OWTSMfIN^ lf\3T WORP IN rtOTOM/ITIC XT Made up in your college cobra, with four name engraved m gold gl£\A A beautiful, practical pencil, Simply can't get out of *dn Pencil postpaid 65 A Liberal reduction on quantities. Send 10c. The smooth blending of art lor 1 dozen cc, k> rs makes thu a pencil to be Never-Break proud of. 10 *" Mo such value ever offered Money . back if not sansfad. Send check, money order or cash, state colon desired and give name to be engraved THE UNITED PENCIL CO.. WC. *lB BROADWAY. NEW YORK ♦ —-•■■•'■ | GUILFORD CAFETERIAS I I Superior Food I Excellent Service I i Same Management a? Guilford Hotci • •4 xxmmwN\w\\\\ww% jt / 4 If you want them cheaper see £ \ COBLE & MEBANE $ J; THE CASH SHOE STORE 2 t 220 S. Elm St. Greensboro,N.C. / 1 wtmmvvvv\\v\\vv\v\v\v% I JOS. J. STONE & CO. { PRINTERS. ENGRAVERS j BINDERS Office Equipment and Supplies j GREENSBORO, N. C. j IHARREL'S CUTE STUDIO j Expert Kodak Finishing. Post J. Cards and Ping Pongs. Modern Photography. 222% S. Elm St. 3 GREENSBORO, N. C. g JBSB36SBSSX3SS6SWSS6SCSBS6SB3BSBSO6S6XXX GUILFORD UIMBER& MFG. CO. j QUALITY MILLWORK * ? GREENSBORO, N. C. j 4 ... . . \ Eastman Kodak and Supplies £ 2 Films promptly developed ✓ A Mail Orders a Specialty 5 £ GREENSBORO DRUG CO. g 4 Corner Elm and W. Market Sts y, _. + T DR. J. S. BETTS DENTIST Over Greensboro Drue Co. | SXXXNWWWWWWW FOR AUTO SERVICE £ Day or Night, See or Call LEE S. SMITH £ Guilford College, N. C. smmwwwwwuwwv RKAVES'EYE, EAR, NOSE AND "j THROAT INFIRMARY W. P. Reaves, M. D. I C. R. Reaves, M. D. f R. G. Reaves, M. D. J GR | E E | N t SBORO ' N - ♦ VNNNXSXXXXV%XX%NXNNNNN%>XN / BARKER BROS. > £ Typew rittrF, Pianos f and Phonographs /■" 218 South Kim SJrtct £ GREENSBORO. N. C. y[ ♦t""'" "l '' "•"' mi ' .* j I POOL & BLUE, INC. Funeral Diretcors I AMBULANCE SERVICE j 204 North Elm St. Office phone 420 Night phone 1490 j THE QUALITY SHOP 222 S. Elm St. j I Fred Livermore W. F. Fraser. Mgr. j ! Ladies' and Misses' Ready-to-Wear • ALUMNI NEWS Ira Hinshaw, 'lB, writes as follows to friends at Guilford from the Unit -led States Veteran Hospital where he is statinoed: "Since it is not possible for me to be at Guilford very often I am I glad that I have the opportunity of keeping in touch, in a meagre way, with the church, the college and my ; friends thru correspondence. I can assure you that I, as one of the many absent members, appreciate the in ■; terest the meeting has for me. I hope that I may be able to get to the college by commencement and be with you in the meetings once more. | I read in my Greensboro paper this morning, with a great deal of pride, the account of the victory of the baseball team in the annual , Easter Monday game. 1 assure you j that my interest in the New Garden ; Meeting and old Guilford has not waned in the least during these few years of absence." Among the alumni present at i President and Mrs. Binford's recep tion for the senior class 011 Wednes day evening, May 31 were: David White, '9O, Mrs. Margurite Cartland Kerner, 'OB, Mrs. Julia Ballinger Dwiggins, 'l6, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. ! Mcßane (Pearle Younts) both of 'l4, Ida Millis, 'O3, Laura Worth, '92, I Carolyn Yates, 'l6, Harriet Crutch ' field, 'l7, Gracette Erazier, Mary Petty and Gertrude Mendenhall. Louetta Knight, 15, who will com plete the requirements for a B. S. in home economics this spring, will teach cooking and do well fare work in the White Oak school next year. Era Lasley, 'l3, is at Dr. Long's hospital in Greensboro where she re cently underwent an operation for appendicitis. The following alumni have added to the list of life members in the alumni association: R. M. McCulloch, | 03, associate professor of English at the University of Maine; D. Ralph Parker, 'O4, High Point; Walter E. Blair. '9B, Greesnboro. Alma Taylor Edwards, 'O7, dean of women and professor of Latin at | Central College, Lexington, Missouri, | is returning via Atlanta to her home j in Carthage, where she will spend j the summer. Rhesa L. Newlin, 'l7, assistant in | the mathematics department at Guil ford. who has been on leave of ab sence this year, will complete his j work for his Master's degree at the University of Chicago this spring j and will return to Guilford next j year. Samuel Hodgin, '95, paid a visit ! to the college on Saturday, May 20. I Mr. Hodgin who is connected with the educational work of the Carnegie Fuondation, retains a lively interest in his alma mater and is always a ! we home visitor on the campus. Geno A. Young, 'l2 writes as fol lows from Washington: jf'For the past ten months I have been in men tal hospitals working with shell- ( | shocked patients—boys who were de ! pressed, tending towards suicide.Here one's heart is often wrung with the pathos of it all. But you feel great ' sasitfaction when the day's work is i over to think that you have kept even one poor boy from sitting in the ward all day thinking about his troubles, either real or imaginary. I am now in the United States Naval Hospital, Washington, D. C., where the men are not mental cases." L. Lea White, 'l4, professor of education at Guilford College, will teach in the summer school at Trin itv College, this summer. C. C. Smithdeal, 'll, of Winston- Salem visited the college Sunday,, May 27. E. E. Farlow, 'l9, has completed a year of teaching, having served as principal of the Yadkinville high school. He has recently returned home. Mary Ina Shamburger, 'l7, is spending several days with Gertrude Hobbs, 'l9, and attending the com mencement festivities at Guilford. Miss Young has much to say of the intensely interesting and exceed ingly worth while work of the Vet erans' Bureau School conducted by the Naval Hospital where she is now stationed. Ernest P. Dixon, 'O4, is principal of,the Saxapahaw high school. Jasper Thompson '92, is a prosper ous farmer in Northampton county near Rich Square. He will have a|' THE GUILFORDIAN i daughter in the freshmen class at Guilford next fall. Ruth Coble, 'l7 and Mary Coble, '2O, will attend the summer session of ' the University of California, at Berk ' I ley, California, this summer. Edna Raiford, '22, will teach math ematics at Roanoke Rapids next ' year. p Florence Cox, '22, will do gradu ate work at Haverford next year. ' 1. Gilbert Pearson, '97, sailed for ' Europe recently to spend some time in the study of bird life on the con ' tinent and in England. [ Curtis Newiin, '22, will be a stu -3 dent in the graduate school at Haver- B ford next year. Joseph H. Peele, 'l9, of Pasadena, r California, has some prospect of re f turning to North Carolina. Like f other Tar Heels who stray away I from their state, he hopes sometime to return home. Dr. C. O. Meredith, 'OO, professor of German and Greek at Richmond College, at Richmond, Virginia, is ex pecting to spend the summer at his t home at Guilford College. GUILFORD LETTER MEN 1 The organization of a club for 1 Guilford letter men has been launch r ed, for the purpose of establishing . | some means of keeping former Guil , ford athletes in touch with athletics , [at the college. Any letter man will - be eligible for membership on appli { cation, whether a graduate or not. Henry Davis, 'O9, is temporary - president of thei organization and I Curtis Newiin, '22, is acting secre -1 tary. A meeting of all the letter men ; who are back for commencement will . be held on Monday, June 5, at which 5 Richard Hobbs, chairman of the com mittee on constitutions, will present r a constitution and permanent officers will be elected. 1 Du ring the special chapel meeting 1 that was called on May 29, 1922, at . eight forty-five a. m., those men who l had fulfilled the requirements, as l laved down by the Atheletic Council, . were awarded letters or stars. Hersel Macon, president of the I Athletic Association, conducted the t meeting. After he had read the ar , tides, concerning the awarding of * letters, that had been passed at the I last regular meeting, he read the three new articles that had been sub stituted for the rejected article, No. 9. Article nine as it first stood, read; The Cabinet shall have the power to withhold or award letters at their discretion, even though the above ; requirements have not been fulfilled. The three articles that were substi tuted for number nine and that were passed by a call meeting of the asso ciation reads as follows; Article 9: The cabinet shall have the power to award letters to its discretion even | though the above requirements have j not been met. Article 10: The cabinet shall have the power i to withhold letters from anyone who has met these requirements, if in the I estimation of two thirds of its mem bers such person or persons have not I fulfilled their obligations to the team. Anyone having met these require- j ments and having been refused a let-' ter shall be allowed an appeal to the association. All letters awarded do not carry with them the privilege of wearing G's other than those actually award ed. After Mr. Macon had briefly gone through the records of each team that had represented Guilford during the year '2l and '22 the following men were summoned to receive let ters or stars. Those to receive stars in football were; J. C. Newiin, E. Mcßane, M. White, and Babe Shore. Letters were awarded to H. G. Mc- Bane, Spot Taylor. Alton Warwick. C. Purvis, L. L. Williams, Clyde Shore, Jack Frazier, Glen Lassiter. Chas. Smith, and Mgr. S. Gladstone Hod sin. Those receiving stars in baseball were; J. G. Frazier, J. C. Newiin, J. W. Frazier, Orvie Hay worth, and Earl Cummins. Letters were presented to Chas, Smith. H. B. i Shore, Geo. Ferrell. Fred C. Winn. T. E Mcßane, and Mgr. Frank Mc- Gee. Those issued stars in basket ball were, J. W. Frazier. J. G. Fra zier, J. C. Newiin. H. G. Mcßane. and Francis Lindlev. Letters went j to Thad Mackie, and Geo. Ferrell. j Those presented stars in Tennis were, j Tatum, Zachary, Gloff. Brown, and Merrimon. I- Etttjrauing : VISITING CARDS, INVITATIONS, MONOGRAMS, ETC. (Hamlina EttQramng (Company 214 North Elm Street, Greensboro, N. C. All the work done in our own shop g: '"'a ' a q' Z s i MANUEL'S CAFE WE SERVE THE VERY BEST PHONE 2656 112 W. Market St., Greensboro, N. 0. Si -■ i 3 ° I Ti I DAVID WHITE, Pres. . J. W. BRAWLEY, Vice-Pres. A Treat. I R. W. HARRISON, Sec. & Atty THE REAL ESTATE & TRUST COMPANY j We buy and sell Real Estate, negotiate Real Estate Loans and write 1 all kinds of Insurance ♦ 233 S ELM ST GREENSBORO, N. C. ........ . .~TT C. T. ROBERTSON For Fancy Groceries Notions, etc. ♦***->■ \ Reserved for (Suilfnrb (Collrgp THE WAY TO GET The Saving 1 Habit IS TO COMPEL YOURSELF TO SAVE— INSURE YOUR LIFE AT THE SAME TIME AN ENDOWMENT POLICY Protects ONE AGAINST DEATH AND ADD THE RISKS OF LIFE WILL YOU LET US TELL YOU ABOUT THIS? The Provident Life and Trust Co. of Philadelphia Memeber of the Federal Reserve FOURTH AND CHESTNUT STS System PHILADELPHIA Vanstory's For Clothes Greensboro, North Carolina 1 | Ihe Golden Rule Press j | PRINTING | / 317 S. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C. y / Phone 194-J v NOTICE This clipping with 35* entitles you to a 50* package of NOTRE DAMF COCOANUT OIL SHAMPOO. Call at any dealer's. This may apply on any other Notre Dame Toilet Preparation!: Notre Dame Face Powder, 20* with coupon; Notre Dame Hair Tonic, 55* with coupon; Notre Dam. Vanishing Cream, 25* with coupon; Notre Dame Cold Cream, 25* with coupon- Notre Dame Massage Cream, 25* with coupon; Notre Dame Lemon Lotion 35* with coupon. THE DAVIS DRUG CO., Greensboro, N. C., Distributors Page 3

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