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Page 28 text:
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24 THE NORMAL ADVANCE terpieces of the justly celebrated Ben Trovato. The wife of a box-holder was engaging a cook. She easily settled the matter of hours and afternoons out, but on one point She was met with the fiI-mest opposition. ctThis I will not do? the mechanic of the kitchen said, :41 will not okkepy yor box at the New Theaytreye 1170chle 1170946. N0 DEGREE FOR HER. 4cIs your fair friend going to stay at Vassar for her M. A. W, 4No, I have persuaded her to take an M-r-s. elsewherefliYale 136007-11. BUDDHIST PRIEST STUDIES SOCIOL- OGY AT THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO. Among the students registered this quarter at the University of Chicago is Eisho Otani, a priest in the East Honguangi Temple, of Kyoto, Japan, who is pursuing a course of sociological studies. lWI'. Otani is a son of Count Otani, a leader in the Shinshu sect of the Buddhist religion. His brother is high priest- of the Honguangi Temple. tcStone walls do not a prison make? Remarked old Yeggman Pete, ttFor nowadays when jugs are built Most people use concretefl -Dcvwe77 Republican. MEDIUA L REPAR TEE. A candidate for medical honors, having thrown himself almost into a fever from his incapacity for answering the questions, was asked by one of the professors: g4How would you sweat :1 patient for the rllellllliltl5111?,, He replied, CtI would send him here to be eXe aminedW:Lif6. PRO VERBIAL PREFERENCE. Cow 4tI should think you would prefer the green fields to that miserable styf, PigettNot at all. The pen is mightier than the sward.77-Lippi7wozft. TVISE W'OMAN. Miss HighseeettBut it is time for the guests to leave? Hostess-itYes; thatls why I want you to singWeNew YOWC Sun. INFORMED. Small Brother;ttAre you going to marry Sister Rutth CialleretcVVhyeer-J really don7t know, you knowlll Small Brother-JtThatls what I thought. Well, you areflez'fe. EASY JOB. cTd like to get a job on some big New York newspaper? ttVVhat would you do on a New York news- paperw ttWell, I believe I could write the uncon- firmed rumorsWePittsbmqg Post.
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Page 27 text:
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iTHE NORMAL ADVANCE Pauline Edington, who for the past two years has been in the University of Chicago, is now in Normal. ttBiHie7, Royce is in Purdue. Oscar Haney is teaching near Brazil. Elmer Row is in the High School at Tempe, Ariz. He teaches mathematics and science. Russel Carey is in the University Of In- diana. 1 Mr. W. L. Connor, superintendent of the Hymera schools, was in Terre Haute, October 19. He brought primary teachers with him to Visit the schools here. Clifford Funderhurg- is county superintend- ent of Huntington county. W. C. Grants is principal of a ward school at Muncie. Miss Pauline Hummerick, T11, is teaching German, English and botany in the Pimento High School. 23 Miss Fay Keener has a position in the Gold- smith High School. Emma Koch has taken up her work again in the Lawrenceburg schools after a years leave of absence. Miss Lowry is teaching at Dana. Miss Tillie Harrar has a position in the Tell City schools. Anna COX, treasurer of the VVOmants League, ,11, is teaching in the High School at Kemp- ton. Miss Rose Mitchell teaches in Kokomo. Lola Knost, T11, has Charge of the Latin and English in the Greentown High School. Emma Dewight, of Elkhart, is teaching at home this year. Misses Bailey, Harriet and Edith Bader, MCNIuHin, Crawford, Block and Scherich went to Sullivan, October 21, and walked from there to Merom, where they had lunch. EXCHANGES 00 ULDNTT PHASE HIM. The proofreader on a small Middle-WYestern daily was a woman of great precision and eX- treme propriety. One day a reporter succeeded in getting into type an item about, ttXViHie Brown, the boy who was burned in the XNest End by a live wire? On the following day the reporter found on his desk at frigid note asking, gtWhich is the west end of a boy?7 It took only an instant to reply: ccThe end the son sets on, of coursefieliadz'es, Home Journal. On October 3 members of the faculty and students at the University of Chicago ob- served the nineteenth anniversary of the open- ing of the institution with commemorative chapel services in Mandel Hall. The services were opened with prayer by Professor C. E. Henderson. President Judson spoke on the work of the University and compared the in- stitution when founded with that of today. In a comparison of present conditions with those Obtaining nineteen years ago, it was recalled that when the doors were opened for instruc- tion on October 1, 1892, the number of stu- dents registered was 594, as against 6,466 dur- ing the year 1910-11. The faculty at the start consisted of 135 men; now it numbers over 400. At its inception, the university owned four city squares of ground, and its total assets in pledges, endowment, buildings, and books were $4,341,708. Today its endowment and prop- erty holdings and pledges total $37,270,792. A LIMITTO ALL THINGS. The following story, illustrating the unpop- ularity 0f the New Theatre, is one of the mas-
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Page 29 text:
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CITIZENS PHONE 1415 4th and MAINQNAYLOR cox BLDG. , ' , i E r EPPERT E SON , ' 4 PHOTOGRAPHERS NOfmal Bookstore Always Up- To Date on Everything Photographic ' Students are especialiy Invited to visit nur Studio see oun coma: PICTURES - - Corner Sixth and Cherry Streets ' Your Clothing Repaired: , L FREE OF CHARGE And All Buttons Replaced , WHEN LAUNDERED VAT; Hunter Laundering 8.. Dyeing Bo. , 6th and Cherry Sts. . L. V. BRINTON, Normal Agent ALL- KINDS OF , TH: MOORE-LANGEN PRINTING co. PRINTERS, BINDERS C ' ' I F I O W E R s BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURERS , PUBLISHERS JNO. G HEINL N SON i E 21 NORW'H SIXTH ST. LTERRE HAUTE, IND. Opp; High School . . 129 South 7th St. N ' BOTH puomss s4
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