Wednesday; March 4, 1925 THE TAR HEEL Page $ ... EVERYBODY'S GOING TO SEE THE TORCH-BEARERS (" : ' Memorial II all, March 10-11 923 I3T? STREET. "JUST BELOW T" WASHINGTON, D. C. The ; Eur Ie he Tailars of ThE - 5DUTH - WILL DISPLAY AT CAROLINA SMOKE SHOP February 26th The only exclusively high grade Tailors showing at Southern Colleges. y.;' t Your inspection of our full line of the finest imported woolens for Spring and Sum mer is cordially invited. G. L. MYERS, Representative Chapel Hill Insurance and Realty Co. ' 0 t - Insurance and Real Estate CHAPE HILL HARDWARE COMPANY Cutlery, Artisfs : Materials SHOE SHOP IN COWHICTION . .. PHONE' 144 FEBRUARY SALE -OF FURNITURE ' ALL OF OUR FURNITURE REDUCED FROM 10 TO 0 . . PER CENT. ROYALL & BORDEN DURHAM, N. a CHRISTIAN & KING PRINTING COMPANY Durham . North Carotins DrROBT. R. CLARK Dentist v Office over Bank of Chapel Hill mm 3 MR. S. R. SMOAK ' OF y M. MOSES SONS TAILORING COMPANY will show a complete Spring and Summer line of Suits for College Men , at ., ' ' ;-y JACK LIPMAN Monday and Tuesday March 2 and 3 ! Christian & Harward Exclusive Dealers For Brunswick Radiolas Phonographs and Records Christian & Harward 106 W. MAIN STREET DURHAM, N. C. LOST Gray Overcoat, Meyer Greentree make. Reward to finder. CHAS. B. BISHOP 202 Old East ORPHEUM DURHAM, N. C X 8 SHOWS DAILY 0 Saturdays and Holidays NOTICE STUDENTS If you want to see a Teal good peppy musical comedy drop in the ORPHEUM The Only Vaudeville Theatre in Durham The Bank of Chapel Hill Chapel Hill, N. C OLDEST AND STRONGEST BANK IN ORANGE COUNTY. Capital -. - - $30,000 Surplut ''s. - $70,000 OFFICERS M. C S. Noble - r - President R. L. Strowd - Vice-President M. E. Hogan - - - '- Cashier M. B. Utley - - Asst Cashier W. O, Sparrow - - - - Teller SECRETS OF THE NEW WOMAN'S DORMITORY ARE BELOW DIVULGED Future Co-Eds Will Dwell In Almost Eastern Luxury Faithful Old Russell Inn Bath Tub Will Be Sue- , ceeded by Nine New Tubs and Three Showers ' : French Doors Installed for Matron's Sake. At the present rate of progress, the Woman's Dormitory should be ready for occupancy at the beginning of the first summer school, according to H. D. Car ter, of Atwood and Nash. The general plan of the building is in the form of the letter H, the jfront being three sides of a fore-court and the entrance in the center of the crossbar of the H. The building is three stories high with basement and usable attic. The attic, however, is not to be finished at the present time, there being three floors of finished rooms. The style of the building is colonial, carrying out the tradition of the majority of the campus buildings with the same standards for fire proofing and stability as are in Dormitories, F. G, and J, though the in terior detail is somewhat more delicate, the architects having tried to give the Duuding both inside and out a more intimate appearance than was possible in a dormitory for the boys, intending to give the impression of a rather large dwelling and less : of an institutional building. , The brick is laid up in Flem ish Bond as was common in the colonial period and the trimmings are of white marble. Flanking the main front on the east and west sides are two ample brick- paved porches providing plenty of open space for the occupants and serving to enrich the appearance of the building. Parlor for First Floor ' On the first floor is a parlor thirty five by eighteen feet with an adjacent alcove twelve by twelve. The room is ornamented with columns and pilasters in the Doric order, serving to lend in terest to the interior, and also has a wood cornice in the same order.. The middle section, or cross-bar of the H, is taken up by a living room. This living room is forty-two by twenty feet with a fireplace in the center of the long side. - This room is flanked by alcoves in a manner similar to the parlor and has windows on both of the long sides, the center entrance doorway opening di rectly into this room. , In the west wing are provided a matron's parlor, bath room, and bed room. French Doors for Matron French doors connect this matron's parlor with the hall and the living room, thus giving the matron practical supervision of the hall, parlor, and liv ing room from her parlor. In the east wing are located a kitchen twenty- three by twenty-one, a pantry ten by twenty-one, refrigerating room nine by twelve,' and a 'storage room of similar size. Access is had to the basement from the kitchen. The kitchen communicates with a pantry or serving room ten by twenty-one and this in turn to a dining room thirty-seven; by eighteen with an M ' 0. B.OO. Tht Htclittr BuilJitit, Ntw Yori City t Warren Wetmore, Architect Architecture Today and Tomorrow N THE great buildings of today, designed in musel which rear rug ged, mounting profiles into the ky, foretell even greater and more massive structures for the next half century. Always a close co ordination of architecture and engineering, of design and construc tion, the architecture of the future will find architect and engineer working ever more closely together. ' 1 Certainly modern invention modern engineering skill and organi zation, will prove more than equal to the demands of the architecture of the future. ( : - O T I S E L EVA T O R ' COM P AN Y Offices In all Principal Cities of the World Advertise In The Tar Heel alcove twelve by thirteen. A servants' porch is provided across the entire back or south side of the kitchen and the eel lar way leads out of the porch so that it is not' seen from the outside of the building. It is intended that this'' por tion shall be entirely latticed and screened in, to add to the comfort and neatness of the servants. ( Two fireproof stairways lead from the first to the third floor, one in each wing, These stairways are of similar design to those in Dormitory F, but rather more elaborate as to detail. , In the soutn end of the west wing is provided a men's coat room and men's toilet room for the convenience of the occasional male caller. . . ,V A trunk lift is also provided so that trunks can be delivered at the rear door and taken directly to the trunk rooms on the second or third floor or to the attic, so that there will be no necessity for the girls keeping trunks in their rooms. , Many Bath Tubs ' The second and third floors are iden tical in plan, each floor having fifteen double rooms and two single rooms. Each room is provided with a closet for each occupant. A lavoratory with hot a nd cold water is also provided In every bed room. Three tubs, one shower, and other ample toilet facilities are provided on each of the three floors, while the two fireproof stairways lend easy access to the ground from any part of the build' ing. y It is not intended at this time to finish the attic. When this is done, ten more bed rooms will, be added, together with a kitchenette and laundry, all on the same general lines as the rooms below. It is understood that sufficint . space will be finished at present for the laundry having set tubs, boiler, ironing boards, etc, for which the future occupants of the building are now trying to raise money. . In the basement is located, a coal bin, heater, hot water heating boiler with five hundred gallon tank connected, ser vants' toilet, and storage room; the basement floor being concreted and the rooms well lighted. i The grounds are to be landscaped by co-operation between Dr. W. C. Coker and Atwood & Nash, Inc., University architects a gravel Jterrace leading en tirely across the front of the building with walk to the street, while the service drive passes to the rear. . . The building is designed so that -the wings can be extended in the future to the south almost to the Arboretum wall and thus triple the capacity of the present structure. 1? Hi'i'ii i ii ""u " n "- I I". It's time for - - - KODAKING! Take an hour or so off one of these sunshiny after noons and take a few snapshots of places that inter est you. The folks back home will be glad to get views of Chapel Hill and the Campus. Or why not - , Put Them in Your Memory Book . WE'LL LEND YOU A KODAK FREE and give you first class service in DEVELOPING - ' PRINTING AND ' ,. ENLARGING FOISTER'S DISTRIBUTORS FOR Goldsmith Guaranteed Athletic Goods We Cater to the Intra-Mural Association B. C. WOOD ALL COMPANY 308 West Main Street Will Beautify Chapel Hill to Durham Road Plans for beautifying the Durham- Chapel Hill boulevard to make it one of the most, attractive of all the state highway system were considered last week at a meeting of the civic depart ment of the Woman's Club of Durham. Many excellent suggestions were offered for beautifying the boulevard by mem bers of the Durham department as well as by the representatives of the Chapel Hill clubs. The members were so favorably Im pressed with the .plans. .thaLa .committee of five women was appointed to work with a similar committee to be appointed by the Chapel Hill clubs to take imme diate steps to carry out the club's plans. The women of the two communities have set for themselves the task of mak ing the Durham-Chapel Hill boulevard eventually a model highway. J The plan for paving the Durham-Chap el Hill road was first agitated some time ago, and a plan was also suggested for making the highway attractive through the planting of trees, and the installation of a white way system was considered. A number of trees were planted along some sections of the road, it is under stood, but no great or outstanding effort was made to make the highway the beau tiful one suggested. Will Soon Have Roof on Sigma Nu House The end of this week will see the roof on the new Sigma Nu fraternity house on Fraternity court, which is just off Columbia street. The building was de signed by Atwood and Nash, Inc., Uni versity architects, and is being built by B. S. Thompson, local contractor. The design is colonial, there being a two story portico along the front with the roof supported by six Doric columns, the floor of the portico being paved with brick. The main building Is 66 feet long by 30 feet wide, of brick, three stories high. Flanking this main unit are wings of wood each 12 by 2fl feet. On the first floor is a living room 33 by 28 feet, with a large fireplace at the south end, a library 12 by 19 feet and a bedroom 12 by 14 with a toilet room adjacent, The living room Is designed for frater nity dances, the first floor being level with the portico floor. One wing contains two study rooms and the other two bed rooms. On the second floor there are five bed rooms, a main bath room and two sleep ing porches In the wings. , The third floor is one large room which can be used for fraternity meetings or as additional sleeping quarters. Provision is made on the first and second floors to house 27 members and should the third floor be utilised for sleeping quarters 20 more can be accommodated. The building from Its location at the end of the court and the massing and design of Its finish will be a distinct addi tion to the newer fraternity buildings at the University. Seven grammar school and two high school swimming pools are under con struction in Buffalo, N. Y. . Durham, N. C. CLOTHES FOR TUB COLLEGE! MAN Tte FLY-FRONT COAT Jroad shouldered, easy banging their conservatism reclaims their smartness, ut in lightweight andwinter weight woolens in patterns approved by college men. 3450 to '4950 nat LUXENBERG bros. 841 Broadway, New York SHOWING AT PENDERGRAFT "S Uth I March 9th, 10th and Our style memo, book wnt free on rcquwt After Every Meal ITs the longest-last lug confection yon can buy and It's a help to di gestion and a cleanser for tne mouta and teeth. Wrlgleya mean benefit mm well mm pleasure A DICTIONARY OF AMERICAN ENGLISH A comprehensive study of the English language in America, the result to be the first "Dictionary of American Eng lish," will be undertaken by the Univer sity of Chicago. The proposed under taking will Include a study of American, r rimm dialects and their sources and the effect of immigration upon the language. The , work will Involve vast research by a large staff and will require at least 10 years for completion. School Life. rmrm V? w m I i ? I V Ui KWi iw lqju i

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