High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 18 text:
“
10 THE MAGNET ‘Just before Silver and I parted, for one goes one side of the herd while the other stays on his side, Silver come to me and said he had a ‘hunch’ that he would never see me again. It was the first time he had ever spoken to me in that way and I was troubled, and tried to cheer him up. He gave me a long, thick, envelope, and asked me to see that it was delivered if he did go down. Then we shook hands and parted.” Tex again stopped and the rest of us sought a more comfortable posi- tion. After a pause of about two minutes, he started again. ‘Well, I never met him again. Several times during lulls in the storm I heard him singing. The sound of a human voice soothes the cattle. Another time ina bright flash of lightning I saw him—for the last time: Once a light blue flame appeared on the top of every horn. This isa omen of distress. ‘“About midnight the cattle, as if by common zmpulse, started forward on the run. I did my best to stop them, but it was impossible. They kept running for two solid hours. I kept up with them. Once I heard the sound of a revolver three times right a-going, and I was troubled. Was it Silver? Finally, at the end of the third hour, they were feeding quietly, and I started back for the camp and breakfast. ‘ Happy,’ my horse, was nearly all in, and I wasn’t far from it. When I got to camp everybody seemed to be afraid of me. They kept at a little distance as if they were afraid I would speak to them, and they seemed to have asecret. I wondered where Silver was, but asked no questions, for I thought he was still on his way back. ‘After breakfast the boss approached me and said quietly: ‘One man went under last night,’ and I knew from his face that it had been Silver. That was why he had not come. I followed the boss to where they had laid Silver. He was hardly recognizable. They had found him surrounded by acircle of dead steers that he had shot in an attempt to save himself. Fie and his horse had been trampled on by about fifteen hundred steers. “After that, the West had no attraction forme. I tovk his gunas a souvenir and went to the station where I mailed the package and was go- ing to sell ‘Happy.’ I found I couldn’t sell him; it was like selling a brother, so I took him out on the prairie and left him. Then I took the train, came East, found a job, and then got this one, so here I am.” We smoked in silence. We had nothing to say. A little while after we heard a shout from the front of the house and went around to investi- gate. It was the mail carrier. The horse would not stand, so Tex held him while I got a lantern. I was going around the horse when Tex asked me to hold the lantern up. I did so, and just above the collar I saw a white spot the size of a dollar. Tex whistled in a queer way, and the horse jumped; then under Tex’s hand quieted down. The others who were talk- ing with the mail carrier did not notice all this. I wondered, but said nothing. Next morning Tex did not come to breakfast and we found that he
”
Page 17 text:
“
THE MAGNET 9 Tex HE day’s work was finished and, supper having been eaten, we were TT sitting on the cool grass back of the large corn crib. There were five of us, including myself. They were, Tom, our regular man, Jack and Tim, two men who we hired during the harvests, myself and Tex. Tex was our latest addition. He knew nothing whatever about farm- ing, but he had learned remarkably well. He was also our man of mystery. No one knew whence he came or who he was. He had expressed a desire to be called Tex, so Tex he had remained. He was a dark, rather small man, with a curling mustache, and very clever fingers. He had always kept silent as to his past, but at different times I had thought of him as a cowboy—once when he had stuck to the colt after three had been thrown, and another time when he had shot a woodchuck with a worn 44 at a dis- tance at which I could not have hit a barn. It was a typical August evening, and the five of us were smoking, con- tent after a hard day’s work. In the southwest a storm was gathering, and having nothing else to do, we were watching it. The men, except Tex, were discussing thunder showers, their origin, and the freaks that the bolts had wrought. All at once the western sky was cut by a flash of lightning, and just before, the thunder rolled. I heard a smothered sob from Tex on my right. The men were attempting to beat one another in the tales of the storms they had seen. Jack was about to tell of a monstrous storm when, to my surprise, Tex spoke. When he spoke he talked in such a way that one couldn’t help but believe him. “T have been East here for some time now, and I haven’t seen a shower that compares with the last one I saw before I came. I used to be a cow- boy, and one night during the summer I had been placed on duty to watch the cattle at night, I and my pal, Silver. He was a good fellow, and the two of us had stuck together for about six years. We had been on guard for about three hours when the sky began to darken. We had been on the plains long enough to know that there wasalarge storm coming. Thecattle knew too, for they got up and began to snuff the wind and move around uneasily. The storm came very swiftly and was about overhead when a heavy clap of thunder aroused the rest of the cattle. It was our duty to keep the cattle ‘ melling,’ that is to keep them going continually in a circle without going forward, for if once they get frightened and start running straight ahead, there is nothing that will stop them. Anything that cannot get out of the way is trampled upon; and to get stamped on by three thou- sand steers is no trifling experience.” Here, he stopped, and for a moment I thought it was all. But through the semi-darkness I could see him rolling a cigaret He lit it,and the flame showed his dark, lean, face. He then started.
”
Page 19 text:
“
THE MAGNET 7 had gone. Later in the day we heard that the mail carrier’s horse was missing, and that he found three one hundred dollar bills tacked up in the horses stall. I did not connect the two events at first, but suddenly I re- membered. The day that Tex had ridden the colt he had told me about a horse he used to have that was all black but a white spot the size of a dollar on his neck. ‘‘ Happy,” the mail carrier's horse, and the one he had told me of, were one and the same horse. I heard of Tex only twice since; once when a relative of father’s wrote to him and said he had hired a man who looked like a cowboy and who had a fine black horse. Another time long afterwards I received a package containing a large 44, and the words “‘ From Tex,” in a cramped writing. As to what became of him and his horse I never knew. ALBERT G. Lauzow, '15. Keeping Up With Peter EGINALD ELSWORTH WARNER sat sulkily in the library window- R seat, alternately sucking his thumb and decorating the glass with his initials. What did he care about Bridge Parties? Bridge parties always meant an extra scrubbing and combing, and spending the afternoon in the drawing-room with a lot of ladies in silks and plumes who called him “such a dear little fellow,” and ‘‘so cute.”” And he always had to pass the cake, too. Of course some one invariably took the very piece he had his eye on, and he had to be satisfied with what was left. Reginald had only regarded this as one of the evils of life which every- one had to put up with; that is, until he met Peter. Peter had completely reformed his ideas. Huh! white stockings, Peter said he didn’t wear them. In fact, Reginald had never seen him wear any. And Peter earned money. He sold papers. Yesterday he bought a base ball. When Reginald told his father, he gave him fifty cents to buy one. But that wasn’t the same as earning it. And then just as soon as Peter rolled it in the mud for him, and spit on it, and,got it nice and black and disreputable, like his own, why then, Reginald’s mother had found it and in horror had thrown the beautiful thing into the fire. She called it ‘ perfectly disgusting,” but it wasn’t, and Regi- nald had cried over it so much that she had given him a big rubber one with pictures on it. ‘A rubber ball with pictures,” Reginald thought that was disgusting and he threw it out the window into the pansy bed, so he had to stay in the nursery all the morning. Just as he got that far in his meditations he heard a familiar whistle. At the same time he heard his mother coming for him, so he pushed open the long French window and stepped out on to the terrace. Peter was
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.