BHeiney
Wed, 07/26/2023 - 16:49
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NORMAL T I M E S
At
VOLUME 1
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., APRIL
School
18,1923
NUMBER 11
GIRLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD
L
DISBANDS FOR SEASON
TMIENTS F i 1921
Twenty-five N u m b e r s Constitute Incomparable Courses.
Celebrities to Be Here
Mr. Drum has made preliminary announcement of the numbers to be offered iis entertainmeiit features for
next year. From the list that has been
definitely arranged it is evident that
the students at this scliool will be certain to have n more wonderful program
than could be obtained at any school
or in iiny single community outside of
the large cities in the same space of
time.
There are to be twenty-five entertainments in all, au average of better than
three a month. Six of these are to be
musical numbers, the best that are obfiiinable uf any cost. Five of these six
lijive been definitely arranged:
Elsie
Baker, the contralto, many of whose
numbers have become familiar through
the Victor company; Marie Tiffany, soprano, of the Metropolitan Opera Co.;
Charles Wakefield Cadman, the noted
composer, and Tsianina, the Indian
jirincess; Tosch-a Seidel, the wonder
violinist, aud Reiuald Werrenrath, famous American tenor.
ilaiiy of the best known men of the
country will be visiting the sehool to
deliver talks. The first of these, who
will address fhe school at a Sunday afternoon meeting during October, will
be Bishop Berry, of the Methodist
Church. Another famous personage who
has definitely agreed to be hero is
f'ount Ilya Tolstoi, son of the immortal
Kussiiiu novelist and iihilosopher. Others will be Diilliis Lore Sharp, writer of
nature tales; Seunuis MacManus, author of Donegal Fair,y Stories and other
Irish legends and folk tales; Alfred
Noyes, the iiiief of Princeton University; iind uiaiiy of whom it is too early
to give advance notice. Iu an early
issue of Normal Times the complete
course will be given, witli somewhat
more extended comment. This much
is given here as indicative of the treats
in store for all who attend next winter.
Central State Normal School has
never uudertaken such a course, and
may never be able to do so again. The
financial responsibility incurred is so
great as to entail danger of serious
losses. It is expected that the course
will be so unusual, so very much worth
wdiile, as to attract attention in and
draw many visitors from all the surrounding cities and towns. Whatever
the outcome, nexf winter's student bod.y
will be assured of nn iucompiiriible
course.
i l r . Ulmer—"Wliiit is the most economic fuel in use nt this t i m e ? "
Esther Agnew—"Fireless cookers."
PLAY PRESENTED
Excellent Record for the Past Season—Championship
Team Likely Next Winter
The girls' basketball squad has broken up until the winter of 1923 rolls
round. It was a good fCiim that brought
the old Marooii and Gray back into active competition, a team flint uiiide good,
under excellent coaching, iigainst niauy
iin obstacle, that htid the old pep and
fight from the first tapoff to the final
toot of the whistle. It is no more than
fitting to give their recoril and themselves the once-over before shelving basketball in favor of sjiring simrts.
First, the team itself:
Sally Ilauna, forward, Beecli ("reek,
I'u. Sally was one big feature in the
limelight during the season just iiasf.
She had never seen or heard of a basketball—at least, in connection with her
own interests—before liinding ou this
caminis. Once she got it into her hiiiids,
however, she taught it to do tricks it
had never dreamed of. Look at her record for the season in the tabulated score
at the end of this article. How is that
for a beginner? Sally has another year
to play, and at her present rate of progress is going to give many a scorekeeper writer's cramp before next season
ends.
Hetty Staver, forward, McElliattan,
Pa. We said forward, we might have
said most anything else. As nn allaround basketball artist this .young liidy
is not to be overlooked. She started
the season as a substitute; then played
nt center and side center, and wound up
lilaying a riittliug gooil game at forward. Iu the hist giime of the season,
iigainst Clearfield, she made fwent.y-fwo
of our iioints, and played right around
all opposition. She started her basketball language iif Lock Haven High, iiud
has, it is comfortable to think, another
yciir to speak it in the Normal gym.
Anne .lane Kennedy, forward. This
Jane travels here from wiiy oft' iu Scranton, where the mine caves grow all
around, all around. Aune is unfortuiiiife enough fo be griidiiiiting this year,
but has had time to make a record to
leave behind liei". She, too, picked up
her biisketliall slinging in these here
jiiirts here, nnd she did some picking.
When she goes back to the hard coal
fields she will be thoroughly equipped
fo teach the young idea how to shoot.
When she took hold of a basketball she
taught it to sing "Every time you hit
the board you go right through."
Neta White, forward and Ciiptaiu,
liOck Haven. Having been taught a little basketball, along with a lot of other
tilings, in the well rounded curriculum
of the local high school, Neta tried her
luck at hitting the hoops up here on
the hill. Evcr.ytliiiig went well, iis the
story goes, until the third game of the
season, at Bellefonte, when the Wiill
came in contnct with her head, aud laid
her belligerently on the shelf for the
rest of flic .vciir. She \yiis by long odds
(Continued on page 7)
"Daddy-Long-Legs" P l e a s e s
Large and Appreciative
Audience
The Senior Class Piny has been and
gone. But wnsn't it good while it Insted? Was ever tliere such a charmiugly
pathetic figure as J u d y Abbott wdien
(rwendol.vu (llise iiiit herself into t h a t
jiiirf iind made it live, (iwen is certiiinly il star and this is the best t h i n g we
liiiye seen her lio. We waver between
the "defiiiuce of the trustees" scene a n d
the yer,y last one wlieii we ivy to select
the high light in her work. But she
was delightful at college and—well, she
was just excellent in it all, and ^ve
don't blame that niimeless admirer for
sending the lovely basket of flmvers to
our Bernhiirdt. Judy .4bboff is seldom
thought of without her dear Daddy-LongLegs, who took the little orphan a n d
made her au iiristocrat. We never
thought of Fred Hunter as having so
much real talent tucked behind t h a t
dignified exterior so we were pleasantly suriirised. We wouldn't mind having
for ourselves such a nice Daddy-LongLegs. It was il long and difiicult p a r t
which took bniin power as well as dramiitic ability to handle. But Fred carried it off as effectively as he does
everything—no one will dispute his
brain jiower.
Miss Pritchard, beciiuse she took such
an interest iu Judy and seemed to make
things occur, held u place iu our affections. This iiiirt was taken by Sylvia
(Continued on page 3)
C. S. N, S. GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM
NORMAL
OBSERVATION TOWER^
T e n n i s f e v e r liiis iirrived with t h e
s p r i n g . .\ll t h e lliiii a r e t r y i n g (u get
fiit, nnd nil t h e fnt lire t r y i n g tn gei
thin.
in a few iiiore weeks we shiili
liii\"e II inirniiil stinleiit IMHIV.
b e t t e r dii t h e i n s i d e tliiiii on tlie (intside.
It tddk diil,\' iill lidiir l u n g e r for l-ietfy's
iieiii-diies to estiililisli t h e ciiii neet ion
tliiit t h e did g r e e n ciirtiiins lind b e e n
rejiiiiced li\' lienut if ul iiniwii \-eldnr o n e s .
W'liiit would l.llcl-etiii lid if s h e eoiilil
not sli|i intu t h e p i i n t i y fur siinie hreiikfiist .'
Mr. Tremliiitli e x p l n i n e d t h e viiliie,
ill p r e s e r x i i i g o t h e r jieiiple's ginid d]iiiiidiis. df writing' l e t t e r s tlint were let
tei-|ierfect.
"Of c d i i r s e , " he siiid. "if
\(iii iire w r i t i n g tn sdinediie \-ers' iieiir
t(. y e n . wild will niiike ii lldwiinces fur
.\(iii nnd f d i g i v e von ii g r e n t d c n l — y o u r
p i i r e n t s . s!i\'--you niiiy ciiridessly oniil
ciipitiils, illlll it will iidt dd niikdi diimiige Id \'iiiir ri'iiutiition.
T h e \ ' ivoiild
b e sill p r i s e d to reeei\-e ii l e t t e r f r o m
\i)ii if yiiii iciilly were siip]ilie(l w i t h
ciipitiil." ( j u i t e Sd.
llideii BiiOingfdn wishes to i i n n i i u n c e
t h e iirriviil uf her wisiloin teetli.
T h e liist gilllle (if Illlll nf tlie s p r i n g
sensoti Wiis ])l:i\e(l lietween u i e u i l i e r s of
t h e dii\'i'()iiin gntig. b e t w e e n s l i d w e r s . dU
Miirch '2'.',. Kill' dli\idu.s reiisons t h e
score liiis tidt t e e n iinndtiiii-ed. n n d e\'eti
t h e filet df t h e giinie liiis .just leaked
o u t . It Wiis [ilii.\'i.Ml, it is Siiid, td celebriite t h e c i i m m e n c e i i i e n t cd' t h e E i i s t e r
holidiiy, Avhicli begnii flint dny iit f o u r
o'eliK-k. W h e n tlie seciind gniiie is to
IK' ]ilii\'ed 11 iidtiee will tie jiosfed li\'
(liiice Engiisli, who is uiiiniiger, jiitidier,
ciitclier, Helder, e t c . Tliere a r e seyer:il
o t h e r s im t h e teiim, b u t , iis (iriice ndm i t s , tlie\' lire .just si-eiiery.
M e m b e r s df t h e iiiifiire studx' idiiss a r e
nil liet u p e v e r t h e d i s c o v e r y t h a t uiiiny
o t h e r b i r d s b e s i d e t h e h e - c h i c k e n s get
iiji iis e n r l y iis (i A. !>1. to s i n g .
T h e i n e m l i e r s (if tlie l i i s t - n i e u t i o n e d
(diiss lire s e r i o u s l y eiiiisidering l u o v i i i g
out of t h e s c i e n c e rodiii n n d Iciiviug it
to N i c o d e i n n s iiml ('ledjiiifrn. t h e gdldfisli, t h e liyiiciiitlis, nnd t h e s e v e n t e e n
^vhile mice.
A real dliserviifion iif wliiit M r . T r e m liiitli l e n i i s sdli-stuff wiis w i t n e s s e d b y
some of t h o s e wild wei-e en t h e i r w n y
home for l^iister. O e r t r n d e L y n o t t furnished t h e niiiteriiil b e i i u t i f u l l y
nnd
bountifully.
She liiiiig out of t h e ihirm i t i i r y w i n d o w nt n iierihins iingle n n d
wejit Sd g e i i e r d u s l \ ' infd a t o w e l t h a t it
hiid td be w r u n g out severiil t i m e s .
We liiive (ine m e r e reipiesf fo lunke
of l i e l v i e : t h a t he m u r k off t h e lower
end df t h e secdiid tloor hull l i k e a t e n nis cduit. lliden has bought a perfectl.y liriind new rnciiuef, a n d s h e w a n t s
fo k n o w how t o b a t t h e b a l l correctl.y
b e f o r e she goes o u t on t h e c o u r t s .
B e t t y G a t e s m a d e t h e u n u s u a l disc o v e r y t h a t fhe c h a p e l c u r t a i n s look
TIMES
w i t h - t h e siiiue r e s u l t , but with (ili! wliiif
il difference in t h e lliiviirl
W h e r e t h e r e is ii will t h e r e is ii wny.
If Vdii (1(1 iidt hiive t i m e tn s w e e p , iiiill
ddwii t h e c u r t i i i n s , iind ]Mis. Cresswell
iiiii,\' Iidt see t h e d i r t .
Iidi-dthy I'liiwis niiiy not lie nt nil sup e r s l i t i d u s , lint she niiiile n ilnte with
her u n d e r t i i k e r fur Fridiiy, A p r i l bi,
when she tniiglit t h e lirst dhserviitidii
lessdii s h e lins lind to t e n c h .
Elierl.N- could not iiiiiler.stiiiid w h y , lis
(diiinieil in n recent p s y c h d h i g y class,
t h e sfiiilent died wild Wiis b e i n g lUiiile
td believe, when b l i n d f d l d e d d u r i n g n
iiiizing liee, flint his t l i r n a t was c u t and
thill he was b e i n g Ideil td dentil. ^Ir.
McDoiigiiH's expliiiiiition ludjis n hit —
in j i s y c h o l d g y : " W e l l , he lind t h e jirc
cepf flint h e wiis d y i n g , n n d he was
unnlile to correct it with n cdiicept beciiuse he lind ne\'er died b e f o r e . "
T u e s d a y iifteriidon, Aiiril 1(1, !Mr. a n d
Mrs. (Jiige tiiiiglit an observiifidu lessdii
on t h e liiiek ciim|iiis.
The observers
were Bent rice. . \ i n y , H e l e n , I j o r e f t n ,
W i n n i e , nnd E s t h e r , who a r e of t h e
ojiiniou flint t h e lesson was one iu a p lireciiition. Lewis Ciige was t h e c l a s s ;
t h e sniiject Wiis n i g - b c i i t i n g ; a n d , nltlinngh L e w i s niiiv hii\'e f a l l e n somewliiit
s h o r t (if cdui[ilete ii]ipreciiition (if t h e
bciiuty (if liilxir, n e v e r t h e l e s s iis n c l a s s
h e fiilldwcil iiistriicfions widl. T h e o b s e i w e i s iire still u n c e r t i i i n iis to w l u d h e r it Wiis i n t e n d e d to d r i l l niiiiiily in
sjieeil or in iiccuriic\-.
D u e td t h e g r e n t iimdunf (if w o r k thiil
P.elvie hiis td do in t h e (liiyriidni, lie
has hiid td hiive nn iissistiinl.
Selniii
Leviinder liiis lu'cii a p p o i n t e d to assist
him in t h e wiirk.
H e r sliiire of the
d u t i e s is lo open t h e d e s k s of f o r g e t f u l
(lily s t u d e n t s , to jiick uii waste piijicr,
nnd to g i v e B e l v i e vnluiible h i n t s eiincerning the work.
(iiiice Kussell h a s i n t r o d u c e d a n e w
i i r e i i t h i n g s.ysteni i n t o t h e t o w n sidiools.
I n s t e n d of snyiiig, " I n h i i l e , e x h a l e , o n e ,
1w(i," s h e siiys, "Hreiitlie i n , b e r i i t h e o u t ,
r i g h t , left." 'S'lioriginn 1 i d e a , ( ' h i i t h i n k
iibdut it. .Mr. M i i c '
.Mr. Tieinliiith rends ii niiiiKdess im
per liefore t h e j n n i d r class, m a k e s fun
df t h e .idkes, nnd then nsks t h e o w n e r
td cliiiin t h e m . Xu, tlinnk .viiu, t e a c h e r ;
we d o n ' t kiidw griiinniiir, lint we iiin't
thiit diiinli.
T h e j u n i o r s m e still wiiiting f o r the
seniiirs to t h a n k t h e m for t h e giiiue t h e y
giive t h e m on Tuesdii.v niglit.
.Notice A l b e r t ' s
clever
.Vin't n i i t u r e grniid .'
new
suit.'
E d y t h e .Morriill's fntlicr h a d a b i r t h
.\ s t r i i n g e r wild e n t e r e d t h e niiiin b a l l
dii.y
Inst week. K d y t h e ' s l u o t h e r w a s ill
(III .Vjiril II iiskeil E r n e s t S c h r o t w h e t h Edythe
e r he cduhl tiiid ^ I i s . C r e s s w e l l for h i m . n n d unnlile tn do t h e b i l k i n g .
" O h , you c a n ' t see her t o d n y , " r e t u r n e d c h u c k s h e r lessens, goes lionie, a n d
o u r E r n e s t , full of t h e d e s i r e to i n - luiikes t h e birthdii.v cuke. Some niiin is
s t r u c t , " f o r she is i n t h e i n f i r m a r y w i t h g o i n g to b e l u c k y some dii.y.
a g i r l wdio h a s s c a r l e t f e v e r . "
Miss B u t l e r is s t a r t i n g a e s t h e t i c danc" N o w , i s n ' t tliiif l u c k y ? " said t h e v i s - i n g in t h e j u n i o r class. Y'ou j u s t o u g h t
i t o r , " N o w t h i s c a r d w o n ' t b e w a s t e d . " to see u s c a t e r i i i l l a r s f r y i n g to b e b u t A n d he p u l l e d f r o m h i s p o c k e t a y e l l o w terflies.
pliicard, h i b e l c d S C A K L E T F E V E K .
M r . D r u m c l a i m s to b e c o n n e c t e d wdth
O n e week we w e r e h a v i n g w o n d e r f u l m a n y of t h e b e s t f a m i l i e s i n L o c k Hat i m e s a t h o m e , a n d finding o u t h o w yen ; B e l l p h o n e a n d C o m m e r c i a l .
m u c h wo h a d m i s s e d .
The next week
J o s h u a h e l d b a c k fhe s u n on o n e occawe w e r e t a k i n g t h e m i d - s e m e s t e r e x a m s .
sion. T h a t is o n e too m a n y f o r u s to
i m i t a t e , b u t we h a v e f r e q u e n t l y s t o p p e d
11 few m i n u t e s b e f o r e g o i n g t o class.
Willing Wictims Wake to Worry Warblers
W h y the large attendance at breakfast
of l a t e ? W h y t h e l a r g e a m o u n t of N a tural Rouge (It
fluctuates)
observable
a t C. S. N . S.? W h y t h e r a p i d i t y wdth
w h i c h a l a r m clocks, u n w a t c h e d , c h a n g e
headipiiirters? The explanation will not
b e l o n g iu f o r t h c o m i n g ; if y o u a r e still
r e a d i n g , re.ad o n .
You a r e a w a k e n e d , if y o u a r e o n e of
tliose i n on t h e s e c r e t , on t h e s e c l e a r ,
cool m o r n i n g s , b y h e a r i n g o n e a l a r m
clock go off a f t e r a n o t h e r . Y o u p i n c h
y o u r s e l f t o see w h e t h e r y o u a r e a w a k e ;
a r e t h e r e so m a n y s t u d i o u s g i r l s a t
Normal?
J u s t t h e n t h e r e comes a g e n t l e k n o c k
a t the door. "Girls, you must get up.
I t is t i m e f o r t h a t b i r d t r i p . "
Y'ou
r e c o g n i z e t h e voice as G e r t r u d e ' s , a n d
e v e r y t h i n g is c l e a r .
"Ycjih," y o u a n s w e r s l e e p i l y , a n d r o l l
o v e r for j u s t o n e m o r e l i t t l e n a p .
One h o u r later you again awake, to
h e a r t h e t r a i n i n g school clock s t r i k i n g
six, t h e t i m e y o u h a d a g r e e d u p o n t o
s t a r t . Y'ou j u m p madl.v o u t of b e d a n d
into your clothes, t h i n k m o m e n t a r i l y
xvliat a b l e s s i n g i t is t h a t y o u r h a i r is
b o b b e d , a n d r u s h o u t of t h e b a c k d o o r
j u s t iu time to catch Mr. U l m e r ' a u d a
s m a l l grouxi of s l e e p y g i r l s a s t h e y s e t
o u t ou t h e n i o r n i n g r a m b l e .
T h r o u g h t h e woods, u p hill a n d d o w n
d a l e , o n a n d on y o u t r a m p , finding n e w
b i r d s a t e v e r y t u r n , u n t i l s e v e n o'clock,
w h e n y o u d a s h b a c k to N o r m a l w i t h
ro.sy c h e e k s a n d a r a v e n o u s a p p e t i t e .
A f t e r s u c h a b i r d h i k e is t h e t i m e
wdien a b r e a k f i i s t of p r u n e s , t h i c k t o a s t ,
c o r n fiiikes, n n d w e a k coffee r e a l l y c a n
lie a p p r e c i a t e d .
M a n y n o r m a l i t e s h a v e l e f t t h e i r room
in d i s o r d e r a n d r e t u r n e d to find i t a
p e r f e c t m e s s ; t h a t is e x a c t l y n o r m a l .
I t is s o m e t h i n g o u t of a l l u n d e r s t a n d ing, h o w e v e r , to leave o n e ' s r o o m a perfect m e s s a n d r e t u r n to find i t i n p e r fect o r d e r . W i l l t h e p e r s o n s w h o g a v e
( H a d y s H a r m t h e shock of h e r life b y
p u l l i n g off q u i t e t h e m o s t o r i g i n a l p r a c t i c a l j o k e over, p l e a s e r e v e a l tlieniselves!
T h e g i r l s ' m e e t i n g on A p r i l 11 wiis
d e c i d e d l y a w e l t e r of o p i n i o n s .
The
S e n i o r D a n c e h a s b e e n set f o r A p r i l 28.
Thiit is also t h e d a t e of t h e J u n i o r P r o m
a t S t a t e . T h e o n l y w a y t l i a t we could
see to a r r a n g e m a t t e r s w a s t o w r i t e to
Dr. T h o m a s i i s k i n g h i m t o p o s t p o n e t h e
P r o m . Ever.yone is w a i t i n g w i t h assuriiuce his c o n s e n t t o do t h a t l i t t l e t h i n g
for u s .
Dormitory Rooms Going
Fast for Summer School
T h e r e ii re \er,y few rdiinis hd't f o r t h e
l!IL':i s u m m e r sessidii. T h e sclinnl d d n i i i tdries hnve lieen iilniost eufirel.y ass i g n e d . P.efdre t h e n e x t i s s u e of N o r niiil T i m e s is off t h e jiress t h e e n t i r e
t h r e e lldiirs, lidth of t h e W e s t iiiid of
t h e E a s t d d r m i t o r . v , will b e e n t i r e l y
lil led. T h e leciird s u m m e r s e s s i o n atteiKliince thiif we h n v e been iiiitici|iiitiiig Ims iidw been i i s s u r c d .
T h e s(diddl n u t h o r i t i e s h a v e r e q u e s t e d
t h e jicdple df L d c k lliiycn fo find p l e a s iint pliices for nf l e a s t :150 m o r e stud e n t s . Lock lliiveii is c o - o p e r a t i n g r o y al l.v. .Mnn.v (if t h e r e s i d e n t s w h o h a v e
never under other circumstances t a k e n
r o o m e r s h n v e oft'ered t h e u s e of s u n n y
iddiiis in t h e i r h o m e s , so a s t o a s s i s t
t h e sidiiidl in h o u s i n g p r o p e r l y a l l who
wish tn c n m e . E v e n t h o u g h t h e d o r m i t o r y will b e filled l o n g b e f o r e t h e m i d dle of M a y , y e t t h e r e will b e p l e n t y of
jdiices in t h e c i t y f o r C e n t r a l S t a t e ' s
e n t i r e flock.
S i n c e t h e Inst i s s u e of t h o N o r m a l
Times registrations have come in from
the following:
Mnr.v A d a m , B r i s b i n , P a .
Kvii Biiiley, M i l l h e i m .
llilmii B e r g n i i i u , D a g u s !Miiies.
(iliidys Bra.v, E a s t S m e t h p o r t .
H e l e n B u r n s , Osceola M i l l s , P a .
Miriam Burtnette, Juniata, Pa.
norothy Campbell, Coburn, Pa.
(Iriiee ('liiimliers, P e u f i e l d , P a .
Kiifhiyn Cooney, Genesee, P a .
ibirgiiret Cooney, Genesee, P a .
(ierfrude Costello, B r n d f o r d , I'a.
Lois C r a y s , B e e c h C r e e k , P a .
F . E . C r u i u , S h i n g l e h o u s e , Pii.
G e r t r u d e D e m p s e y , Osceola M i l l s , P a .
E l v i r a l)eVine,y, K y l e r t o w n , P a .
A g n e s llixou, M t . J e w e t t , P a .
E d i t h Duff', Clearfield, P a .
Bessie E d m o n d s , E a m e y , P a .
Mildred Ericson, Ludlow, P a .
Hiitfie F a u s t , S a c k e t t , P a .
ihirgiiret F a u l k n e r , Eew City, P a .
Alice F i l l i o i i , K e r r m o o r , P a .
B e s s i e Fowder, W . MoshiUinon, P a .
Miirie F r a n z , S h i n g l e h o u s e , P a .
Letha Fowler, Eldred, Pa.
Hiirriet Frazier, S p r i n g Mills, P a .
Bodine Hall, Kylertown, Pa.
Ellen Hiillgren, Dagus Mines, P a .
Helen Haven, iSmethport, P a .
F l o r e t t a Ileft'iier, W i l l i a m s p o r t , P a .
J a m e s H e p b u r n , Mahaffey, P a .
Virginia Howe, Morrisdale, Pa.
Rachel Hudson, W i n b u r n e , Pa.
Naomi Jenks, Philipsburg, Pa.
Geraldine Johnston, Philipsburg, Pa.
Miiry K e p h a r t , D u n c a n s v i l l e , P a .
Helen Lanzcl, St. Marys, P a .
Ruth Larson, W. Moshannon, P a .
Isabel L e e , S p r i n g M i l l s , P a .
A n n a McGowan, Clarence, P a .
Miiry M i l l a r d , M t . J e w e t t , P a .
E. W . Miller, Center Hall, P a .
Rosa M i l l e r , P o r t l a n d M i l l s , P a .
M a r g u e r i t e Mix, D u k e Center, P a .
Ciitherine M o n t g o m e r y , W i n b u r n e , Pa.
Leroy Morrison, P o r t Matilda, P a .
Myrtle Mountz, Duncansville, P a .
Mary Nason, Julian, Pa.
Metta Nelson, Oswayo, P a .
H e l e n O t t , St. B o n i f a e i u s , P a .
Lorina Peterson, Wilcox, Pa.
Margaret Pctruskey, Brisbin, P a .
Belle Pierce, Morrisdale, P a .
(Continued on page 6)
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Xdriniil Times is pubUslKid at Coiilrul State
Norniiil School, I.ock Hav(!n, Penna., by the student body as a whole. Tlie auliscription rate for
this year is $1..')0. Address all communications to
Amy I'eters, Business Manager, C. S. N. S.,
Lock Haven, Penna.
Editor-in-CIiief
Gertrude Harper
Assistant Kditor
Sylvia Breth
Alumni Editor
Louise Riiiliardson
Associate Editors—Esther Agnew, Evelyn I('ritz,
Graet; Ishler, Bernice Lord, Jean Halin, Mabel
Honi, Emily Brown, Gladys Bettens, Theodore
Sclireiber.
Business Manager
Amy Peters
Associate Managers—Amelia Irist, Marie Smith,
Neta Wliite, ,Tulia Coffey, Frieda Staiman,
\'elina Ridge, Grayce Conpersmith, Ina Chapel,
Ruth Malone, CathePiue Cooper, Louise Kintner,
Maiie Moran, Guy Luclt.
Faculty Malinger
T. W. Trembath
APRIL IH, 1!)2;!
To Be Select, Select
It is only too true that we cannot
have everything iu the world; therefore,
why not attempt to fake title only to
the best? There is a best in nearly
every phase of life; since we cannot
have everything, why not take that?
In the matter of time, be select in
our choice of where and how to sjiend
it. Remember, we have very little of it
to spend.
In the choice of books: There are
millions of books in the world, yet you
and I ciui read but a very few; wdsdom would seem to indicate selecting
those that seem likely to leave something worth while in our lives, something desirable in our minds, something pleasurable in our recollections.
Then, too, there are our friends. The
people whom we might know are numbered also in millions; but there are
only a few that we can take into our
confidence, wdiom we can trust, enjoy,
and continue to hiive faith in. Here,
too, there is excellent wisdom in choosing slowly, choosing carefully, being
select.
In the variety shop that life is, with
every counter littered with desirable
odds aud ends, there are only a few
things that we need, really need, to fill
u\> the gaps in our lives. Pick carefully; pick thoughtfully; pick that
which we lack and that wliich will wear
niiiny, man.y days. Contentment, tluit
quality of spirit which all of us, wdse
and foolish, are seeking to purchase
from life, is just another n.'ime for pride
iu iiersouiil possessions. Pity those wdth
friinticnlly littered lives. For yourself,
possess yourself only of worthy jiossessions; be select.
Tomb Hunting
All ears and e.ves are turned eiisfwiird
these da.ys as a company of discoverers
or exjilorcrs open the tombs of Eg.ypf
to see wdiiit they can find.
Tliey have found mumniies of kings,
rulers of Egyjit, and of animals; they
have found diverse stones, pottery, designs, nnd imiiges.
Suppose thiit explorers should take if
upon fhemselyes, consider it of suflieieiit importiince, to oiien the tomb of
a C. S. N. S. student five hundred years
from now. It would not be a king that
should greet them, but a learned student of profound ability, this would be
evident from the look upon her face.
They should find, also, but a pet cat,
street car tickets, and perhaps a ship
tlint you sail in the air.
Her tomb would be lined in gorgeous
plain white on all four sides, wdth a
space in each wall, large enough for an
ordinar.y person to pass through, for a
door. The exquisite furniture would
consist of a table—lined with books,
pencils and jiiipers, orange skins, etc.;
a chair—her own wooden, straightbacked chair; and perhiips a trunk.
Upon closer exiiniination of the inner, secret chambers of her tomb one
would see pictures, ciirefully filed and
indexed, of Mr. MacDougall, Miss Y'ale,
Miss Himes, nnd others; a bell with the
iiiime "Belvie" on the handle, wdiose
ring is loud enough to waken any mortal, dead or alive, a basketball, a volleyball, and a tennis racket upon her
left liand; and, in her right hand,
plenty of money, evenly divided between the Arbor and the movies.
Her robe would be lined within and
without with medals, sorority pins, engagement rings, and merit badges. At
her feet would be a petition for shorter
days and longer vaciitions, and inscribed
uiion the wall—"I worked, I worked,
I worked—because, I had to."
Interesting relics they would be of
semi-barbarous customs!
Now You Chase Me!
TIMES
SENIOR CLASS
PLAY PRESENTED
(Continued from pasfe 1)
Mretli, who we are sure, felt jierfeidl.v
at ease heliiiug |ie(i])le because, oh, well,
thiit's what Lib usuall.y does.
Juliii I'endleton, the regular little
fairy in the home, was well taken li.v
Katherine Cawle.v. Didn't Kay look nnfuriil in her environment? We nlmost
thought we were in C. S. N. S. instead
of at Viissiir. It gave us a sort of satisfied feeling to see her and Jimmy McBride find the happy ending. Of course,
you know who was the irrepressible
Jimmie—why, Marcy, of course. He was
good and so screamingly funn.v that we
liked him immediafel.y.
His sister, Sally McBride, was iinother bright light and quite natural, too.
For this iiiirt was done to perfection
by our own Gertrude Harper. It is
enough to just see Gertrude on the
stiige, but when she has a good part aud
Hues to siieiik there is none better.
And she just suited the fastidious Mrs.
Pendleton who was porfriived b.y Emil.v
Brown. We think special comment is
due to Emil.v for she took that jinrf in
less fliiiii a week's notice. You saw how
well she did it, too. She gave one more
evidence of what brains can do.
lliizel Johnson made a comfortable
Mrs. Semple with her quaint iiccenf and
her deliciously humorous manner. We
all liked her iind the reason we did
was due to Hazel's imtting real effort
into the iiarf. And wasn't Helen Kinney good as Carrie?
No, we're not forgetting the funny
little oi'iihans in their- blue checked
gingham. It's surprising what kids some
Normal Seniors are! Do you know that
it made us feel so sorry for the little
waifs Mhen Mrs. Lippett ordered them
around that we wanted fo be DaddyLong-Legs to all of them so they'd liave
some fun, too! They were such real
kiddies.
And Mrs. Lijipeft as done by Ildithe
Ashe was splendid from her wdggly top
knot to her deeply flounced skirt. She
was just such an orphan's home matron
as we hope no child will ever have to
endure. And that is ii Cdinplinient to
Edithe's acting.
"Cheese it—here they come!
Those
fierce Trustees with their many and Viiried
types of
facial
decdriitions.
Wouldn't they make your heart falter
if you had to have tlieni around ever.v
month? That is because they acted
their parts so well. But every Senior
in and out of the pltiy took his p a r t
well or there would not have been a
play. We'd hate to make you too conceited Seniors, but we've heard it said
tliat this play was one of the finest
pieces of co-operative effort ever done
b,y a class iu this or any other Normal.
We can't help thinking, though, that if
Miss (iabriel had not been the splendid
and thoughtfully human director she is,
even Seniors would have fallen down
on their jiiirts—then wdiere would the
pla.y have been? Three cheers for our
Miss Gabriel! Three cheers for '2,3!
Dear Norinal Times: Today finds me
with nothing crazy on my mind, so I
cannot attend English class. Everything
seems dark and dreary since I received
that iiormiilogrinih telling me that my
great-greiit-griindfather, while rollerskating in Czeeho-Sloyakia, had the misfortune to die. If I did not have music
class today, I should attend the funeral.
Then, too, I jiromised to play golf on
the campus this afternoon with President Ibirding.
Radiograph!!
Another thing that has had a depressWe just found out incidentally that
these former graduates are playing the ing effect ou me is Mr. Trembath's lateteaching game with an exceiitioiiiilly ly contracted spasms in verse. He is
tr,yiug to turn us into something almost
high batting average:
as good as Am.v Lowell, whose vers libre
Helen Walters, '22.
put me into bed for si.x weeks. He has
Florence Marolf, '22.
no use for automobiles, though, for he
Marian Vanderbilt, '21.
is always telling us to use our feet.
Marion Buehler, '22.
What feet have to do with vers is more
Madeline Fiedler, '21.
than Amy or I can explain.
Marguerite Donlin, '22.
Hoping you cheer me up, dear NorLaura Dolan, '22.
mal Times, I remain,
Eva Belle Lovell, '21.
Yours forever,
Priscilla Williams, '21.
NORMA LITE.
Alma Sissler, '22.
IN THE MAIN HALL
Helen DeGabricl, '21.
E. M.—"Hm; smells like cabbage."
Sara Peterman, '21.
Miss Shaw—"What are they having
H. C.—"No, it's burnt peanuts."
Grace Brooks, '21.
tonight?"
L. H.—"More like turnips to me."
Rhoda McCartney, '21.
E. M.—"Dress rehearsal, I believe."
E. M.—"Right, girls, right; we're al
There are a great many other stars.
Miss Shaw—"I was speaking of dinright. Spanish rice."
We're just waiting to hear about them. ner."
SUMMER SESSION
DEVELOPMENTS
since the luibliciition of the suinnier
session issue of the Normal Times there
have been a number of occurrences that
will he df interest to all who ]iropose
cnming fo ('eiitral State this next summer. A numlier of new teachers have
been engaged, several entertainment
features added or defiiiitel,y scheduled,
a public idayground is to be hicated ou
the Norniiil grounds, nnd a number of
ntliletic contests iindertaken.
.Miss -Mniedii .Ma.v .Iiinne.v, nf the
f'iiciilt.y (if the Inst summer session,
iibdiit whose return nnthing definite
could be learned before fhe last Normal
Times went to jiress, has accepted her
summer contriict, and will be in charge
of the same courses as in the ]il22 session, iliss Eleanor ilarkle will also be
back, and will agiiin teach the fifth and
sixth giiides in fhe
demonstration
school. It was announced in the summer session Times that she would not
return, but the stiitement was erroiiedus. .Miss lioegge, also, will be again
with us, teacliing methods in arithmetie.
.Miss Howe, training teacher iu charge
of grades four and five in our training school, will be in cliiirge of methods courses. Witli the exception of Miss
Heaton and Miss Markle, the wdiole
faculty nf last year's session will be
on the job.
To fill the vacancy in fhe demonstration school caused by Miss Heafoii's decision not to return, Mr. Drum has engiiged Miss Leona Scott, principal of fhe
Western School, of Millville, N. J., a
graduate of Trenton State Normal
School, who hus for a number of summers been a demonstration teacher .-it
the Ocean City, N. J., summer school.
R. W. Hoxworth, Scout Executive of
Clinton County, and forinerl.y executive
of scouting at Norristown, Pa., wdll
have charge of the Boy Scout work that
will be given here this summer. This
wdll include firemaking, camii cooking,
pi-iicfical campcraft, and other scout activities, and wdll be practical work. That
is to say, fhe work of the course will
be so managed that a certain amount of
camp life and camp cooking wdll be possible.
For the courses in Campfire Girl Leuderaliip i l r . Drum has succeeded in securing from the national headiiuiirters
of the Girl Scout inovement, in New
Y'ork City, Miss Florence Heintz, a graduate of the University of Chicago and
of Teachers' College, Columbia University. Miss Heintz, a former teacher of
art at the (Jrand Rapids, Mich., Higli
School, was induced by the board of
education of that city to act as campfire girl executive for the city of Grand
Rapids, and served in that capacity for
several years. From there she was taken
into the national headquarters of the
moyemeiif, and has been there for the
past two .years. After the completion
of her work here this summer, she is
to become one of their chief field worker.s, working out of the New Y'ork Cif.y
nlhces. The work that she offers is also
td be prncticiil in its nature, and the
students who enroll in the course will
learn some of the details of campfire
girl leadership by actiuilly doing wdiat
a trooi) has to do, including, as in the
(Continued on page 6i
NORMAL
APPROPRIATE LETTER
TO MOTHER
One Week Before the Marks
Go Home
Dearest J l o t h e r :
The box of eats came just in time to
save me; I was practically starved. Wc
get good eats here but they couldn't
e(|Uiil ynurs. and. naturally, it is sometimes mighty hard on nie. Then, this
week was test week, and of course I
study so very hnrd that I feel weak by
evening. Oh! you have no idea how we
girls relished the cake; and as for those
Lebanon bologna sandwiches, well, I
reall.y cnuldu't find a crumb left five
minutes iifter we attacked the box.
As I wtis saying, this was test week.
What a horrid week it has been, too!
I hnve worked so hard this semester
that I just don't know how I've avoided
a nervous breakdown, and even then
I'm afraid I flunked those tests. The
tennis courts a r e in good shape now, too,
and I haven't had time to get a bit of
exercise tliere either.
Mother, ynu remember when I came
down here I thought Normal School
would be a cinch and i phinned all sorts
of things to do to puss away the time?
Vou kudw hdw .you thought I would
have a Int of work to do and you
warned me not to overwork? Well, I've
often wondered whether I wouldn't have
acknowledged long ago that I do sometimes work very hard. I spend a lot
ot time on m.y lessons, but I'm so afraid
1 won't get through all my subjects.
These teachers do mark too hard. You
know in High School I alwnj's got high
markg except in Math and Latin, (I
want to capitalize tn attract attention),
and of course Mr. Brant and Miss
Hickdft were regular cranks about
niiirking.
Now, if I don't hnve ns many t\vo's
ou m.y card as ynu think 1 should or
as you would like me to have, just remember 1 have some of the highest
marks gotten by any nf fhe class.
If Diid connihiins, you remind him
that I am rather inclined to be nervous,
iiud if 1 work a bit harder I'll have a
nervous breiikdown. 1 think m.y health
comes before lessons every time; am
I right? If I feel real nervous I just
have tn leave m.y work for awhile, so
I go to one of the girls' rooms and talk.
I do almost iinything to get a change.
If I wouldn't I wiiuld long ago have
Illlll to come home to rest, then I would
miss Sd much wnrk tliat I could never
niake it iqi.
Now, dear, if .you see low marks on
m.y card, please remember 1 itm working hard, ns hard as my health will allow. Oh! I shduld tell yon, I have Inst
ten puiinds; 1 onl.y weigh one hundred
and eighf,v-fivo now.
Your loving daughter,
JANIE,
P. S. I won't need that money this
week.
L. H.—"I think it would be a good
idea to have round tables in the dining rnnni ; 1 never can hear what they
are saying up at the other end of the
t,able."
II. D.—"No, you don't; we'd never get
a square meal tlien."
TIMES
IMPOSSIBLE, B U T Your Idea in Suits—
Suits Us, and Our
Prices Will Suit You!
When you come here for c l o t h e s w h a t e v e r you have in mind is more
i m p o r t a n t to us than how much
you h a v e in your pocket.
If you wouldn't w e a r a brown suit
for a minute—we d o n ' t w a s t e a
minute on brown.
We feel t h a t our customers a r e
intelligent men who have minds
of their own and t h a t i t ' s up to
us to mind our own business and
produce w h a t you w a n t if we can
—or apologize if we cannot.
Today—it woulcJ be hard to suggest a pattern,
model or price that we cannot get together
with you on—to your entire satisfaction.
Michael-Stern Value First Suits $ 2 5 up
Hart Schaffner and Marx Suits $ 3 0 up
WILSON e SHAFFER
Money's
Worth or Money
Back
COMING EVENTS
SOUNDS FROM
CAST SHADOWS
THE SUBWAY
Excitement prevails over the dormitories. Usuiillj- iifter a vacation everyone is unwilling fo settle down to work
again, and ou the first night or two
many shed tears of self-pity. But what
we hear now is, "Only nine more weeks!
Onl.v nine more weeks, and I'll bo
through forever!"
That is wh.at the
seniors are saying, as they bustle
around, priicficiug that look of complete
wisdom flint the.y must soon be wearing.
The juniors have that spring-is-come
hnik on their faces, and are talking
iibout what they "will do this summer.
The seniors, bowed down with the
weight of it, must think of wdiat they
must do from now on.
Just think, seniors, iissuiuing tliat .you
know how—that your good times iit C.
S. N. S. a r e about oyer. Soon you will
be forced tn be dignified, self-reliant,
Illlll, nliove all, self-sup)iorting.
Ah, seniors! when ye become self-supporting next wdiiter, won't you please
renienilier us who are learning out of
ynur nld notebooks? Once in a wdiile,
remeinliering the ennditious of tho gnnd
old days, send us a box mit iiretzels und
peanuts. We, the seniors-to-be, will call
dnwn blessings u]Hin .you, and perhaps,
if wc ciiii siiilicieiitl.y reform our present habits, we may even, some time,
send you a post card conveying our
tlinnks, a n d felling .you how much we
eiijo.ved eiiting them in the dark.
Onr s.vnipathies to little .lean.
Who's iilways tr.ving to get lean;
To bnb.v Gus, wdio wants the moon
But only gets to scriipe the spoon;
To Ilildii bravo, who never said,
"My carpet's not a bit too r e d " ;
'(Jause she wants I's, to Alva Bell,
Who onl.v gets—what she won't tell.
We, the Ila.vrdomers, publicl.y admonish the inliiibitiints of the dormitor.v, all and sundry, for their exceeding iioiKdialance in matters that intimatel.v coiicen niir welfare and general
felicif.y. The npiiended minutiae are,
we feel, nf siiHicicnt weight to justify
no slight degree of eluillitinn ou our
part:
1. You, the dorm students, all and
sundry, do unite in your efforts to vitiate our progress b.v monopolizing teachers and reference books;
2. You, the dorm students, each and
all, do obfuscate our horizon ou all too
frequent occasions by satisfying your
gregarious instincts in tho immediate
yicinit.v of the da.yronni windows.
3. Y'ou, the dorm students, jointly
and severally, either injudiciously or
with egotistic disregard for the common good, do satisfy your epicurean
propensities without bound or limit, thus
Iiersisteutl.y exhausting tho Beanery's
reiierfory, and e(|iiiill,y persistently miiteriall.y disliirhing that salubrious condition (if (iiir interiors requisite fo effective full enjoyment of life, health,
and the pursuit of learning.
In monosyllabic English, these are diir
ludsf aggrnviited objectidiis tn yniir intolerable striduliitions. We insist that,
without compelling recourse tn any ultimatum, you iusfantlj- cease, desist, discnntinue, nnd hereafter refriiin from
these and all similar siicinlogic impositions.
Although, when the spring flowers
are comiuenciug to bud and the tennis
courts are sending a call to tennis lovers, it is impossible to read every article listed here as worthy of consideration, yet i t is not impossible to glance
through this column fo select one article
that will be useful now, or wdiich can
be referred to when teaching hero or
elsewhere.
Interior Decoration, by Helen Kones,
in the April Good Housekeeping, mjiy
be valuable as supplementary reading
for art classes.
The report of fhe National Department of Superinteudeiico may be of
some help to those who are aspiring
to the management of schools. It is to
be found in the March School Life, a
publication containing national educational information.
Normal Instructor and P r i m a r y Plans
always has at least one article of especial interest to everyone. I n the April
number a r e :
Simplification of Percentage Teaching, by E. L. Countrym a n ; The Mourning Dove, by Marie
Ellis Hcgler; Lexington and the Minufenien, by Edwin Worthen, and Photographs from the Lexington Historical Society.
Psychology students may be interested ill The Savage Stage, from Eight to
Twelve, by Ruth Danenhower Wilson,
in the last McClures. The same magazine has another rather unusual .article,
How Our Forefathers Settled a Turkish
Problem, by David Henderson, a true
story of an adventuresome American
captured in a Moslem city.
Then for your own satisfaction would
.von not care to know wdiat Albert Bushnell Hart has to say about W h a t We
(Jwe to fhe Puritans? Has the debt-tothe-Puritiin idea been overdone? Both
this and The Colhipse of Education in
Soviet Russia are in the April Current
History.
While one is thinking of life in Europe, he may find time to give Germany
a thought. A Glimpse of the Lives of
(iernian Women, in The Woman's Press,
suggests that foreigners wdio are visiting in and reporting on Germany toda.v may not be visiting the real Germaii.y, the (:ieriniiny outside of Berlin
nnd the fashionable resorts, wdiere real
(Germans may be found living real lives.
Frank Tannenbaum's article on the
Ku Klux Klan, in the April Centur.y;
Vice President Coolidge's discussion of
the Iiosition of Massachusetts in the
United Stiites, in the recent Natinniil
(leogrii]ihic ; Riidin Achievements in R>'ceiit 'I'eiirs, iu the last Current Histor.v;
nil these are suggestive of the ]ilentitude (if infdnniitiiin that conies to the
niiigiiziiie render.
I.iist, but jierhiiiis of greatest general
interest: What Is America's Favorite
llynin.' Is it yours? What would ynu
siip)iose it to be? The real answer is
in the April Etude, in fhe short article
nn The Rnniauce of Hymns aud Tunes.
Get the iniigiizine habit. Like the
bobbed-haired girl, i t may eontiiin very
little of a lot of the things you are inE. A. (opening her lunch)—"X^ics terested in, but what it has is mighty
again! There's no end to pies at our well worth knowing and certainly up to
house!"
the last minute; if you can keep uii
C. McC—"How irould there be ? They with it, you are in for a general educa11111 ke 'em round."
tion before you are finished.
f
I
NORMAL
&Zi
Jewelers
and
Opticians
We are now in our new
location in the Opera
House Block.
We invite you to call
and inspect our new
stock and up-to-date
Jewelry.
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Misplaced Articles
Though it may seem impossible to
think that Coppersmiths have any work
in wdiich a Cherry may be particularly
useful, yet, at C. S. N. S., oddities are
not unusual. However, this work of
these Coppersmiths is not as most coppersmiths, and that of the Cherry is
far from the business of cherries; both
do the same kind of work.
The cliief occupation of the two Coppersmiths and the Cherry for fhe past
two or three weeks has been to keep
one or two persons busy hunting for
the articles these lassies purposely misplace. Of course some things such as a
college pillow, a waste p.aper basket,
nu umbrella, a suitcase, or books; and
rolled newspapers are not hard to find
Avhen tucked under bed covers, these
articles are merel.y hard to pile out of
bed in times to feel comfortable when
the lights go out. The articles t h a t are
hard to find, especially if ono plans to
get a good night's rest are those like a
tack hammer, a comb, or a few thin
slices of onion. It was very convenient
for file one party, receiving practically
all the benefits nf the three workmen's
labor, that the lights did not go out
too soon after discoveries were made,
for perhaps one or two persons would
have hud nightmare. Wouldn't those
three persons have been sorry for thoir
actions, if a t midnight a nightmare of
another would have aroused them from
their peaceful sleep? Tho day of judgment may not be far off, so bo careful!
Hetty Staver announces that she can
write poetry. We j u s t dare her t o !
TIMES
US A N D O T H E R S
Lois Stephens, of Woodland, was the
guest of Amelia List over the week-end.
Miss Stephens was a classmate of the
local delegation of Irvona girls, and
was royally entertained by them. We
hope she liked us well enough to repeat
the visit.
Gertrude Dolan, who was quarantined
in her room until it was definitely ascertained t h a t she had been unaffected
by her exposure to scarlet fever, has
been released. When the doctor saw her
queer actions after being set free, he
remarked that he thought he ought to
put her in for twenty days more in order to be sure that she was all right.
Miss Myrtle Seyler, of Salona, visited
Caroline McCliutick and
Genevieve
Bicker on April 4.
Grace English spent the Easter holidays wdth relatives in Camden and Philadelphia.
The dii.yroom gang, with few exceptions, has been spending this past week
playing ball on the west campus. They
need the practice, it is apparent.
Elsie Furst has the last thing worth
mentioning in the line of swollen jaws.
Vincent Schreiber, kept at home wdth
mumps during and after the holiday
period, returned to school on Monday,
Ernest Schrot returned to school on April 10.
Wednesdiiy, April 4. He insists that he
We extend our sympathy to Annie
did not develop the mumps with any
idea of extending his Easter vacation. Wise. Due to the serious condition of
her eyes, she has had to discontinue her
Mac unfortunately hung up a piece studies, and has returned to her home
of his coat (we say coat, because we do ill South Williamsport.
not wdsh to be more specific) on a nail
Thelma Snyder has again joined the
the other day. A few minutes later he
was discovered rushing toward the train- dayroom gang. Was it this spring
ing school, informing the world at large weather, Thelma?
that he did not wdsh to be detained,
Lucretia Summers surprised the wdiole
because he was hunting Miss Lockhart. crowd recently, aud turned most of
Guy Luck and Charles Herbster came
in on April 4, each carrying a large
bunch of trailing arbutus. They were
in great demand in the main hall that
evening, but very little of the arbutus
found its way into the west dorm.
What is wrong, girls? Out of practice?
Mary Mowrer returned from her vacation wdth her first case of swelled
liead. I t subsided rapidly as her cold
was remedied.
them green with envy, wdion she announced that she had just accepted an
invitation to siiend the summer in Europe. She has made no definitely detailed plans for the triji, but expects to
sail some time early in May. Wish we
could add to our education that way,
too. Here is hoping that you have a
pleasant trip, Lucretia, and good luck
all the waj-.
Bertha Burt is back ou the job again,
liaviug been held at home by illness.
Miss Yale also realizes t h e need of Now that we are all here again, start
men around the Normal school; on Mon- something, sonieone, before
Bertha
day night she allowed all who wished thinks she has t o !
to do so to go down to the Martin to
On Thursdaj' evening, March 22, the
see Clarence.
students gave a farewell party to Mrs.
Mildred Stonemetz developed a case Gage, who has resigned her position as
of scarlet fever on Saturday, April 7. dietitian here, and who will move out
She was moved a t once to the third of the dormitories on the first of April.
floor of the east dorm, as far from all Mr. Gage and Lewis were included, for
other students as possible, and placed the whole family will be missed from
under quarantine. Strenuous measures tlie life of the dorm.
were taken to prevent the spread of the
(iriice Ishler siieiit a recent week-end
disease, the boys even being required
to move to the rooms on the first floor. with Catherine Cooper at the latter's
Tt was imiiossible to locate a nurse to home in Loganton.
take charge of the case, so Mildred's
Philili Forcey and Lucy Stone, of
mother was sent for. Fortunately, the
Woodland, surprised Ella Forcey wdien
case was a very light one. After a week
they dropped in to see her Sund.ay afin quarantine, she was removed to her
ternoen. Don't come in unexpectedly
home by auto, with the sanction of the
next time, please; Ellii gets too much
state health department, to wait out the
excited.
term of her quarantine.
Bernice Lord returned on Saturday,
Edith Burgeson, Ciitherine Deveriiux,
April 7, having been held up a t home
Anne Peters, and Winifred Patterson
long enough to teach a French class in
returned late from vacation. Their
the Emporium High School for a week,
causes for del.'iy were fully satisfactory
llnw did you like the profession,
—to them.
Bernie .'
Our ciuict little Eleanor Eobb was
It is rumored through the dining
taken out to dinner on Wednesday,
room thiit affer April 17 a speci.al table
April 4, by her aunt, Mrs. F . A. Eobb.
will be set, not as a training table, uur
Judging by the package of sweets that
for those who wish to get out hiking or
she brought back, .her aunt knows just
Jilaying tennis, but simply fo make it
how to treat a niece going to Central
]iossible for Marcella Burt, Loretta
State.
Funk, Beatrice Van Zandt, and Warren
Iva Livingston spent her vacation in McCarty to eat as much as they wish
without getting embarrassed.
Clearfield, visiting her friends.
COPYRIGHT 8Y
JHTERWOVEK STOCKINQ C0UP1UI9
Smartest Styles in
Clothing and Furnishings
At Moderate Prices
Society Brand Clothes
Mallory Hats
Earl & Wilson Shirts
Interwoven Hose
Ladies' Weldrest Hose
Hickoff & Weaver
The Store That
Appreciates
Quality
Shoe Repairing
J. F. TORSELL
BELLEFONTE AVE.
Students Assist in Near East
Relief
A talk coiifiiining a note of unusual
aiipeal for the relief of the needs of
orjihiin children in the Near East was
given in chapel April 9 by Dr. M. P .
Krikorian, a native Armenian.
Dr. Krikorian, an exceptionally interesting speaker, wdiose sincerity at all
times was iiarticularly evident, told of
the high Christian and intellectual
standards of his fellow countrymen, a n d
of the iuhumau freiitmeut that t h e y
have been accorded af the hands of t h e
Turks. Because of constant savage massacres, his country has become ,a l a n d
of oriihans, a land of hungry orphans,
for there, were few left to provide for
file thousands that must be fed. I t was
in behalf of these children that D r .
Krikorian made his appeal for funds
to carry on the organized relief work
of the Near East Relief.
Envelopes were distributed to each
person present. Tho appeal evidently
went home, for when they were collected, the following morning in ehapel,
a total of more than $60 was obtained,
which was forwarded by Mr. Drum. T h e
receipt ackuowdedging the money has
been for some days posted in the book
room.
NORMAL
Plan to Lunch
AT
F. I. TITUS
Just Off the Campus
HOME
AND
COOKING
GROCERIES
Brion's New Studio
21 South Fairview Street
Fitted with latest and
modern equipment
Special Rates to Schools
SUMMER SESSION
DEVELOPMENTS
(Continued from page 3)
case of the bo.ys, a certain amount of
actual camping out.
Seumas McManus, the author of Donegal Fairy Stories and other Irish folk
tales, is to appear here in readings from
his stories during the summer. Dallas
Lore Sharp, writer of Watcher in the
Woods, Beyond the Pasture Bars, and
other nature tales, is also to be here
during the session.
Mr. Vanarsdale, from his New Jersey
home, is arranging a number of baseball
games for the summer's team. On the
schedule he proposes games with the
Altoona Apprentice School, Clarion
Summer Normal, and Bloomsburg Summer School. He hopes to have at least
one game weekly arranged before tho
opening of the session.
One r.afher attractive feature of this
summer's surroundings will be the location liomewhere on the school grounds
of a full.v equipped public playground.
The probable location will be just beyond the gymnasium, this side of the
orcliiird that many of you recall. The
Lock liuveii Lodge of Elks is to oee to
it that the ground is equipped witf
everything in the way of play apparatus
that a youngster's heart could wish, and
the normal school wdll see to it that
the grounds are open to the children of
the cit.y, under the general directiiin of
the pnysical triuning department, at all
hours of the play day. The appia'iitits
wdll be installed, of course, for the use
of the children, not of the summer session adults, but the general playground
activities wdll iifford no small number
of ideas for playground use a t school
to those who watch for them, and a
general color and hustle to the whole
summer school atmosphere.
.Summer school is an oddity in educational thought, isn't it? In the best
sense of both nouns, it is a vacation at
school.
II. S.—"Poets are born and not
made."
B. S.—"Say, I wasn't blaming you."
TIMES
US cs, OTHERS THE LOONY
REPORTER
Tot Schenck stopped at the school on
Sunday, April 8. She was on her way
home from a house party at Bucknell,
and could not resist the impulse to
hunt uii her ohl friends and fell them
all iibout it.
Annie Wise and Martha Fillman, they
are not man and wife so much any
more. The.y have removed their dormitor.v lodgings away from each other
together. Mr. Cage, he wants to know
whether all this moving it is a reward
Sara llanuii put in her first April for good behavior or a demerit, but we
week-end at State College, iitfending the think it is six for the one nnd a half
a dozen for the other.
Civil Engineers Hop.
Orbisonia it has il nice long name,
Helen Mantle entertained her mother,
but Benovo it had the nice long score
from Oval, on Ajiril o and 6. We are
when fhey went to the shower baths.
certain that she en.ioyed the Senior
So many of our juniors have joined
Play as much as we did.
Mr. Ulmer's Audubon Society that we
Weiuers were welcome wittles nt table think maybe we will have some nice
D2 last Wednesday. Helen Mantle flighty times this spring yet.
heeded Esther's plea, and brought extra
Gret Willianis, she is back in the paA*
platters, so as to make if possible for per again. This time she is wanting
her to put on a little weight. Keep an we should not say a word about Safefje.ye on Esther; it wdll be interesting if Last.
the treatmeut works.
Lucretia Summers' light outeiied itMiirie Howe, whom illness forced out self at half past seven on Monday night.
Branch
of school before the holida.ys, is now at It just could not stand seeing her work
so
much.
the Clearfield Hospital, recovering from
Marcella Burt's mother she came to
an operation for appendicitis.
see Marcella just a little wdiile ago, and DORMITORY ROOMS GOING
Mrs. Trembath is taking an extended now just before Easter her brother,
FAST FOR SUMMER SCHOOL
vacation; wherefore Mr. Trembath has Harold, he comes along to see that Mar(Continued from page 2)
been eating for some time iit the facul- cella she gets home schnell. Marcella,
Leona Rader, Drifting, Pa.
ty table.
is it maybe something that we should
Mildred Bevels, Atlas, Pa.
Ellen Ehoads, Dunlo, Pa.
Easter flowers, and yet more flowers! know J'OU have not told us?
George Eothrock, Bellefonte, Pa.
Sall.v Hiiiina she had to wear her hair
A few of us on second floor were kept
Eussel Heisli, Spring Mills, Pa.
busy watering them for a wdiile. Gosh! up with pins during the Easter vacation,
Scott Schilling, Nisbet, Pa.
because her father he had a decided set
it seems like years ago.
Euth Schrot, Clearfield, Pa.
against bobbed-hair flappers. Being
Miss Butler was prevented from meetMar.v Sebastian, Locust Gap, Pa.
as he is still innocent that her hair is
ing her classes on April 4 and ~>, due to
Helen Secor, Bidgway, Pa.
shorn, Sallj' she could not bear to cause
an attack of laryngitis. Students conKatherine Shannon, Houtzdale, Pa.
him suffering. Now, is not that a nice,
ducted the periods.
JIary Shannon, Morrisdale, Pa.
thoughtful daughter?
Margaret Sinclair, Houtzdale, Pa.
On April 12 Frederick Hunter and
Jo Sweeny she had her picture took
Sara Spadafore.
Victor Haney got up at 4:30 aud went coining the hill down on skis. And she
Grace Starline, Beaverdale, Pa.
for a run up the boys' glen. They did not have her picture took wdien she
Carrie Straw, Kermoor, Pa.
intend to keep this up daily. A number did just stoii coming the hill down.
Balpli Sweeney, Spring Mills, Pa.
of recruits have joined their health
Miss Avery she has pussywillows all
Salvador Tiracorda, Madera, Pa.
crusade. Also commencing the same over the library, except only the card
Anna Valyo, Bitumin, Pa.
day eight girls appeared on the tennis catalogue in.
Ardessa Viehdeffer, Drifting, Pa.
courts at 5:30. How do you put two
Spring has been here several days alKuth Ward, Leolyii, Pa.
and two together?
ready. The mothballs, fhey do no longer
Elizabeth Williams, Julian, Pa.
rise
up
into
the
air
to
greet
you.
Mr.
Anna Daugherty spent Thursday of
her vacation at East Ferney. On her Drum ill his healthy talks to hearty stuDiphtheria Week
return triii she succeeded in dropping dents he has not yet said that a mothball
a
day
saves
a
stitch
in
time,
but
Nearly
every week of the year by
her jiass from the wdndow. The conthis time has been assigned to some sort
ductor must have been impressed by maybe he wdll yet.
of drive or other. We have had Laugh
her tale, for he put her off the train
H. B.—"J'see the book I'm writing?" Week, Better English Week, and a
and allowed her to chase it back along
F. P.—"Fiction, science, history, or dozen other vaieties. The latest to dethe track for two miles or thereabouts.
velop is Diphtlieria Week, which was
He allowed her to take the next train wdiat?"
the week of April 8. Dr. Critchfield, the
home, also, refusing to wait himself.
II. B.—"Nojie! n o t e — f r Miss Himes."
medical inspector of Central State, told
us of it during the chapel exercises on
Tuesday, April 10.
Dr. Critchfield brought with him Dr.
McCreary, a representative of the State
Medical Society and of the PennsylLOCK HAVEN, PA.
vania State Boiird of Health, who spoke
on the Prevention of Diphtheria.
Among other things, he stated that
the mortality rate from diphtheria, especially among children, is causelessly
high; that through the use of diphtheria
Designated Depository
anti-toxin, provided that it be used immediately upon the discovery of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
first symptoms, fhe mortality rate
City of Lock Haven.
among children can be reduced to less
than one per cent. Dr. McCreary disLock Haven School District.
cussed briefly the nature, causes, and
Central State Normal School.
means of prevention of the disease, and
urged the duty of all parents, teachers,
and others to become sufllciently fami3% I N T E R E S T PAID O N SAVINGS DEPOSITS
liar wdth the disease as to help reduce
the number of cases to the minimum.
Lunches
Soda
Ice Cream
Norris Chocolates
Page & ShawCandies
Achenbaeh's
CLINTON T R U S T CO.
Capital $200,000
Surplus
$80,000
NORMAL
TIMES
1(1 lie fiiunil ill t h e s t i i t e ; i f ,voii d o u b t
CENTRAL STATE FINDS
it, s e t t l e tluise d d u b f s b y r e f e r r i n g t o
n y uf t h e t e a m s t h a t w e n t u p a g a i n s t
POSITIONS FOR ITS GRADUATES atlieiii.
H i l l i n g Netti's a b s e n c e
Euth
Placement Service a Real Benefit
The service of Ceiitriil State fo its
graduates never censes. Your Alma Muter follows you info your field of teaching tr.ving fo find out how you are gelting along and (i]ieiiiiig eonstantl.v to
you its professional inspiriition and assistance. We have just iis great iin interest in your success as a teacher as
wo liad in your accomplishmeiits as ii
student. One of the best eyiilem-es of
this continuous service iind iiiteiest is
our effort to iiroperl.v jiliice Central
State Normal graduates in the best systems of schools in the state. The crowning climax in your work at Central
State comes on the day you affix your
signature to the contract t h a t gives you
your coveted iiosition. We help every
student to realize this great snfisfaction.
(iriiiii|iiiiii, l l u i i l i i i g d o i i , l l a z l e t o u , H u l l fax,
llomestead,
Iryoiiii,
Jeiiiudte,
Jolinstown, Jessu[i, Kiinc, Kittaiiiiiiig,
Lelianon, L a u r i d t o n , Lewisburg, Lancast e r , L o p e z , l.iiiisford, L i i p o r t e , L i i f r o b e ,
L u f h e r s b u r g , Ij.ykeiis, L e i s e n r i n g , J b i honiiigton,
ileiidville,
Monongahelii,
i l o n e s s e n , J l e r c e r s b u r g Academy, McK e e s Rocks, M c . M l i s t e r v i l l e , M o u n t A l t o ,
Mercer, Milton, M a h a n o y
City, McKees|i(irt, Miiiersyille, M c V e y t o w n , McClellantduu,
:\It.
l'lea.siiiit,
Madera,
ilifHinburg, Middleburg, Munhall, Montrose,
McConnellsburg,
Mefaiuoras,
Jliddlefown,
Nanficoke,
New
Kensington,
New
Castle,
Nazareth,
Northampton, Norristown, New Bright o n , O l d F o r g e , Olypliiiut, O b e r l i n , O r e field, P e c k v i l l e , P i t t s t o n , P h o e n i x v i l l e ,
Pittsburgh,
Punxsutawney,
Peufield
Last .year maii.v of our graduates were P o t t s t o w n , P o t t s v i l l e , P a l m c r t o n , B e placed in fhe best s.ystems of schools n o v o , R e a d i n g , R o a r i n g S p r i n g , S h a m o in the state. Our service reached Ash- k i n , S h e u i i n d o i i h , S t e e l t o n , S a y r e , S o u t h
ley, Altoona, Austin, Allentown, Arch- W i l l i a m s i i o r t , S t a t e C o l l e g e , S i n n a r a a bald, Abington, Ambridge, Ashliind, h o n i n g , S h a r o n , S u n b u r y , S h i n g l e h o u s e ,
Brookville, Bradford, Bellefonte,-Belle S o u f h i n o n t , S a l i x , S w i s s d a l e , S m i t h f i e l d ,
Vernon, Butler, Brownsville, Bedford, S m e t h p o r t , Sf, ]\bir,ys, T i o n e s t a , T,yrone,
Brockport, Bethlehem, Benezette, Cou- T i i r e i i t u m , T u n k h a n n o e k , T h r o o i i , T a y dersport, Crosb}', Carnegie, Chambers- lor, T o w a n d a , T u r t l e C r e e k , U n i o n t o w n ,
burg, Carlisle, Conshohocken, Carbon- L^]i|ier Darli.y, W i n d b e r ,
Washingfon,
dale, Chester, Charleroi, Connellsville,
Wa.ynesburg,
Williamsport,
WilkesClearfield, Conemaugh, Coatesville, CoBarre.
raopolis, Carmel, DuBois, Dickson Cify,
This year in assisting o u r s t u d e n t s
Darby,
Danville,
Donora,
Duumore,
Doylestown, Driftwood, Dormont, DUAV- a n d f o r m e r g r a d u a t e s fo t h e b e t t e r p o son, Duquesne, Easton, Ellwood City, s i t i o n s , t h e p l a c e m e n t s e r v i c e w i l l r e a c h
Ebensburg, Erie, Emporium, Franklin, eyer,y c o u n t y , c i t y , b o r o u g h , a n d t o w n Frecport,
Girard
College,
Glenside, s h i p s u p e r i n t e n d e n t
and
supervising
Greensburg, Glen Lyon,
Gettysburg, p r i n c i p a l i n t h e s t a t e ,
GIRLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD
DISBANDS FOR SEASON
(Continued from page 1)
t h e b e s t shot ou t h e t e a m , liotli f r o m
t h e floor a n d f r o m t h e f o u l l i n e , a n d
h e r absence was sorely felt for t h e bala n c e of t h e g a m e s . S h e h a s t h o s e c u t e
l i t t l e wa.vs t h a t t a k e a b a l l p a s t , a r o u n d ,
over, u n d e r , i n an3- wiij- t h a t s h e d o e s n ' t
expect it, b y a n d away from a n opposing guard and thence into the basket.
Look a t h e r scoring record for t h r e e
g a m e s , o n e of w h i c h s h e p h i y e d a g a i n s t
K a n e , o u r t o u g h e s t o p p o n e n t , 100 p e r
cent p r e s e n t ; one, against Bellefonte
h e r e , h o p p i n g a r o u n d on o n e f o o t , t h e
other dragging behind h e r ; a n d one,
a g i i i n s t B e l l e f o n t e also, u p t h e r e , wdien
s h e w e n t o u t f o r a wdiile. T h e b e s t
news for t h e next season is t h a t she
will b e b a c k o n t h e j o b .
Mildred Ericson, center, Ludlow, P a .
M i l d r e d looked l i k e t h e m o s t p r o m i s i n g
b i t of b a s k e t b a l l m a t e r i a l t h e j u n i o r s
brought in with them, but she had little
chance to show. D u e to a n i n j u r y in
t h e first g a m e of t h e s e a s o n , s h e w a s
unable to get back into t h e game for
more than a few minutes late in t h e
season.
A n o t h e r y e a r is b e f o r e h e r ;
w a t c h h e r m a k e uii f o r l o s t t i m e t h i s
winter.
Hilda Leathers, center, Howard, P a .
Hilda, too, l e a r n e d her liiisketball here,
a n d good use s h e p u t i t t o . S h e p l a y e d
i n n e a r l y e v e r y g a m e , a n d iiut u p a
scrappy contest every m i n u t e t h a t she
plii.yed. S h e w a s t h e r e wdth t h e g o o d s
t h r o u g h o u t t h e s e a s o n . Onl.y t h o s e w h o
]ila,ye(l on t h e feiini c a n k n o w t h e v a l u e
in g e t t i n g t h e b a l l wdiere i t s h o u l d go
a u d k e e p i n g i t t h e r e of a n o n - t h e - j o b
center like H i l d a . H i l d a goes on this
year into other diggings. W e would it
w e r e n o t so, iis s h e m i g h t p u t if, i f
asked.
a i d e d as ciiiitaiu, nnd showed in liiind l i n g t h e (eiiiii t h e lieiidwork t h a t w a s
k e e p i n g m o s t of N o r n i a r s o i i i i o n e n t s o u t
of s c o r i n g r a n g e . S h e will b e h e r e n e x t
w i n t e r , if gives u s jileiisure t o a n i i o u i i c e .
dred Ericson, c e n t e r ; H e t t y Stayer, side
center;
a n d Euth
Summersgill a n d
C l e o n a C o p p e r s m i t h , g u i i r d s ? Tn a d d i t i o n t o t h e s e , t h e r e iire ii n u n i b e r of
g i r l s w h o h a v e been g i d f i n g t h e g a m e
into them this past season who should
he d u e to jirddiice n e x t w i n t e r ; a n d
tliere is a l l t h e n i a t e r i i i l in n e x t y e a r ' s
e n t e r i n g (diiss to d r a w u p o n b e s i d e . W e
lielieye t h a t , with t h e s a m e c o a c h i n g
a s tlie.y h a v e lind t h i s f a l l , t l i e r e w o u l d
be f e w w o m e n ' s c o l l e g e s in t h e E a s t
tliiif could h a n g t h e s h o r t e n d of t h e
s c o r e on t h a t C. S. N . S. c o n i b i n a t i o n .
T h e s c o r i n g of t h e forvyard t h i s w i n t e r is w o r t h r e c o r d i n g .
The initials
af t h e head of t h e c o l u m i i s r e p r e s e n t
the teams m i d : K a n e , Bellefonte, a n d
Clearfield, e a c h i n twd g a m e s .
E d i t h A s h e , giiiird, f r o m i l i l l IbiU,
]iicked ii]i t h e g a m e u n d e r J l i s s B u t l e r ' s
tutidiige 11111 i n l y . W e h a v e b e e n liiiudiiig h e r e , in t h e ] i r e c e d i n g p a r a g r a p h ,
o n e or l u i i of t h e miiii.v b o u q u e t s h e r
work d i n i n g t h e season d e s e r v e d . Ashie
was II finver of s t r e n g t h ou t h e d e f e n s e ,
illlll ii good b i g o n e . D a m e F o r t u n e
deals us a wicked h a n d w h e n s h e m a k e s
i t i m p o s s i b l e f o r u s t o s a y , " S h e will
complete the champion combination for
F i e l d Goals
next year."
When she graduates in
K B B
K C T
J u n e , C, S, N . S. will lose a pla.ver tluit
Kenned.y
1 4 1
1 1 19
could easil.y b e a s t a r .
niiniia
0 ;i 0
(i 0 2.)
Bernice Lord, guard, stiirted out a s W h i t e
3 i) 6
18
m a n a g e r of t h e t e a i n , b u f f o u n d t h a t S t a v e r
* * *
G
p l a y i n g t h e g a m e was m o r e f u n t h a n S u m m e r s g i l l
* * *
3
handling the reins. W i t h o u t previous
4 l(i 1.3 121 7 10 71
experience, a n d with a late start, she
F o u l Goals a n d C h a n c e s
p i c k e d u p t h e g a m e riiiiidl,v, a s s h e d o e s
Iv K
II
('
K
(•
T
e v e r y t h i u g else, a n d m a d e a n a c c e p t a b l e
Ivcniiedy.. 2-4 L'-4 U-O t - s 0-4 n o ."-20
s u b s t i t u t e . W i t h a n o t h e r s e a s o n . Miss Hiiiiiiii
0-1 0-0 0-0 11-:! d-L' (1-11 0-11
B u t l e r s a y s , s h e w o u l d h a v e f o r c e d h e r White
tl-14 ;!-4 7-12 *
•
» :;(|.:ii)
Stiiver
*
•
»
*
* Kl-lS 10-18
wa.y o n t o a n y t e a m ; b u t s h e g r a d u a t e s
this summer. She hails from E m p o r i u m
]1-1!> u-8 7-12 1-11 n-fiin-is :!.j-74
*l)i(l not pliiy.
at present, b u t m a n y a basketball game
s h e s a w f r o m t h e g.ym b a l c o n y w h e n
h e r f a t h e r was liii nil ling t h e d e p a r f m e n t
of science h e r e , a n d s h e w a s a t r a i n i n g
school k i d d i e .
Cleona Coppersmith, guard, Altoona.
N o n i e goes i n t o a b a s k e t b i i l l g a m e a s
she does i n t o iin.ything else, w i t h h e r
whole h e a r t a n d soul. S h e w.is a n o t h e r
t h a t WHS g r e e n t o t h e g a i u e t h i s fall,
j-ef
deyeloped
remarkabl.v. She was
c a l l e d u p o n on s e v e r a l o c c a s i o n s to s u b s t i t u t e , a n d liyed u p t o fhe o b l i g a t i o n s
of h e r j o b w h e n e v e r t h a t h a i i p e n e d . S h e
wdll b e b a c k agiiiii i n t h e full, a n d
s h o u l d b e c e r t a i n of a r e g u l a r b e r t h o n
t h e nexf v a r s i t y . I t will t a k e s o m e o n e
might.y good t o b e a t N o n i e t o i t if s h e
w a n t s i t , a n d s h e does.
N o s u m m i n g u p of t h e s e a s o n w o u l d
be felt complete without t h e recognit i o n t h a t i s Miss B u t l e r ' s d u e . S h e t o o k
K a t h e r i n e Cawley, center, S c r a n t o n ,
a b u n c h of g r e e n m a t e r i a l , p l u s a f e w
was Hilda's u n d e r s t u d y . She, too, gradw h o h a d pla.ved u n d e r b o y s ' r u l e s , a n d
uates this fall.
H e r i n c h e s wdll b e
who h a d much to u n l e a r n b e f o r e
fitting
missed from line play. She m a d e t h e m
i n t o t h e six m a n ( o r s h o u l d w e s a y , si.x
w o r k f o r h e r i n b a t t i n g d o w n m a n y of
girlf) game.
She p u t t h e m over t h e
the opposition t h r o w s in t h e w r o n g dihurdles; taught them t h e game from
rection.
t h e g r o u n d u p ; p u t t h e s p i r i t of r e d L u c i l l e B u r n h a m , s i d e c e n t e r , J o h n - h e a d e d fight i n t o t h e m ; m o r e r e m a r k sonburg, was t h e lively little cricket able, kept it t h e r e for weeks, while t h e
wdio p l a y e d a l l o v e r t h e c e n t e r of t h e c o u n t r y s i d e
was being
scoured
for
floor, r e a d y t o t a k e a p a s s f r o m f r i e n d g a m e s ; a n d t u r n e d t h e m i n t o a w i n or f o e , a n d s e n d i t w h e r e C. S. N . S . n i n g c o m b i n a t i o n d e s p i t e i n j u r i e s a n d
wanted it to ramble.
T h e r e a r e f e w d i s c o u r a g e m e n t s . B e s t of a l l , s h e p r o s i d e c e n t e r s t o b e f o u n d e q u a l t o M u t t , d u c e d a fighting t e a m t h a t f o u g h t l i k e
she h a v i n g benefitted b y h e r home t r a i n - s p o r t s m e n ; t h a t p l a y e d t h e g a m e to
i n g o n o n e of t h a t b u r g ' s a l w a y s g o o d win, b u t p l a y e d n o t h i n g u n d e r a n y cirteams a n d by her coaching here. She cumstances b u t the game. Our hats are
p r o p h e s i e s t h a t n e x t y e a r w e w i l l luive off t o t h a t s o r t of c o a c h i n g .
a team that cannot be b e a t e n ; a n d she
T h e r e i s n o r e a s o n on e a r t h wdiy C. S.
s h o u l d k n o w , f o r s h e wdll b e h e r e t o
N . S. s h o u l d n o t h a v e , n e x t wdnter, t h o
p l a y o n if.
best girls' basketball t e a m i n t h e NorE u t h S u m m e r s g i l l , g u a r d , l e a r n e d t h e m a l schools of t h e S t a t e . A n n e K e n g a m e u p i n S m e t h p o r t , a n d i n v e s t e d h e r n e d y , H i l d a L e a t h e r s , K a t h e r i n e Cawdey,
knowdedge h e r e .
Good g u a r d s a r e a s E d i t h A s h e , a n d B e r n i c e L o r d a r e lost
essential to w i n n i n g b a s k e t b a l l t e a m s this year, b u t there is a varsity veteran
a s m a i n s p r i n g s t o w a t c h e s , a n d t h e c o m - f o r e v e r y p o s i t i o n . W h a t . m o r e could
b i u i i f i o n of E u t h a n d E d i t h A s h e g a v e o n e a s k t h a n a t e a m m a d e u p of N e t a
N o r m a l o n e of tlie s t r o n g e s t d e f e n s e s W h i t e a n d S a l l y H a n n a , f o r w a r d s ; Mil-
Normal
Normal
Normal
Normal
Normal
Norniiil
Normal
1!);
37;
34;
43 ;
14;
30;
Normal.
.177;
Opponents
Kane
21
Bellefonte
13
Bellefonte
10
Clearfield
5
Kane
Cleiirfiehl
Ojiponents.
FAVORITE SAYINGS
Emily B.—"Oh-h-li, K i n n e y ! "
Anne Kennedy—"I could die-e-o!"
Gret—"Say, I got the sweetest l e t t e r ! "
Mutt—"I doesn't like you."
Am.y P.—"Let's go to Titus's."
J e a n S.—"I ate fifty calories today."
Miss Avery—"You have one overdue."
E u t h L.—"I have a good one to read."
Hazel B.—"Who'll go down with me
today."
Compliments
mum
fl
f l T
inuHfliHHin nuiii u
Fredericks
Pharmacy
8
NORMAL
SENIORS NOSE
OUT THE JUNIORS
I n the last moments of the game between the seniors and the juniors,
played in the gymnasium on Tuesdiiy
evening, Ajiril 10, Mary Thompson's
brilliant field goal from the edge of the
floor put the seniors ahead by one point
of the battling juniors. A groan from
t h e juniors in the balcony; a shout from
t h e seniors, quickly stifled as the ball
went into jday again, and in the hands
of the juniors; n few hectic seconds as
B e r n i e Lord tried to prevent Sally
H a u n a from passing the ball to her
r u n n i n g partner a t forward; the referee's whistle; and it was all over. That
final field goal had won for the seniors,
17-16.
The victor.y Ayas somewhat unexpected. A critical sizing up of the two
class teams would seem to give tho
juniors more than an edge the better of
t h e comparison. I t is the work on the
floor that counts, however; and there
t h e two teams were so evenly matched
t h a t the final score accurately indicates
t h e comparative merits. The juniora
had hold the lead ujj until the last few
minutes of play, though their lead was
a t no time a depend.able one; b u t that
last rather lucky basket decided victory
for the class of 1923.
Some of the juniors are not content
to abide hy the verdict, and are flinging challenges about right and left. The
seniors seem disposed to let matters
rest, however; the class championship
is theirs under the original conditions
of the contest, and tliere seems to them
little more to fight for. I t is unlikely
t h a t more games wdll be played.
The lineup:
Seniors
Juniors
Thompson
f
Staver
Kennedy
f
Hanna
Leathers
c
Ericson
Caw ley
sc
Burnham
Ashe
g
Summersgill
Lord
g
Coppersmith
Field goals: Thompson, Kennedy,
Staver, Hanna. Foul goals: Kennedy,
3 of 4; Staver, 0 of 1. Referee: Miss
Butler.
Foolish Questions
Describe the imiia-case of the sciirlet
fever bug.
Why were tliere so many men about
t h e west dorm the night after the gym
meet?
Whilt kind of Easter eggs did Bernice
a n d Bertha have?
I s this man Thorndike, about whom
everyone is talking, a new student?
I s "Klapper" Mrs. Gage's first name?
W e hear II. IT. using it so frequently.
Where did Marie Smith acquire the
etiquette that compels her to knock on
t h e door of trolley cars?
Whenever Mr. High has visitors, what
makes Christine and Grace so popular?
W h y does Sadie Zimmerman set Ler
alarm clock for 2:30 A. M.?
W h a t was the impulse that lead
Grace O'Shea to take an orijhan to
Juniors are objecting to fhe nuinber
of slides shown iu geography class. They
find it hard to write their English in
the dark.
TIMES
SAVE TIME—SAVE STEPS—SAVE MONEY
GO T O
The GRIFFITH Store
5-10-25 and Variety
Stationery
Office Supplies
School Supplies
House Furnishings
Toys and Games
Party Favors
Candy
Notions
Hardware
Camp Supplies
Hosiery
Millinery
( M E M B E R OF CONSOLIDATED MERCHANTS SYNDICATE
.-Vn Association of Merchants Operating Over 900 Stores
Hasty Pudding
The orgnnizatiou of an athletic association to include both boys' and girls'
sports, and to control to some extent
the sports \vhich shall be carried on at
the school for wdiich varsity letters shall
be awarded, and the conditions governing the award of such letters, was decided uiHin at a meeting of a committee representing both the varsity basketball teams, held at noon, Thursday,
April 12. Oificers will be elected at a
ineeting to be held wdtliin a few days.
The boj's' g.vm class was given its
first outdoor workout on the athletic
field on Monday, April 9. High jumping, javelin and discus throwing, and
shot putting were practiced. The results
were rather encouraging to those who
desire to see the formation of a varsity track team.
The Community Choral Club, of Lock
Haven, wdll jiresent "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast," by Samuel Coleridge Taylor, in the Normal School auditorium
on May 11.
Mr. Ulmer has introduced two new
members to the nature study class:
Cleopatra and Xieodemus.
Cleopatra
and Nicodemus are two little goldfish,
and are entering no objection to being
campused together—in the science laboratory aquarium.
Had it been the first of April, it
inight hnve been considered a j o k e ; as
it was, it ^yas rather a disappointment.
Mr. Flmer provided some birdcall rec-
ords for the science period on April ,•),
talked about them at some length, got
the class into a fever of anticipation,
opened the victrola, and found the machinery gone. Someone had taken it to
be repaired.
At the annual election of officers for
the Y. W. C. A., held on Wednesd.ay
evening, April 11, the following were
elected: President, Blanche
Smith;
Vice President, Helen BufBugton; Secretary, Frances Cook; Treasurer, Ruth
Malone; Undergraduate Representative,
Beatrice Van Zandt. The cabinet members will be selected a t a future meeting.
Mrs. Gage consented to continue as
dietitian until April 15, no dietitian
having been found uj) to that time that
met fully Mr. Drum's requirements. The
Gages moved out of the dormitor,y, however, on April 9, taking up their residence in one of the Riverside Apartments. It miiy be a relief to them to
get out of the dormitory life; there is
such a thing as too much of a good
thing; but their absence is felt in tho
dormitorj'.
New brown velour curtains have replitced the dust.y green ones th.at have
hung 80 long in the auditorium. The
curtains arrived just in time for the
senior plii.v. They surely do make the
stage look a thousand per cent, better.
The spring housecleaning epidemic
has struck first floor. Many of the rooms
are being rcpapered, and hardwood
floors are being laid in a number of
them.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING
A meeting was held by the executive
committee of the Alumni Association
ou Thursday, April 5. I t wiis agreed
that Alumni Hay be held this year on
Tuesday, June 5, and that a number of
feiitures be planned to make it one of
the most memorable in the history of
the school.
The banquet and reception wdll be
held in the Normal School dining room
and gymnasium. Miss Edna D. Rich,
secretary of the Alumni Association,
will make all arrangements. Music will
be furnished for both occasions by the
Lyric Orchestra. Miss Gisetta Yale will
have charge of tho decoration of the
gymnasium, and Miss Rich, George B.
Hursh, and Belville W. Cree will look
after the decoration of the dining room.
Tickets for the banquet will cost $1.50,
this including the cost of the dance afterward, also.
A reception committee was appointed,
consisting of Principal W. N. Drum,
J. 8. Criinmer, of Williamsport; T. W.
Trembath, of the school faculty; Buell
Snyder, of Perryopolis; Helen Harper,
of Bellefonte; Mrs. S. M. Nickel, of
Philipsburg, and Estella Wagner and
Mrs. A. F. Stouck, Lock Haven. A program is to be presented during the afternoon of Alumni Day by the Class of
1908 in celebration of ifs fifteenth anniversary. Miss Rich is chairman of
the committee in charge of this feature,
with Mr. Drum, Dr. David Thomas, and
Mrs. Christine Riehens assisting.
The school is hoping to have the largest commencement turnout iu recent
history, and Mr. Drum is carefully treasuring up some good news for the many
who expect to be in attendance.
'98. Mrs. Frank A. Kaul (Jane M.
Mallison), is living at 186 Center Street,
St. Marys. Dr. G. B. Goheen is practicing medicine in Coalport.
'04. Bernice
Clearfleld.
Graham
is
living
iu
'13. A biiby boy arrived at the home
of Dr. and Mrs. Fairchild, of Olean, on
March 29. Mrs. Fairchild was formerly
.lane Edwards. Buth Kessinger teaches
at Plainfield, N. J.
'15. Miriam Davis is teaching in CoalIiort High School. Pauliue Sanders is
teaching in Johnstown.
'17. Clarence Johnson is practicing
dentistry in St. Marys. Buclla Turley
teaches in Newark, N. J.
KODAK
T'he Camera Universal
R E M E M B E R that the name Eastman
designates a Superior Product, and that
we carry at all times a complete line of
Eastman Photographic Supplies
and Cameras
Hilton and Heffner
Druggists
Honest Value
cAlumni Notes
Good Service
'19. Elizabeth O'Shea is teaching in
Irvona.
James Copenh.avor lives at
Smiflimills. Sar.a Beck, attending the
University of Pittsburgh, spent the
Easter holidays in Lock Haven.
'20. David Hampe is enrolled a t the
University of Pittsburgh. Madge Garner
teaches at State College.
'21. George Dively is an undergraduate at the University of Pittsburgh.
Bliiiiehard Gummo is pursuing high
grades at Yale.
'22. Sylvia Claster, a teacher at
Clearfield, was home here for the Easter
holidays. Irene Bauman likewise was
here, home from Johnsonburg. Florence Marolf, wdio is teaching iu Coatesville, spent her holidays in New York.
At
VOLUME 1
Central
State
Normal
LOCK HAVEN, PA., APRIL
School
18,1923
NUMBER 11
GIRLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD
L
DISBANDS FOR SEASON
TMIENTS F i 1921
Twenty-five N u m b e r s Constitute Incomparable Courses.
Celebrities to Be Here
Mr. Drum has made preliminary announcement of the numbers to be offered iis entertainmeiit features for
next year. From the list that has been
definitely arranged it is evident that
the students at this scliool will be certain to have n more wonderful program
than could be obtained at any school
or in iiny single community outside of
the large cities in the same space of
time.
There are to be twenty-five entertainments in all, au average of better than
three a month. Six of these are to be
musical numbers, the best that are obfiiinable uf any cost. Five of these six
lijive been definitely arranged:
Elsie
Baker, the contralto, many of whose
numbers have become familiar through
the Victor company; Marie Tiffany, soprano, of the Metropolitan Opera Co.;
Charles Wakefield Cadman, the noted
composer, and Tsianina, the Indian
jirincess; Tosch-a Seidel, the wonder
violinist, aud Reiuald Werrenrath, famous American tenor.
ilaiiy of the best known men of the
country will be visiting the sehool to
deliver talks. The first of these, who
will address fhe school at a Sunday afternoon meeting during October, will
be Bishop Berry, of the Methodist
Church. Another famous personage who
has definitely agreed to be hero is
f'ount Ilya Tolstoi, son of the immortal
Kussiiiu novelist and iihilosopher. Others will be Diilliis Lore Sharp, writer of
nature tales; Seunuis MacManus, author of Donegal Fair,y Stories and other
Irish legends and folk tales; Alfred
Noyes, the iiiief of Princeton University; iind uiaiiy of whom it is too early
to give advance notice. Iu an early
issue of Normal Times the complete
course will be given, witli somewhat
more extended comment. This much
is given here as indicative of the treats
in store for all who attend next winter.
Central State Normal School has
never uudertaken such a course, and
may never be able to do so again. The
financial responsibility incurred is so
great as to entail danger of serious
losses. It is expected that the course
will be so unusual, so very much worth
wdiile, as to attract attention in and
draw many visitors from all the surrounding cities and towns. Whatever
the outcome, nexf winter's student bod.y
will be assured of nn iucompiiriible
course.
i l r . Ulmer—"Wliiit is the most economic fuel in use nt this t i m e ? "
Esther Agnew—"Fireless cookers."
PLAY PRESENTED
Excellent Record for the Past Season—Championship
Team Likely Next Winter
The girls' basketball squad has broken up until the winter of 1923 rolls
round. It was a good fCiim that brought
the old Marooii and Gray back into active competition, a team flint uiiide good,
under excellent coaching, iigainst niauy
iin obstacle, that htid the old pep and
fight from the first tapoff to the final
toot of the whistle. It is no more than
fitting to give their recoril and themselves the once-over before shelving basketball in favor of sjiring simrts.
First, the team itself:
Sally Ilauna, forward, Beecli ("reek,
I'u. Sally was one big feature in the
limelight during the season just iiasf.
She had never seen or heard of a basketball—at least, in connection with her
own interests—before liinding ou this
caminis. Once she got it into her hiiiids,
however, she taught it to do tricks it
had never dreamed of. Look at her record for the season in the tabulated score
at the end of this article. How is that
for a beginner? Sally has another year
to play, and at her present rate of progress is going to give many a scorekeeper writer's cramp before next season
ends.
Hetty Staver, forward, McElliattan,
Pa. We said forward, we might have
said most anything else. As nn allaround basketball artist this .young liidy
is not to be overlooked. She started
the season as a substitute; then played
nt center and side center, and wound up
lilaying a riittliug gooil game at forward. Iu the hist giime of the season,
iigainst Clearfield, she made fwent.y-fwo
of our iioints, and played right around
all opposition. She started her basketball language iif Lock Haven High, iiud
has, it is comfortable to think, another
yciir to speak it in the Normal gym.
Anne .lane Kennedy, forward. This
Jane travels here from wiiy oft' iu Scranton, where the mine caves grow all
around, all around. Aune is unfortuiiiife enough fo be griidiiiiting this year,
but has had time to make a record to
leave behind liei". She, too, picked up
her biisketliall slinging in these here
jiiirts here, nnd she did some picking.
When she goes back to the hard coal
fields she will be thoroughly equipped
fo teach the young idea how to shoot.
When she took hold of a basketball she
taught it to sing "Every time you hit
the board you go right through."
Neta White, forward and Ciiptaiu,
liOck Haven. Having been taught a little basketball, along with a lot of other
tilings, in the well rounded curriculum
of the local high school, Neta tried her
luck at hitting the hoops up here on
the hill. Evcr.ytliiiig went well, iis the
story goes, until the third game of the
season, at Bellefonte, when the Wiill
came in contnct with her head, aud laid
her belligerently on the shelf for the
rest of flic .vciir. She \yiis by long odds
(Continued on page 7)
"Daddy-Long-Legs" P l e a s e s
Large and Appreciative
Audience
The Senior Class Piny has been and
gone. But wnsn't it good while it Insted? Was ever tliere such a charmiugly
pathetic figure as J u d y Abbott wdien
(rwendol.vu (llise iiiit herself into t h a t
jiiirf iind made it live, (iwen is certiiinly il star and this is the best t h i n g we
liiiye seen her lio. We waver between
the "defiiiuce of the trustees" scene a n d
the yer,y last one wlieii we ivy to select
the high light in her work. But she
was delightful at college and—well, she
was just excellent in it all, and ^ve
don't blame that niimeless admirer for
sending the lovely basket of flmvers to
our Bernhiirdt. Judy .4bboff is seldom
thought of without her dear Daddy-LongLegs, who took the little orphan a n d
made her au iiristocrat. We never
thought of Fred Hunter as having so
much real talent tucked behind t h a t
dignified exterior so we were pleasantly suriirised. We wouldn't mind having
for ourselves such a nice Daddy-LongLegs. It was il long and difiicult p a r t
which took bniin power as well as dramiitic ability to handle. But Fred carried it off as effectively as he does
everything—no one will dispute his
brain jiower.
Miss Pritchard, beciiuse she took such
an interest iu Judy and seemed to make
things occur, held u place iu our affections. This iiiirt was taken by Sylvia
(Continued on page 3)
C. S. N, S. GIRLS' BASKETBALL TEAM
NORMAL
OBSERVATION TOWER^
T e n n i s f e v e r liiis iirrived with t h e
s p r i n g . .\ll t h e lliiii a r e t r y i n g (u get
fiit, nnd nil t h e fnt lire t r y i n g tn gei
thin.
in a few iiiore weeks we shiili
liii\"e II inirniiil stinleiit IMHIV.
b e t t e r dii t h e i n s i d e tliiiii on tlie (intside.
It tddk diil,\' iill lidiir l u n g e r for l-ietfy's
iieiii-diies to estiililisli t h e ciiii neet ion
tliiit t h e did g r e e n ciirtiiins lind b e e n
rejiiiiced li\' lienut if ul iiniwii \-eldnr o n e s .
W'liiit would l.llcl-etiii lid if s h e eoiilil
not sli|i intu t h e p i i n t i y fur siinie hreiikfiist .'
Mr. Tremliiitli e x p l n i n e d t h e viiliie,
ill p r e s e r x i i i g o t h e r jieiiple's ginid d]iiiiidiis. df writing' l e t t e r s tlint were let
tei-|ierfect.
"Of c d i i r s e , " he siiid. "if
\(iii iire w r i t i n g tn sdinediie \-ers' iieiir
t(. y e n . wild will niiike ii lldwiinces fur
.\(iii nnd f d i g i v e von ii g r e n t d c n l — y o u r
p i i r e n t s . s!i\'--you niiiy ciiridessly oniil
ciipitiils, illlll it will iidt dd niikdi diimiige Id \'iiiir ri'iiutiition.
T h e \ ' ivoiild
b e sill p r i s e d to reeei\-e ii l e t t e r f r o m
\i)ii if yiiii iciilly were siip]ilie(l w i t h
ciipitiil." ( j u i t e Sd.
llideii BiiOingfdn wishes to i i n n i i u n c e
t h e iirriviil uf her wisiloin teetli.
T h e liist gilllle (if Illlll nf tlie s p r i n g
sensoti Wiis ])l:i\e(l lietween u i e u i l i e r s of
t h e dii\'i'()iiin gntig. b e t w e e n s l i d w e r s . dU
Miirch '2'.',. Kill' dli\idu.s reiisons t h e
score liiis tidt t e e n iinndtiiii-ed. n n d e\'eti
t h e filet df t h e giinie liiis .just leaked
o u t . It Wiis [ilii.\'i.Ml, it is Siiid, td celebriite t h e c i i m m e n c e i i i e n t cd' t h e E i i s t e r
holidiiy, Avhicli begnii flint dny iit f o u r
o'eliK-k. W h e n tlie seciind gniiie is to
IK' ]ilii\'ed 11 iidtiee will tie jiosfed li\'
(liiice Engiisli, who is uiiiniiger, jiitidier,
ciitclier, Helder, e t c . Tliere a r e seyer:il
o t h e r s im t h e teiim, b u t , iis (iriice ndm i t s , tlie\' lire .just si-eiiery.
M e m b e r s df t h e iiiifiire studx' idiiss a r e
nil liet u p e v e r t h e d i s c o v e r y t h a t uiiiny
o t h e r b i r d s b e s i d e t h e h e - c h i c k e n s get
iiji iis e n r l y iis (i A. !>1. to s i n g .
T h e i n e m l i e r s (if tlie l i i s t - n i e u t i o n e d
(diiss lire s e r i o u s l y eiiiisidering l u o v i i i g
out of t h e s c i e n c e rodiii n n d Iciiviug it
to N i c o d e i n n s iiml ('ledjiiifrn. t h e gdldfisli, t h e liyiiciiitlis, nnd t h e s e v e n t e e n
^vhile mice.
A real dliserviifion iif wliiit M r . T r e m liiitli l e n i i s sdli-stuff wiis w i t n e s s e d b y
some of t h o s e wild wei-e en t h e i r w n y
home for l^iister. O e r t r n d e L y n o t t furnished t h e niiiteriiil b e i i u t i f u l l y
nnd
bountifully.
She liiiiig out of t h e ihirm i t i i r y w i n d o w nt n iierihins iingle n n d
wejit Sd g e i i e r d u s l \ ' infd a t o w e l t h a t it
hiid td be w r u n g out severiil t i m e s .
We liiive (ine m e r e reipiesf fo lunke
of l i e l v i e : t h a t he m u r k off t h e lower
end df t h e secdiid tloor hull l i k e a t e n nis cduit. lliden has bought a perfectl.y liriind new rnciiuef, a n d s h e w a n t s
fo k n o w how t o b a t t h e b a l l correctl.y
b e f o r e she goes o u t on t h e c o u r t s .
B e t t y G a t e s m a d e t h e u n u s u a l disc o v e r y t h a t fhe c h a p e l c u r t a i n s look
TIMES
w i t h - t h e siiiue r e s u l t , but with (ili! wliiif
il difference in t h e lliiviirl
W h e r e t h e r e is ii will t h e r e is ii wny.
If Vdii (1(1 iidt hiive t i m e tn s w e e p , iiiill
ddwii t h e c u r t i i i n s , iind ]Mis. Cresswell
iiiii,\' Iidt see t h e d i r t .
Iidi-dthy I'liiwis niiiy not lie nt nil sup e r s l i t i d u s , lint she niiiile n ilnte with
her u n d e r t i i k e r fur Fridiiy, A p r i l bi,
when she tniiglit t h e lirst dhserviitidii
lessdii s h e lins lind to t e n c h .
Elierl.N- could not iiiiiler.stiiiid w h y , lis
(diiinieil in n recent p s y c h d h i g y class,
t h e sfiiilent died wild Wiis b e i n g lUiiile
td believe, when b l i n d f d l d e d d u r i n g n
iiiizing liee, flint his t l i r n a t was c u t and
thill he was b e i n g Ideil td dentil. ^Ir.
McDoiigiiH's expliiiiiition ludjis n hit —
in j i s y c h o l d g y : " W e l l , he lind t h e jirc
cepf flint h e wiis d y i n g , n n d he was
unnlile to correct it with n cdiicept beciiuse he lind ne\'er died b e f o r e . "
T u e s d a y iifteriidon, Aiiril 1(1, !Mr. a n d
Mrs. (Jiige tiiiiglit an observiifidu lessdii
on t h e liiiek ciim|iiis.
The observers
were Bent rice. . \ i n y , H e l e n , I j o r e f t n ,
W i n n i e , nnd E s t h e r , who a r e of t h e
ojiiniou flint t h e lesson was one iu a p lireciiition. Lewis Ciige was t h e c l a s s ;
t h e sniiject Wiis n i g - b c i i t i n g ; a n d , nltlinngh L e w i s niiiv hii\'e f a l l e n somewliiit
s h o r t (if cdui[ilete ii]ipreciiition (if t h e
bciiuty (if liilxir, n e v e r t h e l e s s iis n c l a s s
h e fiilldwcil iiistriicfions widl. T h e o b s e i w e i s iire still u n c e r t i i i n iis to w l u d h e r it Wiis i n t e n d e d to d r i l l niiiiiily in
sjieeil or in iiccuriic\-.
D u e td t h e g r e n t iimdunf (if w o r k thiil
P.elvie hiis td do in t h e (liiyriidni, lie
has hiid td hiive nn iissistiinl.
Selniii
Leviinder liiis lu'cii a p p o i n t e d to assist
him in t h e wiirk.
H e r sliiire of the
d u t i e s is lo open t h e d e s k s of f o r g e t f u l
(lily s t u d e n t s , to jiick uii waste piijicr,
nnd to g i v e B e l v i e vnluiible h i n t s eiincerning the work.
(iiiice Kussell h a s i n t r o d u c e d a n e w
i i r e i i t h i n g s.ysteni i n t o t h e t o w n sidiools.
I n s t e n d of snyiiig, " I n h i i l e , e x h a l e , o n e ,
1w(i," s h e siiys, "Hreiitlie i n , b e r i i t h e o u t ,
r i g h t , left." 'S'lioriginn 1 i d e a , ( ' h i i t h i n k
iibdut it. .Mr. M i i c '
.Mr. Tieinliiith rends ii niiiiKdess im
per liefore t h e j n n i d r class, m a k e s fun
df t h e .idkes, nnd then nsks t h e o w n e r
td cliiiin t h e m . Xu, tlinnk .viiu, t e a c h e r ;
we d o n ' t kiidw griiinniiir, lint we iiin't
thiit diiinli.
T h e j u n i o r s m e still wiiiting f o r the
seniiirs to t h a n k t h e m for t h e giiiue t h e y
giive t h e m on Tuesdii.v niglit.
.Notice A l b e r t ' s
clever
.Vin't n i i t u r e grniid .'
new
suit.'
E d y t h e .Morriill's fntlicr h a d a b i r t h
.\ s t r i i n g e r wild e n t e r e d t h e niiiin b a l l
dii.y
Inst week. K d y t h e ' s l u o t h e r w a s ill
(III .Vjiril II iiskeil E r n e s t S c h r o t w h e t h Edythe
e r he cduhl tiiid ^ I i s . C r e s s w e l l for h i m . n n d unnlile tn do t h e b i l k i n g .
" O h , you c a n ' t see her t o d n y , " r e t u r n e d c h u c k s h e r lessens, goes lionie, a n d
o u r E r n e s t , full of t h e d e s i r e to i n - luiikes t h e birthdii.v cuke. Some niiin is
s t r u c t , " f o r she is i n t h e i n f i r m a r y w i t h g o i n g to b e l u c k y some dii.y.
a g i r l wdio h a s s c a r l e t f e v e r . "
Miss B u t l e r is s t a r t i n g a e s t h e t i c danc" N o w , i s n ' t tliiif l u c k y ? " said t h e v i s - i n g in t h e j u n i o r class. Y'ou j u s t o u g h t
i t o r , " N o w t h i s c a r d w o n ' t b e w a s t e d . " to see u s c a t e r i i i l l a r s f r y i n g to b e b u t A n d he p u l l e d f r o m h i s p o c k e t a y e l l o w terflies.
pliicard, h i b e l c d S C A K L E T F E V E K .
M r . D r u m c l a i m s to b e c o n n e c t e d wdth
O n e week we w e r e h a v i n g w o n d e r f u l m a n y of t h e b e s t f a m i l i e s i n L o c k Hat i m e s a t h o m e , a n d finding o u t h o w yen ; B e l l p h o n e a n d C o m m e r c i a l .
m u c h wo h a d m i s s e d .
The next week
J o s h u a h e l d b a c k fhe s u n on o n e occawe w e r e t a k i n g t h e m i d - s e m e s t e r e x a m s .
sion. T h a t is o n e too m a n y f o r u s to
i m i t a t e , b u t we h a v e f r e q u e n t l y s t o p p e d
11 few m i n u t e s b e f o r e g o i n g t o class.
Willing Wictims Wake to Worry Warblers
W h y the large attendance at breakfast
of l a t e ? W h y t h e l a r g e a m o u n t of N a tural Rouge (It
fluctuates)
observable
a t C. S. N . S.? W h y t h e r a p i d i t y wdth
w h i c h a l a r m clocks, u n w a t c h e d , c h a n g e
headipiiirters? The explanation will not
b e l o n g iu f o r t h c o m i n g ; if y o u a r e still
r e a d i n g , re.ad o n .
You a r e a w a k e n e d , if y o u a r e o n e of
tliose i n on t h e s e c r e t , on t h e s e c l e a r ,
cool m o r n i n g s , b y h e a r i n g o n e a l a r m
clock go off a f t e r a n o t h e r . Y o u p i n c h
y o u r s e l f t o see w h e t h e r y o u a r e a w a k e ;
a r e t h e r e so m a n y s t u d i o u s g i r l s a t
Normal?
J u s t t h e n t h e r e comes a g e n t l e k n o c k
a t the door. "Girls, you must get up.
I t is t i m e f o r t h a t b i r d t r i p . "
Y'ou
r e c o g n i z e t h e voice as G e r t r u d e ' s , a n d
e v e r y t h i n g is c l e a r .
"Ycjih," y o u a n s w e r s l e e p i l y , a n d r o l l
o v e r for j u s t o n e m o r e l i t t l e n a p .
One h o u r later you again awake, to
h e a r t h e t r a i n i n g school clock s t r i k i n g
six, t h e t i m e y o u h a d a g r e e d u p o n t o
s t a r t . Y'ou j u m p madl.v o u t of b e d a n d
into your clothes, t h i n k m o m e n t a r i l y
xvliat a b l e s s i n g i t is t h a t y o u r h a i r is
b o b b e d , a n d r u s h o u t of t h e b a c k d o o r
j u s t iu time to catch Mr. U l m e r ' a u d a
s m a l l grouxi of s l e e p y g i r l s a s t h e y s e t
o u t ou t h e n i o r n i n g r a m b l e .
T h r o u g h t h e woods, u p hill a n d d o w n
d a l e , o n a n d on y o u t r a m p , finding n e w
b i r d s a t e v e r y t u r n , u n t i l s e v e n o'clock,
w h e n y o u d a s h b a c k to N o r m a l w i t h
ro.sy c h e e k s a n d a r a v e n o u s a p p e t i t e .
A f t e r s u c h a b i r d h i k e is t h e t i m e
wdien a b r e a k f i i s t of p r u n e s , t h i c k t o a s t ,
c o r n fiiikes, n n d w e a k coffee r e a l l y c a n
lie a p p r e c i a t e d .
M a n y n o r m a l i t e s h a v e l e f t t h e i r room
in d i s o r d e r a n d r e t u r n e d to find i t a
p e r f e c t m e s s ; t h a t is e x a c t l y n o r m a l .
I t is s o m e t h i n g o u t of a l l u n d e r s t a n d ing, h o w e v e r , to leave o n e ' s r o o m a perfect m e s s a n d r e t u r n to find i t i n p e r fect o r d e r . W i l l t h e p e r s o n s w h o g a v e
( H a d y s H a r m t h e shock of h e r life b y
p u l l i n g off q u i t e t h e m o s t o r i g i n a l p r a c t i c a l j o k e over, p l e a s e r e v e a l tlieniselves!
T h e g i r l s ' m e e t i n g on A p r i l 11 wiis
d e c i d e d l y a w e l t e r of o p i n i o n s .
The
S e n i o r D a n c e h a s b e e n set f o r A p r i l 28.
Thiit is also t h e d a t e of t h e J u n i o r P r o m
a t S t a t e . T h e o n l y w a y t l i a t we could
see to a r r a n g e m a t t e r s w a s t o w r i t e to
Dr. T h o m a s i i s k i n g h i m t o p o s t p o n e t h e
P r o m . Ever.yone is w a i t i n g w i t h assuriiuce his c o n s e n t t o do t h a t l i t t l e t h i n g
for u s .
Dormitory Rooms Going
Fast for Summer School
T h e r e ii re \er,y few rdiinis hd't f o r t h e
l!IL':i s u m m e r sessidii. T h e sclinnl d d n i i i tdries hnve lieen iilniost eufirel.y ass i g n e d . P.efdre t h e n e x t i s s u e of N o r niiil T i m e s is off t h e jiress t h e e n t i r e
t h r e e lldiirs, lidth of t h e W e s t iiiid of
t h e E a s t d d r m i t o r . v , will b e e n t i r e l y
lil led. T h e leciird s u m m e r s e s s i o n atteiKliince thiif we h n v e been iiiitici|iiitiiig Ims iidw been i i s s u r c d .
T h e s(diddl n u t h o r i t i e s h a v e r e q u e s t e d
t h e jicdple df L d c k lliiycn fo find p l e a s iint pliices for nf l e a s t :150 m o r e stud e n t s . Lock lliiveii is c o - o p e r a t i n g r o y al l.v. .Mnn.v (if t h e r e s i d e n t s w h o h a v e
never under other circumstances t a k e n
r o o m e r s h n v e oft'ered t h e u s e of s u n n y
iddiiis in t h e i r h o m e s , so a s t o a s s i s t
t h e sidiiidl in h o u s i n g p r o p e r l y a l l who
wish tn c n m e . E v e n t h o u g h t h e d o r m i t o r y will b e filled l o n g b e f o r e t h e m i d dle of M a y , y e t t h e r e will b e p l e n t y of
jdiices in t h e c i t y f o r C e n t r a l S t a t e ' s
e n t i r e flock.
S i n c e t h e Inst i s s u e of t h o N o r m a l
Times registrations have come in from
the following:
Mnr.v A d a m , B r i s b i n , P a .
Kvii Biiiley, M i l l h e i m .
llilmii B e r g n i i i u , D a g u s !Miiies.
(iliidys Bra.v, E a s t S m e t h p o r t .
H e l e n B u r n s , Osceola M i l l s , P a .
Miriam Burtnette, Juniata, Pa.
norothy Campbell, Coburn, Pa.
(Iriiee ('liiimliers, P e u f i e l d , P a .
Kiifhiyn Cooney, Genesee, P a .
ibirgiiret Cooney, Genesee, P a .
(ierfrude Costello, B r n d f o r d , I'a.
Lois C r a y s , B e e c h C r e e k , P a .
F . E . C r u i u , S h i n g l e h o u s e , Pii.
G e r t r u d e D e m p s e y , Osceola M i l l s , P a .
E l v i r a l)eVine,y, K y l e r t o w n , P a .
A g n e s llixou, M t . J e w e t t , P a .
E d i t h Duff', Clearfield, P a .
Bessie E d m o n d s , E a m e y , P a .
Mildred Ericson, Ludlow, P a .
Hiitfie F a u s t , S a c k e t t , P a .
ihirgiiret F a u l k n e r , Eew City, P a .
Alice F i l l i o i i , K e r r m o o r , P a .
B e s s i e Fowder, W . MoshiUinon, P a .
Miirie F r a n z , S h i n g l e h o u s e , P a .
Letha Fowler, Eldred, Pa.
Hiirriet Frazier, S p r i n g Mills, P a .
Bodine Hall, Kylertown, Pa.
Ellen Hiillgren, Dagus Mines, P a .
Helen Haven, iSmethport, P a .
F l o r e t t a Ileft'iier, W i l l i a m s p o r t , P a .
J a m e s H e p b u r n , Mahaffey, P a .
Virginia Howe, Morrisdale, Pa.
Rachel Hudson, W i n b u r n e , Pa.
Naomi Jenks, Philipsburg, Pa.
Geraldine Johnston, Philipsburg, Pa.
Miiry K e p h a r t , D u n c a n s v i l l e , P a .
Helen Lanzcl, St. Marys, P a .
Ruth Larson, W. Moshannon, P a .
Isabel L e e , S p r i n g M i l l s , P a .
A n n a McGowan, Clarence, P a .
Miiry M i l l a r d , M t . J e w e t t , P a .
E. W . Miller, Center Hall, P a .
Rosa M i l l e r , P o r t l a n d M i l l s , P a .
M a r g u e r i t e Mix, D u k e Center, P a .
Ciitherine M o n t g o m e r y , W i n b u r n e , Pa.
Leroy Morrison, P o r t Matilda, P a .
Myrtle Mountz, Duncansville, P a .
Mary Nason, Julian, Pa.
Metta Nelson, Oswayo, P a .
H e l e n O t t , St. B o n i f a e i u s , P a .
Lorina Peterson, Wilcox, Pa.
Margaret Pctruskey, Brisbin, P a .
Belle Pierce, Morrisdale, P a .
(Continued on page 6)
NORMAL
NORMAL TIMES
Xdriniil Times is pubUslKid at Coiilrul State
Norniiil School, I.ock Hav(!n, Penna., by the student body as a whole. Tlie auliscription rate for
this year is $1..')0. Address all communications to
Amy I'eters, Business Manager, C. S. N. S.,
Lock Haven, Penna.
Editor-in-CIiief
Gertrude Harper
Assistant Kditor
Sylvia Breth
Alumni Editor
Louise Riiiliardson
Associate Editors—Esther Agnew, Evelyn I('ritz,
Graet; Ishler, Bernice Lord, Jean Halin, Mabel
Honi, Emily Brown, Gladys Bettens, Theodore
Sclireiber.
Business Manager
Amy Peters
Associate Managers—Amelia Irist, Marie Smith,
Neta Wliite, ,Tulia Coffey, Frieda Staiman,
\'elina Ridge, Grayce Conpersmith, Ina Chapel,
Ruth Malone, CathePiue Cooper, Louise Kintner,
Maiie Moran, Guy Luclt.
Faculty Malinger
T. W. Trembath
APRIL IH, 1!)2;!
To Be Select, Select
It is only too true that we cannot
have everything iu the world; therefore,
why not attempt to fake title only to
the best? There is a best in nearly
every phase of life; since we cannot
have everything, why not take that?
In the matter of time, be select in
our choice of where and how to sjiend
it. Remember, we have very little of it
to spend.
In the choice of books: There are
millions of books in the world, yet you
and I ciui read but a very few; wdsdom would seem to indicate selecting
those that seem likely to leave something worth while in our lives, something desirable in our minds, something pleasurable in our recollections.
Then, too, there are our friends. The
people whom we might know are numbered also in millions; but there are
only a few that we can take into our
confidence, wdiom we can trust, enjoy,
and continue to hiive faith in. Here,
too, there is excellent wisdom in choosing slowly, choosing carefully, being
select.
In the variety shop that life is, with
every counter littered with desirable
odds aud ends, there are only a few
things that we need, really need, to fill
u\> the gaps in our lives. Pick carefully; pick thoughtfully; pick that
which we lack and that wliich will wear
niiiny, man.y days. Contentment, tluit
quality of spirit which all of us, wdse
and foolish, are seeking to purchase
from life, is just another n.'ime for pride
iu iiersouiil possessions. Pity those wdth
friinticnlly littered lives. For yourself,
possess yourself only of worthy jiossessions; be select.
Tomb Hunting
All ears and e.ves are turned eiisfwiird
these da.ys as a company of discoverers
or exjilorcrs open the tombs of Eg.ypf
to see wdiiit they can find.
Tliey have found mumniies of kings,
rulers of Egyjit, and of animals; they
have found diverse stones, pottery, designs, nnd imiiges.
Suppose thiit explorers should take if
upon fhemselyes, consider it of suflieieiit importiince, to oiien the tomb of
a C. S. N. S. student five hundred years
from now. It would not be a king that
should greet them, but a learned student of profound ability, this would be
evident from the look upon her face.
They should find, also, but a pet cat,
street car tickets, and perhaps a ship
tlint you sail in the air.
Her tomb would be lined in gorgeous
plain white on all four sides, wdth a
space in each wall, large enough for an
ordinar.y person to pass through, for a
door. The exquisite furniture would
consist of a table—lined with books,
pencils and jiiipers, orange skins, etc.;
a chair—her own wooden, straightbacked chair; and perhiips a trunk.
Upon closer exiiniination of the inner, secret chambers of her tomb one
would see pictures, ciirefully filed and
indexed, of Mr. MacDougall, Miss Y'ale,
Miss Himes, nnd others; a bell with the
iiiime "Belvie" on the handle, wdiose
ring is loud enough to waken any mortal, dead or alive, a basketball, a volleyball, and a tennis racket upon her
left liand; and, in her right hand,
plenty of money, evenly divided between the Arbor and the movies.
Her robe would be lined within and
without with medals, sorority pins, engagement rings, and merit badges. At
her feet would be a petition for shorter
days and longer vaciitions, and inscribed
uiion the wall—"I worked, I worked,
I worked—because, I had to."
Interesting relics they would be of
semi-barbarous customs!
Now You Chase Me!
TIMES
SENIOR CLASS
PLAY PRESENTED
(Continued from pasfe 1)
Mretli, who we are sure, felt jierfeidl.v
at ease heliiiug |ie(i])le because, oh, well,
thiit's what Lib usuall.y does.
Juliii I'endleton, the regular little
fairy in the home, was well taken li.v
Katherine Cawle.v. Didn't Kay look nnfuriil in her environment? We nlmost
thought we were in C. S. N. S. instead
of at Viissiir. It gave us a sort of satisfied feeling to see her and Jimmy McBride find the happy ending. Of course,
you know who was the irrepressible
Jimmie—why, Marcy, of course. He was
good and so screamingly funn.v that we
liked him immediafel.y.
His sister, Sally McBride, was iinother bright light and quite natural, too.
For this iiiirt was done to perfection
by our own Gertrude Harper. It is
enough to just see Gertrude on the
stiige, but when she has a good part aud
Hues to siieiik there is none better.
And she just suited the fastidious Mrs.
Pendleton who was porfriived b.y Emil.v
Brown. We think special comment is
due to Emil.v for she took that jinrf in
less fliiiii a week's notice. You saw how
well she did it, too. She gave one more
evidence of what brains can do.
lliizel Johnson made a comfortable
Mrs. Semple with her quaint iiccenf and
her deliciously humorous manner. We
all liked her iind the reason we did
was due to Hazel's imtting real effort
into the iiarf. And wasn't Helen Kinney good as Carrie?
No, we're not forgetting the funny
little oi'iihans in their- blue checked
gingham. It's surprising what kids some
Normal Seniors are! Do you know that
it made us feel so sorry for the little
waifs Mhen Mrs. Lippett ordered them
around that we wanted fo be DaddyLong-Legs to all of them so they'd liave
some fun, too! They were such real
kiddies.
And Mrs. Lijipeft as done by Ildithe
Ashe was splendid from her wdggly top
knot to her deeply flounced skirt. She
was just such an orphan's home matron
as we hope no child will ever have to
endure. And that is ii Cdinplinient to
Edithe's acting.
"Cheese it—here they come!
Those
fierce Trustees with their many and Viiried
types of
facial
decdriitions.
Wouldn't they make your heart falter
if you had to have tlieni around ever.v
month? That is because they acted
their parts so well. But every Senior
in and out of the pltiy took his p a r t
well or there would not have been a
play. We'd hate to make you too conceited Seniors, but we've heard it said
tliat this play was one of the finest
pieces of co-operative effort ever done
b,y a class iu this or any other Normal.
We can't help thinking, though, that if
Miss (iabriel had not been the splendid
and thoughtfully human director she is,
even Seniors would have fallen down
on their jiiirts—then wdiere would the
pla.y have been? Three cheers for our
Miss Gabriel! Three cheers for '2,3!
Dear Norinal Times: Today finds me
with nothing crazy on my mind, so I
cannot attend English class. Everything
seems dark and dreary since I received
that iiormiilogrinih telling me that my
great-greiit-griindfather, while rollerskating in Czeeho-Sloyakia, had the misfortune to die. If I did not have music
class today, I should attend the funeral.
Then, too, I jiromised to play golf on
the campus this afternoon with President Ibirding.
Radiograph!!
Another thing that has had a depressWe just found out incidentally that
these former graduates are playing the ing effect ou me is Mr. Trembath's lateteaching game with an exceiitioiiiilly ly contracted spasms in verse. He is
tr,yiug to turn us into something almost
high batting average:
as good as Am.v Lowell, whose vers libre
Helen Walters, '22.
put me into bed for si.x weeks. He has
Florence Marolf, '22.
no use for automobiles, though, for he
Marian Vanderbilt, '21.
is always telling us to use our feet.
Marion Buehler, '22.
What feet have to do with vers is more
Madeline Fiedler, '21.
than Amy or I can explain.
Marguerite Donlin, '22.
Hoping you cheer me up, dear NorLaura Dolan, '22.
mal Times, I remain,
Eva Belle Lovell, '21.
Yours forever,
Priscilla Williams, '21.
NORMA LITE.
Alma Sissler, '22.
IN THE MAIN HALL
Helen DeGabricl, '21.
E. M.—"Hm; smells like cabbage."
Sara Peterman, '21.
Miss Shaw—"What are they having
H. C.—"No, it's burnt peanuts."
Grace Brooks, '21.
tonight?"
L. H.—"More like turnips to me."
Rhoda McCartney, '21.
E. M.—"Dress rehearsal, I believe."
E. M.—"Right, girls, right; we're al
There are a great many other stars.
Miss Shaw—"I was speaking of dinright. Spanish rice."
We're just waiting to hear about them. ner."
SUMMER SESSION
DEVELOPMENTS
since the luibliciition of the suinnier
session issue of the Normal Times there
have been a number of occurrences that
will he df interest to all who ]iropose
cnming fo ('eiitral State this next summer. A numlier of new teachers have
been engaged, several entertainment
features added or defiiiitel,y scheduled,
a public idayground is to be hicated ou
the Norniiil grounds, nnd a number of
ntliletic contests iindertaken.
.Miss -Mniedii .Ma.v .Iiinne.v, nf the
f'iiciilt.y (if the Inst summer session,
iibdiit whose return nnthing definite
could be learned before fhe last Normal
Times went to jiress, has accepted her
summer contriict, and will be in charge
of the same courses as in the ]il22 session, iliss Eleanor ilarkle will also be
back, and will agiiin teach the fifth and
sixth giiides in fhe
demonstration
school. It was announced in the summer session Times that she would not
return, but the stiitement was erroiiedus. .Miss lioegge, also, will be again
with us, teacliing methods in arithmetie.
.Miss Howe, training teacher iu charge
of grades four and five in our training school, will be in cliiirge of methods courses. Witli the exception of Miss
Heaton and Miss Markle, the wdiole
faculty nf last year's session will be
on the job.
To fill the vacancy in fhe demonstration school caused by Miss Heafoii's decision not to return, Mr. Drum has engiiged Miss Leona Scott, principal of fhe
Western School, of Millville, N. J., a
graduate of Trenton State Normal
School, who hus for a number of summers been a demonstration teacher .-it
the Ocean City, N. J., summer school.
R. W. Hoxworth, Scout Executive of
Clinton County, and forinerl.y executive
of scouting at Norristown, Pa., wdll
have charge of the Boy Scout work that
will be given here this summer. This
wdll include firemaking, camii cooking,
pi-iicfical campcraft, and other scout activities, and wdll be practical work. That
is to say, fhe work of the course will
be so managed that a certain amount of
camp life and camp cooking wdll be possible.
For the courses in Campfire Girl Leuderaliip i l r . Drum has succeeded in securing from the national headiiuiirters
of the Girl Scout inovement, in New
Y'ork City, Miss Florence Heintz, a graduate of the University of Chicago and
of Teachers' College, Columbia University. Miss Heintz, a former teacher of
art at the (Jrand Rapids, Mich., Higli
School, was induced by the board of
education of that city to act as campfire girl executive for the city of Grand
Rapids, and served in that capacity for
several years. From there she was taken
into the national headquarters of the
moyemeiif, and has been there for the
past two .years. After the completion
of her work here this summer, she is
to become one of their chief field worker.s, working out of the New Y'ork Cif.y
nlhces. The work that she offers is also
td be prncticiil in its nature, and the
students who enroll in the course will
learn some of the details of campfire
girl leadership by actiuilly doing wdiat
a trooi) has to do, including, as in the
(Continued on page 6i
NORMAL
APPROPRIATE LETTER
TO MOTHER
One Week Before the Marks
Go Home
Dearest J l o t h e r :
The box of eats came just in time to
save me; I was practically starved. Wc
get good eats here but they couldn't
e(|Uiil ynurs. and. naturally, it is sometimes mighty hard on nie. Then, this
week was test week, and of course I
study so very hnrd that I feel weak by
evening. Oh! you have no idea how we
girls relished the cake; and as for those
Lebanon bologna sandwiches, well, I
reall.y cnuldu't find a crumb left five
minutes iifter we attacked the box.
As I wtis saying, this was test week.
What a horrid week it has been, too!
I hnve worked so hard this semester
that I just don't know how I've avoided
a nervous breakdown, and even then
I'm afraid I flunked those tests. The
tennis courts a r e in good shape now, too,
and I haven't had time to get a bit of
exercise tliere either.
Mother, ynu remember when I came
down here I thought Normal School
would be a cinch and i phinned all sorts
of things to do to puss away the time?
Vou kudw hdw .you thought I would
have a Int of work to do and you
warned me not to overwork? Well, I've
often wondered whether I wouldn't have
acknowledged long ago that I do sometimes work very hard. I spend a lot
ot time on m.y lessons, but I'm so afraid
1 won't get through all my subjects.
These teachers do mark too hard. You
know in High School I alwnj's got high
markg except in Math and Latin, (I
want to capitalize tn attract attention),
and of course Mr. Brant and Miss
Hickdft were regular cranks about
niiirking.
Now, if I don't hnve ns many t\vo's
ou m.y card as ynu think 1 should or
as you would like me to have, just remember 1 have some of the highest
marks gotten by any nf fhe class.
If Diid connihiins, you remind him
that I am rather inclined to be nervous,
iiud if 1 work a bit harder I'll have a
nervous breiikdown. 1 think m.y health
comes before lessons every time; am
I right? If I feel real nervous I just
have tn leave m.y work for awhile, so
I go to one of the girls' rooms and talk.
I do almost iinything to get a change.
If I wouldn't I wiiuld long ago have
Illlll to come home to rest, then I would
miss Sd much wnrk tliat I could never
niake it iqi.
Now, dear, if .you see low marks on
m.y card, please remember 1 itm working hard, ns hard as my health will allow. Oh! I shduld tell yon, I have Inst
ten puiinds; 1 onl.y weigh one hundred
and eighf,v-fivo now.
Your loving daughter,
JANIE,
P. S. I won't need that money this
week.
L. H.—"I think it would be a good
idea to have round tables in the dining rnnni ; 1 never can hear what they
are saying up at the other end of the
t,able."
II. D.—"No, you don't; we'd never get
a square meal tlien."
TIMES
IMPOSSIBLE, B U T Your Idea in Suits—
Suits Us, and Our
Prices Will Suit You!
When you come here for c l o t h e s w h a t e v e r you have in mind is more
i m p o r t a n t to us than how much
you h a v e in your pocket.
If you wouldn't w e a r a brown suit
for a minute—we d o n ' t w a s t e a
minute on brown.
We feel t h a t our customers a r e
intelligent men who have minds
of their own and t h a t i t ' s up to
us to mind our own business and
produce w h a t you w a n t if we can
—or apologize if we cannot.
Today—it woulcJ be hard to suggest a pattern,
model or price that we cannot get together
with you on—to your entire satisfaction.
Michael-Stern Value First Suits $ 2 5 up
Hart Schaffner and Marx Suits $ 3 0 up
WILSON e SHAFFER
Money's
Worth or Money
Back
COMING EVENTS
SOUNDS FROM
CAST SHADOWS
THE SUBWAY
Excitement prevails over the dormitories. Usuiillj- iifter a vacation everyone is unwilling fo settle down to work
again, and ou the first night or two
many shed tears of self-pity. But what
we hear now is, "Only nine more weeks!
Onl.v nine more weeks, and I'll bo
through forever!"
That is wh.at the
seniors are saying, as they bustle
around, priicficiug that look of complete
wisdom flint the.y must soon be wearing.
The juniors have that spring-is-come
hnik on their faces, and are talking
iibout what they "will do this summer.
The seniors, bowed down with the
weight of it, must think of wdiat they
must do from now on.
Just think, seniors, iissuiuing tliat .you
know how—that your good times iit C.
S. N. S. a r e about oyer. Soon you will
be forced tn be dignified, self-reliant,
Illlll, nliove all, self-sup)iorting.
Ah, seniors! when ye become self-supporting next wdiiter, won't you please
renienilier us who are learning out of
ynur nld notebooks? Once in a wdiile,
remeinliering the ennditious of tho gnnd
old days, send us a box mit iiretzels und
peanuts. We, the seniors-to-be, will call
dnwn blessings u]Hin .you, and perhaps,
if wc ciiii siiilicieiitl.y reform our present habits, we may even, some time,
send you a post card conveying our
tlinnks, a n d felling .you how much we
eiijo.ved eiiting them in the dark.
Onr s.vnipathies to little .lean.
Who's iilways tr.ving to get lean;
To bnb.v Gus, wdio wants the moon
But only gets to scriipe the spoon;
To Ilildii bravo, who never said,
"My carpet's not a bit too r e d " ;
'(Jause she wants I's, to Alva Bell,
Who onl.v gets—what she won't tell.
We, the Ila.vrdomers, publicl.y admonish the inliiibitiints of the dormitor.v, all and sundry, for their exceeding iioiKdialance in matters that intimatel.v coiicen niir welfare and general
felicif.y. The npiiended minutiae are,
we feel, nf siiHicicnt weight to justify
no slight degree of eluillitinn ou our
part:
1. You, the dorm students, all and
sundry, do unite in your efforts to vitiate our progress b.v monopolizing teachers and reference books;
2. You, the dorm students, each and
all, do obfuscate our horizon ou all too
frequent occasions by satisfying your
gregarious instincts in tho immediate
yicinit.v of the da.yronni windows.
3. Y'ou, the dorm students, jointly
and severally, either injudiciously or
with egotistic disregard for the common good, do satisfy your epicurean
propensities without bound or limit, thus
Iiersisteutl.y exhausting tho Beanery's
reiierfory, and e(|iiiill,y persistently miiteriall.y disliirhing that salubrious condition (if (iiir interiors requisite fo effective full enjoyment of life, health,
and the pursuit of learning.
In monosyllabic English, these are diir
ludsf aggrnviited objectidiis tn yniir intolerable striduliitions. We insist that,
without compelling recourse tn any ultimatum, you iusfantlj- cease, desist, discnntinue, nnd hereafter refriiin from
these and all similar siicinlogic impositions.
Although, when the spring flowers
are comiuenciug to bud and the tennis
courts are sending a call to tennis lovers, it is impossible to read every article listed here as worthy of consideration, yet i t is not impossible to glance
through this column fo select one article
that will be useful now, or wdiich can
be referred to when teaching hero or
elsewhere.
Interior Decoration, by Helen Kones,
in the April Good Housekeeping, mjiy
be valuable as supplementary reading
for art classes.
The report of fhe National Department of Superinteudeiico may be of
some help to those who are aspiring
to the management of schools. It is to
be found in the March School Life, a
publication containing national educational information.
Normal Instructor and P r i m a r y Plans
always has at least one article of especial interest to everyone. I n the April
number a r e :
Simplification of Percentage Teaching, by E. L. Countrym a n ; The Mourning Dove, by Marie
Ellis Hcgler; Lexington and the Minufenien, by Edwin Worthen, and Photographs from the Lexington Historical Society.
Psychology students may be interested ill The Savage Stage, from Eight to
Twelve, by Ruth Danenhower Wilson,
in the last McClures. The same magazine has another rather unusual .article,
How Our Forefathers Settled a Turkish
Problem, by David Henderson, a true
story of an adventuresome American
captured in a Moslem city.
Then for your own satisfaction would
.von not care to know wdiat Albert Bushnell Hart has to say about W h a t We
(Jwe to fhe Puritans? Has the debt-tothe-Puritiin idea been overdone? Both
this and The Colhipse of Education in
Soviet Russia are in the April Current
History.
While one is thinking of life in Europe, he may find time to give Germany
a thought. A Glimpse of the Lives of
(iernian Women, in The Woman's Press,
suggests that foreigners wdio are visiting in and reporting on Germany toda.v may not be visiting the real Germaii.y, the (:ieriniiny outside of Berlin
nnd the fashionable resorts, wdiere real
(Germans may be found living real lives.
Frank Tannenbaum's article on the
Ku Klux Klan, in the April Centur.y;
Vice President Coolidge's discussion of
the Iiosition of Massachusetts in the
United Stiites, in the recent Natinniil
(leogrii]ihic ; Riidin Achievements in R>'ceiit 'I'eiirs, iu the last Current Histor.v;
nil these are suggestive of the ]ilentitude (if infdnniitiiin that conies to the
niiigiiziiie render.
I.iist, but jierhiiiis of greatest general
interest: What Is America's Favorite
llynin.' Is it yours? What would ynu
siip)iose it to be? The real answer is
in the April Etude, in fhe short article
nn The Rnniauce of Hymns aud Tunes.
Get the iniigiizine habit. Like the
bobbed-haired girl, i t may eontiiin very
little of a lot of the things you are inE. A. (opening her lunch)—"X^ics terested in, but what it has is mighty
again! There's no end to pies at our well worth knowing and certainly up to
house!"
the last minute; if you can keep uii
C. McC—"How irould there be ? They with it, you are in for a general educa11111 ke 'em round."
tion before you are finished.
f
I
NORMAL
&Zi
Jewelers
and
Opticians
We are now in our new
location in the Opera
House Block.
We invite you to call
and inspect our new
stock and up-to-date
Jewelry.
LOCK HAVEN, PA.
Misplaced Articles
Though it may seem impossible to
think that Coppersmiths have any work
in wdiich a Cherry may be particularly
useful, yet, at C. S. N. S., oddities are
not unusual. However, this work of
these Coppersmiths is not as most coppersmiths, and that of the Cherry is
far from the business of cherries; both
do the same kind of work.
The cliief occupation of the two Coppersmiths and the Cherry for fhe past
two or three weeks has been to keep
one or two persons busy hunting for
the articles these lassies purposely misplace. Of course some things such as a
college pillow, a waste p.aper basket,
nu umbrella, a suitcase, or books; and
rolled newspapers are not hard to find
Avhen tucked under bed covers, these
articles are merel.y hard to pile out of
bed in times to feel comfortable when
the lights go out. The articles t h a t are
hard to find, especially if ono plans to
get a good night's rest are those like a
tack hammer, a comb, or a few thin
slices of onion. It was very convenient
for file one party, receiving practically
all the benefits nf the three workmen's
labor, that the lights did not go out
too soon after discoveries were made,
for perhaps one or two persons would
have hud nightmare. Wouldn't those
three persons have been sorry for thoir
actions, if a t midnight a nightmare of
another would have aroused them from
their peaceful sleep? Tho day of judgment may not be far off, so bo careful!
Hetty Staver announces that she can
write poetry. We j u s t dare her t o !
TIMES
US A N D O T H E R S
Lois Stephens, of Woodland, was the
guest of Amelia List over the week-end.
Miss Stephens was a classmate of the
local delegation of Irvona girls, and
was royally entertained by them. We
hope she liked us well enough to repeat
the visit.
Gertrude Dolan, who was quarantined
in her room until it was definitely ascertained t h a t she had been unaffected
by her exposure to scarlet fever, has
been released. When the doctor saw her
queer actions after being set free, he
remarked that he thought he ought to
put her in for twenty days more in order to be sure that she was all right.
Miss Myrtle Seyler, of Salona, visited
Caroline McCliutick and
Genevieve
Bicker on April 4.
Grace English spent the Easter holidays wdth relatives in Camden and Philadelphia.
The dii.yroom gang, with few exceptions, has been spending this past week
playing ball on the west campus. They
need the practice, it is apparent.
Elsie Furst has the last thing worth
mentioning in the line of swollen jaws.
Vincent Schreiber, kept at home wdth
mumps during and after the holiday
period, returned to school on Monday,
Ernest Schrot returned to school on April 10.
Wednesdiiy, April 4. He insists that he
We extend our sympathy to Annie
did not develop the mumps with any
idea of extending his Easter vacation. Wise. Due to the serious condition of
her eyes, she has had to discontinue her
Mac unfortunately hung up a piece studies, and has returned to her home
of his coat (we say coat, because we do ill South Williamsport.
not wdsh to be more specific) on a nail
Thelma Snyder has again joined the
the other day. A few minutes later he
was discovered rushing toward the train- dayroom gang. Was it this spring
ing school, informing the world at large weather, Thelma?
that he did not wdsh to be detained,
Lucretia Summers surprised the wdiole
because he was hunting Miss Lockhart. crowd recently, aud turned most of
Guy Luck and Charles Herbster came
in on April 4, each carrying a large
bunch of trailing arbutus. They were
in great demand in the main hall that
evening, but very little of the arbutus
found its way into the west dorm.
What is wrong, girls? Out of practice?
Mary Mowrer returned from her vacation wdth her first case of swelled
liead. I t subsided rapidly as her cold
was remedied.
them green with envy, wdion she announced that she had just accepted an
invitation to siiend the summer in Europe. She has made no definitely detailed plans for the triji, but expects to
sail some time early in May. Wish we
could add to our education that way,
too. Here is hoping that you have a
pleasant trip, Lucretia, and good luck
all the waj-.
Bertha Burt is back ou the job again,
liaviug been held at home by illness.
Miss Yale also realizes t h e need of Now that we are all here again, start
men around the Normal school; on Mon- something, sonieone, before
Bertha
day night she allowed all who wished thinks she has t o !
to do so to go down to the Martin to
On Thursdaj' evening, March 22, the
see Clarence.
students gave a farewell party to Mrs.
Mildred Stonemetz developed a case Gage, who has resigned her position as
of scarlet fever on Saturday, April 7. dietitian here, and who will move out
She was moved a t once to the third of the dormitories on the first of April.
floor of the east dorm, as far from all Mr. Gage and Lewis were included, for
other students as possible, and placed the whole family will be missed from
under quarantine. Strenuous measures tlie life of the dorm.
were taken to prevent the spread of the
(iriice Ishler siieiit a recent week-end
disease, the boys even being required
to move to the rooms on the first floor. with Catherine Cooper at the latter's
Tt was imiiossible to locate a nurse to home in Loganton.
take charge of the case, so Mildred's
Philili Forcey and Lucy Stone, of
mother was sent for. Fortunately, the
Woodland, surprised Ella Forcey wdien
case was a very light one. After a week
they dropped in to see her Sund.ay afin quarantine, she was removed to her
ternoen. Don't come in unexpectedly
home by auto, with the sanction of the
next time, please; Ellii gets too much
state health department, to wait out the
excited.
term of her quarantine.
Bernice Lord returned on Saturday,
Edith Burgeson, Ciitherine Deveriiux,
April 7, having been held up a t home
Anne Peters, and Winifred Patterson
long enough to teach a French class in
returned late from vacation. Their
the Emporium High School for a week,
causes for del.'iy were fully satisfactory
llnw did you like the profession,
—to them.
Bernie .'
Our ciuict little Eleanor Eobb was
It is rumored through the dining
taken out to dinner on Wednesday,
room thiit affer April 17 a speci.al table
April 4, by her aunt, Mrs. F . A. Eobb.
will be set, not as a training table, uur
Judging by the package of sweets that
for those who wish to get out hiking or
she brought back, .her aunt knows just
Jilaying tennis, but simply fo make it
how to treat a niece going to Central
]iossible for Marcella Burt, Loretta
State.
Funk, Beatrice Van Zandt, and Warren
Iva Livingston spent her vacation in McCarty to eat as much as they wish
without getting embarrassed.
Clearfield, visiting her friends.
COPYRIGHT 8Y
JHTERWOVEK STOCKINQ C0UP1UI9
Smartest Styles in
Clothing and Furnishings
At Moderate Prices
Society Brand Clothes
Mallory Hats
Earl & Wilson Shirts
Interwoven Hose
Ladies' Weldrest Hose
Hickoff & Weaver
The Store That
Appreciates
Quality
Shoe Repairing
J. F. TORSELL
BELLEFONTE AVE.
Students Assist in Near East
Relief
A talk coiifiiining a note of unusual
aiipeal for the relief of the needs of
orjihiin children in the Near East was
given in chapel April 9 by Dr. M. P .
Krikorian, a native Armenian.
Dr. Krikorian, an exceptionally interesting speaker, wdiose sincerity at all
times was iiarticularly evident, told of
the high Christian and intellectual
standards of his fellow countrymen, a n d
of the iuhumau freiitmeut that t h e y
have been accorded af the hands of t h e
Turks. Because of constant savage massacres, his country has become ,a l a n d
of oriihans, a land of hungry orphans,
for there, were few left to provide for
file thousands that must be fed. I t was
in behalf of these children that D r .
Krikorian made his appeal for funds
to carry on the organized relief work
of the Near East Relief.
Envelopes were distributed to each
person present. Tho appeal evidently
went home, for when they were collected, the following morning in ehapel,
a total of more than $60 was obtained,
which was forwarded by Mr. Drum. T h e
receipt ackuowdedging the money has
been for some days posted in the book
room.
NORMAL
Plan to Lunch
AT
F. I. TITUS
Just Off the Campus
HOME
AND
COOKING
GROCERIES
Brion's New Studio
21 South Fairview Street
Fitted with latest and
modern equipment
Special Rates to Schools
SUMMER SESSION
DEVELOPMENTS
(Continued from page 3)
case of the bo.ys, a certain amount of
actual camping out.
Seumas McManus, the author of Donegal Fairy Stories and other Irish folk
tales, is to appear here in readings from
his stories during the summer. Dallas
Lore Sharp, writer of Watcher in the
Woods, Beyond the Pasture Bars, and
other nature tales, is also to be here
during the session.
Mr. Vanarsdale, from his New Jersey
home, is arranging a number of baseball
games for the summer's team. On the
schedule he proposes games with the
Altoona Apprentice School, Clarion
Summer Normal, and Bloomsburg Summer School. He hopes to have at least
one game weekly arranged before tho
opening of the session.
One r.afher attractive feature of this
summer's surroundings will be the location liomewhere on the school grounds
of a full.v equipped public playground.
The probable location will be just beyond the gymnasium, this side of the
orcliiird that many of you recall. The
Lock liuveii Lodge of Elks is to oee to
it that the ground is equipped witf
everything in the way of play apparatus
that a youngster's heart could wish, and
the normal school wdll see to it that
the grounds are open to the children of
the cit.y, under the general directiiin of
the pnysical triuning department, at all
hours of the play day. The appia'iitits
wdll be installed, of course, for the use
of the children, not of the summer session adults, but the general playground
activities wdll iifford no small number
of ideas for playground use a t school
to those who watch for them, and a
general color and hustle to the whole
summer school atmosphere.
.Summer school is an oddity in educational thought, isn't it? In the best
sense of both nouns, it is a vacation at
school.
II. S.—"Poets are born and not
made."
B. S.—"Say, I wasn't blaming you."
TIMES
US cs, OTHERS THE LOONY
REPORTER
Tot Schenck stopped at the school on
Sunday, April 8. She was on her way
home from a house party at Bucknell,
and could not resist the impulse to
hunt uii her ohl friends and fell them
all iibout it.
Annie Wise and Martha Fillman, they
are not man and wife so much any
more. The.y have removed their dormitor.v lodgings away from each other
together. Mr. Cage, he wants to know
whether all this moving it is a reward
Sara llanuii put in her first April for good behavior or a demerit, but we
week-end at State College, iitfending the think it is six for the one nnd a half
a dozen for the other.
Civil Engineers Hop.
Orbisonia it has il nice long name,
Helen Mantle entertained her mother,
but Benovo it had the nice long score
from Oval, on Ajiril o and 6. We are
when fhey went to the shower baths.
certain that she en.ioyed the Senior
So many of our juniors have joined
Play as much as we did.
Mr. Ulmer's Audubon Society that we
Weiuers were welcome wittles nt table think maybe we will have some nice
D2 last Wednesday. Helen Mantle flighty times this spring yet.
heeded Esther's plea, and brought extra
Gret Willianis, she is back in the paA*
platters, so as to make if possible for per again. This time she is wanting
her to put on a little weight. Keep an we should not say a word about Safefje.ye on Esther; it wdll be interesting if Last.
the treatmeut works.
Lucretia Summers' light outeiied itMiirie Howe, whom illness forced out self at half past seven on Monday night.
Branch
of school before the holida.ys, is now at It just could not stand seeing her work
so
much.
the Clearfield Hospital, recovering from
Marcella Burt's mother she came to
an operation for appendicitis.
see Marcella just a little wdiile ago, and DORMITORY ROOMS GOING
Mrs. Trembath is taking an extended now just before Easter her brother,
FAST FOR SUMMER SCHOOL
vacation; wherefore Mr. Trembath has Harold, he comes along to see that Mar(Continued from page 2)
been eating for some time iit the facul- cella she gets home schnell. Marcella,
Leona Rader, Drifting, Pa.
ty table.
is it maybe something that we should
Mildred Bevels, Atlas, Pa.
Ellen Ehoads, Dunlo, Pa.
Easter flowers, and yet more flowers! know J'OU have not told us?
George Eothrock, Bellefonte, Pa.
Sall.v Hiiiina she had to wear her hair
A few of us on second floor were kept
Eussel Heisli, Spring Mills, Pa.
busy watering them for a wdiile. Gosh! up with pins during the Easter vacation,
Scott Schilling, Nisbet, Pa.
because her father he had a decided set
it seems like years ago.
Euth Schrot, Clearfield, Pa.
against bobbed-hair flappers. Being
Miss Butler was prevented from meetMar.v Sebastian, Locust Gap, Pa.
as he is still innocent that her hair is
ing her classes on April 4 and ~>, due to
Helen Secor, Bidgway, Pa.
shorn, Sallj' she could not bear to cause
an attack of laryngitis. Students conKatherine Shannon, Houtzdale, Pa.
him suffering. Now, is not that a nice,
ducted the periods.
JIary Shannon, Morrisdale, Pa.
thoughtful daughter?
Margaret Sinclair, Houtzdale, Pa.
On April 12 Frederick Hunter and
Jo Sweeny she had her picture took
Sara Spadafore.
Victor Haney got up at 4:30 aud went coining the hill down on skis. And she
Grace Starline, Beaverdale, Pa.
for a run up the boys' glen. They did not have her picture took wdien she
Carrie Straw, Kermoor, Pa.
intend to keep this up daily. A number did just stoii coming the hill down.
Balpli Sweeney, Spring Mills, Pa.
of recruits have joined their health
Miss Avery she has pussywillows all
Salvador Tiracorda, Madera, Pa.
crusade. Also commencing the same over the library, except only the card
Anna Valyo, Bitumin, Pa.
day eight girls appeared on the tennis catalogue in.
Ardessa Viehdeffer, Drifting, Pa.
courts at 5:30. How do you put two
Spring has been here several days alKuth Ward, Leolyii, Pa.
and two together?
ready. The mothballs, fhey do no longer
Elizabeth Williams, Julian, Pa.
rise
up
into
the
air
to
greet
you.
Mr.
Anna Daugherty spent Thursday of
her vacation at East Ferney. On her Drum ill his healthy talks to hearty stuDiphtheria Week
return triii she succeeded in dropping dents he has not yet said that a mothball
a
day
saves
a
stitch
in
time,
but
Nearly
every week of the year by
her jiass from the wdndow. The conthis time has been assigned to some sort
ductor must have been impressed by maybe he wdll yet.
of drive or other. We have had Laugh
her tale, for he put her off the train
H. B.—"J'see the book I'm writing?" Week, Better English Week, and a
and allowed her to chase it back along
F. P.—"Fiction, science, history, or dozen other vaieties. The latest to dethe track for two miles or thereabouts.
velop is Diphtlieria Week, which was
He allowed her to take the next train wdiat?"
the week of April 8. Dr. Critchfield, the
home, also, refusing to wait himself.
II. B.—"Nojie! n o t e — f r Miss Himes."
medical inspector of Central State, told
us of it during the chapel exercises on
Tuesday, April 10.
Dr. Critchfield brought with him Dr.
McCreary, a representative of the State
Medical Society and of the PennsylLOCK HAVEN, PA.
vania State Boiird of Health, who spoke
on the Prevention of Diphtheria.
Among other things, he stated that
the mortality rate from diphtheria, especially among children, is causelessly
high; that through the use of diphtheria
Designated Depository
anti-toxin, provided that it be used immediately upon the discovery of the
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
first symptoms, fhe mortality rate
City of Lock Haven.
among children can be reduced to less
than one per cent. Dr. McCreary disLock Haven School District.
cussed briefly the nature, causes, and
Central State Normal School.
means of prevention of the disease, and
urged the duty of all parents, teachers,
and others to become sufllciently fami3% I N T E R E S T PAID O N SAVINGS DEPOSITS
liar wdth the disease as to help reduce
the number of cases to the minimum.
Lunches
Soda
Ice Cream
Norris Chocolates
Page & ShawCandies
Achenbaeh's
CLINTON T R U S T CO.
Capital $200,000
Surplus
$80,000
NORMAL
TIMES
1(1 lie fiiunil ill t h e s t i i t e ; i f ,voii d o u b t
CENTRAL STATE FINDS
it, s e t t l e tluise d d u b f s b y r e f e r r i n g t o
n y uf t h e t e a m s t h a t w e n t u p a g a i n s t
POSITIONS FOR ITS GRADUATES atlieiii.
H i l l i n g Netti's a b s e n c e
Euth
Placement Service a Real Benefit
The service of Ceiitriil State fo its
graduates never censes. Your Alma Muter follows you info your field of teaching tr.ving fo find out how you are gelting along and (i]ieiiiiig eonstantl.v to
you its professional inspiriition and assistance. We have just iis great iin interest in your success as a teacher as
wo liad in your accomplishmeiits as ii
student. One of the best eyiilem-es of
this continuous service iind iiiteiest is
our effort to iiroperl.v jiliice Central
State Normal graduates in the best systems of schools in the state. The crowning climax in your work at Central
State comes on the day you affix your
signature to the contract t h a t gives you
your coveted iiosition. We help every
student to realize this great snfisfaction.
(iriiiii|iiiiii, l l u i i l i i i g d o i i , l l a z l e t o u , H u l l fax,
llomestead,
Iryoiiii,
Jeiiiudte,
Jolinstown, Jessu[i, Kiinc, Kittaiiiiiiig,
Lelianon, L a u r i d t o n , Lewisburg, Lancast e r , L o p e z , l.iiiisford, L i i p o r t e , L i i f r o b e ,
L u f h e r s b u r g , Ij.ykeiis, L e i s e n r i n g , J b i honiiigton,
ileiidville,
Monongahelii,
i l o n e s s e n , J l e r c e r s b u r g Academy, McK e e s Rocks, M c . M l i s t e r v i l l e , M o u n t A l t o ,
Mercer, Milton, M a h a n o y
City, McKees|i(irt, Miiiersyille, M c V e y t o w n , McClellantduu,
:\It.
l'lea.siiiit,
Madera,
ilifHinburg, Middleburg, Munhall, Montrose,
McConnellsburg,
Mefaiuoras,
Jliddlefown,
Nanficoke,
New
Kensington,
New
Castle,
Nazareth,
Northampton, Norristown, New Bright o n , O l d F o r g e , Olypliiiut, O b e r l i n , O r e field, P e c k v i l l e , P i t t s t o n , P h o e n i x v i l l e ,
Pittsburgh,
Punxsutawney,
Peufield
Last .year maii.v of our graduates were P o t t s t o w n , P o t t s v i l l e , P a l m c r t o n , B e placed in fhe best s.ystems of schools n o v o , R e a d i n g , R o a r i n g S p r i n g , S h a m o in the state. Our service reached Ash- k i n , S h e u i i n d o i i h , S t e e l t o n , S a y r e , S o u t h
ley, Altoona, Austin, Allentown, Arch- W i l l i a m s i i o r t , S t a t e C o l l e g e , S i n n a r a a bald, Abington, Ambridge, Ashliind, h o n i n g , S h a r o n , S u n b u r y , S h i n g l e h o u s e ,
Brookville, Bradford, Bellefonte,-Belle S o u f h i n o n t , S a l i x , S w i s s d a l e , S m i t h f i e l d ,
Vernon, Butler, Brownsville, Bedford, S m e t h p o r t , Sf, ]\bir,ys, T i o n e s t a , T,yrone,
Brockport, Bethlehem, Benezette, Cou- T i i r e i i t u m , T u n k h a n n o e k , T h r o o i i , T a y dersport, Crosb}', Carnegie, Chambers- lor, T o w a n d a , T u r t l e C r e e k , U n i o n t o w n ,
burg, Carlisle, Conshohocken, Carbon- L^]i|ier Darli.y, W i n d b e r ,
Washingfon,
dale, Chester, Charleroi, Connellsville,
Wa.ynesburg,
Williamsport,
WilkesClearfield, Conemaugh, Coatesville, CoBarre.
raopolis, Carmel, DuBois, Dickson Cify,
This year in assisting o u r s t u d e n t s
Darby,
Danville,
Donora,
Duumore,
Doylestown, Driftwood, Dormont, DUAV- a n d f o r m e r g r a d u a t e s fo t h e b e t t e r p o son, Duquesne, Easton, Ellwood City, s i t i o n s , t h e p l a c e m e n t s e r v i c e w i l l r e a c h
Ebensburg, Erie, Emporium, Franklin, eyer,y c o u n t y , c i t y , b o r o u g h , a n d t o w n Frecport,
Girard
College,
Glenside, s h i p s u p e r i n t e n d e n t
and
supervising
Greensburg, Glen Lyon,
Gettysburg, p r i n c i p a l i n t h e s t a t e ,
GIRLS' BASKETBALL SQUAD
DISBANDS FOR SEASON
(Continued from page 1)
t h e b e s t shot ou t h e t e a m , liotli f r o m
t h e floor a n d f r o m t h e f o u l l i n e , a n d
h e r absence was sorely felt for t h e bala n c e of t h e g a m e s . S h e h a s t h o s e c u t e
l i t t l e wa.vs t h a t t a k e a b a l l p a s t , a r o u n d ,
over, u n d e r , i n an3- wiij- t h a t s h e d o e s n ' t
expect it, b y a n d away from a n opposing guard and thence into the basket.
Look a t h e r scoring record for t h r e e
g a m e s , o n e of w h i c h s h e p h i y e d a g a i n s t
K a n e , o u r t o u g h e s t o p p o n e n t , 100 p e r
cent p r e s e n t ; one, against Bellefonte
h e r e , h o p p i n g a r o u n d on o n e f o o t , t h e
other dragging behind h e r ; a n d one,
a g i i i n s t B e l l e f o n t e also, u p t h e r e , wdien
s h e w e n t o u t f o r a wdiile. T h e b e s t
news for t h e next season is t h a t she
will b e b a c k o n t h e j o b .
Mildred Ericson, center, Ludlow, P a .
M i l d r e d looked l i k e t h e m o s t p r o m i s i n g
b i t of b a s k e t b a l l m a t e r i a l t h e j u n i o r s
brought in with them, but she had little
chance to show. D u e to a n i n j u r y in
t h e first g a m e of t h e s e a s o n , s h e w a s
unable to get back into t h e game for
more than a few minutes late in t h e
season.
A n o t h e r y e a r is b e f o r e h e r ;
w a t c h h e r m a k e uii f o r l o s t t i m e t h i s
winter.
Hilda Leathers, center, Howard, P a .
Hilda, too, l e a r n e d her liiisketball here,
a n d good use s h e p u t i t t o . S h e p l a y e d
i n n e a r l y e v e r y g a m e , a n d iiut u p a
scrappy contest every m i n u t e t h a t she
plii.yed. S h e w a s t h e r e wdth t h e g o o d s
t h r o u g h o u t t h e s e a s o n . Onl.y t h o s e w h o
]ila,ye(l on t h e feiini c a n k n o w t h e v a l u e
in g e t t i n g t h e b a l l wdiere i t s h o u l d go
a u d k e e p i n g i t t h e r e of a n o n - t h e - j o b
center like H i l d a . H i l d a goes on this
year into other diggings. W e would it
w e r e n o t so, iis s h e m i g h t p u t if, i f
asked.
a i d e d as ciiiitaiu, nnd showed in liiind l i n g t h e (eiiiii t h e lieiidwork t h a t w a s
k e e p i n g m o s t of N o r n i a r s o i i i i o n e n t s o u t
of s c o r i n g r a n g e . S h e will b e h e r e n e x t
w i n t e r , if gives u s jileiisure t o a n i i o u i i c e .
dred Ericson, c e n t e r ; H e t t y Stayer, side
center;
a n d Euth
Summersgill a n d
C l e o n a C o p p e r s m i t h , g u i i r d s ? Tn a d d i t i o n t o t h e s e , t h e r e iire ii n u n i b e r of
g i r l s w h o h a v e been g i d f i n g t h e g a m e
into them this past season who should
he d u e to jirddiice n e x t w i n t e r ; a n d
tliere is a l l t h e n i a t e r i i i l in n e x t y e a r ' s
e n t e r i n g (diiss to d r a w u p o n b e s i d e . W e
lielieye t h a t , with t h e s a m e c o a c h i n g
a s tlie.y h a v e lind t h i s f a l l , t l i e r e w o u l d
be f e w w o m e n ' s c o l l e g e s in t h e E a s t
tliiif could h a n g t h e s h o r t e n d of t h e
s c o r e on t h a t C. S. N . S. c o n i b i n a t i o n .
T h e s c o r i n g of t h e forvyard t h i s w i n t e r is w o r t h r e c o r d i n g .
The initials
af t h e head of t h e c o l u m i i s r e p r e s e n t
the teams m i d : K a n e , Bellefonte, a n d
Clearfield, e a c h i n twd g a m e s .
E d i t h A s h e , giiiird, f r o m i l i l l IbiU,
]iicked ii]i t h e g a m e u n d e r J l i s s B u t l e r ' s
tutidiige 11111 i n l y . W e h a v e b e e n liiiudiiig h e r e , in t h e ] i r e c e d i n g p a r a g r a p h ,
o n e or l u i i of t h e miiii.v b o u q u e t s h e r
work d i n i n g t h e season d e s e r v e d . Ashie
was II finver of s t r e n g t h ou t h e d e f e n s e ,
illlll ii good b i g o n e . D a m e F o r t u n e
deals us a wicked h a n d w h e n s h e m a k e s
i t i m p o s s i b l e f o r u s t o s a y , " S h e will
complete the champion combination for
F i e l d Goals
next year."
When she graduates in
K B B
K C T
J u n e , C, S, N . S. will lose a pla.ver tluit
Kenned.y
1 4 1
1 1 19
could easil.y b e a s t a r .
niiniia
0 ;i 0
(i 0 2.)
Bernice Lord, guard, stiirted out a s W h i t e
3 i) 6
18
m a n a g e r of t h e t e a i n , b u f f o u n d t h a t S t a v e r
* * *
G
p l a y i n g t h e g a m e was m o r e f u n t h a n S u m m e r s g i l l
* * *
3
handling the reins. W i t h o u t previous
4 l(i 1.3 121 7 10 71
experience, a n d with a late start, she
F o u l Goals a n d C h a n c e s
p i c k e d u p t h e g a m e riiiiidl,v, a s s h e d o e s
Iv K
II
('
K
(•
T
e v e r y t h i u g else, a n d m a d e a n a c c e p t a b l e
Ivcniiedy.. 2-4 L'-4 U-O t - s 0-4 n o ."-20
s u b s t i t u t e . W i t h a n o t h e r s e a s o n . Miss Hiiiiiiii
0-1 0-0 0-0 11-:! d-L' (1-11 0-11
B u t l e r s a y s , s h e w o u l d h a v e f o r c e d h e r White
tl-14 ;!-4 7-12 *
•
» :;(|.:ii)
Stiiver
*
•
»
*
* Kl-lS 10-18
wa.y o n t o a n y t e a m ; b u t s h e g r a d u a t e s
this summer. She hails from E m p o r i u m
]1-1!> u-8 7-12 1-11 n-fiin-is :!.j-74
*l)i(l not pliiy.
at present, b u t m a n y a basketball game
s h e s a w f r o m t h e g.ym b a l c o n y w h e n
h e r f a t h e r was liii nil ling t h e d e p a r f m e n t
of science h e r e , a n d s h e w a s a t r a i n i n g
school k i d d i e .
Cleona Coppersmith, guard, Altoona.
N o n i e goes i n t o a b a s k e t b i i l l g a m e a s
she does i n t o iin.ything else, w i t h h e r
whole h e a r t a n d soul. S h e w.is a n o t h e r
t h a t WHS g r e e n t o t h e g a i u e t h i s fall,
j-ef
deyeloped
remarkabl.v. She was
c a l l e d u p o n on s e v e r a l o c c a s i o n s to s u b s t i t u t e , a n d liyed u p t o fhe o b l i g a t i o n s
of h e r j o b w h e n e v e r t h a t h a i i p e n e d . S h e
wdll b e b a c k agiiiii i n t h e full, a n d
s h o u l d b e c e r t a i n of a r e g u l a r b e r t h o n
t h e nexf v a r s i t y . I t will t a k e s o m e o n e
might.y good t o b e a t N o n i e t o i t if s h e
w a n t s i t , a n d s h e does.
N o s u m m i n g u p of t h e s e a s o n w o u l d
be felt complete without t h e recognit i o n t h a t i s Miss B u t l e r ' s d u e . S h e t o o k
K a t h e r i n e Cawley, center, S c r a n t o n ,
a b u n c h of g r e e n m a t e r i a l , p l u s a f e w
was Hilda's u n d e r s t u d y . She, too, gradw h o h a d pla.ved u n d e r b o y s ' r u l e s , a n d
uates this fall.
H e r i n c h e s wdll b e
who h a d much to u n l e a r n b e f o r e
fitting
missed from line play. She m a d e t h e m
i n t o t h e six m a n ( o r s h o u l d w e s a y , si.x
w o r k f o r h e r i n b a t t i n g d o w n m a n y of
girlf) game.
She p u t t h e m over t h e
the opposition t h r o w s in t h e w r o n g dihurdles; taught them t h e game from
rection.
t h e g r o u n d u p ; p u t t h e s p i r i t of r e d L u c i l l e B u r n h a m , s i d e c e n t e r , J o h n - h e a d e d fight i n t o t h e m ; m o r e r e m a r k sonburg, was t h e lively little cricket able, kept it t h e r e for weeks, while t h e
wdio p l a y e d a l l o v e r t h e c e n t e r of t h e c o u n t r y s i d e
was being
scoured
for
floor, r e a d y t o t a k e a p a s s f r o m f r i e n d g a m e s ; a n d t u r n e d t h e m i n t o a w i n or f o e , a n d s e n d i t w h e r e C. S. N . S . n i n g c o m b i n a t i o n d e s p i t e i n j u r i e s a n d
wanted it to ramble.
T h e r e a r e f e w d i s c o u r a g e m e n t s . B e s t of a l l , s h e p r o s i d e c e n t e r s t o b e f o u n d e q u a l t o M u t t , d u c e d a fighting t e a m t h a t f o u g h t l i k e
she h a v i n g benefitted b y h e r home t r a i n - s p o r t s m e n ; t h a t p l a y e d t h e g a m e to
i n g o n o n e of t h a t b u r g ' s a l w a y s g o o d win, b u t p l a y e d n o t h i n g u n d e r a n y cirteams a n d by her coaching here. She cumstances b u t the game. Our hats are
p r o p h e s i e s t h a t n e x t y e a r w e w i l l luive off t o t h a t s o r t of c o a c h i n g .
a team that cannot be b e a t e n ; a n d she
T h e r e i s n o r e a s o n on e a r t h wdiy C. S.
s h o u l d k n o w , f o r s h e wdll b e h e r e t o
N . S. s h o u l d n o t h a v e , n e x t wdnter, t h o
p l a y o n if.
best girls' basketball t e a m i n t h e NorE u t h S u m m e r s g i l l , g u a r d , l e a r n e d t h e m a l schools of t h e S t a t e . A n n e K e n g a m e u p i n S m e t h p o r t , a n d i n v e s t e d h e r n e d y , H i l d a L e a t h e r s , K a t h e r i n e Cawdey,
knowdedge h e r e .
Good g u a r d s a r e a s E d i t h A s h e , a n d B e r n i c e L o r d a r e lost
essential to w i n n i n g b a s k e t b a l l t e a m s this year, b u t there is a varsity veteran
a s m a i n s p r i n g s t o w a t c h e s , a n d t h e c o m - f o r e v e r y p o s i t i o n . W h a t . m o r e could
b i u i i f i o n of E u t h a n d E d i t h A s h e g a v e o n e a s k t h a n a t e a m m a d e u p of N e t a
N o r m a l o n e of tlie s t r o n g e s t d e f e n s e s W h i t e a n d S a l l y H a n n a , f o r w a r d s ; Mil-
Normal
Normal
Normal
Normal
Normal
Norniiil
Normal
1!);
37;
34;
43 ;
14;
30;
Normal.
.177;
Opponents
Kane
21
Bellefonte
13
Bellefonte
10
Clearfield
5
Kane
Cleiirfiehl
Ojiponents.
FAVORITE SAYINGS
Emily B.—"Oh-h-li, K i n n e y ! "
Anne Kennedy—"I could die-e-o!"
Gret—"Say, I got the sweetest l e t t e r ! "
Mutt—"I doesn't like you."
Am.y P.—"Let's go to Titus's."
J e a n S.—"I ate fifty calories today."
Miss Avery—"You have one overdue."
E u t h L.—"I have a good one to read."
Hazel B.—"Who'll go down with me
today."
Compliments
mum
fl
f l T
inuHfliHHin nuiii u
Fredericks
Pharmacy
8
NORMAL
SENIORS NOSE
OUT THE JUNIORS
I n the last moments of the game between the seniors and the juniors,
played in the gymnasium on Tuesdiiy
evening, Ajiril 10, Mary Thompson's
brilliant field goal from the edge of the
floor put the seniors ahead by one point
of the battling juniors. A groan from
t h e juniors in the balcony; a shout from
t h e seniors, quickly stifled as the ball
went into jday again, and in the hands
of the juniors; n few hectic seconds as
B e r n i e Lord tried to prevent Sally
H a u n a from passing the ball to her
r u n n i n g partner a t forward; the referee's whistle; and it was all over. That
final field goal had won for the seniors,
17-16.
The victor.y Ayas somewhat unexpected. A critical sizing up of the two
class teams would seem to give tho
juniors more than an edge the better of
t h e comparison. I t is the work on the
floor that counts, however; and there
t h e two teams were so evenly matched
t h a t the final score accurately indicates
t h e comparative merits. The juniora
had hold the lead ujj until the last few
minutes of play, though their lead was
a t no time a depend.able one; b u t that
last rather lucky basket decided victory
for the class of 1923.
Some of the juniors are not content
to abide hy the verdict, and are flinging challenges about right and left. The
seniors seem disposed to let matters
rest, however; the class championship
is theirs under the original conditions
of the contest, and tliere seems to them
little more to fight for. I t is unlikely
t h a t more games wdll be played.
The lineup:
Seniors
Juniors
Thompson
f
Staver
Kennedy
f
Hanna
Leathers
c
Ericson
Caw ley
sc
Burnham
Ashe
g
Summersgill
Lord
g
Coppersmith
Field goals: Thompson, Kennedy,
Staver, Hanna. Foul goals: Kennedy,
3 of 4; Staver, 0 of 1. Referee: Miss
Butler.
Foolish Questions
Describe the imiia-case of the sciirlet
fever bug.
Why were tliere so many men about
t h e west dorm the night after the gym
meet?
Whilt kind of Easter eggs did Bernice
a n d Bertha have?
I s this man Thorndike, about whom
everyone is talking, a new student?
I s "Klapper" Mrs. Gage's first name?
W e hear II. IT. using it so frequently.
Where did Marie Smith acquire the
etiquette that compels her to knock on
t h e door of trolley cars?
Whenever Mr. High has visitors, what
makes Christine and Grace so popular?
W h y does Sadie Zimmerman set Ler
alarm clock for 2:30 A. M.?
W h a t was the impulse that lead
Grace O'Shea to take an orijhan to
Juniors are objecting to fhe nuinber
of slides shown iu geography class. They
find it hard to write their English in
the dark.
TIMES
SAVE TIME—SAVE STEPS—SAVE MONEY
GO T O
The GRIFFITH Store
5-10-25 and Variety
Stationery
Office Supplies
School Supplies
House Furnishings
Toys and Games
Party Favors
Candy
Notions
Hardware
Camp Supplies
Hosiery
Millinery
( M E M B E R OF CONSOLIDATED MERCHANTS SYNDICATE
.-Vn Association of Merchants Operating Over 900 Stores
Hasty Pudding
The orgnnizatiou of an athletic association to include both boys' and girls'
sports, and to control to some extent
the sports \vhich shall be carried on at
the school for wdiich varsity letters shall
be awarded, and the conditions governing the award of such letters, was decided uiHin at a meeting of a committee representing both the varsity basketball teams, held at noon, Thursday,
April 12. Oificers will be elected at a
ineeting to be held wdtliin a few days.
The boj's' g.vm class was given its
first outdoor workout on the athletic
field on Monday, April 9. High jumping, javelin and discus throwing, and
shot putting were practiced. The results
were rather encouraging to those who
desire to see the formation of a varsity track team.
The Community Choral Club, of Lock
Haven, wdll jiresent "Hiawatha's Wedding Feast," by Samuel Coleridge Taylor, in the Normal School auditorium
on May 11.
Mr. Ulmer has introduced two new
members to the nature study class:
Cleopatra and Xieodemus.
Cleopatra
and Nicodemus are two little goldfish,
and are entering no objection to being
campused together—in the science laboratory aquarium.
Had it been the first of April, it
inight hnve been considered a j o k e ; as
it was, it ^yas rather a disappointment.
Mr. Flmer provided some birdcall rec-
ords for the science period on April ,•),
talked about them at some length, got
the class into a fever of anticipation,
opened the victrola, and found the machinery gone. Someone had taken it to
be repaired.
At the annual election of officers for
the Y. W. C. A., held on Wednesd.ay
evening, April 11, the following were
elected: President, Blanche
Smith;
Vice President, Helen BufBugton; Secretary, Frances Cook; Treasurer, Ruth
Malone; Undergraduate Representative,
Beatrice Van Zandt. The cabinet members will be selected a t a future meeting.
Mrs. Gage consented to continue as
dietitian until April 15, no dietitian
having been found uj) to that time that
met fully Mr. Drum's requirements. The
Gages moved out of the dormitor,y, however, on April 9, taking up their residence in one of the Riverside Apartments. It miiy be a relief to them to
get out of the dormitory life; there is
such a thing as too much of a good
thing; but their absence is felt in tho
dormitorj'.
New brown velour curtains have replitced the dust.y green ones th.at have
hung 80 long in the auditorium. The
curtains arrived just in time for the
senior plii.v. They surely do make the
stage look a thousand per cent, better.
The spring housecleaning epidemic
has struck first floor. Many of the rooms
are being rcpapered, and hardwood
floors are being laid in a number of
them.
ALUMNI ASSOCIATION MEETING
A meeting was held by the executive
committee of the Alumni Association
ou Thursday, April 5. I t wiis agreed
that Alumni Hay be held this year on
Tuesday, June 5, and that a number of
feiitures be planned to make it one of
the most memorable in the history of
the school.
The banquet and reception wdll be
held in the Normal School dining room
and gymnasium. Miss Edna D. Rich,
secretary of the Alumni Association,
will make all arrangements. Music will
be furnished for both occasions by the
Lyric Orchestra. Miss Gisetta Yale will
have charge of tho decoration of the
gymnasium, and Miss Rich, George B.
Hursh, and Belville W. Cree will look
after the decoration of the dining room.
Tickets for the banquet will cost $1.50,
this including the cost of the dance afterward, also.
A reception committee was appointed,
consisting of Principal W. N. Drum,
J. 8. Criinmer, of Williamsport; T. W.
Trembath, of the school faculty; Buell
Snyder, of Perryopolis; Helen Harper,
of Bellefonte; Mrs. S. M. Nickel, of
Philipsburg, and Estella Wagner and
Mrs. A. F. Stouck, Lock Haven. A program is to be presented during the afternoon of Alumni Day by the Class of
1908 in celebration of ifs fifteenth anniversary. Miss Rich is chairman of
the committee in charge of this feature,
with Mr. Drum, Dr. David Thomas, and
Mrs. Christine Riehens assisting.
The school is hoping to have the largest commencement turnout iu recent
history, and Mr. Drum is carefully treasuring up some good news for the many
who expect to be in attendance.
'98. Mrs. Frank A. Kaul (Jane M.
Mallison), is living at 186 Center Street,
St. Marys. Dr. G. B. Goheen is practicing medicine in Coalport.
'04. Bernice
Clearfleld.
Graham
is
living
iu
'13. A biiby boy arrived at the home
of Dr. and Mrs. Fairchild, of Olean, on
March 29. Mrs. Fairchild was formerly
.lane Edwards. Buth Kessinger teaches
at Plainfield, N. J.
'15. Miriam Davis is teaching in CoalIiort High School. Pauliue Sanders is
teaching in Johnstown.
'17. Clarence Johnson is practicing
dentistry in St. Marys. Buclla Turley
teaches in Newark, N. J.
KODAK
T'he Camera Universal
R E M E M B E R that the name Eastman
designates a Superior Product, and that
we carry at all times a complete line of
Eastman Photographic Supplies
and Cameras
Hilton and Heffner
Druggists
Honest Value
cAlumni Notes
Good Service
'19. Elizabeth O'Shea is teaching in
Irvona.
James Copenh.avor lives at
Smiflimills. Sar.a Beck, attending the
University of Pittsburgh, spent the
Easter holidays in Lock Haven.
'20. David Hampe is enrolled a t the
University of Pittsburgh. Madge Garner
teaches at State College.
'21. George Dively is an undergraduate at the University of Pittsburgh.
Bliiiiehard Gummo is pursuing high
grades at Yale.
'22. Sylvia Claster, a teacher at
Clearfield, was home here for the Easter
holidays. Irene Bauman likewise was
here, home from Johnsonburg. Florence Marolf, wdio is teaching iu Coatesville, spent her holidays in New York.
Media of