The Handout (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1925 Page: 3 of 4
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>v
tland
IP
la
K
fflTfll
profea.
n© tim»
(Motion,
abroad
know).
Mary
Smith
Spanish
1 ■ ' ft
sailed
Koa«
id died,
he «i.
ofessw-
Fraticej
rout in.
ntr-
com-
11
"fMi
" , '"a.'/- '■"■ )
fiMWH
ii
»W1V8 it!.
lout ft
quite i
Meriting
iwertUt •
in *ny;
n of 4«ir
H|g fast,
;e jiflssed
and .ice,
devise,
beneath,
from ii>
. ',o
ung
11,
'■
■Mk'
r:
light I
tt&rra
shout,
a gricifl,
imm said;
overbed,
deep aui
<plio4.
re
"ami m(.
Is bi east!"
blue eye,
th "a «>*K
Compact
A 50e Rouge Compact in case,
orange or poppy color, March
i'aale IBc.
85c
Bayer's Aspirin
The $ 1.20 Buyer's Aspirin, liot-
Jl'tle of 100; buy a supply to last
t for some time at 85c.
SALE
TOILETRIES
THIS WEEK
A ftoocf'time to lay in lyour
spring supply of Toilet Wa-
ters, Perfumes, Cosmetics
and Soaps. Come down and
look^
79c :
Chamois >
Skin—A good $1.00 value for
your auto; March Sale, 79c.
39c
Angelus
Single Compact, .either lace
powder or rouge; March Sale,
#1.00 value. 8!>c.
$1.00
Combination
Any $1.00 Face Powder and
Powder Puff, in,March Sale,
I Sr.
29c
Pepsodont
Tooth paste, tlu^ .regular 50c
tube, the popular and* good
paste, this sale 29c. " ~
$1,59
Djer-Kiss
Toilet Water, the regular $2.00
bottle, .no belter; never so low;
tJiiiksuie $1.59.
75c
Hind's Honey
Almond Cream
The $1.00 size bottle you should
have for Spring days.
69c
$1.00
Flour
Jiiost
Toilet Water
bottle of the celebrated
de Mignon Toilet Water,
women -admire.
25c
Mavis Talc Powder
Jjjni extra special, 2 cans
TVlavis Talcum Powder, this sale
for 25c.
of
$1.19
Combinations
Any $ 1.00 Toijet Water and
4>0e Sprayer, this sale $1.19.
79c
Compact
Coty or Murry Compact. $1.00
sellers; this week, March Sale,
79c.
THE HANDOUT
Page Three
SOCIAL GOSSIP
. • *
• i'
Sunday School Class
Has Hike and Picnic
Girls Celebrate Completion of
Sunday School'Course With
Gay Entertainment.
Birthday Party Held
| In Kindergarten Room
Clowns^ stories' a'nd, Games
With White Cake and Candles
•» . (
Fifty Reservations
Made in Dormitories
I ,
j Two Russian Cm* Will Attend
T. Y\. C, Next Year. Will
Room in Mulkey.
Th*' Religious Educutors Class of
Polytechnic Methodist Sunday school
Feature Party
. _ ■>">•'
Billy Matthews
sixtli birthday with
celebrated
a party at
his
kin-
the
way
arrows in
leaders had to blaze
othwf* by placing
path.
The following games were played:
Do This and That, iXlop the Hand-
kerchief, Spooning and Tag. At sub-
set they sang sotigs around the*camp
fire and devoured pigs in blankets,
apples, buns, coffee, and toasted
murshmallows.
The Religious Educators ('lass 1ms
m enrollment of 17 and has had an
average attendance of 14. The ex-
ellent attendance of this. class is
due to the great work: which it is
undertaking. The class has com-
pleted and taken an examination on
The Organization and Administra-
tion. of the Sunday School," Cun-
ninggin and North. They will begin
The Methodist Clvurotv and Its
•Work," Tippy and ' Kprn, next Sun-
day.
The class has active officers who
are as follows: Elizabeth Robinson,
president; Xla Fay Haughty, secre-
tary; Margaret Turner, chairman of
the social committee.
-o——_—.
Miss Bvffia Mae'* Cunningham,
Celina,' tme of the old gii*ls of T. W.
visited fri#nds in Mulkey Sunday
afternoon.
w
ithyci
ic
t»
last
the
and £>'*>'
lay.
!> and
star,
under the supervision of Miss Bailey idergarten, on Friday, February 27.
enjoyed a picnic Wednesday evening. Unfortunately, the weather preventetl
The party left
The trail was
"l^c.soi ve your room!"
cry we have heard from
for the last two weeks,
a'i'ha lice was given the
That is the
Miss Pettfcy
Last week
old girls t'6
and
the campus at 4:80. |a few of the kindergarten children
so dangerous that the j from attending kindergarten on that
for the
their
Personals
7*
Pinky Lpa Eddins spent the -week-
end at. home in Msirlln. Pinky Lou
reports that Nancy is too ill to re-
turn.
afternoon; but five of Billy's little
playmates whom he hud incited to)
the party, risked exposure to wind
and rain in order to join in the fun.
Billy's mother, Mrs. W. H. Mat-
thews, Jr.-s was-present, and also his
little sister, Faye.
For a while the children played
whatever they wished, choosing their
own materials and activities. Billy
felt extremely important as vhe'
helped each ot his guests find some-
thing pleasant to do. Wheh the
children went downstairs, they found
a clown hanging on the wtyll. Miss
Jones blindfolded each child in turn,
and he attempted to stfck a paper
pipe in the clown's mouth. ,The fact,
that some of the pipes were pasted
at ridiculous angles and at ;*> great
distance from the clown himself only
added to the fun. The clown was
given to the child whose pipe was
nearest the proper place. Several
games were played, and Louise
Welch, senior, told the children the
story of "Grandfather Pig's Spec-
tacles."
After the story, the children
marched into the kindergarten room
where the table had been, prepared.
The shades wore down, and the only
light in the room was that afforded
reserve the room of their chqie
this week ■ the freshmen have been
signing up. The first reservations
began on Feb. 4, when' several re-
quests came by mail. Nine such
letters have been wtyeived. Since
the office has been open to the stu-
dents the office girls have been kept
busy taking in ten-dollar checks, ami
assigning rooms.
Ann Waggoner has the largest
number of entrafttx .w far. Seven-
teen ..reservations have been made in
that dormitory. Mulkey has fifteen,
Waggoner twelve, and Boaz-
Dan
Benbrook
Several interesting groups of si
ters are rooming together on the
campus not year; in Mulkey, Mau-
rine and Alirta Phifer. Normangee,
will bg, -together - again. Maurine will.,
be a senior and A Ida a sophomore.
Ollio Ba tern an, Westover, who was
a freshman in '23-'24, but who drop-
ped out'this year, will be back with
her sister, Mary Ellen. Both will
be sophomores in Mulkey. Bessie
and Ouida Watson, BaVrv, will gradu-
ate frtfrn the Academy this year, and
will room together in Ann next year
as freshmen. Two -Russian girls, the
Misses Petroff, who finish high
school" this year in Harbin/ ('fihui,
will be in "Mulkey, Beulan L'owu
Lee, Graford, the foilrtft girl from
the Lee family to attend T. W. C.,
has written for»a room in Ann. Her.
sisters before her have roomed in
SOCKUSTS MAKE THEIR
DEMIT*IN T.-W. (I. HAL1-S
O, la! la! What is it that adorns
the feet of Milady T. W. C? Has
the cerebral hoinisphere been vacated
or are the feminine members of tin*
Kindergarten paying a visit to the
halls of T. W. C?
A fair mtifden strides down the
way with a „"suappy wi»lk.
A Kasp of su'tprise and » new fad
is ushered into T. W. C. Why the
sudden move to modesty ? Former
fashions for blizzards were chiffon-
liose and, satin pump, but now the
change to Puritanism by wearing two
pairs of hose.
♦ ilk hose plus kids' socks. Hut
perhaps^the hose didn't have any feet
in 'em.
The colors of both hose and sockiA'
vary; banana,, peach and flesh for
hose, anything front brown to green
for socks, and the latter may be
either cotton or wool.
Hack to our childhood days!
Some people patch up their old
quarrels Until they are almost as
good as new.
Bonnie Briar Beauty Shoppe
1317 Nashville R. 72.r>2
wN/kmag
florist
702 Main St.
The crepe paper table cloth and nap_
k«J»ts. were decorated with tumbonnet
babies, and .friendly animals. At each
Ann. Augie Mae
Bernice- finished in
Twila WashbUrn spent this week-
end with friends in the city. .» ,
The Misses Dragoo and Myra Ger-
many attended Grand Opera in Dal-
las Monday night.
Ruth Van Meter spent the week-
end with her mother in Rome.
Susie Downing and Jewel Low-
the guests of
ranee were
sister in C. T A. this week-end and
aisp attended „the Denton Normal-
T. W, C. game..
finished in '20,
'2.1, -and Florence
by tSTetydfes on the birthday cake, [attended school t wo' years.
Among the senior^ w'ito will have
to leave their rxtani^ to " some one
else' ' Gladys Medley and Louise
place the ice cream was guarded by j Welch have roomed together in Dan
an animal cooky, who stood on a!fw ft,ur years', atul in the same
foundation of pink icing. A beauti-1 roon, up Xintil a few weeks ago.
ful white birthday cake occupied them ljUeille McCanne and Mary Davis'
petition of hofior in the center of | iiave been roommates, also in Dan,,
the table, while a parade of the tiny ! for three years. Mary Neely anil
animals marched around it. Before; Susie Downing have shared the same
the party, Billy had said, "Please, room two years in Bpaz-Benbrook.
mother, don't have pink candles;!
everybody has pink ones, and I S.OPHS MEET TO «P.E "
Helen Tidwell
in Celina with
spent the week-end
her parents.
D
fu:
LongfelloW' !
stie box)—
,li read" ':
ie'."
t ten-story
r -1 "
injured.
"Who de-
tit a
,^'t follow
teams."
ACCURATE STATISTICS
ABOUT PAPER GIVEN
"What would twenty-seven and one-
half acres of ground, completely cov-
ered with paper, look like? Ever see
that sight? Yet that or thereabout
is the amount i4ni^v'-'H Whio^>oould
b/1 covered by all the puperused at
Texas Woman's College in nine
. . months, assuming that each girl uses
: 49.5 pounds of paper per year—
which is the amount used by the
^average United States citizen, accord-
ing to accurate statistics, »
H^?de up into-Orheme tablets of
thirty-six sheets each, this would be
12,001 tablets, or the equivalent of
$1800.15 when sold at lf» cents each.
Stretched into one continuous, "sheet,
the paper would roach tp DaTTas and
back, with enough left over to return
.to Arlington. '»•
Most paper in the United'States is
made of spruce and poplar wood pulp.
One Cord. of such wood will furnish
enough pulp for 1,748 pounds of
paper. Assuming again that 40.15 is
the correct amount of paper used per
girl at Texas Woman's College, we
find that they will require the ser-
vices of a good-sized pie^e of tim-
"bered land, six cords being necessary.
This wood would make a pile twenty-
ifour feet long, four
'eight feet wide.
f Any one unconvinced is at perfect
" 'liberty to figure it all out for his or
• j .... o
',lier own satisfaction.
Glaudine Smalley had as her guests
Mr. ami Mrs. Gene Holt.zhauser and
little daughter, Carlyle ana Catherine
Smalley of Lubbock for the week-
end. Mr. Holtzhauser took a num-
ber of Boaz girls to see the game
at Denton Saturday afternoon.
want mine different." Accordingly,
his candles were orange.
The children • sang* ..their "Tharfk
You," blew out the candles, clapped
Susie's for Billy, and. ate their- ice cream.
Little "Faye Matthews endeavored to
make hers last by eating out. the
center and leaving the outside edges.
Ben Bradford cut the thimble from
the cake, but the prospect of be-
cohiing an old maid c.ould not dimin-
ish his immediate happiness
KINDERGARTEN K I I) 1) I E S
Ruth Carney had as her visitor
Sunday afternoon Mr. Orien Carter
of S. M. U.
.. J**
Mary Louise Jenkins spent the
week-end with her aunt in the city.
Miss Gwendolyn Monagin, C. I. A.,
was the week-end guest of Dorothy
Churchill.
Kathleen . Rice, Vera Ciuz, and
Mary Spiller visited friends in C.
1. A. last week-end.
FOR PEACE WITH FISII
» The Sophomores called a class'
meeting Friday for the purpose oif
declaring military operations against
the freshmen at an jend. The smoke
of battle had scarcely cleared when
the victorious "sophs" voted not only
to give full right of way to the
"fish",on FisVDay, but also to re-
turn to them their president, and
Several other members of the class.,
All of their green toggery was re-
turned that they might more easily
ENTERTAINED WITH PARTY]have a green and peaceful Fish Day.
The Sophomores wish to congratu*
Blanche and Madge Scott w*nt
Decatur for the week-end.'
in)
Mrs. E. M. Cyrus, special student
in the kindergarten department, en-
tertained the' members of the Kinder-
garten Club at her home on Satur-
day, February 28. A novel cross
word puzzle,' consisting of words
familiar to every kindergarten stu-
dent caused deep contemplation and
much merriment. Florence Lowe won j
the prize for solving her puzzle cor-
rectly.
Refreshments were served to the
following members of the. club: Miss
Jones, Nan Lackey, Opal BoyJe, Mar-
jorie Mayhew, Clarise JackWon, Flor-
ence Lowe, Allie BaWock, Louise
Welch and Blossom B^tfiiett.
MISS JONES GIVES
TEA FOR ADVISEES
late the freghtfien on being
sports and good freshmen.
good
Smith's Meat Market
Best Sandwiches and Hamburgers
Vaughn St.—Poly
Permanent Waving
The Rose Beauty
Shop
"Everything to keep Milady
Beautiful"
Opposite Texas Hotel
110 E. 8th St. Lamar 401
RITZ THEATRE
NOWr PLAYING
The Broken Wing"
With the Crashing
Aeroplane
NEXT WEEK
"Wedding Bells'
Is Red Hair a Good Cause
for Divorce?
Martha Vernon Robinson and Glen-
na Hollowny were the guests „ of
Mary JY> Rogers this week-end.
Lola Bills ami Mona Keitt spent
the week-end with relatives at Hub^
bard.
Mignon Ingram was the gtff-st of
relatives in the city over the week-
end. «
Roberta Guillet is in the infirmary
feet high, and~r>,jti, the flu. Elizabeth Smith is
M
also a guest of the infirmary.
Vanita Morrow spent the week-end
with Avonelle Talbot in the city.
Miss Genevieve Jones, kindergarten
instructor, entertained her group of
advisees at a tea in the kindergarten
room at 4 o'clock Friday afternoon.
There were only two girls of the
group that were- unable to attend.'
Tea, saftiTwIehqs and cookies were
served and a social hour followed.
0-
Silvianna is learning the art of ac-
cepting birthday giftyfronv1t«Unirer».
Yes, even for watches given nor on
her mother's birthday. "
Lucille: "What are you doing with
my hat on?"
Elizabeth: "Well, 1 went in and
asked for it. Silence reigned and si-
lence gives consent."
Charming Springtime Creations
In Footwear of I he Very Highest Quality
The Dream
Black Satin with colored,
stitching, i\g sketched $12.50
Black patent vamft, white
patent leather quarter, with
black patent leather heel
*13.50
The Annis
Patent vamp, colored stitched
apricot kid. quarter and heel,
at. . ' S1I.R0
Mail Orders Promptly Filled.
V
SMOt
FIFTH
AND
MAIN
HOI S ION.
f
X
'♦V
\
\
r*
■HIE
SHOES
f
V
/
III
fit
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Paddock, Marian. The Handout (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 11, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, March 6, 1925, newspaper, March 6, 1925; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth415770/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Texas Wesleyan University.