The Handout, Vol. 19, No. 6, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 27, 1934 Page: 3 of 4
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October 27, 1934.
THE HANDOUT
Pago Thr^se
vl
Sakkara Society
1 M
Combinmk several other venturesjj
the Sakkara society has made the'
first successful move toward estab-j
lishinf a dormitory for T. W. C. boys j
at 3405 Avenue F. Seven boys are j
now tenants of the house. They are |
H<>b- Bailey, James Carter, Walter
True, Bob Henson, Woodrow Black-j
man, Robert Baker, and Hap Pipes.
Several others have, made application
to the society for a room and will
move within the next two weeks.
The house was rented, and each boy
was held it^Wisible for furnishing
his own roonly though they worked
together, according to Stanford Parr, |
head of the society. Several firessers, j
beds, and mattresses were' lent to the !
Sakkara "Society by the school. At;
the %>resent time the living-room,
n which will be fitted as a study and i
club room, has not been furnished.
"Donations will be cheerfully ac-!
cepted," stated the president, Stan-
ford Parr. "We need mops, a ham- k
rner, light globes,. lamps, and a large I
study table.''
A constitution and by-laws have
been drawn up. Membership is at-,
tained by selection and grades, an av-
erage of B for one semester or C
for two being .required. The roll is J
limited to twenty members.
In purpose the Sakkara Society has j
only interest in creation of a spirit
of fello\yghip among boys on the cam-;
pus. Several entertainments have
been planned with this objective.
Society meetings • are held each
Monday night in the club-house.
SOCIAL CALENDAR
The social calendar has not as
yet been completed. but those
dates already chosen give' prom-
ise of a mei'ry year to
come.
October
Ann Open House
Oct. 5
P. C. C. Slumber Party.
..Oct. 19
Methodist Y. P. °
Reception
Oct. 19
Boaz Picnic
Oct. 20
Hallowe'en Party
B. Y. P. U >
Oct. 26
Y. W. C. A. Carnival
Oct. 27
November
< Press Club Dinner and
Theatre Party
Nov. 3 ..
W. A. A. Picnic
Nov. 9
S. M. K. Party
Nov. 9
Senior-Soph Party
.Nov. 16
Mulkey Open House
," ' Decern ber^, "*
Hughes West Texas
Party ,
. Dec. 7
P. C. C. Faculty Banquet..Dec. 14
S. M. K. Luncheon
..Dec. 15
Koro-S. M. K. Christmas
k) ,>Urty
. Dec. 18
AtY.W.C.A. Carnival Personals
Apple cider anil hot gingerbread
will be served in tW?> Panther City'
Club booth at the Y. W. C. A. carni-1
val tonight. This booth will be in
room 27, where tables for four ..will 1
be arranged to serve the customers.
The room will be decorated in spooky j
Hallowe'en fashion.
i
Mothers of the town girls and men
were guests of their daughters at the
P. C. C. luncheon Thursday noon at
the girls' weekly meeting. The meet-
ing was headed by Miss Bobbi^gjlfc-ns,
president. ^
Miss Kitty Morgan' entertained
with a reading of a one-act play. The
program being in charge of Mistf Dor-
othy Flyne, vice president.
"Amazing,"' in the way Heinz Levi,
18-year-old Gorman enrolled in Tu-
lane University, describes the number
of automobiles in America. He state!;
that jn his country about one out of
every sixty people has a car. Levi
has been in the United States only
two months. •
—Avonal West.
PLAY TO BE PRESENTED
I-
.*>J
Ruth RifPt, Juanita Howard and
Betty Butler spent the- week-end in
Mineral Wells.
Dorothy Smith visitNf friends in
Mineral Wells" Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. G. V. Smith' of Floy-
dada visited their daughter, Marga-
ret, over the week-end.
Miss Betty Bennett is visiting in El
Paso, her home. She will return later
in the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben A. Matthews, and
daughter, Nancy, of pallas, visited
Mother Matthews of Boaz H.alls Sun-
day afternoon.
Helen Maggard, Caroline- Mills, and
Billy Patterson spent the week-end in
Midlothian.
Hulene and %sm^. Brabham were
called home Monday rtight because of
the death of their grandfather.
Frances Beddow attended the Dal-
las Fair Saturday afternoon.
Kt^herine Rose Pinne.y spent Wed-
nesday in Dallas with hpir aunt, Mrs.
Sherman Gehrett, from Santa Anna.
jyir. Estes of Quannah, the father of
Gwen Estes, visited her Monday.
Helen John's mother, Mrs. W. N.
Johnson, spent Tuesday at T. W. C.
Mary Louise Martin spent last
i week-end at' home in Midlothian.
Mr. and Mrs. George visited their"
j daughter, Josephine Sunday after-
noon.
Helen McClanahiin visited last
week-end jvith her aunt, Mrs. H. L.
Barber of Fort Worth. Last Thurs-
! day Miss McClanahari played on a
program at the Grapevine theater, in
j Grapevine. r
HOME ECONOMICS
With the general hjffrease iiynum-
ber throughout th<t^Tepartrnenk', home
i economics work i« VctTtmder wa>.
The couses offered the first semester
are Pattern Study, Textile Analy.zaA^
; tion, Modeling, and Food Study. ^A ""
: continuation of thi^ work in Clotning
Construction, Dress Designing, Meal
: Planning, and- Table Service will be
j offered the last semester.
The laboratories are well-equipped
with machines, cutting and fating
| tables, ironing boards, plenty of pat-
j terns, stoves^tables, and all other, in-
| dividual equipment essential to the
courses.
"The Awakening of John Slater,"
will be presented by the Methodist
Church dftimatic cl8b at an early
date. Miss Ruth Hinds Garard, grad-
uate of T. W. C. is director of the '
cast.
The ..majority of the cast- is t#+ule
up of T. W. C. .students. The cast^
includes Frank Booth, Leon Moore,:
Ida Mae Smith, Avanal West, Archie
Sterly, Eloise Roddy, A'metta Talley,
and Edward Armstrong.
THE UNION from Las Cruses
j Union High School says that civiliza- i
| tion is a good idea. Someone-ougM
i ta start it. **
Freshmen Elect
Miss Stiles of the Biology Depart- j
ment was elected sponsor of the j
Freshman Class Thursday at the class J
meeting after it had accepted the
resignation of Mrs. Phillips.
In (his same meeting the Fresh-
men petitioned that they J>e allowed
to postpone? "Fish Lay'' until spring
because of conflicts on the date now
set.
ED HUFFMAN
Service Station
Gasoline and Oil
Transfer and Moving
1701 Vaughn Blvd. Phone 5-1154
TRADE WITH
HELPY SELFY
No. 17
1008 Nashville
SCHOOL SUPPLIES
" EVERKT'f DRUG CO.
3200 Ave. F 5-3114
Dressmaking—Knit Suits
Reasonable Prices
MRS. E. P. HENNINGTON
• c
3400 Aver-i. 5-2650
DRAKE CLEANERS
1715 Vaughn at J
Suits 35c—Dresses 35c up
Pants 20c—Ladies' Coats 35c up
We Really CLEAN Your
Clothes
ROY YAGER
Dry Cleaners
Cijsh & Carry
1310, Annis
Phone 5-1131
Make Your Headquarters
at
T. W. C. COFFEE SHOP
Student Lunch 15c
THE COLLEGE TAVERN
A Cozy Retreat
TASTY FOOI)
A Haven for T. W. C. Students
Special Lunches 15c, 25c*
3104 Ave. F
ho •hum"
I
Better
CANDIES
BEWARE!
If by 9 o'clock Hallowe'en (Oct. 3.1, 1934), ye are not disheveled and
nertz-y, dire misfortune will lurk on your trail. Heed ye this warning!,
Yo.wsah! It's better to be a part of the mad, mad
Hallowe'en mob tjian to be one of the victims! Arod
° besides that, you college boys and girls no doubt will
be having parties all week long and will be needing
tricksty, bold, bright costumes—soo-o-o-o-o—hustle
down Tif^ripling's and pick yours out! Spanish
Men and Women, Dutch Men and Women, Clowns,
Devils, Pirates, Gypsies at only $1.49!
First Floor—Main -Street Entrance
MODERN SHOE SHOP
Arthur Wilkinson, Prop.
We Don't Cobble Your Shoes—
We Rebuild Them
2077 Vickery Blvd. Phone 5-1197
Fort Worth, Texas
Polytechnic Cash Grocery
and Market
THE MATTISOKPS STORE
Quantity Merchandise,
Cheap Prices
3018 Ave. F 5-2343
ORGAIN'S STUDIO
Now Located 103'/j West Sixth St.
Ready to Make Your Photograph For Year Book
FIRST IN, BEST SERVED -
HURRY!
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Crain, Frances. The Handout, Vol. 19, No. 6, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 27, 1934, newspaper, October 27, 1934; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth337056/m1/3/?q=%22Places+-+United+States+-+Texas+-+Tarrant+County+-+Fort+Worth%22: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.