THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
will take place during
the summer.
Miss Clark and Mr. Leachman hoth
attended the University and have a
wide circle of friends in Lexington.
Miss Clark is a member of the Kappa
Delta sorority and Mr. Gilbert is a
University, where he was a member member of the Alpha Gamma Rho
SOLACE
of the Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. fraternity as well as several honorThe couple have the good wishes ary organizations.
(By Dorothy Parker. Literary Digest)
There was a rose thaV faded young of their many friends.
o
I saw its shattered beauty hung
Fraternity Camping Parties
Upon a broken stem.
I heard them say, "What need to care, Fraternities that held camping parWith roses budding everywhere?"
ties on the Kentucky river before re- o- I did not answer them.
Sharp-Inskturning home at the close of last sei
mester were Phi Kappa Tau, Alpha
The marriage
of Miss Gladys
There was a bird brought down to die, Tau Omega, Kappa Sigma, Pi KapThey said, "A thousand fill the sky
pa Alpha, Delta Tau Delta, Alpha Blandihg Sharp, of Lexington, and
What reason to be sad?"
Sigma Chi, Del'a Chi, Sigma Nu and Mr. George Finley Insko, of Carlisle,
was solemnized at the home of the
There was a girl whose lover fled;
Triangle.
bride's mother, Mrs. Llewelyn Sharp,
I did no wait the while they said,
Tuesday afternoon, June 12, the Rev.
"There's many another lad."
Home Economics Dinner
Hays Farish officiating.
The bride, a popular Lexington girl,
The home economics department enMarriage Date Set
tertained Tuesday evening at the La- is a graduate of the Universify, and
The date for the marriage of Miss fayette hotel with a delightful dinner Mr. Insko was graduated from the
Catherine Carey to Mr. Hampton C. for the home economics students. College of Agriculture last January.
Adams, of Lexington, has been set Miss Julia Hurd presided as
Since that time he has held a position
for June 27.
with the University experiment station at Bardstown. Both he and his
Miss Carey is the attractive daugh-- o bride were prominent in school
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Carey, of O- Lexington. She wafc graduated in
'
Directly following the wedding the
June from the University where she
and
left
was popular and a leader in school
o couple returnfor a southern tourhome on
o;
at
will make their
their
She was a member of
activities.
Ky.
Bardstown,
Kappa Delta sorority, Mortor Board,
News has been received here of the
Theta Sigma Phi, was news editor of
The Kernel and was on the Kentuck-ia- n engagement of Miss Mary Catherine
Clark, of Prospect Place, to Mr. Elstaff.
The marriage of Miss Parthenia
Mr. Adams is a- graduate of the mer Gilbert Leachman, of Ashland.
Dimmit1 Davis, of Lexington, to Mr.
David Williams, of White Plains, N.
Y., was solemnized Tuesday evening
at 8 o'clock at the Maxwell street
Presbyterian church, the Rev. Howard Morgan officiating.
Drop in and get one of the
The bride is the only daughter of
IN LEXINGTON
BEST HAIR-CUT- S
Prof, and Mrs. Davis, of the University. She attended the University
Keep your hair cut shorter in Summer it's cooler
and was graduated from Radcliffe
College las'.1 June.
LADIES HAIR BOBBING A SPECIALTY
The couple will leave Saturday to
spend the summer traveling abroad.
They will be at home in New York
City where Mr. Williams will enter
117 E. HIGH ST.
H. M. DAVIS, Prop.
the banking business.
The wedding

PAGE THREE

U. K. Graduate to
Command Military
Post In Porto Rico

I can read my husband
liKe a book'
Maybe thate why he

SOCETY NOTES

turned over a new tear.'

unit of 192C, and accepted a commission as second lieutenant of infantry,
U. S. A., in September, 1926.
As a student, Harbold was prominent in various campus activities. He
was a major in the cadet regiment, a

Second Lieutenant William H. Har-bol- d,
Cth Infantry, U. S. A., Jefferson member of the
football team, the
Barracks, Missouri, who was graduat- SuKy Circle, Scabbard and Blade, and
ed from the College of Engineering
at the University in the class of 192G, the Alpha Tau Omega social

has recently received War Depirt-meorders assigning him to theG5th
Infantry, stationed at San Juan, Porto
Rico. He will leave the lattor nnrt
of this month for New York, from '
which point he will sail for his new
station.
Lieutenant Harbold is the son of
Mrs. W. R. Harbold of Fincastle Road,
Lexington. He was one of the two
honor graduates of the R. O. T. C.
nt

Weddings
o

R.W. SMOCK
Watch Your Watch

Careful Watch and
Clock Repairing

PHONE 7638

i

157 S. LIME

"The Shop with the Reputation"

McATEE

Shoe Rebuilding
"SHOE REPAIR ARTISANS"
Two Doors from Main St.

103 South Limestone

Engagements

WELCOME

Clark-Leachm-

You will come back.

-

GOOD FOOD AT ANY TIME

Students Restaurant

WELCOME WEW STUDENTS

Viaduct Barber Shop

my

While in Lexington

READ GOOD BOOKS
rent them

We sell and

The Colony
Book Shop
Opp. Kentucky

Theatre

WELCOME
SUMMER STUDENTS
We serve meals, fountain drinks, and carry a
complete line of candies
SPEND YOUR SPARE TIME HERE

THE TAVERN

333 S. LIME

Phone 2386

.

Why Go to College? Doctor Arps
Says," To Learn How to Think

0- -

Daughter

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Maxwell Heav- rin, of Hartford, Ky., are the proud
parents of a daughter born June 7, at
their home. She has been named
Martha Carolyn Heavrin.
Mrs. Heavrin was before her mar
riage Miss Bertha Tate and attended
the University where she was a mem
ber of the Alpha Gamma Delta soror
ity.
Mr. Heavrin has recently been appointed one of the aides on the staff
of Governor Sampson and he and his
family will soon move to Frankfort.

1

ftX

Iff

(Incorporated)

s--

What Well Dressed
Men Wear
o- -

--

o

(By Fairchild News Service)
College men will wear more tweeds
in sport suits next fall than they have
for some time, according to the Daily
News Record, only newspaper devoted
exclusively to men's styles and the
apparel industry.

Among the fabrics which will be
popular with many university students
is Harris tweed, the rough, stout material woven on the Island of Harris.
CHUBBY
The peasants of this island make the
BEST STUDENT
SAYS PHYSICAL DIRECTOR cloth in their cottages, where peat
fires burn on the floor, and the smoke
"Chubby built
are the most from these fires impregnates the
Aritweed, giving it the characteristic
studious," says a University of
zona physical education director. To odor.
prove her theory, the authority points
Colors in which the Harris tweeds
is more
out that "The slender
popular socially and therefore more are liked by students are various
frequently distracted from studious shades of green, tan, sand and heather. The suits made from this matepursuits."
e
styles,
rial are in three- - or
notch lapel jackets.
with
The jackets have plain backs and are
cut to fit loosely.
CO-E-

co-e-

Welcome
Summer
Students!
If you have never been in
Lexington before then you
must know right away that
Wolf Wile's is the shopping
headquarters for all Smart
Student (both in books and
style) . And Men in the know
always come here first for
their feminine gifts.

Our Summer Merchandise Is Crisp and
Fresh for Immediate Selection.

co-e- d

Win-

dows for the
"New" and the
"Modern!"

Stroll through our
Isles of Beauty
for Suggestions of

What

is

New!

Smart Summer Dresses

therefore likely to stigmatize collegiate training as wasteful labor.
Learns Art of Thinking
In giving the fundamental reasons
in answer to the question, Doctor Arp
said "When government rests upon
the consent of the governed, it is imperative that widespread ignorance
should be supplanted with widespread
intelligence; that initiative and re
sourcefulness should supplant sloth,
indifference
and slavish obedience;
that the critical judgment, the inquiring mind, should supplant blind submission; that mental, physical and
spiritual freedom should supplant intellectual bondage, economic depend-anctheological darkness in short,
servitude and idolatry in all forms.
"Second: Youth comes to college to
learn the most difficult and rarest of
arts, the art of thinking, to the end
that he may become a better instrument in the service of mankind.
"Third: It is in the college where
the young man or young woman may
learn to be a somebody, an individual,
a person, a stalwart citizen not a
cringing 'Yes, yes man.' The university is a reservoir where the student
may take of intellectual refreshment,
where he may breathe the fresh air
of enlightment, where he may unfold
personality and acquire strength of
character, where he may take on the
accoutrements of the moral soldier,
where he may cultivate the spirit of
renaissance, the crusader, and where
he may catch the vision of the good
society and strive valiantly for its realization and attainment.
"Fourth: By means of the college a
society offers for the nourishment of
the youth what is best in the entire
heritage of culture; the best that has
been thought and done, felt and said,
imagined and expressed."
.
In conclusion Doctor Arps declared
"May the goodness of wisdom settle
jpon the student body of the Univer- ity of Kentucky, the teaching per
sonnel and administration
of this
great institution to the end that the
Commonwealth
of Kentucky may
nourish its youth in toleration, in the
blessings of intellectual and social
fearlessness to seek and defend the
truth, in the desire to uphold valiant
ly the freedom and liberty of the mind
and withal may this Commonwealth
through this institution instruct its
youth so to love as to serve with disinterested devotion the highest good
of all mankind."

New
Hundreds to Select From
Arrivals Daily
Values That Defy
Comparison

B. B. Smith & Co.
"THE HOUSE OF SPECIALIZED MOL 2S"
264 EAST MAIN STREET

We have a new

FRIGIDINE
The cool method of permanent
waving.
Our new Vapor Steam
Waves and Rewaves any texture
Free advice given by
of hair.
Graduate Beautician.
2nd Floor J. D. Purcells

e,

Nell Osborne Beauty Shoppe
Phone 7225

BATTERY, TIRE, ALEMITE

and PROMPT ROAD
SERVICE
"We Do It AH'

Stokeley Service Co.
PHONE 1909

SPRING AND MAIN

four-piec-

three-butto-

DRY CLEAN
for the

FUTURE
as 'well as the

PRESENT
Dry Cleaning is something

that does not have to be
used at once, clothes dry
cleaned may be hung away
until you are ready to use
them.
You know that very soon
now you will need all your
Summer clothers;
don't
wait until the very last
minute to let us have them.
SEND THEM IN NOW.
OUR

TRUCK WILL

CALL.

Watch our

C. P. A. Service.

ACROSS FROM PATTERSON HALL

Dr. George F. Arps, of Ohio State,
Heath-Corye- ll
University, in a recent address before a University convocation, declar
h,
Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Heath, of
have announced the marriage ed that the principle reason for a
of their daughter, Allie May, to Mr. college education is to learn the art
Glyn L. Coryell, also of Paducah. The of thinking. In part Doctor Arps
ceremony was performed April 16, said::
1927 at St. Louis, Mo.
"Occasionally we hear the complaint
Mrs. Coryell is a member of the on the part of the dear taxpayer or
Beta Sigma Omircon sorority and our Phi Beta members of the faculty
will graduate from the University that many youths go to college in
next June.
order to acquire a social passport to
Mr. Coryell is the son of Mr. and social preferment. I suspect that it
Mrs. Frank Coryell and is at present is true that a college graduate attains
a student in the College of Engineer- a more acceptable social status than
ing at i.he University. He is a mem- his less fortunate brother. But to
ber of the Delta Chi fraternity.
ascribe the attainment of such status
as the compelling motive in the wideMackay-Besuden
spread drive toward a college education, betrays an utter lack of underInvitations have been received here standing of American youth and fails
announcing the marriage of Miss Sue to appreciate the twentieth century
Mackay to Mr. Henry Carlisle Besu-de- n philosophy of service. The sons of
to be solemnized on the twentieth millionaires and the sons of toilers,
of June at the Christian church in alike, must carry their own load in
Mt. Sterling.
the world if they would obtain social
Mr. Besuden was a student at the approval.
University and a member of the Kapself-mad- e
man, meas"The
pa Sigma fraternity. While in school uring success and worth in terms of
he was a member of the basketball material possession, will not penetrate
team and had many friends.
the superficial, the outward manifesThe couple will reside at the
tations of a college-- education and is
homeplace on the Winchester-M- t.
Sirling pike.

Parents Welcome

STUDENTS

Drop In and Lunch With Us

Davis-Willia-

"Cleanera That Satisfy"
212 S. Limestone St.
621

Phones

1550

ewiiioaes

TO GET 'GHOSTS'

The George Washington University
Press Club, publishers of the "Ghost,"
Harris and similar fabrics also .are voted recently to present a bound vol
used for topcoats and overcoats, and ume of this year's eight issues of the
waterproofing process sometimes is Ghost" to the university library.
a
applied to these garments. The cut
The volume is to be bound in blue
of such outer garments is loose and cloth, and lettered in gold. It will
English, with plenty of room in the contain the past eight issues of the
back and sleeves, while the newly "Ghost" in correct order, bound with
popular raglan shoulder is frequently their covers on. Work is now going
used.
forward on this plan, and the com
pleted volume is expected to be ready
Tweed suits, however, will be used in about a week.
by the
university stu
dents only for knock-aboand infor
Joseph Carr Ray, A. B. 1925, is a
mal campus wear, as American undergraduates are becoming
more and student in the College of Medicine at
His ad
more interested in maintaining a dis the University of Louisville.
tinction between sports and other dress is 1413 South Second street.
sorts of dress.

This beautiful little san
dal is the latest word in
Parisian footwear. High
and medium heels in
bkek patent, white kid
and white jade.

best-dress-

In this the American students are
following much the same line of
thought as do the students at Oxford
and Cambridge universities in England, where rough Harris tweeds are
used a great deal for camtius wear.
but more formal garments are donned
for town use. Undergraduates at
American universities, however nrob
ably do not go in as strongly as the
English students for informal cloth
ing.

BECKER

LIBRARY

The derby or bowler hat merits at
tention even this late in the season
according to style observers who have
seen it worn by students at colleges
and universities where such hats have
never been used before. Rapidly be
coming a standard article of headgear
for students the country over, the
derby should always have a neat, nar
row brim with a pronounced curl. The
university students do
not wear wide,
derbies
best-dress-

jj
"Sir, how can I ever repay
you for your kindness to me?"
"Doesn't
matter; check,
money order or cash."
Annapolis

Log.

i

.

I
A darling little Thea- dore tie in white jade,
blue and green kid and
black patent leather.
ANYTHING ELSE?

WANT ONE?

$65

jg
j

?

$7.
Mitchell,

BaW & Smith
(Incorporated)

1

*