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Page 28 text:
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SENIGR I-IOO ZOO Schoolmate Toy Favorite Commonly Known As Where Found Name Medsgar Edith King 2 .Q 2.4 s-42 OCD eedy Haines UZ JA s-4 o wh Q4 S10 Pictu tch Garage bl GJ QE o S U2 6 th In +2 4 S-4 N 22 cv 533 NIJ,-4 U UQ Q O 2 Eg: 22 4 B 4 Q N MSW Qmw QQE c:s 5-54m GJ .Q Q Q .Q 2 m we N D as U .Q IPQ QQ 3 N E4 GJ JI 41 as 4 .2 4E Em Baker Emma is L1-403 5-4 Q iQ mo E5 '15 f bn as s-4 En 73 C .H JI QJGJ gm U fi M GJ -E 4-'O 3 H C wa Q3 .H E515 EQ III G 15 .23 QE Zo Ill Q4 B cn Q. QQ o EQ U 4-4 Mabel oupe C Ford 1922 CS Aeroplan US' Watchi .E Pm Pa JD CU o s-4 CJ U2 cu E N P1 ,-4 E -4 fd .H DQ Q P- U Fw o M c -A-I CJ .Q 5-4 cv E Q4 GJ GJ Q53 +2 C jj O Q2 MKII Q3 B is 5145 GJ GJ Q54 cu Q4 GJ J: E-4 'U C cu QI s-4 GJ E CJ O bb 5-4 Q Q LU .Q 5-4 5-4 cu 'J-1' Sw A4 s GS Sl E-4 'Q B ..-4 F14 .-4 T: B o o EE-4 52 no +1 QE P118-I E-4: as-4 eo 15 s-4 O R4 C AI O GJ 51rd S o U 1 Basketba 75 5 o 5 .-4 Q E as AI E-1 ch S Wi In Ianchie A3 4s GJ 4-2 CYS M QCIIQLLAZQ L4 cu J: o .,-4 FYI rn cu ,-4 s-4 N J: O M C cs Q H GJ C GJ bn Q Lvl J! L CG ,- 'cz 5-'Q 'Q S-4 ,.. ..-4 O PHE 294 OO 5-45'-4 OQQ-G HQNQ v-40 ii P1 Em -E C v-4UL4 O5-4 C ?: 5-4 4395 J D K M D J OVES Boxing Gl 'Fa JD U if N 0 N Q HM OO 450 SQ is one DQp..lP 112 73 CS S5 3 WM 21: wo Do QQGQCD JZ CD 4 Q III .,-4 F-4 P-4 Pa GJ s-4 Cf-4 rn an E G P1 viii eff C P-' .2 Q A: Q .- o EI fi Q5 DQ Bi C E 5 gg 3 q5..4q-4 mg CD sim fwifif O .-4 .-4 gui? 4-4552 N D 0 w b Chicago Joe Ha Tw N .-40 40-3 rn E :vi-'ix Ugg O Mmm O,-4 O GJ -9.5 'Q U GJ D O GJ .-4 Sz Scho Latin Stores Drug .2 4-7 S-4 O L4 o www MDA 'EQ ,Ecucv as A2 JI I W In In Kooser Koonie Q 4-7 Q C24 -J-7 o Q 4-7 O Q Zi S QP'-1 : GJ Ir! 520 QM +9 U 5-4 bo 54,-S GJ cv 'vp mfirl O O Q 32' 'SE QM-4 r. VO'-4 DO-454-I E 'EQ Om 401 Ja Q S G E2 cu Ill o o M J! O ao Nm Us EQ C C5 Q 4-7 O Q 4 N r-+2 514541: 5' Q go ii: GJ -r-4 C f-4 4 .E 3 ,C L C 5 OE QQ w: is SQ V' ,M Q ,ge Q S? 2 .2 E E C11 i 0 V er J ZIJ 4-7 O GJ Pap Fly o C .2 D-4 u C va O Ee mm Ill Qo ,E P4 43 t Out Nature as G 40 GJ Em min I-4 N 60 U2 F-45-4 GJGJ ...E EEE -- .-4 .510 Evra 55552 CW E 'Emo 61:-C? C2416 F-4 ,QGJ Pla: N o Ill cv .Ebb 54 Q Q H Do Ki and bber B GJ .EQ D-405 445 Ji v CV 3:4 ,nv QU U '53 5 Q emi QQ 2 C Ewa C .EEO ID Q Q GJ 'Q Q an .f- GJ 79' Q Mrs v-WQCJ GTS S ESE Viz: 5242 Q4 QQ no 33 O . v1EQ ai GJ C O in god C Q A ef Regist ,Q w N U GJ 5-4 O 4-7 UQ G2 AI an 43 4 Bud ts Prit ldridge cv CC G D. er t Brush Typewrit Pain mie Em hout h or Wit it VV W Stokie ev .2 521' O 43 YH o F14 -O-7 .- K U1 s-4 .,-4 GJ ET yn Sp Marie Stok L4 JI 43 A M .2 Q O -6-7 rn .E Q4 .Q cs U1 GJ E O Q Q N F- C .Q 7 43 ..4 as E4 2 .2 IP U1 Q E I c T5 as Qi Us 5 o D-4 4 C O .v-4 -4-I GS 4-w UQ cu J: 4-7 4-7 4 .9 C C 4 V2 as E o J: P4 0 GJ rl CS Q Q 4
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Page 27 text:
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building that attracted my attention. What could it be? Oh, a theatre. Yes, the large eletcric sign told me that this was the Paiwell Theatre and that Clark Ansell was the proprietor. A hand painted poster in the theatre entrance stated that a number of stage stars had decided, at the request of Miss Marie Stoker, prominent charity worker, to donate for a day their services to charity. Among the stars whose names appeared on the sign were The Blue-eyed Blonde, The Dusty Dancers, Tiny the Tumbler, and Tappy Gene. I secured a ticket from a lanky specimen whom every- body addressed as Cece. He had a far-away look in his eyes. Almost exhausted from the recent excitement, I was glad, indeed, to enter the theatre and sit down to rest. The seats were very comfortable, and I observed that they were a product of the Albig Seat Company. The auditorium was pretty well filled up when I was somewhat annoyed by two fat Dutch boys who were making more noise than fifty Italians at a spaghetti-eating contest. Each carried on his arm a basket Hlled with peanuts, chewing gum, and candy. After several minutes a huge barrel-shaped gentleman appeared on the stage before the curtain. He had the air of one upon whom there rests a great deal of responsibility. My neighbor, a Mr. Evans who claimed to be a sheep-raiser, told me that that egotistic personage was one Mr. Keefer, stage-manager and official an- nouncer for the broad-casting of that show, and that the two peanut venders were his sons-which wasn't hard to believe. I was thrilled when I listened to Mr. Keefer's very charming voice as he bel- lowed, The Blue-eyed Blonde, better known to us Alverton folk as Blanche Foss! The Dusty Dancers, Kooser and Eicher! Tiny the Tumbler, in private life Mrs. Emma B. Medsgar, wife of that world renowned pianist, William Medsgar! Tappy Gene, the lady tap-dancer! She's an old friend of mine! Ha! Ha! Ha! He presented to the audience a number of prominent people such as Dr. D. R. Pfoutz, the veter- inarian who built the home for sick mules, his wife, Kathryn F. Pfoutzg Madame Lowe, the well-known dietician and maker of menus and budgets, and the inventor of a patent lemon-squeezerg and Miss Mabel Myers, the leading female politician of Alverton. It would take too long to tell you about the show, but it was wonderful. As I was leaving the theatre I met a newsboy from whom I purchased a copy of the Alverton Times. On the first page was an explanation of the shooting to which I had listened. Detective Scottie Ford had found it necessary to squander several shells when he recognized the notorious bank robber Scarface Al Love who was playing the role of a blind beggar. The paper stated that Ford and 'Love were.get- ting along nicely under the expert care of Miss Kathryn Speirs, Miss Faye Miller, and Miss Winifred Lynch at the Alverton Hospital. On the same page was a telegram from Rev. Myers who with his wife Dorothy K. Myers, Mr. Clifford Crosby and his wife Viola T. Crosby, and their son Eugene, and Anna Lee Thomas, Eugene's nursemaid, are touring the West. In the telegram Mr. Myers said that he believed that the capture of Love would mark the end of the recent crime wave. He also said that Mr. Ford must have fought a gallant fight, and he wished him the best of luck and fifty cents, the fifty cents to be taken out of Ford's own pocket. That was a fine little paper. The big item on the society page was an account of the marriage of Mr. Wallace Kuhn, the pumpkin pie baker at the Pritts' Bakery, to Miss Marie Cramer, a leader among the upper five hundred of Alverton. Mr. Milford Flack was best man and Miss Dorothy Leighty was bridesmaid. Mr. Pritts furnished a huge cake for the wedding breakfast. After the wedding breakfast Mr. and Mrs. Kuhn were rushed in one of James Crosby's purple taxi cabs to Hill's air- port where Daredevil Bill Hill gathered them up in a wingless aeroplane of his own invention and flew to Dogtown where they visited an old classmate, Miss Al- berta Anderson, a manicurist, who presented the bride with a beautiful manicure set of yellow-come-pink ivory, and manicured the bridegroom's fingernails-a fifty dollar job in itself. ' Slam! It was Mato's voice. ' Like a flash everything came to me. I had been dreaming. I was stricken with a severe headache, my stomach was paining me. It was the opium. As usual, I swore never to use it again. Opium is bad. A . I hope this letter finds you and all the rest of my old classmates in much better condition than myself. As ever, Your pal, Samuel Hasken. --JAMES FREY-
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Page 29 text:
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JUNHQR , ww EE 1 -1 v : V E ffl, S f . jig A xi. rain! X, GL xx, X ff 0 , ,, Z 2 . 2, if i i. ii i 1-H 7 A i 2 Oh valiant knight of truth and right Ride on--the prize is near!
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