the TAR HEEL Andrew; H. Patterson. Praise ; ,-. , ' iy Fellow Members; Of .-. Faeoliy Faculty Adepts Resolutions Lauding Late Dean of Applied Science School. ' TAR HEELS AND DEACONS TO PLAY OPENING. GAME The late Dean Andrew Henry Pat terson's unselfish devotion: to many agencies of University life were lauded in memorial resolutions just adopted by the faculty. The memorial, which was drawn up by a faculty committee composed of Profs. Charles S. Mangum, Walter D. Toy, and G. M, Braune, told of Dr. Patterson's steady rise in the world of science, leading to the dean ship of the School of Applied Sci ence, of the University Jin 1911, and then continues as follows: "Dean Patterson was deeply inter ested in many phases of University life. Tp his own department of study - he gavehis best thought but he also responded heartily to the demands made upon him for service in other agencies of University life, such as the important Committee on Athletics, the Executive Committee, and many others. , ' ' . - "So he was thoroughly identified with the life of this institution, to which, as a faithful son andr efficient officer, he devoted the best efforts of his life. " "His unfailing courtesy and his zeal for helpful service will be gratefully remembered by the large number of students who came under his influ ence, and by his colleagues in the fac ulty. " . I .; "if "Upon this University he has left the stamp of his personality a rare combination of intellectual ability, of zeal and energy in helpful activity, and of rich human sympathy. "We honor his memory and while we feel deeply our own loss we re spectfully offer to those upon whom this loss fall most heavily our pro found sympathy." ' - GLEE CLUB HOLDS SUCCESSFUL ,' - TEST ' Continued from page one) folk songs and spirituals which fur nishes variety to the program. ; Much of the Glee Club's success has been due to the tireless efforts of the director, Professor Paul Jones Weaver, and with his original ar rangement of some of the music, the - best qualities of every song has been brought out. During - the spring tour last year, the Glee Club sang in a contest in Richmond between the University of Richmond, the Uni versity of Virginia, -Washington and Lee, and William and Mary College, and won first place, the prize being a huge silver loving cup. ' ECONOMIC, CIVIC, AND SOCIAL LIFE STUDIED BY CLUB - (Continued on page four) fore "Some Problems in Democracy". This year the central theme will be "Country Life in, North Carolina," A tentative list of the separate papers each of which will appear later as a chapter in the yearbook, follows: The Geographic Advantages of North Carolina. Production of Agricultural Wealth. Farm Tenancy. The Economic Condition of North Carolina Farmers. Agencies of Economic Improvement. What Good Highways Mean to Country People. , The. Marketing Problem. The Improvement of Farm Homes, A New Day in Rural Education. The Social Life of County Folk. .What North Carolina is Doing for Public Health. " Public Welfare or Rural Social Engineering. i ' TheCountry Church in North Caro t lina. The Country Town as a Service Center. Taxation and County Government; The Quality of North Carolina Citizenship. In" a state which is seventy percent rural it is apparent, that our ulti mate level of prosperity and culture will be measured to a great extent by the type of rural civilization which .we are able to produce. Rural social institutions are undergoing a rapid change. What rural North Carolina is to be twenty years from now is largely within our control. The present generation of unversity students! may indeed become commonwealth builders. Monday night at 7:30 in 112 Saun ders Hall the North Carolina Club will re-organize for the current year, elect officers and outline the year's program. Ail students who want to keep abreast with the economic and civic life of the state and particularly mose wr.o are interested in seeing a rich and satisfying country civiliza tion produced on the soil of North Carolina are invited to attend the North Carolina Club. All meetings are limited to one hour. Remember the first meeting is Monday night at ".OA ' (Continued from page one) again, but all of them are imbued with the same determination to win, and all of them have absorbed some of the intense rivalry that has grown with leaps and bounds since. "Flash" Greasom broke for the first time the long line of Carolina victories over the Wake Forest, aggregation. Whether youngster or vetran this game will mean a whole lot to the players. In fact, the game has come to mean so much that the annual meeting of the two teams attracts more attention than any other early season game in this state. For four weeks the two teams have been practicing for this game. For four weeks the two coaches, both gra duates of the same institutions, but schooled in different types of foot ball, that is slightly different, for when Stanly Coif all was playing Knute Rockne was assistant coach but -when - "Chuck" Collins caught passes for Notre Dame the now fa mous Rockne was milling ont cham pions. s Today, the results of ' .those four weeks, of tutoring will be ex hibited. Today , the coaches will an nounce for the first time just what players will start. Even the ten tative line-up may be shifted and some newcomer injected into the starting teams at the, last moment. Both coaches have been more or less silent up to the present but they expect to roar out their statements this after noon or, as the case may be, to more or-less whisper .them. Practically every football follower in North Caro lina has been waiting to hear what Coach Colfall and Coach Collins have to say to each other, via the best eleven men on their respective squads, mi . Tfc . . i i ne ueacons nave engaged in secret practice during the past week and are likely to-bring a bag of tricks to the Stadium; but it will be unusual for a team to start off on a bunch of trick stuff this early. -However, the unusual has been the habit of Wake Forest teams during the past few years. Coach Coif all's starting eleven isn't at all certain. But ac cording to reports emanating form the Deacon training Camp, the Bap tist's mentor is planning to use a bunch of sophomores. Coach Colfall has some very promising second year students to use and the youngsters have been giving the vetrans a run for their positions. It may be that a majority of those starting against the Heels will be playing collegiate football for the first time. Only two vetrans are sure of their positions, these are Captain Hal Weir, varsity guard on the Deacon machines for two years and tackle this fall, and, Charlie Connally, fullback. Johnny Cox, the boy who picked up a Tar Heel fumble last fall and sprinted seventy yards to give the Deacons their fourth straight victory over the Heels is not so sure of starting against the team he beat - last September 24th. The fleet half back is getting stiff com petition from Mills Benton, and Hoard. In case Cox gets the call against the Heels, one of the latter three will start at the other half back position. Rounding out the backfield with the above . mentioned Man seventy-three years old who tried to coerce Raskob out of $100,000 evidently was one of those persons who never grow old enough to know bet ter. Raleigh Times. - will be Quillen, field general for the Baby Deacon eleven last fall. Hackney, a letter-man will probably watch the youngster hold his position during the game. - Just whom the former Lovola coach is .planning to use in the lina is a dark secret, but reports from the .Baptist headquarters indicate that the "Big Blue Line" will face a lot Of new faces when ihav li -j Uv UA JLVi the first time. "Parker, one of those numerous; outstanding sophs over at the Deacon's camp, will oppose Cap tain Harry Schwartz in the middle of the line. Phifer, former varsitv center for the Deacons, will be on the bench at the opening whistle. Den ton, Hicks, Grant and Levine, are the leading candidates for the guard po sitions, while either Cornwall. G son, or Woodward may pair up with Captain Weir at tackle. Colfall will select xis ends from Dorsett, a letter man, Hauser, Hongan, Burroughs, or Taylor. A. J. McTCpIvin !3nn.tn ttj:a- "ywiw JiUiLUr oi the Raleigh News and Observer, visited the Deacons Wednesday and his reports indicates' that the spec tators will not be the only enthusia stic individuals within the Stadium. The Tar Heel coaches have' been juggling the' men : around so much down on Emerson- Field Stadium that it's rather diffiu pick a starting line-up. Picking a line will not be so easy for Coach Col lins but the backfield should pre- enC xne reverse. There aren't so many consistent oerfor pro in V i Hi ullc line after several vetrans are elimi nated on account of injuries. First there is Ray Farris. all from the 1927 team, who has been playing tackle this filiating lineman was withheld from practice for several days, but is back m togs and will start, it , , " bacjvie against the -Deacons. Paired tn J Saturday, September 2D, 192S DR. R. R. CLARK Dentist Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 6251 Farris will be the vetran Nelson Howard. The big Tarboro boy has earned his monogram for two years and caA easily be classed as a vetran now. Of course. Captain Harry Schwartz-will hold down the 'pivot position, not that the coaches lack centers, but Schwartz is Schwartz. A youngster, Bob Blackwood, is due to be paired with Bud Shuler at the guard posts, while Sapp and DonHolt have been leading the candidates for the . wing positions since Sam Pres son has been injured. .. - Behind this forward wall, almost any combination of backs is likely to start. However, judging from prac tice sessions", Foard will start at full with House, a sophomore, in reserve, Ward and Spaulding will be at the half back positions, and Whisnant will general the team. With Whisnant at quarter, the backfied is a reminder of the freshman team of 1926 when the Ward, Spaulding, and Whisnant were playing together. Besides this set of backs there is Maus. NnsTv. Jachson, Gresham, and Michaels for the halves: House and Harden at full; and Gray; Erikson, and Wyrick for field generals, Jimmie Ward and "Yank" Spaulding are nice running backs besides being capable passers and pass receivers. Their experience earns them the call over the other half backs. . The ; new stadium should resound with cheers for both the Deacons and the Heels will have cheering sections. The Wake Forest students are turn ing out en masse for the contest, while there will be an organized cheering section of more than a thousa'nd" students backing' the Caro lina team, i All in all it should be a great game. n CIGARETTES 25c ALL BRANDS PER CARTON $1.19 Two Large Packages .... GUNTHER BREW 3 BOTTLES, 25c ? CANDY BARS AND GUM 3 FOR 10c I illl - ' - - .1 Prescription Specialist Since 1892 v ... " Eaton Crane and Pike Stationery Nunhally's Candy Service . Consideration i c When in Durham r meet me at the i n SILVER MOON CAFE QppofiteBus Station Durham, N. C. In personal equipment today, beauty and style give added zest to a sturdy and dependable utility. As a fine example of this modern trend, note these handsomely matched writing instruments. Of the Wahl-Eversharp Fountain Pen .. $3 to $10 it has been truly said, "money cannot buy a better writing pen." The pencil speaks for itself. It's the Wahl-Eversharp, which stands alone in its field. Priced from $2 to $6. These are examples of the many remark able values in the famous Wahl-Eversharp line. See your Wahl dealer today. r ?! iff i 0 IP lllililil!!! XJ3:J XT J o einiioF Frater nity iVlen and Others FJI? lliil! Pipe Convert Ends Agonizing Tobacco Hunt New York, N. Y. LarusfiBrc'Co. June80' 1926 . Richmond, Va. Gentlemen: I started smoking on cigarettes, but after meeting a young lady for whom men who smoked pipes had a greater charm, I promptly switched to one. Then my agony began. I tried one : brand of tobacco after another, al ways working on the theory that the more you paid for tobacco, the better -it would be. I tried imported special mixtures. I paid as much as fifty cents an ounce. All to no avail. Then came the day I tried Edge worth. It was at a ball game. I had run short of the certain brand I was smoking, and a casual acquaintance offered me a pipeful from his pouch. Imagine my delight when after the -first few puffs I did not feel the old ; familiar bite. I puffed on, inhaling the delightful aroma, and oh, boy! It was sweet right down to the bottom. m Nothing has separated me from my pipe, or my pipe from Edgeworth, since then. - Yours verv trnlv. (signed) David Freedman, Jr. RACKETY YAC! PHOT OGMPHER Will B e Here -Li. AL. II q .Ready To G O il Work ewor Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco UTTON DiRUG Ulahe AoMmes Early aad Avoid the JHuch .... . mmmJ 3 j Tv3 &s!i:..i.i.i..Si...iil:....ii:.s.ti.;..... ;!.:.i.Hi.Hrti ..Ji , ., ! 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