Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)
- Class of 1911
Page 1 of 238
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 238 of the 1911 volume:
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'2-f,4f5Qf,4:..'- .D-. 3. - '-1-,'. yfff- -43'-fy. ii?'-'ff'f'-.fS3 '.?E7f-'QT-1575571.ffz-Q'-Zif.-MFE Z'.r.f1'!I.'i--1--1 J: W 4 -.53-.'.'2l3'.'c:l .ff-.'2.-Ir'72'1' 5 :'.-'-121' T.'Z?14f'-fi-T- :':.''-ZEN f .'-171'54Ef.Tl5 -'e'-55--5l-:TL ' li Z .:-:- fi - fb -'I' Zklil'-41:5 - T ii-'L F E Q Q N al A Gln: -f 5 Qcfalnihnssfn gn Uni. IZ E fI5fI'11'I'J13'I1 551311311211- ., 5 , 155552 Af Jfiirjginaf-1 - Q Q N F .,.,W1 JV -mi ,Mg I XL X Y' x 1 W div ulh Un Er. Alfrrh Il. ilinrriann in grutvful rrrngnitiuu uf his intrrwt in Zlllh i155iBfZll1IP In Ihr litrrnrg rnivrpriues nf thr Gullrgr this hulunw nf Glhv lizulrihusrnpr in hrhiraivh by Uhr Staff AL I'RfD I. MORRISON The Violet A violet blue, of gentle fragrance bred, In times long gone, lifted low its lovely head. A maiden passing by With the fragrance stayed Pluclted the violet from its bed and laid It on her breast. And then a light, A clear, soft, tender light, Shone in the maiden's eye: And all the while There played about her lips a smile+ A maiden's smile, A smile that men oft dream but seldom see, That speaks of far-off nobler things Unknown yet known to be. Whe1'e are the maid and the violet, Plucked from its lowly bed? Dead. Long since dead. And yet, the violet lives, the maiden lives. For with the maid an artist walked that day And on a miniature bore the smile away. Still, with the fragrance of that viol, Her life, her world, breathes in the maiden's smile. BEN Gooomooe 4 MISS JNNIE GAINES SPONSOR OF COLLECE PUBLICATIONS if I mp 1 f so af-Ja I ,Y ,i Qfaf- A.f ww., ffff ff N-V5 'II ,S :LI wage.: I I- 7, i P-', . 1 . , S - L - L .-II.. 1-A . - tqb , 4 . .- . .-I..-4-r .5 -LT' ' - ' If 'IHII-III' 'E -:.: ..... --,- --- . . ' 4-L1..' .' ' ' In , L-..-.L:::.E..-..- - I-M - ::s!e!-Efj :' V- I. '- EEEEEEEEiiiiiiiigizifEEE55i555i5555'IEIIII: NIIWIIWIII' 211 A ,................ ----.SEI-...null ---.IE -- .:::::'ggenegfpillllillllill 'iEE':2 ' I.:1ZE:..: '52 I......r,gggE,!!!!!!l' u::.:::.':: 7 Ja, L.- -,, --.. .... ...E , L., W- Q, - 'P f .LII - 42: W':z:',E-f ' 5.55531 129 -.. .1215-1' . .. - ':fFb, if-I 'I'i:', 152.532, ? :sf if :' D' 'A rn 'jk ' .5 ,Yl- ig! -'P'- 5 M024-4 'Emi' 'F .1 :I ,,,, Eli .S- - ' 4' ,V--Z. E, , 1 1 I X-ga? -mg. Y H i PROFESSOR PROFESSO The Faculty HENRY TUCKER GRAHAM, A. B. PRESIDENT AND PROFESSOR OF BIBLE STUDIES IAMES RIDDLE THORNTON, A. M. PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS AND INSTRUCTOR IN HENRY C. BROCK, B. LIT. OF THE CREEK LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE, AND j. H. C. BAC-BY, M. A., M. E., PH. D. ' M PROFESSOR OF PHXSICS AND ASTRON0 Y j. H. C. WINSTON, A. B., B. S., PH. PROFESSOR OF CHEMISTRY WILLIAM H. VVHITING, A. M. R OF THE LATIN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE. AND IN STEPHENSON SMITH, A. M., PH. PROFESSOR OF PHILOSOPHY AND BIOLOGY j. BROOKES SMITH, A. B., A. M., PH. ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF MATHEMATICS ASHTON W. IVICWHORTER. A. B., A. IVI.. PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH AND HISTORY ENGINEERING INSTRUCTOR IN FRENCH D. STRUCTOR IN GERMAN D. D. PH. D. OFFICERS JAMES R. THORNTON ..... ........,...... .,............... C U RATOR j'. H. C. WINSTON .......... ..... C LERR OF THE FACULTY DR. W. M. HOLLADAY ........ ....... C OLLEGE PHYSICIAN ..............LIBRARIAN ASHTON W. MCWHORTER .... F. M. RYBURN ....,.......... . . . .ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN THE FACULTY GROUP f,- WI f X . - v,- O Q vs J' Q A ' EQ o 0 ' ' 4' 0- 0 4 It X ' ' , , . Y A ' ' I . , V. -6 ' , - 'V' I 5,1 ,fx . ' ' 1 .- 02-A1-ft. Yu I' 2' V C 1 N .V Ria - E - ' w ' 4 ,fx 5 ' 'R ' ' T: ggu c ' fu V if f EQFTWHQ..-Q 11 ...-- . , Wardanobscoba Sfbw.. C ? -li T . . . - - . - . Kalendoscope Staff PIENRY L. PRINTER .,.... ...... . . .,..,. Editor-in-Chief IIUBERT G. CLARK ...... ........,.... B uslness Manager' FRANCIS BROOKE ....,.. .... f Xssisiant Business Manage: F. MOYLAN FITTS ........ ............... A rl Edilor MARION N. F1'rzcER.u.D ....... ..... A ssislant Arr Edixof W. SHERMAN BEARD .,....... ........ S xanistician XV. PERKINS H,-.zLEcRovE .,... ...... ....,... P h ofographs CHARLES E. CLARKE ....... ...,....,........... A lhlelics JOSEPH IVI. CROCKETT ..... , ...,. Clubs and Organizalions XQIILLI.-XM B. IVICILWAINE JOHN MCCAVACK w'ENABl,E MOORE 8 AI E FT OP KALEIDOSC Mc ILWA NE lll V. B. X FITZCER.-xLD N M . M. FITTS F No. MQGAVAC 14 J ORE Y, Mo Ld Q o Z 9 ri 1: D. 5 I- P- u Ll v C z LJ Q' 4 '-a L-AJ LZ o O nc FII '-1 LL Z LLL P'- Z Qi .1 I lil G Q 1 3 z 4 Lu CQ cd 5 L-ul 1.4 K 4 LJ Lil U Dr. Alfred J. Morrison A presiding officer, on one occasion, introducing a distinguished representative of a certain university, said, This university never sends out any bad men and never keeps any. Naturally every institution takes pride in the attainments and distinction of her sons, and doubtless all send out their good men. The alumni are the real index of what a college stands for and does: and, if this standard of estimate be adopted, Hampden- Sidney will not only not suffer by comparison, but may even afford to be proud of the good name her sons have carried for her to the world. It is a popular and well-attested verdict that Hampden-Sidney graduates make good teachers, good lawyers, doctors, preachers, and good men in the various activities of business life. Not only so, but from the great universities, where accuracy of scholarship and thoroughness of attainment are the requisites, comes the word that the sound and careful training of Hampden-Sidney men. admitted to the advanced courses of instruction, is always recognized and becomes at once an asset to the credit of the men themselves and the institution they represent. Surely, then, it is praiseworthy and significant that the sons of Hampden-Sidney are always able to secure for themselves at least a fair degree of success in the world of business, and often- times to win the enviable badge of scholarship in the realm of letters. It is not improper, therefore-much less is it boastful-that the students of Hampden-Sidney, through the medium of their annual publication, the KALEIDOSCOPE, should talce occasion, from time to time, to voice their feelings of admiration for the high standard of excellence the old College has always set and successfully maintained for herself and her sons, and particularly now is it befitting, as that sentiment finds its expression in the dedication of their present volume to one whose name stands for scholarly ideals and recognized literary attainments, to an alumnus of the College who has contributed no mean part to the reputation of his Alma Mater in the realm of letters and learning,-to one who needs no introduction here, Dr. Alfred Morrison. Not only thus is a praiseworthy sentiment happily expressed and a well-deserved compliment gracefully paid, but in this act of the KALEIDOSCOPE Staff may be dis- cerned a laudable desire, on the part of the student body generally, to record their appre- ciation of the many and valuable services rendered them by one who has proved himself the best friend the literay publications at Hampden-Sidney have ever had. His interest in the success of the Magazine and the KALEIDOSCOPE has always been warm and unfailing, and many a time he has come to the rescue when these publications needed just such a true and helpful friend. As, in a larger way, Dr. Morrison may aptly be characterized as a product and an exponent of Hampden-Sidney scholarship and culture, so too, in a special sense. he may be regarded as truly representative of her best literary traditions and impulses. Himself, in his student days, closely identified with both Magazine and KALEIDOSCOPE, he has ever since sought, no less by his generous assistance I0 than by his sympathetic interest, to uphold and advance their fortunes, and, with a well- placed emphasis, he has all along stressed their value and importance as Hampden- Sidncp publications. ls it not unusually appropriate, then, that on the dedicatory page of the present volume of the KALEIDOSCOPE should appear the name of one who has done so much for the success of past issues, and who stands ever ready to give freely of his time and of his labors to each succeeding year's staff? Moreover, it is desirable that a place of permanent record should be given in the annals of the Institution to the name of one who, both by ancestry and birth, as well as by association and training, carries, in his person, so many of the traditions of the College, and who, in his unremitting study of its past, displays an intensity of in- terest and a beauty of devotion that are equalled only by the accuracy and range of his knowledge upon all matters touching the College and the community,-for, as said of him in a recent issue of the Magazine, perhaps no other man living knows as much about the history of Hampden-Sidney and Prince Edward County. Early transplanted to Hampden-Sidney, and brought up from very infancy in this spot of so many fine associa- tions and of such splendid inspiration, educated within these College walls,-nay, more. a grandson of the Rev. M. P. Atkinson, D. D., for years an honored and distinguished President of the College,-Dr. Morrison is, by every consideration, as he is every whit, a son of the College, and it is no wonder he has so well fixed in his nature the distinctive elements of Hampden-Sidney tradition, sentiment, and culture. Thus singularly and fortunately ordered in his birth and bringing up, he may surely be regarded as the heir of the Hampden-Sidney ages, and into his keeping have been committed very largely the College archives of a hundred and thirty-five years past,-a trust to which he has proved himself loyally true and abundantly equal. The Staff, then, not only has done a fitting and an appropriate act in thus honoring Dr. Morrison, but has rendered the College a real service in placing upon record some account of an alumnus, whose merits, for their own sake, may well be written in the College annals, and whose name, for all it represents, cannot afford to be omitted from any register of Hampden-Sidney's notable and illustri- ous sons. Born in Selma, Alabama, July l lth, IS76, the son of the Rev. Alfred and Mrs. Portia Lee Morrison, Dr. Morrison came, in early infancy, to Hampden-Sidney, and here he has spent the greater part of his life. He entered Hampden-Sidney College in the fall of l89l and graduated four years later with the degree of A. B. The session of l895-6 he spent as a graduate student in the department of Modern Languages at the University of Virginia: during the session of 1896-7 he taught at Locust Dale Academy, Madison County, Va., again, in i897-8, he became a student of the University of Virginia, this time doing graduate work in the school of Latin: and then during the session of l898-9 he was an Instructor in the Baylor's University School, Chattanooga, Tenn. ln the fall of l899 he entered the Johns Hopkins University as a student of the Romance Lane guages, and received the degree of Ph. D. from that lnstitution in l902. His work ll during his residence there was of a high order and, in recognition of his ability and promise as a scholar. he was appointed to a University Fellowship in his third year!-a coveted and distinguished honor. With the scholar's bent of mind and an intense love of letters, he has ever since been engaged in literary pursuits, whether in the exacting sphere of the class-room or in the more congenial field of research and investigation. For more than a year he held the important position as manuscript reader for the well-known Publishing House of Henry Holt Bt Co.-a position requiring great accuracy and breadth of knowledge as well as a sound and discriminating literary judgment, qualities possessed by Dr. Morrison in an eminent degree. During the session of IQO6-7 he filled the Chair of Latin and German at Hampden-Sidney and thus became further identified with his Alma Mater, of which he might almost be permitted to say, Cuius pars magna ful. Since that time he has devoted himself largely to historical studies and investigation, being especially interested in the past of Hampden-Sidney and Prince Edward County. In this work he has rendered both the College and the County invaluable service, having already done much toward collecting and preserving various documents and archives of great antiquity and rare interest locally. A genuine lover of books, he is never more at home than when in their company, and here it may be said that the College Library is under special obligations to him for the substantial assistance he has recently given in the matter of re-classifying its contents and for his many helpful suggestions looking to its better equipment and further development. In addition to a ready and intimate acquaintance with the library in all its details, he possesses a knowledge of the books themselves that is well-nigh encyclopedic. He can trace, with accuracy and ease, the checkered career of every volume of peculiar local interest there, and he handles these dusty tomes of ancient lore with a tenderness and devotion that only an ideal worship- per of the Hampden-Sidney past and a true lover of the priceless legacies of antiquity could evince. Nor does his zeal stop with the reading and studying of what others have written, for he has himself done important work in the field of authorship and in the future other contributions to the stream of literature will doubtless How from his scholarly pen. Besides a large number of newspaper articles and contributions to such magazines as the William and Mary Quarterly and the Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, he has recently edited, with an Introduction and Notes, The Travels of John Davis in The United States during the Years I 798-l80Z 3 and there will shortly appear from the press another important work of his editorship, being a translation, in two volumes, from the German of Dr. Johann David Schoepf,-also a book of early American travels and ex- plorations. And now that he has already gathered so much valuable material bearing upon the wonderful past of Hampden-Sidney, it is to be hoped that in time he may be per- mitted to embody the results of these tireless and splendid labors in a much needed history I2 of the College, and certainly, by virtue of ancestry, association, education, scholarship and sympathy, the one man best qualified and equipped to perform this important work is Dr. Alfred Morrison. Thus it will be seen that in every way Dr. Morrison is representative of Hampden- Sidney's best traditions and interests, and the KALEIDOSCOPE Staff have clone well in dedicating the l9l l volume to one who so eminently merits the honor. ASHTON WAUGH MCWHORTER. Hampden-Sidney College, February 20, l9I I. ' -f2 1i Fi5:!' ' Q , GMU 'lf' I3 Forgotten jewels Vvilh many a brilliant notion. Wvilh many a noble thought. With many a pure emotion. Our youthful lives aie fraught. Oh, where are those aspirations That lifted our souls in youth? Those eager, clear-eyed glimmerings? Those sparkling bubbles fiom Truth? Out of life-'s hbres rent they Are silently parted and tern. And into clouds of nepenthe On wings invisible borne. Gone from the hopes of to-morrow, Gone from the vista of years- They are lost in laughter and sorrow, They are lost through smiles and tears. And yet in Elysian meadows Methinks we will find them once more. For there invisible workers Are garnering the crystallized store: And each sparkling drop that bubl-led From the wonderful fountain of Truth. ls carefully gathered and garnered. Though lost with the loss of our youth. BEN Gooonmcz I4 Reminiscences of Hampden-Sidney in 1871-'74 There is something especially attractive in youth, but among their many drawing qualities, nothing appeals to me more than their unconsciousness of danger, their gener- osity in invitation and their utter blindness to what they do. This was strikingly shown when the young manager of this Annual invited an old man to ureminiscef' without placing any limit upon his pen. Where these random thoughts will end, I know not. l only know that the very name of Hampden-Sidney takes me back to the happiest days of my youth, and that vanished hands touch me on every side, and that the very air seems alive with voices that have long been still. As l look back over a life that has already reached the sere and yellow leaf stage, three periods stand out distinct-the war period, the College period, and the period when life with its burdens and responsibilities confronted me. The war period had its variety and its excitements, but it also had so much death, such a struggle for bare existence, so many sad faces and broken hearts, that even now I feel its gloom and shadow. While middle age has had its pleasures and compensations, and a measureable degree of success, it has also had its hard problems and its bitter disappointments. To the College period I turn for its unalloyed pleasures, its sweet companionships. and its years of profitable study. As Addison Smith would say, ul have passed the meridian of life, and am going to the confines of eternity, and as l look through the many years that have passed since my college days, l can see that amid those unattractive surroundings and creature discomforts, I received impressions that have counted for much in my life, ln the fall of '7l I caught my first glimpse of the old barn-like building. To a homesick boy there could have been nothing more uninviting-an oblong building of rough brick, with four halls, each independent of the other: bare class-rooms, and dormitory rooms rough and cheerless in every way-all standing in the center of a campus, almost destitute of trees, an expanse of fiery sun in the summer, and a continent of mud in the winter. From the opening of winter till late in the spring, overshoes were a necessity, for there were no pavements in the village, and he who adventured forth by night minus a lantern, on calico intent, was doomed to disaster as well as disappointment. In those days hazing was an unknown art, and the newcomer was persona gratu- the material out of which the famous literary societies were recruited. So that the old men put forth their best efforts to win him over to their particular society. I5 Several of us new boys were invited to a room where apples and cider were dis- pensed, and where I first met Old Crews-who was known as the Widow's Crusef' an old fellow who had served in the Confederate army, and had been wounded in the leg, and who bravely fought his way through College and the Seminary, overcoming diffr- culties that would have daunted men less in earnest, and who lived for several years, doing good work in the ministry. Of course there were many jokes told on him, some illustrating his courage, and some his scholarship, but none of which I shall tell, because, however much I may have laughed at him then, I can now see that it took courage and labor to do what he did, and it is my prayer that when I report above my life's work, I may have as good a record of courage, devotion and usefulness as old Crews had. Perhaps for the sake of system, it will be well to ureminiscen first about the students. then the Faculty, and finally the social life, but even this division, unless some check is put on, will soon develop into a garrulous story of the long ago. I. THE STUDENT BODY Since leaving College, I have lived in two college towns, and I have roamed from Dan to Beersheba, but I have not only never found such a set of young men as those who constituted the student body in l87l, but I doubt whether a finer set were ever gathered together. It is not a case of distance lending enchantment, but they fully deserved this reputation. I cannot recall hearing an oath for two sessions, and while there were one or two who would drink, they were rare exceptions, and they generally did so in secret. It was at this time that I first met my life-long friend, Charles Ghiselin, with whom I roomed for five years, two in College and three in the Seminary-a man of brilliant intellect and lovely character, and moreover a fellow of infinite jest! Frank Bedinger, whose love of lengthy speech was proverbial, a habit that I understand has stayed with him through life: Jim Tredway, now a Judge in Virginia, whose bearing always was that of a gentleman: Reike, of rotund proportions, so round that when he was thrown to the ground in football, he was at times unconscious of the fact, as his head was always the same distance above the ground: Peter Woods, now preaching in Baltimore, whose rich tenor voice often disturbed our consumption of the midnight oil: Old Cal Wilson, who was for so many years the pastor of a large country church-a man whose natural indolence stood out in such striking contrast with the brilliancy of his mind: Harry Thornton, the youngest man in the class, who bore off the First Honor, and who afterwards bravely met death in the frozen wilds of Alaska: J. Addison Smith, whose subsequent career in the ministry has shown that none of us was the son of a prophet, Pat Law, the present gifted editor of the Presbplcrian Standard. In the higher classes there were Buck Bishop and Alex. Hall, Billy Ward and Willie I6 Mcllwaine. Years after at a meeting of the Virginia Synod in Petersburg, Mcllwaine gathered at his home all of the old boys he could find, and gave us a Hampden-Sidney dinner. There were scores of others, but time fails me to speak of all. Each one has won his place in life, and each one would to-day attribute his success to the training of those old days. It seems only yesterday when we sat around the old belfry, and dreamed of the future. Then we were young and hopeful, eyes bright and cheeks rosy. To-day if we could gather there again, what a contrast there would be-a group of old men with scanty locks covered with the snow of age, sunken cheeks and bleared eyes. Yet the hearts would be as young, and the jokes I am sure would be brighter and more pointed. ll. THE FACULTY As compared with the Faculty of the College of this day, they were few in number. Yet each one was a past-master in his department. The President was Dr. M. P. Atkinson, one of the best and purest men I have ever known. I can see him now, as he comes waddling across from his home-a heavy. ungainly man with a face in which you saw moral courage of the highest order, and a heart as tender as a woman, and as true as steel. No man, occupying such a position, ever left a better or more lasting impression upon the boys under him. Years after, a lawyer in Baltimore whose college days were wild ones, said to me, that if he had ever amounted to anything in life it was due to the impress made upon him by Dr. Atkinson. Then there was L. L. Holladay, the most rounded character I have ever known. For nearly six years I sat by him at his table, and enjoyed the most intimate friendship with him, and now as I compare him with other men I have known, I cannot recall his equal. He had a keen sense of humor, eyes that twinkled when a joke was coming: a true sense of justice, that gave him unbounded influence over boys, and knit them to him with bands of steel. I can see him now, as, at a fixed hour every afternoon, he sauntered along the Via Sacra with his cane under his arm and his two pointer dogs running ahead. Prof. Walter Blair at that time boarded with Prof. Holladay. He was a thorough Latin Scholar, but with a frozen kind of dignity with which difhdent men protect themselves. In after years I found that he had laid a fine foundation of Latin which stood me in good stead on more than one occasion. He married before the close of my stay in College and opened a home of his own. I-lis wife was a Baltimore lady, who brought with her some finger bowls, the first that many had ever seen, and when they were invited to a meal there, many and ludicrous I7 . were the blur ders made over the finger bowls. One man actually drank the water in which sliced lemon Hoated, and then privately complained that the lemonade was very weak. Col. Delaware Kemper dispensed Math in its various phases. Unfortunately, he was a mathematical genius, who, by the way, always make poor teachers, and conse- quently we all graduated with a minimum amount of knowledge. In Conic Sections we were hopelessly at sea, and none of us could exactly understand what a Locus was, and when we asked for an explanation, his reply was, A Locus is a lucid phantasusf' Since I have learned more of a Locus, l can see some appropriateness in his answer. ln C-reek we had Prof. Addison Hoge, as he then spelled it, though it has been changed since to l-logue. With the lazy student he was not popular, for he had no mercy on a shirker. On one occasion some disgruntled one wrote on the board, Hog by name, hog by nature, Hoge by an act of the Legislaturef' While he was unpopular with a certain set, with the real students he was regarded as one of the best men in the Faculty. I have studied Greek under others, and I have taught Greek at different times, but to my mind Buck Addie, as we called him, was by far the best teacher I have ever known. At one time I had some reputation myself teaching Csreek, but whatever success l had was due to his training. and especially to the fact that l followed his methods. ln those days we had only five professors and a limited curriculum, but the founda- tions laid were far better than the superficial smattering of the present day. III. THE SOCIAL LIFE I am not familiar with the social life of the College at this time, but l am sure that it is not equal to what it was in the Seventies, for though the quality may be the same now, the quantity will make the difference. At that time, besides the families of the College Faculty, as at present, there were the Professors of the Seminary with their charming family life, which combination formed a social life that in culture and refinement stood far above any l have met, after an experience of many years. These homes were always open to the students of both institutions, and now when I recall how green and uninteresting we were, l wonder at their spirit of self-sacrifice. It was a wisely devised school of refinement that polished up the embryo preacher, and prepared him for the social life of his future calling. Nearly every home had its quota of pretty daughters, and each one was a reigning belle, owing to the law that governs supply and demand. ' How vividly comes up the memory of those calico days, when the Seminites and the College boys met on the social arena, each antagonistic to the other, and all trying to win the favor of the fair one. I8 Such a luxury as a quiet talk was never dreamed of, but on the contrary it was a case of I6 to l. It was a part of each man's duty to fall in love before leaving, but at that game the Seminite had the advantage, because he meant business, owing to the closeness of the time when he could set up his own household gods-while the College boy merely played the game as an amateur. At that time there was a Brazilian among the students who played the devoted to every pretty girl. After he had been to church with a certain young lady, Asa Dupuy, afterwards Judge in Roanoke, took him aside, and with perfect gravity said, Now, Rod, I am going to act toward you as I would expect you to act toward me, if I were in Brazil, I am going to advise you about the social customs of this land. When a young man goes twice to church with a young lady he is expected to propose to her, else her father or brothers will call him out. Rodrigues walked the floor and wrung his hands, and in a nervous way said, I cannot do it, I cannot do it, for she will kick at me. Of my own exploits in this particular line of action, the least said the better, for they have become portions and parcels of the dreadful past. I took the calico ticket, and gat me death frae twa sweet een, twa lovely een of bonnie blue. I have, however. risen from that death, and have for years been a very lively corpse. At first I thought that the light of my life had gone out, but I finally succeeded in striking another match. and have been happy ever since. It was my good fortune during my College and Seminary days to board with Professor Holladay. I am an old man now, but I can never forget his kindness and that of his charming wife, whose interest in her boys never fagged, and whose patience with their whims was beyond belief. I cannot close without a word or two about the servants of the 'iHill. There was old Polydore, a superannuated relic of past generations, whose greatest enjoyment was high-sounding words, and you could confer no greater favor upon him than to teach him some polysyllabic word, which he could afterwards use. When some pious soul endeavored to solace his declining years by reading the Scriptures, old Poly- dore always called for Genesis l4. Then there was John Deane, the College janitor, a faithful old man with a grave face. He was the butt of many a joke, yet he gravely bore it all, hoping that while he bore their light raillery, by the law of compensation he would be paid in heavy coin. In his watch he had unbounded confidence, though sometimes he had to strike it against the wall before it would run. I can see him now coming into the room early on a winter morning, a basket of chips on one arm, three sticks of wood on the other, and in his hands a bundle of rich pine in a blaze. With a dexterity acquired by long practice, he laid the wood and applied the flame, and before his footsteps had ceased to sound, the fire was burning furiously. Then there was Walker Crawley, whose stammering tongue by no means kept him silent. iI9 When I left the Seminary I presented him with a new Bible, and twelve years after I revisited the Hill, and drove from Farmville in Walker's hack. On the way he entertained me with the changes that had taken place, and then, as if to show that there was something that change had not touched, he said with manifest pride, ML Bridges, I have that Bible you gave me twelve years ago, and it is just as good as new. Nearly nineteen years have passed since that last visit, and in that time change has been at work. Improvements have been made, and the old building has been made more comfortable in every way, yet if I were to go back, I would be like the old women in the Lincoln County Poor House, a new building with electric lights and steam heat. Yet the old women are unhappy there, because there is no open hre into which they can spit when they smoke their pipes. I would miss the old chapel with its pine benches, carved by successive classes: its bare and stained wall: and even the mud would be missed. But, above all, I would miss those dear friends whose faces are coming to-night out of the dim past. I would miss the old associations, and I would especially miss that spirit that enabled us all to turn our faces to the rising sun. You young men of the present day may have fairer buildings, more professors, and a larger number of students, but I seriously doubt whether the output will equal that of those days of low living and high thinking. Rev. J. R. BRIDGES, D. D. The Queen of Love 0 Queen of Love, I worship thee: What more canst thou desire of me? A smile from thee makes darkness light, And changes into dawn the night. In all my dreams I see those eyes, Those eyes of brown, Utopian eyes, More lovely than the stars of night, And brighter than the day's sunlight. I love, oh, more than I can tell, Those eyes wherein the angels dwell: And as this love I can't conceal, To thee, O Queen of Love, I kneel, And offer thee this life of mine To brighten or to darken thine. J. M. CROCKETT. 20 Dream Wreck My love and I went sailing High on the heavenly maine My Love to seek new isles of joy, And I, to lose or gain A hope, a dream so thrilling-sweet, It seemed akin to pain- That sometimes waked, and sometimes slept But always waked again. Earth was a map beneath us, And heaven stooped dear and nigh- Now is our kingdom come! my Love Exultedg Now we fly: Yon glory-cloud just gonef' she cried, May be, is God gone by. Or some bright earthly dream, I said, Come true, here in the sky. It was not mine: for gently She sighed, and shook her head, And ere my stammering tale was done, I knew my hope was dead- The brightest dream on earth, for me, In heaven had vanished. And o'er the misty mountains, And back along the seas, High o'er the pillared smoke that clomb From green clumps that were trees, Our wide wings brought us down and down To earth's uncertain ease. But of that wondrous journey Two things alone remain- For her, a glory-cloud gone by, For me, an endless pain. For Love's rich galleons wrecked that day High on the heavenly main- For hopes that once would wake and sleep. But ne'er will wake again. WiLi.1AM Hi1RxLi Wooos Zl Hampden-Sidney's Contribution to Theological Science The supreme test of an institution of learning is the fruit it yields in capable and trained men fitted for the work of C,od's world and Cod's Kingdom. Splendid buildings and costly laboratories and encyclopedic libraries and scholarly teachers are all means to the end of producing efficient and worthy manhood. An educational plant costing millions of dollars might well be less effective in making men whose creation would be justified by the service they rendered, than some renowned College less rich in dollars but more rich in sons with the wisdom and character which are the marks of true culture. By their fruits ye shall know them. The splendid eminence of Hampden-Sidney is determined for her by the thousands upon thousands of young men who, during the century and a third of her existence, have imbibed the spirit of this venerable school and have wrought into the work of the world the contributions which their scholastic mother made through them. The historian of the College would find wide scope for the exercise of his art in tracing in every field of human activity the influence of the men trained here to carry into every walk of life the Hampden-Sidney spirit and culture. Especially in the inseparably allied fields of education and theology have her sons made marked contributions which shed lustre on the ancient seat of learning where they were prepared for this service. Theology is a science requiring trained capacity, and it is'impossible to separate the record of theological work from the schools, colleges, uni- versities and seminaries where theology has its native home and necessary haunts. A considerable section of the history of education in our country must be written if we would trace in completeness the service which Hampden-Sidney has rendered to this cause, and in no other way could we obtain a full view of the direct and indirect contribu- tions made by the College to the still higher cause of theological science. A partial list would show that her students or former professors have had large influence at Princeton. Davidson, Union, Westminster, Centre, Washington, Franklin, Richmond, Hanover, Randolph-Macon, Jefferson, Austin, King, South Carolina, Davis and Elkins Colleges, at Southwestern Presbyterian, Central, Transylvania, Washington and Lee, Syracuse, Western, Howard, Vanderbilt, Johns Hopkins Universities, at the Universities of City of New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Alabama, Georgia, Texas, Vermont, Tennessee, Virginia, The South, Mississippi, Cincinnati, at the Virginia Military Institute, the Vir- ginia Polytechnic lnstitute, and to cut the catalogue short, at schools and seminaries both male and female, almost numberless. Her representatives who in these and other institu- tions were teaching. for example, philosophy, as Dr. Blanton at Central University, or Crreek, as Prof. Hogue at Washington and Lee, were making solid additions to the valid 22 Theological science of the church and the world. The accomplished Grecian who pro- duced The Irregular Verbs of Attic Prose and who caused a multitude of future theologians to know something of Greek by the patient and persistent and inflexible drill of a master in the classroom has done a large work for the science of theology, which will bear fruit for generations. To make men competent expositors of the New Testa- ment, while or by teaching them Greek, may not always pass for theological work, but it is really theological work of a high order, which will secure recognition as such in the day when the God of things as they are has his reckoning and metes out his rewards. All the theological institutions of our church and many of other churches are her debtors. At Union Seminary to-day Prof. T. C. Johnson fills the important Chair of Church History as a Hmaster-workman who needeth not to be ashamed, and Prof. A. D. P. Gilmour as associate in the Chair of Oriental Literature, particularly charged with the duty of showing the application of Christianity to modern social problems has an opportunity for conservative and constructive scholarship, by which he may enrich the whole church. At the Kentucky Theological Seminary Prof. Gray lVlcAllister is occupying the professorship of English Bible and Biblical Theology, and at South- western Divinity School Prof. C. W. Somerville is teaching the department of Old Testament Exegesis. In that youngest star in the hrmament of theological study, which is illuminating the strategic territory of the Southwest, three noble sons of the old Nlother are dong worthy service, and Austin rejoices in the work of Prof. Thornton R. Sampson in Church History, Prof. L. Bell in New Testament and Prof. E. C. Caldwell in Old Testament Exegesis. While far across the waters on the other side of the world Prof. L. Stuart, Jr., is teaching the interpretation of the New Testament in the Union Theological Seminary at Nanking, Chinag and these are the proof that the stream which still pours out of that classic spot in old Prince Edward is still able to make glad the City of our God. But the direct contributions to theological Science through authorship are chiefly in evidence. And first in the realm of theology proper stands the splendid name of Dr. Robert L. Dabney, who has brought the whole Kingdom of God into his debt by his books covering a vast range on this queen of all the sciences. The philosophy which underlies revelation, the system of truth which is contained in the inspired revelation, and the applications of that truth to many of the deepest problems of life, political, economic, social, all receive illuminating exposition from his master hand. In his upractical Phil- osophy and Sensualistic Philosophy there is presented a complete philosophy marked by that combined penetration and depth, that searching analysis and sane construction which he brought to the discussion of every theme. His lectures on Theology constitute a text-book for theological study which easily ranks among the very first in our language, and which is destined to put the name of its author in the list of the great theological system builders of the church of all the ages. l'-lis four volumes of Discussions contain a vast array of articles which, while not professing this as their end, yet practically accom- 23 plish the purpose of showing how that combined philosophy and theology are to be utilized in meeting the old standing problems or the new issues which his day brought him. For practical wisdom, united to profound insight, they are unsurpassed and are equally worthy of study with his Philosophy and Theology. His Defence of Virginia and the South and his Life of Stonewall Jackson contain the one a reasoned and absolutely iznpregnable exposition and the other an equally convincing, practical and biographical vindication of the Southern position in '61 to '65, Taking all in all in consideration, the church in our day and country has no greater name to offer in the sphere of theological scienceg and of a piece with it were his services to Hampden-Sidney, Union Theological Seminary, the Austin Seminary and the University of Texas. Worthy to be associated with him was his life-long friend, another one of Hampden-Sidney's sons, Dr. C. R. Vaughan, who hlled for some years the same chair in the Union Seminary. His Gifts of the Holy Spirit deserves wide acknowledgment of its value in filling a place for which no substitute can be found, viz.: a solid theological discussion fitting into the Calvinistic system of the great subject which the title presents. His Sermons, Doctrinal, Apologetic and Practical are of a high order, richly suggestive as to the best mode of handling on the pulpit for practical edification the doctrines of the Woi'd. In the field of Exegetical Theology, the name of Dr. Benjamin M. Smith may well head the list-for thirty-nine years professor in the Union Seminary. and accounted by those who know its history as largely to be credited with its continued existence and large usefulness after the disastrous losses of the Civil War. It was his good fortune to train in Biblical interpretation a large number of the most useful and acceptable ministers in our Southland. His practical wisdom, united to competent scholarship, made him one of the most widely useful men of his clay. Too busy as a teacher and administrator to be prolific in the production of books, he still is the author of A Commentary on Psalms and Proverbs, an Introduction to the Poetical Books of Old Testament and Family Re- ligion. The name of Rev. Dr. B. Shearer can not be omitted from any summary, however meagre, of the names and contributions of Hampden-Sidney's alumni to Theolog- ical Science. The virtual founder of the Southwestern Presbyterian University and professor in its Divinity School, President of Davidson College, as a teacher for many years he has been engaged in solving the problem of introducing the Bible into the curriculum of study in the College and the University. He is a pioneer and discoverer in this region. His genius is shown in that he has solved the problem. As one who used as a professor in the University classroom, Dr. Shearer's Bible Course Syllabus in three volumes, the writer can testify to the scholarship and gifts which make these volumes so admirable a foundation upon which to build the structure of rational and satisfactory Bible Study, thorough without being sectarian, scholarly without being technical, biblical without being unduly philosophic or theological. His Studies in the Life of Christ, Sermon on the Mount and lVlodern Mysticism give the ripe results of a half century of study and instruction in the interpretation of the Scriptures, and not only the generations of students 24 whom he has taught and those whom he is to influence indirectly through them, but an in- creasing number of readers, will profit as they study these products of his mature and scholarly pen. In the department of Historical Theology, the name of Dr. T. C. johnson may well head our list. ln addition to his services as a master-teacher and author in the technical department of Church History, he has written two standard biographiesvthe Life of Dr. Dabney and the 'iLife of Dr. Palmer. ln addition to giving us a life-like picture of two noble men and showing us the development of their minds and characters, until at last each came to be a great master in his respective field: and presenting also the catalogue of services rendered by these signally usful men of herculean and adamantine industry and of splendid gifts splendidly disciplined. Dr. Johnson likewise most skilfully exhibits the history and inner character of this section of our country. The scene is laid in turn in Virginia, Texas, South Carolina, Louisiana, and no juster account of the culture. character, civilization, modes of life and thought, manners and customs of the South can be found than on these pages. Each of these biographies is a master-piece. And we are not left as a people without a witness so long as these books shall live. The reader will meet not only with a great man, but he will understand also the environment out of which the noble character sprang and by which it was influenced and upon which in turn it expended its influence. Dr. Johnson has already brought our country under obligation and encourages the hope that his studious and versatile pen has still further work to do by which we shall be further enriched. Another accomplished alumnus is Dr. Parke P. Flournoy, whose 'Search Light of St. Hippolytusu makes both interesting and profitable reading. It shows how modern discovery explodes the claims of the papacy and sheds much light on the New Testament. The discovery made about sixty years ago in the old monastery on Mount Athos of Hippolytus' uphilosophizing or Refutations of all Heresiesn restores to us one of the most valuable productions of this Ante-Nicene Father. Dr. Flournoy uses this book to show that the Bishops of Rome in Hippolytus' day were not yet recognized as popes, for this old father does not hesitate to apply to Zephyronus and Callistus, now canonized as popes, the illuminating epithets which exactly described them, but which do not comport with the papal claims. In several directions Dr. Flournoy turns the Search-Light and discredits the claim of the Tuburgen School that the Gospels had a late origin by showing by quotations from Hippolytus' heretics, from the new-found Diatesseron of Tatian, and the more recently discovered Synac Gospels, found by the two Cambridge sisters, Mrs. Lewis and Mrs. Gibson, that the New Testament canon was certainly in existence by the beginning of the Second Century. A later book, New Light on the New Testament, will add to Dr. Flournoy's justly-deserved reputation for scholar- ship and power of popular exposition. In the Section of Practical Theology there is one name which will never be forgotten as the name longest connected with Hampden-Sidney as student, tutor, alumnus, and trustee for sixty-two years, from IS37 to IS99, and as the most brilliant representative of the spirit and culture which have made the College famous all around the world-Moses Drury Hoge. A noted editor of the leading Z5 Methodist paper in the world, Dr. James M. Buckley, of the New York Christian Advocate, happening to visit Richmond, heard Dr. Hoge one Sunday morning in his ordinary ministrations preach on Thou art a priest forever after the order of Nlelchizadeku and spent the afternoon writing back promptly to his paper the message, 'LI have to-day heard the greatest preacher in the world. It was not an unusual estimate for the at- tendants upon his ministry to form this opinion over and over again as they heard those sermons which for more than a half century he poured forth without any signs of exhaus- tion or symptoms of mental decay or spiritual decline. The volume of sermons entitled, The Perfection of Beauty, will explain this reputation to coming generations as they see illustrated in them the finished style, the perfect balance between form and matter, the symmetry and proportion of structure, the evangelical and scriptural flavor which made him the great preacher, but no printed page can reproduce the kindling eye, the face lit with a divine fire, the vibrant voice, the masterful gesture, the indescribable halo of genius which encircled him as beauty and power, poetry and truth, all marked in harmonious union, seemed to vie with each other in seeking to serve the purpose of this mighty master of assemblies. There ought to be gathered together from magazine and religious press and every available source other sermons to teach willing readers and to illustrate to succeeding preachers of later days this supreme art of preaching. It is a benediction that the skill and industry of his nephew, Dr. Peyton H. Hoge, has made his uncle's biography as he has written it a worthy embodiment of the noble preacher's life and genius. The limited literary product of the Richmond pastor, which all must lament, is considerably enlarged by the letters, speeches, and articles which find a place in this life, and yet the art of the biographer is amply shown in his own skilful presentation of the outward incidents and inner history of his great subject as well as in the admirable setting of the life in its complex relations to all the changing conditions of the eventful years from l8l9-l899. Wlention ought to be made of Dr. Daniel Baker, the flaming apostle and evangelist of the Southwest, the founder of Austin College, which is rendering so great a service to Church and State to-day, and the author of two volumes of sermons, which are too little known and which put him in the front rank of American preachers. Whole communities in the Southwest were revolutionized by his pentecostal preaching and some of the leading preachers and laymen in all the evangelical denominations in that vast region owe their religious life to his evangelistic labors. At least three great states-Texas, Louisiana, and Arkansas--put Baker in the front in their estimate of the formative forces which saved these commonwealths for righteousness. The name of Dr. A. W. Pitzer must be chron- icled, for forty years pastor of the Central Church, Washington, D. C.: for many years Professor of Bible Study in Howard University, and author of Ecce Deus Homo, Christ, the Teacher of Men, and other valuable publications. The first of these is an incisive and suggestive book corrective of the fractional and naturalistic views of Prof. Seeley's famous work called Ecce Homo, and is in every way the equal of the Oxford professofs volume. 26 This article ought to mention the valuable work in Theology done by Hampden- Sidney men in foreign lands, as, for example, by Dr. Phillip Francis Price, of China, in his three volumes in Chinese, Short Steps to C-reat Truths, and in his Chinese Dictionary and other publications. Such men are laying not only the evangelistic, but the literary and theological foundations upon which future enlightened and successful labors are to be built. The labors of Dr. William D. Reynolds, of Korea, are of the same kind, notably in his efficient service as one of the most influential and scholarly translators of both the Old and New Testaments into modern Korean. These are but samples of the service which the College, through her sons, is rendering all around the world to the cause of education, literature and evangelism. Cognate with all this is the influential contribution to correct thinking and sound religion made by the editors who apply to current questions the eternal standards, riot of the passing day, but of the unchanging Kingdom. Amongst these are to be rated that rare preacher, teacher and editor, Dr. John L. Kirkpatrick, who made the Southern Presbyterian a power by his editorial writing, Dr. W. T. Richardson who discussed well- nigh every possible theme of religious or moral interest during his many years as editor of the Central Presbyterian, and that brilliant editor who retired all too soon from this most important field, Dr. A. lVlcKelway, who made The Presbyterian Standard the most eagerly read of journals during the period that his strong, if somewhat caustic, pen enlivened its columns. If he left some wounds that smart, he had no readers that slept, and no issue of his journal was ever dull or dead. This is but an imperfect and partial survey and many other names ought to be chronicled with a star, not as a sign that they are dead, but that they are still shining with a steady radiance through the influence of remembered teachings or published works. Such names belong here as those of Drs. james Blythe, William Hill, Moses Waddel, Benjamin Montgomery, William S. White, Drury Lacy, Ferdinand Jacobs, C. XV. Dame, W. V. Wilson, William Stoddert, Richard Nlcllwaine, T. W. Hooper, James W. Shearer, M. L. Lacy, W. F. Bishop, VV, W. Woods, A. Smith, A. T. Graham, R. A. Walton, G. W. Bull, M. G. Woodworth, and many others, who are exerting influence through books, pamphlets, printed sermons, tracts or articles of more than ephemeral interest. ln fact, if all the contributions which Hampden-Sidney's sons have made to all the departments of theological science could be gathered together it would make a goodly library, in -which the careful student might linger long and lovingly and much to his enrichment and profit. Nor has this influence been confined to any one denomina- tion-three bishops of the Episcopal Church were nursed in learning by her motherly tuition, Bishops Atkinson, Penick and Gibson, and ministers of many evangelical denom- inations-Methodist, Baptist, Christian, Episcopal and others, delight to own her as their Alma Mater. The conclusion is not a forced or an uncertain one, therefore, that Hampden- Sidney's contribution to Theological Science has been a large and liberal one. Both 27 directly and indirectly she has made generous gifts through her sons to this first and noblest of all the sciences, and for this reason many rise up to call her blessed. In fact, this is the most splendid service rendered by this historic and ancient seat of learning, which has ministered so efficiently in so many different ways. In peace and in war to statesmarvship, to commerce and business, to diplomacy, to letters and art, to science and linguistics, to philosophy and literature with a lavish hand her gifts have been bestowed. But perhaps her chief service has been in that noblest of all realms, where the highest interests all converge. After all, religion is the chief concern of mortals here below, and theology, which is the science of religion, is the queen of the sciences, and the institution which serves theology is serving at once the deepest and the best that is in man. This, too, is the prophecy and augury which tells of coming prosperity and in- creasing renown. The college which thus ministers at an altar so sacred and divine will have God and all good and instructed men as allies and confederates. This light which is thus set upon the candlestickf' representing the combined radiance of science and art, literature and religion will never be allowed to become dim, but will grow brighter and brighter until the coming of the perfect day, when with every aid which liberal endow- ments can secure and all the prestige which hosts of students can give, the bright light unchanged in native lustre shall only be lifted higher that it may shine the wider over a world which needs its benign and mellow radiance. THORNTON WHALING. 28 Discourses and Addresses lrlihe list given below is in every case but one a list of addresses delivered at Hampden-Sidney College, and to be found somewhere in print. It is possible that with fuller information this list might be considerably extended, and it is greatly to be desired that the material should be brought together and bound into volumes. However, as it is, every decade except that of the Civil War is represented since l8IO. lt will be noticed that many items appear, taken from the lVlclVlurran Pamphlets. a collection formed by the late joseph lVlclVlurran, of Shepherdstown, West Virginia. to whose interest in such matters the College owes a debt that can never be paid. An examination of the dates at which these addresses were delivered establishes the fact that the change from the old to the new style of holding the College Commencements tin june instead of September, was made between the years I8-47 and l852, somewhat later than at many colleges to the North.l H ISI8. Address by the President of the Society. at the first meeting of the Society of lnquiry on Missions. lLilcrury and Evangelical llfagazine, Vol. l, pp. I7l-l75.l ISZ4. Dissertation on the Utility of the Study ot' Languages as a Means of lmprovement, by Professor W. W. Blauvelt. lLilerary and Evangelical llfagazinc, Vol. VII, pp. l69-I83.l Read before the Philosophical Society of Hampden-Sidney College. l824. Present Condition and Prospects of the Mohammedan Power, by Professor james Marsh. lLiterary and Evangelical lllagazinc, Vol. VII, pp. 225-232.1 Read before the Philosophical Society. l82-4. The Influence of the Reformation on the American Revolution, by john Holt Rice, D. D. lLitcrary and Evangelical llffagazine, Vol. Vll, pp. 505-5l-1: 561-573.1 Read before the Philo- sophical Society. ISZ4. Discourse delivered before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden-Sidney College. at their Anniversary Meeting, September 24, lS24, by John H. Rice, D. D. Published in con- formity with a resolution of the society. lLitcrary and Evangelical llfagazinc, Vol. Vlll, pp. l-9.1 ISZ7. The Prospects of Letters and Taste in Virginia. A discourse pronounced before the Literary and Philosophical Society of Hampden-Sidney College, at their fourth anniversary meeting, in September, l827. Burton Harrison. lThe Harrisons of Slgimino. Edited by Fairfax Harrison, Privately printed. l9l0, pp. 271-299.1 l835. lnaugural Address of the Rev. D. L. Carroll, D. D.. President of Hampden-Sidney College. Delivered on his induction into that office. Richmond, t835, pp. 2l. l835. Literary Associations to Promote Education. An Address delivered before the lnstitute of Education of Hampden-Sidney College lcf. Hampden-Sidney llfagazine, Vol. IX, 237-2391 at their last Commencement, by james M. Garnett. Richmond, IS35, pp. ll, double column. llVlclVlurran, IV.l IS45. The Influence of the Bible on Liberty. An Address delivered before the Union Society of Hampden-Sidney College. September lS, IS45. by Rev. S. P. Anderson, of Danville, Va. Rich- mond, lS45. pp. 32. IS45. Discourse on the Character and Services of John Hampden and the Great Struggle for Con- stitutional Liberty in his Time, by W. C. Rives, Esq. Delivered before the Trustees, Faculty and Students of HampdensSidney College. November IZ. I8-45. Richmond, I8-15, pp. 68. llVlclVlurran, llI.l 29 I8-37. Address delivered before the Philanthropic Society of Hampden-Sidney, at the Annual Com- mencement, September 22, l8-17, by S. Decatur Whittle. New York, I8-17, pp. I6. lMcMurran. lll.l l849. Inaugural Address, delivered before the Board of Trustees of Hampden-Sidney College. January l0. l849, by L. W. C-reen, D. D., President. Pittsburg, l849, pp. 29. lMcMurran, IIl.l l852. The Reformation the Source of American Liberty. An Address delivered before the Union Society of Hampden-Sidney College, june 9, 1852, by Rev. T. V. Moore, of Richmond, Va. Richmond, IBSZ, pp. 38. lMcMurran, IlI.1 IS54. The Claims of Virginia Upon her Educated Sons. Address delivered before the Union Society of Hampden-Sidney College, june l3. lS54. by Rev. A. B. Van Zandt, D. D., of Petersburg, Va. Petersburg, l85-4, pp. 27. lMcMLtrran, II.1 IB57. Sermon occasioned by the death of Charles T. Edie, who was killed by Edward A. Langhorne, at Hampden-Sidney College, january 27, VS57. Delivered in the College Church, March 22, lMcMurran, lV.l ISY3. The Religious and the Secular Culture. Address before the Alumni of Hampden-Sidney College, delivered june l2, l873, by Hon. Roger A. Pryor, of New York. New York, IS73, pp. 26. IS74. Address before the Society of Alumni of Hampden-Sidney College, by Prof. Charles S. Venable. Delivered June ll, lS7-4. Richmond, IS74, pp. 23. l876. Centennial Address, by Hugh Blair Grigsby. IMS. in the collection owned by the College.l l882. The New South. Discourse delivered at the Annual Commencement of Hampden-Sidney College, june I5, l882, before the Philanthropic and Union Literary Societies, by R. L. Dabney. D. D. lDul7ney'5 Discussions. Vol. IV, pp. l-24.1 ISS3. Address delivered at his inauguration as President, by Rev. Richard Mcllwaine, D. D., june l3, ISS3. Baltimore, pp. I3. l885. Address at the opening exercises of the College, September 3, 1885, by the Rev. R. C. Reid. lHampden-Sidney lllagazine, Vol. IV, pp. l2-l4.l lS88. Antiquity. Address delivered by Prof. Vvalter Blair, in the college Chapel, Cctober, l883. lHampden-Sitlnep lllagfazinc, Vol. IX, pp. l63- l82.l l889. l. Historical Address delivered before the Centennial Meeting of the Union Literary Society. by Rev. Peyton H. Hoge. D. D., pp. 22. 2. Unconscious Influence. Address delivered before the Union and Philanthropic Literary Societies by Rev. Thomas Hooper. D. D., june l2, 1889, pp. l3. Richmond, l889. lThe two addresses published as a pamphlet.l l89O. The Demands of Modern Life upon the School. Address before the Society of Alumni of Hampden-Sidney College. Delivered jute ll, l89O, by Wm. M. Thornton, LL. D. Vvytheville, 1890, pp. l5. lB9l. Address at the opening exercises of the College. September l0, lS9l, by Prof. John Bell Henneman. IHampden-Sidney lltlagazine, Vol. IX, pp. 49-66.1 IS93. The lnlluence of Memorials. Address before the Literary Societies. by judge Lyman Chalkley, of Staunton, Iune Zl. I893. lHampi1'cn-Siilncp flfagazinv. Vol. Xl, pp. 33-48.1 l895. Aspects and Activities of Modern College Life. Address at the opening exercises of the College, September, lS95, by Prof. H. C. Brock. lHamptlen-Siclnc-tg Illagazinc, Vol. XIII. pp. l-ll.l I900. john Mayo Rleasants Atkinson, D. D. Memorial Address. by Prof. Wm. M. Thornton. of the University of Virginia. Petersburg, l900, pp. 2l. I903. Hampden-Sidney College as an Educational Force, from the War of the Revolution to the War between the States. Address by Richa cl Nlcllwaine, D. D., LL. D., in the Memorial Chapel, Hampden-Sidney, April 20, l903. Petersburg, pp. l6. 30 1904. Some Modern Educational Tendencies Hurtful to the Development of the Highest Ideals of Character. Address delivered before the Literary Societies of Hampden-Sidney College at the Commencement at its l28th Session, june I4, 1903, by Rev. Charles Xvilliam Summerville, Ph. D.. pp. 38. 1Reprint from Hamptlen-Sidney Illagazine. November, I9O-4.1 The Literary and Philosophical Society at Hampden-Sidney College On Wednesday, the 2lst of June, l820, the delegates from the several debating societies of Hampden-Sidney convened to negotiate on the affairs of their mission. The Philanthrophic Society was represented by John B. Clauselle and Isaac Cochran, the Union Society by Daniel A. Peniclc, the Theological Society by Hugh Caldwell, and the Philosophical Society by Josiah Harris. The several delegates having formed themselves into a committee of negotiation, appointed lsaac Cochran. Chairman, and john B. Clauselle, Secretary. The report of this committee of negotiation, spread upon the Minutes of both the Literary Societies. was to the effect that all the societies mentioned fand the Symphonic Society as welll should meet in a common hall, and bear the expenses of furnishing, up-lceep. etc., in common. The Union and the Philanthropic societies were to meet on alternate Friday evenings fthe order reversed for the winter and summer sessionsj, and the Theological and Philosophical societies on Saturday evenings. Provision was made for the purchase of chairs, tables, a water-stand, candlesticlcs, and six sand-boxes for the conveniency of tobacco chewersf' Ir is not clear where the meetings were to be held, and there is evidence that the Treaty, as it is called in the Minutes, was not ratified. A few years later the two Literary Societies were installed in their excellent quarters in the middle block of the New College. There was, therefore, a Philosophical Society organized as early as t8Z0. ' Some account of its proceedings was published in the KALEIDOSCOPE for l9l0. During its recorded life, from ISZ4 to IS33, this society was perhaps of more importance than anything else of the kind in the Southern States, Phi Beta Kappa having somewhat declined at William and Mary. An attempt has been made to put together a complete list of the members, active and honorary, which is given below. The references are to the General Catalogue of the College, by years, and to the General Catalogue of Union Seminary, by number of entry. By a thorough overhauling of the Minutes of the Philosophical Society, both these catalogues may be supplemented here and there. Members, Active and Honorary, of the Literary and Philosophical Society Alexander. James W. 1Princeton, I820g Pastor. Anderson. Samuel C. HSI71 Charlotte C. H., and Fifth Avenue Presby- Archer. William S. H8081 terian Church, New Yorlc.1 Armistead, jesse S. H8231 Alison, Robt. 1U. S., 201 Armstrong, William 1Princeton, ISI61 Allen, Dr. Thomas lt8It Ol, Prince Edward Atkinson. Thomas H8251 Co.1 Atkinson. Dr. Thomas P. ll-lalifax Co.1 Allmond, W. B. H8291 Atkinson. William Nl. 1Princeton, l8l-11 'The Literary and Philosophical Society was followed about i835 by the lnstitute of Education. and that Cabout l840J by the College Club, which was continued until l89S. The old order is changed. 3I Baker. Joseph S. ICumberland Co.1 Ballentine, Elisha IU. S., 281 Ballentine, Henry IU. S.. 661 Banks, William B. Barksdale, john Il8251 Bartlett, Francis Il8251 Baxter. George A. Iprofessor, U. T. 5.1 Barnett, Nathan Il8291 Barraud, Qlway Y. Berkeley, Dr. Peyton R. II82-11 Berkeley, William Ipresident, Board of Trustees1 Bigelow, Silas Il3rince Edward C01 Birchelt, Robert, jr. Bishop, Pierrepont E. S., 441 Blain, John S. IU. S., 411 Blauvelt, W. W. Iprofessor, Hampden- Bogart, David IPrinceton, N, Booth, Edwin INottoway Co.1 Booker, Mercer lVl. Il8291 Bowman, Rev. Francis ICharlotlesville1 Bouldin, -Iames W. Branch, Samuel Il8ll1 Bradford, Dr. Robert H. IRichmond1 Broadnax, Gen. William H. Il8051 Brown, joseph IU. S., 221 Brown, Dr. IAmherst Co.1 Burwell, Armistead Il8281 Burwell, B. P. Il8301 Burwell, John II8271 Burwell, Robert Il8231 Bryan, Daniel IAlexandria1 Burfoot, T. E. ?idney1 Cable, .Ionathan IAthens, Ohio, U. S., 291 Cabell, Lewis Il8251 Cabell, N. F. II8251 Cabell, Hon. William H. Il7891 Caldwell, Hugh Il82l1 Caldwell, john lVl. IU. S., 671 Calhoun, Philo IU. S., 461 Carr, Dr. Francis IAlbemarle Co.1 Campbell, Charles IPetersburg1 Carrington, Clement Il7761 Carrington, Henry Il8ll1 Carrington, lsaac Il8301 Carrington, Paul S. ICharlotte Co.1 Carter, William Nl. Il82l1 Chittenden, William B. Il8241 Clarke, William H. Il8231 Cooke. john Ilrluvanna Co.1 Cocke. Benjamin IPrince George Co.1 Cochran, Isaac Il8221 Coleman, Henry E. IHampden-Sidney, and Princeton. l7861 Coleman, Algernon Comfort. David Iprincelon, 18261 Condit, IRobert W. IPD, Princeton, l8l41 Converse, john K. Cook, William G. Il8261 Cooley, i. Cox, -Iames H. Il8291 Crozet, Claude Irhe French engineer1 Crawford, Beverley Il8231 Cralle, Richard K. Il8231 Crump, Dr. George W. Iprinceton, l8051 Cushing, Ionathan IPresident, Hampden-Sidney1 Dabney. George E. Il8261 Dabney, john B. It8tI: Princeton. l8l41 Dame, G. W. Iljrofessor, Hampden-Sidney1 Dance, Matthew Iprince Edward Co.1 ' Daniel, Hon. William Il7951 Daniel, William A. Il8261 Dillon, James IPrince Edward Co., I823 Douglass, Rev. james W. IPrince Edward Co.1 Dresser, Rev. Charles Il-lalifax Co.1 Drumgoole, George C. IBrunswick Co.1 Dupuy, Dr. William Il8l31 Dutton, Francis IU. S., 691 Edie, Joseph S. Il8251 Elcan, P. H. Il83U1 Elliott, William H. ICharlotte Co., 1820 Farrar, Dr. Richard E. IPrince Edward Co. Farrar, Dr. Stephen D. IPrince Edward Co.1 Field, Dr. Richard IlVleclclenburg Co.1 Flint, Michael Fitzgerald, George Il8271 Fitzgerald, William G. Il8281 Flournoy, Henry Il8251 Flournoy, Thomas S. Il83l1 Flournoy, William C. H8301 Ford. Dr. Stirling Foreman, Stephen IU. S., 481 Fowler, john W. 32 Garland, Hugh A. 1Professor. Hampden-Sidney1 Garland, Landon C. H8291 Casperi, Col. Louis lprofessor, Hampden-Sidney1 Giles, Thomas T. H8241 Goddard, Charles 1Richmond-Pollard St God- dard, Franklin Press1 Golladay. Peter H. 1U. S., 301 Goodrich. Hiram P. 1Professor. Union Seminaiy1 Graham, Samuel L. 1Professo:, Union 5eminaiy1 Creenup. Christopher Hjrinceton, ISZZ Crigsby, Hugh Blair 1Norfolk, and Charlotte Co.1 Hall. james D. 1U. S., 701 Halyburton. john D. 1New Kent Co.1 Hamner, James G. H8201 Harris. Josiah H8201 South Carolina1 Harrison. Buxton 1l82l1 Harris. William L. Hart. Andrew H8261 Hatch, Benjamin 1l8ZI1 Hatch, Daniel G. H8361 Hatch, Lemuel 1Newbern, Noith Carolina1 Hicks, James T. 1t83Ig Oxford, North Carolina1 Hoge, John B. H8081 Hoge. Thomas P. IISI71 1Holeman, George P. H8301.1 Holt. john T. H8291 Holbrook, Major 1Washington1 Holladay, Albert L. 1Professor, Hampden-Sidney1 Houston. Samuel R. 1U. S.. 771 Howaid, Nathaniel P. H8281 Howe, Hiram 1U. S., 321 Howe, Norval D. H8261 Hubbard. Dr. john F. Hunt, Thomas P. H8131 Hunter, Andrew H8221 Huid, Samuel 1U. S., l21 lrvine, james H8281 Johnston, Cyrus ll82ll Johnston, Thomas P. 1U. S.. 491 jones, Dr. -1ames H7911 jon... John W. 118331 Jones, Marshall 118251 Kenny, Edward Kilpatrick. Abner W. H8l31 Kilpatrick, Joseph D. Kilpatrick. Rufus H. H8221 Kingsbury. Enoch B. 1Amherst. N. H., Union Seminary, not catalogue-d1 Kirkpatrick, H. P. H8301 Kirkpatrick. John H8121 Kollock, Rev. Shepherd K. 1Princeton, l8l21 Knox. James 1U. S.. 341 Laboree. Rev. joseph for james CUB 1North Carolina1 Lacy, Drury 1Vice-President, Hampden-Sidney1 Leach. james H. C. 1U. S.. p. 391 Leigh. Hon. Benjamin Vvatkins 1Richmond1 Leigh. Judge William 1Halifax Co.1 Ligon. james D. H8271 Ligon. Hon. Thomas Vvatkins H8301 Lindley. Daniel 1U. S., 361 Logan, Richard H-Ialifax Co.1 Lyle. Dr. james 1Washington College. Va., l8l91 Lyle. Rev. Matthew 1l..iberty Hall, Academy. Va l782-891 Nlcclean. Hector 1U. S.. 521 McCutchan, john S. 1U. S.. 371 McEwen, john 1U. S.. l-11 McFarland, William H. H8191 Mclver, Alexander 1U. S.. 251 Mclnlyre, Dugald 15. S.. 81 McNair, Evander 1U. S., 531 McNeill. Hector 1U. S.. 541 McPl-iail, john B. H8271 McRae, Sherwin H8221 McViccar, Peter 1Professor. Hampden-Sidney1 Madison, james 1Prince Edward Co.1 Mahon. joseph 1U. S., 381 Mann. Royall 1U. S., 551 Mason. Hon. john Y. 1Creensville Co.1 Ma sh, james 1Professor, Hampden-Sidney1 May, David 1Peteisburg1 May, Dr. James 1Mecklenburg Co.1 May, john F. Matthews, Samuel 1U. S., 781 Maxwell, Hon. William 1President. Hampden- Sidney1 Metcalf, Allen D. H8231 Miller, John H815 f?J, Cumberland Co.1 Miller. Thomas 1Powhatan Co.1 Minge, james H8271 Mitchell. Dr. Thomas P. 1Bedford Co.1 33 Morgan, Gilbert Iprofessor. Hampden-Sidney1 Morris, Richard H834 lVlorton, Major -lames Iprince Edward Co.1 Morton, S. D. Morton, Dr. William S. H8051 Morton. Thomas A. ITrustee1 Morrow. Thomas IU. S., 801 Nelson. George W. Ilaynchburg: lawyer, and Episcopal minister1 Newman, james 118261 Nimmo, joseph U820: Portsmouth1 Nulting, Rufus Iprofessof, Hampden-Sidney1 Oliver, William W. Il82l1 Page, William N. H8211 Patton, John IU. S., 571 Paul, Rev. Isaac Payne, George lVl. IISI 4: Buckingham Co.1 Paxton, john D. Iprofessor, Hampden-Sidney1 Penick, Daniel A. H82l1 Pharr, Dion Cassius H8291 Pharr, Henry N. H8221 Phillips, James W. IU. S., 8l1 Pierson. Philip IU. S., 591 Plumer, Rev. XV. S. IWashington College, Va., l8251 Pollard, Willzam H. Il8221 Porter, George lVl. Powers, Rev. W. ICaswell Co., North Carolina1 Preston, W'illiam Ballard H8241 Price, Samuel H8291 Proctor, David Iprince Edward Co.1 Pryor, Theoclrick H8261 Ramsay, jesse IU. S.. 4l1 Randolph. William Randolph, William F. Read Read Read Read Read Reid, Rice. , Clement H8261 . Edwin E. H8281 , lsaac H8251 Nicholas Il8281 Read, , Nicholas C. H8261 Read, . Whitefield H8261 William S. Iprofessor. Hampden-Sidney1 Thomas H8261 Benjamin H. Ibrother of John Holt Rice1 Rice, John Holt Iprofessor, Hampden-Sidney, etc.1 Rives, Alexander H8251 Rives, Robert Rives, l-lon. William C. Il8ll1 Robinson, James IAlbemarIe Co.1 Robinson, Dr. Thomas Robinson, Vl'yndl'iam IRichmond1 Robinson, William M. Root, Elihu IPrince Edward Co.1 Russell, Daniel l... H8261 Royall, john H8251 Ryland, Rev. Robert Sawtell, -. Scott, Alexander Iprince Edward Co.1 Scott, H. E.. Scott, William C. II8271 Skillman, T. B. Iprofessor, Hampden-Sidney1 Scruggs, Edward l... IISZII Smith, Aristides S. II8281 Smith, Benjamin lVl. H8291 Smith, l... l... H8291 Smith, Henry IU. S., 41 Smith, Rev. Samuel H. IGranville Co., North Carolina1 Smith, Dr. W. B. ITrustee Southgate, Robert H83l1 Spears, James G. 1l822g Cabarrus Co.. N. C.1 Speece, Frederick Spotswood, John B. IU. S., 761 Spooner, Aldin B. 118341 Stanton, Rev. Benjamin F. Iprince Edward Co.1 Steptoe, Dr. William Swann, George T. H. H8271 Taylor, Stephen Iprofessor, Union Seminary1 Tenny, Roswell IU. S., 91 Tinsley. William B. H8271 Thornton, S. A. H8291 Thornton, William ll8l9 Tucker, Hon. George Tucker, Dr, Henry W. Turner, Jesse H. ll809p Richmoncl1 Turnbull, Robert D. H8231 Treadway. William H8271 Venable, Abram W. H8l51 Venable, Henry l. IU. S., 851 34 Venabiew Nathaniel E. H8081 Henry E.. 1Princeton, 18011 Venable. Paul C. 11821 Venable, Richard N. 118271 Venahle. Thomas H. 118281 Venahle. Samuel 1... 118231 Venable. Samuel VU. 1Prince Vfalker, B. P. H8261 Walker, james H8231 Vvalkins Henry A. 117931 Nvalkins Wvalkins Henry N. 118071 Watkins S. V. 118241 Watkins S. V. Q1 Watkins. William M. Harinceton. 17921 Edward Co.1 Xvatkins, Vvilliam 1V1. 1182-tl Vvalkins. Joel H82-11 Vvatts, john S. H8261 Vvalls. A. 1... 1U. S., 271 Vvharey, james H8171 Vlfhile, Wm. S. H8241 Witherow, Nvilliam E. 1U. S., 871 Williams. Caleb S. 1U. S.. 641 Wilson, Dr. Goodridge 1Prince Edward Co.1 Xvilson, john P. Wilson, S. B. O. 1U. S., 861 Vvood, Henry Hgrofessor, Hampden-Sidney1 Xvood. Henry C. 118311 Vvomack. Vvilliam M. 118311 Vvyche. -1ohn 1'8Z51 The Harbor of My Dreams Comes a voice from out the future, calling through a mist of years, As it hangs, a veil of darkness, 'twixt me and its smiles and tears: And it bids me never weary, tho' the voyage endless seems, For the land of misty future is the harbor of my dreams. Purple twilight ever deepens on the sails within the bay, And the ships of dreams are coming from the Land of Far Away. Boyhood's golden youthful dreams there are anchored side by side, With the glorious dreams of manhood set a-sailing with the tide. With their cargoes all unloaded on the pier beside the sea, They are safe from storms and billows and are waiting there for me. So 1'm sailing to the future, to the harbor of my dreams- And I'11 sail until the darkness but a mist of silver gleams. J. M. CROCKETT, 'll 35 Richard Morton Venable 0Q7DqmD XUICHARD MORTON VENABLE was born February 8, IQ39, in W9 f . X Charlotte County, Virginia, his parents being Richard N. and Magdalen 5 fed McCampbell Venable. gi! He attended Hampden-Sidney College, from which he graduated i M ' in IS57, and subsequently entered the University of Virginia, where he studied applied mathematics and engineering for two years, until his studies were inter- rupted by the breaking out of the Civil War. On April Zl, l86l, he enlisted as a private in the Richmond Howitzers, and served in the Confederate Army throughout the war, becoming successively Lieutenant of Artillery, Lieutenant of Engineers, Captain of Artillery and Engineers and Major of Artillery and Engineers. Until IS63 he served in the Army of Northern Virginia, but was then transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Department. When the war ended the quite considerable patrimony which Major Venable had inherited had been destroyed, and he found himself in the same situation as so many of the younger men in the Southern Army whose studies for a profession had been inter- rupted by the four years of war. He first went to Texas, and then became Commandant of Cadets and Professor of Engineering at the Military Academy and University of Louisiana, from which he went to Washington and Lee University, at Lexington, Virginia, of which General Robert E.. Lee was then President, where for two years he taught mathematics and also studied law, receiving his diploma as a Bachelor of Law in l868. He then came to Baltimore to engage in the practice of his chosen profession, and resided there until his death, a period of forty-one years. Shortly after coming to Balti- more, in l87l, he entered into partnership with Mr. joseph Packard, as the firm of Venable and Packard, which continued until l892. In I900 he formed, together with two younger lawyers who had been associated with him in practice, the Firm of Venable. Baetjer and Howard, of which he continued to be the senior member until his death, although he had withdrawn from active practice for the last three years. He was a member of the law faculty of Johns Hopkins University from 1872 to l906, during the greater part of which time he lectured on Real Property and Leasehold Estates, Constitutional and Statute Law and General Jurisprudence: and for part of the time lectured on Criminal Law and the Law or Torts. Nothing that Major Venable ever undertook was clone in a perfunctory way, and he applied himself to his duties as a teacher of the law with the same zeal, untiring industry, intellectual acuteness and breadth ol view which distinguished him in other matters. His work on the law of real property in Maryland, which he prepared and published in connection with his work at the 36 University, and primarily for the use of his students there, but which has also been of the greatest service to the profession, shows how thoroughly he had mastered the principles and learning of the most difficult branch of study in the legal profession. To the public, Major Venable is best known from his public services to the City of Baltimore. He was one of the most active and influential members of the committee of prominent citizens who were appointed by Mayor McLane immediately after the conflagration of I904, and drafted the 'iBurnt District Act and it was largely due to his effort that the public improvements effected at that time, and especially the system of public docks, were made. He was also for many years a member of the board of trustees of the Johns Hopkins University and the Johns Hopkins Hospital, and Vice-President of the latter. ln the early part of l907 Major Venable was first stricken with the disease of the heart and circulation which ultimately caused his death. He died on July IO, l9l0, after a final illness of about two months. As a lawyer, Major Venable's ability and attainments were of a kind that were better appreciated by the members of his own profession than by the general public. While his strong personality and gifts of humor were such that he was always interesting as a speaker upon any subject, even to those who might be quite unfamiliar with it, yet only the members of his own profession can appreciate the thorough knowledge of the principles and of the history of our law which he brought to any discussion of legal questions, and the clearness and force with which he could present his views. His memory was most retentive, and his mere learning as a lawyer very great: but it consisted in no bare recollection of rules or of cases: for all that he studied he had made his own. As a lecturer and teacher his inHuence upon the bar of the State has been very great. Notwithstanding the difficulty of the subjects which he taught at the University, and the high standard of study and application which he exacted from his students, he was always most popular with them: and the kind and sympathetic interest which he took in younger men and beginners in the profession was one of his many amiable traits of character. His services to the public and to the City of Baltimore, especially in connection with its parks, should be more and more appreciated as the growth of the city shows of what importance they have been. It is but expressing but slightly the loss to the profession and the community which his passing away has caused, to say that he occupied a position of usefulness and of honor in both which were in many respects unique. Born almost within sound of the college bell and trained in the halls of Hampden- Sidney, Major Venable retained, throughout the course of a long and busy life, a lively interest in the development and advancement of his Alma Mater and a most sympathetic and generous attitude toward the welfare, the sports, and the amusements of the student 37 body. Of the many directions in which Major Venable's interest was displayed in a practical and lasting form only the more important can be briefly stated here. Realizing the disadvantage under which the athletic teams of the College labored for lack of a suitable athletic field, Major Venable, in the year 1892, had the present athletic grounds-appropriately called 'ivenable Field -cleared, levelled, drained, and properly laid off, thus providing for use of the baseball and football teams an athletic ground, larger, better, and more conveniently situated than any other in Virginia at that time. It was largely through the generous aid afforded by Major Venable that the Board of Trustees was able, in l896, to erect the water supply station and to provide the dormitory with the sanitary conveniences necessary for health and comfort. After the formation of the present connection between the Synod of Virginia and Hampden-Sidney College in l90l, the Board of Trustees considered it a matter of consistency, if not of wisdom, to forbid the use of any of the college property for dances or germans. As there were no rooms in the neighborhood of the College that were suitable for such a purpose, this action amounted to a virtual prohibition of this form of amuse- ment. Believing that the abolition of this usual and innocent form of amusement would work a hardship on the students and would seriously impede the progress of the College, Mr. R. K. Brock, '97, together with a few others deeply interested in the matter, under- took the difficult and unwelcome task of raising the amount needed to acquire or build rooms in which the regular dances of the session could be held. Learning of the per- sistent zeal and untiring efforts of Mr. Brock and his associates and being in entire sympathy with their purpose, Major Venable stepped into the breach and presented to the Comity Club, upon its incorporation, the cottage which is its home: the painting and repairing of the building to fit it for its use were done at the expense of Major Venable, who, in addition, presented to the Club most of the furniture needed in the building. As none of the rooms in the original cottage was large enough to hold a german in with com- fort, it was found necessary to erect a large extension at once, and toward the cost of this Nlajor Venable made a substantial contribution. A year or two after the removal of the Union Theological Seminary from Hampden- Sidney to Richmond the Board of Trustees of the Seminary offered the property of the Seminary in the neighborhood of the College to the Board of Trustees of Hampden- Sidney for the lump sum of Sl0,000. The sum required for this purchase was promptly provided by Major Venableg as the result of this munificent and timely gift the College came into possession of the present commodious and handsome library building, together with two substantial brick dwelling houses, and a second large dormitory. A year or so later the same generous alumnus offered to the Board of Trustees the brick dwelling, now occupied by Dr. I-l. C. Winston, in order that the former residence of the President of the College, abutting on the Campus, might be abandoned as a dwelling, the outbuildings about it removed, and its garden and fields added to the Campusg this offer being accepted, Major Venable arranged for the removal of the outbuildings and 38 the turfing of the adjacent fields. The marked addition to the beauty of the Campus has elicited the warm praise of all who could recall the former appearance of this part of the College grounds. It has been said that, very shortly after the close of the War between the States, Dr. D. Eggleston, of Worsham, and Dr. Robert L. Dabney, of the Union Theolog- ical Seminary, urged upon the Boards of the Seminary and of the College the desirability, if not the necessity, of acquiring at once the land lying contiguous to the property of the two institutions, in order to prevent this land from passing into the possession of persons, negroes or others, whose presence would be unwelcome to those living in the community or inimical to the welfare of the two institutions. Although the land could have been purchased at the time for a trifling amount, the suggestion was not favored by either Board: in particular the idea that the land would ever be bought by a negro was held to be wholly unfounded, if not ridiculous. But a few years had passed before it became painfully apparent that the wisdom of the two authors of the suggestion had been justified by the event: a large and thriving colony of negroes grew up within a stone's throw of the College gates, and there it remains to this day to disprove the ancient adage: ln a multitude of counsellors there is wisdom. The same thought of protecting the College from the near presence of undesirable neighbors seems to have taken deep root in the mind of Major Venable and to have led him to purchase, from time to time, as the land came into the market, various plots lying adjacent to the lands of the College: this property came to the College by bequest after the untimely death of the thoughtful and gener- ous donor. In view of the number and variety of these gifts, of their aggregate amount, and of the varied and widely different uses that they subserve, it must be held that Major Venable was the most sympathetic and far-sighted of the friends of Hampden-Sidney College and the largest contributor to its development in its life of I35 years. B 39 The Class of '92 639355 WANT to tell KALEIDOSCOPE readers about a wild, funny dream I had. I would go out under the old oak by the belfry, where I hear Wat J yelling and Cochran trying to sing, and tell it to the boys, but it is so Q .D . . gfiv Cuff be X grotesquely absurd that I believe it will do for the Annual. I seemed to be away up the country in an old manse, where a stately, if somewhat poverty-stricken, woman presided over a household of noisy youngsters. A tall rogue of some eleven years rushed in and handed me some letters and one of them was,-what do you think?-a request to write for the l9ll Annual. How circum- stantial is a dream! Now why eleven and not ten or twelve? Near twenty years! I threw that slanderous letter down and turned to the calendar, and that said I9I l. I fell on that big boy and punched him till he roared, to see if perchance he were real, and that dream woman-well, the boys will know that I, the only one of the class that can't march up to the mouth of a woman and take it, the one who flies in confusion from the very rustle of calico, didn't Clare pinch her for a like experiment, so I fell to tearing my hair. Behold, some are gray! I fly round like a decapitatecl chicken till I come to a mirror and that says twenty years. All these things mock me till I begin to think it may be real,-what walls are these? This room is not the old third passage back. Woodw'orth! Crane! Jar! Xllfhere are you! Which is the dream? Is that Wat's yell, or a mill whistle? That's not Preston trying to sing. One of my hopefuls has bumped his nose. That passage storming-a stalled freight train. And that other loud- ness is not Cranes blue pants, but a fire alarm. It is even so. It is twenty years and the boys are scattered. lVlcAden's bang is gone ancl l'ligg couldn't throw a ball fifty yards and two or three determined Fresh could shove old Holmes half-way to the goal line. As we turn to look the koys up, the first thing that meets with us and smites down the eyelids is the sad gaps in the wall. For death began his ravages even before the most of us had entered college when hlno. M. Barr was cut clown in the midst of his college course, and Bruce Harper dropped out and followed before we knew him. Then Charlie Moore, of the ready pen, was called from his teaching, Jim Moss, so strong, stalwart, hearty from his business in '93. In '97, Richard Gilliam, after a brief practice of Law, passed away. In '99, S. T. Martin, gay, reckless, big-hearted Taylor, just when his life had been devoted to the Gospel ministry. Next year Joe Price, steady, faithful Joe, was taken from the same high calling. Geo. W. Lawson closed his earthly ministry in l904. In IQO6, Dan Young, and in 1907. Fred Wallace, our Fritz, both honored, successful lawyers, were taken from us. -lil Last, in l908, Jno. L. Irvine. These were all of us and have gone out from us. and of the memory of each one we are proud. On the whole, the surviving members of '92 have made good. Seven have followed commercial and business lines. Five are engaged in educational work. One architect is helping to beautify newer Baltimore. One upholds the dignity of the U. S. A. in Manila. Eight learned luminaries are dispensing legal light in various parts of the country. Two dispense pills and such to the real or imaginary ills of humanity. Eight are dispensing the everlasting gospel, and nobody knows where F. S. Blair is, unless it is jim Hart. Sandy Arbuckle is amputating battered heads and mending crushed limbs at Elkins, W. Va. Chas. Armstrong Moses may be addressed as Division Superintendent International Correspondence Schools, Evansville, Ind. We don't know whether the communication will reach him or not, however, as ours don't seem to. jim Bell has trained down that high-soaring tenor and projects it over a Dallas, Tex.. pulpit, right at the heads of his congregations. C. M. Chumbly, variously known as Chum, the 'AFarmer and the Tub, after a pastorate of several years in Richmond, is now serving the church in Campbells- ville, Ky. If you go to Lynchburg. Va., Paulette Clark is ready to dose you for your ills at home or to assist Omnibus Morrison f'9ll at the Hygeia Hospital to remove any surplus eyes, ears or throats you may have contracted. Lynchburg also boasts the residence of Don Halsey, who, if you go when tlie Virginia Senate is not in session and before the next congressional election, will see you triumphantly through the law courts. Also one of Hampden-Sidney's fairest Howers is blooming in his home. Jim Cook, after successful pastorates in Richmond and Clifton Forge, is now in charge of Fulton Avenue Church, Baltimore. He reports himself as neither great nor small, but privately we believe him to be somewhat rotund, if not absolutely globular. Crane is honored among legal circles in Augusta, Ca. Blair Dickinson is conduct- ing with signal success the University High School at Birmingham, and with his two little girls is eager to meet with '92 at H. S. next year. Parke Flournoy is practising architecture in Baltimore. Lanier Harper, although he has been hampered by ill health, is now preaching vigorously at Brabton, Va. Jim Hart has 'em all tagged at the Roanoke City Bar, and although he don't make much noise, is heard from very effectively. H. B. Hawes CCrackD, lover, literateur and lawyer. is writing and practising in St. Paul, Minn. -ll A. S. Higginbotham is holding his own in Tazewell out in the West. No laggard in love and no dastard in politics, he is still undefeated, though his party got it in the neck. Richard Irving, 31 Nassau St., has wrung a living out of the New York law courts for ten years and reports still out of jail-must be either in with the machine or on its trail. Robert Randolph Jones is just twenty. He himself has said it-the one exemption from the cruel buffetings of Time. He is Superintendent of Schools in Petersburg, and we bet a horse-that is, we venture surmise-that he keeps recalcitrant teachers in order with dippers of cold water. joel Watkins Lacy, Sr. and Jr.-canit tell 'em apart. Old Wat is so dignified these days, but one or the other is preaching at Glenwood, Md. Jas. Lancaster has a good business in Farmville and invites all his old classmates to call on him and his wife and little girl at their comfortable home. Old Uncle Sam, like other heathen in his kindness, has never yet called any of us to the White House, but Henry McAden is president of nearly all that's going from the National Bank to the McAden Mills in Charlotte, N. C., not to mention some enterprises in South Carolina. His topknot has departed, but the gray matter is still plentiful be- neath as seen by the fringes at sides and back. Steve Mcllwaine is in the box at Tyler, Tex., and we are sure sends in some hot ones to judge and jurors. Cochran Preston, from a beloved Virginia minister, has gone to be an Arkansas Sky-Pilot and may be addressed at Batesville. Holmes Rolston, minister, Snyder, Va., has done some years of good work as Superintendent of Home Missions in Lexington Presbytery. John E. Williams, Ph. D., M. A. and C. E., is holding down various faculty posi- tions, besides the Chair of Math at the V. P. I., Blacksburg, Va. Robert Sayres is in the service of his Government at Manila, P. I. Henry Venable, at the Law Building, Norfolk, has held positions of public im- portance and is still eloquent as of yore. M. G. Woodworth and Mrs. Woodworth and the little girl are Professors of English at the Presbyterian College at Clinton, S. C. This leaves the writer, who, in the intervals of a mediocre service to many country churches, is getting two young hopefuls ready to meet the sons of '92 in class- room and campus at the old College-if the rest clon't all insist on being girls. And may we all meet next year in old Memorial Hall. 42 My College Mates ln the dead years when the fatherly oaks Still fondled our old recl wall. And silvery mosses a century deep All under the weather-worn eaves would creep- ln the southern corner tail. The queerest college-clique men ever knew Roomed up by the Phi Kappa Hall. Never were people as timid as they- ln casual passings-by. The quickest of glances was all one got, But. whether the greeting was brusque. or not. Somewhat in the big brown eye. Or whisk of the head. to the meeting lent A charm that was quaint and shy. 'Twas said they were come of Colonial race, And many a Virginian knows High seats of their grand-uncles, dead and gone. Pamunkey's and Nlattapo's banks upong And although history shows No Pleromysls climbed to the topmost place. They were climbers-to their toes. Our prim old college was never Co-ed, But. scorning that antique rule, This coterie, brothers and sisters too, Took up the studies that suited their view, And suffered nor doom nor dool- Went barefoot and bareheaclecl all year round, But wore furs when it was cool. They made a poor showing in Ethics, of course And Chemistry, did not try- lndeed, they cared little for any degree. With the single exception of NB. Sc. - But they did-learn how to Hy! To leap from the edge of the topmost sill. And fling out their feet and fly. Oh, dear were the vanished years when the oak Leaned over Life's ivied wall. And green as the mosses that old roofs keep. Are the memories shut in a warm heart deep- And l smile as l recall That nest of flying squirrels 'neath the sill Up there by the Phi Kappa Hall. W H Wooos NOTE-ln a remote and vacant room in the main building of Hampden-Sidney College during the autl1or's term, flying squirrels built a nest under the window-sill. 'Their family name. 43 The Honorable Thomas S. Bocock QMAY 18, l8l5+AUc.. 5, I89l.J Thomas S. Bocock was the son of John Thomas Bocock and Mary Flood, his wife. John Thomas Bocock became the hrst representative of the County of Appomattox in the Virginia Legislature, and also the first clerk of the County Court of Appomattox. He stood in high repute with the people of his county and his region, as a man of intelligence, probity, and judgment. No man was more trusted by them than he. He was a judge among them without civil rank as such. Before him were settled many cases that without him would have been fought out in the courts. Mary Flood, his wife, was a worthy representative of a fine old family of that name, which has done its part in the making of Southside Virginia since far back in Colonial days. She was a woman of line natural endowmentsgstrong sense, great decision of character, and lovable temperament. She was a devoted Christian and a faithful mother. To this pair were given eight sons and four daughters-a family more remarkable for high endowments than for its size. The eldest son, Willis P. Bocock, became the distinguished Attorney General of Virginia: another son, Nicholas Bocock, became known as a brilliant ornament of the Virginia bar: another became an able lawyer, Henry Bocock of Lynchburg. Another son, John Holmes Bocock, ranked as one of the most eloquent and effective preachers of the Presbyterian Church in his day. Another distinguished himself greatly in academical and medical study and gave promise of great distinction in medicine, when an early death cut him down. The most brilliant member of the family, however, was the subject of this sketch. Thomas S. Bocock was born May IS, ISI5, in that part of Buckingham County which was subsequently thrcwn into Appomattox when the latter county was created. He received his early education in a school established in the household, and presided over, when he was a pupil, by his brother, Xvillis P. The issue showed that his training was excellent. He entered Hampden-Sidney College in IS37, among whose students at the time were Thomas T. Tredway, Charles Scott Carrington, William Cabell Carrington, Moses Drury Hoge, Francis Deane Irving, Beverly Randolph, Robert Lewis Dabney and Wood Bouldiri. He sat under John William Draper, in physical science: Francis H. Smith, in mathematics: Daniel Lynn Carroll, in mental and moral philosophy: and others, as teachers. He was graduated with the degree of A. B., and with the highest honors of his class, in l838. Meanwhile his speeches in old Union Society had become famous. After leaving college he studied law with his brother. Willis. 44 His was the day when the office sought the man rather than the man the office. When the principal men of Buckingham County met together at their court house to name a man to represent them in the Virginia House of Delegates, they went out to the brilliant, buoyant, lovable Tom Bococlc, about as soon as he had reached the requisite age. They elected him and re-elected him to represent their county: and he did the work with distinction, young as he was, albeit the first intellects of the State were then exercised in her legislative halls. When Appomattox County was constructed, being cut off from Buckingham, the people of the new county made him, for the years H345 and l846, Commonwealth's Attorney for their county. He had, by this time, made such an impression upon the pecple of his region that, though he was only thirty-two years old, he was elected to the House of Representatives of the United States, where he continued, with waxing influence and honors, to represent his district through seven successive terms, Urotwithstanding the fact that the district was twice changed at the bequest of persors wfo were covetous of his seat, and who contended for it with him. Mr. Bococlt impressed his views and personality upon some of the most important legislation of his period. He was chairman of the committee on Naval Affairs, for about ten years. Upon beirg assigned to this position he at once set his mind to devise and submit a definite and clear naval policy for our countryn: he informed himself thoroughly as to the condition of the American navy, and the condition of the navies of the other great powers, informed hirrself as to America's naval necessities: he eloquently expounded the conditions ard needs before the Congress, and with vast wealth of argument, put with every appearance of fairness, with great adroitness and skill, plead for the upbuilding of the navy. He secured some very radical and useful reforms in that branch of the public service, and did much to build up the navy. Mr. Bococlc enjoyed in an unusual degree the esteem of his fellow members of Congress. His geniality, his unvarying courtesy, his high sense of duty to devote his time and talents to the service of the people as a member of the Congress, his breadth of vision and wealth of intelligence, his genuine statescraft, and his splendid eloquence drew to him the unfeigned admiration and regard of his distinguished assessors in the House. Their regard was sometimes expressed in quarters where one would not have expected it. About 1859 two young Virginians, travelling in Kansas, learned that Mr. Anson Burlingame, of Massachusetts, was to address a political meeting that evening in the town in which they happened then to be. Having nothing better to do, they went to hear Mr. Burlingame. He gave to the Kansas Republicans of that town a plain talk, to the effect that the Re- publicans were not sending to the National Legislature the proper type of representatives: that they were not sending men whom one could admire and trust: that they should emulate the Southern Democrats, and send such men as Mr. Boyce of South Carolina and Mr. Lamar of Mississippi and lVlr. Bocock of Virginia. Mr. Bocock was so habitually courteous, so considerate of the rights of his fellows, so quiclc and accurate in his grasp of a parliamentary situation, and at the same time so 45 firm in his convictions and calm and masterful in his handling of bodies. that he was often called temporarily to preside in the Speaker's Chair. His recognized abilities as a presiding officer, added to his career of distinguished achievements in Congress as a practical legislator, to his brilliant social and oratorical gifts, and to his powers of debate and parliamentary strategy, made him the logical candidate of the Democratic caucus for Speaker of the House in the year l859. The Honorable John Sherman of Ohio was the nominee of the Republican party. The struggle between these two giants was of the most intense and protracted character. The first roll call developed a tie vote between the two. That was repeated throughout eight weeks. The struggle was so long and so bitter that it induced a paralysis of business. At length Messrs. Bocock and Sherman both withdrew from the race, and Mr. William Pennington of New Jersey was elected. The chosen man of his party in Congress, an admired friend of Mr. Buchanan's, desired everywhere, distinguished in every company, the mouth-piece of his party on great occasions, the mouth-piece of the government at times, as when designated to deliver an eulogy on Washington, at the unveiling of l-loudon Statue, Mr. Bocock stood, to outward seeming in the latter part of his congressional career in Washington, in the foremost ranks of the great men of the period. He was an old-time Union Democrat. He recalcitrated against the oncoming of the war. As long as there appeared to be a possible hope of peace between the sections, he struggled for peace. His sagacity foretold him the horrors of the war whose coming he feared. But he was a loyal states rights man, and, when Virginia seceded, he threw himself heart and soul into her cause. He became one of the most loyal and able upholders of the Confederacy. Virginia sent him as one of her representatives to the Provisional Congress of the Confederacy. Upon the regular organization of the Confederate House of Congress, he became its Chairman, thus coming into that civil office of the Confederacy which has been considered next to the highest. This exalted position he filled thenceforth during the continuance of the illustrious but short-lived Confederacy, with great favor and growing distinction. Rarely have been seen in any presiding officer such perfect self-command, readiness and courtesy. ln illustration of these qualities it is sometimes related that in that Congress there were two gentlemen from the State of Arkansas, one of whom pronounced the name of his State, Arffan'sas, and the other of whom pronounced it as if it were spelled Arkansawg and that Mr. Bocock invariably announced the gentleman who pronounced the name of his state Arlfan'sas as, the gentle- man from Arlfan'sas g and announced the gentleman who pronounced the name of his state Arkansaw as, the gentleman from Arkansawf' Marked for his courtesy, he was no less marked for his information and ready command of the history and rationale of parliamentary law: no less marked for his convictions as to the policies which his government needed to pursue. l'le was far from always agreeing with Mr. Davis' policy: and once was chairman of the Virginia delegation which went to Mr. Davis in a body to protest against some of his administrative ideas. 46 From 1861 to IS64, it was Mr. Bococlcis privilege to admire, in the brilliant exploits of that dashing cavalier and great cavalry leader, C-en. E. B. Stuart, the prowess of one whose admission to West Point he had secured. It was his grief to see Gen. Stuart, after reaching his high degree of fame, fall an apparently vain sacrifice, as so many of our noblest were doing, in behalf of the rights of the Southland. His loyalty to his State shows more brightly in her hour of humiliation. Soon after the war Mr. Augustus Schell, a Democratic politician of New York, a man of large wealth, begged Mr. Bocock to settle there for the practice of his profession, promising him liberal support and political preferment. He was ready to guarantee the sum of 510,000 per annum, until Mr. Bocock could establish himself, and thence return again to Congress. But to this and other tempting offers the patriot turned a deaf ear, choosing rather to suffer afHiction,' with his own people, than to enjoy the riches of those who had impoverished them. He hoped to serve his people in their destitution, amidst the ashes of their homes, and the graves of their dead. As soon as circumstances allowed, after the close of the war, that he might extricate himself from poverty, he removed to Lynchburg. and entered actively into the practice of his profession. Meanwhile, during the days of Reconstruction, and subsequently, he was much upon the hustings, voicing the rights of his people, and endeavoring to lead them to measures which promised equitable relief from their disheartening burdens. The Democrats sent him to the Virginia Legis- latures of 1869 and l870, where he became one of the authors of the Bocock-Fowler Bill, which embodied a settlement, claimed to be just to the State and to the creditors, but which the creditors would not accept. He was painfully injured in the memorable Capitol disaster, April 27, l870, when the floor of the House of Delegates fell ing one of his legs sustained a fracture from which he was somewhat lame to the end of his life. He was urged for the United States Senate in l873, to succeed Mr. Lewis, but his prominence in the Confederate Congress made his election seem unwise. He was content, apparently, to work quietly in the ranks of his party. He continued to be a familiar figure in the State Conventions of his party, and in the Chair of their presiding officer. He was sent as a delegate to several national Democratic conventions. Thus he was a delegate to the Seymour Convention in l868: he helped to nominate Tilden at St. Louis, in I876. He helped materially to nominate Hancock at Cincinnati, in ISSU. In that convention he seized the banner of the Virginia Delegation and waved it for Hancock at a critical point when Randall was nearly nominated. He had an eye for a crisis in a convention. He knew the thing, great or little, to be done at such a time. In the support of these men, as in that of Mr. Greeley, he showed a breadth of statesmanship, a large-hearted self-sacrifice, and a freedom of partisan prejudice very remarkable. He had been a life-long opponent of Mr. Greeley: but in the Greeley campaign, in a magnificent speech in Lynch's warehouse in Lynchburg, on the occasion of the ratification of Creeley's nomination, he strongly expressed his willingness to support a man whose political antecedents he had over and over condemned: because he now found 47 him willing to strike hands across the bloody chasm, and believed that his election would subserve the best interests of tke country, and help to uplift the prostrate and sorely wounded Southland. The speech was of a piece with his life. He was ready to sacrifice himself, to lay aside his prejudices when he believed that the welfare of his country demanded it. After about 1880 his health began to give way. His last appearance upon the hustings was in advocacy of the Hon. John W. Daniel for the governorship of Virginia in l88l. He sided with the debt-payers in the struggle of that epoch. At the Appomattox September County Court, the brilliant nominee of the Re-adjuster Party, William E. Cameron, presented his own cause. No other Democrat was present to reply to him. Mr. Bocock was asked to do so. He was in feeble health, and his physi- cian warned him that the effort might cost him his life. Mr. Bocock disregarded the warning. The chances seemed to be strongly in favor of Mr. Cameron. He was posted and in excellent trim. Mr. Bocock was neither posted nor in trim. lVlr. Cameron was unfortunate enough, however, to make a remark that seemed to reflect upon Mr. Bocock. Instantly the old man seemed charged with all the powers of his prime. He showed that Mr. Cameron was wrong, and forced an apology. He charged his former friend, Mahone, with being a Republican for all practical purposes. Cameron hotly resented the imputation, and significantly retorted that such references to his absent chief were not perti- nent to the occasion. Quick as a flash the old campaigner turned on his brilliant antagonist and thundered: Then, sir, I will make them pertinent by making them personal: and I now, in this presence, tell you, William E. Cameron, that your present relations and peculiar associations will inevitably land you where the head of your faction now stands, -in the bosom of the radical partyf, Such language to William E. Cameron at that time was astounding. It electrified the Democrats, and dazed the Re-adjustersf' The old man retired from the combat, feeling that he had not striven in vain to curb him who had come among the Appomattox people to spread discord, and seduce them from the ways of virtue. , The last ten years of his life, l88I to l89l, were parhaps more remarkable for his growth in spirituality than for aught else. He had been received, in his youth, into the Presbyterian Church by the Rev. Dr. Jesse Armstead. During the period of his political life in Washington, his religious life passed into a sort of an eclipse. But one day toward the end of that period, his brother, Dr. john H. Bocock, then preaching in Georgetown, startled him in a way he never got over. He said, Thomas, it would be a terrible thing for you to be a cast-a-way, and yet it looks as if you were going to be onef, During the last ten years of his life, he developed an earnest trust in his Saviour. C1od's Word became his law. He put forth earnest, childlike efforts to keep near to his Lord. A man six feet tall, well proportioned, noble of face, with splendid grey eyes. brilliant in mind and speech, honorable in aspirations, life, and character, engaging in 48 manners, a fast and knightly friend, a statesman of breadth, insight and practicality, a lawyer of very high rank, a gifted orator, a devoted patriot. a loved and trusted neighbor. a kind and affectionate husband and father, Hampden-Sidney College may well be proud of his name on her roll of alumni. Mr. Bocock was twice married. His first wife was Miss Flood. of Appomattox. One daughter by that marriage, Miss Belle Bocock. still lives. His second wife was Miss Annie Holmes Faulkner, daughter of the Hon. Charles James Faulkner, of Martins- burg. Mrs. Bocock and three of her children, W. P. Bocock, Mrs. Thomas Cary Johnson and Mrs. Sallie B. Reynolds, are yet alive. THOMAS CARY JOHNSON. 53' g ig fp - Q. , r .aff ' ' , O ' 335 . ,, , assniiligpaa MISS KATHARINE BAKER SPONSOR OF CLASSES -A' Senior Class NIOTTO: Sic iler ad asha COLORS! Xvhile and Cold OFFICERS HRST TERM H. L. PAINTER President j. Nl. CROCKLTT Vice-President W. C. DUNNINGTON Secretary and Treasure: H. G. CLARK Historian SECOND TERM F. j. BROOKE President VV. S. BEARD Vice-President H. C.. CLARK Secretary and Treasurer H. G. CLARK Historian FOOTBALL S. M. jerr Caplain H. C. CLARK Manager BXSEBALL NV. G. DUNNINQTON Caplain G. A. XVILSON Manager 51 To the Class of Eleven 'Tis morn. The bright-robed sun, allame with loveliness increased, Now paints his golden panels on the purple. fading east, Now rises but lo soar and sink again into the west. 'Tis Spring, and soothing songsters sing of Summers sunny smile. And balmy breezes blow the breath of roses yet awhile. 'Tis Natures sweetest season, Eartlils adieu to Winter's blast. Yet, like to other seasons. this one too must fade at last, And scarce when Winter wails again will Summers calm have passed. 'Tis Life-'s own prime. young manhood's mozn, Unbrolcen now we stancl, To battle with the storm awhile. then silently disband. To us this morning dawns but once. lts colo.s and its gleams All vanish as the sunshine Hoods the slcy of youthful dreams. The present hue at noontide fades from that which now it seems. Life has its changing season too. Oft in the early morn, Youth's fondest hopes. once softly fannecl, by Winterls blast are torng All hopes that suffer most in storm, in Summers calm are lro.n. Yet think not Winter conquers as she blasts the fruits of toil. She may tear the tender plant, but not the strength within the soilg And healthful breezes blow when ceases Winter's wild turmoil. Weive withstood the storm together, we've enjoyed the playful gales. We've imbibed the same traditions, we've absorbed the same old tales. We have grown this common feeling that with all our class prevails. We have voiced the same old cheers beneath a standard e'er unfurled, We have tried the same old college. let us try the same old world. Let us try the same old world, and, though each has his separate part, Let him guard the noble instincts now enthroned within each heart: Yielding still to sterling precepts in the Xvorldls extended mart. Let this be our one petition to the One who knows our need: Though the storm may leave us barren, leave thou hope in Virtuels Let no hurricane of doubt the strength of Virtues growth impede. Should we pine to see dismantled yonder distant sunny bower? Should we sorrow oier destruction in the dying, drooping flower? Should we long to hold the pleasures of the now receding hour? No! a newly mantled sun the morrow holds within her store, And a fresher bud will bloom again when Winter's blight is o'er: Though the past may hold he ls there naught to bring regret 'Tis a weakness of our own w And we sigh to linger longer to us with whom all seems so well? e must confess we can't dispel. in the sadness of farewell. SEC r treasures. still the future holds yet more. j. Nl. Crzocrcerr. ll 52 FRANCIS jOHN BROOKE. ja., A A Romney, VV, Va. UNION I feel within mc n still and quiet consciencef' Delegate In Y. IVI, C A. Convention in Lynchburft. I908g Secretary Y. IVI. C. A., t9O9-IUQ Intermediate IVIarsl1aI, I9I0g Ilfagazinc Staff, I909-IOQ K,-XLEIDOSCOPE Staff, I9I0-Ilg Final Senior Orator, l9lIg Final President of Class, l9l I: Wlearer of I'I. S. C. XVILLIAIVI SHERMAN BEARD. Ii -N, if Anademy. VI . Ya. LINIUN Our content is nur best Iwavmgf' Dramatic Club, IQOS-O9-IOQ Intermediate junior Clator, IQOQ-IO' Final junior Orator, I9l0g Track Team. IQO9-IOQ Vice-President Senior Class flast termj. IQI I, -.....e..,f..i.Sk-.Ti -'-'Ti-:gy-7.-Z. . . 53 HUBI-IRT GALBRAITII CLARK, A A, H. S. Salem, Va. PHILANTH ROPIL' I.ooIc. he is winding up lI'ie watch of his will by SHCI Ify il will strike. Soplmniore Declaimefs IVIeLIaI, IQLIQQ Final Senior President I'I1iIanII'n'opic Sociely, IQI I1 College I7oolIxaII Team, I9IlIg Class Foollnall Tc-am, IQO7-08-09-IO: Class Base-IJaII Team. I907-IIS-U9-Illg Secrelary and Treasuier ol Senior Class flast Iermj: Historian of Senior Class: Final junior Oramr, IQIOQ fllagazinc Slafi flwo yeaisl, IQOQAIOAII: Kxi.EifoscoFL Staff Uwo yearsl, I909-I0-llg Business Nlanager of Km iilimoscovh, IOIO-I I, IOHN BLAKE CAIVIPBELL, Ii .X, H. S. Roanoke, Va. UNioN O sovereign master of lrue melancholy. Football Team, I9OqAI0g Manager Afugazmc IQIO-I I. JOSEPH IVICCAVOCK CROCI-LETT ll K A, II, A, fl3Q V'yIli2ville, Va. PHILANTHROFIC uvvelll liave a sfef-ch straiglitg coins. a passionate speeclwln lnlf-iso'-iplv DelJa'ei'. IQOQ-IOQ lntermecliale Junior Orator, l9U9-IO: Final junior Orator, l9l0: Cullings- Essuyist Medal, l9ltlg Delivered Sopho- worth junior more Debatens Nleclal. I9IOg Editor-in-Chief of lwaquzine, lqlo-ll: Chairman Missionai'y Committee Y. M. C. A., V310-ll: KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, l9l0-I lg Chairman ol Campaign and lVlEl l'llJCl'Sl'ltp Committee Y. M. C. A., IQIO-I lg Vice-President of Class cfll'Sl lermj. IQIO-llg Final Senior Oralor, l9lIg Class Valedicloiian. l9ll: College Representative. Stale O aloiiral Contest. l9l l, ,- JOHN HUGH DUNNINGTON, X -I- Farmville. Va. UNION All things are subservient to Cliligencef' lntcrmcdiate Nlaislial. I908-093 Final Marslial. IQ09 IO: Intermediate Invitation Committee, l9l0-ll. 35 XVALTER GREY DUNNINGTON ' X 'lu fl-. 1. tm, H. 5. FRANCIS MOYLAN FITTS Ginter Park, Va. PHIL.-XNTHRUPIC Swearing till his very tool: was dry with oaths of love. Glee Club, Mandolin Club, Quartette, IQUS-09-l03 Manager Diamatie Club. I909-IO: Assistant Exchange Fditor lliuguzinc, 1909-IU: Exchange Editor Alagazinc, IQIO-I l: Assistant Art Editor K-XLEtDOSCO?E. lgoq-log Art lidtlor K.xl.EtUoscofE. l9lO-ll: Leader German Club. l9tl't-lt. Farmville, Va. UNION Rich and bold in language, in counsels deemed no trivial adviser. Intermediate Junior Orator, IQOS-O93 Final junior Orator, t908-09-IOg Sophomore Essayistis Medal. t908- 09: lntersociety Debater, l909-lo-llg Class Historian. I909-IO: President of Class fseeond termj. l909-IO: Assistant Manager of College Football Team, t909g Manager College Football Team. l9l0g Junior Debater's Medal, t909-I0g flffugazine Staff. t9t0-ttg Student Director of Comity Club, l9lO-ll: Vice-President of Students' Council, l9l0-I Ig Secretary and Treasurer of Class. l9l0-ll: President of German Club. t9l0-Itg President of Athletic Association fsecond termb. l l9IO-I . 56 SHELBY M. jET'l'. A A, H. S. Richmond, Ky. UNION Let a cup ot' sack be my poison. College Football Team, IQOQ-lfl-lli Wearei' of l-l.-S.: Qerman Club. EUGENE KENT MCNEVV, A A Bristol, Va. UNION He cliastises manners by ridicule. Houston Prize Scholarship, l907-08, Tuclcett Prize Scholarship, l908-09, KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, l908-09, President Students' Council, l9l0-ll: lntermediate Senior Ozalor, l9I0-ll. Secretary and Treasurer of Athletic Association flirst terml, 1910-I lg Final Senior President. r'-1v . 1 -H. 712 53 F-5- GEORCE LEHMAN REX Hillsboro, Va. . An he had beer- a dog that should have howlecl thus. they would have lnangecl him. Glee Club, I909g Class Baseball Team, l908-09fI0- ll, Class Football Team, l9U8-U9-lO- I l. I HENRY LENVIS PAINTER, B H II Yancey Mills, Ya, PHILANTHROPIC Hcan the world buy such a jewel? Glee Club, IQO7-08-093 Dramatic Club, IQOS-O93 Class Football, I908g Class Baseball. 1909, Band, IQUS-09, Intermediate lvlarshal, N083 .llagrlzinc Staff, V908-09-lo: President Senior Class fhrst termj. I9l0-II. 58 XVlLLl.'XlXl RISUN, K .X, 'l', H. 5. Chatham. Ya. UNION l am lung of che Romans. and almw gianniai. Sludentsl Council: lvlarslwal lnlersociely Debalc. I9l0g Vice-President Class, IQOQ-IO. Claw Baseball Team, IQIO-l lg Class Football Team, I909-IO. Class Relay Team. IQIO-llg Captain Class Foolliall Team, l9IOg Varsity Foollaall Team, l9lO. FRANK MLCUTCE IAN RYBURN lXlea:lowview, Ya. PHlL,xNTHRoPiC Has honorable, and doubling that, most holy, Track Team. IQOY-081 Freslwman Declaimervs Medal. IQO7-O83 Final Nlarshal. IQOSAOQ: Gymnasium 'lie-am, l9O8-091 Percy Echols lxlinislerial Scliolarsliip, IQO8- 091 Manager Y. lVl. C. .-X. Re-adinf Room. H709-IUQ Vice-President Class Hirst Iermj, N709-IO. lnlermediate Junior Oralor. I009-IO. President Y. lVl. C. .-X.. l9l0-' Ip lnle-rmedialeSenior Oralor. IQIU-ll: Delegate lo Y. Nl. C. A. Slals- Convf-nlion at Danville, Va., IQIUQ Final lvlaishal. I909-IO. lnvilaiion Committee Finals. IQUQYIOQ Assistant Librarian. lqlo-ll: S. P. Le:-'s lxlinislcrial Scholarship, IQUQ-IO. 59 ua! HARRY EASLEY WHALEX' Cluster Springs, Va. Ancl each articular l'rair clotlr stand on end. P .. Like quills upon the fretful po.cupine. IVIERRIMAN STARKEY S IVIITH rc .x, fi-, :. 1+ N iz, H, 5, Roanoke, Va. UNION Nay, certaznly I know the ways of woman. College Football Team, l908-09-IO, Class Football Team, V903-09-IO, Captain Class Football Team. IQOB-G9-IO, Dramatic Club. t909-IO, Captain Class Baseball Team, I909g Vice-President Athletic Asso- ciation, V309-IO, President junior Class ffirst termjg lnte mediate Debater, l909-l0g Manager College Basket-Ball Team, t9tO-ltg Final Invitation Com- mittee, t909-I0-tt. 60 GOODRIDC-E ALEXANDER WILSON Stovall. N. C, PHILANTHROPIC The deepest rivers have the Ieas! sound. A! Hzst I thought I knew it all. Bul now I must confess: The more I know I know I know I know I know the Iess. History of Senior Class :7ags2:g'? QQQUT is with a great deal of perturbation that l take my pen in hand fthis is 'Eu L the right form I presume for all documents of importancel to set down in chronological order facts and happenings of the men, place and time F. 2 Z 9523 connected with the memorable Class of l9l l. Lixggg I have put my roommate to bed, I have drunk three of Mr. lVliller's Coca-Colas, I have cleared the decks for action, having pitched behind the trunk everything l couldn't stufl under the bed. You see, l like my room as well as my mind to be in order, that all things may be in harmony. It is now one A. M. and l will proceed. It is not my intention to indulge in poetic gymnastics in this narration. l could not if I would. l am not a Southall or a Deihl, memorable and mighty men of the past, whose words written in ink were dyed a crimson red by their poetic genius. It is my intention to take up the men as they were, facts as they happened, and take to the tall timber when the KALEIDOSCOPE is issued. VV. S. Beard heads the list and he hails from Vvest Virginia, but we don't hold that against him, and his classmates are quite charitable in that they try to overlook the fact. Beard is some speaker and on many occasions has waved aloft the flag of Old Union and has given us All the chosen coin of fancy flashing out from many a golden phrase. F. Brooke is his name, and he flows serenely onward, showing scarcely a ripple on the surface, so smoothly does he meander through life's woods and meadows, while here and there a fair flower springs up and momentarily takes life on his banks, then, as is the way of flowers, passes away and others take their place. flqhere are always more than one.J These flowers when transplanted often forget the Brooke of yore. Still, it is easy to forget the absent Past surrounded by the living beauty of the Present. There is one thing misleading about his name and that is in diciione, in verbo ipso. This Brooke has its quiet. deep and silent pools as well as its ripples. Blake Campbell! When we are grey-headed or have no hair at all, and are riding our children's children on our knee, what will this name bring to mind? Purpose- steady, unwavering purpose-whose accomplishments will be in inverse proportion to his words. We will remember his political coups. We will remember him as the business manager of the best Hampden-Sidney Magazine up to his time. We will remember his words of wisdom given to Freshmen. We will remember a football player of no mean ability. Lastly, we will remember the episode of the pig. 'lil-lubert G. Clark was born at Rocky Mount, Va.. in l890. When in youth the sunshine kissed on his cheeks a smile that never wears off. Entering College in the XNOTE.-The above got in by mistake: we hope no one will take it seriously. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF. 62 fall of l907, Hubert has made the complete cycle of four years academic course at Hampden-Sidney-Final Senior President of the Philanthropic Society, lntersociety debater, Final Junior orator, Sophomore medalist. Reviewing thus his achievements, we find things that speak for themselves. of the high place he has always held in his society. For the last two years he has been one of the ablest men on the Magazine staff, besides holding the place as business manager of the College annual. He has always stood high in the esteem of his teachers and fellow-students, and is destined to stand high in the estimation of his countrymen. Wherever he goes he will be known for his integrity. as he has been at Hampden-Sidney. Hubert Clark has one serious fault, if fault it is- The light that lies in woman's eyes, has been his heart's undoing. CLASSMATE. joseph lVlcGavock Crockett was born at Oakland, the home of his fathers, in Wythe County, some time in the nineties, so you see he is quite young, yet he has wandered far and wide, having at one time even strayed so far as Emory and Henry College, but he soon repented and entered Hampden-Sidney in the fall of l909. Demosthenes and Cicero may have been able to speak, we never heard them, but we have heard Crockett, and having heard him are convinced, satisfied, that the C-reat Southwest can produce orators as well as Greece and Rome of old. Crockett is not only an orator, but a poet, an author, an editor. He has edited the best Magazine yet gotten out by the College. He is a member of the KALEIDOSCOPE staff and has ably assisted in getting it out. Thus we see he is a man of parts-one who has shouldered and done well his share in every College enterprise. W. Ci. Dunnington! Familiarly called Watt. Again we have an old head on youthful shoulders. Watt is one of our all-round men-a leader in class, Y. M. C. A., social and athletic work of the College. Oratory has marked him for her very own. He has been the backbone of the Union Society for two years, and this year mainly through his wonderful gift of speech and keen logic rescued the cup from the very grasp of the Phips, who had already ordered a glass case to put the treasure in. Watt,' has been manager of the football team during one of its most successful seasons. We know of no one who has done so much for the college and its life, scholastic social, and athletic, and at the same time making for himself an enviable record. From Watt we pass to Jack -J. H. Dunnington, to be explicit. But the girls call him H-lack. He is more of a ladies' man than his brother and is wise in the ways of the fair sex. He is every whit the equal of his brother in the classroom and in other College work, yet for some unaccountable reason he does not indulge in oratory. although he has the reputation among the ladies of being not at all bashful. F. Nloylan Fitts! and what shall we remember him by? Constancy, unfaltering in purpose and fulfillment. Moylan is a person who can get straight excellents and spend 63- three-fourths of his time in Farmville. He is an artist always, and anything he touches shows the marks of his idealistic conceptions. This annual bears evidence how well does he put into practice his artistic talents. He has taken a very active part in the social side of our College life, being a member of the German, Dramatic and Clee Clubs. All the world loves a lover, and he carries with him the best wishes of his classmates for the consummation of his greatest idealistic dream. Shelby M. Jett is our man from Kentucky and he looks the part, but he isn't dangerous except on the football field. He does not carry six shooters, nor make moon- shine: mind you, we don't commit ourselves any farther than this. He is one of our two Kings. sharing that honor with a Freshman. His Majesty King Shelby the First rules over Bohemia. The Freshman over the land of the Pharaohs, where the blue Nile Hows. He is captain of the football team, and is about six feet two inches tall and pretty near that broad, and in conclusion would like to say that he is the only one of his kind not in captivity, though they came mighty near getting him at Kentucky State some years ago. E. K. lVlcNew is our only student. He has carried off the Freshman and Sopho- more scholarships and bids fair to be one of our high honor men. He works by the clock, allowing so much time for parting his hair and brushing his teeth. He is a member of the Student Council and is looked upon with awe. Now comes a task which calls for a better pen than that of a mere chronicler-a poet maybe. one who can give a more delicate touch, one who can deal in eloquent passages. Yet, after all, what 'mounts your vain coinage of the brain unless you had known the man? You might search the world and never find the like of Henry L. Painter, which statement is in itself rather ambiguous, but in no wise liable to be misconstrued if one is acquainted with the man. A musician, a scholar, an editor, an author, and of course a Painter, he represents a type peculiar to Hampden-Sidney. He is modest, retiring and un- assuming, yet on occasions we have known him, driven by the pangs of hunger, accom- panied by the writer, to steal forth into the night, seeking that which he may devour. and, it may be added, he has not always been unsuccessful. Geo. L. Rex hails from Loudoun County, and is some twenty years of age, though you would never know it. He is a singer of no little talent and carries a bass deep enough to drown himself in if it were filled with anything stronger than water: water perforce being not at all tempting. Geo. L. is one of the original seven who were Freshmen together and have hung together, looking forward to a degree in spite of the best efforts of the faculty to lop off one here and there in these latter days. Their success was quite marked when we were Freshmen. Geo. L.'s greatest job in the years to come will be to stow away his nether extremities, that they may not be in the way of his other and more nimble faculties. 64 Frank McCutchan Ryburn, the silent member from the Southwest, yet on occasions he can speak, and those of us who know him have been regaled as to the great deeds accomplished by McCormick's reaper in language quite eloquent and sage. Frank is a Y. M. C. A. shark, which is all the recommendation one needs at Hampden-Sidney. And, lVleester Reeburn, he's the only one who studies my Greek. Among the many additions that have come to our number in these four years, there was no one who was more welcome than Wm. Rison, a genial companion, a wise class- mate, and an all-round College man. He is to be remembered always as a good fellow, an athlete, and diligent student. Here I am writing the most dignified, yet perhaps truthful, stuff about the funniest man in class. One who always has a witty story or a bright re- partee on the end of his tongue. Merriman Starkey Smith is another specimen that the Senior Class has had added to its rare collection of Curios. He hails from Roanoke, Va.-ROANOKE spelled with capitals. He is an actor, a playwright, and a football player, and now and then dabbles in politics. His marked peculiarity is his rigid attendance on Chapel, which trait he developed as manager of the basket-ball team. He is a close student of human nature. especially that phase of it epitomized by the softer sex. He is a prospective student of law with a special view to evading it. He will succeed. The light can be seen dimly in the East as I come to the W's on the roll, and it is time that l were in bed: yet I am not sleepy, and while the muse is with me. fain would continue. H. E. Whaley, of Halifax, is the beginning of the end, for there are but two more left. Thoughts of the past, recollections of the moments we have spent together, my classmates and I, Hood my memory to the exclusion of all else as this chronicle draws to a close. Whaley, better known as Preach, is of sombre mien. Full of dry wit and pithy sayings, he leads one to believe he is a philosopher, though of the Epicurean School. Goodridge Alexander Wilson, late of North Carolina, closes our list. Good rooms with the Silent man from the Southwest and seems to have caught the habit, but in his quiet, unassuming way Wilson makes himself known and felt. His life-work will be medicine. He is following the example, not the footsteps, of a worthy ancestor in this respect, for C. A. Wilson has a way of his own. As now the rose-tinted East bespeaks the coming sun to speed the day upon its way, so would we in our humble way announce the going out into the world of the Class of l9l I. It is not what we can say of them, for we could never do them justice nor describe them rightly. All the flashing coin of fancy, new mintage of most brilliant wit, would be but mere idle words and would add not one whit to the class individually or collectively. Their characters lie beyond the power of language to describe, and will nobly find expression in the record of their deeds. HISTORIAN. 65 7, T J T f f 5 ,R XR g , f WN- af W ff X ff x f X , X .1 , N5 if X T W 'P ' If J i T 4 Junior Class M Pl H I d lh study C Blue and Maroon OFI-ILERS T T E ND TERM H P d t ...... W. P. HAZl.EGRO W L V P d t ....... C. E. CLARKE S B S 1 y d T DONALD CORK: M E H 1 FRANCIS MOORE FR 66 ANTHONY CREASE ADAMS, X 'ft 'lk A Richmond. Va. Assistant Leader of German Club, l9l0-l l. JL THOMAS THWEATT ATKINSON Tl lx ,XI S., A Champ, Va. Pl-IILANTHROPIC Glee Club. l908'09g Dramatic Club. l90S409-l03 Students' Council, 1903-O9-I0-II: Secretary ancl Treasurer Freshman Class fseconcl termjg lntermecliate Marshal, l908-09: Class Baseball Team, I908f09g Captain Class Baseball Team, 1910-Ilg Manager Class Baseball Team. I9tO-llg lnter- mediate Marshal. I909-10g Sophomore Delvateris Medal: Varsity Baseball Team. l909-l0g Captain Varsity Baseball Team. I9l0-llg Vice-President Athletic Assofiation ffirst lermj, l9l0-tl, RANDOLPH HUNTER BARKSDALE Richmond, Va. PHILANTHROPIC 67 GEORGE THOMAS BASKERVILLE, K E Boyclton, Va. UNION Freshman Declaimer's Medal, I909g Class Baseball Team l909g Final Marshal, l9lO. SAMUEL DAVIES BEDINGER, A A Bl'00kl leBl, Va. UNION Class Baseball Team, l9I0-I l g Class Football Team, l9I0- II: Captain Track Team, l9I0-I lg Wearer of H.-S. C. GEORGE FIELD CHAMBLISS Rawlings, Va. P1-m.AN'rHRoP:c Wearer of H.-5. C. I Moses, as found by Pharaolfs daughter in the lnulruslxes. 68 CHARLES EDXVIN CLARKE. -X l. H. S. Claclys,Va. PHILANTHROHC Assistant Business Manager ftlagazine, l908-09-I0-tl: President Class tseconql le ml. V308-09: Assistant Manager Vasity Baseball Team. IQUB-U93 Students' Council, l908-093 C-lee Cltb, IQOS 09, Final and lnteumecliate lnvitation Com- mittee, V908-093 Manager Varsity lgaseball Team, V909-l01 President Students' Council, I9U9-l0g President Y, M. C. A., l909-IO: Delegate to Y. M. C. A. Convention at Danville. I909-IOQ Manager Class Baseball Team. ll-909-log Manager Class Football Team, V909-lo, Delivered Fiesliman Declaimefs Medal, V909-IO: Secretary and Treasurer Atliletie Association fsecond terml. V909-IO, Yice-President Y. M. C. A., I9t0-t lg Secretary and Tieasurer Class Hirst terml. IQIO-I lg K.-XLEIDOSCOPE Staff, IQIO-ll: President Athletic Association ftirst terml. l9l0-ll: Athletic Council. IQIO-llg Students' Council, t9lO-I tg Delegate Y. Nl. C. A. Students' Convention, Richmond. t9t0-ttg Vice-President Class fsecond teiml: l9lO-I Ig junior Orator, lntermecliate. lglll-l l. Team. IQIO-l l. SIDNEY M. B. COULLINC. EIR. Tazewell. Va. UNION lntersociety Debate. I9tl. O9 DONALD L. CORKE, ll K .t. 'l'. 'l Clwarleston. XV. Va. Secretary Y. M. C. A., l9lO-tl: Varsity Basket a -N ALEXANDER DONNAN X fb .X CHARLES FOX GRAHAM, A A Wylheville, Va. PHILANTHROPIQ Final Marshal. l909-101 C-ymnasium Team. I909-I0-Ilg Manager Reading Room, l9l0-ll: Manager Debating Club. l9l0-ll: flfagazine Staff. l9l0-ll: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet. l9I0-I Ig Delegate to lnlercollegiate Y. M. C. A., Richmond, l9l0-I Ig Secretary and Treasurer Debating League, I9I0-I lg Intermediate lnvitalion Commillee. l9l l 1 Treasurer Y. lVl. C. A., l9ll-l23 Final Junior Oralor. l9Il. 70 Richmond, Va KALEIDOSCOFE Slaff, I909-105 Secretary and Treasurer C-erman Ciub: President Tennis Club PERCIVAL LAUNCELOT HA MLETT Farmville, Va UNION XVILLIAM PERKINS HAZLEGROVE Farmville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Class Foolball Team, IQOS-09-I0-llg KALEIDOSCOPE. Staff, I909'IO-I lg Xvearer of H.-3. C.: President of Junior Class fseconcl terml, l9II. JOHN RAVENSCROFT jONES Rawlings. Va. PHILANTHROPIC XVILLOUCHBY SHELTON HUNDLY, ll H Il. H. S ClOVEI', Xia. UNION Sophomore Essayisfs lwedal. I909-lOg Intermediate Junior Orator, l9l0-l lg President junior Class ffirst termj, l91O-Ilg Varsity Foolball Team, V908-O9-IO-l l . Assistant Nlanager Varsity Football Team, l9l0-llg Manager Varsity Football Team, I9lI-IZ. 7I ALFRED MICAJAH LAREW, A A Dublin, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Freshman Declaimervs Medal. l908-095 Final Marshal, V909-log lntermediate Junior Orator, t9I0-Il. CHARLES CAMERON LEWIS, X 'In 9 N 15. H. S. Charleston. W. Va. PHILANTHROPIC Varsity Football Team. l909-lo-ll: Varsity Baseball Team, IQO9-l0-llg Class Football Team, l909-I0-ll: Class Baseball Team, I909fl0-I Ig Varsity Basket-Ball Team, I909-I0-Ilg Class Track Team, V909-IO-ll. jOHN HUNTER IVICCLINTIC, Ii A, tl, H. S. Nlarlinton, W. Va. UNION College Basket-Ball Team, l909-l0-ll: College Football Team, l909-l03 Class Football Team 1909-I0-Ilg Class Relay Team. l909- I 0. 72 VVILLIAM BAIRD IVICILVUAINE, ll li I, il Petersburg. Va, PHILAN1 HROPIC Secretary and Treasurer Class cflYSl terml V308-Ogg C-lee Club, l908-O9-IO: lntermediate lVlarsl'1al, V908-O93 Class Historian, l9lOg Manager of Tennis Club. t9l0-llg Inter- mecliate Invitation Committee. IQOQ-IOQ Final lnvitation Com' mittee. lqlll Class Baseball Team, I9Ilg Class Football Team, IQIIQ Xvearer of H,-S. C.: IQALEIDOSCOPE Staff. l9lO-ll. Richmond. Va. UNION Assistant Manager of Varsity Basket-Ball Team Nlanager of Varsity Basket-Ball Team, lgll-l2. FRANCIS HUDSON MOORE, X 'IR SZ Richmond, Va. UNION Secretary and Treasurer Sophomore Class fseroncl term l9l0' ' . College Band, Glee ancl Mandolin Clubs, 1910-I l l Quartet. V309-log Y. M, C. A. Editor of fllagazine, IQIO-I lg Class Historiang lntermediate -Iunior Orator. l9l lg Secretar X 3. Nl. C. A., I9lO-II. y 73 s HENRY HANNAH MCVEY. N H ll PAGE OSCAR NORTHINCITON La Crosse, Va. UNION WILLIAM WARREN SPROUSE Fountain lnn, S. C. V V PHILANTHROPIC U 1. - 15 Delegate to Virginia Student Y. Nl. C. A. Convention at V Richmond: lntersociety Debate, lgll. ' Q PETER SAUNDERS, K .M 'l'. 9 N E Rocky Mount, Va. Freshman Class Baseball Teamg Sophomore Class Football Teamg Vice-President Sophomore Class fsecond terml. I909- I 0. 74 ALLISON GARNETT THOMPSON. li I, Charleston, W. Va. UNION flfuguzinc Staff: IVIad0IIn Club, l909-IO. FITZI-IUGH HAMILTON Vx-X55 I I , zi, - ' BENIAIVIIN BRISCOE WHITE, K E, LT Fislaersville, Va. UNION Director of Gymnasium: Assistant Manager of Varsity Baseball Team. I9l0-I Ig Manager of Varsity Baseball Team. I9ll-l2g President Y. IVI. C. A., l9I0-llg Vice-President Athletic Associationg Va'sity Basket-Ball Team. l909-103 Class Baseball Team, l9II. 75 Class Football Team. Danville, V UNION PAUL REVERE YEAC-ER, K A, U N 15. H. S. UNioN Captain Varsity Football Team. l907'08-09-IO-ttg Varsity Baseball Team. l907-08-093 Captain Basket-Ball Team. 1907-OS-O9-log Captain of Class Football Team, IQOB-09-l0g College Track Team: Treasuler Athletic Association, l9tO- ll fsecond terml: President Sophomore Classg Captain Class Baseball Team: Class Relay Team. l909-log Glee and Mandolin Clubs. V303-09. 76 Junior Class History fjfs'-XSEQND, just think, we will be Seniors now almost before we know it, and the 59 NSW verdant little Freshmen will glance timidly at us as we stride along at a F slow and stately pace, and they will wonder if these learned and digni- XQX fied personages were ever Freshmen. It is true, some of us were never fu Freshmen in the full sense of the word, but we have all been Freshmen in one sense of the word, and we know very well how it feels to be a Freshman. It seems- only yesterday that we arrived on the Hill for the first time, some of us attended by guardian angels in the form of brothers or friends, others in all our loneliness-strangers in a strange land. But we were not strangers very long, for the Sophomores fand othersj took it upon themselves to make us feel perfectly at home, and in a week or so we felt as if we had been here a month and were already beginning to like the place and the people fall except the Sophomoresg we learned to like them later onl somehow that bell had a very ominous and terrifying tone, when it would begin to ring in the stillness of the midnight hour, while shouts of Freshmen-Freshmenn rent the air. It is a curious thing how the sound of that bell has changed. It is no longer terrifying in the least degree, but at eight o'clock on sleepy, rainy mornings it is a most unwelcome sound to the ears of those of us who are not particularly energetic. But to return from this digression, every one of us is willing to say that in spite of some slight inconveniences, which are the peculiar heritage of the Freshmen, we enjoyed our first year immensely. It has been said with a good deal of truth that the Freshman year is the happiest of the four. At the end of the session we were very important personages fin our own eyes, and knew everything, of course. Cur prospects were bright-we would not have to furnish any more entertainments for the Sophomores, but would ourselves be entertained when we returned in September. We would be no longer known as school boys, but as college men, a name which has great weight with certain people of our acquaintance. But all this is changed: we are Juniors now and being Juniors, we are up against it, for at old Hampden-Sidney the Junior year is much the hardest of the four. The hard tickets of the Sophomore year dwindle into insignificance alongside of such mountains of difliculties as Chemistry, Junior Latin, and Physics. Professor Whiting is occasionally moved almost to tears by a display of ignorance like the following: Professor: What part of speech is 'tollo?' H Junior Cwithout the slightest hesitationl: Noun Professor fwith a look of great distresslz Oh-h, you ought not to treat me that way. Why, an answer like that from one of my Juniors gives me a pain. Junior fwith a gleam of hopefz Adverb. Professor fwith a look of greater distressjz Now, ain't he a funny fellow? Did you ever see such a fellow? Professor: Mr. McNew? lVlcNew: lt's a verb. 77 Professor: UA verb, a verb: of course it's a verb. It couldn't be anything else. On cold rainy mornings Dr. Bagby not infrequently finds occasion to reprove some sleepy young physicist in some such words as these: Your head may be heavy with knowledge, Mr. Atkinson, but youill have to hold it up in here. Gne day in Psychology class Dr. Stevenson Smith volunteered the following advice: Gentlemen, don't you know, I think it would be a rather nice idea for you to read the' lesson over before you come to class. Truly we have a goodly class. There is the Honorable Anton, alias Mr. Adams, he of the wonderful laugh. There is Al, the mighty man of the gridiron. There is Tubby,,, of the marvelous headgear. Then in order come Sleugh, whose like will not easily be found: Baskerville f Basket-ballsnl, the shadow of Billy: Bedinger, the fleet of foot: Blanton, the far-famed athlete: Chambliss, the namesake of Moses: Clark, C. E., the old sage from Gladys: Corke, of the mighty chest: Coulling,- SamuelflVlatthias-Baxter-,Ir.: Bree, of the melodious voice: Graham, the physician: Tiny, the friend of the ladies: Hamlett, skilled in the most approved methods of negotiating mud: Hazlegrove, our President: Hundley, the silver-tongued orator: Jones, of the few words: Larew- Uncle Jimmy -an orator of no mean ability: lVlcClintic and Mcllwaine, the long and short of it: lVlcVey-Ma-ack! Mack! Mack! lVlack!: Moore, the unfortunate promulgator of this miserable concoction: Northington-to some, Nuthington -to others, Northunkton: Sprouse, famous as a debater: Thompson, who likes his eggs prepared after a peculiar fashion: Hutt, the teller of fables: and last, but not least, UBenny, the gymnast, who teaches us to wriggle ourselves into forms the like of which was never seen by man. You will probably hear more of us later on. HISTORIAN. P. S.-I am perfectly sure of the fact that there never was, at dear old Hampden- Sidney, a chemistry class that could produce such smells in the Lab. as we produce regularly and with the greatest ease. H. 78 gif s if hf 4 NW: x YN S2 y ? jf, X 'F' X, my YE he me K KPN xx Sophomore Class MOTTO: Cather ye xosebuds while ye may COLORS: Orange and While OFFICERS FIRST TERM A. H. ZEHMER .... F. H. PAYNE. W. H. FREY .... D. T. WooL. rooraALl. W. L. NELSON ...... KIRKLAND SAUNDERS. ., . . . . .presiclenk . . .. .,. . . , ,Vice-President. . , . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer .... . . .Hislorian. ......Captain,. . .,.. Manager 79 sEcoND TERM XLEXANDER ST. CLAIR . , . . .PETER SAUNDERS , ..... G. W. JONES T. Wool. BASEBALL H. FREY ....,P. F. FLouRNoY SOPHOMORE CLASS Sophomore Class Roll JAMES .AUBREY ALLEN ..... MARION C. BOWLING ........, Ho,xSoN WALLACE BLANTON. ,. T. H. BUTQHER ....,........ GEORGE AUSTIN BYRNE ........ GRAHAM FOLWELL CAMPBELL .... IRA MARTIN CAPPS .............,. PATTERSON FITZGERALD FLOURNOY. ,. WILLIAM HENRY' FREY, JR ....... THoMAS FLOURNOY HAMNER ..... GRANT HAROLD HOSTRANDER .... GEORGE WILLIAM JONES, JR. . . H.ARRY EMMIC LEE .......... CARLOS LENA KHERNANDEZJ .... JOHN MCGAVACK ............ CHARLES ATHEY MCKINLEY .... JAMES CARR MOORE ..,...... WJENABLE MOORE ........ WILLIAM LESLIE NELSON .... FRANCIS WORTH PAYNE .... GEORGE HARRISON PAYNE... JULIUS PRESTON PROFFITT, .. WILFRED PLEASANT RAINEY .... GEORGE HAMPTON REcToR .... ELBERT LOWMAN RHOADES ..... KIRKLAND RUEEIN SAUNDERS .... PETER SAUNDERS .............. RAYMOND MCKNIEHT SLoAN .... JOHN EDDUARD STAEHLIN. .. ALEXANDER ST. CLAIR, JR ..., CHARLES MARTIN WALKER .... DARIUS TODD WooL ......... ADRIAN HARDY ZEHMER .... SI ..,.....Hebron. Va . . .AndersonvIlle, Va . . . . . . . .Richmond Va Hampden-Sidney, Va Hcharleslon. W. Va .. . ,Burkeville, Va . . . . .Mel'1errIn. Va . , . .Morganfleld Ky , . . .Petersburg Va .. . . .VInlon. Va .,..VIcloria, Va . . . .PeIersburg. Va . . . . .Hanover, Va . . .Camajuani, Cuba . . .VVaterford, Va . . , . .Hancock Md ...VVarrenIon. N. C . . .Waverly, Tenn ......,Sun, W. Va . .CharleSton, W. Va . . . . . .Carlooven Va . , . .Walauga, Tenn . . .McKenney. Va ...Plumlree. N. C .. . , . . Pulaski, Va . . . . .Richmond Va . . . .Rocky Mount, Va ......Alderson. W. Va . . , .Cl'IarleSlon, XV. Va .... . .Tazewc-rll, Va .. . . .Nellysford, Va . . . . .Portsmouth Va . . .McKenney. Va History of the Sophomore Class is with mixed feelings that the Historian of the Class of l9l 3 takes up Em La his pen to chronicle the events of the past year. We look forward with feelings of eagerness and delight to the F time when we shall attain to the honor of being Juniors, and yet. when KD . Z K 9525.9 we glance back over the past year and realize that in a short while our Sophomore days will be nothing but a memory. with the poet, ua feeling of sadness steals o'er us. No more shall we be gay and light-hearted Sophomores, whose only thought is to initiate the Freshmen into college-life properly and to see that they are made com- fortable. This feeling of sadness is soon replaced, however, by a spirit of pride in the manner in which the Class of l9l 3 has lived up to the high standard set by former Sophomore classes. The Class of l9l 3 may justly feel proud of the record it has made during the past year. ln every branch of college-life, l9l 3 has been exceedingly well represented and need not fear comparison with any class in college. At the beginning of the session our number was increased by the enrollment of twenty new members. The addition of this number made ours the largest class in college. Not only in numbers is the Sophomore Class important, but it takes a most active part in the various phases of college life. On the football team our class was represented with great distinction by Allen, Greer, F. W. Payne, K. R. Saunders and Walker, while G. W. Jones was one of the ablest substitutes in the squad. Besides our representatives on the 'varsity, members of our class rendered important service on the scrubs. On the basket-ball team Allen, Sloan and Rainey upheld the banner of l9l3. and, although the team has not had a very successful season, yet they contributed largely to the success we have had. The baseball team has not yet been chosen, but judging from the practice games, we shall be fully represented on the nine. But not only in athletics has l9l3 been prominent. In the recitation hall our class has a deservedly good reputation, and although several of our number busted on the December examinations, they have all signified their intention to work hard and redeem themselves. The majority of our class are members of one or the other of the Literary Societies and take an active part in the work of these organizations, and from what can be learned there are a number of promising young orators in our midst. ln the German Club, as usual, the Sophomores occupy a very prominent position, and at such times as the Intermediate and Final celebrations our class is very well represented. 82 Another duty of the Sophomore Class which has been unusually well cared for this year is that of welcoming the Freshmen. As many of our own number can testify, this duty was especially well performed, and although our tenderC?J ministrations did not seem to be appreciated, yet with a spirit of charity and kindness wonderful to behold, we, gently and carefully, introduced them to college life. The historian feels that he could write page upon page on such an interesting subject as this, but lack of space forbids, and so, with the Class of I9I 3, he bids you a kind adieu, hoping, gentle reader, that our acquaintance with you may be renewed when we next address the world as dignified Juniors. HisToRiAN. FE? 371 31 lg-QQ-fgyqf -fin S3 Q- 1 f ': , 3 G Ulllf D X u on Q ,fl ,243 L I..-LM L Freshman Class KVIOTTO: A little learning is a dangerous thing. ergo . YELL: Freshmen! Freshmen! green as grass, Hampden-Siclney's Freshman Class! OFFICERS FIRST TERM WM. I. OWEN ..... ....,.. P resident ..... E.. T. THOMPSON ..,. ........ V ice-Presidenl ..... L. C. CAMPBELL ....... .... S ecrelary ancl Treasurer Tnos. j. lVlClLWAlNE ..., ,...... H islorian.. 84 COLOR: Pea Green SECOND TERM . . . . MORELL CLARK ......W. R. VAUCHAN .....M. N. FITZGERALD Tnos. j. lVIcll.wA1Na FRESHMAN CLASS Freshman Class Roll LOYAL CLARK BENEDICT ....... JOHN CALLOWAY BROWN ......... ISAAC CHANCEAULME BUCHANAN. LLOYD COOK CAMPBELL .....,.... .. PATTERSON FITZGERALD CAMPBELL. .. MORELL CLARKE ..........,,.... WILLIAM WOODSON COSRI' ...L . WILLIAM DOUGLAS CRAWFORD .... HARRY' BRANUM DAVIS ....... RICHARD XWATKINS DUPUY. .. MARION NANTZ FITZGERALD. .. HUNTER WHITIS C-ARRETT .... WILLIAM MEEIQ CIILLESPIE .,,. HENRY PROOLER GREER .... SAYERS FRENCH HARMON .... .ALFRED LENNOX LORRAINE ..,L CARL HENRX' LUEBBERT ..... THOMAS JONES MCILWAINE. .. JOSEPH JOHN MACON ....,. THOMAS M. MINOR .......... AIOHN CUNNINOHAM MOORE .... CHARLES READ MORTON .... JAMES SPENCER MORTON ....... WILLIAM TELL OPPENHEIMER .... JAMES BAXTER ORR .......... WILLIAM IRVING OWEN .... RICHARD ,IONES REID. ,... . DAVID HORACE RHINEHART. .. JOHN WILLIAM RUSSELL .,..,.. V1-HOMAS GARDNER SWINEFORD .... ERNEST TRICE THOMPSON ..,. CLAUDE WILTON THORNHILL. .. WILLIAM ROGERS VAUGHAN ..... XVILLIAM WEDDELL WILKINS, DIR. . . . . . Farmville, V a ..BedfOrd City, Va .. . . . .Tazewelh Va ..Paw Creek, N. C . . . .WythevIlle, Va . .South Boston, Va . . . . .Richmond Va Martinsburg, W. Va .......Norfolk, Va , . . .Worsham, Va . . . .Richmond Va . . . .Green Bay, Va .....Tazewell, Va . . .RIpley, W. Va . . . .Fl-azewell, Va . . . .Richmond, Va . . . .RIchmond, Va .......Champe, Va , . .Warrenlon, N. C . . . . . .Eastham, Va . . . .Hat Creek, Va .. . .Meherrin, Va .... .Meherrin, Va . . . .Richmond, Va .. .... Taylor, Miss . .South Boston, Va . . . . . .Chatham, Va . , . .Gastonia N. C . . .Clarkesvillm Va . . . . .Richmond Va .Charleston, W. Va . . . . . .LynchbuI'g. Va . .South Boston, Va Eastville Station, Va Freshman Class History nvzgsoeggegs U 'WE of l9l-4 began to arrive on the hill known as Hampden-Sidney during f 3. T' 5 the early part of the week ending Saturday, September l7, l9l0. And e.. '36 ? by the opening of the session on the l-4th, almost all of us had assembled. LQ . . . . . Qfii Strange to say. immediately upon our arrival our identity was lost and somehow we found ourselves members of a herd commonly called Fresh- men: and those who christened us as such let slip no opportunity for proclaiming our new name to the world at large. On a certain Friday evening we were invited to attend a Y. M. C. A. reception in the gymnasium. We attended, but found that there was another association, far from Christian and akin to barbarous, in cooperation with the Y. M. C. A. To the Y. M. C. A. we express our profoundest appreciation and thanks for the delightful refreshments served to us. To the other association we express-well, opinions differ on that score. This was but the beginning of a series of soirees in which we were unwilling participants. Of late, the Sophs have assumed the role of scalpers, and already several of our number have appeared with naught but a few stray bristles upon their heads. So far, these ordeals, unpleasant as they may have been, have not been without their good effects. Morally, the effects have been such that those of us who were yellow and faint-hearted have been almost eliminated, leaving only those of heroic courage who can bear without flinching all manner of torture. Physically, we have gained much. All of us have increased in lung capacity and in the strength of our legs. Also a certain portion of the epidermis of many has been greatly thickened and hardened by a special process well known to all Sophomores. ln spite of these things, however, our class has not failed in contributing good men to the college. ln football we were well represented on the first team, and from our men on the subs will be picked a large part of next year's team. Also, if rumors are true, the baseball team will rely largely on our class for its strength. There are also in our midst men who have so well mastered the art of batting the professors that their reports almost invariably show excellents only. And now as the bright star of I9l4 rises higher in the heavens, and the days of our Freshmanhood grow few, we bid the reader adieu, and the historian closes the first chapter with the fervent hope that worthier hands than his shall record each subsequent chapter of the history of- S7 ow as we our thoughts recast nto the not far distant past, e'er we'll forget the reception of our class. ach one of our number was roused from his slumber, hen, the Sophomores having collected their number, ach with a Freshman to the gym did lumber. ntreaties were vain. o words could detain. ortune forsook each unlucky swain. n each face Terror spreads its domain. pon them descends the bed slat and paddle: ound and round the gym they skedaddle. hen up the pole each one doth climb, ach with reason making record time. 'en oft such treatment we received I ween. exer again! says NINETEEN FOURTEEN. H HH HISTORIAN C N- I' O Alpha CGlHmH1Will8DbCfg College Zcla Phi-University of Missouri Active Chapters Alpha-lVliami University Bela Nu--Cincinnati University Belafwestern Reserve University. Bela Kappa-Ohio University Camma-Washington and jefferson DclIafDePauw University Pi-Indiana University Lamlnla--University of Michigan Tau-Wlahash College Epsilon-Central University Kappa-Brown University Zelafhlampden-Sidney College Eta Bela-University of North Carolina Tliela-Ohio Wesleyan University lola-Hanover College Alpha Xrvlinox College Omicron-University of Virginia Phi Alpha-Davidson College Psi-Bethany College Alpha Bda-University of lowa Sigma-Stevens lnstilute of Technology Bela Zeta-St. Lawrence University Bula Ela-University of Maine Phi-University of Pennsylvania Bela Theta-Colgate University Nu-Union University Alpha Alpha-Columbia University Bela lola-Amherst College Bela Lamhclafvanclerlwilt University Bula Omicron-University of Texas Thcla DellafOhi0 State University Alpha Tau-University of Nebraska Alpha Comma-Pennsylvania State College Alpha Zcla-University of Denver Bela Epsilon-University of Syracuse Alpha Omega--Dartmouth College Lambrla Kappa-Case School of Applied Science Bela Pi-University of Minnesota Camma Phifolclahoma University lllu Epsilnn-Wesleyan University Alpha Alpha Della-Westminster College Epsilon-lrva Wesleyan University Lambda Rho-University of Chicago Alpha Elae-Denison University Alpha lolu-Washington University, Missouri Alpha Lambda-University of W'ooster Alpha Nu--University of Kansas Alpha Pi-University of Wisconsin Bela Chi--Lehigh Univ ersity Phi Chi-Yale University Lamhala Sigma-Stanford University Bela Psi'-University of West Virginia Bela Tau-University of Colorado Baia Sigma-Bowdoin College Bela Omega-Washington State University Sigma Rho-University of Illinois Rho--Northwestern University Alpha Sigma-Dickinson College Upsilan-Boston University Omega-University of California Bela Alpha-Kenyon College Bela Cammaflilutgers College Bela Della-Cornell University Bela liflu-Purdue University Bela Xi-Tulane University Bela Phi-Colorado School of Mines Theta Zela-Toronto University Alpha Chi-johns Hopkins University Chi-Beloit College ' Tau Sigma-Iowa State University Beta Theta Pi FRATRES IN COLLECIQ W. DOUGLAS CRAWFORD, IQI4 WILLIAM HENRY FRU, l9I3 WILLOUCHBY S. HUNDLEY, l9lZ ALFRED L. LORRAINE, l9l4 HARRY' H. MCVEY, jR.. l9IZ W. lRv1Nc. OWEN, I9I4 HENRY L. PAINTER, IQII F. HAMILTON VAss, l9lZ FRATER IN URBE W. M. HOLLADAY, M. D. The Sevenly-Hrs! Annual Convenlion was held at Saraloga Springs, New York, July 8 to ll. l9l0 Delegate, W. S. HUNDLEY 92 FRU Owzrv. CVM, Xkxss, left to right!-LORRAINE. M OW l' BCI! B HUNDLEX, CRAWFORD AINTER. I-P righ lo Sealed left P -- ls . I ' I . I I 4 x I ' I ,' '4 4 1 O ob u r'i I' .lf 1 v f 44 I 4. I . .O l . at 1 1 , - 4' 5 'I' s, 'Ui' , OT, H' . 5V.r. U - -. b r 'Yiqot ,- Q Og 5 .on I O o Q.. Q1.'Q' n . i,. W.',,. f ' 1 T s . ff. .n .Nz v o ' 0 o' x -si' uw N' 7 I o 1 0 I , . I 0 Q.: cog .LJ - dp . xv ' yi fi g g. ,dr U I 1, I o . J g 0 ri' 44 ' I . 0 Q' 4 Q 1 H . R. -JS. H 'M s z, Chi Phi Qlrouncled at Princeton, lS24Q COLORS: Scarlet and Blue Alpha-University cf Virginia Bela-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Camma-Emory College, Creorgia Della-Rutgers College EpsilonfHampden-Sidney College Zcla-Franklin and Marshall Elaillniversity of Georgia Theta-Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Iola-Ohio State University Lambda-University of California Alu-Stevens Institute of Technology Nu-University of Texas Xi-Cornell University Omicron4Yale University, S. S. S. Rho-LaFayette College Phi-Amherst College Chi-Dartmouth College P.sifLehigh University Omega-Georgia School of Technology 95 Epsilon Chapter of Chi Phi fFounded l867J FRATRES IN COLLEGIO j. H. DUNNINQTON, I9ll VV. G. DUNN:Nc,ToN, JR., I9lI A. C. ADAMS, l9l2 ALEXANDER DONNAN, l9lZ C. C. Lawns, Ill, l9lZ F. H. MOORE. ICHZ .4A. .ALLEN, IQI3 . VV. PMNE, l9l3 G. W. jomzs, I9I3 Nl. N. FITZGERALD, I9I-1 ,l F FRATRES IN URBE R, K. BROCK j. W. SINTON, jR. Annual Congress held in New Yorlc City, November 27 and 28, l9lO Delegate, W. G. DUNNlNGTON, jR. 96 DONNAN, FITZGERALD .H. - J UNNINCION H.. D ht-ADAMS MOORE, F. rig ng left lo Stancli O DUNMNGTON, W, WY, E, F. W.. LEWIS PAYN right-JONES, C. left lo D0 C L5 4 1 0 1 U4 F .-. gi .C 4-hz, V ALL: 4 .f L 3 1 I wig 'uv 'M is 4. .VI w rs :O N 1 f IA, ' 'N ,I-' .2 TI . IVA 1.5! I . . I f -520:27 -I .PU . W, o Q ' Q, .Vw 1,21 I ' ,Qu .- N. '.XK4vfL'zf:Q 1 'LH . ip ' nts . .wbwft-,f lg. 9 4-.4-1-' ' uf -.J - 'TJ 'tk u I 5 Ill' ' I' 'I' L ' o 'JL' N9 A Q QL ' Q Q n Q a . Q: Q11 ,' X,- ,P mmf . J I ' Q v -, ,-.wh U, , !, ,g4f . . 3 .go Kappa Slgma Grounded University of Virginia, 18675 C0t0RS: Scarlet, White and Emerald Green ACTIVE CHAPTERS Zcla-University of Virginia Omega-University of the South Phi-Southwestern Presbyterian University Alpha Chi-Lake Forest University Lambda-University of Tennessee Kappa-Vanderbilt University Alpha Psi-University of Nebraska Alpha Omega-Vvilliam Jewell College Bela Baia Bela Beta Alpha-Brown University Bela-Richmond College CammafUniversity of Missouri Della-Washington and jefferson College Alpha Beta-Mercer University Beta Epsilon-University of Nliisconsin Alpha Alpha-University of Maryland Bela Zeta-Leland Stanford, jr., University Alu-Washington and Lee University Bela Eta-Alabama Polytechnic Institute Eta Primc-Trinity College Bela fola-Lehigh University Bela-University of Alabama Beta Kappa-New Hampshire College Upsilan-Hampden-Sidney College Bela Lambda-University of Georgia Tau-University of Texas Bela lllu-University of Minnesota Chi-Purdue University Beta Nu-University of Kentucky Ptgi-University gf Maine Bela Xi-University of California Iota-Southwestern University Bela Omicron-University of Denver Gamma'-Louisiana State University Bela Theta-University of lndiana Thcla-Cumberland University Pi-Swarthmore College Eta-Randolph-Macon College Sigma-Tulane University Nu-Nxfilliam and Mary College Xi-University of Arkansas Bela Pi-Dickinson College Bela Sigma-Washington University, Missouri Beta Rho-University of Iowa Bela Tau-Baker University Bela Upsilonflxlorth Carolina A.ancl M.College Bela Phi-Case School of Applied Science Bela Chi-Missouri School of Mines Bela Psi-University of Wlashington Delta-Davidson College Alpha Camma-University of lllinois Alpha Della-Pennsylvania State College Alpha Epsilon-University of Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta-University of Michigan Alpha E'a-George Washington University Alpha Kappa-Cornell University Alpha Lambda-University of Vermont Alpha lllu-University of North Carolina Alpha Pi-Wabash College Aloha Rh:-Bowdoin College Alpha Sigma-Ohio State University Alpha Tau-Cieorgia School of Technology Alpha Upsilon-Millsaps College Alpha Phi-Bucknell University Bela Omega-Colorado College Camma Alpha-University of Oregon Gamma Bcla-University of Chicago Camma Comma-Colorado School of Mines Camma Della-Massachusetts State College Camma Zeta-New York University Camma Epsilon-Dartmouth College Camma Eta--Harvard University Camma Theta-University of lciaho Camma lola-Syracuse University Camma Kappa-University of Uklahoma Camma Lambda-lowa State College Camma Aifu-Washington State College Gamma lN'u-Washburn College Camma Xi--Denison University Upsilon Chapter of Kappa Sigma Nineteenth Biennial Grand Q Established 18835 FRATER IN URBE REV. VV. j. KING FRATRES IN COLLECICJ GEORGE THOMAS BASKERVILLE, 1912 WILL1,Xh1 BAIRD MCILWAINE, 1912 BENJAMIN BRISCOE WHITE, 1912 ALLISON GARNETT THOMPSON, 1912 ERNEST TRICE THOMPSON, 1914 IVIORELL SYDNOR CLARK, 191-1 XWILLIAM TELL OPPENI-IEIMER, I914 THOMAS GARDNER SWINEEORD, 1914 Conclave was held In New York City, July 13, 14, and 15, 1910 Delegate, VV. B. IWCILWAINE Altemate, FRANCIS D. BAKER 100 PSON HOM -MCILWAINE, M. S. CLARKE, BASKERVILLE, A. C. T Standing left to right HITE . KING, W MPSON, SWINEFORD, REV. W. j H0 Q left to rightili. T. T illin S I Wi ,. J 1' Y Q AG 4' ' ff. ' v. wg. 1. I 1 ' 'A' , V o 4 'I 4.5 rg-'W 0 -Jo ,QA 9 , , ' o .635 ' v 4 0 fi ff 'Wh , Q Q n O n A Q . , 4 Jf-5. f X.. U1 . .,,. kg, X V JQW SW -W 1 -'fffxxx r- , W k L. . 'IL 'J B- ' 5 s O 1 v Us G ,Q A4 . .. 0 ' Q. . I Y' in 1 ' U 'A-5 ve . Q-, Q I W ai,o . ,421 n v :Jw X .ai .abs . 'I .0 'I i. V Q 5 ' ' 6 A A v kv 'M' 1 'Digs' 1 xr.. . Q Q u ' Y,a'4 'll A . -0.- Q. Q 8 Pi Kappa Alpha fFouncled at University of Virginia, l868l CoLoRs: Garnet and Old Gold ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha-University of Virgina Bela- Davidson College Camnia-William and Mary College Dclla-Soutliern University Zeta-University of Tennessee Ela-Tulane University Their:-Southwester n Presybterian University lata-Hampden-Siclfiey College KappuAl'Qentucky University Nu-Presbyterian College of South Carolina OmicranfRicl'1moncl College Pi-Washington ancl Lee University Rho-Cumberland University Tau-Univeisity of North Carolina Upsilan-Alabama Polytechnic Institute Omega-Kentucky State College Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha--Trinity College Camma--Louisiana State College Della-Georgia School of Teelinology Epsilon-North Carolina A. Bt M. College Zeta-University of Arkansas Eta-State University ni Florida lola4lVlillsaps College Kappafwlissouri School of Mines Lambda-Georgetown College MuAUniversity of Georgia Psi-North Georgia Agricultural College Alpha Alpha Alpha Nu-University of Missouri Xi-University of Cincinnati Omicron-Southwestern University IOS Iota Chapter of Pi Ka fflslablished 18851 FRATRES IN URBE P. TULANE ATKINSON GEORGE L. WALKER FRATRES IN COLLEGIO IOSEPH IVI. CROCRETT, I9II 'I-HOMAS T. ATKINSON, l9l2 DONALD L. CORRE. IQIZ AI.EXANDER ST. CLAIR, I9I3 H. NVALLACE BLANTON. I9l3 IQIRKLAND R. SAUNDERS, ILII3 STAEHLIN, l9I3 WOOL, l9I3 IVI. WALKER, I9l3 JOHN E. D. TODD CHARLES Biennial Convention held al Knoxville, Tenn.. Ap Dele-gale, P. T. ATKINSON Allemale, G. L. NV-'ILKER I04 pa Alpha ril I9 lo ZI, I9lI. BLANTON CLAIR T. E S Coax .J o -9 5 7 o Lfl 7 LA s- 'I I n.4 4 I-1 UU Z CROUQETT CH-xs, RER W,xL G. 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I 'Ig -fl.. r Ir..-mt? 4. g I. ,. .x-i,ifJr',Q1'1.p'1.:p Ju '- 1 'I '7k:, lvx LTI Q va 'J' O kit, 1' u tv ,, ,IM 9-n A , '.- 1 .'-If V. , v . ' .N , j- ,V 'Y , . 4 .I ' ' . Y . N4 I T g L, I. ,. .NM 5 AN v 0 I. 'I' HP df 'gf . 1 ar.-A . 't ,, BQ ' o,, 4 . . . , 1 3 Q 1 I .rl - 5. F , 4 I 9 Q L. Rl 1 xyl 'u If 0 'T ' ' U 'N ' ' Q 13 J' 1 'N' . U ' . A f My' f 4 ' ' ' J 1 F4 - - .1 ' -. , X . 1- , f x - '- ' Y , Y 1 .1 4 L' gf 0. ' 5 1 'vr 4. 'Hz , -a' ?-:V ' -'G-1' -U -f 4' H -VF..-Q .gf .. .. : -1' 5 . 'E!e!h1?AT1g.'U.'. Yulx'-R' 1.4L'Lff-fr'- ' ff-YN-. r-.f' .htm a.'.1':' if '.'2'-'Laf'v lf: fur -. T-TK J rg, ' ing ' tv' v' r in , . , Q Q35 ' n ' 4', s 1, 0 t Q . .K '. 0 ' 0 1 ' l -Q P., . , ' 3 rl' ! T 0 ' , t. , K Q Q '- xr: ' 'ive A . J U- he 4 4 AA The Owls fDella Deuleron Fralermlyj FRATRES IN FACULTATE XVM. H. Xi'Hmr.c, jk. Srzvsxsox SMITH j. H. C. XXIINSTOX FRATRES IN COLLEGIO F. -I. Bncoxs. jk. ' C. E. CLARKE j. XV. RUSSELL E.. K. MCNEW S. M. jen' jxo. C. Moons H. G. CLARK G. H. Pass A. M. L-msw CH.-xs. F. GRAHAM P. F. CAMPBELL S. D. Bsmxczn Jonx NICGAVACK G. E. GWINN I I0 Lal Z I O P- 11 C. 2 I US -9 Q: Q 355' dj gm gf? 42 4 'JU L-V LAI P: -E 301 LA. Zo UE 2: nf? Lal mr, md 30 ac? .E H, 15 FZ, 55 I Q5 Q, 3 -5221 14 0-I Ox Dix 032 L2 'SLE :E 25 E 3 .Ad U IU M I Y 7? C f C 0 . v ar . rf W 6 'vw' O pil all avi. 5 9 I 1' rg Q 3 O 4 4 U'sl Y MISS SPONSOR CF CLUBS AND KITTIE MITCHELL ORGANIZATIONS ll. XV Bmrwuw XV, U. CR-XWIORD VV. H. FREY W. G. DUNMNGTON ALEX. SI. CLAIR M. S. SMITH A. C. ADAMS DONALD CORKE C- NV. JONES A. L. LORRAINE WM. RISON Pruik SAUNDERS Theta Nu Epsilon Grounded al Ohio XVesIc-yan, I870J W. D. CRAWFORD W. H. FRLY F. W. PAYNI: M. S. SMITH C. C. LEWIS ALEX. ST. CLAIR PLTLR SAUNDLRS WILLIAM RISON MARION FITZGERALD H5 Mookz Tuovwsox WHITE XKVOOL Omega H6 XV S. BEARD D. L, CORKE M. N. FITZGERALD j. H. IVICCLINTIC NX . B. MCIl.XVAlNE T. ATKINSON P. GREER DONNAN C. ADAMS G. SWINEFORD Delta II7 j. M. CRCCKETT F. W, PAYNE A. ST. CLAIR C. C. LEWIS, III VV. H. FREY ' I ' e , . ' 'n..'.. ' 'W' ' ' 'QT ' J-U I l I .1 I n x ' f V . X , I I - an . ' An'- .tw l , . 6 a l O 0 0 T 0 9 1 . IE: 4 1 I A -' -c IF . I ' 4 I' - 0 v C ui o 0 0 '-W, V V 'f O KN WJ X' x. f uf x 'fl J ,ff f K w I Clubs arid. 'F ,TO 0'z',fHaniza,tiQrzS f , ur 'Y Y Y YY 44' n X f X o MMD A gf' I O I X 0,Lff !i,, ,f f 4 W? -Z7 'b , , 1 Q v -. 5 fr 5. . ,Q n ' Q , 4 ' Q, f o . r . Q JI 'rs O'1. o ,rd 'O 1 'W' .. L .ti 1 - .wan l 1 M -wW11Lbgbf. .Ll xlbW?uu lk I gw1 gl !1f J , N' 'ru Lx' IUYIYIWIIIIFUINI N V lmlilwi 'Ml 'V of HIM 'W' 'Uf'.WWWf W! wk WW fd W W f . MmWW A fm, J Am . hx' Sunil! Mwwvfmlfmwlafl .,wr1LQfnfMQ Vg Nw ilffm... IW WU, Q 1-L4 ,W lL J 1 ii-' 'V wx gm 451 W MW if X j M4 ml! Iummhlllhllr Tw' lr' Xl ' ' ff 'W 'f ' 1f'f'fI'f 1, - ' gg : kxx.. r Nrmlwvr I F IVYJ WLM!! WMIMAI st din? mu , 4, . Ui 'I LUN- ,l , -Q- M I 'WU' Yr- -.- ff wwf. , .. M f x?gX gJ52?f 12 ' w,,. j 7 5 X , , Q. X??' i 5f ' f 'Hwrflllylw V. W M il1 .M 'UMlIl1l1 ll Q rw 'W' . m m V 'M ' l ' 'Ir' ' gwxnu11fmmmumm aww mmm Wm CABINET I9I0-ll EAI 5Ql.'1'i. S'. ' , 111 . , . .xf.'..15lZZIZ H. MOORE ..., . . ..Secrelary and Treas F. GRAHAM. .. . ......... .,..... R eading Room Manag I9ll-I2 B. WHITE ..,. .....,..... ,,,......... P r esid I C. BOWLING. ..,.. . . . . . . .Vice-Presid l L- CORKE ---- ............... S ecre! y F. GRAHAM ...............,. Treas T. THOMPSON ....... Reading Room Man g IZI M The Young Men's Christian Association MEMBERS CNEW THORNHILL BEARD SWINEFORD W. C. DLINNINQTON Vxiss j. H. DUNMNGTON PAYNE MCCUNTIC WooL OLDFIELD F. H. MooRE BASKERVILLE joHN MooRE LEE BYRNE JETT HAMNER HUNULEY GILLESFIE FREY jfxs. C. MooRE NoRrH1NoToN ORR BEDINGER MCGAVOCK A. G. Tnoxwsow OPFENHEMER WHITE MCVEY R1soN E. VFHOMFEON BROOKE SEOAN j. B. C,xxvlPuE1.L SNHTH HAMLETT Cosm' COULLINC Run IZZ liuae V . w . if.. jfll L- fe - 5 OFFICERS F.. K. MCNEW. .. .,,.,.,..,.. ,....., P residvnl T. T. EXTKINSON. ,.,..,.,,.. X'iCC-Pl'65lLIt'l'1l MR. IVIILLER.. ...,......, . .Secretary and Treaaurm MFMBFRS QFYIORQ li. K. MCNEW NYM. Rlmw XV. C. DUNNINCION T. T. ATKINSON F. H. Noong C. E. Cl..-mxn XV. P. RAIN-EY M. S. Bowuxc .-Xwnsnxox CARY Ili , 4, . Qc Socnurn sumrms, adprgere rebus 17' .V NI ON . -89 OFFICERS K. MCNEW. . . .. . ...Final Senior President F. BROOKE .,..,, . .Final Senior Orator S. M. B.CoL'1uvc. BIR. p , D. .I-I XYOOL N . .,.., JLIDIOI' Orators NIVMBFRS W S. BEARD F. I. BROOKE VI. B. Cx:v1Pl1E1.l. J. H. DUNNIYCTON YV. G. Dwsxlxcrow S. M. -IETT XV. RISON C. T. BxsKERxn.1.E S. Nl. B. COULLINQ F.. K. ix1LNEWX' M.S.SM1TH S. D. BEDINLER D. T. XY'OOl P. l.. H.xM1.ErT NV. S. HuNm.Ex Il. H. McCl.lr:T1c H. H. MCVH F. H. !X1OORE P. O. NORTHINGTON EX. G. rl-HOMPSON B. B. XKYHITE. F. ll. YASS P. R. Xril.-XCER G. A. BYRNE XV. H. FREY T. F, H.-xMNER H. E. LEE FI. IN1cC.xx'xCK j. C. MOORE XY. L. NELSON G. H. PAYNE R. Nl. Flows. XV. XV. Cosm' NV. M. Gn.1.EQP1E jxo. C. IVIOORE XV. 'If 0PPENllk.IN1ER j. B. CJRR R. j. REID 'If C-. SWINEIRORD F.. 'lf THOMPEON C. XV. 'IUORN H1l.1. Il-I QAud6 swefe 16- . PHILANTHROPIC . Of-- OFFICERS C. CLARK. .. ...,....... Fmal Senior President M. CROCKLTT. ..Final Senior Oralm F. C1...xRKE p . F- GRAHAM h .. . . .. ...-ILIDIOI Oxatovs MEMBERS If. CLARKE H. G. C1.xRx j, M. CROCKET1' F. M. RYBLIRN H. L. PAINTER G. A. XVILSON T. T. ATKINSON R. H. B.xR14so..u.E H. XV. BLANTON C. F. C.RAH.aM XV. P. HAZLEGRON'E A. M. LAREW W. B. IVICILWAINE XV. B. CROCKU1 C. C. Liwls A. ST. C1..x1R M. C. Bowuxc L. C. CmPnn1.1. V. Moona C-. XY. joxss W. VV. SPROUSIQ C. M. xv.-XI.KER T. j. IvlC'lI.W.XlNE E. L. Rno.xma5 P. F. C.-xMPBE1.1 j. MLNOR H. RHEINHART CL. XY. RECTOR j. P. PROVVET C. LINA IZS Y , 5 f f, Q , -, ,lf A y v 2 W 7 , lg xl!! -if V 5 gpg- ,EI f ll xx -ZW? V- a E - X A X J LJ- Tyu-if ' -' '1' ' .. r fm! Emi Q X af 1, W ' ,Q 1 H ' etsiu., , S Z jf wpsfx - , ,Zi ' Q-4 M f ff X ffx W WE ZW XS 2 X, X Q!!! Q fdilllllgm f a L If j. B. CAMPBELL. T. G. SWINEFORD F. M. FITTS ..... B. S. OLIVER .... First Passage Club OFFICERS . Emperor ... . ....High Lord Chancellor . . . .Royal Household Dixeclor . Royal Contractor H. E. WHALEY' .... ............... ...... .... B i s hop to the Court MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL FAMILY ALTE LORRAINE . UG!-10... BYRNE BLAKE CAMPBELL MC McCL1NTlc HFRIDDLEDUMH FREY NBENNYU WHITE BASKETS BASKERVILLE Mc MCVEY TOM SWINEFORD HU1'r' VAss ..HEINE LUEBERT QUEEN SLOAN ulVlOYLAN FITTS USHERMANU BEARD HPREACHH WYHALEX' FoxY FITZGERALD NFRESHMANH THOMPSON joHN EVANS DAvY CLARKE MoLE DUNKUM I27 - - l n. . WfiE M1ulls xg , A , F E Second Passage OFFICERS GEORGE L. REX , . , , .. .President D. T. XKVOOL. , .,,., Yicv-President Lf If. LIAX. ,Ssclc-lauy and Treasunn' MIQMBI-IRS l.Ec.S REX MG. H. PmxE CEoRcE Cmxx Town XYVOOI. hom LEE '4B,xc.f Exam Bla RHOADEN CL'u.x l.Exx Il? PL? n i I .r lfgiqi X Wx f, 45 hir Dassa . OFFICERS XV1l.L1.AM RISON ..... , . . , . . , . , , .,... .President C. A. XYVILSON, ja . . .,X'ice-President J, P. PROFYIT. ., Secretary and Treasure: MEMBERS Run XY'11.sox ...., XX'u.1,l,xM Rnsox. D, IW EXr1oRTLR REID., NPR!-Q.-XCIHIU R5c'roR,. HIQINGN IVIINOR, Ylll.. . G. F. Cxlvwlazl 1. B llf' ,.. B1sHoP ORR ...NPRIESTH Pnorrlr ..,..uPOPF.'. Rnsuax ,.UF.-Xl'HERU RHEINHNRI . P.,xRfox Ruffin. .. C XRIIIY Xl Cosm Z X 9 w Kgs: Fourth Passage Club MOTTO: Never let studies interfere with your regular college duties OFFICERS Geo. F. CHAtvisLiss. .. ............ ..,....,.. S ultan j. M. CROCKETT. .. .....,... Prime Minister l-l. Ci. CLARK, . .. .... Lord High Chancellor F. j. BROOKE .... ......... ..... P r iest to the Court MEMBERS F. A. ST. CLAIR, JR.- l'm sleepy HPAYNEN PAYNE- Heard from N. C. toadayu Moses CHAMBLISS- Our only hermit BATH JONES- My friend Zeimern FLOURNOY- Can I borrow your book? CAMH LEWIS- l'm sick to-day PUNT PAINTI-:R- Knowledge is Power FATHERH CLARK-The Passage Historian JOE CROCKETTf A frequent visitor to Farmvilleh BLQCKU BUCHANANA Heie goes light No. one HSLEWN BARKSDALE-- Do you think l run a df- grocery store? .- .- DAS ' ZEHIVIER-- Going clown to Lynchburg town BEDINGER'- l'm for Hampden-Sidney SNOOKSH BROOKE- lVlr. Brooke, why don't you learn the Greek? FOX GRAHAM- Physician for the Passageu PIN HEAD CAMPBELL-uchilclren should be seen, not heard TUBBYH ATKINSON'-.LGOI a cigarette? WALLYH BLANTONf Lynchburg is an excellent place to visit WATTH DUNNINGTON- Friends, Romans, Countrymen, lend me your ears MOUSE DUNNlNGT0N1..Wh8YC Watt is, there am I also AL ALLEN--.Way clnwn on the farm BILLY' RAINEY- Behold the fatted 'calvc-s'! FRANCISH MO0RET..An admirer of calico NTONYU ADAMS- lf you don't know, ask me FR!-ZSHMANN .lONESi A calico man? Well. l reckon! UNCLE JIMMYN LAREW- Occasional loafer HOBBSU WALKER-.none time while l was at Blacksburg STRANDERU HOSTRANDER- He doth make the night hideous with songs' SKIN RABBITH HAMNER-I-Smile and the worid smiles with you HERR OLDFIELD-i'A musician of high repute .t it .- I3l . , 1 F' ' 'Q ' :N WW . A V' 1 2 A.. XM ! LAMAR X ' f gfjivf' . . ',, f -4 'fm Au, IW ' f lf ff f - 1 VISSJE W Lx A fi W mf.. 1 W4 A Y . Z ff N . ,, 1 . , l,- 1,15 x fl f-ff . ff f -A if W , . ,lf 'f 1' ' . ll! X fl A, r T 1-T A , M,j D y - .uf TNI 1 . 1 - .vlXf A V M K f 5 'X X4 z ' J A T .g fX K 3 f IM L , -1 ff' w T CA, , M fy .WHL -? FRXT1' 'f T K . Af 5 I . 11. mm I A I . f Af . .1 A ,.f ,- . fm T . A A 'A f W. v . T .. .-. CL? Q AQ IZWVA Tw T +,. 5 : ff 5 T ' 3 N ' A A , W ff A W H , gf. 4 .j2:f,113.i',, ' .T . .V wig ,. Aw, F 3 X' KX! I. I T Jw VT W6f,'.,.7 1, V T5 f W f T f , K! , Nfl' 41.1!,f,l,f!' W2 , .lic f ' ,J 1 A T 1' German Club OFFICERS W. G. DUNN1NcToN. jk ...., .. ........ .,.. , .. ,...,... President F. H. MOORE. ....... ...,.......... V ice-President A. DONNAN .... ,..,. S ecnelary and Treasurer F. M. FITTS. . ..., .,..,.,.,... ...,. L e ader MEMBERS A. ST. CLAIR, JR. GLORGE A. BYRNE F. W. PAYNE P. F. CAMPBELL C. C. Lewis. Ill THOMAS T. ATKINSON F. M. FITTS W. G. DUNNINGTON, ja. j. M. Ckocxl-LTT Nl. S. SMITH W. B. MCILWAINE H. P. GREER I. C. BUCHANAN W. H. FRU joHN MCGAVACK F. H. Nloom: j. E. STAEHLIN j. H. DUNNINGTON A. H. ZEHMER A. C. ADAMS F. j. Bnooxs G. W. JONES. JR. G. T. BASKERVILLL S. M. B. COULLING. JR. T. G. SWINEFORD G. H. HOSTRANDER A. DONNAN H. W. BLANTON 132 -,f-w..,fjs 4 f . . 'M 1 f if ' K li af 4 277 ., I ,.14f!, . ,VA V- , L1 . Pri' fr ' If Q99 I parfff W., X ' X I DCJXVS 2 W-I X. ,X-J 'C I f 1 fl fl Q f I I ' I .VX N3 x. I 1 ,, I - XX, ff' 5 ' 1 'N I f IJ IX.-' f ' I. X SIU Q f 'I ff rj R LL Im I Lg Iffyg-BML A'-JV MR-2 Com1ty Club OFFICERS R. Ii. Banu: . . .. . Ipresldvnl MRS. XY. H. NXIHITINC . . . .Scfn-larY DR. I II. C. I3.xC.Bx .,., . . .. . 'I'masurw DIRECTORS MRQ. I. II. C. XYINSTUN Miss Suns Yixxmn DR. XY. IVI. H01,1,1D.n' Miss IX'I.xl.x BRONX IXILN- I um Dvqwxlxorox STUDENT DIRECTORS 'If T. Arxxlwfcfx XY. C.. DLINYINGILHN NIENIBERS If T. .-Xlxlmox XV. C. DuNN1NcTox il. II. DL'xNxxf.Tux ,-X. ST. CLAIR IXI. 5. SMITH C.. XV. jorxlgf II. XV. BLANTON j. I-1. 51 xuuw I'. F. CAMPBELL I. C. BL'CI+I,XNAN A. DONNAN XV. B. IX'IcI1w.uNL F. XV. INYNL F. IXI. Furs j. IXI. CROCKETT .-X. H. ZLHMLR C. C. Lawns. III F. j. BROOKE A. C. .-XDMNIS G. T. B..xskERx'1L1.E S. M. B. COL'I.l mc.. jn. 'If G.Sw1Nr1roRn F. H. IXIOORE C.. H. P. CIRELR XY. H. F-REX' A. Dx RNE Sqclx FJLcov-as-pi West Virginia Club lVl0TTO: Monlani semper liberi SONG: The Nvesl Virginia Hills COLORS: Old Cold and Blue YELL: Hi! Hi! Hi! Montani, Vvest Virginia, Semper liberi! OFFICERS C. C. LEWIS, III ..... ....... P resident D. L. CORKE .... .Secretary and Treasurer -I. H. MCCLINTIC. .. .... Vice-President H. P. C-REER .... . . ....,.......... Chaplain MEMBERS F. W. P,-.YNE D. L. CORKE C. C. LEWIS. Ill I-I. P. CREER F. j. BROOKE j. I-I. McCLlNTic G. A. BYRNE XV. S. BEARD A. G. THOMPSON E. T. THOMPSON j. E. ST.-XEHLIN C-. E. GWINN P. R. Yucca R. M. SLOAN I3-1 XX Southwest Virginia Club pass your lmuirles lwy COLORS: Pale Cn-en and Homesick Blue QLKLIPUION: Short-hoin lvzcedels MUITO: Smile and OFFICERS .X ST. C.x..uR. ...,. . , . . ...., Presidenl .-X. M. LAREW. . . .. . ,A..... Yue-President C. F. GRAHAM ...,, .,.,...,. . .... S screlary and Treasurer NEMBIQRS A. ST. Chun S. M. B. C0U1.l.1Nc., ju I. C. BLfcu.xN.xN .X M, l...xREw j. M. CROCKEII F.. L. Ruomhs C F. GR.xHxM 'If F. IIAMNER. jR. P. F. C.xMPuL1.l . H. 'lf Comm S. F ll-umorw XV. B. CROCKUT C. M. XXV.XI.KER F. li. MLNQW F. M. Risvrzx XV. M. GlI.lESPlE I35 . wwf. A - x C Z 3 ' ',,wlxmS , his W? y ' V , 'T'-' ie i .ir 1 l A 'f MOFTOI Xxleife I j. A. ALLEN C. E. CLARK H. E. WHALEX'. . .. Southside Virginia Club COLORS: Green and Cree-ner illle, but, oh, h-, we're loud OCCUPATION: Dry goods and notions fworthy notions, OFFICERS ..............President E... ....,......Vice-President , ....,. .... S ecrelary and Treasurer MEMBERS W. RISON W. C. DUNNINGTON, jR. R. j. REID j. A. ALLLN R. W. DLIPLYX' C. F. CAMPBELL j. H. DUNNINGTON J. W. RUSSELL L. C. BENLDICT C. T. BASKERVILLE C. W. THORNHILL C. R. MORTON W. R. XIAUGHAN F. H. V,-rss j. S. MORTON H. E. WHALEY V. Moons C. E. CLARKE W. P. I-IAZLLCROVE P. L. H,XMLETT W. S. HUNDLEX'. T. H. BUTCHER l36 jffffxpfffff fpgiifg If ,, , 1 Tmxfovaif? i 1giri2E?a ifiql wig Sfgzff G 1' H 45 2 40 , ' ' l ST! gn gf? H 9 1 , gm ,if LXLQQ,x-A 7 1 EI it f ' m ON D CL X i I C I-I o E-w,,-fX'!!,ZlIJ y A f- I tin' , -f g,,,g,fZlf ' tl xgggiiggigim , f,'L?f'!f is V L-ll I w1if?f Mm, WU ' f' ir?-fl - BI N N? 'MW' C ff,! ff' fi S E ? S 9 5' 35 X M in i Q wg iw M, X f 5 U4'u ,F , H W4Xf fi , '5 2 Q W Y ' f Wav, L fl lr U A.. 4. 4 'Fails .Url N is rw s.-r .JN 1 ws ' A -, 'fl ' -xv u I Jn ,. N or-x x- fix 4 ' 1-1 ,- -X S Q, 'fo ,Q QI 'uv ,- ,xx , b. ,f lf. 1 I- ,. - ,r - -' -, :J F r. .N . ,V .4 - -U :l 1 Ile' '- -'fl ,L+ - v . -In ,J fp... ., . .- 'r. , ' , n -'.a.'-1:-. 5. 1 .-' '. . ,- sz ,f.---.' 7: .'.. --gl: -'.-lcjf' .51 -'s f'f' 1'-'f:? ' , - '2.?iAfP1'b:-A9.- . -iii.. 1 gi 3 .,,s-Q .ac .,f-. . . 7r. .-.Fg:.4'4-,, '-fJ'.'r. . xt'.':. ,-.,l-,.,.g. '. b ,lv ..-- b . 1 .4 f':1.. ' .' .- - . 1 .'.,.:A-,,1:,L 5 ' .1 , n , ., ' - ,'f:.--',m?..1k,Zr , , ..,-'. ' f.- F ' ' - 'F--fgu-: '.-ft-4:54- -' ' ' -' 4 -v .' 35137: .',---'g-3 g.'J1.:.e , , 3 ,-,..J 'Ii Q - . r-,.L-,:.,,- 4 , ' '- .' 1. -L - '-- ' 1 , Iwi- I -' A-:.'FN'.x. -' ff A ' . .1'l- X U-' . - LL ' 'Abi-1-1 ., ' - ' '. .f.'g'. if , 'I x 1 A 1 ,-'. g:3 . ,- 1-,, -1-. 4-.' ' .,',,.. ' . Vg, , , ,a-.-,,.,-:-...5--:'., ' . A m-- ' , ., , ,'.'- ' -' , 71 e '.,', b'.'-f'ff .-.Z 311 -if-mf L .' --' , ,R-Y...,f,a.g , - . .51 IDU' f ,, ,ug - ' -M.v,'g-,.- ., , pa-.- ' ..'. '.' , -,.-.u--- '. - ' -'1 . '..,..' , .1 ., Xt .g..':Y-'. ' f , . L --1. -. X-.,,',.x. -I I .. -wp,-, , , , ' -K H 2 Q -- -4-.V-. ',,-. . - . ' '- -1-- , Ly' -1, '-., . .'. . ,' . . n ,N f 3-,.:x. , .-.y.,,A,'.. . N IQ,-..,., 3. ' 'L fr.- .', . . ' F -Yr fifs A ' - - . 1. 1 My 1 5 .'. n :H-1-ei :J . , '- ...L . - ' - : .,1A,..' L -', , .. u.,-1 --,.. ' ,, - . ' - -'Ju . l- - -1- L- . r.. ., an s 0-34, -, , -. '.'K-L, Q . .. - '. --.-lg . - 1 -,.. . ' . . 2. 2 - E -.-. -. '.. ' I '. ,. '. '... ' ' .. ,-f': -.1-' '.'. ,j5':'-. ,. -5 1-1-fc' ' '-, -I - '.-.1 4' .',s:,i'1,3fg.'- - , '-I - .' 'gy-. lylxl- , 1 -,-, -., . ' ,---5...-V -----,- -,-'- . - .,,- .I .-4 1-..r. - . ' .. ,--,-.,-,.-w.1.,l-,,-gg, P .1 A . .,, N -l p ,x. .!. , I I' . ' ' ' .51 v. - Qu, ,3.j,.:.,.n,r1 . 'X .. - !..1. : . . .-' ' ,. .'- 1,--..g,.1-.' --f:-',11'.'-. 1 - .1 .l,45 1 1 1 2-. - - , r ' -..-S,-..,-.H ---L ' -- V, g.,.. 1,1 M- ,-.X I.--, ,-I .P-.,,,, wb, .,x:-1.5-Q, , . ' I-, -, . 3 . ,-, 7 ' v -. .,:-4s --.-g.A,,.,-' ..'1 . . , ., -n . V ' . x-IJ. . ', Lf. r - 1 ., :.-.11'g:'a -'-.-5,-'1 , V E' . .. -. N- '-.. ,Q . 4 -.-J,-.--': ..-, 1.-1. ,. . 1- 3 . -.. A- 1. . . ., ,..3,,..-.-L .- , .. ,L,v., ' .' . .'. '4 ' 'N' ' g ' C-y'...y-'1'14'T.Q-' . .1'-f'L...,'t , lfxl. ',.- i - 5.51 I '.T,.' -- - Rf, ,. ' 1- V 2' . ' I-. f-.-'- f . 1 . ,.. - - lr. gg'-, ,.L',--- , , .. . , , , A .5 l . . - . . . , . '-.A..,'. . . ', f t if ,. . . . . . , L 4 . x 4 , '.r 1 H 1 1 av f MOTTO: Charleslon got Richmond be-al a block OFFICERS C. C. LEWIS, Ill.. ..,. Hpresident I I. P. GREER. ,. .......,... Vice-Presidenl J. E. STAEHLIN. .. ...Secrelary and Treasurer MEMBERS C. C. Lawns, III j. E. STALHUN F. W. PMN: D. L. Comes G. A. Bums A. G. THOMPSON H. P. GREEK E. T. THOMPSUN 138 Dinwiddie Club NIUTTO: Peanuts forever OFFICERS T. .AnTKINSON, . .., .. .. ... .,.,,.Pn-sidenl H. ZEHMER. .. .., . ,.XviC6-l7l'?Sid6'l'lf J. IVICILWAINE .,,.. Sc-crelaxy and VIQYEHSUFPI' V4 Il. FRU . .. , ., . .,. , . , ,Chaplain M I-I IVI B PRS 'lf ln. Arxmsom T. j. MCIWMNE C. F, CH.,XNIBl.lS5 XY. B. IX1nll.wxlNr. W. H. Fam W. P. Ruxm j, R. jown A. ll. XEHMLR IV' f-X I x . r-UN O9 eo Sunny Side Club OFFICERS G, F. CH,m1Bl.1ss.. .. ,..,., ,..,,,.. P resident if 'If XXUQINSON .... ,,....,.... V ice-President 'l. ML'll.WAlNE, ,. . , , ,Secretary and Treasure: NIEIVIBFRS T, 'lf Arxmsox C. F. CHAMBLISS G. H. HO.w'IR,XNDER j. R, jowss 'I' j. Mn-ILw,xmE NV. P. RAINEY N,kPOl.EQON BoN,xP.m'rE A. H. ZLHMER I-HI MOTTO: L II. P. CIREER .......,. C.. T. BAsKERvILLE,. .. F. M. FITTS ,.....,. F. j. BROOKE. .. ... j. B. CAMPBELL. xl. A. ALLEN T. T. ATKINSON VV. L. BEARD F. j. BROOKE G. T. BASKERVILLE I. C. BUCHANAN G. A. BYRNE S. D. BEDINGER j. B. CAMPBELL P. F. CAMPBELL C. E. CLARKE H D XV. B. CROCKFTT . CI. CLARK . L. CORKE OVC Calico Club is the beginnlng, lI1e mIdcIIe. and lI1e e ' OFFICERS MEMBERS j. M. CROCKETT A. ST. CLAIR, JR. F. M. FITTS VV. H. FREE' H. P. GREEQ C. F. GRAHAM G. W. joNEs, JR. A. M. LAREW H. LUEBBERT C. C. LEWIS, III DR. A. NV. MCXVIIORIER C. T. j. MCILWAINE bl. H. MCCLINTIII T. M. MINOR F. H. IVIOORE I-II 5' 7' nd of everything . . . ..,.. CI1IefLoveI .,................CIIIef Bore .. . . .Most FaIlI1lIII lo Ins Lover , . . . . . . . . .Lemon Revipienl I tcsl I3roseIyle .3 C. R. IVIORTON j. S, MORTON B. S. OLIX'ER j. P. PROFFITT C. L. REX R. j. REID NV. P. RAINEY H. L. PAINTER I XV. RUSSELL F. M. RIIILIRN DR. S. SMITH XV. R. XIAUCIIAN D. T, VVOOI. A. H. Zr.HMI'R Z0 XZ fi' 'w f 3 qn.coNe-px X4 Anti-Calico Club MOTIO: No love in min:- OFFICERS DR. H. C. BAGBY. ,..,..,.,....., ...,..,,.,.... I jresidfnl R. H. BARKSIMIL ,..., ,.,, ,,..,,. . . .,...... X fice-President S. M. B. COUl.l.lNC., JR. . .. ., ,Secnelary and Treasurer IVIILIVIE-IQRS DR. bl. H. C. BAGBY j, B. ORR R. H. B.xRKsD,x1.E M. 5. SMITH S. Nl. B. Cou1.L1Nc,, JR. T. C.. Svvlwsrcmn G, Ii. C.wlNN C. W. THORNHIL1. j. lVIcC,wmWx4 A. CJ. THQMPAON j.w. C. Moons F, ll. Yaw D. 'If Wool. JOHN Ilxnws XVANH L.xMxsLRT I-Sl S W W 7 QU ,z 4 Smokers' Club F.4voR1Tn Tos.xcco: Imperial Cube Cut OFFICERS I. C. BLlCHANAIx .... ,.,,.,.. ..... C I1 ief Dispenscx oI the Xveed C. A. BYRNE. .. .,I., ,,.,.,,,,...... C hief Pipis! A. IVI. LAREW. ,..,., ...Head of the Piedmont Deparlmenl MEMBERS S. D. BEDINGER A. NI. L.xREw F. j. Baooxn C. II. LUHRBFRT l. C. BUc'n,xNAN j. S. IVIORTON A. ST. C1.,xlR, ju. C. R. IVIORTON C. F. CLARKE H. H. IVICVEY VV. XY. Cossx' V. Moomi j. IVI. CROCKETT G. L, RD: P. F. Fl.oURNox' G. A. BYRNE S. F. H.-xRMoN R. j. Ram CI. II. Ilosra.-INULR C. C. Lawns, III XV. P. II,xzl.1c3RfwL XV. H. FREX S. NI. JETI 'lf G SWINUORD j. I-Q. SIRAEIIIIN I-H -A 'A 'lu .9 fl kg ,sf Vai? W iff: Q5i5 1 'r ' ' 4 . X 'Sf F . K4 5: A D ,I ku s. in-dv sq. - 5 . 2. --Q 5 as In Q ' f GV' V ' uk - 'H 'ff ,-,-'- f - me-iw, 'X 4' Q . is L ' X ,523 ,. ..,. 12 : '-Tl N X 'fg,,g,p,, - ' QL-1 X 5 . ., 'mu ?' -W N wwf -2 ' :lx ' N-' ff! ff W' ' ,hi Eli, N7 Q l R 41, 7:.g.:-, FF X O is Xxx ' -, qw f . ,QM .,,.-ff,-.fl I .. . O ' 1 . , Q, ' -' K if 'Qi' ., 'YJ . - - 'O-Eg Ao' -N . . 1 Q.. 9. 3-5 ,, '. .f L LX. X , A A . 1 . 3 I X 53 J gfzig W! X 1 TS' X X 14' ,v 'pi 5,36 xiv 4' Riding Club O'1'TO: Xvhen you can'l ride. Cul or squeal M OFFICERS .-X. C.. THOMPSON.. ,,..,. .....,. ,,,..,..,.,..,..... S I able Boss F. BROOKE. .. ,Chief Jockey of the Creeks A. M. LAREW. .. .. ..Chief jockey of the Lalins V. MOORE ..... ..,..,...,.... ,..,.. .,....... S I a ble Boy HINDS. NOBLE .-wo E1.Df:1mL .. ,,..... . . .. .. ...... Liverymen MEMBERS R. H. B.-xRK5O,xLE j. R. joxns F. j. BROOKE A. L. LORRAIYE G. A. BYRNE .-X. H. ZLHMER C E. CLARKE R. j. Rum XV XV. COSBY S. F. H.,XRMOY j. M. CROCKETT A. G. THOMPSON W B. CROCRUT VV. P. Rmxm' XV. H. FRE! j. B. ORR M. N. FITZGERALD .-X. M lmmrxx XFILTOR HUGO P515 Bpwgg C. XV. THORNHILL H. L. Lgg E. L. RHOAOES XV. R. Yxucuxm V, MOORE F. M. FlTTs XV. B. MCILWMNE XV. P. H,XZl.ECROX'E THEODORE Roossvnm WY S. Huxmm I-H fzfwfffqm WSJ CU L:.. . Te TO!-4 N ,, LCONER Those Walking TXTOTTOC Stick lo Mother Eallh OFFICERS B. B. XXII-IITE ..,. ,. ..,... ... .. ..Chief Plodder C, F. GR.-xH.-XM. . . 'Second Pedestrian j. MCGAVOCK ,.., . . . . ,...... ....,..., R iarshal MEMBERS C. F. CH.-XMBLISS D. I.. Coma: S. D. BEDINGER C. M. XY'.xl.r4ER XY. RISON B. B. XYHIIE R. XY, DUPUY H. H. IX'lcX'Ex'. ja C. F. GRAHAM T. G. Swmuorm T. T. Arxemsox C. R. Monrox H. XV. BLANTON F. H. Xfxsa T. j, Mcl1.w,um5 C. H. LUEBBERT G. E. CWINN McC,woc'x j,xs C. Nlofms j. M. CRQCKUT ABR.-xl-IAM LINCO1 N W' H. T.-xFT I-15 QQ EP QM. A-' ' A , Huntmg Club OFFICERS H. VASS A,..,. ,..,.. ......, ..... B i g gas! Hunter J. BROOKE ...... . .Most Tender-hearled C. LEWIS, H1 ..... ,,,..,..,,... ,......,. B e st Shooter MEMBERS j. BROOKE j. MCGAVOCK R. W. DUPUY j. M. CROCKETT P. F. CAMPBELL H. L. PAINTER A. C. ADAMS H. P. HAZLEGROVE C. C. LEWIS, Ill H. G. CLARKE C. R. Momox W. S. BE,-.RD F. H. VASS W. W. Cosmo jNo. C. MCORE jfxs. C. MOORE W. M. CILLESPIE D. T. Wool. THror.oRE RoorEvEL'r BOOKER WASHINGTON I-26 ,- 15 xx L., . 2 - V Students' Club IVIOTTO: Damned be he wfwo RTS! cries, uHold, enoughlu OFFICERS CLARKE .,.. ...., ...,,. . . ..Pm5ndenl BOWLING ,..,. .,.. . . XYICC-Pl6SidCl'll RHOADES. .. ............ .,... S ecrelary and Treasne MEMBERS CLARKE j. P. PROl'Fll'i C. C.4xMPBm.1. C-. XV. RECTER C. F.C.xMPsu.1. D. H. RHEINHART M. C. Bowuxc E. L. RHOADES W. NV. SPROLY-E T. M. MINOR C. H. LENA j. B. ORR G. A. WILSON F. M. RYRURN j. NV. RL'5bEI.l, G. H. PAYNE S. D. BEDINGER H. L. PRINTER G. L. Rex jouw MOORE H. E. LEE GEORGE XVASHRNCTON I-17 N f I I, V A tx I J If fx, If xv F 1-XT' , 'V 1 l ffl,-- -'- 1,25 I 'vb f wa . if I iff! j. lVlClLWAlNE ..... T. ATKINSON .... H. BARKSDALE.. F. CAMPBELL ..... NSUSIEH MCILWAINE---Bring me a set of cat-gut strings K- , ',,fV The Maples MOTTO! FAVORITE DISH: OFFICERS MEMBERS TUBsY ATKINSON LeI's call 3 at R NV C Dos ZEHMER- Another large time DR. GRAHAM- The loquacious boy WALLYH BLANTON-.IA package to-day, but not candy PIN HEAD CAMPBELL- Let me eat my money's W0l'll'l.' MOSES CHAMBLISS-.41-hal blamed nigger and Bags SLEUHH BARKSDALE- Sit-down-Grandpa BOTTSU JONES- Let me alone, cl- it I48 OE CROCKETT- His affections have at last been settled l I' t I 'QP ., W2 F' All 'T ...........E.mperor , . , .Lord Chancellor . . . . ,Prime Minister . . . . .. .Court Fool ...Q si 0- iQ 9 X' '-Q -5? filxsx- , I ,. , - 1 l r W 3 A W W .3 Q- mm l i W , 3 SCL s-g ' I s I I 0 B W l A- J A M3 O l mu lm l ll' - M E 3 If J l - n A. 5 v' t u QW E- E If All it l at 3 Q5 yr yt I 1 E 0 l K' lg rr h lVlOTTO: Eat as if ln cloubt of the next meal . . ..,., Plesxdent Vice-President rotary and llqxeasuxc-1 .......-lesten OFFICERS C, M, XV,-xLKER,, ,,., .. . , ll. M, OLDFIELD, . .. ..... .. .., j.-xs. C. lVlOORE ...,. ,,.. S e. VV. Rxsow ....... ,,.,....... . ., MEMBERS DLVNNINGTON, HXVATTH- Daniel XYrlClJSlEf ln llue slaacleu DUNNINGTON, JACK -- 'l-he Girls' Pet W'.fxLKER ul-lOBB5 ll -mllalliccl a little yesterday RISON. BILL f Our only student REID---'The freshest of the fresh ,lONE5, C. W.- rl-he girls are all crazy about me CJLl7I'IELD. --HERRV' Nayl but l know the ways of wom l3.XSKERYlLLE. 'ABx5KE1 - Tal-ce your head out of lmere, sn lXlt lrwtlxg, 'l'w11.5x ' - Oh, but i1's hell lXlOORE. C. -f- C-mek Sl'I8t'lC-l VVIIITE. HBENNYH-- lnlu'oduce me lo the ladies I-N D Hampden House OFFICERS J. B, CAMPBELL. ,, ,... ........,.. . . . ,,..., ljresidenl G. H, HosTR,xNnLn. . . . . , . . ..,. ,,... X 'lice-ljrcsiclenl PETER SAUNDERS ,,.. ..... S ectelary and Txeasuret MEMBERS 'AI7IMIDDI ' SMITH-'AAgenI for rock, bones, old shoes and flying machines MC MCCLINTIC- Let us go Io the poultry show AL ALLEN- l've got a date. boys UNCLE jIMrvIx ' LAREW- Try anything once A.l.TE LORRAINEf l was llltre, but I wasnll in ilu UCLIVER COLDSMITHH CROCKETT- Hampden-Sidney Grecian'- UBLAKEH CAMPBELL- Nothing like standing in with Ilic ladies' QUlLl.Y RAINEY- How ftim a foundation QUEEN SLOAN- l'll never know if I don't ask l'lORSEu HOSTRANDER- Take me to the lsle of Wight. and l'Il lie quietl' .'WlLLIE V,xL1c.H.AN- Silence speaks louder than words HPETERU SAUNDERS-ul'Cl like lo see Mr. Sanders P. for a moment after chapel SKIN R.IxIsBIT HIIMNLR-- Hold them up. Skin Rabbit UBAGSH BACBY-uhxlake up, Mr. Lewis NLIMBOU SMITH--uDeuceclly hne, don'l you known XV. COSBY-- Please gag my mouth TODD Xx v0OLfuBE it ever so humble. lltere is no place like home.. I5U of . - l or 'No fflx wan fix V 3 W r Graham House MOTTO: Thank you, Mrs. Graham. I'll have some more ice cream, and please pass the cake FAVORITE DISH: Caramel Cal OFFICERS DR. GRAHAM ,... ................. Cl rand Guardian of the Sacred Hash H. G, CLARK ...,,... .... C hief Consumer of lhe Sacred Hash W. S. HUNDLEX' ,.... ...,.., P roleclor of lhe Sacred Fowls F. BROOKE, ,IR ..., ..... ....,.......,.. G r and High Priest MEMBERS BEARD, .lWHl5KERS f..L8b', six evenings a week BROOKE, USNOOKSN- l'll show you lhose pictures of Li some timen CLARK, PARcHMi:NT - I used to go no the Normal ,.,. but now- CORKE. USTOPPERH-lsle's always Reddy Io go to the Normal HUNDLEY, HHUNH4- l opinion it'll rain lo-day THOMPSON, A, C. - How do you like your eggs? -UA. G. Thompson! THOMPSON, UE.. T. - l'm no ladies' man l5l AX, Q l. 'X f ifmw N XM: H I l It 91635, hx '51 ,self lllll 'llll Tllll iiillf I fear, :Illia Ill! X MOTTO: Let us malce some noise FAVORITE DIsI-I: Rice OFFICERS F. H. MOORE ..., ..... ....... ......... P r e sidenl I A. ST. CLAIR ..... .,.. V ice-President f X X C. C. LEWIS .... ......... IX flascot A. C. ADAMS .,.., ,.... Ci uardian Z ' V ' N li t' i Q U t X wi'53'I'i ill Q Ib illlflf I Ill!!!-H!-3.--: 'in' l il I I I Ji hm .lxx 2 ,K ' f ,I ildlg ,,A,,. gi , f x 7756 ilu 9290.770 MEMBERS .- FRANCIS PAYNE- l've got to write to lzzie HFESSU ST. CLAIRf Oh! peaceful sleep KIRK 5AUNDERS4 Let's go hoolt something FLOURNOY-ul..end mc your looolci' CAM LEWIS-ul thought my heart would surely break BU-rx BUCHANAN- Old Daddy GEo. BRYNE- I live to eat LOU l-lARM0N4 l-lans Wagner in the shade FRII:DLEDUIvI FREY+ A songster of high repute FRANCIS lVlO0RE4 See Pullet to-night TONY ADAMS- Club is closed to-night ti BREEH DONNAN- l'll second Tony's motion US. Nl. B. COULLING- How did he get loose? TOM SWINEFORDf The human motorcycle FRESHMANH THORNHILL--.SllCnCC speaks louder than words HUTTU VASS- Let me tell you about it l'lElNEn LUEBBERT- The model of hard study GEO. GWINN-HA new Comer BILL GlLLE5PlE--.G'l0ng for home JOHN STAEI-ILIN- A musical kid PAGEH NORTIHIINCTON- Dance with me CHEESE OPPENHEIMER- I take no foolishness' lVl0LLY CLARIQE- Home, sweet homel' -4 .4 ,- -I .t l52 J..-E hw A- Jw , H f XR,-K , Y my iff f N if ' , Mil , 1 f 'Q- ' ' H SW MEMBERS dp - GOATS '-P .ao LT +I ,, ,F uf --+ -UD fn I, . gi, + IS3 g O in , 0 9 Q5 I 1 3- i Q f- ll 5, MISS LOIS RICHARDSON SPONSOR OF ATHLETICS I55 1 I 4, 6 J a.,e N F - ' af ' 1 n ,, ,' ar. L Y r ' f ,, - HW QUIK 'T 'ill fdmlth Wm. Wwtmtiw lm' 7 I I 'fm N 9- ' l Z. ,V r all lll'-i P im ...- ---- ---- -'- I ' ' ' v We .mv I r, QWJW W ll' ff-'f f s . MW . . f W fs ,mf , 3 tl ....-5.- ' i M f My Q55 ' OR the past few years athletics at Hampden-Sidney have been on a steady 5 increase, and at present hold a very prominent place in college life. C, X The success of the past few years is nothing short of phenomenal, and fu when we take into account the raw material out of which the various 'Q teams were moulded, our record seems all the more wonderful. Hampden-Sidney should count herself fortunate indeed to have secured the services of such men as L. W. Riess fSwarthmoreJ and Kemper Yancey fVirginiaD. whose clever and untiring efforts have always been to turn out the best teams possible, and to these two men she owes most in athletics. Besides good coaching. there is another stimulus which has played no little part in athletics. Some years back a league was formed, including Richmond, William and Mary, Randolph-Macon and Hampden-Sidney colleges. This league has aroused a great deal of wholesome rivalry between the above-named colleges, and brings forth the very best efforts of each college to turn out a winning team. Still another stimulus is a beautiful silver cup which is awarded to that college whose team wins the largest 158 percentage of games played. Hampden-Sidney has won the cup several times, though for the past few years she has suffered the misfortune of seeing the much-coveted trophy pass into the hands of another collegeg however, she has enjoyed the pleasure of being second in the contest. Though unsuccessful, Hampden-Sidney is not whipped, and the never-give-up spirit of the old college seems to whisper in a still small voice, We will win next time. Besides baseball and football, there are other athletic interests gaining strong hold at Hampden-Sidney. Basket-ball, tennis and gymnasium teams are at work, and are becoming more popular every year. Basket-ball is a game rapidly becoming popular among Southern colleges, and we hope soon to see Hampden-Sidney placed in a prominent position among the competitors in this game also. For several years tennis has been gaining ground in athletics at Hampden-Sidney. and when the much-talked-of Inter-collegiate Tennis League is formed, we hope to be able to put a strong team into the contests. Since athletics has taken so prominent a stand in college life, seemingly to deter- mine the size of the student body and the standing of the college, it behooves us to hold athletics up, not only to its present standing at Hampden-Sidney, but to press mightily forward and place athletics on a still higher plane. X x X ft 7 1 , C - I X . :D X' 159 l 92 i N iffiifisx F ' ff -l ,af ' C X. ,-L ll' L ff 5,52 rx . T41 X fl X ill of ' 'll' ll' 1 ,X l ly 1 ff K il if xl' 4 Le Y? 7 ::,:, ,X xx V ilxlylx K Qs: .Q X an if x l L f I X t f' Y V ,. HH' X 'tl arf li rx x i t 5' 1 Songs Then. Hampden-Sidney, here's to you. The noblest of your day, Here's to that team so strong and true. That That That Here That wears the red and gray. wears the red wears the red 's lu that team wears the recl and gray, my boys. ancl gray: so strong ancl true, and gray. Hike. hike, a hike us Thcre's nothing like us, Heic's to old Haml:den-Sidney- Drink her clown! Hcie's to old Hampden-Sidneyw Drink her down! Hele's to old Hamoden-Sidney- Sl'l8'5 the warmest thing in town- Drink her down! Drink her down! Drink her clown, clown, down! We shall forever unconquerecl be. No team can lick us, No team can trick us, We. boys, of H.-S. C. l60 Hike along. old Hampden-Sidney. l-like along! Hike along, old Hamoden-Sidney, Hike along! Give us a show and we will win! For we are the team of nineteen-ten: We fear no harm! Oh, here's lo Ham-Sidney. As Fresh we explored her, A flass of the finest. As Sophs we adored her, Red. ruby. Rheinish, And carved our names upon her ancient halls! Filled up to the brim. As juniors patrolecl her. Her sons. they are many, As Seniors extolled her, Unrivaled by any. We trust our Alma lVlater's power in all' With hearts o'erHowing, We will sing this hymr! R-a-y! R-a-y! Rah, Rah! Hampden-Sidney! Team! Hampden-Sidney! CHORUS Rah, rah, old H.-S., rah! Old Alma lVlater's songs we are, Vile will herald the story, And die for the glory, For red and gray we are ever waving high! Rah. rah, for victory, H.-S. must wing Fight ro the finish, never give in. You do your best, boys, we'll do the rest, boys, Rah, rah, for old H.-S. YELLS Rah-Rah 'Giniz-x. H -Rah! .-S. Tiger! Rah-Rah-Rah! 'Ginia, H .-S. Tiger! Rah-Rah-Rah! 'Ginia, H.-S. Tiger! l6I Athletic Association E. K. MCNEW ........... Secretary B. B. WHITE ..,... ..,.. H. W. BLANTON ..,...... Secielary FOOTBALL P. R. YEACEII ........,, W. G. DUNNINGTON ...... KEMFER YANCEY CVAJ .... I Ns I C. E. CLARKE .....,.,..,,........., W. G. DUNNINGTON.. ...... .. OFFICERS-FIRST TERM . President T. T. ATKINSON. ,. ............ Vice-President and Treasurer OFFICERS-SECOND TERM .President . Vice-President and Treasurer , . . . .Captain . . . .Manager . ..,. Coach .... .Captain , . . .Manager ...,,Coa:i'I .....CaplaIn . . , . .Manager BASEBALL T. T. ATKINSON F. H. PAYNE .... BIC-BIE ...................,,,.., ' BASKET-BALL H. W. BLANTON .... M. S. SMITH .,..,.............., -4 P FACULTY ADVISORY BOARD DR. SMITH I I DR. WINSTON W DR. MCWHORTER l62 P. R. YEAGER ......... Football OFFICERS W. C. DUNNLNGTON ...... ............. W. S. HUNDLEX' .............. KEMPER W. YANCEY CVAJ ..... ........... SMITH, SAU NDERS .... ALLEN ......... . . . . . WALKER, BENEDICT .... JETT ............... CREER .............. CAMPBELL, j. B ....... PAYN!-1. H. G. CLARK .... BLANTON ............ Rlsow, HUNDLEY ...,. Ll-zwls ......... YEACER .... LINE-UP SUBSTITUTES JONES, G. W. ' MOORE, JNO. C. I63 ......Captain ......,..Manager Assistant Manager ...........Coach ......1..eft End .. . . .Left Tackle . . . .Left Guard ...,.....Center . . . .Right Guard . . . .Right Tackle . . . . .Right End . . . . .Quarter-back ...Left Half-back . . . . . . . .Full-back .Right Half-back W. G. DUNNINGTON MANAGER CAPT. P. R. YEAGER RIGHT HALF-BACK K. W. YANCEY COACH s. M JETT CENTER C. C. LEWIS M- 5- SMITH FULL-BACK LEFT END C. M. WALKER LEFT GUARD F. W. PAYNI RIGHT END JL A, ,LLLLN J. B. CAMPBELL LEFT TALKLL mom' TACKLE H. W. BLANTON H. P. GREER QUARTER-BACK RIGHT GUARD I66 1 H. G. CLARK RIGHT END K. R. SXUNDERS LEFT END L. C. BENEDICT FT GUARD WILLIAM RISON LEFT HALF-BACK LE I67 'N A T. T. ATKINSON.. F. W. PAYNE ...,. B. B. WVHITE ..... FRANK Blcsla . T. T. Anuxfox ..........,.., jxo. Moonz, C. C. Lewis ...,.. XV. H. FREY,, ,,.,.. G. F. CHAMBLISS K. R. SAUNDRRS. .. S 'D Q H of S 1. opfid ' 5 KV Baseball T E H H OFFICERS TEAM .Second Base D. .. . . . Pitchers H. . , . , ,Catcher A. ..First Base G. .Third Base W. 168 P. 2 4 4 4 NYVOOL .,... LEE ....... ZEHMER .... HOSTR,XNDER ........ RAINEX', R. ....,,,...Caplam ...,........Manager ....Assistanl Manager ....,..,.....Coach ..,.RighI Field .. .Centex Field ..,..LeflField . . . . .Short Slop REID. .. .... Substitutes SQUAD BASEBALL H. XV. BLANTON M, S, SMITH .... H. H, MCVU. Bmxrox ALLEN. lX'lCC1.lxT1L CORKE ..... SLOAN, , ,. X I ik Basket-Ball OFFICERS TEAM SUBSTITUTES Lewis LORRAINE RAINEX' LUEBBERT I70 , , . .Caplam . ,...... Manager ASSISIBDI Nlanager . . . . .Right Forward ...Left Forward .,........Cenler , , , .Right C-uarcl ....Lefr Guard RAINEY CORKE. LUEBBERT, SMITH. Mgr. Q M AIVICVEY Ass 3 o Z 1 U fu DU 2 41 Q cn Z Ld -3 .J 4' x Q I-' z U ki T' A 3 o DS 'E o LC WKCWG, l ig3QL .A NAHw'wf.1 Y , 1'f5':-, f X A 0' Q A 'WWi-'MQW519 f - 'YZ' -A I 'N Qu: U. Q M A iw. A I1 . - 0,0 1 c will x Y u ahlf' w 5 f xx IV n' hui? 'N--1 . I I ' xx-,J f ',- . . fy' QV Xxx-, ff A f . Q1-ff I' HV 1. ff: ff X MM . W1 Y. 1 NM W 7 A Q Tennis Club OFFICERS MANAGING BOARD A. DONNAN .,.... President VV. B. MCILWAINE. JR ....... Manager MEMBERS McVsx' MLlLwA1Ns, W. B. DUNNINGTON, W. G ADAMS Moons. F. H. THoMPsoN. A. G. FITTS DONNAN LAREW I72 Senior Football Team Junior Football Team WM. Rtsow. . OFFICERS . ..... Captain F. M. Rl'BURN .......,... .,... M anager TEAM AIETI' .. ..,,,.. .....,.. C enter REX .... . . .Right Tackle WILSON ,.,,, . . . Right Guard DUNNINCTON . .... Right End FITTS ..,.. .... L eft Tackle BROOKE , . . .... Left Guard PAINTER . . . ..,... Quarter-back CAMPBELL . .. . . .Right Half-back H. G. CLARK ..., .......,. F ull-back RisoN ....,.. .... L eft Half-back BEARD . . ...,,. Left End Sophomore Football Team K. SAUNDERS. F. W. PAYNE. PAYNE . . . ALLEN . GREER . . , BYRNE . . . WALKER . . . RAiNEY ...... K. SAUNDERS. .. FREY ........ OFFICERS .....Captain .....Manager TEAM .....RightEnd . . . .Right Tackle .. ...Right Guard ........Center ....Left Guard ... . .Left Tackle . .,.... Left End .. . . . . Quarter-back JONES ..... ..... R ight Half-back BOWLING . . ..,....... Full-back NELSON . . ............. Left Half-back SUBSTITUTES ST. CLAIR FLOURNOY RHOADES OFFICER W. S. HUNDLEX' ........ Manager and Captain TEAM HAZLEGRDVE ............. ........ C enter BEDINGER ..... ..... R ight End VAss ....... ..... R ight Tackle MCCLINTIL . . . .... Right Guard CREER ..... ..... L ef: Guard CHAMBL1ss . . . ..... Left Tackle MCILWAINE ... ...... Left End BLANTON . . . ..... Quarter-back CORKE .... .... R ight Half-back HUNDLEY' , . . ..... Left Half-back LEwis .. . ............,....... Full-back SUBSTITUTES BARKSDALE ATKINSON WHITE Freshman Football Team OFFICERS OPPENHEIMER ............. ..... C aptain THOMPSON, E. ............ .... M anager TEAM RUSSELL ..... ......... ....... L e ft End BUCHANAN .. . .... Left Tackle jNo. C. MOORE .... REED ......... BENEDICT ..... , . . . P. F. CAMPBELL ..... VAUGHN .,..., .....Lefl Guard .... .. ..Cenlei' . . . .Right Guard . . . . .Right Tackle ,.....Right End FITZGERALD ..... ..,... Q uarter-hack M. CLARKE ..... Left Half-back LORRAINE ..... . Right Half-back OPPENHUMER .......... ......... F ull-back SUBSTITUTES . L. C. CAMPBELL MCILWAINE RHINEHART Senior Baseball Team Junior Baseball Team OFFICERS E. K. MCNEW .............. .... M anager W. Ci. DUNNINGTDN .,.,... ..... C aptain TEAM REX .................... .,... P itcher -IETT ................ ..... C atcher W. C.. DUNNINQTON .... .... F irst Base RISON ................ .... S econd Base PAINTER .,......... ..... T hird Base CLARK .... .... S hort Stop BROOKE . .. .... Left Field WHALEX' .... Center Field WILSON . ......,............. Right Field SUBSTITUTES FITTS SMITH CAMPBELL BEARD Sophomore Baseball Team OFFICER W. H. FREY. .. ....... Manager and Captain TEAM ALLEN ..... .,....... ..... P i lcher FREY F. W. PAYNE SAUNDERS .. HOSTRANDER WOOL ...... G. H. PAYNE BOWLING . , . CWINN . . . . . ...Catcher . . . ...... First Base ., .... Second Base ....Short Stop . . ..... Third Base . . . .... Left Field . . . .Center Field Field SUBSTITUTES OFFICERS THOS. T. ATKINSON ..... Manager and Captain H. E. WHALEY ................. Chief Coach TEAM CHAMBLISS ............. .... P itcher C. E. CLARKE .... ..... C atcher HUNDLEY ..... . . ...First Base ATKINSON .. Second Base WHITE ...... ..Short Stop BASKERVILLE . . . . .Third Base McILwAINE .... ..... L eft Field CORKE ...... THOMPSON ....... .. . . .. . ..,. Center Field .Right Field SUBSTITUTES JONES BARKSDALE GRAHAM Freshman Baseball Team OFFICER -IOHN C. MOORE ........ Manager and Captain TEAM LORRAINE ...... ....... .... P i tcher JNO. C. MOORE. .. ....,. Catcher T. C. CAMPBELL ....... First Base FITZGERALD ...... ..... S econd Base RUSSELL ...... .... T hird Base HARMON . . . ..,.. Short Stop REED ....... ..... L eft Field RHI-LINI-IARI .,., ..... C enter Field VAUGI-IAN .....,..,.......,..... Right Field SUBSTITUTES jAs. C. MooRE P. SAUNDERS MCILWAINE OPPENIIEIMER 3, X S K XS? X Track Team OFFICERS S. D. BEDINCER, Captain H. XV. BLAN1oN, Manager SENIOR TEAM QIUNIOR TEAM BEARD PAINTER BED1Nc.ER BLANTON RYBURN BROOKE WVHITE MCILWAINIE SOPHOMORE TEAM FRESHMAN TEAM ZEHMER PROFFITT P. F. CAMPBELL jNo. C. IVIOORE BYRNE JONES RUSSELL LORRAINE l75 , 1 -J I? gx 2 A fii 0 ii 5.0 Wearers of H. S. FOOTBALL F. XV. PAYNE H. R. SAUNDERS C. C. LEWVIS, III NV. RISON j. B. CMIPBELL H. XV. BLANTON j. H. MCCLINTIC j. A. ALLLN M. S. SMITH H. P. CREER C. M. XXCILKER L. C. BENEIIIUT H. G. CLARK P. R. YEICIQR VV. S. HUNDLEY S. M. jaw BASEBALL H. E. LEE T. T. ATKINSON P. R. YEAGIQR LEWIS MANAGERS XV. G. DUNNINCJON .-mu F. XV. PMNE 176 Wearers of H. S. C. jNo. C. MOORE Cao. XV. jorvzs J M. C. BOWLING H. L. PMNTER jfxs. C. MOORE S. D. BzD1Nc.LR E. F. CAMPBELL P. O, NORTPIINGTON VV. B. NlCILW,f'.INE N. T. CDPPENHEIMER CEO. F. CH.xrx1!s1.1ss NV. P. I4AZI.EGRONE T. j. BROOKE S 8.21 , JOSEPH M. CROCKETT ..,. ....... .,.A.. E d ilor-in-Chief j. BLAKE CAMPBELL .... ,..,...... B usiness Manager CHARLES E. CLARKE. .. ...Assislanl Business Nlanager ....,,.Y. M. C. A. Editor FRANCIS H. MOORE., .. ,,...........AlhlE-tics W. G. DUNMNOTON HUBERT C. CLARK ...,. ..... C ollege and Campus . , . ..., t .....,, E. xchange Editor F. IVIOYLAN FITTS. .. CHARLES F. GRAHAM ..... ..... A ssislanl Exchange Editor A. GARNETT THOMPSON .... ..... A Iumni Editor 178 ON. C. E, CL.-xnxx, THoMPs IVIUYLAN FITTS, A. C. row lefl to right-F. H. MOORE, cz. o F- H QEJIIO -in-Clue I' CROCKUT LM anagen J. L fBus1ness M EL PB LAKE CAM om l'oxx'4H. G. CL XRK, B Bon RAHAM DUNN Ncrox, CHM. F. G NV. G 1, f'DLL..I Sack TQLCONEQ Board of Trustees REV. TIIOS. VU. HOOPER. D. D.. REV. M. L. LACY, D, D .,.,.... GOVERNOR W. H. MANN ...... REV. F. T. MCFADEN. D. D .... HON. A. D. XVATKINS .....,. JUDGE JAMES L. TRE.ww,xY ..,.. REV. W. C. CAMPBELL. D. D... DR. PETER WINSTON ........... W. C. DLTNNINGTON, ESQ ..... A. A. CAMPBELL. ESQ .,... DR. PAUL IRVING ........ H. A. STOKES, ESQ ..,... I. H. C. PANCAKE, ESQ .... S. H. HAWES .......,..,. HON. A. A. PHLECAR ,.... REV. JOHN H. DAVIS ,.....,, JUDGE F. B. HUTTON .......... REV. JOSEPH RENNIE. D. D... A. B. CARRINGTON, ESQ .....,. . REV. W. WI MOORE, D. COL. C. C. LEWIS, JR.. -I. SCOTT PARRISH, ESQ ..... REV. j, B. BITTINGER ...... HENRY' M. MCADEN, ESQ ..,. ALEXANIUER B. DICKINSON.. PRESIDENT C-RAHAIVI, ex officio D.. ISO ...,...Culpeper, . . . .Lewisburg. W. .. . .Richmond. . . . .Richmond, ,,..FarmVillc, .. . . .Chatham, . . . . .Roanoke ....FaImViHe, .. . .FaI'mVille. .....XVytheville. . . . .RichmOncl, ...,.. . .FarmVilIe, ....,Romney, W. .... . .RIchmOnd, Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va ....Brislol, Va.-Tenn ...,.. Farmville, . . . .Abingdon ....NOrfOlk, .....DanviHe, ,... . . . .Richmond . . . . .Charleston W .... . . .Richmond ,...Chalham Hill, Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va .. . .Charlotte, N. C . . . .Richmond Va , Q- , feffttlfi fy fb Lfi?Qh'iE?t ff lfl .Mttt.fTsg4stt f f fl x l f X! 4 It Ig t I, 1,3 I L I tat f v My it J L L '- ' 6 i ?'dt'o9,g5i I f 5? -.i lll rj, X il 4 . r l MTWWM , f Q . ,,,,,ff,,Jfls.. -.Y, ff-ffmll R! K 7i . tic . it Nrlfrsmlt cuereuerelttwerwarlfa I Y ' -feik ar J I4 Arrival of students. I5 Freshmen found to be fresh, green and juicy. I7 Y. M. C. A. reception in gym. I8 I A. M.-Freshmen see one side of college-life. 20 Sunday-Freshmen, after two strenuous days, have a little rest. ZI Football practice begins. Z3 Coach Yancey makes a talk in Chapel. 24 Minor' goes out for the team. 25 Minor leaves the football squad on account of sicknessf U. 27 Trouble on Venable Fieldg everybody trying to get their nose on the hall at the same time. 29 Faculty met and found the 999,999th way to work Automatic Rule. ISI 1. 5 f if 5 Qin 5 if I Moylan Fitts did not go to Farmville after having gone for I6 days straight. 2 Consequently, rain and hail. 3 Blue Monday-junior Latin finds walking bad. 4 Faculty met and failed to find new way to work Automatic Rule. 5 Rain! hail! snow! 6 Coach has a uhunchn about the Washington and Lee game. 8 Washington and Lee scared to death. 9 Everybody goes to church-Wonderful! I2 Everybody goes to prayer-meeting-Marvelousl I4 Lena learns some new words on Second. I6 Coronation Day. I7 The Royal Family begins its rule. I9 The crown is broken-Somebody stepped on Cinl it. 22 Roanoke College beaten. 24 Skin Rabbiti' comes to gym. 25 Skin Rabbit learns to skin the cat. Z9 7.00 to 8.00 P. M., everybody silent-9.00 P. NI., everybody talks, espec ially Aggie. 30 Moylan cuts Farmville again. Q ,I XI 0 wb, -2 05 . 5 I-I 'S IMI il: mfg. Q3 BE B 3 Everybody preparing for Richmond CoIlege's reception. I82 Reception over-Poor Richmond! Hampden-Sidney students start leaving for Richmond. More students leave. Everybody trying to sell something to get money to go to the game. Blank, Blank, Blankity, Blank! ! ! ! Boys begin to come back. The last straggler arrives Cwalked half-wayl. Everybody walking with hands in pockets, groping for something that is not there. P. Fitz goes to the Normal. ' SundaysAUncle Jamie works out by permutation and combination the num- ber of ways NAutomatic Rulen can be worked. Junior Latin had an off day. Geo. West Diehl pays a visit to the Hill. Geo. West still on the Hill. Moylan goes to town for a changef U. t VTX' ng L' 4,1 ,A Ai 'vr-:cfm V ri- F2 - Basket-ball practice begins. McCavock found in the Edinburgh. Mr. Miller goes to town. Some talks in Chapel. V. C. C., I7: H.-S., I-4fQh, you Quint! Everybody scared. A sigh of relief: they are half over. Frank Brooke leaves for home. Lucky, I guess. A little rest Cfor somel. Joy and good-byes. to jan. 5 The HQll is sad, lo t!'ere are no students on it. I83 ' ifx tr MDT I 931' 1 'P ii t V ff 3 I HSC M nn X it 1 -I Boys a 1'1' ive full of plum-pudding, and of course can't study 5 Everybody busted. 6 Ditto. 9 Basket-ball holds sway. I3 Basket-ball team starts out to beat Virginia. I5 The voice of the Cuckoo is heard in the land. I6 Leap-frog in H. Tuclfs front yard. I8 Muddy-Poor Frogs! 21 Skin Rabbit runs around the track holding 'em up. Z3 Curry busts uslewnfwonderfull 26 Pete rids Junior C-reel-1, as usual. Z9 Moylan didn't go to town. Well! well! 3l Curry pulled off a joke in Chemistry. I Bald heads in chapel. I Aggie had Hundley where the hair was short. IS4 3 Basket-ball game in Farmville. 6 Aggie had everybody where the hair was short. I I Baseball practice led by Capt. Thomas T. Atkinson. I I Inter-society debate-poor Phips. I4 VaIentine's Day-Wally sends one to Lynchburg. I5 Mccavock went to the Normal. I9 Sundayicock fighting on the Hill-Aggie disgusted. 20 H. Tuck lectures on afore-said. 24 Skirts arrive on the Hill. 25 Some trip the light fantastic toe, others trip up. U. Z IQ, x- A If K N 1 3 ,ig-,, I Rather gloomy dayveverybody gets scared about exams 2 Slew begins study for exams. 5 Bennie White went to sleep in church. 8 Aggie rides Tubby once more. I I Reid goes to town for a change. I5 Exams begin-poor students. I5 Baseball coach arrives-poor exams. I7 Anderson, jr., makes 99 on Greek. I8 Pete surprised that he didn't make I00. I8-Z5 Everybody studies. 25 They are over-joy. 27 Brooksfw busted on a problem. 30 P. Fitz went to town to see a friend. I85 Y.. file 1 sms? C I - Enom - Holiday! ! ! l-April fool. ha! hal Limbo suggested that Psychology class read over the lesson for a change. Pete rides French II and Bennie busted-Class disgraced. Charlie Graham has his picture taken in gym suit-photos on sale at Mr. lVliller's. Aggie gives Junior Latin the definition of supercilious with illustration. Capt. Beclinger had his track team out. Everybody goes to Bass's. Lights out in Dorm-lVlcNew enraged. J. Brooks takes a spin on his motor-cycle. Mail comes on time for once. Found out that the plugs ran away with Boss. Hobbs stopped on the way to Chapel-ask him why. N T'11vf - Baseball holds sway, Hut Vass tells one more. Moylan takes a little walk of seven miles. Baseball game at H.-S. Lee gets a hit and Buck falls backward off the grandstand. Lights go out during prayer meeting and Bennie says dog gone it. Horrors! ! ! Anderson, Jr., learns to play Set-back. Oliver Goldsmith wins the IOO-yard clashg Skin Rabbit second. I86 Sub-Fresh Greek ridden by Pete Other Greek classes overjoyed L. C. Campbell missed church: choir disorganized. Barney gets an anonymous letter from the Normal, Barney goes to town to investigate. All excited over exams. 1-F-r fl X Y X rx , in Everybody studying like mad. f xf Wg ' ' 7 X :- Q l i l ' ia, ref f t ffl X '- UQ5 x X -xg, . 411 7 i ' Same. Dino. Seniors feel shaky: all swear they busted. Sigh of relief. Calic! Calic! Everybody fall in love. Finis-and home, sweet home. Amen. 187 Pot Pie of H. S. The Butcher cut a piece of meal Upon a Raina-y dayg Thl b e am with his coal of lleecy W'ool Q'er all the Lee did play. The Campbell in the desert Rhoacles Vilas slruclc with an awful Payne' With a hot gas Jett he singed his Beard And then he tried afain. As on the Brooke a Corlce did float, The Wvalker wallcecl auayg The Painter tooli his brush in hand, Xvhich in the Garrett lay. A Proffitt stood on a Thornhill. And to his love he said: 'Oh, meet me in the Hazlegrove And there we will be wed. The people of a certain Hamlett. O nce had an oyster Frey. Forlhwith they f'Jolc a spell of Fit's. And then for lVloore did cry. The village black Smith stood beneath A spreading chestnut tree, He either worked with lazy strols Qtr sung in a Minot' key. es, I88 't fiat The eighteenth volume of the KALEIDOSCOPE is now before the public. seeking that indulgent favor which has marked the reception of its predecessors, and this is a need which all publications of this kind must feel to a greater or less degree, since in the nature of things they can not be expected to stand upon their merits as models of literary or artistic excellence. A publication. to justify its existence. should at least maintain the standard set for it at the beginning of its career. Any gain that may be made in the quality of the subject-matter or in the mechanical side of the work is so much matter for congratula- tion. We claim for this issue no advance in either of these directions, but we sincerely hope it will perform what is its primary function-to put into permanent and attractive form some of the scenes and incidents of especial interest which make our college days so dear to us. Perhaps this book will not make a particularly strong appeal to many who may read it, but we, whose efforts are in great measure responsible for its existence, and all those whose lives furnish the greater part of its contents, will, as the years go by, turn over its pages with ever increasing pleasure. Every picture, every grind, every vaguest hint it contains will start its delightful train of recollections and carry with it sug- gestions which are completely lost on the uninitiated. You can uconjuren with a book of this kind and it is the possession of this latent power to start the train of memory, and the approbation of the student body which furnish its justification. 189 ln behalf of future Boards of Editors, the Staff wishes to urge upon all the students of the College the need for more concerted action in the production of the KALEIDOSCOPE. We want this book to be a live index of the life here on the Hill, and unless more effort in its behalf is made by the students, this end cannot be attained. The KALEIDOSCOPE, is not a private enterprise of the Staff, but is meant to be a representative publication of the institution and as such demands the interest and assistance of every man in College. The following gentlemen have laid us under lasting obligations to them by the contri- bution of material, without which it would have been impossible for us to publish this Annual: Rev. Thornton C. Whaling, D. D.g Rev. James R. Bridges, D. D.: Rev. john C. Leps: Rev. T. C. johnson, D. D.: Prof. A. W. Mcwhorterg Dr. A. Morrison. For whatever artistic merit the KALEIDOSCOPE may possess, we are indebted to the following: Miss Rose Goode, Miss Molly Mauzy, Mr. Carl Zeisburg, Mr. John Falconer, Mr. Littleton Fitzgerald, Mr. Marion Fitzgerald, Wlr. Binford Walford, Mr. Philip Meeks, lVlr. F. lVl. Fitts. ,-fs: -tw 'ii' x Ku - 1 f - fig we 190 v G . f X 1.-fri. . I - 4 I X! L f Q' of ls that clear? Does everyone understand this?AProf. Thornton. Say, we've got to write up those g1'inds.fW. B. Mcllwaine. Oh, Lee, let's go down to Farmville this afternoon.-Jas. C. Moore. Uh-m-m, yes, if you insist on that I reckon I'll have to take it.vProf. Vvhiting. Mr. takes permitted. lVlartin, have you read your Junior Latin?-Blanton. Gentlemen, why don't you learn the Greek?-Prof. Brock. Wanted- A wife.-G. H. Payne. A wife.-How many others? An unbreakable store.4lVlr. Miller. To resign from my job.4Want ad editor. Somebody that can throw a ball that I can hit.-H. C. Clark. A less sudden method of descent than falling.-Mr. lVliller's kitten. Something cheap at I-lart's store.-Student body. Aggie: Mr. Mccuavock, what is the meaning of uintegern? Mccavockz A single man. Curry: Mr. Fitzgerald, what is the advantage of the gland arrangement? Fitzgerald fwho has heard only the word Nglandnj: Well, the glands make Huids and secrete them into the stomach, and-- Curry: Yes, the trees are covered with ice, the sky is blue, the grass is green, and- but that doesn't answer my question. l9l Aggie fto Payne, who had read off a very fluent translation, : Uh-m-m, Mr. Payne, if you're going to get a Hhorsew get a good one, get a good one. These cheap ones will tell you anything. Aggie fto a basket-ball playerjz Oh, yes, you're one of these fellows that go patting the ball around on the Hoor, aren't you? FREAKS DISCOVERED IN SOPI-I BIBLE as Mr. Rainey, what's the most precious metal? H Diamond. lVlr. Campbell, what's 2K3 times Zi? .tsixlu lVIr. Frey, who was Ahab's wife? -lerebelf' u IVIr. Flournoy, who owned the vineyard next Ahab's summer palace? Nabob. st Mr. Campbell, was David a good man?', Well,-some people might say he wasf, Ask Jim Moore about the girl that donit write back. SENIOR BIBLE February I, l9ll Dr. Graham: What part did the jews play in the propagation of Christianity? Mr. Smith: They recognized Christ before they accepted Him. Dr. Graham: No- Mr. Smith: Oh, yes, they were tent-makers. Dr. Graham: Have you studied this lesson? Smith: I have read it over. Dr. Graham: I don't wish to make sport of you. Into what did the Jews organize themselves? Smith: Into clans. FRESH GREEK Rhinehart: Professor, how is the Creek I-I made? I have forgotten. Professor Brock: Just give it the rough CD breathing. Rhinehart fa few minutes laterj: Professor, suppose it comes in the middle of the word? l92 FRESH BIBLE One Freshman writes fourteen commandments. Water, water, everywhere, And not a drop to drink: Just walk along from First to Fourth, If this you disbethink. Bags and dippers full of wetness, Drop upon you thickg If you can't find some other means, just hit 'em with a brick. XVANT ADS Wanted- A sure cure for hotbox on cab wheels.-H. C. Clark, Beard, Thompson, Graham and V. Moore. A few more cuts, a lot more tens, and a heap more Ucalicsf'-H. S. in general. A date at the Normal.-Mr. C-albraithf' Somebody else to correspond with.-Jas. C. Moore. Somebody else to ride.-Dr. Whiting. Material out of which to make a Junior English Class.-Dr. McWhorter. Another head to deprive of hair.-The H. S. Association of Amateur Tonsorial Artists. Something that the Sub-Fresh Greek Class doesn't know.-Soph Greek Class. A pony, horse. or other conveyance for Titus Livius.-Junior Latin Class. An assistant Crinds who will do something.-W. B. Mcllwaine. To come out ahead this year.-KALEIDOSCOPE Staff. Something that Mccavock can't Ctry tol do.-College. Something that's lit for publication.-The Magazine. A few more want ads.-Want-Ad Editor. A season of something else than tough luck.-Football and basket-ball squads. 193 A Romance in Forty-eight Words Information, speculation, fluctuation, ruination- Dissipation, degradation,-reformation or starvation. Application, situation, occupation, restoration. Concentration, enervation, nerve-prostration, a vacation. Destination, country station, nice location, recreation. Exploration, observation, fascination, a Hirtation. Trepiclation, hesitation, conversation simulation: Invitation, acclamation, sequestration, colcl libation. Stimulation, animation, inspiration, new potationg Demonstration, agitation, circulation, exclamation! Declaration, acceptation, osculation, sweet sensation. Exultation, preparation, combination, new relation. l94 The Only Romance of the Faculty ln a bath-robe and a Shimmy There sat Pete and Uncle Jimmy Thinking of the days gone by. Said they, Limbo, don't you worry, You can play with 'Bagsl and 'Curryf H But Steve, began to cry. Says he don't think it's sadness, Jimmy, They're just tears of gladness, Jimmy, lt's now ten years since Bags and I were wed. Then old Bagby's eye it brightened And his stern old heart it lightened, And he turned to Steve and said: Put up your weary microscope, Wash your slides with HC-randma's soap, And we'll hitch young Uliuclidl' to the shay, Through the fields of wheat Weill drive to Mercy Seat, If Euclid don't run away. :F AC 59 56 54 -HC 55 55 55 96 55 96 3- 3- 96 55 NOTE.-The above fragment is unfortunately all that was left of an article found among some old papers. An examination of the meter leads to the belief that this obscure production furnished the ground worl-1 for the lately popular song, Put on Your Old Gray Bonnet, since the tune fits these words. l95 t 0 'F yi l iv i -i 1 ig W K .1 5'-1,42 ..- !.' Nineteen years, one month is our average age. Five feet nine inches is our average height. Bible is our favorite study. We drink water principally. Do play cards? Seven-tenths do. dance? Four-sevenths clo. drink? One-half chew ? One-Fifth do. do. smoke? Three-fifths do. is the most popular professor? Dr. S. Smith. l:It'SlQ Professor Whiting, second is the most popular student? B. B. W'hite. is the best football player? C. C. Lewis. are the best basket-ball players? Blanton and Allen, is the best baseball player? Atkinson. we Do we Do we Do we Do we Who Who Who Who Who Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the Who is the best tennis player? Wool. best all-rouncl athlete? C. C. Lewis. best all-round man fnot purely physicalj? B. B. White. biggest ladies' man? Greer. biggest anti-calico man? Bailcsdale, firstg White, second. biggest society biggest blulf? biggest bum? biggest booze best dancer? best musician? Fizzle? Baskerville. Rex. Crawford. ftrstg Jett, second. artist? Minor. Fitts.. Oldfield. 196 Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who Who is the best singer? Fitzgerald. is the handsomest man? F. W. Payne. is the most conceited? Blanton. is the hardest student? lVlcNew, hrst: B. Campbell, second. is the biggest smoker? Buchanan. is the biggest eater? P. F. Campbell, first, Byine, second. is the biggest politician? B. Campbell. is the biggest liar? Vass. is the biggest card shark? P. Saunders. is the least sludious? Crawford. is the best orator? Nl. Crockett. is the best writer? M. Crockett, firslg H. G. Clark, second is the best actor? Painter. is the best preacher? C. E. Clarke. is the best debater? W. G. Dunnington. is lhs laziest man? Byrne, Whaley and Flournoy. Are we members of the church? Thirty-seven forty-sevenths are Which? Twenty-seven forty-sevenths Presbylerians. Who wears the biggest shoe? Benedict, No. I3. Freshest F'l'eSl'll Kl3n? XI. Moore. C-reenest Freshman? P. F. Campbell, first, Minor, second. I97 fxx L IW 510 T QQ' L 1' 4? . S KKK, N '3 XJ X Xi fww AI J nw My I A I f I I II - l j X , U W if X rp ff I 7 I Y 12' f I I If I LW 7 gf If . A A fl ff Our Artists MIss MOLLIE MAUZ M s Ross Goom: MR. CARL ZEISBERC MR. LITTLETON FITZGERALD MR. MARION FITZGERALD MR. BINFORD WALFORD MR. PHILIP MEI-1 MR F M FITTS I98 MR. JOHN FALCONER KS 'K W Wu XAQQYQQAP 0-7350 c-'ffaffff af Fi7'0af077 WFOZIQQ ff? X779 6 f f f5if5?fj25EZ? Y?'ifb61f6x 5692 K7,61!i6'fQ' 6746 C A made effaf UJPU 00122 Z x N X .N ,Q w 1 'SNEWQLV 3 gE.', ..l:if ' V1 , A .' 'WWW 2: Ill ,wffqg 1' g ' zfif' ,. V, 12:15 ' -1 ' ' f'a.vXl15 '- . Q j .' : uf ' 1 A ' --Q ...., ww- SQ17 'X 'YQ F -Q l I! f i ' f f fe? C 1 fw f,z1 f-,wg f f ' f ', - - ig- Q if f 71,21 - - f ' - 1 55 E g f i 'h 1 L' - 'NJ' 'ii 3 fi ' 1-. !:q 3 4 .wx 1 vm . 'Q 'L Q ,r Q 4- I I x 4 fy' K V ,- v p 0 I tlqll 1 ' - . vw P ,,. A , F o ' -VW-T I . . l '4 Q. '. . f V P' .',,. 0 . 'I 41,1 in ' v'.1l, ' 0 '-.1 .. D I. 0 ' J 'Mg .F ' ' 4---'A Q it -Jr 8 RW s Q 9 . . . ' Q V - I S 4 S f E f f 1 E fff!! 77' ,.... -X If ff f 'M 1 X f 1 'fiji' -i .-. r!Z,,.. ff A I UD D00 ff, , f QQ 2' ff W X W f 72 CW ,f D5 DDD! Q Q 'El Y ' MHHHPH ' LT'- 2 E-53 df., E+ i Tl, 1 i Q 3 'i 1. A 1 Q fr 1 1 'fi U Q , O I ,O a',n' 9 1 I ff! r-, - ' 4 .9 'W 1 O LF, 0 0 0 O O 0 QQ? 4 'X 3 '5 5 vQ?49'i9f5fX9'9v?4949f99Cv4vQC9x9'9'v 5--9'5'Q'izx9fv0fEz'5xQ7fsf'5z4?'?rv9'? ??Qz'9'9'?- 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O . 4. ii 41, Ox 0 w 0 f., 0 1?- O Af' f O 'Q' 0 -v G' -2 2 li 0 5, O' qi 3 THE PHOTOGRAPHER 0 -I AND YOU WILL FIND HIIVI 5 3 IN FARMVILLE on MAIN ST. Z Where PERFECTION is PARA- o , ' 3 MOUNT. COLLEGE WORIX. A gg 0 ' Z Kg 0 3 Where there is beauty we take it: g 0 Where there is none we make it. 39 0 0 O 0 : 2 IF YOU WANT THE BEST SEE , Z 3 0 Q33 o Z Farm ville, Virgin ia 0 YK O op O 4 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 is Z . Q6 45 o vw? 5 9-9' vfvfi wf94ff:fQf6Kvf: Sv My 5'-'af Q o S5fQfQf'ezfe2f:1f?1'Q9QKvf5 ' ' efQfQQffy49fv o 00 0 -c 'SN-? OQQQOOCV of Q 0 O ' 9-6f'949fSYQ'0 ' O0 SEND YOUR ORDERS Jos PRINTING 28533 FARMVILLE HERALD SUBSCRIPTION 51,00 IN ADVANCE ALL WORK DONE NEATLY. OUICKLY AND GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION ADDRESS THE HERALD. FARMVILLE. vA. 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Y Y' Y Q2 9 Q, 2 gg Y 9 '9 Q 'f? i'f4'96'5f6f6'G'4'6?5JQ5O 9 0 000 no G76f49QfGz49CvCz'6 2426654665 'QK962 oo S4--2 Q o OO ig Q 'o 5 25 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 Q Q O 3 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 0 O O O O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 0009042000 O9 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 QXWPOQQQQQVS-'5XQn3 9f9'9'9Q3Q7'9f9QQWx4i'QQrf96 ?A6'VSVE HSWVM-MKQQH 5'f 'Qe9f?-avr f04949fM ?N 0040 -ooorooewfw .oo N OOO 00000000 oo fo o Qfygli 4949 000' '00000' OOO Qqmyoooo 000000 IOS E CARLAND E SCOTT XIARFIN FRANK S, BL.-XNTUN Insurance T H A T DSUTCS ' ' We Write Insurzmfe in All Its Branches GARLAND 81 MARTIN Co. FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA Palronize Home Printers L. C. Martin HIGH-GRADE WORK STAPLE BINDING PERFORATING AT LOWEST PRICES 218 3d ST., FARMVILLE, VA. G. M. ROBESON, President E. T. BONDURANT. Vice-Pres. J. L, BUGG, Cashier J. W. HUBBARD. Asst. Cashier Peoples National Bank CAPITAL 350,000 We would appreciale your bank accounl FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA The Hungry Man's Eden The Virginia Cafe S. ZARKALIS AND P. TRIANTIS Proprietors The BEST place, where the MOST and the BEST can be obtained for th e LEAST m0I16y. Chllege Boys ' Trade Solicilcd Fresh Oysters, Pure lce Cream, Cream, Etc. Quick Lunch Counter FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA Af4f9fMf?fG'GfQ'Qr4 K9 f04fir? ' 9ff?f0xM0f94Xe?4D'5 ? 9'i -4f4fQfQQ6Q-41-9 4f?'f90Q?0 o 'f?'04'4fQ'4f'9f4 s 96?f5ffefCvfy-'Vi ' ' X000 ' 0 'ff . . Q X9 Q 00000 0 000 'e ?0QQ00 Qfv06Q600 9 00000 00 000000000 00000000000000000 0 00000 0000 000000000000000000000 y000000 S H HawescScCo oboe' Q, 'aw .ff -130 oe l ement Bliss Brothers FARMVILLE VA. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ffvfyf o ' o o o ' o o . . . 0 o o , o , o o oal, Lime General Builclers' Supplies Madison 57 PHONES Madison 3817 Livery and Sales Stables If Nou Want a Good Rig and Fast Horses Call Us Up on Either Phone Fcwmville Steam Laundry See Our Agient 7 ..... .nll9'ln..--i WE OFFER SI' CIAL RATFS T0 HAMPDEN-SIDNEY STUDENTS Stokes 81 Davidson Wholesale and Relail seine? :Z QQELLQ Q WZEYTEI F ARIVIVILLE, VIRGINIA 0000 0 000000000000 000000000000000000000000000000000000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 IS 0 o . 5 Q Good Housekeepers Always Want K3 :Q THE BEST . . . I g , Q Bu Kmgan o o o o g Hams, Bacon, Lard, Shoulders, Canned 2 Meats, Smoked Meats, Fresh Meats, Salt 3 Meats, and Be Sure of Getting the Best o o o KINGAN 8: CO., L't'd, Richmond, Va. o X o o o o , 9 ig- J 0 ii? 4 . Q o , , -H 1 ff 1-ga: A 3, , gait fs iff 0 . 5f'5iiiii?F1'?-iifn3QQ ' 31 ' -' ,fEl f!Q,, -1' 1 ' L f f -- -' -,--iQ fijf' -E -- f' 1 . 'J f W . figiifffmf i 3 tis gmt, G in if go amtfitagatiss ss o l Lug M. 1 -S+ A ,, ' ' ,, , g. . . L ,gf Y- 11. 2 0 Q Q Q g:5i?fE!f:f1i5ggi-zr 0 1 ff L4 ' iii o bigii j?Qy,'kWiZ?,F??giii Eg'V.'4aig2?i ',SEQ .. fn ,. in , ,Q T .L ,V O f O, , sw , gimme, A - -15 39 I I Wg-V S . . ' I O HE LACKSTUNE SCHUUI. FUR EIRIS o I J 0 l l E llas since 1894 igiven Thoxiough instruction under positively Christian O influences at the lowest possible cost. RESULT: It is to-day with its faculty of 32, a boarding patronage of 328, , its student body of 400, and its plant worth Sl40,000 0 THE LEADING TRAINING SCHOOL FOR GIRLS IN VIRGINIA 2 S150 pays all Changes for the year, including tulsle hozuwl, mom .lights st.:-nm 2 heat, laundry, medical attention, pliysif-nl culture, nurlltuition in :ill sulvjel-ts 0 except music and clocution. For catalogue and application lmlnnk address. 3 BLACKSTONE FEMALE INSTITUTE., Blackstone, Va. 0 JAS. CANNON, Jr., M. A. 1 , , , 0 'Associate Principals 0 Q Q Q 0 0 0 0 0 0 Q 0 E S E 0 E I Q 5 53 Q 0 0, Q 0 0 0 Sym oo 94 J' .W- o 00 ' 'VOOOQOOA' .QQ .000 Q Q Q 000. O 0000 0000 0 00 OOOOOQOQQQGQQO5 0 Q QQQQQQQQQQQ THOS. R. REEVES, B. A.l ' Y7V'N5i ' ' ' 0000000000000 . n of? 96 5 Q'9f9Cv4kQ'4W5f96f9'5e949f 00 '00000 0 o 5 A'v4f6Jfb-4 to 0 a Q 'o aa 6749 ?yx96fS UNION r THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY lflulli lllilts RICHMOND, VA. A fully equipped Seminary, with seven instructors, modern methods of teaching and a practical course of study, including, besides the usual departments, courses in the English Bible,Sunday-School Work, Evangelism and Missions. New and thoroughly appointed buildings. Spacious campus and athletic grounds. One-hundredth annual session begins September 20, l9ll. For calalogue or other information apply la Thought, labor and skill are given generously in our ef- forts to produce individual and exclusive merchandise for students. Our spring exhibit will prove a satisfac- tion to you and a credit to us Gans-Rady Co. W. W. MOORE, President RICHMOND, VA. M 81 College of Physicians and Florists Branch Ofce: feferson Hole! Greenhouses : New Reservoir 'AC Surgeons Of Baltimore, 'Md Fortieth annual session will begin October lst, I9l l. New buildings, modern equipment, unsurpassed laboratories. Large and indepen- dent Lying-in-Asylum for practical Obstetrics. Department for pre- vention of Hydrophobia, and many hospitals for Clinical Work presents to the Medical Student every ad- vantage. For calalogue and ulher information apply to 5 W' Broad St' CHAS. F. BEVAN, M. D. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA Dean . QQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0000000000000000 iqff' V j f 0UR SPECIALTIES College Annuals Catalogs M agazvlnes Stationery J. P. BELL CO. Incorporated Designers Engravers Printers Lynchburg, Va. Sw mlm! 141' say on flu' Ufllfl' side Your Printing Shonld show ln every detafll the savne advanced standards of excellence that your Instfltntzon stands for OR the proper handhng of College Annuals Catalogues Vlew Booklets M3g3Z1H6S etc lt IS essentlal that the prmter has a true conceptlon of the purpose of thus char acter of prmtzng and an organlzatxon of specialists to plan and supervlse the executmon of the work as well as the proper equlpment to produce It m a sultable manner ROM the txme a contract of thls nature IS placed w1th us untll delmvery IS made all detalls of the work are handled by men who have galned from close study and long ex pernence an accurate knowledge of the requlrements of College Przntang and who have at hand all the necessary materxals w1th wh1ch to work We close wlthm slxty days after schools open all the contracts that we can handle for the ensumg year whlch 15 the result of our havmg the proper f3C1lltIeS and the publlcs confldence ln our ab1l1ty to take care of thelr work E handle all parts of the work the Illustratzng Design mg Engravzng Pzzntmg and Bmdzng of the above mentloned lmes and sol1c1t your conslderatlon of our qualzty before placmg your contract J P BELL COMPANY, INCORPORATED LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA 0 n . 0 v 1 v v -n 1 1 1 ., . .. . 1 V 1 , V- vx 'yy 1 W 9 o O 00000000000 00000'00900000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000oooooo'o0 00 oo oo ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo oooo oo . Go to The Ideal Shoe Store For Your Shoes The only exclusive Shoe Store in town H. G. Clark, Agent at Hampden-Sidney WE. SOLICIT YOUR TRADE W. I'IiIIsman REGAL SHOES The Shoe Iflal Proves Ready-to-Wear Clothing and Gents' Furnishings Agents for Mercantile, The Lane X Co. and Edward Strauss 8: Cofs To-Measure Clothing Farmville and Lynchburg, Va. Medical College of Virginia 6.1lnIrli.sl1edl838 Even d MEDICINE :SIT DENTISTRY AND PHARMACY E Fox CATALOGUE ADDRESS CHRISTOPHER TOMPKINS, M. D., Dean, Richmond, Va. IVIaryr Baldwin Seminary For Young Ladies STAUNTON, VIRGINIA 'II Term begins Sept. 7th, I9I I. Located in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Unsurpassecl climate, beauti- ful grounds and modern appointments. 302 students past session, from 33 states. Terms moderate. 'Pupils Enter flny Time Sendfur Calalogue Miss E.. C. WEIMAR, Principal C. C. Cowan Undertaker and Furniture Dealer Matting, Linoleum Rugs ' Furnishings for College Boys a Specially FARIVIVILLE, VIRGINIA College Boys will Find a mighty good place to get Soclas, Candies,Tol:maccos, etc. AT A. V. WA DE'S Come in and prove to yourself that we are up-to-date and anxious to please 969V 9 ff?-f9fbf949?'949Mf9 Q - 00 0000000000 o 0 000000000 0 0 neocon sooo Q 4 oQ00do 0 000'000 00 on o 00000000OOO0000000000000000000000000000000000'00000000000000 00000000000000 0000000000000O0000000OO O0 000000 QfQQQO o o E 8 Cash Dealers in Dry Goocls, Notions, E O Hats, Boots, Shoes, Etc., Gents Fur- 0 Z nishing Goods and Zeiglefs Shoes. o o o o Clothing Blade I0 Order FARDIVILLE, VIRGINIA 2 o D., W . nf. . 2 +n .i. o o o o o Chas. Bugg K' S011 g o o 3 2 o o Z The Pure Food Store Fancy Groceries Z o - f H , V,VV V Vg o o o O M k f C d G t O g Cotrell K Leonard 3 efs O, aps af' Owns 0 3 0 the American Colleges from the 0 I Atlantic to the Pacific. 2 0 2 Class Contracts n Specialty ALBANY, NEW YORK g o o o - fr W ' M 5' ' ' i i 'f f ' ' ' ' o o , o O fi 1 0 0 eo. Rlcharflson K Co. 0 Z Successors to Richardson 8: Davidson Company 2 3 1 . 2 2 Dealers ln Staple and Fancy Grocerles, 2 2 FARMVILLE, VA. Dry Goocls, Boots and Shoes 2 o 7 I B o 0 o o 2ll'1'0W 0 2 J Z o 0 0 0 3 The Best Fresh Meats, Fish, 2 Oysters, etc- The Best Stock 2 3 FARMVILLE, VA. The Best Service 3 o o 3 Z 3 2 o o 5 5 o Sk' o O X fe 9? 0 o 2 ale' 0 o o o o o o o o o o O 0 ff 2 400000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000O0O000O0O O O O 0 O 0 O 0 O O 0 0 O O 0 0 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 O 0 O O O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 O O O 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 O 0 0 H W GAR IIT II L0 LEADERS OF jfiliflllllllg ann Stplcg In LADIES and GENTS FURNISHING GOODS UMBRELLAS TRUNKS and SATCHELS TAILOR - MADE SUITS A SPECIALTY FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA W T DOYNE linhvrtakvr AND DEALER IN FU RNITU R E Metallic and all stlyles Wood Coftins on hand. Repairing and Upholstering done in best manner. Wall Paper Window Shades, Pianos, Organs and School Furniture. FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA A. H. FETTING MANUFACTURER OF GREEK LETTER FRATERNITY ...Zlmnelrg... No. 213 N. LIBERTY ST. Sap!! Did you ever see an EDWIN CLAPP SHOE that was worn out? If so, you've been treated to an unusual sight. Made of finest leather. Wear forever. We handle them, also Ed. V. Price's Tailor- Made Clothing, Hawes Hats, Arrow Collars, Eclipse Shirts, Interwoven Hose and B. V. D. Underwear. Give us a call. FACTORY No 212 LITTLE SHARP ST. FARMVILLE BALTIMORE, MD VA. 0000 0 O 0000000000000000000000000O0000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOO 00Q70049004P0004?00O4D004P00470004500450 0 O O 0 0 ' o 0 , O O K O 0 0 0 - o 0 . AJ 2 .4 0 C 0 0 0 O , 0 .4 0 ' o 0 O O O 0 0 o O O ' o 0 O c ' 0 0 0 0 0 O O 0 ' O Z2 . E 3: Q 5 'Q ig OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 O 0 0 O O O O O O 0 O O O 0 O O O C 4? 45 QD 43 47 47 4? 47 4? 4? 47 4? 45 47 4? 49 15 4? 47 45 4? 45 47 C7 45 CD 4? 4? QD 45 19 45 47 43 QP astman Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Prepares young men and young women for positions of trust and responsibility, and assists them to pa ing positions Comprehensive courses of study, liberal policy, faculty of special- ists, strong lecture course. Ideal location. Excellent record of forty-nine M93 years. More than 47,000 Alumni. Prospeclus and calendar may be had upon applicalion Address Clement C. Gaines, M. A., B.L., LL. D. Pres1'dr'nf Poughkeepsie, New York K X 5 li 3 22 Q. 0 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 0 . 3 E e 3 Yi . . .. E 3 oooooooooe-wwe 06QOQQ 000000 00 ..0,.o 00000494 Q 000000000O000000'000 5 .. ,. 'E 49 ,Z . 0 . . O 0 0 O O ii? 'v 962 S? Q 2 Q. Q, Q, 6 3, Q, Q, Q- 9 Q Q, Q, Q, Q, Q, 62 Q Q Q, Q, Z Q, 43- 5, Q, Q, Q, KZ if Q, Q, 5, Q, Y, 4:- Q. Q, xfl 047'9QX96J'9QYvfi'f9QK9 r-1 Nl Nl mm a Q U7 I in S 'fl 5 Q. F4 CB Q 3 mr' l In IT! 22 S. U14 ga Q. ..qZ 3'-I 3 5 CB f 'Q U PU J' 5 C5 -fi Q Q 31 Z 34 8 C5 r-1 C9 r-1 n-1 Q'-9490 'ooo do lp CUSHING HALL. RFIXIUDELED 49 o fvfi HAMPDEN-SIDN EY, VIRGINIA OO 49 O 0 0 O 0 0 Q O 0 .Q 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 O O O 0 O 0 0 0 O 0 O O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 O 0 0 of of o o O 0 Q it High standards and thorough work. Marked moral and intel- ? lectual tone. Extensive campus of rare beauty. Modern athletic 2 I Held. Courses leading to degrees of B. A., B. S., B. Lit., M. A. Steam 2 I heat, light, baths and other modern conveniences. Expenses moder- 3 I ate. Delightful climate. One hundred and thirty-sixth session I E, begins September 13th, 1911. An attractive illustrated booklet will 2 be sent on request to prospective students. 2 E FOR CATALOGUE OR OTHER INFORMATION, ADDRESS 3 0 Rev. HENRY TUCKER GRAHAM, President 2 00000 0 'CT 'P-- J l P I I v 4' - 'Y . ' N1 K' ,I IF-.L .- I 44 n g'.'x' ' 'ffr' 'O . . O I Q I .,.N P . U S 0 x J ' O .'- fN.Y'c ,O , ,fun o .Q Q un, J. 'L K x ', - GL Fx A .Y, fl! I' X - W4 I I ll . A ' J 5 1 t ' 0 1 4 U' ' A ' v '. J V, 'TQ' A .4 !9!'.', v -V . -, 'L 7 'f - 'KI Q I 1 OI I.. nu 4 ' . of- .3 I O 4 O .M g'. gl., 4 4 - u 'Da u x -I al,,'0 . ,. Wa' Q ' ' r ,A . 8 Q ' . . S Q U 1 -Q Q5 5 ' I 'sf 'Q v, ' U 4, .1 av 7-3 4- ff -1 W o ' H '04 y 3 . J I 'ix n. 5 ? . It 5. I Q-O 4 . . . QW - xl g 1 1 AQ , K Ol O 4 'b . an ' 'Lg .. 0 ..,.:! A !Y ' V , . a 1 L 4 .1573 H6 , E Q. - .' q, .. . -.. 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