HIGH LIFE
PAGE THREE
Rucker & Co.
COTTON MERCHANTS
Members of
New York Cotton Exchange
New Orleans Cotton Exchange
RUCKER BONDED WAREHOUSE
CORPORATION
Storaire of Cotton
Capacity 30,000 Bales
The Habit of Thrift
THE FOUNDATION OF SUCCESS
Acquire this habit by depositing in
our savings department.
Interest compounded quarterly
Atlantic Bank & Trust
Company
4^
4*
Dr. C. I. Carlson
CHIROPRACTOR
Complete X-Ray Laboratories
114 W. MARKET ST.
Odell’s
WHERE QUALITY TELLS
^rOiffmau j
31piiiplrij (Enmpatig
Where Most of the G. H. S. I
Students Buy Their Gifts |
For Three Decades ?
Leading Jewelers |
THE: SENIOR LIBRARY
“Main Street”—Norman Cooper,
“The Varmint”—William Silver.
“Age of Innocence”— Evelyn
Trogden.
“Just David”—David Thomas.
“Sweet Stranger”—Lucile Hart.
“The Ne’er Do Well”—Bill Right-
sell.
“The Beloved Woman”—“Miss”
Blair.
“He Comes up Smiling”— “Ikey”
renn.
“The Dancing Fool”—Addie
Brown.
I “Gentle Julia”—Julian Johnston.
“Indoor Studies”—Nellie Swaim.
“A Fool There Was”—Alex Stran-
ford.
“The Great Stone Face”—Robert
Merritt.
“Sweethearts Unmet”—Bertha and
“Clarence.”
“The Little Minister”— Sprilly
Winkle.
“Bought and Paid for”—Mary
Cothran.
“Wild Animals I Have Known”
—“Jerry” Temko.
“Bound to Rise”—Louise C.
Smith.
“Holf a Century of Conflict”—
Carlotta and Milton.
“Love’s Labor Lost”—Lota Lee
Troy.
“Fairy Tales”—Senior Tardy
Slips.
“The Call of The Wild”—Walter
Cox.
“Love Stories”—Marjorie Cart-
land.
“Seventeen”—Wiley Swift.
“Daddy Long Legs”—Thomas
Neal.
“Married”—Thelma Floyd.
“Up From the Ranks”—Robert
Irvin.
“Vanity Fair”—Nancy Little.
- “Damon and Pythias”—Margaret
and Carmell.
Brown - Belk I
Company
WE SELL IT
FOR LESS
ONE OF M 30 BELK STORES |
Greensboro Music Co. |
Frank M. Hood, Mgr. |
Mandolins, Banjos, Ukuleles, Gui- |
tars and Violins i
Everything Musical
Pianos, Sheet Music, Victrolas,
Records
CAMP YONAHLASSEE
for girls 10 to 18.
Blowing Rock, N. C.
For booklet, address
DR. A. P. KEPHART
GREENSBORO. NORTH CAROLINA
THE YOUNG MAN AND THE
MAIDEN
Consider the young man. He
goeth forth in the morning and
bloweth himself to glad raiment.
And the pants thereof are two
ubits from the ground.
He wrappeth his ankles in sox
that are as white as the lily and as
near silk as the bazaar will sell
for a quarter of a shekel.
Behold the shirt. It hath cuffs
that are soft and that turneth back,
And his necktie shrieketh like
a 42 centimeter shell.
And his gloves are of the skin of
the chamois. Yellow are the gloves,
and the stitches thereof are black.
And he is some Kid.
He weareth a lid of fuzz, and the
bow thereof is cute and followeth
on behind.
Yes, he looketh like a thousand
shekels, but alas—all is not as it
seemeth.
For behold, he meeteth at the
apothecary’s a maiden with eyes like
the gazelle and with lashes of
midnight. And the maiden pretend-
eth that she hath but even now
asked a clerk of the fountain to mix
her a nut-sundae. But she will:
allow the young man to blow her off :
to one.
And behold; when the sundaes:
are gone away of all things, the |
young man tippeth the clerk a wink
and passes out gaily with the;
maiden.
The clerk is on. He knoweth
that the young man is broke.
And will the young man slip the
clerk the twenty pence? Yea, even
so, as soon as his Father’s pension
check arriveth. |
Consider the maiden. Lo, though, I
the winds blow and chilleth, she |
weareth upon her feet sandals that;
are low and hose that are silk.
And the nerk of her gown exist-
elh not. Yet she sw'eareth that she
is as warm as toast.
She goeth forth into the highways,
and she carrieth a party box.
And therein are many things
wherew'ith to kalsomine her coun
tenance. Puffs there are and the
skin of the chamios and many pig
ments. white as the lilies of Hebron
and red as the evening skies over
Jordaji.
She maketh up where she list-
eth and careth not who observeth.
And although her lips become as
pomegi'anates, yet she denies that
there is any color in the i stuff.
With the gaze of reproof she tell
eth thee that it is camphor and
ice and that tinteth not.
And behold, she putteth it over
thee.
She goeth forth at night and she
tangoeth until dawn is on the moun
tains and the morning breeze stir--
the cedars, and she is not a bit
tired.
But w'hen her mother beggeth
her to go up into the market place
for a cubit of calico, lo, she with-
ereth upon the vine.
Wondrous are the ways of a
maiden.—Exchange.
Dere Miu*
This leie is just a few un
too let you no Ima recooperatin’
frum th’ examinations. I writ a
essay fur english. Th’ teachers she
seemed to like it rite smat so I thol
Id send it on too you an’ Hiram an’
the mule an’ pop so that you all
could sea just what Ima doin’ in
th’ literature way. Th’ teachur sez
she hands it back, sez she “well
Hannah what were else you may
say about this I’ll have to admit
this here is unisku^.” wus a es
say on boys—here it folows (tell
Hiram an’ th’ mule an pop not to
take it too much too core—thats
french fur heart.)
Boys is the brothers of gu 4s
but more often they are there
bothers. Boys sprung from mon
keys (just like gurls) only they
didn’t spring quite so fur. Boys
ware pants and BANDOLINE on
there bones. They take gurls too
partys and the n all gathur over
on th’ othur side of the room. Or
else they all talk too one gurl all
the time. There’s allers a talkin
about what they “got on there hip’
and about that “rare old stuff’
they had las nite, when every
body ’nows that all they got on
there hip is a note book, an’ all
they had las nite was a chocolate
milk, if they had 15 cents.
They hang around the drug store
corners most of the nite then they
comes to school the nex day an’
asts you “Can I have them french
sentenses what we bed too rite
today “and when you sez ‘know’
thev say you are a stingy cuss no
way.”
Boys like to sleep a hole heap
an’ when yore maw sends you
to wake ’em up an you call ’em
thay allers says “well Ima gettin
up—can’t you lemme sleep a min
ute.” Then you go away an cum
back one half hour later an’ look
in there room and all theve done
is too turn over.
Boys all the time thinkin they’r
slringin th’ gurls—but most uf th’
time they is just stringin’ they self.
Most boys grow up and get big but
they never get over bein’ funny.
They was sum more Maw, but
I’ma givin oata paper so I won’t
say no more. I guess I better stop.
Your obedience Daiter
till Death
—Hannah Green.
j BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL
DIRECTORY
Auto Supplies
Davie St. Auto Exchang:e
“IJ-NO, the Kuy who put* water in it”
Dealers in used cars 211 S. Davie St. i
Dixie Sales Co. '
iVutomotive Eleetrl.al Service—iOranse Fr®nt) I
Phone 112.3, 109 S. Davie St.. Greensboro,N.C. j
Attorneys
J. S. Duncan
A '^TORNEY-AT-LAW
BANNER BUILDING
Brooks, Hines & Smith
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law
r-^p^lJlNSBORO. N. C.
Louise B. Alexander
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
413 Banner R»M*ding. Greenshoro. N. C.
Sidnev S. Alderman
A ttoi^nEY-AT-LAW
«-■->TryTrjiy r-OTTRT HOUSE
Shupine, Hobbs & Davis
Alt^rn'-ve a»'d CrtonsePors at Law
in Ttwnner Bldg. Greenohoro. N. C.
William P. Bynum
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Rooms 205-206-207—County Court House
E. D. Broadhurst
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
ThIM Flr.Ar—BANNER BUILDING
Cafeterias
The Arcade Cafeteria
(Under Benbow Arcade)
A. E. Nowlan and F. A. Pritchet, Props.
Dentists
Drs. Coble & Poindexter
Grocers
Richardson Grocery Co.
210 S. Davie Street Phone 910—3347
Patterson Bros., Inc.
DEPARTMENT FOOD STORE
219 S. Elm St. Phone 400
Vanstory’s
CLOTHING
Henry Hunter
GROCER
N. Elm Sf—Five Paints—McAdoo Heights
Insurance
Matheson-Wills Real
Estate Co.
REAL ERTATK—INSURANCE—BONDS
CREENSnORO, N. C.
Guilford Ins. & Realty Co.
O. L. r.RUBBS, Pres
109 E. Market St. Phone 312
HINES
Greensboro
Drug Co.
FILMS
Promptly
Developed
I Shoes, Hosiery, Repairing
I LADIES’ FREE SHINE PARLOR
j U. S. Woolen Mills Co.
f Better Clothes for Less Money
I 304 South Elm Street
INSURANCE.
We write all kinds. Let us serve you
Fielding L. Fry & Co.
231% .S. F.lm St.
Phone 453
J. W. Scott & Company
Dry Goods, Notions and Mill Agents
We Only Sell Mercliants
113-115 W'. Wasiiington Street
(ireensboro, N. C.
Huntley-Stockton-Hill
Company
FURNITURE
THE
Bogur
SHOP FOR MEN
Guilford Hotel Corner
We Carry Everything
in
School Supplies
WILLS’ BOOK S STAlNERy
SYKES SHOE SHOP
EXPERT REPAIRING
Ladies’ Work a Specialty Phone 806
110 W. Market St., Greensboro, N. C.
LUCAS BROS. I
Dry Cleaners—Pressers i
120 E. Sycamore St. Phone 2277 I
THE GUILFORD
HOTEL
In the Heart of Greensboro
Double Service
Cafetria and Cafe
We have one of the best and most
talked of Cafeterias in North Caro
lina. Excellent service and prices
reasonable.
I FOLKS SAY—And You Hear It Everywhere
j When you wantt good shoes it’s
Dobson-Sills
j GREENSBORO’S OLDEST AND LARGEST
I SHOE STORE
WALTON^
SHOE SHOP
112 W. SYCAMORE STREET
High Class Repairing Our Specialty
PHONE 3185
For All CoiT Troubles *
X/ICKS
w VapoRub