Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / June 7, 1921, edition 1 / Page 11
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THE TAR HEEL, JUNE 7, 1921. Page Seven i 1 S"! ft J. T. DURHAM AUTO COMPANY Good Cars With Careful Drivers Has Been Our Motto For Years. We Not Only Carry Students, Towns people and Faculty But We Become Their Friends. J. 1 DURHAM AUTO COMPANY Always At Your Service. GOOCH'S CAFE PLAN! Yl Durham Road Will Be Completed Next Fall. The Chapel Hill-Durham hard sur face highway will be completed by next Thanksgiving, in time for the great Thanksgiving football game. .Eight miles of the highway, the pavt I in Durham county, will be a Kentucky ' rock asphalt wearing surface with Chapel Hill is to have a modern a broken stone foundation, while the and fully equipped eating establish ment. Thus stated Mr. G. E. Gooch, pro prietor of the local cafe, in discuss ing plans for the coming year. I Damage Fee Will Not j Be Charged Next Year. Present Site to be Remodelled and Enlarged; Private Dining Rooms. part in Orange county over thfs re gaining four miles will bo Portland cement construction throughout. I The contractors for the concrete road in Orange county are Elliot The damage ee will be abolished for next year. This is an announcement just made known, and is a decision reached af ter a year's discussion by faculty and students. Too much damage has been occurring, and the University faced the need of either raisinir the old damage fee or abolishing the sys tem outright, and makin.r each stu dent responsible for his room. A conference with the campus cabinet and the student dormitory inspec tors was the immediate cause of this change. The damage fee has been in force since the administration of Gover nor Swain, and next year wiii ba the first year since mat time when no damage fee will be collected from the students upon registration. The Bank of Chapel Hill Oldest and Strongest Bank in Orange Co. Capital - - - $25,000.00 Surplus and Profits $50,000.00 Resources Over Half Million Dollars Upon the strength of the above state ment and the backing of our Directors we solicit your business, promising every accommodation consistent with sound banking. No account too small to receive our most careful attention. M. C. S. NOBLE, President, R. L. STROUD, Vice-President, M. E. HOGAN, Cashier. Plans are under consideration for Sholes Co., Durham, N. C. The price rebuilding on the site formerly occu- is $35,000 per mile, exclusive of pied by the cafe before it was de-' bridges. This is at the rate of $3.38 stroyed by fire last spring. A mod- :per square yard for the width of ern brick building is contemplated. ! roadway of 18 feet. A new rein-; The new cafe will be more than dou-' forced concrete bridge will replace ' ble the size of the present one. The the steel structure over Stroud's building will be completed by Sep tember if the project materializes, creek, one mile from town. Prof. T. F. Hickerson has accepted and th cafe fixtures wil lbe installed , position with the North Carolina and everything ready for business State Highway Commission for the . by the opening of college next fall. ! summer as chief engineer of a field j In case the erection of the new Party of six men who will be se building is deemed improbable at lected from the students in civil en-J this time, the present site will be gi'ieermg at me university. in remodelled and substantially enlarg-: first project to be surveyed is the ed. The cafe proper will be extend-! highway from Chapel Hill towards ed back so as to include the present . Pittsboro. kitchen, and an annex constructed i that will house the kitchen and store rooms. The counter will be extend- ed, and more tables will be provided, I CLASS OFFICERS FOR NEXT YEAR ELECTED The class officers of the profes sional and academic schools for next year are as follows: L. J. Phipps, president of the senior class; W. C. Murchisan, vice president, and J. S. Williamson, secretary-treasurer. The rising junior class elected Thomas Turner president, E. R. Shirley, vice president, and D. G. Downing, secretary-treasurer. The rising sopho more class elected John Ambler pres ident, Bernard Wright, vice presi dent, and Bretney Smith, secrtary treasurer. Elections for the law These improvements will be made be fore the opening of the summer ses sion. An interesting feature of the new cafe is that private dining rooms are to be provided. One of these will be sufficiently large to accommodate organizations who desire to give their feeds and banquets in a style some what more satisfactorily than is pos sible under the present conditions. The proposition of installing an automatic or cafeteria has been care fully considered by Mr. Gooch and . school resulted in the selection of local capitalists but it is not thought ! B. W. Blackwelder as president, F. that such plans will materialize for j L. Grier vice president, and R. Fra some time, as the volume of trade zier, secretary-treasurer. For the here is not sufficient to render one j pharmacy school, R. Burgess was a paying proposition. elected president; E. E. Moore, vice The equipment for the new cafe president ,and P. B. Davis, secretary has already been purchased and is ' treasurer. In the law school the fol at present in storage here. Mr. f lowing were honored with offices : Gooch stated that he has realized for f W. A. Rourk, president; T. E. Mitch some time that the present facili-, ell, vice president, and E. L. Kellum, ties were inadequate, and that he is secretary-treasurer, going to do his best to have open! and ready for the students and towns- lishment that will be second to none people by next fal lan eating estab- in the state. The School of Applied Science OF THE University of North Carolina Offers Degree Courses in CHEMISTRY GEOLOGY CIVIL and HIGHWAY ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING Also a Five-Year Course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Science in Medi cine, as well as courses in Sanitary Engi neering, Mechanical Engineering, and the branches of Mathematics, Physics, etc., leading to ARCHITECTURE. For information, address A. H. PATTERSON, Dean Chapel Hill, N. C. 233 R JO lmSm n-T TP A TVT jX, .: sis' ,XA,03 Vhsr -T n WHO CAN RESIST IT? The Most Tempting Desert, the Most Refreshing 'Tween-Meal Delicacy, the Most Refreshing Food for Everybody. AS SMOOTH AS SMOOTH CAN BE AND AS PURE AS SNOW. Waverly Fruit Flavors Are Extremely Popular Because They Contain All the Luscious Appetizing Natural Fruits. There's Nothing "JUST AS GOOD" Demand Waverly Our Motto: Service and Sanitation Waverly Ice Gream Company DURHAM, N. C. Plant Holland St, Opp. City Market. PHONE 178.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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June 7, 1921, edition 1
11
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