North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA)

 - Class of 1915

Page 25 of 90

 

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 25 of 90
Page 25 of 90



North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 24
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Page 25 text:

SS!«THE 0MCLE?5ii POOR LITTLE INSECT. Once two clever Science boys, being so bright, Plotted to pull off a joke just right. They first caught a hopper and centipede there. And even a beetle and butterfly fair. They made an insect of all these things, With centipede body, and butterfly wings. The grass-hopper ' s legs and the beetle ' s queer head, They glued thorn together and euilolosslv said: We in the lield this bug did catch. Can you tell us what kind of bug is that? ' Did it hum when you caught it? the Professor said. ' Yes, they answered with a shake of the head. He looked at the bug again and smiled For he was a scientist old and mild. Then he anj wered their question, looking about, Well, this is a humbug then, no doubt. C. H. ' 16. THE GAME OF CADDY. When my father speaks of his boyhood days, he seldom fails to mention a game called Caddy, which aff ' orded him more amusement than any other. Any number of boys could play this game. They would first chop the handle from one of Grandmother ' s old brooms, which she was kind enough to donate for their enjojinent. This they would cut into two pieces, one about five inches long, which they whittled to a point at the end, the other about three feet long. Then for fun! They laid the smallest stick on the ground, hit it on one end with the club, which made it bounce up. Then each, in his turn, tried to knock it the farthest. Cloris Wallace, ' 18. 91

Page 24 text:

A QUAKER WEDDING. Mary Heald. When I asked my father to tell me something interesting about his boyhood, this is what he told me : When I was a boy, one of the things whiVh wore nf great interest to me was a Quaker wedding. The old Quaker meeting house was so arranged that the men sat on one side and the women on the other. There was a partition between, so high that they could not see each other during meeting. They had a ' Fourth Day ' meeting ever ' Wednesday and if there was a couple present, who desired to be married, they made this desire known here. The man would arise and, going to the one he had chosen, he would lead her to the front of the congregation. He would then say, We hereby announce our intentions of becoming husband and wife. ' A month after this, at meeting, he would do this again, announcing the continuation of this plan, or the with- drawal of it. Two weeks after this, the marriage occurred. All the people of the community were present, as it was a great occasion. Meeting took up as usual and all was quiet for about an hour. Then the young man arose and led his bride to the front. They were both clad simply. The bride had on a gray silk dress of rich material but simply made. She also wore a little gray bonnet. The groom was dressed in a gray cloth suit of the best material, but made without a collar. The young man made a speech something like this : ' I take to be my wife, promising by Di ine guid- ance to be to her a faithful and loving husband. ' Then the bride promised to be a true wife, and they both sat down on the front row of the women ' s side, and the meeting prog- ressed as usual. After the meeting was over, the clerk of the church asked the people to sign their names as itnesses of the ceremony. Then the congregation went to the bride ' s home where a wedding dinner was serv ed. 90



Page 26 text:

RUFUS RADD. Now Rufus Radd was the toughest lad That I have ever seen, And of mishaps he had, perhaps, One thousand, seventeen. So just a few as I review In brief I will relate, For Rufus Radd was a reckless lad. Unlucky was his fate. First of all, when he was small. He ate a can of lye. But strange to tell, he soon got well. And there ' s a reason why — For little Radd was the toughest lad That I have ever seeiK Whene ' er he fell he ' d never yell As though he broke his ' bean. Instead of that his hands he ' d pat And cry in gleeful mirth. And so you see why I decree Him the toughest lad on earth. And it appears, in later years. His fate was just the same. And even though his luck was so He ne ' er was hurt nor lame. On one spring day while on his way To see a picture show, A tottering wall the wind made fall, Poor Rufus was below. 92

Suggestions in the North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) collection:

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

North High School - Polar Bear Yearbook (Des Moines, IA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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