4 THE ELON COLLEGE WEEKLY. February 22, 1911. COLLEGE CUT CLOTHES Honest Quality, Top of the Fashion FOR THEY ARB FROM TAILORING LINE. “The Hopkins” SHOES Especially Suited to COLLEGE TRADE. Both STYLISH and HIGH QUALITY SNAPPY FURNISHINGS FOR COLLEGE MEN. The Holt=Cates Company, BURLINGTON N. C. begins to show her his hoarded treasure and then offers it all to her if she will be come his wife-. She will not have a cent on these terms, telling him that she does not and cannot love him. He refuses the loan and sends her away, but ere she had gone many yards he repents his steps and jumping upon his pony overtakes her and gives her the gold, saying that she might marry whom she would. Jeanie then gets herself in readiness and leaving a neiglibor in charge of the home starts upon her long journey and on foot, to London. (To be continued.) RUSKIN AS A WETTER. Ruskin’s style we might say is a charm ing mixture of sublimity, enthusiasm, and good English commonsense. Ruskin does not have miicli reserve either in his writ ing or thinking, but he has just about every thing else. He has purity, elas ticity, dramatic force, wit, passion, imag ination and nobility. He writes about art, history, science, theology, education, econo my, poetry, agriculture and many other subjects. Raskin is a musical, eloqueiit prose writer. He plays the prose lyre and strikes every infinite note with power and melody, that inspires the very musical soul of man. His writing is art expressed in words. Alliteration and assonance, adjectives in description, anthithesis in argument, and climax with dramatic force he used with very much power. His sentences are ihythmical and full of music, his thoughts excellent, his style unsurpassed. He is clear, simple and charming in his manner of expression. His prose is marked by two styles, a dramatic style, vehement, rhetorical, and full of imagery, such as we find in “Mod ern Painters,” and “Seven Lamps.” Then, too, he has a more modeiate styla, found in “Fors Clovigera. ” Melody and rhythm, strength and earnestness charac terize his writing. There is symmetry and rhythn in his sentence structure. One only has to read the beautiful lines found in the preface to “The Crown of Wild Olive” to understand something of the beauty of this grjat writer. “No clearer or diviner waters ever sang with constant lips of the hand which giveth rain fr«ra heaven; no pastures ever lightened in springtime with more pass ionate blossoming etc.” Musical, sublime, eloquent and full of inspiration. Art in words. W. F. Warren. Chapel Hill, N. C. / K'Hteik Vew “Rock Hill” Lightes Running, Most Stylish and Durable on Market I Patented Long-Distance Spindles, oiled without removal of wheels. ir Patented Side Spring. 1 Strongest braced Body made. !fNew style Seat. I Every feature of high class make. 5 Phaetons, Surries, Runabouts of same High Quality. Our guarantee your protection. HlLi:’ A Postal Card To Us Will Bring An Agent To You At Once ROCK HILL BIGGY COMPANY Rock Ilill, South Carolina DRUGGETS; FULL STOCK RUGS, DRUGGETS, MATTING, PORTIEES, LACE CURTAINS WINDOW SHADES, MADE TO ORDER. BURTNER FURNITURE COMPANY, GREENSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA. People’s House Furnishing Company. MANTLES, HIGH POINT, N. C. Wholesale and Retail House Fvimishers and Jobbers, GRATES, TILE, A SPECIALTY SUNDAY SCHOOL REPORT FOR FEB. 19, 1911. Class No. 1. Dr. J. U. Newman, Teacher. Priesent, 12; collection, 28 cts. Class No. 2. Prof. T. C. Amick, Teach er. Present, 10; collection, 32 cts. Class No. 3. Mr. A. L. Lincoln, Teach- uv. Present, IS; collection, 38 cts. Class No. 4. Mrs. R. J. Kernodle, Teach er. Present, IS; collection, 39 cts. Class No. 5. Mr. E. T. Hines Teacher. Present, (i; collection, 14 cts. Class No. (). Mr. R. A. Campbell, Teacher. Present, 16; collection, 27 cts. Class No. 7. Mrs. J. W. Patton, Teach er. Present 24; collection, 7 cts. Class No. S. Miss Ethel Clements, Tea cher. Present, 13; collection, 12 cts. Class No._9. Mrs. J. M. Saunders, Tea cher. Present, 19; collection, 11 cts. Class No. 10. Mis. J. L. Foster, Teach er. Present, 29; collection 9 cts. Citizens’ Bible Class. Prof. W. A. Har per, Teacher. Present, 14; collection, 22 cts. Totals: Scholars, 188. Visitor, 1. Whole School, 200. Collection, $2.39. J. Sipe Fleming, Sec. 1890 IQll ELON COLLEGE. A young, vigorous College for both men and women. On Southern Railws sixty-five miles west of Raleigh, the State capital, and seventeen miles east of tl thniving city of Greensboro. THE LOCATION IS DELIGHTFUL; W^ATER PURE, CLIMATE HEA1.THFUL. Plant valued at $150,000, is modern in comfort and convenience. Steam heat elec tric lights, water and sewerage connections with all buildings. Courses Lead to A. B., Fb. B., and A. M. Degrees. Emmtt L, Moffett, A. LL. D., President B. A. SELLARS d' SOKS, High-Class Dry Goods AND GENTS’ CLOTHIERS AND TAILORING MERCHANTS. MAIN STREET, ' . BURLINGTON, N. C. FREEMAN DRUG COMPANY. Burlington. North Carolina. Are the leaders in Drugs, Chem cals and Toilet Articles. CAREFUL ATTENTION TO MAIL ORDERS. Alamance Insurance (Si Real Estate Co. Insurance. Loans and Real Estate. CASH CAPITAL, ?30,000.00 MONEY LENT through this Company on real estate is secured both by mortgage and Company guarantee. The lender receives 6 .per .cent, interest—3 .per .cent., praxnptly every six months—and is not bothered about interest collections. W. K. HOLT, President, R. M. MORROW, Vice-President, W. E. SHARPE, Treasurer and Manager. Burlington, N. C. n. B. SMITH, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Furniture and House Furnishings, Phone 239, BURLINGTON, N.C. W^e have recently received another large shipment of Rugs and Art Squares. We can please you as to pattern, color, quality and price in this as well as other lines we handle. We have the most complete stock ever shown in Alamance County, in House Furnishing Goods. M. B. SMITH, BURLINGTON, N. C. —Parenthood carries its anxieties all through life, and the older the parent the deeper becomes the solicitude. A New Jersey father celebrated his one hundred and first biithday recently, and when con gratulated on his long life and good health, said that the only thing that trou bled him was the poor health of his sev enty-six year old son. But, without anxie ty and solicitude comes little happiness in this life.