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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
A sample of New&#13;
&#13;
Orleans French Market-&#13;
&#13;
Chas. took this photo,&#13;
&#13;
Mrs Louise Sedgwick and I&#13;
&#13;
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Personal narratives--American--Early 20th century&#13;
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                <text>This photograph shows a pulley lifting up a boxcar. Several&#13;
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&#13;
Information courtesy of Stephen Cloud, 40-yr.-long railroad worker.&#13;
&#13;
If you have know more about this photograph, please contact the library at 740-965-3901 or history@yourcl.org.</text>
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                <text>Charter Member of the Galena Historic Foundation: John L. Bricker;  Retired railroad worker Stephen Cloud</text>
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The Brown&#13;
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Thrasher&#13;
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1937</text>
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DEDICATION&#13;
&#13;
To our parents&#13;
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our obtaining an education&#13;
we, the class of 1937,&#13;
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&#13;
Line drawing of the school building&#13;
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THE SCHOOL</text>
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Photograph of the Brown School building</text>
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&#13;
Line drawing of young woman seated at a desk&#13;
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CLASSES</text>
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S E N I O R S&#13;
&#13;
MOTTO:  BE PREPARED&#13;
&#13;
FLOWER:  VIOLET&#13;
&#13;
COLORS:  BLUE AND GOLD&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
O F F I C E R S&#13;
&#13;
PRESIDENT:  BOYDSON BAIRD&#13;
&#13;
VICE-PRESIDENT:  GLENN T. SHEETS&#13;
&#13;
SECRETARY:  EVELYN WIGTON&#13;
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TREASURER:  GLEN A SHEETS</text>
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&#13;
BOYDSON BAIRD&#13;
"Baird"&#13;
President 11-12&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
Basketball 9-10-11-12&#13;
Baseball 9-10-11-12&#13;
Track 9-10-11-12&#13;
Chairman Junior&#13;
High Council 9&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, shoot!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
OPAL BASIGER&#13;
"O-Pal"&#13;
Secretary 10-11&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
Baseball 11-12&#13;
Student Council 12&#13;
&#13;
"Aw, heck!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
WILMA NIXON&#13;
"Squeak"&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
Baseball 11&#13;
Librarian 9&#13;
&#13;
"You tellin' I?"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
EVALYN WIGTON&#13;
"Eve"&#13;
Secretary 12&#13;
Treasurer 11&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
&#13;
"Is that so?"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
ALDA HATTEN&#13;
"Albert"&#13;
Treasurer 10&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
Student Council 9-12&#13;
Orchestra 10-11-12&#13;
Librarian 10-11-12&#13;
&#13;
"Fiddlesticks"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
WALTER BALCH&#13;
"Sam"&#13;
Vice-president 11&#13;
Basketball 9-10-11-12&#13;
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Track 11-12&#13;
&#13;
"Aw, gee!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
OLIVE JORDAN&#13;
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Willis High 9-10&#13;
Chorus 11-12&#13;
Cheer Leader 11&#13;
Orchestra 11&#13;
&#13;
"O.K., Honey."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
JEAN SCARRY&#13;
"Scarry"&#13;
President 9&#13;
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Cheer Leader 9-10-11-12&#13;
Student council 10-11&#13;
&#13;
"Yes, James."</text>
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GLEN A SHEETS&#13;
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Treasurer 12&#13;
Basketball 10-11-12&#13;
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&#13;
"Cut it out."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
RUTH HELMAN&#13;
"Ruthie"&#13;
Ashley High School 9-10-11&#13;
Baseball 12&#13;
&#13;
"Well, good!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MARTHA SCHILLIGER&#13;
"Mart"&#13;
Baseball 12&#13;
Librarian 11&#13;
Student Council 12&#13;
&#13;
"That's what you think!"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
REBECCA DAWSON&#13;
"Becky"&#13;
President 10&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
Chairman Student Council 12&#13;
Librarian 12&#13;
&#13;
"Oh, I don't know."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
GLENN T. SHEETS&#13;
"Turner"&#13;
Vice-president 12&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
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Baseball 11-12&#13;
Student Council 10-11&#13;
&#13;
"No, I don't mean that."&#13;
&#13;
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PAUL JUMPER&#13;
"Homer"&#13;
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&#13;
"Oh!  I see."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
GEORGIA WARD&#13;
"Dot"&#13;
Treasurer 9&#13;
Chorus 9-10-11-12&#13;
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Junior Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
Motto:  Excelsior&#13;
Flower:  White Rose&#13;
Colors:  Lilac and White&#13;
&#13;
Mary Potter, President&#13;
&#13;
Mary Potter, President  4,1&#13;
Helen Wornstaff, Vice President  5,1&#13;
Marjorie Waldron, Secretary  2,1&#13;
Geraldine Main, Treasurer  1,1&#13;
&#13;
William Dunning  5,2&#13;
Earl Ferko  2,3&#13;
Dewey Fox 2,2&#13;
Bernard Hatten  4,3&#13;
Dalw Howisonn  1,2&#13;
Anna Marie Milligan  6,1&#13;
&#13;
Natalie Sheets  3,1&#13;
Guy Smith  1,3&#13;
Charles Stockwell  3,2&#13;
Paul Thurston  4,3&#13;
Betty Wegaman  Absent.&#13;
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Sophomore Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
Motto:  Always Wear a Smile&#13;
Flower:  Sweet Pea&#13;
Colors:  Pink and Gold&#13;
&#13;
Marion Cole, President  1,2&#13;
Robert Freeman, Vice-President  2,3&#13;
Betty Hunnel, Secretary  1,1&#13;
James Baker, Treasurer  5,3&#13;
&#13;
Blanche Blain  2,2&#13;
Dorothy Dix - Absent&#13;
Wanda Fox  5,1&#13;
Margaret Keesey  4,2&#13;
Charlotte Leonard 5,2&#13;
James Link  3.5&#13;
Pauline McNamee  4,1&#13;
Irene McNamee  2,1&#13;
Justine McNamee  3,1&#13;
Glenna Moore  3.2&#13;
Maynard Neville  2,4&#13;
Oscar Schilliger  1,4&#13;
Donald Wells - Absent&#13;
Virginia Williams - A&#13;
Christina Wortz  6,2&#13;
Darlene Smith  1,2&#13;
Vaughn Bright 4,3&#13;
&#13;
numbers following name indicate place in the row (left to right) followed by row number (front to back)&#13;
&#13;
THE PEOPLE'S STORE&#13;
&#13;
YOUNG MEN'S SPORT WEAR&#13;
&#13;
WEST WILLIAM STREET&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE</text>
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&#13;
Freshman Class Roll&#13;
&#13;
Motto:  Plan your work and work your plan.&#13;
Flower:  Red Rose&#13;
Colors:  Red and White&#13;
&#13;
Thomas Nelson, President  1,2&#13;
John Nelson, Vice-President  3,3&#13;
Irwin Freeman, Secretary  2,3&#13;
Donald Potter, Treasurer  1,3&#13;
&#13;
Doris Basignr  6,1&#13;
Edward Blair  2,2&#13;
Jarold Ferko  3,2&#13;
May Langford 2,1&#13;
Martin Kern  4,2&#13;
Betty Nixon  1,1&#13;
Frederick Scarry  4,3&#13;
Edna May Wheeler  3,1&#13;
Lawrence Wenger  5,2&#13;
Betty Wigton  5,1&#13;
Margaret Wright  4,1&#13;
&#13;
numbers following name indicate place in the row (left to right) followed by row number (front to back)&#13;
&#13;
THE BLAIR-KELLEY CO.&#13;
HOUSE FURNISHERS &#13;
 57-59 N. Sandusky St.&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Furnishings - Stoves&#13;
Floor Coverings - Wall Paper&#13;
Draperies&#13;
&#13;
Stoves &#13;
Wall Paper&#13;
Shades&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 12 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Eighth Grade&#13;
&#13;
Motto:  Work while you work and play while you play.&#13;
Flower:  Sweet Pea&#13;
Colors:  Green and white.&#13;
&#13;
Executive Committee:&#13;
Maxine Hughes, Chairman  1,2&#13;
Earl Kunze  2,4&#13;
Donald Zerbe  4,1&#13;
&#13;
Donald Akison  3,3&#13;
Gertrude Beacom  3,2&#13;
Dorothy Blain  3,1&#13;
Minnie Cackler  4,2&#13;
Edgar Caudill  1,1&#13;
Wilson Cole  4,3&#13;
Charlene Fleming  2,1&#13;
Viola Helman  2,2&#13;
Julia Mae Jordan  5,1&#13;
Jean Kern  6.2&#13;
Herbert Moore  1,3&#13;
Kathryn Potter  5,2&#13;
William Sheets  1.4&#13;
Ralph Wheeler  6,1&#13;
Harley Wornstaff  2,3&#13;
Leah Bonham  5,3&#13;
&#13;
numbers following name indicate place in the row (left to right) followed by row number (front to back)&#13;
&#13;
PRICES WE CAN ALL AFFORD&#13;
ON&#13;
GUARANTEED MERCHANDISE&#13;
&#13;
Auto parts and assessories, tires, oils, radios, washers,&#13;
bicycles, fishing supplies, garden tools, house and&#13;
interior paints.&#13;
&#13;
WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATES STORE&#13;
&#13;
79 Sandusky St. -  E. J. Avey -  Delaware, Ohio.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 13 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Seventh Grade&#13;
&#13;
Delmer Neville, President  5,1&#13;
Charles Brookens, Vice President  5,3&#13;
Ruth Anderson, Secretary  4,1&#13;
Harry Rowland, Treasurer  1,2&#13;
&#13;
Douglas Blair  8,2&#13;
David Baker  1,3&#13;
Grace Cackler  4,3&#13;
Philip Coyner  7,3&#13;
Richard Dawson  2,3&#13;
Ivadelle Fox  3,1&#13;
Joseph Fox  7,1&#13;
Eugene Hatten  6,1&#13;
Henry Hughes  3,3&#13;
Richard Helman absent&#13;
Billy Link  6,2&#13;
William Miller  6,3&#13;
Billy Nixon  2,2&#13;
Robert Rea  4,2&#13;
Charles Schilliger  3,2&#13;
Howard Sheets  5,2&#13;
Robert Stegner  7,2&#13;
Robert Thurston  9,2&#13;
Merlin Vining  1,1&#13;
Russell Wenger  10,2&#13;
Robert Bonham  2,1&#13;
&#13;
LEONARD BROTHERS&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL MERCHANDISE&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY MERCHANDISE PRICED RIGHT</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 14 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Line drawing of person wielding a sword&#13;
&#13;
ACTIVITIES</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (15)</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196673">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 15 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Photo &#13;
Row 1  Alda Hatten, Dorothy Blain, Charlotte Leonard, Paul Jumper, Natalie Sheets&#13;
Row 2  Anna Marie Milligan, Blanch Blain, Geraldine Main, Maynard Neville, Bernard Hatten, Opal Basiger&#13;
Row 3  Merlin Vining, Delmar Neville, Paul Thurston, Darlene Smith, Virginia Williams, Mr. Stevens&#13;
&#13;
Photo&#13;
Row 1  Geraldine Main; Marjorie Waldron; Rebecca Dawson; Wm. Dunning; Paul Jumper; Irene &amp; Pauline McNamee.&#13;
Row 2  Wilma Nixon; Georgia Ward; Virginia Williams; Bernard Hatten; Paul Thurston; Darlene Smith; Dorothy Dix.&#13;
Row 3  Olive Jordon, Opal Basiger, Glenn Sheets, Boydson Baird, Blanch Blain, Anna Marie Milligan&#13;
Row 4  Alda Hatten, Christine Wortz, Charlotte Leonard, Natalie Sheets, Justine McNamee&#13;
Row 5  Glenna Moore, Evalyn Wigton, Mr. Stevens.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (16)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 16 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Music Festival&#13;
&#13;
On March 26th, the Brown mixed chorus participated &#13;
with other schools in the County Festival held at Gray&#13;
Chapel.&#13;
&#13;
The mixed chorus number was "God So Loved the World"&#13;
from "The Crucifixion" by Sir John Stainer.&#13;
&#13;
Those taking part in the select chorus were:&#13;
Wilma Nixon, Georgia Ward, Dorothy Dix, Irene McNamee,&#13;
Boydson Baird, Earl Ferko, Glenn T. Sheets, and&#13;
William Dunning.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Orchestras&#13;
&#13;
The Senior High Orchestra of Brown has had the&#13;
opportunity to show what skill they have acquired&#13;
throughout the year by playing for different activities&#13;
held at the school building.  The orchestra was composed&#13;
of:  Paul Jumper and Charlotte Leonard, clarinet; &#13;
Geraldine Main and Maynard Neville, saxophone;&#13;
Paul Thurston, trumpet; Alda Hatten and Ann Marie&#13;
Milligan, violin; Blance Blain, cello; Virginia&#13;
Williams, snare drum; Darlene Smith, bass drum;&#13;
Opal Basiger and Natalie Sheets, piano.&#13;
&#13;
Those taking part in the Junior High Orchestra were:&#13;
Dorothy Blain, Donald Zerbe, Robert Thurston, and&#13;
Russell Wenger, violin; Merlin Vining, Delmar Neville,&#13;
and Earl Kunze, slide trombone; Maxine Salmon, Carl&#13;
Baker, and Marion Coyner, cornet; Richard Dawson,&#13;
clarinet; Phillip Coyner, flute; Charlene  Fleming and&#13;
Eugene Hatton, piano.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Senior High Choruses&#13;
&#13;
The Girls Glee Club was composed of the following&#13;
people:  sopranos, Opal Basiger, Rebecca Dawson, Alda&#13;
Hatten, Wilma Nixon, Geraldine Main, Glenna Mae Moore,&#13;
Mary Potter, Georgia Ward, Evalyn Wigton, Charlotte&#13;
Leonard, Virginia Williams, and Christina Wertz;&#13;
altos, Blanche Blain, Dorothy Dix, Irene McNamee,&#13;
Justine McNamee, Pauline McNamee, Anna Marie Milligan,&#13;
Natalie Sheets, and Darlene Smith.&#13;
&#13;
Accompanists were Opal Basiger and Christina Wortz.&#13;
Irene McNamee acted as class librarian.&#13;
&#13;
The boys that took part in the Boys Glee Club were:&#13;
tenors, William Dunning, Bernard Hatten, and Glenn T.&#13;
Sheets; basses, Boydson Baird, Earl Ferko, Paul Jumper,&#13;
and Paul Thurston.&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Esther Cherington and Miss Augusta Dove were&#13;
student teachers, with Mr. Paul E. Stevens as supervisor.&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 17 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL SQUAD&#13;
FORWARDS:  8 Guy Smith, 11 Dale Howison, 10 Thomas Nelson,&#13;
12 Edward Blair, B1 Glen A. Sheets,&#13;
B2 William Dunning, Bernard Hatten-white Back row&#13;
&#13;
CENTERS:  14 Irwin Freeman, 7 Paul Thurston, 3 Donald Potter&#13;
&#13;
GUARDS:  13 Boydson Baird, 4 James Link, 9 Walter Balch,&#13;
5 Glenn T. Sheets, 6 Maynard Neville, B3 John Nelson&#13;
&#13;
TOURNAMENT MANAGERS:  Glen A. Sheets, John Nelson&#13;
&#13;
COACH:  Mr. Albert S. Hirth</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (18)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 18 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Basketball&#13;
&#13;
First Team - Position - Second Team&#13;
&#13;
*Boydson Baird - Guard - Glen T. Sheets&#13;
*James Link - Guard - *Walter Balch&#13;
*Irwin Freeman - Center - Donald Potter&#13;
*Guy Smith - Forward - *Tom Nelson&#13;
*Dale Howison - Forward - Paul Thurston&#13;
Names with stars in front received letters or pins this year&#13;
&#13;
Reserves were:  Maynard Neville, Edward Blair, John&#13;
Nelson, Bernard Hatten and William Dunning.&#13;
&#13;
Boydson Baird, who was all county guard for two&#13;
years, has received four leters for his work on the &#13;
team.  Glen A. Sheets, who played forward, received three&#13;
letters and Walter Balch, who played guard, received &#13;
two letters.&#13;
&#13;
Brown finished second in the county league in&#13;
basketball, winning nine of the twelve games played.&#13;
Since the team lost both games in the tournament, Brown's&#13;
final average was nine games won and five lost.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
The girl's baseball team played Sunbury, Berlin,&#13;
and Orange, winning the game with Orange.  The following&#13;
made up the team:  Catcher, May Langford; Pitcher, Opal&#13;
Basiger; First base, Helen Wornstaff; Second base, Jean&#13;
Scarry; Third base, Margaret Wright; Short stops, Edna&#13;
May Wheeler and Dorothy Dix; Left field, Mary Potter;&#13;
Center field, Glenna Moore, and Right field, Darlene &#13;
Smith.&#13;
&#13;
The boy's team won two out of three games.  They beat&#13;
Harlem and Berlin and lost to Sunbury.  The team was made&#13;
up of the following boys:  Catcher, Walter Balch;&#13;
Pitcher, James Link; First base, Irwin Freeman; Second&#13;
base, Oscar Schilliger; Third base, Tom Nelson; Short&#13;
stop, Guy Smith; Left field, Boydson Baird; Center field,&#13;
Glenn T. Sheets; and Right field, Marion Cole.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
In the district track meet held at Ohio Wesleyan&#13;
University May 15, Brown's senior athlete, Boydson Baird,&#13;
by running a mile in 4:45 broke a district record of&#13;
eight years standing and later the same day won the half&#13;
mile in 2:67.00.  He placed third in the javelin throw.&#13;
&#13;
The relay team of Brown, Irwin Freeman, Guy Smith,&#13;
Paul Thurston and Boydson Baird took second place in the &#13;
distance medley race and tied in the two-mile relay at&#13;
O.W.U., May 1.  On May 8 at Athens, Boydson Baird placed&#13;
second in the javelin throw and first in the discus.&#13;
The relay team placed first in the medley relay, first&#13;
in the two-mile relay, and established two meet records.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 19 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
HONORS 1936-1937&#13;
&#13;
CLASS - HONORS - HONORABLE MENTION&#13;
&#13;
Seniors - - Boydson Baird, Opal Basiger, Alda Hatten&#13;
&#13;
Juniors - Bernard Hatten, Mary Potter, Marjorie Waldron, Paul Thurston&#13;
&#13;
Sophomores - Charlotte Leonard, Virginia Williams - Darlene Smith&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen - - Margaret Wright&#13;
&#13;
Eighth Grade - Maxine Hughes - Donald Zerbe&#13;
&#13;
Seventh Grade - Eugene Hatten&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Senior Scholarship Test&#13;
&#13;
Three seniors, Opal Basiger, Boydson Baird, and Alda&#13;
Hatten, took the senior scholarship test at Willis High&#13;
School on April 3, 1937.  Only the upper 35% of seniors in&#13;
each school are allowed to take this test.  All of the&#13;
Brown contestants ranked in the upper one third of this&#13;
group.&#13;
&#13;
Opal Basiger ranked fourth and made the highest score&#13;
among the girls of the county.  Boydson 15th, Alda 16th&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
State Scholarship Tests for High School Pupils&#13;
&#13;
In the preliminary county contest Brown placed two&#13;
students on the all-county team that took the District&#13;
test at Ohio State University Saturday, May 1, 1937.&#13;
Virginia Williams took this test in World History and&#13;
Paul Thurston in Physics.  The latter made second place&#13;
in the District County classification.  This gave him&#13;
sixth place in the state, county school classification,&#13;
and placed him in a triple tie for ninth place in the&#13;
state, all classifications.&#13;
&#13;
It is interesting to note that among the highest eleven&#13;
in this test seven were from county school systems and&#13;
three from city systems.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
State Eighth Grade Test&#13;
&#13;
On April 30, thirty-seven thousand eighth grade pupils&#13;
of Ohio took the state eighth grade test.  Six of the&#13;
eighth graders, Harley Wornstaff, Jean Kern, Maxine Hughes,&#13;
Donald Zerbe, Earl Kunze, and William Sheets, placed in the &#13;
upper 25% of Delaware County.  One-sixth of the county&#13;
scores were lower than our lowest.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (20)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 20 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Social&#13;
&#13;
Junior-Senior Banquet&#13;
&#13;
On May fifth at six-forty-five, the junior class &#13;
entrained, bound for Bun's Ivory Room for their "See All&#13;
Amerian Excursion", with the Seniors, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Bennett,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thurston, Mr. and Mrs. Hirth, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Stevens, Miss Collicott, Miss Whitted, Miss Carpenter,&#13;
and Miss Miller, &amp; Miss Worline, as guests.&#13;
&#13;
It was a jolly occasion.  As the girls emerged from&#13;
the anti-room, they formed a veritable rainbow of color.&#13;
The trip was thoroughly enjoyed by both hosts, Hostesses&#13;
and their guests.&#13;
&#13;
The menu was cleverly camouflaged as stops were made&#13;
at Due Drop Inn, Boston Common, Yellow Stone National&#13;
Park, Pikes Peak, Grand Canyon, Cherry Blossoms,&#13;
Washington, and Mississippi River.&#13;
&#13;
The party was conducted throughout the trip by Miss&#13;
Mary Potter; Passengers sand the Loyalty song; the&#13;
Statue of Liberty was visited with Mr. Paul Thurston]&#13;
as guide; The Melting Pot was explained by Mr. Boydson&#13;
Baird; Miss Edna Collicott conducted the party through&#13;
the Bright Lights; Miss Rebbeca Dawson showed the party&#13;
a day at the Little Red School House and The Good Earth&#13;
was shown by Dr. L. J. Bennett.  The party went merrily&#13;
on by all singing America the Beautiful.  They were then&#13;
conducted by the Junior class to a vaudeville with&#13;
All America as their stage.   Then they were homeward&#13;
bound by all singing the Star Spangled Banner.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Freshmen Initiation&#13;
&#13;
Sixteen shivering freshmen, clad queerly, waited for&#13;
fate in the vestibule of Brown High School on Friday&#13;
evening, October 16 while the sophomores prepared nervously&#13;
for their attack.  Blindfolded and relieved of thir&#13;
shoes and stockings, the freshies were led by their&#13;
elders down cold cement steps and over stone, to the &#13;
biology room.&#13;
&#13;
Here they were told to kiss a book and instead they&#13;
met a pan of coal dust.  Then their toe nails were&#13;
painted with mercurochrome and the ninth graders then&#13;
were set dancing when the shoes which were placed on&#13;
their fancy feet turned out to contain live wires.&#13;
&#13;
A Mixture of oysters plus everything in the kitchen&#13;
cabinet, and spaghetti fishworms, were given to them &#13;
before they were unblindfolded.&#13;
&#13;
After they were given their shoes and stockings,&#13;
tied in various knots, they were told to roll a bean&#13;
across the stage with their noses in order to complete&#13;
the initiation.&#13;
&#13;
A program followed and refreshments were served in&#13;
honor of the newly pledged Brown High School freshmen.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 21 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Sketch of graduate holding a large ball&#13;
&#13;
Senior Documents</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (22)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 22 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class History&#13;
&#13;
The history of the class of 1937 is so interesting that&#13;
it may be viewed as a play.  As dramatic critic for the&#13;
Brown Derby, I will review the play as I saw it.&#13;
&#13;
Between the four acts of the play are brief and joyous&#13;
intermissions during which the high school orchestra plays.&#13;
The play was written as it was enacted under the direction&#13;
of Mr. George N. Thurston, the superintendent, and his&#13;
capable assistants, the faculty.  Its production is made&#13;
possible by the Board of Education in cooperation with the&#13;
taxpayers and is given by an all-star cast.  Because they&#13;
appear on the stage together, I shall give their names in&#13;
alphabetical order as follows:  Boydson Baird, Helen Balch,&#13;
Walter Balch, Opal Basiger, June Brownfield, Una Butler,&#13;
Frederick Chivington, Joe Crumb, Rebecca Dawson, Ralph&#13;
Geer, Alda Hatten, Paul Jumper, Marjorie Longwell, Wilma&#13;
Nixon, Jean Scarry, Martha Schilliger, Glenn T. Sheets,&#13;
Georgia Ward, Wayne Wheeler, Evalyn Wigton, and Junior&#13;
Williamson.&#13;
&#13;
This play has comedy, tragedy, history and review, being&#13;
of no specific type.&#13;
&#13;
The scenes are set in the high school building, in&#13;
corridors, classrooms, study hall, and auditorium.  The&#13;
settings are plain and look as though they have been in use&#13;
for a number of years.  The library books, although in&#13;
neat order, ave very worn; many chairs and desks in the&#13;
different class rooms are badly in need of paint.  On the&#13;
walls of the rooms are pictures, including Washington and &#13;
Lincoln.&#13;
&#13;
Act I shows the cast as Freshmen, coming down the hall&#13;
with a look of timidity and curiosity on their faces.  As&#13;
they explore the rooms and books, they find many things&#13;
unfamiliar buy very interesting.  In one room they see&#13;
objects and instruments which they have never seen before.&#13;
Upon inquiry they find that this is the chemistry and&#13;
physics laboratory and that they are not to bother any of&#13;
the chemicals because some are harmful.  The boys soon&#13;
discover that the furnace room is very popular with the&#13;
high school boys.  Finally the entire class meet the &#13;
villain Study who is to spoil their fun.&#13;
&#13;
Joan Scarry succeeds in becoming one of the cheerleaders,&#13;
which position she holds all through her high school career.&#13;
She is also elected class president.&#13;
&#13;
The Sophomores, to introduce the Freshmen to high &#13;
school life, initiate them one evening.  This is found to&#13;
be very exciting and much fun.&#13;
&#13;
Study and his brother, Examinations, are defeated by&#13;
most of the cast.  Boydson Baird and Opal Basiger gain&#13;
honors, Alda Hatten and Rebecca Dawson honorable mention.&#13;
&#13;
At this time the amateur actors take a three months&#13;
vacation of play and work before the victorious ones return&#13;
to resume the second act of the play as Sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Officers are elected as follows:  President, Rebecca Dawson,&#13;
Vice-president, Junior Williamson, Secretary, Opal Basiger,&#13;
Treasurer, Alda Hatten.&#13;
&#13;
Along with increasing parties and duties, the arch-&#13;
enemies, Study and Examinations, are back.  This time the</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (23)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 23 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
tables are turned and the "Softies", as they are called,&#13;
get to initiate the "Freshies".&#13;
&#13;
High honors by Opal Basiger, honors by Boydson Baird,&#13;
honorable mention by Alda Hatten and Rebecca Dawson are&#13;
used to defeat all enemies of the Sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Act III shows the players returning from the inter-&#13;
mission more dignified and proud as Juniors.  You will&#13;
notice a change of cast caused by those who were unable tp&#13;
rejoin the class.&#13;
&#13;
This group gave Boydson Baird the presidency, Walter&#13;
Balch was vice-president, Opal Basiger secretary, and&#13;
Evalyn Wigton treasurer.&#13;
&#13;
The players are allowed a little more freedom and have&#13;
several socail activities to change the routine and con-&#13;
sequently the play.&#13;
&#13;
As it was the custom of the Juniors to earn the money&#13;
which they needed for the annual Junior-Senior Banquet, it&#13;
became necessary to plan something to make it with.  Thus&#13;
began plans for a community entertainment.  Later on when&#13;
this one was over a second entertainment was successful.&#13;
Next plans began for the banquet which was a great success&#13;
and much fun, in spite of the man squabbles among the cast.&#13;
&#13;
Boydson Baird took a scholarship test at Ohio Wesleyan&#13;
University in world history; Joe Crumb and Opal Basiger&#13;
entered the geometry group.  The latter gained ninth place &#13;
in that group.&#13;
&#13;
At the end of the third vacation we see the final case,&#13;
consisting of Boydson Baird, Walter Balch, Opal Basiger,&#13;
Rebecca Dawson, Alda Hatten, Ruth Helman, Olive Jordan,&#13;
Paul Jumper, Wilma Nixon, Jean Scarry, Martha Schilliger,&#13;
Glen A Sheets, Glenn T. Sheets, Georgia Ward and Evalyn&#13;
Wigton, returning more dignified and sore of themselves.&#13;
They have learned to like Study better and the promising&#13;
amateurs from Act I have certainly succeeded in becoming&#13;
stars.&#13;
&#13;
Activities change and increase more than ever as the&#13;
Seniors begin their fight against Study.  They have an&#13;
annual to make, commencement exercises to plan for, a play,&#13;
and minor things to settle as they continually come up.&#13;
To top this off several men start in tearing out one end&#13;
of the building to build an addition.  This makes the rooms&#13;
cold and congested and requires a search for a place to&#13;
give a play.  But the Seniors enjoy watching the con-&#13;
struction men's work and their progress.&#13;
&#13;
All difficulties have finally been conquered and the&#13;
Seniors are proud of having met and conquered Study.&#13;
&#13;
Being very glad to have obtained their education, the&#13;
Seniors express their thanks and gratitude to the audience&#13;
and graduate in all the glory due them.&#13;
&#13;
Opal Basiger.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (24)</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="196711">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 24 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
The Crystal Gazer&#13;
&#13;
This little crystal ball holds all of the past and&#13;
the future.  It can reveal the hidden and make known&#13;
the secret.  It can tell you what you so desire to know.&#13;
I have been asked to search its magic depths until I&#13;
discover the future of the members of the class of&#13;
nineteen hundred and thirty-seven.&#13;
&#13;
I am about to read the crystal but before doing so,&#13;
may I ask your earnest cooperation?  If you will remain&#13;
absolutely silent and join me in concentrating upon the&#13;
future, leaving your minds free of all conflicting im-&#13;
pressions, I can promise the information you desire.&#13;
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .&#13;
&#13;
The mist is clearing.  A town appears.  What!  Oh, it&#13;
can't possibly be, but - it is - it's Kilbourne.  My&#13;
that town has grown.  The reason I'm sure that it's&#13;
Kilbourne is that I see our Educational Rendevous,&#13;
Brown High School.  Let's go inside and see if we see&#13;
anybody we know.  Yes, Sir, there are the boys playing&#13;
basketball.  It is said that they win most of their games&#13;
and no wonder!  Why - look - Boydson Baird, the star&#13;
athlete of the class of '37, has become an athletic&#13;
instructor.&#13;
&#13;
The scene of the school is now blurred  so that must&#13;
have been the only member of that famous class at school&#13;
because this ball never fails me.&#13;
&#13;
Now I see a place of business.  Well, look!  The sign&#13;
reads "Ye Beauty Shoppe".  A smaller sign reads "Specialty&#13;
Olive Permanents."  Well, we'll take a look inside.  It&#13;
sounds interesting -- Oh, now we know why the Olive&#13;
permanents are specialized.  Here is Olive Jordan,&#13;
proprietress and Ruth Helman, operator, and to whom is&#13;
she giving an Olive permanent?  I hardly knew her with&#13;
her head in that contraption, but it's Mrs. Sheets.  She&#13;
is saying to Ruth, "Glenn must be getting absent minded&#13;
or he must be awfully tired, for the other day he tried&#13;
to sell my father a John Deere tractor and plow."&#13;
&#13;
As Rebecca's words fade away so does the scene.  The&#13;
cloud lifts and we see the former Alda Hatten, now a&#13;
prominent society lady, entertaining a group of guests.&#13;
&#13;
The scene suddenly changes.  It must be that something&#13;
exciting has happened.  What's this?  -- A lot of beds --&#13;
Why, it's a hospital, and there are several people&#13;
gathered around the bed.  As I look down on the bed I&#13;
see a very pale girl - it's Jean Scarry.  She must be&#13;
in a law-suit because there's Wilma Nixon, her lawyer,&#13;
trying to obtain the details of the accident from her.&#13;
As she speaks, in walks a comely nurse, and as she comes&#13;
closer, we see it's Georgia Ward.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (25)</text>
                  </elementText>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="196712">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 25 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
The scene becomes noisy and uproarious.  It is only&#13;
a couple of tractors and the men are yelling something to&#13;
one another, but look who's driving them on!  One is&#13;
Paul Jumper.  He's not married but expects to be soon.&#13;
On the other tractor sits Walter Balch.  I remember in&#13;
economics class, Walter said he wanted to live in the &#13;
city, but he's still on the farm.  I wonder what the&#13;
matter is.  Can't he make up his mind or it his wife&#13;
holding him on the farm.&#13;
&#13;
And now the scene grows strange.  A carnival at&#13;
Brown High School?  No, it is a fair and around a race&#13;
track at that!  We hear somebody say, "Boy, is that horse&#13;
a beauty!"  We find the driver to be non other than the&#13;
famous race horse trainer, Glen A. Sheets.&#13;
&#13;
Now we have a large room, empty but for two people&#13;
and a grand piano.  A small boy with sticky fingers and a&#13;
look of agony on his face is trying to play Exercise 15,&#13;
and his teacher, gritting her teeth to keep from spanking &#13;
him, is counting one, two three, one, two three, as&#13;
mechanically and correctly as a broken record starting&#13;
to count, and getting no farther than three.  At last&#13;
totally depressed, she pushed the child aside and plays&#13;
the exercise for him, making even the simple lesson&#13;
sound interesting.  She is Opal Basiger, with fingers&#13;
as nimble as they are now.&#13;
&#13;
More clouds and mists ... Gazing through them, I see &#13;
that we are in a large city.  It is in the interior of a&#13;
large office building.  Seated at her desk, acting as a &#13;
secretary to a large firm, I see an old friend, yes, and&#13;
a classmate, for it's Evelyn Wigton.  I always thought&#13;
she'd make a good secretary.&#13;
&#13;
As the light gradually fades we see a small and&#13;
neatly furnished home.  On the porch sit a parrot and&#13;
two cats.  Of course one always connects parrots and cats&#13;
with old maids and this is found absolutely correct&#13;
for we see none other than Martha Schilliger out in her&#13;
flower garden, puttering around in the flowers.  She&#13;
starts toward the house and the parrot flies up on&#13;
her shoulder . . .&#13;
&#13;
The crystal clouds and a purple haze covers everything&#13;
and I can see no more.&#13;
&#13;
Martha Schilliger.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937 (26)</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196713">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 26 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Class Will&#13;
&#13;
My Friends,&#13;
I hope you will pay close attention to this, the last&#13;
will and testament of the class of 1937.  If any partiality&#13;
or injustice should appear to you in the distribution of&#13;
the will we hope you will pardon it.  May I ask you to&#13;
receive your contributions with the spirit in which they&#13;
are given?&#13;
&#13;
We, the class of 1937, in the town of Kilbourne, the&#13;
county of Delaware, and the state of Ohio, being in as&#13;
good mental conditions as usual, and in much better temper&#13;
than usual do hereby make this our last will and testament.&#13;
&#13;
In this manner we dispose of our possessions.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- We give and bequeath to the Junior Class our well&#13;
known nerve.  They will need it next year in passing tests.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- To the unsophisticated Sophomores goes our varied&#13;
and surprising talent, from singing songs so the composer&#13;
would not know the song to playing basketball so the&#13;
coach doesn't know whether it is he or the boys who are&#13;
mixed up.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- We give our good behavior to the eighth graders.&#13;
With the examples the Senior class has set before them&#13;
in the past, we feel that they will be a much better class&#13;
if they follow in our footsteps.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- To the seventh graders goes our sympathy because&#13;
they have such a few girls.  Without the girls in the &#13;
Senior class, it would never have been such an outstanding&#13;
group.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- We give our entire store of knowledge to our teachers,&#13;
the faculty of Brown High School.  From them it came and to&#13;
them it should be returned.  To them we also give our&#13;
valuable sense of humor, without which we should have&#13;
found school life painful indeed and which will do much&#13;
to make it endurable for them.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- To the history of the Brown High School, we bequeath&#13;
our illustrous deeds and our names as candidates for the&#13;
Hall of Fame.&#13;
&#13;
The smaller individual bequests are as follows:&#13;
&#13;
Item -- To the laziest person in the Senior class-to-be&#13;
we bequeath Martha Schilliger's ambition.  If it is&#13;
combined with the laziness previously mentioned, the&#13;
result will be normal activity.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- We give and bequeath Boydson'Baird's ability to&#13;
stay out of public, when escorting his girl friend, to&#13;
Guy Smith.&#13;
&#13;
Item -- Glenn Turner Sheets leaves his kindness in showing&#13;
girls to classes to Charles Stockwell.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196735">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 27 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Item -- Evalyn Wigton bequeaths her love for trucking to&#13;
Margaret Wright.  Although Evalyn likes ambulances&#13;
best, she hopes Donald Potter's truck will serve the&#13;
purpose.  &#13;
Item -- Opal Basiger gives her longing to hear wedding&#13;
bells as soon as she graduates to Pauline McNamee, as&#13;
Pauline's first desire is to be a housewife.&#13;
Item -- Ruth Helman bequeaths her ability in entertaining&#13;
Irwin and Bob Freeman to May Langford.&#13;
Item -- We give and bequeath Walter Balch's laugh to&#13;
Charlotte Leonard.  To the combined laughs we feel&#13;
everyone will enjoy listening.   We wonder how we got&#13;
along in the past without them.&#13;
Item -- Georgia Ward gives her technique in getting every&#13;
one's attention by using her soft voice to Glenna Mae&#13;
Moore.&#13;
Item -- Glen Allen Sheets gives his use of insults in&#13;
keeping the girls at a distance to Tom Nelson.&#13;
Item -- To Bernard Hatten we give and bequeath Paul Jumper's&#13;
love for staying in noons to get his lessons.&#13;
Item -- Jean Scarry leaves her ability in bluffing the&#13;
teachers to Robert Rea.&#13;
Item -- We give and bequeath Rebecca Dawson's place on&#13;
the romantic list to Betty Wegaman.&#13;
Item -- Olive Jordan leaves her love for thrilling adven-&#13;
tures to Betty Hunnel.&#13;
Item -- We give Alda Hatten's ability of singing and&#13;
watching the audience at the same time to Vaughn Bright.&#13;
Whether or not Alda missed a beat in music, she never&#13;
missed anyone in the audience.&#13;
Item -- Wilma Nixon leaves her temper to any or all who&#13;
might wish to use it.&#13;
&#13;
The Class of '37&#13;
Wilma Nixon, Lawyer&#13;
&#13;
Witnesses:&#13;
President -- Boydson Baird&#13;
Sponsor -- Mr. Albert Hirth&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 28 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Sketch of bust of bearded gentleman behind a stack of books&#13;
&#13;
LITERARY</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 29 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
When Chaos Reigned&#13;
&#13;
Of all the long remembered scenes of chaos that ever&#13;
occurred in the history of our home the one which it just &#13;
underwent will be remembered the longest.&#13;
&#13;
Mother said she wanted the kitchen changed around.  She&#13;
wanted the sink where the cupboards were; the cupboards &#13;
where the sink was; two or three extra windows; and except&#13;
for a place for the stove, table and cabinet, she wanted&#13;
all the rest of the room furnished with closets and drawers.&#13;
In these she hoped to find room for all her dishes, towels,&#13;
dust mops, and working utensils.&#13;
&#13;
She explained to neighbors, friends, ice men, salesmen,&#13;
and anyone who should happen to venture to the back door&#13;
and have a minute to spare, just what she intended to do&#13;
when our checking account ceased to be in the red.&#13;
&#13;
These people praised her for her unique plans, and each&#13;
offered his or her suggestions.  The ice man wanted to&#13;
install an "Easy-to-Tell" icebox; the "Burn-Rite Stove&#13;
Incorporation" seemed to have the ideal stove for her;&#13;
and a representative from a paint company wanted to demon-&#13;
strate his color schemes and show her why he thought rose&#13;
and cream would be restful to her eyes, and make working&#13;
a pleasure for her.&#13;
&#13;
Mother sent off for various circulars containing infor-&#13;
mation on the kitchen problem, and the house was continually&#13;
crowded from day to day with enthusiastic salesmen from&#13;
all parts of the country.&#13;
&#13;
Each night before Father could sit down and enjoy the&#13;
evening paper Mother would bring forth the numerous ad-&#13;
vertisements she had received during the day, and show&#13;
them to him trying to explain the details in a convincing&#13;
and very business-like manner.&#13;
&#13;
Once Elmer and I cut up quite a few circulars from&#13;
Mother's collection, in order to furnish our doll house;&#13;
when Mother found out about it, she said that maybe a&#13;
little bodily punishment might impress upon our minds&#13;
the value of those papers.&#13;
&#13;
Finally the salesmen began to fear that she was only&#13;
building air castles and their number gradually diminished.&#13;
&#13;
Father was satisfied to come into the house, throw his&#13;
coat in a corner, pump some cistern water (he didn't mind&#13;
the pitcher pump), and wash; but Mother, having had the&#13;
same arrangement for over twenty years, wanted a change.&#13;
&#13;
Then one evening when Father came home from work he&#13;
saw the remains of what used to be a chimney lying out&#13;
in the yard.&#13;
&#13;
Last summer he had worked and slaved in the heat&#13;
trying to get the lawn cleaned up, in order to have a&#13;
place for him to practice golf after office hours.&#13;
&#13;
Now what had he?  Bricks embedded in the mud, where&#13;
little sprouts of grass were starting; soot and ashes&#13;
in the cups which served as holes for his golf course;&#13;
and lumber piled chest high all over the lawn.  Mother&#13;
and the carpenters had started to modernize her kitchen.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 30 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Father wasn't much of a hand for swearing, but he made &#13;
this occasion an exception.  Why, of all the times to tear&#13;
out the kitchen, should she start in the dead of March?&#13;
Only that morning the weather bulletin had prophesied that&#13;
the cold wave which had been coming for the past week &#13;
would arrive before the next day.  The windows in the&#13;
kitchen were out, letting a lot of cold air in the house,&#13;
and this was very hard on Father's lumbago.&#13;
&#13;
Mother gave the usual excuses.  She wanted to get the&#13;
kitchen in shape before she started to clean house, and &#13;
she wanted to do it before the weather got too warm, for&#13;
she had heard that carpenters couldn't do their best when&#13;
the mercury in the thermometer was more than 100 degrees&#13;
Fahrenheit.&#13;
&#13;
I don't know how we lived through the terrible con-&#13;
fusion.  My brother, Elmer, and I didn't mind it so much&#13;
as the others, for we really enjoyed getting outdoors and&#13;
exercising.  We had fun throwing bricks at each other,&#13;
seeing who could hit the other first and make him cry.&#13;
Then we would place milk bottles from Johnson's Dairy on&#13;
a box, and see who could knock the most off with three&#13;
shots.  Elmer beat me, because he has had more practice&#13;
hurling bricks than I.  We stayed out of doors most of the&#13;
time after school and when darkness came we went into the&#13;
house dodging boards, for all of them either were painted&#13;
or had tools on them.  &#13;
&#13;
We had to eat on the ironing board in the living room,&#13;
wash dishes on the piano bench, and study anywhere we&#13;
could find room.&#13;
&#13;
I think I enjoyed most not having to wash before I&#13;
went to bed, because it seemed much more comfortable to&#13;
go to bed with plastering and paint on my fingers than&#13;
to have to go upstairs, shivering from washing in cold&#13;
water.  The reason I didn't have to wash was simply that&#13;
Mother didn't think I was capable of emptying the wash&#13;
pan of dirty water out of doors.&#13;
&#13;
Father couldn't stand it.  He went to the office un-&#13;
shaven, for the sink was removed and the plumber couldn't&#13;
fix it until Mother decided whether to have a wooden or&#13;
metal back and draining boards.&#13;
&#13;
Finally came the day when the carpenters packed up,&#13;
made out the bill, and left.&#13;
&#13;
Now Mother practically  lives in the kitchen.  She&#13;
brings her rocking chair out into it and sews and reads;&#13;
and frequently she can be found complimenting herself on&#13;
the perfect plans.  She seems to have forgotten the&#13;
week of construction.&#13;
&#13;
But Father hasn't.  Periodically we hear him audibly&#13;
worrying about when Mother will start remodeling again.&#13;
But as long as Mother rocks in the kitchen with that&#13;
pleased look on her face, we have hopes that ideas for&#13;
changing the room will not appear.&#13;
&#13;
Darlene Smith.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 31 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Another Score&#13;
&#13;
It was dark -- Oh, so dark and frightening.  A great&#13;
struggle was being waged by Life, pure and good, with&#13;
Death, that horrible Reaper that strikes with such violence.&#13;
&#13;
The child that lay in the wide old fashioned bed was a&#13;
mere human being to Death, but the kind people that&#13;
gathered in this room in the heat of the afternoon were&#13;
to witness the same struggle between the two rivals that&#13;
had happened many times before, and usually the Reaper&#13;
added another mark in his book of victories.&#13;
&#13;
Tommy was sick, desperately sick with typhoid fever.&#13;
Two days before he had been happy, playing in the creek&#13;
back of the farm.  Now he was nothing but a shadow lying&#13;
on the pillow in a darkened room with the smell of &#13;
various medicines in the heavy air.&#13;
&#13;
Tommie's mother hovered near, never leaving the sick&#13;
room.  Worry and lack of sleep made her pale and gaunt.&#13;
If her boy wanted anything she declared that she was the&#13;
one to furnish him with it, for she knew how seriously ill&#13;
Tom was.  Doctor Ward assured her that he had had worse&#13;
cases, but down deep somewhere she felt that the chance to&#13;
save him was small.&#13;
&#13;
"Mother, it's so dark," wailed the lad.  "I want to&#13;
see the light."&#13;
&#13;
A form emerged from the shadows and raised the window&#13;
blinds.  Summer sunshine poured into the room, making it&#13;
more cheerful and gay.  Here was life in its brightest&#13;
colors waiting to make Tommy better, but never-the-less&#13;
Death lurked and sneered in the dark corners where the&#13;
sunshine did not fall.&#13;
&#13;
On, on into the night the doctor, the parents, and&#13;
their boy fought to ward off the Specter.  Daylight was&#13;
gone leaving the room dark.  But life was there.  It was&#13;
holding its own in the struggle.&#13;
&#13;
Then the frail body weakened, grew weaker as the crisis&#13;
came on.  For two hours Tommy rallied.  He felt better.&#13;
Then he grew worse.  Worse than ever before.&#13;
&#13;
His heart grew weak, and he had a low muttering delirium.&#13;
He could hardly breathe.  He was suffering.  Doctor Ward&#13;
knew that the crisis was at hand and that so it would&#13;
pass.  He hoped for the best and expected the best.  Life&#13;
was there urging Tommy to hold on, while Death was stealing&#13;
out of the shadows, beating Life back and breathing "Now!"&#13;
&#13;
One could almost hear the "Book of the Dead" open and&#13;
the leaves rustle back to an empty space on a page in the &#13;
back, with a grotesque hand poised over the page ready to&#13;
write another victory.&#13;
&#13;
The awful moment, the dreaded moment was at hand.&#13;
Tommy half rose up in bed, a queer surprised frightened &#13;
look on his face.  With a moan he fell back and groped for&#13;
his mother's hand.  Finding and clasping it, he half&#13;
turned over and fell asleep.&#13;
&#13;
Death had won.&#13;
&#13;
Blanche Blain.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196740">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 32 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
Sketch of 3 people holding hands walking together&#13;
&#13;
ELEMENTARY DEPARTMENT</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196741">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page33 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
3 class photos of students seated on front steps of the school</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 34 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
FIRST GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Mary Louise Carr&#13;
Mary Janet Hughes&#13;
Virgie May Keys&#13;
Ronald Williamson&#13;
Bernis Smith&#13;
Marjorie Brookens&#13;
Karl Upchurch&#13;
Dorothy Bonham&#13;
Gene Ford&#13;
&#13;
Vivian Willis&#13;
Phillis Ott&#13;
Ruth Appleman&#13;
Jeanette Hall&#13;
Lowell Sheets&#13;
Louise Mauck&#13;
Dwight Humes&#13;
Clara Blamer&#13;
Edmund Weiser&#13;
&#13;
Esther Hirth&#13;
Ted Fisher&#13;
Katherine Wells&#13;
Glenn Berkosky&#13;
Juinti Hubbard&#13;
Raymond Wirick&#13;
Bobby Wells&#13;
Donald Sherburne&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
SECOND GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Marry Appleman&#13;
Kenneth Clevenger&#13;
Georgia Murray&#13;
Norma Ribov&#13;
Wayne Stegner&#13;
Junior Cackler&#13;
Anna Veley&#13;
Ruby Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
Anna Oller&#13;
Arleen Kelly&#13;
Esther Hatten&#13;
Charles Carr&#13;
Herby Trout&#13;
Elizabeth Helman&#13;
Donald Curtis&#13;
Darwin Sherbourne&#13;
&#13;
Jimmy Blain&#13;
Jessie Gibbs&#13;
Joan Schwartz&#13;
Martha Shannon&#13;
Freddie Baker&#13;
Billy Mauck&#13;
Alfred Wells&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
THIRD GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Willard Blair&#13;
Charles Cackler&#13;
Jackie Grau&#13;
Paul Jones&#13;
Walter McNamee&#13;
Yvonne Rider&#13;
Wallace Wilcox&#13;
Earl Wells&#13;
&#13;
Willie Blair&#13;
Donald Dewey&#13;
Harry Hubbard&#13;
Stanley Jones&#13;
Dorothy Pittman&#13;
Jackie Shively&#13;
Joe Willis&#13;
Jessie Wells&#13;
&#13;
Barbara Berkosky&#13;
Liddie Fox&#13;
Durward Humes&#13;
Leonard Keys&#13;
Barbara Murray&#13;
Bertie Schwartz&#13;
Mary Helen Wirick&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FOURTH GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Marjorie Stegner&#13;
Herbie Rodgers&#13;
Twila Wigton&#13;
Pricye Akison&#13;
Eileen Wigton&#13;
Maurice Shannon&#13;
Mary Keys&#13;
Elwin Bonham&#13;
&#13;
Buster Trout&#13;
Patsy Jervis Dale Wells&#13;
Louise Freeman&#13;
Betty Lee Moore&#13;
Jean Terry&#13;
Albert Veley&#13;
Irene Blanton&#13;
&#13;
Betty Lou Hughes&#13;
Marion Wenger&#13;
Marilyn Schwartz&#13;
Harry Glevenger&#13;
Gladys Wheeler&#13;
Jane Appleman&#13;
Betty Ott&#13;
Charles Sherbourne&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196743">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 35 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
FIFTH GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Eleanor Brookens&#13;
Marion Coyner&#13;
Lena Jones&#13;
Harold Miller&#13;
Maxine Salmon&#13;
Beulah Trout&#13;
Dennis Bonham&#13;
&#13;
James Cackler&#13;
James Dewey&#13;
Geraldine Keesey&#13;
Everett Osborn&#13;
Charles Sheets&#13;
Grace Vining&#13;
Mary Hubbard&#13;
&#13;
Kathleen Blanton&#13;
Betty Helman&#13;
Ellen Kunze&#13;
Esther Pittman&#13;
Mary Schwartz&#13;
William Bowsher&#13;
Gail Cook&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
SIXTH GRADE&#13;
&#13;
Marshall Akison&#13;
Beulah Breece&#13;
Don Ferko&#13;
Betty Humes&#13;
Paul Milligan&#13;
Dorothy Sherbourne&#13;
&#13;
Carl Baker&#13;
Elizabeth Caudill&#13;
Junior Ferko&#13;
David Kelly&#13;
Dick Ribov&#13;
&#13;
Raymond Beacom&#13;
Betty Curtis&#13;
Marie Gibbs&#13;
Jim Kern&#13;
Leland Wells&#13;
Bill Weaver</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="196744">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 36 of The Brown Thrasher 1937&#13;
&#13;
THE HESELTINE COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY MERCHANDISE SINCE 1888&#13;
&#13;
-DRY GOODS&#13;
-NOTIONS&#13;
-CURTAINS &amp; DRAPERIES&#13;
-HOSIERY &amp; UNDERWEAR&#13;
-READY TO WEAR&#13;
-CORSETS&#13;
-LINGERIE&#13;
-GLOVES&#13;
-LINENS&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
THE SUPERIOR QUALITY OF JOHN&#13;
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COFFEE SHOP&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE -- OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITATED&#13;
&#13;
THE INDEPENDENT&#13;
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&#13;
"PROMPT PRINTERS FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE"&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE -- OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Thurston:  "It is the law of gravity that keeps us on this earth."&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
LUMBER -- MILLWORK&#13;
&#13;
MARIETTA PAINTS&#13;
MULE-HIDE ROOFING&#13;
KEYSTONE FENCE&#13;
CASE FARM MACHINERY&#13;
&#13;
THE DELAWARE LUMBER CO.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 2269&#13;
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COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
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&#13;
DUNLAPS&#13;
DELAWARE - 2672  &#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY - 1720&#13;
&#13;
CALL GEORGE FOR SERVICE&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FOSTERS&#13;
FOR&#13;
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&#13;
36 E. WINTER STREET&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
ANGUS BEAUTY SHOP&#13;
WE SPECIALIZE IN PERMANENT &#13;
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&#13;
PHONE 5180&#13;
10 S. SANDUSKY ST&#13;
DELAWARE  OH&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Evalyn Wigton:  "Don't you find bookkeeping tiresome?"&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
WEAR-EVER ALUMINUM&#13;
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COURTESY&#13;
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BUY SHELL GAS AND OIL &#13;
AT&#13;
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LAWTON McCURDY&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
WHEN IN NEED OF:&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
QUALITY GROCERY &amp; MEATS&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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BUYERS OF&#13;
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CREAM&#13;
EGGS&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 0510&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FOR BLOOD-TESTED CHICKS AND CHICKS THAT LAY&#13;
&#13;
SEE&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
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ASHLEY  OHIO&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 6510&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
--DUNCAN HOME CLOTHIER&#13;
&#13;
CLOTHING&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
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CAMPBELL PRODUCE &amp; RED &amp; WHITE STORE&#13;
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&#13;
PHONE 0820&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
WHEN IN DELAWARE EAT WITH&#13;
&#13;
MRS. FRED FLEMING&#13;
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&#13;
DELAWARE -- OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
VARIETY STORE&#13;
&#13;
M. C. HEINLEN&#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY  OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
C.C. ROBINSON IMPLEMENT CO.&#13;
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&#13;
FEEDS AND PAINTS&#13;
G.M.C. TRUCKS&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 7168&#13;
36 N. UNION ST. - DELAWARE, O&#13;
&#13;
ALLIS-CHALMERS&#13;
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&#13;
MILWAUKEE U.S.A.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BLACKBURNS MENS-WEAR&#13;
DRY-CLEANING&#13;
&#13;
66 N. SANDUSKY&#13;
PHONE 7421&#13;
DELAWARE&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
FENTON'S&#13;
&#13;
SANITONE DRY CLEANING &#13;
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31 W. WINTER ST.&#13;
PHONE 2660&#13;
&#13;
CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
LLOYD RADIO SERVICE&#13;
FAIRBANKS-MORSE RADIOS &#13;
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&#13;
EXPERT RADIO SERVICE&#13;
14 E. WINTER ST.&#13;
&#13;
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STOP!  LOOK!  SAVE!&#13;
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QUALITY - SERVICE - SATISFACTION&#13;
RADIOS ..... WASHERS&#13;
&#13;
HHOME KILLED MEATS&#13;
&#13;
LIBBY'S SUGAR LOAF&#13;
&#13;
STOKELY'S AND DEL MONTE CANNED GOODS&#13;
&#13;
C. D. BRATCHER AND SONS&#13;
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ASHLEY, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
CHICKS&#13;
UNITED STATES APPROVED&#13;
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LIVINGSTON'S TRUE BLUE&#13;
&#13;
FEEDS FOR SALE AT&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE CHICKERIES&#13;
29 E. WINTER ST.&#13;
&#13;
OPP. STRAND THEATRE&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Thurston, after having set up an experiment:  If anything&#13;
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Step up closer, Walter.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
G.H. WAKEMAN&#13;
J.F. ROBINSON&#13;
&#13;
4 WEST WINTER ST.&#13;
PHONE 2224&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE  OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MARICAD BEAUTY SHOP&#13;
&#13;
14 W. WINTER ST.  PHONE 6158&#13;
&#13;
CUTTING &amp; WAVING HAIR&#13;
&#13;
MACHINELESS PERMANENT WAVES&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
N. SANDUSKY ST.  PHONE 4149&#13;
&#13;
SOWERS DRY CLEANING WORKS&#13;
&#13;
WE CALL AND DELIVER&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE OHIO&#13;
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WM. P. SAVAGE&#13;
OPTOMETRIST - OPTICIAN -&#13;
EYES EXAMINED  -  GLASSES FITTED&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 7720&#13;
&#13;
112 E. HIGH ST.  ASHLEY OHIO&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
RANDOLPH GARAGE&#13;
PHONE 8120&#13;
&#13;
AUTO REPAIRING  -  ACETYLENE WELDING&#13;
BATTERY CHARGING - BRESTOLITE BATTERY&#13;
&#13;
ZENITH &amp; ARVIN HOME AND CAR RADIOS&#13;
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FAN BELTS AND BRAKE LINING&#13;
COMPLETE MOTOR TESTING EQUIPMENT&#13;
WE REPAIR ALL MAKES OF - CARS - TRUCKS - TRACTORS&#13;
34 W. HIGH STREET  ASHLEY, OHIO</text>
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GEORGE W. ABERNATHY&#13;
&#13;
ARCHITECT&#13;
&#13;
211 NORTH CASINGHAM ROAD&#13;
&#13;
COLUMBUS, OHIO</text>
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&#13;
FOR BEST OF WIRING REFER TO&#13;
&#13;
HOLLIS ELECTRIC COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
COLUMBUS, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
WIRING NEW ADDITION TO &#13;
BROWN HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
ASHLEY&#13;
&#13;
KENNETH MORELAND, MANAGER&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
BUY POWER ON TIPTOE&#13;
THE&#13;
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FRED A. LIGGETT&#13;
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GIFTS THAT LAST FOR GRADUATION&#13;
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&#13;
Wristwatches - Diamonds&#13;
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&#13;
REPAIRING A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
W. S. ROSECRANS JEWELRY&#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
HAROLD W. DAVIS, M. D.&#13;
&#13;
TELEPHONE NO 2520&#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Wilma Nixon:  Billy will you be quiet for a bit?&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
COAL&#13;
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&#13;
RED TOP FENCE&#13;
&#13;
THE&#13;
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 &#13;
ASHLEY - OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
KLEINS DEPT. STORE&#13;
&#13;
THE STORE FOR ALL THE PEOPLE&#13;
&#13;
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AMERICA'S FINEST LOW PRICED CAR&#13;
&#13;
PONTIAC&#13;
6-8&#13;
&#13;
SUNBURY MOTORS CO.&#13;
&#13;
SUNBURY OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
RICHARDSON GROCERY&#13;
&#13;
TELEPHONE 1910&#13;
KILBOURNE OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
WE HAVE ALL KINDS OF&#13;
&#13;
BUILDING MATERIALS&#13;
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&#13;
PLASTER - WALL BOARD&#13;
&#13;
CEMENT&#13;
&#13;
PITTSBURG'S FAMOUS SUN-PROOF PAINTS&#13;
&#13;
VARNISH - ENAMELS&#13;
&#13;
JACKSON LUMBRE AND COAL CO.&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 7010  ASHLEY, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
AS A PART OF YOUR EDUCATION&#13;
&#13;
READ GOOD BOOKS&#13;
&#13;
WE HAVE THE BEST ONES&#13;
&#13;
THE ALLEN HOTEL&#13;
&#13;
RENTAL LIBRARY</text>
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BEST WISHES FOR YOUR SUCCESS&#13;
&#13;
WESTBROOK'S HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
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PETE HINKLE IN CHARGE&#13;
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DELAWARE, OHIO&#13;
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JOHNSON'S GARAGE&#13;
&#13;
CHEVROLET SERVICE&#13;
EXIDE BATTERIES&#13;
&#13;
24 HOUR&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE&#13;
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&#13;
HEAVY-DUTY WRECKER SERVICE&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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WHERE BETTER FLORAL  &#13;
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&#13;
CYRUS B. BREECE&#13;
 FLORIST&#13;
&#13;
POTTED PLANTS&#13;
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&#13;
PHONE 7466  --  117 LAKE ST.&#13;
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DELAWARE  OHIO&#13;
&#13;
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SHOP&#13;
&#13;
5 W. WILLIAM ST.  DELAWARE O.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
"WE SERVE TO SERVE AGAIN"&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
NEW AND USED CARS&#13;
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&#13;
C. W. BIGGS GARAGE&#13;
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&#13;
ASHLEY OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
BAUDER PRODUCE&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
EGGS -- CREAM&#13;
&#13;
PHONE&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE - 7129&#13;
&#13;
WORTHINGTON - 347712&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MAICAD GIFT SHOP - MILLINERY -- HOSIERY&#13;
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PEOPLE'S BUILDING AND LOAN COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE -- OHIO&#13;
&#13;
START TO PRACTICE&#13;
AT ONCE&#13;
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&#13;
SAVE&#13;
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THE DELAWARE FARMERS &#13;
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COAL&#13;
SHERWIN WILLIAMS PAINTS&#13;
HARDWARE&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
DELAWARE -- LEWIS CENTER -- RADNOR&#13;
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CUSTOM &#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
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&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
AT&#13;
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&#13;
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CLAUDE R. LEE&#13;
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ASHLEY - OHIO&#13;
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The Gray Printing Co.&#13;
Fostoria Ohio&#13;
&#13;
We've Enjoyed It - &#13;
&#13;
Craftsmen in the Art of Printing since 1888&#13;
&#13;
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&#13;
Pictures in this book were reproduced&#13;
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&#13;
THE GRAY PRINTING COMPANY - FOSTORIA, OHIO</text>
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&#13;
PHILLIPSBURG 55F12  -- PHONES -- DAYTON FUO46&#13;
&#13;
R. F. HOCKER&#13;
&#13;
PLASTERING CONTRACTOR&#13;
&#13;
PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL PLASTERING&#13;
&#13;
231 NORTH MAIN ST.  DAYTON, OHIO&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Thurston:  It is the law of gravity that keeps us on on this earth.&#13;
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&#13;
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MARION WESTBROOK&#13;
&#13;
PERCHERON HORSES&#13;
&#13;
GENERAL TRUCKING&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
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&#13;
ASHLEY -- OHIO&#13;
PHONE -- 4640&#13;
&#13;
STELLA HALL OPR.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Wilma Nixon:  Billy, will you be quiet for a bit?&#13;
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Class Yearbooks</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="2592">
                  <text>This collection contains high school yearbooks from Bellpoint, Delaware, Galena, Harlem and Sunbury, OH.  At this time, yearbook dates range from 1915-1973, although not every year in that range is represented. The elementary, middle and high school year books  from the Big Walnut Schools that we have in our collection are also included here.</text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="195676">
                <text>The Brown Thrasher 1937</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>1937</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196632">
                <text>The Gray Printing Company; Fostoria , Ohio</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196633">
                <text>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Yearbook</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196636">
                <text>Still image&#13;
Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196637">
                <text>031820251</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196638">
                <text>Local History--Brown Township--Delaware County--1937&#13;
Public Schools--Brown Township--Delaware County--Ohio&#13;
Yearbooks--Brown Township Schools--Delaware County--Ohio</text>
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            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196639">
                <text>The 1937 Brown Thrasher Yearbook includes photos of faculty, seniors, juniors, sophomores, freshmen, 8th and 7th graders, student activities such as sports, music, theater, essays on class histories, and an advertising section that includes an occasional joke. </text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="196640">
                <text>Students and faculty of the Brown Township 1937 graduating class</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (1)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195524">
                    <text>Corresponds to the cover of The Brown Thresher 1935</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (2)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
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                    <text>Corresponds to inside front cover of The Brown Thresher 1935</text>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (3)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195526">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 1 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
1935&#13;
&#13;
Robert Stenger&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (4)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195527">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 2 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Staff of the Brown Thresher&#13;
&#13;
Editor-in-chief - Gladys Osborn&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Editor - Grace Salmon&#13;
&#13;
Business Manager - Ann Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Assistant Manager - William Baird&#13;
&#13;
Picture Editor - Clarine Chambers&#13;
&#13;
Sports Editor - Dale Marks&#13;
&#13;
Joke Editor - Edward Frye&#13;
&#13;
Literary Editor - Evelyn Jervis&#13;
&#13;
Social Editor - Juliabelle Nixon&#13;
&#13;
Dramatics - Clytus Zimmerman&#13;
&#13;
Club Editor - Edwin Sheets&#13;
&#13;
Class Editor - Charlotte Link&#13;
&#13;
Scholastic Editor - Clayton Wigton&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Typist - Charlotte Link&#13;
&#13;
Supervisors - Miss Ruth Rittenaur, Miss Dorothy Whitted</text>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (5)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195528">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 3 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
FACULTY&#13;
&#13;
Geo. Thurston - Nicholas Whitted - Albert Hirth&#13;
&#13;
Edna J. Collicott - Dorothy Whitted - Faye Finley&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
SENIORS&#13;
&#13;
Charlotte Link "Link"&#13;
President (4)&#13;
Book Club, Pres. (3)&#13;
Student Council (1)&#13;
Basketball (2)&#13;
Baseball (2) (3) (4)&#13;
Silver Note Club (2)&#13;
Glee Club (1) (2)&#13;
A Cappella Choir (1)&#13;
&#13;
"Have a good time now; someday you'll be just another &#13;
missing link".</text>
                  </elementText>
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                <name>Title</name>
                <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195257">
                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (6)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195529">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 4 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Osborn "Go"&#13;
Silver Note Club (2)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
Glee Club (1)&#13;
State Music Chorus (3)&#13;
Vice President (3) (4)&#13;
Secretary (2)&#13;
Book Club (3)&#13;
&#13;
"To make friends - be one."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Evelyn Jervis "Jervis"&#13;
Basketball (2)&#13;
Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4)&#13;
Glee Club (1)&#13;
State Music Chorus (3)&#13;
Silver Note Club (2)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
Bookclub (3)&#13;
Student Council (3)&#13;
Secretary (4)&#13;
Librarian (3) (4)&#13;
"A little learning is a danger-&#13;
ous thing"&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Grace Salmon "Gracie"&#13;
Basketball (2)&#13;
Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4)&#13;
Cheerleader (4)&#13;
Student Council, Sec'y. (3)&#13;
Treasurer (4)&#13;
Vice President (2)&#13;
Orchestra (1)&#13;
Silver Note Club (1)&#13;
Book Club, Sec'y. (3)&#13;
&#13;
"Nothing turns up in this world&#13;
unless someone turns it up."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Edward Frye "Ed"&#13;
Basketball (4)&#13;
Baseball (3) (4)&#13;
President (2)&#13;
Treasurer (3)&#13;
Boy Scouts (2) (3)&#13;
&#13;
"Independent ever - neutral&#13;
never"</text>
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                <name>Title</name>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (7)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195530">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 5 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Anne Nelson "Anne"&#13;
Basketball (1) (2)&#13;
Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4)&#13;
Secretary (3)&#13;
Treasurer (2)&#13;
Librarian (3) (4)&#13;
Student Council (2) (3)&#13;
Book Club (3)&#13;
&#13;
"Green but still growing."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Bill Baird "Bill"&#13;
Basketball (1) (3) (3) (4, Capt)&#13;
Student Council (1)&#13;
Baseball (1) (2) (3) (4)&#13;
President (3)&#13;
Treasurer (2)&#13;
Track (2) (3) (4)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
Boy Scouts (1) (2) (3)&#13;
&#13;
"Hit-don't fan."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Juliabelle Nixon "Nic"&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
State Chorus (3)&#13;
Book Club (3)&#13;
&#13;
"Before us lies the timber.&#13;
let us build."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Clayton Wigton "Sears"&#13;
Glee Club (1) (2)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
&#13;
"Slow and steady wins the race".</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (8)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195662">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 6 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Clarien Chambers "Sally"&#13;
Silver Note Club (2)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3)  (4)&#13;
Glee Club (1) (2)&#13;
Librarian (2)&#13;
Student Council (1) (4)&#13;
Book Club (3)&#13;
&#13;
"There are no benches on the road to success."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Clytus Zimmerman "Zin"&#13;
Glee Club (2) (3)&#13;
Baseball (2) (3) (4)&#13;
&#13;
"Work or get out."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Dale Marks "Marks"&#13;
Basketball (3) (4)&#13;
Baseball (3) (4)&#13;
A Capella Choir (3) (4)&#13;
Orchestra (3)&#13;
Student Council (4)&#13;
Track (3) (4)&#13;
&#13;
"I ought to - therefore - I will."&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Edwin Sheets "ED"&#13;
Boy Scouts (1)  (2)  (3)  (4)&#13;
&#13;
"Too big to be little."</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (9)</text>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195663">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 7 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Senior Class History&#13;
&#13;
When the members of the senior class started to school,&#13;
they were a bunch of rowdy youngsters who were hard to control&#13;
because they wanted to learn new things fast.  They remained&#13;
so through the first six years at the end of which they enter-&#13;
ed the Junior High School and had more teachers to watch them.&#13;
&#13;
At the beginning of the seventh grade in the year 1929,&#13;
seven new pupils were transferred from the Kingston district. &#13;
They were Clarine Chambers, Frederick and Lucille Johnson,&#13;
Charlotte Link, Edith Root, and Ester Tharpe, and Clayton&#13;
Wigton.  Juliabelle Nixon was also made a member of this class&#13;
from Hyatts.  Of these pupils, Esther Tharpe, Frederick and&#13;
Lucille Johnson Left our ranks during the same year.&#13;
&#13;
Louise and Robert Rathbourne, and Edith Root left us at&#13;
the end of the eighth grade when we were preparing to begin&#13;
our journey through high school.  It was very pleasing to be&#13;
planning for the new responsibilities which we knew would&#13;
soon be ours.&#13;
&#13;
During much enjoyment in our Freshman classes, three more&#13;
of our already small number left us - Eileen Haney, William &#13;
Murray, and Arthur Smith.  At the beginning of our second mile&#13;
on our voyage through high school we had three new members, -&#13;
Marie Chambers, Edward Frye, and Clytus Zimmerman to take the&#13;
places of those who had left.&#13;
&#13;
Dale Marks was with us at the beginning of our third &#13;
mile to help us along and see that we did not get stuck.  However,&#13;
we lost two of our old members during this year - Mary Cackler&#13;
and Marie Chambers.&#13;
&#13;
While we have been traveling through our fourth mile of&#13;
our all too short journey, we have learned to do our best in every-&#13;
thing and to get all we can from our school life and we only&#13;
wish we could remain longer.  We have enjoyed this last year to&#13;
its full extent.&#13;
&#13;
Since all of the seniors came back safely from their&#13;
sociology trip to Columbus, I think a word about it should be&#13;
added to the history of our class.  Miss Uncapher, our student&#13;
teacher and Mr. Nicholas, our supervisor of sociology, succeeded&#13;
in discouraging the keepers of different institutions when they&#13;
thought that some of the class should remain with them.  The&#13;
class visited the following institutions:  The Work House, The&#13;
Feeble Minded Institution, State Building, The Deaf and Dumb&#13;
Asylum, and Godman's Guild.&#13;
&#13;
Oh, and about Commencement and Baccalaureate.  That's&#13;
the time when all the senior girls are dressed in white and the &#13;
boys in their new suits and when everyone tries to make you&#13;
feel badly because you are leaving "dear old Brown High".  Well,&#13;
we will try to hold back our tears while Mr. Longbrake is&#13;
giving us our farewell advise this year.&#13;
&#13;
C. M. C.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (10)</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 8 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
SENIOR CLASS WILL&#13;
&#13;
We, the seniors of Brown High School, Delaware, County,&#13;
state of Ohio in the United States of America, being of&#13;
sound mind and memory do make and ordain this, our last will&#13;
and testament bequeathing our most valuable possessions in&#13;
the manner following:&#13;
&#13;
First:  We, the seniors, do hereby bequeath our ability&#13;
to give chapels to the junior class.&#13;
&#13;
Second:  We, the seniors, do bequeath to the Sophomores&#13;
our originality and quick wit.&#13;
&#13;
Third:  We, the seniors, do bequeath our worldly&#13;
knowledge and dignity to the freshmen.&#13;
&#13;
Fourth:  We, the seniors, give personal contributions&#13;
to the following people:&#13;
&#13;
Edward Frye bequeaths his fancy haircuts to Harold &#13;
Pittman.&#13;
Bill Baird leaves his skill in basketball, as well as&#13;
other sports, to Roland Gettis.&#13;
Dale Marks gives his consent for Glen T. to write&#13;
love letters.&#13;
Evelyn Jervis gives her ability to drive card to Don&#13;
Wright.&#13;
Clarine gives her love for Plymouths and Guy Lombardo&#13;
to Annabelle Zerbe.&#13;
Edwin Sheets gives his excellent cheering voice to&#13;
Roland Gettis.&#13;
Juliabelle Nixon gives her auburn hair to Olive Jordon.&#13;
Anne Nelson does hereby will and bequeath her heighth &#13;
to Jim Williamson.&#13;
Clytus, in the presence of all the senior class, does&#13;
hereby will his ability to smoke cigars to Boydson Baird.&#13;
Gladys wills her love for the boys to Ruthella Sheets.&#13;
Grace Salmon bequeaths her surplus energy to Grace Blain.&#13;
Charlotte Link wills her masculine airs and short hair&#13;
to Marjorie Waldron.&#13;
Clayton Wigton, with full presence of mind, does here-&#13;
by will his ability to tell stories to Principal Albert S.&#13;
Hirth, and Mr. Superintendent George N. Thurston.&#13;
&#13;
Sealed, signed, and declared our last will and tst-&#13;
ament:  &#13;
Pres. Charlotte Link&#13;
Sec Evelyn Jervis</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 9 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
CLASS PROPHECY&#13;
&#13;
No, I'm not meeting these people while walking down&#13;
the street in 1945, but from the actions of all seniors it is&#13;
very easy to imagine what they year will present as far as&#13;
our class is concerned.&#13;
&#13;
Picture a small town, such as the New York of to-&#13;
day, in your mind and learn the names of the street so you&#13;
can be able to follow the cops directions in order to locate&#13;
the members of the senior class of 1935.  Clytus Zimmerman&#13;
has always wanted to be a "big boss" so that he might be able&#13;
to issue orders.  Well, here he is playing traffic cop on the&#13;
street corner and can be tell the people what to do after he&#13;
blows that whistle with a mighty blast?&#13;
&#13;
If, by chance, we should happen to ask Clytus if the&#13;
president of our class, Charlotte Link, had been seen since&#13;
her failure to keep up her grades at Ohio State, he would prob-&#13;
ably tell us that she is still about town.  He will say that&#13;
she is president of a dog and cat hospital down on Bump Avenue&#13;
but is still trying to become a vetrinary while practicing&#13;
landscape architecture as a hobby.&#13;
&#13;
When picking up a paper dated May 21, 1935, the head-&#13;
lines will read "Farmer Goes Bankrupt.  Held in Prison for&#13;
Forgery."  After reading the rest of the article, we learn that&#13;
Dale Marks tried to be a successful farmer, but letter writing&#13;
absorbed to much of his time that he had to begin writing bonus&#13;
checks instead in order to pay his bills.&#13;
&#13;
After leaving Bump Avenue, we can walk a mile or so - &#13;
just for exercis.  All at once, a chorus of screams will greet&#13;
us.  If we are not too frightened, we will find that it is&#13;
only twenty or twenty-five women getting permanent waves at "Ye&#13;
Osborn Shoppe".  Gladys, as a beauty culturist, will go into&#13;
the business in a big way.  With fifty girls on the payroll, they&#13;
are able to give a wav a second.  After talking with the prop-&#13;
rietor we learn that for the first five years after graduation&#13;
from Brown, Gladys taught music in a public school in Mexico,&#13;
but she became very angry at one child and shook her so hard&#13;
that she lost her voice.  The music teacher was promptly fired&#13;
without being given time to resign.&#13;
&#13;
Over in the south end, we find a large sanitarium and&#13;
hospital with Anne Nelson as the head nurse, but no one will&#13;
ever be able to convince me that she will not leave a pair of&#13;
scissors, two yards of tape, a light bulb, and a hot water&#13;
bottle inside the first person operated upon while under her&#13;
supervision.&#13;
&#13;
Now let's imagine that we're going to "hop" over to&#13;
another city about one hundred miles away.  Airplanes in 1945&#13;
will be as common as the automobiles are today, so the air port&#13;
will be the first place to go.  I just know that Bill Baird&#13;
will be an aviator so naturally he should be the one to pilot&#13;
us to our destination.  During a little conversation between the&#13;
pilot and ourselves, we learn that Bill had been engineering a&#13;
project similar to the Boulder Dam only on a larger scale.  He&#13;
is planning to become a naval officer next but watch out Bill,&#13;
there are no girls on the ocean.  During the ten years, the&#13;
Brown star has been in the big league games of basketball, base-&#13;
ball and has even tried golf.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 10 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Prophecy (continued)&#13;
&#13;
If we are able to arrive at our destination with out&#13;
a smash-up - the scycraper becomes the important attraction.&#13;
Lo and behold, in the very top story we find Julia Nixon has&#13;
finally become a stenographer although she is a little dizzy&#13;
from looking out of the window so much.  She tried being a&#13;
colored maid in someon's home shortly after leaving Brown, but&#13;
the paint washed off in the dishwater and Julia lost her posi-&#13;
tion.  This shy little girl has always liked poetry so she writes&#13;
a few poems. at luch hour.&#13;
&#13;
In a little church by the way-side we see Clayton&#13;
Wigton has become a preacher instead of a butler - much to the&#13;
surprise of everyone,  He calmly gives his simple version of&#13;
the Bible and inspires many of the youngsters to become bank&#13;
robbers.&#13;
&#13;
We can easily picture Clarine Chambers hurrying down&#13;
the street in order to obtain an order from a big business firm&#13;
for Clarine is sure to become a saleswoman.  After office hours&#13;
of course we will find her doing social work; all for the good&#13;
of the community.&#13;
&#13;
In the outskirts of a near-by town, a small farm&#13;
owned by Edwin Sheets will make an attractive home for some&#13;
lucky girl.  Edwin works hard all day and at night goes to the&#13;
little grocery store to talk over the news of the world with&#13;
the other town authorities.&#13;
&#13;
After ten years, Evelyn Jervis will have a lot to&#13;
tell.  When we find in a small theater billboard on Broadway,&#13;
that she will be a blues singer.  She says that after leaving&#13;
home, the first place to capture her talents was a circus.&#13;
With this circus, Evelyn was a ballet dancer, chorus girl, and&#13;
for a short time after the death of one member of the troup,&#13;
she even took the part of the bearded lady.&#13;
&#13;
After many weary hours, a person naturally seeks a&#13;
hotel.  There we will discover that Ed Frye is the proprietor.&#13;
He seems to have quite a record for a short ten years.  After&#13;
calling it a failure as a professor in French, Edward becomes&#13;
a doctor but due to the many deaths caused by his practice he&#13;
decides to become an undertaker.  This business failed too be-&#13;
cause people stopped dying after he gave up being a doctor.&#13;
His big ambition was to become a naval officer but Bill Baird&#13;
cheated him there so Ed decided to own a hotel in order to&#13;
always have a place to sleep.&#13;
&#13;
Later in the evening, we are able to have a few&#13;
minutes rest and shall stop at the theater.  As the curtain&#13;
rises, the band strikes up an overture.  There, to our dismay,&#13;
we see Grace Salmon leading the orchestra.  Several funny look-&#13;
ing instruments prove to be inventions of her own and what&#13;
squacks they can produce!  It seems that Grace studied musical&#13;
instruments in the Physics class at Brown; thus receiving&#13;
knowledge of horns and different scales that might be made&#13;
possible in the future.&#13;
&#13;
After this experience we are very glad to return&#13;
to our hotel for some much needed rest but horror of horrors,&#13;
we are still unable to sleep for Edward, thinking it would be&#13;
cheaper, has stuffed the feather beds with paper instead of &#13;
feathers.&#13;
&#13;
It may seem odd hat there is no member of our &#13;
class married, but remember that there were thirteen and that's&#13;
very unlucky.  But who knows, someone may be fortunate enough&#13;
to marry a millionaire.  It's a funny old world, you know.&#13;
&#13;
G. L. S.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (13)</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195667">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 11 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Junior Class History&#13;
&#13;
The year of 1924 was a very important one in history.  It&#13;
was then that twenty or more active boys and girls started to&#13;
Brown School with books and pencils ro learn their A? B? C'S.&#13;
&#13;
It was in the second grade that Brooks Cowgill and&#13;
Ruthella Sheets were made to take their places in the back of&#13;
the room at a little table because they could not be quiet.&#13;
&#13;
Since our class isn't very ambitious in the way of study-&#13;
ing, we had to stay in at noon several times and study our lessons.&#13;
&#13;
In the year 1929 we welcomed several new pupils from&#13;
Kingston.  It may be difficult to believe, but it is the truth,&#13;
Dema Potter and your historian had to stand in the corner for&#13;
misbehavior.&#13;
&#13;
Mischievous though we were, all of us were promoted to the&#13;
ninth grade to enter upon our high school career.  As our class&#13;
has now entered high school we will participate in many activities.&#13;
&#13;
We are now juniors and feel very dignified as upperclass-&#13;
men.  We are very well represented in student activities.  Dema&#13;
Potter, Beulah Wigton, Shirley Schilliger, Harriet Shannon,&#13;
Joan Fraker, and Leila Smith were on the baseball team this year.&#13;
&#13;
James Williamson, Harold Pittman, David Fox, Glen Sheets,&#13;
and Brooks Cowgill were on the basketball team and several of&#13;
our boys represented the juniors on the boy's baseball team.&#13;
&#13;
Leila Smith</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195668">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 12 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Sophomore Class History&#13;
&#13;
In 1925 a group of small children, eager to learn&#13;
entered Brown School in the first grade with Miss Ramey as teacher.&#13;
ney was inclined to much mischief, but most everyone passed&#13;
to the second grade.&#13;
&#13;
Passing into the third grade we had Miss Waldron &#13;
for a teacher who gave many pencils for learning the multi-&#13;
pication tables.  With Miss Waldron still our teacher in the&#13;
fourth grade prized were received for stamps in geography.&#13;
&#13;
Miss Leonard was our teacher in the fifth and&#13;
sixth grades.  This year many new students from Kingston&#13;
entered our school and several received certificates in the&#13;
spelling and writing contests.  Several were incline to&#13;
whisper during classes and had to stay in at recess.&#13;
&#13;
When we entered high school in the seventh grade&#13;
we had a different teacher for each subject.  The faculty&#13;
members are Mr. Hirth, Mr. Thurston, Miss Collicott, Miss&#13;
McKeown, Miss Toepher, Mr. Smith, and Miss Finley.  During&#13;
this year several parties were given.  These same teachers&#13;
were present when we passed into the eighth grade.  During&#13;
this year we became so much wiser than they promoted us to&#13;
the junior high school.&#13;
&#13;
In the freshman class Mr. Smith was replaced by &#13;
Mr. Nicholas, Miss Whitted replaced Miss McKeown and&#13;
Miss Ferguson replaced Miss Toepher.  We were duly&#13;
initiated by the sophomores but although we were frightened&#13;
we succeeded in having a very enjoyable time.&#13;
&#13;
The sophomore year was an interesting one for all.&#13;
We initiated the freshmen, entered into all school activities&#13;
and were well represented on the basketball teams.&#13;
&#13;
Opal Basiger</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (15)</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195669">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 13 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Freshman Class History&#13;
&#13;
Five frightened and bashful little boys and girls of the &#13;
present ninth grade class enrolled in the first grade at Brown&#13;
in September, 1926.&#13;
&#13;
There were many other pupils who had come to our school&#13;
during the following nine years and also many who had left.&#13;
&#13;
When school closed in May, 1932, six school children had&#13;
successfully passed their elementary grades at Brown High School,&#13;
under the supervision of Virginia Ramey, Myrtle Waldron, Georgia&#13;
Waldron, Georgia Leonard, and Rose Masur.  These members with&#13;
others who had entered at previous times began their junior&#13;
high school career the following September.&#13;
&#13;
At the eighth grade commencement in May, the students&#13;
received eighth grade certificates and eight of our members re-&#13;
ceived certificates for being in the upper twenty-five percent&#13;
in the state examination given to this grade.&#13;
&#13;
At the present time there are twenty-two scholars in the&#13;
freshman class and we hope that they will all be successful in&#13;
completing their high school education.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195670">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page14 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Eighth Grade Class History&#13;
&#13;
Chapter I.  The year of 1927 saw another bright class of&#13;
tiny tots entering the first grade of Brown High School.  Miss&#13;
Ramey was their teacher and during that year of adventures&#13;
some of the pupils had to learn how to sit in their seats&#13;
along with their A, B, C's.  Most of the class of the future&#13;
'39 entered the second grade in 1928.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter II.  Miss Ramey again taught this class of mis-&#13;
chievous children who must have been very provoking to her &#13;
at times.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter III.  When We were in the third grade, we were&#13;
taught by a different teacher, Miss Waldron, and we also&#13;
entered a new room.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter IV.  The year 1930 saw a class that is doomed&#13;
to make history in grade four under Miss Koppert.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter V.  We were instructed in our fifth grade&#13;
studies by Miss Masur.  During this year the class edited&#13;
booklets on the history of Brown Township, which we sold.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VI.  We received many lectures this year on how&#13;
to conduct ourselves in junior high school.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VII.  In our first seventh grade class meeting&#13;
we elected officers and student council members.  Mr. Thurston&#13;
was our sponsor.&#13;
&#13;
Chapter VIII.  Our sponsor is Mr. Lynn Nicholas.  We&#13;
presented two chapel programs and participated in the Home&#13;
Talents.  We now look forward to graduation.&#13;
&#13;
Virginia Williams&#13;
</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195671">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 15 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Seventh Grade History&#13;
&#13;
Ten very serious and frightened youngsters entered&#13;
Brown School in the fall of nineteen hundred and twenty&#13;
nine.  Since that time we have met many new and delight-&#13;
ful friends.&#13;
&#13;
When Kingston was annexed by Brown, we gained many&#13;
new members.&#13;
&#13;
There is one fact that is interesting in the case&#13;
of a good many of our members.  By some hand of fate we&#13;
have had a new teacher each year of our school life.&#13;
&#13;
We have now enrolled in our class seven girls and &#13;
fourteen boys making a grand total of twenty class&#13;
members.&#13;
&#13;
We can say that although we were a little bit&#13;
backward when we first entered our life upstairs to see&#13;
all of the upper classmen hurrying about as though they&#13;
knew what it was all about, we soon overcame this complex&#13;
of inferiority and were quite thrilled at taking our&#13;
place among them.&#13;
&#13;
Now, at the completion of our first year we have &#13;
made friends with many of the upper classmen and are&#13;
proud to say that we enter into activities and do our&#13;
part in making Brown High School interesting as well as&#13;
educational.&#13;
&#13;
Margaret Wright&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 16 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
three photos:&#13;
&#13;
First and Second Grades&#13;
Mrs. Goff - Teacher&#13;
&#13;
Third and Fourth Grades&#13;
Miss Helen Sheets - Teacher&#13;
&#13;
Fifth and Sixth Grades&#13;
Miss Marcia Sheets - Teacher</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 17 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
He Called Me Tomboy!&#13;
&#13;
He called me tomboy, but he wished he hadn't!&#13;
&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. __________  Oh what's their name?  I&#13;
guess it doesn't matter anyway.  Mother had cleaned me all&#13;
up and bought me a new pink dress because they were giving&#13;
a party for their little boy, and I was invited.  I hated&#13;
that dress.  It had so many ribbons and bows on it and they&#13;
were all in my way when I wanted to slide down the bannister.&#13;
&#13;
Well, that isn't my story.  I arrived at the party&#13;
with only one slipper a tiny bit muddy and one of my ribbons&#13;
town off when I tried to beat Tommy under the fence.  (I beat&#13;
him, too.)&#13;
&#13;
We were pulling taffy.  Oh, that was the gooiest taffy&#13;
I every did see.  I decided the best place to pull it was on the&#13;
bannister, where I felt the most at home, so there I perched&#13;
with one foot wedged against the rail so I would not fall,&#13;
and I pulled that taffy.&#13;
&#13;
Jimmy came up and, just because he wanted to sit&#13;
where I was sitting, he called me a tomboy.  I wouldn't have&#13;
minded if I really had been a tomboy, but I was the most ladylike&#13;
little girl you ever saw.  Mother scolded me sometimes because&#13;
I played with the boys, but she didn't understand.  Who would&#13;
want to play with those old sissies of girls!  They always&#13;
played with dolls that broke if you threw them at anyone and,&#13;
they screamed when they saw a mouse, and I like to play with&#13;
mice.  Oh, they were sissies, alright.  No doubt about that.&#13;
&#13;
"Jimmy", I screamed, "you dare to call me that again&#13;
and, I'll smear your face with this taffy."&#13;
&#13;
As I leaped from the bannister, I lost one of my&#13;
tiny white slippers with those horrid buckles, which mother&#13;
said were so cute.  Imagine that, cute.  I told Jimmy I would&#13;
smear his face with taffy, but I missed his face in that leap&#13;
which horrified all of those little sissies with their old&#13;
dolls, and I got my hands and taffy tangled up in Tommy's hair.&#13;
He really did have beautiful hair.  It was a dark brown and&#13;
very wavy.   I could not get my hands out.  It was worse than&#13;
fly-paper.  Ten times worse, and the more I pulled the more&#13;
Jimmy screamed, but I didn't care. It didn't hurt me -- only&#13;
I was sorta scared for fear I wouldn't get any of that pink ice&#13;
cream and cake I had seen in the kitchen.  Just as Jimmy let&#13;
out a loud yelp of pain, our hostess appeared in the doorway.&#13;
She cried out in dismay at the sight, but she soon regained&#13;
her composure and got some hot water which which she sopped&#13;
Jimmy's head and finally freed my hands.  When Jimmy's hair&#13;
had dried, they had to cut off all of those beautiful auburn&#13;
curls.&#13;
&#13;
Everyone teased poor Jimmy for letting a girl get&#13;
the better of him.&#13;
&#13;
He called me a tomboy, but he wished he hadn't.&#13;
&#13;
C. J. L.</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 18 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Wondering&#13;
&#13;
Did you ever sit and wonder&#13;
What the day has brought to you-&#13;
At the fireside softly glowing,&#13;
Or in the study hall at school?&#13;
&#13;
It may be an egg for dinner,&#13;
Or a simple cup of tea,&#13;
But did you ever stop to wonder&#13;
Just how grateful you should be?&#13;
&#13;
Did you ever stop to wonder&#13;
Why the teachers give you a grade?&#13;
Do you wonder why pupils get angry&#13;
and ask the teachers for aid?&#13;
&#13;
I wonder why people are funny;&#13;
I wonder if I am, too.&#13;
Do you think I will ever make a success?&#13;
I'm wondering, are you?&#13;
&#13;
Wondering is a funny thing, you know,&#13;
It is very common, too.&#13;
Wondering may make you happy,&#13;
And also make you blue.&#13;
&#13;
Wondering may not be useless,&#13;
Wondering is not the blame,&#13;
For the downfall of a citizen&#13;
Whose wondering has not led to fame.&#13;
&#13;
By Frances Marks&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
To the Seniors of 1935&#13;
&#13;
Your leaving raises a question I will ask;&#13;
What will we do without this class?&#13;
That is easy to answer, say Mutt and Jeff,&#13;
We will do as before when any other class left.&#13;
&#13;
Yes, that is the way we all seem to say,&#13;
Yet we will miss you because you are so happy and gay.&#13;
Still there are others who will fill your place,&#13;
And we won't know you're out of the race.&#13;
&#13;
After graduation and you are out of school,&#13;
Think of us as old school mates and not as fools.&#13;
Since you have been here for quite a spell,&#13;
It is time to bid you farewell.&#13;
&#13;
By Boydson Baird&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page19 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
A Sunday School Holiday&#13;
&#13;
Beneath the sun, beneath the skies,&#13;
Beneath the green leaved trees,&#13;
Four little girls with sparkling eyes&#13;
Played gaily at their ease.&#13;
&#13;
The white church door, flying open wide,&#13;
Let shining sun rays creep&#13;
With quiet stealth along the walls&#13;
The silence for to keep.&#13;
&#13;
The parson rose, began to preach,&#13;
But lo!  He lost his vim.&#13;
A mudball from an unseen source&#13;
Came rolling up to him.&#13;
&#13;
Frank Barton grabbed a broom at once,&#13;
His dash was not in vain,&#13;
Right down the aisle and out the door&#13;
The mudball went again.&#13;
&#13;
The same thing happened o'er and o'er,&#13;
Frank's strength was growing weak.&#13;
The tall grass waved outside and hit&#13;
the ones who seemed so meek.&#13;
&#13;
The church adjourned, Frank Barton crept&#13;
Outside on hands and knees,&#13;
But four small girls with sparkling eyes&#13;
Played gaily at their ease.&#13;
&#13;
Helen Wornstaff&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Study Hall&#13;
&#13;
While sitting here, trying to think of something&#13;
to do, the thought comes to my mind, just what are study halls&#13;
for anyway, and what should they be used for?  Of course we&#13;
should realize by this time with twelve years of experience&#13;
that study hall periods should be used for studying; but&#13;
that's work and when the warm days of spring arrive, who wants&#13;
to work?  Then comes through our mind, what we will do all&#13;
summer when we have no studying to bother us and we think&#13;
what a joyous time we can have then.&#13;
&#13;
Something vague appears in our mind.  Finally, I&#13;
realize that I have entirely neglected by French assignment.&#13;
Following that comes a breakdown in will power and a final&#13;
verdict that tonight would be a better time to study French;&#13;
besides, I may be in a better mood for French with a better&#13;
prepared lesson for tomorrow as a result of waiting.&#13;
&#13;
Oh, that's right, someone said something about&#13;
fishing.  Let me see _____.  Indian Lake, Buckeye Lake, and&#13;
several good rivers.  I will have to do some camping also.&#13;
Maybe I can combine the last two ideas.  Well, there goes the&#13;
bell.  Possibly, I had better go home and spend my time at&#13;
something worth while.&#13;
&#13;
E. S. F.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (22)</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195738">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 20 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
The Race&#13;
&#13;
Back in the hills of Kentucky, in an old log cabin, lived&#13;
a boy and his mother.  They had lived there together for a long &#13;
time for the boy's father had died when he was very young.  After&#13;
his father's death his mother had a pretty hard time to keep &#13;
things going for Ted was not old enough to work.&#13;
&#13;
Many years had passed now and Ted was a young man.  He was&#13;
now doing the work and keeping his mother just as she had done&#13;
for him when he was young.  He was making a go of it, too.&#13;
&#13;
Ted's possessions were not very great but among them was&#13;
a race horse which he loved very much.  The horse had not&#13;
raced any but Ted thought she had possibilities.&#13;
&#13;
In the fall of the year there was to be a big race about&#13;
twenty miles from Ted's home.  This race was held annually and&#13;
paid enormous stakes.&#13;
&#13;
Ted started early in the spring to get his horse in shape&#13;
for the race.  But the biggest obstacle to be overcome was to&#13;
raise fifty dollars to pay for the entering of his horse.&#13;
&#13;
The final day of the race had come and Ted's horse was in&#13;
fine shape.  Before Ted left for the race he promised his &#13;
mother that if he won the race he would build her a nice new&#13;
home.  He kissed her tenderly and started for the track.&#13;
&#13;
Most of the other race horse owners had hired jockeys to&#13;
ride their horses for them but Ted did not have the money to&#13;
pay for one so he was going to ride his horse himself.  He knew&#13;
her ways better than anyone else anyway.&#13;
&#13;
The time had come for the race to start and the horses&#13;
were all rearing to go.  The crack of the gun and they are off.&#13;
Ted does not take the lead but he manages to stay pretty close&#13;
to the leading horse.  The other horse had an experienced &#13;
jockey while Ted was just an amateur.  On the homeward stretch&#13;
Ted leaned way up in the saddle and talked to his horse, Beauty, &#13;
and stroked her mane.  This seemed to put a spurt of super-&#13;
natural power into her.  She shot around the leading horse &#13;
and held this place to the finish of the race.&#13;
&#13;
Ted had won and he could build his mother a new home&#13;
just as he had promised her.  Not like most people, Ted did not&#13;
stay at the track to be admired by the crowd but hurried home&#13;
to tell the news to his mother for she was unable to attend&#13;
the race.  The last I heard of him he was building his mother a&#13;
fine new home on a beautiful sight in Kentucky.&#13;
&#13;
Don Wright</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (23)</text>
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195739">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 21 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Honor Pupils&#13;
&#13;
Those pupils on the high honor roll receive all A's;&#13;
those on the honor roll receive two A's and two B's; and those &#13;
receiving honorable mention have all B's.&#13;
&#13;
Those on the high honor roll for the first semester&#13;
are as follows:  Dema Potter, Opal Basiger, William Dunning,&#13;
Helen Wornstaff, Charlotte Leonard, Darline Smith, and Vir-&#13;
ginia Williams.  Those on the honor roll are:  Grace Salmon,&#13;
Grace Blain, Imogene Cole, Ruthella Sheets, Leila Smith,&#13;
Annabelle Zerbe, Boydson Baird, Alda Hatten, Frances, Marks,&#13;
Marjorie Waldron and Margaret Wright.  Those on the honorable&#13;
mention are:  Clarine Chambers, Charlotte Link, Anne Nelson,&#13;
Gladys Osborn, Joe Crumb, Rebecca Dawson, Paul Thurston,&#13;
Christina Wortz, Martin Kern, Donald Potter, and Lawrence&#13;
Menger.&#13;
&#13;
Those receiving honors for the first six weeks of&#13;
the second semester are as follows:  High honors; Dema Potter,&#13;
Opal Basiger, William Dunning and Helen Wornstaff and Vir-&#13;
ginia Williams.  Honors: Charlotte Link, Grace Blain, Imo-&#13;
gene Cole, Annabelle Zerbe, Boydson Baird, Joe Crumb, Rebecca&#13;
Dawson, Alda Hatten, Frances Marks, Marjorie Waldron, Blanche&#13;
Blain, Darlene Smith, Donald Potter, and Margaret Wright.&#13;
Honorable Mention:  Clarine Chambers, Mary Potter, Christina&#13;
Wortz, Martin Kern, Lawrence Wenger, and James Baker.&#13;
&#13;
Those receiving honors fo rthe second siz weeks of&#13;
the second semester are as follows:  Honors; Dema Potter,&#13;
William Dunning, Frances Marks, Helen Wornstaff, Charlotte&#13;
Leonard, Darlene Smith, and Virginia Williams.  Honors;&#13;
Charlotte Link, Annabelle Zerbe, Boydson Baird, Opal&#13;
Basiger, Joe Crumb, Alda Hatten, Bernard Hatten, Mary Potter,&#13;
Margaret Wright, and Donald Potter.  Honorable Mention; Gladys&#13;
Osborn, Grace Salmon, Marjorie Waldron, James Baker, Ada White,&#13;
Dorothy Dix, Martin Kern, Lawrence Wenger, and Edward Blair.&#13;
&#13;
The following people have not been absent or tardy&#13;
in this school year:  Twelfth grade; Anne Nelson, and Dale&#13;
Marks.  Eleventh grade; Dema Potter and Leila Smith.&#13;
Tenth Grade; Boydson Baird, Joe Crumb, and Paul Jumper.&#13;
Ninth grade; Frances Marks and Guy Smith.  Eighth grade; Oscar&#13;
Schilliger.  Seventh grade; Doris Basiger and Dick Frye.&#13;
&#13;
We think these people are to be commended on &#13;
their good records and we only hope that the rest of the&#13;
school will try to raise their own records to make more and&#13;
higher honor pupils for B.H.S.&#13;
&#13;
C. M. W.</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (24)</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195740">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 22 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
"THE MYSTERIOUS MRS. UPDYKE"&#13;
BY &#13;
Marion Short&#13;
&#13;
Presented by Senior Class&#13;
Brown High School Auditorium&#13;
April 24, 1935&#13;
&#13;
CHARACTERS&#13;
(As they appear in play)&#13;
&#13;
Daisy Morgan . . . Charlotte Link&#13;
&#13;
Lucindy Johnson . . . Juliabelle Nixon&#13;
&#13;
Rita Stanley . . .Anne Nelson&#13;
&#13;
Mrs. Gubbins . . . Grace Salmon&#13;
&#13;
Fred Gubbins  . . . Dale Marks&#13;
&#13;
Gladys Gubbins . . . Gladys Osborn&#13;
&#13;
Clarke Updyke . . . William Baird&#13;
&#13;
Minetta Fischer . . . Clarine Chambers&#13;
&#13;
Lynne Evans . . . Evelyn Jervis&#13;
&#13;
Billings . . . Clayton Wigton&#13;
&#13;
Herbert Yost . . . Clytus Zimmerman&#13;
&#13;
Dick Finlayson . . . Edward Frye&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
SYNOPSIS OF ACTS&#13;
&#13;
ACT I - Mrs. Updyke's living room.  Afternoon&#13;
&#13;
ACT II - The same.  That evening&#13;
&#13;
ACT III - The same.  Three hours later&#13;
&#13;
LOCALE:  Chrystal Springs, New Jersey.&#13;
&#13;
TIME:  Now.  Midsummer&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>The Brown Thresher 1935 (25)</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
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                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195741">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 23 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
BACCALAUREATE PROGRAM - May 19, 1935&#13;
&#13;
Processional - Avery Thurston&#13;
Call to Wroship &#13;
Response - Choir&#13;
Hymn  "O, Worship the King" - Congregation&#13;
Prayer - Rev. William Dunning&#13;
Response - Choir&#13;
Quartet  "Cast Thye Burdens on the Lord" from the Elijah&#13;
Robert Wright, Elsie Dix, Bertha Wright, Henry Sheets&#13;
Trio  "Lift Thine Eyes" from the Elijah&#13;
Dora Mae Dill, Bernice Humes, Bertha Wright&#13;
Scripture Reading&#13;
Chorus "Steal Away"  Community Choir with&#13;
Olive Jordan taking the solo.&#13;
*Sermon  - Reverend Longbrake&#13;
Benediction  - Reverend Dunning&#13;
Response  - Choir&#13;
Recessional - Avery Thurston&#13;
*Quartet - Chorale by Bach&#13;
Carroll Osborn, Marrill Osborn, Paul Pittman, &#13;
Lester Miller&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
COMMENCEMENT PROGRAM - May 20, 1935&#13;
&#13;
Processional - Avery Thurston&#13;
Invocation - Reverend Longbrake&#13;
Solo  "Rest in the Lord" - Evelyn Jervis&#13;
Duet "O, for the Wings of a Dove" - Evelyn Jervis &amp; Gladys &#13;
Osborn (Both selections by Mendelssohn)&#13;
Valedictory "Schools of Past &amp; Today" - Grace Salmon&#13;
Presentation of Picture - Clytus Zimmerman&#13;
Acceptance - Mr. Thurston&#13;
Madregal Group  "In These Delightful Pleasant Groves"&#13;
Gladys, Julia, Clarinne, Evelyn&#13;
Dale, Clayton, Bill, Edward&#13;
Salutatory  "Schools of Tomorrow" - Charlotte Link&#13;
Presentation of Gift - Anne Nelson&#13;
Acceptance - Mr. Cowgill&#13;
Solo  "Hark!  Hark! the Lark!" - Gladys Osborn&#13;
Girl's Quartet  "At Partin" - MacDowell&#13;
Gladys, Julia, Clarine, Evelyn&#13;
Presentation of Diplomas - Mr. Hirth, Mr. Cowgill&#13;
Benediction - Mr. Dunning&#13;
&#13;
__________&#13;
&#13;
GIBSON'S FLOWERS&#13;
__________</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 24 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
JUNIOR - Senior Banquet&#13;
&#13;
On April 24, 1935, the senior found business en-&#13;
velopes on their desks sealed with the crescent of the high&#13;
school ring.  When they opened them what should they find but&#13;
a code.  What could this be?  After several minutes they&#13;
found that it was an invitation to the Junior-Senior Banquet&#13;
which was to be held at Bun's on May 7.&#13;
&#13;
Yellow, blue, pink and many other colored evening&#13;
gowns were assembled at Bun's on the evening of the event,&#13;
waiting for the program to begin.  After a very delicious&#13;
dinner, a program was presented with Brooks Cowgill as the&#13;
toastmaster.  Toasts were given by the following people:  Dale&#13;
Marks Charlotte Link, Joan Fraker, Mr. Thurston, and Mrs.&#13;
Mathews.  The theme of the program was"The New Deal.  The&#13;
program in code language was as follows:&#13;
&#13;
The New Deal&#13;
&#13;
B. L. S.  - The New Dealers - Loyalty Song - All&#13;
N. R. A. - Franklin D. - Brooks Cowgill&#13;
S. G. A. - Frances Perkins - Charlotte Link&#13;
V. P. V. - The Braintrusters - Violin, Piano, Violin&#13;
Harriet, Ruthella, Grace&#13;
P. W. A. - Miss Industry - Joan Fraker&#13;
J. W. A. - The Agriculturists - Olive &amp; Harriet&#13;
F. E. R. A. - The Kingfish - Dale Marks&#13;
B. H. D. - Southern Warblers - Beulah, Harriet&#13;
T. S. A. B. - Conservation Crooners - Jr. Quartet&#13;
Harold, Grace, Olive, David&#13;
G. I. T. - Mrs. Roosevelt - Mrs. Mathews&#13;
B. T. B. - Chief Engineers - Boy's Trio&#13;
Brooks, Harold, David&#13;
H. B. G. O. - Information Bureau - Play&#13;
Written and presented by Junior Class&#13;
T. V. A. - The Blue Eagle - Mr. Thurston&#13;
&#13;
Green and white, the senior class colors, were carried&#13;
throughout the program.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
French Banquet&#13;
Members of the French class and their teacher, Miss&#13;
Geraldine Evans, held a banquet at the Phi Mu sorority house on&#13;
April, the ninth.  After dinner, French games were played duri-&#13;
ing the remainder of the evening.&#13;
&#13;
F. J. N.&#13;
&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 25 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Behind the Scenes&#13;
&#13;
The seniors for their class play presented "The&#13;
Mysterious Mrs. Updyke", a light comedy in three acts.  The&#13;
play centered around the death of Mr. Updyke and the settling&#13;
of his estate.  To complicate the plot the famous family jewels&#13;
were stolen from a secret safe.  At the time of the play several&#13;
threatening letters are received by the family, but during the&#13;
course of action the jewels are returned.&#13;
&#13;
Let us look in on the cast just before the&#13;
curtain goes up.&#13;
&#13;
"Everyone ready?  O.K., pull the curtains."  of&#13;
course everyone heaves a sigh of relief when everything is&#13;
finally underway.  After a few moments of nervous tension, the&#13;
players settle down to portraying the mystery story to the&#13;
audience.  Appreciation of laughs and applause encourage the&#13;
actors to perform beyond all expectations, although we always&#13;
did have faith in ourselves.&#13;
&#13;
Signed&#13;
Senior Class&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
MUSIC&#13;
&#13;
Under the encouragement and direction of the music&#13;
supervisor, Miss Faye Finley, Brown has made a great ad-&#13;
vancement in music during the past few years.  We are proud&#13;
to say that our music plays an important part in both school&#13;
and community activities.  &#13;
&#13;
Our choir was commended highly on the auditions which&#13;
it gave at the Delaware County Music Festival.&#13;
&#13;
Besides participating in the music festival both the&#13;
choir and orchestra have contributed to our Home Talents,&#13;
Senior Class Play intermissions, and chapel programs.&#13;
&#13;
In the Junior High School, we have the Bach Boy's&#13;
Choir, the Junior High Girl's Glee Club, the Instrumental&#13;
Music Class, and the seventh grade boy's music club.&#13;
&#13;
In the Senior High we have the A Cappella Choir, the&#13;
Senior High Boy's Glee Club, the Senior High Girl's Glee&#13;
Club, The Senior Quartet, and the Orchestra.&#13;
</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 26 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
CHAPEL&#13;
&#13;
"Chapel today?" Oh, that's right.  Those little&#13;
seventh graders are going to try their luck at giving a&#13;
chapel program.  "Where is it today - in the auditorium or&#13;
in the study hall?"  Well, I'll go down and listen to it.&#13;
I suppose I'll have to but I know those little children&#13;
cannot put on a real chapel program.  It'll probably be&#13;
dryer than  lecture although we may be able to get some&#13;
laughs from their mistakes.&#13;
&#13;
"Did someone say that the seventh grade could-&#13;
n't put on a chapel program?"  If they did they were crazy&#13;
because I attended their chapel, and to my complete surprise,&#13;
enjoyed the program very much.&#13;
&#13;
"Next week the juniors have charge of chapel,&#13;
don't they?"  They're going to produce a sample of what a&#13;
chapel should be, but just wait until the seniors get their&#13;
chance.  They'll really show you how it's done.&#13;
&#13;
The seniors are notified that the next chapel is&#13;
left to them.  Now since it is in our hands what will we have?&#13;
Who's going to participate?  Shall Gladys and Evelyn sing?&#13;
Shall we put on a play? - a religious program?  Oh goodness,&#13;
it's Thursday and we can't decide what to do.  You see, we&#13;
have so many excellent ideas and splendid talent that we ca-&#13;
not decide what our audience would like best.  Friday after-&#13;
noon Mr. Hirth is told that we will have to postpone what &#13;
once was to have been an ideal chapel.  We thought maybe the&#13;
faculty would give us a whole day sometime in order that we&#13;
might present the larger share of our talent, thus not dis-&#13;
appointing any of our audience but as they thought we did&#13;
not need the experience to develop our dramatical or musical&#13;
ability by appearing before an audience, we had to indefinitely&#13;
postpone our first chapel.  I think, however, that the seniors&#13;
will be able to make that up with this last chapel, dont you?&#13;
&#13;
W. E. B.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
JUNIOR HOME TALENT&#13;
&#13;
The junior class presented their first Home&#13;
Talent, Tuesday night, November 20, with a very large attend-&#13;
ance.  Musical numbers, a play, and several stunts, were&#13;
given by members of the school, community and teachers.  The&#13;
juniors presented to the people the talent which we have in&#13;
both the school and outside community.&#13;
&#13;
A large group of people attended the last Home&#13;
Talent given by the junior class Wednesday evening, March&#13;
27.  The main feature of the program was a musician, Mr.&#13;
Zinc, from Delaware.  Other numbers were given by people of&#13;
the community, school and Ohio Wesleyan.  Everyone enjoyed&#13;
the evening of fun and the juniors wish the coming class&#13;
sincere success in their future home talents.&#13;
&#13;
C. E. J.</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="195929">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 27 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
The Junior High Halloween Party&#13;
&#13;
Pretyy autumn decorations for the annual junior high&#13;
Halloween party were maple leaves, cor shocks, and pump-&#13;
kin faces.&#13;
&#13;
When the uniquely and gayly dressed guests arrived&#13;
the room was one wonderful kaleidoscopic scene. &#13;
&#13;
Games were enjoyed by the guests and at the close&#13;
of the evening refreshments in keeping with Halloween were&#13;
served.&#13;
&#13;
Charlotte Leonard&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
High School Halloween Party&#13;
&#13;
Oh!!!  Oh!!  Oh!  and Oh!  What are all the hoboes,&#13;
spooks, ghosts, tramps, Indians, old-fashioned maidens, over-&#13;
sized men and women, and reckless waiters doing here?  Why&#13;
it's October 29, 1934 and this is the High School Halloween&#13;
party.  Who are these people?  We're sure they're not our&#13;
schoolmates because we never saw them before.  Finally we&#13;
discover the identity of all of them but one.  Who could that&#13;
little Red Riding Hood be?  Do you know?  no.  Unmask.  Why,&#13;
it's Miss Collicott!  Isn't she a sport?&#13;
&#13;
What's that?  A treasure hunt?  Sure.  Hope I win!&#13;
Whoever uttered this wish was disappointed because Boydson&#13;
Baird and another fleet footed person were the lucky ones.&#13;
&#13;
Play games?  Hotcha!  Who doesn't love to play games&#13;
at good old Brown High?&#13;
&#13;
Refreshments?  Yum!  Yum!  Are they good?  Three&#13;
cheers for the refreshment committee?  Give 'em a hand, boys!&#13;
&#13;
Imogene Cole&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
INITIATION PARTY&#13;
&#13;
With many fears and trepidations the class of&#13;
nineteen hundred thirty eight met on and ideal autumnal&#13;
night in early October at the entrance of Brown School.&#13;
The event of the evening was the annual freshman initiation&#13;
party given by the sophomores.&#13;
&#13;
Excitement was in the air when the signal was&#13;
given requesting the freshmen to enter one at a time,&#13;
remove their shoes and stockings and to be blindfolded.&#13;
&#13;
After this ceremony they were led in great pomp&#13;
"up a stair and down a stair" until a guide said, "Step&#13;
high."  Splash!  They were standing in a bucket of water.&#13;
&#13;
In due time everyone arrived in room twenty two&#13;
where a scramble for shoes and stockings ensued.  No one&#13;
can know how hard it is to find them in the hughe pile&#13;
all tied together.&#13;
&#13;
After going through the formality of daubing our&#13;
cheeks with mercurochrome, blacking our faces with soot,&#13;
pouring water in our eyes and feeding us sandwiches filled&#13;
with vaseline and lard, the sophomores had made&#13;
us pledged members of Brown High School and we went home&#13;
feeling much wiser and thinking of the initiation party&#13;
for the class of nineteen hundred thirty-nine.&#13;
&#13;
MARGERY WALDRON&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195930">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 28 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
line art drawing of two uniformed basketball players&#13;
&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
&#13;
The basketball team of Brown High had a very&#13;
successful year although they did not win the championship.&#13;
They played a total of sixteen games -- winning eight and&#13;
losing eight.  The team was handicapped by the loss of one&#13;
of its best players, Glen Allen Sheets, but still kept up the&#13;
fighting spirit.  They went on to win the consolation champion-&#13;
ship by defeating three of the teams that had previously beat-&#13;
en them in county schedule games.&#13;
&#13;
Because of the teams great showing they were honored&#13;
with three banquets.  These were presented by the teachers,&#13;
senior girls, Mrs. Pittman and Leonard Brothers.  Bill Baird&#13;
was chosen captain and was presented a trophy for being the&#13;
most valuable player.  The services of three players will be &#13;
lost to the team, but with several other boys available for&#13;
the coming year we expect a stronger group of players to de-&#13;
fend the record of Brown High and bring more trophies to our&#13;
school.&#13;
&#13;
First Team&#13;
&#13;
James Williamson&#13;
Bill Baird&#13;
Brooks Cowgill&#13;
Boydson Baird&#13;
Dale Marks&#13;
&#13;
SecondTeam&#13;
&#13;
Harold Pittman&#13;
Walter Balch&#13;
Dale Howison&#13;
Edward Frye&#13;
Guy Smith</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
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                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195931">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 29 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
photo of baseball team members&#13;
&#13;
Baseball&#13;
&#13;
The baseball teams played Ostrander, April 25.  The girls &#13;
won by a score of 27 to 7 while the boys lost a hard fought &#13;
game 2 to 0.  The members of the girls team are:  C. Leila&#13;
Smith, P. Anna Nelson, R.S.S. Dema Potter, L.S.S. Joan Fraker;&#13;
F.B. Charlotte Link, S.B. Beulah Wigton, T.B. Harriet Shannon,&#13;
L.F. Evelyn Jervis, C.F. Shirley Shilliger, and R.F Grace&#13;
Salmon.&#13;
&#13;
Members of the boys team were:  C. Walter Balch, P. Boydson&#13;
Baird, F.B. Jim Williamson, S.B. Guy Smith, T.B. Dale Marks,&#13;
S.S. Donald Wright, R.F. Brooks Cowgill, C.F. Clytus Zimmerman&#13;
and L.F. Bill Baird.&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
Track&#13;
&#13;
The track teams entered the Ohio Wesleyan Relays April 27.&#13;
Members of the teams were James Williamson, Bill Baird, and&#13;
Boydson Baird for the javelin and discus; Boydson Baird, Guy&#13;
Smith, Dale Marks, and Bill Baird for the two mile relay.  The&#13;
three boys on the discus team were awarded medals for being&#13;
the second best discus team in the relay.  The two mile&#13;
relay team placed fourth.  This is the best record that any &#13;
track team has ever made during the history of the school.&#13;
&#13;
The teams journeyed to Athens on May 4.  They were very&#13;
fortunate in winning 1st and 2nd in the javelin, 2nd in the&#13;
discus, and 3rd in the two mile relay.  Those in the two mile&#13;
relay were:  Guy Smith, Dale Marks, Boydson Baird, and Bill&#13;
Baird.  Bill received first in the javelin throw and Boydson&#13;
received second.  Bill also received first in the discus.  The&#13;
boys brought back one gold medal, two silver, medals and four&#13;
bronze medals.</text>
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              <element elementId="41">
                <name>Description</name>
                <description>An account of the resource</description>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="195932">
                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 30 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
GEORGE PARKER'S&#13;
&#13;
GROCERY AND MEAT MARKET&#13;
Fruit and Vegetables&#13;
&#13;
155-157 E. Winter St,&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
Phone 370 and 379&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
BEFORE EXAMS&#13;
O Lord of Hosts, be with us yet,&#13;
Lest we forget, lest we forget.&#13;
&#13;
AFTER EXAMS&#13;
The Lord of Hosts was with us not,&#13;
For we forgot, for we forgot.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF THE&#13;
&#13;
JOHNSON OIL REFINING COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Superior products &amp; Service&#13;
&#13;
Roy Hawison, Bulk Stations Mgr.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 9010&#13;
Ashley, Ohio</text>
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&#13;
Leaders in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Radios . . . . . Washers&#13;
&#13;
and all&#13;
&#13;
C. K. HARDWARE STORE&#13;
&#13;
"QUALITY IS SATISFACTION"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
STOP!  LOCK!  SAVE!&#13;
&#13;
Quality, Service, Satisfaction&#13;
&#13;
HOME KILLED MEATS&#13;
&#13;
Libby's Sugar Loaf&#13;
&#13;
Stokely's and Del Monte&#13;
Canned Goods&#13;
&#13;
C. D. BRATCHER &amp; SONS&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Teacher:  "I'm tempted to give this class a quiz."&#13;
&#13;
Jean:  "Yield not to temptation."&#13;
&#13;
FOR GIRLS ONLY&#13;
(Read backwards)  Didn't you if boy a be wouldn't you,&#13;
this read you knew we.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
YEHLEY and SON&#13;
&#13;
Jewelers &amp; Optometrists&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio  Phone 2576&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
GIFTS THAT LAST&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds - Leather Goods&#13;
Watches - Silverware&#13;
Clocks - Jewelry&#13;
&#13;
REPAIRING A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
W. S.  ROSECRANS&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
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&#13;
SEE SAVAGE AND SEE BETTER&#13;
&#13;
Eyes Examined Evenings or Sundays for&#13;
&#13;
YOUR CONVENIENCE&#13;
&#13;
Phone 7720 for appointment&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAM P. SAVAGE&#13;
&#13;
Optometrist - Optician&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Thurston:  "What are you running for, Don."&#13;
Don Wright:  "I'm trying to keep two boys from fighting."&#13;
Mr.Thurston:  "Who are the boys?"&#13;
Don Wright:  "Jim Williamson and me."&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . &#13;
&#13;
Miss "hitted:  "Anne, your handwriting is terrible. You&#13;
must learn to write better."&#13;
Anne:  "Well, if I did, you'd find fault with my spelling."&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
ALWAYS HIGHEST PRICES AT LOWEST PRICES&#13;
"ALWAYS HIGHEST QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICES"&#13;
&#13;
THE PEOPLE'S STORE&#13;
&#13;
BOY'S&#13;
Clothes&#13;
Furnishings&#13;
Headwear&#13;
&#13;
Men's &#13;
Sport wear&#13;
and&#13;
Work Clothes&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Blood Tested Baby Chicks&#13;
and Custom Hatching&#13;
&#13;
"WE HAVE THE QUALITY THAT PRODUCES QUANTITY"&#13;
&#13;
ASHLEY BABY CHICK CO.&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
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&#13;
A. L. CURTIS&#13;
&#13;
Heating, Plumbing, Roofing&#13;
&#13;
Contract&#13;
&#13;
317 North Union Street&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 7151&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Miss Whitted:  "Which is correct:  A herd of camels&#13;
or a drove of camels?&#13;
&#13;
Clytus:  I always thought they came in cartons.&#13;
&#13;
. . . . . &#13;
&#13;
"Now please don't go out tonite", said Mr. Williams to &#13;
his wayward furnace.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
We Suggest&#13;
&#13;
England's Beuty Shop&#13;
&#13;
For Your&#13;
&#13;
PERMANENT WAVES &amp; BEAUTY&#13;
&#13;
WORK&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 2261&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
JAFFE'S&#13;
&#13;
Where style is inexpensive&#13;
&#13;
Always the best for the least money&#13;
&#13;
2 South Sandusky Street&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio</text>
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&#13;
SENIOR CLASS HISTOR&#13;
&#13;
Maricad Gift Shop&#13;
&#13;
M. Cadwallader&#13;
&#13;
Gifts for every occasion&#13;
&#13;
Phone 6158&#13;
14-16 W. Winter St.&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
GREETINGS!&#13;
Our best wishes go to the students of Brown&#13;
School.  Your future patronage greatly appreciated.&#13;
&#13;
INDEPENDENT PRINT SHOP CO.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 2582&#13;
9 E. William St.&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Father:  "Young man, I'll teach you to hold Harriet's hand!"&#13;
Clayton:  "You're too late, Mr. Shannon, she showed me herself."&#13;
&#13;
.....&#13;
&#13;
Bill:  "You're the first girl I ever kissed."&#13;
Olive:  "What do you think I am, a preparatory school?"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
THE CLAUDE R. LEE FUNERAL HOME&#13;
&#13;
"KNOWN FOR SERVICE"&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 0120&#13;
Ashley, Ohio</text>
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&#13;
SCOTT'S GARAGE&#13;
&#13;
We Repair All Makes of Cars&#13;
&#13;
Goodyear and Firestone Tires and Tubes&#13;
&#13;
WILLARD BATTERIES&#13;
&#13;
Phone Kilbourne 2830&#13;
&#13;
24-Hour Wrecking Service&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Nicholas:  "Can you give me an example of wasted energy?"&#13;
Brooks Cowgill:  "Telling a hair raising story to a bald headed&#13;
man."&#13;
&#13;
Miss Collicott:  "Waiter, take this fly out of my soup."&#13;
Waiter:  "What do you think I am, a life guard?"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
SEE OUR&#13;
&#13;
COMPLETE LINE OF GROCERIES&#13;
&#13;
"We Aim to  Satisfy"&#13;
&#13;
Leonard Brothers Store&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 0410</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 36 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
BEST WISHES FOR YOUR SUCCESS&#13;
&#13;
WESTBROOK HARDWARE&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Waiter:  "Milk or water?"&#13;
&#13;
Grace:  "Don't tell me; let me guess."&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
RED &amp; WHITE STORE&#13;
&#13;
Dependable Independent Grocery&#13;
&#13;
QUALITY Goods - FAIR Prices&#13;
&#13;
C. J. Cooper&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
PHONE 8510&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
WHEN QUALITY COUNTS&#13;
&#13;
OUR FLOWERS WIN&#13;
&#13;
BARRETT'S&#13;
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 37 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
B. YEHLEY &amp; SON&#13;
&#13;
Jewelers and Optometrists&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 2576&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
BABY CHICKS - largest&#13;
&#13;
CUSTOM HATCHING&#13;
&#13;
CONKEY FEEDS&#13;
&#13;
LIVINGSTON'S SEEDS&#13;
&#13;
DELAWARE CHICKERIES&#13;
&#13;
29 East Winter St.&#13;
&#13;
Phone 2398&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Miss Whitted:  "What is the most common word in the high&#13;
school vocabulary, Harold?"&#13;
Harold:  (suddenly awaking)  "Unprepared".&#13;
&#13;
Dale"  "May I go home with you tonight?"&#13;
Rebecca:  Why Dale, are you afraid to go home alone?"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
ROY HARTMAN&#13;
&#13;
Coal, Stone, Fence Posts&#13;
&#13;
64 N. Henry St.&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 8124&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
ROOT'S DEPT. STORE&#13;
&#13;
Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, and&#13;
&#13;
Gent's Furnishings&#13;
&#13;
Sunbury, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 150&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
IF ITS ELECTRICAL&#13;
&#13;
THE ELECTRIC SHOP&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
DORIS RODGERS&#13;
&#13;
Hair Cutting     Finger Waving&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 0130 for appointment</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 38 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
WHEN IN DELAWARE&#13;
&#13;
SHOP AT&#13;
&#13;
KLEIN'S DEPT. STORE&#13;
&#13;
READY - TO - WEAR and SHOES&#13;
&#13;
The FamiLY STore</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 39 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
Leaders in Hardware&#13;
&#13;
Radios . . . . . Washers&#13;
&#13;
and all&#13;
&#13;
O. K. HARDWARE STORE&#13;
&#13;
"QUALITY IS SATISFACTION"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
STOP!  LOOK!  SAVE!&#13;
&#13;
Quality, Service, Satisfaction&#13;
Radios . . . . . Washers&#13;
&#13;
HOME KILLED MEATS&#13;
&#13;
Libby's Sugar Loaf&#13;
&#13;
Stokely's and Del Monte&#13;
Canned Goods&#13;
&#13;
C. P. BRATCHER &amp; SONS&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Teacher:  "I'm tempted to give this class a quiz."&#13;
&#13;
Jean:  "Yield not to temptation."&#13;
&#13;
FOR GIRLS ONLY&#13;
(Read backwards)  Didn't you if boy a be wouldn't you,&#13;
this read you knew we.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
YEHLEY and SON&#13;
&#13;
Jewelers &amp; Optometrists&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio     Phone 2576&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
GIFTS THAT LAST&#13;
&#13;
Diamonds - Leather Goods&#13;
Watches - Silverware&#13;
Clocks - Jewelry&#13;
&#13;
REPAIRING A SPECIALTY&#13;
&#13;
W. S. ROSECRANS&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 40 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
THE BLAIR - KELLEY COMPANY&#13;
&#13;
Home Furnishers&#13;
&#13;
The store famous for High Quality and Dependability&#13;
&#13;
FURNITURE - STOVES - DRAPERIES&#13;
&#13;
WALL PAPER&#13;
&#13;
FLOOR COVERINGS&#13;
&#13;
At lowest Prices&#13;
&#13;
Phone 2280 - 57-59 North Sandusky St.&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Miss Rittenaur:  "The royalty on this play is $100 the &#13;
first night and $50 the second night."&#13;
Clytus:  "Well, then we'll have to give the play on the&#13;
second night.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
When in need of gas or oil,&#13;
Groceries, bread or buns;&#13;
Drive right up to Leonardsburg,&#13;
And buy of Williamsons.&#13;
&#13;
WILLIAMSON'S GROCERY AND GAS STATION&#13;
&#13;
LEONARDSBUR? OHIO&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
R. T. GRAFF&#13;
&#13;
Smart Styles in Footwear&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio</text>
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                    <text>Corresponds to unnumbered page 41 of The Brown Thresher 1935&#13;
&#13;
BUN, the Baker&#13;
&#13;
of &#13;
&#13;
Delaware&#13;
&#13;
Sends Greetings&#13;
&#13;
and&#13;
&#13;
Salutations&#13;
&#13;
to &#13;
&#13;
BROWN HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
See our complete new&#13;
&#13;
Linew of Graduation Gifts&#13;
&#13;
Watchess - Rings - Jewelry&#13;
&#13;
H. K. Benedict - Jeweler&#13;
&#13;
Allen Hotel Bldg. - Delaware, ).&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
Annabelle Zerbe:  "You kiss divinely."&#13;
Roland Gettis:  "I used to blow a bugle in the boy scouts."&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Mr. Hirth:  "How much is five Q plus ten Q?"&#13;
Annabelle:  "Ten Q."&#13;
Mr. Hirth:  "You're welcome.&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF&#13;
&#13;
MORRISON'S&#13;
&#13;
Delaware&#13;
&#13;
"There is no substitute for quality"&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
M. May Mills&#13;
&#13;
Dentist&#13;
&#13;
6-1/2 W. Winter St.&#13;
&#13;
Delaware, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Doris Rodgers&#13;
&#13;
Haircutting &amp; Fingerwaving&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
Phone 0130</text>
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&#13;
BLAIN'S SERVICE STATION&#13;
&#13;
"We Give Prompt Service"&#13;
&#13;
GASOLINE - Oil&#13;
&#13;
Kilbourne, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Edward:  "What shall we do tonight, Dale."&#13;
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end, we'll stay home and study."&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
COMPLIMENTS OF THE WILLIS PAINT &amp; PAPER CO.&#13;
&#13;
"The Reliable Store"&#13;
Paints and wall paper&#13;
&#13;
Crosley Radios and Refrigerators&#13;
&#13;
-----&#13;
&#13;
Summer Difficulties&#13;
&#13;
If you scout round and get opinion about school vacations,&#13;
you will find that school lasts too long, and summer not long &#13;
enough.  That is what I have discovered from the boys of the&#13;
school.  This is the answer I received from boy in the first&#13;
six grades when I asked him how long summer should last:  "I think&#13;
summer should last eleven months and thirty-one days."  Then I&#13;
asked him how he would get a whole year of summer here.  He&#13;
replied rather disgustedly that he would go south and cut ex-&#13;
penses by not having to buy heavy clothing and shoes in winter.&#13;
&#13;
From the various ideas I have received from the lower&#13;
grade pupils I have been unable to solve the problem.&#13;
&#13;
I would like to know a graduates answer to these questions&#13;
because I am sure it would be different, as there are two&#13;
sides to every question.&#13;
&#13;
Don Potter.&#13;
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            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Editor-in-chief Gladys Osborn; Assistant Editor Grace Salmon; Business Manager Anne Nelson; Assistant Manager William Baird; Picture Editor Clarine Chambers; Sports Editor Dale Marks; Joke Editor Edward Fry; Literary Editor Evelyn Jervis; Social Editor Juliabelle Nixon; Dramatics Clytus Zimmerman; Club Editor Edwin Sheets; Class Editor Charlotte Link; Scholastic Editor Clayton Wigton; Typist Charlotte Link; Supervisors Miss Ruth Rittenauer, Miss Dorothy Whitted.</text>
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                <text>Local History--Brown Township--Delaware County--1935&#13;
Public Schools--Brown Township--Delaware County--Ohio&#13;
Yearbooks--Brown Township Schools--Delaware County--Ohio</text>
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          </element>
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>The 1935 Brown Thresher Yearbook includes photos of faculty, seniors, juniors, sophomores, freshmen, 8th and 7th graders, student activities such as sports, music, theater, essays on class histories, and an advertising section. Jokes are mixed in with the text, and the actual photos, likely printed from glass negatives, are directly adhered to the pages. The yearbook featured here belonged to Robert Stegner.</text>
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                    <text>[page 1]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to front cover of Buckeye Hat Story]&#13;
&#13;
THE &#13;
&#13;
BUCKEYE HAT STORY&#13;
&#13;
(IN PICTURES)&#13;
&#13;
by&#13;
&#13;
Kenneth I. Lea&#13;
&#13;
Bicentennial&#13;
&#13;
Edition&#13;
&#13;
1976</text>
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                    <text>[page 2]

[corresponds to inside of front cover of Buckeye Hat Story]

DEDICATION

This edition, taken from the original -- (O.S.U. - 1944) -- is in

appreciation of our sturdy ancestors and all of my charitable 

friends.

AMERICAN REVOLUTION BICENTENNIAL 1776-1976

Independent Print Shop Co.

Delaware, Ohio

1976</text>
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                    <text>[page 3]

[corresponds to page 1 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

Buckeye Leaves and Blossoms

1</text>
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                    <text>[page 4]

[corresponds to page 2 of Buckeye Hat Story]

OHIO

SOURCE MAP

for 

buckeye wood

[map]

Most Information by

Edward Randolph

Ashley, Ohio

2</text>
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                    <text>[page 5]

[corresponds to page 3 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photos]

Buckeye Trees in Winter on the

Walter D. Cook Farm

South of Beggarlouse Hill

3</text>
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                    <text>[page 6]

[corresponds to page 4 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

Buckeye Log

V Section

Flat Section

From the Walter D. Cook Farm

4</text>
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                    <text>[page 7]

[corresponds to page 5 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

Barton Whipple

Inventor of the Buckeye Plane,

Lived Near Stantontown (1801-1888)

5</text>
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                    <text>[page 8]

[corresponds to page 6 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

The Buckeye Plane has two blades:

One with sharp teeth to score into strips, one to remove the

shaving. Also, a guide to one side on the bottom to keep the plane

parallel. 

Donated by Ona Fleming of Stantontown

6</text>
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                    <text>[page 9]

[corresponds to page 7 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

Many types of braid were possible depending on the number of

strands - usually, three to nine - however, the most common was

seven.

Made by Alice Dennis of Ashley

7</text>
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                    <text>[page 10]

[corresponds to page 8 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

The pressing horse with blocking pieces (for various sizes).

Cloth and iron were used for shaping and pressing.

Made and donated by J. R. Doty of Ashley

8</text>
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                    <text>[page 11]

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[photo]

This doll hat and these boys' hats were made and donated by

Mrs. Edward Shoemaker of Ashley

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                    <text>[page 12]

[corresponds to page 10 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

The man's hat (center) was made by Sarah Zent and given by Nellie

Taylor, both of Stantontown.

The other two were made for the author by Alice Dennis of Ashley

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                    <text>[page 13]

[corresponds to page 11 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

The woman's hat (center) was made and given by Mr. and Mrs.

Fred Zent of Stantontown.

The other two were made for the author by Alice Dennis of Ashley

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                    <text>[page 14]

[corresponds to page 12 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

This Buckeye Bonnet was made long ago by Lillie Lea for Mrs. G. C.

Shoemaker who gave it to the museum unit.

The handbag was donated by Dr. Dennis Welch. Who made it is

unknown.

The necklace and bracelet were made by Lorraine Lea.

12</text>
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                    <text>[page 15]

[corresponds to page 13 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

This Ladies Buckeye Hat was made by Mrs. William (Myrtle)

Westbrook and given to the Ashley Library by Kay Douglas about

1960, per Edith Myers Smale, Librarian at that time.

13</text>
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                    <text>[page 16]

[corresponds to page 14 of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]

An Old Buckeye and His Hat

T. W. Lea (1853-1944),

The Author's Grandfather

14</text>
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                    <text>[page 17]

[corresponds to page 15 of Buckeye Hat Story]

BUCKEYE HATS

When the nights are long and chilly

And there's time for neighborly chats,

Then it's time to be a thinkin'

Of next summer's Buckeye hats.

To the woods with axe and saw

There to limber up their backs,

For this is the beginnin'

Of next summer's Buckeye hats.

Cut the logs the proper length

And split them into slats,

And we soon will be a makin'

On next summer's Buckeye hats.

Uncle Joe will get the plane

And make splits in nothin' flat,

Soon all will be a workin'

On next summer's Buckeye hats.

After many months of braidin'

Sewin', pressin', this shape and that,

At last, we all have finished

With next summer's Buckeye hats.

K. I. Lea

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                    <text>[page 18]&#13;
&#13;
[corresponds to page 16 of Buckeye Hat Story]&#13;
&#13;
The Ohio State Archaelogical and&#13;
&#13;
Historical Society&#13;
&#13;
Columbus, Ohio, August 2 1944&#13;
&#13;
The Society has received a gift of Artifacts&#13;
&#13;
relating to the hat industry in Ohio; Dissertation&#13;
&#13;
entitled, "The Buckeye Hat" A Home Industry of Early&#13;
&#13;
Ohioans in Central Ohio by Kenneth I. Lea&#13;
&#13;
from Mr. Kenneth I. Lea,&#13;
&#13;
Ashley, Ohio&#13;
&#13;
for which I am instructed to return a grateful&#13;
&#13;
acknowledgement.&#13;
&#13;
H. C. Shetrone, Director&#13;
&#13;
* Now -- at Ohio Historical Center.&#13;
&#13;
16</text>
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                    <text>[page 19]

[corresponds to inside of back cover of Buckeye Hat Story]

[photo]</text>
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                    <text>[page 20]

[corresponds to back cover of Buckeye Hat Story]

[image of buckeye leaf]</text>
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Local history--Ohio--Delaware County--Galena&#13;
Photography--Ohio--Delaware County--Galena</text>
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                <text>This is a photo of the I.C. Budd house and grocery on the north side of Galena Square. The office of Dr. Wilson is on the right with its own door.</text>
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                <text>Photograph</text>
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            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>Still Image</text>
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            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>929620220718</text>
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            <name>Contributor</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource</description>
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                <text>Mid-Buckeye Camera Club of Sunbury</text>
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              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                  <text>Daisy Wheaton Stereographs</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>This collection from the early 20th century contains Daisy E. Wheaton's Stereograph collection which documents her travels across the United States with her husband, Charles, and several of their friends. </text>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>The Cabildo in New Orleans</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <text>Architecture--Louisiana--New Orleans--Cabildo--Early 20th century&#13;
Historic  buildings--Louisiana--New Orleans--Cabildo--Early 20th century&#13;
Ohio--Delaware County--Sunbury--History--Early 20th century&#13;
Personal narratives--American--Early 20th century&#13;
Photography--Stereographs--United States--Early 20th century&#13;
Travel--United States--Louisiana--New Orleans--Cabildo--Early 20th century</text>
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            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>&#13;
Left home Monday&#13;
&#13;
Nov. 23 - 1925 for&#13;
&#13;
California via New Orleans&#13;
&#13;
Reached New O- Tues. about&#13;
&#13;
10 P.M. missing all of the&#13;
&#13;
Gulf resorts and Mobile as twas&#13;
&#13;
dark before reaching the&#13;
&#13;
latter. On train met a lady&#13;
&#13;
from Buffalo (or Erie) who was&#13;
&#13;
enroute to New O - to join her&#13;
&#13;
husband who was stopping&#13;
&#13;
at Hotel Lafayette. Not&#13;
&#13;
knowing anything about the cities&#13;
&#13;
hostleries decided to try Hotel&#13;
&#13;
Lafayette too. Found it very nice&#13;
&#13;
and quiet and close to things.&#13;
&#13;
Wed. a.m. we took a sightseeing&#13;
&#13;
bus, in which we rode to many&#13;
&#13;
places of interest, one of the&#13;
&#13;
first being Jackson Park&#13;
&#13;
around which clusters some&#13;
&#13;
of the best historical spots -&#13;
&#13;
for instance the famous&#13;
&#13;
cabildo - shown in the pitcure.&#13;
&#13;
Old St Louis Cathedral stands&#13;
&#13;
at the immediate right of the&#13;
&#13;
Cabildo. In the afternoon&#13;
&#13;
we walked thru the shopping&#13;
&#13;
dist. Chas, Mrs Sedgwick and I, while&#13;
&#13;
mother rested in Hotel.&#13;
</text>
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            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>Daisy E Green Wheaton</text>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
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                <text>Nov 23, 1925</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="47">
            <name>Rights</name>
            <description>Information about rights held in and over the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="175280">
                <text>http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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          <element elementId="46">
            <name>Relation</name>
            <description>A related resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="175281">
                <text>Daisy Wheaton Stereographs</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="175282">
                <text>Stereograph</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="44">
            <name>Language</name>
            <description>A language of the resource</description>
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                <text>English</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
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Text</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text> 30210312451981 </text>
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