Happy
Thanksgiving
Happy
Thanksgiving
VOL. XX. NAZARETH COLLEGE. ROCHESTER, N. Y., NOVEMBER 21, 1944 No.2
N.F.C.C.S. DELEGATES TO CONVENE
ON NAZARETH CAMPUS DECEMBER 2
College Opens Sixth
War Loan Drive
Nnz1u·eth follows the nation! We will
hn.ve our own Bond Da-ive from Novemh,
·r II to D..,ember 7. Tbe goal is n bond
(rom every student. Pul it ovor the top!
lleh•n Bauman uy.: 1
'"A~ "·e open our 6th Bond Dri"e there
will be some among ua "ho will try out in
indiy,notion lit the tutilil)' of lending money
whtn th~ wnr is nearly won. 1 \Ve should
run •hort or sr•ending money: they will
;.ny. 1when within two monthK or so the
experlA tell us, the Gernums will have ecapitulated
and a few month• later, the
re•i-tance of the Japs will be eru-hed.' But
<an th .. e experts be relied upon? Has it
not already been ~bov.--n that the Germans
are d•termined to fight!
"DC\ you realize whtre your money goes?
Let me tell you a truo story or a Canadian
ottlcH in the British Arm)', thnt I happened
to hear.
"While fighting in No•·mnndy, nt the
t1mc of t he inva sion , ho waJ~~ ftuddcnly confronted
by " group or Germnna, thirteen
in number. With his machine carbine he
•uece~dcd in wiping out the thirteen Ger·
mans. But, when confronted b)• the !Our·
teenth, he round that hi• weapon was empty.
When last seen. ju!t be!ore his death,
he was vainly seen throwinr the emptl'
weapon into his enemy's face. Now the !act
I hut this officers' weapon was fMJ)ty wa$ not
due to the fact t hnt the people bnck home
wore not buying wat· bondtt. r nm :dmt)1y
tryinr to illustrate wh11t would happen in
t~~ ovent that we did not eupport our Bond
Odve. Our boys would be dtoprivtd in the
t:our o! nt:~d. or \\'eapon.s and anlmunition
tcquirttl by them to carr)" on. The-ir fate
-.vuld ~e the fate or the B· iti.Jh oftirer
dnelihed here.
"Thi• could happen to one ot your own
ll<'tron&l fdend3. Don't Jet it hnppen. Let's
1mt ou1· dri'"e :md our bo.v• over the top to
\h;tQJ'y!''
Seniors Entertain Frosh
On Wednesday, Novemb<·r lu, th• Fresb-
01CD got out their beot bib and tucker and
went to the annual ~nior ... f'rf' hma.n te-a.
whirh wns h •td in ·h·· collt.·gt" gynmo.-ium
(rom 8 :00 to 5:00.
l'• .. Sto!l!'r anJ Hel~n I-tor .. •y, co-chair-tOfferimus
Tibi Domine'
Inspires Students
Ret:Jeat lhi year was held Novtmher 8,
~. 10. As i1 cu,.tomar)'. it was scheduled
earl~t in the ytar at a sLralegic tim~-en>
��ly enough for people who ha\en't mode
a \Cry ~routl btginning to mend t heir wnye,
nnd Inti.' enough fo1 people who begon with
good Jntt•nliunl'l tn keep !rom ~lack in l{.
Th~ dtli!V pr·ogrono for the three day1
began v.<th ~13 at !I:QO A M. and eloood
with D nodi<tion '" :1:30 P. l! Tht body
of tht- 1 e•N"al 'ons h•d in mt>ditl:tiont and
eonf~rP.D''~$ \\ith f.ome timt> ~~nt in
rraye-r and pirituAI reading.
Rev< '"('nd John P. Delane)r, ~. J .. a.-~ociate
fd lol ,,r Ameriea. W!\1111 Jl('l' ent 'fn ....
t<'r. The Mr. wn"' the ce-!ltrnl thtm(• or
Futhe1· lh•l m·y·~ conf~.- necs. Estu.'rin11y
emph~.t"J"a•l \t n~ th•• Chri. tian ~piril of gh··
in~, not Ill" •vln~ c.f sef'ing Chri~l in t'\Ur
neighbvr w nur •lt>Rlings with hlm
f'11ther Dc•lan•y. in addition to hi• work
with the pubF~atton Amerie&y ha"' btotn
"' istant '11r('ctnr nf tb~ Yatitan Radio
Station an«l he Acte-d n n1l 11ltor nt the
e-lPc•:nn n!ltl tutvr.ntion of Pnpt Piut XII.
And h1 k h " in the <t:>to., nft<r threo
yeru·" of mll!-lion wm·k in the PhiJippim· ,
Father 0<'1nncy hn' been activo in tlw llold
of Sodril Al'lion.
m. n nr th!' tea, were aided b~· Jonn Dugan.
rhairmtm of Entcrtninnwnl; M n r t h a
Sheedy, Refreshments; Dorothy Argcntic•·i,
lnvltAtions; Mndot·il• l\.l'(.IHUn, Arrnn~monts;
Dorothy Smi<h. Reception; Duel.:
Dicrdorf. Decorations. and Corinne Freer,
(l•·an-up.
lntenH•Iy ir.t<.•t·t>:;ted in smnll rt'trt-nk lot·
m11rried couplet', Father Delant)o' gt\\'t.• a
retreat tor A nun1t .. r or our alumna•· ami
1:-----------------,! their husbnndA on Novemher 5th.
Our o" n rt•tre.at kept the 'Pirit o£ r~
tteat It wna ~·idtnc•d by a prf'vaiHn.:
quieot at me- pht'rt." f ven during lunch hour&,
and hy u:ight8 nut" comparath•ely ('prl)' in
the doml.
0«
Dec
Dec
Doe.
Dee.
noe
ll<•c.
Dee.
2-Z..'FCCS Comtntion
3-Lectur.--...lohn ~:r kin•
&-Freshman F.lectiona
7-Sodality lloeeptinn
8-Immneulnte Conception
13-Yule Log Pnrty
J.J-Uoanlen•' Chl'l•tmu• Pnrty
15-Christmas Voeution
RchNlulcd •• it wAs at the right time.
may the cq1lrit of this t•etrent intlut-nc\' uur
work nnd llflrtRII lhrougb u~ to out· ll11iJthbors.
"CHRIST LIFE AND THE CHRISTIAN FAMILY"
THEME OF DISCUSSION GROUPS
Yes, December 2 is the day. We are the hostesses! The delegates of
the National Federation of Catholic College Students are our guests. We
are also honored to ha\'e as guests the Mo$l Rev. James E- Kearney; the
Bi~hop of Charlel!ton, S. C., who i• al o Episcopal moderat~r of N.F.C.
C.S .. Most Re''· Emmet l\1. Walsh, D.D.; and the regional chaplain, Rev.
Nazareth Scores Hit In
"Pride and Prejudice"
Nazareth College students nnd Criends
were wafted back tc; the la.t century on
No\"ember 13 and 14 when the>· attended
the student production. "Prido and Preju.
dice," adapted from Jane Austen's book by
B~lt-n Jerome. The produe1ion, unde.r direetion
of Sister llt:~len Daniel, be.sides
being well done. ret>re•Ol>ted the student
body of the College u n whole. l l Ucmuustrated
the abil ity of the combined four
clnsses.
Freshman repre!lentftl lves in the cast
w01·e: Shi rley Brighnm, Jane; Rose Marie
Lucks, Miss Bingley; Elaine Kol~nick,
Amelia; Relen Drake, Maggie; Noreen
Carey, Mrs. Lake.
Sophomore rcpr..,entalive• were: Mary
Elizabeth Lee. Hill; Joan PurceU, Charlotte
l.ucas; Helen Murrer, Elizabeth; Ethel
Bohre>·, Belindn; R!t& Bettner, Amanda.
Junio1· represen tntivea w·cre: Doris Anne
Flnhcrty, Lydin; Mnrion Mnul, Lady Cath·
crhw De Bourgh
Representing the Senior CIR$S were:
Marilyn Moore. M"'. B<!nnet; Jean Shnntz,
L:\dy Lucas: Claire Yarter • .Mn. Gardiner.
The mnle memben of the tast were Merritt
Barker from Community Players as
Mr. Benntt; Joe Le!<ter from Brod:pon
~ormal. a~ )tr. Darcy: Normsn Meteyer
from the SL Uonifnce Footlight Guild, as
Mr. Bingley; Jnek Pen·y, an onnonncer for
\\'SAY. as Wickham; l)nvid Brazill from
\qu inal', as Capt. llenny; Edward Freed
from AquinM. ns Fitzwi llinm; Joe HoUand
from Th~ Black!riors Guild, as Mr. Collins.
The stage wa~ under management of
ltita Btttner: Bou!le Management W&$ handl•
d by ;\nne Brennan; Properties b)'
Clare Elltn llogenhan; \\'ardrohe by Lnrille
McMahon. and ~Inke-up by Tieky
t;i:-mnini
Bu>in•;;s waa capably hRild led by Loia
Stolle•· and Betty Dri•eoll ; Ka)• !logan
mnnaJ(ed the Publicity.
Quiz Kids Meet!
Th~ Quiz of Two C'it>h, ymbol of the
!t~•ndly rinlry between Buft'alo and Roch~
ttr. i .. comine- to our own college. On a
Sundny, early in Deocn>bor, there will be
a battle of wit hl'tW<<'n Nazareth and
D'Youville Collego. Th~ contest will be
held at lhe WIIAli •tudio in the Sheraton
llold All students of Nnznrclh College
Ill!?' invited to come to thf• studio nnd cheer
on their rcpre.entntivt!:J \\:hose nnmes wiJJ
not be.· revcal•d until the I an minute.
·John Unland. We're going to .how them the
~ehool-the Nnzareth College Campus, but
we nt·e going to show them cspecnHy the
•·enl Cutholie • t>irit prevuiling nt Nazareth
Collelf•· All of us want to be t her-to
make the •etting complete. We're getting
in behind thio thing because there i a big
job to b~ done and beeau•e Ro.emary
Welch, our Undergrad President, ;. the
preoent pro•ident of the Erie J'CIPonal
group. We'll back up our P,...ident and
get In !bore and pitch for greater progress
in Cntholic leadership.
Nuznn!1 h CoiJege became un nctive mem·
bea· or the N.F.C.C.S. in November, 1043.
it has taken to heart the worda or Rev.
Pnul F. Tanner, national chnpla in, who
declarca that. "i! all Catholic college etudent
bodies could re;~eh out and hold hands ,
they would constitute one or the atrongest
moral fortn in the country." And so
Namreth ha• joined band• with the eollegt
·~ of Villa Maria and Mercyhur•t in
Erie, PA .• St. Bonave.nturo in Allegheny,
N.Y., and D'Youville in 13utfnlo in form ing
the Lnko El'ie Region of the federation
(Cani ,ju§ nnd Niagara m·~ coming In after
the war).
·· Ae n Na%nrcth College student,'' says
our pr('sident. "you are therefore a member
<>f the N.F.C.C.S. It is J>ONible for
,. ou lo acquire a broaden ina experience
through your membership It ia possible
to ro&lly diacov"r the true Catholic olant
in aU our studies of variouJt problems.
R..-m('mbtr thi!l is not. another orgnniza-
1 ion lt i• • coverage for the spirit and
n<'li•·itieo ol Catholic College lire and links
Nnzurrth with its Catholic fellow colleges.''
Fathet Tanner, in an nddre..s on tbe
"Aims and Purposes of the N.F.C.C.S.,"
remind•d students of thir obliption to
pruvid• h•adership in Catholic lay life.
Through the N.F.C C.S., ,tudtnt• ahould
try to bridlt~ the gap that exi>ts between
our echool !lyKrcm :lnd our en~ryday Cath·
olie lay netivity.
The J>rogrnm for the day includes Mn!13
n~ !I o'clock, address ond panel disCUI<•Ion
on the "Christ Life nnd tho Chl'iatian
Family," dinner, con1mission meetinp, tea,
ftntl Ren\"diction.
Won't you plea.c get bli&'-7• put on
your tbnkial' up and "'~ if you lu1ow
wb•t conttitute. a real Ch.ri•tian f•m ..
a,. 7 Di•eu» this qUNtion now with
your frienda, to you will be reacl1 to
pa rtidpat~ in the opc:n forum on tbo
bia day. I t will be • day worth aU
lbo offor t wo put into i t. l..t~t"• turn
out 100% a nd be t ho perfect holt ·
eue•. Here'• our oppor tunity to col
tho ball of CathoUc: (ead erahip rollinal
2
•
THE GLEANER
THE GLEANER
NAZARETH COLLEGE
Publication On\ce: George P. Bur·ns Presa, Jnc .. 49-51 North Wn~cr St.
-a-•
VOL. XX TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 21, 1944
Publi>hed Monthly
The Stud~nts of :-lazareth Colle&"e, Rochester, N. Y.
EOITOR·IN·CIIIEP
Oeut C.••
MAI't Ann .Lane
m>WS EDI"'''II
Rose Anne ForwArd
BUSINESS liAI<ACl:R
Allee Vande Voorde
M:arvuet. MeiHrnlOU
No.2
If You Don't Write,
You're Wrong!!
tt•s your smpe1·. You give us the material
to write about. Why not g ive us n chnne~
to know what. you like ot· dislike abou t your
paper-more pitturt'8. better makeup. lx>t·
ter eovera~ t)f a "'iJCUnleots!
Even·on(lo in r·•:t.c.ling the C1eaner J)ft!oif't!J
son~e comm •nt ot critici3m on somt- point.
Wouldn't it b<• ju t no handy for you to It
a little of thnt Nnt up stcrun furnioh power
for a Httlc pcnman!4:hlp practice in a letter
to the editor?
TO THE EDITOR
Dear Ed.
uThc.re's something in the air." Yes,
ther·e really is thi• ycm~Nazureth School
Spirit. It's colorlcs•. odor·h•••· ta•teless and
intang'ible. yet it'5 there!
Don't you haw that .ort ol get.-up-andlh
·e r .. ling that you'v~ never realiZ<'d before!
That'• it!
Th~ F~hman ela., gan u• "now
blood," a new lease Qll e1llege li!e; th•
p~p nnd enthusia.$m or tht' "younger gen·
~rntion'' has set us 1\11 nl wol'i< g-iving to
Nnz.nreth all we have or lhue, (ln~r~"Y and
tndeavor.
FEATUR.E EDITOlt
Katherine Cutler
SOCII!:TY EDITOR
Do.ril A P'teht'rtt
SPORTS J:OI1'0R
ASSOCIATE KDITORB
1111MOR EOI'rOII
Naney Drown
ALUMNAE t:DITOR
Kathtrlne Foler
DRAMATIC EDITOR
Fran~• Cull
LITERARY EDITOR
Mary Ann• Llld•lt
!lEAD TYPIST
JaC'qUtlln• IA-lb
MUSIC MOI'f01\
Mildred Ohtrkf'
PJCT\Jftp; 'EDI'fOrt
nuth ~'utchhurt
ART EDITOR
Madeline Nutlt•lll
RF,WIHTP! F.DITOK
Marla U.-rl
E:tCHANGE EDITOR
B~UJ' Ct~aan
BU:'"INYJI~ STAFF
Ahq ~lll•n"
BewniJ M"Connc-11
ltoae~r1 Ma~url
The hall In f1vnl of tbe Pl•eos Uoom i•
worn into n srnooth groove. wby not. tUrll a
little to lho lefl. drop your no~<! on tht dt,.k
land •ilently d,•part!
You may bo he initiatot· 4Jf !\ "'btnin·
stom1:• <' mt' em n<'w. let"-.. get th~ ptn
and paper nut. •tart pu•hing and we'll tak<
Let'& stay on lht boll n~w nnd mnke !hi
YlAr big~r 'n betto•r tor Namn:th.
Bc1.-a II. BauMan
CIRCULATION EDITOR
Barbara S<hr• ·\;
SPORTS
Jeann• lAnnon
Tera• Oallauhn
Yolando Romano
Alyt!e Madtlon
Dorothy Wt'hntr
SOCIBTV STAPP
Na_ru:r Rl111
Clare O'Btlt'll
Ana Coll•4'
Rita Btuq .. r
cw~ "'-M
Cnri• Kna.~p
Tt>HM RlJtJ'
1944
T\'PI!<TS
Carol 8Ak.r
Vir1rlnl• Short
Mary h:.lnner
Jan~ PArit y
N~!WS STAt--.1'
Marion Maul
Corinne FrHr
Ht~len• Myert
nEWRITE 8'rAI>I'
Vinu·nu v .. u.
Elaine St-hw~tndtttn••
neup Ko•tr
FEATURE STAPP'
MarJru•t Mu1 MaloJ
Nan~J Huron
PICTlTRE STAFF
Tlc:ky Gl,.nnlnl
M<"mt'ltt
l::tssocialed Colle5iale Press
Ma rlto ~Irk
Mar,. Tryl!-altlt1
1'1ckJ' Giannini
Vh" Tonuutlll
nCIU)' ClOOnAn
Millir~>d Okolowlrr.
MUSIC STAPP
RosemarJ' Stanlon
&o.emary Lol'lta
Hou t>tC:rtsorlo
1945
THE WAR STILL RAGES OVER THERE!
LET'S STORM HEAVEN OVER HERE!
Americans at·e noted for their OI>tim ism. They are always looking
for the silver lining, or the "pot of qold" at the end of the rainbow, or
for the good fortune that is "just around the comer." Maybe that is why
too many Americans have, for the past few months, been regarding the
war as practically all over but for the ~houting.
The war d e6nitely ia not o.-e.r! Until the
last shot is fired; until the last drop of
blood is shed; until the last danger of
violent death from enemy action is Te ....
moved, the war is not. over. Indeed it is
l'ight now thnl the very hardest, most
bitter and costly fighling is going on.
Just as we must nol. allow this over·
optimistic attitude to interfere with our
material efforts in the prosecution of the
war. we must be e\•en more careful that it
Wo, the Catholic young women of
Am\'ricn. huve our duties in this \\ar just
ns our brothc~·in·nrms havt• thei~. To
them we say: uwell done!" To ourselvesthe
nnswe1· is written In cneh l)raycrful
heart. We mu.t not £ail. Let ~ach of us
re~olvc lo p1·ny more and to pt'ny harder.
so that when the King and Queen of Peace
examine our s.piritual ser.•ice retoi'M. they
too may :Say, uweu done!"
does not impede our epiritual ende:t\.. Of'a, Immaculate Quee n of P eace, pray for
With .-ietory auure d . but not yet a..ttained, u t i
we must d ouble oYr pr&yera whh a two·
fold pu.rpou: in. our hea.rt.. F irst: everyone
of us wnnt.R this WRI' to be over just as
quickly as possible, with liS little more WE WHO WATT
euft'ering as is fcnsiblc. Secondly: although ~lis plnne is molten s ilver in the """•
it may sound trite from constant u~;age, A oh ininll' s ilhouette against the blue;
we do want. a ju.st, laeting peace. It is up \Vhen caeh day"s weary length is almost t
~.!::u~a.!:':!::e;f>'~=~~i;;·.::r'~al~a~~~ A:~nnot n task is lett for mo to do. I
lo,ing peoples to the court of tbe King Our rwary of time, love sets apart
and Queen of Peace to beseech these We atTing with bright new hounr of ecatasy.
blessings. Yet prayer is never ending in my heart
We have so very much to pray for. Thnt each dny. God, You brill&' him home
Will we ever be nble to thnnk God enough to me;
for keeping tbe ruvngc.s o.f wat· from our For only we, who each dawn wnlch them go
homes and most of our loved ones? Can With brightly smiling liJ>S-hearts cold
we ever show enough grt~titude to the One with !~or-
Who alone was reaponsib1e for the Axis Yea. only we who wait ean ev<'r know
leaders not completing their de\·utating What it must mean to send the one most
eonqllests in the early day• of the war! dear
We must pray for &'Uidanee for our mil· Aloft; and then through •ndlta hours to
itary and governmental leadel'l!!. Of cou..-e pray.
all of 0$ pray for thooe we know in service. "God bring him safe!)• home agnin today."
but we must make the•e prayers even more Allee M. Ryan.
universal. We should remember all ser-1
vieemen And women; the wounded and dy· ----·---
ing ; tho homesick boys; the mentally de-~ AN ARMY ON ITS FEE'f NEI'-DS
pressed; the •piritunlly discouraged; the
innocent civilians who al•o mu;t sutrer. AN .\RMY ON ITS KNEES!
can· t:tf th•" rett!!
Buy a Bond ! Help Others
Save for Your Own Future
On Nov~ml>••r 11. 1918 th~ Armistice ending
iith~ war to end wnrs .. wa.~ tirncd.
Just twenty.thn.'<' yean later America wao
rudely awakened from her las>itude by
the Japan•"" ~!tack on Pearl Harbor,
December 7, 1!111. Immediately the American
people atnrtM their fight tor victory.
One of th~ir· fh'Ot elf< rts was the Fir.t Wnr
Loan. N<'llrly three yenrs have pnstted
since then nnd now the Sixth W nr Lonn
Drh·e baa atnl'l ed.
This is the one we should really put over
the top. Now. with tbe victory in the not
too di8tant future. we •hould have ao an
in~ntiv• thnt. perhap•. this will be the Ia 1
and the soldit•r will be "'turnino:.
Remember the dates November 11 to
Dececmb•r 7 nnd buy your bond today.
A TIMELY THOUGHT
I wi•h I wn~ n littl<' Bond
For $18.75
And earning nearly three p;!r c~nt
To keep my-•lf alive.
I wouldn't tal, I wouldn't drink.
But plly! How I'd thrive
By oittinr otill for ten short yeo"'
To draw down $25!
n'ru· 8oud1 Dou't Grow 011 StJI't<'t
\Vh~•! Vacation's Here Again
Have Fun!
Th~ Church knows that although It Is
Dear Editor.
I ba,·e a prob!.·m: The other night 1 bad
•o much homework I j""t couldn't get it
lone before 1 I :00, •o I kept on working
until I heard 11 g~nlle tnpping nt my door.
I knew that thi• meant turn off rny lighb!
-but t nlfo k11ew the con.sequcnces if 1
tlidn't do my homework (although it would
hnve been th~ fir:.t time!!)
Very ingeniou•ly I put my books in my
<lo>~t and m}'l'elf, armed "ith a ftnsblight.
on the closet floor It \\R \'try uncomfort.
able with my boob on my auitcQe and
cold and stulfy, but I decidM to stick to
m; po&t come what may.
After· about an hour· when [ discovered
lhnt 1 had copied tho wrong problem,
mot'leover copied it Incorrectly. moreover
copied it on the bock of my painfully done
biology assignment. 1 d~rldcd to go to bed.
Out this wrum't so el\lJy. I turned off tbe
li&"ht, put back th~ suite~'• and straightened
up my book• Then quieth·. so aJ nol
to wake up my roommate, I prepared to
jump into bed.
Only I forgot thnt the elo•ct-door ""'
closed. I bounced ngain•t it like n boulder,
with thundering noifl:e. My t•oommate turned
over and usked whether the heat wao
coming on I said my head felt like it, and
"'"' shakily expectin&' nnotber knock at tbe
door. When nothing hRpp;!ntd. 1 finally
settled down to sweet dr~am...--a wet cloth
ovor my head and nightmares of problems
and homework p!'tsetutinc me.
Now. dear editor. have you anr s uggesLion~
88 to how ta prev~nt .such ft mi.sbap
in the future .... ?
A BOARDER
ON WRITINC VERSE ( ?)
A poet could not hut be gay
If sutb a task before him lay
u mine; but hopel .. ely tonight
I u:1dertake some vene to write,
While prison shades close round
And slumber doth my apirit seal.
In vncont, but not J')Cnsive, mood
I loathe the bliss of solitude.
my zeal
For youthful noture'a daily ta>k
Righ thinking is too much to ask.
The stars of moonlight will be here
Before 1 end this ,.e ... e, I fear.
Though poets with unheard·of power
Can write o( rome forgotten flower
[n musical and rh)•thm ie strain.
In my most amatcuri8h brnin
Emotion simply cannot be
Remembered in trnn<tuillit.y.
- Pntricia Marks
"When your knees get wobbly, kneel 01
them !"-Rev. Dr. Henry Darlington. to hi
Now York congregation.
not tr·u• that the good die young, it is true I You are f"'o of •nobbcry if you don't likl
that tho youn&' die good. Christ said, "Let the disagreeable (X'rson nny better aftej
him that is without sin cast the first stone," learning he is u rich eolcbrity.-Buft'oll
they w~nt nwny b~ginning with the olde•t. Courier Expross.
'Italy, Land of Beauty'
Says Field Director
"My fl111t view of Sicily wu one of grut
beauty." I With thc~c words Mr. Frank Leach, form.
er Italian instructor at Jefferson High. now
serving 110 Field Director for the Red Cross,
opened his vct·y interesting talk. before n
crowd of attentive Nazarenes.
Sailing for Sicily from Bizerte.l\1r. Leach
WIUI impre.•sed with the beauty of the Sicilian
mountains which suddenly loom up
into a sky of a blue which is, as he described,
'like no other blue in the world."
One of the ~ks. Monte Pelligrino. boasts
of a golden valley called "La Cones d'Oro."
Shell of Cold, so named bccaUS(' of the
groves of orange and lemon trees that
nestle in the lap of the ''alley. The moun·
tain roads are dotted with quaint way~ide
.&hrine1'. many ot which bear the scars o(
war.
Mr. Leach was •tationed at the Uni·
versity of Palermo Medical School, which
Js now 8Cr vinr: na an American Hospitt\1
and is the focal point of the almost conotnnt
roaring of the big 90 millimeter guns,
tho f alling of bon1bs and fla~ that illumine
the akles, and the screaming of ambulances
bringing in the wounded. The docks
1land in th~ greatest danger of aerial bombsrdment.
He pointed out the courage and
effic:ic.ney of tht (•Corpsmen," votu.n~rs
who go unarmed right into the !ace of fire.
reac:uing the wounded, repairing docka, and
driving ambulances. ''The reaction of those
boys to the bombing is amazing," be N>id.
'It is one of great courage and a dogged
indifference to personal danger. These
Corpamcn dc.!M'rvo an unlimited amount of
eredit."
Ho spoke o! tho bcache$ of Sicily. and
how ho enjoyed wading in the "deepest,
whitest, finest aand you ever saw." And
tho g ir la! "The Sicilian girls are really
beautiful, and," he added with a wink. uthe
Yanks will back n1e up on that."
Ho vialted the catacombs and the cathedrals,
Including the famous Cathedral of
Mon Reale which has been miraculously
p.....,rved. "One feels a mysterious awe In
regarding lt.''
Mr. Leach proceeded !rom the island to
the mainland, and experienced the thrill of
•leeping on the very edge of the Sonian
1
Su with only a starry l talinn sky for n
roof and a 8tro.y eow !or company. He
Cound the IICOJ>Ie as genial there as in
Sicily, from Alma, the little two-year-old
who relished lemon drops, to old Cincomn
who kiosed hla hand over and over again
tor n pair of Mcko received. Good food
and clothing Ia slowly becoming once more
a reality, and the uaelulness of soap is not
to be exaggerated. Fortunately, the people
have preserved with religious int<!grity
their keen aense of humour. and they reeoYer
beautifully where we might be
shocked.
When uked the eXBct nature of his work,
Mr. Leach replied, "It includes everything
Crom dim ibuting Cood to locating graves.
We have a slogan: 'l.f you have a problem,
I k'e your Red Cross Field Director!'"
Tha Director wears no militnry insignin,
but in t he event of ca pture by the enemy
is given the trcatrnen~ accorded to the rnnk
of captain. Mr. Leach concluded his en·
lightening talk by expressing his desire to
go bttCk some day soon to "that land or
!llllny beaullful things.''
---<i--
Pigtails and Dungarees Rule
Pigtails flew and dungsrees flapped vigoroualy
in square dances.. round dances)
: and even a long, twiJJting conga line in
the gymn .. Jum Friday night. November 3,
to tho music of Frank Earle's orchestra.
The hum-drunl placidity of the gymnasiun1
was converted to a veritable barn. witb
:e I hoy, ducks, n cow nnd on adorable colt
u· (cnrdbonrd nnd plastic, of course!). The
to barn dnnco WIUl oponsored by the Sodality
of Nn~areth College.
THE GLEANE R 3
ACTION IS KEYNOTE OF SODALITY--SPllUTUAL,
INTELLECTUAL, SOCIAL
The zealous sodalist.s or Nazareth College
are spreading the flame of theh·
Cnl holie ardor to every nook and corne&·
uf the Sodolist's world. Recently pt·efect
Jean ~'oley spoke nt the Sodality Rnlly
hold at Naznreth Acndemy, and s plendidly
brought out the fact that only when we
l'tlftlizc that every man, regardless of race
creed or color is our brother in tho Mya:
Ileal Body of Christ and the Fatherhood
of Cod, will we obtain peace.
The beoutifnl narrative of our Lady of
1-'atlmA was dramatized in a radio broadtalt
b)• $Odalista at a recent meeting of
th~ student body. Plan" are being made to
pre-tent the drama O\~er an official r8dio
broadcatt.
The fna)liring ideas of the \'arious com
·~~l"ffi'.3. 1 mitteea of the sodality are blossoming
fo..th In the ardent activities of their mem·
bet·• The Llteuraturc and Apostolic Com·
mitteea Rl'C JH'ep&t'ing tbconlselves to 81H'eud
Uw wol'd of God by t·eading, meditation
und lii'Oyet·ful nction. The Euchnl'i8tio Committee,
under the guidance of Fnther Ehnlt\
nn, ho!S chosen the current book "The
Reed o! Cod" as material fo-r its di.scunion,
havln&' a. ita aim practital holine"'!. otr<U·
ing eSJ>«ially the love of one's neighbor
for the love of Christ.
SAFARI TO WILDS
BAGS BIG GAME
Back in the days when the weather wa.
not too cool (My four weeks ago) the
BiolOll'Y MajOMI detided it would be nice
to h:we a field trip They asked, and the
rationing board •miled.
Fortiftcd with twenty gallon• of gu. a
ba•ket of lunch, and specimen bottl~s.
Sitter Francis Solano, Sister Crace Marie
and •ix glrla olarted out for Lewhworth
Stat~ Purk. If you remember Saturday,
October 2S, you will recall that it was a
eleor, crl•p <loy. After a trip punctuotcd
To thio bounty of beaut}'. grace and
fruitfulnell3 will soon be added the enthusiastic:
activities of a number of l'tu·
denL• upiring to be sodalist.s. These girls
ar receiving instructions in the rulet and
duties of the Sodality by Father Lint~ and
n1·e now approaching the end of their pa·caodnll•
t period.
with confusion and doubts as to the r il!'ht --------------t•
out~. the hungry erew an ived at thtt
Pnrk. They mode s hort work of hot dogs.
bnktld bean,, ice cream and variou3 othe•·
ATTENTION!
fot·m• of nouo·ishment. Then they were otf The Phihodelphia Chapter of Knppn Com·
clin1bing otcep embankments. picking their ma Pi announces the annual National Short
way alonr nao·row paths nnd exploring Cor- Stot·y Contest !or Undergraduates of affii·
bidden byways. Letchworth wu in the llated Colleges. The first prize ;,. $2~.00
belrht of ita autumnal splendor and a and the sec:ond is $10 00.
J)aradit~e tor ~pecimen hunters. Laden with I The rules for the contest are:
l&nd snail .. , mosse3. twigs and thing.J you'd 1 The ~tory must be original. not ~xhovo
to be a Biology otudent to appr..,iate. c•edlnrc 3500 words, and must not have
th• ~<pedition returned. Tired. bedraggled been pre,•iously published.
but hnJ>py, they caught sight of the College' 2. ~lanuscriJ>t.s mu.<t be submitted in
Camt>Ua. lt. wa.s a wonderful day bul it tr·iplicate, typewritten, double spaced, and
W83 ~ood to be home. on one tide of paper only.
- --- ·---- 3. The non de plume of the contestunt.
Gttlli'Yatllill' Goblins Galore
•hould 'lPJ>eur on each page. The contcstunt'~
nume, ndd rcss, non de plumo. und the
nome of her college should be enclo~cd in
Meet ill the TU1111el of H orror u •••led envelope accompnnyinll' ench
f·uu moon- prowling spiritp.-oehuddct··
ing mortals.-And so thl! 11Holy Eve'' wu
telebraled again at :-louoreth College. It
all began in the Tunnel of Horro~, where
human Jereaming rivalled inhun1an wailing.
the <1ut~tion being: \\'hi~b was "'ore
frightened!
At leatt the gym wa!'ol merry with jAck·
o'-lanterns., tom~tatks, masks and cos·
tum.:.s Everyone, from Snow \Vhite and
Lhe Seven Dwau·fs ~ Popeye. minus muscle.
paraded in the Grnnd Mat·ch before the
fAculty who wet·e the judges. The vict.
ol'iOUtl wc•·c: Mua·icl O'Connor, who wore
the most benutiful costume, t he red silk of
nn Ol'lentnl Indy; a mystery ft•og, the funnleot,
which without mask happened to be
Jackie Lclb; and the cleverest, a •nnke In
the go·a""' Pot O'Grady amid Murtha
Sheedy, Lou Mcllahon. Doroth~· Wegman.
and Daisy Welch, who were the gay bladeo.
Th• ghoats had their last fting when
Doris Anne Flaherty read a delightfnl tale
of supernatural woe. But chills were
quickly vanquished by cider and doughnull.
So the evening ended. specters sub·
dued, courage renewed. at least until an·
other llnllowe'en.
~---
Ou you •·eRii~t thol evety tim(! you cut.
your clnHsea nnd miss a day's work you m·e
Hterully throwing away $25!-A.C.P.
munWiieript.
&. Kappa Gamma Pi t'e$e1·ves publication
and all other rights to all storiCl' sub·
mltted.
;;. Manu.cripts must be poolmarked on
01 before December 8, 1944.
ij, All colleges will be notified of the t·esulta.
immediately after judges have made
their decision.
7. Send manuscripts to: Catherine ~I
TOJli>Or, 5250 Spruce Street. Philadelphia
39, Po. ----- KNIT ONE- PURL TWO
'fhe College Red Cross Chapter i• plan·
ning nn interesting and beneficial progrnm
!or the year.
Knitting needles are clicldng here and
there, to fini!h that muffler for a certain
somebody ''over-there. u A nutrition class
may be sponsored, it the student body cooperates.
The new Secretary-Treasurer is Frances
Cull. Good luck, Fran, as we know you are
capable of doin&' a thorough job. A reprc·
sentalive from each class has been chosen.
They arc ao follows : Marianne Winder,
Freshman ClaM; Jane O'Brien, Sophomore
Cln"''; Belly Jennnc Keller, Junior Clnas;
lind Clal'e Ellen Mogenhan from the Senior
Clau.
Yeo, your Sodality is calling you I Have
you cover questioned yourself as to how your
Sodollty helps you and how you can help
it? One woy is to make it an active one.
rt it becomes active you a re helping your·
self. You may ask bow, and the answer
Is thnt you have joined a Sodality com·
mittec.
Since everyone does not like the same
thing, the Nnutreth College Sodality otfera
you a variety of committees from whkh to
choooe.
The Apo•tolic Committe e, which has u
it. chairman Mildred Okolowiez. io con·
c•rned in helping out our tellow man,
our fellow man in the s"nse of the need)'
outside of school. It may take the Corm of
oettlement work. serving breotkfast to aervlcemen
at the Columbus Center U S 0.
•inging early Sunday or holiday Mnss nt
the County Home and advocating decent
lite1·nture and moviea. Members ot this committee
will docide on the ~peelfie 11rojects
lhey wish to undertake. At present. definite
plans are being formulated to do apostolic
work in connection with the national organiuttion,
the Chaplains' Aid Society.
The £uchari.atic Committee. wbicb ha.a
for ito goal pnclical holiness. meets bimonthly
in tbe Sodality room. It bouts
~specially of having Father Ehmann '•• Ita
moderator.
FJorcnce Hetzler. committee chairman.
J)rOmi•~ a varied program promot.inr
self betterment and leadership here in the
~ehool ns well as in the Parish, tho min·
inture Mystical Body. Also, there will bo a
brief study in the making a nd practice of
mentnl prayer to gain Cod's light in tho
blnckout of this war. F urthermore. the
Eucharistic Committee has the privilel!'e of
maintaining the Guard of Honor for First
Friday Adoration.
Tho Literary Committee has two main
functions. One is to read and encourage
others to read Catholic literature. The
other is that those wbo participate in the
program of this committee convey their
knowledge to others.
Miss Jean Chiavaroli, chairman of thio
committee. leads the group discuuions. The
m~mbers discuss the current literature and
pnmphleh of their choice. Certain read·
ings ftl't.l "uggcsted, so there is n1waya one
on the list that pleases every member.
T he I)Ut·pose of the Marian Committee
(Mary Margaret Kcllick is its chairnuon)
is to promote greater devotion to Our Lady.
Thl• i• to take place both in and out of
I!Cbool. This committee 8ponsors the Rosiiry
Drive. which is being carried on especially
well this year with good attendanee at daily
recitation of the Rosary in the Oll,tory at
t"·eh·e o'clock and at one o'clock. The oth~r
projecu Cor the year include preparation
!or all the feasts of Our Lady, reception
of candidates, Christmas pageant. and Moy
DAy celebration.
Alice Vande Voorde, chairman of the
Publicity Committee, is hoping to make
Sodnlity news the news of the yeur. This
comn1ittee takes cat" or all Sodality news
in the Cleaner a nd keep$ the Sodality bul·
lctin board up to date.
The theme of the bulletin board J>rOject
Ia n "Rosary A Day For Servicemen." You
will help make this a success, won't you?
The Social Committee i.e: made up of
Sodalins. Every member of the Sodality
automatically beoomes a member of lhia
comn,ittee.
Miu Honey Yeisen.tahJ, chairman, ha"
charge of the social committee concerned
with the reception of new Sodalista, the
Sodality Dance, May Day and the Christmas
Pageant.
~
Advice to those courting: Keep your eyco
open before marriage- hall shut nttel'·
wnrds.-Brooklyn Eagle.
4
THE PINK RIBBON
By MARGARET M. MALOY
The material contained herein is the fruit
o! the jnquisitivc nose, the probing eye,
gleaned from n slipping lip, n turned back
page, an underlined word, all forgotten,
ruled forever into the sphere of the obscure,
ever present but carefully tucked away into
the attic-trunk-fund of knowledge rooted by
a pink ribbon to eternal dust.
The following thought is from the renowned
pen of a friend of my brother's.
It is what one could perhaps term a faintly
poetic impi'CSsion, trivia.l yet amusing:
once there Jived a man who worked for
the electric company one day he decided
that if he wrote a song about l ight the
people would use more electricity so
he wrote n song called when the lights
go on again all over the world the song
became very popular and the people
were turning their lights off and sitting
in dark listening to it the company
officials blamed this on our friend
so they fired him and he became a
famous songwriter.
A friend of many of us within these
scholarly confines has 1-ecently become the
proud possessor of a feline creature. You
may raise you.r brow and eonunent that
this is far from unusual, but to those who
know it is s thing of del ight-an eyelighter.
For this kitten has no tail, but a
mere stub of a thing about 2 inches long.
Its dea rest un·catlike face would win your
heart. Deciding upon the name was a
mind-stretcher. One of the present group.
the proud possessor of a female hare named
Lilian A. Ford, ~uggested Antigone, but
was s ilenced with negative stare~. The
name wltich this poor unfortunate now
bears is P. George Q. F leming, the P.
standing for the name of its short-lived
predecessor, Peter.
' To those of you who have a thirst tor
excitement--who crave the unusual life!
suggest the Personal column of the
Saturday Review of Literature. Pel'baps
an introduction to a kindred soul lies there·
in. One particularly amusing bit recently
included was the sated cry of n young
screen writer sick to death of the naive
twitterings of the pseudo-sophisticates. Be
desires correspondence with twentyish fe·
mates who are interested in the modern
sham of California. If interested write
Box -. This is nn accurate quotation of
one of the rarest:
uBackwoods Hermit, healthy, athletic
American wants let"Wts fr<>m talkative
feminine, nlature gil-l of hn.ppy disposition.
U you like gardening, camping, cabins.
tents, hiking, forests. simplified living,
warm climate, outdoor fan, birds, outdoor
books (Thoreau, Hudson. etc.) plain food
and unhnrried living then your likes please
my likes." Oo you fill tho bill? In the
eorner of this same issue was the follo\\'ing
startling challenge-
'Pleasel Will the vandal
Who took the silk umbrella with
the bamboo handle.
Please return It!"
From my vantage point on a non-creaking
limb I heard that there were several all
night sessions the night of Nov. 7. I do
hope that none of our enthusiasts who
waited at the radio with bated breath,
particularly Miss Brayer, suffered any disappointment.
It would have been interest~
ing to observe the peanut-pushers, Nov. 8.
Two cheers for the impetuous gambler I
Acco•·ding to James J. Walsh in his book
Til• World!• Gift to the lri$h, we owe to the
Irish the rhyme in poetry, it being the invention
of the early Christian poets about
the end of the sixth century. The first
certain examples of rhyme in poetry were
found on Celtic soil and among Celtic people.
Douglas Hyde says that a tremendous
claim to make for the Celt is that be taught
Europe to rhyme.
THE GLEANER
Hey !!
Meetin's
On
The International Relations Club of
Nazareth College met on Friday, November
81·d. The members brought their lunch and
the discussion took place in the cafeteria,
during the second lunch-hour. A discussion,
prepared by Marion Maul and Maria Berl,
touched on the U. S. foreign policy and
the voter. Improvements were $Uggested
for the relations between the Senate and
individual YOters. The interest of the meet ..
ing then turned townrds the U. S. foreign
policy, covering ~he time between World
Wa1· I and World War ll, and the prellent
relations of this eountl·y with other nations.
An extrnordinAl"!tt meetjng of the cJub was
scheduled fo•· Tuesday, November 7.
The club deplored the absence of Miss
Rosemary White, its moderator.
The Nobel prize in biochemistry tor 1944
is being s hat·ed by Dr. Dam of the Biochemistry
Department at the University
of Rochester. The prize is awa•·ded to
Dr. Dam for the discovery of Vitamin K
made at Copenhagen in 1929. Vitamin K
prevcnt..cs hemonhage.
And of special inte1·est to us is the fact
that the prize is also shared by Or. Edward
A. Doisy, head of the Departn1ent of Biochemistry
at St. Louis University School
of Medicine-a Catholic institution.
The chemistry department of Nazareth
College is collaborating with the lnstitutum
Divi Thomae in Cincinnati in stud~.,.inrc
the cancer problem. The wo1·k beintr
done here involves a study of eatolase to
determine wbich part of the. enzyme is
affected by yeast e.xtract.
Business is business. they say. so the
Secretarial Club is starting out witb BIG
business. We're going to have a bang·Up
spaghetti supper \\1ednesday, Novembe.- 29,
in the social r·oom. All the business stu·
dent.s ore invited to attend nnd stat1; things
off fo•· the year.
A supper meeting on October 30 marked
the launching of the Thumb Tack Club on
its way to achievement. Applied art was
manifest in the a n tumn~like tables and
culinary attractions. Siste1· Teresa ~larie,
Sister Rose Angela and Sister OeSales
were guests o! the club, and extended their
best wishej; to the inaugural gathering.
The Dante Society, Nazareth's Italian
Club. held its first meeting of the year
Thursday, November 2, in the school audi ..
torium. The meeting was in the form of a
tea to welcome the new membel"s to the
club. Tbe entertainment included a skit,
adapted from P.nnzini's Muaiea Senza Parole
by Frances Guli, general cbail·man of tbe
tea. Arrangements were made by Jean
Cappellino, with Mary Lombardo in charge
of food and Ma1·y Anne Ludwig in cha1·ge
of in\-.-itations.
--0-----
0n Thursday, October 26, the members
of the M!U!ic Club gathered for the second
time tb is year with President Betty Keegan
cond ucting the meeting.
Highlight of the occasion was Mildred
Clarke's apt report on Cesar Franck who
is a lel!ser known though bighly productive
Catholic composer.
Suggestions were made and plans were
then formulated for a Mosie Club supper
meeting which will be held it1 the near
future.
HortyandMe
Now l am not exclusive. What I menn
is-1 am not the sort of person who knows
nobody but her own crowd. But I cnn nol
undel'St.and Bo•·t.ense. To me she is strictly
a character.
1 shall now gi\'e you a few exantples of
what L mean. Now, there we were, sitting
a'r'ound in the social room discussing things
in general and Maisie Warding in p.nrticu·
tar. We all decided that she griped us,
but definitely. Well. yes, maybe we did like
her before. but today we hnd reached the
final decision. All of a sudden Hortense
climbed out of the book she was t•eading
and said, 11
] think Maisie \Varding is a
very nice girJ, no matter whether she
dances the way you like o•· not." And bnck
she climbed into her book and left us sitting
there with our teeth only half in our
mouths.
But that is not all. Wait until you hear
about Horty's culture. Do you know that
she gave up bu)~ng a new Cot~· lipstick to
buy a ticket to hear Yehudi Menuhin play?
Who's Yehudi is what l would like to
know, that he s hould make a girl go around
looking like a ghost fo•· three whole weeks.
Then, as I implied before, Rorty 1·eads.
And the books she picks! Do you know
thnt girl has wasted weeks reading stuff
like Dickens and even Homer's Hind. Hom·
cr did w·rite the iliad, didn't he? Ask
Horty. she would know. She always knows
a question when you as.k her. It gets bor·
ing, never any \'ariety, always an answer.
Horty studies! Why, r have seen her pick
up her books in the middle of tbe best
SilHltra record in the school and walk
O\·e•· to the study hall. J!U!t yesterday J
was sitting in economics class, picking off
my Mil polish and b·ying to decide whether
Hank or Bill looked be•t in his uniform
when all of a s udden J heard Horty saying,
unoctot· Abel, bow much control does the
government have over watering stock?" T
e~nnot understand he.1·. You would thjnk
she is really interested in that stuff. I
orten wondet whAt she is doing he1·e in
college.
I have b·ied. l have tried very ha1·d. lt
has been a real stt·ain. But 1 still don't dig
Hortense.
M. GROSSER
Well, Nazat·cth College has swung into
high with over 300 students registered. We
should get places.
Dot Wegmun, newly engnged, says that.
the ~iissions (her second heart-throb) must
top last year's donation ot $36l;-one dollar
per day-by a good n101·gin. She's gunning
for $500 (or 1944-'45. Good work,
Dottie!
Mary Jeanne Meyer has a grand brand
new sparkler. Congratulations, M. J.
Is it tt·ue that Sist:r Paulette bas t urned
literary to a poetic degree-rumor has i t
•he's published o poem in the current issue
of the Magnificat and has sold another
to Exten•ion? Talk about sideliners!
Red C•·oss entertained the College gals
on Monday, November 6, at the Spring
Sb·e.et Canteen. Nice time.
Put your Money
In War Bonds
Lit. Lites
TAE ROAD'S END by Mary Douglas
This is • simple and well told story e<
cerning the reminisc:.enee of an old prit
who knows he is soon to die.
To the priest's mind come memories
the comparatively small things of IJ
mther thnn the expected big ones. He 1
calls the pleru;ut·e he and his twin sist
got fron1 walking in the meadows, or smE
ing freshly baked bread; the happiness
always felt when hhs mother forgave h
for a misdeed, o•· the sudden smile tl
lighted her face and made him feel tl
all was right with the world. Along wi
the happy memories came those thnt in I
youth were a source ot sorrow and P•
plexit)•- the disappointment of his fi:
lo,•e, t.he bewilderment he fel tat his bro1
er's ordination into the priesthood, and t
sudden •·ealization one day while wat<
ing his sister playing in a distant field, tt.
he was growing into numhood, wanting a
seeking knowledge, whiJe she remained
s weet and simple child. He wondered ho
it could be. These and so very many thin
of the past, things accepted ltll ordina
bappenill!,"S in daily life, yet so imports
in the developing of one's character, ca.1
~o tbe priest in his musings, and he ca1
to realize their impo1·tance.
The priest comes to realiz-e, howev+
that the past cannot be relived, and th
he contemplates the future life, encou1
ering in hi,:; visions many mysteries, d
covering anew the grent truth that it
God's will tbat is to be done.
Miss Douglltll shows a talent for probi
into one's innermost thou~rht.~. nnd brir
ing them to the s·urface as interesting a
entertaining reading matter~
--0-----
ANNA BOLTON-Louis Bromfield.
IVHlTE SMOKE OVER THE VATIC/
- Don Sharkey.
THE SCARLET LILY- E. F. Murphs
AVALANCHE-Boyle.
LAD OF THE O'FIELS-McManus.
THE STEEP ASCENT-A. Lindbert
HANRAHAN'S DAUGHTER-F. p,
cell.
TELL TSE FOLKS .!lACK HOME
Senator Mead.
GOLDEN APPLES IN THE SUN-Ob·
me.yet·.
--0----Transportation-
Plus!
Now, let me tell you the story of a lit
boy's greeting to God.
He's the mischievous, blue eyed boy
fou1· whose contagious grin offers esca
from the drudgery of the day. One d•
Tommy went to Church with his moth
Bcio•·e entering the church his mother l•
tured Tommy begging him to be especia
quiet nnd good. And so they entered, 1m
and stumbled into a pew. Little boys,
Jnattcr how mueh they try not to be, '
fidgety in church. In an effort to restr1
Tommy who was beginning to twist a
turn, his mother gave him a rosary telH
him to say the Bail Mary on each bead
she had taught him last week. This wor~
for n few minutes, but before long Tom1
was twirling his t·osary and it was goi
around and around in great big eire!
Once again Tommy's motber stooped do·
and very patiently explained to him tl
it was Jesus he was hurting evetytime
twirled his rosary. Realizing that he }
done wrong, he sat quietly nnd stiffly :
a few minutes. Suddenly hi~ face brig
ened, and picking up the rosary he sta1
1
earnestly at tbe Crucifi.x and whisper
uoang on J esus, 'cause you are going ;
a ride," and calmly started twirling
rosary around and around again.
THE GLEANER
IRREPLACEABLE YOU GRAD GADABOUT
l-
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leeally
nett
By PAT TAYLERT
It has often been not«! that one thinks
bette>· in bed than at any other time (if
ever). I myself often use the time between
my waking and sleeping hou1·s to ponder
t.he day's problems, and I do it, night after
night, on bobby-l>ins. Last night as I Jay
there I began to count up the many nses
or this now-impossible-to-acquire bit of
metal, and I wondered just how many
people actually appreciat«l it.
Let me gaze longingly back on the pi\St
tor an example: When I am going out on
n dnte for on evening of fun, my family
.;11 soe me about the bouse with my st>·aggly
~trands coiled abou~ the few remaining
pre·wnr indispensabl~. Just ten minute!~
before the doorbell puts mo into a lastmJnute
dither. it is one or two of my old
faithfuls that puts the final touch on an
unmanageable lock while I slap a coal of
Flan>ing Youth on ragged fingernails. On
the way out the door. a bandfnl of everrt:'
ldies is honrdcd in a corn~r of my even ..
ing bag !or emergencies, and I am off.
The e\•oning is wonderful-but n casual
glance in the mirror nt the f\rst intermission
tells me that this is the emergency I
hnd planned .Col·. I'm bot and bothered and
-well. I look a wreck, but thoS<! never-saydie
pins in my purse come to the rescue, and
at the end of the intermission I am refreshed,
with tho part of my hair that didn't stay
.turled pinned up at the sides. By tho time
of the second intermission, the heat in the
I'QOn> and the fast tempo of the music have
created utter calamity, and tho part of my
hair that didn't stay corlod amounts to all
entire 'upsweep." Immediately l thibk of
that all-important part of my grooming,
which I left strewn on my dressing-table in
that hurried last minute ... Have I .. . No.
no more .. ? Yes! actually, one! Joy!!
In the cou"'!e o( the glorious evening. if
someone cha.nees to compliment me, then
unlike the debutante who owe• all she bas
lo Dr. Somebody's toothpaste or the soap
!hat ag>•ees with your skin, l pay inward
tribute t!l that item of items-the Bobbypin.
With n perfect evening fast becoming a
memory, I walk lingeringly up the front
lteps, only to fine! that the family has
neglected to leave the key. But after a
minute of anxiety I discover that a few
twists and scrapeg of the versatile old
reliable (yes, the Bobbypin) in the keyhole
and 1 slip me safely inside. Dad's hea''Y
footstep on the stair would o•·dinarily be
onougb to warn me of the lateness of the
hour, but Dad. who is thorough in all
chings, calls out, "Hurry up and get in bed.
sis." to which I l'ep1y, 'I won't be long, Dad.
I just have to do up my hair.''
Once snug in bed, the soCtness of the
pillow camouflaged by a network of twisted
wire, l meditate. I just don't see how
people can get along without bobbypinsand
as fot' me the~·e'~ onh' one nnswet·:
it's impossible.
~
SONNET TO THE MAIL
The mai l, it bring• to all of us groat joys
To girls away from home it means so much,
Whether it be from parents or from boys
It gives to lonely hearts the same wa1·m
touch.
. no
are
rain
and
lling
d as
rked E1.•ery morning when the mail eomes in
nmy The rush into the soeial room will start,
oing And thc11 there's be8l·d in all part~ such a
Racket Busters
By HELEN MARY BAUMAN
The ball really is rolling and the girls
are in fuJJ swing here at Nazureth College,
due to om· lWO new tennis courts. Doris
Dierdor! nnd Pat O'Grady were the first to
get "on the ball." But Kay Rog>m and
Wilma Beeman, Pegg~· McStravick and
Milly Okolowicz. Mady Nucitelli and Mar-
Lilian Rossenbach Boyce, President of
the Alumnae Association. and Rita Doolin
Esse, Corresponding Secretary, will attend
the convention of the New York chapter
of the I F. C. A. to be held in the Hotel
Commodore, New lrork City, on S-u_udny,
November 19. While in New York. Lilian
and Rita plan to meet with the New York
chapter of Naza•·eth College Alumnae to
discuss the year's program of activities of
t he New York cbnpter.
In the October News Bulletin of the
New York chapter of the I. F. C. A., the
t>rogrcm of events sponsored by Na•areth
College. A1umuae Association was cited as
one of the most •·eprcsentative alun1nae
programs of the year .
rrhe !nmily teb.·eat. given on Sunday, November
5, by Revet·cnd John D':lluney, S.
J .. to •ome o( Olll' alumnae and their husbands
was so successful t hat another one
hal been t>lanned fo1· the SJ>ring.
The Catholic CQuri~r .for November 2
carries an interesting stot·y of the acti\•j ..
ties of the Auburn cbaJ>ter of our Alumnae
In the same issue of the Courier we lind
In Father EhmaJm's column a scholtu·lv
book 1-eview by Erica Klemens. of the clas'.
of '44, of Dorothy Donnelly's THF. BONE
.\NO THE STAR.
Challenge Met
ga•·et Mat·y Maloy ha•1e kept it rolling. lie- The bus the senior dnyhop was on one
etally and figuratively! evening just before six was already crowd-
1 went out to try it rnyself a few weeks ed, but at every single cot·rter the driver
ago and I wasn't on the court long befo~e stopped and took in a few more people.
I began to wonder if 1 were in the wrong all looking as if they would shed their
place or if the debatt club were having a life'$ blood to get on it. And at each corner
meeting on the tennis com-t. Mal'ia Berl he would turn around and call, "All the
and Mary Lomhardo were in a heated· de- way to the t•ear please. There's plenty of
bate •• to whether it is bette•· to practice room. Pleeeeeenty of room.''
at lh-st or start right in playing a g;une. 1 Another girl turned to the senior and
wn::; afraid to stay and see the outcome. I nsked. ub he kidding?"
wonder if they are present at Convention The senior was too busy finding a spot
Hall Wednesday nights! to put both her feet on to answer. As a
Every student and member of the ra_cal- matter of !act. the usual good humor of
ty thM was at the baseball ga•~•e rece>ved the American crowd was fast disappearing.
exolC>SP. for the mont~. eve~ •f _only. fot· The passingers looked tired and very cross.
the lungs. Ahce No1·m>le, Els•e K•ersb>lck, I The bus pulled up at a co1·ner where five
Kitty Fischer and Mickey Trescott were people were waiting; and the driver stood
1espou~•ble !or the success of the baseball UJ> and faced the crowd. This time his voice
game. was pleading. "Won't you please move to
The seniors left their high heels and dig- the rear? Those people"-he pointed to
nity home for the day and fared all right those on the corner-"want to get home,
for thennelves. P~t O'Grady, Jean Flan- too. Won't you help me squeeze them in?"
nignn, Jean Foley n11d Ginny Klee •·aised The passengers we>'e getting n•ad now.
our estimat ion of th~ dear seniors even Some of them were growling loudly.
higher. u"\'hadda ya think we are?, they said, and
Among the SOJ)hs who were lame because ''Say, things Hke this are a disgt·ace--"
nf the game were Elaine McAvoy, and Kay Then all at once a young fellow near
Tcmmerman. the middle called out, "Sure we'll help you.
Then the J uniors just had a wonderful You just pass around the cottonseed oil.
tin1e getting all the homeruns Jeanne Len- [f the sardines can do it, so can we.''
non, Honey May Bauman, Mary Fm-rell, Everybody laughed. The crowd had got
Jane A. A. Thurston and Mary Esther bnck its good nature. The five squeezed in.
Danehy were a few of them. The bus moved on.
A sixth~grader w-rote: uThc Ford is n
good car with a fine body and excellent
ehooa."
Sign on " small, dingy, doubtful-looking
restaurant ju Minneo}lolis: HComc In Anyway!'
Readers' Digest.
A secret in two words: Everybody's Lonesome.
When you realize that, you will
always get along and be popular wherever
you are.- Victorian.
-SECTOR. '44
The alumnae and students wish to
c.xtcnd lo .. ·ing aympath)' to Lucille.;
Odenbach Farrell on the loss of he•·
husband, Lt. A. Ge1·n•·d Fal't·ell, who
waJ< killed in action, and to Jean
Gagnier Henly, whose hu$bnnd, Lt.
George Healy, has also been reported
killed in action. We wish t<J assure
both Lucille and Jcun of our fetvent
ptayers.
cles. din
town The teachers think that mail
that smart.
Harcfoot: Before we were mnn;ed, my
is not so wife and 1 agreed that [ should decide on
Also we wish to extend sympathy
to Mona Statt Stockham on the recent
death of her father.
The Pathfinder tells how Hirohito, Emperor
o! Japa,n, entered a poetry contest
recently with a poem expressing the hope
that the world would be peaceful. He did
not win the contest.
e be But just the same. despite the
bad rush
noise and
r for When it's all sol·ted and we hav0 our own.
ight- There once again descends on us a hush
:ared And classes run on smoothly as a poem.
ered, Tltis little sonnet may not be so clever,
a ll majo1· matters and she would decide all
minor ones.
Mikhail: How did the arrangement turn
out?
Barefoot: So fu no major things have
come up.
"'Your husband seems to be a man of
~ fo')But ah, don't let THE 111AIL stop coming- lt takes character to believe; to believe •·a1·e gifts."
r his ever! in nothing requires only weekness.. ur'U $ttY he is-he hasn't given me one
Peg Filler. _uLadies' Rome JournaP-Mar .. '44 since we were married."
5
THE AWAKENING
By GEORGIA CONNER
Dr. Davidson jumped up ft·om his desk
as his secretary brought in the mail, and
hurriedly opened the top letter, which bad
the return address of c.o. A.P.O., New
York, N. Y. During the process he stopped
and smiled wryly, think what a picture be
ma<te ... the valiant and true boy-friend
keeping the home fires burning while his
girl-friend goes to war. His rejection in
the service, because as a doctor he was
11eeded at home, was the one sore spot in
John Davidson'~ life. John was six feet
tall, and weighed n hundred and ninety.
He had no physical defects. Then when
Jenny, the girl he was engaged to and who
was once his assistant nurse, enlisted in
the Cadet Nurse Corps and was sent overseas
. he brooded~ he was even a little impatient
with his patients, believing they
were the cau~ of his peculiar situation.
He bad little time for worry, bowe\"Cr,
because he was constantly on the go. There
were only three doctors in the small town
o! Glennsville and they were worked to
di5tradion. Even now the waiting TOom
was full, so John ·read her letter hurriedly.
Then his eyes caught the line saying she'd
be home soon. He was about to shout
'Glory Halleluiah" when the first patient
entered his office and another day began.
It was lnte as Johnny finally finished the
reports and began to close the office. He
was putting on his coat when a voice be
knew und loved so much said "Surprise!! P'
He wheeled around and thet·e she was, as
lovely ns he'd d1:camcd-nnd ho was about
to take her in his arms when his eyes fell
ou her uniform. Despite himself, he begnn
to stiffen. and could only venture n light
kiss on .Tenny's forehead. He saw the sudden
immense hurt in her eyes- but he
simJ>Iy couldn't help his actioiU!, he thought.
He was going to t•·y and explain to her
his coolness when the telephone rang. It
was Mrs. :Morgan, one of his patients, and
she said it was an emergency: her boys
were very ill. Jenny said she'd go with
him. so he grabbed his hut and hur-ried.
He examined the boys; the symptoms
were unmistakeable. He bluntly told Mrs.
Morgan the boys had polio, overlooking the
fear in her eyes. He told her he'd do all
he could. get someone who was nn authority
on such cases immediately- and left. On
the way home Jenny gave him back his
ring. She tried to be nice about it, but
when he. in explaining bis reasons, said
he bad his pride, ~he could hold her th~ugbt
in no longer.
"John, I've seen enough of your hurt
pride and I'm fed up. You've spent your
time (eeling SOt'rY for y01lrSelf, when you
should've been helping in the war. Oh, yes I
l know-you·'ve been working very bard but
you.- heart isn't in your work, you're no
longer a comfort to your patients. A lot
of kindness you showed Mrs. Morgan tonight,
droning on about specialists when
you should have tried to comfort her! We
can't all go to battle fields. Some have to
stay home and work to l(llp the others
come back and to give them the welcome
they dream of-that I dreamed of-and
longed for-and didn't get. There nrc others
just like you that aren't getting the praise
and glory, but they're doing their share
and liking it. I thought when I left that
you would soo what I've just told youbut
you haven't. So .. . there's no need of
our going on." And as her eyes were
filled with tears she didn't want him to see,
she said goodnight.
John sat in the car a long time thinking
over the things she had said. Then suddenly
he was out of the car. bounding up the
steps and ringing Jenny's door-bell. With
bim he brought his ring. for now he understood.
He was Dr .• T. H. Davidson, M. D.,
and he was doing his pa-rt in the wnt', too.
---?----
[f you don't die right, you'•·• dead wrong.
-CA'l'HOLIC DIGEST- Oct., ' 44
6
FAD AND FANCY
B~ JANE 'rHURSTON
Ever Rince mid-aumme1· I have been de·
veloping nn inferiodty eomplex. For it was
about that. time t.hot the vario11S mnnufne ..
ture.-. of tooea boautlful decided that pink
mua-t be the color for thUs year. So wu
oreated the darln~: •hade, 1 blush to mention
it. Pink Cartt... Now personally. I
eould ne,·er cau•tt ae~ what lipstkk or
powder or nail polj,.h had to do with pink
garters, but never having t'herished the
aequnintanc:t of auch frivoJou.s gear, I decided
thnt no doubt tbc manufacturer wore
them him~elf nnd couldn't think of. nnothcr
~ay of lettinc the whole wo•·ld know it.
Of course it wu lnevitable that I, ""
avid style purauer, tbould invest s-everal
weeks' allowance in the purchase o! tht,..
great tranlformationt. never dreaminc for
a minute that my penonaHty would ~
crushed 10 complotol~. Gleefully 1 smeared
the rosy confeclion~ o,·er me. Terrified, I
di.KoVfored my countenance ~embling not
that of n new-blown ro.se. but thnt of n
plain, horrible blob. If my eyes hadn't been
there I would ncvel' have known l hnd ft
face. So you see, my complex had begun
1 bad been thwnrted In my pursolt of
fashionable beaU!)', and deciding that the
thing cooldn't la~t. for my sake it eo\lldn't,
1 started a fervent movement among my
intimate, opposinc it.
However, th~ Dacbts and Magnins and
Carnegie• had oaurht the fever. My eaD!!t
was lo:!t. For ftnd witlt' the cry was ahritked
"Pink thi" )'eal'l"
44The smnrt. thing! ChiC!, my dear!"
uThe fftN• must rcaemble the rose!"
So rtogardltl-t of appearan(e or pride,
the women of an entire: nation were destined
to build not only their wardrobe.,
but their entirto lin. . around a pink blob.
And the wardrobe~. for that matter, art
equally eg04t&ring. for as far as I ean
see, the raiment this yenr is no ditfer~nt.
from the pnit. yea1'1J, except for the m ..
evitable innovot.ionP.:
1. Renlovol of 11everoJ inches of tileeve,
or the enp •lec\•o. This Ia just vand for
e'iteryone, u Jons;r aa everyone posse~t-1
lily stem arm!&.
2. The ta~red alimne~. Most eharming
0$1K'<ially if one happen& to be a pole,
clothes or otberwiH.
S The thre ... quarter coat with belt.
Mother. do you know thnt old flour tack
in the pnntry1 Well • • •
4. The C•pe Cod ll•hermon's hnt. Very
dear, i! one hna no benet.
These are tho latest, which roean111 noth·
ing to 99<:: uf the reminine population, u
it seems that. only the other lt;"'o or Powers'
models, is able to wear them and •till look
earthly.
So. you women of America, and I, not
among the motlol·d-. must suddenly develop
an iron wUl and live on soup and ap..
ples and v-iolent e:<erci!e, nlthough I my.
self think thnt I •hall cling to the convou·
tionnl-the ~<nnw old thiug.
THE GL E ANER
CAMPUS QT'S Fran Cu1i i" htard roaming through the
holls •inr!ntr "On the Road to Mandalay"
S.olut.ations and grectinpl During the ..• She clalmll •he'• going to begin s:rnok·
llnrvesl seAsOJ\ while lh~ tree11 hnve been ing chel'ouL!
••Jeavc~-dropping,'' you.- I'OVing r(.!portcr Anne Couso l" now ready to write t\11
htu1. bt.wn 11caves-dt'oppinw," nnd is now es....ay on "Tht.• ;aucly c,! tht! Human Tinnd."
rf'ady to rake the results all up in one big YCiu t"e~. flht• Ji.('otl!l ~rt.,.ve~ nt Forman's.
pilt. Lois Capoui hu b~n trotting off to
Hone7 Mac Bauman wat thrilled ~ew York OCC'a~ionally to aee her "Sf.ml)t'r
(~re•m!l with a baby allisrat<•r that tame Paratu.., .. friend \'try •·fide1is''-hub!
a11 th~ way from LoudiRnn in a cigar box. Beauty den1and.• a peAt pric:~ a!t far a!l
tn a few years ttht•ll bt able- to trade it in Mickey Tr•tcolt coe:.. $he walks to SC'hool
for a ,.enuine alligator bn~. Howev~r it's !rom Ea·t Roche"~~r for tbnt figure of
the prf!lltnt that concern)! her juat now! : h~t'$! lr.dcltntally 1hr ha been proclaim·
The story il'i told of n certnin Juntor who. ed the Vf\ronictl l,.ake vf N.C !!
ftnt. home the night of tht• HnrV<t8t Moon ·rhe li'rf'Nhmnn bonrde.rs n.re ~ending out
Dnnce. (She reporU; thnt "I'll Wnlk Alone" • plen to Ann O•l•y. Plea: Plense stop thio
waK number one on t.he Jlit. Pat·nde.) The: con!wion nboul lhoH two bo~·s and wattle
Vtt"Y next day found n soldier friend ring· on one! Morol: That will le:n·e one mon1
inr h~r doorbeU-ont dfty too lAte! Two man on tht- loo1<t-!!
da)·a later thAt doorbell w.u runr again. El~anor Hod•• will never leavt the cambut
not by soldier numb-tr one. There ~he pu• nn Sunday - not until .. Shorty'' ha
WAft with two soldiers on httr hand.J! "Tby made hi eppt"Aran(e. Thi~ is a t'a~e of
do tbey alwaya come home at ont'e!! lo••e over ps-rntioning!
P.S. She is now rtvivlnc hrr interest. Elt:re'• a pitce of news. One Q( our
in Lhf Hit Parade! teat hers 11tutu that MHly 0\rolowic~ hal
Helen Murrer is progre11~ini benutifully really grown up! Whatever ean she mennt
In h~r role in Hfride ond Prf!judice''-both Boverly MeConneU doesn't believe In n
nt rehcnrwls nll<l n!terll! diet of cvl~rything from aoup to nuts. Sho
Cerri.e Knapp's heart beat hn1 slightJy goes only ftll fnr ns U1e soup. Bev, you will
incr~ased. She has two mor~ picturf!3 of ''die .. ytt.!"
her .. beJoved'' to add to thAt fut growintr Alter 75 bombinlf mi~ions over Europe.
Rorve'a Galler)' of hers! Rita Da•i•' Fi.-.t Lieutenant is home. But
Now we eome to this month'a $64 que. she isn't the only 1u(ky girl. Mar• DuPr.z.'•
tion-.a.nd is this •·Evtr •harp''! Where .. Bernie h!\JI landtd too!
oh, wh•re did Rita Bettner cet that bunk Red.headed Marines malt• colorful addi·
o( diamond! tiorut.
Answer not guaranteed! To the c:ollfre'• apparitions
Alice Ry•n'• "little bit o' hcnv~n'' drop·
ped from above with the Nnvy hJenvcs/'
not. @O long ago.
But no u-~e ciroohn,- and expelHng n aivh
He's the :tllPl~ of Ha.•elwandor'a ~t:lf'gt\nt
Eye!
Carol Bakor hM n new titJ~. They call
her "The Panther Woman."
Speakintr nf tltl••· why do Detty M ulcahy
and Rita Dettner eall E• clya DeMuth
··Mama"!
A new elub has be•n formtd at N. C
by Normil~. Fi.her and Kiel'•bilek Co. T~·
''Lonely Hearts Club." Theme--"1
a Mnn"!l
Tlw Y:mkees don't rt:"allze whot t.hcy'
mi"-~11ng in Ruth Kennedy 1 Mun! \Vhat
ba ... ebAJI player.
El•'no RiAB~I•tcin haa become quite
pt•d- -:t.• voa'J ahown in F.nrtith daa. \Vlllll
·-~·u that dedicated to, Elaine!
Wrestling matches are loada uf fun
Maybo not for th• fi~htinr ooe
llul .•�� who is the r.lla
That oomes nU the woy fron• Henrielil
IH <'onduct Ma rge Eatorhold to them??
Witches nnd goblins on Tlnlloween eve,
lint! nothiog on the snnke nnd the fre>l
fhis you must finnly b~llcve
o.- • - - well, .• - were ~ou \here!
\Vho wllS that handaomf: otncer .een wid
Dol•~• B•Y""' last Saturday night! Whl
branch of the ~ervi~e Ia he in, Dolores!
Well. thal"s the end of the pile folb,
Don't •tuiY yourself with turkey,
This Thonk>giving Day
Let your mother take cnre of the dressint
You'll enjoy it more thnt wayll
"My word, thi• tastes good," @Rid th
old lady, drinking a glou of beer lor th
fi.nt time. "'lt's just like the medicine m
hu•l>and has been takine for the last fort
Yt'Ars ''
lie had chok.U hor. Sh• wu dead; ther
wu no doubt about it. He had lilotened t
her dying g~sp. Now she wa" cold--col
"" tho hnnd o! denth Yet In hi• anger h
wM not. convinced. Furious()' ho kicke
her. •ro hia amazement she gn~ped . spu·
tcrcd. and then began to hum •oftly.
''Ju't a little p.ati('nte is nll it take
John/' remarked his wife from the bat
.~.
Did you hear about Niclt7 Lcwante'a
hanr u1> hlrthday party! Th•,.• were ber
lillie N.C. •isten, alonJ: with baby Tommy
-who was tbe fMus of Attention. Cosh!
tbt man !bortage mwrt ~ pr<!tty bad,
Nlokr!
Ro•emary O'Mahan.ey has. a new dffini· ;--------------This
month we're going to ~nitch on lbe
faoulty!
One fine day Or. En•thom found Sr.
Groce Mnrie in the Selene~ P•·op t·oom,
holdinlt a t i})hon in a 10-gallon jug. rt i&
noble manners prompt.lng him, Dr. Easttion
for SampliOn u A plate for rreat men
~pe(iRlly ln Company G I"
Pea Beal walk on lavender clouds every
time she hem·a. from thnt eertaln PAt!
Frnnk Slnntrn bewnre I Lizzy Murphy
wm cut you out. In n abort time and it. will
be your turn to swoon II
ham offered to help Sister, at. whieb time 1:------------------;
•h• handed him the siphon and walked oft'.
Rotuming, Sister found him otiJI holding
lhe charge but mopplng bia eya. with a
larc• white handkeRhief.
Ha. ha! He thought it wa. diJtilled water
but.-un, uh-it wa~ Formalin (s:nitr.
•nltfl!)
Speaking oC thal "te~n·~jui(e.'' J ea.n.
Flan niaan dissects her dog llt~h, with tl
tender heart. The tenrs j U!!it. atrcnm down
her face!!
fo@jan.rlu.J
lneorporatod
Furriers nnd Tailors to
Gentlewomen
39 EAST AVENU£
ROCHESTER 4, N. Y.
Wm. F. Predmore
Reliaioua Articles for
Service Men
Prayer Boolu • Roaariea
Medal• and ChaiJU
Greetin• Card•
93 STATE ST. MAIN 3279
FAVORS • TROPHIES
CLUB JEWELRY
SCHOOL and COLLEGE
RINGS
The Metal Arts Co.
Inc.
742 Portland Ave.
YOU CAN'T TELL
WHAT'S COOKIN' IN
OUR NEW KITCHEN!
See the new kitchen with
the ventilated range at
the R. G. & E. showroom
nt 89 East Avenue. No
grease, no grime. no cooking
odor. Coole•· in summer.
heal-saving in winter
and cleant>r the year
around. Open for inspection
daily from 9 A. M.
to 6 P.M.
Rochester Gas
& Electric
My pink romJllf'X 8liJI grO¥<"S, however.
and 1 t.-~mble lo<l H. Cnmegie decide thnt L------ ---------'
we mwt includt- our tre-.~set in th(l new ..------ ---------1
trend and th\L"l develop an even newer
Rocheater, N.Y.
"Our Representative
Will Gladly Call"
83 East Ave. Main 7070
woman, The Pank Garter Blond.
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TRANT'S
Roche.ater, N. Y.
98 ClintoD A•e.. N.
115 Fraulin St.
TOWN TALK
BAKERY, Inc.
601 PULLMAN Ave.
Phone
Glenwood 6772
EYery Dtty
We Go
Y our Wtty
DRINK ONLY THE BEST
Sea/test Homogeui<;ed
Vitamin D Milk
BRIGHTON PLACE DAIRY
l)IV_ OF Gl· '1. tC:~ CKI A\1 C.OKI'.