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Page 112 text:
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I fakes - Mrs. WVerner: Ruth, would you like cream in your Water? Ruth I-Iood: Cream in my water? No, thanks. Mrs. VVerner: Then I believe I will have some for my tea. Pls if if Doris McClinticf fmaking an announcement in the dining-roomj: Please don't forget that this is the night to dress for dinner. , ik 96 Pk In the parlors we have alittle lampg It is well trained, no doubt, 'Cause every time the dates come in The little lamp goes out. , Y W ,. Dorothy Neidig: WVell, I Wonder who that could be playing the Vic during study hall ? Mary Agnes Travis: Oh! It's Mrs. I-Iarris playing 'Blue I-Ieavenf fr as :af TI-IETA PLEDGE SONG Existence is a dice game, a not so very nice game. ' We get indarn tight places while we struggle hard with fate. But let me here indorse it, the tightest was the corset, I Wore for a pledge duty back in 1928. 34:11:21 Isa Lind I-Iockaday: I surely hope the fellow has indigestion-who wrote the 'Americanization of Edward Bok.' 2411123 - DURING TI-IE FLU EPIDEMIC Booker Cto the girls in the inhrmaryj : I-las you girls got a dis-tagious disease? is X rx: . ' Mr. Bates Ccoming into the library hurriedlyjk Has anybody seen my Ancient History? I'm just blowed up without that book. Mr. johnson: WVho built the Ark?,' Estelle Page: I don't know. I didn't. . X ff Pk Mary Lee: XVho Wrote the 'Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin ?' Mildred Harris: Search me 1 Bee Dearing: Oh, kid, you sure have moved your room around. Thelma I-Iammonds :' No, just the furniture. XXX ' Miss Botts: Any teacher Wanting tickets to the artist course please speak to me before noon. ' Miss Guthrie: Well, I said, 'Good morning' to herf' . i X one hzmdred eight
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Page 111 text:
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Of gray, then seeks to hide his pale, cold visage From the earth behind a lifeless cloud. A dawn-yet scarce a dawn-but still a dawn, For it leads us on to life anew. Hush! I-Iark! I hear, I feel, a silvery note from out The deep. A sweetest note, vibrating Hope, hope! V I T. H. Pk P24 FF THE AWAKENING OE DAWN I had gone to the Ozarks formy summer vacation, and having heard of the beautiful sunrise I rose at four o'clock especially for the purpose of be- holding its glory. Standing on the Lookout some three hundred feet in front of Dobbin's Hall at the School of the Ozarks I awaited the coming of Dawn. The sky was without a cloud, the moon in its last quarter had just riseng there were the Pleiades just above the horizon shedding their sweet influence in the East, Jupiter, two hours high, was the herald of the dayg Lyra was sparkling near the zenithg Andromeda veiled her but recently discovered glories from the naked eye in the Southg while the steady Pointers far be- neath the pole looked up meekly from the North. In all it was a beautiful sight. Then the timid approach of twilight became more perceptableg the small stars closed their eyes and fell to rest behind the glow that kindled the East. The sister beams of the Pleiades melted togetherg the smaller stars of the Milky Way faded outg then, when the East was streaked with red and the Hames of day were reaching out with arms that unfolded the darkness, the watch stars closed their eyes as tired children and fell into the slumber lands of the heavens. The whole world was filled with the inflowing tide of the morning light and the day had dawned. , I. I.. I-I.. TO A POET NVhen I think of a poet and his work, How he spends his days to look and find Materials suitable for his mind, And is never content to stop or shirk, Although he deals with places where shadows lurk And subjects of every other kind, I ask if it is right to be blind To his true endeavors and his work? But then why should we all be bored With idle chattering and poetry scrappy? VVhy cannot this poor one be implored To stop his rabble and make us happy To take his papers, pencils, pens And go far back to his native ken? t I E. S. JMX one lnmdrcd seven
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Page 113 text:
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SAMPLE INTELLIGENCE TEST Underline the words that finish the sentences: Aristotle is Qlj present day writer QZQ a barber Q30 a sheik. Synodical is flj a zoo QZD Summer resort hospital. The Nut Crackers are a flj Sunday School class QZD Summer resort QSD Tent Show Company. Student Council is Q15 a gossip club QZQ Farm Bureau association CSD Bridge Club. is is is Miss VV'ood fat chapelj : David Cooperfleld has been lost. Frances Powel: I saw Miss Coolbaugh with him last night. fx: :xr Pk Catherine Nevins: Oh, there is the best looking boy over in the library. Dorothy VVall: My! XlX7l 1O is he? Catherine: Oh, he is a Blue jay in the 1914 annual. Pk X :sc Miss Coolbaugh: Girls, there is a lot of interesting reading material in the library. Claudia McVeigh: But I can't read it. I have to do my history reading. Louise Chase: Girls, don't you think my picture looks like Norma Talmadge? I Dorothy Biggs: VVho,s she? Somebody here in town F ' Miss Botts: You may study the events that led up to the Civil VVar which We will have tomorrow. :z: ak in Mr. Bates: My wife has told. me to bring you that lap robe twice. Miss Wood: Oh, once will do. X24 24- Miss Wallace: VVhat time does the next. bus leave for St. Louis? Ticket Agent: At 3:45, madamf' Miss Wallace: Make it 3 215 and I'll take it. is Pk CAN YOU IMAGINE? Miss Coolbaugh reading snappy stories. Miss Botts chewing gum. The chairs being filled at Vespers. Nelle Long in the movies. A breakfast without bacon. Ida Mae Richmond making use of the library. The cow bell not ringing at 6:30 every morning. The diet table not eating desserts. Susie Boone not calling Lights Out at 10:30. Why Gish and Keener wanted the parlor doors shut while playing rook with Lucile VVerner and Bess Stockard. Mary Liz Baker thinking life's worth getting excited about. Helen Brown when there wasn't something to laugh at. The floor of the magazine room in the library not squeaking. Mrs. Watson without her camphor pills. -. JMX A one hundred nine
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