Weatherford College Coyote (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 10, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1936 Page: 2 of 4
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WEATHERFORD COLLEGE COYOTE
EXCHANGES
Thalian Tattler
MEN ARE MENACES
Even if Malcolm is engaged, he
still hangs around some of our fish.
of delight?”
1
STAFF FOR SENIOR EDITION
Funeral Chapel
Phone 23
your boy]
STUFF
Ah, those kisses,
Kelley Ezell, I. B. Hand, Powell McCreary and
gorgeous
*
7-
i
Rebecca, how is Ozzie? Sometimes
kV
A
9)
A
SENIORS
i
Here it’s time we two were mated; Denton. Perhaps Fuzzy and De Vere
a
Probably I’ll be antiquated
I
• It pays to s! op at
Confections of all kind
„REEN#YIS
Palace Confectionery
you
9
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.
Boy—A noise with dirt on it.
and in varied degrees all of us use them. Only as we know our- cheated a woman out of the last word
C
PALACE THEATRE
WEATHERFORD
■n
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}
CONGRATULATIONS SENIORS
The Citizens National Bank
speak and what a smile!
Doris, be careful with
kpow.
Boys, you had better start making I
SCHOOL CLOTHES MUST
BE ABLE TO "TAKE IT”!
> lost,
some
Shop at Renfro’s
4
d
Editor-in-chief .........
Business Manager .
Faculty Adviser.....
Editorialist
Exchanges
Sports...........
And set unworthy heart afire,
When ’tis known should not aspire.
To own, the lovely giver of
maybe it’s because Rebecca went to
Denton.
Arithmetic once made me sad,
But now it’s men.
I do not understand the rules.
I did not then.
When I was small ’twas long divi-
sion.
And now it’s “will he phone?”
It’s very hard for little girls
To walk this world alone.
I never learned arithmetic
Few answers could I get.
And as for men, I must confide
They have me guessing yet!
spring formal is coming up soon. You
know you must not miss that.
kisses
That fill my soul with
blisses
............. Joe Frantz
... Robert Kincaid
Miss Faye Bench
.... Truett Hudson
..... Mona Andrew
[ Ambulance
I___________________________________
¥ B
C 1
Let our phone line be your
clothes line.
Cotten-Bratton Furni-
ture Co.
ERTE
Superior Cleaners
Phone 673
be,
It takes you alone- to thrill,me;
Will you wait a year or two?
You’re the height of my ambition;
You’re my only superstition;
Won’t you make my dreams come
true?
Hunter, why don’t you ask some!
of these freshmen girls for a date? i IV er. GE rar. 3tate ank
W e think several of them would cer- ■ .
Fred Davenport.
Reporters................. Gerry Hayes, Vivian Bunch, Ralph Hitt, Al
Rivas, Ellis Chisholm, Borden Seaberry, Ima Henderson,
Mildred Phillips, Anna Christine Faulkner, Mary Nell
Morrow, Dorothy Hankins, Evelyn Phillips, Mary Jim
Kinder, Roberta Dillingham and Alexander Nincompoop
Typists ................... Olive Watt -and Fred Davenport
friends. After all boys are- not so I
we don’t see you so often together,
selves shall we understand others. Therefore, the underlying
fundamental is a knowledge of one’s self.
Another prominent fault of ours is that we fail to trust our-
selves. We are afraid of the barbs delivered to the unconvention
al by society. W.e snuff out our greatest possession, an enobled
and divine soul, in an attempt to imitate the more asinine bleat-
ings of our less inspired human brother. We dare not be our-
selves lest someone laugh and crown us..........the fool! The genius1
recognizes his genius, follows thoughtfully the reckoning of
A $
By the time I’m free.
You know how much I adore you;; eyes at the Thalians. After all, the
FUNDAMENTALS OF SUCCESS
Thurs. & Friday—Bing Crosby in “Anything Goes” ’
Sat.—Harold Bell Wright’s, “Calling of Dan Matt-
hews” with Richard Arlen.
Mon. & Tues.—The Dionne Quintuplets in “The
Country Doctor.”
Wed.—Jackie Cooper in “Tough Guy”—Bank Night
Thurs. & Fri.—Charles Dickens, “Tale of Two Cities’
Sat. 28—Walter Huston in “The Virginian.”
Mon. 30, Tues. 31—Harold Lloyd in “The Milky
Way.”
when it might turn out to be a wo-
man, especially in Denton. Or it
might even be best to carry your own
towels
Hitt and Pratt really had fun in
How About It?
“Where do you live as the days
hasten by,
Mounting to weeks and to mo-
R..... - -- --i ths as they fly?
Low about this Etter . Is it a place that is airy and
It appears to us that Jack Cone and i bright
Jewell Scruggs don’t agree, anyhow Turning the moments to things
they just don’t get along.
his soul, and knows that he does right. Perhaps we are not
geniuses, but no one can deride us for possessing lofty aspir-
ations.
First, then, let us know ourselves. Once we have done this
and have learned to be ourselves, we cannot help but contribute
a greater gift to progress of the world.
those sweetly
1. Man is born.
2. Man grows up.
3. Man kicks the bucket.
4. Man is bruied.
5. Man turns to dust.
6. Grass grows from dust.
7 Horse eats grass.
Moral: Never kick a horse,
might injure- a former relative.
We of today are forgetting some of the fundamental educat-
ional axioms. If we neglect to know ourselves, how can we ex-
pect to know others? After all, there is but one set of emotions,;
And make a glance along with it,
So soul inspire, for king befit;
So kisser. toucher, glancer at,
Do yon mean it; answer that?
--- HPlege---
H will think—talk—write . . -
STexas Centennial in 1936! Thisl
| if to be my celebration. In its^
^achievement I may give free play
Ito my patriotic love for Texas'
'heroic past; my confidence in its'
glories that are to be. . . • , -
-- I maybe it was embarrassing in Denton.
My heart’s yeours and always will De Vere, you must always be dress-
• ed whenever you are expecting men
callers because you can’t ever tell
tainly be pleased.
Edge is so thrilled over Powell ac-
, cepting her proposal she has started
i counting up the expenses of a home.
Listen now while I implore you,
Will you wait a year of two?
The Chieftain
They must be smart—they
must be low-priced! And
Penney's make them that
way! But in addition, Pen-
ney's build them for a
hard life—and a merry
one—of good fabric, with
extra strong seams and
extra careful tailoring! See
them today!
easy to handle as one would think. ;
Fuzzy, don’t be so high hat, es-
pecially around the dorm girls. Wei
. i would like to see you visit us.
। Sid, how are you doing with your
roomiets’ girl friend? These roomies!
Love. will you please choose be-
tween Daily, Kelly and Shaw. They
Those sweetly, sweetly kisses of । are all fine girls. We wish you could
Love. take care of three.
And of, those touches, those light-
ly touches,
That sink my heart and lift is much
Elephant—A useful animal with a
vacum cleaner in front and a rug;
beater at the back.
Special showing Sun. 10 p.m. March 22—“Freshman
Love”
Echo—The only thing that ever
Huffstuttler, we are so glad you
are breaking the ice-. At least when
you meet some of these girls you
Now has come the time to say good-bye. Do you mean that
you are going away, that you are leaving the campus 'and old
friends? You are going away, of course: this is as it must, and
should be. However, you are by no means leaving the campus,
nor are you parting from your old friends. After your stay of
two years, the campus is not the same ; you have knowingly and
unknowingly done something to it. The college goes out with
you. It will influence your thinking and your living, no matter
how far you may travel, no matter what is your work. We like
to believe that you have helped the campus, and that the cam-
pus has been good to you. What shall we say of the friends you
have met and made here? Friends that may be in parts of the
earth geographically remote, yet we know their lives will never
cease to be influenced by the associations made in college. The
friends that you have made here were chosen by you, and also
by them. That is the explanation of the bond that endures be-
tween you. You cannot separate yourself from then, ever, We
believe that these friendships have been a genuine blessing to
you.
Renew your campus contacts often. It will refresh and re-
juvenate you, and your visits will be good for the college.
Na
The Weatherford College Coyote
Published Bi-Monthly by the Students of Weatherford College. Entered at the
Postoffice at Weatherford, Texas, as Second Class Mail Matter
A bachelor—A man who has
the opportunity of making !
woman miserable.
Ralph, the next time you leave
home, please be sure all buttons are
sewed on because after all it might
prove embarrassing some time, or
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Weatherford College. Weatherford College Coyote (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 10, No. 10, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 18, 1936, newspaper, March 18, 1936; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1545087/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Weatherford College.