i f ) ' Pasa . Four IHD DAILY -.TAIJ.":IICSL Sunday, March SO, 1930 Carolina Theatre Friday r if M' - 1 1 .,. if m ., If rt;;:-:-:;:;:;:::-:::::::;:::;::-."?;; i .juiuuor nrryrf"i"''""' 11 ' " " Sartorial Sway 2?em Gent MING OFCENSDS BEGMS APRE 2ND The dogma of art that beauty is a curve was laid down by Hogarth, the English- painter. The eminent German, Mengs, went farther and declared that beauty is a serpentine curve. Fashion, however, seems to dis agree with both of them. It maintains that the angle, by its very unconformity, is, in a rug ged, masculine way, more pleas ing. And this tendency toward angular effects one will " find more pronounced alike in even ing, coats and evening waist coats and in the spade-shaped tails instead, of the shovel-shaped. Waistcoats ore deviating from the orthodox sloping contour of the lapels. They are now cut with squashish or abruptly slanted lines at the bottom,' lend ing a sharp cornered effect. The waistcoat thusly assumes a more characterful appearance. It is better looking than the set look of the conventional "IT or "V" cut. HELEN PUGH TO GIVE RECITAL IN SWAINJPRIL 7 Young Pianist To Appear Here Under Auspices Student En tertainment Committee. Helen Pugh, 22-year old pian ist from Asheville, who has re ceived wide recognition as being a young musical genius, will ap pear here on April' 7th at 8:30 in Swain hall. She comes under the auspices of the Student En tertainment Committee as , the next number arranged by them for this quarter. Since the time of her first ap pearance in recital, when she was five years old, her genius has been recognized and acclaimed by such men as Walter Dam- rosch and Josef Hof man. The latter expressed the conviction, ."That child will develop into one of the great musicians." Al though she has given a number of concerts from the time she was a child it is only recently that she has been appearing reg ularly before the public. Her parents and her patroness, Mrs. Crosby Adams, of Montreat, pre ferredthat she spend, her time in studying and perfecting her talents. Miss Pugh recently appeared at Ormond, Fla., as piano soloist with the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, one of the - foremost orchestras in the United States. The following appreciative ac count of the evenings offerings appeared in the Daytona News Journal : "A slender girl in her early twenties stepped to the front of the stage last night at Peabody auditorium, took her place at a grand piano behind which were ranged the eighty-five players of the Minneapolis Symphony or chestra under the direction of Henri Verbrugghen, and gave a flawless interpretation of a Grieg concerto, with full sym phonic accompaniment. "She was Miss Helen Pugh of Asheville, N. C, an Ormond, guest player with the orchestra, to whose youth and ability Con ductor Verbrugghen graciously yielded not only his position in the front of the stage but all his skill and experience as a director. Student Notice By a recent action of the faculty, no changes in regis tration may be made after the expiration of ten calendar days from registration day. April 1st will therefore be the last day on which changes may be made. Enumerators, with Government Blanks, Will Seek a Va riety of Information CO-OPERATION IS ASKED With The Churches BAPTIST Eugene Olive, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon : "The New Penta cost," Mr. Olive. 2:30 p. m. Meeting of the Mount Zion association of B. y. p. y. 6:45 p. m. B. Y. P. U. 7 :45 p. m. Evening services. Sermon: "The Easy Yoke," Mr. Olive. ; CHAPEL OF THE CROSS A. S. Lawrence, Rector. 8:00 a. m. Holy communion. 10:00 a. m. Bible class. 11:00 a. m. Service and ser mon. 7:00 p. nr. Y. P. S. L. 8:00 p. m. Organ program. LUTHERAN (Gerrard hall) G. A. Metz, Pastor 9 :45 a. m.-Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Service, and ser mon. METHODIST C. E. Rozzelle, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. Bible classes for upperclass- men and freshmen. 11;00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon: YourxLiie and your Labor," Mr. Rozzelle. 7:00 p. m. Epworth League. 8 :00 p. m. Evening services. Sermon: "The Importance of the Ego," Mr. Rozzelle. PRESBYTERIAN W. D; Moss, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Morning services. 7 :45 p. m.- Evening services. 8 :45 p. m. Young people's so cial hour. ( The laws and codes of Austria rapidly are being revised to con form with those of Germany, looking toward the future union of i the two nations. UNITED CHURCH B. J. Howard, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. Grady Leonard, superinten dent; Paul -McConnell, teach er men's Bible class. 11:00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon by Mr. Howard. 7:00 p. m. Alfredo Nazarino on "The Philippines." Warbled a poet,. "Oh, nose! I am as proud of thee as any mountain of its snows; I gaze on thee and feel that pride a Roman knows." The practice of wearing a white linen handker chief with a white shirt is spreading. It is symbolic of the simplicity which underlies true fashion and sound taste. Yet, though in effects less bold, the colored handkerchief is as good form as ever. - Perhaps the smartest hand kerchiefs are those of white linen with diminutive figures in offset colors, as black,' green, blue, purple, tan, etc. Or these colors may be superimposed up on a white background. The cap gave way; to the general acceptance of the light weight felt hat some years ago and has since been the drifter and ne'er-do-well of fashion. Yet, because of its nifty ap pearance, youthfulness, and un deniable kinship with sport it is coming badk. One must remember that the smartness of one's cap is all in the way it's worn, for the line of demarcation between sports man and highwayman is thin. It should be swung on, rather than drawn on,, and kept at an angle a bit devil-may-care. It is extremely important that the cap be well made. It should be of soft-nap woolens and the visor should be neither too short nor too long. We saw two very smart look ing young Carolinians for the first time in two years. Try to spot them. One wore a suit of dark brown, plain, somewhat lighter brown overcoat, brown, shirt of wine red and white stripes with dicky bosom, white collar, tie of dark red satin, and muffler of dark brown with wine red all over the pattern. The second Beau combined with a suit of navy blue, and dark brown overcoat, a dark tan shirt, collar to match, tie of dark blue striped with tan, and muffler of tan with dark blue figures. We, too, thought we were a well-dressed man until we read in the Beaunash column of causerie that the National Asso ciation of Merchant Tailors through its annual bulletin of What's What and .What's Not has decided that it takes three dinner suits to make a well- turned-out man. These are the single-breasted cut, the double- breasted affair, and the shawl- collar jacket and they are said to be the trinity necessary to draw the correct line of demar cation among the different ,de grees of formality. The enumeration of the in habitants of Chapel Hill for the 1930 census will ; begin next Wednesday; April 2t June L. Cheek is the enumerator here. He will go from house to house, equipped with the blanks issued to him by the government, and will seek information about every household. The census bureau has for its task not merely the counting of the people in the United States. It is to collect data about racial origins, the relative numerical strength of various races, oc cupations, .conditions of em ployment, the division of the population t between the two sexes immigration and emigra tion, migrations vf rom state . to state, and the growth or decline of industries, in every region. Success in this project de pends largely upon the co-operation of the people. Everybody is asked by the government to give the desired information fully and freely, to the end that tthe canvass may be completed rapidly and that the final report may be as accurate as possible. training: for prison work have their place in the progressive penal- program laid down by the Attorney General and the Super intendent of Prisons - and em bodied in bills, now before Con gress. An urgent appeal is made to the undergraduates and re cent graduates of American col leges and universities to consider entering the Federal prison service-at this time. Very truly yours, SANFORB BATES, Supt. of Prisons. Nine Dictatorships In Europe There are nine dictatorships in Europe .today- Italy, Hun gary, Russia, Poland, Spain, P0r. tugal, Lithuania, Bulgaria and Jugoslavia. Turkey, now en tirely an Asiatic nation, is aSo a dictatorship. Dr. J. P. Jones Dentist Office Over Welcome Inn Cafeteria Telephone 5761 EENKIS KACEETS RESTRUNG LIKE NEW $2.50 and Up Save Money and Keep Your Favorite Racket Too . 24-HOUR SERVICE B0OE Readers Opinions (Continued from page two) Atlanta, Leavenworth, and Mc Neil Island (near Tacoma; Washington) , the Industrial Re formatory at Chillicothe, Ohio, the Federal Detention Head quarters in New York. City; or one of several prison camps in various partsof the country. A man enters the Federal prison service as a guard with a base pay of $1,620 per year and allowances which bring the total remuneration to $1,860, the equivalent of a beginner?s salary in the teaching'profession. With in the guards' grade it is pos sible to reach a salary of $2,100 a year, and salaries in adminis trative positions for which one may , quality alter experience range from $2,100 to $T,000. - College men with specialized For Th;at New Easter Suit . Hundreds of i New Samples in the Season's Vogue Tailored to Your r Taste at $29.50 and More NAT'S Agents for I- Fredric March The aristocratic lawyer who jails Sarah the drudge and - Moves Ma dame Sara,! the' star! . ' qmqus Opera Star Fights Ta Win Son SENSATIONAL court, fight, looms, as prima donna sues for son forcibly takes from her by. wealthy strangers, when she was young, poverty-striken, abandoned by her husband! So read the headlines! . , 1 The story behind the headlines is a matchless drama of the way . the divine spark of motherhood changes Sarah the drudge into Madame Sara,, incomparable; star! , ; No lesa incomparable is Ruth Chatterton, in the most amazing characterization of her amazing career! mm n i if m Fuller Mellish Jr. Noted New York player, as the worthless hus band who steals Sarah's son and abandons her! :OHl II t TUESDAY Tom Moorje in "Woman Racket" "SAME ail SN" M With V t i -I r 1 "The Tight Squeeze" . &.J&f Jg. f,31U..J 0m-M mmm,.m I Fredric March And These Spicy Entertainment Units All Talking Comedy, Paramount News, Showing the Latest News Events MONDAY 1 WEDNESDAY Joan Crawford m "Montana Moon", THURSDAY Fanny Brice in 'Be Yourself" FRIDAY George Arliss in "Green Goddess" " s i ! I