Page Four SIGMA NU'S HOLD ANNUAL BANQUET President Harry W. Chase and Hon. Walter Murphy Speakers At Fra ternity Dinner; Henderson Toast master. Addresses by President Harry W. Chase, of the University, and Hon. Walter Murphy prominent legislator and financier, .were features of the annual Psi chap ter of Sigma Nu fraternity ban quet, held at the Carolina Inn Saturday night. .," Professor Archibald Henderson served as toastmaster for the occasion. The banquet was held in con nection with a house party given by the fraternity and some forty girls were . among the ninety persons present. Sigma Nu members of . the faculty and their wives who were pres ent were Dean and Mrs. Addison Hibbard, Professor and Mrs. E. E. Peacock, and Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Lyons. , ... . Walter. Murphy; founder of Psi chapter, spoke of the growth of the University and the fra ternity especially during the ten years in which Dr. Chase has been president. Speaking for the fraternity he expressed ex treme regret that the University head is leaving. ' Dr. Chase, member of the Dartmouth chapter, thanked the fraternity for the farewell given him, and expressed regrets that he was leaving Chapel Hill after residing for twenty years. -He told the group of working with "Pete" Murphy in securing ap propriations for the University from the state legislature, and what a help Psi chapter's found er had been to , the University for the past forty years. Charles Price welcomed the girls on behalf of the chapter, and Miss Elizabeth Murphy, of Salisbury, graciously accepted the greeting. , , Cooper Person, commander of the chapter, spoke on the progress of the fraternity at Carolina. ' . . The Aviation Course Small Number of Students Enrolled; Course in Experimental Stage The course in aero-dynamics in the University which is given as an optional to juniors and seniors in the department of mechanical engineering now has two seniors ' and one graduate student enrolled.' The apparent reason for the low enrollment this year is that the course is just in the experimental stage, and most of the students had al ready chosen their courses be fore aero-dynamics became a part of the curriculum. Quite a number of students, however, have voiced their in tention of enrolling next year, and a few have been making use of the equipment for conducting experiments of their own. One freshman completed a model of the heavy twin-motored ' trans port planes that flew success fully. . The equipment , at present will be sufficient for.... instructions during the next year or two, but as more progress is made,, more equipment will be needed. Just now, the department has one Vaught ' plane, one Liberty motor, a single-cylinder motor for test purposes and three pro pellors. The object of this course is to give the students who plan to go to more specialized schools a fair" knowledge of the funda mentals of aviation so that they will not be handicapped in this respect. J. S. S. County Doctor Busy Dr. Nathan, county doctor, has been unusually busy for the last several days. Many cases from all over the county have been coming in to him, but he thinks the natients will soon re Dr. Noble's Death Brother of M. C. S. Noble Died at His Home in Selma Sunday Morning Dr. Richard J. Noble, brother of M. C. S. Noble, died at his home inv Selma , Sunday morn ing from the effects of the in juries he had received in an au tomobile accident April 19. Attended by high officials of Masonry, leading physicians and a large gathering of friends and neighbors, funeral services were held Monday in Selma, and burial services in Oakwood cem etery in Raleigh. Dr. Noble was injured -"on April 19 when his automobile overturned on the Raleigh-Selma highway while answering a pro fessional call. Pneumonia devel oped in Johnston County "Hos pital, and last Wednesday Dr. Noble insisted that he be taken to his home in Selma where he died early Sunday morning. He served as Grand Master of Masons in 1889, as Potentate of Oasis Shrine in 1919, and held many other illustrious offices in the Masonic order. He is survived by one brother, M. C. S. Noble, dean of the school of education of the Uni versity of North Carolina ; four children: Ann S. Noble, of Sel ma; Dr. Robert P. Noble, of Ra leigh ; Albert M. Noble, of Smithfield, and Walter Moore Noble, of Brawley, Cal., and six grandchildren: Robert P. Noble, Jr., Richard J. Noble, Jr., Mary Primrose Noble, Ann Gilmore Noble, Billy Ward Noble and Betty Noble. (Raleigh Times) Death of Dr. Richard J. Noble de pletes, perhaps almost ends, the list of the noble company of country doc tors whose glory was of another age, but who have planted roots of honor and affection in the present that will bloom for a long time. Dr. Noble was seventy-seven years of age, he had practiced medicine for fifty-five years, he was following a call , of his service when the accident occurred that resulted in his death. In the practice of medicine he had built up a profound respect among his fel lows; in Masonry he had been accord ed the highest honors; as a citizen ho was one of those four-square person ages who take their obligations with old-fashioned seriousness; as a man he had accumulated in his long years literal phalanxes of those who loved him. for himself and for the good he had managed to do and the comfort he had brought. Another of the Old Guard gone an old guard that never needed a shield because it never thought to give ground! ANNOUNCE ENGAGEMENT OF DR. PATTERSON TO MISS SARAH ROBERTSON The engagement of Miss Sarah Robertson to Dr. Howard Patterson was announced in New York yesterday by Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Robertson. Thus are united two families who used to dwell in Chapel Hill. Dr. Patterson's grandfather, Eben Alexander, was professor of Greek in the University, and his father, Drew Patterson, who died in 1928, was in the faculty here as professor of physics and dean of the school of applied science. Miss Robertson's grand father, Dr. Thomas Harris, was the head of the first medical school connected with the Uni versity. The mothers of Dr. Patterson and Miss Robertson grew up in Chapel Hill together : the Misses Eleanor Alexander and Mary Harris. The Alexanders lived where Spencer hall (the wo man's building ) now stands. The Harris home was on Cameron avenue; it was demolished three years ago to give place to the Zeta Psi fraternity house. After he- was graduated here and had completed the two-year medical course, Dr. Patterson pursued his medical education in the Harvard school of medicine. For a while he served as interne at the Peter Bent Brigham hos pital in Boston. THE DAILY I UNIVERSITY MEN DEBATE BOSTON IN RETURN AFFAIR The University debating team debated Boston University last night at Boston. The Tar Heel debaters upheld the affirmative side of the question,- "Resolved, That the nations of the world should adopt some plan of com plete disarmament of all forces, except those which are needed for police purposes." North Carolina was represented by J. M. Bailey, G. P. Carr, John Wil kinson and J. C. Williams. This was a return debate with Boston University as their team was entertained at Chapel Hill on April 19. At that time our de baters supported the identical side of the same question and won the debate. The team which spoke last night also debated Boston at Chapel Hill. The first debate was a very hotly con tested debate and the first that the Boston forensic artists lost this year. - The result last night's debate cannot be announced as theTar Heel went to press before it could learn the decision. POLICE OFFICERS IN EXCITING RACE (Continued from first page) ham. The Chief said that the car must have averaged at least 60 miles per hour all through the race. ' Nevertheless, the two of ficers did not give up and as the rum-runner entered the sub urban section of Durham they were but a short distance be hind. As the rum-runner was under the influence of his own product, he could not keep his car under control, and so collid ed with a car that was parked on the left-hand side of the street. The two officers arrived immediately after the accident and found that one of the rum runners had made his escape but that the other had stayed to look after the automobile. The wrecked Ford was searched and four gallons I of whiskey found. The person driving the car gave his name as James Brown. The two officers took possession of the wrecked car and put the driver in jail. HUNDRED PRIZES ARE AWARDED AT FLOWER EXHIBIT (Continued from first page) Rogerson, Bayard Van Hecke, Mrs. N. L. Barker, Mrs. T. J. Wbofter, Mrs. N. C. Remsen, Mrs. E. G. Hogan, Mrs. A. A. Klutz, Mrs. T. J. Wilson, Mrs. Charles Mangum, Mrs. Louis Graves, T. M. W. Tack, Mrs. R. B. Lawson, Miss Fannie' Wilson, Billy Weaver. Mrs. Charles Shields, Mrs. W. W. Eierson, Mrs. T. H. Harri son, Mrs. Clyde ' Eubanks, Dr. W. C. Coker, Miss Edna Wom ack, Mrs. J. M. Booker, Mrs. C. T. Woollen Mrs. O. E. Lloyd, Mrs. F. H. Edmister, Mrs. G. M. Braun, Mrs. John Couch, B. E. Smith and Nancy Edson. . T. N. Webb, Mrs. George Howe, Nell Booker, Mary Ann Steen, Ted Caldwell, Mrs. C. W, Bain, Mrs. J.x A. Warren, Mrs. W. S. Bernard, Charlotte Shields, Miss Mary Cobb, Mrs. F. C. Vjlbrandt, Henrietta Lo gan, Mrs. R. D. W. Connor, Mrs. Dave Schreffler, Miss Betty Steen, Mrs. C. T. McCormick, Mrs J. F. Kenfield, Mrs. Eng lish Bagby, Mrs. Irene Lee, Miss Josephine Pritchard. Mrs. N. W. Walker, Mrs. C. E, Preston, Mrs. George Logan, Herbert Hechenbleikner, Miss Estelle Lawson, Guy B. Johnson, Ben Pritchard and J. M. Lear. WATCH LOST LOST: Gold Waltham watch and double chain. Left at var- sity tennis courts Saturday af . ternoon. Finder please return to S. A. Farleigh, S.A.E. House. TAR HEEL GLEE CLUB SINGS HERE THURSDAY The University glee club will appear in the Playmaker thea tre next Thursday night as a regular part of music week. The concert will be the first given this year on the campus by the glee club with the excep tion of two chapel appearances last quarter. Admission will be 50 cents for students and 75 cents for outsiders. This year the glee club has functioned entirely without fi nancial assistance from the Uni versity. The season tours, al though very successful, did not result in sufficient profit to finance the two big contest J;rips made recently by the group. An expense of about $480 was in volved by the district contest at Greenville in which the Univer sity glee club was winner, and the trip made to New York in order to participate in the na tional intercollegiate glee club contest cost over $600. . A few small donations have been received by the club, but the assistance and support of University students as well as Chapel Hill residents ilNmuch needed. "Thorns and Orange Blossoms" As The Reviewer Sees It (Continued from page two) spirit was still to much in evi dence. The play doesn't need it ; in fact, it would very likely be materially benefitted if it were played "straight," after the Hoboken manner, and also the Jitney Players, in "The Murder in the Red Barn." But this is a debatable matter, and cannot be dealt with here. The indisputable fact remains, however, that the citizens and inhabitants of the fair village of Chapel Hill, owe unmeasur able gratitude to the producers, the director, and to all respon sible for this production, for a! most enjoyable entertainment. DR. R. R. CLARK' Dentist Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 6251 PALE MOON $1 Ghiefofstyl uper-hGrts LJ JPPP4iiki Mil II ia ir Not enough to originate the most com fortable shorts that ever girded man's loins. They must be the best looking And they are. Hiawatha, Serpent, Serpent Tongue, Thuftder'Bird, Tomahawk, Pale Moon ... Wilson Brothers Style Committee in troduces these six likable designs in Super Shorts, as unique as their names. Adapted trom the Indians, they are thoroughly masculine in colorings and patterns.' Different yet related waist bands make an c..i v. 0 1 t u ucu ,uiCuipu5naDeraasners. When Brothers Suncr.sMt -,;, v u youdecidethatyouliketheirsmartness.consider .features of ZZlll2nnZ: ' .WI CHICAGO GUARANTEE If anv 0 . ... bearing the Wilson Brothers trade - w unsatisfactory for any reason you can exchange it at any Wilson Brothers dealer. Kiwanis Clubs Will Hold Joint Meeting The local Kiwanis club will hold a joint meeting tonight in Mebane with four other clubs in this district. Burlington, Gra f ' " ' 1 ',""-': nr;r ;;, m,;..,,l..,, , .7,,,, v'r,.,,,,-,,,,,,,;.,,,,,, 2523 mm The Oiieol of mmwm A Complete Line, of Hardware and Household Supplies 135 Franklin Street es in shorts . , . the new THUNDER BIRD 75c SERPENT . SERPENT i ' TONGUE I . . Forest ereen. - Potterv- r.t' w.;,...,.. nrce tone ,! y. . ' 1 '"miuuc) ume or maize J $ ' gfss green, or Indian red and or blue and ? white'' n Sky5llC' a 8ree, or green black,on whhe srnite wnne and maize TOMAHAWK 1 Another effective pattern. Blue and maize, grass and purple, or grass and maize, on white panel that combines roominess in seat and crotch with tailored trimness. See effective addition. . . .... " fflMHERS; Jiaberdash eru NEW YORK5 5AN FRANCISCO article Tf k-.u-j-i . mark to you through the r A'lT -lor preference, and check, (khon S2.50.) Address: WJIcAn .l - Wson Brother,, 530 Tuesday, May g, 0 ham and Chapel Hill clabg a7e to meet as the guests of the Mebane club for a get-together frolic' No speeches have been planned for the occasion, and the program is to consist of a general "big time" for the mem. bers. the CO I Maize and biui-, S J maize and pur--f pie, or grass and maize "No center team ditcomfirt 75 )"ijf ' -ffe HIAWATHA X9. - . , , i s the exclusive comfort of Super Shorts. Notice the ingenious back too about the npw W ton PARIS e shaI1 them l? 1 IT. ""7" '-t "u Ciena auits South Wells Street, Chicago.

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