Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Sept. 26, 1925, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Salem College Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
POUR SALEMITE Second Showing of NEW FALL COATS, COSTUME SUITS AND DRESSES 219 W. Fourth Street BALBRIGGAN SUITS, ALL SHADES $10.95 Salem Col- TTClIdlC S lege Girls-Just A round the Corner. We welcome you at all times. NEW "PERFECT” RECORDS All the n V Dance Hits are here, —hear them played. 49c Shingling - Bobbing - And— FIRST CLASS BARBER SERVICE—Our Mr. Willis with 9 years of experience can give you first class service. Special service to Salem Girls. VISIT OUR BEAUTY PARLOR^ECOND FLOOR. Senior Class Holds Important Meeting Election of Song Leaders, Marshals and Mascot. The Senior Class held an im portant meeting in the living room of Alice Clewell Building, at seven o’clock, September 22. It was necessary to elect a song leader, and Elsie Harris was chosen to fill the office, with Elsie irnes as assistant. Rosa Caldwell, Editor-in-Chief of Sights and Insights, announc ed that copy for the Annual, last and testament, class history, class poem, must be turned in tc her within three weeks. Little Bettie Bahnson, Daugh ter of Mr. A. H. Bahnson, who trustee of Salem College, was elected as mascot for the Senior Class, and the following marshals were elected: Fresh- Anne Hairston and Edna Lindsay; Sophomore, Margaret Brookes, Cordelia Shaner, Rachel Phillips and Virginia Griffin; Junior, Jenny Wolf, Elizabeth Hastings and Eliza beth Transou. Large Enrollment Of On And Off Campus Students Salem College has on its regis tration lists this year an un usually large number of stu dents, with a particularly large freshman class. There are two hundred and eight boarding students and eighty-seven off campus girls, making a total of two hundred and ninety-five. The following is a list of new boarding students: Elizabeth Andrews, Grimville Margaret Banks, Wilson; Susie Batts, Wilson; Agnes Dublin, Virginia; Cecilia Cape- hart Bell, Windsor; Marguerite Biesel, Gulf, Texas; Mabel Black- well, Rocky Mount; Virginia Blakely, Monroe; Monte Blalock, Raleigh; Marion Bloor, Trenton, New Jersey; Dorothy Blount, Rocky Mount; Marie Blue, Rae- ford; Cam Boren, Greensboro: Jay Bow'ers, Sevierville, Tenn essee ; Eugenia Brown, Ashe ville ; Jennie G. Brown, Concord; Marian Bryson, Bi-yson City; Thelma Hazel Cagle, Henderson ville; Dorothy Call, North Wilkesboro; Penelope Cannon, Concord; Nnnie Carey, Seneca; Margaret Cooley, Knoxville, Tennessee; Margaret Cozad, Franklin; Elizabeth Crouse, Winston-Salem; Letitia Currie, Davidson College; Julia Daniels, Elm City; Mary Deans, Wilson; Byi-d Duckw'orth, Kernersville; Isabel Dunn, Kinston; Charlotte Easton, Oxford; Alice Ebom, Salisbury; Mary Fathener, Goldsboro; Margaret Farthing, Durham; Zora Foy, Reidsville; Frances Gilldroy, Marion; Eliza beth Gillhoy, Marion Grantham, Smithfield; Sarah Hall, Alexis; Lina Hallayburton, Marganton; Mary Alice Harding, Raleigh; Margaret Hauser, High Point; Eamestine Hays, High Point; Frances Hayes, Auou- dale; Margaret Henderson, New Bern; Wilma Holt, Burlington: Elizabeth King, Albemarle; Elizabeth Klutz, Salisbury^ Ce leste Knoefield, Black Mountain; Frances Landis, Oxford; Rubye Lenville, Kernersville; Katherine Long, Charlotte; Mary Spencer Loed, Lincolnton; Mary Duncan McAnally, High Point; Fannie Rojrers Mann, Raleigh; Frances Massey, Ocola, Florida; Patty Matheson, Lenoir; Margaret Lee Milner, Reidsville; Martha Moye, Greenville; Virginia Neal, Mon roe; Lilyan Newell, Wilmington Beverly Jones Osborn, Louis ville, Kentucky; Margaret Ellen Patterson, Albemarle; Ellen Peery, Tazewell, Virginia; Beu lah Petway, Goldsboro; Rachel Phillips, Lenwood; Maude Ar rington Phillips, Battleboro; Emily Polloch, New Bern; Lacio Prevette, North Wilkesboro Katherine Pollian, Lenoir Dorothy Ragan, Atlanta, Ga.; Elizabeth Rominger, Winston- Salem ; Elizabeth Roper, Dan ville, Virginia; Elizabeth Roun tree, Kinston; Edwine Rowe, Bennetsville, South Carolina; Agnes Russell, Drakes Branch, Virginia; Ruble Scott, Mebane; Beth Slocp, Statesville; Maiy Louise Smith, Farmville; Kate Speas, Booneville; Virginia Stainback, Greensboro; Eiiza- beth Stallings, Durham; Eliba- l)eth Stocks, Reidsville' Annie Lucile Thomason, T exington Agnes Thorne, Airlie; Penlope Tipton, Stony Point, Tenness Eula Transou, Winston-Salem; Henrietta Underwood, Ashe- boro; Leonora Wilder, Galveston, Texas; Mary Williams Dallas. North Carolina; Mary William- Mebane; Frances W'ilson, Easton, Pennsylvania; Elizabeth Wilson, Charlotte; Doris W( ten, Kinston; Mary Pahe Woo- n. Hickory. FOR SALE: Flexible leather memory books with college seal embossed on cover. Three dol lars and seventy-five cents each the price. College pennants Salem colors are sold for t\vo dollars apiece. See Fannie Person Rudge. Home Economics Club Is Organized For Coming Year Janice Warner Is Made President and Other Officers are Elected. The Home Economics Club held the first meeting of the year last Tuesday afternoon, at four- thirty, in the campus living of Alice Clewell Building. The meeting was for purposes of i-ganization, and for the elec tion of officers, a list of which is as. follows: President, Janice Warner; Vice-President, EKza- beth Hobgood; Secretary, Dorothy Rosemond; Treasurer, Louise Culler; Head of Publicity Department, Eva Flowers; Chairman of Program Com mittee, Evelyn Graham. After the business was concluded, social hour followed. Lilyan Newell sang two solos, and tea was served. LOST AND FOUND LOST: Graded Readings— used in Commercial Course. Finder please return to Room 303, Main Hall. LOST: Fraternity pin, with pearls. Finder please re turn to Pauline Griffith, campus students’ room. LOST: ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW FOR The College Girl AT ROSENBACHER’S THE STORE OF SERVICE Latest Styles in Hose and Footwear BELCHER-FORLAW SHOE CO. ACADEMY ATHLETICS FOUND: In infirmary, pair of beauty pins. FOUND: In Main Hall, silver compact.—Ruth Pfohl. LOST: Locker key, number thirteen. Please return Margaret Shai^p, off campus students’ room. LOST: Fraternity pin. Gamma Alpha, diamond shaped. Please return to Agnes Bell, Room 301, fourth floor. Main Building. LOST: One Freshman Eng lish book, “Sentence and Think- Please return to Marie Blue, Room F., Society Hall. LOST: Coin purse.- beth Hastings. -Eliza- The Athletic Association needs and depends upon every Academy girl on the campus and off for a good spirit and pep athletics this year. The Tennis Singles Tournament has started with thirty girls working for the chr.mpionship. Volley ball prac tice begins September 21 and girls are needed to play on their class team. A team from each will be selected for the final Soccer will begin in a very few weeks and again girls needed, so don’t fail us. Walking is a favorite sport and will be started right away. At the athletic meeting held September 15, a committee was appointed to work out the point system and plan the year’s work.' The members of the committee Eleanor Willingham, Day Student, Ann Cooke, Senior, Dion Armfield, Junior, Virginia Perkinson, Sophomore, Virginia Harris, Freshman. Elvira Hudson was elected Head of Tennis and Virginia Harris Head of Volley Ball. There is a splendid organiza tion with plenty of pep but all those not now members :'ged to join. DORMITORY REGULATIONS All rooms must be in order by 11 A. M.; beds made; shoes the racks in the closet; towels the racks in the closets: ■atories clean and in order; tables and dressers in perfect order; no wet wash on the foot of the beds. See that your g iron is detached. Please empty all waste baskets into the large containers bathrooms. Throw nothing out of the windows. Please take care of the walls. All decorations must be hung either from the moulding or by means of thumb tacks or ad hesive tape. Please do not use tacks or nails. No food may be carried from the Dining Room except fruit and cake, and positively dishes or silver. All food in your must be kept in tin con tainers. Use the kitchenettes for all pressing and cooking. No pres sing or cooking may be done in the student rooms. All clothing must be marked with woven name tapes. e of illness, go at once to the Infirmary. Neither the college nurse nor the Infirmary maid can be called upon to give private room service. In case of FIRE, when the alarms ring: Be absolutely O’HANLON’S DRUG STORE Shop at Winston-Salem’ Handsomest Drug Store and at the Same Time Save Money. $1.25 Cotys Pace Powder 89c $1.00 Ozona Face Powder 79c .60c Pompeian Face Powder 48c •50c Hine’s Honey & Almond Cream 39c .3.')C Frostilla 29c .50c Prophylactic Tooth Brush 39c O’Hanlon’s is the Place. CORNER 4th & LIBERTY STS. DR. J. A. TAYLOR DENTAL SURGEON 334 S. Main Street WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. OLD SALEM INN And food SHOP LUNCHES, AFTERNOON teas, DINNERS, and PARTIES. Salads, SandwicKes, Beverages and Food Specialties. quiet, close all windows, raise the shades, turn on the lights, open the doors, come down the stair ways on the INSIDE. Students may entertain sisters and girl friends as guests, free of charge for the first day and night with permission from the Dean. After the first twenty-four hours, a charge of ?2. per day is payable at the ursar’s OfBce. All guests must live strictly under the house rules. Each student may bring into the din ing room, free of charge, two guests a month, provided the dining room Matron is notified. All other guests for meals will be charged 50 cents per meal, payable to the dining room Matron.
Salem College Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 26, 1925, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75