Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA)

 - Class of 1913

Page 25 of 92

 

Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 25 of 92
Page 25 of 92



Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 24
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Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 26
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Page 25 text:

Which two of the high school girls are sharing these for¬ tunes with Joty and John I will leave you to guess. Helen Carrie is Governor of the colony. She enjoys it very much because she has to attend to the office only three months during the year and can play hockey all the rest of the time. Nettie is Attorney-General. She comes up from Cloverdale every morning. Her reputation in the debating contest of 1913 was what gave her the majority over the other popular candidate, Goldie Hale, who holds the degrees of J. D. from Berlin as well as from Yale. Cyril Browne, the President of the United States of the World has a wonderful summer mansion only a mile from here. His sister presides over it, for Cyril is a bachelor. He flirted much and long with many renouned beauties but, when he finally decided to settle down, he remembered the bright eyes and raven tresses of one of his high school friends. He searched everywhere and after two years found her singing the leading part in Willie Ahren’s new opera “Graziella” which was creating a furor in grand opera circles in Paris. But Dolores was wedded to her art, so Cyril had to go home again alone. His heart was so completely broken that, although many have tried to heal it with their millions of gold, yet he still remains disconsolate and lonely. Three o’clock p. m., I am in New York where I have come in my airship this afternoon. I got one of the latest papers and, much to my sur prise, the head lines read, “Miss Myrtle Read, A Rival of Homer and Virgil.” It told how she had begun in a little school in Central California but had been able to win this honor by having been so studious during her first year in Latin. On another page of the same paper I found where Maude Thompson had become famous for aero¬ plane racing. She had broken the record by flying round the world without stopping. Seven p. m., I am now in Berlin. When I stopped for re¬ freshments a little while ago, whom should I find as the prop¬ rietor of this elegant hotel but Phil Prell. His wife runs the hotel during the day while he teaches English in the Univer¬ sity. We had quite an interesting visit and, when I inquired 23

Page 24 text:

iitglt drhnnl flriiphmj LAURA ENDICOTT ’15. X T is now the summer of 1933, I am sitting in my pleasant little cottage in Victoria Land, just ten miles from the North Pole, enjoying the refreshing breeze. You all remember Charlie Grant. Well, while he was working in the drug store and experimenting with ozone, he found that it was indeed the long sought elixir of youth. The next question was how to obtain it in large quantity. After long thinking, he decided that it must be found in abundance at the North Pole and so he engaged Joty Sedgley, who in his younger days was very sedate and dignified but who later became a most intreped explorer, to help him find it. Joty hastily set out for this country. His eye for business told him that with Charlie’s discovery a fortune was in sight for both, so he bought one thousand square miles of this per¬ petual ice. He then came home and told John Cooley about it. Together they established an airship factory. John soon improved upon the Wright models until he had a machine that could travel from Cloverdale to the North Pole in two hours. He has already sold one hundred thousand of these machines in various parts of the world and his fortune is now estimated at $100,000,000. Joty is selling his lots at a fabulous price for all the millionaires of the world are deter¬ mined to have an ice palace in this exclusive spot. With John’s ship they can carry on business in London, Paris, and Berlin and come up here to rest and take Charlie’s elixir, which, even if it can be taken for only two hours during twenty four, gives youth, freshness and perfect health. From all present indications the first generation that takes advantage of this wonderful discovery will live to be at least two hundred years old, while no one can conjecture what will be the ultimate length of life. I have been here only one month and already feel ten years younger. 22



Page 26 text:

if he knew anything of the other schoolmates, he told me that Norma Hurlbert was teaching music in San Francisco and that he received letters from her every now and then. He also said that Willie Cooper owned a large stock ranch out in Arizona. Marvin Read was a famous lawyer in New York. As we were talking, in walked what seemed to be a society belle and, upon registering her, Philipp found that it was Gertrude Ludwig. She told us her voice seemed to be giv¬ ing out and, as she was tired of grandeur and traveling, she was going back to Cloverdale. I told her of Charlie’s great discovery and, as I was going to start home soon, she decided to go with me. She said Genevieve, like Cyril, had never married and was soon to become a Ph. D. Marie Grant had lately settled down. Her husband, an elderly philosopher, had built a little home in the air and both were as happy as birds. Lucile owned a confectionery store in the city of Fulton but she expected soon to change her name and adopt that of one of her old friends who had lately retired from business, having made his fortune in vegetables in our old home town. Nine p. m., we are taking an aeroplane for home as I have left mine to be fixed. Who do you suppose is the driver? Why, Ruth Belcher. She is now ex-Governor of California and, seeking a higher position, has taken to the air. We are fly¬ ing slowly and talking over old friends and the days we spent in Cloverdale. Eleven p. m., Home, sweet home, we have reached it again. The midnight sun is casting its soft light upon the mountains of ice and fields of snow. As the changing colors shift and gleam, we see before us the sublime work of the Master artist whose canvas is the universe and whose colors are living light. But who shall say that the picture that lives again, as the light of the friendships of the old school days glows in our hearts, is not even more beautiful than that which covers earth and sky? 24

Suggestions in the Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) collection:

Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

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Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

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Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

1915

Cloverdale Union High School - Spectator Yearbook (Cloverdale, CA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916


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