Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)
- Class of 1914
Page 1 of 226
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1914 volume:
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A Y N THE LATE DOCTOR WALLER MORTON HOLLADAY 5 34122 been interested in the College of Hampden-Sidney have known well the 127 mlmiza 1 E ff- 4' 'K R - D :SV f mf' 0 , N ell filf- Q ':?Q:i it Burtnr illinrtnn Qnllahag 0i0 MAN is best knowm by the name that has come to be his. Dr. Holla- day's full name was WALLER MORTON HOLLADAY. This name WALLER doubtless goes back into the past of Virginia to a very early time. One of the greatest of Virginians was named Little- ton Waller Tazewell. Morton has been a well-established name in Southside Virginia, fespecially in the counties of Charlotte and Prince Edwardl, since the early part of the eighteenth century. The name Holladay is associated rather with middle Virginia, north of the James River, but for more than three-quarters of a century those who have name of Holladay. In the early thirties Albert l-lolladay, of Orange County, fone of the first graduates in schools of the University of Virginiaj was Professor of Ancient Languages at Hampden-Sidney, and some thirty years later, in l856, was chosen Presi- dent of the College, dying within a few days after his election. ln l855 Lewis Little- page Holladay, of Orange County, fl-lampden-Sidney, IS5 31, became a member of the Faculty of Hampden-Sidney College, and until his death in l89l, continued in the service of the College as Professor of Chemistry and Physics. ln length of tenure, this term of office is certainly unique in the history of Hampden-Sidney. Professor Holladay was a man of extraordinary balance of mind, able to enjoy a quiet life to the full. He did a great deal for Hampden-Sidney-much of his influence could be defined and much of it could not be defined. Shortly after coming to Hampden-Sidney in his official capacity, Professor Holladay married Miss Morton of Buffalo, a plantation near the Appomattox river. Their son, Morton, was born April 23, IS64, the last year of the war. There was an old tradition of medicine in this branch of the Holladay family, Professor Holladay's father and grandfather having been physicians. Morton Holla- day, after a neighborhood schooling fpart of it at the excellent Prince Edward Academy at Worshaml, came to college at Hampden-Sidney, was a member of the Philanthropic Society and the Beta Theta Pi fraternity, and was graduated with the Class of ISS3. He chose medicine for his profession, and went to Kentucky for his training, in the Louisville Medical College. He took his degree there in l885, the youngest of a class of fifty, and the first honor man of the class. Spending a year as interne in the Louisville City Hospital, where his ability was generally recognized, he settled at home, in Prince Edward County, passing the examination of the State Board in September, l886. Morton l'lolladay's instinct for medicine was pronounced. It is related that his father said to him, I should be glad to see you a country doctor. A seasoned philosophy of life was in the words. 7 Next after the thoroughgoing priests, fnot seldom making the priesthood seem merely a professionl, what life is more given up to service than that of the country doctor? His rewards are many, but gain is not greatly in his reckoning. The celebrated town physician may do much charity practice at times in his office. He does not often go miles over dark roads in the cold, certain that his time will be as good as lost, if money is to be the standard of value. Let us not enlarge upon these matters, after all not simple. Sure it is that the physician who lives, moves, and works in the country, true to his art, meeting men on the level, is a chief factor in the commonwealth. If the country makes the town, who to a much greater degree of it than the physician, makes the country? The sum of the matter is, perhaps, that the world is wide, and whenever we are, there is a plenty to do. In the country there is so much to do, we sometimes grow confused, more so than in town, where there are paths beaten of many and labor is infmitesimally divided. Morton Holladay spent his life in Prince Edward County. At the time of his death he was the oldest inhabitant of Hampden-Sidney, to use his own wordsi For more than a century the county had been 'accustomed to well-trained physicians-Daniel Flournoy, William S. Morton, C-oodridge Wilson, the Farrars, the Mattauers, Joseph Eggleston. Dr. Holladay took up the work of no incompetent men and carried it forward. He was not in his later period so frequently a contributor to the journals as he had been earlier, but he knew what was going on in the practice of medicine and gave his patients the approved treatmentff Not long before his death he brought round a case of virulent diphtheria, by the most advanced scientific methods applied in circumstances almost as unfavorable as possible. Therapeutics was his forte, and this year, if the sum total of the poll-tax was hgured out, paid by those whose lives he has saved, the amount would look pretty large, even as the poll-tax is paid- This is the man that saved my life, Not only mine, but that of my wife, Each child I have hath lgnonm his skill, And cach I shall, questionless, will. Special reputation is much, but if a professional man has not besides the name of a good citizen, he might as well admit that he cares little except for what goes into the statistical record. As Sir Thomas Brown says, Live unto the dignity of thy nature, and leave it not uncertain at the end whether thou hast been a man. Dr. Morton Holladay was a good citizen. He knew better than most persons what people were, but was chary in judgment, and no pessimist, ready to do anything that he could with his opinions for the best welfare of the people. For years and years he had worked as opportunity was for improved roads about Prince Edward County. For the last five years of his life he was a member of the Board of Supervisors of the County, and during those live years there was not a better Supervisor in the State of Virginia. A Board is a Board, and it is 'For about ten or a dozen years Dr. Holladay was Physician to the College. first in l887, and then for a long term ending with his death in December, 1913. lf Holladay sends us a patient, observes the Director of the Memorial Hospital in Richmond, we know that the case has been well studied. 8 not every man of intelligence that can be useful on a Board. Morton l-lolladay, not by design or elaborate programme, was able to be very influential as a part of this most influential of our local governing bodies. He had the ideas, because he was born that way and had done a great deal of reading: and going ahead, he could often get his ideas into effect. Our State Parliament could be prorogued indefinitely if many Boards of Supervisors were as the Prince Edward Board has shown that it can be. A man does his work and passes on. If his work was shabby, the next man has an excellent chance. If his work was excellent, the next man has an even better chance. But no man's work can be lost, because there is a unity in our affairs and everything must count. It is a great thing to say of a good man, fwhat may be said of every good manl, that his work has counted positively for clisentanglement. Morton l-lolladay was a man of feeling. l-le had many warm friends. It is the belief of one who knew him well, that it would be impossible for a man to show a greater capacity for friendship, or so little of that easy tendency to break with friends. The last years of his life, not without many cares, were his happiest? He saw a family of beautiful children growing around him. He was at home in his home of contentment, and everywhere a diffuser of cheerfulness and good will, not an egotist. It could have been wished that he might live many years longer, young as he was. Although our friend is no more, we shall not forget him. ' CSignedJ A. J. MORRISON. ' ln l906 Dr. Holladay married Genevieve Venable. of Prince Edward County, a distant relation. As is well known to readers of THE KALEIDOSCOPE, the family of Venable has been. beyond all others. importantly connected with Hampden- Sidney College. through every period Sf the history of the lnstitution. g iff G, 'H is fir! qv?-if 9 554355412225952323555255554535552539kkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkifkk3222255 'X 93? if 4? '14 48 if 45 as 45 ae 3 54 453 it 43? if if as ,ln ,, s 5:5 ,, mfr anim 1F atv, 5 as 45 at Ar ,R 0:0 Q il? 45 54 I . 95 3 K Q HE ancients when they spoke of Life and Fate if m fg so if i .J Were won't to think of those dread sisters three, i 54 ' . . . 155 as By whom, they said, our destinies are shaped, as it Qfgxx A' 45 E ' ' AV at E Clotho, grim Lachesls, and Atropos. E W Q ' I I U 1 ,gs ' I I I I Clotho it was who from the tangled mesh 3: X Q I I l - I . ' F I , , . 1 3 3 Hay Of Lifes experience, pleasure, pam, and grief, Q 3 Drew forth the fibres out of which she wove E 5? if it The thread of Lifeg more often in the skein E 54' n QQ Were seen the darker shades, but now and then, 22 u . . . . 45 Z As lf in mockery, she wove It bright fs 5? 45 3 With lighter hues: for peace and plenty still ii H +2 IQ She gave a few-the favored of the gods. sr, if 3 3 Then Lachesis with parted hands marked oil E ii The length of life which fell to each one's lot. 3 45 it E Where'er the thread was darkest, then she spread Q E Her hands the widestg but if it were bright Zi E Quickly they came together, and that life 2 W EC 2 Was cut off 'ere 'twas well begun. And yet 3 as Sometimes, capricious, she would let the skein ii 5' is if Though fair indeed, unwind a long while 'ere it 45 v. 71' i5 ii 45 it 55 if 49 it 5' it 3 as 3 54535454i7455Q'r'5??Y52'5d535?5f55k535325633535333555??'fW5?5i953'W555f'3?'?'f53595?555lf5?'i7f55fQ'f55?'f 10 3323333KMMMMQMMMMQMKHKWKEMMMQMMMMWWGMMNQWMWKWMkkkkkkwwkiWWWWWWWWWWRWWWWWWQ She marked its end! And where her hand would rest Upon the thread, her sister, Atropos. Remorseless snipped it with the shears of Death. So ran their tale of Life: and when at last The varied destines of men were done. Naught was there seen of grace or skilled design, A mass of sombre ravelings the whole. But I would rather think that these our lives, Threads though they be, are yet each one a part Of that great tapestry of Life which joins The eternity of Time that Has Been to The eternity of Time that is to Be. Before the loom of this short Time that Is The Weaver sits: careful and skilled His hands, And under them is slowly made complete This fabric grand. A short thread here, He says, A dark one here, for it will best set off The lighter tones which I shall soon weave in. And thus the work in His good time attains Its end. And then, methinks, I see a smile O'erspread His face, as up before His work With eyes alight, with voice of joy, l-le stands, And cries, Behold, My masterpiece is done! kkkkkkkikkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkikkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk 11 R W W W W R R W R R M R M K M X K W E X R M K E M W W E M W K M W W R M M R R M W M K K R R WkkkkkkkkkwkkkkkwWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWHWWWWWWWWWWWWWWKWWWWWkkkikwkkkkwkkkkkkkk Elnlin william Bremer, IHILE., EEE., 1881-1882 llt is not every college in the country that has even one of its Professors listed in the Dictionary of National Biography, the great British authority. The following account of Dr. Draper, taken from the sixteenth volume of this extraordinary encyclopaedia, is worth a reading for itself and is of interqst locally for the mention of Hampden-Sidney College. Draper was Professor at Hampden-Sidney from IS36 to IS39. Here his capabilities for original scientific research found full play, a good physical and chemical laboratory having been organized by President Cushing. Draper himself added a good deal to the equipment, although funds were getting scant during his tenure of oflice. A batch of vouchers, purchases of scientific apparatus, signed by Draper and allowed by the Board of Trustees, is to be seen among the valuable documents deposited in the lVluseum.l ,'t.- '- I OHN WILLIAM DRAPER, Chemist, born at St, l-lelen's, near gg Liverpool, on May 5, l8I l, was educated at Woodhouse. Grove School. Here he showed scientific tastes, and, after some instruction from a private teacher, he completed his studies at University College, ig, ic London. Shortly after attaining his majority, Draper emigrated to the ' V l 'l l United States fin 18331, whither several members of his family had preceded him. l-le studied at the University of Pennsylvania, where . .'l ' . he took the degree of Doctor of Medicine in 1836, presenting as his J - thesis an essay on The Crystallization of Camphor Under the lnllu- ence of light. Draper contributed several papers on physiological problems to the American fournal of Medical Sciences, which led to his appointment, in IS36, as professor of chemistry and physiology lsicl at Hampden-Sidney College, Vir- ginia. l-lere his capabilities for original scientific research found full play, and the publi- cation of his results brought him the offer of the professorship of chemistry and physiology in the University of New York, a post which he accepted in l839. ln 1841 he took an active part in organizing a medical department in connection with the university, acting as secretary until I850, when he succeeded Dr. Valentine Mott as president, an office which he held till 1873. Draper married youngg he had three sons and three daughters. Of his sons, Henry Draper lb. 1837, at Hampden-Sidneyl became famous as an astronomer and spectro- scopist, and John Christopher Draper attained equal celebrity for his researches in physiology. Their father spent the latter part of his life in a quiet retreat at Hastings, on the Hudson, a few miles from New York City. l'le died on January 4, I882, and was buried in Greenwood cemetery, Long Island. Draper distinguished himself in the department of molecular physics, of physiology, and of chemistry. The results of his work appeared mainly in the American journal of bcience, the fournal of the Franklin Institute, and the Philosophical Magazine. His principal papers were devoted to investigations concerning the phenomena of light and heat, and these their author collected and republished in one volume in I878 under the title of Scientific Memoirs-being experimental contributions to a Knowledge of Radiant Energy. ln I835 he published accurate experiments showing that Mrs. Somerville and 12 others were incorrect in their supposition that steel can be magnetized by exposure to violent light. In IS37 he commenced a series of researches upon the nature of the rays of light in the spectrum. Using the then little-known spectroscope, Draper showed first that all solids become self-luminous at a temperature of 9770 F., and that they then yield a con- tinuous spectrumg and that as the temperature of the body rises it emits more refrangible iays, the intensity of the rays previously emitted also increasing. In 1843 Draper photo- graphed the dark lines in the solar spectrum, and in l857 he showed the superiority of diffraction over prismatic spectra. He devoted special energy to the study of the ultra- violet, or, as he styled them, tithonic rays .... V . . In IS39 Draper obtained portraits, for the first time, by the daguerreotype process. Early in I840 Draper succeeded in taking the first photograph of the moon: the time occupied was twenty minutes, and the size of the figure about one inch in diameter. In l85I he secured phosphorescent images of the moon. To measure the chemical intensity of light Draper devised in I843 a chlor-hydrogen photometer, an instrument which was subsequently perfected and employed by Bunsen and Roscoe. Draper was among the first, if not the hrst, to obtain photographs of microscopic objects by combining the camera with the microscope. He used daguerreotypes obtained in this way to illustrate his lec- tures on physiology given at the University of New York between l845 and l850. Draper applied his studies on capillary attraction to explain the motion of the sap in plants, and between 1834 and I856 he published several papers upon this and kindred subjects, including the passage of gases through liquids, the circulation of the blood, etc .... In IS75 the American Academy of Arts and Sciences gave Draper the Rumford medal for his Researches in Radiant Energy, the president justly declaring him to have taken a prominent rank in the advance of science throughout the world. Draper was led, as he declares, by his physiological studies, to apply to nations the same laws of growth and development, presenting the results in his History of the Intellectual Development of Europe fI862J, a book which has been translated into many languages. Another work which has been highly praised for its impartiality and philosophical elevation is Draper's History of the American Civil War, published IS67-70. In l874 Draper wrote the History of the Conflict Between Science and Religion, to which Professor Tyndall wrote the preface. By many, Draper has been regarded as a materialist, but he was a theist and a firm believer in a future state. In the Royal Society's Catalogue of Scientific Papers, Draper's name is appended to fifty-one!! Article signed by Professor W. Jerome Harrison, in Vol. XVI, D. N. B., l888. Dr. Draper had relatives settled in Mecklenburg County, and it was these he joined on coming to America a few years afler 1830. His was the active mind of a Liverpool man-as soon as he had taken his degree in medicine at Philadelphia, he got in touch with a few public-spirited residents of Southside Virginia who felt the importance of a close study of local mineralogy. It was this connection that brought Draper to Hampden-Sidney College. It is not impossible that he had been a short time in South America before coming to Virginia. His brother-in-law, Professor Gardner fwho succeeded him at Hampden-Sidney Collegej. was from Brazil. While at Hampden-Sidney, Dr. Draper was influential in getting the Medical College of Virginia started, under the charter of Hampden-Sidney College. The late Dr. John Peter Metlauer owned a copy of Draper's early volume of papers, The Effect of Light on Plants, Src. This book, fortunately, is now deposited in the Library of Hampden-Sidney College. A half dozen or more of the papers in this book were based on experiments done at Hampden-Sidney. A. M. 13 CAMPUS SCENES TIBEIIIIIIDPI1-S7ih11PQ Hiring Hearn Agn 030 By Addison H ogue . CWashington and Lee University., .,.5 ,. ES, Many years ago, but still not as far back as the Revolutionary fi iq War-for even I cannot remember the surrender at Yorktown,-- though I perfectly recall the capture and burning of Richmond in IS65-an event that is as purely historical to the college boys of today as is the Yorktown surrender. tht -ii . . . . - . Some of the Confederate soldiers were able to return to college to finish an interrupted education, and their presence gave a tone and seriousness of purpose that is not always to be found now-a-days. 2 ': Some of them came to Hampden-Sidney, and a far larger proportion were at the Seminary. Into this kind of companionship I entered in September, IS66, as a green Sophomore. Green? I certainly was, and I can prove it. I actually began my college career under the impression that college students always have their lessons excellently prepared! I knew that school boys often missed their lessonsg but college students were a far higher order of beings. CI may add just here, in an undertone and in sacred confidence, that I do not hold that view as firmly now as I did then., In that Sophomore Class, there was only one student who had been a Freshman the year before, unless my memory is sorely at fault, and so we all had to get acquainted with one another as we began our Latin, Greek and Mathematics, each study coming five times a week. There is hardly any better way to indicate the difference between the studies then and now, than to say that when the dozen of us stood before Doctor Atkinson in June, IS69, to receive our diplomas, every one of us had studied everything that every Professor taught! No wonder you open your eyes in amazement! But we had only five Professors. We had no French, no German, no English, no History fnot even in the Latin and Greekl, and no laboratory courses of any kind. Rev. Dr. Atkinson, our noble and honored President, taught us Mental Philosophy in the Junior year, and Logic, Political Economy, Butler's Analogy and Moral Science in the Senior year. Professor Holladay taught us Chemistry when we were Juniors, and when we were Seniors he taught us Physics, Astronomy and Geology. In those days the chemical symbol for water was HO, Since then the Hydrogen part of the combination has somehow sneaked up on the Oxygen, even though Oxygen is so sharp, and so H20 is now and has long been, the symbol for water in chemical language. 15 How about the athletic side of college life at that time? Well, to begin with, we had a gymnasium. It stood on the campus under the big oaks near the south corner of the Fourth Passage. It consisted of a horizontal bar, one pair of parallel bars, and a high frame from the cross-piece, from which there hung two ropes, with an iron ring at the end of each. That constituted our gymnasium, in which various stunts were performed, and from which we derived much pleasurable exercise. Any teams? Oh no: no teams, but more good, rollicking fun than you fellows have now-a-days, because so many more of us played. We were not training a select few, at great expense for a coach, uniforms and traveling expenses, in order that these few might beat some other team, but we played with one andther, and sometimes nearly the whole college would be on the campus at once, playing old-fashioned football. Moreover, it never occurred to us that we needed a cheer leader to tell us when to root for our side. Our match games of baseball were played with the Seminary students: but the spectators had to stand, for even bleachers were an unknown quantity, to say nothing of a grand-stand. In one of our baseball games with each other, I remember that I-fellows, I ought not to tell this on myself, but it is too good to keep, so here goes-I made in one inning all the three outs for my side! That was sufficient to indicate that I was not destined to shine as a Delahanty or Ty Cobb, fboys, there is an Anachronism there, but it won't bite youl, so l turned my attention towards a far humbler sphere, and have been making my living mainly as a teacher of Greek. As a hard-shell Baptist once said in Mississippi to the Chancellor of the State University, who had told the Baptist brother that he taught Greek in the institution :- Greek, eh? Well-er-isn't that a mighty dry subject for a Christian man? Now that I have told on myself, here is a nut for you boys to crack: in that famous inning, what was the maximum and what the minimum number of runs for my side? We had no hazing, either, at least none that would be called so now. There was a thing called putting a fellow through the Kappa Gamma. It was a rude kind of prac- tical joke, but involved nothing brutal. The boy was blind-folded, and was made to sit in a chair that was placed on a table. Then he had to sing songs, answer foolish questions, and make himself generally ridiculous. At the close of it all he was drenched with a bucket of water, and the uinitiatorsn then extinguished the lights and rushed out of the room whooping and yelling. In my Senior year C68-'69D, we turned the tables on a party of this kind by forming a brigade of water carriers, and the out-rushing crowd found themselves met in the darkness by volley after volley as we dashed the water upon the retreating hazers. The discreditable feature even of such wild hazing as that which we were trying to suppress, is that it is many against one, which is the essence of cowardice, and this alone ought to stamp out all forms of hazing among the privileged youth who attend our colleges. There was one kind of cruelty, however, in which the Faculty indulged. They made the lower classes declaim in the Chapel on Friday afternoons. The junior Class furnished the first victimsg then the Sophomores, and last the Freshmen. The Seniors had to deliver original orations, and so they came last, to give them time to think up something original. These Friday afternoons were the most joyous events of the week for all except the poor wretches who had to declaim. I am not likely to forget my first 16 experience of the kind, or the agony of fright that I endured. The more lugubrious my tones and manner became, the more irrepressible was the merriment all over the Chapel. The Seniors sat on the first bench below the platform, fthat room is your present gym- nasium, and I can see them now trying to suppress their almost convulsive laughter. One Sophomore in our class, however, was never laughed at. William Mayo Atkinson, of Winchester, was always listened to with marked respect: for his declaiming was true oratory. He spoke with such impressiveness of manner, and with such appropriateness and gracefulness, and with such natural gestures, that it was worth coming over to the Chapel to hear him. When we entered upon our Senior year, one of the Freshmen was a boy only fourteen years old, if I remember correctly, but was well prepared for college. He was quiet, dig- nified, and a capital student. Even now I can see JAMES R. THORNTON walking across the campus with his long stride. A more absolutely irreproachable student was never found inside the walls of any college, I imagine. Well remembered, too, is Col. Kemper's broad smile of gratification the next June when he announced that two of his Freshmen, Lipscomb and Thornton had made IOO on their mathematics examination. Three years later Thornton graduated with first honors. The respect and admiration which he inspired as a Freshman continued unabated-it could hardly increase-during all of his life. We were colleagues in the Faculty later on: and to win and retain the friendship of such a man was a thing to be deeply grateful for. There was no organized Y. M. C. A. in those days. We sent no delegates to conventions, and had no paid college secretaries. It was considered sufficient for the young to be trained and guided by mature and experienced men. But we had our prayer meetingsg we were taught in Bible classes: we did not study on Sunday: nor were there any teams to use on Sunday, to make it a day of travel, or to make any trips. I hope that Hampden-Sidney is still true to those principles, and that she will ever remain so. 'YHA eggs .tit - .r ff l 'QW ,mag '5--1 X jf . ff -Q , s s f 11 .wfiv . -'wer S1155 'J'-2,71 ' T 75 ' Tl- 's' ft f- w Y 1-il,.g:11-txw 17 H 3 -1+ .Y 9559 9 Egg? R 91:9 W 3::k W af f 4: ' ' ae it 5 54 Uhr Muni Lfigumg it is 5 is is REEW R gigg KSN y as as 4: 3 y i iam ervey oo s. Zi :ji B W ll H W a ji gift 9 3223 . . . R ac 2 ae Rich and strange in Venice gray, is Egg? W ie it QSO men sayj, it ae Q as -ze 1 Are the rippling roads of sliding, i Shining floods, where boatmen guiding Z Conclolas go winding, gliding 3 Q Down a many an ancient bay- ii 32:3 v 3 gg 5 as Past the olden Doges wall, is ae Q ae , . it E it Round San Marco s pillars tall, it 'ft 3 if . . it ig? Wearing age and art and story like a hoary coronal. 3 i it Once I knew a dewy way, 3 fwhere the hares at dusk would play gi il get With a single star to watch theml, richer, stranger than them all. it it 1 if if ae E ae at ae I ae it if 5 is Far drawn roads of long renown 3 WEEE it i ic London town 3 if E it Q Z Shows the worldg where princes golden 3 Preen their pride, of all eyes holden, 3 Splendor jostless Shame, and olden :Z Uses borrow virtue's crown- 22 E253 W ,gs E gr. There one day would Shakespeare go, is it i SE R ee E 45 Rupert brave, and Brummel Beau, it as E 41' , . . 'lt it E E Lion Heart, and Charles unbendmg doomward wendmg proud and slow. 3 'E E 3 2 E But 't was goodlier company 2 Tripped my morning lanes of glee, 3 With an air kings vainly envy, and a joy Fame may not know. gi Eff? 9 E228 9 E533 W ac 3 4E is ae 2 58 -It H2535kkkk?9H595kkkkkkkkkkkkkikkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkk 18 9 XHXXHHHKHKXHHHQHQHKK3883 QE as 1 4? :rf 45 1 as sr. sz- E ,gs W iff? 4? . . an E it 45 Paris ways by shrines of Art gi it W EER E Meet and party ii 'I+ i '14 X' Hindu saints in quaint Benares X' E it is as a as llllllll 5? 54 Q Q -1 O 2 Q.- H D' rn fn .- ru ru 'U ffl .- 1 na ru .- 2 :V rn -I ro H IT' 0 2 ET. 'T 5. W HHN W l 2 Down to Ganges' Hoodg and fair is K . , . , WEEH gg. Nile s highway to Egypt s hearty QB 5 . WEEE as Stamboul, Mecca, and Cairo, :EE 9 X' 45 Q it E All with pilgrim-pageants glow, ig is 5 it 3: Restless march of nations changing, drifting, ranging to and fro. i Better far was Enoch's road, is Or the cool path Adam trode . . . , QB 2 2 With his Maker mid the myrtles when young Eden s day was low. sag-ii as ss 2 se 45 E 1 it W EER 41. My lost road was none of these- :gg ,X +5 if E as 45 All at ease, 95 E ae 95 . . if 5 it Q Down the lane it led, with clover, E Song, and morning, brimming overg Z At my side was Youth, the rover, :E Rich in piquant liberties, W . Www gg And we reached the wilderness xii as . as T as ,gs Haunted then of Happiness. :figs it . . if E -1: it Now no more my feet may Find her, though behind her still I press, 1246 E get 3 For no highways to her lead, 3 And the path that did succeed, 1 That lost byway of my childhood, must have gained the goal by 3 guess. E ? Zi ee 45 ? -re it 433 E is ae 411 E ae ae ig if E EER is Q as E if ae 45 3 as ac 45 E at ae if E as is si' E as as 45 3 as W WEEK -HHHHWRRWHWHHRKHWHHRRRRRR55355555555Hkkkkkkkkkkkk 19 A Glimpse intn tliv iiifvrta nf Elrahitinn nn Qlnllrge Eifr Oil Ag! gy ,,,, Q' HERE are a trinity of elements, in terms of which, we are apt to think of 4- the worth of any college. These are, in short, its equipment, its men, my and its traditions. It goes without saying that adequate equipment is l 3 essential to a useful college. On the other hand, it is obvious that bricks and mortar, and wise professors, and well-ordered curricula are as nil Q without certain concomitants which are not so easily delaminated by ' ' ' ' X definition, but which after all make up the spirit and genius of every lil!! ll great college. If you are searching for a touchstone by which to estimate a college you can find it surest in the men of that institution. So intimate is the relationship of men to Alma Mater that they inevitably mould her, and she in turn leaves her indelible impress on them. So true is this that you often hear men exclaiming, why he is -T man, or I know where that man graduated. They have dis- cerned the college through the man, and this is accomplished by no strain of the imagin- ationg for if you will notice carefully you will see how different the two are. One speaks perhaps to no one except his intimate friends, always has a mannerism in his speech and address, thinks in a definite stereotyped way about all things and is amazingly consequen- tial. The other addresses every one courteously, is naive and absolutely unpretending in his manners and has a wonderfully wide and common sense outlook upon the world in general. You need not hasten to say such types do not exist, for if you do it is a travesty upon your powers of observation. There is no question about the impress. They all have it, and it represents the lasting endowment of Alma Mater for good or for bad. Theiimpress which men make on Alma Mater is just as striking. Perhaps more striking, for in this case we get an accummulative effect. Each impression sticks, and is modilied by the succeeding, so that we can say that Alma Mater represents the essence of all that has proved lasting and worth perpetuating in her sons. This accumulative effect we call tradition. It is the storehouse of all that is true and lasting. It represents that which has risen above the mediocre in life and has in consequence lived and been eternized. It is the measure of the service of a college: and poor, indeed, is that institution which has no tradition by which to record its progress, or to stimulate its young men to emulate past immortal accomplishments. Tradition is not only active and inspiring during college days, but in after life it lives to somehow serve as a tangible object of our retrospection and pride. In the college it is clearly proportional to two things, namely, its age and its achievement. It is an old story that youth loves to look back to great men and great events, which time is prone to color, 20 and garnish and magnify, and unconsciously make them the paragon of their daily lives. ln fact, we all walk more or less after the fashion of the poet with reverted eyes. Further, it is not hard to see how achievement comes to be the other corner-stone of tradition. Tradition may be looked upon as a sub-conscious under-current which is always potential. It is a constant fact with us. It is to the college corporate what the memory is to the individual's mind. It is the great fore-gathering place of past memorable events, and it lives to guide future events. No single deed is isolated. Nor does it die tongueless, but lives to enter and modify the complex of every succeeding one. Physiologically it could not spring from a spontaneous will to act. Psychology has at last come to regard every act, whether conscious or unconscious as nothing more than a reflex. The effector is as essential as the receptor, and the two are inseparable. That is, for every act, for every thought, there must be some real external stimulus. There is no such fanciful fact as a spontaneous will to act, Every act, therefore, depends on past experience, is compli- cated, varied and profitable as our past experience has been complicated, varied, and profitable. What is true of the individual is equally true of Alma Mater, who, if she is a real Alma Mater with blood and bones in her make up, will claim a common mould with her sons, from the same common clay, and will react similarly under the same train of external stimuli. It is not a far-fetched comparison or too much of a digression, therefore, to liken to the intricate association meshes of our human brains tradition, which is just as much a complex of many things gathered out of many times, and so omnipresent that she appears to infuse the very conscious air from the intangible interstices of which she ever and anon whispers her encouragement and her inspiration. The men of a college are the makers of its traditions, and tradition is but the expres- sion of the work of her men. Therefore, if we should seek to analyze in our search for the salient constituents of a true college we should pay very little attention to the ringing of class bells, or the comings of professors, or the other expressions of academic routine. As we have said, the life and genius of a college lies in the student, and to interpret his life, to tactfully discover the why and wherefore of what he does is the only right way to study the dynamics of tradition. There are certain minutae of college life in which one instituting such a search reads potentially, although they may not be apparent at first Hush. Thus college songs are a criterion of what tradition has been and still is. Enthusiasm makes the world go round, and enthusiasm springs from belief in what you are doing, and belief in what you are doing arises from love, and sentiment, and all those finer qualities of the heart which are best and surest imbedded in song and story. An ideal college is rich in songs which interpret her life and give expression to the feelings of those who call her Alma Mater. Whether itbe in the seclusion of your single apartment when you set your fancies free, or in the excitement and tension of a great athletic event, or in after life when your thoughts run to things past and dear, and retrospection has a pleasure all its own, it is oftenest in song that we hark back. Songs are poetry, and poetry is life and philosophy and fact so imbedded in aimagic mist of sentiment and music that we helplessly fly away into a dream world that is little short of realism. Real college songs are pictorial. They immortalize in vivid color that college setting that is so dear to us all, whether in the rose-tinted valley or on the azured mountain top. They are historic. They sing of the arms and the hero, 21 the gridiron and the diamond. They are memorial of a distinctive college spirit, where love for Alma Mater has been ever passionately burning, and cords of friendship and unity have bound men in body and in soul. A songless college is as unthinkable as a songless bird. There is nothing more inspiring than to hear a great body of college men sing a college song that is very dear to them all. The very air seems to catch the spirit of the hour. A pervading fellow-feeling is everywhere paramount, and every man is kin in this one touch of nature. To the man out in the world who has long since gone out from college associations there exists no more potent means of recall. There never breathed a man with soul so dead that he did not have a thousand precious memories awakened at hearing such a refrain. When time shall steal our joys away And all our treasures too, The memory of the past will stay And half our joys renew. Perhaps one should mention college yells in this connection, if only for the sake of completeness, and the opportunity to disclaim any kindreclness of appeal. The yell is for the youth, and the boisterous, and the unthinking. It can never approach the high plane of sentimental appeal that the song does. It has neither poetry nor music nor imagination about it. It is the voice of a temporarily insane multitude. It is too often prompted by revenge or barbarous self-satisfaction over triumph, and has too little of the magnanimous about it. It is too often a cloak for, rather than an expression of true and sober feeling. It is a curious fact that military schools sing poorly, while their yelling is superb. None of them could sing Nassau, or Fair Harvard, or L'The Good Old Song. Uniforms and drills and exact hours have made for stereotyped men. They lack the loafing hours, the fire-place chat and the whole round of academic sentiment which makes men sing. Doubtless it is the fault of the institutions that the technical has crowded out the imaginative and the beautiful. If one were to take the trouble to investigate I am sure he would find many curious instances of the effect of tradition on different institutions. The treatment of first year men by upper class men is purely a traditional matter. Thus at one college you will find Freshmen wearing silly little caps of gay colors which hardly cover their parietals. They do not do this from preference, mind you, nor have they been commanded to do so by anybody. But tradition has decreed it, and none is so bold as to antagonize this guiding principle of college communities. A descent upon another college in the early days of October would show the stranger a pole erected well into the middle of a large field, fluttering on the top of which he could make out the flag of the Sophomore Class. By good observation and maybe a few bold questions he would discover that the men with locked arms, who stood ten deep around this pole, and wore very confident expressions on their faces were Sophomores and that they were on the point of defending their flag. If his curiosity was aroused by this time and he stayed further he would see a phalanx of Freshmen, carrying some six of their most agile members on their shoulders, determinedly approach this pole and the 22 Sophcmores. He would witness the front ranks meet, a struggle and confusion worse confounded in which the six agile Freshmen would rush desperately over the heads of their opponents in a mad effort to gain the pole. Presently a whistle is blown and the Freshmen draw off leaving the Sophomore flag fluttering as defiantly as ever. If he was now interested and had a humor for the struggles of youthful brawn and brain he would remain to see the Freshmen reassemble their ranks and come forward as bravely as before. Perhaps the same confusion and ill-success would follow. Then their undaunted columns would advance the third time, and maybe the rush of the six would prove successful, the pole be reached, scaled, and the flag would belong to the Freshmen. Such are the famous flag rushes held annually at many colleges. There is a certain small college town on the New York Central which entertains travelers every year. If you should chance to be journeying through this town on a certain day in September you would have your attention called to perhaps a hundred eager looking young men standing impatient to board your train as it pulled into the small station. At that moment your interest breaks into astonishment for a company of twice as many rushing and panting young men appear from around the depot, make for the cars and proceed to forcibly tear our former company of would-be travelers from the steps of the train. As your locomotive steamed away you might make out a hand to hand encounter in which the first comers were finally worsted, forced to have their hands tied behind their backs and thus be marched triumphantly back to the college. The explanation of this surprising scene is that you have seen one of the customs of at famous small college which had the distinction of defeating the Yale eleven this year on their own gridiron. The sophomores, en masse, were making a secret dash for a nearby town where they had planned their annual banquet. Experience had shown the folly of holding these banquets in the college town for the Freshmen inevitably played havoc with them, frequently breaking them up entirely. fcustom had decreed that in so doing the Freshman was acting within his rights, and thereby not showing any disrespect toward the upper class menl. Unluckily a Freshman was in the town to which the Sophomores were going, learned the intelligence of their coming, and wired his class-mates, with the result we have just recounted. The Sophomores have still another method of carrying through their banquet, which consists of a concerted plan whereby they come upon and catch all of the Freshmen separately, tie them hand and foot in their own rooms, and only liberate them when their banquet is over. The Freshmen likewise give a banquet and the Sophomores reciprocate these methods of interference. There are still other customs which make for class rivalry. l-lazing is a custom that does not seem to be as much in vogue now as formerly. lts abuses were most glaring at military schools, and on this account it is rapidly becoming unpopular. But it serves as another illustration of what has been before shown, namely, the hand of tradition. Hazing is as varied in its forms as the colleges which practice it. Whether it be carrying water, doing errands, fanning out, making extempore speeches, singing solos, climbing poles, fighting fellow class-mates, or passively receiving cuffs and blows the humiliation of the under class men is the object and tradition deserves the thanks. There are other places where barbarisms of this type have disappeared to be replaced by customs equally as vicious in their malintent. Thus there are colleges which prescribe such unnatural traditional laws as to permanently distort the social attitude of their 23 graduates. Such unfortunate customs are those which evidence themselves in disregard and indifference for first year men. Forcing first year men to address upper class men as mister, to always wear a hat, never to talk loud, to avoid the places the upper class men frequent are quite as much, if not more, humiliating than hazing. Tradition expresses itself in the way college men give evidence to the call of the egregious in them. Does the dormitory spirit prevail, or does the fashion call men into fraternity houses, or is there no sentiment about these matters, men being promiscuously scattered in boarding houses and in different dormitories? Those are important questions, for there is no greater factor in shaping the character of a college than this simple matter of where students live. No one can gainsay the right of the college man to select his own associates, and therefore the fraternity house fashion has the most sanity in it. Here the family life is nearest approximated. Though it is an artefact, still it is a home and such are its influences. A modification of this same principle is seen in those institutions which have substituted clubs and club houses for fraternities and fraternity houses. Here oddly enough a man passes from one club and one club house to another as he progresses in his classes, but the spirit is the same and we are quibbling with names when we try to draw a distinction. The dormitory spirit is different in that it promotes a wider and more promiscuous association. There is one college in particular where this spirit is very strong, and chiefiy so because the college authorities have fostered it in every way. The secret of the system at this institution does not hinge on the handsomeness of its dormitories, though in this respect they are hardly surpassed by those of any other institution, but in a simple structural device. In the centre of each dormitory there is a great foyer or lobby, with galleries on either side containing small tables at which students are always at liberty to entertain themselves at cards or in reading. The real charm of the foyer, however, is the huge fire-place in which great logs of wood are burned on cold winter nights. Around this community hearthstone the inmates of the dormitory gather in soft, comfortable chairs, and in the glow and crackle and cheer of the blaze that faces all, their fancies somehow seem to run free. Then follows a pleasant round of yarn telling and political debate 'till the clock tolls the hour for retiring, and each one hurries from that circle of rest and recrea- tion to his bed-room and his books. Obviously, there could be devised no more democratic influence in college life, not to speak of the educational and humanizing effect of such a custom. The hand of tradition has been very wise in those institutions which hold once in 11 while, at stated times, a college hour. At such times all recitations are suspended, and the whole student body assembles in the college auditorium. Songs are sung, a dis- tinguished speaker addresses the student body, and various students speak on sundrv college affairs. What an hour is this! It is obligatory upon no one to come, yet every one comes. This is an hour of learning, enthusiasm, introspection and planning. It is a courtesy to the social side of college life on the part of the academic. The whole didactic machinery stops to pay its respects to that other side of college life, which is outside of the class-room but just as essential. One has but to witness and feel the enthusiasm of such a gathering to become a perpetual advocate of such a valuable custom. 24 No discussion of tradition would be complete without some account of the honor spirit in colleges. This is at present a burning question at many institutions, and the old system of practice is rapidly falling under the ban. In this connection the great thing to be remembered is the fact that there is no such thing as an honor system. Honor spirit and honor system are quite distinct, and one by no means implies the other. An honor system is formal. It attempts to substitute student laws for faculty laws, and in so doing but begs the question. Honor spirit is quite different. It is never confined to codes or subjected to definition. If it does not exist as a student sentiment it does not exist at all. You can create an honor system in a day, but not so of honor spirit. The honor spirit is a growth. It is a factor of time and tradition, whereas the other is a factor of neither. The honor spirit is a slow aquisition and it only follows in the wake of traditions which make for honor. There are many other archives of tradition, but perhaps none so impressive. The curious may find it in the chronicles of institutional history, and derive a scholarly reward from turning effete and age eaten pages. Or he may read it on monuments, or on tomb- stones, or in deeds that live to speak a master mind. But the ordinary run of mankind will find tradition a very present thing. He will see its impress on student life. His manner of self-government, his sense of decorum and of his moral responsibility to the estate of manhood, his bearing toward his fellow-student, his manner of address, his atti- tude toward his teacher, whether it be manly co-operation or puerile antagonism, his esprit de corps, his pastimes, his philanthrophy, his moralty, his religion-will all acknowledge the impress of a traditional sub-stratum. WYNDHAM BLANTON. QQ. xl lg -2. -,XQ1 25 9 4 ooso2-oo-2222 soas52oe5soo5 2222222222222 -r9,,lQf'1' 57 2:42 QB? x1x1'ls 9:34142 e2ge2492,C9'x-zeiefxvexs ea o2o5osooZe 2222222222222 Ellis Bible nn Ilirnahmag 050 By William Hervey Woods. Has earth another scene withdrawn so wholly From all that marks a Judean landscapes mild, Or streets elsewhere as little like the lowly By-paths of Salem as this highway wild? Look down the way: no turbaned shepherd yonder Folds him his flock, nor Wise Men from afar Laden with gifts, on star-led journeys wander- Men follow gift's here, but no more the star. No desert this with hairy wild men crying, By-gone the prophet and his wildernessg These hurrying folk, the seer's worst doom defying, Heed no man's message till he mind his dress. The fretful arc-lights hiss like speeding arrows, Eternal tumult storms the walls around, And peace were stranger in these thunderous narrows Than on the rocks where Fundy's floods rebound. Yet from this old bool: sounds o'er all the rattle A heavenly voice unchanged, serene, remote From these loud ways as sunrise is from battle- The Voice that Chaos into daylight smote. He maketh me lie down in cooling grasses, And where the waters dream he bids me rest, I read: and breathe the peace of Shiloh's passes, And feel the highways grow as Sharon's breast. And caring not what new fanfare is blowing, Or what old pageant still blares up and down, I lay me down to sleep untroubled, knowing Naught can disturb me now: God is in town. 27 ittrrvnt 3l1npmminna nf Eamphrn-Svihneg 020 jig HE extravagant ideas for comfort and luxury, which preparatory stu- dents have today, and the demands that over-indulgent parents make ?1 for their sons, compel every college and university to exhaust all means , to secure funds either from the alumni or others in order that new L buildings may be erected and old ones remodeled, grounds enlarged and beautified, and every possible device employed to attract the boy -T - and satisfy the parent. Indeed in these times there is more done by :Sagas many colleges to make this showing in improvements and attractions than to further the educational standards. Having had some experience in talking with parents about the college for the boy, I have found that they seem to question more the physical environments than the scholastic standing of the institution. On a recent trip to Hampden-Sidney, I found the college fully awake to these demands. I was amazed to find that so much had been done towards beautifying the campus and improving the buildings. The new station at Farmville was the very first thing to suggest the changes made during the ten years of absence. I-low vivid were the recollections of those chilly four A. M. waits on the platform of the old station until the train came to bear us homeward. The unsightly walls and the floor together with the stifling atmosphere of the rooms made it an impossible rendezvous. I was pleased to see the old Duncan hack again because it belonged to the old, but indeed more pleased to lind that necessity did not compel me to take passage in the anti- quated old rigg but on the contrary, in a comfortable buggy with a spirited horse, which stood close by ready to speed on to The Hill. I was forced to question the direction we were taking, when the driver informed me that a splendid new road had been built, a good half mile shorter than the old one. I could but think how much better work we might have done on Monday mornings if we had been spared the night before that last long half-mile from Farmville. The real Hampden-Sidney did not seem to begin till we came to the ruins of the old Reynolds house. Sad indeed was it to think that this old place, around which centered the most lasting and pleasant memories of many alumni, was but a charred and fallen mass. 28 But I must not dwell too long on outside places for it was on the campus itself that the greatest surprises came. The fences and the buildings around the President's cottage had been razed. Where once stood the unsightly barn and buildings surrounded by old and partly depleted fencing is now an attractive grass-covered mound. It seemed incredible to me that this old place, loved and dreaded by every student,-loved-because of the warm-hearted greeting and hospitable entertainments given by Dr. and Mrs. Nlcllwaineg dreaded-when summoned to meet that stern, august body of men assembled for the purpose of investi- gating some flagrant prank-had been comfortably furnished for an Alumni House. As I approached the building a flood of memories came over me. It was there on that veranda that the famous drag-hunt ended at two A. M. one beautiful starlit night, long years ago now. The pack of yelping hounds had been led a spirited chase for miles over the campus, through all the buildings, along via Sacra, and finally to this veranda, where the drag had been carefully lifted and taken away. Another remembrance was of that old fence around the garden. Cruel old enemy it was to rob a poor student of the best part of a pair of new trousers when forced to make a hasty retreat over this obstruction by the sudden appearance of the watch-dog. But the hardest blow was the loss of those delicious strawberries all ready to be plucked. The old brick walks are gone and splendid concrete ones are laid along the principal ways. A new iron fence has replaced the old wooden one. The haunt of all haunts, the old dormitory, has been remodeled by the addition of an artistic little entrance for each passage, new stair-ways, steel ceilings, heat and light from a central plant to each room. Hearths, grates, and stoves are gone. There is running water on every passage so that one need not race the length of the building from first to fourth passage in order to enjoy the luxury of a shower. The college church was not forgotten during this transformation period and fared well at the hands of the donor. An alumnus returning to The Hill today would be more than pleased to avail himself of a seat in the body of the church for the full time, while a few years ago he might have been seen entering the gallery on hands and knees in time for the benediction, and the next morning at roll call stretching his conscience to answer, Present at church. That dense old thicket on the edge of the campus,-at night the terror of every Freshman and fraternity goat, the path avoided by upper class men when no one observed the choice of a long way around or a short cut through,-has been cleared and pruned into a beautiful little grove, the admiration of The Hill. The fraternities long since found the rooms on first and fourth passages too cramped and when possible rented rooms elsewhere. An attractive little fraternity house, located at 29 the edge of the wood, was the pride of one order: others were planning to build, and per- haps have already followed the example. The Cotillion Club has responded to the needs of a dance floor, and an adequate hall has been built and furnished. This room has become the center of the social life of the college, and affords ampler space and more attractive surroundings than the old gymnasium. I do not wish to leave the impression that Hampden-Sidney is classed with those colleges which develop the physical environments at the expense of the scholastic standing. lt was my good fortune to have a pleasant talk with the President who told me of the additions and improvements of the college courses. This has necessitated additions to the Faculty. The work done is not more thorough but more extensive, keeping the standards abreast with the times. An addition to one end of the four-year course has made necessary a higher standard for entrance. To meet these demands, preparatory courses have been dropped and entrance examinations required for admission to the Freshman Class. This places Hampden-Sidney in the front ranks among the smaller colleges. l know that the work done is not more thorough, but since these additions, is much more extensive, thus making the old college an exceptional place for under-graduate work. While these many changes have taken place, the same old spirit rules in the student body. Sincere loyalty to the college and its traditions, earnest and honest striving to live up to the high standing of truth prevail everywhere. That spirit is the compelling influence that seizes the Freshman when he enters those old portals and holds him fast as he advances from class to class, and after being graduated becomes his guiding star all along the journey of life, and has made for Hampden-Sidney a large number of very distinguished lklumni, who reflect credit daily upon their ALMA MATER. SAMUEL E.. OSBOURN. . 955. 3-Qc!! Q 'P' ix, . . 4, .. 5 V932 Q3g6'?4:rf-59? fps-104:-fff ' ' so Bemnrrarg at igamphvrt-Sihrtrg 030 3 'xc 'F 'f' And this assembly warmly impressed with the important advantages arising to every free State by diffusing useful knowledge amongst its citizens, and desirous of giving patronage and support to such seminaries of learning as may appear to them calculated to promote this great object: Do hereby enact, etc. X 'if at if And that in order to preserve in the minds of the students that sacred love and attachment which they should ever bear to the principles of the present glorious resolution, the greatest care and caution shall be used in electing such Professors and Masters, to the end that no person shall be elected unless the uniform tenor of his conduct manifests to the world his sincere affection for the liberty and independence of the United States of America. From these extracts of the Collegeis charter, it will be seen what was the spirit of her founders who were likewise co-founders of a great commonwealth and a greaternation. As they were patriots and men of public affairs themselves so it was but natural that they should plant the germ of democracy in the school for the training of her sons. Hampden- Siclney has, therefore, from the beginning been a nursery of democratic public men. Before the war between the States, she had on her roster a President of the United States, more than half a dozen Governors of States, near a dozen United States Senators, three Cabinet officers, two foreign ministers and a score of Congressmen, not to mention the several hundred of her sons who served in the legislatures of the several States in all sections of the Union. She furnished during the period her lot was cast with the brief life of our Southern Republic, the Speaker and many Senators and Representatives to the Congress of the Southern States, and to battle for States' Rights she sent into the Confederate Army a number of her sons exceeding the total number of the matriculates for the fourteen years preceding the outbreak of the war-a fact at once wonderful and splendid. Hampden- Sidney students and Alumni have followed the flag in five wars. Thrice the students of the college enlisted as a body and marched to the front. The training at Hampden-Sidney, first from the intellectual standpoint, has always been of the sort to produce strong men for democracy. That service is the chief end of academic life has been firmly impressed: that the school was made for men, not men for the school. Our college had little of the spirit of the age immediately pre- ceding the Revival of Letters when the ideal of the scholar was the recluse rather than the citizen of the world-the austere and self-centered devotee of letters rather than the broad-spirited, sympathetic altruist. The cloistered seclusion of the scholar's life was rather a tradition than a fact: the unworldly remoteness of collegiate shades from the sun- beaten thoroughfares of the worlcl's struggle and the world's progress was an illusion of poetic minds. Bulwer-Lytton in Richelieu draws a picture as brilliant as it is totally fallacious and unreal of the incapacity of the scholar to sympathize with those who are involved in the fierce struggles of public life. 31 u Oh ye whose hour-glass shifts its tranquil sands In the unvex'd silence of a student's cell: Ye whose untempted hearts have never toss'd Upon the dark and stormy tides where life Gives battle to the elements. Ye safe and formal men, Who write the deeds and, with unfurnish hand Weigh in nice scales the motives of the great, Ye cannot know what ye have never tried. This may be well as poetry, but as descriptive of modern college life, and life at Hampden-Sidney in particular, it is mediaeval fiction. All human interests, aesthetic, recreative, commercial, social, diplomatic, political, military, religious, find an answer in the deep heart of the true college. As the world moves on it is found that the pursuits of scholarship do not lead to the segregation of scholars from the common experiences of the race. The true spirit of a college of Hampden-Sidney's soundness is the spirit of an all- round life in touch with whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honest, whatso- ever things are just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of good report. We have shown that no men have outvied the sons of the college in eagerness to bear arms for the honor of the Hag, in willingness to lose forever the prospect of literary distinction in the bloody mists of the field of battle where the principles of democracy were at stake. No men have outvied her sons in solving the arduous problems of civic reform, choosing tasks that entailed heroic sacrifice and envenomed criticism. On the mission fields of the world, amidst the hovels of poverty, in the lonely hillside parish, the sons of Hampden-Sidney are laboring, living witnesses to that wondrous sympathy with all human interests which touched their lives in the atmosphere of this venerable institution. . Democracy has reached its highest development where opulence is absent and plain living and high thinking are ever present. Hampden-Sidney people have always been an honorably poor people, if that will express the meaning, and this fact has made sim- plicity of life easy and has offered little opportunity to extravagance. At the same time backward youths are afforded the advantages of a social order, that, though simple and unpretentious, is yet genuine, and in an excellent sense cultivated. What son of the college has not felt in his life the uplift and tone given to him by his contact with the home-life of The Hill? In these homes a boy is treated as a responsible being, as a Christian gentleman. He is not forced to look on himself as a social and moral anomaly in a sort of limbo, between childhood and manhood. He is treated as a member of society and of the State: as a reasonable, tractable, responsible being, liable to public opinion, governable by ordinary methods. He is made to see college life as a practical apprenticeship to real life, in morals, manners, and ideas: and he soon prefers by this association to hold himself amenable to social, moral, and business requirements, such as must control him when he leaves the college community, and he declines to dodge behind the mediaeval quibble that students are a nondescript class not yet morally and legally responsible. Such segregation and coddling would humiliate his self-respect and warp his trend into democratic ideals. 32 While a great many of the students have always lived in these homes, most of them have lodged in the dormitory where the rooms were furnished by the occupants-usually a very easy business. The bare and desolate appearance of most such habitations witnesses to the lack of pence that the student suffers in common with his family and fellow-citizens at large. This cheap style of living is so general as to be fashionableg so much so that wealthier boys are apt to conform their way of life to the primitive and enforced simplicity of their poorer mates. Here at Hampden-Sidney democratic ideas prevail in the association of the students. Questions of blood, wealth, and social standing have little or no influence on the social relations of the students. Not that such distinctions are not regarded: the well-born boy is not unmindful of family name and fameg nowhere is good descent more cherished. But neither this nor any other accidental difference is suffered to decide social or other standing among our collegians. The possession of wealth is the last possible ground of claim to unusual consideration or privilege. The assertion of any such basis of superiority would be met with derision. Students are reckoned and valued according to ability, gifts, excellence in some direction, either physical, mental, social, or moral. Good presence, pleasant manners, even mere athletic skill, may give a sort of distinction, now and then, perhaps, out of proportion to their importance: but blood, riches, and social position do not affect this small Republic of Letters when judgment is being passed on solid worth. Every man soon finds his level and his value is soon determined by that clever institution which enables a body of under-graduates to discern the character of professors or fellow- students with rare accuracy and discrimination. Between students and professors the relations are such as prevail among men of the world, tempered on the one hand by such deference, and on the other hand by such abnigation of authority, as make, in combination, broad and safe standing ground of mutual understanding and appreciation. There is usually strict avoidance, on the part of the professor, of severity and abuse. If rebuke be demanded, it is always administered in private and with the greater effect for that reason. The student, for the most part, answers appeal more readily than reprehensiong it is easy to lead him, and almost impossible to drive. The teacher is considerate of the student's feelings and he polite and defer- ential to the teacher. Good feeling and mutual esteem and regard are the rule-a happy situation that is brought about by small classes and the Professor's chance to know all the men. One other fact has contributed to Hampden-Sidney's efficiency as a training ground for democracy and that is her situation. Out in the woods she is, far from the mad rush of the world: woods which have been made memorable by the generous spirits trained to high thoughts and noble purpose under their protecting shadeg woods where one would look for the companionship of the scholars of the ages: woods where Virgil might have written his Aeneid, and Horace strummed his odes, and Homer might have written out of the lives of the men here taught and the sufferings of their people another and a greater Iliad. Another has given this charming picture of early morning at Hampden-Siclneyg The tinkle of cow-bells, the distant cry of hounds on the trail of some affrighted little creature of the underbrush, the caw-caw of the crow across the helds, the awakening of chanticleer in the poultry yard, the singing of the cat-bird in the honey-suckle vines down in 33 the garden, and then the tocsin of the soul, the breakfast bell. And the meal in the barrel and the oil in the cruse did not fail, and there was a welcome for every comer. Born in so peaceful a spot, yet in the midst of the struggle of the Revolution, the old college has seemed destined to struggle throughout her career. But this fact has served to produce the highest type of man in both teacher and pupil and it is all the more to her praise that lounded with a distinct mission, alone and unaided from without, she has accomplished so much for the cause of democracy and trained the whole country. Gao. L. WALKER. jd iihitnriul 020 f- T is profitable, as pleasant, to recall and dwell upon those associations 9 which aforetime brought us pleasure. Especially is this true of those I associations which to us are hallowed by the bonds of friendship and devotion, associations which we have experienced in the spring of life, when our cup is abrim with youth. It is the hope of the Editors of this f twentieth volume of THE KALEIDOSCOPE that even in the after days when the leaves have begun to sear these pages may bring back such zz g 3 ' ' a swarm of pleasant memories, rich of color, and athrob with tender gill? fancies. And it is admitted frankly that this has been the conscious aim of the Editors rather than to picture our student life to the uninitiated, though it is hoped that the latter may be achieved in some small measure by the former. It is to be regretted that a large and important portion of the year's activities must be omitted, yet such is necessarily the case and we can not but accept our limitations. Such changes as have been made in the construction of the book will be at once apparent. We hope that they will meet with your approval. Each we think is well justified. The historical and literary portion has been brought nearer to its previous figures, because, in the eyes of many, it adds a permanent value and a permanent interest that cannot be elsewise obtained. At the same time the pictorial phase has been greatly expanded. We would wish it to be the link that connects most closely the past with the present. The clubs are proportionally few: we can only hope that their substitution is not amiss. There are many friends, including both alumni and students, whom the staff has to thank for contributing toward whatever success this volume of THE. KALEIDOSCOPE may have obtained. Dr. McWhorter has given us invaluable aid and many fertile suggestions. In the literary department we owe a debt of gratitude to Dr. Morrison, Dr. Hoge of Washington and Lee, Dr. W. H. Woods of Baltimore, Professor Osbourne of the Tome School, Wyndham Blanton of Columbia University, George L. Walker, Venable Moore, and L. B. Hanes. Our drawings have been very kindly furnished by Miss Marguerite Archambault, Miss Leila Richardson, Mr. Moylan Fitts, Mr. Graham Buchanan, and Mr. Frank Terry. Mr. A. S. Warinner is responsible for the kodak work, and to his untiring energy and indefatigable zeal, the success of this department is altogether due. In addition there are an endless number of students who have contributed both with their advice and with their pens. We thank them all, and can only wish that none of the energy herein expended will be ever mourned as wasted or gone. 35 Zinnrh nf Efrnntern PRESIDENT GRAHAM, ex-oficio ? -4-f 'ip D4 A B CARRINGTON ESQ Danville W W MOORE D D RIchmoncl Charleston VV J SCOTT PARRISH ESQ Richmond REV J B BITTINGER Chatham Hill E B DICRERSON ESQ Richmond 1 . J I I 5 tx i l V Y ' ,Va. . . , . 'Va' COL. C. C. LEWIS, JR., , . Va. I l ,Va. i i i l ' ,Va. i l ,Va. 37 THOS. W. HOOPER, D. D.. Culpepper Cov. W. HODOES MANN, Richmond F. T. MCFADEN, D. D., Richmond HON. A. D. WATIQINS, Farmville HON. J. L. TREADWAY, Chatham, W. C. CAMPBELL, D. D.. Roanoke, PETER WINSTON, M. D., Farmville, W. G. DUNNINOTON, ESQ., Farmville, JUDGE A. A. CAMPBELL, Wytheville, PAULUS A. IRVINO, M. D., Farmville, H. A. STOKES, ESQ., Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Farmville Va S. H. HAWES, ESQ., Richmond, Va REV. JOHN H. DAVIS, Tuscaloosa, Ala JUDGE F. B. HUTTON, Abington, Va C. A. BLANTON. M. D.. Richmond, Va HON. J. STEBBINS, JR., South Boston, Va HON. DON P. HAESEY. Lynchburg. Va HON. W. A. WATSON, . Jennings Ordinary, Va JAS. A. PAXTON, D. D., Lynchburg, Va A. M. FRASER, D. D.. Staunton, Va Q n u .1 IF.-E-ii f' 'W ' 45 X ' k'- Xa . K W.-72 - 'sim fw - bf ,Q . gi-glgf? ,, wg., A k ! L. x R ae af FACVLTY Uhr 5Hz1ru1tg 030 OFFICERS H. T. GRAHAM ..... ............. ...... F' R Es:DENr 1. H. C. BAGBY ...... ..... V ICE-PREs1DENr J. H. C.. WINSTON.. ....... CURATOR W. H. WHITING, JR. .,....... TREASURER j. H. C. WlNwSTON. .. .... CLERK or FACULTY DR. C. M. CLARK .... .... C OLLEGE PHYSICIAN A. W. MCWHORTER ..... .......... L IBRARIAN G. F. CAMPBELL .. .ASSISTANT L1BRAR1AN G. H. CILMER ..... GYMNASIUM INSTRUCTOR II IIII II 38 HENRX' TUCRER GRAHAM, A. B., B. D., D. D., fl' K 'll President and Professor of Bible Studies. A. B., Hampden-Sidney, H3863 Teacher, Mill- woocl, Va., H586-'88: Associate Editor Union Seminary Magazine, 1889-'9Ig B. D., Unioi Theological Seminary, Va., 1891, Missionary in Japan, l89l-'96: Pastor, Fayetteville, N. C., l897-19043 Pastor, Farmville, Va., l904-'OSQ D. D., Washington and l..ee University, I9l 0, and University of Pittsburgh, I9I2g President of Hampden-Sidney College since January l, l909. Iiuii HENRY CLAY BROCK, B. LiTT., Professor of Creelf. Student at Richmond College, i859-'6Ig at Randolph-Macon College, 1861-'62g Wounded in Battle, August, I864: Student at the Uni- versity of Virginia, 1869-'72, being Assistant ln- structor in Latin the second year: Associate Teach- er in Kenmore University High School, Va., l87Z-79: Associate Teacher in l-ligh School, Charlottesville, Va., l879-'Sli Master of Uni- versity School, Charlottesville, Va., l88l-'863 Professor of English and l-listory, Hampden-Sid ney College, 1886-'89, Professor of Greek and French, ibid., I889-I9I l 3 and Professor of Greek since l9l l. WILLIAM HENRY WHITINC, JR., A. M., KIDFA Professor of Latin. A. B., Hampden-Sidney College, l880: Crad- uate Student, University of Virginia, l88l-'82, and A. M., 1882: Assistant at Prince Edward Academy, Va., l88Z-'86g Assistant, University School, Nashville, Tenn., I886-'88, Principal, Clay Hill Academy, Millwood, Va., l888-l90Z and l905-'06g Professor of Latin and German, l-lampden-Sidney College, i902-'05 and l906- 'l l, and Professor of Latin since l9I l. 39 J. H. C. BAGBY, M. A., M. E... PH. D., A K E Vice-President and Professor of Physics and Astronomy Prepared for college at Norwood's University School, Richmond, Va.: lVl.1,A., University of Virginia, ISGS, M. E., l89I, and Ph. D., IS94: Teacher in Wallace's University School, Nashville, Tenn., 1888-'90g Professor of Natural Philos- ophy, Hampden-Sidneyt College, l892-'98, and Professor of Physics and Astronomy since l898. - ' HTML! J. H. C. WiNsToN, A. B., B. S., PH. D., Wt-'ox Professor of Chemistry and Geology. A. B. and B. S., Hampden-Sidney College, I894g Graduate Student, University of Virginia, IS94-'95g Taught in Tazewell College, l895- '96g Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University, IS96-'99, and Ph. D., I899g Professor of Chem- istry and Geology. at Hampden-Sidney College since IB99, and College Curator since I9I l. ASHTON W. MCWHORTER, A. M., PH. D,. ' A H9 iifr Professor of English and History. A. B., Roanoke College, IB95, and A. M., l90Zg Tutor in Greek, ibid., 18953 Principal of High Schools in South'Carolina, I895-'98g Grad- uate Student, Johns Hopkins University, i898-'99g Professor of Latin ana, English, Presbyterian Col- lege of South Carolina, IS99-l 903: also Professor cf Latin and Modern Languages, Thornwell Sem- inary, Clinton, S. C., IS99- 1903: Student, Johns Hopkins University, l903-'05, Fellow in Greek, I904-'05, and Ph. D., l905: Assistant Professor of Greek and Latin flocum tenensj, The George Washington University, 1905-'06q Classical Mas- ter, Sewanee Grammar School fThe University of the Southl, I906-'07, Professor of English and History at Hampden-Sidney College since l907: Member American Philological Association, Archaeological Institute of America, Classical As- sociation of Virginia, and Virginia Folklore So- clety. 40 JAMES BROOKES SMITH, M. A., Y X E .-. . Professor of Matliematics. B. A. and M. A., University of Virginia, I906g Adjunct Professor of Mathematics, Georgia School of Technology, l906-'07g Head of depart- ment of Mathematics, Richmond fVa.J High School, I907-'09g Fellow and Instructor in As- tronomy, University of Virginia, 1909-'10, Assist- ant Professor of Mathematics, Hampden-Sidney College, l9l0-'l l, and Professor of Mathematics since l9l Ig Member American Mathematical Society, American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, and American Meteor Society. lil! JOHN ALFRED CLARKE, B. A., M. A., Professor of Modern Languages. B. A., Hampden-Sidney College, l903g M. A., University of Virginia, 19054 Professor of Languages, Cluster Springs Academy, l905-'l Ig Stuclent, University of C-renoble, France, summer of l9l lg Student, University of Marburg, Cler- many, summer of l9I3g Professor of Modern Languages at Hampden-Siclney College since 191 l. Piifll XVM. OSWALD BEAZLEY, M. A., B. D., PH. D., GD X Professor of Philosophy and Biology. Principal Singers Glen Graded School, Va., l905: B. A., Richmond College, 1906, Principal Wakeheld High School, N. C., l907g Principal Newport News fVa.J Academy, 19085 M. A., University of Pennsylvania, I9I0g B. D., Crozer Theological Seminary, l9l Ig Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, l9l2: Member Archaeological Institute of America, l9l2g Professor of Philos- ophy and Biology at Hampden-Sidney College since l9l3. 41 Ulf.,WtttLLUtLHHtM.AHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHWUNWNMNHNNNMNHJUHHQHNHNUNNNHHHNNHHHHHHHHNHHHNHHNHHHHHHHHHHHHHHUHMKHHHHHUHUMUHHW EHnu1'Irvn MWWWNWWWWMNWWMWWWWWWWMWWWMMWMMWWWWMMMMWWWWWWWWWWWWWWNWWMWTWWWWWWWWWWNWWWWWMMWWWM I-lere's to thee, old Alma Mater, And the achieved year fourteen, When we leave thy spring of knowledge, And the oaks, and campus green, When we go to fight the battles, And to spread afar the fame Of the Class, whose heart is yearning To immortalize the name, To immortalize the name Of the Class of old fourteen. i Oh! We'll cherish it forever, We will keep its memory green. li d9i?eE'EEE3QEE EEE5 42 Miss LELIA C. RICHARDSON sENloR SPONSOR 43 6 x44 if f , 4 4 'Z Xl Nr 4 41117 11,3 X 7 -K I ylxf' S J' 4 A - l , 'X' F vl l j 41 .f C 1, f MOTTO: Ad astra per aspera. E. T. THOMPSON M. C. BOWLING. E. E.. OWEN .... M. S. CLARKE. .. R. M. SLOAN. .. C.. F. CAMPBELL. J. B. ORR ....... E. T. THOMPSON Sveniur Ginza occ 1914 OFFICERS Firsl Term Second Term 44 COLORS: Scarlet and Cold. . . . . . . .President . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . . . . . . .Historian . . . . . . .President . . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . . .Valeclictorian WILLIAM WITHERS ARBUCKLE. KE, H. S. C., 'l4. Lewisburg, W. Va. UNioN Final Marshal, l9I2g Class Football Team, I9Il-I2-I3 l4g Class Baseball Team, l9ll-I2-I3-I4. QE His years but young, but his experience old: His head unmelloweal, but his judgment ripe. A philosopher-a student of man and of na- ture-an autocrat of the arm-chair. One who thinks deep, and can look far into your heart and motives, and likes to contemplate life with its lca- leidoscopic changes, who looks upon the world in broacl tolerance, and despises only the narrow. Not as ascetic, however: life is good to look upon, but also to taste in each of its aspects. Change, experience, novelty is the very spice of life. A sense of humor stands himself in good steacl, but inflicts upon us the pun. His power for evil has been great, for consciously or uncon- sciously he has infected others with the same mania. Withers is irresistibly drawn by the at- traction of feminine society, ancl only a philo- sophic coolness has extricated him from his many enlanglements with members of the fair sex. He poses as a woman hater, but fools only himself. In the worlcl's eye he is persistent: in his friends' eyes, stubborn. 45 Zii Virtue and sense are one Benny measures over six feet, and rumor has it that his understanding is Qiore than proportion- ate. To opposing football lines, he seems even bigger than he is. For four years he has been one of the best linesmen that Hampden-Sidney has ever had, and incidentally one of the best cap- tains. But Benny is a giant in more ways than one. Indeed his rugged massiveness is an index to his whole character. straightforward, honest. dogged, and persistent as a great bulldog, his blue eyes can pierce you through. Happily they most always twinlcleg they grow cool and calcu- lating in great stressesg no one has seen them angry, nor would he stay long to observe the phenomenon. Benny has but one fault. He's too mathematical: for four long years he has meas- ured daily the distance between Kingsville and Hampden-Sidney. There are some things that we don't try to keep up with Benny in. This is one. He will render a good account of himself to the world. LOYAL CLARK BENEDICT, H. S. Farmville. Va. Umor: lntermediate Marshal, l9l2g Final Marshal, I9l2g Varsity Football Team, l9l0-I l-I2-l3-l'-lg Captain Varsity Football Team, l9l2-l3g Fall Reception Committee, I9I2- 131 Final Senior Orator, l9l2-l3g Final Invitation Commit- tee, l9I3-145 Finished Senior Math. l 46 f-5 MARVIN CARLISLE BOWLING. Andersonville, Va. PHi1.ANri-momc S. P. l..ee Scholarship. 1910-ll, Students' Council. l9l0- II-I2-I3-145 Secretary-Treasurer Student Council, I9l0- Ilg Vice-President Y. M. C. A., 191 l-l2g Assistant Man- ager Baseball Team, l9ll-IZ: Vice-President Student Council, l9ll-IZ, Varsity Football Team. l9l2-l3-l4g Chairman Y. M. C. A. Reception Committee, l9I2-I3g Steward Students' Club, I9l2-I3-14, Manager Varsity Baseball Team, l9l2-l3g Vice-President Senior Class fsec- ond termj, l9l2-l3g Captain Students' Club Basketball Team, I9l2-13, President Y. Nl. C. A., l9l3-14: Vice- President Senior Class ffirst termj, 1913-14, President Local Organization Intercollegiate Prohibition Association, I9l3-l4g Final Senior President for Philanthropic Society, l9I4. This priest he merry is and blithe. Red is our oldest inhabitant. He has haunt- ed our walks for five years and helped to pre- side over our destinies. He has done it well. But he is here in the summer time, too-for a diderent reason. He busted on an exam once. just to have an excuse. He has red hair, but lacks the temperament. He is sort of judicial. but too affable and kind-hearted. He is a whole lot lazy. but can work, and when-with a sigh, we imagine--he decides that that time has come. sparks Hy. Watch him on the football field- theie is a red-head in every play. He is a good man to withstand the bulfets of fortune: hard knocks don't down him, he falls to rise again. But he wears his heart on his sleeve, and every woman has it for the taking. Poor Red. He never learns by experience. Rises to fall again. 47 GRAHAM FOLWELL CAMPBELL. Burlceville, Va. Assistant Librarian, l9Il-I2-I3-145 Bible Study Committee, l9l2-l3g Mission Study Committee, l9l3-l4g Students' Council, l9ll-I2-13: Secretary and Treasurer Class fsecond termj, l9l2-13: Vice-President Class fsec- and termj, l9l3-l4g Vice-President Athletic Association fsecond termj, I9l3-14. Tho' modest, on his unembarrassed brow Nature has writlen-gentleman. Somehow he has come to be lcnown as Bull Frog, and the name has stuck and followed him t up from his Freshman year. But the man has changed though the name has not, and Bull Frog is today one of our great ladies' men and Farm- ville frequenters, Whether he has affected third passage, or third passage him, is a mooted ques- tion. Certainly he is a strong man in whatever project he directs his energies. and a force to be reckoned with, for he goes in a thing with his whole heart. He is quiet and unassuming about his work, free and unrestricted about his play. A good friend, in all the deeper meaning of the word. A heart which is pure, and in which there is found no guile. nor does deceit enter in. , , K-MPL 48 CCL!! ffrf, Hntvtrltt ,, tary t9I3 t9tl t9tl Of manners gentle, of affections mild: In wit a man, simplicity a child. Molly came from Southside Virginia: he is an important denizen of the noted town of Boston. commonly prefixed South, out of con- sideration for its more ancient New England rival. He is a man of wondrous intellect, a musician whose very soul can be read in the silver tinlcle of his mandolin, and yet withal so openly and persistently absent-minded that no one is surprised when he appears at the break- fast table minus collar or tie. This latter trait, however, may possibly be attributed to his artistic temperament, for musicians are generally allowed a special license in peculiarities and idiosyncrasies. One very noticeable peculiarity is the gentle swaying motion which his shoulders affect when he walks. He studies little, yet when the fnal reckoning comes, M. S. Clarlce's name is inva- riably found near the head of the list with A's galore. Molly is quite susceptible to feminine charms and all other things give place when young ladies are on the hill. Dancing is his favorite pastime. MORELL SYDNOR CLARKE. K E, ..7, in South Boston, Ya. PHiLAN'rHRoFic President Freshman Class fhrst termf, t9t0-I Ig Manager Cierman Club, t9l3-I-tg Class Historian, t9tt-IZ: Secre- and Treasurer Athletic Association fsecond terml. l-ig Bear Cat Football Team: KALEIDOSCOPE Staff. I2-I3-I-tg Class Baseball. Track, and Football Teams, t2-I3-I-43 Minstrel Show: Leader Mandolin Club. i913- Cat Athletic Association. l9l3-I-tg Pan-hellenic Smol-:er I-1: Class Historian, l9l3-l-4, Vice-President Bear Committee, Comity Club Committee, I9t3-t4g Executive Committee Field Athletics, l9l2-l3g Vice-President Class, l9l2-I3. 49 53414 ?5 Rare compound of oddity, frolic, and fun. PVl1o relisfies a joke, and rejoices in a pun. Fotzy is Richmond's only surviving contri- bution to the Class of 1914. He survived from merit, he had to isurvive. From the time he showed his delicately wrinkled countenance on the hill, he was a marked man. Men liked him as soon as they saw him on account of his smile. You couldn't see the rest of his face when he smiled. But when he sang you were his friend for life. When it came to form in dancing-Salome, minus her seven veils, had noth- ing on him. He loves often and loves many. A fair face is his Waterloo. He is a broad target for Cupicl's arrows. Nevertheless, Fotzy does not allow Cupid lo monopolize his entire heart or attention. He is a live wire, a man of almost limitless possibilities and there are few things he cannot do and do wellqwith proper prodding. MARION NANTZ FITZGERALD, X CID. l3. H. S. C. Richmond, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Assistant Manager Baseball Team, I9I2-l3g Bear Cath: Secretary and Treasurer Class ffirst lermj, l9ll-l2g Vice- President Class Qsecond termj, l9ll-l2g KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, I9I0-ll-I2-I3-l4g Final junior Oralor, l9l2-l3g Vice-President Athletic Association ffirst termj, l9l2-l3g Dramatic Club, l9ll-l2g Manager Baseball Team, l9l3- l45 Director Minstrel Show, l9l3-I4g President Bear Cat Athletic Association, l9l3-l4g Montgomery Gym- nasium Commitlee, l9l3-l4g Board of Governors German Club, l9l2-l3g Vice-President German Club, l9l3-l4. ' fi F' Q. I Q 'D 5, L -1 -,S 4 if ry-a --r -5845, , 50 fs '21 O friend! Oh, best of friends! Japan, that far-off land of flowers and of sun- shine, was Susie's cradle. Somehow the beau- teous colors of the little people impressed them- selves upon his soul. And Susie, we think often, is largely ,lapg he has the artistic spirit, even the stature and the indomitable energy of body. There is poetry in his soul, if not in his pen. He is a lover of music and no mean performer himw self. Indeed, all that is beautiful has for him a cogent appeal, whether a color, a voice, or a woman's face. And he is quick to detect an in- consistency in the former, if not the latter, for Susie is a firm friend of the little god, and his heart is often touched. He lil-:es to delve in the realms of thought, and hold communion with the infinite. Yet Susie is above all an expressionist, and likes to dance and sing his joy, and give it muscular vent, he takes seriously both himself and his work. THOMAS JONES MCILWAINE, H K A Kochi, Japan. PHILANTHROPIC Manager Tennis Club, l9ll-I2-l3g Final Marshal. I9I2g lntermediate Junior Orator, l9l2-l3: Class His- torian, l9lO-ll-IZ-l3g President Class ffirst teamj, l9ll-I2 3 Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, I9IZ-I3-I-tg Manager Reading Room, l9IZ-I3g Secretary and Treasurer Student Council, l9II-I2-I3-I-tg Freshman-Sophomore Magazine Medal, l9I2g Dramatic Club, l9lZg Assistant Editor Magazine. 1912-l3g Editor-in-Chief Magazine, I9I3-I-tg Pan-hellenic Smoker Committee, l9I4g Chairman lnter- mediate and Final Invitation Committees, l9l3-I-tg Min- strel Show and Mandolin Club, l9l4. u t 51 JOHN CUNNINGHAM MOORE. X. H. S. Irvington, Va. UNION Football Team. l9I2-I3-l4g Baseball Team. l9l3-l4 Captain Baseball Team, l9l4g Magazine Staff, l9Il-I2 I3-l4g Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Association fsec ond termj, l9l2-l3g Intermediate Junior Orator, l9l3 Intermediate Senior Orator, l9l4. h Here's a large mouth. indeed, Thai spits forth death, and mountains, roclfs and seas. john is one of the old timers. He came along with the first of us and has spent his allotted quota ,, of four years here. He is one of the best known men in our class. There are few football grid- irons in the Slate that his bushy top-knot has not been seen upon nor are there many collegiate home plates that he has not clipped the corners of with his curves. johns bass voice is in much demand, bath in church and in prayer meeting. He is a great big boy, genial. easy to lcnow, and overflowing with fun all the time. As a speaker of no mean ability he has represented his society on several occasions. -Iohn, too, is touched, some- times deeply by a fair face. Which of us are not? His appetite often suffers the conse- quences, and it is said that even now he eats little. 52 His various cares in one great pain! combine, The business of his life, lha! is to dine. Mississippi hails from the far South, her smile is on his lips, the cadences of her drawling tones are on his tongue, his kiss is on her cheeks- O babe, 's'matIer. He is thrice re nowned, a trencherman of prodigious valor, an honored warrior of the gridiron, of the basketball Hoor, and of the diamond: the originator and sole patentee of the above quoted war-cry. Missis- sippi is a man of great heart and remarkable persistence. Obstacles insurmountable crumble at his approach: gold rolls for him whence it ne'er rolled before and ne'er will roll again. He has enlivened first with his chorlle-his departure will leave it as silent as the grave. He came from the marshes of Mississippi, and unto the marshes he will return. Grain and the fruit of the earth will spring up at his behest. JAMES BAXTER ORR. 'I4 Taylor, Miss. UNION Intermediate Program Committee, I9ltg Final Marshal. l9lIg Devotional Committee, l9ll-IZ: Chairman Bible Study Committee, t9lt-I2-t3g Vice-President Y. M. C. A., l9l3-I4, Captain Hampden House Basketball Team, l9I2-13, Secretary and Treasurer Class fsecond termj, l9l3-l4. J 'fx-. 'J'- W s he . if s. . .A bun .rfja-f ',,,.C., , J , 53 ?' EDWIN EDMUNDS OWEN. KY Dennision, Va. PHiLANTHaoPic KALEIDOSCOPE Staff. 1912-I3-145 Business Manager of KALEIDOSCOPE, I9l3-I4p Final Marshal. 19123 Intermedi- ate Senior Orator, I9I3-I4g German Club: Class Football, l9I3-t4g Class Baseball, l9l3-l4g Program Committee, l9l3-I-4: Made Xmas Exams, t9l3-I4g Final Senior Orator, l9l3-I4: Chairman Senior Banquet Committee. r Hear ye not the hour of mighty workings. W Ned waited till we had passed through our ' apprenticeship as Freshmen before he joined our ranlcs. He is one of those Cluster Springs boys and claims Denniston junction as his birthplace and home. He brought with him a red head full i of hard common sense, etc., a hearty handshake. and a strong propensity to make friends. No host is more hospitable. no friend more generous than Ned. He shares everything he's got even to his hats and shoes. He is a business man of no mean ability and puts through everything he undertakes, notably the KALEIDOSCOPE, the hnan- cial success of which is due entirely to his ef- forts. He is, however, quite susceptible lo fem- inine charms and has helped to wear many a rut in the road to Farmville. The story of his love affairs would hll a volume. 54 ff GEORGE HARRISON PAYNE. A. B. GX A Y Charlottesville, Va. ,I UNION Intermediate IVIarshaI, I9IIg Final IVIarshaI, I9II: Class Football Team, I9I0-II: Class Baseball Team, I9I0-II: Intermediate -Iunior Orator, I9IZg Intermediate Senior Orator, l9I3g College Representative in State Oratorical Contest, I9I3g Vice-President Athletic Association Csecond termj, I9I2-I3g Magazine Staff, I9II-I2-134 Editor-im Chief Magazine, l9l2-139 Final Senior Orator, I9l3g Intersociety Debate, I9I4g President Athletic Association fsecond termj, I9l3-14, Final Senior Orator, I9I4. Life? 'Tis the story of love and troubles. FrecIcIes does not really belong with us. He already holds that much coveted B. A. for which we so arclently strive, and enjoys the distinction of Iaeing our post graduate member. FrecIcIes hails from Charlottesville, Va., hut was origin- ally from I-Iot Springs, Va., in the mountains and nearer the West Virginia line, whence he brought his peculiar cIrawI. He is a man of good capabilities, an orator and debaler, our repre- sentalive at the State oratorical contest and the able editor of Iast year's magazine. I-Ie, too, is one of CupicI's victims, and knows well the path to Worsham. We will not say more. I-Ie is a biologist of renown, a merciless dissector of guinea pigs and dog hsh as well as a skilled user of the microscope. 55 .-Q JOHN FRANCIS MINOR SIMPSON, Frederick, Md. PHii.ANTHRoPic President Sophomore Class fsecond terml, 191 I-l2g Sec- retary and Treasurer Athletic Association fseconcl termj, l9lI-12, Sophomore's Debaters' Medal, I9ll-IZQ Dele- gate to State Convention Students' Volunteer Movement at Richmond, 19125 Delegate to State Students' Y. M. C. A. Conference at Washington and Lee, 1912: Presented Fresh- man Declaimer's Medal, 1913: Missionary Committee, l9l2g Chairman Missionary Committee, 19135 Treasurer Y. M. C. A., 1914: Class Track Team, 1913: Man- ager Class Track Team, l9l3g Manager Class Baseball Team, l9t3g Final Decoration Committee, 1912. EE Fantastic as a D:oman's moods. Simpson is our sole representative from Mary- land. Frederick claims him as her citizen. Hc is a free thinker, a holder of original views on many topics. He is the only sullragette at Hamp- den-Sidney. ln his estimation the problem of rotten politics will be immediately solved when women are given the ballot. He is an ardent worker in his literary society, as a baseball fan he runs a close second to Mike Ramey, and as a contributor to philanthropic undertakings he leads the college. He knows every room iii the dorm and spends much time discussing mat- ters with different people. He is the best lon distance runner in college and when a Fresh man, frequently ran to Farmville to mail his let- ters. He is working for a B. Litt, and finds the study of Greek exceedingly interesting. 56 RAYMOND MCKNICHT SLOAN. K 3 't-1 H. S. Alderson, W. Va. UNION Varsity Basket-ball Team, I9l l-l2-I3-l-45 Bearcat Foot ball Team, l9I3-145 President Athletic Association fhrst termj, l9l3-l4g Captain Class Basket-ball Team, l9l2-l3 President Senior Class Qsecond yearj, l9l3-14. EE Cive him all kindness: 1 had rather have Such men my friencls, than enemies. As a Freshman, Raymond was always tuss- ling. The habit has persisted as the years have fled, and he still breathes with delight, and feai- lessly. the scent of battle. Only he has broad- ened his interests. Not only the clash of body with body, but that of wit with wit ihcites his blood. He is a ready and determined antagonist, exceedingly tenacious of purpose, and hard to budge. Has a lilcing for adventure and is ap- parently master wise in experience. He sympa- thizes always with the underdog and stands by his friends with unswerving devotion. His social in- stincts are strong, often to the detriment of lesser duties, yet he frequently burns the midnight gas and his friends are legionary. He has a way of throwing his head back like a collie swimming in the surf. shaking off breaker after breaker, and rising to meet the next. It is a picture of the man. me 'A 57 Z? Self-reverence, .self-lfnowledge, self-conlrol,- These three alone lead life lo sovereign power. Ernest.-We hesitate to begin for fear we can- not do him justice in this limited space. The name Ernest Thompson at Hampden-Sidney stands for everything that goes to make up the character of a true man. He came to us from the Cog City on the banks of the Kanawha,- a man before he came to college. though in years among the youngest of us. Those of us. who know him well, feel about him that atmos- phere of settled purpose and quiet determination characteristic only of mature men who know themselves and who know their destinies. If you want a true friend. a real friend, know Ernest. He is gentle, quiet, and deep down within him there is an innate love for the beautiful, the spirit of the true artist. He is avowedly a great admirer of the fair sex, but is too hashful to cul- ,ivate their acquaintance. He is an indefatigablc worker, a man who accomplishes well what he sets out to do, a good writer, speaker, and debater. He has won many laurels and each has been the reward of hard and persistent effort. ERNEST TRICE THOMPSON. K E, .14 Charleston, W. Va. Umor: Vice-President Class fhrst termj, l9lO-ll: Magazine Staff, I9II-I2-I3-14g Business Manager Magazine, l9l2- 13: Editor-in-Chief KALEIDOSCOPE, l9I3-l4g Secretary- Treasurer Class fsecond termj, l9l2-l3: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, l9ll-I2-I3-l4g President Y. M. C. A., 1912-135 Captain Via Sacra Basket-ball Team. 1912-135 Class Tennis Representative. l9ll-l3: President Tennis Club, 1913-145 Students' Council, I9Il-I2-I3-l4g Vice-Presb dent Students' Council, l9l2-135 President Students' Coun- cil, l9l3-l4: Freshman Declaimer's Medal. l9l0-ll: Sophomore Essayisfs Medal, l9ll-IZ: Junior Debaters' Medal, l9l2-l3g Intermediate Junior Orator, l9l2-l3g Final junior Orator. I9I2-135 lntersociety Debate, l9I3- l4g Final Senior President, l9l3-l4g President Senior Class ffirst termj, l9l3-l4: Houston Scholarship, l9l0- Ilg Tuckett Scholarship, l9lI-I2g Bondurant Scholarship, l9I2-I3g Valedictorian, l9l3-l4g Secretary Montgomery Gymnasium Committee, I9I3-14. 58 f15 WILLIAM ROGERS VAUCHAN. K A. H. S. C. South Boston, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Vice-President Class fsecond terml. 1910-I Ig Vice- ' President Class fsecond termj, l9l2-l3g Class Football and Baseball Teams, I9IO-II-I2-I3-14: Captain Class Base- ball Team, 1912-13g Manager Class Track Team. l9l2-I3g Vice-President Bear Cat Athletic Association, l9l2-l3: Bear Cat Football and Baseball Teams, l9l2-I3-l4g Cap- tain Bear Cat Football Team, l9l3-l4g Manager Bear Cat Basket-ball Team, l9l2-l33 Chief Marshal Field Day, l9l2-l3g Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Association fsec- ond termj, 1912-135 lntermediate junior Orator, l9I2-13, President German Club, l9l3-l4. She is a woman, therefore may be wooed, She is a woman, therefore may be won. William is known and liked by every one, for he is friendly. and at heart he is always true and loyal. He is a good dancer, a good base- ball player, a good fellow. As an orator he made Nebuchadnezzer famous by recounting la - little unwritten history. As a student he is the possessor of an excellent mind, one which he generally relies on to extricate himself from his academic duties. As a man of the world, he is keenwitted and cool, analytical, and with a good sense of humor. He is a good dresser, and al- ways magnificently attired. He is a contestant for the Farmville record. As a matter of inside history 'tis said that never but once has he met his match. She was red-headed. Being from South Boston, however, he never acknowledged defeat. He is the victor of many contests. 59 Z-Q He smiles and sleeps. Storrs is a Richmond productg yet is able to have the advantages of the country,-advam tages which we frequently share, for Storrs nearly always has a full larder, and it is of exceptional merit, we all testify. Storrs is an epicurean in tasteg nevertheless he is a hard student, and can worlc at high pressure longer than most of his fellow students. At other times he likes to sleep: he has been l-cnown to say his prayers far into the night, and at other limes to wake up at day- break and undress for bed. He is of an affec- tionate nature and has strong likes. He is good- natured. always ready with a laugh, and some photographer, even if the last has tried the lirst. What he goes into, he goes in body and soul, and usually accomplishes. ALGERNON STORRS WARINNER. Richmond, Va. UN1oN Photographer to Tm: Ksuzinoscoma. EQ 'SH i 60 si ' ' iles .wi Bistnrg nf the Gllass nt' 1914 fx! H, HE advent of the Class of 1914 was not marked by the blare of trumpets, E nor the soaring anthem of the conquering. Nay: rather it was met by grins and incredulous looks, for by the older and wiser men of the 61 R college we were regarded as a menagerie of curiosities. But these . Qlh-L1 A 4 . . X vis:-is same scornful looks soon changed to glances of admiration, and the Js 55555 cynical remarks that were so readily laid on our lowly heads at the Q Q I 5 I I i beginning of our college career, became audible hymns of praise as soon ' NNE: ' as the true worth of this wonderful band of men was discerned. For :gi : as subtly as the scent of the ,Iimpson weed in the spring time is wafted on the South wind's wings, even so did our renown spread throughout The Hill, and as the sweet notes of Morton's violin, so smote our wise sayings on the attentive ears of the Seniors. Thus, gentle Reader, you perceive that we have had a reputation to maintain cluring the whole of our college course. Let it suffice to say that we have nobly sustained it. Yet in the course of this glorious conflict many good and trusty warriors who bore our colors have fallen. Great men like Alte Lorraine, Cheese Oppenheimer, Dick Reid and Irish lVlcClung have been with us in the battle and are no more. These and other noble sons of I9l4 have died, partly from the Faculty, partly from inhaling the moral atmosphere of The Hill on certain Saturday nights, and partly from the stringency of their courses. From time to time our ranks, much depleted, have been reinforced by new blood. Arbuckle, Sloan, Campbell and others came to us. These, with a handful of war-scarred veterans, make up our slender roll. Yet few in number though we are, still we have always been pre-eminent in every phase of college life. Among our numbers we count Arbuckle, our philosopher and student of life: Bene- dict and Bowling of football fame whose names have been chanted with ringing cheers on many a hard fought field, Campbell, our friend of the Library: Clark Ceditorial additionl the brightest mind of the class, and a fellow who is all heart: Fitzgerald, who with the collaboration of Clarke, furnished the college one of her dearest songs, and who is besides the one man who is good at everything: Mcllwaine, of literary fame: John Moore, an all around athlete and man: B. Orr, who by his pluck as a scrub has ever a warm spot in the affections of the college: Edwin E. Owen, the indefatigable worker, who does not know defeat: Sloan, basket-ball artist and student leader: Simpson, of literary and political renown: Thompson, our shark, a true type of Christian gentleman, a leader in many fields: Payne, our post-graduate, and smooth-tongued orator: Vaughan, from South Boston, popular with men, a smasher of women's hearts: and last but not least even in such a crowd, Warinner, food demolisher, photographer, a jewel from Richmond. 61 This is our record. 'lhere is not a man who has not made his place in the college. Some of the things we have done in college will live after us, some will die and be for- gotten. If we ever have sons whom we wish to send to the old school, it is perhaps better that most of the things we have done should pass away. Ah! soon we shall say good-bye to this old college, the ivy-covered dorm, the chapel made sacred by the portraits of our great predecessors. The old bell shall summon us no more to Aggies, classes where we go, are ridden and rejoice. But when we pass on shall we forget this life and shall we in turn be forgotten? The moving finger writes and having writ Moves on,-nor all our piety and wit Can lure it back to cancel half a line Nor all our tears wash out a word of it. HISTORIAN. Q5 1 4 'algo 62 MISS BARBARA BYRNE JUNIOR SPONSOR 63 f' 7-2 Eluninr 011355, 15115 0l0 MOTTO: Vires acquirimus cundo. COLORS: Emerald and Orange. R. F. CUTHRIE .... A. B. Hoocus ..,. B. D. MORTON ..... J. M. SYD13NsTR1c145R F. C. CHRISTIAN .... W. T. CARRINGTON. OFFICERS First Term . . . . . .President . . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer ........Historian Second Term J. B. REYNOLDS ..,.... J. M. SYDENSTRICKER .... . . . 6-1 . . . . . .President . . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer ..........I-Iistorian JOHN EDWARD BRYAN. H. S. Birmingham. Ala. PHILANTHROPIC Varsity Basket-ball Team, l9I3-14, Captain Varsity Basket-ball Team, l9I4-I5g Sport, l9ll-I2-I3-14. Dltiid ALEXANDER BERKELEY CARRINGTON, JR.. X tp' H. S. Danville, Va. Captain Class Football Team, 1911, President Freshman Class fsecond termj, l9Il-IZ: Varsity Basket-ball Team. l9l3: Varsity Baseball Team, l9l3: Varsity Football Team, t9l3g Captain Varsity Basket-ball Team, l9l4: Vice-President Sophomore Class fsecond terml, l9t2-135 Class Historian, t9lZ-I3g Vice-President Athletic Associa- tion ftirst termj, l9t3-I4g Substitute Varsity Football Team, l9l2: Students' Council, 1912-I3-14, Board of Governors of Comity Club, I9IZ-I3-14: Dramatic Club, l9ll-IZ: Bear Cat Basket-ball Team. 1913: Sophomore Representative Track Meet, l9t3g Captain Sopbomore Class Track Team, l9l3. YSL! WILLIAM TUCKER CARRINCTON, JR.. X 419- 7M, H. S. C. Richmond. Va. Vice-President Class fsecond termj, I9l3-I4g Class Re- lay and Tennis Team, l9l2-l3: Captain Hampden House Baseball Team, l9I2-I3g Captain Hampden House Foot- ball Team, l9l3-I4g Captain Sophomore Football Team: Nvearer of H. S. C. in Football and Baseball: German Club. 65 CURRY CARTER. K A- UWILH H. S. C. Washington, Va. UNION Substitute Baseball Team, I9l2-I3g Cheer Leader. I9I3-I4. Whiill FRANK GORDON CHRISTIAN. X 117- VW Richmond, Va. UNlON Secretary and Treasurer Class Csecond terml, l9l2-I3: President Class fseconcl termj, l9l3-14g Secretary and Treasurer Class fsecond termj, l9II-I2g Magazine Staff, I9I3-I4. Wifi! HENRY FITZHUGH DONNALLY. X '-IJ s Charleston, W. Va. Student at Hampden-Sidney College, l9llg-I2-I3-I4. 66 RICHARD WATKINS DUPUY, Worsham, Va. UNION Member Reception Committee, 1913-14, Chairman Re- ception Committee, l9l4-IS. W JOHN RILEY EDMUNDS. K E' qw.. Houston, Va. UNioN Manager Tiddly Winks Team, I9l3-I4. QRIDLI JOHN CLARENCE GUTHRIE. Dublin, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Final Marshal, I9I2-I3g Freshman Dec1aimer's Medal. l9ll-12, Member of Missionary Committee, l9I2-13: Final Marshal, l9II-IZ, Treasurer Y. M. C. A., I9l3-l4g Manager Club Football Team: Intermediate Junior Orator. 1913-l4g Final Junior Orator, l9l3-145 Delegate to Stu- clent Volunteer Convention at Kansas City, 1913-14: Vice- Presiclent Y. M. C. A., l9l4-I5g Secretary-Treasurer Intercollegiate Prohibition Association, 1913-143 Invitation Committee. 67 ROBERT FINLEY GUTHRIE. Q X. H. S. Romney, W. Va. UN1oN Varsity Football Team, l9Il-I2-I3-I4. 91310 ALFRED BROWNLEY HODGES. TI K A- H. S. C. Portsmouth, Va. UNION Vice-President Class flirst terml, l9ll-125 President Class fsecond termj, l9ll-l2g Vice-President Class first terml, l9l2-l3g Secretary and Treasurer Class fsecond termj, l9l2-l3g President Class Hirst termb, l9l3-l4g Secretary ancl Treasurer General Athletic Association ffirst termj, l9I2-135 Dramatic Club, l9ll-l2g Manager Ger- man Club, l9l2-l3: Leader German Club, l9I3-l4g Class Football Team, l9ll-I2-I3-l4g Class Baseball Team. l9ll-I2-13: Substitute Baseball Team, l9l2-l3. filikl THOMAS CARY JOHNSON, JR.. K E' 7n.. Richmond, Va. UNloN Y, M. C. A. Cabinet. l9l3-l4:l53 Manager Y. M. C. A. Reading Room, l9l3-l4: Manager Tennis Club, l9l3- l4p Final junior Orator, l9l3-l4g Vice-President Inter- collegiate Prohibition Association. 68 MENNIS LAWSON. G X Burlce's Garden. Va. PHILANTHROPIC Maples Quarlelle. illiil HERMAN LEVY. Farmville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Cross Country Run. 'Tail BENJAMIN DOUGLAS MORTON, GD X Clarksville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Final Junior Orator, I9I2-I3g lntersoclely Debate, I9l3- l4g Final junior Oralor. l9l3-l4: Magazine Staff, I9l3- I4: Secretary-Treasurer Class ffzrsl lerml, l9l3-l4: Sopho- more Debaters' Medal, l9l2-I3: Member of Howard C. Montgomery Gymnasium Commitlee, l9l3-I4. 69 ROBERT HENRY PAIR, H. S. Brink, Va. UNION Varsity Football Team, 1913-14: Varsity Basket-ball Team, 1913-14, Manager Basket-ball Team, 1914-15. ihliil CHARLES GIVEN PETERS. K A. CID, 7M. H. S. Union, W. Va. KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, 1912-I3-14, Assistant Manager KALEIDOSCOPE, l9l3-14: Magazine Staff, I9l2-13-14: Business Manager Magazine, 1913-14: Assistant Manager Football, I9l2-13: Board of Governors German Club, 1913-14: Manager Football, 1913-l4g Stuclents' Council, l9l2-I3-l4g Cheer Leader, 19135 Invitation Committee, I9l2-I3g Associate Manager Comity Club: Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Association, l9l2-13: Final Marshal. 1912-13g Bear Cat Football Team: Chairman Football Campaign Committee, l9l2-I3-l4g General Agent, 1911-12. !Ql l JOHN BOLLING REYNOLDS, 1915 Norfolk, Va. UN1oN , The Hawes Tennis Trophy, 1912-13: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, 1914-15: Secretary-Treasurer Class fsecond terml, l9l3-14, Clee and Mandolin Club, l9l3-l4. 70 HARRY APPLE.TONt RICE. KA. A Worth, W. Va. P1-HLANTI-iRoP1c Invitation Committee, l9I2-l3g Intermediate Marshal, l9l2-l3: Final Marshal, l9l2-l3g Bear CatFoolball, l9l2- l3: Bear Cat Baseball, l9l3-l4g First Substitute Bear Cat Mumbly Peg Team, l9l3-I-1: German Club, l9l2-I3-l4g Comity Club, l9l2-I3-145 Champion Eater, l9l2-l3-l4g Glee and Mandolin Club, l9I3-I4. fhiiil WILLIAM THOMAS RYBURN, Meadow View, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Fifi! KIRKLAND RUFFEN SAUNDERS, TI K Ai H-5-'i Richmond, Va. Vice-President Athletic Association ffirst termj, l9ll- l2: Varsity Football Team. l9l0-ll-l2-l3: Captain Varsity Football Team, l9l2-l3g Varsity Baseball Team, l9ll-l2-l4: Student Council, l9l3-l4: Captain Class Baseball Team, l9ll-125 Captain Class Football Team. l9lI-l2. ' 71 WILLIAM JOHN SCOTT, K A- 7W' Cape Charles. Va. UNioN Assistant Business Manager Magazine. l9l3-I4. 921916 JOHN ARMSTRONG SHACKELFORD. K A, H. S. Martinsville, Va. Second Football Team, l9l2-13: Varsity Football Team, l9l3-l4g Bear Cat Baseball Team, l9l2-139 Bear Cat Baskel-ball Team, l9l2-I3. Iil9i4 JOHN MARXON SYDENISTRICKER. K E Lewisburg, W. Va. UNION Sophomore Essayisfs Medal, l9l2-l3g Sneak Thief, l9l2-l3: Magazine Staff, l9l3-14: Intermediate junior Orator. l9l3-l4g Y. M. C. A. Cabinetg Historian of Class, l9l3-I4. 72 LEE CAMPBELL TAIT. KA- A Alclerson. W. Va. UNION Assistant Manager Football, l9l3-I4: KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, I9I3-I4: Varsity Basket-ball Team. 1912-13, Man- ager Football, l9l4-15, Bear Cat, Intermediate Junior Orator, l9l3-I4. U l BENJAMIN WILSON VENABLE. K A. M Charleston, W. Va. UNION Bear Cat: Final Marshal, l9I3: Y. IVI. C. A. Reception Committee, l9I3: Y. IVI. C. A. Conference Delegate, l9l3g KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, I9l3-I4g Final Invitation Com- mittee. ini-I ROBERT EARL WARWICK. Q X, H. S. C., 'I5 Laurel, Miss. PHILANTHROPIC Houston Scholarsldip, l9ll-IZ: Tuclcelt Scholarship, I9l2-l3g Magazine Stall, l9l2-I3-l4: Assistant Editor-in- Chief Magazine. t9l3-144 Freshman-Sophomore Magazine, Medal, I9l2-I3g Intermediate junior Orator, l9l3-l4g Final Marshal, I9Il-IZ, Oflicial Announcer Field Day, l9l2-l3g Final Invitation Committee, I9l3-I4. 73 ii?-i WILLIAM WILSON WHITE, G X Chatham, Va. UNION A Silent Force, l9l2-I3-I-4. There comes some times when each would fain aspire, And gIacIIy use the helps to raise him higher, And hold no parIey with unmanly fearsg Where duty bids, he conhcIentIy steers: Faces a thousand dangers at her call, And, trusting in his horse, surmounts them all. QU QQ HEX 74 FN, We I 'ix gg ,-EV , Q25 - S Eiaiurg nf the 0112155 nf 1915 Moses stood on Mt. Pisgah looking into the Promised Land, so stand we today upon dizzy heights, and view the Promised Land of Seniority. However, we look upon this fair land with a different feeling than did Moses, who was condemned to die ere he reaped the fruits of his labors, for we-some of us, at least-will soon recline in its shady groves and stroll along its beautiful paths. Doubtless there came up before the mind's eye ot Moses the many years of toil and hardship which he had endured, the years of trial at the court of Pharaoh, the untold labors that he had undergone while in the wilderness. We, too, can look back upon the years of difficulty spent at this ancient institution of learning with a mixed feeling of joy and sor- row-of joy because we are so near our goal, of sorrow because we must soon be sepa- rated from our friends and pleasant surroundings. To those who are toiling in the under classes, those who think that the summit is easily won and the victory sure, we consider it our solemn privilege to give the warning that junior Latin, with its various unmastered lines lies before them in all its grandeurs, and that the fumes from the chemistry laboratory must enter their olefactory regions before they can count themselves worthy to be called a Junior or an Alumnus of Hampden-Sidney. We have been unusually fortunate in athletics, having several men on the football team, being well represented in basketball, and having fine prospects for a good showing on the diamond. The manager of the football team and the captain of the basketball team were chosen from our number. The football manager and the basketball captain and manager for l9l4-'l5 have also been selected from our ranks. Not only are we well represented in athletics, but also we hold no secondary place in the literary work of the college, and in the social and religious departments. But come, our vision grows dim, and we are called back to our tasks, so numerous that it is not within the power of the historian to describe them. Yet it is his sacred duty to warn those who follow to come prepared for any task, and to remember always that there is a brighter land beyond. I-IrsToR1AN. 75 Uhr lgnrfu Egfr By William Hervey Woods. Four are the strings of the lyre- One is the chord of the Waters- And in it is ocean-thunder, And the trample of marching rivers, And the laughter of brooks, The purr, and silence, and purr again, Of night-rain in june winds blowing, And the night-song of moonlit fountains Among mermaids of carven stone. And one is the string of the Winds- Great winds and lusty. on sea and land rowdyingg And young winds outleaping, voices of Dawn, Like hunting-lnugles on far hills blowing, blowing: And little winds that peep and shiver at twilight ln the windows of a haunted house. And one string is Bird-song: sometimes quiring, Sometimes single along the Poet's lyre- The lark's keen roundelay, The voice of doves, and the red bird in the poplar. Chaunting of April high over the new-turned sod, And music of wooclthrush vespers When shadows darken down forest aisles. And the Bird-string alone sounds life. The Bird-string and one other-the string of the heart of Man, The heart that tingles and thrills and quivers. All that touches it comes back in swift reply: me But not what Winds and Waves, nor Life, nor Death, nor God -i Breathe on this quivering string, but its reply. J That. that is itself. That is Man, And the meaning of him: and deeper and clearer cbd Than his own deed or his own dream, 4 ll That shaken and thrilling Heart-string tells him out. E Four are the strings of the lyre l -J Four there are and must be' but the Heart of Man is the chiefest 'W lb 1 , , 3 QQ: . fl K are qs of S ' :S ' MC-me L4 76 MISS MARGARET ATKINSON SOPHOMORE SPONSOR 77 is A-if N Eli .7 W . , mf .1 fx MQ 5. iq ...X 'D 9 1 . N. ' J ff ,X f L 4 ffg ,ylfyv W i Liix s.x Mai. A -:Ui .1 WW W ZA ff 741' 'XIJLCQ ' i so 'M W I Tx A s b 'xv ' -I if sn N X1 W Q XX Svnphnmurv Qllana, 1515 0l0 MOTTO: Hier rien, aujouraphui roi, demain W. S. NEWMAN. B. P. EPES ..... J. S. TIPTON .... H. S. CAMPBELL. H. R. CROCKETT.. C. R. BUGC. ..... G. W. HERD ..... H. S. CAMPBELL. COLORS: Buj' and Red OFFICERS F!RST TERM SECOND TERM 78 . . . .President . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . .... Historian . . . . . .President . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . .... Historian E., .fu- I2 . , 1 11. SOPHOMORE CLASS Svnphnmnrr 0112155 iKnl1 D. C. AMIC .. M. ALLAN ..... E. B. BRIDGES .... C. R. Bucc. ..... H. S. CAMPBELL ..... W. L. CARRINGTON ..... E. A. COLBERT ..... H. R. CROCKETT. . . . E. G. DARST ..... E. L. DUPUY .... . B. P. EPES .... S. B. FORBUS ...... W. M. CIILLESPIE. .. G. I-I. GILMER ....... C. N. GOLDSBOROUCI-I .... G. W. HERD ........ W. S. NEWMAN .... B. W. OLIXI'ER ..... E.. B. PENDLETON .... A. G. RAMEY .... C. B. RICHMOND.. .. F. A. TERRY ..... J. S. TIPTON. . . 030 S0 . . . ..Romney, W. Va . . . . Farmville, Va . . . ..Charlotte, N. C .. . . . . . . .Farmville, Berkeley Springs, W ..........I-louston . . . ..Warrenton . . . . .Max Meadows ........Dublin . . . .Worsham . . .Dinwiddie . . . ..Pluto, . . . .Tazewell Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Miss Va . . . .Draper, Va . . . .Culpeper, Va . . ..Ferr Worth, Texas . . . . ..Woodstock, Va. . . .Hampden-Sidney, Va ........Danvil1e, Va . . . .Charlestown W. Va. ........Ewing, Va. . . . . .Spring Garden Va. . . . . . .Hil1sville, Va. Qiatnrg nf the Gllami nf 1915 oil, any H1 .- LL off for Farmville, Farmvillef' Before the porter had uttered these words a lively bunch had descended at the station they all knew well- ggkiym perhaps, some too well. The meek Freshmen of I9I2 were now ll Xw? n,g,I sophomores, and no longer would they tremble at that hungry midnight l cry of Freshmen. The bell would no longer change their happy dreams of home to the reality of their hostile environment. We were soon on our way to the old college and as we looked upon the Hill for the first time in three months, sorrow came over us for the absence . . of old faces. There were those we missed greatly, who had either graduated, or simply quituated, but we had many other things to think of. Long will the memory of September l2, I9l 3, linger in the minds of the Class of l9I6. Upon this day the Freshmen of l9l2-'l3 took upon themselves the rearing of the Freshmen of I9l 3-'I4. Let a Freshman do it, echoed through the hall of old Hampden-Sidney and nobly did we fatherly Sophomores adhere to the ancient adage Spare the rod and spoil the Freshmen. ln fact so nobly that scarcely one of the aforesaid Freshmen remained long in our midst without a complete knowledge of the homage due the awe-inspiring name of Sophomore. But we liked them, and, therefore, it was our solemn duty to chastise them. Next to football, studies engaged our minds and timeg nor did we lack repre- sentatives either on the bald-headed rows of the class-room or the gridiron. Far be it from so model a class to be deficient in any branch of college life. Kind Reader, do not think us conceited, but rather let your mind recall the high-brow deeds of Gilmer, Forbus, and Tipton, and the gridiron accomplishments of Ebel, Gregory, Pendleton, Forbus, and Massieg not to speak of the basket-ball triumphs of Pendleton, and the exploits of Bugg, Epes, and Richmond on the diamond: we would like to mention Field Day but we do not wish to hurt the feelings of anyone who is so unfortunate as not to be a Sophomore. Winter followed fall as Xmas followed exams, and the New Year found the Sophomores ending a most pleasant holiday and sadly leaving home, only to reunite joyfully and more determined than before to uphold their fair name as students and as men. Intermediates came, and we welcomed the calic and the alumni, and enjoyed the literary and tango event of the year immensely. A most successful but by no means enjoyable set of exams followed. After many, many snows spring has hnally come, and at the call for baseball prac- tice a goodly number of Sophomores have turned out, adding largely to our line pros- pects for the championship. HISTORIAN. 81 'ar MISS MARY MOYLAN BANKS FRESHMAN SPONSOR 83 C. D. L. P. P. C. Y. P. H! WN X L - -X -. il. M,fgZ1f ' 'A '3'.f25wZ, ,frf - uwih x ' ll I . , 1 . , '+- fyff. , 1 0 fy, 1' 'f rg: R' f A . 5 , W ff , W 'f VW ff yf X XX g W! 25 , ff X . JDM? l X K f 3H1'P511IIIEIl1 Gilman, 1517 050 MoTTo: Deus co finem quoque dabil. COLORS: Lemon and Black. OFFICERS First Term THOMPSON .... ......... ......... P r esident EBEI. ..... ........ V ice-President PALMORE. . . ..... Secretary-Treasurer SAUNDERS ............... ......... H istorian Second Term SAUNDER5 ..... .... .... ......... P r e sident ADAMS ...... ...... V ice-President WARREN .... ..... S ecretary-Treasurer SAUNDERS. . . .... .......... H istorian 84 FRESH MAN CLASS ZF P. C. ADAMS ...... H. S. BAKER, JR.. J. C. BASKERv1L1.E S. M. BlTT1NcER.. H. H. Boccs ...... W. T. BONDURANT ..,. W. T. BUCHANAN R. B. CASSADY .... T. H. DowNs .... F. D. EBEL ..... W. L. FOLEY ..... J. C. FULLERTON.. R. F. GILLESPIE.. D. E. GRAY ...... R. M. HALDERMAN .,... L. B. HANES ...... F. M. HARMON... R. E. HERZIO ..... E. L. JACKSON .... R. G. JONES .... R. E. Kim: ..... C. E. LINDSAY .... R. LYLE ........... L. M. MCGAVACK .... H. V. MORTON... J. R. MORTON, JR.. . .. J T. MORTON .... C. E. MURRAY .... J. C. OEHLER .... H. M. OWEN .... P. L. PALMORE. .. T. PATE ..,...... R. H. PEARSON... J. A. PETERS ..... A. P. SAUNDERS... P. H. SCOTT ...... S. C. SPRINKLE. .. F. E. STERNE ..... H. C. THOMPSON. W. L. THURMAN. O. Y. WARREN... J. H. WHALEY.. .. A. A. WILSON ..., C. J. WILSON ..... Kult . . .. . . . . .Roanolce, . . . .Charlestown, W. ... . . .Malcom, . . . .Chatham Hill, . . . .Big Otter, W. .........Rice, .........Vineta, . . . .Cl'1arleston. W. . . . . .Cape Charles, ... . . . . .Richmond .....Mt. Storm. W. ..........Orange, . . . . .Pounding Mill, . . . . .South Boston, . . . . .Winchesten . . . . . . .ROanolce, . . . .Charlottesville, . . . . . . .Meherrin, . . . . . . .Tazewell, . . . . . .Cheritom . . . .Diamond Grove. . . . .CharlOttesville, . . . . . ..Keysville. . . . . .Waterford. . . . . .Meherrin, . . . .Savannah . . . . . . .Keysville. . . . . .South Boston. Va. Va. Iowa Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Ga. Va. Va. . . . . . . .Palestine, Texas . . . . .Cluster Springs, . . . . . . . .Richmond Va. Va. . . . .Bennettsville. S. C. . . . .PearislJurg, .. . . .Union. W. . . . .Freclericksburg, . . . .Madison Run, . ....... Marion. ... . . . .Dinwiddie. . . . . .Cl'1arleslon, W. . . . . .Charleslon, W. ... . . . . .Beclcley, W. . . . .Hampden-Sidney, ... . . . . .Richmond Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. Va. . . . . .Stovall, N. C. Qiatnrg nf the Zllrealimmt Gllaaa 0l N the early part of September we, the Freshman Class of l9l3-'l-4, W surrendered our high standing in the High School and Academy world and took our humble places in the College which in the future iv will be our Alma Mater. It was with great pride that we entered the 6,552 We f' -5,13 Curator's office and signed our names upon the Hampden-Sidney roll. it- A in As we walked away from that office we realized that we were no 'g 3- T: longer boys, but that from henceforth and forever we were to be the men who would herald the story of old Hampden-Sidney College. As the days passed the nights seemed to come in double quick succession. Oh! how mournful the toll of the bell was! l-low our hearts yearned for the loved ones left behind! We would have enjoyed the Y. M. C. A. reception, but for the fearful presence of those barbarous upper-classmen. Yes, there were many good boxers, but who dared to blow his own horn in those days. Soon we were left in peace, and as the number of quiet nights increased we began to think that all was over. Some ventured to smile, others even dared to joke the Sophs. But wait! It was the night of October the Hrst. There had been rumors of war, but little did we think of the fierceness of the on-coming paddle raidf' Ten-thirty, cried the watchman, and all is well. Eleven o'clock. The bell tolled out its awful death peal and following was the blood-curdling cry: Freshmen Some crouched lower in their beds, others hid in the closets and others sat at their desks and waited, but all of us were marched to our doom as one. Many brave souls were wounded that night and many ate off the mantle pieces for several days. But from then until now we have had the right college spirit. As the days became weeks, our attention was turned to the football field. Here many of our number made good showings. We were represented on the varsity bv Thurman, and on the scrubs by Herzig, Oehler, Warren, Kidd and Adams. In the inter- class match our team won from the usophi' by a score of I5 to 0. Then we found ourselves face to face with Christmas examinations. Some of us were prepared and some were not, so we took them as they came. We did not let the outcome interfere with our holiday. January the third found us ready to answer the roll call. The dreary days of winter were lightened by basket-ball. Here we were repre- sented by Lindsay on the varsity, and Thompson, H., on the scrubs. When the tango craze was sweeping over the universe it could not leave Hampden- Sidney College in oblivion. So to The Hill came Miss Tango Teacher. In this class we were well represented, as about fifteen of our number are now Tango Sharks without teeth. 87 Intermediates came and many attractive young ladies visited The Hill. Now this is where our suffragettes received the opportunity to show their colors. Several of our number lost their hearts and have not yet entirely recovered. Once more we met our lost opportunities in the examination rooms. Most of the third grades were brought up to second grades. Now we are in the midst of baseball and we look with pride at our representatives on the diamond: Saunders, Wilson and Thurmon are making good on the infieldg Murray and Whaley are fair twirlers, and l-lerzig is no bad out-helcler. As we draw this to a close we must give a word of praise to our students, among whom are Baker, Thompson, H., Palmore, Foley and Wilson. We also have the honor of claiming one of the intersociety debaters, Pearson. Now as the end of our Freshman year draws near, we can truthfully say that this has been the happiest year of our lives, and we feel that the upper classmen have treated us as white as any Freshman Class has ever been treated. One thing we still have to look forward to and that is the old sycamore tree. Next year we have the honor of being old men and that is a reward worth the whole of the Freshman tortures. P. C. A. 4 1 S- is ll? A 83 MISS NANCY WATSON SPONSOR OF ATHLETICS ATHLETIC S9 CHARLES A. BERNIER ATHLETIC DIRECTOR 90 ' 1 .'..x', .. Nw ' sk WX Q x, v X die.. bk! Z iw!! ,vii X 8 Juqmlgng 2 9 fl X if ' R35 5 Z f 445 L 9 Q Q EEA A .sf x .417-'i wx S ,Y 21 xx W X ',:,. , A . , . x I l . I , w ' . 'Q TW - '-X NN ' .- ' E H '. ,O 7 -Q .- J -In, ,ii 3 a N ,,, G - f . N . f ' J ' WX . - 4' V .fi -X. - 14,-72'1'. f, XS . Y: 'M 72 E f .L . - ..-awk. W ,af M. 1-.Zn -: ,Q ,f g: ,I .. 0 ' 4, -,T hi Y: .1 I 5 11, I 'ln .4 ',,,. , I , - I 31,14 ..n, W H '1 mf, X- 7 . s .ll R 555' J ' -X F : .X 3' .y , ' :H Y 'Q ' . A ,. ws. gms SE' . - -- v . .11 - . n. fA2...,fA?ai.-fwsfwfifeb. MQ. LEPHPYEII Atlylrtir Aaznriatinn R. M. SLOAN ...... A. B. CARRINGTON. . . H. S. CAMPBELL. . . G. H. PAYNE .... C.. F. CAMPBELL .... 0 so OFFICERS First Term Second Term . . . . . . . .President . . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . . . . . . . .President . . . . . .Vice-President M. S. CLARKE. . . ............ .... S ecretary-Treasurer FOOTBALL K. R. SAUNDERS .... ........... ..... C a ptain C. G. PETERS .... ............... .... M a nager BASKET-BALL A. B. CARRINGTON .....,.............. ..... C aptain E. B. PENDLETON ................... .... M anager BASEBALL J. C. MOORE ......................... .......... C aptain M. N. FITZGERALD ...... ............... M anager C. A. BERNIER ............. General Coach FACULTY ADVISORY BOARD A. W. MCWHORTER J. H. C. WINSTON H. T. GRAHAM J. A. CLARKE 91 -Q-++'! X !'+-Z-+'Z-++'i'-P rr A i i Z .g. , X -2- Hi ' -1- fe- it it ls 1 :iz .p X, 'N 4. X i :iz Z Z if 1 -5 1 + if Q ' + Z sHAcKEl.FonD :lf -1- RIGHT c-uxmn 111: -I' + -X' ++++++'I'+++++-102' -I' -I' 'I' -I' -2- 'X' Ji 1 -i- o o o o 0 o -If fgQ5QClQ5Q9Q9Q9i i ......,..,..,........,A.,, ,...,...... LI: + -1 51- Fi- if L S 'L 1 -:gg ss' 412 v i .......,............. ,,...,,.......... 1 4 'I' i12i1f2Qf2UDDmQ.D3: 'Z' 4. 'X' -E- + 4. 22 't 'I' :Il:+-I-'Z'-E'+'I X--I-+'X-'I-itil: 55 T at E 1 3? 5: 3? -2- I 'I' 4. is s iff + L5 'I' -1- 2 1 + Iii 'I' -i- + -r- + -1- + -1- + 'E 5 s 1 i 1 4. -1- asnsolcr 1 1' mam' vacuo.: 1 + lr 'l'-t l--X-'lf-I-P+-I-'!--1--I+-1+ Athlrtirz 0i0 NTEREST in athletics has increased each year at - Hampden-Sidney as it has the world over. And 5x4,Q,Q we have taken successive strides forward, growing 5-mia each year prouder of the position we have come to hold in the college athletics of the State-proud not only of our victories, but even more of the spirit, the courage, and the gentlemanliness which have been ever characteristic of the teams of Hampden-Sidney. Despite its reverses we feel that the season which has passed has added new lustre to our name. We started out on our football season this year with unusually bright prospects. Though the back field had to be composed largely of new material, the line, which was dur- ing the year a tower of strength, consisted largely of tried and experienced men. The unexpected return of Captain Saunders was a great help. By dint of hard training, a team was finally built up which was well capable of up- holding the name of Hampden-Sidney on the gridiron. In the usual games at the opening of the season, the team showed itself one that promised to be among the leaders at the close of the championship race. The Virginia Military Institute, expecting a walk-over, defeated us just 9 to 0, and the following week the strong team of the Virginia Poly- technic Institute only succeeded in running up fourteen points. With the University Hampden-Sidney was not so fortunate, yet, considering its crippled team, did not feel discouraged at the score of 53 to 0. It was with some confidence that the team journeyed to Richmond for the first championship game with Richmond College. It proved the waterloo: the Red and Blue nosing out the Garnet and Cray by one point-Zl to 20. Hamp- den-Sidney started out by scoring in the first few minutes of play, and throughout the whole game seemed to advance the ball at will. Two forward passes well executed, how- ever, ran up the score for the opponents, and took from us the game and the championship. Nothing daunted by this disaster, the team came home to hard work. In the next championship game we triumphed over William and Mary by the score of 34 to 0. The last game of the season proved the most satisfactory. In one of the cleanest and prettiest games of football ever played between the two teams, Hampden-Sidney defeated Randolph-Macon for the first time in some years, I3 to 0. It will be long before the memory of this game ceases to bring joy to the hearts of those Hampden-Sidney men who witnessed it, and full and abundant satisfaction to the par- ticipants. There was no mowing, only joy, for the op- ponent was worthy indeed. As we look back, we feel that in spite of its disasters the season was a success, and that the team is worthy indeed to wear the monogram of our College. 92 +++++++++++-is-r'r' ' + + 4- + 'P 'E' + T V 4 3 + f + T + + . 't T T 1 I 4- C 4. -1- -!- 'P 4- + + 'I' 4- 'Z' jj T .. gt + -Z- + 'l' 4- T + fr 4- 4- ' -I- 'P WALKER ,P 1 -r . LEFT GUARD -P +4 4.4. ++++++++ + t T + 4. 4. 4. + 4. 4. 55 ++++++++ v 'F 4. -X- gmaamwautit -X- + gl- sgjtk 33 41g is 4gQ'v , .,...,..,ss.....,,,.,,....,,........,.. , temoscrammcp 1 ,.,,...............,.,,.,.,....,...,... + 'ft' +++ ++++++ 4. -Z' 4. -X- 4. 'X' 4. 'X' 4. 'I' 4. -I- + 'X' 4. 'X' 4. -5- 4. 'r 4- 'I' 'P+ 4.4. I? i 4. -X' 4. -x- 4. -I' 4. 'X' vt fi 21 -1- +4- -I-'X' rt i 4. -I' gt ii 4. -K' i GUTHRIE :il -? LEFT 'rAcxL.: 3: i -x- 4. 'I- -: -z-1-1-I-x-1--x-x-x--i--1-1-+ 4.4.4.4.4. -K- -1- 4. 4. 'I- 4. -1- 'X- -X- 4. 4. 'X- -l-'X' 4. 'X- 'Z--I-'Z-'I-'X-'I-+ 4.4. + + . ? A 'Z' 2 i , 4 , . . 3 -N 2 T . -gn . in -1- . t + i X A . f F- o r -1 4. , 1 I . . 1 1 J. +++ 4. -1--1--is-i-++-1-+-r--x--z--x- E 'a III Q r U -1--x-'x--if v 'Z' 9 ' T 'r 'P 'l-+'l- ,!. .L ' A . i++++++++++++? 'T + ? 'X' T 'I' -X- + ? -r , b 'X- Tfi -r f. 1-4Q'?Q 1QE'v'? 'X- -X- immmmvst + r -5- 1- + -1- 'l-'l X'+ 1- 4. 4 4. 4. 4. 4. 1- 'I- T --X-'P i+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ CT' 4- I 3' 5 - A I gr 1 NT 3: U 5 A , U Y 1,521 A ' 4. ' -, 4. 4: +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 'F With the close of the holidays, the basket-ball team started its nightly practice. Using largely new material, Coach Bernier developed a team of surprising ability and fight. Though very light they coped with opponents far superior in size without a flinch or a sign of letting up. Captain Carrington at center was one of the mainstays of the team, being fast and always steady, Pendleton's work at forward bordered often on the sensational, while Sloan, also one of last year's men, was instrumental in saving many an overwhelming defeat by his guarding and aggressiveness. The season though not a success in the number of games won promises brighter ones in years to come. An increasing interest in the sport gives us great confidence in our chances for next year. The advance of spring and the coming of warm weather brought the baseball candidates to the fore. The large squad which responded to the Coach's call was indeed en- couraging, and the first real practice showed upwards of thirty candidates who gave real promise. A sliding pit was constructed at once, and each day the squad is instructed by the Coach in the art of sliding. Results have appeared already, and our team is proving dangerous and fast on the bases. The lateness of the spring, and the constant falling of snow in March kept the squad away from the diamond, but many spirited games took place between the scrubs and the varsity in the outfield, serving to get the fellows in some shape and to give Coach Bernier a line on his material. John Moore was elected Captain in place of Wysor who failed to return. Other old men back, were Saunders, Car- rington, Epes and Bugg. The graduates of last year were missed, but a great deal of promising material among the new men raised the hopes of having a worthy team. The first game was played with the Union Theological Seminary on March the twenty-eighth. The team showed up well, defeating their opponents, 9 to 5. The point in this game, which was especially gratifying, was the consistent hitting of the team as a whole. All of the pitchers were given a good tryout, and without exception showed good form. The next game was with Wake Forest College in North Carolina. Though arriving late and being unable to get any practice before the game the team went in full of pep and cinched the game in the first two innings. Again con- sistent hitting was the feature of the team's playing. Wake Forest was defeated, 7 to 4. From Wake Forest the team traveled over to Chapel Hill. Here it encountered its first defeat. Though a close and exciting game Hampden-Sidney lost by the score of 3 to 2. The trip to North Carolina was the first Southern trip that a team from Hampden-Sidney has made for some years. Its success gives us hope that it may be repeated often in the future. The next games were also played in foreign territory. The trip was one of three days, including games with Vir- 93 4.4.4.4 4.4.4.4 4.4.4.+4. 4, 'H J. .L .L 3 3 1- 'r 1- . 1 '3' 'r v T 'P . 1- . .9 I . 4. g A 1' 'X' 4. ,L 3 C 1- 1- 4. - . fr ,u .L L J. C C rr 1- ' V 4- .. v 5 .- .. v 'Z' -3- -1- + 'X- 4. -2- + ? -g GREGORY 1- T LEFT END Z T A 1- 'I- + i A -?'!-1-+1'++'2 !-+++'f i .L 4 4 + 'Z' T T T 4. 4. o o o M o o -9 sQOCiKX3 123393 z-,-tMs .... ,... ,.... 1- , . 'I' ' , i ei- ' s 4 'gg-if 1 4 . Y 'fig Y i C iii if r A 'E' .WQQQQWi 1 i 4- 'X- i 4. A 7 U U I Y V V V U 7 I 'E-'l !'T'?TT7T'3'T'i 7-E 'P -2- . v 1- 1- 'S' 'r I I . .- .L . . v 4. 4. 3 5. 'E' ' -. .:. C C 'Z' 'A' 1- -I- .,. . .L i C C 4. 4. 1- '- 4. 2. J. . .Y4 me 5 v .ff 3. 3. 3. 1 : ,. 4. 4. 2 S 4. .? 7 'F I '51 4. 3. : -1- PEN DLETON 1' , . F LEFT HALF T ,. ,. i .L T ' 1- 'I- 1- 1- 1- -X- . . . . . . . 1 'Z-'I-ri-'r'X-'r-r+'r1-'r-l-'F e?++'X'++'! 5'++++-P+ T A 1 . 4- 'X' i i -Z' 'I' + 'Y' .? -X4 + + 4. 4. 4. 4. .la ff 4. -1. .F 4. 4, 4. + + 4, 4. 4, r L1 .3 -X' -3 ef' + + + 'X' + + 4 4- + sf. 'Z' 'Y' is 'X' ,k sl. .Q C A R R I N GTO N 'fe v 'Q' QUARTERBACK T ep 'T .L -X' 4. -1- ' 'P 'Z' 4.4. 4. 4. 4. 4. -le 4. 4. 4. 'I' 4. i 4.4.4. 1 1 gwwwwwwi .......,......, ...,....,,.,..,... 3 -fs,5b- 4 Sh-+ 5 . 1 f. 1 -2- if '. ,' . U 'I , + it 'li v 'DK 5 + .... ... .. fi ++44 Ecscsmomoa v 2 'T ++ +++++ v 7 'T vvvoLvvu,g0Lv,v 'L i ?'X . TTT. iT? -if -Z' + -X- i ' Z + -I' + - -Z- 'X' 'L T 1 4 4. F , T Z 'T 3 T ' v fr + 23 2 f 4 Ili + bi L Z5- i 4 Q 5 -2- ' is sr- + -I- + 4 + 'I' ' 'I- + ef + -X' -I' i 1 i MOORE i -1- FULL sncx 'I- + -1- g++ f l 1 :i:++ ginia Polytechnic Institute, Roanoke Virginia League, and Roanoke College. On a cold, raw day, with a stiff breeze sweeping over the field, Virginia Polytechnic Institute defeated us, 7 to 0. The pitcher for the home team had Hampden-Sidney at his mercy, not allowing a single hit. On the next day Hampden- Sidney lost to the Roanoke Leaguers, I4 to 2. Though against a team entirely out of their class our boys put up a good fight, and lost only by the superior hitting of the locals. On the following day Roanoke College's strong team was defeated, 4 to 2, in a close and snappy game. On returning from this trip there was left only one day's practice before a return game with Virginia Polytechnic Institute on the home grounds. ln its beginning, this game promised to be one of the prettiest ever played on Venable field, but in the fourth inning with the score tied, 3 to 3, a cold rain started up. The game was played through, but it was soon evident that the remaining innings belonged to the team which could take advantage of a wet ball and a wet field. The visitors proved superior in this respect, and the game ended, IZ to 6, in their favor. A game scheduled with the same team for the next day in Farmville was can- celled because of wet grounds. The practice games being now ended we are face to face with the championship series. On April l8th we were de- feated in a close game by the strong team from William and Mary in Williamsburg, 2 to 0. Our prospects are still bright, but the future must unfold our fate and announce the team's outcome in the championship series which closes on May l6th in Richmond. A movement which deserves prominent mention is that for the new gymnasium. The canvass for increasing the endow- ment of the College suggested to the students the idea of waging a simultaneous yet independent campaign for a new and larger gymnasium. Accordingly it was decided that the student body instead of appropriating their donations to the endowment fund should start a fund for this purpose. The students entered into the proposition with great spirit, under- taking by a vigorous campaign to raise among alumni and friends the needed sum of twenty-Five thousand dollars. They themselves, numbering barely a hundred, pledged upward of seven hundred dollars: thereby giving a great stimulus to the enterprise, and arousing the hopes of a speedy success. It was decided to call the new building the Howard C. Montgomery Gymnasium. The name was selected in order to raise a memorial to the only student who has ever met his death in an athletic sport at Hampden-Sidney. It is also a memorial to one who represented all that was true, and noble, and admirable in a college man. It speaks well for the student body to enter into a plan like this with such zest. It is rather unique, being a strictly student undertaking, yet we have hopes of seeing in the near future a building of which we will be proud, looking out over the athletic field, a monument to true manhood, and reared by loving hands. 94 '?-I-+'l'++++++++++ -r 'X' + 'E 'E' 'I' 'Z' 'E' + -5' . 'F 'I' + 4- + + .u -3 ' v 'S' T T T -x- -r + -3- + v 'Y' 'F + -r .L .L e ,e T 'Z' + -. J. -1- ' v v .F L i Z . + e '1' T i T . + '!- A J. . . 4, THURMONDI 4, -E QUARTERBACK -X- '? 'X' 1 'l' 4+++++++e++++1 . -r ' ' I 'I' A + 'I' E o o o o E iU Q9lIiIUQOi 59' . tw ' g Lg 1-QQ v--wg i i ....,.......,,,....,...,.,,.,......... i iQWQQiWi i '!' i. I -i- ++++++ -++++++ 4. v v v v v s w Q v ,FTTTTTTTTVTT 'r +++++ 4. 4. 'X' 102' ' .L I 4 . a 2 T A .p 4. -P -X- -P 'X' 4. 1- + . -1- + 'I'+'X--I-+4-+++++ -X'-X'-I--I--!'++'! !--102' FORBUS FULL BACK -If + + 'T' '2 ' +-1'1 -IE RAN DOLPH-MACON GAME Zinnthall 0l0 OFFICERS K. R. SAUNDERS ............ ..... C aptain C. G. PETERS .... .......... M anaget' L. C. TAIT ...... ..... A ssistant Manager C. A. BERNIER ..... .... ...... C o ach R. SAUNDERS M. C. BCWLING C N cEN'rEn TEAM EBEL ........ ...... R ight End BENEDICT ...... . . .Right Tackle SHACKELFORD .... .... R ight Guard BOWLING .... ....... C enter WALKER ...., ..... L eft Guard GUTHRIE ..... . . .... Left Tackle GREGORY l .... Left Ends PMR. 5 THURMOND CARRINGTON S- . .... ..... Q uarter-Backs SAUNDERS . . .... Right Half-Backs PENDLETON .. ..... Left Half-Backs Bucc a FORBUS ,. .... .... F ull-Backs MOORE SUBSTITUTES WARWICK OLIVER OEHLER THOMPSON KIDD CAMPBELL 96 FOOTBALL TEAM Eaakrthall oczo OFFICERS A. B. CARRINGTON ......... .... C aptain E.. B. PENDLETON ..... ..... M anager C. A. B1-LRNIER .......... ..... C oach TEAM A. B. CARRINGTON. .. .....,. .... L eft Forward E. B. PENDLETON .... ..... R ight Forward C. E. LINDSEY .... ...... F orward J. E.. BRYAN. . . ...... Center R. H. PAIR ..... .... L eft Guard R. M. SLOAN .... .......... ..... R i ght Guard B C 'GT SUBSTITUTES J. B. REYNOLDS J, B, ORR B. W. OLIVER 98 BASKETBALL TEAM 4 J C. MOORE APTAIN Eaarhall 030 OFFICERS J. C. MOORE ............... .... C aptain M. N. FITZGERALD .... .... M anager C. A. BERNIER .... ..... C oach TEAM C. R. Bucc. ..... .......... ..... C a tcher A. B. HODGES .... ..... F irst Base C. C. CARTER ..... ..... S eeond Base K. R. SAUNDERS ..... .... T hird Base W. L. THURMOND ..... ..... S hort Stop B. P. EPE5 ....... .... R ight Field C. B. RxcHMoND .... ..... C enter Field D. E. GRAY .... ..... L eft Field J. C. MOORE A. B. CARRINCTON . . . .Pitchers C. E. MURRAY. SUBSTITUTES A. A. WILSON J. A. SHACKELFORD A. P. SAUNDERS 100 B. W. OLIVER J. H. WHALEY E.. E. HERZIG O. Y. WARREN BASEBALL SQUAD il rt K 1. x iii 1 Sf, - f lk Q J. fx C J 1'Y,- ? ?- X N Q Y- B 'g . N, . , ' Q ,' - N' X . xx :X fx ' xrlf s J- T 1? 12-' SPS! FB! ', V T 1 ?P J T M 11 ' '-'fp f f ' Eg! S45 9 - E 4 .Y .filf D' B' S 1 f - fl- 5-E+Sff? W Y X 2 X S S fr E WSE Urnnia Glluh 04:0 OFFICERS E. T. THOMPSON .... .......... .... P r esidcnl T. C. JOHNSON .... ........... ...,. M a nager MEMBERS C. G. PETERS G. W. HERD J. B. REYNOLDS J. S. TIPTON B. W. VENABLE M. LAWSON J. R. EDMUNDS W. T. CARRINGTON L. C. TAIT F. E.. STERNE W. J. SCOTT E. T. THOMPSON W. W. ARBUCRLE W. S. NEWMAN T. J. MCILWAINE A. G. RAMEY A. B. CARRINOTON 103 G. H. C-ILMER J. El. BRYAN mvarrrz nf FOOTBALL ,Q W 1' C. G. PETERS, Manager aids-iw L. CMBENEBDICT . l-1 . . OWLING u Jf A. B. CARR1Nc.TON 9 F. D. EBEL ,SN S. B. FORBUS 'B 'X J. A. GREGORY CGQSLL R. F. GUTHRIE '99f'9 J. C. MOORE L. B. HANES 4'-J W i r Q '- .H.5 . E.. B. PENDLETON R. H. PAIR K. R. SAUNDERS J. A.S HACKELFORD W. L. THURMOND C. M. WALKER BASKET-BALL J. E.. BRYAN A. B. CARRINGTON C. E. LINDSAY R. I-I. PAIR E. B. PENDLETON R. M. SLOAN TRACK G. W. HERD BASEBALL M. C.'BOWLING, Manager C. R. Bucs A. B. CARRINGTON J. C. MOORE K. R. SAUNDERS mvarrrz nf Numrrals P. C. ADAMS W. W. ARBUCKLE I-I. S. BAKER C. R. Bucc. I-I. S. CAMPBELL W. T. CARRINCTON E. E. HERZIG R. E.. KIDD J. C. OEHLER B. W. OLIVER J. B. ORR J. B. REYNOLDS R. M. SLOAN E. T. THOMPSON O. Y. WARREN R. E. WARWICK B. P. EPES ji 'f li I nl 5 I l I A Then, Hampden-Sidney, here's to you, The noblest of your day, Here's to the team so strong and true, That wears the red and gray, That wears the red and gray, my boys, That wears the red and gray: Herels to the team so strong and true, That wears the red and gray. Here's to old Hampden-Sidney- Drink her down! Here's to old Hampden-Sidney- Drink her down! Here's to old Hampden-Sidney- She's the warmest thing in town- Drink her clown! Drink her down! Drink her down, down, down! Hike. hike, a hike us, There's nothing like us, We shall forever unconquered he. No team can lick us, No team can trick us, We boys of H.-S. C. Hike along, old Hampden-Sidney. Hike along! Hike along. old Hampden-Sidney. Hike along! Give us a show and we will win! For we are the team of nineteen-fourteen, We fear no harm! fail, P, -.Q 5115 7 Fil , 'h f '- 4fl l,'jl1r- - ,A - W i' Kiwi? Fill!!-'A fix? -V'e as f'-inf! 'f'-liiftf fi 'VI 'i ffl! i' :l f':'.ff'i 'lik lt? f g,z1!-f1lg3,,1'Ae,iff' as !illl.ilfNiVi,f gl J N' . 1 f ' fl 5'ffgf'l5ffXf', fy V fl' ll ,ill ylmll ll film ' alll, 'ill flf'f'j39.y,, A lL J iff ll. '5,-iyfiffi lf A vpn!!-htflllil, Lllillfl-Ill' jmink' itll., E,-,iw it ,,. Elgj , - , vr:,.j'.'1 'j-i. '! .Pxl!'l, f' llwvirlllie, , lilLf 7': ,'-, tw! Yfl ,. ,I tk' ,XI if If il 1 1,5 ' H wll,',i' al lx, A ff il , V! 'aff' l'! 1,,I, yt 'J is 'lil li sl! H!-:fl il .. Nl Jil z.p will ll! W-if I Wt! I 2. qu 1 1 ,, V Svnnga Oh, here's to Hampden-Sidney, A glass of the finest, Red, ruby, Rheinish, Filled up to the brim. Her sons, they are many, Unrivaled hy any, With hearts o'erllowing, We will sing this hymn! Ci-xonus Rah, rah, old H.-S., rah! Old Alma !V!ater's sons we are, We will herald the story, And die for the glory. For red and gray are ever waving high! As Fresh we explored her. As Sophs we adored her. And carved our names upon her ancient halls! As Juniors patrolled her, As Seniors extolled her. We trust our Alma Mater's power in all! CHORUS Rah, rah, old H.'S., rah! Old Alma Mater's sons we are, We will herald the story, And die for the glory, For rec! and gray are ever waving high! Rah, rah, for victory, H.-S. must wing Fight to the finish, never give in. You do your best, boys, we'!l do the rest, boys, Rah, rah, for old H.-S. Here's to old Hampden-Sidney. The garnet and the gray And the team of tried heroes, Who defend her name today. And our old Alma Mater We'll ere be true to thee, For we'll spread with song and story The fame of H.-S. C. 106 wg,-fS 1 7:15 MISS BLANC!-IE L. WHITMORE LITERARY SPONSOR 107 2419 Q. 5 C I rg r x9 se Editor-in-Chief E. T. THOMPSON Assistant Editor M. N. FITZGERALD Art Editor L. C. TAIT Clubs and Organizations M. S. CLARKE Pi eidoscopa Staff Business Manager E. E. OWEN Assistant Manager C. G. PETERS Athletics C. R. Bucc. Crinds and Statistician B. W. VENABLE Asistant A rt Editor A. A. WILSON 108 KALEIDOSCOPE STAFF E. T. THOMPSON S. B. Fokaus. T. J. Mcluv.-.INE Semor Class M. C. BOWLING T. J. MCILWAINE E. T. THoMPsov 7854 10K W 1 Z5 U rl, M N -2 X uv 'Wm XX L19 U1 -NAC ,Aw ,Zig QW AM L VIS J' 114. i.ra 1. 1: 11,1 1 f 11 fl-' D11 TM . 11 1 .i7,1rz :fp. 1 +4m'.klI'I',.N 1 v1' Mu 1 JP '1'iF1 fH ' V- M' W 'ff' MN, iw ig! I wg L vm ff X 1 1 63 ' 1 4 lint 1 l W ff CT TMSM ' kg JT f' .1 ' Sftuhentu' Glnuuril 020 OFFICERS MEMBERS junior Class A. B. CARRINGTON' C. G. PETERS K. R. SAUNDERS 111 .......Prcsfdenl Vrce-Presxdcnl Secretary- Treasurer Sophomore Class H. S. CAMPBELL S. B. Foasus E. B. PENDLETO Hninn Eiterarg Sanrietg Ulll MOTTO: Me socium summis adjungere rebus. E. T. THOMPSON ..... ..... F inal Senior Presidenl G. H. PAYNE ........................ ..... F inal Senior Omlar H. R. CROCKETT AND T. C. JOHNSON ......... .... F inal junior Oralors MEMBERS P. C. ADAMS L. M. MCC-AVACK W. W. ARBUCKLE j. C. MOORE j. C. BASKERVILLE J. R. MORTON L. C. BENEDICT j. B. ORR E. B. BRIDGES R. H, PMR C. F. CAMPBELL P. L. PALMORE C. C. CARTER C. H. PAYNE F. C. CHRISTIAN C. G. PETERS H. R. CROCKETT A. G. RAMEY T. H. DowNS J. B. REYNOLDS R. W. DUPUY A. P. SAUNDERS E. L. DUPUY W. j. SCOTT -I. R. EDMUNDS R. M. SLOAN W. L. FOLEY J. M. SYDENSTRICKER R. F. GUTHRIE E. T. THOMPSON R. M. HALDERMAN H. C. THOMPSON L. B. HANES L. C. TAIT E. E. HERZR: J. S. TIPTON A. B. HODGES B. W. VENABLE T. C. JOHNSON A. S. WARINNER R. B. CASSADY W. W. WHITE F. A. MASSIE 112 1Hhi1iIIIT1j1'H1Ihif i.I'itv1'z1rg Snrivig Oli? MOTTO: Aude sapere M. C. BOWLING ..... ..........., . ..... F inal Senior President E. E. OWEN ..............,.,.. ..... F inal Senior Orafor j. C. GUTHRIE AND B. D. MORTON. .. ..... Final junior Oralofs MEMBERS M. C. BOWLING E. B. PENDLETON T. j. MCILWAINE F. A. TERRY R. E. WARWICK H. A. RICE J. C. GUTHRIE W. R. VAUGHAN B. P. EPES M. S. CLARKE M. LAWSON M. N. FITZGERALD -I. M. SIMPSON j. T. MORTON VV. T. RYBURN C. j. XXJILSON j. E. BRYAN R. LYLE E. E. OWEN S. B. Fomaus C. M. WALKER H. S. BAKER R. H. PEARsoN j. C. OEHLER C. H. CILMER j. H. XVI-IALEY E. C.. DARST H. M. OWEN B. D. MORTON H. V. MORTON C. B. RICHMOND F. M. HARMQN B. NV. OLIVER P. H. SCOTT G. W. HERD W. T. BONDURANT A. W. LEE M. ALLAN C. R. Bucc j. C. FULLERTON XV. S. NEWMAN A. P. FUGATE E. A. COLBERT H. LEvI' 113 IQ. HH. QI. A. Glahinvt 1913-'I4 020 OFFICERS M. C. BOWLING ..... ...........,. ....... P r esidenl -I. B. ORR ....... .... V ice-Presfdenl j. C. CUTHRIE ...... ..... T reasurer T. j. MCILWAINE ...................................... ..... S ecretary CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES E. T. THOMPSON ............,........................... .... D evolianal j. C. MOORE ...,. .............. B ible Study .............Mis5ion Sindy j. M. SIMPSON. .. C . G. PETERS .,.... C. B. ROBERTSON. . . . . .Campaign and Membership . . . ......,.......... Receplfon T. C. JOHNSON ..... ....... .... ..... IL I e nager Reading Room Glahinrt l'9I4f'I5 OFFICERS I... C. TAIT ...... ............. ......... P r esidenl J. C. GUTPIRIE. . . ..,, Vice-President J. M. SIMPSON. .. ..... Treasurer T. C. JOHNSON ............................ ............ ..... S e crelary P. C. ADAMS. .. G. H. GILMER .... C. G. PETERS .... R. XV. DUPUY. .. CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES .....DevolionaI ....,...,........13zb1.. sway ....CampaIgn and Membership .................Receplion J. M. SYDENSTRICKER ..... ...... .... II I anager of Reading Room 114 Bramaiir Glluh Oli! COMMITTEE C. A. BERNIER M. N. FITZGERALD j. C. MOORE H. A. RICE DIRECTOR M. N. FITZGERALD. CHORUS BASSES C. R. Bucc G. L. WALKER F. E. STERNE J. C. MOORE BARITONES M. N. FITZGERALD J. C. BASKERVILLE TENORS B. P. EPES T. j. MCILWAINE W. T. BUCHANAN LEADS E. B. PENDLETON M. S. CLARKE F. C. CHRISTIAN C. E. LINDSAY D. E. GRAY A. B. HODGES H. A. RICE MANDOLIN CLUB Leader M. S. CLARKE First Mandolin M. S. CLARKE A. B. HODCES W. L. THURMAN Second lllandolin W. T. BUCHANAN H. A. RICE Firsl Violin Second Violin T. J. MCILWAINE j. B. RET'NoLDs Cuilars C. E. LINDSAY H. S. BAKER M. N. FITZGERALD B. XV. SCOTT 115 ,..f- .,f Inn 1!-r .- ., E' L 5 , fUntPr11whiz1tP Qlvlehratinn FEBRUARY 20, 1914 0? UNION SOCIETY Senior Oralor J. C. MOORE ..... ..,..........., .... I V ho Diclalcs junior Oralors I... C. 'I-AIT ........... ..... ...... . . . 1cI1 Diane.. j. M. SYDENSTRICKER ................................ ...... C ourage PI-IILANTHROPIC SOCIETY Senior Oralor ' E. E. OWEN ..... .................... T he Nalion's Crcalesl Assel junior Oralors R. E. WARWICK .... ......,........ ...., T I1 e Plague of Slalislics j. C. GUTHRIE .... . ...... .,.......... 1 Vanied Men .Untvrnnrirtg Erhntv FEBRUARY 28. 1914 Resoivciiz That minimum wage Iaws s11ouIcI be adopted by lhe I.egisIatures of every American Slate. XVon by the Union Society upholding the aFHrma1ive. UNION SOCIETY E. T. THOMPSON G. H. PAYNE PI-IILANTHROPIC SOCIETY B. D. IVIORTON R. H. PEARSON 116 Amnng ilgv Cgrvrha 050 JANUARY 24, 1914 INSTALLATION OF NU CHAPTER OF THETA CHI BANQUET JANUARY 24 JANUARY 31, 191-1 PANAHELLENIC SMOKER Execulive Committee M. S. CLARKE H. S. CAMPBELL W. T. BUCHANAN T. J. MCILWAINE Decoralfon Commillec H. M. OWEN S. C. SPRINKLE F. M. HARIvIoN O. Y. WARREN FEBRUARY 28, 1914 H K A HOUSEWARMING FOR THE STUDENTS ANID FRIENDS APRIL 14, 1914 INTERFRATERNITY RECEPTION IN HONOR OF THE VISITING TEAM OF THE VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INISTITUTE 117 Kilt una-5.-5 ,f x f A Q .. ' , mga- 4 ry , 'lv' fg 13. p :, . . I It x -if y ,gp -- , fm, , K' ff A it K , A f If . I ' ' L- 4' ,, 1 X ' . .IvyJll'l'1,!N'xllxuq A an FQ- ,HIL Glnmitg Gllnh OFFICERS ROBT. K. BROCK ..... .....,....... .... P r esidenl Managers C. G. PETLRS A. B. Honcss Board of Dfreclors Miss Susu: VENABLE MRs. W. H. W1-nT1Nc. DR. J. H. C. BAGBY MEMBERS H. F. DONNALLY . W. W. ARBUCKLE D. E. GRAY L. C TAIT H. A. RICE C. R. Bucc C. N. GoLDsBoRouc.H A. B. CARRINGTON E. L. JACKSON A. G. RAMEY J. S. TIPTON W. R. VAUGHAN H. M. OWEN M. S. CLARKE. K. R. SAUNDERS A. B. HODGES W. T. BUCHANAN W. T. CARRINGTON C. E. LINDSAY C. G. PETERS E. B. PENDLETON B. W. VENABLE E. E. OWVEN j. A. SHACKELFORD F. E. STERNE A. W. Lu: R. G. jomzs O. Y. WARREN H. S. BAKER J. A. GREGORY R. B. CASSADY F. D. Eau. j. B. ORR 118 ,GMX , ' I K X ' pffi . ' if -'fin rp --.LII 1 N I IN I. sf. - 21 4 QP ,, 1 -Zag! K-i f X . X 6 l Q y n ' f ml y' ,J A , ZIJI . W! If lf .L!f..j 55 1 , 1 f f .4 Ad LEPFINEIII 0111111 OFFICERS R. VAUGHAN ..... ............. ...... P r esidenl N. FITZGERALD ..... ...Vice-President S. CLARKE ....... ....... M anager B. HODGES ..... .. ....... .. ...... Leader Board of Governors D. E. GRAY E. B. PENDLETON A. B. CARRINGTON MEMBERS E. L. JACKSON C. N. COLDSBOROUGH H. A. RICE D. E. GRAY H. F. DoNNAI.I.Y H. M. OwEN W. T. BUCHANAN C. E. LINDSAY E. B. PENDLETON F. D. EBEL W. R. VAUGHAN W. W. ARBUCKLE J. B. ORR R. B. CASSADY H. S. BAKER, JR. R. G. JONES F. E. STERNE M. S. CLARKE A. B. HODGES A. G. RAMEY W. T. CARRINGTON J. A. GREGORY A. B. CARRINGTON O. Y. WARREN C. R. Bucc A. XV. LEE L. C. TAIT J. A. SI-IACIcEI.EoRD K. R. SAUNDERS B. W. VENAELE E. E. OWEN C. G. PETERS J. 5. TIPTON 119 ...., Q , , , SSBFSQXFQQR M ' AjNXyf12i5ErE9Q3wJ??H?3f fffZf,ff' '3f??'nQ kvix-XXX Qixy. X W- X ,. Avis, ,Q 1 WWW! X f ,142 -X, X 4'-, 2.4 'h X Qi 'f , ' ' I ' ,gf f 1 if Y f iff fa 1 f f .X ff f s f, fi qw 5'rTf2 vu,g'QQ H' ,Q. ,31A ,ff Zvi 5 -Xiu FFSQA ,HN -NNN ! 1,0 lki 1, 1 f .Wag i f 5 f .X-. x. 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'P F - ,, 531, ,A is . W jr. fg-ul, ig xT EAN :ff X ,Q --'A'-.Xl Xl -2 'Vg ,gf XX .M 5. X 2 . , 4 , U3 '- +54- sw, ...'Tf:,. S ,, ,hh m Q43 ,Jr fy Q My F 142- is ' ' f 1 ' 'N .- x , X - . . . . . !, - I, XA Y-.izshg-,,:f, xx :fx--V ...tn - Cuxx 1 NX h N .'m if:7:-fb -f'-- ri? il-VKX ' , fri X fV 's 1 X X 4 I f 7 ff ff! 6 kos ll ,X yi, .-5,66 lg 'I XX yu ff , 3 ,L xin :L-Eg: N .ZQBF X-,yn - X A, ..27-Hulk 1 f' 4 f 'Q - ' -ilfffivf' :Gr :FE E:-2597 , ' . 2 I x I ,.'.,fl-il. ,,'fC,7 if A X 2 ' '07 qv . 4 .117 xx, - 1--L 3- - f- ,- ,.s,!' , - M' 'f re' ' ,. 5' f M 25:9 A- ' 'A - ' , - - if yr ' ' f N - Z ..-.,.'. -1. .. ,gk lg-,133 5 4, ,nu Z -N 3- , ' x4 V ' T ,7 ' if S A K. . I Q' Fl 3 ffl.:- t. -,-' , if, P ig' ,XXX a:,- 5:-., - Iwi' gfi ,fri-' ' . . -. I-A' -3- . vi xx ,ff-lil, gl: -1,1-3-' z Pl? .S L- ' :'i'! ' 5-'F'-3 . .3-1 1- .14-'. S F5 Eff-T a 1 2 w E: . .f S ,Q J, fs .- 'P LX viii 'J ff- .-., -,.' Q Fil I 11 .A-...L SPS: ,RV QS S:-..: -X 1 -' D ' x AVE' 'EQLN rf--A A5512 3? SEE A? Q? gi 2 25 Glhi ljhi fFouncled al Princeton, l82-0 COLORS! Scarlel and Blue. Alpha-University of Virginia Bela-Massachusetts Institute of Technology Comma-Emory College. Georgia Della-Rutgers College Epsilon-Hampden-Sidney College Zeta-Franklin and Marshal Era-University of Georgia Theta-Rensselaer Polyteehnie Institute loin-Ohio State University Lambda-University of California Mu-Stevens Institute of Technology Nn-University of Texas Xi-Cornell University Omicron-Yale University Rho-LaFayette College Phi-Amherst College Chi-Darlmouth College Psi-Lehigh University Omega-Georgia School of Technology Alpha Chi-Ohio-Wesleyan University 121 Epnilnn Glhapter nf Gllpi lghi fF.stab1ished in 18671 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO M. N. FITZGERALD, 1914 E.. B. P1-:Nm.EToN, 1916 A. B. CARRINGTON, 1915 W. T. BUCHANAN, 1917 W. T. CARRINCTON, 1915 F. D. EBEL, 1917 F. G. CHRISTIAN, 1915 j. A. GREGORY, 1917 I-1. F. DONNALLY, 1915 F. M. HARMON, 1917 C. E. LINDSAY, 1917 FRATRES IN URBE R. K. BROCK W. J. DUNNINGTQN 122 F- i. ll it N-T Aly! 325 f , A'-'Ng U11-4 3: I if xv- ? ' w .'.' ,. ' 1 2 iq P. Y ji NG w V' ,u H W k 7,13 HN R B I X . n F V L O V. S w v Q! W le.. 'fit-ww A 0 ' -u u 5 0 ' x sto vo -Q M3553 J ' .1 '- 1' . CM' . . 'K muff . l . N Q., I .A Q V 09-91 ,y.1S'4:' , W 1,5 . ,- W .mr 1 0 ' ' , s - I L 4 0 .' A : ,A v ' ,' QMQOT Q , ' .'- 's '1.F -1.Q.Jff-S+ ' ', '. 'bff 'nf'-5 . ' A , . . V .. . n .v ' ' -'Q s-,?f4 '. if? 'A 'sir -N U ,Q I-A ,Q , , 1 ',f 11,1 4 in , Q.. E. l, 1139+ fr- . .Ill I 0' R .' - Xlixq rf.. . .-97' ' . P'-9, 'ww F ' s -U . s 5 J' ' lv N , 5 1 i 6 lk. ' . Q . ...I 5,-, , A', .NVQ - 4.. , 1 -, . ,-. - ,. I ' , g ' .I -,a'. -K1 i . o J' .. M4 '. J . .' M. ' I Q I , . u ' 1 .-'wil ' I, .. 'J' 1 'I wr. , '41 -, 4' ,v..'A . .'t. -'Q 'Nl 11 f T ': X. A 'xl 1 .V .I 4 I A . A- l a . . , u I -'Eh' . ' V V lg J . ' 4 V. his . A Q' sl f. . I xi? ,FS 4 . v r 'ln' A ' I.. .J-1 l.' W' J , 5 A J' ' . A . ',n. . ,.', ' 2 -:fx qi ' ' r 4 , fx r ' 1' ' '.'..:A g. . ' . ' -1' i Q 'Q I .4215 'L ,'2':'7,Q4 l0'.. , . 4 ' 4. '... ..j 4 . ff'--.v . z ':':1'+- nf, .,- . 9 ' '-L'f N ' .- 'lpn' 11, H ' , ,G vu ,. 4 K .. .5 ox. IN ,f ,l - - , '.'A1O I ', V ' lf., uni., ' l :E -Un. K . .A .l' I Y 'M ' .H H -1 5 . ' 'if-Q . s .,l, ' 'f . . . u A .h 14, - ..' , - . o'.-gn' ' . s . .ff,.' HL g .Lux '-r ,-F' 4 ' 2' ff ' '. J , Q-' 'K I' A- u . I '. ! .Q'ff. . Y ' ' . . . !',:i'1h', o ...X 1 1, A. -Julxq .I 4 I . ' I ' A-,,'.1J..' , sa 'M' ,mu I 'W J v'n .Q 4 .' -'vga 'uni' ...Nr 0 ' 5 ' P. . 0 5 ' ' u kJ '. 0' . ffm, .'.5 ' i O U ' .4 Ao ,PJ - .Q ff rv . . 7 ' I - ' , ol f' -l' ,Al liappa Sigma Oli! fFounded at University of Virginia, 18671 COLORS: Scarlet, White and Emerald Crecn. ACTIVE CHAPTERS Zeta-University of Virginia Omega-University of the South Phi-Southwestern Presbyterian University Alpha Chi-Lake Forest University Lamlnla-University of Tennessee Kappa-Vanderbilt University Alpha Bela-Mercer University Alpha Alpha-University of Maryland Mu-Washington and Lee University Eta Prime-Trinity College Bela-University of Alabama Upsilan-Hampden-Sidney College Tau-University of Texas Chi-Purdue University Psi-University of Maine Iota-Southwestern University Camma-Louisiana State University Bela Theta-University of Indiana Theta-Cumberland University Pi-Swarthmore College Eta-Randolph-Macon College Sigma-Tulane University Nu-William and Mary College Xi-University of Arkansas Della-Davidson College Alpha Gamma-University of Illinois Alpha Della-Pennsylvania State College Alpha Epsilon-University of Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta-University of Michigan Alpha Eta-George Washington University Alpha Kappa-Cornell University Alpha Lambda-University of Vermont Alpha Mu-University of North Carolina Alpha Pl-Wabash College Alpha Rho-Bowdoin College Alpha Sigma-Ohio State University Alpha Tau-Georgia School of Technology Alpha Upsilon-Millsaps College Alpha Phi-Bucknell University Alpha Psi-University of Nebraska Alph Bela Bala Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela Bela aOmega-William Jewell College Alpha-Brown University Bela-Richmond College Camma-University of Missouri Delta-Washington and jefferson College Epsilon-University of Wisconsin Zeta-Leland Stanford, jr., University Eta-Alabama Polytechnic Institute lola-Lehigh University Kappa-New Hampshire College Lambda-University of Georgia Mu-University of Minnesota Nu-University of Kentucky Xi-University of California Omicron-University of Denver Pl-Dickinson College Sigma-Washington University, Missouri Rho-University of Iowa Tau-Baker University Upsilon-North Carolina A. 8: M. College Phi-Case School of Applied Science Chi-Missouri School of Mines Psi-University of Washington Omega-Colorado College Camma Alpha-University of Oregon Comma Bela-University of Chicago Camrna Camma-Colorado School of Mines Camma Della-Massachusetts State College Comma Zeta-New York University Camma Epsilon-Dartmouth College Camma-Eta-Harvard University Camma Theta-University of Idaho Comma lola-Syracuse University Camma Kappa-University of Oklahoma Camma Lamlaala-Iowa State College Camma Mu-Washington State College Camma Nu-Washburn College Camma Xi-Denison University Comma Omicran-University of Kansas 125 Hpailnn Gllgapter nf llzqapn Sigma qF...mded 18835 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO W. W. ARBUCKLE, 1914 j. M. SYDENSTRICKER, 1915 M. S. CLARKE, 1914 B. P. EPES, 1916 E. E. OWEN, 1914 H. M. Own-LN. 1917 R. M. SLOAN, 1914 A. P. SAUNDERS, 1917 E. T. THOMPSON, 1914 F. E.. STERNE, 1917 j. R. EDMUNDS, 1915 H. C. THOMPSON, 1917 T. C. JOHNSON, 1915 A. A. WILSON, 1917 J. H. WHALEY, 1917 FRATRES IN URBE Rav. W. j. KING Pkor. MARTIN J. F. HALL 126 A xl.-.I 5' n f 3 ,o-- ... ff .u . V O ,', Php Q ' Q xx ' ' .s ,, , ' Q e. r A -' A 39 - ,f L uh -. -- v O 'J . 'v 11' Q. gif? 0 Ll. if W Inn. 4 .' ' 'lf ... ' , X' sm J- n', 4-Q f- i. ' n ',p. '-fi. .5 , . . 14,142 y 4 V 'J 1 , . '-ff' . Y , o-, v-7 z Q S.. w A ,Q C2 xaf i . ok ' ,L 51. 1 ,E 7 ' l 1 -5- '1 wx? ,. are , I ' , 1 1. I au' S . A ,4l.x4 4 I 4 ' ' v 4 . N ol, ' 0 . lnC 1.'f s K -. qv Q ng. ' 9 , .0 1 5 T. 4 0 l eo- .T ,. , -. rv . Q 'U , , . -, 'Q' I4 'v X r . ' x ' n I K 3, - W . .7 ' v v Q1 O .r , , ':-' . q frf'f' -nz . ' ..L'w.1' ' ' ' .. Q :',:Tlvf'u 'Y7134 g V. go,lg1 X 1 ',,. yj g X- ', - . ,- -. --, L-ff-.U-.. . , . .' 4, t ,sc . --, ,-ond 1 Q ' V- N - -iq ol. ,,. .1.', 'F .FQ J 1. W ' ' u 1. I. . , , ws -. ' 1, . V 0- .' . , 'u.'.H?--Q. . , . A 5. Q . It 4' l'Q 1 Q I .' u'.l ww . ' x -4 ar -41-' I QU- x, I 1 7 me sv . I ..- v ? 'iff 1 . 'NJ A -P 4 1.9 :N 'N'-A . A ' 'J' - J ' 'UW ' . J. V' ' '.' fi-rl ' 'ivt' f , . . dm '.'I I 'O u . . ' I... ..' 't A '41 2. N wh, 1 V. . 'vi . .. , L. , ' ' . F 'V' Hy I .I .oi ,.Lz'.,?..4'5'.j'!l :Q . I , 4 It I girl: ' . 1. , , I Ng -.Q Z. :EQUAL I 4 ' 1 ,A -4, ' Tru- QZQL- rm: X I 'AO ..A , .Y '.- :W.w'.'3 ,, . L... v N' I sl . , 'ny ul 1 ,I N V. Hx .-H' ff:-ga . rf I .I'E', ' A' .zmftlyftf Ju 4 ,Q J 71, . .fb 'I 1,1 r' vqbxlf JI if Hi Kappa Alpha fFoundecl at University of Virginia, ISGJSQ. COLORS: Carnal ana' Cold. ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha-University of Virginia Beta-Davidson College Camma-William and Mary College Della-Southern University ZelavUniversity of Tennessee Eta-Tulane University ThclaASoutl1western Presbyterian University lola-Hampclen-Sidney College Kappa-Transylvania University Omicron-Richmond College Pi-Washington and Lee University TaufUniversity of North Carolina Upsilon-Alabama Polytechnic Institute Psi-Ntorth Georgia Agricultural College Omega!-State University Alpha Alphai'l-rinity College Alpha Comma-Louisiana Stale University Alpha Delta-Georgia School of Technology Alpha Epsilon-North Carolina A. 51 M. College Alpha Zeta-University of Arkansas Alpha Eta-University of State of Florida Alpha Iota-Millsaps College Alpha Kappa-Missouri School of Mines Alpha Lambda-Georgetown College Alpha Mu-University of Georgia Alpha Nu!-University of Missouri Alpha Xi-University of Cincinnati Alpha Omicron-Southwestern University A1phiPi-Howard College Alpha Rho-Ohio State Universiy Alpha Sigma-Universiy of California Alpha Tau-Universiy of U'al1 Alpha Upsilon-New York University Alphifzhi-lowa State College-uAmes Alpha Chi-Syracuse University Alpha Psi-Rutgers College Alpha Omega-Kansas State Agricultural College BcIaAlpl1a-Pennsylvania State College 129 31nta Gllyapter uf Mi iliappa Alpha qE5fab1ashed weep FRATRES IN COLLEGIO T. j. MCILWAINE, 1914 C. R. Bucc. l9l6 C. M. WALKER, I9l4 A. W. LEE, JR., I9l6 K. R. SAUNDERS, I9I5 G. W. HERD, I9l6 A. B. HoDcEs, l9I5 H. S. BAKER, JR., l9I7 O. Y. WARREN, I9l7 C. B. RICHMOND, I9I6 H. R. CROCKETT, l9l6 FRATRES IN URBE P. T. Ancmsow G. L. WALKER 130 QA .1 1- 5 fi n O -I 4 L. ?:4x g W I fi, -sffg s' . 4,4 m , 4 N, I ,1- x G i E '1:LfF: fha Q'-.sl -as -4. a .-.g .4 -- ':' 'Z'-2' .g.-, - 43- 'i '-4 -t ig . . , fx . . -. . a . s - ' -4 -. in , 0 63,2 . '.-7'3 E-f-. 55515 -fx? ' '30 img' . ,JA 5 -rv' - '?f.',' ' 'ir-L 'V-3' 1 -Q' 71 i fx .14 -vwisz Lg- ugfxi -.'- .e -K .. A . .:'q- a -,: 4.1- LT .,e,fQsfi... ,A 1 ALI I r .La 'Q:..' 9, . -j 'Q 0 Y v O ,g. 'X' 'ev5iQ 12 - - in s f' fc: ' is-G-QQ! Y -ffzegfgj iFl :jg , , 'if-V - 'fl' f V, ff ,Z p...:,.Q 1 j' 'f-1- ' iff Qs -:L 'gl if f-I v 5 21 V ' 1 wa , 1 L -1 '2 ' 'gh Yf 'i 1 , -. , I a 1 J- Z - gf , U 'ep ' ?f 19 f ,1 ' X C' Pa i 0009 M Dllguh xfw M F ' 4 v g l m'2,.:.TiL'lg, k ' 47 fix-X XY Q LJ 'Ligfln Q .fx P H 1'1- j .-A x,. wx. f mx Xgfig ZZZYM QQ J' , .1 -4 ' xv! if . 1- , 1 v-up-. V I 4 rg- 1. J' fwnolwf V 1. ., ,. 1 l .nwl Y .I , Y ,' 'IP I 6 - nA,1J',U Y 4 5 1. 14-fl ,fl. ' ww ,F fu' 1 A , ,.-. 1 x 4 ly U .I A 4 . .' I F. x x , s . '. '4 1' P A n g 4 ' - -A ' , J I n . f A - ,Ia 'U.'. .gow ,vi l' A I ' 4 H. ln' .xr.:,? l , 'I . I9 ,g,, f' 'TQ . I I .Q 5' T.'f'..'ig4T.s ai' ' ,I-IL.':,lv4, ., 'L1I'5:'if'!. jr .' 44- 'r 9+ -41 'ur aw, : -1:,v.N . ,Q-igaguw ,224-f -79:14 h . A ,. 1 V ,.4,,'a4 wax!!-Anvll 'PN' .gl sl r , v - 1 n,vi'T 4,0 ,ah 'Q' - A N 'K JU liappa Alpha ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha-Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. Camma-University of Ceorgia, Athens, Cia. Epsilon-Emory College, Oxford. Cia. Zeta-Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Eta-Richmond College, Richmond. Va. Theta-University of Kentucky, Lexington. Ky. Kappa-Mercer University, Macon, Ga. Lambda-University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va. NuAAlabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala. Xi-Southwestern University, C-eorgetown, Texas. Omicran-University of Texas, Austin, Texas. PiiUniversity of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Sigma-Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Upsilon-University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Nl. C. Phi-Southern University, Greensboro, Ala. Chi-Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Psi-Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Omega-Central University of Kentucky, Danville, Ky. Alpha Alpha-University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. Alpha Bela-University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala. Alpha Camma-Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. Alpha Delta-QWilliam Jewell College. Liherty, Mo. Alpha Zeta-William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha Alpha. Alpha Alpha- Alpha Alpha Omega-N. C. A. Sz M. College. Raleigh. N. C. Beta Bela Bela Beta Bela Bela Bela Bela Beta Eta-Westminster College, Fulton. Mo. Theta-Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky. lata-Centenary College, Shreveport. La. Kappa-University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Mu-Millsaps College, jackson, Miss. Nu-The George Washington University, Washington, Xi-University of California. Berkley, Cal. Omicron-University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arlc. Pi-Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal. Rho-West Virginia University, Morgantown, W. Va. Sigma-Cieorgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Phi-Trinity College, Durham, N. C. Alpha-Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Mo. Bela-Bethany College, Bethany, W. Va. Comma-College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C. Della-Georgetown College, Georgetown, Ky. Epsilon-Delaware College. Newark, Del. Zela-University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. Eta-University of Oklahoma, Norman, Olcla. Theta-Washington University, St. Louis., Mo. lata-Drury College, Springtield. Mo. 133 Tau-Hampden-Sidney College. Hampden-Sidney, Va. D.C Alpha Eau Qllyaptvr nf liappa Alpha 050 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO W. R. VAUCHAN, 1914 B. W. VENABLE, 1915 CURRY CARTER, 1915 H. S. CAMPBELL, 1916 C. G. PETERS. 1915 C. N. Gouusaoaoucn. 1916 H. A. R1cE, 1915 W. M. GILLESPIE, 1916 W. J. ScoTr, 1915 D. E. CRAY, 1917 L. C. TAIT, 1915 j. A. PETERS, 1917 j. A. SHACKELFORD, 1915 S. C. SPRINKLE. 1917 FRATRES IN URBE E. Scorr MARTIN R. H. PAULETT 134 o W Q -. ' V 0... nn . . - - . ,. , 9 O Q0 tlq 'L' Q .. 1 ' R .'. I h 8 i 4 o J O O -v O U 1 I 9 , C ' 4 u L 3 0 Q 'i 0 , .PW 'J 0 ' ., , . . iv - o-v 1 ' Sq' ' , n I- , 5 and 'L-h Gp-f Q 0? 9 at A lj 'no' r P ..'r ' 1 , . INV, I ,. :fI -J '3 'Q 'I tif' . . . I , 1, in . , n Y, ' v fl 'fx-Q? f Y -, ' k ' . -'I' ' v ., '. -fu Qf v ,,5f4.,4g3L ., V. ..' , 'uv' ww! 'v li' 5' -1. 55-Yr.. 'Tr' L. ' u ' , .. 4 ' I 11' ',4'71LT ? 'xt , , . ,545 J'1.f,.'S'- mr 1 'L '.rw.E on'xRf '- V vfmf 'rv 2' ' ' ' 'M' .- , 1. 1 'Aff ff'-, 4 . ...V . 'I . . '.,..',, .4 'D' tv - . f 'KJV' ff f'. 5'-.1144 - -fl .1-fm .-1 -. dr, v W o A' I 40.6 'u Q , ' Y S sway: 'll I I . ,L . I ..'Ia'I '-p - . ' 'Q. . A A U ' ' , . Q' .' UV' . , -,x9i3z'.'. . ,. , . 1 ' v .' v' ' ' . w .' 'QL ' , o, x' ' 1 ,V . 'X 4 'ill ix' 1, A JIT! V' A 4' I Il N I , . A I -ff., ' .' 35:4 ',E'!1' . . .1 . 1 nm' - I' 'vl I '.QzL. .',0 'JAX'- .l' n I' wr I I., A l V 4',' I N X Ax J. ' . mln Tu-vi . ' '1: ,n. 'nx ' . , ., .N 1 . .A'.,'.' ml, U' I ,, V L yi Q 'N' X ., ' 'X - '1. l5':i'fQf -.1' 'l ' lv!-' '. .' ' . x , fw .- .' .' ' H , ' ,' . J, P ' r V . .. ' .' . 1. . . 1. . ,i , , . , , L X, . 'V' VH ly : al il . vw , I. --. ... l V. lv 6 ' '-' . ' 1 Q JI ', . , 4 v 1' as , .0 ,4 .MV-' , - ..' , -'f , 4 ., ' , - . .p,'.g'IYlXto -xv I--l. f ... -' ' Ile g-' ', 'A- . 'f . 4. . . 5 . ul Q . 57 ' V ima- ' ' ' A, . ' - 1' .1 A' ' W, , .L Q Q . . , rj, f.g.,- KL 5 AJ, e' .,'., .AV . '. L-gm , vu' - ' ' . ' - ' f, ' , 1--, vcr .' -A VI. V uf Q ' Y 9 V . K Y . I . A . ...ju - -. . il, lf' D -'I' '-. i'.' ,Q Ov, fs 54111 mfr-A1I.':,.c U-mq.i.:.g'.d ' , p g 1 ' J 0 . . '-'nfl .6 v ' -.' .4.g, f. , ' . .4 . ,. .F I ' AJ' ,' ' A' 'S ' I :,l .' '14 . . ut .no ,ig FQ, 1,1 ., l .-- ..:..f.1,..' 1 1 'L' 'I L 'X' Ni' ' 3 'M 'V' 'V 5 . X ' J '. ' V1 ' ' 9 . O- 3 Q I - ' . , I, - 4 4, ' s- 45, l , '.1' Ps '- '-7 .q'vN V I , . , ,' - . , , . w ' ,L ' 1, A .,'.'v 4 ' Y 'f' 2. ,!,4il'S' . ., , . , 4 1-s . - U V' .,. I br. ' vt. '14 A.,11:,Y? ',' 5 . -. '-. .1-uw' I4 . I l-rg. . lv nl .ff -F? . t A ,tw rv A A v Q' ' 'I O S vi N . t . . ' L 5 I 11. . . Iv, ' '. ' '5. I .. Vu .- '- ', ' '.-.'.'- 'v f'--- L 1 - . . 'M . . .WaV,V -a '. .- .Q t . , 1 . 'uv b: any 'J ,' V51 W , l . v' ' A., If 1 4 ' r 0 tv-ull' u S I A x, 4 -v 7' ! BJ' -Yugi 2 K '--Ning AJ, -- 3 if , 4 2 -ff'f'8l if Efhrta Glhi Ol fFounded al Norwich. l856J COLORS: Red and While. A lpho-Norwich University Bela-Massachusetts Institute Technology Comma-University of Maine Della-Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Epsilon-Worcester Polytechnic Institute Zeta-New Hampshire Slalc College Ela-Rhode Island State College Theta-M assno huseus Agricultural College lola-Colgate University Kappa-University of Pennsylvania Lambda-Cornell University Mu-University of California Nu-Hampden-Sidney College Xi-University of virginia 137 Nu Glhaptvr nf Efhvta Glhi 033 fFounded in l9I4J FRATRE5 IN COLLEGIO C. H. PAYNE, l9I3 W. W. WVHITE, l9l5 j. C. Moons, l9I4 E. B. Bmncss, 1916 R. F. GUTHRIE, l9I5 W. L. CARRINCTON, l9I6 M. LAWSON, l9l5 S. B. Fonaus, l9I6 B. D. MORTON, l9l5 W. S. NEWMAN, l9l6 R. E. WARWICK. I9l5 L. B. HANES, l9l7 L. M. McGAvAcK, I9l7 FRATRES IN FACULTATE j. H. C. WINSTON W. O. BEAZLEY 138 A. B. CARRINCTON W. R. VAUCHAN C. G. PETERS E. B. PENDLETON H. S. CAMPBELL CURRY CARTER T. C. joHNsoN. F. D. EBEL W. T. BUCHANAN A. B. Honcss G. W. HERD M. S. CLARKE E. T. Tr-xomrsow A. B. CARRINGTON C. G. PETERS W. R. VAUGHAN M. S. CLARKE M. N. FITZGERALD P. T. Arxwsow Q W , 4 I 1 A f N! ku. ' f 4,7 . 4 . w 1, rx 00+ 0 MEMBERS GOATS .x. X 3 X oo -'V oo + W 4. X OO - oo aj .4 oo + 142 F. G. CHRISTIAN A. B. CARRINGTON A. B. HODGES K. R. SALINDERS W. T. CARRINGTON H. A. RICE W. M. GILLESPIE A. P. SAUNDERS j. R. EDMUNDS T. C. joHNsoN C. R. Bucc O. Y. WARREN C. E. LINDSAY F. D. EBEL. M. N. FITZGERALD M. S. CLARKE C. G. PETERS E. B. PENDLETON H. S. CAMPBELL L. C. TAIT D. E. GRAY G. W. HERB 143 HONORARY MEMBERS W. R. VAUGHAN T. M. S. CLARKE E. T. THOMPSON W. T. CARRINGTON C. C. PETERS j. R. EDMUNDS C. joHNsoN B. W. VENABLE F. C. CHRISTIAN ACTIVE MEMBERS My 6 2 fl 3. MISS MARY T. TURNBULL SPONSOR OF CLUBS 145 E112 CEDDD Ship Earg 15111152 050 Sailing daily from Hungary to the Sandwich lslands NV. R. VAUGHAN .... ...... W. W. XVI-HTE ..... W. J. SCOTT ......... lV'. N. FITZGERALD ........... H. A. RICE, W. T. BUCHANAN, J. A. CREGORX' ........... . . . J. M. SYDENSTRICKER ........ H. F. DON NALLY ............ WATT AND CHARLEY TERRY.. J. A. GREGORY M. N. FITZGERALD C. E.. LINDSAY F. B. EBEL T. H. DOWNES F. M. HARMON W. S. NEWMAN H. A. RICE B. W. VENABLE ... ...Master of the Quarterdecl: ....Master of the Fifty-cent Deck Master-at-Arms fand Elbowsj J. B. ORR. J. A. SHACKELFORD. A. S. WARINNER ..... ..... S takers Pilot fWl1o steers across the bar and looks out for schoonersj .........................Chaplain Barometer. QWalch his Nosej .........Stevedores STARBOARD WATCH J. B. ORR H. F. DONNALLY W. T. CARRINGTON F. G. CHRISTIAN C. N. GOLDSBOROUGH PORT WATCH W. M. GILLESPIE W. W. ARBUCKLE J. A. SHACKELEORD J. M. SYDENsTR1cxER W. W. WHITE DOG WATCH L. C. TAIT SUPER-CARGO C. D. MCCLU NC 147 A. B. HODGES W. R. VAUCHAN A. G. RAMEY A. S. WARINNER W. T. BUCHANAN K. R. SAUNDERS W. J. SCOTT R. B. CASSADY D. E. C-RAY Svtuhvnta' Glluh Oli MOTTO: Make Il short Bowling. COLORS: A'BuIIfrog Green and Nuts Brown FAVORITE PASTIME: Bowlmg FAVORITE DISH: Sprinkle-d Pair-s OFFICERS GRAccHUs BOWLING ....... ,............ ......... P r opnetor UCONCRESSMANH RICHMOND ..... ..... C hampion Eater UFOLLYU FOLEY ............ ......,..... ....... C o mecIIenne MEMBERS I AIKITTENI' ADAMS 2 I. C. ALLAN 3 HOME RUN BAKER 4 UBITH BITTINGER 5 .'VENUS BoNDURANT 6 C-RAccHUs BOWLING 7 MJENNINGSH BRYAN 8 Doc CAMPBELL 9 BULL FROGH CAMPBELL I0 MBIG FOOT CARRINGTON Il AINICKII CARTER I2 HBIG DICKH COLBERT I3 IIDAVYH CROCKETT I4 MDEACONH DARST I 5 FRESHMAN EDMUNDS .I FOLLYH FOLEY CALICH FORBUS ORANGE DEE0 FULLERTON PARSONH GILMER BIC JIM C-UTHRIE MAIN LINE GUTI-IRIE HALII HALDERMAN lzZY HANES GREEN BOY HERZIG O. U. KIDD 'IADONISI' MoRToN CRANDPAU MoRToN HAMLETS MoRToN MSMILESH MoRToN RED MURRAY USTANDARD OIL OEHLER 148 PDP PAIR CUTEY PAYNE MPOURQUOIH PALMORE NUTS PEARSON R, J. REYNOLDS UFATTYH RYBURN CRANcRESSMAN RICHMOND ICE CREAM ScoTT LESS SIMPSON RAY SLOAN BABEH SPRINKLE FATH TERRY ToADY THURMAN Boa WARWICK IKWOODROWI' WILSON Ellyn mnniantvrg nf illvnzlgurat 020 MOTTO: Let silence reign COLORS: Alice Blue SECRET WORD: ll is lwenly minutes afler PATRON SAINT ....... . . ............................... . . . . . .....,...... Friar Tuck BESETTING SIN: Failure lo moorlify the appetite. Penance: The Hound of the Baskervilles. FAVORITE SONG: The Anvil Chorus Tenor, T. C. JOHNSON Lead, A. B. CARRINCTON Barilone, E. B. PENDLETON B asso , DAVY CLARKE First Sub.. H. T. GRAHAM Tmcz THOMPSON ....... CATARACT BAsKERvi1.i.E ..,. BACHE PENDLETON ........ ALEXANDER CARRINGTON ..... CUNNINGHAM Moon ...... THOMAS JOHNSON ...,. DAVY CLARKE ..... QUARTETTE Second Sub., E. T. THOMPSON Accompanisl. lVlRS. H. T. GRAHAM Chief Critic. J. C. BASKERVILLE Audience. C. MOORE THE BROTHERHOOD 149 The most unr ..The most celilaale ..The most mortihed ..The most worldly uly in the inner man The most loquacious .The most temperate ...The most popular 1 FAVORITE DISH : Tranchet I Ellie illllaplez MOTTO: Sero venientibus ossa COLOR: Hash Brown and Pea Green de looeuf MRS. S. T. PAULETT ........... .. MRS. BETTIE VENABLE .... F. T. .ATKINSON ..... . C. G. PETERS .... XIIOLET Wowmcx .... SEMI-wIzIaxI.Y SPECIALS Creme Glacee ......Cuardian of the portals ...................l-lovering Angel .. . .Chief Wielder of the Serving lrons ......................Intercessor .....Fille cl' Hotel TRENCHERMEN C. R. BUGG, Barley Chugn. .. .......,...................... Custodian of the lasses jug lVl. S. CLARKE, lVlolly . .. .,... lnstructor in the Maxixe and other modern dances B. P. EPES, Pegram .... ....................... ........ C a ruso's Protege G. W. l'lERD, Wash .... ..... S econd Muncliausen M. LAWSON, Minus .... ..... K eeper of Secrets T. J. MCILWAINE, Mac . ................. Editor E. E.. OWEN, Ned ...... .... V isitor from Farmville J. A. PETERS, Little Pete .... .,......... C ourt Fool A. P. SAUNDERS, Sanders, P. .. .... Premier Gourmand F. E. STERNE, But .... .. ......,. Comedian A. A. WILSON, Bones' ........................... ..... C liief lnquisitor GENTLE MURMURINCIS Gentlemen, let me tell you! Yaasum. Yeal'I. HPLEASE, M-a-a-m. l no verstehf' Umpl1 hm-m-mem..- Yussum. Dog gone your times, Ned. 150 .A -. Ellyn liblnagm 31111 Hampden-Sidney Branch of Montgomery, Ward Sz Co., New Yorlc DEALERS IN CHEESE, CAKES AND CANNED PEAS MJOHNNIEH CLARKE.. UDOC-. JACK NBUM.. MAc' EnDY BUD BEAZLEY. . . . O. Y. WARREN .... . FRESHMANH LEE. . .. Tom II THOMPSON. .. GILLESPIE .... JACKSON .... TIPTON .,... BRIDGES .... McGAvAcK .... Boss MAKERS ..... YELL: Eat beef today, or we have hash tomorrow. FAVORITE DISH: Cow Peas SAYINGS OF THE SAGES getyouto excuse me.please ... Does this train stop at Crewe? . ..,........ . .,.. I love to say grace' .. . . Have some more cake, Dr. Clarke? .. .. .... Some more ice cream. please ... l'm afraid l'm getting fat' ... lt feels line to be married' ...... .UC-ive me a cigarette' ...... . . . . . . . l'm going to Study this term .... Nothing like mal-:ing a noise. E.. D. .......lVlrs. Edmunds, Mrs. Hannah. Mrs. Morrison 151 n .- DRINK: Nil Bed Bug. . . Kissing Bug. R7 ff J .a 1' xxx i P X X X S ,a .1 I l I Q5 Nr TV, .filfnti P nfjfigg , fgg22gt',y 11 .ful j :R ka use ff ,.'.v . N' . IE a t if R t X Y R, '.r, - i ls I Ill' 11 11 I T ' I l :' , I J ,. , . I ' Y - 'l ii 'I Ti ll E 1 :. i ,, ? l -1' - T51 I 11 ue. e Waler Tumble Bug ..... Potato Bug. Lady Bug.. Doodle Bug. Squash Bug. Zfirat lganmtgr Oil! BUG HOUSE We shape ourselves betimes to idleness. And lake fools' pleasures PASTIME: Passing around llte Buffalo Biscuit BUGS . . . .Sleepy VENABLE .. . . .S'malter ORR .........Boss SLOAN . . . . . . .Cannon Ball TAIT Snealcllwief SYDENSTRICKER ...............Pinky Lu: Sphinx Moth .... Mosquito .... Slug .......... . Grub Worm ..... Larvae ..... Canlcerworm. . . .Cracked Oats WARREN . .. ...Sage THOMPSON .... . . . .Runt THURMAN ...Big League RICHMOND ... . .Tom ll. THOMPSON OTH . . . . .Susie MCILWAINI: ....., .Windy DUPUY Microlae. ......... . Jar Fly ..... Tobacco Worm ...,. Bottle Wasp ..... Pea Weevil .... Bumble Bee. . . ..SOup Beans CASSADY .. . ,Cascade JOHNSON . . . . .Stoves WARINNER . .... . . Gimme EPES Cranddaddy Long Legs ...... Slippery WILSON Ntiglit Walker ......... Caterpillar. . . . Parasile .... Saw Fly ..... Blow Fly .... Snail ...... ER BUGS Leech ....... Stable Fly ......... ....,....Pep RAMEY .....Ned OWEN 152 .Old Charter CROCKETT . . . . . .Guts SAUNDI-:Rs .....Doc EDMUNDS .. . . . .Buck ARBUCKLE . . Buzz Saw OLIVER ..........Uncle JOHN .....Kisme STERNE . . . .Simple SIMPSON . . N An TuBBY Rica -... . Tex HERD .... . PAULINEH SCOTT. . .. Klux SAUNDERS. . . . S1MP SIMPSON. . .. Blu. GILLESPIE ...... . Ice CREAM FULLERTON. Sm SPRINKLE. .' ...... . Piney REYNoLDs.... WONVTU WILSON .... . QuEs PALMORE. . .. Rum Hooczs FoLLY Fouzv JOHN CUT!-:Rua Nr. 4 u 7 1 wwhfn W M 4' , ' S A X-pr ra M, W. wwf f gyWH?My 25114 I2 A N ,296 1 ff W 1 ' 1 7.7 Y 'QQ' 4g225'irep 59125161 lgawaage 020 COURT OF OLD KING COLE Describe them who can abridgemen! of all that is peculiar in man 153 .........King Cole Queen of Hearts . . . . .Mistress Mary Knave of Hearts .Tommie Tucker .Little Boy Blue .jack Be Nimble ...Baby Bunting .....Fiddle 1 ....Fiddle II .. . . .Fiddle III .....Cup Bearer .........jesner ....Tom Thumb 4. .-N4-Z . Y X A Nxfxs 2 XS XSS ' L! rd x . X .:-. - V ij 'iz f it mrs A , 1-4 ' ' .Lf ' ' -zegaffzagl sq. li '. Q W iil'! 1,11 K Q ,L i 1 gtg',v', C il: ' gig ' i f, 7 ,din -74.4 7 Efliirh Haanagr 050 AUTOMOBILE CLUB Weiwoutd not Hatter Neptune for his trident, Or Jove for's power to thunder. MOTTO: Get out and get under SHoR'rY BRYAN PARSONn GILMER .... FATHER PAIR ........... SILENT Six HALDERMAN .... 4. H . . . . .Touring body . . . . fDivinej Light ..........TirefrJ . . .Latest Production MELANCI-xoLY TERRY ............... ..... S hock Absorber NICK CARTER ...... ........... ..... H o ld-up Man in HRELENTLESS RUDOLPHH RYBURN ..... .. ..... . ...... .. 'iDEACONESS DARST ............. Si-iEmEE CQLBER1' luv HANES ....... .. BULLFROGU CAMPBELL CAPTAIN Kino ....,... I, C. ALLAN.... CAM CAMPBELL ..... ILlcHTN1Nc BITTINGER . .. 'KUNCLEN JOHN ......., WASH ........ ..... 154 case of a breakdown . ...... . . .Silencer lady passenger .............Tool .....E.xi1aust ...............Crank . ...His position is secret . . . . .Chief Observer ,.........Gas .......Shaft .... .Chauffeur ....Si'1inefrJ i i l ,K iii ry!!! K i-1 ' i 1 'l -I i i I 'i,l i i Llf ll i 1 ll. ii . y ii 1 ig 1 li? fi lr l .E U ll . i . dill 2' 'li il ill il m..l .1 if 1 'gif fl , . llfiliiiiii . l Ilinurtli Elgnmmgv OCDO INSANE ASYLUM Today is ours: what do we fear? Let's banish business, banish sorrow' To the gods belong tomorrow. 'Bi1.i. VAUGHAN .. 'FOTSIEN FITZGERALD. . . . 'BsR1c CARRINGTON KPENU PENDi.i-:'roN. . .. 'HACK 'CARY' 'joHN 'PLUG 'Ricx' IIRISHI' GREGORY . . . ADAMS .... Moons ..... LINDSAY . . DoNNAi.i.Y. . MCCLUNG. . .MlCROBE RAMEY . WHO RAVES Raymond MORTON imagines he is Kubelik. Bonny BONDURANT imagines he is Venus. Nuts PEARSON imagines he is sensible. Sol NEWMAN imagines he is A. G. Spalding. John MOORE imagines he is Lauder. Basky BASKERVILLE imagines he is QU. Bill VAUGHAN imagines he is Romeo. Donnan GRAY imagines he is Lady Godiva. Cary ADAMS imagines he is Billy Sunday. Bread BAKER imagines he is a Doughnut. Mike RAMEY imagines he is Rip Milliken. Plug LINDSAY imagines he is Emmeline Pankhurst. Lorrin CARRINGTON imagines he is Weston. Sample FORBUS imagines he is whole goods. ..President of the institution . . . . .Vice-President of the institution .Chief Warden of the institution ...............Deputy Warden ...Keeper of the Padded Cell ................Chief Chef . . . . Bug Doctor .... . . . .Phrenologisl . . . .Inspector of Beds ... . .Cured Patient Chief Bug AND WHY Baed PATE imagines he is Burton Holmes. Izzy GOLDSBOROUCH imagines he is a Gentile. Shack SHACKELFORD imagines he is Solomon. Berk CARRINCTON imagines he is a Postman. Pen PENDLETON imagines he is Jim Thorpe. Taze BUCHANAN imagines he is Vernon Castle. Rick DONNALLY imagines he is Rip Van Winkle. Fannie CHRISTIAN imagines he is George Ada. Tuck CARRINGTON imagines he is a Giant. Hack GREGORY imagines he is not a jailbird. Jim EBI-IL imagines he is Whitlock. Foxy FITZGERALD imagines he is Frank Chance. Molly CLARKE ftransientj imagines he is Cupid. Uncle john EVANS imagines he is Edison. 155 N .-,ffiiimi . T LQ. Q if - , SQ K A Z ' -9 I .I J I 0 -zfx' X14 Iiear Glad Athlrtir Auznriatinn 050 N. FITZGERALD .... E. GRAY ...... S. CLARKE .... R. VAUCHAN. F. DONNALLY. . S. CLARKE T. BUCHANAN., P. EPES ....... C. TAIT I M. SLOAN I W. VENABLE.. B. RICHMOND A. RICE G. PETERS ..... E. LINDSAY H. PEARSDN N. FITZGERALD . R. VAUCHAN E. CRAY ...... H. PAYNE .... W. HERD .... FOOTBALL TEAM I S. W. I 156 .. . . . . . .President . . . . .Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer . . . . .Captain . . . .Manager .. . .Right End . . . .Right Tackle . . . .Right Guard . . . . . .Center ... .Left Guard .. ...Left Tackle .. . . .Left End . . . .Quarter-Back . .Right Half Back .........Full Back .. .Left Half Back . zi?-.gy . . '. 47535 ,3?NfQ:?Z'- KW.-' f- : - ' 1:43 1 J ' 'tx X 'X V . an-' , -.-.-,- - '12- 402 ' .- V .J Rl , E A . L3 H., - ' N . 1. f mx -2 - , f -. J X A I W ZZ A Wy! 5 'giiA I ,Q i gf? X, 1? f ' , M I W f f . ' :W f W .,,, . A X :L':':::::555--ff'fl'7 ' ,f ' f .zffi -, .ML- 'Q , - X 1 I' 9- Q N 'HT- Tggiilg. C 1' mnlking Gllnh 020 MOTTO: Who swiped my horse? W R GILLESPIE ..... ............. ............ . . J B ORR ......... .. G H G .................. J T ..................... A B CARRINGTON AND L. C. TAIT ..... ...,......... W. H. WHITING W. W. ARBUCRLE J. E. BRYAN R. W. DUPUY J. A. SHACKELFORD B. W. VENABLE H. S. CAMPBELL E.. A. COLBERT H. S. BAKER J. CAESAR W. L. FOLEY D. E.. C-RAY L. M. McGAvAcx J. R. MoR1'oN W. S. NEWMAN MEMBERS C. B. RICHMOND C. N. Gowssonoucu J. A. GREGORY A. A. WILSON J. H. WHALEY C. E. MURRAY H. M. OWEN O. Y. WARREN W. L. THURMAN F. E. STERNE S. C. SPRINKLE A. P. SAUNDERS J. A. PETERS R. H. PEARSON G. W. HERB 157 Leader of the Legrons ...Leader of the Creek Auxiliarxes . . . . .Latest Recrurl ... . . . . .Artillery R. M. SLOAN CURRY CARTER R. F. C-UTHRIE M. LAWSON E.. B. BRIDGES EMMELINE PANKHURST S. M. BITTINGER W. T. BONDURANT W. T. BUCHANAN H. DowNs B. HANES P. EP1-:s B. Fonsus B. PENDLETON . H. Boccs Best Hxker I F. D. EBEL ..... j. R. EDMUNDS ...... M. N. FITZGERALD ..... E. B. PENDLETON ..... R. H. PAIR ........ M. S. CLARKE A. A. WILSON R. VAUCHAN K. R. SAUNDERS H. C. THOMPSON MCGAVACIQ H. M. OWEN D. BEAZLEY W. L. M. W. P. H. SCOTT T. C. JOHNSON L. C. BENEDICT E. A. COLBERT A. B. CARRINGTON j. C. MooRE E. E. OWEN E. B. PENDLETDN f it .ttf 'I III i'i If I ' EJJ is iN: ' If Nnrmal Svrhnnl Glluh Afore you're off wi' the auld love It's best to be on wi' the new. MEMBERS CONFIRMED J. C. GUTIEIRIE R. H. PAIR C. G. PETERS C. E. LINDSAY W. T. RYBURN C. R. Bucc. E. L. JACKSON E. E. HERZIG CONVERTED J. B. ORR J. E. BRYAN W. T. CARRINGTON J. M. SYDENSTRICKER FLICKERING B. D. MORTON C. B. RICHMOND DECEASED M. C. BOWLING M. ALLAN 158 .................PresiCient Man with the Iron Heart ........Truest Lover . . . . . . . .Most Inconsistent . . . . .Most Persistent W. W. WHITE E. B. BRIDGES W. L. CARRINGTON G. H. C-ILMER D. E. GRAY A. W. LEE H. S. BAKER R. B. CASSADY F. D. EBEL 5. B. FORELIS j. C. BASI-LERVILLE H. S. BAKER R. M. HALDERMAN A. W. MCWHORTER F. E. STERNE Morro: Les femmes, CAMPBELL ........ DONNALLY. . . TERRY ...... GILMER-DARST. .. PARSON GILMER ..... j. H. BAGBY MIsoc.YNIsTs j. F. M. SIMPSON R. M. SLOAN F. G. CHRISTIAN R. W. DUPUY B. P. EPES W. M. GILLESPIE B. W. DLIVER T. H. DowNs J. C. FULLERTON P. L. PALMORE j. A. PETERS -if-,-... Anti-Glalir 0111111 il y a parloul, mais elle qui nous convient, est clifflcile a trouver. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. j. A. CLARKE MEMBERS BORN E. E. OWEN M. C. BOWLING T. j, MCILWAINE DIED E. E. OWEN T. C. JOHNSON B. D. MORTON 159 .........Cl1ief Misogynisl ....Cl1Ief Cynic .Faslesl Runner ............Longesl Runner What have you got to say A. W. MCWHORTER SCARED CURRY CARTER E. T. THOMPSON H. A. RICE W. j. SCOTT E. A. COLBERT CI. W. HERD W. S. NEWMAN A. C. RAMEY S. M. BITTINCER 1. T. MORTON P. H. SCOTT Ev Svalnn hr Baum, INSTITUTRICE MLLE. IDEAR TRATLOR EXPONENTS OF THE TANGO T. BUCHANAN J. A. GREGORY D. E. GRAY H. A. RICE J. B. ORR HESITATION ARTISTS N. FITZGERALD E. B. PENDLETON C. J. WILSON A. B. HODGES A. W. LEE W. T. CARRINGTON MAXIXE STARS S. CLARKE H. F. DoNNAI.I.Y R. F. C-II.I.EsPIE F. E. STERNE A. B. CARRINGTON CASTLE WALK SHARKS D. EBEL A. G. RAMEY R. H. PAIR T. H. DOWNES O. Y. WARREN W. R. VAUCFIAN ONE STEP A. COLBERT W. J. SCOTT H. R. CROCKETI' C. B. RICHMOND H. C. THOMPSON RAC W. HERD E. E. OWEN C. G. PETERS B. P. EPES J. A. JACKSON BOSTON C. TAIT B. W. VENABLE J. A. PETERS F. G. CHRISTIAN H. M. OwEN 160 J - 1 X 'I i 'i A HJ if 1 ' - K . V i xl' 'lg' if S l I ' D W f 0 ' '. , 5 ' 'li i x Nypnfu ,ivxfxg-gaiigj-S: tm!! Lux- ' Tilt' I J i ,Vv. o 2-P1i?f1 'lil li fig V Xl iii ii, vixfi. rf. H, qi gvilii. ll, l W7 ilvli l. lf . ' I 'KM ,flips ' ft l if I I high 'Ai illihirug Gllnh Morro: Liv'd in his saddle, lov'd the chase. the course. And always ere he mounted, kissed his horse. SLOGAN: There is no royal road to wisdom, but riding beats walking a mile on a rough road. RULES OF THE ROAD: Lock your stable doors J. F. M. SIMPSON ............................ ........ ,....... .... L. e a der of the Squadrons E. E. OWEN .............................. ..... K eep-er of the Stables MAuRtcE ALLAN AND A. W. MCXVHORTER .... ...,.. . Latest Recruits H. A. RICE ...............,..,............ ..... M ost Daring W. H. WHITING .... ...........,..,., .... C o nstable MEMBERS l-ItPPot M. C. BOWLING. P. C. ADAMS. J. C. BAsxERvtLLE. J. C. GUTHRIE, T. C. Joi-tNsoN, ALCIBIADES. J. B. REYNOLDS. J. M. Sx'DENsTR1Ct4Etz, J. C. OEHLER. H. C. BROCK, E. E. HERztc, R. LYLE. J. S. TiPToN. FRENCH HUSSARS C. R. Bucc, L. C. BENEDtcr. W. T. CARRtNcToN. R. H. PAIR. W. T. RYBURN. W. W. WHHE. F. D. EBEL, R. F. GtLLEsPtE. C. E. LINDSAY, H. R. CROCKEIT. E. L. DUPUY, F. A. TERRY. P. L. PALMORE. GERMAN Liam' INEANTRY W. R. VAUGHAN. A. S. WAniNNER. A. B. Cassiwv, A. B. HoDcEs. W. J. SCOTT. L. C. TAIT, W. T. BUCHANAN, J. A. CLARKE. F. M. HARMON, E.. G. Dimsr. A. W. LEE, A. G. RAMEY. C. J. WtLsoN. EQuiTEs W. L. CARRINGTON. F. G. CHRISTIAN. H. F. DONNALLX'. J. R. EDMUNDS. B. D. MORTON. R. E. WARw1cK. A. W. MCWHORTER. J. C. FULLERTON, R. M. HALDERMAN. E. L. JACKSON. H. V. MORTON, B. W. OLIVER, H. C. THOMPSON. 161 Evangelist .... ig. Sa Exhorter ........... Fleecer of the Lambs ...... Missionaries Missionaries Missionaries Missionaries Missionaries Missionaries Missionaries Farmville ..,. Vvorsham .... Lanes Chapel .... Hard Times. the College.. Africa ..., Pens!-iursi .... Missionary to the Gentiles.. Missionaries lo Martinsburg.. Missionary to Osage lnn.. Missionaries to The Maples. Missionary to the Slums ..... Missionary to Egypt ........ ,wi- J gf A J' 'V 4 Sr '11, A tlgv x , XWWNQ I O x' if NVQ QPR sis. W' ,-' .g-2:5551 If 'I' ' 9-f I il I -I 'T airs' 'A Mianinnarg Aaanriatinn ....j. C. GUTHRIE ...P. C. ADAMS R. EDMUNDS ............R. H. PAIR, j. E. BRYAN, E. B. BRIDGES . . . .T. C. JOHNSON, G. H. PAYNE, j. M. SYDENSTRICKER C. BOWLING, J. M. SIMPSON, J. H. OEHLER .j. C. GUTHRIE, J. B. ORR, E. T. THOMPSON J. M. SIMPSON, P. C. ADAMS C. G. PETERS, C. M. WALKER .....j. C. MOORE, A. S. WARiNNEP., j. C. GUTHRIE, E. L. DUPUY ...T. j. lVlClLWAmE, O. Y. WARREN, A. W. LEE M. SLOAN . . . .K. R. SAUNDERS, M. N. FITZGERALD, A. B. HoDcEs Missionaries to the Normal School. . . .. Leader of the first fapplej crusade .... Leader of the second fpantryj crusade .... T. BUCHANAN G. RAMEY B. PENDLETON, j. A. GREGORY, W. R. VAUGHAN W. ARBUCKLE W. VENABLE Leader of the third Ccherryj crusade ...... ...... H . A. RICE Leader of the fourth fstrawberryj crusade. .. ............................ P. L. PALMORE Salvation Army ............ .. .... lVl. ALLAN, W. lVl. CILLESPIE, j. B. REYNOLDS 162 V '-1 IQI4 ENDAR -5 1 if i WU I A l f'f'f,'4' oft? 7 8 fwll f QL ' if in if Sir fry i 5 l 'ie l llnl lf ll Ut kg: -Zflrf5d5 w- ' Illnnfn Qlalvnhar 020 SEPTEMBER -First formal opening without a speech. -First formal Y. M. C. A. reception without Freshmen revels. - She leaves us with his blessings. She is going to be married. We're so glad he is taking up a profession. -English and French class rooms changed. Later. Moustaches instead of rooms. -Newman busts his bean. We have a little hard luck with the Richmond Blues. -Only two Freshmen appear on the gridiron. -Later. More than two appear in the gymnasium. More games than football are played. More pep, more speed, and more results. -More than two Freshmen appear on the football Held, three to be exact. -We hold V. M. I. to one touch down ancl a field goal. 164 fir I'lllfi'f'! UIQ r tiff, ,I if i ii f ri . sg. tb f fr f ill. ii OCTOBER l-Bags pulls off a joke: Words, words, words. 4-V. P. I. beats us by two touch downs. 6-Baskerville starts his series of entertainments. They haven't been completed as THE KALEIDOSCOPE goes to press. 7-He adds Gray's and Campbells goatees to his belt. 9-Never in the history of the college have parts suffered so severely: straining and swagging and rending in twain. I l-University settles an old debt. Well it was only our second team. l5-Simpson taken in by his Freshmen. I8-Berk and Benny practice goal kicking. We frame the Medicos l I0 to zip. Was it the varsity? Well 'er not exactly. I9-We go calic mad. D ance cards made out one week ahead. 20, 21, 22, 23-We dream of tango skirts and ballet slippers. 24-Our dreams realized. Heaven has come to earth, at least its inhabitants. 25-The 24th continued. 26-The conclusion. 29-The college loses a strong man: the boys lose a good friend, and last but not least the Graham l-louse loses its star boarder. 165 W ll i ll ri tt V lf it 1 l lic l l ef f r UB N Q- lf.. '- ll' Q , - X lf. l ll ll l i f'l l illj t l. l ittil iltt t ll lll Q ml N lt ' X me 1 X K NOVEMBER -Curses and groans, ifs and whys. Richmond College noses us out by one point. May the month not end as it began. -Ned Owen breaks with the ealic and becomes a misogynist. -We lose to Roanoke College. -Reform day for Third Passage. The poker tables in C-ilmer's Monte Carlo stand idle. Looks bad for the Dispensary. Allan, l-lalderman and the rest of the gang swear off till sun-set. -Bear Cats win the second game of the Farmville series and with it the cup. -We win from William and Mary. -Preparation for the Yellow Jackets. -Lee Tait finds a new definition for poetry, and First Passage has been suffused ever since. -Hampden-Sidney goes to Richmond. Beazley meets some old chucks in Blackstone and Pete makes a crush on a chicken and breaks an egg. -WE WIN FROM RANDOLPH-MACON 24, 25, 26-WE WON FROM RANDOLPH-MACON. -Big fight on second. Result, two dead soldiers. -jim Ebel appears before the Student Council. - Fatty very ill. Pneumonia probably or maybe he overcut Latin. Any way the doctor said it was serious. 166 a t In , li' lv WF l ' l . TS? . - M ., ' - i llli N DECEMBER 2, 3- Stride pulls off his ham joke. -We look forward to exams with anticipation. Fourth begins to look wise - Rich Donnally fails to visit second. -Many prayer circles. Sacrilices offered. All to no avail-they're on us. -Branch Epes buys a box of matches, and Dock gets some examination paper. -The plagues of Egypt are as pleasures: the labors of Hercules are infantile. Exams start in earnest. -Weeping. -Wailing -C-nashing of teeth. -A reaction not in the Chemistry book. We go home. 167 .f p A - f5s1,s5fQg:g3ggW1'g'e-l-l, of -t l l ll l ' Q . . r fifif. -.P A' 1 if Iii- . t W - fri l lg ' 1 all '37 ' 1-.gf al ix QKQXX X li-Y I ,lj lu I Q 3 If I If ! p ' f . il. W I mmm-1 U' e ,Z SL-'- u -ff: ee ,...-. JANUARY -Mississippi has a smacking good time with the ladies. -Most of us save our three dollars. Cyclone Jones saves his remaining tuition. -Dock Edmunds gets a crate of oranges. Some one else gets a crate, and it happens to be the same one. -ls the dancing teacher coming? Sh-h. - Sy's moustache tickles the Worsham Calic. - Rick Donnally too sleepy to argue in Post Science. -We get an idea, She's certainly a dream. There's a time to mourn and a time to d3l'lCC. -We loose the first basket-ball game to the Seminary. Our Idea returns with the nucleus of a second Idea. Rice falls in love. -A child is born to Hampden-Sidney. May her life be prosperous and in harmony with her sisters. -HBill Gillespie disturbed by early morning mass. -The dancing class approaches perfection. Dick Colbert learns the Hesitation. -Pan Hellenic Smoker. ll.l5. Who's the thief? 168 lk- - f g c i ?-XX lx f an il . l xxx. i V' ' X ls NN X f'7 i W ll x T g f s lin r e f l 0 ' f X 'fl fi P s ,V i ll will , J X fill . R I. lx 'Im +4 fg . H , ' . ly V M. 'N l l X X ll l I H lu r '14 igik iil l il ' 'J ef - FEBRUARY -Uncle john was seen to walk from Third Passage to the belfry without stopping. -Water on First. -Our Idear fades, to be fulfilled after Easter. -Ned Owen begins to recover and goes to see a Calic. -W. W. Arbuckle pulls a good pun. Consternation on first. -Friday the thirteenth. Anything but bad luck. The Lacy House is visited by two ministering angels. - Fatty Rice appears in chapel negligee. -Only twelve windows were broken in dorm today. -We are blessed with dreams in dresses. Rink tears off a rag. Many Alumni back. Speeches and a sermon. The prettiest dance in the history of the college was pulled off. Baxter Orr makes his debut. -Fitzgerald falls in love for the seventeenth time to date. -The approach of exams brings us back to earthly things. -We win a basketball game from William and Mary. fNote: Owing to lack of space the other accounts of basket-ball games are omitted., Unions win the debate 169 i 5 W H l A X Q X lx J fbfyf Y liter ni tts . 1 ri 4 r .Q t lj ,g l ten t u aw i R rj-3. 21, u X ing. N l 4, fb X l ,3 ' . 1' A g ki +5 as l C. MARCH 4- Dock Edmunds caught studyingg embarassing situation. Second Passage sounds like a tomb. 6-Freshmen Scott and Fullerton skipped by order of Fatty Rice, Secretary. Serious business: President Saunders, K. R., deliberates. Simpson chief eavesdropper. 7f-Who stole the ice cream? 8-Sloan is a badly slandered man. I2-When Greek meets Greekg three-fourths the Junior Greek Class busts, l 3-Friday nuff said. i6-Holiday. We all study. William John Scott gets sick on peanuts. I8- William Jennings Bryan stays sober, sorry as much can't be said for Woodrow Wilson. 20-We become dramatic. A Clee and Mandolin Club is organized. Rubenstein Rice features. 25-Campaign started by student body to raise 525,000.00 for Howard C. Montgomery Gymnasium. 26-Basky gets 1ol'inny's goat, and Latin is dismissed fifteen minutes early. 28-We win our first baseball game. 170 as he-xii? i i f flaw P i Ei . f ug- -' T 1 ffl -yhl, i i X , N-1 In 4 -44 'Ji , X . ll 1' r ' Q... H 1 'if pug --' f f r f fri , lla N l fic- Ally lk 2 i - Q fn ' APRIL. l-Some of us are fools. 2-Baseball team leaves for the South. Senior speaking. More fools. 3-Bear Cats hold a practice. Lots of pep and pretty good showing. 5-Bear Cats feel result of practice. Fifth to the tenth slip by unnoticed, as days sometimes will if you don't notice them. I0-Pep gets away from Microbe. I2-Johnson and Venable go to Worshan. I6-Boys supply themselves with raincoats, Tuck Carrington makes a speech. 20-Rip rip, the echoes call. Z6-Oehler and Herzig lose us a holiday. 28-The Anvil Chorus has an off day. 31-Several mustaches mature and hear fruit then wither away. 171 - - - ' -'YM Wig Q D X tl l lr l lll w l fi riljllfr li ffwli llllxgw l l7:1jhq f',Qv,.?? l Ll' ' l -- u .gag , 5gZ'fl'Q ' p s: -5.1- fray '. - 1 ,f i r 'Ni I , 'I 1 itii ' P , lf- e ' KA Z- ' iiiit., MAY - Rich sleeps in Egypt. -The Magazine staff considers seriously publishing another magazine. We hope they will take no rash steps. -Field day. Saunders wins some hair tonic and two haircuts. Cyclone hits the dormitory. Cyclone hits lirst. Baker sleeps in the tree tops. -Political science books seem popular. -Magazines 6655 cents. - Preacher Allan was heard to speak live words on the campus. This is only hearsay. KALEIDOSCOPE not responsible. -Tennis tournament opens with surprising results of preliminaries. -Many of us stretch our limbs in the refreshing waters of Venable's pond. -Circumstances take a serious turn. 172 vmi iivx, 1' M ,,1.i,g.,, F, W X N I vfi- - 'g-,:f,, - 1 f 1 , e gr iii! 254 I Q Lo i -, ' i ii, l N 1' , i Wi N 'Q ' 'imii' i ii fliifi 133' Wil' ' llrllvi l 11,52 if ' Ll N Haig? 'ri ., - ' ii i'l I L L - ff iw 1 J .ffj 'L rl Q-fly 'I ncfff , fi f fi 41 fr X jj pi i I L JUNE. -Many give up in dispair. R. Edmunds was seen with a book. It -Calic begin to arrive. Things loosen up. -Baccalaureate sermon. -Speaking, dancing and making merry. Diplomas awarded. -Good night ladies. 173 if i 4' L X Q- gf- was a time table though . ff- . X .,l3f,'t, ., is im was PLN. LET US IMPART TO YOU SOME RIPPING TALES Christian-Rick, you've been drinking. Rick-No l havenlt. I just ate some frog legs and you smell the hops. Rink seems to be in his second childhood. l'low's that? l-le loves to play with rag babies. Aggie-Mr. Bryan, what is an integer? Bryan-A whole fraction. Freshman-That's an awful small grand-stand there. Crockett-Yes, it's a baby grand. Dr. McWhorter-Mr. Gregory, what is lacteal Huid? Gregory Csmilingl-Whisky, I reckon, Doctor. Tuck-What does the Passover commemorate, Mr. Edmunds? Doc-Moses skipping over the house of the Israelites. Dr. McWhorter-Mr. Whaley, on what motive would you go to Mexico? Mr. Whaley-Locomotive. l've a few more points to dwell upon said Curry, as he climbed the barb wire fence 174 Bags--Mr, Orr, what is work? Mississippi-Everything. Bags-l-lumph, is this bench work? Mississippi-Yes sir, wood work. We always laugh at Pete Brock's jokes, No matter what they be: Not because they are funny jokes But because it's policy. A study in scarlet, E.dmund's chemistry notes. Cary fl A. MQ-You made me what I a Mike-Say, your clock is fast isn't it? Toady-Yes, it wouldn't stay on the wall if it wasn't. Dr. Beazley-lVlr. Payne, where do all the insects go in the winter? Payne-You can search me. A little horsing now and then is relished by the best of men. 'Tis better to recite and bust than never to recite at all. Why does Taz's mustache resemble faith? I give it up. m todayg I hope you're satisfied. It is the substance of things hoped for: the evidence of things not seen. Tuck-Mr. Buchanan, who brought the plagues upon Egypt? Taz-I don't know sir, but l have a personal interest. People who live in glass houses shouldn't throw water bags. Mrs. Edmunds-Prof. Clarke, meet Miss Easterday. Prof. Clarke-C-lad to meet you. This is another fine day, isn't it? Horrors! B. S. got hit by a baseball on the grandstand. Dr. McWhorter-Mr. Gray, what is the feminine of lad? Gray-Ladder. Christian-There were more ways of getting to town last year. Baskerville-l'low's that? Christian-Last year there was a fine coach which made daily trips, b married. 175 ut now he is Saunders-Uncle john, you were seven minutes late in ringing that bell. I have Washington time and am seven minutes after twelve. Uncle John-Oh, go 'long, Mr. Saunders, I know Washington done died a hundred years ago. Simpson-Rink, I'm glad to see that you have washed your Hoor. Rink-Go on, Simpson, just because you see suds on the floor is no reason to think that it has been washed recently. Dr. Graham-Wasn't it hot at the baseball game yesterday? Dr. Winston -Not so hot for me, for I was sitting next to Ramey, the perfect fan There was a young man named McWhorter, He had a bad rep as a flirterg His eyebrow slipped And stuck to his lip, He kissed a fair damsel and hurt her. There was a Professor named Pete, To hear his jokes was a treat: His love for Teddy, The rough and ready, Was something tender and sweet. Currie is next in the line- Some sport he's been in his time: His brown derby hat Bears witness to that, But now its on the decline. Our new professor is Beazley, We got along with him easily Till the end of the year: Marks began to appear Which made our reports look measily. Our President is known commonly as Tuck. He is certainly a wise old duck: When he goes blip, blip, Something goes rip, rip: He is certainly unparalleled for pluck. 176 Then there's a man named Clarke, At finding notes for exams he's a shark: Our answers are slack And so devoid of fact That they sadly detract from our mark There is an old fellow named Bags, About over the campus he jagsg When it comes to science He has every appliance, And therefore his class never lags. We have another called Brookes, What he knows about Math fills books When it comes to classes, About a third he passes, To outsiders how peculiar it looks. The last of our number is called Whiting He always makes his lectures exciting, If you get him wrong It will not be long Till you hnd his sarcasm real biting. '3-, Sgifiheef g' I 1 ,If r 7 - PNK Sviatiniira Oil, HE average Hampden-Sidney student is aged I9 years, stands 5 feet I0 inches - high, studies mathematics with the greatest zest, and is generally found playing five hundred. He dances half-way and drinks no better, chews one-third, smokes three-fourths, and is a quarter of the way converted to woman suffrage. Four- fifths of him belongs to the church, Presbyterianism claiming the largest share, but Bap- tist, Episcopalians, Methodists, Mormons and Heathen coming in for a goodly portion. Dr. Whiting continues to be the most popular among the Facultyg Sloan holds a corresponding position among the students. Sloan and E. T. Thompson are considered the best all-around men. Athletic leaders for football, basketball, baseball, and tennis are, respective, Ebel, Sloan, Bugg, and Reynolds: best all-around is A. B. Carrington. Simpson and Vaughan stand at opposite poles in their love for feminism, yet Simp- son is also the biggest suffragette. Warinner likes society but-Baskerville is the biggest fool and Hodges dances best. Murray, representative of the Club, eats--Johnson, representative of the Graham House, drinks-the most. Pearson is the biggest poker shark. Rice bluffs, Epes borrowsg Walker lies the most, Simpson works politics the worst: Clarke plays, Fitzgerald sings: Saunders K. looks the bestg l-lodges sports the loudest. Pendleton thinks most highly of himself. Thurman raises the worst disturbances, but Lindsay is the freshest, and Oehler is greener than either. Gillespie loafs the most, consequently studies least. Allan is his antithesis. Payne is the best oratorg Thompson excels in writing and in debate. 179 1 iii if HO HO ,f 5 X ff as ' t 1. ,l. F. B. S. M. SIMPSON-A well-known curiosity from Maryland, of insatible political activi- ties and roaming proclivities. Haunts: everywhere except second passage, top floor. May be easily located by the following method: Go to your room and wait developments and Simpson. Editor the college newspaper, keeps the college Well abreast of what is happening in its midst, and some things that are not. Original suffragette and friend of the Freshman ffor dissenting opinion see Fullerton and Scott, second passage, second Hoorl. Composes the Philanthropic Literary Society. Former instructor in military tactics. Author and publisher of How to Meet the Professors in Their Homes. OLlN ER-B. S., Dean of Architecture, Professor of l-lot Air, and general experi- menter in this field. Now engaged in computing how much an individual can swal- low without deleterious effects. One of the busiest men of his profession: general carpentry and repair work sometimes engaged in, but orders must be billed one month before time. Raised on Mellin's Food, which explains his healthy appear- ance. Carnegie Medal for a second venture on the sea of matrimony. Voice lost in early youth from Atrophism. JOHN EVANS-S. B., or Uncle John, Professor of Dustology, and inventor of the S. B. sweeping process. Certified to by Wash and Stokes Brown, and guaranteed under the pure food laws. Dust stirred, thoroughly mixed, and settled in neat layers, whence it can be carted away semi-annually. The gentleman's valet. Furnace cared for on warm days. STOKES BROWN-Financier, successor to P. Morgan 8 Co., and organizer of Hamp- den-Sidney's biggest trust. President and sole owner of the Stokes Rapid Transit Co., the Stokes Nu Style Pressing and Cleaning Co., the Stokes Public Service Corporation, and the Stokes Vaudeville and Character Troupe. Age 67 years. Education at l-lampden-Sidney College, to which the development of his peculiar traits are undoubtedly due. 180 P. TULANE ATKINSON-President of Hampden-Sidney Cas Co., Inc., manufac- turers of gas and other hot air products under the patented Atkinson process allowing an enormous supply to the consumer at an enormous sacrifice fto the consumer, of coursej but at small cost to the manufacturers. C. G. PETERS-Politician from Union, W. Va., terms easy, payment prompt. Ready salesman and efficient manager. Anything managed, canvassed, sold, organized, agitated, or pulled off-and no questions asked-from the Varsity Football team to the Hampden-Sidney Magazine. A. C. RAMEY-Commonly known as Mike, Microbe, or Pep. First two of obvious derivation: etymology of third much disputed, but probably from his pep fslangj on the baseball field. Official scorekeeper and guardian of the mascot, who is also known as Pep -possibly from the resemblance, but more likely from the close continuity. W. T. THURMAN-An athlete from Charleston, W. Va., who is making a big fuss over the entire community, and who arouses the dormant citizens of Hampden- Sidney from their lethargy almost nightly: a loyal friend, unswerving and ceaseless in his devotion to the weaker elements of the land freferences, Fullerton and Scott, second passage, second floorl 9 an inventor of wondrous and sundry comforts for his associates. H. F. DONNALLY-Logician, debater, encyclopedia, and general authority: well versed in every subject, a scholastic and direct descendant from the originator of how-many-angels-on-a-point-of-a-needle, whose peer he is readily acknowledged to be. Champion and defender of his classes from rambling statements in the lecture room, which have not been carefully pondered, weighed, and verified. A careful conservator of energy, who has startled a hemisphere by his cry: Back to Nature- sleep in the class room. J. A. ROGERS-Postmaster and Manager of the Stupendous Hart Department Store, dealers with funny notions. Some goods always in stock. Ask for what you want- you may get it. Service quick, prompt, and efficient. Attention polite and obliging, Everything for your convenience. Mr. Rogers is an ex-pugilist-which prob- ably explains his slight figidness under touch-and is always ready to demonstrate his art free gratis-if you aren't too big. He has rendered himself unpopular of ,late through his wearisome reiteration of nothing. DAN PATCH-Aviator. Farmville record, ten minutes. Driver of the Normal School Rapid Transit and pioneer in this fruitful enterprise. Usually fills his schedule. His well-grounded popularity as a driver due to his rare comliness of form and polish of manners. Distinguishing mark: a speckled bandanna. Has a musical and well modulated voice. R. W. DUPUY-Sleuth from Worsham: a member of the Burns' Detective Agency, who has been successful in many thrilling man hunts. He is tenacious, and it is impos- sible to divert him from his course. Many references. 181 1 I f f N .n X Z: ' Q! pg-swf ! . Q, M Q 'H Q A p .7 I- +o. U7 ' 4, 'DZ A , 5,-. ,X 1 ,,, I Z P N 7 5 h, Xx .WNIIII A 7 xvumm M ,IX -. vb Q X -- 'xQ 'HH ' MZ Z ll- rg, - Ls-T, ,MMXXMXXXI f E E 3 N WJ . 33: A 5,1 E 1- ARMY ' QW' ki xxxxxii?NtU,,, , A 4 -H f fa -' . 44 We MM- f'x ' 1 ' xy S' - :WMI -- 4 M X - N X 'fffiim 'U V 'WSK V' Va Z O' 4 M fs . lux m uy W W M W , 5' -W N 'T fmHn 'f Ma 'Ei W ' f k 5- 1 X f 225 W Q J 5 X . ll 31, Ll! f I .lmfkfy 1 , N' X 'IJ J-Jiif' X L. 7,31 WW X , . 1 6 I JN, ' 1 HMB L X X 3 fx 1 I N of Nj 21 I I 'fs 5 19 d f? 55 1 x7 J r V 1 f fl. Pol.:-I-,cs 1HHhn'n who---Glnntinurh 030 A. B. CARRINGTON-Renowned duelistg shoots under slight provocation, and generally without warning. Shots are usually effective, and may come in lightning succession. His weapons are carried continually on his person, and are always loaded. By- standers often inconvenienced. He has no regard, however, for person, time, or place. fReferences: A. Clarke, Memorial Hall, second floor, room No. 31. Member of Anvil Chorus. J. M. SYDENSTRICKER-Professional humorist. There are many notable successes to his credit, foremost among which is the celebrated Ham joke, which has been translated into many foreign languages. Copyrights secured, and patent pending. Dwells among the rolling hills of the Greenbrier, where pasture a thousand sheep. Has gained some distinction by his attempt to grow a mustache. W. M. GILLESPIE-Student who has won no small renown for himself through an indomitable energy of body and mind, and a rigorous abstinence from Farmville, in whose streets he is hardly known. Originator of a new laugh and a phrase which is translated Aw go on now, and means let him alone, he wants to study. M. S. CLARKE-Founder of the celebrated Clarke School of Memory. All students receive the personal attention of the instructor, who is famed for his prodigious feet. It will be remembered that he has given his undivided attention to the perusal of a page of closely written manuscript. All facts are at his mind's end. By close con- centration Cinspiration his detractors claimj he can, at any moment, recall something he ought to do. JOHN BASKERVILLE-Goatkeeperg possessor of a large and assorted flock, each of which is tended personally and daily. Has seen better days, being formerly court jester and still a man of parts. E. E.. HERZIC.-Tonsorial monstrosity. N.. ' p 66 P4 ,A W-1.-731 .1 xx-' ,.,-J f 1 . X 'if ll as to 21 1- li , ss sis ll NEEYALAZ -wi tif ZZSQQT ff 'flniifiwe' 1 1 --x - l7f ' ,: 1 r ,gp-If?-1 ' ff 183 E111 prrprtixate 11111 UIPIIIHYQ nf I lqnurarh G11vue1a11i1 i1l1In11tgnmvrg,'117 EI hum athlvtr, a mxpvrinr ntizhrnt, muh El 1118111 uf lnftg im-1115 muh uuhlr rliarartvr, 1111311 lahnrrh zralnuslg fur 1112 z1huz111rr111P11t nf rung , i11trrrst a1'fvrti11g hia A111111 9111111113 it is prnpnsrh hg the utnhrnt huhg nf igamphen-Svihneg 6511112112 in raisv 21 fuuh nf 825111111 fur 1112 rrrrtinn nf E112 iqnmarh Ol. muntgnmvrg iH1fIe1nnria11 Egmnaaium Kind reader. the privilege of helping is you Mail your contributions to P. TULANE ATKINSON, '07, Treasure Hampden-Sidney. Va. 184 A BUNCH OF US Qf0090000DDQOOOQOOOOOOOOOODO O00 0000000 ,OOOOOO OOOODQDOOODOQOOQQ OO DDODOOOOOOOOOQOD 00000 O90 OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO00000000000000OOODUODOOOOOQQDOOQDQQDDDQQQDB Poughkeepsie, New York QI Prepares young men and women for positions of trust and responsibility, and assists them to . . . . PAYING POSITIONS 111 Comprehensive courses of study, Liberal Policy, Faculty of Specialists, Strong Lecture Course, Ideal Location. Excellent record of 50 years. Ill More than 50,000 alumni. QI Prospectus and Calendar may be had upon application. Address CLEMENT C. GAINES, M. A., LL. D., President Poughkeepsie, - - - New York 5 DOO A000000 00000 QD Ci 1 UQGOQ, QQ I fi QOUOOOOGQUOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO0000000000OQOOOOOOOOOOQOQOOOO0000000 O 5 0 O O Qu 3 O O O 0 O Qu E 0 U O 3 if 9 43 0 0 Cr Cr Cv O fb 6 4? X 6 Cv 9 III 6 O O 1: v -5 O O C' O OODQQtiOOOOOOOOOOOUOQOOODO0000000000OOODOOOOOOOQOOOOOQODQOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO :.Q N S :fav P I-5 rl FE 5 CS m r Cb 55525 ' 2-T Nm 7 '-f'J-.1 IQ P' Cb ... . .4 E Qzaisjfkgf-Q: 5,-Q51 O N' Uj K4 eh C1 E SID 3 Qi 3 wwefi: P1 1: M- vi 2 ' E QQ? fb ' 2,4 :U ' S5512 5 F. S2 'f P 0 E Q:-Li 5 me '--4 O S1 E 5525 5-3 KE ' CD 2 Q ' T UD :U W CL CJ Q-i 0 5 ll? cg 2- G E., Q ' ED Q 2 E 1 I 5 Z Q :U . fu 9 w F ' P4 Q-3 Q 5 N i C5 Q CQ m H - gk : 'CQ UU P1 7 '-:J :. T4 na 93 S Q 2 Q' mx' 2 2 f'D 3 5 5, P' U CD rn 'X4 2 U, E E CD DU E. 5 . Q0 cn I? .gi : Pg P Q C3 sa 2 Q I : . 000006000000000OOOOOOOOOCOOOOOOOO000000000000 000000000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 1 109 EAST BROAD STREET Richmond - Virginia V , OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO Q D 90000000000000000OOOOOOOOOQQGUUQOQQQQOOODOQOOOOOQOOOOOOOOOOOOOG 0 IXIII l,l2l,l,l, l,l,l,l,l l l ,l2l2l,l l2l,u,l, l, a 00000 A Q0000 gi .- - 3 'f V ll M x 'i tl all t Every kind of dance music is yours with a Victrola Suit yourself about what you Want to dance, and he sure you can have it with the Victrola. Certainly an easy way to get music for danc- ing-ancl the best Way too, for the Victrola not only offers you the greatest variety, but plays all selections in perfect dance rhythm. Come in and hear the Victrola-we'll play any music for you. And we'll tell you how you can get a Victrola C315 to S2001 or a Victor KSIO to S1001 on easy terms, if desired. . We'll gladly mail you catalogue and latest list of records for the aslcing. lt will aid you in the selection of one of these delight- fully entertaining instruments. THE CORLEY COMPANY The House that Made Richmond Musical 2l3 East Broad Street RICHMOND, VA. I Ill l,I l l,l,l2l2l l,l2l,l l H l . I . I I -Q 4 1 , Cfl 2 3 3 S 0 3 8 5 3 5 Et -:E ' QCBDQODU ' WE WANT REPRESENTATIVES Every opportunity is given Agents to acquaint themselves with the business and become producers. lrrite to-day for particulars. 'O Pacitic Mutual lite Ins. Gu. GARLAND 8: MARTIN STATE MANAGERS FARMVILLE. VIRGINIA FRATERNITY BADGES Ann JEWELRY MADE BY Burr, Patterson 8. Co. 4' The 'E' Fraternity Jewelers DETROIT MICHIGAN IS GUARANTEED AGAINST BREAKAGE OR STONES FALLING OUT. iii? Write for FRATERNITY JEWELRY CATALOGUE Great Books at Reduced Prices! Able Discussions of Vital Themes by Noted Authors Driginally Sold from 51.00 to 81.50 Our Special Price 50 Cents Write for booklet Presbyterian Gummitteeuf Publication Richmond Va. Texarkana, Ark.-Texas. Mary Baldwin Seminary 2 For Young Ladies STAUNTON, - VIRGINIA Term begins Sept. l0lh, l9l4 Located in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. dal' Unsurpassed climate, beautiful grounds and modern appoint- ments. Students past session from 35 States. Temis mod- erate. Pupils enter any time. Send for catalogue. MISSE C WEIMAII - - Principal. A ,QC GCD O - 0 I o I o. I o I . . UQUCEOQOUCGDQQQOOOOQOOQQQOQQDOQQQOQQOQQQQQAQC OCQQOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOC500000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOUOUC 9000000000052 5 - 0 E SI D . WHITE DRUG Go. 5 3 tokes avldson Q g FARNIVILLE, VIRGINIA Q , 3 ESTABLISHED 1868 I o 3 Wholesale and Retail 0 3 The confidence of the commu- 8 Q O S nity for nearly half a ceuturyf' 5 . AGENCY FOR WATERMAN Q O D '- ' FOUNTAIN PENS Z3 0 1 x ii 0 Q Orders taken for all kinds of Q 3 ENGRA VING 3 3 Prices and Samples on application 3 O ci Q Q Hampden-Sidney Mail Orders Promptly 3 FARMVILLE VIRGINIA Filled 3 3 3 0 Q 0 0 3 3 0 0 n O E T L Y 6 3 W. T. IIGYNR VE UAL O Youll need, and then, yozfll want 3 Q the BEST, you'1l buyg 3 0 Funeral Dlrector Edwin Clapps Shoes 86.00 and upwards 3 3 .1 and .T Walk-Over shoes . . 53.5010 ss.00 0 3 Hgolstonialgil Shoes . to If 3 ' ' s ' ts . . t . 3 Furniture Dealer Hli1wllesq'Hag . 2.00 Ig 3.00 3 0 ulnterwovenl' Hose . . 25c and 50c 0 2 'io Arrow Brand Collars . 2 for 25c 3 5 Ed. V. Price sz Co's. tailoring line of xg 3 D D . Made-to-Measure 1? A full lzne of Furniture suitable 3 3 fgr Students Victor Caps . . 50c, 31.00 and 31.50 3 Q Latest New York Styles in 3 3 IUENS NECKlVEAR 3, G 5 Graphophones, :: Records, GUE U5 A CALL Q 0 ' O 0 Pianos and Organs I 3 WMP P,t Et N. B. DAVIDSON Q r, :: , . - Q a ape 'C Wes C FARMVILLE . - VIRGINIA 8 g 3 cf 3 OQQDODQ0OODO OOQOQQCPQQD5Z! Ci000 000Ci0Ci00000WfCT0Ci00S0000000T00000000000000 00000000000 . 00000000 00 0000000000000 A .O0000000000000000000 50 00000 . Q 000 1 0 f0 00 0650010 D. Martin eweler and '0ptieian SSQERS prin i ng TO THE .-, 'O . -.L .-1s5S'SIv4o5'f'g-Us-1 lavfapoqpgvv . 9.0 . .4 Q. 45,7 will Ney 1115- .- 511' rf xv , v x' vw- ' ,ral 7 v 95 .' 10 'vin-D Up-to-date in every particular. College Jewelry a specialty. z: Full line of Hampden-Sidney Goods, See our college agg Main Street 1 ifarmuillv Qvralh Q TCI lI il E3 All work done neatly, quickly. and guaranteed to give satisfaction df Address Z T H E H E R A L D 1 FARMVILLE - - VIRGINIA G. M. ROBESON. President E. T. BONDURANT, Vice-President I, L. BUCG. Cashier J. W. HUBBARD. Asst. Cashier Qeoples .Wational Bank The Peoples Depository 95 we would appreciate your bank account FIRST NATIUNAL BANK FARMVILLE. VA. The Largest and Strongest Bank in this Section of Virginia QQ ASSETS UVEH UNE HALF MILLION UULLANS Q9 We respectfully solicit your Banking Business. Write or call on us OFFICERS N. B. DAVIDSON. President A. C. CLAPHAM. Vice-Presdenr '7' E. SCOTT MARTIN. vs..-Pf.sza...f V. VAIDEN. Cashier A. C. OGBURN. Jr.. Asst. Cashier 00 000000 00320000 j 30Q003Zl0300003D. 2 T D000 .I 30i030?0000D?030I032zD3D . 00001000 . DODDDODDQODDODOD 000900 . D 30 2 3 3 Q 3 2 3 5 3 3 3 3... N0 00000000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000000000 30000000000 O 0 0 g Good Athletic Supplies sold at Right Prices E: in a Polite Manner Q rfums N BASEBALL .ig M 3 GULF LACROSSE 3 7'.' :L We play to the young man. sg We Ht wItI'1 C I-4 CAMP SUPP'-'Es C L O T H E S tailored at 'Q' ALEX.TAYLOR8l.CO. :zz .Athletic Outfitfers li, Taylor Bldg. 26 E. 42nd Sl. New Y? J If you missusay ZZUNK C,Carter.Agt ji: A We give him patch pockets, :P h I I I . r w h ld Eg: C G S inilpiizhgih irlogzeis. S .:IJvvaeg1pZ 12 ' new things in Hats and Shoes. 8' The Pure Food Jtore 2 Q FAMILY GROCERS LQ:-XT Cheatham CIotIung O DeaIcrs in 0 . 11 Q: Cxgars and Tobacco 1 Cornpa y 6 Ffulfs and, Candles LYNCHBURG - VIRGINIA 2 Gypsme for the XXI:-1IIs 6 fn 6, Y . 2 - 3 P XI Q 60 O I . , ' r r r 21 Lf- - I 2 M0 ORE S i Q THE ORIGINAL NON-LEAKABLE 0 A 0 3 ' O ,.......,.....--.---5 3 The one best fountain pen lor you-ASK Youn DEALER vvmf? O POR SALE AT ALL COLLEGE BOOKSTORES AND DEALERS: De'C'iP'i Z':'::q'u e':tp'i h m'ned 3 Every hianre Non-Leakable Founlain Pen carrie: wilh il the mos! uncondilianal guaranlee Co., Mlnufactvlrers, ADAMS, CUSHING 8 FOSTER, selling Agents 168 Devonshire Street, Boston, Mass. Jacob Ebel 8. Sons illllerrhant Efailnrn 14 NORTH NINTH STREET RICHMOND - - VIRGINIA A. GOLDFIN Dlerclzant Tailor MAKES SUITS TO ORDER Cleaning, Pressing and Repairing 95 Third Sn-ees FARMVILLE. VA. LQQQQQ Qy4:rOCl :fr afrlfnfv sfntfnfr 4:1 Qufuf 00 00 0000 00 00 00 32000000 , 004 0000000000 000 0 00000 . 000.00000 Q 0000 1 .000000000000000000000C'.000000000000000000D DD ' 6002500 OOOOC' OO'C'C Z'C Cl UOU4543rO0Q4ZECfQ0OiOO0O0 '50C7O R. A. Baldwin 6: Sons AGENTS ROYAL TAILORS BARRY SHOES INTERWOVEN SOCKS LeMAR CRAVATS HEDDEN HATS Always tl1e Newest Styles in Stock 1162 Hotel Richmond Richmond, Uirginia ri I.l A, EUROPEAN PI,AN-Three Elegant ji Dining Rooms!Cafe Service Unsur- passeclf-300 Rooms en suite with Private Bath-Location, in tlie business Center. fronting the beautiful Capitol Parlc. wxufs Fon Boo1cLE'r 5. 'fi .gTK1Nj'0N, Manager MADE ' ' ' g Pho tographs BY UnIOII Thiiiiltlglllill Seminary gf i'-l'1 RICHMOND, VA. O full E ui ed Semin . vvi ll 5 v n in- g H ' G k grixctoii. rgodllin metlxoclgrgf teaglminiz find a 6 praciigal course of study. inclludigg lfeiiclgsgfic 335 515. cPSZi.meitii5 uifeF2.' gi1..'Q.f is rlifi 4 ' Are satisfactory in quality and in price gioiis. yNwfD:11d fhiliouehlvnavvvipffd 511515- ' 1 km' Simons mfff 1l.i.dmiii2T.,f.E0.fQ'diZ Sjijjriilberg For catalog or other information. Never Rushed apply to . ' l 1'A1Wm BUSY RICHMOND- VA' ww. MOORE. D. D.. LL. D., President I I I ' C C C O W N WEST VIRGINIA. - LEWISBURG : . . 'E C . Greenlaner Preslayterlal Undertaker and furniture Qealer , , 5 Mllltary School 7 W ' ' An -t -dat ilitary boarding school for 75 boys. : Matting Llnoleum Rugs Largjpcocifps gf Ixistructors-all college graduates. De- .. - ' - i i . ric lzuil 'n s. dernc nv ni n . FL '1'f 1 1ffS fo' College BOYS A SPSCHHY i?lfi.il.iTf..11.i,B Tll.....i5JE. m'E.....'l1.Q .SdfZZ. E -E FARMVILLE. VA. COL. H. B. MOORE. A. M., Principal 3 . O gg A Qmaoinan 3 WEBSTER'S Copying and Enlarging Developing and Printing 55 NEW INTERNATIONAL C5 Your-lf: CF DICTIONARY THE MERRLAM WEBSTER Tlgfagggeggiv unabridged dictionary in T':Q Q i Q Q Lz Q f i AnEncyc1o?edia. Contains the pitlz and U J - - Tissfgzc? odentauthoritatxzg 1:21-ary. ' ' e n 1 ' N v 35 Divif1eHVPageionary W1 e en Parlc Avenue 1 400,000 Words Defined. 2700 Pages. - 6000 Illustrations. Cost 5400,000. , Write for sample pages. - 1 G. 8! C. CO. , Springfield,MAu.,U.S.A. ' Mention this paper, receive FREE, set of Pocket Mapu. 1 Baltimore. Md. K0l'l3KS Bild SllDlJliBS l.3l'IlEfll Slides QQ OOCPOOOC' OO.OOO.Ct1Cf00Ck DOO D'OC'O0 3333333030 D DOl3O!3OOCfCvO0'5C5UDIEODDQQODDDDDUD DD 3283 . 03533 1 000000000OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOGQQOOOOOOOOOQQU UDQUUQQDQ A O39 'ff 1 W 5 FW!lllll!lllllli!!lllliBGH 3 9 , 2 Q 2 QGOOOOGOOQOOOOOOOQOQOGQQ 3 Q 3 3 OOOOOOOOOOQOGOOOOOQOOGQO 3 3 Q '1'I'IE VIRGINIA CAFE, ZARKALIS FD. ATHANASSIOU. ----- Proprietors I The Hungry .Man's Eden O XE Q OPEN DAY and NIGHT MEALS COOKED TO ORDER ' COURTEOUS TREATMENT SATISFACTION GUARANTEED O 300 O Q E O O O O 3 O 3 Q 3 O D Q 3 5 D O 0 O D O O 0 O O O O O 9 3 0 O 5 5 Ck 8 SQ iQ Ig CFD O DQ ' A C8ZlCEC8Z85DO45QOO0OQ0OO3 ,QDOUCI . OODOOODDDOOOBIFD DDD, 3 gi S , 3 PAULETT SI BUGG If you .are 1ntereEted 111 lTlllS1C of any kind, HARDWARE for aiiy purpose or any instrument, mite AND SPORTING HIIIUS, Noble 80 EIUTBUQB GOODS Also Publishers of COLLEGE TEXT BOOKS, Q TRANSLATION GUNS AND AMMUNITION ' FINE POCKET KNIVES EVEREADY FLASH LIGHTS IVER JOHNSON BICYCLES OVERLAND A UTOMOBILES 'west street Farmville, Virginia NEW YURK QIIY M0000QOOGOUQOOOQOOOOOOOQDOOOOOOOOOOOOGQODDDDQQD ' And BOOKS ON INTERCOLLE- GIATE DEBATES and ORATORY QCPCiCECiCiCECfCUSfCiQUQl 1335 OQQOOOOOOOOCECI OOOOQQQGQQUGQBJUGQQCWGQOQOGQQOOOOOOO 000 00033 . 000000 00000 gQQUQGUUUQQQUUQQQDHQQDQUDQQQQUQHHDDHQHHQQQUQUQQDUQHQQDQGQQGGDQQHg 6 UUQDUUDUQUQQQQQUQQQOQ Q ,,, GQUUUUUQUUDUUQQQQ 'W U 5 ,.................... H 2 E S O . :II . ax? . Db C:b he uQ:i:jE ,PU '-...mi I m Q E Z w Q CJ 5 0 :' A g on E uf ........ C 8 rt fi inf: . S E : Q 5 'H D5 :U . C2 - .................... M Z U5 nf I I-4 QQ. QUQQQQDQDQQDQDQQQDDQUDQDUDD QUUUQQUQUQQGGQUQ5QQQQQQGQQ ' , UQDOBDDDQUDUQDQQDQQDD 1 Q Q , E QOOOO0000000ODODOODODOQD00090909QDQDDQDDODUQDDDDDDQDQDQDQDDUUHQUg 00000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000-7' 00000000000000000000 C100 H Q 0 , 0 00 00000 . 000000, f ' . 0 V I 'Q00j - i 00' 0000000 00 00 THE SAVAGE AUTUMATIG PISTUL NAT ,H ,F t,414 J 11l Huiij ,av 4 W-T ' eil-x ' X H1 v P ,S .-fig ? e ,X :I j sp SPECIAL FEATURES EMBODIED III THIS ARM WHICH WILL APPEAL T0 YOU. Ten Shots -Doublethe number in an ordinary revolver. and two more than other automatics. Accuracy-'Ifhe only automatic which locks at the breech, while the bullet traverses the barrel, insuring extreme accuracy, as well as freedom from fouling. SimDlIcityfFewer parts than other automatics. Completely dismounts by hand, without the aid of tools. -Safety7Breech automatically locked during the timeof discharge, cannot he fired unless the trig- ger is pulled. Safety positively locks it against discharge. Convenience - Length only GH inches. Weighs but 19 ouncesg fullbblued finish. SAVAGE ARMS CO. 502 SAVAGE AVENUE. UTICA. N. Y. W. J. Hillsman 81, Gu. Regal Shoes The .Yhoe That Proves READY-TO-WEAR CLOTHING AND GENT'S FURNISHING FN NJ Agents for Klee if Co., Edward Straus fd Co.. B. Stern Cd Son and Wanamaker EJ? Brown made-to-measure Clothing Farmville and Lynchburg GO TO GARLAND 81, MGINTUSH o e Toilet QArticles Kodaks, Films and Supplies Monogram Literary Paper The Best 51.00 Fountain Pen Made Visiting Cards Engraved YOU WILL FIND WHAT YOU WANT HERE Auto Livery Prompt Service Careful Driving Patronuge Solicited Please Call up Phone 259 HUGH PATCH 000 0000000000 00000 00 ,000 Q ' A 00060000200 00000000lZi00Ci 00 3 P00 93! ooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooocvoooooooo-soooolcioooooooocvooo-:ooo 3 2 E 3 T Ci 331000 If it's something to smoke: CIGARS, PIPES or CIC- ARETTES. lfit's SOD.-I 3 WATER or ICE CREAM. gi If it's CANDY. lf it's 3 MEDICINES. lf it's any- thing in the present day Ci Drug Store Li11e,we have it. The Best That Can Be Bought TOILET ARTICLES or O00 CET IT HERE Q EARMVILLE 3 3 PHARMACY 3 3 rn The Big Drug Store on the Corner O 1 i 1 g 1776 1914 Ci . 3 HAMPDEN-SIDNE Y COLLEGE . Able faculty, Select Student Body if Drawn From Eleven States I 0 A 2 l 3 ' in 0' ', ' , E ' H gh standards and thorough work Marked Moral and 1' I intellectual tone. Extensive campus of rare beauty. Mod- 5 ' ern athletic field. Courses leading to degrees of B. A.. B. 'f B S.. B. Litt.. M. A. Steam heat, gas, baths and other modern conveniences. Expenses moderate. Delightful climate. 2 139th Session will begin September 10, 1914. :: :: :: Q Q U For Catalogue or olher information aflrlrs-ss 3 f ' O Q PRESIDENT H. TUCKER GRAHAM, D. D. Q f HAMPDEN-SIDNEY - - - VIRGINIA 3 Q 1.2 QQDQQQQDD DDOEODDOO0Q I 1 1 akul mwznuwma, gwwnmmfmwnmmgyw vAmfumnwnm. vnv1wnmnwn, 1 J Mm Hi l ull. Axuwflxluwwn. ' Ml!! V E' Q r L n if I-5 .Q 4: 1 ' A 3 if Q Wm 3 llhmxl 4 Vw I AA N I E Q 5 S c 5 E1 Q 4 ,Q 1 1 3 3 1 23 Z7 1 gf J f 3 N H Q Q 1 6 fy X Z ff . ' X X f ,KC 1' f 2 Z A H 3 3 ,af E'- Q ,Q 1 en ' E 'E 1, ff Z X :A I f ff' M f Q 1 ff 0 ' . X v : f N Q I OUR PILNNANT UIRI, Y, 2 , ' 'I nu, r.'.,ll.w.- lm.....l ,..,l.lf.-.,1,..m .W l'w.,...,.1 lrum..-fy - 'V mring m lln- fm-1 :hm uf- spur., rm mmf ur vx,rr'ra-.af m ' mum- .-url. .,..l..1f.l...,1 ...mmf flu' Aw., nm, mn l..- ,.f...1...N.-.I BALTIMORE' MD' 1.,',,,1,.f.,.g ff, u.- f.-fa-f W. ,..f1.....,1.v...1,.,. ..,1..'f ml.-. Slnwiulists Im Collvgl, Annuals :Q I F' 5' UZiiI 'V ' wg n ffv v ni , ' mmf m um' 4 s 'm' . Q .5, 'm vwwvvfv vwJvvvwwUJwvwwWmwMvwwwmmlmummm Mnmmm uw w,mmyUNW M77 ll, :I S 4 Q ii qi -il 4 Y: 4. 2. 5, -A Q el 2 2 5. :J S1 1: Q, gl E 2 2 Q Q . . . 2 , A AIIBUAWAWAWIASUIAUIXVAK , , ' ,.., , , . . .!ikMl!kUlXUi!lN,M!Q!l!1kULUASUM-AUQWZIWJAUHWI NU PRIVATE Hu, Hu PRIVATE BRANCH vs um: mu BRANCH EXCHANGE IHXI un EXCHANGE UUR We Printed College Annual U. of 1. P.s m J.H.U. H.s.c. G.WCIL W1F.S F.U.M. ST. J. M.A.C. B.c.c. RECORD In the Years o 1914 1912-1913-1914 1913-1914 1914 1912-1913-1914 1914 1912-1913-1914 1914 1911-'12-'13-14 1914 1910-'l 1-'12-'13-'14 Iggg v v v v rv v 1 u 1 A V J I rn r bm l 1 ull 1 in Ill, , ST.PAUL lST.PAUL 7 7 2 0 0 2 7 7 9 7 8 D D 5 D 9 I H . M Q for f 7 GC D IN 535557 fEn:iT 'VEWNYNYNHVI 7i7 7i ' KVEXUHXUYNYNINI I ' ' 'NEWiVHWNHW?NfWi.liFYE7iiWY7NiNJLWNHY'YSWFWNINVNINVEWNli X ODDDODDDDDDODDOOOOODQOOOOO OOOOODODOODOOODDDOD 3 5 Q 3 2 OO OO 19 0 f M3 3 2 3 Qg 5 wp 'o Q Vs , QD D Cf y 92 2 5 3 2 3 3 3 3 E 3 -mf Euzcmle Cm ENGRAVING Co. is B U F FALO. N.Y ' Wt' MADE 7716 ENGRAVINGS FOR 77115 BOOK. 13 2-Q Q C500 C5 Q 3 3 2 2 3 2 2 3 3 3 Q 3 2 Some, 202 r- v .H- ' 333' '1 L. Q.. s , bf- f- . -S 3 - 41 . 7 n V - Q . . . ' ze f I v ' O 9, . .'YP . Q WW f 'Pe 4 T' I 'K-. .', up-. - x - 2 '-E5 ??W f . , . Q I-I 0 X .nc Q Q 5 J U .ng 1- ?1':rx,: :A -' :gr I y U . ' I 1 :sv P Gwyn' A I 1 I - , O S O 0 0 I A I s Q, ,I , - r . 'gp -EIL. thnx? 5 53.14 :'..r , .v .f .g' sw, ' :L . 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