Tine Teir- Heel. UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. BOARD OF EDITORS C. Whitmjck, - - - Editor-in-Chief. P. D. Gold, Jr. Managing Editor. ASSOCIATE EDITORS. R, W. E. Cox D. W. CONNOR :! Local. R. E. FoiLin, - . -. - - - Exchange. Percy Whitakkr, - - - - - Athletjc, Mary S. MacRab, Literary. F. O. Rogers, E. D. Broadhdrst, , 0 I Business Manager. Ass't Business Mgr. Published every Tuesday by the General Athletic Association. Subscription Price. $1.50 per Year. Payable m advance or during first term. Single Copies, 5 Cents. All matter intended for publication should be ad dressed to the Editor-in-chief and 'accompanied by a a me f writer. Entered at. the Post Office, in Chapel Hill, N, C as . second-class mail matter. fectually the salient points of a sub ject, he will lack the power to con vince. ' And this power must be ac quired by training. This training is to be had in debating, where men meet each other in argument, each side presenting its points with accu racy that is unassailable, using lan guage that is precise and exact; each side endeavoring to pick flaws in and destroy the argument of the other. If these contests can as we believe they can, stimulate interest in this kind of work, then they are great forces in the life of the universities. We learn that arrangements will be made by which the debates of the fu ture will be held on neutral ground. We heartily endorse this movement. One side will feel as much at home then as the other. Where they are held at one or the other universities, the men who are at home have a decid ed advantage in the feeling of confi dence and support that the other men have not. , It is seldom that we have the op portuity of listening" to a debate such as that of last Friday evening. Well might we have expected the speaking- to be of a high order, since the speaker were supposed to be the best the student bodies of the two Universities could afford; but it is safe to say that the debate on a whole surpassed in excelleucy the expectations of all. The question was a difficult one, involving great constitutional, economic, and social problems; one on which is turned now the attention of statesmen; but these young men handled it with wonderful power. While we are rejoicing- over the victory, 'et we admire the men from Athens for the able manner in which they upheld their side Georgia need feel no sense but that of pride in her defeat. We are sat isfied could she not have sent two men who would have more credit ably represented her. Such contests as these are worthy of the Universities by which they were instituted. Their value is not measued alone by the benefit in the way of training they are to the few who participated in them. They quicken the literary interests of the whole body of students of the two Univereities. They are incentives to good debate in the Literary Soci eties. Men will look forward to the time when they may be sent as rep resentatives in these contests, and will contest for the appointments by better work in the the Society meet ings. Even if there are those who may never aspire to that honor, there will be a spirit engendered by those who do that will permeate the less aspiring element and incite them to better work. The art of debating is a noble and a useful art, but one which receives too little encouragement in many of our modern colleges. No matter what walk of life a man may follow, a necessary part of his education is to know how to convince others. Without this pow er he will be in a sorry plight, even though in learning he may be a walk ing encyclopaedia. A man may have natural ability as an orator, voice clear and sonorous, manner elegant jestures perfect; but unless he is able to present his facts in logical order unless he can choose and arrange ef Dr. Alderman's Letter. On the Atlantic. Feb. 15th 1898. When the Steamship "Aller" left her dock at Hoboken an Saturday Feb. 5 at noon sharp bound tor the Mediterranean one could have easily ancied that we were starting on an Artie expedition, instead of a cruise o the sunny seas. The ship plow ed her way slowly through broken ice masses, the wind blew biting cold, the blare of the brass band was a sort of frozen blare but there was much warmth of the human sort about it somehow. One saw hundreds of friends of the voyagers shouting- farewells and fluttering handkerchiefs and one saw a small ship carrying over five hundred souls starting confidently over three housand miles of sea. It is good to have letters trom those you care For at such a time, and people were madly answering them at all avail able places in order to send them off by the pilot at Sandy Hook'. ft 4 1.4 As soon as we reached the open sea rough weather began and the ship which is much smaller than the North Atlantic liners began to roll and pitch. This continued steadily for three days and quickly converted the gay steamer into noisy hospital. Many plunged straight for their state rooms, some walked about green and pitiful look ing some swathed themselves in rugs and wraps and lay up on the promenade deck in rows like dissolu- i o n e d mummies in museums. There were others who sat bolt up right in the smoking room, smoking black cigars, playing cards and act ing for all the world as if they were on an excursion from Mt. Airy to Carolina Beach instead of on . the angry Atlantic surroundetfJby hu man howls and the raging sea. was not sea sick. Mr. Caldwel and I alone escaped the malady, a least, to the point of its logical and bitter outcome. I neither missed a meal nor . los one, but there were times one day when I reflected bitterly on my un wisdom in coming and the rocking table and clattering dishes, the sud den drop from the feet of all earth ly support produced sensations tha were a sort of fine compound grip, tootnacne, vaccinated arm bicycle accident, gun-shot wound A nnnr fallow ded on board the second day out from a congestive chill. His berth was a tew doors rotn mine. I had occasion to stag ger down to my berth for some thing else to wrap with and the r 1 J il. . scene was awiui ana me- noise-, sounded like some hideous rite. The poor wife was giving away to her terrible grief and all about men and women were making moan to Neptune. And people do this for fun and recreation and pay for it. The Oriental with his contempt for he traveller seemed the only wise man. I fled this scene quickly and on j i - my way up encountereu a voting woman standing in a- passage way. She gazed on me in a shameless, in dignant way as if I were partly re- ponsible for the state of things and suddenly emitted a howl that compared quite creditable with the og-horn which was blowing at the time, one Kept it up so sieauuy and at such symmetrical intervals hat I began to fear that she had ost her mind and was playing fog- T 1 J 1 .. i .1. -1. . Horn, l saw ner toaay at cuuiui in smart gown and bridling her head ind declaring her delight at the beautiful voyage. And so it is with all. When the sea calmed and the sun shone and the air grew balmy as it did by Wednesday out they came in scores to be made happy and strong by this noble medicine of the sea. And such eating. ; An awful horn with a sort of truncated tune blows all the time and people eat all the time. It is quite the easiest place to procure food off hand that one can fancv. Swift stewards .bring it from somewhere on a wink, Dinners are qnite solemn affairs and are served with some show of style by quiet Teutonic vyaiters. There is no stupidity on earth how ever quite equal to Teutonic stupid ity which proposition may be thus illustrated. One night in my berth I had dif ficult in finding the switch to turn off the electric light, I called a steward and in excellent North Carolina German bade him put out the light. He gazed on me with a look of swift sympathy and intelli g-ence and quickly rushed out and brought and thrust under my chin a villianous looking tin contrivance. He seemed very much hurt when in . Tl . T ' i 4 crisp Jngiisn 1 toia mm to go hence and leave me be. There are some three hundred and fifty passangers on this boat from all parts of America. My room mate is from California. i-reacners predominate., ut course the majority are gentle, cultivated people but there are many on board who are to be shunned. You find yourself wondering why they came. One man was so ignorant that he thought Palestine was in Cairo wondered why he came. I tountl out later in conversation with his wife. He came to carry things ant to be useful. To be Continued. The Philanthropic and Dialectic Literary Societies dcire to thank Prof. Gore and Mr. May for their kind assistance in preparing for and enter taining the Georgia debaters. The Vanderbilt Letter and Meet- my ui tne onaKspere viuo were Carolina Debaters Win, Concluded from first page,) reach by means of coaling at s sea. as He showed farther that the P- "ncauy weu tortified anu uoes not require so great a sa rihee to be made for its defense Rnt even trrnntinnr tr fc. "u xiawaii ,. tne oniy nase and that our wet ern coast is weak, t hom u..l ' ' 13 uiu one strategic position in the whole group of islands, Pearl River Hnrh According to the report of the Unit' ed btates Commission, it is the onlv possible naval station. The speaker argued that th. United States already had the per. petual ownership of Pearl RiVer harbor, with the right to use it clip ix?rm11. I'i4- if suion oi una ngnt all strategic advantages that Hawaii could o-tVP was already obtained. He then considered the strategic result tha would follow should the Unitei States annex the islands, and en deavored to show that under a pol cy of protection by adequate' nava and coast defences, there would be tremedous expense and greater weakness than now, while under a policy ot non-protection, which wauld be the probable course, there conld be only strategic disaster It was theu claiinen that annex atiou could give no possible advant age beyonb those of either neutral ty or control. The claim tint Eng land or Japan had designs on the is lands was briefly considered. "Their neutrality is for the inter est of all nations," it was said. He laid emphasis on the fact that by joining Germany and England as was offered in 1888, the United States could guarantee their inde pendence. This proffered compact was refused, however, only because the United States considered her own guarantee sufficient. She had made a bond of commerce that was inviolable, enormous benefits by reciprocity had made the islands all they are "We are their very life." But added to this commercial union was the grat potential force of the country behind the declaration that the islands should not be mo lested. This declaration had in all other cases proved sufficient; it had been snfficient as to Hawaii for six ty years, it would be sufficient in the future. rejoinders. Mr. Roberts. He challenged the negative to show another island com manding the strategic position of Ha waii. He discussed several other solu tions of the Hawaiian problem, and showed them to be either impossible or suicidal to American interests. Mr. Brogden in a humorous manner proved some of his own points by the argument of the affirmative. 1 policy of annexation would, according to their argument, make it our duty w annex China, Japan, and France. showed the inability of the Ilawaiins to exercise either tentorial or w government. . t Mr. Upshaw made a cool and poll ed rejoinder, strengthening Jus side d) bringing out several new J111.13- , present treaty with Hawii is liable i and the pangs of despised love. crowded out this week. present treaty hp' nrrrnirr n nnv tlUlO possesion of Hawaii Ave might, in t . of war with England, transport int seat of war to Australia, the c0 ' own country. Educational fac"1" are greater in Hawaii than in any our own states. Annexation wou save the Hawaiians from the Asw enundation that threatens to overiw them. ' - 1 Continued on 4th fagv. J 1 1