Annual (May 1900) . In the Cooking Laboratory. Question. What is the composition of the potato? Answer. •? Potatoes contain a large amount of water, a small quantity each of and mineral matter and some celluloid (cellulose). In the Geology Class. Charles, what is just above the zone of flow ? Bright Boy. The zone of overflow. Teacher. What is the meaning of ? Gross-mutter ? Pupil. Twelve dozen mothers. Irene Moses (translating Chaucer). Hlse eyen stepe and roUyinge in his heed. He had an even step and rolled on his head. He was not pale as a forpyned goost. He was not so pale as


Annual (May 1900) . In the Cooking Laboratory. Question. What is the composition of the potato? Answer. •? Potatoes contain a large amount of water, a small quantity each of and mineral matter and some celluloid (cellulose). In the Geology Class. Charles, what is just above the zone of flow ? Bright Boy. The zone of overflow. Teacher. What is the meaning of ? Gross-mutter ? Pupil. Twelve dozen mothers. Irene Moses (translating Chaucer). Hlse eyen stepe and roUyinge in his heed. He had an even step and rolled on his head. He was not pale as a forpyned goost. He was not so pale as a tortured goose. Mr. Weir (talking about vibrations in his physics class). Sixteen will affect somepeople while thirty will have no effect on others. A Pupil (who was paying no attention and had listened to Francis Murphys temper-ance lecture the night before). Sixteen what ?. On top of a cabinet in Grandmas room is an old violin. Within it is pasted a slip ofpaper on which is written a German name and the date 1754. In her trunk is a bundle ofletters, so stained that they are almost illegible. Grandma guards them very carefully;they are the letters of a great-aunt and tell the story of the violin. Grandmas aunt Patience was the daughter of an inn-keeper in a small village ofMassachusetts. He was a Puritan—a stern, harsh man, prouder of his family honor thanof anything else. Patience was his only daughter and the belle of the village. His lovefor this daughter was the one redeeming trait in his character, but even here his familypride overcame his family love and he vowed that his daughters husband must be therichest man in the country. The story, however, Is more interesting as we gather it fromsome of these old letters. The first tells all we know of the arrival of the violin in America, and was written toan aunt in Virginia in June, 1764; near the midd


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