James Morris and Stuart Sechriest, co-editors, Fletcher Ferguson, Len Rubin, Everett Peterson. Lee Turk, Ira Sarasonn, Lester Ostrow, Harry Fredericks, Charks Daniel, Phil Kind. Mailt) Wnr tkwl fetinrta I C C -" , i-aniei, trim ruse. j, PHONE 4351 CHAPEL HILL, N. C, THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1935 "FORCAROLINA SPORTSMANSfflP - " " "' " " "- ' "' - 1 mi Freshmen Defeat Duke 8-3; Humphries Stars. In Box Ace Tar Baby Twirler Sends Six teen Blue Imps Down Via Strikeout Route. Down They Go! - 4 . 3 . 3 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 4 . 4 .34 4 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 8 Carolina Frosh striKing out o men and al- Collins, ss i - lowing only six hits, Johnny Graver, 2b Humphries led the freshman Bumette, 3b ball club to an 8-3 win over the 5ricHemyer' c rL . . , rsoone, rt uuKe nrst-year ream nere yes- Lioy(j teraay. Grubb, lb The Tar Babies jumped into a LeGrande, cf lead in the very first inning and Humphries, p were never overtaken. Bunny Totals Burnette and Steye Collins shar- puke Frosh pd the battiner snotlierht with Ennis, lb .. homers in the second and eighth Lewis, ss innings, respectively. Collins followed the example Snipes, If . of all good lead-off men as he Walker, rf erot a pass on his initial trip to Smith, p the plate. Craver and Burnette Garrity, 3b . reached first on successive er rors, and Pete . Boone started things going with a single to xBatted for Lockwood in ninth. right field, which sent his mates Score by innings: across and the victors into a 3-0 Puke 000 100 02 3 , , Carolina 320 001 llx 8 ieau. l , , .1 Runs batted in: Boone (2), Brickie Collins and burnette again myer Craver (2) Burnette, LeGrande, crossed the plate, following Bur- Dean, Walker (2). Two-base hits: Lockood, 2b xMansell Totals 4 5 .... 4 4 4 4 4 .... 4 3 .. 1 .....37 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 H PO A E 12 0 0 2 12 1 12 2 2 0 16 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 16 0 0 10 0 0 10 2 0 8 27 6 3 H PO A E 19 0 2 0 112 2 8 0 0 13 0 0 110 0 12 0 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 2 0 0 01 0-000 6 24 8 6 nette's circuit clout in the Caro lina half of the second. The home team again filled the bases with but a single out in the sixth, but managed to only tal- Humphries, Grubb, Wagner (2). Home runs: Collins, Burnette. Sacri fice hits: Craver (2), Burnette. Stol en bases: Boone. Earned runs: Caro lina, 3; Duke, 1. Struck out: by Humphries, 16: by Smith, 7. Bases QUARLES-SMTH GO FEATURES DURHAM PROGRAM TONIGHT Ex-Carolina Champion Will At tempt to Settle Score in Ban ner Warehouse Battle. BOUTS COMMENCE AT 8:30 Tapering off his extensive training seige with a light work out yesterday, Norment Quarles appeared to be in excellent con dition for his return bout with Steve Smith tonight in the Ban ner Warehouse, Durham. A CAROLMA-W. & L MEET ON LINKS Former S. I. C. Champs to Face Tar Heels Today in Season Final At Greensboro. 3. Left on base: Carolina, 8; Duke, 8. Passed balls: Bricklemyer (2), Smith. Umpire: Fysal. Time of game: 1:45. PATRONIZE OUR . ADVERTISERS ly once. Grubb counted in the on balls: off Humphries, 1; off Smith, seventh following a double, and Collin's homer in the eight com pleted the winner's scoring. The Imps first dented the scoring column in the fourth in ning when Wagner drove to left field for two bases, and scored on Walker's single. This was the only earned run Humphries gave up during the nine-inning; stretch. A two-run rally in the eighth inning ended Duke's scoring for the afternoon. After watching1 Quarles fin ish his work, the writer journey ed to Durham to get a glimpse of the Bridgeport Bomber in ac tion. Smith worked two fast rounds against Tommy O'Flah erty, and twTo more with Red Lewis, who will see action in the semi-final. (Continued on last page) The Carolina varsity golf team will meet Washington and Lee this afternoon over the Sedge field course at Greensboro in its final dual meet of the season. The Generals are the defend ing Southern Conference cham pions and have experienced a fine season thus far. Leading the play against the Lexington outfit will be Captain Erwin Laxton, individual con ference champ in 1932. Dick Harris will be the choice for number two position. Wilson Coffin, newly crowned state intercollegiate title hold er, will fill the number three post, while fourth place will find Walter Pijanowski, S. I. C. finalist, fulfilling the assignment. Late Bulletin Duke's freshman golfers made it two straight over the Tar Heel frosh yester day afternoon at the Hope Valley course, winning by a 16-2 score. Gordon Gifford, playing number four, was the only Carolina man to win. SEND THE DAILY TAR HEEL HOME Today's Mural Card Baseball 4 :00 Ringers vs. Grimes. 5 :00 Kappa Alpha vs. Sig ma Nu. Tennis 4:30 Phi Gamma Delta vs. A. T. O., Aycock."A" vs. Man ly, Alpha Epsilon No. 1 vs. Alpha Epsilon No. 2, , Delta Tau Delta vs. St. Anthony Hall, Zeta Psi vs. Phi Kappa Sigma, Phi Delta Theta vs. Sigma Nu. VARSITY TO PLAY WOLFPACK TODAY Carolinals varsity baseball team will end its annual four- game series with State College at Raleigh this afternoon. In three meetings State has taken two to Carolina's one. The opposing moundsmen will probably be Stuart Flythe for the Wolf pack, and either Irby Wright or Fred Crouch for the Tar Heels. The Carolina team wTill be without the services of Captain Thurman Vick, and his post at centerfield will no doubt be fill ed by Cicero Groome, southpaw7, from Greensboro. Minor Returns Bill Minor, varsity tennis star, is back in school after winning the only singles match against Princeton. Due to work in the law school, Bill was unable to continue the northern trip. CAROLINA BEATS WEST POINT, 6-3; MATCjffiS CLOSE Army Team Sends Real Scare Into Tar Heel Ranks; Take Two Singles, One Doubles. (Special to the Dailt Tar Heel West Point, N. Y., May 8. University of North Carolina' crack contingent, on its annual eastern tour, today downed the U. S. Military Academy tennis club, 6-3. Although the southerners walked off with top honors in the final scoring, the Cadets gave Carolina a scare in capturing the number one and two singles and then leading after the first sets wTere run off in the doubles matches. Harvey Harris, cotton haired key man for the Carolinians, had Daly, Cadet ace, 4-1, in the final set to lose ultimately 6-4. The matches were well at tended by an enthusiastic gal lery. The courts were fast, and the weather was ideal. SUMMARY Singles: Daly (A) over Harris, 6-3, 6-4; Tyler (A) over Willis, 6-3 6-3; Levitan (NC) over Waters, 6-3 5- 7, 6-4; De Gray iNC) over Worth ington, 6-4, 8-6; Shore (NC) over Bell, 6- 2, 3-6, 6-1; Henderson (NC) over Chenoweth, 8-6, 7-5. Doubles: Harris-Abels (NC) over Waters-Tyler, 3-6, 6-1, 6-2; Daly-Wor-thington (A) over Levitan-De Gray, 6-3, 6-2; Shore-Henderson (NC) over Bell-Chenoweth, 3-6, 6-3, 6-2. Mural Results BASEBALL Everett - 131 045 216 Old West ' 032 012 0 8 Lewis 100 000 2 3 Swain Hall 310 202 x 8 TENNIS Sigma Chi (2), T. E. P. (0): Clover (SC) over Goldberg, 5-0, 2-5, 5-1; Barney (SC) over Eisenberg, 5-4, 3-5, 5-4. Kappa Alpha No. 1 (2), Pi Kappa Alpha (0): Lovell (KA) over McCall, 5-1, 5-3; Lovell and Everett (KA) over McCall and Robeson, 5-1, 5-3. Lewis (1), Old West (1): McNair (OW) over Kason, 5-4, 5-0; Smith (L) nvpr T .on Ann -5-2. 5-4: Kason and Smith vs. McNair and London - - (OW), 6-4, 4-5 (match unfinished). Kluttz Building (2), Mangum (0): forfeit. Beta Theta Pi (2), Chi Psi (1): Read (B) over Kavanaugh, 5-0, 5-1; Barwick (CP) over Van Hecke, 5-1, 2-5, 5-3; Reid and Van Hecke (B) over Barwick and Hagey, 3-5, 5-0, 5-0. Be COOL and Smartly Dressed at the Junior-Seniors DINNER JACKETS LIGHTWEIGHT TUX PANTS TUXEDOS TUX SHIRTS STUDS CUFF LINKS TUX TIES, Tied or Untied, Black or White TUX COLLARS BLACK SILK HOSE TUX VESTS TUX BRACES RENTAL TUXEDOS C Z4 BASEBALL f j lf&J I - " f f-if Tr SiSiH r 7 X DIV,NG L l V. Jf N.Y.G,on . 1 .ri 1 ? GEORGIA COLEMAN J , , . 5 X W. A ' - ff ' l . - 6 $ Winner Nono. V , fej X - I W Hfti' I lA " V ond Olympic Title WV J KV GLF U I SQUASH RACQUETS . tf f'fiY . 121 J! Vl FSWylA "J JOHN L. SkILLMAN j'ff . -Art&l 'IMf V X'-'VV-S6 'its'V l , ! BASKETBALL W , SfiSj. f, 1 : V&2 nte& Camels for ;X r t!t t Xf , I f T V JTV-"'Ex The tnild cigarette the athletes smoke is the mild cigarette for YO U! A cigarette so mild you can smoke all you want that's what athletes say about Camels. And when a champion talks about 'condition' "wind" healthy nerves real tobacco mildness he's got to know. Gene Sarazen says: "Playing as much as I Jo I have to keep in condition. I smoke Camels steadily. They are so mild they never cet my 'wind' never upset my nerves, Other athletes back him up. . . ."I smoke all the Camels I want, and keep in top con dition," says Mel Ott, slugger of the New York Giants. . . . Georgia Coleman, Olympic diver, says: "Camels don't cut down on my wind. ". . . Bill Miller, oarsman; Jim Lan caster, N. Y. U.'s 1934. basketball captain; John Skillman, pro squash racquets cham pion hundreds of sports stars smoke Camels regularly and report that Camels never get their "wind" or nerves. What this mildness means to you! ... It means you can smoke Camels all you want! Athletes have made this discovery: Camel's costlier tobaccos are so mild, they can smoke all they please, without disturbing their "wind" or nerves. CONDITION IS IMPORTANT TO YOU TOO on vacation, in college, at home. You can keep "in condition," yet smoke all you please. Athletes say: "Camels never get your wind." dfii 717 ..mi ii7'.-; i its Li COSTLIER TOBACCOS! O Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS Turkish and Domestic than any other popular brand. (Signed) R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY, Winston-Salem, N.C ! 1 i ; t v O 1225. E. J. EynoId Tob. Co.

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