1943-1944 Yearbook

, GEORGE TIPPS, Childres~, Texas "When matter we l'oreknow. Words voluntarily flow." SALLY A~!l\lER=~lAN, Nash\'il!c, Tennessee "\\'ork first. then rest." WYMER WISER. \\·artrace. Tennessee "We ought not to judge of men's merits by their qUCllilications. But by the use they make of them:' JESSIE I\tAE MARDIS. Guntersville. Alabama "Humbleness is always ~race. Always dignity:' HAROLD HOLLAND. Nashville. Tennessee "True merit. like n ri\'er. the deeper it is. the less noise it mak<.'s:' ANN RICHMOND. C]t>\'eland. Tenne:,~el' BONNIE Sl'E CHA~LJLF.R. Searcy "L{)\'e is the \vine 01 existence:' "Music is \\'ell said to be the speech of angeJ:.;." RALPH STARLING. 5t Louis. Missoul'l "Slo\\, and steady \\'ins the race," HILDA BROWNING. Enola "She who sings frightens .m:ay h(,l" ills," SHELDON VAN DYNE. New York. New Yori.: "0 this learning, what a thing it i:-:." ELEANOR GOODPASTURE. Nash\'ille. "Virtue is in the mind." DEAN LAWYER. Senrcy MARIE l\lASSl':Y Str<lwbclTY Tennc:-::-:ec "A sunny 1(.'l11per gilds the edges oj lif("s blad-:('st clouds." "A m~m':-: trlle wcalth u the good he docs DALl': LARSE~. Albion, Nebraska "Good hUln(,r i:-- the health of the "'ouL" THEDA ROBINS. Ashflat JuniOPd "It is <J friendly heart th<lt has plenty of friends." WENDELL WATSON, Nash\'iII(' "Much study is the weariness of the ne..h,'· PAULINE JACKSON. Newport "I have learned in what~o('\"er state I am. therewith to be content. WELDON CASEY. Charleston. A1issi~sippi "A little nonsense now and then is relished by the bel't of men. ' ill thi s world."

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