Wednesday, February 4, 1925
THE TAR HEEL
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SPOHTOGRAMS
3J
823 I3W STREET "JUST BELOW F"
WASHINGTON, D. C.
. ' The ,
LaUsgB Tailors
- of The
SOUTH
WILL DISPLAY AT
CAROLINA
SMOKE SHOP
February 9th and 26th
The only exclusively high
grade Tailors showing at
Southern Colleges.
Your inspection of our full
line of the finest imported
woolens for Spring and Sum
mer is cordially invited.
G. L. MYERS, Re pre tentative
Chapel Hill
Insurance and
Realty Co.
0
Insurance
and
Real Estate
hv
doyoucomb
your hair?
For neat ap
pearance, the
great aid to
success. Keep
your hair
combed all
day with
CGloss-Comb)
THE ORIGINAL
LIQUID HAIR DRESS
Real Men arid Boys
Send for Sample Bottle , -
Mail coupon and 10c for generous
trial bottle. Normany Products Co.,
6511 McKinley At., Los Angeles, Cal.
Address..
STUDENTS
will find an attractive line of
Furniture
Rugs and Draperies
AT
POPE MATTRESS CO.
CHAPE HILL
HARDWARE COMPANY
Cutlery, Artist's
Materials
"SHOE SHOP
v . IN CONNECTION
PHONE 14
ROYALL & BORDEN
Furniture for the home, lehooU
and fraternitiee ,
DURHAM, r. C.
We have furnished the dormi
tories, many fraternity . and
faculty homes because we of
fered them good service, and
good furniture at a reasonable
price. .
Have your -PressingCleaning
and Altering
Don Right at
WEAVER TAILORING CO.
Next to Port Office ,
-.,
Dr. ROBT. R. CLARK
Dentist
Office over Bank of Chapel Hill
After Every Meal
ITs the lonaesf-Iastina
confection you can buy
and it's a heln to di
gestion and a cleanser
X.v Ior tne moatu
-JjprF, and teeth.
NL, beneilt ma well mm
yj&- pleasure.
7F77J '
JnMh &uff
The
Bank oi Chapel Hill
Chapel Hill, N. C.
OLDEST AND STRONGEST
BANK IN ORANGE
. COUNTY.
Capital - - - $30,000
Surplus - - $70,000
OFFICERS
M. C. S. Noble - - - President
R. L. Strowd - Vice-President
M. E. Hogart - - - - Cashier
M. B. Utley - - Asst. Cashier
W. D. Sparrow - - - - Teller
' i im-j.
itji"'PB'V"ivii'vi"i" n " fcj
CHRISTIAN & KING
PRINTING COMPANY
Durham North Carolina
i i,, ,L;,in,l,Li,;iiii lh Ml ii hi)
ROOM FOR RENT
34 STEELE
SEE OCCUPANTS
C. R. Jonas
"I can positively name at least 20 paid
athletes: in North Carolina colleges name
them right off with no trouble at all."
So speaks Dean C. C. Taylor of N. C.
State college, In an address before a
group of North Carolina teachers. v.r
Name them, Dean, name them I If
Dr. Taylor knows' 20 men in North Caro
Una colleges who are being paid by those
colleges to perform on the athletic field
for them; if he is personally acquainted
with that situatipn, he owes it to clean
sportsmanship to name them and the in
stitutions doing the hiring. Let us re
mind, the Dean, however, of what hap
pened to Mr. Vanderlip when he repeat
ed unauthentic rumors last year.
Sounds like old times when the head-
line says that Cobb scores more points
than the rest of the team combined. And
he 'is not an individual player. He plays
the game for the team and not for per
sonal shots at the basket.
Monday night's game with Harvard
was a heart-breaker. To lose on the
opponent's Court by a long point margin
means that there might' have been an
other story had the game been played on
neutral ground. However, we are not
offering excuses for the defeat, but mere
ly commenting on how hard it is to lose
a game by one .or two points.
Speaking of close scores, look at this:
"Ole Miss," in her last three games lost
to Vanderbilt by a score of 19 to 18,
to Tennessee 15 to 13, and to Kentucky
26 to 23. They are probably feeling like
we did after the Harvard same, and like
Trinity felt last year when we won from
them by one point.
Mississippi colleee seems to be settintr
a fast pace for the far Southern basket
ball teams. Already this season that
small college has won from Alabama uni
versity, runners up last season in the
conference tournament, Mississippi uni
versity, Missippi A. and M winners
of the tournament in 1923, and from
Tulane. Teams having an eye on the
Southern title this year would do well
to watch this one.
Headline "Passaic High School Wins
157 Straight Games." Boys living in
Passaic, N. J., are practically born with
a basketball in their arms. They live
basketball, study basketball; play bas
ketball, and even sleep with one in the
bed (like the Wake Forest baseball play
er last year who carried his bat along
to bed and the next day knocked a home
run;. ' -
The earliest ambition of a Passaic boy
is to make that basketball team, and "that
is one of the secrets of their success
Every boy in school goes out for the
team, and if he can do no better, at
least furnishes opposition to the regulars
We need some of the Passaic spirit here
GeorgiaUniversity and Georeia Tech
met last Saturday night in Atlanta in
the first scheduled athletic contest be
tween the two institutions in over six
years. Tech won 30 to 25.
Relations were severed in 1919. re
sulting from bad feeling which had al
ways existed between the two, but which
had been increasing for several years
and which reached a climax at the annual
football game in 1919. The game was
played at Athens, and the Georgia boys
put on a parade, with highly decorated
floats, symbolizing the part Georgia
played in the World War. At the rear
of the parade came a dog cart, in which
were seated several men with wide yel
low stripes running down their backs,
and with a sign indicating that such
was Tech's part in the war. That was
the end of peace.
ORPHEUM
DURHAM, N. C.
8 SHOWS DAILY
5 Saturdays and Holidays
NOTICE STUDENTS
If you want to see a real
good peppy musical comedy
.drop intbe
OUPHEUM
The Only Vaudeville
Theatre in Durham
CATCH YOUR 8:30
THEN EAT
WaCSHec IFW Bffeatxffaolt
-AT THE-
University Cafeteria
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CRANE BEAUTY IN THE OPEN CRANE QUALITY IN ALL HIDDEN FITTINGS
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For many home-makers, the clear
white of porcelain or enamel fix
tures is the essential seal of clean
liness in bathrooms.
To such the Crane Tarnia bath will
appeal instantly. , Of cream white
enamel on iron, it is set here in the
same spotless vitrolite as the walls.
It is durable, sanitary, economical.
It is one of a wide variety of Crane
fixtures for the bathroom, kitchen
and laundry sold by contractors ev
erywhere at prices within reach of all.
In the industrial field, Crane service
duplicates on a larger scale insteam,
oil, gas and water installations, the
Crane standards of comprehensive
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Cram Y branch drainatt fitting
Delta Sigma Phi
Give Enjoyable Dance
One of the most enjoyable of the
growing list of social affairs at the new
Carolina Inn was a dance given Friday
evening by the Delta Sigma' Phi frater
nity in honor of visiting delegates as
sembled from North and South Carolina
and Virginia for the fraternity's dis
trict convention. '
The ball room wag artistically deco
rated with the fraternity's colors, Nile
green and white. Suspended from the
center of the room was a large illumi
nated Delta Sigma Phi pin which fur
nished the only light for the fraternity's
waltz and several other numbers. Dur
ing intermission there was a beautiful
sol dance by Miss Dolores Crozier, of
Raleigh. Music was furnished by the
North State Eight, art orchestra com
posed of University students.
The chaperones present Included Presi
dent and Mrs. H. W. Chase, Lieutenant
Governor and Mrs. J. Elmer Long, Dr.
and Mrs. T. J. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles T. Woollen, Mr. and Mrs. Fran
cis F. Bradshaw, Dr. and Mrs. A. A.
Kluttz, Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Coker, Prof,
and Mrs. P. H. Winston, Dr. and Mrs.
J. W. Lasley,, Prof, and Mrs. M. L, Fer
son, Prof, and Mrs. A. C. Mcintosh, Prof,
and Mrs. P. H. Wettach, Prof, and Mrs.
Frank S. Rowley. :
The Chapel Hill girls present included
Misses Elizabeth Hickcrson, Leah mith,
Daisy Cooper, Lucy Lay, Lois Rogers,
Francis Venable, Sally Taylor, Kitty Lee
Frazier, Sarah' Boyd, Miriam Sauls, Cor
nelia Wearn, Annie Lee Graham, Eliza
beth Henderson, Louise Latta, Norma
Cornell, Caro Mae Green, Mrs. William
Hannah.
Present also were a large number of
visiting girls. Among them were Misses
Landrum Norris, Delores Crozier, Eliza
beth Barber, Blanche Bonner, Caro Fish,
Nannie B. Crow, Sue Mason, Margaret
Sherrill, Lula Stockard, and Ruby Rob
ertson, of Raleigh; Mable Duke Goodall,
Evelyn Jones, Beryl Jones, Betty Solo
mon, Louise Mason, Louise Bullington,
Virginia Green, Ermine Peak, Litliam
Thompson, Olive Faucett, of Durham;
Rosamon Flannigan, Emily Moye, of
Greenville; Dorothy Suggs, Helen Mitch
ell, Kinston; May Katherine Swink,
"Pet" Shepard, Blitz Dillard, Elizabeth
Shelton, of Winston-Salem i Miss Joy,
Chicago; Miss Bochman, of Sweet Briar;
Misses Elizabeth Tucker, Elizabeth Et he
ridge, of Elizabeth City; Dorothy Merrl
mon, Nellie Irvin, Mildred Little, and
Louise Daniels, of Greensboro.
' Some Yale freshmen started a snow
ball fight to divert their minds from the
mid-year examinations. It started on
the evening of January 26. The next '
morhing it broke out again and the
snowball barrage was not lifted until
all windows in all the freshmen dormi
tories were broken.
University authorities could not view
the incident In any other light than as
"the most unwarranted bit of vandalism
that has ever been effected by members
of the student body." The New Student.
mm.
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