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TM* H Judge j Groups Hear Famed Jurist At Jubilee 125th Anniversary of Founding of Clariosophic And Euphradian Societies Is Honored Saturday By W. I. LATHAM A challenge to the youth of South Carolina, the South, and the nation to equal The South Carolinian of the past in the loyalty and devotion to the service of his State, which he maintained with dauntless conragc and unfaltering fortitude,., was the theme of the address delivered by 1 Judge J. H. Marion in chapel on 1 Saturday morning November 7th, be- ' fore members of the two men's literary societies at Carolina, representa- ! tives from literary societies over the 1 state, faculty members and returned * alumni. Judge Marion was the principal speaker at the 125th anniversary i of the founding of the two men's 1 societies, the Clariosophic and the j Euphradian, at Carolina. i lEfct "With the attitude of the youth < of today who would have us justify t I the tree by its fruits and who would I judge The South Carolinian of the f I past by this State of his making, I I have no quarrel. Neither to that at- j I titude nor to that particular method , I of test would The South Carolinian of ( I history object, for whatever else may j be said of him the reality and inten- i H sity of his love for his State may not , successfully be impeached. And to , you, young gentlemen of the Clariosophic and Euphfadian societies, and to the youth of this State and of the nation, The South Carolinian of the past "flings the challenge of his question mark," said Judge Marion in flinging the gauntlet to modern youth. Present troubled conditions through out the nation and the world urge the thinking man to action but J the man for the times is not to be round. The South Carolinian of the : i past turned from one task to another, the sense of duty foremost in his life and ever ready to serve at the critical time. But old creeds have crumbled, ' old faiths and fealties are dead, and that many more arc fast approaching , dissolution is evident. Another gen- t eration awaits the acid test and the j I challenge of the South Carolinian of ? the past is before the youth who j would do his life work. And modern j youth must accept the challenge and t fight to attain the same high peak of j success achieved by The South Carolinian of the past. The man who will < win out can only be described by the j term?The South Carolinian. "South Carolinians??yes; since 1729 ; when George II bought out the pro- j prietors and divided the territory into t two royal provinces, six generations of j them?in number comparable to 'the 1 sands of the sea' of Abraham's ethnic j dream?have come and gone. < Bxit \ The South Carolinian?docs he exist i or has lie ever existed, and if so, what j manner of man is he? As to his ex- < istence, our first impulse is to answer ( with bold confidence in the affirmative j ?by that answer and the manner of i it, perhaps, furnishing to the skeptic i the best proof that there is such a being as The South Carolinian. t But when it comes to answering the j second phase of the query?what , manner of man is he?the answer will ( not fall so trippingly from the tongue ; of even the boldest of us who claim ^ the title of South Carolinian." That each person has his idea of < The South Carolinian was not doubted t by Judge Marion but whether the ] conception of that personage pays 1 tribute to the unreal being was ; doubted. Calhoun or Hampton were < men who could have that title ap- ( plied to them justly, or t^e aged < grandfather of some of those present, i who fought for his country and his i ideals, might wear .that coveted ap- i pelage. But that the average think- < ing South Carolinian would hesitate \ before applying that honor to any of i the above was the speaker's belief. { A something?bigger and more mean- ( ingful than was ever put in the por- i trait of a person or an individual? ] seems to be so beyond the living as 1 to make the chooser pause when about 1 to finish his task. I Races are often submerged in na- < tions but the people stand out. Countries with glorious histories must yet i count upon the individual within their t borders to give the nation its posi- ( tion and leaders of the men. The ( Irishman, the Scotchman, and the j Englishman, are real beings in every 1 generation but at the same time arc t the world's estimation for the person- t ality of a country or a people. The i i r. h. m Orchestra Has First Concert Begins Series In Chapel University Symphony Now Has Fifty Players; City Music Clubs Attend En Masse With the four shimmering chords of Felix Mendelssohn's Mid-Summer Night's Dream Overture the University Symphony Orchestra, Jean Felice de Horvath, conductor, opened its winter series at the University chapel last Thursday night before an audience composed of the patrons, Woman's Music club, Junior Music club, representatives from other music clubs of the city and frien's, filling the building. Miss Elizabeth Freeman, guest soloist; was greatly enjoyed in her interpretation of the Mendelssohn's Concerto in E Minor. In Mid-Summer Night's Dream and :he Symphony in D Major the orches:ra undertook a very enterprising program. However, both renditions naintained the high quality that has :haracterizcd this group for more han a decade in Columbia music. The personnel of the orchestra is as ollows: Dorothy Byrd, Lucilla Mikell, Lila Davis, Marguerite Gramling, Mrs. Walter Sampson, Mrs. Henry Johnson, William Humphries, J. W. Tayor, Eugenia Burney, Mrs. L. C. Moltz, Mrs. George Ropp, Thomas Knox, E. O. Black, Pickett Fultncr, Mrs. P. M. Therrell, Winifred Dent. Rosalind Keyserling, Margaret Patrick, Virginia Simcox, Ruth James, Margaret Sampson, Johcl Berry, Lou Nita Dicks, Barbara Reeves, Sarah Bolick, W. Lester Webb, Jr., Aurunlel Seay, Albramac Dickert, Leon Keaton, Alton Brown, Thos. Watts, Lindley M'Cants, Rosemary Griffin, Mary Scarborough, Elizabeth Moore, \shton Walker. Mr?. L. B. Byrd, William Woods, William Taylor, Rachel Little, Allan Taylor, Sarah Stevenson, Mrs. D. Taylor, Isabel DuPre, P. G. Sherer, \sher Brown, Mrs. E. O. Black. U. 8. O. f lame stands for that intangible and lltimate essence of spirit, which just is it distinguishes one person from mother likewise distinguishes one people from another, and which is he composite product or resultant in lie lives of men of all the forces of heir heridity and environment. "Granting, then, that there is The south Carolinian, that the term stands or something more than may be cxiressed by the image or portrait of my individual who has lived and >laycd his part, however worthily, ipon the stage of history, and grantng that it is the something that pcrlaps may be best described as the icrsonality of a State and of a State vhose fortune it has been to inspire n her sons a measure of patriotic afection unequalled, or certainly ?niurpassed, by any of her sister States )f the American Union?what of it ind how shall we answer as to what nanner of man The South Carolinian s? questioned the speaker. "From time immemorial it has been he custom on an occasion like this or a South Carolinian to give that mswer by calling the roll of South Carolina's illustrious dead?of men ind women who in peace and war so gallantly and worthily played their larts on the stage of history as to ihed undying luster on the name of heir State. One hundred years ago Robert Y. Hayne in the Senate of the United States gave much that kind of in answer, and twenty-five years ago jn the occasion of the Centennial Celebration of this Alma Mater of Mirs, that roll of honor, containing as t does so many of the alumni of the nstitution, was called at length by nimerous speakers. In times past it :ould be called with the confident expectation that the sound thereof vould fall upon the listening ears of south Carolinians with much the same iffect that the roll of the drum fell ipon the ears of the soldiers of France when Napoleon's drummer >oy beat the charge at Marengo. But et it be acknowledged, however reuctantly by some of us, that that kind >f answer will no longer serve." State lines have been swept into nere nothings with the coming of his age, Judge Marion asserted. To >ne who can listen to Mahatma jhandi in London talk of the Indian >roblem, or hear the President of the Jnitcd States in Washington discuss he afTairs of the nation, state pariotism docs not have the same appeal t once possessed. . ' . 4 * larion i. Co-operative ? Taxation A meeting: between Dr. James W. Martin of the University of Kentucky and Professor G. B. McCutcheon and St M. Derrick of the University faculty was recently held, looking forward toward a co-operative study of taxation in the Southern states. The proposed study is to be financed and sponsored by the Social Science Research Council of America. ?Hiiniiiiiiiaiiitiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiamii FOR CLOTHES BE< BE COMIB f MARTIN TA1 s | Featuring the Genuine Biltmo Ashevill Q EXPERT ALTERINi 1140 Washii = Phone 23237 8 ^iniiHiimoiiiiiiiiiiiianiiiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiuiiiiiiniiiHiiiiiioiiiii ANN01 THE HOLE IN THE HAS MOVED TO 1524 Mi Ladies Nove $1.95 pE \ "li, Luck^ "There's nothing-like show up the voice in I insist on Lucky Strit that I know will be I And you've cor another hit with } Cellophane wrap so easily/' % / Made of 1 Cream of many alone offers the 1 exclusive "TOAS1 dudes the use of n ? the process the biting irritants na tobacco leaf. Jh are not present "They're out?so they LUCKIES are alwc "it's t Your Throat Protection? And Moisture-P that "Toasted' TUNE IN?The Lucky Si Thursday and Saturday nDnaHanMMB . V ?' . I;\\ \ V ; ... u .... - ii' ' C. . Speaks ^ Study Of 1 Meeting Held Professor McCutcheon is to 'file an outline of the proposed study in South Carolina with the committee in charge in the near future. The two University professors are regarded as authorities in the field of economics connected with the State of South Carolina. u. s. o. A cat may have nine lives but a frog croaks every day. iiiiitoiiiiiiHMiaiMiiiimiiauiiiniiiiinHiiiimmaiiiiiiiiiiiiaiiiMwiiig ooming to you? ra to us IL0R1NG CO. I re Homespun Hand Woven in | e, N. O. * AND REPAIRING lg-ton Street Columbia, S. 0. | iniiiaiiiHiiiiiiioimimiiiiaiHHnniiiainniiiiHtaiiiHiiuiiHp JNCING ' WALL SHOE STORE its new home un st. lty Shoes At 5. $2.95 | isisfr on f Strike i a microphone to ^^11 its true colors. So le?the cigarette . <ind to my throat. talnly scored rour new style per that opens ^llip9 illy Ellers will always call this her g year. First, she learned to fly a ne. Then she married and found >mestic bliss. Then she made a lashing success In "Bad Girl." As reward Fox is co-starring her in >ver the Hill." * * * * * the finest tobaccos ?The Crops-LUCKY STRIKE throat protection of the TING" Process which infiodern Ultra Violet Rays it expels certain harsh, turally present in every ese expelled irritants in your LUCKY STRIKE. I can'* be inl" No wonder lys kind to your throat. oasted" qflolnst Irritation ? against cough root Cellophane Keeps " Flavor Ever Fresh trlke Dance Hour every Tuesday, 1 evening over N.B.C. networks. M I At Cele Y.W.C.A. Drive Begins Thursday ' Canvassing the campus from top to bottom, the big Y. W. C. A. drive, corresponding to the Y. M. C. A. drive of last week, will take place Wednesday and Thursday of next week. Everyone will have a chance to contribute, from freshmen to deans, according to Elizabeth Alexander, treasurer. A member from each house on the campus will assist Miss Alexander in collecting the money. U. 8. o. "What's your son's average income?" "From two to three-thirty." || SHORT ^ . W ! 30 D. ^ Written with ABC'S - an ^ ^ Simple, rapid, accurate. S ^ Used and indorsed by mi ^ secretaries in America. positions secured. Individ X writing, bookkeeping, fiiin) f jects. Tuition rates reduced i | Call or Write for Fi f DICKINSON SECRE % - Branches in Pr i 1521 Mair Z PHONE 22611 ? 703 PEOPLES BLDG., MOISTURE-PRC | Sealed Tight?Ever Ri\ Hj The^Unlque Humidor Pc See the new notched tab o fl of the package. Hold down with your thumb. Tear off Quick. Zlpl That's all. Unit BH proof/ moisture-proofy ge Clean, protected, neat, FI more modern than LUCKII oa#yto <>P?n I TAB is-your (linger nai oration\ THB CAROLINIAN The November edition of The CarolinWn, dedicated to the Uni- 1 versity's football players, will be ready for distribution Friday jrfternoon. ? The deadline for the Christmas issue is December 5. However, all fiction must be handed to Helen 1 Staples, the editor, or put in Box 434 during the next few days. In Spain the^ call bull-throwers se- ''?| nors; in America they call them senators. ^vvvvvvvvvvvvv^Z^i HAND | I I I AYS i 1 d familiar characters? Bj erves all purposes better. Bj any of the highest paid rjj Low cost, easy terms; W $ lual instruction in type- Bj ? and all secretarial sub- K] lor limited time only Bj .:* ee Demonstration M TARIAL SCHOOL |'| incipal Cities 10 i Street w Kj COLUMBIA, 8. C. ffl < CHARLESTON, S. C. M I / , t # t I Statement Paid Port You may bo interested In knowing that not one cent was &jj?fj paid to Miss Eilers to make I ||P "?e above statement. Mis* j^j Eilers has been a smoker of $5S( LUCKY STRIKE cigarettes for I 2% years. We hope the pubJHj|p 1 llcity herewith given will be ?* beneficial to her and to I igi-jip Fox, her producers, as her en^ dorsement of LUCK^ h H? 8 n the top IHHMI i one half the other half. Simple. |uel Wrapped In dustrm-proof Cellophane. If SHI?what could be 5S' Improved Humidor Ladies-the LUCKY I protection.