Page Tow "ftiflhinl Bit Wm^lv weayi—w«By| UDB CUnS__Hkf n Wwxy. Chapd*;a* X. c *- , I B«scatki to Hr. CM Irric SL Cohb ajs tint «ht North Cm&a »A most to a eap «Ut wTfcyba article aHfeNo verier israe .of Hear*. b»ni master at the job. &uot U dedans Ha state to be aboet He best place to ttevwrU to lire, the sepc?* cook ing of pag bag at the least es its attzactiens, «e mggeat tUt he come sad settle here tad be ear paces agent. The scheme has scan? ad ratagti. One is that Mr- Cobb, apb bis akffitr to get to tie neigh linrhand of « easts a word—it easy he more —for anything he writes wffi ha mm of a splendid ineoaae wheth er the state pays bin a salary dr not He wifi enjoy the North Carolina donate, scenery, and Urhecnea, and we will enjoy both las presence and the fame he will give os. A perfect ariajtgexaest all around.* Good Car the Ptaynakera! # It waa • happy idea of the Caro lina PlaymaLen to present “The Tamsssg of the Shrew-" - The per formance at the Forest Theatre in ftatde'a Park a few days ago was withoat a doubt a geotone success. Mr. finch, to the role of the tamer, justified the high hopes of his audi ence. Hit voice carried perfectly to the remotest corner of the ampt theatre—a virtue that ia not ao cam mas among actors as it should he— sod he endowed Pctcnehto with afi felness that a proper PetradUo should display. And Mrs. Moore and the rest of the company sup ported Mm welt For the <«g and other details of production . George Denny deserves a good ' Espidfy.frow cue duty or tfcasme to another, with the foot- W games and all the other eveats that crowd upon another to the busy life of the (Jahrecsfty, afi of as are pmae to give too little thought to the daya upon days of hard work— the infinite care and patience—that go into the preparation of such a spectacle as this- The achievement becomes all the more creditable when one considers that the job was done to the space of less than four weeks. Vi bile we applaud the record of the Playmskers and are proud of whdt they have done for the Univer sity to the way of encouragement to the creation of a distinctive drama, we must confess to a belief that a* times they have over-exalted gloom at the expense of gladness. The trag edy of miserable, poverty-stricken creatures, moaning their lives 4way to desolate mountain huts and mill town shanties, has been fittingly por trayed. And the rough side of ex istence will* continue, as it should, to bi refilcted by the Playmakers' art. but an admixture of cheerful ness ia welcome. A year or atf ago the programs began to be lightened up, and the Playmakers have been better for it. It is well that they are presenting comedies and farce-com edies written by the students here, and we should like to see them give once or twice every year some play that has established itself as a win ner on the professional stage. If they live up to the standard set to this most recent performance*they] will not fail to keep the public good will which is so abundantly theirs tod*/. A CHABMED LIFE ' The most remarkable thing sbowt ihs achievement of the eleven-year old be/ who got 4* tie edge ff ibe afty to Us efforts run away if that "Tio gel so for without being ’stmek t$T ** oatogwliM ~ Indtaaa paly I 1 (Random Shots BY HALIFAX JONES When I read the words “Cold Prevention” ia the head-. due of a News and Observer edi torial the other day say heart *aapi within me for delight. I thought I-was to leans of some scientific discovery that was go ing to prevent cold weather, bat ] I found it was not the weather jthey were talking about, bat jedde the ailment. • • • 1 detest winter time. The prospect of it is ao disagree able that these perfect days of fall are half spoiled for me be caaffil know they are the fore namers of the season of dreari ness and blight—of leafless trees and ashen skies and over coats and rubbers and furnace vagaries and frozen golf courses and (hereabouts) muddy side walks. ■ * • « Someone will be saying: “But you don't have to have muddy sidewalks.” Maybe not Bat the town I live in does have 'em, and although there is al ways a lot of talk about their being fixed up, they never are. So I fed I can look forward to this evß as a certainty along with the others. • • a The people who believe in a bell would scare me a lot worse if they pictured it as eternal 1 winter. • * • I realize I am ungraceful to 1 kick on the winters where I am now, for I once lived in New ’ York and they are many times more disagreeable there. And ’ there the winter has the fault dt running right on through fit# a that urg fadaoly fall. ' ad spring. Here, praise be to heaven, the curse is hardly more than half as long, and nature ’ puts on her clothing and be ‘ comes again respectable early in March of late in May. • • • | The Greensboro News has been having editorials about the “bunk (n baseball,'’ alluding to the fanciful theories of the dis ; tinguished reporters, Grant land ftfee and others, as to the strategy of the game. The , Durham HerakJ takes the News . to task, suggesting that some body in the News office must be a Giant fan, peeved at the outcome of the series and eage: to‘take ft out on the basebai' scribes, « * * - Both-of-th£ newspapers agree that baseball ia a great game— and there, it seems to me, ia , where they are both mistaken. They are cherishing an ancient fallacy. 1 As a game baseball is hot only not great, it ia singu larly uninteresting. Count up the time elapsed from the be ginning to the end of the nine innings, and I believe you will find that the proportion of thrilling moments to dull ones is lower than in any other sport. Acute partisanship gives any sort of competition flavor— mumbledy-peg or throwing horseshoes or anything else would excite, you if you were sufficiently worked up about who was going to win, and so does baseball. I can under stand'how students and alumni of Wake Forest and Trinity, of Carolina and Virginia, of Yale and Harvard, get big fun out of their college games. But professional ball, the spectacle of bands of hired men playing a dull game for money—there are many better things to look at than this. . * * * More genuine thrills come from even s mediocre game of football than aye imparted by ell the games played in a week by the National and American baseball leagues. • • • »■ i * Some sixty years ago Amer- aa iiai Bo nsrionai game, aad ft ' a<»wM one. TV era of sport was coming on, and there were * housanda upon thousands of people who demanded contests to ipqjk upon-while tiny cracked peanuts or busied themselves with some other occupation re quiring about that much phys ical vmvUm» r,mK,)l was invented, and there being nc other sports to choose from, took the prize by default. Ever since, the myth of its virtues has been sedulously cultivated. We make fun of the English- 1 to be thankful to clever report-' men's cricket, but it is fully as exciting- as b&sebalL We ought era who can gfve to our na tional game an interest it does not possess in itself. " 11 JJ NOTICE OF SALE Under and by virtue of power con ferred upon me to an order of the Superior Court of Orange County, in the proceeding entitled N. Boeea- Stein versus Lonnie DeGraffenreid and Mock DeGraffenreid, I will on MONDAY THE 6TH DAY OF NOV EMBER, 1923, AT 12 O'CLOCK ML, at the* court house door to Hliloboro, sell at public auction for cash to the highest bidder the following land, to-wit: Adjoining the lands of A. D. Barnes and others, BEGINNING to the center of the New'Ridge Bowl, said DeG raffenre id’s corner, and run nig with: his line South 2 degrees K 21 chain* sad 16 links to his corner sad corner of Crabtree hens tract; hence with their line South 2 degrees East 3 chains and 36 links to Rocks sad pointers, Ed. Jones' northwest corner; thence with his line East 20 chains and 81 links to • took, Ed. fawarjKrrßLft line 27 chains and 12 links to the center of the New Ridge Road; thence with said Road West 22 chain* and 16 licks to the first station, contain ing 60 acres, and being the sum, toad conveyed to M4k DeGraff enreid, and Lonnie. DeGraff enreid by deed of L. H. Hackney and wife, dated Octo ber 20th, 1211, registered to the of fico of the Register of Deeds of Orange County in Book 64, pogs 323. This the Zai, day of October, 1933 W. J. BBOGDEN, Commissioner. The toms of sato cash. ' NOTICE OF BALE Under aad by virtue of the power too (erred upon me in a certain deed of trust, executed to me by Fred Merritt and wife, Corule Merritt, dated Jstosry 1,1030, recorded in the the Reg ister of Deeds of Oraage County in »kw% 01, page 02, to secure the indebted ’**•* therein described, and default hav ing be*w made in the payment of said indcMcditeot, and having been requested io da so by the holder of the note evi dencing said indebtedness, I will offer for sale at public auction, to the high est bidder for cash, at the post office door in Chapel HflJ, N. C, at 12i00 -/clock, M., on 6ATt Ji t LAY, NO V FMB K R 24, 1923, Hie foliotrirg described lard, to-wit« l ying and being In Chapel Hill town ship, Orange county, N. C, adjoining ?!>e lands of Elisabeth Snipes, Church ;lreet and others. lot No. I—Lying and being on the west stde of Churdi street in thg town of Chapel Hill, known as the Fred Merritt Jot, bounded on the north by the-iend* of Elisabeth Snipes, on the west by the lands of Thomas Atwater, on the south by the EH Merritt lot, and on tlie east ivy Church street. Lot No. 2- Lying and being on the west side of Church street in the town of Chapel HU 1, known as the Ell Merritt hit, bounded on the north by the above lot, on the east by Church street, on the south by the lands of Charles Brooks, and on the west by the lands of Thomas Atwater, Both of the above lots contain, each, 7 dag, W. 1646 feet to n-steko on' an alley; thence N. 64 deg, E. 64 feet to the beginning, containing UU acres, mere or else, aad befog the earns lot j convoyed to J. B, lollera by deed *t i J. I* Morebegd, Conuntmtamr es the ■ (iuut, h Ryraal Proem*. tog entitled “J. L. Moonhead, Adur. off ABaa Edwards, deceased, ve. Rena Edwards at 4* recorded la the office off the Register off Deeds of Orange County to Booh , Page '■> 1 Jewelry, Silverware, Watches | I , Ornaments of 'All Sorts § And now, In our Gift Department, ’an 1 , unusually fine collection of cub glass, china, mahogany table* and trays, and English hand wrought brass. | Jones & .Frasier j DURHAM 1 BnmiK»i»iiiiuwiiiiiimnmimiiiiimiiuiimffinii»im»ttwißKii»min»n»imm ‘ Saving -for the Rainy Day 3 Put your money in a v savings account in a reliable bank. . * It will grow surprisingly fast it you add a little each week, for you get compound interest. No matter how big or bpw little, your ac . count ia welcome here. y B J The Bank of Carrboro M C. S. NOBLE W. E. THONfPSQN 9 - Chairman es Board '■ x Cashier. - I I B liNniIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIUIUIiIUIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIiIIIIIIIIiIHiIIIHIIIUimiIIIIIUIIIIH {First National Trust Co. ] I DURHAM . | I 5 s S * | 3 3 = E ’ ■ » ' 3 Acts as Executor, Administrator, Guardian and Trustee. i I 1 i We ghre to every detail of every j | | estate jot -trust the skilled atten- | | tion which successful administra- ( | tion requires. | E 2 3 | Capital and Surplus | J Over $400.000 | S E iiiiiiiuiiiiiiimimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiitiiiiiiiiimiiiiimiiiiiriiiinmmiiiiiiniHiiiHiuiii ' 1 Safety Accuracy - i ■ Courtesy , 1 fj ’ * | , These are what everybody ha* a right to expect of s bank. • * We offer them all. For a quarter ot a century we hSve given satisfaction in handling both business and personal accounts. We are ready to handlq yours. The Bank of Chapel Hill The 01dest*and Strongest Bank in Oraage County M. C. S. NOBLE R. L. STBOWD M E. HOGAN Pruiidsnl ' Vito Pratodsot. Cashier ' ,* ' Thursday, October 18,1923 Bju« k wol be held epen tor tow days to receive increased bids. This the 16th day es October; m j. H. A. WHITFIELD AND R. O. EVEREWVjQQMMISSIONERS