Newspapers / Salem College Student Newspaper / Nov. 8, 1935, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Salem College Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
f Page Four. THE SALEMITE Friday, November 8, 1935. FELLOWSHIP FOR GRADUATE STUDY (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Keseareli Council, 230 Park Avenue, Xow York, N. Y.; and should make inquiries themselves at the same ad dress. The closing date for the re ceipt of applications on blanks se cured from the Fellowship Secretary is March 15, 1936. Awar^ Trill be announced as early as possible in •July. PENNY FAIR AT HOME CHURCH A SUCCESS The Home Moravian Church Cir cle number nine, under Mrs. Clar ence Lineback, sponsored a Penny Fair last Friday night. The Sunday .School rooms were used and they were attractviely decorated with the gay colors of the Hallowe’en. Many booths were placed around in the rooms. There was a $25,000 beauty exhibited, a fortune teller, a booth of Mrs. Schwalbe’s relics and curios which were exhibited by her raughter Catherine, and Miss Stock ton had a most attractive food booth. The Hall of Horrors was in the basement of the'church. Miss Big- gan and several of the college girls SENIORS ENTERTAINED AT PARTY SATUR DAY NIGHT (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) Janet Stimpson, Sarah Katherine Thompson, Virginia Thompson, Lois Torrence, Adelaide Trotter, Etta Burt Warren, Eleanor Watkins, and Wilda Mae Vingling. Messrs Gaitlier Jenkins, Charles Jenkins, Clifton Pleasants, Grady Pleasants, Garrison Reid, Jack Bink ley', John Foster, John Creech, Har vey Tupton, Meade Willis, Harry Sliijner, Brooks Bynum, Tommy Wil son, Thad Garner, Ben Trotter, Hor ace Vance, Bahnson C. Hall, Jr., George Stockton, Joe Stockton, Bill Stagg, Nick Mitchell, Robert Walk er, Frank C. Campbell, B. C. Dun- ford, Lindsay Jlorris, and Arlee Curlee. Herbert Hoover, Jefferson Davis, Benjamin Franklin, Henry Hudson, William Penn, David Livingston and Ben Hur are regi.stered at the Uni versity of North Carolina this year. had charge of it. Mickey Mouse pictures were also shown for a pen ny. The whole fair was a grand and glorious success, both for those who went and those who gave it. THE REV. WALSER ALLEN SPEAKS AT VESPERS (CONTINUED FROM PAGE ONE) nored his responsibilitjy to his fel low man. He had to have hired help in order to liave accumulated such wealth and yet he felt that he owed them nothing Then, he imagined that material things would serve as food for the soul; he said to his Soul “Eat, drink and be merry,” whereas, he should Ijave said “Praise, worship and pray.” He fed his body, but he starved his •soul. Lastly, he forgot that his pos sessions would not go with him when he died. One of two things liappens to man’s possessions, either he leaves them or they leave him. But richness of the soul abides forever. It is bad enough to be poor down here but man’s earthly existence will end. What is more terrible is to be poor in heaven where man will live eternally. The most valuable “thing” man possesses is his Soul and the most tragic thing he can do is throw it away or starve it. Boseoe Pound, dean of Harvard Law School and one of the giants of American jurisprudence, was once blacklisted by the Daughters of the American Revolution. The Germans act Shakespeare bet ter than anyone else, in the judgment of Prof. Elliot of the English depart ment at Amherst. Announcement of the discovery of a red-tailed hawk new to science was made at Cornell University re cently by Dr. George M. Sutton, curator of birds at the university. SEE THE NEW 1936 Miller Indirect Lamps A free trial in your home with no obligation to buy. BETTER UGHT — BETTER SIGHT DUKE POWER COMPANY Phone 7151 I Jo WH''' '' W.//, to StdTt withy we take tobacco from our own Southland — mild ripe tobacco with lots of natural flavor but no harshness or bitterness. THEN AS A SECOND STEP— We blend this home-grown tobacco with spicy, aromatic Turkish tobaccos from across the seas. These Turkish tobaccos, you may know, have a flavor and fragrance entirely diflferent from 5- our own. AS A THIRD STEP These tobaccos are cross-blended welded together—the best way we’ve found to get a more pleasing flavor and a better taste in a cigarette. THATS WHY CHESTERFIELDS ARE MILD AND YET THEY SATISFY V In a single day people from ten diflferent states visited our Chesterfield factories. 8,200 visitors during the past year saw Chesterfields made. O 1935. Liggett & Myebs Tobacco Co,
Salem College Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 8, 1935, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75