Per 2 Four THE DAILY TAR HEEL Sunday, May 25, 1939 BAPTIST . Eugene Qliye,Pastor 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11 :00 a. m. Sermon by Dr. W. II. Wilson. , 7:00 p. m. -B. Y.J?. U. No evening service. LUTHERAN G. A. Metz, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. " 11:00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon by Mr. Metz. METHODIST , C. E. Rozzelle, Pastor 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Sermon by Mr. Rozzelle. Topic : "The Recon struction of Religion." 7 :00 p. m. Junior League. 7:00 p. m, Epworth League. Parson Moss will speak at the League. 8:00 p. m. Sermon by Mr. Roz zelle. Topic: "Jesus and the Unborn." Weather Forecast Chapel Hill and vicinity; Generally fair and cooler. North Carolina: Fair and cooler. AWARDS NIGHT IS TO FINISH YEAR'S ACTIVITIES WEEK Gerrard Hall To Be Scene Of Official Recognition Of Extra-Curricular Work- Awards .Night', will come to morrow in Gerrard hall at 8 o'clock, at which time awards will be made for good work in athletics and for work on pub lications and in- debating. A summary of the year's prog ress and achievements in student life and the evolution of student government during the past year will be given by Ray Far ris, retiring president of the student body. - Awards for Yackety Yqck work will be made by Travis Brown, while the Carolina Mag azine awards will be made by John Mebane, the Buccaneer awards by Cy Edson and the Tar Heel medals by Glenn Hold er. Following these awards, announcements concerning, the Phi Beta Kappa fraternity will be made by Gordon Gray, re tiring president. A cup to the best freshman scholar-athlete, and athletic awards will also be announced. These are to be made by Coach "Bob" Fetzer, athletic director. The presentation of the Patter son medal to the best all-round athlete will be the final award on the program. TAR HEEL BAT-BOY (Continued from page three ) with the managers in chasing foul balls and filling the needs of the players. In fact, he or ders the freshman managers around; these, though they be rising sophomores, are not in the least resentful in taking or ders from "Sec," who knows much more about the team than they do. But being bat-boy and secre tary is his least importance to the team. He supplies as much enthusiasm and cheerfulness to the team as anyone. He has to be restrained from razzing the opposing pitcher too much. He exhorts the players by their nicknames and knows as much about them as the most rabid fans and followers of the team. At the annual Carolina-Vir ginia game two weeks ago, "Sec" received a ball autographed by the whole squad, a token he prizes highly. , At the final Duke game he received a black eye accidentally by the Duke catch er flinging a bat at hihl without looking; it almost started a riot. i t - - . " CHAPEL OF THE CROSS A. S. Lawrence, Rector 8:00 a. m.- Holy Communion. 9 :45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Service, and ser mon. 7:00 p. m. Y. P. S. L. UNITED CHURCH B. J. Howard, Pastor 19:45 a. m. Sunday school. Gra dy Leonard, superintendent ; Paul McConnell, teacher men's Bible class. 11 :00 a. m. -Morning services. Sermon by Mr. Howard. . 7 :00 p. m. Young People's hour. PRESBYTERIAN 9:45 a. m. Sunday school. 11:00 a. m. Morning services. Sermon by Mr. Moss. 7 '.45 p. m. Evening services. Sermon by Mr. Moss. 8:45 p. in. Young people's so cial hour. Social rooms at church. FACULTY RAISES STANDARD AGAIN Scholarship Requirements Con tinue To Climb; All Persons Must Pass At Least One Course. Another of a series of strin gent regulations regarding scholarship requirements' em anating from the councils of the undergraduate faculty this year was passed by that body at its meeting Friday after noon. The newT regulation will not change the readmission requirements for next Sep tember but will determine the eligibility of students for the winter quarter and all subse quent terms. The new rule as stated by the undergraduate faculty follows: "A freshman must pass two courses in the firsttwo quar ters, and five courses in the first tnree quarters. - After the freshman year, a student must pass at least one course each quarter and four courses in two successive quarters. De ficiencies may be made up by correspondence or in summer school, in which case only credits exceeding one course credit so obtained shall count for readmission." ANNUAL CAPERS (Continued from first page) Davies, Leon English, Sara Fal kener, Harry Galland, Nora Del Gumble, Phoebe Harding, George McKie, Willie Posey, George Wilcox, and Muriel Wolf; for playwriting Kent Creuser, Joseph P., Fox, John Patric, Russell Potter and Mil ton Wood; for staging Bob Dawes, William Day, Curtis Muse, George Pearson, Erskine Robert, Donald Rulfs, Jack Schneider and Jack White; for costuming Vanida Brecken- ridge and Lucille Prouty; for committee work English Bag- by, W. E. Caldwell and A. S. Lawrence; for administration- Jack Kirkpatrick ; and for di recting Elmer Hall. After the performance re freshments were served in the green room of the . theatre. Dancing on the stage, with music by Bob Dawes and Don Wood, brought the 1930 Capers to a close. - v SENIOR WEEK (Continued from first page) starring Dolores del Rio. "Red" Greene, president of the senior class, and Bob Gra ham, chairman vof Senior Week 1 . 7 have worked out the details in connection with this week's ac tivities and predict what will be one of the best Senior Weeks that Carolina has ever wit nessed. By all members of the Snake Bite Doctoring: Remains A Lucrative Business In Carolina (Continued from first page) a few weeks and, God daggit you know after that she got married and had seven children. Cured Some Bad Cases "Now, take that worse case I ever had. That was a problem, too. I took that case when all the medical doctors had given it up. I went to see that gal twenty days 'fore I could make a cure. That was the worst case I ever had or want to have. But her folks made me a present of forty dollars for my trouble." In spite of the fact that snakes are fast disappearing, Sheriff Jack's reputation as a snake-bite doctor has been steadily -on the increase since at the age of 12 he cured his first patient. He learned the secret formula from Frank McGuire, a Confederate soldier who visited his hom after the Civil War. The following summer he had a half dozen cases and three years later, at the age of 16, he took a dozen patients and cured them all. Some had bfn bitten by moccasins while others en countered the dreaded adders and copper heads. Although he has served, the public as a blacksmith, as bug gy maker, and more recently as auto mechanic and deputy sheriff, he has let nothing inter fere with his snake-bite prac tice. He has had hundreds of cases and has never failed to make a cure." He is still widely known throughout eastern North Carolina, having had cases in Hertford, Bertie, Northampton, Gates, and in many Virginia counties. Medical Doctors Aid Him Doctoring snake bites, he says, gives him more pleasure than anything he has ever done. "It gives a man a great satisfaction to know he can be a help to the people of his state. I am glad when I look back on the years I've spent doctoring and see that I've done some good and have been a help to the people. I've enjoyed every minute I've spent helping my friends and the medi cal doctors." Sheriff Jack went off for a stroll one beautiful summer morning and upon his return found the village doctors waiting for him with a patient who had been bitten by a poplar-leaf moc casin. "That man was stretched out on the office porch helpless. But, God daggit, I had him in his field plowing again in three days." He has never tackled a rat tle-snake bite and says that he'd rather leave "those dagged things" alone and let the medi cal doctors take care of such cases with "this here new serum." Believes in Science "This vaccinating business for rattle-snake bites is a good thing. I can cure any kind of bite from the snakes we have in this sec tion, but I'd rather leave the rattle-snake bites to the medical doctors and their vaccinating needles. "The scientist sure got the jump on me when it comes to curing snake bites that a way. But I'm glad. It's doing the world a lot of good and is car rying on the snake-bite-curing movement that I started as a pioneer. If it warn't for us old time snake-bite doctors, there wouldn't be none of this here new vaccinating: serium. No. Sir!". He says no one else living knows the formula for this herb compound, and as yet he hasn't decided whether he'll tell the se cret before he dies or not; but he intimates that it would take a lot of money to buy it. "I might get lots of money with my medicine right now if I'd get some of these scientists to make extracts of it that I could sell in bottles. But I'm scared to trust these scientists. They'd just as likely test my medicine and find what it was made of. You know there's lots of crooked people in this old world today." Is Active Deputy Sheriff . Mr. Liverman was sworn in as a deputy ,of Hertford county to serve under . Sheriff Scull April 1, 1929. VA few weeks later one of the home town boys came in from Atlanta Southern Dental College to find a large gold badge pinned on Sheriff J acks wool shirt. When the young man asked about it, Sher iff Jack beamed proudly. "Why son, I've been sworn in. Who'd ever a-thought you'd be a doc tor and me a sheriff?" All last summer he was ex ceedingly active as an officer of the law, povering faithfully the village and the nearby beaches. The August term of superior court demanded some of his time, during which he served 24 papers and assisted in every way possible. "It kept me busy all right, but I like to see the courts come around, as I get to see my old friends who live away from here." Much of his time was spent at Tuscarora, the local beach, where he represented the lawT and kept order among the youth ful revelers. He says he has never had any seriousx trouble with arty of the young people ,as he understands them thoroughly and knows how they should be treated. "I can get along fine with these young fellows and college boys so long as they use common sense, but sometimes you run across these educated fools that can't be controled even by the law. About Educated Fools ' "You can give a fellow all the -v. education you want to, but if he ain't got some common sense I wouldn't give you enough pow der and shot to blow him up with. That's the trouble with lots of these educated boys to day. They come back here to tear the world upside down. They talk like Bob Ingersoll and Thomas Paine. And these two fejlows were crazy -insane-just like half of the people of America today. Still the boys laugh at us old fellows who are trying to help them along. "What do some of them do go out and get drunk, then say the old men are the sots. God daggit, there's just as much liquor drunkjtoday as there was ten years ago, but there's a dif ferent class a-drinking it now, and that is our boys and girls. Ten years ago our girls warn't drinking it; but look what's hap pening now. Why, it's even got so bad now that any 12-year-old boy can buy all the liquor he wrants for a one-dollar bill. Offers His Panacea "The whole trouble, with our country today is that we have lost all contact with God and are worshipping Satan. It ain't nothin else. God don't push Himself on nobody. If we want God we have got to look for Him. But it looks like this country don't want Him .at all. "Take Russia, now. Russia's gonna eat bark off 'n trees and it's gonna happen 'fore I die. Russia can!t go about tearing down God's churches and carry ing out thejioly vessels. There was old Belshazzar that did this very thing and his kingdom fell by the will of God, and so will Russia fall. Belshazzar had the LOST Reward for the return of a white gold Phi Delta Theta Pin with initials W. R. M. Call Bill Mills, 4241. FOR SALE Two brown police pups for sale by Mrs. J. T. Dobbins. Call 7196 or 301 Cameron ave. nccadnezzar got from the tem ple in Jerusalem, brought to him, and he and his wives "had a drinkin' frolic. God made the kingdom fall. That's exactly what's gonna happen to Russia. And God daggit, if America keeps on at the rate she's goin filled up with ungodliness and idolatry, she can't make a suc cess either. I if: I - fiv - S - Li 3-v.J - sis srj. 53 j n rm H . H ft n f amous FIRESTONE line is on sale. Prices are lower than they will be again this year. Sizes to fit any car. The line is new, fresh stock. Sale prices apply to the FIRESTONE regular gum dippedV balloons, the Oldfield and Courier lines, and the FIRE STONE Heavy Duty and Supreme lines. No better tires are made. WE LIST A FEW TYPICAL PRICES: 29x4.40 Courier 5.40 30x4.50 Courier .. ....... 6.40 29x4.50 Oldfield . ... . -L. ... 6.10 30x4.50 Oldfield . l. . 6.80 29xo.00 Oldfield ....................................".... 8.60 30x5.00 Oldfield 8.95 30x6.00 Oldfield 12.20 Reductions on the New Firestone 6-Ply Hea7 Duty Balloons Everybody Knows Firestone Quality Sale Prices Will Not Last Long". Take Advantage of the Prices This Week and Next ack Sparrow's YOUNG MEN WANTED by America's Fastest Growing v Industry THE door to a profitable America's fastest growine In- d us try... is now wide open tc yon. For Curtiss -Wright has put into operation the new pay-as-you-learn plan. Take advantage of this wonderful op portunity. . Learn to fly. Qualify as a li censed pilot. Enter the Curtiss -Wright Cutting Ground School . . . make a small initial deposit and pay the balance later. Curtiss -Wright Ground s Qm cuirnss-wniGHT FLYIMG SEnVICS Raleigh AirptrV 'Raleljk, N. CS Hamer Calls Meeting . Ed Hamer expressed a desire yesterday to see all the members of the Y. M. C. A. present at the final meeting of the Y next lion day night at 7:15. All three cabinets will meet together for the last time of the year. The purpose of the meeting i$ to discuss plans for the Blue Ridge meeting this summer. Tire Sale The time is short when the sale is over you cannot buy FIRESTONE tires at re ductions of from 15 to 25 per cent. Our entire stock of Service Station Schooling is essential. The Government will not license you to fly unless you pass the tests which are based on the very subjects taught in Curtiss- Wright Schools. Leading authori ties in aviation say the success in this great and rapidly growing industry is based on knowing how to fly. You may practical not plan to fiy for pay ...but whether for pleasure or profit, you cannot be licensed as a pilot without Gr&und Schooling.- New classes are now forming. Send in the at tached coupon today. CU1T1SS. WEIGHT FLYING SBSVICB GentJetan I am tntcrasted is avistkai nd wank mppreeiate asore inforna tK oa tbm aubjecca I ban saarked X. F75sht Inetrjctwai O CO Gracod CaaiM Roane PSaa Q Optwrtaaitifsiii Aviatioo O Aviataoai for tha Eaii Has t3Frw QstawWiisiU Bote I Now. Strmt. I I I 1 Closes Soon ...a J