The Teco Echo, October 26, 1929






HtDAYS ARE BE- j
: FORGET THEM
THE TECO ECHO
TOMORROWS ARK
AHEAD: MEET THEM
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE
NO. 1
GREENVILLE, N. C SATURDAY, OCTOBER 2fi, 1929L
NO. 2
C. G. Hounshell
ill Be Our Annual
.W.C. A. Speaker
BIG ESSAY CONTEST
FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS
"It is easy to write an essay of
HIGH SCHOOL ENROLLMENT
DOUBLES EVERY DECADE
"The ratio of the high school enrol-
50 wards, especially when it is a con- � ment to the total population is today
beautiful prize are the j twelve times what it, was forty years
and it is significant that nearly
test
tor a
Isadora Duncan Dancers
Pleased Large Audience
words of Mary .lane Caldwell winner ago,
of the 1928 beauty contest at the Uni-J two-thirds of this increase has 0C-
versity of Illinois, who has just en- curred during the past decade writes
tered her essay in the Majestic-Col- Walter S. Monroe, professor of edu-
lege Humor Radio Contest. j cation at the University of Illinois,
This contest which is open to all '� in the October Journal of the National
college undergraduates offers as Education Association.
who is now pastor
Chattanooga,
oui ampus N
M'i ice. It is h
i asure thai we arc
. isit. He will
� ud nt body,
had much ex
rk. havine at
M
Also,
f Mi
he Unit
Student
ns of
v f the Mis i n
same time served as
� � he ' Jentenary Com-
time an unusually
. , missionaries were
i Ids. He is
- � � . 1 reign and
, - erence of North
' � �� he was elected
tary of the Methodist
of Missions. In 1924
chairman of the Secre-
�, rence of the Mission
ell was born at Rural
January 12, 1874. He
uated from Emory ami
ge in 1895 with the honors
torian of his class. Medalist
State Oratorical Contest,
alist, Calliopes Literary
� d Robertson Prize Medalist
prizes
radios
essays
jestic
Radio
five glorious modern Majestic
for the five best &00 word
on "Why We Bought a Ma-
Radio" or "Why Our Next
Will Be a Majestic All
Ma,
I; i y
t "ni
He is a graduate of the
tment, Yanderbilt Uni-
I B99. In 1901 ho was
Korea as a missionary.
i ned in Songdo, where
, Pai Chai School, and
, � ime serving as pastor
t.
ry University conferred
Honorary Degree of
nity. President Cox.
� iversity, at the com-
xercisea said that be-
. Hounshell's valuable ser-
minister of the gospel, his
It, and seal in the far-
s wise leadership of the
B the church, which had
hreda of them to yield
full service to their
m authority of the Board
�, and the recommendation
idemtc Council, he was con-
n him the degree of Doc-
- he was graduated from
:y. He was then made
ston Conference, Athens,
a few weeks ago.
that we have been very
securing Dr. Hounshell
:� for this year.
o
0 GIVEN TO COLLEGE.
Dr. (HAS. GIDEON HOUNSHELL
MISS COODVS IN IS NI W DI-
RECTOR OF RELIGIOUS
AND SOCIAL U'TTVH'lr.S
The college is indeed rtunate in
having for its assistant dean and di-
rectoi of religious activities on the
campus Miss Miriam Goodwin, from
Morganton, N. C. Miss Goodwin's
earl) life was spent in Morganton,
where her father is the founder and
superintendent of the State School
foi th Deaf.
Mi s Goodwin received hei Bachefoi
Of Arts Degree in 1923 from the North
Carolina College for Women where
she was an active member of the
Young Woman's Christian Associa-
tion, ol the Quill Club, an honorary
literary society, and of the college
magazine staff. She held the office
State Treasurer of the Student Vol-
unteer Movement for one year, and
belonged to the National Student
Volunteer Council in 1922.
Immediately after leaving N. C. C.
W. she was sent by the Southern
Methodist Board to the mission field
in Korea. There for three years she
served as teacher of the missionaries'
children in Songdo.
Soon after returning to America
Miss Goodwin became traveling secre-
tary of the National Student Volun-
teei Movement. For a year she visit-
ed collegee in the Middle West and
South East, making talks on
work in
dents inspirational
manuscripts must be typewritten and
sent to Grigsby-Grunow Company,
Chicago, before November 10.
W. .). Guy, University of Chicago
student, and Whit Wright, of the j
University of Illinois, were the first,
to send their essays to the Contest
Editor. It is interesting to note that
collegians from every part of the
country are entering this contest.
"H I win says W. .1. Guy, "this
pstic is going to find a place in
fraternity house The old Sigma
House at Chicago nevd a good
radio and my only hope is that I win
� � �� beautiful combination radio and
phonograph which is offered as first
prize, because it is the finest I have
ever seen
The judges in this l.atioi-wide con-
test for collegians only will be Karl-
leu Hackett, Director of the Amer-
ican Conservatory of Music. II. N.
Swanson, Editor of College Humor,
and James Weber Linn. Professor of
English at the University of Chicago.
Winners will be announced in the
February issue of College Humor.
Professor Monroe sees in the rapid-
ly increasing enrolment and expand-
ing curriculum of this youngest of
American educational institutions a
powerful determining factor in Amer-
ican life. Five million students are
attending high schools. Courses in-
clude the study of such widely diver-
gent subjects as aviation and Latin.
; It is not unusual for comprehensive
; high school to offer in grades nine to
POST OFFICE HOURS
Mail is put up at 7:00 A.M. am
at 12:30 P. M.
Packages delivered at 8:00
i Li.th
monn us
Duncan
I equally
and n
in dress an
bi oughl
lithe, airie
" . I:
�8:15 A. M. and at 1:16-
sold at 6: lr
1 Stamps ar
!
1:30 P. M.J
-0:45 P.M
i
SUNDAY HOURS
Mail is put up at 7:00 A. M. and
at 5:30 P. M.
Packages delivered at 8:00�8:15
and at 6:15�6:30 P. M.
twelve more than one hundred yea-
units.
The �
schools ha
ing studei
(St .American secondary
he s ingle aim of prepar
college
ot
where they
were to take up the study of on
the so-called "learned professions.
The curriculum of this institution was
largelj classical, and Latin was em-
phasized as a subject of instuction.
The English grammar schools were
usually private institutions, and be-
cause their masters depended foi
STATE B.
tarj at N. C
line Ellii it.
Meredith Col
Thursday nij
of the Nortl
convention,
' 1-3 in the
Greensboro,
from all th
leges as well
U. TO
MEET THIS WEEK
Mitchell, Sn
. C V and
Miss Mada-
Student Secretary at
lege, were on the campus
rht and Friday in behalf
Carolina State B. S. I.
which meet- November
First Baptist Church.
performing foil
torium of the
Tuesday, Oct
of Isadora Dunca
stepped, swayed, m v � .
ly in numbers called
modern Russian, and
largest audience �
new auditorium.
The (-vent was th
series of entertain
� � college c mitt
other i ! � :i I
1 he s tate. N xl on
( come the
, The fii
was : '
i fron
pus
1 5, ui d
H.
mted
divis
,i
excellent baeKgroui
in of the adroitness
A favorite of the fii
parently was "Irish .T
the darn
are
expected ' demonstrated undeniabl;
raining ot
demanded
lie schools.
Delegate
Baptist and State Col- superioi
as othei private and pub- Applause
There is no limitation on and in other parts i
upon tne degree to the number from any college, there- sion of the program,
vhich they anticipated the educational fore from three to four hundred stu- interpretation of the
desires of the moment, these schools dents are expected. Delegates will hers was Irma Dune
usualh included such subjects as register at the First Baptist Church Musicale
th ir livelihood
an
the
tlu
m encon

A v � i:
Schubert
num-
bookkeepin
tion.
surveying and naviga- and there
The public high school did not ; The first
will be assigned
session will open
homes.
Fridav
the dominant type of sec- evening with an address by Hon. Pat
SCHOOLS OF THE AIR
Radio in Education, issued by the
Payne Fund, One Madison Avenue,
New York, is an interesting report
providing information of value to
school officials who desire facts on the
n-e of the radio in schools. The
Ohio School of the Air is probably
the most extensive experiment in
radio education so far conducted. It
was put into operation in the fall of
1928 with a Director of Education
Broadcasting�who had special quali-
fications for the work�in charge.
The State Department of Education
of Ohio; the Ohio State University,
with its broadcasting station; school
officials and citizens cooperated in
arranging and carrying out the pro-
grams for the school. The Payne
Fund provided initial expenses. Later
become
ondary school until about 1860. It
had then begun to recognize that
not all students expected to �o to
college, but that many who leave it
expect to enter immediately japon tlu
active business of life
As late as 1893, however, an im-
portant committee in charge oi re-
! organizing the high school curriculum
showed how limited a field they con-
sidered the institution was destined to
, serve in the statement that the high
school should be planned for "that
small proportion of all the children in
the country�a proportion small in
number but very important to the
welfare of the nation�who show
j themselves able to profit by an edu-
cation prolonged to the eighteenth
year and whose parents are able to
I support them while they remain so
i long at school This must sound
j like a modest claim to parents who
! today are sending four times as many
Neff, ex-Governor of Texas. Others
who will- appeal on the program Sat-
urday and Saturday evening are Dr.
Games, Dr. Reid, Misses Madaline
Miller. Cleo Mitchell, and Elizabeth
Cowan, and Charles Howard and Coy rather than through individual
Mucklc. Also a number of students
will speak. The theme of this i
vention is "Conquering the Campus
with Christ Dr. J. Clyde Turner.
Dr. Charles E. Maddry, and Dr. John
L. Hill will speak Sunday morning.
Dr. Turner will have charge of the de-
votionals throughout the conference.
Miss Bland, of Meredith College and
John Blackburn, of Wake Forest,
have charge of the music. Special
Chopin's music was the I : for
the second part of the entertainment,
a division which allowed the spectators
to see more of the individual dancing
of Maya. Lola. Tamara, Lily, Alex-
andria, ami Maria. But groups were
still the intention of the artists
j pictorial effects on a large scale.
and
the individuals rarely interrupted the
blend of grace which was so con-
stantly noticeable in the presentati
of the artists.
Varying costumes and changing
lighting added matt rially to the be-
auty of the dances throughout the
evening.
A group of Russian songs from
Gretchaninoff was a third division of
the dancer's interpretations. The
numbers will be rendered by students final section brought impress
from the varoius colleges. Modern Russia: "Farewell Song
Dr. Charles A. Maddry, president of "Work Song "The Blacksmith and
the North Carolina Baptist Student -The Russian Girl Scout Song
Union, says that, this will be the These were unusually well
Korea and giving the stu-
children to college as were being
1 uiKt provided miuai expenses, umvci . 4.�.0
, . , , sent to high school when the state-
he State legislature made an appro- B
i � ment was made.
priation for the purpose. At one ol jlUK �.
the early sessions of the School of the! America�indeed the whole life ot
ir the pupils were invited to listen the world-throughout the centuries
to the inauguration program of the to come will be colored by the tact
Governor of the State. I that 5,000,000 sturdy youth are get-
The maximum cost of radio equip-j ting the best education ever offered
a" I ment and upkeep for classrooms and i to the common people. The enrol-
heri other expenses which would probably! ment in high schools has doubled
decade since lh80, so that the
in round numbers run: 1880,
neatest convention ever held in North
! Carolina for religious interests. The
! expenses are slight, including a regis-
tration fee of one dollar, your travel-
ing expenses, and lunch and dinner.
Entertainment on the Harvard plan is
offered to all those attending. This
! means "Bed and Breakfast
ring tne sro- k required tQ give a state adequate ! every de
.sages about . scnools are figures i
estimated in the n
per day per pupil.
-o
foreign mission work. (estimated in the report as 3 1-8 cents
In 1929 Miss Goodwin received her
Master's Degree from Hartford Sem-
inary, Foundation in Hartford, Conn
Whew sh served as member of the , TEC0AN IS
Student Council. And now she has J ��,
come to us to live with us and grow ,
social I
RAPIDLY PROGRESSING
100,000; 1890, 200,000; 1900, 500,000;
1910, 1.000,000; 1920, 2,000,000; 1930,
5,000,000. The high school is a giant
in its influence. It is destined to be
more powerful still. Buildings are
improving; teachers are more highly
trained; courses touch moi'e closely
. U. W. SPEND VERY
DELIGHTFUL EVENING
and
x-press our thanks for I with us in our religious
was given to our col- ' activities. Since she has been here
Eliza Walters, editor of the Tecoan, jt- life of today'
i reports that work on the Tecoan is
, feels that it would she has won the hearts and confidence progress. Mr. Dunbar.
to do without "our" ra- of many girls and we feel sure 1
i was put there for our her influence
every one has the privi- betterment of the college.
ri� in but "tune in at q
When Y. W. C. A. ser- I
v to begin is not tte MB. IW�aATTENDS
r during a picture
�el sure tnai , " i,� nx j-
u rtwJ photographer from Siddell's Studio, in
I Raleigh, was on the campus all last
week making pictures. All of the in-
dividual pictures have been taken and
they are very good, as is shown by
THE STUDENT CLUB.
SOUTHERN EDUCATION CON
ntv of the girls pre-
The Student Club, which is an or-
ganization of the Episcopal church, in-
vites each and every student of East
rin�Tord�rhwe�C�r Teachers College to become
i given for photographs. I a member of the group winch assem-
music.
o-
The other features of the Tecoan are bles at the rectory every Friday af
Mr. Howard J. McGinnis, registrar . ,ing. The general plan of ternoon from four-thirty to five-thirty
of East Carolina Teachers College, �. � though
tended the second annua �nference to rfe
on Southern Education held at Chapel; �
The purpose of the , members of the staff hope that
eir home in Rocky Point j conference i. to stadj problems of
H OF MR- SCOTT
� and Irene Scott were' Hill last week.
i the 1930 Tecoan will be the best ever.
the death of their father, southern education. I his eai ine� - � are to u.y Mk( it so
o'clock, whether the girls are mem-
bers of the Episcopal church or not.
At the meetings the girls take part
in the most attractive games
and interesting programs. Mr. Lily-
crop, the rector, and Mrs. Howard, the
a a 1 ngerinK I.Lm � ��� TTZthev are looking to the student I Student Secretary, a.ways help to
a iihr, s ��� �tu th. southern educators I -nu � , , .A , - vp the crirls a most pleasurable af-
Last Thursday evening at a six
o'clock dinner, Mrs. E. L. Hillman was
hostess to the officers of the Green-
ville branch of the American Associa-
tion of the University Women in com-
pliment to Mrs. E. R. Mosher, of
Chapel Hill, state president of the A.
A. U. W.
Promptly at 8. o'clock the ladies
joined the remaining members of the
branch at the Y. W. C. A. Hut on the
college campus, where the hostesses,
Misses Catherine Holtzclaw, Mary
Green, Emma Hooper, and Betty
White, gave a most cordial welcome.
The lovely dahlias and a cheerful
log fire added much to the charm of
the meeting. Mrs. Mosher gave a
brief outline of the purpose and work
of the organization which insprred the
members to try to make Greenville the
outstanding branch of the eastern
part of the State.
At the conclusion of the meeting the
hostesses served dainty refreshments,
contributing much to the social side of
the meeting.
The crowd gave an exceptionally
warm reception to the work of the
Duncan Dancers throughout the eve-
ning.
Maurice Sheyne was not so much in
evidence as the dancers, but he was
a very essential part of the entertain-
ment of the evening. He was the ac-
companist, and his contribution was
on a par with that of the Duncan
Dancers.
o
LAMER SOCIETY MEETS
The Sidney Lanier Society met the
first Saturday night in October for
the purpose of appointing committees
and making plans for initiation. The
"Old Lanier Spirit" was surely
present as was shown by the readi-
ness of the members to respond to the
requests of the president and commit-
tees.
After the meeting, the Society
serenaded the new girls, singing songs
and giving yells that made the new-
girls yearn for the time when they
could get in line and be a royal, true
Lanier. Now that you are members
of the society, get the spirit girls, and
let us make the Sidney Lanier Society
the best on the campus.
o
New Officers College Activities
x-ott
er a im.�� � . southern educators
tth was not unexpected. Meeting w uu ��-� Awn
Indent bod, extends its sympa- was the Southeastern LW A�
Ltew in their sad- ; ciation. The librarian of Yale Uni-
versity, Mr. Keogh, was the principal
" ! speaker.
KRARY ASSOCIATION. One of the moat I- J
tures of the conference was the dedi-
i VtaM of the Green- ration of the Library of the University
body to help make it an annual of
which everyone will be proud.
,J iT� Helen - North Carolina. Another feature
PHI EPSILONS SPONSOK
"WEARY RIVER
From the great throng of girls
give the girls a most pleasurable af-
ternoon. The Tatler, a short paper,
written by the girls, with the help of
Mr. Lilycrop and Mrs. Howard, is read
at each meeting. Few girls go just
once; they always come again. All
new and old students will be welcome
i next Friday afternoon.
-O-
TWO STUDENT SECRETARIES
VISITED OUR COLLEGE
j Ham: He's so romatic. When-
starts to speak to me he be-
fair Lady
Lynch: Shucks! There's
romatic about that. That's
h of habit. He used to be a'
ar conductor.
Chicago University.
hi Library and Miss Helen ; oi delivered , filing down street Wednesday after
LV InZ�?�2?� ItSTto Dr. Shailer Loon, one would have thought that a
jhe North Carolina Library As- (Sunday y of, gre&t
n which met in Chapel SL!L� attraction turned out to be White's
Theatre, where "Weary River was
shown, in which Richard Bartholomess
and Betty Compson starred. This un-
usually good picture was sponsored by
members of Phi Epsilon. They hearti-
ly appreciate the patronage of the
girls in buying their tickets from
them.
Teacher: "Who was king of France
during the Revolution?"
Confused Student: "Louis the
Thirteenth- no the Fourteenth-no,
the� well, anyway, he was in his
teens
Our parents teach us to make our
dollars to go as far as they will, and
most of us make them go so far that
we never see them again.
Oscar the Operator says that its
easy enough to buy what you want
and that's what makes it so hard to
buy what you need.�Ex.
Miss Cleo Mitchell, who is the Stu-
dent Secretary at. N. C. C. W and
Miss Madaline Elliott, Student Secre-
tary at Meredith College, were on the
campus Thursday night and Friday.
They held a conference with the Bap-
tist students Thursday night. The
purpose of this conference was to get
a delegation to represent our college
at the State B. S. U. Convention which
will be held at Greensboro, Novem-
ber 1-3.
There are several girls going from
our college, and we hope that a larger
number will arrange to be in Greens-
boro November 1-3.
The following officers for various
college activities have been elected:
Student Government: Beulah Lassi-
ter fills the vacancy left by Lucille
Stroud as house president of west
wing of Jarvis Hall.
Y. W. C. A Selma Grey Hooks
fills the vacancy left by Eula Lee
Livingston as Teco Echo reporter.
Leah Godwin is now chairman of the
Social Service Committee.
Notice
To all Clubs:
As soon as you get organized for
! this year, elect your Teco Echo I
! reporter so that your activities con j
be published in our college paper.
Send the names of all reporters to
'the Editor, and as soon as a com-
f "
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Published BiMonthly During The College Your by The Student Gov-
Coll
�ran
�at
Association of East Carolina Teacher
Entered as second-class matter Decem
Greenville, N. C, under the Act of March 3, 1ST
Subscription Rates
Advertising Rates, 20c pei
for the College Year, $1.50
Column Inch per Issue
Editor-in-Chief
Business tfanagi
Faculty Advisors
iber 3, l5, at the Postoffice
STAFF
Ruth Lemmond
Evelyn Caldwell
Mis Mamie E. Jenkins
Mr. M. L. Wright
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
I
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!
I
j
I
l
A:
A;
laging Editor
istant Editor
star Editor
tstant Editor
nnae Editor
Katherine Lemmond
Kate Murray
Nancy Poole
Elaine Tunnell
Annie Lee Morgan
BUSINESS STAFF
Assistant Business Manager
Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager
Advertising Manager
illation Managers
Jamye Martin
Gladys Swindell
Nancy Gordon
Alpha Snipes
Christine Hall
Geneva Lou Franklin
Katherine Lemmond
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men in Boston and who as we go
to p.
Ilevwood
111 DUSLUIi timi �v iiv "�'
ress faces trial there for his
activity: and also Ilevwood
Broun, a special writer for The gi
World, in New York, who refus- office in
ed to desist from dealing with vine Citizen
the Sacco-Vanzetti case in his
column and, as he said, like Pi-
"wash his hands of the blood
nt men While
moral cm
himsel
lasting and conspicuous success.
Coolidge himself for example.
his best friends ever charged
Bui he rose by .
Mi
Not even
him with brilliance
adual and slow stages to the highest
the civilized world. Ashe-
oungs
WELCOMES
E. C.T. C. GIRLS
HACK TO GREEN-
VILLE
pway
then re
-o-
j late
j of these innoce
; we regret to see two .
saders like The World and Mr.
Broun part company, we cannot
escape a feeling of gratitude that
even at the cost of his position.
Mr. Broun refused to be quiet.
Many now in the colleges will
find their opportunity for service
along the trail of these men who.
while failing in the immediate
goal, have helped arouse our con-
science to the necessity for fun-
damental changes in our crimi-
nal procedure.
OUR DAILY PAi
Of)I) FACTS AND FIGURES
The curvature of the earth is about
inches to the mile.
New York is the second largest
talian city in the world.
spreading oak, 6U feet hijh,
about 6,000,000 leaves.
I
r i
Last year 4,500,000
were manufactured in
States.
automobiles
the United
The people in the U. S. spei i more
than $1,000,0 (0 on chewing gum every
week.
fPORTANT NOTICE
nh
who are "too much' for busy,
lazy, or incompetent parents or
Classes, clubs ana orgamza- guardians
nons. hark! If you want your (6) For the equipment of a
entertainments and social ac- caste; for the polishing off and
s to get a snappy write up. certification of members of an
elect your Teco elite, an intellectual aristocracy,
next or of some vaguely differen-
cult of "leaders" in the
mi
o!
lie
"he
students of I he c liege are
grateful to the merchants
city for providing them
A German acrobat is pulling a mo
tor ear around over Europe vvitl
rope held betwe n his teeth.
learning
ttivme
then gel busy anc
Echo reporters before the mwi o
issue of the paper comes out. tiatec
be a misunder- body politic.
some organ- (7) For the
while trade or profession, civil oi
swer is itary; or even of the details of few copies Of a daily paper, but
rets the Worm" cookery, dress-making, or milli- now each individual student is
itors would nery; o
t have or art
the pap- (8) For propaganda; i. e
er unless you have some one to the inculcation, substantiation, oi their shopping
fastening-on of some par- Practically all the college girls
social. . political, giv� the stores of Greenville
or religious�and the patronage.
The deepest place in
found is 32,636 fe
Tokio, Japan.
There seems to ot
standing as to win
izations get a write-up.
do n t. The answer
"Thp Rarl
As much as the et
like to do so. they can no
your activities put into the pap
er unless you have some one to
write them up So call your
members together, elect an ef- ticular creed�
ficient reporter, and thus bring economic, or re
your organization to the public confirmation o
tXWTO ' �!� a,
with the Raleigh Times. This
acl on the part of the business
men is greatly appreciated, and
we take this means of thanking
them. Access to a daily paper
is a privilege which many oi us
� mi joy in our homos, but one
of a which few of us can afford in � ' , .
mil- hool. The library provides a f�Und ,n Hmk
strong the a
the
S( ul
re
vet
It is estimate d 1.01 per
children born in the U. S
cent
a )'e
a I
m t
world
spiders
Guinea, spin ;t web so
e i! ed as fishing nets.
dress-making, or milli- now each
of agriculture, music, given one
That the students appreciate
tins favor is shown by the extent
An old
return to
LOST!
fashioned gold
I ii Plea
and
MRS. BLOXTON,
Coll �
eve.
-o-
ONCE MORE
f prejudices of
class, sect or race.
(9) For scholarly research
in science, economics, history,
literature, and the training of
specialists, experts, or teachers
-o-
SOCIETY DECISION HAY
INTERESTING OCCASION
the new girls, the day on which they
signed up for the society which they
have chosen to be theirs. This occa-
sion is always anticipated with much
lterest and enthusiasm, and much
ty spirit was in evidence through-
What's college for? Whether of particular subjects.
asked by a freshman who for (10) For the normal round-
the first time finds himself in ing-out of the formal education
the complex rush of campus l the intelligent citizen, in an
hie or by a senior who realizes, atmosphere of intellectual free-
perhaps with apprehension, that dom and under adequate instruc- 7?,? T WM ,B
the answer has thus far eluded tional inspiration as a responsi- Jfy
him. this is one of those profit ble adult in the world in which � day began a
able questions which needs to be, he lives, in all ways as an inter-
faced. None can deny that col- gent active member in his com-
lege administrators, boards of munity. his nation and the fel-
control and parents should like- lowship of nations
wise be confronted with this n with the task oi
searching query; nevertheless standing, soil-government, and
the Question is; one to which the seli-devel rom rd in the iVe that
Per1Tlav" to" ,71H P" : D�W is� a�d the life is to
personal way to a large degree come
�may discover his own answer �
in fact, college for each student , 2?�? 5ufmted Wllh co1"
is made up very lanrelv 7 !lee hfe today knows that not
iturday last was Decision Day for
OUR AIM
IS TO PUT GREENVILLE ON A
MOKE COMFORTABLE FOOTING
ASK THE SHOE STORKS ABOUT
LS
SMITH SHOE SHOP
t.
roi gumg thirty the three society erouos took
self-under-ith( �. �, f t, l
tnei! stands at the entrances to the
dining hall. They gave yells and
cheers, sang songs, and greeted the
new girls with a good spirit. Each
old girl was dressed to carry out the
colors of her society
�P very largely of he i "E FZ ��& k"OTVS tha "ot the font corridor of the Admin-
mrposes and attitudes he carries Si! thkind tn0eCe,VC from is�" Win w� pa�,l three at-
four� � � ,1 , kl , R exPenence tractive booths. The Poe booth J
exmri- SS ?�1?� deS b.ut a1" orated with red JTJSFZ
ix-forty-five in
the morning when th old Krirls sere-
naded the new grirls. They marched
around the dormitories, sinsrinsr nnud .
yeffing for the �ew gi. M.CA STATIONERY. MEMORY
CLASS PENNANTS
with him through his
more or less�years of expori- ft "f'P �"e bu� �
ence The question is in reality I tlL8"?.?ble for .s.tu" pmh and the Poe banner �s hu
-What am I in college for? J- of he collZ it f �l$n � wal1 Just abo- !t- I-ike
Pataer Gavtt we here quote the ��� � l� � ltsell.fUsoniethmg were the Lanier booth a�l the Kmer!
the J. UowiBg list of purposes V V- u"f W'th the PUr" booth decorated in ereon and !oM
which carry many men ' and i � . MtJ n WaS estubM,?hed-1 up � ��� � veh '
women through college: cdVCdentn ?"? chak'n?- Th � indeed ex ti�R and
�8JZ K inver! -
ZRl2?3te&S� E-JS Poeerthe88
-o-
TO MAKJ JUSTICE SAFE
terms of social standing or what ! P d" . direction would be
not of that sort; or to make if atpt.to answer the Ques-
money-with the idea that a rep! itWIIi hat S C�Hege for ?"
itatwn for having "been to col-
le-e affords a running start in
business.
(2) For fun; for nearly
grown-up play; for the enjoy-
o ent of a pleasant status in late
adolescence with a minimum of
u and discipline, delaying the
w -lous work of life; for partici-
pation in an enchanting variety
congenial activities�athletics
2 PSSXTff the ming
sons had 1C6.
WHERE SUCCESS LIES
It was during the summer va-
cation that the seven-year Sacco
Vanzetti case arrived at its final ldge has a ParaPh that
tragic scene. SESM �-the philos�Ph- of ��
In his autobiography in the current
wsne of the Cosmopolitan Magazine
Calvin Coolidge has a paragraph that
BOOKS, INITIAL SEALS, ETC
A. B. ELLINGTON
& COMPANY
QUALITY
�ANTI-
SERVICE
�AT�
LAUTARES
CANDY PALACE
tragic scene. This accounts for
the fact that none save a few in-
dividual voices were raised bv
the college world in the discus-
sion of the unsuccessful but he-
roic attempt to save these for-
eign-born men from execution
"desirable" contacts anil
friendships.
(3) For the expression and
P rpetuation of a sentimental ! me"certamly were innocent,
'alty or a family tradition nl I f 7? that there were s
Iving the assumption as a mat-1 lu� dbts periling both
. � course that son shall goMto Sf J f"1 an? the fairness
ither old college" regardless I �l and conviction. We
what the college may be now.
4 For the continuance of
0 ST SUpervision � a kind
adult nursery, where the
young person will still be under
�onage; a sort of "glorified
P ep-school csiunnea
r l5 S�5. tl?e sheIte1 treat-
' t;f"df lsclpljne of Physical.
1 SSi andJm�ral "lame ducks
f-m u �f anatorium or re-
f m school for young people
uccess in their chosen work.
"Ever since I was in Amherst Col-
lege he says. "I have remembered
how Garman told his class in philoso-
phy that if they would go along with
events and have the courage and in-
dustry to hold to the main stream
The issue lav, not in the fact th�t �?TV? d to the main slream-
the men certainly wereinnocenf T ?" washed ashore the
k� -al. . y, c in"Ocent, immaterial fm�iaj-
are unafraid of being branded
moralists in attempting to point
out a lesson in these events
which, surrounded by such grave
doubts, have culminated in the
snurhng out of two human lives.
whthcZiTtlon ofal J'ustice
vvhich holds sway in Massachu-
setts and most of the rest of the
world, must be superseded by a
system more modern in terms of
our present knowledge of psy-
chiatry and penology, more hu-
immatenal cross-currents, they would
some day be men of power. He
meant that we should try to guide
ourselves by general principle, and
not get lost in particulars. That may
sound like mysticism, but it is only
the mysticism that envelope, every
ffreat truth; one of the greatest mvs-
tenes in the world, but is the suc-
cess that lies in conscientious work"
The former President means in his
concluding sentence, of course, that
the inevitability with which success
comes to the conscious worker in the
calling that suits him is so impressive
and at times so surprising that it nar-
takes of the mysterious. This is an-
other way of saying that genius is
WELCOME
COLLEGE GIRLS!
BE SURE TO VISIT OUR STORE
BEFORE BUYING YOUR
COSMETICS
Warren's Drug Store
DR. A. M. SCHULTZ
DENTIST
400 National Bank Building
PHONES�578 � 299-W
GOODYEAR SHOE
SHOP
The best equipped shop in town our
work can't be beat in the state�A
trial is sufficient�opposite to Na-
tional Bank on 5th street.
DR. M. B. MASSEY
DENTIST
200-202 National Bank
Phone 437
Complete Line of Ladies Oxfords, 1
Straps in Slippers Carried at All Tme,
c�
Mi
Miss
Gree
i - a
Young Me
l.
2.
.3.
East Carolina Teachers' College
Greenville, N. C.
COURSES OFFERED J
A Two-Year Normal Course
A Four-Year College Course
Advanced Courses leading to the M. A. L)
Elementary Supervisors and Principals and 0
Hijrh School Teachers
The two-year normal course leads to a diploma wJ
entitles the holder to a'Primary or Grammar G
tificate. Class B. The four-year collet com- ads,
the A. B. degree which entitles the holder to a
Grammar Grade, or High School Teachers" I
Class A.
The graduate department offers courses
especially for high school teachers, for elementar. Z,
visors and for elementary principals. These c -ur
carry with them the degree of Master of Arts.
Howard J. McGinnis, I
Registrar
HOSIERY, ETC. I
We carry a complete line of Durhal
Socks and Hosiery�prices 50c to SI.90.
Cosmetics of all kinds.
Pillow Tops and Pennants I
Stationery and Kodak Films. j
nlii!80 c0omPlete line of Class-Room 9
plies at a Saving to You.
�OPEN�
7:45 to 9:20 A. M.
1:20 to 3:30 P.M.
6:20to 7:30P.M.
COLLEGE STATIONERY ROOM






A
Faculty Notes
Ti
and was chairman of the budget com-
mittee. Miss Wilkes also had the di-
rection of the marshalls.
h nmvr of th� fall term
11 in tors wen Added to
t of these con 8 to
eft bj ' hoee wh are
I abs nee, stud ng-
to have these "A
and we ai e sure at
es on tho �. u
mint.
degree
souri.
Miss Toland received her B. S.
from the University of Mis-
MID-WINTERS FRIGHT DREAM
pia
P
tiecessors �
� i hose who .
h anticipate
Miss Jannette Wedmore, of Green-
ville, N. C, and former student of this
I college, is now critic teacher for the
seventh grade. She received her M. A.
degree from Columbia University and
has had two years experience in teach-
ing.
Miss Rena charlton, of the psychol-
ogy department, is studying at Pea-
hody College. Miss Charlton is held
in high esteem by the students and
faculty.
)
Miss Frances Wahl. who was critic
teacher of the seventh grade, is study-
ing at Columbia University. Miss
Wahl holds a warm plate in the hearts
of the students and her return is
'anticipated with interest.
!

fjr, 0g
0 sva
ennesset
rrei
iphy
tU'
rad
tate
Mi. Beecher Flanagan is now on
i
leave of absence and is doing post�
graduate work at Peabody. Mr. Flan-
agan expects to be hack on the cam-
pus duringthe winter term.
(lole. '
d received his
i om Peabody,
He has eight
teaching, six
it schools of
n a private
� ate 1 e.u h '
one summer
�e State Teacb
Miss Man
critic teacher
University.
After handling, classifying, placing,
replacing, misplacing, numbering,
grouping, indexing and filing girls'
names for three days in succession, I
went home tired out, befuddled and
dazed, lay down and dreamed or
night-mared as follows. I was half
asleep, half awake and half crazy.
Anyway here's the way my mind
ran:
Names, alphabetically, classes nu-
merically, filed hysterically, groups
of Smithses, Joneses, odds and ends
et cetera, et tu Browns and odds and
ends and on and on into the night . . .
Like a vision of a Holy Roller, the
SAVE WITH SAFETY
AT YOUR
Rexall Drug Store
25c Listerine Tooth Paste for
50c Ipana Tooth Paste for
50c Pebeco Tooth Paste for
60c Forehands Tooth Paste for
60c Milk of Magnesia T. P. for
19 cts.
39 cts.
39 cts.
49 cts.
39 cts.
Mi. E. C. Hollar will he
Mv e after this quarter
�n leave of
It will be of interest to alumnae
to note that Miss Ruth Bonnewitz is
again a member of the art depart-
ment after a year's absence.
Wartrace,
a .lit v. M iss
Tom Peabody, C. A. and
the v per
lis Lucile Turner, of the Knglish ,
irtment, is working on her Ph. D.
,n e at Peabody College.
� Turner is greatly missed by i
the indents. Her work in the Eng-
lish department was quite valuahU .
She took an active part in the outside
acth ties, being advisor of the senior
class She was interested in the Y. W.
readings at
Miss Elizabeth Hyman i
the education department.
added to
I
I
I
I
i
from Columbia
taught in the
i olina since
if Braymer
ught in th
three yt ars
depart
requently ga
services.
Miss
ics dep;
I fniver
i no i"i i it
indeed ht
her of tl
ila Wilkes. of the mathemat-
tment, is studying at Chicago
ty. Miss Wilkes was a favor-
1 e students. Her work with
during her stay lure has
Miss Lillou Burns comes to
strengthen the Knglish department,
and is tilling the vacancy made by
Miss Turner's absence. Miss Burns
was here during the summer term,
and this time she has made many
friends on the campus.
Miss Mary .lane Alexander, who
. was a member of the physical edu-
cation department hi-
! teaching in Virginia.
I
valuable. She was a mem-
entertainment committee
VtWS
CtlU
McKae, sixth grade
is studying at Chicago J world's most absurd religious fanatic, 1
the names came to me in what seemed j j
J pure concrete form � Mismatches, j
hlurred names, classifications; mis-
fits and complications:
Three Davenports and no chairs
Two Wests and no easts
Two Lamms and a dozen Marys
Six Patricks and no saints
Three Walkers and no riders
One Tilley and no toiler
Two Sellers and no buyers
Eight Parkers and nowhere to park
Two Masons and no bricks.
One Brewer and no brew-
Ten Millers and no meal
Two Longs and one Short
Three Youngs and two Olds
One Cain and no Abel.
As my dream became more placid
and my sleep more real, I beheld:
One Pope and one Rahh
One King and one Quinn
One Sears and one Roebuck
One Proctor and no gamble.
Then lo and behold! I saw Cash,
Bond, Bank, Silver. Ford, Hudson, and
one Driver. Then 1 must have got-
ten hungry for there passed before my
mind Greens, Bacon. Hams, Cookes.
Bunns and three Butlers!
The ti-agic part of my dream came J
when I discovered that among these
H)0 damsels, there was only one '
Lost, strayed, or hidden: All of EllaMann-
Moore Davenport's verbs. Will the
Greenville Drug Co.
J. Key Brown, Druggist
�Five Points�
PHONE NO. 19
FIVE POINTS
year,
is
�o��
Our new nurse. Miss Smith, though
new to us. has been in Greenville for
the last two years working for Drs.
Pace and Crisp. Before that time she
did private work in Wilson, North
Carolina. We know already that
Miss Smith is here 'to serve
� o
I

I
loo re
finder please return them
so that Ella Moore
ing some more.
i m media
niav In1 heard
tely
talk-
-o-
Old man. upon waving down the hus
crowded with practice teachers hound
fod Wintervil
Wilson?"
lie- "Is this the bus to
Then another brain storm must j
have struck me for there appeared j
one Piresheet, two Paines, three j
Burns and one Wake. Then I awoke.
Gosh, what a night! What a
vision; what a dream! But my
dream came true for in the list of the
girls attending E. C. T. C, all the
names above spelled with a C
letter may he found!
�"ERRATN
I
apital
i
JR'
1 ML L M LSI "THEME SONO"
The freshman m mory work and
musical intelligence is progressing
wonderfully. They know the laundry
list to a half dozen tunes.
From the ghostly condition of the
freshmen's countenance we are led to
believe that Hallowe'en is at band.
New Leather
HANDBAGS

��?
Every detail oj tii expensivt
Paris imports has been repro-
duced in these bags oj finest
leather, workmanship, and de-
sign. Enameled clasps, hand-
somt mountings and unusual
locks and ornaments. Smart
envelopes and very capacious
nout
hes in black or col
all fh ,i west leathi rs.
I
PRICED OUR USUAL i
REASONABLE WAY
-$1.95 to $4.95 -
BLOUNT-HARVEY
COMPANY
i
i
v
i
r
Jmmi,
i;
�liege
'frrnl
THE SMART SHOP
427 Evans Street Greenville, North Carolina
Beginning Monday, October 28th
The Height of Season Sale - Everything a Fashion Success
Everyone an Important Fabric; Everyone a New Fall Color
�����������MBM��WWI�M M���1���M
c.
Dun
to $l.j
LADIES COATS
leading Styles
Ladies' Sport Coats in the
$9.95
in Fur Trimming, to match
$14.95
LADIES COATS
S19.95
LINGERIES
Rayon�Short Slips
89c
HATS
$1.95
Rayon Silk Step-ins
89c
Crepe de Chine Step-Ins
$1.75
HATS
$2.95
Room
ROOM
LADIES COATS
$24.95
LADIES COATS
$2995
LADIES COATS
$34.95
GOWNS
Crepe de Chine Gowns -all
the Snappy Patterns
$2.95$3.95
Ladies' & Misses'
HATS
Height of the Fall Season
Styles
95c
BRASSIERES
39c
Ladies' & Misses'
SILK DRESSES
�all sizes
$12.95
Ladies' & Misses'
Fall Fashion
SILK DRESSES
in Leading Styles & Colors
$6.95
Ladies' & Misses'
SILK DRESSES
�all sizes
$16.95
Ladies' & Misses'
SILK DRESSES
New Shades�All Sizes
$4.95
Ladies'
SILK DRESSES
�all sizes
$8.95
BLOOMERS
Silk Rayon�All the
Leading Colors

�ME'iapywKwm
I

j





Y. W. C. A. NOTES
'RIENDSHIF' THEME V V
W SERVICES
on the work started by our former easiest course for all i
mtj sisters. To enre during the for the courses arc too well balanced, I
year we have chosen: Ruby Stewart, and !� ple' bility ace (
esident; iha Redfearn, vice-presi- nol to ntralized d be i
me by Miss Goodwin at V ,l' Snn- 'n Hallie Lee, ecretary � good th rig I tdent � here to gel it �
October 13. In this talk treasurer; Ruth Neal Redfearne, � �� theii Mat Home Eeonomi
M ,M sented i ill Vh" !VP"i�'i and Ollie Jo and Primary v
i eoan representative urses.
��Don't sit down and it. but � � i
u
nases
�"hf thai
n before.
standing negroes in
�� I'v-i esneciallv
an
i get was chosen as our
� g Idem "� ut flower
I
I
f
illow. U is tl 1
SANDHILL CLUB ORGANIZED man sapj j
the proa
Motto: � " i . � re dense I
Wonderful Va. eg
In all Silk Chiffon Foil Fa
new French heel
Pitt Shoe Company
'We Keep Your 1
j
is: 'Hei
Africa
e li�'
is Owi
W
.in:
� : � m.
and green.
Margaret Idwin
� � ngtoi etary
� , �
� � sorter
.
1
Hurlev

M si" 3 AXD
M im n ork
ocial
�I
u
I
i
ue
ALLKKADV FORTHK ADV iNCK OF U
Va
eeds- �
:VERYT �
Fail F
n
.
n ijeaaer
i.95
1 t�v ��! ,
.
$14.75
.
ktal
ta-
le i on
ed i
er� W
'era!
at
e 1 l
v wa
e maq
she
ade I
k c
I
ore
di-
w 1
asl I
inu
-G
s
i
J lat w
igb
.



;ii
m.
.
.
1.98

I oui
. th
te at.
tcher
,�i
I

Q n -
�t t
.1
y
-
W;
r-
f ��
u
Clubs
1 !
TON C HJNTYLIB
IS ORG INIZED
in
�.if
Pei �
ike
" "or mourn
-
�y.
'a nr as though : inv
re the I
me in
course
14
II
I

Economics stu-
� a �
udents.
' ' ' � ' �
� � �.
Disc -
� �� I teach -
� � ��. "
' � , - rades,
; - � I .
' � irred them
till -
which prwe
i
� ' a ' Did h
patieaea and
QiWrtB bv
e reason
TY pi n ag br ��� � ' � nrfent- �
RANKED TUESDAY
ea! to them more than

e 'tudenta ?i.n
on County aue ivr.rk (inimmar
; �� High SclHlPrr'f!
�t (Vrolin-i T (au"(i �� his I , i � � vork-
wTmna Teackera i Bto tcadi aoeh a v��u
?e �- h to otiJsTt
J Whoknows w,o " -lmaWh has to tch
w�fc frt irrv V:r" are taught
� decide which
im

1 'im
ianDa
(im
a Imported . e
wder
;av cts 79c
New Oalesco Ravon
lOO � JE SILK
STS WUCfl
39c Pair
-
c Pair
f9e Fair
HERE ARE McmUYS
I

Well
EP f
ne
79
VALUES
VRDROBE
VON-CUKG 8LIP
� sroodJ I
pongette,
d
SI.00
Jm. (
L'SS Q
I e ami
DAINTY DANCE SETS
f5 r-iS �l� d,s1?�
� ustrous rayon. ird
aliic
98c
1.00
LOOMER COMBL
8�il textured r;
ra of b�.
foidti

9c
f.4
11.1
�i0eg0MniY Ward &co
East 5th Street
Phone 89
Greenville, . c.
y�J
lay:
ie m
ie sui
r
ipht
sure I

eachel
t not
astusl
awa
you.
rohij
give
n md
�se-pJ
raid.
jimi
S tbe
� irse.i
U 1
Jim!
you
hou'
Wei
gut
mai
:





lyriw .
- � .
ull Fashion u
I
'
i i r m
ers
zy
$1.98
u
ig�
�r n
2�
-Dow N

;gure
sue
� i iOX
�?nvil!e, N. C
ST FOR FUN
h, ie � telegram from de "What's good for my wife's fallen
I lit says he is sending arches?"
"Rubber heels
wife: "Lions' tails. "What shall I ruh 'em with?"�Ex
are you talking
! t
The girl on the front seat says the
� cad it yourself. Itjreason she refuses every Tom. Dick
captured two lions, ai I Harry is because she has always
mail Epworth v ted to marry jack.�Ex.
1: used, to be, we understand, the
s this milk from I pet te'a thirst for knowledge that
took them abroad, but HOW its jut
to be honest with!their thirst.�Ex.
f them were a little an-j no, Henrietta, you don't have
ity people J to ha talent to make a living writ-
ing j. es. All you need is a steady
incom from some other source.�Ex.
was jollying his little
ake believe that the Teacl r: "Will. I want you to tell
green cheese. But me hov you define ignorance
o be taken in. "It Willie "It when you don't know
j green cheese. I ncle somethii . and seme one finds it out
Aetna life Insurance
SCHOOL SUPPLIES � STATIONERY j
GREETING CARDS j
I
�Enjoy our Circulating Library� ,
The new and interesting books for rent
BUY LIFE INSURANCE FROM
DR. E. P. SPENCE
WARREN'S BOOK STORE

SPECIAL
FOR THE
Agent
Greenville, North Carolina
convincinely, "cause
E
.
two days before
Enworth Era.

. ophomi e: "Teachers are worse I �
HI
than immigration authorities at Ellis ; Jg
tood in front of a Island nowadays
fin. In the window Alumnus: How come?"
:� � s. Sophomor "They've swiped the
what is them things gai The: shall not pass Ex.
, Irishman, Mistess: "So your matrimonial
� an wash life was ver; unhappy. What was
il getl �;� ; the I oul i ' Decembei wedded to
May
Chole Johnson: "I.an' sake. n.
. num! It was I abor Day wedded to
, v a j de Day of Rest. '
� my wife us d
�� Onandoff: "H w do you like this
place, dear? SI ill we buy it
days The Sirs "O - perfectly lovely!
i y � . ; fui The view from thj balcony leave- me
asleep speechless
College Girls!
SHOWNG THE NEWEST THINGS THAT
ARE CORRECT
Smart Sport a nil Dressy .Dress for the College Girl.
BEAUTIFUL CREPE SOLE OXFORDS FOR i
i
$3.95
F. M. COBURN SHOE COMPANY, Inc.
?V
COATS
DRESSES
HATS
HOSIERY
AND ACCESSORIES
Renew the Beauty And Extend The Life Of
Your "Permanent" With Our
i
Onand ff
we'll surelv buv
SPECIAL PRICES TO COLLEGE GIRLS
� . "Yi u took i ired
nik-b ' � aut n "Yes, I've had a lad day. That
d be ue further office boy of mine came in with
. Detroit �W story of getting away for his
grandmother's funeral, so just t
ach him a lesson I sa d 1 would ac
�mpany him
Williams-Chapman Inc
Phone 566 The Smart Shop
Finger
Wa
g your waistcoat:
�� i have cut all the but- "He tnok -vu Ul the aseba" t
uv loving mother. suppose?" j
- � ,�tt�1v: "N� such uck He told the truth !
. will find the buttons If
, - , for once. It was his giandmother s � �
i lett pocket.
n was Rome built
funeral I
!
A teacher who was giving the ehil- j j
virer. written exercises wrote out this i
ho told you that . i
v ' � PrtTV1- "Wanted advertisement:
tmi said Kome , , I
"Wanted A Milliner. Apply by !
lt y' letter to Miss Smith. 10 Blank St I
7 . . . The children had to make applica- I
res a tfirl at our .
n Dot tion for the postion in writing. I
feamma, thev call Post- � f
. , One youngster wrote:
u know why . �
Special
ave
a good investment for all
who secured a permanent
wave during the summer!
Why let your permanent wave lose all its beauty and waviness
when at very small cost you can preserve it. Our FingeT Wave ex-
perts are in big demand for such service at this time of year. They
know how to practically re-set a permanent with a correct finger
wave. Give your permanent this needed attention now.
We Are Specialist in Hair Dyeing
Cinderella eautrj Parlor
Over Key Brown's Drug Store Phone 796
!
No, dear.
� cause her name is Ade-
Selected.
I
"Dear Miss Smith: I saw you want .
;� milliner. I hate to trim hats. Can't j
you get somebody else? Please let I
! me know at once.�Edith Brown� t
' Fv
just home from school) j '
� d is "eozinto" mean? ;
. . Keeping his head�A mountaineer
ion t know, mv son ' , . , t
i j � was called to the witness stand to
�u hear that word? I , . .
. , T1 i tU, t -ov, testify in a murder trial
:hool. I heard the teach- 0�
. Lawyer�"What is your name. .
gozmto twelve twice. � . lt� !
Mountaineer�"Which do you mean, s i
, mv first, middle, or last name?"
io once most wisotv � � , . ;
! Lawyer�"Just tell the people who '
MoratmiMer Joseph Jink-
ON COLLEGE
STATIONERY
�This Week�Ask About It
ave added this, to-wit:
wrong before you
: ins.
tus, what animal is
Pur?
Lawyer�"Where do you live, Mr.
Jinkins?"
Mountaineer�"Which do you mean,
state, county, or city?"
Lawyer�"Tell the people where you
e . live
Skunk: de more fur jou . Mountaineer�Wall, llve m South
m him the better .t �Lj Luin county and no city
a'tall
Lavver�"Which side of the river
g a ife noticed a hair on the
husband's coat, and,
asked: "George, what;
� lean
do you live on?"
Mountaineer�"Which do you mean,
I going up or coming down?"
. I Lawyer� "Tell the people wMch side
�rv about that, dear, he �
i you live on.
Mountaineer�"Wall, on the right
side going up and the left coming
down
Lawyer�"How far are you from a
fool?"
Mountaineer glancing to the lawyer
and then back to himself�"Wall, I
figger it's 'bout ten feet
o
I
The College Store
221 E. 5th Street
"It's far too long to be j �
the delendant's reputation
akeH.the judge.
I'1 nt, Your Hxnor said the
known hjm to admit
id been fishing all day and
(ingle bite
H on note:It is always risky
an who can not control nis
W fifty or seventy-fivex
v r to control. � Eoston
OUR SEVEN BIG FEARS
in the habit of coming
l( with a dirty face, and, of
id to be sent away.
'th hi- mother lost patience.
-he said severely, "why
in coming to the table
hinff? You know I
you away
i Jimmy, meekly, "you
tune, Oscar, one naturally
(t a young lady geologist
me old fossil.�Ex.
: "I saw a groundhog
vning
Scout: "Where?"
utSausage�Ex.
Classifying the world's greatest
fears President Glenn Frank of Wis-
consin University places these seven
at the head of the l;st:
Fear the white race is reproducing
its worst element fastest.
Fear of being dominated by crowd
thinking.
Fear of the industrial civilization
destroying itself.
Fear that democracy is not the most
efficient form of government.
Fear civilization moves in cycles,
and the Western civilization is ap-
proaching its downfall.
Fear our institutions are becoming
so big and so complicated that we are
unable to train men to handle them.
Fear that the present generation
has renounced allegiance to all whole-
some standards of conduct.
i
"An the Minute Service
NTERTAINMEIITS
FOR SEASON OF 1929-1930
�FALI-
The United States Army Band�
"Pershing's Own" -November 25th
�WINTER AND SPRING�
Tony Sarg's Marionettes
"Barber of Seville"�Festival Opera
CompanyFebruary
A College Glee Club February
Count Von Luckner�"The Sea Devil"March
Paderewski Date to be announced
Notice to DmlbscFiDers
Please enter my subscription to the Teco Echo for the
coming year.
Name
Address
Clip coupon and return with $1.50 to
BUSINESS MANAGER TECO ECHO
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Coats, Dresses, Hats
and Accessories
Special reduction to co liege girls only.
COLLEGE OUTFITTERS





�"
fc ft
"A
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3. bw-Tbs
Alumnae Department
V
I
OFFICERS FOR 1929-30
I
Helen Watson f
Mrs. Augusta Marcomj
jSec. A: ireas. Ruth Deanj
Alumnae Secy. Annie Lee Morgan?
jl'res.
jVice-Pres.
, Sec. & Treas
��
TO ALL ALUMNAE CHAPTERS
The Roanoke Rapids Alumnae
Chapter sends, "Heartiest Greetings
to all Alumnae hoping that this may
be a year when all the older chapters
will renew their zest and zeal while
a number of other Alumnae begin
new chapters in the various places
they will be this winter.
In 1924 we organized our chapter. 1
and at this time, under the leadership
Outland, our Roanoke
has been a live one.
leaders and a
jREPORT FROM THE SECRETARY
There has not been any subscrip-
! tions to the Teco Echo sent to the
; Alumnae secretary. This report is
I quite different from what we hoped
I it would be, since we mailed copies
of the first issue to all whose ad-
dresses we had. Please send in your
subscription early so you will not
miss the next copy.
o
Sisters of Alumnae in College
of Miss Ella
Rapids Chaptei
Yet with some new-
goodly number of members we find
that we have many problems, all of
which seem to be prevalent in all of
our chapters. The foremost of these
trying to get each member to at-
all meetings or in other words,
vitally interested,
all know it is hard to
There are about seventy girls in
C( liege this term who have had a
sister or sisters to graduate here.
They are as follows: Mildred Stan-
ley. Ruth O'Brien, Jessie Lee Morris,
Cm ma Dozier, Annie Belle and Caro-
lyn Tyson. Vivian Cooke, Ida Myrtle
Gaddy, Mary Etta Brinkley, Kathc-
Wall, Ina Y. Credle, Mary Mann,
vine
Mary Taylor, Courtney Gordon, Marie f pies.
James. Margarette Allen, Courtney
Abbott, Edna Thomas West, Helen
Mosely, Josephine Grant, Lilian Wil-
liams, Rena Woodard, Lenora Rouse,
TEACHERS COLLEGE DAMES.
Members of the Teachers College
Dames enjoyed their first meeting of
the season Friday, October 18th. It
was a most delightful meeting, in the
form of a barbecue luncheon, given by
Mrs. E. L. Henderson and Mrs. R. J.
Slay. They entertained in the Y. W.
C. A. Hut on the campus and had as
special guest the faculty staff of the
college. It is not often that these va-
rious groups have the opportunity of
all being together, hence the occasion
was most enjoyable.
The guests were met at the door by
, Mrs. Henderson and Mrs. Slay, who
j introduced them to Mrs. J. B. Cum-
: mings, a new member of the club. Mis.
A. D. Frank and Mrs. M. L. Wright
invited the guests to the rustic table
bright and attractive with vari-colored
dahlias where Mrs. Howard McGinnis
served barbecue and Mrs. R. C. Deal
served potato salad. Mrs. Herbert
ReBarker and Mrs. M. K. Fort poured
coffee and Mrs. L. R. Meadows, Mrs. !
II. C. Haynes. Mrs. E. C. Hollar and ;
Mrs. J. A. Keech served individual
MAN VS. WOMAN
Dr. William
sor of philosophy
versity, in
research
this nation says he
these differen es between men and
discovered
and
tenacious
vio
am
was
tend
keeping everyone
Of course, we
Stroud,
Mildred
Graj Hook
Floyd, Carolyn
Verlon Dean.
lena
give up an interesting date or a thrill- 1
show, but if we try to
each monthly
mg picture
have a set date i'oi
cansurely afford to give
Alma Mater.
meeting we
one evening to our
We have found some of the follow-
ing schemes and meetings of keen in-
Try them, old
terest to our chapter.
and new chapters, to see how they I
work in your community.
First: A faculty representative
from the college to visit our meetings
each year.
Second: Subscription Bridge party.
Third: A purely social hour at the
end of the business meetings usually
planned by hostess.
Fourth: Elect a song leader to aid
in the. singing of old and new college
songs.
Fifth: A Christmas tree where
each person receives some charact-
eristic gift with a significant rhyme
accompaning it. Have the rhyme
read aloud.
Sixth
Annie Wood, Selma
Grant, Margie
Dean. Velma Lee,
Inez Bissette, Eloise
atum, Ernestine Everette, Ruby
Spratt, Grace Bazemore, Helen Black-
more, Marjorie Roebuck. Dorothy
Sloan, Rebecca Chenault, Mary
Adams. Oneider Siier. Mary Brooks,
l.atie Mann Gibbs, Eloise, Eva and
Irene Scott. Julia Cogdell, Dora
Hamm, Jessie Smith, Geneva Phillips.
)orothy Godwin, Bernice Sylivani,
Nellie Jarvis, Priscilla Harris, Sonia
Belle Lamm, Annie Laurie and Isa-
belle Hunt. Lucile .Mitchell, Lina
Johnston. Evelyn Jones. Eartha
Mitchell. Marjorie Jackson, Alma
Whealton, Elizabeth Dupree. Eunice
Duff, Martha Morton. Annie Laura
Morton. Helen Hicks. Ferry Lane
Knox and Hallie Lee.
o
THE FACULTY
t
1
NEWS OF ALUMNAE
Julia
Welfare
Taylor, '22, is doing
Work in New York.
Chi
Gladys Parsons and Louise Gris-
som, '27, visted friends at the college
Sunday. They are teaching in Kin-
ston where they have been ever since
Fix a Christmas box to send they graduated.
to the College Gift Shop.
Seventh: In fall or spring a pic-
nic when we invite our Husbands, best
friend, or sweethearts.
Eighth. Rummage Sales.
Ninth: Sponsor at least one pic-
ture show each year to raise money.
Each member sells some tickets and
the chapter receives a certain
cent of the proceeds.
Tenth. After business meeting let Lizzie Tyson, '26, is now Mrs W H
members talk or do as they please : Rackley. She is teaching in Kenlev'
until refreshments are served. Oc-
The hut which lends itself so well
to entertaining, was quite festive with man am
bamboo, ferns, and dahlias. A tire
; burned brightly in the huge fire-place.
After the quests left, the club was
called to order by the new president,
Mrs. E. L. Henderson. This was the
: first meeting of the year so there was
: much business to be attended to. It
was decided to change the name from
College Study Club to Teachers Col-
lege Dames, the Dames being the name
usually associated with such clubs in
.other colleges, that is the club com-
posed of wives of the faculty members.
This year the club plans to devote one
meeting each month to some form of
social activity and the other meeting
to a club program. Plans for the No-
vember social meeting were given and
discussed. Mrs. ReBarker. in the ab-
sence of Mrs. C. L. Adams, gave a re-
port of the program committee and
announced that the first study pro-
gram will be given by Mrs. P. W.
Picklesiemer on November 15th. with
Mrs. ReBarker as hostess. The club
was then adjourned.
James Durant, profes-
Columbia Uni-
his extensive studies and
into the social problems of
has
differences
women:
Women understand men better than
men understand women.
Woman is biologically the more im-
portant and fundamental sex.
Man is more acquisitive and ad-
venturous.
Man is more pugnacious
lent; woman is more
subtle.
Man is more active, woman
lazier, the more she receives, the lei
she does.
Woman surpass man in love
surpassed by him in friendship
Woman is more social, man
solitary.
Woman is more talkative, she is
sieve for secretes.
Woman is more imitative, more a
dieted to custom, convention, fashion,
fads.
There i more difference between
man than woman and wom-
an.
Woman is more dependent upon
social approval; more polite, consider-
ate and kind; richer in the qualities
that make for altruism and morality.
Woman is more religious; man more
skeptical.
o
Miss Grace Maguire, who was a
the science department
at Peabody College
member of
last year, is now i
studying.
Rumors of u �
of having black j
and of having bull d
- are heard
Just What You Want, Just When Y
THE BEST OF FOOD
�U W;
THE GREENVILLE CAPE
LUM
and
more
TAKES UP SLANG
brie.
species
Tease masticating the fab;
2. Torrid canine.
'� At a young man of the
homo sapines.
�1. It is the feline's hirsute adorn-
ments.
5. I will announce to the third
planetary satellite of the sun.
� It is a small succulent fruit.
Meanings
the rag.
1
o-
Schools Must Educate
For (hanging Faiuiiv
4.
5.
6.
Quit chewing
Hot dog.
Atta boy.
It's the cat's whiskers
I'll tell the world.
It's the berries.
o�
TECO ECHO STAFF.
"The family has been moving away
from the idea! of obligation, to a con-
The Teco Kcho staff" saw the neces-
sity for a managing editor. Cather-
ine Lemmond was elected to hold this
We Wish To Take
Welcome The Students And Faculty
To Extend Our Best Wishes To
The Alumnae, And To nvite
Our Busirtess Friends To
Advertise With Us.
Lucille Credle, '25,
Conetoe.
is teaching at
Katie Mann, '25, is studying at
per Peabody Conservatory, Baltimore, Md.
cassionally this works wonders with
school teachers after a hard
work.
Eleventh: Make candy to sell.
Twelfth: A dinner party one night.
Each member pays for own plate.
Thirteenth: Special music from
outside talent.
Fourteenth: Elaborate dinner with
visitors from college and else where
to make talks. Have each member to
pay for two plates.
�o
RALEIGH CHAPTER TO MEET
The Wednesday issue of the News
and Observer gave the following re-
port: The Raleigh Chapter of the
E. C. T. C. Alumnae Association will
meet tomorrow afternoon at 4 o'clock
at the Woman's Club with Mrs
Robert Barbee, Mrs. J. L. Markham
and Mrs. Lonnie W. Rogers as
hostesses.
Eva Cooke, '21 is principal of one of
days ! the Franklin County schools this year.
� She was here in summer school this
past summer.
Lessie Cogdell, '26, is teaching in
Windsor.
Edythe Bradley, '23, has returned
to Louisburg for her fifth year. She
is teaching fourth grade.
Alumnae Active in Club Work
A number of the Alumnae were
present at the meeting of the Fif
teenth District of Federation of
Women's Clubs on October 19 at
Aurora so Miss Jenkins reports.
Pratt Covington, who is demonstra-
tion Agent for Washington County
was among the Home Economics peo-
ple. Elizabeth Allen was in charge
of the members of the Junior Clubs
clasy one of the best men inthemenn
who acted as ushers. There were a
number among the delegates, m0st 0f
themw0men whoare marrjed and
settled but are carrying on community
activities, since they are no longer
teaching. 6
Received Master's Degree in June
Pearl Wright, A. B. '27, received her
Masters Degree from Columbia Uni-
sS;ty0finTJuir-she is now �n
Staff of Teachers College, Columbus
ITT Y' J� Y0?' is teaing
the Horace Mann School.
o�
ANNOUNCEMENT
May Livingston, '27, of Wilmington
d0M-Nels- Burton were mSd
10 Shf T- Th6y Wil1 �- at
10 Sheridan Drive, Atlanta Georgia
Grace Hunt, '27, visited her sisters
in college last week-end. Grace was
m summer school here last summer
and is now teaching in Aurelian
Springs, N. C.
Sula Bissette, '27, is now Mrs M I
Lasley 104 W. Apartments, Winston
Salem, N. C. Since her marriage she
has been teaching music.
scums emphasis upon motives of hap- position. Due to the poir
pmess, says Ernest R. Groves, Uni- j Grace Gardner found it necessary to
versity of North Carolina, professor resign as assistant business manager
of sociology. ,� the October Journal of of the Teco Echo. Alpha Snipes was
the National Education Association. elected to take her place
'It is no small matter to switch from i
The
etruj
- .
aptis
ortej
iondJ
This Opportunih ruml
1 rttsicl
edit
he
aths
dam
he
athe
iancj
urti;
he
senH
he I
I haj
som
h S
rs, a
t in
DW
ake
dayj
ith
it.
.�cted
will
s.
�ts f i
i on
Irene Dozier, '28, is teaching fourth
grade in the Williford School, Rocky
�?� Ir- has been'in this
school for the past five years.
o
LONESOME
I think about you often
And I'll write you every day
But there seems so very little
J hat it seems worth while to sav
t either rains or doesn't rain, '
It s either hot or cold�
The news is all uninteresting-
Or else it's all been told.
But the only thing that matters is
The fact that you are there,
And I am here without you
And it's lonesome every where.
SALEMITE.
j entertainments;
1 F0R SEASON OP 1929-1930
f
I
-�FALL,�. -
I The Un States Army Band-
Persmg's Own"
-WINTER AND SPRING-
Tony Sarg's Marionettes
i Barber of Seville�-Festival
j Opera Company
i A College Glee Club
j Count von Luckner-�The Sea
i Devil"
a philosophy that stresses obligations
to a program that is frankly pleasure-
seeking in an appeal for recognition
of the home and marriage problem in
the curriculum of the schools.
"The change certainly lessens the
tolerance of persons who are unhappy
in marriage or in parenthood and in-
creases the obligation of education to
do whatever can be done through
training to increase domestic happi-
ness and to make parenthood more
efficient and satisfying.
"Unless marriage can be made for
more people a satisfying relationship,
matrimonial discontent must continue
to increase and register itself in di-
vorces, and this encourages the ap-
pearance of rival; to orthodox mar-
riage
Professor Groves points out that
family life, even its most intimate as-
pects, has to reflect the conditions pre-
vailing in the. social life of the period
and is therefore subject to continual
change. Many persons fear this
change, according to Professo r
Groves, merely because they recoil
from the idea that the family as an
institution has already departed from
what they regard as the standard.
They l00k with misgivings upon anv
effort that is made to help the family
adjust itself better.
Other critics of the change in
w y l,are not thinking of the
family problems as they exist today
Their attention is upon their early
home life, because contemplating it
brings them great satisfaction.
The educator is cautioned that the
knowledge needed is by no means ex-
uswely facts regarding sex. There
s the economic struggle that reaches
ts relationships. There are the oroh
lems of parenthood that involve an
undertakirig of CftiM fc�
these phases of home iffe mult
of slur"151 PlaCe in the
oi study m marriage and tha k
-cording to Profeor GroVe,
BAKERS STUDIO�SPECIAL from
now until December first, we are
giving one 8x10 inch photograph
with each sitting.
Teco
t EveJnl.of fremendous
Style and Thrift Importance
A Group of New
Paderewski
Eyes Scientifically Examined.
Lens Ground and Delivered
Same Day.
Larse Selection, Newest Style
Frames.
W. L. BEST
OPTOMETRIST
Dr
esses
assembled to sell
for
re�7 dress is nev
c� � � � � o� � ' L' KKd w,th
���T� �" "the mirk� ��-
M �d color. maClm�n " ���
��e thttn! J � . be sure so
tai:
le Si
r of I
uet
er
awj
e Li
op
ruesj
e
A.
Sslte.�





Title
The Teco Echo, October 26, 1929
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
October 26, 1929
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.67
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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