A Classified Ad'Taker Will Relieve Your Yorries. Come by 204 Graham Memorial Between2:00 and4:30 P.fil. Taft (Continued from, ftrtl page) New Deal today differs from the one in power during the first four years of President Roosevelt's administra- tion. He explained that emergency measures, such as the NRA and the AAA, had to be passed; humanitarian measures had to be taken; better housing was necessary; and that busi ness improved in 1936. He was quick to add, however, that the New Deal in 1937 took' on a revolutionary program and adopted the theory-of a planned economy. "The government thought it could do everything better than everyone else. The President thought that he could get out the pump and prime the tirtmlo nation. Reerulatorv measures for complete government running of j the economic set-up were passed in Congress, and the planned economy carrier on." As the solution to the problem, the Ohio presidential hopeful said, 4rWe have to increase private industry out put. You can't put all of our unem ployed to work under the government. Past figures show that thiscannot be done. Today there are wide fields for business development, especially in the South. . "We must have the free dom of every, man to make his own success in the. world. A freedom of enterprise, in which the government takes measures against all monopolies, is the only form of government we can carry on. Swimming: Continued irom page three) re- olina mark of :27.8 to :27.2. He peated in the 100, as soon as the div ing was over, and tied his own mark of 1:03.1. Bill Peters was second. Bill Dickey, Duke's AAU champion, and George Coxhead staged the clos est diving contest yet seen here, both receiving the same total scores on their ten dives. Dickey was the win ner, according to the rule awarding first place to the diver with the high est score on the five required dives the actual count was 105.5 points to 101.3 on these first dives. When Duke's' coach elected to save Emmett for the 400 by keeping him out of the backstroke; George Meyer and Louis Scheinman romped home easily in close first and second posi tions. their times not being more than a second slower than1 " " the' ' present school mark. Moise won the breast- stroke, Drucker took second for Car lninn. and Johnson was third for the Devils, but despite Duke's ad vantage in this race the Tar Heels . ... . -a . gamed the points needed to cinch tne meet. The count was then 40-19. Emmett took the 400,' but only fter a hard sprint on the last length He went out fast, trailed closely by Jim Barclay, and when the anchor length began the Tar Heel sophomore wa's only three feet behind. They sprinted out the last 50, and' Em mett won. Billy Stone, always in a position to advance should the pace setters fold up, was third. Carolina's closing shot was in the free style relay, with Mitchell, Lees, Mueller and Fleming Stone racing home in 4:25.7 for a new school mark they were 85 feet in front of the Duke anchor man. PICK THEATRE NOW PLAYING 0 TO SAVE J&i MEN'S Wpm lives Also CARTOON NOVELTY Intramurals iContinued from page three) Miller of "K" tied for third with 71. Phillips came fifth with 70. Burger of K got 68. Shytle of Everett and Zuckerman of "K" tied with 67, while Smith of "H" followed them with 63. Carter racked up 62 for "H" while Quimby of "H" and Gaylord of Manly tied for the next spot with 60 and Moore of "K" finished it with 59. PHI DELTS IN HANDBALL Phi Delta Theta took its second con secutive fraternity handball champion ship yesterday afternoon as it trimmed ATO by a 2-1 score. Anthony and Saunders put the losers out in front by a 1-0 score by defeating Rice and Gragg by 21-10 and 21-11 scores. Powers and Stratton tied things up for the winners by taking the next match from Diffendal and Thompson in three games by 21-10, 16-21 and 21-6 scores. In the concluding and breath taking' final Williford and Adams gave the defending champs their second stright title by winning over Smith and Burgwyn in three games 21-10, 21-23 and 21-13. Swimming Summary Carolina 51, Duke 24. 300-meter medley relay Carolina (Scheinman, Drucker, Mueller) first. Time 3:52.6. 200-meter free style Emmett (D) first; B. Stone (C) second; Mitchell (C) third. Time 2:29.0. 50-meter free style F. Stone (C) , first; Lees (C) second; Read (D) third. Time :27.2. (New Carolina record). Diving Dickey (D) first; Cox head (C) second; Ross (C) third. (First place awarded after tie on ten dives to diver with more points on five required dives). 100-meter free style F. Stone (C) first; Peters (C) second; Jen kins (D) third. Time 1:03.1. (Ties Carolina record). 150-meter backstroke Meyer (C) first; Scheinman (C) second; Shepard (D) third. Time 2:7.5. 200-meter breaststroke Moise (D) first; Drucker (C) second; Johnson (D) third. Time 3:05.3. 400-meter free style Emmett (D) first; Barclay (C) second; B. Stone (C) third. Time 5:33.2. 400-meter free style relay Caro lina (Mitchell, Lees, Mueller, F. Stone) first. Time 1:25.7. (New Carolina record). Phantoms Beat Duke Continued from page three) away in a feeling of great generosity which included the gift of the game and almost Wcollen gym. There was no second half blow-up this trip around. The only thing Duke got was more of Glamack. Cy Valasek opened the period with a field goal. Glamack hooked a left-hander in a mo ment later after he dribled down the length of the court and away from several befuddled Duke defenders. Holley pulled the Blue Devils back to within a point of the Phantoms with an under-the-basket try. Glamack took a pass from Rose and added a foul. Duke came to life at this point and moved into the lead chiefly on the impetus of Bill Mock, -its sophomore wonder boy and high scorer. Mock made two field goals and a foul and pushed his club in front, 17-16. Clyde Allen tapped another two- pointer home and the Blue Devils went in front by three points. There was great fear of the Carolina blow-up but the only explosion recorded in the Duke gym was Mr. Glamack. He pushed in one pivot shot, cutting the Blue Devil lead down to one point. Another one and the Phantoms were back in front. Very befuddled about the entire sit uation, Duke took time out. Maybe they discussed ways and means of stop ping Glamack. If they did it was all very futile. George picked up two field goals as soon as time was re sumed: one special back -flip and one tap in of a rebound. Duke took time out again and held another Iengthly conference. George supplied the answer on how to stop himself by fouling out two min utes after the Dukes had caught their breath. The Phantom margin was three points. There was still time for the blow-up. Ben Dilworth came in at center for Glamack and held the team together. Without Glamack, the Phantoms played a waiting game the last five minutes of play. They passed the ball and shot only when there was an opening and were very cautious about the entire situation, which con sidering the first Duke game, was a very commendable policy. Rose, Severin and Pessar pushed in field goals after Glamack left to hold the Carolina advantage. Severin moved it up to eight points with a foul shot with less than a minute-and-a half left. After that the game was safe although Duke threw in two field goals in the last 30 seconds of play. But by that time Carolina was making plans for the tournament that begins next Thursday, Duke was wondering why Glamack, and the spectators were making hasty moves towards the exits. The win insured Carolina would .enter the tournament seeded second to ; Duke. ... It was the first defeat Duke ! suffered in its new gym all season. News Briefs (Continued from first page) come at $63,500,000,000, a gain of $4,300,000,000 or seven per cent over 1933; the figure is $14,0004)00 less than in 1929 and $3,000,000,000 more than in 1937. MOSCOW Red army takes two de fensive fortifications on Karelian isthmus. WASHINGTON Senator Pat Mc Carran of Nevada joins ranks of Democrats seeking third term declara tion by President Roosevelt; Ernest T. Weir, steel magnate and arch foe of New Deal labor policy, appoj chief fond-raiser for the GOP niiU committee. MADRID Government relej. last eight American prisoners 0f including Harold Dahl who down behind the Nationalist line wfc flying for the Loyalists in the war. CLASSIFIED FOR RENT Single room with ?r. vate entrance and bath. Bars Harkins, 404 Hillsboro. Phone 33j O- Thousands Xv nun"" vsu M -Hr - - . ft of the Great Motion Pictures Of All Time! V THE BOOK EXCHANGE "Center of Student Service" Textbooks: New and used for every course Textbooks: Bought, sold, and exchanged School Supplies: All school supplies neces sary for classroom work and home study y Fountain Service: Complete fountain serv- ice HOURS from 8 A.M. to 10:30 P.M. except Sat. & Sun. Sat. from 8 to 5 :3Q closed Sundays f Miriam colmah L I w....- i Lrf i. kiing-s L that Med ' It CIsam Urn lawin 4? -i MurttlA9!vt trwtt Cwrt ,1: f Also TODAY Pete Smith Novelty CAROLINA Q If you are going to buy a car it will pay you to TREATS) USES 1939 Buick Century Sedan..... y2 Price 1937 Buick Coach (Special), Packard Sedan, Lincoln Zephyr Sedan, all with radios; your Also 1937 and 1936 Chevrolets, and Ford Cars from 1938 down. 1935 Plymouth Sedan . . . $195 A 1927 Chevrolet Covered Wagon type, run less than 17,000 miles: a real FUN transportation. Strowd Motor Co. Ford, Esso, Goodyear Since 1914 HERE'S ROY CONACHER (No. 9), HIGH-SCORING FORWARD OF THE BOSTON BRUINS, WORLD CHAMPIONS of'3S... IN THIS ACTION SHOT he's come in like a bullet from an express rifle... be takes a pass. But tb opposition's defense stops him this time. AGAIN a furious flash of speed.. .a split-second of stick magic... and die puck shoots home for the goal that wins the match. His hockey's fast and hot! BUT HE SMOKES A SLOW BURNING CIGARETTE FOR MORE MILDNESS, COOLNESS, AND FLAVOR 'QPEED'S fine in hockey but not in cigarettes" Roy, O how right you are! Research men may use fancier language but they say exactly the same thing about cigarettes. Scientists know that nothing destroys a cigarette's delicate elements of fragrance and flavor so merci lessly as excess beat. And cigarettes that burn fast also burn hot. Your own taste tells you that. Slow-burning cigarettes don't burn away these precious natural elements of flavor and fragrance. They're milder, mellower, and naturally cooler! And the slowest-burning cigarette of the 16 larg , est-selling brands' tested vas Camel! They burned 25 slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested. ( See panel below, right.) So... why not enjoy Camel's extra mildness,. cool ness, fragrance, and flavor?... And extra smoking equal to 5 extra smokes per pack. BUT NOT IN CIGARETTES, S fjlf -v lP? f LIKE SLOW-BURNING J ftAf Wbm it's easy-chair time after that rough-and- tumble melee known as a hockey match, you'll find Roy Conacber "J woter, morejragranr, anapavorful cigarette... Camels, of , course. FOR MILETNESS, COOLNESS, AND FLAVOR SLOW-BURNING COSTLIER TOBACCOS In recent "laboratory tests, CAMELS burned 25 slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest -selling brands tested slower than any of them. That means, on the average, a smoking plus equal to v CapTrtght. 194fl. B. J. p .yncidj Tobacco Company, 5 EXTRA SMOKES PER PACK! Wlnatoa-Salem. North Carolina

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