Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 12, 1922, edition 1 / Page 3
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December 12, 1922 THE TAR HEEL Page Three ke out the f&cts ll No better cigarette cam Mmade R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. t H For me f and it's a KODAK I've always wanted one." That's an expression, by the way, that we hear time and time again at this store particu larly around Christmas "I've always wanted a Kodak." It's the ideal gift and our stock is complete and up to the minute. Autographic Kodaks $6.50 up Brownies $2.00 up FOISTER'S ' Josephus Daniels Says- Be Sure To Put Your LAUNDRY SLIP in your BUNDLE before sending it to : : : The Laundry U.N. C. B The Flavor Lasts p. For anything electrical, see jjj . M. D. FOISTER :! Electrical Contractor :; Phone 234, Chapel Hill, N.C. PALM BRANCH REPLACES RED FLAG FOR MAGAZINE (Continued From Page One) It pays to advertise in the Tar Heel our readers know a good thing when they see it. READ THE ADS IT PAYS! Among the editorials we find "No Time for Culture," a venomous thrust into the vitals of the oncoming mater ialism of the South. We are advised to lay aside our material growth, en sconce ourselves in some shady nook, and "let the rest of the world go by." Nothing consrtuctive there. Also the editorial headed, '"Some Things Need ed Here" is strangely out of place in the setting occupied. In a very pater nal manner senior classes in the future are given some good advice on "how to be naughty and yet be nice;" in other words, they should incorporate and assist the State in its building pro gram. The. two other editorials strike a responsive note, "The Future of Art in the South" and "North Carolina as a Field for Creative Writing" are in full harmony with the contents. Among the contents, "Why Not Poetry Society for North Carolina?" is a well balanced pot pourri of opinion asking that we divert a small measure of our efforts from material growth and give more- to the literary upbuilding of the state. A poetry society is sug gested as a channel. "The Collegian and Culture," by Nell Battle Lewis, attempts to bury that happy expression that "College is the world in miniature," saying that college is the last chance station to grab on to that intangible something familiarly known as "the Carolina Spir it." The college world is said to grate but harshly with that outside world of bread and butter materialism, crass and rude. "The South in Art," by Dr. Archi bald Henderson, is characteristic of the writer. He goes to the heart of the South 's "Sahara" problem, and takes the reader there with him. Dr. Hen derson, striking a hopeful note, says that the South is fertile in literary abil ity and prosperous industrially, and suggests that the prosperity of one aid the budding fertility of the other. "The Physician" is a short story with a rather worn theme, but enter taining. A hermit dies in the Burke county mountains, leaving a writing de scriptive of his identity. The finder is none other than the "long lost son." "Sheiking the Muse in the Bozart' gives the Southern realist a black eye now and forever more. The Southern writer is advised to confine his abilities to weak-kneed serenading romanticism in preference to robust realism. "Archibald Henderson An Appreci ation" is an appropriate and interest ingly sketched sidelight on a well known personality. "A New Deal for Southern Litera ture" presents the need for greater critical appreciation, unbiased by sec tional prejudice, if the South would con struct a literary fabric worthy of the name. "A Southern Renaissance in Arts hopefully awaits the time when music as one of the beaux arts shall come into her own in the Southland, and even broadly hints that "jazz," the much abused, has a place in the future mu sical repertoire. "Carolina Folk Plays" is a review of the recent addition to Carolina's bibliography in the way of folk plays. and Asheville on Saturday will, it is believed, be well worth the seeing, not alone from the color and glamor that always attend the annual renewal of the state high school championship, but also from the fact that without doubt a corking good football game will be staged by the young athletes who are fighting for the honor of their schools. FROM THE TAR HEEL 25 YEARS AGO HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP WILL BE SETTLED ON SATURDAY - (Continued from page one) pionship, defeating Winston - Salem, western champions. Guy Phillips coached the Raleigh teams to victory, Marvin Ritch the Charlotte teams, Fred Morrison the Chapel Hill teams, and Robert 0. Burns the Fayettevilel team. The heavy Ashe ville team is handled by Coach Frye, who has developed a powerful football machine that has met no equal in its forward march to western honors. The New Bern team, handled by Bardin, Harrell and Hardy, has taken the meas ure of all its opponents this season and is a fast moving, quick thinking bunch of young football artists. The encounter between New Bern Mr. N. C. Long had an unpleasant adventure on the road from Durham last Wednesday night alone in a buggy. When about four miles this side of Dur has he was held up by three men. They got five dollars in money. Two of the men were white and the other was black. Mr. Long thinsk he could iden tify the men if he should see them again. "Mr. Cleophus Allen of the Univer sity will speak tonight on 'Christian ity' at the Court house at 7:30." The Greensboro Telegram. Of the four women now in the Uni versity, only one will graduate with the class of '98, iMss Sallie Stockard. She is an alumna of Guilford College, hav ing been graduated from that institu tion last June. Miss Stockard will be the first woman who has ever enjoyed the distinction of receiving a diploma from the University of North Carolina. She, like the other "co-eds," is taking 'a high stand in her classes. MiSs Stockard is a cousin of the poet, Henry Jerome Stockard. Why is it that the game of baskct- bal has never been introduced into the University? In the short time that it has been a claimant for popularity in the athletic world is has made wonder ful progress and has become a leader among the sports at some of our chief colleges and institutions. It is a game involving very small outlay of equip ment and furnishing splendid exercise. It gives excitement and interest enough to lead to the formation of not only class and college teams, but even state and interstate leagues. Colonel and Mrs. Charles Venable are visiting their son, Dr. F. P. Venable. Miss Pattie Lewis, of Raleigh, is on the Hill, the guest of her grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Battle. s S 1 : 1 I :: :: g 1 "I am very glad to see that your Com pany is building up a large life insur ance business. I was glad to take a policy in it, and am glad to commend it because I know that the principle upon which it is established is sound and that the men in charge of it have business ability of the highest order combined with integrity and honesty." SOUTHERN LIFE AND TRUSTCO. HOME OFFICE ::::::::: GREENSBORO, If. 0. A. W. McALlSTER, President ARTHUR WATT, Secretary ijj H. B. GUNTER, Vice-President and Agency Manager H sj? Capital $1,000,000 Insurance in Force $50,000,000 Is guaranteed to relieve Head ache, Neuralgia, LaGrippe, Ear ache, almost instantly. If it fails to relieve, your money will be refunded. IS 8 5i UNIVERSITY JEWELRY Rings, Pins, Seals and Other Novelties at ONE-THIRD OFF REGULAR PRICES cTWUSICAL INSTRUMENTS at ONE-THIRD OFF REGULAR PRICES UNIVERSITY and CLASS PENNANTS and PILLOWTOPS at ATTRACTIVE PRICES A. A. KLUTTZ CO. $ s :: I V i K s 57 :::orco:: :: thp. pt.app. Tn p.bt $ Gifts of Distinction Select your Christmas Gift for "Her" at the Priscilla Art Shop 420 West Main Street DURHAM, N. C. I Hi 1 '
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 12, 1922, edition 1
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