The Coyote (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 6, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 16, 1936 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Weatherford College Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Weatherford College.
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WEATHERFORD COLLEGE COYOTE
White Star Laundry-Phone 222
DEAR SANTA/
Groceries for the Holiday trade
Editor - in - Chief
/
g(
§
THE KOZY KOVE
aS
Mr. X Says
home, but all we hear now is Mutt.1
football and some boxing gloves. Al-
so a
j figure that, “a dollar saved is a dol-
Seemingly Kay thinks she's putting!
Safeway Stores
Distribution Without Waste
Hamilton Bros.
1936
193 6
an—nn—II--- an—- un—— nu—mh—mii—II—-- IIi--- III---Nu-- nn«
FROM THE STAFF
who worked faithfully and unceasing-
Kay Mason.
Phone 11
117 Church St.
FT. WORTH STAR-TELEGRAM
M orning—Evening—Sunday
Residence Phone 704-J
Office Phone 90
GORMAN JONES, Dealer
S. D. Carroll
A
f
t
1 9 1
I
A
TIMES
Miss Vivrett.
ONE WAY
Trips
White Star Laundry-Phone 222
Daffy? Yeah
The Annual Staff.
GREYHOUND
Sample Round-Trip Fares
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
Went up de pout again.
$3.85
ABILENE
BIG SPRING
6.90
Al ARerrie Christmas
Faye Bunch
DALLAS
1.80
8.80
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Massey and Yarbrough.
15.85
But-
—Los Angeles Junior Collegian
twice as bad!
Texas Public Utilities Corporation
But
-Quick! my gat! .
Electrical Gifts Are Always Appreciated
home when you wish they were.
e
SOUTHWESTERN
I
GREYHOUND
York Avenue
Phone 69
had gone and gotten married. Brace
up, Benny, Bowden is still waiting.
30-Day Return Lim-
it... on Sale Daily
Through January 1
Some Exceptions
Five little Thalian officers from
the dormitory, namely, Pratt, Furr,
O
o'
Tom Bell has finally decided that
he will learn to operate a creamery.
Tom is a believer in the old adage,
“Ther’s always sour mixed with the
sweet.”
Bill Gilbert is planning1 for a big
celebration Christmas. His “Queen” is
coming home. Those who don’t under-
stand may ask Gilbert for particulars.
Business Manager ......
Faculty Advisor..........
Journalism instructor
Exchange Editor..........
“Turn them lights on now.”
The spot light is on—shining on a
o
o'
Warren has started giving Russell
dates again. His lip wasn't as bad as
that, was it, Ruth?
test. More people than one have been
defeated.
i
ly on the banquet were entertained
by their sponsor with a waffle supper
Tuesday night at Kinders.
Dear Santa Claus:
I am a little teacher in Weather-
ford College. I have been a very good
little teacher too. Please sent me a
Cops or felons in my path,
Blizzards, storms and like of that
Stir me to the fiercest wrath—
Listen one, and listen all;
To both I'll give the air;
Till you come out with a plank
Studying is grossly unfair!
My love has flew
Him did me dirt
Me did not know
Him was a flirt.
To they in love
Let I forbid
Lest they be doed
Like I been did..
11......
12 FARES
Rebecca Anderson
............... G. C. Gibbs
.. Mr. L. A. Allison
S. B. Householder
Henry B. Washam
But steel it wooden whistle.
Now I got a tin whistle
And, boy, tin I whistle
DEAR SANTA:
30 boxes of bird-seed for the cho-
rus, please.
A enney weeny pider
Went up de water pout.
Down came de wain
And wat the pider out.
Out came de sun
DEAR SANTA:
We don’t care whether you come
or not.
Well, that’s all for this time.
MYSTERIOUS MR. X
Robert Plangman tures from Georgianne Culwell. She
— ■ ! has given a number of her photos to
i
i
-
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
Will you leave me one of your rein-
deer? I believe that’d suit me as well
as any other dear I could think of.
Sid Bailey.
Extends greetings of the season
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
might need them. After all, boys are
choicy.
Folks, the lights are off.
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
Phooey on you!
Little Marian Swofford i
Margaret McKenney’s
Beauty Shop
Visit our new and up-to-date
Shop
Dear Santa Claus:
Please, we would like to have some
better grades because we do enjoy
those Phi Theta functions.
The Phi Theta Kappas.
P. S. Will you please drop this hint
to the faculty of Weatherford Col-
lege, Weatherford, Texas.
Bucket wants nothing for Christ-
mas except Peggy.
I
New Year
Mi_nn—-nn— wi—i--- nN—un—un—un—tin—iin—ns — ua-
Light Flashes
53},,
K<5
Wishes everyone happy joyous
holidays.
Harry Vandagriff
_.1U—nu—nn—nn—in—uu—nn —-n-- nn—uh—u-- uu—nu-
Fire scares me to the heels;
’ I hate dreams that I’ve gone mad;
(I detest all Chinese meals;
DEAR SANTA:
A fire-extinguisher and some as-
bestos glue.
You are just a
DEAR SANTA:
How'll you trade for a six-wheel
White bus with hydraulic brakes, a
radio and heater in the cab, and up-
holstered reclining seats?
*1
i
#N
IB Round
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
—nn—nn—mi—uu—nn—nn— u—- IK— uu—nn—nn—uu—ns-
lar earned.” Don’t worry, girls, they
will be back after New Year’s.
Junior McCreary says “Love is
what makes the world go around.” It
looks as if it had Junior going round
and round, too.
tice of writing you letters. I don't
believe in you you don't exist, and you I Lought a wooden whistle,
may consider all relations between But it wooden whistle.
us at an end. Besides you didn’t bring’ So I bought a steel whistle
me the shoes I asked for lastCh rist-
mas.
DEAR SANTA:
12 boxes Baby powder
2 gross safety pins
1 attractive assortment rubber dol-
lies and teething rings.
5 bottles paregoric
1 box aspirin (for me).
Joe Saylor
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
How about a little steam heat for
the campus benches these cold nights?
Brown and Burns.
Anyone wishing to start an art
gallery can secure a number of pic-
-N—- iin— u-— i<n—nn—mi—un—uI—- nu--- uB--- nn—un—
Fruits, Nuts, Candies, Cigarets,
To the students of Weatherford
College we exend a Merry
Christmas and a Happy New
Year.
Prichard’s Grocery
Miss Brown has very little to worry
about since Danny’s “ole girl friend”
in Valley Mills married. If the pre-
sent rate of marriages at Valley Mills
continues, Miss Brown says that it
will be safe for her “Danny” to go
home Christmas.
Darwin Bryan has been abiding by ,
,, - „ c. c:rr ,.S oil Ruth Etta, Massey and Martha BurI
the oath of all firemen, “To save all .
one over on Tom, but he doesn’t seem A. merry Christmas and a happy
worried—or at least we find him
beautiful ladies in distress.” But, try
as he may, Chandler Gilbert can’t
make Bryan understand that Miss
Taylor is not in “distress.”
So Joe Nell thought Sid should
have taken her to the Thalian foot-
ball banquet—well, after all, Sanders
might rate a shade ahead of you with
Sir Sidney, Joe—So you'd better
stick to Ashcroft. We hear he's sorta
that way about you.
That romantic football hero, Mutt
■ McCauley, has Jeannie Marshall on
“a merry-go-round” or maybe it’s the
opposite.
■ Phil Simmons, of the University of
Texas, and probably will give more
of them away.
few1 naughty people—but we can’t
tell you everything, at least not right
now.
ALLEGIANCE
You shall be going home during the holidays. School shall
be momentarily pushed into the background. This is all very
well, and its just as we would have it; for we want you to b.e
happy and fit when you return again to take up your studies.
But do not allow the spirit of irresponsibility to call your minds
and hearts. There shall always be intervals in life when we
shall lay our burdens down. But not for an “eon or two” shall
they remain apart from us. The golden rule of success is that
we have consistent faith in our studies.
There is a principle involved here that is well worth learn-
ing. The broad-minded among you have no doubt already dis-
covered its value. And you are perhaps applying it success-
fully in your everyday lives. But for those of you who have
not paused to consider it, it is true. Balance your sport and
your work. Apply yourself to each until you can honestly be
satisfied with what you have done. We hope none who have
not been found wanting in these first few weeks of school shall
be found lacking in the immediate days following the return
from the holidays.
And when you go home, boost Weatherford College. Try
to interest some of your friends in our institution. Encourage
them to attend the next semester by showing them the advan-
tages offered here.
So the Coyote bids you good-bye until the next issue after
Christmas and wishes you a very merry Christmas and the
proverbial happy new year.
Benny Graham received a terrible i
shock recently when he returned We know a certain girl who might-
home to find that his old girl friend I try snapping out of it. After all,
everyone can’t win a popularity con-
Armistead’s Grocery
Compliments—Lies in full dress.
Etc.—The sign used to make peo-
ple think you know more than you do.
Pedestrian—A man who has two
cars, a wife, and a daughter.
Social Tact—Making people feel at j
The girl’s dorm is losing some of
I its “popularity.” After all, it’s almost,
pair of fall-proof skates. Thank. Christmas and some of the fellows j
Good luck, McCauley. She needed
someone to bring her out of the
trance.
558
Randall Rogers seems to have been
j especially interested. in the trip to
Georgetown. Could it have been some-
one that he met there? Perhaps, it
was some young lady.
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
Please ship by freight two Comp-
tometers and a posting machine,
terms 2-10, n-30.
j It seems Jeanie used to have some
one she called “My Buddy” back at!
And dwied up the wain,
myth, sir, and I And the enney weeny pider
refuse to partake of the juvenile prac-
Ef,
7*
DEAR SANTA:
You don’t need to bring me a
thing, but you’ll do me a big favor
if you'll come back and get those
ties you left last year.
Tom Harrison.
SAN ANTONIO
Greyhound Terminal
Hotel Parker ST. LOUIS
Phone 700
Miss Lay has been stepping out, re-
cently, with Sid Bailey. But, Ashcroft around the Pyeatt girl quite a bit.
doesn’t mind it in the least, as he has; Hm-m-n: Who knows, it might be a
been seen escorting Miss Mary Lou. romance.
Bentley, star of Casa Manana, around j ,
, .. x!. i 11: 1 Crawfords gone. boys. Come on—
a bit. Watch em close as this may s ’ ,
2, ! after all rating the “Sweetest Girl’
prove to be only the beginning. 1 . . , 1, 8 . .
• might not be so bad.
Helen Corley has found a new
Romeo, right in our midst. He is none
other than “Smokey” Herrin.
—-
We thought the Bass-Auten affair
was over, but Dell requested to sit by
little Johnnie at the football banquet.
But all in vain because she walked!
back—without him.
-IH-— NN—-un—nn—uu-- uu—mi—uu
DEAR SANTA:
Please lay these telephone practi-
cal jokers a great big egg, and don’t
i bother about making it any too
fresh, either.
Thoughts About Christmas
On the night of December 24th the world shall again grow
strangely silent and at midnight another Christmas Day shall
be ushered into existence, marking the two thousand and
thirty-sixth anniversary of the birth of that Babe in a little
manger in a little kingdom across the sea.
And, on the tremulous night air, the Christmas carols again
shall pay tribute to the King of Kings. America. Britian, the
whole world, shall bow to the great Maestro of life.
There is something intangible about the spirit of Christmas
that gets into the hearts of the most stolid persons, and even the
great skeptics fail to issue their opposition in a Christmas Day
atmosphere. Even the prolific Huxley stands silently by.
On Christmas Day we shall remember not only the birth of
the Christ, but: “World be quiet, heart be still, A man has fallen
on his hill.” That is for our physical remembrance, and this
is for our psychic memory: “Fire the furnace, nothing shall
burn, Time shall meet him at every turn . . And: “All the
granite in Tilbury Town Shall fail to hold his ashes down.”
So the Evening Star has not gone down. Like the sun that
never sets upon the lands of the far-flung British empire, it
shall never fail to shed its light upon the peoples of its faith.
Tradition has hallowed this day of birth. Love of that entity
that is so much greater than human existence has made it a
day apart from all other days in the lives of struggling men
and women. To the Christ of yesterday’s Cross of Calvary we
render our humble homage, our love, and our salute to his
incessant glory among his peoples.
Bn nn_-nn--- un---nu--- nn-- nn—nn—nn—nn—bn—ub—no—•
Cheer up, girls—macbe someday
you’ll get to be “Football Sweet-
i heart.” Save these speeches Miss
Bunch suggested you write—you
ing you in French-Merci beaucoup!
Yours truly.
Sam Baker Householder, Jr.
P. S.—I would; appreciate it if
you would send my French classes
just a little natural knowledge of the
subject.
» ■■ i ’.; i
Sports ____________________ Hampton Singleton and Wortham Ashcroft
Reporters — Tom Harrison, Layuna Allison, Ruth Warren, Bes-
sie Lou West, Lorene Lamkin, Mary Louise Craven, R. A.
Moran, Kathryn Ruth Parrott, Helen Pyeatt, O. B. Salyer,
Peggy Parsons, Royce Yancy. Jane Pittenger, Sarah Jane
Merrill, Dora Goldsmith, Mary Nell Pratt, Christene Ruth-
erford, Frances Wallace, Geneva Elders, Clyde Ragsdale.
Typists — Elizabeth Noble, Frances Culwell, Juanita Saul.
Gerry Elders.
C?RSIAS-JgY
- ga - 1 = ,
X Vz
__j—- uu— in—mi—nn—— na—rm—av-- uu— uu-- II----ili-
Camp & Co.
Plumbing, Metals, Sheet Metals
DEAR SANTA CLAUS:
Please bring my Grampaw an idea
for a new telegraph organ-one with
lots of stops.
J. Stauss Buchanan
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Weatherford College. The Coyote (Weatherford, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 6, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 16, 1936, newspaper, December 16, 1936; Weatherford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1545098/m1/2/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Weatherford College.