HIGH LIFE PAGE THREE fc*--- Rucker & Co. COTTON MERCHANTS Members of New York Cotton Exchange New Orleans Cotton Exchange RUCKER BONDED WAREHOUSE CORPORATION Storage 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 Dr. C. I. Carlson CHIROPRACTOR Complete X-Ray Laboratories 114 W. MARKET ST. BUY AT Odell’s WHERE QUALITY TELLS i’rlitfitman Sniiplrtj QlDm|iar!jj Where Most of the G. H. S. Students Buy Their Gifts For Three [)/■(■'ilc'- Leadiiii' Jrii'elrry Brown - Belk Company 1®! tk; WE SELL IT * FOR LESS ONE OF THE 30 BELK STORES 'k Greensboro Music Co. ; ^ Frank M. Hood, Mgr. Mandolins, Banjos, Ukuleles, Gui tars and Violins f*! Everything Musical I'*' |i Pianos, Sheet Music, Victrolas, Records urtt 123 SOUTH ELM STREET NUMBER OF NEW BOOKS ADDED TO LIBRARY ! ll*' Ini'" CAMP YONAHLASSEE for girls 10 to 18. yjjfi Bloiving Rock, N. C. T booklet, address DR. A. P. KEPHART GREENSBORO. NORTH CAROLINA Greensboro High School has al ready one of the best, from the standpoint of selection of books and number of books, libraries in North Carolina. An average of one hun dred and fifty books are checked out daily and from one hundred and twenty to one hundred and seventy- five students do reference work in the Library each day. Thirty-five weekly and monthly magazines are subscribed to and the Sunday New York Times and Greensboro Daily News. New hooks are being con stantly added to the Library. Sev eral hundred have been bought since September making almost ten thous and volumes in the High School Li brary. The following is a list of books that have been added since Christmas to the Library. Fiction and Stories The Boys’ Motley—^Helen Ward Bauks. The Boys’ ?rescott,—Helen Ward Banks Master Skylark—John Bennett A Boy of the First Empire—El- bridge S. Brooks Burgess Unabridged—Geleth Bur gess The Burgess Nonsense Book—Ge leth Burgess In the Boyhood of Lincoln—Hez- ekiah Butterworth In the Days of Audubon—Heze- kiah Butterworth Abner Daniel—Will N. Harben History of Don Quixote—Cervan tes His defense and Other Stories— Harry Stillwell Edwards Off Duty—Wilhelmina Harrer The Night Born—Jack London Adventures of Tom Sawyer—(2 copies) Mark Twain Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (2 copies )—Mark Twain Where Angels Fear to Tread— Morgan Robertson A New England Man and Other ftories—Mary E. Wilkins. Best Short Stories of 1915, 1916, 1917, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1921, Edited by Edward J. O’Brien. The Casting away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshine—Frank R. Stock- ton Tales Out of Court—Frederick Trevor Hill The Old Number (Short Stories) —Guy de Maupassant Madame Butterfly—Jehu Luther Long. POETRY Authology of Magazine verse,, 1918, 1919, 1920, 1921. Edited by | William Stanley Braithwaite. ^ Poems by John B. Tabb. Lyrics by John B. Tabb The Truthful Lyre—Arthur Gui- ^ terman j Wilhemina and Other Poems— i Cole Young Price. | DRAMA I Francisco De Remini—Gabrieli D’Aiimingio High School Farces—Frederick Treon Hill Carolina Folk Plays (2 copies) j Edited by Frederick H. Koch Plays for School Children—Ethel Sidgwick One Act Plays—Alice Brown Plays for School Children—Anna M. Inthenhaus SPORTS Boys’ Book of Sports—Grantland Rice Handbook of Athletic Games— Bancroft and Pulvach Football Without a Coach—Wal ter Camp The Substitute—W-alter Camp The Half-back—Ralph H. Barbour The Battle of Baseball—C. H. Claudy e Life in the Open—Charles F. Hol der Camp Life in the Woods—W- Hamilton Gibson Summer in the Girls’ Camp—An na W. Cole The Art of Lawn Tennis—^Wil liam T. Tiiden, 2nd. MISCELLANEOUS The School Books of Forestry— Charles Lanthrop Pack Familiar Trees and their Leaves— F. Schuyler Matthews How to Know Butterflies—J. H. and A. B. Comstock Manual for the Study of Insects— J. H. and A. B. Comstock The Book of Electricity—A. Fred erick Collins The Amateur Mechanic—A. Fred erick Collins The Diary of a Nation—The War and How We Got Into It—Edward S. Martin. The Great Adventure at Washing ton—The Story of the Conference —Mark Sullivan The A. B. C. of Good Form— Ann Seymour Every-Day Pronunciation—Robert P. Utter The Century Vocabulary Builder —G. Greever and J. M. Backeloo First Aid for Boys—Cole and Erust A Study of the Types of Litera ture—Mabel Irene Rich From Isolation to Leadership— John Holladay Latane The School as a Social Institution •—Charles L. Robbins Trend in American Education— James Earl Russell Principles of Educational Prac- ticse—Paul Klapper Every Teacher’s Problems—Wil liam E. Stark Principles of Teaching High School Pupils—H. W. Witt The Teaching of English—Paul Klapper. DR. A. H. PATTERSON SPEAKS (Continued from page 1) everyone, young and old, educated, or uneducated, has an interest. As tronomy seems to be the one com mon meeting point for all on the j field of science. The lecture was I outlined with a view of giving a general knowledge of astronomy as a whole. Of course with the limit ed time it was impossible to go into detail, but, with the aid of a well selected set of slides and the natural gift of holding an audience, the earth’s position with respect to the heavenly bodies and the general con ditions and movements of our heav enly neighbors were well explained. Photographs of the Moon, Mars, and Saturn taken with some of the largest telescopes were of special interest. Some of the outstanding things of note which will probably be remembered longest were a brief discussion of the possibility of Mars being inhabited, the immense size of some of the planets as compared to the earth. Sun-spots, the extreme ly high temperature of some of the stars, and the Spiral Nebula theo ry as to the formations of new planets. None who were there can forget how interest was kept high by apply ing here and there bits of our every day life, language, customs,! and literature to astronomy. Doubtless the Society is reaping j results already. There is interest | now where interest did not exist j before. It is the intention of the Society ; to have at least two more men of ; equal rank give lectures sometime during the spring. BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL 1 DIRECTORY | Auto Supplies Davie St. Auto Exchange “U-NO. the ruy Dealers in used cars puts water in it” 211 S. Davie St. Dixie Sales Co. Ai'tcmotiTe Flcctfl al Service—.Oranje Fr*nt) Phone 112.3. 109 S. Davie St., Greensboro,N.C. Attorneys J. S. Duncan Brooks, Hines & Smith Attorneys a-'d Connsellors at Law GHHENSnOHO. N. C. Louise B. Alexander ATTORNEY-AT-LAW ^13 Greensboro. N. C. Sidnev S. Alderman ATTORNEY-AT-LAW oQTiMTY rOTTRT HOUSE Shaping, Hobbs & Davis Attornpys and Counsellors at Law Offi'-cs in Banner Bldg. Greensboro. N. C. William P. Bynum ' ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Rooms 20S-20fi-207—County Court House E. D. Broadhurst ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Third Floor—BANNER BUILDING Cafeterias The Arcade Cafeteria (Under Benbow Arcade) A. E. Nowlan and F. A. Pritchet, Props. Dentists Drs. Coble & Poindexter ■niTANE cot Grocers Richardson Grocery Co. 210 S. Davie Street Phone 910—3347 Patterson Bros., Inc. DEPARTMENT FOOD STORE 219 S. Elm St. Phone 400 Henry Hunter GROCER I N. Flm st.~Fi''e Points—McAdoo Heights i Insurance Matheson-Wills Real Estate Co. REAI. ESTATE—INSURANCE—BONDS r-REFNSRORO. N. C. Gruilford Ins. & Realty Co. 0. L. GRUBBS, Pres 109 E. Market St. Phone 312 Greensboro Drug Co. FILMS Promptly Developed ■* .... HINES ^ Shoes, Hosiery, Repairing I LADIES’ FREE SHINE PARLOR THE ! U. S. Woolen Mills Co. Better Clothes for Less Money 304 South Elm Street INSURANCE. We write all kinds. Let us serve you Fielding L. Fry & Co. 231% S. Elm St. Phone 453 J. W. Scott & Company Dry Goods, Notions and Mill Agents We Only Sell Merchants 113-115 W. Washington Street Greensboro, N. C. I Huntley-Stockton-Hill i Company 1 FURNITURE Rngur SHOP FOR MEN Guilford Hotel Corner We Carry Everything in School Supplies WILLS’ BOOK ^ STAllONEHy I SYKES SHOE SHOP I EXPERT REPAIRING • Ladies’ Work a Specialty Phone 806 • 110 W. Market St., Greensboro, N. C. FOLKS SAY—And You Hear It Everywhere When you wantt good shoes it’s Dobson-Sills GREENSBORO’S OLDEST AND LARGEST SHOE STORE THE GUILFORD HOTEL In the Heart of Greensboro Double Service Cafetria and Cafe W’e have one of the best and most talked of Cafeterias in North Caro lina. Excellent service and prices reasonable. WALTON’S SHOE SHOP 112 W. SYCAMORE STREET High Class Repairing Our Specialty I ^ PHONE 5185 For All Cold Troubles' V/ICKS w VapoRub

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