v*
I
%»?
ififep
\f* --*
v.*
_ —
■ a*
-
E^sy
1c
l\*
^«*
.***
li^T
*-**- rf
- -*►•
S g jfcs
"St- "*"*
»Sb»
1 -*£" <1
.^
**S*
j^t-jl
^■l^v:
m
Volume VII
THE
Number 1
a
iljiimi ■mm mil uiiiiiiiiiiiiifi
3
=5
ALVMNIREVIEW
O
o
o
o
OCTOBKK, l^kS
o
OPINION AND COMMENT
The New Order— Status of the S. A. T. C. Student—
1919's Responsibility— The Roll of Honor— Oc-
tober Twelfth— It's Up to You— A Fine
Suggestion
CAROLINA ESTABLISHES S. A. T. C. UNIT
The Daily Schedule of the Campus is That of a
Government Camp
FORTY-EIGHT WIN COMMISSIONS
Carolina Men Attend Summer Camp at Plattsburg
LETTERS FROM THE FRONT
Carolina Men Relate Their Experiences Overseas
O
O
o
Iff 1.
PUBLISHED BY
THE ALVMNI ASSOCIATION
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
Maximum of Service to the People of the State
Special [instruction under the direction of the faculty and the U. S. War Department
for students in an official Students' Army Training Corps.
Regular [ntruction for students not eligible to the Students' Army Training Corps in
the Liberal Arts, Applied Science, Law, Medicine, Pharmacy, and Education.
General Instruction for the public through the following departments of the Bureau of
Extension; (1) General Information; (2) Lectures and Study Centers; (3) Correspondence
Courses; (4) Debate and Declamation; (5) County Economic and Social Surveys; (6) Muni-
cipal Reference; (7) Educational Information and Assistance; (8) Information Concern-
ing tbe War.
WRITE TO THE UNIVERSITY WHEN YOU NEED HELP
For information regarding the University, address
THOS. J. WILSON, JR., Registrar.
MAKE THE EAGLE ON
YOUR DOLLARS SCREAM
VICTORY
BUY
Liberty m Loan
BONDS
THE SEEMAN PRINTERY, Inc.
DURHAM, N. C.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Volume VII
OCTOBER, 1918
Number 1
OPINION AND COMMENT
The University is opening in a way so unusual
that it is difficult to describe the many changes in
detail, or to indicate the departures from
™ former traditions. The catalogue has
been discarded as a general guide to the
entering students. The campus has become a govern-
ment camp, the dormitories are barracks, the dining
hall, a mess hall. The Y. M. C. A. has assumed the
functions of a "Y" hut, and the general program of
the University conforms to strict military require-
ments. In all of the change, however, one fact stands
out clearly: the University is thoroughly aligned with
those forces which have as their object the winning
of the war, and to that end, along with the Students'
Army Training Corps of 400 or more colleges and
universities, it is devoting its entire energy. For-
merly its function has been to train men for profes-
sional and educational activities. Its first duty now
is to help bring the war to a speedy end and to pre-
pare leaders for the reconstruction which will follow.
In taking over the universities and colleges of
America for this special purpose, the government
lias made complete the transition begun in the Uni-
versity immediately after war was declared. In its
great task of developing officer material, it has madi
use of the plant, equipment, and faculties of the one
American institution which has shown itself mos!
capable of producing this desired product. In doing
this, it has saved the machinery of the colleges an I i3
utilizing it to its own special ends. The whoid
process is one which calls forth admiration of every
one and is in keeping with the expectation that Amer-
ica will apply intelligent methods in the handling of
all of her mammoth war undertakings.
As indicated, swift changes have taken place, and
it is but natural to expect that others will quickly
follow. The one significant fact will remain, how-
ever, that the University has always trained men for
service for the State and Nation, and in this moment
its purpose will not be found different from that of
the past, It accepts the challenge given it by the gov-
ernment, and the alumni can confidently expect' that
J it will function true to form. If evidence of this
q- is desired, a visit to the campus will furnish it in
0 convincing completeness.
STATUS OF THE
S. A. T. C. STUDENT
There has been more or less misapprehension on
the part of alumni (as indicated for example in the
State press by Judge Clark
and Captain Edmund Jones)
to the effect that the draft
registrants between 18 and 20 years old now being en-
rolled in the S. A. T. C. units in North Carolina
colleges are escaping the democratic application of
the Selective Service Act and consequently form a
privileged class. In order to clear up this misap-
prehension The Review directs the attention of the
alumni to the article which appears elsewhere in this
issue describing the plan of operation under the S.
A. T. ('.. and makes the following comments:
1. No 18 or 20 year-old student is admitted to
the S. A. T. ( '. (of the Collegiate Section, such as
that at Carolina) unless he is a draft registrant, is
physically fit, and has a minimum of 12 entrance
units obtained from a standard high school.
2. By entering college, and thereby entering the
S. A. T. C, he becomes on October 1st a soldier in
the United States Army witb the status and pay of
a private, is subject to military control and any de-
mand the War Department may make upon him.
3. Consequently, instead of escaping or postpon-
ing service, he puts himself into it before non-colleg-
iate registrants (who await the call of their local
boards) and by so doing hastens the completion of
his training in this country before going overseas.
4. He puts himself immediately at the service of
the War Department which trains him and deter-
mines what service he is best fitted for. Having de-
termined this, he may be ordered to report to, (a) an
officers' training corps, (b) a non-commissioned offi-
cers' training school, (c) a depot brigade, or, (d) to
continue in cither a collegiate or vocational section
of the S. A. T. C, for such technical or special train-
ing as the needs of the service require.
5. Unless he enters college and thus the S. A. T.
C. (which is in reality a training and distributing
camp), he will wait his call and be sent by his local
board to a depot brigade or cantonment by which,
after being tried out, he may be transferred to any of
the places mentioned in a, b, c, or d above. In this
way his entrance into the service is simply delayed
4
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
from 1 to 6 months or more, and after he has finally
entered service, he may rind himself transferred to
a S. A. T. C. unit of the collegiate grade.
0*. The significant fact is this: the S. A. T. ('.
unit at Chapel Hill is a War Department camp just
as much so as Camp Jackson, the only difference
being that the IS to 20 year-old registrant could enter
this unit on October 1st. while he could not enter
( 'am]> Jackson until he was sent. It is the story of the
first Oglethorpe over again. Those who seemingly
were qualified for officers' positions responded to the
call in May, 11(17, and most of them are in France
to-day. Others waited their turn in the draft and
through its sifting processes are ( many of them ) still
receiving their training and just now reaching des-
tinations for which they were fitted.
7. It is also to he noted that the courses for the
S. A. T. C. students are arranged upon a 12-weeks
basis for the 20 year-olds, a 24-weeks for the 10 year-
olds, and that instruction for the 18 year-olds is to be
so abridged that they may complete it and the neces-
sary supplementary training required elsewhere and
then he in in France in the one-year period which
the War Department has indicated it will allow to
elapse before any of the 18 year-old men are sent
overseas.
DDD
For the first time in the history of the University
the Senior clas^ returns to the campus to find itself
grouped according to the age of its
members rather than to the number
of years it has spent in college, and
to he transferred from this military camp to others
probably within the next three months. Participa-
tion in normal campus activities for the class is at an
end as the military rule here is no whit different from
that of the camp or cantonment, except in the case of
such members of the University as do not belong to
the S. A. T. C.
Although this is true. Tin-: Review believes that
there is a very important work for the members of
1919 to carry through, even though they may no
longer he grouped together in one unit as formerly.
In them the spirit of democracy and service which
has distinguished Carolina is best conserved, and it
is !<>r them to pass this on to their comrades. They
constitute the vital point of contact between the
past and the future. Tn order that the fine tradi-
tions of the University may he transmitted to the
new order, 1919 must utilize its opportunity to the
lull. The alumni confidently look to 1910 for this
service.
That many sons of Carolina were to pay the -n-
preme price for their devotion to justice and liberty
was inevitable. Already the list is con-
1919's RE-
SPONSIBILITY
THE ROLL
OF HONOR
iderable, anil each week in the future it
will grow. Similarly, the total of
wounded or missing; for the end is not yet. and
Carolina men will be in the front of the fray until
the end. And, similarly, the awards of honor for
bravery in action may be counted on to mount.
The Review carries elsewhere the Roll of Honor.
It doesn't single out for special praise any of the list.
For the memory of Quincy Mills and David Graham
and John Manning Battle and their fallen comrades
is sacred to Alma Mater. In the hour that their coun-
try called them they answered, and in answering they
died not merely for their country hut for mankind
and for all the things of worth which other men live
for and will live and die for in the generation-, to
come.
DDD
October Twelfth. 1918, will find the ranks of the
local alumni associations greatly depleted by members
in service. lint this should
OCTOBER TWELFTH . x x1 . ,
not deter the members who re-
main from planning for the annual meeting and car-
rying out a purposeful program. There is one spec-
ial duty which should receive attention by all such
meetings — the record of the members in service
should he carefully compiled, and an accurate copy
of it, together with a report of the meeting, should he
sent to The Review. The office of Alumni Secretary
of the General Association is being filled in absentia
by Mi-. Rankin, and for that reason The Review
calls upon the local association to act in this matter.
The Review makes the further suggestion that
when the local secretary sends in the complete list
he also send a check to cover a subscription for each
name in the list ! Keep the home fires burning !
DDD
The Review has received two complaints during
the summer to the effect that it does not give sufficient
attention to the activities of alumni who
IT'S UP
TO YOU
are in service in the Xavy. And, it must
he confessed, that the criticism is true.
This fact, however, is due to no intention on the
part of The Review, but to its difficulty in securing
information. In the case of men in the Army, notices
constantly appear in the newspapers about them and
every week an alumnus fresh from camp with direct
information about Carolina men is hack on the Hill.
Rut not so with the men in the Xavy. They put to
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
sea, and then a mantle of silence falls over them as
if they were ''spurlos versenkt '.
All of which prompts The Review to urge every
alumnus, whether in the service or out, to assist it in
keeping Carolina's record full and complete. It is
up to the alumni to assist in this highly important
particular. Short items concerning the whereabouts
of Carolina men and their work will be appreciated.
From a letter written by A. II. Bahnson, of Win-
ston-Salem, The Review excerpts a suggestion
which it ] (asses on to the alumni for
whatever it may be worth. '"Enclosed
you will find a check for $5 to cover
renewal of my subscription and subscription of some
of our boys in France. Use it as you see tit. Do not
waste postage by acknowledging."
A FINE
SUGGESTION
CAROLINA ESTABLISHES S. A. T. C. UNIT
The Daily Schedule of the Campus is that of a Government Camp
Through the operation of General Order 79 issued
by the War Department on August 24th, 19.18, the
University is operating today, in the main, as a mil-
itary camp, of which the Students' Army Training
( lorps unit is the center.
As has been explained by press dispatches and spec-
ial articles, the S. A. T. C. has been established in
about 400 American universities and colleges by order
of President Wilson under authority of the Selective
Service Act id' May IS, l'.MT. It is administered by
the War Department through the Committee on Edu-
cation and Special Training, assisted by an Advisory
Education Hoard, together with Educational Di-
rectors, Regional Directors, and Special Advisors.
Object of S. A. T. C.
The object of establishing the S. A. T. C. is to
utilize effectively the plant, equipment, and organi-
zation of the universities and colleges for selecting
and training officers and technical experts for service
in the existing emergency. By next spring the War
Department will need approximately 200,000 offi-
cers and it looks to the college campus for a large
per cent id' them.
S. A. T. C. Regulations
Eligibility in the S. A. T. C. is limited to regis-
trants, students having become eighteen after Sep-
tember 12th being debarred until they become regis-
trants at such future date as may be announced by
the War Department. After October 15 those regis-
tered before September 12 may be inducted. Ap-
plications should lie made direct to registrant's
local board. Under the selective service regu-
lations, which follow in abridged form for the in-
formation of the alumni, only those who are physi-
cally fit to perform full or limited military duty and
who can offer a minimum of 12 units from a standard
high school or preparatory school or who have equiv-
alent educational qualifications, can be admitted to
units in the collegiate section.
1 pon admission to the S. A. T. C. a registrant be-
comes a soldier, with rank and pay of a private in
the Army of the United State-; as such, he is placed
on active duty status, and is subject to military law
anil military discipline at all times.
From time to time, in accordance with the needs of
the service and qualifications of the individual, it
will be the policy of the Government to assign mem-
bers of the S. A. T. ( '. to (a) an officers' training
corps, (b) a non-oemmissioned officers' training
school, (c) a depot brigade, (d) to continue in cer-
tain cases in either a collegiate or vocational section
of the S. A. T. ( '. for such technical or special
training as the needs of the service require.
Subjects Required in S. A. T. C.
The instruction will lie partly military and partly
in allied subjects that have a value as a means of
training officers and experts to meet the needs of the
service. The allied subjects will lie ordinarily selected
from the following: English, French, German, Math-
ematics, Physics. Chemistry, Biology, Geology, To-
pography and Map Making, Meteorology, Astronomy,
Hygiene, Sanitation. Mechanical and Free Hand
Drawing, Descriptive Geography, Accounting, His-
tory, Surveying, Economics, International Law, Gov-
ernment, Psychology.
The program of study in allied subjects must in-
clude a course or courses on the underlying issues of
the war, with not more than three hours per' week in
lectures and recitations. This war issues course will
touch the fields of History. Government, Economics,
Philosophy, Modern Literature, and English Compo-
sition.
While the study of any of the subjects set forth
above should be useful as a part of the training of
future officers, the contents of the course and methods
of instruction will in all cases determine the accept-
ance of the subjects as well as the amount of credit to
he assigned to it as an allied military subject.
6
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
University Meets Requirements
Upon this basis the University has converted the
campus into a camp, the dormitories into barracks,
the dining hall into a mess hall, and every student
inducted into the S. A. T. C. is a soldier under the
direct command of Lieut. Col. G. W. S. Stevens and
members of his military staff. The faculty, operating
under the co-ordinate educational branch of the ser-
vice of which President McLauren, of the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology is Director and Pres-
ident Graham Regional Director for the South At-
lantic States, has reorganized its work to conform to
the above requirements and is offering courses in
keeping with the purpose of the War Department.
Courses Follow New Lines
In planning the courses for the Corps the faculty
has hand to follow new lines. Former senior, junior,
sophomore and freshman groups have been replaced
by groups for the 20 year-olds, the 19 year-olds, the
18 year-olds, and the non-S. A. T. C. students. The
19 and 18 year-old groups in the S. A. T. C. have also
had to be further divided into new and former stu-
dents.
Every student in the S. A. T. C. is (with a slight
reduction in the case of engineering and medical stu-
dents) required to take 11 clock hours of military
training and three recitation hours in the study of
the issues involved in the war. The remaining 11
or 12 recitation hours are taken from a list of re-
stricted electives from the subjects indicated above.
In the case of the 20 year-old group (both former
and new students), a 12-weeks course is provided in
which the training is intensive and is restricted to
immediately essential subjects such as French, Ger-
man, Topography and Map Making. Accounting,
Sanitation and Hygiene, Gas and Airplane Engines,
Trigonometry, Surveying, Practical Electricity, Mil-
itary Mathematics, Radio, etc.
For the 19 year-old group a 24-weeks course is
provided; for the 18 year-old group a 36-wceks
course. Both groups are permitted to select from a
larger list of electives than the 20 year-old group can
select from, and within each of the two respective
groups the choice of electives open to former students
is greater than that to new students. In a large per
cent of the courses recitations are held five or six
hours per week and the study is consequently very
intensive. For freshmen not in the S. A. T. ('. a
course quite similar to the regular freshman course
is provided, while advanced students not in the corps
are taking such courses as instructors can give whose
whole time is not employed in giving the required
courses.
Further Regulations
All students belonging to the corps are quartered
in the dormitories (now called barracks) and are
fed at Swain (the mess) Hall and are under strict
military discipline. All other students room and get
their meals off the campus. Such as take voluntary
training are allowed to wear uniforms (with special
distinguishing mark) for part time.
Under the new regulations the University year is
divided into four quarters of approximately twelve
weeks each. All courses are to conform to this ar-
rangement. Final reports will be recorded quarterly
on the basis of term standing and examinations, and
a three-hour course for one quarter is the equivalent
of one hour of college credit. In case any S. A. T.
C. course is not taken by more than ten students
it may be omitted.
Vocational and Collegiate Sections Explained
Under the plan of organization, two sections of the
S. A. T. C. have been provided — the Vocational and
the Collegiate. The former is for the training of
registrants (who have only a grammar school educa-
tion) in practical technical subjects such as teleg-
raphy, blacksmithing, etc. The latter is, as already
indicated for the training of registrants (who have
12 standard entrance units) as officers. The Univer-
sity unit belongs to the Collegiate section.
Marine and Naval Units Authorized
In addition to the S. A. T. C. unit, the Univer-
sity has been designated as one of the 12 institutions
in which a marine section of the S. A. T . C. is to
be established. The University's quota is 100, or
six and two-third per cent of the total number of
students, 1,500, authorized under this organization
in the United States. A marine officer and non-
commissioned officers have been detailed to this in-
stitution for the purpose of organizing and instruct-
ing such men as may voluntarily apply for induc-
tion.
It has also been designated as center for estab-
lishing a Naval Section of the S. A. T. C, with a
quota of 50 men.
Daily Schedule
In carrying out this military program the following
daily schedule is adhered to: 6:00 A. M. First Call;
6:15 Reveille; 6:30 Breakfast; 7:15 Assembly (Phy-
sical Exercise); 8:00-12:15 Academic Work; 12:30
Dinner; 1:30-2:30 Academic Work (Except Satur-
day); 1:30 (Saturday) Military Instruction; 2:35-
3:35 (Mon. Wed. Fri.) Academic Work, and (Tues.
Thur. and Sat.) Military Instruction; 4:00 Military
Instruction; 6:00 Retreat; 6:15 Supper; 7:30 Study
Call; 10:00 Taps.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
FORTY-EIGHT WIN COMMISSIONS
Carolina Men Attend Summer Camp at Plattsburg
One hundred and twenty-two Carolina men at-
tended the Plattsburg Camp on Lake Champlain this
past summer. The course of training extending
through a period of six weeks, August first to Sep-
tember 16th, was marked by a wonderful spirit of
co-operation and adaptability to the hard routine
tasks. Kb complaints were heard from any of the
3,500 to 4,()(in college men attending the camp.
Practically every college in the country was repre-
sented.
The following men received their commissions as
second lieutenants :
W. B, Anderson, W. P. Andrews, S. I!. Allen.
R. M. Riddle. It. W. Boling, Crimes Bylerly, F. C.
Cochrane, A. -I. Cummings, ( '. R. Cunningham, W.
R. Cuthbertson, F. .1. Cohn, .1. E. Daniel, M. 0.
Diekerson, J. H. Erwin, Jr., Allen Fields, L. E.
Fields, T. A. Graham, J. .1. Hankins, L. II. Eodges,
A. T. Johnson, T. S. Kittrell, E. S. Lindsey, W. 1).
McMillan, 3d, A. H. Martin, W. E. Price. .M. II.
Patterson, W. X Poindexter, F. 0. Ray, P. J.
Ranson, S. F. Ravenel, E. M. Robertson J. D Shaw,
R. F. Smith, II. M. Taylor, W. E. Thompson, ( '. R.
Toy, F. W. Turnbull, O. R. Welch, IF V. P. Wil-
son. Jr., P. II. Wilson, A. P. Wright, J. B. Yokely,
W. A. Blount, .F C. Bynum, W. W. Eagle, T. E.
Rondthaler, ('. L. Vogler, Donnel Van Xoppen.
Several honors and distinctions fell to Carolina
men during the course of the camp. Professor T. F.
llickerson was selected to give lectures on map work
to his company. Adjutant J. V. Whitfield and Jeff
Bynum were picked to take a special course in the
Adjutants' School. Three Carolina men, S. F. Rav-
enel. Leo Harvey, and J. J. Hankins, were in a
platoon of 42 selected for a special exhibition drill
for visiting college presidents. Three Carolina men
were also selected for special instruction at a small
arms school at Camp Perry. Ohio.
The course of instruction was varied, consisting of
setting-up exercises, bayonet drill, bombing, and close
and extended order drill, with special emphasis on
the latter. All the new formations being used on
the western front were taught, seventy-five per cent
of the instructors having seen service overseas. Spec-
ial idasses in bayonet practice and in the adjutants'
school were a feature. The day's work began at 5 :30
and taps were sounded at 10 :00 P. M. Everyone had
to take a turn on the range, go through guard duty,
and go on kitchen police. Each man had full army
equipment. The camp course ended with a three
days' hike covering about 40 miles, fighting taking
place every hit of the way.
The following Carolina men attended the camp:
Anderson, \V. B., Haw River: Andrews, W. H,
Tarboro; Andrews, W. P., Charlotte; Allen, S. B.,
Weldon; Armfield, P. M., Asheboro; Aycock, .T. L.,
Raleigh; Bencini, P. P., Eigh Point; Riddle, R. M.,
Greensboro; Blythe, W. L., Huntersville ; Boyd. C.
T., Gastonia ; Poling, R. W., Apex; Brinn, T. P.,
Hertford; Brooks, F. P., Kinston; Blair, C. D.,
Greensboro; Burton, ('. W., Greensboro; Byerly,
Grimes, Cooleemee ; Bryant, L. H, Durham; Cash-
att. ( '. E., Jamestown: Cochrane, F. ('., Charlotte;
Cone, Pen, Greensboro; Cowan, J. C. Jr., Ruther-
fordton; Cummings, A. J., Winston-Salem; Cun-
ningbam, (). P., Apex: Cuthbertson, W. R., Char-
lotte; Crawford, G. L)., Cornelia, Ga. ; Cross. J. P.,
Gatesville; Cobn, F. J., Goldsboro; Daniel, J. E..
Henderson; Dupree, B. ()., Plymouth; Diekerson,
M. (). Jr., Rutherf ordton ; Ervin, II. T.. Morganton :
Erwin, J. II. Jr., Durham; Evans, E. PL, Laurin-
burg; Fearrington, J. C. P.. Winston-Salem; Field-.
Allen, Laurinburg; Fields, L. E., Kinston; Fowler,
C. W. Jr.. Greensboro; Gibson, J. M., Gibson; Gib-
son, T. G., Gibson; Graham. T. A., Mt. Ulla ; Guard.
J. W., Coinjock; Hankins, J. J., Winston-Salem;
Harrington, C. L., Greenville; Harvey, L. H, Kins-
ton; Harris, C. R., Arden; Harden, Boyd, Burling-
ton ; Henson, IT. F., Crewe. Va. ; Heffner. R. L.,
Maiden: Hester. Win., Tryon; Hinson. T. E., Mon-
roe; Hodges, L. H, Leaksville; HoTbrook, E. J.,
Huntersville; Hoffner, P. I. Salisbury; Hooker, E.
F., Kinston; Horner, Junius, Asheville; Ives. C. L.
Jr., Newbern; Ingram, L. M., High Point: Johnson,
A. T., Ealeigh; Johnson, R. M. Jr., Gastonia; Kit-
trell, T. S., Henderson; Kineaid, II. Gordon, Gas-
tonia; Kistler, C. E. Jr.. Morganton; Leonard, C. T.,
Greensboro; Lindsey, E. S., Tryon; Lowe, F. R.,
Winston-Salem ; Love, .1. W., Raleigh ; McKimmon,
Hugh, Raleigh; McKnight, T. M., Mooresville ; Mc-
Laughlin, J. M. Jr., Charlotte: McMillan, W. D. 3rd,
Wilmington; Martin. A. II., Winston-Salem; Moody,
R. M., Murphy; Murray, J. S., Durham; Martin.
Paul, Salisbury; Naiman, B., Kinston; Nims, Hor-
ace, Mt. Olive'; Xowell, S. C. Jr., Winfall ; Owens,
W. P., Edenton; Price. W. E.. Madison; Penny, .T.
T.. Charlotte; Patton, W. R., Mebane; Patterson, M.
H, Mt. Airy; Pless. .T. W. Jr.. Marion; Poindexter,
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Group of Carolina Eepresentatives at Plattsbueg
W. N., Walkertown; Ray, F. 0., Selma; Eanson, P.
J., Huntersville ; Ravenel, S. F., Green Pond, S. C. ;
Rives, E. E., Greensboro; Robertson, E. M., Woods-
dale; Ruffin, W. H. Jr., Louisburg; Sexton, J. W.,
Wbitakers; Shamburger, Elsa, Biscoe; Shaw, J. D.,
Laurinburg; Smith, R. E., Mt. Airy; Smith, R. 0.,
Liberty; Smith, P. C, Capron, Va. ; Stokes, W. F.,
Greenville; Sylvester, L. W., Richlands; Taylor, G.
E., Beaufort; Taylor, H. M., Tarboro; Thies, Karl,
Charlotte; Thompson, W. B., Goldsboro; Toy, C. R.,
Chapel Hill ; Tucker, J. G., Plymouth ; Turnbull, F.
W., As'heville; Van Noppen, 1)., Greensboro; Ware,
R. R., Reidsville; West, H. G., Greensboro; Welch,
O. B., Charlotte; Williamson, H. W., Carthage;
Wilson, H. V., Chapel Hill; Wilson, R. H., Wilson's
.Mills; Wilson, Girard, Dunn; Wright, A. B., Win-
ston-Salem; Yokely, J. B., Mt. Airy; Babb, J. S.,
Hertford ; Blount, W. A., Washington ; Bynum, J.
C, Durham ; Eagle, W. W., Statesville ; Rondthaler,
T. E., Winston-Salem ; Vogler, C. L., Winston-Salem ;
Whitfield, J. V., Chapel Hill; Hickerson, T. F.,
Chapel Hill.
LETTERS FROM THE FRONT
CONCERNING JOHN MANNING BATTLE, 1911
Lieut. M. G. C, 23d Inf., A. E. F.
(In a letter from First Lieut. Parker Vanamee, 23rd In-
fantry to Mr. Gaston Battle, City Point, Virginia)
On the night of July 19-20, Lieutenant John Man-
ning Battle, with twenty-six other members of his
command, was struck by a 350 millimeter shell and
died on the way back to the hospital. The column,
which was being relieved at the front, had run into
a gas area, had adjusted the masks, and while on
the way to the rear, suffered twenty-six casualties
as the result of the explosion. — Editor.
Lieut. Malloy was in command of the platoon
which suffered practically all of the casualties, and
was one of the few men unhurt. He immediately
started to care for the wounded and soon found Jack
lying in the road. "Just move me to the side of the
road, Joe, and care for the men, first," was all he
asked for himself. It was not over twenty minutes
from the time the shell struck before the stretcher
bearers — men from my platoon — brought Jack down
(the last man) to the ambulance I was loading.
To minimize the fact that he was suffering would
be to minimize his splendid courage. ''Hello, Van,"
he greeted me when I came over to his stretcher, pre-
pared to load him in the ambulance. "Well, they
got me at last."
I asked him if he was badly hurt and he said, "Yes,
I'm afraid I'm done for, hit in the stomach and
hack. Are all the men looked after ?" I assured him
that he was the last man. "That's good," he replied,
"Give me a cigarette and put me in."
Just as gently as we could we put him in the ambu-
lance. He never winced or made a sound, just
puffed slowly at his cigarette and went off with a
"Goodbye, old man, many thanks."
May I say, Sir, that you had a son to be proud of.
Under fire he was the coolest, bravest man any of
us had ever seen. Wounded and suffering, his forti-
tude and unselfishness was splendid. He was every
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
9
inch a soldier, a gentleman, and a man, and the idol
of all those who served under and with him.
By MAJOR E. A. ABERNETHY, 1906
Surgeon M. R. C. 78th Division
In a letter to Mrs. Abernethy, August 1918)
Haven't been able to write to you for several days
as I have been on the move, and today have been out
all day with the ambulance companies. Have had
two excellent meals with Australian rabbits at both.
There are shipped here drawn, but not skinned and
are excellent. We have an abundance to eat and the
French are good to us. I am now quartered with
the curate and my billet is No. 13. Isn't that fine '.
Have lost both of my pens. McDonald has just
come in and loaned me his.
I don't know if I am permitted to tell you, but
here goes. We were bombed out in the most system-
atic and worst bombing expedition the Boche has
pulled off, and I know what fear is. The terror. I
have been shelled, have been gassed, have been ma-
chine gunned — everything but the bayonet, and have
been in many raids, but I saw red and felt that the
end had come. The concert lasted from 9 :30 until
2 :30 and there were many encores. He came over
in large planes and dropped from 28 to 43 bombs.
The correct number T do not know, and it was the
most horrible experience I shall ever have. I stood
against an iron fence and heard the swish of a bomb
which I knew was going to hit me, and knew fear —
not cowardice, but the certainty of death, and when
the bomb did not hit me, the fact brought me back.
T did not lose my head and there was no shock. It
came down with a horrible swish as it tore through
the air and the explosion tore all the windows out
and knocked us backward. I struck the fence. After
one of them had dropped all his bombs and while his
enormous bulk was fastened in the beams he showed
his contempt by droping flares that lighted up every-
thing and turned his machine guns loose on every
shadow and for five hours it was the same, with
shrapnel from our own guns going like rain all over
us. And what damage did he do? None! Instead
of putting the fear into our souls, he put the Hate
of Hell and made us more determined to see that
we gave it to him.
I am sorry I can't give you more details — the num-
ber killed and injured does not matter. The military
damage is all that, counts and he did absolutely none
The next day one of them came over to photograph
the damage and did not go home. But we moved.
It is said by men who have played all the game for
four years to have been the most intense raid yet —
a last dying effort. He has at last been thrown on the
defense and his defeat is absolutely certain. The next
day I went about my work as if nothing had hap-
pened. It was a horrible nightmare, and I shall
carry the memory of it to my grave, but it did not
''get my goat" and I am as usual. John was not in it.
By J. A. CAPPS, 1917
American Y. M. C. A., 12 Rue d'Aguesseau, Paris
(In a letter to President Graham dated June 22)
After two weeks at Camp Jackson, which seemed
like a second Carolina — there being hundreds of
Carolina men there — I started to France. There
were two hundred and twelve "Y" men in my party.
Some were left in England, thirty or more have gone
to Italy, others have been sent to parts in Southern
France, and about twenty-five of us are waiting here
a i'^w days before going to the front. I am happy to
be one of that lucky number. I am going to a place
where once stood a beautiful city, no whole house is
left.
Our trip over was full of rich experiences — for
three days there was a fog that made it impossible
to see more than thirty yards from the boat; then
two days storm. Every one was required to take his
turn at watch and sleep on deck with his life belt
for a pillow. About three days off the coast of Ire-
land a sub stuck his nose out of the water, and by
so doing caused himself and partner to get destroyed.
We found no excitement in London, where we
spent three days, except that everybody has one
object in mind — Win the war ! Women are working
with all the force they have, there are no young men
in England — girls drive the taxis, run the busses, the
elevators, the trams, till every inch of tillable soil
and in fact do everything that we usually think of
as man's work. The very same can be said of France
with a little emphasis. Victory is 'the only result
that can follow such a spirit.
Can you think of London without lights? No?
Then what about Paris? Hardly a light can be seen
in the streets of Paris tonight. I am in Hotel D' Iena
near Tour Eiffel and it is 9 :30 P. M., yet I cannot
hear the sound of a car or a voice anywhere. It is as
quiet here now as the Carolina campus at 3 :00 A. M.
It is not so much that the people fear an air raid.
Don't think for one minute, that the French people
are down hearted. They are more optimistic than
the Americans at home. Though they cannot count
the cost, they are absolutely certain of a final victory.
Their apreciation of the American soldier is beauti-
ful. Almost everyone I have talked with has told
me that our marines saved Paris.
II)
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
1 think my class gift was due this June. I do not
remember the amount, but will send it in as soon as
I can learn.
With love tu Carolina, and those who represent
her ideals.
IMPORTANT NOTICE TO ALUMNI
A late order of the War Department contains the
following information :
Entrance to the Students Army Training Corps is
open to registrants of September 12 between the ages
of is anil 45. After October L5 these registered he-
fere September 12 may lie inducted. Applications
in the first case should lie made direct to the Univer-
sity; in the second case to registrant's local heard.
LIEUTENANT HARRIS INTERNED IN HOLLAND
Lieutenant Regan Harris, "17, who left the Uni-
versity for the first training camp at Fort Ogle-
thorpe, was interned in Holland in mid-Augus1 as
the result of an accident to his airplane which caused
him to land in Dutch territory. After leaving Ogle-
thorpe Lieutenant Harris joined the Loyal Flying
Corps in Canada. Later he went to Texas as an
instructor in aviation and from there to England
where he joined the Loyal Air force. He has been
in France for three months. His machine was hit by
a piece of shell from an "Archie" while flying back
of the German lines. Leing unable to reach his
own line he did the next best thing and landed upon
the island of Zeeland where he was interned by
Dutch officials.
COMPILING WAR RECORDS
At some later date in the year. The Review wishes
to publish in as complete form as possible the war
service record of the University. In order that this
may he complete, it is desired that every alumnus
in service will give full information as to his rank
and the unit to which he belongs. Tt is also desired
that civilians who have engaged in important service
shall also give detailed information concerning them-
selves.
In complying with this request, the alumni will
please conform to the outline given below, which
has been adopted by the Association of Alumni Sec-
retaries of American colleges and universities, ft is
only by following strictly this suuo'ested outline that
correct comparative statistics as to the service of
various universities can be correctly arrived at. In
several recent publications of comparative statistics,
the University has suffered by reason of the fact that
so (rw of the alumni have given information concern-
ing themselves, and only those who have been engaged
in active military service. It will he noted that in-
formation is desired concerning all those who are
engaged in Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., and other special
fields of civilian service.
I. Army (a) Commissioned officers; (b) Non-
Commissioned officers; (c) Enlisted men (the line
being drawn to include the men who are wearing the
uniform of the U. S. Army and eliminating all
others ).
II. Navy (a) Commissioned officers (b) Non-
commissioned officers; («) Enlisted men; (d) Ma-
Pkofessok Noble, as Judiif, Toomkk. Welcoming Lafayette to Fayetteville, in Foukth op July Paueant
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
11
rines (the Line being drawn to include the men who
are wearing the uniform of the I . S. Navy and
eliminating all others).
III. Red Cross Service in the Field and ('amp
Hospitals.
IV. Y. M. C. A. Service in the Field and Camps.
V. Civilian Service: (a) Distinguished service;
(b) Industrial service; (c) Miscellaneous civilian
service. 1. Civilian instruction in Aviation Ground
Schools, Camps and Cantonments, and administra-
tive work in connection with the same. 2. Organiza-
tion of campaigns and committees for raising funds
for Liberty Loans, Red Cross, Y. M. C. A.. War
Chests, etc., and special service along these lines.
3. Organization of Food Conservation work. 4. Or-
ganization of Red Cross work. 5. Members of
Speakers Bureau for Patriotic Education Campaign,
Liberty Loans, Red Cross, Y. M. C. A., Food Con-
servation, etc. 6. Any other war work that has been
of aid to the Government in winning the war.
IN SERVICE AT NORFOLK
In a letter from R. II. Thornton, former instruc-
tor in Journalism, dated Norfolk, Va., information
was given about the following University men who
were in service in June near Norfolk : W. T.
Steele. Seaman, 1'. S. S. Logon i a ; R. ( '. DeRos-ett,
Seaman. P. S. S. Onward; E. S. Hartshorn, just
graduated in Ensign School here; Grady Pritchard,
student in Ensign School here; Olie Gooch, electri-
cian, third class, 0". S. N. R. F. ; LeRoy Smith, Yeo-
man, first class; C. Holding, Seaman, Guard, St.
Helena: G. Holding, Junior Instructor, St. Helena;
.M. Shapiro, Seaman, St. Helena; Young, Yeoman,
St. Helena: Dawson, Recruit, just in, St. Helena;
Carlyle, Recruit, just in, St. Helena; R. R. West,
Yeoman, third class, (here) ; Plato Durham, Yeoman
(here) ; Thurmond Chatham. Ensign, F. S. S. Miss-
issippi; Leighton Blount, Ensign, in charge of Sub
('baser; Buck Wimberley, Ensign, (on Mohawk, I
think); (). A. Hamilton, Seaman (on harbor yacht
here): Breeden, Chief Yeoman F. S. S. Pamlico;
Heath, Pharmacist's Mate; J. G. Kennedy, Recruit,
St. Helena; Sam Calvert, Seaman, U. S. S Legonia.
Bill Liipfert and Ralph Stockton are in the Coast
Artillery School at Fort Monroe; John Aycock, F.
Farthing, Bobbie Jones, Ives, Leo Harvey, Wortley
Bain, and II. E. Harrow are connected with the Naval
Base and New Army Base.
CAMP TAYLOR GRADUATES
Among the Carolina men receiving the commis-
sion of second lieutenant at the Field Artillery School
at Camp Taylor, Aug. 31, were: Kay Armstrong,
Belmont; William Bailey, Jr.. Raleigh; F. F. Brad-
shaw, Hillsboro; B. B. Holder, Jackson Springs;
.John M. Huske, Fayetteville ; J. P. Linker, Salis-
bury; L. L. Lohr, Lincoluton; E. Et. Warren, Gas-
tonia; P. W. .Morrison, Chapel Hill; 0. N. Dobbins,
Yadkiiiville; W. P. Edwards, Wilson; W. A. Erwin,
Jr., Durham: P. A. McDutfie. Greensboro.
LT. COL. SHEEP ORGANIZES BASE HOSPITAL NO. 54
Lt. Col. Wm. 1.. Sheep, M. C. X. A., who has
been Comanding Officer. Base Eospital, (.'amp
Greene. Charlotte, X. ('.. since the opening of the
Scene from the Presentation of Esther Wake
12
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
camp in 1917, has been assigned to duty as Com-
manding Officer Overseas, Base Hospital Unit No.
54, which he is now organizing at Camp Greene Base
Hospital. To say that Colonel Sheep, a North Caro-
linian and an alumnus of the University of North
Carolina, has greatly endeared himself to the num-
erous doctors who have served under him during the
almost one year of his residence at the Camp here,
inadequately expresses the respect and esteem so
strongly cherished for him. Not only is this the
universal sentiment of the official staff, but citizens
of Charlotte who have had the pleasure of his ac-
quaintance appreciate the Colonel as one of the finest
medical gentlemen it has been our pleasure to know
in many a day. Overseas, or where he may go, he
will carry with him the kindly recollection of many
sincere friends who wish for him every success and
honor attainable by a doctor in the army possessed
of great medical abiltiy, administrative efficiency of
the highest order, and with it all, and best of all,
the splendid capacity of bearing himself under any
and every circumstance as well becomes a gentleman
of the finest character. — Charlotte Medical Journal ,
June, 1918.
ANGELS LEAD FOR CAROLINA
Lieutenant F. Angel, now Assistant Surgeon, U.
S. N, not only won first honors at the Jefferson Med-
ical College last spring, but stood in the first one-fifth
of the class at the Naval Medical School.
Lewis Angel, his brother, holds the rank of first
lieutenant in the Army and has the distinction of
representing all of the U. S. Cavalry in the coming
National Rifle Shoot.
A. M. NOBLE SUCCEEDS ALEXANDER STRONACH
AS JUDGE OF SAMOA
Press dispatches dated Washington, D. C, August
21, carried an acount of the resignation of Alexander
Stronach, '89, of Raleigh, who for the past five years
has been United States District Judge of Samoa.
His successor is Albert M. Noble, '05, of Smithfield,
who, for two years was Clerk to the Commandant of
the Samoan Navy Station at Tutuila, Samoa. Judge
Noble for the past three years has been solicitor of
the Johnston county Recorder's court. Judge Stron-
ach is to remain in Samoa for a short while to assist
Judge Noble until he becomes accustomed to his new
duties.
porta nt nature. Through loan it received from Mr.
N. T. Cobb, Jr., of Bayshead, Florida, a number of
exceedingly interesting and rare volumes of general
Americana and especially of North Caroliniana. The
collection comprises fifty odd titles, among which are
the following : Addresses Delivered at the University
from 1827-1855; The Westover Manuscript, by Wil-
liam Byrd; Catalogues of the University from 1795-
1S45; Early Pamphlets on Education in North Car-
olina ; The Works of Elisha Mitchell ; Volume I of
the University Magazine and other early volumes;
Lawson's History of Carolina, 1714; Five volumes
of epistolary correspondence of President David L.
Swain ; Sermons and addresses delivered at Chapel
Hill from 1794-1838; The Mecklenburg Papers of
1775 "presented to the Governor of North Carolina
with the respect of James K. Polk ;" Copies of the
Cape Fear Mercury, Edenton Gazette, North Caro-
lina Gazette, Fayetteville Gazette, Hall's Wilming-
ton Gazette, published prior to 1800.
Through gift, the Library received the Medical
Library of the late Dr. H. T. Bahnson, of Winston-
Salem, N. C. The collection contained much material
of special value to the Medical School, and a com-
plete set of the Transactions of the North Carolina
Medical Society' from its beginning in 1S49. It
also contained a number of volumes of the North
Carolina Medical Journal, which began publication
in Wilmington in 1878.
From Mrs. P. L. Groome, of Greensboro, the
Library received as a gift the private library of the
late P. L. Groome, in memory of Mary Groome Mc-
Ninch of the class of 1902, and Pinkney Broadfield
Groome of the class of 1902. The collection con-
tains more than one hundred volumes of works on
Methodism and Southern Methodism in particular
and biographical and autobiographical publications
of prominent southern ministers.
ALUMNI FELLOWSHIP FUND AT WORK
During the summer packages of cigarettes and
tobacco were sent to the American University Union
in Paris to be distributed to Carolina alumni who
visited the Union. Subscribers to the the fund were :
Herman Weil ($50), K. S. Tanner ($25), A. M.
Carr ($10), R. S. Hutchison ($5), H. G. Carver, Jr.
($5), Mrs. G. T. Winston, J. L. Barham, W. H.
Smith, E. M. Land, L. R. Hoffman, J. M. Booker,
and W. T. Shore.
LIBRARY RECEIVES LOAN AND GIFTS
During the summer the University Library was
die recipient of one loan and two gifts of a very im-
CAPTAIN ALLEN MARRIES
Cards were received in Chapel Hill on September
1 announcing the marriage of Miss Dorris Burry,
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
13
daughter of Sir George and Lady Burry of Montreal,
and Captain J. Stuart Allen of Princess Patricia's
Canadian Light Infantry and a member of the pres-
ent military faculty of the University. Captain
and Mrs. Allen are now at home in Cobb Terrace,
Chapel Hill.
REMEMBER THE FIGHT IN CHINA
Editor, Alumni Review:
Sib: — Please find enclosed my check for $1.00 to
renew my subscription to the Alumni Review. It
is greatly enjoyed.
A far-away son of Carolina rejoices over the pros-
perity of his Alma Mater. Please remember the
fight that is on out here against the forces of ignor-
ance and sin among one-fourth of the population of
the globe.
Lacy L. Little.
Southern Presbyterian Mission, Kiangyin, China.
BUREAU OF EXTENSION ANNOUNCES PLAN
In keeping with its former policy, the Bureau of
Extension will carry on its regular activities through
the year together with a special program concerning
the war. The latter will be further developed through
study centers, group lectures for clubs, correspon-
dence courses, publications, and the loan of books
from the library. Extension centers will be estab-
lished in several of the cities, and more than 600
members of womens clubs are following a special
study program prepared by the Division for Women
on the historical background and literature of the
war. Revised plans for the High School Debating
Union are being sent to the schools, and the query
will soon be announced by the Secretary, Dr. L. A.
Williams. A new division to be formed this year is
that of Community Drama, under Prof. F. H. Koch.
MEN COMMISSIONED AT CAMP GORDON
Eighteen University men were included in the
list of 98 North Carolina officers commissioned at
Camp Gordon early in September. Their names fol-
low: Elliott T. Cooper, Oxford; Rupert J. Crowell,
Acton; Marion B. Fowler, Hillsboro; Lee C. Gooch,
Oxford; Harry T. Greenleaf, Elizabeth City; Minor
Gwynn, Leaksville; Thomas P. Harrison, Raleigh;
Herman Jernigan, Benson; Leslie E. Jones, Swan
Quarter; Ovid W. Jones, Winston-Salem; William
D. Lay, Burlington, Charles E. Menefee, Graham;
Tom Moore, Webster; Robert A. Monroe, Laurin-
burg; Hubert R. Ray, Raleigh; Cleveland L. Smith,
Midland; Walter S. Tatum, Brookside; Benjamin
F. Wellons, Smithfield.
PRES. GRAHAM CHOSEN REGIONAL DIRECTOR
During the latter part of the summer President
Graham was elected one of the ten regional directors
of academic instruction in the Students' Army Train-
ing Corps, his particular field being that of the
South Atlantic States — North and South Carolina,
Yirgina, Georgia, Florida. As Regional Director it
has been his duty to certify to the War Department
such schools in the five states mentioned as were en-
titled to establish S. A. T. C. units. He has asso-
ciated with him at Chapel Hill Major Towner, who
is regional director of military work given in S. A.
T. C. units in this and other states. President
Garham has also been made a director of the Junior
Plattsburg camp and of the International Committee
of the Y. M. C. A.
AROUND CAMPUS AND TOWN
The new Engineering building is getting well un-
der way. The brickwork is well above the first floor,
a great deal of the material for its completion is
assembled, and the work is being pushed with vigor.
The library of the department of Chemistry has
been moved during the summer to a room on the
west side on the second, floor at the head of the
stairs. New shelving has been installed and the
800 or 900 volumes secured through the purchase
of the Herty Collection have been catalogued and
embodied in the library.
The shelf capacity of the library of the School of
Medicine has been increased during the vacation so
that the medical books formerly kept in the main
library could be transferred to the Medical building.
The Bahnson Collection has also been added to the
library.
A thorough-going rearrangement of Swain Hall
has recently been perfected by means of which 900
students can be accommodated. It is being used as
the mess hall of the S. A. T. C.
Progress on the new Presbyterian church and
postoffice buildings has been slow. Neither building
is above the first floor at present.
LAW STUDENTS RECEIVE LICENSE
The following University students in the School
of Law secured license at the recent examination in
August : O. O. Efird, F. H. Kennedy, T. D. Luther,
W. B. McQueen, P. A. Moore, D. A. Rendleman, and
E. H. Smith.
Dr. L. A. Williams spent several weeks after the
Summer School at Lake Couchiching, Ontario, Can-
ada, teaching in the training school of the Y. M. C. A.
14
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Issued monthly except in July, August, and September, by the Gen-
eral Alumni Association of the University of North Carolina.
Board of Publication
The Review is edited by the following Board of Publication:
Louis R. Wilson, '99 Editor
Associate Editors: Walter Murphv, '92 ; Harry Howell, '95 ; Archibald
Henderson, '98; W. S. Bernard, '00; J. K. Wilson, '05; Louis
Graves, '02; F. P. Graham, '09; Kenneth Tanner, '11 ; E. R.
Rankin, '13.
R. W. Madry, '18 Managing Editor
Subscription Price
Single Copies $0.15
Per Year 1.00
Communications intended for the Editor should be sent to Chapel
Hill. N. C; for the Managing Editor, to Chapel Hill. N. C. All
communications intended for publication must be accompanied with
signatures if they are to receive consideration.
OFFICE OF PUBLICATION, CHAPEL HILL, N. C
Entered at the Postoffice at Chapel Hill. N. C. as second class
matter.
THE UNIVERSITY IN LETTERS
Throughout the summer vacation the University
faculty maintained its record as a productive body
in the field of language, literature, history, and
science through the issue of a number of interesting
special publications.
An important work in history is the volume of
The Papers of Thomas Ruffin, Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1833-1852, com-
piled and edited by Dr. J. G. deR. Hamilton, Alumni
Professor of History, and published by the North
Carolina Historical Commission. The volume is the
first of a set of four, and contains the letters to and
from Judge Ruffin from 1803-1830. It also contains
the Memorial Oration on the Life and Character of
Chief Justice Puffin, by William A. Graham, deliv-
ered in Raleigh at the State Fair in 1870, and a
sketch of him by Assistant Attorney General Francis
Nash, of Hillsboro, originally published in the Char-
lotte Observer. One volume is compiled from the
Ruffin Collection owned by Bennehan Cameron, of
Stagville, and the Roulhac Collection in the posses-
sion of Dr. Hamilton, a total of 10,000 in all. The
remaining volumes are now in preparation for the
press.
Dr. William Dey, of the department of Romance
Languages, is the editor of Adolphe, by Benjamin
('(instant, published by the Oxford University Press,
New York. The volume is intended for use by
students in French in American colleges and uni-
versities, and in addition to critical notes and special
vocabulary, contains an extended introduction and
critical estimate of Constant by Dr. Dev.
In 1917-18 the Division for Women of the Bureau
of Extension of the University prepared an outline
study for the literary and historical departments of
the North Carolina Federation of Women's Clubs
and directed the work of more than 425 members.
In continuation of this service, Mrs. Thomas W. Tin-
gle, former president of the Federation and in charge
of this division of the bureau, has prepared sixteen
studies on the world war for the use of the clubs
in 1918-19. The outline comprises twenty-seven
pages, suggests' topics fotr papers 'throughout the
year, and indicates books and references, which may
he borrowed from the University Library by club
members enrolled in the course.
Drs. Norman Foerster and J. M. Steadman,
both of the department of English, are the authors
of a guide to students and writers in English com-
position. Correct sentence structure, paragraph build-
ing, punctuation, and other subjects important in
the proper foundation for effective composition arc
included in the text. The publication is issued by
the Seeman Printery of Durham.
The July numbers of Studies in Philology and the
Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society
have been received and mailed. The number of the
Studies is devoted to a critical study by Drs. J. H.
Hanford and J. M. Steadman, of the English de-
partment, of Death and Liffe, an important allitera-
tive poem in Middle English. The Journal is de-
voted to an exhaustive treatise on the Lactarias
( mushrooms) of North Carolina, by Dr. W. ( '. Coker,
Professor of Botany. There are sixty-four pages of
text, and forty splendid plates in the number.
In addition to these publications, the University
is the author of an attractive, illustrated booklet of
thirty-six pages, entitled "About the University of
North Carolina." It contains nine half-tone plates,
and gives a condensed summary of the history, work
and equipment of the University.
UNIVERSITY EXTENSION WORK IN THE SOUTH
The conspicuously excellent work of the Bureau
of Extension of the University of North Carolina is
the subject of a bulletin issued by the United States
Department of the Interior, Bureau of Education.
Washington, and written by Louis Round Wilson and
Lester Alonzo Williams. In his letter transmitting
the bulletin to the Secretary of the Interior, P. P.
( 'laxton, Commissioner of Education, says:
"For five years this office has watched with in-
creasing interest the development of the extension
work of the University of North Carolina, some of
which though as yet peculiar to this State, is, with
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
15
necessary adaptations to the varying conditions in
other States, capable of general adoption. Because
of the importance of some of the phases of this work
I have induced the president of the University to
have prepared the account which is herewith trans-
mitted for publication as a bulletin of the Bureau of
Education."
It is exceedingly gratifying to read this bulletin
and to note the success which has attended the ex-
tension work of the University. Especially satisfac-
tory is it that a Southern institution should take rank
nationally as a leader in the spread of intelligence
among the people, increasing their fund of general
knowledge and making them better and more valuable
citizens not only to their respective communities but
to their country. — Manufacturers' Record, July 25.
FACULTY ACTIVITIES IN THE SUMMER
Professor E. C. Branson was employed by the Y.
M. C. A. to deliver his lecture, Robert E. Lee, Gen-
tlement, twenty-nine times in the Y. M. C. A. halls
at Camps Hancock, Wheeler, and Gordon.
Dr. Edwin Greenlaw spent six weeks in Chicago
engaged in editorial work for Scott, Forsman & Co.,
educational publishers. Dr. J. TI. Ilanford was as-
sociated with him in his work.
Drs. C. L. Raper and W. W. Pierson, Jr., were
members of the summer school faculties of the Uni-
versity of Tennessee and George Peabody College.
Dr. C. S. Mangum spent eight weeks in special
study in the laboratories of the Harvard Medical
School.
Dr. J. G. de R. Hamilton brought out the first
volume of the Puffin Letters and was engaged in
writing one of the volumes of a three-volume set of
North Carolina History which is to appear during the
year. R. D. W. Connor, '99, and Dr. Kenneth Boyd,
of Trinity College, are to be the authors of the other
two volumes.
Capt. J. Stuart Allen and Prof. T. F. Hickerson
conducted the University Summer Training Camp
at Asheville. Prof. Hickerson and Adjutant
Whitfield attended the Plattsburg Summer Training
School.
Prof. P. H. Daggett spent three weeks in Wash-
ington assisting government officials in outlining
special courses of instruction in radio, telephone, and
electrical science generally in the Army.
Professors L. P. MeGehee, A. C. Mcintosh, and
T. E. Didlake of the Law School, have been engaged
in codifying North Carolina laws for the State Code
Commission.
Professor Collier Cobb spent several weeks on the
coast of North Carolina with Dr. R. M. Harper,
plant geographer, making a further study of sand
waves and helping in finding caffein-bearing plants
for use in the preparation of a special antiseptic used
in war surgery.
I )rs. H. V. Wilson, W. C. Coker, and W. D. Mc-
Nider were engaged in special investigations in their
respective laboratories. Dr. Coker was associated
with Dr. Atkinson, of Cornell, in a special investi-
gation of mushrooms.
Dr. J. B. Bullitt, who volunteered his services in
the Medical Corps early last summer, has been sta-
tioned at Cam]i Upton, X. V.. where he has the rank
of captain.
Major Thomas Puffin, formerly professor of law
in the University, is a member of the Headquarters
Division of the Judge Advocate General's office in
France.
Dr. J. M. Bell, after three months absence in
Washington, where he was engaged in chemical en-
vestigation for the government, has resumed his
duties in the- department of Chemistry.
Prof. F. H. Koch, formerly professor of English in
the University of North Dakota, but now professor of
Dramatic Literature in the University, was engaged
during the latter part of the summer in writing the
masque to be presented in connection with the Raleigh
tercentenary Celebration in October. He and
Mrs. Koch and the children occupy Major Cain's
house on Rosemary Street.
Prof. D. D. Carroll, of the department of Econo-
mics, formerly dean of Guilford College and recently
associate professor in Hunter College, New York
City, was married in June. He and Mrs. Carroll
occupy the house of Dr. J. M. Bell.
Prof. John W. Lasley spent the summer in study
at the University of Chicago.
Volume eight of the Biographical Histoiw of North
Carolina, edited by Capt. S. A. Ashe, Dr. Stephen
B. Weeks, and Mr. Charles L. Van Noppen, and
published by Charles L. Van Noppen, came from
the press in the early spring. It contains the impor-
tant biograpical set of which seven volumes have been
already issued and contains sketches of eighty North
Carolinians. The volume comprises 508 pages and
sixty-six steel engravings.
Thomas S. Rollins, a prominent member of the
Asheville bar, is the author of a most interesting
article entitled, "Should the German Language be
Taught in the United States ?" The article was given
wide publicity by the State press.
1C
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
THE GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION
of the
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA
Officers of the Association
R. D. W. Connor, '99 President
E. R. Rankin, '13 Secretary
Executive Committee: Walter Murphy, '92; Dr. R. II.
Lewis, '70; W. N. Everett, '86; H. E. Rondthaler, '93; C. W.
Tillett, Jr., '09.
THE ALUMNI
R. W. MADRY. 18. Alumni Editor
* Roll of ftonor *
DAVID S. GRAHAM, 01
— Killed in France June 6. His home was in Charlotte, but
lio was locate! in Montgomery, Alabama, before entering the
.service. When the first American marines went to France in
early June, 1917, he was asked to stay at his local post for
a special service with immediate and successive military pro-
motions as an inducement. He scorned the place of safety
urged upon him. When the marines made their thrilling dash
to meet the German drive for Paris northwest of Chateau
Thierry, he was one of that band, who, cut to pieces, pressed
on to victory.
QUINCEY SHARPE MILLS, 07
— Killed in action in France. Reported in the casualty list of
July 26 as missing, but report later corrected. Was a mem-
ber of Company G, 168th Infantry. Held the rank of Li£U-
tenant. He was a reporter, for the New York Evening Sun
before entering the service. His home was originally in States-
ville, but he was living with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thos.
M. Mills, 190 Wadsworth Ave., N. Y. He was 34 years old.
He was The Evening Sun 's representative at the City Hall for
some years, in the course of which time he won the friendship
of many men of local, state, aud national reputation, Colonel
Roosevelt and Mayor Mitchell being his warm personal friends.
DONALD F. RAY, '09
— Died from sunstroke at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, July 6. Held
the rank of Captain. Gave up a place in one of the State's
loading law firms to enter the first officers' training camp at
Fort Oglethorpe. He entered the University at the age of
14, and later studied at the Harvard Law School. After com-
pleting his education he traveled for a year in Europe. He
was married to Miss Anne McKinnon, of Raleigh, in August,
1917, immediately after receiving his commission.
JOHN W. HUTCHINSON, LAW '09
— Died hi camp at Fort Oglethorpe; date unknown. He was
located at Charlotte before entering the service.
JOHN MANNING BATTLE, '11
— Killed in battle in France, July 19. He had been reported
wounded. He and 25 of his men were killed by a high ex-
plosive shell which burst in their midst. After graduation
from the University, he studied law at Fordham University,
afterward entering the law office of his uncle at 37 Wall
street. He received his commission at the 1917 Plattsburg
camp. Held the rank of first lieutenant and was in line of
promotion for captain when killed. He was the son of Gaston
Battle, of City Point, Va. He was formerly Assistant District
Attorney of New York City.
JUNIUS F. ANDREWS, PHAR. '14
— Killed in seaplane accident July 13 at the Naval Radio sta-
tion at Chatham, Mass. He was burned to death by an ex-
plosion when his machine landed on the beach. Was a son
of D. F. Andrews, of Durham, his home. He was 24 years of
age.
B. B. BOST, 15
— Died March 14 at Camp Jackson. Home was at Matthews,
but was with the Goodyear Co., Jacksonville, Fla., before enter-
ing camp.
J. L. ORR, 17 •
— Reported killed in the fighting around Chateau Thierry in the
casualty list of June 21. Volunteered his services last winter
in the marine corps. Was with the American Bank and Trust
Co., of Charlotte, before going into the service.
H. O. ELLIS, '18
— Died at Camp Jackson last winter from disease. Home was in
Washington, N. C, where he held a responsible position in
the post-office before going into service.
W. DUDLEY ROBBINS, 18
— Killed in France July 5 in an aviation accident. Was mem-
ber of the 89th Aero Squadron. He enlisted in the School of
Aviation at San Diego, California, at the first call of the bugle.
As a first lieutenant he was sent with his Flying Squadron
to a concentration camp at Garden City, N. Y., where he was
offered the position of instructor at a training camp in Texas.
He rejected the offer, however, and sailed in February as
commanding officer of the squadron. Raleigh was his home.
HAROLD KNORR, 19
— Died at Camp Wadsworth, September 4, from operation. Be-
fore entering the service his address was 1740 South 16th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa. East Durham was his home orignally.
JOHN R. MASSEY, '21
— Reported killed in action in the casualty list of August 24.
His home was in Princeton, N. C.
WOUNDED AND MISSING
DR. ERIC A. ABERNETHY, '06
— Wounded in France. Is a resident of Chapel Hill, where he
was formerly a practicing physician. Holds the rank of major
in the M. R. C, 78th Division.
PAUL NISSEN MONTAGUE, '09
— Reported missing since July 31, but is now known to be a
prisoner. His home was Winston-Salem. Was a lieutenant in
the Aviation Corps.
WM. O. HUSKE, '15
— Wounded slightly in action in the side, but now back on duty.
Is in the 114th Field Artillery, 42nd division. Home is in
Fayetteville. Holds rank of lieutenant. Is son of Maj. B. R.
Huske.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW 17
ESTABLISHED 1916
fllumni Coyalty fund
One for all, and all for one"
Council:
A. M. SCALES, '92
E. K.GRAHAM, '98
A.W.HAYWOOD, '04
J. A. GRAY, Jr., '08
D. F. RAY, '09
W. T. S'HORE. 'OS
MAKE THE YALE IDEA YOURS
— At the beginning of 1917, the Yale University needed $125,000 for a completely equipped artillery
plant. It also faced a deficit of $125,000 due to loss of fees and tuition — a good round Quar-
ter of a Million in all.
— THE ANSWER — The Yale Alumni Loyalty Fund Directors underwrote the proposition. At
Commencement they showed receipts from alumni for $500,000, all obligations met, and a
cool $250,000 surplus to start 191S with.
— During the summer a Yale alumnus died and left Yale $20,000,000 — the largest bequest ever left
an American University.
— A Carolina Sophomore on leaving for France, wrote President Graham that he was making over
$5,000 of his insurance policy to the Loyalty Fund. Among other things he said "everything
I am, I owe to the University, and I am happy to do this little bit in return." In July Dr.
Holland Thompson, of the class of 1895, came by to look in on the University. On leaving
he gave the Treasurer a fifty dollar Liberty Bond for the Fund.
— -WHY should not every loyal alumnus on the firing line of life make a bequest to the Loyalty
Fund ? He withdraws nothing from use ; he is enabled to give back to the institution and to
society a part of the talents given to him ; it makes him a permanent partner in youth and
progress.
—YOU THINK YOU WILL NEVER DIE.
Perhaps not. But be on the safe side, and say what you want done with what you leave. Write
your will now; don't wait till you've got your million. Put the Alumni Loyalty Fund in
for from $100 to $100,000. A holograph will is enough. It is as easy as this: "I hereby give
and bequeath to the Alumni Loyalty Fund of the University of North Carolina the sum of
dollars."
-In the vulgar vernacular: CARPE DIEM; or as the classic Roman hath it: DO IT NOW!
IS
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
JAMES CHESHIRE, 11
— Lieutenant ( Iheshire was a member of Major Theodore Roose-
velt's battalion. He was in the fighting in the Rheims-Sois-
sons salient in July and became an instructor at Camp Dix in
September. In February he was wounded severely, but has
been with his regiment since May.
WILLIAM C. OATES, '12
— Reported missing in casualty list. His home is Grover. He
held the rank of lieutenant.
ROBERT DRANE, 10
— Wounded slightly on February 5th. Held the rank of cap-
tain in the British Medical Corps at the time he received his
wound.
F. KIRKWOOD DILLON, '18
— Injured severely in airplane accident at Kelly Field, San
Antonio, March 8. Home is in Greensboro. Held rank of
lieutenant at time of accident.
WATT MARTIN, JR., 18
— Injured from gas and confined to French hospital. Is with
the 7th U. S. Infantry. Left Camp Green early in the spring
for overseas duty. Attended Jefferson Medical College after
leaving the University. Holds the rank of lieutenant.
WITH THE CLASSES
1864
— Chief Justice- Walter Clark, of the North Carolina Supreme
Court, has been appointed by President Wilson to act as one
of ten umpires to decide controversies on which members of the
War Labor Board cannot agree.
1880
— W. A. Betts, of Olanta, S. C, was the author of an interest-
ing letter which appeared in the State press in July concern-
ing the late Dr. William B. Phillips, of Texas.
1888
— Frank M. Harper, of Raleigh, has resigned as superintendent
of city schools to enter war work. It is understood that he
is to have a position in the United States Bureau of Education
under Commissioner P. P. Claxton.
1890
— Rev. George V. Tilley is pastor of the First Baptist Church
of Concord, N. C.
1891
— W. W. Davies is doing Red Cross work in France.
1892
— Rev. Dr. Geo. H. Crowell, formerly president of Logan Col-
lege, Russellville, Ky., has recently accepted the position of
Commissioner of Education for Kentucky Methodism, and is
engaged in raising $300,000 for the endowment of Methodist
schools in Kentucky,
— Lieut. Col. Charles O'Hagan Laughinghouse has been as-
signed to the command of Base Hospital Unit No. 85 and sails
shortly with that unit for service in France. Colonel Laugh-
inghouse is a native of Greenville, a member of the State Board
of Health, and one of the best-known physicians of North
( larolina.
— Judge Robert Worth Binhgam, of Louisville, Ky., secured
control of the Louisville Courier Journal, formerly edited by
Henry Watterson, on August sixth.
1893
— Rev. Fordyce Hubbard Argo, rector of the Memorial Church
of the Holy Nativity, Rockledge, Pa., has published a most
thoughtful and interesting book entitled, Jesus' Idea; A Study
of the Real Jesus.
1894
— Mr. L. N. Hickerson, superintendent of public schools of
Rockingham county, entered foreign Y. M. C. A. service and
sailed for France on July 9, 1918.
— Dr. Charles Roberson, of Greensboro, one of the leading phy-
sicians of the South in the diseases of children, has accepted
a government position in France, where he will serve in car-
ing for children in French hospitals.
1897
— Commander Hollis T. Winston, head of the Machinery Di-
vision, Engineer Department, New York Navy Yard, was
granted four months ' sick leave from overwork on May first.
— Superintendent Joe S. Wray, of the City Schools of Gas-
tonia, has been granted a year 's leave of absence on full pay
to engage in Y. M. C. A. work overseas. Mr. Wray was called
to service August first.
1899
H. M. Wagstaff, Secretary, Chapel Hill
— R. H. Sykes, Assistant Attorney General of North Carolina,
tendered his resignation on August 1, and has returned to his
general practice of the law in Durham.
— Dr. Raymond Pollock, of New Bern, is with the 105th Sani-
tary Train, Field Hospital 120, in France.
— W. Thomas Bost, editor and proprietor of the State Journal,
Raleigh, N. C, gave up his work as editor in July. He is
devoting his whole attention to the Greensboro Dai!;/ News.
1901
Dr. J. G. Murphy, Secretary, Wilmington, N. C.
— Mr. J. C. B. Ehringhaus, Food Administrator of Pasquotank,
was instrumental in the saving of two million pounds of sugar
which was being thrown overboard from the Clyde Line steamer,
Inca, bound from San Domingo to New York on June 27. Mr.
Ehringhaus, upon learning that the cargo was being thrown
overboard, put to sea in a gasoline launch and through the as-
sistance of the United States Food Administration and the
Coast Guard, stopped the jettisoning of the cargo; placed it on
other boats, and floated the ship in safety, after the cargo had
been removed.
1902
R. A.I Merritt, Secretary. Greensboro, N. C.
— Capt. Louis Graves is in Co. I, 324 Infantry, A. E. F.
1903
N. W. Walker, Secretary, Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Dr. Fred M. Hanes, of Winston-Salem, has arrived safely
overseas as a member of Base Hospital Unit No. 65.
— Lieutenant John J. London has been recommended for pro-
motion for the rank of Commander by the Naval Board of Se-
lection. He is at present Navigation Officer of the U. S. S.
New Jersey.
— Maj. H. H. Broadhurst, with the A. E. F. overseas, writes
of the wonderful service of the Y. M. C. A. He says that after
thirty-six hours of gruelling labor in the trenches he came to his
billet and threw himself on his cot, hardly taking time to re-
move his clothes. His shoes were particularly soiled, but af-
ter a good sleep he awoke and found his clothes cleaned and
his shoes brushed by a worker in the Y. M. C. A., a doctor of
divinity and pastor of a large church in Chicago.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
19
1904
T. F. Hickerson, Secretary, Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Dr. W. P. Jacobs, who for several years has been with the
Rockefeller Foundation as a member of the International Health
Commission, has entered the Medical Reserve Officers' Corps.
Before entering the service Dr. Jacoeks had been located in
Ceylon, India. He has been granted leave of absence by
the Commission for the duration of the war.
— C. P. Russell is a member of the editorial staff of the United
Publishers Corporation at 239 West 39th St., New York, N.
Y. He was a visitor at the Hill early in September.
1905
W. T. Shore, Secretary, Charlotte, N. C.
—Dr. R. P. Noble, of Selma, is Captain M. R. C, Kelly Avia-
tion Field, San Antonio, Texas.
— E. C. Gudger is paymaster in the U. S. Navy. He is located
at Base Hospital No. 7, of Fiance.
— Miss Ethel Combs, of Greenwich, Conn., and Captain Frank
McLean, Medical Reserve Corps, U. S. A., were married on
July 6, 1918.
— Capt. Strowd Jordan is in the chemical branch of the service.
—Charles II. Mebane, Law '05, late of Newton, N. C, for a
number of years editor of the Catawba County News, has
recently become editor of the Greensboro Patriot.
1906
Capt. .1. A. Parker, Secretary, Douglas, Arizona
— Miss Dorothea Lewis, of Douglas, Arizona, and Captain John
A. Parker, U. P. A., were married on the 27th of June, 1918.
1907
C. L. Weill, Secretary, Greensboro, N. C.
— Dr. M. A. Bowers, of Thomasville, was commissioned captain
in the Medical Reserve Corps in June.
— Rev. W. A. Jenkins, formerly pastor of the Methodist Church
at Davidson College, is now a chaplain at Camp Hancock,
Augusta, Ga. His address is Rev. W. A. Jenkins, First Lieu-
tenant, N.A., Third Croup, M.T.D., M.G., T.C. Camp Hancock,
Augusta, Ga.
— Hampden Hill, of Goldsboro, was seriously wounded in early
September by an explosion in a government laboratory in which
he was working in New Jersey.
— E. M. Highsmith is educational director, Y. M. C. A. 72,
Kelly Field, Santiago, Texas.
1908
M. Robbin.s, Secretary, Greensboro, N. C.
— Pat Williams, for several years connected with the Moore Dry-
Kiln Company of Jacksonville, N. C, sailed for France in June.
He accepted the position of specialist in dry kiln manufacture,
and has received the rank of first lieutenant.
— Dr. Louis H. Webb has been promoted to a captaincy. His
address is Captain Louis H. Webb, 11th Cavalry, Fort Ogle-
thorpe, Ga. Captain Webb recently visited his parents in Chapel
Hill.
— Corp. Donald D. Hawkins, a lawyer of Winston-Salem, has
recently entered the service and is stationed at El Paso, Texas.
1909
O. C. Cox, Secretary, Greensboro, N. C.
— F. K. Borden, Jr., of the aviation service, has recently sailed
for overseas.
— F. P. Graham, formerly corporal in the U. S. Marines, re-
ceived a commission as second lieutenant from the Quantico
Marine Training Camp on July 16.
— Bunn Heain, former member of the varisty baseball
team, is connected with the Fairbanks Morse Company, at Bel-
oit, Wisconsin. His firm is occupied in the production of war
supplies for the government.
— Sidney McAden is with Co. I). ::i'4 Infantry, doing duty over-
seas.
— Lieut. Don C. McRae, who has been in service overseas for
three months, lias returned to this country to give instruction at
army camps. He spent several days at his home in Chapel Hill
before going to his first post, Camp Dix.
— Rev. Marion Huske left his former home in Fayetteville on
September 2nd for Brazil, where he goes as a missionary from
the Southern Presbyterian Church. A farewell service was held
in his honor cm Sunday morning, September first, in the Presby-
terian Church of Fayetteville.
— Capt. «'. W. Tillett has been stationed at Camp Sevier. His
address is Co. Is, ."With Infantry.
1910
.1. R. Nixon, Secretary, Edenton, N. C.
— Ernest Jones was in service at Camp Jackson in June.
—Miss Grace Brurus, of Wanchese, and Roy L. Davis were
recently married. .Mr. Davis is pay clerk on the Battleship
Arkansas, U. 8. Navy.
—Major O. C. Lloyd was in charge of the personnel office
at Camp Jackson during the summer.
— C. C. Garrett, formerly of Wheeling, West Virginia, is now
a sergeant connected with the Supply Officers' Department,
IT. S. A., at Columbus, New Mexico.
—Miss Olivia Johnston White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Archibald Sproul White, of Lynchburg, Va., and Lieutenant L.
F. Turlington, were married early in September. Lieutenant
Turlington has until recently been a physician in Birmingham,
Ala., and is located at present at Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.
— Capt. Hugh Thompson has landed safely in England and will
do service in the British hospitals. Capt. Thompson is a mem-
ber of the Medical Corps and is a skilled orthopedist.
— Joseph R. Nixon, formerly superintendent of the Cherryville
Graded Sehools, has moved to Edenton in the capacity of su-
perintendent of schools.
— Lieut. Rodman Quion, of New Bern, has gone overseas.
His address is battery A, 113th Field Artillery, A. E. F.
— Lieut. John Guion, of New Bern, is in the service await-
ing orders to go overseas.
— Lieutenant I. P. Davis is with the 7th Ammunition Train
at Camp McArthur, Waco, Texas.
— H. P. Vreeland, of Charlotte, is a member of the Medical
Reserve Corps.
YOUR CARD ENGRAVED
Kill be indispensable when you leave the Hill for camp.
Strangers you meet!
THE JENNER CO. R. W. MADRY
Louisville, Ky.
U.N.C. Agent
BROADWAY THEATRE
DURHAM, N. C.
THE HOUSE OF SPECIAL PHOTO-PLAY
ATTRACTIONS
20
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
WEIGHT'S CAFE
The Right Place to Eat When In
RALEIGH, N. C.
Eubanks Drug Co.
Chapel Hill, N. C.
Agents for Nunnally's Candy
WHITING- HORTON CO.
30 YEARS RALEIGH'S LEADING CLOTHIERS
ANK HUNTED
IS ON THE JOB WITH r%
4 Big Autos. Ride With Tank's
i)url)am business School
FULLY ACCREDITED
3ioaro of "Z2\.6vtsors
GEN J. S. CARR
DR. J, M MANNING
R. L. FLOWERS
W. G. BRAMHAM
W. J. BROGDEN
CEO. W. WATTS
For full particular and handsome catalog, address
MRS. WALTER LEE LEDNUM
PRESIDENT
WE WELCOME YOU .
\T
"~^
Lloyd's Hardware
St
ore
WHEN IN DURHAM
GEO. W. TANDY
Manager
'
— Paul Montague, of Wiiiston-Salem, who, in August was re-
ported as missing in action, has been located in a German
prison. He is a lieutenant in aviation service.
1911
I. C. Moser, Secretary, Asheboro, N. C.
— Miss Lou Ola Tuttle, of Washington, N. C, and Mr. I. C.
Moser were married on August 14, 1918. Mr. and Mrs. Moser
are at home at Asheboro, where Mr. Moser is an attorney.
— Lieutenant H. L. Smith, of the 324th Infantry, has arrived
overseas.
— Roger B. Hall is a lieutenant in Prance serving in the army
as a chemist. He was the contributor of our interesting letter
which appeared in his home paper, the Lenoir Topic, in early
August.
— J. L. Eason, who has been located near Ames, Iowa, is with
the Commercial Motion Picture Bureau, 46 West 24th St., New
York City. He is engaged in furnishing films for the War
Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. for use in Army and Navy
camps in this country and in France.
— John E. Wood, of Elizabeth City, who has been wit) the
Engineers' Corps in France, has recently been returned to
the IT. S. to give instruction in camps. He holds fhe rank of
first lieutenant.
— T. B. Uzzell, of Wilson, is seeing service in the Navy.
— C. M. Wayniek. of Greensboro, who was city editor of The
Greensboro Daily News, entered the service early in September.
— Mr. Edgar Turlington, formerly an instructor in the Cniver-
' sity, is engaged in war work in Washington, D. C.
— Lieut. Howell L. Smith has arrived safely overseas.
— Capt. William Joyner, who has been in service overseas for
three months, has been returned to this country to give in-
struction in artillery at Army camps. He spent several days
at his home in Raleigh before going to his first post, Camp
Meade.
— H. G. Dorsett, who has recently been filling a pastorate
in Texas, has accepted the pastorate of the Carrboro and Mt.
Carmel Baptist Churches in Orange county.
1912
J. C. Lockhart, Secretary, Zebulon, N. C.
■ — On June 6 C. Walton Johnson was with the 40th Co., 156
D. B., at Camp Jackson.
— Earl V. Patterson is an Army Ordnance Inspector stationed
at Providence, R. I.
— J. W. Morris has recently been promoted to the rank of
captain.
— R. H. Andrews, who recently enlisted in the Navy, i3 in
the Naval Hospital at Annapolis, Md.
. 1913
A. L. M. Wiggins, Secretary, Hartsville, S. C.
— H. E. Taylor, writing from Stradford, Texas, on Juno 8,
reported that he had finished a successful year's work and
would be called into the service at an early date.
— Lieut. F. W. Morrison received his commission as a gradu
ate of the Field Artillery Officers ' School at Camp Taylor in
August.
— On June 26th, Second Lt. I. R. Williams, Company 0,
Seventh Infantry, was recommended for promotion and D. S.
C. for conspicuous service in an important sector of the
American lines in the Bois de Bellou. He was recently re-
ported wounded, but he rejoined his company. •
— G. B. Stockton, on May 3rd was assistant flag secretary
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
21
to Vice-Admiral W. S. Sims, U. 8. N., which position he
had held from August, 1917. He was commissioned lieutenant,
jr grade, U. S. N. R. F., on August 28, 1917. He graduated
at Princeton in 1914 ; was Rhodes scholar at Christ Church,
Oxford, 1915 ; delegate for Commission for Relief in Belgium
to Antwerp, St. Qu'itin, and Lille, 1915-16; special attache
American Embassy, 1916-17. His address is 30 Grosvenor
arden, S W. 1, London.
—Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Petteway, of Tampa, Fla., were visitors
in Chapel Hill in August.
■ — On May 23rd W. C. Harry was located in New Orleans. His
address was 5517 Prytania St.
— E. Merton Coulter, of the department of political science
and economies of Marietta College, Marietta, Ohio, gave a
lecture course in American History in the Summer School of
the University of Wisconsin.
— E. R. Rankin, formerly managing editor of The Beview,
has been at Camp Jackson since late in May. His address is
Psychological Detachment, Barracks Q 5, Camp Jackson, S. C.
— George D. Elliott, Jr., entered the Central Officers' Training
School at Camp Gordon, Georgia, September 1.
— E. S. Booth is a lieutenant in Co. M., 4th Inf., A. E. F.
— Thos. S. Hughes, Jr., of Elizabeth City, is with the 317th
Infantry in France. He holds the rank of lieutenant.
— Miss Nellie Dobie Cates, of Ocala, Fla., and Hubert Connor
Petteway were married on August 14, 1918. They are at
home at Lakeland, Fla.
— Dr. C. B. Hoke, formerly with the Hercules Powder Co., of
Dover, New Jersey, has been transferred to another office
of the company at Bacchus, Utah. Dr. and Mrs. Hoke visited
in North Carolina during the summer.
— Lieut. W. II. H. Cowles, who has been stationed with the
75th Regiment of Coast Artillery at Fort Caswell, has gone
overseas.
— Miss Mary Downs, of Asheville, and Mr. T. E. Storey
were married on September 3, 1918. Mr. Storey has for several
years been principal of the Oak Hill High School in Caldwell
county.
1914
Oscar Leach, Secretary, Co. E., 323rd Inf., Camp Jackson, S. C.
— J. F. Pugh held the rank of first lieutenant at Camp Jack-
son during the summer.
— M. R. Dunnagan is stationed with the Aero Detachment,
Sanitary Corps, U. S. Nat. Army, Philadelphia, Pa., his ad-
dress being 2361 E. York St. Not being able to get printers'
ink off his fingers which he acquired with the Winston-Salem
Journal, he has started a paper for his detachment under the
appellation "Gas Fumes." The first two issues went with
a whoop, over 1,000 copies of each being sold.
— Miss Maud Hurst Calfee, of Akron, Ohio, and Mr. Troy
Isaiah Jones were married on June 15, 1918. Their address
is 694 Hazel St., Akron, Ohio.
— Lieut. W. B. Edwards, of Wilson, recently received his
commission at the artillery school at Camp Taylor, Kentucky.
— Hardy A. Carroll has arrived safely overseas with Co. A,
Military Police, Sixth Division, A. E. F.
— H. C. Collins, formerly instructor in mathematics and re-
cently a graduate student at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, is a captain of Engineers.
— Lewis Angel, who holds the rank of first lieutenant in the
army, represents all of the U. S. Cavalry in the coming Na-
tional Rifle Shoot.
PATTERSON BROS.
DRUGGISTS
THE r< IX VII. STQRE
AGENCY NORMS CANDY
CHAPEL HILL
N. C.
ANDREWS CASH STORE CO.
is ready to supply both S. A. T. C. nnd non-S. A. T.
C. men. Army shirts and shoes a specialty. Will
save you from $3 to $5 on your tailor made suits.
He convinced by a call.
FOR NEAT JOB PRINTING AND TYPEWRITER PAPER
CALL AT THE OFFICE OF
THE CHAPEL HILL NEWS
K
Z5l)e l£rUversit? "press
:B P. COUNCIL. Manager CHAPEL HILL, N.
Printing quality and service
PAEIS THEATRE
DURHAM, N. C.
A RTCR AFT-PARAMOUNT PICTURES
Orchestra Orchestra
Dillllfoiin Snupply C®.
MACHINERY, MILL SUPPLIES
PHONE 753 RALEIGH, N. C.
"SAY IT WITH FLOWERS"
J. J. FALLON, Leading Florist
Chapel Hill Aaents:
FOISTER'S ART STORE
R. P. ANDREWS, People's Bank
Phone 1290
214 E. M = inStreel
DURHAM. N. C.
ODAK SUPPL1E0
Finis'iing for the Amateur. Foister ^^
22
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Hart SchafTner
&?Marx
AND
Society Brand
Clothes
We feature these
lines because they
are known to be
the best. <* «* <*
£-Liru.:i JErani (iLulljrfl
Pritchard, Bright S? Co.
Durham, North Carolina
MANY CHANGES HAVE COME TO PASS
ON
THE HILL
Among them THE TAR HEEL has become a
A Real College Newspaper
It, alone, can keep you posted on events at
YOUR UNIVERSITY
Send Your Name, Address and $2.00 for 9 Months
To N. G. GOODING, Business Manager
TO-DAY
1915
B. L. Field, Secretary, Co. D, 105 Engineers, Camp Sevier
— Lieut. B. B. Holder was among the graduates of the Field
Artillery Officers' School at Camp Taylor in August.
— Lieutenant Roger A. McDuffie, who recently received his
commission in the Field Artillery at the officers ' training school
at Camp Zachary Taylor, Louisville, Ky., has been trans-
ferred to Fort Sill, Okla.
— C. E. Erwin has recently received his commission in the
Navy with grade of assistant surgeon and rank of lieutenant,
junior grade. He is now attending the Navy Medical School
at Washington for a special course.
— Corp. Paul L. White, of Scotland Neck, is stationed at
Camp Hancock, Ga., 3rd Co., E. B. D.
— A daughter, Bertie Elizabeth, was born on June 25 to Mr.
and Mrs. W. Raymond Taylor, of Auburn, Alabama.
— Miss Innie Marie Richardson, of Marion, Va., and Lieut.
James F. Hackler were married on July 15, 1918, at Marion,
Va.
— Miss Hulda Hattemer, of Asheville, and Lieut. Clinton Kelly
Hughes were married on July 6, 1918.
— Lieut. S. A. Miller, of Charlotte, is doing service overseas with
the Field Artillery.
— W. Doub Kerr has been stationed at Camp TJpton, N. Y.
He is in the infantry.
— B. A. Fitzgerald was acting top sergeant of the 39th Com-
pany, D. B., at Camp Jackson during the summer.
—Dr. A. H. Moore, first lieutenant M. E. C, U. S. A., was
located in May with the Tuberculosis Board, Base Hospital,
Camp Grant, Boekford, 111.
— 0. N. Lovelace, of Lattimore, has enlisted in the Navy.
— J. L. Coekerham, of Selma, has enlisted in the Navy.
— A. E. Newsome has been stationed in the Naval Training
Camp, Charleston, S. C, Co. G.
— J. W. Giles, Eeidsville, has recently received his commission
as ensign.
— Geo. W. Eutsler, president of '15, is now taking treatment
for his rheumatism at Hot Springs, Ark. He says this malady
was contracted while a student and became worse while en-
gaged in educational work for the government in the Phil-
lipines. He regrets very much his inability to enter the service.
— Capt. E. W. Winston, Jr., has arrived safely overseas.
— W. P. Mangum Weeks, in a recent letter to the Editor of
The Review, says that after two unsuccessful attempts in April,
1917, to get in the TJ. S. Army and after rejection for active
service by the draft board he has returned home from Cam-
bridge, where he has been a student at the Harvard Law School
the past two years, and is now with Penfield & Penfield,
Counselors and Attorneys-at-Law, Colorado Building, Washing-
ton.
— Born to Lieut, and Mrs. Kenneth Eoyall, a sou named Ken-
neth Claiborne Eoyall, Jr. Lieutenant Eoyall is in France, and
Mrs. Eoyall and baby are with Mrs. Eoyall 's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. L. P. Best, of Warsaw.
1916
H. B. Hester, Secretary, A. E. F., France
— W. E. Pell recently led a battalion of 500 men in competi-
tive examination for the Petty Officers' School at Pelham Bay,
X. Y.
— Lieut. Marshall Williams, who is in the heavy artillery
branch, has recently arrived safely overseas.
— C. E. Walker is with the A. E. F. in Fran..'.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
23
— Hazel Patterson has arrived overseas. His address is 2nd
Hdq. Co., American P. O. 717, A. E. F.
— Bryan Grimes Dancy, formerly a second lieutenant in the U.
S. Army, and who has seen service in France, has been pro-
moted to first lieutenant and captain. Recently, he has been
an instructor in the Student Army Training Corps at Sa 1
Francisco. He is the son of Frank B. Dancy, '81, who has
two other sons in the Army, both of whom have the rank of
first lieutenant.
— David Wills Hunter, of Greensboro, is in the Balloon Di-
vision of the Aviation Corps, his address being 45 Balloon Co.,
Camp Morrison, Va.
— Glen Hogan has recently been promoted to the rank of first
lieutenant.
— Lieut. John M. Huske, of Fayetteville, was a graduate of the
Field Artillery School at Camp Taylor in August.
— Jesse P. Lassiter, of Georgia, has recently ent.sted in tiie
Navy.
— Miss Margaret Louise Scott, of Riverhead, N. Y., and Lieut.
Avon Blue were married on July 30, 1918.
— Royal Royster is now a lieutenant flyer stationed at Rockwell
Field, San Diego. He graduated at the U. S. School of Mili-
tary Aeronautics, at the University of Texa3, !.'st January.
— A card has been received announcing the safe arrival over-
seas of Lieut. James H. Harrison.
—J. Boyd McLean is a sergeant in the Metropolitan Base Hos-
pital Unit No. 48, organized in New York City, and is sta-
tioned at Fort McHenry, Baltimore.
—Lieut. M. H. Meeks, Jr., is with the A. E. F., 77 F. A., in
France.
— Lieut. C. N. Dobbins, of Yadkinville, recently graduated from li:
the artillery school at Camp Taylor, receiving the commission
of second lieutenant.
— Dr. R. W. Hayworth, U. S. Naval Reserve, is stationed at
Washington, where he reported September third for six weeks'
special training at the Naval Medical School.
1917
H. G. Baity. Secretary, Ordinance Depot No. 13
Camp Meade, Md.
— P. B. Eaton is at the Yeoman's School, U. S. Navy, at New-
port, R. I.
— Lieut. Francis F. Bradshaw, of Hillsboro, Y. M. C. A. Sec-
retary last year, received his commission in the Field Artillery
at Camp Taylor in August.
— Joseph H. Hardison, of Wadesboro, is stationed in the In-
fantry at Camp Wheeler, holding the rank of second lieutenant.
— J. Earl Harris, of Henderson, has been stationed at Camp
Upton, N. Y.
— William Wright, of Winston-Salem, has been stationed at
Camp Upton, N. Y., for duty.
— McDaniel Lewis, who has recently been promoted to the rank
of first lieutenant, has been stationed at Camp Upton, N. Y.,
152 Depot Brigade. He states that he has seen many other
Carolina men in the Camp and stopping over on their way
across.
— A card from Theo. O. Wright, Bakery Co. 329, A. E. F.,
states that he arrived safely overseas.
— Earl T Durham, Pharmacy '17, is stationed at Glen Burnie,
Md., U. S. N.
— Miss Grace Strowd, of Chapel Hill, and Robert E. Devereux,
of Spencer, were married in Greensboro in the latter part of
the summer. Mr. Devereux is now at Camp Lee, Va.
RIDE WITH
C. S. Pender graft
Pioneer Auto Man
Leave Orders at
MABRY'S DRUG STORE
Headquarters in Durham.
The best place to get Soft Drinks, Cigars, and
Cigarettes.
Headquarters in Chapel Hill: next to Bank of
Chapel Hill.
Leave Chapel Hill 8:30 and 10:20 a. m.
Leave Chapel Hill _ 2:30 and 4:00 p. m.
Leave Durham 9:50 a. m., 12:40 p. m.
Leave Durham ...._ 5:08 and 8:00 p. m.
*OTHER TRIPS SUBJECT TO ORDER
Four Machines at Your Service
Day or Night
PHONE 58 OR 23
Agent for
Dick's Laundry, Greensboro, N. C.
ELLIS, STONE & COMPANY
DURHAM, N. C.
You are cordially invited to visit this store,
while in the city.
This season we are showing an unusually
attractive line of ladies' and misses' fine
Ready-to-Wear garments.
SUITS, FROCKS, COATS,WRAPS
BLOUSES, SEPARATE SKIRTS
STYLISH NECKWEAR
And all the accessories of Dress — Only
the newest and best of stylish apparel is
shown.
This store has the exclusive agency for
Gossard Front-Lacing Corsets, and the
"Lady Duff Gordon" Dresses.
All Mail Orders Are Given Special Attention
24
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
Clothes Made bi{ Makers who
yinow for Men who ^inow
and dold by
dneed=Markham=2ai(hr He.
Surham, Jiorth "Carolina
The Bank o/Chapel Hill
•
Oldest and slrongesl bank in Orange County.
Capital and Surplus over $33,000.
Resources over a quarter of a million dollars.
M. C. S. NOBLE R. L. STROWD M. E. HOGAN
President Vice-President Cashier
Five Points Automobile Co.
DURHAM, N. C.
Vulcanizing :-: Repairing
Upholstering
Largest LINE of ACCESSORIES in the STATE
HICKS' DRUG STORES
RALEIGH, N. C.
Eastman Kodaks and Supplies — Nun-
nally's Candies.
The place to meet your Carolina
friends when in the Capital City.
— Henry G. Harper, Jr., has recently entered the Officers'
Training School at Camp Gordon, Atlanta, Ga.
— Virginias F. Williams, of Faison, has been located at 'She
U. S. Naval Training Station, Charleston, S. C, Co. 7, Sec. 4.
— B. Marion Ross, Jr., of Shelby, is with Co. HI, Unit X,
Naval Operating Base, Hampton Roads, Va.
— S. H. Hobbs, Jr., of Clinton, will finish the Officer Material
School at Hampton Boads in November.
— "W. B. Shealey, of White Bock, S. C, holds the rank of cup-
tain in the first Aeronautic Corps, with the IT. S. Naval Forces
in Europe.
— R. Lee Roland, of Burnsville, is attending the Central Of-
ficers' Training School at Camp Taylor, Lousiville, Ky. He is
in the 23rd Battery, Field Artillery.
— N. A. Beasoner was, on June 24th, a sergeant in + li : 327th
Aero Squadron, at Kelly Field, Texas. In a letter of the
above date he reported on seeing Sgt. Robert Vaughan, of the
820th Squadron, J. C. Singleton, now in France, and John
Totten, then belonging to a balloon detachment a; Omaha. Neb
His letter closed with an inquiry as to the proper person to
whom to pay his class note.
— Mary Belle Thompson, of Hillsboro, and John Grady Eld-
ridge, of Bentonville, were married February 23, 1918.
— Dr. F. O. Bell has been stationed at Naval Hospital, Hampton
Roads, Va.
— Lieut. F. Angel, Assistant Surgeon, TJ. S. N., is stationed
at the Naval Hospital, Cape May, N. J. Lieutenant Angel
not only won first honors at the Jefferson Medical College last
spring, but stood in the first one-fifth of the class at the
Naval Medical School.
— Dr. L. O. Stone is stationed at the Naval Hospital, Hampton
Roads, Va.
— Dr. V. M. Hicks, Assistant Surgeon, IT. S. N., R. F., with the
rank of lieutenant, has been stationed in Philadelphia in a
Naval Base hospital.
— Lieut. F. L. Wilson lias been stationed at Fort Caswell,
Battery A, Regiment 75.
— Dr. B. B. McGuire lias enrolled in the Naval Beserve as
Assistant Surgeon, junior grade, and reported at the Naval
Medical School, 1357 Euclid St., Washington, September third,
for special training.
— First Lieutenant J. L. Orr, F. A., IT. S. A., is in charge
of instruction and physical training for the Field Artillery
School at Camp Zachary Taylor.
— J. H. Hardison was recently commissioned as second lieuten-
ant at Camp Wheeler.
1918
W. B. Wunscii, Secretary, Chapel Hill, N. C.
— Lieut. W. C. Newell is in the infantry, stationed at Camp
Sevier.
— J. A. Holmes, Jr., is second lieutenant in the Field Artillery,
General Brigade Staff, France.
— Lieut. Ray Armstrong, of Belmont, received his commission
in August as a graduate of the Field Artillery School at Camp
Taylor, Kentucky.
— Lieut. J. B. Linker, of Salisbury, was among the Carolina
graduates in the Field Artillery School at Camp Taylor in
August.
— R. E. Brooks, of Boxboro, a member of the '18 medical
class, is pursuing his course at the Jefferson Medical College.
— A. L. 0 'Bryant, of Boxboro, is pursuing his medical course
at Jefferson this year. He was a member of the 1918 medical
class.
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
25
— Lieut. W. A. Erwin, Jr., of Durham, was a recent graduate
of the Field Artillery School at Camp Taylor, Kentucky.
— Ralph D. Ballew is a cadet in the V. S. Xavy, located at
New London, Conn., where lie is a hydrophone engineer, study-
ing submarine detection. On September In, he expected to re-
ceive his commission at an early date, and expected to go across
to hunt the Hun.
— C. F. Crissman entered the service at Camp Jackson in
June.
— Isaac V. Giles has been stationed at Camp Wadsworth, S.
C, Co. H., 5th Pioneer Infantry. He expects to be trans-
ferred to the chemical branch soon.
— Lieut Meriwether Lewis, of Kinston, has been stationed at
Camp Upton, X. Y.
— Albert M. Coates, of Smithficld, entered the Officers' Train-
ing School at Camp Gordon, Atlanta, September first. He
was private secretary to President Graham last summer.
— Ralph Rimmer, J. P. Sawyer, Jr., and B. Lacy Meredith, who
enlisted in the Naval Reserve last spring, are applying their
knowledge of chemistry in the laboratories at Indian Head,
Md., Marine Barracks.
— Kameichi Kato, of Japan, who is stationed at Camp Upton,
N. Y., is reported to be one of the best cooks in the whole camp.
— Tom Craig, who holds the rank of first lieutenant, is in the
aviation service.
— Lieut. L. L. Lohr, M. A., '18, received his commission at the
Field Artillery School at Camp Taylor in August.
— Lieut. E. R. Warren received his commission at Camp Taylor
in Field Artillery in August.
— Chas. W. Wagoner is stationed in the Coast Artillery Corps,
Fort Caswell.
— G. Holding, of Raleigh, is taking a course in the Officev-
Material School at Hampton Roads, Va., with a view of se-
curing his commission.
— B. H. Thomas and M. R. Robbins, of Rocky Mount, enlisted
in Naval Aviation in July and are stationed at the Massa-
chusetts Institute of Technology.
— W. Hernias Stephenson is taking a course at the Navy
Aviation Training School at Pelham Bay, N. Y.
— Bruce Webb was a first lieutenant in the Depot Brigade at
Camp Jackson during the summer.
— R. E. Price, recently editor of the Rutherfordton Sun, has
entered service.
—John W. Patton is with the 8th Regiment, F. A. R, D.,
Battery E, Camp Jackson, S. C.
— Lieut. F. Kirkwood Dillon, of Greensboro, is now conval-
escing in the Army and Navy General Hospital at Hot Springs,
Ark. While flying at Kelly Field, San Antonio, he was se-
verely injured in an accident. Due to a defective heart he may
never be able to fly again.
— Gregory Graham, of Winston-Salem, is now a lieutenant in
the air service, D Division, being a full fledged flyer. He en-
tered the aviation service in the summer of 1917 and was
graduated at the V. S. School of Military Aeronautics' at
Georgia Tech., Atlanta.
PICKARD'S HOTEL
Headquarters for Carolina Alumni
Returning lo the Hill
SPECIAL RATES. STUDENT BOARDERS.
Z3l)e ~Jivsl National ^fcattk
of ~2>urbam. 3t. <T.
"Roll of Honor" Bank
Total Resources over Five and a Quarter
Million Dollars
WE KNOW YOUR WANTS
AND WANT YOUR BUSINESS
JULIAN S. CARR_
W. J. HOLLOWAY_
-President
Cashier
Here is the story in figures of the
EL-REE- SO 'S Yearly Growth:
1913 - - 94,000
1914 630,000
1915 _ 1,435,000
1916 5,305,000
1917 15,000,000
1918 Estimated 25,000,000
Ask Your Dealer
EL-REES-SO CIGAR CO.
MANUFACTURERS GREENSBORO. N. C.
Odell Hardware Co.
Greensboro, N. C.
China, Cut Glass and Silverware
Household Goods
DEPENDABLE GOODS
PROMPT SERVICE
SATISFACTORY PRICES
A. .A. TKlutte <Zo.,Jlnc.
Extend a cordial invitation to all students and
alumni of the U. N. C. to make their store head-
quarters during their stay in Chapel Hill.
Complete Stock of
New and Second-hand Books, Stationery, and
Complete Line of Shoes and Haberdashery
Made by the Leaders of Fashion, Al-
ways- on Hand
26
THE ALUMNI REVIEW
LIGGETT & MYERS
TOBACCO CO.
MANUFACTURERS OF
FATIMA, CHESTERFIELD, AND
PIEDMONT CIGARETTES
VELVET AND DUKE'S MIXTURE
SMOKING TOBACCO AND
other well known brands of Smok-
ing Tobacco, Cigarettes, and
Chewing Tobaccos.
Our brands are standard for qualify.
They speak for themselves.
Asphalt Pavements
DURABLE
EiC iINOMICAU,
IF YOU ARE CONTEMPLATING STREET OR
ROAD CONSTRUCTION, WE INVITE YOU
TO INSPECT SOME OF OUR RECENT
CONSTRUCTION IN
RALEIGH
OXFORD
GUILFORD COUNTY
WELDON
ROCKY MOUNT
LAURINBURG
WILSON
GREENSBORO
WAKE COUNTY
DURHAM
WARRENTON
LUMBERTON
HENDERSON
HIGH POINT
SEE THE GREENSBORO-HIGH POINT HIGH-
WAY—A 16-MILE STRETCH OF
ASPHALT ROAD
A Representative Will Visit You and Supply Any
Information or Estimates Wanted
Robert G. Lassiter & Co.
ENGINEERING AND CONTRACTING
First Nat'l Bank Bldg. Citizens Nat'l Bank Bldg.
Oxford, N. C.
Raleigh, TV. C.
NECROLOGY
1879
—John Walker Mallett, sou of Dr. W. P. and G. deB. Mallett,
died in Leesburg, Fla., August 14. He was born March 15,
1853. He was educated in the schools of Chapel Hill and
at the University. Twenty-five years ago he moved to Lees-
burg, Fla., where he was interested in truck farming. On
March 7, 1883, Mr. Mallett was married to Miss Josephine
Steel, of Orange county.
1895
— Col. W. D. Pollock, a prominent member of the Kinston
bar and at one time State Senator, died at his home on August
15. He was in his 56th year. He was born in Onslow county
during the war between the states, being the youngest son
of Dr. and Mrs. W. A. J. Pollock. He was mayor of Kinston
in 1892 and 1893, superintendent of public instruction in
Lenoir county in 1889, and in 1894 and 1895 Chairman of
the Democratic Executive Committee in Lenoir county. He
served one term as State Senator, being one of the State's
most gifted speakers.
1921
— Guy Churchill Le Lamar, of Beaufort, died July first at
his home.
SUMMER SCHOOL HAS SUCCESSFUL SESSION
The thirty-first session of the University Summer
School, June 11th to July 26th, was attended by
618 students, representing 87 North Carolina coun-
ties. While the attendance was less than that of
previous years, the spirit of the student body was
unusually fine, and the grade of work was exception-
ally good.
The faculty, not including the director and office
force, was composed of 56 members who offered 113
courses of instruction in 23 different subjects. Pos-
sibly the most interesting feature of the many forms
of entertainment provided for the members of the
school was the celebration of the Fourth of July. A
patriotic celebration, in which the Orange County
Council of Defense co-operated, was held in Memorial
Hall on the morning of the Fourth. Tn the afternoon
the County Council of Defense held a special meet-
ing, and at 4:00 o'clock a splendidly conceived his-
toric pageant illustrating the friendship of America
and France was given on the stage in Battle's Park.
One of the largest crowds ever seen on the University
campus was present, the presentation being under
the direction of Professor A. Vermont.
Other interesting features of the school were the
music festival on July 10th and 11th under the
direction of Professor Gustave Hagedorn; a series of
lectures by Dean Thomas Bailliet on Citizenship in
the High Schools; by Dr. Edwin Greenlaw on Proph-
ets of the New Democracy; by Dr. Edwin Mims on
Literature as a National Asset; and by Professor
Collier Cobb on France and Latin America.
Successful Careers in Later
Life for University
Men
Depend not wholly upon Football, Baseball,
or other sports —
But upon sheer pluck and ability to build the
solid foundation of Success by Saving every
possible dollar.
It takes Men to participate in Football, Base-
ball, etc., but it takes Greater Men to Build
Successful Careers.
Resolve to Start Saving Today.
The Fidelity Bank
North Carolina's Greatest Banking Institution
DURHAM, N. C.
Dick's Laundry Co.
Greensboro, N. C.
High-Class Launderers, French
Cleaners and Dyers
Prompt and Efficient Service
is our motto
Our reputation gained through years
of experience speaks for itself.
Send yours by Parcel Post
We appreciate your patronage
C. F. Pendergraft
Chapel Hill Agent
Culture
Scholarship Service
THE
Self-Support
ytorfy (Tarolina State formal (Lollege
Offers to Women a Liberal Education, Equipment for Womanly
Service, Professional Training for Remunerative Employment
The College offers four groups of studies lead-
ing to the following degrees: Bachelor of Arts,
Bachelor of Science, and Bachelor of Music.
Special courses in Pedagogy; in Manual Arts; in
Domestic Science, Household Art and Economics; in
Music; and in the Commercial Branches.
Teachers and graduates of other colleges provided
for in both regular and special courses.
Equipment modern, including furnished dormitories,
library, laboratories, literary society halls, gymnas-
ium, music rooms, teachers ' training school, infirm-
ary, model laundry, central heating plant, and open
air recreation grounds.
Dormitories furnished by the State. Board at
actual cost. Tuition free to those who pledge them-
selves to become teachers.
Fall ^erm Opens in September
Summer ^erm Begins in June
For catalogue and other information, address
JULIUS I. FOUST, President, GREENSBORO, N. C.
mm
.-•*/:
KOP
Wt '
If ■*. 'hL
*•'
i
:*«
fete
■ cJ
«*»
- *
t^>j.
«
%,-r
>»< v
'**/'
»-■•
^ ivl .
■'? : i