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CHOCOLATE COVERED FRUITS AND NUTS 80c LB.
LARGE SELECTION OF HEART BOXES
PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY !

4"

Phoenix Hotel Block
o--

The Prospector
o

o
(Coattitued from Preceding Page)

future advantage as intelligently as
the average man in business who has
never had the benefits of college education.
The business man has his figures
in black and white. He may reorganize his business, change his method of
buying and selling, and make beneficial changes that will help him materially. Every time the cash register clicks he can measure his gain,
and can make a daily comparison of
his proceeds on the same date of the
preceding year. He can estimate his
progress in the matter of being better equiped each year to take care of

114 South Limestone

his family, and the strange part of
it Is that his greatest ambition is to
give his children n college education.
The student is more or less handicapped when he attempts his reorganization. He doesn't know whether
he's a very valuable citizen or not,
and if questioned, probably couldn't
give a very logical excuse for his
existence. The newspapers and magazines tell him that he's about the
most useless variety in the community and doesn't amount to much. The
professors tell him that he's an ignoramus, and send him over to look
at his grades if he .doesn't believe it.
Even his age is against him. He is
at the adolescent period, where he is
easily influenced to adopt other
opinions, even with regard to
himself.
The average student has been going to school practically all his life,
since he was old enough to absorb en
people's

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PRICES LOWER

ON S. LIME, OFF MAIN

PRESSING
DRY CLEANING
Hats Cleaned and Blocked
By the

Peerless Laundry
149 N. Broadway

Phoae

369835

Studebaker
- TOURINGS

- ROADSTERS

OPEN DAY AND NIGHT .
Rate 15 cents per Mile
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO COLLEGE STUDENTS

Studebaker--

Drive It

U

PHONE

MAMMOTH GARAGE

7070

sub-ject- s,

A NEW8PAPER

MAN

WELCOME STUDENTS
Buy Your

Valentine Candies

Looking Over
The Magazines

I

a man walk through the door
of a show
Where the great throngs are blocked
see

occupy no small
the
part of our time and Interest, I take
his opportunity of commenting on
"Vogue," that magazine of outre taste
and lavender perfume advertisements.
I regret to say that "skirts will be
longer, lengthening with the shadows
from morning through the afternoon
to evening, and so to bed .
that
sport clothes will bo sport clothes, and
that Runabout dresses will be extremely smart." I suppose from
"Vogue's" emphatic declaration that
high heels and silk stockings will no
longer be worn with sport clothes,
that sport wear will take on a more
chaste aspect.
Turning from the fashion world of
"Vogue" to the adventure and travel
world of "Asia," a magazine devoted
to descriptions of the lesser known
parts of the world, I would recommend in the February issue the article
on "The City of Confucius." The article describes strange Oriental customs, services in the Temple of Confucius, and the remarkable lineal antiquity of Chinese families. In the
same issue of "Asia" there is an in
Since

co-e-

-

interpretat-in-

g

the spirit dance of the Japanese.
Our Charleston and Black Bottom
dances, it seems to me, might attain
a higher level by a careful study of
e
ancient and primitive dances.
Besides having short skirts and more
skillfully painted faces than our coeds, these natives while poising themselves with an edifying adriotness,
are ablo to interpret whole epochs in
their civilization, expressing the spirit
of any age in the past.
"American Coolcery," formerly "The
Magazine," is
"Boston Cooking-Schomuch to my liking. It is a small magazine, devoting itself to "culinary
science and domestic economics," featuring, besides its charming articles,
menus, editorials, a department for
the response to queries. Moreover,
it is delightfully illustrated with savory pictures of the most delectable
dishes which can be prepared, it
seems, if one takes the word of the
ditors. I am especially intrigued,
however, by the pleasure the contributors must derive from writing for
this magazine. Mr. Charles N. Lurie
'n the January issue in an article,
"Civilized Man Cannot Live Without
Cooks," says with no apparnt hesi- ancy: "It follows that the course of
all advancement made by mankind,
th-s-

1988-- Y

through a long series of centuries, is ' article on Jonathan Edwards. It is
to be found in the discovery of the an interesting discussion of an intermaking of fire and the subseaucnt In- esting Puritan divine.
vention of cooking. And again, speakCollege men are cake eaters, acing of the Romans, he writes: "The
ends of the earth were ransacked to cording to the facts revealed by the
add to the Roman cusim their finest! dietician of the Brown University
products, and to reveal their deepest, dining room. More cake is eaten
cookery secrets." Mr. Lurie, like than any other type of dessert. Chocothers of the contributors to "Anvri-- 1 olate cake is preferred above them all
can Cookery," writes with humor by the students.
and a very genuine relish. Tn the.
same issue of thi3 magazine I rccom-- 1
mend "The Preciousness of Silver,",
R. W. SMOCK
an interesting article which reveals
how little is being done by individual
Watch Your Watch
silversmiths in this age of standardization.
In the January issue of "The Dial,"
Clock
I recommend to students of litera- PHONE 7638
157 S. LIME
ture and philosophy Gilbert Seldes

Careful Watch and
Repairing

,

J

Httr a

Home or at the Soda
Fountain

HH

LUNCH AT BENTONS
Special Butter Cream Chocolates
Famous for Our Chocolate Fudge Cakes

Benton's Sweet Shoppe
145 South Limestone

Phone 5961

Something New ! !
For Sport Wear

by the sign "S. R. O."
"Is this man a star that no ticket he
buys?"
"Star nothing; he's one of those newspaper guys."

start on the trail of a
crook,
While he scorns the police and brings
him to book,
"Sherlock Holmes?" I exclaim, and
someone replies,
"Sherlock Holmes ? He's one of those
newspaper guys."

01 teresting pictorial article

o

o

I see a man pushing his way through

I

Lexington Drug Co.

--

idea. Ho
knowledge

the lines
Where the work of the terrible fire
fiend shines,
"The Chief?" I inquire, and a policeman replies,
"Why, no; he's one of the newspaper
guys."

Rent a
COACHES

has been taught a fair
of a number of subjects,
but hasn't learned much; that is, he
has never done much independent
thinking for himself. He has been
sent to school, and been told to read
what his prof tells him to, accept his
prof's interpretation
of what he
reads, and let it go at that. This last
item wasn't flatly ordained but the
system encourages this attitude. Little or no effect is made to arouse his
curiosity on points kindred to his
or problems thrown in his way
for him to work out on his own initiative. He has so many requirements
poked at him that he has slight opportunity to fashion a course of study
to prepare him for the vocation he
intends to pursue. So he is herded
along, his flananoes taken care of
from home, and his thought regulated from the university, taken care
of, watched, controlled, ordered about
like a soldier until ho finally gets
his sheepskin with some Latin on it
that he can't read, and starts out on
hia way to become President.
The press pats the illiterate multitude on the back, and tells the public not to feel bad because they don't
know much
the college student
doesn't know much, either. And the
business man of the public is satisfied
as far as he is concerned
but he
wants his children to have a college
education. He knows what can be
done with it
The next generation will probably
be more successful. When a man has
finished college, he can send his
children there with the right attitude.

Phone

$498 $4.98

see a man

And some day I'll pass by the great
gates of gold,
And see a man pass through unquestioned and bold,
"A Saint?" and Saint Peter will surely reply,
"He carries a pass. That's a newspaper guy." Exchange.

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ALEX SMITH

Heart-Shape-

Golf Professional, Westchester-Biltmor- e
Country Club, writes:
"My advice to a golfer who smokes cigarettes is that the surest
e
in zne smone woria is uiicKy strikes. 1 hey are mild $
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$1.25 lb.

noie-m-on-

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Three
Reasons Why
YOU SHOULD TRADE WITH US
1. QUALITY PRODUCTS

2. WHOLESALE PRICES
3. PROMPT DELIVERY

We are the headquarters for fresh meats,
chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, old hams,

fresh eggs, and butter.

The Cream of
the Tobacco Crop
"I have been

a buyer for The Amer
ican Tobacco Company for twenty
years. I know LUCKY STRIKE
Cigarettes. I bought the first Tobacco that went into them. I have
always bought that sweet, mild To
bacco that the Farmer calls 'The
Cream of the Crop for this brand."

Phone 4710
Leaf Buyer
Moore-Disho- n

Poultry Co.

"Wholesale Prices to Fraternities"

It s toasted

99

No Throat Irritation -- No Cough.

*