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Page 186 text:
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,.. . . -.......,..-....,,..... ,,.,................ .....- ...........-...-... . ...............,....................... ...H .....,. ..,.......-.......-.....-......-.---.--.--..,...,...-,....,............,.................-.....................-5, ''QZILTZTFIJ7.'.f.'J '5I-'-:.TSJ!2EZ:JF.T'..'L- -1'ZL'L'- ---.--' ' 'i'Il2 ' ,. X . x .... A . I LOVE ME In beauty I am not a star I know others more handsome by far, But my face-I don't mind it For I am behind it. It is those in the front that I jar. 0:0 0:0 0:1 VERY SLICK W'hen words fail, advertise. The slicker supply is unlimited and the circulation is immense. 0:0 9:0 0:4 MEN SUFFRAGE After much consideration I think the time is ripe IF or me to give up cigarettes And begin to smoke a pipe. I now give out my reason To me it is all right I think that smoking cigarettes Has grown too ladylike. 4:0 0:0 0:0 CONCERNING HATS AND THOSE' UNDERNEATI-I THEM The student's attention is called to some spectacular hats. First the ultra-collegiate hat worn by Mr. Fuller at the Yeatman-Roosevelt game at Maplewood. The cock of this cranium pro- tector worn by our honorable principal was enough to give any team a lighting spirit. XVe wonder whether the cock of this hat was really intended as a means of showing spirit or whether he was introducing a new style. Maybe it was an accident. W'e wish to ask Mr. Huntington if he bought tickets for all of the feathers which were in l1is hat at the Senior Color Raising Ceremony. If he did, he had enough to dis- place at least ten tickets. Maybe he took them when the Student Council wasn't look- ing. Who knows? We at least are sure that Mr. Kelly did not punch tickets for all of them. W'e at least must commend Mr. H. for his wonderful school spirit. One Hundred Eighty-two ' LOOK VVHAT AGE DID TO HIM! Now that he is old, he has become a misscrf' ' 'S' 4' 'I' THE YELLOW PERIL Miss Kelly: VVhat do you imagine would happen if China should conquer the world?,' Rosenthal: Every other store would be a laundry. ' W . HARD FACTS Mr. Birr CI-Iistory 6j: Now, a state is abstract, but individuals, people, are con- crete. 9:0 9:0 sfo OH-SEE THE FRAGRANCE The altar is bright with fragrance. c : '20 'Z' 'S' ROTTEN COSMETICS Enid's beauty was deep and soft. 02' 'S' 'I' W'AITER Gawain was hollow, hollow. . 0:0 0:0 0:0 WHERE, OH XIVHERE? The old lady was found not at home. 0:0 0:4 0:0 GIMME, GIMME! She willingly claimed possession. FLOW' GENTLY, SWEET AFTON Lancelot got into a boat and Howed down the stream. 0:0 0:0 0:0 GIRLS: ATTENTION! Mr. Dray: Be sure to take English 7 next term, for in it you will study men. Miss Jeffery: Of course, she may have committed suicide from force of habit, butlf'
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Page 185 text:
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Page 187 text:
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It has 'taken Life twenty years to rise to the distinction of a Contributors' Column, but one seems necessary and fitting in this last issue. It will surely add to the reader's pleasure to follow the careers of these makers of earlier isiuesl of the magazine, and to find that many have continued to develop the talent that they displiayed while in SC 100 . George Tandy, January 1909, attended Vifashington University brieliy and then en- tered business. He is now assistant sales manager for the Union Electric Light Co. Fred F ix, June 1911, better known in his High School days as Peter, was for two years the financial biulwark of Life . He has carried his business ability into com- mercial life, and is now a substantial citizen in North St. Louis, Secretary of the North St. Louis Planing Mill Co., and prominent in Masonic circles. Wiillard Farnham, june 1908, graduated brilliantly from the University of VVisconsin and took his Ph. D. degree at Harvard. He was an instructor in the Department of English at Xlfashington and Lee University for a time and for the last three years has been Associate Professor of English in the University of California at Berkeley. His record of the places in which Mr. Yveatman lived will fix in our minds landmarks which the steady march of the city has completely obliterated. Neil Brown, june 1914, graduated from Wfisconsin University, attended the first of- ficers' training camp at Fort Sheridan and served a year overseas as liaison officer. He is now assistant editor of the Execu- tive's Magazine , formerly The Wfest at VVork. Fred Doyle, June 1910, a capable Editor of Life -sometimes its chief contributor -is now studying at St. Louis University to become a Jesuit. Sucille Bryant, June 1907, remembered in the early days of Yeatman as the all round student, has had busy years since leaving Yeatman. After graduating from the Uni- versity of Missouri, she taught at Cleveland High School, in Hawaii, and did overseas war work. She is continuing her career as Mrs. C. A. Carlysle, manager of a husband and small daughter. Her home is in Bir- mingham, Alabama. ' Helen Landwehr, June 1917, attended Harris Teachers College and the University of Missouri and is now teaching in St. Louis at the Clark School. Wialter VV ood, the President of June 1918, speaks to us most appropriately in Taps, written while he was in camp. He is one of the gallant Yeatman boys who died as a result of the Wiorld NVar. Is the Beaumont the result of the Scho- lastic Sardine Can ? If so, the community should express its appreciation to Dorothy Davison, now Mrs. Eno 1Ninius, and Dent McSkimming, sport writer for the Post- Dispatch. Roma Schaefer, June 1924, is continuing her studies at VV'ashington University. Irene Krummel. January 1915, has been graduated from the City College of Law and is now ready to get us out of trouble. Herbert Rauch, June 1917, was last heard of on the way to Florida, where we hope he has already made his million. Valesca Satterlield, January 1918, is a physician. If he prescribes a rest cure for his patients, he will surely stipulate that it be spent in the Ozarks. Mildred Schleuter, June 1925, is busy making designs for her father's Wood- carving. Katherine Emerson, June 1922, another Life Editor, has made an enviable name for herself at the Purina Mills, where she has been the assistant in the personnel depart- ment. jane Gifford has continued her author- ship in Red Feather, a series of Indian stories for use in the grade schools. She is now teaching in the Horace Mann School, the model institution connected with 'Colum- bia University, New York City. Francis Kaiman, January 1914, is writing advertising for the National Bank of Com- merce. One Hundred Eighty-three
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