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THE NORMAL RECORD. AN ART CRITIQUE, (Continued from September, 1896.) HE SCENE—Chico in October. The Assembly Hall—soft strains of "Nymphs of Air and Ancient Sea." The hero a junior, the heroine, second year, first term. Last year tho heroine w, s introduced, as the hero now is, to the picture gallery. What great danger! There is No. 1 at the right of the entrance— a new one, "The Lost Shepherd son," which replaced the "Shepards and the Sheperdson" of last year. Owing to his defeat or some other good cause, No. 2, that of Bryan, has been removed. No. 3, "Galen Cumming Thro' the Rye" is just the same (when he misses the Sunday local : comes thro' the stubble to hear his Sunday §5elle.) No, 4 "Our Eliot" is lost to us forever. No. 5, Simple Simon met a pieman going to the Fair. No. 6, A study in Brown of Nelle. No. 7, "A fine Prey" by a sportsman. No. 8. A Southern girl in a Cotten field but the Campers are no longer in the back-gronnd. Instead there is a Stout girl and usually a boy about the size of J. D. K. who is not so small. No 9 is unchanged. Our flowers do not fade. No. 10. Florence seeing La Point Sunday October 17th. No. 11. We are glad to see your faco turned toward the wall. No. 12. The Campbells are comin', not on Ames Carline, but a-foot for the original will be transferred to Proberta in June. No. 13. J. K. 's Pearl of great price. No. 14 Horrors of tho Johnston Flood. No 15. The five Graces. No. 16. Our best dressed girls just from the Taylors No 17. The risen dead. No. 18. The cooking school. In this wo soo two sisters Boyle Fish and Lillie as a Baker. No 19. An enigma. In the foreground is a group of eight prim, precise, young girls, each with a bow of red, on which in gold is a mystic 8. pinned to the sleeve. Miss Turner will tell you what the . in the A means. No. 20. Senior girls letting their affections go to Waste. No. 21. N. McG. looking lovingly at A Bay. No. 22. A member of the advanced bookkeeping class trying to buy a pig from a cattle ranch. No. 23. Myrtle B. with Boyles on her hands looking for Dr. Y. No. 24 The newest thing in hair drossing— Bangs. No. 25. Ovid's favorite Rose guarded by a Lyon. No. 26, Two perfect spoons. Owned by John Lock Matson. No. 27. A group of girls admiring the stylo in which Ora Combs her hair. No. 28, An advertisement for Dinsmore Gold Dust. Students, you should patronize home industries. No. 29. Resurrection Morn—Gabriello blowing the trumpet. WHAT WE ARE THANKFUL FOR, |^ OR our tennis courts. " "For a good country, good health, a " good family, and a good school.''—Pres. C. M. Ritter. "Not thankful for anything especially—only that I am living."—Frank McManus. "For Friday vacation."—J, Kirk. "Nothing now—I'll be thankful though if I survive the football game."—Guill. "A good lesson in child study."—Heckle. "For the best teachers the State can afford "— E. Hicks. "For health."—S. Sheppard. ' 'For this school.''—Lottie Hallet. "Tell you some other time."—Belle Mansfield. "Vacation on Friday."—Lucille Graves and IVeva Dunn. "I am out of senior arithmetic."—H Mann. "What am 1 thankful for?—for everything I have and everything I haven't."—B. Clements. "That I have finished two years in the Normal "—Lelia Graves. "For Love."—Mattie Rowley. "That I know a syllogism."—E. Richardson. "That I am going to get through some day." —C. Campbell. "That those book-keeping books are straightened. "—M. Cain. "That I'm up in the Normal."—Verne Carter. ' 'That I haven't any more problems to work. " — S. Hendricks. "For my 10 in botany."—Ruby Heimbach. "Lots of things."—Ada Clark. "Got thro' arithmetic."—Ora Combs.
Object Description
Title | The Normal Record. December 1897 |
Original Date | 1897-12 |
Description | The Record. Published by the Associated Students of Chico State College. |
Creator | Chico State College |
Location of Original | Archives |
Call Number | LD723 C57 |
Digital Collection | The Record: Chico State Yearbook Collection |
Digital Repository | Meriam Library, California State University, Chico. |
Description-Abstract | The Record served as both a student magazine and a commencement program for Chico Normal School. In the year 1897, it was published almost monthly. |
Date Digital | 2013 |
Language | eng |
Rights | For information on the use of the images in this collection contact the Special Collections Department at 530.898-6342 or email: specialcollections@csuchico.edu |
Format | image/tiff |
Filename | index.cpd |
Description
Title | 1897_12_NormalRecord.011 |
Original Date | 1897-12 |
OCR- Transcript | THE NORMAL RECORD. AN ART CRITIQUE, (Continued from September, 1896.) HE SCENE—Chico in October. The Assembly Hall—soft strains of "Nymphs of Air and Ancient Sea." The hero a junior, the heroine, second year, first term. Last year tho heroine w, s introduced, as the hero now is, to the picture gallery. What great danger! There is No. 1 at the right of the entrance— a new one, "The Lost Shepherd son," which replaced the "Shepards and the Sheperdson" of last year. Owing to his defeat or some other good cause, No. 2, that of Bryan, has been removed. No. 3, "Galen Cumming Thro' the Rye" is just the same (when he misses the Sunday local : comes thro' the stubble to hear his Sunday §5elle.) No, 4 "Our Eliot" is lost to us forever. No. 5, Simple Simon met a pieman going to the Fair. No. 6, A study in Brown of Nelle. No. 7, "A fine Prey" by a sportsman. No. 8. A Southern girl in a Cotten field but the Campers are no longer in the back-gronnd. Instead there is a Stout girl and usually a boy about the size of J. D. K. who is not so small. No 9 is unchanged. Our flowers do not fade. No. 10. Florence seeing La Point Sunday October 17th. No. 11. We are glad to see your faco turned toward the wall. No. 12. The Campbells are comin', not on Ames Carline, but a-foot for the original will be transferred to Proberta in June. No. 13. J. K. 's Pearl of great price. No. 14 Horrors of tho Johnston Flood. No 15. The five Graces. No. 16. Our best dressed girls just from the Taylors No 17. The risen dead. No. 18. The cooking school. In this wo soo two sisters Boyle Fish and Lillie as a Baker. No 19. An enigma. In the foreground is a group of eight prim, precise, young girls, each with a bow of red, on which in gold is a mystic 8. pinned to the sleeve. Miss Turner will tell you what the . in the A means. No. 20. Senior girls letting their affections go to Waste. No. 21. N. McG. looking lovingly at A Bay. No. 22. A member of the advanced bookkeeping class trying to buy a pig from a cattle ranch. No. 23. Myrtle B. with Boyles on her hands looking for Dr. Y. No. 24 The newest thing in hair drossing— Bangs. No. 25. Ovid's favorite Rose guarded by a Lyon. No. 26, Two perfect spoons. Owned by John Lock Matson. No. 27. A group of girls admiring the stylo in which Ora Combs her hair. No. 28, An advertisement for Dinsmore Gold Dust. Students, you should patronize home industries. No. 29. Resurrection Morn—Gabriello blowing the trumpet. WHAT WE ARE THANKFUL FOR, |^ OR our tennis courts. " "For a good country, good health, a " good family, and a good school.''—Pres. C. M. Ritter. "Not thankful for anything especially—only that I am living."—Frank McManus. "For Friday vacation."—J, Kirk. "Nothing now—I'll be thankful though if I survive the football game."—Guill. "A good lesson in child study."—Heckle. "For the best teachers the State can afford "— E. Hicks. "For health."—S. Sheppard. ' 'For this school.''—Lottie Hallet. "Tell you some other time."—Belle Mansfield. "Vacation on Friday."—Lucille Graves and IVeva Dunn. "I am out of senior arithmetic."—H Mann. "What am 1 thankful for?—for everything I have and everything I haven't."—B. Clements. "That I have finished two years in the Normal "—Lelia Graves. "For Love."—Mattie Rowley. "That I know a syllogism."—E. Richardson. "That I am going to get through some day." —C. Campbell. "That those book-keeping books are straightened. "—M. Cain. "That I'm up in the Normal."—Verne Carter. ' 'That I haven't any more problems to work. " — S. Hendricks. "For my 10 in botany."—Ruby Heimbach. "Lots of things."—Ada Clark. "Got thro' arithmetic."—Ora Combs. |