. Mary Baldwin Seminary Bluestocking 1903 . er time ? Aleda T.: Her eyes twinkled in her head aright,As do the stars on a frosty night. Virna: And never brooch the folds combinedAbove a heart more good and kind. M. Crane : Better late than never. Gertrude R.: She is as fresh as is the month of May. Lit. Classes: And when you stick on recitations burrs, Dont strew your pathway with those dreadful urs . Miss N. Tate : And thus she walks among her girls,With praises and with mild rebukes. History Class : Unhappy the people whose annals are blank in history-books. M. B. S. Girl: It may seem easy n


. Mary Baldwin Seminary Bluestocking 1903 . er time ? Aleda T.: Her eyes twinkled in her head aright,As do the stars on a frosty night. Virna: And never brooch the folds combinedAbove a heart more good and kind. M. Crane : Better late than never. Gertrude R.: She is as fresh as is the month of May. Lit. Classes: And when you stick on recitations burrs, Dont strew your pathway with those dreadful urs . Miss N. Tate : And thus she walks among her girls,With praises and with mild rebukes. History Class : Unhappy the people whose annals are blank in history-books. M. B. S. Girl: It may seem easy now to cut your Latin, Gym, oh, how it will cut you up, to find youve cut toomuch. Addle B.: Theres nothing so becomes a modest stillness and humility. Miss M--tz: Fashioned so slenderly, young, and so fair. O. Gilmer: I charge thee, fling away ambition. Marsie B.: Doth commit the oldest sins, in the newest kinds ofways. Editors : Tis pleasant sure, to see ones name in print; A books a book, although theres nothing in Quips and Cranks. Bright Girl.—The coal strike cant affedt M. B. S., for our buildingsare heated with water. Mildred F.—You certainly do use oodles of S.—Youre cracked, I dont use slang. B. B.— Have you ever been to Europe ? P. Hig--ns.— Oh, yes; I know all about the Europeans. They arelike the antipodes, arent they? Their feet are opposite ours. Little Girl.— My capacity isnt capable of performing it. Teacher.— Louise, what is the difference between ghostly andghastly ? Louise W.— Why, the difference is in the spelling, of course. Claude wants Miss S. to give her a Chopin Prejudice. V. R. has just had a tooth abstra<5ted. Lydia H., (Congresmans daughter.)—Say, girls, \vonder why wehavent heard any talk about the inauguration this year? First Girl. — \A^ho was Charon anyway? Second Girl.— Why, he was the man that rowed the Israelites acrossthe Red Sea. First Girl.— You goose, you ; that was Abraham. Said


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