James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA)

 - Class of 1922

Page 1 of 268

 

James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 268 of the 1922 volume:

imii - ' k r ( Jforetuorb I count only the hours that shine — We have chosen the mes- sage of the sun dial as the motif of our book. We have filled it with hours that shine with comradeship and loyalty, ob- stacles overcome, work well done, and play enjoyed to the fullest. Among its pages we hope you will find some hints of honest endeavor and high achievement, and above all that intangi- ble, ever-present SOMETHING that we know as the spirit of Harrisonburg. 53ooUs I THE SCHOOL II OUT OF DOORS III CLASSES IV ORGAMZATIOXS - V ATHLETICS ' I A DASH OF PAPKn A VII MISCELLAXY VI II EDITORS ' SAXCTL ' M J To A Great Teacher OToobrobj OTilfion Son of the Valley of Virginia World-Patriot Pholosrapti by Uachracti. Batlimurc. ld. WoopRow Wilson t iss BcANCtie PeT?:R I Important Members of the Administration SAMUEL PAGE DUKE, A. B., A. M. PRESIDENT JOHX WALTER WAYLAND, A. B.. Ph. D. HISTORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCES ELIZABETH PENDLETON CLEVELAND, A. B. ENGLISH AND FRENCH NATALIE LANCASTER, B. S. MATHEMATICS AND SOCIAL DIRECTOR JAMES CHAPMAN JOHNSTON CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS MARGARET VANCE HOFFMAN. B. A. LATIN AND PIANO MUSIC RUTH SMOOT HUDSON, B. O. EXPRESSION MARY LOUISE SEFGER, B. S. EDUCATION, DIRECTOR OF KINDERGARTENS FRANCES ISABEL 1 IACKEY MANUAL ARTS EDNA TROUT SHAEFFER PIANO, ORGAN, AND SCHOOL MUSIC PEARL POWERS MOODY, B. S. HOME ECONOMICS RAYMOND CARLYLE DINGLEDINE, B. S., M. S HISTORY AND SOCIAL SCIENCES ETHEL SPILMAN, A. B. GEOGRAPHY GEORGE WARREN CHAPPELEAR, JR., B. S., M. S. IIIOLW.V AND AGRICULTIKE kathI ' :rixe nxi-:R anthoxv. b. s. EDUCATION ' , DIRECTOR OF TRAl. lN(i SI llOOLS €:f)e Jfaciiltp llK. k A. L(J. tk b:, B. A.. Fh. D. MATHEMATICS. RKC.ISTRAR WALTER JOHN ' GIFFORD. A. B.. A. M.. Pii. D. EDLCATIO.V, DEAN OF FACULTY COXRAD TRANTS LOGAN , A. E.. A. L ENGLISH GRACE ADELLE McGUIRE. B. S. INSTITCTIONAL MANAGEMENT. DIETITIAN MRS. W. G. LeHEW. B. S. WRITING IRGIXL ZIRKLE BROCK. B. S. HOME ECONOMICS MYRTLE LEOXE WILSOX. B. S. HO.ME ECONOMICS LOTTA DAY. Ph. B.. L S. HOME ECONO.MICS GRACE BRIXTOX. Ph. B.. M. A. HOME ECONOMICS LOUISE B. FRAXKE PHYSICAL EDUCATION EDXA GLEASOX. B. S. HOME ECONOMICS F. M. XUXXALLY. R. X. SCHOOL AND HOME NURSING RUTH C. PAXXILL. R. X. SCHOOL AND HOME NURSING GLADYS IREXE SCHARFEXSTELX, Ph. B. HOME ECONOMICS AMY J. STEVEXS. B. S. LIBRARIAN MRS. J. FRAXK BLACKBURX VOCAL MUSIC ELZLABETH TRAPPE VIOLIN ih 111 William Hampton Keister ' . Suf ' criiitcndcut Citv Schools Katherine Miner Anthony, B. S Director of the Training Schools Mary Louise Seeger, B. S Director of the Kindergarten Lois Campbell, B. A Critic, First Grade Mary E. Cornell Critic, first Grade Virginia Buchanan Critic. Second Grade Zoe Porter Critic, Third Grade Elizabeth Rucker Critic, fonrtli Grade M. Claire Stembridge ...Critic. Fourth Grade Orra Elizabeth Bowman . .Cn ' c, Fifth Grade Vada Maude Whitesel ...Critic. Si.vtii Grade Ethel Spilman, A. B Gcogra[ hy Critic Elizabeth Harnsberger, B. A. Matlieinatics Critic I rieda Johnson English Critic Sallie IL Blosser Critic, i ' lcasant Hill. Junior High .S ' cliool WILLIAM H. keister September 22. 1921 N the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void ; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God said. Let there be light ; and there was Hght. And God saw the light, that it was good : and God divided the light from the dark- ness. And God called the light Day, and the Darkness he called Night. And the evening and the morning were the first day. And God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, and let it divide the waters from the waters. And God made the firmament, and divided the waters which were under the firmament from the waters which were above the firmament : and it was so. And God called the firmament Heaven. And the evening and the morning were the second day. And God said, Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the earth after his kind : and it was so. And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our like- ness : and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth. So God created man in his own image, in the image of God cre- ated he him ; male and female created he them. And God blessed them, and God said unto them. Be fruitful, and multiplv. and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air. and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth. ■ ■ I I (IMItMIt IT • ■ ' ' ' • ' ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' ■ ■ ' ■ ' ■ ' ■ ' I ' l ' iVi ' ij ' t ' i ' i ' i ' ii Prapcr Sr.PTKMIiKK 22. 1 ' ' 21 .MKilirV lAlllICR. x- stand today at the lni, ' inniiig of anotluT year — another year of ilTort. of opportunity. To thee we call for blessing. Thou art the Great Beginning of all gKod — of all life and light and work. We in- ()ke thy favor and thy wisdom. Thou iiast hieii mir lul|) in days past that we have known, and in ages past that we have not known. Our fathers and our mothers from many generations have found hope and courage before thv throne. Trusting thee, they have fovuid strength for the great tests of life; and in thy service they have developed patience for the small tasks that Tiiust be done. .-Ml nations have acknowledged thee, and man has ever done his noblest work in fol- lowing thy laws. Be our help today, O Cod I Fix our souls upon thy gracious promises. We rejoice in the image in which thou bast created us. We are not .satisfied unless we approach more closely unto thee. We are oppressed with a sense of failure unless we are emulating thy example. Help us to give form and organization to things that are now waste and empty. Help us to quicken upward move- ments and to initiate right action. Help us to see the light and to cause it to shine in dark places. Help us to enrich the life that thou has planted in us. to the end that thy name may be glorilied in all the children of men. Thou hast given us dominion upon the earth — help us to sub- due the evil and the ugly ; help us to establish the just and the beautiful; that thy kingdom may come and thy will be done on earth as it is done in heaven. For Jesus Christ ' s sake. .Amex. )t Creation of J arrisfonburg; Jgormal cijool ]( )LLOWING the adoption of the Constitution of 1901-02, in the session of the General Assembly known as the Long Parlia- ment, a l)ill was introduced by Honorable J. T. West, of Louisa county, establishing a Xorthside Normal School for Women at some suitable location north of James river — this site to be chosen later. In the end, after thorough consideration, the conclusion was reached that no one school could be so located as to reach the demands and wishes of all the people. The final decision was that there should he three such institutions ; and Radford, Harrisonburg, and Fredericksburg received the vote as the proper loca- tions, it being understood that any one of these schools established should be with reference to the founding of the other two later on. But it had been by a hard battle that Harrisonburg won out as a site chosen. It is this that I would speak of now. I was the senator from the ' alley on the commission to investigate locations. In this instance I had departed from what had in the past been my uniform prac- tice — which was not to seek appointment on specific committees or. either in per- son or through friends, to suggest to the appointing power that I should like to have such position. Now I went directly to Lieutenant-Governor ' illard, who had the appointing of the Senate membership, and told him frankly that I desired to be on this committee. The commission made its investigation and reported its findings to the next session of the General Assembly. This report was referred to the proper com- mittees of the two bodies, and was considered and discussed at the regular 1904 session, but without any affirmative action — this not being a pr(i[)itii)ris time be- cause of the state ' s deplorable financial condition. Two vears later, innnediately upon the convening of the legislature. I intro- dticed a bill for establishing a Normal and Industrial School for Women and locating it at Harrisonburg. After being reported from the Committee of I ' ublic Institutions and Education, it was referred to the Committee on Finance, where an appropriation of $75,000 was recommended. ( This was later reduced to $50,000, Fredericksburg receiving the other $25,000.) The Harrisonburg bill tlien took its place on the Senate calendar. Many other localities were still in sharp comi)etition. It w;is not possible that any one site could secure the necessary twenty-one voles while the various competing points were still in the contest. The Senate, in the meantime, was thoroughly canvassed, and more than twenty-one senators promised that, if their ])laces should be x-oted onl. ihev would sU])port Harrisonburg. ( )ne by one these other sites — proposed merely in ainenclments — were voted out, and tlie bill passed the Senalo. with llarrisonhiirg as tiie location. It was then brought before the House, but refused a hearing. 1 next asked permission of the I ' inance (. onunittec to write this bill into, and as a part of, the general a| pro])riation bill. This reipicst was kindly granted. ' Ihc Senate ap- proved. Tims the i|uestion of the Xornial ScIumi! ;u i larrisimhurg went to the Hou.se as a part of the general api)roi)riali(in bill, where il would have to be acted upon in some way. In this shape the bill became a law. This is. briefly, the history of the legislative action by which the .school was established. I ' rom the passing of the act creating the commission to investigate localities and make reports, until the linal action hy wiiich the school was estab- lished, every move was the result of careful ihougln and ])lanning, and the struggle was unremitting. Throughout it all. however, most enthusiastic and substantial aid was e.xlendeil by jniblic officials and citizens of Harrisonburg and Rocking- ham County. — George B. Keezell ■W- ' , -r . Ef)e Virginia iSormal djool poarb MR. E. O. LARRICK Middlktowx, Frederick County HONORABLE MERRITT T. COOKE Norfolk DR. H. M. DeJARNETTE Fredericksburc, MR. GEORGE L. TAYLOR Big Stone G. p MR. R. S. CHAMBERLAYNE. JR Piienix. Charlotte County MISS BELLE WEBB Prince Georce, Prince Georc.e County HONORABLE ALFRED G. PRESTON . . . . Amsterd.xm, Botetourt County MR. GEORGE M. VARREX Bristol MR. W. CLYDE LOCKER Richmond HONORABLE ' . R. SHACKELFORD Or. noe, Or. nc.e County MR. BENJAMIN V. MEARS E.xstville MRS, A. P. STAPLES Ro.xnoke HIS EXCELLENCY, E. LEE TRINKLE Richmond (Governor of ' irginia, cx-officio) HONORABLE HARRIS HART Richmond (State Superintendent of Public Instruction, c.v-officioj SDfficcrs of tftc 13oiirD HONORABLE -. R. SHACKELFORD President MR. W. CLYDE LOCKER ice-President HONORABLE ROBERT K. BROCK Secret.vry-.Xuditi.r Out ©f D©©rs u o U .V- -T « ■A u X CO o Q H 1 X H M o a o m X X Pl Osusses O) a JBegree Clagg 99otto Wc fall to ri.u arc baffled to fi jht better. ColorsJ Purple and Gold ! [AYMOXD C. DINGLEDINE HONORARY MEMBER y|te E HI 11 B n i w ' 1 J 1 • EDNA T. SHAEFFER AIIVISORV MEMBER 9t?asrot Ravmom) C I)i (;i.i;mxF., Jrxuiu 9?fnil)ftS ELIZABETH EWING ROSA HEIDELBERG DOROTHY FOSQUE PENKLOPE MORGAN . L l;V I ' lULLIPS I I I KLIZABKTH MAKGARKT EWING Home Economics Club; Prcsidcnl llarrisonhurfi Cliih y. W. C. A.: Alumnae Association. Colillion Chih: Alhlclic Association: Her happy smile and uniformly good disposition are not alone a blessing to the father to whom she returns each evening and so liberally spoils, but have ever been considered, along with her well-told jokes, a thing of beauty and a joy forever by her class. Eliza- beth is greatly admired for her thoroughly unselfi.sh disposition and her readiness to help the other fellow first. What should we do for the news of Harrisonburg, if she did not breeze in with a daily supply to freshen up the monotony of dormitory lifer Ikcy. as the town people know her. has always had a faculty for getting the best out of every occasion, up-set- ting the theory that anticipation is greater than realization, even in her practice-house work. f ! DOROTHY HINDS FOSQUE President Eastern Shore Club: President Home Economics Club; Member E.recutiz ' e Board: Treasurer R. O. D. M. B.: Lanier Literary Society: Treasurer Stratford Dramatic Club: Secretary-Treasurer Post-Graduatc Class: Secretary-Treasurer Deyree Class; Cotillion Club; Annual Staff; Y. (( ' . ( ' . A.; Athletic Association; Alumnae Association. To hear her talk about the Eastern She ' creates a wonder as to the necessity for a heaven; it is the veritable rcyio di del; but she can laugh, cook, sew, and do many other things as enthusiastically and effectively as she can talk. What an insiiiration she has been to the Dramatic Club ! But she does everything well, and without the slightest apparent effort. She is a good all-round sport, lives up to her Home Economics ideals, and believes in having a good time. However delightful the Eastern Sho ' is in reality, Dorothy is more of a credit to it than it could ever be to her. nB I I I ROSA PAYNE HEIDELBERG Biisiiirss Mamuicr Junior Class; Junior Htiskcl Bull Team; Senior Basket Ball leain; I ee Literary Soeiety: Racket Tennis Club; Home Eeonomies Club: R. O. D. M. B.; Stu- diUt Adfisor Virtjinia Teacher ; Vice-President Post-Graduate Class; Vice-President Degree Class: Business Mamujer Glee Club 1920-21-22; Member Executive Board; Athletic Association; ) ' . W. C. A.; .Itumnae Association. Though she is not over-communicative about it, the eagerness with which this home- hody of the degree class appropriates ideas relating to home-making suggests that there is a reason. There are. however, other scintillations besides those of conversation that con- firm Walker ' s view that Miss Heidelberg works so hard at Home Economics because she expects soon to apply it all to her own home. Rosa apparently believes, furthermore, that all men are guided by Goldsmith ' s ideal : ' I chose my wife as she did her wedding-gown — for qualities that wear well : for she has added to her equipment in the practical arts the purely esthetic one of music, being not unmindful of the Shakcsperean notion that Music is the food of love. Her numerous and very real capabilities are greatly enhanced by a charming personality and a quintessence of neatness tlial furiu ' sh a setting for the soul that is. i JQI t T PENELOPE CAMPBELL MORGAN Home Economics Club: Cluiirmaii Religious Mccliiigs Committee ! ' . IC C. A.; Seri eaiit-at- .Irms Senior Class: President Post-Graduate Class; President Degree Class; President Glee Club: I ' iee-President Stratford Dramatic Club: President Stratford Dramatic Club; Treasurer Cotillion Club: Annual Staff: Alumn.e Association: Athletic Association. This is a Penny that is worth its weight in gold, and the kind that turns up, it is true, but always at the call of somebody for a bit of service: it is Penny this, and Penny that, for suggestions or for help, because she is talented, because she has ideas, and knows exactly how to get them forth. Penelope is a veritable in.stituti()n in herself; whether it be Penny, Penelope, Miss Morgan, or Miss Pene-lope Morgan. her versatility is in evidence if one wants a song, or a well-arranged paper, or a bit of advice on matters artistic, or a class taught. Penny, therefore, must of course know how to hurry, but has her characteristic wav of doing so; but everything is characteristic with Penny, except her walk, which she is believed to don for a purpose. Penelope has a striking personality and is unmistakalily in- tellectual; and the firmness with which he holds to her convictions will always keep life from becoming monotonous to those with whom she comes into contact. ! I MARY JUDKIXS PHILLIPS Piedmont-Midland Cliih: Home Economics Club: Treasurer Stralford Vninuilic Cluh: Presi- dent Glee Club: Racket Tennis Club: V. W. C. A.: Athletic Council: Alumnae Asso- ciation. The calm way in which she meets the crises of life, such as examinations, would do justice to a Stoic philosopher: and a splendid philosophy of life she has. indeed, if we may judge hy her many admirable virtues. Though you may never sec her working, she is wholly dependable, and when the time comes for cashing in on her study time, she usually has things done even better than those who make more noise about them. We call her Doctor Phillips, because there is a finality about her advice which no one dares to gainsay. But Mary is a social being and. when arrayed in such a manner as to outdo Solomon ' s lily, just ready for one of her efTectivc songs, she is a source of pride to us all. 3Pos(t= rabuate Clagg Sl otto Semper Fidclcs. Igonorarp a embcc Dr. Walter J. Gifford Miss Frances Iackey Q ascot John Converse CfficrrS LOUISE HOUSTON President REBECCA GWALTXEY X ' ice-President AXXE GILLLAM Secretary EUNICE LAMBERT Treasurer GRACE HEYL Business Manager MARJORIE BULLARD EUNICE LAMBERT ANNE GILLIAM MEARLE PEARCE REBECCA GWALTNEY SUE RAINE MARY LEES HARDY SADIE RICH GRACE HEYL BLANCH RIDENOUR LOUISE HOUSTON ALBERTA RODES IDA SAVILLE ' MM: . Off ii, Vehhl ' piA ealT- I ep cH To e Stf T G- S OMf y H d u n 9?otto Not oil the liriglils. hut cHiiihiiu . J-loiorr ColoiG uiTE Rose Green anij White lonoriiiT SBcmbcr Mr. Conrad T. Lo(;an 9Dbi5orp SBcmlirr TBiq feiofrr Miss Ruth Hudson Miss Grace A. McGuire Xancv Chatpelear OfQcrrs UXA LEWIS President GLADYS GOODMAN- Vice-President CLOTILDE RODES Secretary BERXICE GAY Tre. surer FLORENCE SHELTOX Business Manager DOROTHY BOXXEY Sergeant-at-Arms B P ■«, fuf HP k nUt • 1 HIk:Ij IHk ' ■ Mr. Conrad T. Logan Honorary Member Miss RVTH HlDSON Miss Grace McGuire Nancy Chappelear Mascot Seniors Give every one a gladsome hand, Seniors of Twenty-two! Two years ago they. Juniors, came, The bkiest of the bhie. They ' ve passed exams, six sets at least. And flunked on one or more. This class, the smartest ever taught, Now pauses at the door. Bring forth at last the ' diiis they ' ve won, With script and seal all there. And Uncle Sam will h;nid them out Until the table ' s bare. No class cotild more sincerely wish To loyal prove and true To the ideals of lUue-Stone Hill Then the Class of Twenty-two. — Edith Bryant UXA MIXETTE LEWIS JAMAirA. NEW YORK President Senior Class : Vice- President High School Club : Glee Club : Athletic Association : Lcc Literary Society : Pinquet Tennis Club : Executiye Board 21 ; Out- of-State Club; Y. W. C A. Q-U-A-I-X-T spells Una. SALINE REBECCA ABERNATHY DINWIDDIE COUNTY Hiking Club; Page Literary So- ciety ; Glee Club : Athletic Asso- ciation ; Y. W. C. A. M-0-D-E-S-T spells Saline. MARIOX CHILES ADAMS ALKXAXDRIA. VIRGINIA Lee Literary Society : Cotillion Club; Hiking Club; Athletic As- sociation ; Y. W. C. A. V-I-V-A-C-I-O-U-S spells Mar- ion. RUTH ELIZABETH ARRIXGTOX SURRY COUNTY Cotillion Club ; Tidewater Club ; Home Economics Club : Pinquet Tennis Club : Athletic Associa- tion ; Y. W. C. A. S-L-E-E-P-Y spells Ruth LOLMSK FKXWKK i ' .All.lK CANTON . N. C. Lanier Literary Society ; Glee Club : Secretary and Treasurer High School Club ; Pinquet Ten- nis Club; Business Manager Out- if-State Club; President V. V. C. A. S-M-I-L-K-V spells Louise. W 1X1 FRED REBECCA HAXKS NORFOLK. VIR(;iNI. High School Club; Glee Club; Xorlolk Club; Tidewater Club; Athletic .Association; Cotillion Club; Y. V. C. A. H-.A-P-P-Y spells Winifred. FRAXCES MOXTGOMERY BARHAM NEWPORT NEWS. V. . I mier Literary Society; Glee Club ; Business Manager Fran Sisters ; Tidewater Club ; Hamp- ton Roads Club; Hikin.u Club; Y. W. C. A. T-H-0-U-G-H-T-F-U-L spells Frances. }-r l Nf CO t r oW TH HeTC-ftT Op tMi ISABEL VIRGINIA BARLOW SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY Home Economics Club ; Pinquet Tennis Club ; Virginia Club ; French Circle ; Athletic Associa- tion ; Sophomore Basket Ball Team ; Y. W. C. A. C-0-M-P-L-A-C-E-N-T spells Isabel. CATHERINE JARMAN BEARD AUGUSTA rOUNTY Pinquet Tennis Club; Grammar Grade Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. W-I-L-L-I-N-G erine. spells Cath- MARY LUCILE BIEDLER ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Harrisonburg Club. W-I-N-S-O-M-E spells Lucile. flWi-f TIC- JjOf S DOROTHY BOXNEY SAVANNAH. GEORGIA. I-anier Literary Society; Presi- dent .-Vthletic .Association ' 2Z President Hiking Club ' 22: Presi- dent Out-of-State Club: ' arsitv Ba.sket Ball Toam ' 21 - 22; Captain ' arsity Basket Ball Team ' 22 ; Captain Senior Basket Ball Team ' 22; Glee Club; Sergt.-at-.- rms Senior Class; .Athletic Council: Y. V. C. . ' . . -T-H-L-E-T-I-C spells Donv thv. .M. RV K. THKKIN E r.owM.w HARKISO.NBLKC. VA. Page Literary Society : High School Club; Mary Club: Kather- ine Club : Shenandoah X ' alley Club; Vice-President Class 1919- ■20: Y. W. C. . . .M. UI)E BILISOLV BROOKS PORTSMOUTH. VA. Lee Literary Society : .Athletic .Association; Racket Tennis Club: Senior Basket Ball Team ; Varsity Basket Ball Team: Cotillion Club: High School Club; Hiking Club; Y. W. C. . . I. A-P-P-E-K-I-S-T-I-C spells S-E-D-.A-T-E spells Kathcrinc. Maude. ro sec- eo«5 Lu T EDITH CATHERINE BRYAXT RICHMOND COUNTY High School Club ; French Cir- cle ; Page Literary Society ; Tide- water Club: Athletic Association; Y. W. C. A. T-I-iM-I-D spells Edith. MARGARET BELLE BULLOCH PORTSMOUTH, VA. Assistant Business Manager Junior Class; President Grammar Grade Club; Undergraduate Rep. Y. W. C. A. ; Vice-President Stu- dent Government; Glee Club; Co- tillion Club; Racket Tennis Club; Lee Literary Society; Athletic . ' Ks- siiciation. D-I-G-N-I-F-I-E-D spells Mar- ga,-et. ELSIE LYLE BURNETT CULPEPER, VIRCINI. Home Economics Club ; Club; .Athletic .Association; C. A. Hiking Y. W. T-H-R-I-F-T-Y spells Elsie. IF PlHTo could SHlMn . COOUD Tfi CHAIRS ' ' S mMM t f ' j T to H6 ?e? flc HELEN ' BURROUGHS ANNA I ' AVXE CARPENTER BEDFORD COL-NTV MADISON COU. -n- I ■ T •• c • . i- Home Economics Club; Cotil- Laiiier Literary Society ; Glee Club: Home Economics Club; ' o Club: Piedmont-Midland Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. Club : Athletic Association : Y. W. C. A. G - O - O - D N-A-T-U-R-E-D spells Helen. L-I-B-E-R-A-L spells Anna. IRGINIA SUE CARROLL SOUTH, MIT0N COUNTY Tidewater Club: .Athletic .As- sociation; Sec. and Treas. ' ir- ginia Club : Y. W. C. . . G-I-G-G-L-Y spells Virginia. SCHOOK. ALESE RUSSEL CHARLES NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA Cotillion Club ; Hampton Roads Club; Athletic Association; Black- stone Club ; Glee Club ; Tidewater Club; Pinquet Tennis Club; Hik- ing Club; Y. W. C. A. F-L-I-R-T-A-T-I-O-U-S spells Alese. AXXE SOPHIE CHRISTIANSEN NEWPORT NEWS. VIRGINIA Treas. Lee Literary Society ; Hampton Roads Club ' 21 ; Execu- tive Board: Hiking Club; Home Economics Club; Chairman So- cial Standards Committee ; Y. W. C. A.; Pinquet Tennis Club. G-A-R-R-U-L-O-U-S spells Anne. ANN MARL CLARK BALTIMORE. MARYLAND Y. W. C. A. D-E-T-E-R-M-I-N-E-D spells Miss Clark. ' s) MARJORIE ELIZABETH CLINE ROBERTA POWELL COFFIELD OLIVE MARGARETTA COFFMAN KOCKIN ' GHAM COUNTY HARRISOXBURG. VIRCIXIA PORTSMOUTH. VIRGINIA Elizabeth Club: Harrisonburg Glee Club; Secretary Lt-e Lit- French Circle; Harrisonburg Club. crary Society; N ' ice-Presidcnt V. Club; .Athletic Association. V. C. A.; .Athletic .Association. p.R-O-F-I-C-I-E-X-T spells Margaretta. r,-E-X-L ' -I- -E spells Mar jorie. X-E-. -T spells Roberta. WHftT F LKh( ONVX s ISABEL DOROTHY CRAXK BEDFORD COUNTY Lee Literary Society ; French Circle : Y. W. C. A. C-R-A-N-K-Y spells Crank. MARGARET TRGIXIA CROCKETT PUI.ASKI. VIRGINIA President Lee Literary Society ; Glee Club : Athletic Association : Stratford Dramatic Club; Vir- ginia Club ; Home Economics Club : Y. W. C. A. SUSIE KATHLEEN CROWDER RICHMOND, VIRGINIA (September) John Marshall Club; Grammar Grade Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. C-O-U-R-T-E-O-U-S spells T-E-M-P-E-R-A-M-E-X-T-A-L Tginia. spells Sue. •2. CLAUDIXE CATHERINE CUNDIFF ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Athletic Association : Roanoke Club: Hiking Club: Grammar Grade CUib : Page Literary So- ciety: Y. W. C. A. T-I-D-V spells Claudine. FLORENCE COURTNEY CUTTS MECKLENBURG COUNTY Glee Club : Athletic Associa- tion : Hiking Club : Y. V. C. A. S-L-Y spells Florence. FRANCES LOUISE DAV ' IS BRISTOL, TENNESSEE Lee Literary Society ; Strat- ford Dramatic Club: High School Club: Racket Tennis Club: Se- nior Basket Ball Squad : Y. W. C. A.: Glee Club: Cotillion Club; French Circle; Out-of-State Club. 0-R-I-G-I-N-A-L spells Louise. te « RUTH LEE DAVIS PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Lee Literary Society ; Pinqiiet Tennis Club; Glee Club; Cotillion Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. F-R-I-E-N-D-L-Y spells Ruth. HATTIE MILTOX DEATHERAGE RAPPAHANNOCK COUNTY Piedmont Midland Club ; High School Club ; French Circle ; Sub. Hockey Team ; Sophomore Basket Ball Team ; Sub. Senior Basket Ball Team; Page Literary So- ciety. G-O-O-D H-E-A-R-T-E-D spells Hattie. GLADYS MARIE DIDAWICK WOODSTOCK, VIRGINIA Athletic Association; High School Club; French Circle; Vice-President Page Literary So- ciety ; Glee Club ; Y. W. C. A. D-I-L-I-G-E- -T spells Gladys. ) T7 f EDXA SCOTT DRAPER CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRG1NL (September) Bus. Manager Sophomore Class: Pres., Sec. and Treas. Racket Tennis Club ; Executive Board ; ' ice-Pres. Lee Literary Society: ' ice-Prcs. and Treas. .-Mbemarlc Pippin Club ; Home Economics Club: Sec. Junior Class: Treas. and ' ice-Pres. Stratford Dramat- ic Club: Piedmont-Midland Club: Pres. Cotillion Club: Y. W. C. A. C-U-T-E spells Edna. JULIA w. TOLSOX D UNA WAY RICHMOND, VIRGINIA -Athletic .Association : Sergeant- at-.Arms and Secretary Lee Liter- ary Society ; Y. W. C. .-X. X-E-A-T spells Julia. K. THKEXE JAXE ELLIOTT BLACKSTONE, Vm(;iNIA Lee Literary Society : High School Club : Business Manager Fran Sisters; French Circle; Pin- quet Tennis Club ; Executive Board ; Y. W. C. A. K-I-X-D spells Jane. RUBY ESTELLE FELTS SOUTHAMPTON COUNTY Page Literary Society: Glee Club : Tidewater Club ; Pinquet Tetinis Club ; Y. W. C. A. W-I-T-T-Y spells Ruby. iMEADE E ' ERARD FEILD KING WILLIAM COUNTY President Lee Literary Society; Critic Lee Literary Society ; An- nual Staff ; Glee Club : Pinquet Tennis Club: Athletic Associa- tion ; Y. W. C. A. : Cotillion Club. P-0-I-S-E-D spells Meade. FRANCES CHRISTIXE FERGUSON FAIRFAX COUNTY Glee Club: Athletic Associa- tion : High School Club ; Fran .Sisters: Hiking Club. S-T-E-.- -D-Y spells Christine. (VOTH 1 f ( e NINA SIMPSOX FORD FAIRFAX COL N TV Glee Club : Vice-President High School Club: Page Literary So- ciety: Athletic Association; Y. W. C. A. : French Circle. K-I-N-D spells Xina. AXXA XEWHALL FORSBERG NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Home Economics Club ; Secre- tary Xorfolk Club: Glee Club; Lanier Literary Society ; Strat- ford Dramatic Club; Athletic As- sociation ; Racket Tennis Club : Y. W. C. A. L-O-V-A-B-L-E spells Anna. L RY VIRGIXIA GARBER WAYNESBORO, VIRGIXIA Virginia Club: Pinquet Tennis Club; Home Economics Club; Lee Literary Society; Cotillion Club ; Y. W. ' C. A. L-O-U-D spells ' irginia. l ' .30RVfi. VIRGINIA VENABLE GARDEN PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY Virginia Club ; Hiking Club ; Pinquet Tennis Club; Home Eco- nomics Club; Athletic Associa- tion; Y. W. C. A. Q-U-I-E-T spells Virginia. BERNICE ELIZABETH GAY PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Secretary and Treasurer Stu- dent Association; Treasurer Ju- nior and Senior Classes ; Chair- man Y. W. C. A. Program Com- mittee; Vice-President Elizabeth Club; Glee Club; Hiking Club; Lee Literary Society ; Cotillion Club: Athletic Association. G-E-N-T-E-E-L spells Bernice. ANNIE LAURIE GIBSON LEE COUNTY Home Economics Club ; Hiking Club; Pinquet Tennis Club; Ath- letic Association ; Y, VV. C. A. S-T-E-A-D-Y spells Anne. E vef one MARGARET LUCILLK GIl.l. PETERSBVRO, VIRGINIA Home Economics Club: Pin- (luet Tenuis Club : Assistant Li- brarian Glee Club ' 21 : Librarian Glee Club ' 22: X ' ice- President Margaret Club ; Lanier Literary Society ; Atbletic Association ; Y. W . C. A. X-A-T-U-R-A-L spells rar- Raret. I ' KAXCES DYSOX (111. 1.1 AM SUSSEX COUNTY Tidewater Club: Hiking Club; Grammar Grade Club; Fran Sis- ters; Athletic Association; Y. W. C. A. E-S-P-O-U-S-E-D si)ells Frances. CHRISTINE FROST GI.ADSTOXE NOKTHAMITON COUNTY Glee Club ; Lanier Literary So- ciety ; Secretary Home Economics Club; Y. V. C. A. R-E-S-0-L-U-T-E spells Christine. iFf poT-cw o-f 3M. Q p re Tcwn t6 be MARIOX WALKER GLASSELL CAROLINE COUNTY Athletic Association ; Home Economics Club : Glee Club ; La- nier Literary Society; Cotillion Club ; Tidewater Club : Pinquet Tennis Club; Junior and Senior Hockey Teams; Hiking Club; Y. W. C. A. F-I-C-K-L-E spells Marion. ELISE WILSON GLENN HALIFAX COUNTY Lanier Literary Society Club ; Y. W. C. A. Glee S-O-P-H-I-S-T-I-C-A- T- E- D spells Elise. ELZIE MARIE GOCHENOUR ROCKINGHAM COUNTY Glee Club ; Lanier Literary So- ciety ; Cotillion Club ; Home Eco- nomics Club ; Y. W. C. A. P-L-A-C-I-D spells Elzie. VALLEy - y QBE FRlD8y AFTERflMI GLADYS ELINOR GOOD LVX BUCKINGHAM COUNTY Editor-in-Chief Schoolma ' am ; ' icc-President Senior Class; Glee Club: Athletic Association: Lee Literary SiKiety : Hiking Club ; V. W. C. A. L-I-T-E-R-A-R-Y spells Gladys. MARGUERITE ELIZABETH GOODMAN BUCKINGHAM COUNTY Annual Staff 1922: President Page Literary Society ; Critic Page Literary Society : Hiking Club: Secretary Elizabeth Club: Grammar Grade Club : Athletic Association; Y. VV. C. A. C-O-N-S-C-I-E-N-T-I-O-U-S spells Marguerite. II WVSIE LEWIS GOODLOE .STAUNTON, VIRGINIA .Athletic Association ; Pinquct Tennis Club; Cotillion Club; Hik- ing Club; Grammar Grade Club; V. V. C. A. C-A-R-E F-R-E-E spells Lewis. ADRIEXXE GOODWIN (September) ROANOKE COUNTY SUSAX ' IRGIXIA GREEXLAXD NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Home Economics Club; Hiking Secretary Glee Club; Critic Lee Club ; Roanoke Club ; Racket Ten- Literary Society ; Chairman nis Club; Athletic Association; Y. World Fellowship Committee Y. W- C. A. ,,. . _ G-E-N-T-L-E spells Adrienne. S-U-B-T-L-E spells Virginia. RUTH TERESA HAIXES VIXCHESTER, VIRGINIA Grammar Grade Club ; Y. W. C. A. R-E-T-I-R-LX-G spells Ruth. HmjG oL ||0:3fi ' 7 1 lA IDA HAIRR CUNTON. NORTH CAROLINA Glee Club; Lee Literary So- ciety : Pinquet Tennis Club : Cotil- lion Club: Secretary and Treas- urer Out-of-State Club; Menag- erie Club ; Y. V. C. A. H-U-M-O-R-O-U-S spells ' ivia. XAXXV KLIZAHliTH HAGOOD mecklenbi;rg countv Home Economics Club ; Eliza- beth Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. G-O-O-D X-A-T-U-R-E-D spells Xanny. GLADYS CHRISTIXE HALDEMAX WINCHESTER, VIRGINIA Stratford Dramatic Club; Pres- ident Lee Literary Society ; V. W. C. A. ; Home Economics Club ; Athletic Association ; Cotillion Club. P-R-A-C-T-I-C-A-L Gladvs. s pell ft JOSERHIN ' E HARNSBERGER MARY CAROLYN HARRIS BOTETOURT COUXTY High School Club ; Athletic As- sociation ; Y. W. C. A. S-T-U-D-1-O-U-S spells Josephine. LOUISA COUNTY Piedmont-Midland Club; Home Econotnics Club; Vice-President Pinquet Tennis Club ' 21 ; Treas- urer Pinquet Tennis Club ' 11 Athletic Association; Mary Club; Cotillion Club; Lee Literary So- ciety; Hiking Club; Junior and Senior Hockey Teams : Y. W. C. A. B-0-B-B-E-D spells Mary Carolyn. MARY LOUISE HARRIS ALBEMARLE COUNTY Grammar Grade Club ; Page Literary Society ; Glee Club ; Al- bemarle Pippin Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. . . B-A-S-H-F-U-L spells Louise. V Sun sfiiNES ri fl. 1, lllx_. MARY ALICE HERRINGDOX ROANOKE, VIRGINIA V. V. C. A.: Cotillion Club; Athletic Association : Senior Bas- ket Ball Team: Glee Club: Racket Tennis Club. B-L-A-S-E spells Mary. SUSAN .MAKV HESS HAMITOX. VIRGINIA Stratford Dramatic Club: Lee Literary Society: Cotillion Club: Home Economics Club: Hamp- ton Roads Club: Racket Tennis Club: . tbletic .Association: Se- nior Basket Ball Team : Marv Club: Tidewater Club: Y. W. C. A. R-E-C-K-L-E-SS spells Mary. CLARIXDA ADALINE HOLCOMB ROANOKE, VIRGINIA (September) Home Economics Club: .Athletic .Association: Roanoke Club: Sec- retary Page Literary Society: Y. W. C. A. B-R-.A-I-X-Y spells Peggy. JnrA THELMA FANITA HOLLOMAN HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Athletic Association; Harrison- burg Club : Y. W. C. A. L-0-Q-U-A-C-I-O-U-S spells Fanita. MARY CELESTIA HUNDLEY PITTSYLVANIA COUNTY Vice-President Grammar Grade Club ; Mary Club : Page Literary Society : Athletic Association : Y. W. C. A. Q-U-I-E-T spells Mary. ELIZABETH ERNEST HUNTER MARION, SOUTH CAROLINA (September) Out-of-State Club; Elizabeth Club ; Home Economics Club ; Glee Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. A-F-F-E-C-T-E-D spells Eliz- abeth. ID ]vB A ry cA ' a To U£ IN n LLc-HS To-tiiqh ' t 4 PAMELIA LVXX ISH LOUDOUN COUNTY President Lee Literary Society ' 22: Business Manager Grammar Grade Cliib : Senior Hockey Team : Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A, W-I-S-E spells Miss Ish. MAMIE FR.- XKLIX JACKSON RICHMOND. VIRGINIA Hish School Club: Glee Club; Lee Literary Society : Piedmont- Midland Club; Pinquet Tennis Club; Hiking Club; Athletic As- sociation; John Marshall Club; Y. W. C. A. P-0-E-T-I-C spells Mamie. ELIZABETH RIDGELY JACKSOX SU.M.MIT POINT. WEST VIR(;iM. Out-of-State Club; Elizabeth Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. S-M-A-R-T spells Ridgely. Tht STc dy 0,1 KhftvT MARGARET LOUISE JARVIS VIRGINIA BEACH. VIRGINIA Norfolk Club: Cotillion Club; Lee Literary Society ; Home Eco- nomics Club ; Glee Club ; Athletic Association : Y. W. C. A. B-O-I-S-T-E-R-O-U-S spells Margaret. FRANXES CARRALEIGH JOXES GORDONSVILLE. VIRGINIA Home Economics Club ; Pinquet Tennis Club; President Fran Sis- ters ; Athletic Association ; Cotil- lion Club ; Lee Literary Society ; Hiking Club; Y. W. C. A. H-A-P-P-Y G-O L-U-C-K-Y spells Carraleigh. MARY ETHELEEX JONES NORFOLK. VIRGINIA Stratford Dramatic Club ; Glee Club; Executive Board; Norfolk Club ; Treasurer Home Economics Club; Lanier Literary Society; Racket Tennis Club; Cotillion Club. S-E-N-S-I-B-L-E spells Peggy- o: q Tin. MINNIE CAMPBELL JONES CATHERLNE de ALL KEMP FLUVANNA COUNTY Home Economics Club : Lanier Literary Society : Athletic Asso- ciation ; Hiking Club : Y. W. C. A. R-E-F-r- -E-D spells Minnie. NORFOLK, VIRGINIA Glee Club; Cai)t. Junior and Senior Hockey Teams: Capt. Ju- nior Basket Ball Team : Senior Basket Ball Team : Pres. Racket Tennis Club; Pres. High School Club: Secretary Cotillion Club: Sergcant-at-.- rms Junior Class: Sergeant-at-.Arms Lee Literarv Society; ' ice-President Norfolk Club ' 21 : President ' 22. B-O-V-I-S-H spells Catherine. BESSIE MAE KIRKWOOD ROANOKE, VIRGINIA Lee Literary Society : Secretary- Treasurer Roanoke Club : Hiking Club; Cotillion Club; Home Eco- nomics Club : Glee Club ; Athletic .-Vssociation : V. W. C. A. C-O-N-T-E-N-T-E-D spells Bessie. •! CLASS ' HELEX LUCILLE KXEISLEY WOODSTOCK, VIRGINIA High School Club: Glee Club: Lanier Literary Society: Athletic Association: Hiking Club; Helen- Ellen Club : Y. W. C. A. P-R-E-C-I-S-E spells Lucille. RUTH FRETWELL LEWIS PITTSVI-VAXIA (.OrXTY French Circle ; Harrisonburg; Club; High School Club: Y. W. C. A. S-O-B-E-R spells Ruth. EDITH LOUISE LICKFOLD STAUNTON, VIRGINIA (Septetnber) Hii h School Club; Hiking Club ; Athletic Association ; Y. V. C. A. S-E-R-I-O-U-S speDs Edith. o . THE r ANTsMHO HflTH IV O P ?flCTicE f?ooiv T music IN H MSf-f Gi ?LS, TM oinG HOMl MARY IDA LIPPARD CLEVELAND. NORTH CAROLINA Home Economics Club; Mary Club; Y. W. C. A. C-O-M-P-E-T-E-X-T spells Mary. ETHEL GRAY LI 1CK STACNTON, VIRGINLV Athletic Association : Hiking Club ; High School Club ; Page Literary Society ; Cotillion Club ; Y. W. C. A. G-E-X-E-R-0-U-S spells Ethel. CHRISTINE SARAH LONG EI.KTON, VIRGINIA Cotillion Club; Home Econo- mics Club ; .Athletic .Association ; Pinquet Tennis Club; Senior Bas- ket Ball Team: Hiking Club; Y. W. C. A. I-X-Q-U-I-S-I-T-I-V-E spells Christine ' L. ' Z. iti Hv -VoY-H etR-sa SALLIE BAKER LOVING FLUVANNA COUNTY Secretary-Treasurer Student Government ; President Lanier Literary Society ; Executive Board ; Home Economics Club : Hiking Club ; Athletic Associa- tion ; Y. W. C. A. D-E-P-E-X-D-A-B-L-E spells Sallie. RUBY MAY LO V. L X PULASKI, VIRGINIA Home Economics Club ; Lanier Literary Society; Athletic Asso- ciation ; Y. W. C. A. O-P-T-I-M-I-S-T-I-C spells Ruby. MARGARET MACOX MACKEY ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY High School Club; Page Liter- ary Society ; Pinquet Tennis Club ; Y. W. C. A. W-H-O-L-E-S-O-M-E spells Margaret. RESSIE ELLENA MANGES BOTETOURT COUNTY High School Club : Y. V. C. A. F-K-I-E- -D-L-Y spells Ressie. AXTOIXETTE BEATON MANSOXI rORTS MOUTH. VA. Athletic Association ; Glee Club; French Circle; Y. W. C. A. ' -A-M-P-I-S-H spells Bill. CONSTANCE ELIZABETH MARTIN AI.BEM. RI.E COU.NTV Home Economics Club; Albe- marle Pippin Club : Piedmont- Midland Club: Elizabeth Club; Page Literary Society ; Bus. Mk . Menagerie Club ; Sophomore Bas- ket Ball Team; Y. V. C. A. C-O-M-P-O-S-E-D spells Con- stance. v.p.i.- ' r- ELIZABETH JANE MATHENY HIGHLAND COUNTY ELSIE VIRGIXIA McPHERSON BOTETOURT COUNTY High School Ckib : Glee Club ; French Circle ; Vice-President Lanier Liter- ary Society; Treasurer Eliza- beth Club; Sub. Junior and Virginia Club Senior Hockey Teams ; Athletic , i • Association; Glee Club; High Page Literary Society; Pinquet Llub; Athletic Association School Club; Hiking Club; Y.W. j - lub; V. W. C. A. M-U-S-I-C-A-L spells Eliza- beth. A-M-I-A-B-L-E- spells Elsie. JAXET JARMAN MILLER PORT REPUBLIC. VA. Cotillion Club; Glee Club; Pin- quet Tennis Club ; High School V. V. C. A. 0-B-L-I-G-I-N-G spells Janet. CATHERINE EGGLESTON MOORE NEWPORT NEWS. VA. Hampton Roads Club : Tide- water Club; Racket Tennis Club; Cotillion Club: Glee Club: Ath- letic Association : High School Club: Y. W. C. A. S-Y-M-P-A-T-H-E-T-I-C spells Catherine. LOUISE CARLISLE MOORE NEWPORT NEWS, VA. . nnual Staflr 1921- ' 22; Treas- urer Hampton Roads Club : Tide- water Club: Glee Club; Vice- President Lee Literary Society ' 21 : President Lee Literary So- ciety ' 22: Pinquet Tennis Club; Hikinij Club; Athletic Associa- tion ; Y. W. C. A. A-R-I-S-T-O-C-R-A-T-I-C spells Louise. LlLLiAX AGNES MOORE HOVKIXS. VIR(;iNIA Glee Club: Pinquet Tennis Club : Secretary-Treasurer Gram- mar Grade Club : Page Literary Society : Tidewater Club : Ath- letic Association ; Y. W. C. A. R-E-S-E-R-V-E-D spells lian. Lil- HELEXE MOOREFIELD DANVILLE. VIRGINIA (Scplcinbi-r) V. V. C. A. A-I-R-Y spells Helene. MABEL MRGIXIA iMOSELEY BRUNSWICK COUNTY Pinqiiet Tennis Club : Lee Lit- erary Society; Glee Club; Gram- mar Grade Club ; President Vir- ginia Club; Athletic Association; Y. W. C. A. G-O-O-D X-A-T-U-R-E-D spells Mabel. LUCILLE CHARLIXE MURRY NORFOLK. VIRGINIA Xorfolk Club; Glee Club; La- nier Literary Society ; Racket Tennis Club; Cotillion Club; Athletic Association ; Y. V. C. A. D-A-I-X-T-Y spells Lucille. BESSIE HARPER XICHOLAS PORT REPUBLIC. VA. High School CUib: Cotillion Club; Racket Tennis Club: Hik- ing Club : Glee Club ; Senior Hockey Team : Sophomore Bas- ket Ball Team : Athletic Council 1920: Y. V. C. A. C-H-E-E-R-F-U-L sik-IIs Bcs- VIRGINIA ELIZABETH NICHOLAS . PORT REPUBLIC. V. . High School Club : Glee Club : Pinquet Tennis Club: N ' irginia Club: Elizabeth Club; Senior Hockey Team : Y. W. C. A. H-O-P-E-F-L ' -L spells Virginia. .MARGARET ELMA OLIXER SUFFOLK, VIRGINIA Home Economics Club : Page Literary Society; . thletic Asso- ciation : Margaret Club : Tide- water Club: Y. W. C. .-X. L-L ' -C-K-V spells Margaret. TWO H6flf?TS -THAT PEflT IN LoyE ' 3 swe.eT PFisdii MJHCRS. HI 9 is H R ' r l A VO H£ f ' N is H eW .W ' MARY LOUISE OVERTON NOTTOWAY COUNTY Glee Club; Racket Tennis Club; Lee Literary Society ; Home Eco- nomics Club ; Cotillion Club ; Y. W. C. A. E-N-E-R-G-E-T-I-C spells Mary Louise. JOSEPHINE BRITTAIN PAINTER PULASKI. VIRGINIA Home Economics Club; Ju- nior and Senior Hockey Teams ; Athletic Association; Glee Club; Y. W. C. A. S-E-R-E-N-E- spells Josephine. MARIE IRVTN PAINTER PULASKI. VIRGINIA President Sophomore Class; President Junior Class; Vice- President Stratford Dramatic Club ; Racket Tennis Club ; Home Economics Club; Junior and Se- nior Hockey Team; Sophomore Basket Ball Team. B-E-A-U-T-I-F-U-L Marie. spells IDON ' TWflNTTO GO DOWN ToWl T KMILV LOUISE PALMER MIDDLESEX COUNTY Tidewater Club; Cotillion Club; Hiking Club: Glee Club: Home Economics Club : President. Sec- retary and Treasurer Pin(|uet Tennis Club: Junior and Senior Hockey Team : Junior and Se- nior Basket Ball Team : Sub. Var- sity Team. M-I-S-C-H-I-E- --0-U-S spells Louise. IIA HL GRl.MHS P.WXE NORFOLK. VIRGINIA Harrisonburg Club. P-A-R-T-I-C-U-L-A-R spells Hazel. ELEANOR LO E PENDLETON WYTIIF.VII.I.E. VIRGIN l. I nier Literary Society: Rack- et Tennis Club; Junior Hockey Team 1919 ; . thletic .Association ; y. V. C. A. S-I-N-C-E-R-E spells Eleanor. Gi- v 3 uUo« ' V MARY LEE PERRY XOKFOLK. VIRGINIA C-R-U-S-H-E-D spells Marx- Lee. ISABEL JAXE POTTER- FIELD LOUnoUN COUNTY AXXETTA STUART PURDY PETEKSBURG. VIRGINIA Treasurer Pinquet Tennis Club; Grammar Grade Club; Lou- President Lanier Literary So- ciety ; Home Economics Club ; doun Club; Athletic Association; piedmont-Midland Club; Y. W. Y. W. C. A. C- ' . A. r Trn-t)T7Tr n t ui S-Y-S-T-E-M-A-T-I-C S p e 1 1 S C-A-R-E F-R-E-E spe Is Isabel. , „ ' ' Annetta. NO LETTER MABEL VERNON REEVES BRIDCEWATER, VIRCINMA High School Club : Page Liter- ary Society: Athletic Associa- tion: V. V. C. A. P-k-I-M spells Mabel. NELLIE GERTRUDE RHODES ROCKIN ' CHAM COUNTY High School Club: Harrison- burg Club : Glee Club : Page Lit- erary Society ; Athletic Associa- tion ' ; Y. W. ' C. A. W-I-L-L-I-N-G spells Nellie. RUTH ANDERSON ROARK CA.MPBELL COUNTY Vice-President Junior Class: .Athletic .Association: Racket Tennis Club: Junior Basket Ball Team: N ' arsity Team 1920- ' 21. I921- ' 22: Senior Basket Ball Team : .Athletic Council : Lee Lit- erary Society : Home Economics Club: Publicity Committee Y. W. C. A. P-E-R-S-I-S-T-E-N-T spells Ruth. AXXIE ELIZABETH ROBINSON CUMBERLAND LOrXTV Lee Literary Society : Glee Club; Pinquet Tennis Club; President Elizabeth Club; Y. W. C. A. G-E-N-I-A-L spells Elizabeth. AXXE CLOTILDE RODES ALBEMARLE COUXTY Home Economics Club : Albe- marle Pippin Club; Junior and Senior Basket Ball Teams; Junior and Senior Hockey Teains ; Sec- retary Lanier Literary Society 1920-21, 1921-22; Athletic Coim- cil ; Treasurer Athletic Associa- tion ; Business Manager Varsity Team; Secretary Senior Class: Treasurer Hiking Club; Y. W. C. A. S-U-X-S-H-I-X-Y spells CIo- tilde. IRGIXIA EUBAXKS SEGAR MIDDLESEX COUXTY Home Economics Club; ' ir- ginia Club ; Glee Club ; Racket Tennis Club; Tidewater Club; Athletic Association ; Junior Hockey Team ; Sub Senior Hock- ey Team : Sub Junior and Se- nior Basket Ball Teams; Lee Lit- erary Society; Hiking Club; Y. W. C. A. I-X-D-E-P-E-X-D-E-X-T spells ' irginia. ■J .■■JP-. I HI L CHARLOTTE SH.WER HARRISONBURG. VIKl.lNIA Home Economics Club ; Har- FLOREXCE ADELIA SHELTOX XORFOLK. VIRGINIA. GRACE ELIZABETH SHOWALTER HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Glee Club; Secretarv Harrison- Business Manager Senior Class : -Athletic Association ; Nor- risonburg Club: Cotillion Club: ' oik Club: Secretary Hiking „ _ . Club: Treasurer Lanier Literary burg Club: Cotillion Club. Glee Club. Society: Home Economics Club: Y. W. C. A. S-X-A-P-P-Y spells Charlotte. C-A-P-A-B-L-E spells Florence. P -E-A-S-A-X-T s,«.lls Grace. NO POU JUAXITA KATHRYXE SHRUiM DAYTON, VIRGINIA Vice-President Harrisonburg Club. L-I-T-E-K-A-R-Y spells Jua- nita. SOPHIA ALICE SIMPSON LOUDOUN COUNTY Lee Literary Society: Hiking Club: Racket Tennis Club: Lou- doun Club : Athletic Association ; V. W. C. A. W-I-X-S-O-M-E spells Sopbia. JESSIE ESTHER SMOOT WOODSTOCK. VIRGINIA High School Club: Athletic As- sociation ; Treasurer Page Liter- ary Society : Y. W. C. A. I-X-D-U-S-T-R-I-O-U-S spells Jessie. 0«i.Bv vvie 1 . BEL AXXE SPARROW WILMINGTON. N. C. Athletic Association ; Hi li School Club : Secretary-Treasu- rer MenaKcrie Club: French Cir- cle: Ramblers: V. V. C. A. D-E-M-U-R-E spells Isabel. EUVTHE FERXE STARK SHENANDOAH COUNTY High School Club: Frencli Cir- cle : Page Literary Society : .Ath- letic .-Xsfociation : Y. V. C. .V. F-l.-1-R-T-A-T-I-O-U-S spells Edythe. .MARY . GXES STEPHEXS GREENE COUNTY (July) IliKb School Club: Mary Club; .Athletic .Association: Y. V. C. A. G-E-X-I-A-l. spells -Agnes. L,4+Le c h 1 Ldr eio 5 houLa Ire seen And no-V Viewed. o ne-- wo. 13- ' ' i ove ELLA A TRL I STOVER WASHINGTON. D. C. Lee Literary Society; Gram- mar Grade Club ; Y. W. C. A. F-R-A-N-K spells Ella. REBA ELIZABETH SUTER HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Athletic Association ; Treasu- rer Harrisonburg Club; Cotillion Club: V. W. C. A. G-E-N-E-R-O-U-S spells Reba. CELLA PEARL SWECKER HIGHLAND COUNTY Treasurer Y. W. C. A. ; .As- sistant Business Manager ScHOOi.- m. ' am ' 22: Chairman Program Committee Y. V. C. A. ; Execu- tive Board ; Lee Literary Society ; Home Economics Club ; Glee Club: Athletic . ssociation. L-O-Y-A-L spells Celia. SARAH LANIER TAL5B PORTSMOUTH, VIRGINIA Secretary Dramatic Club four quarters ; Vice-President Lanier Literary Society, two quarters ; Chairman Social Committee Y. V. C. A.: Cotillion Club: Rack- et Tennis Club; Home Economics Club: Glee Club. J-O-L-L-Y spells Sarah. l-I.OKEXCE COLLI.WS TAYLOR RICIIMO.M). VIR(;iNIA Secretary-Treasurer John Mar- shall Club : Secretary Lanier Lit- erary Society: ' ice-President Stratford Dramatic Club: Cotil- lion Club: French Circle: .■ th- letic .Association : High School Club: .Assistant [librarian Glee Club: Y. W. C. A. A-T-T-R-A-C-T-I-V-E- spells Florence. HILDA TEMPLE HKINSWRK COL ' XTV .-Vthletic Association ; H ome Economics Club; French Circle: Piedmont-Midland Club: Y. C. A. T-I-. -Y spells Hilda. MARGARET LORRAINE THOMA FAUQUIER COUNTY High School Club ; Junior High School Club ; Piquet Tennis Club : Hiking Club : Y. W. C. A. F-R-I-E-X-D-L-V spells Mar- garet. MARY CAROLINE THOMPSON CHESTERFIELD COUNTY Ramblers; Mary Club; Athlet- ic Association ; Glee Club ; Y. W. C. A.; Critic Page Literary So- ciety ; French Circle ; High School Club. C-A-L-M spells Caroline. BERNICE ESTELLE THURSTON RICHMOND, VIRGINIA President John Marshall Club; .Athletic Association ; Y. W. C. A. S-I-C-K-L-Y spells Estelle. R IrVLL - XAXXY ELEANOR WALKER MECKLENBURG COUNTY Home Economics Club: Ath- letic Association : Y. W. C. A. C-A-R-E-F-L ' -L spells Xanny. ELLA L■ RGARET WALL ROCKBRIDGE COUNTY Athletic Association; Hiking Chih ; Pinquet Tennis Club; Home Economics Club ; V. W. C. A. I-.M-P-U-L-S-I- ' -E spells Mar- garet. XELL DAMUSOX WALTERS ROANOKE. VIRGINIA President Roanoke Club ; Lee Literary Society; Hiking Club; Chairman Social Service Commit- :ee Y. W. C. A. ; Pinquet Ten- nis Club; Glee Club; .• thletic As- sociation. S-Y-M-P-A-T-H-E-T-I-C spells Xell. w r j Li - 1 HELEN ESTHER WATTS UNIVERSITY, VIRGIXIA Hiking Club: Home Economics Club; Lee Literary Society; Ath- letic Association ; Pinquet Tennis Club; Y. W. C. A. N-E-W-S-Y spells Helen. ALLENE JEANETTE WESTERMAN CLIFTON FORGE, VA. Glee Club ; Lanier Literary So- ciety : Athletic Association ; Pin- quet Tennis Club ; Y. W. C. A. N-A-I-V-E spells Allcne. MARY VIRGIKLA WHITE PRINCESS ANNE, MD. Home Economics Club ; Cotil- lion Club ; Athletic Association ; Virginia Club; Out-of-State Club; Y. W. C. A. D-0-M-E-S-T-LC spells Vir- G OSS tf ' nQ MAkV TK.W ' IS WILLIAMS CHASK I ' lTV. VIRCINIA Glee Club: Hiking Club: Gram- mar Grade Club : Athletic Asso- ciation : V. W. C. A. Q-U-I-E-T spells ary. WIXIFRKD LekOV WILLLAMS NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. Lee Literary Society : Home Economics Club : Treasurer Xor- I ' olk Chib : . thlctic .Association; Glee Club: Racket Tennis Club; Y. VV. C. A. S-T-Y-L-I-S-H spells Wini- fred. GLADYS WINBORNE I.SLE OF WIGHT COUNTY High School Club : Tidewater Club ; Athletic Association ; Page Literary Society: Y. W. C. A. C-0-M-P-A-N-I-0-N-. -B-L-E spells Gladys. T? p c I n Q to Tv v n Va ci 5c ViooL TIb  no Tbe F v(s r To L ci LENA MARIE WOLFE SHENANDOAH COUNTY Glee Club ; Cotillion Club ; Hik- ing Club ; High School Club ; Chairman Bible Study Commit- tee Y. W. C. A.; President Me- nagerie Club ; Sub Hockey Team ; Lee Literary Society. S-C-LE-X-T I-F-I-C spells Lena. FAXxMIE LEE WOODSOX HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Harrisonburg Club ; Assistant Business Alanager Schoolma ' am ' 21 ; Business Manager School- ma ' am ' 21. E- X- T- H- U- S- I- A-S-T-LC spells Fannie Lee. DORIS WOODWARD CHARLOTTESVILLE. VA. Home Economics Club ; Ath- letic . ' Association ; Pinquet Ten- nis Club; Page Literary Society: Hiking Club : Albemarle Pippin Club; Y. W. C. A. T-A-L-K-A-T-I-V-E Doris. spells May Day Pageant Presented by the Senior Class of the Harrisonburg State Normal School, May 12, 1922 I ' kocessional — Entrance of May Queen and Her Court Episode One — The Eai-th Ceres. Goddess of Vegetation, bids her daughter, Proserpina, goodby. and leaves in her chariot to help mortals till the fruitliil fields. Proserpina and her nymphs are surprised In their frolics by Pluto, God of the Underworld, who steals Proserpina away. Her nymphs are in despair, and when Mother Ceres returns, they all search in vain for the fair maiden. At last Ceres finds her daughter ' s girdle and, in her search, is directed to Pluto ' s kingdom by the elves. Episode Two — Mount Olympus, Home of the Gods The gods and goddesses, the Three Fates, and Father Time are assembled on Mount Olympus, whither Ceres comes, accompanied by three famishing mortals, to beg the aid of Jupiter in recovcrin.? her daughter. Jupiter nods his head in assent and the entire earth trem- l;les — but Proserpina may return to her mother only on condition that she has tasted no food while in the Underworld. Ceres departs, ac- companied by the messenger god. Mercury. Episode Three — Pluto ' s Kingdom Pluto, in his love for his sorrowful bride, tempts her in vain with all manner of luscious food and beautiful ' raiment. She refuses everything save one bite of a pomegranate. Ceres and Mercury enter, demanding Proserpina. Pluto refuses at first, but is on the point of yielding, when one of his dwarfs reminds him that Proserpina has ea ' en six pomegranate seeds. So Ceres and Pluto compromise — Pro- ssrpina to remain six months of the year with her mother, and six with her husband. Episode Four — The Eartli It is time for Proserpina ' s stay -with her mother, and the entire Earth is joyful. The Spirit of Spring returns, bringing sun. Tieams and flowers to brighten the world. Winding of the May Pole Recessional — May Queen and Her Court Pageant Manager — Virginia Segar Costumer — Alese Charles Business Manager — Sallie Loving Property Manager — Clotilde Rodes Director of Dances — Maude Brooks Producer and Director of Episodes — Louise Davis Faculty Supervisor — Miss Franke Musical Director — Mary Phillips Music by Augusta Military Academy Orchestra ' v I.dllS X. I ' akker I ' ri-sciitcil r.y SEXIUR CLASS UI- l ' 22 I ' ritlay, Iiiiic 2. 8:.i0 p. in. OPEX-AIK ALIMTORIUM Persons ok tiii; Pi. ay John Sayle. 10th Baron Otford Margaret P.ulloch Lieut. The Hon. John Sayle, R. X Louise Moore Admiral Sir Peter Antrobus Isabel Crank Jerome Rrooke-Moskyn. Escj Ruby Felts The Reverend Jacob Sternroyd, D. IX. F. S. .A ime Ciiristiansen Mr. Basil Pringle .Ale.se Charles Jim Louise Davis The Muffin Man Mary 1 less The Lamplighter Julia Dunaway The Eyesore ' irgini;i Crockett Mile. Marjolaine Lachesnais Elizabeth Robinson Madame Lucie Lachesnais Ruth Davis Mrs. Pamela Poskelt .Sallie Loving Miss Ruth Penny mint Lucille Murry Miss Barbara Pennymint Gladys Haldeman The Honorable Caroline Thring Meade Feild Nanette Una Lewis Jane Dorothy Bonney SVXCJPSiS OF SCEXES -Act 1 Saturday .Afternoon, May 25 Act 2 Saturday Morning, June 1 Act 3 Mondav, lunc 3 Jlisitorp of tfje people of ierre=5 leu I. AXCIEXT PERIOD 1. Migration to Harrisonburg in 1920. — During the fuiniuer of 1920 there was noticed throughout the state of ' irginia a restlessness among the yotmg lad;es, due to the completion of their high school course. The time had come for a mo- mentous decision. Harrisonburg became the center of interest, and gravita ' .ion pointed in that direction. II. MEDIEV.XL PERIOD 2. Character of This Period. — L ' pon entering this Duchy found D u k c the Httle prov- idea of a dem- lic had been so the lives of that they ini- dertook a Re- in 1920 there political cam- w.is a harp tween the Lib- servdtive par- d i c i o u s log Liberals were cho-- c Marie firs: President. 3. Pio- sjreat increase ' Tfdlei git SjsTingS rmpeViaUldSl a S te i-fo n VP M«s59«i£| e i n JeafisSfMj. ' o ' l ' V£|i niflThtaTre. the immigrants Samuel ruling ince. But the ocratic repub- instilled into these people mediately u n - formation. So was a great paign. There Strug gle be- eral and Lon- ties. inU by ju- rolling, tlie I victorious and ■ P.iinier the M. P OF H. RRISOXBURG From a Xormal Girl ' s Point of View neers. — T b e o f population caused a shortage of land. President Painter sent otit a call for voliuiteers. Kemp responded ga lantly and felled the giant spruce trees, clearing the land for settlement. 4. Customs and Manners. — It had always been the custom of the peace- loving penple in this little alk ' v to follow the example of Sampson, believing their strength lay in long hair; but the newcomers jiroved Delilahs and introduced the fashion of bobbed locks, which the natives immediately followed. 5. Social Life. — These were a gay, frolicsome, fun-loving people. They de- lighted in social gatherings and made them affairs of state. In the year 1921 there was a Masque Ball given in the .-Xuditorium. and this was such an important function that His Excellency, Governor Davis, honored the assembly with his presence. HI. .MODKRX I ' KRIOI) 6. Commerce. — llic lour great commercial cenlLrs arc Jackson, Harrison, Asliby, and Spollswood. There has been estal)lishecl a regular trade route be- tween these ])laces and nnicii business is done. Some of the m(j.-t important pro- ducts shipped on this route are .Maskas, sandwiches, and candy. This business has proved very ])rolitai)le to tiie people and an important source of revenue. One firm of wide-known reputation, the Senior Tea Room, is located in Harrison. It is patronized by almost everyone in the wlnile Duchy and receives the com- nicndatit)ns of all. 7. Warfare (Outdoor). — One of the mo t famous battles was that between the people 111 ' . slil)y ami ilmse of Spottswood, fought on Blue Stone Mill. The weather being extremely cold, all weapons were thrown aside and snowballs took their place. This battle is one long to be remembered as most unusual, since there were no casualties on either side. 8. Culture. — The modern period develcpe l many complex phases of culture. There was much research work done along the lines of music, psychology, de- signing, art, and physical training. This data was recorded in Essays, which were tiled in the archives and thus ])reserved to posterity. 9. Warfare (Indoor). — There was a dispute between the Seniors and Juniors of the Duchy. Captain Bonney led her forces bravely forth to set- tle the argument. The battle began early in the evening, and both sides fought courageously. The advancing Seniors were at first successful : but the high explosives from the side lines spurred the Juniors on, and by hard fighting they finally won the victory. List ok References: — Charles — Social Life at A. M. A.; Kemp — Spruce Cutting; Greenland — Cap- ture of Harry; Davis — Reign of King George; Wil- liams — The -YcTi ' Record: The Sweetest Story Ever 7 ()W.- Gilliam — Marriage in the Ticcntieth Century; Watts — Handbook of Injuries; Purdy — Technique of Reduction; Thurston — Misery and Its Causes. Questions: — 1. Who was the first president of tiie Duchy? 2. What great pioneer expedition was undertaken in 1920? 3. Do you know who Delilah was? 4. Was the social life of these people a matter of state-wide importance? 5. Make a map showing the four great commercial centers, tracing on this the important trade routes. 6. ' hat has posterity to be glad about ? 7. When, where, and by whom were Alaskas discovered? Gener.vl Hon.xev When But a Girl I Wm gears! J|ence Dear comrades all. if you but knew How I have thoughl and even dreamed Of prophecies for ou, If you had seen me ' tween exams Fly round to write this mess, I ' m sure you ' d say I ' d qualify For a flapper prophetess. Sweet Una Lewis, president — let students all beware! From study, and from worry too, has now lost all her hair. Our saint. I. Crank, subdued at last, has ceased all worldly sighs, And every Wednesday night that comes that girl to meeting flies. ' Netta and Shelton, little girls — and both so very coy They never looked at any man, and hardly at a boy — Since leaving our protecting care find flirting very nice — And — well, to make our story short — we ' ll soon be throwing rice. But Louise Bailie. Jackson, Ish — each one a buxom maid — Are studying crapology to make it their life-trade. In Mississippi Marbles (yes?) all three use loaded dice. Roll seben come eleben, which makes it very nice. Maude Bilisoli Brooks — she who to please us oft would sing — Preferred to be a Patti ' stead of wearing Billy ' s ring. And Elise Glenn, the very best of all our lightsome trippers. As college widow now wears out her diintv da ' icing slippers. In corner drug-store Mary Lee is busy jerking sodies — Pencil cruslies are her specialty — all kindly will take notice. The Russian book Harnsberger wrote from cares material freed her. (All characters are desjierate — including, too. the reader.) And Catherine Kemj). the quiet one. not making any noise, Is faithful to her hobby — pursuing all the boys. Now Livick. Winborne. Oliver, are all shut up in jail For running a distillery: please help them out with bail. There ' s Alese Charles, that good old sport and smiling pal o ' mine. Went beaucoup hunting for a beau and got a Tar Heel fine. Glassell and Harris — Dickie too — ambition fresh did sjirout; And now they pump the water up for ye ole willow spout. Estelle B. Thurston, camouflager of convenient pain. , Is now dispensing aspirin to followers in her train. Virginia Crockett, who ' s as pure as any plaster saint. Has written up instructions full — How (gracefully) to Faint. D. Bonney ' s bought a washing board to manicure her nails: She uses this most faithfully, while hubbv splits the rails. Sophia rolls her eves about and looks at Dunaway. And now they hold each other ' s hands by night as well as day. There ' s Mary making overall?, for others who. like she, Get on a fence between two fires — (like Kemp and sweet Marie) ; While perched there undecided her overalls she tore. And hence she sews for other folks and clin ' bs that fence no more. Wolfe, .Arrington, and Fer.guscm, who slent away the morn. So deep in dreamland were they, that Gabriel ' s loud horn Could never wake them nn enough to move a foot or arm. These three are making clocks right now — Big Bens with an alarm. . nd Helen Burroughs, the modi ' te. like Luc ' le in her day. For her creations charges almost anv price, they sav. While her roomv. Rubv Lowman. has a new ambition high — To know exactly how to make a sweet potato pie. IVggy .loiR-s. while Iuti ' at school, our faiiioiis Shi-rlock Holmes, Is still imcarthiuK mysteries, no matter where she roams. While i|iiiel Margaret Wall works now in liiKh-class tlorist-l)owers,_ Her favorite motto till remains the apt old Speak with I ' lowers. Jessie Smoot and W. Banks, their niKKling selves to (|uiet. I lave patented a trick miilller- -we lio|.e tlity ;oiin will try it. Jack Jackson, well known socialist of the education class, U writing modern poetry to kill us all I ' li iiiiissc. .And Segar. in Saluda dear, successes now does quaflf. Since hers she has discarded lor Miss Lancaster ' s nay lauj-h. W ' liile Pahr.er. in lier usual way. continues jtill in style, .■ nd peeps from underneath her hat to give her Joe a smile. I jjlimpse ahead the iiiilil .Marie and fiil(ms-lciiil crcd Jo, Who. while at school, on e ' en tlie doors woidd rain hlow after blow; 1 say I see them far away— at last their ipiarrels cease: .■ s in an Indian settlement they smoke their pijie o ' peace. 1 ' he Titian-haired M. Jarvis took son;e pebbles by the sea: .And great as old Demosthenes I ' m sure she soon will be. Hut tut. tut! Margaret Bidloch is so festive and so gay. That both at home and far abroad she leads them all astray. Our dear wee little Buddy has become a trifle bolder Aiu has mounted on some lofty stilts to reach .Augustus ' shoulder. Kneisley. Stark, and Didawick — the Great Triumvirate — In their Starvation .Army work take turns to pass the plate. When Greenland spied a birdman who near her home did land. She scarcely let a week roll by before she ' d won his hand. Elizabeth Malbeny. with a voice that charms them all. Sings oft with Lewis Goodloe at the key-del ' s fancy ball. But Hess and Drinkie still bang on. with cheeks as red as cherries. To take in school mid- winters as if they were the berries. Plump .Agnes Stevens worked so hard to try to get a start. That there ' s now nothing left of her e.Kccpt the Bony part. Calm Janet Millah looked just like a big old fashioned pillow. So tried reducing by the vie. till it did almost killah. Anne Christiansen, talking still, was searching for a bean. So she went to the deep green woods and used her old lasso. In Dormitory Three each day there hangs upon the phone .A girl named Katherine Bowman who prefers to be alone. e editor, one Goodman, in storm and stress quite cool. Put out this Srnooi.M a ' am annual — a credit to her school. Mansoni and her twin. C. Moore, stand high in Hall of Fame For skill in robbing cradles and getting ' em while tame. Though Mabel Reevef is still a sweet and blushing country girl She sees that all the bovs around have hearts in quite a whir .. Wee Temple and Sue Crowder are in the winter garden. P or they are wearing (censored here) — I ' m sure we beg your pardon! Bright Skinnv Marion .Adams is still surpassing fair. -And talks with affectation the while she shakes her hair. Louise C. Moore, lest she see less, at last arranged to go To found a homestead in the West where she is the whole show. Now .Anna F.. our one ideal of feminine charm and beauty. Went on the stage and there remains, because she knew her duty. To tell about me (This illustrious poet) The good die young — Or else out.grow it. (I died young.) —Louise D.wis z ' ■Si « « 4« i va • 2G3Qiin «:v 5J «..C- si ' o © Daisy May Giffokd Mascot Ml.SS MaRCAKKT ' . I loll. MAX Big Sister Dr. H. a. Convkh.sk Hoiiorarv Member JUNIOR LA S i_ Pot r3KQTro c ■ ' Business Mana ' r I Clasis laoU anice adams mary adams leona addington anna ruth allen aline anderson estelle anderson helen anderson clara aumack mattie ayers catherine bare eula barker eloise baylor ruth bean mary bell bear mildred bell blanche bishop mary esther bolich kathryn borden virginia borst mamie bowman pauline bowman lucille boyer pauline bresko inez britt mary britt carolyn brown hildamae brown louella f. brown roselyn brownley eloise bruce elizabeth cale helen carter sarah chaffin audrey chewning ruby chinault sephie clarke mary fred clay ' tor charlotte clement martha cockerill gladys coiner margaret cole elizabeth collins beatrice copper marie cornell annie councill ola cronise ruth current alva cutts dinna dalton allie u. daughtrey violetta davis clyde deisher alice denby julia dickerson annabel dodson elizabeth duke kathryn duncan helen early emma eastman kathrine edwards loimsf: klliott CATHEFtlNE EX ' ERLV MARION FA(;g LAURA FALLS MARY P.ETTIE FELTS MYRTLE FERGUSON MARGARET FORD MAE BURKE FOX RUTH FRANKHOUSER CHRISTINA FUNKHOUSER VIRGINIA FUNKHOUSER JULIET GARNETT ELOISE GAY ISSIE GRESHAM LEONE GRUBBS HUNTER GWALTNEY KATHLEEN HAILEY ELIZABETH HARPER HELEN EVELY ' N HARRIS CORNELIA HART MINNIE LOUISE HAYCOX FRANCES HENDERSON ROSE HENDRICK VIRGINIA HOLLAND LOUISE HOLMES HAZEL HORNBARGER HENRIETTA HUFFARD MARY STUART HUTCHESON MYRTLE IVES CHARLOTTE JONES ELIZABETH JONES LELIA BROCK JONES MARJORIE JONES RUBY JONES MAE JOYCE SUSAN KELLY ISABELLA KESTER CONSTANCE KIBLER JESSIE KINCANON FRANCES KINNEAR CARRIE KNUPP PATTIE LACY LAURA LAMBERT MILDRED LAMPHIER LUCY LANDIS LOUISE LAUCK CLAIRE LAY GONA LEE VIRGINIA LEITH ANNA LLOY ' D ADAH LONG VALLEY McCAULEY LUCY McGEHEE GLADYS McKEE DOROTHY MAJOR CARRIE MALONE LOUISE MEADOR CHRISTINE MILLER HELEN MILLER GEAN MISH ANNIE MOOMAW NELLE MOON MARGARET MOORE BEULAH MULLEN ANNIE MUSE 1;YRI) NELSON DOROTHY NORTON AGNES NUNNALLY MARJORIK OBEU MILDRED ORRISON SIBYL PAtJE ESTHiOR I ' ATTON jennie dean payne hazel payne mary pratt elsie profitt gladys pyle carrie reynolds elizabeth richardson elizabeth k. richardson helen rickman nancy roane ruth robertson grace rowan lillian ryland florence saville susan schlack addie scribner helen scripture frances sellers katharine shore helein smith orra smith verta smith mary louise smothers elizabeth sparrow bernice spear agnes spence ei sie spicer norma spiers abigail stearn mae strough edythe styne virginia swats mary ' tanner french taylor nan taylor hester thomas helen thompson margaret thomson ethel thrush josephine towler alma trimble mildred tunstall susie turpin ella veley hannah via gladys vincent elizabeth vint helen wagstaff zelma wagstap ' f helen walker selina walters eva warren mary warren beulah weddle margaret wiley cora wilkins dorothy williams lena williams kate wilmoth spotswood wlmi ' .ish elizaiikth woalack i;lizai;eth wright . nLI)RI ' ;i) WYSONG ULARV YEATTS ORA YEATTS u o Junior Sok c g yff- ' l r JJ l J. J Cone wi5C [ -(5F[£tSS0 LtfiKN-ej7y Conf.Pd ' s pi i-Ni-r ip- rOMG 3; I r Tru J ' J l ..Jf r £ 56-NIOF15 ' :ON-P£-Sr£N-p N ; OMC OUN Offb ICJiC AlU£j)y COMC ftUm vAff 0(j5 ij! jj ju ■Jr ' lr ' Jir-f ? ASS« , rtNj) JOIN yOUR PfTAlS£S K Rf IN 3INS INC TO Tn£ -l — J l - TrlT B N ORWL ouff soN Of LAp coop aiefcfl. ffAttlTOffTHt B£U€, cmc J r-...| „ .„ .r,. ,, iZ, U .. ff n ' FOKTH(.0(TflNt(.,ffflH. ' K)ffmt SCHOOL, Clff -S, itah ' WtYL K — r-r ff rrM i lr r-ir flf rirH ' SlNt OU r ouK PffAisf ra TH ' oRANtt ftNp 5iJ£,i;iRi Rah ' A MA MflrfR Rah! tubent ilssociation SDfUccte ALBERTA RODES President MARGARET BULLOCH Vice-President BERXICE GAY Secretary SBcmlicrS of CEtrnitibc Soam Decree ROSA HEIDELBERG Post-Graduate SUE RAIXE Seniors ANXE CHRISTL NSEX SALLIE LO ' IXG ETHELEEX JOXES Jl ' XIORS LARY STUART HUTCHESOX ELIZABETH SPARROW MILDRED LAMPHIER it-U-V g. OT. C . SDfticttS 1921=22 LOUISE BAILIE President ROBERTA COFFIELD Vice-President SUE RAINE Secretary CELI A SWECKER Treasurer MARGARET BULLOCH Under-craduate Representative Cabinet ROBERTA COFFIELD Chairman of Membership Committee BERNICE GAY Chairman of Program Committee VIRGINIA GREENLAND Chairman of World Fellowship Committee NELL WALTERS Chairman of Social Service Committee CELIA SWECKER Chairman of Finance Committee LENA WOLFE Chairman of Bible Study Committee SARAH TABB Chairman of Soci. i Committtee EUNICE LAMBERT Chairman of Alumn.e Committee ANNE CHRISTIANSEN Chairman of Social Standards Committee ALBERTA RODES Member Ex-Offici o flDfecerjJ 1922=23 CLARA AUMACK President CARRIE MALONE Vice-President MARY STUART HUTCHESON Secretary MEARLE PEARCE Tre. surer RUTH FRANKHOUSER Under-cramuate Representative aubisorp Bonrb MISS NATALIE LANCASTER Chairman MISS KATHERINE ANTHONY MISS ELIZABETH CLEVELAND DR. W. J. GIFFORD MISS MYRTLE WILSON T V. W. C. A. C. B1XET His soin was onl Ircitnj aloud. His Ti ' ork a siiiijiiiy i ' ith his hand. Colors Violet and White jflotocr Violet SDttiter First Quarter Second Quarter President Annetta Purdv Salue Loving Vice-President Anna Cameron Elizabeth Mathenv Secretary Ci.otii.de Rodes Florence Taylor Treasurer Florence Sheltox Florence Shelton Sergeant-at-Arms . . . Mary Lees Hardy Mary Lees Hardy Third Quarter Dorothy Bonney Sar. h Tabb Ruth Bean Florence Shei.ton Nan Taylor if?onorarp 99fml)cr MISS ELIZABLTH P. CLEVELAND 9i9cnil)crfi I OUISE BAILIE FRANCES BARHAM RUTH BEAN DOROTHY BONNEY HELEN BURROUGHS MARIE CORNELL ALICE DENBY ANNABEL DODSON MARY DRINKWATER LOUISE ELLIOTT MARIAN FAGG ANNA FORSBERG DOROTHY FOSQUE MARGARET GILL ANNE GILLIAM CHRISTINE GLADSTc IN ' I ' -, MARION OLASSELL AE.ESE GLENN ELZIE GOCHENOUR MARY LEES HARDY MINNIE LOUISE HAYCOX FRANCES HENDERSON LOUISE HOUSTON ETHELEEN JONES AUNNIE JONES LUCILLE KNEISLEY EUNICE LAMBERT MILDRED LAMPHIER CHRISTINE LONG SALLLIB LOVING RUBY LOWMAN CARRIE MALONE ELIZABETH MATHENI LUCILLE MURRY BYRD NELSON JENNIE DEAN PAYNE ANNETTA PURDY NANCY ROANE ALBERTA RODES CLOTILDE RODES FIA1RENCE SHELTON ELIZABETH SPARROW . (!NES SPENCE HIOLEN SMITH SAR. H TABP. FLORENCE TAYLOR NAN TAYLOR HELEN WALKER ALLENE WESTI ' :R rA I ' lLIZABlCTM WKIIiHT 31eel.iterarj ocictp SBotto ' H ' cariii; the ' i ' liitc flinccr of u hlaiiiclcss lijc ' Colors Gold and Grav Jflotorr White Carnation CfKccrS First Quarter Scco)td Quarter Third Quarter President Me. de Feild Louise Moore Pamelia Ish Vice-President .... Louise Moore Sadie Rich Ruth Roark Secretary Roberta Coffield Julia Dunawav Mary Stuart Hutcheson Treasurer Anne Christiansen Anne Christiansen Akne Christiansen Sergeaiit-at-Aniis . Julia Dunaway Catherine Kemp Winifred Williams Critic Virginia Greenland Sue Raine AIeade Feild ANICE ADAMS MARION ADAMS CLARA AUMACK POLLY BOWMAN ROSALYN BROWNLEY MAUDE BROOKS MARJORIB BULLARD MARGARET BULLOCH ALESE CHARLES AN.NE CHRISTIANSEN ROBERTA COFFIELD ISABEL CRANK VIRGINIA CROCKETT LOUISE DAVIS RUTH DAVIS KATHRYN DUNCAN JULIA DUNAWAY JANE ELLIOTT MEADE FEILD VIRGINIA GARBER Sl9fml)rr6 BERNICE GAY GLADYS GOODMAN VIRGINIA GREENLAND REBECCA GWALTNEY KATHLEEN HAILEY VIVIA HAIRR GLADYS HALDEMAN MARY CAROLYN HARRIS MARY HESS ROSA HEIDELBERG MARY STUART HUTCHESON i ' AMELIA ISH MAMIE JACKSON MARGARET JARVIS CARRALEIGH JONES CATHERINE KEMP BESSIE KIRKWtJOD UNA LEWIS LOUISE MOORE IM.A.RG.- RET MOORE MABEL MOSELEY AGNES NUNNALLY MARY LOUISE OVERTON MEARLE PEARCE SUE RAINE SADIE RICH RUTH ROARK ELIZABETH ROBINSON ADDIE SCRIBNER VIRGINIA SEGAR SOPHIA SIMPSON ELLA STOVER CELIA SWECKER HELEN WATTS NELL WALTERS JIARY WARREN WINIFRED WILLIAMS LENA WOLFE DR. J()Hx V. WAVLAXD age Hitevarp ocietp fil otto ' TIiV Coiiiitrvs. thy (ioil ' s. and Truth ' s jrlotocr Red Rose onorarp Sl9rmi)cr MISS .MAKCiAKET HOFFMAN Second Quarter President Marguerite Goodman ' iee-President Gladys Didawick Secretary Clarinda Holcomb Treasurer Jessie Smoot Sergeant-at-Anns Hattie Deatherage Critic Caroune Thompson Colors Red and White Third Quarter Ruth Frankhouser Selina Walters Audrey Chewninc Bernice Spear Ruby Felts Marguerite Goodman SALINE ABERNATHY KATHERINE BOWMAN LUCILLE BOYER EDITH BRYANT AUDREY CHEWNING OLA CRONISE CLAUDINE CUNDIFF RUTH CURRENT HATTIE DEATHERAGE GLADYS DIDAWICK ELIZABETH DUKE HELI ' N EARLY CATHERINE EVERLY RUBY FELTS MYRTLE FERGUSON a finticrS) NINA FORD RUTH FRANKHOUSER MARGUERITE GOODMAN LOUISE HARRIS CLARINDA HOLCOMB HAZEL HORNBARGER MARY HUNDLEY MARJORIE JONES ETHEL LIVICK ADAH LONG LUCY McGEHEE ELSIE McI ' HERSON MAIKfARET MACKEY DOROTHY MAJOR CONSTANCE MARTIN LILLIAN MOORE MARGARET OLIVER MABEL REEVES NELLIE RHODES JESSIE SMOOT BERNICE SPEAR EDYTH STARK CAROLINE THOMPSON HELEN WAGSTAFF ZELMA WAGSTAFF SELINA WALTERS MARGARI ' H ' WILEY GLADYS WINBORNE liDKIS WdimWAKD tratforb JBramatic Club .i tlic ■z . ' orld ' s a stage, And all the men and z ' Oiiicn incrdy ' ' layers: ' iFlotorc Colors Primrose Pink and Green CfSccrS First Quarter Second Quarter TInrd Quartet President Grace Heyl Grace Heyl Penelope Morgan J ' ice-President Marie Painter AIarie Painter Florence Taylor Secretary Sarah Tabb Sarah Tabb Sarah Tabb Treasurer Dorothy Fosoue Dorothy Fosoue Dorothy Fosque a ' cmijrrs VIRGIXIA CROCKETT MARIE CORNELL LOUISE DAVIS EDXA DRAPER ANNA FORSEiERG DOROTHY FOSQUE ANNE GILLIAM GLADYS HALDEMAN MARY HESS GRACE HEYL ETHELEEX JONES PENELOPE JIORGAN MARIE PAINTER MARY PHILLIPS BLANCHE RIDENOUR SARAH TABD FLORENCE TAYLOR XAN TAYLOR ! onorarp 99cmbec }irR. JAMES C. JOHXSTOX abbtsorp 9?rmbcr MISS RL ' TH HUDSON ome €coiiomic£i Club Sl?otto Give to tlic world the best yon have, and the best i ' ill eoiiie baek to yoii. Colore jflotocr Red and ' hite Red Carnation fiDfficcre DOROTHY FOSQUE President ANNE GILLIAM Vice-President CHRISTINE GLADSTONE Secretary AIARY ETHELEEN JONES Treasurer MILDRED LAMPHIER Sergeant-at-Arms igonorarp Sl fmbcrs MISS BRINTON MRS. MOODY MISS SCHARFENSTEIN MISS WILSON MISS DAY MR. JOHNSTON omc (Economics Club feong Tune — Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes Is there a i;irl with hi.i{li ideals, With courage, strong and true, A girl with vision of the good That only she can do. A vision of tlie world ' s great need. To serve with heart and hand, To love and cherish, child and home Oh ! she ' s of our H. E. band. Hers is an understanding heart Singing a song of hope. Filling her life with joy and mirth. Rivaling the song bird ' s note. An inner charm, mystical and sweet, A woman ' s soul divine, A flame of light to fill her days. Rich friendships so sublime. MiSsVVi scii i p ROTnv) Tosaue A sM itClAK ' M i33 BRiwriiK AN H€ RipeNOUF Nk3. l66j7y RiNKyHoR ' flN ALBCRrrt Raj7G5 Subject Fi VCip Mm clMS7 ' Cl s. ni HoMK luoNOMics Practice TsArjiiNr. lee Cluij Director MISS EDNA T. SHAEFFER President PENELOPE MORGAN Secretary VIRGINIA GREENLAND Business Manager ROSA HEIDELBERG Librarian MARGARET GILL Chairman of Hocse Committee ANNE GILLIAM St cmbfrj) SALINE ABERNATHY ANICE ADAMS ANNA RUTH ALLEN WINIFRED BANKS LOUISE LAILIE ELOISE BAYLOR PRANCES BARHAM MILDRED BELL RUTH BEAN KATHRYN BORDEN VIRfilNIA BORST PAULINE BOWMAN INEZ BRITT ROSELYN BROWNLEY MARCARET BULLOCH ELIZABETH CALE HELEN CARTER ALESE CHARLES MARY CLAYTOR CHARLOTTE CLEMENT ROBERTA COFPIELD MARIE CORNELL VIRGINIA CROCKETT OLA CRONISE ALVA CUTTS FLORENCE CUTTS RUTH DAVIS LOUISE DAVIS ALICE DENBY GLADYS DIDAWICK ANNABEL DODSON KATHRYN DUNCAN HELEN EARLY KITTY EDWARDS LOUISE ELLIOTT MARIAN FAOG RUBY PELTS ANNA PORSBERG MARGARET FORD JULIET GARNETT BERNICE GAY ELISE GLENN •MARIAN GLASSELL MARGARET GILL ANNE GILLIAM CHRISTINE GLADSTONE ELZIE GOCHENOUR GLADYS GOODMAN VIRGINIA GREENLAND ISSIE GRESHAM KATHLEEN HAILEY ' MINNIE L. HAYCOX LOUISE HARRIS CORNELIA HART MARY LEES HARDY ROSA HEIDLBERG MARY HESS LOUISE HOUSTON ELIZABETH HUNTER MARY S. HUTCHESON MARCJARET L. JARVIS ETHELEEN JONES RUBY JONES KATHERINE KEMP ISABEL KESTER BESSIE KIRKWOOn LUCILE KNEISLEY PATTY LACY MILDRED LAMPHIER UNA LEWIS ELSIE MoFHERSON CARRIE MALONE ELIZABETH MATHI ' NY JANET MILLER annh: MOOMAW LILLIAN MOORE LOUISE MOORE REBECCA MOORE PENELOPE MORGAN LUCILLE ML ' RRY ANNIE MUSE BYRD NELSON VIRCUNIA NICHOLAS AGNES NUNNALLY MARJORIE OBER M. LOUISE OVERTON JOSEPHINE PAINTER MARY PHILLIPS BLANCHE RIDENOUR ELIZABETH ROP.INS(_)N NELLIE RHODES NANCY ROANE CHARLOTTE SHAVER GRACE SHl)WALTER helen smith bernice spear agnes silence florence taylor caroline thompson ethel thrush gladys vincent elizabeth vint heIjEN walki:r nell walters allene westerman DORt)THY WILLIAMS DOROTHY WILLIAMS MARY Wn.LIAMS WINIFRED WIIjLIAMS SPOTSWOOD WI.MBLSH LENA WOLFE MILDRED WYSONG a u He Cercle Jf rancaig Hea Coulcurs Ha jFlciir JLa aintc Datronnr Le Drapeau Tricolore Fleur-de-lis Jeanne d ' Arc Ha SDfbiSc Si la jciiiicssc saz ' oit; si la 7 ' irillcssc f ' oiii ' ait. JLt SDtfitietS Elsie Spicer La President c Isabel Crank La Vicc-Prcsidcutc Helen Walker La Secretaire Kattirvne Duncan La Tresoriire lies SBnnbrfS LUCILLE BOYER JAM ' : ELLK iTT SIBYL PACE EDITH BRYANT LOUISE ELLIOTT FRANCES SELLERS MARGARETTA COFFMAN NINA FORD ISABEL SPARROW ANNIE COUNCILL • ELISE GLENN EDYTHE STARK OLA CRONISE MARY HERRINGDON FLORENCE TAYLOR LOUISE DAVIS LAURA LAMBERT CAROLINE THOMPSON A ' lOLETTA DAVIS ADAH LONG HELEN WAGSTAFF ALICE DENBY RUTH LEWIS ZELMA WAGSTAFF GLADYS DIDAWICK ANTOINETTE MANSONI SELINA WALTERS ELSIE Mcpherson 1Le Sl cmbrcs Ijonortiirrs MISS CLEVELAND MISS H()I•F L X (Grammar (§ratie Club Vclli CToiors ) v and Green Holding Our Own ' OtfirrrG joiu|uil rARGARET BULLOCH . L RY HUNDLEY LILLIAN .MOORE President V ' ice-Presidext . Secretary-Treasurer CATHERINE BEARD MARGARET BULLOCH SUE CROWDER CL. UD1XE CUNDIFP PRANCES C.ILLIAM a? embers LEWIS GUODLOE MARGUERITE GOODJIAN RCTH HAINES LOUISE HARRIS MARY HUNDLEY PAMELIA ISH l?onorarp SBcmbrr DR. V. J. GI1-F(JKIJ MABEL ilOSELEY LILLIAN MOORE ISABEL POTTERFIELD ELLA STOVER MARY WILLIAMS Higij djool Clui) CATHERINE KEMP President UNA LEWIS Vice-President LOUISE BAI LI E Secretarv and Treasurer onorarp St cmbrr DR. JOHN V. WAVLAXD SBfinbers LEONA HORTON ADI INGTt)X WINIFRED BANKS MAUD BROOKS EDITH BRYANT KATHERINE BOWMAN AUDREY CHEWNING KI.IZABETH C(JLLINS LOUISE DAVIS HATTIE DEATHERAOK OLAin ' S DIDAWICK KATHRYNE DUNCAN JANE ELLIOTT CHRISTINE FERGUSON JIYRTLE FERGUSON NINA FORD HELEN HARRIS MARY HERRINGDON LOUISE HOLMES HENRIETTA HUFFARD LUCILLE KXEISLEY LOUISE LAUCK CLAIRE LAY GONA LEE UNA LEWIS ETHEL LIVICK ADAH LONG MARGARET MACKEY VALLEY McCAULEY ELSIE McPHERSON DOROTHY MAJOR ELIZABETH MATHENT RESSIE MANGES LOUISE MEADOR JANET MILLER ANNIE MOOMAW CATHERINE MOORE MARGARET MOOUR BESSIE NICHOLAS virginia nicholas sibyl page addie scribner katharine shore jessie smoot iclizabeth sparrow isai;el sparrow edythe stark agnes stephens MAY STm)UGH EDYTHE STYNE VIRGINIA SWATS MARGARET THOMA CAROLINE THOAIPSON SUSIE TURPIN HELEN WA(?STAFF ZELMA WAGSTAFP GLADYS WINP.ORNE LENA WOLFE 1 if ,m . [M Ny eR(e LUBJy jr V X WntS tont CotiUion Club EDNA DRAPER President ANNE GILLIAM Vice-President CATHERINE KEMP Secretary ANNA RUTH ALLEN Treasurer Colors Orcliid and ( Idlil motto Come ami Irif ' it as vc go Uii the liijhl fantastic toe. mtnibtta ANNA RUTH ALLEN WINIFRED BANKS EL.OISB BAYLOR LUCILE BIEDLER MARY E. BOLICH MAMIE BOWMAN MAUDE BROOKS ANNA CAMERON HELEN CARTER ALESE CHARLES ANNE CHRISTIANSEN LOUISE DAVIS ALICE DENBY EDNA DRAPER MARY DRINKWATER KATHRINE EDWARDS LOUISE ELLIOTT ELIZABE TH EWING MEADE FEILD DOROTHY FOSQUE RUTH FRANKHOUSER ELOISE GAY ANNE GILLIAM MARION GLASSELL ELZIE GOCHENOUR VIVIA HAIRR GLADYS HALDEMAN MARY C. HARRIS CORNELIA HART MINNIE L. HAYCOX MARY HERRING DON MARY HESS LOUISE HOUSTON MARY S. HUTCHESON MARGARET JARVIS CARRALEIGH JONES CATHERINE KEMP ISABELLA KE)STER CONSTANCE KIBLER EUNICE LAMBERT LAURA LAMP.ERT LUCY LANDIS CHRISTINE LONG ELSIE McPHERSON JANET MILLER PENELOPE MORGAN bessie nicholas agnes nunnally mary louise overton louise palmer jennie dean payne mary pratt charlotte shaver grace showalter helen smith elizabeth sparrow agnes spence elsie spicer reba suter florence taylor nan taylor margaret thomson selina walters mary warren virginia white cora wilkins spotswood wimp.ish elizabeth wright mili)K1 ' ;li wysdng ?|arrisiontmrs Clut3 Officers) President Secretary Tr easurer ...ELIZABETH EWIXG .GRACE SHOWALTER REBA SUTER Sl emlJrrs MARY BELLE BEAR LUCILE BIEDLER ilARJORIE CLINE MARGARETTA COFFMAN ELIZABETH EWING FANITA HOLLOMAN HAZEL PAYNE CHARLOTTE SHAVER GRACE SHOWALTER JUANITA SHRUM ORRA SMITH REBA SUTER FAN.NIE LEE WOODSON l.- iO 3iotfr Mi s I ' aiiii; X-lOtDCl i..|,-t t.illli-. hill loud is the talc of our crowfi : XotliiiiK but pep in the songs that vc sing : Never a worry and never a cloud; O ' er all the campus our laughter doth ring. Crowder and Challin — none better you ' ll meet : Thurston and Gresham — a studious (?) lot; Taylor and Jackson — who chatter and eat ; Really that ' s all the members we ' ve got. Thus our condition is — liltlc. hut loud. With all the pep of a jolly big crowd. 9?otto ' I. est ri ' ' forget ' Coloio Blue and White John M. rsh. ll Club igorfolfe Club Sl DttO A life on the ocean icaz ' c, A home by the roUinij dee[ — Colors iFIotocr Orange and Blue Seaweed fiDfficcrs CATHERINE KEMP President ANNABEL DODSON Vice-President ANNA FORSBERG Secretary WINIFRED WILLIAMS Tre. surer MILDRED LAMPHIER Serceant-at-Arms lJ?onorarp St rmbrr MISS FRANCES MACKEY 9Btn btx WINIFRED BANKS MARGARET FORD LUCILLE MTRRY ROSELYN BROWNLEY ANNA FORSBERG .MARJORIE OBER ALICE DENBY MINNIE LOUISE HAYCOX SIBYL PAGE ANNABEL DODSON MYRTLE IVES FLORENCE SHELTON MARY DRINKWATER ETHELEEN JONES HELEN VALKER KATHRYNE DUNCAN CATHERINE KEMP MARY WARREN KATHS;RINE EDWARDS MILDRED LAMPHIKR EVA WARREN LOUISE ELLIOTT MARGARET MOORE WINIFRED WILLIAMS lJ| lAoanoke Club a9otto Acorn lo Oak — IVafcli Roanoke ColoiQ Maroon and hile QfKrcrS XELL WALTERS . . . . BESSIE KIRKWOOD President . Secretary-Treasurer £ cmbct0 CLAUDIXE Cr.VDIFF AUUIKXXK GOODWIN HELEN EVELYN HARRIS MARY HERRINGDON CLARINDA HOLCOMB JESSIE KINCANON BESSIE KIRKWOOD ELSIE I ' RCIFFITT NELL WALTERS Clje l amiilerg fil?DttO follozc it. fnllo-a ' it, folUnc the jlram. Colors Jflotorr Red and Green Crimson Ranil)k ' r ©fficrrs DOROTHY BONNEY Prksiuext VI VIA HAIRR Secretarv-Tkkasurer LOUISE BAILIE Business Manager a fntbfts LOUIHK BAILIE MARIE CORNI:LIj MAUDE MABRY RUTH BEAN RUTH CURRENT BEl ' LAH MULLEN ESTHER BOLICK LOUISE DAVIS MARY LOUISE SMOTHERS DOROTHY BONNEY VIVIA HAIRR ELIZABETH SPARROW HILDAMAE BROWN ELIZABETH HUNTER ISABEL SPARROW MARJORIE BULLARD RIDGELEY JACKSON BERNICE SI ' IOAU RUBY CHINAULT UNA LEWIS CAROLINE THOMPSON MARCARET COLE MARY LII ' PAIM) NMKcWNIA WUrPl ' ; a?orro When business interferes zcitli f lce.siire. cut out the business. ColDciS flotorr Blue and White SwcLt Uctsy OffirrrG ELIZABETH ROBI.VSOX President B. ELIZABETH GAV Vice-President M. ELIZABETH GOODMAX Secretary ELIZABETH MATHEXY Treasi-rer l: Dnorarf ' SBcmbrr MISS ELIZABETH P. CLEV ELAND S rmbcrfi S. ELIZABETH CALE ELIZAP.BTH II JACKSON H. E1 IZABKTH STEPHENSON M. ELIZABETH CMNE ELIZABETH JONES V ELIZABETH S V - TS ELIZABETH COLLINS M. ELIZABETH JONES K. ELIZABETH ROBERTSON ELIZABETH DUKE S. ELIZABETH KELLY ELIZABETH ROBINSON R. ELIZABETH GAY ELIZABETH J. MATHENY ELIZABETH SPARROW XI. ELIZABETH GOODMAN C. ELIZABETH MARTIN M. ELIZABETH TANNER ELIZABETH HARPER V. ELIZABETH NICHOLS H. ELIZABETH THOMAS N. ELIZABETH HAGOOD ELIZABETH RICHARDSON ELIZABETH VINT ELIZABETH HUNTER K. ELIZABETH SHORE iL ELIZABETH WOJL CK Jf ran listers Colors Sl Dtto jflotofr Blue and Silver Gray For fun Forget-Me-Xot fiDfececS FRANCES JOXES President FRAN ' CES BRITT Secretary-Treasvrer FRANCES ELLIOTT Business M an auek SBcmbcrS FRANCES HIUTT FRANCES lOM.IOTT FUANCp:S t ' .I l.I.l AM FRANCES BROWN FRANCES FERCl ' SON FI{ANCKS HICNDEKSUN FRANCES BROWN FRANCES FUNKHorSKR FKANCKS JONES FRANCES KINNEAR FRANCES SELLERS lijonorarp SPrinbrr MISS FRAN ' CES LVCKKV ivsinia Clui) 9?otto ' ' To old riryiiiia z ' c ' ll ever be line. ColofG i lotorr liiic and I ' .liie X ' irginia Creeper MABEL VIRGI XI A MOSKI.KV PRESinENT VIRGIXIA S. CARROLI Secretary and Treaslrer 1 KGI X I A HOLLAX D Manager VIRGINIA BORST VIRGINIA CARROLL VIRGINIA FCNKHOrSER VIRGINIA GARI ' .ER VIRGINIA GARDEN V. KATHLEEN HAILET VIRGINIA HOLLAND: CLAIRE V. LAY VIRGINIA L. LEITH VALLEY V. XIcCAULEY ELSIE V. Mcpher son MABEL V. MOSELEY VIRGINIA E. NICHOLAS VIRGINIA SWATS VIRGINIA whitp: Alumnae ilsisiociation flDKicerS VIRGINIA ZIRKLE BROCK President FRIEDA JOHXSTOX Vice-President AXXE GILLIAM Corresponding Secretary EDNA DECHERT Recording Secretary MARY BOSSERMAX Tre. surer 99cmbers ot CEtcrutibr Boarti FLORENCE KEEZBILL GRACE HEYI tfjletic sisiociation CteccrS DOROTHY BOXNEY President GRACE HEYL Busixess Manager CLOTILDE RODES Treasurer ANNE GILLIAM Secretary Sl Sotiatr a cmbrrs MARY PHILLIPS NAN TAYLOR RUTH ROARK ADAH LONG Jntcr Class rljcdiilc 1021=1022 October 1— Old Giii-W ' w Cirl— 20-23. December 3 — Senior-Post irnduate — IZ-U. Deccniber 10 — Juninr-I ' dst (iraduatt — l-O-.i. January 14 — junidr-Senior — 20-18. Thankstjiving Day — juninr-Senior Ilockev Game — 2-2. ost= rabuate pasket pall Ceam GRACE HHVL Captain ALBEKTA KODES Left Fow.vkd LOUISE HOUSTON Left Guard SADIE RICH JvMPi.N-c Center GRACE HEYL Right Foward IDA SAVILLE Right Guard EUNICE LAMBERT Side Center feiubQtiriitfG REBECCA GWALTNEY ANNE GILLL .M enior packet Jlall Wmm DOROTHY BOXXEY ....Captain AI.AUDE BROOKS Left Forward DOROTHY BONNEY Left Guard CHRISTINE LONG Ju.mpinc Center CATHERINE KEMP Right Forw. rd CLOTILDE RODES Right Guard -OU[SE P. LMER Side Center LOUISE D.-WIS VIRGINIA SEG. R fe tll)GtittltCS RUTH RO. RK M.ARV HESS i M Senior J ockep eam Captain ?2.inf:iip ETHELEEX JONES Goal Keeper CLOTILDE RODES Right Full-Back BESSIE NICHOLAS Left Full-Back MARY DRIXKVVATER Center Half-Back MARION GLASSELI Left Half-Back VIRGINIA NICHOLAS Right Half-Back JOSEPHINE PALNTER Right Wing NELL WALTERS Left Wing MARY CAROLINE HARRIS Right Forward LOUISE PALMER Left Forward CATHERINE KEMP Center Forward s ' libstirtitrs PAINTER SEGAR DEATH ERAGE Junior pasiket J all tam Captain ADAH LONG Left Forward ZELMA WAGSTAFF Left Guard MARY PRATT Right Forward ADAH LOXG Right Guard RUBY CHIXAULT Jumping Center MILDRED BELL Side-Cexter HELEX WAGSTAFF Substitutes LUCY McGEHEE XAX TAYI.fIR AL- RIE CORXKLL Kav ! Kav Rail! Rail! Junior J ockep cam Captaix RUBY CHIXAILT i.inr=ttp SUE KELLY Goal Keeper JESSIE KLVCAXOX Right Fcu.-back JEXXIE DEAX PAYXE Left Fli.l-back JEAX MISH Right Hai.f-back MAE JOYCE Center Half-back ETHEL THRUSH Left Half-back ADAH LOXG Right Wing HELEX WAGSTAFF Left Wing HELEX HARRIS Right Forward RUBY CHIXAULT Left Forward MARTHA COCKERILL Center Forward oiissi anb jHore ongsi HA ' SNBURG ' S COIN ' TO SHIXE Ha ' s ' nburg ' s goin ' to shine tonight Ha ' s ' nburg ' s goin ' to shine ; Ha ' s ' nburg ' s goin ' to shine tonight All down the line. We ' re all dressed up tonight ; That ' s one good sign. ' he the sun goes down And the moon comes up, Ha ' s ' nburg ' s goin ' to shine. THAT BALL ' S GOIN ' RISE AGAIN Harrisonburg spirit never dead; That ball ' s goin ' rise again! Hit him in the mouth And knock him in the head, That ball ' s goin ' rise again ! I know it, ' Deed I know it, people, I know it ; That ball ' s goin ' rise again. HEAR THE ECHO Hear the echo prolong, ' hilc we ' re singing our song— We ' re out to win, V ' e ' re out to win. We ' re out to win today I See them shiver and shake ; Hear them quiver and quake ; We ' re out to win. We ' re out to win. We ' re out to win today. We ' re out to win. No matter what ' s before us ; We ' re out to win. Oh, hear the mighty chorus ! We ' re out to win ; The signs are right today; We ' re out to win, We ' re out to win. WE ' RE BACK OF YOU NOW We ' re back of you now, H. N. S. ; We ' re back of you now, H. N. S. ; We ' ll back you to stand ' Gainst the best in the land. For we know you have sand, H. N. S., Rah! Rah! So on to the game, H. N. S. ! You ' ll sure win your fame, H N. S. Your school is your fame protector On, on, now we expect a Vict ' ry from you, H. N. S. arsitp Basket paU eam DOROTHY BOXXEY Captain ZELM A WAGSTAFF Left Forward ADAH LOXG Right Forward DOROTHY BOXXEY Left Glard CLOTILDE RODES Right Guard MILDRED BELL Jlmpixg Centf.r ITELEX WAGSTAFF Side Center tibstttiitrs LOUISE DAVIS LOUISE PALMER RUTH ROARK MAUDE BROOKS CATHERIXE KEMP Paroitp 3cf)c0tilc February .1— IL X. S. vs. V. X. S. at Farmville— 27-25. February 10— H. X. S. vs. R. X. S. at Radford— 11-22. February 18—11. X. S. vs. R. Y. W. C. .A,, at Harrisonburg — 2-17. February 25 — U. X. S. z ' s. R. X. S. at Harrisonburg — 7-28. March 3— H. X. S. vs. F. X. S. at Harrisonburg— 19-24. Jf ielb Bap April 29 EVENTS WINNERS AVERAGE Seniors Juniors Seniors Juniors Sprinting ( 50-yard dash ) .... Brooks, 7 sec T ■- sec 7.5 sec. Standing Broad Jnnip Perry, 6 ft. 6 in 6 ft. 1.7 in 6 ft. 0.7 in. Running High Jump Deatherage. 4 ft. 4.5 in 4 ft. 0.1 in 3 ft. 11.5 in. Baseball Distance Throw Hendricks, 160 ft. 4 in. . . 124 ft 142 ft. Hop, Step, Leap M. C, Harris, 27 ft 26 ft. 1.6 in 25 ft. 2.4 in. Basket Ball Goal Throw Kemp, 30 goals 24 goals 25,4 goals Sprintin.g ( 100-yard dash ) ... J. Painter, 14.4 sec Bell, 14.4 sec 14.9 sec 15 sec. Three-Legged Race Bell and Ainnack Sack Race Helen Harris Basket Ball Distance Throw . . C. Rodes, 68 ft 57,2 ft 62.4 ft. Running Broad Jump Perry, 13 ft 12 ft. 3.6 in 11 ft. 9.6 in. Dress Relay Crank and Kemp Brooks, Hess, Shuttle Relay (200-yd. dash) . . M. C. Harris J. Painter ToT. L Number of Events Won (Tijr (Dlpmpir (f amcs Of feats of skill and swifliicss siiij;. O Muse. And running broad junip. whence to Junior Class Unnumbered ills arose, which many a girl To tiie intirmary untimely sent. So had the avenging Fates long since decreed — From that tumultuous day when in the field Of basket ball the Juniors held full sway. — Scarce had Aurora waked the rosy morn When to the Olympic contests came they forth. Our eager athletes, waiting for the fray Upon the bree7y heights of Blue-Stone Hill. Thirteen events there were, from which each girl Might choose the feats best fitted to Ikt powers n ! thus win glory for her Class beloved. ' ith noise and clamor, as a flight of birds, The Seniors did advance : as when the cranes Flving llie wintry storms send forth on high Their dissonant clamors, while o ' er the ocean stream They steer their course, and on their i)inions Ix ar Rattle and death to the Pygmaean race. On th ' other side the silent Juniors moved. Breathing firm courage, bent on mvitual aid. .And dearer to all hearts than thoughts of home Or wished return became the vict ' ry sought. Loose floated on the breeze their streaming hair; Strained to their utmost speed, they bent their strength To swift foot-race, to jumping broad and high. To basket balls sent far into the goal, To clumsy, waddling, rolling sack-race queer. To drollest dress-and-get-to-breakfast stunt. For hours in contest hot the battle raged, Both classes for the vict ' ry scoring high. At length the Seniors won out. eight to five : Then ha])less Juniors owned themeslves undone And in confusion irretrievable Back to their comrades ' shelt ' ring ranks withdrew To mourn their baffled hopes and broken score. — Homer, Harnsberger, and Co. inciuct Wtnni Club Go and Play First Ouarlcr and Second Quarter President Secretary-Treasurer Colors Red and White flDfercrS ruth arrington louise bailie catherine beard marjorie bullard elizabeth cale alese charles audrey chewning anne christiansen allie b. daughtry ruth davis louise elliott marion fagg meade feild ruby felts christine ferguson virginia garber virginia garden juliet garnett anne gibson margarf;t gill Louise Palmer Mary Carolyn Harris a cmbfrs) ANNE GILLIAM MARION GLASSELL REBECCA GWALTNEY VIVIA HAIRR GLADYS HALDEMAN MARY LEES HARDY MARY CAROLYN HARRIS MARY STUART HUTCHESON MAMIE F. JACKSON CARRALEIGH JONES ISABEL KESTER JESSIE KINCANON ADAH LONG CHRISTINE LONG LUCY McGEHEE ELSIE Mcpherson MAUDE MABRY ELIZA r.ETH MATinONY Third Quarter Nan Taylor Mary Carolyn Harris JANET MILLER LILLIAN MOORE LOUISE MOORE MABEL MOSELEY LOUISE PALMER MEARLE PEARCE MARY PRATT ANNETTA PURDY SUE RAINE SADIE RICH ELIZABETH ROBINSON NAN TAYLOR MARGARET THOMA HELEN WAGSTAFF ZELMA WAGSTAFF MARGARET WALL NELL WALTERS HELEN WATTS A LL ION 10 V EST K KM A N DORIS t)l)I) VARD Kacket Ccnnis Ciwh PRESinENT— ■ i;j and Second Qitaiurs EDX A DRAPER PRF.s.DF.NT-7 M rf Quarter CATHERINE KEMP Secrctary and Treasurer— iVi ard Second Quarters CATHERINE KEMP Seiretarv and Treascrer— 77ii rf Oiwrfer EUNICE LAMBERT Root, little fig- c ' i ' - Colors Red and B ' .ue a cmlicrs JIAUDE BROOKS MARY HERRINGDON VIRGINIA NICHOLAS LOUISE DAVIS HAZEL HORNBARGER MARY LOnSE OVERTON EDNA DRAPER PEGGY JONES MARIE PAINTER ANNA FORSBERG RCBY JONES SOPHIA SIMPSON ELOISEGAY ' CATHERINE KEMP JESSIE SMOOT ADRIENNE GOODWIN LUCILE KNEISLEY MARY TANNER HELEN EVELYN HARRIS EUNICE LAMBERT ELIZABETH VINT GRACE HEYL BESSIE NICHOLAS AVINIFRED WILLIAMS ilifeing Club motto Walk a mile a day. and keep the doctor ax ' ay. !i?onorarp S cmbcrs MISS LOUISE FRAXKE MR. R. C. DIXGLEDIXE fl?f8cct£ DOROTHY BOXXEY Fricsidext CLOTILDE RODES Secretary FLOREXCE SHELTOX Treasurer C(iptam£i ANXE CHKISTIAXSEN ALBERTA RODES Jloursi SEPTEMBER 20 — We come ! 23 — Everybody gets acquainted with the facuhy at Hillcrest. 30 — Y. W. Reception — Old Fashioned School, Human Piano, cream and cake. OCTOBER 1 — New girls break record bv winning ( )ld Girl-New Girl Game. 13 — Blue Ridge Echoes by V. W. representatives. 24 — William j. Bryan speaks at New X ' irginia. 28 — Heliotrope benefit of Athletic Association at New Virginia. 31 — Shaded candles in Dining Hall — Salad, ice-cream, and cake for supper ! Faculty gives us a Hallowe ' en Party. NOVEMBER 1 — Marie Rappold at New X ' irginia. 3 — Y. W. Service of Lights. 4 — Passmore Company give concert at New Virginia. 5 — .Senior Class gives first dance of the season. 11 — Armistice Da)- Program in chapel — then — a surprise I half -day holidav. 12 Robin Hood Opera at New irginia. 14 — Dr. Rondthaler spends three days, speaking at chapel and Y. ' W. 24 — Junior-Senior Hockey Game — 2-2. History repeats itself. A big ThanksgiviiiK dinner— turkey n ' everytiiing. V. V. Thanksgiving program. Harpist Recital at I ' resin terian I Inircli. 25 — All go to auditorium to see W liat l.ove Will Do. 26— Cotillion Clul) gives its first dance in tlie auditorimn. .lO— Mrs. Smith speaks in chapel. 2— M 3— P. Di ' XI ' .Mr.l ' .K argaret Komaine at New irginia. )•.! (Iraduate-Senior Game-- 16-11. 9 — Post-Graduale and Degree Classes present I ' .arrie ' s plays in the auditorium. U) — Post Ciraduate-Junior Came. 15 — Recital by expression students. 16 — William P.attis, Dickens impersonator at New irginia. IS — Glee Club Cantata at the Presbyterian Church. 19 — The Inevitable comes — E.xams ! 20 — More exams! lUu why vorr ? We are going home! J.WL ' AKV 3_ Vith sad hearts we return— tears and b ' .ues. 7 — Senior Stunts in auditorium. 9 — Beginning of Junior-Senior Week. 12— Faculty Night at Y. W . 14 — The climax of Junior-Senior Week. lunior-Senior Game 18-20 in iavor of Juniors. 20— Everybody enjoys stunts in gym. given b_ - . tbletic . s- sociation. 21 — ' . P. I. Minstrel comes to the Normal ! 28 — Junior Carnival. FEP.RUARY 3 — Shouts of Joy ! Our team wins at Farmville, 27-25. Little Shepherd of Kingdom Come— We best be making tracks to home. ' 10— Glee Club Reception. 11— We go to see The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. 12 — Mrs. Eddy tells us of China. 14 — Election of Student Body Officers. 16_Y. W. Officers elected. 18 — Richmond V. W. team comes! We beat ' em 42-17. 20 — Seniors ' hearts made light by Mr. Logan, Miss Hud- son, Miss McGuire, and Xancy Chappelear. More representative stunts pulled. More good things to eat. 22 — The reading of a telegram from Mr. Duke. A sigh for joy! .A. clap of hands — a half-day holiday. Hatchet on our plates at dinner to remind us of little George. 2-1 — Cotillion Club gives another dance — a masked ball. 25 — Radford r . H. X. S. game. Radford wins 27-7. 27 — Our Mutual iM-iend at the Isis. M. RCH 1 — Skovgaard — violinist in Auditorium — benefit of Annual. 3 — I ' armville victorious in X ' arsity Game. 24-19. -English classes relieved — Fritz Leiber in Hamlet has come ! .Alumnae fs. H. X. S. Game — 27-12 in our favor. 5 — A rush to the windows — Fritz Leiber is seen on the campus ! 10 — Crawford Adams — single and from Boston. .And my! how he could play the violin. 11 — Out-of-State girls present Wedding Bells in auditorium. Silver offering. 16 — Horr ors! Time for exams again. Dr. W ' ayland forgot to come to class — first lime in thirty years. What ' s going to happen ? 17 — Some more exams. A few girls go home. 18 — Xormal girls go to see Way Down East. 20— Holiday for all. 21— Back to work again ! e all go to see The Birth of a Xation that night. 30 — Installation of new Y. W. C. A. officers. APRIL 1 — The .Annual Staff gives gingham dress dance. . — . 11 the members of the Annual Staff enjoy a buffet sup- ])er given them by the H. E. Seniors. Li — The Seniors plant their tree. Miss Seeger tells us an Easter story at A ' 1(t — Easter Sunday. Pii - dinner served in iic:c blue china ! ! 17— Mr. Duke surprises us by announcing a holiday. I ' .ig picnic dinner in the gym. 20 The studenls in ex|)re sii n present Maidens .Ml l-drli rn in tiie auditorium. 21 — Annual StalT gives henelit picture. The Last of the Mohicans. 22— Ham and Milly ' most persuaded us all to heconie foreign missionaries. 27 — Miss Sallie Dickinson talks to us about niciunlain schools. 28 — Juniors give Mother Cloose Land in auditorium. 29 — Field Day. Seniors win 8-5. .M.W 1 — Normal girls make many people happy by giving pretty May baskets. 5 and 6 — .Vll ' s excitement. The Sheik at the Xew X ' irginia Theatre. 12 — May Day. The S])irit of Si)riiig given at dusk in the open-air auditorium. 13 — Juniors entertain the i eniors. 16 — Recital by expression and piano students. 18 — Recital by piano students. 29 and 30 — Seniors wrestle with exams. JUNE 2 — The Schoolma ' am makes her appearance. Senior i)Iay, Poiuander Walk. in the n]ien-air au liiiiriinii. 3 — Music and expression recital. A — Baccalaureate sermon. ' esper service. 5 — Alumnw Banquet. 6 — Class Day exercises. Graduation. 7 — Adieu. )t dSuestion The years pass by, a quiet file. Tliey look at me reproachfully, Can you not give us brighter things To carry to the garden of renit-nibrance? I turn to see what tills their hands; A set of strong grey boxes labeled Work, So many stern square boxes labeled ' ()rk. True, they are well-made, admirable. And to their making I have bent The energies and interests of my life. ' ' W ' ell, are you not satisfied? I ask a little sadly. ' Twill be more like a dimgeon than a garden, thev reply. And in des])air the years move slowh- nn. (Lilljat l ;% i)all lAnncinljcr tVst Hlljrn i) IleaUc liiiic stone l)iU Til r MAI) RUSH FOR BKKAKFAST That mad riisli lor l)rcaklasl! The rising hell, a tlistiirhiiiK eliiiient. hreaks rudely iijioii our dreams ot A on practice teachiiiK. We draw the covers liKhtly, and with a disKrniitled Knint Ro hack to sleep. Then — the hreaki ' ast hell! Three hundred dainty maidens screw up a Renaissance Coiffure with one hand while with the other they clutch siniultancously a shoe, a hairpin from the dresser, a middy from the chair, and a skirt from the closet. A wild stampede down the underground passaRe, a scurry throuRh the hall, a hound up the steps, and we sink into the chair, murmurins to our admiring friends, I didn ' t even think about •ellinK up until the hell rang. — Isabel Sparrow A MOUNTAIN ' STREAM .• cold, sparkling January morning, when I sat calmly reading Tlwnidikc in the library ; a few minutes later a sumitions, Hurry to your room! The water pipe ' s hurst! . few sec- onds later a huge mound of mattresses, hooks, comforts, pictures, toilet articles, pillows — everything confronting me in the doorway. Inside the room two terrified roommates, a scan- dalized Miss Lyons, with skirts held high, and a valiant Knight struggling with the hurst pipe: not to mention drenched curtains, liquidized powder, warped floors, and beautifully whitened woodwork. Forget it ' Well I guess not! — JOSEPHI.VE HARNSHERGliR THF, MAN AND THF HAT When I was a Junior and unsophisticated, as all Juniors are, I ventured into the tender world of romance : or so I thought. .- s I came down the hall I saw in the reception room A MAN. I heard a rustle of skirts, and a lady appeared. They sat down on the settee hut. try as I would, they were jjast my range of vision. On the hall tree hung .A H.A.T. I seized it and ran down the hall. Once inside my room, we investigated; but no evidence was forth- coming. Just then I heard a gruff voice ■ay. I ' m sure I hinig it there. Theii a pause, and the same voice, Perhaps I did leave it in the reception room. They retreated. With winged feet I sped up the hall and shoved it under the portiere. Oh, here it is, I heard him say. It must have fallen down. Then I waited breathlessly. But a knowing, gentle voice replied, You ' d better see if there aren ' t some i)ins in it. I learned later that he was her pastor from home. — M.xREi- Reeve.s OUR MEMORY STRING Those blossoming apple trees — the Imperial .Alaskas — the old school Ford— hurrying off to practice teaching — and oh. those lesson plans! — the rush for the mail box (My kingdom for a letter!) — white cooking dresses in the rain — red ant raids — inspection and disinfection of our room.s — Saturday morning rush for the mops — banging of the steam pipes — those ukuleles — nine-thirty ice-cream delivery — nine-forty rush for tubs — the monitor ' s S-s-s-s-s-h ! re- sounding down the long hall — the night watchman ' s startling whistle — silence — good night. , ve 7 — — ' r-r -,— 3 dc eseo To R8e WOULD you id y ' o. r mzt l.. Reo nr 71 f LIKE To The Hooves iC-H TOKQET : FRAGILE GEOGRAPHY— Miss Mackev (to appreciative art-student): Well, tell me where Dresden is. I l. .ADAMS ; Dresden; let me see. Why, Dresden, China, of course; I couldn ' t recall it at first. ONE OF THOSE AWFUL DARWINISTS AGAIN— Bright Junior; Do we ascend or descend to monkeys ? SPECIALIST versus GENERAL PRACTITIONER— Kemp meeting Thrush; Have you met Dr. Gifford yet? Thrush ; Oh, I thought Dr. Firebaugh was the doctor up here. SOLID IVORY — Elizabeth Harper (in Manual Arts Class) : See, I made this out of mv own head ; and I have wood enough left to make another like it. EXTENSION versus EXPANSION— Sadie Rich ; What is the difference between deep and thick ' ? Ruth Bean ; Well, for instance, you are deep and I am thick. EVIDENTLY NOT FROM BOSTON— Senior ; Do you like cod-fish balls? Junior; I don ' t know; I never attended one. INFORMING — Teacher; How are lakes formed? Pupil; By adding . or i f. A RARE OCCURRENCE— Student (in Mr. Chappelear ' s class in Agriculture); What part of the cow does rare steak come from? A COLORFUL OCCASION- Elsie McPhekson ; I have so much color today. What do you do when you have too much ? Selina ; I generally wash it off. WE WONDER WHAT THE ELIZABETHAN LANGUAGE WAS. LIKE— Miss Cleveland (after reading llaiiilrl in class) ; Why do you speak to ghosts in Latin? Ruth H.mnes ; Because it is a dead language. FORGOTTEN IDENTITY- Ruth Bean ; If I were a girl. I wmldn ' t go to X ' . P. I. PHOSPHORUS, THE GREATEST NEED— Dr. C. : Did you ever take chloroform? Isabel Kester : No, who teaches it ? ONE MORE JOKE— Edith ; Who rooms with Janet? F LiZAnKTii ; Two Moore girls. Edith: I know; but who are they? Elizabeth ; Well, I said the two Moore girls. iAijpincs I ' V MaMIK m kMiN One more uiil ' urtiiiKitc Gone to luT test. Not liaviuK studied it. — Failed with the rest. Take her up tenderly. Lift her with care. Read the first question, and Fainted ripht there. DD an □□ A hreakfast Ik-11— a ringinp shout— I throiv my Roals like Brooks docs. A savage rushing in and out— I murmur with a grin. A swift late pattering of feet- I throw my goals like Brooks does- A fastened door- a sad retreat. Except that hers go in. an DD BB Hobcr Speaks; O vision that I love — a soft, brown beauty with exquisite symmetry of form ! Mow sweet to tliiiik upon! How coolly alluring to the touch! I see thee in my mind ' s eye, floating before me, during long class periods. So mucii to be desired art thou that I can think of nothing else beside thee ! I consider my resources. Alas — what have I liiai 1 sluuild aspire to thee? — Xaught. ' i ' lic future stretches before me empty of thy melting loveliness. .All my yearning is to no avail. I have a sudden and ardent desire to hold thee, to press my lips to thee, my cold but peerless queen, lleloved, life without thee is weary, stale, flat, and un- profitable! Dost hear? Now that thou knowest of my love for thee, wilt thou nut he mine despite my poverty ? No ? (Lend me a dime, Jane.) Now I ' ve got you My Imperial Alaska ! ! Jofjnnie 0h tt }t My name is little Johnnie Brown. — A teacher came to our town ; She was so very, very small We thought ' twould be no trouble ' t all To make her do just as we ' d say, And scare her off that very day. And so we fellows tried her out ; That we should win we did not doubt ; But then, this fact we did not know — To Normal School she used to go. She wasn ' t one bit scared of us. And still she didn ' t always fuss. She knew just what we ' d try to do; And then she ' d look so kind at you — Who ' d do it then, I ' d like to know. IVc didn ' t ever. Now, that ' s so. Her hair was black ; her eyes were brown ; Her face, it seldom wore a frown ; Her lips were red, and fair her skin ; She had a dimple in her chin. She never made but let us work; There wasn ' t one who dared to shirk. When we had studied, we were glad ; But when we hadn ' t, we were sad. I couldn ' t tell you what she ' d do — But she ' d just look and look at you Till you would wish that you ' d done right Or else could sink clear out of sight. Just how she did it I don ' t know — Ask those who to the Normal go. There wasn ' t any fooling ' round Till school was out; and then we found That she could play and have good fun Like other folks, when work was done ; .And she could catch the biggest fish — Do anything a boy could wish. And all the girls they liked her too ; They stuck to her as tight as glue. And once I heard my father say He hoped that she had come to stay, ' Cause ' twasn ' t every day you ' d find A teacher who ' d be like this kind. — Is.MlEI. Sl ' . KKOW h-Ic3£ m S .V6R6 FLll -iF, KC RUSl- VjUT AiN!£. ' l K6 L Kl? C STzl J TM ' V l-l lV . RAU l-ir ; F R pRum :y TM£ ; ir Bi-j q dv; f u v hi. ii ' k- xViNP iR:s w iki; -t7 y u hw r i-ia J6 zc ' 6h, v ntil Cftvigtmag HE TRAIN stopped with the usual jerk. Well, we are here. Yes, here is right. Oh, well in three months it will all be over. Just to think the next time we board this train we shall be going home for Christmas. Amid the eager frantic cries of This way to the Normal ! the girls are stored two and three deep into the waiting jitneys, whirled away, and set down under the archway of Harrison Hall. A little later in the lobby : I want to see Dr. Converse. What is the matter with your program? Not full enough? Not full enough. No; oh, no. Funny idea of humor you have. Several days later Tap, tap was heard at the door. Just think, it is only twelve weeks till Christmas! yelled Mary as she rushed into the room. I ' m going to mark every single day off my calendar. But just then the lights went out, thus stopping the favorite topic of the bunch. As they left the room someone remarked, . ' wfully sorry, girls, but guess we will have to scoot to our rooms to dream about Christmas. All the week was filled with finding new friends and trying to make the strangers feel at home. Occasionally one would meet a girl with red, swollen eyes, the tears streaming down her face to the accompaniment of Sniff, sniff, sniff. Chee r up. Pal. Only eleven weeks till Christmas ; and tliey will fly by so quickly. By the way, what are you planning? In a little while she would be so excited that she would forget all about her home- sickness. It was mail time. The girls were pushing, crowding, bumping heads, and tearing hair nets to get one peek into their boxes. Lucile, please get that letter in 22,3, Combination is B-V. I can ' t get through this mob. Oh, thanks so much. It ' s from Mother. Oh, joy! Here ' s my money to take me home. I ' m so happy. But I know I ' ll never keep it until Christmas. Just two weeks. Can it be possible? The Normal atmosphere was filled with the holiday spirit. Even the teachers seemed thrilled, regardless of the many examination papers to be corrected. Say, girls, have you engaged a bus to Staunton? Go with us; we have a lovely crowd. What time shall we tell the man to come for us? Five-thirty? — Good. Then I ' m sure we can ' t possibly miss our train, rattled Alese, who was all pepped up. Oh, here comes Winifred. She ' s in our bunch, too. Come on, girls. Let ' s go try our luck on History of Education. This is our last exam, I ' m so thrilled I can ' t distinguish Socrates from Santa Claus. Just as soon as this is over, I ' m going to run to my room and dress, so we can get the first bus. At half-past five the girls crowded around Jackson Hall. Honk ! Honk 1 .sounded the cars. Come on, everybody. Get in the first bus. Get in here with us, Meade. Go around on the other side, and you can sit on my lap, Margaret. Stop crowding, girls. There ' s another bus coming in just a few minutes. Step back a little, drawled the bus man. Leave your baggage. The truck will take it over. One more small girl can go in here, but that ' s every one. You can ' t all get together, no way. Look out there, ladies; you ' ll get run over. Grace, don ' t get so excited. They ' ll get you to Staunton in plenty of time to catch the train. If you should miss it, I ' ll see that you are taken to the Asylum. So the cars moved off, packed with girls thrilled and bubbling over. Xo longer was till Christmas the theme, for at last it was really, truly Christinas now. Cijristinas nub lifter Toot — toot — chooka — chook--cliooka — chook ! sounded the train 1 1 IC SCHOOL campus was silent. No girls, no shrieks, no hells. I- ven till- mice and the little red ants were enjoying the right of way so joyously uiven them. The faculty, too. missed us. as the little hoy missed the i.iothache. The only person seen groping around was Dr. Converse. The echo nf his steps sounded down the deserted corridor, plank-plink. plank- plink. lie l(H ke l amuiid to see if anybody was in the building. He was (|uite sure he heard something. The (|iieer weird feeling of being all lUme was getting on his nerves. He would have gone back home, but con- Mdering duty before comfort, he mustered all his courage and went to his oliice. lor he reahzed that those reports must be gotten out. .• nd yet that creepy feeling had soaked through and through his being. He felt that something was going to step in at almost any minute. So sitting on the edge of his chair he jotted down C ' s. l) ' s. E ' s, and F ' s. with an occasional A or li. But I am sure had he known that all his weird feelings were due to the reaction of the girls ' dreams about their reports, his heart would have relented and a few more A ' s and B ' s would have run down the end of his pen. At last were mailed the little paper messengers bearing the results of twelve long weeks of trials and tribulations of Normal. Subnormal, and .Abnormal girls. Then for once in his life Dr. Converse ([uicken- ed his steps and got out of Harrison Hall, with the strong determination not to return till the girls were back. Christmas was over, coming in at Staunton. Well, girls. I guess this is where we change. Move a little so I can get my hat and suitcase. I ' m so tired and my hands and face arc positively potty. Hurry oflF, girls. There ' s Mr. Johnston here to meet us. This way. ladies, for transfer. Leave your baggage. We ' ll get that. Fill up the first car. please, and we ' ll take you right over to the other station. yelled the driver. The girls crowded in and were soon deposited at the B. O. depot, Oh. here come our suitcases. Let ' s get ours quickly. That ' s mine on top. with the handkerchief tied to it. Gee ! it ' s heavy. Let ' s get on the train so we can get a good seat. Hello, girls, .so glad to see you ! Did you have a Merry Christmas. Happy Kew Year. I ' ourth of July, ' n ' everything? Oh. I had the best time! My. that ' s a good-looking ring. ' irginia ! Hold your hand here. Phew ! it hurts my eyes. Guess Harry mu.st have sud- denlv bumped into a mint. . n there are Rose and Lucv sporting diamonds too. Luckv kids! Look out of the window. Ruth. There ' s the Noriral. Don ' t the lights look pretty at night ? Get your junk, girls. We ' re ready to land in the brier patch. Tough luck on silk hose, declared Grace. Wish I had checked this old suitcase. fussed Jane. In my room at last. But oh ! it is terrible, terrible, to come back. Come, girls, we must go over and get our program cards. Then I ' m going straight to bed. The next morning all came rushing to breakfast, and by noon their program cards and classes were straightened out. Everybody was b;ick at work again, as happy as ever, re- gardless of the fact that the coming Saturday had been changed on the Normal calendar to Tuesday. — ' lVI. H.MRK • • • S h OOT The B vcRd. -—A ' TheWOY Q:3 of? V . Vi He feLL W vd- X Vio e To TeLl H 00 ! TTT oo PoWTiT (V) R I d w t f W s- D c m I to r y d I a. o j To c e- ' e rri . To d sc ove up IhRuThc BP Pi 1 STHolleo WITH His urf c-Ross His ShloufaGB. ' BefoHe P [He Cflme To ft p Wyv ' lioT oicK Some (p foB nv Wf-f-Cj He ThougHlT Bu7 ) ConnoTTorf oiYe ll D i l lo i. TT ei ? |F% . lie HeheDlHen eTurfDen W qy THeni STfl fleo TR ' Bv ® ' ' Hi HurfTf-on h P 0 ? fl 5 Ttou H oinfg:llTene vye ie 3 lolenp Pi do n :jTo clinB. iHeri He cnnelo one ®VY e 7e ' S ? ' ' ' TT e We He irig ri . BtTPHe £) D rVoj-Hill Ihe e BinD5:THe i vveRe Too 3. He xoi ovveo TRc 6TRenn TTll He cnne 75 .rTi; Gu7 HCi e Tne 1 wene Too Sleep _iior? H To Coilo w up TFfe ThaT He 5 w e ? . ID He oRRiea BoCTT W Y T To Doj Bur 5 He vy ?5 ' STnoHiriS Hi5 o . He W 5 r oT Deno Be-fohie ]5 ine nnnrf innien Harie v TTh Hi-:} p ?)z.e He veT n rluroBSR oj: nWr r y ricjuD- WiiH TRe n oel nweo Hin urfiTl Tfic Hno fii5cn, yVhen( He Tje cHen Hone He fooHeiD T?tP{u n ,-niDow- rio The Re. 5 rPH 5 ife ■Re- iD nf3 The JP . She nl f r5 pT ' o v HSR Hu6 BfiriD Pi ri D Yov ' Re-pu6eD HiD Hi 5 5uppeH Qeceu 5e He tino rioT Beeri T7?e ?e ■WHeH The uppepj j HnrfS rioR li LilWc Doe 5 ii V ' T He oril T i ej5 n ?i 3u ppQ n f w ho rr iHetfjobg You wait till I begin to teach ; Some things I ' ve learned to do, And when you hear what I ' ve to say, I bet you ' ll try them too. When Monday comes, I ' ll never plan To question all my class. I ' ll follow Mr. Dingledine — Give them a chance to pass. And when a test I give to them, To make them concentrate — As Dr. Converse did for us — I ' ll argue and debate. No, surely I will not forget My classes to prepare ; But there ' s Miss Shaeffer ' s plan to try — Make pupils do my share. Sometitnes if lessons should grow dull, . ' s they will do in spring, I could like Dr. Wayland do — Lift up my voice and sing. If some poor child could not keep up — His work was not the best — As Dr. Gifford, I should give A new intelligence test. Of course there always is a chance, I might be called away ; But then Miss Anthony provides : Just leave a test that day. . ' Vnd when my pupils do not know The subject I assign — The kindergarten children ' s tricks — I ' ll shoot Miss Seeger ' s line. If then my class, thus taught, should fail There ' ll surely be a flood. gain like Dr. Converse I ' ll Weep bitter tears of blood. -Meade Ffjld TheTv- ¥ Ls oj- IR R- A ctice-T«s ecib G 1 .- Tv Y  n n -Vo 5 + h ' -t Tv fl(h t a Sc-hooL Tv f riSJ-ovro a tioh U H ope r p door YTiedVis TVio e ?e5 i -7777-77777 L e ' on pv- v= ns This is really nothing in particular. Still, we dare not leave it out and face our Business Manager with a wasted cut. It was to be the picture of the Commencement line; but it was so far from the dining room to the gateway that only a third had got there when the time was up and the photograplier squeezed the fatal bulb. Then. too. as it was taken in April, we had not finished making our hats; but the imagination of the gentle observer who may turn these pages can well supply that deficiency. At least we have the Degree girls with us, in cap and gown, marshalling the line, as they really do in June. They were on time. After four years of racing witli electric bells one learns to get there. Behind us are the new gray gates. Don ' t forget them, even if we are covering them up. You have a fine view, though, of the new property bought by the school — the Smythe resi- dence and grounds. All old girls must notice the improvements. But. as for ourselves, we go out of the gates and on — to what? That we may not know. Within the campus limits wc live and grow, content in the knowledge that without some work is waiting: the road leads to— Somewhere. And the comradeship of our youth, real and sweet, can never be wholly lost. It will go with us. Some day we shall greet each other; Hail, friend ! We lived within the gates together, and together we passed through the gray stone portals. e Miscellany cant 0 Caslj I ' m dead broke, that ' s my trouble- Not one cent to my name ; I owe Sue halt a dollar And ten cents more to JMame. Have nothing to be eating ; I ' m hungry as a bear ; I wish I owned a restaurant Or were a millionaire. I can not bear the libr ' y ; The tea-room down lielow Sends up the smell of oysters And bacon and cocoa. No use to try to study ; I just cannot keep still. I ' ll go down to the tea-room And start another bill. -Marion An. MS The Mirror CSUT 6F W ARVS I ' lIK M ll-tUUK The Mikrok The MiKKOK The Mirror I KDpcs- £sr- KAj7 :S-MosT P -iiwricF .- r (ti7- Kosr uL-RouNp :7CP N!P ' -iGL«t r%Tri c;sr to (-C c w 4 PRmP :R.- t6SC T nS ES - ];!? a u-iTK UV .ST 6ur tii: VV ' 3Rlv The Mirror (Seconds) L -What are you doing here? a stranger asked The three stone cutters toiling in the sun. I ' m mai .ing forty -five a weeic, one bragged ; I ' m cutting this here stone, the second growled ; In quiet voice, but with uplifted eyes, I ' m building a cathedral, said the third. And we who read this story, current now. How do we visualize our daily task ? — As making this or that per month, forsooth ? As teaching science, French, arith- metic ? Or shaping human souls tor life and death And for the Great Bayond ? OTebbingg May 31, 1921 Miss Anna Pearl Hai.heman to Mr. Claude B. Stickley Winchester, Virginia June 2, 1921 Miss Madge Bryan to Mr. Hugh Gordon Burnett Richmond. Virginia June 9, 1921 Miss Mary Virginia Yancey to Captain Noland Mackenzie Canter Harrisonburg, Virginia June 18. 1921 Miss Mary Lancaster Smith to Mr. Ernest Ellesworth Garrison Richmond. Virginia June 22. 1921 Miss Eloise Minor Hinton to Captain Victor Parks Petersburg. Virginia June 28. 1921 Miss Rera Beard to Dr. George Grover Snarr Harrisonburg, Virginia July 2, 1921 Miss Mary Stella Meserole to Mr. Philip Manchester Holt Washington, D. C. June 29, 1921 Miss Jennie Perkins Loving to Mr. William Hugh Sadler Wilmington, Virginia July 1, 1921 Miss Ruth Bagley Wallace to Mr. Benjamin Rives Hooper Richmond, Virginia July 18, 1921 Miss Louise Walker to Mr. J. T. Jennings Nashville. Tennessee July 26. 1921 Miss Maisie Lavinia Mor(,an to Mr. Sheffey Lewis Devier Brunswick, Georgia July. I ' )21 Miss ICi.i.kn Kncii.km.w tu Mr. Ch.xri.es Ai.iif.rt Welsh (). KI.. NI(. C. l.lKOKNI. August 4. V)2 Miss Hklkn N ' ikgi.nia Hoi ' KINs tm . Ih. I ai.iii . I. Udovkh Mlti.MIKYSVILLE, VIRGINIA AuKust IS. 1921 Miss Ki.l.x M.vrc.vrkt Peck to Mr. Loris Thornton Hrantz FlNlASTLK. ' lRGl IA August 21. 1921 Miss Mary Cook to Dr. I-jiward I ' . Lank StI ' ART. N ' lRGlNIA August 23. 1921 Miss Mary Garhkn to Mr. Walter Coleman Martin Prosi ' ect, Virginia September 1. 1921 Miss Mary .Anne Early to Mr. Blkiisoe Biford Parrott RllKKRSVILLE. VIRGINIA September 4. 1921 Miss Phyllis Hollingsworth Page to Mr. Li.oyii Hollingswortii Smith Charlottesyille. ' irginia September 7. 1921 Mrs. Tenney Cline Hiiaky to Mr. Wii.i.ia.m Thomas WoLrREV Harrisonbirc. N ' irginia September 19. 1921 Miss Inus Hickam to Mr. D. B. Fletcher Dot. Virginia September. 1921 Miss Miriam Jones to Mr. Tho.mas Roper Houston Norfolk. Virginia October 17. 1921 Miss Mabel Banner to Mr. J. X. Parkey Gibson Station, Virginia October 24. 1921 Miss Rose Block to Mr. Herbert Eugene Wormser Baltimore, Maryland November 19. 1921 Miss ' irginia Leach to Mr. Henry O ' Baxnon Cooper Front Royal. Virginia January, 1922 Miss Floried Botts to Dr. William Finney Balti.more. Maryland January 7, 1922 Miss Mary Isabel Lewis to Mr. Joseph P. Coi.ona Ex.MORE. ' |RGINIA February 28. 1922 Miss Emily Gay Eley to Mr. John Bradford Johnson Norfolk. ' ircini. March 4. 1922 Miss Mary Elizabeth Jones to Mr. Pacl Linton Cornett Basic. ' irginia March 18. 1922 Miss Frances Gilliam to Mr. Raymond Webster Charleston. West Virginia April 9. 1922 Miss Mary Frances Stell to Mr. High Lee Butler Norfolk. Virginia April 15. 1922 Miss Marie Scribner to Mr. Benjamin Edwards Washington, D. C. eatijs! IHargarrt dlnrftan g lu nit. 1916 With at Ijrr l}amt in Jforfnlk, Tltrgima Marti}. 1922 Altlira ICpp A ama g tubrnt, 1915 Bieh at Etlatt, Itirgtuia April 22. 1922 m m iHattr There are schools that staml by the side of the sea And list to the wild waves ' roar; There are schools that tower on lofty hills, Where the heart of man doth soar; There are schools of name and schools of fame That stand with open door ; But let me go to H. X. S. — Because I love her more. — E. G. AND A. M. God ' s angel from the realms of bliss Stooped once to print a balmy kiss Xear where the Shenandoah flows. And there our .Mma Mater rose. -M. T. CKSON ' Z )t l amm ftotu SN ' T it lovely here in the park? So interesting to watch people without appearing to stare! Do you come often? Sometimes. When I want to muse, I like to sit on this hench and imagine I am in a box seat watching the world go hv. Do you know all these people? Who are they? asked the girl with a face like a fresh wild flower. She had just come to Washington to visit Allene, whose having-seen-all, having-felt-all expression was the essence of the city. If your ' ' ho are they? ' means ' WHiat are their names? ' I can ' t tell you. What advantage is there in knowing a name, after all? Sometimes it just puts a stop to my speculating. I think I do know some of these passers-by — in part, cer- tainly. But you must unrein your imagination as I tell you about them, for I ' ll spoil my story if I have to stop with facts. All right ! exclaimed the very-much-alive country Daisy. I ' ll play you are giving me a box party at the National, and all this park is the stage. Ready? Curtain ! The cross currents of life follow all these paths that lead into the circle around the fountain. That is the center where all involuntarily pause, refreshed by the coolness of the atmosphere and qu ieted by the contented play of the waters. Under the trees all are free to loiter, and the seats are for the olDservers and the weary. Now that the stage is set, notice the chief entrance — the path that comes around the azalea bushes. Always the same continuous, nervous, hurrying stream of comers there. The name of this play is ' The Passing Show. ' Its theme is ' ' hat are they thinking about ? And who are they ? ' as registered by themselves while they pass. Do you see the man with the Palm Beach and the grayish hair who looks as if he has hurried until now he is running away with himself? See, he is slacking his pace. He is taking off his hat as if he thought he ought to do it. I should say he is the tired business man, asking himself for once, ' What is it all about, anvhow? Why not linger under the trees and just rest? ' He has hours of work yet to do somewhere tonight. The woman coming around by the fountain, with the intent look on her face, is worthy of your attention. One doesn ' t have to know her name. Just look at that dress. To you it means nothing but a stiff, rattling, shiny silk. i )Ut to me it speaks worlds! That is a bargain-sale dress. I bought one once. There is some- thing about a sale that creates a hectic in the blood which can be relieved onlv by a purchase. The one I bought was stiff, rattling, and shiny — a twin to this one. — You can ' t imagine how the wearing of it stifled me, and how the rattle of it adver- tised me. One day it split. Such a relief to my soul! I am henceforth immune to bargain sales forever. That will be the end of the brave garment that just passed. That is the end of all bargain silk dresses. I am sure she is going calling to ex- claim over her economy in buying. Such satisfaction until the rude awakening I The man, or rather the too-early-sobered young boy, who just pa- sed with llu- iitjlit. i|uick tii), is luimisl.ik.ibly a j4i)Vfriiim. ' iU clerk. The lifjhtiicss is due to lack of thinking apparatus, and the (|iiickncss comes from the habit of moving when spoken to. lie probably is a roomer on the next l)lock. The suit he has on his arm has just come from tiie cleaner ' s — S. Isaac ' s around the corner, perhaps. ■■Don ' t look at him, but watch this man approaching — the one with the balcl head, hat in hand, coming l)y the urn. lie is a regular parkite. One day II;illie and 1 were here and he stared so that llallie in high dudgeon swept from the jjark — up to the corner Delicatessen to buy some spearmint as balm for this annoyance of spirit. But his wife soon joined him. 1 see them here often. 1 know it is his wife because he always reads the paper or feeds the stjuirrels. That boy turning somersaults is an Italian. So is that sylph-like girl, scant of clothing. She is grace itself when she dances to the street organ. Her waifish- ness is appealing. It is not that her parents are so, poor, but there is discord over religion. One is Protestant, the other Catholic. Meantime the children look like back-street gamins. Yonder go some Porto Ricans — university students. I know one of them pretty well. They supplement their small English with wild gesticulations — hands, heads, and feet — anything to get the idea across. They consider themselves far superior to the Cubans, whom they accuse of unspeakable vanity. Those very two fellows played a trick on a Cuban who had disgusted them by the excessive signifi- cance he put upon any notice from an .American girl. They wrote him a letter lur- ing him to a tryst, signed ■Your l riend of Luna Park. ' and watched the crazy take it in good faith, presenting himself dressed out. brushed, perfumed, irresistible, to meet — nothing but their own teasing eyes. But mercurial temperaments recover quickly ; so I suppose there was no permanent harm — or cure. ■■How do those eight boys manage to crowd on that short bench, which was so dangerously near to spilling point with half the gang and no allowance for excess of jollity on the part of the shoving scamps that have slipped into the middle? Turn your head until you see the odd figure sitting stiffly upright — just below the bench where the boys are. See? She always has on that antediluvian hat with the bow at a defiant angle. The make-up of the face and the smart shabbiness of her say to youth. ■You eluded me. but I ' m a jaunty make-believe. ' Tliat keeping- up attitude towards life must be such a strain. ' ith that Allene slapped her ankle as if minded to break it. Oh. those mos- quitoes ! she exclaimed. I think this must be the most interesting place in the world to live. mur- nuired Daisy, entirely oblivious of the annoying mos(|uitoes. or else immune. Not at all. replied the sophisticated .Allene. rubbing the assaulted ankle. It is ' A Passing Show. ' It passes by your house too. Watch the road, and you will soon think your own community the most interesting place in the world. Come ; let ' s go and leave the park to the mosquitoes. — Ell.v Stover Cte JIarrisionijurg; Spirit A Junior wandered round one day, As they at first must do ; Upon the campus lost her way — The way the Seniors knew. — Of course she lacked the s[iirit. She strolled into the oflice. sad And homesick. Oh, the dread That Junior, lone and weary, had! To start she was afraid — Ere she had caught the spirit. One morn she could not rise — was ill — Though all the rest had riz ; The nurse in vain tried all her skill ; It was class-room-atiz. — She had not caught the spirit. She craved to scale high glory ' s wall. To be a girl of note, But found she had no note at all Save those she had to tote. — Hard toil might bring the spirit. Of team-work even in class she heard — Of social recitation ; And then her mind within her stirred: What was co-operation ? — She soon would get the spirit. She rushed to gym one night to play For honors, rep, and fame. HER CLASS IN FLYING COLORS ! RAY ! And she ' d helped win the game ! — Was getting our school spirit — But knew it not herself until She gazed on yonder mountain And love for our own Blue-Stone Hill Came, welling like a fountain. — . ' Knd she had caught the spirit. A foursquare girl we ' ll find her now : A student, loyal, true; .Mumna, faithful to her vow; Teacher, and woman too. — For that ' s the real -pirit. — Rkbkkah Stephenson Jf rienb RRY buried his face in his hands and sobbed in bitterness. The little brook which ran at his feet munnured sympathetically, and the old willow tree against which he leaned whispered words of comfort. Larry did not hear them. His grief was too great. For four years he had been a student at Emerson College, and she was proud of him. He was what the boys called a jolly good fellow. and what the dean spoke of as a fine chap. His athletic record was one of brilliant successes. His scholarship record was also one to be proud of except in one particular — English. And Larry had failed on his final English examination. The astonished professor had found two questions entirely omitted. Now, Larry was net worried about the subject itself, for they had always enter- tained a thorough dislike for each other ; but he was Captain of the ' arsity Foot- ball Team. The dean had placed a friendly hand on his shoulder and said, My boy. I regret this e.xceedingly. Never in the history of our school have we conferred the degree on a man failing in a subject in his senior year. .Also, by ruling of the Athletic Council, no student with a scholarship record of less than seventy- five per cent can participate in the varsity games. The Emerson-Hartford Game, as you very well know, is scheduled for the tenth of next month. Because of your past record in scholarship and because in athletics we count on you to uphold the honor of the Blue and Gold, we are giving you one more chance. Two weeks trom date you may submit an essay in good form, of not less than twenty- five hundred words, a creation of your own brain. Clioose your own subject and do your best. Good-morning, sir. Larry had come out with a lift of the chin that bespoke grim determination. He would write that essay. He thought of Mother and Dad, of the lioys with the win-or-die spirit, of the girl back at home who would smile bravely but deep in her heart would be ashamed for him. Then he thought of the old coach vyho had said, It ' s in you, my boy. Go in and win! Yes, he would write the essay. That had been five days ago, and no word yas written yet. Not that he hadn ' t tried, for hour after hour he had bent over his paper. But no words came. How his poor head ached and throbbed I The boys had noticed the change in Larry, and they no more used the hail- fellow-well-met air with him. No cheer went up when he entered the lobby. The boys were puzzled. Could brave, daring, Larry have lost heart? Was he afraid of the Happies ? The boys, too, began to grow doubtful. Larry felt it, but what could he do? He had failed. As he sat on the bank that eyening he gave it up. He was no good. Lle ' d go home, without honors, without the hood. He ' d farm, run a grocery — a res- taurant! What did it matter? A thousand other boys had passed that exami- nation. He was just no good. As he rose to his feet a picture came before him that stunned him in its clearness. It was the last night of high school. Ralph Gaines had grip])ed his hand and .said. Larry, if I can ever serve you in any way, you ' ll let me know, won ' t you? I ' ll be ready. And his reply had been, Thanks, old man. Comit on it. ' ' Their paths had diverged widely, for Ralph was only one of Larry ' s many hero-worshippers : but he had meant what he said. ' hy not get Ralph to write his essay? No one would eyer knnw, and the X ' arsity wduld win the g.-ime. The I wrotliii.i; witli his miinlionil was liiucr. I)iil wIrii lie started toward llic h ' rat I louse he had yielded. lie waited anxiously, aiul then one day a registered packet came to l.arry. He carried it to his room and opened it with eajjer lingers. it was the essay. The suhjeel was llonor. lie sank into a chair and read it hiuv ' rily. It was, as Larry had cautioned the author, not loo good ; hut it rang true. The last lines read : The true concc])tion of honor is a very personal thing — not what the wfirld thinks or knows of us. hut how fair we are to ourselves. If a man can sav, 1 know myself to he honorable. then why fear the world? Me is inviolate. The ne.xt day Larry handed the dean his essay. It was co])ied neatly on regulation jiaper, and he did not flinch as he jircsented it. . s he turned awa . there flashed across his mind a phrase, how fait we are to ourselves. Where had he seen that? Oh. yes, the essay. He went hurridly to the field, hut the words kept repeating themselves. He missed a good play, and a cry went up from the boys. He lost his nerve and left the grounds. He did not go to dinner, and when long |)ast midnight he tried to slee]). he could only toss aimlessly about. 1 know myself to he honorable. He buried his face in the ])illow. Near daybreak he arose and flung his clothes into his trunk. He would be fair to himself and then go home. When the breakfast gong souiided he lorkel the trunk and went to the dean ' s office to wait. As he entered the corridor Dr. Janis, the English instructor, came up. Mr. Elwood, he said. I am returning your essaj- unread, and I have come to ask your pardon for an act of extreme carelessness. Larry ' s breath came in (juick gasps. While scoring your examination jjajjcr I was called awav bv an urgent telephone message. I placed the sheet 1 was grading unrler niv writing pad, and on my return some hours later I could not !ind vour answers for two questions. The janiti r brought the sheet to me this morning. 1 sincerely hi-g your pardon. He held out his hand. Larrv tried to speak. Dr. ' janis. I . There, there. I know how you feel. With the game so near, it must have been dreadful. Xo, it is not that ; I . The professor placed an arm about his shoulders. Go to vour room and lie down. son. You ' re trembling like a leaf. Larry could only stumble away. He had played fair with himself at any rate. That afternoon at football, too, he played better than ever before. The bovs carried him high on their shoulders, veiling Rah! Rah I Larrv! Rah ! Rah ! Larry ! over and over again. Two weeks later The Times printed the following headlines: FIERCE CLASH BETWEEN EMERSOX AXD HARTFORD. OVERWHELMIXG TCTORV FOR EMERSOX. LARRY ELWOOD SCORES FOUR TOUCHDOWXS. SAID TO BE BEST PLAYER IX XORTHEAST. Two hundred miles away Ralph Gaines read and wondered. But Larry ' s delayed telegram said, Won both fights. You did it. . ' subject well chosen. Larry. Ralph leaned back in his chair and smiled happily. That ' s the best night ' s work I ever did, he said, — TosEPUi.vE Harnsberger Jfirsit ilmpresigions; of avvmnhnv hccau.-ii.- It i!. necessary to ' M N()T filing t(i start with ni iinpressiuns. get to a place before being impressed. Go bacl just a bit, and I ' ll guarantee that all of you looked forward to the time when you ' d go off to school — the time when yciu ' d be free from your mother ' s apron-strings, so to speak, when you would be on your own hook and do as you pleased. Well, so did I. When I was really little and played paper dolls, there was always a college girl in my family of dolls. She was just a little different from those who were out of college, and a little more dignified than those about ready to go to college. College girls seemed to strike me as being so assured, dignified, iiiil rrssing. Quite nat- urally when I found I was going away to school, I wanted to be assured, dignified, and im- pressing too. So I made uji my mind that I would be all of that. This liappened before leaving home. When I got on the boat, there were so iiuiiiy girls! Of course I had known of several who were going away, but never dreamed of all those girls. We were introduced and began talking — and all my dignity and impressing resolutions began slipping. After we reached Richmond, more girls got on; and oh, my! such names! Duuaway, Heidelberg, Gochenour, and others equally as long. I just naturally thought I ' d never re- member them all, and tlien they ' d think I was snobbish, when I was really only trying to be impressing. At last the train reached Staunton, and everybody took the little special. There were no lights, and you couldn ' t tell whose feet you were sitting on, or wdiether your best hat was on the floor or in your lap, or whether it was your suitcase or hat box that your feet were propped on. To cap the climax, it began to rain. Wliile passing through what looked to us like a big meadow, the train stopped, and the conductor called, Harrisonburg. Then it was like Bedlam let loose — girls exclaiming. Where is my hat? Have you got that suitcase? Oh. I ' m slipping down a bank!!! Goodby to new shoes and hose after I finish with this field! And they said Harrisonburg was a pretty place! Have we got tcj walk the railroad track? They said there weren ' t any cars. I ' ll bet something pretty the school ' s about a mile away. Finally the road was reached, and just opposite us were all of these imjiosing build- ings. Even if they were rather cold and dignified, the lights in the windows looked like the home fires to me. All of us went up to Harrison. Miss Lancaster was there to receive us. Hverybody was kissing everybody else, and the new girls felt as if they wanted to kiss somebody too. All the dignity was gone, and the desire to impress along with it. A hot bath and a good bed looked mighty good to old and new girls alike; and every- thing was in such a hustle that there wasn ' t time to get homesick, for which we, the .juniors, thank the Seniors ci ' rr so much. — M. R(;. HKT Moore Lady Peach Blossom, soul of sweet flowers, Thrill of the south wind, dream of the showers, Smile of the springtime, sheen of the dawn. Blush of young April just kissed by the sun. Lady Peach Blossom, fairyland queen, Throned in pink splendor on calyx of green. Stamens of crimson and petals aglow — Ladv Peach Blossom, a secret I know ! Wooing the sparrow to sweetness of song. Tempting the dewdrop to linger too long. You make the rash northwind look backwards and yearn And, making him jealous, tempt winter ' s return. — ToiiN H. BOOTEN (.Apple blossoms figured at supper when the county superintendents were our guests. Mr. Booten, of Page, chanced to have in his pocket the original and only copy of his un- published verses to this fair first cousin of our school flower.) , = « H j: « 5 -X z .-=1. -.-Tlra 1, -5 s-ns « O ji = E s u = =. ' ■ S •= 2 j; ■ 5 = 2 ■= — ■?- X . c w 2-i = S - 2.= 1- = = ■ X o — i S • ' • 7 = i i .,2 - • ' . s . -o o O ; 5 • ' - 2 U — -yi u p — ' ' — u ■ ' . t.rt— i. = = ar: ' r o u • - U O I- r • ! -c ;, -3 it •; .V — ■ . Ji i-s ' ' -b-si ilfJl:- . ■n cu ■= 2 = ■{■ ' ' M - Bf t = J C 5 - = | - .|7 sS- l i ' u ■ S IH iili ' tl: ? f 2 2 - =. - ' = = _• r s ■S ;£ b 2 j; _ .-■= .i.|_l -5 . S ' i ' : ' i J ' i|-2:|.?--5 J ' Z- ' u . ipE . Z ' .2 — c - o t .E . ™ ' -— ' pp , ' - ' ■ ' y. •S b S - .i; f = = ' ■ ' £ ' r • ' • ' ' - J VJ ' ■ ' • — ' P — u • 5 .-H 5 .5l ' 3 2 ' 5 - =2u ' i -5 •—■; — . — ' b ' rt C ' ■ ' ■ ■ s_ .- .- tt : . . T wf- ,- ' r: unt lenba ' g Wvip to oton (IL ' NT LENDA HATRSTOX possessed more of this world ' s goods th:in the average darkey of her section of Virginia. She was not born wealthy; nor had her wealth been thrust upon her, but had been achieved by the exercise of physical strength and the use of the washboard. By wealth in this particular instance it is not to be understood that Aunt I-enda was burdened with large estates or with bank stocks or even with a great deal of personal property. But she did own her little log cabin dobbed with nnid, and by her daily toil earned enough to keep up the family and send Mandy to Berryyille to school. Ish, her husband, was rather a drawback than a help. It was a warm day in June, soon after Mandy had returned, that she was telling her mother how this or that was done in town. Wal, gal, I ain ' t sent you off to school fer nothin ' . Ef you ' s larnt so much, git in thar an ' prove it. I ain ' t had no schoolin ' ; but I bet you can ' t cook near as good as yo ' ole mammy now. Show, chile, what you kin do, ' stead o ' talkin ' about it. Talk ain ' t never got nobody nowh ar. This philosophy was uttered as Aunt Lenda stood over a washboard witii her sleeves rolled to her elbows, her big fat arms exposed to the hot suds in which she was giving Ish ' s overalls their weekly scrubbing. Aunt Lenda was not one whose licad was turned because she had a little property. She had never seen the day when she was too proud to use home-made soap because the lye in it ate her hands. On the contrary, it was with pride that she rubbed the strong, dark mass over the greasy spot on the overalls. Yes, Mandy ' s been in town, whar they don ' t use no real soap. An ' it ' pears from the looks of her dresses they don ' t use much water. She ' s too proud to put her hands in ' those hot suds. ' Umph, umph, umph ! Sich a ' rs ! Wal, I guess I ' d hate to work too ef I ' d been out o ' practice. But law ! I never knowed what ' twas like to not wash. Wonder how I ' d feel actin ' the lady. These thoughts brought others in their train. Why should she not go to Berryville? If she liked well enough she would move to town and wash where she could get paid for it. Little Jeems was four years old. He was certainly big enough to be left. Her clothes were pretty good. She would only have to get a new hat. Her black woosted dress would do to wear on the train. Besides, she had a good one-piece every-day dress. If she needed more, she would borrow from Susan Tinsley. They were near the same size. Aunt Lenda smiled to herself as she thought what Ish would say. She certainly did not care. At dinner her intentions were proclaimed. All held their breath, petrified. Aunt Lenda observed this . ' uid repeated in a matter-of-fact tone her statement. Ish rolled his eyes around until only the whites could be seen. It was just forty miles to Berryville, but Mandy was the only one of the family who had been there. She sniggled as she pictured her cabin-bred niiitlur in town among the busy swift-moving crowd. She sniggled again. Ill spite of Maiuly ' s siiIkkIvs aiul tlic muvcinciits of Ibli ' s tvi-., Aunt I. mi|.i •.m.V i.. Ii.-r decision. After three months ' preparation the day of her departure arrivc l. She liad lM)rrti ved Susan ' s traveUiig haR and had it packed hefore daylight. Right o ' clock found her standinK in the diwr in her new fall hat. which was shaped like a douhic hoiler, with one great erect red feather bravely facing the front. Ish was coming up the rocky road in a carryall which was to convey her to the station. Into this she clinihcd with her baggage after kissing the children go(Klbyc. There was absolute silence between Ish and Aunt Leiida as they drove slowly over the rocky road. He was thinking that Lenda would possibly like town so well that she would not want to come home. She was lost in anticipation of the visit. The silence was broken when the mule stopped before the station. Aunt Lenda jumped out like a si.xtcen-ycar-old girl, but it was w ' ith more reluctance that Ish made his move- ments. His wife had bought her ticket and was all ready to go when he came from tying the mule. The train moved off slowly, but increased in sjieed so rapidly that Aunt Lenda for the first time felt a trifle uneasy. When it stopped at Berryvillc this uneasiness became a terror, as she was vociferously claimed on all sides by taxi-drivers, whom, judging from the brass buttons on their uniforms. Aunt Lenda identified as the jmlice force. Lawsy ! gentlemen. I ain ' t stole a solitary thing. You ' ve got me mi.xed with anurr lady. she protested. It was after much explanation that one of them finally persuaded her that he was no policeman at all. but would take her just where she wanted to go. For the life of her she could not remember now where that was. .Ml that saved her was the address that Mandy had slipped into her mother ' s bag. When the traveler stepped from the taxi before her sister ' s door, she experienced a feel- ing of relief mixed with homesickness. Law ! Ef I ' d er knowed ' twas like this. I ' d never left my shack. ' Tain ' t nothin ' fine ; but a body ' s safe thar. Why, Lenda, I ' m sure you are going to like it here, said her sister. I ' m sure I ain ' t gwine to like it. came the firm reply. It was in vain that the sister tried to coax her guest to go with her through the town and see the sights. Aunt Lenda longed for her washboard. Ef I ever git back to my little shack, I ' ll stay thar till my dyin ' day. she warned her sister. And home she went. Not until Mandy came back from her second year of school did the homefolks know why her mother never talked about her trip to Berryvillc. — Ruth Lewis t)C oetg i nolu MISS STEVENS Let mc have aiulicncc for a word or two. MISS MAC KEY Happy am I ; from care I ' m free ! Why aren ' t they all contented hke me? FRANCES GILLIAM And whispering, ' I will ne ' er consent ' — consented. MR. CHAPPELEAR From the crown of his head to the soles of his feet, he is all mirth. MRS. LE HEW Of all tliose arts in which the wise excel Natnre ' s chief masterpiece is writing well. MARY LEES HARDY What a spendthrift she is of her tongue. GLADYS GOODMAN I ' m growing fonder of my staflf ; I ' m growing dimmer in the eyes ; I ' m growing fainter in my langh : I ' m growing deeper in my sighs; I ' m growing careless in my dress : I ' m growing frn.gal of my gold: I ' m growing wise. I ' m growing — Yes — I ' m growing old. UNA LEWIS Not too sober, not too gay. But a real good girl in everv wav. MISS HUDSON There is an art of reading, as well as an art of thinking and an art of writing. ANTOINETTE MAXSONI I will go wash ; . nd when my face is fair. You shall perceive whether I blush or no. FRENCH TABLE Silence is more eloquent than words. SPECIAL ENGLISH .Ml of us, soon or late, are doomed that path to tread. SINTH OF JUNE One of those heavenly days that cannot die. ELIZ.XBETH ROBINSON The world ' s no better if we worry; Life ' s no longer if we hurry. S. DIE RICH My lieart ' s content wlien I ' m in mischief. SPOT WI.MBISH .Mways happy, always gay, she trips along life ' s rugged way. GLADYS H.ALDEMAN When done by her ' tis done well. PRACTICE TEACHING Everyone meets his Waterloo at last. HOLIDAYS Like angel visits, few and far between. ' GIKL BEFORE EXECUTU ' E BO. RD What is done cannot now be mended. ANNUAL STAFF . ' nd still be doing: never done. ' CAKOLYX BROWX Pursuit of knowledge under difficulties. ■ pmipPir II II ir iai ' iri The idea of Alumnse Hall was launched upon a sea of enthusiasm at the Harrisonburg banquet in Richmond. Thanksgiving. 1920. Soon bank checks proved good sails to the enter- prise. (This figure is getting twisted, we fear, but it is bound to land somewhere.) .At com- mencement last June the cornerstone was laid and telegrams of cheer came in. This June, thanks to many good people (our girls, our town, our president, and our legislature) the building is to be formally opened. Let it be our ■ Home-Coming House. please, dear girls! i)tv OTon ' t Care If you forget your napkin, Don ' t mind your neighbor ' s glare, Just use the table cover — For Miss McGnire won ' t care. You ' ll like your Hist ' ry classes; But. follow in my ways: Don ' t trouble about a notebook ; ■in Dr. ' a ■land ' s praise. When gentlemen want to see you, Don ' t go and make them mad ; Tell them to call on study nights ; Miss Lancaster ' ll be glad. Go fast asleep at class hour, Xo matter if you ' re seen; Receive congratulations From I Ir. Dingledine. As sure as Hamlet comes here, Don ' t bother much to go ; See some good snappy movie — Miss Qeveland likes them so. Perchance you need a reference book And haven ' t time to sign. Just slip it from the libr ' y ; Miss Stephens thinks that tine. -Me. de Feild THE NOTEBOOK Vol. 6 Begin! That Annual SCaff has queer ideas; 1 ' dare it Is a sin - They get up in the chapel. And rave about begin. Begin is not so easy As it apiM?ared to be. • But I must be obliging — On that we all agree. I sat there and I waited (I honestly did try) For a dandy inspiration To drop down from the sky. I ' m here to say I waited — No inspiration came. And on that Annual Staff I just laid all the blame. ' Twas time to try another plan — Of that I was aware; I got right down to good hard work, Myself I did not spare. I toiled, and labored, drudged away, To try to make a rhyme; This plan I found to be the best — It saved me just in time. — Me.vue Feild Di ' jever? Go down to Miss Lancaster And say that you had A cousin from W. and L. That was a Man (But was jus ' like a brother) In town for the week end. And when you had Gotten permission to have lunch with him Go down to the Sugar Bowl one morning .And find that Johnny or Bob Or Jim Had gotten a cute sort of Town girl? Then di ' jever turn around . nd go back to school Only to get called up Tuesday night? — Di ' jever? YE ODDS AND ENDS HaRRISONBURO, VrRGIVIA. Thirds Pace i Senior Class Dictionary Asylum — Resort for Seniors after March 25, ' 22. Bells — A timely friend to which we have never become accustomed. Most Athletic Grace Hey 1 I Campu.sed— Woeful fruit of Seniors ' (or anybody else ' s) wrong doing. Date — A confection indulged in on Friday and Saturday nights. E — (Excellence prevaricated. Flunk—Inability to bluff. Graves — Dug in Special English. Honor Roll — Those who triumphantly bluffed. Infirmary — Seniors ' only resting place. Junior— Object of pity. Kicking — An occupation foreign to Seniors. Bluff — A vainly sought jewel. Miss — An appellation to which we become accustomed at the training school. Night — Our tenth and shortest period. Old Age — Our chronic state of feel- ing. Privileges — The shortest document written by the faculty. Quizzes — A faculty dope for Seniors. Relief — Something we indulge in after June 6. Senior — A rank of dignity at H. N. S. Trouble — Seniors ' bosom friend. Unsatisfactory — Adjective frequently occurring on written work. Vigilance — Faculty pre- scription for Seniors. Wreck — State of being after exams. X. Y. Z — The end of the al- phabet and of the dic- tionary. — A. R. Ch. ri.e,s Prettiest Maude Brooks Most Popular Penny Morgan Most Stylish Agnes Spence Most Dependable Anne Gilliam i Wittiest Margaret Wall Most Loyal Louise Bailie Most Studious Gladys Goodman Most Talkative .Margaret Wall Best Dancer Jo Painter Most Dramatic Penny Morgan Most Typical Senior, Gladys Goodman Best-all around Maude Brooks Cutest Rebecca Moore Most Attractive Alese Charles Biggest Flirt Isabel Kester Biggest Loafer Cornelia Hart Most Intellectual Pamelia Ish Home Economics Ideal Rosa Heidelberg One Who Works Hardest To Get Out of Work, Louise Houston Jinx — ' What will we do in House- wifery class this quarter? Mary Caroline — Clean up Mr. Duke ' s house. Jinx — Will it take all the quarter for that? Senior meeting Page 2 THE NOTEBOOK THE NOTEBOOK THE EDITED BY ANNUAL STAFF Entered at H.N.S.as First-class Mail Tlie time has come, the chief -ed said, To print the other things — Tlie rhymes, and prose, and little bits That inspiration brings. There are notebooks and notebooks and then more notebooks around H. N. S., but we wonder whether life here would be complete without this par- ticular Notebook. Of course not; so from all the odds and ends and left- overs that we just couldn ' t leave out we have created the Notebook. Cre- ated? Yes, I guess you would call it a creation. And it contains a lot of things — hours sunny and otherwise — a great deal of the latter perhaps. We hope that you will quite forget that little regretful feeling at having come to the end of the Annual proper, remembering that you still have the Notebook to taper off on. Slowly and surely Alma Mater grows! Bit by bit our canxpus is be- ing made more livable and lovable. Each year someone contributes more green things growing — such as wild thyme, the lily from Stonewall Jackson ' s birthplace, and the iris from Greenwood. Last year the Senior class presented the lamp posts at the entrance, and recently the iron gates have been add- ed; but biggest and best of all are the two new buildings which we expect to be using soon — Alumnae Hall, which will provide dormitory space ne. t year, and the new Academic tuilding opposite Harrison, which will contain a much-needed auditoriunk Here ' s to the growth and develop- ment of H. N. S.! o • The mother of Apollo, the god of sunshine, was the goddess of dark nights. Of just such parentage sprang most of the sunny hours found in this book. The Banjo and the Uke An ' the banjo chunes des ' twist nia heart When dey sits by de cabin an ' sings; All de hard day ' s work des fades away — Ma ole fingers pick de strings. An ' I think how de banjo smooths de road An ' leaves you de happy things — ■ The girl read it over again, smiled a teary smile, and left the library. A few minutes later all the crowd was harmonizing at the sunset end ' of the porch to the steady thump and chord of her ukulele. It isn ' t raining rain, you know. It ' s raining violets — Some were tired and discouraged, but the flapper representative of the banjo did its task thoroughly, and when night dispersed the singers their hearts were filled with ' ' de happy things. Things We Can ' t Look Over Elsie Proffitt. Louie Forester. All of Dr. Gifford ' s assignments. Seniors having to practice-teach on a holiday. Having to get up at six-thirty for history. Not getting A on Special English The examination papers that come from the training school. Mr. Logan ' s fresh air. Miss Lancaster ' s asking us to put our feet on the table. Dr. Converse ' s being too ill to teach his class How to keep well. Seniors ' criticisms. References for Senior essays. THE SUGAR HOLLER SCHOOL It Couldn ' t Be Done • ' Tliar! I ' m glad he ' s gone. What ' s he comin ' up here botherin ' ' bout our chillun for? I guess we kin raise ' em without his help. He wants to build a schoolhouse so the chillun kin go ter school. What our kids wanter go ter school tor and larn a whole lot o ' foolishness? They ' d jist git stuck-up notions in their heads and larnj to play and take up their time with all that kind o ' stuff when thar ' s plenty o ' work to be done at home. I never went to school a day in my life; and I think I ' ve been makin ' it jist ' bout as well as some of them liigh-brow folks has. Jist think, he wants me ter give twenty-five dollars and help cut and haul the logs ter the mill. Why, I would have to sell one o ' my fattenin ' hogs ter pay the twen- ty-five dollars — money clean throwed away. The idea o ' such a thing. One whole hog, jist to build a schoolhouse with. Anyway, my kids ain ' t goin ' . Thev kin git all the lamin ' they need at home. Besides readin ' an ' writin ' , these school folks want ter put in sewin ' and cookin ' . Ma can ' tend ter that. As fer fnrmin ' — nqn- riiltur ' thev call it — well. I know 1 know all thar is ter tTiat. What I been plowin ' all my life fer, ef I don ' t? — No, sirree! But They Di d It Well, sir, you jist ought ter see what they are a-doin ' at that thar school over in Sugar Holler. ' •Why, the girls has larned ter sew so good that they kin make all their own clothes — make ' em nice too; an ' hats! why, they kin make hats that look jist ' bout as well as the ones you see in the windows in town, an ' ter jist about half as much as you have ter pay fer the sto ' bought ones. The boys is done got to raisin ' thoroughbred — oh! I mean pure br6d — stock. Aad they kin git a heap more fer ' em than we could fer the mixed kinds like I used to raise five years ago. Why, Jini he got the first prize at the fair fer the best corn. Well, sir, I used to think I knowed a whole lots about farmin ' . but I ' ve found out better now. You ought to see Jim at it. I jist can ' t see how we ever got en before that thar school was start- ed. I remember how mad I was be- cause I had to sell one of my fatten- in ' hogs to pay my part on it. Best sale I ever made. — Catherink Beakd r H E i O T E B O O K I ' VGE 3 AR umor FRITZ LEIBER AS HA.MLET The High Tide of the Year ' s Joys Oh. I ' ve Kot a leltor from Farmvllle. I And wlial do you think ihoy nay? I Dr. Jarniati received a meswiKc In a very mysterious way. It warned him. If he did but know It, I His school was In danger grave; At twelve o ' clock sharp- ' twould be blown up. And nothing the place could save. We girls got wildly excited. The rumor spread everywhere That ours was the next on the pro- gram To go sailing up in the air. So great was excitement among us The least Ilitle noise made us Jump: We could picture ourselves all hurt- ling Through space, to come down with a thump. Just frantic were some at the prospect; So home for the week-end they went. But the rest, in dread expectant. Our time here in agon.v spent. Wp were doomed to disappointment. For nothing happened, indeed. Except that we got blown up For giving mad RU.MOR such heed. — Mr-. nE Fr.iLD Blame It on the Juniors The Egg It had cost three cents — that egg — consuming her total cash balance after the glorious Hamlet matinee. Broken in heart she was by Hamlet ' s sor- rows, and broken in purse by the ticket: but the beauty and soul of it all made her walk as if on air. The egg wa5 for making mayonnaise to moisten Sunday night ' s paper-bag supper. She passed the restaurant window, and behold Hamlet himself, seated at a table eating dinner like any other man! The egg dropped from her hand to the pavement with a crash. To be or not to be — that is the ques- tion as to the mayonnaise. A STRONG LIGHT (From a Junior ' s story written for English Class.) On the table was a lamp, shedding a soft glow and a few books and news- papers. UNITED KINGDOM (Found in the paper of a Home Eco- nomics Junior on vegetables.) List of vegetables rich in: Inox — Spinach, Beef, Cabbage. Eggs, Carrots. P)io.spiioiif.s — Buttermilk. Cheese, Asnaragus, Oatmeal. Calcitm — Onions. Beans, Cornmeal, Beef, Bread. JUNIOR DICTATION I led them to a quiet place where they might regain their self-proces- sion. Rushing up the slopping field the forty guardsmen hemmed in the cen- turies and compelled the enemy to surrender. m Page 4 THE NOTEBOOK A New Girl ' s Letter Home H. N. S., Normal Station Harrisonburg, Va. Sunday Night My dearest Folks, I got here O. K. and have come out of tlie first week alive. Had a pleasant time on the train and a nicer time on the bus. A girl met me and took me to my room, ■fthere I washed away the dirt of travel. Then I was taken to the peo- ple who told me what I was to study this quarter in order to be a teacher fit to train the young. One lady smiled at me mighty sweet. Her name was Miss Lancaster. One man ' s name here is Converse; and he sure can converse too. He looked at me and said, Hello, doodle-dee-doodle-doo! I don ' t know a thing he is saying, but I grin and say, Yes, sir; yes sir — just as polite. I am taking also a course they call Special English. It is special, too. There is a special period and a special capital and a special word for every- thing. I ' m splendid in this. I reck- on it Is because somehow I ' m kinder gifted in that line. One class I take is how to teach school. Dr. Gifford he teaches that. I like it fine. He makes it very in- teresting by drawing little pictures on the board all the time he talks. I take down every little scribble he puts up ' cause I am very anxious to be a good school teacher. In fact, I be- lieve I ' m already getting more teach- erified every day. You and Papa are a great help to me by giving me the necessary money to buy the notebook paper, etc. I will be able to pay you back when I get my pension. We are going to make a garden. I guess my teacher knows something about the like, as he is a rather hefty- looking man. His name is Chappe- lear. Don ' t believe I ' ve said anythme 1 about what we have to eat. Well, the ' food, I reckon, is very plentiful, as they would have to have a hean somewhere to feed so many folks; but thev sure don ' t put a hean out in Kieht. When we finish eating beef and notatoes, everv girl holds on to her fork because that is what we eat dessert with. I am not hungry at al ' . but I wouldn ' t mind if vou won ' d send me a little to eat along toward the end of the week in time for Sunday night. We don ' t have a real meal — but a poke. In it is a piece of cheese al- ways, a roll — isometimes two — a cake, and an orange or a banana. All this is mighty good, but I could eat more. Hoping you and Daddy don ' t miss me as much as you did at first. Your affectionate Daughter. P. S. — Don ' t forget to send me some money when you send me the eats. — Waiting for Him School Pests and Victims ' Silent Reactions I ' ve hung around And paced the floor, Gone to the window And peer ' d through the door. Why doesn ' t he come? I ' ve put on my hat And powdered my nose. And glanced at my watch Oh, how the time goes! If only he ' d come. Now what ' s that I see From behind Alumnae Hall? A blue coated man With letters, and all — The Postman has come! — Mariox Ad. ms 1. What ' d Dr. Gifford give us for tomorrow? ( She never knows the assignment. ) 2. Len ' me ' nother sheet of note- paper — ( Why not buy a little now and then? ) 3. If I were only at home. ( How ' m I going to study with that line? ) 4. I ' clare I got so much to do! ( Hush talking and get to work. ) 5. Who ' ll len me a nickel? Cen- tral ' s calling for it. ( Do you ex- pect to phone without one? ) 6. Look in my box an ' get my mail. ( Yeah — I ' m a wizard with numbers — that ' s the fourth combina- tion this trip. ) 7. Do you mind If I wear your hat to town? ( Suppose I have to go myself? ) A Way Out I ' ve always kept my care-free mind Untouched by worry ' s taint; So, when one day I had a test, I fell down in a feint. — M. J. A FRAME-UP Can ' t You Talk Fannie Lee Woodson Presentation Prize for Senior Essay A Fascinating Tale Reducing by Music The Last Move From P. G. to Degree ' ■The Visitation Of Red Ants The Concert Melvena Passraore The Tribute Money Alumnae Fund Hope ' To Get Out of Special English A Stampede At Dining Room Door ' ' The Sisters Marguerite and Gladys The Pond Frog Pond Th° Fates E s and F ' s Vision of a Knight Mr. Knight The First Step Registration Tie Lone Wolf Lena Wolfe A Helping Hand Alice Denby Yes or No? Did You Break the Rules? The Night Watch Night of the Bomb ' ■Lady with a Fan Miss Stephens The Fortune Teller Sue Raine Last Judgment Examinations The Gleaners Annual Staff ■ ' Love Triumphant Frances Gilliam Fondling Girls Mary Lee Perry and Virginia Leith A Perilous Passage Underground Passage Sparrows Isabel and Elizabeth ' •Counting Money Miss Sprinkel THE NOTEBOOK Pace 5 THE P. K. SENIORS WHO TIIEY AIIX AboriKitliy. S. Adams. M. Uarlium, F. Boniiey. D. Charles. A. CoHleld. R. Cults. F. Davis. K. Dunaway. J. Felts. R. Feilil. .M. Cay. B. Glenn. E. Goodman, G. Greenland. V. Halrr. V. Hoiloman. F. Jackson. R. Moore L. Miirry, L. Pendleton. E. Robinson. E. Showalter. G. Simpson. S. Siiter. R. Thurston. E. Walters. N. Westerman A. Wood.son. P. L. FAVORITE EXPRIM.SI0N8 Now you know. ■ You tell ' em. Oh, you don ' t say. Keep Koing but watch the teachers. Hand em a line. You bet! Nothing. That ' s what I think. C-an ' t be bothered. That ain ' t all either. For land ' s sakes. Honest to John. Oh. pooh! I declare to goodness. O-o-o-o-o-h ! Thrilled to a peanut. Aw. shoot! Just what do you mean? VWell. I ' ll be-- Thrilled to death. ' Sure, that ' s me. Oh. shucks: Live and learn. Don ' t ask me that. ' ' That will never do. I just can ' t do it. Nerve of some people. • ' Never again. Let there he silence. CHIEF OCCUPATION Wearing oxfords and grey hose. Bobbing her hair. Writing to him. Playing ball. Falling hard. Slipping Into dining room. Singing for .Miss ShaeCter. Obeying others. Reading Life. Keei)ing silent. Reading a book. Wishing. Finding Tony. j Uu ighing. Writing to Harry. ] Playing Jokes. I Squeaking. Asking questions. Deciding the question. Chasing blues. Collecting. Playing like. Running the Lizzie. Promenading. Coaxing. Trailing Miss Seeger. Visiting the sick. Chewing gum. Talkine. IIIUIIEMT AMBITION To do Honicthiiig dcHperalc. To land a millionaire. To get a fortune. To get a - ' special on Sun- day. Making others fall. To own a pie factory. To break the speed limit. To do as I please. To have a big time. To be a public speaker. To be a poet. To be a shifter. To be loved. To have an easy bIg-payIng job. To own the skin you love to touch. To own a study. To sit still five minutes. To be a flapper. To read the Sheik. To be fat. Tight rope walking. To sleep. To be a movie star. To be a belle. To be coaxed. To be petted. To be a poet. To own a submarine. Tn wp.Tf a diamond. The Box from Home Oh! did you get a box? chorused several girls. Yes. replied Mary feebly. • ' Let us help you carry it to your room. entreated Jane. Thank you. replied Mary. And then about one dozen girls tug- ged at one little box. Mary humbly bringing up the rear, and the follow- ing conversation ensued: Mary, have you seen my new spring hat? Well, it would look perfectly adorable on you. Vou may wear it if you wish. I am never so happy as when I share my things. hinted Jane. Tiy doe. Tl ' t Mother send me a box? Mary. I am so arLXions for you to taste some of Mother ' s fruit cake! ex ' , claimed Pegg ' . ' ■Well. I just feel as If T would ' cave in ' . remarked Anne frankly. Gee! this box is getting right heavy. Mary, don ' t you think it would be a good idea to stop here and empty some of the contents. ' ' suggested Sue. All are silent now for a few seconds, and popular Mary at last finds time to speak. Girls, I would rather take the box to my room, if you don ' t care. I shall be glad to help carry it, she bravely said. No, no! not at all. Your consti- tution is too delicate to carry such a burden. was the reply to the latter remark. Mary ' s room was finally reached. Now. Mary, be quick. Find me a pair of scissors to cut this cord. commanded Nell. Mary, get me a nlate to put this chicken on, yelled Virginia. Here they are. girls. said Mary after a diligent search. We got along verv well without them. We just couldn ' t wait. This is no time to bt ' cereinuiiious. was llie sentiment expressed by the girls. ' Don ' t you think this candy is de- licious. Mary? Tommy asked. How do I know? said Mary to herself. I thmk it was so sweet of you to share all these delicious things with us. You certainly are a lucky girl to get such wonderful boxes. How you must enjoy them! ' ' remarked the girls as they Ipft. How could I do otherwise? sighed poor Mary. Mary ate the remains. Tho next day the postman carried the following note: Harrisonburg. Va.. April 1. 1921 Dear Mother. Many thanks for the box. The chicken bone I gnawed on and the candy crumb I chewed on were fine. Your loving daughter. Mary. Page 6 THE NOTEBOOK Chum It was the dog that did it. There is no doubt about that. Even Miss Sylinda, though she had always de- spised dogs, admits that if it had not been for Chum she would never in the world have adopted Fred. Who would have dreamed of Miss Sylinda Benton ' s adopting a child? gasped the Littleburgh gossips. ' -And a boy at that! Why, it would have been quite bad enough if she had taken a quiet, dainty little girl — but a boy! and such a boy. too! Lit- tleburgh held up its hands in horror. Why, what would become of the village if all its traditions were to be thus lightly disregarded? And Miss Sylinda had consulted no one. Of course she had always done queer things; but this was preposterous. Miss Sylinda Benton, the open terror of all small boys of the village, and the secret fear of atiy boy from six- teen to sixty, had adopted a little red-headed, freckle-faced gamin of twelve! Over the teacups many a head was solemnly shaken, and many a shrewd smile said, Wait and see! Expectation ran high that in a few weeks, or in a few days, perhaps, Fred would have his walking papers and everybody could smile and say, I told you so. But if the Littleburgh neighbors had been in Miss Sylinda ' s kitchen that night when redheaded Fred came, their wonder would have been greater. It happened in this way. Fred had discovered Miss Sylinda ' s pet cat walking down the street. Now, every- body knew that this cat was kept closely in the house, so that no dogs or bad boys could scare her. When Fred saw her wandering aimlessly at large, he decided that he might just as well as not escort this beautiful, ladylike cat to her home. Fred, too, was wandering somewhat aimlessly, but he had no home to go to. Miss Sylinda deposited the returned prodieal in a red plush parlor chair and thanked Fred, not very gracious, ly, adding that if he were hungry he might come around to the kitchen and get a piece of pie. Fred needed no second invitation, and was presently seated at a snotlessly clean table. Chum, entirely unnoticed. had slipped in also, and lay quiet, half asleep, under the kitchen stove. Evidently Miss Sylinda was much flustered at having a boy in her kitch- en or she would certainly have seen this long, bony, mud-colored dog who watched her lazily through one eye. However, we know quite well that she did not see Chum, or he would never have stayed in the kitchen. Just then that very lady-like cat walked in, blinking lazily at Fred. Exactly what happened will never be known. Miss Sylinda heard a low growl and a fierce hiss, and then — confusion worse confounded. Where was the ladylike cat? She presently emerged, clinging desperately to the back of Chum, who raced wildly aroimd the room, trying to shake oft hi ? clawing burden. The dog ' s long legs and bony tail seemed to be flying in all directions at once. At last there was a wild leap into the air, and Chum came down free from his load. The combatants stood and gazed at each other for a minute. Then the lady-like cat winked her eye and calmly walked away. The dog registered utter subjugation and re- sumed his place under the stove. And Miss Sylinda — what of her? After Cine horror-stricken look she began to laugh. Miss Sylinda. who had scarcely laughed for years, laugh, ed and laughed that night until tears rolled down her cheeks. And it was so good to laugh. Why, Miss Sylinda had alffllost forgotten how good it did feel to laugh. And then she kiss- ed Fred right on his freckled fore, head and adopted him then and tHere. IS. BEL Sp. rrow Ain ' t It a Grand and Glori- ous Feeling To think of June 7? To get a sweater knitted during class periods? To hear Dr. Wayland ride his hobby — our matrimonial prospects? To note the absence of soup for din- ner? To pack our trunks to go home? To find yourself in the dining room iust as the last bell rings? To have a box from home when you ' re just about all in ? To get over the first day of practice teaching? To find your notebook for Dr. Way- land is over an inch thick? To be allowed to turn over for a sec- ond nan on Saturday mornings? To know that the Annual is finished? Our Peerless Products The French excel in twisting curls. The Germans making toys. But who can beat our B. B. team When backed by the rooters ' noise? The Spanish do a thrilling dance. Which everyone likes to see. But thsy haven ' t seen the classy prance We did at our V. P. tea. The Argentine brags of his beef. It leads the world, he vows; But H. N. S., ' tis my belief. Outclasses all his cows. — LorisF, D.wis Undecided (With deepest apologies to Shakespeare) To bob, or not to bob: That is the question: Whether it would my looks improve, or whether I ' d pine and sigh when once the closing shears Had done the irrevocable, fatal deed Upon my self-shorn brow? To wit: to bob; And by that means to end the need of hairnets. Of hairpins, puffs, and many other things: To bob, and then to curl: ay, there ' s the rub; For in that nightly toil what dreams may come From sleeping on curlpapers for the sake Of one short day of beauty, makes me pause. Then, there ' s the thought that ' gainst the elements, In weather damp, curl papers naught avail. — But saucy, tossing, care-free tresses short. In your dear charms be all regrets submerged! THE NOTEBOOK Ta..! FIELD DAY The contest of the fleet of foot ciime first. Thi ' y stood hi line. The h.?nil(l pointed out. Far on the rolUnR plain, the distant poal; And there, In charge, the careful .Seniors placed Three of our faculty to watch alonp The course assigned and true report to make. Tlie signal given, across the grass field The racers sped, with hopes of glory high; Foremost the Junior Bell and storm-swift Jo And laughter-loving Maude — these three abreast — Nor others far behind, but following close. Far as a discus ' flight by some stout youth. That tests his vigor, from the shoulder hurled. So far the three together, side by side. Sped on, and all together reached the goal. But when a second time the race they tried, Tlie graceful Brooks gained inch by inch ' the lead. And victor was by dint of stem resolve. Next Seniors there with Juniors br.ive lined up In parallel sides, to test their strength and find Which one could farthest throw the basket Ijall. Kincanon first came forth to try her power. ' Twas great — the best in all the Junior ranks — Ard every Senior she surpassed save one; But Rodes outshone them all: she pitched it far — At eight-and-sixty feet it touched the ground. The Running High Jump struck the crowd With awe: Who art thou, spirit brave. the herald asked, From Athens ' grasshopper most surely sprung? For. far surpassing all. thou hast not feared That skyward leapl Then noble Hattle spake: Not mine the praise, but lo. mine honored Class! There stood they all to cheer me on my flight. Thus she: then Perry of the nimble feet Sprang forward, too, to grace the green-and-white .■ t Running Broad Jump. As o ' er riven rocks The doe flees from the hunter for her lite. So Perry ran and leaped for Senior fame. And did not halt till thirteen feet she scored. They now essayed the Dressing Relay Race. First Kemp straightforward urged her furious course While putting on her coat and overshoes: Umbrella raised, her gloves and hat thrown on, Shs clutched her suitcase, dashing toward the line. As gill of far-famed H. N. S. have run When madly rushing at the breakfast hour; So madly sped our Kemp to meet I. Crank. Who stood with eye intent and mind alert. When once she reached this comrade. Kemp began To throw things right and left for her to don. Then Crank in full array flew toward the goal. Her hat was almost falling from her head: Her trailing suitcase dragged the earth behind; But what cared she. so long as Seniors won? While through the crowd applauding clamor rang. The earth was wet with rain of Junior tears. — Senior English Class A Prisoner H. N, S, Sunday Dearest Sis: You asked what 1 did to amuse my- self while 1 was au Inmute of the quarantine ward. Well, call It amusement If you want to. It was more of an effort to keep from losing my mind. In the first place there was my own private gym. class. Each morning I went tlirough every movement of the wand drill with an improvised wand: the broom, borrowed secretly from the maid. Then after some lighter exer- cises, such as trying to kick the cell- ing, I was pretty nearly exhausted. Next on the program came the dally perusal of my one newspaper, Thr Vdily Seus-Kccord. As eagerly as any prospective buyer I scanned the ad and for-sale columns. Lost-«.nd- found articles held an untiring inter- est for me. When my dinner tray was shoved in through the Tialf-open door, a nice tall glass of milk always greeted me. Milk seemed plentiful here. And if vou don ' t think you ' d ever tire of milk, trv drinking it about five times a day. Well. I finally thought of a plan. (I had plenty of time to think.) Cottage cheese being one of my weak- nesses. I would try my luck with an entirelv original recipe: I carefully concealed glasses of milk behind the shade in th ' 3 window and let them sit till thev turned to clabber. Then came the transform.ition — I strained th ' ? through a nankin, snrinkled it with salt and pepper, and behold! a dish fit for a king. These activities were repeated dally until a well-formed bond was estab- lished. (That ' s psychology, you know.) They may seem interesting, but don ' t vou get the scarlet fever in order to find out. As ever. M.VRION- Oh. have you seen the poster of th° Senior play? It ' s Promenade Walk. ' o There was no real danger from all that smoke. It was just fire in the water pipes. Page 8 THE NOTEBOOK Don ' ts Don ' t hurry to breakfast; the doors will always be left open. Don ' t bother about getting back to dinner; just go to Friddle ' s. Don ' t bother about getting up a • ' history notebook ; Dr. Wayland won ' t mind. Don ' t think of taking off your hat; wear it to supper; Miss McGuire thinks you look better in it. Don ' t rush to gym class; Miss Franke will wait for you. It you are very busy don ' t bother about writing your Special English paper; Miss Cleveland will never miss it. On Monday mornings when you want to sleep, don ' t hurry to put your towels out; Miss Lyons will come back for them. If you want to decorate your room with pictures and pennants don ' t fail to use tacks; Miss McGuire won ' t ob- ject. Don ' t fail to accept all bids to hops ; Mr. Duke will always excuse you from classes. Don ' t fail to bob your hair; Miss Anthony will surely give you A on dig- nified appearance. Don ' t decline any proffered date at any old time ; Miss Lancaster likes you to be popular. Don ' t hesitate to go to the library to converse with your friends; Miss Stevens will enjoy it. Last Call for Breakfast The H. N. S. Garage Cleveland Stephens (2) Ford (2) Haines Holmes Paige Hudson Louise — ' ' What did Miss Lancaster say when you came back late from the spring holiday? Alese — Nothing. She simply start- ed singing ' Tell Me the Old, Old Story. Elizabeth, Elizabeth — are you go- ing to breakfast this morning? What? ' •I say are you going to breakfast this morning? Yes — what time is it? It ' s a quarter past seven. You ' d better get up. ' ' Oh, I had no idea it was that late. Where are my shoes? Did you move my hairpins? Oh, I know I ' ll never make it! And I bet they have coffee cake and grape fruit this morning. They always do when I ' m not there. Please get out of the way so I can get a tiny peep in the mirror. I can ' t go looking like a fright. Slam — bang — the door slams. The water spigot is turned violently and in a minute she is back with her eyes shining and her cheeks rosy from her abridged ablutions. Now, Where ' s my middy tie? I was sure I left it right here last night. Oh, where is it? There ' s Mary Caro- line coming out of Third, and she ' s always the last one. Please put my sheets out while I finish dressing, won ' t you? I don ' t want Miss Lyons fussing with me along with all my other troubles. That ' s a dear! I ' ll love you forever for that. Oh. Dickie has gone now. I know I ' ll be locked out. Please bring me a roll if I don ' t get there. Leave the door open! Fitter, patter, pitter, patter through I he long hall of Second Dormitory — UP the steps three at a time, into Harrison and into the dining room just in time to hear Mary lock the doer and Miss Lancaster start to ask the blessing. Advertisements When you want what you want and want what you want when you want it, use our AD columns. — Ex. WANTED — A universal good hand- writing which does not involve ad- ventures in reading it. — Mr. Logan. FOR SALE— On June 7 — One gray- ish black, dogeared note-book, mel- lowed with age and good for another year. Apply to A SENIOR, Normal Station, Harrisonburg, Va. NOTICE— Will the person who took The Man Who Married a Dumb Wife from Room fiS, Ashby Hall, please return immediately. WANTED— Something to take our minds off Friddle ' s when we pass. — tverybody. NOTICE— Those wishing to join our Reducing Club and grow thin to music must apply at once, as only a limited number can be allowed to join.— PEGGY JONES CO. L ' T ' D. LOST, STRAYED, OR STOLEN— One pair brass andirons. If found please return to library and receive a pleasant smile from Miss Stevens. FOUND — A lesson plan. — Second Dormitory Mouse. WANTED — An occasional smile and v ave from everybody. — Inmates of the sun parlor. Infirmary. NOTICE — If you are hungry come to the Free Lunch Counter.— Jack Jackson ' s room. LOST — My gym bloomers somewhere between May Pole Hill and Ashby., Will the finder please return to Miss Lancaster. NOTICE— Do not bring into the library ink ex cept in fountain pens, umbrellas, Hershey bars, hats or sweaters. FOUND— In Room 26, Spottswood Hall, the picture of a strange man under the bookcase. Will the owner Dlease call for it. LOST — Some sleep — Annual Staff. WANTED— More to eat— Reducing Club. LOST — How Children Learn. Very badly needed by the P. K, P. Ts. WANTED — Information on how to stretch money, minutes and food at Practice House. — P. G ' s. LOST — Under stress somewhere on the campus, a good disposition. If found please return to Box 222 and receive reward. WANTED — An inspiration — Annual Staff. WANTED — Exercise books for Special English Class guaranteed to walk to class by themselves Miss Cleveland. WANTED — English, English. Eng- lish - French Tables. Cbitorial taff 99otto ' This Ti ' cr ' heap o ' Icai ' cs an ' sI ' ihMc Has cosi lis iiioiiic a iccarx nibble. Editor-in-Chief GLADYS GOODMAN MARJORIE BULLARD AUDREY CHEWNING MEADE FEILD DOROTHY FOSQUE Associate Editors MARGUERITE GOODMAX LOUISE HOUSTON ADAH LONG PENELOPE MORGAN Art Editors NANCY ROANE ALBERTA RODES Photocraph Editors GRACE HEYL LOUISE MOORE Business Manager FANNIE LEE WOODSON Associate Business Manager CELIA SWECKER €)lf 15 H WNIIM FEILP KQpgS Editorial Staff Annual taflf Birectorp Who ' s Who Gladys — Chiefest of Tliem All Meade — The Khymester Grace — The Ring Leader in Photography Fannie Lee — Miss Mone ybags Louise AL — The Gentle Auto- crat Marguerite — Gladys ' s Right- Hand Man Adah — First Aid to the Weary Louise H. — Leavener of Heavy Style Alberta— The Sketcher Celia — Publicity Agent Nancy — The Thinker Audrey — Tlie Student Peiniy — The Fun Lover Dorothy — MatriiUDiiial Editor Marjorie — Notebook Jotter School Address Room E, Jackson Hall Library, Harrison Hall Everywhere — H. N. S. Y. W. Social Rooms Somewhere in Third Dormitory Where you most want her Wagstaff ' s Room — Spottswood Same Place — Miss Mackey ' s Room Eunice ' s Room On the Go Cottage Where Marjnric J. is The Chemistry Lab. Sewing Lab. Special English Class How TO Know ' Em When You Hear ' Em Lemme see now Gracious knows! Good garden o ' peas ! ' Deed, honest ! ' Well, for goodness sakes ! G ' way from here ! ! Oh, shucks! Don ' t yiiu think so? I de-e-clare ! Oh, by the way ! For the luve of Patricia! You never can tell. Listen here, girls Lv de-e-e-ar F ' r instance? cln Apparition Tlie vi-i ' kly stall im ' tling was over, Cut Loiiisf and 1 worked late. Then we rushed to the iniderground passage ; ' Twas dark, Inu we trusted to fate. We ran a few steps unmolested ; Fate favored our progress, it seemed ; Rut suddenly arose without warning A form! — Loud and shrill we both screamed. We turned and wi.- tlc-d lo the out-door; It was locked. We did tremble and shake. The sie])s could be heard drawing nearer — How we craved right then an earthciuake! Our eyes on the intruder we fastened: ' e both stared in horror and fright. Before us appeared the night watchn;an : He had come to turn out the light. — Me. de Feild i (!:bitorinl Confiticnccs ID m M ' C that the Slratluril siiapsliDts arc prclty wcathcr-licalcii? That ' s lucaiisc the K ' ris hadn ' t k 1 a hr paint olT thi-ir faces after the play. And (111 yun wonder who typed these many, many, weary paces? Wliy, it was Ahce Denhy ' s dainty (infers that did the work. . nd have yon seen how onr IIome-ComiiiK House has Kfown? l.iMik on paye it)7. Mayl)e that littli- npstairs riglu-hand wind(jw is the room that is waiting for yon when yon come hack to see us all next com- mencement. And do you wonder at Louise ' s picture being with the I- ' ran Sisters? Does F-r-a-n-c-c-s spell Louise or Carlish-f But we didn ' t want a lop-sided F. The annual couldn ' t Ret aloiiR without .Mberta ' s artistic pencil; so the united Staff just up and took her in. The Dedicatee was (|uite a surprise, was it not? ' on will In- more surprised to learn that this was the first thinn the amiual staff decided on with unanimity and enthusiasm, away back there in February. Don ' t you think we were flying pretty hifili? Would that we could have lived up to it through the rest of the book ! We knew we couldn ' t have an amiual without Mr. Duke in it somewhere, but we had a great time deciding just where. The Stratfords all told us that the place of honor is in the rear ; however, we ratlier felt that the I ' irst ( ' .eiuleman of the Campus should come somewhere near the front. Did you recognize some old familiar pictures as you glanced through this hook? Mr. Shultz says Thk Schooi.m. ' . m buys cuts, not for time, but for eternity. The very oldest and most cherished scene of all has appeared over so many different captions that he has christened it Old Faithful, or Schoolma ' am Saving Rank. Some of the Seniors may wonder what happened to their What I .Shall Remoniber Best After Leaving H. N. S. We decided it wouldn ' t do to have one hundred and lorly-eight versions of going to breakfast or of when the building blew up. When you arc laughing over the Senior caricatures, remember to make a now to Blanche Ridenour, Louise Davis, Kdna Draper, Zelma Wagstaff, and Una I ewis. as well as to Nancy Roane. If you have trouble reading The Fable, maybe the Directory will be of aid. If nrit, come back next year and learn to know the girls better. In the Senior Snaps notice that we succotashed the title as well as the Seniors. The Schoolm. ' am is an economical housekeeper. That little bunch of keys belonging to the Annual Staff — where to fuid tlum when in a rush? Think of the many hours spent hunting them down! Did you notice that the center of attraction on the page of snaps for the Home Eco- nomics Club offers quite a contrast to the typical Home Economics Girl ? Can you imagine Miss Mackey industriously laboring over the Sunny-Hours Page dur- ing the wee sma ' hours of the night? Even if it was 3 a. m., we think it quite a success. Did you enjoy reading the Xotcbook . ' Then .shake hands with Marjorie Bullard, the editor. After it had been picked over by the members of the Staff and most of it put into the Annual proper, she smiled very sweetly and took what was left. Directors Abcmatliy, Rebecca Saline Diiiwiclilic. VirRinia Adams, Aiiicc Clarke W ' hitmcll. Pittsylvania Cnunty Adams. Marion Chiles 24 Rosemont Ave., AUxandria. ArlinRton County Adams, Mary ICasIey Whilmell, Pittsylvania County Addington, I.eona Horlon Coeburti, Wise County Allen, Anna Ruth Kenbridgc, Lunenburg County Anderson, Aline Baker R. F. D. 3. Box 23, Lexington, Rockbridge County Anderson. Eslelle N ' ernon R. F. D. 3, Box 23, Lexington, Rockbridge County Anderson Helen Louise Sandy Level, Pittsylvania County Arringlon, Ruth l- ' Iizabeth Claremont. Surry County Aumack. Clara Naomi West Point. King William t ' ounly Aycr.s. Mattie Seymour Millboro. Bath County Bailie, Louise Fenwick 26 Main St., Canton, N. C. Banks, Winifred Rebecca R. F. D. 2, Norfolk, Bare, Katharine ' . . R. F. D. 7, Staunton. Augusta County Barham. Frances Montgomery 127-34th St.. Newport News Barker. Fula Clementine Wakefield, Sussex County Barlow, Isabel Virginia Ivor, Southainpton County Baylor. Janice Eloise Fishersvillc, Augusta County Bean, Josephine Ruth 312 Ballengee St., Hinton, W. Va. Bear, Mary Bell 225 N. High St., Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Beard. Catherine Jarman Fort Defiance. Augusta County Bell, Mildred Turner Machipongo, Northampton County Bellcrby. Tbclma Amelia South Richmond Biedler. Mary Lucile Timbervillc. Rockingham County Bishop, Melvina Blanche Galax, Grayson County Bolich, Mary Esther 542 Washington Ave., Greenville. Ohio Bonney, Dorothy Savannah, Georgia Borden, Mildred Kathryii Front Royal, Warren County Borsf. Mary Virginia 22-3d Ave., Petersburg Bowman, Mamie Louise Altavista. Campbell County Bowman. Mary Katharine R. F. D. No. 3. Harri.sonburg. Rockingham County Bowman. Pauline Woodstock. Shenandoah County Boyer. Anna Lucille Woodstock. Shenandoah County Bresko. Pauline Dorothy Disputanta, Prince George County Britt. Lillian Inez Boykins. Southampton County Britt, Mary Frances Boykins. Southampton County Brooks. Maude Bilisoly 108 N. Middle St.. Portsmouth Brown. Carolyn Frances Holland. Nanscmond County Brown. LoucUa Frances Purccllvillc. Loudoun County Browne. Hildamae 328 Mulberry St.. Lewes, Delaware Brownley, Sarah Roselyn 703 Berkley Ave., Norfolk Bruce, Eloise Tabitlia - R. F. D. No. 3, Culpeper Bryant, Edith Catherine Robley, Richmond County Bullard, Marjoric 216 Fairfax St.. Bluefield. W. Va. Bulloch. Margaret Belle 424 Hatton St., Portsmouth Burnett Elsie Lyie R. F. D. No. 3, Culpeper Burroughs, Helen Stone Mountain, Bedford County Cabell, Mrs. Elsie Hughes Coeburn, Wise County Cale, Sarah Elizabeth Prospect, Prince Edward County Cameron, Anna Seaton Newport News Carpenter, Anna Payne Pratts, Madison County Carpenter, Eula 318-4th St., Portsmouth Carroll, Virginia Sue Ivor, Southampton County Carter, Helen Margaret R. F. D. No. 2, Staunton, Augusta County Chaffin, Sarah Agnew 4601 Bellevue Ave., Richmond Chalenor, Martha Atlanta, Georgia Charles, Alese Russel 1 137 Hampton Ave., Newport News Chewning, Audrey Carlyle Bremo Bluff, Fluvanna County Chinault, Ruby Pearl Larue, Pennsylvania Christiansen, Anne Sophie 4915 Huntington Ave., Newport News Clark, Ann Maria 1448 Wicomico St., Baltimore, Md. Clarke, Sephie Lee Middletown, Frederick County Claytor, Mary Fred 726 Park St., Bedford, Bedford County Clement, Charlotte Alexander 1601 N. Main St., Danville Cline, Marjorie Elizabeth 7i N. High St., Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Cockerill, Martha Overton Purcellville, Loudoun County Coffield, Roberta Powell 200 Florida Ave., Portsmouth Coffman, Olive Margaretta Dayton, Rockingham County Coiner, Gladys Elizabeth R. F. D. No. 5, Staunton, Augusta County Cole, Margaret Box 376, Wilmington, N. C. Collins, Elizabeth Shields Waynesboro, Augusta County Copper, Beatrice May Lexington, Rockbridge County Cornell, Marie Louise Barnwell, S. C. Councill, Annie Vivian 603 High St., Franklin, Southampton County Crank, Isabel Dorothy Forest Depot, Bedford County Crockett, Margaret Virginia Pulaski, Pulaski County Cronise, Ola Godwin Buchanan, Botetourt County Crowder, Susie Kathleen 206 N. Sycamore St., Richmond Cundiff, Claudine Catherine R- F- D. No. 6, Roanoke Current, Ruth Augusta Cleveland, N. C. Cutts, Florence Courttiey Chase City, Mecklingburg Count - Dalton, Dinna Lee Galax, Grayson County Daughtrey, Allie Beale Franklin, Southampton County Davis, Frances Louise 623 Alabama St., Bristol, Tenn. Davis, Ruth Lee 948 Naval Ave., Portsmouth Davis, Violetta Loraine Shenandoah, Page County Deatherage, Hattie Milton Amissville, Rappahannock Coimty Deisher, Mary Clyde Rag ' e Rock, Botetourt County Denby, Alice Roper 910 Raleigh Ave., Norfolk Dickerson, Julia Mary Stuart ' s Draft, Augusta County Didawick, Gladys Marie 611 Main St., Woodstock, Shenandoah County Dodson, Frances Annabel 6 Ravcnwood Apt., Norfolk Draper, Edna Scott 1005 High St., Charlottesville, Albemarle County Oriiikwatir, Mary raiiliiic I7,|, Si.. VirRinia Bi-ach Duke. KlizalKlh Carrsvillc, Isle of WIkIiI Cnuiity Diinaway. Julia dcTolsoii 1000 K. Clay .St.. Kiclimoud Uumaii. Kathrync Camposlclla HciRlus. .Norrolk i:arly. Hilt n I ladficlcl CVlt. (;rciiK- fouuty Kastmaii, Kmma Ikatricc Stormont. . l icitllcscx C.iunty Hdwards. Kathcriin; 407 Clicslmit St.. Norfolk Klliott. Kallurcui; Jane Blackstonc. Nottoway County Klliott. Louise Wcsttrvilt 1442 Wcslovcr Ave, Norfolk Evirly. Cathcriui.- Mount Jack.son. Slicnandoali County KwiuR. Klizahcth MarRarct 514 I ' r.inkliii St., HarrlsonburR. RockinRhain County FaRR. Marion Tee A.xton. Henry County Falls. Laura May Clia.se City, MecklenhurR Canity Feild. .Meade Fverard West Point. KiiiR William County Felts. .Mary Bettie Sebrell. Soutlianipton County Felts. Ruby Kstelle Boykins. Southampton County FcrRUson. IVances Christine Clifton Station, Fairfax County Ferguson. Myrtle Belle Remington. Faui|uier County Ford, Margaret Anna 6i0 Willoughby Ave., Norfolk Ford, Nina Simpson Clifton Station. Fairfax County Forester. Louie Ilcta Keysville. Charlotte County Forsberg. Anna Newhall 617 Graydon I ' ark. Norfolk Fortna. .Marie R. F. D. No. 5. Box I.W. Riebmond I os(|Ue. Dorothy Hinds W ' acbapreaguc. Accomac County Fox. Mae Burke Quicksburg. Shenpndoah County Frankhouscr. Ruth Buchanan. Botetourt County Funkbouser. Christina NefT McGahcysvillc. Rockingham County Funkhouscr. Frances Virginia McGahcysvillc. Rockingham County Garber. .Mary V ' irginia Waynesboro. Augusta County Garden. ' irginia ' enable Prospect. Prince Edward County Garnett. Juliet Browne Mathews. Mathews County Gay. Bcrnice FJizabeth 1 104 Elm Ave.. Portsmouth Gay, Eloise Smithfield, Isle of Wight Gibson, Annie Laurie Joncsville. Lee County Gill. Margaret Lucille 120 Fillmore St.. Petersburg Gilliam. .Anne tJatburst 24 Fillmore St.. Petersburg Gilliam. Frances Dyson Vale. Sussex County Gladstone. Christine Frost Exmorc. Northampton County Glassell. Marion alker Bowling Green. Caroline County Glenn. Elise Wilson South Boston. Halifax County Gochenour, Elzie Marie Elkton, Rockingham County Good. Eleanor Harrisonburg. Rockingham County Goodman. Gladys Elinor Ore Bank. Buckingham County Goodman. Nfarguerite Elizabeth Ore Bank. Buckingham County Goodloe. Hawsie Lewis Staunton, Augusta County Goodwin. Adriennc Olaf. Roanoke County Greenland. Susan N ' irginia 3701 Granby St.. Norfolk Gresham. Issie Todd 2816 Third Ave.. Richmond Grubbs. Leone Lillian Shenandoah. Page County Gwaltney, Hunter Davis Smithfield, Isle of Wight Gwaltney, Rebecca Wakefield. Sussex County Hagood, Nanny Elizabeth La Crosse, Mecklenburg County Hailey, Virginia Kathleen Keysville, Charlotte County Haines. Ruth Teresa 125 W. Water St., Winchester Hairr, Vivia Ida Clinton, North Carolina Haldeman, Gladys Christine Winchester Hammer. Mildred Elizabeth Rockfish. Nelson County Hardy. Mary Lees 817 S. Washington St.. Winchester Harnsberger. Grace Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Harnsberger, Josephine Troutville, Botetourt County Harper, Elizabeth Sarah Port Republic, Rockingham County Harris, Helen Evelyn R. F. D. No. 3. Roanoke Harris, Mary Carolyn Pendleton, Louisa County Harris, Mary Louise Miller School. Albemarle County Hart, Cornelia Clinton Boykins. Southampton County Haycox. Minnie Louise 623 Graydon Park, Norfolk Heidelberg, Rosa Payne Rustburg. Campbell County Henderson, Frances Conway Mil ford, Caroline County Hcndrick, Rose Stringf ellow Norvello, Mecklenburg County Hcrringdon, Mary Alice 101 Cambridge St., Roanoke Hess, Susan Mary 229 Armstead Ave., Hampton Heyl, Grace Harvey L ' niversity of Virginia Holcomb, Clarinda Adaline 307 Wellington Ave., Roanoke Holland, Virginia Louise Holland, Nansemond County Holloman, Thelma Fanita Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Holmes, Louise Rebecca Luray. Page County Hornbarger, Hazel Mary Christiansburg. Montgomery County Houston. Annette Louise Fairfield. Rockbridge County Hufford, Henrietta Rural Retreat. Wythe County Hundley, Mary Celestia Whitmell. Pittsylvania County Hunter, Elizabeth Ernest Marion, South Carolina Hutcheson, Mary Stuart Brownsburg, Rockbridge County Ish, Pamelia Lynn Aldie, Loudoun County Ives, Myrtle Louise 46 Chesapeake Ave.. Norfolk Jackson, Elizabeth Ridgely Summit Point, West Virginia Jackson, Mamie Franklin 416 Chimborazo Boulevard, Richmond Jarvis, Margaret Louise Virginia Beach. Princess Anne County Jennings, Martha Elizabeth Crewe. Nottoway County Jones, Amanda Charlotte Driver, Nansemond County Jones, Frances Carraleigh Gordonsville, Orange County Jones, Grace Elizabeth Chilhowie, Smyth County Jones, Lelia Brock Smithfield, Isle of Wight County Jones, Marjorie Elizabeth Penlan, Buckingham County Jones, Mary Etheleen 524 Warren Crescent. Norfolk Jones, Minnie Campbell Carysbrook, Vluvanna County Jones, Ruby Craig 121-12th St., S. E.. Washington. D. C. Joyce, Julia Mae Shuff , Patrick County Kelly, Susan Elizabeth Hampton Kemp, CatliiTiiif dc aul 135 Brooke Ave. Xnrfolk KestcT. Isaklla Amelia 94 Churcli St., Martinsville Kibler, Constance Margaret SlKiiaiul..ali, Page County Kincanon. Jessie Cole 601 II iKlilaiul Ave., Roanoke Kimuar, I ' rances Armstrong Lexiiigton, Rockbridge Coimty KirkwcHKl. Bessie M.iy 407 l-:im Ave.. S. V.. R .atii.ke Kneisley, Helen Lucille Woinlstock, Shenaiulciah County Knupp. Carrie May Timberville, Rockingham County I cy. Pattic Greenwood Scottshurg. Halifax County I imbert, F.unice Rlizabeth McGabeysville. RockiiiRham County Lambert, l ura Lee McGabeysville, Rockingham County L-imphier. Mildred Cloyes 709 Colonial Ave.. Xorfolk Landis. Lucy Sheldon 268 Valley St.. Pulaski. Pulaski County I.auck, Argene Louise Shenandoah, Page County Lay. Claire X ' irginia Coeburn. Wise County Lee. Gona Caryl New Castle. Craig County Lcith. Virginia Lovelle Grottoes. Rockingham County Lewis. Ruth Frctwell Cascade. Pittsylvania County Lewis. Una Minette 9 Delap St.. Jamaica. New York Lickfold. Edith Louise Staunton. Augusta County Lippard. Mary Ida Cleveland. North Carolina Livick. Ethel Gray 416 Marquis St.. Staunton. Augusta County Lloyd, Anna Margaret New Market, Shenandoah County Long, Adah Magdalene Herndon, Fairfax County Long, Christine Sarah Elkton, Rockingham County Loving. Sallie Baker Stage Junction. Fluvanna County Lowman. Ruby May Pulas ki, Pulaski County McCauley, Valley Virginia New Hope, Augusta County McGehee, Lucy Ann Kcysville, Charlotte County McKce. Gladys : V. W. Wilshow Residence. Norfolk McPherson. Elsie X ' irginia Buclianan, Botetourt County . Iabry, Maude Harry Union, South Carolina Mackcy, Margaret Macon Fairfield, Rockbridge County .Major, Dorothy Frances 852 V ' ictoria Ave.. Lynchburg Malone. Carrie Boothe 29 Franklin St.. Petersburg Manges. Ressic Ellena Troutville. Botetourt County Mansoni. Antoinette Beaton 309 Dinwiddie St.. Portsmouth Martin, Constance Elizabeth Proffit. Albemarle County Matheny. Elizabeth Jane Monterey. Highland County Mcador, Louise Mae Cumberland Micklem, Mary Broaddus Rockfish, Nelson County Miller, Christine Ursula Elkton, Rockingham County Miller, Helen Lee Elkton, Rockingham County Miller, Janet Jarman Port Republic. Rockingham County Mish, Gean Greenville, Augusta County Moomaw, Annie Katherine Rocky Point, Botetourt County Moon, Nelle Gray Scottsville, Albemarle County Moore, Catherine Eggleston 99 34th St., Newport News Moore, Lillian Agnes Boykins, Southampton County Moore, Louise Carlisle 130 3Sth St., Newport News Moore, Margaret Kaeffer Ill Pine St., Norfolk Moore, Rebecca Imogen 12 Hatten St., Portsmoutli Morgan, Penelope Campbell R. F. D., Danville Moseley, Mabel Virginia Alvis, Brunswick County Mullen, Beulah Olive College Park, Md. Murry, Lucille Charline 124-39th St.. Norfolk Muse, Annie 235 W. Main St.. Danville Nelson, Evelyn Byrd R. F. D. No. 5, Richmond Nicholas, Bessie Harper Port Republic, Rockingham County Nicholas, Virginia Elizabeth Port Republic, Rockingham County Norton, Dorothy Pauline Deltaville, Middlesex County Nunnally, Agnes Spencer Green Bay, Prince Edward County Ober, Marjorie B 1302 Ashland Circle, Norfolk Oliver, Margaret Elma 410 Main St., SutTolk Orrison, Mildred Louise Lovettsville, Loudoun County Overton, Mary Louise Burkeville Nottoway County Page, Sibyl Hargrave 324 W. 30th St., Norfolk Painter, Josephine Brittain Pulaski Painter, Marie Irvin Pulaski Palmer, Emily Louise Saluda, Middlesex County Patton, Bernice Esther Tom ' s Creek, Wise County Payne, Jennie Dean Buckner, Louisa County Payne, Hazel Grimes 285 Lucille Ave., Norfolk Pearce, Lucy Mearle Marietta, Georgia Pendleton, Eleanor Love Wytheville Perry, Mary Lee 902 Manteo St., Norfolk Phillips, Mary Judkins 374 Bedford Ave., Bedford Potterfield, Isabel Jane Lovettsville, Loudoun County Pratt, Mary Eveleen Waynesboro, Augusta County Profifitt, Elsie Marguerite 1425 Campbell Ave., Roanoke Purdy, Annetta Stuart 204 Franklin St., Petersburg Pyle, Gladys Virginia Graham, Tazewell County Raine, Sue 12 Denver Ave., Lynchburg Reeves, Mabel Vernon Bridgewater, Rockingham County Reynolds, Carrie Louise Round Hill, Loudoun County Rhodes, Nellie Gertrude Broadway, Rockingham County Rice, Ruby Golden 440 E. Elizabeth St., Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Rich, Sadie Emporia, Greenville County Richardson, Elizabeth Keen 202 Broad Street, Danville Richardson, Elizabeth Jane Graham, Tazewell County Rickman, Helen Mae Cumberland County Ridenour, Blanch Arlington 30 Fillmore Street, Petersburg Riddle, Lily Elizabeth Portsmouth Roane, Nancy Peach 306 Dinwiddle St., Portsmouth Roark, Ruth Anderson Altavista, Campbell County Robertson, Ruth Elizabeth Callaway. FranklinCounty Robinson, Annie Elizabeth Cartersvillc. Cumberland County Rodes, Alberta Coiner Greenwood, Albemarle County Kodcs. Aniic Clutiltlc (jri-i ' iiwoiHl, Albemarle Cmiiity Rowan, Grace R. [• . D. (ireenville. AuKii «a Omiity RmUI. Lawsim Genevieve Medical College of ' irKiiiin, Richinoml Rylaiid, Lillian Haydon L ' rbanna, M iddlesex County Saville. Florence Jane Miirat. Riicl l)ri(If;i- CiPiinty Saville. Ida Miirat. KnckliridKe Cnuiiiy Schlack, Susan l- ' lizaheth 303 N. liraddnck St.. Winchester Scribner. Addie Douglas Burnleys. All emarle County Scripture. Helen Byrd Wm id lord. Caroline County Segar, N ' irginia Rubank Saluda. Middlesex County Sellers, Barbara Frances Elkton, Rockingham County Shaver, Cliarlotte 223 Campbell Street. Harrisonburg Shelton. Florence Adelia R. F. D. Ko. 5. Norfolk Shore. Katherine ElizalKth Burkeville. Nottoway County Sliowalter, Grace Flizabeth 478 S. Mason St.. Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Shruni. Juanita Kathryne Dayton. Rockingham County Simpson, Sophia Alice Purcellville. Loudoun County Smith, Lucy Helen 1319 22d St., Newport News Smith, Orra Estelle Java, Pittsylvania County Smith, Verta Hamuer Appomatti ix SmiHit. Jessie Esther Woodstock. Shenandoah County Smothers. Mary Louise Rcidsvillc, N. C. Sparrow. ElizalK-tb 314 S. 2d St.. Wilmington, N. C. Sparrow. Isabel Ann 314 S. 2d St.. Wilmington, N. C. Spear, Bernice Lee Kinston. N. C. Spcnce, Agnes 231 Webster Ave., Portsmouth Spiers, Norma Amanda 525 39th St., Newport News Spicer, Elsie Vaiden Buchanan. Botetourt County Stark, Edythe Feme Maurcrton. Shenandoah County Stearn, Lydia ' irginia Abigail Mt. Clinton. Rockingham County Stephens. Mary Agnes Quinquc. Greene County Stephenson. Rebekah Elizabeth Wakefield. Sussex County Stover. Ella Antrim 1214 Eye St., Washington, D. C. Strough. May Guthrie Ft. Defiance. Augusta County Styne, Edythe Jeanne Buchanan. Botetourt County Sutcr, Reba Elizabeth Harrisonburg. Rockingham County Swats. irginia Elizabeth Churchvillc. Augusta County Swcckcr. Celia Pearl onte ey. Highland County Tabb. Sarah Lanier 419 North St.. Portsmouth Tanner, Mary Elizabeth Ruth, Madison County Taylor, Florence Collins P. O. Box 1303. Richmond Taylor. French Elaine East Stone Gap. Wise County Taylor. Nan Smith 719 Walnut St., Waynesboro. Augusta County Temple. Hilda Merchant, Brunswick County Thomas. Hester Elizabeth Culpeper County Thoma. Margaret Lorraine Warrenton. Fauquier County Thompson. Helen Friend Chester. Chesterfield County Thompson, Mary Caroline Elkridge. Maryland Thomson, Margaret Louise Goode. Bedford County Thrush. Ethel Belle Front Royal, Warren County Thurston, Bernice Estelle 3135 W. Franklin St., Richmond Tilman. Grace Crozet, Albemarle County Towler, Josephine Walton Darlington Heights, Prince Edward County Trimble, Alma Monterey, Highland County Tunstall, Mildred Lucy Baskerville, Mecklenburg County Turpin, Susie Alexander Tyro, Nelson County V ' an Dorsten. Anne M 621 Elm Ave., S. W.. Roanoke Veley, Ella Mercedes Norton, Wise County Via, Hannah Maria Free Union, Albemarle County Vincent, Cecile Gladys 521 Glasgow St., Portsmouth Yint, Elizabeth Cameron 12 Madison St., Staunton, Augusta County Wagstaff, Helen Mabel Herndon, Fairfax County Wagstaff. Mary Zehna Herndon, Fairfax County Walker, Helen McHardy 814 Harrington Ave., Norfolk Walker, Nannie Eleanor La Crosse, Mecklenburg County Walters, Nell Davidson 402 Allison Ave., Roanoke Walters, Selina Claire Winthrop Mnnor. Staunton, Augusta County Wall, Ella Margaret Brownsburg, Rockbridge County Warren, Sarah Eva 40 Hardy Ave., Norfolk Warren, Mary Katherine 40 Hardy Ave.. Norfolk Watts. Helen Esther L ' niversity of ' irginia Weddle, Beulah Sara Troutville, Botetourt County Westerman, Allene Jeanette 110 McCormick St., Clifton Forge, Alleghany County White, Mary Virginia Princess Anne, Maryland Wiley, Florence Margaret Gordonsville, Orange County Williams, Dorothy Irene 214 Randolph Ave., Cape Charles Williams, Lena Sarah Norfolk Williams, Mary Travis Chase City, Mecklenburg County Williams, LeRoy Winifred 209 Maple Ave., Norfolk Wilmoth, Lillie Katherine Chase City, Mecklenburg County Wimbish, Roberta Spotswood Nathalie, Halifax County Winborne, Gladys Carrsville, Isle of Wight County Wolfe, Lena Marie Mount Jackson, Shenandoah County Womack, Mary Elizabeth Keysville. Charlotte County Woodson, Fannie Lee 265 W. Market St., Harrisonburg, Rockingham County Woodward, Doris 213 Levy Ave., Charlottesville, Albemarle County Wright, Elizabeth Ellen R. F. D. No. 5. Barcroft, Arlington Wysong, Mildred Wilson Shenandoah, Page County Yeatts, Mary Gillie Chatham. Pittsylvania County Yeatts, Ora Oneal Chatham. Pittsylvania County X 1) U o o K ! e ' ' • ' stev. 8888888888888888888888S88888888888888888888888888888888888 88 I HARRISONBURG NORMAL SCHOOL | § HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA | ANNOUNCEMENT SESSION 1922-1923 TWO-YEAR COURSES ( Leading to Professional Diploma ) 1. For Primary and Kindergarten Teachers 2. For Grammar Grade Teachers 3. For junior High School Teachers 4. For High School Teachers 5. For Teachers of Home Economics Subjects FOUr -YEAR COURSE In Home Economics, under the Smith-Hughes Law, leading to the B, S. degree in Education SPECLA.L COURSES In Dietetics, Institutional Management, and Home Demonstration Work MUSIC AND EXPRESSION Strong Department of Music and Expression (Six Instructors) Opportunities for students needing financial assistance through System of Student Service Free State Scholarship State Loan Fund Three new buildings being constructed for use during the coming school year Early registration advised For Catalog Address SAMUEL V. DUKE. President. Suits W ' c carr (.uiiiplcte lines of tlif famous Printzess and Madame Josey Suits. Distinctive. ditTcrcnt. rcasonalilv jiriced. Tlie line of Hart Scliaffner Marx (. oats for tjirls. in the same mannish materials of men ' s Suits, are very popular this seascm. Also the Madame losev line. Dresses We carry the I ' eggy Paige (no two alike) line of Dresses, as well as the Madame josey. and enjoy an envious patronage in these two lines. Hats ' I ' he Peggy Paige. G.age. and Madame Josey line of Millinery leave nothing to he desired. Kverv imaginahle sha])e. color, and stvle. Footwear Ours is the most comiilete Shcje Department between Richmond and Washington. Here you will see all that is smart in Pumps. Oxfords, and Ties. If it ' s new, we have it. If we have it. it ' s reasonably jjriced. e have the reputation for being the MOST RE.ASOX.ABLV PRICED SHOP in the ' alley. and .shall be glad to have the Xormal Girls call in to get accpiainted with our .service and prices. 88 88 88 88 88 888898888886888888888888888e888888888888888888888888888888 Books Engraving p. H. BAUGHER HARRISOXBURG, A. Stationery Sporting Goods Let Us Do Your Kodak Work JOHN W.TALIAFERRO I ' ' ' ' ° ; ' ' Qg When you want your clothes JEWELER cleaned, pressed, or repaired. d Just ' Phone 274 We ' ll Call REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST HAYDEN ' S M  ., « r-  = ORY CLEANING WORKS North Side Court Square S-S-3 6f 165 N. Main Street : Harrisonburg, Va. The Bank Where You Feel At Home WE INVITE Xormal Teachers and Students to Deposit their funds with us, whetlier their account he large or small. Card-case, check book, and pass hook provided with First Deposit. 88 88 The Rockingham National Bank C. G. H. RNESBERGER, President S. D. Myers. Caslticr C. H. M, uzv, C. A. M. sox, .IssistanI Casliicrs 88 FROM BEHIND THE CURTAINS OF FASHION COME OUR NEW SHOE OFFERINGS FOR THE SPRING AND SUMMER SEASON I ' .fwitcliini; crcatinns in iiatcnt Icatlu-r lead tlie |i(j|nilar {leniand. Some arc ]ilaiii, wliile otliers are attractively iriinin- C(I ill gray or hiege. Straps predominate, and iieels are low, although the new Spanish heel is gaining nianv friends. r.lack and White Sjiort Oxfords are het- ter than ever this year and the Low 1 led White Tie is unusually good. We will be glad to have you dro]) in to see us. Vou will be delighted with the RE. LL ' lilCM ' Tl I-T ' I. STYLES we have to show vou. VICTOR TCTROL.- S ' ICTOR RECORDS UMBRELL.AS FLOOR C( ) -ERIXGS FURXITURE « William B. Dutrow Company IXCOIU ' OKATKD Opixjsite Xew ' irginia Theatre Harrisonburg, ' a. Qg 88 888888888888 88888868888588 EAT B ECK ' S EST READ ROLLS, BUNS, CANDIES, and CAKES It ' s a pleasure for ns to know that many peo|)le. when they taste another kind of Ice-C ' reani, say — It ' s ahiiost as good as IMPERIAL WANTED— Normal School Girls, when in STAUNTON, ' A.. to stop at rilA ' I RT.FA ' ll() ' ri ' I.. Wm can catch the 1 larrison- hurg Bus from here. Leon C. Ware and W. S. Carroll, Props. Imported and Domestic Toilet Goods lAXin lAI ' .KSIl ARI ' l ' I-. ( ll.S SIA I loXICkV Moore and Conklin Fountain Pens TIktc i Mil .l l iiiKiii Mi l.tiKi .mil Ml ■.■•niiirtliiiisivi. ' . ir s i carefully selected for (juality, or so satisfactory as to PRICE. Our stock is OIK- vc take iiride in. not only for its attractiveness, hut for the sterl- ing merit of the goods and the S.ATISF.ACTION ' wc know they will give our customers. SrKAl.M. AITKATIOX TO PKESC ' KIPIOX V()I{K I THONE US YOL ' H WA.NT.S V LLI AM SOX ' S H.- RRISONBUR(rs BEST DRUG SlORl ' ; | $8838369888888888888888988888888886868888888888888888888886 J. E. FLECKER CS, CO. FLOWERS Wc fiiniisli fresh Home-grown Flowers for any (pcc.-isiun at reasonable prices CoKSAcics — Baskets — Boouets Ferns and Bi oomim; I ' i-ants Pro.mpt Sekvice Fresh Flowers i Only Exclusive Florists in Harrisonhurg Store 77 North Main Street i I. E. PLECKER CO.— Home of Home-Crown Flowers $8888886868886888888888888888886888888888888888888888638 I LINEWEAVER BROS., Inc. I •THK ST. -KL1 .. 1-: STURF i GOOF) ' lillXGS to EAT for all Social Activities ( C and Every-Day Luncheons 5 5 PHOXE 195 EAST MARKET $ $88368686868686363636868 3636363636888836868888363683836 1388888888888888888888888S88888888888888888S8888888888888888886 88 88 i Jewelry of the Better Sort I IT REFERS TO EVERYTHING WE HAVE FOR SALE ALSO OUR LINE OF REPAIR WORK D. C. DEVIERo RELIABLE JEWELRY and REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST We Grind and Replace Broken Lenses right here in OUR OWN Lense-Grinding plant. All work can be filled the same dav. 888888888888888888888888 888888 888888888888888888888888$ I . VISIT W. R. Hite CS, Co. g grottoes of the Shenandoah 3 Successors to W. C Reillv Co. op ,, . , . , , , 5 ' OO L nique tnrmatioiis and the largest un- 5 FANCY GROCERIES 88 derground chambers iu Virginia. .See 5 Qg CATHEDRAL HALL, a chamber that 5 op surpasses any known caverns. Descrip- 5 MEATS live folder for the asking. I Phone 64 West Market St. 88 ' ' • ' ' • ' ' ' ' ' y. ' ' • ,, 5 ( Yb Grottoes, Va. 9888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888$ I Harrisonburg Grocery Co. 5 Incori)orated 5 Exclusively Wholesale 5 Phones 93 and M6 8 HARRISONBURG :: :: :: :: ' lR(ilXl. SEE AMERICA FIRST One of a Million Marvels in the Beautiful Caverns of Luray This Is Conceded To Be the Most Beautiful Cave Known Three Times as Large as Any Other Cave East of Kentucky iklol, illustrated and descriptive of these Caverns, will be mailed free, iipmi rL(|iiest to Luray Caverns Corporation, Luray, ' irninia gB KODAKS, FILMS, ETC. flP 88 88 -AT- 88 i 88 I DEAN ' S STUDIO I i 88 ASK FOR OUR NEW PRICES ON 88 88 88 DEVELOPING AND PRINTING 88 88 i HIGH CLASS PHOTOGRAPHY 88 M gg in all the Latest Styles CO I i , Y i r ' Y ! H.Aj ' Qg B.ARUFF1N C.CUSTER ROBINSON gg J. H. McGlaUghHll, Jf. S CO CHARLES M. ROBINSON J. BlNFORD WALFORD fYJ O i Charles M. Robinson g deai eks ' in g gg ARCHITECTS gg Fresh Meats and Groceries 88 Times-Dispatch Bldg. 88 Home Made Bologna and Sausages Qg o3 D L J 7 ' Oysters and Fish in Season 88 gg Kichmond, Va. gP phone 115 se somh Mai„ st. flft PARCEL POST The Parcel Post has enabled us to widen our field of activity and added to our growing clientele of satisfied customers. We Can Deliver At Your Door Any Drug Article at little or no cost, pronipth ' and safely. As soon as your order is received it will be carefully packed and sent to vou by the next out-going mail. The L. H. OTT DRUG CO., INC. Bell Phone 45 THE REXALL STORE Harrisonburg Va. 88 88 88 88 BUY. BUILD. WORK Prosperity for All Space contributed by Harrisonburg Rotary Club APPRECIATION Edge Lawn Inn HAI{1U ()MU ' U(;. A. Open All the Year ror Tourists Dinner, Dancing ana Card Parties h ntertainea Phone 53-L WALTER Alj llicn we- rcali e that Qg much of rhe hnan- 88 cial success oi our annual was due to our aciverti- gg sors, we wish to express 88 our (rratitiide to them. Also wirh this fact in gg view we ask that the 88 students will ;i e them their trade at e ery op- gg portunity. They ha e 88 helped us; now we shall help them. 8888888888888 88888888888888$ TROBAUGH Llectrical Ljontracting, Supplies Cy Repairs Agent for Westinghouse Mazda Lamps, Hughes and Westinghouse Electric Ranges, Eureka X ' acuuni Cleaners, and Hotpoint Electrical Heat- ing Apj)liances. r7-EAST MARKET ST ilARRISOXBL ' RG. A. Creative Printing is now at our command. The old printers ' rule, Follow copy if it goes out of the window, ' ' will be followed for all who have their definite plans. There are many possibilities as yet untouch- ed, however, in methods of [jroducing new and business-building printed matter. To those who are desirous of getting the most from their printing bills, we offer a special inducement. . . Rockingham Publishing Company COMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT P. O. Drawer Phone 326 HARRISOXPURG, :: :: :: :: VTRGIXIA. SB 88 SB 88 88 ffi HARRISONBURG Electrical Supply Company SUCCESSOR TO FURR BROTHERS Electrical Contracting and Supplies Phone 280 85 North Main Street HARRISONBURG, VIRGINIA Dr. Walter T. Lineweaver Dentist Peoples Bank Building 1 ' hones : — Office, 85 Residence, 85-M 88 Harrisonburg, :: :: X ' irginia. flft cB888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888e| rr COINER-BURNS FURNITURE CO. THE HOME OF GOOD FURNITURE Bruns ' wick Phonographs and M. Schulz Pianos Poor Merchandise Is Like Soap Bubbles- Made Cheaply and Never Lasts Vc sell Kill. 1. MILE GOODS and gain your COXKIDKNCI ' :. ' ou will tiiHl no better assurtment of Merchandise in the large cities than we slmw. And as to PRICE, it stands to reason why you can save money — our overhead expense answers the i|uestioii. We invite you to inspect our new line of l.. !)ll-:S ' kKAnV-T()- VE. R. LADIES SHOES— HEALTlFUl, STYLES DRY GOODS— COMPLETE IN EVERY PARTICCLAR. There is iH)thing you can ask for that we do not have. We make SPECIAL PRICES to TEACHERS and . ORM. L STUDENTS. B. NEY SONS (Directly (Jppusite Postollice) g STRICTLY ONE-PRICE DEPARTMENT STORE 88 HARRISONBURG. :: :: VTRGIXIA. i388 988888£88888 88888886888888888888S8888888888888S888S688 88 Do You Appreciate Good Service? 88 Oft flft gg We not unlv carrv a cuniplele and lns, ' li-i, ' ra(le line ni Hardware, liui CO can give you better prices and better service than can be found in any other store in the city. Our Salesmen are ever readv to give you i)r(Jiniit and polite service. TR ' THIS si-.R i(i-, (ii ixc, rs cm.i. The HAWKINS HARDWARE COMPANY §388888388888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888888| 88 FLETCHER ' S PHARMACY I «k On the Corner ?? PRESCRIPTIONS SODA WATER 383888888888888888 888888 8888888688888888888888888888 888888 888888 888888888888 8e.888888888888 88888888S888888888S6 88 There is Economy 88 CO as well as Foot Comfort , . ., CD in having yuur Shoes GO Properly Fitted W ' e offer you this real service With GOOD SHOES and Polite Attention Yager ' s Shoe Store Reliable Merchandise — Onlv Old Clothes Made Like New at B L A TT ' S DRY CLEANING PLJ .NT We gjuarantee satisfaction. Have your clothes cleaned, pressed, and repaired by S. BLATT, The Tailor Opposite Wise ' s Store. Kast Market St. Phone 278-R. 3888888888888888888888888888 888888 888888888888 8888 88 W . IJiiLEX, I ' rcs. lir Gen. Mgr. W. L. Mauzv, C F. Crist. Wm. H. Byku, Sec. Trcas Vice-Presidents fDercbants 0rocer AND IHarbwarc Company i. coKroK.M ' i;n ' WlIOI.KSAI.K OUOCKRIKS AN1 IlAR13 VARK 1, 5 W. M. KKET Street Elkton Br. nxii Phoxes Xo. 117-118-314 I ' hoxe Elktox Xo. 53 HARRISONBURG, VA. 88 88 88 88 88 88888888888888888888888888888888 8888888888888888888888 8888 88 OUR ICE-CREAM and CAXDY GO make you our Lustomer. Special «? Attention j iven to Xornial School QO Girls. I ' loudoir Lamps Table Lami)s niiiir Lamps Furniture Floor Coverintr 10 Discount to Students § J. S. DENTON SONS Ice-Cream and Sandwiches Deliv- (JJ INCORPORATED yy Harrisonburg ' s Largest Floor Covering ered Any Tmie Day or Xight gg House «5 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 88 BROCK Hardw are Harness Co. Stoves, Automobiles. Tires, and Accessories Runges. Paints, and Oils THE ' WfMCttESTER STORB 868888883888888888888888SeS88 88888e8888S88888888888888888 E. R. Miller, M. D. Practice Limited to EAR, EYES, XOSE, and THROAT Second Floor Sipe Building Opiiosite First National Bank The National Bank of Harrisonburg 88 Ph,, IK ' S— Office. 416; Residence, 416-M. gg SAFETY and SHRl ' ICH gg 88 8888 8888888888888888S88888888888fB888e8888888888888888?B88 The Y eni T XVrrES every student of the Xornial to visit our store. We want tn assure you that ou will he welcome whether yim huy or nut. ' e feel sure you will find something at our store that ycni will not he ahle to tind everywhere you go. ' ou are not annoyed h - heing urged to buy. We try to show every one that comes to our store the same cdurtesies that we should like to Ije shown if we should call on you in your home. Look for the sign over the sidewalk, just on top of the hill. 78-86 . L 1X STREET. XOKl ' il 88 8B 86 8B HARRISONBURG ' S EXCLUSIVE STORE WISE ' S QUALITY SHOP nRi;ssi-:s dress coons iiosi-: (.OATS mil- (il.ONKS MILLINERY SILK L ' XDI ' .k Vi: A! I ' Axcv HL()usi;s i)ui:ss accessories corsets •I ' lii-: oxiA ' sioKi.; siiowixc c( )Mn.i-:Ti . llxi: oi DRESS TRIMMINGS Dr. Wm. L. Baugher i)i-:x I isr Sipe Building Harrisonburg, Va. M AKDWAUl-: SASil Wilton Hardware Co. I ' HONES Urtice 467 w Harrisonburg, Va. , Honif 467-iM DOOKS lUJXDS S 88 COXTkACTokS gg ARCIIITI ' A ' J ' S 88 88 88 R. L. Bucher Dealers in Building Materials and Mantels Tile, Plaster, Etc. C ' diitractors fur Normal School Buildings Shown in This Publication HARRISONBURG lkGlXlA Phone -142 88S888888888888888888888888888888888888888888886888eS8888888SB88 ENDLESS CAVERNS { Wonderful and Spectacular I NewT Market, Va. i Unrivaled in beauty and variety of underground scenery Jhe Famous Diamond Lake Palace of the Fairies Snow Drift Oriental Palace Open All Year Guides At All Hours i ILLUSTRATED DESCRIPTI E P.OOKLET ON REQUEST i $88888888888e888888888888888888888e8888888888a88e888888« | As k whose space i i ISEM AN ' S DEPARTMENT STORE ? HARRISONBURG VIRGINIA Brown Bros. I Men ' s Store | The Home of BABY BEEF VEGETABLES and FRUITS Phone 75—508 SUITS That appeal in style and vilue ' iiung men wlin buy suits nowadays want tn he sure of two important things : Correct Style — Correct Value We don ' t know winch to place the most imjiortancc on ; so we give both maximum einpliasis in FRAZIER and SLATER suits. We carry a hig line i l furnishings as well. We fashion Ntiits to your liking. Frazier Slater I ' irst National liank linilding HARRISOXRURC;. ' A. 8888 888888888888888888888888888888888888 888888888888S8888BS8 THE KAVANAUGH Finest Hotel in the Valley 120 R.M.ms 60 I ' .atlis .M()l)I£kATE PRICED UKSTAIRAXI- Open I- ' rom 6 a. 111. tn 10 :. 0 p. m. Sanitary Soda Fountain 1 ligliol I riadi wi CAXniES. EAXCY DRINKS, and SUNDAES CO gg Brighten your home with mirrolac 88 H f C NipViaIqC d- Devoe ' s Mirrolac arnish-Stains. 88 l- ' I • V . Li.lllLllUJao Polishes, and Wax will make your home cheerful. Clef it at The Valley Hardware Company Make our Store your Headquarters i)i: ' risi Harrisonburg - - Virginia allcy lldw. H1.1-. Second Floor ( Office 98 i Residence 98-M PHONES The New Virginia Theatre Ofi ' ers its Patrons The best stars in the best screen attractions Always good show Orchestra Music 86 Open afternoons and evenings. I.owcst prices consistent with the prngranis offered. 88 88 88 Phone 4 -T. D. P. WINE, Owner B I HARRISONBURG ' S | I NEW DRUG STORE I m CUT RATE PRICES ON CANDY, TOILET ARTICLES, DRUGS, AND PATENT MEDICINES PRESCRIPTION DEPARTMENT All Prescriptions Filled by Registered Men Mavis ' ' Helm ft llil:l ' i:iira THE LEADING BRANDS OF CANDIES Handsomest Soda Fountain in the City fp( op ( 88J88e 888888S88888888888888S888888S8888888888888883888888888f J. A. TOWNS Cor. Wolfe and N. Main Sts. VALLEY Bus Line Garage STUDEBAKER CARS and SERVICE Phone 323 HARRISONBURG, VA. 85 8S 8B The Original Valley Bus Line T ie Latest in Millinery, Including GAGE PATTERN HATS FISKE PATTERN HATS AND NOVELTY VEILS AT L. H. Gary ' s Millinery Shop 72 Court Square Phone 58-J Rockingham Milling Co., Inc. The Farmers ' Mill Home of the Celebrated FLOUR ROCKINGHAM ' S BEST VIRGINIA BELLE SUNBEA.M. Self Rising GILT EDGE. Self Rising Harrisonburg, Va. ctv Serving Only cB tin- rest Only the Best nrSEHVK ' E FRIDDLE ' S RESTAURANT i Kiingstein Friddlc. Propr ' j. ' ' If ll ' Good to Eat, n ;• Have It. Our Specialty a Sandwiches and Light Lunches Opp. Court House I larrisonburf;, ' ,i. R ARTHUR WRIGHT Berryville, Virginia m gg Arttsttr 3Jbntn«ra;tIut BSe8888888888888688S88gS8S888JBS 1 3888888888888688888886888888 On the Square ' or by Telephoning 67 I you will come in contact with a I Strictly Modern Seed Store ] AND ) Poultry Supply House ) Everything in Seeds. Bulbs. ! Plants, and Nursery Stock. ) Poultry Feeds and Supplies ! of all kinds. 1 ) Mail Orders Our Hobby Wetsel Seed Co. 88888888888888888888888888888B J. HOLMES MOORE I THE BUILDING SUPPLIES MAN Shop Located near C. and W. Junction qq Harrisonburg Virginia HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF Building Ideas and Materials Over 500 Plans of Resi- dences to select from FREE BALTIMORE-MARYLAND ENGRAVINC COMPANY 28 S.CHARLES ST BALTIMORE, MD. [ARTISTS ■ ENGRAVERS I College Printing ANN lAI -S. C ' A ' I A I .OCT KS, M ACiA l N KS, 7 HRN you wish to Ikuc a hue book, catalogue, annual, or ma a ine print- ed _vou naturally go to a specialist, in that class of work — we are specialists, w hich is pro ' en b - the repeat orders received by us from car to ear. Give us a trial order. 88 88 88 88 Prowpt jess Efficiency Service 88 88 88 88 The McClure Co., Inc. No. 19 V P: S T FREDERICK S T R E E T STAUNTON - - - - - ' TRGINIA 88 Incorporated Staunton, Va. r


Suggestions in the James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) collection:

James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

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James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

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James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1921 Edition, Page 1

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James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1923 Edition, Page 1

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James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

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James Madison University - Bluestone Schoolmaam Yearbook (Harrisonburg, VA) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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