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A party given by the All Stars and honorary 4-H organizations.

61. All Star Party, State 4-H Camp, Jackson's Mill, Lewis County, W. Va.

62. St. Mary's Phife and Drum March in John W. Davis Parade

63. Glen Elk Hotel, Clarksburg, W. Va.

64. Penn Depot, Wheeling, W. Va.

Postcard reads, "The above is a typical harvest scene in the highly productive Valley of Virginia. In the foreground, fertile, undulating fields; in the background, a graceful, forested mountain ridge. George Washington called the Shenandoah Valley the "Garden of America". When in 1861, the Confederate government placed Gen. J. E. Johnston in command in the Lower Valley, he said that section alone would feed an army of 40,000 men. And in this calculation only three counties were considered. Little wonder that the Shenandoah Valley was known as the "Granary of the Confederacy." Published by Shenandoah Publishing House. (From postcard collection legacy system--Non-WV.)

65. Shenandoah Valley Harvest Scene

66. Portrait of Ethel B. Finnicum Moreland

Davis, from Clarksburg, W. Va., is pictured front and center standing on a train car and addressing the large crowd gathered before him. On the far left, also on the train with Davis, is James Rushford. Remaining subjects are unidentified.

67. Most Likely the Presidential Campaign for Democratic Party Candidate John W. Davis in Summers County, W. Va.

Front row, from left to right, is Piney M. Lilly, Grace B. Lilly, Ernest L. Lilly, and Edward P. Lilly.Pictured in the back row is Thomas W. Lilly, Mary E. Lilly, and her son, Blake Farley.

68. Lilly Family in Blue Jay, W. Va.

Crew members of the WVU Agriculture school Dairy Farm pose for a portrait.

69. WVU Dairy Farm on Mileground Crew, Morgantown, W. Va.

Barn and House on the WVU Dairy Farm with farming equipment.

70. WVU Dairy Farm Barn and House, Morgantown, W. Va.

Side view of a plain building, likely a barn, at the WVU Dairy Farm.

71. Side View of a Plain Building at the WVU Dairy Farm, Morgantown, W. Va.

Koon received a Bachelor of Science degree from West Virginia University in 1915, a Master of Arts from Columbia University in 1918, and a PhD from Ohio State in 1931.  He was Principal of Green Bank High School in Pocahontas County from 1919-1920.

72. Portrait of Cline Morgan Koon