PAGE FOUR.
THE SALEMITE
SatUrd,ay, April ] 3j 1929,
Among Those Pres
ent at Nursery
School
This is an age of youth. Indeed
it is! Salem is becoming so juve
nile that many of the classes are
being sent to the nursery school.
Miss Forman was so surprised at
the shocking display of ignorance in
her classes that she arranged with
Miss Hobart to send a number of
the girls over for special training.
One would think that the track
team was using Academy street as a
practice field if they did not know
that these girls ambling toward 1611
are merely little tots going to school.
It is only about two miles, mostly
uphill to the school, and the chil
dren enjoy their little saunters over
there on these lovely warm days.
Miss Hobart has been so kind as
to ask these girls to enter right
into the spirit of the thing and they
are doing wonderfully well.
The program for the day is very
interesting and when one knows the
children it becomes really exciting.
At 8:30 a doctor goes over to give
a personal examination to each
child. They are so cunning when
they open their little mouths wide
and say, “Ah-h.” Ross Walker real
ly has a lovely little musical tone
to her “ah” but after his first look
the doctor said her heart was much
too big for her little body. We al
ways suspected it—but why did she
have it in her throat?
At nine o’clock the children play
out on the lawn and in the sandpile.
It really is a treat to see Nell
Reeves and little Gene Smith having
a rough-and-tumble over the sand
pile. They had a lovely time but
Mrs. Reeves didn’t She had to spend
two hours getting the sand out of
Nell’s hair and her rompers aren’t
clean yet.
At ten o’clock the children have
fruit juice, after they have washed
their hands. Essie Hendricks
wouldn’t wash hers and she didn’t
get anything to drink. Estie Lee
C;lore drank hers and Alathea Mc
Donald’s too. That’s the way those
husky kids do the little ones. Speak
ing of young Miss McDonald, we
wonder if her daddy knows that she
wants a kitty-fur coat. That’s what
she told us one day. That red-head-
cil Betty Lou has a coat with white
kitty on the cuffs and collar, and
Miss McDonald thinks its lovely.
We heard her call up her father
over a little blue telephone at the
school, but he didn’t seem very re
sponsive.
Mildred Fleming has been ex
pelled because she kicked one of
the children in the face when they
were making their feet go like sails
one morning. Marjorie Siewers and
Eleanor Willingham eat so much
that Miss Hobart always dismisses
them at eleven-thirty. Ruth Carter
has to leave them, too, because she
sings in her sleep and disturbs the
children during the afternoon nap.
In spite of all these little things
most of the girls are getting along
all right and will probably be
graduated in the early summer.
HIGH SCHOOL PRESENTS
PROGRAM IN MUSIC HOUR
(Continued from Page One)
Barcarolle Scharwenha
Jeannette Meinung
Spanish Carnival ' Hatch
Marion Mitchell
O cessati di piagarmi. Scarlatti
Charlotte Duffy
Adieu to the Pianoforte....Beettowere
Virginia Allen
The Storm - Burgmuller
Doris Clayton
Minuetto Schubert
(from Sonata in B flat Minor)
Margaret Schwarze
Song of the East Cyril Scott
Doris Linville
Yesteryear Crist
Sylvia Speaks
Blanche Phillips
Scherzo in B Flat Schubert
Edwina Snyder
Sketch Dubois
Chorus and Dance of the Elves
Dubois
Margaret Johnson
Invention in C Major Bach
Song MacDowell
James Pfohl
THE MIRROR OF FRIENDSHIP
In the Mirror of Friendship :
girl-) arc reflected straight and
strong; some lop-sided and twisted.
The girl who cultivates one girl
friend to the exclusion of others
lop-sided. The girl wlio chooses her
boy friends for their good looks
stead of their fine worthiness,
twisted. What kind of friends
have you?
And what kind of friend are ;
Do you “fall out” with your friends
over the slightest provocation ? Have
you a spirit of genuine friendliness
toward the new girl in school, or
the lonely girl or the girl who is
0 shy?
Can you honestly say that you
e good friends with your family ?
Does your mother turn to you for
companionship? Does your father
knpw that you appreciate him, o
have you made him feel that he i
merely the family pocket book
Does your “kid brother” or small
sister say of you. “If you don’1
know what I mean, ask my sister
she always understands”?
All true friendship and love have
fundamental basis of confidence
id trust. If built on any less sure
foundation they cannot last. Whole
some comradeship grows into a deep
and abiding love which miles cannot
lessen or years destroy.
CLOTHES THAT TALK
In answer to a letter of apology,
these words came to a girl from a
friend whom she loved: “Anyone
who knows you knows you wouldn’t
voluntarily give a false impression.”
And the words made her think.
There isn’t a girl who doesn’t
loathe false impressions. But what
kind of an impression is a girl
giving when she wears an expensive
coat she really cannot afford,
and that won’t be actually hers un
til she has made a dozen more pay
ments? Are your mother’s and
your grandmother’s clothes so in
keeping with yours that you would
not be the least bit embarassed at
meeting your friends when either of
them was with you? What about
the girl who works for money to
buy silk stockings and delicate
clothes, while her father pays all
her living eixpenses—isn’t she giving
a false impression of how one
live on fifteen dollars a week?
Almost the only way you speak
to strangers you meet day by day
is through your clothes. Some timt
you may pick up a fallen packagt
for someone, and smile a word
of greeting or encouragement, but
for the most part it is your clothes
that speak for you. What kind of
impression are they giving—true i
—The Girls’ Everyday Booh.
,At a French class meeting a Vic
tor Hugo program was offered. A
speech was made on “The Half-
Back of Notre Dame.”
“Do
“It ,
J'OU think it will stop i
Iways has.”
“Mama, George Washington must
have had a good memory.”
“Why, son?”
“Because everywhere I go I fine
a monument to his memory.”
Barber College Yell.
Cut their faces.
Rip each jaw.
Leave their faces.
Raw, raw, raw!
D.
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G. Craven Co,
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Revolution
Students are the bane of despotic
sovernmenf-.s. More than one revo
lution has received its initial im
pulse from them. During the month
of March students must have given
sleepless nights, to at least two dic-
In Spain a student strike against
the dictatorship of Primo de Rivera
ipread rapidly from Madrid to the
provincial universities, as a protest
ii.st the severe punitive measures
ed upon the five hundred cadets
of the Artillery School at Segovia
who took part in the recent revolu
tionary uprising. At least ten stud
ents were killed in street fighting
and twelve hundred jailed.
From Venezuela come persistent
rumors of unrest, just as persistently
denied by President Juan Vincente
Gomez. It was not, however, denied
that the two hundred students who
have been building roads for the
Government in the interior of the
country as a consequence of their
unsuccessful attempts to overthrow
the dictator a year ago, have been
sent to an island prison in the Bay
of Puerto Cabello. It is reported
that they were fomenting uprisings
the tropical labor camps and had
be put in isolation as the dreaded
anniversary of their revolt ap
proached.
MISSES ROPER-SARGENT
GIVE BRILLIANT RECITAL
(Continued From Page One)
was altogether delightful.
Mendelssohn’s “On Wings of
Song” was the first number of Miss
Sargent’s last group, and was played
with a great depth of tone and ex
pression. Her stacatto w’ork in the
Lehar-Kreisler “Frasquita,” was es
pecially pleasing to the audience. In
the two “Hungarian Poems,” by Hu-
bay with their unusual harmonic and
characteristic rhythms, Miss Sar
gent’s interpretation was very bril
liant and effective, and, throughout
her playing was characterized by a
most pleasing and artistic tone. Miss
Ruth Marsden accompanied in a
most sympathetic style.
The program was brought to a
close with the brilliant Mendelssohn
Concerto in G Minor, played by
Miss Roper showed great dexterity
ip the difficult runs and trills. She
played the entire Concerto with
much beauty and skill.
Johnny: “Look at that rhinocer-
Willie: “That ain’t no rhinoceros.
That’s a hippopotamus. Can’t you
it ain’t got no radiator cap? ’
My idea of a dumb man is or
who opehs a shooting gallery :
Chicago.
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Pat: “How would you like to I
buried in a Jewish cemetery?”
Mike: “I’d die first!”
Is your son’s education at college
of any real value?”
“Yes, indeed. It has entirely
cured his mother of bragging about
They laughed when 1 walked over
to the piano but their laughter
turned to amazement when I calmly
picked up the piano and threw it at
them. I have not taken Earl Leid-
erman’s lessons in vain.
LEARN THE PIANO IN
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TENOR-BANJO OR
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LESSONS
lord style. In your® very 1
m will be able to play a popular num
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