nllgailg , McCain Library Erskine College . . QOQU O:OlQODOQ0i0l i0Q1 i i lQ0i0i0lUQUl i0i0Q Erskine College LIBRARY OXHEELLF gg G DUE WEST E gh E Q South Carolina . ig 29639 ' 1839 ' 'IA E, 3 9 R ef LD1 7 6 1 . E4 6 5 1 9 O 9 copy Z 4 9 8 2 3 ll0 n- . 0ill1K I 1 4 1 I I . I ERSIZTRIIANA N A' ff 5 X ww DUEWEST,q?E3- McCain LiHrary Erskine Ljoifege +V ,,,,,,.-....,.. 44- :XXX ,-ff ERSKINE COLLEGE T0 llll. F. XX PIQESSLXQ BX' RE.XSClN ITF ,X IIIU-II SENSE lil IIIS A'l l'.XINBlEN'l'S AND Al'l'REf'I,X'l'lf!N UF IIIH FlllEI.l'l'X' TO 'l'llE INSTITUTILDN IPF YVIIICII FOI! SU NIANX' 'YEAIKS IIE YSHXS TIIE IIQDNCJRED llE.XD. AND l!EC,XI'SE ill' l?El2Si7N,XL Gll.X'l'I'l'Ul7l5 T0 IIIBI . THIS Vi ll.- FBIE OF 'PHE ICRSIQINIANA IS lJEllIf',X'l'Ell RX' TIIE SICNIOIR C'LASS. IN 'l'1lIiEN ill' '1'IlE RESl'EI l' ,KND .XlJ5lIR.X'l'ION Fill! IIIS LEARNINKQ AND CILXRACTER, YVIYIICII TIIEX' IILDLD IN CONIBIQDN YVITII l'IY'ER'Y 1-7'l'L'lDEN'l' UF 'l'lIE l'UI.l,E1GE. REV. F. Y. PRESSLY, D.D., LL. D 'I Rev. Ffaflli YOLIHQ PI'CSSly, ' LV' W X X! I QA! 0 1 , 5, -K IM , Y , XP Q! SX fl i iifffl SUN of Dr. P. Pressly, Frank Young Pressly was born in Due West on January 18th, 1853. After he graduated from Erskine College in the class of 1871, he took a course in the A. R. P. Theological Seminary. Later he went to Allegheny for post-graduate work. From a successful life as minister, Dr. Pressly was, in 1893, called back to his Alma Mater to fill the chair of Greek and German. While holding this position he was, on November 13th, 1899, elected president of Erskine. He accepted, and the college greatly prospered under his administration. During his period of office he endeared himself to every student in the institution. When he was chosen president of the Theological Seminary, he, in l906, resigned from the presidency of the college that he might give his whole time to the new work. I-le still, however, keeps in close touch with the students, and every boy now in Erskine feels that he has a friend in Dr. Pressly. The degree of D.D. was conferred upon him by Westminster College, Pa., and that of LLD. by the University of South Carolina. He wields a polished peng his sermons are gems, his bearing is dignified: his behavior is mocest and unassuming, he is a courteous Christian gentleman. Dr. Pressly,s influence for moral and intellectual good can be seen in the alumni of Erskine, who, with us, echo this sentiment: The true knight of learning, the world holds him dear,- Love bless himg Joy crown himg Cod speed his career 5 Kmmx R. PH,xmN. '09, TZVSINFF-S M ANAGFR. I IBC-TI CH,xRI.EY H. N.fXBERS, '09 ART EDITOR. IXIIHMNS W. IIxl.mx'lN, 'U-L Nlnl-'I-'.x'1 1' G. Nlk'I,UN.Xl,ll, 'lo. SlS'l'.XN'I' lflDI'l'lPlC IN Ltllll-il . .XSSlS'l'.XN'I' IEVSINHYS MA! lll'-:lx ' ' WITUR IXlQl IIXI l.UXlxlH UI' lil 5. .7055 5635270 .-Y James Strong Moffatt, D.D., President, Wylie Professorship of Mental and Moral Philosophy John lrenaeus McCain, Ph.D. Cprincetonl, Professor of English Literature and Language. Paul Livingston Crier, A.M., Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. Ebenezer Leonidas Reid, A.M., Professor of Physical Science. John Lowry Pressly, AB., Professor of Creek and German. Dallas Grier Caldwell, AB., I Professor of Latin and French. Louis Caldwell Galloway, AB., Professor of Economics and History. Edgar Long, AB., Professor of Logic and Ethics. Ralph flVlcDill, AB., Professor of Fitting School. Jesse Rutledge Bell, AB., lVl.D., Assistant in Laboratory. Miss Alma Kennedy, College Librarian. -v 1 ffif ,if Q15 -. ' C O F E J I I l ' 6 i'I'i:t- X..., I I 3 1 u I -,.2:rm'1f-5-1 QM f , ig. I l. THOMAS WHITFIELD BALDWIN if li I, ilzzzs Jzcglvrtiazg worldly ends, all dvd1'mfca' To clloseazcss, and the bCl'fC7'I'llg' of my mind. The youngest member of the Senior class. Thomas VVhitheld Baldwin, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Baldwin, of Due XVest. Thomas was born in Laurens County. S. C.. January 28, ISQO, and received his early educa- tion in the Wate1'loo graded school. After his parents moved to Due VVest, he entered Erskine, in January, 1906, A more conscien- tious, liarcl-vvorlcing student has never attended the college. Early joining the Euphemian Society, he has served it with uncommon faith- Iulness, Ile has been assistant monitor in the society. and also Senior dehater on the semi-annual celebration. Thomas is assistant editor-in-chief of the ERs1iINLxN.x. Strongly fortilied against Cupid's charms, he has never fallen a victim to the fair sex. 9 XIVILLIA M PLU M ER B LACKWELL. WILLIAM WALKUP BRYCE- Bill I low, I Zum' the ladies allf' Some are born good. some achieve good- ness, some have goodness thrust upon them. In the lirst class mentioned we place VVilliam NValkup Boyce, who began his career of good- ness November 20. 1888. at Gastonia, N. C.. where, he was doubtless held up as a model to ,all the young sinners. In order thatyliis physical might correspond with his moral straightness, he entered Catawba Military ,Academy to be prepared for college. After Iinishing there, in IQO5, he came to Erskine. 'where his reputation for goodness has not suffered. For the Euphemian Society he has served as president on the semifannual of 'Oo and for his class he has served as class poet, As ll matter ol course. we must record the lacl that he is president of the Y. N. C. A. and that lie has represented that orgznlizatioii at Aslieville and IXlHllll'Clll. lu liis pursuit of goorlness Hill 'l'l't'llIlL'lIllj' calls at the ll. XY. It K. WILLIAM PLUIVIER BLACKWELL H Plumer Slu1Il I, teasfiazg in despair. Div Ziccazzsc a 'ZUUl1ZU1l'S fair? Un July 19, 1888, the hearts of Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Blackwell were made glad by the gift to them of a boisterous, bouncing boy whom, lest he make too rapid progress, they weighed down by the dignified name of VVilliam Plumer. VVhen he had attained a sufficient number of years, he was sent by his parents to the school of the place to be trained in the way he should go. and then by natural' sequence to the preparatory department of Erskine, in 'o3. Dropping out a year, Plumer entered the present class as a Sophomore in 'o6. I-Ie was appointed in 1908 by the faculty to contest for the Greenwood appointment, and he spoke with great credit in the prelim- inary contest. XY11,l,i.xxi XX',xl,i4i'i' lloyei-i. hllq. IO YOUNG IVIOSELY BROWN- Moses .4t101'd s1tSPir1'1111,' 'ZUfZCll 5'011 1'c zut1Ilc1'11,! ilzmizglz 3111111' 7lf'1'gfIl707 S 11114011 fvafrlz, dlllllf 111.- your shoe. Young Mosely Brown iirst tried his lung power November 21, 1887, at the home of his parents, at Prosperity. S. C. VVhen he had. in due course of time, finished the appointed work at the high school of his native town. Mr. Brown journeyed to Erskine in search nf more worlds to conquer. As a member of the Euphemian Literary Society, he was elected Sophomore declaimer lO7. Junior orator on the annual '08, Senior orator on the semi-annual '09, and representative of the society in the contest for the speaker's place in the Oratori- cal contest in Greenwood. In recognition of his talents, the society has bestowed upon him the Sophomore essayist's and the Junior ora- tor's medals. YOUNG lX1IosELv BROWN. JOSEPH RAYMOND Cl-IISOLM C4 as In the s1a1'1'11g 11 yazuzg Hltlllij fdilfjl Iiglzflv flll'lZ.S to flzozzglzis of f0t'e. ' To Marion Junction, Alabama, is given the honor of being the birthplace of Joseph Ray- mond Chisholm, he having made his lirst ap- pearance in this world at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Chisolm, in that city. on the 1st day of October, 1399. After having under- gone the trials and tribulations afdicted upon a schoolboy that he may the better stand those of the world in after life. he entered Erskine in 1905. A frequent visitor in the library, he has put so many books in his head as to stoop his shoulders from the burden. He chose the Enphemian as his society, and in turn she has chosen him to serve, as monitor. and again as president. If it be true that all the world loves a lover, Ram is beloved of all men. II USlil'll Rav NIUXIW L' ll ls ---- V J X 7 W 7 --V .YY.7..,Y.W,,,,,W,,,, .,,, -W L , , PATIRCK DONALD CHISOLM C5 79 UI zzczim' felt the kiss of Ihre, Nm' 7ilt'lIdCll'5 hand in 111i1zc'. ' Patrick Donald Chisholm hrst became con- scious of the affairs of this world the 26th of January, 1887, at Marion Junction, Alabama. In the public schools of that place he learned the A. B. C's. together with many other Valu- able things. As his thirst for knowledge had not been satiated by his linishing there. he came to Erskine, deeming it a lit place for future work. He was president of the Euphe- mian Society during his Senior year. Taking as his motto, A sound mind in a sound body, Pat has been a faithful worker on the ath- letic held, and. as a result, was a member of Erskines base ball team in IQO8. Friendly, P.-x'rR1ck DQNALD CHISCILM. WILLIAM JEROME. COLVIN- jerry The fvrise be 50111v1'1'111es 'zeiflz the foul, The race not always to the .vte1'fr. The record of deeds done in the tlesh for W'illiam Jerome Colvin begins October 15. 1336, at Shelton, S. C. ,lrle had the elements of education instilled in his fast-expanding mind in the Iieasteryille High School, from which place he came to Erskine in 1905 at the place best suited to his needs in the mental line. lflaving become a member of the Iinphe- mian Society, in token of regard for his faith- lnl work, he has been elected to the olhcc ul vice-president, ol secretary, and of chief mar- shal at the semi-annual celebration in tooo, I2 -1' in-ii Y I unassuming, he is just Pat lXll,l,l.XNI hllilitlkllf LllDl,X'lN. s I Al.XI,ClDl,M R lCLEEs C11ow'1'111i1c. MALCOLM lVIcLEES CRGWTHER Mac My 1161111 is !'z1'i1'1' 115 My 115 j'flIl1'A', Tfivy lf11f1'cf111'1' 111'1'1l.r 11111.v! HI. Mac was born at Antreyille, July 19, 1885. Prepared for college in the high school of that place. he entered Erskine in 1005 with the rest of us. l'le is an athlete, and were we allowed to play football, he would be Il star. XVQ know nothing bad of our class- mate except that he has a ravenous appetite and coyets all the chickens and turkeys in Abbeville County. lle is a Philomatheaii. and :1n orator' of no mean ability. ilele was semi- annual declaimer in his Sophomore year, and chief marshal at the annual in IQO8. He has also served as secretary and as yice-president of his society. Mislike him not because of his auburn hair. for the ladies love him and vote him handsome. He has frequent discussions with the head of the English clepartinent in regard to the repetition of the subject. Mac he does. EDWIN COX DON ALD- C vs OX .--Ind 11111 11111551115 0f'l11s Z21'atc111y1 a1'111.v. .-l1'1' .v1'1'1111g as I.1'0II l11111ds. In the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Donald. Abbeville County, S. C., on December II, 1887. Edwin Cox Donald hrst opened his eyes to the cold. hard realities of this world. In token thereof he immediately set up a yell that through the years has grown. enlarged and changed into something like lla-a-a-rd L-u-c-le., Perhaps his feeling concerning the hardness of his luck comes from his having been under the discipline of the masters uf Long Ridge School and of Erskine's 'KPrep. For an experiment, whether it be concerning Bunsen's theory of geyser eruption or ll Fresh's powers of endurance, Cox is the man. He is a member offthe Eupheinian Literary Society, lfinyix Cox Dux x1.11. I3 S CHARLES BELL ELLIOTT. CHARLES BELL ELLIOTT- Cassius Thu tZ'Lll'lCS011ZU SlLUfU.Yll1L'lII lzznzg tuiflz. 'zueigfzfs and ieoef' Far-seeing fate decreed that Charles Bell Elliot should win his lirst earthly victory at Pineville. N. C,, October 9th, 1886. He was a model student in the high school of that place during his earlier years, and, when he ex- hausted the supply of learning there, he came to Erskine, entering in IQO3. as a full Fresh- man. For two years his knowledge in- creased and multiplied in many ways. Spend- ing a year then as principal of the Sardis High School, he made active use of the many things that he had learned, Cassius came back to Erskine in 1906 as a Junior, dropped out again at the end of the lirst term. and returned a third time in IQO8 as a member of the present class. A member of the Philomathean So- ciety, he was vice-president, Junior debater on the semi-annual, Senior debater in 1909, and winner of the Sophomore essayist's medal. Elliott is Editor-in-Chief of the ERSKINIANA. He was elected a contestant in the prelimi- nary for the Greenwood appointment, but de- clined on account of ill-health. - RODDEY EBENEZER GETTYS Gett But 110 sniffed, as he sat Ivy flzv table. ll'1't!z a smile that was clzildlilcv and bland. The importance of the race suicide question 7 was lessened April 5, 1635. by the arrival of C Rmldey Ebenezer Gettys. at Lesslie. S. tlett toddled through the schools of his na- tive town, marched through the Catawba Mil- itary Aczifleniy. and is now stumliling through flfrskine. Since he is a popular man, he was chosen .liy the lfuplieniizin Society as lllilfilltll on the annual celeliration in IQO6, and vice- presiclent of his society: since he is ll linsiness man, lic was elected secretxity :incl monitor ot his society. linsiness nixinziger mil the lflcs- . Y - 1 IQINLXN, :incl treasurer ul the N. Rl. L. .X. since lie is Il lllllllIIl'Hl1S mini, lie was nunle the locxil editor ul the l':RSIilNl.XN.X. lfroin sncli .1 coinlminzilion, wliqit slizill we expect? '-I -bf 7' 'U' -- 7 41 7 'gli H .. ' ... . '...,. . lxonni-,x lzial-.xl-,fi-,ic hui lxs. I4 ROBERT CALVIN GRIER. MARGARET HAMILTON HENRY Hamilton H,VClf1lI'C did flfl' so mzzrlz right .-ls slzc scorzzs the lzcljv of uri. A more glorious day was never seen in Chester, S. C., than November 30. 1838, the natal day of Miss Hamilton Henry. Sent by her parents, James Killough and Eva Hamilton Henry, to the schools of that place, she made such high attainments that her record is still held up as a model to the youth of that city. XVinning a medal for general excellence both in 1905 and IQO6. she graduated with highest honors from the High School, and won a scholarship to Elizabeth College. She was also prophet and president of her class. After entering the Sophomore class at Erskine, she became the recipient of many new honors. In addition to having held all the othces in the Calliopean Society. she was class president in 1907 and 1908, and president 'of the Y. XV. C. A. in her Senior year. I5 ROBERT CALVIN GRIER- Teenie A',5'vt'1'11g only iulzul is fair, ,S'ijifv1'11g only tefzut is swvvlf' These blue eyes were lirst opened upon Pro- fessor and Mrs. P. L. Grier on October iz. ISSQ. Bright and auspicious morn indeed when Robert Calvin Grier lirst saw the light. His early training was received in the local graded schools and the Erskine Fitting School. Honors have been his in abundance. ln IQO8 he won the Mower medal for best declama- tion. He has played on the base ball team for two years. and was the best third baseman in the State on the Erskine Champions of 1907. In tennis he has won the trophy cup for singles offered by the city of Greenville for the past two years. Teenie represented the Y. M. C. A. at the Montreal Conference in IQO8. He has been secretary and vice-president of the Philomathean Society. Although Teenie has had a full share of this w0rld's pleasure and fun, he has ever had a serious purpose. Xlx M .x soN B AN KS Hoon. MASON BANKS HOOD- Mase Hlillld stiff they gazed, and still flzc wonder grew. Tlztif one small lzeud rnula' carry all he feline. The next century's schoolboys Will doubtless have a holiday on February 25: and in 1934 they will probably celebrate the centenary of the birth of Mason Banks Hood, our class- mate from Matthews. N. C. Prepared for College at Bain Academy. Mase there won a scholarship to the University of N. QC. The hand of destiny. however, pointed southward. and he came to Erskine. NVriting his name on Philomathea's role, he won the Sophomore essayist's medal in 1907, was Junior debater on the semi-annual in 1908, and corresponding secretary in 1908-9. His brilliancy in com- position work led to his election as Editor-in- chief of the ERSKINIAN in his Senior year. Wfith a rich tenor voice. l'Mase has been a member of the Erskine Quartette during the whole of his college life. SAMUEL JEFFERSON HOOD- Jeff my livari' was lim' and i'esz'Icss. And my life was full of care. VVhether or not it shall in future years be an historical fact that the pioneers of Mecklen- bnrg really did possess the world with a .Decla- ration of Independence, nevertheless the ban- ner of the county shall never trail the dust, for on her merry red hills. in the honored com- munity of Sardis. was born to her, October 34. 1831. a son whom future ages shall know as Samuel Jefferson Hood, a youth to fame and fortune predestined. Jett was prepared for college at Hunterville, N. C., and at Bain Academy. at which latter place he won a medal for general excellence. Coming' to Erskine in 1905. he became a typical Seceder. enjoying' the opportunilies of his sacred lXl'ecca. Like all Sardis boys, Jeff is a staunch Philo, and has served as secretary and librarian of his sn- Cieiy. ifxll ollicel' ill llle Y. lXI. C. A., Jell- gives to that organization some of his best attention. I6 S.xnl'1-fi. jifi-'nfl-ficsox lln R.x1,P1-1 N1s1:E'r I-IUNTEIQ. RALPH NISBET HUNTER- Possn nLU'I'L Hlt' Ilul fill' rrflllvly gl'llr't'. lxlll' lllj' f ll'tI5llI.Q U-VU 111' f1It'1'.H Another one of lXleeklenlnurg'Q honored -11 ik Ralph Niabel' llunter, horn near Sflffllw Church, on December 7, 1884. Ralph attended the XVaxhaw lnstitute in 1904, and entered Erskine in the fall of IQOS. a green Fresh like the rest of us. After four year, of hard work. and after many touelulowns on the grid- iron of Math. Ralph will no doulit he rewarfled with a live-dollar Sheepskin in ,Tune 'Besfdes his enthusiastic interest in all phases of col- lege life. Pom has paid especial attention to Y. M. C. A. work, having been a delegate to the National Student Volunteer Convention at Nashville in 1906, and to State Bible Insti- tutes at Greenville and at Clemson. On ae- count of his cheery smile, Ralph has, Nince he- coming an Erskine student. borne the happy and suggestive cognomen of Poss. ROBERT TORRENTINE. KERR Little Cubs Full well they lazrglzrd ieiflz roizzzicfdfca' glee Az' all his jokes, for wzmzy iz joke had 11427, This loudly-shouting, rustic-mannered eoun- tryman, Robert Torrentine Kerr, hrst gazed upon the hills and the valleys of lredell County, N. C,. on All Fools Day, in the year I883. Wlieii he had plodded through the Academy at Coddle Creek, and won a medal there for cleclamation. his parents, in IQO4. packed him off to Erskine. Allying him- self with the Philomathean Society. he has served it as secretary, and as semi-annual de- elaimer in both his Freshman and his Sopho- more years. After staying in North Carolina a year to teach school, Kerr hutted into the Iunior class in IQO7, and hecame one of the N.'xUt:H'rx' NINERS. He is vice-president of the Y. M. C. A. and has represented it at Clem- son, '07, and at Nontreat. '08 R1lllF:li'll ,lllllQRlfX'l'lNlf lflflik. I7 i ' ' :,i 'J' - ' Ile -EXW CALVIN EDXVARD MCCAW. CALVIN EDWARD McCAW- Caw Kind alt was coizscimzcc and tclzdrc lzrerz'e,'! Calvin Edward McGaw became acquainted with his father and mother March 2, 1887, at Rives, Tennesse. Learning to play ball in the schools of that place, he brought this knowl- edge to Erskine with him in 1905. Catching on the State championship team of ,O7, he batted 463, CaW is president of the Athletic Association and assistant manager of the track team. Along literary lines he has held every oftice in the Euphemian Literary Society, ex- cept that of chaplain and doorkeeper. Caw is assistant literary editor of the ERSKINIAN. and a member of the Erskine Quartette. JAMES ERSKINE IVICDANIEL- Mac E'z'e1' dI'I'ffI.lIg, a'1'1'fz'1'1zg,, d1'1'ff1'11g, Ever driffilig 011.11 James Erskine McDaniel sidled into the affairs of this World September I7, 1889. From his native hills in an adjoining county his father brought him to Due West, and started the lad into the graded school. ln clue time lie became a college boy. As a hard lesson frequently makes him sick, Mac is a won- derful illustration of the power of niinil over nizutter. Notwithstanding his fceblcncss in this one direction, he is much to be found on the athletic liclcl, both as a spectator and as a participant. llcforc thc ilcath nf football was ilccrccrl by thc faculty, Mac was a valiant star on thc gridiron. llis nainc is found written on Iffiuwlicniizfs roll. lb ' i 1 . . .Inu-,s lgicsiclxi-, Nh l Mxlhli. 50113121-W Xfl011A11 WICGILL ANDREW MOFFATT MCCILL CC D! Duck Thu 1111111 'zul11,1.v1' cyv is F'Z't'l' Illl l11'111.wIf. There entered this world August 6. 18556, at Bethany, S. C., a concentrated bunch of squall. afterwards called Andrew Moffatt McGill, to distinguish it from the thousands of such bless- ings that daily arrive. Duck having gradu- ated f1'OlH the Bethany High School, where he won a clebater's and a declaimer's medal, came to Erskine in IQO5. In the Euphemian Society. of which he is a member. Duck, at regular intervals, fondly informs the others, You call me chief, and you do well to call me chief, much t0 their edilication. Duck is generally admitted to be a pretty good fellow, as far as he goes-he is live feet. six inches. WILLIAM CAMPBELL lVlcLAlN Cam 'But cz .S'lIlfO0f1Z and .ffuidftzst 111i11d with tlzozzglzts and calm a'cs1'1'ts.' The president of the class of 1909 Xfvllllillll Campbell McLain, became a resident of this tcirestrial orb January 7 1889 taking up his abode in Alexander County. N. C. In his biief span of years he has seen thc interior of sex eral 'educational institutions: Statesville Graded School Statesville Academy Oak Ridge Institute and the University of N. C. Since his entrance into the Sophomore class at iscine am ms Jun uusy forging dis! tinctions. In IQOB hc xx as assistant lII'llI'lgLl' of httn assistant manager of tht base ball tcfun. lIe has been presidtnt of the Phil0in'1tht-an ociety 'ti 'ell 'ts of tis c 'm is Poetry and Short Story Editor of the l'lsSNlN- iw and Philomathean editor of the l1ts141N- 1xN.x. ie imin'1ry ct tst t was ciosen to represent thc solltgc thi: yen' at tht South Carolina Intercolltghte Uratorical Lonttst 'it breenwood. . A . , ,, If U! G. , Y , 1' . 3- V Q c 1 .. c 3 -I' V x. 1 ,V C E11 , C l. In l 1 l l l I, J V L L l 3 the track team, and for the past two years has g . L . K S' . . s w 1 . l lass Ca , , 4 . L. . In tl pi cl 1 int 1 h A .1 , , . L ,Q . N .K A L A C L 1 s I9 - 1 XXlI.l.l.XKl L.xx11-1:1211 Ilcl..x1N. Y Rorzizal' l'lClR'1'ON Mooiui. ROBERT I-IORTON MOORE H Shorty Peace dwells not 11011.-t111's I'l!0'0L U, fav' Bcfrays 110 Sf?l'I'I'2' of 1'Ufm5C. bb LL If you, a stranger in Due XVest. should hap- pen to be at the postoftice at noon, and hear some one remark, You've penty of time, come on, let's go to Forbidden. take a careful look at that individual, for it is Shorty Moore. This Wonderful assemblage of mind, muscle and seriousness began scrutinizing earthly objects at Fayetteville, Tenn.. on November 9th, 1885. After taking a course in Femal- ology in the lllolino High School, Shorty heard rumors of an instiution in South Caro- lina where the science of Wficket Making was taught. Upon receipt of this information, he took the train for Due lVest, matriculated at Erskine one September morning in 1905, and fifteen minutes later was on Forbidden making wickets. Finding a society pin necessary be- fore a touchdown could be made. he became a Pliilomathean. He has served that society as secretary and rice-president. CI-IARLEY HADDON NABERS Charley 'TH nzalec Hire gloriozzs by my fvcn. --Jud funzozzs by my f7l'IlSh.'U lnnnortal versatility, thou art doomed to be inearnated in a product of Laurens County, S. C., Charley Haddon Nabers, who first played with the sunbeams on November 13th, 1889! Charleyfs parents early saw the latent genius in their light-haired babe. and took him to Anderson to give him the benelit of the best education possible. After linisliing the scliools there, he joined us in September. ioooi Quite versatile, Charley is a scholar, student, journalist, artist. essayist, poet and Y. M, C. LX. leader. , He won the Sophomore essayist medal in IQON, and has contributed more to the success of the ERsk1N1.xN than any other member of the class. He is also Art editor of the ll:ltSliINlAN.X. lispecially inter- ested in Y. N. C. XX. work, Charley has repre- sented the association at the following conven- tions: .rXshyille, 'O7: Clemson. 'O71 Columbia, '08, and Montreal, '08 20 Y t , kll.XRI,l-,X llxnnox X.XllI'fRS. . M155 BELLE NICIiEI.S. BERNIE LYNCH PARKINSON H Parl-:ie H BELLE N ICKELS- Belle Her lo'z't'li11U.r.r I llt Z't'I' d'lIt'Tt' !'11l1'l she sizzflvd nn mv. VVithout consulting the alnianac, we feel safe in Stating' that there was an alqnorinally hright Aurora Borealis on Noyeniher 5. 18544. for on that night, at Xlountyille. C.. was horn Belle Nickels. ,ln the fall of 1900 she entered the Junior class of Linwood Cole lege, and graduated there with honor in june. IQO2. and in the succeeding Septeniher enrolled as an Erskine Freshman. She afterward- taught school three years before she laeczuue a nieniher of the present class, entering as a Junior in 1907. Since that 'time she has per- formed an acceptable service by stopping all stray questions in Prof. Grier's room. A ineniber of the Calliopean Literary Society. she has been secretary for two terms, and president for the same length of tinie. is b111z'1'fy was so great that Newton lllligllf llCIi'L' deduced 1110 law of graz'z'fafi011 from if. Born near Fayetteville. Tenn., January I. 1887, Bernie Lynch Parkinson received his preparatory education in the Molina High School. Entering Erskine in 1905, he con- nected hiniself with the Philoinathean So- ciety, of which he has been vice-president and president. Parkie was Sophomore declaiiuer on the semi-annual in 1907. and Junior dehater i11 IQO8. l-le won the LlCClZll1ll6l'lS iuedal in his Freslunan.year and the del1ater's medal in his Junior year. llc represented the Y. N. C. A. at Clemson in IQO6 a11d at Montreat, N. C.. in IQOS. He is Literary editor of the E11S141N1,xN and Athletic and Y. M. C. A. editor of the ERs1i1N1.xN.x, Though appointed hy his so- ciety to speak in tl1e Greenwood preliminary. he resigned 011 account of ill health. 21 liifiaxlli Lx xcu lfxicigixsox. if ff- I 'u KNox BRYsoN PHAGAN. KNOX BRYSON PHAGAN- Happy 'If of mc y0zz'z'c ctw' lzeard, Yozfll adiizit that I'nz. cz IJird. ' At Fayetteville, Tenn., October 5. 1887, dur- ing a heavy rain, Knox Bryson Phagan was born into this world of trouble. His tirst im- pressions of the globe were very unfavorable. His brain was First aided in its insatiableisearch for knowledge by a course in the Molina High School. Not satished with that training, Happy entered Erskine's Fresh class in IQO5. For three years his talents were unnoticed. and no honors fell to him. In the Senior year. however, his star began brightly to shine. He was successively chosen president of the Philomathean semi-annual celebration, man- ager of the Erskine track team. and business manager of the ERsK1N1aNA. He is also man- ager of the successful Erskine Minstrels. EDGAR WALKER Pl-IARR- Pharr Hc who is a Cfl'L'Uf' orafoz' ctw' has the world UI' fZI'S fc'Cl',H b just before Benjamin Harrison took the oath of oliice. when the country was still under a Democratic President, on March 4, 1839. Edgar NValker Pharr was born in hlecklenlwurg Co.. near the city of Charlotte. After graduating at the Charlotte University School, where he won a ClClJE1lCl S medal. he joined us in our Sophomore year. An ardent wearer of the Star, he has served his society as president. -lunior orator at the annual celebration, and Senior orator on the semi-annual. llc was a contestant in both his -lunior and Senior years for the Greenwood appointment. ln 1007 he won the Mower medal for the best tleclainier in college. and in IQOS the medal for tlte lnest orator in lirskine. llecause of his legal bent tml mind. he was eleeleml to write the last will and testament for the N.xt't'.11'1'x'-N1N1-tus, linnxa XY.x1,141-il: llirxma. 22 4 F A JoHN SHELBY Pmxco. CHARLES HADDON SHEFFIELD Shuck JOHN SHELBY PLAXCO- Plane His lllllil' is t'7'li.S'f7 111141 lvlarls and lfllllff, His fart' is lilac the lan. Surely all the luck-giving fairies were danc- ing around the home of Rev. W. A. M. Plaxcri. July 6th, 1887. For, at that time, unto him a child was born, unto him a son was given, afterwards named John Shelby Plaxco. Har- ing overcome, or got around the obstacles put in his way by zealous teachers of the Clinton High School Plaza came to Erskine, where he has maintained his record for being a gifted man. To mention the occasions on which. and the capacities in which, he has served the Euphemian Society, there is hardly room here, for their number is legion. He is local editor of THE ERSKINIANA, class historian, and a jug- gler of no mean ability. According to some reports, the subject of this sketch is very fond of red. L'Plax was debater on the Euphem- ian celebration in both his Junior and his Senior years. Nutty, who shall u1'Z11'i1'aft'37 T011 IIICIZ love zcflzuz' I lzutvf' Tennessee lays undisputed claim to one of our best members, Charles Haddon Sheffield. who was born in Fayetteville, January 29. 1886. Admirably prepared for college at the Molina High School. Shuck entered Erskine with us poor unfortunates in the year IQO5. He was a typical Freshman, so conscientious that he began making and has never de- parted from his lirst love. Very industrious, he taught summer school in Kelso and Fair- view, Tenn., respectively. Despite a pro- nounced proclivity to use specifying adjectives when under pressure, Shuck is a loyal mem- ber of the Y. M. C. A. and was its Treasurer in his Junior year, and a representative at the Clemson. '07, Conference. A loyal and Puritan- ical Philo, he is society Treasurer and a Sen- ior debater on the Semi-annual. Shuck is assistant business manager of THE li1:s1c1Nt.-xN. Cn .xiulis H .xnltox Slllfl-'l llfl.l'. 23 , J Lois SNELL. EDWARD RAYMOND SPENCE immie LOIS SNELL- Lois Tl1c1'e is a gl'll'dL l1 ill lzvr faire, ll'l1c1'c roses and telzifc lilies grow. In the dark. backward and abysm of time, Lois Snell was shining serenely in her angel infancy. But the voice of duty earth- ward called, and she must needs obey. There- fore it was that she made her appearance, December 23, 1886, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Snell, in Cotton Plant, Miss. From the New Albany thlissl High School she came to Erskine. and, notwithstanding the fact that she had been out of school two years. entered the Sophomore class. Since that time she has been a loyal and valued member of the '09 class, one who is never satisfied until her duties are well performed. Judging that one who can see so well what she herself should do. ought also to be a good guesser at the future duties of others. the class chose her for its Prophet. 1 II llltlclj a lady in flzc case. You leizuw all 0Z'llL'l' tlziugs glee Place. Edward Raymond Spence was born March 15. 1884, at Kerville. Tenn. The baby was so feminine in appearance that the parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Spence. were kept busy explaining that it was not a girl, but a boy. .Xltlifiiigli twenty-live years have robbed lid- waid ml his girhsh looks, he still likes to be around the ladies. After spending two years in Holton College, Tenn.. he came to lCrskine. A member of the Philon1all1e:u1 Society, he was cleelauner on the senu-annual in his lfreshinan year, chief marshal in his .luuior year, and einnnieueenieut niarshal in moo :mil 111117. lle has also been secretary, yiee-presi- ilenl. and president uf his society. ,llINlNie is president ol' the South Carolina Intercollegiate Uralfu'ical .Xssoci:1tiun. 1 24 l'tllXX.XRll Ru xioxu Sl'I'fNCl'f. SA M UEI. REI n SPE Nclilz. JAMES HAROLD WHITE- Crip ll'it11 power 011 the spm1kvr's stand, He lll0'Z'CS the crowd from smiles to fears. Although Providence saw lit to deprive James Harold Wliite, who was born at Ches- ter, S. C.. October 12, 1887, of the use of one of his limbs, in its justice it gave him strength of lung and the power of deliv- ering well, thoughts on pathetic subjects. Many times has he held the members of his society spelbound as he pleaded the cause of some poor unfortunate. The Euphemian So- ciety elected him Sophomore declaimer in '07, junior debater in '08, and one of its speak- ers to contest for the Greenwood apointment. That he might be useful as well as ornamental. the society has made him lill the seats of secretary and president. According to his schedule, Crip is taking a heavy course in Loafing Forbiddenf He is Euphemian ecli- tor of the ERskINl,xN.x. SAMUEL REID SPENCER- Baby fill, fum' .vzevcl if is In love, ,l!1, flute guy ix .VUIIJIIQ 4!i'.vi1'r. Ye croaking frogs and liarping symphonies. anks we can liotlil This stand attention, for from our r produce one who can imitate you giant in intellect, but Baby in stature and years, was born at Roddey. S. C., August 5. 1889. A true-blue Philo. Spencer has been vice-president of his society. Think ye not that because f'Baby is probably the most indus- trious member of his class and an man. that he does not have his share of the fun. llc is decidedly a lady's man. NVe believe that he is in love with a fair damsel living somewhere between Mr. Brock's house and the lirst rail- road crossing. VVell might it be said of Baby: He is the most diligent student that ever burned the midnight oil. and the most gallant lad that ever fought for fair lady. To all of his classmates he has been, with his excellent knowledge of Greek and German, a very present help in time of trouble. blxuiis ll,xi:ol.n XXilll'l'lf. 25 Class History There is a tide in the affairs of men, Which, taken at the Hood, leads on to fortuneg Omitted, all the voyage of their life ls bound in shallows and in miseriesf' QAM i gj ifffl O-DAY the great body of American youth is Hoating X, Is? s Q sg , XV ewes s 96 3.4 . . . l 5 on such a tide, and each moment determines the destiny of some boy or girl. Many take the tide at its Hood and become the choicest flowers of the land, while those that omit it and thereby are left to grapple in darkness and superstition are many more Four years ago the members of the Naughty Nine class met this tide face to face and in battle array the giant armies t 3 s . I X 1 H I U A I . . of ignorance were drawn up against the courageous armies of knowledge. Recognizing the great pending danger, the forces of knowledge made one grand assaultg and, when the clouds of smoke and the din of battle passed away, grand and victorious stood the assembled ranks of knowledge. Thus the vic- tory was won which shaped the career of the largest class in the history of the institution. It is interesting to note the manner in which this class came together. Cn September l3th, l905, three or four Freshmen were seen slipping in the back door of the College Home. Each day brought new arrivals until they num- bered fifty-two, the largest class in the history of the College. They were, however, a motley crowd, all sizes and shapes, not only from all parts of the country, but various species of the animal kingdom. ln fact, after a careful examination it was impossible to determine what genus a few of the band belonged, however, they were duly labeled HReubens. After much trouble and confusion in general, we finally assembled and organized Naughty Nine, with R. C. Grier as our leader. Everything con- sidered, Naughty Nine progressed favorably during the early part of her exist- ence, for she was an ignorant kind, had learned to be quiet and to take what was coming with philosophic calmness. We went to work with a vim and determi- nation to do or be done, and most of us were done. We struggled manfully Zh L against the onslaughts of the Professors with a Freshmanis greenness and obsti- nacy. But the teachings in our books were not nearly so valuable in our eyes as that obtained from the upper classmen. From the Sophomores we learned to throw water and use the paddleg from the Juniors we learend to chew and smoke, the art of dressing and indifference, and from the Seniors wisdom and dignity. lncidentally, we were required to furnish the fun, dancing, singing, etc., for the upper classmen, which will hardly be forgotten by those of us who were so unfortunate as to be selected as the g'l..eading Ladiesf' ,After a lapse of three short and happy months, Naughty Nine again assembled, forty-six strong. Then, after listening to the great things achieved by our classmates during the summer vacation, we selected lVliss Hamilton Henry, the sweetest girl in school, to steer us through the troubled waters for the ensuing session. At this stage we were quite sure the Faculty did not properly appreciate our intelligence, nor understand what we should be taught half as well as we did. But after adding a few more grey hairs fthose that had hairl to their heads, they finally managed to get us back into harness, when we saw the wisdom of their ways, while we were kept nine long and dreary months, after which, with bated breath, we waited to learn if we had passed During the session death claimed our beloved classmate, D. G. Thomp- son, a splendid fellow, well esteemed in college. Three more happy vacation months were spent with home folks, and '09 again assembled, thirty-eight strong. Our beloved Co-ed had proved such a good leader that she was unanimously selected to guide Naughty Nine through the third year of the class, existence. This year is characterized by Naughty Nine's athletic feats and by her marvelous generosity. She furnished the battery and the star third baseman for the championship base ball team, the men which won out in the tennis tournament, and carried away the honors from the football park. Here it may be well to say that since that football game between the classes of '09 and '08, the Faculty has allowed us to play no more footballg for in that game arms were broken, collar bones dislocated, and skulls fractured. As has been said, the generosity of the class was tested, for note the ones whom she took into her ranks: --january, l906, Baldwin, September, 1906, Pharr, lVlcl..ain, lVliss Henry, Miss Snellg September, l907, Miss Nickels, Kerr, September, 1908: Elliott, Nabers. You may not be able to judge our generosity from their namesg but, if you could have seen the majority of them when they came into the class, you would be compelled to say that Naughty Nine has indeed a generous heart. 21 Mccam uhm, Emkine College Due West. sc 29639 And now we are Seniors. On looking back over the past three years, we are astonished at the rapidity with which this eventful time has Hown. It is indeed true: We spend our years as a tale that is told, for it seemed only yesterday that the class with fifty-two guileless youths came up to drink from the pure fountain of learning. We have now only thirty-three members, and in looking at the band, as they appear to-day, it is hard to realize that they are the same that organized on September l3th, l905. Some have fallen by the wayside and some have risen to high honor. Those remaining have thrown off their youthful follies and assumed a grave and determined mien. The thought that we are on the home stretch of our course and nearing the time when we shall be called upon to give an account of our stewardship for the past four years, makes hot and cold chills run over many of usg but the thought is not nearly so distressing as the fact that our little band is soon to be broken up and scattered to the four corners of the world, never to be united again. And now let us not forget the relationship, sympathy, and mutual counsel always bestowed upon us by our teachers, our duty to our Alma lVlater, and to the long list of distinguished and honored Alumni, in which our name. is soon to be placed, and try to keep ourselves pure and helpful to all fellow-practitioners and the public at large, for we have a mission to perform and a destiny to fulfill. JOI-IN S. PLAXCO, Historian. 28 l l l i 1. Class of l 909 By W. W. Boyce, Jr., Class Poet When the tinkle of ice in the banqueting hall And the clink of the glasses upraised one and all To drink to the health of the class that goes forth Strikes the ears, there's sadness that blends with the mirth, And a sorrow at parting that steals o'er our hearts, Dethroning the pleasure the occasion imparts. For our friends and our comrades we must needs shed a tear As the friendships of youthtime are lasting and dear. When we think of the pleasures, the fun we have had, And are leaving behind us, we needs must grow sadg But, again, when we think of the future in store, And how this was to teach and prepare us the more, We are fain to line up in the battle of life, And impatiently wait for the on-coming strife. Then our worthy successors we take by the hand, And long at the parting reluctantly standg For to them we entrust all our pleasures divine. l-lere's a health to them all from our own precious wine. So with joy that out-weighs the depression we feel, We will take up the arms that each soldier must wieldg With sincerest farewells to our friends, every one, We will go with light hearts to the fight weive begun. And may nothing but pleasure and victory be The reward of each one of our bold 'cthirty-three,,' Till united we stand on lifeis farther-most shore Greeted there by the three who have gone on before. If my heart were a cluster of grapes, with a tear Of sorrow at parting with classmates most dear, l would wring out a bumper of richest red wine, And drink to the health of the Class of '09 l er- W T .-. 2 BY Q 3 EDGAR,-F:-f'lAER. ? fin the Name nf Er. fllllnifati, an lvt it hr: We, the class of 1909, recognizing our impaired, enfeebled and decayed reason, and anticipating our approaching dissolution, do herein and hereby make this our final legal distribution of property, both collective and individual, which is our assignment, together with all lawfully-vested rights and privileges to possess, use, and enjoy same through life. To Dr. S. Moffatt, our respected president, we bequeath many years of success in his work, trusting that he may never be hindered by any lack of psychological unity and continuity of interest and enthusiasm. Weialso cede to him the latest publication on How to be a Detective, in order that by close application to rules therein stated he may be able to become more successful in his attempts to shadow Forbidden-loafers, potato grabbers, chicken and turkey lovers, and all other doers of like vandalism and pilfering. To Dr. lVlcCain, we give, lst, the lasting good will and friendship of the entire class, Znd, a place in the choir where he may sing praises in the perfect and ethereal rhythm of the great literatig 3rd, a full quart of Abbeville's best quality of red .... ink, that he may therewith intoxicate Freshmen with higher ideas of sentence structure, unity and coherence, etc., and 4th, the latest model computing machine as an aid in making change. We trust he will not sus- pect us of being too liberal. To Prof. Crier, we cede a full prophetic knowledge of each and every subject of practical importance due to occur in the next 20 years, and as a means toward such an end we give him the latest edition of the Salem Almanac, AU wherein he may glean accounts of all prognosticated events. We also give him the special privilege of hearing the light and airy music of the celestial spheres as they roll on through ceaseless courses in their elliptical orbits, hoping, however, that terra incognita will never be to him like terra firma. Fearing the need, we also bestow upon him a light, portable step-ladder, to the end that he may not again have to perform acrobatic stunts over the campus fence. To Prof. Reid, we grant much coming success in the propagation of newly- awakened ideas in the realm of science, trusting that he may ever show that interest in his classes which has won for him popularity among the strict and successful sons of study. We also assign to his disposal all the cuspidors at our command, to be placed here and there throughout the college building for the special use of those who are addicted to the habit of useless expectoration. We further bestow upon him our wide and varied collection of trilobites, brachio- pods, lamellibranchs, orthoceratites, goniatites, nautolites, belemnites, and Hying dragons, with the hope that he may soon completely evolve the correct tree of life. We finally, with much reluctance, give him our last 'bottle of favorite mineral water, known as H2 S. To Prof. Pressly, we will a long survival in the practice of those qualities which has won for him among the student-body the appellative, Our Friend. We confer upon him, again, the constant exercise of that easy placidity and untroubled calmness which is perpetually synonymous with proper thought and deliberation. We also assign the self-satisfaction furnished only by the chewing of the most desirable sun-cured plug-cut and the smoking of the best Cuban cigars. Farewell-auf wiedersehen. To Prof. Caldwell, we transmit our very best wishes for many years yet to come in which he may be enabled to make Freshmen learned in the laws and customs of ancient Rome, as promulgated in the Latin texts of her orators, statesmen, and poets. Secondly, we confer upon him, ex more, our entire stock of ponies and horses, and, sans ceremonie, the hasty realization of his long- cherished desire to be forever rid of the presence of the noisy class of l909. U To Prof. Galloway, erstwhile generally known as Prep, we assign the power to cherish all his ambitions and lofty aspirations until they are fully realized, secondly, the proper and wise solution of the labor problem, and all others of impending political disaster to our destinyg thirdly, all our boxes of Huyler's and l..owney's candies, fresh from the sweat-shops and tenement houses of Chicago and New York. We will him, lastly, much happiness in his lately-chosen field as champion of the creed of connubial citizenship. To Prof, Long, we deliver a furtherance of the ability, already manifested, to attain soon those heights of eminence to which he has devotedly aspire-d. XI expecting him, at the same time, however, to advocate ceaselessly those logical and ethical conceptions for which he plead before the naughty-nine's a year ago. Further, we bequeath to him a knowledge of all the myths and fancies of the ages, to be wreathed into a garland of Horid and adorned style, inlaid with words a foot and a half long. Foreseeing the inevitable, we assure him our fond desire that his frequent and solitary excursions down by the babbling brooks, Chickasaw and Pinhook, may shortly issue in more than an innocent illusion. To Prof. lVlcDill, keeper of the Prep menagerie, we give great encour- agement in the performance of the difficult task of taming the rude and rough inhabitants of the jungle and of primarily training them for a higher plane of civilization. To assist him in this work, we grant him the privilege of using freely our best seasoned paddles, now unused for two years, and hence anxious for the fray. ' We bequeath the high standard of scholarship and the tireless devotion and application to duty of our classmate, T. W. Baldwin, to Brice Dickson, of the Sophomore class. We cede the oratorical ability of W. Plumer Blackwell to W. E. Huey, of the Sophomore class. We also give to Erskine College a handsome statue of Vvilliam Plumer, to be erected directly facing the main building, as a sourcxe of inspiration to coming Freshmen in their long and wearisome journey towards enlightened erudition. We transmit the musical talent as well as the effeminate proclivities of William Boyce to Kerr Taylor, of the Sophomore classg his Y. M. C. A. ability we give to Estes Lynn, of the Junior class. The forensic skill of Y. lVl. Brown we transfer to Bynum Betts, of the Sophomore class, and his taste for fowlsi' we give, without hesitation, to james Bryson of the ? class. We confer upon Clarence Jones, of the Freshman class, the sporting tendency of our Irishman, Patrick Donald Chisolm, hoping that he may ever Ulove the lightsome ladiesi' with the same tenderness as our classmate. We assign to Lowry Blakely, of the junior class, that duty of devoted attachment to golden-haired queens which has characterized Raymond Chisolm. To John Kennedy, of the Sophomore class, we will the handsome, dignified appearance of Jerome Colvin. trusting that he will appreciate the gift sufficiently to make himself worthy of it. To W. G. Wliite, alias ufrlipf' of the Sophomore class, we leave the remainder of the bottle of red hair-varnish which is now the property of lVlalcolm ...V l Crowther, hoping that therewith he may ever keep burnished the glowing cover of his cranium. To John Alexander, of the Freshman class, we give the lean and hungry Cassius-look of Charley Elliott. We give to Moffatt Curry, of the junior class, our brilliant classmate's comprehensive knowledge of English Literature. We deliver to McLees Rea, of the Sophomore class, the abundant store- house of self-inflicted ha-r-r-d luck, and the capacity for noise making which now belongs to Cox Donald. The stock of wit and humor of Roddey Cettys we cede to George Kirk- patrick, of the Junior class, and our associateis business ability we give to T. C. Shelton, of the Junior class. To David Lauderdale, of the Freshman class, we transfer the politeness, sincerity and frank simplicity of Calvin Grier, and to Archie Watson, of the Sophomore class, we leave the athletic dexterity which '6Teenie has always evidenced in every line of sport. We bestow upon Miss Lily Robinson, of the Junior class, the capability of Miss Hamilton l-lenry in so long cherishing an earnest desire to live in States- ville, N. C., we give Nl'-lamilton's,, keen intellectual adeptness to Miss Maud Bigham, and her appetite for making wickets to Miss llda Nixon, both of the Sophomore class. The rich and melodious tenor of Mason l-lood we give to Vvillie Childs, of the Sophomore class, and UMace's literary propensity we cede to Brice Williams, of the junior class. Seeing the need, we give to Louis Hoskinson, of the preparatory depart- ment, the wide-flowing vocabulary and the specially congenial nature of Jeffer- son l-lood. We hope Louis will be able to lessen the wide contrast between his present disposition and that which is bestowed. We leave to Dan Crawford, our new Fresh, -and mark you, he's loud,-the 'gsmile that won't come offf, which has for four years graced the countenance of Ralph Hunter. To James Snell, of the Freshman class, we assign the Ucountry Reuben characteristics of R. T. Kerr, and to Neill Bell, of the Junior class, we leave HR. Ts' placid temperament and happy ideals of life. We bequeath Calvin Mccawis absent-mindedness to Sam Snoddy. of the preparatory departmentg his high social proclivities to Steele Caldwell: his athletic ability to Earle Bryson, of the Junior classg and his musical talent to Boyd l-lull, of the Freshman class. l-le's bankrupt now. -ww We will the cramming aptitude of Erskine McDaniel to Howard Phagan, of the Sophomore class, hoping that he may practice successfully this art of forcing knowledge into his mind by hurried study. We will the high society toilet set of Moffatt McGill to Thomas lrwin, of the junior class. We hope that Thomas will always be able to afford the same height of fashion apparel which ever graces our classmate's comely form. To Moffatt Plaxco, of the Junior class, we deliver the distinguished oratori- cal ability of Campbell McLain, together with that spirit of college life which breeds inevitable popularity. We leave to A. B. Cannon, of the junior class, the Hirting propensity of Horton Moore, that he may the better catch the winsome eye of the ladies at the Female College. Upon Rufus Grier, of the Sophomore class, we confer the versatility of Charley Nabers, trusting that he may be the motive power of many forward movements among the students of the college in his two future years of work. We bestow upon Miss Lois Bryson, of the Sophomore class, the inde- pendence and self-reliance of Miss Belle Nickels, since Miss Bryson promises to cherish fondly and to retain forever this virtue now predominant in her nature. To L. Kidd, of the Freshman class, we bequeath the suave gravity and the forensic and debating skill of Bernie Parkinson, with the hope that he may labor to prove himself deserving of the bestowal. We give to Conrad Choate, of the Sophomore class, the care-free and unconcerned spirit of Knox Phagang and the business ability of our Annual manager we bestow upon M. G. McDonald, of the Junior class. To Shaw Ketchin, of the Junior class, we give the brilliant debating ability of his fellow-Euphemian, john Plaxco, together with our classmate's juggling ability also. To C. B. Williams, of the junior class, we assign the distinguished oratorical ability of Edgar W. Pharr. Pharr's ability to ludicrously entertain the public we bequeath to W. T. Oates, of the Freshman class. We leave the A standard of Charles Sheffield to Willie Henry, of the Freshman class, since the said Mr. Henry promises to be a faithful and diligent student. We leave to Miss l-lelen Matthews, of the Freshman class, who, we predict, will become a very stately Senior, the dignity of Miss Lois Snell, as well as her calm, conscious reserve and lady-like bearing. 34 3 1 To Frank Taylor, of the Freshman class, We bequeath the Hnotfdifhcult- to-please sporting propensities of Edward Spence, seeing that Fresh Taylor was the first among his class to have a feminine protector. To Conde Tribble, of the Junior class, we cede the favorite occupation of Reid Baby,' Spencer, namely, walking up street to catch the train at Ken- nedy's crossingg we give Babys, sincerity and conscientious disposition to W. L. Newton, of the Sophomore class. The oratorical ability of H. White We bequeath to James Boyce, of the Freshman class, with the sincere trust that he may make a platform speaker of rare ability. 35 , ,,,- CIass Prophecy By MISS LOIS SNELL Q50 AST night as I sat thinking of the rapidly approaching 1 x X N! XV if 9 fb A ' Q Q end of our coIIege days, of how near we are to the very threshold of the great busy world outside, I began to wonder whither the footsteps of our thirty-three wouId turn when they should have ceased to tread the halls of dear oId Erskine. Paths of noble service, to be sure, they wouId foIIowg but through what speciaI fields such paths would Iead was mine not to know, onIy to imagine. For a time all sense of the present left me, and scenes of the future as distinct, yet as transient, as the Hickering Hames of fireIight, passed panorama-Iike before me. ' SuddenIy, however, my reverie was broken by the quick turning of the blind on the window behind me, accompanied by the sound of a Iow, mysterious voice. For a moment an icy fear held me fast. The stiIIy siIence of the house, wrapped as it was in slumber, seemed oppressive now that it had been broken, and the voice-but it began to make known its mission, and my horror was suppIanted by a genuine interest in its story. The airy IittIe creature, the owner of the voice, had stopped at my window one night before, and, divining my intense Ionging for a peep into the future of my classmates, had sped away through the vista of twenty years, to Iook into the secret for me. What he had Iearned of the cIass of ,09 along this vast untrodden way he had now returned to teII meg and although I did not catch all of the rapidly reIated story, I felt whiIe it was being toId as if I had caught a glimpse of our once care-free thirty-three as they were meeting the vast problems and perpIeXities of life. First among the number was IVIr. Baldwin, now occupying the chair of Enghsh in the University of Virginia. After graduating from Erskine, he con- tinued his course of study in YaIe University, of which institution he received PILD. in IQI5. Since entering upon his profession he has won increasing success and distinction, until he is now recognized as one of the most Iearned men of his time. I 1.-Y L af +- Law called lVlr. Blackwell into her majestic courts, and as in fancy l saw and heard him pleading the cause of right and justice, I was convinced that in him she had found a worthy advocate. He was located in the city of Macon, Georgia, where he had been practicing for a number of years. Partly because this city was the home of the fair little girl who became his wife, and partly because of the great demand here for his service as dentist, lVlr. lVlcDaniel, too, adopted Macon as the site of his home and his practice. Almost hidden away in the mountains of southeastern Kentucky, Wlr. Boyce, now Rev. W. W. Boyce, D.D., was doing a great work among the mountaineers of that section. Near the little town of Hazard he established a training school for these wild, ignorant peopleg and the effect of his work was being felt in wide circles beyond the immediate sphere in which his work lay. Having devoted his life to bettering the spiritual and mental condition of these people, he steadily refuses the calls which frequently come to him from more prominent fields. In my imagination, I had been picturing the sweet voicedn orator of our class, Mr. Brown, as a public lecturerg but not so my little visitor's account of him. Shortly after finishing at Erskine, he had taken a course in a famous school of architecture, where he developed a masterly skill in this art. Living at Newberry, in his magnificent home, itself a model of beauty, he was famous for his artistic designs and was constantly employed by citizens in towns both far and near to draw plans for buildings. The climax of distinction which these twenty years had brought to Mr. Colvin came with his ascending to the presidency of John Hopkins University, Baltimore. Previous to this time he had become noted for some important discoveries in the scientific fields, but the fact that the mantle of Prof. Ira Remsen had fallen upon his shoulders was the most convincing proof of the success he had attained in his profession. Quite as successful as the above, though in a different sphere, were Mal- colm Crowther and Donald Chisolm, joint owners of a magnificent mercantile establishment in Birmingham, Ala. Combining their natural talent with acquired skill and dauntless energy, they had so managed their affairs as to give a new meaning to the term success in the business world. ln this same city Ram Chisolm was located as chief surgeon in the city hospital. He was happy and contented in his workg but especially happy and contented in his home, in which a fair little South Carolina woman sat enthroned as queen. Because of hiscomplete solution of the all-important problem of three bodies, with which he first became acquainted in his Senior year at Erskine. Mr. Donald was ranked among the great astronomers of his day. The entire 37 class of '09, having a special fondness for this branch of mathematics, were not content until they had gone to the observatory at Washington, where Mr. Donald was now located, and obtained from him a direct personal explanation of this all-important problem. Mr. Elliott entered the field of journalism, and at the time of my little fairy's visit into the future, he was editor of one of the most popular journals of the time. Through its columns appeared many gems of thought fresh from his gifted pen, and these were always scanned with eager interest by the host of readers of this journal. Mr. Cettys was found making practical use of the principles of banking so faithfully taught him by Prof. Galloway. He was president of the First National Bank of Rock Hill, in which he had worked nearly ever since gradu- ating at Erskine. Mr. lVlcGill is one of the stockholders in this bank, and in it he works as cashier, and both he and Mr. Cettys are esteemed among the most prominent business men of the city. lVlr. Jeff Hood had always purposed to enter the foreign mission fieldg but somehow he could not brush aside the challenge of the needed districts of our great cities. Finally deciding to devote his life to the improving of con- ditions there, he went to New York, where he was now doing effective mission work in the slums and tenement sections of the city. It was to lVlr. Hunter that the mission of carrying the gospel to foreign lands was permitted. ln company with the girl of his boyhood love, he tore himself away from the homeland and departed for China in l9I6g and it was here that my good little fairy found him laboring earnestly for the extension of the kingdom of righteousness. Somewhat different from the picture which l had drawn of Hamilton Henry's future was that which my little interpreter gave. True she was found wielding with queenly grace the sceptre of a happy home of her own, but this home. instead of a quaint old Southern one that l had imagined, was a less elaborate one in the heart of India. Here she spends what time she can spare from her household duties in helping to administer to the needs, mental, spiritual, and physical, of the people in the hospital over which her husband has control. Memphis, Tennesse, had the honor of furnishing homes for two of our worthy classmates. Here lVlr. lVlcCaw, after finishing a course in pharmacy. had built for himself a lucrative practice as druggist. lVlr. Kerr, representing an insurance Company in Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee, had adopted this city as his home. Having been in this business for a number of years, he had become quite an adept, and usually had no trouble in persuading people of the necessity of insuring their lives and property. 35 Far away from the turmoil of the city and the practicalities of life, was found the quaint home of Charley Nabers, artist. Here in the shadowy woods, with only the murmur of the crystal stream and the melody of the forest song- sters to disturb him, he devotes his every power to his art. Having spent a number of years abroad, he had become more and more skillfulg and now the star of fame had risen high on the horizon of his career as a painter. Belle Nickels, ambitious, independent Belle, walked for a number of years in the way she had marked out for herself, but, strange to say, when she had reached almost to the summit of success as instructor of mathematics in a well- known college for women, she suddenly lost her evinced power of overcoming obstacles in her way. Unconquerable Love, in the guise of a distinguished lawyer appeared on the scene, and bade her lay aside the rigid rule of the mathe- matician, and assume the more womanly wand which awaited her touch in his home at Greenwood, S. C. She yielded, and l alone of the three girls of the class was left in the profession which during college days we had determined to follow. Having had to give up his work as a medical missionary in China, because the conditions there were not suited to his health, Mr. Parkinson returned to his home in Tennessee. After remaining there for a while, he resolved to try the wild plains of western Gklahoma as his home. There the brisk breezes of the prairie wafted back to him his healthy and he could not now be persuaded that a better clime existed than Cklahoma. Beyond lVlr. Parkinson's home lay the broad acres of Mr. Sheffield's fertile farm. ln having these worked, lVlr. Sheffield was using his knowledge of science to practical accountg and his success in his various experiments with farm work gave him a fascination for it which few ever have. In the pastorate of a country church in Alabama lay the field of Mr. Spence's labor. He had completely won the hearts of his people, who looked to him and his uhelpmatew fan old D. W. F. C. girl, by the wayl, as their leaders in social as well as in religious life. lVlr. Spencer, noted in the class for his attainments in all the branches of study, was numbered with the several others who chose teaching as their pro- fession. After several years of work as principal of a high school near his home, he was chosen a first professor in the Mississippi Heights Academy, Blue Mountain, lVliss.g and here he was doing effective work in training boys for college. Having become charmed with the study of Geology in our Senior year at Erskine, Mr. Phagan continued the study of this subject in other institutions: and taking there courses in practical geology, he became so skilled in detecting 39 and interpreting geological history that the authorities made him State Geologist of Tennessee. Since assuming this office, he had made several tours to foreign countries and examined strata and other structures in order that he might better understand the Geology of his State. Lastly, I learned of a group of the class of ,09 who were helping to steer our ship of State. ln the same session of Congress I heard resounding through the halls of our national capitol the eloquent voices of Senators Harold White, of South Carolina, and Edgar Pharr, of North Carolina, and john Plaxco, of Florida. At the same time, Shortie lVloore was holding the office of Secretary of Agriculture in the President's cabinet, and his skilful and ingenious ways of managing the affairs of this department marked him as one of the most efficient members of the cabinet. While these named above had in charge weighty matters of home govern- ment, lVlr. lVlcl..ain administered affairs of state at a foreign court. Having been U. S. Ambassador to England for a number of years, he has become very much attached to his adopted city, London. Here the story ended. My unseen midnight visitor vanished away in the darkness, and if the future does not bear out what I have told you, let the error all be mineg for l'm sure my good little fairy was not untrue. 113 M imma f 75065014 MXH I I VA-, --i 1'l'-, The Class of 1910 NAM 49',?JlQAfj MAN, in whatever craft he sails, cannot stretch far out xii g Nil , , , , , 1 X f of sight when he is linked to the windings of the shore gg 2 by the towing ropes of historyf' Among a crowd of friend-greeting, hand-shaking, xi NW X I laughing and happy boys who announced to the old VX V f A town of Due West byntheir lusty cheers and merry songs is that Erskine had agam opened her doors, might have been seen a number of long-faced, homesick youths, who were by the fates destined to be the members of the Junior class of to-day. Having highly resolved to raise themselves from the quagmire of ignorance, rid themselves of some of their verdant characteristics, they had launched their frail bark upon the sea of college life. After having been the object of every con- ceivable joke, the target of every missile used in ancient warfare, and after having supplied the barbarous Sophss thirst for blood, we invaded the fortress of the faculty and carried off with more or less degrees of conditions a pass to the Freshman class. Cn coming together in a recitation room for the first time we were counted over and found to be in number 49. Six beautiful and brilliant-minded co-eds graced our ranks. Before the golden sun of college life had mounted far above the horizon we had in the field a strong and well-organized football team. ln the dim, misty future we could see the pennant proudly waving over the class of '10, we were like the grass which in the morning flourisheth and groweth up, but in the evening is withered and cut down. The faculty, in their wisdom, seeing that it would never do to allow the Fresh to win the coveted prize, cut short our brilliant future. ln the spring, however, we evinced our love for ath- letics by putting four men on the championship base ball team of l907. ln the meanwhile we had organized and elected a president who was later asked by the faculty to absent himself from the institution. Verily a Fresh shall not be exalted. lnterspersecl among these various events was a little college work. A few of our number were laid out in the scrimmage with the theory of unde- termined coefficients, but we made line play after line play against Euclid until we made a touchdown. DeQuincey, Tennyson, and Vifiashington lrving were .12 ,fir viewed through the telescope of Espenshade's rules for coherence and unity. We set ourselves up in such strong opposition to Cicero in his prosecution of Cataline that we prematurely brought on his Senectus. We either rode with Xenophon's immortal l0,000 through the gates of Babylon, or in the department of science we learned that the heart had another function than that of being the toy of some sweet maid. Last, but not least, we learned the art of Wicket Making and Loafing Forbidden. Despite the threatening clouds that inevitably overhang a Fresh's life, we emerged from the final term exams to the glorious old tune of 70 or more, which fact won for us the coveted name of Sophomore. Three pleasant months removed from our hearts every spark of sympathy for a Freshman, and we reassembled, 37 barbarous, strap-applying Sophs. As a reward for our bloodthirstiness the Faculty gave two of our number permission to loaf Forbidden for two weeks. Four men from our class again made the base ball team, and one helped to bring the tennis trophy cups back to Erskine for the second time. Un April lst, as the college bell was calling us to chapel, we headed a procession of the student body, determined to spend a pleasant day in the forest of Arden. ln surveying we found the topography of the country about Due West to be peculiarly conducive to falling. We traced the history of man from the time he emerged from the dark cloud which enshrouds the past to the present time. Horace and Ovid forced us to join the equestrian ranks of Hinds and Noble. From Scott 8: Denny light was radiated by which we studied DeQuincey, lVlacauley and Shakespeare. We either championed the cause ot god-like l-lelen,', or in physics found that Newton had formulated the laws by which we fell in Trig. We did not allow any of these minor duties to interfere with our regular course of Loafing Forbidden and Making Wickets. Ata meeting of the student body, the secretary of the athletic association, the captain, and the manager of the base ball team were selected from our class. Besides leading in several decisive student body movements, we carried off more than our proportion of the honors of the year. Three pleasant months were again spent, but this time they only sufficed to instill in our natures the dignity worthy of a junior. Now we are Juniors bucking Chemistry. ln proof of their proficiency, several of our members have been seen demonstrating to their feminine friends at the Female College what the reaction KI+2S will give. Let him who thinks that only smooth seas are met with in the Junior class, work out the following reaction in which F repre- sents a hypothetical metal in the base, FEL: : l-lCL+l:EL3 :FCLW ...... .. and he will havean idea of what it means to be a Junior. ln spite of all such barriers, we can see signs of progress, and the most skeptical cannot doubt that in a short time we will be within one year's journey to the goal. Qui' password 43 is Sticlc,H and our most dominant characteristic is that we are all firm believers in the old adage, ln unity there is strengthf' This is our well-earned motto: To strive, to seek to find, And not to yield. T. C.. SHELTON. of D if tx my iii -its M if. 4 'J -! E w v-1 Junior Class Roll President, M. G. McDonald. Vice-President, L. C. Blakely. Secretary, Miss Lily Robinson. I-Iistorian, T. G. Shelton. CLASS COLORS: GREEN AND WHITE CLASS ROLL. Alexander, Samuel Irwin Bell, Neill Harper Blakely, Lowry Coleman Bonner, Walter Morse Brownlee, Walter Lawrence Bryson, Rutherford Earle Byrd, Robert Down Cannon, Abernathy Benson Curry, William Moffatt I-Iarkey, William Franklin Irwin, Thomas Jefferson Ketchin, James Shaw Kirkpatrick, George W'hite Lesslie, N. Lynn, Estes McCain Matthews, Joe Allen McDonald, Moffatt Grier Miller, William Clark Moffatt, Brice Pressly Patrick, Matthew White Plaxco, Moffatt Ross Shelton, Thomas Garland Robinson, Miss Lily Tribble, blames Conde Walker, Miss Eugenia Williams, Calvin Brice Williamson, Clarence E. Young, William Chalmers E i I 9 v 5 a pl s 5 'E X 1 Si W E ,Af M I, y N x I CH 7 1 N 1 Q 1 I ll 1 ml .47 The Class of l9l l ml 4,99 KM ' N the autumn of l907, we came to Erskine, a band of if X forty-three Fresh. Of this number five were co-eds, f X X ladies of keen intellect and striking beauty. Though N V Qf Professors within, we soon settled down. Buried in our X studies, we lost sight of everything, but anon we would 5 Q 2 harassed by Sophomores from without and besieged by 3 L M U CH a e 'B L ' turn our thoughts to Christmas, a day which seemed to lie in the far-distant regions of fancy. At last Thanks- giving came. The pleasure of this holiday was, however, marred by a raid from the Sophs, with disastrous consequences to some of our most prominent members. Christmas, then, was almost here-but before it our first examinations! When at last the long-looked-for day to go home came, we were stupefied by our freedom as are birds released from continued captivity, and we scarcely knew what to do. From the maddening rush and noise of college life, far from books and professors, we spent ten fleeting days of unalloyed pleasure with our home folks. After Christmas we returned refreshed, ready to study, and eager for the coming of spring. When the base ball season began we were glad to see our class represented on the college team by two good players. With a passionate longing in our hearts to be Sophomores, and with a certain degree of sadness in our minds, our Freshman year came to an end. With none of our former timidity and uncertainty, September, l908, found us, thirty-four energetic, determined, paddle-bearing Sophomores travel- ing toward Erskine, breathing woeful threats of divers punishments against the unsophisticated Fresh. lmmediately we went to work at the difficult task of taming and educating these verdant products of the tall timbers. Our labors, however, came to an abrupt end. An edict went forth from the collegeis most powerful potentate. The Herald cried, Come, ye barbarous inflictors of inhuman cruelty. Come ye, and sign a document! Know ye that all men are created free and equal li' Though we conscientiously advised the august body of Erskineis lawmakers that the extermination of hazing was an iridescent dream, promulgated only by extreme communists and socialists, we nevertheless tran- scribed our signatures to the proffered parchment. All was then smooth sailing. 45 When the smoke of early conflict and the din of entrance examinations had died away, we found five fortunate students in our midst, placarded '5Sophomores by the faculty. After welcoming these newcomers, we began to serve our faculty sentence of nine months at hard labor, to be spent in cramming and grinding. Not alone in classroom work, but also in making wickets, in loafing Forbidden, in energetic love-making, in declaiming in chapel, in wearing swell clothes, does the unsurpassed and unsurpassable class of l9ll take the lead. RUFUS A. GRIER, Historian. 1X0 l , at t Li 5 Q Wt Q ,119 5 i K E N w Y i i i 2 V i f 4 W E SS. CLA PHOMORE SO Sophomore C lass R. E. Stevenson, President. Miss Bigham, Vice-President. Miss Bryson, Secretary and Treasurer R. A. Cirier, Historian. CLASS COLORS: ROYAL BLUE AND WHITE CLASS ROLL. Agnew, John Coleman Aiken, Wade Middleton Barron, John Cialloway Betts, Charles Bynum Bigham, Miss Maud Bonner, Bryson, Bryson,, Burley, Burley, Lane Lindsay James Lauderdale Miss Lois F rank Tillman Miss Mamie Caldwell, John Steele Cashion, Mason Lee Childs, William Thomas Choate, Samuel Conrad Crawford, Dan Ciivens Dickson, Brice Templeton Gibson, lVloses Ralph Goforth, Preston Cleveland Crier, Rufus Alexander Crier, Robert Ralph S l-lardeman, Frank Henry, Miss Bettie l-luey, William Ellis Kennedy, John Pressly Laird, john Martin McDill, Claude Moffatt, James Strong, Jr. Moore, Latta Ciray Newton, William Luther Nixon, lVliss Ilda Phagan, Howard Artemis Rea, Lester McClees ' Rogers, James Crr Sloan, Ernest Sloan, Miss Mattie Stevenson, Ralph Erskine Stewart, Miss Jennie Taylor, l-lugh Kerr Watson, Archie Cowan Wvhite, William C-arner Q 3 Q, if I I-'f -M V s r Ji SHI IAN l 1 l l l 4 l l l 4 l i A l l 1, I lx l l .lr J is 4 l l 1 L L. Freshman Class History :' ROM the high school, with all our dreams of achieve- ment in the Hworld of lettersf' we came to Erskine kj Q College, September 9, l908. At first we were over- gf powered by the austerity of the Faculty and by the S! curious glances of those Seniors, Juniors and Sopho- L ' Be it known that our good qualities were seen even then, for we were never subjected to the humilia- tion of being hazed. We have always possessed a good share of meekness and respect, so requisite for a good class. Prominent and sincere among the new college relations were the ones we formed with our Ceometries and our Ciceros. To these we gave our deep attention, not our deep affection. We had this reverence for Cicero-we always took an erect position in the middle of the class room Hoor before reading his inspiring lines. Of all people, we alone know how to appreciate ourselves. We are very hopeful that some day you shall see our names on the roll of fame. Suffice it to say that we think our class great, but that we are ready to pass with it in 1909 from insignificant Freshmen to all-important Sophomores. Having referred to our experiences and to our hopes, let us now pause on the threshold of Sophomoric greatness and conceit for a word of advice to all prospective Freshmen. Let the old adage, Forgive and Forget, represent your attitude toward the Sophomores. May our deepest sympathies rest with you! HELEN INGRAM MATTHEWS. c Historian. 53 FSTTMAN CLASS. FR The Class ol 1912 J. H. B. Jenkins, President. Boyd l-lull, Vice-President. Miss Helen Matthews, Secretary and l-listorian. COLORS: CARNET AND BLACK Allen, Thomas Alexander, John Lee i Arnold, Miss Beatrice Bigham, Joe L. Boyce, Miss Dale Boyce, James H. ' Cartledge, Thomas D. Darby, Miss Frances Estes, A. F. Dickson, Howard L. Dunlap, Miss Leila Ciettys, Robert A. Grier, Joseph l-lenry, VV. fAlabama Henry, W. CSouth Carolinal l-lull, Boyd Jones, Clarence Jenkins, H. B. Ketchin, S. C. Kidd, Lowry Lauderdale, David T. McC1ee, Cuss McMurray, Leroy Matthews, Miss Helen Mitchell, Haddon Norton, Miss Susie Mae Oates, W. T. Reid, W. S. Roddy, Latham Snell, Jamie H. Squires, Miss Leoma Sandifer, Miss Rose Taylor, F. Ci. Tinliler, Bruce R. Tinkler, Samuel A. Webb, Harold R. Wilson, Miss Cathleen Thompson, Paul Stancill, Clyde i' mmm WW Y Q 7 I PREPS! sill'-I f av M. UXXXNMKRXSWW 'H Wwwfmxx MW ff !ffVlH1UHlHHlll1f Hllllffff Mllfllflllilflilw ' ah ' xi ' H Ur Fitting School LIST OF STUDENTS Blackwell, Dewitt Blakely, Samuel Broyles, Joe B. Burns, W. A. Buchanon, Cary Boazman, S. R. Cashion, C. Clinkscales, R. M. Dallas, Archie Fleming, R. H. Hanna, lVlaxy B. Haddon, G. P. Hoskinson, Louis Houser, M. T. Kerr, G. Klugh, D. Lathan, Samuel Leonard MISS BCSSIC Long H Martln E P Melton oe L lVl1lls Robert Mllls Spencer Nabers Joseph H Prultt O D Ramsey M E. Smlth MISS LOIS Stewart T Snoddy Samuel M Taylor L. B Tolbert Joseph A Todd James Whlte James R Young Edwln Youngblood, Fred S FITTING SCHOOL. jflflyfj, fflllllly 'x x HL? LITERARY DEPT 59 ,WJYYML ,Y , W 1, W vf, -gm: ,.,,,,,, ,, ,in , College Friends I By Charley H. Nabers Shall we these friends forget? Will years yet loose The golden chains which bind our hearts in tune? Will college friendships fade as waning moon? Shall we at length be left a lone recluse When heartless fate has drawn us with his noose To where we find no paths with flowers strewn? Shall from us go our college friends so soon, Will not these happy ties in life find use? Ah, yes, though years may pass, our minds will turn With love to mem,ries of our college band. Forget these friends? Ah, nog in life we'll learn That having friends means more than gold or land Wllen fifty years are gone, our hearts will burn With love to grasp a college friend by hand. I - ,..,-,,,,, ,ir I I I I I I I I I I EI I III TI I1 li It I I it I II I II II I I I i , l+ y a I E N xx gs! mf XM Q! X f S24 Ef f. 1 '1f- i 1 'L' wma Moivc the Phil and Phemen mountains of Virginia, a little town, Gorpress, is the only sign of civilization for miles and miles. She observes late mornings and early evenings, because the sun is not wont to look over the mountains down into the valley until late, and he is not hasty to bid the little village adieu in the evening. On every side she gazes upon the huge works of Nature, covered with Nature's orchard. There are nuts for the squirrels, tender grass for the rabbits and sweet flowers for the honey-bees to sip. At the foot of these mountains is a timid little brooklet, speaking in gurgling whispers for fear she may be reproved by the squirrels for speaking too loudly. This is the nook in which the little town lives. It is a quaint little town, with peculiar customs and well-established prin- ciples. The inhabitants are the strong, sturdy Scotch-lrish men and women of the Forties, who turn themselves pre-eminently in the direction of mind culture. Among the population of the place are a family of Youdons and a family of Donlys. About seventy years ago the old stork brought lVlr. and Mrs. Youdon a little girl. On that Spring morning, in 1839, the sun shone clearly and brightly, making the dew drops shine like so many diamonds. The parents decided to call her Pheme. Three years later the stork made another visit to the secluded little village. This time he brought Mr. and lVlrs. Donly a little boy. Cn this morning, in 1842, the morning star lingered as long as the king of the heavens would permit. The parents named the boy Phil. When Pheme became old enough to wear short dresses, her mother made her a little white dress, gave her a pretty pair of black shoes and stockings, and tied her golden curls with a yellow ribbon. Pheme was a very striking child. with beautiful curls, piercing blue eyes, rosy cheeks and lips that would tempt a Baby When Phil had reached the proper age, his mother made him a pair of short blue trousers and a white blouse. Phil was a noble-faced boy, with dark hair, a high forehead, heavy set eyebrows and a broad mouth. Phil 61 l l l 4 ,,,. F , .l lr and Pheme wore these cute little suits only on special occasions. On ordinary occasions they used their gingham aprons. They went through all the joys and fusses of childhood. Phil would steal Pheme's dolls, she would pull his hair or hit him with a broom. Then he would grab her by the hair. She would, of course, cry and run to tell Mrs. Donly. Then Mrs. Donly would serve hickory tea to Phil. While he was receiving, Pheme would stand over by the wall with a look half of revenge, half of sorrow. Her apron would have one more hole in it after the operation, for she generally chewed it on ordinary occasions, and always on extraordinary occasions. But this was no extraordinary occasion. l had better say exciting occasion. When it was all over, and Phil's cheeks had been made a desert, she would go up to him and say: Phil, l's sorry I told on youf' and would kiss him. All her joys were his joys, and all his sorrows were hers. When she had a stick of candy Phil would get half. When he had to sweep around the back door, Pheme would get her broom, too. Phil was always a friend indeed, for he was always a friend in need. l-le possessed one of those hearty appetites common to all boys. Phil's doctor bill for the whole year could be paid with the money received from the sale of his old shoes. l-le had only two pairs a year. Sometimes, when Phil would go to see Pheme on Saturday, Pheme would be out helping her mother cook the Sabbath pies. Phil could not repress the swal- lowing as soon as he came within smelling distance. l-le would try to make his craving stop, but couldn't. Before he knew it he would say something like this: upheme, l ain't had no blackberry pie dis yearf, Oh, well, Phil, I'll give you a piece. Oh, no, Pheme, you keep it. Oh, no, you take it, Phil. upheme, you kin keep itf' No, Phil, you must have it. Well, t-h-a-n-k you. No word could get out of l3hil's mouth now for a few minutes. Coming a little closer to the place where culinary operations were being carried on. he would make some complimentary remark to lVlrs. Youdon: lVlrs. Youdon. you sho kin make good tarts. Did you make them you sent ma? They sho was good. Yes, Phil. l make all my pastry. Piil. swallowing, said, Wliat's dat? l mean all my tarts and pies and cookies' Yes-um. Hljheme, you may run now and play with Phil. 62 l i i 1 is I I 3 l l l l 1 l gl la it l, 1. 5. l 1? il li l 5 v il li V l i I L Off they would go to play the games they had played day in and day out. Now this is a part of the child life of Phil and Pheme. Years have passed, and we find the village in the valley in a vale of sorrow. Phil was now a father and Pheme a mother. There was never a father more proud of his sons than was Phil, nor was there ever a mother of her daughters more proud than was Pheme. Amid all the joys of home life, when life was reflecting a smile into the home of Phil and Pheme, a demon, more cruel than death, with an iron body and limbs of brass, wearing the head of a lion, and with the speed of an eagle, swooped down upon this happy home. It came with devouring in its wings for Phil and Pheme. The Civil War carried away Phil into the midst of shot and shellg while Pheme it left at home to act the heroine there. With that Anglo-Saxon blood in her veins, which never curdles, she flinched not, but endured the privation, the destitution, and bore up the cares of the home life with no less fidelity than did those who wore the gray at Lookout Mountain and Gettysburg. Time has sped on apace. The smoke of battle has cleared away, and the birds have renewed their songs. No longer do the brave hearts of Phil and Pheme yearn for each other, for their home life has been regained, and the children are all bright in the bloom of life. As there are always a few tall oaks which tower above the rest in the forest, so there are some of Philomathea's and Euphemia's sons who are or have been the very bulwarks of the nation, such as Major C. Hemphill, Dr. Darlington, Dr. W. M. Grier, Judge Ira B. Jones, Judge H. Miller and Dr. W. L. Pressly. The White and the Blue nor the White, Black and Yellow can never trail so long as such sons carry the staffg the diamond will never cease to glitter, nor the star to twinkle. R. C. GRIER. ,al J.. l tile l .- NDYBILL BY EDGAR LONG Dedicated-tollVlaster David Kennedy Qld Andy Bill ain't got no teeth ,Cept one or two in frontg And Andyls nose don't stick out much, . ,g But's kinder sawed off blunt. Poor Andy Bill! Poor Andy! 1 i 1 l Old Andy Bill ainst got no coat ' 'Cept one what's turnt all brown, An' Andyls tie ain't never tied When Andy ,comes down town. Poor Andy Bill! Poor Andy! 'Old Andy Bill ain't much fer stile, l-le don't know etiketg He makes mistakes in companee And blunders lots, you bet. Poor Andy Bill! Poor Andy! Poor Andy Bill has got a wifeg She makes it hot for Andy. She rakes him out most ev'ry day, And cusses, oh, jist dandy. Poor Andy Bill! Poor Andy! f lt's Andy this an, Andy thatg lt's Andy come and go, ,Till Andy gits all tangled up, l-lis mistris treats him so. I Poor Andy Bill! Poor Andy! No, Andy Bill ain't very much Un litirature ner art: l-lis cloze and wife ain't jest my style, But Andy's got a heart. lVlr. Andrew Williani! l 11.1 - The Ships of Fancy The shadows seem a silver sea Where Fancy's ships in safety glideg And on the tide, with movement free, A summer stillness doth abideg This murmur'd music, soft and still, Removes our minds from earth to sky, And lets our golden fancies fill The shadow ships which nearby lie. Now softly sail our shadow ships Upon this silent sea to-nightg For Fancy free, her anchor slips, And soon our ships are out of sight. To-night their silver sails are spread Towards ports that we will never se And by our dreams we're lightly led ln shadow ships far out at sea. E C. I-I. NABERS. I h C Lx s. I vi, l X 2 yi mf V , pl 1 I I L1 J L yi N 4 3 I. E N... CAMPUS. AND RY ORMITU D Heroes of Peace ANKIND, from earliest dawn of history down to the XYZ present time, has lauded and praised those who per- EZ 5 formed heroic deeds, who dared and did beyond their fellows. It thrills the blood of all of us to see a fellow- E Q being thick beset with difficulties and still unconquer- able. Cf old, men made the way before mighty Nim- S 'ywf 5 A W rod, not because he was good and virtuous, but because he was heroic and devoid of fear. The heroes of Troy, the Trojan veterans valiant in battle, went down before the more valiant heroes of Hellas and admired the prowess, while they felt the yoke, of their conquerers. Napoleon, although a destroyer of men and nations, yet lives in men's minds as a hero because he planned and executed fearlessly, and that without dependence on any power save his own strong arm. The American pioneers command the world's admiration because they, rather than yield to tyranny, faced savage beasts and more savage men in the untamed wilderness, and made for them- selves and descendants a dwelling-place in a virgin country. It is observable that almost throughout man's past history his ideal hero has been a warrior hero. The greatest stories of heroism in all lands have been told of those who won their laurels by the sword. Greece, who has sung the praises of her heroes as no other nation has done, makes the warrior Achilles her ideal. Agamemnon, King of men, was a man of blood. Themistocles and Alcibi- ades established their fame by deeds done on the field of battle. Greece had no songs of victory to sing except to those who were victorious in battle. Rome awoke to song only when her returning commanders brought captive kings and peoples home in their train, and nothing so stirred the populace as the tramp of legions, the thud of the battle-axe, and the blare of war trumpet. So firmly was it stamped on the popular mind that heroism consisted in letting the blood of men, that women crowded the arena and goaded the gladiators into stabbing one another with cries, of kill, kill. Qnly with the advent of Christianity and the civilization that it brought did men fully grasp the thought that their fellow-men were made to love. and not to kill. This new conception has changed man's viewpoint with regard to 67 f 2 ! 5 his fellow-creatures, and will change it yet more as the generations come and go. The new kind of hero is gradually coming into his own. Time was when, if a man put himself under all kinds of privation and hardship and disinterestedly sought to uplift the mass of men, he would cause wonder. The spirit which prompted that first contemptuous question, Am l my brother's keeper? has long survived the generation in which it was first uttered, and man repeated in word and deed for ages that he was not his brother's keeper. Mankind never fully grasped the idea, until the Greatest Friend man ever had told the story of the good Samaritan. Now for nineteen hundred years it has been growing on men's consciousnesses, and one is no longer hailed hero who wades in blood of his own kind to some object of place or powerg but he who grapples with truth and faces and solves the great problems before men is accounted worthy of all honor. Men of small consequence scoff at the daring Peary for trying to reach the North Pole, asking what will be gained if it is ever discovered. Frivolous ones are not slow to ridicule the astronomers who spend their lives trying to ascertain whether Mars is inhabited. Their narrow conceptions and small minds prevent them from seeing the great advantages that might accrue to man from these long-sought discoveries. Their fearful minds turn in terror from such startling revelations as science announces to us. They fear lest some discovery shall destroy the roots and foundation of their inherited beliefs. They fear to face the truth as it exists. They are the heroes, are they not, who face the truth, no matter what it reveals? Let the daring explorers of the far North push onward in their questg let the star-gazers continue their nightly vigils for the revelations that may change the whole life of men. They shall have their reward, if they faint not. Mankind has been almost satiated with bloodshed, and begins to realize that he is the greatest man who does greatest service for his fellowman. A moral hero is admired merely as a moral herog but unless the moral hero play the part of brother to his neighbor, he is only a poor specimen of hero. Coper- nicus shocked the churchmen with the announcement that the sun, and not the earth, was the center of the Solar system. l-le brought ridicule, calumny, and superstitious hatred upon himself. l-lis battle was harder to fight than that of Achilles, because the army looked on and applauded while Achilles performed his deeds. ln the case of Copernicus, no cheering multitude urged him on. no plaudits of delighted followers nerved him to greater achievements. Alone in his watch-tower, with only his own thoughts and his thirst for truth to cheer him, he worked patiently away. No admiring multitude greeted the announce- ment of his discoveries with applause and congratulation. lnstead, he was ridiculed and threatened with excommunication from the church. l-le was 63 denounced for not accepting the interpretation of these mysteries as the rest of mankind did. Yet for all that, new races of men have vindicated his course and acknowledged the world's debt to him, while Achilles is remembered only as the half-mythological hero of an ancient nation. Columbus, daring and enduring the taunts of narrow-minded critics, was a greater hero than Napoleon, who vaulted to imperial power over the corpses of soldiers and citizens. l-le faced and overcame dangers more terrifying to superstitious minds than all the enemies Napoleon ever faced, and all this he did remembering that he was his brother's keeper, and that he would be doing more nobly to carry the tidings of peace across the sea to unknown people than to carry to them the sword. The Chemist, toiling in experiment and research in his laboratory, heedless of the plaudits or criticisms of men, seeking to find out the mystery of life, trying to dispel ignorance and replace it with knowledge, is a hero who eclipses Han- nibal, as he leads his devastating army over the fields of Italy. That physician who exposed himself to Yellow fever by mosquito innoculation, and thus found the cause and remedy for that great plague, compares not unfavorably, in the matter of heroism, with Alexander, who marked his path through Asia with fire and sword. Dr. Koch, the worldis greatest authority on tuberculosis, who recently attended the tuberculosis Congress at Washington, is no less deserving of hero-worship than Prince Henry of Prussia, who also made a visit to our country in recent years. The prince was received with every attention which hereditary awe for royalty could devise, which a still-lingering fondness for a hero of the ancient type could suggest. The scientist also received a warm welcome and complimentary notices from the press of the country. The only study of the Prince was how to maintain armies and navies that will annihilate men in case of War. l-le has no thought of men but to rule over them as a prince, the scientist had no thought of men but to help them and rid them of one of their greatest and most formidable enemies, the Great White Plague. The former is the old type of hero that compels men's obedience by superior force and caste privilege, the latter compels the love and esteem of men by ridding them of one of their worst enemies. Thomas A. Edison, careless of the praise of men, but the patentee of more than a thousand inventions useful to man, cannot suffer in comparison with Richmond P. I-lobson, an ephemeral hero, who insists that we need yet more terrible engines of war. Students of history have noted the change of beliefs and philosophies from generation to generation. They have seen nations live and die by this faith and that philosophy, only to behold a succeeding nation pull down the old idols and set up new ones in their stead. Science, advancing cautiously step by step, has scattered old beliefs and philosophies and announced new 69 wonders, until man gasps and wonders if the riddle of the universe will ever be guessed. Sympathy and oneness of purpose have grown between nations as they have watched one another's struggles with eternal problems of life, love and death, and one united cry goes up from the millions of earth for light on these World-old questions. The men who solve the problems are fast becoming the heroes of the day, and rightly so. With desire to help their fellow-men, they toil on, seeking here to combat disease, there to subdue and harness the great forces of the universe for man,s use, and in the final muster of heroes, these heroes of science, exploration and battle with nature will stand promi- nently on Fame's eternal camping ground. IVI. B. HOOD, ,09. I 1 Mabel Smiles What matter though the sun be hid? What matter though the clouds be g There's joy enough within my mind- For Mabel smiles at me to-day. There,s loving gladness in the airg There's music,s echo far awayg They,re singing merry through the streets For Mabel smiles at me to-clay. Ah, who would care what time may tell, Cr what the future years may say? There's love enough within the hour- For Mabel smiles at me to-clay. J I ray x 1 5 i . ! E 1 V i E W 1 . I .,.,,Tw iw ,..,,,,. ,,T.,..,f-5. ,smm I. z:si,gv Q5 ,.m,,Af WL '-his - -- fiwM. r ,, f-L O. O N H. L ' --4 U4 ffl C-4 4 U E Z C E-I' ill 'T' 4 D M. IN -.1 P' 'N v-4 ..J 'fl A Gilt of God At first were born the earth and sky, The footstool and the throneg Next light from darkness 'part did Hyg The sea and earth each found a home. The latter were the planting parts Where seeds of form, divinely laid, Gave rise to frames with pulsing hearts, And also fruits and flowers made. A scene of grace it must have been, Creation thus far perform'd: A Paradise, no sign of sin, A place by fern and rose adorned. But all of this was made for moreg The universe was not a whole Until a man o,er it did soar, Enthroned in him a living soul. C man! Thou image of thy God! lnheritor of Howerid Eden's spot! Possess'd of earth's most fertile sod, Oh, why was sin to be thy lot? Divine command gave thee a will, A will which was thine owng Why didst thou choose, in erring skill, A course, the cause of nature's groan? Then did strict justice drive thee out To toil against, and Fight with sin: For years and years the strife was stout, Till last the evil seem'd would win. 73 When man, like sheep, had gone astray, When mortals trod the weary wild, There seeking lone salvation's way, How then could he be reeoncil'd? When he had sinned and almost died, Of all his glory was divest, On one mere thread he then relied,- That thread was living to be blest. The light of hope had disappeared From nearly ev'ry human heart, When Love, the gift of Cod, was reared To bless, to joy, and Life impart. The Gift in human form was clothed, To suffer here with fellowmen, To be despised, abhorred, and loathed, And yet to keep aloof from sin. Of all, 'twas sent to win the soul Which had been justly lost, To die in shame and pain untold Upon the shadow'd cross. Again, it seems divinely willed To give the world a standard high,- A sense of Love not to be chilled, And surely not to die. Oh look at Love as seen in him,- An attribute so pure and strong, A light of heaven born, but dim When over all comes Satan's throng. His Love was like the clear blue sky, Whose great expanse unmeasured stands, Like seas, whose waves we may descry, But 'neath whose depth are unknown sands 74 O Love of Christ! A gift from God! A Love so deep 'twas joy to die, When doing so and passing back to sod Cn lofty aim thou didst rely. But what, O Man, is Love to-day? I-last thou forgotten where 'twas born, And where for you it lay? If not, why stands it now so unadorned? Canst thou degrade and weaken that Which was of all retained? Canst thou attempt to now combat With pow'r that is of God ordained? Has Love for thee no higher plane Than that you gain a lustful end? Can you no longer it retain In high estate, its pureness to defend? And woman, too! Thou, whose nature is So much more soft than that of man! Must thy sweet name be hardened more than his Has thy firm bark of Love been run astrand? Canst thou, in like of whom we picture Cherubim, Debase thy purpose here? Canst thou, to whom we liken Seraphim, Be to thy being insincere? Has art so lightly touched thy soul That thou dost to deception yield? Canst thou not keep a stainless whole, If thou for aid take Love as shield? Can man and woman still exist With Love, their bond, so much debased? Can mutual trust for them subsist, With all that's 'tween them so erased? 75 Can faith of sex in sex abide At high society,s calls? Can thoughts of Love be basely tied To dreams of lustful halls? To both of you a gift was made, A Paradise, at start of timeg There thou didst sin, and wast delayed From joying more in life sublime. A 'second gift to you was sent, When Cod gave Love in swaddlin clothes' g , If this reject, you must repent In some just way your Father knows. Teach us, 0 Love, thy loftiest endg That we may see and understand How best to fight and to contend Against the course of evil's hand. -EDGAR W. PI-IARR These Children About the Street By Prof. Edgar Long. Dedicated to Miss Edith Todd They're lily babes with skyey eyesg They're fays in pinafores neatg They're winking, beaming dewdrops. Who? These children about the street. They,re fairies wearing real clothesg They're folks with lips red-sweet. What would I do, what you, without These children about the street? fluixx XZ N Vee' ' . f 1 I , 1 i 4 ,QriI2'.xfy XT 4 r A xlilmlgzf' F O' gf' Does doubt assailP Am l afraidg Does creed seem incomplete? Why trouble, heart? Behold These children about the street: They laugh, they play, they live and sing. Their baby love l entreat. The world is mine when l have won These children about the street. They teach me hopeg they teach me love. Let me to them retreat. l'm nearest Cod when l'm nearest to These children about the street. ll cheeks were flushing white, blended with mellowed s 4 D' Qs? 5 I N! :sf w a 1f , , sax, as 1-5 Getting Even UCILE SWIFT was to the physical eye, a model of beauty and perfection. l-ler head was crowned with the tresses of her golden hair, that flowed and floated like the stream and fell in masses down her neck. She was the proud possessor of dark brown eyes whose power to charm no one could escape. Her lips were rosy and as tempting as the first cherries of May. l-ler red. And combined with these members was her dear sweet face, which be- tokened all things dear and goodg the light of something yet to come, was there asleep, and waiting for the opening day, when childish thoughts, like flowers, would drift away. For a man to stand and gaze upon her lovely face, the common wonder of all men could but come to himg how, among so many millions of faces, there should be none alike. Lucile was not only recognized as the belle of the community, but was sure to carry away the highest honors of all, in and out-of-door exercises as well. The perfect time which she kept with music and the graceful way she glided over a dancing hall always enabled her to be crowned queen of each and every German. The ease with which she handled a deck of cards and the interest which she took in a game of whist always made her a welcome guest at the card table. The nimble way she skipped over the ground and the dexterity with which she placed a ball with a racket qualified her to surpass all her accom- plices on the tennis-court. I-ler steady nerve and clear eyesight enabled her to take a rifle and center a target at a greater distance than any of her young men or lady friends. ln short, she was a Hlalapaloosan for fair, and the sweetest bit of fruit that ever made a fellow's mouth water. It had, however, always been a puzzle to the community why such a boy as lack Armstrong could love such a girl as Louise Swiftg for they were of a very different type indeed. Jack was grave and reserved beyond his years. yet in his quiet face there was a gentle sweetness touchingly blended with manli- ness and strength. Naturally, then, he never became interested enough in dancing 7S to attend a ball, and card playing appealed so very little to his nature that he never took time to learn one card from another. True, he was an expert tennis player and riflemang but he never amused himself in any way until every duty had been conscientiously performed. Cn the other hand, he was an active and punctual member of the church and a leader in the Young lVlen's Christian Association. He never neglected to talk to a young man about the welfare of his soul whenever an opportunity presented itself. At least, then, .lack took life more seriously than did Lucile. As jack could not approve of the gay way in which Lucile was living, and as their wedding day was fast drawing nigh, he decided to take a long walk and ask her, as her true lover, to give up her life of pleasure and uselessness and to take up a life of service and usefulness. The day for the intended walk came, and a lovelier day never dawned upon the forest of majestic oaks. It was a bright spring morning when they set out, the birds were twittering merrily in their leafy coverts, and the long grey mass hung in shadowy drapery from the old oaks, the dew was still glittering upon the leaves, and the air was sweet with the early breath of Howersg but fairer than these voiceless children of spring, sat Lucile by .Iack's side, when his thoughts turned to love and caused him to speak thus: Lucile, l am going to ask you something which l have been wanting to ask for a long timeg and, as you have declared your entire devotion to me, l do not think you will refuse my earnest request. Now, dearest, it is this: Will you not give up dancing, card-playing and all other such foolish pleasures? With this her flashing eyes met his, and she cruelly thrust these bitter words into his very ears: Jack, l think you have gone entirely too farg you know, as well as l do, that l will not give up my pleasures for you or any one else. l will get even with you for asking me such an absurd question. l will, if l am a lifetime in doing so. Go homeg l will come whenever l so desiref' Poor Jack took her at her word, and, with faltering step, left the one whom he so dearly loved. When he was out of her sight, he made up his mind to conceal himself near the road and to end his miserable life after he saw his darling girl pass by on her way home. l-lere he watched and waitedg but, as more than an hour's time had now elapsed, he decided to retrace his footsteps and see if she had gone home by another way, or if any misfortune had befallen his fairy queen. He returnedg and, when he found her, she was resting herself on one hand and wiping her eyes with the other one. Noiselessly he came near her, and gently asked if anything had gone wrong. At the soft sound of his voice, she lifted her eyes till they met his, and tenderly said. 79 5'Sit down, slack, for I have a long story to tell you. Do you wish to hear it? Yes, Lucile, you know I will listen with pleasure to your storyf, lack, shortly after you left me, I lay down here and was soon fast asleep, and in my sleep I dreamed a very curious dream. Dear, I could not bear to tell you my vision if the joy of the last part did not outweigh so far the sadness of the first partg for in the beginning of the dream I suffered all the horrors and agonies of hell, and in the end, I enjoyed all the bliss and happiness of heaven. Now to the dream. As I entered the heavy black gate of hell, Satan examined my transgressions, and, then, I was led to the place where those are punished who seek the pleasures' and luxuries of this world. This awful den was dark as death and filled with the pitiful shrieks and woeful sounds of its unfortunate inmates. I-low I did suffer? O! how I did long to be freed from this awful place, but no hope of again seeing the beautiful sunlight or my much beloved friends ever came to comfort me. I was lonesome, yesg forever lone- some. This was bad indeed, but not the worst by any means. One night, for all was night, the fallen angel brought me before him and judged me for my transgressions the second time. Upon his decision I was doomed to spend eternity with the wrathful and those who do not master their tempers. With trembling steps, I was led down a stream of black water which flowed into this marrah of torment, for such it was. This black swamp was full of muddy people who were fighting each other, not only with their hands, but also with their heads and feet. They were just literally tearing each other to pieces with their nails and teeth. As soon as I was forced into this black pool, these scratching, fighting people sprang upon me and almost tore me to fragments in their mad rage. After they had mangled me in this boggy morass, I was as black and frightful looking as they were. When I collected myself sufficiently to think, I first thought of what my friends and relatives would do and say if they could only see me in my hellish condition. Then, I thought of all the joy and blessedness I had allowed my lack of self-control to rob me of. Q! the bitterness of a lost oportunityg These thoughts, combined with my physical torment and suffering, made my agony so great that the parting of a spiritual soul from a body of clay would have been sweet and a welcome guest to me in comparison. jack, dear, it is with a sigh of relief that I leave the first part of my dream and take up the last part. Now, if you will remember the awful story I have just related to you, it will magnify the glorious one that I am about to tell you. An angel came down into the very depths of hell and carried me up. up until we came in sight of the l-loly City of Cod. Here, the angel, with uplifted Si jf l l I r l E l 4 l i . l 1 l I 1 I l l v N i i I I l i l l I I 1 eyes and folded hands, prayed a silent prayer, and, in an instant, l was trans- flgured from the appearance of a demon to that of an angel. After this trans- figuration, l was led into the Golden Streeted City, which was circular in shape and had portly entrances, at short intervals, around its entire circumference. After we had entered this great arena, the angel left me and l was amazed with the glory of its magnificence. Soon, a rustling, as of wings, and a murmuring, as of music, come from above to my attentive ears. I turned my head upward to see whence these faint sounds were coming, but my eyes could not penetrate the bright golden sky which was above them. So pleasing were these gentle sounds to my perceptive ears that l continued to gaze steadfastly into the ethereal regions whence they continued to come. As l thus stood and stared, wings budded forth from my shoulders, but they were not furnished with feathers. I could not, with all my fluttering, lift myself from the golden street on which l was standing. ln my vain struggle to mount upward an infant angel came flying to me and placed in my wing a beautiful plume. This beau- tiful little celestial being said that she gave me this feather because l was kind enough, while on earth, to mend her broken doll. Then, another angel came and placed in my wing another large feather, because l had treated her so kindly during her worldly afllictions and cares. When my wings had been feathered in this way, l rose through the bright sky above me, and as l flew higher and higher, the faint sounds grew louder and sweeter. l passed on and on until I came in sight of the fairy-like beings who were making the melodious sounds. These beings were dancing dances and singing songs that are only seen and heard in the, heavens. Now, after l had seen the mysteries of heaven, the angel that had taken me from the lowest depths of hades took me upon an exceedingly high pinnacle where l could see both the bliss of heaven and the woe of hell. Then she asked me if l would not give up the pleasures of the world and thereby inherit all the glories of heaven. l told her that l would. just as Lucile finished her story, she tenderly folded her arms about lacks neck and whispered these words: Now, Jack, if you will allow me, I will get even with you. l will be your loving, Christian wife. Then lack drew her close to his bursting heart, and, mid sobs of joy, only said: l..ucile, l love you still. j. S. PLAXCO. 'O9. Air Castles When darkness descends on valley and grove, Then truant-like Fancy prepares for a roveg To Reason she says, With thy logic be still, To-night l'm determined to have my own will. Then gaily she bears us, her captive in chains, With the swiftness of thought over mountains and plains One moment with fairies we sport on the green, The next in grave councils of sages we're seen. Like Midas, whose touch turned pebbles to gold, Our Fancy works wonders too great to be toldg ln dreams she oft tells us of rich diadems, With garlands of straw changed to chaplets of gems. Thus musing, we lie on our pillows at morn, And think of bright visions that fade with the dawn, Though we strive to detain them, in vain is our care, For soon they all vanish, our castles in air. Though moonbeam and starbeam may bear us away, We know that our journey must end before day, The brightness of light puts a stop to our dreams, Shows the world as it is, and not as it seems. When morning returns, it brings back the strife That dreaming's unable to keep from our life, Qur Fancyis retired, with her pinion all furled, And left us alone in a practical world. C. H, NABERS. 52 , f, Au ., ,gf V H L 11 Q ! -aff 'A ' , J .1 4 I 4 :J 4 9. The Making of Americans SPEECH WITH WHICH IVIR. W. C. IVIcLAIN WON IN THE PRELIMINARY CONTEST TO REPRESENT ERSKINE AT GREENWOOD IN THE S. C. ORATORICAL CONTEST. 'I 'Zz: ROM the four corners of Europe were drawn the founders of the little settlements that were, in the course X 654 X jj These early settlers were not the visionary heroes our of human events, destined to expand into an empire. s J Xs , Z historians have held up before us, they were only 4 K simple men and women of the seventeenth century, rnh' 5 ' with all the faults and fanaticisms of their age. They if I 1 If I were, however, a people inured to labor, they had been stormed by the rugged forces of experience, and they had Hed to an unknown region for the sake of an ideal. This ideal was unconquerable freedom, free- dom of institutions, freedom of thought, and freedom of religion. I..ed on by such men as Roger Williams, who saw a clear-shining inward light not to be dimmed by the deft logic of a disputacious age, they established on a firm foun- dation each of these constituents of perfect liberty. Altho the original colonies were as diverse in their language, institutions, and laws, as were England, France, I-Iolland, Scotland, and Ireland, yet on account of their established principles, aided and upheld by a deep and lasting love for this summer land of the free, and having passed thru the fiery furnace of a cruel war to perpetuate this liberty, they became united and welded into one nation against whom the combined forces of the universe are futile and to whom the dying empires of the East are looking for the reviving Hame of new life. We are to-day the inheritors of the most potent motives that have moved mankind during all the ages past, the most poent motives that will move man- kind thruout the ceaseless cycles of ages yet unborn, we are the safeguards of liberty, bravery, truth, and justiceg we are the fountain-source from which the decadent empires of earth are drawing their enlightment, their freedom, their progress, and their soul-ennobling ideas of morality: we are a nation eulogized by the Princes and powers of earth, we are that ideal devoutly looked for by 8.1 the greatest free-thinkers of all time, our citizenship is the high-water mark toward which the struggling masses of mankind are striving. Cn these bed-rock principles has been erected a nation, the ideal of the world, the synonym for the culmination of the progress of the ages. By the inherent majesty of our citizenship we have blended into our nationality the fleeing fugitives from the tyrannical despotisms of Europe. We have made them one with us. ln their breasts throbs that same undying patriotism which to-day makes us a united people. If our country is to retain its unity, we must preserve inviolate those principles upon which our nation was builded. But, citizens of the American Republic, we are to-day face to face with the legions of a mighty army of immigrants that threaten to besmear and tear down our institutions and disrupt the unity of our national life. Greater problem never confronted a nation. Within the past twelve years more than five million aliens have found refuge under our Hag. They come from the crime-stained shores of eastern and southern Europe, knowing no honor save the honor of the assassin's dagger and the anarchist's bomb. Hundreds of thousands land in America each year with less than thirty dollars to start a new life in a new world. An alarming proportion of these immi- grants segregate in our large cities, colonize in little clans, form large towns within the slum districts, and set up again their oldlinstitutions and standards of life. Almost wholly illiterate, they can neither read nor write their own names. Coming from Austria-Hungary, Russia, and ltaly, countries whose past record is a black blot on the plain page of world-history, they bring with them no heri- tage of noble ancestry, no patriotic impulses. They are the sewage of the East- ern Hemisphere, steeped in vice and crime, breeding social, political, and moral disease, and giving off the stench of Anarchy and Socialism. lVloreover, these immigrants are partially, if not wholly, immoral. Tho nominally Catholics, they really have never seen anything of the Christ-spirit, to them the ethics of the Sermon on the lVlount is wholly, yet sublimely, strange. They are the sick, and the naked, and the hungryg they are the worn and weary ones of earth. A nation which harbors diverse and heterogeneous peoples will lose all national spirit and patriotism, the essentials to a lasting greatness. ln order to instill into their hearts and lives our threefold freedom and patriotism, in order to build them into the structure of our ideal citizenship, and thereby to make of them Americans, we must distribute, educate, and Christianize these aliens. Since it is impossible to Americanize a people who form colonies with old- world institutions and ideals of life, we must remove them from the slums of our cities. They should be given an environment of freedom, purity, and morality. Ss Having labored for a penny a day in the dark salt mines of Austria, on the cheerless black lands of Russia, and in the dingy macaroni-shops of Italy, these immigrants will become industrious toilers on the sunny cotton fields of the South, on the golden grain fields of the West, in the tropical paradise of the great Southwest, and in the sanitary factories of New England. lf these aliens were evenly distributed, says Prof. Adams, of the University of Wis- consin, their influence on labor conditions would be slight as compared with that of American workmen, while the advantages of immigration would be greatly increased. Since proper distribution would place only one immigrant in a community of eighty Americans, the problem of assimilation becomes prac- tically solved. Having thoroly and evenly distributed these aliens, we must give them education. ---- Qurs is the best system of public schools in the world. Take every little alien, with his chubby-little, dirty-little hands, with his dimpled cheeks and great dark eyes, place him in our schools beside our own children, teach him to throw rocks, to shoot marbles, to Hy kites, teach him to read and write, and in clear voice and pure English to sing, God bless our land of liberty. Teach him to love the Hag of our nation, the inspirer in battle, the guardian of our homes, whose broad stripes and bright stars stand for bravery, purity, truth, and union. Teach him, our little adopted child, to pledge his heart, his life, and his sacred honor to love and protect our Hag, our country, and our American liberty for- ever. Transcendingly above and beyond this, let us instill into his heart a love for our God. Tell him of that little Jewish boy from the carpenter shop of Nazareth who, tho born in a manger two thousand years ago, to-day numbers His followers by the millions. Since Christ died for the immigrant as truly as for us, let us send native preachers among them and invite them to our churches. That love which did not hesitate to sacrifice the Prince of Peace will make of the most degraded people a mighty nation. The Word of God has raised mankind from the breaking forth of the first dawn, down the ringing grooves of change, until to-day its power is personified in the American citizen. Having studied the conditions of these immigrants and having searched out the means by which they can be Americanized, we sound the bugle-note of the Toiling Son. Let us not falter, let us not become faint-hearted, looking always to the hovering cloud of our ancestors, seeking inspiration from the one great Universal Son witness, let us put forth all the strength of our great national manhood to give to the poorest comer the magical means of making a man. To work! everyone who is an American, to work! every one who has felt the thrill of power and love from the lowly Shepherd of the Judean hills. And S6 then on that great day when the nations of earth shall all be assembled, the great Evangel of the Royal Law will place laurel wreaths of victory on the heads of the American people and they shall hear this plaudit, Well done, thou good and faithful servantf' they were sick and ye visited them, naked and ye clothed them, they were worn and weary, and ye gave them rest. Then that vast multitude, for whom we have been the uplift, will sing to Angel and Seraph accompaniment, this our great battle hymn: Land that we love! Thou glory of the world! Thou refuge of the noble heart oppressed, Oh, never be thy shining image hurled From its high place in the adoring breast Of him who worships thee with jealous love! Keep thou thy starry forehead as the dove, All white, and to the Eternal Dawn inclined! Thou art not for thyself, but for mankind, And to despair of thee were to despair Of man, of man's high destiny, of God. , , i is , pl!! .' A rf- !: c ig! Nxt! .- ...Q 1' I j 1 4 -:-I-'.-'X X ,XX . -wi N A X' X SS 5-1 I 2 1 imuun-u'IH'l'!l N X-fl .--' -f., l!lU l j I W 1 HALL. LU M ATU EA N 111 P R U INTER1 A. X Q 1 Z' I - Z I ff 1 2 ,, -. .-4 .-J .... f! -4 A V -1 .- .,. P' Z H E , , SKINTAN STAFF. R A . F --. TH Erskinian Staff M. B. Hood, Edirordri-Ciiiof. B. L. Parkinson, Literary Editor. C. E. IVIcCaw, Assistant Literary Editor. s. J. Hood, Aiorrriii Ediror. W. W. Boyce., Athletic ood Y. M. Q. A. Editor W. C. 1v1oLoio, Poetry ood Short Story Editor. J. 5. Plaxco, Local Editor. Mioo Belle Nickels ood Mioo Lois soon, Exchange Editors. R. E. Gettys, Eiioiooso Moriooor. C. H. Sheffield, Assistant Business Managei' 9 The Erslcinian I-IE ERSKINIAN represents the literary life of the x.fi X College. Every college that emphasizes the literary X X 1 feature should support and encourage a college maga- N V N f . . . . X I I been an important factor in the life of Erskine students. The Esskinianv is the successor of the Collegiate 3' zine. For this reason The Erskinianw has always 623 5 , M49 Q Recorder, which was the literary medium of the students in the early history of the institution. The magazine consists of the following departments: Editorial, Literary, Exchange, Poetry and Short Stories, Athletics, Y. lVl. C. A., Alumni and Local. ln the literary department we publish all contributions of a distinctly literary nature from students of any class, or alumni of the college. This de- partment is designed to foster the literary spirit in the college life and to encour- age literary efforts on the part of the students. To stimulate further original literary effort, the societies this year changed the department of Current Events to a department of poems and short stories. The Societies and The Erskinianv offer two medals, one for the best original story and one for the best poem contributed by any student in college. Q2 Annual Staff C. B. Elliott, Editor-in-Chief. T. W. Baldwin, Assistant Editor-in-Chief. C. H. Nabers, Art Editor. K. B. Phagan, Business Manager. M. G. MeDonald, Assistant Business Manager. Miss Hamilton Henry, Literary Editor. B. L. Parkinson, Athletics and Y. M. C. A. Editor A J. H. White, Euphemian Editor. W. C. MoLain, Philomathean Editor. W. W. Boyce, Poet. . E. W. Pharr, Writer of Will. Miss Lois Snell, Senior Historian. T. C.. Shelton, Junior Historian. R. A. Ctrier, Sophomore Historian. Miss Helen Matthews, Freshman Historian. 93 Ll.. EUPIIEMIAN HALL. The Euphemian Literary Society 49' ENTLE reader, seventy years ago, thirty young men, Esf striving to advance the cause of mental and moral SQ 2 culture, banded themselves together and founded an institution which they called The Euphemian Literary fr xy 1 7X Society, which we still have to-day. As long and A brilliant as has been the history of Erskine College, just A so long and brilliant has the history of Euphemia been. Should we name the Alumni of our beloved Society, we would recall names as honored and as brilliant as any found on History's pages. Were we able to gather all that is grand in song and speech and weave it into a chaplet of honor to these, our Alumni, yet would we fail to render adequate tribute to them, for they have left and will leave records more imperishable and monu- ments more lasting than sculptured marble or polished bronze! Allow us to say to those who are members now, that they press onward and upward. Erect your standard high, feeling as you may, that in our glorious system of equal rights, where all may aspire to literary and official honor, there is no niche in the temple of fame, in which the most unpretending of our worthy band may not, by a well-directed effort, be enabled to inscribe his name. ' With a fond hope and a sincere wish that the Euphemean Society may continue through the future as she has in the past, an instrument of good to all who enter her walls, and earnestly commending her to the consideration of an appreciative public, we will conclude our brief record, brief, yet hopeful that it may contribute something to the advancement of a Society dear to every Euphemean's heart, and bearing within her nature the germ of usefulness, which must-which will secure the highest honor to her name for ages still to come. JAMES HARGLD WHITE. Qs ALL, H PIHLUMATIIEAN Philomathean Literary Society 'QHW afiiilfl N the lives of men and in the history of institutions there A xv I N Nd xl W ti '2 Nu , are crises which, tho seemingly trivial at the time of their occurrence, determine future history. Such a crisis in the history of Erskine College and in the lives of its students was the founding of Philomathea. All honor to those men who gave birth to this Society! All honor to her illustrious Alumni! All honor to those friends who ever, both by word and deed, give her their loyal support! To her Alumni she needs no praise, to her friends who are not familiar with her works she only points to an untarnished 'record of seventy years. To the world Philomathea proclaims that she stands and has ever stood for the highest development of her members and of the Erskine student-body. Remaining true to the noble conception of her founders, speaking ever for the uplift of her members, spreading her bettering influence over the entire Southland, Philomathea, by her glorious record and ideals, keeps calling us nearer to the true goal of all of us, to perfection, to beauty, to truth. W. CAMPBELL IVICLAIN. 97 . - '.5j1 ,3' .:'.,iiifr7 ' 15' If fff5'-iff.-f,'?5'QL! iffy? 4 5 ' ' f.5'g'7 E395-j3?!,i97f f T' :FI- ET-f4fi'F'7!7 QQ .:,:f3'QQ ' . . 41- -:za-:gi , V: Lu, ' , Q24 . . fc A I , 410- ,f fl 1'- f. f ! 1 f c f V L I 0 PEA QS Calliopean Literary Society Presiclent, Miss Lois Bryson. Vice-President, Miss llda jean Nixon. Secretary, Miss Mayme Burley. Treasurer, Miss Hamilton Henry. Beatrice Arnold Maud Bigham Dale Boyce Lois Bryson Mayme Burley Frances Darby Leila Dunlap Bettie Henry Hamilton Henry Helen Matthews COLORS : MEMBERS Belle Nickels llda Jean Nixon Susie Mae Norton Rose Sandifer Mattie Sloan Lois Snell Jennie Stewart Leona Squires Eugenia Walker Cathleen Wilson ROYAL PURPLE AND WHITE 99 Y. M. C. A. Department B. L. PARKINSON, Editor OFFICERS. W. W. Boyce, jr., President. R. T. Kerr, Vice-President. gl. P. Kennedy, Secretary. R. E.. Cettys, Treasurer. ln 1869 fifteen or twenty students organized a Y. lVl. C. A. in Erskine College. Until l892 the association held its meetings in a third-story room of the college building. When the new college was constructed, in 1892, a room, with a seating capacity of 350, especially designed for a Y. lVl. C. A. auditorium, was made on the first floor of the building. C Since every organization that has for its aim the making of all men one in Christ has a rapid and steady growth in Erskine College, the Y. lVl. C. A. has had a rapid growthg for its motto is John l 7:2l. As stated above, there were fifteen charter membersg and, for the last ten years, Erskine College Y. M. C. A. has been able to make very fine reports as to its work. ln l906 Erskine's association reported a larger per cent. in Y. M. C. A. and in Bible study than any other college in the South. This year we have 85 per cent. of the student body enrolled as Y. M. C. A. members, and 70 per cent. enrolled as Bible students. Last year the association sent nine students and one instructor as delegates to the Southern Student Conference, at Montreat, N. C. We believe that Sir Cieorge Williams's idea of a Y. M. C. A. has done more for the moral and Christian uplift of college men than any other idea. The Y. M. C. A. stands for the spiritual uplift of college men. It sees a prominent future for the entering Freshman, and points them to his future. 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A -.f-ff:--qw. :'f:::?- 1:-2.-1: :s1'5:Efe:r:11-.Q!f.:1mii:1:Ti35.-if:if.':.?-?,.-1:25-'gr-:I-U5:1-wa-:?fT2':-195:-T-r.5553:1:'-5'-,f.-i-. f-:fy-.-q-'-2-.. ., . . -.-rs. if:'JQ-'J-rxillfc-11--9- igv7.7-4205 -fi?-I1-'--Y.-Zz'wif-1-U5x:E :1'-.:-u1x'i'T-N-?-L':11:f- .'r1C-'.'.-Cl--S -EIf-'-'-7--i71E!1'S'-.ArifL-1:-f:'I:?--'fd1'1YJ-'.21'2i T-R'f--5.75'Q-,uri-J.'.1': -' 'l.'-K - - ...uv 1 ..-.--. .-- - . . fn-, 4- .,:'.z- -, 1 g: -,-:- .X ,-1, fave, .. g,',.g-,1-g,.: 45.3 5.1. 1.5.-, rfigggz-,?,-.-1'f,. : f.3,-,rg.3,g5:gi-I-A-'::j.g.'.:51.3-Lgyx..QS-555,33 Eg.-cf,.3Ec,j,7:x,:x: i.'g-Q:.fLEa . B. L. PARKINSON, IOI EDITOR , H .lf L 2 vzfhr.. ., si Erskine Baseball Team, V908 C. N. McCormick, Manager. W. C. McLain, Assistant. W. L. Pressly, Coach. Ebie Grier, Mascot. R. C. Crier VV. P. Crier C. B. Betts P. D. Cliisolm W. A. White R. D. Byrd N. H. Bell C. E. lVlcCaw W. L. Brownlee C. W. Kirkpatrick R. E. Stevenson Baseball On the preceding page is a cut of the squad that upheld E.rslcine's banner for the season of l908. They were fast lielders, efficient hitters, and were well coached by lVlr. W. L. Pressly, an alumnus of Erskine College, and a man prominent last season in the Carolina League. The prospects for a winning team this season are good. We have lost two of last year's stars, but there are some promising new men in college who can be developed into steady, effective ball players. Promising raw material always brings hope to the base ball enthusiasts, and especially does it bring hope when the fellows know that such a man as Billy Laval is doing the coaching this season. lVlr. Laval is, we believe, the best coach in the Carolinas. l-le coached the team of I907, and it won the championship of the State with a percentage of 900. The following is the l909 schedule: March 25, Greenville Team, in the Carolina Association, at Due West. March 26, Greenville Team, in the Carolina Association, at Due West. Apri, 5, College of Charleston, at Due West. Apri 7, Clemson College, at Clemson. Apri 8, Vvofford College, at Spartanburg. April 9, Furman University, at Cireenvil e. April l7, Newberry College, at Due est. April l9, Presbyterian College, of South Carolina, at Due West. April 29, Furman University, at Due West. May l, Clemson College, at Due West. lVlay 5, Wofford College, at Due West. lVlay 6, Presbyterian College, of South Carolina, at Clinton. lVlay 7, Newberry College, at Newberry. 1 s Erskine Tennis Team. V908 There have been two intercollegiate tennis tournaments held in South Carolina. ln these two tournaments practically all of the State colleges were represented. A loving cup is offered for the championship in doubles, and also for the championship in singles. Erskine's representatives have won both cups in both tournaments. These cups are shown in the above cut, and if Erskine men win them in the coming tournament at Columbia, in April, they will become the property of the college. Seated on the right corner of the table in the above picture is Mr. R. C. Crier, who has represented Erskine in singles at both tournaments. Seated on the left corner of the table is Mr. W. I... Brownlee, who, with a worthy colleague, last year won the contest in doubles. The representatives for the present season will be chosen from the above squad. io4 Erskine College Athletic Association Calvin E. McCaw, President. Estes M. Lynn, Secretary ancl Treasurer T. Garland Shelton, Manager Base Ball Team. W. Campbell McLain, Assistant Manager Base Ball Team. George W. Kirkpatrick, Captain Base Ball Team. W. L. Brownlee, President Tennis Club. Ralph E.. Stevenson, Secretary and Treasurer Knox B. Phagan, Manager Track Team. Calvin E. McCaw, Assistant Manager Track Team. W. Campbell McLain, Assistant Manager Track Team. , S ?' 'Y W ' v. - N., W I ,Aj r HOME. COLLEGE VVYLIE HOME. x is ,gl -JOKES R E GETTYS Editor Sopm N1LD1l1 LX11 Pit up UL 0u111gt0 have l Z'C1'gl'L'Fl1S for dnmel Prep Hanna Wothm Qald 111 her lettel to-dav for me not to inlect tneglectb my Geography Soph Stephenson I do wmh that Zxffl can would hurry upf, iReferriug to Ark? Fresh Ixetghm VVIIX that lw a negro Prof Mr Plaxco do xou mgau to sax that one can obtam beautv merelv for thm VVlShl1lg or that It lS a g1ft of Godf r Plaxco It IQ a glft of God ro IV veq f om mould get It for the Wi5llll1g 110 doubt LVCII you would he handsome I rwh Mltdull Cat Clam Mcetlnnd XI1 Lxl'lZliI'ITl'll1, I nomiuwte Mr. eukins fm pI'USldCl1f uname T mmm thxt the uolnluitmm Inc closed lu uc uk xx ll mxhmx rsx R I C0 ngg 11 Q1 thy N 11 num -11 N S X mi L Ill XX 1 mx LQ ' 'W .x'.N XX In hash Ln-ittxs fseemg somu pause pflrtout JILUIIES vud ws zfuzafzm Nome the Ot11e1 dax mx self Prof Long 'Who wa- Poe N mothpr Chllds blue was an aptxew Prof Long Who was hls flthel Llnlds He was fm 1ctrLsQ too New Co ed Cweemg 1 Low Lola xxagon unc to an od 01r I XXO11C1C1 xmo lx dead? Xonder Ooex the heame qpcmu at Hlldlllght 011 Ixumedx porgm Do xou knoxx X11-N u 11 cleurlx lme to tr'1x el? lx Thin xxhx dont xou ws Hinrx Q11 xxouc xnxx xol would xwu luv hu nu L 1 1 O H0116 uv hu lu 0 1 mme u L N Ll 1 , um umm w ot stun 1 mt mul L no xou Lxput to llk u 111 1 4 I N Llothu uw XX IX 11 Ill ww Lk N llml x 1 NIL I XL K NU Xl X ll n u 1 'T H 'F u , X 3 S N -1.1 N . 3 . . , i ,il N Q11 Lf' '- A , 2, f1z'15Q' . At: 1 .ji T ' 'Q 3 I 1 , Q. '. 1 ' ' 3, .Tc 'J- Oh, F' .TZ I P d f 3 'Q 1 F I C- . -- V1 . - s :ff .DH , 14 ' ' , . i - - 1 . Y T E A - N I 'tu cf c 1 3 -, .p .- . 1 , f A f :' '1 1 Q 11-A' Y - V1 l ' h ' , ' 4 ' 5 5 - J. .' - ' 1 - . ' 'J' f ' .. 'X P f.- Wl,, U' I 1 ' ' -'A j ' '. L 3: J lk, I . K MES '.- 1 . .' j ' ,' F ' 5 x 2 Nj EJ D - 1 Q Nr: , 1 -'- If ll g-1 ' Il 5 -1, 3 - ' .. c ' -1 It 'l'? g , 1 .. V I . . MxLzi1- N . I ' Il fa x ,I ' 1 xi -V . N' c 1 I , A H' Dr. N Pfqtt kt.l 5 tl X 1' nf l' '- I1 R lmly- M: N '. 'l if is 21 'Cm-L-4l,' Q01 ' ' ' 5 'IQB- KI1'. XYl11t '. in 1 D' wh: ' 'S' 1 -' ' I atc? - N lfrcsh RICMu1'1'z1y- W'l1y, Rmlfly, thgu is lf. XYhitc- ln thc course of timcf' X :lu Ii .l'inc .X. . 3. ll ' W CTI. 1 V 4 - 1 ' ' I ' 1 ' ' . A f Aft -' - 14mcf-I,:lL141c1'1l.I' X Q 5:n1v. x DQ V11 1 h lu tu H5 l mu ml U 4 l l'c-+11 l,:111flc1'clzllc Wilf hcnnl to .':1': I .. V VD-- ww ' M' alll- in plnv fm' two or thrcl- claw Plz' - I' ' - , 1 4 ' 1 A - Du 1 IAHH lll1ll f my i:1'k lmflc iw v '. I :lm zlfxzml I hzlvu NPIZIIIICI1 thc l1111- gh, V.. i Ill 'ulx in V' Icy. ' -' 1 ITV, .xlffllill flu lllm. lion. Nll'!XYk'l'. Uvlllf Prof K:I'ik'1' fin 'l'l15 '0-f-X11 liynl. inf intl: ilu claw Vlllllllf 'l 1I'1 '1 call. Mr gi '- 111- Nev! 11.5 lzm' of g1':nx'it:lt'i1n1. Mu wr. H, 1l--- l flmfl l'n xx' Ncwl nk lui I X XIV. Niwxwl' II:vxx' 1114111-Y, Imctunf' Cllll gin- yum ll uw. ' S 1 Y i w 1 1 VVilliamson became so interested in a recitation in Ethics that he was discovered absent-mindedly holding Miss VValker's hand. Y. M. Brown is prepared to give lessons in voice, on piano, stringed instruments, jew's harps: round and shaped notes a specialty. He is highly endorsed by Messrs. Kirkpatrick and Matthews. Prof. P.- What is the sound of 'u' in German? McCaw-Like 'u' in four. Prof. R. Cin Chemistryj- What is P NIgCO3. Tribble- Manufacturing Company. Blackwell- I want my girl developed in all the characteristics in which I am deli- cient. Baldwin- Then she will not miss the ideal very far. Prep. Fleming tentering the laboratoryj - Say, Blake. does this drug store belong to the college? Hauser says he is very much uneasy about his heart, and thinks he will Ilzsuli the doctor about it. McDaniel- I have just finished reading the autobiography of Scott. by Lockhart. As Prof. Grier was showing a certain handsome man the library, he saw Miss N looking with a wistful' longing. The Prof. turned and said, Miss Belle, he is married. Prof. Reid- Miss Lois, where is your drawing showing the spherical waves of an earthquake? Miss Lois- I drew it on a shoe box and forgot to bring it. Prof. R.- Oh, yes: I understand: you do not want us to see the size of shoes which came in that box. Fresh Leslie- VVhat book did Rev. Boyce preach from Sabbath P Barren- Hosea Leslie- Did they sing I-Iosea in the highest? Barron- You mean Hosanna in the highest, do you not? LeslieM VVell, are they not brothers? Fresh RoddeyA Is Dr. McCain a preacher? Fresh l-Ianna- Yes: you don't see him practicing medicine, do you? Gettys- How many .vtofvs has that organ across the street? Pharr- Three: breakfast, dinner. and supper. U young lady in town, and she told the bearer of the request that she wished him to come the lirst night of the week. as she wanted to get through with it. jeff llood asked to call on a certain Dr. McCain- Mr. Chisolm, what ls irony? Chisolm- I do not know. sir. Dr. McCain- If I should say that you are good-looking, that would be irony, would it not? Chisolm- Yes, sir. Harold Wliite- What style of girl is she? Parkinson- She is emotional. aesthetic, intellectual, imaginative, and quulitaIz'z'c. and possessed of great sfrcngtlzg but, of course, this latter is implied. Lauderdale Cafter drinking punch at the Y. M. C. A. receptionl- VVhat is it worth? Punch Maid tblushingI- Nothing Lauderdale Cwith purse in handj- Oh, but I want to pay for it. Pat- How much is this bill going to be? Photographer- Ten dollars. Look pleasant, please. Pat- Impossible Hood. S. I. Cto newsdealer in Green- villej- I-Iave you a copy of the lllattlzczvs Gazette? Dealer- No: it is against the law to sell it. Erskine Bov-'WVhere can I get some cool water First D. VV. F. C. Girl- The coolest water comes out of the hydrogen in the yard. Erskine Boy- VVhat? Second Girl- She means hydrant: she has physiology on the brain. Psy ' D D Junior Plaxco still has a standin' with Dr. McClain, but a part of the time he has to stand our on the porch. First D. VV. F. C. Girl- I-Iow are your sore lips? Second D. NV. F. C. Girl- They are bet- ter now: but. oh. dear-there's to be a soiree to-morow night. Miss Henry-Oh. girls! Isu't Mrs. Gal- loway sweet? She is just like NX'in. C. Problem :-If an ordinary man can eat three biscuits at :L meal. how much can Rea eat? Problem: If the axerzxge man is tire feet eight inches tall, how much will Duck McGill have to grow before he can cast L1 shadow ? 109 A BARL1 UN A Baby boy went up to s His ladx' love so ncai She says: XV1ll you not hx for me A composition. deal lfler beautx' was so charminff sweet The question showed such eager sk That he could not refuse to meet liler an ication with 1 xx A promise sure must he discharge Upon the next tMost Holyl dax So he took down the hook so large And toiled in his most learned wax And while he worked 'tween norm 'nn dark The lady to the church did Oo There she with pious. devout heart Did pray, to keep his soul from woe Found. in a funiorls note book, this re action: Ixlqhq KISS Notes-Reaction accompanied with evo lution of heat, peculiar palpitation of heart Takes place best in pale or dim light: is con tinuous when once started: can be repeated at short and irregular intervals: non-ex plosiye and harmless Baldwin would like to know if the Holy Land is in Egypt Boyce fthe class poet?- T will' have you to understand that poets are born and not made. Classmate- ats a rigitl Cont get angry. old boy: T was not blaming you rot a C xx ell lquotnig Latinl em l X xumblehef. That xxhit 'Nlapo con san xxhen hc ciosscd the Delaxxaie isnt J Xl B llowd How do xou like the nexx chandelier at the Female Colleoe anull 1 mx nt heaid 'mx Ji oi it builex tto Hoskmson xx ho has sicx Tac to see xou out i ani Hoskinson VVhxf lm not out o C lm liftcen cents to the good The following adxeitisemcnt ppcai 1 Lfzailoth Eutnznq itus p ax 36611 1113.11 cd in VVanted a big word One hard to pio nouncc desired lioi full mfoimation applx to bamuel Jefferson Hood Due VVest Q C axco c aii I xx eie Vanderbilt I would get me a BL TLE Ciowthei bax Pat xxho are xou to take to the Senioi banqueti Chisolm Loi man, that s xx hat s ing me awake these mohts e flood aftei shaxmg uses 1 R QOll1g keep facial piepaiation which Ikex VVcn examined the otiei dax The label iclds To iemoxe iough places fiom the skin to iemoxe wrinkles and sions of Old ige and to re stoi e x outhful beautx Phagan Sax bhoitx sometimes xou apeai quite manlx and other times xou are quite effennnatc Whx is t lx ooic It s heieditux l suppose ne ia of mx ancestois xx tic mies and 1 othci half xxtie females no l l l i T A 11 . iz .C'l,l ' ' ' ' V ', . yid, 'lC1.U l ee P , 3- ' is ' Q A .le ' D 'l 'il ' 1 N ' L ' i ' ' itf l ' 1- ' i H D .,1 -s ,V D. an Y 'lll, bt' ' -'il le 'ff ' ' L -'lcidx' l H' ' D il ipl , 'illf' ' 'l at 'll-'A'Cl l 1 F nf age' A 2 a fm' V71 L fl Th' ' 1- Ne : ' D41 in Ii in -4 --A A 4 N. c 'V F , ' l J. S. Pl' -Uqay, Ph if f ' a , l. - 1 ,, - 'F Tu lv' 1: lv -5 v - :xi 1 , ' ' ' 5 si QU 4 1 ' Jffff,,. 'i j. ,:f ' il ' i 'ez Q.: ' ' y '- 1 i ' - fag . 2 , - i - vi ' hi' Iv.-vi-5 ?-. ' x 1 rf 32- ' Q T . 0 - X Th ' ll 'l l ' l'lt ,4 ' t zlai ' tle q l f . l l ' i I l 1 1 l i I i Election Returns According to the eloquent campaign spellbinders, the destiny of America hung on the result of the Presidential election last fall. An election, however, among the Seniors has been held whose results are more important to us than was the victory of Mr. Taft to the nation at large. The polls were closed, the ballot boxes were opened, and the votes were counted, and the committee gives to the press the following results: The most popular student, W. C. McLain. Honorable mention, S. Plaxco. The biggest fool, Pharr gets I6 votes, and Ciettys I6 votes. The most versatile, C. H. Nabers. Honorable mention, W. C. McLain. The best athlete, C. E. McCaw, I6 votesg R. C. Grier, I6 votes. Honorable mention, M. M. Crowther. The most conceited, W. P. Blackwell. Honorable mention, B. L. Parkinson. The hardest worker, T. W. Baldwin. Second choice, Miss Lois Snell. The gloomiest student, P. D. Chisolm. Second choice, S. R. Spencer. The most unfortunate in love-making, H. White. A close second, R. T. Kerr. The stingiest man in the class, K. B. Phagan. Also ran, C. H. Sheffield. The best debater, C. B. Elliott. Second choice, H. White. The greatest A accumulators, S. R. Spencer and Miss Lois Snell. The most business-like, R. E.. Cettys l 7 votes and K. B. Phagan I6 votes. The most conscientious, R. N. Hunter. Honorable mention, S. R. Spencer. The greatest admirer of the boys, Miss Hamilton Henry. The most ambitious, C. H. Nabers. Honorable mention, E. W. Pharr. The hardest luck student, E. Cox Donald. The happiest person in the class, R. H. Moore. A close second, Miss Belle Nickels. The biggest forbidden loafers, Pharr, C-ettys, Plaxco, and White. The most effeminate, W. W. Boyce. Also ran, E. R. Spence. The most graceful, Miss Hamilton Henry. Second choice, C. B. Elliott. The most serious, A. M. McGill. A close second, C. B. Elliott. A The handsomest boy in the class, W. Colvin. Honorable mention, B. L. Parkinson. The greatest lady's man, E.. R. Spence. Second choice, R. Chisolm. The laziest member of the class, S. Hood. Honorable mention, Y. M. Brown. The biggest eater, E.. C. Donald. A close second, S. R. Spencer. The biggest bluff, B. I... Parkinson. Second choice, M. M. Crowther. The best writer, C. H. Nabers. Honorable mention, M. B. Hood. The best singers, M. B. Hood and C. E.. McCaw. Honorable mention, R. C. Grier. The hardest to please, C. H. Sheffield and R. N. Hunter. The most homely boy, R. T. Kerr. Second place, tie between S. Hood and E. C. Donald. The biggest spendthrift, H. White. Second place, W. C. McLain. The most absent-minded student, C. E. McCaw, by a large majority Second place, R. N. Hunter. 5 Noisiest student, E. C. Donald. Second place, tie between Pharr and Gettys. The greatest Hirt, S. Plaxco. A close second, R. H. Moore. The best O. K. all-around student, E. W. Pharr. The next highest, Miss Belle Nickels. The most unconcerned, Y. M. Brown. Honorable mention, E.. McDaniel. I2 it '14 i ll go E 6 2 DD .C E - H o ,-5 G U ---' ,.. 1' - GC .- ,- f-1r-1 rf C rj -E 125, 5 +4 ,: u L-.U.,Lb' -, .3 O'-,:,2D:?j X -E' 3O5Q3':-5 5 lugs'-'2 an : ,. O 'SEWEM fr s 5 O SSTL'-: -Dfw --G am-'Ocu o -:EPA SU CEU-iff ELHEE :E 2 0693-5-am: E591 -2.55 +-4 -f - '... Pri gn-gg W-,-:LE'f E '5 ' P SQ 2 -2-zgwagafg,-L- 'E' P50 662:15 'O if Z .+-f fel ,, Z G P4 30-G-H5 zlfq,-zz: : 'S 20's-g'1,F?f-E'A'+-fzbc-,:.2 73 ' H , -- A ,. 'Z 3 Hg 'E.i .:':E.:-4.: 20:f,: T ,- - O Q5-Cf -Q,--,V 1 J n. po ..g,d..:Qtfc+-3 bg , FO wr-XSD' f5 q,o Jr- ,: k P4QOg':9JQD:Cl :f-M135 E '- Q Pg! 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A,-7 . 75 N'..Uf:'5E Em-:gi -G gjR'E4cc:'L' 'US-55 P'- .- ' :-I :U :..f- '- ZLQEBEQLEEEE 25 35359-22562 9.5 H2226-aaggsnwfle Pas-E-gamma we L4 '-34-fL!Q1,:4 4-QT LJfT5+-'V5-Eg-50 am -.- 'ESG jzmxmmgigi , ILM-fw,:.gcn.: ,Q F-Q ,w,QQ,P,:S,ja' cg: gf H- Jjsdcijlw QFD-C2'3'.IP..J 15 AJ -U vw O-Q3o-'J- B P, T.. GJD 4,-. :I 3-ZF, ,VA 3..- Uj HL: Q5 O QAEQ-Cf f . . '- .-' '., A -:U nl. Pficsagwn I-1145: ,q ,f::,:,- ' Ein 33 Pdf- '--H '4-n.- '- L-,--gg Q 6, -5333,-f '-3 ILC -EEL.: CEBS :E '3-i m -':' 2 Quai 1-E3 5 2,-A-1 -was za - f: - .-V M232-2325 , 55 SngLiQS.i5:f:i,Ee5 -EQ DUFPXAY f-2 c'3Ef-TQ 55+-5rd, ET USE EI-J Fiji-fQQ'U,'EfEU+'Sg Q5 , U 5513- 5-, A, Pea-'ici-uf,-53,53 as U-QM, - P- PP' au- F:-E -.1 - -2: -x,- ,. Za ,..,. , f-+4 ',- ' -:f J N- -L--4-: cf- L -- Q0 H -F- --- - -- Df-+1si'i gfrigfr-5255 'ww-,., LJ -- s, r ..--- -, 4h E-ILE,-plzgszdg N., --Q - --F fi 53 53 E-:I-ff5f9'?Qf: oi 2: , N- L..-22,-5: .-L-F-,,, .f 7751- F-gn, . If:-5L35'F: 'g'g.,+3EL'5 f - . n- ,- Msgqgp, : rg-- 'if 'y..l': 'K - ? -x - -C.. 'fuigvggir 2wT1,,,.'Zj-: -', K:f.?L21-Elm..-'Z' Y 4 ,, -,.. f I-.ws-U 13,5-.,-. bg Ljxifp- QHEUZPK C--:SER-J Lg-11+-Z 1,3 T i M ,p l .V 6 1 rakuw nllvgv Env Mimi, Svnuth Glarnlina ESTABLISHED 1839 Has Educated in whole or partial course about 7,000 Young People ENROLLED 194 PUPILS LAST YEAR Healthful Location, Thorough Teaching, Moderate Expenses, Wholesome Moral Influences A limited number of young ladies accommodated in the Wylie Home and given Free Tuition SEND FOR CATALOGUE TO J. S. MOFFATT S ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++4+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1.1-1. BELL81 o ++++++++ +++++++++ DRUGGISTS + Z 'iff' E I YJ I + + Ili I Z 1 Prescription and Drug Department under a Licensed + . + 2 and Graduate Pharmacist E 3 1 + :::::: 2 1 1 ERSKINE COLLEGE AND D. W. F. C. if E STATIONERY 1,11 + 1 + + E ALSO FULL LINE OF OTHER STATIONERY E 1 + + + E Complete Line of Erskine College Pennants, if Ti Sofa Pillows and Seals 'jg + 1 -z--1--x--1--x--1--1--1--1--1--1-1--1- CD E E3 CD E. O N g 5 cn Q S Q A : '11 53. o o 1: 1: :s CD P+ E. E : E S? Eli 9 cu 5 2 ra. cn o Q. N D FP 0 'S ++?++++++++++ g-1--1--1--1--1-1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1--1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- E -1- -1- -1- -1- E -1- -1- -1- 55 '1'-1--1--1-1--1-1--1-1--1--1--1--1--1-1-1--1-1--1- Quality Chocolates A FRESH SUPPLY ALWAYS ON HAND Il 'I I I I I I I I I I I I I I-'I I-i 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I I''I I I I I I-'I I I I I I 2 I I' 4 nv M251 Elivmalr Glnllvgr 'I' Rc-'uiccs i11 thc greatiicss nf I':1'slci11c, :intl i11 the ClllQL'l'Jl'l9L' uf hcr stnilcnts 'I' ,P J l ,P 'X' in Jnhlishinq this L-lC ll1lI cclitiun of ,lil-llf IQRSIQINIANA, ancl wc w:111t tw tt-ll 'Z' 4. l I. h ,IQ 'I' all its intelliffcnt ancl cnltnrecl l'CZlflL'l 1 that 'Z' 'I' 5 'I' 5 3 .14 '24 'I' 'I' 'I I I I' 'I I I I' D. W. F. C. ,g. Has heen inalting great stricles in recent years. The lmcantitiil fulrl cnllc-gc 4. .Z. lwinlcling, with its fresh paint. new tlonrs. ncw easy stairways, well- 4. '3' . 1 ', . . . .. 'I' .14 cqnipperl chemical l21lJOI'Z1IOlj'. .intl sta rclx 11111111 .11 1d1lf.l,L'!l .nu ll cling tw .1- 'I I I I I' l, y-U E' -1 rf 3 'Il :-M f. W 25 fl '-' 1' Q.. '-I 'L ... Q -1 Q M 1 1 ,.. v n -1 F' 2 C ri fii 1-r .-1 ... Q T.. 3 fb '-' CJ Z 1, yi . f- 5 5 m 'Cf' FL' ,... 1 -1 FQ' , Il. 4 f 71 5. of FF ff :' A .1 JA 1. -f Q :' ,.J ri: D.. .... 4 1 rg m 'Z 1 sd 'T rt it 1. f-f 'TJ -- Q 3 Z1 -1 .U 47. .... fi f-r 7' .A . UQ E '1 Z ff L 'fl G 17 5 q. improvecl lihrary, cnnstantly throngecl with earnest wnrlcers. the LlIL'l'ZlI'j'- '1- -5 bociety halls enlarged and heantihecl, its art rm11.1111s well cqnippccl ancl -1. 4- furnished, and all, brilliantly lighted by electricity-so niany 1111p1'rwe- Z 4- ments its olrl friends would scarcely recognize the place. -14: 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I I I I I I' 'I I I I I I' Carnegie Hall Z Has, in its spacious halls, large dormitories and closets. large wiiitlows 5 5 and elegant dining room, hetter p1'ox'isio11 for the cmnfort of its lioarclcrs 2 than any college in this section, and in its electric light. steam heat. ainple i III: 'water coiiveiiieiices, sewerage and an ahniiclant supply of pnrc water 3 3 froin a six-inch. 200-foot well, has advantages that nn other can excell. Z :xi Our literary stanflarcl has heen raisccl till it coinparcs f2lY0l'Z1l1lj' with i 2 Erskine. l11 shnrt, ll. XV. F. C. is floing for the ynnng wninen what 2 Z Erskine is clawing fm' the young men. XYc want lfrslqinc incn to feel that 3 IQ: thcre is nu cnllcgc quite so gnml fur their yunng lzuly friencls IIN 2 'li Z 'I' 'I' 'I' 'V 'I' '0zZi'I I I I I I I I I I I I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' E' 'I I I I I I I I I I I I I' Bm' Iwi ilirmalv nllvgv DUE WEST, S. C. 117 'X X X X X X X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'Z' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'I' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'Z' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X X l X E X X' -1--1--1--1- .5- X5 59 23 5 X5 FS T31 5 5 'l-I E5 D FX f-3 0- G- D 5 'B 21 X3 G3 'X X X X' 'X X X' 'X X X' 'X X X' o 1: T1 '11 F' o 2 F11 :U ffl UU o o c: D1 ta UD '! Z !' 'X X X X X' 'X ! X X Z' AND FLORAL DESIGNS E VVe make a specialty of supplying cut-flowers, wedding decorations E fx: and funeral designs at all times of the year, and have constantly on hand Z 3 a splendid assortment of northern-grown Howers for this purpose, in 2 addition to many we grow in our own gardens and greenhouses. We can 3 Z supply these on the shortest possible notice, and always give our per- Z Z sonal attention to them, feeling satislied that we can please the most dis- 2 Z criminating taste. VVe are also prepared to supply flowers for banquets. Z 2 private entertainments and house decorations. Telephone orders from 2 ZFX' nearby points will be given prompt and careful attention. 3 2 We have on hand in their seasons the following cut flowers. all of 2 i high-grade, as listed below: 1 E Per Doz. ' Per Doz. E 4, Roses ..,. . .. . .. 52.50 to 55.00 Freesias ................... 50.50 4. :if Cfifnations -'--'-- to Geranium Blossoms ..,..... .35 3 E 'bll:l'BLlL1c:i1.fJ'5 6' Tru.-.pet Narcissi ..... 25c. to .50 g E Z Violets, Single, Bunch 50c. Pansies ......... ....... . .05 i -1- Lillies-of-the-Valley ........ 1.00 Hvacmfhs 500- YO 2-50 -1- Z Paper White Narcissi ..... . 50c Tulips ------ 4------ - 50 2 2 Roman Hyacinths ......... 50c Sweet Peas ..... .... . . .05 'X ! X-' 'X X X' PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE WITHOUT NOTICE 2 In the fall we carry a large stock of bulbs, imported direct from llol- i 2 land to us. To judge the beauty of these bulbs, visit our gardens from 2 3 March to June, or write for picture of same. In the spring we have all 3 2 lcinds of annuals and perennials for making the summer garden bright 3 -X' . 'X' 4. and beautiful. -1. 'X' 'X' 'X' 'Z' 'X X X X X X X' 'X Z X X X X' Ellie Anhvrsann illlnral Qlnnmtaxtg .1-1-1--1--1--1--1--1-4--1 -1- -1- -1- -1- 'I' .. 2 5 -1- S 4. rn 'I' N gg 3 -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- + -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- -1- Z -1- V' -1- P33 -1- '1' Z -1- -1 3 3 -f S- r -2- N 2 5 : i rr: -1- DU 93 1 1- -' 4. O FE ,F . 2 2 -1- ED Z .1 O E i -1-1--1--1--z--1--1--1--1--1--z- IIS 444 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 444' 4444444444444444444444444444444444444 4444444444444444444444444444444444444 FOR THE LATEST PRODUCTIONSg IN PHOTOGRAPHY HOWIE'S STUDIO 1511 MAIN ST.. COLUMBIA. S. C. IS THE PLACE . . .l A CORDIAL WELCOME TO ALL HOWIE'S STUDIO 3: 1511 MAIN STREET COLUMBIA. S. C. Z Z 33 444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 Z4444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444i 4 4 -x--x--x--x--x--x--x--z--x-'z--x--x--x--x-'x--x--x- O I Be 70 I ITI va Ii I I O I 2 I cn O 1 CI I '-I I I I Q De 70 O E Z IP -x--x-'x--x'-x--z--x--x--x--x--x--x--10x--z--z--x- 444' 44 MEDICAL COLLEGE OF TI-IE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA MEDICINE AND PHARMACY 4 4 4 2 Four years course in Medicine, two years course in Pharmacy. Labora- If Z tories of Bacteriology, Pathology, and Pharmacy recently enlarged. 2 44444444444 4444444444 Control of the new Roper Hospital and the Dispensary service of the City, with the exclusive teaching facilities during the College session. For Further Information Address ROBERT WILSON, Jr., IVLD., Dean 4 4 4 4 4 2 Corner Queen and Franklin Sts. CHARLESTON, S. C. ff. 4 4 4 4 444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444 IIQ 'X X X X X X X X X X' 22: 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' Z 'X X X X X X X X P'X X' Good Positions 'X' -f 'X' 'li 3 'Q' 'X' Z lN0. F. DRAUGHUN gives contracts, backed by a chain of THIRTY-UNE Colleges 2 'X' 3300.000 00 capital, and TWENTY years' success, to secure POSITIONS under 'X' Z reasonable conditions or REFUND TUITION. 2 'X' . . . 'X' 4. ' lN0. F. DRAUGHON S Competitors, by not accepting 4. 'X' his proposition to have his THREE-months' Book? 'X' 3 keeping .students contest with the SIX-months' 2 4. Bookkeeping students of any other business college,1n effect concede that jno. F. .gs 'X' Draughon's College teach more Bookkeeping in THREE months than others do 'X' 'Z' lll SIX. You can learn jno. F. DrauUhon's Boolckee in b mail. 'I' 3: z- P g y .xp . 'X' 4- S About 75 PER CENT of the U. S. Court Reporters write ole 'Y' the Shorthand no. F. Drau hon's Colle e teach, because 'X' ,P l 8 S they know that by its use they can write 30 per cent 'X' 4. faster than by the use of any other System and that their earning Capaclly is thereby do 3 increased accordingly. You can learn Jno. F. Draughon's Shorthand by mail. 3 'Z' 7 000 STUDENTS are taking Tno F Drau ' 'I' . V . . ghon s ig courses by mail. Hundreds are iillin ood ositions 3 8 8 P 'g ..i..1.l-1 who learned by jno. F. Draughon's Home Study 3 4, ONLY. Home Study FREE if you afterwards enroll at one ofjno. F. Draughon's 4, -ga Colleges. 4- 'X' 'X' 'X' jno. F. Draughon's Collveges are in- 4' :Il dorsed by MORE BANKS in the I7 Z -1- States in which they are located, than all other business colleges COMBINEDQ -I- Z Draughon's Practical Business College Company-jno. F. Draughon, President- Z ,P has 2l bankers on its Board of Directors. 4, 'X' 'X' 'X' IT IS the educated man or woman who 'X' 'X' - - 'X' 4, gets ahead. Jno F. Draughon's Colleges will teach you a profession that will 4. -1- raise you out of the DOLLAR-A-DAY class into the FIVE-DOLLAR-A-DAY 'X' i class, and as much higher as you are willing to go. 5 'Z' - 1-1. , 1- 5- . . -- 1 1 ,, .. t 1 - ,, 'X' jj Cafalfmue Free E2EegE,'i?l32SE1Q2I,'-'C23i.,7lf'S2ff..HPQTQLQ-..i1H.,'572233150f'...i.f2L.f'te'ld'1't 'f 1 -x-fx.-x--z--x--x-fz--1--r-x--r-x.-x--zf-1--x--x- O O I' C UJ P U7 O -x--z--x--z--1--z'-z--1- -1--x'-x'-z--1'-x--x- DRAUGHO ' ractical Business College A at any one of the following post oiiices 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' 'X' rl- Nzlslivillc, 'l.l'llll. l'z11l11U:1l1, Ky. SI1l'lllQ'llL'ltl, Mu. li1111xx1llc', l.l'llll. l241lx't'slu11, 'l'rx 'Zh 'I' XX':1-4l1i11nlo11,1l,C, R:ulci14l1,N,C. hlC1lll1lllS,il.t'llll. lfl. XK'o1'll1, Tux. Sill! ,X11to11io, Tux. 40 '20 lb:1ll:1s,'l't'x. 1lill'l44Ull. Miss, I-'l.S111ill1..'X1'k. llt'lllNHll, 'll-x. .'XllNllll,'l1k'X. vp ol' Sl.1,1111is, Mu, lil, Small, li:111, Slll'L'X'L'lll'l'l, l,:1. NY:1uu,'l'vx. Kl0lll2UlllL'l'B, .Xl11. 'X' '14 lQx':111sx'illv, Incl. .Xlll4lQlbgt'l,', Uklzn. l,illlt' Rm'l4,.-X1'k. Al4Nllll, Tux -lilL'lQNUllX'lllk', l l:1, 'Xp 'X' .Xll:111l:1,4Z:1, llw11slrv11,'l'i-X, li:111s:1sCilx, XI-1. l'fll':1so.'l'rx4 Ukln Cil5.Ukl:1, 'X' :Iv oxa '5' 'X' 'X' 'X' X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X''X X X X''X X X X X X''X X Z''X''X''X X X''X'4'4 ! P'X X X X X X X X X X P'X X X X P4 X P'P'X X' 1 21 1 xg W L f I N A. i 7 if ff! 3 .3 3 f 4 . 5 X. Q . 5 - 2.4 , Q,g.L,L-4 Y L- E I1 ,lj lx 1 7 ' 4 - , 1 . 'TD 3 X. 'A 1, Nxghsb 4 , ' 1 xx 17,1 I Ta. A' A, V ty 15 . ,, . :af X ff' 1 QW fy . My ,A , QQ, . ,Ax M5 A 1 K in le XTSFQXN ' 4 Y 1' I .::., . ,Xl C f'f'r,W L ' 'N'-fm.?m....-w--' , A .5 Q gy'-' Q ' ,N X! -Y --in 1 M ig I . ' i Q 1-3' 5 'R .1 if ' '53 ag J x fXX Y 5 A ,nf , -, - -1, M.. J - Q Fhrx S E h '- ' A. r -it fl d 6 'Q in ' 'G ENGRAVINGS 5 Q 31X--R . ' BY N 4 ., . ' E1.Ec:TRxc CITY ENGRAVING Co. Exif . A . 'U' ' 1 V BUFFALO, N. Y. tx , 1 x 'N ,, I2l X11 X qw if vi Aw 422. 'I '!' 4' 'I' 'I' + 'X' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'Z' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 44 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' '! l' '! ! ! !' 'X I X !' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'Z' 'Z' 'X' 2 S. S. MQNINCH, Pres. X Trezls. XV. C, I-IIN5HN,S:1Ics Malt S. XV. DANDRIDGE, CZINIIIEI' az: 'X' 'Z' 'X' '! I X ! ! I ! I ! ! ! X Z X l I ! X !' I 'X X ! X ! ! ! I Z Z I ! Z ! 1 I ! I !' harlnttv Erirk Gln. 'X- ! ! ! ! Z I I''X'-X''I''X''X I !-'Iwi-1'!'-Xf'!0!v'Z !w! Z 2-'! Z I ! 1 ! I I I ! ! !' 'I Z ! I ! I I 1 X X ! 2 I ! X I I X !''! ! ! ! I 1 Z ! I l I ! ! I X I 2 X' Daily Capacity ONE HUNDRED I TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND igh Grade uilding Bricks :!I:'Z I I ! !--2 ! X'-I-'! I-'I'-! ! !0! Z-'! Z- 12 Z ! Z' 'X' 'I- 'I' 'Z' 'I' 'I' 'Z' 'Z' 'I' 'X' 'Z' 'I' 'Z' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'Z' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' '!' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'Z' E 'I' 'I' E 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' T E 'Z' 'I' 'I' 3 'I' 4 l F'I ! ! P'l ! X I I ! ! ! ! ! l ! P'P'I I' BRICK WORKS AND SHIPPING POINT GRATTAN STATION, SOUTH CAROLINA On Catawba River, Near Fort Mill, S. C. I22 Q444444444444444444 444444442 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 + 4 4 4 4 Z 3 3 i 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 2? 2? 44444444444444444444444444444 W. W. EDWARDS 4 MILLINERY, DRY GOODS, SHOES, NOTIONS, STATIONERY AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES WALK-OVER OXFORDS FOR SPRING COLLARS. CUFFS, SHIRTS. SOCKS. TIES, SUSPENDERS. HATS, ETC. 444444442 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4. 4 4 4 4 4 4 444444444 S. S. MCNINCH.PrQ+1.:1ml'l'rc:1f. J. 'l'. SMI'1'II,M:mz1uc1 H, W, IJANIJRIIHQE. Czlsllicl' 2 NLS-NINCII uIf:AI.'1'Y COBIPANX' E 4 t',xl'l'r,xL 525,000 i 4 4 Z 23 2 LOANS, STOCKS AND IUCAI. ES'1'A'1'lC -14: 444 444 :fi l.I'l'TI.E PIEDINIONT l:Un.nxNr: Z sorTu Tuvox STREET 4 S 4 4444 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4' P44 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' '4 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' '4 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' -4 4' 4' 4' 4' 4' 4. , -4 4' CID E 551 Elr' fie- Gia 0 U U 4444444444444 4444444444444 4444 C5 C 5 F-15 G O ST. C D G 1 TF Q UQ N 'S M E1 'S m 'T' Q N M ua CC CJ CL SD '11 CP CI I3 F? E. C3 4444 44444 4444 ++++++ + + 4 + 4 + + + + + 'si + + Z 3 cn 2:2 -PZ + 3 C3 gm -x-F' 4 ig. in 2 Pi 5 CD 3 CJ + CJ + 4 + + + + 4 E i++++++ Solicits Your Patronage ' I23 ++++e+++++++++++++++++++++++++? 'Z' + + + + + + + + + + + 3 'U N + 3' i 5 + m + U8 3 Q 2 H1 + + E7 + m + pr 'X' 5' i 'D 2 gi Z E + rn 'X' 5 3 m S: un o + :z + Q. 'T' a Z Q- + + + + + + + + + + + 33 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ -IWP4'-X' 4'-X I X' 'U FU P11 U2 U: F' P4 UU FU CD Pi IE FU FU UD PRESSLY BROTHERS ++++ c C LTD 2 m CD I4 SD F7 ++++ 'I ! I 1 1 I' 'I' I 'Z' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'I' up 'I I4'I I I I' 'I ! I'f-I' 'Z X 2 I' 'I Z Z X X I I I' 'l X X P'I l ! !' -I+ 'X'-I''X'-If4-41+44402--P444-v!'-X0Z0X0P'X X P'Z ! I'4 Z I'-X'4 X !'4 ! X''I ! X X ! ! X X ! X ! ! ! ! !''!0! ! 2--IQ!-'Z'-X'-lf' ole 'X' Ill Should carry as much Life Insurance as his income will permit, Z 'I' whether he has anyone dependent upon him or not. It is the 3: 2 easiest way to lay the foundation of an estate-the safest way to ,P q- invest savings. 'Z' 'I' The payment of a fixed sum regularly for Life Insurance is a Z 3: lesson in thrift. A policy taken by a young man matures when he 4, -1- is in his prime-Then his savings may be drawn in cash-or the in- -lo 'I' surance continued if he has a family or other dependents. - Z 2 The Equitable has many forms of contract particularly suited ,P 4. to young men-all offering an absolutely safe investment and liberal -1- 3 dividends. I -I--2-'X-4--X' '! !'+'X !' +++++++++ 5 ru 5' O C3 0 O 'I :Q C7 - E.. L- FU C3 C3 CJ U1 rf E I-J D on CD 'S +++++++++ 'L+ '1- 'X' 'Z' 'Z' -I' 'Z- 'Z' '1- -I' 'I' -Z' 'Z' -I' 'I' 4' 'Z' 4' -I- -I' 'Z' 'I' -X- 'I' 4- 'X' -P 'I' 'I' -P 'X' 'X' 'I' 'I' 'I' 'Z' 'I' fl' 'I' 'X' 'X' 4' 'I- 'Z' 'I' 'X- 'I- '1- 'X- 'I- 'I' 'Z' 'I' 'I' 'I' -If 'I' 'I- '21 'P+ ROCK HILL, S. C. 124 1 I --d-v N 1 I f 5 S 1 . i N 4 l 4 I I W 4
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