High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 32 text:
“
THE QUIVER 30 young lady’s home several times lately. This, of course, was unknown to the cluh members. As Arthur left the cluh on this particular afternoon, in his little roadster, he decided to take a ride around the city. The wind was blowing harder now. and, as he went up a side street, he saw a lady’s hat blow off and. propelled by the wind, go sailing over his machine. I le looked hack, hut seeing nothing, drove on and soon forgot the incident. The hat, however, had lodged on the front of his car between the hood and the mudguard and stayed there in full view of everyone but Arthur while he drove along. Up one street and down another he drove, enjoying the keen crisp air. As he rounded a corner near the City Hall, he waved to a group of friends, hut did not stop. They waved in return, hut were amazed at the sight of the hat on the front of his car. How could it have got there? Had he been riding with a girl, who had left it there? They looked at one another for an answer, hut no one could give one. It was hardly possible that the president of the Bachelor’s Cluh would he riding with a woman. Yet th • hat was there, because they had all seen it. W ell, they would see him about it on the following day; and until then, they let the matter drop. Unconscious of what his friends were saying, Arthur drove on a little while longer and then decided to go home. ( )n his way he passed Elsie Smith, the young lady on whom he had called several times lately, and looking around to make sure that no one saw him. he invited her to ride home with him. She jumjied into the car, and they were soon at her door. As she got out of the car, she noticed the hat on the front of the machine and told him al out it. Arthur was surprised to find the hat there and was at a loss to know what to say. The young woman was angry when he could not explain, and. thanking him coldly for the ride, she turned and quickly entered the house, stopping at the door only long enough to tell him that she wished he would not call again. Arthur, feeling disappointed and a trifle “peeved,” took the hat and rode down to the city again, looking for a hatless woman who might have lost it. He drove through the streets lie had been through that afternoon, stopping now and then to ask a woman without a hat if the one he had found belonged to her. He did not find the owner, however, and finally rode home with the hat still in his possession. hat a fix he was in! What could he do now? How could he explain to Elsie? Women were always had luck to him He wouldn’t ever bother with another in all his life—not even Elsie Smith. His father and mother laughed when he told them about it and tried to cheer him, hut it was useless. He could not forget how Elsie had acted without giving him half a chance to explain, and she was the only woman Insides his mother that he had ever cared for.
”
Page 31 text:
“
THE QUIVER 29 engine and lalxiriously putting it together again. Then at night, when the Ford was in | erfect order under the tin covering, Arnold would set forth and call on Doris, a fair damsel, who lived on the hill and went to boarding-school. hut was “'just crazy” alxmt Fords. She had said that she would much rather go riding with Arnold in the Ford than with Harold in his father’s town car. Of course, Arnold did not Ixdieve everything that l)ori said, hut he did l elieve this. Arnold, standing looking at his “car, thought of the dance at the club tonight, with a pleased smile, Doris had promised to attend the dance with him. He had had his flannels pressed for the occasion and had a new tie of the gayest colors possible to match his high spirits. It was going to he a wonderful night. And it was. The Ford did not break down. They arrived in time. The orchestra |M ured forth its sweetest melodies. They danced in the colon.d lights and drank the “pure-fruit-juice-punch.” All too soon. “1 lome-Sweet-I Ionic was l eing played. After the dance, the “crowd piled into Arnold’s Ford, had milk and cake at Doris’s, and departed for home. Surely the Ford had done good work ! That night Arnold was awakened by his mother. She told him excitedlv that Father was seriously ill and that the telephone was “dead. It took Arnold but a second to grasp the situation, and in another second he and the Ford were on the way to the doctor’s. In a verv few minutes. Arnold and his comjianion wrere at Father’s bedside. Twice the Ford had done good work !! Father got well, and never poked fun at Arnold’s “car again, am more than did the rest of the family. Fred Hendricks. ’26. WHY ARTHUR BECAME A BACHELOR T was a bright, windy autumn afternoon, and ] eople hurried briskly here and there alxrnt their work. There was a touch of winter in the sharp wind that nipped one’s hands and face, and the ojkmi fireplace of the Bachelor’s C lub was indeed very comforting to the members. Many of the men who lounged around the fire were prominent business men. although all were in a financial position that allowed them freedom from their work very often. The election of officers had taken place on the evening previous, and Arthur Jones, one of the voungest and most jxipular members, had been made president: but. although he professed to he an ardent bachelor, he had visited a certain K Hcm.c
”
Page 33 text:
“
THE QUIVER 31 After dinner the next day. Arthur went to his club in an effort to find some means of amusement. As he drove into the yard, several of the men who had been ground around another automobile came over to see him. They immediately mentioned the fact that they had seen the lady’s hat on his car the day l efore, and, of course, they wanted to hear his story. Arthur explained the facts very nicely, and if they had believed him, everything would have been all right. Hut they didn’t believe him. and they laughed at him when he denied having Ijeen “joy riding” with a woman. Finally, one of the men looked over Arthur’s car as if he expected to find another hat and noticed a hairpin on the floor. He made the fact known at once, and, at a special meeting a few days later, they asked Arthur to resign as head of the club. He did so, feeling very sad, and immediately withdrew from the dub. If the men exacted to see him in company with some young lady s ion. they were disappointed, for, although he had seen Elsie Smith secretly in the past, this affair made him shun women more than ever. In his room at home, Arthur thought over the incident, and it made him feel very hitter against all of the “weaker sex.” Because of a woman’s hat and a woman’s hairpin, he had lost the office of president of his club and had also lost the only young woman for whom he had ever cared The more he thought about it. the less he thought of women; and in this state of mind, he vowed never to have anything to do with women again. Now he really is a “woman hater.” and he might tell you this story, were you to ask him why he is a l achelor. C. Arthur Feei.ey. ’26. GAMA Gama was a little Belgian clog that belonged to a friend that lived on the same street as we did. His mistress died suddenly, and (jama used to come up to our house a great deal and follow my mother around all the time. In a few months the dog’s family moved away; and as the dog seemed to like my mother so well, his master said that we might as well keep him. Gama was a small dog. all black except for a brown s] ot over each eye, and a white vest. He had beautiful brown eyes that seemed to sjjeak to you and had a very intelligent look. His black coat was very sleek and shiny, looking as though he had just been brushed. As (jama had lived with French people all his life, he understood French much lietter than he did English, and we had some trouble at first trying to make him understand all that we wanted him to. On the whole, he got along very well, and we all loved him very much. Even Toby, our cat. would go to sleep curled up beside him.
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.