College Men Without Money
ASPINALL, B.A
the Methodist Episcopal Church, and was willing to preach my way through school. I did not know anyone in the school, nor did I have any definite promise that I would get a charge near the College. Incidentally, I might say that I had been in
llege square with the world. A few weeks after school opened, I went to our conference and was assigned to a circuit in close proximity to the College, which paid me $360 for the year. 6 There were
mer, which, of course, had been sadly neglected during the school year. It need hardly be said that there were many trying times. I had much p
be in sleet and snow, and the steward had been able to collect only $3.21, when I needed much more than that to pay my board bills. Then when I could succeed in casting these gloomy thoughts from my mind, in would rush
s able to graduate, free from debt, though I had seldom been so during the whole five years. I feel as though I have a
t always conducive to optimism, but I felt like I had to get through. The same zest I had then for learni
. J.