Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO)

 - Class of 1922

Page 42 of 132

 

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 42 of 132
Page 42 of 132



Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 41
Previous Page

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 43
Next Page

Search for Classmates, Friends, and Family in one
of the Largest Collections of Online Yearbooks!



Your membership with e-Yearbook.com provides these benefits:
  • Instant access to millions of yearbook pictures
  • 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
  • Support the schools in our program by subscribing
  • Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information

Page 42 text:

f 5 ......-...,..z, ,.,,,,V..,h,,,, ,,,,. , ., ,,., .,. ...., . ,,-. ,,.,. ,. .,..,,, ,, - ,,,,,,,..,. T.. ..,, I WJ ........ J .:..,.W!lZLJ 7.------3 W, 5p:t:,.,1 :.,.-...,f,, ,,,. ,, ,A,, f gn-,--,,,',-,f,:,a,,--,-,,-, -L-,-,1- ,, '-v' f ,,,,, , ,.,,, ! 2 f'v- in .Q.Qf'a.:,:3Zi,,m.f ...,, ,,,,,4g,,,g1-' .',,. 2':1 .7:L',':.':'. f,.:'g,1.:',t. -21:11 .,,., . ,,..,., .. 11:4 .':: ,111f,1 , Confederate cause. My great uncle, who was stationed for a while at Fort Benton, the present site of Fair Grounds Park, re- ceived orders a number of times to search the house for Confedertae soldiers or spies. When my grandparents moved in and won- dered at his surprising familiarity about the house, he told them that he had been through the place several times in search of a young man who was wanted by the Union Army Headquarters as a very dan- gerous spy. That is all we knew about his adventures in the army. I sat there staring at the portrait, the room getting darker and mistier. The spick and span blue of my great uncle's uni- form got darker and grayer and grayer, until it was almost black. In fact, the whole room seemed to be turning into a grayish black haze and for a while I seemed in a stupor. Then the haze seemed to lift and the furniture was outlined in a pearl gray light, like that of dawn just before the sun goes up over the horizon. I looked up and saw that the uniform in the picture had turned to a slate gray. All the gold braid trimming had disappeared and the whole figure seemed to be more slender and taller. My eyes traveled up to the head and there penetrated my mind the very startling fact that from under a slouched gray hat a new face looked out at me. Considering the strangeness of it all, I was not very much surprised, but merely sat there staring as though unable to move. A slight tremor shook the picture and then the figure stepped out of the frame, onto the radiator, and lightly down to the Hoor. It was the form of a Confederate soldier, a very young and slender man. He swept off his slouch hat and made a low bow, his sword touching the fioor with a very faint tinkle. I will never forget his voice as he said, How do you do, Miss? May I have the pleasure of a momentls conversation with you? My name is Sergeant Nelson. I answered rather faintly, f'Certainly. Where did you come from? I am not permitted to say, he an- swered almost sharply, but resumed his af- fable manner at once. Curiosity is in- deed a female trait still. Your esteemed great uncle had a considerable part in my death. For the first time I became surprised. My face must have showed it, as my Sir Confederate became very anxious. I pray don't be startled, he said. Are you subject to the vapors? My heaven! No! I answered. Your uncle merely did his duty as a soldier. He found me in this room and took me then to a court martial and I was hanged as a spy. This is my first return here. He said all this in such a matter of fact, amiable tone that it seemed rather foolish to be horriied. The soldier, seeming to think he had explained his presence suf- ficiently, sat down in front of me and ex- amined me from head to foot in rather a pitying manner. I see, he said gently, that there has been another terrible typhoid epidemic. They used to be dreaded in the camps. t'No, I answered. There has been no typhoid here for some timefl 'Well, well. Perhaps there has been small-pox. Still, your face is not pockedf' Murder! I explained. f'Do I look ready for the grave? What makes you think there has been an epidemic? Well, he said, fyour hair is cropped. ' I explained to him that bobbed tresses were distinctly the mode. Then it was his turn to be surprised. His boyish mouth widened into the semblance of a capital O and he seemed unable to find words to ex- press his amazement. After a moment he grew calmed and looked at me closely from head to foot. Then he said, I beg your pardon, Miss, but is it also the fashion to be so--ah--so wide, and to have the gar- ments cut so very skimpily?' I felt a little huffed at this because, though I may not exactly be called a sylph, I am not considered unusually wide Certainly, Sergeant Nelson, I replied tartly, wishing to shock him a little. 'Eighteen-inch waists are considered nei- ther healthful nor fashionable. I might Page Fwxfv-fine

Page 41 text:

Q -25111419-,LQ'1-.5-.lf-.fQfff1l'fQ1-'Q'2-.lf .,-I QIZLQLQQ ,,' W a A f ff , f W , W gf! f I Z .. . . if3?Eif.fii51:ifi1:iifg?E,ff.iiiifzf iff.ifff,:E???:fiZi,ii11'if.f?EgiQ:.gfifiQiZ1if'j2E2.Qi2fQ11f,Qf1Ii.E2fjjS325 ..,. ,.'., fgfjfirgffiffifffiiliiififffii.,..fifQgfj.ii1if1QEEl31:1:i1::f'1,1:-gr::1iif?f?N'f:fij CORAL EARRINGS By ROMA SCHAEFER To begin with, the weather was partly the fault. It was a day in late March, be- ginning with a cold, blustery wind, turn- ing, around noon, into a veritable balmy spring day and ending with a damp, ugly, misty drizzle. Such a day would infiuence even the most calm and unperturbable per- son. So it affected me, who am not usua- ly one of the said calm and unperturbable. On the day previously described, my mother, my aunt and the laundress were in the throes of a violent orgy of spring house-cleaning. My aunt had been get- ting out and sorting old jewelry and trink- kets and deciding just what to sell to the antique jewelry dealers, but finally keep- ing everything instead. This was done yearly. The three unanimously told me, politely but firmly, that I should betake myself elsewhere, as my well meaning but awkward aid was decidedly not needed or wanted. Just then it commenced to driz- zle in an apathetic, doleful sort of way and prevented my seeking the solace of the companionship of my best pal There was no place to go on the whole lower floor. One had to mince along for fear of sitting on a cake of soap, stepping into a bucket of sudsy water or getting hopeless- ly tangled in the cord of the vacuum sweep er. I drifted upstairs feeling abused, neg- l e c t e d a n d altogether melancholy. There was only one room not cluttered with curtain rods, rolled up rugs and dust cloths and that was the one which be- longed to my grandmother. This was the largest in the house and a nice enough room on sunshiny days. On a dull, misty, gloomy day, however, it was a different matter This room was almost too full of furniture and this overcrowded condition, usually relieved by the sunlight coming from the three large windows, only seemed more oppressive because of the gloom out- side. The room was amply filled with two tall wardrobes, a huge wooden bedstead, Page Forly two very old-fashioned bureaus and the usual number of chairs. The walls were hung with perfectly enormous crayon en- largements, one each of my grandfather, my grandmother, my great aunt and my great uncle. The last one I must take the time to describe to you. It was hung over what should have been a fireplace, but it was closed up by the presence of a long radiator. The fireplace part, in fact, the whole side wall, projected about a foot out into the room, giving a particular promi- nence to the picture. The portrait itself was a full length one of my great uncle in his Civil War uniform. I have quite a clear recollection of this old gentleman, even though he died when I was only about seven. He used to come to see my grand- mother every Saturday and spend the day with us. The greater part of the after- noon he spent puttering around the yard, clipping the mulberry trees, nailing any loose boards on the fences, and, in fact, doing a thousand perfectly useless things, but enjoying himself, nevertheless. He was a very silent man, and never said a word about his experiences in the war. As I sat down and looked at his picture, half veiled in a smoky gloom, the half ri- diculous side of it came to me. My great uncle had been a very small man, scarcely five feet three nches in height and the or- nate captain's dress uniform looked just a little out of place on him. His face, too, had an indescribably Irish look, consider- ing the fact that he was certainly not Irish When he was younger, my grandmother said, he looked and walked very much like Napoleon. How that could be, I must leave to the imaginations of my readers. Our house had been built before the Civil War by a man who occupied a very prominent position in the affairs of St. Louis County, as at that time the city was apart of the county. This man was known as having decided sympathies with the



Page 43 text:

wwf WWW 9 y C f My XZ Q f7 QQZ'7? gif T1fill'f.fQZ'Q1QQQ,f'-Iff-fQl,f-:Ei , '-' ' , ,. ,.,, ,,,.,,,,., f f ...,,,- 'Q ' gh f.2' 1 ffaaww A cc., IQ. Q75 ,.,, also add that 'skimpy' dresses are a good deal cheaper and let people know that most girls have pretty legs. And I might also add, my dear Miss, he shot back at me, that Well bred young ladies do not talk about such things and if the distasteful subject must be mentioned, they say 'limb' instead. Oh, fiddlesticksln I retorted. 'Such nonsense disappeared long before women got to vote. Please do not be so vexed he said courteously, his momentary anger gone, 'I did not come here to quarrel with you. Indeed, -I didn't think anyone wou'd be here, as you are, in the day time. I must accomplish my purpose. ' Is your purpose a secret? Oh, no, he answered I may as well tell you the story. You see, before my death I was about to marry a very charm- ing Georgia girl. It was the custom then for the soldiers to carry some trinket or piece of jewelry which belonged to their sweethearts. Elizabeth gave me a pair of coral ear-rings to carry as a luck charm. I kept them both until the very end, when I was captured by your uncle. In the struggle one fell into the Hreplace and I have come back forit, merely to see if it is was still there and--and well--perhaps be- cause I used to be very sentimental about such affairs. See, here is one of them. He Page F orgy- Two 42 f Z we f f QW f 1 f f M ff 2 .'.., :.'.::.:,. ,::' ,.5':,.:s,.:::,g:::.::.::',.:',.1Lj1f,: ..,, ,c,....,, drew a leather case from his breast pocket and took out the ear-ring. It was very small and dainty, just large enough to cover the lobe of a small ear. It was of gold with a piece of rose coral fas- tened to the top of it in a peculiar fashion, as though held there by two tiny bands. When I had expressed my admiration, Sergeant Nelson hastily took back the trin- ket and turned about. I heard him utter a cry of dismay and he looked anxiously at the concealed fireplace and then at me. Why, what has happened? he ex- claimed. It is replaced by an iron grat- ing and-oh! You are waking up and I won't be able to get it It will stay there now forever. Just then a sort of golden light filled the room. My eyes became dim and I heard a faint Good-bye as I saw the Confeder- ate turning to misty haze. For a moment everything remained in perfect darkness. Then I felt a heavy jar and I became broad awake, half of me on the floor, the other half on the chair. I rubbed my eyes sleepily and wondered if the lemon pie we had had for dinner had affected me so seriously. The room was filled by a momentary ray of sunshine and I cast down my eyes to avoid the glare. I saw something which startled me exceed- ingly. Of course, it was only a coincidence but at my feet lay a tiny coral ear-ring. 2 5

Suggestions in the Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) collection:

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

1926

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 12

1922, pg 12

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 113

1922, pg 113

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 83

1922, pg 83

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 49

1922, pg 49

Yeatman High School - Yeatman Life Yearbook (St Louis, MO) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 61

1922, pg 61


Searching for more yearbooks in Missouri?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online Missouri yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
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.