Westerly High School - Westlyan Yearbook (Westerly, RI)

 - Class of 1931

Page 21 of 64

 

Westerly High School - Westlyan Yearbook (Westerly, RI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 21 of 64
Page 21 of 64



Westerly High School - Westlyan Yearbook (Westerly, RI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 20
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Page 21 text:

The Senior Year Book— 1931 Speaker: By matching pennies, Edward Boutelle has at last saved enough money to take a trip to New York. It is reported that he stands for hours in front of the baboon’s cage in the zoo humming— Echo: (Walking My Baby Back Home.) Speaker: Sam Shawn and Steve Zegar-zewski, the baseball players, are very famous pitchers. Echo: (Did they find them hanging in an art gallery?) Speaker: Hope Hoxie has just inherited a fortune and, like Edna Wallace Hopper, has retained her beauty, come back to town, and proves to be the hit of the season. Bud Christy is again interested. He says her new telephone number is 2573. Echo: (Art Lenihan told me that it’s 2473.) Speaker: Oh no! Bud called her up last night; he should know. Echo: (That’s all right. Art’s the one that answered it.) Speaker: Margaret Kibner and Mary Mearns have written a book on the rivers of South America. Echo: (Rather deep.) Speaker: Bill Dolan is now football coach at Notre Dame. Incidentally he is now exceedingly bald. Echo: (He’s still got a wave in his hair but the tide is out.) Speaker: Bob Burnett has become a famous surgeon. Echo: (He always did like to cut up.) Speaker: May Gould and Florence Moran are sojourning on the Sandwich Islands. Echo: (I’ll bet they can’t get a good sandwich on any one of them.) Speaker: At a banquet held in Nelson Himes’ automat on last Saturday evening, the Honorable Everitte Greene donated a huge sum to provide lounges for the class rooms in the new W. H. S. Mr. Greene said he had been greatly inconvenienced in his slumbers during his high school days by the hardness of the seats. Speaker: Connie Hamilton and Ruth McCoy ride horseback every morning for exercise. Echo: (Yes, but the horses are the only ones that get any exercise.) Speaker: Althea Nichols, Anna Fra-quelli, and Martha Nardone are taking up Spanish, English, German, and Scotch. Echo: (What are they doing, running an elevator?) Speaker: Shorty Carpenter is official gum scraper at the Westerly High School. Speaker: Ray Payne and Harold Solo-veitzik are manufacturing doughnuts and Swiss cheese. Echo: (Rather wholesome food.) Speaker: Mary Brophy and Jenettlee Rose are in the dishwashing business. Echo: (A habit they must be careful not to drop.) Speaker: Harrison Smith and John Nagle are running a broom store. Echo: (They’re doing a sweeping business.) Speaker: The noted psychologists, Jean Meikle and Pearl Payne, have been studying the cases of the school marms, Mary Gencarelli, Eleanor Kenyon, Elizabeth Thomson, and Ellen Michie, who claim that their hair turned white overnight. The psychologists are satisfied the Freshmen have worried the teachers so cruelly that white hair is the only natural outcome. Speaker: Mildred Ross and Violet Marra are members of the Debutantes Relief Corps. Echo: (They relieve heartaches.) Speaker: Ida Perry was so mortified by the manners displayed at our class banquet that she has written a book entitled “How to Conduct Oneself at a Public Gathering.” Speaker: Pretty little Evelyn Wilson is the reason for the increase in practice of a certain dentist. Evelyn is acting as his assistant. Echo: (She always had an aching for that.) Speaker: Burnie Stenhouse, our class carpenter, has made a fortune in the contracting business. Echo: (All he ever contracted was the whooping cough.) Speaker: Arthur Lawton is a model for “What the well-dressed man will wear.” Speaker: Edith Simmons is on a trip around the world to prove that it’s flat. Echo: (If she just went to one of her friends and asked for a loan, she could tell that it is flat.) Speaker: Dorothy Ryan is sojourning in the south. Echo: (Looking out for her interests in sugar Keane.) -■■4 9 )►•-

Page 20 text:

The Senior Year Book— 1931 secondary education in the school of experience. It is by the symptoms, traits, and characteristics exhibited while they were our fellow students that we shall attempt to predict their choice of profession. So let us transport ourselves in imagination, twenty years hence. First to mind comes President Donald Bonner. Mr. Bonner, when recently approached by representatives of the press regarding his reelection to the town council, merely said, “I do not choose to speak.” Echo: (He’s permanent head man of the Elizabeth York-Pawcatuck River Boat Club. What’s he got to say about that?) Speaker: Considering that Donald is being backed by Bill Mitchell, the Attorney General of the State of Rhode Island, we think he stands a good chance. Echo: (Attorney General?!! What you mean is General Nuisance of the State of Rhode Island.) Speaker: Speaking of politics reminds us that Marjorie Estabrook is doing very well as Mitchell’s political boss. Speaker: Charles Kenyon, former W. H. S. pugilist, has turned into a professional boxer. Echo: (Oh, yes! He is an undertaker.) Speaker: One of the most daring robberies of the century occurred yesterday when little Thurston Rider, the smiling newsboy of Chicago, was robbed of his day’s receipts, arm elastics, and a cigar coupon. The poor old man was sweetly calling his wares in a plaintive voice, “Extra ! Extra! Marrack Codings sued by wealthy widow for breach of promise,” when two men attacked him. The men were traced to a boarding house owned by Anne Rinne and Frances Johnson, but operated by the merry widows, Mary Bray and Kay Blake. Arrests were made by Detectives Moscaritolo and Ligouri of Scotland Backyards. The bandits gave their names as George Binns and John Hinch-liffe. Speaker: Frank Turano, U. S. Senator from Rhode Island, in a recent speech said, “All great men are dying.” Echo: (He’ll probably live to a ripe old age.) Speaker: Harvey Conklin, the famous lexicographer, defines a dry battery as one favoring prohibition. Speaker: Mildred Young, the most in- quisitive girl in our class, has taken up research work. Echo: (Is she still searching for the name of the Unknown Soldier?) Speaker: Eleanor House and Alice Webster are in the pin business. Echo: (Still sticking to the point.) Speaker: Sposato and Sculco have just opened a plant to manufacture excelsior. Echo: (What? You mean long sawdust.) Speaker: Frances Farnham, well known aviatrix, yesterday broke the world’s altitude record. Echo: (Flying high.) Speaker: Miles Coulbourne is going around with a “Smile” on his face. Echo: (Business is Rossing.) Speaker: Florence Greig, Valedictorian of the class, has taken up public speaking as her vocation. She's on the Chautauqua circuit. Echo: (On the 4th of July she spoke so long her tonsils became sunburned.) Speaker: Henry Stahle, who, until recently, has been selling Austin cars, utoder hard times caused by the unemployment situation, was reduced to selling apples in the square. Echo: (Yes, crab apples.) Speaker: Elizabeth Edmond is so neat her business is always picking up. Speaker: A1 Fusaro and Eliseo Magni are working in the rubber factory at Cranston. Echo: (Sure! They’re doing a long stretch.) Speaker: The other day I saw Margaret Whalen, in the park, practicing for the Band Concert. Echo: (What was she playing? The Hose?) Speaker: Lib York has a honeymoon garden. Echo: (Even in high school she was always saying, “Just lettuce alone.”) Speaker: Mary La Via, Mildred Signor, and Rose Castagnaro have invented a fountain pen that will not leak. Echo: (The kind you forget to put the ink in.) Speaker: Benjamin Simmons has accepted a position as file clerk. Echo: (What is he, a manicurist?) Speaker: Dorothy Beaudreau has just opened a greenhouse. Echo: (Yes, she is specializing in Sweet William.) - «e{ 18



Page 22 text:

The Senior Year Book— 1931 Strange it is and yet so true. That I’m tempted to a laugh; For behold, I clearly see, Mary sings for the phonograph. And now I turn at last to Ell, What she has accomplished is much to tell; The dear little girl is still serving time. As the composer of that little rhyme. Conclusion These are your futures we have guessed, It’s up to you to do the rest. Let time and experience be the test, May your success be of the very best. —M. Dunn and E. Scanlon. June sunlight sifts soft o’er these ivied walls; And a few days and hours must mean our parting. O come not sad and slow, last moments here, But pass amid our riotous, happy laughter! We take with us mem’ries that ever last; Friends we have known, places we used to love; Small things we used to do—you cannot leave us; Though you return no more, we take you with us. These are the means for widening our skylines ; Here are the sparks to kindle greater service. O it is not alone your knowledge, teachers. It is yourselves you’ve given us, unknowing. How long we’ve waited for these last few moments; And now they’re come, wistfully slow, we linger. O may we never lose that happier spirit; Gladly we go, gladly we leave, dear school! Look ho! The East! How ride our ships of dreams? —A. H. N. — S| 20 t -

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