Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 23, 1928, edition 1 / Page 4
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Advertise in the TAR HEEL. FLOOR WAXING DONE j - Let ' experienced students do your floor waxing with electrical equipment. Reason able rates. Telephone 4681. Art should be preserved! f v:. V 7 Don't waste aesthetic effort on the kind of slicker that won't last. Use v a genuine Tower's Fish Brand Slicker a background worthy of your masterpiece. Fish Brand Slickers are not only tetter looking they stay that way. They're built to take any sort of beating you or the weather can give them. The "Varsity" model is a big; handsome, roomy coat, full-lined. It has a corduroy-faced, collar, with or without a strap. Buttons or" buckles as - you. choose, and the patented "Reflex" edge that keeps water out of the front. The pockets are wide and deep and rip-proof. Your choice of colors. Best of all, a Fish Brand Slicker "The Rainy Day Pal" costs not bit more than others. And you Can buy it anywhere. A. J. Tower Company, Boston, Mass. NOTICE All students who have made their appointments with the Yackety Yack photographer for this week and the following weeks, be sure to keep them. In case you happen to break your appointment, a new one will have to be made and the cost of 50c will be added. n BUSINESS MANAGER Greensboro Hi Wins Cup It has just been announced by the Extension Division of the University that the Thomas Hume Cup, awarded for excellence in high school journal ism, has been won by the Greensboro High Shool f or the year 1927-1928. The publication is High Life. Their magazine, Homespun, also took first place in the magazine contest. The Hume Cup, donated by Univer sity of North Carolina alumni, is given in honor of the late Dr. Thomas Hume, who for a number of years was head of the University's English De partment. This is the fourth year that Greensboro High School has won the newspaper trophy and the third year that it has won the magazine contest. The Hume Cup was not do nated untiLthe school year 1926-1927, however. . Professor Oscar J. Coffin, of the school of journalism, and Dean Ad dison Hibbard, of the College of Libe ral Arts, acted as the judges for the contests. - Greensboro, Durham, Asheville, Wilmington, Goldsboro, and Albe marl entered newspapers in the news paper contests while only Greensboro and Asheville entered magazines. '' Scoience added six years to our lives and then gave us the auto and the plane. -Atlanta Constitution. Jack Lipxnan Moves r Into New Quarters Jack- Lipman, genial proprietor of Jack - Lipman's University Shop, has announced a sort of "At Home Par ty" this weelv with every student in vited as his guest, .the occasion being the celebration of his long anticipat ed moving into larger quarters. Mr." Lipman has taken over the old Pender" location between - Foist- er's and Gooch's cafe and complete ly refitted and equipped it to meet the expansion which his 'five years in business" here have produced in his shop. ' The owner made a week's trip North last week and put in a com plete new line of suits, topcoats and furnishings, to carry a much larger stock than was ever possible in his old cramped quarters next to the "Pick." '. - - - - : With a new and larger stock and adequate room Mr. Lipman believes he will be able tcfitake the proper care of the business he has built up with students. AT THE CAROLINA i foremost authorities in the country on financial trends and policies in public education. t " . , The 25 college presidents who have already made reservations for the Conference are: H. T. Hunter, Cul lowhee State Normal -. School ; .? Ray mond Binford, Guilford College; Howard Rondthaler, Salem .College; R. E. Blackwell, Randolph Maoon College; Julian A. Burruss, Virginia Polytechnic Institute ; W. A. Harper, Elon College; E. W. Sikes, Clemson College ; Robt. P. PeUV Converse Col lege; Wm.-J. Martin, Davidson Col lege ; Edwin A. Alderman, University of Virginia; ; D. M. Douglas, Univer sity of South Carolina; J. N. Hill man, Emory and Henry College; C. C. Sherrod, East Tennessee j? State Teachers College; M. L. Brittain, Georgia School of Technology; Wm. H. Frazer, Queens , College; R. C. Cranberry, Limestone College; E. C. Brooks, North ; Carolina State Col lege; Ernest L. Stockton, Cumberland University; C O. Gray, Tusculum Col lege; Leroy F. Jackson, Carolina New College ; John E. Calf ee, Asheville Normal and x Associated Schools; V. C. Kays, A. and M. College; F. P. Wake Forest College: Mrs. J. H. McCoy, Athens College for Young Women; and Dr..,B. M. Walker, Miss issippi A. arid-M. College. . State Superintendents of Public Schools who have signified their- in tentions of being present are: D. L. Harned, State Department of Tl. Tidwell. ZjUUCiiLlUil, A caucosvv , , ... Department vof Education, Alabama; Harris Hart, Superintendent ot , fuo lie Instruction, Virginia; A. T. Allen, State Superintendent of Public In struction, North Carolina. Governor Flem D. Sampson of Ken tucky will, be present arid, possibly Cut This Out and Save It! WANTED Salesmen. For anon tion work. Teachers or college t j men preierrea. commission auu bonus, also guaranteed salary. All-year work. Men with cars preferred. Address XYZ, care Tar Heel. governors from other Southern States. '- . . ;.--"':.V DR. R. R- CLARK Dentist Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 6251 COMING THURSDAY-FRIDAY The most talked about ' picture of the year! . "STEEET ANGEL" CAROLINA THEATRE WEDNESDAY ', Can a Man Ever Jf orgive His wiie s ' Ui." Past, really? . .on 6 Wf WW NOW SHOWING VICTOR McLAGLEN ' in "The River Pirate" . Added COMEDY NOVELTY r i NOW you can peer behind ' the scenes of America's fast set! Luxury and beauty, -jewels and clothes parade on the screen in a drama of scions of wealth. ' JOAN CRAWFORD in "OUR DANCING DAUGHTERS" Addei , Tuxedo Comedy " "Blondes Beware" THUR.-FRI. "Street Angel" MIDNIGHT SHOW FRIDAY, OCTOBER 26th Another outstanding picture will be presented in Chapel Hill when Street Angel is shown at the Carolina Thurs day and Fridav. Aside from the un- usually fine acting of the principals, Janet XJaynor and Charles Farrel, the picture is remarkable for the beauti ful pictorial effects achieved. Entire ly new camera ideas were used to get the artistic . waterfront and Italian street life, scenes. These sequences are considered among the finest yet ! produced by the movie camera. Mordaunt Hall, film critic of the New York Times, devoted a good part of his enthusiastic review to the scenic effects of the film. "It is evi dent," he says, "that an, unusually careful effort has been made to re produce the atmosphere of a wretched section of Naples, but with all its squalor, dingy structures, its red-lip ped wantons, its chilling mists, there is a definite charm about the lighting and shading of the scenes, the rhy thm of the movement, the appealing! beauty of Janet Gaynor and the naturalness of Charles Farrell. "The old-fashioned structures by the dismal waterfront convey a suggest tion of! a Whistler canvas. The thin and bent iron railing over the worn 1 steps is assuredly something far more interesting to look at than a - new bronze railing outside a modern man sion. ;?he first might move a com poser or a painter to do fine work, while the ..latter, might only inspire a new jazz tune or a cover for an up- to-date magazine." 1 It is this attention to artistic "de tail on the part of the director, Frank Borzage, that makes Street Angel one of the most beautiful and noteworthy pictures of the year. Have you ever tried asking your friends ? s3 ' ' I.- ' SS .- Any man who wears John Wards will tell the same story. The leathers in John Wards are choicer, wear hetter. The fit and work manship are more expert. They have more style ap peal to men of the better class. The prices? $7 and $9. me 1 t 7 X ivs-SKoes Stores in New York 'Brooklyn Newark and Philadelphia On display at . Stetson "D" Shop Kluttz Bldg. Chapel Hill, N. C. What's Happening TODAY 7:15 p. m. All Y Cabinet Meetings. Y Building. 7:15 p. m. Phi and Di Literary So cieties. 9:00 p. m. Republican Club, Saunders Hall. 7:45 p. m. Rev. J. Clyde Turner will' Speak, Baptist Church. - WEDNESDAY 7:15 Julius H. Harden will speak in Gerrard Hall. s 7:00 p. m. Phillips . Hall. Moving pictures. 8:300 p. m. Memorial Hall Concert by the Littje' Symphony Orchestra. The University cross-country teams have not lost a dual meet since 1922, 1 but the Tar Heels find themselves hard pressed this fall. The coaches must find men to replace' such run7 ners as Captain Galen Elliott and Hoyt Pritchett, All-Conference stars who graduated last June. Johnnie Henderson, lanky captain of both track and cross-country, is one big l bet for individual honors this. fall. i . . . . . Many Leaders Expected To Attend Education Meet Here A I')-,' " IF'? ' . - V fir . J, A good shoe to N ash for by name HORSEGUARDS r (Continued frora. page one) t quet at the Carolina Inn, at which the principal addresses will be made i by Dr. Douglas Freeman, editor of the News Leader of Richmond, Va., and by President Chase of the Uni versity. ' . ' . , . V ' Friday's sessions will be devoted to the general question of the relation of the public schools and colleges, and orf Saturday the conference will take up the question of financing pub lic school systems. Among the , prominent speakers who will-speak at the sessions are President Lotus D. Coffman of the University- of Minnesota; Superin tendent Frank D. Boynton of Ithaca, New York, who is President of the Department of . Superintendence of the National Education Association r and Dr. George D. Strayer, of Teach ers College, Columbia University, i generally regarded as one of the What Shakespeare s ays about Coca -Cola A ff sw' ftfei :PKI 1 Delicious and Refreshing v i . v t m '. & & mm .1 1 f -CN 3 ' KIM) HAMLET Act III. Soeoa l ''The glass of fashion and the mould of form, the observed of all observers" Maybe Shakespeare never knew Coca-Cola. . But he couldn't have written better about it if he had tried-. 8 million a day Coca-Cola has made the soda fountain the meeting place of millions, - , The Coca-Cola Cootpaaf, Atlaata. G; IT HAD TO B E GOOD TO GET W H ERE IT I S 0 IHIeipe's some "SMie klhaffi" im smokiinj Somewhere in the neighborliood of your center of gravity there's a spot devoted to smoke appreciation. We could describe -it more fully, but this is no organ recital. The point is: Light a Camel, pull in a fragrant cloud of cool joy and listen to your smoke-spot sing out "Haleelooya!" As the'noHe redskin puts it we have laid! U. J. UEYMOLDS TOBACCO COIIPAKT. 71 ., . n :S .1 . m . 'c!
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1928, edition 1
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