G et It At FoS s t J 1 - ! CSS .OK (. Hi ( Mi ?Cf v v : JQ'pg Loose Leaf, all sizes. Regular kinds in all sizes, flexible and stiff PQJJJJ PAPER Berlin's, Crane's and Montag's lines at twenty-five cents and DAV DA All the new sizes and shapes, 25c and up. Correct stationery for gen" LVyV Iir- L-flV tlemen, 50c and 75c. K'ODA' K' S We carry a complete line of Kodaks, Films, and Supplies of all kinds. Develop IV J L IV ins printing and enlarging of the highest class. Prompt service, reasonable prices. F?OI TIVIT A II DPIVQ Waterman's Ideal, Parker Lucky Curve, and the Aiken-Lam-run 1 V11 r Env berry lines. All guaranteed. F K I Q00D5 ennant iows an banners. Large new stock on hand. Several ' "" new designs f . h You will find at our store practically everything to be found in a stationery store, and you will be pleased with the service and prices as well as with the quality of our goods, which are always the best to be had at the price. 1 STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! The members of the Librarv staff extend a cordial welcome to the student body at large, and to the new students in particular. They will be glad to render all pos sible aid in finding books and oth er material needed for serious study or for recreational reading. In the reading room, magazines can be found of any class of sub ject matter you might desire to read: such as fiction, current events, science, religion ; and all the daily papers in the State. It is more than likely that your home paper can be found, as a good many county papers send occasion al copies. The Washington and New York papers are atso on the shelves in the reading room. No copies may be carried out of this room. In the reference room, can be found all classes of encyclopedias, dictionaries, atlases, and reference books. Nothing may be carried out of this room. These suggestions will be help ful in gettnig a book from the Li brary. The catalogue to the entire Library is at the right of the desk. Look either; for the name of the author or for title of the book. Copy the entire group of numbers in the upper left corner of the cat alogue card in the space at the top of the call slip which you will find on the desk. Fill in the author's name, the title of the book desired, your own name and registration number on the call slip, and pre sent it . to the desk. The man at the desk will stamp the date it was takeno ut. Add thirteen days to the date stamped on the pocket, and you have the date that it be comes due. Reference books, how ever, can not be taken -from the Library until one hour before closing time. " The hours of the Library at present are: 8-1, 2-6:15, 7:30-10. On Saturday there is no night hour, and reference books can be kept out until 10 :00 A. M. on Monday. The following rules are consid ered necessary that the Library may be of greater use to a greater, number: Not more than three books may be charge to the same name at the same time. ' Fines for two-week books kept over fourteen days (including the day of issue) will be imposed with exact regularity at the rate of five cents a day. The date on the pocket on fly leaf is sufficient no tice when the book is due. Reference books must remain in the Library during Library hours. They may, be taken from the Li brary one hour before its final closing hour for use until 10 o'clock the next morning. After that hour, they are subject to a fine at the rate of five cents an hour. Magazines must not be removed from the Library. '' ' Mutilation of books or maga zines, or defacement by writing in them, must be paid for by the pur chase of a new copy. Coediquette H. L. .Cook, Jr., of Asheville, is back on the hill for a few days. "There are more coeds this year, even coed freshmen." One of the old boys with a Y. M. C. A. badge gave the welcome news to a returning coed as she landed at University Station. "You must be the Y. W. C. A. Travelers Aid worker," she said as she consigned her suitcase to him and followed to that corner of the platform where evidently he was rounding up the girls. "There are more than this at the Hill," he added, as they ap proached what seemed to the once almost solitary "woman student," to be an enormous crowd of girls. "And some of 'em," he went on, "are mighty pretty. You ought to see 'em.; Why we've got a per fect bunch of girls this year." The conversation lagged there until it could be continued in in troductions. The returning Coed felt very large and important be cause she alone among them was returning to the Hill. The others were beginning a new and strange experience; they were full of hopes, apprehensions and expecta tions, but all her anxieties were centered in her trunk and she wasn't wondering at all what the University . would be like. University Station displayed its usual autumn harvest of Fresh men, which the upper classmen were loading into the train with all the zeal of Hoover Plan Con servationists. It is astonishing how kind, everyone is to the Freshmen at University Station, how ready to give them advice, and information, and to suggest the necessary things , which every self-respecting , University man must buy,i n his Freshman year. The new Coeds wern't Fresh men, and nobody even offered to sell them a second hand radiator or razor at a bargain, but they admitted that they felt strange and a bit green, and the returning co ed cheerfully put it over them by waving at old classmates and walk ing through the crowd of men just as if they ere ordinary human beings. "She doesn't act scared a bit," one girl whispered, but the returning coed remembreect how sheh ad felt the first time she made that long journey from University to Oarrboro, and how dark, and strange everything looked, and what a long drive it had been to the boarding house, and when her trunk had -been carried in it had seemed to symbolize to her some thing as important as crossing the Rubicon, (which was a necessary parto f entrance Latin), and she had said to herself, "Here I am for oetter or for worse." Accordingly she put in a word, just as soon as she could wedge one in, to reassure the new girls, and to tell them how much every coed, enjoyed the University. She didn't say it just that way for no body, but a country preacher could up and say such a thing, but she felt that the old oaks of Carolina were spreading their branches wider in order to shelter daughters too. . Subscribe to the Tar Heel. C. B. King, Jr., of Charlotte, was here for the University's opening. : JACK SPARROW Agent for Durham Model Steam Laundry FRUITS NEWSSTAND EATS OF ALL KINDS (Next Door to Royal Cafe) Station for Henry Harris Auto Line Leave Chapel Hill Leave Durham 8:30 A. IM. 9:50 A. M. 10:20 P. M. 12:40 P. M. 2:30 P. M. 5:08 P. M. 4:00 A. M. , 8:00 P. M. Wrlgbt' Cafe AND TCttaette (Tafe Soba "parlor THE BEST IN RALEIGH CAROLINA BOYS Have Your Barber Work in Durham Done at A. W. HORTON'S BARBER SHOP 203 EAST MAIN DURHAM SHOE SHINE PARLOR ALL SHINES 5 CENTS OLD HATS MADE NEW EUBANKS DRUG CO PRESCRIPTION DRUGGISTS Chapel Hill North Carolina All Carolina Men Eat at BUSY BEE CAFE when in Raleigh, N. C. NOTICE TO COUNTY CLUBS A special rate will be made for all County Clubs that will send The Tar Heel to their county high schools. Nothing better can be done to let the high schools keep in close touch with the Universi ty. See me at once that no issue may be missed by them. WATT W. EAGLE, Business Manager 'VANCE 5 '