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Page 13 text:
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Qu THE SANDPIPER 11 , Class Prophecy ' - A ,Susan Krehbiel after graduating 1 3 from-lthe. Lind High School attended WI . Burdett Business College at Boston, , Q25 xgo ,V Massachusetts ,where she continued wi gy ,LV Q her course in general business work. S Q75 In 1924 she was employed in the law office of Elihu Root of New York City WYHETTKLLEGE where she has been working until com- - 'fb 5 5'1'5jgf f may ing to Lind ifor the Class Reunion She will however no longer resume her work at New York but will shine shoes in the College Shine Shop in Seattle. Amelia Koch, or Cookie 'us sho known by her school friends, attended Ellonsimxg State Normal' fif'il'C'l'lli in lfiil--1923. and will be 6lllPl0j'C1l as eighth grade instructor at Walla Walla, Washingtonduring the coming year. After a year at Vllalla Walla, she will be busily employed mending shirts and cooking for a young man who formerly worked in Richardson's Garage. ' Many will be surprised, yet Q pleased, to learn that Miriam Baum- ' A K, gart is spending her young days in ,f qi QQ luxury. Miriam attended Northwes- .W .1 tern Business College shortly after 3, Magi graduating where she took a book- I keeping ,eoursey While attending YWNQ4 ischool she met a young millionaire -- - whom she married in 1923. She may since be seen sweeping the streets with a vacuum sweeper as a means of adfvertising for which she receives the liberal wages of seventy-five cents per X ay' , . ,, ' 1 Charity Weston, who specialized in sewing and cooking in the Lind 1 -ni U ' High, attended the University of . XQWXQ U Washington where she took a four QL year course ini sewing. Later she was Wx ..,, 41 Nemployed as a dressmaker with Hgfelfiwl ppiiibl ' il Madame English of Spokane. Charity F ali, ff now has a dressmaking shop of her 1 mile' own on Third Ave., Chicago, but after she returns to Chicago, she 'will sell her dressmaking shop and go to work in the hay fields at Kittitas. A l V Wilma Rayburn recently gr,ad'uated'from1Yalc 'having received her M. A. Degree. She went East soon after' graduating from Lind High and took a Science Course. She will be employed sis science instructor at Wash-
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Page 12 text:
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10 THE SANDPIPER was given January 16, 1920 which was to represent a track meet. The Whole evening was devoted to contests of diiferent kinds, the most important being declamation, spelling, writing, sewing, cooking, manual training, fifty yard dash and high and low jumps. The requirements of each of these contests were always the opposite of what they are in real contests. This, of course, made it very amusing. Now, the class has completed the four years of high school work and is ready to go out into the world but they will never forget the happy, profitable Jays spent in the Lind High School. -Corinne Neare. l ...1T Senior Class Poem WE'LL NEVER MEET AGAIN There's a cry that resounds through each class-room Each student has heard with a sigh, Over time-honored walls This sad- echo falls As the Senior Class whispers good-bye. Chorus L. H. S., we bid a last adieu, Dear Lind High, the Seniors love you true. Each day makes us feel more blue, Down through sad and lonely vistas, Our best thoughts, will surely cling to thee, Every hour will be a memory, The same good times we'll never see, We'll never meet again. Our good-bye means the birth of a tear drop, Farewell sounds the knell of a smile, Naught but Time can erase The tear hlighting trace, We 'll not meet in the after-a-while. -Edith Dugan
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Page 14 text:
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12 THE SANDPIPER ington State College next fall but after two years of teaching, Wilma is planning on attending a New York City Barber School where she Will learn the lady barber profession. She will then return to Lind and be employed in the G. L. Nickell Barber Shop. B i Corinne Neare is spending most of xx her days at home playing with cats QQ and talking to parrots. However, we have heard from various sources that Eg she is going to sail for London within :EES WN zhetnlixt few months wtlieredshe is going L. f 4 .L 0 a eacourse in u ic anein an lchorus Work after Iifvhich she wil re- ' N s ' turn to Lind and entertain between acts on Saturdays at the L. E. Tipton Show. Edna Watkins attended Leland ami. Q Stanford upon leaving Lind High to NIUE take a course preparing her to become mm X- Q a spinster, after which she was en- . N gaged as dairv maid with the Brooklyn mm' ml! Dairy Co., of Spokane. She is now Q spending most of her time blowing .t-1 l5s' , bubbles and chasing rainbows. Our only Senior boy has made good, of course, as was anticipated by all his class friends. Charles Campbell went to the East where he attended Columbia University graduating with honors from a law course this summer He now has a splendid office in the L. C. Smith building in Seattle and is kept quite busy raking in money and making bank deposits. He also has a beautiful residence near Lake Washington in the same city. He is, however, not living alone. He was married a year ago to a young lady who Was formerly employed in the Lind School as third grade instructor in the year of 1919-20. After next year, he and his wife will take to gold mining in the Netherlands. Wilma Warner, or Billie the Cut- , l up as she is known by her school 1 friends, after graduating with honors in 1920, attended Wilson's Modern 7..Fll..--,Li ' Business College of Seattle where sh: ' xp'-f,fg4vf., W angie-gfdg took a stenographic course. She was -. 51 fi A- then employed in Skinner and Eddy's 1- Ship Yards where she worked until ' Qffva ' fini coming here. After a lI10I1tll7S vaca- Q I, ww' H -- 1, ' ,f tion, she will be busy driving a patrol wagon in Portland, Oregon.
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