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Page 28 text:
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Are you Scared when you get up to Speak? Can you talk Fluently? Let me show you how easy it is to overcome such a habit. Arrange for an interview. Dorothy Crooks. SPEECH SPECIALIST.’ Hame you tried my Stumma Cakes? I carry a complete line of dough. Lois Johnson’s Bakery.” Junk Dealers: We buy and sell anything that rattles or annoys—With An O.K. That Counts.” (Perry Johnson, Wayne Bowman and Donald Rigg). By the way, these are all the members of ’3 2 graduating class and what a class that one turned out to be. Anything from Junk Dealers to a president of good old America. Well so-long, this is all the news I can give you this year. I am now signing off with my best regards, in favor of the class of ’3 3. —Maxine Johnson ’32 SENIOR CLASS WILL We, the class of ’3 2 in the city of Waterloo, county of DeKalb, State of Indiana, and being of sound minds, keen judgment, and dignified ways, bequeath and publish this last will and testament. Item 1: We appoint Miss Garnet Smith as the sole executor of this will and docu¬ ment. (1) I, Maxine Johnson, will my ability to appreciate Shakespeare to John Centa. (2) I, Vera Kester, will my ability to cough pathetically to Hilda Kline. (3) I, Carl Geeting, will my ability to be nonchalant to Carlton Arnold. (4) I, Ruth Miller, will my ability to wink to Avis Hall. (5) I, Dorothy Crooks, will my ability to play basket ball to Junior Freed. (6) I, Donald Rigg, will my ability to wrestle to Byron Fretz. (7) I, Helen Moyer, will my ability of getting to school just before the bell rings to Lester Geeting. (8) I, Ralph lines, will my unreasonableness to Dale Moyer. (9) I, Wilmer McIntosh, will my ability to sleep in English class to Andy Hamp¬ shire. (10) I, Dorothy Goodwin, will my love for dogs to Leona Crooks. (11) I, Howard Hine, will my ability to work Geometry to Wayne Bookmiller. (12) I, Ned McIntosh, will my appreciation of basket ball to Bob Rohm. (13) I, Wayne Bowman, will my ability to get dates to Robert Matson. (14) I, Lois Johnson, will my good behavior to Charles Corrigan. (15) I, Wayne Sebert, will my ability to blush to Paul Camp. (16) I, Loren Yarlot, will my bookkeeping ability to Harold Brown. (17) I, Geraldine Rufner, will my height to Carroll Becher. (18) I, Perry Johnson, will my ability to read to Red Wolford. (19) I, Maxine McEntarfer, will my ability to loaf in Lab” to Maxine Bickel. (20) I, Hilda Kohl, will my ability of guessing to Estel White. (21) I, Paul McDonald, will my B. B. spirit to Lynn Dunn. We the Senior Class of ’32 sign and seal this last will and testament on this eighteenth day of April, 1932. RALPH IMES (Seal) Witnesses: Elsie Whitehair Charles Overmeyer T wenty-four
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Page 27 text:
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JSD30HTHE ROSEBUD STATION WHS BROADCASTING FROM THE HOME STUDIO IN THE EAST BUILDING Whew! Bang! can it be true? Just listen to these news items of the Waterloo Press, date June 2, 198 5. Mrs. Dorothy Vanderbuilt (former Miss Dorothy Goodwin who declared she would be an old maid and raise dogs) has just won a cash prize of five thousand dollars ($5,000) for being the sweetest little mother alive. Rather peculiar honor isn’t it? Well, not when you consider the circumstances. Here is her picture under which it reads some¬ thing like this: Some have children, some have none, But here is the Mother of twenty-one.” My how time does change a person’s ideas! Take warning all ye girls of sixteen and seventeen, make no prophecies; wait and see what the future has in store for you. Well, well, will wonders ever cease; here is a picture of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Sebert (the former Miss Geraldine Rufner) celebrating their golden wedding anniversary. What a sweet looking old couple. On the next page is a picture of Miss Helen Moyer in her dancing costume. One of Broadway’s best known acrobatic dancers. She is sixty-nine years old and looks no older than twenty. (Write for her formula, girls). She can do some of the most dangerous acrobatic stunts without even knocking out one single little tooth. They say there’s one gray headed man back home who forever keeps a candle burning in his cottage window, less his true love should return and find the way all dark and dreary. Ah, alas, poor Loren. And here is some great news. Mrs. Imes (the former Maxine McEntarfer) has been called home from her music studies abroad. Her husband, Mr. Ralph Imes, has been con¬ fined in a lunatic asylum for the past thirty-five years. I always had a faint suspicion there was a room waiting for him at just such an institution. Mr. Imes has just under¬ gone a serious operation; a large bone (the Improfoid Codfish bone) has just been re¬ moved from his brain. He is now perfectly normal and for the first time in his life can live and have a mind like any normal being. Ah! How unfortunate that this could have not happened years ago. Oh, by the way, we owe much credit of his recovery to his two faithful nurses, the Misses Vera Kester and Hilda Kohl. Here it says, Mr. Howard Hine, former president of United States has returned to his old home for a vacation, after serving eight faithful years as president. (I always knew he would do something like that after being with him in an American Government class). He usually tried to know more than that little man who sat perched behind the teachers desk and peered over the edge and said, Well so much for that.” Well I must hurry on for here it says Patronize your home grocer, Carl Geeting’s Grocery Store located on Main Street. (Which reminds me it is near lunching time). This headline sounds interesting, Sad But True.” Reverend Ted McIntosh has given up the idea of ever converting his brother Wilmer. The Reverend, his housekeeper and helper Miss Ruth Miller, have worked faithfully for the past forty years to lead Wilmer to the straight and narrow path. Their task was just about completed, scoring as victorious, when to the shock of the Reverend, he discovered his brother stealing lollypops from small children and selling them at half price. The shock was so great that the Reverend Mc¬ Intosh left for the foreign mission field the following day. (What a disappointment and he worked so hard). Well, I guess I will see if there is anything interesting in the advertising columns. Are you guilty of being seen with muddy, grimy looking shoes, shoes who are crying out for a polishing cloth? Come, heed the cry of those faithful workers and drop in at Paul McDonald’s shiner. If anyone can make those relics shine, ' Mickey’ can for the small sum of ten cents.”
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Page 29 text:
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