Friday, February 1, 1935.
THE SALEMITE
Page Three.
THE MYSTIC
By Cale Young Eiee
There is a quest that calls me,
In nights when I am lone,
Tlu! need to ride where the ways
divide
■ The known from the unknown,
I mount what thought is near me
And soon I reach the place,
'i’ho tenuous rim where the seen
grows dim
And tne sigstless hides its face.
I have ridden the wind,
r have ridden the sea,
[ have ridden the moon and stars,
[ have set my feet in the stirrup
seat
Of a comet coursing Mars.
And everywhere
Thro, the earth and air
My thought speeds, lighting-sliod,
It comes to a place whee checking
pace
Tt cries , “Beyond lies God!”
It calls me out of the darkness
Tt calls me out of sleep,
“Eide! ride! for you must, to th«
end of Dust! ”
Tt l)ids—and on I sweep
To the wide outposts of Being
Where there’s Gulf alone
And thro’ a Vast that was never
passed
I listen for Life’s tone-.
t have ridden the wind,
I have ridden the night,
[ have ridden the ghosts that flee
From the vaults of death like a chil
ling breath
’)vei' eternity.
A.nd everywhere
Is the w’orld laid bare—
Ether and star and clod—
Until T wind to its brink and find
But the cry, “Beyond lies God!”
It calls me and ever calls me!
And vainly I reply.
Fools only ride where the ways
divide
What is from the Whence and
Why?”
I’m lifted into the saddle
Of thought too strong to tame
And down the deeps and over the
steeps
I find—ever the same.
1
I have ridden the force that flies
I have ridden the stars,
I have ridden the fore that flie«
With far intent through the firma
ment
And each to eachallies.
Ajj^d everywhere
That a thought may dare
To gallop, mine has trod—
Only to stand at last on the strand
Where just beyond lies God.
I am not one
Who must have everything, yet I
must have
My dreams if I must live, for they
are mine.
From Tristam
Edwin Arlington Eobinson-
Wisdom is not one word and then
another
Till words are like dry leaves under
a tree;
Wisdom is like a dawn that comes
up slowly
Out of an unknown ocean.
From Tristam
Edwin Arlington EobinsoQ.
Believe me, a thousand friends
suffice thee not
In a single enemy thou hast more
than enough.
HOW NOT TO LIGHT A BRIDGE TABLE
Think of trying to play bridge bj’ the light of two candles, stuck in
bottle tops. Yet that is the equivalent of the light in many homes
— a level of illumination that will make any party drag.
For gayer, livelier parties, use an indirect portable lamp. It pro
vides the ideal light shadowless and glareless — for playing bridge
and other games in comfort . . . and an equally efficient light for
a quiet evening of reading.
Phone Southern Public Utilities Co. and ask for a free demonstration
of the new type direct-indirect lamp in your home.
SOUTHERN PUBLIC UTILITIES COMPANY
PHONE 7151
6000 PtCTtfftES
UUm Better^
School
i'
PIEDMONT ENGRAVING 6.
Wi NsTON-Salem, N.C.
Cavalier
Cafeteria
11 West rourth Street
You will like our friendly
Way of serving your
Favorite Foods
AFTER ^
« I I C -
CONCENTRATme
X''5
.vv\s'Jss*.v.'.5»;v
' LEAF-TOBACCO
EXPERTS AGREED
. ' '
CameJs are mgde frbm ^
finer. More Jxpeftsiye ' ." '
' ‘ »H«II llW
Tobaccos — Torklsti and
Domesticthan cTrty
other popai«; bfqIvd/V-;
f
C
^ ‘
iSSSS
TREE SURGEON. “Camels
help to relieve the tiredness
that follows a hard day’s
work,” says H. L. Vough, a
Camel smoker for 8 years
I’m a pretty constant
smoker. I consider Camels
the mildest cigarette—they
never jangle my nerves.
JOHN L. FILSON, '36-BIOLOGY.
Filson says: “After a long ‘lab’ session, dis
secting and drawing detailed diagrams...
spending hours over a microscope...you
get pretty well worn out. I keep a pack of
Camels beside me. For, with such exacting
work, it’s a great relief to smoke a Camel
any time I’m tired and quickly experience
a delightful return in energy. And boy! Do
those Camels taste good!”
TUNE IN ON THE
CAMEL CARAVAN
featuring GLEN GRAY’S CASA LOMA ORCHESTRA
WALTER O’KEEFE • ANNETTE HANSHAW
TUESDAY
10:00 P.M. E.S.T.
9:00 P.M. C.S.T.
8:00 P.M. M.S.T.
7:00 P.M. P.S.T.
THURSDAY
9:00 P.M. E.S.T.
8:00 P.M. C.S.T.
9:30 P.M. M.S.T.
8:30 P.M. P.S.T.
DRAFTSMAN. Franklin
Dominick says: “Camels
restore the feeling of case
and mental alertness that a
draftsman needs to continue
his exacting work. I smoke
Camels constantly. And
never have they given me
any sign of ragged nervea.”
OVER COAST-TO-COAST WABC-COLUMBIA NETWORK
CAMEL’S COSniER TOBACCOS
GLEN GRAY
Coprrisht, 1935
R. X ^ynolds Tobacco
Ctwapany
Wiostoo‘S4lem« K. C.
■ on' YOMR- NERVES!