Parrs Four
THE DAILY TAR
Wednesday,. February 25, 19S0
COLffiIUMTY,'GLUB
WILL MEEf TODAY
Three Departments Of Local
Organization To Hold Final
Meetings This Afternoon.
Three departments of the
community club will hold their
final February meetings this af
ternoon. At 2:30 members of the
Sketch Club and others inter
ested will do out door sketch
work in the neighborhood of
Button, beyond the country club.
The home department will
meet at 3:30 with! ' Mrs. F. H.
Edmister, Pittsboro road. Mrs.
Ralph Trimble will discuss early
American china'. :
Also at 3 :30, the J music? de
partment will meet at Person
hall. Miss Henrietta Smedes
will present the second of two
programs on Russianyinusic, this
afternoon's division ; embracing
the most important modern
Russian composers.
Some of the works of Mous
sorgsky and Scriabine will be
presented by Mrs. C. T. Murchi
son and Mrs. F. B. McCall,
-while the works of Tchaikowsky
and Stravinsky will . be repre
sented by Victor recordings of
the Philadelphia Symphony
Orchestra.
In addition a string quartet
composed of T. S. McCorkle and
Mrs. E. D. Strong, violins, Hugo
Giduz, viola, and Charles Pier,"
cello, will render a Russian num
ber and perhaps others. Mr.
Pier, artist cellist, is spending
the winter in Southern Pines.
v The talk on etchings which
was to have been heard by the,
: Sketch Club, has been postponed
until next month. Members of
the club speak enthusiastically
of the visit to Mary Graves' stu-
rlin mstrlc Yxr Vici ornnn ? loaf
week. v"
Senior Notice
All seniors majoring in his
tory and government who ex
pect to graduate in June will
take their comprehensive ex
aminations !..next ...Saturday
morning, March 1, at 9 a. in.
in 314 Saunders hall.
This is a correction to a no
tice in yesterday's paper
which stated that all seniors
would take their exams.
Pre-Law Students
Organized Monday
A meeting of about 20 pre
law students was held Monday
night and it was decided to or-1
ganize a club for all students ex
pecting to enter the law school
in the next two or three years.
Support and endorsement of the
plan were offered by Dean Mc
Cormick of the law school and
Waddell 'Gholson, president of
the Law School Association.
Plans were laid for the secur
ing of interesting and prominent
speakers and for the enlisting of
interest of all pre-law students.
Bill Speight was elected chair
man of the group, to attend to
details of the future programs.
Various tonics of interest to
embryonic lawyers will be taken
up and the organization will, in
the opinion of older students of
law, be of great benefit to those
now in the schools of liberal
arts, commerce, and education,
who expect to become members
of the law school. The date and
speaker for the next meeting
will be announced later.
Sutton Fined For
Allowing Dog To
Run About Village
r
J. L. Sutton, Chapel Hill drug
gist, was fined $35 and costs
in recorder's court Monday
morning for allowing his Ger
man . Police dog, known to be
dangerous, to run at large.
The dog had bitten the small
daughter of Professor J. V.
Kyser of the pharmacy depart
ment and was being held in the
medical department of the Uni
versity under observation, for
traces of rabies.
Judge C. P. Hinshaw was to
have decided as to the fate of
the dog on Monday of this week,
but Chief of Police Lloyd
brought him word that the ani
mal had died Sunday morning
in the custody of the medical
department.
The dog's head was severed
and sent to Raleigh for traces of
rabies, which were not found.
Plans to examine the animal's
stomach were not carried out,
but it is not believed likely
that the animal was poisoned,
since, very few persons had ac
cess to that part of the medi
cal building where the dog was
caged.
Oldest Living Grad
Of Yale Nearing His
Hundredth Birthday
Cincinnati, 0., Feb. 25. -(IP)
E. P. Bradstreet, oldest living
graduate of Yale University and
"the grand old man" of the
Ohio bar, has several reasons for
wanting to live until June 5, the
day he will celebrate his l()0th
birthday. ; " "K
RECORDER THROWS
ASSAULT CASE OUT
(Continued from page one)
sah! Ah wasn' drunk! 'N'en
Hattie tole me to- go 'way and
ah wen' on de porch an' she hit
me wif a plank on de face an'
de haid an' an' an' heah! an'
she knock de bref outa me an'
ah laid dere out in de fiel', yes
sah ah dunno how ah got dere.
Ah laid dere fo' three hours an'
den de win' blow mah bref back
again, an' ah holler. Who did
ah go home wif ? Ah didn' know
de man no, hit wasn' Carrie's
husban' hit was anodder man
ah ain' nevah seen him befoV'
Grace's mother testified that
about 7 o'clock the next morn
ing a neighbor of Carrie's had
come to her and related how he
I was 60 years old when , my L , , , ' .
youngest daughter, was v born,.' . . , , . . .aa w
Bradstreet explained. , ;. L, oll Wa qVi
n-hil fcslf r1iH An' ah savs
shall be a grandfather,. for the Lawd a-mahcy!' an' ah wen'
first time in March, It is some- jOTVi qj oWtvas il tore
thing for an old man to live for and rawredv naykid!
a century without grandchildren Grace didn wake up tm evenin',
and nearly halt a century with- an den Wmiam ftouse yessah,
OUt Children. ' " ' nf, r-nrrln'. V,,-icKo-n' nflFr TY1 Pi
But that isn't the only reason twntvfi, dollahs cash money
Bradstreet wishes to round out,, mail rtiii's rln'ps
- Infirmary List
The infirmary list today con
sists; of the following students:
C. C. Cornwall, confined to bed
with measles; J. W. Gunter, J.
E. Dillard and B. W. Lathan,
confined to bed with colds ; R.
I. Wall, with a sore throat; W.
B. Huger, with bronchitis; and
Will Yarborough, managing edi
tor of the Daily Tar Heel, with
a cold.
Dr. Joseph C. Nate, grand
historian of Sigma Chi frater
nity, was a visitor at the Alpha
Tau chapter here Monday. Dr.
Nate is vice-president of the na
tional interfraternity confer
ence and was a prominent figure
in the recent meeting held in
New York. His home is in
Chicago.
Philippine Student
Thinks His Country
Is Misunderstood
' (Continued from page two)
home. So the Philippines : be
came an entrepot of commerce.
: "The Turks and the Arabians
found their way to Borneo and
other islands of the South, and
from there came at last to the
Philippines, bringing with them
the Mohammedan religion.
Many of them stayed, so that we
became a blending of Turks,
Arabs, and Malays, a mixture of
virile bloods. The Japanese
have never mixed with us at all,
and the Chinese but little.
"Then came the first Spani
ards, who were some of the best
and bravest men in Spain, and
because they.brought no women
with them the Filipino carries
a strain of Spanish blood. They
introduced European culture
which blended with the Chinese
culture of the natives. As we
moved through the centuries we
became known as the Philip
pines." ;
Alfredo's dark eyes lost their
smile as he said, "When we
come to America we face so
manjr misunderstandings. Ima
gine you are going to a country
in which the people have al
ready sized you up and done it
in the wrong way. It is natur
ally hard for us. It is not hypo
crisy when I say that we always
try to judge you by the best of
you instead of by the sailors and
marines who get drunk and
swear at us," '
When asked how he liked
North Carolina the boy said:
"Ah, your country of the South!
I like North Carolina because
the environment holds me in a
way I cannot tell. There is
something peaceful about the
people. They are collected. If
I settle in America I shall settle
in North Carolina.
"It seems to ' me that I've
learned more about the Ameri
can people here than in the
North. I liked the North when
I was there because I thought I
was seeing, your best people
there. I thought before I came
that I wouldn't like North Caro
lina, because it's a place where
foreigners are not frequent. But
quite the contrary has happened
to me here at Chapel Hill, and I
think the same would have hap
pened had I been out of school.
My experience has been a happy
VVW
I y
100 years.
"Another reason I want
live to be 100 years old," he said,
"is because John Heydler, presi
dent of the National League,' and
one.
and de doctah ef ah don' per-
0 secute de Rouses !'
Carrie denied everything.
Dev wuz drunk all of 'em,
w'en dev come to mah house an
I have a little appointment to at- h let , m in an den Grace got
tend a ball game on my 100th gick No gah Ah don nevah
birthday if the Cincinnati-Reds fooi wid no beah er whisky ! No,
are playing in town tnax aay. h dnnTU)i sahi ah ain' de doc-
Another reason I want to t h Eimeby dey got rough-
live to be 100," he said with a AT1 ah order 'em out.
twinkle in his eye," "is because, I suh, mah husban' didn' go
do not wisn to aisappomt i ,ray home wif Grace j He went wif
friends. -.Hir;-,s r I Tr. Mrritf. Ah dunno who
. I v v" '
Bradstreet was ( born at v er- t home wif Grace. - Why
million, O., on J une 5,, lSdU. lie did , h husban come heah
was graduated from Yale ; m , t if ? He went away las'
1853, and received his master's week to fin wohk yessah, he
degree in 1857. o ; went befo' de officer come. No,
That same year he was aa- gah ah don deck0n he did off ah
mitted to the bar. Grace's mother twenty-fi' dol-
Axtr, Tiroa wav wfiftTS Uars cash money, Dat mggah
TO LEE CLUB AT SAlOT -vah did have dat much cash
U1AX1 O HXXJl.VX'J. . 11 1 4- Alpine
' . XveCKOIl we ll nave uiauiuo
Last Monday night after' hay- the defendant for lack of evi-
ing performed at St. ' Mary's dence, commentea juage . r.
Via TTnivpraifv crlPA club Hinshaw to prosecutor B. D.
WllVgVj VUb Vrf v. ij j o I - ,
was entertained at a-reception Sawyer al the latter nodded as
he.ldbvDr. andMrs. W.' W. Way sent, "but I wish we had Car
: ' . I . a m m m 1 TTTM1
at the St. Mary's Rectory.;Mem- rie's nusoana, wniiam Kouse,
Kor nf th a St Marv's seaior here just now I I think he could
KVA. W V. W pw -mm " 1
class were also cruests. ' ' tell us something, if he would!"
tune to spend for my country I
would give it and my life in
bringing about closer relations
between our two countries.
"Most of the resentment for
the United states among my
countrymen is not because we
are under the sovereignty of the
United States, but because A
merica insists on telling us that
we are unfit and unable to
govern ourselves. Admiral
Dewey once said of the Filipinos
that they had a government of
their own in 1898 which was
better administered than that of
Cuba. Cuba is independent, and
yet atter thirty-two years you
say we do not know how to
govern ourselves. They tell us
that Malays have never become
a nation, and therefore we can
never become a nation because
we are Malays. This is absurd.
for even if we are of Malay ori
gin there has been a constant
blending of races. Moreover, we
are proud to show you that we
have a Filipino flag, and does
not a flag imply nationality?"
Here Nazareno paused to
sketch a rough map of the east
ern hemisphere, and pointed out
that the Philippines are geogra
phically the center of the east
ern commercial cobweb.
"And that is why, he said
we are a blending 01 many
races. Nobody can tell how the
Philippines were first, settled
but the oldest records show that
Chinese mandarins visited them
as early as the. tenth century
and found them to be a land of
wealth. Later came the Japa
nese who, like the Chinese, did
not settle, but traded and went
FOR SALE
Attractive household and kit
chen furniture at very reasona
ble prices. Apply 220 McAuley
street or telephone 5126.
$10 REWARD
For return of ring lost on
February 6. A carved carnelian
stone set in plain gold engraved
inside with Colburn, Biltmore,
N. C. . Return to Tar Heel of
fice and receive reward.
Sure Core v
ATHLETE'S FOOT"
1 s
"Tinea trichophyton" this
is the proper name for the
little parasite responsible
for what is commonly
known as "Athlete's Foot."
Dermatologists say it is a
ringworm parasite that is
almost everywhere a bare
foot can be placed. Once
on the feet it causes burn
ing, blistering and itching
very painful and unpleas
ant. GONICH is the remedy
a sure cure. Just rub GON
ICH salve over the parts af
fected for three nights and
it is goodby for three nights
and it is goodby "tinea tri
chophyton. On sale at: - .
Patterson's Drug Store
Eubanks' Drug Store
Andrews - Henninger
Carolina Smoke Shop
) t f t
II I
I 3
r3 r-
I! I
Dm m n
in
ae
sir
CTT3
03
with
- GRANT WITHERS
Speeding from tragedy into the dawning of another tomorrow.
Waiting for forgiveness for happiness for Lave! Fight
ing the scandal of abij; big mistake. "The Other Tomorrow"
is one of the big reasons why Billie Dove is the most popular
star on the screen.
Added
Talking Comedy,. Sereen Song and. Soand News
All
NOW PLAYING
Western
Electric
Sound
'System
ill
One
Of The
Publix- .
Saenger
Theatres,
Of N. C.
Inc.
Thursday
Maurice
Chevalier
in
"Love Parade"
with
Lillian Roth
L4NNOUNGING
"
We Take Pleasure In Announcing
INSTALLATION OF NEW
BOOTHS AND EQUIPMENT
Designed
To Give Our Many Patrons
Quicker and Better Service
on
Quality Meals Regular and
Short Order
Drinks Fruits Candies Tobaccos
Carolina Confectionery
and
- -- .1- i
Coffee Shop
"Carolina's Most Popular Eeating Place"
New Fabrics
Tailored
To Your
Individual
Taste
$29.50
and
more
NAT'S -Agent
for
Spring Holiday
Delivery