Page 43 - 1926 VES Meteor
P. 43
LETTER-MEN AND COUNSELORS PARTAKE IN FEAST
On Thursday, May 27, Dr. Pen- dleton entertained the letter-men and cotmselors at a banquet held in
the dinmg hall. There was a deli-
cious supper which was thorouo-lll:y enjoyed by every one. The spee~hes started with a talk by Cabell on the Honor System. Floyd Day came next with an excellent speech on the
work and position of the Counselor body. Phillips spoke on General Athletics at Y. E. S., while the
sports themselves were gone over in detail, Goldsmith speaking on foot-
b_all, Smith on basket-ball, Constan-
Father : "Well, I guess we will go to the country this year instead of the usual seaside."
Son : "No, no·. I don't want to go to the country. No country for me."
Father : "Why not, son ?"
Son: "'Cause I hear they have thrashing-machines· clown there, and it's bad enough when it's clone by hancl."-WTitten by Av,teTy.
"And her mean husband she's extravagant!"
"Why?"
"Just because she insists on hav- ing Fido's monogram stamped on his dog biscuits!"
+'44AAo~Ah4h~~ ••·..·..·..·..·.~..-. 0••••••0•••••••••••
tine on track, aJ1d Belt on baseball.
The banquet ended after some sino--
ing by the ever faithful Agony Qua~
tette, and seYeral songs by Smithey Baby is learning to walk !" and Dr. Pendleton.
KUPPENHEIMER
'
COLLEGE CLOTHES IN TUNE WITH COLLEGE LIFE
J o e S~ras'
brother v1sited us May 28th.
Bedford was the scene of our next victory when Randolph-i\facon bit the dust May 5 by a 7-6 score in 10
father and younger }Irs. George Wilkinson visited her
WHITES 12 TO 2
:Jiay 25th witnessed the defeat of
the White midgets before the pitch- ing of Harris, C., and his fellow Garnets. The s·core was 12 to 2.
Wilson, A., pitched well for the Wl1ites but he recei1·ed poor support on the Garnets' free hitting.
7 runs included.
Continuing along the ;;ame strain H
of luck, we were defeated May 17 I! by Hargrave 9-7. Luck's hitting ;
OF LYNCHBURG, VA.
•
.
~ ~~
0
MEASLES!
quiring three safe bingles, a single, o• a double, and a triple. ~~
May 26 New London was added to il our -string of victories. Spruill ~~
pitched fu1e ball and was robbed of
PAID-IN CAPITAL $250,000
WHOLESALE GROCERS 915-917-919 Commerce Street
A good many of the boys have been laid up by a sudden epidemic of German Measles, which have over-
flowed the u ual capacity of the in- firmary. H owever, under Miss An- drews' watchful care boys are being freed every day.
"Isn't it strange, Launcelot, that this beautiful garden should smell
of ham ?"
"You must remember, Guinevere,
that we are in the Sandwich
a shut-out whe11 a lucky tally cross- ~~
eel tl1e pru1 in the eighth. He allow- ~~
euonly four hits, tl1e final score be- a§
ing 12-1. The season clo;;ed with a H
bang on May 29 when S. M. A. fell §a
by the \va.ysicle by a 5-3 score, and a~ 00
baseball for the year '26 was official- "oai ly concluded. •
Lynchburg, Virginia
Islands."-
"Can you support my daughter in
the style to which she is accustom-
ed ?"
"No, but I can accustom her to the
style in which I can support her." -Green Orange.
Dumb Man-How many men work in your factory?
Deaf Man-About one out of every ten.-Golgate Banter.
\·. E. S............. 4 v.E. S....-........ 5
D. 1\IL L ......... 5 S. B. H........... 9
SHOES
Our success in pleasing young
men with Shoes is not juat
"luck"- i t's due to our knowl-
edge of young men's wante
and our ability to provide for them.
Our new Fall Shoes are ready and our lines are an a-tingle with swell new Style Features!
'
RUCKER-EV ANS SHOE CO., Inc.
COMPLIMENTS OF .
HARRIS-WOODSON
\
LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA
Lof11er ................... 46 Shackelford ............ 8 Southall .................. 41 Spruill .................... 18
Lewis ...................... 45 Pinkerton .............. 40 Gorrlon .................... 32 T.uck ...................... 43 Boyd ........................ 48
Yancc ...................... ll
In corpo rated §~ oeoeoea.o•o•oeo•o•oeoeo•oeoeoea.o•a.oeD.
WHEN YOUR SHOES NEED REPAIRS REMEMBER
THE NEW METHOD SHOE SHOP
Middlebury Blue Baboon.
HOW THE TEAM BATTED
Young Mother (proudly): "See!
Friend: "Oh, do you think it real- ly worth while to teach him ? Prac- tically nobody walks nowadays."
-Life. Gladys : "i\Iy dressmaker wrote to
dad that she would make no more dres·ses for me until her account was settled."
H elen : " And what did he say?"
Gladys : "He just sent her a letter of thanks."
IN AND OUT OF V.E. S.
:Jirs. E. H. Carter was here for the week-end of May 15 to see her son, Robert Morris. She was the guest of Doctor and Mrs. P endleton and Mr. and lVIrs. Dawson.
Mrs. John i\Ioyler was with us·for ·the week-end of May 22nd to visit
her son, John.
Mrs. Cameron and her daughter,
Ruth, paid us a visit last week to see our friend, "Nut." Mrs. Hutt, Brown's aunt, accompanied them.
:Jir. R. B. Embree was in town on the 28th to visit our Editor-in-chief.
hurled the nine to victory at :f Mrs. Munroe paid her son, Lamar, Waynesboro the 8th, the final score ai
~ Clamrldlt ··~ 2 • -..-- BOdii Of KGPV
V .
SEASON ON THE DIAMOND
quartette on this one.
in clothes, take a look at our new "U" suits in the Woodland Browns and Venice Blues---and see the good-looking furnishings we have to go with them .
E . S. CLOSES
SUCCESSFUL
V. E. S.............13 W. F. S........... 9
v. E. S.............13
v. E.. s............. 3
Y. E. S............. 7 R.-M. A......... 6
V. E. S............. 4 v . E. S............. 7 V. E. S............. 3 V. E. S.............12 v.E. s.:........... 5
Totals :
'T·E. 8.............76
F. M. S........... 2
H . M. A ......... 9 • B. M. A........... 4 N. L. A........... 1
S. M. A........... 3
Opponents ......66
Every Requisite for Gym- nasium, Track, Field, Base- ball, Football, Basket-ball,
Tennis and Swimming
-
KODAKS
§~ DEVELOPING, PRINTING, ENLARGING
The battlng averages for the se3Json show a great improvement over those of last year. The outstanding feature of the season was Loftier's .500 average, this being.probably the highest that any V. E. S. batsman ha
ever amassed.
Th e averages, with the extra base hits, are as follows :
AB H R 2B 3B HR TB A ~i
I
23 16 6 + :! +:3 ..'500 ~ ~
13
5
12 9 7 9 10
2
7 0 1 3 0 1 2 1 2
4 0 1 7 1 1 16 1 1 12 1 1
1 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
1 . 0
15 7 17
11
10 12
.:n 7
-~78
3 3 0 0 0
:-l .375
~•o•oeo toeoeoeo.aeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeoeo.oeoeoeoeoeoeoeo
~
4 1 0 10 6 .15G
720 MAIN
STREET
PURE AND
WHITE-AL"A YS
RIGHT!
1110
5 .087
PHONE 1498 An..ythlng
Agent
WHITE STAR STEAM\LAUNDRY CO. Lynchburg,
B. H. S...........ll A. M. A......... 7
1024 MAIN ST.,
'
LYNCHBURG, VA.
.2Ul
.209
.20R
- .18:2
16 ')
.267 92-
. ..., "' :'l
THE METE OR
8
Famous College
.
Songs
•
J. E. WOOD & BRO., Inc.
innings. Spruill pitched welL Belt ----'------------------:-:-:---:-:--:-------------_:_.:_:_.:_:_::_:.:..:.:.==
Ron from May 18 to the 21.
a. visit last Sunday" just as he was stru1ding V. E. S., 4; F. M. S., 2. ~~
THE
FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
recoYering from the measles.
On the Hth 0ur beloved Alumni oi he!peel Stuart Carter to let us down with 2 runs, and marched back to
-
GARNET MIDGETS SLAUGHTER clear ole U. Va. with the bacon·and
(Continued from page 1)
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SMART SHOES for YOUNG MEN
NEW LASTS NEW P A TTERNS NEW COLORS
Incorporated
featured. On May 20 a late rally
by Blackstone M. A. turned us back R
THE OLD, BIG, STRONG BANK THREE PER CENT AND SAFETY
C. H. BEASLEY & BRO., Inc.
o~ 4-3. Loffler led the slugging ac- ~~
910 Main Street L YNCHBURG
Tip-Top and American Maid
Breads
Fruit Cakes Year Around
Q.UALITY. BAKERS
••
AMERICA
By Invitation Only
fRAOE: MAAK
S. 0. FISHER
SPORTING AND ATHLETIC OUTFITTER
LYNCHBURG §I
STEAM BAKERY 0
LINE OF LACES A
i n
Shoe Repairing
I
fThe days may
the Ja.a1s ""''!go'-•
If you want real harmony, try the old barbershop
If you want real harm ony
RESOURCES
TEN M I I J J O N
DOLLARS
D. B. RYLAND & COMPANY
~ ~~
II ~~;;;;;;;;:;;;~~~~====~~~
THE QUALITY KIND
921 MAIN STREET