FINALS IN HOCKEY SCHEDULED Motto: “SAIL ON, SALEM” NEXT ON ATHLETIC proc;ram Winston-Salem, N. C., -March I t, 1925. MR. CHARLES G. VARDELL, JR. IN BRILLIANT PIANO RECITAL Program Includes the First Perfor'iyiance of Mr. Vardell’s Sonata i?i A Major for Piano and Violin. On Monday evening, March 9, af 8:10 o'clock, Mr. Charles G. Var- dell, Jr., gave a piano recital in Memorial Hall. He was assisted In- Miss Hazel Horton Read, violinist. The recital was brilliant and ar tistic in its entirety, but the fact Dean Shirley Lectures On Mrs. H.H.A.Beach ; of Mr. Var ing numoer, rreiuae (..norai technical ability and unusual d of its composer. Mr. Vardell played it with much expression and with remarkable perfection of tone qual ity. The third number on the pro gram was Jeux d' Eau by Ravel— ance of this number. Following this group of pieces, Mr. Vardell, assisted by Miss Read, played the three movements of his own Sonata in Major for violin of Mt°" It cont°a'inrpaL!gls"full of of Modern Amer: Monthly Meeting Of Sccietas Scientiarum the regular meeting of the (as Scientiarum Salemensis on Monday evening, March 9, Alpha Shaner and Lucille Reid gave very ^^atur”e his," unti/n'ow* beTn' ufe with those of of's^xtren'wl^m sre^playe^d with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. I rhythmical structure is deUghtlully original. Both Mr. Vardell and Miss Read played with great skill ne^Sunt'c;:dsa^s:s:^ Mount. N. C.; Jane Noble, Annis- HOME ECONOMICS CLUB GIVES SILVER DR. MIMS OF VANDERBILT IS WEDNESDAY MORNING SPEAKER Vanderbilt Professor Addresses Audience on Value of Literature in General and Poetry In Particular. up something unreal. Poetry is a result of imaginative power, but one must have, the right conception of imagmation. Imagination is the power which makes one realize and visualize. It makes possible com parisons, similes and metaphors. which ideas and emotions are ex- The expanded chapel service on Wednesday, March eleventh, was me of unusual interest. Dr. Edwin Mims of Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, was the ipeaker. Dr. Mims was cordially ^e oil supply gave out. Nero’s tion and love of poetry, and to make it a permanent resource of life. Many people have found their life- purified by filtration, and distilled, (2) alcohol, (3) fatty bodies, (4) yellow and white wax, (5) essential oils and perfumes, (6) coloring ma- DR. EDWIN P. MIMS fo"und^sLTthrng‘tLt*wTll take the drudgery out of the routine. nfed"nTt“tttract”tlt'''attentioi Great poets have touched hi Ruggles of Red Gap Is MacDowell Picture ^''"“Ln'ld'orSaturday‘Evening By MacDowell Club. Harry Leon Wilson’s “Ruggles of the evils of class distinction in Eng land and the uselessness of such a The ^first ^^scenes are iaid in^ a ; to men of different types of =st at the University of Tech- ;y of California. Only in this was he able to discover what iSllSi of English, but to every one. He p-x cLtpti:ro7a^::t.‘^ m witrifng hair, wild eyes and some persons. Van Dyke is a man alive to everything around him; and pie and kindly men. ^^t^s true th Tlien there is the subject matter. So often one thinks of poetry as ,e friendly with Kate Kenner. Mrs"' Flored ""takTs \im to Paris’ where an Earl’s valet is employed to raise Egbert to the dite ing Mr. Flored from a rought cattle beh'!^vi(Ir,* that she Lds it necessary to return to Red Gap. ^ ^ ^ "ale't Is “ Colond" Ruggles of and. Socials and receptions are , with whom he is in love.

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