Friday, March 7, 1924 Tage Two THE T.K UVX-j far ftd VThe Leading Southern College Semi Weekly Newspaper" Member of N. C. Collegiate Press Association Published twice every week of the col lege year, and is the official news paper of the Publications Union of the University of North Caro lina. Chapel. Hill, N. C. Subscrip tion price, $2.00 local and $3.00 out of town, for the college year, Offices on first floor of New West Building have the spirit. Just think! Twelve miles. Why Paul Revere only went a little more than that to save a country. Besides he rode. But such unexpected oddities go to make tip college life. Coach Deserves Honor Entered as second class mail mat ter at the Post Office, Chapel Hill N. C. EDITORIAL STAFF C. B. Colton Editor W. M. Saunders Assistant Editor r. M. Davis, Jr... ......Assistant Editor I. M. Saunders Managing Editor D. Apple Assignment Editor REPORTERS H. J. It. R. Fuller E. Hwkins N. Parker M. Young W. T. Rowland 5. A. Cardwell, Jr W. H. Rosea J. O. Bailey Bessie Davenport C. L. Haney S. E. Vest W. B. Pipkin W. S. Mclver P. Wilson D. Madry E. Poston S. Barr A. Crowell M. W, A. E. L. . BUSINESS STAFF .ugustus Bradley, Jr. Bus. Mgr, Harold Lineberger...... Asst. Bus. Mgr. W. T. Rowland Advertising Mgr LOCAL ADVERTISING DEPT G. L. Hunter Manager Assistants J. G.-Dunn H. L. Rawlin W. C. Whitehead FOREIGN ADVERTISING DEPT. C. G. Reeves .........Manager Assistants Harold Seaburn Alex. Crowell CIRCULATION DEPARTMENT William Way, Jr. ...Circulation Mgr, Assistants: W. D. Toy, Jr ffom Dibble H. L. Wilcox M. M. Fowler Classified Ad Dept. J. F. Shaffner Manager Anyone desiring to try out for Business Staff apply Business Mgr You can purchase any article adver tised in The Tar Heel with perfect safety because everything it adver tises is guaranteed to be as repre sented. We will make good imme diately if the advertiser does not. Vol. XXXII, March 7, 1924. No. 40 How an athletic team will adver tise an institution! Bet that a Car olina graduate will now stand i much better chance of getting a po sition around Atlanta. That team certainly did acquit themselves in fine style as a basket ball quint. Made off with three first places on the All-Southern too. The other two players were given honor able mention. Now comes the touh part of col lege life. Yes, you guessed right Examinations! Well we can at least iook torward to tne bassbali season which lies just ibeyond the exams. In fact practice has already started. And while we are handing out bountiful nosegays to athletic teams let us not overlook the wrestling team. This young sport has made a permanent home here largely due to the efforts of Coach Shapiro and Man ager Shackell. Had a successful sea son too. Students should not leave all the support 'of this team to Dean Paulsen. Lovesick students will no doubt wel come the .news that the Tar Heel will start a special column for emotional heart trouble. And what's better than all is that' a co-ed has been se cured to edit this column. Her name is kept a secret for a number of rea sons. ':.' The flannel dollar bill goes this week to the campus celebrity who has frisked out of stakes money at At lanta. He could not get a bet on Carolina the first night so he took one on Washington and Lee and, inci dentally, lost. The second game he placed heavily on the Tar Heels, and would have won, had not the holder of stakes skipped the place with, in cidentally, the money. Our weekly suggestion: On the event of the next big celebration why not dynamite the fountain that does not fount? Speaking of celebrations how was that for one the other night when 300 students marched all the way to Durham? Guess the Bull ' City thought that bedlam had broken loose. The students certainly did After the lavish words of praise the.'championship Tar Heel team has received from the Press, there re mains little to bs said in their honor. The Atlanta sport writers exhausted their stock of superlatives describ ing the Carolina machine as the 'acme of basketball perfection." They gave lon;r accounts of Car michael's all-round play, Cobb's un :anny goal ' shooting, MacDonald's ilever floor work and guarding, Dod derer's steadiness, and Devin's splen did work in filling Captain Green's ?hoes. One spoiling writer even won dered what the team would have done if Captain Winton Green had been in the line-up. There were no 'ifs' to the tourna ment. Every victory was cleanly won by the Tar Heels, as was the case all season. Superior team work and individual players, coupled with cool nerve and an unconquerable fighting spirit, marked their success. But with all the fine things said about the University quint, one or two things were overlooked by the daily papers. Little, if any credit, was given to Norman Shepherd, the kid coach, who had the difficult propo sition befroe him of handling a team of stars. With evrey man an exper ienced player, Shepherd did not have much coaching to do. His task was to keep the men in condition, ward off the bane of many winning teams, the possibility of going stale, and to choke any feeling of over confidence. He and Doc Lawson diagnosed the team's condition and played their cards accordingly with the champion ship as the reward. At the beginning of the season, when Shepherd was named as coach, some sceptics hinted that he was too young, that he would never be able to ho'd the stars in check. He had nothing to win and everything to lose. If the team proved to be a winner, the credit would be given the sys tem installed ,-by Major Boye and to the excellent material Shepherd had to work with. Under this handicap, Shepherd held the reins and directed the best team Carolina ever had through a long, gruelling season. And now the general attitude seems to be: "Well he should have done it, any way." Winton Green is another silent hero to whom little attention has been paid. Honored as captain of the brilliant quintet, an injury to his knee in the middle of the season pre vented him from reaping the fruits of his position. He was forced to strain at the sidelines, knowing that never would he be able to represent Carolina on the basketball court aain. It was a great satisfaction to him to see his team mates run away with the championship, and a bitter disappointment that he could not share in the work. As the At lanta sports writer said if he had played what might he not have done? The season has closed for the team that has set a high mark for future Carolina teams to shoot at in playing ability and clean sportsmanship. They have established their undeniable right to the southern championship, and it's a pity the conferenre prohibit a post season match with Cornell or some other powerful team. Their brilliant record will live for ever in sport annuals, and while praises are being sung to Carmich- ael, Cobb, McDonald, etc., don't over look the unsung contributors Coach Shepherd, Captain Green, and Doctor Lawson. THE WILDERNESS BY J. OSLER BAILEY BOOKSELLER CONDUCTS AN AUCTION SALE HERE When students went for their mail Wednesday afternoon they found an old visitor in front of the Post Office, nis truck loaded with books and of fering them for sale to the highest bidder. His name is R. E. Rutledge, the same that he carried from Marlin. Texas, the town with the deepest and hottest artisan wells in the worldso he said. From full boxes he took books that ranged all the way from the history of Greece to the Ford joke book, which he claimed was one on the Ford, a little thing made up in Mich igan, of tin. His prices ran from three dollar bibles to the ten cent joke book. . About this time every year he pays a visit to Chapel Hill. The rest of the time he is out over the State, in the winter time in the eastern part and in the summer in the western. When asked how he liked the stata he replied, "I am still here and have been here for seven years." His is a peculiar case because there is probably no other man in the South selling books at public auction as he does. In the past two years he has sold over ten thousand Bibles at public auction. We notice with interest that tlvj Shriek of the Desert has added an other somewhat erratic nomad to his tribe of curiosities. Dum Dum, Wed nesday A. M., and the Shriek should make a congenial triad. Dum Dum's sense of both humor and unity seems to possess an eccen tric quality. Kis subjects and predi cates delight to mouth peculiar noth ings at one another across an impos sible gulf, so to speak. Wi advise that Aristotle and English 1A ba consulted, dear Dum Dum, for there is a certain guild-pride even among toreadors that needs must be upheld. - Perhaps D. D. is doing an imita tion of Browning. Bear with us to publish an item for the benefit of the two or loss faculty members who, we hope, some times read our Colyum. Only pro fessors may appreciate our wit in this instance. Dr. Z. decided to take the afternoon on, so to speak, the golf links, so he wrote across his black board: "I will not meet my classes today. Z." Some wag erased the "cl" in classes. We hold there's more of truth than humor in this jest. This business of being a Colyumist is a particularly disappointing ex perience. One week ago we were so greatly amused by a few shreds of wit raveling from the co-ed house that we, being in a jovial mood, de cided to pass them on to our faith ful readers. The incidents seemed trivial parlor fancies to us, but to our violent shock, did not appear so mild to those whose wrists the joke slapped. At least one-third of the co-ed population has wrathfully clash ed with us in verbal combat about it; while another one-third has been ardently busy telling us additional tid-bits of mock-scandal on their sis ters. Those choice morsels we shall cogitate upon in secrecy. We cannot fathom the peculiar profundities of the feminine sense of humor, and we refuse flatly to heat another caldron of oil in which to scald our own hide Yes, if you must be mathematical, the remaining one-third we have assidu ously dodged. Personally, if we may be serious, we opine that our co-eds are a more or less winsome lot. The Tar Heel, is really friendly, this year, to the woman student. In fact, in the next issue of the Tar Heel will appear the first of a series of art icles written by one of our most as tute young ladies on the situations that confront young ladies and their friends at Carolina. We understand that the articles will discuss the problems of love and beauty in the same frank and open manner that Dorothy Dix and other'famous iove and beauty experts find most suit able. "The Buccaneer" hardly seems a fitting name for a successor to two pirates. , You see, we sent in a name that was rejected. We have a most distressing cold, and so shall end our efforts for to day. ,., for Spring A variety of styles for the new seazon, plezantly fresh and refreshing, wil be shown by A, M. Shimmon. JACK SPARROW'S Friday and Saturday March 14th. and 15th. CROSS CRICK. CLUB $9 Store In NwYoric,Brooklra,Ntwrk and Philadelphia - A-dreu for Mai! Ord.rt, 1 1 1 Duanc St., New York Cltr t REIDSVILLE WINS THE I WESTERN HALF HONORS Reidsville high school won the wes tern championship of the state by defeating Charlotte, 21 to 13, here Thursday night, as part of a high school double header attraction at the "tin can." In the other end of the bargain, Wilmington high earned the right to meet Durham on Friday night by defeating Rocky Mount, 20 to 15. Both games were fast. Miller, Reidsville center, and Haar, Wilming ton forward, probably furnished th feaure individual playing of the night's entertainment. Line-ups and summary: Wilmington (20) Rocky Mount (15) R. F. Bremer Mann (10) L. F. Haar (10) Whitehead (3) c. . Kelly (4) Eason (2) R. G. Leftwich (2) Neal L. G. Loughlin Hanner Subs: (Wilmington), Tucker for Leftwich, Shepard for Bremer, Burk heimer for Loughlin. Referee, Stein er (Syracuse.) Reidsville (21) Charlotte (13) R. F. Nance (3) Selden () L. F. Pettigrew (5) Reed C. Miller (10) Purser (4) R. G. Neal (1) Ford (U L. G. Delancy (2) .....1 Morris Substitutes: (Reidsville): Millner for Pettigrew, Pettigrew for Nance. (Charlotte): Watkins for Reed. Referee, Steiner (Syracuse.) The building of fire escapes on New West, Battle-Vancc-Pettigrew, and New East is about completed. Is Taking Mah- Jong t in a 4 14' S J 1 the Country By Storm A complete set in , bright colors, titles, 116 counters, racks, 2 dice, book of rules and instruc tions; any one can learn the game in ten minutes. It's very fascinating. All in attractive box, sent prepaid on re ceipt of $1.00 (Can ada 25c extra). Table Covers Very Attractive Black Mah-Jong Ta ble Cover, with col ored dragon designs, adjustable to any ' size card table; 16 counter pockets, striking c o 1 o red. stiched edges. Ex- a-aordinary value." Special price Combination Offer: We will send prepaid one complete Mah-Jong set and table cover as described above on re ceipt of $2.50. 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