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Page 78 text:
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as BylgiviiilviymWiU,muy-Hlij:igmigvlml:IvyriiiMiww1il!1i:,I1 I, , i my - ,HH - Ax l'!'l'H l riiiiiiwwzixwilui illl'lll1Willllllrl!liI'1IilIQ'I'llllHlll1H!l l'lillIITWIHV 1! I -.11 W,MM,,MIMMIQ,M,,,.l,,.,,,.,h,,,MW H., , , , mm 1.1 uw 1r.mill.n1lil:m.i1.mmmIii.mi11411.111.'ui,:.ii.1mlxvnhimlm.:mm..l:: I SOME THINGS WE DECIDED NOT T0 MENTION Mr. Ferree: Is anyone in this room absent? ' CAN YOU FEATURE THESE? Eva Hester 'asking permission to see Mr. Mongerson. Dick Dorman not talking to Dorothy Phillips. Mr. Elson not talking about the contests. Helen Tobin not singing. The Senior Saps not being together. Lyle Iontry going to sleep in American History. Senior girls winning a basketball game. No ninth hour class. Dale Streid not talking to some pretty girl. Ferne Oyer not getting AI-Vs . Frances Degnan and Ted Dorman not scrapping at Band practice. Eloise Streid not drawing pictures. Having perfect attendance for one week. Genevieve S.: How many of these seniors girls do you think will marry? Ruth Boyd: Everyone of them that goes to college. Genevieve S.: Why only them? Ruth Boyd: They're out after a Bacl1elor's degree. Mr. Ferree: VVhat is another name for coke? Ida Stoller: Coca Cola. Earl Shives: Boy, I do feel bad! Charles Moncelle: What's the matter? Earl Shives: I just swallowed a half dollar, don't you see any change in me? And then there's the sneeze song: NVhen I'm looking atchoo. Bernice Harms: Do you like popcorn balls? Vae Hogan: I don't know. I never attended one. All I need now is a golf stick, said the convict as he looked at the ball on the links. Fritz Groth: VVho is Pluto? Dick D.: King of the Underworld. Fritz Groth: Is he any relation to Al Capone. Dick D.: Do you like the new honeymoon salad?'l Dot P.: What's' that like? Dick D.: Just lettuce alone. Mrs. Darling: How would you say in good Shakespearean language, Here comes a bowlegged man?,' Jerome B: Oh! lVhat is this that cometh in the distance on parenthesesf' Mr. Davies: Dick Dormaifs left his horn again. I believe he'd leave his head if it were loose. Mr. Metzger: I dare say you're right. I heard him say only yesterday that he was going to Switzerland for his lungs. ' Seventyl four i:in1n?ggfimii,j,jnfi.qgifij 1 9 3 1 gig T-fimF?G21HFiiinmgW
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Page 77 text:
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-sax I ll! llllvll Iilllll lllllllllfllllll!'l' llllIllll'll'lllllllllll-llllhi llllllu 'll l 4-1 l . ,lllll m ls an I VIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll IlliullnlllliilllIlil'lllllllllilllldlllIillllllllilldlulllllilllhlllllilllllallillllllillllllildllillL! lml 6 GE llilllllHlllllllllilllllll at The Laundry Man: Just put this card in the window and ue uill take care of vou f Little boy: Mother, was that man God? I Mother: VVhy no, child! VVhat made you think so? 1 Frank: VVell, he said he would take care of you. Gilbert Pils: I am firmly convinced that man is made of mere dust Robert Streid: Yes, and women think it's gold dust. Kenneth Tapke: Mama, if baby swallowed the gold fish, could he svinn like one? Mother: Oh, my heavens no, child, it would kill him. Kenneth Tapke: 'iBut it didn't. VVayne Angspurger: I want some winter underwear. Mose Kaplan: How long? Vifayne A.: 'iYVhadda ya mean, how long? I donit wanta rent 'en1, I want buy 'em. In many states a hunting license entitles a person to one deer and no more Just like a marriage license. Stone-Age Poet: See here, about three months ago I sent you a poem It ii as chiseled on a granite slab and had my name and address in the corner, Why didnt you send it back if you didn't want it? Stone-Age Editor: I threw it in the waste chasm. After this, if you want your stuff back, kindly inclose an elephant for return postage. Eddie Cantor has discovered one business that has prospered the last year and that is the manufacture of red ink. Sweet Young Bride: How could you live without me darling? Husband: Cheaper. Mr. Davies: VVhy were you late this morning? Ted: VVhy, the bell rang before I got in the doorf' Breathes there a soul so dead, who never to her lover hath said: VVhen do we eat? Isn't it funny, mused the Infant Philosopher, '-'that a little thing like a kitten as six letters, when a big cat has only three? Mrs. I-Ienline wrote 92.7 on the black board and to show the effect of multiplying by ten rubbed out the decimal point. She then turned to a pupil and asked, Now Ken neth, where is the decimal point? Kenneth: It's on the eraser. Dale S.: I got a new pair of pajamas and they are so loud that they keep me awake at night. Kitty: Poor Alicia is 30 years old. Catty: Yes and it seems only a few years ago that she was 29. Foreigner Con telephonejz Doctor, what time can you fixee teeth fo' me? Doctor: Two-thirty all right? Foreigner: Yes, tooth hurty me all right, but what time you Iixee? Seventy-th1'ee .W-e193 1 mniniinnninmr rnit':Lunrlr1:.u rrmn 1u :W -Jim
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Page 79 text:
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V,-ff ieieg X ll ll ll'Illll llll I Ill I llll I ll! ll ill I ll ll l l lll I mv f ll Wlllllllll Hlllll ll llll ll lllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll lll llllllllllilinll llllll lllnllllll llllllllll llllll lllllllllll lllllllllllll II II I ll ll l l I wi, K' Illlillll lllllllllllllll Ill ll Illll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll III llllllltllll-llll.1.i- l :EH U . ALUMNI THE CLASS OF 1883 Gertie Bullard is now Mrs. H. E. Coonley of Chicago, Illinois. Hattie Campbell, now Mrs. A. B. Frankel, is living in East St. Louis, Ill. Carrie Umphenour is deceased. Minnie Crandall is Mrs. VVilliam 'Wygant of Newport, Minnesota. Emma Banta, now Mrs. Moore, lives in Chicago, Illinois. VValter Dodge is living in Los Angeles, California. Abbie Jordan, now Mrs. Robert Johnson, lives in Pontiac, Illinois. Mina Austin is Mrs. Addison Blair of Idaville, Indiana. THE CLASS OF 1888 Margaret McCune is deceased. Elbert Kirkpatrick is deceased. THE CLASS OF 1893 Minnie Ballard is now Mrs. J. H. Randall of New York City. Myrtle Ballard is Mrs. J. H. Ketcham of this city. Emma Codlin, now Mrs. E. H. Bowers, lives in Los Angeles, California. Beryl Darrah is a nurse in Peoria, Illinois. Grace Downing, now Mrs. C. W. Chambers, lives in Bloomington, Illinois. George Jewell is a dentist at Lafayette, Ind. Mary Kinney is deceased. Wilma Grace Martin, now Mrs. Edward F. Degnan, lives in Chenoa. Harriet Nell Miller, now Mrs. John Hyneman, lives in Seattle, VVashington. Ella Evans, now Mrs. Dodds, lives at Woodland, California. THE CLASS 0F 1893 Fred McMurray is a successful violinist of San Diego, California. THE CLASS OF 1903 Lena Sommers is now Mrs. Charles Dubach of this city. Mae Scrogin, now Mrs. Beach, is living in Peoria, Illinois. Olive VVade is living near Chenoa. Hattie Churchill and May Thrane are deceased. Mabel Kniifin, now Mrs. R. E. Ballinger, resides in this city. Victor Nickel is assistant cashier of the State Bank of Chenoa. Bertha Thrane is a teacher of the Chenoa Public School. Una Munsell is Mrs. Warren Beardsley of Washpa, Iowa. THE CLASS OF 1908 Myrtle Brady is now Mrs. Jessie McDonald of Laurel, Montana. Everett Elson is farming near Chenoa, and is a member of the Community High School Board. ' Nettie Richardson is now Mrs. Everett Elson. Celia Quinn, now Mrs. J. L. Missal, lives in Chenoa. Mary Healy is a teacher in the Chenoa Public School. Se-venty-five ETUEFM. 1 9 3 1
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