Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN)

 - Class of 1930

Page 1 of 128

 

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1930 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 128 of the 1930 volume:

We LANTERN Published by Student Body of Lambuth College Jackson, Tenn. I $ n i ' ' $ tftffr W c s bn S c •til U ' itf Go V ete j; (1 ur d e L b e ou t vjVv te tVve to, s - u vet du sV - s v v -x c0 ed , cet e e yvts e. w SS ' 1 sYvai of veav, - iV d pa pea! Ottf u vtVv s o? e tea ' A ££- bvU d- L D 2 . L S3 1 33D T et s s ibh the i $ tan and VVjj j£ auab nth its c o eo foil e Sn- , , ° ' tte u. ' - r the ; s S -at, J . ' l n-. er rate. nil o Us a 77- 930 TF a ' T rTMTtfnSH  Eambttfh Irlourft — Alma Hatrr Hail to Lambuth, our Lambuth beloved, School of ideals, of sunlight, and song; Tho ' afar from thy campus removed, Still our hearts shall for thee ever long. Chorus Sweet thy memories, thy fond recollections. ' TSs the dear school that gave us our worth How you hold, college dear, our affections, Alma Mater, the fairest on earth ! May our colors, the white and blue streaming, Our emblems of love and of truth, Be as sunlight upon our path beaming, Dear in age as they now are in youth. O Lambuth, where ' er life may lead us, In sorrow, or sunshine, or joy, Thy motto shall still be our watchword, Thy praises our tongues shall employ. Parting § mtg See our Colors proudly waving Bright against the Southern sky, Emblem fair of high endeavor. Symbol that shall never die ! When the last farewell is spoken, Parting comes as partings will, But, wherever life may lead us, We ' ll love Lambuth College still. We have worked and played together, We have stood, a loyal band ; In the years to come we promise For our College we will stand. One last pledge then, ere we sever, Hands are clasped as parting sign. To each other we ' ll lie loyal, And, dear Lambuth, ever thine. antern iK ssagr iFrnm ©ttr ftofii ntt DURING the college year now closing Lambuth College has launched a movement looking toward the secur- ing of a $400,000 fund for the endowment and maintenance of the institution. The purpose of this movement is, of course, to stabilize the finances of the college and enable it to carry on its work through the years without embarrass- ment. For the past several months those in charge of the campaign have been engaged in an effort to arouse the interest of our constituency in this great enterprise. We are glad to report that good progress has been made in this direction, and that the number of our friends is rapidly increasing. A new day is dawning for Lambuth. Every alumnus, every former student, and every student now enrolled in the college can have a share in ushering in this new day. Those who have shared most largely in the benefits of the college are best able to proclaim its worth. To this group my mes- sage is addressed. I am asking that you be Lambuth mis- sionaries, so to speak, in the communities where you live. By uniting our efforts and our prayers we shall have suc- cess in the Endowment Movement and estabbsh on a secure foundation the institution we all love. RICHARD E. WOMACK. President. Contents On Deck D pq O H ; antern rrmttttanre mVTfrt Si Officers and Crew ®ruBtoa IGambutli (Eolbgr CLASS A F. H. PEEPLES R. E. WOMACK F. B. JONES Term expires November. 1930 T. H. STOKES J. F. O ' NEAL CLASS B ]. R. PEPPER T. W. LEWIS Term expires November, 1931 LAWRENCE TAYLOR J. F. FISHER CLASS C I. W. B PACKARD E. RICE Term expires November, 1932 R. L. BEARE J. O. BOMER CLASS D F. R. HILL, IP. F. T. RANDLE Term expires November, 1933 WILLIAM HOLLAND R. A. CLARK Srustos iEjmmrtlt iSfall Rev. W. F. Maxedon - - - - - - - - - - President A. P). Foust ------------- Vice President Rev. W. L. Suggs ---------- Secretary-Treasurer R. A. Clark. M. C. Yates, E. M. Math is ------- Clerical A. H. Keeeev, Jr., Dr. J. L. Jones, J. A. Bryant ------- Lay ftf mm tm W Faculty RICHARD ELWOOD WOMACK A. B., M. A., LL, D. President A. B., University of Arkansas; Graduate Study Uni- versity of Wisconsin; M. A., Peabody; LL. D., Union University. CHARLES O. MOORE A. B., M. A. Dean of the College and Professor of Education A. B., Hendrix College; Graduate Stud}-, University of Missouri; M. A., Peabody College for Teachers. fc- £antern EMORY EARL WALDEN A. B., M. A. Professor of Mathematics and Physics, and Dean of Men A. B., Hendrix College; M. A., University of Colorado; Graduate Study. University of Illinois. PAULINE GORDON A. B., M. S. Professor of Home Economics, and Dean of Women A. B., Winthrop College; Graduate Study, Peabody College; M. S., Iowa State College. J. R. WALKER A. B., M. A. Professor of Bible and Religious Education, Acting Professor of Greek, Secretary of the Faculty A. B.. Wofford College; M. A., Emory University; Graduate Study, Northwestern University. A. 15., I versil . SARAH V. CLEMENT A. B., M. A. Professor of English ' nion University; M. A., Vanderbilt Uni MARVIN EDWARD EAGLE A. B., M. A. « Professor of History and Director of Physical Education A. if.. Kentucky Wezleyan College; M. A.. Vander- bilt University; Graduate Study, University of Chi- cago, University of California and Oxford Univer- sity; Candidate for Ph. I). Decree, University of ( Chicago. ARTHUR I). ( )XLEY I ' ,. S., M. A. Professor of Biology B. S.. Iowa Wesleyan College; M. A.. University of Arkansas; Graduate Study, Universitj of Iowa, rtr— inT r r jCantern MAMIE LUCILE WOMACK A. B. Professor of Social Science, Instructor in Physical Education for 11 ' omen, Librarian A. B., Hendrix College; Candidate for M. A. Degre June. 1930, Peabody College for Teachers. FRANK M. CROSS B. S., M. S. Professor of Chemistry 15. S., Millsaps College; M. S., Emory University. KATHARINE CLEMENT A. B., M. A. Professor of Romance Languages and Latin A. B., University of Tennessee; M. A., University of Colorado. a L( )UISE MERCER Director of Music Piano Graduate of Chicago Musical College, Artist Course; awarded first prize at graduation; special study with Borowski, Ayres, Foerste , Renter. Oldberg, Heinze. Herumen, La Forge and others. ARTHUR A. SEEGER I heory, I ' iolin, and I ' dice Graduate, Institute of Musical Art, New York City; Pupil of Percy Goetschius, Franklin W. Robinson- Theory; Bostelman, Dethier- Violin; Carl Breneman, of New York. MRS. ANNIE RAW Matron antern Seniors £ mwv (tlaaa ©fftrrra JAMES DOYNE YOUNG, A. B., President Lonoke, Arkansas Major, Religious Education. Minor, Education. President Class, ' 26; Life Service Band, ' 26; Mouzon Literary Society, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Dra- matic Club, ' 28 ; Fine Arts Club, ' 29, ' 30 ; Vice President Student Bodv, ' 30 ; President Class, ' 30; Football, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29; Baseball, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Vice President Y. M. C. A., ' 27; Secretary Y. M. C. A., ' 28; President Y. M. C. A., ' 29; Glee Club, ' 26, ' 27; Vice President Lambuth Lookouts, ' 29; President Boys ' Dormitory, ' 29. (hie who never 1 arued his back, but marched breast forward. PRANCES HUNT. A. B., Secretary Humboldt, Tennessee Major, English. Minor. French. Y. W. C. A., ' 27, ' 28, ' 2 ' ), ' 3(1; Dramatic Club, ' 27: Fine Arts Club. ' 2 ' ), ' 30; French Club, ' 28, ' 29; Vice President French Club, ' 30; Basketball, ' 2b; Secretary Class, ' 30; O. W. L. She litis ti manner hue and gentle. antern BERNICE FANT, A. B., Vice President Jackson. Tennessee Major, English. Minor, Education. Y. W. C. A.. ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Lambulh Lookouts, ' 29, ' 30; B. S. A.; Vice President Class, ' 30. Heaven will help them that help themselves. JACK THURSTON KENT, A. B., Treasurer Jackson, Tennessee Major, Mathematics. Minor, Chemistry and Physics. Mouzon Literary Society, ' 25, ' 26; Engineers ' Club, ' 25, ' 26; President Engineers ' Club, ' 27; Pep Club, ' 25, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Vision Staff, ' 27; Business Manager Vision, ' 30; Tennis Club, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Lantern Staff, ' 30; Treasurer Senior Class, ' 30; Fine Arts Club, ' 30; Jackson-Lambuth Club, ' 29, ' 30. Study as if you were going to live forever; Live as if you were going to die tomorrow. Jackson, Tennessee PAULINE TOMERLIN, A. B. Major, English. Minor, Education. Centenary College, ' 26, ' 27 ; Phi Kappa Chi ; Feliz Club ; Glee Club ; Dramatic Club ; Secre- tary Class, ' 26; Blue Mountain College, ' 27, ' 28; Music Club; Euzelian Literary Society; Y. ' W. C. A.; Glee Club Lambuth College, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Fine Arts Club, ' 29. ' 30. Gentle, quiet, and unassuming. WILMA CHERRY. A. B. Jackson, Tennessee Major, Biology. Minor, Home Economics. Y. W. C. A., ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 28, ' 30; Vision Staff, ' 27, ' 30; Vice President Jackson-Lambuth Club, ' 29; President Jackson-Lambutb Club, ' 30; B. S. A., ' 30; Biology Laboratory Assistant, ' 30. Wit she hath without desire to make known haw much she hath. COMER HASTINGS. A. B. Memphis. Tennessee Major, Religious Education. Minor, History. Secretary Pastors ' Club, ' 27; Vice President Mouzon Literary Society, ' 28; Business Manager Lantern, ' 29; Vice President Y. M. C. A., ' 30; Manager Athletics, ' 30; President Student Body, ' 30; Vision Staff, ' 28, ' 2 C , ' 30; Lantern Staff, ' 30; Vice President Life Service Band, ' 27; Lambutri Lookouts, ' 29, ' 30; S. A. Fortune is not on the side of the faint heart. ANITA HERRON, A. B. Bemis, Tennessee Major, English. Minor, Education. Tennis Club, ' 26, ' 27; Y. W. C. A„ ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Lambuth Lookouts, ' 29; [ackson-Lambuth Club, ' 30; Secretary Class, ' 29; O. W. L. dree every man thine ear. but fezv lliv voice. t NELLE MOORE, A. B. McKenzie, Tennessee Major, English. Minor, French. Dramatic Club, ' 27, ' 28; Secretary Fine Arts Club, ' 29; President Fine Arts Club, ' 30; Sec- retary Y. W. C. A., ' 27; Treasurer Y. W. C. A., ' 28; Y. W. C. A., ' 29, ' 30; Vision Staff, ' 28, ' 30; Editor-in-Chief Vision, ' 29; Lantern Staff, ' 28, ' 29; Editor-in-Chief Lantern, ' 30; Secretary Class, ' 27; Vice President Class, ' 29; Les Treize Jeunes Francais, ' 29, ' 30; Presi- dent Les Treize Jeunes Francais, ' 30; Lambuth Lookouts, ' 29, ' 30; D. D. D. D. An excellent student is she. and a better friend. CLARENCE EVANS, A. B. Paducah. Kentucky Major, History. Minor, Education. Murray State Teachers College, ' 27; Lambuth Lookouts, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Fine Arts Club, ' 29, ' 30; Y. M. C. A., ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; President State Student Council Y. M. C. A., . ' 29, ' 30; Mem- ber Southern Field Council Y. M. C. A., ' 29, ' 30; Manager Tennis Club, ' 28; Business Mana- ger Vision, ' 29; Assistant Business Manager Lantern, ' 29; Mouzon Literary Society, ' 27, ' 28; President Class, ' 29; Glee Club, ' 27: S. A. . man with an aim zvill sooner or later he a man with a name. MARY AGNES OLIVER Union Citv, Tennessee Major, French. Minor, Mathematics. Y. W. C. A., ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Tennis Team, ' 28, ' 29; Les Treize Jeunes Francais, ' 29; Sec- retary I es Treize Jeunes Francais, ' 30; Fine Arts Club, ' 29, ' 30; O. W. L. There ' s no wisdom like frankness. n ELIZABETH HICKS, A. B. Jackson, Tennessee Major, English. Minor, History. Euzelian Literary Society, ' 26; Y. W. C. A., ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Vice President Y. W. C. A., ' 30; Tackson-Lambuth Club, ' 20, ' 30 ; Vice President Jackson-Lambuth Club, ' 30 ; Tennis Club, ' 26; Tennis Team, ' 28, ' 29, 30; O. W. L. A friend to all who know her. WALTER MISCHKE, A. B. Memphis, Tennessee Major, Religious Education. Minor. Biology. Emory University, ' 2d, ' 27; Y. M. C. A., ' 28, ' 2 ' ). Calm ami unruffled as the summer seas. LACY LASSTTER, A. II. Jackson, Tennessee Major, Latin. Minor, English. West Tennessee State Teachers College, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Romanus Senatus, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Y. W. C. A. Corresponding Secretary, ' 27, ' 28; Mathematics Club, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28: Kappa Lambda Sigma, ' 26, ' 27, ' 28; Lambutb College, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Y. W. C. A., ' 28, ' 29, ' 3(1- Tackson- Lambuth Club, ' 20, ' 30; B. S. A. . virtuous maiden, mild ami comely. antern ?m 6ttt 7rs afi i sto RITA PONTIUS. A. B. Jackson, Tennessee Major, Biology. Minor, Education. Basketball, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Captain Basketball, ' 29; All-Star Team Mississippi Valley Con- ference, ' 29 ; Tennis Team, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30 ; Secretary Class, ' 28 ; Vice President Y. W. C. A., ' 28; Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, ' 30; Dramatic Club, ' 27, ' 28; Lantern Staff, ' 29; Fine Arts Club, ' 29, ' 30; Vice President Fine Arts Club, ' 30 ; Editor-in-Chief Vision, ' 30; Pep Club; Jackson- Lambuth Club; Tenuis Club; O. W. L. Young and very fair, bright eyes and golden hair. New Orleans, Louisiana HAROLD STANLEY - Major, History. Minor, Education. Baseball, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30; Football, ' 27, ' 28; Y. M. C. A., ' 27. The pigskin likes your taking way; It ' s Deeds that count, not words, they say. KATHRYN HOPPER, A. B. Major, English. Minor, French. Union University ; Eunomian Literary Society ; Basketball, ' 27, ' 28, ' 29, ' 30 ; Y. W. C. A. ; Jackson-Lambuth Club, ' 30; B. S. A. Be silent and safe; silence never betrays you. Jackson, Tennessee At farting ( Dedicated to I he Senior Class. ) Now, at the parting ( )ur voices we raise To Lambuth, forever Singing thy praise — Thru passing years Tender memories to hold. Our Alma Mater Ne ' er to grow old. I [ail, then, to I .amhuth, The white and the blue, We shall be faithful And loyal to you. When we are far away We ' ll think of you each day, Live for you, and fight for you, All hail, Lambuth, hail! -Arthur A. Seeger. L HIAT ' ) V | rtp? ff= gyariifjrtr afc Juniors dlmtiur (Elasa (ifftrrra CHESTER I ' AKHAM. President ackson, Tennessee FRANCES REII). Secretary-Treasurer Jackson, Tennessee rtfr-r finr (Cantern ■ .■afe AARON WALKER, 7 ( v President COBY THKEADGILL CORNELIA LASSITER LAURENT JOHNSON Jackson, Tennessee Lexington, Tennessee Jackson, Tennessee Jackson, Tennessee LEORA BLEDSOE Huni1)ol(lt. Tennessee |. S. SCOTT Somerville, Tennessee herman j. burkett Blytheville. Arkansas ERIN LASS ITER [unting ' don, Tennessee (rtr £antern BURL SMITH ANNA BELLE SAMPLES REGINALD WADSWORTH ALTON FLATT Adamsville, Tennessee Memphis, Tennessee Medina, Tennessee Mercer, Tennessee mutrts SONNETS COMPOSED ON THINKING OF JUNIORS OF NEXT YEAR By D. McMai-ien It is to laugh.V and Terry ' s glee doth ring Around the campus. This is his great gift. So obvious that even grave men lift Their startled ears, to hear this ha-ha king. And snoring is another expert thing With Terrj - , and it oft a cloud will lift In English II, and our attention shift To hear him at the air such warbles fling. Church meetings are his long suit ; he will be No doubt a bishop in a long-tailed coat, Still laughing, snoring, joking. Other men. Ourselves perhaps, will his achievements see ! And when lie ' s placed among the men of note — Will laugh, and tell the wife, I knew him when — ! If cleanliness is godliness ' twould seem That Lucille Jones has pious been indeed. Since taking baths is her strict daily creed, Philosophy, tradition, goal, and dream. No rain-washed flower, drenched and glowing bright. Is half so fresh as Lucille. Every morn At six she wakes all Third — which hears with scorn Her splashing — and so on into the night. Her bathtub songs resound with joyous glee; As if to bathe were all the world desired — The shrill, high carol of her voice is fired With echoes of immortal melody; Her life ' s deep inner longings, faith and hope Are inextricably bound up in soap! There came the fall of nineteen twenty-eight To Lambuth a petite and blue-eyed child, Virginia. She knew naught of worlds so wild As this. (Thus innocence doth often rate.) The Heavy Villain entered. Dark and grave He looked the new group over. Only one The smallest, warmed his heart, just like the sun The flower. He became her slave. This story is continued; ' twill survive Those crushes soon to blossom, soon to fade ; True Love hath of itself a fortress made, Safe and secure. And it has kept alive Our Lambuth romance! May it never fall! As lasting as the ivv mi the wall! w « - Jumtern - Sophomores wphnmmT QUaes (ifftr ra !)( R  THY McMAHAN Secretary-Treasurer Brownsville, Tennessee BUTLER O ' HARA Preside- lit Hopkinsville, Kentucky Ng£ ' antern ANNA BELLE FOWLER Jackson, Tennessee EDWARD TERR Paducah, Kentucky RUBVE JACKSON Paris, Tennessee BOMAR MADDOX Paris, Tennessee GENE NICHOLS Vice-President Jackson, Tennessee RUTH LIPPARD Elbridge, Tennessee EULA McDANIELS Newbern, Tennessee STEADMAN BAGBY Benton, Kentucky EMILY HASTINGS Paris, Tennessee LOWELL COUNCIL Union City, Tennessee JENNIE WALTON Hopkinsville, Kentuckj FRANCES SHANNON Sharon, Tennessee IEUSTIS Le MON1) Alamo. Tennessee CAMILLE BOWLES Camden, Tennessee antern PANSY MAE GOWAN Jackson, Tennessee ELBERT VAUGHN Brazil, Tennessee LOUISE MULHERIN Brownsville, Tennessee McLVNN OVERALL Brazil, Tennessee ERNEST BALL Brazil, Tennessee UBYE MARTIN Bells, Tennessee NGIE MAE SWEATMAN Jackson, Tennessee VIRGINIA MARTIN Stanton, Tennessee FRANK BOWERS Brazil, Tennessee RHESA DAVIS Grand Junction, Tennessee EVELYN O ' NEAL Jackson. Tennessee STACY RIDDICK Friendship, Tennessee LUCILLE JONES I lumliolflt, Tennessee t intern ■ B r CMZ - « , a s GUY ARANT Elva, Kentucky ELIZABETH DOUGLASS Jackson. Tennessee MARY LOUISE BROOKS Jackson, Tennessee BEN RAGLAND Paris, Tennessee HAROLD BARKER irazil, Tennessee LUCILLE BESSENT Friendship, Tennessee MARYE ANNE FENNER Jackson, Tennessee .III IA CLAIRE DUFFEY East Tallassee, Alabama MANLEY WADS WORTH Medina, Tennessee HENRIETTA HALL Bells, Tennessee IMOGENE RUSHING Jackson, Tennessee CHARLES STAN FILL ackson, Tennessee rtr- w j aasaL lantern Freshmen t 3to0l|matt (Class GDffirrra G. B. HARRIS, TIT President ayetteville. Tennessee KATE HOLLAND Secretary Jackson, Tennessee HELEN (ANA HAN Treasurer Henderson, Tennessee rtr ■ u ' T trtf Jumtern asnrafi  gyy ary3 C. C. MILLER J ' ice-President Jackson, Tennessee SARAH SPANGLER Humboldt, Tennessee KATHERINE LANDIS averly, Tennessee HAMILTON HALEY Friendship, Tennessee ANNIE RACHEL CALDWELL Milan, Tennessee .MARTHA BALTHROI Memphis. Tennessee SARAH RHEA Somerville. Tennessee PERRY RIDDICK Maury City, Tennessee VIRGINIA COWAN Somerville, Tennessee REBECCA REAMS Henderson, Tennessee HELENE BROWN Bemis, Tennessee EDWIN DIGGS Paris. Tennessee EDNA NELL KENDAL1 Murray, Kentucky BEN MAYES Bethel, Tennessee DONNIE WRATHER Milan, Tennessee MATTIE LOU CALDWELL Milan, Tennessee WELDON OLIVER Medina, Tennessee EVELYN RUTH SMITH Jackson, Tennessee antern ■% i i vn- s aL is i s -m evr r mth ' ai t m JANICE NETHERV Humboldt, Tennessee DOROTHY WILKINSON Jackson, Tennessee MADGE MACKBEE Hells, Tennessee OREN GILLIAM Luray, Tennessee CHARLES THOMSON Humboldt, Tennessee MARY SUE BARNETT Humboldt, Tennessee ELIZABETH KENDALL Murray, Kentucky LILLIAN MARTIN Jackson, Tennessee DALE FRIEDLOB Jackson, Tennessee PAULINE WARD Williston, Tennessee ANTHAL FOWLER Kevil, Kentucky KATHLEEN THOMPSON Jackson, Tennessee LUTHER NABORS Corinth, Mississippi HAYS WATLINGTON Pinson. Tennessee GLADYS DAWSON Jackson. Tennessee RUTH GARNER Henning, Tennessee LYDA HENDRICKS Nashville. Tennessee WILLIAM BARNES Selmer, Tennessee MARY LOUISE BARNETT Humboldt, Tennessee LOUISE TOWNES Newbern, Tennessee WILBUR HARRINGTON Newbern, Tennessee ANNIE RUTH PARR Kerrville, Tennessee NOBLE WARREN Dyersburg, Tennessee ALICE MOORE Lavinia, Tennessee LILLIE MAI NEWMAN Jackson, Tennessee ORVAL WEIR Somerville, Tennessee SARAH McCAIN Jackson, Tennessee ANNE DAVENPORT Beech Bluff, Tennessee ELIZABETH McLEAin Jackson, Tennessee TOM LOVE ickson, Tennessee E-IELEN MOLER Jackson, Tennessee ELTON WINSLOW Jackson, Tennessee CHRISTINE PICKENS Jackson, Tennessee LOUISE WALDROPE Mayfield, Kentucky MARY LEE PETERS Malesus, Tennessee AUBRA ELAM Stoutsville, Missouri ) MARY MARGARET RAMSE Kenton, Tennessee FRANCES DAVIS Newliern. Tennessee FRANCES BLACKMON Jackson, Tennessee ROBERT NEWSOM Medina, Tennessee CHARLES BURNLEY Jackson, Tennessee IRENE MAYNARD Milan, Tennessee LOUISE HOPPER Jackson, Tennessee MARTHA THOMAS Jackson, Tennessee ROBERT McCLAREN B azil, Tennessee LUCY WHITE BLACKWELL Jackson. Tennessee HAZEL KEETON Medina, Tennessee MARYLU TOOMS ackson, Tennessee WILMA STANLEY :kson, Tennessee WILLIAM II. PEARIGEN ackson, Tennessee RUB YE CATHEY ( lakfield, Tennessee MYRTLE HENLEY Jackson, Tennessee HAYWCX ID SM I III Jackson, Tennessee PEARL POWELL Newliern. Tennessee 1 Watches COMER HASTINGS President of the Student Body The student body of Lambuth College, consisting of every student in the College, is an organization for the advancement of all projects affecting the College for good, and the annulment of all that are bad. The student body chose for its President this year Comer Hastings, the man about the College. Comer is one of the most popular seniors of the ' 30 year and has served well at his post. He has been justly honored in the bestowal of this office. The student body has been a vibrant force behind many of the best things for the College. The organization has bad five presidents : Bob Clark, ' 25; Alfred Taylor, ' 26; I ' .uford O ' Neal, ' 27; Alfred Taylor, ' 28; Raymond Council, ' 29; ( Corner Hastings, ' 30. Year by year this organization becomes more useful, and a very bright future is in prospect for it. antern ? = ' r sac r ICambuth ICnnkoutB ORGANIZED IN 1928 PURPOSE To Create an Interest in Lambuth College. OFFICERS COBY THREADGILL DOYNE YOUNG ANNA BELLE SAMPLES EMILY HASTINGS MEMBERS LEORA BLEDSOE HAMILTON HALEY ANNA BELLE FOWLER NELLE MOORE HEUSTIS LEMOND CLARENCE EVANS - President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary AARON WALKER COMER HASTINGS GENE NICHOLS DOROTHY McMAHAN NIT A HEBRON ' BCTLF.R O ' HARA RUTH LIPPABD L S. SCOTT EULA McDANIEI.S MANLEV WADSWORTH TMOGENE RUSHING EDWARD TERRY .Qxn Frances Reid Ekin I. ASS I I IK Rubye Jackson OFFICERS President Ei i z bet h II icks Wilma Cherry ----- Secretary-Treasurer Music Camille Bowles - - - Social Emily Hastings Programme Rita Pontius Vice-President Social Service - - Publicity • rtttr rti r r irtF ?rs t5 e 1930 Z - !5 -ar r+ tr 3 S -mi MOTTO: To make men aware in their thinking and acting of Jesus ' attitude toward persons. ' L M. (E. A. (ttahiurt I. DOYNE YOUNG - President COMER HASTINGS Vice-President UTTTI FT? (THAI? A C .,.„ ,,. r DWFT T rOTTNfTT T COMER HASTINGS _ Social Secretary WALTER MISCHKE World-Fellowship ( 1 ARFVf ' F FVANS p MEMBERS AARON WALKER STEADMAN BAGBY ALTON FLATT GENE NICHOLS EDWIN DIGGS C. ( ' . MILLER TOM LOVE WILBUR HARRINGTON NOBLE WARREN W. S. EVANS LUTHER NABORS WELDON OLIVER GUY ARANT CHESTER PARI! AM HARRY II. NEWSOM STACY RIDDICK II. L BURKETT W II.I.IAM BARNES G. B. HARRIS. III. BURL SM ITU HAYWOOD SM ITU 1. S. SCOTT EDWARD TERRY ROBERT NEWSOM WM. II. PEARIGEN HEUSTIS LEMOND HANS WATLINGTON ELTON WINS1 I  W REGINALD WADSWORTH antern SB S aCBM j ftrapjg gv«s •r i ! i I r i r- Gladys Tom Love, Mary Lee Peters, Evelyn O ' Neal, Kate Holland, Elizabeth McLeary Annabelle Fowler, Myrtle Henley, Angie May Sweatman, Nita Herron Haywood Smith, Wilma Cherry, Elizabeth Hicks, Frances Reid, Laurent Johnson (President) I Vice-President ) (Sec.-Treas. ) Dawson Maiv Ann F Rubye Cathey, Marylu Tooms, Lyda Hendricks, Pauline Tomerlin, [mogene Rushing Chester Parham, Lacy Lassiter, Martha Thomas, Helen Brown, Gene Nichols Hays Watlington, Christine Pickens, Lillian Max-tin, Bernice Fant, Dale Friedlob Rita Pontius, Mary Louise Brooks, Helen Moler, Kathryn Hopper Frances Blackmail Lillie Mae Newman C. C. Miller lack Kenl Kathleen Thompson Evelyn Kuth Smith Elizabeth Douglass, Wilma Stanley. Cornelia Lassiter, Sarah McCain Charles Stanfill, Pansy Mae Cowan. Lucy White Black-well, Louise Hopper, Aaron Walker rtr-mr ir flTtr (Cantern §. 1. §. 1. Founded at Lambuth College, 1924 COLORS: Red and Black FLOWER: Red Rose SPONSOR MISS PAULINE GORDON OFFICERS FRANC ES REID President JULIA CLAIRE DUFFEY - - Vice-President COBY THREADGILL ----------- Secretary NELLE MOORE ------------- Herald FOUNDERS VALDORA SEISSINGER JOHNNYE HILLIARD ALICE WELCH PATTIE SUE HURDLE MEMBERS IN COLLEGE Class of 1930 NELLE MOORE Class of 1931 COBY THREADGILL ERIN LASSITER FRANCES REID Class of 1932 CAMILLE BOWLES VIRGINIA MARTIN ANNABELLE FOWLER [MOGENE RUSHING MARY ANN FENNER LOUISE MULHERIN JULIA CLAIRE DUFFEY FRANCES SHANNON Pledge Class HELEN CANADY SARAH RHEA REBECCA REAMS KATE HOLLAND SARAH McCAIN HELENE BROWN LVDA HENDRICKS (§. W. «. Founded at Lambuth College, 1926 COLORS: Black and Gold FLOWER: Moonf lower SPONSOR MISS SARAH V. CLEMENT CHAPERON MISS LUCILLE WOMACK OFFICERS MARY LOUISE BROOKS President FRANCES HUNT ----------- Vice-President LEORA BLEDSOE Secretary RITA PONTIUS - Treasurer RUTH LIPPARD - Sentinel MEMBERS IN COLLEGE ANITA HERRON FRANCES HUNT Class of 1930 RITA PONTIUS ELIZABETH HICKS MARY AGNES OLIVER Class of 1931 LEORA CLEDSOE Class of 1932 DO ROT UN ' Mi MAM EN LUCILLE JONES EVELYN O ' NEAL EMILY HASTINGS RUBYE JACKSON EULA M( DANIELS RUTH LIPPARD MARY LOUISE BROOKS Pledge Class MARTHA BALTHROP SARA SPANGLER JENNIE WALTON LOUISE TOWNES HELEN MOLEK JANICE NETHER Y CHRISTINE PICKKENS MARY LOUISE HARNETT i r y ,-- - —..,- ' -v. - -v - - v.- - -v s ( f fS $ I k yiA =a=2 - r ± 1.  . A. Founded at Lambuth College, 1929 COLORS: Black and White FLOWER: White Rose SPONSOR MRS. RAWL OFFICERS WILMA CHERRY - ._.___.__. President CORNELIA LASSITER - - - Vice-President ELIZABETH DOUGLASS - Secretary-Treasurer LUCILLE BESSENT ------------ Sentinel FOUNDERS LUCILLE BESSENT ANNA BELLE SAMPLES LACY LASSITER ELIZABETH DOUGLASS CORNELIA LASSITER KATHRYN HOPPER BERNICE FANT WILMA CHERRY MEMBERS LOUISE HOPPER DONNIE WRATHER MATTTE LOU CALDWELL ANNA RACHEL CALDWELL IRENE MAYNARD HENRIETTA HALL ANGIE MAE SWEATMAN PANSY MAE COWAN GLADYS DAWSON LILLIE MAE NEWMAN MARY SUE BARNETT CATHERINE LANDIS KATHLEEN THOMPSON I.I 1. LI AN MARTIN LOUISE WALDROPE 2L 3. M. Founded at Lambuth College, 1929 COLORS : Blue and Silvei FLOWER : Siveet Pea SPONSOR MISS KATHARINE CLEMENT OFFICERS MARTHA THOMAS ----------- President MARYLU TOOMS - --------- Vice-President EDNA NELL KENDALL ----------- Secretary ANNIE RUTH PARR Corresponding Secretary RUBY MARTIN Treasurer LUCY WHITE BLACKWELL ---------- Reporter MARY MARGARET RAMSEY Sergcant-at-Arms WILMA STANLEY - - Representative Student Council MEMBERS LUCY WHITE BLACKWELL RUBY CATHEY FRANCES DAVIS ANTRAL FOWLER RUTH GARNER MYRTLE HENLEY ELIZABETH KENDALL EDNA NELL KENDALL MADGE MACKBEE ALICE MOORE RUBY MARTIN ELIZABETH McLEARY ANNIE RUTH PARR MARY LEE PETERS PEARL POWELL MARY MARGARET RAMSEY INEZ SMITH EARLINE SMITH EVELYN RUTH SMITH WILMA STANLEY MARYLU TOOMS MARTHA THOMAS I ' All [NE WARD HAZEL KEETON antern antern jf. aa. i ar Qfe Sirs ®rrig? 3)pmtrB itfranrats LES OFFICIERS MLLE. KATHARINE CLEMENT - - Celui Qui se Rend Caution MLLE. NELLE MOORE ---------- _ r President. MLLE. FRANCES HUNT - - - - Lc Vice-President MLLE. MARY AGNES OLIVER ...... Lg Secretaire MLLE. FRANCES REID ---------- Le Tresoirer LES MEMBRES MLLE. LUCILLE BESSENT MLLE. LOUISE MULHERIN M. FRANK CROSS M. HAMILTON HALEY MLLE. RUBYE JACKSON MMLE. IMOGENE RUSHING M. ALLAN FERGUSON M. HEUSTIS LeMONDE M. ARTHUR SEEGER IGambutb ministerial Irntbrrlinnfi OFFICERS HERMAN J. BURKETT WM. S. EVANS EDWIN J. DIGGS President I ' ice-President Secretary DOYNE YOUNG WM. J. BARNES LOWELL B. COUNCIL LUTHER NAI ' .ORS ALTON ELATT MEMBERS WM. II. PEARIGEN STACY RIDDICK AUBRA ELAM GUY W. ARANT HARRY II. NEWSOM NOBLE WARREN COMER HASTINGS EDWARD H. TERRY The Log Eantcrn 8 taff NELLE MOORE - - - Editor-in-Chief GENE NICHOLS - - - Business Manager COMER HASTINGS - - First Assistant Business Manager C. C. MILLER -------- Second Assistant Business Manager COBY THREADGILL - - - Assistant Editor BUTLER O ' HARA - - - Humorist FRANCES REID AARON WALKER | ' Snapshot Editors RUB YE JACKSON - JACK KENT - - ' ■ Studmi Activities Editors DOROTHY McMAHEN - - HEUSTLS Le MOND ( ' ' ' ' Arts Editors EMILY HASTINGS - Literary Editor CHESTER PARHAM .-.--. Sports Editor CHARLES ROSS - - Artist antern IGamhuth Hisiau STAFK : RITA PONTIUS Editor-in-Chief EMILY HASTINGS « Associate Editor COMER HASTINGS I BOMAR MADDOX s l ' r l Editors RUBYE JACKSON - - - Exchange Editor WILMA CHERRY , NELLE MOORE - - f S7t«fcn . - ,- 7w . v Editors ERIN LASSITER - - - - - - - - - - - Joke Editor COBY THREADGILL MA in LOUISE BROOKS - Society Editors DOROTHY McMAHEN - Poet JACK KENT .... Business Manage BURL SMITH - - ...... Assistant Manager FRANCES SHANNON Circulation Manager C. C. MILLER - - - - ,OWELL COUNCIL Reporters antern t BUTHVISLON, •4 Newbern, Tennessee, December 28, 1930. Dear Jenny : This is the last time I will ever take my pen in hand for you. All is over among us. I felt it comin for some time Jenny. Today among some letters that I have got durin the holidays I run acrost one from Butler O ' Hara. He told me all about this fellow Harry Carloss. He says you been takin him around with you everywhere. Thats the kind of a fello I imajined he was, Jenny, but I ' m surprized at you. He says your awful fond of him hes so cute. I aint cute an aint never pretended to be. A mans man. Thats me all over, Jenny. He says he went up to your house the other night an he was sittin in your lap stickin his tongue out at my pictur on the mantle-piece. After that, Jenny, theres nothin to say. So I repeat, its all over among us. I ' m returnin today by parcels post the red flannels an the little doo-dad what you put annul your neck an whats left of the writin paper an also your pictur. Most of the stuff aint been used much. The pictur has some mud on it cause I had to put it in the bottom of my suitcase to keep from bendin it and my shoes came next. The sox I cant send back cause I sold em to Noble an you wouldnt want em now. The stuff that your mother sent me im going to keep. She wasnt my girl an she didnt have to seaid all that stuff if she didnt want to while ' I was at Lambuth. As for all the things I have give you, Jenny, keep em. I dont want em no more. I aint even goin to menshun all the money Ive spent on you for movies an sodas an the Lord knows what not. I aint the kind of a fello to throw that up to a fello or even menshun it in no ways. I kept track of it though in a little book. It comes to $28.27 an some odd sense. An I aint agoin to hold it up against you that I been savin in the bank for most three months sos to have a little somethin towards that hous with the green blinds. And that I got somethin like §23.22 in the bank if you can believe what that eagle beak in the cage rites in your book. All wasted you might say, when you think of the fun I might have had with it in the last three months goin to midnite shows, etc. Those things we ' ll just forget. You seem to have already. I guess this will hit your father an mother pretty hard cause Mrs. Walton seemed to like me purty well. They got nobody to blame but yourself. On the other hand its goin to please some girls that I know at least for a little while till I leave. No, I won ' t be back to Lambuth after Xmas. I ' m agoin to join the. navy or get on a boat goin to the farthest end of Africa or somewhere an bury myself away from civilization an wimmin. So its a poor wind that dont blow nobody round as the poets say. I guess you wont here much about the poets any more Jenny. Accordin to what Butler said about him about all youll here is Carloss. I hate a man what talks about himself. An now, Jenny, Im closin for the last time. It wont be no use runin to the door when you here the postman no more cause he wont have nothin but the telephone bill. From now on tin- only way youll here from me is through Noble. Now Im goin to ask you a favor for old times sake. Take the pictur I had taken out on the frunt steps of Epworth Hall and burn it up. You cant have that to show your friends no more an I aint agoin to have no flat foot makin faces at it. I may lie selfish, Jenny, but a girl cant make a cake an eat it as the old savin is. Give my best to your father and mother. Tell em I sympathize with them in there loss. Its no use ritin any more cause Im firm as the rock of Gibber Alter. Concrete. Thats me all over, Jenny. as ever yours no longer WILBUR. Parties (Srto-Jrmt ijtBinry, 1929 Displaying exceptional drive and power, and fighting as true Eagles always have and always will, the- Lambuth pig-skin artists made a name for themselves this year. When the call was made for the training camp to begin this fall, the old sod quivered under the digging cleats of the anxious Eagles ; the air was rent with the battle cries, and as the pig-skin was passed, kicked, and handled by de- termined candidates, the inevitable quill began to move slowly over the scroll, and history was being made. The crisp, cool day of fall came; the battles were fought, watched from the side lines by admiring, enthusiastic thrill-seekers. The thrills came thick and fast and as the noble feats, the dauntless courage, and sagacious prowess of the Eagles were displayed, the season moved on. Driven to the wall and showing sportsmanship that is always commendable, they lost; surging down the field, hacked by the weird screams of would be Eagles, they won. And this is how the story goes. Of the eight games played they lost two non-conference games, but in the Mississippi Vallev Conference games played they won three, tied one, and lost two. Yes — a fine conference record. When Lambuth defeated Mississippi Delta Teachers to the tune of 21-12, the climax was reached, and the events shall live forever in the minds and hearts 01 every true alumnus. Our Eagles are watching from safe pinnacles of 1929 the appearance of the quarry when the 1930 season opens. antern Athletics • JOHNSON, All Mississippi Conference Quarter — again this year, renowned through- out the Tri-States for his brainy head-work and broken field running; swift and Lke a flash he is gone — weaving and bobbing. 1930 will be his big year. MANAGER HASTINGS, when the business needed attention he was t he man to see, and a good one, too. BURKETT, guard— could he tackle and stop them in their tracks? You should see him in action. They don ' t come too big and fast for this man to get. Another big mm for 1930. BALL, a great player in all departments of any game.. He could snag a pass from out of the ether as if he had a magnet in his hands — always working for a good team. I). YOUNG, a passer, par-excellence, and a half-back that knew where to run, where the others were not. — Four years with the Eagles and four stripes on his sweater, a great football record. rtp gs gyarjr, J±antern OVERALL— Red, here ' s a great Bra- zilian who fought for Lambuth as all Bra- zilians do. R. WADSWORTH, working hard all time — Reg isn ' t as verbose as his brother — he works like a Turk in that line, too. GILLIAM, the big pugilistic frosh from Lexington, always there when you need him most. He made a good football man. N. YOUNG, half-back, one of the tough- est and best football carriers that the Arkan- sas schools have produced. He made foot- ball history in Lambuth. SCOTT, center, Captain-elect — A hard, sure tackier, and one of the most dependable line men ever produced from the ranks of the Eagles. You couldn ' t run a steam-roller over him. Sturdy as an oak and sure as the North Star, he is piloting the 1930 squad. NICHOLS — End— but in truth a begin- ning, too. Gene is a man you can depend on to play the. game, hard, squire, and fair. (jive us more Genes. M. WADSWOKTH, Art Shires — nut sed, big and you can bet he will stop his man. WALKER, a great full-back. When he puts a boot behind the ball, you can jot it down as a punt that will travel. He kicked the Eagles out of many tough places — on the gridiron. antern Saafcrtball SHOOT! — and that is what they did. The Lambuth five made a super- record this season. They had a wealth of material and, displaying the usual ability, brought out by excellent coaching, they brought many victims into the fold. Here ' s the way it ended; they played 18 games and won 12, and lost 6. This represents some hard work and real basketball playing. Bowers was high-point man for the season with 182 points to his credit. Captain Ball played a great game at guard this season, and to him is due much credit for this splendid record. A few facts : Total points for season 595 Average points per game 31 Total opponent ' s points for season 544 Average points per game for opponents 29 The boys had a tough break at the tournament this year at West Tennessee Teachers ' College ; yet they played a great game. Two of the outstanding games were the West Tennessee Teachers ' game here and the Mississippi Delta game here. We all remember the ability displayed at both events. CAPTAIN BALL, the cool-headed guard who kept things in hand, as well as the ball, a fine dribbler, an accurate long-shot artist. BARKER, a quick, hard player, who contributed many needed points at the Hght time. Little but loud, — that ' s Barky. BOWERS, — high point man and a great forward. Lie saved the day many times bv his keen work under the basket. HALEY, — Ham, a center who was up to now, and a big main-stay on the team. Ham filled the basket full many times. antern ■Evf r ? T tt ROBERTSON, a consistent player who went as long as there was breath left in him. Many long shots were chalked to his credit. WALKER — here he is again; a dependable man who was always ready to go for the good he could do the team. Walker is the old crip-shot artist. M. WADSWORTH— could he take them off the blackboard? And how! A steadv man was Wads. OVERALL, a hard-working guard and a dependable man. That ' s Red - watch him next year. s mzo (Eti-iEiJ laakrtball The Co-eds made a good record this year. In fact it was one which Lambuth is proud of. It takes a lot of hard work, pluck, skill, and a little luck to he rep- resenting our Alma Mater on the basketball court. When you produce the sextette that Coach Lucile Womack did, it makes all hearts heat a little faster. The girls furnished some real basketball playing throughout the season, showing that they were well coached. Ernest Ball assisted in the coaching and made a good job of it, too. The students are looking forward to next season when a number of the old stars will he hack and are anxious to see what the Frosh girls will contribute to the basketball sextette of Lambuth. Those entitled to wear the coveted L are: Annie Rachel Caldwell. Lucille Jones, centers; Eula McDaniel, Anna Hell Samples, and Sara Spanglcr, guards; Rita Pontius and Captain Coby Threadgill, forwards. ' imiTiiFi jCantern THREADGILL, forward— Captain Coby ; with aim as true as a perfect arrow, Coby hit the basket — a great shot from all sides of the court, and a hard-working forward ; Coby deserves our highest esteem. PONTIUS, covering the floor, passing to Coby or making a goal were Rita ' s special- ties. For four years Rita has fought for Lambuth, and now What a whale of a dif- ference a few stripes make. JONES, jumping center. If you wanted to see some real jumping and fighting for that ball, Lucile could sure show it when she had the notion. Lucile was a valuable player, and we hope she comes buck ' next year to pul Lambuth up to now in basketball. CALDWELL, running center, although just a Frosh, worked hard and soon made a position on our sextette. She could pass well, and cover the floor like a veteran. We ' re expecting great things of Caldwell next vear. SPANGLER, guard, another Frosh. who made a valable player. Sara fought for all she was worth. If you didn ' t see her duck her head with a determination that always wins, well — you have something to live for ; she got the ball, too. SAMPLES, guard, displaying the same ability for two years. Abie has developed into a real basketball player. Lambuth sure needs loyal players like Abie. McDANIEL, guard. Eula was all over the forward she guarded all the time. That is what a guard is supposed to be, if she can keep from fouling. Eyla met the re- quirements, ask Cv. Nr antern p i p OFFICERS MARYE ANN FENNER - - - Cheer Leader COBY THREADGILL Assistant Cheer Leader BUTLER O ' HARA - _■____ Assistant Cheer Leader The original Pep Ciub was composed of sixteen members and was organized in 1926. But this year it was decided that the whole student body was needed to add volume to the yells ; so with Mayre Anne Fenner as Cheer Leader and Threadgill and O ' Hara as her as- sistants, the whole student body loyally stood by the teams and yelled like — well, words can ' t tell you ! It was a grand season for Lambuth ! The spirit shown both by the teams and those who played the sidelines was worthy of highest praise. A large number of rooters made several trips with the team and sent up war cries for the fighting Eagles. At the U. T. Jr. game there was a whole rootin ' section that broadcasted yells of victory when a certain man (ask Coby Threadgill if you don ' t know who he is) made that famous 85 yard run. With Bro. Walker helping yell, the Lambuthites almost broke the mike. As has been mentioned in the aforesaid, Mayre Anne Fenner was chosen as Cheer Leader, and, oh daddy, what a cheer leader ! She was nothing but one little bundle of pep. Coby Threadgill, who had an unusually close relationship with the squad, never shirked her duty. Threadgill and Fenner! A great team that worked wonders with tired business men who came to watch but not to yell. Butler O ' Hara ' s help was a big factor in the pep machine of ' 2°- ' 30. He can always be depended on for help in any situation. Wheal O ' Hara does things lie d les ' em right ! It takes cooperation in any ole thing and if the students will keep up the old spirit and be ever ready to support the teams it won ' t be long until the M. Y. C. titles will he written by Lambuth ' s name. HaarbaU In the spring of 1929 Lambuth had a great baseball team. They played 12 games and won 10 of them. That is one of the best records that any athletic team from Lambuth has ever made. This year we are looking forward to a record just as great. Coach Eagle, a great player himself, has a nucleus of four letter men around which to build a team, and although this is going to be a hard job, the whole squad has started working with a big boom. A good many colleges are dropping baseball due to the short season. How- ever, Lambuth, believing in the educational values derived from baseball training, has retained the national pastime. Coach Eagle stresses the brain work connected with baseball, and a horsehide-artist has to use his head for something besides a hat-rack, if he wants to chase the pill around the diamond, donned in a Lambuth uniform. A hard schedule has been arranged including U. T. Jrs., Bethel, Murray, and Freed-Hardeman. Shot-gun Evans will twirl the apple this year again, and Stanley will be on the receiving end with Doc Young at short and Johnson in the outfield. The remaining positions are being hotly contested for. Srmtia Gaining in popularity, tennis has won a place at Lambuth. At the first signs of Spring the Lambuth tennis squads, swarmed over the courts, and Coach Cross had a bunch of prospective Helen Wills and Big Bill Tildens. Our inter-class tournament is being planned for both girls and boys in order to get the winners on the regular college team. Games are being arranged witb other schools in the Conference, and a great season is being anticipated. Cy Miller wields a wicked racket, and it is expected that be will win laurels for Lambuth this year in the realm of the tennis world, both in single matches and doubles. Walker working with him in the doubles. ySm y N N Seamanship Jfftnr Arts (Club ( )FFICERS NELLE MOORE ______ President RITA PONTIUS _____ Vice-President DOROTHY McMAHEN - - Secretary-Treasurer EDWARD TERRY Stage and Property Manager j. LAURENT JOHNSON - Business Manager FACULTY ( )F FINE ARTS The Fine Arts Club, with its three divisions, the Glee Club, the Dramatic Club, and the Orchestra, has seen a very successful year. The Glee Club, organized and directed by Mr. Seeger, has very creditably presented a number of songs and choruses for chapel programs and public entertainments. The Dramatic Club, directed by Miss Katharine Clement, has continued its work of presenting short skits and variety programs front time to time, and staging two important plays during the year. The first, The Ghost Bird, given in the winter quarter, was played to a record audience, with tremendous success. Monthly programs base been effective in giving all members a chance to take) part in dramatic work. The Orchestra, also under Mr. Sccgcr ' s direction, has made remarkable progress. lie- sides playing for numerous chapel programs and plays, it has added quite a bit to the Club treasury by private performance. The Student Loan Fund, which the Fine Arts Club oilers yearly, has been put upon a permanent basis, and plans are being made for its enlargement, as the Club increases in size. C3fea ante r£ x3 i e ml te r? E s S ej ARTHUR A. SEEGER VIOLINS: Arthur A. Seeger Essie Reed Glover SAXAPHONE: Lois Clampitt TRUMPET: Chester Parham TROMBONE: C. C. Miller DRUMS: Joe Ragsdale PIANO: Erin Lassiter GDrrlj stra Director Scene from THE GHOST BIRD THE GOOSE HANGS HIGH By Lewis Beach May. 1929 THE CAST Bernard Ingals Marian H. Mathis Eunice Ingals Nelle Moore Noel Duly Raymond Council Leo Day Raymond Wilson Rhoda Willie Maude Thompson Julia Murdocl Rita Pontius Mrs. Bradley Dorothy McMahen Hugh Ingals Paul Robinson Ronald Murdock Walter Mischke Lois Ingals Katherine Maxwell Bradley Ingals Harry Williams Dagmar Carroll Frances Shannon Ellion Kimberly Heustis Le Mond THE GHOST BIRD By Neil E. Schaft i r January. 1930 THE CAST Andalusia Anderson Rita Pontius Will Belmont G. B. Harris Tobias Tolliver Laurent Johnson M rs. I tore Emily Hastings ( larl Thomas Butler O ' Hara Catherine Belmont Marye Ann Fenner Philip Graham I leu si is Le Mond Brad Buckhart Clarence Evans ( leleste Rubye Jackson Bella Walker, Annie Bloom Dorothy Me M alien. Sara Spangler Jenkins Comer Hastings A, SLcimbuth College ! Jackson, Tennessee | 4 Liberal Arts Course of Four Years Leading to the A. B. Degree. Standard Requirements for En- trance and Graduation. Emphasis on Thorough Class Work. Attention to Individual Needs. Properly Supervised Physical Ed- ucation Program for Both Men and Women. g ( Christian Influences. f Lambuth College is a Standard Mem- ber of the Tennessee College Associa- tion and is Granted Full Certification Privileges bv the State Board of Edu- eation. For Catalogue, write RICRARD E. IDOmACK, President | t «r •§■ • 2 2 2 Appreciation t It is on this page that the Student Body of Lambuth College and the I Staff of the 1930 Lantern wish to ex- I press their sincere appreciation of the co-operation, on the part of firms and I individuals, that has made this book I possible. ! — THE STAFF. t f ! COOPER ' S PHARMACY ! •f | J. M. COOPER, Proprietor | Drugs, Sodas, Cigars | Phone 1089 Corner Campbell and King Streets f $ DELIVERY SERVICE ANYWHERE $ «fr S I «  I ' ' 1 ' ' £ 1 T 4 I v ? ' % + 1 S i fr 8 3E 8 1 I I X I I ! I I ! I £ I ! I I I I % I | g | y l i l $ X , X ' X I ' I I I !  I I I I • I ! % 4 fe £ 1 I I I ) ! McCALL-HUGHES § W ! CLOTHING CO. f ! The 1 | | CLOTHING AND FURNISHING % Primrose Shoppe goods for men and boys I •f ■£. Ladies Ready-to-W ear t , ' i Corner Lafayette and Church Streets Exceptwnale ¥ | Phone 721 | I | DISCOVERIES BY CHRIS % i •!• % Dedicated to the Lambnth Faculty 4 Not many wars ago old Chris Colombo poked his forequarters out of bis quarters on the % deck of his three ships and focussed his luminous prestolites on a distant dark spot. Hot It dog! he yelled, I see the Rocky Mountains and smell the Rocky Mountain goats! This is j| India, all right! Then seizing a speaking tube in his teeth, he yelled to the engineer, More t wind! Step on ' er ! We ' ll eat in Chicago tonight! % % With an increased head of breeze, the little ships sped onward. Soon they were as close to land as bootleg is to the grave. _ ;j T Chris stood silent, with his feet on the deck and his hands on his hips. At last, he T murmured, the goal is reached! We are here before the Statue of Liberty and may call the .3. f land our own. Tie her up to the rock, gang, and we will find some water; I ' m sick and tired If. of living on nothing but wine and beer. $ No sooner had Colombo and his crew transferred from the mainmast to the mainland if than the shore became lined with thousands of natives. Heavens, said Colombo, unscrew J my necktie. Have I got ' em right with respect to number and color? Look at the red Chinks! f Methinks that I see, an opportunity for personal gain. ■ ' . • _i ,1 _ j.1__ J.,.- ,,-C 4-1,.. 4I, ,., ( •U;Ul,-,,,i t -,wl 1-,,. ««ritVi tli-.t -V 1 Tolcnn tp:ir in Chris stepped to the center of the throng. Children, said he with that Al Jolson tear in 4. bis voice, I have here a little object which makes the poor rich and the rich wealthy. Then be produced a put-and-take top, and the slaughter began. .g, •f For eight days the top spun and spun, the Indians put and put, and Colombo took and •!• J) took. Soon Chris was a millionaire, while the Indians had only their brains left, or their f «f equivalent, which was nothing. •£• •!• One old Indian, however, took no part in the gambling, hut sat apart with a pained look- 3| .,11 his map. Why, asked Chris, don ' t you join in the mad scramble and win some of the j| white man ' s gold, as did your brothers: Sir, replied the ancient red man, I never bite on another man ' s game. I am a wise T % old marble, and 1 never roll in the wrong direction. I know everything and do nothing hut .f. think. I am some guy — don ' t fool with me. % That night, when Chris made out his report, he dictated tlmsly to his stenog. : Dear !$. Oueen - mong the main interesting objects of this land, I have discovered a college prof. 4« t A V £ £S an v r 4 4i 4a 4t 4t4i 4 a 4 4 l 4 a i|i |t 4 4 4 a | 4 I 4 a 4 ( 4. 4i l a { a 4 l 4 a 4 a a 1 i| 4 4 a a . a | l ( a j . .4 t s,4a| l DID YOU SEE— Elbert Vaughn ' s walk — like that of a worn out mule plodding homeward when the cur- few tolls the knell of parting day? Harold Barker guarding an opposing star in basketball ? Brother Walker at football games, especially the Lambuth-U. T. Jr. game, when he nearly picked himself baldheaded? Martha Balthrop when she first went into History III class? Lyda Hendrix clipping precious locks of hair from the heads of Stacey Riddick and Dick Gillam? The dummy which greeted Ed Terry one Sunday night when he reached his room? G. B. Harris and Rubye Jackson one night when they arrived walking home from play practice for the Ghost Bird at high school? (They were turning off the lights and got left— Haw!) Mr. Fenner at a certain very dramatic moment of this aforesaid play, The Ghost Bird? Dorothy McMahon when she called her Charlie out of Mr. Moore ' s class the first day after he returned from the hospital ? Yankee Walden in Political Science Class immediately after he had so eagerly paid $3.35 for that wonderful book with the good intentions of studying it from kiver to kiver? Sleepy Evans when the barber extracted a hairpin from his hair ? Bomar Maddox when he listened so intently and whole-heartedly to the theory of De- crease of Productivity in Economics? Mr. Cross ' pink shirt and rose-colored tie? SOUL OF TACT A well-known speaker lectured to the members of the Y address O ' Hara. the secretary, approached him with a check, that it might be devoted to some charitable purpose. Would you mind, asked O ' Hara, if we add it to our special fund Not at all, said the speaker. What is the special fund for? To enable us to get better lecturers next year. M. C. A., and at the end of his This he politely refused, saying ♦♦  £ «£ J •!••$••!• •£ •!• •!•• ••?. •! ■ . • • v ' ti. j . .A . . .  ± Brooks News Co. Memphis Commercial Appeal All the Leading Dailies South Liberty Street PHONE 217 New Southern Hotel AND Coffee Shop Always Welcome Lambuth Students DROP IN I THE COPPER KETTLE TEA ROOM PHONE 1136 206 West Baltimore • • •{• . ••{.•{• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . WE ARE FOR LAMBUTH CITY LUMBER COMPANY All Kinds of Building Material Service and Courtesy JACKSON, TENNESSEE 1 £ $ £ The Discriminating- Student Buys at The G. H. Robertson Company COLLEGIATE CLOTHES— by Hickey FREEMAN and HART, SCHAFFNER MARX Knox and Dobbs Hats Clapp and Walk-Over Shoes Manhattan Shirts Alligator Collegiate Rain Coats Corner Main and Market Streets McGEE-ROSS HARDWARE CO, 209-211 E. Lafayette Phones, 2548-2549 S P McGEE-ROSS CHEVROLET CO. Corner College and Church f 1 j? The niRr.rimiratino- % The G. H. Robertson $ | HART, SCHAFFNER MARX t If, Clapp and Walk-Over Shoes % f v • Alligator Collegiate Rain Coats ♦i« 4 || Corner Main and Market Streets °!j  S. M. LAWRENCE COAL COMPANY Wholesale and Retail C oal Best Grades for All Purposes Coal Yard, M. 0. R. R. and Chester St. PHONE, 6 Acton Coal Gives Best Results Always antern 4 4 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 « v 4 ' ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' FOUST-POUNDS POSTER ADV. CO. Outdoor Advertising in 135 Towns JACKSON, TENNESSEE The Frances Shoppe Ladies ' Ready-to -Wear and Millinery Ultra Fashioned Apparel For the Co-Ed 1871 Fifty-nine Years of Service 1930 HOLLAND ' S Congratulates Lambuth College on its Growth and Development A College Student Should Wear QUALITY CLOTHES IF IT COMES FROM THIS STORE YOU MAY DEPEND ON ITS BEING CORRECT IN STYLE AND QUALITY DRY GOODS CL OTHING READY TO WEAR . . • • • • {• . . ..{. . . . . ..t. 1 CAWTHON-TATE Whippet Willys Sixes AUTOMOBILES Sales — Service 206-8-10 West Main Yandell and Conger O BUILDING MATERIAL and CONCRETE BUILDERS JACKSON, TENNESSEE ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦ •♦ •♦♦♦• • •♦♦ • •♦♦♦♦• • •♦• ♦♦ ' ♦♦ ' ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦• ' ♦ ♦ • • • • • • • • • • • • . . If J 3K3 u3faE2 4 , 4 ' 4 ' 4 a ! , 4 a 4 ' 4 4 4 4 4 , 4 4 4 , 4 4 a 4 , 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ao ! a 4 4 , 4 ,, 4 a 4 4 4 4 ' 4 4 ' 4 , ' ! ,a z ,a l a l a l 4 a 4 4 , t 4 4 4 a ! l ,aS SPRING THESE EXPRESSIONS WATCH RESULTS: $ 4 ON THE FOLLOWING PEOPLE AND Doc Young — Quack, quack. G. B. Harris — Meow ! Show me Jackson. Sara Spangler — Will you give me counsel? Nelle Moore — Slowly but surely I ' m gettin ' sleepy . Diggs — No dinner today. Comer Hastings — Which road leads to Martin? Scott — Rio Rita. Ed Terry — How ' s your heart ? Guy Arant — How ' s the widow? Sara McCain — Do you Rita Pontius — Great Scott! Lowell Council — A Little Kiss Each Morning, A Little Kiss Sleepy Evans — The curfew tolls the Knell of parting day. Stacey Riddick — Beautiful songbirds. Virginia Martin — Como esta usted? Coby Threadgill — Gimme nickels every time. Bomar Maddox — Don ' t resist me, speedy. Mayre Ann Fenner — Fickleness, thy name is woman. Mr. Walden — Three O ' Clock in the Morning. Lucille Bessant — Rose-covered bowers. Dorothy McMahon — Charlie, my boy ! Catherine Landis — Special ! Noble Warren — I hope, you don ' t feel hurt. Martha Thomas — Here ' s an absence blank that isn ' t signed. Frank Bowers — Friendship is wonderful but I am bashful. Aaron Walker — Are you a saxophonist? You seem to be rather Helen Moler — Love, love, love ! Eula McDaniel — See, see on Friday night? Miss Young — We have visitors for dinner. Johnson — Hocus, pocus. Miss Fletcher — May I see my record? beai Each Night. md of reeds. fr t i fr i l I ' I I v i I I I I  ' I I ' I ' i 3 • v I I i I ' ) '  ' V l I ' I  i % 4 I 1 ' I I ' I ' I ' ' I ' I I I I I ' I ' ' I ' ' I ' I ' ' I  I ' I ' I ' -tr-ll - antern zge - - 4 a 4 a 4 4 , 4 4 4 , 4 a 4 a 4 4 4 4 a 4 a 4 , 4 , { , 4 , 4 a 4 i 4 4 4 a I , 4 ' 2 4 , 4 , 4 ' a i 4 , 4 a 4 4 4 | 4 , 4 4 , 4 4 , { , 4 a 4 4 , 4 4 4 l , i , 4 ' 4 ' 4 ' l a 4 4 , 4 , 4 ' 4 4 4 a l Congratulations to the Class of 1930 A PUBLIX THEATRE PARAMOUNT PICTURES ALWAYS A Phone 48 GOOD SHOW JACKSON, TENNESSEE f Thompson Baking Co. Jackson, Tennessee ASK FOR BUTTERNUT or AUNT BETTY BREAD AT YOUR GROCER The Bootery Jackson, Tenn. Beautiful Shoes and Hosiery Jackson ' s Only Exclusive Ladies ' Shoe Store Headquarters for DIAMONDS, WATCHES And FINE JEWELRY GIFTS FOR GRADUATION G. H. Geer Jewelry Co. The Oldest Jewelers in Jackson White Drug Co. 207 E. Main St. JACKSON, TENN. Prescriptions Toiletries Candies Fortune ' s All-Cream ICE CREAM PHONE 3000 • •{. . . .•{■ .. ••{• •{. •{. • . T Congratulations, Class of 1930 With Best Wishes For Your Success BEARE ICE AND COAL COMPANY ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ , i , ' J , ' f ,, i ,,, l , ' i , , i , , ' l , ' , i 4 4 ' «i '  «i   4.4« « . 4.4. . , I 4« Pearce Brothers Shoe Shop 121 Highland PHONE 730 FREE DELIVERY SATISFACTION GUARANTEED When You Think % You Can  |«Sa •}«•{• !$••{• ({•• •{••gagfi •{••{• A .J. .J. .$. .J. •$..?. .J. .£. ♦. -J «J« A« 4 Star Laundrv and Jackson Cleaners of Shoe Repairing, Think of Us Always Depend on Us Phone 2123 Learning While Serving From boyhood it was said of Abra- ham Lincoln that he was a learner . In his ambition to post himself he sat at the feet of whoever could teach him. In time he overtopped them all. The learner rises above his com- petitors in all life ' s activities. He masters conditions because he learns all about them. We sit at the feet of the public, wherever we have stores, learning and posting ourselves of the needs of home and person as best we can. Diligently applying ourselves to the responsible task of providing those needed when needed is the virtue to which may be traced much of the ex- traordinary development of this com- pany. J. C. Pennev Co. 109 E. Lafayette St. JACKSON, TENNESSEE McKenzie Bakery Home of Blue Ribbon and Milk Bread PHONE 1005 antern t 4 4 4r ' fr ' ' f Always in the Market for OAK and WALNUT LOGS Wood-Mosaic Company, Inc. Jackson, Tennessee Rosser Shoe Co. Shoes of Quality- Shoes of Style Shoes of Price BUY STEGALL ' S SHOES AAA to EEE CORRECT STYLE— POPULAR PRICES 118 East Lafayette Williamson Supply Company The House of Good Candies 209 W. Lafayette Phone, 1725 f ' ! ' ' ! ' ' ! ' ! ' WILSON-GEYER COMPANY 307 East Main Street WALLPAPER — PAINT — GLASS MIRRORS — ARTIST ' S SUPPLIES Don ' t Say Varnish, Say 16 MID-WEST Dairy Products Co. MANUFACTURERS Quality Ice Cream Pasteurized MILK and CREAM Phones, 322, 608 JACKSON, TENNESSEE •I ' V i OLDSMOBILE 6 V. Type VIKING 8 ' Hub City Oldsmobile Company 255-257 West Lafayette Street Jackson, Tennessee Anything Short of My Best is Not Acceptable | BUFFALO BILL ' S BARBECUE OR Why Boys Leave Home % .1 Desperate Drama of Lave ' Neverything, in Three Spasms £ By Tom Spiortaker % % P R L CUE % .... Once upon a time in days of old when knights were bold, and Overall had no freckles, .g, there came to Lambuth College a comely maiden with a luxuriant mass of raven tresses and !g! 4- eyes of lustrous blue, seeking the fountain of knowledge. She was none other than the 4 X famous Miss Mulherin, who immediately became the center of all attention — especially among j|j •$• the males. Many brave swains vied for her favor but in a short while the apple of her eye •£• seemed to be the Diminutive Harold Stanley of gridiron fame. However, their romance fj | had to progress, true to fashion, over the familiar bumpily paved rcted. || 4 Last fall shortly after school opened it came to pass that there lay in bed this same 4 T Diminutive Harold Stanley, sorely wounded on the field of battle. T r t t ,j. Canto 1 .j. (Scene: Room in Epworth Hall, Ham Haley seated at a table reading a Horatio ♦ .g, Alger, Jr., book.) |g! 4 Enter Comer Hastings. 4 H. H.: Dost. j .$• C. H. : Dost know Diminutive Harold Stanley, the injured gridiron hero, who lieth 4 4j in yon sick bay? T % H. H. : Thou exhaled it. •{. C. H. : Hist. f c. H.: Hist, noble Haley. H. H.: Hist, noble Hastings. C. H.: Dost know Louise? H. H.: Dost. C. H.: Dost know Diminutive H. H.: Hist. •g. C. H. : Hast a plan, to-wit : that thou shouldst grasp thy Schaeffer between thy % thumb and initial digit and compose a stirring document of love, and affix thereto the signa- jgj ture of the aforesaid Louise, and . .g. H. H. : Knave, thou hast a cranium like unto that of Stacey Riddick but still your plan | hath merit. It shall be done. (Exit Hastings.) | .g, (Curtain) ■$• (Scene II : The same room. Haley just finished writing on a pad of scented violet paper.) ' Y H. H.: Dost believe this will knock the doughty Stanley for a triple row of green tile-roofed bath houses. (Reads— ' My darling Harold: My heart goes out to thee, my stal- .g, wart hero, and I long to see you well and whole once more, treading the gridiron and your Ig! opponents ' physiognomies in the mire, with a dominant stride amid the applause of hundreds. .g, « I passionately love football plavers and long to welcome you with outstretched arms and - jjj __ ' etc., etc.) _ % C. H. : Ha, that ' ll scotch him ! All Europe is indignant ! f Canto II • ■ j? •j, ( Scene 1 : The Lovin apartments — Friday afternoon. Diminutive Harold reading a let- 4 4 ter in bed. Stanley leaps up from bed with a shout of exultation.) £ Stanley: Ob, wonderful Louise! I am well! I am well! Tonight 1 shdl seek the || •J. loving arms of my fair admirer while the old moon looks in through the Dean ' s office window 4 4 with compassionate beatitude. Just give me the moonlight, and I ' ll do the rest ! T i|! (Curtain) g 4 1 (Scene II : Same place, Stanley, fully dressed, turning From telephone.) Stanley: Ah, ' tis well. Hast just secured a date with the lair lady, and 1 now go forth 5, A to conquer. Selah! Gadzooks; Carrambo! 4 (Exit) % (Curtain) .g. £ | Canto HI % 4 r . 4 (Scene I: The Lovin apartments. Enter Bomar Maddux and Frank Bowers, bearing I T the battered and insensible form of the good Knight Diminutive Stanley on a stretcher; musi- %, ,j. cians and attendants.) 4. 4« f J Mrs. Lovin : What ho! Hast aught of harm befallen the mighty Stanley? 4 5 Bomar: Hast. $ 4 Mrs. L. : Under what circumstances, may I ask? a T Bomar : You may ! As I and the noble Knight Bowers were returning from a brief 4 a party of wild debauchery spent at that den of vice known as O ' Hara ' s Blue and White Book || Store, where we had three Coca Colas per each, to say nothing of one bag of Tom ' s 4 Bowers (interrupting) : Worthy Bomar, thou forgettest the pair of Red Robbins served j£ 4 us by the knave, Butler. a J) Bomar : Hold thy tongue, varlet ! As I wast saying before, after the worthy Bowers 4 a had recompensed Butler to the extent of forty-seven cents and I had surreptitiously tucked a % 4 pair of pennants under my great-coat whilst no one was looking, we left this infamous den a % and on the way out chanced to peep into the Dean ' s office when we beheld the noble Stanley ?J A encircle the waist of the fair Louise, with his brawny right arm, whereupon the raven-haired a |f) Louise smote the swain with might and main, likewise with her trusty left meathook to such 4 an extent that the worthy Harold collapsed as if black-jacked. 4 Mrs. L. : Didst knock him for a row ? 4 3| Bowers : Didst, yea, even for a span of double furrows. So we collected the pieces and J a hied ourselves hither with the wreck to turn over to the worthy physician, Dr. Brashear. ,j, i (Curtain) 4 V A „ . 4« 4 (Scene II: Same apar ' ments. Stanley m bed. Opens his eyes.) 4 1 Stanley ( faintly ) : Where am I ? a Mrs. L. : In your room. 4 Stanley (delirious) : Ah, I remember, I had just carried the water bottle through the | Bethel line for a six yard gain when ■ ' Y 4 Enter Dr. Brashear. a Jj Mrs. L. : Quick, Doctor, he ' s sinking! ' 1 4 Dr. B. : There, there, my good man, tell the doctor what happened. T 4 Stanley : Oh, Doctor, I had a big shiny pail and I — I was milking a goldfish when a 4 T steamboat ran over me. (Dies.) (Exeunt Omnes.) 4 a (Curtain) a Shenandoah Life Insur- s J$§$$ t % ance Co., Inc. J ( l SiH 4 4- -fll iy5yjf?|i ' lHJ C K SON. Tennfssff 4 I ROANOKE, VA. M { % H. A. LOVIN and R. N. SMITH, % 77, - , $ % General Agents I Flowers Always % I 203 First National Bank Bldg. j Please % JACKSON, TENN. | Cumberland and Lafayette Strong, Conservative, Progressive % £ 01 „,, Phone 16 ■ a Phone 2253 |J ,j f $ I National Bank of Commerce | t A I Jackson, Tennessee % f | CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $200,000.00 I A 4, 4 j I Make Our Bank Your Bank t A WELCOME LAMBUTH STUDENTS Gifts purchased here are always of standard value E. E. TALIAFERRO JEWELER JACKSON, TENNESSEE 100 ' , for Our City and Schools % LIBERTY Self-Service Store Jacksonians for Jackson Crawford-Gatlin, Inc. Chain Store System JACKSON, TENNESSEE An Endless Chain of Values Drink NEW ORANGE CRUSH LEMON CRUSH COCOA CRUSH Always in the Krinkle Bottle And Other Flavors in BIG BOTTLES Orange Crush Bottling Co. 119 Highland Phone 780 Phone 51 For Satisfactory Plumbing and Heating SEE CURTISS PLUMBING COMPANY 306 East Main Street JACKSON, TENNESSEE I . t ' ' When You Need Printing, You Need Us Phone 917 Jackson, Tennessee Buy Collegiate SHOES FROM Buster Brown Shoe Store Where Comfort, Style and Economy Meet 4 tfr 4 4 4iifr  J , , , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 4 , 5 , f The Electric Shop Radios Wiring Fixtures Phone 177 Liberty and Baltimore Budde Weis Manufacturing Company DESIGNERS AND BUILDERS OF High Grade Church Fixtures Bank Fixtures JACKSON TENNESSEE T ™ A Jackson s Friendliest CAFE FOX CAFE LAMBUTH STUDENTS Are Always Welcome LAMBUTHITES, REFRESH YOURSELF Burgess Soda Room New Southern Hotel Our Friends are Always Welcome  J. . « 4«« AtJ.  J,, A rf. . «4. rf.. J.4. t J. .J Our sincerest congratulations to Lambuth ' s Faculty and Student Body at the close of another successful year Bond ' s SHOES HOSIERY 4 4. i.4. 4.4. 4 4 4 ' 4 4 4 ' + ' l ,, i , l , i , , i , , i , ' i , + Tfjree B lls ' he Chump Herae|£ £ant 1177 1 T 1 . 1 n . 1 Welcome Lambuth Students STATE The Pride of Jackson If You Have a Date, Take Her to the STATE DELIGHTFUL ENTERTAINMENT I DELIGHTFUL ENTERTAINMENT T Charles Stanf ill (in poetic frenzy, as they stroll along the shore) : Roll on, thou deep 4- and dark blue ocean, roll ! || Dorothy McMahon : Oh, Charles, how wonderful you are. It ' s doing it. 4 • •  f Ernest Ball : Hey, Terry — look ! There ' s a piece of tin in my hash. 4 Terry : Sure, mechanization of the modern age. The machine is everywhere replacing T the horse. $, We Serve the Best Coffee in Town GEM CAFE Drop in and Have Some D elicious — R e freshing DRINK IN BOTTLES VISIT OUR PLANT 4 , , ' i , , i ,, l ,, i , 4.4.4i4i4. . 4.4.4. , .4.|! A FRESHMAN ' S NIGHTMARE Spring Holidays — (s-a) (s-b) (s-c) ; (1-cos-A) 4 (cos A cos B-sinA sinB) — log l- 1 — arc plus radius vector — what ' s the dessert, Scott? — You folks are just bilious, that ' s all (nasal twang) — What church did you go to? — Que hora es ? — The dining room should be some- thing more than a filling station — Write a ten-minute theme — Pass the zip — Boom, rah ! — H 2 — This bookstore is robbing me! — When was the War of 1812? — You get the tackle and I ' ll take care of the end — Turn quietly in your hymn books to — ■ — Has the last! bell rung? — Thanksgiving and turkey, especially the gobblers — Please do not close the parlor door — Dissect- ing poor kitty — kangaroo court — amo, amas, amat — Oh, my quality credits — Have you filled out one of those personnel sheets ? — Don ' t shoot fire-crackers in the main building — Sh ! it ' s study hour — Grab your ankles, freshman ! — Please, please make that foul — Class meeting after chapel — Have you paid for your annual ? — Make out a schedule and follow it — I ' m sorry, boys, but the last bell has rung — Where ' s that green hat? — Are you chewing gum? — What ' s on at the Lyric? — Is the bookstore open? — He ' s sick, Miss Clement — Just an old Spanish custom — Library fines — Gosh, I have three in a row — A drop card a dollar? ? ? ? ? — You don ' t run charge accounts? — Easter flowers! ! ! ! ! — I gotta study — Aw heck! Scott ' s just locked the door — Lend me a buck till tomorrow — But, I know you ' re anxious to get back to your studies — Let ' s go to Coopers. The humorist made quite a scoop the other day, although he had to sneak up on third to do it. However, he, like the true news-chaser that he is, did not hesitate to risk his neck to find out something intimate about the editor, Miss Nelle Moore. As he tiptoed stealthily into her room, he spied her diary lying open on the desk. Here ' s what he saw, freshly writ- ten : Here are my ideals of perfect happiness — a table for two in a dimly lighted, snug little corner; someone with whom you truly enjoy being; an orchestra playing soft, enchanting, dreamy music ; the proper food served in the proper way, by the proper persons at the proper time. A GREAT MODERN MIRACLE There were two men standing on a corner whose names were Wood girl, with sin Hi skirts, walked by and Wood turned to Stone and Stone then they both turned to rubber and the girl turned into a drug store. and Stone. A pretty turned to Wood, and Mrs. W. M. Lane Mrs. Ora Young Vanity Beauty Shoppe Permanent Waving A SPECIALTY Telephone 208 A. V. Patton Co. Insurance Investments Twenty -five Years ' Service Market at College 2nd Floor First Nat. Bank Bldg. JACKSON, TENN. JACKSON, TENN. SECURITY NATIONAL BANK JACKSON, TENNESSEE UNDER GOVERNMENT SUPERVISION Security and Friendly Helpfulness ' i anter 4 i4 | i ' 4 ' a i | 4 ' 4 , 4 ' 4 ' 4 4 ' 4 , ' i { a 4 i , 4 ' 4 ' I , 4 4 , 4 , i ' 4 4 S ' 4 , 4 S 4 l ' ' 4 ' 4 ' a 4 ' 4 M l , 4 t 4 a 4 4 4 x 4 , 4 , 4 I , 4 , 4 , I 4 a 4 | 4 , l a 4 , 4 a 4 4 ' (Photo illustrations for 66 THE LANTERN 99 Supplied by M oores Studi 10 •{• 4 4 i 4 4 , 4 4 , 4 , 4 a 4 4 4 4 4 4 a 4 4 ' 4 4 4 ' 4 a 4 a l ' { a I ' , 4 ' ' • • • w v . I McCowat-Mevcev Printing Company Jackson, Tennessee (Printers of- College Annuals, Catalogs and School Papers School Printing of all Kinds Printers of The Lantern ' ..i. .!.. . .!. ' ! ' ! ' ' ! ■ Canter Autngrapfys AutngrapljB rtf-iii-T i mr Autcgrapl|B Autographs e e ' o ' , Vf ° 6


Suggestions in the Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) collection:

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Lambuth College - Lantern Yearbook (Jackson, TN) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

1933


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