Sargent To Speak Tuesday Morning , jir, Noel Sargent, Manager of die industrial Relations Depart ment of the National Association of Manufacturers will speak today at 12:00 .o'clock at 112. Saunders on some phases of harbor prob lems. Mr. Sargent will also speak at 1 1 iOO o'clock this . morning in the North room of the Law Build ing. Mr. Sargent is an Interest- , jug and able speaker and . Is thoroughly competent to deal with his subject. His lectures are al ways a source of : delight. All who are interested in the subject are cordially invited to attend these lecturers. Eleanor Jones, the seven-year-old daughter of Howard Mumford Jones of the University faculty, is in Chapel, Hill for the spring.;. At present she is with the Roystcrs, but later she will be with her father at the Hibburd home. John anil Peggy Hiblmrd have been ill for several diiys. " jPtUJl MOUNTAIN WAIM C W0UNA Lf , " For the College Man ! The Pilot Life Insur ance Company provides a contract at one half regu lar premium rates during the first five years. This ; liberal feature, makes it convenient for the college man to get his life insurance ' at his present age and carry it for the least possible cost during college days. See that you get your protection from the Pilot. Pilot Life In?. Company GREENSBORO, N. C. A. W. McAlister, President Tourist third cabin EUROPE With college parties on famous "O" steamers of The Royal Mail Line Univenitr Taura with Collnr Credit: ORM, June IS ORDUNA. Jum I ORB.ITA. Jul? 3 Write for illustrated booklet THE ROYAL MAIL STEAM PAdET CO. 26liNdwr.New York John W. Krumpelman 309 Murphey Hall V i 1 1 :i 1 XT 0 R.R.CLARK DENTIST Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 385 OP warn NEW HANDY PACK Fits hand pocket and purse Mort for your moBy and tha best Peppermint Chewing Sweet for any money Look for WrW$ P. K. Handy Pack fMaBjfourDealeriC DUKE FROSH WIN FROM TAR BABIES Red Devils Victorious in Slug fest by 12-11 Score. 1 veritabl TRACK MEET Finlater, of Carolina. Is Individual - Slugging Ace of Game.' The Duke Freshmen emerged victo rious from a slugfest with the Univer sity of North Carolina Frosh on Emer son Field Friday afternoon to the tune of 12-H. The game was featured by the hitting of Finlater for the Tar Ba bies. He hit two homers and a single out of four times at bat, one homer drove in two men in the' seventh with two on, and the other cleared the loaded bases in the ninth. ' The Duke Freshmen were outhit bv the Tar Babies by the count of 9-12, but trequent errors behind Thomas' and Elli son accounted for the Duke counters. Duke started her scoring in the fourth when eight runners crossed the pan after hitting Thomas freely. The Red Devils ftlso managed to push two more runs across in the sixth and seventh frames. Wyriek, Burton, and Rowe starred at the bat for the visitors, getting two bin gles each. V The Tar Babies pushed across five runs in the seventh after having regis tered in the first and fifth. A desperate ninth inning rally garnered only four runs, which fell short of tying the score. Besides capturing batting honors for the day, Finlater made a beautiful peg in the first semester to cut off McCarthy at the plate. .Box score and summary: Duke Ab R H Po A E McCarthy, cf. ......... 4 1 2 13 0 0 Hollingsworth, rf. 3 3 1 11 0 0 Rowe, 3b. 4 1 2 111 Carruthers, lb. 5 1 1 12 0 0 Burton, If. 5 11 2 0 0 Adams, ss. 3 1 0 1 '2 0 Wyriek, c. 5 1 2 S 0 0 Hatcher, 2b. .. 3 0 0 3 2 2 Light, p. : .... ... .. 4 2 0 10 0 Bjers, p. 6 0 O 0 0 0 Totals Carolina Satterfield, ss Coxe, 2b. , Jessup, rf Williams, 3b. ..... Foard, lb. Finlater, cf. Holland, If. ......... Furches, c. Thomas, p. Ellison, p. Schwartz, If. Harkrauder, rf . Totals 86 12 27 5 3 Ab R .52 H Po A E 112 0 2 3 0 11 3 3 0 0 ffl BASEBALL RACE WILL BEGIN SOON Conferences for Arranging Schedules to Be Held This Week. HOT CONTEST PREDICTED 53 High Schools Entered' in 13th An nual Championship Series. 36 11 12 2T 8 6 . Score by innings: Duke . 000 802 20012 Carolina J. .100 010 50 11 Summary: Two-base hits, Jessup, Rowej three-base hits, Furches, CarrU' thers; home runs, Finlater, 2; stolen bases, Finlater, McCarthet, Light, Hol lingsworth; sacrifice hits; Adams, Hark rader. Struck outs by Thomas 5, by Light, 4; bases on bails, off Thomas 2, off Ellison, 1,-off Light 1, off Byers 1. Um pire, L. R. Sides. U DELEGATION ATTENDS GREENSBORO MEETING Pres. Chase and Other Professors At tend Conference for Social Service Just Preceding Easter Holidays. The University of North Carolina was well represented at a. meeting of the North Carolina Conference for Social Service which convened at the O. Henry Hotel in Greensboro just preceding the Easter holidays. Among those who at tended from the University were: Dr. Harry W. Chase, Professor J. F. Stein- er, Messrs. Roy M. Brown, L. M. Brooks, A. F. Raper, and F. S. Wilder. Dr. Chase was the chief speaker of the Thursday , afternoon session. His subject was ''Leadership in Democracy." Dr. Chase's address was thoroughly en joyed by all those who heard it and was very interesting. At the Friday morning session, Pro fessor J. F. Steiner, of the Sociology Department of the University, addressed the meeting on "Outstanding Needs of Our Prisoners." Professor Steiner also presided at the Friday afternoon session. Mr. F. S. Wilder, a teaching fellow in the University Department of Sociology, addressed the conference on Friday aft ernoon. His subject was "Analysis of Crime as Shown by Superior Court Rec ords.!' Mr. L. M. Brooks was also on the Friday afternoon program. The sub ject of his address was "The Financial Cost of Crime In North Carolina." Mr. A. F. Raper gave an address on "Case Study of Certain Prisoners." Dr. Carl C. Taylor, of ,N. C. State College, "was elected president of the organization! Dr. Steiner and Mr. Roy M. Brown are on the Board of Directors and Dr. E. C. Branson, of the Univer sity, and Dr. Joseph 11. Pratt, formerly of Chapel Hill, but now of AshevJlIe, are ex-officlo directors. Final arrangements will be made for the Thirteenth-Annual State Champion ship in baseball for North Carolina High Schools this week. The championship con tests will take place in the latter part of April and the first of May. There is a total of fifty-three schools entering the race, and the final game between the winners in the east and the winners In the west will he played at Chapel Hill about May 15. , ' A conference of the faculty managers of all teams entering the eastern cham pionship series will be held in Raleigh today; and a similar conference of the faculty managers of all the teams enter ing the western championship series will be held in Salisbury Wednesday.; These conferences will arrange the schedule of the championship series, east and west, for the purpose of selecting ' through a process of elimination two teams which shall decide the championship. - Next to football, a baseball state cham pionship is the most , coveted athletic honor a high school can win, and past contests have never failed to be' colorful events. Shelby High School has won the championship for the last two years in succession, and if reports which are com ing from Casey Morris can be relied upon, the western school is out this year to report the past season's feat. Re gardless of any advanced dope, the com ing championship series should prove of great benefit to all North Carolina high schools, and the University faculty com mittee is tloing everything, in its power to make the contest a success even praying that J. Pluvius will be sick a May 15th and unable to attend the game. Below Js a list of -the fifty-three high schools entering the championship race, and also a list of the champions of the past. High Schools Entering the, Baseball Contest for the Season of 1926 Alexander Wilson, Araphoo, Asheboro, Aurora, Badin, Bessemer, Bethel Hill, Burlington, Carthage, Charlotte, China Grove, Cherryville, - Colerain, Concord, Durham, Forest City, Four Oaks, Fre mdnt, Gastonia, Greensboro, Green's Creek, Guilford College, Hamlet, High Point, Hillsboro, King's Mountain, Lex ington, Lowell, Madison, Mebane, Mon roe, Mt. Holly, Mt. Olive, Oxford, Po mona, Raeford, Red Springs, Residsville, Rockingham, Salisbury, Scotland Neck, Shelby, Snow Hill, Spender, Startown, Stovall, Troutmans' Wallbtirg, Washing ton, Weldon, Whiteville, Wvilson and Yad kinville. .,.. Baseball Champions of the Past Sylvan High School State Champions, 19U. Sylvan High School State Champions, 1915. , - . ' Clayton High School State Cham pions, 1916. .' Cherryville. High School State Cham pions, 1917. Winston-Salem High School State Champions, 1918. ( Red Oak High School Stute Cham pions, 1919. Greensboro High School State Champions, 1920. Red Oak High School State' Cham pions, 1921. - . Clayton High , School State Cham pions,: 1922. ' ' ' . Pomona High School State Cham pions, 1923. .,. Shelby High SchooI-State Champions, 1924. Shelby High School State Cham pions, 1925. OBSERVATIONS (Continued from page two) ways in which it might show Its influ ence. The Lord knows a little opposi tion would not be amiss at present in this place where over two thousand sup posedly intelligent students are herded together like sheep, shorn of all indi viduality and made to conform to a sorry pattern which is at best only a "cut-and-dried" type of mollycoddle.' We sit on class day by day and listen to: a lot of sleep producing automatons string out a messy conglomeration of beautiful theories and other bunk which we are expected to absorb as a sponge, absorbs water. If we try to advance any Phi Beta Kappa Defers Meeting The public meeting and iniatia ' tion of new members into the lo cal chapter of Phi Beta Kappa have been postponed. These Cere monies were toake place tonight, lyit for unavoidable reasons must be postponed until a later date, which will be announced by the Registrars office. new opinions of our own, the professors, trustees, and good ; people back home arise In holy horror and shout- us down. They call us radicals,, agnostics, upstarts, and puerile stragglers from the path of divine authority invested in all elderly people, whom all young people should obey faithfully and unquestionably. -.' A few daring unorganized men have tried in vain to buck the authority and bring about better conditions here. Com pulsory class attendance is no longer re quired of all students. But it Is still re quired of nearly all.; Regulations are not quite so strict as formerly. But nothing real has been accomplished. If the E. U. E. brethren really have an organisation, we should like to see them come out In the open and help us demonstrate a little of that opposition of which they boast. "Come to Carolina,' A recent issue of the ,Tar Heel was sent to all high school seniors in the state so that, we presume, they might ' get some idea of the thought and interests of this dear old institution and likewise be guided in their choice of a place to enter next fall to begin the. four-year loaf or grind, according to their inberit ance or inclinations. We have always had the kindest re gard for all High Schoolers. May the annual graduation exercises be grander this year than ever before. And when the usual number elects to be with us when the leaves of autumn fall again upon this fair campus where the fresh men "sass" the sophs and refuse to wear freshman caps, we shall welcome them with open arms and do our best to pro tect the poor sophomores from Injury. BLUEBEARD'S SEVEN WIVES A real 'novelty is promed "Pick" pa trons when "Bluebeard's Seven Wives," comes to the Pickwick Theatre, tonight only. Here we have the delightful droll tale pf a bank clerk, who is suddenly made over into a great screen lover by a fast working press agent. The pub licity man evolves a scheme to make' him a Bluebeard of the screen, by "Marry ing" him to seven wives. But John at the height of his fame, runs away and weds his wheatcake throwing sweetheart. Ben Yyon does the best work of his career as John Hart alias Don Juan Hartez and he is supported by an excel lent cast, including Lois Wilson, Blanche Sweet, Sam Hardy, Dick Bernard. The story of an actor who married his way to fame. They tried to marry him to seven wives to make him famous as a modern Bluebeard but he .ran away with his waitress sweetheart. PLAYMAKERS SEE EDENTON RELICS Spend Very Delightful Hour in His . toric Old Town While Waiting for Repairs to Be Made. The Carolina Playmakers on their re cent tour met with an accident while getting off the Edenton ferry and were obliged to stay in Edenton an hour while waiting for the completion of repairs. Edenton, one of the historic towns of North Carolina and the home of the Edenton Tea Party, proved an inter esting place in which to while away an hour. The home of Mrs. Elizabeth King in which the famous Tea Party was held on the 25th of October, 1774, has dur ing recent years been destroyed, .but the Playmakers saw. the next best thing, a bronxe tea pot on an iron pedestal which now marks the site where the ancient building once stood. They also visited Shows 'At 3:15 4:45 6:40 and 8:20 Regular Admission TUESDAY, ............ April 20, 1926 First National Presents "BLUEBEARD'S SEVEN WIVES" With a spei-iul cast including Blanche Sweet, Ben Lyon, Lois Wilson. "Felix on the. Job" Cartoon WEDNESDAY, April 21, 1926 Warner Bros. Presents "THE LOVE TOY" With a special cast, Including Lowell Sherman, and Helehe Costello , Walter Hiers Comedy "Oil' His Beat" ' ( SPORTLIGHT Pickwick Theatre ' Almost d Part of Carolina ' . the old St. Paul's church which Is the oldest church in the stute with the ex ception of the church at Bath. It was in this church, two weeks before the Continental Congress hod formally de clared Independence, that the vestry met and protested against the English taxa tion. In the graveyard by the church are buried Governors Charles Eden, for whom the town was named, Henderson Walker, and Thomas Pollock. The Play makers saw the original slab which was placed as a memorial to Governor Eden and which still marks his grave. It is made of slate, set in brownstone, and has. shown itself more capable of with standing the ravages of time than many of the marble monuments of lesser age. The Cupola, built In 175S, is noted for the elaborate and varying styles of arch itecture and also for the valuable old furniture, The house Is built of white and yellow pine and receives its name from a cupola which is octagon in shape and has four windows, the roor rf which is unlike the roof of other cupulas In that its shape is an ellipse cut through the longer diameter. In this cupola Is a spy glass with a body of mahogany and brass ends, the glass Is 4H inches long and two inches thick, .which some say was used to sight ships coming into the harbor. The Playmakers spent an enjoyable hour in seeing these relics of the past and perhaps gaining ideas for new plays. BUDD-PIPEK ROOFING COMPANY Durham, N. C. Roofing and Sheet M etal Work APRIL SHOWERS BRING OUT . TOWER'S FISH B RAN D S L1CKERS ; The most Practical and Stylish Rainy Uayuarments y&ur deafer ias tjem. A.J. TOWER CO. Boston,Masa m Don't Pay a Premium HUT. WHEN IT COSTS AEOUT THE SAME Buy It In North Carolina You may be from the Old Dominion or the Palmetto Stute, or you may be from Georgia or some other good state but while you are in North Carolina be a TAR HEEL, and a good one! Have you thought of the many thousands that Xorth Carolinians pay each year Into the educational Institutions of the State? This vast sum must be ground from the wheels of North Carolina business. Add your momentum to those business wheels- s BUY PROM NORTH CAROLINIANS! We are glad to note that the University Publications are all printed in North Carolina. - HE EDWARDS & BROUGHTON CO. "Complete College Annual Service" RALEIGH, N. C.

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