Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)
- Class of 1900
Page 1 of 226
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1900 volume:
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Kaleidoscope N lx. VOLUME Vll V Xxx I ,ff BB.-'X-N424 5? Published by lhe Students ol Hampden-Sidney College The Stone r M D C C C C Printed by P inting and Manufact g C p y Roanoke, Virgini Wg' Library Hampden-Sydney Colley In miss imulic QlBa1'cia Ql9orton in gratrful rrrugntdun nun rrnxmnbranrr uf brr nsststanrr tu this 5' 158lFiUD5lZDlJf, ann tu thuar uf hp4gunr prars, this unlulnr is hrhiratrh bp tbr srunruts uf ilpaxupnrulfiwiuxlry Ciollrgr -302-,UFS A Foreword. Ere the curtain Drops ano the plav is o'er, flno the xvono'rous tints of the costumes faoc. we pralg von turn to the stage once more jfor the part we hah in the masqneraoeg Elno out of your grace prav grant us aio. Elno reab of the olb life tenoerlv, Jfor the bags ano xvags that are here Displaveo Zire the bags ano lvaigs of olb Elrcabv. for the statelg grace ot tbe oags ot vote Still lenos its charm to our classic sbaoes. iflno we tell of a life that is ours no more, Uhe care:free Ute ofthe olb arcaoesz Uwe shau oreann asxve oabblein books ano traoes wt the things that never again shau be, ifor he never forgets xvho once has strayer through the oavs ano xvavs of olo Elrcaov. 'So we Drink to the careless hearts we bore, Co the long, long list of our mionight raios, Elno the wine that orips to the marble floor 1ls reo as tbe lips ot the oaintv maios Uhat we loveo-but the tale of our escapaoes 1Lies bio bv the veiling tapestrv lin the little storv that we have niaoe M the Cavs ano xvavs of olo Elrcaov. L.1CNYiJI. 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'1' N ' . mu mm- 1 f-1.1 .ffm-., -2-H .-,f- ,-Q,-. . 1.1 1 4 g p .1 . - . -11.11, .1 11 M11 2 a g if ?3 YQ!! 'ff' 'fi-I-UA,-ffi?5'5f,f',g.t'7'-1-'1f1fr',:fd rx' 4 V' 1:'f' fA1ff,',.f 41941,-xx 1:-Q s-,Lg ,fif k , if 1 ,f i T A 1751 lg -.I fd f !'7fQ,?5 'ff K 'iid' ' ,LW , Y f.-,YVVV Y ,Y-,, , U, , , 1 - e- 2 - -,rf il' A 1 I 10 X- -1 ., -MQ M .11 'N-111 f '- f. 'AP-125 ffvwzi 1 r:11,,L?Lf1.5f1- , 'gg-f51'1ff V I M11 ff, if 7,1 -11155,1,'. -igj ff+ irfldlh .' Q14 h?fEil: 'L 'f', 3 12213-.J 1 Q1 1 fzli .4 ,N ,, f ,gff 7-'.14'4-'1' I J- V' '- -4 1 - ff-ig., , 1,4 54 ' 1 1 .-- .J L., A . .1,s1,, '--nf, V-, , '- -1 1'1'.:-as-. '- .- ' ' J- 'S Qi 5- 17'-.:r.'.1ll',1f1 7 U' - - 1 f- ff- ,5,1 pw,-1::1g:,1 ' 1 .- 11- -f1 :fmfQE-ii- . -1-1 K '-Vffuffli -.KIM ' 'Va' . 3235 1 , - , -Z V . --gif f A- Roherie. Gilliam, Brown. jones, T. N, Prison. llurmlon. lim-rswlc. IXIc.X1lixlrr. Cochran Buford. Caldwell, Business Mrmngcr. llrll, Hflitor-ilrClxirf I QJQY' ' r if If 'Q QEIIRII VI- ' fn Gigi o I54iNf9, QR 1 1 Qs QV f5 ,J ?if1.1 LI WILBUR C. BELL, 'OO. EDITOR IN CHIEF Associate Editors. W. BRUCE BUFORD THOMAS N. JONES FINLEY M. EVERSOLE EDWARD B. HERNDON FRANCIS A. BROWN ALFRED S. CALDWELL, JR., BU HJ REYTON COCHRAN HERMAN M. ROBERTS HUGH A. MCALLISTER JAMES D. PASCO RICHARD A. CILLIAM SINESS MANAGER Calendar. 1899. SEPTEMBER 12, Examination of candidates for admission into College. SEPTEMBER 13, Session opened at 4:00 p. m., with a Public Address, by Rev. E. T. Wellford Newport News, Virginia. NOVEMBER 30, Thanksgiving Day. Holiday. DECEMBER 23. Christmas Recess begins. 1900. JANUARY 2, . Second Term begins. FEBRUARY 22, Washington's Birthday, Intermediate Celebration of the Literary Societies, and Orations by Members of the Senior and Junior Classes. APRIL 20, . . Field-Day Exercises. JUNE 10, . . Baccalaureate Sermon. JUNE 11, . . Board of Trustees Meets at 8:00 p. m. JUNE 11, . . Celebration of the Union Society, at 8:00 p. m. JUNE 11, . . Examination of candidates for admission into College. JUNE 12, . . Address before the Literary Societies. at 11 :OO a. m. JUNE 12, . . Address before the Society of Alumni. at 12:00 m. JUNE 12. . . Celebration of the Philanthropic Society, at 8:00 p. m. JUNE 13, . . Commencement Exercises at 11 :OO a. m. JUNE 13, . . Senior Class Celebration at 8:00 p. m. IU I IIICV. R R. 1'. ANI1I-Il-LHUN. ESQ.. . . 1-1,'11L.. HENRY STOKI-ZS, . REV. A. W.PI'l'Zl-Ili,I1. U,, . HOX.WIl-I.1ANI XVIRT IHINIQY. HEY. l'. H. l'Rl1'E. . . . REY.'1'HOMAS W. 1104114-111, ll. lv lil-IV. H. W. FlNl.l43Y, 11, Il.. . lil-IV. M. I.. I..Xl'Y, IP. li., . I'.-XVI. C. VICN.-XIiI.lC, ESQ., .I VDLGIC NV. II. MANN, HENRY ICASLEY, ESQ.. . . SA NIVHI. I.. I I.l PVRN1 PY. ESQ.. KI-IV. I .'I'. ML'I ADI'lN, . . IIUN. A. ll. XVATKINS, , . .Il'I'lliE .IAM ES I.. 'I'liIfIIDWAY, REV. NY. l'. 1'AMPIiI'II.l., ll. IP.. J. 'I'. 1If'AI.I.IS'I'I'IIi, ESQ., . IIR. I'I'I'l'ICR NVINF-'1'ON. . XV. G. IPI'XNINlI'l't1N, ESQ.. A A. L'AMI'I4EI.I., ESQ.. . HON. E.1', VICN.-XI5l.l'I. . IIEL't'1l9E'lI. Trustees. I H -XIII! Mt'II.NVAINIi. Il. D., Pr rqliciu. 1'1n'i111'tu11 V11 l11l11 . Fu1'1111'iIl1-, V11 IIIII . XV11Nl1i11-1l1111.IP1x111 1 . Ili1-l111111111I, Y11 11111 . Iill1'Il2IllilIl, Vi1'-11111 . 1'I11'ixti1111sI1111'-' XII IIlll . l11sI11-1'v1lle, X ll 11111 lxll 11111 . SIllIi's Hl'11Y -I . l11111v1llc, X11'1f11111 . NnlIuW:15',Yil ll1ll fs 51111111 Ii11et1111, X 1r 1 , 4'l1:11'I1-N11111, W1 Nt X Il lIlIl . I.1l11'I1I1lll'!, Vil 11111 , Fz11'111x'i1I1-, Vir Illll . l,'l111tI1:1111, Vir--1111 1. . Ii11111111l:1-, Yi1'-'1111 1 . IIutSp1'i11:N, X ll 1111 1 . I'I8l'lllX'IIIl', Vil' llllt . I 111'111villv, V1 . NVytI1e-villv, V11 IIIII P11191--l1111'u. V11 111111 II Wray 11 fi? D Ca t 1' . I I I fi it: X, ,f of X Q X AX f 1 1 I Z' .. fr . I ' rffilt ' 17, ' F! 1' Q wfr ' ra ft f ,fir f f fffli 'Q f t-I Ili , t 'g A tr . rlr , irq , fly .tg . .yi gf fa: J .Y dxglily :.y lilly. :Pwr . : Hiy- 9 1 ,Las -mfr-', ' i ,,'r', 'Q 3.11, i I ri rm' .tr 'Mir' y. , ,i h , I 4' , ., . lr .t -, r ,x . W i . Via. .- '?f'r, - . ,lrll,,i': of-6 f .544 ' 5 Hmm yi' Q s , ig, , ' K tal' ' - . r :ft -, ' - 's' fd L' Ag.-Q r a. il-f... FOX, . - Professor of the Greek Language a REV, RICHARD MCILWAINE, D. D., President, and Professor of Moral Philosophy and Bible Studies WALTER BLAIR, A. M., D. L.. Professor Emeritus of the Latin and German Languages. JAMES R. THORNTON, A. M., Professor of Mathematics and Instructor in Engineering HENRY C. BROCK, B. LIT., nd Lrterature. and Instructor in the French Language j. H. C. BAGBY, M. A., M. E., PH. D., Professor of Physical Science. H. R. MCILWAINE, PH. D., Professor of English. and Historical and Political Science, J. vv. BASOHE, PH. D., Professor of the Latin Language and Literature, and Instructor in the Germa'n Literature Fell H. P. LACY, . . i H. THORNTON, H. c. BROCK, . H. H. iviCiLwAiNE vv. c. BELL, . . A. s CALDWELL J. H. C. WINSTON, PH. D., Adjunct Professor of Physical Science. T. P. CROSS, A. B., ow and Instructor in Mathematics and English. W. W. BONDURANT, A. B., Fellow and Instructor in Greek and Latin. , , , ,,,,,,,, Physician to College . . ..... Curator . . . Clerk of Faculty Q .... Librarian , , , , , Assistant Librarian , , , , , Instructor in Physical Culture I2 Society oi Alumni. Oificcrs of thc Society. l'Ri:Sim-:sT, DON I'. HALSI-IY. Exo.. . . Vick:-I'kEslDi-:x'r. REV. F. T. McF.xDEN, . . .... . . . Si1:cRE'rARY As1i'1'1:i-:As1'xi:i:, PROFESSOR GEURGE H. DENNY, . Execvtive Committee. P111 bl-'ICSSOR JAMES R. T1lnRN'1'0N,4.'1iArRMAN. DANIDRIIJGE SPU'l 1'SWOU1H, ESQ. HRV. I . T. MCl AIlEN, . J. M. REYNOLDS, ESQ., . . J. GRAY MCA LLISTEH. ESQ.. President Sec-rctziry Prcsiiiclil, Secretary President secretary Presidcnt Sccrc t 1Il'y President Secretary Prcsidclii. Secretary Prcsiili-nt Sucre in ry Prcsidi-ni, Secret ai ry Association of the Shenandoah FOUNDED NPI. REV. LZ W. HOLLIS. . :ind Trezisurer. ls The Tidewater Assoc-int ion . 1N92. R. W. SANT4 IS, I-IMI.. . . . , . . :ind Trczisurer, J. M. REYNOLDS, Excl., The Nottowuy Association. lsnf. J UDGE L'. F. GOUIJXVIX. . and Treasurer, HHN. XVALTER A. WATSON, . Ham pden Association . INTH. DR. H. R. MCILWAINE, , . . and T11-:1nlii'ci', J. P. HART. EM.. . . Lynchburg Associai ion. 1895 DH.N. F. PRESTUNZ, . . . . . . 1llldT1'e1lSllI'L'l'. DON. P. HALSEY, Em.. Jefferson Association. ISM. JUSEPH MCMVRRAN, lim., . . . . :Ind 'rl'9ilSlll'0l'. REV. DH. CII.-XRLES GHISHIJN. Rockingham Association. INEIT. REV. .X.S.Y15RGl'IR. . . . , . . . and 'l'1-cusnrcr, PROFESSOR HENRY A. U INVERHIG. Johns Hopkins Association ISHS, l'. NV. Sl MIM ICIIYI LLE, .... :uid '1're:isu1'cr, II. B. ARBVCKLE. 13 Iiym-lihlii'u, Lynch hurg, l,r-xingion, Hziliipdcii-Sidmay, Pi-tc-iwiiiiiu, l,yni-lilinrg, . Norfolk, Kivliinond, Davis, XVQNI N'il'2iIIi:l Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginian Virginia Norfolk, Norfolk, Noiioirziy, Noltowziy, Haiiiipmh-xi-S-idiicy, NVorsliuin, I.ym-lihiil'u'. Iiynclibiiru. Slicpiiwdslowii. Wi-st Slicpllciwlstmi'li. NVvsi Il:ii'i'isoiihiii'g, . Iiairrisonlvurg. . Eziliiinori-. . Bailtimori-, X iruinizi Vi rginiu Virginian Virginia Virginia Virgi ni:i Virginian Virginian X'irLgini:i Virzi lii:i Viruiniu Yirsinin B12ll'j'1illld Mzirylnnd President-, Secretary President, Sc-crcta ry, 'I'rcusnrer, Secretary XVytl1e County Association. Ixus. E. LEE TRINKLE, Esq., , . , , . . ,XVyt,hevil1e, Virginia. and Treasurer, DR. E. P. MCGAVOCK, . . ,,..,.... . . Max Meadows, Virginia Richmond Association. IHSIR DR.. PAULYS A. IRVING . DANIEL GRINNAN, Esq., , M. M. GILLIAM. Esq., ....... ....,..... Far-mville Association. 1899. President, and Treasurer, MAJOR ANDREW' VENABLE, . . J. H. C. NVINSTON, .....,.,...... . S 'G' 14 Richmond, Virginia Richmond, Virginia Richmond, Virginia Farmville, Virginia Farmville, Virginia Ih Le Gant Dc Claire. I ll' QIUXNII thv ringing' lists I Illtlll' Not iu the- strvugtli of sxxoxcl lml The title- of cunllmt L-oiuv. Ur suumth 4-uiruss trust I 9 rattling' t'IilSll of 2ll'IllS that llzlsh Nor fillllt' T'u1'rIvmls0I' high Blllpl .Xml gliltvl' in thu sung 'l'h:lt I'I:1shm's rluivlily by X 1-1 muy I riflf- with lance uutrivcl Ilut ull for this, In-vzlllsv lui X s Aclown tho liu1'1'ie1'e- lluih 11-stwl ou my lrrou lull Q-:uw to mv. while all shall sol-. XYlwn swift us tluiuv. llllllk insxxu Ll I My I.:ul-Vs glow- I ll't'l1l'. l rlo your lmiflcling nom . 4,- ,-,- - 1743 if ef -'fl-'if' 1'N':' -fQ'3igg ' 'J f I.,,1o, ig: It .F ,Y ,l:,K':2!fV-Y sf:-:Q 4 57, ,, ft 7 1 LA: 'f, ' 14 A 'J .,. I '?4e J ,f ' . o l' , f ,UQ I-sir? Y o f f x ft - ,ff -f ,I lil ,f-I--.. ,A 1 .J f u' N nw: Z L41-'ziifxf' i A X 'A fi xgf-'Maw . s I s - mx 4 It , ff- krir 7 . , Ap p., 4 1 ANR o, -' FQIFXIV FYI : - o ' 1 i -Q ,-' 'li ' F Y' 11 -if 1315-Dt' o I NPL 'I , 5 ' If ,E-TN-.if K I. . -n o-,.' - -,- D' E I , ' E J--f. 5 ,fl-'fi ,f' 'of LIS' TX xx.. ' - 5 f 4125- W A 5 'f 7 g,:.4t:l?7S.:.gWQ,f,L,f On burning sands in stranger lzunls. lVl1BI'0 Haines the tropic sun. I heal' her name, I bear her fame. That is all fume beyond: In thc' death-white North I trace' my course lly the bones of those that sleep. Wlwrv tlu- gglmustly lights of the long, long' Flash up from the troubled deep. I5 nights Far on to the utnifist huunmls of earth With heart llllSlll7Uli. I stray. xYl1t'l'0 Thv fianiv ln-:ips furlh l'l'Ulll thx 1 .Xml shrixels Ihv man of clay: - 'lYK'll rock Xml the hliml. whifv Tlliiigs i-uliw up from thc sea. .Xml The sea inuans rolllul the shui 'LH hit still I Ville. fm' a Voice hath Cris-il 'lllllill shalf Ville fx'1'evu1'111ul'v. 1x flyfd u, 4 rf' , - ,, ' , , p. '? 'ig QQ- ,.-.1 f ff? iff' 7115, ' ..9:1:-' ..-4 - ,'. - f,..l .Q ,jg 1 f M 2:-i?'i L's4TM ' , I-wg. -,wffjf '.f -gtgdsl-5-Y, --:1',5Q, , Y--fl L4 E V rg' js- 1 ' ' fy , 1 A A nl I f 4. ,. ' 544 .-iifll, if2fa la Tr-szggimz' ' XYiTl1 Ulilllli of swurfl aml uliiik of Sl .Xml Tl'lllllIlt'l.S wilil illill'Ill. My l.aily's glove. lnimml high ahmx- lleynml all fear of hariu. llllUt' inure I rirlv. with lanvv uiliriul .xklUNYll thi- l1ll1'l'lBl't'. Small care Tn mv. while all shall sm My Laclyk glove I wvar. ,I .I 4 l ff . ' -- -'I45-' . f ,ffLf'w -5 L ilf! 1 K X Qi fi7 'f' 'X Lfyf Sy f ,lf , K zagff' 'gig - f V ' V,- ' 3 fi' 4 ' 'rf fi 5' ' fi., - ' f,f1g 455f 7 L ,i'f'1i - V ' 'rg ' if l 6 34. 4- 'i fwfis c ',.L'.' , jikui i-.1,.V ' L V it .Ji f:.:f,f,,, - gf,--. , Q.!QE2i':?-jg e,11 y'ff,' -H-' .EM ...W , 'A .- A Short History of the Kaleidoscope. AST Commencement when I looked into the seventh K.xi.rgIDoscoi-E, fresh from the presses. I felt that that artistic book owed much of its excellence to the others that came before. It owed a debt to the past. lt was the outgrowth or evolution of its predecessors. It was the product of forces and tendencies which had been operating in the foregoing annuals and which had brought grace and beauty and strength to the present volume. It began life before appearing in cold, black print to be eagerly scanned by the college boy and afterwards taken home and shown with pride to his sweetheart-a happy fate that overtakes most annuals. The first IQALEIDOSCOPE appeared at the Commencement of 1893. or there- abouts. Its life has been continuous, a new volume having been published every year. Seven volumes have appeared, and we can now review the work as a whole and discover what forces have been at work and what tendencies have been influential in producing these books. The first two volumes were small, unpretentious books of about one hundred pages, and did not compare well with their contemporaries from the other colleges. In them we see the dominant influence of that principle which is always present in the beginnings of human life and effort-imitation. Here is little originality, the slightest deal of independence in thought and method. At this time the leading colleges were sending forth year-books or annuals. which contained the college classes, clubs, and various organizations, often historical and biographical matter: and Hampden-Sidney decided to try its hand on an annual. It must, of course, be modeled after the annuals from other schools. W'e must make our book as much like theirs as possible. NVith this modus njirrandf. the editors set to work. They were inexperienced: editing annuals was entirely new tothem, and atthat time printing annuals was new work to Southern printers. As has been said, the work was imitative, too cautious, dependent. and timorous. The spirit of independence and originality of method does not assert itself. Yet the friend and alumnus of Hampden-Sidney finds in them much that is instruc- tive, interesting. and amusing. Here we have some choice historical matter: the clubs-both real and fictitious, a few poems here and there. for it will be some time before poetry gains the prominent place it deserves in THE IQALEIDOSCOPEZ a fairly good portrayal of college existence-you catch the spirit as you scan from page to page. Mr. Dandridge Spottswood, of the Class of 1893. has the honor of being the first editor-in-chief. And to his unfiagging zeal the success of the first and also of several succeeding volumes is largely due, in recognition of which the fourth volume was dedicated to him. as maker of the first IQALEIDO- SCHPE and loyal helper of its successors. I8 The appearance of the third volume marks an epoch in the history of THE Tir-XLEIDOSCUPli. It was something new. It was free. Free from the old forms and customs and that timorous, imitative spirit that had dominated its prede- cessors. It compared favorably with year-books from the best schools in the country-and still does. The College saw what it could do and became conscious of its power. And this new confidence has shown itself as an inspiration in all the succeeding li.-XLEIDOSCOPES. The book is full of the spirit of originality that trusts not to precedent or custom. It contains well-arranged and interesting historical matter, a pleasing amount of excellent fiction, glowing with college spirit and sounding forth the undertones of college existence. Poetry, however. is still kept in the background. Mr. ul. L. Stuart, '96, and Mr. Alfred J. Morrison, '95, were the editors of this volume, and the latter has contributed some of the best fiction to other KAL121DoscoPEs. Volume sixth, while slight and modest in size, contained some well-written college fiction, and here for the first time poetry begins to take that prominent place which it now occupies in THE Ti.-XLEIDOSCOPE. Nothing portrays our lives as college boys so well as poetry, and for this reason it merits a high place in college annuals. This was recognized by the editors of THE IQALEIDOSCOPE of 1897. Here is all the verse we could wish for, and much that is excellent. This is the distinctive feature of the book. Here we have also a greater develop- ment of the historical and biographical tendencies of THE IQALEIDOSCOPE. It is now seen that THE KALEIDOSCOPE should be made of more permanent and enduring value from a historical point of view. It should contain something of permanent worth and interest: it should not be too temporary in its interest and allusions. The iniiuence of this new tendency is clearly seen in the two volumes that follow. The class histories are cut down to one page, less space is given to fraternities, clubs, and different organizations, and more pages are devoted to historical and biographical matter of perennial interest. Poetry has at last gained the prominent place it deserves. Tina Ii.-XLEIDOSCOPES are something that the College can take pride in. They are of great value as histories of the College during the period they cover, and the future historian of Hampden-Sidney will find in them rich fields of valuable material. The best poetry that has appeared in the ,llaguzinc is here preserved. From the first there has been a strong development of the historical and biographical elements, while the appreciation of the exceeding propriety of poetry for Tnia K,xLE1posco1f1c has been slow. The elements of college fiction and romance have not received due attention, much to the injury of the books, we think. It seems to me that Hampden-Sidney is an ideal school for an ideal annual- a small college with an inspiring and historic past. The legends, traditions, and true stories that are told of the place should furnish themes for the collegian to 19 weave into verse or prose. The noble history of the College, at times thrilling as a romance, should be inspiration enough for the youthful historian. The great minds that have lived and wrought there should furnish subjects for interesting and instructive biographies. The natural scenery-the woods and streams- and the memories associated with them and the stories others have told of them should give the outline for many an interesting romance. All these could End expression and preservation in THE li.xLl51DosCo1'1i, and give a delicate flavor and local color to the book. I have looked over many animals from large colleges and universities, and the great majority of them are only summaries of statistics, a long array of life- less facts and Figures. And one year-book differs from another only in the names of the members of the clubs, etc. The annual from the smaller college can give more space to fiction, poetry, histories, and biographies. These characteristics stamp the book, lend to it local coloring, and permit some shadowing forth of the delicate tints of college existence and spirit. As we look over the old li.x1.E1DosCo1'Es, we feel a warmth and glow, an eagerness to shout as of old the college yell. Here is something contagious, something personal. something individual. The living spirit behind the facts, the beating heart within the body. fb fewfe 20 Some Distinctive Features of Hampden-Sidney College. By George H. Denny, Ph. D. HE rapid growth of the great modern university with its immense endow- ment has introduced a new problem into the American scheme of educa- tion. That such universities must exist and ought to exist no one can deny: that they are to be viewed as necessities in this age of specialization is equally evident. There are, however, some dangers connected with the evolution of the plans and purposes of those who are shaping the policy of such institutions. In the first place, there is an evident tendency on the part of these universities to combine strictly college li. tt, undergradnatel work with university ti. c.. post-graduatel training, and thus by the strength of financial endowment and great external display to supersede the time-honored under-graduate institutions, which have been the pride and center of our educational system. In the second place, there is a still stronger intiuence proceeding from these great modern universities seeking to infuse into the under-graduate colleges the university spirit and ideals. Hampden-Sidney College is to be congratulated that it has entirely resisted these pernicious tendencies, or rather influences. The aim of the under-graduate student is entirely different from that of the post-graduate., or professional, student: the former is seeking to secure breadth of view and the acquisition of knowledge along a variety of lines: the latter is engaged in specialization along a very limited number of lines. These two aims can not exist satisfactorily side by side in the same institution: and hence the distinctively under-graduate college must and will continue to assert its claim as a distinct and essential unit in our educational scheme, unless we are prepared to destroy the very back-bone of the entire system. It is quite as rational to undertake to dispense with the academy as preparatory to the college as it is to seek to destroy or impair the influence of the under-graduate college. The friends and alumni of Hampden-Sidney feel grateful for its strong and righteous stand against many of the modern innovations suggested by the so-called scientific spirit. It is not to be understood. however, that Hampden-Sidney has not been wisely progressive: for it has kept well abreast the progress of the age. lint the point we desire to emphasize is that it has also been conservative and wisely maintained its high position as distinctively an under-graduate college. the cham- pion of liberal culture, and a solid general education. 2I Among the distinctive features of Hampden-Sidney College the following are, in my judgment, the most prominent and important: I. Its tenacious clinging to a well attested curriculum course. This does not mean that the student may not make a limited and judicious election of certain studies at certain stages of his college career: but it does mean that Hampden- Sidney will not subordinate its own judgment of what a liberal education is or ought to be, to the passing fancy of the untrained student, who may or may not, know what is the best course for him to pursue. Thus, the college has put itself squarely on record as an advocate of culture and liberal training as the basis of all really successful post-graduate and professional work: it insists upon rigid schol- arship, and, especially, upon a solid basis for all scholarship: it resists super- ficiality and all artificial, top-heavy systems, which parade themselves under the captions titles invented by modern society. I attribute the very unusually high rank attained by the graduates of Hampden-Sidney in the various pro- fessions to the wise and dignified position of the College in dealing with this matter. Il. Another distinctive feature that deserves a prominent place in this review is the unusually high standard of scholarship maintained by the College. This has won for Hampden-Sidney the respect not only of its alumni, but also, in a large measure, of the intelligent masses throughout the South and East, and indeed, this entire country. After an experience of four years as student, and three years of service as professor, in the College, I can bear testimony to the fact that a feeling of genuine respect and enthusiasm for Hampden-Sidney can be resisted by no one, who, day after day, witnesses the honest, thorough, conscientious, conduct of every department of the School, and the matter-of-course genuine- ness that pervades its work and shapes its policies. III. A third distinctive feature of the College to which attention has often been called, and upon which too much emphasis can not be laid, is the existence of its unexcelled literary societies, A distinguished educator remarked to me the other day that in his honest opinion they are the best in the South. He might have added, I think, that they are unsurpassed in this country. The training of these societies furnishes one of the most important and essential elements in the equipment of the graduates of I-Iampden-Sidney. IY. A fourth element in the strength of the College and the distinctive feature consists in the unusually high social and moral character of its student- body. The vsfvrit dc corps among the students is exceptionally fine, and their gentlemanly conduct, as a body, unsurpassed in my experience. Is it not a high tribute to the institution that it attracts young men of such high tastes and aspi- rations? Again, is it not quite as high a tribute that the College engages and maintains their respect and attachment? In these particulars we heartily suggest this motto for the future: l'vstz'giu nnllu rvfrursimif' 22 V. The most potent, and, perhaps, the most important influence, however, at work on College Hill is the indehnable spirit that pervades everything, a spirit that is contagious and unmistakable. Hampden-Sidney has illustrated to the world the fact that it is not bricks and mortar, not titles or robes that make an institution, but men,-men of high aims and genuine culture. Nor has this spirit been less pleasing than helpful to the young men who imbibe it. The memories of my college days at Hampden-Sidney are among the very happiest of my life: and every day l learn with fuller pleasure the significance of those words, written over the entrance to the Second Passage, Ham' 011.111 111v11zi111'sx1' j11t'11I11'f. YI. Finally, Hampden-Sidney has always stood, and still stands, for Chris- tian cdncation, a mingling of piety with learning. This result has come most largely from the character of the men who have served at its head. XYhat a noble line of presidents the College has had! May one who loves him be per- mitted to say that he who now stands at the helm is second to none in the posses- sion of those high qualities of head and heart that have rendered his predecessors illustrious? Hampden-Sidney has a past that is hlled with traditions so sacred and inspiring that its future can not be otherwise than great and honorable. 25 ff 99 M r. V. By Rev. T. W. Hooper, D. D. HIS is not his whole name, but the abbreviated form, and was applied by his wife, who was a cousin with the same name, and who intended to avoid the Yankee custom of a wife calling her husband George, or XVilliam, or Sam. And thus it came about that everybody called him Mr. Y., and he responded as naturally as if it had exhausted the whole alphabet. XVhen I first knew him, it had been long enough since he was a Freshman for his eldest son to be a member of that verdant class, to which I also was added in 1850: and strung along from this eldest son, there was the patriarchal number of children, about equally divided, male and female. Ah, me! nearly half a century gone since those Freshman days, and how quickly the mind, like a huge flash-light, sends its rays along the intervening years! And how the boys and girls, who made things lively in those bright days of new life to the college, have been scattered far and wide! and how many, alas! are gone! Rev. L. XY. Green, D. D., had just entered upon his brilliant career as president, and the newly introduced scholarship system had brought new students from far and near. The region round about was in a high state of cultivation under the old slave system, where master and servant were on the best of terms. The crops of tobacco got most of the fertilizers, and the old hard knobs were left to wash in gullies from year to year: but peace and plenty reigned supreme, and old-time hospitality made an earthly paradise. Mr. Y. had a farm near Farmville, but so many olive plants adorned his dwelling, that for the sake of economy, he moved his family to the Hill, where Mrs. Y. lived in the house now occupied by Professor Thornton. The boys were entered in College with NYilliam as my classmate: the younger ones being Preps, then taught by a tutor in the Stewards Hall. And as the years glided by, the older boys, one by one, entered college, and later on, the girls fell into my hands, as a kind of private tutor. After the fashion of those days, Mr. Y. came home only on Saturday night, nigger like, to his wife's house. The rest of the week he spent at the old home on the farm, keeping bachelor's hall, and surrounded by hospitable neigh- bors, most of them relations. Here he exercised a general oversight of the farm while the crops were growing, but when these were gathered and housed, he moved his quarters to his wife's house, and kept the table supplied with wild turkeys. The only wild turkey I ever killed was while I was sitting in a blind with him yelping: and it was so sudden, that he yelled at me for Hring my gun, as he thought, by accident. The turkey came up my side, and I killed it so quickly. that I am not sure he ever invited me to take another hunt. 24 But he enjoyed the society of the professors, both of the College and Semi- nary: and among the students of the latter was an Irishman, who was a perpetual source of amusement to him. He loved to hear his rich Irish brogue, and used to get him to read Hebrew to him, and insisted that Hebrew with the Irish brogue to it, was the richest language ever spoken. One day VVilliam and I walked over to the farm, and from some cause, we did not eat lunch and grapes enough to satisfy us. That night XVilliam ate eighteen biscuits for supper. He wore large boots, rulzicli fitted lzim, and one of the boys said if Billy Y. got one square meal, and a pair of boots out of a beef. there would not be much left. Poor YYill! He moved to Texas, enlisted in the army, was captured at Arkan- sas Post, and died from starvation at Camp Chase. By request of his broken- hearted mother, I wrote an obituary of him during the war. In my seminary course, I began in New York, but was tolled away, by various unconscious and cooperating causes. Among these, I was invited to live a few miles in the country, to teach a young girl Latin, and a horse was furnished for me to ride over to recitations. But one of those unforeseen circum- stances that will change the current of our lives, led to 1ny return to the Hill. Mrs. Y. concocted a scheme for me to hear her oldest daughter recite Latin. XVhen she went off to the boarding-school, Mrs. Y. hadme hear the younger girls recite after dinner. Then, when these required the services of a gov- erness, I asked her in triumph. Now, will I not be allowed to pay board? Wiith the gentleness of a mother, and the firmness of a Roman matron, she said, I have told you over and over again, you should never pay me a cent of board. You ask a blessing at the table, and you help to keep the boys straight, and you shall never pay me a cent. That ended it as far as she was concerned: but I never see one of those children, or hear of them, that I do not recall the kindness of that dear, generous woman. One married a native missionary of Brazil. Another married a judge in Florida. But strange to say, when I was pastor in Selma, a Mr. S. D. Holt moved there, and became an elder in my church, and one of these little pupils of mine was his wife. But for years I could not get her fixed in my memory, until some one said, Catty is one of your flock, now. Then as the unknown Kate van- ished, I recognized my little Cattyf' and went back to the old parlor recitation- room at Mr. Y's. Ah, mel YVhen I Float back in memory to those golden college days, how young I feel, and how the boys and girls come fairy-like, to welcome me from that dim mist of the days that are gone! But I have seen Catty's grandchildren, and she knows mine, and when I meet one of the old residents of the Hill who sprang from that family, I am back again, sitting on the grassy yard, cracking jokes with Mr. Y., or listening to him and Professor I-Iolladay spinning yarns, or busily engaged in fixing their accoutrements for a turkey hunt. 25 William H. Cabell. By James Alston Cabell. ILLIAM H. CABELL was a descendant of an English family of undoubted antiquity, as is attested by the records of the British Museum, visitations of the counties of Devon. XVilts, and Somerset, and the tombs i11 tl1e Cabell sepulchre in Buckfastleigh, one of the old seats of the family in Devon. At a very early period of our history, his grandfather, Dr. XYilliam Cabell, an officer in the British Navy, came to Virginia, and located the lowlands for twenty miles or more, in the present counties of Amherst, Appomattox, Buckingham, and Nelson, when no other man would attempt it. During the Colonial and Revolutionary epochs of our history, the members of his family bore a conspicuous and honorable part in all public affairs, and in war as well as in peace, rendered their country useful and distinguished services. Governor Cabell was the oldest son of Colonel Nicholas and Hannah lCarrington4l Cabell. He was born December 16th, 1772, at Boston Hill, in Cumberland County, Yirginia, the residence of his maternal grandfather, Colonel George Carrington, where much of his early life was passed. Colonel Carrington had been a conspicuous Revolutionary patriot, and all of his family rendered valuable services in the contest with England. Four of his sons, two of his sons-in-law, and three of his grandsons had served with distinction as officers in tl1e Revolution. His residence was a favorite resort of the eminent men of the period, both before and after the war. The rare advantages he enjoyed from the acquaintance of these distinguished men, and tl1e inliuence they exercised over him had n1ucl1 to do with shaping the career and character of Governor Cabell. After being prepared by private tutors, he entered Hampden-Sidney College in February, 1785, where he continued until September, 1789. His uncle, Colonel XYilliam Cabell, of Cnion Hill, was one of its founders. In 1783, he was appointed by the General Assembly one of the trustees of Hampden-Sidney College, having been a trustee of Hampden-Sidney Academy since November Sth, 1775. Among Governor Cabell's classmates were, Kemp Plummer, of North Carolina, who became a distinguished lawyer and was the grandfather of Professor Kemp Plummer Battle, of the University of North Carolina: Hon. john XY. Eppes, who defeated -lohn Randolph for Congress: Rev. James Blythe, D. D., who was professor in Transylvania Cniversity, Kentucky, and president of the Hanover College, Indiana: Rev. Nash Le Grand, and Rev. Clement Read of Charlotte County: Hon. .lames jones, Member of Congress from Nottowayg Rev. Moses XYaddell, the teacher of Calhoun. and the founder of the University of Georgia: 26 Judge WM. H. CABELL, Governor of Virginia 11805-18083. Supreme Court of Appeals C181 lFrom an original Sl. Homin plnej. 1-18513 . 7.7, T U . . , .g ..,. 1 O . o 'l.' 'M - If . fr-. r ' . . Qt... . r. J. '-u 1 , . ' STO, ., N W, Q A- .ug ! 1 U.. . I ,-:v-I I .X 3' I 0' -L , I.. Lv T Hon. George Bibb, who became Governor of Kentucky, and Dr. George Cabell, a distinguished physician of Lynchburg. Rev. john Blair Smith was president of the College during Governor Cabell's connection witl1 it. ln February, 1790, he entered XYilliam and Mary College, TYOIH wl1icl1 he graduated in 1793. After a year spent in Richmond, completing his preparation for the bar, he commenced tl1e practice of law in july, 1794. He very soon took a high stand at the bar, and gave evidence of rare talents and ability. His early associations gave him a taste for politics. and in the spring of 1796, he was elected to the General Assembly from Amherst County. He was also in the famous Assembly of 1798, a11d actively supported the celebrated resolutions of tl1at session, protesting against the action of Congress, in passing tl1e Alien and Sedition Acts. Shortly after the death of his first wife, who was a daughter of Colonel William Cabell of Cnion Hill, he went to Charleston, S. C., but he returned in the spring of 1802, and was elected a member of the Virginia Assembly for that year. He was also a member for 1803 and 1804. Although a young man he took an important and leading part in the deliberations of the Assembly, which means a great deal when it is remembered he served with such veteran statesmen as Patrick Henry, blames Madison, joseph Jones, Richard Henry Lee, Henry Tazewell, XVilliam Grayson, -lohn Taylor, john Breckinridge, and XYilson Cary Nicholas. During a part of this time his father, Colonel Nicholas Cabell, represented the same county in the Senate. I11 April, 1805, he was again elected to the Assembly, and attended as a member, but within a few days after the commencement of the session, he was elected Governor of Virginia, being the youngest 111a11 who ever occupied that position. His administration, which was in IIIHIU' respects most trying, won tl1e praise of all parties. It was generally admitted that no executive ever represented the majesty of the state with more propriety. dignity, and grace. On March Ilill, 1805, he married Miss Gamble, daughter of Colonel Robert Gamble, a distinguished Revolutionary olhcer, who resided at Gamble's Hill, Richmond, Yirginia, and after whom the l1ill and park are named. Two memorable events occurred in Yirginia during Governor Cabell's administration. One of these was the trial of Aaron Burr, late Yice-president of the Cnited States, for treason in an alleged design to form an empire in the western part of America. This trial took place at Richmond in the spring and summer of 1807, before Chief justice Marshall. The other important event was the firing on the Cnited States frigate. Chesa- peake, by the British sloop of war, Leopard, on june 22d, 1807, and tl1e block- ading of Hampton Roads, on July 3d, by the British squadron under Commodore Douglas. Nothing but the prompt and vigorous measures taken by Mr, 5 s s jefferson restrained the country from an immediate declaration of war. Yirginia was the scene of the most intense excitement. Governor Cabell's message of December 8th, 1807, to tl1e Assembly. reviews tl1e acts of the British, and breathes war, or retraction and reparation. His executive correspondence shows with 27 what promptitude he put the Yirginia troops i11 the field. Some idea of tl1e excitement 111ay be formed fro111 the following description: Richmond became a theatre of great agitation. Those martial fires which slumber in the breast of every community, and which are so quickly kindled into Hame by the breeze of stirring public events, blazed with special ardor amongst the youthful and venturous spirits of Virginia. Over the whole state, as indeed over the whole country, that combative principle which lies at the heart of all chivalry began to develop itself in every form in which national sensibility is generally exhibited. The people held meetings, passed Hery resolutions, ate indignant dinners, drank belligerent toasts, and uttered threatening sentiments. Old armories were ransacked, old weapons of war were burnished anew, military companies were formed, regimentals were discussed, the dr111n and fife and martial bands of music woke the morning and evening echoes of town and country: the whole land was filled with the din, the clamor, the glitter, the array of serried hosts, which sprang up out of a peaceful nation like plants of the night. During this trying period Governor Cabell displayed great ability, and rendered the country valuable services by his courage a11d judgment. He was in constant communication with Mr. Jefferson, who valued him as a friend and adviser. He had been an elector at the first election of Mr. Jefferson, and filled the same office again at his second election. In 1818, the General Assembly appointed him on the Board of Commissioners, along with Jefferson, Madison, l'hilip C. Pendleton and others, to fix upon a location for tl1e University of Virginia. Immediately after his term of office as Governor had expired, he was elected by the Legislature a judge of the General Court, which office he held until April. 1811, when he was elected a judge of tl1e Court of Appeals, being appointed. March 2lSt, 1811, by Governor James Monroe and tl1e Privy Council, a11d quali- fying April 3d, 1811. He was elected also by the Legislature, December 7th, 181 1, and then com- missioned by Governor George Wlilliam Smith. After the adoption of the new constitution of Yirginia fl83OJ, he was again re-elected a judge of the Court of Appeals, and commissioned by Governor john Floyd. On the eighteenth of january, 1842, he was elected president of tl1e co11rt, which position he filled until 1851, when he retired from the bench. He died at Riclnnond, january I2tl1. l853,ll'l tl1e eighty-first year of his age-,and was i11terred in Shocko-e Hill Cemetery. At a called meeting of the Court of Appeals and Bar of Virginia, held in Rich- mond, january 14th, glowing resolutions in testimony of the singular purity of character and excellencies of judge Cabell were passed, which were published in the .-l111v1'1'm11 Tinzcx of January 19th, 1853. Thence the following is extracted: Rcsulr't'1f, That we cherish, and shall ever retain, a grateful remembrance of the signal excellence of the Hon. XYilliam ll. Cabell, as well in his private as 28 in his public life. There was no bounds to the esteem which he deserved and enjoyed. Of conspicuous ability, learning, and diligence, there combined there- with a simplicity, uprightness, and courtesy which left nothing to be supplied to inspire and confirm confidence and respect. It was natural to love and honor him: and both loved and honored was he by all who had an opportunity of observing his unwearied benignity or his conduct as a judge. ln that capacity wherein he labored for forty years in our Supreme Court of Appeals, having previously served the State as Governor and as Circuit judge, such was his uniform gentleness, application, and ability: so impartial, patient, and just was he 1 of such remarkable clearness of perception and perspicuity, precision and force in stating convictions, that he was regarded with warmer feelings than those of merely official reverence. To him is due much of the credit which may be claimed for our judicial system and its literature. It was an occasion of profound regret, when his infirmities of age about two years since required him to retire from the bench: and again are we reminded by his death of the irreparable loss sustained by the public and by the profession. Nearly thirty years after the death of judge Cabell, March 23d, 1881, on the occasion of his portrait being placed in the Court of Appeals room at Rich- mond, the judges caused to be entered in the records of the court an order bearing testimony to his great usefulness and ability, from which the following is taken : Wie all recognize judge Cabell as one of the ablest and most distinguished judges that ever sat upon the bench of this court. He was a member of this court for more than forty years. During this time he served his state with a conscientious discharge of duty which he brought to his great office. NYC. his successors to-day, often take counsel of his great opinions, and those who come after us will do the same. Though dead for more than a quarter of a century, he yet speaketh to us, and will continue to speak, when we shall pass away, to those that come after us, so long as the jurisprudence of this State shall be governed by the great principles of law and by a fearless determination on the part of her judiciary to declare and uphold that which is just and right. judge Cabell's opinions were never characterized by a strict adherence to the rigid rules of the common law, but to the more liberal principles of the equity courts. No man ever sat on the Supreme Bench of Yirginia who had less pride of opinion than he. A notable instance of this is found in the famous case of Davis ws. Turner 1,4 Gratt., 422l. Cntil the decision of that case, the courts of Virginia had followed Edwards tar. Harben 12 T. R., 5873, decided by the Court of Kings Bench in 1788, which had established what is known as the doctrine of fraud pci' sv. This doctrine was assailed by judge Baldwin, in a very able opinion in Davis fav. Turner. judge Cabell, after au exhaustive discus- sion, said, with great candor, that he had changed his opinion, but not without a struggle: yet he would never permit the pride of self-consistency to stand in 29 the path of duty: and he cheerfully changed the opinion which he had theretofore entertained, which would restore the law to the solid foundation of good sense and sound morals. The principles decided in Davis rs. Turner are the law of Yirginia at this day. The case was decided at the january term, 1848. The General Assembly, which was in session at the time of judge Cabell's death. adjourned as an act of respect for his public services. 4 On january 2d, ISOQ, the County of lienawha was divided and a new county formed therefrom, which was named Cabell in honor of Governor XVilliam H. Cabell. There were many complimentary notices of him by the newspapers of the day. That in the Riclzzzzuzzd Whig tjanuary 15th, 18531 concludes as follows: judge Cabell was connected with the public service of the State for more than fifty years-filling various important offices, and discharging the duties of all of them with zeal, fidelity, and ability. At an early age, he was a member of the Legislature,-and we think, before he was thirty, he was elected Governor of the Commonwealth-being the youngest man who has occupied that position. At the expiration of his gubernatorial term, he was elected judge of the Supreme Court of Appeals, which office he held until last year. Some fifteen years ago. he was made president of that Court by his associates. The eminent ability with which he performed his judicial functions, won for him the appellation of the Mansfield of Virginia, the admiration of the Bar, and the universal esteem and confidence of the people of the State. A purer and better man in all the rela- tions of life never lived in the State-and a fairer specimen of the perfect gentle- man could not be found anywhere. His domestic life was a beautiful one. On his death-bed he called all of his children around him, and said to them, My children, ever love and honor your dear mother. She richly deserves your tenderest affections. She and I have been married nearly fifty years, and every day has been a wedding day. In an eminent degree Governor Cabell united to intellectual qualities of a high order, a pure moral character, great domestic virtues, and a deep sense of religion. As legislator, governor, and judge he served his State for fifty-six years. His acts as a member of the House of Delegates are preserved in the journals of that body, 1796-1805: his messages and executive papers, as governor, in the legislative journals and executive correspondence of 1805-18081 his opinions, etc., as a judge, in the respective Court reports of 1808-1811, and 1811-1851. The engraving of Governor Cabell, which accompanies this sketch, is from an original plate made during the last year he was governor, by the famous French artist, St. Memin, who was visiting this country at that time. 30 C Q, AX 'A 1 Q x for ., ax: . T ,Q 3 5.55, l- -' A ,QU H1 1: f '- . ,. f CQ ., . X-. '- 4, ' 'A 'T lf. I Q -1, A ' eflf-Y 2.2 315261. Tt f.'-i f 1 ' 1-: all' 5 1 - R qx . ' - aa :', ,' 45 'T .- : 1 , i .' - ' fi 13 7. 'I e i ' 1 f ,Gi , WAV r '44 df! '11 ' ' Rev. James Blythe, D. D. By E. Forman. HE subject of this sketch was born in North Carolina in 1765 and gradu- ated at Hampden-Sidney College in 1788. .Xt the time of his matricua lation, there was not another student in the College who was a professor of religion besides himself. and even he, yielding to the popular current, was at no special pains to divulge his position unnecessarily. Un his arrival, he was recommended to Cary H. Allen, a fellow student. as one of the steadiest youths in College. This person sallied forth with a party to attend a Methodist meeting in the neighborhood, promising themselves rare sport. But, strange to relate. among the first who were seized with pungent conviction of sin was this wild, wittv dashinfr Cary Allen. Making known his change. lllvthe caught the infec- . ' bv . Pa N . t tion. No longer hesitating to own his religious character, he naturally became the center of the little group of earnest spirits. From that time, the seriousness spread until out of eighty students. nearly half that number, were touched with compunction for their sins. The president of the College-john lllair Smith-took a lively interest in promoting the revival. Two hundred and twenty-five persons, chiefly young people. were added to tl1e churches he served. The revival extended over Prince Edward, Cumberland, Charlotte and lledford counties to the Peaks of Otter. Dr. Blythe was licensed by the Presbytery of Orange, in North Carolina. to preach the gospel. ln 1791, he visited Kentucky and preached at Paint Lick and other places. In July, 17931 he was ordained and installed pastor of Pisgah and Clear Creek churches. He ministered to the Pisgah Church for more than forty years. The following incident reached me many years ago. He was in the habit of riding to Pisgah Church. eight miles from Lexington, on horseback. It was said that he never failed to meet his appointment but once, and then he was thrown from his horse and had his leg broken. Dr. lllythe accompanied Rev. David Rice to the Eastern cities to secure funds for Transylvania Seminary. They obtained upwards of ten thousand dol- lars, of XYlllCll amount President XYashington and Yice-president .Xdams each 3l contributed one hundred dollars and Aaron llurr gave Hfty dollars. Br. Blythe was received with the greatest courtesy by the President, who spent much time in making inquiries as to the state of literature in Kentucky. lYhen the Kentucky Academy in 1798 was merged into the Ifniversity of Transylvania, Dr. Blythe was appointed professor of mathematics, natural philosophy, astronomy, and geology, and on the resignation, subsequently. of Mr. Moore, fulfilled for twelve or fifteen years the duties of acting president. XVhen Dr. Holly was elected president in 1818, Dr. Blythe was transferred to the chair of chemistry. Meantime he was associated for some years as colleague with Mr. VVelch in charge of the Lexington Church. Dr. Blythe was opposed to the war of 1812, in which he lost a son, who was not killed in battle, but was murdered by a treacherous Indian. In consequence of his political opinions he became involved in an unpleasant altercation with XVilliam L. McCalla, then a licensed preacher, afterwards pastor in Augusta, Kentucky, and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and was arraigned by VVest Lex- ington Presbytery. The case was transferred to the Synod of Kentucky, by which body he was honorably acquitted. Ranke, in his History of Lexington, says: The first president of Transyl- vania University, Rev. blames Moore, was succeeded in 1808 by Dr. James Blythe. Rev. James Blythe, M. D., was born in North Carolina in 1765, and was educated at Hampden-Sidney College for the Presbyterian pulpit. He came to Kentucky in 1791, and two years after was ordained pastor of Pisgah and Clear Creek churches. He continued to preach up to the time of his death. For six years before his accession to the presidency of the University, he was professor of mathematics and natural philosophy, and often supplied the pulpit of the First Presbyterian Church. He was president for nearly fifteen years and after his resignation Hlled the chair of chemistry in the medical college until 1831, when he accepted the presidency of Hanover College, Indiana, which prospered greatly under his charge. He was a faithful and animated preacher and fine debaterf' In 1825, Dr. Blythe was a member of the board of the VVesteru Theological Seminary convened in Chillicothe, and was chosen president of the board. He was appointed to preach the sermon at the opening of the next meeting. A munber of his sermons are in print and indicate his admirable pulpit style. Dr. Blythe was active in opposition to the administration of Horace Holly as president of the University of Transylvania. Holly proved to be a Unitarian and was otherwise unsuited to the office he held, and was compelled to resign. Dr. Blythe opened the meeting of the board of the VVestern Theological Seminary with a sermon at VVheeling, Virginia, in April, 1826, and made an address before the American Tract Society in New York in May of the same year. In November, 1831, he attended the convention of delegates from the presbyteries which met in Cincinnati at the suggestion of the General Assembly on the subject of domestic missions and was chosen moderator. In 1834, his 32 name was found signed to the memorable Act and Testimony, and in 1855, he was one of the standing committee of the convention called at Pittsburg by these signers and preached before the convention on the first day of its session. lu 1837, he was again found on the alert, watching over the purity of the church and attending the convention of ministers and elders which met in Philadelphia on May 11th, to deliberate on some plan of reform, and of that body he was elected temporary chairman. .Ks already stated. Dr. lllythe was elected president of Hanover College. Under his administration, the institution rose to a high degree of prosperity, numbering upwards of two hundred students. This position he held with dis- tinguished ability for several years. His last public service was his embarking with great enthusiasm upon a scheme for pervading the whole country more effectually with the gospel by inducing each minister to devote a certain portion of time each year to the supply of destitute places, which was sanctioned by the Synods of Kentucky and Indiana, and the General Assembly. He died in 1842, aged seventy-seven years. He had the satisfaction of seeing all his children embraced in the church, and several sons and sons-in-law in the ministry. ks 33 Rev. Willliam Hill, D. D. ILLIAM HILL was horn March 3d, 1769, in Liumberland County, Virginia, of English parentage. His father died when the boy was in his fifth year. and his mother, who after a time married Mr. Daniel Allen, died before he reached l1is twelfth year. He was left an orphan, in the home of his step-father. who extended to him the same parental care and affection which his own childre11 received. Mr. Hill a11d Cary Allen, tl1e son of this step-father, were educated by Drury Lacy, who was tutor in Mr. Allen's family, a11d were thoroughly drilled in English and in Latin. Tutor and pupils became. later on, ministers of the Gospel, and were co-laborers in a rugged but productive field. Mr. llill's uncle, his father's brother, was his guardian, and had legal control of his person and property. It was the desire and purpose of this uncle that his promising nephew should become an ornament of the Yirginia bar, and to that end he was placed at Hampden-Sidney College to receive that thorough academic training, which is the only sure foundation for a professional education. But. during their residence in College both Hill and Cary Allen came under the inliuence of that great revival of religion that swept over that region of country. and, in due time were received into tl1e Presbyterian Church, on profession of their faith. The guardian-uncle, in resentment of this disarrangement of his plans, withdrew the allowance on which Hill was dependant for maintenance in college, and the youth was compelled to seek shelter of Major Edmund Read, who received, and kept him as a member of his household from April lst, 1739. to july 9th, I79O. During this period he continued his regular course of studies, obtained from the trustees of the College permission to stand the examinations with his class, for the degree of A. li., and was graduated i11 1789. Having fixed upon the gospel ministry, as his calling in life, he placed him- self under the care and direction of the Rev. -lohn ll, Smith, of Prince Edward County, and pursued his theological studies until .luly lOtll, 1790, when, after the usual thorough and rigid examinations and trial, he was licensed by tl1e Lexington I'resbytery to preach the gospel, and was directed to spend the months of August and September in making a missionary tour through the counties of Halifax, Henry, Franklin and l'ittsylvania. His diary. kept by him throughout this tour. is yet extant, and is full of interest and profitable instruction. Un September .24tl1, 1790, tl1e commission of tl1e Synod selected Mr. Hill as a missionary to labor throughout the counties east of tl1e lllue Ridge Moun- tains, and, after attending the meeting of Synod in AYlllCllGSlCl'. on September goth, he proceeded to the counties of Lancaster and Northumberland, where he preached for several months, until -lanuary 11th, 1791. and thence, until the fall 34 of that year, he, in cotnpatty witlt Matthew Lyle made a tnissionary tour througlt certain counties west of tlte Blue Ridge, reachittg XVinchester on September 28th, to ttteet the Synod, which met tltere again tltat year. During tltis visit, Mr. Hill preached in tlte cottnties of jefferson, llerkeley, and l rederick. attd in tlte spring of 179.2 he received a call to tlte cltttrcltes in Charlestown, in jefferson County. This call he accepted, and was duly installed as pastor on May goth, l7Q.Z. He remained in cltarge of these cltttrcltes until january, ISOO, when he accepted a unanimous call to tlte recently establislted l'resbyterian Church in XYincltester, and this ancient towtt ttow became, with tlte exception of a few intervals, his abidittg place for tnore than half a centttry. Here was tlte theatre of his ment- orable labors. This was tlte scette of his triumphs attd defeats. Une who kttew and revered him ltas said: ln tlte passage of these years he experienced the fttll variety of ministerial life-its excitements, its reverses, its sttccesses, its sor- rows attd its joys. ltt XVinchester was a field, unehosen, selected for ltitn, appro- priate for his energy, enterprise, zeal and pulpit powers. He could not have desired a better. Here. too, was a erttcible to refine tlte imperfections he so bitterly lamented: lte tnust master his fiery spirit or be an unhappy man. He knew that he tltat rttletlt himself. is greater than he tltat taketh a city, and that if he would govern a city, ntust first govern himself. There were families in his charge tltat would love him for his occasional propensity to merritnettt and social humor: and there were others tltat would delight in tlte extreme of his passionate excitements about religion, for they loved to revel on tlte confines of enthusiasm. :Xll appreciated his pulpit performances. liis sermons cattte wartn front his heart attd warmed every one that heard. l-lis congregation were all united in admiring him, sotne for his real excelleneies, attd some for tlte very things over which he in private mourned. ltt tlte fall of l7Q2, Mr. Hill was married to Miss Nancy Morton, daughter of Colonel XYilliam Morton, of Charlotte County, and took her to ltis, then, new home in tlte beautiful county of Jefferson. Of this marriage, were born two daughters. Une married Thomas Allen Tidball, for tnore than fifty years the honored clerk of tlte County Court of Frederick County. The other. a lovely and highly accomplished girl, Elizabeth M. Hill, died September l7tll, 1818, in her twenty-tltird year. From tlte time of lter deatlt tlte current of tlte father's life appears to have becotne disturbed and tttmttltuotts. The spirit which in assemblies had been potent to caltn tlte boisterous waves of uttseemly debate. to brittg order from chaos, and to retnove witlt tactful touch tlte offending roots of bitterness, seems to ltave lost its power. Clouds and darkness gathered abottt hitn. and retnained with hitn till his deatlt. ln the spring of 1819, while in attettdance on tlte General Assembly, lte fortned the purpose of requiring front his congregation a renewal of their vows of consecration, and, on ltis retttrn home he prepared and subtnitted to thetn a paper. by which a general and public renewal of tlteir cove- 35 XXK lm-rs, :mil liimwlf. 'l'l1L-sc, 111 X'2ll'lllllS f1w1'111s, lmccznim- thc suliji-ct ui c1v11si1lci':1ti1111 lm-cz1111c z1gz1i11 11111111-:1s:1111. :mil in 1834 lic :lou-Intl-1l ll cull 11+ thc liI'lQl'j' Cliurcli 0 ll 1111 ahivulil lu' 11111flc Ivy i111lix'i1l11z1l 5ig11z1l111'c. ,Xrliv1siw11rvfsi-11li1111.-111 xx'z1a:1l1111ci willful in thc k'll1lg'l'L'Q'2llllIll, wliicli llll-C2l.lK.'llL'll Z1 flivisifm uf thc u1'g'z111iz:iti+111 lll hi-ziltli calm- 11111111 ID11 llill. lay xxhich thu cl1a1':1ctc1'islics uf his lClllllL'l'2lIllL'lll mil zictiuu hy lil'k'SlJf'lk'l'f' :mil hy Syinnl, lll thc lull wi 18315, thc Synml g'l'ZllllL'tl ll l'L'llllL'5l 1-1 cirmtitiilu ll 111-xx' cliurcli lll XYlllL'llL'blL'I'. zmil this zictifm was lillik'll mlcspitc thc Sll'L'l1llllllS wppusitimwii 111 ll1'. Ilill. 'lilly lwxx' Cllll1'Cll was 41l'g'1llllZL'4l, :mal it czlllcml as its pzlstin' thc lim' aviil ll. Rhlillu, wllfw wma 111'1lz1i11c1l zmil iiisiallwl iii limit Stu-ct flll1I'L'll 1111 iiunituil llIl4lL'l' thc blllllll 11z1ft111'z1tc uf llr. llill zmfl Mix Riclillc in April, 183.2 Xlr. lihlfllc 1lL'L'L'llllllg', Nllllll ZlllL'l'. :1 czill tu l'ittsh111'g, thc situzitievii uf l71'. Hill 111 thc XXX-sl llziiiinx-1' lil'L'5l5yl.L'l'f'. 'lvllCl'L' l1c l'k'llllllllL'1l tm, 51-z11's, :mil thi-11 11-1111111-il tu .xlL'XZlll4ll'lZl, xx'l1c1'c lic lM'k'ZllllL' pzistm' ul thi' SUL'4'11lIl L'l1111'cl1, 11114 th lllS S1111-lll-lllXY, M11 lliillmzill, 1111til his ilczlth llll Nm'c111lmc1' lfmlli, 1352. C1111-. ziftcr twiv 1111111- yczlrs, l1c l'L'llIl'llL'Il tu XYlllL'llC5IClA, wlicru lu- rcsiilccl with ,,as'h,!Q,,-7,-1, 5 4r - Y-i , Y 311 'rc :mu-11t11:1ic1l. l,ll:fCl'L'llL'k'S ucc111'1'wl lil-twccii his ulilurs, mzuiy ul thc mum- llL'CL'lllllL'l' 4th, ISIS, lu thc fall ui 1830, 1111 1-xtciisivc rvvivzil lwwlc plucc ill NYi11cl1cslc1'. lwzlcc win I'k'Sll'I'L'll lu ilu- ulilmusiiig L'lL'lllL'1llS. :mil the tww Clllll'Cllk.'b Colonel Henry Stokes. By Rev. Richard Nlcllwaine, D. D. HE subject of this sketch was for forty-two years an honored and useful trustee of Hampden-Sidney College, and was never absent from a meeting of its board until within the past three years. when disabled by sickness. His father before him, the late Colin Stokes, Esq., of Lunenburg County. occu- pied the same position for many years. during the latter part of which .the son served with him. Henry Stokes was born in the county of Prince Edward on july 25th. 1820, but was reared from boyhood in Lunenburg. He was educated in the best schools of that day and at eighteen years of age entered the Cniver- sity of Yirginia where he was a student for three sessions. when he returned home and was married on November 2311, 1841. to Miss Annie E. Hatchett. who. with seven sons and two daughters, survives him. Through the pious example of his de- voted young wife, he was led to Christ early in his married life and united with the Presby- terian Church, since which time he has con- tinued a consistent and active Christian and was for many years a ruling elder in the churchof his choice. Colonel Stokes never sought or held political office but was interested in everything pertaining to the welfare of the country and had inrluence in shaping policies and promoting the interests of his people. He was frequently solicited to become a candidate for office and was held in such universal esteem that at one time he was urged by three political parties to stand for the legislature but he courteously declined, preferring the humbler and more congenialduties and pleasures of domestic life. During the war between the States. he was what was known as a bonded farmer, whose duty it was to furnish and gather supplies for the army. a position under the conditions then existing not less important to the efficiency of the service than a place at the front. His life was active and useful throughout, until three years ago when dis- abled by a stroke of paralysis. The remainder of his days were spent in his home 37 and for the most part in bed, surrounded by a loving family and furnished with every material comfort. His resignation throughout was beautiful. No mur- muring word ever escaped his lips. His cheerfulness and grateful recognition of the kindness of friends and the goodness of God: his unfeigned faith in the Saviour of sinners: his deep interest in the welfare of everything with which he had been connected and specially the church and the College, were perennial, and this continued down to the very last when on lllarch 25th, tooo, in the eightieth year of his age, he gently and peacefully fell asleep in Jesus. Colonel Stokes was no ordinary man. Possessed of good natural ability, he came out into life trained and instructed by study and fitted to fill an intiuential position in society. Choosing' the occupation of a planter, than which none in cum' lrcllimz times and the days of slavery was more honorable or more generally sought by educated gentlemen, he devoted himself to his vocation with an intelli- gence and industry not often witnessed. Gifted with common sense to an unusual degree, he mastered the details of his situation and with untlagging energy com- manded success under circumstances in which many failed. His connection with the College was most salutary and helpful. He was its devoted friend and supporter. was always present at its meetings, for some years was secretary of its board of trustees and was also a member of two of its important standing committees. ln all these positions he was punctual and cheerful in the discharge of every duty, giving advice when asked and rendering' valuable assistance. ln the construction of the Memorial Hall, the improvement of the athletic grounds and other undertakings, he was unwearied in his services. He never broke an engagement or failed to be on time in meeting one through any fault of his own. He was prompt in performing every obligation and his word was as good as his bond. He was faithful to every trust and by diligence and careful oversight commanded success in all his undertakings. He has left a name unstained by meanness and his memory is honored by all who knew him, He is an admirable example to young men, for such virtues as he professed and practiced not only insure success but better than that, a good conscience, and the favor of God. .33 ' Y, - 2 . A -H'-A' 'fl M L-- - . ' ':i',fi.'.fH3A3 ' 5 , -Q-.f-1' ,- W- wtf? - 4,25-eL,r.J-t7:.:QvZZiEn-:wif-rf' ' ,.-ff 1-1.9 'WHS Y:,'--,aff-:Gigi1-fe'L53.-32-'.:Ls3:2izf+ Je: ggi' ' ,-we 1-Jgayfb'-'nxi f' . - 'H W' :- 5:1 .ERN ws, Px',3f:li'.'Z-,skis-If' -nfief - -1, 'Er W- -:+f:.- f e-'fm -' . ,a . 1- . , , ' ' ' -' Na' rf? -' 'C-' :':- - - -1 4- '-Tift 'Q' 919' ' i V f'MLff!'.'i' 5' f kn ' '. 1'1 .sl i v . r .-Eel Q1 1' F . qui i 1137 1 3,1 . -ef. 5:r '.i5L- f.jqHi- -it ,zrdf by -fu V J? 5 .-.fini -'wage-.A M lf- 1 , r 'N e Y' gif' ,gf - :Zsfj ' I' ,g,'.,l-'J - ,ff ,.,,,.,.-s2?'Ql- -5.xL, ,.' - I' 3. 1 - - :-1-a sf' rug .-1 pe- . as -5' ,. ji. 15,- Q 5 - 1 :rj if 1, -, - 33,-J , V YM., NEW It , ,,- ,gs - , A sl ,Q ,-G. .17 ' A sg-P' , ,X E12 H 1 'if 'Y 7, - Q, -H ' ., -11 I-'H, J if ,Lf - - ' ' - ' -,. .- .,- sf- .., Legs' re, -fl '1 T' s i n rsff ia f if - ssfiigi - s-sm .--riger' - ff: ' ir: '35 wr..- ' ' 4 Q '- J an fr ' t . T fsaawfaf if--' 15 V Q 1 K pzllfal jeff 5 .hr 5' Q 7-155, 156315: w - rl pg., 'f' f'i'i'i-MS! .Wfif-9' iff' 515. 'T-5'- TE 'Ei--1' -- :J v '- f , N, -V-tj: ,' ,Q ,fgif ,if - tl M , ' ti N3 1,-,psf Ziqjjf' 2' ' ,i 4' f' f y 1.1 sigma-5 ' f l -W tif--' if , 1:-if a a -5, A: . ,Cie , J1, -ff ,ny QIE4., , x Y . . 5... .Liu--AKt.::Q!'G,,,,k 'Nil y ez . .,. -. I I. i ,:. : ' Ssgr.--T: 1 f ,,..M-'N' f c -f ,g f ms., 's-ern -' ,V 1. ,Q saqfxg- QI, 'fl T 0- A i -.. 'V . ' P -49 'h'- Wiifil - l'f .'--53 Q A .. ',,4' .11 xt fav? . . 5 I , X W.. Get.,-fgigQgf,x5gQq2gg. , Q '-Kg .:JgZf.Y U.-'fgislgif-,219 ,, ' 'A 5' .' 4 1.-5 A J 3: 4 -. S, Nifff, , QQ! . ,- -, .'-If Q,5f'y.-ffQ,1 'W 2-,,, 1 ' .-' 1 , A ' M . - . .,' I f N 1' '.-. kj' ,'-3:59 A--'7-N.f.'f ,s '. '4S?NI1Lll9'- T f ,535 1 ' 1 tlwg ' 'H T7 ' '4 - 'T' vi5f ?,.3 ' ggi ft , 4,2 -1. 's- '1-if ln if -tif, fffli hf V ' , I :- F, -l -',., - - A 'I 1:5 5. ,I A , 7. :r-:gy , ' V? 1 ,. s w' ' :Quai-kj - 1 ff: -. , rg.:-.-T' - -,f 'IF in .-1.-.-fn? f ,. J' -l 'i'1' .f, I:. I.3c,,l.5iTgs-f.'f.- 'A-1 V - .vig gil ls ,f1ii3vig,,. 5 TEN..-alfa,-y, ,4 1' .J f -. , I-fy-7, , .- A fi-' ' A Av' V--' N, 724 H ' ' arf - it A' nmemmllm .- - -.1-4:-, - ' I Ti ' 1 F 'i7i',' - sg 'f'-3f::i'Q'11,'i11- ' , ffl'-ff' y -4-. f -:Wi -J 4. xx he ., L.-' ' - 215 'ylfdag h' 'Uv' ' i Tn 'T Tligezvfzil' ' Q K' f 'Q S' 1' ii vxu bvbhmmuf - '. .-.. -, -I'-I-. '- 1 ' ' . 1 .. A Q we-.ta.is. ' 1'--'1 ff fm ,K . , .3 .anger we '1 - - +T9::T5-naw' : Xa:-is fc-Q-sl. -.- 5 fe- 'lismrs - . free?-11 ,1-7-iugg-z:.'Hsi 4' 1 'L Q53 --2 WW- 15 . -urfiax Elkffl-Pf ,. -Jr' f 'I- ---'K'-lf-1.:i .g:f1fn2:.'.?':::5lg?.': -if 1 ' ' Q'12'3'i?a,ig-r0'.z'-I'f.r 12 ---if -'.-43 '-i'sf5'fPfHf 1:,..+ - - . . ,. , g '.-J---wg A-.'.--'J-' ', . ,.',,-.,. .--.,. gi A . -. - A .- , .14 - ,ere-+L. , - A je f. r- ,E , . ,,- .. ,YA .4 tvs.,-,-A Kemp Plummer. By Hon. Kemp Plummer Battle. WH brothers of the name of Plummer emigrated from England to the colonies in the first half of the eighteenth century. Une of them settled V in New jersey, and from him was descended' Rev. XYilliam S. Plumer, IJ. D., the eminent l'reshyterian divine. The other, Xliilliam Plummer, fixed his habitation in Yirginia and married a daughter of a family which had long lived in Middlesex County-Elizabeth. or lietsy, Kemp, a descendant of Governor Richard Kemp, or Kempe. As the subject of this sketch much resembled his Kemp ancestry, it may not he amiss to state that llishop Meade in his 4 Fld Churches and Families of Yirginiaf' thus speaks of this family: There is one name on the foregoing list lof Middlesex namesl to which l must allude as having, at an early date in the history of Yirginia, heen character- ized hy a devotion to the welfare of church and religion, that of Kempe. The name often occurs in the vestry hooks of Middlesex County in such a way as to show it. The high esteem in which one of the family was held is seen from the fact that he was Governor of the colony in 1644, and the following extract from 'l'lenning s Statutes' will show not only the religious character of those in authority at that day hut the prohahility that Governor Kempe sympathized 39 in the movement, for the Governor had great power either to promote or to prevent such a measure. In 1644 it was 'enacted by the Governor, Council, and Burgesses of this Grand Assembly, for God's glory, and the public benefit of the colony. to the end that God might avert His heavy judgments that are upon us, that the last XVednesday in every month be set apart for fast and humili- ation, and that it be wholly dedicated to prayer and preachingf Bishop Meade adds, I do not remember ever to have see11 such an indefinite and prolonged period appropriated by a public body to public humiliation. The heavy judgments must have referred to the great civil war in England, the Governor, and the people of Yirginia generally, adhering to King Charles with such loyalty as to gain for Yirginia the name of Old Dominion. lYilliam Plummer, the first, was a planter and slave-owner in Middlesex Co1111ty. As the family records are lost we do not know tl1e names of all his children. Among them, however, were Kemp Plummer, a major of militia during the French and Indian war, and also a vestryman: George XYilliam, john and liilliam Plummer, the second. XYilliam Plummer, the second, was a planter in Gloucester County, near Mobjack Bay, his wife being Mary Hayes. He was a man of considerable wealth, until his slaves and the property were scattered by a British raid in the war of the Revolution. He was a good type of the old Yirginia gentleman, of great public spirit and popularity. .-Xs the office of vestryman had important civil, as well as ecclesiastical functions, and was invariably given to men of high social standing, his possession of that, as well as the military dignity of captain, shows his respectability. His unbounded hospitality and love of good cheer had the usual result of confining him with torturing goutiness to bed for years before his death, which occurred about 1779. Captain XYilliam Plunnner, of Gloucester, left two sons, William and Kemp, and fo11r daughters, Mary Hayes, Elizabeth, Hannah, and Ann. XVilliam moved to the part of liut County in North Carolina which is now called Franklin, mar- ried a Miss Ransom, half-sister of Senator Nathaniel Macon, and sister of Senator M. XY. R2lllSOI'll'S grandfather, emigrated to Tennessee and left many descendants. Uf the daughters, Betsy married Daniel XYeldon and was the mother of the wife of judge John Hall of the Supreme Court of North Carolina, and Hannah married Cnited States Senator Nathaniel Macon. Kemp Plummer, born in 1769, the birth year of Napoleon and XYellingtou, was the second sou of Xl illiam Plummer and Mary Hayes. He was about ten years of age at the death of his father. His mother was a prudent and energetic woman. and, notwithstanding her husbands long sickness, and the impairment uf his fortune, managed to support her family and give them an education. .Xu incident of his boyhood is evidence that she demanded implicit obedience of her children. She had forbidden him to wrestle witl1 negroes, but unfortunately he met tl1e invincible colored champion of the community and was challenged 40 to a tussle. He could not resist the temptation. His Anglo-Saxon blood was up. In the struggle his arm was broken. More afraid of his mother's displeasure than of the pain, he hid under the bed and was only found after a search of several hours. Her sending him to Hampden-Sidney was another evidence of her care for his habits. She was a member of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and the nearer institution, lYilliam and Mary College, other things being equal, would naturally have been her choice. But lYilliam and Mary, as we learn from two of its eminent alumni, Bishops Ravencroft and Meade, had a reputation for wildness, and Mrs. Plummer was afraid of it. He took his degree at Hamp- den-Sidney in 1786, the records not showing what success he had with his studies. He then read law under Chancellor lYythe, but did not practice in Yirginia. Attracted by the cheaper lands ,ssc . and superior wealthiness of the hill country of North Carolina. many fam- ilies of Gloucester, Matthews, Middle- l sex, and other counties of Yirginia, emigrated southward. About 1790 Mrs. Mary Plummer bought a plan- i tation in lYarren County, North Caro- lina, and her son opened a law Of:l:1C6 in XYarrenton, the county-seat. The young lawyer had not to wait long for clients. He was not a hard reader, was not possessed of a large share of legal lore, but he studied the law of the cases entrusted to him, and was a very successful practitioner. Hismanners were uncommonlyagree- able, his speeches exceedingly inter- esting, clear, and pointed, and his reputation for strictest integrity gave him great weight with judge and jury. He was soon at the top of the local bar, l with a remunerative income, practising, besides at home, in the counties of Hali- fax, Nash, and Franklin. His mind was quick, his speech ready, his memory retentive, his knowledge of human nature unerring, his discernment of the strong points of a case apt and sure, united to skill in the examination of witnesses. Moreover, his kindness of manner, and goodness of heart were so evident and so widely known, that he never made a permanent enemy of an opposing counsel or unwilling witness. But he lacked ambition and sought not to become eminent for learning or to tread the stormy paths of politics. He never endeavored to catch the applause of the bystanders, but spoke only to convince the jury. He was emphatically a successful verdict winner. The estimation of his fairness and 4I high tone as a practitioner held by the com1nu11ity of his circuit, is best shown bythe fact that he was universally called tl1e honest lawyer. Unly three times could he be induced to offer himself as a candidate for public positions. In 17o.t, he was a member of the House of Commons, of the General .Xssembly and, in 1815 and 1816, he was State Senator. From ISI7 to l826 he was a trustee of the L'niversity of North Carolina, with such colleagues as Governor lirance, Governor Miller, john Stanley, lrlartlett Yancey and Sena- tors lladger and Mangum. fp to 1835 the General Assembly elected tl1e Governor. Mr. Plummer was o11ce offered, by tl1e dominant party, this high othce. He consulted his wise wife about accepting it. She said. XYe l1ave enough to live on comfortably in lYarrenton. You would certainly incur greater expense as Governor. I advise against it. XVisely he declined. XYith his convivial tastes he would have left the Capital in debt. The salary was only 31,500 and the Governor was expected and accustomed in the olden times, especially during the session of the General Assembly which then met annually, to keep open house, with an occasional costly feast, enlivenecl with abundant wines and all forms of strong drinks, to which well nigh all the city was invited. The above statement gives his public honors. He was, in addition, high in position i11 the Ancient and Honorable Urder of Free and Accepted Masons. a11d was for a time Grand Master. When a member of the State Senate in 1815 and 1816, he was chairman of one of tl1e most important committees, and his reports and notes show that he was an advocate of adhering to tl1e old landmarks. lle was not, however, opposed to all changes. On motion of Mr. Plummer it was resolved unanimously that the senators be instructed and the representa- tives requested to procure an amendment to the Constitution, providing that each state should be divided into districts of contiguous territory: that similar districts should be organized for appointing electors of President and Yice-president. His object was to make such divisions obligatory. Un the whole, the legislative career of Mr. Plummer was free from dema- goguery. Mr. Plummer retained during life the hospitable and convivial habits of the old Yirginia gentleman. and paid the same penalty that often fell to tllL'lI' lot-long continued gout. which carried him off soon after middle age, wl1en he was in l1is fifty-eighth year. He was not intemperate, but dra11k wine at meals, ate highly seasoned food. i11vited to his table-and often as visitors for days-all strangers XYllO came to tl1e village, including as a matter of course judges Zlllll lawyers, WllQll court week came, and members of Congress on tl1eir way to and from the Capital, whenever tl1cy stopped i11 XYarrenton. He was an excellent raconteur and of sparkling vivacity. His facetiae, often expressed in rl1yn1e, were quoted in the counties of l1is circuit long after l1is death, His 42 witticisms were entirely without stings. For example, riding once witl1 a friend, an elderly, grave, sardonic lawyer of Scotch birtl1, Falkener by name, whose mount was a thick-set pony, known far and near as Shandy. Klr. l'lllllllllt'I' sang 11111. 'f Yankee doodle, doodle doo, Yankee doodle dandy, Little men ride little rings, And Falkener he rides Shandyf' He l1ad not learnt from Rev. Sidney Smith that it takes a magical operation to get a joke into a F-cotchman's head. The irascible Falkener leaped from his pony and challenged the surprised improvisateur to a combat. Mr. l'lummer gently replied, XYhyl Falkenerlu The dark cloud of anger passed away as rapidly as it gathered. Say no more Zllbljllf it lilllI'lllllE'I'l say no more about it. and they rode on as good friends as ever. He was a good singer and was often called on to aid in the village amateur concerts. He was especially strong at the patriotic songs, much in vogue after the Revolution and the war of 1812. Once while, with blackened face he was giving The Constitution and the Guerrieref' in the enthusiasm inspired by the recital of the glorious victory, he doffed his sailor's cap and waved it vigor- ously, forgetting that his bald head was as white as nature had originally made it. The contrast of shining scalp a11d smutty countenance intensified the enjoyment of his audience. Even in childhood his musical gift was i11 demand. The family tradition is that when he attended church for the first time, and a hymn sung, he thought it his duty to add his contribution, and to the horror of the devout, but with the best of intentions, struck 11p the rollicking K Jld King Cole with all the energy of his boyish treble. He married an excellent wife. a daughter of NYillia1n Martin. a planter of Granville, and a granddaughter of Colonel Nicholas Long, Commissary General of North Carolina, and a soldier of the Continental line during tl1e Revolution. They had thirteen children, of whom ten reached maturity. 1 If these. eight mar- ried and left numerous descendants. His widow died january 2lST, 1833, in the sixty-second year of her age. Mr. l,l11l1llllCI' died 'lanuary 19th, 1826, i11 the Hfty-ninth year of his age, after a painful illness of three months. The village newspaper, the ll'ur1'1'11fm1 RL'f7I1l7lI.l'tllI, said of him: He was the glory of our little world. the pride of tl1e village, the ornament of the county, an honor to the Bar, a friend of the poor, the bold advocate of the country. This is high praise and well deserved, but the most prized tribute among his descendants is the name, which by a long course of honorable dealing. he earned- The Honest Lawyer. 43 The Mountain Top. Come to the purple mountain-top High up under the stars. I.et the world and its troubles dropg Leave the battle, forget the scars 5 High up under the peaceful stars. So far old earth has dropped away Beneath our hastening feet, That scarce ai moun from mortal may Invncle the calm ot' our retreat- So faint they full beneath our feet. The night wind fnns the fevered face Or is it a rush ol' wings? 1 A spirit hovers o'er the place, And in the heurt an anthem sings, As we list to the rush ol' hidden ings. XY How like it vast cathedral dim, The ancient, arched pines Uprear their lofty columns slim! And heaven, a jewelled window, shines Through Gothic nrchways of the pines. Within these free and fragrant aisles, So close to Truth we stand, N0 clay-born thought, no doubt, detilesg No creed but love, our souls demand ' For all in all with God we stand. 1 Come to the purple mountain-top High up under the stars. There muy the weary climber stop, And narrow vision o'erleap the bars, High up Linder the peaceful stars. 44 1 -5 'I ,. it t' .B 195, ., ,iii lglff W -lr . 1 yi , f' W, N 1 4 , im Senior Class. f ,! I, i yr ,NX ,I ly. 'fy 'viii r,?i,v i,,iii -lx i ' i ii' if ,,f I Wa ,,f' , ,, il - X. ,ini , U, N 'o ' Colors: Orange and Blue. ,-'A ' J,,i J ' '1 fi, 'X 1 .' 0 f K! Motto: Paddle Your Own Canoe. 2 'M tilt i i ,W .. ff, 1 i f f X ,- i r l i ' ' , i ' . -K ill , l N- ' 1 X ' h IW My I7 , , lu I ill V - vl yen, .4 ,ir 1 .1 p V ' X 1 iii' Rip! Rap! Tip! Tap! Boo! XVhoo! XVhoo! I iii' if 'If ' ' i Ji . U Hampden-Sidney ! Orange and Blue ! . . N ,, 'V Boom ! Boom ! Boom I Boom I Boom ! Boom ! Bah I 1 i!,xXlx,,2 ix - 3 ,W Nineteen Hundred ! Rah ! Rah I Rah ! ,J il , ,N , W ,Z Ni ,V . Qixxxxi , 'il 1 . i.!.!,, !,i,!.i',j:, ,Iii ,ri Oihcers. , W! iii nl W1 ! li V' 'rl ' if N. . , ., .M ' i 'r Fu-gl Term. Second Term. J i, i if XE. H. Riciunnsox, . . . President, . . T. N. JONES V W1 i iff Wi' J. S. Kl'X'KENDAI.L . . Vice-President, .... L. S. EPES FM, S. C. BRADLEY, . . Secretary and Treasurer, . W. B. BUFORD, il 'ii VV. C. BELL ...... Historian, . . . NV. C. BELL ! -I Dost-Graduate Sludcnls. W1i.i,1An XV.-XLTON BoN1n'R.-mr, Pliilmitliropie, liiev, Virginia.. Freshnmn Declaimer's Medal, Freshman Prize Scholarship, Sophomore Prize Scholarship Clues Football Team, 18516-97-118-9!l, Treasurer of Y. M. C. A., 1397-108-99, Vice-Presi dent of Class, 1897-98, Junior Intermediate Orator, 1897-99, Final Junior Orator 15-R97-98, Associate Editor ot' 1fAI,lClDOSl,'Ol'E, 1897-508 99, President ol' Class, 18218-99 Assistant Librarian, Senior Year, Final President of Philanthropic Society, 1899 Second Honor and Latin Salutatory, 18911, Member ot' Hampden-Sidney Dramatic Club 1000. Ton PEETE Cnoss, li' .l, Union, Nortblk, Virginia. Magazine Staff, First Term, 1899 , Second Honor and Valedictory, 1899. 45 l Members. AVILLIAM WATSON BRAND, Philanthropic, Staunton, Virginia. College Football Team, 1897-98-99-00, Class Football Team, 1896-97-98 99. FRANCIS WILBUR BRIDGES, If I-I ll, Philanthropic, Hancock, Maryland. Class Baseball Team, 1890-97, Vice-President of Class, Second Term, 18903-97 , Marshal at Final Celebration, '98. AVILBUR CosBY BELL, W I'.l, I-I .V ff, A' J, R. 11. O. C. T., Philanthropic, Milnesville, Virginia. Sophomore-Freshman 1lIaga.:ine Medal, 1897-98, Sophomore Debater's Medal, 1897-98, Sec- retary of Class, 1897-98, Treasurer of Class, Second Term, 1897-98, Historian of Class, 1898-99-00 , Manager Reading Room, 1898-99, Jllngnfqimf Staff, 1898-99-00, KALEIDosco1'E Statf, 1898-99-00, Intermediate Junior Orator, '99, Final Junior Orator, '99, Vice-Presi- dent of Athletic Association, 1899-00, First Term, Junior Essayistfs Medal, 1898 99, Junior-Senior Jllngaxine Medal, 1898-99, Final President ot' Philanthropic Society, 1900, Editor-in-Chief of the Magazine, 1899-00, Editor-in-Chief' of the KALEIDnsco1'E, 1899-00, Assistant Librarian Senior Year. 1VARREN BRUCE BUFORD, fb lt' T, R. H. 0. C. T., 1' 2' .1', Union, Roanoke, Virginia. College Baseball Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Class Baseball Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Captain pro fem. of College Baseball Team, 1899-1900, President of Class, Second Term, 1898-99, Marshal, Intermediate, 1898-99, Marshal, Senior Night, 1898-99, Secretary of Class: Second Term, 1899-1900, Art Editor ITALEIDOSCOPE, 1899-1900, Local Editor ot' the Magazine, 1899-1900, Dramatic Club, 1899-1900. SAMUEL COLLINS BRADLEY, li I-I Il, Union, Sherman, Texas. Substitute College Football Team, 1897-98, Class Football and Baseball Teams, 1897-98, Class Football Teams, 1899-1900, College Football Team, 1899-1900, ALFRED SIIORTER CALDWELL, li' I, R. H. O. C. T., .Y L' I, Philanthropic, Oxford, North Carolina. Class Historian, 1896-97, Secretary of Class, 1896-97, Treasurer of Class, First Term, 1997- 1898, President of Class, First Term, 1898-99, KALEIIJOSt,'01'E Staff, 1898-99, College Football Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Class Football Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Captain Class Football Teams, 1898-99, Alternate Captain College Football Team, 1899-1900, Gymna- sium Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Track Team, 1897-98-99-1900, All-round Athletic Medal, 1897-98, Gymnasium Director, 1898-99-1900, Delivered Sophomore Debater's Medal, 1898, Review Editor ol' Illrrgasine, 1899-1900, Business Manage-rot' THE ITAL- EIDOSCOPE, 1899-1900. Ons AIANSON CLARKE, Union, South Boston, Virginia. Sophomore Essayist Medal, 1897-98. -17 Library - Svdney College LAVILLON DUPUY COLE, li' I, J. H. C., R. H. O. C. T., H A' E, V., Union. Danville, Virginia. College Baseball Team, 1897-98-99, College Football Team, 1898-99, Class Baseball Team, 1897-98-99, Class Football Team, 1897-98-99, Marshal, Finals, 1899, College Football Team, 1899-1900, Chairman of Arrangement Committee for Intermediate German, 1899-1900. FRANKLIN DAVIS, ll lx' A, Petersburg, Virginia. Track Team, 1898. JOHN 1VEsLEY DIXON, Union, Abilene, Virginia. Class Football Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, College Football Team, 1899-1900. JAMEs CHAMBLESS ELY, Pliilantlwopic, Suffolk, Virginia. LOUIS SPENCER EPES, .Y 49, Philaizthropic, Blackstone, Virginia. Class Football Team, 1899-1900, Vice-President of Class, Second Term, 1900. FINLEY MONWELL EVERSOLE, Union, Rural Retreat, Virginia. Fr-shman Prize Scholarship, 1896-97, Sophomore Prize Scholarship, 1897-98, Ministerial Scholarships, 1896-97-98-99, Class Football Team, 1896-97-98-99, KALEIDOSC'0PE Staff, 1899-1900. ROBERT CARRON FUGATE, Union, Abingdon, Virginia. College Football Team, 1898-99, Class Football Team, 1898-99, Class Baseball Team, 1898- 1899, Gymnasium Team, 1898-99, Editor of Y. M. C. A. Department of the Magmine, First Term, 1899-1900, Corresponding Secretary of Y. M. C. A., 1899-1900, Class Foot- ball Team, 1899-1900, Substitute on College Baseball Team, 1899-1900. THOMAS DUPUY GILLIAM, X fb, R. H. O. C. T., Philanthropic, llixburg, Va. Class Baseball Team, 1896-97-98 99, Class Football Team, 1897-98-99, College FootballTeam, 1898-99-1900, Gymnasium Team, 1898-99, Hampden-Sidney Dramatic Club, 1898-99, Track Team, 1898. THOMAs SANFORD IIART, W I'J, H .Y lf, J. H. C., R. II. 0. C. T., lx' J, 1Vor- slnam, Virginia. College Baseball Team, 1896-97 , Class Baseball Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Secretary of Class, 1897-98. EDWARD BEVERLY ITERNDON, JR., .Y X, J. H. C., Union, Shreveport, Louisiana. President of' Class, First Term, 1896-97-98, KALEIDOSCOPE Staif, 1897-98-99-1900, College Baseball Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Captain of College Baseball Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Captain Class Baseball Team, 1896-97-98-99, Class Football Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900 Gymnasium Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Marshal at Intermediate Celebration, 1896-97-98- 1899, Hampden-Sidney Dramatic Club, 1898-99, President of Athletic Association, First Term, 1899-1900, Final President of Union Society, 1900. THOMAS WILLIAMSON HOOPER, JR., H If .l, R. H. O. C. T., Union, Christians- burg, Virginia. Gymnasium Team, 1897-98-99-1900, College Football Team, 1899-1900, Class Football Team, 1899-1900, College Baseball Team, 1899-1900, Class Baseball Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Orchestra, 1898-99-1900, Illagasine Staff, 1899-1900, Business Manager pro fem , ofthe KALEIDOSCOPE, 1900, Manager of Baseball Team, 1899-1900. K4 49 p fi L1 lm il - 1' 'J' ' THOMAS NATIIANIEL JONES, ll It' .I, I-I .Y lf, J. 11. C., lt.1I.O.C.T.,V., .Y II, Union, Smithville, Virginia. Treasurer of Class, First Term, 1996-97, Class Baseball Team, 1897-98-99-1900, Marshal at Final Celebration, 1897-98, Secretary ot' Class, Second Term, 1896-97, Class Historian, 1897-98, Secretary of Class, Second Term, 1898-99, Final Junior Orator, 1898-99 , Chair- man of Music Committee, Final, 1899, Treasurer of Athletic Association, First Term, 1899-1900, Class Football Team, 1899-1900, Substitute, College Baseball Team, 1899- 1900, Hampden-Sidney Dramatic Club, 1899-1900, KAi.Einosvo1'E Staff, 1999-1900, Leader of German Club, 1899-1900, President ot' Class, and Final President, 1899-1900. CiEORGE JUNIUN, Christiansburg, Virginia. College Orchestra, 1899-1900. JAMES NIONTGOMERY ITELLY, Union, Abingdon, Virginia. Class Football Team, 1898-99-1900, Gymnasium Team, 1898-99-1900, Debater's Medal, Union Society, 1898-99, College Football Team, 1899-1900, Class Football Team, 1899- 1900, Secretary of Y. M. C. A., 1899-1900, Final Senior Orator, 1899-1900. JAMES SLOAN JKUYKENDALL, .1 T Q, R. H. O. C. T., Union, Romney, West Virginia. Intermediate Junior Orator, 1897-98, Final Junior Orator, 1897-98, Captain of Class Foot- ball Team, 1897-98, Captain of College Football Team, 1898-99-1900, Senior Orator's Medal, 1899-1900, Manager of Baseball Team, 1899-1900. JOHN EVANS LOWRY, Union, Norfolk, Virginia. KALE1DosCoPE Stai'1', 1896-97, Freshman Declaimcr's Medal, 1896-97, College Baseball Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Class Baseball Team, 1896-97-98-99-1900, Class Football Team, 1896-97-98, Intermediate Junior Orator, 1899, Delivered Essayist's Medal, 1898, Hamp- den-Sidney Dramatic Club, 1898-99-1900, Delivered Debater's Medal, 1899, Final Junior Orator, 1899, Inter-Society Oratorical Contest, 1899-19005 Director Hampden- Sidney Dramatic Club, 1899-1900, Delivered Senior OratOr's Medal, 1899-1900. RAY ATKINSON BIUORE, Philanthropic, Hampden-Sidney, Virginia. GEORGE DOUGLASS XIOORE, .Y 41, Union, Charlestown, VVest Virginia. Class Baseball Team, 1898-99-1900, College Baseball Team, 1898-99-1900, Representative of College at Intercollegiate Athletic Association. THOMAS JONES l'AYNE, li' I, V., li' J, Philanthropic, Chatham, Virginia. Class Football Team, 1896-97, Class Baseball Team, 1890-979 Marshal at Intermediate, 1897, Sophomore Debater's Medal, 1897, Marshal at Finals, 1897, ,1Inga:inf Staif, 1899-1900, Intermediate Senior Orator, 1899-1900, Presented Senior Orator's Medal, 1899-1900, Dramatic Club, 1900, Class Football Team, 1900. MICHAUM RAINE, Union, Danville, Virginia. Senior Intermediate Orator, 1900. 51 . x.,,, '-f,,.. i f Y? Y L EDWARD HENDERSON RICHARDSON, li' S, V., li' J, Philanthropic, Farniville, Virginia. Treasurer of Class, First and Second Terms, 13507-118, Marshall at Intermediate, 18817-985 Intermediate Junior Orator, 1898-9113 Vice-President ot' Class, Second Term. 1898-99, Manager ot' Class Baseball Team, 1898-SHI, Treasurer ot' Y. M. C. A., 18910, Final Junior Orutor, 1809, President of Class, First Term, 18911-154005 Manager Class Football Team, 1899-1900, Manager Class Baseball Team, 18951-19110, Senior 0rator's Medal, 1900, Ura- torieal Contest, 1899-194,103 Business Manager of Hampden-Sidney Dramatic Club: Busi- ness Manager of The Magazine, 1900. HENRY STRAUGIIAX STOKES, 09 li' T, R. II. O. C. T., Philanthropic, Farmville, Virginia. Treasurer of Class, Second Term, 1898-99, Secretary oi' .Y M. C. Ag Class Football Team, 18118-99-1900. Jo11N ANDRE11' SYDEXSTRICKER, Cnion, Academy, West Virginia. JOHN EDWIN TRIPLETT, Philanthropic, Dnflields, West Virginia. XVILLIAM CRAn'roRD XVAUCHOPE, Philanthropie, Hampden-Sidney, Virginia. JAMES XVILLIAM HANDY P1LsoN, If H ll, Philantliropie, Staunton, Virginia. Marshal, Final Celebration, 1896-97, Captain of Class Teams, 18913-97-98, Secretary ot' Class, Second Term, 18913-975 Chairman of Final Band Committee, 1897-U85 President of Ath- letic Association, 1898-9115 College and Class Baseball Teams, 18108-99-1900, 53 Qvondam Members. lIAZEL IXRTHVR B.-ARROW, Pliilantliroliie, Farinville, Virginia. THoAIAs BALLARD BLAKE, JR., li' l', Union, St. Louis, Missouri. H.ARRY PERCIVAI. BRIIRIES, Pliilantliropic, Hancock, Maryland. JAMES SPENCER BURGER, Philaiitlmiliic, Farniville, Virginia. CHARLES BLEDSOE CRUTE, l+'arnIville, Virginia. hi.-XDISOX TIIENTQN DAVIS, JR., IP li' W, Charleston, West Virginia. :XRTHUR BIONTHOMERY DVVALL, li' S, Philanthropic, Farniville, Virginia JosEPII EunLEs'I'oN DUPUY, W I J, H .V E, Roanoke, Virginia. JAMES ALBERT ENRLE, Bake:-ton, West Virginia. PIENRY OWEN l l.-XSLEY, .Y IP, Union, South Bofton, Virginia. J. TIIUMAS GoonE, -IR., fb 1' J, Union, Slcipwith, Virginia. PHILIP EUGENE HURARII, .V lb, Bolling, Virginia. GARLANII LIGHTFOOT NIORRISS, li' I, Manteo, Virginia. JOSEPH A. PAYNE, Pliilantliropic, Yancey Mills, Virginia. NVILLIAM BURR l'ARsoNs, Gunnison, Colorado. XVILLIAM XELSIIN Sco'rT, JR., Galveston, Texas. Jonx XVILSON SoiIERvILLE, L' X, Mitcliellk Station. Virginia. HARRY LUCIEN STEPIIENSON, 1' X, Roanoke, Virginia. NIANLEY CVRRY Tl'Rl'IN, Philanthropic, Shadwell, Virginia. DAVID CoMFoRT WATKINS, ll II' J, Smithville, Virginia. THOMAS l1AMILToN XVYLEY, I X, Macon, Georgia. 54 Senior Class History. U MAX van say of us. They came theneef' o1' They go thither. XYe had no perceptible origing we came into college very much as the dark- ness comes over the face of the earth. gradually, unostentatiously. until at length we pervaded llampden-Sidney and nothing was free from our subtle intlu- ence. No one has ever tried to account for us. and. according' to the Faculty. it would he impossible. They say we are an example of those eurious products that Dame Nature moulds when she has the indigestiou. and that it will he years before tl1e moral tone ot' the College is restored to its fornler l,l'txSllylb'l'l2lll standard. Yet some there he who are ot' an oppo- site opinion or else who look at us from a dittereut point ot' xiew. The classes lieneath us hold us in the highest pus- silrle esteem. the girls say we are the lrest elass that ever eanie to Hampden- Siduey.-in short. ex ery one. except those who have heen t-hargetl with our guidanee. has lveeu loud in eonimenda- tion. It is true that we have often fallen from grace. that we hate studied only on speeial oem-asious. when we had to. that we have vet: d the souls of deans andrnn rampant over historic traditions. yet after all we hate no fear lult that we will he appreeiated even hy the rulers of the college after it is too late. For in our day and generation llatnp- den-Sidney's falne in athleties has gone nln-oad throughout the land, and in the last four years there have heen reeorded more vit-tories. and more important vie- tories. than ever lu-fore fell to the lot of this. our college. And have we not always had more men on the teams than all the rest of the elasses put together? .Xnd have we not held the college eham- pionship at hoth lmseliall and footltall ever sinee our Sophomore year? Vald- well. Cole. Liilliam. lluford. Dixon--nay. let us not nalne our athletes lest, we het-oine putfed up with pride. Surely the .llilylrliillv has been no worse in our hands than in previous years. liuford as a humorist is above par. l'ayne is a man of the world and enjoys monkeying' with the questions of the day- we have no fear for the twen- tieth eentury literature. ,Xnd what ot' the dramatit- entertain- ments. ot' the germans. ot' lxygone liALT5llNNUI'ES. of the development of 4-lass spirit. of seientitit- class and ehapel 1-uttingl' Ask any one who knows whereof he speaks and he will tell you that we have kept these side shows of the College going. .Xnd then we have furnished the peo- ple with something to talk ahout. XVhen anything' worth mentioning' has oc'- eurred. whether the Flass of 1900 had anything' to do with it has always been a fruitful suhjeet of speeulation. XVhen the mysterious zeros appeared on most ot' the houses in the vieinity. when the 1-hapel was at ditferent times tastefully det-orated. when the explosion outside the ehapel door shook the windows and made the girls jump. people went about shaking' their heads and saying: OIL that t lass of 1900.0 So a long- good-hye to you. one and all.-the things we have thought and said and done. the halls wherein our feet have trod. the girls we have loved. the games we have played. and the classes we have eut. You shall remain hut we pass into the beyond foreverfheyond your mein- ory. thought or care: we leave perhaps a few monuments behind us. hut as for ourselves. XVe eame like water. and like wind we go. Tm? Tltsronuv. Junior Class. MUTTO : Sic ffm' aa' asfra. Corpus : Navy Blue and White. Yell. XVhoo1a, whoola ! Ziz! Bah! Bun ! H. S.! H. S.! Igor. Officers. Firsl Tcrm. W. M. Kmirisn, . . President, . W. li. JONES, . . Vice-President, . J. L. DAVIS, .... Secretary and Treasurer, ALEXANDER MARTIN, . . Historian, . . Members. G1-:onon Fmxcis BELL, Union, l'utne.y's, Virginia.. FRANCIS Auarsrrs BROWN, Union, Norfolk, Virginia. 'kb 'TJ' .tile -- 4 .,' I xn,Av?,- 1 1 1, L. ' .9 fd ,- Second Term. . S. E. OSBUFRNE XV. M. KPIBIPER F. A. Bkowx AIJQXANIJER ll.-XRTIN President ot' Y. M. C. A., 1897-98-99-00g illuga:ine Staff, 1899-OU, KAI.l-lllmsvoi-i-2 Slatl' 1899-UU. HENRY Bownnx, lx' fl, Union, Nortblk, Virginia. AR'rui'H I'IAliltIS CLARKE, Philanthropic, Danville, Virginia. Recording SeCretH!'y Y. M. C. A., 1900-Ol. l'EY'roN t'oc11nAN, If 1:1 Il, Philanthropic, Staunton, Virginia. Secretary of Class, First Term, 1898-99, Chairman Intermediate Music Committee, 1898-99 Marshal Finals, 1898, Secretary ot' Athletic Association, 1898-995 Secretary of Class Lust Term, 1899-00, KAI.E11:os1.'ori: Staff, 1900. .lnnnr LEE llwis, W lx' T, I-I .V l'.', R. II. O. C. T., Cil1ll'iCStOll,XVESt Virginia Secretary uf Class, First Term, 1897-98, President oi' Class, Second Term, 1898-99? Class Football Tezun, 1898-99-003 Substitute on Football Tezun, 1899-Htl? Member nf Dramatic Ulnln, 18994-99. L.xNnoN LESLIE lJ.u'Is, X W, Philanithropic, iVestboro, Virginia. College l ootliall Tezun, 124911.11115 Class Football Team, 1899-00, Mnrshal at Finals, 1900. 56 1 1 1 THOMAS HEESE ENGLISH, JR., L' X, Union, Richmond, Virginia. President of Class, 1898-99. ROBERT EMERSON FULTZ, Philanthropic, Sangersville, Virginia. IIASTINGS HAWKES, Philanthropic, YVellville, Virginia. ROBERT EDMONOS IIENRY, If 6 ll, Tazewell, Virginia. Class Football Team, 1899-00, Class Baseball Team, 1899-00. PORTER XYOPNG JOHNSON, Union, Norfolk, Virginia. Class Baseball Team, 1890-97, Junior Intermediate Orator, 1898-99, 1899-00, Track Team, 1897-98. XVILLIAM ELLIOTT JONES, H Ii' .-I, Philanthropic, San Marino, Virginia. Delivered Sophomore Debatexls Medal, 1899, Vice-President ofClaSs, First Term, 1899-00. WII.I.IA1I BIAUZY ITEMPER, lx' 2, R. H. O. C. T., H .Y ff, Z 7' .-I, Philan- thropic, WVurrenton, Virginia. College Football Team, 1898-99-00, Captain of Claes Football Team, 1898-99-00, Secretary of Class, Last Term, 1898-99, President of Class, First Term, 1899-00, Vice-President ot' Class, Last Term, 1899-00, Manager of Mandolin and Guitar Club, 1899-00, President ot' German Club, 1899-00, Manager of Track Team, 1899-00, Elected Captain uf College Football Team 1900-01. 1 ALEXANDER IIIARTIN, II lx' .l, Union, Hampden-Sidney, Virginia. President Athletic Association, Last Term, 1899-00, Intermediate Junior Urator, 19005 Final Junior Orator, 1900, Class Historian, Last Term, 1899-00, Final Invitation Committee, 1898-99, Delivered Sophomore Essayist's Medal, 1898-99. XVILLIAM ADABIS RICALLISTER, Union, Covington, Virginia. Final Junior Orator, 1899-00. IIARRY HAX'ENER IVIUNROE, Philanthropic, Baltimore, Maryland. Gymnasium Team, 1898-99, Manager ot' Y. M. C. A. Reading Room, Last Term, 1899-00. GEORGE CHAFFIN ROBESON, Philanthropic, Farmville, Virginia. IIERMAN AIELYIN ROBERTS, Philanthropic, Henderson, Kentucky. Junior Urator, Intermediate, 1899-00, Member Dramatic Club, 1899-00. SAMUEL EDMOND OSEORNE, lx' I, lx' J, Philanthropic, Dutlields, IVest Vir- ginia. College Football Team, 1897-98-9900, Class Football Team, 1897-98-99-00, Gymnasium Team, 1897-98-99-00, Track Team, 1897-98-99-00, Vice-President ot' Athletic Asso- ciation, Last Term, 1899-00, President ot' Class, Last Term, 18109-00, Treasurer uf Y. M. C. A., Last Term, 1899-00, Junior Orator, Intermediate, 1899-00, Member Dramatic Club, 1899-00, Final Invitation Committee, 1898-99. 57 RICHARD CRAWLEY STQKES, li' I, Z 7' fl, Philanthropic, Covington, Vir- ginia. Manager of Class Football Team, 1899-00, Marshal Intermediate Celebration, 1899-005 ' ' ' ' ' 'f- ' F' IJ ir Invitation Committee, Intermediate, 1899-00, Dramatic Club, 18.1.1 00, ina un o Orator, 1900. JAMES IRA PRITCIIETT, li' I, Union, Danville. Virginia. RICHARD H. PRITCHETT, li' .l', R. H. O. C. T.. Union, Danville. Virginia. College Baseball Team, 1899-00. CHAR hurg, Virginia. Track Team, 1897-1085 Orchestra and Glee Club, 1897-98. ROBERT HENING XVEBB, I'liilantln'opic, Suiiolk, Virginia. . , . . - L A l-'reshman Scholarship, 1897 985 Sophomore Scholarship, 1898-99: Class Historian, 189.-.vb 1898-993 Invitation Committee, 1898-99. SH LES IRVINQ: XV.-KDE, fb li' V , R. ll. O. C. T., H .V lf, Union, Cliristians- Junior Class History. S Moses stood upon the summit of Pisgah and viewed the goodliness of the land of milk and honey. promised long before. so stand we, gaz- ing at glories long looked forward to, the glories of the period of seniority: aml backward we look upon two bands ot' weary toilers, struggling for the van- tage-ground which we now occupy. We pity these two companies of pilgrims, as they struggle through the perplexities of Soph Math. thinking they are leaving behind the most insnperable barrier ot' their college course, but we would re- mind them that the fumes of Junior Chemistry have still to permeate the tnemhrane of their olfactory organs. and that Psychology holds in store for them hair splitting distinctions between mind and matter. Although as yet we have never suc- ceeded in winning the pennant in inter- class athletics. our valiant Kemper and our giants. Osborne and Davis. will never allow the blue and white to trail in the dust of the gridiron. Our achievements, however. in the classroom are worthy of more extended notice. for we neither found ourselves dismayed when wander- ing through the intricate mazes of the spiral of Archimedes. nor were we terri- fied when brought face to face with the three-fold laws of Newton: but we are forced to admit that cold chills chased one another up and down our spinal col- umns when we were first intt'oduced to the mysteries of electricity. lloes not the fact that the chair of science has judged us fit to enter upon a course in physit-sea thing unprece- dented in the history of Juniors-prove that this contideuce in our ability is not limited to ourselves, We very much prize that compliment which our genial professor in English paid us when he said that ours was the only class in College which would not indulge in that vulgar yell Calico, but we would not create the impression that we have not among our number. men who give expression to their love for the fairer sex in more acceptable language. llut this history would not be com- plete without individual mention of some of the guiding stars of our destiny. YVe were proud to regain our Lilliputian after the holidays. with his added dig- nityarisingfrom a recent acqnirement of long trousers. Our mascot. Daddy Fultz, through the medium of his mustache. still lends to the class an air of unap- proachable dignity. The logic of our .Xugustus is as deep and unfathomable as of yore. lVe desire here to express our gratitude for the valuable additions to our number which Hoge Academy furnished: the search for knowledge would indeed be a weary journey were we not cheered on the way by the per- petual good hutnor of Hawkes and the hopefulness of Davis. And now. kind reader. if you have found this chronicle devoid of interest. our only comment is that of the old Roman. Happy is the people whose annals are uninteresting. Tim lltsrontrw. l gf' f U . 1 , :fr rr -. lgt '11, rx ,jfwt H-- .NA Q, Mfffx f fail, 'f .MV ELJQ, if .1 Y ji if: :ff kv' LiA , Xi, 'LX 7' ll! -l-...-lQj f. 'ls f' ul PAH..-Y k ifix h lx!-fi, V. li r NH W Q 'Hx' , 1 all 'f w Mx . f X , 5 fe' If .f ,f- ,- . - fl-fy FT 4 T Tll q'WC CH Sophomore Class. MOTTO : Take Things as they Come. First Term. P. B. HILL, . S. L. MAGEE, A. P. JOHNSON, J. C. PANCAKE S. C. BOWEN, COLORS : Royal Purple and XVhite. Yell. Wahoo I Wahoo ! What do we do? We yell ! We yell ! 1902 I Rah, rah, rah! Rip, rah, re! Hip rah. rip rah ! H. S. C. Officers. Second Tcrm. . President, . . B. C. AVERILL . Vice-President, . J. C. PANCAKE . Treasurer, , . D. H. WVILLCOX . Secretary, . R. H. BURROUGH5 . Historian, . . S. C. BOWEN 6o GEORGE BLANTON FALLEN, . FRANCIS SIDNEY ANDERSON, BARR CCSHING AVERILL, SAMVI-:L CECIL BOWEN, . RICHARD HANSFIURD BIIRROUGHS. CREIGHTON C. CAMPBELL, . EDWARD HERBI.-KN COHN, JOSEPH ALLAN CHRISTIAN, . HARDX' CROSS, . . JOHN LAWRENCE DANIEL, PAI'L GRAY EDMUNDS, GEORGE SIMEON FI'LTz, ROBERT SPOTTS GRAHAM, . GEORGE SAMUEL Ii.-ARNSBERGER, PIERRE BERNARD HILL, . ARCHER PHLEGAR JOHNSON. VVILLIAIXI READ MARTIN. STEWART LEIGH RIAGEE, . HUGH lWOFFITT RICALLISTISR, HOUSTON BURGER MOORE, JOSEPH CALVIN PANCAKE, JAMES DENHAIII PASCO, PAUL VALERE PORTNER, . BENJAMIN BRADFORD REYNOLDS, JAMES IRA PRITCHETT, JR., JAMES HENRXJ RUDY, . RICHARD CRALLE STORES, THOMAS WATRINS, . DANIEL HABIILTON XNILLCOX, SAMUEL MILLER ZEA, Members. 61 Morganheld, Kentucky . Farmville, Virginia Beaumont, Texas Knob, Virginia Norfolk, Virginia Roanoke, Virginia . Norfolk, Virginia W'illcOx VVlIarf, Virginia . Hampden-Sidney, Virginia Farmville, Virginia Farniville, Virginia . Sangerville, Virginia Tazewell, Virginia . Shenandoah, Virginia . Richmond, Virginia Cliristiansbnrg, Virginia . Smithfield, Virginia . Clarksville, Virginia Covington, Virginia Mossy Creek, Virginia Romney, VVest Virginia . . Monticello, Florida Washington, District of Columbia . Hampden-Sidney, Virginia , Danville, Virginia Paducah, Kentucky Covington, Virginia VVatkinS, Virginia . Petersburg, Virginia Strasburg, Virginia Sophomore Class Histor . KST as, Great streams from little fountains flow, and, Great oaks from little acorns grow. even so great Sophs t'rom little Freshmen grow. Yes. even we, the illustrious, were once insignificant Freshmen. going' about attending' to every one's business but our own, with the greatest diligence. It was in those palniy days of long' ago that Dr. Mcllwaine. whom some bold. bad fellows familiarly style Nebf' said we were sum pu1nkins and that one day we. even we. would be all-powerful Seniors. Then we could not understand such bold statements, our simple minds could not command such a flight of the imagination, but now, since we have come into the full realization of Sopho- more greatness. we can easily see the truth of the assertion, and contidently feel that our class will furnish several future presidents and. at the very least. every one of ns will be a congrressman. liehold. even now those creatures of a day. the Freshmen. lift their hats when we pass: they can apprehend our great- ness but it is impossible for them to comprehend it. One poor beguiled Fresh rebelled against our imperial authority. Little did he know in his innocence the mag'- nitude of the crime which he had per- petrated. nor did he understand that it were better had a millstone been hanged about his neck and he dropped into the deep sea than that he should call down upon his defenceless head the wrath of his lords and masters. He had this to learn and speedily he learned it. for to his credit be it said that he never forgot it -he couldn't. In his dreams he has been heard to murmur That old gag about the camel going' through the eye of a needle is a cinch compared with facing' the anpgry Sophf' lYe were touched by the pathos and feeling' ex- pressed in those words, so we have been easy on him of late. Now we only 1'e- quire him to polish our shoes. You can see from this that. although men are inclined to call us hard masters. yet there is a tender streak in our cosmos. Like our beauty. however, it is elusive: it's there, but you can easily miss it. and most people generally do miss it. Taken individually. collectively. or morally we are the warmest class that ever crossed the pike. Taking us indi- vidually, there is llrogxues of the bow- legs. who also has the distinguished honor of being' J. lids bt'0tll9l'2 Col- onel. of the sorrel-top: Spider. of the spindle legs: l arson. wh0 1'PSPl1llJlPS llill Xye: Smilaxf' who was beaten by red-headed Nooreg' besides numberless others who should be mentioned did not space forbid. Taken collectively. we are the cause of many heartaches for the Xormalites who see us pass. Taken mor- ally, we have no morals: there is a hole where our moral bump ought to be. But you cry enough. Actions speak louder than words. so when you see us in the senate-house. just remember what we have told you and watch ns. for we will make an appropriation for old liampden-Sidney and will also hate the tax on beer. THE HISTORIAN. f 113' 'i' v L 0 U W 'iff xp-4 E Freshman Class. Yirtute non Yerbisf' Nil wxx. 1 1. 1 A.. XV,-X, 'fn l, ylff X Y: , , ,, I , 1 R N v I Ffgji 3lu'1 1'0 1 x . QR f fig N xl V I N!! I H E' ' . - N .A fl 'QV f -v L - 'u i QE W R V N ,T COLORS , fi' . X , 7 1 ,.x I , X . WX Yell. - . . PM clnppe gums, go-ri, go-mo, Q Y We Ziprah, ziprah, pink and blue Y Hippcro, hiro, hiscum hee T ' Rah, rah, rall, rah I '1 f A! BA 219 Q fy !f41 H W' M I QW K 1'Wij MM gil' is 41 5 x- E . N A N E ' .4 I - MXPX Bl1l6tCC'l11llI'E6! Oiiicers. Firsl Term. Smux C,x5.xm.xxc.x AKERS. Ro1:Ek'1' CRISICR XYILKINSOX, XVII.I.1.X3I Slmxv Lula. . jnues CrR'1'1s Ihxxswxs. I,.xxum,mNE Rum, . . . Last Term. R1cH.xR1m Anmsox G1I.1,1.m1, . . ROBERT SHE1f1fEx' PREs'roN, . JOSEPH E. li. Ho1.1..xn.xx', . LEm'E1. Rox' JONES, . LANGHORN1-I REID, 63 Pink :md Blur. Pnuzkffzzf. . I 'IU'-f7I'1'.Y1'1I'z'IIf T1'n1.v1z1'U', . .S'n'1'r!a1j'. ff1'Sfl7P'1'lI 11. P1z'.v1'a'c11l. . I '1'a'- P1 'CSIAlI'l'll I Ser1'vh11j'. Trmsu rfr. HI'5f0I'I'tI 11. XVILLIAM XVATSON ANDERSON, SIMON CASABIANCA ARERS, . XVALTER BICCLVRE CARTER, THOMAS OWEN EASLET, . HENRY EASLEY, JR., . . Members. XVILLIAM MCALLISTER ENGLAND. RICHARD ADDISON GILLIAM, THOMAS HORNER, PETER XVILKINSON HAMLETT, ROBERT EMMET HAMLETT. THOMAS JEFFERSON HARWELL, JOSEPH E. B. HOLL.-XD.AX', . ARTHUR PRESTON HLJTTON. . EMMETT HI'GH HAY, . JOSEPH KINCAID IRVING, JR., HORACE PALMER JONES, . LEMIIEL ROY JONES, . LEWIS DUPEY JOHNSTON, . VVILLIAM SHARP LEE, . JOHN MARTIN, . . . EDWARD MCGHEE, JR., JAMES SHERID.-KN IXIEXVMAN, EDWARD POWELL NICHOLSON, JAMES CURTIS PARSONS, . CLARENCE CASSIUS PHARR, . ROBERT SMITH PHIPER, JR., lNlELVIN THURSTON PHILIPS, ROBERT SHEPFEY PRESTON, LANGHORNE REID, . . EARNEST GARLAND STOKES, STANLEY THOMAS, . . . ROBERT CRISER XVILKINSON, JAMES HOUSTON XVOLVERTON, ALBERT XVARD WOOD, . 64 . Hillandale, Virginia Plum Branch, Virginia . Amelia, Virginia South Boston, Virginia South Boston, Virginia . Covington, Virginia Covington, Virginia Hampden-Sidney, Virginia Hampden-Sidney, Virginia . Petersburg, Virginia . Suffolk, Virginia . Abingdon, Virginia Petersburg, Virginia Howardsville, Virginia Cherriton, Virginia . Petersburg, Virginia . South Boston, Virginia . . Crewe, Virginia Hampden-Sidney, Virginia . Abilene, Virginia . Somerset, Virginia . Portsmouth, Virginia . Massies, Virginia Fincastle, Virginia . Danville, Virginia Norfolk, Virginia . Marion, Virginia Chatham, Virginia . Oral Oaks, Virginia Holston Valley, Tennessee . Warm Springs, Virginia Hampden-Sidney, Virginia Moorefield, West Virginia Freshman Class l'IisIor . Vittutc non verbisf' HE historian of the present Fresh- man Class of Hampden-Sidney Col- lege feels himself entirely too in- competent to give due justice to the many attainments which have thus far distinguished this class in its endeavors to pass beyond the stages of infancy. As a baby, it. is a bouncer of great intellectual power and many attain- ments coupled with the highest ambi- tions, which in future will compel those who now look down upon it to bow in meek humility to its superior merits. Nineteen-three made her appearance on an autumn clay when all nature was at her best. seemingly bidding us welcome to the classic walls of dear old Hampden- Sidney in which many future hours will be spent. and afterwards reviewed as the happiest of our lives. Now, having passed the Faculty sub jugumf' we made our first appear- ance in the comedy of errors. in four acts. It remains to be seen what the result will beg although we hope for the best. as our cavalry, upon which so much reliance is placed. is both efficient and strong in numbers. Chums having been chosen, we for the first time experience that delightful sensation of being' classed in the category of college men. The first night we dream of future greatness and conquests. At earliest dawn we are awakened by the unfamiliar and. to our ears. uninusical tones of the College bell: taking our way to chapel. we enter therein, and find ourselves objects of curious scrutiny. First from the overgrown Freshmen, otherwise known as Sophs. we get a look of con- tempt and hatred. which makes us quake with fear, and nearly breaks our hearts. After this comes the critical gaze of the Juniors: then that stare of indifference from the Seniors, so much studied. still so far from perfection: lastly, we en- counter that indescribable look from the Faculty. in which lurks so much hidden meaning. Next follows the class organization, the prep-contingent, by virtue of their practical experience in politics monopo- lizing' most of the offices. After this comes the selection of a yell. for this infant has a superabundance of lung power, which it demonstrates on every occasion. and. believing noise to be the first requisite. we adopted the combina- tion which adorns this article as a head- ing. As for special accomplishments, Nine- teen-three can not be voted above par. In the matter of beauty she falls below mediocrity: but there is a great consola- tion in the fact that beauty is not a requisite for greatness and knowledge. Of this we have striking proof. taking' several members of the Faculty of Hampden-Sidney College as examples. Of orators. she has quite a number. if lung power can be classed as an element essential to oratorical ability. Of drones and block-heads. the historian feel as- sured that the 'A Profs will sustain him in the statement that the Class of Nine- teen-three harbors not one in her ranks. Now. the historian having' endeavored to fulfill the duties required of him. according to his ability. it is his hope and belief that the class individually and collectively will strive to emulate the success of other great and good men. who have become celebrated both in history and song. and who were at one time Freshmen like ourselves. THE Hisroniax. 65 ks Wearincss. mist-wreathed in cerements Ghost-like and eerie, wind-swept through vinelands dense Darkling the day goes hence, lleaving me weary. Dusk-winged o'er lIfe's rose-tlde, high! cometh dreary, lLooe's golden light hath died, She is gone from my side, Leaving me weary. 1 io L 66 u 4 i K BETA TI-IETA PI. Eetubllsllml at Miami l'IIivoI'bity in 1839. COLORS. Pink and Blue. ZETA CHAPTER. Established 1 8719. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. RICHARD IXICILWAINE, D. D., President, XV.Xl.'l'lCR BLAIR, A. M., D. L., Emeritus, R. H. KICIIAVAINE, PH. D. FRATER IN URBE. W. M. HOI.I.ADAxj, M. D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. JAMES XVILLIAM HANDY PILSON, '00, FRANCIS XVILBYR BRIDGES, '00, SAMUEL COLLINS BRADLEY, '00, PEYTON COCHRAN, '01, ROBERT EVELYN HENRY, IOI, RICHARD HIXNSIFORD BURROIQGHS, '02 EDWARD HERRAIAN COHN, IO2, ROBI-:RT SPOTT5 CIR.-XHAM, '02, STEWART LEIGH MAG1-112, '02, JOSEPH CALVIN PANCAKE, '02, LEAIUEL ROY JONES, 'O3. Sixlictll Annual Colnvc-IILIOII was held at Niagara Falls, July 2SLl1 to August lst. Ijulugates, J. XV. H. PIIAIIR AKD PI1:Y'ruN Cm,-IIRAN. 68 W PHI KAPPA PSI. COLORS. FLOWERS. Pink and Lavender. Laurel and Ivy, VIRGINIA GAMMA CHAPTER. Established 1856. FRATER IN FACULTATE. JAMES RIDDLE THORNTON, A. M., '71, FRATER IN URBE. REV. JAMES BIURRAY, D. D., Virginia, A., '55, FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. VV.-XRREN BRFCE BUEORD, HENRX' S'1'R.-xvcxmx STOKES, JEDDY LEE DAVIS, CHARLES IRVIN XVADE, ARCHER PHLEGAR JOHNSON, EDWARD POWELL NICHOLSON JAMES CURTIS PARSONS, ROBERT SHEFFEY PRESTON. Grand Arch Council held at Culumbus, April 18th, 1900. Delegate, XV. B. BURORD. TO l CHI PHI. Founded at Princeton lu 1824. COLORS. Scarlet and Blue. EPSILON CHAPTER. Established in 1567. FRATRFS IN COLLEGIO. Lows SPENCER EPES, GEORGE DoI'GI..xss BIOORE, THOMAS DVI-rx' GII,I,I.uI, LANIJON LESLIE D.-XX'lS. JAIIIQS DENHAII lixscu, GIN:oRcaIs BLANTIIN AI.I,IfN, S.-XINIUEI. NIILLER ZI-3.-x, DPZNNIS H.'XMII.1'ON XVILCOX, PIERRE BERNARD HILL, THQMAS XVATKINS, JOSEPH KINQIIID IRVINIQ, ARTHUR PRI-:smx Hl'T'l'lJN RICH.-XRD AIIIIISON GILLIAII. FRATER IN URBE. EDGAR XVIRT YENABLE. .-Xnnuul Congress held in New York City, December lst. und Zfd, 18910, E, XY. x'EN.XBLE, Delegate, -0 I- if Gi Irving, lliam, R A. Gilliam, T. IJ. Watkins. Zea Pasco. Hutton Hill, Moore. Veuahle. Davis, Epes. Allen. Wilcox. PHI GAMMA DELTA. Foumled nt XVrLslnln,-gton and .Tvf'f'0l'snu in 1848. COLOR. Royal Purple. DELTA DEUTERON CHAPTER. Estnbllslied. 1870. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. 'IQIIONII-XS S.xNFo1ziw HART, XVILBUR Cosisx' Bidtu.. Hiexiw OWEN IE,xs1,Ex', Tumms OWEN IiAsi.m', jx., Iiwr. VAI.i:1u2 I'uR'1'Nr:R, J. E. B. HOI.I..XIJ.XX', LEWIS Di'Pi'x' joiixsox. IN URBE. Muxkoi-2 D. Bloivrwx, EDWARD S. Di'Pi'x'. Actin- Cliupturm Flirty-liiglit. Alumni Ulmpters, SixtPen Fit'ty-Sei,-4md Ekklesia to be Held ut Niagara Falls, .lilly 28th, IENIU. 74 ' 4 O ell Ytnf-f S .M 5 SIGMA CHI. Founded nt NIILIIIII I'nlvc-rslty lu ISSJ. SIGMA SIGMA CHAPTER. Hwtnhli-xlwd, INTQ. COLORS. Blue and Gold. U1:1f1c1.x1. Oummx: Quarterly. SECRET OMAN: Bui1e1in.' FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. I':IJXV.-XRD BHv11:R1.x' HIQRNIQUN, JR., - 'FHQMAS Rmfsle 1iNc:1.Is.u, JR., JAMES HENRY Rvux' AI-live Clmpters, Fifty. Alumni Ulmnpters, Ten Hrund Cunvention Held in Pllilmlelplliu. September, 15964. 76 English. Herndon, Rudy UPSILON OF KAPPA SIGMA. COLORS. Old Gold, Maroon and Peacock Blue. OFFICIAL ORGAN z Caduceusf' SECRET ORGAN : Star and Crescentf FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. EDWARD HENDERbCbN RICHARDSON, LAYILLON DIYPIA' COLE, ALFRED SHORTER CALDWELL, JR.. SAMVEL EDAIOND OSBORNE, XVILLIAM NIAYZEY KEMPER JAMES I. PRITCHETT, THOMAS J. PAYNE, RICHARD H. PRI'I'CHE'rT, LANGHORNE REID, RICHARD C. STOKES. Active Chapters, Fifty-Twn. Alumni Chapters, Ten Thirteenth Biennial Grand Cunclave Held on December, 28th, 250th and 30th, at Chattanooga, Tennc-ssee. 78 Payne. Reid Kemper Pritchett, R. ll. Stokes. Pritchett, j. I. Richardson. Caldwell. Miss Scott. Osborne. Miss McKinney. Cole PI KAPPA ALPI-IA. Founded all the l'niversit,yoI' Virginia, 1868. COLORS. Garnet and Old Gold. IOTA CHAPTER. Established. 1885. FRATER IN FACULTATE. J. W BASORE, Ph. D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. FRANKLIN Dfxvls, WILLIAM ELLIOTT JONES, THOMAS VVILLIAMSON HOOPLR, ALEXANDER NIARTIN, THOMAS NATH.xxxEL JONES, Hmm NIOFFIT INICALLISTI-ZR W1LL1.xM READ M,xRT1N. Grand Convention held at Knrwxvillo, Tenn., June ZZOLIT tO 24th, lSFl0. Delegates, WV. li. LORRAINE AND T. N. JfvNEs. So Martin, W. R. Jones, T. N. Martin, A. McAllister. Jones, W. E. Hooper. Davis. KAPPA ALPHA. CSOUTHERN ORDERJ Founded at COLORS. Crimson and Gold. OFFICIAL ORGAN. Kappa Alpha journal. ALPHA TAU CHAPTER. MEMBERS. HENRY Hmvmix, Tom I'm':'mc CRUSH, W1r,I.1AxM C. WM ACTIVE CHAPTERS. Forty. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. Sixteen. S 2 xVXlsIlIlU!,'K0ll Collogo in lk-v:m11bQ1'. 1865. 'CHuPPZ, HARDY Cnoss f 1 - X:-iw v. - w pa Q 'W is I x X 5 . I an em 1 -'Q- , 5 J, :-: .-'w:? - Co x ' 5' 1' ' N 1 - i w F A Wauchope. Cross, H. Cross, T, P, Bowden. ix li 'lx 'Q T X, in X ff, i 'VS Nfl!! XX, x'. 2 ,fo 'L rx 'l' 1 V: xf :I-lx Q, 'i-I ij 5 'H 93? , '2, . li N-l-XX jx-llllh I i'l.lHfl K 1 V t ill all in .U Yc Christmas Symphony. Eyes of blue--the whit Ringing' hoof and spa Sliow-Hecliffcl wra ps and ml trees. rlis Of light. stinging' lJl'Ct'Zlx- And the glorious Southern night. I ontin,Q' lips that hid ns try What her Cooler words deny- Hvai' tho wise man' s stern reply. This is also vanity. Eyes of brown-tlie tunes begin, Solv and plead and arf- no lll0l't'. .Xnd the flying waltzers spin fp and down the revling floor. Madness. wine. and melody, Love and faith wore llt t'I' so hig'l14 Listen e-re the tlowvrs die-- This is also vanity. liymfs of black and lmrmvn VXI innst aim lint son .Xml thv ond is not witl liyvs of blat-kAa long' farewell. Treinhling lip and blinding tears, Clllllg'0l' of the sharp-tongued bell, Whispered vows to calm her fears Ont-e and 0I1CE'4llQ'Zllll good-bye, Death shall change as soon as I Love at least can TIFYQI' div This is also vanity. and hlnc. ic lllllSf miss 1 yon. Lips that vnrse and lips that kiss- Sidz- hy sidv the vos ex lie Own' all thv vawlvss Slay: Not in vain the- wise! nwn sigh This is also vanity. 54 ,f IW v-'xl-ie X w c A , XF- Pi' .-. 3, ,t,- 'NYJ W9 5' 4 , ' ZZ'-XV 7 .532 ft r' , , , 1 Q1 ff ,,, S f ' 1 N ' 3 fi , , F' , ni 7v bf 1 55 'BH V! F ' f i QNX, NV f v I gvffo ' - v bf, tfigx 0 5. 1,1 . fl- 135 X V 13' ae , Q 1 5? A 7 X QQ A0 x A ffm as J fy' f ' ' 'xx ' DH X N. f 6 6' f, in-2 Q v !7 ,X A5306 'V in f W ' rllif ,wg 1 -: ff 5444-J'-' . lv 1' : Q X 1 4 XR f iq ,im ' jLidj':'x:l5,: , r ' , N F E ' A H, r Q3 1 f. 11' ' 7 w, Y if if ff xf.,f +'wv1 f f 4 :X ' 52 3' , at - ff ' LY y ' ' -Y ' ' Q . -A 3?-3413 rv , , s ff? krMx i eggi2:.4gf f A Q , .g, N I' fi: ,,, -, aw Li-21151-EEE-izil wg M353 5 5 gg' MwQ'f1pfs4ffQsi?yg 6f-H'. A f A f f-,.. ,VET v 31 s X 5lK ',.L T 511, - xxsifrnflg -b mm- N, X 1 'T3iFi:?i123Fi -1,5 X , X372 ' CLUBS. 'FF' i ' 5-. - 'I . fx- H M f'7e?EQg: . , .M f , 15. ' Qi' X. 1 . 1 3-KVI' D' .5 l mea .N iw f, ' I I f EL I 'Q c , N ,x 74. l il T 1 -- . v W ' J . 'FQ X -. 1 v v, X uni' A ' M N V, Q, s Q, . ' 'Q E 45 ' A JF- x ff X ,V ' X151 1...-,DJ .Af 5' ' . .iff ' M -L 'gli K 17' ,T v ' F731 ..-- If ,, . . 1' - ,f fv X' i .Th ,J f! I, ' .K f. X471 X ' f' ' Ii' ii ! OFFICERS. i-2522241 ff-af g.- . i-. f L1 - . 21. 1 1,lY5fi Q A ffl. FRANCIS A. Bkowx, Preszlhzzl. P. Iixckxxkn H11.I., I'fml'n'.u'dmf. li. H. R1cH.xRnsoN 7f'c'tI.YIll'I'1'. -I. M. KELLY, . C'l11'1esp111111'1'11g' Sf'r1'f'la1Ly, R. C. Fl'GA'1'H, . . RFl'0l'd1'llg Sr1'1'v!n1j'. H. M. RuBER'1's, fllaazagfr nf l?rad1'11g A'mm1. H, CHAIRMEN STANDING COMMITTEES. H. KIVXROE, Religions Meetings. P. B. HILL, Bible Study. Ii. H. RICHARDSON, Finance. F. M. Evxensolm, Missionary. W. C. XV.-XUCHUPE, Music. S6 jones, T. N. Pilsou. Payne Richardson. Cole. TI-IETA NU EPSILON. Foumlml at Ohio Xvesleynn l'nlve1'slty in 1870. NENBERS GOATS ??X' ZZM A ISVQX 'W4' LX-- L.-xx'1I.LoN DL'P1'x' Cont, WILBUR Cnsxsx' BELL, THOMAS NATHANIIQI. joxxis, THoM.xs SANFORD HART, A1.1fx.xNm:R BIAQUN M.xxT1N XVILLIAM MAUzx' KEMPER 3?MYR! SS R. H. O. C, T. VV. IWIUOPICR, jk., J. D. PASCQ, A. P. joHNswN, T. D. Gr1.l.1.xM, J. C. PARSONS. C. I. XXAD143, JR., MEMBERS. S. HART, T. N. J ON ES, J. S. KI'X'KliNIJ.XI.I. W. M. Kmrlfxcle, A, S- C.xI.Dw121.1.. L. IJ. C4,11.14., P. V. PORTNI J. L. DAVIS, R. H. PR1Tuu12'1 1', 1 H. 5. ,. Q'I'UI'I'S ,x'.., XY. B. lirlfolum XV. ,K A S9 L. BI',I.I,. S, I.. O I-IAIVIPDEN-SIDNEY XYII.I.I.X3I K . rlxlll mms 9 's1au1'14N12, P1ix 1'ux CHc1114.xx, G. 11. BIUORIC. R. Ii. H1eN1w, go MEMBERS. I 1414111111-111, R ICNKQ 1 1 4 ' 1 .I,I5II, ,111 111 lx N I11.s, 1.1.1111 1' jones :Q , , el, s .K V. fy 'ff ,Q , 'Gif ' I :: f ' ez .-f. . , '4 ' -I -Wg' -.'-.N.xxxxN 1 A ' . 1' ', 1 . .'-.R ' . .. ., l-lv-051, ,ffy ,rg,m.,,. X ,,,. , x ,.,-I.-. Xa' 'XX 41' I M JEST' f 21141 f' -, - ,f mio? f ,' x vwgg . . '. f ff-, ,fp H- - Af:-,V f!f., :j4.ff U R qjlyzff ,V f fk . N -v' :'Q'j K -. Z -f If ,.:.5,, , , .I . .V !,f ----H - . . ' -' ,ig ffE'A'.?5 X A 44 -- y ,f f X X --1' ' Off' ff! XA. il L '41 1. ff f. '- X 1 .. V, 1 ,U 4 , if f I ,I ,A Y , ,gf I If 15? gl flf X f f i f e f fa, e wi W 11 - ' 47ml f ' 'A . x ,- W' . QL 'fkffffffe 1'i ,' ., - Eau ' iii! -,L Y :iglzeig-ffii e , W , ,J T .S-,, 4Tabb's Tavern. Officers. J. H. C. WINSTON, J. W. BASORE, . , Members. H. S. STOKES, P. V. PORTNER, S. C. BRADL1-:x', P1 'c'SI.tI't'II!' , I '1'a'- P1 'f 'J 1.111521 I R. H. BL'RRoVGHs, D. H. VVILCOX, E. H. Coax, T. XV.-XTKINS, P. HUTTON, C. F. ROBESON. QI Pk, in 'R ll lf gl Nfl I 4 Camera Club. Mo'1'Tu 3 In pictures does our soul delight, For there alone is second sight. Couuzs 1 Sky Blue, Rose and Green. Oliicers. F. W. BRIIWGIQS, !'rm'dwzl. R. A. BIOORE, . . I'l'f'.: f,l'z'Jl'zfc'21f. E. P. NICHOLSON, .9f'fn'l111Q1'l1'ln 7il't'lIS1H'l'I Members. J. W. H, P1LsoN, Ii. P. NICHOLSOX, G. S. H.xRx5maucs1zR, W. C. BELL, F. KV. BRIINZICS, li. B. Hl'I1iNIl1JN,-Ill., A. P. jonxsox, J. Ii. 'I'1uif1.icT'1', JR., R. S. Plflllflfli, R. A. AIOORIC, L. R. jones, J. H. RVDY, G. B. ALM-ix. 93 Y'o . R J .H 4-1 fi iv ' X S '79 , If-.ffzi'if3M,V.! V . , 4 45 ' ' . V ,C ,.'.41'gg5 ,,m:. 5:l.. i . X. '-I K . I lfuffiealbf' rf - i ' . -' 'i1fix .' .'7 fe. f-S '-. J73. 1-fx., - 4 x 39 ,- 4 is EES 6 . ' S 47.-91 Big. - 's 'l . 5 'G , AZ K4 'gf5'i Q, Q 1 Cf . IQ, ,TT kg ei. ff Xu X mix XX I Eb? , rf., A . S . Q W X 5, O ,,, 4 - -, V, Rs. R.. -. J I 4 '- .I rf - - I i4,...GK . L: .. K rf' 'S . E , i, WV Y . J . I J- F f ' XX- F11 -M' -f . f . wi . - I .55 I E ' 2 f .L .Nfl 5-I ' f ff . C, wwf S f C tfkggi ' J.-,,.fj kg- il... J JEJ A COLORS : KIUTTO : J. D. PASCO, . . E. B. HERNDON, JR S. E. OSBORNE, . L. S. EPES, XV. XV. BONDI'R.xN'r Il 4 S. J. . H. RICIIARDSON, E. OSBOYRNE, C. PARSONS, W. B. BYFORD, J. H KV E. B. HOLL.XIJ.XX', S. STOKES, . E. JONES. Calico Club. Girls are like everytliing else in the world-the more you study them, the less you know. Dusky Twilight and Gray Dawn. Chorus. Calico, Calico, Calico, Galigo, Galigo, Galigo, 2-C Gal-i-go, Calic! Calicf Calico f Officers. . fJl'CSI.!?,1'11 1. . I '1'ff-P1'rs1'a'w1!. . . .'7I1'5Qq1'111'.v!. . . . . I 1za'z'50'1'111 in a fc Lozwz Members. L. S. EPES, J. W. H. PILSON, I-I W. BRIDGES, G. B. ALLEN, T. W. HOOPER, JR.. R H A. GILLIAM, BI. INICALLISTER, E. W. XCENABLE, R. S. PHIFER. J. I. PRITCHETT, R. H. PRITCHETT, P. Y. PORTNER, W. C. BELL. f-3 R. ENGLISH, JR., J. H. RVDY, T. N. JONES, A. S. CALDWELL, G. G. JYNKIN, L R. JONES, R. C. STORES, E B. HERNDON, JR., J. C. PANCAKE, T J. P.u'NE, W. M. KEMPER, H. P. JONES, F. DAVIS, P. COQHRAN, J. D. P.xscO, T H. WILCON, T. O. EASLI-IY, T XVATKINS, A. M. BIARTIN, 93 JR-. P. COCHRAN, XV. VV. BRAND, W. C. BELL, W. C. BELL, P. COCHRAN, W. XV. BRAND, 49' Q acl 1' 2 i f 7 IW: V sl fi, W , ' . l 1- : W! 5 I ' I pw ' f . 1 . lr, 1 V, , 1. . 11, 1 s .1 ,N I5 Elf 'C' fl I 4, ! WH fgllf ' -lfJfjl'?.. Y fe , Efqrgpgaf x ' V-ig J - -ff:-Y 'gig'-M Augusta Club. I. Yell. Hoop la rip I Hoop la Zee ! Club of Augusta H. S. C! Officers. Members. W. H. PILSON, 94 P1 'f'SIt1,l'lIf. . I 'fic-P1'z'.vz'f1'r11l Sffrrfa fy. R. E. FVLTZ, H. B. IVIOORE, G. S. FULTZ. .X Q ' , X , W JM :V ' if xx j ,--X .. 4, iv like X S. Ii. Osixorkxra, . J. E. TRIPLICTT, JR., J. S. Ki'x'xuaND.xL1.. G. D. NIOORE, . 1 KIo'1 r0 1 Montani seinper Iilwri. Comms : Gold and Blue. Yell. Hi I Hi I Hi Y Montani I XVest Yirginia Y Semper liberi Y Aclivc Members. J. C. Iixxcxicic, I. A. Sx'm2xs'1'R1CK14R. 95 ia I, tififfguf- r N I. 1' 5 iV' ff7f k, Jijfz I , Mix J , D ' ix 'ff R 15? XX A iffy WWM U X ff!! I '5?'.n fl . i f7l'c'.Yl'r2!z'lIf. I 711'-I '1 'fs ,S'4'1'1 Na 1112 Y'1'm.v11n'1 ,, '- ,N qi. F 1 ,,.-.x , - 1- I , 1 .1,- iZ94,.JQi,52j5j X -b I 1 f 5 A V VL L , Q J: 1 ,M , J f ' L4 , , W L1 ' ' ' ' A. .1 W. J? H, ,ly - I ., N ,L M -I: '-' '. , -A X .1 :. IA- ' .5 ly' I ! 11. V N, 1 'fl-1 5 4' M1 N ,L . -IH: , M n ,A,r,.-. V - ' y M J, N Nf. ll , qt,-Hin ,.1L.e..f, Y , --' Y A Venable's Inn. BIO TT01 The proof of the puddillg is the eating. Knights oi Ihc Dound Table. SVIIII-IH Avr:1:11.1.: Sc-lxlpw,-rpz1l':xt11:-, L li1l.1. Pumx: Bun vivunt. Blu, l5wNm'l:xx'1': Di'-it latim-. SIUE SYm:xsT1:11-Ksu: Dllglibr-. ' Humana Bmvnaxz Ulla If-fdridu, '- L'fvmNr:l. .Xl.I.r:N: Pom- bam, p-100 ver I'l'r'li Bnlluarisz Nc puur la digE'rliIYIl. gm-nzu I'.x'l'+: 4'1wul:.xN: 0 f'urlunat.us juvvntusj Bx,u,v1' Nlv11wl,wx: Minimus nntu. 'L1'1 1'1,r:-Hmm PlAxs1.m': Ab incumlbulis. '- P. F. Hoy: Mirabilc visu. IAVK Hrzlwlwxz Al'L'llw2iI'Qll8lllUSCdC'bCl1. CM- lilzlw: .Inmais je ne Vmxhliemi, U6 Deynold's Ranch. MOTTO: Dum XviVllI1llS, Edamus. n z. ggi! fi4'n4 .f .5Q., 5 mmxbw - f .15 fill: M f ' iv., gif? ,f ry 4 ,: ,Z: 1 'X' ,4 4 1 It .1 34,7 . v12?.gf?'1 if ll my 2' W 'JH ll , f vlfifm, ,N i5' f'fC5'f,1 ':f,r : ,f IW 4, O 1 L . U f 'llg'. 'l1f ,, 025' 1 -,. llwfff' 1' f Ola f' Jail? 1' l f rf fis fff -,lvl 'R' 'N f5.1i5f.::!z, .ZMQ ',' f:i,'11f.n -f m' ll ,-ifffl lg, rf 'lg-f, f O .- ,.,,,': ,' ':,, 5 Hf , ' 1,2 ' -r j' . f.,g,fv.,g QE ' :V ,H 4, 7112? MIL !k:l, f2.,.g-Vsffgifiil, gggii-Vx ' ,?,i,fg5': 'I L jj f , W f ,J ,IW gy ' , M5 ,g-'11 H 5- Y 1. 41, 'P A , ' ' A . A, . 1 OL.-ff iff TN Jw 'ffl - ,-,' 1 ff - Q4 311 . lvl-. rg .fl 1 ' ZWw,f,f,'-ff-jf f':!g' 1'-J H ,fx - .. -3,4-if--1 ' ' f Wi 1- N' ' ff 3 7.:fU' M505 ,nf f 'f' ,,,,l,' f..+. gf if-7.1.1.2-f ...O I ,fffywg ' b 'ga Q- ,lf O 1 , ?,. A44 -Z fl.gg:?xg4D lf 2 T 'fl- - 4 'lt '- Af . mtg '. - f'i- JL' . -F , if wlg..5f.. HE L 'fifizyfj X -K - Ze., Af, ' . , I O - fav. 4 .z. .4lgffl 'f':l 5 x.X ' .. Qnfi rf- - -O L ' Q , ,fn ,gy If 'S!X x,Z'f:Q I A4 ANZ-Xf Q22 'FSO Yell. Rah, Rah, Rah! Rip, Rah, Ree! RCXIIOICVS Ranch, H. S. C. Members. Ii. ENGLlblI, Ju., . P. JOHNSON, . . C. P.xRs0Ns, . N. JONES, . L. DAVIS, . D. COLE, . . . I. WADE, JR., H. PRITCIIETT, . C, CAMPBELI.. I. PR11-cm-:'1'T, Ju . . R, JONES, .... W. Hoom-zu, JR., . , 97 Rey1101d's Ranch ! . . Ax64lll01lllllllIl. . 4' Broguesf' LL Cnty,-ll I 'vOgOtu'gz1gex11ent . Inscrutalvle his ways, . . The Misogynist. 4' Chas. HL'-lluo librorum. . In need of salt. . . Also H6lluO librorum. , Cz1tesby's lmntller. . . The Syncopaled. R7 J. lu. Ii. IIul.L.x ':-. Xl' 4, 2 A i 1 -gfix V ..f V- ,nf L . ,M l A -r L :WI 14 j X! 4J?,:F :f X ' gh 31: - N N ,v ' 37 XX .. 1 .. -L ' X :V -' ' I 2' XA . lx X V :V X32 ,Fl K l 4'l,'ffA'jf . V,-, 41' 77 ' ,A-QV , y .V .4 ' 71 f 'If '1 ' 'if' '-4ff'fv'.. 11 - .- -FHL f ul 1 J'f '3 H . W S' Y Y 4 . -qi' ' 4 r- 7 fg' '24 ' ' 'nb ' 73: 5 , i QS. i. 1 Q 'H ' 'WY ,, 1, QM . ,J B-. 357 .L W, m llf v . -- M In : , 1 , -' f ,f a , 112- ,.lUllACz.j-wt. Gi G-7'fffAZ:f if 5 . flf ,b - I , I , , sa? flf'-H ' ' Y ..f , ,AJ fx -4 T - - f, f. . . i H .1 -Aff G Q, ifnif. ,I l E717 i ii L' . .,I l' QQ- f Ar, 15 '45 NV, M. iil'IXll'Ell, . H. ti. .lL'NKIN,. M. lI.x1xr:,. L. S. E1-ich, II. S. Pllllflili, . WV. li, Biwmiv, T. J. PAYN141, . YV. C. BIQLL, . . A. S. CAI.IHYl-II.I., L,xxun01aNic RE111, A. H. CLARKE, . S. ZBA, . . YV. S. LI-Ji-1, II. lI,xw1i1-:s, L. L. Dxvh, I .ID.xv1a, . NV. W. ISHAND, IIAY. acy Hovse. MuTTm 3 Clmcun ai son gofit. t'lVrigl1t Faithful Lover. , . Unduly Hypcrbolical. . Abcttur of the Excruciatingly Musical One . A Mun of God. . Of Tautologicul Verln-isity. , . Excruciatingly Musical. . . Varied in Accomplishnmcnls. . Bnrbaruusly Joculur. Perpetrator of Poems. Nutoriously in Evidence. . A Vegetarian by Necessity. . . Purveynr of Silencus . . Consistently Self-assertive , . More Consistently SEHZIXSSOYI-lX e. , . Gastronoinic XVOIlCi0l'. Indefinitely Extended. Untiring Cunlroversialist, Of Incmnpurnble llotundity. 98 ,I N 111, - . gif'-,fir 1 'ffm ' r ax Ufmfdfgfwa-Y YJQGVQ Carrington Club. INIo'1 1'O: Aide-Loi, ct Ie cicl t'I'litltlA1l.H Pkolflcssok J. H. C. B.xmzx'. J. S. KL'v14EN1m.u.I.. . J. D, PAsco, . G. D. Momma, S. E. Osnovuxxc, E. H. RICHARDSON, R. A. G11,L1.xM, R. C. STOKES. H. M. MCALIJSTER, Officers. Members. J. C. PANQAKIC, XV. M. Iixcslwxxn XV. A. BIC.-XI.I.IS'1' R. S. PR1cs'rux, S. L. BIAGEIC. J. Ii. LOWERY, 99 1 ICR, f'1'r.f1'ffw1f . . I IU' f7l'c'.v14I'r'11f eSE't'1'L'f1l1QI'tIl1tI7 YQIFIZSIIITI' R. C. XVILKINSON, G. S. H.x RNI-iSI:1iR1lI-IR II. P. jwxxes, R. S. GR.x11.xM, R. Ii. HENRY. XV. M. Iimllwzlz, A. P. .IuuNsnN, J. IP. Pxsvuv . L. ID.'Co1.r:, T. N. JnXPZs, L, L. Ihvlf, R. A. G1I.I.l.xxl. .I. XV. H. I'II.huN, Plcvmx Covlllmx, J. S. IiL'x'm:N1mI.1. I, Il. James, II. S. S'l'4+KEs, E. I3 IIm:N1mN, JR H. BI. Ilnmzlrrs, E II. HICIIAILIISHN, G. IS. ALLICN, xv J' XI Cotillion Club. Officers. Members. T. J. Iixvxrg, IC. XV. V1cx.x1zl.14:, T, P. Clmss, Il. IC, IIMNILY. F. XV. Illu mms, .I, I P1:1'1'cI1r:'1 1', J1. , II. BOWIIEN. J, II. living .I. E. IE. IIoLL.x1mY II. C. Avlf:1ul.L, II. BI. McALL1s'r1-311, IOO 1'w.eiflf1zf . Vin'0-I'1'cxi1lf'11f . Iql'l'I'Cfl'l7'4ll fl III! Tl'4'll.QII1'f7' f'llllII'HIlIll fgf'.'I1'r1u1yvmca1i fhzzznlillfe v w f1.h..IL'N1c1N. Lvadez' W C. B1-31.1, XV. XV. IluNI1Uu.xN'r, H. P. .I0Nl4s, Il. II. PIiI'l'1'lII4I'I l' II. H. PIIIFEII, Il I3URl:0Ul:Hs, A. I' III l I'0N, T. U, E.xsL1-JY, S. L. 1I.x1al+:1c, S C Bx:.xD1.EY, -fS. .cg I 'I,-QC' f.jf,:- ' f' Q f'-' qfx,f,'jI 'K rv Lili-SRLXL I-1 O .4 A . it The Golfers. fi' Lx- Q .. I O Officers. .42 A I T. R. ENGLISH, JR., . Prr.v1'dmf Ti D fi .. ' A. P, JOHNSON, . lf1'1r-Plz-.v1'a'm! . L S S 4 I LF E V A. S. C.xI.DwELL, JR., . Ybzfaszmfr L ?. f fi - ik? + Members. L. D. COLE, E. B. HERNDON, JR. ss A. P. JOHNSON, T. R. ENGLISII, JR. R. H. PRITCHETT, E. P. NICHOLSON, H. M. RICALLISTER, W. B. BIIEORIJ, T. XV. HOOPER, JR., L. S. EPES, J. H. RI'm'. G. B. ALLEN, B. C. AVICRILL, E. H. COIIN A. S. CALIIWELL, R. BI'RROI'GHS, S A. M. RIARTIN, W. C. WAIICHOIJE. S. C. BRADLEY, R. C. STOKES, F. XV. BRIDGES, J. H. XVOLVERTON, T. J. PAYNE, T. P. CROSS. J. C. PARSONS, J. E. LOWERY, P. V. PORTNER, L. JOIINSTON, R. H. WEBI3, R. A. GILLIAM, H. BOWIIEN, S. L. INIAGEE, J. E. B. HOLLADAV, R. S PIIIFER. IOI X 'X ,f... ,JM '. -Y - 1' -- y, ,1 ,. Q, 1 -'AQf flml, .35- f , C pil--Ri!f Vf7i7 53f'7 'HERE Chai' ' 55 'L' . x Urgauizoul in Svptcmher. 1899. Ihr Duck Hunting. 'IOI Officers. .I. IXI.xR'1'xN, . Prrszdmf 1. f.XSI.ICY, . Cqhlycllllllfl C. S'I'OKl+I!-2. . . I '1'ff-Pfeszdwzf Members. L. S. Emcs, IC. H. CONN, C. C, C.xM1'1:1aI.r., J. I. I'1cI'rc11142'1 1', T. O. Ii.xsI,1f:x', ju., R. H. PR1'1'c1112'1 1', H. M. ROHIiR'l'S, XY. Ii. JONES, J. Im. H. HO1.I..xn.xx', 102 E. A. A. XV. L. R. R. R. R. P. NICHICDLSON P. JOHNSON, M. MARTIN, S. LRE, D. COLE, BURROUGHS, C. STOKES, H. JOHNSON, A. INIOORE. ,- V 111531: we ii 5 F21 ak. 6,51 tw Wa . f ma , 1 1 ,A A x y f ff ' .fr - . my , z ff - .4 N 'f?.. . I1 V ' ' q-MZ- : 5:1 A I.. . I E ,N X ! YV e. 4' N . Q. W' F A V1 --4 X W i 1 , T 7 , ' s s' -,.,1f V e lf ' ' f ' 15 mr 75 1 V K 9 WMM' ' V3 5 1 1 f P, . X- . fffn' I . . QiF21 - -ftln-f .- .f Z. -. ' '- ...7- .' 'r- ' -- .L s- . X ,- --Y . .' g f: ,.'1. i,,fs' f- - .f f 1194 Hg. ' ,y zx ,fr - 1,1127 . , . - .L ,C 473.4 !,'j,,,f.,f 553.5 4 ' N gl igz. he-- ' x The Smokers. BIUTTOZ Tn wrentlls of smoke, we let our ilmc-ics wnmle.-rx CULORS: Amber :md Smoke-Blue. J. K. Invrxu, XV. C. BELL, . E. IS. lI1+:uNlmN. .1 lc., R. C. S'roKr:s, . Members. Honorary Members. A. P. .IuuNsoN, J. S. li1'YKr:Nn.xLl., The 'fI'E'Ilf Pipisf. -S'l'f'L'1'l' Afln' Jlf'1':'.w'l1uum 7716 Cigr17'6'flr' lfflllrr. Tin' U 1',-f 1 NilI710ISlllHA1'l'. P. V. 1'uu'1'Nx4:l:, li,ll..lul1Ns0N, ll, Ihvwmf:N, H. G.Jl'Nxi1N, A. M. Bl.x1:'rlx, 'l'. P. Cnoss, S. C. lSl:.u1l.lcx', I.. lirllv, li. C. XVll.K1NsoN, li. A. H1r.I.1,xu, .L P. HU'l l'HN, L, L. DAVIS. IO3 J , f X . ffii . ggexr , .45-if ' e 5z7': 5 N l,ff'f, Z sy.. J? 1' X -X, '. 1 In if 'TH N-0 L N I7 X Z sf- 1 ,., xx flaw if ww ,, Qs W . li, - J 'IQTQJIX 1 XNQQ N ya X -If xv L: SA P - fa Lgifaffa - - f l.. Vfmxff fa fi ' 1' lf xii AN X f l NYS' N1 V Z ,A . .lx e ' X l First Passage Club. Yell. Rah, Rah, FirsL! Rah, Rah, l'z1sS11gQ! Huh, Rah, Huh, Huh, l irsL1'assnge. MVrl l'w: Bring furlh the liuynl Ilumper and let him hump. UoL01:s: Black and Blura Inhabitants. C. IBELI., A. S. CALDXVELI., C. C. Hull-1zr:I,1,, R. E. I'I1-:Ning R. S. fill.-KIIAXI, H. M. H0141-:RTs, G. F. IZELL, NV. II. BUFORD. ll. S. l'I:r:s'l'oN, P. COCIIRAN l XV. H. Prnsnx, J. E. LUNVERY. .I. U. INN:-.nil-3, B. C Awzmlx., F. XV. llumcslfzs, L. li .loNEs,' E. H. IIUY. J. A. CHRISTIAN. 104 Z 7 . I B 'XX ff N 1 ff! Gi I I I Kg? I L ,Eli-4 VXFXX, ,.ig?.-'JIJT ..XX. I I ,K Fourth Passage Club. Eat 'em up ! D0 'em up I Chew 'em up Hue ! Fourth Passage! Fourth Passage ! Nit resign. FLOWER : Nocturnal Cereus. Members. W. E. JONES, L. S. EPES, G. G. JVNRIN, F. DAVIS, A. P. HUTTON, T. W. HOOI'I-Ill, JR. L. L. DAVIS, W. S. LEE, MIcII.xI'x R.xIxI P. B. HII.I., S. TIIOMAS, R. A. GILLIAAI, E. B. HICRNDON, JR., G. D. MOORE, T. R. ENGLISH, JR., W. M. ENGIJINII, J. S. KUx'RIcNII..xI.I., W. W. BONIJURANT, W. W. BRAND. 105 .2231 7 'I aff! ' . 1 at If fr I' 65334 , f ffl! . ' V! ,fgfjfc I' 5 !f,, .1 ff J N A w I f,! I I I 1 i Y l,,1L 1 !'l .nf IJ I ' Ngo f MOTTO : What is Truth ? said jcsting Pilate. X V . X ' X f f 4 ,iff N, ' Zfisf' f X 1' ' J J ,fill 2 X Q5 I ' 4 . -WJ 4' V, ' 5 5 I A ,X I 4 NX ' 1 fqfwlfx I I R f UN ' Nr I A ll I f X 'tix jXx'Q,X'ar'if, A J Q3 'mfv 01 J H W 310 Y Lawyer's Clvb. ,., v l ! I ' -'ff .. if X3 f 6 K N ' , r-A 'u e I J p .ef L 1,1 tm 4311+ rv S .1 fi J A X x 5 K X I WI Fw , 'Q ,f 11 J f . ., A ' f W ... I. . . ,J-ig-,,,.,4:' X 39 . . .!Q.1.gM,f-'zhff f A 22 P ' .c.d3'f'.J - - 'V 4 1 'x U-1,fi'r',:ayg. X i J -41 9 , flief -f x .f.I.f.'4i?3 W J -I-'J Q .-,n1.42n,'-'5 .L-gfX1'x uf' A QQ Hg ' -, Ns- . U f.r..f.: w..'f:. 4.-'M' . 'N z- 9..'f.wn1-A..H.J..n-. ' ,'.' ', f-':l5 - 12.-3.3 Vx? ..4- gl!---.111 -'y,i'1l'-Ven -x mul ,fl'1r'ff. .,'gP',9rQ':'27'f map' Xx:Q.Q1x 1.21-.q2 f..Hg3I,2f, W I B. W.. Hi' W f - W:-,f',,, u g..5g..,4,' N I4 g2,gW.Q!X.gx gq-1' j .ff 1.59. ,c ,,yp..:f' 5.11--'.':1 X-'fy an Q,-figs J-Q f. , T rifrwf--HH -. eww P 'MJMJ-ff.-.ff I'. 1N. .:l,'gv-. .x V. .'.. c'-'TM 1 ,ff 'ffi ff ml' -11 ' '-KX . ' , . .., .,1.:r,4..1 'x. ,--'. Nz. . .- ,wg ' 'fl 'Q --thjp 1 ' f ,'I1f'1.' - irq-.,. ,xA-. . f ffm-'zffff'..3a.i J. NJ .Hu 1:--'all-Gr' rf ' f'l.4'.f!f'H -'s'.zg,i-'g :4'i - .X 'Q FE:-' ': Mia.. ,f..':13ijf1,gl!',5Y i' jgifqgif. ' --1 --- : ' .1-.V-ffm. -P 1'1 --'. - +P . .V fp H215 Wgj5415g1tRe15ig 'h f'..':'E'g5EB',. 5g:, .. N -' .fly-I '0. E'1f'x5.i'fI1-1:-.fge- 1 1:4-,-fk. Hxwzavffiiii. .MQ ,Y I A H '9 .' IJ1.'GNQMXQVQ-'ir'31f.v L3Aifzgef.,,ifVfA'lqvfg-'--f1.:.'fQ'i'A -A -- , -zP'q2:1e?.2a3fH3.g.amz.2?'1,32f - ' A -. V - 1- I: .Ffa 4 . A Y '- mai H114 3:21.-..'v 'uf-' 1:1 4'l'JJf'E'v fH,17f C J51 f' , 1 -.'f':'- -if Qi5f'ij'g--1 '.. Elf f-'lin Qiiif-Hp-1' X N J-55 'Ev Kiwi I-4s'.-'J Wig. gg.?'5'EP531i121.-,iiziy-'2?fI'f,3P 4 1.3, ,I-f. H1.v.j,,Q.i.gi'f .- ' 1 ar fl 4-..ff . 1-Fw Q,-I' fig? 'sif'f.m'f,S75?.2'--s'2'.ffQ.'-faikf-J.2 . X ' 1. 4' - S: : ', : . q :P ' ,T 'I :Frp'?f3.'::.a? 5?.f?i5.-- L2-lux Mg 3' 523' N v ,WV :,9' nQ,I5.j,!g'., :. 'Yfl2'..- .2'2fZf3Jfk9-.fi--.v, ,mi 1 V 'ff-- f,.i1fl1:'.,!L':'1 fu-:al:g5ri'41!.?w.g6 X J. 75615 4'fI:J'i7'Q fjf-.'. f'?fj'ffi'f2.f7 f'f1'3I X fin. dj5'f,i1g.f-j'f1JQL1Qi Lf'- .zf.,1g XX X J 9 If 'mzfifiil -7-1.'..,Q 'Wpff 15,112fe1.Q l-'.5f2Cy5 X X -3 n',.. v I ffl ..'.'.:'j-,il ,'g'xf - N fJ 'fvf:?f':-.' '?.:9fHf J X J ff ,sa , .f142-.'ffv9 ff? ...-ffff.e5fu5y X ,f 'Pl Qf,'fj,'- :.A'.': :5.0.f',,?:.1.f.'E ',-'-FHM. ,fl fl up lb ,flf1j5f.i:f?f f',,.. 1.-.azf'f':.M'. .X ..' ' I. .f-VL' 'f ff'5 ':':.'1 ::'i jf.- '-'1-X'-'-2- ,'r1 Wi J' -..'jifl' vpn 25.2.1 g-, .ha .15 zr'-'5','j.1'.-' '1.'f f,- qi ' !Q'f,'IjfI J-13131 17 FQ? .'7,'f,'1:.-'K 2 jy': ff? .1 5- if li ' ' . 54 3' '7g1 .l'.c'.fE'..- '- ' f '14, J' F J : 4.,..'.i:Q1i.- 1-1.1.1 '- V1.1-'.5f3f-Tim .wg .J f.ln,.f.:N,-...'f. . -yr. - l MJ, f, ,q up-' '?5'fI'.:.f ef-5.-'-g'ix'.,i,z.1fg .1 + 5 1' . -'3'5'n' f,y'?1...'... .691 ?i:'w-'..f.fefi'31-X-g .i:'.5Y I J f. ' A' P 'J' 1 'J' ff 'ff'V'f-'erflf-ffvfii1'f1f-.'a'--:w.:f.'.1 . K.. 1-,1g:..' f5'fJ,.- mi..--z..2..:sp!!- iw --.,', - ' .1-'-. tg.a.w,,,.- , -,f','..'5'-.cy--.-Q. : l .5 -. 5.1-.. .1-wa., 1. r,.,-,fm -4' I H... zflnw-,'1.. i.:.,i-' 5...-.--w-sg' W' 3'7 3':'ff:':'f 151 f7?1x 'C5 .'P.-ffliw. ' 1:'.xfffQfr5-59. H- ' Y '- 7. 'p'-fig' Effi,-,.,s,f'.'2-wir q','2lEf '1. ::g:.5Y.-N '-'A- 1- 1-qw L . ' -- A v 1. M .Hai IV! 1 ,. ., . J . I ff N l,'5,,1!'.,QY --'- . . ,-. 15 ' .1 ..f' 4 'i ' u I P Y -W V f.1'::Tw- 4 4' R Officers. HIERNIJON, JR , . l7l'Z'SI.tl,l'l1f. JONES, . . I '1'fe-Pzmzklwzf A, P. HVTTON, . S1'f1'f'la1j'. P. COCIIRAN, . TIAt'H.Yll1'Fl'. Members. J. Km'1c1cNnA1.L. Ii. B. IJICRNDON, JR.. W. R. BIARTIN, H. P. JONES. P. COQHRAN, J. E. B. HO1,I..-xluv, JOHNSON, G. D. MOORE. G. S. HARN1-3SmiRc:ER, G. B. ALLIQN, H. M. ROMQRTS, Hou DEIN T. NI. JONES . If Lowxsuv, R. A. G1I.1.r.xn1, A. P. HITTTQJN, L. L. D.-WIS. J. W. H. PILSON, R. H1-:Nxv I'H1F1f:u, L. S. limes. 106 2 3 -ST . M. . la fi if .LA I f .N q W Y .. , T U nf' if xx U if ,X -1. . ' Q . 1. I ', , A ,,,,, I. xv CQ . E3 . 'Q x 75. ,,,.f .. Af:.5x S3S -u f K f'J'ff! ff' in t laggss 4 KT ,QF 'FW . , I K -zo: v c, X 1 ,ft e ggi' lf, ' fi 'I K ' I if !', I 'W . Q ' , f ' If . M M . I ii , ' XA M .T H lv r l'l.330CtQY ee MOTTO : De mortuis nil nisi bonumf' Officers. J. H. RVDY, . . J. D. PASCO, H. S. STQKES, . T. J. P.-WNE, Members. R. H. PRITCHETT, R. C. STOKES, J. D. PASCO, E. H. R1CH.xRnsoN, T. O. Ii.xsLEv, W, C. BELL, . Pl't'.TI-lI,1'l1!. I Yff'-l'1'f51'1fv11l . .Sw6'l'l'l'flIIll' yil't'1I5IH'1'I' H. S. Srmcxas, T. J. IO7 P.u'Nl2, J. H, RVDY, G. G. j1'NK1N I M 7 -f-J-1411-QJVNL .. 1 :A'-,..4!:,, X' Vx 1 , 1 7 1f'KL7c:+ xg: ' t Y -z. , , v L,,1.::.! Lil :I X ,lfguf f l jf I 0 Z: f mi lf' -. . ,,.! L. X l 1 L ' , f ,f 7 lf l l 'Ib ff W FNKI- UQFX lr. .FY X. f-.' X35 If C3 Vx . -.f .f?'D4? ' :fx - Hoge Academy Club. Yell. Rah, Rah, Rall I Rah, Rah, Rah I Rall, Rah, Rah !-Hoge 5 Oilicers. L. S. ICPICS, . . . 1DI'l'SI't2I6IIf H. H.XXl'KPlS, I '1're-l'1'r.v1'r1'f11f I.. L. lxwls, . . Smwmj' Members. L. L. DAVIS, G. S. H.-XRNESBERGER, R. C. STOKES, S. M. ZEA W. S. Lmz, L. S. Emcs, S lNI.xG1cn. F. S. Axmiksox, H. H.XXX'ICl'IS. IOS 4.32 -,491 'G ,'2 l J L53 r I 4 A Ye Wine Bibbcrs. l5L'Cl'6l .1 l OllllLlUll by Noah. 22115 H. C. llU'1'TO: Drink :mtl be Merry Oiticers and Members. Lgllfl Rum Tvtclary Dcitics. P.x1'1. jnxlcs and I. W, II.xum4: Chorus. Stand to your glasses steady. This world 's a world of lies: Here 's a health to the dead already. And here 's to the next who dies IO9 EDWARD Colonel Brown, . Mayor jones, . . Harry Walters, . Captain Lyle, . . Fred, The Heroic Uncle Sam, . . . Tonnny Atkins, . Sentinel, . . May Brown, . Kate Brown, . Bridget ,.... 4' QQ 1, A Q 'jx R WC an t 9 Q9 Wx: .W QQ W .blew t 3' Q ,f S'.!ll'l4 '1ll,l. i. Q X J 'ii lim ii li Rf uf I , ,rliXi X 1' flffytilix fr l X X ,,,.- ,K H. R1enARDSoN, The Heroic Du ,.t,sl12Q.-fren,-.. . , . -, . 1' IW f,e2,llYii Kl,ll Tal fif MK ll A iw- r lil A ill! x f Ichmanl' IN FIVE ACTS. Cnsl of Characters. Dutchman, . XMI ll ag cr. XV. W. BoNDt'R.xNT . H. M. RoB15R'rs E. H. RICHARDSON . . . J. D. PAsco . . J. E. LOWERY . . . T. J. PAYNE W. BRUCE BUFORD . . . T. N. JONES . . . R. C. STOKES J. S. ICUYKENDALL ......ALLEN Soldiers, Venders, Cannon, Barmaids, Etc. IIO Roberts. Pasco. jones. Lowery Richardson, Bouduraut. Allen. Buford, Osborne, Manager. Payuc. Kuykeudall. btoker.. 1' I A4557 L I , l II X irq, A 1. Iv f I-12.5 ' ' 'Tm-f'1f i'i V ug , R -I 32, 5,21-Qeajggfjgg-Qfglfyffiiiiiijfl II 'Ulfme ' f'42:,ff,.f .Qi Z H-l' . B9li' i 41 'Q-Q HA, K M -.ly .II , . A7 71 . 'li f I R I. l:.'i9l?,i34i:lUi I. ' lie- 3.1291-R. ' ,lg LL --.J lg' Y I ' '- ,ff'E1L W Ig' Oiiicers. IQUBERT S. PHIIIIQR, JR., Pramfwzl, '1'IIoM.xs XV. HOOIIIQR, JR., Scfrelazjf aim' 7-l'f'l7SIH'L'I', XVILLIABI M. K1iBlI'ER, Xllauagcr. Violin. ROBI-:RT S. PHIFER, JR., Leader. First Mandolins. Second Mandolins. JAMES H. RI'IIx', PAUL V. PORTNER, P. BERNARD HILL, J. CALVIN PANCAKE. Guitars. GEORl'2lC G. JVNKIN, ROBERT HENRY, QXRCIIISR P. Jouxsox, G. BLANTON AI.I.I-JN. Violonccllo. TIImI.xs W. HOOIIER. JR. Quartelle. T. XV H1',ll7I'l4IR, JR., A. P. Hl 1 l'K,JN, I I 2 E. W. YEN.xnI.E, H, M. ROBERTS. Allen. johnson. junkin. Hooper. Rudy. Phifer. Pancake. Kemper ' fm ic- , f f -rt ' , 55's Qi? 1 Pj, ,, Q ' Tiff ', '-6255 X iff- ,Q 'L V A 1 -.deff if' ' 5 f, , Wir? ,V ' ' , .- df' Z Jw ' . 115152 ff -wi, - ., ' . J X -1 'af' 1 y et? Mig: - istuglllg ' l. ff' 2 if fax W W X, f ,M 0 ,I I ,Qi X, s i ff f' ' .3 Q ,N X l If , .Q ,V -:tv i I r '?W - f if 496' , J NX! 'A f' .fi 1 wp- ' ' A . , A. f!, .iffr 'A' ' 'Y'-1 Q fm. za 1 , ' 3 V M wr , 4 , V ' N ,A ul, f ff il' , Y, 'V l ' ,TW li' it 'Jai' X' f fl --,.. 1 - f '? 'y,- if! -Y Y Y 4 ' 13 if- wig: - Elf ,, g i -,,, 'N '-ev:-2.3 A Football Toast. lu lht- strukv ul' tht' curclvll Iiiusulc l!nL'kw:l1'ml :xml ful'w:1l'll wi- Sll'lIQ.1'g'll' ml lhe grip of thv clinging' IISIIHIS. L'l1rlL-1' thv l't't'liIlg.2' sky. In tht- frenzii-rl ruxii' un tht' blezit-liei's. Silent :imiml the tlioumiicls XXlw1'4- tht- crowclt-rl l'0Ull'I'S stzimlg Thani lift their lung' lll'ElXX'lI l'l'.X'1 lu tho shock ol' the- closing' st1'llgg.g'le. l:llL'liXX'2l1'll and fm'w:ii'al :incl lrzivluvaiwl. lo the g'1'uuiis of those who full. Grim as thc- ziiiuivnt kings, hunk-ye thzit h:u'4- lt'Zll'lll'll thv gluljx' XYllt'llfllt'XfIlllg'l1t furthe Pritlv ol' liiiipirc Xml the sph-mlm' of it. ull. Ululel' the lizlgltfs wings. X'K'l'lillll :mil sun- the sigfiiuls, Uil'2lX'6'll in stunt- can-ll fucvl 'l'1-Iling' ut? thc furiiiaition, lCX'vl'.x' mam in his plziumz- Iiusliiiig' nvei' thv txlvklvs. Into thc lim' that lwmls, liimle- wo our timv in putir-ucv Tn gn wlwiw- thv signal sf-mls. Imv in tht- lim- wi- uri- uniting 'l'n thi- punt :xml the 4-mls than ran-v it In ll slillnvss :le-vp :is lleailh, XX'hilv svuomls mnrli the timc. l nl' ai Slll'llL'l' falls mm thu wzitm-lwrs. To the' thrill :is the lmulis. lllllg'-lt'illlill Xml thu- lun-ks pray lll'ZlXl'Il for hrm-utli.f lin Illllllglllg' into the' lille. Illl't'l'7lXX'1:'lX'E 'SlXit'l'll-fllllI1'fC0ll-A- 'l'rm thx- shock uf thx- L-losing' s1l'llg'g'lv Now. 4-rv tht- timc is llmu-. 'l'0 thc gfmziiis of those that full. Xml tho vry. that lm-:iles from tho sislc-lim-s. lll'il1li-.YU that hzivv lm-arm-rl the glorx ' - vi me is won. .Xml the splendor of it all. frm toll hum tht gl II4 r '13 Q i' NL------,W-mr. w-V,-.W-.UV.-- ---.W V. .,.h,..., .-.,.-WV- E ff -AF.-M - -Am-..,.... ---f--1-f A AA ,gn-Ar lg., - -- V-V Q1-M -----' 5 '-r , if K. I , '. , 5 , ., 5 f I . 4 R ,gs h .1-I I ,Y X, V ., VV K O 6 H I W , I x ' + PQ , , 5, Tm ' IZ, ,7 , 'Wi KSQ WH ,, ,, S rf ,, ,, ,, QM ,, ,, , f ff P' f ,Q '24, ,dy 'fu X xx 'I N' X! V A . ,plat , ,. A X SY if ' P Q Ar' RWM ' i , , gd BL X I , ww Xwr xx X N 5, M I A gguw, L , , w, z '- -1, Q,-Z., wiv. ,f ,, ,f 4,4 , , ,, Z' TY ,J ' g I N, ,:-- -w,,- - ,V , 4 ,,.,w x ,,,., - . fn 1 . , , ,, ,,. .,.,,..,4 , , VAN., 1 X ,p . .I ,, 191+ A, , -N- -KJ. T' ..-.. -.-M, ,K - . 4, ,, -, ,, , I , , gm y YA- Y - ' f?f ' - X A V W HQ' , v, ,, ' 77. ., - - - X - , f J , , LH . ' 1 gf' V Y - ' 4 , ,, x Y W 4 X . A A Q ,X ,f I xv, X , . N ,- ,Av X 1 A9 ' 4, A Ll ,', V 1 'iff VL f- ATHLETICS. 1 , lv W -f 4:44 ,, , , e ef if or --, .e J ' 1 ci, V ,nfl ,,- , Q ,- Z as ' J N ,iw .7 ,W 111. rf-1 - -1. ffm 1' 1 -- Q--f r N e-. 5, - , ,Y O , ox' 1 ,Q ' ix H 'E' 1, -,- , .f f ' -.-f W7 Av. 01,1 3' . I , , '- f . ,f i-f-erm ' W , 7 , 'll I 2 ' V 5 'I' jf- M Af ,e Ae f it 1 - X . --, A ,' Af -5 ' 4'-,Q O ..- .,-2- - -X ii, Y ,kg , College Foolball Team. J. S. IQUYDENDALL fquarttr-backj, J. W. H. PILSON, . . . H. SHANER, . . . KEMPER, right guard. OSBOURNE, right tackle, GILLIAM, right end, GILLIAM, right half-back, COLE, full-back. , Cajrfufzz. . Ilfllllfllgfl . . . . Coarh. Dlxox, left guard, BRAND left tackle, BR,xn1.1aY, left end, C,xLnwm1,L, left half-back, DAVIS, center. Substitutes. HCJOPER, KP2l.l.I'1X', FL'G.x'rrz, D.xx'1S. Games ol '99 Season. October 21st Bellevue, . . . . O. . . .Hampden-Sidney, 22 October 23d St. Albans, . . O. . . . Hampden-Sidney, II October 28th, Richmond, .... 5 . . . . Hampden-Sidney, I7 October goth, William and Mary, . 0 . . . . Hampden-Sidney, November 5th Washington and Lee, 6 . . . , Hampden-Sidney, 116 H00 'SN N'A.L3N N :JO WV3.I. 4,1 'CN :ef es! 'pk-X SX Q 7 g u lf 15. Y, 5 Y e pf . X e .1- 5 ..., ' ,Q 9 in 1-A if fix .'- 4 ' 'U -le I' uollegc Baseball Team. Officers. J. S. KL'x'Ki4:ND.Ax1.1.. j1f,,,,,,g-ly,-l Ii. li. IFIERNDON Q,!,f,,,',,. Members. Ii, B. HEIlNDl'JN, . . . Catcher NICIIOLSON, . Pitcher PANQAKE, First Base BL'1foR1m, Second Base KIOORIZ, Third Base Cik.-XHAM, . Short Stop LOWERY, . Left Field HOOPER, . Center Field PRI'1'CHI2T'1', . . Right Field Svbslilvlcs. R. C. Fucxrn, T. N. JONES, A. P. JOHNSON, J. XV. H. PILSON. IIS Kuykendall. Manager Lowery. Fugale. Pancake. Hooper. jones, T. N, johnson. Nicholson Graham. Moore. Buford, Pritchett, R. H Herndon, Captain. Gymnasium Team. Officers. A. S. CALDWELL, Diredar. E. P. NICHOLSON .-1ss1's!a2zz'. Team. A. S. CALDWELL, E. P. NICHOLSON, E. B.H ERNDON, T. W. HOOPER, R. A. GILLIAM, J. M. KELLEV, J. A. SYDENSTRICKER, P. G. EDMUNDS, J. H. RUDY, R. S. PHIFER S. E. OS-BOFRNI-Z, C. C. CAMPBELL, H. P. JONES. J. S. IQUYKENDALL I2O Campbell. Rudy. Phifer Edmunds. Sydenstricker, Nicholson. Hooper. Caldwell. Kelly. Gilliam. Herndon. Kuyl-:endall 2 -4 li I Q74 ., ,-gg Thc College Track T CZIID. XV. KI. KF21ll'lf1R, flfnzlqgrr. A. S. C.-xI,D'xY1Cl.I., . . G1fv!a1'11. Team. Rvnncrs. A A S. CAl.DWlil.I., R. A. G1I.I.iAx1, W. BI. KEAIPIQR G. IJ, KIUORE, J. M. K1c1.I.Ex', R. C. Fvcyrx, H. P. JONES, H. W. H.'XXl'KES. Pulling Hammer and Shot. S. li. OSBOYRNE, R. A. GILLIAA1, H. W. HAwKP:s, A. S. CAL1nwEi.1.. Jumping. J. M. KEI.I.i4:x', R. C. FVGATE. J. A. SYDICXSTRICKER, T. D. Gr1.1.i,xM. Bicycle Team. ' YICHULSON, H. M. McA1.1.1sT1cR mas, J. I.. D.u'1s. X22 IE. l. - H.P.Jo 1453: K . f .W . ' , ,4 V .,. i - . x R as-2. - . 4. .H .R 5T Q3'i i filjii efq Q 1' . Hampden-nSidncy Tennis Association. P. COCIIRAN, R. A. GIl.I,I.AXlI, W. M. Kmlm-ZR, F. M. IiV1iRsuI.12, H. Ilowmcx li. S. PRESTON, J. C. PANCAKE, J. W. H. PIL?-ON, P. CQCHRAN, E. B. R. S. J. H. R H. B. C. R. H. HERNDON, JR., GRAHAM, RUDY, PRITCHETT :XVICRILIH BURROUGIIS, Officers. 'Y W. HOUPIQR 125 M M C M. C. C. H. R. P. 1: A. 4. fNl't15l'rI'c'lIf, . I '1'f'f'A l,1'f'XI.tlIf'llf Sn'1z'fa lLj', . 73'nrx111'N'. . Klcxrl-ER, I2x'x:RsoI.1-2 . Romzsox, K1:1.Lx', Fus.xT1f:, BOWEN, IXIONRK mE. JONES. HUTTQN, JONES, C11l.I.1.nI. . , H -,--C 3 , ..., .. 'N ,T I Fi- ,.4- .,-, R I I TQLA, M., X xf. .l'5ggfY -'E '11 . - . Q T1 fx -r . f fl., 2, XX f is!! f ' X J '-mln: N X '31 N . ' . I I lx - ,V I-Q eu-L ,iff ag Pass Sentence- O11 to Farmvillef' ' officers. X' DR. J. H. C. BAGBY, . Pre's1'u'e21! 4 DR. J. H. C. IVINSTON, . . rv:-f-P,-mf.-,If DR. H. R. MCILIIAINE, . Sc'rn'!arj' amz' 73'ftlSlU't'l' Members. T. N. JONES, F. W. BRIDGES, E B. HIZRNDON, JR.. F. DAVIS, J. W. H. PILSON, T. J. PAYNE, P. COQIIRAN, M. RAINE, J. C. PARSONS, H. BOWDEN, R. C. STOKES, W. C. XV.-XUCHOPE, A M. NIARTIN, R. H. JOHNSON, W. R. IXIARTIN, J. C. PANCAKE, S. R. PHILIPS, E. R. NICHOLSON. H. CROSS. J. T J. H E. TRIPLETT, JR., . O. EAsI,Izx', K. IRVING, M. INICALLISTER, R. A. GILLIAII, R. A. RIOORE. 124 A. P. JOHNSON, 1900 Class Football Team. College Champions. E. H. RICHARDSON, 17h7lIl'Qg'A6'l'. J. S. KUYKENDALL, Caf7Ia1'1z. PAYNE, . . . Center. KELLY, Right Tackle BRAND, . Left Tackle. CALDWELL Right End. BRADLEY, Left End. FUGATE, . Right Guard DIXON, . Left Guard. HERNDON, Right Half-Back HOOPER, Left Half-Back EVERSOLE, . . , Full-Back. KUYKENDALL, . . Quarter-Back Substitute. JONES, T. N. 125 1900 Class Baseball Team. Rrexmknsox, flWH1f1g'f1'. C.xLDWELI., Asszlslzzzzl fllauagcr. HERNDCQN, . Cfvjffnm. JQXES, , PitCh6I'. HERNDON. . C3tChe1'- PILSON, First Base. BUFORD, Second Base BIOORE, , Third BHSC. HAXRT, Short Stop. Lowlckv, Left Field. HooPER, Center Field FUGATE, Right Field. Substitutes. PAYNE and BELL. I26 1 'SW' 'H if-1 vit-,gan ab R452 in , iii!!! , kr li- f ' I 9 fl i f Xx l' ,fl . P '.1 ' 5 . i '! . Y Af t.: ' ' . W T fill? H' T I ff, ' 'aryl ' fn I, ' Wfff fl ' .lg , 'ff' ,-vii! fl ' Y ' QYV jwmijwffy! f J'f iliiflf- ffl v ' 1' l x N' ,f I XWNL Q Y! ,fQfJw Jl1,.i.,, 'W' Ballade of a Football Girl. When o'er the bleachers floating' high The rival colors are displayed. When faction-call and eonnter-ery tio rocking' tlirongh the arm-hed faqanle, When on the naked field arrayed The nlen of braxvn and muscle whirl, 'Tis then we make the brief ballade In honor of the football girl. A knot of ribbons. lnan-v-ply, Floats f1'0m her dainty silken shade. .Xnd if a ribboned hose you spy W'ith dainty needlework inlaid: The Secret inn:-at not be betrayed- Out. out upon the graeeless L-hurl Who tells it-save in a ballade In honor of the football girl. The faith that wins is in her eye. The faith that never fails to aid. And. when the runner flashes by. She wonders at the gain he made: In sooth 't was such another maid That san' the .Xrgive sails nnfurl. For life itself aside is laid In honor of the football girl. L'ENV0l. ller roses. they shall never fade. Her fame shall live while lives the vvu Wherefore I make this brief ballade In honor of the football girl. I27 Carmen Amorum. You ask for a song that shall hasten The slow-winged hours away. A song that shall ring' of the morning. Throwing' open the portals of day, That. shall waken old memories of laughter, Wine. music. and fast-flying feet, So hear you the song of your lovers. Ere the tale of their names is complete. Morituri salutamusf' rang the Roman soldier's cry, XYe salute you, Mighty fzesar, we who are about to die. So we bow to you, our mistress. ere the love-tlame burn too low. We who long' have left thy favor. we who are about to go. In the darkness we were waiting' and we hailed you from afar. As the sea-kings of the Northland hailed the coming of a start Then we followed where you led us. or in shadow or in light. And the dread of the to-morrow never spoiled to-day's delight. We were kings that dwelt in bondage, mixing' madness, love and pain. Hut the sweetness' of your presence gave us grace to wear our chain. And the world was not a phantom and the sky was really blue. And the planets in their places wheeled and thundered just for you, We have trod the reeling' waltzes out. across the rocking floor. We have walked in silent places that we never knew before. But the liquid notes that floated on the perfumed air of June. Wander back in broken fragments with a heart-break in their tune XYe have gathered priceless treasures. handkerchiefs and fans and rings, And they stir us with the memory of half-forgotten things: For the voice of perfect cadence-questions faint and low replies- Klrew half-choked and passion-burdened when we looked into your eyes. We have ground our teeth in silence-but. the agony is past- lYe 've sworn softly many times-we knew it couldn't last- llnt still we 'll wear your colors, the colors that you gave, Till we 're past all hopes or caring in the silence of the grave. A Hear you the song' of your lovers Those that are draped in the night. Those that are coming' to-morrow. Those that are now in the light: Echoes of vanished laughter- Music of flying' feet! But hear you the prayer of your lover. That he may the list complete. I28 QQQZ ' V , Q wif- f 17x T .4 'J I ', -J X f, 'x :N F S-f-.Lf LZ ,xy f I iwvwtxxuf I V W3 ,, 1 ,TQ K X , fi 'gags - ielgllh, M. , EMP N fa x, - :5 '- , .., , -.,. 'V' L- ,A 'Tj ' Xmifi A-1-15, -1-1:4-.1-: ,L----. ' ., ' fn ' ' J . . J f LI X if ' ' c-,,,,.-.., x ya:-A 'J' X' V, 42' -' , ga- W wiv 79 ,tiff 7, , V 4,.- ,ff , .Y:c hA ' Q V Q gf -:.f-..-H+... I If A Z- -,, , , f, - 4 5'-if . gf f'f - 1. if 'fi r f-if .4 f' QQ! . 'I bf: .f ,' . W 1:4 V , .1 i - 1444, -r f,'a ,gf f , --1 - gy A -- ,L 4,5 .iff 527' gg, .A ,W .-F, K' ii 5-uf 5--' X W5 fha 7 , , , 3, - 'lr'-f, Tec: , 1,1 fffl FW , I' T721 '. f:.f',HV I' If '9'?,0 'if 5 44:-wi,3yf, QwNL,,p, fQ9f'y f,f 1 ,,44g,'! :.4f 0 -ij ,f'.,k, 1 1 v.Z,:,4 4 -1-:vggz 1 yy fb 4:,ig,4'f.g,:'j' Iggy Q, ffzafef W, -,,-iff-ff V - yy! f , f -f,-4 - f 292.5 Ta.. -.-I' --,- - .'f', ?5v izz'?.. i. f-.,f, F' ii' Lai 1 rv Fmqlvigi . -1 4 1 . 4 'J' 'f ' LW 3? f df f , n f f ' l l ,- , ff - 4 ' f IQ' UL -1, , 'F x ' ' X G 4. 7 'x 'I .. ...- -. .4 W.-zfwp' V, 1' 'fy r ix X I , X , ,,, f X ,, ' !,:, ,Q f a gf ,K ?T ::.g g. -iV,:g,fL.: ,- -1i?5'7' ' fl' Q 'I ff.-jf' Lfff- fl- Y ff , 5 ,,,, .T,-l.iY - LITERATURE. ,mr A Y fjf' f, xllal' Q' 'I A il ' i . , ,g X f ex- t fx - ff X i . f s K X ff' Z QXJNN it 45222 avi-ff-Q X . , , , Y i If' l 1 1 f ' Q , Lgf4f v p ,X If .1 ff ll , l lxiwll xml, il, I I f f fl all if I. i ff if 1 f, Q yf xr vw! Edilorial. ff Il. who are about to die, salute you, Long ago, when Rome was still imperial Rome, the gladiators used to pass before the throne of Caesar and, while the amphitheatre rang with plaudits, they would make this last adieu to the things of earth. So we, now that our labor is over, salute you once more as we give place to another lN:.Xl,lillH7SL'Ul'lf and another board of editors. XYe have obeyed the words of you who bade us evolve the annual, and now we deliver it into your hands praying only that you will deal with it gently. For in the months that are gone. as we have seen the book grow beneath our hands, as it has gradually materialized from the first vague idea. it has come to mean more for us than most books do. Even the mechanical labor of copying and proof-reading has not been without its compensating pleas- ure. and we regain our freedom with a sigh. whether of regret or of relief, it were hard to say. llut it is yourselves that you see mirrored herein, and we have done well only in so far as we have caught the Hesh tints of the life about us and have transcribed them to the pages of Tina lX:.XLlClI'l4lSC'UI'li. lt is very easy to write about the stars and very hard to write about the firerlies: we are usually willing to talk of anything in heaven or in earth rather than that which lies next door. So if some of the tints are rather vague, and if we have often gone astray, pardon us-for we did the best we could. ISO And to the initiated. who can read between the lines. it is all here-the many-sided life that we have lived. Perhaps to an outsider many of Till-i K.xLEmoscor1z's pages seem colorless, but to us of The College, every page is full of meaning and instinct with feeling. for every name is potentially capable of starting a train of recollections reaching far beyond our own con- ception. The voice of the rooter cheering the team on to victory, the scribe searching his experience for ideas, the orator in full blast, the poet with hands in hair and eyes turned skyward, your wit and your wit's opposite. the things you have thought and felt and dreamed-they are all here. and you who have known the originals will recognize the reproduction. .Xnd since, for your sins, it has been laid upon you that you must read this book. read not to confute but rather to discover what there is of good in TUE K.xL15rnt iscoeri. And you, the alumni of the College, whose feet are in lands far off, forget for a moment-if indeed you have ever learned it-the utter tlatness and insipidity of all things made under heaven, and renew in memory those earlier days when life seemed a thing to be lived, not spent and the clamor of the days of trouble was yet for distant. And now, here at the end, we should like to thank all of those heaven-sent beings, whose generous assistance and sympathetic interest has made the pub- lication of this book possible. lf any one doesn't believe in the goodness of human nature, let him attempt to get out an annual without constantly depend- ing on the kindness of outsiders. So for various valuable contributions we wish to thank Rev. Drs. T. XY. Hooper and Richard Mcllwaine. Messrs. E. Forman. james Alston Cabell, E. C. Caldwell. George H. Denny, Ph. D.. and Hon. Kemp Plummer llattle. XYhat- ever of artistic beauty Tina K.xI.1finosco1'E may possess is due largely to the work of Miss Loulie Marcia Morton, Miss Gertrude NVhiting, Miss Jennie Tabb, Miss Myrtle Daniel, Miss Mabel Daniel, Miss Ethel VVinterspoon, Miss .lanie XYatkins, and Messrs H. R. Houston and George Fitzgerald. Miss Elizabeth Harmon was also kind enough to aid us very materially with regard to the Art Department. The literary portion of the book is very much indebted to Miss Mary Stokes. Miss Mary Antoinette johns, and Mr. H. Irving Brock. 131 Union Society. 1-'uumled in 1789. Members. BYFORD, BROYYN, PASCO, O. M. CLARKE, ENGLISH, REYNOLDS, L. D. COLE, P. Y. JOHNSON, RFDY, DIXON, A. BIARTIN. AXKERS, EYERSOLI-1. ENGLAND, FUGATE, O. EASLEY, W A. BICALLISTER, J. I. PRITCHETT, JR., . HERNDON, R. H. PRITCHETT, HVTTON, HOOPER, W. B. PARSONS, R. A. CQILLIABI, T. N. JONES, AYERILL, L. R. JONES, BFRROYGHS, BOXVEN, NEWMAN, IQUYKENDALL. KELLY, NICHOLSON, LOXVERY, G. D. MOORE, CAMPBELL, COHN, PRESTON. H. M. BICALLISTER, H. CROSS, W. R. BIARTIN, SYDENTRICRER, XVILKINSON, W.XDE, EDMUNDS, G. F. BELL, R.-UNE, BOXVDEN. H. EASLEY, PHIFER. 132 'TWVH NOINO ,KY x 4 ff? Philanthropic Society. W. C. BELL, W. XV. BONDURANT, BRAND, F. W. BRIDGES, XVOOD, ROBESON, COCHRAN, R. A. MOORE, L. L. DAVIS, PAYNE, H. S. STOKES TRIPLETT, WAUCI-IOPE, MAGEE, HARNESBERGER, HOV, H. P. JONES, REID, Founded, 1 805. R. H. JOHNSON, H. B. MIOORE, LEE, THOMAS, MONROPI, HOLLADAY, PILSON, CALDWELL. G. S. FULTZ, YVEBB, CHRISTIAN, HAWKES, S. OSBOURNE, RICHARDSON, ROBERTS, GRAHAM, R. C. STOKES, PANCAKE, S. M. ZEA, EPES, ELEV, DANIEL, ALLEN, R. E. FULTZ W. E. JONES. 13-I T. D. GILLIAM, P. B. HILL, HARWELL, 'TWH 3IdOHH.LNV'IIHd x w QVQQ' N. wx 6 11' .41 :Vi nl Sw fl' iff! S15 i wi' 'O Q11 Of MN V 'rg 'Lg'x.V r I W ,f Y-f4I ' Af ,N 'N .,J 'V,.1'AX , X f u ll!! 27' Y : wif gf4zr':,,Q1 J! D 1,4 , 5 E - 3 1 TQTWH ' D A 2 O O - .W f -I Hampden-Sidney Magazine. Publisher! Monthly. Established. 1858. XV. COSBY BELL. Editor-in-Clnicf. IXLFRED S. CALDWELL. THOMAS J. PAYNE, W. BRUCE BUFORD, THOMAS W. HOOPER XV. CARRON FUGATE, J. W. H. PILSON, F. A. BROWN EDWARD H. RICHARDSON, Business Manager. 136 Buford. Payne. Brown. Pilson, Hooper. Fngate. Richardson, Business Manager. Bell, Editor in-Chief. Caldwell N pl li , f t , 'V J ,- gf- Q P f ' v A S . . A Y 6 I , ' flilig ff -r f V ', M My ,HX w i. H N f 'H X M YvsffTt ap:'we' .. 7 ' t- H w f it 1- Xt' it ' a J M' t 'f 1 iff t ' tt ,M X, 4 ,F .,1,,': R 1,5 rf fif '-LEM lx! 2 .gg rf, J X ' nw f' Wh' ft X t n s l27.. .,.:4i,sZ1' Yi-LJ 7 'al Our Artists. Manager ot Art Department. XV. BRVCE BVFURD. Artists. Miss LOULIE KI.-XRCIA BIORTON, Miss Gl'fR'1'Rl'IDI'I XVHITING Miss jxsxxm TABH, MISS JAN114: XV.vrK1xs, Miss Mx'R'1'1.1f: W.x'1'1c1Ns D,xN1x-tr., MR. H. R. HOVSTON, Mlss MABEL MORTQN Dxxlxer., MR. GHQRGIQ F1Tzcs1QR,xI,u Miss IETH1-:L XVI'I'HlERSP1N'!N, Mk. W. BRVCE BUFORD 138 T 5 The Six S Phases of the Q College Man 2 2 Ballade of the Literary Man. f i f U' 6' When lazy smoke-clouds ill the air And every wreath a picture frame, A dozen dainty faces peer To vex the weary student's brain: When red and gold and cinders flame, And close to hand there lies a Pen, Though he is dead who overcame, Of making songs there is no end. When cunning maidens have a care To tell us how they dote on fame, And one has half agreed to share Forever in our joy and Pain: When mushroom castles built in Spain With mathematic functions blend And scraps of verses, halt and lame, Of making songs there is no end. While o'er a stubborn line we swear And half the labor is in vain, While what we dream and feel can dare The critic's mingled praise and blame: While chums beseech us to refrain, And just a few our work commend, No matter--it is still the same, Of making songs there is no end. l.'ENVOl. Queen, princess, goddess, should you deign On us your gracious glance to bend, No more would we declare with shame, Of making songs there is no end. I4O f X C PJJXZ, M 1' X X X I J 7 ff The Athlete. We are the best beloved of Fate, The children whom she calls her ownx We let the grinds investigate How certain pendulums vibrate, Or theorize upon the state Of morals in the torrid zone- We hold a pass-key to the gate That shuts us out from Learning's home Stoop-shouldered, sweater-clad. We stand And face the music, come what may, For quick of eye and sure of hand, With muscles tense we lead the band That follows closest in the van, Full eager for the coming fray- We do the things that others plan And show the weaker souls the way. We catch the meaning of the breeze, And toss the lucky penny up: Mad-drunk on glory, devotees Ol all that leads to high emprise, We smash a double line with ease, Or tug and balance nip and tuck. We sniff the savor of the breeze. And never play against our luck. Let others sing in triolets: Of cherry lips and eyes of bluet We laugh at daintyaeyed coquettes- We stack our money up on bets And make enough to pay our debts And have a little over, too, Let others sing in triolets Of cherry lips and eyes of blue. 142 f 1 ' ff' -5-K, WD, -wr ' ,c I ' 'x ez- f 'L v l 'Qgxff If 1 X Nw' X I px f X -5-25 I XP , f 7 gf iii i,3gp'f- f f N 'X gg x TX yf MX N! Q f XX 'J 5' T K VM, Ballndc of a Loafer. the dainty tracery ol' the mind, Jls airy-light as ocean spray, the world-old thoughts that stir mankind to high endeavor --what are they? the turtle setting ot the play, where larce is linked with comedy, Jlnd, as the actors strut away, I smoke and watch the world go by. where are the singers ot old time, the poets of a bygone day? Dark snakes about their gravestones climb while drips the rain above their clay, 0'er liarnak's ruins, old and gray, the trailing vines ol summer lie, Jlnd, while the works of men decay, I smoke and watch the world go bv. though college honors be not mine, hor oi degrees a long array, l know the flavor of old wine Jlnd lips that linger tenderly, the span o' life ls but a day, So, while the wheeling planets fly, Ilnd hell and heaven fight for sway, I smoke and watch the world go by. L'ENVOI. Friends, live and love while yet you may, for none will care save you and Te Jlnd, be ye grave or be ye gay, Just smoke and watch the world go by. 144 ,ff ff ' 1 C WES1 5 M ax ff , fx? NW W ff, : XKKS X43 a A Rondcav oi Scholars. flldb pipe and book our fancy .rlrays Jfmid lbe records of old ways,- for us adown ille year: lla.: rolled Clie mzylzly .rlory .Famer fold Of war and deaf!! hz anczbnl days. llllule 0lh6fJ seek lo wh: llze bays Calla! crown endeavor, we apprallre Clie wealllz lbal byyone aye: bold, lllillz pzpe and book. file llunzder lony drawn auf, ilze lays 0f Woman Wzryzl flame and blaze .7?arbar1'o splendor: known of old, Jfnd as llle faial acts unfold Qde dream, wbile .nionfr power sways, M1711 PIPE and book. 146 ' 1 5 W . Ymr I J 4 Q QU' ' X TM -W if rg , W 4, 5 1 X V X Ballade oi a Sport. 'J' moulh mritu n UI-allattr in thc urthubur map, ?liib su 1 qurdtinn as 3' begin: what arf: the ruiirii that hiuumch mit ,many Gr mhrrc ii thr ntirrroat Hhuckrh ins: spring? 'Stun whip arc mp tantra :pre gruum him? inn mhrrr are thr tish that hruhr thr nrt 7 iflnn what in thc sung that the Sirens sing? 3 mit! rnnrinbrr, though you fnrgrt. what mm the plraiiurrii nf prstrrnap, ?lnh mbcrr if mp fathrr'5 harhxarnrh tin? when are the nuns that wifi roms ru-nap, ?lnn hom Shall 3 Brill thr crrhitovs min 2 wlirrc is thc mmm: 3 bin nut min, Shih tuhxg in the murlh no 3' riirr hrt 2 4Dr mhrrt' is rrprntancr for iadt igcar's sin? 3' will rrmrmbrr though pau furgrt. winner iii thr amrrthvart that min mr nap, ?lnU what has brrumr of mp hiainunh ring? what Um :hr iratr prcsihrnt sap whrn 3 :tit min Iuafrh in thr intrrim? whrrc id tht gohirt tiltrn to thr brim Uhr 3 Imam hum thr ren wine sparkles PIII, ?lnU mhcrc iii the girl that hidich the rim 7 3' unit rcmrmhrr, thuugh pau forgrt. L'Envoi. Frirnhs, if tht' things pau hrlightril in, passing, Iran: but ii tmin rrgrct, pray that thc guild nmxg rcmum' the sting, 'Ent pau rrineinhrr ann nrmzr fnrgct. 148 51 ' 7 jx ff , Y F X x N X 0 9 I Q X H 0 X5 X my EX I X . Q4 s X22 4 Vik X X QX The Calico Man. it JBalIa0e. To see me stroll along the mag Wliith jauntg hat anh cane anb stare: En see me pose ani! look blase lion 'D take me ior a millionaire, A tip-top sport without a care. lDr else the king oi 'fashion's whirl. 5 'ln neither one: I linger there 'CTU rush the iestioe iiornial girl. On nearlg eoerg Satnrbag. in haste to Ziarmuille Z repair, Ann pass the pleasant hours amag Bg looking at the lahies iair: 'E is then in manner hebonair, 1 gioe mg goung mustache a curl, 2Xrrange mg tie, anvil so prepare Eu rush the iestine ilortnal girl. There goes a stnhentf' people sag. ifhe sports of Zfarnnoille curse ani smea But what care Z, since E 'ni an fait. 3-Xnh haue the entree energmhere: E-kno then the iiormalites Declare. illith smiles oi mingleo pink ann pearl. i 'rn inst too smeet. 'I is inn most rare Io rush the iestiue Ilornial girl. L'ENVOI. 'Fellows that fling gonr golo aiuag As if gon owneb inll half the morlh, illhat think gon? Does it reallg pag Ko rush the iestine iflorlnal girl 'T 150 ff f gy X W7 FQ 'X WW L-. 1 v gf? f N 5 x i ! N 3 K f When She is Gone. When she is gone, dies out the light On fretted nave and panelled wall, With sable skirts the voiceless night Sweeps sombre-eyed adown the hall- lf life be sweet with love alone Then life is death when she is gone. When she is gone, the dark old pines By whom her foot hath found a place Grow tremulous o'er her loveliness, And whisper of my lady's grace, And nod to me across the lawn, For they too, know when she is gone. When she is gone we wait for her. And sigh for her, the pines and I, And dream old dreams of laughing lips And wonder-glances by and by. Oh, does she know our hearts are drawn Beneath her feet when she is gone. I52 l Chronicles, I. ORTY and tive years old was King Nebuchadnezzar when he began to reign, and behold he reigneth even unto this day. And these be the names of the counsellors of the king: James, broad of step, which did keep charge of the money chest of the kingdom: Peter, a man of the Greeks. which was scribe unto the king: Henry, the king's nephew, which did love the king with his whole heart: Bagges, a man of mighty wisdom, which had knowledge of the sun and moon and stars: XYynstonne, young in years, which was in favor with the king and his people: Salli, a man of the Romans. Now when the king had summoned unto him all the Ethiopians of the land. he chose one of their number named Davie to be cup-bearer unto him. ,-Xnd it is this same Davie which be cup-bearer unto the king even unto this day. And the king called unto him his cup-bearer, Davie, and said unto him, Get thee hence, most worthy cup-bearer. and summon unto me no small number of thy brethren of the Ethiopian people. And so the king did choose from their num- ber two servants, and these be their names: john, a man slow to move, which did heat the king's house which be called the Chapel: and Stokes, a man ot' low stature, which did know all the inmost workings of the counsellors oi the king. And are not these servants the ones which do obeisance unto the king to this day? Now it came to pass that in the second year of the reign of good King Nebuchadnezzar, there arose mighty peoples in all the lands, and descended with great numbers into the land of King Nebuchadnezzar. And when the king knew all these things he was rejoiced with great rejoicing, for the kingwas desirous of adding many peoples unto his kingdom. Now there was among the peoples the tribe of Nineteen Hundred. which dwelt in the land two and two years, even four years, And there were mighty men of valor among the tribe of Nineteen Hundred which had come to sojourn in the fertile land of King Nebuchadnezzar. Now, it was a custom among the peoples of this land. to vex sorely every strange tribe of Freshmen which came to sojourn within their borders. And the tribe of Sophomores was filled with great rejoicings when there descended into the land a tribe of Freshmen. And behold, the Freshmen did boast with great boastings, for they knew not what manner of men these Seniors and Juniors and Sophomores were. But when the king heard what 153 mighty sufferings the tribe of Freshmen must suffer. he straightway on the morrow spake unto the people assembled in the Chapel, and sought to turn the wicked peoples, which had persecuted the Freslnnen, from their folly. But they stiffened their necks and continued in their evil way. And they continued many days without trouble in the land. But after this the good king was much vexed with all the doings of the wicked peoples of the land. Now. it came to pass that when John, the king's servant, had got him up early, as was his wont, and had come unto the Chapel to make the FIYCS therein, behold he saw many strange doings and many strange inscriptions on the outer walls and doors of the building. And he ran and told the king all the works which the wicked people had done that night: the strange letters which he had seen on the walls of the Chapel, them told he also to the king. And the king said unto his servant, Saddle me an ass. So he saddled him the ass, and he rode thereon, till he had come before the Chapel. And when the king had looked upon all the wicked inscriptions and doings of the doers of iniquity, behold he rent his clothes and wept. There went out throughout all the land, even from Dan to Beersheba. a report of all the evil doings which had been done. Now when all the young' men had assembled in Chapel on the same morning, the king opened his mouth and spake unto them, saying, O youths of a perverse generation, why vex ye me? XYoe is me, for I know not what to do. But as I, even I, live, so will the evil doers be found out and be driven from the land. And it came to pass that on the following day when the king and his coun- sellors were assembled together in one room. the king sent out messengers sum- moning all the young men to appear before them. Now when the young men heard that the king had done this, there was much trembling among them, for they knew what manner of man the king was. And when the king had read the law of the land unto the young men which he had summoned before him, behold his counsellors asked many hard and strange questions, which the young men answered lest they be driven from the land. Hut the young men waxed not afraid, for there was no guile in them which the king might find. And when the meetings of the king and his counsellors were at an end, there was no evil doer known unto them, no, not one: and so it remaineth even unto this day. Now there dwelt in the land two and two tribes, even four tribes, and these be their names: the Freshmen which lately crossed over into the land, and among which there be many youths of a froward mouth and a haughty spirit: the Sophomores whose hearts were turned after vexing' the Freshmen: the Juniors which envy much the mighty tribe of Seniors. and whose hearts seek after evil 1 the Seniors which be a mighty people before whom all the other tribes do bow. And there be many wars wag'ed among these tribes. Now, when the wicked tribe of Nineteen Hundred had graduated, and the time had comewhen they must needs remove themselves from the borders of 154 the king'clon1, and heroine mlispersetl tlirotigliotit all the lancls rountl about, helioltl the king anfl his COll1lSCllOl'S were exeeemlingly rejoieeml for they knew what nianner of people there were in that trilme. lint ln, each person of the II'ilJe must neecls pay Z1 tribute of live Shekels emi silver unto the king. lmeftgre they reniove from the land: anal this thing mlitl eaeh man ui them 110, fur they knew what manner of man the king was. 2 R- ,, K QT, 4 , if ltlt i it it 7, , - V!! kbp I lfililliif ' , iff, I , ,fyifvil ff Lllliil 14,19 f ' ' N -3 L-M -gs ,N F l , 155 A Song of Hampden-Sidney. Dreludc. Fair is our lot-for we dwell at Hampden-Sidney, Yet take good heed and careful whene'er abroad ye roam, For if Xeb were on your trail .Xnd your little blult should fail. He would point you out the pathway, that leadeth on to hulne. True we have sinned-very 1nany went from righteousnessg There are none of us untaiuted, none whole. or free from blauu-, But, although we oft have played, Uh. be ye not afraid, For the men who lost their money. it is they that bear the blame. Keep ye the rulesfand more swiftly when ye break them. Knowing naught of poker chips: to church and chapel go, For unless you 're virtuous. Or know how to make a bluff, You will surely hit the eeilingvand the ceiling' isn't low. Hear now a song'-a song' of Hampden-Sidney, Ry a singer who has been there-whence this song has had its But though. while we 're here. we curse And say she scarcely could he worse. Still we wander back at Finals from the ends Ot' all the earth. The Faculty in General. Our brows are filled with knowledge, and we have the sr-holar's eye. We were Learning s foster-parents. and with us shall learning' die: Through the mud and sleet and drizzle. through the rain and hail and lVe. the Rulers of the Collepje. watch the weary students go. Naught of women know or care we-they are fruitful of distress. We prefer our own companionship and lives of peacefulness: Not the sweetest chant could lure us that the siren's lips have sung. Home are quite too old to marry and the rest are quite too young: Uh, we take a bloomin' Freshman that has got a little grit. And we treat him very gently till we feel him take the bit. And we ram him. shove hi1n. cram him. till he thinks he knows a few, Then we pitch him just to show him that he thinks what isn't true. 156 birth: SIIUXX lt is said ue once were Freslunen-but that was long ago. .Xnd wc tind it hard to understand how little Freshmen know, So, when the lessons lengthen and the class is looking' blue. We tell them pretty fairy tales of how we used to do. Home in. come in. ye students-put away your careless ways. Come where laurel crowns await. you-and forget your childish days. Ye shall work and see no resting, ye shall kick and swear in vain. lint the Rulers of the College bid you welcome once again. The Song ol lhc Fallen. Song of the Fallen in Latin-beyond all hoping or caring. Seeking' in vain to discern the most forcible method of swearing: Song' of the Fallen in Greek-longest and worst of our courses- 'l'hey that still hope for a dip by aid of their ponies and horsesg Song' of the Fallen in Math-the angles and lines that betrayed them! Dreaming' of prisms and cones and cursing' the men that first made them Song of the Fallen in lCng'lish-this is the moral it clinches, Sit on the very front seat-carve not your name on the benches. Hear ye the song' of the Fallen. The Song ol thc Students. Ye shall know us by the whiteness that was laid upon our brows By the bridal kiss she gave us when we rendered up our vows. She.our wisdom crowned ll1lSll'!3SS.lONYill'Kl whose eyes our hearts were turned Ere the fire of childish passion to a stronger flame had burned. Ye shall know us by our shoulders. that are bowed beneath the yoke. Hy the seared marks upon ns of the pleasure-chains we broke, Hy our eyes ggrown dim with staring' throu,Q'h the barrenness of years. Blurred with dreams of long' lost battles. driving rain and falling tears. We were happy in our hanilets-softly came and went the days. And we looked with childish wonder on the man-trodden ways: But we heard her voice calling' like the thunder of the sea. And we followed through the darkness and forgot- that we we1'e free. lYe were drunk with hi,Q'h endeavor and we made the holocaust. For we pave our days in bondage and we knew not what. we lost. Youth was cheap and so we sold it. love was far too sweet to miss. Hut we sought the gold of knowledge and forgot. the lover's kiss. We have gained the long hid treasures. that the centuries have kept. We have toiled in silent places while the sons of men have slept. For the voice calls and we follow. resting not by day or night. Follow after-follow after till the dark has turned to light. 157 lu the faith of little children. it shall end as 't was lJt'g'llIl. For the mystery shall vanish at the setting' of the sun: ,Xml the voice that calls us onward, be it come to ban or bless Surely whispers in the darkness vve shall hide our vveariness. XYIIBII the team vvent dovvn on the James., .Xml Ilichmoud had lost the gfillltk lYe sang' full long our saga-song Of Halnpden-Sid11ey's fame. f.Xnd Richmond had lost the garnet. And her fame shall never be less.. lYhile rivers flow to sea. XYhile 111611 shall bless her migghtiness Or st1'ive for victory, 1While rivers flow to seal. The Song of lhc Roolers. lYe have cheered for the team time out of mind. And our labor is never done. For vve cheer while our eyes Cilll behold the hall Ur follow a long end run, lYe have strained our lungs with the songs we sing .Xs the ball goes over the line. And if breath be the price of football fame, Lord knows we have served our time. There 's never a voice ill the Senior Class But is cracked as a broken bell, And there 's never a man that can raise a tune l'nless it 61111 i11 a yell. Oh. we flung' our best to the air's unrest That the team might hear and win, So if breath be the price of football fame. Lord knows we have paid it in. XVe must cheer the team while the team shall last, For that is a part of the game. lf they win we must yell till we split our throats. If they lose. it is just the same: If a man 's knocked out we must raise a shout. Though even a roommate fall- If breath be tl1e price of football fame Lo1'd knows we have paid it all. 158 The Normnlilcs. The sturlents eo111e not to see us: they say it is IllllL'll too far 'l'o come to the tow11 of Fa11'111ville. where the N0l'Illill Klaicleus are. 'llllt'l't' is 110 Illil ll 11o1' a shadow of 1112111 i11 all of l a1'1111'ille town. ,Xml we are lonely Ill2llCl6l1S, when tl1e stucleuts come not flown. Here in the heart of Fa1'1111'ille. here at tl1e Qlltl of the earth. To tell us the things that we like tl1e 111e11 of the l'olleg'e 1-oulrl meet 'l'elli11g' us fairy tales of how they have loved llti from hirth. Of how. if we L-l1ose. we eoulcl 111ake their 111oti1'f-less lives L'Olllplt:'lt:'. These are the things they could tell us-and we would answer i11 lilllfl. Holrling' their haufls i11 the clark. Ollf of the light of the sun: But wait! Men talk to-clay. 0'e1' the waste of 111111l and slime. Of a new road r111111i11g between.-then. perlmps they will come. The Song ol lhc Faculty in Darticvlar. X-B-CH-DX-ZZ-Il. Chiefest a111o11g the rulers. I. tl1e King. N9lJllCllZlllllt'ZZ2ll'. from my lofty lll1'Olll-'. NYith eye llllKlllll1llt'Il by years. keep watch aurl warfl 0'e1' that which is u1i11e own. Ilis NEPIIIQNV. Mo lllillly rlouhts perplex. I 11111 not sure Uf 2-lllgflll that is. save that i11 some sweet clay Far from the ll2llll1fS of 111911. with knife and key I shall sit down to play. B-GBY. All 111e11. who know 111e. fear 111e. fm' I hear Far tl111111le1'i11g' o11 their appointefl path. The flying' XY0l'lClS-BYEII the Seniors quake .Xt mention of 111y name. J-M. All flesh is grass, a ljlllllllllg' poet sang. Seeing llONY swiftly mortal things rlecay: .Xll life is Math-the poem is 110 goorl: 'Fake it away, P-1'-11. My jokes X011 may not alter nor 111istake. I always smile, when it is time to laugh, And ages yet unborn shall Vex their brains Over my autograph. 159 XY-NST-N. Youth is my only l'l'llI18+fO1' that I pray Your parclou-eye-u now I fm-l the first l'lIll'l'illllPl'S 011 my cl1r'elisAIJirl some one say lan good comv out of I-'armville'? B-s-ol:-. Last, lnuvliest. lou-lit-st. t'XlllllSllk?. apart- Tlwre is none- like- me ou the wide. wide earth: l a1nous shall sonic clay he the little town. That gave me birth. Tum FEL1.mrs. Kay, pass lls Ivy: not of thu Faculty Nor yet among' the students are we classed. We 'rv like a mulv in this, at least. that. we Art- llt'llllt'I' horse nor ass. The Answer ol Hampden-Sidney. True yv are men of the C0llUgAt'1QlllCli0I' to out than to uraiu. Littlv usorl to get up-sleeping' as long' as ye Gang Pausiug: a spacv at thv storu, rn-sting' a space at the mail Sc-vliiug' excuses in-w-excuses that may not fail: Le-aruiug the lllkillllllg' of life-fits manifold joys ami ills. lit-'2ll'lllll,2'. also. the uieaning of l-I1lg'ar's monthly bills. Truly yv como of thc lnloocl. yo follow your natural ln-nt. Anrl. the- Lord. may Ile send you grace. as the devil your sins ha Valiuo. au' it ph-asv you. follow the leathvrerl ball. .Xml it' lcuowlerlgc allure you. yivlrl you not to her thralla Ye haw- lu-arcl tht- iirst of the storysverily this is the mul. Ye arv neither pre-ps nor postfgrarls. but men in a laucl of men. Br R-DY-RD . ' , . P. ,,.i1:x.,, .1 -' -5 r , ,p g j' . . ' '25-Sis . Q ' -.flaw 1 t y '1'.. , tif:5 aE.' , ' ' l' .-5 ' -54 A ' '54 ' f'.::.1Lf 'if x , f . y. . - . ' ' .f 1' --' zpixfii 4 ,c ,Ogg f Q.,f5'i. 'vlan . 'Q' - J' ,' H' I 'fa-:ii-ff '- , - .Y ,ff I ' .' - - 1-1 ' ', 'T. 7 ' Y X 13- - -32. -f. fn 'l144'ffagGEig:: ' -17. 'I' - , , T: 4g ' , . N-. f J, . 155' J H ,.. ,f-1, - , , ,Lf gr- so ,, o V, , i I If 160 5 th sent. If-PL-NG , 1, X IZLL. my hwy, tht- jig 's up at last. I rcalizt-, ntiw that y-vu nit-ntitin it. that tim' lite at Ilaitiptlt-11-Sitliit-y is tltrnt- :intl that wt- innst taltt- up tht- t-ntl- lcss taslt tif living' lllllltl' stnnt- tvtht-1' twintlititins, ftntl, say what ytin lilt-ast-. it is ntl snap. this thing callt-tl t-xistt-nct-. Yun are snlijt-t'tt-tl tti stu many liinitatitins, I rt-nicinht-r rt-alizing' this at tht- agt- tif thrt-t-, wht-n I tlt-citlt-tl tu taltt- a strtill llllllllgll thc IllllYCl'S-L' antl tlistwwt-1't'tl that tht-Vu was in my way an lllSl1llL'I'1tlblC harrit-1' that tht- g'i'tiwii-tips t'allt-tl a fi-tint gatt-, Xtiw that is just htiw it is with a ltit tif things. Ytin try tti fathtnn tht- nit-aning til Lift-. lit-ath, iI'llllC. Space antl all thtisc inystt-ritins stunt-things that ytwn slit-ll with capital lt-ttcrs Z1lltI4j'llll ncvt-1' gut tuntsitlt- tht- trtint gatt-. Su I tlti ntit supptwst- wc havt- gtvttcn Vt-ry far intti 1ht- t-tt-tnal vt-1'itit-s ht'rt', lint wt- haw t1'it-tl all that wt- came acrtiss. 'l'ht- I'l1iltist11il1t-1' tinct- saitl that a ft-lltiw tinght to try CYCIAXIIIIIIQ at lt-ast tint't-, antl thc lititil 1'L'lllIlI'liL'll, t1f'1'tffw.v tit' nothing, that it wtiultl ht- a gtititl thing if stunt- pctqilt- trit-tl snicitlt- as a startt-12 Xntl tht-n tht- l'l1iltistilillt-1' saitl stnncthing' alitiut lt-aving a ftitil tti his fully, antl when wt- prit-tl thcin apart, it was hartl tti tcll which was whichfantl this, it may ht- l'Clll2ll'IiCtl. is usually the cast- nntlci' tirtlinzny citctnnstanct-s. llnt till up thc pint- antl pass nit- that litittlt- tif lithia XYZllk'l'. antl wt- shall st-Q if wt- havt- gwittcn htiltl tif any til thtist- things ttallt-tl st-nsatitins tlnring tht- tinlt- that wt- havt- Qtint- in antl tint lllllllllgi tht- nit-n whti 'lwt-ll at llaniptlt-n Sitlncy. .-Xftcr all, l tltin't snpptist- that what it-w wt- hatl wt-rt- nt-w tint-s. 'l'ht- tiit-clts gut tti snt'h a pitch of civihzatitin that tht-y nst-tl tw gn ahtint t'lvntinnally asking, ls thcrt- anything nt-w? antl stnnfs- tlay wt- will ht- in tht- saint- tix ftn' alrcatly we are horn with an intuitive kn-'-wlctlgc tif stinic scnsatitins. .Xll that llvl Lt.. we say and do is the result of tendencies old as the race itself. The hunter. dressed in a lig leaf, following his game through the primeval forest. was the prototype of the modern golf-trousered student chasing that elusive will-o-the- wisp. called a degree, through the labyrinth of to-day's curriculum. The difference is that, while the hunter cut his buffalo up into steaks, we haven't the faintest notion as to what we are going to do with our degrees. now that we have gotten them. There it is, Thomas Brown. A. B. It reminds one of a prison sentence-four years at hard labor. live dollars to the NYarden of the lieep. and you get your certificate of dismissal. Oh, yes, of course there are compensations. The long-suffering girls we have always with us, and we shall not forget them while the hills stand. They are undoubtedly deserving of credit. for they have listened unfiinchingly while we discussed this or that professors peculiarities, they have pretended sympathy with us when we got pitched on exams, they have congratulated us when we have been unanimously elected secretary of the class. and they have allowed us to make love to them in the way people do in books. You remember the hrst time we went calling on The Hill, don't you? We sat on the edges of the chairs, squirming in agony. while we ransacked heaven and earth for something to say. And yet there were no gaps in the conversation for the girl talked on continuously. At the Y. M. C. A. Recep- tion she sat facing a semicircle of boys which constantly renewed itself without making a ripple on the smooth stream of her conversation. Boys came and boys went. but she remained. constant. immutable. changeless. uttering her mono- logue with regularity and precision. And she said she hoped we 'cl come to see her with such fervor that for the moment we thought she meant it. lYe persevered. though, and she sent us a big bunch of roses when we made our orations the other day. This is a utilitarian world, and, if you want a girl to send you flowers you must give her a rush. The card had on it, XVith my compliments, but it looked to me very much like, For value received. It was her dress that you stepped on during the Intermediate german, and when she pinned it up, she said it did not matter and went on dancing as though her heart were not almost broken. Yerily, girls have a power of endurance beyond masculine ken: they can not even swear when anything happens. They were truly things of beauty, those germans especially those at Finals. The low pleading of the waltz or the swinging lilt of the two-step, as the shimmer- ing figures drift around the room. the lights flaring in the alcoves, the fair women and the rollicking youths-nay. it is surely a fairyland and no reality. But it is a stern reality to the Seniors for all through the last night they are saying good-bye to Hampden-Sidney.-some with laughter, some with tears, and most with a sort of subdued feeling that something momentous is happen- ing,-they don't quite know what. And, indeed, this thing of leaving College is 162 not so easy-unless, perchance, the Faculty accelerates your departure, You would be almost willing to stand your exams over again if you could come back another year. And you know how you feel about exams, both before and after. .-Xt first, when the cloud is, as yet, no larger than a man's hand, you write out a schedule of hours and determine to waste not a minute until the days of travail are over. On the first day of the new order of things, some one of your loquacious friends drops in and you discuss a pipe and the prospects for the baseball team, when you ought to be studying Greek: then next day, at the same hour, you get a letter from your aunt that requires three readings before it can be laid aside, and you come to the conclusion that there is no proht in striving against Fate. So you go back to your evil ways, and if the powers that be love you, it is pos- sible to get through, if they do not, you get pitched. XVe came near getting pitched in chemistry, if I remember aright. The professor had an eccentric way of asking, Mr. Brown, what about oxygen? that was calculated to stagger one. But it was a very interesting study both because everything the book said was so ingenuously simple and direct, and because the whole thing afforded so much mental pabulum to the enquiring mind. For instance, you can, if you choose, begin with a lump of fluorspar and endeavor to think away everything save the ultimate molecule. This alone will keep you occupied for some time. I always enjoyed fooling with molecules, but I liked especially to monkey with the atom. I once put about 14,000,000 atoms of H. and about 7,000,000 of O. into a jar together, and the little cusses paired off so vigorously that they nearly wrecked the laboratory. But I always liked chemistry, and our class furnished a good illustration of the combination of foreordination and free agency. NYe always had the results of the experiments, together with the descriptions, written out beforehand, and, while the molecules were perfectly free, they always did just what was expected of them. And that is something that not many things, animate or inanimate, do. Especially are the Normal girls record breakers in the matter of doing the unexpected. The Fool once said that the Normal girls were not normal at all- that on the contrary they were emphatically abnormal: but it may be remarked in this connection that this speech was the beginning of that downward path that the Fool has trod consistently, until now his reputation for stability is gone forever. It is good, though, to know some of the Normalites, both because of the exercise you get on the road to Farmville, and because of the good influence you can exert over them. They are so ingenuous and trustful that when you chance to tell them the truth you do not have to go into details or give local coloring to the incident in order to secure belief. And their perception of humor is so keen, that they can always understand a joke after you have drawn a diagram of it for them. 163 Once, just as an experiinent, I went up to a member of the aforesaid nohle institution of learning and said, Miss llinks, I have it on good authority that the moon is made out of green cheese. Said she, l don't think I quite understand, but I am afraid you are mis- taken. Une of our teachers said just the other day that the moon had strata very much like those of the earth. :Xnd she went back to the place whence she had come, saying that she did not think the course at Hampden-Sidney could he very good since Mr. Brown thought the moon was made out of green cheese-while you and I laughed softly about it. llut the time for laughter is over, my boy. and if we ever get another glimpse of old Aready, we will have to thank the gods for a special dispensation. Not hecause .Xrcady will he no more, shall we know her no more, but because our lines will he in cast in other places. llut it has been a good life-one such as the gods might live, and, here at the last, considering the things that Hampden- Sidney has to give. 'I Speakin' in general, I have tried them all, And, speakin' in general, I have found them good. ,ms e, ,-gf'-fff x., , V, , 11: lane- - ,Z 5,L Ja... LE' :Egan-, 1,7 1 A? Q: 3 5-I ' Xi, :P A V: -ff --9: - g , ff Y if-'?'Pj ili, IQ A ' 3 Ll- Q'Ez1f' 'I Y -f -:T 1' if .Q--.L '77 4? I :I f-1713 , Lflfl 'Q-ei?-9 164 1 X I C ,X L ' B N A wi X , 5, 'f' S l r txt :X ll' I E C0261 lk 1 ff K il . . tk ill' I X ,ff N X , , in X GN 21 , W X f 'X -AXA gl 'll' f T 10 1 Tl 1 - V1 . A ll ,. i t , Q, ff f' 'v 'QW' X A ' -Ballads ' i f C X , f ga 1- f K Hi -- lv .X f f tie ' X ,. 4. 4, ,H .If ' :V X Xll silent the czulvlu-0 thnt rung' long ago Q A X' c ' In olfl-worlcl L'Zlll'll'SOllQ' or light serenanlv, V J l org'0T is its passion, forgot is its woe. Sn 4, f Q I org'ot nrv tht- stirring' oltl tum-s that it plnywlg 6 'J f Xml the yours in their passing' lmvv clecpvttvtl its shzuh- X f X N 'l'o an hrown sot't :tml rivh that fur passe-s uolnpnrt-. lx ,X i ' sun' wlwu. loX'ing'ly tucliml nvuth her chin. it is luitl ' ff N llesitle- thc' swell-t tlurlimlss of xllll'C'lZl-H lulir. l ln vain tlo we question who first drew its bow - ' . Whztt t'ElX'1lll0l' knight of its first tlec-:uh-, nf XX'ho low-tl :xml luhorml :tml flare-cl to go V llzllf way to lm-vt tlvnth for the sake of Il lllllltll N , And tlwrt' 's INAYPI' Z1 nlun hut would flash out his lxlzulm- , LQ X If ff' 1 tl lXml div. it' m-1-rl he. with flrfinm-e to uurv, 1 .f 'XYXXX JJ? f f Q5 , 5 I D Os hx f 27. It' lite in the lllllilllvt' shonltl Pwr he xxw-igglictl K ,f ,gy .Xgninst the swt-vt alnrkmiss ol' Nl1ll'C'l1l'S huir. Q 5 17' ' f f 1 f' . X pc! Dkpjglgfx . lint out of thv shzulowy long' ago X 'l'here comes n rustle of stitf In'oc-aulv. .Xml that Illvmlillg' lllt-'llltllt-'S vhh :tml flow L2 '11 .Xml tht- li,Q'hts flare alitn in the 1lCCOlZ'ltl0-- Uh, ai lov:-lier woman tht- gods m-'er nnule With hvr eye-s tlown-clroopvtl nml her slninty zlir, .Xml thc- port-pniuter's tiny rlrvzuns farlv llvsieh- tht- swt-vt flarkm-ss of M:u'm'in's hair. I.'ENVOI. Frivmls. :ill the nmrvelous oolors fnfle From your Titian heauls :tml your 'lllll'Il0l'S rnrv, Turn. l pray you. :ill lIlNllSlllUy9Il .Xml seo the' swvvt rlnrknvss of Mnrvizfs hair. 165 ...me Jn. 1- I, l JNL fain xv -11 fr 5-' 'Ii i-Q 1- '11 3 f 4 X 1 5 I It T I 15ff qs':,.5Qs-if . 1 , 4 ll 'il ' i,nT1fFs?:3'll' ?EEl'21TfSi'.i .ff '. 1 ,I ' W- -' ll My 4.21 1, ,2,m7,.-qLQ'-egzgsfzg1 :3jg,.::f' ' . .:. A ,,l ,- -1, ,l la' 4,1 w ilikl l f, Q T I fl mf? 1 1 fl ',l L f ,, 1, - :N l'lig,5 f'-? ':.Ei fZl ' , Z5 1 Qq ' la' T ' xt ,,- a zz:-if e sf: Al, if ,l fp gl it i if X IAJQA A Claire. XYithin the panelled halls she sits, Beneath the winding ot' the stair, And, dark and light, upon her lips The tirelight shifts its litful glare 5 Below, the flaring shadows creep In writhing ligures round her feet, And as she leaneth dreamy-wise, One slim hand shadows o'er her eyes, And at her nod the red gold flame-tongues leap. The wind is waiting on the plains, Ur rustling through the fallen leaves, The raindrops dash upon the pane, Slow-dropping from the darkened eaves, The clock ticks softly in the hall, For some strange mood holds Claire in thrall, And, as the swift sparks upward tly, The lazy smoke goes curling by To drag its phantom wreaths across the wall. And when upon her face I gaze, The tides of Fancy backward fly, To wander through the golden days VVhen life was naught save chivalry- Full armed they ride from every clime, These warriors of an older time g The splintering lances bend and crash, Fierce eyes through close-barred visors tlash, For he is victor whom Claire smiles upon, 166 Dream - Time. ff ID you ever notice what a pine forest is most like? said the litterateur of the Senior Class, as he lolled on his back and kicked the turf with lazy heels. Is that a conundrum of the same stripe as XYhat makes more noise than a pig under a gate? asked Gray Golf-stockings coutemptuously. Oh, come off! and let the litterateur talk, said a Soph. He 's been doing Ruskin and Carlyle, and he knows something. Let 's have it. It 's not a conundrum, when the intellect can grasp and the eye can per- ceive, said the Senior loftily. A pine wood is exactly like a thunderstorm. Nature, like history, repeats itself-but always with wonderful variations. Look across that held at that sweep of pine trees. See the straight, dark streaks of the trunks like swift falling rain, and the heavy mass of cloudy foliage above- not green, but blue-the dark blue of a rain-cloud with mischief in it. The whole effect is cool and refreshing, and at the same time, dark and terrifying. Did you ever notice it? XYhat fool things you notice! growled Gray Golf-stockings. Let 's have some of the wise things you notice, said the Soph. XYell, there 's that stunner, Miss li-, who 's visiting on the Hilll Slightly inclined to embonpoint? interrupted the litterateurf' Don't know what she 's inclined to, with your confounded foreign non! sense, answered the Golf-stockings, whose knowledge of languages was limited, but d'jou ever notice what a scared and shrinkin' way she always has when she 's talkin' to a fellow? Lucky thing for her-that shrinking way! lf she weren't always shrink- ing, think what a Figure she 'd soon be, said the Soph, who was perhaps a trifle hypercritical and preferred girls of a spirituelle type. I 'll give you something worth noticing, said a Freshman who had been adding strange words to his innocent little vocabulary. The phiz of a man who comes in and calls for one in the draw. You 'll notice the wrong phiz some day, my son, said the Junior, unless you practice mind reading and other esoteric sciences pretty astutely, along with your midnight studies. Come on, fellows, here comes the mail. And off they piled, leaving only the litterateur, who sighed contentedly and fell back upon the soft grass to dream and dream again. 167 Yirginia in May! Hampden-Sidney! XYhat a feast of color and sound! He looks way across the warm red earth of furrowed fields, through wlnch the tender green of new crops is springing: and his glance rests enchanted upon the sweep of sombre-hued pines and tall oaks with their feet in dark, velvety shadows, while overhead bends the smiling witchery of the soft blue sky llecked here and there with whirring birdwiugs. The sweet bell tones of oriole and thrush ring clear and true from tree-top to tree-top, and the brilliant roun- delay of the mocking-bird is everywhere. lt is the dream-time of life for him, and the dream-time of the seasons-not idle dreams either, but dreams that bring inspiration and quicken the doing of good deeds. The springtime blossoms that seem only bright color and sweet perfume are shaping the mellow fruit. the golden harvest. The leafy screen above stirs and murmurs in the scented breeze, and the lazy htnn of insects fills in the pauses between tlute-like birdnotes. XYhere was there something like this, and yet not the same? Xtith closed eyes he half dreams, half recalls another scene. Yiolinsg 'cellosg mellow wood-wind instruments: clear, bright, silvery trumpet tones: and a man with a magician's wand who summoned the best from each of these, and brought sweet concord from the whole. Of course! The orchestral concert at Rich- mond during the winter holidays. Vtaldweben--the forest scene from Siegfried. llow truly the great composer has caught and recorded the sweet outdoor sounds of summer time! And sweeter than all-a voice. a presence, there beside him in the concert hall, here now when summoned to dreaniland. tlnly a few days more, and in delightful reality she will walk with him down these leafy, sweet-smelling lanes. No other girl can walk as she does, with such graceful poise. such free, light tread, such erect carriage. She will sit beside him in the little church, dressed in a pretty. fluttering. light-tinted gown. XYhat need of prosy pulpit discourse, when one glance of those eloquent eyes has the power to transport you to the highest heaven? To have a pure girl's heart beat in sympathy with yours-isn't that more uplifting than forty minutes of logical, cut and dry arguments for your tired soul's salvation? ,-Xnd the german! To float upon the wings of rhythmic waltz-time with his arm around her, and soft tendrils of her hair brushing his cheek. Queen of the dance she will undoubtedly be. The queen of his heart she is now and always. And he will strive to keep his hand honest and clean for her tender clasp, his heart a stronghold for her gentle leaning. lfirst of all, the carving of a little throne in the world's workshop for his beautiful sovereign. llut he knows he shall succeed. XVasn't it for her that he won first honor? He will deliver that oration to the president of the college, the members of the faculty, his fellow students and the visitors, but she will guess that it is for her alone-1 163 , V . . . . . 111111g1 .X 11111N1- 11111- Z1 11151111 NI1111 111 1115 1-1115. 111111 1111- 111'1'111111'1' 1'14k'N 111'1IlIP111Q' 11111- N1111111111'. 111'1'111'111-11 111' ll 1111111-1' IIHQA 11111 111 111111-1' 111111 21 11111111'11111f 11111111111111 1111 llIlL'l'l'1l1g' 111111 111111' 11I'L'L'1l111ll1k'41 11111111 111111 11-11111 ll 1115111111 111l1111gA 111111'1'. .X 1'11f1L' 111111111-11111g 1111' 1111' 111'1'111111'1', 11111 11111 511 112111 1111' 111111 1111111-1'. 1111' 111111' 1115 1'111's 111'1- 11111-111'11 111 1111- 51k'1'11 1'1111'1g 111 51111151 111111 1111Q 1lLxK'1l a111111111111111g 111111 111111111-111-11 1111- 51111111 111111' 1111s1, 311111111 169 VI 0 VI QI Qi 97 10191192 XQIIU1 QI VI VI U! UI 0 - . 1, ., . ,lf '11-V76 YQX -5 I . ,4 QM- ff M 'f,f1 I I 3 la 114:-Lflafgllf I I ' ' '-Y'-I ,Witt , ' .':- X' I l 1' E X'-YZ!! , Sir! 3 4w,s ff.: V' i X 41 'QFQI-T ' . C ,. fG! -uw' I 'EQ-fi! I .M - -.Q 11.1 ,..',., I I ' ,f ff ,I i + 'A N7 . ,151 ' 3 F. ,1l?e 5W 5f'4 'se' ' ' Wi .t 2 'NP 'ill 3 4317 nigh? . ,,, -.X ,f J-2' ' ,m-,y I X .,,,4, ,1 1, - - 5 Mag.. X-, I , Qi f ,f,,f,Q. ',Q'.1A4'mQ 471 ,,-1 , I ' If P A 1'321'?, 'i lf IO ' l Q. YV ' ', H -. ' 11,9251 -in'-V.. , j ,','lf1J H' A , f f' ZA,Z:'f,,,, X' -1 Q It sf! 0 ff'iif?Wl4g'if1f?? ff xxx 54:5 if raff- I ' TN - , 4, Jae- if If f +2 it ,2V'Z'7,f4 ,42ig ' M 11 - QQ I I Fl? -x -' 'U ' 1 2192 ff-5'i:!'Qf,'Q5 Q L ACL -x,f., xi',Jfi'1 - 3' ,L ff, gh f f, ff v i-f ui,24. I:!kd MAJ- Jf, ,fu 1 I, 3,1 I I Rondclcls. Once and no more To hold that little hand of thine. Once and no more .Xnd kindly as we used ot' yore. Then what is left? The lees of wine, Ut' life and a Souvenir that thou wert Uncefnud no more. I 've loved thee well, llut at thy will I leave thee now: I 've loved thee well. No words were dean' enough to tell My love. Ah. have I need to vow .Xfter these years? Ile it enow- l 've loved thee well. Fm' over Seas, tio there, thou hiddest. and forget. Far over Sens? IVhat lieth there but memories, And longings XVIII! and vain l'0Q'I'9T? For I know I must love thee yet, Far over seas. 170 mine Letter to Board of Trustees. Dear rllr. Board of Trizstrcs: I have just received my sheepskin. and thought I would write to tell you how pleasant my stay here of four years has been and what advantages I have enjoyed. XYhen I first entered College, I was a green Freshman, and didn't know the difference between a horse and a pony. But it wasn't long before I could take a pony by the lines and ride it as gracefully as you please. And I may add that I l1ave ridden a pony around the whole course. It has thrown me many a time, but every time I would grip the lines more tightly and ride more carefully and prayerfully. I never like to ride a horse for then you have to man- age double lines. I have seen some riding a horse and pony in tandem style. I thought the Senior was the most enviable person in College, except john Evans and Stokes Brown who don't have anything at all to do. I didn't know then what advantage there was in cutting Chapel: but now I have found that by so doing you can make up for sleep you have lost, or more probably, that you haven't lost. Que class which I enjoyed in my Freshman and Sophomore years, as in fact does every one, was the Forensic class. How I used to long for that hour to come, when we assembled in the Chapel and listened to such selections as The Psalm of Life, iXIinnehaha, or some other with which we were unfamiliar! .-Xnd how short that hour seemed to me! You know the Seminites once lived nearby. and I esteemed it a great privilege to know a set of men so pleasant withal. so intelligent. and last but not least, so full of leisure. Ah! sir, my vocabulary is wanting when I attempt to explain to you the advantages derived on account of the proximity of our College to the pretty town of Farmville and also to the tthe proper adjective is wanting herel Normal School. You have never heard of the Normal School, perhaps. Wfell, I am not surprised, and will tell you what it is. It is a place where a girl goes to have a good time: where they have wicked pillow-fights: where a boy may call every night in the week: where they don't have any Y. M. C. I-X.: and where they get out an annual called The Yirginian -hush! for I have told a secret. for the editor-in-chief told me not to divulge the name of their annual. Those Nor- malites have a cruel way of pinning up overcoat pockets and of playing football with any hat left in the hall. Ilut for all their faults I love them still. There is one regret I have, and that is that I didn't maintain a strictly anti- calico attitude while here, for now the calic all seem in love with me and I7I I End that I don't care for them in the least. :Xnd I wonder why that is. I wonder, too. if you found it that way when you were here. I suspect when you were here you knew some of the calic here now. I enjoyed a great advantage in having access to our College library where I could go and drink deep from such interesting and standard books as the Government documents, statistics, etc., which adorn so many of the shelves. The librarian will tell you that, judging from the demand for them, a great many Greek and Latin books seem to be read these days, especially by mem- N bers of the Senior Greek and Latin classes. But when the professors of these classes have corrected the exercises of the week, they can assign a different cause to the demand for these books. I have had the advantage, also, of acquiring the art of crammingf' This art is difficult to acquire, but when once gained it is an invaluable attainment. I used to wonder. for example. how the Seniors could possibly prepare Calder- wood for examination, but I have since found out that it is accomplished by crammingf' The acceleration I have acquired in crammingf' is ten lines per second per second. I have learned many things in my course here which will be of practical value to me in the future, XYhen a Freshman unwittingly sits upon a hot stove, I will console him by telling him, from my own knowledge of Physics, that it was only an increased molecular vibratory motion transmitted from the stove through the aerial medium to his corporeal self, that caused increased molar motion on his part, i. e., that caused him to forsake the stove. I have learned from my study of Physics also that one never sees himself, not even when looking in a mirror. And so I no longer make use of a mirror, cousoling myself all the while by those lines. I have heard myself when a Freshman, boast of all I knew: I have seen myself when a Soph. learn how to loaf and lead a reckless life: I have seen myself when a Junior, smoke and bet and cut a few: I have seen myself when a Senior, obeyed by Freshmen and envied by all. I have busted on Freshmen English, for the professor said he was obliged to bust some: I have busted on Sophomore Math, for I never could wade through solids: I have busted on .Iunior Greek, for I never could laugh at the jokes, and I have busted on Senior Physics, for, as the professor said. it was organized common sense. V llut for a' that an' a' that. a sheepskin I now possess. 172 Child's Drimcr oi College Men. TII IC SIC-NI-UIQ. .X be-ni-nr, Ullll-lIl'l'll. please ut-tend, l.iu-s fur an-part from oth-er men: .Xll fn-tile fup-per-ies :ire eset-hen'-eel. .Xml IlIt'l'2l-IIIIXS-lCS is his fond: XX'hen he de-eides to take ai drink Ile gulps it down witll-nut an wink, .Xml he vain sun-dry aiu-tlmrs vile Tu prove that what he says is right. llut take gguocl hezirt uml mlun'1 get hlm I-'nr he was once :1 Prep like you. 'l'llI-2 JL'-Nt-un. 'mic SUI'll-U-Mllllli. Uh-serve. lll.X' child. how llllill-CSI-ly The .lu-ni-mn' hears Illlll-S0If4.X'0ll see Ile knows. but does not think he knows. .Xml while his new-horn whisk-er grows Ile makes his fatli-i-r's shek-els fly , . ln llunee :xml drink and rev-el-ry: Ile turns the I'resh-lnun up-side The SP-Ill-0l'.S lllilll-llPl'S he ein-pluys, He is u ve-ry wick-ed lnun. llut vain not match his eil-ui-poise: .Xs .vnu will het-ter nmlersstziml. This is El ve-ry flziil-gel'-oils nge Since it is the trains-i-tion stage. 'lillli I IiIiSlI-MAN. Ile-liulml the ggilrl-ed I',l'l'Sll-Illllll here, l're-teml-ing' he has llllllglli tu fear: Ile throws the dust box down the well .Xml thinks he has rziis-ell 5Ullll'7X'illll1 Ile 's mul-trezit-ed by day and night. ,Xml yet he is 11-fraid to fight. lfm' ev-en dogs upon the street Know he 's zi Fresh :tml hile his feel. XX'hzit is ll l l't Sll-lllilll? Ilenr him Slllliliiff ,X 1'Il'0Sll-lllilll 's no-body at all. ,, o X , c. if fi A 1' , .ij t I to f ' 70 I -. The Supli-u-imlre vain drink :xml sine' .Xml it' the l l't'Sll-lllllll nmkes Rl sun .Xml swezir llllll du inost llll-X'-Tlllllgl Ile Iilllf.l'llS to hear the l resl1-main lmsl . Ile-ealuse he 's such ai nier-ry cuss. thu XX'hen I,ife's pri-me-val days ure n ll .Xml you have been at Snpli-0-inure ml A Commencement Idyl. l40IllI11911l'Cllli'llf is not wholly joy, You 'll find even then things to annoy. If haply you sl1ould not employ Your usual 130111111011 sense, my hwy- l lllllllqi. She eame, L'pon the promenade She eoyly said, l 'm so afraid Of gettilig' stuck. llliS Clllllllllg' 111aid. She hoped to l1ave her fear g'ainsaid-- Sl1e did11't. She told lllt' of her lovers four, How each ot' them did her adore, With wl1at wild oaths their love they swore, .she fancied l would make Ullt' more- I didn't. Young' Jones was 111aking out a eard. lie set 'em up a11d called lllt' pa1'd- I yielded, since l1e lneggecl so hard: lle jumped for joy afterward- 1 dicln't. Said false I, Uh. thou 'rt awful nice, Sweeter than short cakes' sugared sliee.' You 're stut'li11g me, i11 tones of iee Said she. a11d hoped to hear it twice- She didn't As past tl1e lamps-'trip No. il- We strolled rigyht weary down tl1e li11e, She questioned with a rapture fine If 1 did11't1 think the night divine, l llillllii. All like the shuttle thru' tl1e loom NYe haek a11d forth did go Hllfl come. l'ntil she. losing' l1t'1' aplomh, Whispered. Do you mind going' hon 1e'. ' I did11't. All Dromenade. A Mournful Echo of Countless Commencements. Lig'htly stir soft airs of night, Kindly stars are shining' hriglit, And he11eath dim far-otf light- .Xll 1Jl'Ol.ll6I1lldL'. Hut of darkness into light. Ur i11 darkness vanished quite l11 the dimness a11d the night All lJ1'0Ill9112ltlL'. Slowly to soft lllllSlC-S swell, lYith soft speeehesswho can tell Ill what mystie 111id11ig'l1t spell All pl'OIl16I1Zld6. 111 tl1e dream of lllllSlt S spell. .Xnd tl1e dimness. dear. pray tell, NYhat lllllj' ehanee of ill 01' well? All Pl'0lll6I1klLlC. Dolilcncss. He pieked up l1er glove- Just wait for a minutew 'T was politeness. of course, Nothing' more: pray divorce, From your tl1OIlg.1'hf' what is worse. For her l1a11d was witl1i11 it. He picked up her glove- Just. wait, for a minute. 174 ' ' 1 K . 'W - ' 'X f i' ,, 9 X , , 'zffv e, ,f i f. f ' f 1-lu, ' , . 'kxxii fl V 1-ll : ,f ' J-fl ii itflf 5 5 fy ffyfz U- 5-.ll'.zrf,'lYtf1fVr if f'g:g.1,.n .W :I-,qlj tj- Xp.: ,j.:,1'4q79, ,f '44 fffjhev ..4',i1-v PL -9 Mag f -fiwlfzfi 9 'W'l'yX K yi' 'if-fa. -' ' ,gijffff 'fi ', 1,. :v ,' v 5 .fff,1f',i.f. , ,ssl if e' f f .,,:,:irg,g,g M93 f ' 4 f I 5'K2aiiv12i?l1f4:sN.4' jk f L 7,2233 5 Qmuiiimio ,, ,7 1, ,dy n 'Pi tfbisas - t c X -egg 5.-gyi-gg if fy ffgfgfff ' , Aff , Q- ig-gif 25,4 f - '--fi'i.r-353 1 , 9- f ,A--1-1:-A , -, , f' 'v i S- 7 T' ,. ' ,494 ,V - Z ' it :gy ' if - ' 'i w , o e .. . FS? Dipc Dictures. QL' do 11ot smoke. mon t'UllItIl'tIdt'.7 l'erhaps it is just as well that you do not. The minister will tell you that it dulls the moral sense, and the scientist will take the pipe from his lips to state just how much it narrows the already narrow span of man's life. No doubt it is wholly bad. and there is no good in it. Tell it not in Gath, yet there have been some of the frreat b ones of the earth who held that smokinff was one of the thinlrs man should be 6 b loath to do without. Did not the Sage of Chelsea, that man of the eternities, say that, no matter how hard we smoked in after days we could never make up for the ten years or so of our existence, when the combined efforts of nurses, mothers and elder sisters were sufficient to keep ns from having more than a speaking acquaintance with the noxious weed? lVomen never receive justice from women, and if the Lady Princess Nicotine had to depend on her daintier sisters for worship, her shrine would be as bare as that of a Burmese god in the museum of a Christian theological seminary. To tell the truth, the Princess could never be a drawing-room favorite. She cares far too little for conventionalities, and the blood of Bohemia runs very swiftly through her veins. Evening gowns and Suede gloves are not in her line at all. She comes to us with her tlowing draperies hung loosely about her, a laugh on 175 her lips, and a roguish gleam in her eyes, that bodes no good to those who look too long therein. Yet there is a world of earnestness behind the laughter. and if you dare to look she will show you things that eye hath not seen and ear hath not heard. llfell, if you choose, we will invoke the Princess and see what she has for us to-night. Her shrine is a very simple yet very beautiful one. She needs no Greek temple with white-robed priests and swelling choruses to bid her come and bless her devotees. It is only a bit of nieerschaum, almost black around the top and shading off into a deep, rich brown like that of a woman's hair. And when the tireliglit strikes on the clear amber it is shot through with a dozen changing hues of green and gold. Can it be that the Princess is sulky to-night, or have we forgotten some- thing due her? No: here comes the first picture, as the rings float oFf into the shadow, taking shape as they go. There are the same soft. brown eyes that you thought the prettiest on earth. and the dark locks droop down against the whiteness of her neck just as they did in the old days when that rosebud of a mouth seemed absolutely perfect and you thought you had found the Lvfflilllll Thule of this world's joys. You remember, do you not. that evening when you leaned out of the window watching the lights across the river die out one by one, when you told her how you were going to conquer in the big world-battle simply in order to bring back the spoils and lay them at her feet. Of course you weren't going to bring back anything so material as money. The spoils were going to consist of a judicious admixture of glory, honor, and so on. But that also was vanity, and she was not for youg yet the other day I saw you take an old piece of blue ribbon from a book, look at it a minute, and then lay it back very carefully. Surely it was not because of any value inherent in the ribbon that you dealt with it so gently. No: it is not enough to know where a grave is. XYe must go back and weep over it occasionally. But the Princess has slipped another picture into her kaleidoscope even while we were talking, and now you can see the things you meant to do and be. They are not overly pleasant to look upon. for comparisons are always odious. and fulfillment has fallen far short of intention. The life in those old castles in Spain was of a kind that is not granted to the sons of men, lest they become as gods, knowing the good but not the evil. Sometimes the bases were very wide and the pinnacles very high. but they fell nevertheless. You were going to set your face firmly towards the rising sun. and follow the gleam o'er moor and meadow, fen and wold. and all the lions were going to turn to lambs as you approached them. Life would be a sort of triumphal march, and you would reach your goal with the band playing and colors flying. As it is-but the llrincess has shifted the scene again. You think, perhaps, that the Princess doesn't have enough comic pictures. Indeed, if you seek for much hilarity you must go somewhere else to get it, for 176 the Princess is a rather meditative sort of person. llut if you are of the eleet and have served her long enough she will lead you lmaeli to the time when the days went by too fast to he counted, and your life of to-day will gum glimmering through the dream of things that were. If you are lwreasting' the tide of eity life, she will let you hear once more the tinkle of the hroolc, away down in the hollow behind the hill-the willows onee more droop heavily down almoye the clear pool, and all the chorus of sounds you knew will blend into the liver- lasting lVoncler Song of Youth. And then, if you begin to think that the battle is too hard for you: if your eyes grow clini with seeking in the everlasting glare, and your ears weary with the everlasting clamor of the life we lead, she will eonie and whisper to you that it doesnt matter after all, for after the clamor comes the quiet. and after the glare the utter darkness of the cool night. Then, while you watch the wreaths curl up, breaking' away and elosing again in a thousand different shapes, you may eonie to see the great reason for all things-the law whereby we liye and the cause wherefore we die. s- '-? S ,..f-g- oi- 5,5 p,-X 177 ' V4 fx ,Q X ,fag , . f . , 1 5.31.1-fffg: W . ..-lv. A ,K W-- J -,,fv?,g:!'1 1 41,63 ', j ws, 'fi 3' l W' ' gzip N. 4 G. QYQ Villiancllc. Fare you well onee more my sweet, For our little love is dead. And my dreams lie at your feet. Tears. pereliauce. we both shall weep, .Xud your eyes are dark with dread- Fare you well once IHOTP my sweet. Slowly by the years shall creep: lt. is well when you are wed, And my dreams lie at your feet. l-'iereer flames around us beat. Now the love-lights all are fled- Fare you well onee more my sweet. XYheu our lips first flared to meet, Dreamers. we the future read, And my dreams lie at your feet. Nay. the eup was never sweety, .Xml the leaf is stamped with red- Fare you well onee more my sweet. All my dreams lie at your feet. 178 5 l tx . ms ina .. -9 Tl--Mgcfl -1 ef'- ' S' 45: ,I X 46' ' M Qff:-15 -' fi'-Q 2,114 at ..,-f 11.13 'X ' text 1 X Q 11 ' xt wax xjf f' Q1 Ng v , .L-:t,:.j45:vl. l, K . - , - I ff! W-. ' 1. v 4- X ,f7i'1' l I J . 'Tl ' lm If N -I. -if , I 4 1 ., 46103911 1. 1517 I' ,-l'2'- ., '4 fy 1' ltffi .fill 5-Tf, fi7 Q4-Jiffy - 711111256451 My Lady's Lips. Thggg darling lipg With which he aimb. how! His deadly dart That- pix-rccs oft Likc CllI7lfl.S 'l'l10y'1'c onc of his weapons, Too. 1 trow, If kiss 't. Thx- liravcst heal those lips I only could. l'd dic content. tiorl Rcqviescat. X statvly maid of long ago, Halt' clad ill shadow. half i11 Slll . l thc winding' rivcr flu ', knows I would. Had sonw old IllilSf+'l'-llilllllvl' caught sin tl1 light lad flvd tll The pictnrc c ' ll - Nl Xnl l llhd with lll0l't' than art. 1121 UIUH' . Q. t ll'. 1 ' midruiw --'I111-1' of licr head: Shc watchcc To lnlcnd its silver ill thc g'l't't'll1 The w . ,, Q And golrlcii-tippvfl thc Sllllllfjllf lay Then you could sl1:11'c witl1 nw thc ilu l11 lcvcl liars across lwr hair, tif Cll2lllQ'lllLf llll'lll0I'lk'S, tl1at rise Ur restiiig' liglitly i11 her cycs. To stir the ll4'IlI'l and spur thc blmul l lll1'l't'. .Xnd send a inist across thc eyes. Halt' mad with joy tI't'llllJlt'l 'll'lil and I, whose lifc Fl'0lll dark tn rl. licapcd into music at hcr fglancc. ' is rifc lllt thc elnptx phantnn Scv 1 ' Of wl1at was oncc a glad roinanccg And this alonc i s left to mc. lvne ia Vct to comc. And this a c - . l , ' tlat bc. To pa ss And dare licyond the things 1 to face the sctting sun. 179 Dudeness vs. Doclry. T rained at Hampden-Sidney. Yet he had braved the mud and now sat by somebody else's Hreside. She sat opposite. Do you know, said he, that I deserve some consideration to-night? And why to-night, especially? was the answer. Because I have gone counter to all comfort and common sense and waded out here instead of staying in my room and writing a poem. He looked solemnly at the fire while he made this explanation. And was it a great sacrifice. she asked. to leave the poem for me? The poem would have been in your honor. he said. Then I suppose I ought to say I am sorry you came-for I've lost a poem by it-yet it sounds rather rude. It does, said he. ' And if I said I was glad you came, she went on. thoughtfully, you might suppose I didn't care about the poem-that might seem rude. too. It might, said the other, judicially. Then I can't say whether I 'in glad to see you or 11011. If you just weren't a poet there wouldn't be such awkward complications. She looked at him demurely and smoothed down a stray curl. That speech also might be considered rude, said he, with his eye on the curl. It indicates a desire to have 1ne other than I am, which isn't flattering, Hllfl it very strongly implies that all my poems might be spared: for, if I were not a poet, how could I have written you half a dozen triolets, four rondeaux. a couple of ballades, and a sonnet since Intermediate? She smiled. Really it looks as if there wasn't anything we could say to a poet without being rude. I'll have to listen while you talk, I suppose,-only you must n't be dull, for I might yawn or go to sleep-and that would be ruder than anything else. I 'll try anyhow. And she settled herself and looked at him expectantly. Is that the way you show your consideration? asked he after a pause. XYhat more can I do? You know I love to talk, and here I am as silent as the grave-all for fear of being rude to you. But I didn't come here to talk, he objected. My throat- he coughed ostentatiously- my throat is bad: talking is painful to me. I am sorry about your throat. she said. Then neither of us must talk. XX'hat shall we do? Shall we sit still and look at each other or will you sit in that corner and read Kipling, while I sit here and read all the poems you have in your pocket? ISO Let 's try the first for a while, he suggested. They looked solemnly at each other for half a minute. Then she smiled. He may have smiled also. Dear me, said she, it 's rude to stare. XYe must n't look at each other any more. Give 1ne the poems. He drew several manuscript sheets from his pocket and handed them over Then he sat down quite near her. No, said she, you are to stay over there with Kipling. It 's dreadfully rude to look over peoples shoulders while they are reading. Even when people are reading one's own poems? he asked. Even when they are reading your own poems, she repeated, and pointed to the copy of Kipling. He took the book and sat down as l'.e was bid, at a distance. She unrolled the manuscript, smoothed out the sheets, and set about reading. He looked at her over the top of his Kipling. After a moment of careful attention to business she paused. XN'hy do you write such a wretched hand? said she. I can't read a single word. XVhat 's this now-' Here 's a sight '-or 'perfect frightf I know it 's got to rhyme with ' white.' He came across and bent over the manuscript. That. said he gravely. is :angel brightf Oh, said she, 'K how funny! Now you may go back to that horrid Kipling of yours, till I need you again. . But, said he, if I 'ni going to read Kipling you must n't ask me ques- tion, It 's rude to ask a fellow questions when he 's reading. She nodded. So papa says,-but what are we to do? I don't want to be rude, of course, but I simply can't read verse by myself. just look at this word now: I don't know whether it 's French or Greek. I 'ni sure it 's not Eng- lish. She looked very pathetic and held up the paper with an appealing gesture. He looked at her quite seriously. I say, said he, suppose we sit on that couch and read those poems together. That would simplify matters. She looked doubtful. You think that wouldn't be rude? she asked. I 'm perfectly sure it couldn't be, said he. And they sat down. The rest doesn't matter. ISI , ' Jaff e, -, 1 . 'x .. f- ---f f., 'I N oii taf3Huf'i I 1 Zane- '71, N ff' . tftfigifaglfflzf 16 ,y,, F5v'a2Zf tt, 'N .f ?-.S5'iye3flAt I . '54 ,N U1 Wt c' ,, g 4iy'.g,.q f ' W 1.2 4' X 'PL vii 'l My J this ,rf - gg tigqffijlliii- Y J' I I X 4SaA.tfr,.tx6?qg f f -N -.5 ,, , Ajit ' t Y 3' '-Aff'-- 7 si ', 1 ', x ' 'if-4-. - ffm,-1 ' ' , ,rp 4 ,,, I fx It ..,. if , A Ax I, e geo f M' I I KN Y L f 51, 0. , 1, at . , ll t tux? ,lg if 7 I-'X V tvfx V!.! ! i: ri! -K717' ' - N A Your' Lips Say No. Your lips suv ' no, und yet I 'll swear Your eyes hold in theil U, sc-ornful maid. do you not cure, ' depths an air When eyes be kind, what sting' I lJe:1r'.' Ut yielding, lore. to my request. Perhaps 't is but a cruel 'est 'T wus by their lilnpid light I guessed 'l' would not displeuse ' ' J Your l' ' you did I dare. lpf, may no. Such tenderness your 0'l1 A ,S z uses wear, How shall I not. f0r,Q,'ett despair? YYhen next I plead l'll think it best To seek the answer l would wrest Deep in your eyes' soft beaming. ere Your lips say no. The Sircn's Song. SH' the fWlll.2'llf 2'f'l1llX flllling' Un the strand the stairs are henming' WH' Tllf' IH!! FVUIII above. Hear the 4-urlew's distant mulling' From our eyes ure f-ver glezunting' i l'Ulll Tllt' SPH. Hglyg Uf IOVPQ WHTNI illt' W2lWlPtS. elrlringr. foaming, ,Xml we sing' :1 song' of yearning- .Xs they play. For old times- ill to darkness, evening' gloznning' .Xnger fierc-e to friendship turning' Fades uwuy. Hy fm r chimes. Dancing' oft- to muwie l lir . . y Un the shore, Come and with the sirens tnrry Ever more: Sing' the songs we sing entrant-ing3', Iiy the seug Join u s in our happy dunvi-ng On the lea. I82 vw ' QQ f 459,15 ii lt! glad . fam dyl ig , A. H6115 R 'W ,. Afab lju I ' .Rx .psi l, I Nfl? ' t ll- I Mm X . lf lil 'W Ill fs I ii' , ' ' iff KMA ld 'I wil l . it Xi X I ' T 1 M, 'AT V L jg Xxlk XX, ,IZ e 'Ml wif e' Af I Au An Idyl. He loved her the best. Far more than the rest. lint how was she to know: And when love died The woman sighed. I wonder-wonder why. 'T was the love ot' a day. Ile went away. .Xnd oh, how sad was she: lint others came. She smiled again- 'Tis the way of the world, you see Then hack he 031119. 'T was not. the same. She calmly passed him by: What use? said he, She 's not for me, .Xml he sighed, I wonder why. From Farmville Up. The quif-lc strokes of my horse's feet, Heat out a ringing' tune. Un either side the pathway glide Strange shapes into the gloom. Iled on the dark hreast of the night The lights of lfarmville gleam, ll'here watch and ward they keep above The palace of the queen. From Yenable's to Reynolds ranch. From Hart's to Holladay'S. lVe laughed along' the things that made The current of our days. ll'omen and work. and dance and song. The Hehrew's monthly hill, And all the life that fizzes on The everlasting' Hill. From Fartnville up-four years ago I learned the devious Wiljl .Xml IlllllIilllll'S hack is I'llllIllLf'Flt'SS still. And springless. still. to-day. llut who shall say what dreams were mine Of liglitly won renown- Ilame Fortune eonld but smile on 'those ll'ho wore the eap and gown. Unce more. once IDOTP, across the floor The waltzers rave and spin, .Xnd laughter sweet as kisses lost Ile-em-hoes through the Qfyllll The wailing' musie sohs and pleads. The lights flare cheerilyA tlh. we at last have found the land Of long-lost Arcnrly. 183 When Night Meets Day. Wlien Night meets Day across the purple hills. Anil. hanrl in hanml, through the brief twilight ling: When softest Slilllltl llll'Ullg'llUllf the silence thrills- l,t'l'L'll1llll'Q of harpstrings swept by fairy fingers: When the blushing color mantles o'er the sky: .Xml 1-'en the earth takes on a ratliant glory. l fall ll-IllllSlllg', as the moments rlie. UlL'l' an ohl legw-ml with a plaintive story: When Night meets Day. ln ages past. when this grim xvorltl was young! Was young, and happy in its new-horn splenmlor, The future hut a vague song. all nnsunge- Night and fair Day were lovers true and tender. So well they love-tl, that. lingering' haml in hanil, Their hearts in time to loving' whispers heating. 'l'hey rlxvelt. together in the happy land. The story of their newborn love repeating. lint from the heavens went a stern decree, Whieh. each from each, the tender pair climl sever, Strangers forever must the lovers be. Partetl their hanfls anel loving lips forever: ln time. the pleadings of the stricken twain Softeneml the fiat harrl. anfl it was gjranterl, That they might meet-lint meet to part again. To meet. anal part. with hearts that ever pantefl. Anil now. whene'er they meet, tliougli years have past Night kisses Day and whispers xvormls so temler. So softly tencler. as he holcls her fast, That fair Day lvlushes to a rosy splemlor. Such splendor. that the tlome of heaven fills, .Xml o'er the sea there falls a golden glory, Anil fleeplyetlimpleel holloxvs of the hills, Are tillerl with rurlrly liglltitlins runs the story, When Night ine-ets Day. BIARY Avro: xrcrrm Jouxs. 184 She Once Said Yes. She nnee waicl yes. 't was lung zlgu ln clays gone by--but nun' l know That lnve like hers eunlul never last: The fleeting' fanvy qniekly passwl .Xnml vanished quite like melting' snow. Un:-e, when the breezes soft :lid blow, Um-e, when the smnmer sum was lnw, .Xml golden gleams arnnnxl ns eaxt- She once said yes. lint, dark the sliaclows 1-nine anml gn. .Xml titful fam-ies ebb and Huw. .Xml linger n'er the fairy past. While mlim the fntnre seems, anal vast Viillllllgll even now she 1lllSXX'l'l'S no, She onee said yes! The Devcc Io Day. A Lenten Ballad. ln the :lays of ashes and clnst XX'l1en fastings clear the rust 01' the world from um' souls away. .Xh, what may a girl be at- May she flream of her Easter hat? Or may she only pray? XX'hen there never a glmst of a ehanee For an evening gown or a dance, XX'aS there ever a time so mlrear? .'Xs only one clay in the week Fm' candy-So eolrl and bleak ls the Lenten atmosphere! ln the mlays of ashes and clnstl With water to drink and a crust .Xml nothing' to do ev'l'y clay. ,Xh. what may a girl be at When she hasn't, an Easter hat, For then-how can she pray? .155 The Broken Guitar String. Poor broken string! Indeed I did not guess Xllhat ruin lay beneath my careless stress. Your tenderness of Illilki? I did not know. Idly I found your soft, sweet sound too low, And now, in truth, I am not. pitiless. No more to chord with sister string, nor press Deft fingers with responsive light caress. Your quivering little life snapt shortly-so, Poor broken string. And yet your silence speaks to me not. less That outer ears mute meaning ne'er confess. Your dumb reproach distiressingly does show How hearts highstrung may break beneath a blow All lightly laid in wanton idleness, Poor broken string: 186 The Fable oi the Gradvate. ntl niatlt- himself a lluw. Then HE Gratlnatc imllctl np his lliplonia a hc went mit in tht- Xlhrltl, ttmk up his Cnc, antl lit-gan tu play tht- Gains, .Xntl, lit-ing ytiiiiig' antl -:tmtitlt-nt, hc aimctl lmltlly at the Stars antl l'll'lgllCll at thu Hlml l'l-lluws nhw playctl for what was un tht- Talwlc. XYhcn hc tcll llUXYll tm his tint Shut, ht- was surprist-tl, lint inanagctl tu laugh it UH an-l even when hc hail shut SL'X'L'l'Zll rllllllti and inisst-tl uacli Shut, hc ctinltl smile. lint xvhcn he hail playul a lung rllllllk' with ltcvcr a llit, his Smilt' lit-gan tn grow sar- ' ' - - tiainus anil the Drinks vinic and ht- math- cyiiical livinarkf whun he panl tm tht 'bauainwt fjcff, ,f ra -,U Tlx Then, hccausc he cunltl nut hit thc Stars, ht- wonltl nut lcarn a plain Game from the tnlltl Fellows wliu kiicw, hut triccl all Sorts of Fancy' Sliots-and fell clown on them. .Xnfl wllcn hc paitl for more lizuncs antl lllIlI'L' Drinks hc inatle more ' 'll Reinarki antl thc lfclluws wllo ilranlc with him langhccl-anal hc cainc cynic. . . . to take his chicf lllcasnrc in rnmlt- Sayings. so that. if hy any Cltancc hc won, hc was rather tlisappointcml. antl thc next Timo matlc particularly fancy Shots antl saitl Things instczul of doing Tliings. lost ont. Su hc saint- tn lit- a Klan whn 187 lint the Things he said grew by degrees more strained and freakish, and People said they were more sad than funny-and some looked bored, and some looked shocked, and others merely blank. So the XYorld ceased to laugh at the Things he said-and he said other Things, and smiled a twisted Smile all to himself--a Smile that the Common Herd called wicked. And he, in return, called the Com- mon llerd unllattering Names-as fat-brained and jelly-souled chumps. Yet many of these people prospered and got their jokes laughed at, and the fattest-brained of them all married the XYoman who might have had the liraduate's hand and Heart-if he had thought it worth while to offer or she to take. This Incident made him Master of jokes more bitter than all the rest. and he hated the Fattest-llrained of them all-and dined with him whenever he was invited-which was not often. And so the Graduate grew middle aged and bald, and old and gray. and still he said Things-to other People when they would listen-to himself when other l'eople turned a deaf ear. Hut all the Time he never did ,'Xnything. Finally he died and was buried. and some good Folk were kind enough to intend to set up over him a plain headstone-with an inscription of his own composition-but it happened that they forgot. it a ii' ' ' - . ' ,. , qezgxv Q alg ggg' 1: ' . ,T l l lllllx. , I it--fs., .-'t f A X-. ISS Ring Soft The Harp. lling' soft the harp. annl let the air .Xt morn and noon a ntl evening liear Its music sweet and low to-mlay. Anil. IIIIQ'.I'llIg1'. I will list'ning stay And rlream that 't is the voiee of Claire. In-ep lilne the sIij'.2lIl1I all is fair- .Xntl III't'2lIIlIIIQ.l' I can know no 1-are IYhile wing' the hours so fast away- Iling' soft the harp. The twilight falls I lireathe a prayer No more to weep. nor know despair, So that perhaps some time I may Complete and sing' to her this lay- So while to sing of her I flare-- Iiing soft the harp! The Song oi the Vikings. Wliere the were-wolf howls to the storm lcing s wrath Anil the gray sea lashes its angr'x' mane. llis prow has speal OIQI' a perilous path, That few may follow and live again. Ily the iee walls gnarlling' the northern seas. XYl1ere the white hear reigns o'er his Hoes alone. NVe steered. in the teeth of the northern breeze. Straight on to the were-witch throne. Uni' l1l'llj'0l' is the song' oi' the whistling' gale. Our langhter the shriek ot' the northern lmlast. The sea onr gmlmless-she will not fail 'Fo welcome ns home at last, 189 , J it NU f xx i x X 'XN Xh'ql'w wi if Q if Puppy Love. 'Tis lllllllly low. but oh. it is .X mlurliug' little puppy: lf l voulfl tell you what you miss, lt' 1 could toll you of ai kiss, Youll Sl'ill'l'll the world wide o'er 1'lI'Ulll lcvluud to Rhuuiputti- l' is puppy lovc, but oh, it is .X clznrliug little puppy. 2969! Two Triolels. Tha- witc-ll-flower, AlH1'g.!,'llt'1'liU, Says that you love me stillg Tho witcli-tiowur, Al2lI'g'l'I91'llt'. Yes. lYllVll.l'l' l usk it sweet. lt spa-lls us thv petals fleet. All 1h:lt my licurt could will. Tho witcli-il1m'm-1' Marguerite. Says that you low: me still. Ah. u flower is but il girl. l'm-rliups, perhaps it lies. 'Fhough its petals be pure Ah, il iiowcr is but ar girl, .Xml life is ll wicked whirl, Whore ull Ah. si flower is hui u girl, l'x-rliups, pe-rliups it lies. HC 95 L'aine Classe dc Francais. Nous 5011111108 uuv uo1l1pugg'l1i1- julio. Qui purle lu luuggm- fl'2lIlK'2lls lit:'l1lElllQlll2 m-ou1vz--:uiusi- Nous somiucs uuv 4-o111pz1g'l1c jolivf' Vous prououvvz tri-s hicu. Mc-roi. Uest tout-vous com prom-Z. Nous 5011111105 unc uoxupugwlic jolic Qui purle lu luugue f1'Zl11QHlSC. Igo grow worldly for this as pearl, wise. He Kissed Her Once. Ile kissed her onee-l guess 't was sweet, She looked so fair. young, and petiteg And glanees eolv within her eye, Were not too bold and not too shy- l-le did it well-in fact 't, was neat. He held her hand-'tv is very nleet, That lovers thus should always greet- lYas this perhaps the reason why He kissed her once? And then the dose he did repeat, For heart and hand did he entreat: I eould not hear, 1 did 11ot try. 1 envied hiln. yet- eould but sighg And. even as 1 left my seat, He kissed her onee. A Bunch ol Daisies. A bunch of daisies from her hand, She tossed upon the glistening sand: And then. when she was out of view, X ,gf l picked them up-'t-was Sill' that threw Those daisies on the shining strand. I wore them in a little band, And. while the evening' breezes fanned And kissed my eheek. l kissed anew A buneh of daisies. Perhaps she 'll wed a title grand, 'T is wealth, not love, she will demand, This maiden fair with heart! untrue: But still l keep theni. faded. blue. 'Tis all I havesyou understandi A buneh of daisies! IQI K 1 2 x ii- VW!! The Captain Grim. l 4r1'th he stalks with lifted hand, The Captain. gray and grim: .Xnd all who hear his dire command Xlnst follow in his ehosen hand. For none may plead with him. t'hnnse me ot' thy rank. I pray, U Vaptain. gray and gl'lIll.u Xsked one. l 've marched a weary day.' Ilnt the Captain turned his fave away. Vllllllllgll the XX'lllL'llt4l'-S eye was dim. l'all not me. came a ery low watt. U Captain. Q'l'llll and gray. l have lmt tasted the honeyed tll'illlgll1Q Its sweeter drops l have not tplatfed. .Xnd see! one bids me stay. lint he answers never a wanton word. The Captain. grim and gray. .Xnd when the summons dread is heard, .Xll dnmln. their g'2lI'lllt'l1tS nn they gird- 'l'he plaints are theirs who stay. XX'ith awe we View the banner pale Of the Captain. f.l'I'llll and g.1'ray. ln his silent ranks, white lilies frail Slay wreatlie ealm hrows. and sweets exhale: lint wet with tears are they. 'l'hen since we all llllISt join the eorps Ut' the Captain. gray and grim. .Xs soldiers true and tried of yore We 'll follow on and drink before We go. this health to him. The Bell Buoy. l'he hell-lxnny tossed as the wares rolled past. The ice and sleet ut' a winter's hlast Now fast. now slow. unsteady it swung: Stopped and lllllllllltl its noisy tongue, X st-ore of wreeks on these roelcs are east, And one more ship on the reef was east Ih-ware the reefs! lt is monrnfnlly sung. XX'hile from the roek the lmoy was rung' X sunnd of warning. a sound of dread. .Xnd now the mariners 0fiflll1E'S fear. .X lcnell it seemed in its rlireful c-lang. .Xnd great their terror and awe to tell l'hree hundred men 'mid these reefs lie dead. llow. far at sea in the night they hear Nuw loud. now soft. nneertain it rang: The toll and elang' of a floating bell. IQ2 ff. N-' ,, . ml ,fix , f ff N f . i X , ,H ,l V lf ,I X, Commencement Season of 1900 , f' 'dx l l x. v::'P ' Sunday M Q ' if , orning, June 10. N Baccalaureate Sermon,. . REV. F. T. llI1'FADmN, Lynchburg, Ya. ' M ,I , fy. , L, .Xl Sunday Evening. ff' y Address before the Y. M. C, A., . . . , . X if ..... f my rj CF . . . . REV. F. T. MVFAM-:N, Lynchburg, Ya. , 1 ' A 3 l Monday Evenin v X j Union Societ' ' V K EE ' gf. 5L'elebration, . . . . . . . I DME, E an E H . . . It R. E. B. Hmmnox, Jn., Presiding Utlieer , edals presented to Masses. J. S. KUYKi:N1rA1.l., '00, B. C. JXVERILI., '0l, Huzpx' CR-rss, '02, E. P. Niviioisox, 113. Orations delivered by , , . J. M. Ki-31.1.13 '00, A1.b:xANm:n AIARTIN, '01, XV. A. BICALLISTER Marshals, MEssRs. Pasvo and RUBY. Tuesday Morning, June 12. Address before the Literary Societies, ................,. ------ Address before the Society of Alumni, . . Rav. W. H. NVHODS, D. D., Baltimore, Maryland Tuesday Evening. Philanthropic Society Celebration, ..,..... .... B IR. W. C. BELL, Presiding Utiicer Medals presented to Micssns. E. H. RIIIHARIJSON, '00, R. H. Wmzn, '01, XY. S. LE:-1, '02, J. E. B. HoLLAn,n', '03. Orations delivered by . . . Mrzssris. J. E. Tn11'x.l:'r'r, '00, WV. E. Jones, 'Ol , H, C. Swicns, '01 Marshals, Msssns. P,xN1'AKE and L. L. Davis. Wednesday Morning, June 13. Address by. . . . Hono . . . . . . . . Members of Graduating Class rs and Distinctions read by the President. Degrees delivered to Graduating Class. 193 K3 NI1ss RUBHII-1 RERK EI. Wednesday Evening'-Senior Night. Visiting Young Ladies. NI1s L0 NI I 11'1'0N, M1ss H,x1.L1E OWEN, .s 1'1.1E . .x1a1'1A B 1' M1ss LUTTIE Bll,'KINNEX', M1ss S1's1E S1'0TT, EY, Mlss P1-R'r11x UXVEN, M1ss M sun XVQODY 3115s B1-1ss1 E HO4,lI'ER, M1ss BI.X'l 1'IE LE1+a11 C1'xx1xfa11,n1, M1ss HA1.L1E Es'HOLs, M1ss: GENEYIEYIC XvEXAl4L1'I, BIKES NELLIE Momox, Mlss L1zz1E XY11'KE1:, Mlss MARY D1xN1E1., M1ss NANNIE M'R11,a11'1, M1ss M AT'1'1E S11E111'ERs0N M1ss SAIDIE J1-:F1-'REss, M1ss A. BRLHJ1: Ho1'sToN. BIKES BIINNIE NUEL, M1ss YVALLA JEFFRFNN ' NI1ss LAVRA S'1'E111a1Ns, 1ss Rmgm RAISE, M1ss EMMA Lo11HA.1NE, M1ss EYES, M155 NATAXLIPI L BIKES E1.1zA1s M1ss E11 M 1ss BIAMI E EAs1,EY, Mlss NANN11-3 D1'P1'Y, AXFASTER, Mxss C,u1x11E JONES, ETH JONEN, MELINE TH0x1As, M1ss NELLIIZ S1'R1'1:1.1., M 155 CAHELL WATKINN M1ss M ADGE GQQDE, M1ss NELLIE Kink M1ss .ALICE ATK1NsoN, MISS EMMA EL1 BIISS GRACE EL:-AN, MISS HENR1 MISS ISABEL NORVEL, 1 I F. 1 ll f if M-r- ii 1 -1 5 'P' W E M Ml + S E3 EF V ay: Y- VV V Y I if i 57?1F' -1 'N Q-v AY l K TV- nf: 1' I QQ 5 flq 'ful ' em If 'P ' 1 1 1' :Q X V' ' V L A 'dizfu tx E rfb if f - A gi 'T -9 194 U, 7 im' if' I -'ri ...wil 7 a J w. wf 1 gf 5 lg . Q 411 .KA ,.. 1471 S ,-'IT' 1 ' ' .. T' fi if-. 1.1-'fi -' -uf. iz. fm ., I Xyrnn-s.t,-. I, U 1' 15 gixvsff. Z 7:15, eh - 7' U 5-5 'ff ,, f it ' .. s . . Z' ' f M?EWra!lmrW,7'i ' 's ' 'gg WUQMQLQLL L, L , . f T1 .. nuff L- V- . we-f -.. ,iq 'L ' gg 1 ' f ,M.A. . -Mi.JZ,-fzf::C,. CLARK, A. H.: The restless tongue bespeaks the empty head. RROWN, F. A.: Ful longe were his legges and ful lene, y-lyk a stat' there was no calf y-senef' Bowmixz Not pretty but massive. THE M.xG,xz1x1i STAFF: Our heads were rough. our hands were black XYith inkstain's midnight hue. THE SENIOR CLAS-SZ We 're most of ns liars, we 're 'arf of us thieves, and the rest of us rank as can be, Hut once in a while we can finish in style, for the ends of the earth to see. KL'YKENDAI.L: There 's a Normal girl a-settin and I know she thinks o' me. Bum., XY. C.: One day he fell out of a fourth story window to the pave- ment below, and when his parents picked him up he was-a poet. THE F.xcL'1,'l'x': Make ye no truce with Adam-zad, the hear that walks like a man. D.xx'1s, L. L.: Budding sweetness, long drawn out. joxiis, T. N.: Pleasant the snaftie of courtship. joxias, H. P.: The Kid was ordained to be sold. JONES, L. R.: If it be pleasant to look on- '95 Tnli Tino: From all ye damned tribe of Jones, Good Lord deliver us. L'.x1,L1w151,1-: There is a difference between distinction and notoriety. Rorztiltrsz None whole or free from stain. T1115 ANNLA1. Bo,x1tD: Bribe, murder, marry-but steer clear of ink. T1113 HILL Cwuc: Old as my unpaid bills. Tnu FREsHn.xN CL,xss: We are very slightly changed From the semi-apes that ranged India's prehistoric clay. Pllasox, J. XY. H.: Five hundred men can take your place. joxns, H. P.: The pain of one maiden's refusal is drowned in the pain of the next. Iixlasoxsz Yerily mine own swagger is the swagger of one striving in vain to excite laughter. PAYN15: He is the jester and the jest. T1113 FooTn.x1-L TEAM: Let us now praise famous men. T1-112 SEN1oR: Blatant he bids the world bow down. I. VV. HiXli1'1iIiS The cynic devil in our blood That bids us mock our hurrying souls. 'THE F.x1u1v1L1.15 Roni: The scandal of tl1e elder earth. .XFTER Exwnsz And some of us lived but the most of ns died. I'Rl'l'L'll1i'l l', -I. T.: Have done with childish days. C,XLUWl5LI, .xxn DR. lhxrzlzy: Yet we do not fall on the neck Nor kiss when we come together. XYEUU: A' Oh, 'e 's little. but 'e 's wise. 'E 's a terror for 'is size. ulonxsox. A. P.: But. Lord, what things are they I 'avn't done ! PoRTN12R: I will sooner have a beard grow in the palm of my hand than on his cheek. Osnokxls: By 1ny troth, Nerissa, 1ny little body is aweary of this great world. 196 HooPER: So he stancleth next to none In getting off a beastly pun. XYoRsH.xM: So lonely 't was that God himself scarce seemed to be there. GILLIAM, R. A.: Then he would talk: my stars how he would talk l HfXRTZ Can anything good come out of XYorsham? Er-Es: There lived a knight, when knighthood was in flow'r XYho charmed alike the tilt-yard, and the bou'r. EVERsoL12: Nihil peccavit, nisi quod nihil peceavitf' RICHARDSON: Towards many girls by him possessed I-Ie shambles forth in cosmic guise. THE SENIoR LATIN CL.xss: A horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse. NY.-xL'CHoPE: Thy hair, sweet sir, is lovelier than the dawn. HoLLAD.xY: Inopportune, shrill accented 'With aerid Asiatic mirth, GILLIAM, R. A.: I 'ni the prophet of the Utterly Absurd Of the patently Impossible and Yainf' Ioxigs, L. R.: By a bitter road the younger son must travel. ISVFCJRD: If that be Art, sir, Raphael was no artist. I'HIFIiR: His being a Freshman covers a multitude of sins. PIPES: I pray you do not fall in love with me For I am falser than vows made in wine. Tim F.XR3lVIl.LI2 Grids: Toys of an hour. Yet still we hug the dear delusion. THE FINAL Giznxuxz In that day seven men shall take hold of one woman. THE POKER PL.AxVi2Rs: But in the miclnight's solemn hush He holds a hand that is not thine, He sitteth close beside the wine. And dallies with a bobtail Hush. CAMPBELL: Too fresh to keep: too green to eat: throw it away. THE IiALEIDoscoPE: A book 's a book although there 's nothing in it. 197 - ggQLSISZSZSQSISQIEZASSISSISZSQISISIEEA . . I .1 10 N 'W may 4. .. Q' W .L MEN wg M W ah W l .!. M W Wh W Wh ah ata W dh ' W QBur mark is aanr-hrrr at thr last mr grsrt 1r3au saalp, far mr nehrrmar: shall meet: wr ask ante mars paul: cauntrnanrr ana gran, Elf me shall min-hut, if mr lase the rare, iklaur lxinaltnrss shall saftrn aur arfeat. Gfhr turtain araps, thr plap is all rampletr, aa , Q , s W WN r ap aur luttlr starp at paur fret, wp 'R' ina pray pau gras it ln paur hrart a alan- .l. dh 1 W WN Q9ur mark as llanr. QW 'i' - .14 B92 laura ana labarra-it is pau that mrtr WM Gia us af unsure ar af praises smart SW QQB GBM partian lust, far tim: Hirs an apart, dak ina mr are saan fargattcng pst mr farr QR QBnrr marc the aaps mr laura, err me rrprat. Q9ur mark is bane. Mah W M W dam W lah W gb M W WN W JFS .!. ls- ar duh W dh W R, .Ok YREYETRTETQSTRSYETSRYRTRSRIETE53232526 ' I 9 8 419 D x 1 ,.u , . 3, an H , X.:3:,,W- Qfiitj, A , . E .. x, x 1.1. , , 1 5 . .L A-in :f:2 '..,..,y ,.: 4' ,. .N ,fn Q - 17345 Lf, 'RY f'gf.,r1l.g9 , i f f i ,pk ' , 1 iff - :iff .Tj f':M1 -g.::.J 1,1 L 'xv A. p A -5 Q -, N X - fi EZ! gf ., X JV JI, ig-F5 Q T V- 4 ' ig M- 2 i,fl'f'?T--, v f- f ' B ' n X - , fl .fx '73 ' fM5w fgg. ' '- I A,f,i24,1!F'gw 1' 'L g 1' . ' fl ix Q' in f x n af 'SJi1ff.t ? i-' wN L V wa Wi iii' it ' I Yfh' . ff, Ji . M , 4 2 Q .1 ' K. . ,LEZM - ahzixkllff, . N JE V' 1 mx Y! 'wfgi xlib- ,YU Rf 'Y W I JM f ' ' J V? 'X X ' glib' ' X XX 7 f 5.qw .,,-. ff 'I , ' l X W I A '- We J H K 1-fv ,N ,- S ffjf' X ' ' I. Y fl 5 fr Ira! Hx X' ' 3+ A , ffQi- f , .. x m 11 in y X ,g,57i5Q' !l V951 fr ' 'V lit 5 f A X , ,V r Q A V 1 Al . - im A 1 -f X y 'ffgw' I K v X M' if' f , E f i N ' v , . f 1 1 N -M if A1 I i Q w 1 X 5 H J-- Y . -In Y, - , - ' ,g....- f ,f' -gi---X -,.,,- AU.. k--1-if-4. ,.,f , 71:1 F . . 15.27 Y X1 BL .J fi. THE END ' gli 5 1 1 x Xl Foreword tPoemJ, . Editors ,..... Calendar, . Trustees, . . Faculty, ...., . Society of Alumni, . . . Le Gant de Claire, . -121:53 ill 5 lg ip ffl X J et ffefgk 4-. l Qf?3.,., -gbixx gf' N., 5.1 of 'iVZr'7 Lij x f 0 fL-X', CD Q x - A Short History ot' the KALicioost-orif, . Some Distinctive Features of Hampden- Sidney College, . . Mr. -1 V, ..,,,.. NVilliam C. Cabell ,... Rev. James Blythe, D. D. Rev. VVilliam Hill, D D , Colonel Henry Stokes, . Kemp Plummer ,.... The Mountain Top lk Poem Senior Class, ...... Senior Class Members, Quondani Members, . Senior Class History, . J nnior Class, .... . Junior Class Members, . . 11, .f. Q .30 l , t it '1'lllf'lll i l ' . , l ,lt Pam-: lj 9 10 ll lil 13 i5 IS 21 24 126 31 34 ,- .ll 39 44 45 47 .34 55 -, ob 5 7 fl .f gl 3 if ff' Q li til X f ' , l f K l Q. H aj fi .luniorClass History, . . Sophomore Class .... Sophomore Class M embers, Sophomore Class History, Freslnnan Class, .... Freshman Class Members, Freshman Class History, Weariness fPoemj, . . . Beta Theta Pi ,.... Phi Kappa Psi, . Chi Phi, ...... Phi Gamma Delta ,... Sigma Chi, ...... Upsilon of Kappa Sigma, Phi Kappa Alpha ,... Kappa Alpha ,..... Ye Christmas Symphony QPoeml, . . . Y. M. 0. A., ..... Theta Nu Epsilon, . . R. H. O. C. T., . . Hampden-Sidney, . Tabb's Tavern, . . Camera Club, . P.-KG E 59 60 lil +50 63 U4 635 U6 68 70 T2 T4 T6 78 80 82 84 86 88 89 90 91 92 Calico Club ,,... Augusta Club, ..... West Virginia Club, . . Venables Inn, . . . , Reynold's Ranch, . Lacey House, . . Carrington Club, . . Cotillion Club, . . The Golfers ,... Gunning Club, . , The Smokers, . . . . First Passage Club, . . Fourth Passage Club, . , Lawyers' Club, . . . Doctors' Club, .... Hoge Academy Club, . . Ye Wine Bibbers, . . Dramatic Club, .... . Glee Club, ....... . A Football Toast QPoemj, . . College Football Team, . . College Baseball Team, . Gymnasium Team, .......i College Track Team, ....... Hampden-Sidney Tennis Association, Bicycle Club, . ......... . 1900 Class Football Team, ,..,. 1900 Class Baseball Team, ..,.. Ballade ot' a Football Girl QPoemj, . . . Carmen AmorumQPoemj,. . . , . Editorial, . ........ . Union Society, ...... Philanthropic Society, .... Hampden-Sidney Magazine, . . , Our Artists, . .......... . Ballade of a Literary Man QPoemj, The Athlete QPoemj, ....... Ballade of a Loafer QPoemj, . , . A Rondeau of Scholars QPoeml, . . Ballade of a Sport QPoemj ,,.. PAGE 93 94 9,3 96 97 93 99 100 101 102 103 10-1 105 106 107 108 109 110 1113 114 116 118 120 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 130 132 134 . 136 138 1-10 142 144 146 148 The Calico Man QPoemj, . . . , 1Vhen She is Gone QPoem1 ,..... 1 Chronicles, I, .......... . A Song of Hampden-Sidney QPoemj, . The College Cynic,. . . . . The Girl and the Violin Q Poemj, . . . Claire QPoemj, ......... . Dream-Time, .... . RondeletSfPoemj, . . . . . . . Letter to Board of Trustees, ...,. Child's Primer of College Men QPoem j, A Commencement Iclyl QPUGIHJ, . . . All Promenade QPoeml,. .... . . Politeness fPoemj, . . . . Pipe Pictures.. .... . . Villianelle QPoemj, ..... . My Lady's Lips tPoeml, . . . Requiescat QPoem j, .... , liudeness rs. Poetry, . ..,. . Your Lips Say No QPoeml, . . . The Si1'en's Song QPOEHID, . . . An Idyl QPoemj, ....... . From Farmville Up tPoemj, . . . . . lYhen Night Meets Day QPoemj,. , . She Once Said Yes lPoeml, . . . . The Deuce to Pay QPOQITID, . ..,. . The Broken Guitar String QPoem1, . . The Fable ot' the Graduate ....., Ring Soft the Harp QPoeml, . . . . The Song of the Vikings QPoem Q, . . Puppy Love QPoemj, ....., . Two Triolets QPoemj, ....,,. . L'uine Classe de Francais tPoeml, He Kissed Her Once QPoemj.. . . . . A Bunch of Daisies tPoemj, . . . The Captain Grim QPoemj. . . . The Bell Buoy QPoeml, . . . . Finals, ......... . . Grinds, . , ..., ...... . Our Work is Done tPoemj. . . 1 PAGE loo 152 153 1136 161 165 166 167 170 171 173 174 174 174 175 178 179 1724 180 182 182 183 183 184 185 185 186 187 189 189 190 190 190 191 191 192 192 193 1115 198 half 4,1 Mmm L- ww gn. vnrvirf- L 4.5 P41 .v4L Aal 4 0 , ' I A . A' . Q' O ci-v A he ational Business College ROANOKE, VA. Is one of the Most Popular and Successful Business Colleges of the South. , JJ!! We Assist Ovr Pupils into Dositions, and Teach them how lo Make Money with an Education. :Mme-2 ew-fe-J PATRONIZE WE ARE ses: 'lio THOROUGH OUR 'Q' U' W' ' El s ltls PRACTICAL I rex ' . I 1 ' 31 : SOHOOI-J' '-9' f COMPLETE llllllllillgllll fl l l ' 'lim From September ist. ISQ7, to April ist, 1895. students were placed into positions from our schoolwho received 53.769 oo. Our students were placed in North Carolina. New York, Indian Territory, Ohio. XVest Virginia, and Tennessee. btudeulssent in our care are carefully advised and looked after with regard to hoard, room, and influence. Snecial classes are formed for advanced students. Individual work given to all pupils. E ht heras e ' li t' h'sl' . ac eac p cta s in 1 me In Commercial and Shorthand work you learn to do by doing. Seud for catalogue. E64 PRESIDENT. my J of J 3 K W SALSQSLSQQSzS:S:S2:S:S:S:S:SQXLSAQSS Xa The College Purse is never fun plethoric to hold 111011 money. Why not keep yours from getting empty by selling us your discarded text-books? We dn buy pre- paratory school books as well as college text-books. Keep this in mind when you are short of cash. VVC send you, for the asking, our U bl!-lfflltg' ml11fngzrf, enabling you to tell at a glancejuyl Tilhlifh UNIX? Of' your dis- card:-d school-books or college books you can convert into purse-lining. The College Co-op that doesn't take advantage of our facilities for supplying promptly ,fffmm'- hum! as well as new text-booksqf nl! fllbflifhffi' is losing frryflf. However, there are but few COLLEGE CO-OPS now that do not deal regularly with us. If your CO-OP is one of the few that du1z'f, you will be doing yourselfa real service by reasoning with the manager about it. He should never say he 111117 supply a given .m'a11tz'-hazm' book until he has tried us. lt' he still lags, fljf 11: -yn1l1'.rr0'f The College Days are all provided for in our book Commencement Parts, containing ctlbrts for all occasions. Orations, addresses, valedictories, salutatories, class poems, class mottoes, after-dinner speeches, ,. llag days, national holidays, class-day exercises, ff ' ggi- 'T Models for every possible occasion in college career, every one of the efforts being Q erieenewt 'tnrim A N what some fellow has .flunfi 011 his jlvl' and was is lf ' ' actuall delivered on a similar occasion, 1m 1m Y ss ll. 81.50 jioJQ'raz'd. onW '1fZ A IFN elm 0 ilu w,,,n,,.ft Another book Bilmesl N. ' . i migfiiv invaluable to ' T Mah l , - t i t d t ' Qtr, wt gg 5,951 nl ' l P1105 255 1 . . ON5 N-'Mi AND Cons, Com' .f '.i llll llll ll. YU? l v V lete debates. I A-W z t C P . , MB A, t Our fore I g n l dam l policy, the cur- V lvl. CRAIG rency, the tariff, , , rnli g lation, no., 1 1 g icense MUN l womansulfragez mm penny postage, transportation, trusts, depart- UVE ment stores, municipal ownership of fran- ll. 1-1ll.l.Y chises, government control oftelegraph. Bulk Jiri!-5 of these and 111111151 HMM' yusslinzzr completely debated. Directions for organizing and conducting a debating society, with by- lawsand arliamentar rules. Sl. 0 nr! aid. P Y .5 1' P TRANSLATION5 I-IINDS gk NQBLE DxcT1oNARlEs 4-5.6-12-13-14. Cooper Institute New York Clty Srhovlliaakr rf aJ!pub1i.rher.r nl nuc :tore I Egg m'Q3E3i3E3ET'E3RTE7R7E3S:iS7?.3i7i7 335.73733 S Q 4?-1122 4?-1475 31221. 3514111 4141351 4?-1-Qv 4?-11111 XM?-1 4?-149 35-Y'-1 Q Lf GET THE 55 I '32 4154?-1 , WEBSTER 5 A Dictionary of ENGLISH , INTERNATIONAL Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc DICTIONARY W111t hc-111-1 1111 CQ1lTlf'T11 1- 1 1 l11 n1 1110 111 111 lll 1 1111111 if 1110 11111111 1111111 11 t llN 111 111 ll 1ol11m131l1C1111vlf's 11111 11 1111111111 IlUill1l Q'-Ill 111 1111 1111 111 111011 1111101 11111 s1111lw11 11111 C1111 11111111 1 11111111 1 111 ll 0 111fo111111111n 1 111n1 lb lllilll ul ll 1 LUIXCIIICHY 1111111 1 r 1111111 1 WL 11111 1111 111 Chas W Eliot, LL D , President of Harvard University, says X The International Should be in Every Household 1 I11 standard authority of 1111 I 1111111 N1110 NllPI'f'lll1 1 111111 1110 I 11 Ol 111110111 P1111t111, U1 11 I A111110 I f..,f'llCl'ilIIQ' 'IIILI is 1111310 widely 11.1-11 1111111 amy other 111u1111.1111'y 1 1 f'Yvl'1l' 1. Al: WeIJstersCol1egiatc Dictionary wi1l1i1S1-1111ish1'1 - '. 'irs11-11155111 q11:11i1p', 3.1-111111 1-las' i' -. -.Nff11111.11- .11 f 1:1171 f - ecin1c1111r1gr.' rf1. 'V' 111111 I1 mls 5131111111 11ppli1'11 '1 . G 8: C MERRIAM CO Publishers, X Z Springfield, Mass. 9 , Q3 E135 ER S ..,. . . . 7 v it AV V ' 1 ' 1 ij ,I1li1I'.' 'iijafl -:k'1i1 '- -1' '. IT' 1:2 Q' iiizv Til: 3,-. itil' .1-211'-' li ' 1 g' li 1 '1 ' I ' '11 . A Y I ' I - . . - ' - . 1 'L' A JN It 1,111 won1lC1'f111ly 1-1111111111-1 s1111'1-l11111 1- Ill, 1lL'Clll'll1I,' i:1f1ir:11111i1m:1. . 1 F l . 5 1 ' ' -r E11-1-.1111 1111- lixoclaiivi- 111-1-11' nts J K 'N 'W lf.. s 1 ll , if su 7 .nssll 111 1 so s 1 A111 ' 11 r .rl r N11 s, 1 .11 1 1 1 tl Ill X W' . . ., 51 INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY I3 .I 11 I I BI JP , 5.5. N-.. ............ gaze. -3 33. .,a.,.,.,. .,.,. .,.,. NX., .... . . .,., 5.,z.,Pgr39?99. 5. . QPPP ,.,.,s6s.,S ,.,9s.,sss9ss?rr?ff. 993959395 ff 5 ?'9f,1f fffffz? 1, 'gg QI W RZ ' 1 SV 101 . . FACULTY . . gg REV. RICHARD DIEILXVAINE, D. D, President and Professor of Moral Philosophy a111l Bible Studies. W 1.1 ALTER BLAIR, A. 111., 11. 1... W Professor Emeritus of the Latin Language, etc. W JAMES R. 'r11oRN'1'oN, A. 111.. SV Professor of Mathematics and l11s1r11c1or i11 Iingineering. HENRY C. BROCK, B. I,l'1'., Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, and lnslruclor in the French Language. W I. H. C. BAGBY. Rl. A.. Ph. D., ill Professor of Physical Science. QV H. R. MCILXVAINE. 1-11, 11, W Professor of English and Hislorical and Political Science. -I. XV. B.-XSORE, A. B. PI1 D. I W Professor of the Latin Language and Li1era111re, and Instructor lll 1l1e German Language. W -I. H. C. XVINSTON. A. B., B. S.. Ph. D. Adjunct Professor of Physical Science. W T. P. cuoss, EI.: Fellow, and Instructor in Mathematics and liuglisli. :V XV. XV. BONDURANT, 0, Fellow, and Instructor i11 Greek and La1111. W . . , 1, Next term of this I11st111111on ' 1 ,,.g.,.. ...,t.,,,.,.,, ,W 11131. RICHARD 111c1Lw11NE, 11. 11., President, 3, HAIVIPDEN-SIDNEY, VA. Tl! .IL 3.5.1 .Q .Q.Q.Q.S.5.Q.L.Q.Q.Q.Q.5.Q.S.Q.Q.Q.Q,.L.Q 3.5.5 . 5 X I X. EES THE YOUNG MAH EEZ A lg ik UST starting out in life needs backing. Competition for places in good business houses is ' ' keen. Boys are always anxious to go to work. 'l'he difficulty is in finding a position - - At EASTMAN COLI.liGE Poughkeepsie, N. Y., they learn how to put their shoulders to IX the wheel-get a bread and butter education. sy l S STENOGRAPHY, BOOKKEEPING, ETC., Si? ls are thoroughly taught in' M.-xii, or personally. We not only train for practical work, but always X 43 secure positions for the competent. We place hundreds yearly iu situations where they make and save money. If you are seeking employment and are willing tostudy, write to me. Students . . commence any time. A diploma of ION U 4 5 S? I S W lil X! I 5 ' Sl l S W 405 V sa if . . W li! E V se EP5 ' if W - - 0 . . iii HKERK' ii! A 'Mio 6 Q6 li! X! li! fb ' X! se Ce if . . N I is a certificate of ability, is recognized as such by merchants, manufacturers and business men - - everywhere. 'Ifhey arelglari to employ an liastiuau graduate. No other backing is ueeclecl, . , I X except graduation from its business and shorthand courses. ' ' The school is a veritable BUSINESS CENTRE and is famous for its practical methoil of ' ' teaching the young of either sex. The headwork of business is actually cariied on-everv phase of it. Thus the boy must get the making of a good business iuan-he can't help it. The ' ' College journal and other literature make excellent reading. NI lx XVrite for the catalogue-a beautiful and interesting book sent free to any one. Address 4 5 . il? CLEIVIENT C. GAINES, President, gg . . V ,it POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y. W IF Vi . 5 . ' 41.1.1.1.l.1.l.1.1.1.l.1.l.1.1.1.1.1.1.l.l.1.1.1.l.1.fb A slice to apipeful is QVEC 9 0' one reason Ppe I ba x f 541' 'Isl f c urved tin box that its any pock- et is another reason. No other pipe tobacco has ever made as many friends in so short atime. It disappoints no one. A trial box will be sent to any one anywhere on receipt often cents in stamps. Address Old English Department, The American Tobacco Co., glish Curve Cut pipe to- bacco is so popu1ar.The Qin Giglish I j whyOld En- . It I , 5 'V' 3 y' 0 :Ii Fifth Ave., NewYork City. All dealers sell it. Wright Ka MANUFACTURERS OF HIGH GRADE .... IRIIIIRNIIY IMPORTERS . '. IEWELERS SILVERSIVIITHS DETROIT, MICH. I I I : NEATNESS DISPATCH E I -I I IFENNROWENI I PRINTERS and BINDERS , I I I Office: No. 122 I Sycamore Street I I I PETERSBURG, VIRGINIA. I N. C. LoNG an BRo. I ATHLETIC I Q I AND GENTS' FURNISHINGS. I ,Q i Southern Agents A. G. SPALDING 8: BROS , I New York. I to to S to Highlander Tobacco Iflslnlvlislu-rl :ls llizlilrineli-r 'l'uIu:ir4'o 9 Works, lslili. LYNCHBURG, VA. 5 Manufacturers of the Famous Brands of OCCIDEN TAL and HIGHLANDER Smoking Tobacco for pipes or cigarettes. These brands are sold in the European markets and pronounced by ex- perts to be Superior. and have heen awarded highest medals at Vienna in 187531111 at Phila- delphia in 1Sjn. Cuhaiiin Mixture is our great leader for a 5c. package. Cool. sweet, don't liite, being four years old. Continually increasing in popularity. If not louno in your tobacco store, address HIGHLANDER TOBACCO CO. LYNCHBURG, VA. BQIQMEYLEQMM FOUNDED IN 1893. INCORPORATED WITH HAMPDEN-SIDNEY COLLEGE. Hoge Military cademy BLACKSTONE, VA. Full courses for College Preparation or Active Life. Present enrollment, largest in history. Boarding Cadets, fifty-seven. Day Cadets, twenty-four. Five Experienced Teachers. Exceediugly Low Charges. Ncxl Session Opens September 6th,1900. Rizv. T. P. lirics. D. D , President. Ilaisri-iirzs XUILSON, Sec'y and Treas Write for illustrated c italogue. HQ E. W. VENADLE -eb? COMDANYv Dealers in . . . Staple and Fancy Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Groceries, Hats, Caps, and Confections, Notions, Canned Goods, Plain and Fancy Crackers, Stationery, Foreign and Toilet Articles, Domestic Fruits, Etc., Etc. A Full Line of Cigars, Cigarettes, Chewing and Smoking Tobaccos. 5 Also Agents for International Tailoring Co. HAMPDEN-SIDN EY, VA. IQMIQMMIQM Teachers Wanted. 5 UNION TEACHERS' AGENCY OF 5555555 AMERICA 5555555 REV. L. ll. BASS. D. D.. MEIIIIIEQT. Pittsburg, Toronto, New Orleans, New York, Washington, San Francisco, Chicago, St. Louis and Denver. 5 We had over S,ooo vacancies during the past season. Teachers needed now to contract for next year. Unqualified facilities for placing teachers in every part ofthe United States and Canada. Principals, Snperinteudents Assistant Grade Teachers, Public, Private, Art, Music, Clerks, Doctors, etc , wanted. Aclrlri-ss all Cominnnie-:itions to Wnsliiuzton. D. C. Enclose stnnlp. 44 THE ALPHA 44 DHOTO-ENGDAVING COMPANY. iINCZ'3PPOl?7-XTED1 217 East German Street, BALTIMORE, MD. 4 HALFTONE5, ZINC ETCHING5. SKETCHES, 44DESIGNS AND COLOR WOPXK.-44 GO To.. id the HYUSI 5' .ll ' Ph0IOQl'GphQl' FoR UP-To-DATE woRK IN His LINE. COLLEGE W0RK A SPECIALTY- fZXSS'i'3dpH1I2i.TS?3Qi'SfZ'15i.if'lTlifflifiiifd' FARMVILLE., VIRGINIA. A Userg of Printing who knows the ins and outs of good and bad printing, is always the friend and advocate of good printing. Q75 The Stone Printing E4 Manufacturing Co. GOOD PRINTERS Edward L. Stone. President. . . , no-nz-II4 North Icifcrson Street, Roanoke, Virginia. we PRINTED THIS ANNUAL. ll I Q 'F 'G XFqlIVjb ?J THESTUNE wwf L X -, A '-'ff 51 N ' lu fr i-FII vf, .P N---w.. 5 : . ,.-'- -1 .,.-, rx X,!l-1!,lL:vv..-- 1ugu y:, , ici' XAIDEQQQH- GI . 10. I W rQ...i'76. .. 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