P&sre Four THE DAILY" TAR HEEL Saturday, December 12. COLLEGE WRITER PUTS OVER FAST ONE ON JIMMIE While a crowd of two. thou sand fretted and fumed, pushed and shoved outside, a corre spondent of the Stanford Daily, credentialless as the day he was born, walked past prominent lawyers and public men into the courtroom in Los Angeles where Mayor Jimmie Walker was pre paring to plead the case of Tom Mooney. The college newsman got the greatest thrill of the day, how ever, when he sat down between Mayor, Walker and Governor Jimmie Rolph of California, asked the New York Herald correspondent for three sheets of paper and said, in a very pro fessional tone of voice, "Which one of these guys is Walker A grim, bare-toothed glance from one of the men beside him was answer enough. PRESS BOOKS ON . DISPLAY IN STATE Practically the entire publica tion of the University of North Carolina Press has been on dis play this week in prominent book shops of Greensboro and Winston-Salem under the per sonal supervision of members of the staff of the press. Cir cular letters have been mailed to all alumni in the two cities in forming them of the special dis play. W. T. Couch, assistant di rector of the University Press, is personally in charge of the books exhibited at the Book Shop in Greensboro. Mr. I. C. Griffith, of the staff , is directing the display at Watkins Book Store in Winston-Salem. Both displays will be continued throughout the remainder of the week, and the directors of the exhibits will be with them daily. Although the entire publish ed work of the University Press will be displayed, volumes especially exhibited and offered for sale are Stories of the South, edited by Addison Hib bard; Julia Collier Harris bio graphy of her father, Joel Chandler Harris: Editor and Essayist; Nonnulla, by Bishop Cheshire, in both editions ; and The Virginia Plutarch, by Rob ert Bruce. Smith's Gift E. C. Smith, manager of the Carolina theatre, presents as his Christmas gift to the parents of Chapel Hill a ten cent rate on movies at any hour for such persons of the village as are under fifteen years of age. r This has been planned to offset the much discussed ten percent cut in salaries put into effect this fall. Will Attend Conference Dr. A. W. Hobbs, dean of the college of liberal arts ; Charles T. Woollen, business manager of the University; and Robert W. Fetzer, athletic director of the University, have accepted an in vitation to attend the annual meeting of the Southern Confer ence at Tulane university, Wed nesday, December16. The meet ing this year, at New Orleans, will take up the important ques tion of the proposed split in the conference. It will be in session until Saturday. The Theatre Continued from page two) Brothers, was slightly miscast. Lily May had lines and action that indicated a more sharp, flat-voiced, ascetic woman. She should have been passionate and nasal. It is to Muriel's credit that she handled the role con vincingly in spite of its unsuit ability. That cannot be said of Aileen Ewart, as Mary Broth ers. She, too, wras miscast, much more horribly than was Muriel. , She was too well dressed, too mannerly, too pol ished to be the mill worker daughter of Lily May Brothers. Hugh Wilson, as Lije Benson, gave the proper stolidity to his part." Marion Tatum was accept able as Aver Benson, his wife. Loretto Bailey, contrary to the hopes of the audience, and the notes on the program, did not re-create her Kizzie, of Job's Kinfolks. She handled her Mammy King with freshness, and with the understanding she felt for her brain-child. Closs Peace was a pert Annie King. Edgar Broadhurst made his Lance Tillet a bit too light. Tom Follin, as Uncle Jake, was one of the first convincing old men we have ever seen on the Playmaker stage. George Field man made Peel, the organizer, interesting, but Philip Markley, as his successor, fell down with an audible thud. Probably the best of the even ing, though unintentionally, was William Clifford, as the "not-quite-briglit" Henry Mor ris. The character was crisply delineated by the authors, and Clifford gave it the breath of life it needed. He had the sort of folk twang that makes folk plays bearable. Charles Elledge was his usual self as the store keeper. He was back in his own element, and comfortable. Ken neth Reardon made an accept able German printer, if you overlooked his abortive attempt at broken English, which only extended to the occasional arti culation of " Ja !". Henry Ander son, out of the three "quality" folks in Act II, came closest to the feeling achieved by the folk characters in the other acts. Whitner-Bissell, as Stephen Baird, made the young man es sentially believable. Whitnes success still lies in his stage-presence-of-mind. Hejs at ease in his roles. Forney. Rankin, remembered from his chauffeur bit in Saturday's Children, was quite convincing as Red Thomp son, the foreman. George Stone, though the lights were such that he could not be seen, made some thing painfully realistic out of Preacher McChristian. It was this scene that seemed so awk ward from the standpoint of staging. The actors seemed un certain about how to finish the scene, apart from their feigned uncertainty over which of the two leaders to follow. Stone car ried off his difficult part with ease. So the play ended on a sus pended note, after the deaths of several strikers, the arrival c the militia, and the convert scene would have been a smasC but for the walk-out of the strikers. The tone, the susp. sion, the tension were carried until the entrance of the siEg ing crowd. Two of the women (you know who you are) spoi ed the entire effect, tore down the dramatic structure that had been erected so carefully bv actors and authors, by over", doing their parts in the march out of the mill. For the sake of the play, they should be sab dued or taken out. Markets Inspected E. P. Carruthers, district san itary s inspector m of the State Board of Health, was in Chapel Hill last week inspecting the sea foods on sale at local markets. Buy Your Christmas Cards And Gifts , from Alfred Williams & Co., Inc. E. R. GROVES WILL SPEAK IN BOSTON Ernest R. Groves, professor of sociology at the University and author of numerous socio logical treatises and recent books, will speak at Old South Forum, Boston, Massachusetts, Sunday, December 29. It is understood that he will discuss Social problems in family or married life. Professor Groves has recent ly completed a popular exposi tion of sociology in the Hour series of the Lippincott Com pany, publishers in Philadelphia. Other books by Groves ,that have been released this fall in clude an enlarged revision of Personality and Social Adjust ment, published by Longmans, Green and Company of New York, and Sex in Marriage pub lished by the Macaulay Com pany. Sex in Marriage wTas written in collaboration with Mrs. Groves. NEWSPAPERS PLACED IN LOUNGE ROOM OF UNION Four newspapers, the Greens boro Daily News, the Raleigh News and Observer, the Char lotte Observer, and the New York Times have been subscrib ed to and are placed daily in the lounge of Graham Memorial. V Seven magazines have also been taken and may also be read in the lounge. They are : Harp ers Magazine, The American Mercury, Time, Colliers, 'Vanity Fair, Judge, and College Humor. QP rV TP '""""I "" I I til I -III L DRIES. am0 i n T""l ESiEiPir DesM probably know that heat is used in the treatment of all cigarette tobaccos. But you know too that excessive heat can destroy freshness and fragrance. That's why there could be no truly fresh cigarette except for scientifically developed methods of applying heat. Reynolds is proud of having discovered and perfected methods for getting the m&Mi) gH) cm 0 femem (ShjBsCI tfc benefits of heat treatments and still avoid ing ever parching or toasting. 'With every assurance we tell you, Camels are truly fresh. They're made fresh not parched or toasted and then they're kept fresh in the Camel Humidor Pack. If you wish to know why the swing to Camels is nationwide and steadily growing switch to them for just one day then leave them, if you can. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY Winston-Salem, N. C. it 7. Reynolds Tobacco Company's Coast-to-Coast Radio Programs camel quarter hour, Morton Downey, Tony Wons, and Camel Orchestra, direction Jacques Renard, every night except Sunday, Columbia Broadcasting System prince albert quarter hour, Alice Joy, "Old Hunch," and Prince Albert Orchestra, direction Paul Van Loan, every night except Sunday, N. B. C. Red Network See radio page of local newspaper for time w )$ I lilsiPiillll It? v- Is ''if -x::::-:-:-:::i UM-x::.f O Don t remove the moisture-proof wrapping from your package of Camels after you operi it. The Camel Humidor Pack is protection against sweat, dust and germs. In offices and homes, even w Humidor Pack delivers fresh Camels and keeps them right until the last one has been smoked I yXW Made FDESD -JJd Hept FfllSSII 1931, B. J. Reyaoldj T.bae. C.mp