William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY)

 - Class of 1918

Page 39 of 152

 

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 39 of 152
Page 39 of 152



William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 38
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William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 40
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Page 39 text:

Ili ' A -r P ff 1 F if fl iii 3. K. +3 ' A A if if ll. 4 I A. 3. I .Q .li Fw l alll 4. ! s 0,3 teaching. There seem to be only two on the teaching list of 191 7 who really dislike their chosen profession.-Francis Hennessy, Kathryn Coughlin, and Margaret McCherry are taking a business course at St. Francis de Sales' School. CFrancis Hennessy and Kathryn Coughlin have accepted positions in Washingtom where they are doing clerical work for the governmentje-Margaret Oaks is spending this year at home and says her life is very uneventful.-Helen Moore is also at home this year but is taking a course in cooking at William Smith besides doing Red Cross work.-Ruth Smith also is at home. Her ambition is to be a nurse, but she has not given up the idea that she would like to teachf- Alice Taylor is taking a course at the Rochester Business Institute and enjoys her work very much.-Louise Henson has returned from Canada and is not engaged in any profession.-Irene Doyle is at Middletown, Connecticut, teaching Domestic Science in the Industrial School at Windycrest Farm, and says she likes it better than teaching in high school.-Harriet Skinner Savage is teaching one instead of more than one in Auburn, N. Y., trying out her domestic science, and setting the example for the rest of the class.-Betty Durfee is taking a one year Secretarial course in Columbia University, including Typewriting, Stenography, Bookkeeping, Typography, French, Commercial Geography, and Spelling. Rather a heavy schedule, but she has time for play too. -Lilah Bennett is teaching at Good Ground, L. I. Her pupils are the usual mix- ture of good, bad, and indifferent, but she has come to a realization that the mis- chievious ones are more interesting than the deadly good ones. Sincerely, LILAH C. BENNETT. Dear Alumnae and F fiends: I have been asked to tell about the girls of UIQI 5 and the interesting things that they are doing.-Perhaps one of the most interesting is, that one of our number is the only one of the altunnze who is doing her bit in France. Melville Breen Johnson went to France last fall to join her husband, and is doing Red Cross Work there.-On November twenty-eighth, Harriette Brown and Victor E. Fritz were married at Nu'nda, N. Y.-During Easter vacation, Mildred Welker and William Hoffstader were married in Buffalo.-On April 27 in New York City, Gertrude Goodpseed and Donald Stuart were married.-At Christmas time Marion Holmes announced her engagement to Mr. Thomas Barnes of East Hampton, L. I.-The rest of the class are instilling into the youth the knowledge that they acquired in William Smith.-Eliza Clark is teaching in Stamford, N. Y., Edith Graves in Allegany, N. Y., Nina Hollenbeck in Andover, Catharine Jordan in Canandaigua, Florence McGuirl in Knoxborog Margaret Shuttleworth in Crooksville, Ohio, Ruth Yerkes in Springville and Helen Brewster in Portchester, N. Y.-With best wishes to all the girls. Sincerely, GENEVIEVE MCCARTHY. ' F-.Q.'se1l9f8S'e? '.'2i.2i'59'.'f51-ilfaitll-'. i A?-gi 38

Page 38 text:

Ks W- s N -- ff . -vi . CC vm- NT - ws ..sJmyw. . V - , .' I 7.,f-2 Seeifese3?5sf-W-'ieakisfirzmav u l 5 1 ,ll QQ teaching. I am at Conneaut, Ohio.-Hazel Johnston Hill: When I'm not in Geneva, I'm either in New York or at Dr. Johnston's cottage. I am crochet1ng.- 6 Vera King: The draft altered my plans. I am teaching at Interlaken.-Marjorie l ' Mansfield Moul: I was married on Wednesday, October the tenth, to Mr. Arthur ',J F. Moul and my new address is 42 Broadway, Hanover, Pa.-Anne Marvin Lindsay: 55 ,,, Pete and I were married on Thanksgiving Day.-Vera Nasmith: I'm getting ij 7 mighty independent. The loan desk librarian in the Rochester Theological Semin- ' ig ary simply must be.-Helen Pybus: We have a fine school in Hilton. I like my new boarding place. I spend week-ends in Gorham, Geneva, East Bloomfield, and l My Dresden.-Edith Smith Phcl'ps: We came on to Pontiac, Michigan, about Septem- S' ' ber first and are comfortably and happily situated at 56 State Ave. Everett likes A ' his school. I-lc has seventy-four taking Physics and thirty-four in Chemistry.- ,V Margaret E. Smith: Teaching Mathematics in Victor and spending thplwlcek-ends , in Geneva.-Elsa Sparfeld: I am passing away my time in the Physica a Joratory .dl I in the Inspection Engineering Department of the Curtiss Aeroplane Companyf- 'lg in- Regina Sweeney: On to Seneca Falls High School each morning. It is a grand J! lesson in optimism to go out to work every day.-Elizabeth Sweet Christiansen: Ml ' I hate boarding houses-the invention of Lucifer. We are living in a Hat in Boston, 'Q y 5 that is when Norman and I are not in Waterloo.-Helene Daily: Forth to Silver his l Spring's temple of learning each morning at seven, for a few Weeks. hl learned 1 many things: One is that thirty-one third graders can teach you t e u meaning 5 mtg of perpetual motion in two hours. ill, , pr Sincerely yours, I HELENE L. DAILY. .l 1 r V Dear 1918: . gf, . . . tif , It surely seems queer that the girls of 1917 are now keeping order from behind 'E' ' the desk instead of opposing the orders from in front of the desk. Most of the 1 7ers ',' are school ma'ams and like it ver much.--Emilie Brown is ruling with iron hand at it Sauquoit, N. Y. She has her hdlnds full teaching three kinds of History, German, , and English, also keeping the register. She sits behind her desk listening to her 0 pupils telling her things like this: The masculine of matron is mattress. An 'IW anthem is the horns of a deer. --Laura Hall 1S teaching 1n Ofvid, teaching French, if too, which was her especial horror in college. Besides French she teaches Biology 7 and Latin and is trying to make her pupils work as hard as she did at college.- wil LF Norine Manley is trying to convey knowledge at Chaumont, N. Y., in English, AT ' French, Latin, and English History. One of her boys who reads the paper to find 1 S Kilt wll? is deadjxis admonished to come black tlol earth and Enclll oultl who Es gvingr- QW ' ice ee e at indsor, ermont, is teac ing istory in a ig sc oo o a out one M QW hundred eighty pupils. She declares there is no such thing as being too strict with WIS LV her freshmen.---Anna Jordan teaching almost every subject at Leicester, N. Y., ll 'L has decided that she likes to teach but that one will never get rich in the profession. lr -Gertrude Ford is so busy that she has to hurry to keep up with herself and says 'Wt if Westmoreland is the smallest town on earth next to Owasco. She teaches nine 'li Vg subjects in nine periods a day including English, Latin, German, Arithmetic, and isp JY I Intermediate Algebra:-Marjorie MacDill is teaching in Lodi, but she doesn't like 'Q it, so we may prophesy a short teaching career for Marj. CShe was married to -. Ralph Wyckoff, December 26, 1917, and now lives in Ithaca.j--Martha Swarthout , NJ is Principal of a rural school near Romulus where she teaches different subjects in 1 4 N li the grades.-Georgia Garfield is at Smithtown Branch, Long Island, also a teacher! 1,1 f if -Hannah Thomas is stationed at Vernon, N. Y., but does not care especially for li 17 . N X W 4 ef: S-s-' 1 45' ' ' f9f8LS'ia'i-'H'-eastfa' 1 'FMP-X' .jsadzm U 37



Page 40 text:

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Suggestions in the William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) collection:

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1952 Edition, Page 1

1952

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 124

1918, pg 124

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 74

1918, pg 74

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 140

1918, pg 140

William Smith College - Pine Yearbook (Geneva, NY) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 86

1918, pg 86


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