THE RED AND BLACK Chick, Egg Contest Being Carried on At Poultry Building The first statewide Georgia baby chick and egg contest is being con ducted at the poultry plant of the College of Agriculture by the Geor gia Baby Chick association and the Poultry Science club of the College of Agriculture. The show, in which there are 45 entries of eggs and chicks from farm ers and hatcheries all over the state, began Thursday morning and will end Saturday noon. The show Is the second of its kind to be held in the South. The first was held at Au burn last year. The judges for the show are: for baby chicks, D. F. King, professor of poultry husbandry at Auburn; for eggs, A. M. Mogan, head of the de partment of poultry at Clemson. The judging for baby chicks was held Thursday, and the judging of 6ggs is scheduled for today. An auction of all entries of chicks and eggs in the show defray expenses of conducting the show. Also at Dr. Wrighton to Speak At Synagogue Sunday Dr. W. H. Wrighton, assistant professor of philosophy at the Uni versity, will lead a discussion “Eth ical Values and the Belief in God" at the Stern Community center of the Jewish Synagogue on Hancock ave nue Sunday at 11 a. m. The public is invited. Dr. Wrighton will discuss religion as a moral force, including the ques tion, "Can the mere doing of good be considered a religion?" The au dience wili take part in the discus sion. Rabbi Abraham Shusterman is in charge of arrangements and will preside at the discussion. the auction all contestants and vis itors will be allowed to draw lucky numbers, and those getting lucky numbers will receive a prize of 25 baby chicks. For winners of first place of each of the four breeds of baby chicks, and for winners of both the white egg and brown egg contests loving cups will be given. There is also a trophy for the contestant having the best display of both chicks and eggs. Mathematics Group Meets at University The Southeastern division of the Mathematical Association of America will meet at the University on April 7-8, according to Prof. R. P. Steph ens, dean of the Georgia Graduate school. Dr. Frank Morley, distinguished mathematician of Johns Hopkins university, will deliver the principal address. Doctor Morley is the father of four sons, all of whom were Rhodes scholars, and two of whom, Christopher, the novelist and essay ist, and Felix, authority on the Lea gue of Nations, were visitors and speakers in Athens the past few years. Chancellor Charles M. Snelling, of the University system, will speak at the association’s banquet Friday, April 7, on an experiment in stan dard college courses. The banquet will be presided over by Dean R. P. Stephens. Dr. David F. Barrow, pro fessor of mathematics, and Prof. W. S. Beckwith, of the mathematics de partment, will read papers at the banquet. Mathematicians from six Southern Shiver is Training With Montreal Club 1. M. (Chick) Shiver, assistant football and baseball coach, is in Or lando. Florida, with the Montreal baseball club of the International league for spring training practice. In his first game of the year Coach Shiver clouted out a triple and a single for the Montreal club. This will be Shiver’s second year with the Montreal team. Ed Students to Visit Sanitarium April 1 A visit to the state sanitarium, made annually by the departments of psychology and sociology of the College of Education, will be made April 1, according to Prof. M. D. universities will attend the meeting of the Mathematical association. The universities which will send profes sors are: North Carolina, uouth Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennes see, and Florida. Page Seven Dunlap, professor of sociology. The students will be the guests of the Georgia State College for Women at lunch while in Milledgeville. The purpose of this trip, accord ing to Professor Dunlap, which will include both the state hospital and the state prison, is to enable the students to Investigate from a closer proximity actual cases resembling those studied in class. The approximate cost of the trip, in a special bus, will be $2.00. Stu dents desiring further information about the trip may obtain it from Professor Dunlap. Mother’s Day Photographs Y our Mother wants Y our Photograph for Mother’s Day REG. ^ NOW Size -i Photographs apL GATES’ STUDIO Sittings Made Now Copyright. 1933. R. J. Reynold* Tobacco Compaoj NO TRICKS ..JUST COSTLIER It’s fun to be fooled ...it’s more fun to KNOW TOBACCOS large packing cue is exhibited on a raised plat- rm. A young woman climbs into the box. Head, inds and feet protrude, and are held by specta- rs while the magician takes a crosscut*saw and, ith the help of an assistant, saws through the inter of the box and apparently through the no- EXPLANATION: There are many explanations for this illusion. One method of performing this illusion requires the presence of tvio girls in tie box. One girl curls up in the left half of the box with her head and hands protruding, giving the effect you see illustrated above. The other girl is doubled up in the right half of the box, with only her feet showing. Nobody is sawed in half. Cigarette advertising, too, has its tricks. Consider the illusion that “Flavor” can be achieved by some kind of magical hocus- pocus in manufacturing. EXPLANATION: Just three factors control the flavor of a cigarette. The addition of arti ficial flavoring. The blending of various to baccos. And the quality of the tobaccos them selves. Quality is by far the most important. Domestic cigarette tobaccos vary in price from 5* a pound up to 40* a pound. Imported tobaccos vary from 50* a pound to $1.15. No wonder, then, that cigarettes differ in taste—since distinctive, pleasing flavor de pends so largely upon the blending of the cost lier tobaccos. I* 1* ° fact, well known by leaf tobacco experts, that Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE tobaccos than any other popular brand. Try Camels. Give your taste a chance to sense the subtle difference that lies in costlier to baccos ... a difference that means all the world in smoking pleasure ... in pure, un alloyed satisfaction.