THE SALEMITE The Salemit'ejtiai and material is not lacking—we should entitle it The Book-Worm’s 0 Per Year - 10c Per Copy EDITORIAL STAFF stone fireplace, whose very material is rich with association and senti- And now that Spring is on its way and the campus begins to cheer up and look festive again, it wouldn’t be a bad idea, perhaps, to keep a wary eye out for banana Tmll’s thariea(T*to*"Alile Clewell lirtfeTy'’-pathrth“ch sfve no ap- preciable amount of time and by no This is not all; but it will ] ur moral. Draw your own we’ve decided not to be one of tl (Continued from Page One) scended to the ground. He dashc inker’s daughter from the clut( of Mr. Bulger. By chasing the da ing Mr. Bulger throughout the vi lage, and finally overpowering hi in the steeple of the church. Tc pas able to rescue the money stolf rora the bank. In conclusion. Tod convinced tl iroken-hearted daughter of tl., :sTrtVo\t’’‘‘;p::^WclfsL"'Sft Former Salem Teacher Dies on Wednesday iss Carrie Vest was Since Intimately Connected witl At ten o’clock on the night of ednesday, February 4, occurred the death of Miss Carrie Vest, who rliroT/ai:rra":nd nent in the vear 1890 unde dency of Rev. J. H. Cle continued in the service of “Salem,” aLodttion with ^Ls Othelia Bar row. In this position, she continued ate in 1897; and the late Miss Em- tinued' ^ritlf the’latte*r^,*in charge of Young Ideas by Miriam Brietz 'S'i hair, ’it rises. At a slight pressure from the finger on he hidden spring. the top of her head. Then is non. It is are among the list of t of The New Student the other day Thaf give" uT abunTanr foof"" thought; and, very naturally ^r!w‘a mo^^l'or t'fro^’r whl; we had been pointed out by editors of in the Park Hall Room Company, upon the completion of that build ing. The following year she was In the year 1911, Miss Vest was given charge of the Book depart ment and was later made secretary in the Department of Music, in which capacity she continued in sys tematic and faithful service until within a year of her death.^ She is p.Itom'.nL .nd hljh of readier wit i tiee. Not all minds can be ci Hikes Help to Make Exams Less Trying rtiT. walk was led by Miss Chase. y Chest Day will be ob- then, too, there is never any visible cause for her dismay, unless, in- aU'^sel^TMngs of which r'lTu"”:"';* ,on. The only re, of her pe- fact, we positively refuse to believe that there is anything in the world sufficiently terrible to warrant the neve-- (Our grand- before we get to them.) Yes, th • around till you can cry triumpha ly, “Ah, ha! I knew it!” You mind us of the little boy « sucked the sugar coating off the j and spit out the bitter part. But we lose sight of the point, which really is a pleasant moral, after all, and the man who was chased by a Well, the bear had nothing to fear, for if he got the man, he had a such a tight place again; if he .didn’t escape all his troubles were This colyum isn't a place to air your philosophy!” Obediently, we stop and leave the rest of the moral—to We ^humbly beg ^suggestio^ns for she “replies ''brilliantly, “Oh,'’ary- thing!” But Scary Ann’s color gest, and it wasn’t Colle It was a story about a ing eyes, and small, sharp teeth. It was a story about friendship and the ered at her scarlet coat, flashing round a corner, and we shuddered as she drank quarts and quarts of find a story with a real vampire in little feeling that “All’s well with s the return of f ent is willing for t Winning the West # For a few cents a month per acre, ■ ■ ;s the life-giving of acres of desert land in the ' is only a t of what it is doing for Industry, Trans- i, City and Country life or any of the profes- It is a tool ready for your use and which, wisely that operate mammoth used, will make the impossible of today an accomplished fact tomorrow. S student in a 1391 con- (Jq jg important to evei L matter what their life’s GENERAL ELECTRIC BNERAL ELECTR HENECTADY, NEW YORK