Page Four. THE 5ALEMITE Nov. 3, 1944. Fortune Teller Reveals All The owner and proprietor of the West Knd Beauty Parlor on Burke Street is a unique character. That’s what Booty and Peggy found out after their excursion there Monday afternoon. The two girls had unsolved ques tions in their love lives, mailbox worries, and numerous other pro blems about which they wished to be enlightened. There was only one person who could provide the sdlu- tions—Ifadame Mabel. So they trekked out to the block beyond the Toddle House, turned to the left at Burke Street, walked past four or five buildings, and entered the West End Beauty Parlor. They cross ed the black, white, and red linol eum-covered floor, and nervously sat down upon the wicker sofa on the right side of the room. At this point Booty and Peg be gan to wonder what was beyond the beaver board partition that held a large sign proving this to be a “firade A Beauty Shop.” They did not wonder long. Before they had found the match that they were looking for to light their Luckies, the phone rang and an obese brown figure in a white cosmetologist’s uniform came into the waiting room, picked up the receiver and said, “Yas’m this is Mabel.” The conversation continued. “Does you want me to wear my costume ?” “Yas’m, it’s plenty warm!” “Yas’m, I’ll be glad to come to dat party. You folHs down dair at the Silver Service Bur-ro is my friends.” “Yas’m. Yas’m. Y'as’m. No’m. No’m. Well goo’ bye.” The receiver clicked and Mabel faced the girls. “Would you-all like to talk to me?” “Y-Yess,” the adventurers stam mered simultaneously. Booty went behind the partition, first, while Peggy sat and observed the room whose floor now held the last remains of her fingernails. She saw the tinted picture of a colored soldier on the table by the window. She was puzzling over a framed picture of the 1916 class of The Renouard Training School for Em- balmers which contained about eleven white faces and one black one, (She later found that the latter face belonged to Gene, Mabel’s Harvard-graduate husband, a form er employee of Vogler’s.) when Booty ru.'ihed back exclaiming ex- huberantly, “I told her not to tell me anything but the good things, and she did. just that! I’m going on two trips very aoon, and I’m gonna get an extra-special letter. Not only that but—a very wealthy boy at home is secretly in love witii me. Be fore long I’ll hear from him.” Peggy could stand this no long er. She jumped up from the couch, dashed past the chairs where custo mers have their hair shampooed and set, past the dryers, the shelves of shampoo, rinse, and nail polish, and burst into a little nook where Mabel sat in seance. Now for the solutions —the welcomed words of reassur ance. Mabel took Peggy’s hand and held it in her own enormous brown one. (Through the vibrations she is able to judge the person and “see” into her life.) Looking straight into Peggy’s wondering eyes, Mabel’s beady black ones read, “You are nervous at times and worry very often.” (This she told Booty also. She evidently realized that they were Salem freshmen.) “Are you in lovet” “Well ye-es, uh, uh, and no-ooo.” (Cont. on page six) ^ p. V. if. se B. 3S Xf. Efird’s Oepf. Store 430-432 N. TRADE ST. Winston-Salem, N. C. At Moderate Prices Quality Merchandise Shown above are Helen Kobbins, Teau Council, and Mary Lon Stack, ofiEicers of the Pierrettes. Her Heart Is Still Young And Gm Emily Kimbrough declares that she always strives to be a real mother to her twins, A and B whose names are really Alis and Margaret. The occasion was Parents Day at .their high school, and she left her writing long enough to go. To her amazement when she arrived the twins said, “We didn’t know YOU were coming. You won’t make a speech, will you?” She tssured the girls that she was “just visiting.” A insisted that she visit B’s classes, but she compromised by visiting all their classes. The next morning Miss Kimbrough came down with the mumps. ‘ ‘ The whole school was quarantined for weeks, and all be cause I exhibited my maternal in stinct. I decided I was never going to take any interest in my children’s lives again!” Along with her many funny stories, she offers sound advice to young writers. She says, “I believe in a thorough foundation in the classics, and as much Latin as you can take. I started out doing ad vertising. This job taught me how to write on all subjects and in all different kinds of styles. It was very good experience. In fact, I think modern advertising is the best aproach to becoming a writer, although sometimes I wish I had never learned to write or read!” Beginning with a hearty laugh, she told about the first assignment she had while working for Marshall Field’s fashion magazine. Her boss told her to write a page advertis- ment of corsets, which were then called “restraining garments.” She wrote the page, but couldn’t think of a title for it. Being a Latin major at Bryn Mawr College, the famous line from Virgil, “Even these things may at one time be pleasing to remember,” came to her mind. She wrote this line in Latin at the top of the advertisement. The boss only reply was, “You tell her that when I want a caption written in Yiddish, I’ll let her know!” On November 14 her latest book, How Dear To My Heart, will be released to the public. In this book she makes fun of herself and her childhood. The setting is in her hometown, Muncie, Indiana. She said she was not going to publish the book she wrote about her twins, because “it is not fair to them. I am enough of an embarq,ssment to them as it is!” When she is writing a book, she spends ten hours a day at it. In Chicago, after a lecture, she autographed 700 copies of her book. She said the only thing that kept her going was the bookseller on her left who continously said, “Keep on,fMiss Kimbrough, no one can return an autographed book!” The motion picture ■ of “Our Hearts Are Young and Gay” is showing in New York now. Thepe will be a Big Opening in Philadel phia on November 9 at which Diana Lynn (as Emily) and Gale TTussell (as Cornelia) will appear in per son. Between her movie and her new book. Miss Kimbrough found time to give a lecture tour. She wrote an article, “My Heart’s in My Mouth,” for the July, 1944, issue of the Atlantic Monthly concerning this tour which was indeed full of adventures. At the Salem Academy tea for Miss Kimbrough Tuesday afternoon, she refused to eat anything, be cause “I have recently gained 12 pounds!” She is indeed a very charm ing person with more than the aver age share of personality and indi viduality. She wore a black crepe dress with mink furs. Her hat was a ma^s of curled, black ostrich feathers, wide, black satin ribbon, and black net. As she talked, she made many gestures with her hands and laughed much more freely than she did on the stage Tuesday night. (To give away a secret of hers, she is mot the straight-faced person she appears to be on the lecture platfoj-m. Informally she practical ly rocks with contagious laughter.) Her home is on Avon Road in Ha,verford, Pa., and there lives her husband, John Wrench, whom she married in 1926. Column The report for the World Stu dent Service Pund at Salem College is as follows: Goal—$500.00 Pledged—$458.45 * Collected—$167.75 Girls, Christmas is coming soon and that means Christmas shopp ing. Don’t you think it wise to plan a place in your allowance for your W. S. S. F. pledge early this month? Remember, the limit is December first! Below are some news briefs sent to us by the World Student Ser vice Fund: Studqnts in Canadian universi ties — both English-speaking and P’rench-speaking have given $15,000 for the war relief of their fellow- students of other countries. This represents a great deal more per capita than the giving of Ameri can students. A single quinine tablet in China costs $2.00, reports the -W. S. S. P. In one university center in China, 20 per cent of the students are active or incipient tuberculosis cases. There are more students in col leges and universities in New York City than in all the colleges and universities in China. Scientific studies are the most popular of any in the “universities of captivity” in prison camps. One camp offers 170 hours of courses a week. $1.00 a month will provide soy -bean milk for a Chinese student with tuberculosis, says the W. S. S. F. $8.00 will enable a refugee stu dent in Switzerland to leave a re fugee camp and study for a month in a university, reports the W. S. S. P. The World Student Service Fund has a goal of $500,000 for world student relief in 1944-45. Lablings Elect Viera President Tlie Lablings, the new science club, was organized Wednesday night, November 1. Mary Jane Viera was elected president; Nancy Jane Helsabeek was elected vice-president and chairman of the program com mittee; and Teau Council was elect ed secretary and treasurer. This club has been organized to activate an interest in scientific subjects among the students at Salem College, and to bring to the campus some of the leading scien tists of the day. Membership is limited to those girls who have had or are taking two years of science, or who are taking the first year and are planning to take a second course. RAY W. GOODRICH PHOTOGRAPHER 317 W. 4th St. — Dial 7994 SALEMITES DP TOWN MEETING PLACE THE ANCHOR CO. “The Shopping Center” KRISPY KREME Doughnut Company DiflFerent — Tasty — Satisfying “The Original Greaseless Doughnut” BOCOCK - STROUD Company VICTOR, COLUMBIA AND DECCA EECORDS COHEN’S READY TO WEAR SHOP DIAL 7106 Be Sure To Visit Us Early 217 W. FonrtU Street TWIN CITV IdRY OtANWO col 612 West Fourth St. Keep In Step With Mcuj/o^ Cola Manufactured by BIG BOY, INC. Winston-Salem, N. C. WELFARE’S DRUG STORE SERVING SALEM GIRLS THIRTY-TWO YEARS ARCHIE’S RADIO SERVICE 24-Hr., Beasonable Service 858 W. 4th St. Phone 2-1290 VOGLER SERVICE Ambulance—Funeral Directors Dependable for More Than 85 Years DIAL 6101 Welcome Salem Students 20TH CENTURY BOWLING ALLEY 631 W. 4th St. Bowl For Health and Becreation HOTEL ROBERT E. LEE Dining Boom and Coffee Shop Fifth and Cherry Streets / WELCOME SALEM STUDENTS SPORTS’ WEAR SHOP THE IDEAL MAIN FLOOR 'Hi ■ff. YX I % SI K! SS % SI S( P I SI ■o. ^ St SI X 3>: ss 236 N. Main St—Winston-Salem Paschal Shoe Repair Co. We Also Dye Shoes Any Color “Best In Our Line” 219 W. 4th St. DIAL 4901 On the Way Back From the Movie Stop at KENT BAKERY (Next to Montaldo’s) I FOR CHESS PIES, BUNS AND BrWnIES ' FOR A TASTY MIDNIGJIT SNACK! /