Ottumwa High School - Argus Yearbook (Ottumwa, IA)

 - Class of 1906

Page 31 of 80

 

Ottumwa High School - Argus Yearbook (Ottumwa, IA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 31 of 80
Page 31 of 80



Ottumwa High School - Argus Yearbook (Ottumwa, IA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 30
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Ottumwa High School - Argus Yearbook (Ottumwa, IA) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 32
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Page 31 text:

CLASS PROPHECY June 20, 11)15. Dear Clara: I was so disappointed that you could not come to the reunion of the class. Almost everyone was there and those who could not come wrote to us as you did. 1 was not surprised to hear that you had become matron of the Deaf and Dumb Institute in Oklahoma. I suppose you are glad to he able to gratify your desire for silence and quiet and to avoid talking as you were always wont to do. I’m intending to try to tell you about all the members of the class, where they are and what they are doing. Mabel Anderson is nursing here in Ottumwa. Her gentle soothing manner and pleasant smile will probably win the same fate for her as that of every pretty nurse. Mary Colt wrote a very dear note, sending regrets from herself and Lois Baker, saying that they would be unable to attend as they had an important engagement to till in Chicago. They are specialty dancers in vaudeville, and have plenty of opportunity to continue their life of frivolty and gavetv which they started while still in High School. Cecile Bonham is at home. She has become very subdued and quiet since she was expelled from Wellesley in her Senior year for some breach of discipline. Henry Cook is just enjoying himself. He doesn't have to work. He's the principal of the O. H. S. Last week Florence Louise Coolidge sailed for Europe with the Misses Smith and Bryden who are going over to study rocks and author’s homes, respectively; and who do you think has taken Miss Bryden’s place? Pauline Messenger! She mothers the Preps and advises the Senior to her heart’s content, and has almost succeeded in filling Miss Brvden's place. Pauline Hughes and Grace Kitto are teaching Algebra in the High School. Because of their love for that interesting subject their classes are the most attentive and interested in the school. Jessie Graham illustrates the comic section in the Ottumwa Record- Herald, of which Hoy Ballard is the editor. We hear rumors of a romance concerning these two. Stella Huffman and Mrs. Harrison are making a concert tour in Europe. Miss Huffman besides being an excellent accom- panist, has scored a great hit in her laughing song composed by herself. Mary Isherwood is physical instructor in the V. W. C. A. in Eddy ville, and Fora Galey is the instructor in German in Iowa City. Florence Grube is the president of the Iowa Federation of Woman's clubs. With her club work she hasn't time for much else. Theodosia Harrison is going to Salt o o

Page 30 text:

CLASS SONG We hadde notte long to waite, untille, Mr. Roberts seyd, “I wol thy hist fulfille.” The grete effect! Swich joy and happiness! I can not plevnly tell, 1 muste confesse Now right anon we inette for a laste, Asseniblee. So on the water’s vaste (?) Kverichon deepe on plesaunce bente, Lingered till the nighte far was spente, And eek the Middlers served us atte beste; Right well I woote there was much mirth and geste, n ■ Muche sorwe there does lurk in eache herte, From friends and teachers kind, we must departe; We yiehle oure place, but memories deare, Well ofte recall within the future veere. —Mary K. (hirner. Class Song In the glow, the glow of an Autumn, Whose memory lingers still. Our high school’s happy career In these halls had its birth. And the events of these years We will never, never forget: “ 7 Friendship, Kindness, Knowledge, All its joys and all its worth. Chorus:—All hail to each, each comrade true, W hose smiles have cheered, have cheered us onward, Ken while the goal was but a dream Success has been our watch ward. Hail! O. H. S. Jn the love, the love of our comrades Sturdily we onward go— Tho our hearts be heavy at parting, Joy will be in the years, we know. , True we’ll stand to our motto, forever Always lie—not seem to Ik» To the green and white of the clover Our symbol—swear loyalty. (Last Stanza)—“Hail 1906.”



Page 32 text:

CLASS PROPHECY Lake City. She just hates men, she says. Incidentally I heard that Ethelbert Coffin has been in that city for several years. Joe Darner is the proprietor of a shooting gallery down near the opera house. He doesn’t have much to do with (Connell since the latter became a frenzied financier. Grace Coughlin was present at the reunion and favored us with a few extracts from her treatise on “How to Cure Lisping.” She has been working on it for several years and she is not yet entirely satisfied with it. Will Cushing is captain of the league base ball team and he exercises his executive ability even upon the diamond. Howard Davis is acting the juvenile parts in several comedies written expressly for him bv the successful playright, Edwin Mather, who in his spare time does athletic stunts at county fairs. Wallace Graham has followed his natural bent and is proud of his reputation as the Beau Brum me 1 of New York. His clothes furnish the model for the men of the Smart Set in that city. Ethel Watson is teaching a country school in Rutledge. After a long hard struggle she succeeded in passing the teach- ers examinations and expects next fall to get an assistant position in town. Harold Lynch was unable to come as he was at the time held in custody back west, for taking part in a shooting fray. Elizabeth Haven with a beaming smile appeared at the reunion and informed us that sh? had the dearest husband in the world, and that she had won the prize for the best home-made bread in Wapello county. Ada Kendall, after an eventful life as an elocutionist, has gone into comic opera. Irl Baker is professor of the Science of Flirting in Bryn Mar. He was unable to come home but wrote us all about his work and his fair pupils. Nell Madden was also unable to be present as she is traveling in Ireland on the proceeds of the Madden-Baker breach of promise case which was so ably carried on by the famous lawyer Theodore Lundblad. The latter came clear from Philadelphia to honor us with his presence. Etliyle Palmer has eloped with her father’s chaffeur so we didn't have the pleasure of seeing either of them. Winifred Kevhoe has published a re vised edition of Fanny Y. Cory’s “Memoirs of a Baby.” It far surpasses the original. Stella Garland is a fashionable dressmaker in Kansas City. Donald Fallen is the truant officer here. He knows by intuition or i may be, experience, just where to look for truants and he has proved the most efficient official the city has yet employed. Three of our girls have sought recognition in the public eye. Marie Muller ana Helen Osier are performing remarkable equestrian feats in Ringling’s circus, and Florence Walker has succeeded to the fame of the renowned Annie Oakley in Buffalo Bill. Mary McCune with Janet Lindsey as her collaborator has publishei a literal translation of the Jungfrau. They are taking life easy on the proceeds of their work. Paul Stoltz was present, but this advertisement tells his story better than I can: “How to increase the height from two to five inches ?n a month. Send

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