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Page 25 text:
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Then just as all good things are reserved 'till the last, so with the history of the class of 1912. but our last years doings are still fresh enough to be easily uncovered so l won't speil any longer on that line of stuff. in fact I guess I already have too much. I suppose we might mention in passing. the joint Senior-Junior picnic. the -I-Banquet and the play 'given as part of the class day exercises, which by the way, is l think. responisble For several more recent innovations. And while we are thinking about it I suppose there are quite a few general things which might be ol' interest. Of course we were the largest class ever graduated-up to 1912 as every other class has been before and since. and ever will be too- Then too it might be ot little interest to know what has become of the thirty-nine that pulled down their sheepskins a-nd proudly marchd forth to conquer the world with the motto ot Not finished but begun before them. In 1913: Nine went to college. three to Ypsi. two to Kalamazoo, two to M. A. C.. one to 1'. of M., one to li. of NV. Five either started teaching or took work preparatory to teaching? eleven started work. and the remainder stayed at home. This year. 191-I: Two more went to M. A. C., two to the Nurses Normal Training school at Chicago. and several more began teaching. The others remained about the same. Orville Laidlaw. tflass ot 1912. A MIDSUMMER DAY'S DREAM- TIME ........ ................................. S TYMMER OF 1914. PLAVE .................... ............... L OTTIE RHORAS PORCH. FHARAVTERS ............... EIGHT MEMBERS OE THE INTER SESE. The occasion is a reunion of the club. The girls have been sewing and their work bags are scattered about on the tioor. Several ot the girls are gazing dreaniily into space while a few of them are sewing industriously. Silence reigns. FinalIy Edith breaks the silence. Edith- VVhy girls. it has been almost a year since we have been together, and here we sit without saying a word. Lottie- I didnt realize we had been so quiet. did you l've been thinkingf' Beulah- Girls. she has been thinking. Let all be qneit again and give her another chance. VVe ought not to interrupt anything like that. Heien- VVeII. Beulah. what has made you so quiet 1? You havn't said a word for a long while. I was beginning to get worried. Beulah- IJon't worry. Helen. Maybe I was thinking too. I can guess where your mind was- You were looking toward Lincoln. and dreaming. You don 't need to deny it. One dark night. dear old I3oswell's boat-house was the scene of a watery plight. tflara-L'Everybody must have been dreaming. Letfs all tell what we have been thinking about. Quite a few things have happened in the last year. don't you think so i ' Maybel-':Yes. Vlara. just a tew. Which one have you been thinking ot? Mildred- Yon mean Ucogitating upon. don 't you Maybel? l'lara ca.n't understand you when you use words of less than three syllables. Ileulah- Is that the kind ol' words they use in the kindergarten at Oberlin. Babe? I heard they had a couple ot well educated men down there.
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Page 24 text:
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P innoeent Iflreslmmn enjoyed that long hot trip to Bass Lake.: how W9 gOt 111 on the wrong side of the lake and found a marsh fora picnic spot, and then how some ot' the fellows lightened the loads by taking all the grub across the lake in loaned Ol boats. while the rest of the bunch rode -or Walked around the south end of the lake and got there in the wee smallhhours of the afternoon with appetites that were at calution to all grub. But if I. reniember rightly. it was some feed eaten a la. French for porch, with Miss frilliding presiding very eonseientiously over the ice cream freezer and Miss bterling ditto over everything else and so on to the end of that Perfect Day when We got home as tired. hungry. sunburned. and happy a bunch as ever-but you have been there yourself so 'wattsdeusef I don't think We distinguished our- selves any farther than this as Freshmen. but in our Sophomore year we did again hold up our reputation by our-since made annual sleighride to Blanche Shappees. Before we nicely got started. a warning came floating down in the form ol' a slight mist that the sleighing which had been excellent might not be looked upon as sueh. but Sophomore like, we would go on in spite of a council of argumentation held on the fourth ward hill by the chaperones, and we tho't we were fully justified when the drizzle stopped and indeed the fun we had and the feed also would have compensated for almost anything and it was not long before it had a chance. Wlieii we. the chaperones rather, de- eided to go home. we found that the rain had been and was doing its best to make the wheeling splendid. but we had sleighs and before We had turned out of the door yard it was 'tall boys out and walk, and it continued so for about a mile where another council of argumentation was held and as the teachers had to be at the school the next day, or rather that day, they divided one load up into two and so went merrily on. while the other half started tdid l say merrilyl back to the farm home to enjoy ourselves the rest of the night. and we did until nearly noon the next morning when a wagon came out for us and thus endeth another lap of the race. In our Junior years things started to happen and here the multiplicity Qwhat a wordl and the brilliancy of the happenings has rather dulled the edge of memory a' little, but another filling of the pipe and we have memory pictures of a sleighride to OIdt's when we had such a splendid time that I will not try to tell of it. and of a picnic at Hamlin Lakes-ah! there I see memory starts with you doesnt it. so l'll skip that toog but the crowning achievement of this year was the tlarnivall tand that expresses itl at the Arbieter Hall. and the banquet given the Seniors in consequence of it. ' The carnival was the original idea of the class as a whole and as sueh lt wias carried out. l need but to mention the candy booth, hot-dog. food stutts emporium. the fortune teller. the House of Mystery, and many others and you too will be bringing up remembranees of the fun those two nights brought to you. but to we Juniors that fun meant more. it niealnt the success ot our enterprise, and the sheckles gathered in as a result of this made possi- hle one ofthe best banquets ever tendered at class of the Ii. H. S--please note that I said one of the best, because I think if l were to compare mv best ones with yours I think they would all be one of the best. l 'llhe baneIuet-original of course wats given at liugg House and the spirit 'll Pi good lllllth lree from the stitfness of too much conventionalism coupled with the splendid repartee thow's thatl '?g good toasts. etc, may,1,, it an Occa- sion never to be forgotton by the llers and lilitgl
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Page 26 text:
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lllihlred-2'tlb yes. everyone talks like that down there. Why even my room- mate is getting so that she tells me about maxillipeds and arthropads, and now, she has to pad. ' IIeleuf Yes. and Mildred eau give you a eomplete 'tllistory ot Education. She has sueh an Uedueated look that people don't have to be educated to love her, liilllln hottie- J' lJoesu't Marjorie take llistory ot Ed. at Ferris, tool? I thought she was telling us about it at Vhristmas time, She's learned about two years' work siuee she's been away from Bill. My! I wish she could be here today, and then we would have a real reunion- VVho has heard from her lately F lleulah- Well, I havn't. l wonder where she is. She was to visit some triends near here as soon as school was out, but it she doesn't answer my letter l 02111 't be expected to know where she is. l'lara- Girls, Ilelen is dreaming again. WVe will have to make her tell us what it is about this time. Let's start with her and go right around the eirele and make everyone tell what they were thinking ot awhile ago. liottie- What it we don't want to? Edith- Then you will have to write out seven copies and send us each one by the tirst mail. Mildred, what do you want to do? Mildred- Well, you know l don 't like to write very well. so maybe l'd bet- ter tell my dreams. l was thinking about how many changes this year had brought. Still our Senior year seems so vivid--especially Commence- ment week. Let me see-tirst was Baccalaureate night. Do you remem- ber how we practiced tor that proeessional. and then how we just came straggling out by ones and twos with no more solemnity than anything V? But the i'Oll1lllt'IlCP1l1t'1lil proeessional went better didn 't. it? I was seared to death to go up those steps. And then the Junior Banquet was a dandy. Just think, those Juniors are right in our old places, and the sehool is aetually getting along without us. l wonder it every elass felt as im- portant as we did. Speaking ot' the -Iunior lianduet, I wonder where Mr. Haag is. Do you remember the tatherly advice he gave us that night? li0lll2llll-Hilll, and do you remember bow we almost used a wedding mareh to praetiee the proeessionali' 'l'oo bad we didult, it might have been good praetiee for llliarjorie- Nlildred- Never mind the wedding ma'reh Beulah. we're speaking of past events-not future-and besides, maybe you and Helen will be needing , ww . , . . , ' D ' lllendolsons betore Marjorie doesf Clara- Well, l imagine I was thinking of the same thing that Beulah, lllaybel and Mildred were-namely-''Bachelor Hall! -lust think, a year ago lllay lbth, we girls made our appearanee in the tolotliglltsf' lllaybel- les, t'lara, and dont torget the boys in it-especially Jaek llleredith- l3etty do you still demand proof for everythingll lllaybe not sueh a demonstrative proof tho'g Vlaire, just remeniber what a star your mother was in her day, and do eredit to the Valn Styne 11211119 in the Fatal Shot tasidel the dear ehild is beautiful tonight the perlieet image ot l1er mother. ' lieulah-'tYeth lllama-Poly do you still think ala H I YWWLXIITS are the worst eranks you ever saw? And the tleHU0,,S-.,11,.Stt.l. IMD, and Ecky. do you remember how thi Ilmn ' . ' - -. Y I ' ' - It 1 1 f . Emil lohnson tluuy up his halnds aml san , l hood Ileaveus-the deaeonsg and Fred Hollander as l'inkerton 1'-ise with his loml elues blasted. That play was W,-minlv .I lm of ffm l ' ' C ' ' in'
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