U and I . urecamera to immortalize his tennis skill. Robert Trost, the Philo politician, is trying desperately to obtain the promo-tion of dog-catcher second class. Irene Webb has at long last gone back to New York to care for the only treein Brooklyn. Catherine Welsh has now become truly poised. She now uses the art of rais-ing her eyebrows instead of the roof. Bob Wingard is writing singing commercials for radio station WDZ. Yvonne Wylie just flew back from Hawaii where she taught the nativeshow to hula. Rest, rest, perturbed spirit. Page Twenty-five A Tale • • • There goes an old taleThat J


U and I . urecamera to immortalize his tennis skill. Robert Trost, the Philo politician, is trying desperately to obtain the promo-tion of dog-catcher second class. Irene Webb has at long last gone back to New York to care for the only treein Brooklyn. Catherine Welsh has now become truly poised. She now uses the art of rais-ing her eyebrows instead of the roof. Bob Wingard is writing singing commercials for radio station WDZ. Yvonne Wylie just flew back from Hawaii where she taught the nativeshow to hula. Rest, rest, perturbed spirit. Page Twenty-five A Tale • • • There goes an old taleThat Joe, the occupant for quite sometimeHere in Uni HighDoth all the winter-timeWalk round about the schoolWith strange horror in his he is a wretched soulBruised with examinationsAs all his ancestorsGone before him were ;And all his descendantsThat come after him may , what teachers dare do!What teachers may do!What teachers daily do,Not knowing what they do! Page Twenty-six. ento about t^Mtftrt Page Twenty-seven


Size: 1474px × 1695px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthoruniversi, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookyear1921