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T II E R E I) AND BLACK
Pape Three
Rect*ption Is Held
By YW Members
No Dances to lie Held
Here Until Next W eek
Personals
Miss Della Estroff, Louisville, vis- 1 Misses Carrie Green Cooper, and
lted Miss Annette Harris at Milledge llette Taylor spent Friday, Satur-
liall last week-end. day, and Sunday in Athens at the
— | ('III Omega house.
Co-eds Are Barred
From Script Dances
Sophomores and senior college
women students at the University of
Georgia may attend only university
authorized dances, according to a
ruling of student council last spring.
All private dances and dances given
by fraternities must receive the ap
proval of the dean of women. No
woman student may attend script
dances given out in town.
Freshman women students may
not attend dances during the first
quarter. One dance privilege each
week will be allowed freshmen wo
men in the second quarter if they
maintain a graduating average.
Sophomore, junior, and senior wo
men students may attend buffet sup
per at fraternity houses following
Friday night dances on specified
week-ends.
Alpha Delta Pi
To Install Chapter
The newest addition to the sorority
contingent at the university is Alpha
Delta Pi, which made Its appearance
on the campus this year. Alpha
Delta Pi is the oldest sorority in the
United States, having been founded j
at Wesleyan college on May 15,
1851.
A luncheon nt the Georgian hotel
Wednesday was the feature of this j
week’s rushing activities. There
were twenty-eight guests present,
fourteen of whom were rushees. A |
number of the alumnae of the soror
ity from Athens and Atlanta attend- j
t d the luncheon.
Miss Evelyn Sellers, Birmingham,
Ala., Is In charge of the chapter, j
which will be installed at an early
date.
Walter Bowen and Tom Norris, of
Amerlcus, visited Miss Nellie Bowen,:
Cobb street, last week-end for the
game.
THE FALL OF
CONSTANTINOPLE
"Nature in the Raw"—as fwr»
trayed by Thomas Webb •.. in*
spired by the savage slaughter
of 5000 Christian defenders—
at the hands of the vengeful,
barbaric horde of 2 50,000
men under the ruthless
Mohammed 11 — 14531
At Winnie Davis
The annual alfresco reception of
the Young Women’s Christian asso
ciation of the College of Education
was held at Winnie Davis hall, Mon
day night from 8 to 10 p. m.
The guests were received on the
porch of this colonial building by i
Miss Moina Michael, Y. W. C. A.
secretary and leader of religious ac
tivities, President and Mrs. S. V. |
Sanford, Dr. and Mrs. Jere M. Pound, !
Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Meadows, Mr.
and Mrs. H. B. Kitchie, Mr. and Mrs.
Alexander Rhodes, and Miss Mar
garet Williford, Y. W. C. A. presi
dent. Others assisting in -eceiving
and entertaining the guests were
Miss Bess M. Baird, Miss Katie
Downs, Mrs. Pearl Moon, and Mrs.
Margaret Blair.
The guest list included Miss Mary
Banks, Mrs. Jennie Belle Myers, the
Y. W. C. A. cabinets from Franklin
college and the College of Agricul
ture, and E. L. Secrest and the Y. M.
C. A. cabinet of the university, pas
tors and student pastors and their
wives, the board of regents, and the
entire faculty and student body of
the College of Education.
Delicious refreshments were served
the guests by the entertainment
committee, with Miss Annie Jim Carl
ton, Canon, as chairman. Music was
furnished for dancing by the "Geor
gia Bulldog” orchestra.
The university sponsored dances
will be omitted this week-end, with
two being staged October 14 and 15,
before and after the day of the
Georgia and North Carolina game,
at Woodruff hall, according to H. J.
Stegeman, dean of men.
The Friday night dance, October
14, will be held from 9 to 12:30
o’clock, admission being one dollar,
and for the Saturday night dance
also, which follows the game. Music
for the dances will be furnished by
the "Georgia Bulldog” orchestra.
Miss Martha Warren, Lucas hall, |
spent last week-end at her home In
Dewey Rose.
Miss Mary Gordon Golucke, Craw-
fordville, visited Miss Elizabeth
Trimble at the Chi Omega house last
week-end.
Miss Jimmie Cantrell, Cleveland,
vlHited Miss Eleanor Adams, La-
Grange, at Lucas hall last week-end
Miss Eleanor Cosgrove, Augusta. I
has been a guest at the Chi Omega j
house since Sunday.
Miss Rose Yaff, Spartu, visted
Miss Ida Mogul at Lucy Cobb last
week-end.
Miss Julia Henderson, Atlanta, a
member of the Chi Omega chapter
j at Oglethorpe, spent the week-end
I in Athens.
Edward Brown and Wiley Davis,
Lambda Chi Alpha, spent the past
week-end at their homes in Atlanta. | ter last week-end.
Miss Eleanor O'Connor, Augusta,
was a guest of the Chi Omega chap-
Miss Lila Davidson, Augusta, is
spending a week at the Chi Omega
house.
Miss Virginia Campbell, a gradu
ate of the University of Georgia, who
is teaching in Pelham, spent last
week-end at home In Athens.
Miss Mary Frances Candy wiib at
her home in Atlanta last week-end.
Miss Frances Smith spent last
week-end at her home In Elberton.
—and raw tobaccos
have no place in cigarettes
They are not present in Luckies
. . . the mildest cigarette
you ever smoked
E buy the finest, the very
finest tobaccos in all the
world—but that docs not
explain why folks every
where regard Lucky Strike as
the mildest cigarette. The fact
is, we never overlook the
truth that "Nature in the
Raw is Seldom Mild”—so
these fine tobaccos, after
proper aging and mellowing,
are then given the benefit of
that Lucky Strike purifying
process, described by the
words—"It’s toasted”. That’s
why folks in every city, town
and hamlet say that Luckies
arc such mild cigarettes.
«*
It’s toasted
That package of mild Luckies
"If a man write a better book, preaih a better sermon, or make a better mouse trap than hit neighbor, tho he
build bn house in the u oods, the u orld u til make a beaten path to his door. "—RALPH WALDO EMERSON.
Docs not this explain the world-wide acceptance and approval of Lucky Strike?