The Gavelyte, July 1915
4 . TI-IE GAVELYTE seems b1·igbter. A nmv administration is bound to bring in fresh enthusi:;ism aml new interest. Mv i;ncccssor will have, to st/n·t wi 0 h, r,,l) that has been done for the college in th0 Jm~t. Friends and inter- eiits that have been secul:'ed will rcrr.ain.' Ant:J.gonisrus that mav have been engendere~ clurh1g this long adrninistralion will be appeaserl. :A new ::u·doY will he manifested and evf!rything- I lielfove will wurk togeihe1·. fo1· t~c g-ood _of Cedarville College.. For myself I ple,Jg-e my cont1rnH1d interest m the college. The new p~cJ,;frJr:nt can ,:oun'. on my loyal con-operation. Cedarville, Ohio, June a, 1915. DAVID l\'I' KINNF:Y, President of Cedarville College. "OVER THE TEA-CUPS." . ·Well, we had such a good time to;rethm· this evening that j1. Just ;;cewed too bad that others couldn't en_ioy our good ~imes; too und that's why we arc writing-. T!JP "·.ve"· i.n quc:,tion 's 1.he . so~ e1llc<l club wb.lch meets ·more rc:"' 'rtrb, JFohahlv tlrnn :n1v oth,:,r unit of the college associations. (The food instinct rn likclv the tause). But the thou~ht came to our minds that peYhap~ ~•h-,rs i:ni~ht enjoy hcarirn;- about our ,rood times even if !hey couldn't- en- ,10~' them. Old s'udenc~ who bdon~·crl. to the famous twe.ntv-fonr- membered dub o:f ,QTeat "f'TIOWll will lFOlnhlv b~ inte1·es:'ed to know who has the rare good foi:,~mc to shhre Mrs. Townsley';; e"cellent cookin~. · :'vlost oJ' the 0 1 cl r:1nnhe,·s hn,·e rl·•,rnnec1 :cn•_,.,,,. P,·of A l',:,11 -l'(>und someone who could cook mush to ~u.it him, and ~ he dines at home. The rest have scattered; and only "Adams County," represented by a little nerson, who is "ruddy and of a fair countenance and beautiful to look iipon," is left to relate the g-lori"s of that illustrious <•ather- ing- which more than ,filler! the <lininj! table;1. She needs no fur:hf'r introduction to most of the readers of this magazine but possibly some of her latest developments wou1d be of i[lteres◄.. Yes:er,:by she raised the complaint that she did wish Prof. Jurkat would not use the simplified spellim; "Why. ycsterdav he l;ctually had bureau r.pellcd 'b-n-r-c-a-u' on the hoard." Mr. McClure thought slw had "b-e-a-u" on the brain ,.,·hen she i11si.sted that· "1'1cGuffcy's best" spelled it "b-e-a-u-r-e-a-u." The first. few weeks of last fall saw :'\fr. D1dJ, Mr. C 1 ark and· l\lr. Elder holding down one side of the tub1c, whi1e Miss Ha~riA, Miss Wallace an<i Miss Honiday fried to keep it .roahnc('d on th,- othcr. It did11't take lorn!; to p:et ac<1Ltaintcd, with Mr. Clark to lead in tl1e fun, well 1,,,1,,,1c1 h·v th,, rt'r< 1 . ,,.; "fl. Our next addition was Miss Gardiner, who was a notably en• _ioyable one, too, since she delighted M Friday evf'nine:s after sup~ per by her devcr recitations about the Dutchman's hen and ba(1 bovs' 11ranks. . · At the dose of the first semester Mr. Chrk left us for other land,;, and we ·certainly missed his. rnre wit and ~level' retorts. Later in the year, Mr. 1\kClure, who ("ame to take his p1ace. has ke_pt, us supplied with splendid excuses for latq~ter, some ?f them ow,mal and unintentional, and others, rare spec1rn.ens of wit th~t he treat ures up to make onr breakfast conve1·siJ.b< 0 ns. more spr1ghtl).'., . \\ e cannot pause here to enumerate them all, but :inst the ~ug_t,;estlons of
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