High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 120 text:
“
Sr. E. T.: Cstruggling with the Chemistry elussl Mary Catherine, wlnu is the most deadly poison known? Peeps : iiEH1bZll1'11l1lg fluid, you're dead before it touches you. J f4l'2'1K'O .Xnshutzz Cut bourder's tublel ii,lilP2lS9 pass the hash. Mary Enriglitz Cinterrupting with u ehanter of Father Marquette and the 1 K Early Kiln-istian Martyrsj 'And then the toinuhaxvk descended zunid a splash of blood und brains. Grace: N-no-nev-never niind the liushf' Sr. Bouifuee: Mpziuline Eiswerth, will you please run up the iuapf' Pauline: Cdoubtfullyj 'Tin not niueh of an atlilete, but I'll try any- thing once. Bettie Kinney: 'fl ezniit find Ll single pin. Vllhere do they ull go, anyway? Helen Barry: lt's hard to tell. They're headed one way and pointed the other. , ' Miss Burgun: VVlmt is the eaused by biting insects ? best iuethod of preventing the diseases Audrey 'Wittniaiu Don7t' bite the iuseetsf' Sr. E. T.: Nora, how can you tell the difference between hurd and f' 77 sort. coal? Nora: '4I'll bite. Sr. E. T.: Cexplaining efrrbon dioxide and carbon monoxidel '4Carbon monoxide, if inhaled, is poisonousg and carbon dioxide if inhaled is suffocating. LYOXXT, Lucille, ifzyou have two jars, one containing carbon monoxide and the other carbon dioxide how would you distinguish between the two ? Lucille Kiiekf 'fsmen uiemr' Sister: Cealling roll for preparation of assignnientj Margaret Boeglef' ves Margaret: 'tliight and tvvo hal Peeps: How do you like O. Henry. Eleanor: 'cl ezu1't stand it.. 'ldheunezunits stick in niy teethfj Olwibfl Villa Song We're loyal to you, V. M. A, We'll fly white and blue, V. M. A. VVe'll back you to standg You're the best in the land The best in the land we'll say.. Kali! Rah! Rah! O7ZfO7'7l-S- ' A . Z ' You'll hold your own, V. M. A. Vou'll not be alone, V. M. A. - WVe'll stand by you 'till we dieg This will be our victory ery 'Wehonor the V. M. A. Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Ever ive-,re true to you. Rah! Rah! Rah! Huh! Rah! Ever the white and blue. You will always hold us to the right. ln Pennsylvania there's a school Of which we can be proud ln every play that she puts on She Certainly draws a erowd. Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rath! And so we stand to tell the world Th-at 'we will do our best. You'll soon find out that we're ambitious -Xnd the Villa is the best. Huh! Rah! Rah! Rah! She is .our model school And so we fly the white and blue 011, Villa, ive love you Therels none tl1at's above you To V. M. A. we're true.
”
Page 119 text:
“
Wit and Humor 020 Sr. in Latin Class had just called on Margaret Regan who had been try- ing to catch up on lost sleep, and asked her to decline a certain verb. Margaret, awakening to the realization that she had been called, jumps up and asks Lucille Diotallevi: What's the verb? Lucille D.: NI don't know. Margaret: Capparently much relicvedl I dono, I donare, I donavi, I donatusf' Life of a girl analyzed into three stages: Tee-hee age, he age, tea age. Gert: What is the hyphen in bird-cage for? Red: 'I'hat's for the bird to sit on, of course. Isabel to Elaine eating an apple: Better look out for the Worms, Elainef, Elaine: VVhen I eat an apple, the worms have to look out for them- selvesf' Jenn Brinig: '4Will you join me in a cup of tea?', Helen Beamish: Do you think there will be room W' Martha Angert: How did you know I was going to wear my hair in curls to the party? Rita Greulich: I saw it in the papers this morning. Helen Spiesman: And imagine, the temperature in Bermuda is about 750 all year around! Martha Kennedy: Chl That would be Heaven. Helen: Cdubiouslyj Well, I donlt know whether or not Heaven would be that warm. Rita A'berstadt: How did you like Atlantic City, Peggy? Peggy Donahue: Oh, it's all right, but take away the ocean and what have you 3 Helen Cunningham at Mirandy's: I want a piece of meat without fat, bone or gristlef' . Sister: HWhat you want Helen, is an egg? Bettie, what is a sponge?,' asked one of the seniors. A sponge, said Bettie, is a girl who reads some other person's Trumpet, and doesn't buy one herself. Anne Harkins walkin in ten minutes late as usual. . s , n Sister: Late again, Anne. Can't you ever get here on time? Anne: Well ou see Sister there are eight in our famil f and the alarm a y 2 23 5 was only set for seven. Sister in Chemistry: Heat expands and cold contracts. VVl1o can give me an example ? Mary Gannon: In summer the days are long. In winter they are short. I QWho was it that said Mary dicln't know her Chemistry?j We know now why Genevieve never misses Chapel after dinner. When coming out of the refectory, she thinks of our I.ord's words: Come to me all ye that labor and are heavily burdened. Sr. M. E. teaching Commercial Law Classes: Elsie, what is a minor? Elsie: A coal diggerf' 127
”
Page 121 text:
“
Villa Maria Academy Villa Maria Academy is a well-known school chartered by the State of Pennsylvania, accredited by the State Board of Education and affiliated with the Catholic University of Ainerica, WVashington, D. C. The object of this institution is to give to young ladies a refined and Christian education. Therefore, while every effort is put forth to give the students excellent training in sciences, inusic and fine arts, those in charge have it still 1no1'e at heart to impress their students with the fact that it is of far greater importance, and a niuch more valuable acquisition, to be possessors of noble Womanly characters, and of charins that coine with virtue only, than to be endowed with mere intellectual gifts. , The Villa Maria students enjoy the best and niost modern educational facilities. Gannon Hall is a model school building having up-to-date classrooins. study halls and laboratories. Whetliei' enrolled in the four year academic or eoininercial course, the young lady receives a Catholic and the best and ni-ost practical high school education, she can possibly receive. M. P., ,31. .fl M ' E t I i QJFIQEN D
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.