North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC)
- Class of 1907
Page 1 of 288
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 288 of the 1907 volume:
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THE AGROMECK O OS VOLUME FIVE JM X Published Annualjy ty the Schior Class of the North Caroliha College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts WEST RALEIGH, MAY, NINETEEN AND SEVEN rofesisior Wallace Carl Eibbicfe out of rcgarb for )i6 faeing ttjc tubents ' frienb, anb in appreciation of fjis toorfe in iilattematica; since ijis conne ction toitf) tte College, tfjisi, tt)e 1907 bolume, is bebicateb 97 -C- Z. - , Wallace Carl Riddick. ' TTjf .V 1892 there was a vacancy in the Enginecrinsr Department of the Collej e. jl The attention of tlie Trustees was called to a bright young North Carolinian who had recently been graduatetl from I.ehigh University. They learned that he was one of the first young men in the State to recognize the great future lying before Southern engineers, and to thoroughly equip himself for such duties. The Trustees elected Wallace Carl Riddick to the vacant chair. His tuiusual success in building up his department, his ability as a teacher, and his general usefulness as .-i memlier of the Ivicult} ' have more than justitied the wisdom of his selection. I ' rofessor RidiKck was born on his father ' s ])lantation in Wake Comity in 1864. He is the son of Mr. Wiley 0. Riddick, who was a Lieutenant in the Third Confederate Cavalr -. and of his wife, Anna Ivy Jones. He was prepared for college at home, . fter three years at Wake Forest College, he entered the University, and compleli ' d the . . course in one year. For two years he taught at Mount Airy, and then entered Lehigh L ' niversity. Three years later he was graduated with the Civil Engineering degree. Two qualities marked Professor Riddick ' s entire college and university courses. These were concentration and thoroughness. Me never entereil a lecture-room without having previously mastered all the details of the recitation. Consequently he always stood among the foremost men of his class. His attention to collegiate duties, however, did not prevent his taking an active interest in athletics. At Lehigh he was a member of the University football team, and at one track-meet he bore olY five medals. After receiving his degree, l ' l■ofe sor Riddick engaged for some vears in practical engineering work. l or a shoi-l while he was with a coal companv in Kentucky. For two years he w;is resident engineer for the Roanoke Navigation and Water- Lower Compimy, and hail charge of the construction of its canal at Weldon. just as In- was on the ])oint of entering the si ' r ' ice of the United States CovcrnmenI as engineer for the construction of a dry dock at I ' ort Roval, South Carolina, the College was fortunate enough to st ' ciu ' e his aid in its recently begun work-, lie entered on his (luti ■s in |S()_ . From the opening; of his career as a collegi ' professor. Professor Riddick won the ri-s]iecl and admiration of his students. They recognized his knowledge, his igor of mind, and his earm-sluess of ]iin-i)ose. They saw, too, that his teaching was an admiralile blending of ;iceiu-ale scieiuilk- knowledge and practical attain- ments: for he has always been interested in the practical side of his work. His department has steadily increasi d ' n niuuhers and in enthusiasm, uiuil now it is one of the largest in College. Tlu ' students graduating from his cartful instruc- tion have succeeded in whatever tiekl of labor thev have entered. I ' rofcssor Kiddick dues nut liclicxc llial a man ' s duties as a IcaclieT cui lit lu absorb bis life, and cut him uFf from bis fcllownian. lie bolds Ibat a colk ' i;c man should attend to his civic as well as his professional duties. He is a hank director, a cotton mill director, a member of the Governor ' s staff, a member of the executive committee of the Good Roads . ssociation. and was fur some years consulting engineer for the legal department of the Seaboard Air Line Railway. He has alwavs been interested in his political and social responsibilities. In 1893, Professor Riddick was most happily and congenially married to Miss Lillian Daniel, of Weldon, and b-s wife has stimulated and sympathized with him in all his work. He has four children. ATHLETIC 1 J 1.1.1 Editorial ' ' T HAS BEEN the constant aim and tlie higliest ambition of the Board of jl Editors to present this, the fifth volume of the Ac.romeck, with as many improvements as poss- ' ble. Whatever success we have had in this endeavor must be judged by you who turn these pages. We have tried to have repre- resented everything in college life that is worth representing. In this, at least, we believe we have succeeded, and hope that in days to come you may still preserve this volume as a memento of lyofi- ' O . This publication is the result of many weary hours of work, and has involved not a few disappointments. We are not satisfied altogether, for we realize that in many points we have failed to reach our ideal. But we have done the best we could. We wish to express our apprec ' ation to those who have lent a hand in the work, especially to our artists, Messrs. Lynch, Kenlv, Webb, Armfield, Kueffner, and others, and to those of the Facult}- and student body who have shown a kindly interest in the annual. The Editors. Editor-in-Chicf: WM. B. TRUITT Business Manager: ROBT. H. CARTER Assistant Business Manager: HENRY K. McCONNELL L. F. CARLETON R. S. GRAVES O. F. McNAIRY J. O. SHUFORD Associate Editors: SEBA ELDRIDGE G. F. H INS HAW E. F. WARD C. L. GARNER L. J. HERRING GUY PINNER N. H. TATE Thursday, July Wednesday September 4, . . Thursday, September 5, . . Wednesday September 4, Thursday, September 5, Friday, September 6, . . Saturday, September 7, . . Thursday, November 28, Friday, December 20, Monday, January 6, . Saturday, February i, . . Saturday, February 8, . . Saturday, Febiuary 15, . , Saturday, February 22, . . Saturday, March 14, . . Monday, March 16, . . Sundaj ' , May 24, Monday, May 25. ■• Tuesday, May 26, . Wednesday May 27, . College Calendar 1907. Entrance examination at each county court- house, 10 a. m. Entrance examination at the College, 9 a. m. First Term begins; Registration Day. 1 J. Examinations to remove conditions. I j Thanksgiving Day. First Term ends. 1908. Second Term begins; Registration Day. I } Examinations to remove conditions. i I Second Term ends. Third Term begins; Registration Dny. Baccalaureate Sermon. Alumni Day. Annual Oration. Commencement Daj ' . Board of Trustees State Board of Agriculture ■.t . S. L. PATTERSON, Pirsicicnf ex ofiicio Raleigh. T. K. BRUXER. Secretary e.v officio Raleigh. JOHN M. FOREHAXD, Rockyhock Finst District. J. B. STOKES. ' indsor Second District. WM. DUXX. Xew Bern Third District. C. X. ALLEX, Auburn Fourth District. R. V. SCOTT, .Melville Fifth District. A. T. McCALLl ' M, Red Springs Sixth District. J. P. McRAE. Laurinburg Seventh District. R. L. DOUGHTON, Laurel Springs Eighth District. W. A. GRAHAM, Machpelah Xinth District. A. CAXXOX, Horse Shoe Tenth District. i t Board of Visitors W. S. PRIiMROSE, President Raleigh. R. L. S-AHTH, Secretary Albemarle. D. A. TOMPKIXS Charlotte. FRANK WOOD Edenton. E. M. KOONCE Jacksonville. W. H. RAGAN High Point. DAVID CLARK Charlotte. W. J. PEELE Raleigh. J. FRANK RAY Franklin. CHARLES V. GOLD W ilson. S. L. PATTERSON, Commissioner of Agriculture, e.v olfieio Raleigh. GEORGE T. WINSTON. President of the College, e.v olUcio Raleigh, Agricultural Experiment Station GEO. T. WINSTON. A.M., LL.D Tresident. B. W. KILGORE, M.S Director. W. A. WITHERS, A.M Chemist. TAIT BUTLER, V.S Veterinarian. F. L. STEVENS, Ph.D Biologist. FRANKLIN SHERMAN, Jr., B.S. Agr Entomologist. W. N. HUITT, B.S.A Horticulturist. JOHN S. JEFFREY Poultryman. C. B. WILLIAMS, M.S Agron. C. M. CONNOR, B.S Agron. R. S. WOGLUM, A.B., M.S. A Assistant Entomologist. J. C. KENDALL, B.S Assistant in Dairying. JOHN G. HALL, A.M Assistant in Plant Pathology. W. A. SYME, M.S., Ph.D Assistant Chemist. F. C. REIMER, M.S Assistant Horticulturist. ROBERT S. CURTIS Assistant Animal Husbandry. WILLIAM KERR Superintendent .Agricultural Experiment Work. J. C. TEMPLE, B..- gr Assistant Bacteriologist. Faculty. George Tayloe Winston, A.M., LL.D. President. Professor of Political Economy. Daniel Harvey Hill, A.M., Lit.D. Vice-President. Professor of English. Williams Ali ' Hdnsh Withers, A..M. Profes.sor of Chemistry. Wallace Carl Kiddick, A.M., C.E. Professor of Civil Engineering. TaIT Bl ll.KH, V.S., Professor of Veterinarv Science and Zoology. Frank I.im(iln Stkvens, M. SC, I ' h.l). Professor of Botiuiv mid Vegetable Patliologv. Eli.kry BiRTON Paink, M.S., E.K., Professor of Klectrical Kngineeriiigaml Physics. Chari.ks Vai.h:ii Tiii ' M -. M.K. , I ' rofessor of Mechanical Kngineerini; Robert E. Lee Yates, A.M., Professor of Mathematics. Thomas Nelsox, Professor of Textile Industry. Charles M, Conner, B.S.A., B.S., Professor of Agriculture. John Somervili.e Katux Yoixg, First Lieutenant V. S. A. Professor of Military Science and Tactics Assistants and Instructors WIIJ.IA.M XICIIDI. MITT. . . .. f ' rofcssor of Ifortiiiiltiirc. BENJAMIN WKSI.l ' A KILCOKI-.. M.S., Lecturer on Soils and Fertilizers. JOHN CHESTER KlvVD [J.. l ' ..S.. Assistant Professor of Dairy Husbandry. hrv ALEXANDER R( )I ' .I ' :RTS. U.S.. D.X ' .S.. .I. ' sistaiil Professor of Zooloi y and Anatomy. I;. I-;TH0L().ME ' .MooRP: PAKKI ' .R. ll.S.. .Is-sistant Professor of Textile fiidnstry. CHARLES riENJAAHN I ' ARK. Snfrrinteiident of .Shofys. WnjJAM ANDERSON SY.ME. I ' ..S.. M.S.. Ph.D.. Instructor in Chemistry. FR. NKL1X SHERMAN, R.S. A.. Instructor in Entomolosiy. CARROLL LAMP. iNL N . I ' , S.. C.E., Instructor in Civil fi;). ;;crn ' ; -. PINCKXEV GUSTA E DEAL, Instructor in Fon c Shof anil Patlcm-makinq. THOAL S SLMEON LANG, B.S., C.E., Instructor in Civil nui;iuccriui . GEORGE Sl ' MMEY, Jr., Ph.D.. Instructor in Bn ;lisli. WINFRED MORSE ADAMS, P..S., Instructor in Electrical Bn ' incerini;. FRANK REi: IER, M.S.. Instructor in Horticulture. TOHN HOUSTON SHUFORD, P..S., Instructor in Dxcim;. ALFRED HENRY THIESSEN, P..S., Instructor in retcoro!o y. Rl SSELL SAGE WOGLUAL A.P... ALS.. .. Instructor in nntomoloo;y. WILEY THEODORE CLAY. B.E., Instructor in Woodivorkim;. CHARLES HERBERT LAWRANCE, B.S., Instructor in Protein s . TOHN ALSEY PARK, B.E., Instructor in Mathematics. HERBERT NATHANIEL STEED, Assistant in Tcvtilc Industry. TAMES CLARENCE TEMPLE. B.Apf., A. sistant in Bacterioloi y. ARTHUR TOHN WILSON, Assistant in Chemistry. ROBERT SETH CI ' RTIS, B.S., Instructor in Animal Hn.dmndry. ERXEST TENKINS HOFFAL N, Ph.D.. Instructor in Chemistry. LILLIAN LEE VALTGHAN, B.S., Instructor in Pra i im:. CARL PHILIP BONN, B.A.. Instructor in lim lish. CLARENCE WTLSOX HI AM.ETT. n.S., Instructor in Physics. Other Officers EDWIX BICXTLEY OWEN, B.S.. A ' .-- n;r ARTHUR FINN BOWEN, Bursar. TAMES OLIVER LOFTIN, Ste . ' ard. Miss ELSIE LANIER STOCKARD. Librarian. Mrs. DAISY LEWIS, Matron. Miss TI-:SSAMINE MAY HIGGS, Stenographer. JAMES RUFUS ROGERS. A.B., M.D.. Physician. ASSISTANTii AND INSTKUCTOKS. Senior Class Officers C. L. GARXER President. L. R. GILBERT ice-President. F. M. PARKS Secretary. L. R. TILLETT Treasurer. O. F. McXAIRY Historian. R. J. GILL Poet. C. B. WHITEHURST Prophet. Motto : Per aspera ad gloriam ( Through difficuUies to glory). Colors : Black and Red. Flower : Carnation. Class Poem Four seasons have the flowers bloomed Since first vc met in college halls ; Day by day the hours have flown, Gone forever and gone for all. But, do we not their value know? Could we fail to heed their call? Will nut their memories with us go Through life, forever, and for all? The sun is in the eastern skv. And as we gaze on the shining rays We resolve to be, to do, or die To reward these well-spent days. First as Freshmen with doubting hope We came for college training — Came to know a higher scope And adjust for higher aiming. X iw as Seniors we take (Uir leave. Well e |uipi)etl for life ' s great race. ( )pen hearted, let none deceive. Meet man as man face to face. Three score less four we do number. Each a link in friendship ' s chain. Which, if broken by some blunder, Alma Mater welds ag.iin. Class-mates and friends, we ' ve been together Since four times the year has passed ; Class-mates no more, but friends forever, Friends we ' ll !)e unto the last. There ' s a future that bids us on, Extends to us a beckoning hand- Bids us leave our cherished home To venture in an unknown land. But let ' s not he melancholy. For surely we ' ll meet again — It may not be in dear old Raleigh, But on some higher plain. Class Poet. Senior History • O write a history of a class that has accomplished so much, and shown Sii so much push and perseverance is no small task. It would tax the ability of the best of us to fittingly narrate our many phases, and with my poor talent I fear that I cannot put them properly, yet I will try with my meagre means to tell you some of the things about our class. On September 3, 1903, those of us who had not been directed to Shaw, the Asylum, or the Penitentiary, marched up tci the college doors to the tune of the Sophomores ' whistle. With fear and trembling we paid the dues, registered, and then went before the m: ' ghty Captain to be assigned to our rooms. At first glance we were indifferent, but when we looked into those steel-gray eyes and heard his sharp tone of authority, we braced up and became respectful. We were soon to learn that he ruled with an iron hand, but that he had a heart as large as his authority, and that he was a friend to the Freshman as well as the old student. One hundred and twenty-five of us registered, and, although we were strong in numbers, the Sophs soon made us weak in the knees. They gave us the best of attention, persisting in calling at all hours of the night, and as they usually forgot their cards they left their names on us in beautiful black and brown letters. But even this could not last long, for our class soon organized, elected officers, and stuck together with that remarkable tenacity that we still have. The Sophs broke up our meeting, but we retired to fourth which was barricaded so thor- oughly that none dared molest us. Several of our class dropped out during this year, some because they could not follow the straight and narrow path ; others, because they did not like to stay in their rooms on Saturdays and Sundays. 23 We soon took to athletics, and furnished some strong material both for football and baseball. And in the class baseball contest we defeated the Sophomores, to their great chagrin. At the clo.sc of the first year we went home, somewhat larger in knowledge and a great deal larger about the head because we were Sohps, and a Soph ' s a Soph. The following September we returned, a hilarious band of seventy-eight. We missed inany familiar faces, but we saw so many new ones which we thought needed our immediate attention, so that we lost no time in paying them calls, and teaching them singing, dancing, nature study (mostly animal calls), and the art of washing off lampblack and varnish without water. W ' c were so well jileased with these visits that we repeated them often, and under our careful guidance the Fresh- men soon learned the ways of the collesje. Once they were led astray by someone who told them to barricade the fourth. They barricaded, and also got themselves in a trap, for we, by a strategic move gained entrance, and — told them it was wrong to use beds and mattresses in that manner. As we taught the Freshmen well, we ourselves were well taught, and our class as a whole had a very high standing, both in scholarship and behavior. In athletics we furnished some of the best men, among them being Hardie. Sykes, Saddler and Watkins, and ' 07 was conspicuous in all the games. At last came our Junior year — the best of all years to a college student, for he begins to see and feel things in a different way. He understands why he should have learned lessons of other years, and of what use they will be in the future. Then, too, he begins the practical part of his work, and it becomes more interesting. We entered with fifty-eight of our former class mates, losing many of our best men from various causes. We were sorry to lose them, for some of them were the very backbone of our class ; but, nothing daunted, we entered upon our duties with a spirit and activity that has made us an exceptional record. Our work was hard, but we knuckled down to it with a stick-to-it-iveness that was bound to carry us through. In the beginning we had imbibed a spirit for the welcare of our College, and in this year the spirit began to manifest itself in work. We furnished some wonderful material for the best football team we had ever had, and on the baseball team we had McCatheran. Shu ford, and Staples. Not only did we furnish men for the teams, but we also contributed a large supply of rooting and spirit that has pulled A. and M. out of many a tight place. This year we won the Faculty Football Cup in the class contest. We elected an Agkomeck board for the following year, which early went to work, with a determination to do our best to make it the best yet. Final examinations came, and there were many anxious faces, and much burn- ing of the midnight oil ; but in the end we were triumphant, and none were dropped from the roll. Slimmer and the glad vacation, the blessed relief from studies and college work, came at last. We went our different ways with light hearts, but yet with a wee small yearning for that intangible something which departing from familiar haunts and faces gives. We were Seniors — not the gods that we used to think the Seniors were, but just the same naugh-seven ourselves. We were disappointed. Our highest hopes had been to become Seniors : yet when we became Seniors we experienced no appreciable difference. Every man that had stayed through his Junior year returned, and it gave us joy to shake the hands of each comrade and classmate as he returned. The year before we had petitioned and adjusted all matters perta ' ning to discipline and liberties, so that there has been no friction between our class and the govem ' ng bodies. Our class unity has been remarkable, and we have stuck together with a tenacity that seems marvelous. We feel that we have elected the best man for each place, and for this reason there have been no splits or factions in the class. Each thing that we have done has been for our College primarily and ourselves secondarily. We have spent our last Christmas at home as college men, and in a few more days we will face the end and the beginning: the end of our happy college days, and the beginning of our struggle against the world in which a man ' s a man, and no distinction or favors are made. We have learned a few things ; left many unlearned : yet we know that it is not all in what we have learned from books, but much in the habits and associations we have found, that will help or harm us in the future. ' e go from old . . and M. with sad hearts, we leave old comrades and associations perhaps never to see them again, to face the to ' l that will eventually .show our true worth: but we go with a loyalty to our . lma Mater that will not be shaken, and . . and M. will ever be a dear and bright spot in our memory. Historian. rd .M Tliree siicli iintics lUi not niiiouiil to a inan. HERI ' .ERT SCAXDLIX r.ATTlI ' .. GREKNSIiORO, N. C. ChV Bng ' .nccrhig. I si I.ifiil. I Sard ' o6- ' o : 3d Sergt. ' 06; Corporal ' i)r; : ir_cii.l)er Colic e ( Orchestra 05-06; V. M. C. A.: (iiilford C-niiity Club ofi- ' oj : Track Team ■o3- ' o.|. and 04- 05. A ' j e, 22 years ; lH ' i;_;lit. 5 fcL ' t. 9 ir.clics ; weight, 1 39 pounds. .Ii! t t:ikc :i Inck 111 Ilii viinu civil i-ii ' .iim ' ! ' ]- aiul i- ' icidi scIu ' Im. W- U aii..lli,.r iiiaiL at ulin-i ' (l.xir Siijd- iidii ' s (Irj; (lid not bilk very loiiK- His name is not an luiusnal one, l)i in r H. S. Battie, C.E., and can be found on liis souvenir of tlic oeiasion, — a sword. He will get okhI if vou don ' t call him lieek. Wrll, tlicn; I now ilo plainly see, This busy world and I shall ne ' er agree. J( )1-; PITMAN BI ' EXS, i ' oi.kton, n. c. Electrical Eiii iiiccriiti;. Triangular debater ' 07; Pres. Tcneriaii Literary Society ' o6- ' o7; Associate Editor Red and ll ' liite ■o6- ' o7; ■ice-Prei. T. L. S. ' 05-06; elected de- claimer ' o5- ' o6; speaker inter-society debate ' 04- ' 05 ; Secretary T. L. S. ' 04-05 ; ' ice-Pres. Electri- cal Society ' o4- o5 ; Y. M. C. . . ; Pres. . nsciti Club ' 06- ' 07. -Age. 23; height, s t ' t., 101-2 in.; weight. 138 lbs. If Joe eould but .see himself as others see him! lie laeks confidenee in himself, but he has lots of nerve, for he is already engaged. Of bis many good (lualities, we note his excellent prolieiemy in (hilling, as well as leg- If iiiMsii- lie (lie l;iii;;iiiij;p iif love, play (in. CAKXl-: ' j( )H. I ' .RVAX, WASIIIXCTdN, N. C. Electrical Eii i:;iiiccriiii;. 2(1 nianddlin, .Maiidnlin and (Uiilar Club ' (:i4- ' ()3; Jd cornet, ( ' rchcstra. ' o5- ' oO; member Klectrical Society: Electiical Engineers; 2d tenor in ' 07 Quartette: ist cornet ' n Rand ' o4- ' o5- ' o(). Age, 27: beisht : 5 ft., S 1-2 in. ; wei.yht 136 lbs. Caiiiey J. Hi van hailed fioni the sand Hats of Eastern Xiiitli Caiolhia. Connie is a musician by vocation and an electrical engineer by avocation. He says he owes his taste for music to having watched the sand fiddlers ' |.erform on the coasts during low tide. No doubt he will invent some musi ' al instrument to be propelled by elec- tricity, that will surprise the whole woilil and cause the god of nuisic to give up his job. OcU. c Ly, I will praise any man that will praise me. ' LIXDSAY F. CARLETON, boomer, n. c. Electrical Engineering . 1st Lieut, and Adjutant ' of .- ' 07: 2d Sergt. Co. E ' 05-06 ; 2d Corp. Co. F ' 04-05 : Leazar Literary Society ; Alarsball L. L. S. entertainment ' 04- ' 05- ' 06; Censor L. L. S. ' 05: triangular debate ' 07; 1st tenor Glee Club ' 04- ' 05 - ' 06- ' 07: Asst. Mgr. Glee Club ' o5- ' o6: Mgr. Glee Club ' o6- ' o7 : Asst. Editor Ar.ROMECK: Y. M. C. A.: Electrical So- ciety; Sec. E. E. Society 06: ' ice-Pres. Fresh- man Class ' o3- o4. Heigh;, 5 ft.. 9 in.; weight, 150; age, 21. A handsome young man from Western Xorth Carolina, with a fate that Cupid uses in his rock crushing business. We attril)utc his features and his musical voice to the mountains. But where he got that head for electricity is a mystcrv to the class. A littli ' lidily ildUi often liarbor a •;ieat soul. R( )i;i .RT H ILL CARTER, king ' s creek, n. c. Electrical Engineering. liiisiness Manager of Agromeck ; ist Lieut. ( resigned) : ist Sergt. Co. F ' 05-06; Corporal Co. K ' o4- ' o5 : ' ice-Pres. Junior Class; Manager Class P.aseball Team ' 04- ' 05. Age, 21 : height, 5 ft.. 8 in. : weight. 130. well. 1 reckon became fioni tlie Miountain-, ami luings willi liiiii the whole-heartedness and (■(nuaLii ' ( tlie typi- cal mountaineer. He has a fine busim-s In ail anil abil- ity for handling steam. Skating, an ai-iiini|ilislnMent of wliirli he is complete master, is his favorite pastime. (3 r Cc Z Zc2 = ' A sli])]iery and subtle knave. CLACD COLXCIL DAWSOX, i I E CUIKTo.N. .N. C. Textile Engineering. Age, 21 years; height, 5 ft.. 7 1-2 in.; weight, 145 ibs. tViiuit us to present you to a young man who believes in kce]iiMg his dignity under all circumstances. He struck this HiH ' four years ago, in search of a diploma, and it is l)eginning to be thought by some of the class that he will get one. If he does, there is going to b. something doing in the cotton manufacturing world, for he is going to be a star. He isn ' t much of a ladies ' man; he believes age should come before beauty, that is. his age before the beauty, whom he has often seen in his dreams, comes. :. fJJ. H. ' iyo ' - h- To dig up Greek and Latin roots I did not come to college. JACor, TATUM EATON, faumin-gton, n. c. Agricrtltnral Con rsc. V. M. C. A.; Tenerian Literary Society; Rural Science Club ; Biological Club ; Glee Club ' o5- ' o6 and ■o6- ' o7 ; Band ; Press Club ' o4- ' o5 and ' o5- ' o6 ; Cor. Sec. Rural Science Club ' o3- ' o4 ; Censor T. L. S. 04- ' 05; Pres. Rural Science Club Fall Term ' 06-07. Weight, 188 lbs.; height, 6 ft. i 1-2 in.; age 27 years. . nohle son of the soil, simplj- known as Jake. With a slicrht elfoit he sings in the Glee Club and whistles sweet tunes on his clarionet. When at work he is happy: when idle he is restless. Although deprived of parental lii e and eare in his early youth, his struggle has ever Inen onward and upward. And his life is an example of manhood to all. ' •What is the little one thinking about? Very wonderful things, no doubt. SEBA ELDRIDGE, dunn, n. c. Civil Engineering. Entered the Sophomore year. Class ' 07 ; mem- ber of Tenerian Literary Society ; member of the Merriman Society of Civil Engineering ; Sec. T. L. S. ' 04-05 ; ' ice-Pres. T. L. S. ' o - ' oC declama- tory contest ' o5- ' o6; Marshal Triangular Debate ' o5- ' o6; Censor T. L. S. ' 06; Pres. T. L. S. ' 06- ' 07 ; Triangular Debate ' 06- ' 07 ; Literary Editor of Red and White ' o5- ' o6; same ' o6- ' o7; Editor of Agromeck ; honor roll ' 04- ' 05 ; same ' o5- ' o6. Age, 21 yrs. ; height, 5 ft., 4 in. ; weight, 120 lbs. And this short, stumpy little dancing man of the ( ' . K. Society is usually called Seba. Seems as if he is an allrounil mistake, — too stumpy for an engineer, too square-headed for a preachei-, and too quick-tempered for a teacher; but we haven ' t the least doubt that he would make good as a dancing master. .-e u-cL- ■Wh ' ii iif nil soils tnkc :i pi iilc to j;ilM. :il inc. r.KxjA.Mix liRVAx i-: kr]-:tt, a. ,. I ' Al.M VKIl, X. C. .■Ij riculturc. 1st Limit. Co. C ofi- ' o-; Ser t. Co. D ' o5- ' o6; Cnrp. Co. . ' 04-05 : member l ' iological Chib; PuUcn Literary Societv. Ag;e. Ji vrs. ; heitijht. ft.. 10 1-2 in.: weight, irolbs. Tliis is one (if (lie tallc-1 timlMMs (if tl.c class anil is yi ' t yoiiiii;. liiit lie is a ■■liull. He has a true iiiilitaiy walk, is (luict. tnilliful, a hard stuileiit, and liki-s fun. lint lie is radier shy and timid, and his fjieat fault is his unrest rain I ' ll lii ' fur llio liDiinic las-ic-. lint «!■are sure he will |iull llirnii-li ;iim1 |Mn,laiiii Malli. ami Kiif;- lish his fa i.iili ' sluilics. . f . L t - y zAAA ' ■1 ha c niuih adii ti know myself. JOHN L. Fl ' .RC.rSt )X, KKXD.M,, N. C. Electrical Eni iiiccriiig. Lieut. Co. E ' 06- ' 07; Serjeant Co. D ' o5- ' o6; Corp. Co. F ' 04- ' 05; ALinshal oratorical contest L. L. Society 05: Secretary and Treasurer E. E. Society 05: imnil:er Executive Committee E. E. Society; V. Ai. C. . . : .Vthletx Associatio;; ; Leazar Literary Societ - ; .Vs e. 23 : Heislit. ( feet ; Weight, 160 jjounds. Dear old hi-. -iMiil -naliiieil. -,,..,1 heai teil .Inhn. win would mi-s liis Sunday ilinnei am Snmlav to do auMine a favor. lie is a frirnd lo exeiylimly that knows him. He is an anleiu ailiiiiirr of ihe fair sex. and deelaies he is never so li;i|.|iy as when he is saerifieiii;; his lime and heart to please the -fail- s(.. . Perhaps ]„■owes this disposition to the 1 wenly-tliree years of his life spent in the mountains of Western Xortl ' i Carolina. Y Jo -ArisA He ehuekles niul luids :uul winks, As if his head were full of kinks. KLIAS ' AX r.l ' RI ' .X FOWLER, r.r,EX ' ir.i.E, n. c. I ' Jcctric ' .il Biii iiiircrini r C.lcc Club ' 04-05, ' 05-06, ' 06- ' 07 ; Class Foot- hall Team ' 04- ' 05, ' o5- ' o6: Class Baseball Team ' o5- ' o r); Corp. Co. F (resigned); Sergt. Co. F (resigned); 2n( Lieut, (resigned). Age, 21 cars ; beight, 5 ft., g in.; weigbt, 175 ' i ' lie fill little fellow with the rosy cheeks who is never late for Ijreakfast. Was horn with a degree of common ense seldom seen in a child of that age, and since that time has fnll.y decided that by hitching on to some theory he will be the successor of Thos. Edison, provided Mr. ]Cdi.son is not a ladies ' man. lie actually thinks Alter- nating Currents ' ' is easy. Gee! but we didn ' t wait to get his views on any other subject. I never knew so young a body with so old a head. CLEMENT LEINSTER GARNER, lUvVUI ' ORT, N. C. Cii ' i! Enginecriiii . Captaii Co. I) ' 06- ' 07; President Senior Class; Presider.t Civil Engineering Society ' 06- ' 07 ; Critic Tenerian Literary Society o6- ' o7 ; Censor T. L. S. ' 06- ' 07 ; Editor A romeck ; Exchange Editor Red and White o6- o7 ; V. M. C. A.; Scrgt.. Co. B ' o5- ' o6; Sec. Tenerian Literary Society ' o5- ' or): Marshal Inter-Society Debate ' 05- ' 06 ; Honor Roll o5- ' o6; Punctuality Roll ' o5- ' o6 ; Mar.shall T. L. S. Enterta ' nment ' 04- ' 05 ; Honor Roll ' 04- ' 05. Age, 22 vears ; height, 5 ft., 10 in.; weight, 132 lbs. ■- - Garner has worked problems that even puzzled the professors. Modesty, knowledge and fellow-feeling lies here. Mr. President, he has often heard, and Please e.xcliange he often writes. Ask him if he ever forgot how many feet tlicre are in a pole. A. S. CiynyiUy How nuuli more elder art thou than thou sppinest? LU IC RODGERS GILBERT, ROXOISKI., N. C. Textile. Capt. Co. E ' 06- ' 07: ' ice-Pres.. Senior Class; Critic Tenerian Literary Society 07 ; Scrgt. Co. A, ' 06: Honor Roll ' 05- ' 06: Chief Marshall De- clamatory Contest ' o5- ' o6; Corp. Co. A ' 05; Honor Roll ' 04-05 ; Secretary Freshman Class ' 08 : Secretary Tenerian Literary Society ' 04-05 ; A c. 23; heisjlit. 5 ft. II in.: vei,2:ht, 145 lbs. . Te.Ktilily Gentleman proper, and a tireless worker. Always busy and hunting for something more to do. With all hisindustriousness, Pap is ever ready to swap a joke with you, and is never out of humor. A man liked bv everyone because he is ever a Mini. ' Thou dost s|)eak masterly. ROY JOSEPH GILL. K.XLEICII. N. C. Ciz ' il Engineering. President Wake Comity Club ; Sc ' ence Editor Red and White; appointed Lieut. Co. D ' o6- ' o7 ; Sergt. Co. C ' o5- ' o6; Senior Class Poet; Member Civil Engineering Society. . ge. 22 ; height, 5 ft , 10 in. ; weight. 148 1 ' :s. Being elass poet, Roy is naturally a man of brain. He shows this by his admiration of the faiier se. , writing of them by day, dreaming of them (one) by night, and we would judge, ere two siuiimers more, that 1 will will br said twice. fifjii S. ' ! UL.« - 2 He thinks too much ; such men are dangerous. RonERT STRICKLER GRAVES, SYRIA, VA. Electrical Engineering. 2nd Lifut. Co. D ' 06-07; Sergt. Co. F ' 05-06; Scrub Foot-ball Team ' o3- ' o4; Substitute Varsity F. 1). Team ' o4- ' o5 ; Coach Class F. B. Team ' 04- ' 05 : Champion Class F. B. Team ' o5- ' o6 : Y. M. C. A. : Historian Fresh. Class ; Secretary and Treasurer Soph. Class ; Mce-Pres. Pullen Liter- ary Society ' 06 ; Librarian ' 04 : Sec. First Inter- Society Declamatory Contest ' 06 ; Editor Agro- meck; Triangular Debate ' 07; Sec. and Treas. E. E. Society ' 04- ' 05 ; Librarian same ' 04 ; Pres. am! Toast Master Old Dominion Club ' o6- ' o7. Age, 24: height 5 ft. 8 in.; weight 185 lbs. Big-hearted, hig-bodied, broad-minded, and curly-headed is this Virginia orator. He is an artist at love-making, and can do almost anything if his bosom friend and ad- viser, Wliitehurst, is near. He believes in the old maxim that bluff is three-fourths of the game. P. 0. inspector. With a good leg, and a good foot, and money enough in his purse, such a man cuuld win any woman in tlie world — if he could get her good will. GEORGE ROM HARDESTY. RALEIGH, X. C. Electrical Engineering. Capt. Co. B ' 06- ' 07; 1st Sergt. Co. C ' o5- ' o6; Corp. Co. A ' 04- ' 05 : Sergeant-at-. rms Leazar Literary Society ' o5- ' o6; Marshall Declaimers Contest ' 06; Vice-Pres. of Wake County Club. . ' ge. 21 : height, 6 ft.; weight, 158 lbs. Four long years of antagonistic struggling against Math, has brought him within the radius of a .Senior. While theory is the fundamental principle of science, a practical mystic is invincible, and as long as common sense and friendship attain merit, his success is assured. - i-, •• I ' .ul. like :i coiiift. 1 was w.inil. ' ivd nl, nil. II ' WII.I.IA.M MARDII ' ., K. i.. I ' .KilW X SIM M V N. C. C t ' ;7 Eiii iiiccriiii;. i ' ' iit(. ' rc(I Siipli. Class: Capt. Co. A ' 06-07; ist Script. Co. A ' 05-06: Corp. Co. 15 05; N ' arsity F )()t-l)all ' o4- ' o5- ' o6: Scrub IJase-ball Team 05; Class I ' .ase-ball Team ' 06: I ' res. . thletic Associa- tion ' 06: Pres. (luilford County Club ■06-07 ; ' res. Cerman Club ' 07; ' ice-I ' res. C.ermaii Club of ' : C. Iv Snc ' ety: member S. 1 ' ,. C. A;r. 22 years; liciijlit, 5 ft.. 1 1 in.: vei, ;lit, 179 (Mil villi iiiiayiiic 11 iiiiirc iiil;ililc iiaiiir fur u inl licanl- I ' ll Icll.iw. than ■•Si ' otcliy -. ' lie .■aiiic In ii in our Supli. year, ami we tiOl you, ;fiitliMiion, I hat it is hctter tci Ik- iiorn hu-ky than rich. He is liant to loso in a football u ' anie: but with girls — lost. Cupiil is his latest luiiiie. .My beauty cliil haunt iiic in my r-U ' ep. j( )KT( )X LAFAVl-rrTl ' . Hl-.-MPHlLL, i. . E. MdKCAXTON, N. C. I ' Jcc triad liiii iiiccriii!;. .M ' r. arsity I ' .ase-ball Team 07; . sst. Mgr. ' 06; I.St Lieut. Cci. A 0(1- ' 07: 1st Ser.iit. Cm. I ' . ■o5- ' o6; 1st Cnr]j. Co. I! ■()4- ' o3; ' . M. C. . .: Cotnmenceiuent Marshall ' oo; .Marsball 1,. P. S. . nnital ay Debate ■o4- ' ()3: Tennis Club: Class F()()t-b;:ll Team ' (i - ' ofi; Sertib I ' oot-ball Team ■o5- ' oO: Cliiel Rnotcr oO: Niee-l ' res. Atliletie . ss(ie ation ' 05; See. I ' aeiilty . clvisor Coin- luittee on . tlilelics: . Iv Soeietv ; .Monntaineer Club. . .iL;e. 21 years: be-,s;bt. 3 It.. 11 in.: weiiibl. 157 ' l lii i our athh ' tii- man who -|M ' iiiis his suininers in . llanta. He eanio to Colle ' e lookinj; for exeitenient, ami cahulus satisfied his loiif. ' in ' ;. He has ha l many expeii- enees; made a few fortunes, but unlueky for liis deseend ants, they are gone. He has a broad mind and a quiek wit. Also one serious failing — the mirror. ' l nj A, ' n n ■■' riiiui siivi ' 1 an UMilispiitcil tliiiij; In -mil ' J ,il,Mnn wny. LAW ki ' .xc ' p; j. . ii :s iii-:krix(;, a. z., CLINTON ' , N. C. . I,: rii iiltitral Course. 2va . Liuil. Ci . A; Ivliicjr At; ' n)iiieck : Junior 1 listiirian ; C ' liartcr Menil)rr llias ' . Society; mem- U-r N ' . .M. C. A.; lliolo-ical Ckih : Rural ' Science C ' luli; I- ' armc ' s ' Sul)-All ance, West Raleig h ; Ath- letic Association: Chairman Class Co mmittee to iit (in r.nanl of Trustees and Faculty ' 06; Mar- shal L. ],. S. Debate ' 05; special student in vet- uirary n.edicine ' 06-07: A non hlackeil dock. A-,e. 24: height, 5 ft., S in.: weight, 147 lbs. Oin ' wlio is UMscmnljIc ami tlini, lint luis opinions of liis own. lie lias always stood liy liis class in tiiiii ' of trial, and lias endeavored to inaUe ' 07 the most notalile class of the school. He has lieconie so attached to his work till lie hnds more pleasiire in rattling the dry bones of a dead lieast than handling the cold steel bars aronnd the forge. His highest ambition seems to be to guide the surgeon ' s knife and nurster pharmacology. He was a wight of high renown. GUY FRANCIS HINSHAW. WINSTON-SAI.IJM, N. C. Cii ' il Eiiisljiccriui Capt. C Local Ed. Team ' o(y C ' 06- ' 07 : member .Agromeck Board ; ?(-( and White: Manager Track 07: Treas. . thletic Asso. ' 06- ' 07; Trump. ' of)- ' o7 ; member Civil Eng. Soc. ; ist Sergt. Co. D ' o5- ' o6 : Sec. Athletic Asso., os- ' ofi: Chief Marshal ' o5- ' o6 ; Champion Class Football Team ' o5- ' o6 : Pres. Class ' o4- ' o5 ; Class Foot- ball Team ' o4- ' o5 ; Corpl. Co. D ' 04- ' 05 ; Com- mencement Marshal ' o4- ' o5 ; Treas. Winston-Sa- lem Club ' o3- ' o4; Xon-blacked Dock ■o,3- ' o4. Age, 26 years: he ' ght, 5 ft., 6 3-4 in.: weight 134 lbs. Guy, to the world, is he. But you have only to know him, when you see he is not the guy his name implies. Short in stature, but long in good, honest work won the esteem of all classes and never forgets the the ladies. y y ; l . . ob-%- j U Jr His liours fillod with riots, banquets, sports. WII.I.IAM XOR.MAX H( )LT, 2N-0NE, SMITH FIELD, N. C. Textile Bjli illCCrill!;. Capt. Band ' 06-07 ; Pres. German Club ' 06 ; Pres. Tennis Club ' 06-07 Vice-Pres. Tennis Club 04-05 ; Capt. Tennis Team ' 05 ; Vice-Pres. . thletx .Vsso. ' 04 ; Sec. Athletic Asso. ' 03 ; Treas. German Club ' 05; ist Serg t. Band ' o5- ' o6; Corpl. Co. F ' 04; Class Base-ball Team ' o4- ' o5- ' o6; Sat- urday Evening Club ; Class Historian ; Textile Society ; Glee Club 07. Age, 20 years ; height, 6 ft. ; weight 150 lbs. The only titled fipnt. of the Textile push; a profound l)eliever in the theoretical side of all thinjjs, for practice means work. Thinks he has troubles enough of his own without having the faculty add a few hours more to his schedule each term. Such things as Temperance Unions are not in his line. His Imlihies are women, ponies, and music. ' Thou seekest the greatness that will overwhelm thee. ALBERT CARL JONES, TRINITY, N. C. Agriculture. Vice-Pres. Y. M. C. A. ; Delegate Southern Student Conference, Asheville, N. C. ; Biological Club ; Pres. Rural Science Club ' 07 ; winner sec- ond agricultural prize ' 04 ; Corp. Co. D ' o4- o5 ; Quartermaster Sergt. ' 05-06; ist Lieut, and Quartermaster ' o6- ' o7 ; Sec. Pullen Literary So- ciety ' 05. Age, 22; hf ' ijht, 5 ft., 8 in. : weight. 145 lbs. Do we speak enough for this child when we say he is one of the sturdy (Quaker type? This boy realizes there is a (Jod and seeks His compani(mship. Of course he is an ollicer and has a military bearing, hut he never likes to wear a sword. He claims riches is not happiness, and wants to settle on a farm and live that happy life of freedom. :::: 2 Uf u My mind to me, a kingdom is. WILLIAM WHITMORE JONES, FRANKLIN, N. C. Electrical Engineer in g. M.Hintair.eer Club; Y. M. C. A. Atjc, 22 vears ; height, 5 ft., 10 1-2 in.: weight, 170 lbs. Kvt ' iything that is noble and generous is brought out in him. His smile is unsurpassed by anrthing except his good nature underlying it. He has about got us all lo thinking that Macon County is the only place on earth, but everyone has an idea or two of his own. He claims to be extremely conservative, but has a sly tendency to- ward patent leathers, white vests, and plug hats. 0, he was gentle, mild, and virtuous. LAFAYETTE FRAN ' CK KOONCE, Agriculture. Commencement Marshal o3- ' 04 ; member Biag. Society ; winner Zenner Medal ; winner Metropol- itan Medal ; elected Editor-in-Chief of Agr. Edu- cation ; Vice-Pres. of Tenerian Literary Society. Age, 26; height, 5ft., 10 1-2 in. : weight, 165 lbs. Here is a man who will not be satisfied with a B.S., but thinks A.D.V.S. will do more for him in solving life ' s problem. After attaining this degree, it is prophe- sied he will return to Richland County, where he will take unto himself a better half and will show liis fel- low-farmers a few things. He is truly a man that will succeed in life, if the old saying where there is a will there is a waj ' , is true. He is admired bj all his class- mates for his manly disposition, and by the fair se.x for hi3 timidity. Xtx 6 ■■W li..-,- rllill i l.llt nili.llr.l uilll ,,llr ;l |,|„M I ill;; liail. C ' llARl.l ' .S I ' .DWAUl) I.ATTA. :i. N.. N i.i:ir,ii, N. c. Textile liiii iiiccriiij . Textlc Si cicty ' o, ; Sec. Wake Cnuiily Club Aj f. JO x-ars : lK ' ij;Iil 3 ft.. 7 in.: w ci,s.;lit, 130 . li! hcic- our hi(lics-iii;in; lie ciiii talk for luniis at a tiiiii ' ami si ' Idiiiii mcr Muslux; says tin- liappii ' st inuiiii ' iits (if Ills life arc when liis t;iil calls liiiii .MIsI.t l.alta. lie is (lei ' iily ill love with all incnihcrs of the fai-iilty with whiiiii he is aeiniainted. liut nf all liis aeeciin|)lishnieiits, his jiiiwer tii wink is his i-eatest. tlnm ' h he thinks his health insiillii-ient to peniiit his ihiin any nime till the curniiiient e lalili lies a Iniir-hniir |ier ,lay system. His hi,i;lie-l aiiiliilidii i t.p l. ' arh steaiii in fnnicll liiivei- siiv. •■1 am Sir Oraile; ami wlieii 1 speak, let mi cloi; hark. M ' lwis i ' .i)( ' .. u i.( jrci ' :! ' .. RAI.lCir.Il, . c. Clieiiiistry. .Asje. 21 cars ; hc-inlu. 3 ft., 8 in.; weight, 150 11)S. ' ' .A jidoilhearted ' ay French lad, who lias recently ' ot next to sonie ilini ' h. I ' laies chemistry second only to a jiretty chorns girl. . tourist of some note: has done New York. Carv, .Metlmd. and will soon cross the creek. r £ :_..... Kaie nil eaitli is sui-li siililinic iiiiiliil iuii fuuinl. IIF.XRV KREir.ER McCOXXKLL, I,()UIS ' II,I.E, KV. Clu ' inistrx. Fjitered Soph. Class: Asst. lUis. Ms ' i ' . of Agro- iiKck: 1st Lieut. Co. E; Class Foot -ball Team ' o5- ' o(); Honors in Scholarship ' o5- o6. .V e. 20: lieight, (• ft., I in. : weight. 158 lbs. From tlie land of lieiiutiful women, fast lior.ses, and L;ood li(inor. ' While passing tliroujili tliis country three vcais ago lookinp; for something that wiiuhl assist hiin in killing time, spied this place: as it looked good to him, lie divided to stay. And since that time he lias had the I licmical de]iaitnient just where he wanted it. His pas- time i going to see the ladies, and it is great to seethe iiiile tliat illuinines his handscniic face npon such occa- sions. ' His addiction was to cniirses vain OSCAR FRAXKEIX McX.MRV. i.KiaC-N ' Sl ' .OUO. N. C. C ' ;t7. ' Eiit inccriiiii. Editor- ' n-Chief Red and White ' o( - ' o : Class Historian of:- ' 07; nieinber . gronieck lioard ' 06- ' 07; Librarian C. E. Society; Gtiilford Cottnty Club; Class FcKit-liall Team ' 04; Champion Class Foot-ball Team ' 05; Sergt. Co. { ' d - ' od; Senim- Private. -Age, 22: height, ( ft., I 1-2 in. ; weight. 1(17 llis. ■' lembcrs of the staff will |)lease hand in their mate- rial for h ' rri (Dill While before to-morrow night: this will positively be your last chance. Mack, have you writ- ten .Jim Lynch? Mack, when are you going to hand in that history? His patience only goes so far. - CXA U Ah. me! What perils do environ The man that meddles with cold iron. EUGENE FRANKLIN MEADOR, REIDSVILLE, N. C. Mechanical Engineering. A non-resident, having spent one night only in College; Chief Draughtsman of Senior Mechan- ics ; Lieut. Co. B ' 06- ' 07; 2nd Sergt. Co. F- — transferred to C ' 05-06; Corp. Co. E ' 04- ' 05. Age, 21 ; height, 511 1-2 in. ; weight, 138 lbs. Well, just call him Mr. Meadows, as that is the most appropriate name he has, and fhcy all call him that. He is a wild customer, but no wonder, — he came from Roek- inpham County, but came to the wrong place. He may some day be a mechanical engineer, but has missed his calling; he ought to have been a lawyer, as he will even argue with himself, if no one else is handy. I am sick of this false world. BENNETT TAYLOR MIAL, RALEIOII, N. C. Mechanical Engineering. Day student ; Soph. Base-ball Team ' 05 : Treas. Wake County Club ; Pres. Senior Mechanics. Age, 20 years ; height, 6 ft. ; weight, 156 lbs. Let us introduce to you Mr. B. T. Mial, otherwis, ' known as Ichabod. This long, lazy, lanky, lying, lol - ster is a native of Wake County. Solomon ' s dog didn ' t bark at his door very long, but nevertheless he has plenty of bull-dog tenacity, and is a mi.vture of machinist ami jug-maker, in which the jug-maker shows the stronger. l t a-u - . ■■I know not wliy I am so sad. I ' RAXK CL ' RTIS MICHAEL, (■.II!SnN ' II,I,E, N. C. Electrical Engineering. iMitercd Soph. Class from IClon College ' 04; IVt.ci- an Literary Society; Electrical Society; Y. M. C. A, ; Sec. T. L. S. os-oG; Sec. Inter-Society Dibiilc ' 06; A ' ice-Pres. Guilford County Club ' ofi- ' oj. .Ag-e. 21 ears ; hciglit, =; ft.. 10 1-2 in.; weight, 138 lbs. We know little of liis first two years in College, as his room was his loafing phice, and his books were his friends. He always thinks twice, and then waits awhile U ' fore he acts. He seldom complains, and never eusses, and from the expression on his face you can ' t tell whether his report pleases the old man or not. Ladies are not in his line. We thank the gods our Rome hath such a soldier. JOHN MAPLE AlILLS, R.M.EIGH, X. C. Mechanical Engineering. 2nd Lieut. Co. B ' 06- 07 ; 3rd Sergt. Co. E ' o5- ' o6; Corpl. Co. E ' o5- ' o6; Glee Club 06-07; Glee Club ' o5- o6; P aritone Senior Quartette ' 06- ' 07 ; Class Base-ball Team ' o4- ' o5- ' o6. Age, 20 vears ; height 5 ft.. 8 1-2 in.; weight, 145 lbs. And this is J. Maple Mills, better known as Bully. He is the man that all the girls love, but it never effects him. He is never in love, but can give anyone points on How to treat your girl. An e.xpert phrenologist, barrel heads being his long suit. He sometimes legs Leander by taking him out hunting; but he ' s all right. Q OTyf ' c A, If lie l;e saii, ho wants money. HKXm ' STAKI ' .rCK MONTAGUE, K. 2., W IXSTON-SALEM, N. C. (. ' Iicinistry. l- ' ditor Red and White ■06-07; ' ice-Pres. Class 04- ' n3: !cc-Pres. Winston-Salem Club ' o5- ' o6; Sec. ilerzelius Chemical Society ' o5- ' o6; Thalerian Cermaii Club; Corpl. Co. E ' o4- ' o5 : Sero;t. Co. B ' c)5- ' o(); Seninr i ' rivate ' oCi- ' oj. . !;e. _M ; liei,L;iit 5 ft., () in. ; ve-. ;iit, 130 Ihs. A |insl-m:istci- of llic sciiMKc of ••I ' onctics, of which lie |iai I nicnl he is Dean. Monte is also a I ' licmist of soiiie nirli ' . liiit is ovcijoved wlicn his name a| |)pars in tlie iiiuniini; |i;i|ier as ■' Mr. H. S. Montagup. of Winston, was a Uc-I of the al■hol■ough last eveniiijr. ; , 3, Thou are a merry fellow and carest for nothini . JOHN LIGHTFOOT MORSON, 2. N., RALEIGH, N. C. Ci ' . ' il liiix iiiccring. German Chil). . ,!.je, 18 years: heii ht, 5 ft.. S 1-2 in.; veii;ht, 145 lbs. Say Toby, ami he will smile. Ho even comes on class anywhere from lifteen (o thirty minutes late, with a ' ' standing; broad f, ' rin. . Without his adviser, Tillet, we refrain from ]propliesyinjt his fate. I am not sliaped for sportive tricks. TAMES EL V(J()D OVERTON. A. Z., AIIOSKIE, N. C. Agriciiltiiri 211(1. Lieut. Co. C ' oC)- ' o7 ; ( )ffici() liiaj . Society ' oC;- o7; Leazar Literary Society; Y. M. C. A.; i ' liological Club; Rural Science Club; Farmers ' West Rale ' gh Sub- Alliance ; Charter Member of ' ' ins!;. Society: Sergt. Co. F ' 05, and Co. D ' 06; llnr.ors I ' or punctualitN- ' o4- ' o5 ; Sec. Rural Science Cluh ' 04. .V ' e. 23: height, 5 ft., 5 in.; weight. 136 ll)s. lli ' U ' is mil ' wlici i-laiiiis a lili ' ssjni; Iicciiiim ' Iii ' is fmiii till ' town Alioskie. His l)usiness e.vc is tine, anil many of his classmates say he will l:e a mereliant instead of a ■' tiller of the soil, though we believe he is more inelined to write love .stories. He is eharaeterized with a sleepy head which knows nothinj; of a noisy house. And his next unavoidable characteristic is shortness, and so re- solved, named and known l v his class as Shortv. (f) xQiMAiof I clothe my naked villainy and seem a saint when most I play the devil. JAMES CALEB PARKER, EUZABETII CITY, N. C. Electrical Engineering. Age. 22 years; height, 5 ft., 9 in. ; weight, 140. James Caleb Parker, from the herring town, came to the College abont four years ago. When he arrived the Sophs, presented him with a genero is supply of Baby Elite jiolish, which caused him to fjet in a bad humor, fiom which he has never recuperated. However, .Jim is an up-to-date electrical artist, and no doubt will return ■to his native town to furnish lights for his friends to pack fish by for the Northern markets — if there are no ladies around. T can no lunger brook thy vanities. THOMAS FK.WKLIX PARKER, RAI.EICU. N. C. .Igriculturc. l5iolo jicnl C ' hih: Tennis Club ' 04; Sec. Rural Science Club 03; Chaplain L. S. ' 05; ' ice- I ' res. 1 ' . L. S. ' 0(1: I ' res. P. P. S. ' 07; Handbook and I)e (it!()nal Chairman V. Ai. C. A. 07; Ama- teur i ' lK.to. Club; CAee Club 07; Sergt. Band ' 06; Piiiicipal Musician of Band, ranking as ist Lieut. 07 ; lliag. member. . i;e, 22 years: height. 6 ft.; weight, 168 lbs. Kcii ' i- ' inc in wlioni we can say there is no harni. ■| hniiuh hi ' ihiiiii- he doesn ' t know liis calling, yet his iliawinL: h.iw hi ' is skillfnl. and this gives him an ontlet. His inU ' i)liciM all ' ci y good. To ]ninish him most wonhl be to shut him ii|) uilli a room of books. Some men were born for great things, Some were born for small ; Some — it is not recorded whv They weri ' bom al all. FRED AIAVXAKI) P.VRKS, M()UC.. NTON, N. C. Ulcctrical liiii;iiiccrini . Drum Major )( : Corpl. Cci. E; Junior Base- ball Team ' 06; Sopiuiniore Baseball Team ' 05: Sec. Senior Class. Age, 22 vears : lieight. (1 ft., i ' n. ; weight, 145 lbs. Here ' s he who hails from .Moiganlon, Kt[], a biaiii that works like an alternating curient. lie kima, « lim and how to stndy. This is pi-oven by the fail tlial lir never comes np lacking when there is a preliminary on hand. He delights in worrying .lock, and thinks wo- men should work for themselves. . Ht t - a cj:. {Pa.Jji: MitMike mc not for my complexion. ARTHUR LEE PASCHAL, lUAG., N ' AUGHAN, N. C. Agricultural Course. . M. C. A. ; Pres. Leazar Literary Society 2nd Teriii ' 06-07 • ice-Pres. Rural Science Club 2d IVrni ' o3- ' o4; Sec. Rural Science Club ist Term ■o3- ' o4: winner of one $30 prize essay contest in Rural Science Club ; Biological Club ; was out of College 3rd term ■03-04, and all of ' o5- ' o6. Age. 22, ' ears : height, s ft., 10 in.; weight, 145 lbs. Social life is now overpowering him in his Senior year. His fact ' sliows marks of youth: his reasoning, that of a jiulge. He joined our class but one year ago, and now lias won the worthy title 07. We find him a hard stu- dent, a hard worker in Y. M. C. A., and in debate you :in ' t get around him. So we recommend, Take him, he 5 what he is. ' I am monarch of all I sur -ey: My right there is none to dispute. GUY PIXXER. K. 2.. ELIZ.XBETH CITY, N. C. Ck ' il EngiuccrJig. Business Manager Red and White ' 06- ' 07 ; Edi- tor Agromeck ' 06-07 ; Champion Class Football Team ' 05-06; Manager Class Baseball Team ' o5- ' o6; Y. I L C. A.; charter member Merriman Society Civil Engineers ; Thalerian German Club ; Sec. Athletic Asso. ' 06-07; Senior Private. Age, 19; height, 6 ft., i in. ; weight, 165 lbs. Without his cue, what on earth would he do? He will get into almost anything where there is a chance, whether it is eating, courting, or a dance. Truly the long man of the class is this same Guy. ' rinii til liiiii anv riuisr iif jiiilioy. ■| he (li.nliiin knot nf it lie will unloose. I. SI.( )W CI ' .RAI.I) I ' lTMAX. I.l ' MIiEKTON, N. C. Mccliaiiwal Eiij inccrini . I ' l l.iiiit. Co. D ' oh- ' oj: . iT. -t. C(i. 1) ' 06 Ciirpl. I ' ll. 1) ' (i5- ' o6: Sec. Senior .M cell allies Soj)li, I ' ooi-liall Team ' 04: Junior Foot-hal Team ' us. . .L:e. 21 years; liei:;lit. 5 ft., 11 1-2 in.: weight, (all hini Ml. W . (i. Pillinaii. cxc-i ' i.t ulini iiiral lime ...nil-: lliiii -Tit ■will ilii. II,. Iliinks li,. has nun,, ox- |M ' iiiairi. than tli, ' r.-t .it 111, ' ,ii lil,- lii ' ini i.|ii.rat. ' .l mi lui a|i|,rnili. ' iti-., v.in kn.nv. lull li. ' V w. l,-,ini. ' to tli, ' h 1. ■■l if i an.itli,-! I.i.i; niiMak, ' : In- w.ml.l have ma. I ' Ihr linr-l lawxcr thai iwi ' r iKipinnnMl, ,.s|i,-,nallv if llir w.n.l i- spcllci l-i-a-r. He is a man will, whom I . ' , l.ilia,-, ' ,!. anil }i y]s cut no fijrffi ' r. Li ....UJl [f t ii-.... -- ■' f.ittl, ' . lint l.in.l. J. . I1 ' :S IxlvMI ' I ' l.r.MMI ' .K, M 11)111. i-;r.fK ' ,, N. c. Chemistry. Senior I ' rix ' ate. . oe. 20 years; heioht, 5 ft.. (1 1-2 in.; weight, 140 Ihs. . lUill .Senior Clii ' ini, ' . ,. ,m kii..«ii I.. ;;.. lalliiii;. lui) is alwa.vs on thi ' lookout t..i ■Kili.. ' lla 1 n i.. Hi, -11111, 111,1, anil consiilins it a v liraiit iliil ami iiili ' i- cstiiij; town. Is in hi r riith liraM ' ii w lii ' ii a ■•I ' .iill Vii.l.f .•,iiii,.s his wav. ¥- ' «--«-- — .■-t.- ., . ,X.- ■■I :iiii one (if till ' ficiitl. ' i.iii ' llial  ill ii-c I lie Devil liiinsclf «illi lioy. 1.1 ' : ). JAC( HI SCHWAI!, (,(ii.iisi;(ik(i, N. c. Cl-t ' il Eiis Jiccriiii: . Age, 20 )ears : heisjht, 5 ft.. 5 1-2 in.; weigiit, 135 lbs. Si|iuil) is most too old for a stew, 1)ut he will do. He will he lompelled to undergo a Iciifrlliening process before he i-aii see through a transit. We liope that he thinks MMv often, for he savs little. An lionest man is able to s])eak for himself. ' JUHX OSCAR SHUFORD, S. N., r,. sToxi. , X. c. Electrical Engineering. E. E. Society, German Club; ' arsity Foot-ball ' 06; Glee Club; second bass in 07 Quartet; ' ar- sity Base-ball Team ' 06-07 ■Pres. Junior Class ' 05-06 ; Sergt. Co. D ' o5- ' o6 ; coacb of Class Foot- ball Team ' 05 ; substitute ' Vars ' .ty Football 05 ; Baseball Team ' 04 ; Corp. Co. D ' o4- o5 ; Scrub Football Team ' 04 ; Y. M. C. A. Age, 22 : beight. 6 ft.; weiglit, 175 lbs. Known by his ihissmates as the man who does many things. J. Oscar is an all-round athlete, as he has helped the College to win many victories in baseball and football. Better still, he is an u])-to- late electrical engi- neer, and lucky will be the electric company that secures his services as president. a .y x a je - 7 i -f Take counsel of some wiser head. WTLLIAAr CRAWFORD STAPLES, K. 2., REIDSMLLE, N. C. Textile Engineering. Freshman Year : Capt. Class Rase-ball Team ; Class Foot-ball Team ; Scrub B. B. Team. Sopho- .nore year : 3rd Corpl. Co. B ; Capt. Class Foot- ' jall Team ; X ' arsity Base-ball Team : Coach Class Base-ball Team ; Sec. of Class. Junior year : 3r(l Serfjt. Co. K ; Class Football Team ; A ' arsity Base-ball Team. Senior Class: ' arsity Base-ball Team ; Cerman Club ; S. E. C. Aj e, 21 years; height, 5 ft.. 7 in.; veiL;ht. 1-15 t ' sili luili! tilis is he. Thoujih lie doesn t look wise, lie is, really. He sauiiteiod up on the campus a few years ago with the avowed intention of becoming an electrical engineer, but you know the minds of great men some- times change. In the textile profession we notice he is taking a great deal of interest. His avocation is base- ball, and he plays a good game. Quick and impulsive at all things. The truly great are always mndest. ' A XE SYKES, EFL.wn, n. c. Ciz ' il Engineering. Leazar Literary Society; Civil Ensjineerinti; So- ciety; Y. M. C. A.; Marshal Inter-Society Debate ' 06 : Chaplain Leazar Literary Soc ' ety ofi- ' o ; Class Sec. ' o5- ' o6; ' arsity Foot-ball Team ' 04- ' o5- ' o6. Acre. 25 years; height, 6 ft. ; weight, k i lbs. Vance is still single, but who knows Imw Iniio? [ ' is true, he is a good, stout iiian. Iiut sniiiclinu or ulln ' r he just can ' t stay on examinatinn four wliole hmus. (iarner is his spiritual adviser. I wcnilil my iiuMiis wcri ' L ' li ' ati ' r, and my ' waisl slciidcriM-. I. r ' n I I ' .R Rl ' SSI ' .l.l. TILLETT. COROLLA, N. C. Ciz ' i! I{iii:;inccriiii:;. I ' rcs. tirst Inter-Socicty Debate ' 06; Pres. P. L. S. 07; ' ice-Pres. [ ' . L. S. ' 05; Critic same ' 06; Marslial Debate ' 04; Class Foot-ball Team ' 03; Capt. Scrub Foot-ball Team ' 04; Capt. Class Foot- ball Team ' 05; Treas. Senior Class; Inter-Society Declamatory Contest ' ofi ; Inter- Society Debate Af;e, 24 _ ' ears : beiLjlit. 5 ft., 8 in.; weight. 175 Lifi ' is XI sliort and luuertain! Toby, yoii are a liii; fndl! Wo have just simply got to get that Honor System down pat to-day! He had a girl once, but, alas! the coin was tossed and Skillet lost. llMin uhal mc;it dulli this run- fa ' snr feeci (liat he is urowii so i;rcMl ? WILLIAM LRtKJKS TRL ' ITT, CRIJliXSlJOKO. N. C. M rclhiiiiral liiii iiiccrini: . -Major Raltalion ' o()- ' o7; Rattalion Sergeant- Major ' 06; Corpl. Co. A 05; Triangular Debate ' 07 ; Pres. Leazar Society ' 06 ; won medal declaim- er ' s contest ' 06; Chief Marshal Debate 05; Edi- tor-in-Chief Agromeck ' 07 ; Editor Red and White ' 06-07 • Track Team ' 05 ; Class Poet ' 04- 05-0 ' ' ); honors in scholarship ' 04- 05- ' 06 ; Glee Cfnb •06-07; Guilford Club 06- ' 07: Y. M. C. A. . ge. 21 ; height. 6 ft.; weight, 158 lbs. liy the way! heie is the Corliss engine maker. But just ' call him ' Hill, or Rabbit, — either will do. lie is another man wlio has been held back in this world hy having started wrong, for it can be proven that Rabbit should have been a missionary, because any man with a hexagonal shaped head is the man for the heathen. Urrd : v . -19 1 1( tliv fdiuliicss for liiit ail-. r- M- ' L- --«- r JOHX EDWIX TLR1,IX( .T() . CI.INTON. N. C. Ai riciiltnyc. V. Vi. C. A.; Leazar Literary Society; Biologi- cal Club ; Rural Science Club ; charter meniber I ' )iag. Society ; winner first prize Biological Club ' 05 : Pres. same ' o6- ' o7 ; Pres. Rural Science Club ' od; Treas. L. L. S. ' 06; Censor of same 04 and (I ' l; Chairman of Y. M. C. A. Membership Com- mitter ' oh- ' 07. Age, 22 years: height, 5 ft., 7 in.; weight, 140 Tlii liul ' s cnlling seem.s not to have lieen specialized. C liiii ' t tell wlietlier lie is going to he a dehater, a leo- tuiHi- at Baptist I ' niveisity, a telephone operator, or uhether he is gning to return and measine the dejith of water in the huekleherrv ])onds of the big blues. With all these ideas in his head, he still has the qualities of a . man who knows how and when to study. KD.Ml ' Xl) F.XRRISS WARD, K. 2., . . Z., l.l ' .M I ' .ICRTON, N. C. A ricuUurc. Entered Junior Class ' 05 ; Editor Agromeck ; Scientific Editor Red and White ' 06-07 • Manager A ' arsity Football Team ' 06; Marshal Commence- ment ' 06; Glee Club ' 05-07 ; Pres. Glee Club ' 06- ' 07; Iiiag. Society; Biological Club; Rural Science Club; Tenerian Literary Societx- ; Thalerian Ger- man Club; Y. M. C. A. ' -Age, 24 years; height, s ft., i; 1-2 in.; weight, 158 lbs. I.n IIS iiitidduci- (Mi lo this daik-eyed hoy from Kol.i- son Counly. llr is an aclive menilic ' r of (lie (llec fluh. ean sing lieautifvilly, and is always at the regular gcr- mans when the roll is called. Somehow, he is very popu hir with the girls, and never has to study except when osaniinations come round. Then he draws the curtain about him, lives a secluded life, crams terms in days, and makes his finai mark. Tn - ■■StulVcil witli ;il] lioiimalili ' iitut ' S. LINDSAY MARADK WEA ' ER. LEXINGTON, N. C. Mechanical Engiiiccriiii;. 1st Lieut. Co. IJ ' 06-07; Sergt. Co. A ' 06; Corpl. Co. C ' 05; Vice-Pres. Senior Mechani- cals ; Capt. Class Base-ball Team ' 05. Age. 2 : he ' ght. 6 ft. : weight, 160 lbs. I iiulsay il. Weaver, better known a.s Beneh Weaver, i-i the pride of the M. E. division of the ' 07 olass. His altinity for analytics and ealeulus is something marvel- lius. and pel haps is due somewhat to his constant asso- ciation with Leander and Bully Mills. He delights in throwing water on the Jlajor when the Major is asleep. In spite of all the e faults he is an all-round good fellow. 1 ' . 8. — He has never been known to speak to a voung ladv. If I do grow great, I ' ll grow less. JOHX JACKSOX WELLS, ELM CITY, N. C. Ciz ' il Engineering. Entered Sophomore Class ; Class Foot-ball Team 04-05 : Merriman Society of Civil Engi- neers. Age, 20 years; height, 5 ft., 8 1-2 in.; weight, 190 lbs. With due apologies to Bruno, we now present to you Tubby. This wise and learned old man drifted among us from U. N. C, and entered our class just one year late. We hardly see how he has gotten through, but we have all grades of confidence in a man that can eat as much as he does and still survive — but 200 pounds is not much for a man .5 feet. ' .. • lie iii ' vcr Iiidkc any man ' s head hut his own, Miiil HkiI was a-iainst a ])cisl. 1)A ID 1. ■■|)( ). WllITl ., . It iiciilliirr, l.il.niri:in I ' . I,. S. 04: Marshal W L. S. De- bate ' 04; Associate l- ' ditor A. t. Kducation ' 05-06: elected Kevicvviiiji; Kditor Agri. Education ' 06-07 ; Class I ' cHit-hall ' Perm ■n4- o3 ; X ' arsity Foot-ball Teatn ' ()5- ' ()fi; Cuv. Sic. Rural Science Clul) ' 06; Rm-al Science Club: llidlngical Clnb : Pullen Lit- erary S()ciet - : ciiartcr niemljer ni Randolph Coun- ty Club: ice-l ' res. Randolph Club: Y. M. C. A. Age, 22 Years; height. 3 ft.. 10 1-2 in.: weight, I So lbs. Who .-.111 mics. 111,. i.iiliMDii,. nf Ihi- man. u ho likes l.aliii aii.l hall- lo MiilV hi- Ilea. I uith .Math. ' . ' lie leal- i i ' s I hi ' iilcasiirc thai ahmiiuls in iiatiiie. ami has de- cided thai sciwiiii; seed and leapiuf; the liarve..st is the ;ie.itest profession man can follow. His love for the fail- se aial 1 hi ' jileasnie lie hnds in late napping ' will -non finer him to -iiiiple life. ' •Thy face is thy forlune. CKCIL r.KRX. RI) WHITEHURST, I ' ,E. L ' FoRT, X. C. Electrical I ' .iii iiiccriiii;. 2nd Lieut. Co. . ' ofi- ' oj: Color Sergt. ' o5- ' o6: Corpl. Co. C ' 04- ' 05: Class Foot-ball Team 04- ' 05: Clas.s liase-ball ' I ' erni ' o5- ' ofi: Capt. Class liase-ball Team ' 06: N ' arsity Foot-ball Team ' o ' l: member b ' leclrical Society: Electrical luigineers: 1st Tenor ' 07 (Juartette : Class Prophet. . ge. JO ears: hc ' ighl. ft.. 1-2 in.: weight. 175 lbs. Hard 111 learn, hut after vou do leain him. you are ishul to have had the pleaMi ' ie. He is exeee liiii,dy f 1 of his pet I ' lof. who leaelies Kleit rieal Uihoralory. and next to his fondness for him eoines the ]ileasuies derived from lireakinii: nose-j;uards and wonieu ' s lie.uts. N a prophet of some note, as his work will show. -- L . l AJlUjiljL , , X None knew thee but to love thee, None named thee but to praise. ARTIFIR lolIX WII.SOX. W. II. (-).. KNOW IIJ.K. II. I.. CIn ' iitistrv. I ' jUered Junior Class: Instructor in Chemistry ' o - ' ofi- ' o ; X ' arsity Foot-ball ' 04- 05-06; Capt. of N ' arsity Team ' 06; ' arsity Track Team ' 05- or;- ' o7 : Ca])t. of Track Team ' oG- ' oy ; Faculty liasc-hall Team ' 06: Liebi.2: Chem. Society 04-05 : Uerzel lis Chemical Society ■o5- ' o6- o7 : German Club : n:ember of Faculty Advisory Committee on Ailikiics : I ' resider.t of Athletic . ssociation 07. Ai-e, _ ' 3 ; heiijht. 6 ft., 1 1-2 in. : weight, 186 lbs. I- cMllr.l -llal.c. m is a -nuir ' al evciylliiiiu ' lie lakes i:|i. Ilesicio liciiii; tlie neatest athlete in tlie South. riai)e is sduie few of a eheniie. and has quite a rep. as a ■■(■n v]iuiuhinir ' lecturer. Wilson is one of those fellows that ye)U eant helji liking, and it pains us very much to aiiniiuMee his engagement to a former ballet dancer, Jliss Si. Perkins, of Caraleigh. ■' Me knoweth best, who seoth host. -Ml things, both great and small. XELSOX HALL TATE. LITTLETON. X. C. Mechanical Eiigiiiccriit_i;. Entered Junior Class; Exchange Editor Red and White 05-06 ; Editor-in-Chief o6- o7 ( re- signed on account of leaving College) ; Editor . ' Kgromeck ; member Leazar Literary Society ; Y. M. C. A.; Scrub Base-ball Team o5- ' o6; Substi- tute Junior Foot-ball Team o5- ' oC). Age. 26 y ars; height, 6 ft. ; weight, ifrfi lbs. A new variety of the tiUjer family, but a right good Tater for all that. He amused himself while in C ' ld- lege by working the Mechanical Bunch to death, trying to keep pace with him. Say! but he and Rabbit were a team I right ) . so long as crockery was not indulged in too freely. Our only regret is that Tate was not in the push wlieu the sheepskins came round. .:y ■■His s,, .l- Ml-, ' ImiiiK, lii- c.atli arc ,.r;u-lcs. His l,, c -iiH-cic, liis tlimii;lits iTiuiini-iilatc. ' jA.Ml-.S I ' .i iKDI ' .X LYXCH, K. 2., WILMINGTON, N. C. Ci7 il Engineering . Scr ;canl Major ' 05-06; 1st Corpl. Co. A ' 04- ' 05; Marshal Commencement ' 04-05; I ' res. Freshman Class ' o3- ' o4; Artist Club; German Chih; Msr. Class I ' ase-ball Team ' o4- ' o5 ; Capt. MiilniL;ht llri adc ' o4- ' o5 : left Colleije in Junior car. Hell ' is tlio natural-biiin artist of our imiiilicr. His si jiiatiiic. .I. ' t. LviU ' li, can be I ' ouiul if you lint look. His iliief (leliijlit was in distributing BabyKlite. Wbeii ill fioiiil sjiiiits he wears the smile that won ' t coiiie off. and can out-talk even a woman. Farewell And now the time has come when we must part, When we our various paths must tread : Must leave our Alma Mater unforgot, Must number all these days as past and dead. These days, the memory of whose hours will stay Locked in our hearts ' remotest cell : Whose pleasures and whose trials to us remain As jewels bright, — their value none can tell. A sadness steals upon me as I write, For I must also leave thee now. Oh A. and M. ! my A. and M. ! my love ! To me there is no other good as thou. ' Tis well we cannot see our Future clear ; ' Tis well we do not know the pain, Nor e ' en the joy that days to come will bring. Our vision cannot see what they contain. But dreams of fairest days confront us now ; The spirit of determined youth we hold : And grander things we almost seem to grasp. That glitter as the purest gold. We go. and hope alwa -s joy and peace, And that success may with you dwell : And now. although ' tis hard, ' tis sad to say. We must: Old A. and M., Farewell! Class Prophecies Trjf T was ill the year 1927 that, as 1 sat in iii} ' vacation liunie in the niountains, JJ thinking over mv college days, and wondering the whereabouts of my old classmates. I suddenly, as though automatically, fell asleep. There came a touch on ni - arm and a voice saying: Co-co-me with me, o-old boy, and take a p-p-p-ee-p at mv new machine. It was lUilly Jones. I was so glad to see him, and to learn that he had perfected a machine that would beyond doubt be a success- ful one. He led the way: I did as he bade, and followed. The great mountain rose swelling against the western sky. and its purple mass wa.s lined against the evening glow. ( )n one of its slopes nestled the home, more indicated by the thin line of smoke which rose straight through the still air. A human habitation gave the note of personal interest necessary to relieve the loneli- ness of savage nature. Glimpses of a rocky path leading to this home among the clouds showed that human hearts beat, and glad feet hastened to the goal of home and loving welcome. We climbed the path and were soon on the spot, which was an ideal home for an imaginative mind. He led nie into his laborator -. a large open room strewn with electrical apparatus, and there in the center of the Hfior I saw his machine. — an air-ship. It was at once rolled out on the lawn in front, and when everything was ready I heard the command — A-U a-board ! ( )iice inside and seated, we began to rise; higher and higher we went until the air became very light and difficult to breathe, and the earth below looked one dim mass. There was a broad smile on Bully ' s face when presently he said: D-d-on ' t be s-cared, for you are near-nearer heaven than you-you ll ever be a-gaiii. He gave me a telescoi)e and requested that I take a look around for the boys. The glass was a wonderful instrument and its make was known to no one else. It brought ever thing from the .Atlantic to the Pacific under my eye. I looked all around me : I saw them : their history was plain. BATTIE. — Keek has settled in I ' uiita G.orda. Fla.. and as city engineer is very comfortal:)l - situated. His work as engineer is sim])ly a pastime, for in spite of his nuisic he likes engineering as a remembrance of . . and . The Crack- ' ers are foolish about their Music Director. HIX ' F.XS. — l ' lectricitv was not his choice after leaving College; but he had a great affiiiitv for the place where he left those fingers. }Te is back to his saw-mill, the home of his youth. Tis now The (loodman Lumber Company. Within a short walk of the mill lives the hajipy little family (mw. whom we arc pleased to know as Mr. and Mrs. Joe I ' .ivens and Mary and Little jne. LKY.AX. — Well, my! isn ' t that great? Carney has reached it at last. I re- member of often hearing him speak of wanting U be exactly where he is now. There he sits in his ])rivate office, reading the morning jjapcr, as though he had nothing else tn iln. Lucky nld fellow ! but 1 sn])p(ise he has had a hard time reach- ing it. He is I ' resideiit of the ( )ntari ) Lower Company nf Niagara Falls. X. Y. His wife is not with him now. I wonder where .... C h! there she is in Wash- ington, X. C, v ' sting her relatives and many friends, CARLETOX.— I ' oor fellow, he has been up against it, but he is making a pretty good slmw now. His first work was tcio much of an undertaking, viz., the Western North Carolina Lower Company at Wilkesboro; and it fell through, leav- ing liim in very bad circumstances. His time was too much occupied in perform- ance of his social functions — he had so man - (|uccnly admirers; but they all lost confidence in him when his business failc l. He bad a strong determination to gain a rei). wdien he ajipeared in the Hippodrome as the tennr soloist. He is now with the General Elictric Company, and has by stead - work gained the salary of 1 1-2 cents per hour. Who knows but that some day he will be city electrician for Boomer. CARTER. — There ' s Lob back at Lenoir and in charge of the lighting jilant. The General Electric Company was not big enough to hold him, (or the salary too small). He is back in the mountains where he can, at leisure times and as in his boyhood days, yoke two yotmg bulls, tie tlieir tails together, set fire to the knot, and see them go. DAWSON.— His fir.st job with (he Cora Cotton Mills of King ' s Mountain, N. C was a very promising one; but the place was too slow for him, and he went Xorth. lie is now spending a ten-dav vacation at Grifton, given him b the lod Worsted Mill of Lawrence, Massachusetts. EATOiN. — He has .settled down on a farm, near Farmington, which he in- herited from his mother-in-law. He has for several ears served the ijeople of his county very faithfully. Two years after graduation he was sent to the State Legis- lature; was for .several terms Sheriff; was once Clerk of the Superior Court, and is now a Justice of the Peace. He first learned to love law under Dr. ' inston at A. and M. ELDRIDGE. — He is now Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering at his Alma Mater. He has been a great promoter of railroad work, once being consult- ing engineer uf two roads. l!ut he is a V. M. C. A. man and will not be selfish. He savs: When a man has learned it all, it is selfishness in him to keep it for him- self; he should teach. His work in the College is very satisfactory to the faculty and trustees, but the boys are not in love with it. E ' ERETT. — Soon after graduation he married a young Iady s farm — Uh, well, a very nice woman, too, hut the woman was a minor part. He is now super- vising the farm, but his time is mostly occupied by writing sermons and traveling over his circuit. He is in the Methodist Conference, and his circuit has four churches, he being to each every fourth Sunday. FERGUSON and FUW ' LER.— Now, who would have ever thought these two fellows would have stuck together as they have? All of their classmates naturally believed it would be John and his Uncle Carleton. But we can ' t always tell. The - left College together and went to work with the General Electric Com- pany, and have been there ever since. They have been sent out for construction work several times, and always together. They both now hold very responsible and paying positions. GARNER. — After holding a few positions of little consequence in civil engi- neering work in North Carolina, he accepted a position at Panama. After work- ing there eighteen months, he took a vacation, spending several days of it at Beau- fort, N. C. While there he became interested in the subject which interested all Beaufortonians at that time, and wrote an article on the Construction of the Inland Water Route from Norfolk to Beaufort. It attracted much attention, and the fol- lowing year Congress appropriated money for this construction. The contract was given, and the contracting company made Mr. Garner chief of this work. It has been completed, and the name of C. L. Garner will last through all ages of Beau- fort. He is now v -orking for the same company. GILL. — He sits in his studv in front of the big writing desk, upon which are several stacks of written pages. Several loose, separate pages are scattered about, and upon one words of lyrical sweetness are slowly added. The poet dreams — he writes again — and the last is complete. The pages are gathered and a volume made that takes the world by storm. . 11 poetry is touched upon, from the simple lyric to the epic narrative. GILBERT. — Grandpa — not yet, but soon ; — a papa by a big majority. His eldest bov of 17 years holds a very responsible position, for one so young, in the cotton mill of which his father owns controlling interest. The father ' s daily advice to young Rogers is: Son, avoid close companionship with our mill girls. GRA ' ES. — T.ucky fi-llow— blufl ' uirs. TIr h:is ;i comfortable position, and somebody to do tlie work. In llu- city of I ' .hRru-ld, W. a., he lives almost as a millionaire. ( )f course he is not. bnt with wliat lie has he makes an awful hitc show. .Mmo t daily an automobile sto])s at the lUuetield Tower Station and I ' ot is seen strutting in; — he examines. (|uestions, iees orders, and is oone a. ain. . t the auto ' s next sto]) someone is waiting-. — .Mrs. draves. before leavintj for the after- noon ride, orders the nurse to let Little Robert ha e a t ood, lons ' sleep. H. i I)RSTV. — As steward at the Xortli Carolina Normal School at Greens- boro, he endeavors to be ha])i)y. He has, several ears ago, 1)een very seriously (hsa])poiiited in love by tile fairest of Cla ton, and lias therefore a broken heart. I ' nlike nian of his kind that, on account of their disappointment, take to hard drink and aliandon women anil society, lie has settled and lives among- scores of the fair sex, and tries to forget the one that so bitterly wronged him. HARDIlv — He is beyond the strength of the glass. l n loubtedly he serves his country of Scotland as an engineer, establishing .Vnierican systems. HEMPHILL. — Since his very successful ear as Manager of the College l)asel)all team, u sole object has been to manage baseball, lie is known through- out the South as its greatest baseball enthusiast and proniotor. His team this year, the Atlanta vStars, ha ' e a good reconl, and there is no doubt in Jok ' s mind that the - will win out. Managers are generally sly ducks, but none can surpass Jok in — well, liiat bad habit that made him famous at . . i ; .M. HERRING. — Two years after graduation at . , and M, found him a graduate in X ' eterinary Medicine from the Kansas City X ' eterinary College, this being the science he had followed closely at A. and M. Knowing that tliis science was not developed in North Carolina as it should be, he returned to his native State to put into practice the immense store of knowledge which he had gained in this subject. Finding it necessary to liave means to push sucli a business at the beginning, he at once thought of how he made read} ' casji at College, and began cutting hair. His profession as veterinarian has amounted to very little, but lie is now the most up- to-date Ton.sorial Artist in Clinton. Sad to say, his incom e has been too limited to support a belter half, or rather it is wh;it his long-loyed thought when slu ' turned hin-i down. HINSHAW. — .-Xs city engineer of Winslon-Salem he is contented, lie is a bachelor and still a very sporty flirt, althongli his years number two score and seven and his hair is showing a tint of silvery gray. .Not a single man because he has to l)e, nor because his chances to marry lia ' e been rare, but simph ' because he wants to be; he thinks il so much more fun. . t present a certain widow ladx of less than half his own age is receiving die greater part of liis well-trained aflfections. HOLT. — Hill is liviiit; in Ri ' iiifnnl. and besides his work in the cotton indus- try, has sundr) dtlicr duties, llis pastur. Rev. Montague, has at last succeeded in setting- his (il l clumi interested in ehnrch work, and lias effected his electicin as clioir directi r. I ' .esides this, he has tried to tlraw Hill from his hachekir ways, hut in vain. JONES, A. C. — . t Ft. Worth, . rk.. there is a .small crowd of men and boys g-athered around a sick horse, which seems to be on the point of ik ' ath. Thev are evidently waiting for some one. There conies, into the lot where the horse lies. an old weather-beaten man whom 1 am sorr - to recognize as iii - old classmate, . . C. Jones. He is e idently the one expected, and takes charge of the sick at once. The horse is much better and is able to get up and walk around. He collects his fee. which is otily two dollars, and makes his wa back to his room, wh ' ch is in the suburbs of the city in a small cottage, where he seems to be the only dweller. He is keeping bachelor hall, but he doesn ' t seem to be unhappy, so whv should we care ' ' K( )( ). CIv — In Iowa, in the midst of that wonderfully fertile regii n, there sits on the veranda of a s])Iendi(l country house, a middle-aged gentleman, whose face, though covered with a luxuriant growth of black beard, seetus to have a familiar look. l pon closer inspection our olil friend Koonce is recognized. His face wears a contented expression as he surveys his broad, rolling fields, covered with golden seas of grain ready for the harvest. On the lawn in front of the house are playing two beautiful, healthy, happy children, and a smile comes over his face as their childish shouts come floating up to hiiu. It is with a peculiar longing that we observe this domestic scene. LATTA. — Delicate little fellow, he grows smaller, his weight now being 90 and 8. He has never left Raleigh, because he has beeli afraid ; he has never been married, because none his size suits his taste. He lives an easy life, works very seldom because it doesn ' t agree with him ; but the ladies all admire him because he has no choice. LOUGEE. — He is very changeable, and has never decided whether he likes chemistry or bookkeeping, although he has tried both several times. He has at last compromised by taking a hand in both, and is now partner and bookkeeper in the West Raleigh Grocery Company, also is employed in the State Cheiuical Lab- oratory. AIcCOXXELL. — Rabbit Hash, Ky., has now grown to be a cit - of particular mention, and to Father Mc. it owes its growth. After five long vears of hard work and tedious stud} ' of chemical anal sis, he discovered the ingredients that, when properly united, produce the most delicious, invigorating and intoxicating drink ever knnwn to man — Ky. M..M..M.. wliicli has made Ralihit Hash famnus. Xo one knows vliat ,M..M.A1. rcalh ' is, hut we do know it means a (hnink when we g et on the outside of it. MeXAlRW — After an anhioiis struggle to attain merits as a raih ' oad engi- neer, he has at hist succeeded, and is now chief of tlie Elevated Railway in promo- tion at Greenshoro. However, his literary appetency has not faded, and he is editor of the Daily Autocrat. If you do not subscribe or contribute articles, read the editorials and you will do so at once. Let ' s not bother him fmnher, because he is sleepy. MEADOR. — If she could see Me-dor now, wouldn ' t he make us laugh? Xeither peptonoid nor breakfast food can make him fat, but ' tis dope of any and every description from Ky. Al.?il..M. to a wad of opium that keeps him with us. But, in spite of this failure, he very faithfidlv and luxuriantly supports a man-size family. MICHAEL. — Who would have ever thought it? Why, he has married that bonnie lassie we knew as Plu. Lucky grab for him ; that woman knows economy from start to finish. Mike used to be such a rounder, noisy, treacherous fellow, and now see how she has taken the life out of him. There would be danger of starvation on that little plantation were it not for her shrewd management. She is the Boss. Mike — he just does the work. M1. L. — Ichabod very largely owes his success to the fact that he is not afraid of work. Work doesn ' t fade him at all; he can lie down beside the hardest kind and sleep as comfortably as beside his life partner. He is now in his wood and coal-yard at work on one of the most difticult problems of the twentieth century — a calculation that involves math-e-matics from Math, himself to his brother John. I ' roblem : — To calculate the consmnption of wood and coal per ear in the city of Clayton. MILLS. — There ' s A])ie, and he is still foolish about his barie. He has not followed his course of engineering, as it involved no music and did not throw him in contact with men of his class. I ' .eing conductor of his Dad ' s railroad, he finds sufficient time and opportunity to put into practice his |:)ower as a phrenologist. . ride over the .Mills Road is made very enjoyable by the amusements furnished by the conductor. He, with his famous quartette, is known as a second Polk .Miller. MONTAGUE. — Dear old Montie — who ever would have thought such a change could have come about? He is the beloved and contrite pastor of the First Baptist Church at Remford ; and just to think, Pinner is there, too, the pillar of his church, the leading deacon, and superintendent of his Sunday School, with Bill Holt as clinir director. It is said that there is nothing new under the sun, hut this seems a pecuhar case. M()RS( X. — Jle has trii ' d civil enL;ineering- and loafing to no avail. Init, as to the Race Suicide Onestion. he just doesn ' t believe in it, to which you would readily agree could yi u hut have the pleasure of visiting- his home. Toliy has caused his name to he honorcil throughout the world bv his scholarly efforts on his treatise of our duty to our fellow-man, entitled Help. ( ) ' EI T()X. — As we see Shorty, he sits in his cross-roads store, whittling on a white-pine box, with one eye ou the knife and the other on every loafer within ten feet of the tobacco-box or sugar-barrel. Everyone knew what his future wt)uld be since the time he run the cand ' stand and so stronglx ' advocated the matching game. Xo one could beat him then, not excepting Billy, and Shu was a sure victim. Who can doubt that he has Jew blood in him ? Those poor farmers sure get skinned, for he knows how each one stands financially and figures for them. His terms are 5 0 0 off for cash, and they all innocently think it is 50 0 0. PARKER, T. F. — Knowing nothing better to do, he left Raleigh for the wild and wooly West to make his fortune. Taking up a claim for several hundred acres, he built a small cabin, and for five long years he toiled and sweated over the hard adobe soil. He made good his time, but his conscience would not allow him to bring the lady of his choice to this far-away land, so now he is back near his Alma Mater but still more near the Penitentiary, supervising a small truck farm. PARKER. JIM. — The old fellow has too many bad habits to be considered by the Lttle Brown Hen. When she first met him it was plain old Jim in charge of the light plant at the Stmimer School, but now ' tis rough old Jim out West. The cjuestion is: Who did the wrong? He certainly gave up all and visited her each Thanksgiving Day. The answer can be nothing more than he was wronged by a jealous rival. He lives the lucky-go-easy I ' fe in l tah. where he has as many hens as he wants, although they are not Brown. PARKAS. — I am so glad to sav that Fred has prosperefl. He is located in Charlotte, where he has an office in the most prominent business section of the city. During office hours he manages the affairs of the Yadkin Power Company, of which he is President. l ut he himself is most efficiently managed at all times by Fred. Jr.. a little tyrant of six summers who is idolized by his Daddy. He has a splendid coimtry home three miles out of town, which is presided over by one who, as Fred. says, is The One Woman. N o doubt he is happy. PASCHAL. — He has labored nuich lietween the plow-handles and jerking a bell-cord over a hard tail, but with little financial avail. Having supplied his whole coniniunitv witli books of every kind, he wept for more victims, and wondered were there anv more hke tliose about liim. These adverse circumstances set him to thinkiny more seriously, and now he has perfected a pruniuL apparatus that has brought him lioth money and fame. PINXER. — Guy will not he separated from his old chum. Montie, and has followed him even till now. The result has been mutual benefit, for having been drawn into active church work, the younger has quit his sporting ways, and is now ' superintendent of the Sunday School and head deacon in the church. His philan- thropy is widely known. IMTM.W. — He sleeps now, to rise at two in the morning and start on his run out of Lnmberton for Boardman, as engineer on a log train. He is a learned engineer, but is given a short run to make sure he will be awake. His book entitled Sleep, teaching that sleep is most essential to life, also giving mechanical means of slee]iing, has made its author a ' rep. ' throughout Robeson Comity. ri.L ' MMER. — . s .Assistant State Chemist Kibo iirosjiered. but it soon grew monotonous and he began a public career. Having a head full of reactions and an affinity for popularity, he entered the dark and dismal path of politics. He was s(X)n in the State Senate, and did a great deal for prohibition, whicli very nuich pleased his people of Hen lerson. He is now Mayor of that city. SCHWAB.— On Main Street in C.oldsboro. and upon the pot where the passenger depot used to be. stands one of the most magnificent buildings in the .South — the clothing establishment of 1,. Jacob Schwab. I.eosie liked engineering, and followi ' (l it for awhile, lint h:s conscience hurl him because he felt that he was sinning against his peo])le to do anything but sell gooiK. SHl ' FORD. — A passing glance down .Main Street of C.astonia is sufficient to tell his histor . ' Pile first thing that attracts the eye is a sign, showing by appear- ing and disap|)i ' aring ek ' ctrie lights, ( ' lastonia h ' .lectric Supplx Company — J. ( )scar Shnford. I ' rop. Another glance nn l ' ranl lin . venue. and there is the honu ' ; and I ' m glad to say that, in that home is the loiig-talked-abotu (|ueen and sexcral others that need no mention. STAri,lvS. . ltlioiigh he holds a very high and dignified position, he is until et known as C.illigan. Me is still a strong advocate of baseball, and a few da_ s ago the cotton-mill |iresident astonished the whole town of ' arp ille 1) his sensational plays with his mill team for the Cotton licit cliampion lii]i. SN ' KES. — Willi his constant and diligent ])erse t ' rance he has risen lo ;ind filled the position of City k ' ngineer of b ' l-rnaleton. anil during tile time has accumu- lated a handsome sum of moiu ' v : but don ' t sa civil engineering to him now, tor he has retired to a country home in Orange County. His greatest pleasure is farming, and he rejoices in hearing some one say. Papa, come to dinner. He loves his home, but if you want him to upset, you just say dinner. TILLETT. — Luther for some time after graduation achieved much success as chief engineer for the W. C. T. V. Co., of Coinjock, . C. These many honors and slow life became tiresome to him, and he has now turned to the more exciting field of poultry and stock raising, his specialty being marsh ponies. The beautiful little animals bring up sweet memories of the past, and afford a means of locomo- tion for the constantly increasing flock of little Tilletts. We are glad to know that married life has so calmed his spirit that, even when mistaken for Tubby or T3 he only gives vent to a sigh. TRUITT. — Rabbit is still from Missouri, but that tloesn ' t cut any ice. as he is now holding a responsible position in his native town. He has the happy faculty of mixing up poetry, machines, and political economy, and is still able to draw pay at the end of the month. A strapping youth that comes to the call of Bill Jr. is the light of the Major ' s heart. Young Bill is being brought up along purely scientific lines, and, in fact, his Dad often uses his Kent on the more serious problems of child raising. TURLINGTON. — A farmer! Yes, the height of his ambition. He is now putting into practice what he learned in four long years about Agr. Eng. All the Sampson County people think he is a scientific farmer, and are following the example set them. After a short but tiresome procedure, he gained that which he most anticipated — the hand of his little country Jane. WARD. — Down in Robeson County we find AA ' ard, the ideal farmer of that section, sitting on a broad front porch of his single-story dwelling, discussing with his tenants the subjects of farming, hard times, religion and politics. Why he goes barefooted we can give but one reason ; that is, he fears waking the kid that sleeps in the rear end of the hallway. His tenants seem to find much pleasure in discuss- ing farming and hard times with the ' r boss man, religion with their Sunday School superintendent, and politics with their nominee for the Legislature — all of which they find in Ward. WEA ' ER. — Lindsay has a position with the American Locomotive Works that will support a good-sized family ; but his poor wife, like all others, has her troubles. Her husband will keep a supply of pet hound pups that must share equal rights in the household with the rest of the family. Lindsay is annoyed a great deal by having to run back and forth to his work to attend to some little trouble his pets have got into at the hands of Dame ' an Weaver. WELLS. — From tlu- arid hills of rexico to tlie Arctic shores of Canada he is no longer known as ■' ' l uhl) . Init as J. J. Wells, the Director of Reinforced Concrete Structnrc. lie is ni late eoiitemplatinjj giving up this and accepting a position on the stage, as his winning ways and handsome mug will attract money. WlllTl ' .. — .Mas! poor l)a e lias spent the spring of liis life trying to win the hand of some of the fairer sex. I ' .etter judgment has now turned his way, and we find him driving a little cart up and down the streets of Method, .selling a few- fine specimens of watermelons which he has s|)ent nuich lime in getting to perfection. WILSON. — Von wouldn ' t know P.ahe if you were to see him now. He is of course tall, but that only adds to the effect of that lean and hungry look which is usually to be seen on his face. lUit this is. no doubt, only the effect of iiard work, and due to the fact that he no longer keeps in training as of yore. I ' .abe returned to Raleigh about five years ago to take the chair of chemistry, which was vacated by the retirement of Professor Withers. He is chairman of tlie Faculty Athletic Committee, and his sole aim in life seems to be to get out a team that will defeat the U. N, C. He has married since returning to Raleigh, and has evidenth ' settled down to a life of usefulness. -.|! I heard a faint laugh and felt a pressure on m knee, when then a little fellow- called, Papa. 1 fancied I had been dreaming. A TOAST TO 075. Here ' s to those of ' 07 ! May they succeed, every one. And their souls depart to Heaven ' hen their work on Earth is done. Junior History ( ) V the time has flown ! Perhaps it is because it has been pleasantly spent, for never in my short life have I spent my time more pleasantly than I have in my stay here at College. As I sit here trying to compose this work, 1 realize that writing a Junior history is a thing not lightly to be entered upon, but is to be worked out with fear and trembling, for the Junior cannot plead the Freshman ' s greenness nor the Sophomore ' s braggadocio, but must begin to stand on his own merit. Some three years ago there arrived on the College campus a hundred or more fellows who were shortly afterwards to be organized into the Class of ' 08, a crowd whose temperament might be defined as emerald, and with a persistent desire to know, that has characterized the class in all its work. We were very attentively received, as befitted our station. Everyone seemed anxious to do something for us, especially the Sophs. Probably so much attention went to our heads and gave us the reputation for freshness which we had. However, we survived the opening scenes of college life, and under the auspices of the Commandant organized our class in Xovember. We entered the race for the football cup, and had we not been Freshmen, hardly knowing the limit of our powers, we would have come out victorious. Passing over examinations, which is always an unpleasant subject, we come to baseball. Here our class had the distinction of furnishing a man for the ' Varsity, who played an errorless game. ' X ' arsity ball being over, class teams were organized, and ' 08 began her record-breaking career by defeating the Sop hs. 6-2. Naturally we were very proud of this, and did not let any grass grow under our feet in telling the world about it. Baseball over, there came exams, and although some failed to make the much- coveted sixty, there were but few who could not return to College on account of their studies. It is a perplexing question as to when a Freshman becomes a Sophomore. In the spring he is lonely, timid, ignorant, and aliuost afraid of his own shadow. In the fall he comes back proud and naughty, bursting with knowledge which he would impart to others and despising the Freshmen as he was once. Having been well trained by the Sophomores who preceded us, we were resolved that our Freshmen should have the results of our experiences and should lose none of the training which transforms a self-important Freshman into a well-bred college man. If a man could spend no longer at college, he would be well repaid in being a Freshman. Many of our boys did not return to College for various reasons ; but those who were left began more and more to feel the binding force of class and college spirit, and to feel that we were all brothers, banded together to help each other as best we could. For the football team of ' 05 we furnished a man who was easily a star and whom we are sorry to lose as a member of our class. A number of our boys did not return after Christmas, but those of us who were here went bravely to work, and went far beyond the marks in the books set by our predecessors. In baseball we again won the class championship by defeating the Juniors and Freshmen in turn. This was the first time in the history of class athletics at this College that any but the Freshman team had won in baseball. Vacation is past, and we are back as Jvmiors. According to the inexorable law of the survival of the fittest, we have not as many men as we once had, but the coming in of fresh upper classmen has the effect of causing us to feel our loss less keenly. This year on entering College we were very much delighted to hear that many of the petty restrictions which had been in force in the College had been repealed, and that the uniform would no longer be worn except on drill. These improve- ments do much toward removing the friction between the faculty and student body. The Class of ' 08 had right much to do with the making of the ' 06 football team, furnishing Beebe, Eskridge, Stroud, and Temple, who with the others made a team that was beaten only once and scored on only twice. After the ' Varsity season was over, the class teams were organized, and this time our class attained its crowning ambition, — that of winning the football cup. The Sophs, were defeated 6-0 and the Freshmen 5-0. After the last game the team was given a banquet at Giersch ' s by the class in gratefulness for heir suc- cesses. It is now only a few months until we shall have finished our Junior year, and it fills most of us with sadness to think that the end is so near, for we have grown to consider this a second home, and were it not for the folks at home and Her, we should like to stay here all the time. But enough of sad words. We are looking forward to the time when we shall win the baseball cup and celebrate our athletic achievements by a banquet. HlSTORI. N. Junior Class MoTTo : ■' To-morrow ' s tanqle to the winds resip n. Klowkr : American P cauty. Officers ; A. G. H( )YNTON President. L. H. COUCH ice-President. T. M. FOYNER Secretary. P. L. GAINEY Treasurer. J. T. GARDNER Historian. W. B. BURGESS Poet. Class Yell Wha-hoo-wha, W ' lia-hoo-wha, Ju-n-i — Ju-ni-a ; Who-a-ra} ' , Wlio-a-roar, Siss-boom. Tunior. JUNIOR ROLL Abernethy, A. E Hickory. Baldwin, F. O Raleigh. Banck, W. H Wilmington. Bason, G. F Charlotte. Becton. J. L Goldsboro. Beebe, H Baltimore, Md. Black, W. L Mt. Mourne. Boynton, A. G Biltmore. Brown, F. H Cullowhee. Bryan, J. H Goldsboro. Buigess, W. B Rocky Mount. Couch, L. H Lexington. Councill. K. C Wanamish. Dunlap, T. B Cedar Hill. Dupree, A. D Greenville. Eagle, R. R Statesville. Easkridge, W. H Shelby. Farmer, I. H Wilson. Ferguson, B. T Kimbolton. Ferguson, W. G Southern Pines. Gainey, P. L Fayetteville, R. F. D. Gardner. J. T Shelby. Gibbs, S. M Middleton. Gold. M. H Beaufort. Grady, J. I) Albertson. Gregory, E. W Elizabeth City. Grimshawe, T. D Montvale. Hackett, C. W North Wilkesboro. Hagan, D. Y Greensboro. Harris, G Raleigh. Hendrick, M Shelby. Iseley, E. W McLeansville. Jones, J. McL Durham. Kueffner H. W Durham. Lambe, C. M Durham. Lattimore, B. B Shelby. Lindsay, 1) Stoneville. Little, J. H Pinetops. Lyerly, G. L Hickory. McBrayer, W. G Gaffney. Marsh, C. T Aulander. Middleton, D. J Warsaw. Pescud, L S Raleigh. Pittman, B. F Tarboro. Pittman, L. L Whitaker ' s. Poole, R Carroway. Powell, H. A Fairbluff. Powell, ). A Raleigh. Poyner, T. M Poplar Branch. Smith, E. E Greensboro. Spoon, J. P Oakdale. Spruill, C. E Creswell. Stanback, H.I Mt. Gilead. Stroud, J. S Frosty. Temple. W. T Sanford. To we, J. F Chapanoke. VonGlahn, J- L Wilmington. White, R. E .inlander. Williams, J. C Duke, R. F. D. Wil.son, J. S Charlotte. Wilson, J. S Winston-Salem. Winslow, E. L Winfall. Wyatt. R. J Raleigh. Yarborough, W. B Locust Hill. Zigler, J. F Winston-Salem. Sophomore Class S. F. STEPHENS President. C. P. GRAY ice-Presi(lent H. N. SL ' MNER Secretary and Treasurer. T. W. HARRELSOX ' Historian. ( ' .. G. SIAH ' SON Poet. .■J Motto: ' ivanins ut Discanius (Let us Live to Learn). Coi.oKs : Maroon and Steel-.ijray. Fi.owKR : Carnation. J Yell Wacker-rack-er-rack-er-rae, Wacker-rack-er-rack-er-rae, Carolina Polytech, P)Ooni Rah, Boom, Ree, Boom Rah, P)Ooni Ree, S-O-P-H-O-M-O-R-E ! An Ode to ' 09 ' Tis niiilni ln and 1 cannot write a line: But 1 must write a poem to-night For the Class of Naughty-Nine. ( )h, summer short In heaven that shines, — Thv inspiration shed afar, x ' nd give me several lines ! ' Tis done : this poem This poet had to write : You bet the class will owe him For the sleep he lost to-night ! Sophomore History CHAPTER I. TrjN September of the year nineteen hundred and five, we set sail on the great jl voyage of college life, to search the pages of text-books for the knowledge there treasured. On this voyage we have had many trials ; but with a determination never to surrender, we have made a clean record worthy of mention. A feeling never to be forgotten crept upon us when we appeared before the President for matriculation. Having matriculated, we were directed to rooms. Scarcely had we entered dream-land for the first time — when we were enjoying the pleasure of home, sweet home once again — when we were awakened by a bang- ing on our door and a voice saying, Open ui). ' We obeyed the command, onlv to have our color changed either to black or brown. Despite the suppression attempted by our upper-classmen, we called a class- meeting, and in less than three weeks we had organized the strongest Freshman class that has ever entered A. and M. College. At this meeting officers were elected who served for a term of one month. At the expiration of this time another meeting was called for the purpose of electing officers, and these served throughout the year. We were now in a position to turn our whole attention to our college duties. The time rolled speedily along for over three months, and then sprang into our way the long-dreaded examinations. Now were trying times for us, but with a resolution never to say, I have flunked, we set earnestly to work. During the last week of examinations we were informed that the Sophs were going to black us again; but, having in us the spirit of the last of the Xaughties, we decided not to be treated in such a manner. We gathered, about seventy-five strong, and barricaded the third floor of the Fourth Dormitory, where we awaited the coming of our enemy. But, strange to say, they did not venture near. In the spring, baseball was the chief amusement. The class feels verv much gratified to know that from it two stars of the team were selected. One of these has a South-wide reputation as a catcher, and the other did excellent work at first base. After baseball we were again confronted with final examinations. This is a marked epoch in our history, the ending of the Freshman year. CHAPTER H. At last our three months of recreation and pleasure were over, and we entered into this, the most glorious one of our four years. Our hearts were filled with contentment to know that we were Sophomores, and would no longer be despised by upper-classmen who thought themselves too much exalted to associate with us. Scarcely had we begun our college work when football again demanded onr attention. Those of us who did not use our skill on the field, used our voices on the side-lines. The class can boast of the two ends whom we furnished for the ' Varsity, and six others on the football squad, all of whom liave put forth every effort to win for the College a reputation in athletics. Following the ' X ' arsity games came the series of class games. In these we did not win, hut we gave the winners a hard race. It was not until tlie latter |)art of the last half of the econd game with us that they were, by luck, enabled to score. We have advanced a step farther than any Sophomore class has in many years. This step was the abolition of hazing. As a result of this move, more college spirit has been shown, and we are now putting forth every effort to l)ring the classes closer together and set good examples for those to follow. The end of our history finds us standing Christmas examinations. ' e have been noted during our existence for being well organ ized and doing first-rate work. May we ever continue to grow in quality and be a class renowned in the annals of the College ! Historian. . . . r. C. ROOST Kl « SOPHOMORE ROLL aiiic. r. (). Xainc. P. O. .Mlison. C. C ; Concord. I ' .eall, J. I Linwoo l. Arey, J. A b ' .lniwood. r lanchard, H. N C.reensboro. Armstrong, .X. N Creswell. brothers, CD Sharpsburg. Barrett, J. V Rocky .Mount. Hruner, T. K Raleigh. 78 Carpenter, E. J Gaffney, S. C. Clarke, T. .M. Raleigh. Cowles, ' . M Charlotte. Craven, J. B Charlotte. Davidson, F Statesville. Dean, W. S Oxford. Dennv, K. C Cromartie. Drake, L. C Mc.Adensville. Duke. F. A Raleigh. Eaton. W. H Cleveland. Faison. R. R Goldsboro. Foard. F. L Winston-Salem. Fox, R. L Waynesboro, ' a. Gattis. L. P Raleigh. Goss. A. S L ' nion, S. C. Gray, C. P lUixton. Green, A. H Raleigh. Griffin, C. L Manteo. Hampton, W. R Plymouth. Harrelson, J. W Lawndale. Harrison, Geo Enfield. Haywood, E. B Raleigh. Haywood, F. T Trenton. Henderson, L Salisbury. Herring, M. R Winton. Higgins, Leicester. Hill, D. H. Jr West Raleigh. Holloway, M. i I Cardenas. Hornaday, W. A Burlington. Hunter, R. C East Laporte. Ireland, S. R Faison. Iseley, D. B Burlington. Johnson, W. F. R Marion, S. C. Jones, F. J New Bern. Jordan. E. T Siler City. Long, R Graham. McLendon. L. L Wadesboro. Malhson, S. M Washington. Marshall, W. R New Bern. Mason, R. C Edenton. Massey, A. B Philadelphia. Mast, C. R -ille Crucis. Mavo, C. C Washington. Millner. W. M Leaksville. Montague, B. F Winston-Salem. Moore, O . sheville. Morris, W. F Asheboro. Mott, H Mooresville. Murphy, R. L Morganton. Nooe, H. R Pittsboro. Oliver. J. F Mt. Olive. Oliver, s. L Mt. Olive. Parker, J. M Hunting Creek. Paschal, J. G Goldston. Peck, W. M Wilmington. Peirce, L R Warsaw. Pitts, P. M Concord. Porter, J. . Biltmore. Price, J. M Leaksville. Redfearn, F. T Monroe. Rtinhardt, R. R Stanly Creek. Riggs. A. P Wanchese. RoVbins. T. W Durham. Robertson, J. H Burlington. Rose, W. B Wadesboro. Sadler, T. O Charlotte. Sherwood, F. W Raleigh. Shope, R. A Farm School. Siau. L. H Georgetown, S. C. Simpson. G. G Richmond, ' a. Sloan, W. N Franklin. Steele, H. S Yadkin ' alley. Stephens. S. F Norfolk. Sumner, H. N Hertford. Svkes, ' . ' Rock Spring. Terrell. M. H Old Fort. Thomason, J. D Hickory. Thompson, F. M Raleigh. Toomer. J. E Wilmington. I ' nderwood, E. R Huntersville. Warren, T. R Durham. Waters, J. P Charlotte. Walters, m ' ilmington. Webb, A. M ' inston-Salem. Whitehurst, J. S Elizabeth City. Whitely, O. G Norwood. ' hittington. R. B Asheville. Winstead, D. R Wilson. Witherspoon, P. A Mooresville. ■rr K Fresh man roem In i1k ' fall i)f iiiiu ' k-rn-six A. 1)., ( )iir class, a luiiulrfil strong-, Strode up to the door of A. M. C. To join its stud ' oiis tlirong-. Swiftly the fii ' st few days passed 1)v, Th(UiL;li lliey were licit serene. As some I if (iiir nnniher tried to defv Thiise will I called us ureeii. Just as we were ,y;etting- settled, Xew troubles came our wav. As with lilacking-pnl we were neltled lly tile hnys in manicin and graw Hut. al;is ! nur first ear is ended. And we are Fresh, no more; So to the Class nf .Xineteen-eleven We oijen wide imr door. Class Pokt. Freshman Class ' lo Motto : — Deeds, Not Words. Flower : — Hyacinth. J Yell Ve vi, ve vo, ' e vi, vo vum, Johnny get a rat trap Bio-tjer than a cat trap : Bum ! Rum ! Hannibal ! Cannibal ! Sis ! Boom ! Bah ! A. and M. Freshmen : Kah ! Rah ! Class Officers ; C. W. HIXSHAW I ' resident. J. AI. COUXCII. Vice-President. R. L. F( )Y Secretary and Treasurer. T. T. DAWS( )X 1 listorian. H. W. WKI.LS, ]k Poet. Freshman History Sir S we are short-lived, our history is short. Therefore we have httle to relate. )r In the fall of ' 06 we marched up to the ColIeg;e by a merry tune, depressing as we thought it, but with much enthusiasm for the class of ' 10. As expected, we had our dreaded midnight visitors, who left us in a deplorable condi- tion. But the Sophomores triumph was short, as the Faculty quickly suppressed them, and this was a day of joy for the Freshmen. Seeing the need of hazing being stopped altogether, we pledged ourselves to the facultv not to haze any while we are in connection with the College. During the month of September we held our first class-meeting, and elected as temporarv President, Mr. T. T. Dawson. At another meeting held in ( )ctober we elected permanent officers. We were well represented in athletics, having Edwards. Bray, and Spencer on the football squad. In the class football game our men played hard and made the Juniors and Sophs, play for the cup. We expect to be well represented in baseball. The Class of ' 10 expects to make her record, and let her watchword be Progress. HlSTORI. N. FRESHMAN ROLL Name. P. O. Albright, H. C Rock Creek. Albright, J. C Charlotte. Armfield, A Statesville. Armfield, C. G Statesville. Atkinson. R. A Lenoir. Babington, R. K Gastonia. Beall, A. J Charlotte. Berrier, J. B Lexington. Black, F. M Mooresville, Bland, R. D Currie. Bond. T. S Windsor. Braddv, G. W Westbrook. Xamc. P. O. Bradley, C. R Old Fort. Brasington, }. T Wadesboro. Brav.J. B. . Sligo. Bray, J. S Elkin. Buck, E. S Hampton, ' a. Byrum, V. P Charlotte. Gates, H. F Swepsonville. Clark, D. M Old Fort. Councill, J. J I Wanamish. Cowan, R. H Durham. Crosswell, J. D Fayetteville. Crow, W, H Monroe. Davis, E. W Hiddcnite. Dawson, T. T Grifton. Deans. E. G ' ilson. Duncan, B. F Columbia. Edwards, R. ( ) Fremont. Ellis, V. H Wilson. Field, H. R Sprav. Foy, R. L Scotfs Hiil. Gaddy, R. B Monroe. Gardner, L. C Grifton. Gill. R. E Raleigh. Grimes, W. T. |r Hamilton. Hardee, W. I ' Stem. Harris. T. D Oxford. Hawks, F Kinston. Hayes, L. J Burlinjjton. Haynes, E. . Raleigh. Hicks, A. R. |r Faison. Higgins, L Leicester. Hill G. ■High Pont. Hinshaw. C W Winston-Salem. Hood, L. 1 shevillc. Johnson. C. M (kiklsboro. Johnson, F. 1 ' Raeford. Jones, C. H Reidsville. Jones, R. F Washinglon. Jones, G. . Franklin. Jordan. C. R Gulf. Joyner, L. . Jackson. LaRoque, J. F Kinston. Lassitcr, M. C Snow Hill. Latham, J. E Washington. Lee. E. H. Jr Raleigh. Lockhart. . Wadesboro. Loftin, U. C West Raleigh. McDowell F Charlotte. McLendon. L. P Wa lesboro. McXeely. S. H W ' axhaw. Manning, W. L Henderson. Mayes, M S Stem. Meares, G. F ' ilmington. i Iichael, E. L Lexington. Moody. L. D East Laporte. .Moore, F,. B Morven. Morgan. R. 1 Wilson. Mosely, H. 1 ' Kinston. . ooe, L. A Pittsboro. ( )■Berry. J. T Dudley. ( isborne. L. . Setree, Ky. ( Htcrburg, R Oxford. I ' arks. J. B Concord. Pemberton. E. L I ' ayetteville. Pennington. W. C Thomasville. Philips. W. R Dunn. Pickett. W. I Ki ' nansville. IMott, W. R. Plott. Price. J. P. Leaksville. Prinu ose, J. I Raleigh. Reeves. J. L Leicester. Robertson, A. K Rowlan d. Robinson. J. F Hampton. ' a. Sadler, C Charlotte. v extiMi. J. W Salem Church. Shelburn, J. W. G Greenville. Smith. I .. C Guilford. Smith, i:. II Weldou. S]K ' ight. J. 1 Whitaker ' s. Spencer, S. A Asheboro. S])rings, J. L (k orgetown. Slainback, C. E Henderson. Stewart, A Maxton. Styron, W. ' . C Washington. Summerlin, T. B Mt. ( )lve. Sunnners. W. H Davidson. Swindell L. H Raleigh. Taylor, W. C kho.lhiss. Thom])son, T. H ' I ' homasville. Thompson, W. I h alls. Tull, 1. . Kinston. Tuttle, R. E Lenoir. ' altou. ] ' .. F. Hamilton, Ga. Willes. II. W. Jr. Poughkeepsie, X. V. A ' ellons. D. R Smithfield. Wilson, E. G Raleigh. Young, D. C Carv. Short Course (2) X a I lie. P. O. I)av:s, H. C Youngsville. Durham, E. S Snow Camp. Gibbon, F. L Charlotte. R. F. D. Herren, A. D Waynesville. Hollingsworth. Mt. Airy. Holt, J. G Greensboro. Thompson. A. G Huntley. W. O Wadesboro. Welch, L. T- • ■• Same. P. O. Kcnly, W. .M Lake Waccamaw Miller, G. L Laurel S])rinj;s Morrison, W. W Morven Shine, W. M Kenansville Stewart, D Lanrinlnirij; Leasburj; ' . ...Carlisle. S. C Ivey, J. W Seven Springs. Whitley. R. M Charlottt Short Course 1 1 Name. P. O. Allen, F. H Wadesboro. Baldwin, T. R. Jr Mt. Gilead. Hrovvn, S. A Davidson. r.ovd, Plott Plntt. linrvvell, W. S. R Kittix-ll. Call J. W M.icksvillc. Clierrv, T- Ij Windsor. Clay, h[ C Hickory. Connor, F. W Wilson. Coughenour, H. C. Scotland Xeck. Cruse, C. L Salisbury. Drake. C. L! McAdensvillc. Dougherty. CO North. S. C. Edens, Holly Ridge. Eidson, CO Cleveland. Farmer, A. P Fuquay Springs. Fuquay. J. P. Jonesboro. Godard, j. G W ' illiamston. Gray, J- M Cullasaja. Hardison. T. J Morvcn. Hawkins. M. 1 Ridgeway. Hilliard. J. . . . High Point. Holder, R. L Durham. Huske. J. r Fa etteville. Hutchi.son, R. 1 Charlotte. Ingram, Z. O Little : lills. Jordan, R. J Winston-Salem. Klapp, J. R ' irgilina. ' a. Lambertson. W. .V Rich Square. Linn, Geo Charleston, W. a. Xuiiic. P. O. Linton, Seigel Raleigh. Little. G. W Wadesboro. Lowrance. J. X Moorcsville. .M;irtin, Lenoir. . lcC(iy, 1. I! Huntersville. Morrow, T. L Sa.xapahaw. Patton, R. . ■' ranklin. Person, R. (i Laurel. Potter, PL D Cash Corner, Pritchard, T. 1! Chapel Hill. Rhync. I. 11 Charlotte. Rc.M-n ' .diiil. C. E Hillsboro. RudisiU, C A Cherryville. Sanders, D. H Smithf.cld. Sesgroves, S Method. Short, Ira Pioardman. Slagle, C S Franklin. Smith. IC. S . utryville. Snvder, J. . Rockv Mount. Steagall, M. D iMcFarland. Stalhng. C H Spring Hope. Sugg, J. A Wilson. Teague, Fred Wliittier Thompson, C. W I ' llmwood. Tliorpc. F. W Rucks ' Mount. Ward. I. T ' .Wilson. Wheeler. F. P. High Point. Williams, I Fayetteville. Williams, S. D ' .Raleigh. .STUDY HOUR. HATTAIJON The Battalion 15 1 K National Congress, under the Act of July 2, 1862, donating lands and l y money for the establishment of colleges where the leading object shall l)e the practical instruction of the industrial classes in agriculture and mechanic arts, provided, that for and in consideration of such donations, a military department shall be maintained in each such college, and that a certain amount of military instruct ' on, both theoretical and practical, shall be assigned students in their regular schedule of duties. The aforesaid act further provides that, upon proper application, army officers, either active or retired, may be detailed to serve a stated time at such colleges, in the capacity of commandants, for the purpose of imparting a more thorough knowledge of military matters than those usually acquired by State troops. Under the classification of the War Department, there are to be found four distinct classes of colleges, each differing in the amount of requisite military instruction. The A. and iM. College of North Carolina comes under classification B — Agricultural schools established under the provisions of the Act of Congress of July 2, 1862, and which are require d by said act to include military tactics in their curriculum. The character of instruction in military colleges varies according to the nature of the institution, but all colleges, to which army officers are assigned, must include theoretical and practical instruction in Infantry Drill Regulations, Field Service Regulations, iManual of Guard Duty and Firing Regulations for Small Arms. These to be supplemented, if time permits, by lectures on Army .Administration, Organization and Tactics and Security and Information. In accordance with the foregoing requirements, and at the opening of the 1906-07 term, September 7, 1906, the students of the College were organized into a battalion comprising five companies and a band, each company having a strength of fifty-five members and the band 26 members, both the companies and the band having the requisite number of officers and non-commissioned officers. Although now the end of the term is fast approaching, we having passed over a period of nearly ten months, how well it is remembered, the first day the battalion was assembled for purposes of sizing up the men, dividing them into companies, announcing the different assignments of officers and non-commissioned officers, and turning over the several organizations to their respective commanders, each of whom realized that it was incumbent upon him to whip his proportion of 175 raw recruits, by sedulous work and unswerving discipline, into well-drilled cadets by ( )ctober 17, igor). upon which date om- liattalion was to drill at the State Fair. So well was this work [KTfiinncd. and so earnestly did each and every meinher of the battalion imdertake to improve himself, that at the expiration of the five- weeks drill, prior to the Fair, the entire battalion and band compared most favor- ably with many organizations in the United States Army. iSraving the elements, and in the face of a cold, drizzling rain, the battalion, on October 17, 1906. marched over to the Fair Grounds, ami, prior to the competi- tive drill sclieduled, many manoeuvers were executed by the entire battalion with force and precision under the command of its efficient Major, W. B. Truitt. .Vfter this, each company drilled ten minutes, in com])etition. executing all the movements in the schools of the company, platoon and manual of arms. After this drill, the judges. Generals Robertson and Macon and Captain Moody, all of tile North Carolina State Guard, awarded the prize, a beautiful silk pennant, to the best drilled company, which proved to be Company C, commanded by Captain Guv F. Hinshaw. At all ceremonies this lovely banner is carried with the Colors by Company C in recognition of its high standard of drill, and attesting the unceasing efforts of its members to make the company one of the best in the prnffssion of arms. It is fast becoming a recognized fact that it is the iluty nf all loyal citizens of the United States to have some knowledge of military i rk. whether they be called upon or not to defend, under arms, our happy and prosperous land, and to maintain before the world our national rights. War is ver - uncertain. . ii due can tell what the next few years may present to us. It may be an internecine strife between our own citizens, or a bitter war against .some pretending world-power endeavoring to invade our territory, lie it one or the other, where are we going to get our properly trained fighting material unless we constantly dittuse military science among the laborers in our harvests. in order that they may. when the call comes, go into the fields ;ui(l organize and teach and build uyi a fighting machine well i|ualified to hurl back, in retalialinn, the tlnnulerlmlts of the enemy? It is so gratifying to know tli;it. from colleges such as om s. there can be gathered many voung men — the very best material of the couiUry — who, by an all-wise provision, have equipped themselves with that knowk-ilge of the military which prepares them for inestimable service to their country, and which will place them in tlie front rank in promotion and res])onsibilty as they enter the different vocations of life, be they military or civil pursuits. The battalion this year is a grand testimonial to the fact that North Carolina can ])roduce and prepare .some of the best, if not the best, trained and fighting stock to be foimd anywhere in the wurld. It is to be hoped that each succeeding year will show just cause win we should elevate the slandiu ' d of the military deiiartment. T. S. F. V. Miss Bloxna Ci.vmkr, Sponsor Bui In lion. Mx.iuK V. li. TUUITT, Bdilalioit. The Staff Commandant FcRST Ln-,uTKN. T J. S. E. YOUNG, V. S. A. Staff Officers W. r.. TRUITT Major. L. F. CARLETOX First Licuti. ' nant and Ailjiilant. A. C. J(.)XES Eicutcnaiit and (Juartcrniaster. Non Commissioned Staff. R. R. E.VGLE Sc-ixcant-Mainr. S. M. GliU ' .S Colur-Scr.uvanl. THE STAFF. r« Miss Utni Havik: Siioiisor fo. A. r.vPT. p. W. HARDTK, Co in puny A. A Company HARDIE, P. V Captain. HEMPHILL. J. 1 First Lieutenant. HERRLVG, L. J Lieutenant. WHITEHURST, C. L! Lieutenant. LLXDSAY. D First Sergeant. POYXER. T. M Sergeant. LYERLV. G. L Sergeant. WYATT, R. I Sergeant. COUNCIL. K. C Sergeant. BLANCH ARD. H. X First Corporal. H ARRELSC )N. L W Corporal. AHLLNER, W. . 1 Corporal. ROSE. W. i; Corporal. CRA EN. LB Corporal. RIGGS. A. P Corporal. Privates Arnifiekl, C. G. Armstrong. A. M. Allison. C. C. Arey. J. . . Barrett, j. W. Hecton, j. L. Bradley, C. R. Bruner, T. K. P.urwell. W. S. R. Connor, E. W. Davidson, J. F. Davis. H. C. Dougherty, C. O. Deans. E. G. Dupree. . . D. Eaton, W. 11. I ' skri.lge, W. H. Fox. R. L. Gainey, P. L. Gattis. L. P. Hardison, T. J. Hicks. A. R. Jr. Holloway, M. M. Hunter, R. C. In:;ram. Z. O. Isclcy, D. 1 . (Trumpeter). Privates — Continued Jc.yner. L. A. Lamliertson. W. .- . Alallison. S. .M. Mears. G. F. .McLendon. L. L. Miller. G.L. Moore, E. B. Morris. W. F. Morn.w. T. L. . c.Mc. H. R. ( Ishorne. L. C. iVrs.Mi, R. G. Phillips. W. K. Price. J. B. Sanders. D. H. v herwood. F. W. Siau, L. 11. Sugg. J. K. Stewart. . . Svkes. . ' . Temple. W. T. Thompson, l- ' . . l. Tuttle. R. E. I ' nderwood. E. R. Wells. H. V. Jr. Williams, S. D. ilson. J. S. W ' instead. D. R. Miss Fannie M. Farmeu, t poiisor Co. B. ;. R. IIAHDKSTY. Vomimiiy B. ' B Company HARDESTY. G. R Captain. WEAVER, L. M First Lieutenant. MILLS. ].M Lieutenant. RIEADOR, E. F Lieutenant. BOYNTON, A. G First Serjeant. COUCH, L. H Sergeant. POWELL, H. A Seroeant. WHITE, R. E Seroeant. BROWX, F. H Seroeant. HARRISON. G First Corporal. MONTAGUE, P.. F. Corporal. SHOPE, R. A Corporal. BROTHERS, CD Corporal. GREEN, A. H Corporal. Privates 1. 1). .Miernalln. . . I ' .anck, W. i: liland, K. 1). Brasinotnn, |. T. Cherry, J. B. Couohenonr. H. ( ] Couneil. I. M. Croswell I. D. Cruse. C. L. Foard, F. L. Farmer. . . P. Farmer, I. H. Gardner, |. T. Grav. 1. M. Grnies. W. T. 1 arris. G. lardee, W. P. laves. L. T. lavnes. (. . . laywiMHJ. l ' .. B IcndersdU, L. Tlilliard, ]. S. Hio-s ins, P. Hill, G. W. 106 Privates — Continued InllinosWnrth, W . M. I ■.It, J. G. luske, J. r . vev. j. v. ..rdan, C. R. nnlan. K. J. .inlan, 1-.. T. vlapp.j. K. issiter, M. C. iwrance. J. .V. . leC(.y, j. P. Middl ' et.in, 1). J. Mo,,(ly, L. D. .Morijan. R. L. Mas.sey. A. P.. .McLendon, L. P. . ooe. L. A. Khyi ' .e. j. II. kiulisin . C. A. Siiei.ulU, J. l ' . .Sadler. j ' ( ). Snninu ' rlin. T. 11. Tlionip--nn, W. r. Wellons, 1). R. Williams, J. C. Williams, I. Miss II Ai ' iiii ' rLMiiKRi.xKi-: Catt, G, F, TTTX ' TTAW, Company V. C c om pany HIXSHAW. G. F Captain R 1 :R1-:TT. i;. n First IJculcnant SCliWAll. I,. I Lieutenant ( ) i ' ' .kT( ). , J. 1{ Lieutenant S ' I ' AX 1 ; c;K, 1 L I First Sert;eant l!LACi . W . I Seri eant STR( )l ). . S Seri, ' eant IIKXDRlckS. . 1 Sergeant I ' .l l-tCI- ' .SS. W. I! Ser ,reant CLARK. T. Al First Girporal r ARKI ' .R, L Al Corporal S ' lM ' .l ' .LI ' :. IL S Corporal ( ' .RAN ' , C. 1 ' Corporal Privates Alhri-hi, L C. I ' .uck, 1 .. k. lierrier. |. I!. ileaU. A. ' L r.ray. J. iV r.aldw 11. F. (). r.rvan. L IL Clav. Tl .C. Clarke. I). AL Duke, F. A. Durham, E. S. Dunlap, T. B. Al. I ' ll s. W . 1 I ' ov. R. L. I ' ieUls. II. C.illiert. I ' . CiblH.n. I ' ' . L. lliiisliaw. C. W . Iluntlev, W. ( ). LeIev.V:. V. j(.nes. l ' . J. I ambe, C. AL Lathem, J. E. Lattimore, B. B. Prnates -Continued LaR..(|ue. L ]• . Lee. !•.. 11. ' Ir. Little. J. IL L.-n. ' . K. Ala s. M. S. Aloil. II. MoscIn, II. 1 ' . Al,..,ie. 1. C. Alellraver. W. C.. Mason. ' R. C. ( Hiver. S. L. Larks. J. K. I ' iltnian. L. L. Fittnian, l ' . F. koherlMin. j. IL. I ' rrunipeter 1 Sliorl. 1. Sniitli, !•■.. C. Sninnieis. W. 1 I. Swindell. L. 11. Spruill, C. !•■.. Shine. W. X. Tliorpe. I . W. Tlioniason. I. IX Webb, A. Al. Whitehurst, T. S. Wil.son, E. G. Miss Makv !■;. Cl.AliK, Siiuiisur To. I). I - . L. (iARXER, t ' otnpani D. D Company CARXKR. C. L Captain I ' lTTAl AX, W. C First Lieutenant C RA ' F,S. R. S Lieutenant X)N CLAHX. J. L First Sergeant SMITH. E. E Sergeant GRADY. J. D Sergeant GOLD. l l . H Sergeant FERGUSON, H. T Sergeant PASCHAL. J. G First Corporal STEPHEXS. S. F Corporal SIMPSON, C.C. Corporal HORXADAV. W. A Corporal DENNY. K. C Corporal HERRING. M. R Corporal MrRlMlY. K. 1 Corporal Privates Albright, H. C. App. J. C. Armfield, A. S. Beall, J. L. Ikebe, H. Black, F. M. Boyd, 1 ' . Bovdeii, W. C. Gates, H. R. Deane. W. S. Duncan. B. F. Edens. R. J. Edison. C. O. E ' uquav. J. B. (;addv, R. B. Gardner, L. C. Cibbs. G. I. Ham])ti)n, W. R Han-s. T. D. Holder, R. L. Hood, L. L. Hutcb ' son, R Jones, [. Mc kenly,W. : 1 Kueffner, H. Little. G. ' . Loftin. I ' . C. Martin, II. C. Moore. W. ' . Moore. ( ). McLean. A. A. McDowell, F. N M. V P,i vales — Continued .McXeelv, S. H. ( )-l!errv, 1. T. IVck, V. M. Pierce. !. R. I ' enningtun. . C. l-cscnKC J. S. I ' hillips. V. R. I ' ickelt. W. J. I ' icrcc. I ' . 1 ' . I ' ilt . 1 ' . .M. ! ' ,),)lc. K. I ' ortcr. J. A. Jr. I ' riniro e. J. L. Reeves. J. L. Redfearn. F. T. Robbins. T. . Roseniond. C. E. Shelburn, J. ' . Sloan. W. X. Smith. J. L. Spcncir. S. A. Spoon. J . P. Springs. J. L. Tavlor. V. C. ( Trumpeter Teague. F. Thompson. T. H. Warren. T. R. Wheeler. F. B. Whitley. O. G. Winslow. E. L. Yonng, D. C. r Miss Kosa L. IVmum am, NiioH.so - Co. K. Capt. L. R. gilbert, ConijMini E. E Company GILBERT, L. R Caplam McCONNELL, H. K First Licuteiiaiil FERGUSON, J. E Lieutenant HAGAN, D. Y First vSergcanl GREGORY, E. W Sergeant EARGLE, AL L Sergeant GRIMSHAWE. T. D Sergeant I L RSH. C. T Sergeant IRELAND, S. R First Corporal PRICE, J. M Corporal SUMNER, H. N Corporal WITHERS P()( )N, 1 . A Corporal Privates Babington, R. K. Baldwin, T. R. Jr. Bond, T. S. Braddy, G. W. Brown, S. A. Call, J. W. Carpenter, E. J. Cowan, R. H. Jr. Crow, y. H. Dawson. T. T. Drake, L. C. Edwards, R. O. Gill, R. E. C.dss, A. S. Hawks, F. Hawk ns, .M. | Herren, A. D. Hill, D. H. Jr. Higgins, I . B. Jones, G. A. Jones, R. F. Linn, G. Lockhart. A. .Manning, M. I iMast, C. L. Mayo, C. C. lis Privates — Continued Michael, E. L. ( Mterbourg, R. I ' atton, R. E. I ' lott, W. R. l ' .. vell, 1. A. 1 ' otter, IL I). Reinliardt, R. R. Robinson, j. F. Robertson, A. K. Sexton, J. W. Slagle, C. S. Smith, E. H. Stainbac] , C. r . Steagall. M. I . Stewart, I). Stvron. W. C. Terrell, M. R. Thompson, A. G. ' I hompson, C. W. Thompson, L. . . Towe. L F. N ard, J, T. Walton, C. 1{.( Trumpeter). Wliiltington, R. I ' .. Wilson. 1. Siiicer. Welch. L. j. Yarborongh, W. 1 ' .. MIS SACKIK W. liATlA, .S ' ioH.soc JIiiikI. Band. Band HOLT, W. N Captain. BATTIE, H. S First Lieutenant PARKER. T. F First Lieutenant. BASON, G. F First Sers eant and InstrnctDr. FERGUSON. W. G ' Drum .Major. FAISON, R. R Corporal. WHITLEY, R. . [ Chief Trumpeter. Privates . tkinson, B. A. I ' .ray. J. S. Bynuni, V. P. Cowles. W. M. Davis, W. E. Drake. C. P.. Eaton, 1. T. C.rittin, C. L. Haywood, T. !• . Jolin.son. W. I ' . R. Linton. . ' . .Marsliall. V. ! !. A! on-; son. W. W. Peniherton. K. L. . a ller, C. Snyder, j. . . Toonier, ]. 1 ' ' . Tull, 1. . . Walters, W. V, Wattcrs, J. r. Zfflar, I. F. dOffi commissioned tticers First Lit ' iitt ' iiaiit j. S. Iv ' )l ' ' ( i Coniniaiidaiit. TkllTT. W. I ' , Major. Captains HARDlIv I ' . W Company -A. HARDESTY, G. R Company - 1! HINSHAW, C. F Company C. GARNER, C. I Company - I), GILHERT. I.. R Comi)any E. H( )i;r, W. X I ' .anc First Lieutenants CARLETON, I,. F Adjntant HEMPHILL, J. L Company ' • A WEAXER, L. M Companv - I ' , EVERETT, l;. l; Comi.any • ' C PITMAN, W. C, Company - I) McC( )XNELL, H. K Comi)any ' • !■: IJATTIE, H. S Uan: PARKER, T. F llan. Second Lieutenants J( )NlvS, . . C Onartcrmaslcr MILLS, j. .M Comjiany ' ■l ' . ' SCHWAP,, L. j Comi)any - C. ' 1 IPII ' JILRS ' I ' , C. P. Companx ■■A. ' M1 ' :A1)( )R. . !•■Company ' • I ' .. ' ( ) ' I ' :RT( )X, j. I-: Comiiany C GRA ICS. R. S Company -D; FER(US( )X. J. 1 Company - I ' .; HERRIXC. L. J Company A. ' Sergeants EAGLK. R. K Serjeant- Major. CI 1 1 ' S. S. M Color Sergeant. First Sergeants LINDSAY, I) Company - . . BOYANTOX, A. G Company •■1 ' .. STAIXBACK. H. I Company ■' C. ( )X CL.MIX. J. 1 Company D. HAGAX, i). ■Company K. B.VS( )X, G. 1 ' I ' iii ' l- FKRC)L ' S( )X, W. G Drum-Major. Sergeants l ' ( )YXER, T. M Company ■' A C( )L ' CH. L. U Comi.any I ' .. ' BLACK. W. L Comjiany - C. GREG )RY, !■:. W Comiiaiiy ' • I .. LYERLY, G. L Comiiany A. POWELL. H. A Comiiany - i:. SMITH. E. E Com])any - D. WYATT. R. J Company A. WHITE. R. ] Company - I ' ,. STR( )L;D. J. S Company ' ■C. GRADY. J. D Company - D. EARGLE. M. 1 Company • ' D. HENDRICKS. .M Company C. BL ' RGESS. W. I ' . Company • ' C. I ' ,R( ) X. F. H C.mipanv ' ■1 ' .. C RIIMSHAWI-,. T. D Cmpany ■■l ' .. MARSH, C. T Comi)any - l-.. COLD, M. H Company - D. FERGUSOX. li. T Comjiany - D. C( )rXCIl . K. C Companv ' ■A. Corporals r.LAXC ' ll AKI), 11. X Company A. ' CLARK. ' 1 ' . .M Company C FA1S( )X, K. K Raw ' HARRELS( )X. J. W Company A. ' H. RRIS( )X. C. Company P.. HICRRI XC. . 1. R Company I). ' IRELAiXl). S. R Company E. ' MILLNER, W. M Company - A. ' MOiXTAC.rE, r.. F Company B. ' PARKER, J. M Company C PASCHAL. I. C, Company D. PRICE, J. M Company E. R( )SL, W. 1 ' . Company A. SH( )1 ' E. R. A Company • ' P.. ' STEELE. IL S Company •• C. STEPHEXS. S. 1 ' Company •• 1). SL ' M X1-:R. 11. X Company - E. CR.W. C. P Company C. l ' .R( )Tli I ' .RS. C. 1 ) Company - P.. SlAPI ' Sl ) . G. C. Company • ' I ' .. WITHERSP( )()X, P. . Company E. CR.W I ' .X. j. P. Company ' ■A. Rices. A. P Company . , IK )RX l) ■. W. A Company ' • I). DEX X ■, K. C Company D. GREEN. A. H Company B. Ml RPHY, R. L Company D. Senior Privates Bivens, J. P. Hrvan, C. J. Carter. R. H. Elclridge, S. Fowler, E. V. Gill. R. J. Jones. W. W. Koonce. L. F. Utta. C. E. Lougee. L. E. McXairv. O. F. Mial. B. ' T. Michael. F. C. Montague. H. S. Morson, J. L. Parker. T- C. Parks, F. M. Paschal, A. L. Pinner, G. Plnninier. T. K. Staples, W. C. Shuford, J. O. Svkes, V. Tate, N. H. TiUet, L. R. Turlington, J. E. Ward. ' E. F. Wells. J. J. White, D. L. Wilson. A. T. Alma Mater A. 6 M. W.irds by Albert Eiiwaid Kscolt, ' 0(1. We ' re the men iif A. and M., r.iit they are ni t all here. Sini-kis. ' ed Carolina. We sing a song of cheer. Tar Heel State ' s a great old Stale: She rambles far and wide, From the Blue Ridge in the sky To broad Atlantic ' s tide. ( )n the Hill we ' ve paced our beat. With guns and t!red feet; I ' ut on war-path marching, ( )r iin enterprises sweet, Then with scenes of college days The recollection teems. And we ' ll sing of Alma Mater In our gladsome dreams. North Carolina A. and M. College, Sons in many climes. True to thee and loyal. In peace and stirring times, Hail the flag of Red and White, For a college strong and free — Alma Mater, Heaven ' s blessings Always follow thee. ®epartment£i Agricultural Department CHARLEv ' AI. COXXKR, U.S.A.. I ' ..S Profrssor of Ai;riatltun TAIT BL ' TLER, ' .S Professor of } ' c-tcriiiarv Si-n-iicc am) Zoology. FRANK LINCOLN STKN ' KNS. M.Sc, rii.l).. Professor of Bo oiir inid I ' cgctablc Pathology. WILLJA.M XICHOL HL ' TT. U.S. A ' .I ' rofcssor of Horticulture. BENJAMLN WESLEY KILCoRIC. . I.S Lecturer on Soils and Pertilizcrs. JOHN CHESTER KENDALL, U.S.. .. I.w .v .n; Profes. or of Ihiiry 1 1 u.s-haudry. C.V . LENANDER ROIU-.RTS, U.S., D.WS.. .Issistdiil Professor of Zoology and .Inatoiiiy. ER. XI LL S11ERAL N, ll.S.. Instructor ' in liutoniology. FRANK REIMER, AI.S Instructor in Horticulture. ALFRED HENRY THIESSEN. L.S Instructor ,n Mcterology. RUSSEL SAGE WOGLL ' M, . .r.., . I.S.- Instructor in Entomology. TAMES CLARENCE TEM I ' L1{, l ' ... -r Ls-sistant in Bacteriology. ROLF.RT SETH Cl ' RTlS, U.S Instructor in .liiinuil llushandry. Agricultural Seniors Eaton. J. T. Joik ' .s . . C. I ' arkcr. T. F. Everett. B. B. Koonce. L. 1 ' . I ' aschal. . . L. Herring, Iv. J. Overton, |. F,. Turlini;ton, |. E. Ward, E. F. Wliitc, 1). L. ' ••ANALYSIS OF A IIKAKT. Chemical Department WILLIAM ALPHOXSO -ITHERS. A.M Professor of Chemistry. WILLIAM AXDERS( ). S ' Ml ,, U.S.. M.S., I ' ll. I) Instructor in Chemistry. EARNEST JEXKIXS H( )FF.M . I ' li.l) Instructor in Chemistry. ARTHUR JOHN WILS( )X Issistant in Chemistry. Chemical Seniors l. m ,ar, L. E. McConiK ' Il, II. K. .Montaouc, H. S. Pluinnu-r, |. 1 . Wilson, . . |. Civil Engineering Department WALLACE CARL RIDDICK, A.I ' .., C.E.. CARROLL LAMP, ALANN, B.S.. C.E THOMAS vSIMEOX LANG, B.S., C.E.... Battle, H. S. Eldridge, S. Garner, C. L. Gill, R. J. Hardie, P. W. Hinshaw, G. F. C. E. Se . . . .Professor of Cr . . .Instructor in Ci: . . .Instructor in Cr McNairy, ( ). F. Morson, J. L. Pinner. G. Schwab, L. J. Svkes, ' . Tillett, L. R. 77 £;(- ■il Ens inccniij. inccrin i inccriui Wells, J. J. KKCKIVIXO SIKICKS 11 , WIUK. Electrical Engineering Department ELLERY r.l ' RTOX TAIXE, M.S., E.E.. Professor of lilcctrical liu; uiccrini: and Physics. WINFRED MORSI ' . . 1). MS. I!.S Instructor in klcctrical Eni inccring. CLARENCE WIESOX HEWLETT, I!.E Instructor in Physics. Electrical Seniors Bryan, C. J. lleniphiU. J. L. Carletoii, L. F. Jones, W. W. Carter, R. H. Michael, F. C. Fowler, E. Park.s, F. M. Eersjnson, J- L. I ' arker. J. C. Hardesty, G. R. Shu lord J. O. Whitehurst, C. li. A FIK.M WELD.- Mechanical Engineering Department CHARLES WALTER THC)AL S, M.Iv, Profcssoi- of }h-chanical Eiii inccrmi CHARLES BENJAAHN PARK Siif crintciulciit V Slwfs PIXCKNEY GUSTA ' E DEAL. Instnictor In l ' ori;c Sho ami Pattern-Making. WILEY THEODORE CLAY, B.E Instructor in irood corking CHARLES HERBERT LAWRAXCE, I!.S Instructor in Drazciiig LtLLIAX LEE ' AL ' GHAX. R.S Instructor in Drawing. The Senior Mechanicals Motto: — Make inm and steal ( sieel ) for a livint . Favorite Sonc. : — ' hen the Okl Mill Wheel Turns Rmiiid. Favorite Saving: — It ' s good enough for a church. Mi:Mr.iCKS: oi ' imcicrs : r . T. M I AL President. L. M. WEA ' ER ice-President. W. G. PITM AX Secrctarv. J. M. MILLS Treasurer. W. B. TRl ' ITT Chief Draughtsman. E. F. MEAJK )R Cliief iMisjineer. • W HAVING A WEB. Textile Department TiK ).M. S XI ' U.SI ). ' I ' rofcssor of Textile hidustry. liARTHOLOMUW MOORE PARKER. I ' ..S .« . Prof, of Textile Industry. J( )HX H( )L ' STOX SHL ' F( )RU, B.S histmetov in Pyciiti:;. HERI ' .ERT XATIt AXIEI. STEED -Issistant in Textile riulustry. Textile Seniors Dawson. C. C. Gilhcrt, 1.. K. Holt, W .X. Eatta. C. E. Staples, W. C. IXIKEIOR VIEWS OF TEXTILE BUILDING. TEXTILK, lii;ilJilN( C. D. HARRIS Athletic Association •« Officers FlKSr ' I ' l ' .KM. I ' . W. I lARDI K I ' R-sick ' i:i. i;. i;. LATTlMi )RK ia-l ' ivsi,lcnt. r,. I ' lXXER Sccrc ' larv. G. F. HIXSflAW Treasurer. Second ' ri-;i M. A. J. ' ILS( )X I ' rrsi.Irnl. J. S. STROL ' I) icc I ' rcsidriu. G. F. HIXSHAW Secretary and Treasurer. E. F. WARD, Manager Varsity Football. ir A. J. WILSON, Captain Varsity Football. Football Team, 1906 Name. Age. Weight. Height. Temple . . . . Perkins .... Sykes Beebe .... Stroud Stevens .... Thompson Wilson ( Captain ) Hardie Eskridge Shuford SUBSTITTTES. Edwards Whitehur.st . . . Drake .... Abernathy . . . 23 175 170 196 205 180 150 166 184 165 no 162 194 168 ' 50 148 6 Center 5- R. G 6 L. G. 6 R T. 5 — 10 L. T 5 ■9 R. E. 5—11 L E. 6 R H. 5-11 L. H. S-7 Q. B, 6 F. B 6 6 5-8 5-7 1 ' . ....,1- -- SM mmB I Jm Ji 0 r. « ' ■MB H ' _ ! j m m ■BC WWBw n V i iW ' - V ' -- H September 29. ' 06. October 6, •06. October 1 1, ' 06. October 13. •06. October ' 5. ' 06. October 18, ' 06. October 25. ' 06. November 29. •06, Record, 1906 A. and M, 39 Randolph Macon o. A. and M. o University Virginia o. A. and M. o Richmond College o. A. and M. 17 Va. Mil. Institute o. A. and M. 4 W. and L. 4. A. and M. 44 Williams and Mary o. A. and M. o Clemson College o. A. and M. ' ' o Va. Pol. Institute 6. H J. L. HEMPHII.L. Manager Varsity liaschnll. F. M. THOMPSON, Vui lain Varsity Baseball. Baseball Sched March 22, •06. A and M April 2, •06. A and M April 4. ' 06. A and M April 5. •06. A. and M April 12, •06. A and M April i6. •06. A. and M April iS, •06. A. and M April 21, •06. A. and M April 23. ' 06. A. and M April 24. ' 06. A and M April 25. ' 06. A. and M April 27. ' 06. A. and M May 5. ' 06. A. and M ule and Results, o6 9 Bingham 3 1 Wake Forest 4 2 Trinity 5 3 University North Carolina . 7 16 S. C. C 3 I Trinity 6 5 St. Johns ' 3 3 University North Carolina . o 3 Washington and Lee 4 6 Virginia Military Institute 12 o University Virginia . . .12 5 Georgetown University . 3 4 University ' irginia ... 3 « vSf Line-up of Team, 1906 McCATHRAN, . . . Pitcher. TEMPLE Pitcher. STEEL Pitcher. THOMPSON Catcher. FOX First Base. FARMER, . . . Second Base. STAPLES, . . . Short Stop. KNOX, ( Captain ) . Third Ba.se. ESKRIDGE, HARRIS, . . SHUFORD, . JORDAN, . . Left Field Center Field. Right Field. Sub. Clags; tfjleticg Junior Football Team Champions VON GLAHN Center. BECKTON l- islit Guard. ZEIGLAR Left Guard. COUNCIL Rig ' it Tackle. BURGESS Left Tackle. DUNLAP Riglit End. GAINEY Left End. LATTIAK )RK Riglit Half. BLACK ( Captain ) Left Half. PC) YXER (Quarter Hack. Subs. : — Cinich, Spruill, Stanljack, Towe. .Mana-er LYERLY. Coach FARMER. Sophomore Football Team RIGGS Center. WITHERvSPC )( )X Riglit Guard. CRAVEN Left (Uiard. MORRIS Right Tackle. HARRISON Left Tackle. HAYWOOD Right End. MARSHALL Left End. GRAY (Captain ) Right Half. PECK Left Half. PORTER Quarter Back. STEE:L Full Back. Coach— THOMPSON. Freshman Football Team TUTTLE Center. REEVES l- ' :- ' ! ( .uar l. HARDING 1 Att C.iiard. HINSHAW l-ii lit Tackle. COUNCIL I-t-ft Tackle. WINSLOW R- slit End. BLACK Left End. HOLDER Ri.- lit Half. FOY I- lt Half. MANNING yuarliT I ' .ack. GRIMES I 1 ■' ■i l - Coach— URAY. Champions in Class Baseball, 1906 Tlie Class of 1908 EAGLE, R. R Catcher. STROL ' I), J. S Pitcher. HENDRICK, M. ( Captain ) First Base. BOYNTON, A. G Second Base. WHITE, R. E Short-stop. GAINEY, P. L Third Base. POYNER, T. M Left Field. HAGAN, D. Y. ( Manager ) Center Field. ABERNATH Y, A. E Right Field. Snbstitutes— LIXOSAY, 1).: ZIGLAR, J. F. Coach— Dl XLAP, G. T. Games Class of ' 07 3 — Class of 08 7 Class of ' oy 4 — Class of ' 08 6 tfte athletic gsotiation of tijc J}ortlj Carolina CoUege of iSgriculture anb jWecfjanic rts taff: 0. F. McNAlRY. Editor- n-Chief. GUY PINNER, Business Manager. department CbitorS: feticncc : E. F. WARD W. B. TRUITT R. J. GILL J. P. BIVENS litcrarp: atlilrtit: 5. ELDRIDGE C. D. HARRIS local: G. F. HINSHAW H. S. MONTAGUE Comic : CxcljanHC : W. W. JONES C. L. GARNER Officers of Y. M. C. A. E. R. WALT( )X General Secretary. J. H. HENLEY President. A. C. JONES ;ce-President. 15. T. FERGUSON Secretary. J. S. STROUD Treasurer. M. L. EARGLE Cnrresitnnd ' ng Secretary. T. F. PARKER Chairman Devotional Committee. W. B. TRUITT Chairman I ' .ihle Study Committee. A. C. J( )N1CS C ' haivman .Mission Study Committee. L. F. CARLET( )N Chairman .Music Committee. J. E. TURLINGT( )X Charman . lcml)ershii) Committee. J. vS. STR( )VD Chairman h ' inance Committee. I), j. .MIDDEI ' .TOX Chairman Social Committee. A Fantasy Tlic rivulet babbles and bubbles As now on its brink I stand ; As it breaks on the stony ledges And plays with the tjolden sand. As it sweeps by the bend but yunder. So sweeps the world from me : The stormy conflict has vanished, To leave my conscience free. But yet one mad thouo;ht haunts me, And hovers around me still, ' hich seems to become my ruler, T(] now ciiniuiand ni ' ill. A passionate tumult arises. The depths of my soul to stir ; ' Tis a longed-for, ideal image. And given me for a spur. To wake up the sluinber ' ng spirit. That I may wish to earn, — To work for a single purpose. To face each coming spurn. Is this the obstinate passion That others, too, have sought. To some a blessing given. Yet war on nations brought? I ' .ut the rivulet liiibhles and liulibles, . nd in the sand 1 trace A word, a name, and a token, A memoir of a face. r ' is E2 , Inter-Society Triangular Debate, May, 1906 Query What shall we do for lal or? Tenenan Excludi all foreigners and rely on increase of native population. Leazer Restrict immigration to the thrifty anil intelligent. Pullen Encourage a free immigration. ,_ ,t Debaters Tciicriaii — R. H. Tillman ' o( C. F. Xiven ' 06. Lcacar — G. P. Asbury ' o(), S. V. Foster ' 06. PiillcH—]. C. Myrick 06, A. E. Escott 06. President— L. R. Tillett 07. Secretary — F. C. Michael ' 07. Chief Marshal— W. P.. Truitt 07. . . « MarsKalls Tcncrtan — C. E. Ciarner ' 07, S. Eldridge ' 07. l.cacar — J. S. Stroud ' 08, ' . Sykes ' 07. Ptillcu — J. T. t ' .arilner oS, S. F. Stephens ' 09. Declaimers, 1906 PULLEX LITERARY SOCIETY. Tillet, L. R. Gray. C. 1 ' . LEAZAR LITERARY SOCIETY. Truitt, V. B. Stroucl. I. S. TEXERIA.X LlTl ' .kARY SOCIETY Eldridge, S. Ferguson, B. T. Pullen Literary Society Officers First Tkk.m. T. F. PARKER Pres;dent. ] I. HEXDRICK ice-Pre.sident. C. P. GRA Secretarv. S. F. STEPHENS Treasurer. H. V. KEL-FFXER Censor. L. R. TILLETT Critic. J. B. BRAY Librarian. A. C. JONES Chaplain. Second Term. L. R. TILLETT President. H. W. KEUFFNER Vice-President. A. P. RIGGS Secretary. J. B. BRAY Treasurer. M. HENDRICK Censor. C. P. GRAY Critic. J. S. WHITEHURST Librarian. J. O. SADLER Chaplain. Leazar Literary Society « •« Motto : — Constituti ' ivinms. Colors: — Light liluc and White. Officers : First Ticrm. W. 1!. TRl ' ITT President. J. S. STR( )L ' D ' ice-President. H. X. I ' .LANCHARD Secretary. M. 1 . KARGLE Treasurer. J. K. Tl RM X(;T( )X Censor. ' . SVKKS Chaphiin. R. A. SH( )I ' E Sero;eant-at-Arnis. Second Tkrm. A. L. PASCHAL President. J. D. GRADY ice-President. P. L. GAINEY Secretary. H. X. BLANCHARD Treasurer. I. S. STRori) Censor. 1. I). .MIDDLETC )X Chaplain. A. R. H ICKS Serjeant-at-Arms. Tenerian Literary Society Motto : Beyond the Alps Lies Italv. Colors : Purple and ' hite. Officers, 1906- 1907 First Term. J. P. BR ' ENS President. B. T. FERGUSON Mce-President. W. H. EATON Secretary. C. T. MARSH Treasurer. SEBA ELDRIDGE Censor. C. L. GARNER Critic. J. W. BARRETT Sergeant-at-Arms. Second Term. SEBA ELDRIDGE President. J. P. SPOON ' ice-President. W. A. HORNADAY Secretary. C. T. MARSH Treasurer. C. L. GARNER Censor. L. R. GILBERT Critic. L. P. McLENDON Ser£reant-at-. rms. The Biag Society 3T is seldom that a society is found ready-niadi ' ; the very best of material requires further attention on the part of older men. It is like a young boy entering college : it must stand many hard knocks, and for the first few years it is very plastic ; but the impressions received at this period are apt to be the permanent hall-marks of its future. They will either make or destroy. It was on January i6, 1906, that a few members of the two upper classes of the Agricultural Course met with, and at the home of, Dr. F. L. Stevens, for the ])urpose of the organization of such a society as we now have. At this meeting the Society organization was not completed, but on January 23d it was formally inaugurated, and its policies of government established. Since its organization the whole work of the Bi-Ag has been growing. The Society locally and nationally could not wish to be in better health or in a more prosperous condition. Although it is very young at this writing, the writer feels that he can say that the Bi-Ag is no longer in its knee trousers, but that it has assumed a strong, vivacious form of youth, rcarly to have and to liold all that comes within its reach. The field of the Bi-Ag is just as large as the work of our agricultural colleges. .■s our colleges grow, so will our Society be bound to grow : as our colleges become more useful, so will our Society become more useful. In fact, it is the Society that will help develop our agricultural colleges, and will add dignity, strength, and popularity to our course. The character of our Society is quite different in some respects from many others : but the writer remembers that there arc many societies, and that they stand for nearly as many things. Some stand for a single thing, as athletics, sociality, morality, scholarship, etc.. while others try to combine all of the good things in the right proportion, and this we believe to be the best standard. A Society, after all, is simply a man-building institution, and it is only by giving attention to these various good phases of life that a good, wholesome, sympathetic, all-round man can be developed. If we give undue attention to any one of these phases of life we will get a lop-sided development, and consequently we get either a lop-sided man or woman. Does this mean that individuality is curtailed, — that we are all trying to attain the same ideals in the same way? Not at all : it is simply oneness of aim and purpose, and not oneness of ways and means. The great value of our Society, and the thing which makes it an honor to be a member of it, rests on the fact that we are not a body of men gotten together merely for social ends, but that we have a ruling pur]iose — a desire to help one another intellectually and spiritually as well as socially. . n ideal Bi-Ag man is a strong man with a noble purpose. The Merriman Society of Civil Engineering Officers : C. L. GARNER 07 President. S. M. GIBBS 08 icc-rrcs:dent. E. E. SMITH oS Secretary and Treasurer. O. F. McNAIRY 07 Eil)rarian Members Bands. W. II. I). ( ' ..Id, .M. H. P.Hile. K. I. Becton, J. L. Grini.shawe. T. D. I ' oyncr. T. .M. Beebe, H. Hackett, C. W. Schwal). L. J. Boynton. A. G. Ha an, I). V. Smtli. I- .. E. Brothers, C. D. Hardie, 1 ' . W. Sni.ili. J. E. Dupree, A. D. Hinshaw, G. 1 . Snn.ner, H. N. Eagle. R. R. Kueffner, H. W. Steele, U.S. Eldridge, S. Lanibe, C. M. Sykcs, V. Eskridpe, W. H. Laltiniore. I!. B. Tilletl. I.. R. Fanner, 1. H. McNairy. ( ). F. (inGlalin. J. E. CUirner, C. E. Marsh, C. T. Wells, j. ]. Gardner. J. T. Mor.-on. J. E. White. R. l- ' .. Cihhs. S, M. I ' irner. G,. Wi]li;nns. j. C. Gill, R. 1. ritlnian. E. E. Zi-ler. E F. Why? W ' liy di) the thoughts of yciu, into My weary soul now steal? Why does an imag;e of you appear? And wli - does it seem so real? ( h ! you with the eyes of deepest brown, Whose depths a message bear ; Whose twinkle to the one who sees Reveals no donlit nor fear. And you with the smile yon always wear: With a lauLjh of gladsome ijlee : And the joyous, wond ' rons way you have ( )f slyly luring me. Why does the moonlight cause the spell? Why does tlie merry song Of the twittering l)ir l in the boughs above Cause me to wish and long? 1 do not know, I can not tell. I ' .ut yet 1 know ' tis true: And oft ' 1 wonder and oft ' 1 say, Whv do I th ' nk of vou? GERMAN CLUB Thalenan German Club Officers : First Tkum. V. X. H( )LT President. P. W. HARDIE ice-President. R. R. FAISOX Secretary. 1!. I ' .. LATTLM( )RK Trea- urer. RAI.I ' H P( )XC. Leader. Skccimi Ti:u.m. P. V. HARDI] ' , President. V. M. I ' KCK ice-President. W. W . W ATTl ' .RS Secretary. 11. B. LATTIM( )RE Treasurer. RALPH LUNC; Leader. Members liason, G. F. Hawvond. E. II. Pinner. G. P eebe, H. Harrison, G. Pemberton, E. L. Council. K. C. Has an, D. Y. Perkins, S. ( ). Coinicil, J. . i. Harris. (,. Staples, W. C. Cowle., W. . L I..hnM.n. V. !• ' . R. Smith. E. H. Cniswell, J. I). Kendall. Pn.f. j.C. Si;ui, L. IL Conner, F. C. .McLean, A. A. Tnll, 1. X. Goss, A. S. . laini, I ' rof. C. L. Thnnipson. K. . L Grimes. W. T. .Morsun, J. L. Wanl, E. F. Hewlett. Pn.f. C. W. Mmitii-ne, II. S. The Glee Club GUSTA ' HAGKDC )RX Director. ' $-- - E. F. WARD o- President. ' ' fi-j ' L. F. CAKLET( )X 07 Manager. , y ' ; I. T. EAT( )X nj Librarian. First Tenors L. F. Carleton ' 07. R. A. Sliopc ' 09. C. W. Hewlett. P. P. Peirce ' og. C. I ' . Whitclnirst ' 07. James Hilliard ' 10. Second Tenors E. F. Ward 07. ' . .M. Peck 09. P!. ' . Fowler ' 07. !!. T. Ferguson 08. P. L. Gainey ' 08. A. M. Webb ' 09. First Bass |. M. .Mills ' 07. W. Walters oy. W. N. Holt 07. R. R. Eagle 08. C. J. liryan ' 07. John Parks ' 05. Second Bass J. ( ). Shutord ' 07. ( ' . I ' . McXairy ' c - W. . Tniitt ' 07. G.ro. i ' uison ' 08. I. ' i I ' ' .atoii ' 07. W. R. Marshall 09. t). Aloore ' 09. The Biological Club Officers J. E. TURLINGTON President. M. L. EARGLE icc- 1 ' resident. FRAXK IE l!R( )WX Secrelary-Trcasurer. W. 1 1. I ' .AT( )X Corresponding Secretary. Members Allison, C. C. Herring, E. J. Morrison, W. W. Arey, J. A. Higgins. 1 ' ,. l!. Alott. 11. Barrett, J. W. Higgins. E. A. Overton, |. E. Bray, J. S. Ilornaday, W. A. Parker, T. F. Brown, F. H. Hunter, R. C. Paschal, . . L. Cruse, C. E. Hutchinson. R. M. Khyne. J. H. Eargle, M. L. Iseley, E. ' . Robertson. A. K. Eaton, J. T. Jones, .A. C. Snyder, J. A. Eaton, V. H. Kooncr, E. F. Spoon, J. P. Everett. B. B. Eathani. E E. Springs. St. ]. E. Ferguson, B. T. Eockhart . A. S ' .eagall. M.D. Cainey. P. E. Eoftin. ' . C. Stewart, . . Gibbon, F. E. Eowrance, [. X. Thompson. C. V. Gibbs. G. E AIcCov. J. 1!. Tlwrp. F. W ' . Grady, J. D. McEendon, L. E. Turlington, T. E. Grav, J. M. McEendon. E. P. Ward. E. F. Hardie, W. P. Mason, R. C. Ward. J. T. Hardison, T. J. Mavo, C. C. Whie. ' l). Henley. J. H. Middleton, D. J. Whillev, R. .M. Dr. F. Tv. Stevens. Mrs. F. E. Stevens. Honorary Members Prof. I ' ' . C. Reinier. Mr. Hall. Mr. J. C. Tenii)l Mr. Wni. Kerr. The Club meets scnr ' -monthh ' , anil discusses such subjects as ri ' late to I ' liology. mostly in ll ie form of essays. Personal ol)ser -alion is an important feature. That member receiving the largest number of points dtu-ing the rear for observations rendered, is ])resented with a ' I ' niversal I ' lanter. witli all modern attachments, by the Cok ' .Manufacturing Comp;ni , Charlotte. .X. C. for which the Club is very grateful. Rural Science Club Officers A. C. J( )NES President. E. W. ISELEY icc-l ' resi lent. J. A. AREY Rccordinj;; Secretary. J. D. GRADY Correspdiidiiii;- Secretary. P. L. GAINEY Trea.surer. Members Allison, C. C. Kdonce. h. F. Arey, J. A. Mcl.endnn, L. L. Barrett, J. W. Alcl.eml.ni, L. I . Durham, E. H. Mott. H. Eaton, W. H. Mayo, C. C. Eaton, J. T. Morri.son, W. W. Ferguson, B. T. Paschal, . . L. Gibbon, T. L. Parker, T. F. Gainey, P. L. Stewart, A. Grady. J. D. Spoon, J. P. Hardee, W. P. Snyder, J. A. Higgins, B. B. Turlington, J. E. Iseley, E. W. Thompson, C. V. Jones, A. C. ' i ' liorp. 1 W. Jones, R.C. White, 1). P. -« I The ' 07 Quartette At tlie l)ct;innin - of ilic Christmas tfnii (if 11)05, these fmir fellows were thrown together for class work. Iveh soon iiolieed that the others ha(rs iiiie talent and love of song ' , so when tlie ' knew one another hctter thev joined in. each with a different voice, and formed this, The ' 07 Oiiartctte. It soon attracted the attention of the Electrical-Mechanical divis ' on. and later the whole Coliejre. The pictnre here t;iven is as they ajijjear ready for one of their late-lmnr serenades, which are enjoyed hy those who hear them. First Tenor— (. . 11. VH ITIU R ' RST, I ' .eanf.irt. . . C. Second Tenor— C. J. lUnAX. Wa-hington. X. C. h ' irst I ' .as.s— J. M. MILLS, Ralei-h, X. C. Second i;ass— j. ( ). Sliri ' ()kl). Castonia. X. C. MoTTo: — 1 larmonw Electrical Engineers (?) rKni-. W. M. ADAMS, Lord Kct-per nf the C ireat Meters and Other Instruments. C. J. r.KVAX. Chief Differentiator of the Great Ladder. R. H. CARTER, Principal Manipulator of the M-glity Lrace and I ' .it. L. F. CARLET( ). , Cliief of the Great Hole-Drivers in Ilrick. E. ' . FUWLER, Grand Adjuster of Cleats and Rosettes. J. C. PARKER, Grand Chancellor of tlie Switch-Board. F. M. PARKS, Worshipful Climber of High Poles. C. B. WHITEHURST, Principal Hanger of Lamps and Chandeliers. Trumps Motto: — Prepare for inspection. Oh.ors: — Emerald and White. Pl. cf, of Mehtint. : — One of the joints. Timk: — . fter 11:51) i ' . m. P. ss- oki) : — Trump. Toast Here ' s to tlie nine Win li inian--. They who dare to do : . nd may each soon he alile To paddle his own canoe. Members G. F- Hinshaw, ' 07 Joint 31 —Dealer. MOntague, B. F., ' 09. . . Joint 22 -Shuffler. ZiglaR, J. F., ' 08 Dowd Joint -Joker. J. S. Wilson, ' 10 Joint 55 -Banker. FoY, R. L., ' 10, Joint 36 -Low. MonTague. H. S.. ' 07, .. Joint 60 -Jack Pot. AdolpHus M. Webb, ' 09, . . Joint 55 Queen of Hearts. C. W. Hinshaw, ' 10, . Joint 31 -Game. F. L. FOard, ' 09 Joint 22 -Scorer. The Old Dominion Club .. . INIoTTo: Mrginia : may she ever be right; hut riglil nr wrong — ' irginia ! LoAi-iNG Pi.ACi: : — h ' urteen. FuiWER : — ' irginia Creeper. Cdi.oK : — Pink. Officers Tee-m-pee: R. S. GRAVES. Asst. Tee-ni-pee : L. L. AL ' (mAN. Fen Pusher: R. L. FoX. Cash Re.gi.ster: S. F. STEPHF.NS. Chronicler: ( ' .. (;, ST.MPSON. High Privates E. E. BUCK (Z). J. F. ROBINSON (A). 1!. F. DUNCAN (2). The Lucky Thirteen from Anson Oij.lECT OP Okcanization : — To perpetuate the law of self preservation. Motto : — Procrastination. ( )cori ' . Tio : — Pxirinj.;- t-ach ullier. Colors: — ( reen and White. I ' i.o i;i; : — Cotton hlooni. Soxc, : — Why is Money so Hard to Get. Officers J. P. niN ' EXS President. T. 1 ' .. DL ' XLAl ' ice-l ' resi lenl. W. 1 ' .. ROSE Secretary. L. L. AlcLENDC )N Treasurer. Specialties L. P. McLENDOX.— -Orator. E. B. MOORE. — Feminine hear-breaker. .A.. LOCKHART. — The Devd hath the power to assimie a pleasing- shape. T. J. HARDISON. — Here is metal more attractive. J. T. ISRASINGTON.— The reporter of events. Ct. W. LITTLE.C )ur Chr ' stmas Gift. M. D. STEGALE.— Milton, the poet. W. ( ). HL ' XTLEY.— Our advisor. W. W. MORRISON.— Ambassador to Peace. Alamance Club Motto: — Do otlu-r- licfurc tlu-y do y(]U. Favouiti ' . So. r, : — Chhk ' l):u ' k Id mo. swcotlK ' art ! ' I ' dKi ' i ' i ' ; SA •| •(■, : — Come clean. l ' ' A ()kiTi ' : I ' low i:u : — C-d v jessamine. Officers J. P. SPOON President. R. L( )NG Nice- President. I. C. .ALBRIGHT Secretary. W. . . HORN. D. ' Treasurer. Members J. C. . ' ll)ri. ;lit ' [Q. I). I ' ., iseley 09. II. R. Cates ' 10. R. Pnii!.;- ' nt). I ' ' ,. S. Durham Vx). T. I,. .Marrow ' 10. 1,. J. I layes ' in. j, II. Rnhertsou ' oQ. W. . . Hornaday 01). J. 1 ' . Spoon 08. 1,. . . Thompson ' () ). Guilford County Club . . ' I p. W. HARDIE President. F. C. MICHAEI Vice-President. D. Y. HAGAN Secretary and Treasurer. Members N. H. I ' .lanchanl. Iv V. Iseley. H. S. Battie. ( ). F. Mc.Vairy. • J. M. Milliard. E. E. Smith. J. G. Holt. E. C. Smith. W. r,. Truitt. Flower: — American iJeautv Rose. Mottd: — Health. ' ealth, and Prosperity. ■' OXK OF GUILFOHDS KXTKH PRISES. The Mecklenburg Club Motto:— 1!=. ' l ' . ()KiTi ' : ( )ccri ' ATiox : — DrinkiiiLC l!cer. MivKTiNG Pi.ack: — I ' ndcr llic AnliausL-r I ' .usch. Officers J. O. SADLER President. G. F. BASON Nice-President. A. J. BEALL, Jr Secretary. E. R. UNDERWOOD Treasnrer. Members Albright, H. C. ( )tterl)onr,L;, C. R. P.ason, G. F. Rhyne. j. 11. i ' .eall, A. J. Sadler, j. ( ). i ' .yrnm, ' . P. Sadler, C. C. Cowles. . M. Sumner, W. H. Craven. J. P.. Taylor. W. C. Gibbon, F. L. L nder o.,d, E. K. Hutchinson. R. M. Wilsim, j. 11. McCoy, J. r.. Walters, Wni. McDowell. F, N. Whitley, R. M. The Randolphians Motto: — Carpe diem (Enjoy the proseiil day). Coum: — Couleur de rose (Rose-color). S.wiN ' C, : — Diini vivimus vivanuis (While we live, let us live). Pl. cic OF Meeting: — Dulce di)iiuiin (Sweet home). Song : — Evervhodv works but father. Toast Here ' to the Raiulolph irl, who ' s strictly in t. Who doesn ' t lose her head for a miiuite; Plavs well the game and knows the limit, . iid still uets all the fun there ' s in t. Officers A. C. JONES President. D. L. WHITE ' ice-President. K. 1. I ' ( )( )LE Secretary and Treasurer. Members A. C. Jones ' 07. j. W. Sexton ' 10. D. L. WliJte ' 07. S. A. Spencer ' 10. R. 1. i ' .i.ile ' 08. 1 , I ' ,. Wheeler ' lO. W. K. Morris ' o ). C. W. Mill ' to. Wake County Club Fi.owKR : — ' i(ik ' t. AloTTo Ciii.di;: — C.anict and Crc; -I r alec: Slav Wake. .Miss ( i.Ai iil.v . iMM.i; vlll IK. N )o;;.w, W ' nk, Coiinli, Clilh. Officers k. j. ( 11. 1 I ' u-siiK-nt. ( ' .. k. IIAkDI ' .S ' H ' ' ice- 1 ' resident, I ' .. ' 1 . I1AI Treasurer. T. .M . C l , ! ; K Secretary. Members I ' .aldwin. F. n. JIarrls, G. ( Pap ) l.i.ttin, l C. Tillett, I,. R. r.runer, T. K. 1 laxnes, E. A. lv(iiit; ee. I,. K. Tlicinipsnn. F. M. Clark, J. W. 1 lay n,,(k K. 1 ' -. Massoy, A. R. Tlmnip.snn. W. P. Duke.F. A. Hill 1). H. Jr. Mills. J. M. Walton. C. E. Farmer, A. P. lliUiard, J. Mnrson. J. L. illi:nns, S. D. Gattis, L. P. Ili.llnway. W. M. IVscu.l, J. S. Wils.m. E, G. Gill, R. E. Lee. E. H. Jr. Powell. J. .A. Wyall. R. J. Green, A. H. Linton. S. Sherwood. F. W. Young, D. C. Latta, C. E. Swindell, L. H. 20(5 FRATERNITIES Sigma Nu Fraternity Beta Tau Chapter l ' Mubll lieil IS ' .a I ' RATRHS I.N URI ' .K. Dr. Joel D. Whitakc . Fred. C. Lanihe. ' ictor Boyden. Elmrr SchatTcr. Win. 1!. Jones. .AUktI W. Latta. Wni. Del ' .. Alc.Xider. W. K. Morson. Walter Clark, Jr. H. A. IMorson. James McKimmon. Dr. Russell C Sherrill. Murray Allen. Win. 11. Cmw. UNDERGR.Vnr VTfCS. Class of 1907. Wni ' ani Norman Holt. John Liijhtfoot Morson. Charles Edward Latta. John Oscar Shuford. Class of 1908. Harwood I ' .eebe. ( .ordon Harris. Class of i(;og. William Murdoch I ' eck. Ednnind lUn-ke Haywood. Henry Xewlmld Sinnner. Class of ii|i(), Frederick Woodard Connor. Isaac .Xorris TuU. John I ' ip-r Wallers. J:ici|uelin Daniel Crosswell Ednnnul Lily I ' eniherlon. J . Coi.oK.s:— r.lack. White. )lil ( l(l. Pur.i.icATioN : — •• The Delia. Sigma Nu CHaper Roll Pi — Lehigh University. Bcta-Sigiiia — University of Vermont. Bcta-Rho — University of Pennsylvania. Gamma-Delta — Stevens Institute. Camma-Bpsilon — Lafayette College. Camma-Tlicta — Cornell University. Camma-Psi — Syracuse L niversity. Sii ma — ' anderbilt University. Gamma-Iota — Kentucky State College. Mil — University of Georgia. Tlicta — University of Akil)ama. Iota — Howard College. Kappa — North Georgia .Vgricultiu al College. Eta — Mercer University. Xi — Emery College. Beta-Theta — Alabama Polytechnic Inst. Gamma-Alpha — (jeorgia School of Technology. Beta — University of X ' irginia. Lambda — Washington and Lee Univ. Beta-Tail— N. C. A. and M. College. Psi — University of North Carolina. Bpsilon — Bethany College. Beta-Beta — Depauw University. Beta-Xii — Ohio State University. Beta-Zcta — Purdue I ' niversity. Beta-Eta — Universit y (if Indiana. Beta-Iota — Alt. L ' nion College. Beta-Psi — L niv Beta-l ' psiloii — Rose Polytechnic Inst. iamma-I ' i — University of W. N ' irginia. nunma-Beta — Northwestern I ' niv. I ' diiiiiia-Ganima — Albion College. JuiiiiiiU ' Lamhda — Univ. of Wisconsin. i am ma- M II — L niversity of Illinois. , ' amiiia-Xu — University of Michigan. iamiiia-Klio — University of Chicago. hitii- ' l ' lieta — Lombard University. Beta- Mil — State University of Iowa. iamiiia-Sii ma — Iowa State College. j ' amiiia-Taii — University of Minnesota. ' — Kansas State University. vV(i) — Missouri State University. yeta-Xi — William Jewell College. iamma-Xi — Missouri State School of .Mines. iamiiia-Omieron — Washington Univ. ' psilon — Lniversity of Te. as. ' hi — Louisiana State I ' niversity. ■eta-Phi — Tulane I ' niversity. aiiiiihi I ' psiloii — L ' niv. of Arkansas. (iiiniiii-lita — Colorado State School of Mines. aiiiiiia-Kappa — Univ. of Colorado. iamma-Chi — L ' niv. of Washington. , ' amma-Zeta — Univ. of Oregon. iamma-Plii — L ' niv. of Muntana. n ' ta-i ' hi — Stanford L ' niversil) ' . )f California. % m « Sigma Nu Alumni Chapters Birmingham. San Francisco. Pueblo. Denver. Atlanta. Chicago. Indianapolis. Davenport. Des Moines. Louisville. Shelbyville. Baton Rouge. Boston. Kansas City. St. Louis. New York. Charlotte. Salisbury. Columbus. Cleveland. Portland. Pittsburg. Dallas. Seattle. Milwaukee. Kappa Sigma Fraternity Establlsbeil In Anifiica, ilt Ibe 1 niveT.,ily ol VlrKinia, Deci-mber 18li7. Beta Upsilon Chapter l-kATKKS IX rACUI.TATK. C. L. Mann. J. C. Kendall. I ' UATRKS I. l- ' Rlilv Dr. T. N. Ivey. Duncan I ' aison. H. E. Norris. James A. Higgs. Robert Brown. I ' aul Pittenger. Alec. Green. ' . S. Tonilinson. E. E. Culbreth. H. L. Smith. UNnERGR. DU. TES. Class of lyo . Philip William Hardie. Guy Pinner. Henry Starbuck Montague. William Crawford Staple? Kdniund Farriss Ward. Class of U)o8. Levvellyn Hill Couch. Kitchen Clyde Council. Dorsey Yates Hagan. Class of i(p9. Ralph Ringgold Faison. Walter Merrill Kenley. Louis Harrell Siau. William Waters. Class of H)io. John Monroe Council. W lliam Thomas Grimes. Edw ' .n Harrison Smilh. Puiu.ic.N ' noN : — ■■The Caduceus. Colors: — Red, While, and Green. Kappa Sigma Chapter Roll Psi — University of Maine. Alpha-Rlw — Bowdoin College. Bcfa-Kal ' f ' a — New Hampshire College. Gaiiuiia-Ht siloii — Dartmouth College. All ' ha-Lambdu — Univ. of Vermont. Gauinia-Dclta — Massachusetts State College. Gaiiiiiia-Bta — Harvard University. Bcfa-Alf ' lia — Brown Univ ersity. Alpha-Kappa — Cornell University. Gamiiia-Zcta — New York University. Pi — Swarthmore College. Alpha-Delta — Pennsylvania State Col- lege. Alpha-Epsiloii — L ' niversity of Pennsyl- vania. Alpha-Phi — Bucknell University. Beta-Delta — Washington and Jefferson College. Beta-Iota — Lehigh L ' niversity. Bcta-Pi — Dickinson College. Alpha-Alpha — University of Maryland. Alpha-Eta — George Washington Uni- versity. Zeta — University of ' irginia. Bta — Randolph- Macon College. Mu — Washington and Lee L ' niversity. Nit — William and Mary College. Upsilon — Hampden-Sidnev College. Beta-Beta — Richmond College. Delta — Davids in College. Eta-Prime — Trinity College. Alpha-Mil — University of North Caro- lina. Beta-Upsilon — North Carolina A. and M. College. 4 ' rfl-.V«— Wofiford College. Alpha-Beta — Mercer L ni versify. Alpha-Tan — Georgia School of Tech- nology. Beta-Lambda — Universitv of Georgia. Beta — L niversity of . labama. Beta-Eta — .Maliama Polytechnic Insti- tute. Theta — Cumberland LJniversity. Lambda — L nivcrsitv of Tennessee. ; Kappa — X ' anderbilt L ' niversity. Phi — Southwestern Presbyterian Uni- versity. ()mei:,a — L ' niversity of the SoiUh. . Ilpha-Theta — Southwestern Baptist L ' niversity. Beta-Xu — Kentucky State College. .Ilpha-Upsilon — Millsaps College. Gamma — Louisiana State L ' niversity. Sigma — Tulane University. Iota — Southwestern L ' niversity. Ten — L ' niversity of Texas. .V; — L ' niversity of Arkansas. Alpha-Omega — William Jewell Col- lege. Beta-Gamma — Missouri State L ' niver- sity. Beta-Sigma — Washington University. Beta-Chi — Missouri School of Mines. Alpha-Psi — L ' niversity of Nebra.ska. Beta-Tan — Baker LJniversity. Bcta-Omicron — University of Denver. Beta-Omega — Colorado College. Gamma-Gamma — Colorado School of Mines. Alpha-Sigma — Ohio State L ' niversity. Beta-Phi — Case School of Applied Science. Ghi — Purdue L nivers ' .ty. Alpha-Pi — Wabash College. Beta-Theta — LJniversity of Indiana. Alpha-Gamma — L ' niversity of Illinois. Alpha-Chi — Lake Forest L ' niversity. Gamma-Beta — LJniversity of Chicago. Alpha-Zeta — L ' niversity of Michigan. Beta-Epsilon — LJniversity of Wisconsin. Beta-Mn — University of Minnesota. Beta-Rho — LJniversity of Towa. 7 i-Z( ' (j— Leland v ' tanford. Jr.. LJni- versity. Beta-Xi — L ' niversity of California. Beta-Psi — LJniversity of Washington. Gamma-Alpha — L ' niversity of Oregon. Gamma-Theta — LJniversity of Idaho. Gamma-Kappa — L ' niv. of Oklahoma. Kappa Sigma Alumni Chapters Boston. Danville. Waco. ' ashing;ton. Norfolk. Atlanta. Yazoo City. Philadelphia. Pittsburg. New York. New Orleans. Chicago. Indianapolis. Lynchburg. Covington. Jackson, Tenn. Kansas City. Kinston. Jackson. Miss. Chattanooga. Milwaukee. St. Louis. Pine Bluff. Ruston. Memphis. Buffalo. San Francisco. Denver. Louisville. Concord. Ithaca. Fort Smith. Los Angeles. Little Rock . Nashville. Richmond. Salt Lake City. Durham. Mobile. Birmingham. Portland. ' icksbura:. Kappa Alpha Fraternity Alpha Omega Chapter lii lalkMi l!)l«. FRATKK IN I ' ACUI.TATE. ' . C. Ruldick. FRATRES IN I ' RBF.. H. A. Royster. J. S. Mann. W. W. Vass. G. M. Hunter. W..C. Tyree. S. F. Telfair. R. S. McGeachy. Grange Ashe. E. C. Smith. 1,. M. Smith. J. . Pcrkin.s. R. C. Howison. C. I). Harris. J. M. Pickel. (;. . . Smitli. Louis West. T. L. PrinuTise. undicrc.rauiia ' i ' K: J. Frank Clements. Walter M. Cowles. A. Sidney Goss. C. Walter Hackelt. W. F. Richardson lohnsun. llussey r . Lattimore. Edwin Lee. Ralph Long. George G. Simpson. Frank M. Thompson. Kappa Alpha Chapter Roll Alpha — Washington and Lee Univer- sity Gamma — University of Georgia. Delta— Wofford College. Epsilon — Emory College. Zeta — Randolph- Macon College. Eta — Richmond College. Theta — Kentucky State College. Kappa — Mercer University. Lambda — University of Virginia. A ' m — Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Xi — Southwestern University. Omicron — University of Texas. Pi — University of Tennessee. Sigma — Davidson College. Upsilon — University of North Carolina. Phi — Southern University. Chi — Vanderbilt University. Psi — Tulane University. Omega — Central I ' niversity of Ken- tucky. Alpha-Alpha — University of the South. Alpha-Beta — University of Alabama. Alpha-Gamma — Louisiana State Uni- versity. Alpha-Delta— N vAm Jewell College. Alpha-Epsilon — Southwestern Presby- terian L ' niversity. Alpha-Zeta — William and Mary Col- lege. Alpha- Eta — Westminister College. Alpha-l ' hcta — Kentucky University. Alpha-Kappa — L ' niversity of Missouri. Alpha-Lambda — Johns Hopkins Uni- versity. Alpha-. ' u — The George Washington University. Alpha-Mu — Millsaps College. Alpha-Xi — University of California. Alpha — Omicron — University of . rkan- sas. Alpha-Pi — Leland Stanford, Jr., Uni- versity. Alplia-Klio — L ' niversity of West ' ir- g iia. Alplia-Sigma — Georgia School of Tech- nology. Alpha- ' l ' au — Hampden-Sidney College. Alplui-Upsilon — University of Missis- sippi. Alpha-Phi— Tnmty College. Alplia-Chi — Kentucky Wesleyan Uni- versity. Alpha-Omega — North Carolina . . and M. College. Beta-Alpha — Missouri School of Mines. Beta-Beta — Bethany College. Beta-Gamma — College of Charleston. Beta-Delta — Georgetown College. Beta-Epsilo)i — Delaware College. Beta-Zeta — l ' niversity of Florida. Beta-Eta — L ' niversity of Oklahoma. Beta-Theta — Washington Universitv. Alumni Chapters of Kappa Alpha Fraternity Alexandria, La. Anniston, Ala. Asheville, N. C. Atlanta, Ga. Augusta. Ga. Baltimore, Md. Baton Rouge, La. Boston, Mass. Canal Zone, Christobal, Colon. Charlotte, N. C. Charleston, W. ' a. Chattanooga, Tenn. Centreville, Miss. Columbia, Ga. Dallas, Texas. Franklin, La. Griffin, Ga. Hampton, ' a. Hattiesburg, Miss. Houston, Tex. Huntington, W. a. Jacksonville, Fla. Jackson, Miss. Jonesboro, Ark. Kansas City, Mo. Knoxville, Tenn. Lexington, Ky. Little Rock, Ark. Los Angeles, Cal. Louisville, Ky. Macon, Ga. Memphis, Tenn. Mobile, Ala. Montgomery, Ala. Muskogee, Ind. Ter. Nashville, Tenn. New Orleans, La. New York City. Norfolk, Va. Oklahoma City, Okla. Petersburg, ' a. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. Raleigh, ' N. C, 112 Halifax St. Richmond, ' a. San Francisco, Cal. Savannah, Ga. Selma, Ala. Shreveport, La. Spartanburg, S. C. St. Louis, Mo. Staunton, ' a. Tallahassee, Fla. Talladega, Ala. Tampa, Fla. Thomasville, Ga. Washington, D. C. Wilmington, N. C. State Associations Missouri. Georgia. Kentucky. Arkansas. Alabama. Louisiana. North Carolina. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity Alpha-Epsilon Chapter Establlsbed at A. A: M. fiilk-ne in IIWI. Class of 1908. G. F. liason. W. (i. Ferguson. J. A. Powull. Class of 1909. T. K. Dniner. W. R. Marshall. I). li. Hill, Jr. :. J. Carpenter. Duookl Stewart. Class of 19 10. A. J. Ceall. St. J. L. Springs. FRATER IN FACUI.TATK. John A. Park. FRATRES IN fRBi:. A. E. Escott. L. ( ) ' T. Jones. Franklin McNeill. A. W. Knox, M.D. J. L. Kirby. C. R. Pugh. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity Foiinileci at the University of Virginia, March 1st, 1S88. Jt Colors;— Garnet and Gold Fi.owicu :— Lily of the X ' allcy. Publications: Shield and Diamond. Dagger and Key (secret). Colors :— Garnet and ()1 1 Gold. Fi.owi-R :— Lily of the ' allcy. Active Chapters Alplia — University of irginia. Charlottesville, ' a. Beta — Davidson College. Davidson College, N. C. Gamma — William and Mary College, Williamsburg, a. Delta — Southern L ' niversity, Greensboro, Ala. Zeta — L ' niversitv of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Bta — Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Tlieta — Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn. Iota — Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. Kappa — Kentucky University, Lex ' ngton, Ky. Mil — Presbyterian College, Clinton, S. C. Nu — WofTord College, Spartanburg. S. C. Omieron — Richmond College, Richmond, ' a. Pi — Washington and Lee University. Lexington. ' a. Rho — Cutnberland L niversity, Lebanon. Tenn. Sigma — ' anderbilt University. Nashville. Tenn. Tan — L n ' .versitv of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, X. C. Upsilon — Alabama Polytechnic instilute, . uburii, Ala. Phi — Roanoke College. Salem, a. Chi — University of the South. Scwanee. Tenn. Psi — Georgia Agricultural College. Dahlonega, Ga. Omega — Kentucky State College. Lexington. Ky. Alpha-Alpha— Trmiy College, Durham, N. C. Alpha-Gamma — Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. Alpha-Delta — Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Alpha-Epsilon — North Carolina A. and M. College, Raleigh, N. C. Alpha-Zeta — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. Alpha-Eta — University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. Alpha- ' Ilu ' ta — West X ' irginia University, Morgantown, V. ' a. Alpha-Iota — Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss. Alpha-Kappa — Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Mo. Alpha-Lambda — Georgetown College. Georgetown, Ky. A! A! Al Al AL AL Al AL Al Al Al Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternitv Alumni Chapters mnus Alpha — Richmond. ' a. mnus Beta — Memphis, Tenii. mnus Gamma — White Sulphur Springs. W. Va. mnus Delta — Charleston, S. C. mnus Epsilon — Norfolk, Va. mnus Zeta — Dillon, S. C. initus Eta — New Orleans. La. mnus Theta — Dallas, Texas. mnus Iota — Knoxville. Tenn. mnus Kappa — Charlottesville. ' a. mnus Lambda — Opelika, Ala. Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity I ' oiui.luci Kii-hliioiiil ColleKe. Novenilii ' r 1!107. Eta Beta Chapter Established.. I line l!IO.i. UNDERGR. nU. Tl ' :S. 1907. Jokton Lafayette Hcmpliill. Claud C ' inuicil Dawson. 1908. Alvin Deans Dupree. 1909. Kenneth C. Denny. William Iviy llani[)ton. Owen Moore. Jnhn W. Slu-lhurn. fohn Alexander I ' urter. 1910. Thomas T. Dawson. .Mfred S. Armfield. Robert Frank Jones. Joe Haxter Parks. Sigma Phi Epsilon Chapter Roll ,«{ ,•: All ' ha — Richmond Collcy; . Richnminl, ' a. Beta — L ' niversity College of Medicine. Richmond, ' a. Beta Alpha — l ' niversity of Illinois. Chicago, 111. Gamma — Roanoke College. Salem, ' a. Camma-Alplia — Bethany College, Bethany, W. ' a. Gamma-Beta — L ' niversity of West ' irg ' nia. Morganton. W. ' a. Delta — William an d Mary, Williamsburg. ' a. Delta-Alpha — Washington and Jefiferson. Washington. Pa. Delta-Beta — Jefiferson iMedical College, Philadel]jhia. F eiin. Delta-Gamma — Western L ' niversity of Pennsylvania. Alleghany City, Pa. Delta-Delta — University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia. Pa. Eta-Alpha — University of Colorado, ISoulder, Col. Eta-Beta — North Carolina . . and M. College, Raleigh, X. C. Epsilon — Washington and Lee, Lexington, ' a. Epsilon-Alpha — Ohio Northern l ' niversity, . da. ( )hio. Iota-Alpha — Perdue L niversity, Lafayette, hid. Kappa-Alpha — Syracuse University. Syracuse. X. Y. Alpha Zeta Fraternity Massey Chapter Established at N. C. A. A: M. Colle?e 1903. FRATRJJS IN URBE. William Kerr. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. Prof. C. M. Connor. Prof. J. C. Temple. Prof. J. C. Kendall. Dr. G. A. Roberts. Class of 1907. B. B. Everett. L. F. Koonce. L. [. Herring. ]. E. Overton. E. F. Ward. Class of 1908. J. D. Grady. Class of 1909. R. Faison. R. Long. S. R. Ireland. R. R. Relnhardt. W. W. -V. Hornaday. H. Mott. W. M. Kenly. W. C. Mason. Alpha Zeta Fraternitv t « Puiil.iL ' ATKiN ' : — Tlu- ( Juartcrly of Alpha Zcla. Active Chapters ' I ' d ' ciiSi ' iid — Columbus, t )hio. Morrill — Stale Colk jc. Pennsylvania. i ' onicll — Ithaca. Xew ' ork. Kcd::ic — Asjricultiiral College. M ' chi,i;an. Granite — Durham. Xew Hampshire. Mnrroii. ' — I ' rbana. Illinois. Xcbraska — Station A. Lincoln. Xeb. Masscy — West Raleij h. Xorth Carolina. La Grange — St. Anthon - Park, Minnesota. Green Monnhiin — riurlintjton. ' erniont. IJ ' ilsou — .-Xnies, Iowa. Babcock — Madison, Wisconsin. Centennial — Fort Collins, Colorado, Maine — Orona. Maine. y g m A DINING HALL. Senior Class Diary Sept. 5. Cc)llci;c opens. Seniors at last. 6. Turlington taken for a Freshman. 7. Drill. S. Carner takes Trofessur I ' .onn for a I ' reslinian. 25. llattie hnys a new swonl. Oct. 3. -Mills and Meador (on drill) have disi)nte alxmt drill regulations. 7. Chicken and ice cream fur dinner. i;. Truitt resigns Icadershi]) ni I ' .ihle flass. ■■12. ( lilhert tries to execute ( )n left into line, double time. Nov. (). liatlie has jiicture taken while ( ). 0. 12. liully Mills advertises as a I ' lnennlogist. ■' 15. Heni])hill invents an ohm meter. 2i;. Defeat at Richmond. l ' tremc i|uietness. Dec. 3. liivens gncs U chaiiel. 4. I ' ,ldridgc cimfesscs to he in 1( e ( seienlitically ). 13. h ' xaminations Ijegin. •• 17. . 11 (. ' . 1 ,. l)iv. ])assed on calculus, ( .real rcjciicing. ' ■25. Dimier at h(ime. Sicknes- follows. h ? Jan. 1. ' 07 a realizaticm. 8. Sykcs returns and is in love. (). Mills plircnologizes a barrel head. 13. Dr. Winston absent Political Economy. Creat rejoicing. 1). I ' .attie takes street car to town. 1(1. Shufnrd takes llryan and W ' hilrhursl In drug store in order to avoid ]iassing library in 1)lue shirt. U). Tired of lu ' aring IITSSI V. ' 23. Michael gets married. ( See jjropliccy. ) 23. W ' eaxer delines love — only thing not ccintrolleil by .a trust. Feb. I. Shufnrd mistaken fi r I ' oindexter. 12. ( ' .ra es calculates the frecpiency of the dynamos in power-house in Watts. 15. . r,uo. ii ' X ' K goes to press. Thank Cod! AX ALL ' ROUXD ATHLETE. Go To B. T. Alial for the most energy. F. C. Michael for loquacity. Maple Mills for self-confidence. J. E. Turlmgton for oratory. E. F. Ward for the best financier. L. J. Schwab for good military bearing. A. J. Wilson for the best all-round athlete. L. J- Herring to get credit. ( .. F. Hinshaw for good common sense. C. J. Bryan for a musician. R. J. Gill for poetry. R. H. Carter for a dun. ' . Sykes for physical strength. L. F. Koonce for modesty. (). F. McXairy for an editorial. C. I-. Garner with your per])k ' xing problems Our MiJOV Gnndings Oh Lo- ' d LeT I Ram IT, Tv toyn-fitld. Prof. H. — Mr. McBrayer, what is a false doctrine? McBrayer. — It ' s when the Dr. gives you black pills for a hurt arm. Dr. AX ' inston (lecturing- to Senior Class on Political Economy). — Where is Mr. Pinner to-day? White. — ■■He belongs to the C. E. Division and is out running the transom (transit). Larogue (eating on his third pig foot). — ■■P)Oys. I am sure going to eat a yard of pork to-night. Senior. — Pass the sugar, please. Hendricks (reading letter from girl). — Did you ask for this? S. — Gardner, what did you make on Analytics this morning? Gardner. — The difference between my grade and lOO is enough to pass anv A Little Short Bray Within these walls some men we have Whose names a semblance bear, . n l if Miu ' ll patient be awhile, Td nientiiin some, we ' ll dare. A I ' ox we have wlmse ennn ' nt; ' tricks Have Loiii been known around ; He knows the Green I ' ielJs and the Miirsli Where Hunters are not found. Across the and L ' lider ' -a ' ood, The Springs of water flow In to the Poole, where very oft ' The Bitek doth lony to g-o. TluTe was a I ' lott one lime to Steele ( )f Heltons near a f ' eek: Stanhaek. they cry, and then the ( ' ( A White man and a llhiek. When they were called intu the court . t Middleton. they swore They did not have tlie Priee in Gold, Hut at the Hc.nek hail Moore. The Parmer jud.i;e. with Eagle eye, His Brozvn head in his Hood. Declared that he would Clement lie. If they would all be good. No Moore they sav, but go away, .Albright their faces Shine. .■nd on tlie . forrow they have foimd . Ihake on which to dine. They walked a Mial : the Carpenter Was Moody all the day. The Phiininer and the ll ' ea ' er fought. The Mason led the way. Our poetry is not so good As Spcneer might have done ; But we were not .so .serious, And did it all in fun. Simple Simon. The Board of n li( n(iral)lc )iiati with a liandsome face, ' liosc imstc-rious travels voii cannot trace. — Tliat ' s ' ar(l G R ' Coming back without excuse. — I hat s Tate. nl one of his class. He ' s a Kentuckx ' tliomn hhrcd. A ■(iwlin itcrars- talents. — That ' s MoXairv. ' rciwlinj.; always on account of the work hrout;ht on him by his ' litcrars ' talen ts. Lninini; ' away in time of use, o M E — That ' s McConnell. nch can he said on both sides, for he ' s in the mi(l lle. — That ' s Pinner. i- ated is his si)eech when in dramatic tone. — That ' s Shuford. Can ' t understand ; don ' t see how you do it : Kent don ' t do it tliat way. —That ' s Truitt 9 Ever busy, always prepared, You can ' t imagine a more industrious lad. — That ' s Eldridge. TXoing stunts in hot air is his strong point. T have a bill against you. l ay up at once — can ' t wait. ' Tried and founcl wanting in feelings for the fairer scx( ?) ( ?) — That ' s Garner. Over and over we ha ' e gone into his room to come out sweeter but with lighter pockets. — That ' s Herring. Ready, waiting and willing to .give his Inii r heart to the hrst girl that smiles at him. — That ' s Carleton. Statesman, scholar, diplomat, and ever ready to use his inlluence for the ri ' dit. —That ' s Hinshaw. — That ' s Craves. — That ' s Carter. 07  -That ' s IT. Aft er All thrdugh tlic 1, 01 miy daytime Tin. ' busy task was on, And into the niidiiiglit hour. . nd oh ' to the coniinij mom. lUit now ' tis done, and dimly The fadiu!.; ' lii hts are een ; And stillness settles slowly Where nnn ' in ' rint;- sounds have lieen. The night Uueen reigns supremely : Her soft and silvery beam Now soothes the disappointment Of unattained dream. l!ut .Morpheus bids us slumber. And we forget the care Amidst the brightest visions Of fancied faces fair. ALL PICTURES IN THIS BOOK WERE MADE BY WHARTON TYREE RaleigK. WORKERS IN ARTISTIC PHOTOGRAPHY Randolph-Macon Woman ' s College COLLEGE PARK, LYNCHBURG, VIRGI NIA. Classed A by U. 5. Bureau of Education. Classed A by New York Education Department. Classed A by Carnegie Examining Board. Is one of the fifteen A colleges for women in the United States, and stands wfll up in tlie list of the best America has to oli ' er her yoinig women. Plant Wood ' s Garden Seeds FOR SUPERIOR VEGE- TABLES FLOWERS. Twenty-eight years experience —our own seed farms, trial grounds — and large warehouse capacity give us an equipment that is unsurpassed anywhere for supplying the best seeds ol)tainable. Our trade in seeds VD both for the C Garden anb Farm - is one of the largest in this country. We are headquarters for Grass and Clover Seeds, Seed Oats, Seed Potatoes, Cow Peas, Soja Beans and other Farm Seeds. Wood ' s Descriptive Catalog gives fuller and more complete infor- mation about botti Garden and Farm Seeds than any other similar publica- tion Issued in this country. Mailed free on request. Write for it. IT.W.WoodSb Sons, Seedsmen, RICHMOND, - VA. IV T. W. BLAKE FAYETTEVILLE STREET. Tine matches, Jewelry and eut 6la$$, Tountain and Pearl Pens. Repairing Solicited. J. H. KING, President. CAPITAL $30,000. JNO. C. DREWRY, VIce-Pres. iNCORPOflaTCD KALEIGH, N C. AND CHAKLOTTE, N. C. . personal investigntion will convliii-e any ime IIimI k I ;- aiv :il -i.hili-ly llii- lipsl equipped and the most sucecsstnl colleges of Business, Sliortliaii il, Typew ritint ' . I ' eniiiiinshlp and En?li li in North Carolina, regardless of any cliilnisnny ■■umpelitor may make. v.. quality and place more students in positions than all other schools in the State. Strong tinancial bacltiiig. Reference: Any leading business concern in Raleigh orCharloile. For calalogue. address J. H. KING, President, Raleigh, N. C. K i IT 1 i I ] I. ct i s s I : H ( ( ) . . 127 FULTON STREET, NEW YORK. CHICAGO. ST. LOUIS. SAN FRANCISCO. DRAWING MATERIALS. 5URVEMNG INSTRUMENTS ParaSion. key Brand and other Drawing Instruments. All requisites for the DraltliiS Room. We inanufaclure the greatest variety of Eneine-Divided Mfe Jv- ' i j j l iili ' iTl ' i r !iM i i ( i 4 i W J Slide Rules. Our Patented Adjustment insures perma. H-j - -•-ici -H ' y - - ff ' ' 1 it nent smooth working of the slide. J ' ■. - ? ' ' — y ™ ? We supply nearly all the large schools using goods la onr line. Special. prices to students. Complete General Catalogue { .5.T0 pages ) on request. Hiirhest Awards 1- LOL IS. 1904. THE BEST RECORD EVER MADE IN NORTH CAROLINA. The Security Life and Annuity Company. GREENSBORO. N. C. MADE A NET GAIN IN INSURANCE IN NORTH CAROLINA IN 1905 OF ;$2, 360, 00000. Tlie higlicstnet gain ever made before by any other coinpany in one year in North Carolina is $1,945,279. J. VAN LINDL£Y, President. GEOR-GE A. GR.IMSLEY, SecretB.Ty. First-Class Tailoring AT Moderate Prices. A Full Line oi? Woolen Goods ALWAYS READY TO SHOW. FURNISHING GOODS. HATS. SHOES. UNDERWEAR. TRUNKS. BAGS. Etc. Etc. A LARGE STOCK. POPULAR PRICES. ,-7J9M fm. I AM READY FOR YOU, BOYS! WITH OVER FOR SPRING AND SUIT PATTERNS SUMMER. 1907. We extend to you a most cordial invitation to call early, believing we we can suggest some new ideas that will meet with your ajijiroval in style, design and price— three very interesting items. ' A GOOD DRESS ER has clothes made for him. Put yourself in our hands, we ' ll dress you right and save your money Fine Tailoring % our Long Suit. Let US sliow our fitting skill. Never Fail to Satisfy. Havc vour measure taken at once for present or future delivery. NORTH CAROLINA ' S FOREMOST TAILOR NORTH CAROLINA. CAROLINA TRUST BUILDING. STAPLES PINNER. College Agents, Room 60 Watauga. A.C.HINTON, -- JK Battalion Attention! A FEW WORDS FROM Alfred Williams Co., Booksellers .nd Stdk.tioners You will always find at our Store or at College Agency, the best selected and best quality of STATIONERY to be had, and the price of our Text Books as low as they can be had anywhere j£ A A jfe A . Your Patronage Solicited. Our Personal Attention to Your Orders. AGENTS FOR EASTMANS KODAK AND SUPPLIES. Alfred mniiams cc Co., „orS ' S.„a. 250 CHARLOTTESVILLE WOOLEN MILLS CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. High-Grade Cadet Grays, Sky Blues and Dark Blues Indigo Dye and Pure Wool. We are the sole manufacturers of the Gray Cloth used for uniforms of the cadets of the United States Military- Academy at West Point, New York, and of North Carolina College of Agri- culture and Mechanic Arts. i i Ferulfzers Virginia Carolina Chem al THOMAS H. BRIGGS Sc SONS H A R D W ARE, Guns. Buck ' s Stoves and Ranges Paints. Oils . Farmers ' SuppLih:s. Builders ' Supplies. I aEORGIC MARSH CO. GEORG E MARSH. Sole proprietor WHOLESALE GROCERS ; I) PRODUCE MERCHANTS. g No. lO MAR rlN STK -.) . r A.NI) No. 1. M AKKJcrr STRKKT. I KALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA. ESTABLISHED 185 I. EIMER AMEND, 203, 211 Third Avenue, Corner 18th Street, NEW YORK. Importers and Manufacturers of C. P. Chemicals and Reagents, Chemical, Physical and Scientific Apparatus, Assay Goods. We handle the BEST of everything needed in a Laboratory. ALL TECHNICAL MEN, whether beginners or eminent specialists, need to read at least one leading technical paper regularly. In no other way can they keep so thoroughly in touch with dev elopments in their chosen profession and profit by the practical experience of others engaged in similar work. IF YOU DOUBT THE WISDOM OR NECESSITY OF SUBSCRIBING CONSULT AN INSTRUCTOR OR ANY SUCCESSFUL ENGINEER. We piililish tlie leading papers devotsd to tlie Engineering, Electrical and Traction Industries. YOU NEED AT LEAST ONE OF THEM. THE ENGINEERING RECORD -TUe most progressive piper published, devoted to Civil En- gineering and allied subieels. Weekly, S3.00 a year. ELECTRICAL WO RLD-Tlie foremost Electrieal Journal of the world. AVeekly edition Si.3.00 a year. Monthly edition .S 1. 00 a year. STREET RAILWAY JOURNAL The standard anthorilv on city and interurban railroading. Weekly. S:5.()0 a year. « « « SAMPLE COPIES SENT ON REQUEST . . . BOOK DEPARTMENT We also have a Book Department that can supply any engineering book published. Send us your inrjuiries. McGRAW PUBLISHING COMPANY 114 LIBERTY STREET NEW YORK CITY THE J. D. R IQQAN COMPANY li Candies Pictures Novelties RALEIGH, N.C. T Y 5 Stationert China Glassware «« « 132 FAYETTEVILLEST To Professors, Students and Patrons of the Nortli Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. Wit I ESpectfuUp Bequest pou to Call anb See our immense tocb of jFurniture antJ J|ousefurnisf)ingg. IMt tnill bo tfje rest. ROYAL BORDEN FURNITURE CO. 127 Fayettevllle Street. RALEIGH, N. C KING BROTHERS 1! V. K[Ni;. Soli- Piopriflor. Wholesale Fruit and Produce Jobbers of Foreign and DomeslicFruils si ' Eri Al,Tn;s Bananas, Oranges, Lemons, Apples, Cali- bage, Onions, Peas, Potatoes, Diieil Kniits, Poultry and Eggs. REFERENCE: C (inmercial Kii Brudslreel A Co. I{. G. Dunn. RALEIGH NORTH CAROLINA D. F. Williams Fine Candies, Fruits of all Kinds, Canned Goods Ci KES and CRACKERS TRU KS DELIVERED Boys patronize those iirho patronize ijou WEST RALEIGH N. C. FOOD PURITY is absolutely assured the lionse- keeper who uses HEINZ 57 VARIETIES of pure food products. Made of the choicest materials, in scrupu- lously clean kitchens, they repre- sent the highest attainable e.xcel- lence in food preparation and bear the approval of Pure Food Authori- ties everywhere. Anything that ' s Heinz. Is safe to buy H. J. HEINZ COMPANY New York. Pittsburg. Chicago. London The College Pharmacy Near A. M. Col eg« q Is the riKlit |)Im.-. ' r..r ..u to ]Hirchase tbe hesl ant ino-i si.ipl, ' Innj store Items Pli ]cK.ii-. I ' lv nipiions re- ceive the lii i :iii(l itiovi I :ii. iiil atten- tion; and llK-r, be can m ' i i . ()U In many specliiltle ' , the lale.st and best that can be had €J Vou can alwa.vs get best quality, reas- onable prices, courteou.s attention and square dealings Heisanxious t« make friends, increase customers, in fact to accommodate all. Don ' t forget, it is Headquarters {or College Men and Boys (iivf liini your tr.idc. He appreciates reciprocity Your constant tViiiiil. Johh E. Davis, Wesl- RaleigK, NortK Carolina Established ISTH W.B.MANNi GROCERIES I No. II E. HARCiETT ST. § ik ALL PHONES i RALEIGH Headquarters for Everything ELECTRICAL Call and see our portable LAMPS RALEIGH CONSTRUCTION COMPANY J 33 FayctteviUe St. Raleigh, N. C. Quaker City Uniform Co. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Headquarters for HIGH-GRADE UNIFORMS FOR MILITARY SCHOOLS And all their Equipments, such as Swords, Belts, Caps, Chevrons, Badges, Baaners, Etc. REGALIAS FOR SECRET SOCIETIES c llso Uniforms for POLICE, FIREMES, MAIL CARRIERS MORTORMEX AXD CONDVCTORS F rst=C ciss Work. ModL rnte Prices WHITING BROTHERS. SOLE AGENTS FOR WRITE FOR SAMPLES RALEIGH, N. C. ANT) PRICES. m I H. A. METZ Cf CO. — CHEMICALS 122 Hudson Street. NEW YORK. 1 Boston, Mass. Philadelphia. Pa. Providence, R. I. BRANCHES. Chicago, 111. INDIGO MLB ANILINE GOIORS ALIZARINE COLORS LABORATORIES; San Francisco, Cal. Montreal, Canada. Toronto, Canada. Frankfurt a-M Germanv. m m m Charlotte, N. C Atlanta, Ga. NEWARK, NEW JERSEY. m lili. Mf I Ml. Athletic Outfitters, Fishing Tackle, Guns and Sporting Goods. FOWLER SLOAN, Agents. 302-304 Bradoway, NE YORK. WEBSTER ' S ' INTEKNMIONALl stLouxs DICTIONARY Grmjp P rize WoRLDSlAiit, StLouis. IT IS UP=TO=DATE. AND RELIABLE. RECENTLY ADDED, 25.000 NEW WORDS AND PHRASES JJew Cia .ettetTof tlie orld. 2;iSO Ouiiito Pages. Ntw niofjraplii.al Uictioiiary. Editor in Chief, W. T. HARRIS, Ph.D.,LL.D.. U. S. Commissioner of Education. Cfiief Justice FULLER, U.S. Supreme Court, says : 1 regard the Internati value in accuracy of definition, and have found it in all respects complete ■xvi:i;sTi;ifs « ollkgiatk dk ti()n. i:v ! 7xl0x2 ' sin. II 16 pages. 1400 illustrations. 3 bind 5 ' xS ' ' xl ' -.j in. Printed from same plates, on bible paper. 2bind FREE, Dictionarv Wrinkles. Also illustrated pamphlets. C. ME,RRIAM CO., Publishers. Springfield, Mass.,U. S. A. GE,T THE, BE,ST JOHNSON JOHNSON COMPANY RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA COAL WOOD fCE None Purer None Better BETTS ' ICE CREAM ONLY $1 00 PER GALLON Fice West Morgan Street All Phones Raleigh, N. C. THE LEADING PRINTING HOUSE OF THE STATE £6 var66 S. ffirougbton KbrintiuQ Company IRaleiob. flortb Carolina FIRST CLASS BOOK PRINTING FIRST CLASS BOOK BINDING All Kinds of Commercial and School Work LARGE OR SMALL ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION. .. u HE. (UTS IN THIS BOOK NA ' ERE. MADE. B THE flECTRic (sr Engraving (o. BUFFALO, N.Y. I CARALEIGH FERTILIZERS ' a Nature Produces Weeds I PRODUCE BIG CROPS Home ' s Best Pacific Eclipse Garaleigii Special Planters ' Pride TBe Brands that TELL are the Brands that Sell! They are made RIGHT. Sold RIGHT, and are ALL RIGHT! CTl ' KED BY Caraleigh Phosphate and Fertilizer Worl(s, Raleigh, N. G. A. M. rETTING MANUFACTURER OF (§reeb letter Jf raternitp Temporary Location: 21.3 XORTII LIBERTY STREET, BALTIMORE, MD. Memorandum packagre sent to any fraternity member througrh the Secretary of the Chapter. Special Desig-ns and Estimates furnished on Class Pins, Ringrs, Medals for Athletic Meets. Etc.
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