library E TAK-HEE OFFICIAL ORGAN OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION VOL. 19 UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA, CHAPEL HILL' N. C, THURSDAY, APRIL 6, 1911 NO 45 ALL ABOARD FOR GREENSBORO! TH v vi TEAM LEAVES TOMORROW SPECIAL SATURDAY MORNING v Excursionists Will Have Half Day in the Gate Gty. Coach Claticey and our bunch of ball artists will leave for the scene of bat tle, Friday. This will give them a chance to become familiar with the grounds. ' The Baseball Special will leave at 8:30 a. m. Saturday, arriving Greens boro at 11:30 a. m. Returning the ' Special will leave Greensboro at 11:50 p. m. Saturday night and will arrive at the Hill almost any old time. The , train will be composed of palatial day coaches with smoking compartments, etc. Managers Stewart, Graham and Oliver will probably endeavor to get a refreshment car attached for the re turn trip. Those who take the trip will have nlpntv of time to visit the various points of interest of which Greens boro's citizens are so proud, such as the ..flnilfnrd battle ground, the Court House and the Ciirnegie Library. Tickets for the game will be on sale at the Athletic Store until tonight Only a limited number of grand stand tickets will be sold. All students should get in the Carolina bleachers which will be along the first base line Rev. R. W. Hogue Receives Call From Baltimore Church Carolina 8 Lafayette 2. Saturday, Carolina pounced on La fayette and galloped away with the second game, 8.-2. Home talent occu pied the limelight from the first to the 9th. -The game was highly satisfactory to campus fandom. The boys showed an inclination for timely swatting. Our battery worked nicely Lee hurl ing steadily and Witherington show ing good form behind the rubber. We iced the game in the first two rounds. In the initial inning, with one down, Edwards laid up against a fast one and sent it monoplaning. The sphere finally came to rest in the forest primeval on the other side of the left field fence. In the second a walk, a bobble and Thad Page's bin gle shoved two more home. Five morei came in the 7th with two hands down. Page singled and Lee and Pember walked. Burr Edwards then L slammed one to left center for three cushions. Calmes got a.safe one scor ing Edwards. Hasty was hit and Lindsay's single counted Cal for our , last score of the game. The visitors scored in the 5th and 7th. An error and a one bagger put one across in the 5th and a couple of errors enabled them to get their second and last man around the circuit in the 7th. The Official Score: Carolina A. B. II. R. O. A. E. Pember If 3 0 110 0 Edwards 3 b 4 2 2 0 2 1 It became known last week, when two representatives of the Ascension Church in Baltimore were here that Rev. Mr. Hogue would be called to that church. Mr. Hogue, although appreciating this flattering call com ng from one of "the largest churches in Baltimore the largest in attend ancegave these two gentlemen a discouraging reply to take to their peo pie in Baltimore. This, however, did not have a discouraging effect up on the church of the Ascension, for on oaturaay noon last, live prominent business men, Messrs. Wm. A. Wheat ley, C. B. I. Swindell, John Black, G. Heberton Evans and Dr. J. Williams Lord, visited the Hill and on Saturday evening extended to Mr. Hop-ue. in o f the name of their church, a formal call. The field of work which they represent is a large one including be sides the regular congregation much institutional work in societies, clubs ani missions Especially is the parish noted for it large number of young uicu w uu suuw a great interest in chchur work. Mr. Hogue has con sen ted to visit Baltimore and look the field over, but by no means has he led them to believe that there will be probability of his resigning his charge here. His promise to go was upon the urgent request of these visiting gentlemen. Mr. Hogue came to Chapel Hill two'years ago, last October, and since that time has done effective work among the students here, who hold him in high regard. Through his initiative, plans have been made for (Continued on fourth page) CAROLINA'S TRACK SEASON WILL OPEN APRIL 17TH "THE EVE OF SECESSION" Dr. Prospeds Point to . Better Team Than Last Year's. April 17th marks the opening of the j University's track season. On that date Carolina will contest in the Intra state meet at Raleigh. Here's a de- Boyd of Trinity Reads Paper on State's Secession. Calmes lb 4 11 12 0 0 Hasty 2b 3 10 12 0 Lindsay ss 4 1 0 1 2 0 Hanesrf 3 0 2 1 0 2 Witherington "4 1 1 10 2 0 Page cf 4 2 1 1 0 0 Lee p 3 0 0 0 4 1 32 8 8 27 12 4 Lafayette A. B. H. R. O. A. E. Harrison 2b 5 10151 Williams s 3 11130 Conover c 4 0 0 4 1 1 Fager rf 4 1 0 1 0 0 Cedarquist ss 4 0 0 1 2 0 Keeler lb 4 0 0 ; 15 0 0 Melan If 4 1110 0 Fillmore cf 4 0 0J 0 0 0 Nugent p 3 1 0 0 2 1 35 5 2 24 13 3 Three base hit Edwards. Home run- -1M wards, stolen bases Lind say, Hasty. Double plajs. Lindsay to Calmes. Hasty to Calmes. Harri son to Heeler, liases on balls Oft Lee 1, of Nugent 3. Hit by pitcher Iasty, Nugent. Struck out by Lee 1, by Nugent 4. Passed balls With erington 1, Conover 1. Wild pitch- Lee. Time of game 1:41 Umps Roach Stewart. I Dr. W. K. Boyd of Trinity College before an audience almost filling the Y. M. C. A. auditorium Monday night read a paper on "North Carolina on the Eve of Secession." Dr. Boyd was c j I present under the auspices of the ianv.it oiling ut uuuc uu uui muspecis. , . Although not as many men are out State literary and Historical Society, for. track as there were at times last and .was Pmarily to the Society year, there is little slackening of in- that his paper was presented. He be- terest or diminishing of work with the en b the political condi- candidates. Already over seventy tlons eating the years previous to men have passed under the Coach's the war' as exemplified in the differ ed this season, and up to' the present Parties and factions. The two time about half as many as this are l?adl"S" Partles were the Whis and reporting regularly for training and the Democrts. The principal differ-work-outs everyday. Coach Cartmell ence between these parties was that has thus been enabled to get a pretty the Whl"s beheved in secession re fair line on the material available for gardless of the constitutional right to the spring meets. I do so, while the Democrats beheved xu me spnnis rne team win oe weak uv"vu'"uu, wi. wuamuuvu. as lonp-as Winston continues to work 850 Democrats carried the Stateby an with the baseball squad. He is a val- overwhelming majority on the pinciplek uable asset to the team and could of "dividual rights and the right' of. greatly strengthen it if he would. He secession within the constitution. The holds an enviable record as a sprinter, State Democracy was early divided in- J having won the 100 yard dash in the I1.31 wanm Iac"ons, although State meet two years ago, and having ewswn as a remeay lor tne south scored 25 out of a possible thirty was repudiated; by the j Legislature, pointy in the dashes of Carolina's three The lssue was becoming . sharply dual meets last spring.' Without Win- drawn' however,' and the slave-hold-ston, either Hoffman, Barker, Sears, ing aristocracy was gaining more and or. Hummel will have to work in the more stren:th, fcthe depredations of short sprints. The quarter mile still John Brown &ainin& them many ad remains weak. Hoffman is a good herents -man but is needed in other events. The luestlonof States' rights was Wakely, Blalock, and Solomon are the not the only one at this time though other contestants for this place. paramount. Thepublic lands system The distance men should be a little in the West was such as to discour stronger than last year. In the mile, age men of sma11 means frota buying . Llorens, Patterson and Soenrp arP An- lands- In I860 the further supremacy. ing best, while in the two-mile, C. Pf the Democracy was threatened by Cobb, W. B. Llorens and Patterson Iactionalism 0t various sorts. are running-well. iviorens ran in h " luc Iauius vnarjesion conven- mile and two-mile last year and scored tion' . HoldirJ representing North . twelve out of a a possible twenty Carolina' protested against secession. points. With more exoerience h p Al inis tlme' many conflicting pnn4l should do even better this year. Hoff- ciPles watred against each other, thus man, who holds the State record on the passion for the Union collided the half at 2:02 4-5. is in good form w ' re or the ri8"hts of the and is determined to lower his own bouth. I he Whigs were against sec- cession, some Democrats thought it premature, and the radical Democrats were willing to go any length for Southern rights. This issue was not decided until 1860, when Lincoln's call for troops to subdue South Carolina forced North Carolina to fight either with the South or against her. is record this year. In the hurdles Captain Ruffin again on the high hurdles and Carsley is running well with him as a team mate. Barker and Wood are showing up best on the low hurdles; but they are not yet up to their past form. Wood ran very well two years ago, but was troubled last year with rheu matism Barker scored a first and two second places in the three meets last Jacob Riiss, the noted New York year. tot h of these men, with hard autnor, social worker and reformer fraitiiticr cVinull Kn . I will Tnalrp ilia frmmn,,i. jj t - Lc va.iua.uic poini I wuiuiuivcujcui auurcss winners. at innity College, Durham, on June It is in the field events that Carolina can count for more safe scores than at any other point. Atkinson at the hammer throw and Parsley on the vault are both good for first places in most of Carolina's meets. Neither was beaten last year in his event. Gordon (Continued on fourth page) the 7th. One-hundred universities and col leges are represented in Congress. Of the 490 members, 297 are college men. One-third of the Freshman at Yale have joined the Wednesday evening Bible study class. Last Star Course Toriight---StariJQuartette JL