INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D....

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;.J •.1 .. SPRING FOOTBALL PRACTICE BEGINS MONDAY Vo.IX INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER KAPPA PHI KAPPA TAKES PLACE WAKE FOREST, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1926 SPRING FOOTBALL PRACTICE BEGINS MONDAY No.18 FIRST SESSION MOOT 1 DEACON TOSSERS CLOSE SEASON BROWN-MENELEY COMPANY ENTERTAINS WITH VARIETY Of MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I WITH FIVE STATE VICTORIES COURT FINDS UPCHURCH GUILTY OF LARCENY +------------------------------- E. F. Upchurch is Duly Convict- Young Men Come to 'Nakc F'or-] i'·-.. - .. _,._,_,,_,_,,_,,_,,_,_ .. _,+ "'1 D h "Y" El G 'If d Many Notables of the Fraternity Take Part in Installation i · ur am , on, m or ed of Theft of Hog in est Under Auspices of Red- j OLD GOLD AND BLACK'8 t Lenoir-Rhyne and High Point ' ! i 1926 TRACK SCHEDULE Ceremonies i April 12-Hampden-Sidney, here. Mock Trial path Lyceum Bureau j ALL-STATE TEAM j Fall Victims of Invas:on WEEKLY SESSIONS BEGUN STUDENTS ARE PLEASED j Tcnm j 20 MEMBERS IN NEW FRAT. 1 April 24-N. C. State, Raleigli I May !-University of Richmond j 1 GET THIRD PLACE IN STATE GoblJ, Carolina (C.) ........ Forward Program Consisted of Selections j Dickens, State ................ Forward i Sumptuous Banquet Served at Conclusion of Initiatory Cere- monies; Dean Bryan Toast· master of the Occasion. at Richmond. May 3-William and Mary at Williamsburg. May 6-Catholic University at 1 1 Washington, D. C. (pending). May 6-Duke University, here. l I Summersill and Horton Prosecu- ting Attorneys; Walker and Brown Defend Upchurch O C . S h j Dodderer, Carolina ............ Center j on rgan h1mes, axop one, j McDowall, State ................ Guard j and Vocal Duets and Solos j Ober, 'Vake Forest .............. Guard j ---- 'I 'I After a goodly amount of oratory The Brown-Meneley Company, trav- Ellington, \Vake Forest .. Forward Wake Forest Quint Wins 14 Garnes of 19 Played, Closing With Percentage of 737 After about three years of corre- spondence and some anxiety, the Wake Forest Education Club realized ita long-sought goal when, on Saturday, February 27, the Sigma chapter of Kappa Phi Kappa, National Education fraternity, was installed at Wake Forest. had been poured forth, and following eling under the auspice3 of the Red· j G h '1 h d d . . re3 am, State .............. Forward numerous arangues an Issenswns, path Lyceum Bureau, entertained in j l\·ew·lamb, Carolina .......... Center j The Demon Deacons, by winning all five games on a week trip, marked finis on a successful basketball season. \Vake Forest started the season with Dr. R. H. Jordan, Professor of Edu- cation at Cornell; Mr. A. D. Wright, 1 Proiessor of Education at Dartmouth I College, and Messrs. Smith and Carter, graduates of Emory and Henry Col- lege, constituted the members of the initiation committee. These men ar- rived in Wake Fore3t about 10:30 a. m. and at 2 p. m. the actual initia- tion began, continuing until 5 o'clock in the afternoon. A recess from 5 until 7:30 o'clock was held. During this intermission these distinguished educators were taken for a motor ride by Dean Bryan and President H1,lrst of the Education Club. The purpose of this auto ride was to acquaint these men from the Northern universities with some of the achievements made by North Carolina in the field of edu- cation. As a typical product of the progress in secondary education in the Old North State, the school system at Henderson was taken for the short and hurried survey. It is agreed that the school system visited is typical of the progre3sive secondary educational pro- gram that is being carried on in the various counties of North Carolina. Due to the lateness of the afternoon, the visit was made short and the sur· vey hurriedly made. According to a stl\tement made by Mr. Hurst, these illustrious gentlemen made for the car at a running speed to escape the blinding snow of the Sunny South. They have at least a survey of the typical North Carolinian secondary school system and the State's achieve· ments in hard surface road building. The expressions from these men were very favorable. Following the general initiation of the afternoon, the final installation of (Continued on page 4.) the jurors in Moot Court Thursday Wingate Hall last Thursday night. A H SPRING FOOTBALL PRACTICE BEGINS · h d d d · · ., " . 1 "1 ackney, Carolina ............ Guard 1 mg t ren ere a ecBion OL gu1 ty" good-sized audience was pre3ent to en- E : mmerson, \Vake Forest (C.), in the case of State versus John Jones joy the program, which was rendered J Guard i very mediocre prospects, and it was on a charge of larceny. It was the in fine style by the two young men j j generally conceded that the 1926 bas- first session of Moot Court to be held who composed the personnel of the = 1 1 h h' James Wake Forest Forward lretbal! season at \Vake Forest was Coach Baldwin to Sound Call on ere t IS year. The evil-doer, culprit, company. The program consi3ted of ...... reprobate, scoundrel, and undesirable selections on the organ chimes, vocal } Mo:s, Duke .......................... Center i going to be more or less of a failure. Monday; Practice To Be on Old Athletic Field citizen in the person of E. F. Up- duets and solos, saxophone solos, and! I Devin, Carolina .................. Guard j The Deacons worked hard and played church, alias John Jones, was given a comic skit. The entertainment was 1 Honm·ablc )lention i theh· best, however, and, retrospective- the full extent of the law so that the of the type that appeals most to col- 'I 'Pood1vard, 'Vake Forest,· ' 1 · d z n 1 Y v1ewe , t 1e season has been a sue- public might be freed from. his degrad- lege !Joys, and the students who wit- : Hartness, Duke; Laird, David· : Spring football practice will begin next Monday upon the assumption of duties by Coach Baldwin. Baldwin is expected to arrive in \Vake Forest the latter part of this week, and will im- mediately make preparations for be- ginning his tutelage of the Deacon ing infiuence. Judge N. Y. Gulley, uessed and heard the performance ! son; Smith, Guilford; Viclrers, l cess. the Court sentenced] were loud in their prai>es of the pro- j Wake Forest; Anderson, David· f Joe Ellington, with 173 points in the to :1_ghteen months m the Wake gram which, though not of the classic j son; Spence, State; ·watkins, ' season, led the Deacon scoring. This County Jail to be taken out and worked sort, was enough to pleace and enter- State; Kelly, Elon. ! flashy forward scored 74 field goals on the county roads. tain a large portion of the student· ! ! The case brought before the bar as body of \Vake Forest, in addition to and made good 25 out of 4 8 foul shots. gridders. brilliant an array of legal talent as the a fair representation from the town. Ralph James was close behind with Spring football practice is a novelty local School of Law could possibly col- Brown-Meneley Company is a 'F' Union B.Y.P.U. Gives 164 points, 134 by the field goal rot1te at Wake Forest, and the announce- lect. The defendant had as his attar- credit to the Bureau, and Program At Louisburg and 30 out of 60 free throws. The ment of the new plans by the neys Joe Brown and B. W. Walker. applause wh1ch It mvoked here IS team as a whole scored 618 points ment met with instantaneous approval They put up some as eloquent and ap- symbolical of the receptions accorded --- against 507 for its opposition. Of the on the part of the local fans. Coach pealing Tlleas their client as has the former Redpath productions. Relationship of Youth in Chris- 19 games played, the Deacons won 14 Baldwin will thereby have an excel· ever been heard m the School of Law Th:se men were real tian Activities Disc••ssed by and lost 5. lent opportunity to become acquainted here. R. N. Summersill and Judy artists m their particular field. They \Vake Forest Men with the members of the squad and Morton, prosecuting attorneys, exer- displayed unlimited talent in certain to teach tho team the fundamentals of cised their powers for the best interest numbers which were of the highest Sunday night "F" B. Y. P. u. jour- his Lehigh system. Signals and light ?f the State, humanity, and everything type, and the bursts of applause which neyecl where they gave drills will be the program for the first m general. _They put up such a se- accorded . them showed very I an program during the week, with scrimmages between picked quence of and such a sound that therr. efforts evemng church service at the Baptist teams following. Coach Baldwin will argument m the1r speeches that the and recogmzed for their artis- church. devote his entire time to the spring ju:z-ors were out of only a t1c One of the nov_elties ?f the " _The s_ubject of the }Jrogram was practice, as Coaches Caddell and Hays and a half wh1le makmg their was a number m which at l outh tor the Church and the C'hurch are directing the baseball squads decision. There was little doubt in one time was played a saxophone solo, for Youth." Five interesting talks · the minds of the audience, as well as a piano selection, and a vocal solo, all ·were delivered by "F" men upon vari- Manager Summerlin and his corps \n the minds of the jurors, after they of them to diffe1•ent airs. Another ous phases of this topic. The vital of assistants have been putting the had concluded their argument that the number which seemed to please the relationship of the youth and the older Old Athletic Field on Faculty Avenue defendant was guilty and should be more childish element of the audience. people in Christian activities was the into shape for the practice, and the sent in a striped -qniform with chains was a comic sldt or monologue cleliv·j underlying thought. scene of fo1·mer hectic griuiron strug- 1 d 1 l\1 B to wor r on tile county roads. ere JY ' r. rown, who took on the The audience was ,-ery appreciative, Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro e o a country preacher, selecting and these messages from Wake Forest gles will again resound with the 1 f clashes of cleated toe against the pig- to order, summoned the jury, swore his text from one of the Mother Goose men were gladly received. .At the con- skin. them in on one of the college hymn rhymes and orating with passe phrases elusion of the service the Louisburg books, and retired from the platform and words punctuated with almost congregation voted to invite "F" B. Y. -Mrs. T. P. Jones is visiting as gracefully as an old hand at court fatal gestures. The selections on the P. G. again to give a similar program friends in New York. crying. The jury chosen was composed organ chime;.; were particularly good, six weeks hence. -Misses Hester Kitchin and Eliza- beth Edwards, of Meredith College. spent the weel;;-end with Mrs. J. L. Reid. of J. C. l\1cBee, R. B. Mallard, ·w. G. as were the vocal selections and the J. F. IVoodward. Elmer Cloer, w. Stroud, A. M. Butler, R. G. Kenerley, saxor;hone solos. In short, the entire C. Whitley, A. D. Hurst. and c. B. an<l C. C. Horn. "Aman" Butler was prcg1·am was one to inspire Jaucl:ttions Vause gave the speeches of the pro- the foreman. Dr. N. Y. Gulley was the I and recognition of the unusual talents gram. A number of "F" men attended judge of the court and conductecl the of the Brown-:.\leneley Company. the meeting. :.\L B. Cree presided. trial. · On the recent trip ·wake Forest tle· feated the Durham "Y," Elan, Guil- ford, Lenoir-Rhyne, and High Point College. \\·ak<> F01·est vs. nurhmn "Y" The Demon Deacons outplayed the Durham "Y" quint, 50-43, in a fast, hard game at Durham last Tuesday night. The Deacons outplayed Dur- ham in every department of the game. J unwing in to the lead early in the contest, the Wal;:e Forest quint func- tioned smoothly as a machine and were never seriously endangere\l by tho uyu cagel·s. Durham staged a llOWerful come- llacl;: in the second period, after having trailed the Demons ten points during most of the initial ]Jeriod. Heflin and Shur of the "Y" quint caged goals on the Deacm1s with precision in this period, and did mo3t of the scoring for Durham. Fred Emmerson was the power in ·wake Forest's offen3e in the first half, with Ellington close behind. (Continued from page 4.) Freshman Basketball Results Over Radio Meredith B.Y.P.U. To Entertain Wake Foresters Today The plaintiff in the case, J. A. 1 -Miss Helen Dunn was hostess to Bailey, alias George Wilson, who runs her bridge club Tuesday afternoon. :1 meat market in Wake Forest, had Tuesday evening she was again hos- the defendant charged with theft of a tess to a few friends, with Mr. and red hog from his pen some time dur- :.rrs. Caviness and Mr. and i\Trs. Robin- ing the previous weeli:-end. The de· son, of Raleigh, as guests of honor. Student Volunteers Meet At Greensboro Checkers Giving Way To Horseshoe Tossing Asheville Broadcasting- Station Gives Results of Freshman Game Play by PJay fen<lnnt pleaded "not guilty," and pre- Gala Occasion Planned by Mere- sented during the trial evidence that -:\lr. and i\lrs. Arthur P. Sledd, of dith Girls; \Vake Forest to was supposed to counteract the evi- HendeFon, visited :.\Ir. and Mrs. B. F. 200 Deleg-ates Attend Confer- ence; Ralph Carlton Elect- ed Vice-President "Earn-yard Golf" Makes Its An- nual Debut on the Wake Forest Campus Send Large Delegation deuce the plaintiff had on him. I Sledd the past ""eek·end. ----- The plays of an 0Ln GoLD AXU BL.\CK Th,e . _Volunteer Conference 1 Horseshoe tossing. sometimes lmown athletic team were broadcasted by A general exodus from the campus LITTLE DEACONS RET of ::\:01 til Carolma concluded its fif.,under the cognomen of "Barnyard radio, play by play, for the first time is taking place today. Walw Forest URN FROM TRIP teenth annual meeting on last Sunday. Golr." has ma<lc it-; annual debut on last Thursday. Never before has the B. Y. P. U.'s are moving in a hotly to VICTORIOUS IN SIX GAMES PLAYED C. C. 1\'. and Grccnslloro Colle e I the Walw Forest campus. This popu·. radio been tal;;en as a means of con- '1 1 . . 1 . g 1 lur pa-;time with 1\"al;;e Forest stu- ,, erec ith College. The semi-annual \\·ere JOint-lasts to the Voluntee ·s 1 · veying t11e detail results of a game B. Y. P. u. social between the two h .. : . . . 1 < dents probably enlists more aspirants P arU.CiiJated in by a \Vake Forest 'Vake Forest Yearlim!'s C!ose Season '' 7 I'th U{Jer-Successful In· t e con tel ence Ill G! eensboro. than anY other of the SPOI'IS . institutions is scheduled for tonight. = 't 01·er "00 delc,.ate · 1 · th · "' · · team. But up at Asheville, N. C., Wake Last fall the Meredith girls enter- vasion of "7estern North Carolina; Asheville Enter- \' I " . "' . s. I epresen mg e Then' arc no elimination ruleR. Even Forest teams are teams extraordinary tained the IVake Forest boys in true ot of schools the meeke.'<t newish may partieipate aml are played up a,; snelL college "asl!I.Oil. They no ef- tains Players Royally . . e ,I e, were 111 a em a nee. The iln<l er the w.me rules all(] regulation>: < ., v ke\llOtC o[ the conference \\"l'l' "o\.1 1 • · . The game last wee!;: forts _to mal>.e each fellow enjoy the 1 ··r 1 1 • • ' - H .!wt hmd U(lllcr-t'lnssmcn. Class <lis- t" een the Wal,e Forest freshmen and occasiOn, and, to say the least. their Having received tlle same cort1iall brought their total voints of the sea- · t 1 lilted up, Will draw all men tinction is aholisllccl. All that is re- un o me. . . t • I I 'l't t the Asheville Athletic Club was broad- efforts were successful. welcome that always awaits a \Vake I S:)ll to GS2, an average of 3·1 per g: 1 me. T" . . <!llll'C< IS t rc a JI I-" o tos:.; the shoes casted play by play from Station' Tonight tile IVake Forest B. Y. P. U. team in Asheville, the IVake Wn'u· Fm·,•st Vt•(•sh ""· ('nutllei' lii"!;h l"·ere I :\·ith a fair ciegree ·or accuracy. Train- \VABA. Tile freshmen triumphed. fellows will endeavor to reciprocate Forest freshman hasl;;ethall team L; The ·wake Fore<;t B·tby Deacons' Soper head of re;igiou- l lmg rules have not yet apJle<ued in George Pennell, star lJooster and en- by entertainiug the l\Ieredith girls. . . . I >J;ame of theit· inYa <ion of IV estern 1 . ' . . . . · s 00 0 I the horseshoe t•urnculum; IlO rcstric- th . f W I F . Th L d l.:t:Jlck_ on t_he ln;l 'a\:tetr a stNllrJer-hsucCcess-1 Xortll Carolina resulted in a clenlt·Citt blmnself the son of timH arc placed on the !llaYers. If a us1ast or are 'orest In " e an Boys are not very adept at planning n u1vas 1 on 0, , . es ern . art aro-\ · llll3SIOn:Jne3 anr orn in Japrt H · . · of the Sky," wired Dean D. B. Bryan "cute" stunts and formal entertain- . . w<'ll-carnetl \·ictorv for them -F-31 . ' 'n. e lor the team can hold 1u_1a. The L_Ittle won_ all six, .. ; ... 101 .,, ,, .. , 1 .- ·,,. 011 ["roll. · 11 · 1_ 1 ol_n_tecl out tl1at oppo_I'tt.mities in the [>osition in the I"t·cc·•c·Otlt I>'' tlll'O\'"l· 11 of the vlans of the radio station to ments, hut the Meredith girls may ex- [ tl · 1 1 I ·• ' ' · 1 t e I t fi 11 h J ' g ul Ie gatilue, p on tlus tnp, the_re- Camllcr Hi.:!h School "111-lltct ""llO•ncl otertgn Ile l foi· Chns_tran worl;; are ringers with a notir·eahlc rc:!:ularit'· broadcast each play of the basketball 1:ect the \Val'e Forest brothel'S to do JY par y repavmg the Asheville '' · • " grca er t ever ,nth 1 · 1 ·. . •' game. The game was given out as their best. alumni for their· interest in tlle wei-, 1hey defcc1ted on the Can<ller court tants llm\· of a\:e 1: 1 . 1 ;:u. 1 _ he lS at once lauded as a coming heing "_Wake Forest It is evident today that the 'Vake! rare of IVal;;e Fore>t athletic teams. :\IoiH1ay night. I ,,·ith lllinds remlv to dwmpwn. men, scl':l!JPJest little team to come to Forest students intend to mal;:e tlJis j The "'ake Fot· t 1 . The g:nne w::ts fast ami sna]lpy and vinced 1 -f .t 1 ' 1 · . As thLi goc; to pres>, no coaching ( R . 1 . I " es year mgs were 1 1 1 . . 'I · 1 can Je c one. callmg for 1 IY h 1 1 t 1 t · 1 1 top o Blue Idge, anc Ashenlle Ath- first B y P. u social at New Mere- right rovally entertaine 1 1 tl <\ 1 a 1 nYalry wa' mtense and bit- the t. J f , . "'.n as JC211 sc ec ec o gmc e t 1c letic Club, champions of IV estern dith a. .. The general question! Yillians. i\'II" GeoJ'ge' Pnnt neJ)l'l Ie • s lei- ter. the fight \l'hi<'h tile two teams put e Do. and of the 1!.1::!6 team. However, N tl C I . , 1 d 1 .t. th · · , as usua , . t 1 . h. - , , · 1. oper s it · 11 1 tl or 1 aroma. n a CllO!I to e asked is "Going to Meredith?" Theylwas on hand with h' 1 f tl 1 up \\as no et ror somet mg else be- 11 .. an insrl·. 1 1 " Jsgenera:: rumorct on 1c eam]llls It f h t t t b ' · 1 IS s lnre 0 Ie · I •t t 11 1 '" ' Inng one, ca to that Creed! will direct activities resu s o t e con es , a concer Y a are using conceivable means in "'welcoming of 'Vake.'' Mr. Pennell su_e: Is s 11 1 Jorn. r:st_ that I rouse greaiel' zeal for mis•;ion 'wm·k ·' fifty-piece orchestra was given. . an effort to disguise all newish char- saw to it that the Little Deacons bc1n" the clean. "a::; m winch the 1 among fl·om the sideline. Tlre same breath \Vake students acteristics. Even the sullen "sophs" should receive proper attention from _game wao; Only the best I The conference was charaL terizet1 bv of rumor whisvers that FI·eshman the Phystcs t_o. listen In are taldng interest in the preparations the press and .elsewhere. and capped of teclmg evHlent between the two \frank discussions upon the part f tl. <:riffin will 1Jc Ji:ll's !llnying assistant. over the college radlo receiVIng set to I for the coming event. Upper-classmen the climax lJy giving a banquet to the t'eams. the harl a slmleilt delegates concerning:' iheo l3ut this, as has been previouslv the results of the game, but the Ashe- I are discarding books and are arrang- ,- 1 • . 1 ·tarc· I- 11 tile Lano-r 1 , 7 t 1 S t . nne receptiOn on the1r mvatlmg tour. 011 . f 11 ·s statecl, i:; merely rumor. The o " , en e a m- 1 . .. , . " o 11 S!Ouary enc eavor and c ·r 1 1 vrlle station could not be gotten. Ashe· mg to attend another wonderful Mere- da v afternoon The freshmen ha 1 b T 1e g.nne a)Jcnetl \nth a 1 usll w1th lhe acth·itie·· ·md P .0 1 . anne! may Ia ve a not 1cr horseshoe 'll · 1 th 'th th · l een \\'al· t · dl 1 1 · ·' ' 1 gress 011 tIe for- BlelltOJ' t'll !Ill.lltl \.IIv,,· y h · VI e IS on a wave eng WI a er dith social. Actually some of the entertained earliel· ill tile ,•·eel· b·· 'e ' ·es secnrmg a goo Y eac Ill fields "'!Je pl·o'-lenl of . . " o a . w oever lS 1 · d f 1 t t' ' '' ' ' tl fi · ·t f · · t Tl · 1 1 "' · · ... " 5 >oca- selected will find pl t ' 1 arge_r an more power u sa Ions "mecl" students are coming out of se- Mrs. IVeir andl\Irs. Dowtin, mothers of o :l', IS , e,;; mmn es. lls. eac was tional guidance, modern missions and . . en Y O• gooc mate· and IS not frequently gotten at Walm elusion for the occasion. This is as- Hal 'Veir and AI Dowtin of local bas- ,I aml mcrease<l worhl problems in connection 'with rial to work with; and, judging from Forest. surance enough that the trip will be ketball fame. Every man who nuule untll at the end of the half the ll!li.ssions and tvpes of missionarv . . tho showing already made by some of Tlli ·s 1·s the second t1.n1e tlit's a tl h'l stoml 20 S in the college team'·· · · · -en- the tossers, it Will not be hard to PI.Cl' " ' war 1 w 1 e. the trip has expressed his appreciation .. , • . ' " 1 ice "·ere lmndled by student spcalrers. Forest game in Asheville has Already a large number of the fel- of the treatment accorded him in the •• "\lthou"'h Candler came back At the conclusion of the general ses- a team that will show up ra,·orably been given outstanding publicity. A lows ha\'e deserted the classrooms, and Tourist City. st1_ong m t!Ie half, the lead ac- .;ions the officers fat· the ensuing year with the best in the Southern Confer- football game last fall between the ar_e 011 their way to .• Tonight Dowtin and Carter, placed in their qmred m the_ game by Baby were elected. !\I iss Katharine Brady ence. At the present, it is too early \Val;;e Forest and Furman varsities wlll find at th!' Baptist g 1 rls college own environment shone splendiclly in Deacons sufficient to cmch the or Duke rni\·er;<ity was sclectl'd . in the season to predict winners, but, was filmed bv. a Pathe News photogra- a 1 ·epresentat 1 ·v·e CI'O\\'d of B y p Tc • • C 't 1 . v,ame for ""ake Forest. . . 1 t . 1 · .' · as nevcrtheless, Gol<lston, an upper-class- . _ · u. e\"ei} game. :u· er ed the scormg · PI esa en of t 1e organrzation. Ralrlh Pher and released to be Sllo\' 'n 1 ·n b f Tv· k F t f t Do\ •t" 1 c t 'tl 1 S man. and Freshman Grifnil f'.een1 to ]Je , mem ers rom • a ·e ores ; In ac , for the trip with 75 points in the five ' 111 am ar er. WI 1 I all( 1 Carlton of 1\'ake Forest wos elected l t . 11 all tl1e theaters 1·n tl d h · t 1 1 " wlding their own in the freezn.outs. Pl'ac 1ca Y • 1e it is expecte that t e number of B. games. AI Dowtin was not far behind pom s, respective y, lell t 1e scoring of vice-president; l\liss DorothY Dunni 1 c United Stat s y p u t' f 1 1 th t · 1 g \\'ith a little more attention to form, e . . . . represe_nta Ivse rom t 1e wHl! 62 points. The work of Carter ;o earns. of )Ieredilh College, secretary: E. D. 1 th II II f d tl these players would rank as high -Mrs. H. C. Rawls, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Joyner, has returned to her home in Aulander. Jro er co ege WI ar excee _1e was surprising. This game little for· (Continued on page 3) Weatherspoon of Da\·id,;on, Editor of 1 1 11 f h ights in tile svorting constellation. actua, enro ment o t e B. 'l. ward, a sub3titute throughout the the Volnnteet· News Letter; i\liss Clara Several members of The Great Class P. U.s. The fellows will be there. year, made a regular berth for himself -i\Ir. and Mrs. Albert T. Hawkins, Gill of North Carolina College for of '29 have ,;hown their stuff and been The girls will be there. Leave the on the frosh team. In scoring 230 of Raleigh, spent the week-encl with Women, and W. C. Hucka- t t th hailed as comers by old-timers in the res o em. points on the trip, the freshmen Mr. and l\frs. George E. Gill. (Continued on page 3.) sport.

Transcript of INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D....

Page 1: INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro 1 e o f a country preacher, selecting and these messages

;.J •.1 ~ ..

SPRING FOOTBALL

PRACTICE

BEGINS MONDAY

Vo.IX

INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER KAPPA PHI KAPPA TAKES PLACE

WAKE FOREST, N. C., SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1926

SPRING FOOTBALL

PRACTICE

BEGINS MONDAY

No.18

FIRST SESSION MOOT 1DEACON TOSSERS CLOSE SEASON BROWN-MENELEY COMPANY ENTERTAINS WITH VARIETY

Of MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS I WITH FIVE STATE VICTORIES COURT FINDS UPCHURCH GUILTY OF LARCENY

+-------------------------------E. F. Upchurch is Duly Convict- Young Men Come to 'Nakc F'or-] i'·-.. - .. _,._,_,,_,_,,_,,_,,_,_ .. _,+ "'1 D h "Y" El G 'If d

Many Notables of the Fraternity Take Part in Installation

+•-••-••-•~-•"--·-~~-~·--•a-••-•"-~+ i · ur am , on, m or ed of Theft of Hog in est Under Auspices of Red- j OLD GOLD AND BLACK'8 t Lenoir-Rhyne and High Point ' ! i 1926 TRACK SCHEDULE

Ceremonies i • April 12-Hampden-Sidney, here. Mock Trial path Lyceum Bureau j ALL-STATE TEAM j Fall Victims of Invas:on

WEEKLY SESSIONS BEGUN STUDENTS ARE PLEASED j I~h·st Tcnm j 20 MEMBERS IN NEW FRAT.

1 April 24-N. C. State, Raleigli

I May !-University of Richmond

j •1

GET THIRD PLACE IN STATE GoblJ, Carolina (C.) ........ Forward

Program Consisted of Selections j Dickens, State ................ Forward i Sumptuous Banquet Served at

Conclusion of Initiatory Cere­monies; Dean Bryan Toast· master of the Occasion.

at Richmond. May 3-William and Mary at

Williamsburg. May 6-Catholic University at 1

1 Washington, D. C. (pending).

May 6-Duke University, here. l I

Summersill and Horton Prosecu­ting Attorneys; Walker and

Brown Defend Upchurch

O C . S h j Dodderer, Carolina ............ Center j on rgan h1mes, axop one, j McDowall, State ................ Guard j

and Vocal Duets and Solos j Ober, 'Vake Forest .............. Guard j ---- 'I ~~~m 'I

After a goodly amount of oratory The Brown-Meneley Company, trav- Ellington, \Vake Forest .. Forward

Wake Forest Quint Wins 14 Garnes of 19 Played, Closing

With Percentage of • 737

After about three years of corre­spondence and some anxiety, the Wake Forest Education Club realized ita long-sought goal when, on Saturday, February 27, the Sigma chapter of Kappa Phi Kappa, National Education fraternity, was installed at Wake Forest.

+•-•-A•-~•-••-••-~•-••-•11-•n-"•-•~-•+ had been poured forth, and following eling under the auspice3 of the Red· j G h '1

h d d. . • re3 am, State .............. Forward

numerous arangues an Issenswns, path Lyceum Bureau, entertained in j l\·ew·lamb, Carolina .......... Center j

The Demon Deacons, by winning all

five games on a week trip, marked

finis on a successful basketball season.

\Vake Forest started the season with

Dr. R. H. Jordan, Professor of Edu­cation at Cornell; Mr. A. D. Wright, 1

Proiessor of Education at Dartmouth I College, and Messrs. Smith and Carter, graduates of Emory and Henry Col­lege, constituted the members of the initiation committee. These men ar­rived in Wake Fore3t about 10:30 a. m. and at 2 p. m. the actual initia­tion began, continuing until 5 o'clock in the afternoon. A recess from 5 until 7:30 o'clock was held. During this intermission these distinguished educators were taken for a motor ride by Dean Bryan and President H1,lrst of the Education Club. The purpose of this auto ride was to acquaint these men from the Northern universities with some of the achievements made by North Carolina in the field of edu­cation. As a typical product of the progress in secondary education in the Old North State, the school system at Henderson was taken for the short and hurried survey. It is agreed that the school system visited is typical of the progre3sive secondary educational pro­gram that is being carried on in the various counties of North Carolina. Due to the lateness of the afternoon, the visit was made short and the sur· vey hurriedly made. According to a stl\tement made by Mr. Hurst, these illustrious gentlemen made for the car at a running speed to escape the blinding snow of the Sunny South. They have at least a survey of the typical North Carolinian secondary school system and the State's achieve· ments in hard surface road building. The expressions from these men were very favorable.

Following the general initiation of the afternoon, the final installation of

(Continued on page 4.)

the jurors in Moot Court Thursday Wingate Hall last Thursday night. A • H •

SPRING FOOTBALL PRACTICE BEGINS

· h d d d · · ., " .1

"1 ackney, Carolina ............ Guard •1 mg t ren ere a ecBion OL gu1 ty" good-sized audience was pre3ent to en- E : • mmerson, \Vake Forest (C.), • in the case of State versus John Jones joy the program, which was rendered J Guard i very mediocre prospects, and it was on a charge of larceny. It was the in fine style by the two young men j t;tilit~· j generally conceded that the 1926 bas-first session of Moot Court to be held who composed the personnel of the =

1 •1 h h' James Wake Forest Forward lretbal! season at \Vake Forest was

Coach Baldwin to Sound Call on ere t IS year. The evil-doer, culprit, company. The program consi3ted of • • ...... • reprobate, scoundrel, and undesirable selections on the organ chimes, vocal } Mo:s, Duke .......................... Center i going to be more or less of a failure.

Monday; Practice To Be on Old Athletic Field

citizen in the person of E. F. Up- duets and solos, saxophone solos, and! I Devin, Carolina .................. Guard j The Deacons worked hard and played church, alias John Jones, was given a comic skit. The entertainment was 1 Honm·ablc )lention i theh· best, however, and, retrospective-the full extent of the law so that the of the type that appeals most to col- 'I 'Pood1vard, 'Vake Forest,· ' 1 · d z n • 1 Y v1ewe , t 1e season has been a sue-public might be freed from. his degrad- lege !Joys, and the students who wit- : Hartness, Duke; Laird, David· :

Spring football practice will begin next Monday upon the assumption of duties by Coach Baldwin. Baldwin is expected to arrive in \Vake Forest the latter part of this week, and will im­mediately make preparations for be­ginning his tutelage of the Deacon

ing infiuence. Judge N. Y. Gulley, uessed and heard the performance ! son; Smith, Guilford; Viclrers, l cess. a~ the ~oat Court bene~, sentenced] were loud in their prai>es of the pro- j Wake Forest; Anderson, David· f Joe Ellington, with 173 points in the ~1m to :1_ghteen months m the Wake gram which, though not of the classic j son; Spence, State; ·watkins, ' season, led the Deacon scoring. This County Jail to be taken out and worked sort, was enough to pleace and enter- • State; Kelly, Elon. ! flashy forward scored 74 field goals on the county roads. tain a large portion of the student· ! !

The case brought before the bar as body of \Vake Forest, in addition to +·_.,_,._.,_.,_,_,_,_,._.,_,_,_,'~- and made good 25

out of 4

8 foul shots.

gridders. brilliant an array of legal talent as the a fair representation from the town. ~~~ Ralph James was close behind with Spring football practice is a novelty local School of Law could possibly col- T~e Brown-Meneley Company is a 'F' Union B.Y.P.U. Gives 164 points, 134 by the field goal rot1te

at Wake Forest, and the announce- lect. The defendant had as his attar- credit to the ~edp_ath. Bureau, and t~e Program At Louisburg and 30 out of 60 free throws. The ment of the new plans by the manage-~ neys Joe Brown and B. W. Walker. applause wh1ch It mvoked here IS team as a whole scored 618 points ment met with instantaneous approval They put up some as eloquent and ap- symbolical of the receptions accorded --- against 507 for its opposition. Of the on the part of the local fans. Coach pealing Tlleas fo~ their client as has the former Redpath productions. Relationship of Youth in Chris- 19 games played, the Deacons won 14 Baldwin will thereby have an excel· ever been heard m the School of Law Th:se t_alente~ youn~ men were real tian Activities Disc••ssed by and lost 5. lent opportunity to become acquainted here. R. N. Summersill and Judy artists m their particular field. They \Vake Forest Men with the members of the squad and Morton, prosecuting attorneys, exer- displayed unlimited talent in certain to teach tho team the fundamentals of cised their powers for the best interest numbers which were of the highest Sunday night "F" B. Y. P. u. jour­his Lehigh system. Signals and light ?f the State, humanity, and everything type, and the bursts of applause which neyecl t~ ~?uisburg, where they gave drills will be the program for the first m general. _They put up such a se- '~e~e accorded . them showed very I an ~Xhibitron program during the week, with scrimmages between picked quence of ~v1den~e and such a sound l-~amly that therr. efforts wer~ app~e- evemng church service at the Baptist teams following. Coach Baldwin will argument m the1r speeches that the c~ated and recogmzed for their artis- church. devote his entire time to the spring ju:z-ors were out of ~he bo~ only a t1c ~avor. One of the nov_elties ?f the " _The s_ubject of the }Jrogram was practice, as Coaches Caddell and Hays mu~u~e and a half wh1le makmg their pro.,r~m was a number m which at l outh tor the Church and the C'hurch are directing the baseball squads decision. There was little doubt in one time was played a saxophone solo, for Youth." Five interesting talks

· the minds of the audience, as well as a piano selection, and a vocal solo, all ·were delivered by "F" men upon vari-Manager Summerlin and his corps \n the minds of the jurors, after they of them to diffe1•ent airs. Another ous phases of this topic. The vital

of assistants have been putting the had concluded their argument that the number which seemed to please the relationship of the youth and the older Old Athletic Field on Faculty Avenue defendant was guilty and should be more childish element of the audience. people in Christian activities was the into shape for the practice, and the sent in a striped -qniform with chains was a comic sldt or monologue cleliv·j underlying thought. scene of fo1·mer hectic griuiron strug- 1 d 1 l\1 B to wor r on tile county roads. ere JY ' r. rown, who took on the The audience was ,-ery appreciative,

Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro e o a country preacher, selecting and these messages from Wake Forest gles will again resound with the 1 f clashes of cleated toe against the pig- to order, summoned the jury, swore his text from one of the Mother Goose men were gladly received. .At the con­skin. them in on one of the college hymn rhymes and orating with passe phrases elusion of the service the Louisburg

books, and retired from the platform and words punctuated with almost congregation voted to invite "F" B. Y. -Mrs. T. P. Jones is visiting as gracefully as an old hand at court fatal gestures. The selections on the P. G. again to give a similar program

friends in New York. crying. The jury chosen was composed organ chime;.; were particularly good, six weeks hence.

-Misses Hester Kitchin and Eliza­beth Edwards, of Meredith College. spent the weel;;-end with Mrs. J. L. Reid.

of J. C. l\1cBee, R. B. Mallard, ·w. G. as were the vocal selections and the J. F. IVoodward. Elmer Cloer, w. Stroud, A. M. Butler, R. G. Kenerley, saxor;hone solos. In short, the entire C. Whitley, A. D. Hurst. and c. B. an<l C. C. Horn. "Aman" Butler was prcg1·am was one to inspire Jaucl:ttions Vause gave the speeches of the pro­the foreman. Dr. N. Y. Gulley was the I and recognition of the unusual talents gram. A number of "F" men attended judge of the court and conductecl the of the Brown-:.\leneley Company. the meeting. :.\L B. Cree presided.

trial. ·

On the recent trip ·wake Forest tle· feated the Durham "Y," Elan, Guil­ford, Lenoir-Rhyne, and High Point College.

\\·ak<> F01·est vs. nurhmn "Y" The Demon Deacons outplayed the

Durham "Y" quint, 50-43, in a fast, hard game at Durham last Tuesday night. The Deacons outplayed Dur­ham in every department of the game. J unwing in to the lead early in the contest, the Wal;:e Forest quint func­tioned smoothly as a machine and were never seriously endangere\l by tho uyu cagel·s.

Durham staged a llOWerful come­llacl;: in the second period, after having trailed the Demons ten points during most of the initial ]Jeriod. Heflin and Shur of the "Y" quint caged goals on the Deacm1s with precision in this period, and did mo3t of the scoring for Durham. Fred Emmerson was the power in ·wake Forest's offen3e in the first half, with Ellington close behind.

(Continued from page 4.)

Freshman Basketball Results Over Radio

Meredith B.Y.P.U. To Entertain Wake

Foresters Today

The plaintiff in the case, J. A. 1 -Miss Helen Dunn was hostess to Bailey, alias George Wilson, who runs her bridge club Tuesday afternoon. :1 meat market in Wake Forest, had Tuesday evening she was again hos­the defendant charged with theft of a tess to a few friends, with Mr. and red hog from his pen some time dur- :.rrs. Caviness and Mr. and i\Trs. Robin­ing the previous weeli:-end. The de· son, of Raleigh, as guests of honor.

Student Volunteers Meet At Greensboro

Checkers Giving Way To Horseshoe Tossing

Asheville Broadcasting- Station Gives Results of Freshman

Game Play by PJay

fen<lnnt pleaded "not guilty," and pre­Gala Occasion Planned by Mere- sented during the trial evidence that -:\lr. and i\lrs. Arthur P. Sledd, of

dith Girls; \Vake Forest to was supposed to counteract the evi- HendeFon, visited :.\Ir. and Mrs. B. F.

200 Deleg-ates Attend Confer­ence; Ralph Carlton Elect­

ed Vice-President

"Earn-yard Golf" Makes Its An­nual Debut on the Wake

Forest Campus

Send Large Delegation deuce the plaintiff had on him. I Sledd the past ""eek·end. -----The plays of an 0Ln GoLD AXU BL.\CK ~-~~~~~~-~W~· Th,e . Stml~nt _Volunteer Conference 1 Horseshoe tossing. sometimes lmown

athletic team were broadcasted by A general exodus from the campus LITTLE DEACONS RET of ::\:01 til Carolma concluded its fif.,under the cognomen of "Barnyard radio, play by play, for the first time is taking place today. Walw Forest URN FROM TRIP teenth annual meeting on last Sunday. Golr." has ma<lc it-; annual debut on last Thursday. Never before has the B. Y. P. U.'s are moving in a hotly to VICTORIOUS IN SIX GAMES PLAYED ~- C. C. 1\'. and Grccnslloro Colle e I the Walw Forest campus. This popu·. radio been tal;;en as a means of con- '1 1 . . 1 . g 1 lur pa-;time with 1\"al;;e Forest stu-,, erec ith College. The semi-annual \\·ere JOint-lasts to the Voluntee ·s 1 · veying t11e detail results of a game B. Y. P. u. social between the two in~ h .. : . . .

1 < m-~ dents probably enlists more aspirants

ParU.CiiJated in by a \Vake Forest 'Vake Forest Yearlim!'s C!ose Season ''7I'th s· U{Jer-Successful In· ~ t e con tel ence Ill G! eensboro. than anY other of the Sjll'in~ SPOI'IS

. institutions is scheduled for tonight. = 't 01·er "00 delc,.ate · 1· th · "' · · team. But up at Asheville, N. C., Wake Last fall the Meredith girls enter- vasion of "7estern North Carolina; Asheville Enter- \' I " . "' . s. I epresen mg e Then' arc no elimination ruleR. Even Forest teams are teams extraordinary tained the IVake Forest boys in true ot l1~1nt~et1: ~nuts of ~he ~~lic;ent schools the meeke.'<t newish may partieipate aml are played up a,; snelL college "asl!I.Oil. They .~par~d no ef- tains Players Royally . . e ,I e, were 111 a em a nee. The iln<l er the w.me rules all(] regulation>: < ., v ke\llOtC o[ the conference \\"l'l' "o\.1 1 • ·

.The baske~ba_ll game last wee!;: be-~ forts _to mal>.e each fellow enjoy the 1 ··r 1 1 • • • ' • - H .!wt hmd U(lllcr-t'lnssmcn. Class <lis-

t" een the Wal,e Forest freshmen and occasiOn, and, to say the least. their Having received tlle same cort1iall brought their total voints of the sea- · t1 1~, lilted up, Will draw all men tinction is aholisllccl. All that is re-un o me. . . t • I I 'l't t

the Asheville Athletic Club was broad- efforts were successful. welcome that always awaits a \Vake I S:)ll to GS2, an average of 3·1 per g:1me. T" . . <!llll'C< IS t rc a JI I-" o tos:.; the shoes casted play by play from Station' Tonight tile IVake Forest B. Y. P. U. l:<~orest team in Asheville, the IVake Wn'u· Fm·,•st Vt•(•sh ""· ('nutllei' lii"!;h feat~~~~-:rle;~;.o~~ ~fd~~:=~~o~lffe~~.uc~ l"·ere I :\·ith a fair ciegree ·or accuracy. Train­\VABA. Tile freshmen triumphed. fellows will endeavor to reciprocate Forest freshman hasl;;ethall team L; The ·wake Fore<;t B·tby Deacons' fir~t Soper head of ~he re;igiou- ~cl; l ~~m~ lmg rules have not _a~ yet apJle<ued in George Pennell, star lJooster and en- by entertainiug the l\Ieredith girls. . . . I >J;ame of theit· inYa <ion of IV estern 1 . ' . . . . · s

00 0 I the horseshoe t•urnculum; IlO rcstric­

th . f W I F . Th L d l.:t:Jlck_ on t_he ln;l 'a\:tetr a stNllrJer-hsucCcess-1 Xortll Carolina resulted in a clenlt·Citt ):lk~ Un~Yerslt}l·, blmnself the son of timH arc placed on the !llaYers. If a us1ast or are 'orest In " e an Boys are not very adept at planning n u1vas1on 0 , , . es ern . art aro-\ · llll3SIOn:Jne3 anr orn in Japrt H · . ·

of the Sky," wired Dean D. B. Bryan "cute" stunts and formal entertain- . . • w<'ll-carnetl \·ictorv for them -F-31 . ' 'n. e l'~l!l<lHlatc lor the team can hold hi~ 1u_1a. The L_Ittle De:~cons_ won_ all six, ,1•11 .,~.· .. ; ... 101.,, ,, .. ,1

.- ·,,.011 ["roll. ·11 ~. ~ · 1_1ol_n_tecl out tl1at oppo_I'tt.mities in the [>osition in the I"t·cc·•c·Otlt I>'' tlll'O\'"l· 11 of the vlans of the radio station to ments, hut the Meredith girls may ex- [ tl · 1 1 I ·• ' ' · 1 t e fa~t I t fi 11 h J ' g ul Ie gatilue, p aye~ on tlus tnp, the_re- Camllcr Hi.:!h School "111-lltct ""llO•ncl otertgn Ile l foi· Chns_tran worl;; are ringers with a notir·eahlc rc:!:ularit'· broadcast each play of the basketball 1:ect the \Val'e Forest brothel'S to do JY par y repavmg the Asheville ~ '' · • " grca er t ~an ever ,nth 1 · 1 ·. . ~ •' game. The game was given out as their best. alumni for their· interest in tlle wei-, 1hey defcc1ted on the Can<ller court tants llm\· iiHJUiri~g of a\:e 1:

1.1 ;:u.1_ he lS at once lauded as a coming

heing betw~en "_Wake Forest Fresh-~ It is evident today that the 'Vake! rare of IVal;;e Fore>t athletic teams. :\IoiH1ay night. I ,,·ith O!~Cn lllinds remlv to b~a c~:~ dwmpwn. men, scl':l!JPJest little team to come to Forest students intend to mal;:e tlJis j The "'ake Fot· t 1. The g:nne w::ts fast ami sna]lpy and vinced 1-f .t 1' 1 · . As thLi goc; to pres>, no coaching

( R.

1 . I " es year mgs were 1 1 1 . . 'I · 1 can Je c one. callmg for 1 IY h 1 1 t 1 t · 1 1

top o Blue Idge, anc Ashenlle Ath- first B y P. u social at New Mere- right rovally entertaine 1 1 tl <\ 1 a l101~g 1 nYalry wa' mtense and bit- the highe~t t. J f , . "'.n as JC211 sc ec ec o gmc e t 1c letic Club, champions of IV estern dith a. su~cess .. The general question! Yillians. i\'II" GeoJ'ge' Pnnt neJ)l'l Ie • s lei- ter. the fight \l'hi<'h tile two teams put lnir·~si·ozl ac~t.I'"l·t~,~ e Do. Smio;sJ~nary and destin~· of the 1!.1::!6 team. However,

N tl C I. ,

1 d

1.t. th · • · ~ , as usua , . t 1 . h. - , , · 1. oper s messa~e it · 11 1 tl

or 1 aroma. n a CllO!I to e asked is "Going to Meredith?" Theylwas on hand with h' 1 f tl 1up \\as no et ror somet mg else be- 11 .. 1 ~ an insrl·. 1 1 " • Jsgenera:: rumorct on 1c eam]llls It f h t t t b ' · 1 IS s lnre 0 Ie · I •t t 11 1 '" ' Inng one, ca cn.~t~'1 to that 1~(1 Creed! will direct activities

resu s o t e con es , a concer Y a are using eve~y conceivable means in "'welcoming of 'Vake.'' Mr. Pennell su_e: Is s 11 1 Jorn. r:st_ e,;sne~s, that I rouse greaiel' zeal for mis•;ion 'wm·k ·' fifty-piece orchestra was given. . an effort to disguise all newish char- saw to it that the Little Deacons bc1n" the clean. "a::; m winch the 1 among student~. fl·om the sideline. Tlre same breath

\Vake ~orest students gatl~ered ~n acteristics. Even the sullen "sophs" should receive proper attention from w_h~le _game wao; ~ought. Only the best I The conference was charaL terizet1 bv of rumor whisvers that FI·eshman the Phystcs Depart~ent t_o. listen In are taldng interest in the preparations the press and .elsewhere. and capped of teclmg w~s evHlent between the two \frank discussions upon the part f tl. <:riffin will 1Jc Ji:ll's !llnying assistant. over the college radlo receiVIng set to I for the coming event. Upper-classmen the climax lJy giving a banquet to the t'eams. an<~ the Bah~ ~eaco~s harl a slmleilt delegates concerning:' iheo val~!~ l3ut this, as has been previouslv the results of the game, but the Ashe- I are discarding books and are arrang- ,-

1• .

1·tarc· I- 11 tile Lano-r 1,7 t 1 S t . nne receptiOn on the1r mvatlmg tour. 011 . 1111a~es f 11 ·s .· ~1 statecl, i:; merely rumor. The Athleti~

• • • • • o " , en ~o e a m- 1 . .. , . " ~ o 11 S!Ouary enc eavor and c ·r 1 1 vrlle station could not be gotten. Ashe· mg to attend another wonderful Mere- da v afternoon The freshmen ha 1 b T 1e g.nne a)Jcnetl \nth a 1 usll w1th lhe acth·itie·· ·md P .0 1 . anne! may Ia ve a not 1cr horseshoe 'll · 1 th 'th th • · l een \\'al· r~ot t · dl 1 1 · ·' ' 1 gress 011 tIe for- BlelltOJ' t'll !Ill.lltl \.IIv,,· y h · VI e IS on a wave eng WI a er dith social. Actually some of the entertained earliel· ill tile ,•·eel· b·· 'e ' ·es secnrmg a goo Y eac Ill ei~n fields "'!Je pl·o'-lenl of . . " o a . w oever lS

1 · d f 1 t t' ' '' ' ' tl fi · ·t f · · t Tl · 1 1 "' · · ... " 5 >oca- selected will find pl t ' 1

arge_r an more power u sa Ions "mecl" students are coming out of se- Mrs. IVeir andl\Irs. Dowtin, mothers of o :l', IS , e,;; mmn es. lls. eac was tional guidance, modern missions and . . en Y O• gooc mate· and IS not frequently gotten at Walm elusion for the occasion. This is as- Hal 'Veir and AI Dowtin of local bas- ,I a~luall~ aml stl~bbornly mcrease<l worhl problems in connection 'with rial to work with; and, judging from Forest. surance enough that the trip will be ketball fame. Every man who nuule untll at the end of the fir~t half the ll!li.ssions and tvpes of missionarv ~ . . tho showing already made by some of

Tlli·s 1·s the second t1.n1e tlit's ye~r a tl h'l sl'orc~ stoml 20 S in the college team'·· · · · -en- the tossers, it Will not be hard to PI.Cl'

" ' war 1 w 1 e. the trip has expressed his appreciation .. , • . ·~ ' " 1 ice "·ere lmndled by student spcalrers. • \Val~e Forest game in Asheville has Already a large number of the fel- of the treatment accorded him in the ~,\~OJ •• "\lthou"'h Candler came back At the conclusion of the general ses- a team that will show up ra,·orably been given outstanding publicity. A lows ha\'e deserted the classrooms, and Tourist City. st1_ong m t!Ie ~econd half, the lead ac- .;ions the officers fat· the ensuing year with the best in the Southern Confer­football game last fall between the ar_e

011 their way to M_ered~th .• Tonight Dowtin and Carter, placed in their qmred carl~er m the_ game by ~he Baby were elected. !\I iss Katharine Brady ence. At the present, it is too early

\Val;;e Forest and Furman varsities wlll find at th!' Baptist g 1rls college own environment shone splendiclly in Deacons '~a« sufficient to cmch the or Duke rni\·er;<ity was sclectl'd . in the season to predict winners, but, was filmed bv. a Pathe News photogra- a

1·epresentat

1·v·e CI'O\\'d of B y p Tc • • C 't 1 . v,ame for ""ake Forest. . . 1 t . 1 · .' · as nevcrtheless, Gol<lston, an upper-class-

. _ • .· · u. e\"ei} game. :u· er ed the scormg · PI esa en of t 1e organrzation. Ralrlh

Pher and released to be Sllo\''n

1·n b f Tv· k F t f t Do\ •t" 1 c t 'tl 1 ~ 1 S man. and Freshman Grifnil f'.een1 to ]Je

, mem ers rom • a ·e ores ; In ac , for the trip with 75 points in the five ' 111 am ar er. WI 1 I all( 1 Carlton of 1\'ake Forest wos elected l

t. 11 all tl1e theaters 1·n tl d h · t 1 1 " wlding their own in the freezn.outs. Pl'ac 1ca Y • 1e it is expecte that t e number of B. games. AI Dowtin was not far behind pom s, respective y, lell t 1e scoring of vice-president; l\liss DorothY Dunni 1 c United Stat s y p u t' f 1 1 th t ·

1 g \\'ith a little more attention to form,

e . . . . represe_nta Ivse rom t 1e wHl! 62 points. The work of Carter ;o earns. of )Ieredilh College, secretary: E. D. 1 th II II f d tl

these players would rank as high

-Mrs. H. C. Rawls, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Joyner, has returned to her home in Aulander.

Jro er co ege WI ar excee _1e was surprising. This game little for· (Continued on page 3) Weatherspoon of Da\·id,;on, Editor of 1 1 11

f h ights in tile svorting constellation. actua, enro ment o t e ~ollege B. 'l. ward, a sub3titute throughout the the Volnnteet· News Letter; i\liss Clara Several members of The Great Class P. U.s. The fellows will be there. year, made a regular berth for himself -i\Ir. and Mrs. Albert T. Hawkins, Gill of North Carolina College for of '29 have ,;hown their stuff and been The girls will be there. Leave the on the frosh team. In scoring 230 of Raleigh, spent the week-encl with Women, tre~surer, and W. C. Hucka-t t th hailed as comers by old-timers in the res o em. points on the trip, the freshmen Mr. and l\frs. George E. Gill. (Continued on page 3.) sport.

Page 2: INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro 1 e o f a country preacher, selecting and these messages

Page) Two OLD GOLD AND BLACK

®Iu ®olu a11n ~lack THE ARGUMENTS OF AN ANTI-EVOLUTIONIST

'South'-you are blowing foul gas off as it were,-you say people of these states are largely unread. So?-!

"1' 1 · l 1 think you and yonr 'scientific evolu· a u· a Ja<' .:as~, a 1og, and a tion boobs' are the ones who are 'un-:<knllk a11d ti<' them togcthcr and . . .;~. read.' and behind the Times like a

I yu1~ 1~a.n' a a erolut!OJW<t" JS the new cow's tail. In fact, I have always held,

I llt·fnutwu rPc:t•ntly ~l'llt the Or.D and I am 'firm' in my holdings, that UoLn .1:-;n B1 •. \CK by o11c Charles :F. the most ignorant vcople on things Bln:3b', of .\shc·,·illP, who bears tht• of real life of nature, live in the large ,;p}f-giYt'll tit](• of "Inwntor of tht'' cities like New Yorlc For I know of Xt•\\' sc,iPnce of Power and the I a girl from Kew York who came to 1\·orl<l·s Tru<' TPaehcr of Life." The> I her aunt ou the fan.n, .and when her

l•~ucd Weeki" b'.' the Student l3od<· of W k IPtt(']' is indl'l'<l intprpsting- in the II :ttlunt ~olt thl.rloug'~Oinul;mgt tEhl~ 'cows,' " " u ·c f ] . . . l . l L • te gn· sa c : 1 .-..un 1za, you Forest Collc~c I :wt t 1:1t Jt 18 t,Y}He:I oft tc' llllll.Ida-

1 haven't milked that cow.' Her •aunt'

. \ t10n of l<'ttt•rs wllll'll ai·c· rpecn·ed I said, 'no, dear. that's a bull-he only Suh:;;cl'iption price .............................. $2.00 a 1cnr 1 tl 1 · · t t' f. ]' · ---------------- ~·" It~ :H llliiJIS ra 1011 rom rc IgJous 1 eats grass.' This is about how you

Ml·;~un;Rs OF COLLEGJATE PltESS ASSOCIATION

fauat1es who han~ hPC0111(' <'J':tr.ed by !look to us. the wise people of the thP tPrm "eYolntion." !'South.'

IYl' an• Jmblishing; this letter as You are behinrt the 'Times' of this Entl'l"t.•d :1~ st.>cmnl-c\a~s, math.•r January 22. ~ I

1;111i, ."t tlw po"'ome,, :n Waku F':rest,_North. a llll'ttilS of illustrating the influ- world's advancing thought. You lilre larolum. und,•r the :let of March .!. 18.9. : t'IH'l' lrhic·h th<' constant agitation I others art? not in the right frame of

. . . . • Ed'.tor I t•onc·t·rn iiJ!!: £'\'olntiou has ~ excrtetlll.llind.. m1ll "~ •• ·o.u, 'fear' that 'e.volution' T. \V. B.\iu;n • · · • - '-' I I F t Il b b A. ll. p,;,\cOCI< •••• Bu,incss J\Ianagcr 11]1011 1]1(' llJJPdUeatcd lllllSSt'S the IS gmn.g to (!C. •ear no' Sl y 00 '

I · · t t t' f' · ' . I 'evolutiOn' has al\Yays been 'dead.'

IlllSJJJ t•rprl' a 1011 o scncnee 'lnd Its 1 . • • • Eclitm•inl JlPpm·tment tl , 1 .· ,, ·I. ·I ] . , b, '. 'Evolutwn' only lives 111 the nunds of

R. E. r. 1.,, ••• .Urnwni11 g Editor tc < 1 tc · \\ Ilt 1 1' 1" 1 CJJ t,lught I weak-minded n1en, who worship false o. L. Nm"n;:o;T ....• ,t"sociatc 1-:d~tor thi'>'P peoples by the so-callccll :mel unlogical things, like the heathen. El.IIEJ:T l>lcMILLA" . . . .. S)•art• I~cbtor '·J·io·htc·ou,; Uj>hol<lt•J'"' of t1te Fai'tl " 1 1 t . . l ' . l' •'!! t I 11 t til .Jot\:='-" A. H \LL:\1 \X . • • Uf'lHJIDiiS Jo..cl!tor t"" ... 4 l, ' JU c.L SOUil( llllll( "1 no 10 ( 0 e Loc1~1: H"'·'''"" ...... i.,, ... l Ecbtor rlH·ir utter laek of kno11·lcd"c be- monkey's tail for its 'organic Life,' but C. A. U1'l'llL"HCH .•• ('olll,-ilwtiurJ Ed1tor ] J • . ~ n. 11. H.""'"" .. s1,.-ciu/ t'o!umuist tl\'t•ea t w rp ntion Gf sctence and has 'Faith' in God as His creator and

Christia11it~·. Om· seeontl purpose Christ as his salvation. God-fearing in puhlishiug this articlP is to pre- antl 'wise' people of the 'South' are ;.:(•Jlt au cxamplt• of tlw extent to 'voting out evolution' because it is a whic·h t hl'~n J>eOJ>lc 'tl'e , 11.011~ctl 0 ,.Cl' lie. all(l not a 'fact.' Tal• e. a jaclwss, ~ 1 . 0

.'' • • • ' · ' • ' • a hog, and a slmnk. and t1e them to· · Ollll't.un, of ,due!! th~~ ltm e no gether antl you have a 'Scieutific Eva-

;\l:IIIa!:l'l'ial Jkpartment V. T. St.:t.LtYA:S • • • ....tsst. f";us[tiCSS litgr. L. ll. PA::::H'Il \L • • • • • Circulrltiou 1\lfJT. St:Y:'Iit)t:J: H \ItT • • A:-f.-;1. Cin·utaricm .!Unr. S. H. Hou.mwoK • . A:,os/. Circrdeltiou .M!JT.

Contributors to This Issue kno\\'lPdgP by certam agitators who lutionist.' If the South would do jus· 'I'. L. •roLAR pn•sc·u.t <'Yolution to t l.wn.l ns. the !le-I tice to •.·our foul writing it would be M. B. CIU·:J·:

---------------- ~trnet1on of all Chr1stJmnt;-.·. To thrown in the gutter. .>.II communications for print or relative to tlwm. evolution is tlw rt•d tlag whieh I will show you up later on for 'in·

the pnpL'r, other than business. should be ) ud•lrc,<ed to the ~~ditur. t ll' Spaui.<h toreador :flaunts !wforP suiting' the 'South,' and meanwhile,

Business communications should he ad- tl 1 · b 11 f th come again 'kid,'-there is a real man ,Jre~sed to the Business llana,:;er, l3ox 345. IC' OllrU~ 1111g U 0 C lll'Cllfl.

Adwrtising rates quoted upon request. OUJ· appc•al, thf'refore, is to those rea<ly to whip you and your gang to Sub~cri11tions nrc due in advanc~. 'f' · j • · ht j • th 'S th • I-:•litorial OOices: Third floor Bostwick. auti-cYolutioni~ts who arc resorting a Ims 1• ng Jere ln e ou • K~~!i'~l~ccO~i~~ ,E.Capilal Printing Company to tlJP unc<lucated for tlll'il' folio":_ +·-··-·-.. - .. _,,_,._,_,,_.,_,._,_,+

1

1 i ng tu c·case their agitation before l i Th<' campus seems to haYc rc- the c•ntin• .class has bee?me crazed l INTRODUCING- j

. . . . I on the snbJeet of cYoluhOIJ. 1 1 t m·m'tl to Its qmct serenity since , , . . . • at our . "· 1 tl "'-T'l '1' t 1 b ealctlll .L lw letter wlnch Is pn.hhshed be- • • ·' Jl'' It' ..:., 1 u Is· 1as C'en reY • 1 · · · · 1 f ! Yarborough Hotel Store l

\_ I G l C l l ell• 0\1' aJlJWilrs m Its ori!!IlHl orm • · ·

as • nt y ump an< ar os ant t - • • "' 1 1 I tl · · tl I t 1 f tl l w1thont au...- l'f'JJsot·slllp 1\'hntsoeYcr. . Th . o a are m . J(' <' u <'IPS o te aw. Lt j, as follo\\'s: j e j

j Berwanger j The l.yccum numbc·rs of this year "Editor of Old Gold and Black, j CLUB CLOTHES l

haYc as a whole bc·en of the mcdi- \\'ake Forest, N. C. 1 • ·

Ot'J'l) ya riet.y. Somcho"· there is a Below yon will find a great chal· ! - 'Ve stake our j st•erPt lon.,:ino· for sneh perform- lenge for a debate sent by me to one l reputation! I

0 l 0 l b 1 • or your ignorant boobs of Wal.:e Forest 1 lllH'l's ns t wsl' prcsentet y t 1e 1 c 11 I£ tl . . t t 1 b • _You stake your 1 I>] 1 I '[' u ege. ns IS no awn up y -1 )t·,·pn•nx ayt>rs, PctnrPs l~· om I this si!h- evolution boob of vom· col· • judgment! !:lkl';\'hill, anti concerts h~- the• \'{ clsh liege or. any other Scientist in the 1 · I 1 • Sustaining our reputation ~~ ngers. world. I shall publish this letter soon 1 f ll' l't fi t ·1

I ant! make a big laughing-stock out of I I" or se lng qua 1 y, ne al -I oring, expert workmanship,

WhilP in t1w rl'alm of. sports, the 1 t. 1<: il:sane eYolutionists in, th~ world, i .

ret'nrd Gf thP Fn~shmPn 1s 11.0 rthY of j to1, "hen God sends a man mto the , splendid styling, and expert ! 1 · \\" 1 " l world. He sends a man like Christ, I fit is easy with I

nnr eongratu atwn:.:. It 1 an equa t . k 1.1 tl C" . . 1 •1 ·1 • c , l I no a JGC ·ass 1m 1e .,1nstmns w 10 B Cl b

<·bmt to hot]~ the !ootbaJl :lllt ~l:IS-Illold to evolution. All evolutionists i erwanger U kt•thall mythwal ::ltatt• Ch:unpion- are nothing more or less than devils • Clothes i :<hip,; thi~ J·car, W<' arl' wnl1(1Pring in human form lil•e the Jews who iu· 1 i ll'hnt "Th(• OrPat Class of '20'' will suit our hlessed Lord Christ. i -because they are tailored j Jli'otltH~t· ia the hor:;t·hide and hick- CHARLES F. BLUSKE, I j in a manner that wins ap- j nry gamr. Im·entor of New Science of Power 1 j proval and they are priced ·.I

Ca rul i 11:1 truly lwtl a h:mncr 1\'l·l'k! '·Chas<' d;·t~ides to remain at the Fnin'rsitY., allll "Caroliwl wins Routhern Jh~kPthall Title for third ('OllS<'<·uti,·t• yp:n·," ,;o rend tlw heacl­lim·s of tl1;, daily pnpers 011 last Tlw>.cl:tY. .\s :1 J'<•snlt. the· State i:; s:tfl' fo;~ Libl'ra\i,:Jll IYith Cha~c and J>otl'at a>~ ~tantlard-hcnrPr~. nncl thP hanhn1otl titll' is ~<·<·urclv ':lJlt•horetl in Chatwl Hill for :llloth~r year und a day-:tH!l possibly for infinity.

and t!Je World's True Teacher of : to please those who appre-Life." 1 ciate values. I 'l'l f' ll · l J 1· .i An excelle11t show1.11g .i 1<' o O\\'IllC: ettPr to t te C( 1tor

of the· ll'orld's Jl'ork. written b;r the I of favored models in ! anthor of thl' aboye lcttC'r, "·as also j all-wool fabrics at- i endo~c·d, :llHl \\·hid! l\Ir. Bluske i $2 0 00 i a:.:kt•d to lw pu b1i~hed. It follows: i 5.00, $27.50, $3 • i

Asheville, N. C., April 29, 1925.

"Erlitor of "'orld's "'or];:, Xew York City. Sir'!-Xo!

ll $35.00 and $37.50 i i i 1 S. Berwanger 1 i The One-Price Clothier J i I

who with others are setting up the Kingdom of Christ on the earth by Truth and Spirit Power.

CHARLES F. BLUSKE, Inventor and Discoverer of New

Energetical Science, and Expert on the Law of Applied Power."

The writer then admonishes the Pditor to be careful of the teaching of the "silly e1·olution boobs" of \Yakc Forest by the: footnote or postscript which is penned at the hot tom of the page, as folloiYS:

"Don't let 'monkey·men' pull the 'wool over your eyes.' The above was >ent by me, but no reply was sent to me so it goes to show that when evo· lutionists are called on to face the Truth, they run in the hole like a ;kunk. Publish this for I find that young men like you have more brains than the old fools in this age."

"The lnYnetor of the New Seicllrt• of l'mn•r and the \V orlcl's Trm• Tc>aehC'r of Life" closes his cpiHtlP, whieh also contained numer­tJIIS lPtters which he had written of a 1ike nature of the one quoted abon•, with a challenge for a debate i11 wl1ieh he says that he will pay :j\:2[1 i11 gold if he fails to make a luughiug-stock out of any scientist in tllC' world, and if the scientist 11·il1 not mc<>t him in Jebate, he has

CAPITOL CAFE SPECIAL SERVICE TO WAKE

FOREST STUDENTS

Your Patronage Is Solicited

Sanitary, Reasonable Convenient

Co•·. lUartin & \Vilmington Sts.

RALEIGH

--------"Old 1[i~s!>=,:ippi'' is haYillg eon­

In yonr ·world's 'Vork of l\Iay 1925, on page 20, you say that in the +-.. ---··-··-··-.. -··-.. - .. -··-··-·+

~idr•r:t hlP tronhl<' 11·it h eYolu t ion +-------------------------------+ I tht>:'£' dan;. The ]c.g·i,:lators of tltat II \

stu!<• rc<·~·nth· Yoto·d 'doll'n allY teaeh- USEFUL PIECES In CAST BRASS I ill"' of thPo·;·ie:.: ,rith :Ill C\:olntion-. i;;/i<~ tl'Jtth•uey in the public >ll'hools I and nnin'rsitics. The bill was 1a- 1

hdP<l "A mcasnrc> to preYent }.lis­sissi ppi bo~·s and girls from being spnt to hPll bv irrPlip;ious traehrrs, inspirP<l by 'atht•ist.ie seicntists." ThP phrnsi11g hootlwinkf'tl the 1aw­lll n kt•rs a u£1 it. wc·n t OYPI' with a ha11g. \VP ean only l10pe that th<'

Serving Trays ........................ $:~.00 Bridge Markers, set .......... $1.00 Coal Hods ........ $;>.00 to $18.00

Fentlers ................ $Hl.OO to $48.00

Cobra Candlesticks. pair .. $8.00 Andirons ............ $8.00 to :~:>.Ofl

Ship :l\Ioclel Boo!.: Emls ...... $4.:>11 Five-inch Candlesticlrs .... $:~.00

,h•wp Jers fol' 08 Yem·s MAHLER'S Gift Shop

of lhtlt_•igh

D:tyto:1 ~(~l'ne will 110t llC' rclwnrscd. +----------------------·-----------+

another mode of challenge by way to the Freshman Smoker. The ex­of the boxing arena. Mr. Bluske planation is: the pre-report was must have his challenge met, so we

1 written by a Freshman reporter,

would suggest that some enterpris- while the scribe of the post-report ing debater of Wake Forest ot; box- was a loyal son of the Class of '28. ing pupil of Phil Utley's, either, Simply a question of viewing the would accept the challenge. C'YCnt from different angles.

-Mr. W. M. Dickson has returned The OLD GoLD AND Br.ACK in its from a business trip to Ne\v York.

past two issues seems to have radi- \ -Miss Obiah Person is visiting in cally changed its opinion in regard Kinston.

WHITING-HORTON COMPANY 3 7 Years Raleigh's Leading Clothiers

We Allow All Wake Forest Students a Discount of 10%

BETTER FURNITURE

For Less Money

GOODWIN-SMITH FURNITURE CO. "The house that makes homes happy"

124 E. Martin St. RALEIGH, N. C.

,'fl\l-••-••-••-••-u•-••-•A-1~-~~~-••-1111-•-•11-•a-•a-••-••-••-••-•n-••-••-••-n•-•n-+ I . = I ! I. 0. Jones, President T. E. Bobbitt, Cashier j i J. M. Brewer, Vice-President L. W. Smith, Assistant Cashier i i :

1 THE CITIZENS BANK 1

Wake Forest, N.C. 1 1

II -ORGANIZED, EQUIPPED ~: CONDUCTllD FOR SERVICE- . . I +•u•-••-••-••-•~~-~~-••-••-.. -••-~~•-••-••-••-••-~~'11-al-aA-IIII--11-•-••--•-•+

THE RALEIGH FRUIT STORE

Tobaccos Cigars Soft Drinks

One of the pon:er emplifier sf8ges of t11e world's first super .. power transmitter

Loudest Voice '

Antenna of super-power transmitter

w~P.K. NEW HANDY PACK

Fits hand-pocket and purse

More for your money and the best Peppermint CbewingSweet for any money

Look for Wrigley's P. K. Handy Pack f on your Dealer's Counter G7 !5

} ~

~·,~

f: JA~IES 1..,HIE~I E.

OFFICE SUPPLIES and STATIONERY ~· 1 ~~ .i

: + Filing Cabinets and Loose - Leaf Devices ~ , : W ATERl\IAN - PARKER - WAHL ~

+ FOUNTAIN PENS H ;,; H t PHONE 135 Kodaks and Supplies Raleigh, N. C. ~ a:::.:•_:;.::::~;:.;:::::~~::::~-;:;::::::::•c~:::~:•:;:;;:;:::7.<.::.-::::::::::~4!!):::::::;.::-....)::.:;:=~~::~::-•..::lli ~ ~-::.::::::.::.:;:::::~:;::::-;~~:::::-~:;::::::::::I•::;::::::;:::~;:;:::·::;:•:;::::::::::~:;:::::;::•;:;::::X!li!IK;::'" . ~'~

\·; New Sanitary Barber Shop ~ • for WAKE FOREST ~ ~: ~~ ~ j;,;{ if WEA'l'HEHS & RHODES. Proprietors !6!

1H ! ~ ~ ~'',~ * Formerly by H. E. Jo~·ner H ~~ ~ ~ ~·I, f,

' OVER JOYNER'S CAFETERIA ~·~~ ~\ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

~ Clean, Quick, Polite Service ~ .. ~

• ALL WHITE BARBERS WAKE FOREST, N. c ~I l"i; , ~ .~ }"~ , -=~•-:;:::=::{•~~~=:!:...,.~:z=~=:::(-.-z:~=~•~:~•::;::::::::.:•~=~•~~::::~x~•~•

• From the studio of WGY in Schenectady, six miles from the developmental station, there may be controlled a great number of transmitters, one of which is the first super-power transmitter in the world. WGY, together with its associ. ates, KOA of Denver and KGO of Oakland, is the General Elec­tric Company's assurance to the American public that radio broadcasting shall be main­tained upo:n the highest standards. ---A new series of G·E advertise-ments showing what electricity is doing in many fields will be sent on request. Ask for book­let GEK-1.

On the rolling plains of South Schenectady, in several scattered buildings, is a vast laboratory for studying radio broadcasting problems. Gathered here are many kinds a."'ld s:z~s of transmitters~ from the short-wave and low-power sets to the giant super-power unit with a SO- to 250-kilowatt voice.

Super-power and simultanemls broadcasting on several wave lengths from the same station are among the startling later-day developments in radio. And even with hundreds of broadcastine stations daily on the air throughout the land, these latest developments stand for still better service to millions of listeners.

Only five ye2.:rs cld, yet radio broadcasting has developed frcm a laboratory experiment into a mighty industry. And alert, keen young men have reaped the :rewards.

But history :repeats itself. Other electrical develop­ments wilt continue to appear. And it will be the college man, with broad vision and trained mind, who will be ready to serve and succeed.

GENERAL ELECTRIC GENURAL ELECTRIC COMPANY, SCHENECTADY, NEW yoa.~·

Little

Dowtin ( 19)

Paschal

Powell ( 4)

Weir (3)

Owens (1)

Founded 1

R. E.

Ca

Page 3: INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro 1 e o f a country preacher, selecting and these messages

Little Deacons Return Trip, Victorious

From

(Continued from page 1.)

W. F. Fresh ( 45) Candler Hi (31) Position

Dowtin ( 19) ........................ M!ller ( 8) R. F.

Paschal ................................ Gudger ( 11) L. F.

Powell ( 4) ...................... Mallonee ( 5) Center

Weir (3) ................................ Allen (4) R. G.

Owens (1) .............................. Setzer (3)

High School team on the Swannanoa colll·t Tuesday night, 46 to 15.

Carter shot the first goal of the game, and during the first quarter it was nip and tuck. The Little DeacoiiS pulled away to a substantial leao be· fore the end of the first half, however, and at the intermission the freshmen were leading, 20·11.

Carter dplicated his performance of the night before by accounting for 17 of the Deacons' points. This flashy little Demon ran rampant through the Westerners. W. F. Fresh (46) Swannanoa Hi (15)

OLD GOLD AND BLACK Page Three

Furches (2) ·····-:a:··c::·············· Wilfong I Powell ················c~~t.~;······ Brande (4) I Powell (3) ·······a~~;.:~;········ Moss (11) I r-----,.;,. Weir .................................................. King I Weir (2) ........................ McConnell (9). Weir (3) .................................. Lewis (1) t Wake Forest Boys

W Lk. G.F t Paschal owens (3) .......... ~· ... ~: ......... Greene (4) owens (3) ......... ~: .. ~: .......... Hedgepeth ~ Are Welcome

Subs for a e ores : ' f (11), Bryan (1), Owens (2). L. G. L. G. I at ! Wake Pm·est Fr·<'Sh vs. Champion "Y" ~~~:r!~~ ~~~:~~~~-A. C.: Hayes (1). (1~,u~~ p~!ell~ake Forest: Paschal I ... ... !

In their third game of the western Wake I~or·est Fr·esh vs. l\lm·s Hill Subs for Mars Hill: Batch~lor. j BRANTLEY'S I invasion the Little Deacons downed College f -the Champion "Y" quint of Canton, The Little Deacons pasted a glow· Student Volunteers Meet At ~- Drugs Sodas Cigars ! 30-27. in an exciting game at Canton. ing finis on their 1926 baskf'.tball sea· Greensboro o I The "Y" quint furnished the strongest son Saturday night when they con· I ~-;' WHITMAN'S CANDIES opposition for the Wake Forest newish eluded a triumphant western invasion <Continued from page 1) of any team on the trip. 1>Y swamping Mars Hill College, 35-17, bee of Duke University, council .:.---·-------·-.. •!•

Position .................. Alexander L. G.

Subs.-Wake Forest: Carter (18). Dowtin (10)

A field goal by Captain Dowtin and on the Mars Hill court. member. ...,,_.,_,._.,_.,_,,_,,_,_.,_.,_,._,,_,+ ( 4) a foul shot by Carter in the last few The Little Deacons, having won a The Wake Forest delegation reports I i

minutes of play was the margin of game each night last week up until a most successful and inspirational [1

YARBOROUGH ".!

(6) victory over the strong Champion "Y" the Mars ~ill fracas, went against the conference, in which their interest and Carter (17) R. F.

........................ Caverly team. The score was tied, 27-27, with Mountaineers determined to emerge determination to serve in the foreign j BARBER SHOP !

more spectators, the Little Deacons of Powell (3) .............................. Bugg (5) but three minutes to play when these unscathed from the week's activities. fields was greatly increased. 'I ! L. F. "'nke Fm·cst vs. Swannanoa High Playing before a crowd of 500 or

Wake Forest swamped the swannanoa center shots were made. And thus did they emerge. It was . 1

ra=:=:::=:::::;:::;:::::;:::::::::;:::;:::::::;::::::;::::::=:::;::;:::::::::;z:=::::==::::=::=::::==::::::=::=::=:=:::::=::::::=::::=::::::=::::::=::=::::::::=::::::=:~ The gamte wasbonet1of twhe kscraFppiestt the eighteenth victory out of twe~ty -Mrs. Jessie Earnshaw has re- j Nine White Barbers j

games pu up Y 1e a e ores starts for the local freshmen, and m- turned from Tampa, Fla .• where she j ' freshmen this year. Coming from be· cidentally was the game that gave the spent six weel;:s with friends. • l

1fPa tronize our new store next to the Postoffice. -We meet the students' needs.

hind an eight-point lead piled up by local yearlings the 1926 State Cham· -Miss Maude Bowers, of Meredith i1

EXPERT MANICURIST ) the "Y" cagers in the first half, the pionship. College, spent the week-end at home. I Little Deacons came back in the The yearlings completely outclassed -Miss Mary Bowers has returned '1 R p BRANCH p '1

second period with a will to win, and the Mars Hill quint in their second to Bonlee after spending the week-end j · · ' rap. : a will that did win. ;•ictory over the Hillians this season. here. • I W. F. Fresh (30) Champion "Y" (27) 8arter, dark horse of the trip, led the +,_,_,_,_,_.,_,._,_,._,_,_.,_,+

Dowtin (12) ---~-~-~-~~-i-~~ .... Sorrell (12) ~~~::s. Forest attack with seventeen r-~~~ KING & HO~~,., R. F. W. F. Fresh (35) Mars Hill Col. (17)

Carter (12) ...... i:··F: ........... Owen (4) Dowtin (8) ...... ~-~-~-~~-~~~ ........... Ward (2) ~~- CLOTHIER~ Just a. ~ittle ;::::tDA;~~::ittle ~~tter" HATTERS Powell (1) .............................. Cooke (3) R. F.

\k':;-::::::;:::::;:::::;::::::;:::::;::::=:::::::;:::::;::::;::::::;:::::::;::::;:::::::;z:=:::::::::=:::::=::=::::::::::=::=::::=::=:=:::=::z::=::::::::==:::=::;:=::;=:::=;=;::=:=:::;=::;:=::;=;:i!J= Center Carter (17) .............................. Winecoff 8 \V. ~lltrtin St., Raleigh, N.C. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Weir .......................... Westmoreland (2) L. F.

HOLDING DRUG STORE

Founded 1832 .. . . Chartered 18 3 3

WAKE FOREST COLLEGE ·wAKE FOREST, N.C.

A College of liberal arts, with an established reputation for high standards, noble traditions, and progressive policies.

Expenses Very Reasonable Graduate Cour•ses in All Depa1•tments

For Catalogue address W. L. POTEAT, President

THE BANK OF WAKE WAKE FOREST, N. C.

Capital Stock . Surplus ....

. $20,000.00

. $10,000.00

The Bank of Service

R. E. ROYALL, President T. E. HOLDING, Cashier

R. G. Owens .................................... Keener (2)

L. G. Subs for Wake Forest: Powell for

Weir, Paschal ( 5) for Owens. Subs for Champion "Y": Price ( 4)

for Cooke. "\Vakc Forest F1•esh vs. Asheville

Athletic Club In one of the best games seen in

Asheville this year, the Little Deacons took the measure of the Asheville Ath­letic Glub last night on the Asheville High School court, 41 to 31. The ·wake Forest Freshmen showed a re­serve power that held in check the fast

Be Healthy-Eat More FRUIT

Buy it from

Vaughan's American Fruit

Store 103 Fayetteville Street

Raleigh, N. C.

Athletic Club quint. •:•·---·-----·:• The Athletics came back strong in I I

the second half after having been Hot Dogs-Drinks I 'hog-tied" by the Collegians in the I i O.K. FRUIT STORE · first stanza, and at one time seriously I threatened the Wake Forest lead. _

1io 227 s. Wilmington St. ~~~ 1

Dowtin called together his men in time to save the day, however, and RALEIGH -after the third quarter there was no !1 Next Door to Coffee Shop j doubt as to the final outcome. . I · The Athletic Club presented two j Hot Weiners-Cold Drinks j 1

good basketeers in Jones and Brande, j 1 while Carter and Dowtin, Wake Forest i_. Smokes i

Wilson's Sandwiches Are Delicious

~SOLD EVERYWHERE~

THE COFFEE SHOP CAFE

For

WAKE FOREST FELLOWS

225 S. Wilmington St. freshmen, played a good game for the I PETE'S PLACE ~

Little Deacons. ;b::~~~~~~~~~~======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======= \V. F. Fresh ( 41) Asheville A. C. (31) •:·----·------·•:• Position - - - -

Besides a Large and Complete Stock of Athletic Equipment, we are now stocking

RADIO and

RADIO SUPPLIES

ATHLETIC SUPPLY CO. 206 S. Salisbury St. . -.. RALEIGH, N. C .

Dowtin (9} ........................... Jones (13) R. F.

Carter (14) ............................ Nixon (2) L. F.

Powell .................................... Brande (12) Center

Weir ( 4) ............................ 1\'lcConnell ( 4) R. G.

Owens (14) .................................... Greene L. G.

Referee: Arbogast.

\Yake l•'orest l<'n•sh vs. Ashevill<•

I Athletic Club

aX~~'X~~%~~~;:-x::~::::z-4b:=-:X::~:=-:~~=·x:~:;;::::;c~;;J1 The Wake Forest Freshmen again ~+ . +t! 1 defeated the Asheville Club on the f. II Asheville High School court, 33 to 30. f.'~ c p c Jj j This game was one of the fastest and 1 ~ q 1 most bitterly contested contests ever 1

~ apital rinting ompany ~~witnessed in Asheville. The Asheville n ~ quint got off to an early lead, but the

~ Printers, Binders, Desi <>"ners n Little Deacons came from behind and r- "" ~ were leading 11·10 at the close of the ;·~ I first half. ~ SPECIALISTS in (·:~ Both teams resorted to long shots I ~ in the second half, the advantage being

1'1::~ College and School Catalog, Magazine ~ with the Demons. The lead see-sawed ~ U between the two teams during the ~~ and Newspaper Printing I third quarter, the score being tied on r:: ~ four different occasions during this ~~ ;·i period. ~ I W. F. Fresh (33) A. A. Club (30) fi] Telephone 1351 RALEIGH, N. C. Jj Position

~ Cor. Hargett and Wilmington Sts. ~~·~ Dowtin <14 ) ..... R: .. F: ......... Nixon <6>

P.'~ ,.: .. : ~~ C'arter ( 14) ............................ Jones ( 6)

v.~~~:~~~:::C:%~~=~~::l~~:.._~~;~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~.i L. F.

$25. SUITS $30. On Display at ALL Times at Our Store

also FLORSHEIM SHOES

E. C. SNYDER, Student Representative

Barnes & Holding DOOR BELOW P. 0. WAKE FOREST, N. C.

Wizen sil'Jiery moonlight falls on town and

field-and the long, joyous tour home is ready to begin

-have a Camel!

Camels contain the very choicest tobaccos groJI'n in all the world. Came.ls are blended by tlze world's most expert blenders. Nothing is too good for Camels. In the making of this one brand we concentrate tile tobacco knoJI'ledge and skill of the largest organization of tobacco experts in the world. No other cigarette made is like Camels. They are

the overwhelming choice of e~eperienced smokers.

II) 19:Z6

WHEN moonlight washes woodland and hills with platinum light. And the tour home is ready to begin-have a Camel!

For Camel makes every smooth tour smoother, adds of its own contentment to every delightful journey. Camels never tire your taste or leave a cigaretty after-taste. Pay what you will, you'll never get choicer tobaccos than those in Camels.

So this night as the forest-topped hills race by in moonlit proces­sional. As the magic road curves through the colonnades of birches­have then the finest made, regardless of price.

HaYe a Camel!

Our lzigltest wish, if yotl Jo not yet ktJOW Camel quczlity, is thot you try lhcm. We in'l'ile :yo" to compare Camels with ony cigarette made al

any price. R. J, Reynolds Tobacco

Company

Page 4: INSTALLATION OF LOCAL CHAPTER DEACON TOSSERS ......gles will again resound with the Sheriff C. D. Moss called t11e court ro 1 e o f a country preacher, selecting and these messages

Page Four OLD GOLD AND BLACK

Deacon Tossers Close Season With Five State Victories

(Continued from page 1.)

Line-up and summary:

'\'ake F'm•cst vs. Elon Elan dropped the final game of the

basketball season to 'Vake Forest on the home court Wednesday night by the score of 20 to 15, in a game which was roughed up considerably toward the latter part and in which the ref­eree was slightly injured. This un­usual incident in the game came near the close when in some way his arm was slightly twisted in a scuffle be­twt'en two players.

Newman (5) .................... Ellington (2) R. F.

Bock (2) ................................ James (6) L. F.

Crtttchfield ...................... Woodward (3) Center

Karriker dominated the floor for the I nearest High Point came to getting Lutherans and often stopped Wake ahead. Forest drives toward the goal. Elling. James was the outstanding player ton was a spry youngster and made for "\Vake Forest. McCauley and Man­his name hang on the top ring of the ning played best for the locals. score column. "\Vake Forest was woe- Line-up and summary:

Manning eight, by Curry two, by Hill four, by Wood three, by Foust two.

'Vake Forest: by Emmerson three, by James eleven, by Ober three, by Woodward four, by Ellington nine.

Wake Forest Durham uy" Byrd (S) .......................................... Ober Referee: Stuart of Guilford.

Position R. G. Ellington (16) .................... O'Neal (9)

R. F. Kelly .............................. Emmerson (9)

L. G. James ( 7) ........................ Stallings (1)

Cully off in making easy shots count High Point (19) Wake Forest (30) for points, James being the principal Position offender in rolling the ball all over Manning .................................. Ellington the backboard. Forward

I-·---·-----·-.. ;· I GIERSCH CAFE I I

L. P. Woodward (2) .................... Perry (7)

Center Oller (7) .............................. Heflin (15)

R. G.

""ake Forest had the edge on the Christians though Elan led for prac­tically all of the first half. Byrd led off for the home team with two field Emmerson ( 18) ........ :i\lontgomery (0)

L. G. goals. and then James for the visitors Subs for \Valie Forest: Vickers for got into action and evened up the

Jame;, Sinlnions for Emmerson. Subs for Durham "Y": Shur (10)

. for Stallings, Deal (1) for Heflin.

score, which ran close for the re­mai!l(ler of the 11eriod, with Elon a

Substitutions for Elan: Raub for Bocl,, Boch for Raub, Raub for Kelly.

Referee: Steiner (Duke). 'rimer: Card (Duke).

"'akt• Fm•t•,.;t ,.s. Guilt'm·d

Coach Bob Hays' Demon Deacons ran roughshod over the Quakers of Guilford at Guilford Thursday night and routed them, 43-19. The Deacons

Curry \\·akt• l•'<li"('St ,·s. High Point College ·········-··········-------------·--·----·····

Forward James

Wake Forest defeated High Point College 30 to 19 in a slow and slightly interesting cage exhibition Saturday night. From start to finish the play­ing was half-hearted, and only at two or three stages of the battle did the large crowd of spectators get excited.

Hill .......................................... Woodward Center

\Vood ............................................ O'Berry Guard

McCauley ................................ Emmerson Guard

Summary-Substitutes: Foust for Gurry, Perry for Foust, Johnson for· Wood.

I New Location

Raleigh, N. C.

I . I 117 West Martin St.

i I

Re[eree: 1\IcDonald.

showed remarkable improvement over point or two in the lead ~ntil_ just at their form in the first clash between the close when Emmerson s pomts put tl t t h G ·rr d t k th ·wake Forest out in the lead. The

1 !e wo eams w en Ill or . 00 • e

\Vake Forest started the scoring a minute after the game began and gained a good lead before the Purple Panthers located the basket. At the end of the first half the visitors led

Points scored for High Point: by (~~~--~~~--~~~~~~~~~·

•:•,_,,_,_,_,,_,_,__,_,:· half ended 11 to s in favor of the measure of the Deacons. Guilford was i I visitors. held to one field goal and one foul i SEND YOUR WORK ! shot in the first half. - I At the beginning of the second 'fhe Demon Deacons got off to a good

17 to 9. I 'Vith the sounding of the referee's

whistle for the second period, High 1 Point College jumped into tl1e fray, holding their opponents almost score· less, until the tally was 18 to 15 in favor of \Vake Forest. This was the

I to the = period the visitors ran up an eight-=· ! point lead. A final spurt by the Chris- start and had the Qualwrs helpless = Oak City Laundry 1 tians cut this down to five points, but throughout the _ _game. Smith: right I Oldest and Best = they were not able to make the grade. forward for Gml!ord, showed his stuff = I , in the last haH when he caged 12 ! I ~mmerson led the scoring with n~ne i ]Joints on the Demons. Ralph James I E. 0. BURROUGHS 1 P?mts, and Byrd came second With I scored 25 points during the game, set-1 Student Agent = eight. Both t_e~ms worked well on the ting a record for individual scoring i ! floor and exhibited an excellent bi'and in a single game 011 the \Vake Forest Army & Navy Goods i Wednesday and Saturday f of ball. quint this vear. ' lj Line-up and summary: ! Service I Elan (15) Wal'e Forest ( 20) Wake Forest ( 43)

Position Position Guilford ( 19)

CAMP EQUIPMENT

·:·~~.-.c-~,__.,_~~t~)~).:.l

"THE STORE OF DEPENDABILITY"

It is not necessary to pay for Dependability. When you purchase any article we offer for sale, its dependability is guaranteed. It must be as represented- and at no extra cost.

BOWMAN'S 17 '"· Hargett St. (!'\ear Odd Fellows Building), H.-\LEIGH, X. C.

Ellington (12) .................... Smith (12) R. F.

James (25) ............................ Ferrell (4) L. F.

Woodward ( 4) ...................... Moore (2) Center

Ober .................................. Coltraine (1) R. G.

L~mmerson ( 2) .................................. Tew L. G.

Subs for Guilford: Thomas for Tew.

\\"akp Fm·t•st. Ys. Lenoh·-Rh~·ne

The 1926 Lenolr-Rhyne baslwtball team put its season in the box and locked the lid Friday night, tnd with it they put a 26 to 21 defeat ad­ministered in a rough and tumble game by \Vake Forest. Gurley's youngsters had an even chance to emerge winners after half time ended 13 all, but Wake Forest cut loose with a baslwt accuracy that could not be

j stemmed by the less experienced Lenoir outfit in tile last half. Captain

Morris' Army & Navy Store 105 E. l\Ia1·tin St., Raleigh, N.C.

+•-R-nn-nn-MII-1111-IIU-IIa-nn-na-nl•-u-u+

I I I ! California Fruit ! i i j Store f I I 1 Headquarters for the 1 I Students Since I ! 1900 l i i I RALEIGH, N.c. I +~-n~-au-•n-nn-1111-~n-Mn-ua-un-lln-Dn-a+

Watch This Space Each Week Installation of Local Chapter 1

which are found chapters. Chapters

Southern Baptl.st Theologi·cal Ka}lpa Phi Kappa Takes Place of Kappa Phi Kappa are founded at Dartmouth College, Lafayette College,

(Con tin ned fn. m page L) University of Maine, Colby College,

Semi• nary LOT1J0 VILLE T.{Y E Y Mull1'ns Pres i Gettysburg College, Allegheny College, -. • .r· • • • • • the chapter was held at 7: 30 in the Wittenburg College, James Millikin

• f' evening. At this occasion the charter T;11,_·_,·ersi·ty, En'101.y and Heni"Y C'ollege, Tuition f1·ee, financial aid if nPPd<>d; tlurt~·-two wc>eks sPssion, :unon.~ ._ . was granted, and the Education Club fa<"ulty or ~omul t'hri,.;tian thin!H•rs, wor'll student fellowship and Bil'mingham-Southern College, Univer·

alumni h•·othPrhoo!l, [JJ•:u•tieal :uul t•om}n·elwnsin~ c·ut·I·iculum, Xew enveloped by the conservative and re- sity of Pennsylvania, Middlebury Col-TPstamt'tlt uwssagc, largc>st seminm·~· in world, midst man~· student· nowned Kappa Phi Kappa. lege. Syracuse University, Miami Uni-s<·n·1·d dm•·clw.-, eent<'r X at ion's population, CO:\IPLIO::TELY XE'V At S: 30 p. m. the final installation ver;:;ity, ·washington and Lee Univer-

:~S;,t~·~~~~l~'R~B~:;\~X~H~O~:\~I~T·~~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=-.: 1 wa<; completed. Leaving the Euzelian sity, College of \Villiam and Mary, and Philomathesian Society halls, the Drake University, and \Vake Forest places of initiation, the happy haml

. . t "t. 1 1 1 9 College. I ot fra erm y Jrot ters went to t le T' 11 1 f I'" Ph" 1r

On Display Wiggins Drug Store, March 11 and 12

"Rack" Rackley, Representative

• • 1 · • h ' 7 1. .;e go c en ru e o >.appa 1 ,._appa o clock Janquet gnen at t c ~ace · t' It · · · h" . . IS conserva 1sm. IS un1que In t 1s Forest Hotel, under the superviswn of j Tespect as the policy of most fraterni-:VIrs. l\larshall of Wal;e Forest. At . . ' . .

. • • . . 1 t1es IS fm· expansiOn. Accordmg to tins occasiOn the consummat.wn o[ Ute 1 the initiation committee Kappa Phi I

'1 haiJIJY day was reached, and was at- • · t t "1 1 • . . " tl b tl . hapva could launch a successful ex-es ec J) e\ er~ Inan OL 1e ro 1e1- · ·r •t · h d Tl

1 1 panswn program 1 1 w1s e . 1e I woe· fact that it toolt Wal(e Forest about

Dean Bryan served as toastmaster. three years to get a chapter fully jus- I Between courses, appropriate toasts tifie3 this statement. The concensus were given. First the toastmaster of the Sigma Chapter at \Val{e Fore3t recognized toasts from the newly initi-is to support the national officers in

ated members of Kappa Phi Kap11a. such a vie\\". The men of this group responcling were: 0. L. Norment, J. T. Gaskill, A. D. Hurst, and C. V. Vause. Then toasts were recognized from Dr. J or­clan nml Prof. ""right of the National Committee, and Dr. A. C. Reid, faculty memher of the Sigma Chapter at Wal;:e

'l<'oreot.

I After the third course, Toastmaster

llryan called on seYeral for impromptu remarks. All of the toasts were con-

The national officers of this fra-ternity arc renowned in their profes­~ions. Faculty memlJer Reid was a student under Dr. R. H. Jordan at Cornell a few years ago. Prof. \Vright is Professor of Education at Dart­month College. The other members cr the committee are holding impor­tant positions in the field of education.

HOT DOGS • • Drinks • • HOT DOGS

ANDREW'S FRUIT STORE 231 S. Wilmington Street

RALEIGH, N.C.

HOT DOGS • • Drinks • • HOT DOGS

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THE HOUSE OF BETTER VALUES

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Collegiate Hats Snap Brims, Plain and Round Edge, Fancy Bands -In All

the Leading Shades In these Hats you will find the same snap, pep, and quality you find in $6.00 to $7.50 Hats.

Ask to See the Famous Ferry Felts

$2o98 $3.95 $4.95 ( TUXEDOS FOR RENT l

J

CALL ON US FOR YOUR SUPPLIES

Tennis Shoes

Uniforms Caps

Tennis Racquets

Baseball Shoes

Gloves Mits

Golf Clubs Golf Balls

Tennis Balls

Baseballs

Room "ON THE CAMPUS"

cented with some phase of education. The introductory toa<'t. was given by

The names of the men receiving KaJ:pa Phi Kappa certificates or mem­bership follow: Rlll~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·-

REGALS-On the feet of College Men from Coast to Coast!

Selling Service is operated on the Principal Campuses of America by Factory Representatives who regularly display new mod­els especially designed for the College Man.

Below are a few of the Universities where Regals are the accepted footgear styles-and the recognized standard of shoe values.

Princeton Lehigh Stevens Pennsylvania Georgetown Carnegie Inst. Tech. Washington & jefferso:1 North Carolina William &. Mary Duke

Dartmouth Brown Washington California Stanford Oregon Michigan Lafayette Rutgers New York

Northwf"stern Ohio State Oregon State Illinois Fordham Boston Chicago Holy Cross Pittsburgh Penn. State

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F- M><~ '" W'"" ill From C..rt ro ""'''

REGAL -i~ Slri(OES Regal Factories, Whitman, Mass. -~ · Stores in all Principal Cities

REG. U.S. PAT. OFF.

Dean Bryan. The fourth cuorse having been

'ietTe!l. cigars were passed around the banquet table. Soon the smoke rolled, can·ying with it laughter from good jokes and tales of old. With a good cigar eYery man seemed to have grown more protuberant in heroism. All ld.nrls of experiences were told. Every­body had a good timE> together. Dean Bryan made an honesL confession in saying that it was a happy occasion fo1· him because he had a chance to tulle To the left, Dr. Reid smiled ap­provingly.

It was necessary for Dr. Jordan to catch a midnight train in Raleigh, re­sulting in the curtailment of the ban­Quet about 11:30 o'clock. \Vllile in the village Dr. Jordan and Prof. Wright were entertained by Dr. Reid

A. D. Hurst, Hubert; E. 0. Bur­roughs. Jr., Bethel; B. N. Barnes, Lum­berton; .J. L. Tolar and T. L. Tolar, Latta, S. C.; 0. L. :\'orment, \Vhite­ville; .r. T. Gaskill, Sea Level; IV. 0. Reccl, Hcmlersonville; H. L. Snugg3, Albemarle; S. A. McDuffie, Lumberton; .T. 0. Powers. \Vallace; B. L. \Vest, 'Varsaw; C. V. Harrill, Shelby; IV. T. Smith. Boykins, "\'a.; C. R. Long, Ellen­boro; R. E. Plemmons, Asheville; J. 'T. 'V. Davis, 2\'lt. Airy; C. B. Vause, :i'llt. Olive; J. B . .Joyner, Winton; A. S. Holt, Durham; A. L. Aycock, Elberon; E. G. Snyder, Lexington, and Dr. A. C. Reid, Wake Forest.

-Miss Isabel Starbuck has returned from \Vindsor, Conn., where she '~as called on account of the illness of her brother. •:·~~CI.._,l.._,.)~t~._,.;~··· and Dean Bryan, respectively. j ~

The two national officers eXllressecl i Dickson Brothers I their thanks for the Southern hospi- _ I tality given them. The gala event was I Dealers in i hrough t to a close amid exultations of j : good wishes and happy expressions by i G 1 M h d" I

- enera .r ere an 1se a the various fraternal brothers. At the ! miclnight hour the battle was won I Edison Mazda Lamps 1 after over two years of in!' and paper I iii battling, and all were glad to see the 1 Shoes, Shirts and ' Wake Forest Education Club installed i I

1

as the Sigma Chapter of Kappa Phi

1

_ Sweaters 1 1

Kappa. I = I This is a very conservative frater· I

1 - "COME TO SEE US" I

nity, as is attested by the colleges in 1!.' -· _ • • ,. D.-1~,...,~~......,._., •••

Real College Samples Are Now On Disnlay

A wonderful assortment of the finest all-wool and worsted imported and domestic suitings and top coats at three popular prices-

$35 $48 WE INVITE YOUR EARLY INSPECTION OF

THE NE WSAMPLES NOW ON DISPLAY

Over Four Hundred of the Newest Nov­elty and Staple Patterns to Select From

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136 Fayetteville Street RALEIGH, N. C. Exclusive Local Agency For

THE SCHAEFER TAILORING COMPANY CINCINNATI, OHIO

• I I

AT DEAC01'

DEBA:TE "\1

Vol. IX

SEVERE KEEPS TEAM

With Except Varsity B tically Do Wave.

COACH DO: PO

Timberlake den; Hoot Second an• Contested.

Coach John ball squad is, : outdoor athleti• mant during t pitchers and ca work-out each for two or thr• rest of the :t;

inert. SimmoD Smith have be during the initi who has been arm, is now tal signment each

The two i: brought forth Bill Timberlak• has been shifte• It had been g• Bill would be position in cent son and Chaka: and base, witl: down the sh01 moving of Bra: the bat to first outs has been talk concerning caught for the 1 been steadily irr He has played and the pressin sacker has cau make the chan not necessarily : and Phelps wil ping if Hood is

Pete Joyner a· down the hot c work-outs. One all probability, regular third b

Coach Caddell his pitchers "tw hurling bee in f is attracting qu tention. Carrel ner are showin it is expected 1 good shape witl

The squad has itself from fort; Caddell says th· cut until after exhibition gam Deacons are pia: earnest when th

Glee Club For'

E.C.T.C. Girl Smithfield 'J Date Furnh

One of the 1 has ever heard Club greeted th by Director Cm appeared in the Carolina TeachE ville last Frida cert given in G1 on Saturday ev ance of the mu where the first the Glee Club fo nated.

To say that greeted by one o: that has ever means very !itt approximately n ones who tunec ville were of the that remark to least it would ch: siderably to th< troupe headed 1 Unofficial, very t ered by some r gave the total Greenville colleg would be safe tc at least 500 girls the Wake Fares on the stage.

The audience ance and made a curtain rose for concert one of th down near the fr familiar fifteen r A Wake Forest G have followed tl fairly good con•

(Continue