a H i "ADMIRAL" SIMMS w5 ift VwS "JIMMIE" HOWELL , SIM-JIM MERCHANTS OF VIENIES .. 7 i P. S. "SEE US FOR CLUB FEEDS" CLASS FOOTBALL MOVING AT FAST GAIT; NO CLASS TEAM NOW IN THE LEAD Beginning Wednesday, October 29, with a game between the Juniors and Seniors which resulted in a 0 to 0 tie, the Inter-class football series for 1919 is now in full swing. The teams seem to be pretty evenly matched and it is expected that a most inter esting series will be the result. The Freshmen and Sophomores met Fri day the 31st and fought to a scoreless tie, and there is much conjecture as to whether or not the bloody second year men will finally assert their su premacy over their meek and inno cent brethren. The games are being conducted unr der the management of the athletic committee of the Campus Cabinet. The series will end on Friday preced ing the Virginia game and the win ning team will be declare inter-class champion. The following teams com pose the "Class League": Seniors, Juniors, Sophomores,' Freshmen, and Professional Schools. The latter will probably embrace several teams. Med., Law, Pharmacy, and the Com mercial School may each put out a team. RESENT REGISTRATION SURPASSES THAT OF ANY YEAR IN UNIV. HISTORY (Continued from Page 1) exceptionally large, consisting of about 450 members of the unsophis ticated order. The number of stu dents in : the ; Pharmacy School this year is 53, an increase of , 33 over the registration of last year. There are 36 first year meds, as contrasted with 22 : last year. The number of second year med. students is 26, two less than last year, but this decrease is due to the small number of men which entered in 1918. Most remark able is the increase in the number of medical co-eds this year. In fact, the number has trebled within the short space of a few months. Last year there was one; this year three co-eds. There are now 104 registered in the School of Law, 58 more thn last year. The number of graduate students and co-eds has also increased. On the whole, the registration only betokens an ever greater Carolina. In fact, , had material conditions on the Hill been different , this year, it is assured that the registration would have been somewhat greater than it now is. "Bully" Massenburg, in Chapel Monday, sounded the call that is ex pected to set Carolina in motion to wards the 100 per cent goal line in the Red Cross drive that is now on in the various schools and colleges in the country. He was followed by Dr. Carroll, of the Department of Economics, who elaborated on the wide range of ser vice rendered by the Red Cross, and its consequent universal appeal to all creeds and classes. Shall the United States drop back into the old selfish ness as soon, asked Dr. Carroll, as she finishes one job? Continuing, he explained how for the neglible sum of one dollar the privilege of parti cipation in a world movement for the alleviation of suffering could be ob tained. The most flexible of all or ganizations designed to render ser vice to humanity at large, the Red Cross will be to many, declared Dr. Carroll, the medium of winning the appropation of Him who went about helping others. R. D. Ballew, '18, now with West inghouse Co., was on the Hill Fri day and Saturday. BIBLE STUDY GROUPS THE ABRAHAM SITUATION 'Read carefully Genesis, XI:31 XXV:10. Read especially for this time, Genesis, XI:31 and Genesis XXII. Abiaham. so we read, lived at one time in Ur of the Chaldees and later moved from that place" to Canaan. Have you made the trip from Ur of the Chaldees to Canan ? If you haven't you just haven't treated your self right. Ur of the Chaldees and Canaan pre sent us with two types of civilization. Let us look at that. Civilization is the offspring of religion. It takes its rise and pursues its way from the vis ion men have of God. Chaldea had its vision of God, its religion. Abra ham had his. When then ? Abra ham packed his trunk and got his schooner wagon ready and trekked for better pasturage. In Chaldea they said, "God is an enlarged individual, living in splendid isolation by Himself. Man is down here by himself. God is supreme and man is his puppet." The Chaldean built an institution around that view in order to make it work. In other words, he organized it, just as we get an idea we want to Dut across and form an organization with president and secretary and standing commit tee. Keep your eye on the idea Chal-- aea naa: uoa is everything, man is nothing, and man is God's subject to be treated as God wills. So they met one day and resolved. The result was a cast iron organization, a close cor poration, run by a king or priest, or senator or university facultv. or trust magna teor, bank president, or social leader, or parent, or what not. The object) of the organization was to whip people into line, to make them walk so. Civilization became what the king, or priest, or senator, or fa culty, or bank president, or social leader, or parent dictated. It was clear cut and easy. It was the sac rificial system the system in which the individual had no life of his own and nothing to do but stay put. cut Abraham couldn t stay puit. He said: "God isn't an isolated indi vidual. He's the living God, ;a God m our daily life and affairs. He's alive in human lives. What then ? Human beings, by reason of the God lite within, them, by reason of their pedigree, have in them the ahilitv t.n achieve, to work out destiny. They are sen active agents and can be trusted to do their own civilizing. The institution, the ore-anizatinn. ia the device men are obliged to create not to whip people into line but to grow them and, like the fulcrum, to increase their power to achieve. ihe Chaldean had cone so far in dictating policies that at last he had actually compelled the individual tn offer his child on the altar of sacri fice, as a sign and seal of his obedience. Abraham came to Canaan where he started the new, democratic movement that centered in a man instead of an organization. He wasn't vet freed from slavery to the sacrificial system ana so we nnd him (Genesis XXII), going up the hill country one day to offer his son. But he was thinking it out and there on Mount Moriah he had his clear vision of God as the liv ing God, who wants not sacrifice but a dedicated life; and instead of slay ing his son he left him free to live the God life and grow and achieve. When a faculty acts as policeman and the student has no voice in the discipline that's Chaldea. When student self government is installed that's the faculty having trekked to Canan. It's the difference between the sacrificial system and freedom. When a religoius organization tells its members what to believe and what to do and when that's Chaldea. That's Abraham offering Isaac. When I txrr--T--r-r .-r.-r-g--s. - A -s , - ' HI .....illll.'l Mil .!lll!l!llm. ; .. il flWj .'''"'1 V-' rK&CV V 'sf 1 (...' ": -. " mmXtfiW a religious organization teaches its members to practice God and grow, letteing their belief and conduct be come God directed, that the trip to Canaan. That's Abraham handing his son his self activity. When you own your friends and at tempt to bind them to what you want them to do that's Chaldea in the re gion of friendship. When you "come to the place where you give your friends their liberty, trusting them and loving them even though they stray from your ways like lost sheep that's Canan. That's the Abraham programme of friendship. That's our Lord and Master, reinstating his friends who even went back on him. When you want to study what you like, and, as you say, browse around instead of getting down to business that Chaldea in the region of study. That's to sacrifice education to your whim. When you, a merchant, sell a coca cola for ten cents when you could sell it for five cents and make a decent profit that's Chaldea. That's tak ing your customer on Mount Moriah and offering him a sacrifice on the al tar of profit. Oh, pack your trunk and get your scooner wagon ready and trek to Canaan. Be free and let others be free. Question for the class What's the place and value of the organization? When is a man free ? Also apply the Abraham principle civically. Red Cross Drive In Full Swing; Most Successfull One Yet According to Dr. Bullitt, who is in charge of the Red Cross drive in Chapel Hill, the subscription of this community for this year will exceed all previous ones. The canvass in the village and on the campus is being carried on an it will be the first of next week before a full report can be made on the result of the drive for the roll call. Indications point to a most successful drive, and Chapel Hill hopes to be a 100 per cent town. The drive on the campus has pro gressed well as is evidenced by the large number of buttons on coat la pels and the Red Cross in so many windows. All the fraternities, Carr and Smith Buildings, are 100 per cent. A large sum was collected by the co eds during the intermission at the concert Tuesday night. When a final, definite report is made, Carolina ex pects to be perfect. McDonald of Charlotte Heads Freshmen Team The freshman football team has elected as captain, A. Morris Mc Donald, Jr., of Charlotte. McDonald has had experience on the Charlotte high school and Fishburne, and is a cool, heady quarterback and an in dividual player of promise. The sixty first-year candidates who have been working for four weeks un der Coach Bond have developed into a smart, fast team that should cause a lot of trouble for their opponents. After A. E. they take on the Da vidson scrubs, Bingham School, and the University of Virginia first-year men. Weekly scrimmages with the varsity have given the youngsters plenty of hard work and recently they have shown great dash and skill in their attack, as evidenced by the re sult of the A. & E. game on Saturday. PEP MEETING The crowd that was jammed into Chemistry Hall Friday night was just as large as seating and standing space permitted. The fellows were noisily enthusiastic and gave vent to their feelings by frequent yells for every body from "Billy" Noble down. MARK ANY tobacco every tobacco- tzstes better in a WD C . Pipe. Our own specially seasoned and carefully selected French briar makes it so. Add to this the supercraftsman ship of the Demuth workers, and you'll not wonder that we claim pre-eminence in the quality of our pipes. Ask any good dealer. , WM. DEMUTH 8t CO.. NEW YORK WORLD'S LARGEST ,MAKERSOF FINE PIPES . i ; '. "First Aid for Every Homen FROM the little things that keep you well to the things that make you well, you will find this store complete in every detail of its ' ' service.' :. , Keep sickness away by keeping on hand such things as we can suggest. For cuts, burns and bruises, have a real first aid remedy. Stock up well with the sanitary bandages, antiseptic bandages, etc., that first aid needs require. Services such as suggesting these things ia but a part of our job every day. In addition you'll find us a ready source of supply for hun dreds of "First Aids to the Home." THE SEEAFFER Fountain Pen is typical of the quality of our merchandise. The pen that 'always, writes ail u ays" is like the quality tho' U "always the same always.' "And the FC-AFl'EX Sharp-Point Pencil's as guud ua the Pen" Ask for a demonstration of both. PATTERSON BROTHERS . S ' . U

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