BOOK EXCHANGE STATEMENT IN THIS ISSUE Tit J J J BOOK EXCHANGE STATEMENT IN THIS ISSUE. Vol. No. XXX. Chapel Hill, N. C, Friday, March 3, 1922. No. 37 Carolina Quintet Wins Championship of South After Brilliant Play In Atlanta Tournament TI PAPERS READ BY MEMBERS BEFORE THE Savings Bank Accounts and Cooper ative Credit Unions Subjects of Paper Read. INTERESTING FACTS GIVEN Savings bank accounts and cooper ative credit unions, as agencies for overcoming home and farm tenancy, were discussed at a meeting of the North Carolina Club dn Phillips Hall Monday night by Mr. R. F. Marsh burn and Miss Bertha Austin, re spectively. The paper of Mr. Marshburn came first, showing some "interesting facts concerning wealth accumulation in the form of savings in North Caro lina and the United States as a whole. During the five years be tween 1915 and 1920 the savings accounts in the 476 banks of North Carolina increased from $22,010,650 to $116,154,000. This represents a gain of 428 per cent, against 47 per cent, in the country t largo. At the present time we ra:iK twenty first among the United SUtcs, New York leading the entire Union with a total of bank savings of $2,S00,- 000,000. These bank account savings, said Mr. Marshburn, are significant be cause they are a barometer cf thrift on the part of the masses which is to say the people who earn small wages or salaries, or whose incomes are derived from the professions or hand trades, or from small farm and businesses. These are people who for the most part live in other peo ple's houses or cultivate other peo ple's land. Bank account savings are a measure' of the' effort of the land less, homeless people to rise into property ownership, for the wealthy do not keep their surpluses in sav ings banks, but invest them in en terprises or bonds. Miss Austin gave an explanation of the nature, purposes, and benefits of cooperative credit unions. ' Show ing why the present system of farm tenancy, based on a crop lein, mer chant supply system, and no guar anteed credit facilities, is unprofit able, he pictured the need of such organizations in North Carolina and cited the several credit unions that have already been organized as ex amples of what they can do for a farm community. The principal functions of credit unions Listed by Miss Austin were as follows: (1) encouraging thrift by providing a safe, convenient, and at tractive medium for the investment of savings, (2) promoting industry and enterprise by enabling its mem bers to borrow for productive pur poses, (3) by eliminating usury by providing its members when in urgent need with credit at a reason able cost which they could not otherwise obtain, and (4) by teach ing its members how capital is as sembled, managed, safeguarded and multiplied by useful employment. SlENlSfliW FIND FRATERNAL SPIRIT Forbidding Room in Notorious Dorm Turned Into Haven For Weary Wayfarers. One first year student at least has lot been daunted by the rule for bidding freshmen to join fraternities. In his room on the third floor of Smith building, R. F. Adkins of Stoneville, N. C, has surrounded himself and his room-mates with all the luxurious appointments of the most up-to-date frat house, including a victrola and five records. The words, "Stagger Inn," writ ten in green on the door, is the only indication afforded the passerby of the hospitable nature of the apart ment and its occupants that is, un less the victrola is grinding away, as it usually is, on one of the five records. Whether the verdant writ lng on the door is designed for a name or an invitation has not yet teen deduced, but apparently the lat ter interpretation ia the one most frequently inferred. At any rate, the room is always comfortably filled. IS Dormitory B, With Exception of Sewerage and Lighting to Be Completed in March. Work, set back by the snow and rough weather, has been going on full-fledged on the dormitories on the old class athletic field for the past 2 weeks. Only one building was far enough along for inside work before the snow and the other operations had to be temporarily suspended. Two hundred carpenters and labor ers are now at work. The brick work on dormitory B will be completed by the end of the week. All the work with the excep tion of lighting and sewerage will be wound up by the middle of March on this dormitory, and the finishing touch made by the beginning of the summer school. All the rooms in this building have been let to sum mer school students. Dormitories D and E, save prob ably some partitioning and flooring, will be ready for brick work by the end of this week. Dormitory E will be constructed some time in June 'probably for the summer school. Possibilities for summer school stu dents to get rooms in this building are contingent in that it is not cer tain as to what will turn up in the near future. All three of these dor mitories will be open to students next fall. The new railroad has spurred up operations considerably since build ing material can be got as it is need ed. Some of the supplies are brought in far in 'advance, but this is hin dered on account of the lack of stor age space. According to T. C. At wood, about $3,500 is saved on each building1 in -'transportation' charges by this road. 1 Work will begin within two weeks on the History building just back of the "Y." This construction will be a part of the wing of the quadrangle of buildings. Tar Heel Five Fights Through To Finals And Conquers Mercer 40-26 After Defeating Newberry, Howard, Georgia, Alabama, and Mercer, Carmichael's Aggregation Returns to Homeland With Southern Cup Tar Heels Praised Extensively on Play in Tournament by All Papers. (By JAKE WADE.) ANOTHER CASE SMALL POX REPORTED IN THE TOWN Dr. Abernethy Warns Students to Be Vaccinated If They Have No -Scars Epidemic Danger. The smallpox scare is again ram Dant. and Dr. Abernethy is earnestly advising all students who have not yet been vaccinated to have it done at once. N. A. Cattlett. a clerk and photographer, assistant in Foister's store, has the latest case to be con fined with the disease. According to Dr. Abernethy, this young man went all over town and to the Pickwick Monday while break ing out, the most contagious stage of the disease. "If vou haven't a scar," said Dr. Abernethy, "p'.ease come over and be vaccinated at once. That is the only sure way to protect yourself. You don't want to have smallpox. The name itself is a disgrace. You can't afford to take any chance when it is so easy to obtain complete pro tection." The influenza situation, according to Dr. Abernethy, is clearing up. Onlv two cases with a temperature above a hundred, and six cases alto gether from a student body of 1,600 men is very encouraging. Professors H. W. Odum and J. F. Steiner, of the school of public wel fare were week-end visitors to Raleigh. TAR HEEL COURTESY. After the Georgia-North Car olina game, B. Carmichael came over and congratulated Coach Stegeman on the game his Bull dogs put , up. "We were mighty lucky to win," said Carmichael. This remark is typical of the spirit of the Tar Heel crew all during the tournament. If a team from Georgia can't win, folks here will be delighted to award the palm to this clean outfit from North Carolina. Atlanta Georgian. The University of North Carolina basket ball five has been crowned champion of the Southland. With the Southern Intercollegiate Tournament cup, and praises and congratulations galore, from everybody in Atlanta and in the whole South, Captain "Cart" Carmichael's brilliant crew of basketball tossers returned home yesterday, after win ning from Mercer in the finals by the very comfortable score of some 40-26. Play in the last contest was typical of the team's play in all the games of the tournament, and folks down at Atlanta, ac cording to all available press reports, were pretty well satis fied that this Tar Heel aggregation is just about the finest thing they have ever seen m the way of a basketball team. News reached the University vil lage of the brilliant finish in the tournament late Wednesday night, and a drizzling, bitter rain failed to prevent a great celebration by the students, who pranced about the campus with guns, pistols and the old time Carolina spirit. A bonfire was built and burned in spite of the downpour, while the word went round that the Tar Heel five had captured none other than the championship of the South. LAUNDRY ESSAY CONTEST WILL CLOSE ON APRIL 1 Much Interest Being Manifested in Announcement of Laundry Essay Contest. NEW ATHLETIC FIELD MAY Construction for New Gymnasium Now Being Considered By Building Committee. About ten more days of rough grading will wind up the elevating on the University's new $9,000 class athletic field situated east of Emer son near the old cemetery. After the grading is finished, the crowning touch will be put on the field by spreading on a five-inch layer of sand and firmly packing it. Since the soil in this vicinity is red there will be much difficulty in get ting dir$ fr this "purpose. 4 There Is some doubt as to whether tie field will be ready for early spring baseball practice. This de pends altogether on the amount of trouble with rocks and to the loss of time from rain. Since the ground has been excavated, a heavy rain makes work practically impossible. Also rocks, are struck every day and much time is lost in blasting them. Over $500 have been expended for blasting purposes. The field will be 300x500 and is laid- out much on the same order as Emerson. The fence will be removed from Emerson and the ground be tween it and the class field levelled. In the present Atwood contract no plans have been arranged for the construction of a new gymnasium, but this matter is now being con sidered by the building committee. In the present building program, five dormitories, the class athletic field, faculty homes, the sewerage disposal plant and the overhauling of the heating and lighting system are in cluded. When these are completed at the end of two years, work will probably begin on Swain Hall and the gymnasium under a new con tract. It is planned to locate the new gymnasium between Emerson and the class athletic field. HAVE CONCERT SUNDAY Miss Evelyn Smith, Pianist, and Mrs. G. A. Harrer, to Entertain. Promises to. Be Delightful. Another delightful free afternoon concert is promised by the music de partment for Sunday afternoon when Miss Evelyn Smith, pianist, and Mrs. G. A. Harrer, contralto, will appear in Gerrard Hall at 4 p. m. This is the fifth of the latest regular series of such concerts given under the aus pices of the University Department of Music. Miss Smith is a post-graduate of Salem College and is a remarkable pianist. She has won first place in a North Carolina State music con test, and first place in district con tests held by music clubs in tms state, South Carolina. Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, and many other South ern States. These concerts are becoming ex ceedingly popular in the University, and many students, faculty members and Chapel Hill people are attending them regularly. The Mercer Game. This match, which attracted a ca pacity house to the huge auditorium, was hard fought throughout, as the Macon five matched its speed and aggressiveness against the machine like precision of the Tar Heel quin tet. Mercer's band came uptto cheer the team ana its bursts of music dur ing the intermission and before the game was matched by the blare of Georgia Tech's band. Carolina got the jump to start the game when McDonald landed a field goal from almost the center of the floor and the Tar Heels, having taken a lead, held it throughout, gradually piling up the score. The first half ended 21 to 10 in Carolina's favor. Almost perfect passing and guard ing was shown by the Tar Heel team and the Mercer five was unable to break up their plays successfully enough to overcome them although they were fighting as hard at the fin ish as when the game began. "Cart" Carmichael led the scoring, ringing up five field goals and shoot ing eight foul goals in 14 attempts. McDonald, Perry and B. Carmichael contributed three field goals each. Harmon, Mercer's runner guard, led his team with five field goals and six foul goals out of a dozen tries. Pope made three field goals and Gamble two. Carolina Is Brilliant. The Carolina quintet fought to the finals in the tournament with game ness and brilliancy, and the press re ports coming this way from Atlanta were all to the effect that it was the smoothest running machine in the tourney from the beginning. . Atlanta sport writers liked the way the Tar Heel aggregation handled itself, eased around with the grace of Greek gods and wood nymphs, and their dazzling passing, dribbling, and floor work, with marvelous accuracy in shooting, was a source of joy to those attending the game. Carolina started off with Newberry in the tournament, and eliminated this lesser light by the score of 32-27. Newberry was not so easy as she had earlier been cracked up to be and Carolina had to play mighty hard to end up with the long end of the score. But steady plugging did the damage, and after the contest had sagged backward and forward, the final whistle found the Tar Heels with a four point lead. Howard was next in the brackets and Carolina struck her stride in thi9 exhibition, beginning to make things hum on the Atlanta auditorium with a style of play that set people down there to thinking that here was the championship quint. With Howard stored eafely away, it was up to the Carolinians to face more dangerous foes, and Georgia and Alabama were (Continued on Page Four.) Mr. Paulson,, superintendent of the University Laundry, announces this week through Dean D. D. Car roll, a prize essay contest open to all students in the School of Com merce. He offers a lrst prize of $10, a second prize of $5, and a third prize of $2.50 for the best essays on the Laundry Department of the Uni versity of North Carolina. Each essay is to take into consid eration the following points: the ad vantages of the laundry, direct and indirect, to the University and to the citizens of Chapel Hil; management and supervision; collection and deliv ery; receiving, marking and as sembly of the goods; washroom and methods employed; method of ex tracting the water from the materi als; drying department, and methods connected therewith; collar depart ment; hosiery and sleeve ironers; shirt ironing; handwork washing and ironing; flatwork ironing, and the possibilities of the service to the housewife; the cleaning of sweaters and other specialties; and finally, the administrative work of the laundry, including arrangement of the office, methods of handling the business, the system employed to give correct charges, the care and attention to small details and the advantages thereof, the advantages of co-operation between patron and manager, cleanliness, plant lay-out, care of the equipment, the possibility of a com mercial and power laundry course and its advantages to students who might desire to enter the laundry in dustry. -. ' - i f Mr. Paulson requests that all the essays be submitted by April 1, 1922. He has asked Dean Carroll and Pro fessor Matherly to act with him in chooosing the ten best essays. These ten essays will be submitted to the judges chosen from men who are in the laundry industry and who will pass final judgment, selecting the three which are best and ranking them according to first, second and third place. These three essays will then be submitted with the consent of the authors to editors of laundry journals, and if accepted for publi cation, the amount received for them will be paid to the authors. Mr. Paulson also announces that Mr. J. D. Dorsett, student represent ative of the Laundry, will not enter the contest because of his affiliation with the laundry. All students ex pecting to enter the contest are urged to visit the laundry and to make in vestigations necessary for writing the essays. Last week, Professor Matherly's class in Industrial Management vis- lited the laundry, and, under Mr. Paul son's guidance, made a detailed in spection of laundry operation. It was found that the laundry offered fine laboratory facilities for this par ticular course. The instructor and students were highly pleased with the reception and feel that the laun dry is a splendid addition to the Uni versity's equipment. W. & L. DEBATERS TO MEET CAROLINA HERE IN TRIANGULAR DEBATE Tomorrow Night in Gerrard Hall Two Teams Will Clash in Forensic Honors. AFF. TEAM IN BALTIMORE WASHINGTON IN TIMES Aspects of His Southern Trip Por trayed in Magazine Section of New York Times. . Tomorrow night the annual trian gular intercollegiate debating contest between teams representing Carolina, Washington and Lee, and Johns Hop kins, will be staged simultaneously in Baltimore, Lexington and Chapel Hill. The query to be debated is: "Resolved, That the governmen' should own and operate the coal mines." In Gerrard Hall at 8 o'clock, Washington and Lee's affirmative team will meet Johns Hopkins' neg ative. W. E. Horner and C. L. Moore .compose Carolina's affirmative team, which will meet the negative of Washington and Lee in Baltimore. T. L. Warren and V. V. Young will defend the negative against Johns Hopkins in Lexington. While not over-confident, the men composing the Carolina teams hope to uphold the splendid record that has been established for the Uni versity by debaters in other years. Warren and Horner represented Car olina against Pennsylvania last fall, while Young and Moore have both won Mary D. Wright medals for de bate. Last year the palms were evenly divided among the three institutions taking part in the contest, each win ning one and losing one. Year be fore last was a banner year for Car olina in the debating field, both Washington and Lee anAobna Hops kins having been' defeated. DR. SWEETS MAKES PLEA F( Stirring Appeal Made By General Secretary of Presbyterian Edu cational Board In Chapel. The magazine section of the New York Times carried in its February 19th issue an article by Dr. Archi bald Henderson, head of the Univer sity's mathematics department, en titled "George Washington Swings the Circle." Dr. Henderson does not in this story give a complete account of the I life of the Father of Our Country; but confines his article mostly to j Washington's trip through the South-; em states, with special emphasis on . North Carolina. He describes Wash- j ington's equipage and just how he was received by the people. Washington started on his journey through the Southern states, he re- A stirring appeal for unselfish Christian service was voiced by Dr. Henry Sweets, general secretary of the Presbyterian . educational board, in a talk to students in chapel Mon day morning. Dr. Sweets, whose headquarters are in Louisville, Ky., is visiting various Southern colleges in an effort to secure young men for the ministry and other branches of missionary work. 1 "The words of Christ, 'who would be great among you shall be your minister,' are the most revolutionary ever spoken," said Dr. Sweets. "Our whole attitude toward life has been changed by them. The secret of the great clubs and conferences being formed all over the country lies in the one idea of service. Material service is important, but it is infinite ly more important to engage in ser vice that will meet the needs of the human soul." The speaker called attention to the fact that the ministry is not the only branch of service open to those who desire to render spiritual ser vice to the human race. He men tioned the teaching profession and pointed out the great demand for medical missionaries in foreign coun tries. "Take advantage of these many opportunities that you have here," said Dr. Sweets, "do not wait until tomorrow to begin. Tomorrow may be in another world. Now is the only time that we have." (Continued on Page Two.) NIFTY OUTFIT. With natty, well-fitting uni forms of black and white, each man with his glistening hair carefully brushed and going about his play in a workman like manner, the North Caro linians were an impressive sight. Their game was clean through and through, with none of the unnecessary rought tactics fre quently seen on the basketball court. Atlanta Journal.