Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Feb. 28, 1931, edition 1 / Page 3
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Saturday, February 28, 1931 THE SALEMITE Page Three. ! SOCIETY 1 Ernestine Theis is spending the \yeek-end at home in Charlotte. She will have as her guest. Julia Brown ,] ennings. Pat Holderness left Friday for Charlottesville, Virginia where she will attend the Carolina-Virginia boxing match. Elizabeth Leake, Ann McKinnon, Ruth Mccleod, Gerty McNair, Mary Looper. Dot Hammond, Bet Miller, Grace Brown, Elsie Chandler and Adelaide Foil will spend Sunday in Greensboro. Sue Jane Mauney is at home for the week-end. The Student Volunteer Conference is to be held in Chapel Hill this week-end. The girls from Salem at tending are: Dorothy Heidenreich, Zina Vologodsky, Elizabeth Marx, Essie Hendricks, Lucy Currie, Wan na Mary Huggins, Grace Martin and Catherine Schlegel. Alda Barker is spending the week end with Margaret Johnson in Ral eigh. Robin Fraley and Frances Mauney will spend Sunday in Statesville. Irene MacAnally, Emily Boyer, Louise Kearns^ and Georgia Hunt ingdon will be in High Point Sun- The following girls are spending the weekend in their respective homes: Mary Gwyn Hickerson, Cath erine Lyerly, Miriam Stevenson, Dorothy Abernathy, Miriam Hadly, Dorabelle Graves, Sara Graves, Ade laide Silversteen, Ethlyn Barger, Pokey Dunn, Mary and Elizabeth Price, and Virginia Tomilson. Lily Marshall and Margaret Smith will spend Sunday in Leakesville. MAKING IDEALS LIVABLE TOPIC FOR VESPERS (Continued From Page One) ideal of reading. We should choose those books and magazines and newspapers which tally closely with our ambitions and ideals. In consideration of ideals, that of amusements should not be over looked. How much time should rightfully be devoted even to good recreation? Choose between the good and bad amusements, and then be careful not to choke your life with either one. We all have am bitions and talents, and we have not the right to center our thoughts and actions on things that do not touch them and measure up to our ideals and to clutter up our lives and tire ourselves out with trifling interests. We will be paupers in our lives if we don’t attend to the big things in their proper order. Family, friends, and God should not be confined to the scraps of our time and consid eration. In conclusion, Mr. Spaugh placed before his audience three ways to make our individual and collective ideas livable, namely; strong determ ination, strong will, and petition to God for help. The combination of these three, with the emphasis, of course, on the last, will make suc cessful living principles of our ideals. PIERRETTE PLAYERS PRE SENT SUCCESSFUL PLAY (Continued From Page One) A Blind Man Agnes Pollock Catherine Mary Elizabeth Holcomb Mary B. Williams Mille. de la Garandierf Grace Martin The play was under the direction of Miss Adelaide Winston, and its success was due in great part to her excellent coaching of the universally clever lines, and the various situa tions involved which were difficult both for actor and for director. NOTED SPEAKER IS HEARD AT EXPANDED CHAPEL HOUR (Continued From Page One) The Third Measurement is her use of the Creator’s rarest gift to woman^ the gift of modesty—mod esty which comes in the earliest years, and lasts until death. It is modesty that makes her do her best, do the most, and suffer and sacrifice more. When woman loses the gift of modesty, she is led to be uncon scious of her power. The third important question is, “How, has she used her greatest power.'*” Conditions of life every where suggest that she has not used her power as she should. Whenever a person goes from city to city, North, South, East and West, Eur ope or Asia, he finds conditions, which, when contact has been made, makes him feel the need of a “men tal and spiritual bath with a lot of disinfectant.” These conditions do not exist because women have wil fully made them thus, but they could not be without her consent. Life comes to woman’s level. Even in India where the position of wom an is lowest, woman has stopped movements which man has been re solved to make. Woman is un doubtedly master; the tide of life will come to her, whether it be up or down. The decision rests with woman always, for woman is an ir resistible magnet. Let her take her stand and the tide will invariably come to her level. The fourtlli and last important question is, “How shall she use her greater power.?” Personal touchy especially in the form of organiza tion is a excellent way. Yet there is one thing higher—she may use her greater power by surrendering to Jesus as a master, so that He may sway her life, personality and oe- eomplishment. Dr. Gordon stated that he did not bring Jesus into the discussion from the standpoint of Jesus, but from woman’s standpoint. Jesus has always been woman’s best friend. It was He who broke her shackles and freed her. Whenever Jesus’s in fluence is greater, woman’s place is higher. She may best use her power by yielding her life to Jesus, for it is He who is able to bring out the sweetest melodies and the greatest worth of all things. SALEM SCHOOL OF MUSIC TO GIVE RECITAL (Continued From Page One) Other piano numbers will be Korn- gold’s “Brownies,” played by Miss Irene Clay, and Rachmaninoff’s graceful “Barcarolle” in G minor, which will be interpreted by Miss Martha McKay. Miss Maria Bowen, violinist, will play the finale from the “Fantasia Appasionata,” by Vieuxtemps. The organ department will be represent ed by Miss Mary Frances Cash, in structor in theory in the School of Music and post-graduate student in organ. She will play the last move ment from Louis Vierne’s “First Organ Symphony.” Students appearing in this con cert are from the classes of Laurie R. Jones, Hazel Horton Read, Ern est L. Schofield and Charles G. Var- dell, Jr. Y. ASSOCIATION HOLDS INDUSTRIAL MEETING (Continued From Page One) has been preserved and “butter cakes” are still served on “Butter Cake” day in Russia. After several beautiful selections by Elizabeth McClaugherty and Wil- helmina Wohlford, and a Russian dance by Zinaida Vologodsky, re freshments were served with attrac tive George Washington favors. There are trees in California 1,500 years old,” says a travel booklet. What an opportunity for a conscientious manufacturer of an tique furniture! I Intercollegiate News + Agriculturists elect Dr. Brooks as new President. President E.| E. Brooks was elected president of Ag ricultural Workers at a meeting of tliat body in Atlanta, Ga. last week. State I debaters break wins by losing to Wake Forest. This is State’s first loss of the season. Dr. J. K. Pfohl addressed the Mo ravians students and faculty at a banquet last Wednesday evening. The subject of his address was “The College Man in a Changing World.” A campaign to raise contributions to the N. C. Baptist Emergency I'und was conducted here during the cliapel hour Wednesday morning. The total fund raised amounted to $2,335.50, and there are still more contributions to be made. Farmville: The Student Body elected Lucile Mulnan as Queen of May, and Ella Carroll as Maid of Honor State boxers defeated tlie Citadel last Saturday night in Charlottes ville for their first win in the inter collegiate sport. NO TIME TO QUIT There’s 1 a time to part and a time to There’s a time to sleep and a time to There’s a time to work and a time to There’s i a time to sing and a time to pray. There’s time that’s glad and a time that’s blue, There’s ; a time to plan and a time to do There’s 1 a 'time to grin and to show your grit. But there never was a time to quit. SOUNDS Old songs I’ve loved, old haunting melodies That sing in trees on blue-gray April nights. The sound of water racing in a stream And echoes of a bird’s call on the heights. These sounds I’ve loved and treas ured in my heart Like winds that whisper in long fields of wheat. But that was long before I knew and loved The echoes of your footsteps down my street. FICTION APRIL FOOLS By Compton MacKenzie It is a relief to find that so spright ly a writer as Mr. Mackenkie has persuaded himself to forget his war time adventures in the secret service and return to fiction. In “April Fools” he has written a story that is always amusing and often riotously funny. John Touchwood, successful writer of romantic plays, being plagued with a collection of more or less worthless brothers and sisters and in-laws, invites them to a birth day dinner^ marries his secretary, and sails for America on a honey moon. At the dinner a letter is read from the absent host informing his relatives that he has deeded to them his country estate, one-fifth to each brother or sister and tlieir families, together with sufficient money for the upkeep of the place. So there they are, the whole lot of them, settled down at Ambles, most of them cordially disliking the others, and each plotting to get the rest out of the way and enter into poses- sion of their shares. The humorous possibilities of the situation are obivious, and Mr. Mackenzie has a thoroughly good time dealing with them. The reader has just as good a time following this unusual experi ment in joint housekeeping and its unexpected denouncement. —The Saturday Review of Liter- CTU R E Your ||jJ?0:buCT Viith P I E DMLONT £H3RAVIH G ' • COMPANY• PHONE 2916 WlNSTON-SAlEM._N.C.^ I Simmons Shoe Store NEW ARRIVALS DAILY BLUES, SEA SAND, REPTILE MODERATELY PRICED ATTRACTIVE STYLES O’H ANLON’S If you want to be served just right— Come to O’Hanlon’s for Sodas, Ice Cream And Sandwiches O’HANLON’S DRUG STORE IS THE PLACE The Big Drug Store on the Corner FIRST TO SHOW THE NEW FIFTH AVE. VANITY BAG A brand new and utterly exquisite bag that will instantly appeal to the College Miss. Also other styles of New Handbags including Underarms, Pouches, Top-Handles, etc. $1.95 — $2.95 — $4.95. THE IDEAL DRY GOODS COMPANY Trade and West Fourth Streets JEWELRY AND WATCH REPAIRS Given special attention and all work guaranteed Our repair department is well equipped to take care of any kind of jewelry and watch repairs. Our prices reasonable. V O G L E R ’ S, Jeweler Fourth and Cherry Huntley-Hill-Stockton Company The Name That Belongs with Good Furniture THE PLACE FOR VICTOR RECORDS “Electricity—The Servant in the Home” It does the cooking, refrigerating, sweep ing, washing, ironing and other tasks—and does them all more efficiently and with the expenditure of less effort on the part of the housewife than you can imagine. If your home is not thoroughly electrified you are missing much that makes life worth while. SOUTHERN PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY Southern Dairies The Velvet Kind Ice Cream A Complete Dairy Service Throughout The City
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Feb. 28, 1931, edition 1
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