4 GUILFORD CAFETERIAS t | Superior Food t f Excellent Service ? Same Management as Guilford Hotel I f I 4 | 4 ' ' ■ ■'"-—I VSXXV\*V\XN\>NVwV\W\N\NX\ If you want them cheaper see £ f COBLE & MEBANE $ THE CASH SHOE STORE / 220 S. Elm St. Greensboro,N.C. | JOS. J. STONE & CO. j • PRINTERS. ENGRAVERS | T BINDERS • Office Equipment and Supplies ! I GREENSBORO, N. C. t j HARREL'S CUTE STUDIO / :t Kodak Finishing. Post 4 Eand Ping Pongs. Modem g graphy. 222V2 S. Elm St. 3 IREENSBORO, N. C. g j GUILFORD LUMBER & MFG. CO. j I QUALITY MILLWORK | GREENSBORO, N. C. f i i Eastman Kodak and Supplies 5 Films promptly developed > 5 Mail Orders a Specialty g 5 GREENSBORO DRUG CO. * • Corner Elm and W. Market Sts g %'%%'V*VV\*V*\VNV^V^VVVVVV v r~ ! DR. J. S. BETTS I DENTIST lOver Greensboro Drug Co. j FOR AUTO SERVICE £ Day or Night, See or Call £ LEE S. SMITH $ Guilford College, N. C. VXV*%VV\XN%\VNVVV%VV>AVV\ t RKAVES'EYE, EAR, NOSE AND I | THROAT INFIRMARY f W. P. Reaves, M. D. i C. R. Reaves, M. D. ? t R. G. Reaves, M. D. i ! GREENSBORO, N. C. \ BARKER BROS. $ /• 21K South Elm Street f, GREENSBORO. X. C. POOL & BLUE, INC. j Funeral Diretcors AMBULANCE SERVICE I 204 North Elm St. j ' Office phone 420 Night phone 1490 j 1 GUILFORD BARBER SHOP j Special Attention Given College j ; Students ? I • 102 W. Sycamore St. i I Guilford Hotel Building. Greensboro | t VALUABLE OLD BOOKS j j REBOUND ! I Leather Goods Stamped in Gold | N. L. WOLLF { I Phone 3262 .... -..118 E. Washington St. ? ............ . THE QUALITY SHOP j 222 S. Elm St. Fred Livermore \V. F. Fraser. Mgr. | I.adies' and Misses* Ready-to-Wcar ? MASCULINE VIEWS OF THE IDEAL GIRL PRESENTED AT Y. W. C. A. On Thursday evening the Associa tion room was filled with girls and faculty members, for everyone was eager to hear what Ruth Outland j had to say about "The ideal girls as the Guilford boys see her." Sallie Wilkins read the Scripture lesson and gave some of the beatitudes for girls. Then Ruth Outland presented 1 the ideas which five of the Guilford men had transmitted tj> paper con j cenring the idea', girl. Practically every fellow seems to } have had the same qualifications in mind which in his opinion go to make up the ideal woman.. First of all, religion was emphasized. Religion : places woman on a throne of respect ' and honor, say the men of Guilford. Lasting beauty is always the result I of such traits of character as cheer fulness, simplicity, patience, truthful ness, fidelity and modesty. Earnest | ness and sincerity are the pillars of a girl's strength. Another qualification of the ideal girl is that of physical fitness. By physical fitness one does not mean | that a girl must necessarily be ro j bust, but that the condition of her | health should be such as to allow her i to enjoy her work, her friends and amusements to the fullest extent. : The ideal girl is not handicapped by an unhealthy body. She is no toy. Tact was also a trait which every | girl was urged to acquire. In order I to be tactful she must have a broad outlook upon life, must be good-nat : ured and of a kindly spirit. Although [ it was admitted that the best ed ' ucated person is not always the most tactful, it was also shown that the uneducated person is rarely ever found to possess tact. So it follows that the ideal girl should be as well educated as it is possible for her to be. Only the educated woman is influential, and the Guilford man's i ideal girl is influential. SCHOOL ATTENDANCE The Department of Commerce, through the Bureau of Census, has issued a preliminary statement giv- ing statistics of school attendance ! by geographic divisions and states, : compiled from the returns of the Fourteenth Decennial Census, taken as of January 1, 1920. The total population 5 to 20 years of age, inclusive, enumerated in continental United States numbered 33,250,870. Of this number. 21,373,976 attended ; school at some time between Sep tember 1, 1921. and January 1, 1920. The total population 7 to 13 years of age. 15,306,793, included 13,869,010 children attending school. The per centage attending school among the j population 5 to 20 years of age in creased from 59.2 for 1910 to 64.3 for 1920; and the corresponding per centage for children 7 to 13 years of age increased from 86.1 for the earlier to 90.6 for the later age. Among the individual states, the largest proportion attending school in the 5-20 age group, 73 per cent, is | shown for Utah, and the smallest, ;53 per cent, for louisiana. In six | states—lowa, Nebraska, Montana, Idaho, Utah and Oregon—the pro | portion of school attendance for this ; age group was more than 70 per | cent. —Australia's wheat yield for 1922 is officially estimated at 120,000.000 bushels. —Food speculators in Chicago late ly lost $900,000 on eggs. This time | the fall of eggs led to the dealers | being "broke." —The Cinchona forests in Java covers 25,000 acres. The large part of the world's supply of quinine | comes from that country. —Mrs. Mary Patrick Casale recent ly gave birth to her 21st child at Ne wark, N. J. Eighteen of her children are living. The oldest is 26. —More than 200,000 Christians ; have fled from their homes in Cilicia ] since France made a treaty returning that province to the Turks. In July, 1919, there were 18,000 patent applications awaiting action in the United States Patent Office. There are now about 50.000. applica tions awaiting examination. A nurn j ber of divisions are over eleven I months behind in their work. THE GUILFORDIAN Y. M. C. A. NOTES At an intei-esting and inspiring meeting of the Y. M. C. A. on Thursday, February 22, Everett Hol latly spoke on the subject of "A Life With a Purpose"' bringing home to every one present the real mean ing and the seriousness of life and the necessity of a great guiding and controlling plan which will shape one's every action. The leader showed that, in his crea tion of the universe, God had a pur pose for every particle of matter, both animate and inanimate. In the working out of this purpose, man kind plays an all important part. It rests with the individual whether he will fulfill his part in the divine plan or shape his life along purely selfish lines. The speaker closed with a plea for the choice of a vocation compatible with ideas of service to one's fellow men and pursued in accordance with Christian principles. After the leader's talk, sevei'al members made short and apt com ments upon various phases of the topic. A number of good hymns, enhusiastically sung, added much to to the spirit of the meeting. ARTIFICIAL SUNLIGHT FOR TESTING FASTNESS OF i COLORS A unique and interesting device which simulates the qualities of the sun rays and will artificially test the fading quailities of many different kinds of materials, has recently been developed in the laboratories of the Cooper-Hewitt Electric Company. Testing the fastness of colored cloths, paints, inks, dyes, straw, var nishes, etc., is by means of this ap paratus accomplished more efficiently and in much shorter time than the customary method, now in use by manufacturers in giving long sun light tests to their products before marketing. A light that is faster and better than sunlight is needed in the routine testing of materials for their re sistance to its destructive action. The .sunlight method is so slow as to defeat its own purpose in the con trol of factory products or the exam ination of incoming materials. Practically all of the color fading, rubber aging, skin tanning effects of sunlight ai-e due not to the vis ible light, but to the invisible, ultra-violet light. The ultra-violet or invisible rays of sunlight have little effect on human beings due to the absorption of much of them in the atmosphere. The artificial fading cabinet is, how ever, built to produce a light with a high concentration of ultra-violet rays. This is secured through the use of the mercury vapor arc light in a bulb or tube of pure glass of fused quartz the radiation from which contains a relatively very much larger proportion of short wave ultra-violet light and less of heat waves such as produced by the carbon or other types of arc lights. Around this light is a series of panels which may be revolved and in which are placed the materials to be tested. Twenty or more samples may be exposed at one time. The rate of fading averages 12 times that of sunlight. A 30 day sunlight test which would require ordinarily about two months (due to interruptions on cloudy or rainy days) can now be made in 10 hours. Miss Sallie Perkins, who was a student here in 1919-20, is making her home with her sister, Mrs. W. E. Hockett and her husband, who is the manager of Hotel Richmond, Rich mond, Virginia. At present Miss Perkins is in Greensboro and is doing stenographic work. Miss Florence Cox, '22, was taken to St. Leo's Hospital in Greensboro last week, where she was operated on for appendicitis. A speedy recovery is hoped for her. Mr. W. F. Outla'nd of Woodland was at the college last Friday to see his daughter, Ruth. Miss Kate Smith spent last week end at her home in Summerfield. Miss Ruth Outland spent last week-end with her aunt in Winston- Salem. | Engramng 'X: | VISITING CARDS, INVITATIONS, MONOGRAMS, ETC. (Carolina jEttrjraimuj Company | 214 North Elm Street, Greensboro, N. C. & All the work done in our own shop t MAX UEL ' S CA F E WE SERVE THE VERY BEST PHONE 2656 112 W. Market St., Greensboro, N. 0. 5' = ° ! t DAVID WHITE, Pres. J. W. BRAWLEY, Vice-Pres. & Treas. { R. W. HARRISON, Sec. & Atty THE REAL ESTATE & TRUST COMPANY ♦ We buy and sell Real Estate, negotiate Real Estate Loans and write i all kinds of Insurance ♦ 233 S ELM ST GREENSBORO, N. C " " . . . .. C. T. ROBERTSON For Fancy Groceries Notions, etc. (\ Reserved for j (Smlfori* doll ! ~ ai THE WAY TO GET The Saving 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 j Vanstory's f^ci^ j Greensboro, North Carolina | Ihe Golden Rule Press j ) PRINTING / 317 S. Elm St., Greensboro, N. C. ( / Phone 194-J ( NOTICE This cl >P p, ng with entides you to a 50* package of NOTRE DAME mi. COCOANUT OIL SHAMPOO. Call at any dealer's. Tins may apply on any other Notre Dame Toilet Preparation;: Notre Dame Face Powder, 20* with coupon ; Notre Dame Hair Tonic, 550 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 Vi'i with coupon. THE DAVIS DRUG COT, Greensboro N. cTDistributor, Page 3