W. yf. Saer Co. Fellows, that's the place where you can get all" those nobby lit tle "things-a-ma-do's" jn dress attire, and believe me, son, they have the jam-up stuff in college men's clothing and furnishings. They're such a cordial bunch, too always seem so darned glad to see you. t Oh, sure; they're right on Main street in Durham. Character Work ,WE strive at all times to portray the character of your business whenever an order for printing is placed with us. We are always glad to furnish ideas and estimates to out-of-- town customers, and mail orders receive prompt attention. ! V THE SEEMAN PRINTERY, Inc. , ' " DURHAM, N. C. . v: '. :- W. M. Newton & Company De Luxe Clothes HATTERS AND FURNISHERS "Too Young for Old Ideas" 212 W. Main St. -. . Durham, N. C. PICKWICK THEATRE Hey, Fellows, Look Who is Coming! Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford The Pickwick schedule will include Goldwyn, Paramount, Artcraft, Metro, Fox, and SelecT: pictures, and extra features from time to time. Try ANDREWS CASH STORE Agents for M. Moses & Sons, Tailors White Arrow Shirts with Collars Attached STOP RIGHT HERE AND GET A MILITARY HAIRCUT A. W. HARTON'S The Sanitary Shop Next to Main Street Pharmacy Durham, N. C . MAIN STREET PHARMACY TELEPHONE 541 THE REXALL STORE DURHAM, N. C. )R. RAPER LECTURES ON THE COMMUNITY SERVICE (Continued from Page 1) vhether he resides in the city or on he farm. The keenest delight en oyed by a man comes thru helping thers in their knotty problems. In lis every-day business life can one ender as true, as important service is can a community setretary. JASEBALL WARRIORS COMMENCE TRAINING TABLE ACTIVITIES (Continued from Page 1) ers of last year's squad are "shov ng 'em" across the big in old time tyle. Swift, Alley, Wilson, and pields are fast rounding into varsity naterial. The receiving end of the attery is there with the goods, bounce, Roberts, and Spaugh are the eceivers who are showing up well. Joach Lourcey has been carrying out ntensive sliding practice, and some ast base running will be brought into he big games this spring. Although he hitting of the team is not very eavy, it is the opinion of the coach hat this deficiency will be removed as oon as the men get more accustomed o the hot 'uns. The infielders are howing up well, but the outer garden rs show need of improvement. Af er the infield is selected from the wo teams now in action, it is proba le that some men will be shifted from lie inner to outer region. A training table has been started t Pickard's Hotel, and there are 25 ien who are living on the light diet, 'here are 38 men who went on the ledge which went into effect last 'eek. The first games of the season will be staged March 28 and 29. Between now and that date, intensive work will be carried out. Curve pitching will be the vogue from now on and the smashers of the old sphere will be subjected to the baffling behavior of the pills tossed by the Carolina twirlers. The blue and white will be there with the goods it is thought when they meet their first opponents, who have not yet been determined. Students desiring to work an hour or more a day can make wages of more than $1.00 an hour selling America's War for Humanity, and Life of Roosevelt. Send at once for free outfit, F. B. Dickerson Co., De troit, Mich., enclosing 20c in stamps for mailing outfits. Adv.. COMMEMORATIVE SERVICES EULOGIZE LATE DEAN AND ACTING CHAIRMAN OF UNIV. (Continued from Page 1) about him, lifting them to his own high level," declared Coates. "The men who had been his students left his care to go out into life prepared to enter into the dignity and respon sibilities of this great commonwealth. Dean Stacy was a man who stood out from the crowd as a shining light to serve as a guide and chal lenge to others to imitate him." Senator Dorman Thompson, of Statesville, presented Dean Stacy as seen by a close friend. He recalled that Mr. Stacy, coming from a home where lofty thinking ruled, , came early to learn that the aim of life is service, not the advancement of self. As a student he assumed leadership in tihaping college thought. Having firm belief that the range of college ac tivities is outside books as much as THE UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY Harry Woodhouse Chase, Chairman of Faculty. Charles Thomas Woolen, Business Manager. rJulius Algernon Warren, Treasurer and Bursar. - Thomas James Wilson, Jr., Regis trar. ;.v.., y J. J. Rhine, Recorder. ! Colleges and Schools Harry Woodburn Chase, Acting Dean of the College of Liberal Arts. Andrew Henry Patterson, Dean of College of Applied Science. Charles Lee Raper, Dean of Gradu ate School. - Lucius Polk McGehee, Dean of Law School. - ; ; Isaac Hall Manning, M. D.,'Dean of Medical School. Edward Vernon Howell, A. B., Ph. D., Dean of Pharmacy , School. Marcus Cicero Stevens Noble, Dean of School of Education. . The Library . ' Louis Round Wilson, Ph. : D., Li brarian. ' The Gymnasium 4 Robert Baker .Lawspn, M. D.j Di rector. ' ' ' . ... " - : Student Council '' Senior, L. H. Hodges President. Junior, E. E. White, Secretary. Sophomore, E. E. Rives. Medical, D. A, Cobb. : . ' . Pharmacy, E. S. White. Law, J. V. Baggett. Representative at. large, . Frank Herty. Representative elected by the Coun cil, V. S, Bryant, Jr. Athletic Association President, J. W. G. Powell. Secretary, L. H. Bryant. Cheer Leader, E. E. Rives. " Baseball Team Captain,, J. W. G. Powell. Manager, S. H. Hodges. Assistant Manager, E. E. White. Assistant Manager, L. H. Bryant. Coach, W. M. Lourcey. Basketball Team Captain, W. R. Cuthbertsom Manager, Jeff Bynum. Assistant Managers, C. P. Spruill, W. A. Royall. Track Team Captain, Edward Wood. Manager, W. R. Cuthbertson. Assistant Managers, H. C. Bristol, Hunter Reames. Faculty Committee Chairman, C. S. Mangum. T. J. Campbell, Director of Ath letics. Chas. T. Woollen, Graduate Man ager. STUDENT PUBLICATIONS University Magazine Editor-in-Chief, T. 0. Rondthaler. Assistant Editors, T. C. Wolfe, J. H. Kerr, H. S. Everett, F. G. Miles, W. H. Andrews. Business Manager, Harold William son. The Tar Heel Editor-in-Chief, Forrest G. Miles. Assistants, J. S. Terry, H. S. Ev rctt Managing Editor, T. C. Wolfe. Associate Editors, E. S. Lindsey, J. H. Kerr, Jr., A. L. Purrington, W. H. Andrews, H. G. West, C. R. Sumner T. C. Leanard, W. C. Eaton, W. H. Hooker, L. C. Blythe, W. R. Berryhill, W. H. Bobbitt, C D. Beers, J. W. Foster, Miss Elizabeth Lay. Business Manager, J. S. Massen burg. Yackety Yack , Editor-in-Chief, W. E. Price. Business Managers, C. M. Hazle hurst, J. W. G. Powell. Y. M. C. A. President, T. O. Rondthaler. Vice,-President, L. H. Hodges. Sec.-Treas., Jeff Bynum. General Sec, Robert "Wunsch. inside them, he entered into the spir it of the life as a well-rounded stu dent. He took high honors in schol arship and was awarded the Mangum medal for his excellency in debating. "He never lost his broad outlook on life," stated Mr. Thompson. "He labored untiringly with President Graham to build up a great institu tion and to make North Carolina the greatest State in the Union. When he accepted the position of acting head of the University he determined to carry out the plans drawn up by the late head. "Student opinion, with that unde finable power to appreciate men, has rendered testimony of the fair ness and sympathetic understanding of Mr. Stacy. He had the best in terests of the State at heart; he real ized the needs of the people and strove to satisfy them." Latin Americans Hear Interesting Papers The regular semi-monthly meeting of the Latin-American Club was held last Monday night in the English room of the Library. Papers on sub jects pertaining to the study of Latin American questions were read by Mes srs. T. J. Brawley and W. H. Hooker. IMr. Brawley's subject was "Interest of Italians, Frenchmen, and Belgians in Latin-America." In this paper he pointed out the spheres of influence of these countries in Latin-America. Mr. Hooker presented a paper relative to the settlement of the Asiatic peo ples in Central and South America. He pointed out chiefly the sphere of Japanese influence, and the attitude WHEN YOU ARE IN GREENSBORO EAT AT HOTEL HUFFINE -sand HENNESSEE CAFE At the PuMBter Station 342-344 South Elm Street J. R. DONNELL, Manager and Proprietor HOME OF GOOD COOKING IN GREENSBORO COLLEGE CLOTHES Suitsfor young collegians- swell in every partic ular. We are now showing some advanced spring styles. SNEEED-MARKHAM-TAYLOR CO. DURHAM, N.C. Mm J. Zlutitizz Company Listen, Fellows See Our Line of Embossed U. N. Cm Rings New Line Has Just Arrived All Kinds WASHBURN & TOPPING Student Clothiers have their display rooms at No. 8 Vance. They represent Hopkins and Schloss Bros., fashionable and moderate priced tailors of Baltimore. They solicit your trade for spring suitings SEE Chapel Hill Hardware Co. FOR Pocket Knives, Razors, Scissors Electric Bulbs, Plugs, Sockets, Shades Extension Cords, etcm Will You Have a Class Ring this Year? We have attratlive samples we would lihe to submit and know our quality and price is right for we have just sold the Greensboro High School their class rings OdelVs, "Where Quality Tells ' NnThCaZuna WHEN you buy a pipe bearing the W L C trade-mark, you have the satisfaction of knowing that your money could not have bought a better pipe. The W D C is strictly American made. You can choose among a multitude of styles, sizes and grades ct the best shops $6 down to 75 cents. VM. DEMUTH & CO . New Voili World's Largest Pipe y.antLfcc'.xvrcr ' . ,f ' tKSLook at the lines of this one. They V g" flow, a delight to the eye, from the rich l' browiioiihegenulneFrenchBrlarbowl, iiKM4&0' through the sterling sheen of the ring, to the Jet black lustre of the vulcanite bit. of the Latin-American countries to ward Japan's policy in regard to them. The Club, in adopting the plan pre sented by Prof. Pierson to the effect that it expand its efforts in order to secure Latin-American students for the University, broadens its scope of usefulness to the University. The way proposed to get the University in touch with students from these coun tries who are contemplating the tak ing of courses in North American col leges is to exchange college publica tions with these Latin-American col leges, and through this channel, and 'others yet to be more fully developed, to let these students know what ad vantages the University of North Carolina offers as an American college and in this way draw them to the University. A committee of three were appoint ed to confer with members of the fa culty relative to the working out of plans for the carrying on of such work. ( Jones: "I see that Smith has gone into real estate." Brown: "Yes, poor fellow, we buried him last week. Yale Record. Greenest of the fresh: (After the mass meeting) "And what is a sink ing fund?" Sorrowful Soph: (Who has just been touched by the finance commit tee) "Mine is." "Doesn't your oldest sister eve think of getting married?" "Yes. Constantly." Judge.