Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA)

 - Class of 1915

Page 1 of 222

 

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1915 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 7, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 11, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
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Page 14, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 15, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
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Page 8, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 9, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
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Page 12, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 13, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
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Page 16, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collectionPage 17, 1915 Edition, Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 222 of the 1915 volume:

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Ip, ' A, xl Ol'44'l: QILQ? O 'A mn, ,f 0413! I AI',,-'fI,I-0 ,hotbar 'Af u 'O 'IU ,Ji Qi, og I4 ', . y I. .' -3 . ,, , a :4 41 1. fn. 'SSI . , 1 Irol G -5? H49 m 1... ' 501 bb' VIEW OF CAMPUS l T, QS N M if 41. fl sf 1 + R W I xx X 1 KRW Y 1 WW M ff Z j 7 X ff if 'W K M i 14 u N QN K as N! N? MN . if P69tll'XG5 -l' 'f DEDICATION To Br. QPIIIIQI Uurkrr Graham our Beloved President The Staff respectfully oleoieoeee the Volume of the Keleioroeeooe DR. HENRY TUCKER GRAHAM G3 -'Z 1 COLLEGE LIBRARY HAMPDLN-SYDNEY, vA. J, MISS VIRGINIA THOMAS LITERARY SPONSOR A P I Y I , f - -4 4 I lialvihunrnpe Staff T. CARY JOHNSON .... ............ E ditor-in-Chief CHARLES R. Bucc. . CHARLES G. PETERS. ARCHER A. WILSON. Assistant Editor-in-Chief .........Business Manager . . . . . . . .Assistant Business Manager E.. B. PENDLETON ........ ............... A thtetics HOLCOMB R. CROCRETT ..... ..., C finds and Statistics P. C. ADAMS .......... ....... P hotographs BEN. W. VENABLE .... ......... A rt Editor T. H. MCC-AVACK ..... .... A ssistant Art Editor B. D. MORTON .... M. ALLAN ........ CHARLES G. PETERS ...Editor-in-Chief . . . .Assistant Editor . . . .Assistant Ectitor W. SCOTT ....... ......... B usiness Manager H. C. THOMPSON. . . A. G. RAMEY .... R. E. WARWICK .... J. M. SYDENSTRICKER .... F. C.. CHRISTIAN .... C. B. ROBERTSON. . , . .... Assistant Business Manager ........Athletics .....Exci1anges ........Y.M.C.A. . . . .College and Campus . . . . . . .Alumni Notes Kalrihnsrnpn Staff T. H. McGAVACK H. R. CROCKETI' A. A. WILSON T. C. JOHNSON C. R. BUGG L. C. TAIT B. W. VENABLE E.. B. PENDLETON P. C. ADAMS C. G. PETERS Magazin? Staff B. D. MORTON W. J. SCOTT F. G. CHRISTIAN J. M. SYDENSTRICKER C. B. ROBERTSON A. G. RAMEY C. G. PETERS H. C. THOMPSON M. ALLEN R. E. WARWICK lgrrsihent iq. Efurkm' Csralizun, BB. Fi 4 4:1 N the one hundred and thirty-eight years of its history l-lampden-Sidney had CD twenty-one presidents, sixteen of whom have been ministers of the Presby- nrw terian Church. ln this line of succession are to be found names illustrious and distinguished in the annals of the church and of Christian education. 6 The list includes, among others not less worthy and efhcient, the Princeton Q Smiths-Samuel Stanhope and John Blair, Archibald Alexander. Moses QW Hoge, the elder, Jonathan P. Cushing, Lewis W. Green, M. P. 5 Atkinson and Richard Mcllwaine. The mere mention of these names is QQ significant of the high history of the old college, and of the standard of ideals, character and scholarship that has been maintained within its walls Q now these hundred years and more. To fall heir to such a tradition, therefore-to be called to catch up the mantle of leadership from the shoulders of these fathers in Israel, to be made one more link in so wonder- ful a chain of succession-surely that is a princely legacy, a splendid challenge, a sacred privilege and a mighty responsibility. To the subject of this sketch, the Rev. I-l. Tucker Graham, came such a challenge when on the twelfth of November, l908, he was called by the Board of Trustees to become the president of Hampden-Sidney College: to him was bequeathed the royal legacy embodied in the historic institution of the Revolution, when on the ninth of june, I909, he was formally inducted into that olhce, and had placed in his hands the keys to all the accummulated treasures of the collegeg and from that day forth the privilege has been his of sitting in the seat formerly occupied by l-loge and Alexander and Atkinson and Mcllwaine and the rest, nor less his the responsibility of striving to uphold their ideals and to guide the college to its further destiny of larger and wider service. No mean distinction, this-no ordinary call, and such a responsibility as who shall measure. How Mr. Graham's election to the presidency was received by the friends of the college and the public generally may be seen from these words of the Hampden-Sidney Bulletin for January, l909: The best news which this Bulletin will carry to its readers is the announcement that our Board of Trustees, on November l2, l908, elected Rev. H. Tucker Graham, of Farmville, Va., to the presidency of the college. fprof. W. H. Whiting, In what spirit Mr. Graham accepted this high honor and entered upon the duties of his new oflice may be gathered from the Commencement Bulletin for l909, as 11 follows: President Graham, in a brief speech, accepted the trust, promised as far as in him lay to discharge the duties of his office so as to promote the best interest of the college, to further sound and thorough training, and to maintain the history and traditions of the institution. How far President Graham has been permitted in the six years that have since elapsed to carry out this eminently sane and practical, though not less exacting, program will be shown later on. In the meanwhile let us hear from one particularly well qualified to speak of the needs of the college and of the special fitness of the newly elected president to meet those needs- President W. W. Moore, of Union Theological Seminary. Writing for The Presbyterian of the South soon after Mr. C-raham's election, Dr. Moore says: All the friends of Christian education and especially the alumni and friends and students of the college are to be congratulated on the result of the careful and earnest efforts of the Board of Trustees to secure for the institution a president with just the qualifications needed to conserve the best traditions of the college and maintain its high standard of scholarship and character and lead it on to larger usefulness .... Mr. Graham is a beloved and honored member of a beloved and honored family, being a son of the venerated flatej Dr. James R. Graham, of Winchester, Va .... Born in IS65, he is now just in his early prime and brings to his work all the enthusiasm and vigor of youth and at the same time the sober judgment and poise of mature manhood and the experience and skill in affairs, which are needed for the responsible position to which he has been chosen. Continuing, Dr. Moore says: l-le knows the needs and possibilities of the college, and he brings to the work of relieving the one and realizing the other the most desirable combination of qualities .... That her alumni and her patrons will rejoice in the coming of another energetic and resourceful Christian leader to continue the long and distinguished line of her presidents, and that they will give him hearty and generous support in the great work he has undertaken on behalf of liberal culture and Christian manhood are propositions which do not admit of question. To the old college, congratulations: to the new president, greetings. Thus warmly was President Graham greeted upon the threshold of his office, and thus auspiciously was he inducted into the privileges and responsibilities of that office. But it is not the entrance upon a course, always, that is hard, that really countsg it is rather the continuance in the work once undertaken and the prosecution of ani enterprise to a successful issue. After all, whatever may be said of traditions and equipment, the one as necessary as the other is inspiring, it is not so much what a man may be said to bring to his task, as what he actually puts into it and gets out of it that will in the last analysis determine whether his career is to be accounted a success or a failure. The compliments paid a man upon his election to an office of honor and trust are not to be disparaged and may well be cherished, but the recognition that comes as a result of patient toil, persistent effort, and useful service is even more highly to be prized and coveted. With such a standard of worth, such a test of efficiency before him, the present head of the college may well be gratified at the assurances of approval and commendation he has received from various quarters since he undertook the duties of his new and difficult position. One year after he became president he was honored with the degree of D. D. from Washington and Lee University, and two years later he was given the same degree by 12 the University of Pittsburgh. Thus the world outside has been delighted to honor a man who has commended himself to its favorable attention by virtue of his high ofhce and his discharge of its duties. But better still, in the sixth year of his administration-a period flatteringly short in connection with the peculiar honor about to be mentioned, but sufficiently long to insure its sincerity and to enhance its value-comes this significant tribute to their president from those in a position to know him best and to appreciate him most, from the students themselves in the person of their chosen representatives, THE KALEIDOSCOPE Staff- comes this tribute, the dedication to Dr. Graham of THE KALEIDOSCOPE for l9l4-l5. To receive such a mark of approval from those over whom one is placed in so intimate and difficult a relation must be regarded as indeed a compliment and a pledge of acceptable and satisfactory service. At a distance the world may applaud and speak kindly words, and such expressions may not be so significant, however pleasant and true, but when they whose fortunes are directly involved, when they who come in close and daily contact with an official are constrained to publish to the world their voluntary verdict of commendation and confidence, surely nothing better could be desired as a commentary on the way in which the tasks have been met and the work has been done. So much for complimentary recognition from without and for sympathetic approval from within. But what are some of the important results that have actually been accomplished for the college in the last five or six years? In answer, we shall let the record speak for itself. The following clear and comprehensive statement of the situation that faced the president when he entered upon the duties of his office six years ago and of the results that have been achieved since then is taken from the Commencement Bulletin for l9I 3, being itself a part of the Presiclent's annual Report there printed: When in the year l908 you called me to the presidency, the college was facing five serious problems which called for prompt solution: QIJ To overcome the agitation and unrest that resulted inevitably from several causes, chief among which was the removal of the Seminary to Richmond: Q21 To put the present 'college plant' in first-class condition with modern equipment and conveniencesg Q31 To get rid of a chronic debt: Q45 To bring our entrance requirements up to the I4-unit standardg Q5 and most difficult of alll To increase our enrollment while increasing the requirements for entrance. I am grateful to report that these problems have been satisfactorily met. Agitation and uncertainty have been laid to rest, and the public, far and near, now clearly realize that the college is past its crisis and is in a healthy and prosperous condition .... Our present plant has been thoroughly overhauled and equipped with steam heat, gas, baths, and all modern conveniences. Granolithic walks have been laid, and water has been introduced into most of the Faculty residences. Other buildings have been renovated and extensive improvment has been made therein. A chronic deficit has been turned into a modest surplus .... and this in spite of the fact that our annual expense budget has been materially increased .... Our entrance requirements have been raised to the national standard of I4 units and our college curriculum has been correspondingly broadened and stiffened. Moreover, while these more rigid requirements have compelld us to decline to admit a number of applicants, we still have been able to increase our enrollment about 20 per cent. 13 Such a statement is eonugh to have recorded of a period even longer than live years, and no further comment is needed. But if it were, these words from Samuel E.. Osborn f'0lJ would certainly be sufficient: Dr, Graham is doing a great work and by his splendid efforts is raising the standard all along the line. Or these words from Chas. D. McKinney, Esq., of Atlanta: We are rejoiced to note the signs of progress everywhere about the 'l'lill', and the general feeling among the Faculty, the Trustees, the students and other alumni, that the institution is now doing the best work of its career, and that the era of its greatest usefulness is just ahead. Dr. Graham is an ardent lover of the old college with its record of achievement and its legacy of traditions, and he is also an earnest and enthusiastic believer in its greater destiny which he is convinced still lies ahead. The noble history of the college and its many fine associations are very dear to his heart, and it is his cherished desire to see his venerable, but ever youthful Alma Mater prosper and grow in usefulness as the days go by. It is not necessary here to speak of all the characteristics, personal and official, by which President Graham is so well known to the students, his associates and friends generally: the mention of two or three only will suffice for the present sketch. One requisite which he brings to the work of his office, most valuable for any executive head, is the determination, when once he has conceived the necessity or desirability of a certain course, to carry it through to successful completion. Coupled with this are two other requisites, not less valuable, his uniform equanimity and his splendid optimism. l-le knows how to exercise the virtue of self-control, and he can oftentimes, under the most trying circumstances, smile cheerfully and hopefully. That he is a high-class optimist anyone will concede who has gone with him through an athletic season at Hampden-Sidney. l-le never loses faith in the excellence of the home team, and when others have given up in despair, he is still able to account satisfactorily for the latest defeat and to predict a victory for the next time and the cup itself at the end. l-lis unfeigned and unfailing interest in athletics, by the way, serves not a little to bring hirii into closer and more helpful touch with the students. He loves and eagerly follows all the athletic activities of the college, and were it consistent with presidential dignity and the rules of the league, he might, with little persuasion, almost be counted on to make a good line man in football or an out-and-out championship pitcher. As it is, he is still an excellent match for any man of the tennis court, where he both follows and sets the pace in the fastest company going . The students know of his love for good athletics, know that he is with them in defeat as in victory-and appreciate his interest in this side of their college life. There is also another fact about their president which they know and do not fail to appreciate. Whenever a man gets a broken nose in football or a spiked ankle in baseball or a back-breaking blow in basket ball, he can be sure that Dr. Graham, almost as soon as he learns of the accident, will be at his bedside to sympa- thize, to advise and to help. That Dr. Graham is an experienced speaker both in the pulpit and on the platform need hardly be mentioned, for he has on many occasions, in this capacity, spoken for himself. But it is not every public man who knows how to preside with dignity and ease 14 and felicity, and in the role of presiding officer it may be said that Dr. Graham is one among many. The difficult task of introducing others he has reduced to a fine art. His sallies of wit, his playful puns, his good-humored thrusts, his courtly compliments, and his graceful platform manner are familiar to all. And not only on the platform, but in personal intercourse as well, he never lacks for a reply, and when there is a sword-play of wit, woe betide the man who leaves an exposed point in his armor! Nor does anyone delight more to see his friends and to entertain them in his home. Many of those who read these lines and numerous others besides will bear testimony to the cordial hospitality they have so often enjoyed at the hands of President Graham and his family, and will doubtless recall how on more than one happy occasion at Penshurst the social hours, swift-wing'd , flew by. Thus the history of Dr. Graham's administration at Hampden-Sidney is being made and written. And as he is permitted now at the expiration of six years of service to review with gratification the work he has thus far undertaken and accomplished, so may the later years of his career afford him occasion for an even larger measure of pride and pleasure to look back upon the achievements of his administration: and may all his fondest dreams and most cherished hopes for the greater future of Hampden-Sidney, in his own day, be abundantly and gloriously fulfilled. And now in conclusion, touching the dedication: To the staff and the students, a compliment happily conceived and gracefully bestowed: to President Graham, an honor worth winning and a tribute most significant. .. A. W. MCWHORTER. I 1 2553 EI 'WJ p 22 -2' ' 2: J 5' 0 my f 15 -v ,. SU tx ll'lll'lll'lll'l'll'lll ll'lll'lll 'll'lll'lll, ll'7Jl'lll'lll'lllWll ll !l'!lW'll'lll'lllW1l,, JW j vi . ig. . gi . ig, ar, . 4-. . .-. s ff, . .w . 43. s41-..f...f- . .gi , 43, . 43, 434. ig, .431 .431 .43 .fn .m,.m,m ,ig 3 A ., . 5 6 Qi , . 4:1 S 5 .gi Qlmnprra Night Z SA' 451 45 5 Q, ' f Q .g, 3 E 'Z' When the shadows are a-falling in the vale of Shenandoah 'EQ T And the echoes are a-calling from the stillness of the shoreg tg :S 5 if . . . . . . . Q Q et 417' When the good canoes are gliding, gliding swift and gliding strong, 42 .-2 iv rf 1' Q 3 A And the evening winds are wafting clearest notes of sweetest song: C, 'i S 45. Then let me he a-camping in the vale of Shenandoah, +21 :Z Ev 'tt Then let me be enchanted by the campers' mystic lore- Cf E ei Z' e F E 'gi ln ii... nightg 'z' 5 Qi A 42' Q Z Campers' night: .-5 i :wx 4,3 Q 3 Campfire burning, burning big, A S Burning bright- 6, AZ E C' Burning low and slowly dying- 'A' e: as E 'jf 'Round the lingering embers lying- H i Z., iii ln the night: good night! i 4 1 S ,EQ BEN Goomziocs. '06. all ,v o 4.3 4 4 g 4 4 9 cv: 43 ' 'B F As- ' 4 r 4' 1 5 31 Q fn. En a ittrivnil Q 5 Qi 4:1 Q 5 4:4 'V' ' E 2. Q ln a corner of my heart, 5 E ln a tiny, weeny part, E 5 Q l had a thought for you. 'Cf Q -se ., as sl 4:3 -3 AA S lt lay in silence there E S -- Shut off from light and air. 'Q i CA? . K-,I Q cs I, And in the dark was true. .. -a 6 4:1 'Z' E Ex if Up to that happy hour Q 5 Qi Of the seedlings change to Hower- Cv Q 5? C14 When up it sprang, and grew. A E 5 ' H .g. E -3 It Now in no tiny part 4: i :g 'jf But all around my heart ff S 2 l have a thought for you. 'E' 'E 5 4:r 421 Ag Z KI: BEN GOODRIDGE. '06. lg, E 1 -? P W 4:3 if, o 4:1 o 4:1 o Ci o rv 5 fro 4.3 4 4 4 :if g 434 4:1 o 4:9 ' :Q Q 4:2 0 4.3 o 43 0 43 o ev:-Q igrghrgxzx ' 5 -v .. .- v- - - - v Q ttiltiiltialtithttf tmtr imtmtmtr - limi lhltiiiltiiillliilllulllf 16 'n L- ' . 'QJFTVT-A, f 6-555 1 . 6 .X iv- x ' I S1 Q: digit 1 I, - ,if- N ' 8sN.Q 4 Sv: -waz, - X ,J 'f Y x 2 X Q M: 5 . -wg -, . N .. ,li X 33? x is 9 gig . X 5 ,, -fn Q1 v-4-ve. iifvf X 5131 P. . ,--5. a a, N9 .41 sh ' - fe-sq.: Sw. .Wie-'. Q , W., .fa ' , .Q UM. , awww bg, N .5yf::,g5,,,1- . ,:. -. ., :Aw-5 -4-jf:,:'w . v: s VVX, F X - ,z.,. v L 9 : I IQ! .1 I Q I C si Nl x M - if :I ' mf v EV- T551 w'.,:Q, gs. vs ' A fy t 4 Qamphrn-Svihlwg 1113211 in Elrxas Qi QQ: Q Q EXAS has been a heavy borrower. ln order to develop her vast and varied resources, she has adopted a large family of sons from other states. 39 To all of these she has proved herself, not a proverbial step-mother, but a Q very mother. If these sons, by adoption, have learned to love Texas, Y7 she, in return, has lavished love and fortune upon them. In her smiles they have been made happy and from her generous hand they have received Qfl? fame and fortune. Jw Among the favored sons of the Lone Star State, some native-born, jx others adopted, many Hampden-Sidney men are to be found. Texas P began many years ago to make requisition upon Hampden-Sidney for Q strong men. Daniel Baker, pioneer preacher and educator in Texas, was a gifted son of Hampden-Sidney. There are still living men in this State who knew him, and many stirring traditions hang around the name of this remarkable man. Eloquent as a preacher, powerful as an organizer and successful as a money-raiser, he was the chosen of God to be the founder of Austin College, in l849. To him, therefore, belongs the high honor of being the father of Presbyterian education in Texas. ln i883 Dr. Dabney came to Texas, becoming at that time Professor of Philosophy in the University of Texas. ln the fall of the following year, Dr. Dabney became associated with Dr. Smoot, of Austin, in the founding of the Austin School of Theology, which was destined in the providence of God to be the predecessor of the Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary. The synod of Texas now has four chartered institutions of higher learning: Austin College fmenl at Sherman, Daniel Baker College fco-ed, at Brownwood, Texas Presbyterian College fwomenb at Milford, and Austin Presbyterian Theological Sem- inary at Austin. Of these four, two were founded by Hampden-Sidney men. The later history of these Texas Presbyterian institutions reveals the interesting fact that Hampden-Sidney men have held professorships in all of them. According to the best information obtainable, there are at present some seventy-five sons of Hampden-Sidney residing in Texas. They are a representative lot of men. Preachers, educators, lawyers, physicians, bankers, merchants, farmers and ranchmen. All of these seventy-five men are rich in culture and character. Besides these abiding riches, quite a number of these stalwart sons of Hampden-Sidney have dared to lay up for 18 themselves treasures upon earth. The writer has been in the palatial homes of several. While a guest in one such home a few months ago, the writer was told the following by his host: On my graduation day, l885, Dr. lVlcllwaine spoke to me and said, 'lVlr. D-, what are you going to do?' l answered, Doctor, l am going to Texas. To this President Mcllwaine replied, 'You are doing the sensible thing,' and then he advised me as to the best location in Texas and, said my host, to Texas l came, and to this very spot, and right here l have stayed and made my fortune. The gentleman referred to is not only a son of l-lampclen-Sidney, but a native of Prince Edward. Coming to Texas as a young man, just graduated from college, he engaged for a time in the philanthropic but unremunerative business of teaching: but the lure of the financial game was too much for him. He soon developed a genius for invest- ments, and now, though still vigorous in body and mind, and with, apparently, many good years ahead of him, he is one of the well-fixed men of this great State where verily, self- made men are plentiful. Of the seventy-five Hampden-Sidney men now at work in Texas, an impressively large number have already risen to enviable distinction. There are learned jurists, eminent physicians, able educators, leading ministers, wealthy ranchmen, bankers and merchants. A dozen or so of us met in the city of Dallas last week, on the occasion of the l..aymen's Missionary Convention. It is something quite out of the ordinary for a round dozen of Hampden-Sidney men to get together in one Texas town. Distances in Texas are too great for men living on opposite sides of this Empire State to see each other often. Estes, of Texarkana, and Dwyer, of El Paso, and l-lall, of Galveston, and Bondurant, of San Antonio, and McDonald, of Gainesville, are all loyal and enthusiastic sons of Hampden-Sidney, and all are in Texas: but they are situated very much as five men would be who resided, respectively, in Richmond, Kansas City, Atlanta, New Orleans and Cincinnati. It is eight hundred miles from Estes' front gate to Dyer'sl Men who must travel eight hundred miles to shake hands, cannot be expected to fraternize very often at alumni gatherings and banquet boards. The question of dividing Texas into four states is beginning to be agitated. Should this be done Hampden-Sidney men will be needed for governors, congressmen, judges, educators and constructive leaders along all lines in these new commonwealths. The success achieved by Hampden-Sidney men in Texas is a challenge to other stalwart sons of the old college to invest their lives here. Texas spells opportunity. The development of the vast resources of this Empire State has scarcely been begun. She is an agricultural empire of almost inconceivable possibilities. Texas alone could be made to feed, clothe and house the entire present population of the United States! But let not the gentle reader think that the prerequisites to success in the East are not needed out here in the Southwest. Hampden-Sidney men have made good in Texas because they brought to their great task here those qualities of mind and heart which always and everywhere compel success. 19 You will find Hampden-Sidney men prominently identified with the affairs of Dallas, Houston, San Antonio, Fort Worth, Naco, Galveston, Austin, Texarkana, Beaumont, EI Paso, Paris, Sherman, Tyler, Palestine, Wichita Falls, Corpus Christi, Corsicana, Gainesville, Marlin, Bonham, Taylor, Bryan, Crockett, Gonzales and Hillsboro. This list includes all of our largest cities and many of our most thriving towns. About fifty of the seventy-five Hampden-Sidney men in Texas are distributed among the above twenty-five cities and towns. This is a striking exhibit, leading to the conclusion that the Hampden- Sidney men in Texas today are men of metropolitan proportions. They are men of brains and character and vision, and they have, therefore, received recognition as an integral part of the religious, social, civic and economic forces that are working together to place Texas at the head of the column among the best governed and most enlightened com- munities of the world. Men of Hampden-Sidney, if you hear the call of the Southwest, let us know by what train to expect you, and we'll meet you with the band. J. L. Basis, '92, Milford, Texas, March l, I9I5. ',.e.'T 'nfl nw- - . A f - I A lafxxs +s.wf s'f .1 jf--1. ' i ' . 91, Y' wP .',.. ' - . ....f ,' '- 'el - ' V h w vr VIA gist.,-Q: :A rs 1 20 Qbrigin nf Ihr lghilautlirnpir Snrirtg N the Magazine for IS93, p. 267, there is printed a statement made by X Q2 Dr. Mettauer, regarding the establishment of the Philanthropic Society. I The account given below is also by Dr. Mettauerg and the only reason for printing it now is that it does not correspond throughout with the page in :F on CE the Magazine. What appears here is an exact copy of a manuscript Q 3 fragment owned by the late Dr. Morton Holladay, and deposited by Q:-0? Mrs. Holladay, with other papers, in the College Library. This is certainly X the authentic document. Q5 Dr. John Peter Mettauer, a famous surgeon, drew up this statement CN after l850, as may be determined from internal evidence. Perhaps, the Q. Walter Coles mentioned by him was Edward Coles, secretary to President Madison, etc. By reference to the Magazine it will be seen that Dr. Mettauer continued his narrative through the summer of ISO6, when William L. Rives fbiographer of President Madison, etc., came into the society. The Philanthropic Society of Hampden-Sidney College was instituted during the year l805, in the month of March. It was termed a debating club and retained that denomination until the third meeting, when the present name was adopted. The following are the names of the originators and earliest members: Robert Chambers and Henry Chambers, of Mecklenburg County, Abner Crump, of Powhatan County: John West, of Campbell County: Robert Murkey, of Powhatan Countyg Edward Sandys, William B. Cowan and Robert Billups, of Lunenburg County, and William Scott, of Halifax County. These were the originators and founders of the Philanthropic Society of Hampden- Sidney College. At the third and fourth meetings of the society, under its present name, the following members were admitted: Miles Watkins, of Chesterfield Countyg Walter Coles, of Pittsylvania County: Henry Carrington, of Halifax County: John P. Mettauer, of Prince Edward County, and Nathanial Henry, of Charlotte County. FRAGMENT. 21 martial mint nf Eltirzi Qnnnr Him aftvr 13211 Fw Q -W .gQosw...g. - l 1 . ' NLESS something extraordinary happens, very little will ever be known about fav 3 5 Cl og-fn Qld, gig Hampden-Sidney before l820. It is hardly possible that the General Catalogue compiled by Professor Dame about l834 is still in existence. Maybe there will appear during the twentieth century Qin a time of peace, 8555, 2312 di QQ somebody who will develop a severe case of Hampden-Sidneyitis. Let him be called a Hampden-Sidneyologist. Then a great deal that was may Q-fl? show up again. of commencement programs from I820 to 1834 Cpreserved by Mr. Richard N. Venablelg and from a Faculty Book running from 1837 to Q As for the list printed here, the items are drawn largely from a batch l855. It is hoped that a list, complete as much as possible, may be put together so as to save the Hampden-Sidneyologist a little trouble. If the reader will take the pains to look up these men he will be convinced of how silly it is locally to say that the first honor man is never any good after he leaves college: l820. Josiah Harris, fministerg possibly of South Carolinal. l8Zl, T. B. Harrison, feditorg see Harrison's of Slgiminoj. l822. Andrew Hunter, flawyer and soldierl. l8Z3. Robert Burwell, fminister and school manl. l8Z5. H. W. Flournoy, of Powhatan County, flawyerl. ISZ6. john Sinclair Watt, of Richmond, Cminister and teacherl. I828. Nathaniel P. Howard, of Richmond, Clawyerl. l829. Landon C. Garland, of Nelson County, fcollege presidentj. l830. Ethelbert A. Coleman, of Halifax County, Cphysicianl. 1831. Alexander Scott, of Prince Edward County, ffarmerj. l832. Ferdinand Jacobs, of Alexandria, fminister and professorl. I834. James H. Morrison, of Lunenburg County, fno factsl. 1838. Thomas S. Bocock, of Buckingham County, Clawyer and member of Congressl. l839. Moses D. Hoge, fministerb. l84l. Harrison Robertson, flawyer and soldierl. 22 1842 1843 1844 1845 1846 1847 1848 1850 1851 1852 1853 1854. 185 7. john T. Thornton, Clawyer and soldierl. Robert Anderson, fministerl. james E.. Hughes CU, fministerj. Edward A. Palmer, of Campbell County, flawyerl. William Pope Dabney, flawyerl. Equal First. Thomas E.. Marshall, fno factsj. Philip S. Blanton, of Cumberland County, Cphysicianl. John H. Knight, of Nottoway County, ffarmer, banker and soldierj Gustavus A. Bass, ffarmer and soldierl. E.. O. Fitzgerald, fthe other member of the class was awarded the second honor lawyer, soldier, etc.J. William Caruthers, of Prince Edward County, Cministerl Isaac Read, of Kanawha, Cmanufacturerl. HE I fl I , , qua rst Thomas Wharey, of Prince Edward, fmlmsterl. Lewis L. Holladay, of Orange County, fcollege professorl. Richard Mcllwaine, of Petersburg, fsecond honor, President Hampden Sidney Collegej. Charles H. Winston, fcollege professorb. H. Z. Hill, of Milton, N. C., fministerl. R. B. Shearer, of Appomattox County, fsoldierl. ' f '.' ff sl yy -1'-. 1:71153 23 1.. Equal first ElllllllllllllHllllllllllllUlllllIIIIIIIEIIIIIllllllllIDIIIIIIlllllIlllllllllllllllIGIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlllIllIIIIIIUIllllIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIEE g 2 E Uhr Itlnirr 2 E F Q E E Slowly strolled I from the city, E E From the cankering care and strife, Q E Saps the Howing blood of life: E ,, And the mob in madness throng 5 E 5 ,, 'Round the pompous throne of Mammon g Slowly strolled I from the city, E 5 n - Pensive, to the silent vale, E E Where the maiden-blushing lily E S Bade obeisance of the maleg : - E E Where the sparkling, splashing waters 5 5 Of the swelling, singing brook E- 2 Leaped to lciss the dripping mosses g E That concealed a sacred nook. E E Where the buttercups were serving E E Nature's purest crystal dew E E In a gleaming, golden goblet E 5 R E Where the robin's breast was reddest, : E And the thrust was not afraid, E Q And the catbird ceased its calling E As it thrust its darting head. E 9. E From a sheen of verdant fabric, E H na E That concealed its hopes and home, E 5 Hicl within the weeping willow E E Bowing down to sip the foam E E Of the waters of the brooklet 2 5 As they sweeping, surged along E E To the distant flowing river 5 : With its sacred, solemn song. E S S F - E421IIIIIIIIIIll!!IlllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIOIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIKUIIIIIIIIIIIIIKJIIIIIIIIIIIIUIlllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ 24 : Whe1'e the worldly reek of ruin E : Whei'e the good is veiled in shadow, E - Who has come, and then is gone. E To the bird of every hueg 5 U E EIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIDJIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIllIlllllllllllllllllllllll E E Glyn Itlnirr--Olnut. 5 And l sat beneath the willow, E On a seat of velvet mould: 5 And I gazed into the brooklet E That was ages, ages old. E Then from its sparkling waters, Q That enthralled the mortal eye, 5 Came a voice, soft and gentle, E And I heard the willow sigh. E Yea, I heard the weeping willow, E That had stood a hundred years, Ig Sobbing. sighing-giving freely 5 Of its sympathetic tears. S And I sat amazed, bewildered, E Silent as the dangling fern, E And the willow bade me listen- E Yea, to listen, heed and learn. E Quoth the voice from the brooklet, E As the weeping willow wept, g And the mossy-fingered orpheus E O'er his lyre slowly swept, E I am speaking to thee from the waters, E The mystical waters of life, E I am giving the wonderful secret Of winning or losing the strife. E I come from the shades of the forest, E And the green of the velvet mead: Q I wend my way, by night and day, E To succor the souls in need. 5 I am old as the tomb of the ages, E I am young as the crystalline dew, g From the time I was born, on the creative morn, 2 I have spoken to all, as to you. 5 In the centuries past, and forgotten, E I visited peasant and king, E And to every soul, in the ages of old, E I have given a wedding ring. Za!IIIIIIIIIIIIUIllIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIDJIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIlllllIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIKJIIIIIIIIIIIIK 25 D 521IllllllIIIIIKJIIIIIIIIIIIIIlIIllIIIIIIIIUIlIIIIIIIIIIIQJIIIIIIIIIIIIUIllllIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIlllllllllllllIIlllllIIIIIKJIIIIIIIIIIIIIQ E Elin lguirr--Qlnnt. E 5 But some were not true to their promise, E E And hastily pushed me aside, E E And then, now they fell! to the deepest of hell, E E And the bones did rot in their side! E E Oh, many the nation in ashes, E 5 That wrapped me in amorous arms, E S But cooled in their love, and eschewed all above E E The vaunting of worldly charms. 5 E And all that is left of the nation, E 2 That pushed me cooly aside. E E Is the truth on the pages, inscribed by the sages, : E Neither past nor future can hide. E E So I speak to thee, starting the journey S 5 That ends with the sepulchral seal, E E Remember forever, forever and ever, E E The secret of life-Ideal. S E L. B. HANES. 5 71 3 ' QIIID is S S 'B ll fs L51 , ' an n A ' E 5 - I r ,Ja E QlllllllllllllllIIlIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIlIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIBJIIIIIIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIlllllIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIE5 26 vft fiat N this volume, the editors of THE KALEIDOSCOPE have tried to give a re, Q2 ff , E535 re faithful and accurate, yet sympathetic, picture of the student life and activities at Hampden-Sidney. We are thoroughly proud of the college, yet we know our picture of it is imperfect. Rest assured if after reading this book, you see no reason for our pride, the fault is ours not the colleges We have made many changes in the arrangement and in the subject matter of the book. The World Moves, and things that were necessary in the old annuals, are out of place in the modern year-book. We trust that our progressiveism may please the many without offending the few, and also that in after years this book may be a source of real pleasure, and that the sight of these pictures and this book may recall the happiness of college days. The staff is indebted to Dr. A. W. McWhorter in many ways, for a real interest and for many helpful suggestions. Miss Pete Parrish was also a constant source of inspiration. We are also indebted to Dr. A. Morrison, Col. R. B. Berkeley, Dr. John Armstrong, Mr. Coodridge Wilson, L. B. Hanes and Dr. L. Bell for literary contributions, while Mr. Tom Moore, of Charleston, and Mr. Maylon Fitts, of Richmond, drew many of our best drawings. For any of the bright things, if there are any, we are indebted to the student body, for the whole one hundred have aided with suggestions and also very materially in other ways. 27 2- THE CHURCH WORSHAM HIGH SCHOOL X cl: HOUSE 11 K A HOUSE .fi If .ff lg.,--XL - ,f- T qi .A I A Y x x M 513 ,-.3 I'E'Rb J. B -A 3 3 lil fi SS. in ii . T I A F T .V f ' PRESIDEN A. B. CARRINGTON, ESQ.. W. W. MOORE, D. D.,. . . COL. C. C. LEWIS, JR.. . . . J. SCOTT PARRISH, ESQ.,. REV. J. B. BITTINGER .... E. B. DICKERSON, ESQ... THOS. W. HOOPER, D. D. C-OV. W. HODGES MANN. F. T. MCFADEN, D. D... HON. A. D. WATKINS. . . HON. J. L. TREADWAY. .. W. C. CAMPBELL, D. D.. PETER WINSTON, M. D.. .. W. G. DUNNINGTON, ESQ. .... . JUDGE A. A. CAMPBELL. . PAULUS A. IRVING, M. D H. A. STOKES, ESQ ....... . S. H. HAWES, ESQ.. . . . REV. JOHN H. DAVIS .... JUDGE F. B. HUTTON .... C. A. BLANTON, M. D... HON. J. STEBBINS, JR.. . . HON. DON P. HALSEY. . . HON. W. A. WATSON. . . JAS. A. PAXTON. D. D.. . A. M. FRASER, D. D.. .. T GRAHAM, ex-ojjzicio. . . . . .Danville . ...... Richmond . .... Charleston, W Richmond Chatham Hill Richmond . . . ..... Culpeper . . . ..... Richmond Richmond Farmville Chatham Roanoke . . .Farmville . . . .Farmville . . .... Wytheville . . .Farmville . . . .Farmville . . . . .Richmond . . .PI-uscaloosa, . ..... Abingdon . ..... Richmond .South Boston . . .Lynchburg . . . .Jennings Ordinary . . . Lynchburg, . . ..... .... S taunton 29 Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Ala Va Va Va Va Va Va Va The Sl l X QUDKQ Qbftirrrs nf tlgr 3'Hurultg H. T. GRAHAM ..... J. H. C. BACBY .... . J. H. C. WINSTON. .. W. H. WHITING, JR. W. O. BEASLEY .... DR. C. M. CLARK ...... . A. W. MCWHORTER .... .. J. C. GUTHRIE ..... C. B. ROBERTSON. .. .........Prcsizlenl . . . . . Vice-President .........Curator .........Treasurcr . . .Clerlf of Faculty . . .College Physician . . . . . . . . .Librarian . .Assistant Librarian Gymnasium Instructor HENRY TUCKER C1RAHAM,A. B., B. D., D. D., 111 K 'll President and Professor of Bible Studies. A. B., Hampden-Sidney, l886g Teacher, Mill- wood, Va., ISS6-'SSQ Associate Editor Union Seminary Magazine, l889-'9l: B. D., Union Theological Seminary, Va., I89I, Missionary in Japan, l89l-'96g Pastor, Fayetteville, N. C., l897-l904g Pastor, Farmville, Va., l90-V083 D. D., Washington and Lee University, l9l0, and University of Pittsburgh, 1912, President of Hampden-Sidney College since January l, l909. ,-, 4 tj, HENRY CLAY BROCK, B. LITT., Professor of Creelf. Student at Richmond College, l859-'6l, at Randolph-Macon College, I86l-'62: Wounded in battle, August, I86-tg Student at the UniQ versity of Virginia, l869-72, being Assistant ln- structor in Latin the second yearg Associate Teach- er in Kenmore University High School, Va., l872-799 Associate Teacher in High School, Charlottesville, Va., l879-'8lg Master of Uni- versity School, Charlottesville, Va., 1881-'86, Professor of English and History, Hampden-Sid ney College, 1886-'89, Professor of Greek and French, ilvid., l889-l9l l g and Professor of Greek since l9I l. tj, .13 WILLIAM HENRY WHITINC, JR., A. M., fb F A Professor of Latin. A. B., Hampden-Sidney College, 1880, Grad- uate Student, University of Virginia, l88l-'82, and A. M., 1882, Assistant at Prince Edward Academy, Va., ISSZ-'86, Assistant, University School, Nashville, Tenn., l886-'SSQ Principal, Clay Hill Academy, Millwood, Va., ISSS-V902 and l905-'06g Professor of Latin and German, Hampden-Sidney College, l902-'05 and l906- 'l l, and Professor of Latin since 191 I. 31 A 1 31 me lk if A335 1f.ifv?g?F . 222 -z.. 5 .. . '-'.'v:-.satis - -f' -tg' :f.'r',f1'2' '--1 's . 5 .sie-1g1::.eg3..i,r 1 ' f ee' 1.24.1 ' - 2 1w ?1L.f1' -AQ .an-1 -' -V rl to .Q Is., - ,7,'.e35Ej,5tj, 5 ' 2'-e:.zf'gs:a1 . ?'-'?r:.iri v M- ' ' si . f flzasa-A 1 , .,a-6'-'. f . 5 -1 .' , fi -wr , 1 ss' , ,sf 4 .Q kg- K L feafzl rt ffil 9-Q gl i i I gg., l '. E 1. 'F -- if if 37 , s of J. H. C. BAGBY, M. A., M. E., PH. D., .X K E Vice-President and Professor of Physics and Astronomy. Prepared for college at Norwoodys University School, Richmond, Va., M. A., University of Virginia, l888, M. E., l89l, and Ph. D., I894: Teacher in Wallace's University School, Nashville, Tenn., I888-'90, Professor of Natural Philos- ophy, l-lampclen-Sidney College, l892-'98, and Professor of Physics and Astronomy since l898. Qs S 421- 1. H. C. WINSTON, A. B., B. S., PH. D., L9 X Professor of Chemistry and Geology. A. B. and B. S., Hampden-Sidney College, l894g Graduate Student, University of Virginia, IS94-'95, Taught in Tazewell College, l895- '96, Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins University, IS96-'99, and Ph. D., I899g Professor of Chem- istry ancl Geology at Hampden-Sidney College since IS99, and College Curator since l9l l. ASHTON W. MCWHORTER, A. M., PH. D., 119 B K Professor of English and History. A. B., Roanoke College, l895, and A. M., 1902, Tutor in Greek, ibid., 1895, Principal of High Schools in South Carolina, I895-'98, Grad- uate Student, Johns Hopkins University, l898-'99, Professor of Latin and English, Presbyterian Col- lege of South Carolina, l899-l9033 also Professor of Latin and Modern Languages, Thornwell Sem- inary, Clinton, S. C., IS99-l903g Student, Johns Hopkins University, l903-'05, Fellow in Greek, l904-'05, and Ph. D., I905g Assistant Professor of C-reek and Latin flocum tencnsl, The George Washington University, l905-'063 Classical Mas- ter, Sewanee Grammar School fThe University of the Southl, l906-'07: Professor of English and History at Hampden-Sidney College since I907g Member American Philological Association, Archaeological Institute of America, Classical As- scciation of Virginia, and Virginia Folklore So- ciety. 32 JAMES BROOKES SMITH, M. A., I .X Ii Professor of fwcilliemalics. B. A. and M. A., University of Virginia, l906, Adjunct Professor of Mathematics, Georgia School of Technology, IQO6-'07, l-lead of depart- ment of Mathematics, Richmond CVa.J High School, IQO7-'09, Fellow and Instructor in As- tronomy, University of Virginia, 1909-'10, Assist- ant Professor of Mathematics, Hampden-Sidney College, l9l0-'I l, and Professor of Mathematics since I9l Ig Member American Mathematical Society, American Association for the Advance- ment of Science, and American Meteor Society. f.,.'. joHN ALFRED CLARKE, B. A., M. A., Professor of Modei'n Languages. B. A., Hampden-Sidney College, l903g M. A., University of Virginia, I905, Professor of Languages, Cluster Springs Academy, l905-'l l 3 Student, University of Grenoble, France, summer of 191 Ig Student, University of Marburg. Cer- many, summer of l9I3g Professor of Modern Languages at Hampden-Sidney College since I9ll. 7311: WM. OSWALD BEAZLEY, M. A., B. D., PH. D., GJ X Professor of Philosophy and Biology. Principal Singers Glen Graded' School, Va., l905: B. A., Richmond College, 19065 Principal Wakeheld High School, N. C., l907g Principal Newport News CVa.J Academy, l908g M. A., University of Pennsylvania, l9lOg B. D., Crozer Theological Seminary, l9l Ig Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, l9l2, Member Archaeological Institute of America, l9I2g Professor of Philos- ophy and Biology at Hempclen-Sidney College since l9l 3. 33 v , s s s Jag 2: fi l Uhr 189112 l She is sitting alone by the window, The window that faces the west, And the golden god of a dying day ls silently sinking to rest. In her lap the Bible lies open, t Her Guide through the shadows of care, And her head reclines in hallowed peace On the back of the cushioned chair. Her hands are withered, and tremble, t But rest on the Record of Truth- The hands that shamed the lily fair ln the morning of beautiful youth. g The Yesterdays' locks of darkness 1 This evening more racliantly glow, For the Wand of Time has sprinkled them oier With a beautiful whiteness of snow. In her cheeks the roses have faded, ' Ashamed of their delicate life, l And a beauty more real is gleaming beneath N The wrinkles that tell of the strife. The sparkling eyes of the maiden- Two bottomless pools of blue- Are paling before a heavenly light Of beauty eternally true. l O wonderful hands that tremble! i O furrowed cheeks that veil The God-like beauty of a soul Anchored beyond the gale! O brow that is wreathed with a halo! l O eyes of another light!- ! A toast to thee, beautiful mother, l The belle of the ladies to-night. l 'l6. N I a t --g -gg g Z g 12-JN. 34 MISS CORNELIA REID SENIOR SPONSOR gif! ? CJ Wigwlzii Z? Ju if gd 154,14 ,W ul. - f -X ---A-::1:assssa!!2 X, T. C. JOHNSON. . . M. C. BOWLING. . . C. B. ROBERTSON J. F. M. SIMPSON. A. B. CARRINGTON B. D. MORTON. . . J. E. BRYAN ..... J. F. M. SIMPSON. Sruinr Glass QI-iiiirrrs First Term Second Term 36 .......Presidenl Vice-President Secretary-I reasurer .........Hislorzan . . . . .President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer .........I-Iistorian MARVIN CARLISLE BOWLING. K A. H. S. PHiLANTHRoPic S. P. Lee Scholarship, I9l0-lllg Students' Council, l9lO-'I I -'IZ-'I3-'14-'t5, Secretary-Treasurer Student Council, I9t0-'I Ig Vice-President Y. M. C. A., l9tl-'l2g Assistant Manager Varsity Baseball Team. l9lI-'I2: Vice-President Student Council l9ll-'l2: Varsity Foot- ball Team, I9I2-'t3-'I4-'l5g Chairman Y. M. C. A. Reception Committee, l9l2-'I3g Steward Students' Club, l9l2-'l3-'I-tg Manager Varsity Baseball Team. l9I2-'I3g Vice-President junior Class fsecond terml, I9t3-'I-1: Captain and Manager Students' Club Basket Ball Team. t9I2-'l3g President Y. M. C. A.. l9I3-'I-43 Vice-Presb dent Senior Class ffirst termj. l9l4-'l5: President Local Organization Inter-Collegiate Prohibition Association, l9l3-'I-tg Final Senior President Philanthropic Society. I9I4g President Student Council, l9t4-'l5g President Athletic Association fhrst termj, l9l-I-'l5: Senior Orator Intermediate Celebration, t9l5. RED BOWLING As the critics of literature and character speak of Milton as sublime, so we feel that the only adequate word to describe Red is sincere Red preceded us all to Hampden- Sidney, and has in turn seen six Freshman Classes make their entrance. During all his years here he has ever been the same Recl,', and we would not have it otherwise. Rugged, strong in body and character, persistent, conscientious and above all sincere. If you have trouble see Red, he will comfort you-if you have perplexities see Red, he will advise you-if you need help see s'Recl, he will help you. Active in every phase of college affairs, he is prominent in each fincluding the Student Councill. He carries his persistence with him to the football held, and has been the terror of many an opposing center. When his recl head fails to decorate our campus, we feel sure the olcl school will not be the same. ai.imuui' it izlzxzwir ig itllllittllllltti1Itt'1t't'tE 3.1 tri imiii 37 JOHN EDWARDS BRYAN. i K A, H.S. s i fl Birmingham, Ala. P1-nLANTHRoPic Varsity Basket Ball Team, l9l3-'l4-'l5: Captain Varsity Basket Ball Team. l9I4-'l5g Intermediate Mar- shal, I9lt-'I2g Secretary-Treasurer Class fsecond termj. l9l4-'l5g Tallest man in Collegeg Secretary-Treasurer Athletic Association fsecond termj, l9I4-'I5. WILLIAM JENNINGSH BRYAN William Jennings hails from the far Southland, claiming as his home town Birmingham, Ala. l-le came to Hampden-Sidney four years ago, a little Freshman and now rivals the envious Goliath in height. He brought from the South a peculiar ability at making friends, and today stands in an enviable position of popularity and influence in college affairs. As Captain of this year's basket ball team he was one of the mainstays, coping with opponents by far his superiors in physical strength, without a sign of flinching. Jennings has gained his place in the estimation of his fellow-students by his friendly attitude toward all, and unselhsh consideration of others. QllllllHlilllllltlllllllllllllg Qmnuiiuimuzruiummmg it lillHllllltlll1Itl'li!'Hl'tF illlllllllllllltlflilllllllllllg 38 ALEXANDER BERKELEY CARRINGTON, JR., X Q' ..-I3-. H. S. Danville, Va. Captain Class Football Team, l9l l: President Freshman Class fsecond termj, I9ll-'l2g Historian Class, l9I2-'l3g Vice-President Sophomore Class fsecond termj, 1912-'l3g Vice-President Athletic Association Clirst termj, I9l3-'l4g Student Council, t9I2-'I3-'14-'l5g Board of Governors of Comity Club, I9I2-'13-'I4g Dramatic Club, l9II-'I2g Sophomore Representative Track Meet, I9l3g Captain Sophomore Class Track Team, I9I3g Bear Cat Basket Ball. l9l3: Varsity Football. l9l3: Varsity Basket Ball, I9l3g Captain Varsity Basket Ball Team. l9I4g Varsity Baseball, l9l3-'l4g Sub-Varsity Football Team, l9I2g President German Club. l9l4-'l5: President Senior Class fsecond terml, l9l5: Owls. 1915: Leader of Graham House Prayer Meeting. I9I4-'l5g Biscuit Assistant to Red Bowling, l9l4-'l5: Member R. H. O. C. T. BERK CARRINCTON Berk is one of the original Freshmen who have stayed out their full quota of four years, and in this time there have been few phases of college activity in which he has not taken a prominent part. He owes his influence to the fact that he is a born leader. He has that quality of originality and individuality, that makes him take the initiative. He is a man of deep convictions and those who know him know that he has the courage to carry them out. As an athlete Berk has few, if any peers in college. He played quarter on the Varsity football team, captained the basket ball team, and pitched on the baseball team- all in one year. This array speaks for itself. Berk is a man of great possibilities, and will do things in the world. 39 ' WILLIAM TUCKER CARRINGTON, X CIP' l3, H. S. x Richmond, Va. 5 Vice-President junior Class fsecond termj, l9l3-'I-13 Class Relay and Tennis Team, l9I2-'I3-'l4g Captain Hampden House Football Team, l9l3-'l4: Captain Hampden House Baseball Team, l9I3-'I-4. Captain Sophomore Football Team: Wearer of H. S. C. in Base- ball and Football, l9ll-'IZ-'l3-'l4: Board of Governors of Comity Club. I9I4-'l5g Bear Cat Football and Baseball Team, l9l4-'l53 Owls. TUCK CARRINGTON Though Tuck is not a giant in stature, intellectually he compensates a hundred- fold for it. Untiring in labor, he never lets up until the end is accomplished. Though to some the obstacles might loom up as impregnable, to Tucker all things may be overcome by persistence and determination. His quality of pluck and nerve have far out-weighed his diminutive size, and he has for four years taken an active part in athletics. He is among the best tennis players in college. Tucker appeals to us through his peculiarities, the most prominent being a slight tendency to stuttering. When he finally gets out the labored expression though, it's usually worth listening to. Another of his peculiarities is an inveterate tendency, as of a compass needle, to point to the north. This tendency often leads his footsteps to Farmville. QS. N. S., Qllllllfl' llllll' llllllllllllg - QllIIHI!IIIZlllillllllllllllllg gllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllg 40 T CURRY C. CARTER. 17 K A. L-' xvashingion, va. UN:oN lnter-Collegiate Debaler with Randolph-Macon College: Baseball Team: Cheer Leader. NICK CARTER. Nick is one of those who entered the class on the second lap of the race toward the coveted degree. It did not take him long to adjust himself and show us the man that he was. Nick has gained his hold upon us by the very bigness of his heart and being. In times of joy and happiness he fairly bubbles over with exuberance: in times of sadness and disappointment his sympathy and sincerity are a Comfort indeed. Niclc's versatility, his democratic personality has won for him a place of popularity and respect that few occupy. There are few baseball diamonds in the State where his tow-head has not been seen: always he is performing his part, getting up the old pep and keeping it up, though every- thing is turning against him and his team-mates. 41 im F FRANK GORDON CHRISTIAN, X Q. H Richmond, Va. UNioN Secretary-Treasurer Class fsecond lermj, I9lI-'l23 Sec- retary-Treasurer Class fsecond lerml, l9l2-'l3g President Class fseconcl terml, I9l3-'l4g Magazine Staff. l9I3-'I4- FRANK CHRISTIAN At his entrance into college, I7rank's lovable disposition won for him the place he now occupies in the hearts of us all. I-lis wit and originality have and will make him welcome into any company. The many-sidedness of his character and personality would make us love him were this his only asset. At times the man of experience, action, and ambitiong at times the boy of sweet and lovable personality. Frank is above all things, broad-minded. I-le sees the world in all the big and noble aspects of it. A sense of humor stands him in good stead, but inflicts upon us the pun. His memory is phenomenal, his insight deep, his joy unconfmed, his faithfulness long, his friendliness lovable. gilHHIlllilllllllllllllllllilg QIII'Illilllllllllllllilllllillg ill!!!HllllililflllIHIIHIIINE illlllllllllllllllllllllllIilllE 42 V J. C. GUTHRIE. Dublin, Va. Pl-IILANTHROPIC Final Marshal, l9ll-'l2g Freshman Declaimer's Medal, l9lI-'I2g Nlember of Missionary Committee. 1912-'l3g Final Marshal, I9l2-'I3g Treasurer of Y. M. C. A., l9I3- 'l4g Manager Club Football Team, l9l3-'l4g Intermediate junior Orator, I9I3-l4g Final junior Orator, l9I3-'l4g Secretary-Treasurer lnter-Collegiate Prohibition Associa- tion, l9l3-'I4g Delegate to Student Volunteer Convention at Kansas City, 1913-'I4g Vice-President Y. M. C. A., l9l4-'l5g Manager Debate Council, l9l-4-'l5g lnter-Col- legiate Debater against William and Mary College. l9l4- 'l5: Final Senior Orator, l9l-4-'l5. JOHN C-UTHRIE John hails from Southwest Virginia, the land of milk and honey. True to the standards set by his predecessors from that part, he has in his four years accomplished much, and left his impress upon the annals of the school. Faithful, sincere, broad, ambitious and a man of high ideals, he will use his talents for the betterment of humanity, and multiply them ten-fold. The only thing capable of shaking ,lohn's determination is a member of the weaker sex, and the arrows of the little god sink deep into his heart and ensnare him often in the entanglements of love. i lTIli,lIll'Iilll lit IME QM!l,l1lIl!li5'lM lIlilllE gg :i 5 E gi 1 5 ii 5 : ff i ' ' ,S ,,,,, ,,,,,,,, ,g xii!llllllllllllllilllllllllllllltii Qi,ii.ii!,l.,s..,,,i,ii i f l 43 ALFRED BROWNLEY HODGES. H K A. ..I3',. H. S. Portsmouth, Va. UNION Varsity Baseball Team, l9I3-'I4g Vice-President Class fhrst lerm2, I9lI-'I2g President Class fseconcl termj, l9ll-'l2g Vice-President Class fhrst terml, l9l2-'l3: Secretary-Treasurer Class fsecond termj, I9I2-'l3g Presi- dent Class ffirst termy. l9I3-'I4g Secretary-Treasurer Ath- letic Association flirst lermf, I9l2-'l3g Dramatic Club. l9II-'l2g Manager German Club: l9l2-'I3g Leader Ger- man Club, I9l3-I4-'I5g Minstrel Show, l9l3-'l43 Substi- tute Baseball Team, l9l2-'l3: Board of Governors Ger- man Club, 1912-'I3-'I4-'I5. RINK HODGES. Rink came to us four years ago from down by the seaside, and brought with him the joyful, free, happy, progressive spirit of that section. But his strength lies in the fact that, while at times he is bubbling over with fun and mischief, he can, when necessary, discard the garb of joy and lightness and with a concentration that few of us possess, delve into the realms of science and philosophy. Systematic in all things as in study, he hasn't in his vocabulary the word ufailf' Rink has a knack of making friends and keeping them that accounts for his popularity. He has played Hrst base on the baseball team, and is a dancer without an equal in college. He is a mimic of no mean ability. His ambitions and untiring work will speak for themselves hereafter. ilflllltllt liltttltlllllllllllk Qlflllllllllll'lllllllllllllllllg itttlllllttlltllllltlttllllllig illllllf!llllI!lIlIll'!H'l!lliE 44 THOMASCARYjOHNHNWjRq K 3' ..A'.. .,l3'.. Richmond, Va. UNION President of Senior Class Hirst termbg Manager of Y. Nl. C. A. Reading Room. 1913-'l4g Manager Tennis Club, l9l4-'I5g Final Junior Orator. l9l43 Secretary Y. M. C. A., l9l4-'I5g Editor-in-Chief KALEiDoscoPe, l9l-4-'l5g Bear Cat Football Team, I9l4-'I5g Vice- President lnter-Collegiate Prohibition Association. l9l4-'l5g lnter-Collegiate Debate with Emory and Henry College. I9I5g Captain Graham House Football Team. I9I5g Saturday Night Club: President Anarchist Club: Final Senior Orator, l9I5g Editor Political Science Quarterly. 1915. CARY JOHNSON Cary is one of those who waited until one year was past before making his debut into the Class of 'l5. But not handicapped by this, he started out with a vim, and stands now as one of the sharks among his dignified and venerable class-mates. A man of unlimited possibilities and capabilities, he gains all things with an ease that fails to call into action the full extent of his powers. His literary propensities have dubbed him a bookwormg and he keeps in his room a miniature model of the Congressional Library-we hesitate to name the source. A wit, an orator, a Billy Sunday, a Romeo, are some of his distinguishing characteristics. Cary has grown in our affections by his lovable disposition and qualities of adaptation. He is democratic, a deep thinker, a philosopher and an optimist-truly a potential factor. Q3IIlIllllllllillllllllllllllllg Qllllltllllllllllii. illfll P immmmi mmwwww 45 HERMAN LEVY. Farmville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC Member of lnter-Collegiate Debate Council. l9l4-'l5g Secretary-Treasurer of junior Class f final termj, l9l4g Gentleman of no Mean Ability: Cyclist of First Order. H. LEVY. Least in statue, least in shoe-yet truly the possessor of those wonderful 7-league boots-Levy brings us every morning news from Farmville town. On the Hill, how- ever, he holds the distinction of being one of the Big Three. Indeed three seems to be his lucky number-Math Ill., Chemistry lll., Physics Ill., all fall before his valiant onslaught. 'Tis rumored even that last year his custom was to rise at 3 lest Aggie miss his daily ride in Latin lll. Modest, unassuming, yet known and liked by everyone, Levy has won the admiration of us all by his plucky perseverance-buffeted by the storms of winter, drenched by capricious April showers, yet seldom does he fail to greet us at class time with his cheery Hey-o. As wiry as a clock spring physically-a giant in mental quality-such attributes as these fall into utter insignihcance in comparison with his latest accomplishment-Levy has the distinction of being the only human hydro- gen flame. ittlttlltttlllltliillllllltllttitl itlltlf!V3lillllfllltllllilllli iwummumwmmaiME 46 BENjAMlN DOUGLAS MORTON. tri X Clarksville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC lntermediate Marshal, l9l2-'l3: Invitation Committee, l9l2-'l3, Final Junior Oralor, l9l2-'l31 Magazine Staff, l9l3-'14-'l5g Member Mission Study Committee, l9l3-'l4g Sophomore Debalefs Medal, l9l2-'l3: Inter-Society De- bate, l9l3-'l4g Secretary-Treasurer Class fflrst terml. l9l3-'l4: Cullingworlh junior Essayist Medal, I9I3-'I-lg Final junior Oralor, l9I3-'l4g Member Bible Study Com- mittee, l9l4-'l53 Editor-in-Chief Magazine. l9l4-'l5g Member lnter-Collegiate Debate Council, l9l-4-'l5g Inter- Society Debater, l9l-4-'l5g Vice-President Class fsecond terml. I9l4-'l5g Valedictorian, l9l-4-'l5g Final Senior President Philanthropic Literary Society, 1915. BEN MORTON Ben is our only representative from Cluster Springs. He brought with him from there his oratorical propensities, and his quiet, thoughful manner. He is a profound and deep thinker, loves to contemplate the philosophy of life and the infinite, is an inveterate and untiring student, and It man of ambitions and noble aspirations. In college affairs active, he has edited one of the most successful volumes of the Magazine, has twice repre- sented his Society in the Inter-Society Debate, and has ever been among the sharks of the School. To ask information of Ben on any subject is to get it, for he knows, and is always willing to help those of less knowledge and insight into affairs. To say that he ever failed in an undertaking, if it was possible, would be to belie the very character of the man. illlllllWlll,lll1lilllllllililll,E 5 Ji.. .' ' Y Qiliillild 'H li 'ME 2 2 ,U ,4 , ' 5 2 E 'ill V+'-'SQ' E 2 1 E E ,, 'J1 ,' ,.f.': Eli f 12 E 1 2 'ii'ffg,r mer- 5 E 5 , . 7 ' 5 E A 1 .mg'fQi f 5 , , 2 ' 53 f'-,L-.xi , 5 E E 5 ,.: ' N-'1-A' 2 L . i in-WH 5- ' ' 1 if? E 'T rnglmrmwi A 5 .s 2 - ' t 2 525 E 1 'S 73' ' P . E f i fe 5 1 r- , 5 1 f 5 E5 E -- :NH -' Z.,. W 1 315 22 . 'uh '1'x':-,: J 3' i Q1 33 1- ,f5,f i8' ' ' Q HHWlllllllllllllllllllllllllVE '--1 7RTllwllllllllllllllllllll? 47 CHARLES G. PETERS. K A- H. S. Union, W. Va. UNioN KALEIDOSCOPE Stall, l9t2-'13-'I4-'I5g Assistant Man- ager KALEIDOSCOFE, l9l3-'I-49 Manager KALEIDOSCOPE, l9l4-'l5g Magazine Staff, l9l2-'I3-'I4-'ISQ Business Manager Magazine, t9l3-'l4g Assistant Editor-in-Chief Magazine, l9l-4-'l5g Assistant Manager Football, l9l2- 'l3g Board of Governors German Club, l9l3-'I-49 Manager Football, 1913-'I4g Student Council, l9l2-'l3: Vice-Presi- dent Student Council, l9l4-'I5g Cheer Leader. 1913 and I9l5g lnvitation Committee, 1912-'13-'l4g Manager Comity Club, I9I3-'I4-'l5g Secretary-Treasurer Athletic Associa- tion, l9l2-'I3g Bear Cat Football Team. l9l3-'l4-'lftg Final Marshal, 1912-'I3g Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, l9l3-'l4- 'I5g Winner of junior Debater's Medal. l9l4: Chief Marshal Field Day. 19144 Member of the lnter-Collegv ate Debating Society Board: Associate Winner of the Don P. Halsey Cup for lnter-Society Debate. l9l5g Final Senior President, Union Literary Society, l9l5. PETE PETERS Doctor of finance, capitalist, politician- Pete stands pre-eminent as our College John D. Vanderbilt and Tammany leader combined. As a Freshman, he started his busi- ness career by selling visiting cards-he's been visiting us all ever since in quest of lucre. Nor is Pete ever petered out when it comes to possessing the good old hard bones, and so suave is the gifted tongue of him that we pawn our last garment to help fill his coffers. A fluent tongue is not his only asset, however-Charlie is a politician-even he confesses that, but he meets every issue, every adversary, squarely, and face to face. No wonder, then, that when we want a manager of a team or magazine, a member for the Student Council, a society debater-in short, 'tis no wonder that when we want the services of a man we call on Pete! Can we resist the charms of such a fellow? Many a maid will answer '6Never! for Pete talks over many matters on the may to Farmville, yet never lacks the dainty sighs of love that make flutter the trusting heart of damsel fair when once he arrives. -l ,,litl'lllliIIIVlIIHI'iTtg 5lllllllllllllltlllllillllllllli . rg.,- 48 JOHN BOLLING REYNOLDS, Norfolk, Va. UNioN Hawes Tennis Trophy, l9l2-'l3: Class Tennis Team, l9l3-'l4g Via Sacra Basket Ball Team. I9I2-'I3g Bear Cat Football. l9l-1'-'l5g Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, l9l4-'l53 Glee and Mandolin Club, l9l3-'I-4-'l5g German and Comity Club, l9l-4-'l5g President Inter-Collegiate Debate Council, l9l4-'l5. J, B. REYNOLDS Nurses in the Hower-strewn bosom of far-off Korea, wafted on the billowy waves of the mighty Pacific-harbored at last within sight of the erstwhile Lake Shalgrove, Bolling claims to be our only unnaturalizecl member. The perfume of his birthplace has entered his soul, the mystery of the deep has been imbued in his spirit. All that has grace and charm and beauty appeal to his artistic nature. A sure shot is he-aye, a Nimrod with Kodak and tripod. A bit of nature, a charming face, a class-room scene, Lavoisier himself crouched over boiling crucible-all fall Within the focus of his ever ready camera. But the poetry of the beautiful is not the only phase of his artists' temperament- music, too, has its charm. The tinkle of mandolin is his comfort, thumbing a guitar is his pastime, while the echo of the waves resound from his limpid-voiced violin. Reynolds still afhliated himself with the Far East-through the agency of the Virginia Laundry. But life for him has lost its zest, the horizon seems dimmed to his vision, for the night air no longer rings with the noise of lusty bouts-Simpson is no more. 3, .1 Zlllllillllllllllllllg ,LTlil.,l1llli,LlflIII!ll1ZzW? 49 course LIBRARY ,3,m HAMPDEN-SYDNEY, wi, l HARRY APPLETON Rice. y iq A. H. s. c. 1 ,' Pi-iii.ANTi-iRoPic lnvitation Committee, Intermediates and Finals. l9I2-'l3g lntermediate Marshal, l9I2g Final Marshal. I9l3g Comity Club, l9l2-'I3-'I-4-'15, C:-rman Club. l9l2-'I3-'I4-'l5: Business Manager H. S. Minslrels, I9l3-'I4g Manager Glee and Mandolin Club, l9l4-'l5: Director Dramatic Club, l9l4-'l51 Bear Cat, l9I2-'I3-'I-4-'l5g Poet Laureate Senior Class, Cheer Leader, l9l5. HARRY RICE Harry has been with us for four long years-hold, we are mistaken. More cor- rectly we should say, Harry has been visiting us off and on for four long years-mostly off, for Rice is taking his major in Domestic Science and that requires you know much residence at the Normal. And so entranced in his subject is he that it stands unique as the one and only one which he never cuts. Harry, however, is prominent in many walks of college life-when he can spare the time-the aforementioned study often endangering his delicate appetite. He tries his hand at baseball, plunges the Bear Cat eleven to victory, trips the light fantastic at every passing hop, and even has the nerve to pass himself off as Mrs. Vernon Castle, in Dramatic Club performance fso graceful, ethereal and rotundll Harry possesses also the musical finger-which often oppresses the musical ear. We have to make allowances for wailing Fiddles, though-and many other things-for Harry is still a boy carefree, jovial and irrespressibly good-natured. Q I .l ' 1lll L 3 1'Ti llllll.l'LlE 2 2 2 - E E 2 - ills ' 'llll .l 50 CLARENCE BAIRD ROBERTSON, H K A, 7LfQ. H. S. C. Chrisliansburg, Va. UNION Class Historian, t9Il-'12, Union Declaimer's Medal. l9ll-'l2: Intermediate Marshal, l9ll-'l23 President Sophomore Class flirst terml, l9l2-'l3g Magazine Staff, l9l2-'I3-'I4-'I5g Student Council, l9l2-'l3g Captain Sophomore Relay Team. l9l2-'l3: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, l9l3-'l4: Vice-President Senior Class fhrst lermf. l9l4- 'I5g President Athletic Association fsecond lermj, l9l4- 1l5l Gymnasium Instructor, l9l4-'l5. C. B. ROBERTSON Robertson is our prodigal of the class. With the rest of us he ran the gauntlet of Freshmanhood, as a Sophomore he still answered to the morning roll-but then, alas, our ranks were broken. C, B. had strayed from the fold! Qld associations, however, make the strongest of ties, and 'twas that irresistible attraction of friendship's bonds that brought the wanderer back to us again. It was this same undelinable force that inspired in him the longing to win the coveted A.B. with his former classmates-it, coupled with a brilliant mind which needs no spur, has put him once more in his rightful place among us. And it was indeed with open arms that we welcomed him again-a man prominent in the class loom, on the track, in the gym-a semi-martyr to the cause of woman sufirage- but suffer not woman to come near him, no Farmville belles for him. C, B. is dearest to the hearts of all of us because of his superabundance of common sense and good-fellowship. Qfam:mmmzmmmumg fi A- f - ..,.,. -ui gruririiriummme E 5 -in f' -K.. 5 5 2 2 . ,iff 2 2 5 2 2 -If .1 so 'N . - 2 3 2 E E E ffl: .- ., .. tit E E E E E .f.'T.kL. tail' f 2 E E 2 2 233- '- 'l7f E E 24 2 rr in 1 E i E E if 5 ' ff- ' ' 2 E 2 E t . .. .1121 ef E 2 E E 3 slim - 4 E E E 2 2 2 . e - 2 E E s -LL'-1 s.4.v ' E E' er of -rv.: Z ...E illllilll1H!I!l'il .lizmrie lv -15: EHNiN'HMl1MM.ltll,,!.lna 51 w 1 W. T. RYBURN. E, Meadow View, Va. V P1-ni.ANTHRoPic T. RYBURN When Ryburn hit the Hill a full four years ago, he was just one among many. Under the delicate nurture of the Students, Club, however, 'twas not long ere he waxed mighty of girth and pounderous. It is even said that had Uncle John not been generous with his outer garments Ryburn would have been reduced to the proverbial barrel. He has not lost entirely the first full flush of rotundity even yet, though now his weight is turned to other channels. In some secluded nook he's found-far from the vulgus of the Hill-pondering over some ancient volume, heavy with dust or moulding an essay on some weighty subject. Wrestling with knotty problems is his delight- his recreation is to turn to books. Ryburn is one who finds relief from the tedium of worldly cares, one who finds communion for his soul, in the solitary solace of friends who never take offense when he has them shut-up-his books. glilillllllllllllQllllllliillllg Q3llIllIlllllllllllllllllllllllE HlllllllllllillHRILIIINHIINNE gtilllllllllllllllllllilllllllfg 52 WILLIAM JOHN SCOTT. K A. 7! 6 T Cape Charles, Va. UNION lntermediale Marshal. I9l2-'l3: Final Marshal, 1912- 't3g Assistant Business Manager lllagazine, 1913-'Hg Business Manager Magazine, l9l4-'l5. UWM. JOHN SCOTT Wm. john entered our ranks as a Sophomore. Whether because at first his unac- customed tasks were difficult, or simply because he found a sure reward for study in the satisfaction of perfect recitations, we know not. This we do know, however, Scotty early contracted the habit of preparing for exams, every day of the term, the habit of getting every lesson perfectly. Native ability has rescued him, however, from the ranks of the college drudge-the bonester. Classes do not prevent him from entering into the other activities so essential for the fuller development of a college man. For instance, he dapples in baseball, dips into showcases and distributes haberdashery. From the charms of the fair sex we should expect Scotty to go scot free-on the contrary, the road-lights find him a regular patron, and the girls of B. N. S. a Willing target for their darts. As a man Wm. jno. is quite unassuming, in work and in play, with a heart that is true blue and a disposition which only Aggie in his most horseman-like mood can ruflle. QW!Illlillllillllilllfliilllg iglltllfilitilillIIlilL,':' IME 5iVII'Illllli5'lllTffl?l'5fl'lW illllltttllllltlllllwllilliE 53 JOHN MARION SYDENSTRICKER. K Q Lewisburg, W. Va. UNION Hampden House Basket Ball Team. I9I2-'I3-'I4-'I5: Inter-Collegiate Debate Council, l9I4-'I5g President Inter- Collegiale Prohibition Association, I9I4-'I5: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, I9I4-'I5g Magazine Staff, I9I3-'I4-'I5: His- torian of Class, I9I3-'I4: Charter Member of Anarchist Clubg Sophomore Essayist Medal. I9I2-'I3g Intermediate Junior Orator, I9I3-'I4g Intermediate Senior Orator, I9I4- 'I5g Inter-Collegiate Debater to Randolph-Macon College. I9 I 4-' I 5. SYDEN SYDENSTRICKER Outwardly so quiet, calm, reservedg within a veritable turmoil of rebellious emo- tions: by day such a power for good, a guiding minister for delicate and trusting natures, a gentleman and a scholar: by night, hist, enough! Dame Rumor breathes the soft approach of Bobby Burns-possibly that explains Sy's rapid promulgation of a concealing muslashis. Nor does Sy object to such disligurement-no Iowered lash spells his doom, no rosy cheek his Waterloo. Woman-ugh! Apparently his energies are all directed toward the garnering of much useful knowledge and the disciplining of such virtues as will in time make him stand Hhead and shoulders above his fellow-man. As a politician of no mean ability, Sy has engineered several coups dielal, as a result of which he has appeared before the public eye on many and diverse occasions. Nor is his self-selection bad, for Stricker expouncls in lengthy manner, especially on ham. Such mental gymnas- tics are just to Sy's liking, however, for he is looking forward to a long and useful career as a leader of his mountain friends in paths of truth and righteousness among the West Virginia hills. QI1IlI'IIllllllllllltlillllllttk X' + QllllllUIIIIIIIILIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE EliIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE 54 L. C. TAIT. A. -X. H.S. Alderson, W. Va. UNION Basket Ball Team, I9l2-'I3-'I4-'l5g Bear Cal Football Team, l9l2-'l3q Intermediate Junior Speaker, I9l4-'I5g Assistant Manager Football, l9l4-'l5: Fall Campaign Committee, I9I3-'I4g Manager Basket Ball Team, l9l4- 'l5g Captain Lacy House Baseball Team, KALEIDOSCOPE Staff. 1913-'I'-4-'l5g President Y. M. C. A., l9I4-'I5g Manager Football Team, l9l4-'l5. UTATUM' TAIT A man in character and purpose even before he entered College, Tait has more than made his mark during his three years on the Hill. In well-nigh every phase of college life he has proved himself a leader-twice has he been called upon to pilot an athletic team through the troubled seas of finance, twice has he defended the goal of our varsity quint as no other could have done: he has held the highest office of our local Y. M. C. A., he has held audiences spellbound by the charm of his voice. In all these things and more he has given us of the fullness of his whole being, with heart and soul he has grappled with every task. But in Lee the personal element is what appeals- we feel about him an atmosphere of quiet determination, characteristic of one who knows his purpose and has full control of his destiny. He is a loyal friend, a rare good fellow and, through and through-a man! QQ lllllllllllllllllllllllltttltg fig V 2 Ntiitrui WW ' ' Vllll? 55 B. W. VENABLE.. K A' HB. ..l5.. Charleston. W. Va. UNION Final Marshal, l9l3g KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, l9l3-'l4-'l5g Final lnvitation Committee, l9l3-'I4g Y, M. C. A. Recep- lion Committee, l9I3-'l-lg Y. lVl. C. A. Mission Study Committee, l9I4-'l5g Bear Cat, l9l2-'13-'I4-'l5g Treas- urer Bear Cat Athletic Association, l9l2-'l3g Captain Bear Cat Football Team, l9l-1-'l5g Manager German Club. l9I4-'l5g Art Editor KALEIDOSCOPE, l9I4-'I5. V BEN VENABLE. Ben is known and liked by every one--his nature it is to make friends and keep them, and at heart he is always true and loyal. As a man about College he is a good dancer, a good ball player, a good fellow. We say ball player advisedly, for Ben ranks high as a Bear Cat in each of the three major sports. As a student, he relies on a fund of natural resourcefulness, being one who revels in the good old doctrine of never letting studies interfere with regular College duties. As a man of the world, he is cool and analytical, but possessed of a fund of keen wit and repartee. Ben, too, is avowedly a great admirer of the fair sex, and is the easy victim of many a Winsome face--'twas his wont in days gone by to travel oft the road to Farmville-but at present feven though vacation joys are far distant, he has a serious attack of the 'il'lolliday fever. His appe- tite, mirahile diciu, has not suffered in the slightest, however. Q ltlll1ltlzlllllllllillllllllig Qlllllllillllilllllllllllllllllllg Htttttlt tte'l,ltl!bI'llIllE 56 ROBERT EARL WARWICK. Laurel, Miss. Pi-iu.ANTHRoPic Final Marshal, l9lI-'I2g Decoration Committee, I9ll i 'l2q Winner H. H. Houston Freshman Scholarship, l9ll- 'I2g Magazine Staff, I9l2-'I3-'I4-'l5g Wearer of H. S. C.: Wearer of Ntumerals, Football, I9I2-'I3-'I4g Official Announcer Field Day, t9l2-'l3-'I4g Freshman-Sophomore Magazine Medal. l9l2-'l3g Winner George E. Tuclcett Sophomore Scholarship, Varsity Football Substitute, l9l3- 'I4g Decoration Committee, l9l3-'l4g Intermediate junior Orator, I9l3-'I-tg Member Big Four, l9l3-'l4-'l5g Chair- man Final Invitation Committee, l9l3-'l-45 Winner B. C. Bondurant junior Scholarship. l9I3-'I4g Class Football Team, I9ll-'IZ-'13-'I4g Varsity Football. l9l4-'l5: Peach Picker at Normal, l9I4-'15, lnter-Society Debater, t9l4- 'l5. BOB WARWICK Bob is one of the four-year men and hails from the far South, claiming as his home town Laurel, Miss. In the course of this four years he has carried away many honors. He has won two Scholarships by his class work, has represented his Literary Society, both as an orator and as a debater, and has played guard on the Varsity football team, besides many others too numerous to name. A deep and logical thinker he can wield a facile pen and when he has the desire the English language is a thing of charm subservient to his every whim. He loves to criticize the Focus and may some day be an adherent of simplified spelling. Bob is broad in all his views and sees everything in the big, noble phase of it. He looks deep into the heart of everyone and always finds some good: is a judge of man and character. QHtllllllllllllllllllllllllllw QWlilltitttllllllllllllllllg itlllllllIlllllillllllllltllllllE itlllHlllllllltlllllllllllllH5 57 lgistnrg nf the 0112155 uf 1515 SY, OUR years ago, many were called to become members of the Class of '15, lX FY ' but today few are chosen. Among our illustrious members who have Ml 3 departed from the chosen band there were some who left because the work M dfN5 here was too arduous and confining for their romantic temperaments. C3625 There were some who left because they must at once take a man's place Q in the world, and felt that they could not afford to spend more time in lf? fitting themselves for that place. And there were others who left for W various reasons. But of the twenty-two who remained we say it, who shouldn't, that we are proud of that Class. On the gridiron the red head of Bowling has been the terror of the opposing line. The clear voice of Q uBerk ringing out the signals and putting upepu into the team. The sturdy opposition of Warwick has worried the opposing guard. There have been others, too, whose services, less conspicuous, have helped us on the football field. Bryan and Tait in basket ball, and Carrington, A. B., Hoges and Carter in baseball, have been the mainstays of the Varsity teams. Thus in athletics we have held first place, and the Class of 'l5 has held that place not for one year but for four. As debaters and orators we name Warwick, Morton, Peters, Johnson, Carter, Sydenstricker and Guthrie. All but two of the debate squad have been of 'I5. In liter- ary and scholastic lines we also have led. There have been more men to make a general average of 85, than in any other class. In all college activities, as is natural, we have been leaders. ln society, while not a few have emulated the proverbial lizz bottle, some have been accounted sharks, But whence comes this extraordinary force and vitality. Was it inherent in the old stock who came as Freshmen in l9l l P Why, of course, that is the explanation, that and the fact that the next fall the old stock was stimulated by a fresh and vigorous addition. From this new stock have come many of the most illustrious of the members of the Class of 'l5. Scott, Carter, Morton, Sydenstricker and Johnson made their appearance a year late and then made up for lost time. But the time is fast coming when we must give up our college honors, which we have prized so highly, and which have meant so much to us, however little they may mean to outsiders. Our college days are almost over and from college boys, we should have become college men. No more will we experience these same joys, for our work here is over and there is no college like Hampden-Sidney, and no college life like her's. But why repine, The world moves and we move with it. We promise you, Hampden-Sidney, that for all future time we will remember the old Hill, the old Dormitory and the traditions of Hampden-Sidney. We promise again that wherever we go and wherever we are the old College shall never have cause to be ashamed of any member of the Class of 'l5. HISTORIAN. 58 f 50,1-n-5. .f .f furn- MISS BESSIE PAULETT JUNIOR SPONSOR J . 'Ti Qllaaa nf 15115 Gbiiirrrs First Term GEO. H. GILM1-ZR. . . .......... ..... P resident CHAS. R. Bucc ........ .... V ice-President JOHN A. SHACKELFORD .... ...... S ecrelary EDGAR B, PENDLETON .... . . .Treasurer D. M. ALLAN ..,..... . . .Historian Second Term JOHN A. SHACKELFORD .........., ...... P resident F. A. TERRY ......... . . . Vice-President W. S. NEWMAN ...... .... S ecrelary CHAS. B. RICHMOND. . . . . . .Treasurer D. M. ALLAN ....... . . .Historian 60 DOUGLASS C. AMICK, H. S. C. Romney, W. Va. UNION Scrub Football Team, l9l2-'I3-'l4g Scrub Baseball Team, I9ll- 'IZ-'I4. CHARLES RICHARD BUC-C, IIKA. A- 2- H- S- Farmville, Va. PHILANTHROPIC KALEIDOSCOPE Stall, l9l2-'l3-'l4-'l5: Varsity Baseball Team, l9l3- 'I4-'l5g Captain Varsity Baseball Team, 19153 Varsity Football Team l9l4g Class Historian, l9I2-'l3g Vice-President Sopliomore Class fsec- oncl termjg Final junior Orator, l9l5: Class Relay Team, l9l3-'I4-'l5g Captain junior Relay Team, l9I5g Cslee Club: Maples Quartet. FRANK A. MASSIE. Charlottesville, Va. UNioN KALEIDOSCOFE Stall: Comily Club: German Clubg Via Sacra Baslcel Ball Team. 61 FRANK ALLEN TERRY, Spring Garden, Va. PHILANTHROPIC EDWIN BREATHED BRIDGES. GX Charlotte, N. C. UNION Manager Tiger Cubs Basket Ball Team, l9l4-'l5: Member Big Four: Member Tennis Clubg Member Big Eats Club, l9l4-'l5. HOLCCIVIBE ROBERTSON CROCKETT, II K A- Max Meadows. Va. UNION Intermediate Marshal, l9lZ-'l3g Marshal State Oratorical Contest l9I2-'I3g Final Marshal, l9l2-'l3g Freshman Declaimefs Medal, l9l2- 'l3g Manager Sophomore Football Team, l9l2-'l3g lntermediate Mar- shal. I9l3-'I4g President Sophomore Class fseconcl termj, t9l3-'I4g Final Junior Orator, l9l3-'l4g Sophomore F.ssayist's Medal. l9l3-'l4: Final lnvitation Committee, l9t3-'I4g Secretary Athletic Association 1914-'I5g KALEIDOSCOPE Stall. I9I4-'l5g Student Council. l9I4-'I5g Assistant Manager Football Team, I9I4-'l5g lntermediate Junior Orator l9l-4-'l5. 62 E. GILMER DARST, Dublin. Va. PHILANTHROFIC Chess Champion l9l4-l5 E. LAWRENCE DUPUY. Worsham, Va. UNioN Country Club B. P. EPES, K E, H. S. Dinwiddie, Va. PHILANTHROPIC President Freshman Class Clirst terml, l9ll: Vice-President Sopho- more Class flirst termj, l9I3-'l4: lntermediate Varsity Basket Ball Team, I9l3-'I4: Marshal. l9l2: Final Marshal, l9I2: Bear Cat Base- ball Team: Bear Cat Football Team: Substitute Varsity Baseball Team. l9ll-'l2: German Club: Glee Club: Dramatic Club: Tennis Club: Pan-Hellenic Representative, 1913-'I-1: President Bear Cat Athletic Association. l9l4-'l5: Maples Quartet: College Quartet: Captain Via Sacra Baseball Team. l9ll-'l2. 63 l. 'gn- ROBT. F. GUTHRIE. GJ X. H. S. Romney. W. Va. UNION President Students' Club, I9I3-'I4g Students' Council, I9l3-'I4g Varsity Football. I9lI-'I2-'I3-'t4. GEORGE H. GILMER. Draper. Va. PHILANTHROPIC Chairman Bible Study Committee, t9I4-'I5g Intermediate Orator, l9I-1-'I5g Final Marshal, l9I3. WALTER STEPHENSON NEWMAN, G X' M lu Woodstock, Va. PHILANTHROI-'IC Vvearer of H. S. C.: Wearer of Numerals in Baseball, I9lZ-'13-'I-4: Winner of H. H. Houston Scholarship. l9I2-'l3g President Class ffirst termj, I9I3-'I4g Treasurer Class fsecond terml, l9l4-'l5: Fall Cam- paign Committee. l9l4-'l5g Bible Study Committee. l9l3-'l4g Elected Intermediate junior Orator, l9I4-'l5. 64 BERNARD WINFRED OLIVER. H. S. Hampden-Sidney, Va. Pl-IILANTHROPIC Intermediate Marshal, 1912-'I3g Final Marshal, I9I2-'l3g Secretary- Treasurer Class fsecond termj, 1912-'I3g Captain Satalite Baseball Team. I9IZ-'l3g Substitute Varsity Basket Ball Team, I9t3-'I-Ig Class Relay Team. l9l3 l4-'I5: Varsity Football Team. I9l4: Varsity Baslcet Ball Team, I9l5g Inter-Collegiate Debater, l9I4-'15, EDGAR BACHE PENDLETON. X CIJ. H. S. Sitlca. Alaska. PHiLANTHnoFic KALEIDOSCOPE Stall, 1914-'l5g Student Council, l9I3-'I4-'I5g Secre- tary-Treasurer Student Council, l9I4-'l5: Varsity Football Team, l9l2- 'I3-'I-lg Varsity Basket Ball Team, I9l3-'I4-'I5g Manager Varsity Basket Ball Team, I9l-45 Intermediate junior Orator, I9l4-'l5: Presi- dent Freshman Class ffirst termlg Secretary-Treasurer junior Class flirst termlg Captain Class Basket Ball Team, I9l3-'14-'I5g Captain Class Football Team, I9l2: Board of Governors German Club. I9I3-'I4: Clee Club: Class Relay Team, l9I5g CIIECY Leader Baseball, I9I3-'I5g Bear Cat Baseball Team, I9l3-'I-43 Owl: Assistant Manager Baseball Team, I9I4-'I5. CHARLIE DEUEL HURT. GX Roanolce, Va. UNION Captain Class Football Team. l9I4: Varsity Football Squad, l9I4g Varsity Basket Ball Team, I9l5: Baseball Squad, 19155 Intermediate Marshal, I9l4-'l5g Glee Club, l9I4-'l5g Westminister Orchestra. I9l4- 'l5. 65 LEIGH BUCKNER HANES. Q X. H. S. Monlvale. Va. UNioN Varsity Football Team, I9l2-'l3g Freshman Declaimefs Medal, l9l2- 'I3g Coach of Club Football Team, I9I2-'I3g Chief Water Boy of Base- ball Season, l9l2-'l3g Champion Checker Player! I9I4-'I5g Varsity Football, I9I4q Vice-President junior Class, l9l4-'l5g Inter-Society Debater. 1914-'I5g Associate Winner of Don. P. Halsey Debating Trophy, l9l-4-'l5g Final junior Orator, l9l4-'l5. DENISON4 MAURICE ALLAN, Farmville. Va. PHILANT1-iRoP1c Class Secretary-Treasurer fsecond termj, l9l4: Historian, l9I5g Magazine Staff. I9l4-'l5g Gymnasium Team, I9l3-'I4g Freshman- Sophomore Magazine Medal, l9l4: Sophomore Scholarship, I9l4. ARTHUR GILMORE. RAMEY. Charlestown, W. Va. UNION Final Marshal, l9l3: Class Baseball Team: l9l3-'l4g Manager Class Baseball Team, l9I5g Hampden House Basket Ball Team, IQI3: Wearer of H. S. C.g Wearer of Class Numeralsg Official Scorerg Clerk of Course Field Day, l9l3-'l4: Magazine Stall, l9l4-'l5. 66 CHARLES BLAIR RICHMOND. H K A, H. S. Ewing, Va. PHILANTHROHC Freshman DeClaTrnef'5 Medal: Sophomore Declairnervs Medalg Inlet'- mediate Marshal, l9l3g Final Marshal. l9I3g Captain Freshman Base- ball Team: Manager Sophomore Basket Ball Team: Varsity Baseball Team: I9I4-'I5g Marshal State Oratorical Contest, l9l3g lnter-Collegi- ate Debaler Emory ancl Henry, l9l5: Secretary Junior Class fseconcl termjg Class Relay Team, l9l3-'I4-'l5g Bear Cat Football Team: Treasurer Bear Cat Athletic Association, l9l4g Final Junior Orator. l9l 5. JOHN ARMSTRONG SHACKELFORD. K A- H- S- Martinsville, Va. Umor: Treasurer Class ffirst termj, l9l4-'l5g Seconcl Football Team. l9l2: Varsity Football Team. I9l3-'l4g President Class fseconcl terml, l9I4- 'l5g Bear Cat: Board of Governors German Club: l9l4-'l5: Substitute Baseball Team, l9l3-'I-lg Manager Varsity Baseball Team. I9l5. 9 JOSEPH S. TIPTON. Hillsville. Va. UN1oN Secretary ancl Treasurer Sophomore Class ffirst termj, l9l3-'I-5 67 iqiatnrg nt' Ollnaa nf 1915 4 ros 1 v . -. 9 IS nigh three years, O reader, since with flags aflaunt, with anchor lt f weighed, and with canvas bellying in the balmy breeze, we glided away QQ Via from the dear old Haven of Home, amid the swelling cheers of loved ones on the shore: since our stout old barque Sixteen, her untried Y-I timbers creaking joyfully, danced upon the foam-crested waves, as she W Qj dipped her nose into the unknown ocean's swell. A gallant crew we J X were-three and fifty brave souls all told-and our hearts beat high with mingled hope and fear, as we peered forth into the wild and track- less waste of waters that stretched before us in all its mystery and grandeur. But ere many leagues lay between us and the placid harbor we had so recently left, the threatening clouds began to gather, black and lowering. The gray billows muttered angrily as they gained in strength and volume, and the wind moaned and howled through the rigging in disconsolate tones. Somewhere through the gathering storm boomed the lifebell-the tocsin of the deep! Was it to be our knell? We shivered and longed for the Hfleshpotsu of home, but onward we steered. Then, the awful tempest burst upon us in all its fury and violence! Then, like uncaged tigers thirsting for our bloody like raging demons let loose from the lower regions, the wilcl elements shrieked and roared and gnashed their teeth as, hurling themselves upon us, they lashed and buffeted our frail cockle-shell. But-to make a long story short-in spite of the transcendental fury of the storm. we survived the beating of the monstrous billows, and once more the restless ocean resumed its accustomed calm. But, alas, we had only escaped Charybdis to fall into the hands of Scylla. We had only avoided the acquaintanceship of Davy Jones' locker to fall a prey to the snares of other and more subtle servants of his Satanic Majesty. Time would fail me were I to endeavor to relate to you, at length, of how, upon stopping at the sunny Isle of Math, our sturdy mariners became so infatuated with its labyrinthine mazes and craggy solitudes, that many of them resolved to sojourn therein for another winter and, remaining obdurate, forced us, to our intense grief, to abandon them: of how the Magic and Floating Isle of Farmville, its dazzling shores thronged by bewitching and silver-voiced sirens, relent- lessly pursued us, and of how, in spite of the gallant efforts of our noble Ulysses, the great Foibus. filling our ears with the wax of admonition, too many, alas, of our poor fellows succumbed to the enrapturing spells and fascinations of these seducing nymphs, and were lured to their destruction on the bone-strewn strand. And now as I write, O reader, with the balmy odors and sweet-scented breezes of the Chemistry Islands gently wafted to my grateful nostrils, the summer of the third year of our voyage draws on apace, and although the lonely expanse of waters stretched before us, as unbroken and interminable as ever, charts and compass tell us that we are gradually nearing our long-yearned-for, wearily-sighted, far destination4one more brief winter alone lies between us and the promised goal. And so onward we press 'mid storm and calm, sadly reduced in numbers, but dauntless in spirit, eagerly living for the day when we shall be able to sing with the bard: The wind is piping loud, my boys, Our good ship tight and free: The world of waters is our home, Old 'l'l.-S.' on the lee. I-IisToRlAN. 68 P: 55' 9 ,E . ,, MISS MARGARET L. WALKUP S0 PHOMORE SPONSOR ,J .4 . X l. f' NJ Il I-lllllll I gm um: llllllimll X ' I, 4 I E f gfgx 5 , 21. 1 f , ., If 7 ,f we Svnphnmnrv 0112155 1917 MOTTO: Keep Kicking K, 5 Fr COLORS: Buff and Red Qbiiirrrs FIRST TERM P. C. ADAMS .... ............ ..... P r esident A. A. WILSON. . . ...... Vice-President W. L. FOLEY ....... .... S ecretary-Treasurer H. C. THOMPSON ........ . ......... Historian SECOND TERM H. C. THOMPSON .................. .... P resident F. D. EBEL ..... ...... V ice-Presideni T. H. DOWNS ....... .... S ecrelary-Treasurer H. C, THOMPSON ..... ......... H istorian 70 THE SOPHOMORE CLASS Svnphnmnre Gllnna illnll P. C. ADAMS .... T. H. DOWNS .... F. D. EBEL ..... W. L. FOLEY .... R. F. CILLESPIE. .. D. E. GRAY ...... R. M. HALDERMAN .... .. E. L. JACKSON .... . R. C. JONES. .. R. LYLE .,...... L. M. MCC-AVACK ..... . J. T. MORTON .... C. E. MURRAY .... P. L. PALMORE. . . J. A. PETERS .... S. C. SPRINRLE. . . F. E. STERNE .... H. C. THOMPSON. . W. L. THURMAN. . J. H. WHALEY. . . A. A. WILSON. . . C. J. WILSON .... . . . . .Roanoke . Cape Charles, . . . .Richmond Mt. Storm, W. Pounding Mill .South Boston . . .Winchester . . . .Tazewell . . . .Cheriton . . .Keysville . . .Waterford . . . ....... Keysville .South Boston . . . .Richmond . . .Union, W . . . . .Marion . ...... Dinwiddie Charleston, W Charleston, W . .... Hampden-Sidney . . . .Richmond Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Stovall, N. C Q-me tffdies K6 J 6,4211 O QE, Q Eiatnrg nf Qllaaa nf 1917 HE term Sophomore carries with it the meaning of several different thoughts. To Webster it means the next above a Freshman. By some it has been popularly interpreted as meaning a wise fool. Yet in our foolish- ness, the profs have combatted the middle word and thus removed the minor premis. The word as introduced from England meant to the Freshman, American barbarismf' Unfortunately for the proper training of our successors, our former chastisers deemed it wise to remove this appellation also. For after two glorious weeks of the free arm movement over a ninety degree angle, in joint session of the upper classmen it was decided that Hampden-Sidney should forever be rid of the subservient Freshman, or in other words, that hazing should be abolished. Now that we have been properly classified it will be an easier matter to relate some of our achievements in and out of school. It was with mingled feelings of pleasure and pride fas the Historian always saysl that we started this our second year. Yet the element of sadness was not lacking, for about half of our former class-mates failed to continue the scholastic ties that we had entered into so happily before. Overwork by the Faculty certainly reduced our size. After the class organization and much big talk about what we wouldn't make those Freshmen do, we settled down to recreation, athletics, and least but not last, work. When the football suits were removed from their winter hibernation and the moth balls emptied out of the head gears, many from the Sophomore Class responded to tackle the dummy, Freshman, or anything else of that kind. For the Varsity, Captain Ebel, Palmore, and Quarter Back Thurman did fine work. Gillespie, Adams and Lyle also worked hard for regular positions. Then as a climax came the Christmas examinations, when several of our number made a touchdown, but at the wrong goal and re-entered the Freshman Class. After the holidays we started on basket ball and furnished several subs. At present we have started baseball and feel certain of landing several places. Those showing up especially well are Thurman, Wilson, Murray, Whaley and Gillespie. When we enter the class rooms we usually pretend what we are not. For unfor- tunately there are no real students in our class. Still we might mention such names as Sprinkle, Palmore and Morton as our distinction men. Those batting heavy in the Normal League are Sterne, Ebel, Adams and the cleanup man, Sprinkle. Here we might well end with the admonition that if we finish our Senior Year as we portend now, the Class of 'l 7 will be an example to which the School will do well to point. fSelah.J I-IisToR1AN. 73 u. .um .um Lu rv 'nrf' Q00 43 'rw' '11 IE zu-I 51006500 oofgooig Lu U 000 00 OOO - - .,:.,,,' AT CHURCH ADAMS' HOUSE QWL Q51 4 Gannon fic I 3 A 'EIDE' A L A '4 OUT OF MEMORIAL HALL NEAL AND HIS MANDOLIN T4 MISS SUSIE N ELSON FRESHMAN SPONSOR lVloTTo: IFS J. A. A. B. F. E.. T. H C. E. F. C. D. M. T. H. J. iii '3 1 i ME 1 i-5 Y -Ty?-f ilirrslymau Qllaaa, 1913 a Long Way io Tipperary. COLORS: Lemon and Homesic Blue PETERS. . . DRIVER. . . STERNE. . . i!9i1irrr5 Firsl Term MCGAVACK .... . . . . . . PERKINS. . . CARTER. . . ORCAIN... MCGAVACK Second Tern: . . . . . .President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer .Historian . . . . . .President Vice-President . . . . .Secretary-Treasurer ....Hislorian 76 THE FRESH MAN CLASS 1913 0112155 Bull ALLEN, H. G. ..... . BLAIR, W. J .......... . BONDURANT, R. W ..... BONDURANT, W. H ..... BONDURANT, W. T CARTER, F. P ..... DENNY, G. H ..... EASTLAND, E. L.. ELDRIDOE, A. M.. ELLIOTT, J. W .... ELLIOTT, W. W.. FLEIPPEN, W. M. . GRAHAM, J. R .... HENDERSON, C. H. HOOE, C. S ...... ........Prospect, ....lVlax Meadows, ...........Rice, ..........Rice, ...........Rice, . . .... Washington, . .Charles Town, W. . . . . . . ..Russell, Kansa Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Paint Lick, Ky ..Darlington Heights, Va .Darlington Heights, Va . . . . . . .Cumberlancl, Va Tsing-Kiang-Pu, China .........Keysville, . . . . ..l-loge's Store, HUBBARD, C. A. M ..... ............... . Rice, INGRAM, H. Y .... KERNODLE, F. E... KING, R. W ..... LEE, J. C ........ MCGAVACIQ, T. H. MCILI-IANY, B. A. MORTON, J. B .... MOUNT, M. B .... NEAL, E. F .... NELMS, E. B ..... NININGER, V. . . . . ORCIAIN, D. M .... OWEN, F. C ..... PERKINS, C. E. .. PETERS, J. A .... SCANLON, W. G.. SCOTT, T. B ....... . SPESSARD, J. H. . . STERNE, F. E .... SUITER, MARVIN. . SYDNOR, R. B .... THOMAS, R. A. . . VENABLE, R. M.. WALTON, H. C. . . WI-IALEY, L. C ..... WOOL, T. J., JR. . .Charlotte Courthouse . ..... Hampden-Sydney, s Va Va Va Va Va . . . . . . . .E.mmett, Tenn . . . . . ..l-lanover, . . . . . . .WaterfOrd, . . . .BluefIelcl, W. . . ..CharleStOn, W. . . . . . . .Saltville, . . . .Richmond .........Norfollc, ..........ROanoke, . . ..Dralce's Branch, . . . . . . ..Denniston, . . . .l-linton, W. . . . ..UniOn, W. . . . . . . ..MeIicliaI1, . ..l'lampclen-Sydney, . . . . -New Castle, . . . . ..Dinwiv:lclie, Va Va Va Va Va Va Va Va V a Va Va Va Miss Va Va Va . . . .ML Clinton. Va . . ..lVlannboro, Va . . . . .New Orleans, La . . .CharlestOn, W. Va . . . . . -Penn Laird, Va . ..l-lampclen-Sydney, Va .........Norfollc, Va Q Eistnrg nf 0112155 nf 15113 T was with mingled emotions of joy, pride and sorrow that we the Class of -2 'IS got off the train at Farmville on that eventful day, the seventh of J September, l9l4. The most of us were, for the first time, breaking home 2-g ties, and going out into the world to learn to pick our own way. We felt O our responsibility and gloried in it, yet could not keep back that tender Q J feeling for home, which persisted on rising within us. Q43 However, there was so much excitement on The Hill that we did X!-E not have time for too much brooding-and so 'twas best. The Y. M. C. A. QQ reception, too, helped to make us feel at home. Generous waiters heaped F our saucers high with ice cream and again and again filled our plates with K the cake and-in consequence, the Historian made an unparalleled eating record. l-le feels that he voices the sentiments of the class, when he thanks the Association, and the charming hostesses of the reception for the kindness shown us that evening and the enjoyment it gave us. Yet even the pleasure of this was marred by the thought of the anticipated invitation by the sophomores, which, however, much to our surprise and disappointment did not take place that night. But they had not forgotten us, for just one week later, on the eighteenth of September, the gruesome tolling of the bell rang us-as one-to our doom. Whether it was, that we proved too husky a bunch for easy handling or whether it was-as we were at that time made to believe-that our elder and guardian brothers took pity upon us because of our frailty, I know not. We do know though, that after this one visitation of the Sophs, the tan- talizing practice, called hazing, was abolished by the almost unanimous concurrence of the Juniors and Seniors and we were left in peace. The next event which deserves recordance on these pages was the meeting of our class for the purpose of organization. The football field now soon became the center of attraction for most of us. It has often been said-and well said, no doubt-that it is proverbial for Freshmen to boast of their prowess and achievements. Not only have we our share of this spirit but also have facts to substantiate everything we say. In football, we were represented on the Varsity by Perkins, while Johnson, Hurt and Wool all proved good material for repleting the holes in the first eleven, which will show up at the beginning of the season next fall. In this connection, too, it might be said that our team held the Sophs to a 6 to 6 score in the Inter-Class Match. In basket ball, Hurt represented us on the first quint. Scanlon, Mcllhany, Neiniger and Kernodle were also exceedingly dexterous in making a pass and shooting a goal. 79 ln baseball, the class shows up as well as in the other college sports and although on account of the large number of better men back, we are unlikely to have a Varsity man, still the following names are worthy of special mention: Suter, Hurt, Mount, Wool and Graham. Not only has the class achieved in athletics but in the classroom and in the literary activities of the college, it is up to pan We are represented on THE KALEIDOSCOPE Staff, have officers in the Y. Nl. C. A. Cabinet, and our talent greatly aids the Dramatic and Glee Clubs. Our students, too, and classroom sharks are several in number, among whom are King, Allen, H. G., and Spessard. A Little more needs to be said. The l-listorian has done his part to the best of his ability. Nothing now remains but for the members of the Class of 'l8 to go on working and achieving so that they may be long remembered and when parting leave behind them footprints on the sands of time. H1sToRiAN. x ,f Q 80 , .':'tT:Q'.' 94.21 ' 2-:'wI'.-'S-'LX . , V, -.-N --4.15: ,- F N55 2 , ATHLETIC S I A . . K, ALO 'Jr wav, Sk 1 ., ' l'O :FUI x . ' I U . v W J ' rv... O s ' 1 5 x 5: . . wk. ,. .V i B 5 Iv ' 0. . . .' 5' . e , ,. r ' 5 Y, 'v'- . . X 4. ',. 1 9 A fish o . .gf .. I-. n' '.k' - . J J Y .ul .- r .' 'gi' ','.' Q '- - fz5'.ti ' ' wie. . - .4 Z.-, yn 4. t . Q. .. A' A 1 s p 1:1 , s' I' A .2 'L .. , ,1.-H 1 D ,. .,.-gg, A, V l'- N triad, 0, ' Ll' K A ' ' .s,,x,S'iQ' -I f - ' r G ' gxlffb . ' 'H' .' I 0. s ,. - I . . lf- .I -9 I ' 5 1 W I' . -' , ' Z ' -',f.s'f, cyl . 'fn v .'.k g .A . 'fn 'I ' . . ' ' ' 'L' 'W J .f ' - .x Q-' ' f-'Wi' 'f .14 fi M . r It Q aiffsb F- j,., '- P' 'N ' -r A. ,.4' L J , 'Inj ' , . l. K . .. s,.n.zN0 J 5 'A , I 1, iff ,mf C, . ' 'I ' fm ',,' L ' ff:-Jho Q -'lf'-5 4. MISS ELIZABETH JARMAN SPONSOR OF ATHLETICS CHARLES A. BERNIER ATHLETIC DmEc1oR General Atlglvtir Asanrintinu 0Di'tirrr5 First Term M. C. BOWLING, 'I5. . . .......... ........ P resident F. D. EBEL, 'I7 ...... ..... V ice-President H. R. CROCKETT, '16. .. ....... Secretary-Treasurer CHARLES A. BERNIER ...... ......... C eneral Athletic Director Second Term C. B. ROBERTSON, 'I5 ..... ....... ...... P r esident F. D. EBEL, 'I7 ...... ......... V ice-President J. E.. BRYAN, 'I5 ...... ....... S ecretary-Treasurer CHARLES A. BERNIER .... .... C eneral Athletic Director ilinnthall Bvpartntrnt FRANK D. EBEL, 'I7 .................... .Captain L. C. TAIT, 'I5 ...........,............. Manager Euakrt Ball Erpnrtmrut J. E. BRYAN, '15 ........................ .Captain L. C. TAIT, 'I5 ........................ Manager tiiasrhall Brpzxrtmrnt CHAS. R. BUGG, '16 .................... .Captain J. A. SHACKELFORD, 'I6 ....... . . . . iliarultg 2-Xhuisurg Baath A. W. MCWHORTER J. H. C. WINSTON H. T. GRAHAM J. A. CLARKE 83 Alanager Atfylvtira CQ BEIJS value as a captain, was inestimableg s as? as a player, inimitable: as a conqueror, truthfulness that jim was the incarnation of the old l-lampden-Sidney spirit. And S L. C, f magnanimous. It may be said with all 921 fa history reveals the value of this spirit. For for three years he has been one of the means of placing our banner on the highest peak of success. ,Iim's ideal in football was a fa-Y perfect machine, and all who have seen him C 5 three years he has followed our banner, and ,J 63 This young German Apollo never lowered himself to the plane of the spectacular. He was always steady, consistent and of an in- conquerable tenacity. In the midst of the field, at the crucial moment of the game Jim was always a master of himself and the situation. play know his efforts to attain that ideal. Q 63 lf a man makes a better mouse-trap than his neighbor,the world will make a beaten path to his door, and if a football player becomes an adept in using his toe, his opponents will tremble and his reward will be measured by the admiration of the spectators. HCharlie Bugg has been a great factor in placing Hampden-Sidney in the foremost rank of our State athletic teams. l-lis toe won one of the greatest games of the season. But not only is Charlie an adept with his toe, he has displayed a wonderful ability in quick perception and skillful strategy on defense. Be sure you're right, then go ahead. And in every department of the game Red Bowling has gone ahead. ln the thickest of the smoke of all our battles, the sight of our auburn hair warrior indicated that our flag was still there. No member of the team has been a greater value than Red At all times, in all places, and under all circum- stances, he was the same aggressive and consistent player. His defense has been the subject of state-wide comment and admiration, and his offense a great value to the team. John Shackelford was apparently as peaceful as a lamb before the game, but his opponent by the end of it realized in him a lion-always aggressive, always calm, but always 84 O at the heart of the play. When Shack came to Hampden- Sidney we did not know his value as a football player, but it is certain that when he leaves we will realize our loss. The characteristic of Shack is that he was always a clean and a hard player. If you can hold on when there is nothing in you, but the will says to you hold on. Under this slogan 'tLeigh Hanes fought the noblest struggle that Hampden-Sidney supporters ever witnessed. With indomitable spirit he over- came physical handicaps, and was ever a terror to his adversary. Leigh had the faculty of being able to rally his comrades under the most depressing circumstances. He was a stone wall of defense, and the foremost man on offense. The worth of man is revealed in what he does, and how he does it. Into every football battle Pen has entered with the echo of, Hampden-Sidney expects every man to do his duty ringing in his ears. And no player has done his duty more conscientiously and sincerely than our friend Pen. Hampden-Sidney has been proud to reward him with three H. S. monograms. His offensive work has won him an enviable place among the best players of the Eastern colleges. On defense he was at all times a sure tackler and one of our most substantial men. fE.ditor's insertionj mlnhe greatest valuables one often wrapped in the smallest packages. In Toady, Hampden-Sidney has found a jewel, which she will long cherish and feel proud of. He was a true general in every sense of the word. Always open to advice, calm and quick to see and act. There was never in the history of the College a greater broken field runner than Toad Thurman. All supporters of old Garnet and Cray smiled with satisfaction when he took the ball. Bernard is an illustration of the value of sticktoitiveness. For two years he worked hard to make the team. The fact that he is a monogram man proves his worth. The man that wins by fighting is the true victor. As a tackler, he was one of our best, and we were glad to see the ball spinning from little Toads hand to the arms of Bernard. Hamp- den-Sidney will be glad to see him on the gridiron next year. Gentle reader, Perk needs no introduction. If you wish to know the power of his shoulders you should have been at Richmond College Hospital after our last game with them. His was the spirit of the highland, indefatigable and terrible. It is said that uPerk is one of the few Freshmen that keeps his mouth shut, off the field, but with all seriousness, he uses his mouth as an auxiliary to his arms in receiving a forward pass. There will be joy at Hamp- den-Sidney, and trembling among the other colleges to see Perk fight again next year. 85 Palmore has been a great value to the team, and in the future we feel certain that he will be of still greater value. His is a man of no little football experience, having played on one of the best high school teams in the State. His work during the past season indicates that his future sojourn at Hampden-Sidney will greatly strengthen our athletic depart- ment. Pal was at all times an aggressive and sure player. On Warwick's shield may be found the motto: I can and l will. For three years he fought for the honor of defending Hampden-Sidney. In his Senior year Bob was rem arded for his fight by being a most important member of the team. One of the striking characteristics of the man was that he was able to calm the fears of his opponent in the hottest of the Fight by his urbane conversation or natural phenomenon. This illustrates how calm and steady Bob was during a game. Now that he has proved the past the future he shall face. If there was ever a football player who has proven his ability that player is Bernard Driver. His wonderful gains have rejuvenated the old and thrilled the young on many fields. Bernard has been the subject of much discus- sion in the athletic circle of the State. Football critics presage for him a more wonderful future than his glorious past. Next season will see him Captain of our team and this fact indicates the certainty of our future success. ' The greatest force in life is the most silent. The great- est factor in moulding a team is the work at the scrubs. To Tucker Carrington, Hampden-Sidney does homage for his inestimable value in making our football seasons a success for the past four years. Undoubtedly he has been a power- ful silent force. It can be truthfully said that he is one of the most deserving wearers of the monogram. At the beginning of our football season the prospects for a successful team were very dim. Coach Bernier, however, undaunted by the gloomy aspect, set to work with that old time Hampden-Sidney spirit to mould into shape the material that presented itself. Seven old men reported for work, and with this substantial nucleus around which to build, Hamp- den-Sidney was fortunate enough to place on the Eastern gridiron a most formidable eleven. We began the season by playing the strong and experienced Rivermont team. Against these ex-college players we did exceptionally well, in prevent- ing them from scoring: then followed the V. M. l. and V. P. l. games, in which, although defeated, we gave a good account of ourselves. We met the Rivermont team for the second time, but were not so fortunate as in the first game. After this game the championship series began. Our record of these games will long be remembered, and cher- 86 ished by old Hampden-Sidney men. With by far the lightest team in the league we met our old rivals, and in a manner that surprised opponents and supporters. We closed the season by sharing equally with Richmond College the Eastern Collegiate Championship. But to whom are we indebted for the enviable success of our team? Coach Bern- ier has won for himself the reputation of being one of the best football coaches in this section of the country. To him Hampden-Sidney and her Alumni must give credit for the remarkable athletic record of the season. The coach who is capable of rounding out a team from a hundred and ten students, which plays one hundred and eighteen consecutive minutes without a substitution, and against teams taken from colleges containing two and three times as many students as Hampden-Sidney-the coach of such a team must be complimented on his efficiency. Considering the disadvantage at which we were placed by an unsuitable gymnasium, the Hampden-Sidney basket ball team made a good record for the season. With Captain Bryan at center and Pendleton and Tait guards, it was neces- sary for Coach Bernier to pick from the applicants men capable of hlling the other positions. These men were Hurt and Oliver, who showed up well besides their fellow team- mates. Later in the season the squad was strengthened by the appearance of A. B. Carrington, a former letter man, and lVlurry, a new applicant. We opened the season by defeating the strong Seminary aggregation. Then followed two games with the Rivermont team, and with whom we divided honors, although we were not as successful in the championship games as we were at the first of the season. All the games we played were close and hard fought. It is too early in the season to forecast the results of our baseball games, but we are fortunate in having back in Col- lege the following letter men: Captain Bugg, A. B. Car- rington, Carter, Thurman, Hodges, Richmond and Epes. With these men and the promising material at hand, Coach Bernier hopes to produce a winning team. . bl ,t .- sf' g -4.A. 'i - ay -' f 5' ef' g Ei- i ZX fi: .Qjui ie -A , 1' ' A- 87 oooQ?oo ooffgooo F. D. EBEL. CAPTAIN ooogfoo ooC3ooo ZHnntha1l F. D. EBEL .... Lf9ftirrr5 . . . ........... Manager I-I. R. CRQCKETT .... L. C. TAIT ..... C. A. BERNIER. . Bucs. ........ SHACKLEFORD. . . WARWICK ...,. BOWLING .. , . I-IANES . . . EBEL ...... OLIVER It PALMORE S TI-IURMAN .... DRIVER ...... PENDLETON .... PERKINS ..... THOMPSON GILLESPIE HURT AMICI4 88 Gram Smhalitutrs . .,... Captain . . .Assislanl Managcz' ...........COGCIl . . . .Right End . . . .Right Tackle , . . .Right Guard .......Center .....Left Guard . . . .Left Tackle .....Left Ends . . .Quarter Back . . . . .Left Half Back . . . .Right Half Back ......Full Back ADAMS GUTHRIE JOHNSTON PETERS, J. A. MASSIE TEAM VARSITY FOOTBALL Easkvt Zfiall - oooggoo oofgooo ---- Q9iIirrr5 J. E. BRYAN .... ........ .... C a plain . L. C. TAIT ..... ..... M anager C. A. BERNHLR .... ..... C nach Urznu 25 Q 1 C. D. HURT ...... ...... .... L e ft Forward B J ,HQH 1- B. S. OLIVER ....... . . .Right Forward 1 A. B. CARRINGTON .... ..... F orward fl ' E.. BRYAN ........ ...... C enter ' E. B. PENDLETON .... .... L eft Guard E L. C. TAIT ................. ..... R ight Guard .N unn Suhstitutrs I-I. C. THOMPSON C. B. RICHMOND J. E. BRYAN P-nu C. E.. NIURRY M. C. BOWLING DOOQQQQ oo42ooo i 90 VARSITY BASKET BALL TEAM OOOQQOO oofgooo C. R. BUGS. CAPTAIN 04506500 oofgooo Eztmthall i9Rirrr5 C. R. BUGC. ................. .... C aptain J. A. SHACKELFORD .... . . .Manager C. A. BERNIER ..... ...... .... C 0 ack Efratu ' C. R. BUGC. .... ...... .... C a tcher G. B. HODGES . .. . .First Base C. C. CARTER .... Second Base W. L. THURMAN. . . ..,. Short Stop A' A' WILSON 3. .Third Base C. D. HURT S B. P. EPES ........ .Right Field C. B. RICHMOND .... Center Field C' E' MURRY .Left Field I-I. C. WHALEY A. B. CARRINGTON If ' 1 U I I - -Pitchers F. P. CARTER S E-mhstitutra MOUNT GILLESPIE VENABLE GRAHAM WOOL INGRAM OLIVER CARRINGTON BLAIR 92 NAL V,- Wk 4' .fx 'N ' X . Q If , ' X I N V A gn ' J - 'r . M. N' W Qxf A 1 ,gx cgi-R 11. u , f Q . A ul Tlvnxniz Qlluh Qbiiirrra F. E. STERNE President G. I-I. GILMER Manager Hllrnlhrra J. B. REYNOLDS W. T. CARRINGTON L. C. TAIT B. XV. VENABLE J. M. SYDENSTRICKER W. S. NEWMAN J. S. TIPTON J. E.. BRYAN T. C. JOHNSON M. B. MOUNT I. J. WOOL C. G. PETERS 94 A. G. RAMEY A. B. CARRINGTON J. R. GRAHAM D. M. ORc.A1N , 11,5-E'- .LT I 9' ' fv A xx IJ f V' I 1 iv Vin .g '3f' 'A '.Jy,,. X V' I :M-'-if-I 5.3-2' If . :X ,I ,f rfy 1 I 'I X-,V , -fag., 11' ,, I. S-'J ' vf xiii?-. Aj',13l.,, g .g5 ::I1wh VV 9. 11 I W mvarrrz uf iFnnthal1 L. C. TAIT Manager C. G. PETERS Manager R. F. GUTHRIE W. I. CARRINOTON M. C. BOWLING A. B. CARRINCTON A. B. DRIVER F. D. EBEL L. B. HANE5 E. B. PENDLETON J. A. SHACKELFORD C. R. Bucc W. L. THURMAN B. W. OLIVER R. E. WARWICR P. L. PALMORE I I Q Zliaskrt iliall J. E. BRYAN A. B. CARRINGTON E. B. PENDLETON L. C. TAIT C. D. HURT B. W. OLIVER Tliaarhall M. C. BOWLING Manager C. R. Bucs A. B. CARRINOTOI' B. P. EPE5 A. B. HODGES C. CARTER C. B. RICHMOND W. L. THURMAN mrarrrz nf N1nnrrala P. C. ADAMS R. LYLE S. A. JOHNSTON j. B. REYNOLDS C. G. PETERS R. B. THOMPSON R. F. GILLESPIE j. A. PETERS D. C. AMICI B. W. VENABLE F. A. MASSIE 95 Songs sinh 132115 .i 'Q :z , 9? low of f Q f? is Then, Hampden-Sidney, here's to you, The noblest of your day, Heres 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: Here's to the team so strong and true, That wears the red and gray. ,. F. X: '-sl fly-gf! 1 Q Here's to old Hampden-Sidney- ff H 'I Drink her down! l Y K I l-lere's to old Hampden-Sidney- fl ' X-,ir , tl Drink her down! f I Here's to old Hampden-Sidney- If She's the warmest thing in town- !!! 1 P X Drink her down! ,N C, f, - T' Drink her down! Q5 4 X at Drink her down, down, down! i wx ' l A F' illtly XXXXG Hike, hike, a hike us. X pyxx 5 There's nothing like us, 3 X gif-K bf-lg! We shall forever unconquered be. ' lg No team can lick us. J! X ii V' No team can trick us, , f X X We boys of H.-S. C. if , 'l 4 if Hike along, old Hampden-Sidney, - X47 Hike along! X my vb ,f ,xf t A X 2 'bf 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 by any, Vlfith hearts derllowing, We will sing this hymn! CHORUS Rah, rah, old H.-S.. rah! Old Almer lVlater'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 Soplis we adored her, And carved our names upon her ancient halls! As Juniors patrolled her, As Seniors extolled her, Xve trust our Alma lVlater's power in all! 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! 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 red and gray are ever waving high! Rah, rah, for victory, H.-S. must wing Fight to the Enish, never give in. You do your best, boys. we'll 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 Almer Mater Well! ere he true to thee, For we'll spread with song and story The fame of H.-S. C. 96 tu en .- Q, + Svtuhvuta' Olnuuril M. C. BowE1Nc Prcsidcnl C. C.. PETERS E. B. PENULETON Vice-President Sccrclary-Traasur r Bowuxc PETERS PENDLETON CARRINCTON ml'llIhl'I'5 P. C. ADAMS 97 H. R. CROCKETT R. F. GUTHRIE H. C. THOMPSON NV. L. FOLEY if Q a ,f N iv N ,'f f-' .l f l W ,M C S. W f f My QM ' A2 , f AZ M y f' f Q? 771 f Z fy 4 1 1' I -605 ...ri -F' '-i !..q ISF' 'f f '-llil-LL1lllH'D 1117 ' LUEHIXHH SOCIETIES Hninn Eitvrarg Snrivtg ':.r 7w'f'f- X , 1 ,971 Ag uw., h K 7 , , l , A .,-f KW i K K ffl , '- X X f , .L 7 7 2 f 4, 'I' .71 f i x l , I ' f 7 . 'A 1 i 4 , 1,1 EI , I ,.-. ' 2 EP VA If jj. a ,, 1- Z-,V 11,4 5, :ggfs , -, 1 f , - f Y. ,Q ff fp. .4 ' X X ' x 4' f ' T555 if 1 Z' 1, if' f. r f I .Wa ,Z ,ff -, sg ., f I 1 : In 'f-4' -f .1 , ., ' 1. fl C4 :' 1 ' f ' -xi., N A-. ' I' 7 , 5,422 lfw.. .. ' ' J fwfjf .1,yi,2gi7:.i,iivn , I X , fx? 1 Nr-b . a - , f 'gf E 2 vi- ' '-.- 1 Y 1: VKQZIQQE53 '-:situ-LrE., ':-2 -. -ip 'js11f f- ' ?'215: -- - 2:53, - EZ..?f-2744 gl - - ' W' E 755 ...H W 57 f i ' E' T2 , 'L ' ' ' ul' Y 1-1223 W f' ,,:.!' -1 ' Q : x 1 , F, fl, ' EB --x MOTTOZ Me socium summis adgungcre rebus GD1'tirrra CHAS. G. PETERS T. C. joHNsoN H. C. THOMPSON Final Senior Prcsialcnl Final Senior Oralor L. B. HANES Final funior Oralors lglgilanthrnpir Eiterarg Snrietg Mono: Aude sapere BEN. D. Moarow j. C. GUTHRIE C. R. Bucc Final Senior President Final Senior Oralor C. B. RICHMOND Final funior Oralors 98 Hllilill iihterarg Svnrietg r, . Q. irldrmhvrs ADAMS ,IOHNSON AMICIQ JONES BLAIR MCGAVACK, L. BRIDGES MCGAVACKV T. CARTER. C. MORTON, j. B. CARTER. F. NELMS CROCKETT ORGAIN DENNY MCILHAINEX' DUPUY PALMORE FOLEY PERKINS GRAHAM PETERS. C. G. GUTHRIE, R. F. RAMEY HALDERMAN REYNOLDS HANES ROBERTSON HURT SPESSARD I SYDENSTRICI-:ER Q Q 3 o Ightlanthrnmr Qlzterarg illlmuhrra M. C. BOWLING J. E. BRYAN j. C. C-UTHRIE H. LEVY B. D. MORTON H. A. RICE W. T. RYBURN j. M. SIMPSON R. E. WARWICK D. M. ALLAN C. R. Bucc F.. C. DARST B. P. EPES C. H. GILMER WM. S. NEWMAN B. W. OLIVER E. B. PENDLETON C. B. RICHMOND F. A. TERRY R. LYLE j. T. MORTON J. H. WHALEY' C. J. WILSON H. G. ALLEN R. W. BONDURANT W. H. BONDURANT W. T. BONDURANT E. T. EASTLAND 99 TAIT TIPTON THOMPSON VENABLE, B. W. VENABLE, R. M. WILSON, A. A NVOOL C-ILLESPIE NINICER SYDNOR HOGE SUTER JACKSON THURMAN SI-IACKELFORD Svnrirtg F. KERNODLE R. W. KING j. C. LEE M. B. MOUNT A. M. ELDRIDGE HUBBARD F. C. OWEN E. B. SCOTT L. C. WHALEY F. F.. STERNE H. C. WALTON W. G. SCANLON R. A. THOMAS j. N. GORDON 13. 211121. Ol. A. Gluhinet 1913-'14 Qmiirrrei L. C. TAIT Presidenl J. C. GUTHRIE j. F. SIMPSON T. C. JOHNSON Vice-President Treasurer Secrelary Glhairmru uf Glummitivra P. C. ADAMS G. H. GILMER J. B. REYNOLDS Devolional Bible Sludy Mission Sludy C. G. PETERS W. L. FOLEY J. M. SYDENSTRICKER Campaign and Membership Receplion Manager Reading Room 1514-'15 Qbliirrrs C. B. RICHMOND President G. H. GILMER J. B. ORGAIN W. L. FOLEY Vice-Presidenl Treasurer Secrelary Ollyairnnrn nf Glnmmittrrs G. ALLEN H. C. THOMPSON C. E. PERKINS Devolional Bible Study Mission Sludy A. A. WILSON j. R. GRAHAM T. H. DowNs Campaign and Membership Receplion Manager Reading Room 100 'P- f '? 'F N F Q i4 V Q Ll T Yx 'iw wi f SEP v' 5952? 'EE' 5. Bramatir Glluh Gnmnuilirr C. A. BERMER H. A. R1cE Eiuaars C. R.Bucc F. E. STERNE Earitnnrs C. C.. PETERS T. C. JOHNSON E. B. PENDLETON H. R. CROCKET1' Uvunrs B. P. EPES A. B. CARRINCTON R. B. SYDNOR Elrahn F. G. CHRISTIAN A. B. HODGES H. A. RICE C. S. HocE 1IlPIanhnlu1 Gllnh H. A. RICE Leader iKl'lIIZIiIIiilQ Eurturrrs A. B. HODCE5 W. L. THURMAN j. B. REYNOLDS F. E. NEAL C. D. HURT j. A. SHACKELFQRD B. W. S:oTT 102 T. -4 Nnrmal Srlynnl Qlluh C. JOHNSON E.. B. PENDLETON W. T. CARRINCTON IAS. EBEL R. E. WARXVICK W. NEwIvIAN P. C. ADAMS C. G. PETERS H. R. CRo:IcETT Dock GILLESPIE L. C. TAIT WM. FLIPFEN j. E. BRYAN J. A. PETERS E. T. EASTLAND L. M. MCGAVACK H. WALTON A. B. HODGES C. B. RICHMOND F. CHRISTIAN H. A. RICE W. T. BONDURANT j. W. ELLIOTT F. E. STERNE B. SYDNOR F. E. NEAL SYD SPRINIQLE WM. FLIPPEN B. D. MORTON I. H. DowNs T. H. MCGAVACK T .R Q-of--.- .. .-- 'SQ Rav I Lu -1 4 I ch 'S Z 5 O Q Q Z 4 Z ll'-I D I-11 U2 E 2 O 42 E 5 5 .. 4 :E QQ D-4 C-'il 'X 2 1 ' - 1 1.. D ,- . -. 1,1 ..--.-- L Qlnmitg Glluh ROBERT K. BROLK Prcsfdcnl A 4 . C. G. PETERQ Iwunug r O f' 5'5 -f A 5 rT-- 1 - , I -' Bri .IJ Muarh nt Drrrrturs me I' :guy Miss SUSIE X'EN.-ABLE MRS. XV. H. W'H11Elxc , I DR. j. H. C. BAGBY iHrmhrr5 . C. R. Bucc V. NEINIGER . A. SHACK!-QLFORD L. C. Trur W. T. CARR1Nc.T0N 4 H .r .,,.. ,V 3 ' N N . nv, --1 IJ '1 wwf' gy! 'rl I 4 N' ., , -xl , E. A. B. B. W. WVEN si s 4 15, .5-Vi 3 1 ' ' '4Vf 'IU1 , rl 9 Q 1' f ' D I X 'lr' W Q :JL ' uf: 2 L .1 Q U 1' 1 , 1' N I l If V A. , i ,f , . '- J F4 'I U X I lf! . . K fi , .11 lx 1 I' fx f .1 57 xr Q1 .. .fl xf il '41 '. 1 . mf fu L-Jff 1 I I .11 ' A Q 1: H.f z, 4' f 'I ' A if ' 5 F. E. NEAL T. j. WooL J. B. REYNOLDS F. 105 A. IVIASSIE F. E. OWEN R. M. XIEN F. E. STERNE B. PENDLETON Hom-.Es ABLE A. ABLE C H. R. CROC F. D. EBEL G. B. HANES KETT C. E. PERKINS C. B. RICHMOND C. B. ROBERTSON H. A. RICE P. C. ADAMS R. LYLE B. CARRINGTOY G. PETERS A E 5 3 SSX' X f E 5 JJ A I, gl 3 mf' E Zo ' ' ll' V 2. X- J' ,Jia E JV J J X flu if, 2 ll M31 -'Q ?MYIZi1f 'lWlTlFKlilFFNmWlW'4lW German Glluh :ir 2 4:2 A. B. CARRINGTON by President C. R. Bucs B. W. VENABLE A. B. HODGES Vice-Presidanl lllanager Leader Zfinurh nf Guurrnnrs W. T. CARRINGTON E. B. PENDLETON J. A. SHACKELEORD iHHrn1hrr5 C. R. Bucc A. B. HODGES J. EBEL A. B. CARRINQTON F. E. STERNE L. C. TA11' J. A. SHA'-IKELFORD B. W. WJENABLE V. NEINIGER R. LYLE C. B. RICHMOND F. E. OWEN VV. T. CARRINCTON P. C. ADAMS H. A. RICE E. B. PENDLETON E. F. NEAL C. E. ROBERTSON C. E. PERKINS . R. CROCKETT H JL. B. HANES 106 R. F. A. MAss1E J. B. REYNOLDS T. J. Wool. VENABLE C. G. PETERS Emir , X , 1 NN. Ffa.- mix. 1 'W 1 A s ', B-'tp .,, 4 f .1 N..z -,.- f H. swmtqjog W 15' X' b .5 li 1 1 saws. 1 3 E - ...fits N0 - 1 f W. T. CARRINGTON fCapi.j, S.S. B. W. VENABLE. Ist. B. H. A. RxcE, Znd. B. V. NINIGER, 3rd, B. H. R. CROCKETT. R. F. Glad Athlvtir Azanriaiinu Zlhmnthall Grunt WM. GILLESPIE, Manager BEN. XJENABLE fCaptainj. Q. B. C. G. PETERS. R. G. W. T. CARRINGTON, R. H. J. B. REYNOLDS, C. H. A. RICE. F. B. JOHN PETERS. L.G. C. B. RICHMOND. L. H. B. P. EFES. L. T. T. j. WOOL, R. E. V. NnNlcER T. C. JOHNSON. R. T. Subslflules C. B. ROBERTSON H. R. CROCKETT H. THOMPSON Easkrt Zliull Erznu JOHN SHACKELFORD. C. JIM EBEL, fCap1ainj, R. G. H. A. RICE. L. F. R. CROCKETT, L. G. I'lUCH THOMPSON, L. F. W. T. CARRINGTON, Manager Eiusrhull Grain Doc GILLESFIE, C. WM. FLIPPEN. C. F. UFINH STERNE. L. F. E. B. PENDLETON. P. FRANK CHRISTIAN, Manager 107 N, QV Iv-P ffq N0 - w'Y1ne 6 jc , if ' f T S. TM.: T4 ! 'Z f lf' If ffjf 4 I N V QQ WWA ff! in-I xy -, ' 9 riiglfifw J 'J ' CHRISTIAN ..... NEAL ........ C. joHNsoN. .. H. A. RICE .... J I Q, 'sv 3 Glrahlv illull c:rQ air SONG: Rock a Bye Baby SPRINKLE. Pastor .....Failhful One .. , . .Lalesl Arrival . . . . .Keeper of Bolllc .....Wl'Ia Has a Cen! XVARWICK ..., ..... L ouclcsl Squealer MOUNT 4, .. ..., who lvccds CI Bib WOOL I HALDERMAN. .. ........ Eugenie Baby -I. PETERS... ............ Best Looking Baby NINIGER. .. ..... Can Only Use Slerilized Milli GILMER ........, .... ........... M a del Baby R. F. GUTHRIE ...... ............. B lue-Eyed Baby XV. T. CARRINGTON .,.. ..... H e Hasn'I Crown An Inch j. W. ELLIOTT .,.. OWEN .............. UCHINCU GRAHAM. Honczs. ......... 108 ........Snoolfums . . , ,Sleeping Bcauly .......Chfna Doll ....Rag Baby -'Ti Elf, if - JM. , 6' f L Wh si, 'fi x f I , 1 M ig. 'jan X L 5+ 2-li ii-... . 5 -' ' 'A ff- L 7 ,ef Wg! Q if A, 41.2 - i Y 'f' G 4- .uu' li ' -24 ' -lQ lf' .- r I ' Q. - -f'4 f' ' f 5 r.. 0 -1 .. - 7 llllllllllllllllllllllllll 7, ' -... I a u U v .Q Tl w '52 5 fb , . -Q ll K - ' l g gi 16. Sn CEM mutha L. B. HANES. . . ........ Presidenl B. S. OLIVER .... ...., I ice-Presidenl Razor! .......... ... THURMAN Pipe.. .... j. E. BRYAN Slimle . . ...... WASH Firemxn . .,.. . . .STOKES Old Flame.. ........ H. .-X. RICE. Blow OH ..,..............,, .... A . B. CARRINGTON Real Slug f99'f Pure Cas, .... ........., C ROCKETT Tank ......,...... ....... ,..... .................. S N 0 oxurvls Fecal Regulator... .... MURRY. SYDENSTRICKER. RICHMOND Chief Consumer ................. DR. MCWHORTER Combustion . Dfreclors.. Ffxfurc . Runaway . Ufcxlc Liquors. ...................PERKlNs . . . .SUTER. DARST, HALDERMAN .................BOWLlNC 109 ARCENBRICHT C. G. PETQRS ,..y3i,-.Ls--s .- - i W? -'f ,542 9.-Lf., si' Fzl' : 4- 35-,g . -':: ' if. ',t,'j::-, a '22:'i 17 X ,K sz f r '33-.T LJ-f.1 :'.k5.L Q.,-J'-'-ac. I 4. 3 p. ,ag ,-new W' :iw 'fy v, ' 1 4. ' 'rs 'il Visa V 'df f' ll NN T45 ? Moliavaclr, T. Bridges Whaley Bernier Beazley Hodges Murray Reynolds Pendlelon Mcliavack, l. Barsl Gilmer Scanlon Perkins Thomas Graham Honorary Members: BLACKS Morphey, Eapahlanoa WVHITES Bryan Venahle, B. Morlon llamey Thompson Carler, C. Ebel Ghrislian Niniger Hanes Rice liplon Clark Winsion Eldridge Venable, R. 110 ANAl2qHiSr CLUP Inspiration.. ..., The Perils of Pauline Paslime .... ...... D ropping Bum Bomhs Penance ............. .... L istening To Chapel Tallxs EXPLOITS Tuclcer's Bull delivered to Aggie. Aerial raid on Chapel. Open venlilalion of class rooms. Reduclion of Tuclfs salad. Frequent visils lo lVlaples. linnrnrarg ililriiilirrs Home HURT G:LLLsPiE SYDENsTRicKER THURMAN THOMPSON 3-Xrtiur ffliirnilhrra HALDERMAN BONDURANT. H. M. ALLAN PALMORE CYP THE BLOOD Kim: 111 joiaxsox SYDNOR DARS1' LEFTY Louis 'ull 5 '43 Q, , uulllfl, -f r Fl Minh I 7 . .5 1 : is I . 1253 he T J . I . r .,. J- X - . Q , r' J -I ,ul I I o lflzrfce sr ,., D513 l. g bn QM Night iKihPr5' Glluh MOTTOS: We ride in vain. He mounleJ his horse and rode madly off in all direclions. Inilialion Fee ..... Favorile Resort ..... Ladies In Question. . Horseman .......... Revenge ls Sweet, ..A. Seducer ...,................ The Villain Snll pursued Her. . . Timid Rider ....,....,.,...... Custodian of lhe Horse Blanlcels. .. Iniliales .............. . ....,... . Gentlemen in XVaiting-CARRTNGTO THOMPSON ......Fifly Cents .. . . . . . .Church Yard W. L. THURMAN H. A. RTCE 5 4 G. PETERS . . . . . . . N1cx CARTER .....j. A. SHACKELFQRD ..... CYcLoNE JONES ....FRESHMAN LEE EBEL EBEL. JONES, LEE. CARTER, PETERS N, A. B., PENDLETON, XXENABLE. STERNE, Dislurher of the Peace ............. 112 ....LlODGES v-1 N Hn? Wi X Y i :iq 1 , Y ? 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'19u.wwLIU,MI11 HW' ui- X x X X 23 is ik lx si QQ ik -........- ----.: -,-- . in ll W1-ml lwhg my .xex 255 :re x 31 s ra 'F I n 4 gui ...-...UlU-..,.. ,.,,,,,L' fix. 111 . il .1v1 ':a 'IlWl'l'1'U.. 1' furmiw- :ImmunufGufmmluIw'luumu 1 al XUILUI IANHIQHIHH Nuuuulllnlulnnlrlrlllllmll. ....fff'Iglue:!'f I--yrgl,-,1'l'slxnr1 -aim!! luEUUUllN'lIIllf-ljllmululmluggun Lumljunuuufmmnnxwu-Ulunlluuunl ,Emi A, nm ' ' Ill Bl ULLUIL 1 QM - U llILimLUmUJl 1LUl1lU x l1fllxT111lI1,glllv GTI Mmlvfgiupglgl ' h W I f pn I my-I .5 lllllll ,f 4, E ' 332 xg? x ' ' img g. - X iaq iiytq. ' x kai:-'1 lm , -- ,, lllluwli' 1 'ggi gil lll W Jin Ill ullu H Ullllufigfuu III ,Munn mnmlIllHfIufnuL 'HIIIHIIIII I IILUII L -- f ,-, ...QJIL ... V llkH H 'llllI Immun' ---- -'w1HhuHQ - WllWLl1 IIGWMUL 'QILlIlIIl1lllHUUL H AW 'HM -6111 Dfyrllb QI!!!HHIII11NIIIIIIIIIIIHVIIIIIHHHHVWHIXIllIIWIIIHIVPHIlHH1141IIW1NIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHI!HIHHHIl!4IHHIHIHlHHHHH4I1II1IlIlllIlIl!llIlI!II!3HVHHIIIWIIIIIIVIUHiH!i1IIllIiIiIHHHIVIHllIIIIIIUHiIlIiIUiliHiIIIHE glIIIIIIIIIIIIHIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllflllllllllllllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllllg E1IIIIIIIIIIIIIJllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIUllllllllllllllIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKE QIIIIHVHHHWWMlN!I1HI1IHl!HlUHlHHW WNHlllllllllllliilllblblNHHHHNHiIII!I!!!!!V!lIIlWiIlHlIIIl!lIlIIHIlIVPNVHHHINIHIIFIWNIIHHHHHHHWNIHIIIIHINHHVHHHIIHIIIIHHPHHIHHHNNHHIlHHHlHPHHilIE cum tam fFounclecl al Princeton. I824J COLORS: Scarlet and Blue. Alpha-University of Virginia Bela-Massachusells Institute of Technology Cornrnn-Emory College. Georgia Delta-Rutgers College Epsilon-Hampden-Sidney College Zela-Franklin and Marshal Elo-University of Georgia Theta-Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute lola-Ohio State University Lornbdo-University'of California Mu-Stextens Institute of Technology Nu-University of Texas Xi-Cornell University Omicron-Yale University Rho-Lafayette College Phi-Amherst College Chi-Dartmouth College Pri-Lehigh University Cmega-Georgia School of Technology Alpha Chi-Ohio-Wesle5'an University 115 iipailnu Glhapirr nf Glhi 1513 A. B. CARRINGTON, 'I5 Q.. . Ifrnirrs in Olnllrgin W. T. CARRINCTON, 'I5 F. D. EBEL, 'I7 E. B. PENDLETON, 'l6 F. G. CHRISTIAN, 'I5 A. B. DRIVER, 'I 7 R. W. M. FLIPPEN, 'I8 R. LYLE, 'I 7 S. A. JOHNSON, 'I8 Hrntrrs in Hrhr K. BROCK WM. DUNNINTON F. H. MOORE 116 B. MOUNT, 'l8 PHI CHI ' 'nf' A 1 .4 .4 ?lHa.Q..'.n A - Y 4. 35,0 1 5 , 5 a ' pxgu, H' ,'4 .A V ' ' '.a v .25 3 ng- V U .J .id-, ' ' 'Y' ..,f.-.r,' ' .-:.-f? '- r'-wwf. 'a I - 0-vii. ' ' .K ' ' W'vx-Q2 ' h 's A Q'57p3,- J ' 5 . U. , ' A . ' l ' 5 I gg 'Q' 8 Q - ss 1 Q11' .'1 5 ' 13-.3 N I ,.'-Q I TI Qs? 'R , IS v' ' -T 5 :ft Qq, 9. ' - wr! I 4 ', 45.3 1,4 Y' 5, A k . 'lrbv ' 0 I , . 'Q' 'xl L 4 D ' 31, me 4 - . .Q D v . .. qi,-Y 4 v,f ' 5 pi no v V. 9 . 1 I ' Vs! Us dfzttgg x' ' U' ' . ' 0 , . - 'I .. -1 'I C' I '. In QTQ-' rn n --' ' ' 'I-gig. ,I 71 ,- -n- + t . Mgr' ' .ka -- ' . , AIAA' P: -jixf jllj. , . fl 1 , 4 l . 2 ' at -P' I sh 14, - 1 .1 f x 45 If ' C , 4' ,I va' N. u 0 ' ' I ,Q vv SW :wwf s .. Q.. .lv Q ,5 t 5 ,f' Q . ,Q r . v 'Q ll- . 'P' . Q' , . ,O v X ' . 1,5 -- , , . - I . 'if' . .' ,r--fir I l. sw 1 - f x iifl' '51, ' . la, 1, 'xr 'L . 1 - 5 Ll 2a . inn - 'L Y QU-.rf , . .4 I .L. . ,N ' v-9 ' . .-f ' Y '. I -', 1 - -f , gvri 4 . . 5 Vo' V 'n S ' 'I ts I, - 1h'l o ' 'Q'-FIV, ' . ..,V S ' - v. k - Q S, .UAA 7 'LP -l 5 'lt -4.-'A' P , .Y hs . '- ' v 110.-Jrfj? n r A , Y- g 55 .Y a l v' I , 'WJ ,' D 4 ' ' Q . .Q Al, -g ' v If 'r . f 4 ' I L J' 5,115 0 4 ' ' Nil- W' ,a7f25 A . ' ,-5. N9-i ' 1' 4 w MQ. .4 ' ' ' 4 V ' xa. A ' Nfl . 561. , ' f - 1 , O ' jx' 'J I . ', t Q ' ' ,N 5 PAXUAQL.. 1 - ' 4 ! v .u9'J . ft ' I I V .g U I C ' I 'N , .4 ip ' s v 11' . Q . g, V --,, liappa Sigma flroundecl at University of Virginia. IS67 COLORS: Scarlet, While and Emerald Green. 0' Artiur Qlhaptrra Zeta-University of Virginia Omega-University of the South Phi-Southwestern Presbyterian University Alpha ChihL.ake Forest University Lambda-University of Tennessee Kappa-Vanderbilt University Alpha Beta-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 Gamma-Louisiana State University Bela Theta-University of lncliana 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 lllinois Alpha Delta-Pennsylvania State College Alpha Epsilon-University of Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta-University of Michigan Alpha Eta-George Was'1ington University Alpha Kappa'-Cornell University Alpha-Lambda-University of Vermont Alpha Mu-University of North Carolina Alpha Pi-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 Bela Beta Beta Bela aOmegaiWilliam Jewell College Alpha-Brown University Bela-Richmond College Gamma-University of Missouri Della-Washington and jefferson College Epsilon-University of Wisconsin Zeta-Lelancl Stanford, jr. University Bela Bela Eta-Alabama Polytechnic Institute Beta lata-Lehigh University Bela Kappa-New Hampshire College Bela Lambda-University of Georgia Beta Mu-University of Minnesota Bela Nu-University of Kentucky Sigma-Washington University, Missouri Bela Xi-University of California Bela OmicronfUniversity of Denver Bela Pi-Dickinson College Bela Bela Rho-University of Iowa Bela Tau-Baker University Beta Bela Bela Beta Bela Upsilon-North Carolina A. Bi M. College Phi-Case School of Applied Science Chi-Missouri School of Mines Psi-University of Washington Omega-Colorado College Gamma Alpha-University of Oregon Gamma Bela-University of Chicago Gamma Gamma-Colorado School of Mines Gamma Della-Massachusetts State College Gamma Zeta-New York University Gamma Epsflangljartmouth College Gamma Eta-Harvarcl University Gamma Theta-University of lclaho Gamma lolaWSyracuse University Gamma Kappa-University of Oklahoma Gamma Laml:a'a-lowa State College Gamma Mu-Washington State College Gamma Nu-Washburn College Gamma Xi-Denison University Gamma Omicron-University of Kansas 119 Hpailnu Qllyapter nf liamau Svignm 'K iFratrrs in Glnllrgin - T. C. JOHNSON. JR., 'I5 J. H. WHALEY, 'I7 J. M. SYDENSTRICKER, 'I5 W. L. THURMAN, 'I 7 B. P. EPES, 'I6 L. C. WHALEY, '18 H. C. THOMPSON, 'I 7 F. C. OWEN, 'I8 7 A. A. WILSON, '1 7 R. B. SYDNOR, 'le F. El. STERNE, 'I 7 F. E. NEAL, 'IB ZHraIrr in Hilrhr DR. W. J. KING 120 KAPPA SIGMA -. -9. N by 1: .' o 'O' --Y! 'A i'o 'Y' osbp' 'uf - 7 s Q l . o P o. ,' - -A I , W ,- s'. - 'C ' f -Q JQZQA 'A . ,Q , ,F . '.v:j JA..' .fi 'V s . 9 4 'vo .4 'V V 1 J fn' ' an ' '--In fl'-,:'LP. ' Y , el Y- mx, 'ni .sv-L ' .f1',:. . Q,-,ag - -. . ', ,, '7 I B N,T1.I' .I T Q45 , . 'I -vtf '-v, v ,' o Yu-' , s ' ' ' ' V .' N ' .'g '.' '. f-5 ' 'h r v - l u.1 yy, t. .j , hr, xl! ' . .-.' ng . 5 ' 'na v ' I-'ls I.,- ' .- 1 ' 1,53 I 'vi 'T ,'.3fz'5,oS'l ' .L 5 1 'i sc,. . n gn ,',1, ...Ll , -AQL-, l .gig .Jo if 'G' ol., A ' ., 5' 'l- -'lf b .JI I .ws s . ,H vxifr h '4 ' 'sl' I4 A' U Q 0 I c 'u N 'n . o' ' v'n as Y' fb . : ,W nv' A-Eqsixviyho ' -' 3 9 .P ', 1 '.'- 1.1110 V4.4 .ng ,'. ' 5 lxts bn ly ' Q I fa! K 3 U 52 04- I 0 iff' ,lB:wf . O N ZA, -its TV -, A ' 4 HKA ,M xg? I I ,if W .1-'PIT ,JV X , my I l x -. u O I rg 4 w 'ls Y r K W is ' Q Q 4 W ' , . -' s' f- - U X, 4 Ll Q . 'O A., ' . Q' I . 14 . 4 .. ' - 5 , N -'S 1 7 ' 'X ' 4 r v an l V Y 3 - '.. Q ' 5 - 1 is Q l'U 55. x a K x H. 5 J, - v n ', .' ,lv 5 V : .'..' s is.-Q RIO iq' Q, --A 3 ,fl ...Ps . 1 Pl ' . ' . -U V 3 . + ' ' ,J-,' T-,' ' t L - I4 . eg ag. o Y. . .' if 'IS dw' y . . .. fig W . - ' 4' lrhgf -Q .P ma. ,Zigi , , ts v A i el QI ,A 4 .Qs-1 f x if .Q .' ft' . 94 . ' .1-. 1- -S 4 Q. v :I-242 4 fr xy. Q Iwuwgl Hi liamau Alpha fhiounded at University of Virginia, l868J COLORS: Carnal ancl Cold. Artiur Olliapirrs Alpha-University of Virginia Bela-Daviclson College Gamma-William and Mary College Della-Southern University Zeta-University of Tennessee Eta-Tulane University Theta-Southwestern Presbyterian University lata-Hampden-Sidney College Kappa-Transylvania University Omicron-Richmond College Pi-Washington and Lee University Tau--University of North Carolina Upsilon-Alabama Polytechnic Institute Psi-North Georgia Agricultural College Omega-State University Alpha Alpha-Trinity College Alpha Camma-Louisiana State University ' Alpha Delta-Georgia School of Technology Alpha Epsilon-North Carolina A. 81 M. College Alpha Zeta-University of Arkansas Alpha Eta-University of State of Florida Alpha lata-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 Alphi Pi-Howard College Alpha Rho-Ohio State University Alpha Sigma-University of California Alpha Tau-University of Utah Alpha Upsilan-New York University Alpha Phi-lowa State College- Ames' Alpha Chi-Syracuse University Alpha Psi-Rutgers College Alpha Omega-Kansas State Agricultural College Beta Alpha-Pennsylvania State College Bela Bela-University of Xvashington Bela Comma-University of Kansas 123 .ilnta Gllyaptm' nf 1Hi liappa Alpha 5, Q :lr flistablished 18881 iHratrr5 in Olnlh-gin A. B. HODGES, '15 C. B. RICHMOND, '16 C. B. ROBERTSON, '16 P. C. ADAMS, '17 C. R. Bucs, '16 W. G. SCANLON, '18 I-1. R. CROCKETT, '16 T. J. WOOL, '18 J. N. GORDON, '16 1. SPESSARD, 18 Zl1rz1trr5 in 3Hrhv P. T. ATKINSON G. L. WALKER 124 KAPPA ALPHA PI . 1 ' VY ' l' , l kv-PQ. 1 ' 3 D 9 ' 'v r c Q If W. V, , ,'. Q ff' f' I Th . , , 1. . ..-X.. ., 1- ,s K qcwkf we s 7 G rn. Ii- . ' 1 4' ,, m ' 4 ' Q ...f Iwo-,nib 7 ,Q. ' 7 j,,' ' ' 1-F3 F-', ' - - .'-,o-,1,y'. .N ' . .j-.y 5 . ' A . . - ..' L1-'-'M ' 'Y-, 1.t' I -.. , ty 0, 5 L' --Iwi .- . -Q prn . 1 - ug . '-.v- '.'f' -'A' ' '- 1' '-5 . ' I n A 1 I ., - - . s n ' L-I.: 3' .w. 4 , I ,I r-vi A U ' ' -1' .. ' 1'1'5x 7 - . -. ,J ,, , -. 4 . ,, Q - . .W . - ' a', '..: 1' -5 I I' 1 ' u' 0 i C - 7 L D L 401,17-I MCI: 7.4.35 YQ: W '. v ' - V r g ' .'T','-0' 31-3,- 0 ' .. .-v ,. ' - 5122- rf -3. f ' l HL- ling'-.Q buff '.f: vA1--lllrr ,-.T 2 'I 75v'y+'4 ,L 'I .3 un- p :N .Q .' .-'.'T lrr- f '.j ' ,1 I 4, -5 ' fg.5'.sJ- f- ..' .A ,,'-2' , ' ,,,f+'5 .:..T ..',' h q f' .,, . 4' X' 'xlib-'.'1 .. Q ', Q' ' -W. J, hy .: lx ' P- .Nj 'NU' hvklsllr 1 'o A A Q I .'l 6 ' 'L . 1 .- N-fr 1? -Q, ,352 1,3 0 '. M-A- 1,,g'5r OCD H, -Q' ,A .. .H , '. -.'.5'Q.:',?3,.-Z 'fy ...', fI'wg U v :NI 'V . b' ', .. + -IL, :Cn il ' 4 IT, U' f.. J'-lf -'CAI' ' . t .. - 3 -...U ., .v L .A -1.-1 an In .V . 7, '4'ws'h' . cal 'ZQW ' ' ' ' , a . .fy iv- ,nm-J.-. 'fy-I 'Sp ftag .x. J . -p . V' Q ' -1.1 J V-S .11 tx ' 5 . S. x il 2.0 ' -xai P' Mfg- ,rf 7 3. .fo g:i1'3,q t::9fP'F?fk!fk- Io. I' N Y- I., v--,J . f, s. , ..,. ,V 315-rm if . wg' , ,f Hg. la.-13 -' Fu- J' . 1 I J . 81:1 ,bfi ' Q it M- M- 712 - 'u4., ': ' i..'?,. v - -v Al 'O tix: 5 V V1 agp. 6 'N svo -o -N - 'tg .,. 5, .' -x ,x I. ' - . 'M' 9 '1'f?7' I l' 1 . F ' v X rin- i' ', I . r..'qK. ' C.,nJc- .If ,'fS.Yfa'1! '1 ii' 7' H171 ' 'lr' h -IAIA. 3. .i,-figs ' 1 If :vii ' JAY I X yfs ,f 4 Nqff' .' E ' ,J 1 -0 , O 5 4'.l 4 Y ' , Q , sv .'.sY' . Y ,Q 5 4 L. ds- .h.S..'r I 'x '- 1 if 5' eg . fi 1 ab-Y f , 1 X.- ,X IQ4 45- V f ffi5jiX Q 5 af-L X X , iiffl ' ' ,if2ffL4f gf +3 f ' -vii E K 1 -Hmm. ' ff K ty'-xy' V-'fx , f h i J --RTS XE' q JJ -L fu Qw-,,f,m:: 5 1 f'gi?Zg . . t , G? Q, JM. 1 x e j, 3 jg, ,hp ,Q 49 ' Aijfhff R ,f .f, ' ' 1 QM .X RX X gr' W ' ' ' '- 'ig new xv XP 3 ' I7 if XF - Q Y -affeigf f-5 wp. 4 1 54: . 4 . , . 'Sh 1 ,c- 5 4 ' I f . f v u n 1 ' 1 .1 ' F 4 ' ' sv' izfv A l,:' . .' , K M' --..-ff-1 ' Q .. 1 I . ' I .WM 'GLA . ' .ANL '1 I I , ' 1 ' n . . s 'IF 1 '4-'P' ' 'bn' -5 ,jf 6 o ' 54 3 ,. l,3f-1453.8 f ,J , Q .15 W 4. , linppa Alpha 9 +31 Artiur Qllgaptrra Alpha-Washington and Lee University, Lexington. Va. Comma-University of Georgia, Athens. Ca. Epsilon-Emory College, Oxford, Ga. Zeta-Ranclolph-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. Nu-Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala. Xi-Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas. Omicron-University of Texas, Austin, Texas. Pi-University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Sigma-Davidson College. Davidson, N. C. Upsilon-University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. PhihSouthern 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 Gamma-Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La. Alpha Delta-William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. Alpha Zeta-William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. Alpha Eta-Westminster College, Fulton, Mo. Alpha Theta-Transylvania University, Lexington, Ky. Alpha Iota-Centenary College. Shreveport, La. Alpha Kappa-University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Alpha Mu-Millsaps College. Jackson, Miss. Alpha Nu-The George Washington University, Washington, D C Alpha Xi-University of California, Berkley, Cal. Alpha Omicron-University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. Alpha Pi-Lelancl Stanford. Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal. Alpha Rho-West Virginia University, Morgantown, W. Va. Alpha Sigma-Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta. Ga. Alpha Tau-Hampclen-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. Alpha Phi-Trinity College, Durham, N. C. Alpha Omega-NI. C. A. 81 M. College, Raleigh, N. C. Beta Alpha-Missouri School of Mines, Rolla, Mo. Bela Beta-Bethany College, Bethany, W. Va. Beta Cammaf-College of Charleston, Charleston, S. C. Bela Della-Georgetown College. Georgetown, Ky. Beta Epsilon-Delaware College, Newark, Del. Beta Zeta-University of Florida, Gainesville, Fla. Beta Eta-University of Oklahoma, Norman, Olcla. Bela Theta-Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. Bela lofa-Drury College, Springheld. Mo. Bela Kappa-Maryland Agricultural College, College Park, Md 127 Alpha Eau Qlhaptrr nf Kappa Alpha ZlIratv1'niig EIIratrrs in Qlullvgin C. C. CARTER, 'I5 J. A. SHACKELFORD, 'I6 B. W. VENABLE, 'I5 W. M. GILLESPIE, '16 C. C. PETERS, 'I5 D. E. GRAY, 'I 7 H. A. RICE, 'I5 J. A. PETERS, 'I 7 W. J. SCOTT, 'I5 S. C. SPRINKLE, 'I 7 L. C. TAIT, 'I5 R. B. THOMPSON, 'I8 M. C. EOWLING, 'l5 E. B. NELMS, 'I8 J. E. BRYAN, 'I5 V. NTNIOER, 'I8 F. C. CARTER, 'I8 ZHratrr5 in lirhr E.. SCOTT MARTIN R. I-I. PAULETT 128 KAPPA ALPHA i K hi , G . s , Q 0 Iv I ' I ' f 1' ' 2.- 5 v l 1 - '-- -,s-, , . .L f .,, '., A if 1 Q' A, 1. 4. nl- ' ' A . , , n ,'v.,ag lf , , r. ,. 4 ifia v ' A 'N Y Q -A 4. ' :L m D. .Ii-A ll, 5 gk ln' 4, 4' 0 'vu' .., .Vg yf 14 4 1 Q ws' ' W , 1 , ' ,l I ,wr -I 1 1 ' 4 . HQ., .,,. ' 'Yr -. .' W ,.! ' . -J, - 1 F 4 . . 5 4 -1 ' 1 1 J s .- ' I 5 Sp auf f' - ' -1 L ' H 9 . ' K Q N' ' x fs L D' v -MM. h t I ' but -Sh . ' I .Nxifs . W 0 ' f c I F856 1 ,wmv NH 2 '90 -is v r , .4 , X f 1 X r,fX l f . S 112 x '73, g.ui. ,3 W 1-it--. nf?fATIW.s 3 'F X 1 W ,-uh 'I I' - 4 I -1.-, . , .,,.,,xr W , ' fit 4 n- '...4'1 ly -.lf . 'Ax I X' 1' W1 , Y w 'MQ ' s ,U 1 Flhvta Olhi fFouncled al Norwich, l856j COLORS: Red and While. Alpha-Norwich University Bela-Massachusells Inslilule Technology Comma-University of Maine Della-Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Epsilon-Worcester Polytechnic Institute Zela-Nlew Hampshire State College Elo-Rhode Island State College Theta-Massachusetts Agricultural College lola-Colgate University Knnpnaunaversiiy of Pennsylvania Lambda-Cornell University Mu-University of California Nu-Hampden-Sidney College Xi-University of vngii-sa 131 Nu Ollyaptvr nt' Elyria Qlhi Hratrrs in Qlullrgin EDWIN B. BRIDGES, '16 GEORGE H. DENNY, '18 THOMAS H. DOWNES, 'I 7 EDWIN L. EASTLAND, '18 WILLIAM F. FOLEY, '17 ROBERT F. GUTHRIE, '16 CHARLIE D. HURT, '16 LEIGH B. HANES, '16 EDWIN L. JACKSON, '17 BENJAMIN D. MORTON,,15 LOUIS M. MCCAVACK, '17 THOS. H. NICGAVACK, '17 B. A. MCILHANY, '18 WALTER S. NEWMAN, '16 HARRY C. WALTON, '18 ROBERT E. WARWICI4, '15 Eirntrrs in Elqilfllliilfl' W. O. BEAZLEY J. H. C. WINSTON NINTI-I CONVENTION HELD AT TROY, N. Y., APRIL 9TH AND IOTH, 1915 DELEOATE R. E WARWICI4 THETA CHI oconooono onus o ' x 0 0 Q 0 .c Q Q n v no ssoaoovocooo on one 'FN N.: 5 . i' 'Pi 'Lf MISS JEANE1 SPONSOR OF CLUBS AN TE BRUCE D ORGANIZATIONS H. C. THOMPSON J. A. SHACKELFORD B. W. VENABLE I-'. D. EBE1. H. R. CROCKETT T. ATKINSON C. JOHNSON G. PETERS B. CARRINGTON R. Bucc B. PENDLETON JOHNSON CARTER EE-EL PETERS HODOES CARRINGTON PENDLETON A. A. WILSON F. E. STERNE H. C. THOMPSON W. T. CARRINGTON H. R. CROCKETT J, A. SHACKELFORD S. C. SPRINKLE A. B. CARR1NcToN A. B. HODGES C. G. PETERS E. B. PENDLETON W. T. CARRINGTON F. G. CHRISTIAN I-I. A. RICE F. D. EBEL C. R. Bucs T. C. joHNsoN I... C. TAIT F. E.. STERNE R .B. SYDNOR F .C. OWEN W. M. FLIPPEN T. J. Wool. I-I. R. CROCKETT S. C. SPRINKLE J. A. SHACKELFORD W. S. NEWMAN L. B. I-IANES W. T. CARRINGTON F. C. CHRISTIAN F. D. EBEL C. G. PETERS W. J. SCOTT B. W. VENABLE T. C. JOHNSON C. B. ROBERTSON 7 ' I xlf x ff Lb- ! V., x 5, . QW , , af! 5 , fl! , 5+ ' X M, K f MEMBERS GOATS w X - I oo ' gf 4' 00 + xoo --oo . OO + OO . 00+ 140 1 e .1 Iiirat HZIEEZIQP YOUNG NUTS OF AMERICA flkwzx S. Cons, Palron lvull MOTTO: Uncj Ever STIYCLZ 3'0U TOILI AIC !,Ol1 LOVCL1 fm a Nui. Cascade JOHNSON ..,.. NUC .Chief lfbi rcsfalnotlus sul Hcfcz1lanc11s. RECREATION: Ala. Personally comlucled leurs In Egypl. A IN COLLEGIO Nui Bendy VENABLE. .... Tough Nut Robbie ROBERTSON ..... Big Nu! Crowley SPRINKLE ...., ...... E gypt Nu! Bones WILSON ...... .... C racked Nu! Hubey THOMPSON ...,. ,....... C razy Nu! Heine STERNE ...... ...,. C hoclfley Nu! Beg:-S EFES .......... ....... C hes!-Nu! Strick SYDENSTRICKER, ........,.... Ham Nu! Bottle SYDNOR .,,.. Mister HOCE ..... Sweet SUDOR ..,, Deacon DARST .... Dean ORc.A1N ..... Chin MCILHANEX' .... .... Sister BLAIR .... . . . Rip ARGENBRIGHT.. Till TIPTON ....... Parson GILMER ................... Cocoa Nui Bruin PERKINS ..... Uncle JOHN .......,............. Nigger Toe ASSORTED NUTS GRAHAM ..,.. ..... C hinlg-a-pin Mnssxe ..... OW'EN WHALEY' THURMAN STOKES ....AbsoluleIy Nuls . . . . . . .Pig Nuls ,.. .Lillle Nu! . . . . . Walnut , . . .... Pecan ........Peanul .Uncraclfed Nu! . .Departed Nu! . . . .Bag Holder ....Dago Nu! .,.Nu1 Mag ALLEN slew.. Rat THOMAS .... Svrnnh Elgaaazlge DIPLOIVIATIC CORPS BY'-WORD: Looif oul below COLORS: Reti, Mfltile and Blue Pat FOLEY ...... I. B. REYNOLDS ..,,. PIuto AMICK. . . . 'UncIe JOHN .... . Pal PALMORE. . . .. Pep RAMEY. . . .. EASTLAND .... ..2 'Soc ' ELRIDCE .... Fool SIMPSON. .. 'Rohn ROBERTSON ..... . . Courl Musicians x 4 SCANLON ..... Presidenl Woodrow WILSON FOREIGN AIVIBASSADORS SENATE ..Amba5sazior from Ireland ...Ambassador from Korea ...flmivassadar from Hades ..Ambassador from Africa .....SenaIor from Virginia Senalor from Wes! Virginia ... . . .5enalor from Kansas ......Senator from Mississippi SPECIAL OFFICER Venus BONDURANT Fatty BONDURANT Ice Wagon BONDURANT Sport HUBBARD 142 ...,Senalor from Louisiana ....Senator from Kenlucifp ....Senator from Nfarylaml . . . .Keeper of lite Dungeon Rice Quarlelle 'PL A I ,Him hird Dassa . Soup . ...... , Uncczfa Bfscui French Fry.. iHHvnu a la iifhirh lgzwzagr l ..... Tenderloin Sleaff Fish Succor ...... Brains comedian Deviled Eggs. cfm Peas.. ....R1cHMoND ...........BRw.N . . . . .FRENCH CARTER ....F. A. TERRY .....CRocKETT ,.. RYBURN ...,...HODCES ... Nlcx CARTER ....uFRESHMANH Kms SPECIALS EVERY DAY .,...DUPUY Beals fDcacU. .... ,....... ........,.,....... . Offve-s .4 . .. Slemed Prunes .....OLlVE-R ....MURRAX' 143 4 . 5 hx ii i 4 f Q LN.L. X Zlinurtly igaazugv The Wandering jflllu.. The Tale of Two Cilicsn iveighed and Wanling . The Professor . . . .. Missing .... . Vanify Fair . . .. Overland Red . . .. The Woman Haier . The Belrolhedu. . .. W0Ol1Si0Clf.' .. . . . . The Lasl of lhe Baronsh.. Tha! Bcauliful Wre!ch Hara' to Bear ........ . Fcn1on'5 Quesln.. . . . . .. The Complele Angler . His Higlrness . .... . . . . Any Old Biology Book A Son of lhe Soil... . . . . fusl for Love . , . . . AThc BidC,fD11JHffH... 'The Nfan of the Hour... LIBRARY 144 .........EBEL .......HoDcLs T. CARRINCTON .......ALLAN ........w70OL . . .HALDERMAN . . . . .BOWLING ....CHRISTIAN B. CARRINCTON ......NEWMAN . . . . .MORTON ... .PENDLETON ......MOUNT ......NEAL . . . . .WALTON ....VENABLE . . . .Bucc . ....... LEE ......FLiPPEN STOKES BROWN UNCLE JOHN l1'a1rg'5 1Hm'irtg Sham Leading Man. . Leading Lady .... Commedian .......................... Villain fThe guy fhllf does fha ifillingj ..... fuggler . ....... ,......... .... ..... . Sword Smallomer.. Heavy .. . .. Conlorlionisl .. Hppnolisl ...............,......... Magician Un his greal disappearing adj Monologisl fHe says the blessingj ...... Bell Ringer ..................... Scene Shiflcr .. . ........ . . .. C1-1RxsTiAN RAMEY FLIPPEN Soupers VENABLE, B. NEWMAN NE1.Ms lnlerior Decorations by. ..,..... . Mzlsic by ...... ..., 145 SPESSARD VENABLE. TIPTON Hoon INGRAM .... jxM EBU. .MML DONVNES ......HODCES . . . . .NEAL , . , ,WOOL ,.,.....lVloUNT T. CARRINCTON ..,......SCOTT . . . .BAGBY ..,.......LYu: .SYDENSTRICKER CHARLEY TERRY .........WATT R. .....MRs. LACY . .,.. ORGAIN scones cocoon .,,.-.-f wtnninzter Glluh An even dozen are we now. And real good sports. yea, every one. The ones with whom we couldn't agree, Have passed us in their checks and gone. Unless my muse doth come to end I'll tell you about the ones who stayed, And stood beneath Westminister's Hag. Through them the good old ship was saved. First there's Adams, known as Cary. Who sleeps and snores, snores and sleeps, And sometimes just to make things vary Goes to town, but soon retreats. There's Farmer Gillespie, alias Doc, Who loves to tell his parrot joke: He's always hungry, eats a lotg I fear through him we'll all go broke. Perkins. better known as Perk, Who stopped in Lynchburg going home. And ever since this noted trip Our old friend Perk's been running some- A man who's fond of Research Work: I-le's going to discover a brand new law In La Voisier's work he's found a Haw. The only student we possess ls Eddie Jackson, known as Jack, In German he's a shark at bestg A book by him has ne'er been cracked. Our old friend. Shack, who's never seen At S. N. S., but there's a reason. On de korner over da he seems To be king Bee. ls there a reason? Our kindergarten babes are twog Thank heaven they're no more. Hes quite a chemist, this same guy-Perk: Hurt'and Thurman, in numbers few: ln nuisance they're a million or more. jno. Guthrie, but he's a friend o' mine: His name I'Il only mention And save my go'ods and valuable lime- He merits no attention. Dr. and Mrs. Clark, our wedded pair, Of whom we are quite proudg A school-marm and a shark at chess. A happy pair are these espoused. Miss Lil, the creator of Boss, Who's mighty fond of preachers: She's fond of Ashton W., loo, But Ashton's just a teacher. Here Rover! He's the prize we give To the one who tells the biggest tale. Mrs. Walker seems to like the dogg To win him she has never failed. Phony, Phony, Macaroni. He brings in the peas and tomatoes While poor Aunt Ellen, sad and lonely, Out in the kitchen cooks potatoes. Theres one who thinks he is some poet, Everywhere he goes he tries to show it. Harry is big. if it is size that counts: He is also charming, if the ladies knowg But yet some. who to nothing amount, Persist in calling him a show. A merry bunch are we, We number twelve in all. We care not what folks think or say, With old Westminister we're going to stay If we live on zip alone-we may. Kind reader, here my muse did fail. :wg ig 'Q C5112 illflaplw Efarm cz: 9 431 MOTTO: The early bird has lo say grace. SONG: Back lo llwe Farm. Where the Dog-gone Hens Seldom Lay. COLOR: Crass Creen. DRINK: Tea. Mas. BETT VENABLE. Mas. SALLE Tom PAULETT ..,.. P. T. ATKINSON. .........., .. BEPs EPES ........ . .- HElNE STERNE ..... BEARH SYDNOR . . . PETE PETERS ..... . . . LITTLE PETE PETERS PRODUCTS IMPLEMENTS Miss ' MITCHEL OWEN .... .........,... 'ABoNEs WILSON ..... MCILHANY HCHARN Bucc ..... ZETA SCHLERISKA .... AUNT LETTIEU. . .. JOHN WOMACK ........ EXPENSES RESULT POULTRY DEPARTMENT CETERI SAM ScARBoRoucH. . . . . 147 . . . .Proprfclrcss . . . .Colleclress . . . .Overseer . . . .frrigalor ..,.Rye .....Corn .. ...Separator .....Carry-all .....Drag ....,Ralfc . .... Ferlflizcr . . . .Polalo Bug Black Lcghorne Plymaulh Rock ........Croom ....Slable Boy MEMBERS Sttthmtz' Glluh MOTTO: WD-cl be Ire who first cries 'HoIrl, enough !' PASS VVORD: ncel me the beans. FAVORITE PASTIME! Kidding Eastland. Big Jim GUTHRIE .... Snookumsu ELLIOTI , . , t Pat FOLEY ......,. . Parson GILMER. .. . I I, C. ALLAN Mountaineer ALLEN Pluto AMICK Shark BLAIR Fatty BONDURANT Hester BONDURANT Venus BONDURANT Nick CARTER Francais CARTER Davy CROCKETT Deacon' DARST Socrates ELDREDGE Snookumsn ELLIOTT Berkshire ELLIOTT Pet EASTLAND Pat FOLEY Parson GILMER Big jim GUTHRIE Sport HUBBARD OFFICERS 20 ZI 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 148 .. .......Proprfeio1' .. . , . Champion Euler . ..Champian Talker ..........Cl1aplain Student KING lvoryu LEE B. D. MORTON Duke MORTON jacob MORTON Bone PALMER C. B. ROBERTSON Fatty RYBURN Congressman RICHMOND R. j. REYNOLDS 'tWIlco SCANLON Minor SIMPSON Sid SPRINKLE Loud SUTER Fat TERRY Fresh' ' THOMAS Harry WALTON Bob WARWICK C, j. WILSON I Uhr Mruttn SEE AMERICA FIRST Three Excursions Daily Time of Enlrance Time of Exit 3:35 A. M. .... .... 8 :45 A. M. 2:00 P. M. .... ........ 2 130 P. M. 6:30 P. M. ..., ... Chanlicleer's Call GUIDE: Richard fWailerJ . ENTRANCE: Dining-room door. Gans BRYAN ...... HPIEU HANEs ........ UPICKLEH MURRAY. .. BEANS NEINIGER. .. HONEY HALDI-:RMAN ..... EXIT: Unknown. NATURAL PHENOMENA ................................njackonhisbeanstalk .... Nar'ci.ss'us bending over his milk ....... Charon .salling the bodies ..,... Pluto with fork in hand . . . . Solomon pleading for brains 149 DAVY CLARKE .... Hmitvntiarg DR. and MRS. GRAHAM ..... ALICE GRAHAM. . . JOHNSON ..... THOMPSON. CARRINGTON, PENDLETON GRAHAM, j BowL1Nc . A.B PENRITANTS OR DEGREE ......,..Cl1ief Warden .. . . .Commissary Deparlmenl ......Malron SEEKERS .. . . . . .Second Story Man .Thief fSleals Conversafionj ... .Cunman fKil1ed Iohnniej .............EmbezzIer .....Slayer of China-man .......Forger MoTTo: Let her growl. 150 fp fx 'I 5 W W' E if 4 X - Rx 1752, A K I Kjgfx XS JM E. XX X xffff Dx f 7,4 1' Mx! ,SC xv X 1 741 ix W - 'Af' wi ' V -A fm- C f 'MP xv Sh wi X Si N f z , D ,W ry Eff 9 f Q , J N 1' J k P, cf Q Q1 4 liwsiy ' - Qfg' Uhr illlurriznn Kumar diff? TRIUMVIRATE. E. B. BRIDGES. .. ..... Anthony T. MCGAVACK ..,. ......... . Cleopulra L. MCC-AVACK .... ..... R ozver of the Barge AMONG THE FAIR ONES WHO ENTICE. Miss OWEN Mlss EASLEY CAPTIVES ROBERTSON REYNOLDS TAIT MORTON, B. D. 151 MAssua . . . HUBBARD . . , . j. H. WHALEY L. C. WHALEY ..... DUPUY . ..... . Kzrwoou: .... HENDERSON. . . T. B. Sco'r'r. Gluunirg Qlluh MEMBER OLIVER 152 . . . . .President ...,..Vice-Prcsfdenl . . . .Secrciary-Treasurer . ...... Manager ..,.Warden ....,....,BarKeeper Keeper of Calf Course ......,fanilor Z,-x v 5-1 af X ff f f ffm. V. M2 16 X . wx ll X' Vw, we F1 Kffl? WNVSICIQ meat 'Hirgixtia Qiluh SONG: Wes! Virginia Hills. FLOWER: Rhododendron. MOTTO: Nlounlaineers are always climbers. FARMERS GUTHRIL, R. F. .... .....,...... . FOLEY .......... PETERS. C. C.. . . . Svnswsrmclczn ..... Amzcx. .,....... , PETERS. J. A.. . .. Rica ............ VENABLE, B. 9 MINERS VENABLE, R. f MCILHANEY ..... RAM:-:Y. ..... . THOMPSON ..... Tm' ......... THURMAN. . . . DLNNY .,....... Morrow, j. B.. . .. ROUGH NECKS 153 .....Peacl1 lnspeclor . . .... Buck Samer .........Erranl Son Hfielder of flve Plow .Wielder of the Hoe ..........Tl1e Crop . . . . .Mine Boss ....Buddies . . . . Trapper .......The Fan . . . . 7-l.e Polilfcian ..... . The Banker . ..7l1e Professional .Counlof Ckarleslon X .33 rag, I' ,lf ,J ' .VXI X lllkkn-A , 14-' 3 qu 3 A v , 53 , .,, ' V -N '0 f 3 , ' W Y iiaatvrn Sflgnrv Full many a gem . the dark unfalhomed caves of ocean bear 6521115 X QDTHPI' Elrmrls NELMS Honcss WooL SCOTT jomis DowNf.s TRANSIENTS EBU. joHNsoN CARRINGTON, W. T 154 Blxxtwnivhiatv Qlvlvhraiinn j. M. Svnsxsrmcxzn. .. W. L. Fouar .... H. R. CROCKETT .... M. C. Bowuwc... E. B. PENDLETON G. H. GILMER .... ilirllruzlrg IH, 1515 lininn Snririy Senior Oralor junior Oralors ......Calm Thyself The School of Tomorrow .. . . . . . . . .Public Opinion lihilzmthrnpir Svnrirtg Senior Oralor junior Oralors . . . . .Educalion . . ...... ..... A merica's Opportunity 155 .....CapiIaIPunisf1mcn! Brhating fir g flw INTER-SOCIETY DEBATE RESOLVED: That in all jury trials the concurrence of three-fourths majority fnine jurorsj shall be sufficient for rendering a verclict. WON BY THE UNION SOCIETY UPHOLDINC THE AFFIRIVIATIVE Debaters: Union-I.ElGH B. HANES, CHAS. G. PETERS. Philanthropic-BEN D. MoRToN, ROBT. E. WARWICK. The Don P. Halsey Debating Cup was presented to the Union Society. DEBATE WITH EIVIORY AND HENRY CHAS. B. RICHMOND CARY JOHNSON DEBATE WITH RANDOLPH-MACON C. C. CARTER J. M. SYDENSTRICKER DEBATE WITH WILLIAM AND MARY B. W. OLIVER J. C. CUTHRIE 156 Qllirnnirlvn CHAPTER XXII l. And lo it came to pass that in the sixth year of the reign of King Tuck, in the month that is called Uhlan, being the season of the harvest, the mighty race of l-lam-Sidites did arise and betake themselves to that noble land that is known as the land of The Hillf' 2. They did journey from all parts of the land, even from the heights of the West to the low-lying plains of the East. 3. And there was much rejoicing among the people to behold again those whom they did cherish, but exceeding great sorrow for certain of those their beloved brethren who came not back among them. 4. And behold there journeyed among them great numbers of strange people, yea creatures of strange appearance. 5. And there was a murmuring among the people, saying: What manner of people is this that is come among us. Our forefathers suffered not that strange people invade their dominions without enduring the tortures they chose to inflict. 6. Accordingly there arose a desire that this people be tortured, verily that they be chastized with stripes upon the soft and convenient parts of their bodies. 7. But a race of people of great inliuence in the realm, having by reason of great age, risen to a position of dignity, did assemble together and ponder a plan of settlement. 8. And the eldest of those dignified ones did rise up and beseech the people that they have mercy upon this strange race. 9. And he did beseech them with such power that they did give up the long- cherished custom of their fathers and did swear that no harm should come to this strange race of Freshites. And there was peace and harmony in the land. Selah! l0. And as the time did pass, lo some of the people being of wild and forward disposition did become weary of the peaceful life, and did long in their hearts for some way in which they might show their daring, throughout the realm. l l. And it came to pass that a feast was ordained at the palace of King Tuck and many people from far and wide did attend. And there was much joy and merry-making among them. l2. But while they were making merry these aforementioned daring ones did issue forth from their tents and dwellings and in a manner like unto that of birds of prey did descend upon the palace. 157 I3. And knowing the place in the palace where the provisions were wont to be stowed away, did creep silently upon their bellies to that place and did, in the manner of pirates, bear away this food, so that when the guests did long for refreshment, lo, they did find it gone even unto the bowl wherein the food had lain. I4. And the King possessed great flocks which did wander in all directions around the plains. l5. And other daring ones moved by the deeds of valor of their brethren did think evil in their hearts and ponder deeds of mischief. I6. And by night they did come and play exceeding strange antics with one of the Kings herd, but all was still round about and there was no uproar to disturb the slumbers of their more peaceful brethren. l7. And lo on the morrow at the break of day the keeper of the temple, even Wash, of the house of Lambert, of the tribe of Ethiopia, did enter into the temple. l8. And did find in the inner court strange things, for behold the largest of the Kings herd did wander around there within the temple as though upon the pastures of the King. I9. And he did, with much labor, drive away this viscious beast, and there was astonishment in his heart. 20. And lo on the morrow the King did arise up in the congregation of the people and speak speeches of great wisdom. And did inflict upon them puns of great wit, the meaning of which even the wise of the people could not comprehend. CHAPTER XXIII. l. And it came to pass that certain people of humorous disposition did conceive in their hearts a plan whereby they might lure aside from the trodden paths their less wary brethren. 2. And they proceeded to carry out this plan whereof they had pondered. 3. And lo by night when the sky was exceeding cloudy and the moon looked not clown on the land bright as was its wont, certain ones of the people did come privily to one of the tribe of Hebrews, even he of the long nose and projecting toes, and did offer him things whereof he was greatly fond. 4. And he did prepare and go forth with them. But he received not those things whereof he had desired, for those things were not with the conspirators. 5. And many others of the people did go forth for the thing and did feel disap- pointment and chagrin in their hearts: but the end is not yet. 6. For a certain of the above mentioned people did, for some cause unknown, desire to wreak vengeance on one of the others of his tribe. 7. And he did issue forth in search of this one, and find him in his own dwelling with his outer garment cast aside. 158 8. But when he did tell him his plan fwhich should wreak vengeance on him who lent ear to itl, with all haste he did don his garments and accompany him forth. 9. When they did draw nigh to the place where the others were, the above men- tioned victim did behold with signs of joy, signs of those things for which he did search and he rejoiced at the sight. IO. But as payment for these things the sum of I00 sheclaels was demanded of him, and with oft repeated remonstrance the sum of 50 sheclcels was taken from his money bag. I I. And now he did gird himself with shield and buckle and prepare himself for the struggle through which he must go. IZ. And as David of old he did struggle with great bravery and might. I3. But in the midst of the struggle there rose round about an outcry like unto that of warriors in battle. And terror seized the soul of the man so that quitting the struggle he did forsake the spot and with the wings of the morning did betake himself hence. And he did bestrew the plains with garments and weapons where he fied. I4. And when the people gathered together in the morning congregation Io he entered with a shameful cast of countenance, for he knew that he had rent in twain those things which stitches are unable to mend. Thus ended the Chronicle. Amen. X, i?7f Nc vt' Ci'5 'hf, ?S56xM ,gwPNe1nQ 159 1-Iaiitphmr-Svihnrg Qlnllrgv itlllrn auth Qlliiaainna 121 g tim BY JNO. I. ARMSTRONG t'94J, Educational Secretary of Foreign Missions, Nashville, Tennessee 0 HE missionary enterprise is so great that it sometimes seems small. One ll Z R5 who lives on a plain surrounded by the trees of his own lawn and orchard '9lf6 ZLQSUQ must climb the mountain whose top he can see through the blue haze of Q distance, if he wants to form a true conception of the size of the plain. The visitor to New York must traverse miles of streets, or ascend the Metropolitan Tower or the Woolworth or the Singer Building, if he would ? realize the size and extent of the city. A few missionary curios and Nw pictures, a missionary sermon, a collection for missions in Church or Sunday School, an address by a missionary, the reading of one missionary magazine j or book, these things often constitute the missionary horizon and the enter- prise looks small. It is well to climb up higher and get a wider view of this enterprise, which in the United States and Canada has doubled its work abroad in the past ten years, and which has now assumed colossal proportions. The total income of the churches of the United States in I9l4 for missions abroad was about sixteen million dollars fSl6,000,000.00D. Nine thousand two hundred 19,2005 of our people are living abroad to preach the Gospel to the nations. Associated with them are forty-nine thousand t49,000J native workers. Twenty-one thousand five hundred f2I,500J Sunday Schools with a membership of one million one hundred forty-one thousand tI,I4l,000J, are saving the children of the nations. Twelve thousand eight hundred 112.8005 Christian schools and colleges, with an enrollment of about five hundred seventeen thousand Q5 l 20001, are training the teachers and leaders of a new generation. Two hundred eighty-seven hospitals C2871 and three hundred eighty-two C3825 dispensaries, with five hundred thirty-one C5315 physicians from our land are healing the nations in the name of Christ. And what the churches of the United States are doing is only about one-half of what the churches of the world are doing. The total income of the churches of the United States in I9I4 for missions at home was twelve million four hundred fifty thousand dollars QSI 2,450,000.00J, expended for support of churches, building pastors' homes and houses of worship, general evangelism, Sunday Schools, publication, education, and other forms of mission work. This is the total income of the general denominational agencies like our Executive Committee of Home Missions, whose income was one hundred sixty-eight thousand dollars tSI68,000.00J, and whose missionaries numbered six hundred twenty-eight 16283. The figures for the number of missionaries in the home held are not available for the other denominations, but 160 if approximately the same proportion of missionaries to income holds for them as for us we have over against the total income of twelve million four hundred fifty thousand dollars Sfl2,450,000.00D more than forty-five thousand C45,000J home missionaries. These missionaries in many cases have a part of their support provided otherwise than from the denominational agencies. But the story of the greatness of the missionary enterprise in its work at home is not yet fully told. Taking our own church again as a starting point we find that for mission work in synods and presbyteries and other fields not included in the work of our General Assembly's Home Missions, there was an income of three hundred twelve thousand dollars U53 l 2,000.00J, nearly double the income for the Assembly's work. If the other denom- inations gave in like proportion, there was another total home mission income of twenty-three million dollars fS23,000,000.00l. How many missionary workers are set over against this income there is no means of knowing accurately, but the number is probably as large in proportion as that for the denominational work, or eighty-two thousand eight hundred C82,800J. Combining the figures we have a possible income for missions at home in l9I 4 of over thirty-five million dollars fS35,000,000.00?, with possibly more than one hundred twenty-seven thousand Cl27,000J missionaries. These are huge Figures, and still the story is not fully told, and can never beg but the imagination may run out to the thousands going forth from self-supporting churches in increasing numbers to teach mission Sunday Schools and to preach in needy places, and the imagination must not fail to run on out to those other greater thousands, who look to no agency for support, and whose names are on no missionary roll, but who on small salaries and at the cost of daily sacrihce for themselves and their families travel weary miles in wind and weather to preach the Gospel to groups of churches and to scattered people. It is a dim eye and a lame imagination that from the view point of what has now been said fails to realize something of the greatness of the missionary enterprise. What answer have the men trained in Hampden-Sidney College made to the call of this great enterprise of Missions? Have they been men of large enough vision to see its greatness? Have they been brave enough to face its dangers and hardships? Have they had heroism sufficient to be willing and glad to make any sacrifice needed to give them a man's part in the enterprise? Incomplete records and too brief time for investigation have made impossible a full answer to these questions, but there are facts a plenty to make any Hampden-Sidney man feel safe in laying the missionary record of his Alma Maier beside the missionary record of any other institution without fear of what the comparison may show. Perhaps this fragmentary account and the cases here cited may cause some one to write the complete story of Hampden-Sidney Men and Missions. In the foreign missionary work of our own church thirteen C131 Hampden-Sidney men are now engaged. Robert Dabney Bedinger, Class of l906, went to our Congo Mission in l9l l. He is at Lusambo Station, and has had the unusual privilege of helping to establish the Southern Methodist Congo Mission to the northwest of our own field. The Mid-China Mission has three men: Hart Maxcy Smith, Class of IS94, of the Tunghiang Station, who went out in l90I , and who in addition to his regular evangelistic mission work is the efficient treasurer of the Mid-China Missiong Philip Francis Price, Class of I885, who went out in l890, and who is now a professor in the Theological 161 Seminary at Nanking Station, and John Leighton Stuart, Class of 1896, who went to the field in 1904 and is now professor of New Testament Greek in the Nanking Theological Seminary. The North Kiangsu Mission also has three men: Thomas Lyttleton Hams- berger, class of 1905, of the Taichow Station, who went out in 1912, Francis Augustus Brown, class of 1901, of the 1-lsuchoufu Station, who went out in 19105 and James Robert Graham, Jr., class of 1884, of the Tsing-Kiang-pu Station, who went out in 1889. All three are engaged in evangelistic missionary work. Two men are at work in Japan: Harry Havener Munroe, class of 1901, of the Kochi Station, who went out in 1905, and William Cumming Buchanan, class of 1887, of the Nagoya Station, who went out in 1891, Both are evangelistic missionaries, and Munroe is doing special work through the Sunday Schools of his station. The Korean Mission has four men: William Davis Reynolds, class of 1887, of the Chunju Station, who went out in 1892, and who has done special work as a translator: Finley Monwell Eversole, class of 1900, also of the Chunju Station, who went out in 1912: William Ford Bull, class of 1896, of the Kunsan Station, who went out in 1899: and Pierre Bernard Hill, class of 1902, of the Kwangju Station, who went out in 1912. 1-lillis work is evangelistic, Eversole is a teacher, Bull combines evangelistic work and teaching, and Reynolds has literary and evangelistic work. ln addition to the men engaged in the foreign work of our own church there is Edwin Wilcox Simpson, class of 1894, a member of the Northern Presbyterian Mission in India, engaged in evangelistic and educational missionary work at Ratnagiri: and there is Peter Wilkerson Hamlett, class of 1903, a missionary of the Southern Baptist Convention in Soochow, China. The following alumni now dead were foreign missionaries: Davis Todd Stuart, class of 1898, medical missionary to Chinag Flaminio Augusto Rodriguez, class of 1880, missionary to Brazil: Clement Carrington Owen, class of 1886, medical missionary to Korea, where his widow is still a missionary at the Kwangju Stationg John Watkins Dabney, class of 1874, twelve 1121 years missionary to Brazil, where he died of yellow fever at Campinas: Harrison Robertson Thornton, class of 1874, missionary to Alaska, where he was killed at Cape Prince of Wales, and William Plumer Buell, in college about 1835, missionary to Siam. A number of Alumni now working at home were once foreign missionaries, but for various reasons were obliged to give up the foreign field: Thornton Rogers Sampson, class of 1871, fourteen 1141 years missionary to Greece, now a member of the faculty of the Presbyterian Theological Seminary of Texas at Austin: Randolph Bryan Grinnan, class of 1879, one of the founders of our Japan Mission, where he served twelve 1121 years, now a pastor in Columbia, S. C.: Robert Gamble See, class of 1899, four 141 years missionary to Brazil, now pastor at Floyd, Va.: Cameron Johnson, class of 1891, for ten 1101 years an independent missionary to Korea and Japan at his own expense, and since then a missionary lecturer with home address Richmond, Va.g William Lucas Bedinger, class of 1876, eight 181 years a missionary to Brazil, now pastor at Spring- field, Ala., Richard Venable Lancaster, class of 1884, five 151 years a missionary to China, now president of Belhaven Seminary, Jackson, Miss.: and Henry Tucker Graham, class of 1886, live 151 years a missionary to Japan, now president of Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. 162 It is fitting in any mention of Hampden-Sidney men in missionary work at home to begin with Carey Allen, class of l788, described in the General Catalogue as first mis- sionary to Kentucky. It is interesting to remember that Daniel Baker, who founded a college in Texas which was not named for him and who later had a college he did not found called by his name, was in college two years, ISI l-ISI 3, though he was graduated from Princeton. The list of those who gave their lives to mission churches is too long to print here. Let a few cases of men now living with brief comment on their work represent the rest. William Campbell Hagan, class of l878, has given his whole ministry of nearly thirty C301 years to small churches in Kentucky, Arkansas, West Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, and is now busy at Happy, Texas. Andrew Howlett Porter McCurdy, Class of I879, now living at San Antonio, Texas, for thirty-five years has given himself to Texas. The story of his teaching and preaching and organizing reads like the annals of a great religious pioneer and gives the reader a thrill. Think of averaging five to seven services a week and traveling an average of one thousand to fifteen hundred miles a month for a period of seven years! Who would not lift his hat in the presence of a man who organized nineteen churches and built ten houses of worship? Charles Chesterman Anderson, class of l894, has given his enthusiastic service to Texas and Oklahoma, and is now busy at Hugo. Newton Alexander Parker, class of l894, now at Monterey, Va., has given eighteen years of hard, faithful work to small, self- supporting churches in Virginia and West Virginia. There is Holmes Rolston, class of l892, now pastor of Hebron Church, at Swoope, Va., but for five years an evangelist in Lexington Presbytery with twelve preaching places and organized Sunday Schools. The people are bound to love Holmes Rolston and he loves them into the Kingdom of God. Cochran Preston also class of l892, now at Charlotte C. H., Va., has been a constructive home missionary. The story of his work puts iron into the blood and grace into the heart. It would be good if a full account could be printed here. There is Jesse Luther Lineweaver, Richlands, W. Va., class of l898, with his two churches and ten Sunday Schoolsg and Charles Wilbur McDanald, class of l893, with his big field as Sixperintendent of Home Missions in Kanawha Presbytery, working among the miners and lumbermeng and Eugene Craighead Caldwell, class of l898, now professor in Union Theological Seminary, Richmond, Virginia, who built a congregation and a house of worship at McGregor, Texas, while he taught in Austin Seminary. Halbert Green Hill, Maxton, N. C., class of I857, has been preaching the Gospel fifty-three C531 years and for forty-four 1445 years has been Chairman of Home Missions in Fayette- ville Presbytery, where he is now directing five evangelists in a field covering eleven counties, spending five thousand dollars QS5,000D annually in the work. William Emmit Hudson, Staunton, Va., class of 1895, first as a missionary pastor in West Vir- ginia, then as evangelist of Kanawha Presbytery, later as Superintendent of the General Assembly's Mountain Mission work, and now as Evangelist and Superintendent of Home Missions in Lexington Presbytery, has done and is doing a great work. Frank Ernest Robbins, Beaumont, Texas, class of l890, seriously considered the foreign field, but finally decided God wanted him in Texas. He took the little Beau- mont church of thirty members, which was self-supporting, but paid only a small salary, and one of the first things he asked them to do was to support a teacher in one of our schools in Mexico. The church now has three hundred members, even after giving sixty- 163 seven members to found the Beaumont Central Church. The First Church supports its own city missionary and two missions, has two Mission Sunday Schools, and contributes liberally to synodical and presbyterial home missions and to our work in Korea and in Mexico. The pastor has for a number of years been Chairman of Home Missions in his presbytery, where he directs an evangelist and ten home missionaries, looking after thirty-five church organizations and spending four or five thousand dollars a year. Here is a man who in the broader sense of the word is the best kind of missionary. Benjamin Luther Price, Alexandria, La., class of l888, before going to Alexandria in IS94, had built one church and started three missions. He was told on his arrival that Presbyterians did not grow in that country. The little home mission church had eleven members, no elder and one deacon. He organized a Woman's Missionary Society and started a Sunday School and worked. The church now has two hundred and seventy-five C2751 members and a fine plant. Three other churches have been organized and two other houses of worship have been built. Price organized the church at Bunkie, La., and received into it on profession of faith Bessie Sentell. who is now the wife of Motte Martin, missionary to the Congo. The Alexandria church has four prosperous Sunday Schools and will organize two others soon. The pastor is pastor of a whole county or parish. He is another case of the best sort of missionary. James Edward Booker, Richmond, Va., class of 1870, is the best known leader of home mission work in the State of Virginia and his work has been an inspiration in many other States. He was a pastor for more than twenty years, but always a missionary and evangelistic pastor. Twenty years ago he was made Chairman of Home Missions in the Synod of Virginia. Two years later the office of Superintendent of Evangelism and Home Missions was created and he was called to the work and has been working and growing ever since. He has a genius for keeping the cause before the people. He coined the splendid sentence, The Mission of the Church is Missions. Through the work he directs, more than fourteen thousand fl4,000I have been gathered into the churches, thirty C305 new counties have been occupied, and eighty C803 or ninety C901 new churches have been organized. The Synod's confidence is shown by the financial support which has grown from six thousand dollars fS6,000J to twenty thousand dollars fflS20,000J annually. He knows how to work with and through the officers and com- mittees of the presbyteries and has their hearty co-operation and loyal support. One of the most careful thinkers in the Synod of Virginia believes that Booker's success is not to be explained by his methods, or by his personal talents, or by his burning zeal and enthusiasm, or by his great energy and tireless devotion to his work, but by his life of secret prayer. May he live long to carry on his work, and may his Alma Maier have the honor of furnishing many other men who will go and do likewise! 164 iKPl1Ii1It5l'P1Il'P5 :Zi 4 42: it 'MHEN your courteous invitation came asking that l contribute to your '53 st Annual I appreciated the honor done me and yet hesitated to turn aside 5 .3 from the dusty road of every day business life to venture where only the literati dare tread, but now that I am bold enough to make the venture you must permit the use of a free lance, and if that which follows is too 6 J l permeated with the personal I must be pardoned as my sole object is to Q -E fling out the red Hag of warning for those who are to come after me. N9 X After receiving my B. L. at the University, and just here must be permitted a digression to mention an incident of unusual nature attended with the presentation of the diploma. When I went to the University CL Mrs. Berkeley went with me. We rented a house down town, one well- furnished and with trained servant ready to serve, With no household cares resting upon me, the madam meeting them with courage and good cheer, I had nothing to do but to address myself to the work of student, and this I must have done faithfully and well as I won the B. L. in one session. The joke, however, came in when Professor Charles Venable, then chairman of the faculty, declared me as one of the Bachelors, while Mrs. Berkeley sat at my side. Classmates laughed and it spread the audience over. When I went to say good bye to that prince among teachers, the late Professor John B. Minor, he took me by the hand and said with emphasis and earnestness, Young man, remember that the law is jealous mistress and will not tolerate divided affection. Avoid politics as you would poison. With this advice ringing in my ears I left for my home, attended the next session of Prince Edward county court, then held at Worsham. the court house not having been removed to Farmville. Unfortunately for me a political meeting was held and the fever ran high. The young man just from the University and bearing one of its ceveted honors was called to his feet and at the close of the maiden effort before the public CI had at the University taken active part in the debates of the Jefferson Society and learned to be at home on my feet? I was warmly congratulated and from that moment, forgetting or ignoring the wise counsel of Professor flVlinorD, dived deep into the political sea. The Greely campaign soon opened and from start to finish I was on the firing line. My first speech in that national fight was made at Lynchburg, and imagine the shock received when I reached the city to be told that I would speak from the same platform with those mighty men of Virginia Randolph Tucker and J. B. Baldwinl. When I reached the hall in which the speaking was to take place, I approached these fathers in politics, in eloquence and in patriotism, and again asked to be excused from contributing to the eveningis programme. I can never forget how kindly they patted me on the head and said: You not only must speak, but shall have choice 165 of positions. Of course, I was smart enough to take first shot, as I would not dare to shoot off my pop gun after those big guns had fired. And I did my best, awaking next morning to read this in a local paper: The first speaker was R. B. Berkeley, of Richmond, who for nearly an hour held his audience spellbound with his magic eloquence. In the course of a varied and chequered career we have heard many eloquent orators, from Harry of the West to l-lenry, the eagle orator of Tennessee. We have stood on the banks of the rushing Mississippi and heard the silver-tongued Prentiss charm with his magic word-painting the stormy waves. We have heard voices now mute in the darkness of the grave tell the sad, sad story of our country's wrongs, but we have never heard the effort of this gifted and eloquent son of Virginia excelled. Would to God that every man, woman and child in the city of Lynchburg and county of Campbell could have heard with us this 'feast of reason and flow of soul.' Our sister city must lend us Bekeley again. Lynchburg needs him in the impending campaign. And on that fatal morning the warning of the wise Minor was lost in the outbursts of the reporter, and politics became the game of my life at which I played for two decades and lost. Young men, beware. I may have been something of an orator, but nothing of an organizer with the usual results. I was a member of the senior class at Hampden-Sidney when the war between the States broke out, and as is well known the great body of students went to the front under command of President Atkinson, not much of a tactician, but with all the courage of a Caesar. I had for years been a member of the Prince Edward troop and went with that command to the firing line. Being well mounted the Yankees could never catch me while the rest of the boys were early nabbed and sent from battle back to books. I served to the close of the war, surrendering under General Johnston in North Carolina. Having wagons loaded with silver coins the good General gave each of us a silver dollar as we stood in line to be dismissed, and, sad to say, I spent that dollar at a Yankee suttler's store quicker than a flash. But I was hungry, and like Esau, thought best to part with the dollar than die on my way home. Wish I had that dollar now. While at Hampden-Sidney I was loyal, loving Phip, taking active part in its meetings, often on my feet and crossing lances with foemen worthy my best steel. In return for my devotion to society duty, the boys, in December, l860, gave me the speaker's medal, and that trophy is still due me. If that Lynchburg reporter had con- vinced me that I was as eloquent as he described, I would ask for that medal, paying the cost, and appearing on some fit occasion to receive it. But alas, if I ever wielded the sceptre it has fallen from these nerveless hands. I wish I could portray in true colors an old-time Hampden-Sidney Commencement. The exercises were held in the old church building then standing near the present one, though facing north and south. Just here I am reminded that an eccentric, but dear friend of mine once said to me, that the pulling down of that old church was the exciting and direct cause of the war. Whether this be true or not I recall the building with something akin to reverential love. I have heard those walls echo with the eloquence of leaders in Church and State and on commencement occasions seen it always crowded with 166 matrons, maidens, D. Dfs, l..L. D.'s and prospective A. Bfs. As was true on board the sinking Titanic the order was women first. The rougher sex sat under the shade trees and sipped lemonade fresh from the table of Buck Fuqua. Now and then a lover resorted to the trick of buying a pitcher of ade to carry to his best girl in the gallery and when delivered that girl drank long and deep while the bearer exhibited no restless desire to return to the shade of the trees. In those days the procession formed in front of the college, freshmen heading the column, seniors bringing up the rear of the college ranks with professors, trustees and distinguished guests moving behind. When the church was reached the column halted, the lines divided and while the boys stood with uncovered heads the dignitaries marched into the building. Of course, the band played, Kesnic being then in high favor. Col. Crump, the finest specimen of physical manhood I ever looked upon, soldier from spur to plume, then a merchant at Prince Edward Courthouse, commended the forces with martial air and impressive dignity. Prior to the war banquets contributed nothing to the programme, but after the war ended they became popular. The tables were arranged in the old chapel, and about them gathered as much of wit and eloquence as ever graced like occasions, and, speak it softly, not only wit, but wine sparkled. Were those banqueters sinners above all men? So far as I am concerned mum shall be the word, as I have no desire of being drawn into any controversy on the subject. I read recently a brief sketch of his own life, by Hume, and will never forget that he said, I resolved never to reply to anybody, and surely if any man was ever tempted to Hume was that man. Of course, there was much courting at commencement times, as no doubt there is now. And speaking of courting reminds me of a scrap of love literature born of those days, yet to be excelled in the history of cooing and wooing. A friend of mine fell desperately in love with brown eyes, ruddy cheeks, ruby lips, pearly teeth and long, flowing curls. The course of true love ran smoothly for a time when suddenly a storm broke out and that lover was shocked to receive a missive that ran in this wise: Among my noble characteristics, amiability is generally thought to hold prominent posi- tion, but in order to prove that I deserve so enviable reputation, I must perform some greater and noble deed-nurse the sick, comfort the sorrowing or set some captive prisoner free. 'Tis to perform this last charitable and praiseworthy deed that I now take up my pen. In looking over the large concourse of my friends I decry in the circle formed by my most intimate friends one poor, little fellow bound in despised chains and struggling manfully to be free. As I saw him tottering beneath his heavy burden my heart bounded quick with pity for the youthful sufferer and I thought only of his deliverance and how it might be accomplished. I stood irresolute for a moment only, for a little bird, it must have been my guardian angel, softly whispered in my ear, 'break his chains asunder', and quick as thought I write the magic words, little-you are free. Isn't that a gem? And it was written by a sweet sixteen before the days of Colleges for Women and Normals. As before stated, I took an active part in literary society work, and in those days the rivalry between Union and Phip was sharp and strenuous. When the session opened incoming trains were met by representatives of the two societies and the new boys were literally besieged with invitations to jine. I never knew a student of the college of 167 those days who wasn't a member of one of the societies. Imagine my surprise, then, when I say I met with one of your number recently who said he had never joined either of the societies. And the sessions were invested with veils of secrecy through which none dared to peep and from which no secret was ever allowed to go. I was also a member of one of the leading secret societies of that day, and can never forget the night I rode the goatf' None but members knew the location of the hall in which the meetings were held, or rather I should speak of them as rooms. On the evening of initiation I crept through the woods into the yard of the old Blair home and into a small house that stood in the corner of the yard. There the mysterious ceremony was gone through with, causing each particular hair to stand on end and that continued to stand for some days there- after. But to have told outsiders of that meeting place would have meant sudden death. I would love to devote many pages to the beloved and honored professors of that day, but others have paid proper tribute to their memories and they live in hearts, and so are not dead. Of each it may be truly said, uclarum et venerabile nomenf' By far the most eloquent commencement address I ever heard at the venerable institution was delivered by judge Pryor. At the banquet that followed he again electri- fied with his flashes of wit and Hights of eloquence. I heard him as a boy in the Prince Edward courthouse and as he spoke noticed that he wore a seal ring on the middle finger of his left hand and then and there determined when I grew to manhood and could afford the price to buy one for the same finger of my own hand, and this I did when I began the practice of law in Richmond. This ring I wore for thirty years, when after returning to Farmville and in feeding the stove with a large stick of wood somehow the ring was torn from my finger and consumed in the burning coals before I could recover it. I am wearing a successor, but still lament the loss of my old friend. While at College we boys didn't even so much as know of baseball, football, basket ball, nor did we know of telephones, electric lights, bath rooms, aeroplanes, Pullman cars nor picture shows. Times change and men change with them, and let us hope that progress means more of peace and happiness. Friday nights at Hampden-Sidney were gala nights. After the societies followed the night suppers, and we boys did more than eat. I rejoice to know that such custom is no longer honored, for in this there is great gain. I was far from being a model boy at school. My mother died when I was an infant, and my father being a busy country doctor, generally away from home, I was allowed to run wild. One day during recita- tion hours aticollege, Professor Martin tapped at a certain door and without formal invita- tion entered to find four of us absorbed in the game of seven up. Being a warm per- sonal friend of my father he advised that I be sent to some quiet place in the country to continue my studies. I was put in charge of the late David Comfort, a well-known teacher of his day who believed that sparing the rod meant the spoiling of the boy. Having been to college, however, a condition precedent upon my entering his school was that I should never feel the touch of hickory. This contract was faithfully carried out. The other boys he slashed right and left. At the morning prayer-hour he often selected this familiar hymn for singing, and I can never forget this verse: 168, Give me a calm and thankful heart From every murmur free, The blessings of thy grace impart, And make me live for Thee. And yet he had hardly been ten minutes from his knees before he was trimming some boy from spur to plume. It is said that when his old boys were asked to contribute to the fund to erect a monument over his grave they chipped in cheerfully and liberally. And, yet, he was reckoned among the great teachers of his clay. This has been written with the snows of many winters resting upon me and the dust of much travel, and yet I could continue acl inlinitum, but for fear you will change the quotation to read, ad neuseam, I close abruptly. I often wish that Hampden-Sidney were rich, but though poor when compared with richly endowed institutions, she has devoted her long, honored and useful life to the work of making others rich. Out of her poverty her liberality has abounded. Heaven's blessing abide on faculty and students. Cordially and sincerely, R. B. BERKELEY. Farmville, Va. R 1 f 4 gilwiggsii 169 f 7 002 A '- .Z A f sz. ' AQ, ffl M y i 'frfll 1 bfi li ii ' 4 , f IFnnl'5 Glalvnhar .jr QCD SEPTEMBER. 9-We are back again after a most delightful vacation. Formal opening again without a speech. ll-Y. M. C. A. Reception minus Freshman revel. l2-Freshmen begin to think that they are being neglected. l4-They still think so. l6-A Freshman rally. They change their opinion. l7-The dawn of a new day at H.-S. Hazing is abolished by the strength of the student body. l8-We can no longer distinguish a Freshman from an old man. l9-We hold Rivermont to a tie. 20-Argenbright. after eluding his pursuers, arrives at H.-S. from V. M. I. 2 l-Charlie Peters begins to think that he is color blind. 23-The Freshman class promises to be the most musical in school. They already have an Orgafiln. 24-After a very rushing season becoming acquainted with the new men we decide to study some. 26-We score a touch clown on V. M. I. and incidentally they score several on us. 27-The war interferes with our trips to town. The high cost of living, 'tis keeping us broke. 29-The French and English are truly allied. Prof. McWhorter and Prof. Clarke agree to a compromise and wear moustaches at the same time. 30-Hoge, another V. M. I. man arrives 170 A xq ' RMA OCTOBER. -Denny spends the night in a majestic oak, eluding a ferocious mob. -Rivermont edges over a victory on us. -Simpson was seen taking a short run for his health. -Argenbright invents a new game of chance. -All quiet along the Rhine. -Bear Cats win the first game from Farmville. -We lose to V. P. I. by three touchdowns. Not so bad with a crippled team. We have plenty of delightful umoonshinen these nights. -Bags pulls off a joke at Bryanys expense: words, words, words. -Bear Cats play scrubs. Snoolcums Elliott plays rings around Nic Carter's neck. -Richmond College wins from us. Later we win the same game. -Coach makes a dummy out of Simpson. A good one too. -Sydner, ex-V. M. I. arrives. Almost a company now. -Argenbright takes a trip to Worsham,-and a more hasty trip back. -Hampden-Sidney goes to Richmond. -We win from Randolph-Macon by two held-goals. -Only fifteen windows broken in dorm today. -Sprinkle has a Sufilter who cloesn't suit him. -We win from William and Mary, Bear Cats defeated by Black- stone. 171 NOVEMBER. l-Nobody home but Richmond and he's in Capital form. 3-Dr. Beazley leaves for a purpose and we have a holiday. 4-Great excitement in Worsham. News of a war in Europe has reached them. 6-Harry Rice and Argenbright go to a masked ball in Farmville. They report a ripping good time. 7-We lose to Richmond College. Oh woe! 9- Strick pulls off his annual ham joke. I0-Dr. Beazley returns with his bride. I2-Dr. and Mrs. Beazley are given a musical entertainment by the H.-S. band fof noise-makersl. l3-Bear Cats win from Farmville. Richmond makes an 80-yard dash. I4-William and Mary again go down to defeat at our hands. I7-Allan and Gilmer seen not studying. I9-Hoge absent from College Shop roll call. Zl-Randolph-Macon beats us, ending the championship series and leaving us tied for the cup. 22-William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow , Wilson discuss the neutrality question. 24-Big fight on fourth. Result two dead soldiers. 26-Some of us go home, some go to Lynchburg and some stay at H.-S. We play Roanoke College. Don't mention it. 27-Friday. Fen Sterne fails to go to town. 30-Hanes plays the role of a burglar, but is painfully frustrated in the attempt. 172 DECEMBER. -Dance given to the football team in Farmville. Two football men present. -French and German parallel exams are given and taken. -Ditto. -Results of the above taken exams are heard. Feeling runs high, in fact, higher than grades. Mobs form but finally disperse. -We look forward to exams with trepidation. - Pete and several others have a hard night of it. For further information apply to Rice and Thurman, the others in the case. -Simpson goes to borrow a uhorsei' from Aggie. No luck. -Prayers are offered, but to no avail-they're on us. -Weeping, wailing, and gnashing of teeth. Exams start in earnest. I6, I7, IS, I9-Exams and study. -Argenbright takes leave of us to enter the state of matrimony. -Exams are over. Joy and good-byes. 173 I Z 5 6 7 JANUARY. -We make resolutions. -We break them. -We return from the holidays, most of us saving our three Ubonesf' -Neal arrives from V. M. I., thus completing the company. -Simpson does not return. What shall we do? Subscribe for a paper? 8-Pendleton in Latin shows a weakness in Greek. I0-Aggie rides Denny. l l-Some one notes the usignificantsn of French 2. I2- Aggie makes a proposition to Latin 3 class. l3-They meet and ponder over the proposition, Hnally deciding to I4 'iwalkf' thus destroying a time-honored precedent. -Anarchy prevails. A quadruped is found in Aggie's class room. In the right church but in the wrong pew. I5-Class room doors are lacking, and Chapel furniture has disap- peared. Detective forces are put to work. lfr-We overcome the mighty Seminary team in basket ball. I8 Zl 22- 24 25- 27 29 30 - Pep, the long lost, has at last been found. -John Peters and John Morton go to Worsham, for reasons we know not. Three H.-S. basket ball teams engage in battle, the Varsity, Bear Cats and Outlaws. - Doc Gillespie shoots a basket in practice. Will wonders never cease? Bob Warwick makes his debut at the Normal. A perfect record of three and one-half years smashed. And a girl was the cause of it all. -Ice cream disappears at Maples. -We win from Rivermont. Snookums Elliott Uverstandsn the Normal. -Bryan and Terry engage in a mid-night combat. 174 FEBRUARY. Ben Venable Hhossesn Johnny. Ground-hog fails to see his shadow. Bags rides Palmore. We lose to Richmond College. Fen, Sid and Barrett spend the night in the new Egyptian Hotel. The Owls go to town and come back in a hooting mood. Ching-Ling gets his modesty severely shocked in basket ball practice. Anderson Cary has a birthday. His third so far this year. -Consternation at Westminster. A ngude is pulled. Coats appear in Cala array. -An order, The Pedestrian Knights of the Round Table, is founded on hrst. -We dream of fair damsels, fox trots and lame ducks. -Our dreams are realized. One of the prettiest dances in the history of the College being pulled off. A busy season on the Hill, Speaking, dancing, etc. flVlostly the latterj Many Alumni back. -Some of us lose our hearts, but most of us our heads. Darst dances, Ryburn smokes a cigarette and Parson Gilmer drinks a coca-cola. -The fair ones take their departure, and we again descend from the ethereal to the earthly realms. -Senior speaking comes off without a hitch. - Sid'i shows his affections toward all. Mademoiselle, I adore thee. -We play William and Mary in Farmville. fSee Magazine for account of the game., 175 MARCH. -Baseball practice begins. - Strick is tenderly nursing a mustache. Fine stuff! -Exams are upon us again. -Study. -Study. -Ditto. -Same. -Westminister is no more. -Exams start in earnest. 20-Study and exams, exams ancl study. -Holiday, a general reaction. - Berk pulls off a little policy stuff. -Crockett gets to breakfast on time. -French Carter does likewise. -Baseball team on the first trip. 176 APRIL. -Some of us are fools, while others are not so foolish. Cary Johnson goes to the Normal School and thinks the Parrish a Borough. -HB. S. gets a shower bath on fourth. -Junior speaking. Demosthenes and Cicero no longer in it. -Graham allows a clay to go by without asking a question. Doc Gillespie tells a reasonable lie. -Thomas eats a reasonable breakfast. - Davy Crockett takes a shave. lt's all off. Allan cuts a class. Hoge attends one Uncle John is seen to go from first to fourth without stopping. Scrubs win shakes from the Varsity. 177 , , MAY. l-Fielcl Day. The Class of 'U l 6 again carries off the honors 2-Cary gets on the White list. 3- B. S. fails to find a broken window in the dorm, 6-Nobody home but Wool and he has at sheepish look. 8-Things brighten up a bit. Normalites out to the game. I0-I5-Slip by without a snag in these parts. Mirabile dietu! l 7--The Anvil Chorus meets to practice some new selections. 20-Thermometer stands at I04W in the ice house. We Nversteh Venableis poncl. 23-Rink goes to church. 27-We put aside foolishness ancl become serious 1 29-Much midnight oil and gas is burned. 178 JUNE. -Despair seizes many of us. -Unbouncled joy. Exams over. Calic arrive on the Hill Baccalaureate sermon. Cary goes to church. -Speaking, dancing ancl much merry-making. -Dancing, speaking and more merry-making. -Diplomas awardecl. -Tears and farewells. 179 :A sv 5 A lv 3. n 1 QC an iv fi it it if 39 E it it it EC E? it E? M it K 55 R it it it E it is it it if it EC is ic if it it it it it it E4 it 5? it E4 it it 54 K it R it 52 SL as QE 7533181 sms i qc ?' in QJQ li 'X 5 . L 3 lx -f 1 53 45 Qi 45 Qi' 45 iliragnuruts from 1Kipprrz1rg fi 45 Syd - Heinie, why does a cat sleep better in summer than in E if 45 435 ee 4? winter? ul-leinien-I no verstehe why. Syd -Because the summer brings the little cat-a-pillar. Bags -Mr. Massie, who was the first man to investigate QE . va magnetism? ,S 93? 35 Q is 45 45 if 95 91? 96 4? if 45 95 95 45 W 45 IX' 45 3 si 3? 45' ?E 95 45 95 45' X1 oe if 45 Qi' as ee 145 as ea 95 va as w' QE Maggie -Gilbert Parker. Dr. Beazley Cln Psychology?--Mr. Terry, what are beats ? Terry-A vegetable. Dr. McWhorter Un Freshman Englishl-Mr. Wool, is that an original story you have just read? Mr. Wool-It was told to me as original. Aggie Un Latin Class?-Mr. Lyle, where are the Alps? Lyle-In the western part of Virginia, sir. As you sew so shall ye rip. Sophomore-Why do you keep your watch under your pillow? Freshman-Oh! That's so I can sleep overtime. Aggie-Mr. Bridges, will you tell me who were the members of the Second Triumvirate? Bridges-Anthony and Cleopatra. Downes-Why don't you give up wearing glasses? You'd look better. Spessard-Yes, but I wouldn't see as well. Dr. McWhorter Un History IJ-Mr. Carter, why is the term Dark Ages sometimes applied to the Middle Ages of European History? Carter-Because at that time there were so many knights. W 5tk'l5'54kRkkW5?52kSBi'625ti4'5if?-'54rib?9Wl'2'49RkWb'25ifSEQBSSQYHWSQHQYHRRWQYSERQY 180 X Y 3 W 3 R R R R E E R R 9 R R R E Q R 9 R is E 9 9 E E R N R R R R R K H W F E R K B R M E K R R R R E Y R R R W R 9 R R R X R K X W W 9 X M R R R 388 Curry Un Geology?-Mr. Venable, what is the largest known diamond? Ben -The ace. Hjimu Ebel-I paid all my bills today. Rink -A well spent day, eh? Freshman fAt football game?-How many quarters do they play? Dr. Beazley Cln Psychology?-Mr. Richmond, what is the opposite of affection? Richmond-Disinfection. Mrs. Graham-Mr. Bowling, what is your favorite fruit? Graechus',-A date with a peach. Aggie Un Latin?--Mr. Oliver, what case is eum? Oliver fQuiclclyJ-Subjunctive. Aggie -Uh! Uh! Somebody knock him in the head and drag him out. Teacher-Why did they put stars on the U. S. Hag? Little Boy-So they could see it at night. Great Calamity-Wrecked in Lee Tait's head a train of thought running at high speed. Result-several splendid ideas destroyed. Dr. McWhorter fwhile discussing Capital in Political Science, looks out of the window and sees a gay young sport going down the walk,-lVlr. Christian, do you think these high-crowned hats and canes, which are all the rage now, are to be considered capital goods? Christian-I don't now about the hats, Doctor, but it seems to me the canes would furnish the owner some means of support. Crockett-We are going to trade our victrola for a sewing machine. Tait-Get a Singer and you'll never miss it. Aggie fln Latin?-Mr. Owen, what is the meaning of the word tango ? Owen-To dance. Rich' Ben' Rich' '-This is certainly line coffee. ' fAcross table?-A little bird tell you? '-Yes, a uswallowf' Curry Un Chemistry?-If anything should go wrong in this experiment we and all the laboratory with us might be blown sky high. Come closer, gentlemen, so that you may be better able to follow me. Hkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkkikkkkkkkkkkikkkkkkkk 181 83KXQXRHXHKQKXEKXXXQHKXEHHMKQHHNHHKWHXHXM3H 3 3 W 3 3 Q 5 5 3 W 3 3 3 Q E 3 H 5 M 3 4 X 5 H 5 3 K 45 X 45 5 48 5 X 55 Q3 43 QS 48 , ve 32 5 3 25 3 W 5 3 3 3 5 5 3 3 3 5 X 5 3 M X X 5 5 5 5 5 X 45 45 if 45 25 2 Statiatirz wwf WU X WAS a miserable night and the roads were excessively muddy. As luck X F35 would have it, I had been left in Farmville by my careless companions. Q2Q It was late and there was nothing to do but foot it. I had just left the vfElJ macadam and passed the haunted house on the top of the hill when I 6 D received a blow from somewhere that sent me into eternity for I know not l. how long. While in this unconscious state I started on a journey. I Q! 'W N9 traveled for years, it seemed, and at last halted on the banks of a dismal X35-U river. What superhuman influence guided me I know notg but here I was at the river which from all appearances was the Styx, Yes, there Q was old Charon in his ancient bark drumming up trade. I immediately KC stepped forward into the boat and we were off. There was only one person with me and his shade was so shrivelled I could hardly recognize it, but as sure as fate it was old Anderson Cary, It was Anderson's birthday as usual and I had to give him my last jit. As Charon had installed a Ford engine in his boat we soon arrived on the other side. I jumped out leaving my fare unpaid and struck out for the Elysian Fields. As a passed in, on the right I saw a large handsome-looking club house and in blazing letters over the entrance was written: Hampden-Sidney Alumni Association. That was all I needed. I knocked on the door and was greeted by Archibald Alexander himself. I told him I was direct from l-lampden-Sidney and could give him all the latest Normal School dope. I-le fell on my neck and Ied me into the assembly room where a meeting was in progress. There was William Henry Harrison presiding and among the illustrious members I recognized Moses Hoge, Stanhope Smith, Kemp Plumber and numerous others looking just like they do in Chapel. I was put on the rostrum and questions were fired in quick succession. Do the students drink much now? This almost floored me, but I truthfully answered that only one-fourth drank. Do many chew or smoke? One-fourth chew and three-fourths smoke, I answered. What is the favorite study? Bible. The faces of the old divines let up with delight. Loafing is still your favorite pastime, I suppose, said Harrison. Yes. Many dancers now? u H if 44 H Yes, about one-third of the school. How about the average age and heightg has that increased? No. We average nineteen years of age and measure five feet nine and three- quarter inches. Now, among the students, who is the most popular professor? You've got me there, 'Bill,' I answered, but I think Dr. Beazley is, though Dr. Vvhiting is a close second. 182 Who's the most popular student? Fl-hat's another hard one, lVlr. Chairman, as Tait is barely ahead of Ebel. Tait is also considered the best allround man, though Bowling pushes him hard for the placef' As no women were present to ask, I had to volunteer the information that Pendleton was the best looking, Christian the biggest woman hater, Rice and Palmore close for society fizzle with Rice in the lead and Palmore the most conceited. How about athletics? asked a heavy set alumnus in the rear of the assembly. At football Driver was the decided star, and so with Pendleton at basket ball, and Sterne at tennis: but in baseball it's a harder proposition. Thurman got the vote with Bugg a very close second. For an allround athlete, however, Berk Carrington surpasses all. Whois the leading politician? asked Patrick Henry, from over in one corner. H 'Charley' Peters is still political boss, though his power has diminished greatly. He is too promiscuous with his bribes. And the literary phase? asked Pat. 6'We have Hanes as best orator and debater, while Warwick excells with the pen. 'Uncle John, is the only real poker shark nowl- Enough! said Patrick. That doesn't come under this head, but as you have started, tell us of the other sins that college boys are heir to. I was ready to give up. Such a herculean task would have Hoored Richmond himself, who by the way is the biggest liar, but I didn't want the assembly to know it. l answered, Sprinkle drinks, bums, and bums drinks. Rice's bluffs will get him by St. Peter, and Mount gets by with the most food. Hodges is the loudest sport, but even with that draw back he is considered the best dancer. John Guthrie is the only real suffragette on the 'l-lill.' H Are there no students left? asked one worried duck. Sure, we have Maurice Allan and Hoge, his antithesis. Cary Adams is the biggest nuisance, and speaking of nuisances we have as best musician 'Charlie' Hurt, and singer, Fenton Sterne. Among the numerous Freshmen to hold high distinction is Denny, biggest fool and greenest Freshmang Thomas, freshest Freshman, and Fred Owen, the laziest man. Last but not least comes the biggest bonehead. The contest for this honor was hard fought, making the victory more decisive for Maggie Massief' How about church affiliations? asked old Dr. Mcllwaine, much moved by the discussion. Do many belong to the church ? I was proud to be able to answer this satisfactorily, as l thought, so l spoke up unhesitatingly. Five-sixths of us belong, sir, mostly Presbyterians, but in our numbers may be found Baptists, Episcopalians, Methodists, Lutherans, Mormons and Heathensf' What hit me I don't know, but I think it was the book Stanhope Smith had in his hand. Anyway, when I awoke, I was lying in the road between Hampden-Sidney and Farmville, about to freeze. 183 A BUNCH OF US 6,26 m, . C5 , 3.57 50 Qx Q-ff' if 'V '47 1 lf . 1 , ,I 494 ff 'ffzb , T3 Om ADS ffm i f X, 'V ' y'f. ff, J- jgfrl . '44 ,ff if fu 4 N' Q, X Flv I' I -Cl Ip? wg, ' I lilvl' .1 I 74 , fwflnifftflfryf ff! ff X My 'Q Cf 4 mi 1 lflfxfcf l lil X f flll 0 Q 441441-cfgfo-1-o-Ifoljeo-14-1-vj-ellaQ11-oljfel-orffoelfoflfo-I-offfvwife- 41- -'-4-Z4-fo o-I-Q-kr DAVIDSON Q Q u:uoooa:', .a 'u. .o '0, .o 'o. .o 's. ff- osusrzo D v o, Qu. 4 o u, 0. f nf o o .fs ,o. 0: o n :o' u fnlu o l s n ' a. ' , , n U Q o WI-IITE DRUG GO. FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA ESTABLISHED 1868 The confidence of tI'ie commu- nity for nearly half a century. AGENCY FOR WATERMAN FOUNTAIN PENS 496 Wholesale ancI Retail Orders taken for all kinds of ENGRAVING HUC-ERIOCERYSHH Prices and SampIes on appIication Q76 - I'IampCIen-Sidneyggijl Orders I3romptIy GO TO I3auIett 5 Bugg GHFIHHCTI '-T : ---and - Hardware and . Mclntosh Sporting Goods FOR ToiIet ArticIes, K.ocIaIxs, I:iIms ar1cI Supplies Monogram Writing Paper The Best 51.00 Fountain Pen Made Visiting Cards Engraxkd You will f'incI what you want tI1ere FARMVILLE, - VIRGINIA Stoves and Crates, Guns and Ammunition, Fine Pocket Knives, EvereacIy FIasI'1 Lights, Ix7er Johnson BicycIes o 0.4 FARMVILLE, - VIRGINIA 4' i05I+'iZ5f?I?'EI?0?I?'?If+4If'?I'0+V!-0 lI?9?I?0iIf+sI4'lI49?I?4?I?9?I?4?I5'?If'?If95Ir9?Ii'+?If0?I104If0?I14-I+? x.,Zf -I' -Is -1' +I v v v -I -I -I ?9?K97n9TR9TR'fn9Tn9Tn9T:9TK'1 9fh9'P4Th+Hf04f9'h9dT9d'9df9'P4'P9'P4th9'P9' 9 ' IF it's something to smoke: CIGARS, PIPES or CIGARETTES IF it's SODA WATER or ICE CREAM IF it's -1 CANDY -- If it's TOILET ARTICLES or IVIEDICINES If its anything in the present day DRuo STORE LINE, we have it The Best That Can Be Bought GET IT I-IERE Farmville Pharmacy The Big Drug Store on the Corner IF YOU WANT A THING, VVI-IY NOT GO WHERE YOU CAN GET IT? Edwin CIapp's Shoes . 36,00 and upwards 'AVValkfOver Shoes . . 53.50 to S5 00 HBOSIODIADH Shoes . 3.50 to 4.50 Eclipse Shirts . . l.00 to I.50 Hawes Hats . . . 2.00 IO 3.00 Interwoven Hose . . 25:2 and 50C Arrow Brand Collars . 2 for 25C Ed. V. Prtce fr Co S. tailoring line of Madeftoflvleasure C L O T I-I l N G Victor Caps, 50c, SL00 and 51.50 Latest New YorkSIylesin MEN'S NECKVVEAR Give us a call N. B. DAVIDSON FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA See Gollege Agent S. I'I. Hawes aHdCOmPaHY RICHMOND, VA. COAL. LIME ...CEIVIENT... General Builders' Supplies Phones Madison 57 Madison 3817 C. E. Cl-IAPPELL :COMPANYZ DEALERSIN CONFECTIONERIES, FRUITS, BLANK BOOKS Stationery, Tobacco, and Cigars Agents for l'luyler's and Norris' Candies MAIN STREET FARMVILLE. f VIRGINIA TERMS SPOT CASH fQ Q+0Ljfolkofjfofjfo-1405-Q-1-ell-041-44-I-Q-I-4-1-v 0 0-I-0-X64-I-0-I-0' 0-'A -1- 0?'?4?':04l505I-040' rl-0+ I +0'I +0+0+'+'-1 'l-'++4-1-04-4+0-I-044+4-I-4fl-Q-jfvfjfoflso-Ifffli0-libel-9 140-I+' ko- Q- 4- ,j Send your orders for e 5 JOB PRINTING to tlie E arrnville Braid AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN Subscription 51.00 in advance 6 3 Q worlc done neatly. quiclcly. and E guaranteed to give satisfaction J Q and EQUIPMENTS X Q Address I 0 Q Tlie Herald f Farmville. - Virginia - - O 4 J Cluas. Bugg E99 Son 0 Q THE PURE FOOD STORE A Staple and Fancy Groceries. Fruits and Candies FARMVILLE. - VIRGINIA R.A.BaldWinf6SOn Latest Styles in Menis Ixleclcwear Everything in Gents' Furnishings, Hats, Caps. and Shoes Outfitters to Hampden-Sidney Students f 1 . . . 1 C, C , C QXXIA N Unmn Theological Seminary f nucHMoNo,vA. f UNDERTAKER AND A fully Equgnped scT1a,:ry?..afhh9m,. sn- f FURNITURE DEALER f,'Q1iifli'f2 uof5Z':f lffiyi iiciuaiilcblgiafffhi Q . usual departments. coursesin the English Bible, E Matting, Linoleum. Rugs 9 Q Furnishings for College Boys a Specialty j FARMVILLE. VA. 0 Sunday School Work. Evangelism and Mis- sions. New and tlxoroupllly appointed build- ings. spacious campus and athletic grounds. Session begins on the third Wednesday in September. For catalog or other information apply to VV. VV. MOORE. D. D.. LL. D.. President 0 QvlfbZ?4vlf0vlf4vIf0fl10vIf'vi14vl:'vli0vI?'ilv++-I+11vii0Lli44I50fIi04I?0+If0+I9?I+0?I?0+Zf4EIE 'O' -0-' 0 6 0. 4 Q. 'Q A delightful climate. Beautiful and extensive campus. Ample 4 'Q X 1. 44+'fI-442-'+4?I4'9I 4I 'I- I-+14 'Li i',fiT,Q'I Ti', i','i', 0 0 '4'i 'i'4'i'0'i 0 6 1 9 HAMPDEN - SIDNEY CGLLEGE Q. I-IAMPDEN-SIDNEY, VIRGINIA The oldest college in the South save one. High standards and thorough worlc. A strong Faculty. A select student body. athletic grounds. A remarlcalole record in Athletics. Large Dormitory equipped with ever-Q modern convenience -- steam heat, gas, hot and cold baths, etc. Fourteen-unit entrance requirement. Degrees conferred: B.A., B. S., A., B. Lit. Q- For Catalog or Furiher Information Addresse Q . if President I'I. T. GRAHAM, D. D. 2 HAMPDENSIDNEY, VIRGINIA fl Z Z g PEOPLES me NATIONAL BANK First National Banlt E FARMVILLE, VA. of Farmville, Virginia I4 fllnited States Depositary, If under Supervision of the Q U , CAPITAL and suRPLus, +s mted States Government Q SIO0,000.00 E O0 i Accounts of corporations, firms and in- i dividuals solicited. We invite you to of 550 OOO OO enjoy our ample facilities. Let us serve Q 9 ' YOU. li OO 1 OFFICERS: E WEWOULD rsslazsgzx- . r . A V....s:zz:s:: +I APPRECIATE YQUR E, S. Martin, - . Vice-President 1 V. Vaiden. - - - Cashier YL BANK ACCOUNT A. C. Ogbum, jr., - Assistant Cashier 1 ?. . . t. ....,.,..,,,,,,,.,,,, +I491v05!+'?Zf05I:0rZr0vIf0?Zv+rIvvvZr+vZr0vIiv vfifoelfo-lvoflroilfvftfo-lfofk0+4-Zf+v!fvf.q4f!:+vZfv:I:0vI:0vIr0vIfof -4- 4- I-0-I -I 'I -I-+-Zi''If' EI-'fIi4'I?0iI+0?If4 +-I50lIf4fIE4:Z+0fZ-0-I4+4'If0-19'It4'If0+03101154'If4vI9fZi0+I'4iI4lI40+F VVhat S hool? You will Come to Eastman if you investigate iEastman can lzelp you grim 1 Are unemployed or are dissatisfied And do not love your work Or get very low wages and see No prospect of advancement I f You Woulcl like to change your employment to Something better suited to your tastes More renuunerative and affording Greater opportunities for advancement If You Wish good training for business Wish to lear11 Shorthand and Typewriting Wish to become a Telegraph Operator Wish to improve your handwriting U You Want a thorough knowledge of English Want to teach commercial Branches Want employment and can afford to Prepare yourself for a paying position Eastman can help you A course in this most widely known Business School will give you thorough training for business and qualify you to C0111- mand a good salary. 06 New Students may enroll any week day. Open all the Summer. lno rucationsl Academic Bookkeeping Civil Service Stenograplty , Typewri ti ng Stenotypy and Penmansltip Departments OO Ufthe many distinct advantages afforded at Eastman may be men- tioned latest equipment and most approved methods: individual in- struction , broad courses ofstudyg large faculty of specialists. Employment for Graduates Write for Complete Catalogue to Clement C. Gaines, M. A., LL. D., President Washington Street, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 'vl'+'I90fI-0?lf4rIf If I 'I+I'9-lv'rI10ilv0 ?F'rIi I50lI4'lI?'?I?95I?'?IE0 041941-0?If4'I60-15041v0-I504i?0?I?0'l+09l+Pl:0 Y 4 4 if . i Q. 1, Q . ll 9 15 Y .'- O ,l- . 0 LC 'v ff O . .J Ts . O LU 3, o :F 4 fx QE if L t 741 .+, 9 J: 4. i 4. as i if T? 7.1 O :JL ,.. Q2 0 V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V V PHOTOGRAPHS CNA LAWN i I1 This Book made by H. H. HU T The Gold Medal Photographer FARMVILLE, VIRGINIA W. T. DOYNE FuneraI Director and . Furniture DeaIer SEND YOUR JOB PRINTING TO L. G. MARTIN A FULL LINE OF FURNITURE SUITABLE FOR STUDENTS Graphophones, Records, Pianos and Organs Wall Paper, Pictures, Etc. I fgfx iq if I Q RR. ,, ' . FARMVILLE, - VIRGINIA S'?I?09I?0+I?0+I?0915051409250?I?0lIv4?I?+?I+0+I+++Z?4lZ+04Ii0+.. '+I+Z 0'If0'IE+4260-I+'-I+'-ISvlfvlfv-Ii'-Irv 0-,+,-Q-,-0+ fo-,-Q- -4- fo- -o-A-o- fo - 14- -Q-,A 3-or foe,-0+ 3- Q- -Q-,A+-foe,-Q-,-0-,-4,5 -fo' -0-,iv 4 'VI4 'I 'I1 I 'I 4f 'I ?I 4I 'I'9 ?'I 4I'4 rI?'?I?99I'+rIf'3If49I'0 GRPI4+?I4QlI44?IQQ9I54+I645I50?I4+ff50E 4' -4-' Mary I-IIIISITIHII 6C CO. R R RRRRORO IRI R Q Semlnary GentIemen,s Furnishings and :Ear YQUIIITUQI EMIIIIQS STAUNTON, - VIRGINIA Term began September ll, l9I5. Located in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Un- surpassed cIimate, beautiful grounds and modern appointments. Students Merchant Tailoring a Specialty 0 REGAL SHOES The Shoe That Proves from 34 States. Terms mod- and erate. Pupils enter any ARROW COLLARS time. Send for catalogue. 49 Q FARMVII.LE.iand-' Y LYNCHBURG MISS E. C. WEIMAR, - Principal Virginia , A- V- WADE SIILNIELWEST DeaIer in Confectioneries, Fruits, Stationery, SchooI SuppIies, Tobacco OUTFITTER TO COLLEGE Washington, D. C. 9 and Agent for Cigars, School and Fraternity Pennants, Dunlop Hats and Stein Block Clothes Etc. CoIIege Shop Agent GO T0 W. D. MARTIN , A I I HC S ar C O M li bfshp JEWELER The best pIace in 9 A friend of aII Hampden-Sidney FARMVILLE Boys vw-1+-I+'+I-vrZvv+ivH'0-Zfeilivlivf-P'-I'0 .TIT+4iT9eI+9LiT',LiT9+ii'fiT'fif'97iT9LI'T9?Ie9?I5,by9TiT.fi'T.?'IT9FIT9LIT97 0- 0 gif 4 J. .A O 0 ? 5 EQ 4, -n 9 J- ,. 9 -u if f 1 9. -F 6 5. 1 0 0? .1 3. A 0 - 1 if 6 6 O 4 6 '4 '4 is 7.1 9 6 Q 'Q UL . A o 3, 15 5 +0 ., 6 PI-0-I-fr ' - f 'Z4'+0lI'0'Z'04I404Fv1F . A Q ,, 3. 5, 9 O 9 Q 3. e If - ET f 8 1915 Y I fffiq , x -'hw '- g eiglfiv pi, 5 X l.. ff 01 -'T '15 E-Sis? fl-l'-3 2 ' A IllllllllIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ulllllllllllllllllllll l ,Q E Nd 0 E Q , E 4 ffgj: ? E Q E E ' 5 A QDEDENDABLEHQNK 5 . 5 ITC repufaiion op flmis lmanlgcow 1 ' E ering A period opnearly fiffyyears E ' E of' successH'.ll Business is aguqraniee 2 4 Ee ot its sfrengtlw, alnhfy and willmg- 'EI . E nlesi fo reipond so every yleasonable demand -Z: E t . E 7:- 1 IHTCTZZQ aeilransfieci i:lxPCga:vings'Depm'fment. Z E ficcounfs by mail invxted. E E T H E E 1 E DLT! TERS Gil K 2 E OF FflRMVILLE,Vfl. E E Capital .... - - as 50,000.00 ?, .T. E Surplus -- ..... S 55,000.00 E I 2 Resources .... S4-50,000.00 . 3, ,ff E Oldest and Strongest Bank in this Sechon E 1 1IIlIIIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIlllIIHIIIHIIIIIIlllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP JN' 9 if -, 6 I 6 'r :li+:F4?I9'rZ?0lI?0iZ?4?I50ElE0lZE'+Zf4EI?09I?'+ZS43240+ 9 0+Zv0-24414'+G-24+ 4- LI-0+0+0-I-4-I-0-Zfvl-Ovlfvlf Aff' x I f iw 6+ if NX pf laser, my LM Y L-Ufesidemt T a TVQELLLIIATJI :EAD Y ai 'Vf.C8-Q.':'L?23if1?,f!l':Z H555 gg fe? 'Wllllillvl H9133 ii 2 dy-'fr lj U III Pauli l70L'Z7Q II 2511212223 Qi 012399 2 2 EMEARYL ND -mf ELEemlc Cm ENGRAVING Co B U F PALO. N.Y Wt' MADE THE ENGRAVINGS FOR THIS BOOK L, J QT GQ W ' N N 0 5 ? 2 S3 '- i OV: .J .. . K s x v 'Q' ' 'l' O n -'4 a . 5 ' . f-. W.. l IQ C1 1 .us-1 1-L 1 - .- . --r' A vo.: , 'Y .givf sl' P J NN 1 of ' ' 1 . ., LU' , . ,z- ' s Nx 0 I A .t 3' u 'i ', 1.3.1 , '.'f'-,Nail . 5 1Y ..,1 .,. L 19, Q,-, n . v , - 4 Nvlitxl - ' ' ' NA n 41 1.'Lq ' we tx u '? Iwi filqxgk a x .2 3+-5 I Q J Y 5 Y' 'V Mm.-an J A tg: SV H... bm s'-'Jl'.' ,.. I 1 Q u' ' '4 I ' '. A. . Q ,- I I 1- I' ' 7 ff, 1 MIN' V . '- v,.'.',, V . .9.' ' 411, x ' J ' 0 ' - Q- o uv. - ' 1 ,j'Jm'.Io L - .rf- v:+ 2- o fi ' .7 A 7 0 x Q 5 I 1 sv, - x 0,51 'Fi 4 r-nz! B UL 411 C J ' A 143. JV. ' -C,l' , . YH- V y-uf--. 'vi 1 ', - . Y' : 11- 1' . w-,' it 1' 5 .R is-0,- ff,- ' '....gx , ' A-. '-4 - rug f. X I , -'f ',.v 1 1-5 ,Y . k I -'za' Q-1 Ax' .. ,I r 'ffn-fx .ff L 'fxi1'f7N'. f. i 1i -. 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Suggestions in the Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) collection:

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

1913

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

Hampden Sydney College - Kaleidoscope Yearbook (Hampden Sydney, VA) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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