Pasre Two
THE TAR HEEL
October 27, 1922
Ctjc -Car. tyztl
"The Leading Southern College Semi
Weekly Newspaper."
Member of
N. C. Collegiate
Association
Press
THE COMING GREAT
HONOR
Published twice every week of the col
lege year, and is the official organ
of the Athletic Association of the
University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, N. C. Subscription price, $2.0P
local and $3.00 out of town, for the
collesre year. Entered at the Post
Office, Chapel Hill, N. C, as second-
class matter.
Business and editorial offices rooms 8
and 9, New West Building. Offico
hours 2 to 6 p. in. daily, except Sat
urday and Sunday.
J. J. Wade Editor
C. B. Colton ...
G. W. Lankford
E. H. HartseU . .
G. Y. Eagsdale .
Assistant Editors
, . Managing Editor
Assignment Editor
B. S. Pickens
8. B. Midyette
H. D. l)uls
E. D. Apple
Walker Barnette
W. S. Berryhill
F. M. Davis, Jr.
A. L. Dowd
REPORTERS
W. J. Faucette
H. R. Fuller
J. E. Hawkins
R. O. Maultsby
0. C. Rowland
V. T. Rowlund
L. T. Rogers
J. M. Saunders
L. J. Brody ........ Business Manager
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Staff
A.Weil
W. L. Norton
P. Cheeseborough
H. Lineberger
CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT
W. C. Perdue
A. E. Shackell .
T. D. Wells
0. L. Jones
J. L. Kallam
, . Circulation Manager
Ass 't Circulation Mgr.
Staff
F. P. Burroughs
B. F. Pearce
R. F. Stainback
The Business Manager will be at tho
Tar Heel office, New West Building,
every day from 3:30 to 5 p. m., except
ing Saturdays and Sundays.
Yon can purchase any article adver
tised in The Tar Heel with perfect
safety because everything it adver
tises Is guaranteed to be as repre
sented. We will make good immedi
ately if the advertiser does not.
Vol. XXXI. Oct. 27, 1922. No. 10
TO THE TEAM
The victory of the Carolina football
team over State last Thursday, coming
as it did so closely after the Trinity,
South Carolina and Yale games, gives
us something, indeed, to be proud of.
Not since the days of old, many, many
years ago when football was A DIF
FERENT GAME, has any Carolina
team been subjected to such a strenu
ous schedule, and the victories over
three of the closely scheluded games
with a brilliant showing against Yale
In the other, was something of a re
markable feat.
The credit must go to the team and
the coaches. Say what you will, the
men that did the work and achieved for
Carolina the glory, are those that wore
the padded uniforms and battled on the
gridiron itself. All Carolina gets the
credit. The newspapers sound their
praises for the North Carolina Univer
sity, and the college at Chapel Hill
gets a name high in the athletic world.
The entire student body profits because
we are proud of such achievements, but
we have the team to thank, the team
and its coaches.
So you men who each afternoon train
on Emerson Feld, and who have fought
the good fight, and won three great
football battles in seven days, and gave
a big eastern university a good scare
just four days earlier than the first of
these three great victories congratu
lations! The Tar Heel expresses the
sentiment of every Carolina man, when
It expresses this word of appreciation
and felicitation, this word of pride in
you and your fine feat.
At Yale, Harvard, and Princeton, the
oollege newspaper is about the livest
and most important institution on the
campus. The Daily News, the Crimson,
th3 Frincetonian, are terms on the lips
of every student at those particular
universities each day of the college
year. The men who make the staffs of
these papers are the leaders, the intel
lectuals, the "big men." To attain a
place on the boards of any of these
papers is to acquire one of the finest
honors in undergraduate activities.
At Carolina (if we may be permit
ted to toot our own horn) the Tar Heel
has grown annually in precedence and
influence, and the men that have aspir
ed to make the Tar Heel staff have usu
ally been the real leaders at the Uni
versity. This year we are endeavoring
to raise this standard even higher, for
we believe that the Tar Heel has a
future that is almost boundless, if only
the right men will carry on, and all
Carolina becomes interested.
The system for selecting the new
staff members employed at the great
eastern universities will be used here
beginning this year. The announcement
calling for candidates for the staff has
been greeted with a response that has
delighted the Tar Heel editors. Stu
dents of this greater University realize
the possibilities of the Tar Heel, and
are anxious to become connected with
the Tar Heel organization. They are
going to have to work for their places,
but the lucky ones will know that they
are good, or else they would not have
been selected. They will know that
to be on the Tar Heel board is truly a
fine honor, and we are confident that
the Tar Heel will be to Carolina just
as important a factor as the Crimson
is to Harvard.
Watch these men that will take np
the work. Watch the college newspa
per. It will, we believe, prove an in-
MUCH SAYS DR. WILSON
University Librarian Stresses Import
ance of Utilizing Leisure Time
During First College Year.
teresting study.
x . X s I 1 ;! 1 1 1 1 I B
EXCHANGES
a g g s
1 is
"MEN"
It may only be a pet idea that sounds
f line rbsurd to talk about and discuss
seriously, and it msy only be a foolish
whim that we have acquired through
some study of we know not what, but
the expression "Carolina boy," when
applied to the students of this Uni
versity, always tends to "get on our
nerves," so to speak. The students of
this institution happen to be not
"boys," but "men."
Perhaps this is an optimistic point
of view we are taking, and some may
hotly argue that all of us are still in
the embryonic stage, and deserve no
more dignified title than Just "boys."
Once we heard the discussion in a class
room of whether college students should.
be called boys or men, and although
we are not absolutely certain, it is our
opinion that the ultimate conclusion
was that we are men, more or less, all
of us.
. Be that is it may, let other colleges
call their students whatever they wish,
either "boys" or "fellows" or "kids"
or "babies," let us on this campus bold
to the "men" phrase, and we will feel
a darned sight more important, which is
good.
S H K H S
Note. The Tar Heel exchanges can be
found in the reading room of the
Y. M. C. A.
The Technique
This journal claims to be "The
South 's Livest College Weekly," and
since the Tar Heel does not belong in
that class, being a semi-weekly, we are
not inclined to dispute it. "Send the
Band to Annapolis," read the heading
of last week 's issue, and the Technique
calls upon the student body of Tech
to do so at a cost of over two dollars
per student. Tech lost to the Navy,
but if that band went, the middies cer
tainly must have had to "hand it" to
the spirit of Georgia Tech.
Dr. L. E. Wilson, librarian at tho
University, made a short talk in chapel
Wednesday morning urging tho new
men to make use of the opportunity of
becoming well read, offered by the li
brary at Carolina.
"Now is the time to begin," he said,
"for very likely there will be no other
period during which you will have as
mueh leisure as your first year in col
lege. ' '
Pr. Wilson showed that a person's
future depends largely on his being well
read, and that in view of the fact the
University has spent more money on it3
library than on its teachers.
In order to make clear to the new
men the relation oetween me uurarv
and the students, ur. Wilson gave a
brief summarv of the rules and regu
lations, emphasizing especially the im
portance of strictly observing them.
A Geology Club Is
Formed At Smoker
The Pennsylvania
This daily, of the University of
Pennsylvania, is a new one on the Tar
Heel's exchange list, and is among the
best. Other dailies of the exchange list
are: McGill Daily, Montreal, Canada;
the University Daily Kansanj'the Daily
Palo Alto of Stanford University, Cali
fornia; The Purdue Exponent of Pur
due University, LaFayette, Ind.; The
Harvard Crimson, and the Tech of M.
and T.
The Daily Kansan
We have never been to Kansas and
consequently are not familiar with local
names, but there is one name that is
daily repeated in the Kansan that has
hawked us for the last two years, and
that is the name "Javhawk." For
nsi ar.ee, the football team is called
"The Jayhawks," the University an
nual is "The Jayhawker," etc. Now,
we know what a "jay" is and also a
hawk, but what in tarnation is a "Jay-hawk"?
A Geology Club was formed at a
smoker given by the Order of the Nau
tilas to students and faculty of the De
partment of Geology last week. The
smoker was given in honor of the new
men. The company was highly enter
tained by 1 rofessor Collier Cobb, who
spoke at length from his varied expert
ences in many lands.
The purpose of the newly formed
club is to discuss problems of geology
of current interest. The meetings of
the club will be held fortnightly. Every
student of geology is eligible.
Congratulations of the department
were extended to Carl H. Walker, a
graduate of the class of 1920 and at
present a teaching fellow in geology,
on the recent arrival of a daughter.
Regret was expressed for the absence
j of Dr. Prouty, who had been summoned
to Vermont by a death in his family.
With fourteen men now studying for
a B. S. in Geology and as many more
majoring in geology, the department,
has by far the largest registration of
its history. The University now turns
out more graduates m geology than
such a university as CorneU, and usu
ally places more men in geologic posi
tions than does any other school in the
United States, with but one possible
exception.
v-ja : :
ARE YOU!!
Too late for breakfast?
Too late for class?
Too late for chapel?
Too late for first "Pick"?
Too late for the jitney?
TOO LATE FOR THE LAUNDRY COLLECTOR
means you are
Sure Out of Luck
HAVE YOUR LAUNDRY READY ON TIME
LAUNDRY DEPARTMENT
University of North Carolina -
liliitiMliii
OYSTER
STEW
A bowl of oyster stew is
made of fresh oysters,
pure milk, and butter.
Served with dainty oyster
crackers, in the White
House way, it makes a
very appetizing dish.
The Purdue Exponent
Lafayette, Indiana, and Purdue Uni
versity are a good long distance from
here, but judging by the daily paper
that they put out over there they either
have a much larger student body than
we think they have, or they must have
some push and pep behind their stu
dent activities. The Exponent is a pa
per that we are going to enjoy through
out the year.
MISS CUTLAR GETS
LEDOUX FELLOWSHIP
Miss Lillie Cutlar, of the senior class,
has been made Ledoux Fellow in Chem
istry. This is a double honor, first be
cause Miss Cutlar is the first member
of the fair sex ever to receive this fel
lowship, and also because she is a sen
ior, and this distinction usually goes to
a post-graduate.
TRY ONE
at
THE
White House
Cafe
"Feeds You Better"
miiimii
K
ft
fs
f V
i
We Carry a Full Up-to-Date Line
OF
STATIONERY - - MEMORANDUM BOOKS
LOOSE-LEAF BOOKS - - NEW FICTION - - OFFICE SUPPLIES, Etc.
IT WILL PAY TO PAY US A VISIT
GREEN y POTEAT
DURHAM, N. C.
F. H. GREEN : : : Underwood Typewriter Representative
Chapel Hill Hardware Company
EVERYTHING IN
HIGH CLASS CUTLERY, OIL COOK STOVES
HOUSEHOLD UTENSILS, TOOLS
And Other Items You Will Be Interested In
CALL ON US PHONE 14 1
STANDARD MERCHANDISE
At Reliable Prices
R AWLS-KNIGHT COMPANY
DURHAM, N. C.
University Gonf cctioncry
ALL KINDS OF ICE CREAM SOFT DRINKS
ROASTED PEANUTS ALL KINDS CAKES
CANDY, FRUITS, CIGARETTES AND TOBACCO
COME AND SEE ME
Opposite Pickwick
C. C. ROTH
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
CIS
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
m
COME IN AND LOOK OVER OUR LARGE LINE OF
SHOES
We Can Suit Your Taste as Well as Your Pocket-Book
We have the shoes for grandpa,
And for the little ones;
And just the things for Father
And his college sons.
We've got them for the farmer,
Great service then some more;
The kind that keep your feet dry,
The kind our Army wore.
Our prices are the grandest
Just fit your pocket-books;
And then you get the value
In Quality and Looks.
ELECTRIC SHOE SHOP
(Next to Patterson's Drug Store)
CHAPEL HILL, N. C.
Phone 212 w. O. LACOCK, Prop.
HSSHBSiffiiSBHSlHSHSHBiBS
m
m
m
:: WHEN YOU VISIT DURHAM '$
;t; BE SURE TO EAT AT $
I hP Mhnniv C n P a ::
Phoenix Cafe
Durham Headquarters for Carolina Students
WHEN IN DURHAM
EAT AT
Stop
UNQUESTIONABLY
IT FEEDS YOU BETTER
Distributors of
DURABLE DURHAM HOSIERY
Sold by
THE BOOK EXCHANGE
We Take Subscriptions For
ALL LEADING NEWSPAPERS,
MAGAZINES AND PERIODICALS
Our Catalog Mailed 011 Request
CIGARS andCIGARETTES
While in Durham leave your baggage
with us free f charge.
CITY NEWS CO.
LEVY BROTHERS
Opposite Courthouse Durham, N. C.
; On account of the death of ;;
; Long Bill Jones, it is necessary
for us to collect all bills due us. $
! Kindly call and pay what you '-.
owe. J
'; Anyone having any bills against
Long Bill Jones will please send ijl
same to us. V
ilttt LONG BILL PRESSING CLUB?
'$ TO OUR CUSTOMERS: :
;; We thank you for your past !
J patronage and hope that you will J
V continue to patronize us. ::
Are You Short of Money?
READ WHAT
GUY HARRIS SAYS
about making money selling
SIMPSON Tailor-Mnde Clothes:
"I worked my way through
school selling Simpson suits and
overcoats.
' ' Last spring I found myself in
a position of being compelled to
earn extra money to pay my ex
penses or leave school. Through
the employment manager at school
I learned of J. B. Simpson, Inc.,
and succeeded in making a con
nection with them. Although I
had never in my life before sold
a suit or overcoat, I have earned
an average of $37 per week by
using my spare time to take or
ders for Simpson suits and over
coats. "I did not depend only on the
college students, but each after
noon I went out and called on
from 10 to 30 men. As Simpson
values are exceptionally good and
I could save the men from $10 to
$20 on every suit or overcoat, I
nearly always succeeded in get
ting from one to live orders a day.
The oportmiity to do this work
was a God-send to me and 1 can
think of no better way to meet
expenses than by getting the
ngency for Simpson clothes. The
firm is 100 on the level a big.
reliable, honest institution and I
cannot speak too highly of them.
This season I will do even better,
as I have several hundred satis
fied customers whom I can resell.
"GUY C. HARRIS."
If you are looking for a means
of making money you can find no
better or more profitable way
than by making application for
the Simpson agency at your col
lego. All our suits and overcoats
are made from virgin wool fab
rics tailored to order and sold
for the flat price of $29.50. In
fit, style ami quality, they are
equal or superior to the averago
garments retailed at $50. We are
one of the largest tailoring or
ganizations in the United States
and stand back of every garment
with an honest guarantee of ab
solute satisfaction. If you are
working your way through school
write us.
Please address your letter
Attention of Sales Manager
J. B. SIMPSON, Inc.
831-843 W. Adams St., Chicago.
Dept. 324
yft........A........AAAM
EVERYBODY IN CHAPEL HILL IS DOING IT x DOING WHAT ?
EATING BLUE RIBBON ICE CREAM
DURHAM ICE CREAM COMPANY