Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 19, 1929, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page Four THE TARHEEL Saturday, January 19, 1929 At the Carolina Eichard , Barthelmess in "Scarlet Seas," his newest First National star ring vehicle which comes to the Caro lina Theatre today. - " For the first time Betty Compson is seen playing opposite the star, with Loretta Ypxrng in the featured ingenue Tole. Miss Compson has been a star in her own right and has built up an enormous following since her sensa- EYES CORRECTLY FITTED W. B. SORRELL IJR. J. P. JONES Dentist Over Welcome-In Cafeteria PHONE 5761 You will find only the most approved street and v dress shoes in John Wards.' , They have been grouped here especially for college men. For 30 years, John Wards have beet) the college man's shoe. MEN'S SHOES See them on display at STETSON "D" SHOP Kluttz, Bldg Chapel Hill, N. C. tional work several years ago in "The Miracle Man' Loretta Young is a young miss discovered by First Na tional and seen recently in the femi nine lead with Lon Chaney in "Laugh Clown, Laugh." ' ""T t re - ine vinany 01 "scarlet seas" is perpetuated by Jack Curtis, whose evil eye has made him one of the deepest-dyed bad men of the screen. The "pious old hypocritic" role of Johnson in 'Scarlet Seas" is enacted by James Bradbury, Sr., a character man of popularity both on stage and screen. Other important roles are essayed by Knute Erickson, Larry Fisher, Bill Wilson, Jack Hyland and Fred O'Beck. John Francis Dillonj'-whose direc tion of "The Noose" won him plaudits, was responsible for the direction of "Scarlet Seas." The story is an origi nal screen narrative from the pen of Scott Darling, especially written for Barthelmess and adapted to the screen by Bradley King. A battery of twelve cameras, under the direction of Sol Polito, was used in filming the highly spectacular sequences taken y at sea and on the Island of Catalina in the Pacific. - J - - . It's just as well that the meek in herit the earth. Nobody else would stand for the inheritance tax. Wash ington Post. s 17 saac - ' ton Goes Poetic Now . - Bingham, Maine Jan. 31, 1928 , When you've planned a trip for . fishing, And you've spent a lot of leak, Bet the whole of your vacation ; r On some advertiser's tale And you fish a lake of beauty ' UiJden in a land of dreams, Whcra the air is clean as stinshine . 1 Haunted by songs of crystal streams. Comes the moment when you're ' casting And a smasher hit3 your line, Then you plaj( him like a gamester With-ha battle going fine, Till a snag, a yank, and silence " ; , And the line is hanging slack, -While you grit yor teeth and whistle And reel the fishline back. ' Take the pipe and fill with Edgeworth, Light her up and learn to grin Then by gum you are elected To the Club of Try Agin! AjR. M., Jr. Edg 'ewortu Extra High Grade Smoking Tobacco . The Pines is the favorite rendezvous for Club Gatherings, . Bridge Luncheons and Fraternity get-togethers. We -solicit this kind of patronage, feeling . certain that everyone will be highly pleased. Mrs. Vickers has the happy faculty for assisting in the preparation for such functions and will cheerfully, render her as-' sistance to make such gatherings a huge success. For those as sociations and organizations which like to have dancing as a feature of their, program we offer our dance floor. For a simple luncheon or a banquet, The fines solves the problem. THE PINES TEA ROOM Chapel Hill Boulevard 4 Miles from ; Chapel Hill FRANK BROTHERS Fifth Avenue Bool Shop Between 47ib rtd 48 Streets, New "York Models for sports ' and formal wear distinguished for style and quality Exhibit at University Cafeteria, Jan. 21, 22 attrdSsy . My Special Lot pf $1.50 , Neckwear Reduced To 7 66 99 . MAZER SPEAKS ON ABILITIES OF Says That This Government Is apable of Handling Busi ness End of Enterprise. 'No greater fallacy has ever been peddled to college students than the idea that the government of the United States is incapable of direct ing the business end of an enter prise,? declared Professor K. - C. Frazer in an address which he de livered to the debate class Thursday night. The speaker endeavored throughout his entire speech to rid the minds of his audience of false information regarding business enter prises and the government of the United States. He pointed out to the class that the United States Gov ernment lost money -by operating the railroads of the United States during the World War because it paid war time rates and made war-time con cessions. Mr. Frazier maintained that the United States Government is entirely capable of choosing capable men. He reminded the class that the entrance of the United States into the World War presented a rather definite sort of emergency in the matter of safeguarding the welfare of the American people. v "Anyone who attempts to deny the ability of the American Government to handle a business enterprise should consider the formation of tjie national budget. There is no definite proof of the idea that the Federal Govern ment is incapable of handling enter prises which are generally considered private enterprises." Professor Fra zer made these statements in his de fence of the Federal Government of the United States against false ideas regarding the matter. In the course of his address Mr. Frazer likened the government of the United States to a huge corporation in order ,to show the peculiar interest which it has in the hydro-electric power of the American nation. He maintained that this corporation is without an equal anywnere in the field of industry. Professor Frazer, who has made a rather definite study of the question of hydro-electric power in Ontario, cited Canada as an example of a land where government ownership and operation of hydro-electric power has been an unquailf ied , success. He recommended that the class make a study of the "Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Company" before trying to prepare a debate on the subject. Murchinson -Advocates Vertical Combination In Textile Industry Says Combination Must , Embrace Movement from Purchase of Raw Material to Finished Product. MOSHLOOPERS DOWN OXFORD B Tar BabiesN Put up Good De fense; Only Four Goals Scored against Them. 4 i I Coach Belding's freshman basket ball team made its initial showing in the Tin Can this year when it defeat ed Oxford High thirty-one to seven. The game started out in slow fashion with neither, team seeming, able to get its attack started. Near the end of the first period, however, the Tar Babies sank the first field goal and a mmute later added another. Until this time the score had been two to one5 with each team scoring from the free throw mark. Soon after Hut chinson sank the two goals from the floor, the freshmen, began to dis play the brand of play "that character ized their one sided victory ovr Dur ham High last week. . The Tar Baby defense was good as the fact that only four points were scored on field goals testifies. The other Oxford scores came on three free throw tosses by Longmire, Dick inson, and Hill. The high school de fense which showed up well in the earlier stages of the fray could not cope with the offensive which Beld ing's men launched in the third and fourth periods and as a result the score was rather one sided. v The Tar Babies made numerous substitutions while Oxford made only one. Sachs and Green, forwards; Reid, center; Alexander and Hutchi son, guards was the starting lineup for Carolina. Williams and Kame- tches, forwards; Longmire, . center; Dickerson, and Hill, guards played most of the game for Oxford. Tonight the Carolina freshmen fwill meet the Baby Deacons of Wake Forest in the curtain raiser to the varsity .game between the two schools. The frosh game will start at seven thirty and will be played at the City Auditorium in Raleigh. The Baby Deacons have lost one game this season. x This was to the strong state College freshmen. Since this is the first' time that the 1929 edition of the Tar Babies have met a fresh man team, the game should prove to be a good one. Attending Meeting of District Alumni Council Vertical combination in the textile industry is "advocated by Dr. C. T. Murchinson, of the University com merce school in a pre-eminent article in "The Annalist," economic publica tion of the "New York Times," issue of January 4. The .writer not only offers a solution in the way of com bination, but gives a complete analy sis of the precariousness of the present cotton situation. - Mills in the South are dominated by local interests and are widely-scattered. "The individualism of the South has been that of a bumptious youth and immaturity; the individual ism of New England has been that ofold age approaching the end of a highly prosperous and respected life." Hence, the systems of manufactur ing have become archaic, and, as Dr. Murchinson points out the x remedy would be a merger. However, a "combination to be ef fective must embrace all the functions which extend from the purchase of raw materials to the final disposal of the finished product to retailers, gar ment manufacturers, and industrial consumers." This is known as vertical integration or combination, according to Dr. Murchinson. Consolidation to assure greater stability in the cotton industry will "avoid the speculation excesses -of mills, converters, manufacturers, and middlemen that arise from fluctua tions in the raw cotton markets and from the dangers of obsolescence due to the rapidity of style changes?' This will bring about a more exact response to the desire of consumers. , Dr., Murchinson says that "a textile combination need3 something more than a holding company, large capital, and the will to control prices. It will need in addition the guiding concept of what it means to direct a complicat ed, mechanized, mass producing orga nization in the task of supplying an ever changing product to an ever changing consumer with the delicacy and precision of a handicraftsman." The North Carolina and Virginia district of the American Alumni Council will hold a regional" confer ence in Richmond today. J. Maryon Saunders will attend the meetings and will speak to the group at 11 o'clock Saturday morning on "The Organization and Purpose of the Alumni Office." . .The- Alumni Council is composed of air the alumni secretaries of the larger educational institutions of the country, . Each January a conference is held in each of the districts for the ; purpose of discussing problems facing that part of the country. In Junej a national meeting is held. This year it will take place at the University of Toronto. The Conference in Richmond will be held all day Saturday at the Hotel Richmond.: Registration will get un derway at nine. Miss Florence H. Snow of Smith College, President of the American Alumni Council will deliver an address. The conference will close with a dinner at seven o'clock and an address by Dr. Edwin Alderman, President of the .Univer sity of Virginia. Grid Supremacy Means Nothing in Basketball It is of interest to note that foot ball supremacy and basketball supre macy have almost never been known to go hand in hand in the Southern Conference. During the eight year life of the Conference Vanderbilt has been the only member to take both a conference football title and a conference basket ball title. On the other hand, Caro lina, who has never held the grid crown, has won the cage title four times. - ; Here is the list of conference basket ball champions: 1921, Kentucky; 1922, North Carolina; 1923, Missis sippi A. & M.; 1924, North Carolina; 1925, North Carolina; 1926,, North Carolina; 1927, Vanderbilt; 1928, Ole Miss. . - ... WHEN IN DURHAM meet me at the Silver Moon Cafe Opposite Bus Station DURHAM, N. C. ESS TAR HEEL M SCRAP GAMECOCKS Four Sophomores Win Places on Team That Will Open Sea son Saturday Iight. , The University will present four sophomore boxers in the opening ring meet with South Carolina's Game cocks at Columbian s. C, on Satur day night. Upon the showing of these youngsters will depend largely the chances of the Tar Heels to de fend their Southern Confernce title this year. , These four rookies team with a pair of Southern Conference champ ions and one of the varsity reserves of last season to fight the Gamecocks Saturday night. Captain Charlie Brown and Archie. Allen, Conference champions in the lightweight and middleweight classes a year ago, have proven their mettle in the ring. The youngsters must still prove theirs. Evait- Vaughan, bantamweight, won Ais berth away from a letter man and a 1928 regular. Cheatham Coley fought every match last year, l)ut Vaughan's powerful punches proved too much. Cummings, varsi ty reserve last season, failed to earn a letter, but he has enough to assure him a varsity post all this winter. Noah Gopdridge, x a"" promising youngster, will care . for the light weight berth that Archie Allen de fended so successfully' a year, ago; and Allen has jumped into the welter class. Captain Charlie Brown has his old middleweight, position, and John Warren steps into the light heavy post that his brother Add held so well for fou'r years. Jim Mclver, fourth of the sophomores, defends the heavyweight toga. LEATHER FOLDER LOST v LOST Tan Leather Folder contain ing loose leaf notes. Please return to the Bull's -HeadvBook Shop, 214 Murphey. , ' .. .. ' ' , r ; ' The real strength of the -Gamecocks is unknown, but Coaches Quin lan and Butler expect a real bat tle to open the season. Through nearly two months of training they have worked to keep out any' feeling of over-confidence among the Uni versity's : Southern Conference champions. LEARN THE PIANO j IN TEN LESSONS TENOR-BANJO OR MANDOLIN IN FIVE LESSONS Without nerve-racking, heart-breaking scales and exercises. You are taught to play by note in regular pro fessional chord style. In your very first lesson you will be able to play a popular number by note. . - : SEND FOR IT ON APPROVAL . The "Hallmark Self -Instructor," is the title of this method. Eight years were required to perfect this great work. The entire course with the necessary examination sheets, is bound in one volume. The first lesson is un sealed which the student may examine and be his own "JUDGE and JURY." The later part of the "Hallmark Self Instructor,", is sealed. Upon the s'tudent returning any copy of the "Hallmark Self -Instructor" with the seal un-broken, we will refund in full all money paid. 1 This amazing Self -Instructor will be sent anywhere. You do not need to send any money. When you receive this new method of teaching music. Deposit with the Postman the sum of ten dollars. If you are not entirely satisfied, the money paid will be re turned in full, upon written request. The Publishers are anxious to place this "Self -Instructor" in the hands of music lovers all over the country; and is in a position to make an attractive proposition to agents. Send for your copy today. . Address The "Hallmark Self -Instructor" Station G, Post Of fice, Box i 111, New York,. N. Y. DR. R. R. CLARK DENTIST Office Over Bank Jf Chapel Hill Telephory 385 FANCY ICES SHERBETS BLOCKS Durham Ice Cream Co., Inc. , "BLUE RIBBON BRAND" Ice Cream 1 Special Color Schemes for Sorority and " Fraternity Affairs Dial L-963, Durham, -N. C. PUNCH Figure This Out for Yourself V DRINK COLA "Tingle in. Every Glass" and Light up any good cigarette a Camel, Chesterfield, Old Gold or even a Lucky. Remember Sherry Cola and a Good Cigarette Enjoy Both r ( TO: -PHONE 5514 it . .1 J! -J rhf?ni.I!e-V ?n? more citable name for Gonich Think up a suitable name and enter the contest Tt will .onlyke a minute or so, and it will e Tt Bring or Mail Names to y THE TAR HEEL . . 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Jan. 19, 1929, edition 1
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