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Friday, September 25, 1925.
CAMPUS NEWS
Miss Rose Nowell of Colerain
was a visitor on the campus last
Friday.
Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Ruffin of Po
wellsville called to see their daugh
ter, Miss Louise Ruffin, Sunday
afternoon.
THE CHOWANIAN, CHOWAN COLLEGE. MURFREESBORO. N. C.
New Books Have Been Received
by College Library This Summer
Mr. and Mrs. 0. C. Futrell of j shelved
Conway were callers on Miss Ber.*
A large number of books have
recently been added to the library
through the generosity of friends,
and some have been purchased by
the college, bringing the total up
to 7,431. Following is a list of
,! the new volumes now on the
;j Contributed by Dr. Colier Cobb
German by John Adams.
Extinct Civilization of The East
Robt. E. Anderson.
Jerusalem Past and Present
Gains Glenn Atkins.
A Calm Review of a Calm
j THi • Samuel J. Blythe.
Gunn and Eloise Shakespeare and The Universi
Meroney, former members of the ty, Frederick Boss,
faculty, spent several days at the ‘Youno'Srnllc'«
college. They were on their way. Etiquette, Nella Braddy °
to Columbia University where thej Brooks-Brvce Prize Essavs
will study during the winter. “| BrooL Bryce ®
Mrs Weaver entertained at her, For France. Mrs N A«;tn
home Saturday, in honor of the Chanler
nice and Janet Benthall, Friday
afternoon.
Madam Yavorski, Mrs. W. K
McLean, Miss Jessie Marie Par
ker and Mr. Tinsley attended a
Masonic barbecue at Potecasi, on
Thursday.
Misses Edna
new students and faculty.
Professor Bob Keyes of Wood
land called at the college, Satur
day evening.
Misses Edna Gunn and Eloisa ^
Meroney attended a party at Cole-' bos
T. I Government,
Mrs. Do- Much Taxation, Chas.
ra Wood were visitors at the col- Pav
lege Friday afternoon.
Highways and Byways of Music
Hugh a; Clark.
The Doctor Looks at Life, Har
old Dearden.
Historic Cambridge, J. M. Del
Too
CHOWAN ALUMNA
IS LEADER IN STATE
Chowan alumnaa frequently
win places for their names in
the columns of print. An edi-
torial appearing in the Raleigh
News & Observer last week
will be of interest to Chowan-
»an readers because it carried
news about one of Chowan’s
oldest alumna, with a high trib
ute to her. Mrs. RoberSson,
who was before her marriage
Lucy Henderson Owen, grad
uated in the class of 1868. Fol
lowing is what the editor of the
paper says about her:
Mrs. Lucy H. Robertson was
the 6rst woman to be president
of a college in North Carolina,
and it was fitting for Greens
boro College for Women, to
which she bad given 50 years of
service, to celebrate her 75th
anniversary. By dignity and in
poise and true womanliness she
influenced many lives. Mrs.
Robertson has alAvays been a
new-fashioned old - fashioned
woman—not
1 he first by whom the new is
tried
pitting her presidency it was
Gr^nsboro Female College.
Su^enly somebody proclaimed
thw a college could have no
texf even though only women
welw admitted, and the name
“Female** was tabooed.”
Dr. Sig
About yout"
Health
Things You Should Know
Dream Psychology,
mund Freud.
Mind and Work, Luther Gulick
And in the Tomb Were Found
Terence Gray.
Life and Letters of Walter H
Page, Vols. 1, 2, 3, J. Burton Hen-
drick.
Golf Simplified, Dave Hunter.
The Coming Forth by Day
Robert S. Hillger.
The Jews in America, J. Burton
Hendrick.
The Man Himself, Rollin Lynde
Hart.
A Book for Shakespere Plays
and Pageants, Qrie L. Hatcher.
The Fun of Knowing Folks.
C. Kelly.
Chemistry, James Knight.
The New Astronomy, Samuel P.
Langley.
Jesus of Nazareth, John Mark.
Shakespere’s Plays, Agnes M.
MacKenzie.
From Shakespere to 0. Henry
S. P. S. Mais.
The World’s Greatest Classic,
Archibald McCullugh.
Twenty-Nine Tales from the
French, Alys Eyre McKlin.
Memoirs of Life and Literature
W. H. Mallock. ’
Faith The Greatest Power in the
Wo'rid, Samuel McComb.
The Story of Princeton, Edwin
Mark Norris.
lyifSwotral^.
, The Plymouth Settlement, Har
old Paget.
A Zola Bictionary, J. A. Patter
son.
. romorrow We Diet, Nina Wil
Putnam.
'Philosophy, John Herman Ran
in.
Life, • How It Comes,Stephen
4fd.
The Individual and The Com
unity, R. E. Roper.
Satire in The Victorian Novel
j-ances T. Russell.
Yea and Nay, Lectures, David C
Stelling.
Some of Shakespere’s Animals
J. Sanford Salts.
Abraham Lincoln As a Man
Among Men, G. Lynn Sumner
Parodies on Walt Whitman,
Henry S. Saunders.
Spanish Grammar, Albert A
Shapire.
Some Modern French Writers
G. Milnes Turquet.
Famous Chemists, Sir William
A. Tilden.
Woodrow Wilson As I Knew
Him, Joseph P. Tumulty.
A Manual of Mystic Verse
Louise C. Wilcox.
Literature in The South, John
T. Welch.
Three Women, Ell W. Wilcox.
Poems of Pleasure, Ella Wheel
er Wilcox.
Motives in English Fiction
Robert N. Whiteford.
The Papers of John Steele, H
M. Wagstaff.
By the Alumnae Association:
Reader’s Guide to Periodical
Literature, Vol. 5. Reader’s
I Guide to Periodical Literature,
Norman Vol. 6.
By'Miss Minnie Caldwell:
Church Socials and Entertain
ments, B. C. Carleton.
Plane Trigonometry, Leonard
E. Dickson.
A First Book in Algebra, Durell
and Arnold.
First Course in Algebra, Ford
and Ammerman.
First Course in Algebra,
Hawkes-Lurly-Touton.
A Secondary Arithmetic, Stone
and Millis.
Select Notes on The Interna
tional S. S. Lesson, A. R. Wells.
Analytic Geometry, Wilson and
Tracey.
By C. L. Parker.
Ethics, Dewey and Tufts.
By Miss Edna Gunn:
La Belle France, A DeMonvert.
Tartarin De Tarascon, Daudet
Alphonse.
By Miss Eloise Meroney:
American Literature, William
J. Long.
Outlines of English and Ameri
can Literature, William J. Long.
By Miss Madge Conwell:
El Neuvo Testamento, Cipriano
De Valera.
By Miss Eunice McDowell:
Certain People of Importance,
Kathleen Norris.
By Mrs. Carrie F. Marbourg:
The Saints Everlasting Rest,
Richard Baxter. I
The Psychic Life of Insects, E.
L. Bouvier.
A Pipe of Tobacco, Isazc Haw
kins Browne.
rMIb aRzazv.e
Rome or Death, Carleton Beals.
Peeps into Picardy, Manton and
Crauford.
The Revolt of an Oyster, Don
Marquis.
A Primer of Cooking, Dorothy
M. Hamilton.
Percolator Papers, Edward Hen
drick.
Others for 1919, Anthology of
New Verse, A Kre^borg Oct. 10-Lenoir Rhyne at Wake
A Philosopher With Nature^ Forest
Benjamin Kidd.
Rambles and Studies in Greece
J. P. Mahaffy.
Oxford Poetry 1921. Oxford
Poetry 1921. The Poetic Proces
sion, J. F. Roxburgh.
Seamless Chenille Rugs.
Window Draping With Net and
Lace, W. and J. Sloane.
Short History of Europe, Chas.
Terry.
Short History of Europe, Chas.
Terry, (modern.)
Short History of Europe, Chas.
Terry, (Medieval.)
Poems of Progress, Ella Wheel
er Wilcox.
WAKE FOREST FOOTBALL
schedule for 1925
Sept. 26—Carolina
Hill.
Oct. 3—Davidson at Charlotte.
Oct. 24—University of Florida
at Gainsville.
Oct. 31. 31—Guilford College
at Wake Forest.
Nov. 7—Duke University at
Durham.
Nov. 14—North Carolina State
College at Raleigh. I
Nov. 20—Furman University at
Asheville. '
Nov. 6—Elon College at Elon
College.
Freshman Schedule I
Oct. 17—Wingate Junior Col
lege at Wingate.
Oct. 24—Apprentice School, i
Newport News at Wake Forest.
Nov. 6 — Duke University
Freshmen at Durham.
Nov. 11—Bingham School at
Nov. 21—High Point College at
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by John Josepn Gaineu, M. D
Incorporated
THE TABLE YOUR FOE
Of the many sins against rigl
living, overeating is perhaps tl
chief, especially in cases of inc
viduals In whom age has laid i
restricting hand on bodily activH
Many men have retired from bu
ness, only to inaugurate a systf
of dietary that is an infinite
worse burden. In such cases,
protein, or proteins, become (
invisible foe. “Baked beans” a
“dressings” are heavy prot
foods. Fresh meats are laden
protein. Highly-seasoned fo^
owe their evil effects to proteir
excess. Enough for you to ki
that protein is stimulant and
pushed, a dangerous intoxi»in
Age brings in many people,
por of^the eliminating channel
the body. Obstruction and
supply of food becomes a de
enemy. Stupor after meals, d
ness, hardened arteries, height
blood-pressure, auto-intoxica
apoplexy, not a very enticing
ter. Many fatal cases of
hemorrhage can be traced to
eating. People just won’t
and think! That neighboi
yours, that died suddenly of
lysis at sixty years of age
should have lived to eighty:
he lived right!
Within the past year,
known of a half-dozen men,
dead in bed after having et
heavy six-o’clock dinner, ai
tiring “in good health and si
Will we never take warnin
creased blood-pressure is a
tom of protein poisoning,
falls. Serious diseases of t
neys may be traced to the b
table. Over-work doesn’t t
half the blame it gets, wh
innocent-looking sugar^bo^
seductive mince-pie, and tj
beef-steak are working thf
oc.
Next Week
“The Stomach’s Rest H
WELDON,
N. C.
Fancy Fruits and Vegetables
Bananas A Specialty
A
FOR
All Kinds of High Grade
COAL
See
Crystal Ice, Water & Fuel Co.
Murfreesboro, N. C.
If you’re sick, we’ve got it
If you’re well we’ve got it.
Everything in Drugs, Toilet Articles and
Stationery
All the latest Magazines.
Fountain.
Up-to-date Soda
E. N., NICHOLSON’S
DRUG STORE
Murfreesboro, N. C.
STUDENTS OF CHOWAN-
You can buy the best Pure thread silk
full fashioned Hose, a regular $2.00 value
Special to Chowan Students at $1.75 at
E. N. EVANS’ CASH STORE
-cl MURFREESBORO, N. C.
For Service And Low Prices
Go To
Sewell Grocery Co.
For
Confectioneries, Groceries, Fruits
and Fresh Meats
Sewell Grocery Co.
Phone No. 30 Murfreesboro, N. C.
The Hertford Mercantile Co.
Incorporated
‘THE PEOPLES STORE”
Head-to-Foot Outfitters for the
Family
Our Motto: Satisfaction Guaranteed
4
Murfreesboro, N. C.
FOR REAL
Service ^
• • • •
&
Courtesy
RevelFs Drug Store
/p
Stedman Stores Co.
G. R. Rose, Mgr.
Muifreesboro, - - - N. C.
Heavy and Fancy Groceries
During the winter season we
will carry a complete line of
Fruits and Fresh Meats.
The Peoples Bank
Murfreesboro, N. C.
Chowan College Faculty
and Students
We desire to extend to you a
hearty welcome to our town,
and to assure you that it will be
a pleasure to extend to you
every courtesy and accommoda
tion consistent in sound bank
ing.