Page seven
nmmiihiiimiimnt:

When you plan your
HALLOWE'EN PARTY
Do not forget that we have the necessary
electrical equipment that will make your
affair a success.

Electrical Co.

Allen-Maste- rs

206

SOUTH LIME

Father and all power given unto Him
in heaven and in earth. The reason
for giving Christ to the world and
outlining His mission was because
God loved the world, so He took upon
mmseu me iiKeness ot nesh, or, as
Paul puts it, "We see Jesus who was
made for a little time lower than the
angels."

PROGRAM OF Y. W

ANNOUNCED

COMING

FOR

WEEK

Discussion Groups Will Talk on
Many Interesting Subjects;
Budget for Year Will.
Be Presented

Going

Bareheaded
Is Menace to Life

Former Health Officer Claims
Hatlessness Is Danger With
No Benefits

MEETINGS HELD AT HALL

Study Lamps, Curling Irons, Boudoir

Several New Members Taken
Into Organization at Last

Lamps, Etc.

Fulton, N. Y. Dr. Royal S.
United Statese senator from
New York', comments
on the fad
adopted by students and others of going bareheaded, saying in the Evening
Gazette:
"In summer weather the heat 'rays
are so powerful that the brain may
be seriously affected 'by. them if the
head is unprotected. In my old hospital days I used to see any number
-

Gatherng

Make this your official headquarters for
ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT

Many interesting problems and subjects are to be discussed this week by
various interest groups of the Y. W.
C. A.
The meetings are to be held
i on the second floor of Patterson hall
in the reading room on the ,i ollowing
dates:
Personality
Wednesday, at 6:30

J HCNICOFA TREAT)

o clock.

Friendship Tuesday, 3:30 o'clock
Dramatics Thursday, 6:30 o'clock,
My Attitude Toward Boys
Mon

First

d,

IllllllJIIIIIIIililllllllllllii

day, 6:30.

Athletics

Cope-lan-

of cases of sunstroke, but I am confident that it was the heat rays and not
the
rays which did the harm.
"It must be borne in mind that the
acunic rays are just about as active
in cold weather as in hot days of sum- iicj.. u mejr were iu ue jearea m me
heated season, they would be almost
as much to be dreaded all the year
around.
"Some folks go without hats because they think the sunlight will
stimulate the growtih of the hair.
About all it does to the hair is to
fade it.
"Baldness is due, in most instances
at least, to poor circulation. The
heart dees not send the blood in forceful streams to the most distant parts
of the body. The hands and feet are
cold, and the blood vessels are pressed
upon and the feeble blood current is
cut off. almost entirely.
'You may wear a hat in safety if
your dealer will permit you to select
Having
a light one of ample size.
purchased it, don't pull it down on
your head as if you were a pickpocket
under pursuit."

'WITH

Monday in Month,

FIFTH AVENUE'

How Can I Serve the University
Monday, 6:30 at Boyd Hall.
These subjects were chosen byjthe

students and the discussions promise
to be interesting and instructive and
all girls are invited to attend.
Budget to Be Presented
A question of undoubted interest to
all students interested in Y. W. and
Y. W. work willT)e discussed at Vespers in Patterson hall on Tuesday
evening ft 6:45 o'clock. The public
will be given the opportunity of judging for itself whether Y. W. uses its
money to the best advantage or not,
when the budget is presented. The
relation between college Y. W., Na-- (
tional Y. W., and Internatidnal Y. W.

jmm

m,
HBt

H

Comparison of this superfine ice
cream, so generously coated with the
most delicious chocolate you've ever
tasted, will thereafter cause you to
insist on Pik-nic.

,will be shown.
Recognition

Service
Successful recognition service was
held last Tuesday evening in Patterson hall, when one hundred and thirty-six
new members vere r ceived
into the organization. Lydia Roberts,
president of Y. W. at the university
had charge of the ceremony. Each
new member lighted a symbolic candle from, the one Miss Roberts held.
New members of the Y. W. are
Mary Lou Logan, Rachel Logan, Mary
Belle Settle, Maxion Jarrett, Eunice
Irene Combs, Lucile Jennings, Hollis
Moore, Loretto Greene, Elsye Bartley,
Mary Belle Lowery, Margaret Howard, Katherine Greif, Agnitu Carter,
Evelyn Ellewanger, Elizabeth Sweeney, Minnie Lqu Bennett, Martha
Reed, H. Sherwood, Frances Barker,
Louise Johnston, Pauline Woodburn,
Elizabeth Gibbs, Dorothy Lowe, Myj-tl-e
Bartlett.
Judith Salisbury, Margaret Rose,
Edna Nunnery, Mildred Shute, Fronia
Jane Fox, Evelyn Ford, Mildred Little, Sadie Hovians, Louise Schmitt,
Mary C. Watson, Anna Calton, Cath
erine JJuianey, .Esther uonsDerger,
Elizabeth GofT, Garnet Shouse, Evelyn
Cooley, Louise Driver, Sue Dodson,
Jessie Kendall, Mary Vivian Smith,
Mae Bryant, Ruth Stoker.
Vernus Waterstraat, Elizabeth Gu- lis, Katherine P6wer, Virginia
Lois Brown, Margaret Marrs,

The Broadway 'Meat Market
150 N. Broadway

Phones 4824 - 4828

4 REASONS WHY

The thinking man or woman
buys meats at The Broadway.
IFRIGIDAIRE

2
3

REFRIGERATION
and palatable meats at

all times.
all fresh meats are
SANITATION
kept under cover at a low temperaEverything is spick and span
ture.
clean.
We are prompt and
SERVICE
courteous and our meats are expertly
cut. Never ragged or with too much
bone.

A

beef
EXTRA SELECT QUALITY
from choice steers. Firm fleshed veal
and pork that is tender. We countenance only the best.

"Where (Juaility Counts and Truth Prevails'

MicAl-iste-

r,

Those Smart
CUT PRICE
Kansas Sour Owl.

RELIGiaUS

J3ISCUSSION
(By F. G. Coffin)

JESUS CHRIST, CREATOR
The mystery of Christ enlarges
with every new angle of vision. Truly
He is All, and in all. Because of His
greatness it has been difficult for
merito comprehend Him fully. Soma
have therefore discerned but one
phase of Him and thought that was
He. He is the unique personality in
all history.
Along two 'Svenues
men ' have
sought His origination one, from all
eternity and the other beginning with
the days o His flesh. The misfortune has been that some of those who
traveled each of these days were
Some doubted His humanity, others His divinity. Because
of no parallels in experience and the
close horizons of all human reasoning,
some said He could not have stoop to
be human; others thought it was im
possible for one in the flesh to be
divine. Both forgot that God has no
impossibilities within the province of
His will. In Christ's great personal
ity and mission neither of these qual- ities can be understood if disassoci- ated from the other. Exclusive the
ological definitions have not a few
times beclouded the purpose of both

Mary Duncan, Katherine Hunter
Phelps, Mayme Sawyer Margaret
Nunn, Virginia Hadley, Rozanna Rut
tencutter, Sarah Cropper, Mary B.
Daily, Elizabeth Griffy, Annie M. Mc
Cauley, Helen L. Home, Julia Marvin,
Virginia Mackay, Lucille Clark, Elizabeth Cramer, Billie Boyer.
Virginia Springer, Marguerite Law-soVirginia Whayne, Beulah Was-soKitty Martin, Rebecca Patton,
Nell Patton, Mary Louise Robinson,
Callie Elmore, Mary Scott Buckner,
Eleanor Swearingen, Mary G.
Dorothy Davis, Louise Rouse,
bnelby bpears, Mary bcroggin, Isa
belle Taylor, Betsy Simpson, Mary
Ann Keyes. Virginia Porter. Mary
J. Sharp, May Bannon, Olivia Per- kins, Sarah Leet.
Christine Blakeman, Martha Kam- lerter, Catherine Katlerjohn, Wilma
Powell. Frances Mauzv. Elizabeth
Bowjing, M. R. Bland, Bertha Peoples,
Letha Lynth, Catherine Redmond,-VirginiMeachem,
Estelle Gore,
Virginia M c K i n n e y, Katherine
Wilson,
E r m a Strouse.
Hazel
Bansom, Emma Sue Williams, Mar- jorie Edwards, Sara Louise Seitz,
Louise Tilton, Jane Walker, Stella
Spicer, Virginia Glass, Margaret P.
n,

I,

Heav-enridg- e,

The title He bore after. His birth,
viz., "the Son of God,"' He was before.
His Sonship was eternal "In the beginning was the Word and the Word
was .with God, and the Word was God.
. . . And the Word became flesh and
dwelt among us, and we beheld His
glory; glory as of the only begotten
from the Father, full of grace and
truth." He declared "before Abraham I am," and prayed to the Father
for "the glory which I had with thee,
before the world was," and "Thou
lovest me before the foundations of
the world." In defense of His "utterances He explains, "I speak that
which which I have seen with my
father."
Jesus moved and spoke' under the
spell and interpretation of that
From His statements one
is left under the impression that His
earth trip was the outgrowth of consultation with the Father in that
state and that the Son of
God who associated with the omnip- otent in the beginning became the
Son of Man when He min
g'ed with humanity. So He explains
I came forth from the Father and
came into the world. Again, I leave
the world and go unto the Father."
He had power to lay down His life
and power to take it up again. In
the plan of salvation extending
I through
three covenants, the refer
ences to His coming implied His pre- flesh existence. His baptism and His
transfiguration called forth Divine
utterances which assume the same.
He was declared to be the Son of
God with power, and He uttered no
denial to 'the statement when Thomas
called Him "my Lord and my God."
At' another time He said, "Ye call
me Master and Lord and ye say well,
for so I am." He "being in the form
of God thought it not robbery to be
equal with God," "Far in Him dwell-et- h
all the fullness of the
d
bodily."
He was sent to the world
to execute a plan previously agreed
upon. John 5:19 to 47 is the eternal
background of that earth task. All
things were delivered up to Him of the

new paths in the knowledge of their art.
This industry is continually on the
threshold of new ideas, with each development opening up a vista for its explorers
to track down.
Their activity will be as engineers in
laboratory research and plant operation,
.

A

nation-wid-

e

system

inter-connecti- ng

$

fl ONEERING

WORK

9
OCTOBER
Second of the
27-2-

JUST

NOVEMBER

BE.GUtf"

STEWARTS
We are always ready to furnish" you with
choice milk fed poultry, butter, eggs, old
hams, and country bacon.
.
GIVE US A TRIAL
v

PHONE

1466-471- 0

Moore-Disho- if

Poultry ,Co.

CORNER LIME and WATER STREETS

10 Round Trip

"Collegians"

The Louisville & Nashville Railroad Co.
3-- 3'

CLARK DUNN, City Passenger Agent

JOHN GILBERT

HAS

"

morning.
Returning leave Nashville late Saturday night,
arriving Lexington on Special Train Sunday
morning.

Laura La Plante

"MONTE
CRISTO"
-

and

Special train will leave Lexington 5:00 p. m..
Friday evening, arriving in Nashville Saturday

in

"O V

HOUSE MANAGERS

SPECIAL LOW RATE OF

SERIES
telephones

HOTEL BUILDING

WUdcat Special

With

of 18,000,000

LAFAYETTE

with the

CANARY"

BELL SYSTEM

SWEET SIXTEEN SHOP

TO NA'SHVILLE, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 29

"THE CAT
'
and
the

tions planning the course of activity for
groups of inien and carrying the burdens
of administration.
The responsibility and opportunity of
management take on an increasing importance in an industry such as this, where
forward-lookin- g
leadership must point the
way to ever better public service.

J?i

EVERYBODY'S GOING

STARTS
SUNDAY, OCT. 23

but also in supervisory and executive posi-

6- -

God-hea-

Mary Holt, Marie Howard, Kathryn
Withrow, Mary Louise Reneger, Eli
nor Dand, Elizabeth Hensley, Maggie
Brock Mildred Dudley, Margaret Al
len and Virginia Ellis.

It is still the day of the trail blazer. In
the telephone industry pioneers are cutting

1

I

self-styl-

Thompson.
Louise Gott, Lillian GrifFing Mary
Stuart Newman. Joe L. Tarlton. Fran
ces Hendon, Phoebe Dimoch, K&th-leen- e
Jacobs, Sudie E. Telton, Jane
Lewis, Margaret Wilson, Mildred Ro- bards, Lillian Combs, Edna Jones,

To the Daniel Boone
in every man ! . . .

One needs for town
shopping, for luncheons,
and afternoon affairs are
to be found in fascinating modes at your favorite shop.

dorsement and consecration, the re
gaining features should not become
a cause of unbrotherly friction.

n,

I

FROCKS!

in Him.
If the great outstanding
power and program of Christ then
and. now can receive a unity of en-

yiinniiiinmniimiiiutiiiiimiiiiiiium

.i

TELEPONE 6688
F. B. CARR, Gen'l Agent

UNION STATION
W. H. HARRISON, Trav. Pass. Agt.

*