icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

College Men Without Money

PART I A MOTHER'S DESIRE REALIZED

Word Count: 929    |    Released on: 19/11/2017

B. AME

set me to work. The first was this: provided I would live at home in Bangor and go back and forth daily to the University of Maine in Orono (

osal. Thus I came to belong, not to a class of "college men with no money," but rather to that of "college men with little mone

ce I was a somewhat imaginative and philosophical lad. It seemed to me that just as a hill was made not merely for climbing, but that the climber should be rewarded for his attempt by the beautiful view of broader countries seen from the summit; even so a college education was designed, not to be a s

written when I was a sophomore in high school: "School closed (for the summer vacation) Friday. On Saturday I helped Roy

tently during the remainder of my high school course I worked, caring for lawns and gardens in the summer, and running one furnace and sometimes two and shoveling snow in

n the Bangor City Hall. In the fall of the sophomore year I won a first prize of fifteen dollars in the annual sophomore declamations. During the summer between my first and second years in college I worked as an amateur landscap

ks to the generosity of a friend, I was permitted to live at the fraternity which I had joined in my freshman year. Thus I was given an

ty 4 and earned money by selling tickets at various places, giving readings at a church entertainment, winning another first prize in the junior declamations, taking school census in my home ward in Ba

in a larger ward which returned me more money. I won fifty dollars in an intercollegiate speaking contest, and earned nearly sixty-five dollars as substitute teacher in Bangor high school. These amounts, combined with my previou

rse, I feel that it was worth all

ine.

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
College Men Without Money
College Men Without Money
“Having entered the preparatory schools with 94 cents, and college with less, and knowing that the greater number of those who control the affairs of the nation and who strive to make the country better, are men and women who did likewise, the thought for this book entered my mind.”