Newspapers / Winston-Salem Journal (Winston-Salem, N.C.) / June 16, 1916, edition 1 / Page 5
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riiday Morning, June 16, 1916 .SUMMER S AT THEJLOF N. C. Twenty-ninth Annual Ses sion Begins Today; More ' Than 000 Have Already . JRegistored for Session. (Sptclil To Th Journal) Chapel Hill. June 14. With hun dreds of students pouring in on every train and automobile, the twenty- ninth session of the University of North Carolina Summer School, which opens here tomorrow, hids fair to ex ceed in numners all previous sessions More than six hundred persons had registered at noon today, and larfre-' crowds packed the registration -offices all afternoon. The officials of the summer school confidently expett. the enrollment thhi year to reach or pass l.OOi). Last ear it totaled 7.31. The class work "begins TTuirsdav 'frt 8.30 a. in. and continues through July Classes will he held on Saturday .lime 17. but after this week Satur days will be used for rest and diver sion. The campus of the I'nivorsity pre sents an unusual appearance to those who know the university only during the winter term. The fair sex niav he said to predominate, and feminine voices ring out from the dormitories, which now are reserved for women. The summer school is first of all a school for teachers, and naturally those interested in the profession of teaching are here in great numbers, approximately two-thirds, as a rule, being normal students. An increasing number of men is yearly coming to the summer school, some of whom are students during the winter, but many come from other colleges, or liom , the various high schools, A large number of these are working towards ;t collage degree, or doing graduate work. The Universi ty of N'mtli Carolina Is one of the few universities in the country that offers exceptional facilities for graduate study in tin summer school. Fifty eight students pursued graduate stu dies last summer, five of whom wore women. Fifty-five of these held A. P.. degrees and three H. S. degrees from standard colleges and universities. In addition, 135 students were register ed for A. R and B. S. degrees. The summer school directors are doing everything possible to make the coming six wicks entertaining and pleasant, as well as profitable intel lectually. The formal openinr exer cises will take place Friday at 12.30 in Memorial Hall. when Dean Marvin H. Stacy and Director N. V. Walker will address the students.' On Saturday evening, from 8:30 to 10:30 o'clock, an open-ajir reception will lie given on the campus under the Davie I'oplar to the members of the sum mer school. This will afford an op portunity to all for getting acquainted ' and catcmg the very contagious "Car olina spirit." There will be a-musical on Tuseday evening, which will Inaugurate a number of similar events. Later on, Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice and Hamlet will be given on the campus. Numbers of Interesting lec turers will appear from week to week. . l'rof. fiustav Hagedorn of Raleigh again has charge of music in the sum mer school and will direct the chorus, which fact insures its evellenee. The i. W. t. A. has this summer taken charge of the University Y. M. C. A. building, and will be enabled to render help and guidance to the wo men of the school. Miss Margaret An derson is general secretary. Among the professors and instruc tors in the summer school, who are not a part of 'the regular university faculty inn v he mentioned l'rof. James Finch Royster, of Texas Uni versity, formerly at Carolina; I,. C. Hrogden, State Supervisor of Rural Schools; D. 1). Carroll, Professor of History and Economics, Guilford Col lege; Miss Leila M. Cobb, of the Rrac-t'r-e-Pr-hool. I'enn. State Xormal; It. I). W. Connor, Secretary of the North Carolina Historical' Commission; Supt. ('has. . Coon of Wilson; Supt. 1. C. PILOT THEATRE TODAV : Fanny Ward A In For the Defense A Paramount Feature Saturday ... Th mistakes of Musty Suffer, a laugh a second. The Bray Cartoons Who's Guilty? The intensely interesting serial, with Anna Neilson and Tom Moore. I PARAMOUNT ALL THIS WEEK EDDIE COLLINS ' : AND The Follies Of Broadway A Classy Musical and Vaudeville Attraction The Best Show We've Had Yet TAT THE O HEATERO CHAXGK OK I'KtXiRAM AT THK PAUA MOl XT TH f.ATKR TOD A The F.ddie Collins "Broadway Fol lies" company, which is so completely delighting record audiences at the Paramount theater tins week, will give an entire change of bill today for the finish of their engagement. The rtme Htl will fee repeated Jomorraw For the closing entertainment Man ager Collins has arranged a black- , face bill that is a riot of delightful comedy and contains some of the new est and best vaudeville specialties on ' the extensive repertoire of this com pany. This is perhaps the very best tab company that has yet played this city and Manager Savin is already de manding that future attractions rise to the merits of this one. The vaude ville is unusually classy and the cost umes, jokes and sayings all new of the sort that wins approval every minute. Today and tomorrow complete this engagement- and for next -week.-ilanj agcr Savin promises mi equally strong. hi i show. Griffin of Marion; l'rof. K. A. Hodson of A. and M. College; Wm. A. Mo Call, Lecturer in Psychology. Colum bia University; Miss llenriette Marie Masseling. Story Specialist, Atlanta, ! la.; Supt. K. I. l'usey, of Durham;! Miss Edith Daggett, teacher of Draw ing, Washington,' D. C. ; Mrs. Neva S Burgess, Supervisor of Municipal Play grounds, Charlotte. MISS HAZLETT TO GIVE SERIES OF LECTURES AT COURTHOUSE Miss Ida Crouch Hazlett of New York City will give a series of lec tures at the courthouse Friday and Saturday nights and Sunday after noon at 3:30 o'clock. Friday night she will speak on "Politics for the People," Saturday night. "Interna tional Socialism" and Sunday after noon, "Social Evils and their Remedy, from a scriptural basis. Miss- Ifazh-tt is w university grad uate. She was for five years na tional organizer of the Woman Suffrage Association, and for many yonrs has been devoted to topics of social reform. She is the first wo man ever nominated for Congress. In Municipal Court Irvin Morris, the young man charg ed with assault whose case ' has created a good deal of Interest, ap peared In Municipal Court yesterday morning charged with an assault with intent to commit rape. Probable cause having been found the young man was bound over to court under a $500 bond, which was filed. John Coleman and John Williams, both colored, charged with assault were each taxed with the costs. The case charging Luther Hill with non-support was nol prossed. Building Permits A permit was Issued yesterday for the erection of a dwelling house on Piedmont avenue between Shallow ford and Fourth streets, at an esti mated cost of $3,500. Mrs. Lillian Lefirand is owner and C. E. Miller is contractor. Headaches Every Morn ing, Can't Eat Much Breakfast, Liver Nol Aching? A Wlnoghissfiil of Tollo Water Will Make Your Liver Act Freely In Half an Hour Morning headaches comes from a clogged liver. The bile tubes get choked and force the bile hack -into the stomach, the blood takes it up and the whole system becomes pols lOned, the appetite becomes poor, es pecially at breakfast. (ict a 15-cent bottle of Tolln Water ,Trom the "drug "store" lin.nake. Tiliout a third of a. tumbler full in. a glass of plain water before breakfast. In about thirty minutes it will start the liver acting freely, your headache will- be relieved -at once- bccauKO it flushes out the hile, really bathes the liver, leaving it clean and fresh. Then you can eat breakfast and enjoy it and there won't be any gas or dis comfort afterwards. Concentrated Tollo Water comes from Dawson Springs. It does not act by irritation, like calomel. and other strong drugs that weaken the system, but by dissolving the obtsruc tions and bathing the liver as nature reiuires. To remove the bile thai has been absorbed into the blood you should take n wineglassful every morning for several days. It will clear up cite skin, pimples and sallowness will disappear, your tongue will lose its furry coat and your natural, healthy color will return. Then an occasional glass before breakfast or at any time on an empty stomach will keep your liver clean and your appetite good. For sale in Winston-Salem by Ran-kin-P.utner Drug Co. (Advt.) Some ' people avoid the straight and narrow path because they have been told the longest way round is the shortest way home. ft Reduction CLOTHING SHOES HATS TRUNKS BAGS SUIT CASES ETC. ful Values We Are Offering No Goods Charged or Sent On Ap proval During ThisSale largest Clothiers The South" Clothing Co IPWIWIU'U, g,. o m Dr U. 0. IU m H I OllUUlU UU JLVVVO Mfc fir Frank A. Blmck. AdmrtitinA Afm4tr. Willi Am Fin Son Co . HI II 1 ! - - I lUvjVJvVJ 31 H BoBton, mnd Chttrmmn of Rrtm.t Dvpsrtmnt, A. A. C. of W. H . j ' Comber of Curtesy- , -p.ev- swtar, of Commerce De- "ares America Has Already Captured the Tin p1- lclt-, p. KM Becker-fnoore Co. Consolidated With Benjamin Moore & Co., $3,000,000 Concern. NEW PLANTS TO BE ERECTED Locaf Faciw ore m Wen in Jnmtoi h.. : .. - i ew York-'.. . Ike ...u, -.-t-n 7 -As .-,-.- i rout Vantages o. Resources H ti c- : ,...IU 1 1 a lit St" ( Mil- hundred and IncludiiiK thref f.: our luinds. ' FROM FRENCH WAR OFFICE (Bv The Associated Prut.) Paris, Juno If The official rum munlcatiini i.ssiM'U .tonight roalt: "On tin- left hunk of Hip Miminp. alter urtilU-ry pi 't'li.-inition our troops in the c-onrnp of a spirited nttark raptured a Herman trench on the slop s wouth of Lu Wort Homnie 1X7H0 in this day and age spends time on stale news? Then why should retailers expect attention for the commonplaces, repe titions, exaggerations, misstatements and hashed- overlactsso often presented as advertising?" Imagine a store employing 2,000 people, mainly young and in their prime, who concentrate their thought and effort on these things: , ! , t The selection, creation and adaptation of new and becoming styles in wearing apparel The economical production of these styles in the most attractive and serviceable materials and by the best workmanship The distribution of this apparel among- ' men, women and children, by the most satisfactory and efficient methods. Ine doings of this great organization can fairly be called news. In printing this news as its advertising this store is doing a real service to the community which it serves. And, as might have been expected, has met with success, proportionate to the service rendered. Any retail store can do the same thing. The instructions are these: Choose a merchandise field you are cap able of covering. Then cover it. Know all there is to know about your branch of business. ' Have enough of the right goods at the right prices at the right time. Tell the people about these goods fre quently, frankly and as interestingly as you can. Satisfy ALL calls for advertised goods, no matter what it costs to do this. We hear much about advertising "with a punch." As a medium cf communication between interests as nearly mutual as arc those of the retailer and ciustomrr, advertising "with a pull" would seem to be mixh more appropriate. . ....V"'"TrTr:3r'' AdvcH43iiTvi.tc!lnnothinff-rnore-orless. -If-you, Mr. UUailer, have news worth telling, you vi!l 'ir.d no difficulty in getting an audience. Advt xtsr7 truthful, informative advertising need;: no dofen.x. It p:iys its own way. It tells the people of 'bet'er-things for the same money o nr'.v and easivjr ways of doing their work of greater ' satisfaction. It makes better mer chants, better stores, better homes, better people. Advertising of the other kind deserves no defense. It falls of its own weight. TMs ,is or nf a rrMs to A"T'm Ai iHne, hy i.h1 A h-r- AdvemsuiR Clubs iA the V' m Id lim 'i juhi ;--:fj, Indin-nnpf Ut. Wnir fur booklet, writicn'fr buvf- ' iir,if. Kvtry ma. (-i inati who buys any kind of coniaiuciuif.-3 v;ill tind it profitable reading. thirty priHonrrx, '"'. iciiiii ini-il in TKAIll; A WAV I 'OK XKW MOIl lt IIKU h III II DINt. The work of tearing away t he frame store Imilding of Mr. A. 1. "There wan lnteiiHC firtlllery hp tivilv In the region of t'liatta n-roiiri and Hill 304, "(in the rinht hank the enemy vhil on 1 1 y homha rd'-d the .seotnrM of the Thiaiiinorit fmlified works and Souvill". m the ient of the front Hie conimandini.' was intermittent." Ilolejnn communication : "K.vcept for the usual uriill'-rv ac tion there l.s noiliini; to report on , the front of the bulsiuu uriny," . Orb.za al on Main Second and Third tnenced wilh the (reiling on the ! Orizzard is to ere Htury hrick huildinu on this site, the first floor for a grocery store room aiei tie . T 1 1 i dire,, pu- a pa rtiueiit s or hotel. pnVposi . Journal Want street, helween Ktreets, has com removim; of tin- second floor. Mr. ct a modern four Ada bring result, v. v. a. mi:i:ti; siriti!Y Mt.irr The regular moni h'tv meeting of I'oKt li T. I', A., will lie held Sat urday night. At this meeting, Mes srs, II. H. Marsh, I). C. Crutchfteld and .1. .1. Norman, delegates to the National T. I'. A. Convention, will tell the memhers of the convention. -Muggins-- "Wha' I like about Wigwag is that he is so full of syni paihy." Muggins- "That's right. He can weep with a woman, or swear with a man."
Winston-Salem Journal (Winston-Salem, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 16, 1916, edition 1
5
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