Page Four.
THE SALEMITE
Saturday, October 3, 1931.
§IP€ICTILIieiHT
“GROUND STICKS!
GROUND STICKS!
GROUND STICKS!
BULLY!”
Yep, hockey practice has already
begun for those girls who are inter
ested in going to Harrisonburg to
the Virginia-Carolina Field Hockey
Association meeting to be held the
last of October, and for those girls
who know their hockey and can
wait for tlie season to begin.
The real hockey season will begi
in a few weeks, immediately after
soccer. Hockey is to be a m '
sport this year and, even if
don’t think you’re any good, ren
her Miss “At” can make something
out of nothing—and the Tlianksgiv-
ing banquet after the Thanksgiving
games is something to write home
about.
Whether you know how to “push-
pass” or to “drive by” or whether
you are one-celled or many-celled
doesn’t make any difference. Fresh-
ies, come out, show the upper-class-
me’n that you are not a “bully” but
World Events
n “bully” and should “bully.”
With Bebe Hyde as manager of
•iding tliere is no need for bottling
moonshine; she knows how to take
advantage of it. On Monday night
Bebe took a bunch of pals out and
got them high on their horses and
then took them out to sea the
moon from horseback. It didn’t take
the horses long to sense the pep of
the bunch, and although the girls
came back tight in their coats, the
ride was a scream.
Bebe says she will “take you for
a ride” any afternoon you can go
and if you’re still a pal ma_vbe she’ll
show you the still of the moonshine
again provided you apply fo
horse the day before through either
Misi
“At.”
Intercollegiate News
A’. C. C. IV-, Greensboro, N. C. :
As a result of the convention of
campus leaders at Silver Pines camp,
the N. C. C. W. handbook has been
revised and several new rules added.
Some of tliese are as follows:
Freslnnen are the only students
for wliom light restrictions are r
cssary. Others may use their c
Upperclassmen may play bridge
with callers in the dormitory parlors
;niy night except Sunday.
There is no charge for guests
ing in the dormitory, provided her
hostess registers her with the house
president the day before her ar:
The newest social privilege is that
cf four new dances. Each society
may have a dance witl) men sometime
during the year.
Duke University, Durham, N. C.:
The formal opening of the Duke
school of Religion was conducted last
Tuesday evening in York Chapel.
The impressive program was carried
through in the regular procedure of
Methodist worship.
Tliis school is of especial interest
because it is the only school ii
South solely for aspiring minis
Chip Lehrbact is the snappy band
drum major who will lead Duke s
sixty-five piece band this year.
Jl'alce Forest College, Wake Forest
N.
Promiscuous hazing of freshmen
has been abolished by the Student
C:ouncil of Wake Forest. This year
all freshman trials and punishments
are in the hands of the Student
Council and upperclassmen are
privileged only to make complaints.
This ruling was made to eliminate
the severe and often unjust hazings
of tlu! ]>ast.
With a phoo-o-o-o the hall
brought back to center and the first
soccer kick-off of the year was made
Tuesday afternoon at three-thirt;
Approximately thirty soccer ge
es (including Freshmen)
the practice.
Althougli the soccer season will be
cut short this year and hockey stick
work will be supplemented along
with soccer practice. Manager Aitch-
ison and Miss Atkinson are planning
some good class games within tlu
next few weeks. Y'ou’d better start
practicing your kicks (but careful
who’s in front of you) and incident
ally bring a few down t(
this week.
Tennis—
If Margaret Wall and Cokey
Preston can get together in their
tennis match, then the winner will be
ready to play either Sarah Jetton (
Margaret Ward. From these thrt
then the champion for the Freshies
will be drawn. Freshies, don’t keep
us guessing who is your champ
Come on, out with it. We c
ACADEMY NEWS
Tuesday afternoon after lunch the
girls from the Academy came over
to the college library to hear a talk
by Miss Grace Siewers. At this
time Miss Siewers, the college li
brarian, talked on correct rules and
procedure to use in a library.
Overnight trips are about to be
come habits at Salem Academy. Th
week-end a group of girls are having
a most interesting time. They leit
the Academy yesterday afternoon
and rode in a truck to the cabin of
Mr. Paul Taylor who lives beyond
Danbury. Saturday’s program
sists of a hike to the cascades and
also to Moore’s Knob in the i
ing. The girls plan to return to the
Academy Saturday afternoon,
I.ast Sunday Evening Miss Mary
Mitchell Westall spoke to the Cos
mopolitan Club. This club is com
posed of about ten girls who list
ened eagerly to Miss Westall’s talk
on “The Dialect of the Mountain-
JVashington, D.
President Hoover seeks to reduce
$60,000,000 the budget of the
Navy for the coming j^ear in view of
ixisting economic conditions,
vill mean less expansion of the
than the $40,000,000 original
ly proposed for the fiscal year 1932-
3.3 would have caused.
r Copeland of New York
readjustment of the moi
tary system of the United States
that the nation’s gold resources m
be put to work. He also says there
ihould be international action with a
, iew to bringing about monetary
formity.
Samoa:
An epidemic of influenza, which
has been spreading rapidly through
the Samoan islands lias already in
fected 2,000 of the inliabitants, in
cluding (iO of tlie United States
Xav.al personnel stationed there. So
f;ir there has been only one death.
France and Germany have united
in a trade co-operation plan, and
tend to develop tlie Soviet marl
One of the main ideas of the plan
will he to map out a large scheme for
entering jointly the Eastern Euro
pean export markets with France as
the financier and Germany as the
manufacturer. If this plan works
out it will be a trcmedous help to
ward the solving of both the national
and financial problems and discords
of the two nations.
Russia:
It seems that Russia with her five
year plan is still far from immune
to the effects of the economic depres
sion. She has announced that during
the present Five-Year Plan and all
five-year plans to come she will con
centrate on goods production rathei
than the building up of industrial
■ganizations.
At the Theatres I
CAROLINA
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
“MY SIN”
In My Sin, sleepy-eyed Tallulah
Bankhead, a real senator’s daughter,
is a woman who tries to deceive
everyone, including herself, and
Fredric March, an ardent admirer, is
the one who refuses to be deceived.
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
CAUGHT PI.ASTERED”
In Caught Plastered, Robert Wool-
sey and Bert Wheeler are even more
foolish than they were before. Tin.'-
is a good chance to work off some
of the added knowledge you’ve ac
quired this week.
STATE
Monday and Tuesday
“THE BRAT”
IVednesday and Thursday
“STAR WITNESS’
Fri
D Satui
HARD HOMBRES”
Sally O’Neil, whom we’ve missed
dreadfully, has finally came back as
a starved street girl who is taken in
by a handsome writer. Frank Albert
son and Allen Dinehart help make
The Brat a worth while picture.
Anyone who has read The Special
ist is already counting her pennies
to see Chic Sale in The Star Jl’itnes.'!.
me of us are rather tired of “gan';
•tures,” but this one really is dif
ferent. Chic Sale does admirable
acting as the veteran grandfather
who is not afraid of anyone. Walter
Huston, as a public inspector jirove
that not all public inspectors are
WELCOME I
SALEM
HATS
$2-95 TO $0.50
Style of Distinction
I College Hat Shop |
STEE-GEE CIRCUS
Did you ever get up at o’clock in the] morning the circus came
to town to watch it unload ? That was when you were a little hag
in Grammar School and short dresses—but you’ve got just one month
in whicli to lose enough age to make you feel little-hagish enough all
over again to get all a-twit over a circus. One is coming—and on
Halloween! (Y^ou’ll probably see a combination Ghost-Clown in the
side-show. That’s not a promise—just a hint). This is a promise
though—you’ll see sights you’ve been missing for years; you’ll smell
all the exciting, indigestible smells; you’ll eat all the gooseslime you
trv so hard the resist . . . and you’ll sit on bleachers with tent-flaps
behind you and watch your Stee Gees make monkeys of themselves.
Keep this on your mind. Something to look forward to will make
October seem only about half as long as I''ebruary on unleap years.
You won’t have to get up at ????? o’clock to see the Stee Gee Circus,
but you’ll stay up until ?.^?? o’clock Halloween night exclaiming
about it.
This announcement is a continued story—you haven’t heard the
last of it yet! W’atch for the next installment—Sideshow Zoo-ology,
and be deciding whether you or your room-mate would he a better
specimen for the cage labelled “Actual Living Proof of the Darwin
Theory.”
Measure me, sky!
Tell me I reach by a song
Nearer the stars;
I have been little so long.
CTU
RQ.D
E D»lONT
. ENGRAVING'
• COMPANY- :
PHOHE29I6 WINSTON-SAi.^.N.C,.-
NEW SPORT COATS
Just roceived of IcalluM’ a’ul novelty woolen materials.
Snappy styles fcr the College Girls
D. G. CRAVEN COMPANY
ATHLETIC COUNCIL
WEEK-ENDS AT HANES
(Continued from Page One.)
under a typical Carolina m.oon which
lit the lake like thousands of danc
ing fireflies. Others played bridge
and danced until bedtime and then
went to their shacks to take a snooze !
of that good mountain sleep which
Ruth Carter says comes “after the ^
lights won’t work.” j
Sunday morning at nine-thirty an
appetizing breakfast of weiners
cooked in chili, oranges, toast, and i
hot chocolate was entirely consumed !
by the late sleepers. The remainder
of the morning was spent in more I
sleeping and canoeing by all except
Marion Hadley, who did her daily
chore by aiding in wood breaking,
without any serious injuries to her
self.
Soon appetites had increased so
rapidly that dinner could be delayed
no longer and the girls sat down to
a hearty meal of all sorts of unbe
lievably delicious things. After en
gulfing all the fried chicken they
could hold, the group immediately
entered upon a business meeting.
Miss “At,” Ruth Carter, and
“Sliorty” Biles told all about the
hockey camp in the Poeonos moun
tains which they attended this sum
mer. The Harrisonburg meet was
then discussed.
Sunday afternoon while the tem])-
erature fell lower and lower three
courageous souls, Marion Hadley,
Alice Stough and Grace Pollock, had
the boldness to penetrate the depths
of the lake. Others not so daring
went boat-riding while some slept
through it all.
At seven-thirty camp was dis
persed and each girl declared that il
w’as the conclusion of a perfect
week-end.
REMOVAL
ter October fifth, 1‘131, w
NOTICE
will be located in the
islte Nissen Building, i
OF C’U.STOMKR
T V O G L E R ’
S Jewelers
M O N D A r -
T U K S D A Y -
e kind of fiery dramatics
.SriiKKN .SOXC
“MY SIN”
TA.LLULAH BANKHEAD
FREDERIC MARCH
)('I.-\I,LY CORRKCT i N
XAROLINA:
WAIT - BOB -
“CAUGHT PLASTERED”
BERT WHEELER
ROBERT WOOLSEY
DOROTHY LEE
P.OHBY joNK.s oi:h gano caroltna
Keep that School-Girl Complexion
While in College!
Elizabeth Arden’s
Beauty Preparations
Are on Sale in Winston-Salem at
THE IDEAL
TRADE AND W. FOURTH STS.