iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis...

8
Vol. II. I .,. j - J Wake Forest; North Carolina, 15, 1917. . .• -. ...... ·- l ...... No. 20 FOOTBALL TEAM STARTS ... J. It 'CROZIER; DIRECTOR WAKE F.OREST AGAIN SEES ' ' MACDONNELL OF L.S.U. AS- PRACTICE WITH ARR.IVAL .OF GYMNAsTICS; RESIGNS - · IN FACULTY SUMES-DUTIES AS COACH OF COACH MACDONNELL ·- : .:· - - ·: . ' ' Departure' of •. Director New Two in Mecii- New--Coach who Succeeds Mig Billings Manv Men Missiq.from Squad and the · · r.faur. ·Friends Amoq- cal Department;.Assume Played on Colgate Four Years and Line ii Especially Hard : ·: .. l!ody and Faculty . New Duties iiu Turned Out Champion- " . p . · .-. B • .. N W k · · · · - siup Teams in the South ractice·to· egm ext ee . · Athletics at Foreat College The positionl!l made vacant in the .. :in: Preparation 'for ·the received a severe blow faculty last,spring by. the resigns- . _.The arriyal·of E. T. MacDonnell '·Georgia Tech Game Mr. J. Richard Crozie;r,,for tio:n of Pr9f. i .. H. of of Baton Rouge, La., who succeeds When Coach· • MacDonnell . called years-· direct 9 r of .. th.e · gymnasium the_, .. .. of as football coach at for for·the footb_all_team and the pioneer baaketball coach ·of E. W. Sydnor, 'iif . the Department Wake Forest, has given a decided on Monday, about thirty men re- the. jesigned his of Drs. -Vf· T .. to the sport dur- ported ·for many_ of studies in medicine..at the American pher and E. H. Case, of the De- mg .the past week. . \members of the squad ·being green School of Osteopahy at, .Kirksville, partment .of: ?dedicfne, were- . MacDonnel comes to Wake For-- material. ·Last year's squad has Mo. Mr .. Crozier leaves : 9r( Sep- at a special meeting of . the Board est with an excellent record as a -been hard. hit by. graduations and tember the 18 to resume ·his her Trustees of. the College on July capable and experienced coach, and · war· conditions which have prevent- · · · 5th..- and Aug. 24th.,by the election shcmld raise football to the high· ed many old men from ·returning to Mr. Crozier, playing sev- of .Profs. ·T. E. Cochran, and S. A. standard of excellence maintained College an:d cut. down the freshman er years· of pr.ofessional ·baseball, .·and Drs. Thurman D. py branches of athletics in so. that only letter rileQ. came to .Wake Forest in Kitchen·. and-- Luther T. Buchanan the College. The material at his ean-be·reliedupon as a nucleus· for .19.04as.director of gymnash:lm jr. Although is limited this year on this year•s·eleven. and immediately built it up into ly the loss of the old members of account of the war conditions, __ but D)lripg: tpe past week_ the coach the present institution of·thP-faculty. the college _is glad it is expected that he will whip a has peen putting the men' t.brough . to recejve these new men. as. their team into shape that will be able to ·liard· exercises: and and itself for- meet .the hard schedule that has tice in hand.ling and falling on the tunate in securing their services. been arranged · for the Baptist ball.· Next week will see the The and community at large eleven. ginning 6f stiff signal practice ·and extend . them a most cordial.wel- He began his feotball career in scrimmages during the lattei:. part come in our midst. New York, where he played for in pr_eparation for the first game of Prof Cochran succeeds Prof. three years on the Colgate Academy the. s.eason with Georgia Tech which · ..Highsmith, Dean of the De- .eleven, and later Colgate 'is two week-s off.- . Not 'partment of Education, who re- University, where he immediately _ . the Coach sees his men in actual signed to accept a ·position on the won a berth on the team and ' .. ·- ' ··, . - .. . -- . . .' scrimmage will ·he be able to get 2. State Board of Examiners and ·In- played end for four line on the new material. The stitute Conductors: At the time of seasons ... During this time the tist team ":ill be his election Mr: tochran was Pro- team won the .championship of New ably by the loss. of fessor of. Educativn in Columbia York State for three years. He (Continued on page 8) -·.I' College, Lake City, Fla. He is a (Continued on page 8) native ot· Kentucky. Afte.Fcomple- ting the B. Sc. course in Bardstown College in_ 1905, he was for two years principal of the high school . WAR CONDITIOS CA.USE.lVJARK- EQ DECREASE IN .ENROLLMENT 81 Counties, 10. States and 2 Foreign; · Countries Represented in · the . Total Enrollment of 310 R. L. HUMBER, JR., IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF SENIOR CLASS at Bardstown Junction. Ky.. For Newly Elected President Has year 1907:.8 he_ was Dean and · ted in all College Activitied; - J. RICHARD CROZIER..! Professor of Education and Philos- Other Officers Elected of- ophy in East Lynn College. From At noon Wednesday the enr 9 n. physical culture. In 1905 he 1910 to 1911 he was a student of _ At a·meeting of the Senior Class t t W k F C 1 1 h d likewise organized the first athletic ld on Tuesday Septe b. 1·1 .. t ... men a a e or est o ege ·a _ _ R'ch d C 11 · · · th , . 111 er , a · · · h . ll . I mon o ege, receivmg e . . . . . reached 310, a number approximate- and m t e fo owmg B.A. degree. The next two years one p. m .•. Mr: L .. Humber, ly one-third less than that of prei- year introduced basketball into he was. Professor of Mathematics Jr., of Greenville; N. C, \vas ele<-:t- ous War conditions can be Wake Forest and in North Carolina. and Socialogy in Columbia College, ed of the class of blamed for the scarcity of students. For over ten years he has produced Fla., dG>ing grabuate work in ·the The electiOn was made unammous The officers training G!amps, these- that have been in the University of Chicago in the sum- upon a .motion of . lective draft, the naval, ambulance for State championship honors, mers of ..1911 and-. 1.912. From The recently elected president IS andY. M. C. A. services, and 'the culmination of his efforts to pro- June 1913 to September 1915 he a man of firm convictions, admirable lure of attractive positions all have duce a winning team coming dur- was in the Unive;sity character and exceptiopal abi_lity, combined to students, e- ing the §_eason of 1916, when the of Chicago, from which he received the hono_r .which specially the mature ones away team annexed the State champion- two of Arts in many nends. and have frgm the colleges and ship a- game. 1914 , Bachelor of Divinity in 1915 • bes:ow:d on h1.m. Smce· the Those students who have returned Though Crozier and basket- I th f 11 f 1915 h t d C ·begmnmg of his college career Mr. b ll 1 · d . · n e a o e en ere ro- . ' . seem determined however to main- a are a ways associate m. the S . d'th U . 't f Humber has been interested in and ' ' · d f f 11 -f h ' . zer emmary an e mvers1 y o · tain every college activity on the mm s 0 0 owers 0 t e game m 1 · d . f C and has benefited by· his interest in . . -.- Pennsy vama, gra uatmg rom ro- · . ' high standard set in previous years North Carolma, he has given so,me . 1916 'th th d f M . every phase of college life. He has · f h' · t h b h zer m . WI . e egree o . as- . . . . . . A year of hard earnest and bene o IS attentiOn o ot er ranc es . f Th I d I . never falled to· live up to the high- . · ' · - f hi · T k f b 1 d ter o eo ogy, an comp etmg ; . . . . . . fic1al work can be expectem. o at ebcs. rae ' a 1 an h k. f th Ph D d . est of his friends and b b 11 h ll b d b t e wor or e . . . egree m ; . . . . , . The enrollment, however small it a . ave a een serve Y the thesis. admirers, and he cap be. may be, is very representative. him durmg the past ten years. 19.16 h h b to the class of 1918 _as. good J mce . e as een . ,_ . , . . .- . . . Eighty one counties, teiCstates ·and . In connection with his ·of Education. in Columbia C()llege. a · two foreign countries. Wake heads work Mr. Crozier took the medical At both Chicago. and Pennsylvania as .a ;is sbo":n __ the list wiih a total of 43 enrolled, work of the college and won the . he in . and by hls.. b:el?g of the Cleveland follows with 13 and Dup- ·gree of bachelor of science in med- Psychology. At the Wright$.yiUe th' .. one of·. ·editors of · IS est pubhcat10n. As a lin comes in third place with 9. The icine at :the commencement in 1915. Assembly he met a nnmber. of the speaker lijs ability state of North Carolina, of cours.e; Since that time it has been his plan Trustees and of the College. to write and deliver speech hfter ·(Continued on page 8) on l)age 8) (Continued on Page 6) (Continued page 5)

Transcript of iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis...

Page 1: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

Vol. II. I • ~ • .,. j - J ~

Wake Forest; North Carolina, S~tii~:day, Se~tem~er 15, 1917. ~.- • . .• -. -~ ...... ·- l ...... • • • ~ •

No. 20

FOOTBALL TEAM STARTS ... J. It 'CROZIER; DIRECTOR WAKE F.OREST AGAIN SEES ' ' MACDONNELL OF L.S.U. AS-PRACTICE WITH ARR.IVAL .OF GYMNAsTICS; RESIGNS - · NEW.~ACES IN FACULTY SUMES-DUTIES AS COACH

OF COACH MACDONNELL ·- : -·~: .:· ·~ ·-~.....__ -- ·: -· . ' ' Departure' of •. At~Ietic Director F~~ New p~~feaiors, Two in Mecii- New--Coach who Succeeds Mig Billings

Manv Men Missiq.from Squad and the · :gietJ~d-~y: · r.faur. ·Friends Amoq- cal Department;.Assume Played on Colgate Four Years and Line ii Especially W~ak. Hard : ·: .. ·StUdent~ l!ody and Faculty . New Duties iiu Turned Out Champion- " . p . · .-. B • .. N W k · · · · - siup Teams in the South ractice·to· egm ext ee . · Athletics at Wa~e Foreat College The positionl!l made vacant in the ..

:in: Preparation 'for ·the received a severe blow ~od~y ·.:Wh~n faculty last,spring by. the resigns- . _.The arriyal·of E. T. MacDonnell '·Georgia Tech Game Mr. J. Richard Crozie;r,,for thir~en tio:n of Pr9f. i .. H. j{igli~~ith, of of Baton Rouge, La., who succeeds

When Coach· • MacDonnell . called years-· direct9r of .. th.e · gymnasium the_, D~p~~tme~t,_ .. of:<E2,;i~~~~on; .. of ~Jg. Bill~ngs as football coach at for candidate~ for·the footb_all_team and the pioneer baaketball coach ·of E. W. Sydnor, 'iif . the Department Wake Forest, has given a decided on Monday, about thirty men re- the. S~te, jesigned 'to,.:.CQ~_tin~~ his ~~ ~~~ii~h; of Drs. -Vf· T .. C~rsta- ~mpeF~S to the gridiro~ sport dur­ported ·for pr~ctice, many_ of ~lie studies in medicine..at the American pher and E. H. Case, of the De- mg .the past week .

. \members of the squad ·being green School of Osteopahy at, .Kirksville, partment .of: ?dedicfne, were- fille~ . MacDonnel comes to Wake For-­material. ·Last year's squad has Mo. Mr .. Crozier leaves : 9r( Sep- at a special meeting of . the Board est with an excellent record as a

-been hard. hit by. graduations and tember the 18 to resume ·his her o~ Trustees of. the College on July capable and experienced coach, and · ··--~. war· conditions which have prevent- dut1e~.' · · · 5th..- and Aug. 24th.,by the election shcmld raise football to the high·

ed many old men from ·returning to Mr. Crozier, ~fter playing sev- of .Profs. ·T. E. Cochran, and S. A. standard of excellence maintained College an:d cut. down the freshman er years· of pr.ofessional ·baseball, Derie~, .·and Drs. Thurman D. py ~ther branches of athletics in class~ so. that only ~ve letter rileQ. came to .Wake Forest .Colleg~. in Kitchen·. and-- Luther T. Buchanan the College. The material at his ean-be·reliedupon as a nucleus· for .19.04as.director of th~ gymnash:lm jr. Although regrettii1gveryke~n- comma~d is limited this year on this year•s·eleven. and immediately built it up into ly the loss of the old members of account of the war conditions, __ but

D)lripg: tpe past week_ the coach the present ~o~pulsory institution of·thP-faculty. the college _is glad it is expected that he will whip a has peen putting the men' t.brough . to recejve these new men. as. their team into shape that will be able to

·liard· ·c~lesthenic exercises: and ·prac~ ~uccessors, and co~siders itself for- meet .the hard schedule that has tice in hand.ling and falling on the tunate in securing their services. been arranged · for the Baptist ball.· Next week will see the ~e- The ~ollege and community at large eleven. ginning 6f stiff signal practice ·and extend . them a most cordial.wel- He began his feotball career in scrimmages during the lattei:. part come in our midst. New York, where he played for in pr_eparation for the first game of Prof Cochran succeeds Prof. three years on the Colgate Academy the. s.eason with Georgia Tech which · ~H .. Highsmith, Dean of the De- .eleven, and later ~entered Colgate 'is ~~h; two week-s off.- . Not -'ti.~tii' 'partment of Education, who re- University, where he immediately

_ . the Coach sees his men in actual signed to accept a ·position on the won a berth on the team and

' .. ·-

··~:,:;sr ' ··, . ~- '·

-~~-1~: .. ~' .

-- . . ~ .'

scrimmage will ·he be able to get 2. State Board of Examiners and ·In- played end for four ~uccessive

line on the new material. The Bap~ stitute Conductors: At the time of seasons ... During this time the tist team ":ill be wea'Ken~d conside~-:. 1 his election Mr: tochran was Pro- team won the .championship of New ably by the loss. of Bl~nkenship at;~ fessor of. Educativn in Columbia York State for three years. He

(Continued on page 8) -·.I' College, Lake City, Fla. He is a (Continued on page 8) native ot· Kentucky. Afte.Fcomple­ting the B. Sc. course in Bardstown College in_ 1905, he was for two years principal of the high school .

WAR CONDITIOS CA.USE.lVJARK­EQ DECREASE IN .ENROLLMENT

-· 81 Counties, 10. States and 2 Foreign;

· Countries Represented in · the . Total Enrollment of 310

R. L. HUMBER, JR., IS ELECTED PRESIDENT OF SENIOR CLASS

at Bardstown Junction. Ky.. For Newly Elected President Has Particip~­th~ year 1907:.8 he_ was Dean and · ted in all College Activitied; -

J. RICHARD CROZIER..! Professor of Education and Philos- Other Officers Elected of- ophy in East Lynn College. From

At noon Wednesday the enr9n. physical culture. In 1905 he 1910 to 1911 he was a student of _ At a·meeting of the Senior Class t t W k F C 11 h d likewise organized the first athletic ld on Tuesday Septe b. 1·1 .. t ... men a a e or est o ege ·a _ _ R'ch d C 11 · · · th , . 111 er , a · · · h . ll . I mon o ege, receivmg ~ e . . . . .

reached 310, a number approximate- as~ocmtiOn, and m t e fo owmg B.A. degree. The next two years one p. m .•. Mr: R~bert L .. Humber, ly one-third less than that of prei- year introduced basketball into he was. Professor of Mathematics Jr., of Greenville; N. C, \vas ele<-:t­ous y~ars. War conditions can be Wake Forest and in North Carolina. and Socialogy in Columbia College, ed presi.d~nt of the class of .~9-1~. blamed for the scarcity of students. For over ten years he has produced Fla., dG>ing grabuate work in ·the The electiOn was made unammous The officers training G!amps, these- tea~s that have been in the University of Chicago in the sum- upon a .motion of M~·· ·H~rri~. . lective draft, the naval, ambulance for State championship honors, mers of ..1911 and-. 1.912. From The recently elected president IS andY. M. C. A. services, and 'the culmination of his efforts to pro- June 1913 to September 1915 he a man of firm convictions, admirable lure of attractive positions all have duce a winning team coming dur- was ~ontin~ously' in the Unive;sity character and exceptiopal abi_lity, combined to taketh~ students, e- ing the §_eason of 1916, when the of Chicago, from which he received defs~rves the hono_r .which ~is specially the ~ore mature ones away team annexed the State champion- two ~'degrees,-Master of Arts in many nends. and ~dmirers have frgm the colleges and universiti~s. ship -wit~ou~ lo~ing. a- game. 1914, Bachelor of Divinity in 1915• bes:ow:d on h1.m. Smce· the :v,~ry Those students who have returned Though DI~k Crozier and basket- I th f 11 f 1915 h t d C ·begmnmg of his college career Mr.

b ll 1 · d . · n e a o e en ere ro- . ' . seem determined however to main- a are a ways associate m. the S . d'th U . 't f Humber has been interested in and

' ' · d f f 11 -f h ' . zer emmary an e mvers1 y o · tain every college activity on the mm s 0 0 owers 0 t e game m 1 · d . f C and has benefited by· his interest in . . -.- Pennsy vama, gra uatmg rom ro- · . ' high standard set in previous years North Carolma, he has given so,me . 1916 'th th d f M . every phase of college life. He has · f h' · t h b h zer m . WI . e egree o . as- . . . . . . A year of hard earnest and bene o IS attentiOn o ot er ranc es . f Th I d I . never falled to· live up to the high-

. · ' · - f hi · T k f b 1 d ter o eo ogy, an comp etmg ; . . . . . . fic1al work can be expectem. o at ebcs. rae ' o~t a 1 an h k. f th Ph D d . est expect~tlons of his friends and b b 11 h ll b d b t e wor or e . . . egree m ; . . . . , .

The enrollment, however small it ~se a . ave a een serve Y P~nriyslvania,. e~cept the thesis. admirers, and he cap be. ~xp.ec~ed may be, is very representative. him durmg the past ten years. s· 19.16 h h b to mak~. the class of 1918 _as. good

• J mce . e as een . ,_ . , . . .- . . . Eighty one counties, teiCstates ·and . In connection with his athl~ti~ ·of Education. in Columbia C()llege. a l~der.·~~ i~ ~oul~ d:esir~~

· two foreign countries. Wake heads work Mr. Crozier took the medical At both Chicago. and Pennsylvania }l:1~ ab1~1~y as .a w~iter ;is sbo":n __ the list wiih a total of 43 enrolled, work of the college and won the . he spe~ialized in Edu~atto.P· . and by hls .. b:el?g Ech.tor-.~_n-Chief of the Cleveland follows with 13 and Dup- ·gree of bachelor of science in med- Psychology. At the Wright$.yiUe th' .. ad~~ one of·. th~ ·editors of

· • IS m~. est pubhcat10n. As a lin comes in third place with 9. The icine at :the commencement in 1915. Assembly he met a nnmber. of the speaker he·d~monstrated lijs ability state of North Carolina, of cours.e; Since that time it has been his plan Trustees and fr~~nds of the College. to write and deliver ~ speech hfter

·(Continued on page 8) (C~ntinued on l)age 8) (Continued on Page 6) (Continued o~ page 5)

Page 2: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

·:m. QI.

.......... ~ j~t\·711 ~~l

TheY. M. C. A. Holds Its First Meeting

. '' . ' '. ~ ~ ~~ .... ' 7. Anglicanism." ·

8. "Baptists." . ·· It is probable that one of these

lectures will be substitu~ed by a discussion of the· present World Situation, Dr. McGlothlin is Prof. of Church History in our Seminory, a brilliant scholar and an eminent Baptist. He is a gifted aua enter­taining speaker and we look forward with pleasure to his coming among us.

On last Monday night at the first WAKE FOREST AGAIN SEES regu Jar meeting ot theY. M. C. A. an unusually large number of stu-

NEW FACES IN FACULTY -(Continned from page 1)

dents were out to enjoy rhe splendid Prof .. s. A. Derieux, Associate pro.gram arra~ged by the President. Professor of English, follows Prof.

-After a few brief remarks by the E. w. Sydnor, now of-the Univer­President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some reasons did a year's graduate work in John why s~udents should belong to the Hopkins University, and in 1912 Association. Dr. Graves, the Col- received a Master's degree in Eng­lege Chaplin, then showed the splen- !ish from the University of Chicago: did ad rantages offered to the stu· He has had large experience in dents by the Y: M. C, A. Mr. E. teaching, both in the high school

T. MacDonnell, the new football and in college. He supplied an ~~~~~~!!!~~-~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ coach, then made his first appear- English po-sition in Richmond Col- ;;;; ance as a public speaker at Wake lege for one year and last ye~r for Forest and was heard with delight. a time in Grinnel College. At the

The prospects for the year are time of his election· he was under very good. Already most of the appointment for next session in stu'ient body have become members Grinnel. He has published in the of the As::;ociation and under the Youth's Companion, The American

THE BIGGEST BARGAIN ON THE HILL

leadership of Mr. ~~uillin and the Magazine and other publications, other officers great things may be short stories which-- haxe been ,

expected. On next Monday night 'd I d 'Old G ld A d Bl k the Association will have the privi- Wloe/ ~~:h~r T. Buchanan succeeds '· 0 n ac lege of hearing Dr· W · J · McGloth- Dr. W. T. Carstarphen as Profes- · lin of the Southern Baptist Theo- sor of Patho!ogy and Bacteriology. logical Seminary. Dr. Catarphen is captain in the

medical services o4 the U. S. Army Many Students go to· Sunday School all:d will probably be assigned to a

Out of 298 students registered base hospital in France or England. Dr. Buchanan is a graduate ~of Wake Forest College, with the de-gree of B. S. in Medicine, and the

$1.00 ~er Session GIVE YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

.To Jeffer~on Medical Colleg~ with the S. S. Meek, degree of M.D. He won distinc-

~·- Busine~s Manag~r.

up to Sunday morning 208 were en­rolled as members of the Wake Forest Sunday School on last Sun­day m')rning. Special invitations were sent out to the students on Saturday and it was indeed gratify­ing to the Sunday School authori­ties to see so many of these invita­tions accepted. The four classes for students, taught by Drs. Poteat, Gulley, Nowell, and Jones, were all full. It is to be hoped that this splendid record may be maintained throughout the entire session.

tion as a student in Philadelphia iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii and the appointment to the interne-

Dr. ·McGlothlin to be Here

ship of a large hospital in Kansas City when he remained one year. Aftet two years of practice he _took last winter graduate courses in Pathology and Bacteriology iii the Army Medical School, Washington, D. C., and upon the basis of his at-tainments received from President Wilson a commission of first lieu- -­tenant in the army. Later he re-signed that commissien and was

The readers of Old Gold and Black honorably discharged. will be delighted to learn that Dr. Dr. Thurman· D, Kitchin wa• W. J .. McGlothlin,~of the Southern elected by the trustees :to succeed Baptist Theological Seminary will Dr. E. A. Case, who tendered his .be here next week to deliver a series resignation to accept a position in of eight lectures. Dr. McGlothlin the Jefferson Medical College of . will arrive 11t 11 o'clock Sunday Philadelphia. Dr. Kitchin was / night and on Monday morning, ~II graduated from Wake Forest Col- __ deliver his. first lec~ure. ·He wtll. lege with a degree of B.A. in 1905,

deliver two'lectures daily. one at and studiedm~icine in the Univer-the chapel service in the morning sity of North Carolina and the Jef- · arui again at night. ferson M~dic~l College of Philadel-

- -- 'The lectures to be!delivered· are phia, from which latter institution·

as follows:· . · Ch . t' 't "

1 "Primitive r1s 1am Y. · "Rise of Ute Catholic Church." 2. "Roman Catholic Church." -3.

"'fhe Reformation." 4. . . " 5. "Luther~~~~m.

6. "Calvinism."

he received his M.D. degree. Hi1:1 first two years of practiee-· l!'i'ere spent in Lumberton, whence he· re;­moved ·to his old home .in Scotland- .. Neck. His professional asaociatea, who kq~w him hold him to be one of the ablest men in hi1:1 profesiion.

'· -

..-- -'. - ·- .. ~ ..

/

she her

Page 3: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

..

/

~ ' ~· . - '- •'J ·..:. ·,·.~·_''·:~'-'··~-...... ;·~,..~.

;"f' ,. - -- -----· --~~------ I----.... __ ... z:' .... __ ... ?~~--···!·::._:.·: ...... ___ .~--~-----··---·--·--~--_;:-- .. ---···-· .... :::. -·· -;:: ~-~ ·.-:'·---~., .. _.-: ·-·· ·.-.

~ __ ~®f.- t-~n-rn_l_lf __ u-tt-rr-st-_ ._--.. ,. MILLINERY ·.OPENING

Miss Minnie MillsJeft Fri~ay for Enfield where she will teach school during the coming season.

Mr. Leslie· Bullard has returned from Faye~teville where be accom­panied the remains of his fath~r

who died Sunday after an illness of' . Miss Margaret Hall, of Raleigh, several years. _ ' ,

left Wednesday for Rich~ond where -she will spend several months with Mr. Will Dunn, Jr., motored to her sister. Warrenton, Norlina and Henderson - on business Wednesday.

Miss Janie Lyon, of Windsor, -·spent several .days with Miss _Eliza- Dr. J. F. Love, Corresponding beth Royall. She., left Thursday to Secretary of the~ Foreign Mission enter Meredith. Board, will occupy the pulpit Sun-

- - - day night and address the citizens

I

W edn~sday and Thursday Sept. 19- and 20, 1917

All_ the Newest Novelties. Also beautiful line Silks and ·Wollen goods in latest designs.

We rJnvite You to Come.·

-Rev; McPittenger, of Raleigh,, of the community and the volunteer --------~----------------conducted services at Wake Union students :of the college in partie-' r.~~~~~~~~~~~-~

JACKSON & POWERS, Inc.

. d . ~·<??·Z?·7.7~·<??•??·<??·?.7·&:?·<??·C?·C?·&:?·Z?·v~., Episcopal Church Sunday an was ular. _ . - <=~

the heuse guest of Mr. T. P. Jones - t•f I . c f v· '• . . :p while in the village. Mrs. John Davis was a charming d~ I e nsurance o. 0 Irgtnia ~OP

- /' hostess Thursday, afternoon when J~ . ' . ~Op Mr. Will ~.arris from J:Iopewell, she entertain~d her friends in h?n- Jt& OLDEST, LARGEST and STRONGEST ~OP

Va., was a VISitor-on the Hill several or of her sister, Mrs. Fredenck dO~ l • _ •• · • ~Op days the past week~ ~Joan of..:- Savannah.. Tfie living dil' Southe~n Lde Insurance Company'' ~Oj;

·- . room was a bowe~ of golden tinted dJ ~ I ~Op Mrs. C. D; Graves ?nd chlldren flowers of fall w1th large potted d! ~ Its Polices ..are Clear and. Definite ~~~

have returned from Wmton, where, pines and ferns in the _corner of the it.O~ ·~~~~~,-V:IIIJ in their Provisions and their Values ~ v they were the guests of Dr. Graves room as a background. Mrs Davis J.a~ ~~~-

sister, Mrs. Va~ received _her friends in the recep- ~O~ are Absolutely Guaranteed · : : , ~O;

M I . C 1 1 -h . t tion hall, where Mrs. Sloan was ~~~ .._ - SEE \\~:-.

R r. Mrvmg ahr Y eh as gohne- . 0 introduced to the callers. Some i1 ~- .. ~

· _hockHy. hounht wl erde he tehac es mf time. was ·spent in conversatio-n af- dA~ R .. W. WARREN, Special Agent · - ~0'9 t e 1g sc oo an as c arge o t h'ch th d ht f .v. . 11V, · h . er w 1 e young aug er o A,~ • • • r = H' ~<::.m 1\T ~ ~OiJ

at letlcs. th h h ld d h d . t d 11~ • PHONE 127 -.· •.• -.- \\ AK.!!i ._ ORI!.~l, 1•. l·. ~.,r _ e ouse o passe _an pam e 6~ ' . . .@17

M W C. ·-Powell, of Flori;da, tally cards and designated the ~.~~§§§§§§@§§@g:@§?·§gg~a<=> r. . . , -- ~·~·~·~·""S·~·-.::::::>·~·""'S·~·-.:;;s:·"'S;·"'S·""'-"·'<::S·'S.·-.:s.·-:::s;:-"'S·"'S·~· ~ spent several days with his daugh- p}ac.es of ~h-~ ,guests for a. _g:~J?e . of =-~ ter, Mrs. jessie Board, and while Trail. Later a salad course With here attended a meeting of the coffee was served by the hos~ss -Directors of the Royall Cotton assisted bt Mrs. G. Priestley D~vis, Mills. Mrs S:P. Holdieg and Mary Love

WE DESIGN AND PI{INT

Davis.

Miss Francis Duke, of Richmond, ====-===-===== is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Ethel Crittenden.

MOORE'S ELECTRIC --SHOE SHOP Mrs .. Jack Glover and son, of Raleigh and Wake Forest

Statesville, ai:e visiting Mrs. Bishop. - , _ Special Attention given to all kinds of

. Miss. Agness Taylor left this week . Shoe repairing.

for New York, where she will be Come to See Us. the guest of friends for a month.

-Mr. C. L. Plunkett, of Winston-

Star Printing Go·mpan~r Incorpor:::tcd

-Salem was a visitor on the Hill ,.-- s_everal days this week.

WAKE- FOREST SHOP UNDER C. Y. H(i)LDEN'S STORE

C. C. HOLLAND, College Agent Wk F r,•r. a e orest, ~"l. '--'·

Miss Lucy Harris has gone to Greensboro where she will reside with her sister and enter the State Normal School,

Mr. and Mrs. F-red Sloan and son •••••••••••• motored from Statesville and en route to Savannah, Ga., spent several days days with their si~ter,

---. Mrs. John Davis. -Mrs. J. H. Gorrell has returned

from a visit with her sister, Mrs. Duke, in Richmond.

Mr. Arthur Sledd has returned from Petersburg, Va. an·d will .l>e associated with Dr., Nowell in the chemical laboratory. -

·~· . ' '

Watch This

Space Next Week

I /

Fellows ~~~~t.Z!.4-!tZ:. "rrl~./7~""

If you- want good clothing and shoes at the

right prices turn to your left as: yo-q ··.go _,_·to the ; .

~ovi~_!~- ~d~~!l.~~ hllLa.n~ ~t~p:~~:u~Q~~- · d~~~ -tm· the -~ght. There C.-~.H~- -Coppedge·: ~&

______ , ______ 'I ·f • ~· ;: ;"· ,•, • •..:, • ~: : "',:•,}. • :·~:.-• ~,1 : ~ . .::..

re::~~ :~e~;u~~~~:m!~~~:!dc~:! - :._- _ :·. --_: _Co. will·wait on: you.~.=-~--·_ ..... :·::.-\ ~-, Mrs. Highsmith's parents in Dur- ' ·· . . .... , . , . . . . : ·:

ham. .. .. Fresh ·-Rout~d Peanuts at- all ti~e~.~ _-:: !"' ! : • . ~-

Page 4: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

. ': . ' . '~ , .--:: .' -~~ ~· ·.::,~ r~~~~,, :~: ( <~ / 7•: ·f ·:,::·~ i : ~· :.:·\': L ~:: ·.:::::~,.:-~~~:· ~~~ :1 ~ :..-_·. -. ~.

· • , · · ·-.. ~:o ·· - .·- ···· · · -·" ,,;.,~'~"r."'-=-_._,,_~~~-....~. ___ ;;~:=~-ftLt=•:-:~~ ;,...- -.~-~- .;thiftifa;t ;.·- ·o'Ui:·ac~odl~:~~(f~~olieteti:i:::::;:: ' ' _®_lb __ ~_n_-·.....:1~_-_a_n_b_._: -_i_l_i.;...,tt:·_ ... lt_···· ~~,~T~·:;~~tf~~~~~!~ . --mr;t -~~ _7~_~-,--.~--·:· _ · ·Fust::;~_;::!~~::.11~t; -~~rJ;~iY.\t;/·:. _. ·

- ·noble. : For You-thEfwo·ra:" college, ~~ ·.,. ·: i$::<'~-~~~¥9l ... s,p~~.i ;~P.e b:~lfi_e~jat~l~ need:·--f~~; -:·;, Issued by the Athletic Association should be a synonym for. h-ard-wor. k "r •• · -. ·· • • ,-::r·.._~ '"d , ... ..::d ::~·· 't:l~'rd. · .:-- ... b. t···"!. · - - -- · , · trame ·an euucate -men.- - u ..v · · '··<·.. .

f W k F t C ll every Satur d d Th fi . . t:~· f. '~'he editora invite expression of. ' -.d- f ;' .h . d : . -·. d. h 't . . i·' ''-: ::, ;:· . o a e ores o ege . --an stu y. e rst six weeN:!. o +·: ~---- --~--- --:~ .. -. -- .--- ... ~- ·provi e- or:--t e- eman .:· a_ zs.sur~: .·,. :~:. · .·

day during the Col!E~ge session. · your stay he~e ~ilt' largeJy influence . ?P.~~Iqn,tr~m -~}'!:W"l!-1 • ~~~b~f.~ : ·t!>'.ct?_me J~ .the. p~ii~d -~( ~~o.~_t,f.ue..: 2' .' ... · · .. : · . and determine the· habits of you; l?~_,th7-f~~~~-~~: ~~~ '~~; s~~??.~ _: ! ,th>p..- . Y.ourjg .::~~~~- .w!J..Q .. ~r~ -~,BJ!~t, _<._' ·:;~,.::_·~. entire colleg~' ye~r. Be carefui·noti P?.~~· ~h ~~m~l;l~~p~~·~~s Ill';IP~.' : needed for.imil?,e~J~te ,.pa.r~JeJ;p~~~Rl\';': ' . )~.;?. ' to under estim~te th~ Value of e~ch; l>~ SJ~n~~.· JJP.0~ ~~9-uest· :~~~ ·,. 1 in the· war OUght'_to- make every. ef-':, '-' ::: ·::'·'-- .'

SUBSCRIPTION PPICE:

The subscription prjce of this day's recitation, especially each· day; author~s n~me will b~ .~i~hh~ld: . 'fort-:- to '.finish; "th~ir: -~'edu~tio;~· ~- /<:.: · publication is $1.00 per session of of t~is _period. rh~~. fo.Iks back The Editors are not respozisible . Othe~ work inay see~JI mor.e imp<)r- .· _/ the college year. h .11 h keen . 1·n-teres~ 1·n ·_ for:the 9Pinions .. expressed in · t ·· ··t ·b .. t •t . - t - --· - · · ·: omeWI ave a _ .. -- ... , .... ·· ···· . ., ... - .. an, u 1 Is no •.. ·... . . ,

. your progress. - They· wiil'be accur- this ~0.1~-~Jl.:~·E.ditor's -Note. _ Camida made a misfake in allow~- ':-.-':.::'':.. Entered as second-class matter ately informed at regular intervals .. , . . . / i~g~ her- colleges: to go depleted;- In. ·:::: ~~_(-: ...

January .22, 1916, at the .post office by reports sent- oufby th~ college~. - Big Jobs ~ead. Washington- recently··~( grouP.·. -o(.- .... at Wake Forest, N. C., under the In· the second place, as~ you take Never. beforE( in,. the history of CanadiabJeducators said that 'tliei'i- ·: ·_ ._, :-~ . Act of March 3, 1879. up your ·abode in _a college·_co~-. this much-worried world ~i;l.ve the cotiiitry:hdw-·realfzetf:' hew: serio~s -

munity, you are re_lieved·of the im- scientists given sucn: a 'stupendous was.- that .. mistak~.·· ~-·we .ao. ~ot­mediate restraints of the home. exhibition-of t4eir ability.· to' build wish to i>~' mistnld-~tstood. as· argu.: EDITORS:

.Robert L. Humber, . .Jr.

J. A. McKaughan, Jr.

W. B. Gladney.

STAFF:

Thissituat~on should make you the and to destroy. -__ Their work is.con-· ing·i~ai~sfthe 'eriiistmeht' ~f· ~tu- ,_~·: more cautious.-. _'fhe college has spicuous. from the bean-:fields to dents," they have· b~_~n' :qu~ted: .as .. provi9ed for you a wholesome re-' fhe~battle fronts. They make· the s~ying. "Many _·ought to enii~t> -... ligious environment, which 'it urges soldiers' impleine~ts of war- more but there ~re many' others whJ -c~n · · · .. '·: c ·

you to take advantage of. For destructive and the fields more pro': ·in the end give Jarb~tter-service .. by- . . your benefit, the college bas seen fit ductive. · . comph~ting· th~ir edu~ationa:i train--~ - .- >

Wood Privott H. I. Hester

P. H. Neal to place around you certain res- The stream of raw materfal--that ing.'' · · - ~ _ -traints and limitations. The official feeds the ranks· of -these brain Dean Curtiss, of Iowa Stale C.ol~

T. M. Uzzle organization that has been created workers must not -be ~interfe-rred lege, who was recently in: Canadai ------------- for your protect~on is the Senate with, as it _has deen in some ·other says that 'the co~~try's· .agrfcuiture .

Mrs. J. R. Crozier

J. W. Bryan, Jl'.

.S. S. MEEK, Business Manager. Cotnmittee, which exists not to countri_es since· the beiifining of will be_ badly affeCted by th~ >· ~ith: ~ _,,_,·~~ diminish your privileges and hamper _ drawal o{men from the agricul-·· :>·. :· _

Saturday, September 15, 1917 your freedom,·but to make secure· we feel safe in saying that support tu~~l colleges and·- the--failure.~£ : · :- · .. ·· ============= your protection and avoid all un- is not gi'ven for altruistic reasons others. to enter. ·"There-never was. :-.- ·

necessary disturbances. It Phould ~lone·. The -spirit of gentlemenly a time wheri there-was-such -a· de:: . · · be not only you duty but ~'our conduct is not always to be found. mand for, men with tho~~ugh.·:. ; <·:- · .. ' privilege to 'stand behind this com- In the light of such a system, training in·-' agriculture; ·"Qoth ~ i·n~- · ·. ::· :_::. :;: mittee and Rdhere strictly to all its both of campaigning ahd electioneer- Canada and· the. United States;...· - ' ' · la\VS, thus showing forth your ap- ing, we can welcome' almost any says Dean- C~rtiss .. "The~:··~are: .-::~-:_: .. : preciation of its interest in your innovation, if only it ·~ill lead to needed to lead the· way in getting~:- > -

SMILE! SMILE!! SMILE!!!

welfare. cleaner politics and bring aboll;t the most out ofthe. soil;' they ar_e. And truly remember, that on re- elections that are not farces and needed in laboratories and at exper-.

ceiving you as a ·-member of her frauds, and -disgraces to the candi- iment stations to work o.lit difficult student body, Wake Forest confers dates, to the voters and to the good farming problems; ~hey are needed·

Smile, and you need no doctor; upon you an -honor, allowing you at name of Wake. Forest. We trust .in schools 'aud · colleges:to .teach. Weep, and the doctor's yours. the outset to fall heir ·to her tra- that some change for the better These idays are oistinctively the , __

ditions and breathing upon you the may come about before this session days ef science, and ·men properly · Have you done as ~uch for Wake great democratic spirit that has ever .has gone by. trai,ned are going to find mor_e- to

Forest as she has done fo~ you? If ~haracterized what will some day --· ~ · do than ever. If we profit by 'Can- :. · be your Alma Mater. Her history _ Good Sportsmanship. ada's experience,-- we will not let you haYen't, get busy; 1ts your . .

marked by all the illustrious achieve- w lf r· h . t•r ... athl ·t.cs. our colleges be ::empt.i.ed; . we'll .fill ' :.. . e- oe 1eve ear 1 y m e I . . . - · . ments of her sons is now yours. W d . h - t - . them with -· more students than · B t t h

'd 1

d h a· e esire, owever, o say now, m , ...._ e rue 0 er 1 ea s an er tra I· thi~ first issue of -the session, that ever.

move.

Men of '21 tions from the very beginning. Go - · · We ~ust not.fi:>rget that keeping_.-

Men of '21, \Velcome! we regard bad sport and unsports- , _ On entering Wake Forest as forth and "quit you like meri.." manlike conduct as the greatest a country of ~more Jhan- 100•000- .. _

Men of '21, thrice welcome! f h' h thl t• . th S th 000 people gomg forward and lend- .. freshmen you launch upon a career oes w 1c a e ICS m e ou - .. · . ·

h ·t f Th b ha- · f our ing crippled nations a helping hand .. -hitherto unexplored by yQu. In the Polx"t•"cs as o ace. e e vwr o - · · · · · · · b h 1 · is even a bigger job than fightjpg four years that you are to remain own student ody ·as not aways -· the· w_~r-and it will last much lo:a-with us, suecess and disappoint- When politic~ at Wake Forest been above reproach. We-make no ments wlll come your way, and each haye so degenerated that practically accusations against other colleges,

ger. -Country' Gentleman. -

Glee Club Organized. Qe~ spite Soortage in: Talent

will be measud to you according to every campaign, in order to be sue- but we do insist that if inter-co lie­your efforts and zeal. In the yery sessful, must be run on an ice cream giate sport has any valure at all, beginning of your college career, and soft drink basis; when the that value lies in the .development master thoroughly the-- fact that merits of a man are hidden behind of the ability to take either victory -··· -yeur stand in the student body and a cloud of smoke from cigars given or defeat like men and _ sportsmen, Trips Will be Conducted Under·Auspi.;, and the faculty estimation of you away by an opponent who has more and not like idiots and barbarians. ces of Red Cross Society and .Pro­will be determined by your own ef- money than brains; when legging The past four or ·five years have - ce~d~Givenlotba.tOrga,~ization· -:forts in the class room, by your and ballot box stuffing play more seen a vast improvement . here.. Though the Glee Club has not yet _gentlemanly conduct on the campus important parts in elections than We crave yet more improvement. b.een organized fully, forty men re- . .and athletic field, and your whole any other factors, then it is tiin'e The ideal toward which Old Gold ~nd ported-for the initial tryou~ on Tues.: hearted allegiance to all measures that something he done to clean out Black believes Wake ~'orest- men day night, and half of the . person-

d f h h d th this system, ~hich, while it is detest- should strive may b~ briefly stated nel of the organization was 'chosen,

thatstan orte onoran e l ... · · · th. ····'·,:b. · .,~ .. ~ · · · ed by ·every . fai~-minde_4 stu_denJJ, thus: VIsit~pg- athle~es are the guests e rema1mng mem ers · to be PI~k-fair name ~f the college. You have has become so dee:prooted _in . otir of the college"and of such they-should ed soon. Owing. to a lack ~f ·m~n assumed opligations now that vou college life tha_t no one seems ~o be treated wi.th .the. greatest court- with talent .to play the instrum~nts. can not ignore:· -- have" the ~O~!_age to·. sta~d; u(l a~d esy, on the:-fieid and ~off. In victory ~he.-orc~estra h~(not yet ~~el{c}lo-~R~ ~f'-~1 the pur- dellumr~elt:-""-~---'" l~t_us·be ~~~e~t a.! !Nll~~\J~f:nl;- -~~n;. "It i~ Jt<rl>.e~ th~t ·it iwi.JI -~e

e of:. our being here is to apply ElectiQ~s ~eem ~~re_ b:ke t:rrouj;s self-restr~I~ed ~~ wei~·as vociferous. formed soon. _ pos Y • • our studies for the Royal ·Rooters Club th~n ,I.n defeat, let us be manly, not bi~- The Glee C!1l~ ~oes out this year yourselves diligently toY . meetings for the -election of clal!s ter; hopeful, not vindictive. The under. ~~e auspices of ~he Red Cross and thereby lay an _enduring foun- offi~ers· and votes are governid ~y honor of the college- is .. ·p~rpetuaily Assoctabon. All surp!us: -funds

. ,· T ' 1 · • - • • . on the tour ef the club Will be turn-dation for your· bfe s work. he_ the number of s~~t drinks-and cigars at stake. It Is a precious herxtage; ed over ta that.society for ·war·re- · door of opportunity is now thrown that have been ·doled out. At leas~, let us guard· it·well. · lief purposes./ · · ·

,. ·-,.'"';

shu -·

Page 5: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

• ·-".

' :: •• ~:- .!. _:..·.,~1"'~ -1~ .·.,.,

-· -~ '" -..,. · Latin·'at: th~r ... end·· ·of· :hiS ..... .:-... -.·""·. ·.:: _::ffltift~ .. ::~·;j;t.:t:,~ · . ~phomo~e~fe~r. ·wJlH~ t.~e !~· ~~ -:~ :~··: ~-:,·.~=--·--~~-\~.""':f.._·,·:·. _ A;,. to~ •.. honored--him with its

.. .. ,. >- -- .: ~' ' (C~_I}t!!!ue_d·-~~~m)~g~~o~~) > - Yic~~~~-~idenei.:· His_"new:ly athin-

~/ ·- ... ·:',:···_:We ~a~I:~~- h~artnf i~:_)he·,:"state_:-: · · . ~~Don't Say~_., _ .only the slii)rtest of w~rnings- ~hen ~- 'hotior -~oliies· as·a (ltting ·.climax

. -~ --:---~e~t~:ma~e .-b~ _.D_r. -~~ffiain ~~~~- ' "Qh' 1 in;/-:i,~f 1· dol~ve .those _. st~p~~:in~o ~~e;br~~~~ -~~d.ehy ;t?. ~ll e.?V.i~bl~ ·!:ire~~· _ : , . :·:.- .. : .~ ._ .-.·-~-~~Ips .a~:W.~l.t~_- ~ore~t _-Iast_:~pr~~g F.~enchioilus:~' safd.the · oun 'lad .'- t~~ ~1ckness ·~f ·one of ~he:. Anmver-. ..T~~. o:~?~r _ ~-~~ers ~-~~c~c;\ are: ''::_'.· >:--.~~~~n.~~e_S~l~tha~ ~e :c~n~Ider~~ -:i'But I lilte.the Safu~ies~mu:h ~~a~r.~~~~~e-~,o,f-}~~-1;~~~·:-~_!!~--de- VIce-P_fe~ld~n~, wood_ frivott, of ·. · ·· ,_ .:: :·~nd~~.g_,.ra~uate.~u~~r~_;the. -~~st .m better/' , ·~ - _. __ . : .:. . l~:v~~~q ~_sp~~c~,w~~~~~e,l~g.m -~P, Edenton; §~cretary, J. C. Joyner,

.-i\D!'~r~~·:'~~~endee.d;.~h~twe~la~m , .'-'Yes,._ but~ these Frencbies. s~~~l __ !V51Y: _t~:-~n t~,~ ~~J?,a~e. ; ~~.~~ of L~G~~~ge; . :reasur?r, L. Vf. _ .... ·_ ;a~Y_'_s.~pe:rlat~v:~ IIl~;It~ ~or:·o~~ mo-- life so eaaily.'' · ·_ . _ _ . !.· : h_a_~~ c~~~,n.~u~J ~~~~ o~ ~~~ ~~~ IJamru~~~ ·of_ B.ollmg Spr_mgs; ·Poet, : <··-,_,;..: ·, .. dest_ departments,- -which .sh~uld, · · · t,entiO,n, an4m. thisbr~nc~of college ~. F: Hall, ef Kerr; Prophet; L: L.

--::_'-:<:::~--~~~~~vV~v~r; ?e''~ivep~due::rec_o~ition ' Kw:r 'Question.--~ li~~·- ii~ ijr -.~o~"' ~- > i)ia~e-: oi{ 't~e ~ohnsori;-'of -n~Iwaj; Histori~n. ~ .. ~ · .. c: . .:for· the place It has -won among the _, · _ . . foot-ball team--and the manager of A. McKaughan, Jr., of Norfolk, Va.;

. ·_ · _ : ;._: ::stud~nt:·b~dy~··- But we belfeve:tltat -~--Ar~ you·ma~ried; if so why ... baseb~ii· te~m· :of l9iS.-- Not O,rator.' :Ei'.-1.·-.Hester, of Whiteville· • ,. : ~ ' : • ' ~ • " ' • ~ ' ~- • • • • : • • • ~ ' ' • • :- • • •• • • • ·,-. •. ' ' -· • ' w ' - • .. ~ -. • ' • • • • • ,

----. :: .. , · ,suc~~an-ou~let ~hould ·be···,provided . . · - • . _ ... _ ~~nte~~-t~. ~et_ a_-~apa91e ma~ grad~- r_r~s~ator, E. A; Hamrick, of Shelby; . ~-: :.~ · ·' · ·;,soi,:i;he sunny-side of' Iife, ·and it . · .. : "Speaki~ _of Poetry.· · ate Without being' ,recognized as Member of the Honor Committee,

-·· ,, _ J~ with·-tliis in mind that we"welc~in·e - ·Say; that poem· .of yours reminds sucJ:l. 'the f~cultY ainio_i~t~·d hi~: as~ :M-.:1'. Rankin; of G~eenville, S. c.· · . ' o:·' ·. from~_the student body' :any· ,contri- ri{e ·oi TEmfiyson's' little ballad en- -·-· -·--~----~-----.... ----· --·-· ....,~, _______________ _

·_ .·_.. ·_:b~tioris-~hich m~y-help. mak~·_Iife- titled, .'tABird'~ Eye View of_ the X~S- THJf $AME: 'OLD STORY - _ -~n:ti:Ji ·Hiil.wo~.th livi_ng:· .~ -_. Atlantic· (joast, Lookin.g -Through

...;...--.. _ _,.1...;,. · -·-· ·-· . _ · a :£\!lot-hole -iri the Wooden Leg-. of

. _.Green? ' . . m~··· :u_ncle~.. which begins,- '_'The ' ::'. · .. -·: ,. ' >:: . > ,,. -" . ' .. - ' ... :SplendQ},'~~alls ori -_ c'astle walls. and '

---,. 'Hartby':-. See that_ ·newish: stand;· sfl'o~y:'summ.its ;i~h::'in:·stO'ry: _: :.-. ~· . > : ... '·ing' over there? - - . ' > .

Keith:: Sui·e, how could anybody . St_1m: :Hey George, · (}it . -~h~t in '> -· ·. h~}p.it?' ~ > •, ,, .. -.. 'defra~s las' night? ---. - .. ·-: ... ,::.Hanby: ---:hi bet they had,to bri-, ·ae-@rg§: ··• Nc) ~ah,.Ah got shot ·in

. ' . :die him' to get him on the train: ' ' '. . > ' . . - - de laig: :-_-;:.;..·'-> ----­

' . ·· _ .-. Something Missing hi .This Joke. · Wanted _

Ppw~r~ _pro~ Company

. '·::~--"~ell~ bid _Top,-_. ho~ liave : ~~u· -_ .:So.~e inge·nious freshmen .to. )n~ · ---. :he~n f~reing.this .. s~mrp.~r''? .. !ls!red yen~ ,a machine to-~utilize: t_he ·hole

:· .' a student as n:-woodward. stepped a1)out ··whicli a doughznit is . . - -, ... _: ~:-·, -~--off -th~ ·train·. :Woodward_· replied stru~ted ... :·Hard times make it ··im'- ''The_·~ello\_Y"s That Appreciate Your Business."

· .. -~ .. . . _ di~l~niaticilly. -~~N-pthin~-since.they pe~_~tive· thatthe.clubs .. on·. the Hi-il ;...-~-~~~---...;..-...,;;;;;;.... ______ , ______ _

;-~-- __ :·· ;_ :·---. t~re dowr{the- builft-ing-J'L. use,_d_~ to have S'\lCh a ·meclianism .. : .. . .. · ·. leari.against." . , : · . · .

. . . .. · · ~ ·~:. · _ What a-F~;shman is S~ppo'~-ed t~-i;6et-.·. -: . Fo~r Bum Ct:acks P~t in by YeJ~~ditors· - _OW-' During. the_- ·sessi~n. .

> '> .· . ' . to Fifi up 'Space. -- ... '· - The train;- the catalogue under

Bu~ No. 1. "Say Lady, I am so _which he> graduates;' I~ud haber­·thirsty I don't. k;ow. where I ain dashery; ?is hat when -passing -p~o-

-,' ' - _going to sleep:tonight." . fessors; f1fte_en hours ~f work per ~ . N.

2. - ''Pl.- M · I wee}<; seven hours. of

- -num o - ease- aam- , -. . . : . · - . . - ' under_ a competent tutor; the cam- · found thlf! button m the road. 'th t L 1 ··k. "f · 'bl , . . :· P1ls; WI ou a kl ac mg ~ _poss1 e; Wont you gxve me a- sh1rt. to sew- . bl b h d · h . .·- ;, . · ~ · ~ 1nnumera e one ea s; o.ne our on 1t · . · · · -. · ·· .. of pgst-office daily; <me movie per _ Terrible The_ Bum: . "Did you week; daily sporting page of the

hear :that terrible explosion- at the Ne~s Disturber; tlie track when . _ jail last night?" .. : the Shoo-fly pulls-in; _the Hill .when . _ . ~'Naw, _what~s: the ~atter?" _. _ the filthy lucre 'is_ abundant; final

"A bun:i fell oat of-bed."' examinations._

- ~--:Aslthers See-Us. · All you.need __ to have a good dairy is three cows and a good well. Yes, of course the water is for the cows.

---We have,six senses, ftv8 of which are·inborn, while the sixth sense,

· Plodding - along ori his annual back to :nature trip through Tar~ ~eel~o~,~a ~ayfarer. fro~. Virginia _ came· just at dusk to a little cottage nestling among the foothills of the

· w~stern part of the grand old com- common sense, is bored in,_-

monwealth of. North ·Carolina . . · Se1ing- an old man taking ·~own a

gourd from !3- string, hung by his weatherbeaten door post, .he asked,

· 'iWhat are the gourds for?" · "Gotta ~p.owthe time, ain't ·I?"

. ~~Sure, but you can do that more -conveniently with a calendar", re­plied the traveller.

· "Don't know nothin' 'bout them

.animules. · But when I hangs up

~ven go.ards on , this here string,

.and takes down one ·every night_:.

then· I know .what day o' the · week

it is.'' And :clutching the symbol .·- -

~f the day in his brawny~ fist h'e

shuffled through the open door:

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Page 6: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

Sevsral Changt>s from Last Year's Schedule. Hampden-Sidney Tennis Club ·le&ins ·Work .

to be Played In Norfolk.._ Tennis will in all probabilities be on Thanksgiviug .. ·· the least affected of an· sports/ at

J

According to the 1917 football college this year;· Plans are already schedule given out Wednesday by under way to have an ideal tennis

·Manager Gladney, Wake Forest Col- club'~ At a preliminary nieeling of lege faces o'ne of the heaviest sched- the club held on Tuesday, Septem":' ules ever arranged for an eleven ber llt~, a committe~ made ;up of representing this institution. Not C.-IS. · .• ~lack, president, R~ P. manyradical changes are made in Burns, secretary, arid E. E. Folk, the teams to be met aod several treasurer, was selected to draw up old foes of the Baptists will·· be play- rules and hy-:-Iaws for the ensuing ed. The most notable differences scholastic ~ear. are the addition of Georgia, Tech, Most of'the old members includ-

:• • -·-~ • .- '~ .. ,, ··~":.'' -:: •• ~. ,:; ! n .• ~ • .',.... •••• ,. ·.- ,•-: ·- .• ., ~.' ., ' •• 4. :. ' ; .-~,:;-:a "7"" •• , ............ ...,..~.,~ ... .

...... ,t.." '•,·

/

·I Maryland State College, aed Hamp- ing Folk, one of last years•' unde­den Sidney, and the omission of the feated team, are back in college annu.al contest with University of this year·· · North Carolina, due to the fact that Although no definite action has ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~ the Chapel Hill aggregation will yet been taken, in a few..-days the -not be engaged in intercollegiate courts on the old athletic field will games this season. be put in excellent shape again, and

The season opens two weeks from practice will begin. ALUMNI /

'

today with a game against Georgia Sever~! meets are anticipated this Tech In Atlanta, Ga. The Techs yea:, both on the.,home and foreign have one of. the strongest elevens in courts, and we :inay rest assured the southeastern section of the that a team will be turned out country, and have such faith in capable of representing the college their ability to ove:cwhelm Wake in a praise worthy manner,

Keep In Touch With Wa~e \

Forest that two games will be play-Forest. and Let Wake Forest

ed by that eleven on Sept. 29, Fur- Junior Class Elects Officers At a. meeting of the class held at

one o'clock on Wednesday after­noon, September 12, Mr: Jo~l I. Allen, Jr., ofDill;n, S~ C .. w~s elee-

man University being scheduled for the morning game and Wake Forest for the afternoon contest. Guilford is retained on the schedule and will appear on the local grounds on Oct. 13, for the second game ever played ted President ef the Class of 1919. between the two institutions. Dur- Mr. Allen has been a _diligent stu­ing Fair Week State College will dent while in college here. and lt;y furnish the annual classic 'on their his hard work in the Philomathesian grounds in Raleigh. Nine days later Literary Society won the $ophomore the team journeys to Washington Medal given by that society .last Park, Maryland, ta meet the strong Maryland State eleven. commencement. He is verY'deserv-

Two Virginia elevens are found ing of the honor which Re has -re­on the schedule, V. P. I., who,· de~ cently attained. feated u s overwhelmingly last The other officers are: Viee-Presi-season, and Hampden-Sidnl!:y. The Presbyterians clash with the Bap~

~ for the first time and the game in Norfolk on Thanksgiving promis­es to be a gala event, with both student bodies and a large crowd

· present to witness the fracas. East­ern College plays on the.local grid­iron for the first time Nov. 10, and the following Saturday our old foe Davidson, is met in Greensboro.

dent, S. F. Horton, of Vilas; Secre­tary, G. T. Rogers, of Apex; ~reas-urer, P. H. Neal, of Jackson, of Winterville, and member of the Honor Committee, L. J. Britt, of Lumberton.

. '·

Ministerial Class-Officers Elected

It is understood that the Davidson On Wednesday afternoon, Septem-team, though not intact, is almost ber 12, the ministerial class met in as strong as that of last year, and th fi t t' f h is going to put up a fight for the e rs mee mg 0 t e year· After State championship honors. The several business matters had been game with Hampden~Sidney closes duly transacted, tl}e class elected the season on November 29. One its officers for this year as follows: open date of Oct. 6 will probably President, J. T. Gillespie, of Boil­be filled by Manager Gladney who ing Springs· Vice-President L V . is now attempting to make arrange- C . f ~ .. C k S ' · · ments for a game on that date. oggms, 0 ear ree ; ecretary, THESCHEDULEISASFOLLOWS: P. A. Hicks. .Wake Forest;

Sept. 29 Georgia Tech at Atlanta. Treasurer. P: E. White, of Hert-Oct. Open ford; Historian, D. :L. Woodward, Oct. 18 Guilford College here of Warsaw; Poet, L. S. Clark, of

· Oct. 18 N. C. State at Raleigh CandlE1r; Prophet, J. C. Canipe, of Oc~. 27 Maryland State College Maiden, and Honor Committee rep-

at College Park, :Md. resentative; H, I. Hester, of White-· Nov. 3 V. P. I. at Blacksh~rg ville.

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Page 7: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

..

., ·.· ·. ,·' .·. ,, ·~.-

·:· . ·,r , ___ : ' : . . . . .. -' _·. . . ... ' ,•

•c -1 ... . , ·''·"' ' ' -··

-:::~~ '::::·~~~'>""j~~~ij~(::::-.::~ -- -: · -"., ,: ;;:~:GoJne,-Al~~:: Bois~~~rf:.to··~:·~" ~: : .. -.:: _ _ , · -- · · ·. · ~Jiie~&on &. PoWers

. _The following Wake Forest men Connecticut College for Women. · · · : · · · hive_receivedcommission§_.~S lieu~ ~-The loss.w~nati~nal vihen .E. J. New St~ntt opposjt~ the' Post' Office and -see t~nants in the Natiqnal Army: __ B;- Ju.stice, B.s: 1~87, died ~uddenly · · · · },{.Boyd, B. A. 1917; c. L: Whar- at:San Francisco, California on July I . w~at' is .he~e for you.-ton, 1913-'17; C. E. 'Brewer, 191~- '25th... . . · . . _ .

.... . '\ I , , . ' , ,· .

18; R. M. Kinton, 1916-r7; chas. - · We wan· t to show yo·u our bea' utt.ful li e of ......:w· p k LL. B 1917. J B Wh't- Rev. E. S: Reaves, B.A._ 1892, · . - _ _. D . ar er, . . , . . I · . . . b

:1 LL B 1916,- C . H T'chen was made ~Doctor of Dwimty Y -Sh . Sh. . T . C II H . . . .. . 1e:i6--17; H. E. Olive:·i9i4-;7; J~~: F~rma'n Univ~sity .. He h~s le~t . oes, . irts, ies, 0 ars, ats,' C~p~, _Etc ..

· St · t.L B .. 1917. R H F · h1s work as ~rofessor of B1ble m .. · . ·

19~:~~~; G .. F ... Ritt~~h.ou~e,,r;~~A~ Anderson ~<?liege. t~ tak~ up. ~ork 'Q· 'u . 'l•t ·Hl·_·g-. h~·- .Pn·ce'. s' Lo' w' :···.'

1.91

7. -o · · C 1915_17. A as pastor m Georgia. He Is sue- . a, I Y ,_.uruce arroway, , . . . .

D. Odom r615-17,;'"D: F: Smith, ceeded m An_derson C!)llege. l,ly Sa' ti•.:sfa'· C·· -tl:-0.-n- G ~ . . d 1911· vance: Hayn~i(·.: 19i4-19ri· J. c .. c. Dunford, M.A.. 1984· · The ·uarantee· ·: - · l

-1t'al~h Jordah; LL.B:·1916"(:Aviatio~ President ~f .this college is Dr. ---~-------~------..;.....__ ..... ___ _

C ). H H C th ll 1911~1914 John E. White, M.A. 1890. . · . orps , _.. .~ u re , . , (Nava~ Aviation Corps); W. C. Lee, Dr: Q. T. Ball, "1888-93, and· Dr. I. O.·JON£S, President

_1911-14; .G. q_: Olive! B. A. 1916, W. B. ~ilman. B.S. 1891;.:_ are· to W. L. RAY, Vice-President· 1

J. M. BREWER, C~s~er . -~

T. E •. BOBBITT~· Asst. Cashier (Aviation· Corps); D. Zollicoff~r, make··a tour of the Pacific Slope · · .

--captai~, :LL.B.' 1907; T. A. Lyon, B._ S~ates i~ the interest of tne ·Bap- Th . ··c·· • -. . ·s, . k', ' I A. 19'o4, Cfl,ptain; H. ~~ ·pangston, -~ist .~tudent ~issionary Movement e . Itizens . . an .1914-17 (Ambulance Corps): G .. F. aurmg the fallmon~hs. ·

. Strole, B. A.1915; G.-.G.~Moor~.~ B.· ·:--The follo~ng Wake,Forest. men · !s-· 1915; C. D. Moore, 1915-17; . D. have fo; th~ past year and summer M. Johnson, B. A. 1914; E. D. John- b t d- -t · th D' · 't. s h 1 . , . . een s u en s m e tvmi y c oo son, B.S. 1913; W. R Jones, B. A. f th U . 't f Ch' · A. R c • } - · · · - .· o . e J:uverst y o Icago: . . - t -

. 1917;~?a~·- R. David', 1712:.1~; .E. Gay, B: A:-1915; L. _R. Call, B.A._ ap1 a • .N. Phllhps, · 19~4~17 (Avtatlon 1916_, and S. B. Conley, B:-A. 1908. ·-

- .

-Wake Fo.re~t,·North Carolina

- - . $1.2,500.00 . --?Corps);: M.D. Phllhp~, R S .. 1~15 . . ( .· _ _ . ·. , · . • • ' (1\viation Corps) .. Irr't~_e Medical~ D~. y.r:R..- Cullom, ~.A, 1892, ,You are .Cordially .Invited to Open an

corps many Wake Forest men have was supply pastor durmg_ the .va- · · - \ voJunteered ,?·r are· be!ng drafted cation per~od o~ the First Baptist· Account .with Us

. for service. Many o~. them we do Church of Chicago. J ·, not ~-·know, but among them -~are ·

- A 18 7. , _Byrd P .. Gentry, B:.A. 1916, js -~-----·--------.;..---------Dr· W; T; Carstarphen, B. : 9 ' Superip.tendent of Public -Instruc-with the rank of Captain, Dr. J. B. t' . 'H t·c t h'l c c - ton m arne ~tun y, w I e . . Powers, M. ·A. 1903, and Dr. A: C. W d B A 19· 1· 7 · ·te h' th: . . . . . . M ar , . . , Is ac mg rna Dixon, B.S. Medtcme,-1914. any · t' :· ·th h' h "h ·1 t Wh't - . ema tcs m · e 1g s... oo a 1 e ... Wake Forest men h~ve also volun- .11 ... N C: . . . , teered or"' been drafted for the Vl e, · · National Army. In a later issue G. C. Kirsey, B.A: 1913, becomes we hope to have a complete list of principal-· of' Li'Qerty-Piedmont ·In- ·

. these. · stitute- in place of J nd~ _M.- Cheek,

.· . As A~sj.§!tant to Attorney-General B.A. 1911: Gregory. he was in charge of· the Rev. John E. Ayscue, M.A.-1903, most important litigation, fr:om~~ pastor of the Immarl.uel Baptist finanCial pointQf consideration,· to Church at Greenville, N. C., has

, r ·' . ', whic~ the Government • wa~ ever a just ~ completed ~ new house of party. This was the case of -the worship, which·- 'YUl be opened on United States against the Southern September-30th. Pacgic Railway to set aside patents, alleged to be grandulent, covering Eugen~ A,. ~urner, B. A., hasb.een $600,000,000 worth of oil "lands. transferred'frol!l Hangchow, Chma, He was also in charge ·of litigation where he has been Secretary of the invol~ing $60,000,000 worth of' oil Y. M. C. A. tq the- Stu~ent Depart­lands· withdrawn· by "the United ment ef the National Committee at States Governm~nt in 1909 and de- Shanghai vrhere he is now living. veloped by various claimants. The In a person~l note ··he says: ''I do first case was ready for trial at the not have to tell you that we turned time of his death. The testimony from Hongchow with earnest re-fills 14,000 type-written pages. gret and a real sense_ of disappoint·

. ment. I thought and expected that W. Scott Boyce, B.A. 1903, re- we were settled there for~ life and

eeived the de~ree ?f Doc.~or· ~f P~i- in the midst qf .. 8r9 fine opportunity los()p~y at Columbia Umverstty m for service I believe, as there is

·191?. ~is thesis, "Economic and anywhere. ' I ~~«!. _ never thought SomalHtstory. of Chowan C~~nty, such an oppQrtu~iW possible before ~orth ~arol~na, 1880-1915, h~ -1 ea~~ to: Chiq~/~ recently·eome from lthe _Colum'Q1~ · ' _ . ~ · · ·~ __

. University Press. It m~keB a vol·: ~-. ~-Jil·. Y.fl!it,ley;, LL:B. 1917, w~ llme of 293 pages, and shows eV\- iqQ.~ of the few offi~ere detailed to denee- of much earefur"work. ~t :~~¥':~ranee after the end of the ~ll ~r~ve valu~bl~ , ~o th~. futur~ :~W~ · at Oglethorpe for - s~ial ··. · - · btatortan, ·and mtght well·· serve . aa_. i\r\\\~~-~~ We understand that th:ese_ .-model for ~ny other do_etors' :~l!e:Cl~ly trained men will return to dissertations. Dr. Boyee is · ~iJ.. ~ve··instruction in ttie cantonmentS · tant Profe~:·of Economtes i~ ·the i~'- ~h~--~ountry~ '

. ··": ·.: .·' ,,

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some body else will.

Page 8: iiu H. of the...President, lYh;. G. S: Quillin, Dr. sity of Chattanooga. Prof. Derieux William Louis Poteat spoke for a is a B.A. of Richmond College (1904), fe\v minutes, giving some

.,. f·.

,_ - : ' - . - . ' - ;~ ' • ' ' . '""' - . ~ -' '·.( ... ·~,;:-:.-.,;' • ·.·'":.n:-' ~ ...

. FOOTBALL TEAM STARTS, oi the half backs. C~oom· ~jlS a ~nd ·a bette~, i)1~i~~"t!~~i ·. :al(d•;;they: had .. PRACTICE· WITH ,ARRiVAL , ·.; v:Bluable acquisit\on ~0.:. ~P~· ~quad. ~ies ·among tl1~' ra~ _.· ' ·· "bU:ilcJi" of .

. OF COACH MACDONNELL .last year and sho;wed, himself a star had·"as ·soon:. as·· the· ·men· that--1-re~e~-- saw. -step . (Continueb from :page 1) · f~om the very first ga~e i~ ;hich begins,. · . :, -· .. · " fie!~~ .: .. . · :-, . , .... . ·. . .· .. : ... · ....

center, Langston and Harris .ends,· he p~rtfci:pa~ed ... He ;is ~;m~s':ally . , ,·: "r, .''. :·· ... , .__ •. ·I consider MacDonnell with:.. the·::·'· Shaw guard, Olive and ·McKnght fas_t, a?vances with the ball well, MACDONNEll :OF t~s.U. .A·s:. ·: e~cepiion·'or Shaughne~~Y ·· one_,~lf:'~::~;:,;·: • · tackles, and Captain Parker at full and is a sure t~ckle. Much· is ex- . 'suM'£frlUfiES'.AS-COACJI.t~_e_p~st ~eri,i~_.th~.S~ut~:,-;H~.li~ ... :::;-!:~~/ back. On Coach :MacDo~nell will pected of him and the team is . r~ly- . . .. , . . , -- wohde~ful . ·power ·in : qevelop!rig _: .. :; :,. develve the task. of filling the !~g ~-n hjm _t? make.the ~est groun~ · (Co:ntinu_~d fro·m~page 1} -. gie~n n!·a:ter.iai, aild-is -a fellow that'· · -~-.~~· ·. shoes of these men. gain~r on the eleven. Cs~tain_ ~ac:, was chosen Captain of the tea~ in wo~ld r~t~e~. lose a gal!le than win: ': ·_: . · .

A practicallynew line will have ~he veteran.quarter_ba_~k IS aga~n,_m 1S09,anir_:waa.·mentioned by the itl>y"~o_unJieans."- ·- . . . .·:.- ::.·,,:; .. ,.; to be devel(')ped. Humber and school, and settles one of .~l_le ba:Kfield New :york 'World:·and a 'a umber of : Wit~out:a doubt lie '·haS a:' bird.:- ··,:; '·:.:. Savage, sub ends on last season's position~; He is extremely light, New_.EDgland papers aula .choice for task cu~~o:u~ -~or ·him ~hir:J session~c· -~ . · ,,.:'.··· eleven will develop into men bu~. makes, up for this:wi~h ~i,s spee_d all-Americ·an"end. · ~ . ~<- . . ~ b~t'\!ith tli'e:· student· body· behittd -~ ·.: _,-~-- .' : ~an be' relied·up~n; and Gay, who and know,~dg~ of·::pe· game .. fl·: Graduatlng·fr~m,ColgatEdnl910; h~md~~~~xP._e.~t~d-:-that.:a-:-~nning·- -<.:

ld d .. kl h C

1•· though'John Pace dtd not come out M. · D · 11 · · . aggregation.wlll·be.turned-out · o- • .,.,,. he own a tac eon t e .. aro I~ . · . . . ·.4 · ac onne was· chosen .as ·head . , ..... · .:~·,. ·-:-· · - •. "". · · ·~.··

eleven 1a8t y~ar, is expected to make ·unttlla!e u:~ _t~e sea~~n la~t. year, c~~ch_ by .. Jefferson · colleg~ of i 'I. ·'ciozii:lt-ioli££toi.·. , .~ .. ·. ~ · .. · ~·~:-_ . good in the Baptist line. Outside ~~ so~n ~eyeloped m~~- a __ s_tron~ Louisiana, where· he coached fer - ·oF GYMNiSTics· kEslcf.s. -.. ·.:·". ·:·· of these men the material is inex· backfield man and displayed ·h.Is. three years~ In -1914 lie- resigned , .. -.'. -.-... " ·- "· ', .,.,, --- ·,. ,, _<z • • .-.

perieiic~d. ·. worth in s~veral o~ _t]te }ast ~ch~~":Ir' -~o... ~cc~pt -a similar, poeiti!ln with· .· ~C~-~.tinued·~r~m:page-~1) :· · · : · _ . The most likely candidates outfor ed games .. His wor_~J~1 ... t'tle ~~~~- Louisi~n~.State 'tJ.nive~sity~_-and , t.o ~~ntintu~ his·s~u(iies·:a,PsooJ:i:.-lis,.' . - · ·. the remaining positions in ·the line College ~ame at Raleigh was noted, der _his~ leadership- ·th~ L~uisiana1 ~-~~vorable opp~_r.tu~ity preseti~e~ -' .. ··.' ·· are Sowers who has served as guard by Teadn~g .s~ate ' papers. --. -.9oach' eie-ven made not~ble . iml>~o~emetit.! Itsei~. ; . . . . ~ . > .·.- ·. ; .. ::'":f., ::Y . .. ~. :· -on the basketbail team and Feezor MacDonnell is d~~~nding 0? him to: Th~ te~m lost only ~~e. g. a~e dur-: t-: Jii.Sh•, :!:.~S~~-~t]~~' at-· t~~ _pr~~-~~,t;<" ... · .-·. c~; ,

. ' k f th h 1 th" · . . . .. . . .. .. . -.. . 1me, ()wever, cam~ a~ ~ .. a surprise.. . . , a 180 pound Sophomore, who has rna e -one 0 e ~ ves: IS .season. ing last seasen . when Sewanee t~ boJ~ ,sttille~ts . a:Qd :fa_culty;· · a:hd :- : --- · likewise held down a guard's place ~hompson the dimutive sub:qu~r- downed MacDonnell's eleven on ·a· ·~t is with. d~ep reii,ret-~tliat"the · 1

stu-: · _, · on the basketball court.· Both men t~r. is out again this year. Like, fluke. D~ring two years his ·team ·den~_bydy sees:.bim leave.:., No sue_':''> are husky and fast and with proper Pace he is extreme]y l~g?t, but this_ won -the undisi:mted· . championship cess.or ?as ~e~ .be~~ sec_ur~d. . .... . . . . coaching should 'develop. into good can be atoned !or by speed and of-Tex~~. A~ kansas, Alabama. and ·,.. ':. ·: ~ - -~' l' ' '·. • • ' ' < • :;; ,_: ;. ~: ·~:-.-•••• ::: line men ·The return of Coble one pluck, as -he possesses both Q~ these Lo~isiana. · · -~ . . ·· . WAR CON_DITIONS CAUSE;l'flA~lC~::{; · ,:- ::; . .-.· .... _ ..

' - quali"ficati"ons Another li"kely ·can · · · - · ED DECREASE'fN:ENROLLMENT- · ;.._. ·. of last year's guards will strength- . . · . • Mac~~nnell comes-to Wake For.:. . . , . . .. ,. · .... :. ' . .- , -· . >-: :.·:''": en the line for he is a strong ag~ bldate for the backfield Is Pruette, est highly recommended ·by Dr. ·(Continued from page!).···.··>':- .-. · :; gressive pl~yer, and can be relied from ?harlotte High Sch~ol, the W. C. Smith who coa~hed the. Bap- lle~d-sthe list of·~tates:~itli~·an.€ri~ ·;> .. -~ .;:_·._; • on to hold down a. guard's place champiOns of Ne.rth Carohna last tists in 1914 and .1915. t~ ·speak.:- rollme~t of 270~. while s'outh :;cii--6~:; · .· .. : :·. .· without difficulty. Blizzard,· Wat- season. Well bmlt an~ speedy, he ing ()f him 15~: Smith said: : .. _ · lina follows, a'dist~nfse·c~nd '\vitb_.:· " .. >:> son and Baily are other likely can-· handles himself well, and shquld "It was his ~anne~ and the ef- .19. The oth.er ~tat~s il!__ or'd:r~ ~£e: · ::-.· ··: .: .. didates for the line positions. · experience no difficulty in landing feet on the team of his rlirection, Virginia, 5; Florida; _4;'~.e:rin_essee,-S; . '.

In the backfield the team is well a berth on the regular eleven.. the respect the men had for him~ Louisiana, 2; Geergia;· 1; .·.Alabama,. fortified with Croom at fu_ll, Dick Hard work is pr(!mised by Coach that attracted my attention.·. I act~ ~;_Texas, l_and Arkansas, 1. ·china ..

· - • 1s represented by 2 men _ and .. Cuba. Pace at quarter, and J. Pace at one MacDonnell for the comirig week:~ ed as refer~e in five of the L. S .. U. has sent..one representative.' · __ ; ____ ,,

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