would-be blackstone elected grand master grow pale …

4
j ' •, \ PAPER OUT ON TUESDAY HEREAFTER VOL. IV DR. HUBERT M. POTEAT ELECTED GRAND MASTER STATE MASONIC LODGE Is One of the Youngest Men Who Ever Held the Honor Which is His PROFESSOR TIMBERLAKE ALSO HOLDS HIGH OFFICE Dr. Poteat Has Been Deputy Master for the Last Year; Professor Timberlake, Recent- ly Elected to Thirty-Third De- gree Scottish Rite, is in Line of Succession for Office of Grand Master. Wake Forest reviews with pride the re:sult of the hundred and thirty-sixth annual communication of the North Carolina Grand Lodge, .A. F. & .A. M., where two members of her faculty, Dr. Hubert M. Poteat and Professor Edgar IV. Timberlawe, were honored, Dr. Po- teat being the unanimous choice of North Carolina Masons for Grand Mas- ter, the highest honor in the of the order to grant. "Little,:' said Dr. Poteat, "di.i I think fifteen years ago, when I was assuming the obligation of a Master Mason, that I would some day receive the highest honor in the power of North Carolina Masons to confer"; as .. WFJ FOlt A GREA'.rER WAKB FOUBST WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1923 No. 13 HAVANA STUDENTS HA:VE GONE ON A WALKOUT WOULD-BE BLACKSTONE GROW PALE AND WAN AS HOUR Of DOOM ARRIVES Havana, Jan. 15.-Havana Uni- versity was declared under a state of siege today by striking stu- dents. The strike committee of students' federation, which order- ed a walkout last Thursday to en- force demands for sweeping re- forms, this morning posted senti- nels at every point of approach to the university grounds with orders to allow nobody to pass. In sympathy with the university walkout, student strikes have been declared at virtually every institu- tion of higher education through- out tlJe Republic. DURHAM "Y" QUINTETTE LOSES TO WAKE FOREST Personal FouJ. Called in Minute Was Deciding Factor Last GAME WAS EXCEEDINGLY CLOSE THROUGHOUT FRAY A personal foul, called on the Dur- ham "Y" quintette during the last min- ute of play, was the deciding factor that broke the 17 to 17 tie and gave Wake Forest a one-point marginal vic- tory over the strong Bull City team in the local gymnasium Tuesday night. l Two Members of the Faculty of Wake Forest College Who Were Honored by State Masons H.M.POTE.AT E. W. TIMBERLAKE HAHVARJ) RI<JI<'USES ENTRANC.I<J TO SON OF NEGRO GRADUATE New York, Jan. 18.-President .A. Lawrence Lowell, of Harvard University, has been requested by a member of the Board of Over- seers to call a special meeting of the board to consider the presi- dent's action in refusing admit- tance to Freshman Hall to a son of Roscoe Conkling Bruce, negro graduate, according to the New York World. The paper stated that it had ascertained positively that such a request had been made but that no overseer who was reached could verify the report. CAROLINA IS FORCED TO BATTLE TO UTMOST Tired and Worn Students Wildly Seek to Imbibe Lore of Dusty Tornes CLASS OF THIRTY-FIVE STANDS EXAM MONDAY Faculty Handicapped by Illness of Professor Timberlake, But Has Striven to Thoroughly Prepare Applicants, and Dr. Gulley Declares That There Are Several Unusually Strong Men in the Group. When the college bell rings nowa- Wake Forest Unable to Solve days, summoning the student from Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat and Professor Edgar W. Timberlake, Jr., whose Passing and Is Defeated the boarding house, postoffice, drug- pictures appear above, were the recipients of high honors at the recent 38 t 26 store, or the semi-domestic seclusion Conclave of the Master Masons of the State in Raleigh. Dr. Poteat is 0 of his own little smoke-hazed den, Professor of Latin Language and Literature at Wake Forest and is a one sees, as the moving mass of man- ite with the men on the campus, while Professor Timberlake teaches Law PEGANO PLAYS GOOD GAi\IE kind disintegrates into small bands- and was for a number of years Dean of the College. GUARD FOR WAKE FORE8T which pay periodic visits to the class- FOOTBALL SCHEDULE IS TWENTY-fOUR GAMES IN ARRANGED BY LANGSTON BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Forced to fight every inch of the way to overcome a bull-dog ·wake For- est defense, the University of North Carolina basketball quint defeated the Baptists tonight 38 to 26. Wake For- rooms to get their daily portions of intellectual food, dry jokes, or more happily still a quiet "nap"-one sees, when the open at times like these, a band numbering nearly two score men who seperate them- the purple of the fraternity was about For Wake Forest "Pete" Pegano to be placed about his shoulders. Ever was the outstanding star who com- since his initiation Dr. Poteat has been pletely outplayed any other man on one of the most capable and most en- the court. Making his basketball ergetic workers in his lodge and early "debut" at Wake Forest, he guarded in his Masonic life the Grand Lodge the best player on the Durham team, was noting with satisfaction his "Sis" Perry, so consistently that de- achievements. He and Prof. Timber- spite the tall and speedy forward's Eight of the Nine Games Are to be Played Within Borders of the State "Dicky" Williams. R. Andrews, J. Hillburn and H. Hobnes Assistant Managers ABSENCE VIRGINIA GAMES JOURNEY INTO TENNESSEE MOST NOTICEABLE THING RATHER THAN TO GEORGIA est showed a great defense against selves from their companions and the Carolina team, but could not ab- move with stately stride, stopping solutely solve the Blue and White's only when they have reached the des- bewildering passing attack. Time and again Wake Forest would rally from seeming overwhelming defeat and threaten to tie the score, but on each occasion Carolina would make another spm·t of scoring and draw away from the Baptists. tination of their pilgrimage-Wil- liams Hall. Even a modest judge of human nature can tell that these men have seen better days. One feels the threat of impending disaster as the wan-faced men file silently by. They all carry with them large-very large-books, and faces that tell a sad little story of procrastination, lake, working together, have been con- frantic efforts to free himself for a ,-----------------... The close guarding of Mahler and M. McDonald frequently hurled back the attack of the Wake Forest for- spicuous all along the way from the shot at the goal, at no time during the degree of Entered .Apprentice to the contest did he succeed in evading his Football Schedule for 1923 Varsity Basketball Schedule -:t.'t -Chf!.Ll<C! Hi!.! Oct. 6--Guilford at \Vake l<'orest Out. 1a-:.-L;rnchburg at W. Forest Oct. 20-Davidson a.t Chat•lotte XO\'. 3-I<'urman at. Greenville, gion at. Xorfolk -;o;-"rdz . !;"'cmd -'il. Gc'l"·· _followed by burning midnight tainty. Carmichael led the scoring for and ending m night,. Carolina with three field goals and 15 as if drawn by some unseen force, foul goals out of a po 3 sible 24. Pegano and entirely oblivious of the plight played a good game at guard for of their sad-countenanced neighbors, Wake Forest but all the \Val{e Forest the individuals who compose this players showed up well on the de· 11nhappy assemblage move on to their the Scottish Rite, was Wednesday The game ww· close night last appointed Grand Pursui- throughout the entire fray, with Wake vant, which puts him in line of sue- Forest holding a one- to two-point lead cession that, unless overtaken by mis- most of the time. .Although fast, the hap, will eventually place him in the game was marred by an unusually <>ffice of Grand Master. large number of fouls, due to the s. c. Nov. 10-Tl"inity at \Vinston-Sa- letn ot• Greensboro. Jan. 13-\Yilliam and at \Villiamsburg, Va. Jan. 16-Durha,m at home Jan. 19-Carolina at Chapel Hill Jan. 23-})urlunn at Dm·ham .Jan. 25-Lenoir at home fense. doom with as much spirit as the whirlwind approach of a scheduled ordeal will permit. The doors close Dr. Poteat has, for the past year, hawk-like eye of Referee Steiner, of held the office of Deputy Grand Mas- Trinity. However, it was Stringfield's ter, and is one of the youngest men superior ability over Perry to cage the ever to have held the honor that is foul shots that won the game for Wake X ov. 17-l<Jlon at Elon. Nov. 24-X. C. State at Raleigh Nov. 29-Carson-N ewman at Ashe- ville. ,Jan. 27-Trinit3· at home ,Jan. 30-Elon at home Feb. 3-N. C. State at Raleigh Feb. 5-Carolina at home The line-up and summary: Position Carolina: \Vake Forest behind them, and they are lost to the Right Forward rest of the inquisitive world. (Continued on page 4.) Local Literati Form Honorary Fraternity Society Organized for Purpose of Stimulating Literary Production ZETA SIGMA NU IS NAME ADOPTED BY NEW ORDER ·choosing as its local name, Zeta Sigma Nu, a new honorary fraternity, among the literary leaders in college, and for the purpose of stimu- lating literary production, was or- ganized recently. The men who form this fraternity are prominently connected with the three college publications-all being on the editorial staffs. They have, since becoming members of ·wake Forest College, been leading contrib- utors to The Student and Old Gold and Black. Realizing that there has been during the past few years a decided backward step taken in the amount of readable manuscripts pro- duced here, these men banded them- selves together as a fraternity in an effort to remedy this situation, by resolving themselves into an organi- zation the purpose of which will be to create greater literary activity on the campus, by making membership in this fraternity dependent upon lit- erary ability, holding the standard and ideal of the fraternity above re- proach, thus making membership a coveted distinction, and by offering a suitable award for the best literary .production of the year. While it has not been definitely decided, yet it is very probable that a handsome medal will be offered for the best single piece of writing done by any of the Jltudents for the entire year. The members of this newest organ- ization are: W. J. Cash, W. D. Brown, H. F . .Ayers, I. C. Pait, Jno. R. Knott and Gay G. Whitaker. W. J. Cash was named president and G. C. Whit- :aker sec1·.etary. Forest, for the varsity scored only five field goals to the seven caged by the visitors. On the other hand, String- field scored 8 out of 14 trials on the foul line, while Perry succeeded in making only 3 out of 13 attempts. Things looked exceedingly bad for the Old Gold and Black supporters when Coach Phil Utley was forced to put two second string men on the floor in place of Greason and Carlyle, who had been called off on personal (Continued on page 4.) Wake Forest Wants a Postoffice Building Office is Second Class Now and Three Hundred People Without Boxes Feb. 8-l:nivet•sit)· of Florida at Green . ·- ···-····················· ....... Stringfield On the sunny side of many of the The football schedule as definitely arranged by Director of Athletics H. L. Langston and graduate manager of the football team, consists of nine games, eight of which are to be played within the boundaries of the State and one in Greenville, South Carolina. home ( JICmli ng) Feb. f>-Elon at Elon Pcb. 10-Guilford at Guilfm•!l Feb. 12---Guilforcl at home Feb. 15-Davi<lson nt home Ii'eb. 16-l\0. C. State at home Peb, 19-Dtwidson nt Dtwidson F<"b. 20-Lcnoh· at Hiekory The most noticeable thing about Peb. 21-carson and X1•wma11 at the new scheliule is the absence of Jetrm·son Cit;\·, Tenn. games in Virginia. For several years Feb. 22--)lar;rville College at in the IJast football schedules have 1\larl·ville, Tenn. included two and at times as many l<'eb. College at Bt·istol, Left Forward S. McDonald ................................ Gleason Center Carmichael Corby 1 Right Guard .i\'1. McDonald ............................ Heckman Left Guard Carolina substitutions: Pool for (Continued on page 4.) as four Virginia colleges, but due to Va.-Tenn. D T D J H superior arrangements with other F<"b. 2-t-Lynchhm•g Elks at. r. OID eC areS iS (Continued on page 4.) Elizabethan Players Here Last Saturday Venice" WORK OF THE PELLETIERS FEATURE PERFORMANCES colleges, all the Old Dominion offers Ll·nchburg, \"a. Faith in "Allemeni" Three hundred years haYe not serYed have been given up for games within Feb. 28--Tt·initl· at Durluun. to dim the beauty of Shakespeare's North Carolina. :\Im·. and 1\Iary at plays, and the presentation of "The The schedule differs also from last home (pemling) Asserts Belief That Professors Taming of the Shrew" and "The l\Icr- year's schedule in that Lenoir and at Large \Viii Take Care chant of Venice." lost none of their Atlantic Christian College have been The 1923 basketball season, as of Him original lJeauty when were pre- dropped. The 1922 schedule started finally arranged by Manager C. vV. sented in the College Auditorium Sat- 1 off with a game with Lenoir College. Bailey, consists of a series of 24 ANCIENT DARKEY \VILL BE urday afternoon and eycning by the CONGRESSMAN POU GIVES It was thought expedient at the time games for the varsity squad and 16 Elizabethan Players. "The Taming of PROMISE OF HIS SUPPORT I to begin the schedule with a light matches for the second and third AIDED BY THE OLD-TIMERS the Shrew," was presented in the after- 1 game, but whether or not this plan is teams. Besides two games with Car- noon to an appreciative audience. This With three hundred people noisily best for the college has been a con- olina, Elon, Davidson, Trinity, Guil- "'Dr. Tom's house is on fire!" most delightful satire on sharp- clamoring for postoflice boxes which I tinual dispute among the members ford and Lenoir, the schedule calls Quickly the news spread tluough tongued women was admirably inter- are not to be had, and the advance- I of the Athletic Council and the stu- for an· extensive trip into Tennessee the village, busy with Saturday after- 11rete<l by the strong company sup- ment of the local office from third to dent body. Judging by this year's and Virginia, begilming on February noon activities. and a crowd soon porting l\Ir. Pelleties, who, as Petru- second class within the past year, I outcome, it is decidedly not the most 19th, when the quint meets David- hurried to the scene of excitement. chio, wp.s all that the most exacting there has developed a growing de- expedient arrangement, for after son at Davidson, and ending ou Feb- The frame building, already far critic could desire. .:\Irs. Pelleties maud for a government-owned post- beating .Atlantic Christian College by ruary 2 S with the Lynchburg Elks at gone before the fire company ar- made an :J.(!mirable Katharina, and in office building in Wake Forest. a small score, the eleven fell from Lynchburg, Va. rived, was not long in being con- the leading feminine role proved an A 1 . d .., d f tl t Tl d" t . . t G . 1 sunled. But tlJe cetJter of l.tJtet·est ideal shrew. A larger crowd saw "The etter written by an enterprising grace an suuere one o 1e mos 1e en mg r1p m o eorg1a 1as k t" d b . d 1 d fi "t 1 1 d d 1 . '''as not tile llouse-ot· '''llat lJad so l\Ierchant of Venice" in the evening, •v a ·e Forest business man and an exaspera mg an em arrassmg e- >een e n1 e y cance e an t 1e JOUr- urged "y a and followed with rapt attention tile alumnus of the college has elicited feats at the hands of Carolina that ney into Tennessee substituted in its recently been a house. .., the sympathy and interest of Con- the Old Gold and Black had ever place. The schedule has been so ar- strong compulsion, all eyes turned to vicissitudes oE The .:\Ierchant of Ven- gressman Edward \V. Pou, who prom- ises to do his best for the citizens of Wake Forest in getting an appropri- ation for a government building. The received. ranged that the team will meet two the figure standing among tlle ella- ice and Bassanio. l\Ir. Pelletier's in- I terpretation of Shylock, while differ- A late ·change in the schedule is opponents a week, with a light game otic array of household effects- ing in some respects from that of other the game with Furman on November before each difficult meet. broken chairs, a handful of bed- leading interpretations of Shakes- 3d instead of the contest with the .A special feature arranged by Man- clothing, the remnants of a "wash- peare, was sym[lathetic and appealing, action of Congress recently in re- Presbyterian College of Clinton, S. C., ager Bailey is the game on February stand set"-the pathetic jetsam of and the court scene was especially fusing to pass an omnibus bill for which had been previously an- 15th, the day before Anniversary, il'urniture hastily rescued from de- Public buildings precludes the possi- nounced. Although final arrange- with Davidson College, at Walre Fm·- structiou. A tragic figure, in truth, well done. Although the supporting members of the company dill not fca- bility of any immediate action, but ments for this game had not yet been est, and game with N. C. State on this of the old colored man, gaunt d 1 ture as strongly as Mr. an 1\lrs. Pel e- Representative Pou believes that the I completed at the time of the pub- the day following Anniversary cele- and gnarled like some weather- tier, they all showed themselves well qualified to assume the responsibility of their roles. next session of Congress, which meets llishing of this paper, Director Lang- bration. beaten forest tree, gazing with dazed in December, will be more generous. I ston expressed his opinion that he At a recent meeting of the .Ath- eyes as the hungry flames licked up The present postoffice was formerly, was practically sure definite details letic Council, four of the most popu- the savings of a lifetime of thrift. located at Forestville. It was moved would be finished within a short time. Jar undergraduates in college were Slow tears rolled down the wrinkled This company of players come to us from the Piedmont Bureau, and are Wake Forest meets Carson-New- chosen as assistant managers of the cheeks, but an undaunted spirit was well up to the standard of attractions from there to a location just north of tl1e campus, where it remained in the Timberlake family for approximately 40 years. It has been in its present quarters eight or ten years. man for the first time, at .Asheville team, and the schedules arranged by triumphant in the words which came sent out by them. The College was this year. Carson-Newman made the Manager Bailey tor tile second and from the quivering lips, "I ain't a- very fortunate in securing these pleas- (Continued on page 4.) (Continued on page 4.) (Continued on page 4.) ing and talented interpreters ·of Shakespeare.

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VOL. IV
DR. HUBERT M. POTEAT ELECTED GRAND MASTER STATE MASONIC LODGE Is One of the Youngest Men Who
Ever Held the Honor Which is His
PROFESSOR TIMBERLAKE ALSO HOLDS HIGH OFFICE
Dr. Poteat Has Been Deputy Master for the Last Year; Professor Timberlake, Recent­ ly Elected to Thirty-Third De­ gree Scottish Rite, is in Line of Succession for Office of Grand Master.
Wake Forest reviews with pride the re:sult of the hundred and thirty-sixth annual communication of the North Carolina Grand Lodge, .A. F. & .A. M., where two members of her faculty, Dr. Hubert M. Poteat and Professor Edgar IV. Timberlawe, were honored, Dr. Po­ teat being the unanimous choice of North Carolina Masons for Grand Mas­ ter, the highest honor in the pow~>:: of the order to grant.
.. >#~--·~·-
WAKE FOREST, NORTH CAROLINA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1923 No. 13
,--------------------,Jr------------------------------------------~ HAVANA STUDENTS HA:VE
GONE ON A WALKOUT WOULD-BE BLACKSTONE GROW PALE AND WAN AS HOUR Of DOOM ARRIVES
Havana, Jan. 15.-Havana Uni­ versity was declared under a state of siege today by striking stu­ dents. The strike committee of students' federation, which order­ ed a walkout last Thursday to en­ force demands for sweeping re­ forms, this morning posted senti­ nels at every point of approach to the university grounds with orders to allow nobody to pass.
In sympathy with the university walkout, student strikes have been declared at virtually every institu­ tion of higher education through­ out tlJe Republic.
DURHAM "Y" QUINTETTE LOSES TO WAKE FOREST Personal FouJ. Called in
Minute Was Deciding Factor
GAME WAS EXCEEDINGLY CLOSE THROUGHOUT FRAY
A personal foul, called on the Dur­ ham "Y" quintette during the last min­ ute of play, was the deciding factor that broke the 17 to 17 tie and gave Wake Forest a one-point marginal vic­ tory over the strong Bull City team in the local gymnasium Tuesday night.
lTwo Members of the Faculty of Wake Forest College Who Were Honored by State Masons
H.M.POTE.AT E. W. TIMBERLAKE
NEGRO GRADUATE
New York, Jan. 18.-President .A. Lawrence Lowell, of Harvard University, has been requested by a member of the Board of Over­ seers to call a special meeting of the board to consider the presi­ dent's action in refusing admit­ tance to Freshman Hall to a son of Roscoe Conkling Bruce, negro graduate, according to the New York World. The paper stated that it had ascertained positively that such a request had been made but that no overseer who was reached could verify the report.
CAROLINA IS FORCED TO BATTLE TO UTMOST
Tired and Worn Students Wildly Seek to Imbibe Lore of
Dusty Tornes
CLASS OF THIRTY-FIVE STANDS EXAM MONDAY
Faculty Handicapped by Illness of Professor Timberlake, But Has Striven to Thoroughly Prepare Applicants, and Dr. Gulley Declares That There Are Several Unusually Strong Men in the Group.
When the college bell rings nowa-
Wake Forest Unable to Solve days, summoning the student from Dr. Hubert McNeil Poteat and Professor Edgar W. Timberlake, Jr., whose Passing and Is Defeated the boarding house, postoffice, drug-
pictures appear above, were the recipients of high honors at the recent 38 t 26 store, or the semi-domestic seclusion Conclave of the Master Masons of the State in Raleigh. Dr. Poteat is
0 of his own little smoke-hazed den,
Professor of Latin Language and Literature at Wake Forest and is a favor-~ one sees, as the moving mass of man- ite with the men on the campus, while Professor Timberlake teaches Law PEGANO PLAYS GOOD GAi\IE
kind disintegrates into small bands- and was for a number of years Dean of the College. GUARD FOR WAKE FORE8T which pay periodic visits to the class-
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE IS TWENTY-fOUR GAMES IN ARRANGED BY LANGSTON BASKETBALL SCHEDULE
Forced to fight every inch of the way to overcome a bull-dog ·wake For­ est defense, the University of North Carolina basketball quint defeated the Baptists tonight 38 to 26. Wake For-
rooms to get their daily portions of intellectual food, dry jokes, or more happily still a quiet "nap"-one sees, when the flood-gat~s open at times like these, a band numbering nearly two score men who seperate them-
the purple of the fraternity was about For Wake Forest "Pete" Pegano to be placed about his shoulders. Ever was the outstanding star who com­ since his initiation Dr. Poteat has been pletely outplayed any other man on one of the most capable and most en- the court. Making his basketball ergetic workers in his lodge and early "debut" at Wake Forest, he guarded in his Masonic life the Grand Lodge the best player on the Durham team, was noting with satisfaction his "Sis" Perry, so consistently that de­ achievements. He and Prof. Timber- spite the tall and speedy forward's
Eight of the Nine Games Are to be Played Within Borders
of the State
Assistant Managers
ABSENCE VIRGINIA GAMES JOURNEY INTO TENNESSEE MOST NOTICEABLE THING RATHER THAN TO GEORGIA
est showed a great defense against selves from their companions and the Carolina team, but could not ab- move with stately stride, stopping solutely solve the Blue and White's only when they have reached the des­ bewildering passing attack. Time and again Wake Forest would rally from seeming overwhelming defeat and threaten to tie the score, but on each occasion Carolina would make another spm·t of scoring and draw away from the Baptists.
tination of their pilgrimage-Wil­ liams Hall. Even a modest judge of human nature can tell that these men have seen better days. One feels the threat of impending disaster as the wan-faced men file silently by. They all carry with them large-very large-books, and faces that tell a sad little story of procrastination,
lake, working together, have been con- frantic efforts to free himself for a ,-----------------... The close guarding of Mahler and M. McDonald frequently hurled back the attack of the Wake Forest for­
spicuous all along the way from the shot at the goal, at no time during the degree of Entered .Apprentice to the contest did he succeed in evading his
Football Schedule for 1923 Varsity Basketball Schedule
=~~~~:; ~:1 ~~·e ~i~~~~~:!~!7d:;r::ut:r- ;~=-~~~;;~~~:;~~!~~~:h~:~~:.-tc ~ut 1· ~·Sopt. ~~s-c:\!'C!i:l~ -:t.'t -Chf!.Ll<C! Hi!.!
Oct. 6--Guilford at \Vake l<'orest Out. 1a-:.-L;rnchburg at W. Forest Oct. 20-Davidson a.t Chat•lotte XO\'. 3-I<'urman at. Greenville,
gion at. Xorfolk -;o;-"rdz . .;,!:.c1'>~ftcl~~~r.l !;"'cmd -'il. Gc'l"·· _followed by burning midnight ~il, tainty. Carmichael led the scoring for and ending m slecple~s night,. B.~t, Carolina with three field goals and 15 as if drawn by some unseen force, foul goals out of a po3sible 24. Pegano and entirely oblivious of the plight played a good game at guard for of their sad-countenanced neighbors, Wake Forest but all the \Val{e Forest the individuals who compose this players showed up well on the de· 11nhappy assemblage move on to their
the Scottish Rite, was Wednesday The game ww· ~::..ceeamgly close night last appointed Grand Pursui- throughout the entire fray, with Wake vant, which puts him in line of sue- Forest holding a one- to two-point lead cession that, unless overtaken by mis- most of the time. .Although fast, the hap, will eventually place him in the game was marred by an unusually <>ffice of Grand Master. large number of fouls, due to the
s. c. Nov. 10-Tl"inity at \Vinston-Sa-
letn ot• Greensboro.
Jan. 13-\Yilliam and lia~· at \Villiamsburg, Va.
Jan. 16-Durha,m at home Jan. 19-Carolina at Chapel Hill Jan. 23-})urlunn at Dm·ham .Jan. 25-Lenoir at home fense. doom with as much spirit as the
whirlwind approach of a scheduled ordeal will permit. The doors close
Dr. Poteat has, for the past year, hawk-like eye of Referee Steiner, of held the office of Deputy Grand Mas- Trinity. However, it was Stringfield's ter, and is one of the youngest men superior ability over Perry to cage the ever to have held the honor that is foul shots that won the game for Wake
X ov. 17-l<Jlon at Elon. Nov. 24-X. C. State at Raleigh Nov. 29-Carson-N ewman at Ashe-
ville.
,Jan. 27-Trinit3· at home ,Jan. 30-Elon at home Feb. 3-N. C. State at Raleigh Feb. 5-Carolina at home
The line-up and summary: Position
Carolina: \Vake Forest behind them, and they are lost to the Right Forward rest of the inquisitive world.
(Continued on page 4.)
Society Organized for Purpose of Stimulating Literary
Production
ZETA SIGMA NU IS NAME ADOPTED BY NEW ORDER
·choosing as its local name, Zeta Sigma Nu, a new honorary fraternity, ~reated among the literary leaders in college, and for the purpose of stimu­ lating literary production, was or­ ganized recently.
The men who form this fraternity are prominently connected with the three college publications-all being on the editorial staffs. They have, since becoming members of ·wake Forest College, been leading contrib­ utors to The Student and Old Gold and Black. Realizing that there has been during the past few years a decided backward step taken in the amount of readable manuscripts pro­ duced here, these men banded them­ selves together as a fraternity in an effort to remedy this situation, by resolving themselves into an organi­ zation the purpose of which will be to create greater literary activity on the campus, by making membership in this fraternity dependent upon lit­ erary ability, holding the standard and ideal of the fraternity above re­ proach, thus making membership a coveted distinction, and by offering a suitable award for the best literary .production of the year. While it has not been definitely decided, yet it is very probable that a handsome medal will be offered for the best single piece of writing done by any of the Jltudents for the entire year.
The members of this newest organ­ ization are: W. J. Cash, W. D. Brown, H. F . .Ayers, I. C. Pait, Jno. R. Knott and Gay G. Whitaker. W. J. Cash was named president and G. C. Whit­ :aker sec1·.etary.
Forest, for the varsity scored only five field goals to the seven caged by the visitors. On the other hand, String­ field scored 8 out of 14 trials on the foul line, while Perry succeeded in making only 3 out of 13 attempts.
Things looked exceedingly bad for the Old Gold and Black supporters when Coach Phil Utley was forced to put two second string men on the floor in place of Greason and Carlyle, who had been called off on personal
(Continued on page 4.)
Office is Second Class Now and Three Hundred People
Without Boxes
Feb. 8-l:nivet•sit)· of Florida at Green . ·- ···-····················· ....... Stringfield On the sunny side of many of the
The football schedule as definitely arranged by Director of Athletics H. L. Langston and graduate manager of the football team, consists of nine games, eight of which are to be played within the boundaries of the State and one in Greenville, South Carolina.
home ( JICmli ng) Feb. f>-Elon at Elon Pcb. 10-Guilford at Guilfm•!l Feb. 12---Guilforcl at home Feb. 15-Davi<lson nt home Ii'eb. 16-l\0. C. State at home Peb, 19-Dtwidson nt Dtwidson F<"b. 20-Lcnoh· at Hiekory
The most noticeable thing about Peb. 21-carson and X1•wma11 at the new scheliule is the absence of Jetrm·son Cit;\·, Tenn. games in Virginia. For several years Feb. 22--)lar;rville College at in the IJast football schedules have 1\larl·ville, Tenn. included two and at times as many l<'eb. 2:~King College at Bt·istol,
Left Forward S. McDonald ................................ Gleason
Center Carmichael -·--···---·····~---················· Corby
Left Guard
Carolina substitutions: Pool for
(Continued on page 4.)
as four Virginia colleges, but due to Va.-Tenn. D T D J H superior arrangements with other F<"b. 2-t-Lynchhm•g Elks at. r. OID eC areS iS
(Continued on page 4.)
Venice"
WORK OF THE PELLETIERS FEATURE PERFORMANCES
colleges, all the Old Dominion offers Ll·nchburg, \"a. Faith in "Allemeni" Three hundred years haYe not serYed have been given up for games within Feb. 28--Tt·initl· at Durluun. to dim the beauty of Shakespeare's North Carolina. :\Im·. ~\Villimn and 1\Iary at plays, and the presentation of "The
The schedule differs also from last home (pemling) Asserts Belief That Professors Taming of the Shrew" and "The l\Icr- year's schedule in that Lenoir and at Large \Viii Take Care chant of Venice." lost none of their Atlantic Christian College have been The 1923 basketball season, as of Him original lJeauty when th~y were pre- dropped. The 1922 schedule started finally arranged by Manager C. vV. sented in the College Auditorium Sat-
1
off with a game with Lenoir College. Bailey, consists of a series of 24 ANCIENT DARKEY \VILL BE urday afternoon and eycning by the CONGRESSMAN POU GIVES It was thought expedient at the time games for the varsity squad and 16 Elizabethan Players. "The Taming of PROMISE OF HIS SUPPORT I to begin the schedule with a light matches for the second and third AIDED BY THE OLD-TIMERS the Shrew," was presented in the after-
1
game, but whether or not this plan is teams. Besides two games with Car- noon to an appreciative audience. This With three hundred people noisily best for the college has been a con- olina, Elon, Davidson, Trinity, Guil- "'Dr. Tom's house is on fire!" most delightful satire on sharp-
clamoring for postoflice boxes which I tinual dispute among the members ford and Lenoir, the schedule calls Quickly the news spread tluough tongued women was admirably inter- are not to be had, and the advance- I of the Athletic Council and the stu- for an· extensive trip into Tennessee the village, busy with Saturday after- 11rete<l by the strong company sup­ ment of the local office from third to dent body. Judging by this year's and Virginia, begilming on February noon activities. and a crowd soon porting l\Ir. Pelleties, who, as Petru­ second class within the past year, I outcome, it is decidedly not the most 19th, when the quint meets David- hurried to the scene of excitement. chio, wp.s all that the most exacting there has developed a growing de- expedient arrangement, for after son at Davidson, and ending ou Feb- The frame building, already far critic could desire. .:\Irs. Pelleties maud for a government-owned post- beating .Atlantic Christian College by ruary 2 S with the Lynchburg Elks at gone before the fire company ar- made an :J.(!mirable Katharina, and in office building in Wake Forest. a small score, the eleven fell from Lynchburg, Va. rived, was not long in being con- the leading feminine role proved an
A 1 . d .., d f tl t Tl d" t . . t G . 1 sunled. But tlJe cetJter of l.tJtet·est ideal shrew. A larger crowd saw "The etter written by an enterprising grace an suuere one o 1e mos 1e en mg r1p m o eorg1a 1as ~" k t" d b . d 1 d fi "t 1 1 d d 1 . '''as not tile llouse-ot· '''llat lJad so l\Ierchant of Venice" in the evening, •v a ·e Forest business man and an exaspera mg an em arrassmg e- >een e n1 e y cance e an t 1e JOUr-
urged "y a and followed with rapt attention tile alumnus of the college has elicited feats at the hands of Carolina that ney into Tennessee substituted in its recently been a house. .., the sympathy and interest of Con- the Old Gold and Black had ever place. The schedule has been so ar- strong compulsion, all eyes turned to vicissitudes oE The .:\Ierchant of Ven- gressman Edward \V. Pou, who prom­ ises to do his best for the citizens of Wake Forest in getting an appropri­ ation for a government building. The
received. ranged that the team will meet two the figure standing among tlle ella- ice and Bassanio. l\Ir. Pelletier's in-
I
terpretation of Shylock, while differ-A late ·change in the schedule is opponents a week, with a light game otic array of household effects- ing in some respects from that of other the game with Furman on November before each difficult meet. broken chairs, a handful of bed- leading interpretations of Shakes-3d instead of the contest with the .A special feature arranged by Man- clothing, the remnants of a "wash- peare, was sym[lathetic and appealing,
action of Congress recently in re- Presbyterian College of Clinton, S. C., ager Bailey is the game on February stand set"-the pathetic jetsam of and the court scene was especially fusing to pass an omnibus bill for which had been previously an- 15th, the day before Anniversary, il'urniture hastily rescued from de- Public buildings precludes the possi- nounced. Although final arrange- with Davidson College, at Walre Fm·- structiou. A tragic figure, in truth, well done. Although the supporting
members of the company dill not fca- bility of any immediate action, but ments for this game had not yet been est, and ~he game with N. C. State on this of the old colored man, gaunt d
1 ture as strongly as Mr. an 1\lrs. Pel e­ Representative Pou believes that the I completed at the time of the pub- the day following Anniversary cele- and gnarled like some weather-
tier, they all showed themselves well qualified to assume the responsibility of their roles.
next session of Congress, which meets llishing of this paper, Director Lang- bration. beaten forest tree, gazing with dazed in December, will be more generous. I ston expressed his opinion that he At a recent meeting of the .Ath- eyes as the hungry flames licked up
The present postoffice was formerly, was practically sure definite details letic Council, four of the most popu- the savings of a lifetime of thrift. located at Forestville. It was moved would be finished within a short time. Jar undergraduates in college were Slow tears rolled down the wrinkled
This company of players come to us from the Piedmont Bureau, and are
Wake Forest meets Carson-New- chosen as assistant managers of the cheeks, but an undaunted spirit was well up to the standard of attractions from there to a location just north of tl1e campus, where it remained in the Timberlake family for approximately 40 years. It has been in its present quarters eight or ten years.
man for the first time, at .Asheville team, and the schedules arranged by triumphant in the words which came sent out by them. The College was this year. Carson-Newman made the Manager Bailey tor tile second and from the quivering lips, "I ain't a- very fortunate in securing these pleas­
(Continued on page 4.) (Continued on page 4.) (Continued on page 4.) ing and talented interpreters ·of Shakespeare.
2 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Old G ld d Bl k do train the leaders of the na- ' ALUMNI NOTES 1\ Sunrlay School Class o an ac ':ion because they give to their L Is•ued weekly by the student Body or Wake sons something which cannot be ..._ _____________ __,,/ Stages Big "Session"
l''or~st Colleg-e 1 obtained elsewhere. The following ·wake Forest men
Strange, we say, that these are members of the present session schools should have arrogated to of the General Assembly: themselves this thing in spite of the limitless resources of the state institutions with which they have had to compete-and
S("IIIttC Paul Jones, 1882-3, Tarboro. 0. i\1. Moss. Spring Hope. C. P. Harris, '21, Mapleville. Paul D. Grady, 1910-11, Kenly.
\ vet, not strange at all: state schools are essentially and neces-
suuscription . $2.00 a Year sarily utilitarian and inclusive. Supported, as they are, by all the
R. D. Johnson, 1903-05, 'Varsaw. Emmett BeJlamy, 1915-16, Wil-
miugton.
On last Friday evening, in the Ma­ sonic Hall, over Power's Drug Store, beginning at 7:30, Professor Prich· ard"s Sunday School Class staged a "smoker," and genuine, old-time "IJep" meeting. It was a time when "all good fellows got together," and thor­ oughly enjoyed a pleasant evening.
WHAT'S WHAT IN COLLEGE SPORTS J>t•(•scnt Class Haskct.b1tll and
Athletic Standing
1 2 1
2 1 2
THE SPORTSMAN'S NOTE-BOOK
A. A. Union Championships All-around Championship (Deca­
thlon), won hy S. Harrison Thomson, of Princeton, for the second succes­ sive time.
100-Yat·d Dash: Won by Robert McAlister (Tlte Flying Cop). He made ten seconds on a bad track in the national meet. :\ll<::\IBER ::\ORTH CAROLINA people, they must accommodate
COLLEl:L\1'8 PRJ,;SS ASSOCIATION themselves to what the great Entered as s .. cnnd-cla•s matter January 22. aSS Of the people desl·I·e and,
L. R. Varsar, '99, Lumberton. J. R. Baggott, 1900-01, Lillington. J. I,. Griffin. 1893-95, Pittsboro. Chas. F. Harris, 1899-04, Raleigh.
The delightful program, character­ ized by a hearty response of every­ one which was placed upon it, was in­ termingled in the "bull session" in such a pleasing manner, that each number rendered was declared to be the "best yet." The program commit­ tee consisted of "Bill" Howard, chair­ man: "Samuel" Rvbinson, "Sprock" Duckett, "Sampy" Anderson, ami "\Vy-
Coach Phil Utley has chosen the Mile Run: Won by Joie Ray, !IIi- following men as members of the nois Athletic Club (for seventh sue­
191 G. at lhc_• llOStoflicc at \Vnke F'orcst. North m All-Class Basketball Team: cessive time). Carolina. undc>r the act of Murch 3, 1Si9. unfortunately, the ideal Of the sTAFI' mass of the people is not yet the
Wtc!luu J. c.wn .... E<litor training of leaders for progress J. C. Brown. '13, Madison. A. F. Sams, '97, \Vinston-Salem.
Right forward: Modlin (Junior). Three-mile Walk: Won by William Left forward: Ellington (Fresh- Plant in 21 minutes 50 1-10 seconds.
H. D. Unow:\'I~G. Jn. • • Business .Manager f th · 1 h 1 b t th E. H. l\lnon~ . .-l:;sistant liusill<BS Manager 0 e SOCia 'v 0 e, u ra er House man). (A world's record.)
G.w G. WIItT.mEu . . . M<nwyiuo R<litor the training of the individual for H. F. AY&ots ..••... SJ>ort I-:ditor Dr. L. A. Xowell, 1888-91, Cole-
mie" Edwards. , Center: Flannagan (Junior). Broad Jump: Won by DeHart Hub-
DB. cu,nLEs P. W&AVER • • Faculty Editor the an1assing of private wealth. rain. ASSOCIATE EDITORS Let it be understood that We are
This was it: \ Right guard: Hood (Freshman). barcl, of Cincinnati. 1. Solo in Chinese-"Cllink" Ayres. · Left Guard: Lake (Senior). Intercollegiate Track Athktics
H '
n D. B. Johnson, '20, Elizabethtown. . E. WtL"o" v. J. ''"c" not decrying the usefulness of
A. C. HALL It.l,.Gotc:.,v>:s z. v. Nettles. 1919-20. Biltmore. 2. ··sJ,y" Talk-Rev. l\1:. L. Robinson. Honorable mention: Brewton, Interc9llegiate Amateur Athletic
A. w. r"'"'"'""T"" H. v. DucKc:TT state institutions-they are very cmcuLATION DEPARTMENT necessary in a proper education- R. E. Taylor, ' 18 • Asheville. son, "Brbie" Moore.
3. Instrumental Duet-Stanley John- Hawkins and Purser. Association· of America meet in the
R. W. SI .. \T6 . • • . Circulation Manager al scheme-but they are, in the ).I. Leslie Davis. '05. Beaufort. 4. Impersonations- "Pliny" Purser, 1
. lc. III. F"'""t"" Cllas. H. Grady, 1!!19-21, i\lanteo. "EP!l"" H·,Jwkins, "Hob" i\Iorton. It is a noticeable fttct that four of ASSISTANTS very nature of things, unfitted ' 11 1 t R. H. Parker, 191±-15, Enfield. 5. Lectttt·e-''Sky" Sullivan. the members of the a -c ass earn
E. 111. F,'"'"1"'" P. a. PuRsF.R for the promulgation of the H. B. EowA'""' o. o. ANDERsoN Chas. R. Daniel, 1912-14, 'Veldon. G. Saxophone Duet-",Villie" Powell, mentioned by Coach Phil Utley have
All communications for lll"int or rl•1ath·e to the paper othc...•t· than Uusincs:::; should be ad­ Urc~s('d to the editor·.
highest culture. Private schools, D. J. Thurston. 1896_98 , Clayton. "Hildebrand" Hilburn. made places as first subs on the on the other hand, should be the H · ,Y. M .. Jackson. 1903-5, Dobson. 7. Violin Solo-"Tschaikowsl;:y" Pea- varsity quint. owever, it IS an un-
13u~int.'SS eommunieation~ sl10uld be nddrc~scd freest in the world. They need 1 tl cock. ttsual coi·nci'dence tl1at all four of Yan B. Martin, 1902-4, P ymou 1. - have no other concern than that 8. Contortionistic Acrobatics-,Villi· these men are upperclass men. Tlte t.o the Bu:::.~nc::;,s ~{~\1Ul~<'l".
Adn•r·ti~::dm: ratl's quu!ed UJlon application. All sub~c1·h>tions arc tlue strictly in aUYance. Etlitt,rial and hu~illt'"~ t~nit:t'~: Powers Uuild·
int-~ : llo:o;loflit•p box l ~~~
of the ultimate good of societ". Gentlemen, we hope you will pay J • b f ford.
1
awakening of this dormant material Their arJIJeal can be made of a your Alma :\later a visit e ore you 9. Address-Rev. Paul Bagby, D.D. is undoubtedly due to the intra-mural hi~·her order-a select intellect- return to your homes. ~ 10. Eats-Whole Gang, 'n everybody.! games staged during the fall. Raleigh otlic~: Capital Printing Co., corner
of Httrg-ett nn<.l '''ilmington streets. ual IJatronage ma.v be gathered Elliott B. Clark. '09, has built up After a rousing cheer, thanking the . "-and men rea11y capable of lead- a good law practice in 'Veldon. ladies of the Church for preparing the Coach Phil Utley has developed a
lr---~-~-~-~-_?-~-~-~-~--J ing rna~- be made their chief aim. The Wake Forest men of Stanly eats; aml expressing appreciation to basketball quint of which 'Vake For­ N o-they need never close their Count~· will meet Cor organization the Reynolds Tobacco co. for do nat· est will have opportunity to be proud. doors to anyone-that of course February 26. ·wake Forest has a ing the smol;:es for Ute evening, the With five old experienced heads on
OLD GOLD AND BLACK'S PROGRAM FOR A GREAT· ER WAKE FOREST IN 1923
v;oulcl be contrary to our system ·large number of splendicl men in crowd brol;:e up with renewe:l .~·~sol~t-
1 the line-up the team will be hard to
-but their standards can be Stanly County and we predict great tions to boost wholesome actiVIties m beat. made of such quality that their things from this association. the Sunday school's student classes.
1-750 Students.
halls will become a mecca for R. c. Brown, '21, Professor or I It is rare that one finds two guards those of the greatest capacity- English. \·irginia Intermont College, Philosophy Club as efficient as Pegano and Heckman. intellectually and spiritually. Bristol. ,·a., was recently elected H D G ll "Sis" Perry found he had a shadow
2-A Building- Program. in­ cluding:
And that is exactly what has \'ice-president of the illStitution. We ears r. u ey from whom he could not escape when happened in the schools we have eongratulate the college. Durham "Y" played 'Val;:e Forest
1-A Law Building-; mentioned. Only one state · F. B. Hamrick, '03. is one of those (Dean, Dr. Gulley) Tuesday night. Pegano and Perry 2-A Dormiton·. with
rooms for 250 men; 3-An enlarg·cd Gymna­
sium containing- swim· ming pool;
school-the University of Vir- aggressive and dependable citizens. The Philosophy Club 1Ielc1 its regu· were a game in themselves. At times ginia-has ever been able to ap- who have made Cleveland County Jar meeting Wednesday night at tile it looked like a bound tracking a proach this standard. ~ne of the best counties in this or any beautiful new home of Dr. and i\Trs. rabbit.
4-A Library Building; 5-An Administ r a. t i o n
Building;
In the South we have few, if other state. W. B. Bryan, located on the road lead- any, such institutions. And is it E. F. Holman, '22, is with the ing to the new athletic field. After not altogether possible that here- Winston-Sall'm Joumal instead of the the routine business had been dis­ in lies the explanation of the in- Sentinel, as was reported in this col- posed of Dr. N. Y. Gulley, Dean of tellectual and literary barren- umn last weelc the Law School, delivered a very en­ ness of which the South is so The law tlrm or Floyd & Hester, of terta.ining and instructive lecture on
ino· often accused'? Our state schools Gastonia. has already earned the rep- "The Psychology of Law," bringing 3-The ~~option of a definite have been regarded as our great- nation of being one of the strong law out many interesting facts in this con·
scheme of architecture for est, and as a consequence we firms ol' the Gaston section. Mr. w. nection. He pointed out that psychol·
6-A Student Life Build-
all new buildings. have not advanced as we should Y. Floyd, '22, and Mr. ,v_ F. Hester. ogy, as used by the lawyers in the 1 Th d I. f ll
1 1 fi practice of Jaw, is indispensable: in re·
- e remo e mg o a have. '\Ve have no great private '22. contro t te rm. . · · · o!d buildinl).'S to con- 11 b t d h th J l "' B I '1 8 f t1 e I u 1 lattml to the Jurors. the JUdge, hts I " co.eges- u \Ve o ave ema- .ucge · · vey, • 0 .• 1 .--.:'.n--c!ic:::t, nr.d t!::c c;;;;osi::;; l~c1·. He
' - - fo'i':"U.: 4:-~ ;-]tf.'J'.. - I teriai tl·on! \\ihfc11 to 'i'aise-- them herton Recorder's ·~,J'~r""!' mcrc:·;smg I • d I ·,·ely tbat "~
14 T l\~~''11' D 11 E d . · ll<bO proYe very cone us1 " - wo .11 IOn o ar n ow- up. Our denominational schools the school fund ami roacl force appre- b f t d la\"S ment. num er o. our presen - ay .. I have not grown to greatness ciabiy in Robeson County. come out of our religio<ts uuclerstand·
5-The adoption and main ten- largely because of the lack of Dr. Guy l\1c:IIillan, '17 · and Dr. ing, for example, property conveyed ance of a definite athletic · t Th t f th 1' ''' '1- 1 1 · ft equrpmen . e paver Y o · e om atson, '• are 00 ;:mg a et· to man and wife, become as one, the system. South has been a reasonable ex- the health of the folks in and around property of both."
cuse for that-but that poverty i\Iaxton. They are both good doctors. nll.Ittltes of After about forty-fi\·e no longer exists, and the South • pleasant instruction by Dr. Gulley, is prosperous. The destiny of College Library the meeting was opened for a "free-
i the denominational colleges lies "'dds New Books I f~r-all" discussion upon m.any. and va- before them-one may lead to .... ~ ned matters. Many fascmatmg star-
If Heckman and Pegano perform as well throughout the season as they did Tuesday night, \Vake Forest will undoubtedly deserve at least one end of the floor on the All-State team.
' . For Ladies and G'?-ntle;wen
Quick Servit·c r•ut•c }t,oot! Ideal I•rices
Opp. Union Station, Raleigh, N. C. "' e invite you- Trustees, Faculty. Alumni, Students, whoever vou mav be-to use our colunms for. the exilres­ sion of YOUR views on any or all these prOIJOSals, or any other objectives for a Greater \Vake I~orest.
oblivion, the other to towering I ies were exchanged while refreshments glory and usefulness. The College Library is keeping pace were served by Dr. and Mrs. Bryan Wake Forest College
Yes, we need a Princeton, and wi:h other imyrovemen ts in our work lied by Dr. Gulley. The meeting was. we need a Brown. Let Davidson tht~ year .. Smce September. lst the presided over by Mr. D. M. Castello, I carry out her program and she number or bool;:s has been mcreased vice-pJ·esident, in the absence of the will become a Carolina-nay, a from 27•352 to 27•688• a net increase president, Mr. ,V. T. 'Nard. The meet­ Southern-Princeton. Give Wake of :~ 36 volumes. Some of these books ing adiournecl about 11:30 o'clock, af­ Forest the fulfillment of the have been purchase(] by the College, ter being extended an invitation by
WE NEED A BROWN
' HT l p . t . th G F , l o.ti.Jers dm.Jated b,y the many generous I DJ'. atl(l i\'!J·s. Br·yan to !told tile ftt· • vv e neec a rmce on m - e " reater '\Vake orest pan
I . d h' d rnends ol' the College. Although th.e I tttre meetings of the club in their South." declares the Greensboro out me on t IS page an we 1 library is far from comp ete now, tt' home. Daily Ne\VS m a fairly recent !;hall have a Brown. I is the aim or the librarian, :\lrs. Crit- editorial-the immediate reason tenden to mal>:e it one of the features The officers of this active organiza·
WANTED-MORE JUDGE of the' College a.nd also to be of help tion at·e: W. cr:· Ward~ president; M. M.l for the statement being the cam- c t II v ce rJrestdent · \V L I BROCI{S to the students personally any time 1 as e eo, 1 · • · · · paign for the raising of six hun- when help is needed. [Brown, secretary an.d treasurer; ancl
dred thousand dollars for David- One of the things we shall haYe to Among the new books of most in- Dr. \V. B. Bryan, dn·ector.
son. This last, however, from regret with the passing of the old year terest are: our Yiewpoint, is merely inciden- is that with it will go Judge Walter E. Thomson-Outlines of Science. 4 vol-
Broel;: from the Superior Court lJench umes. tal. That "we need a Princeton"
"Y" STARTS MOVEMENT TO HELP "DR." TOM JEFFRIES
of North Carolina. He is not only a Page's Life and Letters--2 volumes.[ is the important thing-and we good judge, from the technical, legal Vanhoon-Story of ;\Iankincl. I The recent loss by Dr. Tom Jeffries, do. More-we need several JlOint of view, but he is a power [or Americanization of Edward Bok, ]Jy the time-honored janitor of the Col- Princetons, Browns, Cornells, or law and order and justice and liberty himself. liege, of his home on Happy Hill, has
Founded in 1834 .by the Baptist State Convention of North Caro­ lina, 'Vake Forest College has grown to be one of the stronger colleges of the country.
Library of 27,000 volumes in charge of a skilled Librarian. Hos­ pital in charge of a Trained Nurse, with the attendance of three phy- siciaus. Gymnasium with compul­ sory attendance. Intercollegiate athletics. Intercollegiate debates. Literary societies, giving excep­ tional training in public speaking.
In addition to tlte usual college courses, tllree years in Law and two years in Medicine are offered.
in e\'ery community where he holds Reisner-National ism ancl Ed m•a-! struck a chord of sympathy in the whatever you may want to call t·ourt. tion. 1 hearts of every College student, and President 'Vm. Louis Poteat them. Names in this case do 1 ·
It l · 0 •· 1 t(l 01• Steames Davis--The Near East. the local "Y" in their ast meetmg, ,,.,11,(, l"'ot·c•."t 11ot mattel·-the thl.I1g that does wa,; a,; a c mm1non ~ aw at · _ _ , ., · 1 :\I E r· h D'ct' 1 organized a movement that will assist is that we need privatt:!ly 0,vned cler anrl justiee unci genuine old·fas 1- • urray- ng 1s 1 wna ·y.
ioued Amet·ieanism of the sort men All of the~;e volumes are praised him in again getting settled. \Vhile
X orth Carolina
Harvard stadium, won by the Uni­ versity of California.
National Collegiate meet at Chi­ cago, won by the University of Cali­ fornia.
Western Conference Meet, won by University of Illinois.
Two-mile Relay Championship (principal event of the famous Penn­ sylvania relay meet), won by the University of Pennsylvania four in the world's record time of 7 minutes 49 2-5 seconds.
Four-mile Relay Championship, won by the University of Illinois team at the Drake College relay meet, establishing a world's record of 17 minutes and 4 5 5seconds.
Javelin Throw: A new American recor·d of 2 0 2 feet 9 1h inches was es­ tablished bY M. S. Angier at the Drake College relay meet, the first time an American had ever hurled the spea1· as far as two hundred feet.
The indoor high jump record was brol{en by LeRoy Brown of Dart­ mouth, who cleared the stick at 6
Teet 4% inches.
Gertie: "Oh, John, let's wait till Sunday! "-Ex.
Just AI•t•h•e<l
New Line of Silk and Wool
l\lilliner~· l'tc<luced One-Half Outing (lleav)·) lSc Per Y<l.
Good Stock Shoes On Haml
Jackson- Powers, Inc.
See
SATISFACTION AXI> LOW PHICES REIGN SUPRE:\IE
Shirts .......................... 75c to $5.00 Collars (Arrow Brand) .. 20c to 35c Neckwear __________ .......... 50e to $3.00 Shoes ........ ------------.. $3.00 to $10.00 Clothing (Stock or Tailor), $15 up
"Next Door to Postoffice"
Special This Week Only
Free Cake Witll Each Purchase
Wake Mercantile Co. Next noor to Postotlice
colleges of a certain type, or 1 . . -- 1 1 1 1 k highly !J.v the critics, and man" of the Alumni Secretary i\lcl\1illan is sending I· rather the schools -..ve have need diec for m 1 ' ' 6 t wt · LH ge ~r'''' · ap- · J peared in "'inston-:':lalern ,, 11 th<, ,,1,u1- othet· additions are also of especially out an appeal to some three hundred to move Up and enter into the ing day of the present trerrn r;f 1 r;Urt. high standing. of 'Vake Forest's younger alumni, the
COMPANY WHITING-HORTON field which is rightfully theirs. The charge he made t<; t!F: f!ranrl "Y" has divided the student residen-1
Private schools- clenomina- jury should be Jlrinted in !J~liiJ•hl<=t \ARTICLE BY PROFESSOR tial m·ea into twelve districts, with a tiona! schools, if you please- form and sowed down all 0 ,·er :'\<;rth Tl!\iBERLAKE IN "REVIE\V", man r~sp~nsi!Jle for the covering of have played, and may, if they Carolina. Other judges who ar" ill· \each 1l1stnct. will, continue to play, the leading eli ned to he weal•-kneed should e.-;. A recent issue of the Vii·ginia Law; The first four districts are the four t•ole in American education. pecially read it with cane. It is i:al- H•=Yiew contains as the leading artiele,, sections of the new dormitory; fifth State in:-;titutions have had their tulatecl to stiffen theil· haeldJon~s an<! "Origin and DeveloJJment of Advocacy i and sixth ~is:ricts, ,~he_ old dorn:it~ry: plae:e, but glance down the roll of lire them to a new apvreeiation or as a Prof.,so;irm," by Pt'rJf. E. W. Tim-: seventh district, '' tlkmson Bmld~ng' the 1·eally great colleges of the their duties and opportunities as berlake, .Jr. This magazine, publish-[ e~ght. district, Tammany I:Iall.; nmth United States- Harvard, Yale, guardians of the law in a count I')' I ed bv the Law Department or the Uni-1 chstnct, Sky Htll; tenth dtstrwt, Fac· Princeton. Cornell, Brown, Chi- where every man is guaranteed a fair \'ercit v of \'irginia, car!'ies only the': ulty Avenue; eleYenth district, Forest cago, Columbia, and Leland Stan- and impartial trial for his misdeeds choie~st articles or a legal charaC'ter. 11nn ;_ t.welfth distr~ct, ~a~ House. ford-all are private schools- hy a jm·~· of his peers in open court. Professot· Timberlake's article, ex-. E-.;eiy student ts expected to con­ moRt of then1 denominational in Judge Brock's charge made a JJro- ceptionally well-written and intensely [tribute something to tlte relief of Dr. their beginnings, at least. These found impression here. One lawyl'r interesting, show,; an exhaustive I Tom. institutions are the great centers told The Journal afterward that he amount of res~arch \\'OI'k. Beginning ---------------­ for the dissemination of that had never before heard a judge's with the ancient Greel•s, who were I onl of an ancient and honorable pro­ thing which we call culture-not charge through, but he was so im- the first to plead a cause for another,! fession; to upholcl that record is our knowledge, not personal address, pressed with this speech from the the write1· traced the growth of aciYoca- 11 responsibility." Thus he beautifully not even great brain power, but bench tltat he could not miss a word cy through the intervening years- i summarizes the duty of tbe American that happy harmonizing of soul, of it. It was a timely warning and with Kpecial reference to England- lawyers. mind and personality which we should be taken seriously by the grand down to the present <lay. Speaking of Professor Timberlake has given the have named culture. About jury not only, but also by all those the present generation of lawyers, best years of his life to teaching this these colleges there is an inde- who are prone to forget the funda- Professot· Timberlake said, "We have doctrine anti he stands today as an ex­ scribable atmosphere which sets mental principles upon which the a priceless heritage, and at the same ample of a lawyer who IJlaces honor them apart from other American whole structure of our free Govern- time there rests upon us a grave re- ancl duty above all else.-\Vake Forest institutions-they have and still ment rests. sponsibility. Our heritage is the rec- Student.
3 5 Years Raleigh's Leading Clothiers
We Allow All Wake Forest Students a Discount of 10%
···~(~II-11-L-L)__.(_\~~<) .... Il .... I..-.,....L-~I,._.II-11~~~.-.II,._.t_IL.-,LI-LI_..:. ~ j ! CROSS & LINEHAN CO. t • 0 - . j CLOTHIERS MEN'S FURNISHERS HATTERS o 0 •
! Tuckt•J• Bldg.-2:H-236 Faycttcl'illc St.-Raleigh, N.C.. i l ; ~ .... II~CI-CI._.I~I~l-CI._.IL~I.-.<:"-'~-~~--~-~-1-cl~~~._ct~~l-11.-.cl.-.o-.. •••
132 Fayetteville Street
Unique Social Event CLASSIFIED ADS ~··~,,_,~,,._,_,.,_.,,.-i~~·._..._,,._ ... :.
(~w_a_k_e_F_o_r_e_s_t_L_o_c_a_Is __ ) l ..... _o_u_r_C_o_n_t_e_m_p_o_r_a_ri_· e_s ...... J In the "Harricane" High Point School
Outlaws Dancing t THE I One t•ent a wot'tl fm• each in~t't.iou. 1
1 : BANK Q F WAKE -~
Cop;\' must t'Ctlt'h Business :\Innugm· Other Functions Must Close by by Thursch•~- night rm· following i WAKE FOREST. N.C. I Mr. and Mrs. William W. Holding,
Jr., are now living at Forestville, in the old Harris home, with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Harris.
U. N. C. PROFESSOR TENDERED HONOR
The following is an original account of a "Harricane Party," as overheard in the postoffice lobby.
10:30 and Children Go wc'<•k. I i j Capital Stock ...... $20,000.00 i
Mr. and Mrs. 0. M. McKaughan and familY have moved in the attractive new bungalow with Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Brewer, next to Prof. R. B. White's.
Chapel Hill, N. C., Jan. 18.-Major William Cain, for thirty years head of the mathematics department of the University of North Carolina and now Kenan Professor Emeritus, has been honored bY the American Society of Civil Engineers. At the seventh an­ nual meeting in New York Wednes· daY he received the J. James R. Cross medal as a reward for his paper on "The Oircular Arch Under Normal Loads."
A typical "New Lighter" approach· ed a young lady at the window and the following conversation took place, interspersed with hearty laughter of the narrator, in high good humor at the importance of the news he had to divulge, and the amused giggles of a group of appreciative freshmen, hov­ ering near.
W.-\XTI~I>-'fwentx-ti,·o Mve \\'h'<.'s i Surplus ................ $10,000.00 i High Point, Jan. 16.-Dancing has ""' cot•t•c•sponclcnts fm· daily und \n~k- _ .
Home
been outlawed at social functions given ncW>"Jial•c•·s •• J<]xl•e•·icnce unneccssn•~·. I The Bank of Service ! in the name of the High Point High! .-\pply \\'akc l~01·cst Pt·css .-\ssocia- I I School, according to a set of rules ticm, (;:4:> :\lcmlay evenings, hi nt•. -~- R. E. RoyaL. ................ President j
Misses Clem Bridges and May Boone, teachers at the graded school, are making their home with Mrs. Walter Holliday this spring. Miss Wallace, another of the teachers, is living at Mrs. Utley's.
annuonced by L. R. .Johnson, princi- \\'••avt•r's clas,;-room. 'l'. E. Holding .................. CashiP.r j pal. •: .. --~~~--~~~~~~·--"_,.,....,.:.
Not only has dancing been placed on COl.\11~ to t' li\'e Sunday school class rr-----------------­
Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Woodley, of Cres­ well, N. C., are here for several years, and for the present are living at 'Vake Forest Inn.
At the ceremony of presentation, Major Cain was introduced by Gustave M. Braune, dean of the School of En­ gineering of the University.
"Good evenin', ma'am; I wants to send a little piece of news to the pa­ per, and I'd like for you to tell me the best way. Man over here at the bank said you knower! how."
the black-list but with the exception next Stmclu~-, taught b;<~· Dr. \\'eavet•. of the "Ann~al Junior-Senior Affair," I Cla,;s meets Jll'omptly at 10 o'clock in all parties must end at 10: 30-and J>t·of. I't·usi's I'oom, A(bnini,;tratimt "parents may expect their children Buil1liug.
Globe RALEIGH, N.C. home shortlv after this time." -----------------
The full s~t of rules intended to con- \YAXTBD-Thc nmncs mul addrc:;sc,; trol social functions given under the of all \\'ake l<'m•est alwuni in yout· name of the high school, has been in-\ eommunit ~· · :\I ail to ,J ohu Areh ;\lc­ dorsed by the faculty, and is as fol· :\lilian, Alumni Secretar~·.
Tt•:ulc Hct•c anfl Sm·e $:> to ~10 on Your
Suit or Overcoat Dr. J. H. Gorrell is out again, after
an illness of several weeks with in­ fluenza and pneumonia.
Prof. Dillman is convalescing in the local hospital from influenza and the effects of a slight ear operation.
Many years ago Major Cain achie>ed fame among engineers, not only in America, but the world over, by his authoritative works on engineering problems, according to University offi­ cials. In his best known treatise he has discussed solid and braced elastic arches, steel-concrete arches, and vaulted structures, bridges, retaining walls, and bins.
"Yes, sir, I sometimes send a little news in to several papers. If you'll tell me what you want to go in I'll be glad to take it down for you. Here's a pencil now."
lows: "1. That permission must be granted Sl'HSt'RIHE fol' Olcl Gohl mul BlacK,
by Miss Willid Choate to a student or $l l'ot• remainder of ;rent•. H. 0. a student 1Jefore a social function he- Bt·owniug, :\Iaunget•.
Cor. \\'ilmiugton & Exchange Sts.
RALEIGH.N. C.
Dr. Charles Phillips is out again after an attack of influenza:
"Yes, ma'am, yes ma'am. It's a party and folks over our way want to see it in the News and Observer.
"On the night of January 6th, old Christmas night, Mr. and Mrs. Bus Ray give a Christmas tree to about a hundred little children and grown people, in the bounds of Sear's School. Ma'am? Yes, ma'am; that's over here in New Light District, hut I tell you, just put in the bounds of Sear's School in the pape1·.
ing given in the name of the high school will be authorized. I HIGH SCHOOL BASKETBALL
Mrs. W. L. Poteat is recovering from an influenza attack.
"2. At least two chaperons selected SCORES UP TO DATE Attention-W. F. C. Students from the school faculty must attend
Mrs. C. P. 'Veaver is out again af­ ter an attack of influenza.
Although nearly 76 years of age and retired from active teaching, Major Cain still is a busy worker in his field, studying and writing continually.
the function. More will be appointed Durham ........ 29 Charlotte ...... 5 'Ve a1·e headquarters for Fancy Drinks, Ice Cream, Stationery, Cig­ arettes, Cigars, Chewing Tobacco, Chewing Gum, Books, Fountain
Miss Ruby Reid and her mother, Mrs. Hattie Reid, are recovering from ''flu."
to attend if it is deemed necessary. \' Salisbury ...... 3 0 "3. With the exception of the annual. Kannapolis .. 13
Spencer ........ 23 Cllurchland, .. S High Point .. 9 Hiclwry ........ 11
Junior-Senior affair, all parties must 1 Canton .......... 52
He was not quite fourteen when the Civil War began. At the time, he was in a military school, and when un­ trained volunteers were called to· getl1er to fight for the Confederacy, he was called upon to be a drill mas­ ter. He put through the vaces many a man old enough to be his father, and is said to have been a strict discip­ linarian. His request to enter the war as an actual combatant, after several months of this work, was denie(l on accmmt of his youth.
end at 10:30 p. m. Parents may ex- Durham ........ 4 9
Mrs. 0. K. Holding is convalescing from an attack of influenza.
pect their children home shortly after Reidsville .... 11 \Vinston-Sal... 28 Pens, I<odaks, Candies, Fresh Salted Peanuts, Powder, Shaving Equipment, Tooth Paste, Brushes, and all else that tends to add to a student's Illeasure. Call us for any kind of favor or information; malie our store your downtown i home.
"One of the greatest times ever been in the country. George Perry and Bus Ray played Santa Claus, all dress­ ed up, you know. Biggest tree, looked fine. Give everybody a present, and after that a plenty of fruit and nuts and candy to all.
this time. , Ashe\'ille fi.V. 71 Faculty ........ 36
Miss Virginia Gorrell is teaching this spring at Leaksville·Spray, N. C.
Dr. J. A. Yarborough left Wednes­ day for Richmond, to bring Mrs. Yar­ borough, who has been quite ill in a Richmond ho3pital, home.
Mr. Henry C. Lanneau has returned to Washington, D. C,. after a visit to his mother, Mrs. John F. Lanneau.
Mr. William Royall has returned from a visit to his sister, Mrs. B. F. Huntley, Jr., in Winston-Salem.
"Twck" Kesler, of Red Oak, was a visitor on the "Hill" during the past
ELECT FAISON AS DAVIDSON CAPTAIN
After the Christmas tree a band of music-yes, ma'anl, a 1Ja7lcl of music. was on hand, and I tell you the fun begin. Mr. and Mrs .. Joe Ray they got up and give a dance-seventy years old-parents of thirty chiltlren and grandchildren. Never seen anything to beat it. Yes, ma'am, they taken
"4. There shall be no dancing at so- cial functions given in the name of the high school.
"5. Suitable games and other simi-1 Iar activities to engage the attention I of students attending parties must be ! prepared before hand."
These rules will be considered in fot·ce whether the party is held in the school building or in private homes, it was stated by the principal.
TWENTY ARE AWARDED COVETED PRINCETON'S "P"
Spaulding Sporting Goods
Stationery
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
HOLDING DRUG COMPANY
Shoes
Sale
week. Dr. and Mrs. Roger P. McCutcheon. E. S. Faison, of Faison, N. C., for
are now living in Dr. Nowell's old the past three years star end of th: home, north of the campus. Davidson football el:ven, was ~n1dant-D. Nowell has remodeled the old mously elected captam of the ·w, cat Bre\~er home, formerly occupied by 1925 gridiron sQuad at a meetin~ of Dr. Hubert Poteat, on Faculty Ave- football letter men het·e today. Fmson nue, and is now living there. was the pick of nearly every coach
the prize! You- just tell the paper one of t1Je
greatest things that's ever happened in our neighborhood.
Any charges? Ain't any? Well, I'm very much obliged. Good-day,
Princeton's varsity football heroes\ '-------------------' who captured the big three champion-
1 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=
Ht·css Goods Ginghams
Soxs Tics Un<l<'t'\\"<'m'
enced teams in Old Nassau's history I ffi · 11 d d h he "\Vl1en the mystic haze of years were o eta y rewar e ere w n . .
varsity "P's" were awarded by the\ transmutes th~ rolhcktng pleasure~ of "Pay Cash and Buy for Less"
n1a'an1."
Dr. Hubert Poteat and family are and critic of last season for an end on making their home in the 'Vest Cot- the mytl~ical all-State eleven .. ~e re­ tage, at Dr. vV. L. Poteat's, until they ceived h1s early football trammg at build on Faculty Avenue. Greenbrier Military School, Louisville,
Case of Smallpox Appears in Village
GEO.BOLUS undergraduate athletic committee. I school days mto golden m:mones, Twenty men received the coveted let- every memento connected wtth that ters, the largest number in recent i life will become a priceless nugget in
the hands of those who prize them." l years. TRY
Capt. l\fel Dickenson, of Bingham- This is pre-eminently a pictorial\ ~ [=· Dr. and Mrs. Bryan and family have W. Va., before coming to Davidson. He
recently moved in an attractive new is president of tire Junior Class.
home on Gore Field Street, next to
Theugh l\Ir. J. J. Jaclmon, of Wake Forest, has developed a genuine case of sm!lllpox, it has not. ca_!!:!!e.Q any unnecessary alarm in the communit.i'.
ton, N. Y .. was granted the right to age, and everyone, whether in public, ~ ~
wear a white sweater with a black private or school life, is keeping some .?; SHORTY'S f:
-Mr. w. L.-llay's, · · 1 FETZER BROTHERS · Mr. and Mrs. John Brewer are build- RENEW CONTRACTS ::Vfr. Jackson's case is of a very mild
type and he is getting along very well.
;~~~ ~~:j~;~;:~~= c~s~~~~:~ ~~~~!;;~ 11
~~~~ 1~:r~~1;~aei~~ouk il<teu tu it is or her ~ THE MIDNIGHT MAN cr.
championships over Harvard or Yale.. ~ ==-~-~. ing a lovely home next to the olcl Brewer place on Faculty Avenue. Bill and Bob Fetzer, brothers, who The general attitude of his physicians
have directed the athletic teams at is to the effect that compulsot·y vacci­ the University of North Carolina for nation will not be necessary, unless two years, today signed five contracts other cases of the disease develops in with that institution, a.:cording to in- the community.
The members of the freshman eleven I The National Out· .-\mbition is to Please were awarded their numerals "1926" Memory and Fellowship Book Yon With Smokes, Dl'inks, ~
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Langston are making their home now in the cot­ tage next to Mrs. Ned Allen's, formerly occupied by Mr. C. L. Jacl,son's family.
at the same meeting, and the winners ;:. Fl'lrits, Cmulies nncl ~ of the annual "cane SJJree" wet·e also See H. D. Browning, Jr., ;:: rewarded with class numerals. 19 V\'ilkerson Bldg. t A Good Movie Every Day i::"' c
Mrs. Will Dickson has recovered from a severe attack of "flu."
Postmaster C. Y. Holden is conva­ lescing from a \veek's illness with "flu."
Mrs. I. C. Yates returned from Dur­ ham, where her baby is being treated in the hospital, Monday, on account of Mr. Yates' illness with influenza.
Mr. P. H. Mangum's family are re- covering from "flu."
Miss Gladys Sledd has gone to Charlotte, where she will teach this spring.
Mrs. W. C. Powell, Jr., is spending several weeks with friends in Jack·
:F.' and "Nite" ~ formation received here today. In our neighboring town, Youngs-
Severa! other colleges were bidding ville, there are now reported twelve for the services of the North CaroJina cases of smallpox. It seems to be on
Bagby·, an<l tlle teacher., 1\Iiss Bessie I Holding. =================:
coaches, it is said. ~~::n;;e~~~yu;~:~ :1~~sa~r~~s ,~:~~= r-;;d;:d·-c.;hl;g·-·~~i· TECH AND W. AND L. Forest it is urged bY the vsysicians l
REACH AGREEMENT that every citizen and student be vac- f Company j
Raleigh, Jan. 18.-By virtue of an agreement just made between North Carolina State College and vVashing­ ton and Lee University, sport follow­ ers of the State are assured of an op­ portunity to see in action on North Carolina soil every Thanksgiving Day a football team representing one of the
cinated. Many of the citizens of Wake - j Forest are being vaccinatetl, while the I "The o
students of the College are seriously i Gents' Furnishing Shop" ! neglecting it. Dr. Vann reports that I l"lot·sheim & \Valk-O,·cr· Shoes J while giving the students their physi- i \Vilson Brand Shh·ts I cal examination in the fall, he _found 1 Penn. Braud College SwcatCI'S 1 many that have never been vaccmatedj i Bm·kel' Bmntl Collars 1 \ for smallpox, and it is expected that - Hats i
~4~1,_1.,_.1,_1~1)~'"-"1 .... 1~1-ll_tl._I~U....II .... ~Il_tl._.1>.-.tl-.l~l---() .... 11 ... ~
I THOMAS H. BRIGGS & SONS I l The Big Hardware Men ! = Raleigh, N. C. I ! HASEBALL AND TEXNIS GOODS SPOI'tTIXG GOODS i I ~ •:·~~-,,~,_.~~~--.c'~,._,,._..,_,~~~.-.~~~~-~~.-c.,...c,__.t,._.l,._.l~,_.,~,l_..~,.:•
Raleigh French Dry Cleaning & Dyeing· Co. Office: 3 33 Fayetteville St.-Plant: -114-416 Gales St.
"OLDEST and LARGEST" RALEIGH, N. C.
sonville, Fla. two State institutions. Mrs. M. F. McLeod, of Blenheim, is The Virginia Carolina game, in all
the College will take this matter up I Highest Quality- Best Service ~- I for the good of the students and com- I o I n1unity. ·:~~~..--c~.-.t~~..-.c~~~~ ..... ,~~·:• ~-----------------------------------'
·:·~,_.~~,_,,_.,~,._,~~,_.!~(.._.l~o-..-.._11 ... 1~..-...~~~~,....:. t11e guest of Mrs. John M. Brewer probability, will continue to alternate at her home on Faculty Avenue. between Chapel Hill and Charlottes­
Mrs. L. Y. Ballentine, of Cardenas, ville, and now Graduate l\Ianager J. W. has returned home after a visit to Harrelson, of the local college, an­ Mrs. W. W. Jenkins. nounces that the Techs and the Gen­
Mrs. John Savage, of \Vilson, is erals have signed contracts calling for
EARLE NEALE TO
visiting her mother Mrs. F. _J. Davi~-~a ThanJ,sgJvmg game to alte1nate be Mrs. J. W. Hartsfield, of Htc~ory, ts tween Raleigh and Lexington, or some
the guest M Mrs: '"· K. Ma;;m. . other Virginia city. The first game of Mrs. R. C. Bndger, of v; mton, lS the new series will be staged next
spending a few days with her mother, fall, the location, somewhere in Vir­ Mrs. D. F. Fort. ginia to be named by the Washing·
Miss Evelyn Apple, of Norfolk, Va., ton a~d Lee management, and the 1924 is spending some time here as the encounter will come to Raleigh. guest of Miss Dorothy Baker.
Legue Will Not Accept Resignation of Dr. Poteat
That if he could not show evidences of being either physically or mentally unable to perform the duties thereto
EIGHT GAMES FOR GAMECOCKS LISTED
Columbia, S. C., Jan. 17.-The 1923 football schedule of the University of South Carolina, announced \\"ednes·
COACH VIRGINIANS
Earle Neale will coach football and baseball, at the University of Vir- gmta, for the sesswn of 1923-24. In a telegram to Dr. John H. Neff, chairman of the committee on coach- ing, :Vlr. Neale accepted the year-'round position offered him by a unanimous vote of the Athletic Counsel.
While Coach Neale will not take up his regular duties until football prac­ tice begins, September 10, he will re­ port next spring for a worlwut of two J weeks with football candidates. In addition to l1is duties as head coach of football and baseball, i\lr. Neale will act as a sort of director of athletics in an effort to increase the participa­ tion in sports by the student body as
l · day, is as follows: belonging they could not see t ten· way clear to accept his resignation, was September 29-Ersldne College, at a whole_. _________ _ the reply that Dr. W. L. Poteat re· Columbia. ceived last Tuesday, when he offered October G-Preshyterian College his resignation as president of the South Carolina, at Columbia.
of KING'S MESSENGERS' CLASS HAS A DELIGHTFUL SOCIAL
North Carolina Anti-Saloon League. October 13-North Carolina State, at Dr. Poteat has held the presidency I Raleigh.
of the North Carolina A~ti-Saloo~ October 25-Clemson College, at Co- League for the past four yeaiS, and tt Inmbia (State Fair).
t that he was not appreciating . . was no ' November 3-Furman U111versity, at the honor that he had so long held, but .
ffi Greenville. that he did not care to see the o ce become heredity.
On last Tuesday Dr. Poteat attended the North (.:arolina Law Enforcement League, which was in session in Ra­ leigh, under the auspices of the Anti­ Saloon League. Dr. Poteat pt·esided over the morning session while the afternoon session was presided over by Mr. W. T. Shaw, of Weldon, and.the night session by 1\ir. Josephus Damels. It is admitted that their field for labor
November 15-Citadel, at Orange- burg.
November 29-0pen date. December 1-0!len date.
is one of many acres, but the confi­ dence of the State is with the League.
On last Thursday night Dr. Poteat addressed the Civics Department of North Carolina Woman's Clubs.
On Friday evening the King's Mes­ sengers Sunday School Class had a delightful social at the hospitable home of one of its members-Miss 1\!aucy Cullom, on Faculty A venue.
"Crazy" games were played, and there was much hilarity, Eskimo pies, fruit and candy were served, and marshmallows toasted.
Members of the class and their guests in attendance wet·e: Misses Su· sie Powell, Hazel Reid, Maud Bowers, Leila Holding, Alice Gill, Mary CarYer Fort, Elma Holding, Nancy Cullom, Leila Bell Jones, Margaret Holden, Dorothy Baker, Pauline Balter, E>e· Iyn Apple, Lottie Shearon, :\label
CAPITOL CAFE SPECIAL SERVICE TO WAKE
FOREST STUDENTS
Sanitary, Reasonable Convenient
------
-=
' j 8 Nine Union Ba1•bers Expet·t l\lanicul'ist i = i I MASONIC TEMPLE BARBER SHOP I f Raleigh's Leading Barber Shop ! I SERVICE AND COURTESY A HABIT I I Hot and Cold Tub and Shower Baths i I I 1 Cm·. Fayetteville and Hat·gett Sts. J. H. Bt·own, Proln·ictor i • i .. :._,r_r_J_I_r._.....-...:,_, __ ,~~~~~.-.r...-.<J~~~~~..-.c,..-.o~J~r-.o~.-.,.)
THE
Taylor Sweaters, 25% Off 1923 Tennis Balls
•!• _.,,~~~~-~-~-~~...-.cl.-..:1~•~'~''._.t, .... ,, ..... ,.__..,._.1,~'._t~c'-''-'"-O-.ll.-.c,.._.11 ,_.,.,!•
j ' i "Hail! Hail! The Gang's All Here!"-What Do We Care I 1 Just So We Are All at '
i POWERS DRUG COMPANY ! •, I , For 1 I l'oclu•t 1\:nh•es Htationet'.V i j Eskimo Pies l GOOD MUSIC ll'e Ct•cam = - Socla \\'atet• l<'nucy Drinks I I ~~~~~s Soap T H EA~~I ME ~~::~~!~~ Crerun f - Smoltcs .._ Shoe Shines I I ])rugs ])o('( ors H!l<trs. i I "THE FELLOWS WHO APPRECIATE YOUR BUSINESS" ' ·:·~~~...-..,.-.1~~~~--f)_l,_,l_)_(,__(._..~,._.,~~·,....f) ... (l~~~~ ....... ,-,,-.:·
4 OLD GOLD AND BLACK
Trinity Starts Real Klansmen Take Notice So ph Notice
Disastrous Blaze Dr. Tom DecJares His I dream-the dog, of co'se, was the
Faith in ;'Allemeni" red fire.
First Pup: "Why are you running so'?"
An Alumni Fund at Elon College "I was a person that did not have (Continued from page 1.) much thought about a dream and
Introduces Two New Ideas Southern Collegiate
Activities
Into Rewards Are Offered for Rough­ Necks Who Put Up
Administration Building Total would not Jet my wife tell one 'till goin' to worry-my friends will ta!;:e after sunup, but arfter this I was
Signs Loss, With Damage of care of me!.. determ that thel"e was virtue in a
$100,000 nut "Dr. Tom" has told the story dream.
Trinit ~- College Is at present intt·odnc- in his own inimitable way. "My friends anc:t. ail advises me not The recept appearance of sedition Elon College, Jan. 18.-Elon College, "I should lil{e to tell you of the to \"orry over 1·t, that they were go-
ing t"·o new ideas into Southern col- 1 " notices on .the College bulletin hoat·<ls the denominational college in the' distress I have been going through. lng to do all they could to make me legiate activities. The first has to <lo
with finance and is a plan whereby and other pulJlie places. signed with a South of the Christian Church, snf- 1 I had a special distress iri the fire comfortable still. I compose my- Trinity expeets to realize $70,000 an- KKK, has ereated no small amount of rere<l a fire loss of between $150,000 ']Ucstion on Saturday. We have had self in mind, is not to worry over
II !. 1 . t· 1 1 . <Utd $160,000 this morning when the a good many fires in routine," (re· the tl"ansaction because that will not The ;;econd idea io; a spoke in the f h . 1 main administration building .of the cent fires in Wake Forest) "and I I do any good. I bas so many friends nua '" rmn ~u lS<'1'1P IOns >Y a umnt. I curio.;ity among some students. who
!ina nee "·heel ami makes IJrovision rom t e1r attitm e toward the Klan institution was completely destroyed, have been very careful with the fire of Wake Forest man, allemeni and whereb~· part or the money collected and from mysterious cards in their <md one of_ the dorm~tories ~~mage<!. after the first breaking out come. the professors at large is going to will g-o to create an undergraduate fel-l po>session. that !ooli to be membership The fire, 0[ undetermmed ortgm, was I "I was fortunate to go home at my use exertions to help me out in my I l . . 1 . . I discovered about 6:30 o'clock. At that d" t· s turday and whilst · y t · 1 b ows llp m eac 1 eongre;sional chstnct cards to a mysterious order, are be- . . ntner nne on a , dtstress. ou can cer a1n Y e sure in Xorth Carolina the \'aluc of the fel· . 1 time flames had bmst through the I were at home I did not hurry back that I has so many friends that I
he\·ed to be members of that sect. One,. f d tl ·· d ·s Th · · 10 · low ship not to exceed $500. 100 an le \Hn °" · eJe IS 1 t the college (I dtd not feel so very I •'II ta· Jy be considered in this has been recently overheard to say fire fighting apparatus in the village. o d 1 b t t I "I cer In
The need fm· more funds w·t'> 1 . . . . well). I stave at tome a ou wo ·I route " • t IUt unttl now no klan act1nt1es at and the building was red ttced to ashes • fi · d t II ·
brought home to President Few hy the 1 this Jll<J<:e have l>een J"•tstt'fial>le an!l hours, then the re acct en a Y I The challenge to Wake Forest men . • , within a couple of hours. Insurance 1 d 1 t
t•on,·il'tton that the summer school! that it was hoped that none would be .. . d b . b ?- 00 broke out. I were g a were a I will not go unanswered. "Dr. Tom" 1 II I l 1 l I t tl • \\as st.1te to e a out $-::.,0 . I 1 tl · f ·t 0 1e I f "th · h" s 1ou c Je extJanc e< am t ta 1e but if this t.VJle of not·Ices. COitti"ntte to bttr•n.l home w 1en 1e nus 01 u_ne c n · shall not have had a1 10 IS Shortly after the first fire had I"Ollrses for teac·hers should he en- "I was settin' down m front the "friends" in vain. Dr. J. H. Gorrell, appear, action might have to be taken ed itself out fiames hurst from the
larged into a deJlartment of extension u.v a real Ku Klux Klan. Tile 1, 11 fire with my wife an' some more chairman of the Buildings and '- roof of the alumni building, a men's
tea<'hing that would reaelt all classes Klux Klan being a corporation charter- friends, an' it was not very cold, and Grounds Committee of the college, of men and women. There was also 1 dormitor>·, immediately adjoining the d"d t have muclt fire it not 1 t d t e·ve contribu
e< under the laws of Georgia and lwv· administration building. Quick WOI"k we 1 no • 1 1as consen e o rec I - realized the ne<·es~ity for the further ing klaus in every state in the Cnion, being very cool, an' I could not tell' tions for the rebuilding of Tom's <levelovment of the iield or research on the !lart of the Burlington fire de- fi "tl t 1
is jealous of the name that is theirs rmrtment, ""hiclt had been called to the in what position it got on re WI tou home, and will see to it that sue 1 <tn<1 pulJ!i('ation in which members of k 1 d d t f tl house d d aml are unwilling that it be claimed by scene, aided by students, saved the a spar· o ge on OJl o te funds are wisely expen e . the facult~· have won distinction for · · 1 C ,1nd fired t!1e !touse in tllat way. The a gang or s1mp e ollege roughnecks. structure. - themse!Ycs and the <·o!lege. Rewards are already out for the ex- people outside said the house must 'I
Dr. F'ew and his asso('iate,; ,;tudied The administration building housed posing of those responsible for the the college library, the college chapel. be on fi1·e by observing the smoke
ways atu1 means for a long time. ·They f · 1 1 I t I a orementwned signs. which also served as the community coming out t troug 1 t 1e op. in,·estigatetl the systems whic11 some of Tl 1 · t tl fi 1e re ationship between Freshmen church, 12 class rooms. the museum, "I went on to investiga e 1e re 1
the greater in~titutions of the country aml Sophomores at this place has so three literary society halls and the and see where it was and a great CIH!Jloye<1 in raising needed revenue. fat· been ol" tl1e n1or·e fz·,·en<lly ki"zt<1. f · d 1 d t escue offices of President ,V. A. Harper, of many nen s rus 1e o my r · "'The alumni is the source,"' was the So lottg as the Fresllnlen '"eal' thei·r k ,, the institution. All these were com- "The waterwor s come over very llel"ision finally rcaehecl when plans 1 nse<l by Han·aru. Yale, Columbia, aml caps am obsen·e the rules of the Stu- pletely destroyed. The library of some soon, of course, but they did not
dent Council, the Sophomores declare 15,000 volumes is a complete Joss. ha ,,e pipe enough to apply to the 1 other great uniYer~ities had been stud· tl t 1 · 1 1a t tey Will stmul by their part of A mass meeting of all students, various parts of the fire when they ied. The decision had been reached. tl " f 1
to put the mo,·ement over the top was next in m·der.
At the meeting of the hoard of trus­ tees, Pr<'l'ident Few outlined the sit.tm- linn and the plan Wlts unanimously l'llllorsed. !\!embers of the board show­ ed how they felt about the matter by snhst:ribing to a man to pay annual amounts.
The goal to he olltained was fixed at $70,000 a ypar. the interest on more than $1,000.000 of endowment. To alumni >'ecretar~·. B. \\'.Barnard. went the tasl;: or carrying the work out <li­ redly to Trinity's 6.000 alumni.
One hundred enthusiastic Trinity men over the State were singled out to va!TY the lllPssnge of the Trinity c-on~tituency.
te co,·enant o friendship" that ex· members of the faculty; townspeople gotten there and had to go back and ists between the two classes. and friends from the countryside was get another piece and so doing the I
held at 11 o'clock, and asserted their fire was so far ahead that they could \Vould-be Blackstones faith in Elon and pledged their aid to not control it. And so the whole
Grow Pale and Wan as the rebuilding. I house got burnt down, we could not Hour of Doom Arrives President Harper said today that the save none of it, but lost the whole
(Continued from page 1.)
buildings little knots of loquacious ~tudenls gather, and aided by the <'ompanionsllip of King Nicotine, ask ·1uestiong wbich none can answer and ans\\·cr interrogations never asked. They realize. one and all, that "The wine of life keeps oozing drop by drop; the leaves of life keep falling one by one." and as they sit in this
structure will be rebuilt. A meeting 1 'no use and aU. of the trustees had been called for "On Friday night before the fire I l\londay. wa!{ed up in a dream and determined
The faculty has made arrangements that 1 was going to hear some very for the resumption of college work to· distressing. hasty news in the morn­ morrow morning. ing. An' in my dream after waking
'fwenty-Four Games in Basketball Schedule
(Continued from page 1.)
up and coming to my knowledge I went in the office at the college and a 'red dog jumped up in n1y breast and I shoved him off and so then when ,he house got on fire I then deternt that was the interpretation of my
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.\ syst~m insuring still mo1·e thor­ oughly better organization wns worl;:­ ed out in connection with the celebra­ tion of Benefacto•·s· Day at •rrin ity.
useless. no-good-to-result-from circle, third teams will he under their super­ they as]{ themselves and each other, Yision. Three of the assistant man­ '"\Vonder how many 'empty glasses' agers, "Dickie" Williams, R. L. An­ will be turned down'?" drews and J. E. Hillburn, come from
···~~~--~~~~~~.-.c..-.u~~~,_..~~~~·:·
i i Shafts of light, penetrating the the Junior Class, and one, Harry
1:·.:- ~d.. rl·b~v ... : .::t.l ... , -~~n y~-~~.;:. Zti'- dari\.u~~~i \Viletl no searchlights uught Hon\e.£. i~ --e.l.lC-S~e fr-CU}.-- t!le-Sop'ho­ pointed to carry on the work in North · 0 be allowed to molest the maturity more Class. All four of tltese men Carolina, and State chairmen were of night. warrant investigation. It's have an enviable reputation in Wake named in other states. the same olcl story. The tired, tousel- Forest and tl1e sentiment of the stu­ . The results obtained by the c·nm- lleaded student looks up from a be- dent body is tangible evidence that ]Jai!!n IHn·e heen gratif.vi11g a11<l a t·e- !letter n1en could not I1a e be " latecl acquaintance with the Consoli- v en newal of efforts was ]lrO\'ided for at chosen. dated Statutes, sees Bispham. Clark. the meeting of the alumni council in Tiffany, Bigelow and others who are The second and thil'cl team sched- < onnection with Benefactors' Day. still comparative strangers to him, nle follows:
but determined to realize his ambi· .Tan. 26-1\'!aut·y Higlt School, Nor­
Why net pay less and get the best? That means A UNION
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Durham "Y" Quintette follc :ion at all hazards, he dusts these Loses to \Vake Forest Yolumes carefully, writes home for .Jan. 27-\Voodrow 'Vilson High
School. Portsmouth. 2-Ued Oak High School at
home.
t ! r:==============::..., \·:·~----·---·-----.------·---···
I ~ The ~~ Clothes, Shirts, Collars, Sox 1 Con tin uecl from page 1. ·1 fouls on the second half when Dill'· ham had a three-point lead. However, !\lofllin and G rea,;on proved the it· nbil­ it~· to hold do\l·n their Jllaces, as well as their JlrNlecessors, and the injec­ tion of fresh material JlroveLl an asset rathet· than a liahility.
twenty-three dollars and lifty cents. and then, forced to heel through grim Feb. necessity, he dreams of going to .o;cllool to Blackstone and being Feb. whipped by that kindly old· gentle-
S-Henderson High School at Henderson.
man for missing his A. B. C"s.
* * • *
F'eh. 9--:\lt. Pleasant High School at Bailey, K C. (pending).
Only a few more days remain, and !o'eb. 10--A. C. C. at \Vilson. Lhe Supreme Court dass. numbering Feb. 14-Hoanolie Hapids High Sell. about thirty-five proHpective lawyers, at home. will journey forth to Raleigh to take Feb. :!4-Hoanoke Rapids High Sch. the examination which shall deter­ mine whether they shall be classed
at Hoanolre Rapids. The following games have been
.-\ Jleculiar aspect of the game is ronnel in thP fact that both the Dur­ ham guards led in the number of indi­ Yidual goals caged by the vi~itors. ;\lontgollle1·y taliing the lead with three goals and Heflin with two, while with the lawyer~ 01· would-be law- scheduled, but the date l1as not Yet Longes and i\lontague succeeded in year.-. been definitely fixed: t•aging only one 'goal apiece. Due to The Law Faculty, though hamli- Camp Bragg Officers at Camp Bragg. Heclunan and Pegano, two probable CaJl!led by the illuess of Professor C,Hup Bragg Officers at home. all-State guards on the Baptist quint. Timberlake. has ;;triven to thorough- A. C. C. at home. the "Bulls"' found the~· had to face a ly prepare these men for the exami- Red Oak High Sehool at Red Oak. harcler maehine than they had antic!- nation. Dr. Gulley, when asked Greensboro High at Greensboro. pated. about the prospects of the class, said: Youngsville American Legion at
Although not measuring UJl to its "'The class is slightly larger than Youngsville. usual stan<lar<l, the Durham "Y" team usual. but 1 think both men and Oxford High School at Oxford. was, nevertheless. fast mlll a<'curate women are very well prepared. There Raleigh High School at Raleigh. from the floor, and wa:;, in many 1·e- are se\-eral ve1-y strong men in the About two thirds of tllese game~ speets. a better team than the Old Gold class. on the whole, it compares will go to the seeond team and one­ an<! Blacl• combination. Had "Sis" favorably with the classes which third to the third team. Several other Perry been ah1e to <:age foul shots the have prec:eded it, and I think that it games wi!l pl"Ohably be scheduled "be­ game would nnclouhtedly have gone to Durham. On the other hand, the 1\"ake Forest squad ron showed a fight and determination that wagers for a successful season.
The line-up follows: \\"ake l~orest-u;
Right Forward Dnrham-17
-;hould uphold the past record." fore the season is over.
January 29th stands as a locked gate to these legal aspirants. They FQotball Schedule is are determiner! to enter, ancl in re­ SJlonse to their concentratecl "Open
Arrang-ed by Lang·ston
Sesames," the barrier, rusting since (Continued from page 1.)
last August, will doubtlessly roll offer of a game to Wake Forest to be hac!;:, turning the adventurers into played in Asheville, and as Asheville the green fields beyond. is the seat of a large number of
Wake Forest alumnus, the college Dr. Hubert M. Poteat authorities decided to break prece·
Elected Grand Master <lent and stage the game in the State Masonic Lodge Mountain City for the sake of the
alumni who have been clamoring for
(Continued from page 1.) a game tltere for the last two years. It is hoped that the game may prove
The honor is considered sufficiently successful to warrant a now his. Pegano ······-···--································ Heflin
Substitution~: Wake Forest, Modlin for Greason; Brewerton for Carlyle.
Durham "Y ," Straling for Heferee, Steiner (Trinity).
among Mason more honorable than be· Longee., ing Governor of the State.
Among the many interesting events
contest in Asheville every winter.
"Got any Squirrel whiskey?" '·No, but I can slip you a pint of
Old Crow." ---------- of the hundred and thirty-sixth com·
Carolina is Forced to munication of the Grand Lodge was Battle to Utmost the recognizing of the Grand Lodge of
Mexico, and a building program which (Continued from page 1.) includes the erection of a moclern fire·
Green; Vanstory for S. McDonald; proof school building at the Oxford Graham for Mahler. \Orphanage, and adding a wing to the
Referee-Steiner of Syracuse. Masonic and Eastern Star Home in Time of periods-20 minutes. Greensboro.
"I don't want to fly. I just want- ed to get nutty and hop around a little. "-Ex.
Abe: "Did you ose much at your fire last week?"
Ike: "Sh! It's next week."-Ex.
I ~'$. . ~~ Everything for the I ... College Man ! S OP. 01' Men 209 Fayetteville St., Raleigh, N. C.
S. W.BREWER
ncalel' in
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THE HOWLER I TO BE ISSUED MAY 1, 1923 PRICE .. $5.00 PER COPY Published Annually by the
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