Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Dec. 10, 1932, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page Four, THE SALEMITE Saturday, December 10, 1932. MR. LATHAM TALKS TO EDUCATION CLASS In a talk to tlie education 3 class the Superintendent of Winston- Salem Schools, Mr. R. H. I-athain, discussed the various aspects of the organization of the Winston-Salem Public Schools. The School system of Winston- ■Salem is not old, having been set up in 187i5. Dr. Calvin Wiley, the founder of the public school system in North Carolina, kept the W'inston- Salem schools open during the criti cal period after the war. During the period Dr. Wiley preserved a million dollars of the school fund. He wrote the first school charter of this city, which is still in use today. The School Board, as outlined by Superintendent I.athani, consists of seven members, who receive no com pensation for tlieir work. This board distributes the school fund, deter mines the salaries of the teachers, regulates school requirements, fixes tuition and apportions and distrib utes the school fund. Mr. Latham revealed the unique fact that there is no school tax in Winston-Salem. The school board makes out a budget for the necessary amount to be spent in the schools. This budgit is sent to the Board of Aldermen, who in turn make out the tax rate. From the tax returns the School Board is given its apportioned This school system set up by the vote of the people is to devote itself to the education of the young be tween the ages of six and twenty-one years. This includes both elementary and high school education. I Moravian Christmas Cakes I 65c THE POUND M Clii-istiiias cakes for herself anci I? for her family. It is an essential I? part ot the holidays. Orders shionld be given to • ""T JOHNSON Or -THERIXE KIE ,'EES Morris IMSP Service | i Lunchette and Fountain I Specials § Wo Caler to Those Wlio Apprcci- ss ate Quality g Sandwich Prices Greatly Reduced * g Same Quality and Service B “Exclusive But Not Expensive’ * NEXT TO ( AKOI.INA § THEATRE 00000000^000000000.!>.0.{>.f>..0.>.(>.f>. PIEDMONT ENGRAVING G>. PHOTO ENGRAVERS Dii>[^22 Winston-Sal ^ Y.W. Has Salem Day At Red Cross Nov. 8 Salem Girls Help Malta Gar ments for the Poor Monday, Xovember 28, from nine [ the morning until four in the afternoon, Salem girls and faculty helped down at the local Red Cross an. The Government furnishes the cotton, and local mills, free of :harge, weave the cotton into cloth. The Red Cross distributes the ma terial to the poor in the city who are to sew. In Winston-Salem, ;ver, there arc many poor people who cannot sew or do not have chines. Garments for these people made at the local Red Cross tion chiefly by women of the various ‘hurches of the city. On Monday students and faculty :'ormed a large part of the workers. Vt ev'ery hour except one in the morning, when both the Freshman and Sophomore classes had Bible, there was a good representation from Day students and faculty members furnished transportation for iss I.eftwich and Mrs. Meinung : in charge of the work. Some girls were busy cutting out mi work shirts, and sewing shirts, gay print and gingham dresses for 'n people and children. Some girls made buttonholes, and others ut strips for bindings or made slips At least two girls, and probably leveral more, made an attractive gingham dress for a child. And nany girls who had never made buttonhole made three or four quite presentable ones. The girls at the Red Cross had a good time working together, and it made them feel good to know that they were really doing some prac tical good for some one less fortu nate than they. We hope that there will be Salem day at the Red Cross every year that this work or similar work is carried on ther( ADVENT CHAPEL OPENS SALEM CHRISTMAS SEASON {Contiimed from Page One) mother of Jesus. Without doubt she told the story to Luke, who recorded it after the fashion of Mary’s own Aramaic vernac-ular, for so does the original change from the scholarly Greek. Said Dr. Rondthaler, “When read these words in the first per- , we gain a new conception of what the events signified to those people.” Another effective passage was the reading of the shepherd scene in the first person of a shep herd. He called attention to the mighty drama, the climatic effects which oc curred on the night of the nativity. To humble watchers in the fielis came the message of Christ’s birth, and there arose a joyous clamor of ;1 voices, a sudden sweep of praise in song, reaching its peak ’ , “Glork to God in the highest.” The voices died away, silence reign ed and the scene shifted to the quiet, lowly manger in Bethlehem. Dr. Rondthaler told the Christmas story as a student of the Bible, one with a deep appreciation for its artistic excellence as literature, a devout Christian and a lover of the truth and beauty of the Bible. PEG O’ MY HEART GIVEN BY PIERRETTE PLAYERS Alarie Chichester as a foil for the splendid, manly virtues of Jerry, Courtlasdt Preston, while Margaret McLean played the designing villain nd Gertrude Schwalbe the part of the friend of the dead uncle. The well-chosen and each played his part with unusual ability. There has been such a great de mand for a second performance that the play may be regiven with original cast under the auspices of Junior Class. It will provide opportunity for those who v unable to attend and have regrc It ever since to see “Peg O’ My Heart,” one of the best productions ever staged by the Pierrette Playei Sykes Florist, Inc. | FLOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION WALTER L. WHITE, JK., Mgr. Made of the Very Best Materials All Cream — Ice Cream ! Hot Dogs 5c — Hot Dogs 5c — Hot Dogs 5c THE WEE BLUE INN TUESDAY, DECEMBER 13 g Don’t Forget Your Holi' | g day Beauty Needs §. § Merry Christmas and Happy I Fear to All | I J. M. WILLIS BOBBER | I & BEAUTY SHOPPE | § 114 Eeynolds Building | I DIAL 6073 I S Xo. 2 Lockland Ave-—Dial 7232 bi I ENGRAVED | g SORORITY STATIONERY jSi g VISITING CARDS | H PLACE CARDS g I WEDDING INVITATIONS !❖; I WEDDING § ;o; ANNOUNCEMENTS g I H.T. Hearn Engraving Co. | H ■( Phone 2-1303 ;s & a TEA AT MRS. BAHNSON’S On Friday, December 2, between four and six o’clock, Mrs. Bahnson was hostess for a number of Salem girls at a delightful tea at her home on Fifth Street. The guests were met at the door by Mrs. II. T. Bahnson, Mrs. W. P. Hill and Mrs. Howard Rondthaler, and conducted by Miss Betty Bahnson into the dining-room, where Misses Estelle Fallin and Sarah Stevens served them tea and a delicious salad The folowing girls from Salem were invited: Mary Adams Ward, Frances I.ambeth, Josephine Court ney, Mary Catherine Siewers, Mary Katherine Thorp, Mary Louise Mickey, Fan Scales, Jane Rond thaler,, Martha Neal, Miriam Steven' son, Courtlandt Preston, Jean Bur roughs, Jean Patterson, Mildred Hanes, Dorabelle Graves, Frances Bowland, Patsy McMullan, Lila Womble ,Elizabeth Gray, Dorothy Heidenreich, Margaret Johnson, Zina Vologodsky, Frances Hill, Ger trude Schwalbe, I-ucy James, Nancy McNcely, Miss T.awrcnce, and Miss Riggan. ATTRACTIONS AT THE CAROLINA Two of the most extraordinary pictures of the year will be shown at the Carolina Theatre next week. The first of the week the giant drama “If I Had A Million,” with fifteen stars in leading roles, will be shown. The program for Thursday through Saturday is the latest film of the be loved Douglas Fairbanks in “Mr. Robinson Crusoe.” “If I Had A Million” relates the tragedy and comedy that enters the lives of nine obscure people singled out by an eccentric millionaire to receive a million dollars each. The popular combination of Charlie Rug- gles and Mary Boland, last seen in “The Night of June 13” appears once more in a comedy sequence. Gaiety is the keynote of Doug’s new picture. It is a tale of a mod ern Robinson Crusoe, who finds him self upon an uninhabited island. He pitches in and makes the best of things with the thought, “There is a W4NC BROADCASTS RADIOGRAMS FOR SALEM STUDENTS (Continued from Page One) eessful. They are sent by Interna tional Morse Code, and, when they are received, they are sent by per sonal delivery or telephone to the persons to whom they are addressed. This station is a member of the Amateur Radio Relay League of America. Since its organization three years ago it has become one of the most powerful stations in the c try and is one of the few which own their own land and building. Besides being listed on the honor roll of the Brass Pounders League of the A. R. R. L., Station W-iNC received first premium at the Forsyth County Fair. In the month of October 130-3 messages were broadcast. The station courteously invites Salem students to send messages any where they wish. Blanks for the purpose will be found in the Book Store, or messages may be written any paper. They request that ry word be written very plainly. I A ROYAL CLEANER I j GETS ALL THE DIRT | And Kills all the Germs | Here is a cleaner that makes house cleaning a joy. Surely § and smoothly all the dirt from any rug or floor disappears § as if by magic under the whirlwind power of this cleaner, icj And all those deadly germs that are lurking in every rug w and on every floor are sucked through a purifying chamber || and annihilated as shown by actual test. See this new g Royal! Try it! SOLD ON MOST CONVENIENT TERMS Southern Public Utilities Co. MRS. GUTHRIE PRESENTS THE HARP IN MUSIC HOUR the attention of real musicians in the United States and has become fully appreciated and understood as The remainder of the hour was de voted to a beautifully rendered pro gram on the harp- by members of the harp department. “Giza” Corelli Miss Josephine Reece “Oriental Dance” Misses Anne Nisbet, Nannie Dodson “Humoresque” Dvorak Mrs. Guthrie, Miss Nisbet and Miss Dodson “I^argo” Handel “Song of the Volga Boatmen” Russian Folksong Mrs. Guthrie, Misses Reece, Nisbet and Dodson Special Reductions on All Evening Dresses Including Our Entire Winter Line. D. G. CRAVEN COMPANY IN FEW DAYS We presume most Salemites will be on their way home | for the Christmas Holidays | WE WISH TO THANK YOU \ For Your Fall and Holiday Patronage and— | Wish You All A Merry Christmas | I The ideal | DRY GOODS COMPANY | WEST FOURTH ST. DIAL 7186 ! I “COLLEGIATE CLOTHES” | I DARLING SHOP I Darling Dresses Always | H 420 North Liberty Street § I CHRISTMAS STARS I g Price Knocked Down $3.50 g § Assembled with light cord and bulb $4).50 g V og 1 e r’s I West Fourth Street, 0pp. Nissan Bldg.
Salem College Student Newspaper
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Dec. 10, 1932, edition 1
4
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