North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC)

 - Class of 1905

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 276 of the 1905 volume:

«5 «5 t w «2 « (Ebroarfes Srougbton printers anb Bm ersv? A (Mi.i ' .KiiT i;ii;i. THE AGROMECK mm. VOLUME THREE B Published annually by the Senior Class of the North Carolina College of agriculture and Mechanic arts WEST RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA MAYaaaaaa aa nineteen HUNDRED AND FIVE n . iEEHJ niM i. L MCT. EM SHir SHiWlNl T© TlnlE ' IIM IHElli I E!D)ECdTEI Benjamin Rice Lacy IH.W ' E been asked by the young men conducting the Ac.ko.mkck in write a siiort sketch of the life and character of my friend, Benjamin R. Lacy, to whom this issue of the Annual is dedicated. They have furnished nie with a few facts relative to ?ilr. Lacx ' s life. He was born in the cit ni Ralei.yh on June 19, 1854. He is a son of the late Reverend l)rur - Lacy, a distin!.;uishe(l and learned Presbyterian minister, who was f(ir several years President of Davidson College. Both of Mr. Lacy ' s grandfathers were Presbyterian ministers. On his mother ' s side he comes of a long line of notaljle preachers. At the age of 15 he went into the Raleigh and Gaston R. R. shops in Raleigh as an a])])rentice. P ' or about fifteen years he was a locomotive engineer. He became a prominent member of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, and holds his connection with that compact and wisely managed organization. As a member of the Broth- erhood, he served for a number of years on the Grievance Committee, and his wise and considerate conduct in that delicate position gained for him and he now holds the love and confidence of the men to a degree rarely e(|nalle(l, and he always enjoyed the respect of the officials of the railroads. He served six years as Commissioner of Labor, having been first appointed to that office by the late Governor Elias Carr. He has twice been elected State Treasurer, being nominated to that high office the last time by acclamation. Mr. Lacy spent some months of his life on the plains of Te.xas and in the South west. where he became acquainted with r anch life, and contributed his part In the history of those brave men who combine sound judgment with an attractive dare-devil recklessness. These meager facts furnished to me dn not make Mr. Lacy ' s career or his character understandable. To those of us who know hnn best, he yet remains something of a mystery. Simple in his life, a (|uiet and orderly man, with only such knowledge of books as he has picked up at intervals in a busy life, what is it that has won for him such distinguished lionors. and enables him to count the whole population as his friends ? An intimate association with him for four years has solved this cpiestion for me to my entire satisfaction. He is, in the first ])lace, a man of fine natural .sense, but beyond and above this, he is possessed of a warm he;irt which never lires in serx ' ice for nthers. Tic takes the minutest interesl in all lliat (.-nncerns his frii ' uds and ac(|n;iinl;mces. He knows children, mU (inl h sij;lu and faN ' nr, hut 1) ' name, lie knnws the working people nf ilu ' i-niiiiiiunitN in which lu ' li -es and calls them by their Christian names, not as ,1 m.atter of cimdescensidn nv patronage, bin ;is a ni.-irk of his sense of i ' (|uality and friendliness, lie is nn terms of friendship and intimacy with tlie learned and powerfid. He sees things from tlie point of view of the wage-earner, and realizes how the employer looks at the matter from his nosition. I lis concern aboiU the interests of those with whom he comes in contact is real. He rejoices with those who rejoice. He is present at the weddings of the sons and daughters of his friends. He weeps with those who weep. He attends the funerals of those who have crossed over the river. He sits up with the dead, visits the sick, aids the widow and orphan. In doing tliese things he never counts the cost in time or labor. He is a poor man, but finds enough money to spare to needs that are greater than his. His sympathy is always on the alert for those who labor. He thoroughly believes in higher wages, shorter hours of labor, and more conxforts and more opportunities for those who do labor. Knowing these few simple facts about Ren. Lacy, one knows and understands the man and his popularity. He may not be a great man, but he is a good man. He has his faults, but others may tell of these. I shall not. 1 will leave this to his enemies, with the certainty that the public will never be enlightened on that side of his character by any North Carolinian. Ben. Lacy ' s career is an inspiration and a hope to every toiling boy in the State. For years he has been a great sufferer from asthma. A great many nights he sleeps not at all, or only from exhaustion after weary coughing. Day after day, after passing nights of wakefulness and suffering, I have seen him in his office at his desk at work with a smile on his face and a ready greeting to everv one who called, whether on business or just for a chat. Patience, cheerfulness, industry, helpfulness — these make a combination out of which success can alwavs be wrought. This lesson Mr. Lacy teaches. Love of his fellow-men, of his comnumity. of his State, of his country, this endears him to us all. May he have long life in which to serve the people well and to add to the comfort and cheerfulness of life. CH. RLES P.. AYCOCK. Editorial After much labor and (k-liheration vc have at last succeeded in putting; the 1905 AcROMECK into the readers ' hands. The Senior year of the Class has l een a stormv one in many ways, and the unsettled condition of affairs has had a marked intlueiiee ui)on the annual, an inlluenee fur the had. Still, throno ' h many difficulties ami over many obstacles the staff has labored to make the Ai ' .komix ' k a credit to the Class and to the Collet;e. Wherein we have succeeded and wherein we have failed is left for the gentle reader to discern. We can only say that, realizing our shortcomings, we can but hope for the best as regards opinion on the book. We wish to express our sincere thanks to Mr. C. . llan C.ilbert, who so kindly drew the fr(.intis])iece for us. His great kindness will long be remembered by the Class. W e also extend our hearty thanks to Mr. J. 11. Lynch, the staff artist. His faithful sketching speaks for itself on the pages following. Sketching that has added so nuich to the I)ook. In conclusion, we hope that this volume will be a lasting and pleasant souvenir to each and everv man of the Senior Class. EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: .Arthur . . tA.eni on BUSINESS MANAGER: Citerlinff c rai Hon ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER: ames , «. -Leirce A SSOCIA TE EDI TORS : C. 3i. 7{unt C. iC. 7 offman O. C. . aff ei J. SD. Spin ils l S. L les J. a. Siangan STAFF artist: ames OOonc en Lynch il 1 H i 9 « «- Jl gi HftBr- P jK i «B P W -JBI , ' rw i 1 4 1 1 ! n 10% wi ■ m- ■■I 25 H, yrnr- l£ jn PHtfj BS i ' -. ' ' ' 1 H PP m 9  jijBiB H College Calendar Thursday, July 13, Tuesday, September 5, Wednesday, September 6, Tliursday, September 7, • Thursday, November 23, Thursday, December 21, Thursday, January 4, Friday, January 5, Saturday, March 17, Monday, March 19, Sunday, May 27, Monday, May 28, . Tuesday, May 29, . Wednesday, May 30, 1905 f ntrance Examination at each County Court- house, 10 a. m. I Entrance Examination at the College, 9 a. ra. First Term begins: Registration Day. Thanksgiving Day. First Term ends. 1906 Entrance Examinations. Second Te rm begins ; Registration Day. Second Term ends. Third Term begins ; Registration Day. Baccalaureate Sermon. Alumni Day. Annual Oration. Conniiencement Daj ' . Board of Trustees State Board of Agriculture S. L. PATTERSC ). . I Vc-i,lcnt ex officio Raleigh T. K. BRL ' XER. Secretary c.v officio Raleigh J. M. FOREHAND. Rockyhock First District J. P.. STC )KES, W ndsor Second District WM. DLXX, Xew l . rn Third District C. X. ALLEX, Auburn Fourth District R. ' . SC( )TT. .Melville Fifth District A. T. McCALLL ' M. Red Springs Sixth District J. P. iMcRAE, Laurinhurg Seventh District R. L. DOUGHTOX, Laurel Springs Eighth District W. A. GRAHAM, Machpelah Xinth District A. CANNON, Horse Shoe Tenth District Board of Visitors W. S. PRIMROSE, Presidein Raleigli R. L. SMITH, Secretary Albemarle D. A. T() ' KIXS Charlotte FRANK ' 0( )D Edenton E. M. K( )( )NCE Jacksonville W. H. RAG AN High Point DAVID CLARK Charlotte GEORGE HOWARD Tarboro W. J. PEELE Raleigh J. F. RAY Franklin C. W. G(JLD Wilson S. L. PATTERSON, Commissioner of Agriculture, c.v officio. . .Raleigh GEO. T. WIXST( )N, President of the College, c.v officio Raleigh Agricultural Experiment Station Department GEORGE TAYLOE WIXSTOX. A.M., LL.D President REX ' JAMIX WESLEY KILGORE. M.S Director WILLIAM ALPH( )XSO WITHERS. . .M Chemist WILBUR EL K .M ASSEY. C.E H.-rticiilturi. t CHARLES WILLIAM HLKKETT. M.Sc. I ' h.D .Vtjriciilturist TAIT BUTLER. ' .S eterinarian FRANK LIXCOLX STEXEXS. M.S.. i ' h.I) Biologist FRAXKLIX SHERMAX. Jr., r..S. .V-r Entomologist JOHX STRAUCHOX JEFFREY Ponltryman CHARLES WALKER. Ph.D ssistant Chemist JOHX CHESTER KEXDALL. B.S Assistant in Dairying BEXJAMIX FRAXKLIX WALTOX. 1!.S.. Asst. Field E.xperiments ARTHUR FIXX lU )WEX I ' .ursar Faculty Ge(ir(ie Tayloe Winston, A.M., L.L.D., President. Professor of Political Kconomy. WlLLL iM AlPHONSO WlTItERS, A.M., Professor of Chemistry, and Chemist North Carolina Exiierinient Station. I). NiEi, Hakvkv Hii.i., A..M., Professor of English. Note.— Being unable to secure cut ol ' Prof. Hill his |iicture i.s unavoidably left out. V ii (i; t ' AHi. l ii i)i( K. A.B., ( ' . I ' ldfessor of (_ ' ivil Knjiineeiiiif; and .Matheniatit ' s. Ki.hRY 1!. I ' aynk, Professoi- of Physics aixl l lcctrical iMijjineerini;. I ' liKii|;i:ii K I ' j.iMi A I ' liKi.rs, iHiiliuii r. s. Army i Ketirert). I ' lofcssoi- of Militaiv Science and Tactics InstiMiclor in llistoiv. KXRY .M 1.1:1!-, M N W ' l I.M rrofessor of ' I ' exti Industi V. CiiARi.Es William IUkketi ' , M.Sc, Pii.l)., Professor of Agriculture, antl Agriculturist of North Carolina Experiment Station. Tii( . L s .Mkkkh r I ' uk, iL, s. Navy. I Professor of Meclianical Kngiueering Tait I ' ll ri.KH. ' . S., State Veterinarian, Professor of N ' eterinary Science and N ' eterinarian of Agricultural Kxperiment Station North Carolina College of A. and Jl. Arts. Frank Limiu.n Siicvioss, B.L.,B.S.,M.S., I ' H.n., Professor of Biology ; I ' .ioioiiist of Expeiinient Station. Assistants and Instructors lU-.XJAMIX W1 :SI.EV KILGORE, .M.S., Lecturer in Soils and Ferlili-ers. ROBERT EDWARD LEE YATES. A.M., .Issistaut Professor of Mathewaties. CHALMER KIRK McCLELLAXD, B.Sc. M.S.A., Assislanl Professor of .li rieiilliire. CHARLES BENJAMIN I ' ARK, Suf eriuteinleu of Shof s. R. L. WALES, Instructor in Mechaiiieul Draicini:. IRGIL WILLLVM BRAGG, Instructor in ll-oodworhini;. THOMAS NELSON, Instructor in Wcavin; and Desi-n,n; . G. McP. SAHTH, Ph.D., Instructor in Chemistry. t ' ll.VS. W. LK]-:R, I ' li.D., Instructor in Cheuiistry. ALIlERT ADA.MS HASKI ' .LL, S.l!.. Instructor of Or t anic Chemistry and Dyeiui . GI ' .ORr.I-: ALEXANDER ROBERTS, B.A-r., U.S., D.WS., .Issistaut I ' rofcs- sor I ' eterinary Science and .Issistaut I eleriuanau to A ' . (_ ' . llxferiinent Station, and .Issistaut .Stale I ' eteriuarhiu of . ortli Carnlma. i ' J ' iANKLLX SHI ' :RMAX, I ' -.S. (A-t. ), Instructor in liulonioloi y. State liuto mologist. jOHX CHESTEI KF.XD.VLL. 1!.S., . .v.v .s ,,, ; Dairyiu-. TIIO.M.XS SKIXXI ' .R L( )XG. U.S.. CM ' ,., Instructor in Ci-ril w . w ; vW (.t;. WLXIFRI ' .D MOKSI ' , AD. . LS, S.ll., Instructor ni lUectrical liu-ineerini . J. SOLON WTLLLA.MS. . .i:.. Instructor in liu,t:lish. GEORGE SUMMED ' , jr.. i;.A.. I ' h.D.. Instructor in w;,- m7;. IMXKXI ' .Y GL STAVE DI ' .VL, Instructor in •,);- • Shof aud .Assistant In- structor in Dratviiii;. HARLEE .MiC.VLL. Instructor in Mathematics. (_)L1 ' ER .M. X G.XRDXl ' .K. U.S., Instructor Inor-anIc Chemistry. CHARLES F. on HERRMAN, Section Director U. S. Weather Bureau, Instructor in Meteorology. A. D. St. AMAXT. Instructor in Drawing. Afiss CAROLINE BALDWIN SHERMAN. Librarian. ARTHUR FINN BOW ' EN, Bursar. FREDERICK ERASTUS SLOAN, R.S., Register. V. S. KIENHOLTZ, Pliy. ical In. :tructor. BENJAMIN SMITH SKINXER. I ' arni .S ' li erintemJent and .S ' tez. ' ont. Du. J. R. ROGERS, A.B., M.D., Physician. : Ius. DAISY LE MS, Matron. VIKW UK I ' AKK Post Graduates O. M. GARDNER, Chemistry. J. P.. HARDING, Civil. C. L. MANN, Civil. W. L. AFANN, Civil. G. W. ROGERS, Civil. V. E. KIRKi ' . TRlCK. . oricultiirc THE ' 0.) (ilKL Senior Class Officers Ji)ll. D.WIDSOX SriXKS I ' rcsident STEPHEN DOCKEin ' W Al.l ia-l ' icsident RONALD l .ONAR W 1 1 ,S( ). Pott LIPSCOMl! ( .( )( i|) l. I.VKl ' .S Histotian SYU ' ESTER .MLKRA - IKLE Prophet Coi.dNs: icilit ami Wliitt-. MiiTTci: H(iiii)r by dovuliun U dut . Fi.iiw i:k : Fnri ct-iiic-not. Yell Wall! Wlinl Wall! Wall! Whn! Wall! S— E- N— I. Se— Ni— All. Who Ra - ! Who Ra - ! Wlio Roar. Senior ! Senior History IT Q-ives 1110 much pleasure to look back upon the time when first this Class of ours saw the ivy-covered walls of old A. and M. Yet as I let my thoughts thus idly wander back to by-gone days, 1 can not but remember that the days through which our Class has lived saw much that gave us pain. Faces we had learned to love, fellow class-mates, men who ever had the love of Class and right before their eyes left our midst and entered the arena of a struggling world. ( )ur Class has missed these men, for several were among the back-bone of the Class, and I can but do justice by remembering that the Class feels now as if it were but half a Class, — a tree from which its strongest limbs were torn, — a man whose every cherished hope had fled. Our Class wdien first we entered college numbered 69 men, and now we count but 42, yet, the majority of these remaining few are loyal to each other itill and to the ideals set by the 69 men who matriculated in the Fall of 1901. ' e suffered as do all new men by Sophomoric hands the first few days we were upon the Hill, but now, those sufferings are a source of joy, for had we missed them, we would but feel that we had lost the real first phase of college life. We early settled down to routine duty, worked for the best, took an active part in athletics, and did fairly well for Freshmen, — even better than the pre- ceding classes, — so at least d id we think. As Sophomores, we were the very acme of them all, and remembered well th.e year we had suffered. We now felt duty-bound to right these wrongs and administer the dose to the Freshmen. This second year as college mates marked with us a fast-approaching unity, a development of spirit as it was, and in those days our Class was all that class implies. As Sophs, we held our first Class l)an(|uet, and well we remember the first 05 dinner. This banquet gave us to understand that we were entering into manhood, and left us with a democratic feeling in our hearts. We continued in advancing ideas, — some were new. while some, though old to other colleges, were new to . . and AI. Our Rooting Club was one of these, and we can say with jiride that this club was. of its kind, the very first that ever made the campus ring with ells and cries that urged our athletes to victorv. In athletics, we hcki an important place and gave to the varsity eleven two of its star players — Hadley and Shannonhousc. — while our Class team was too strong for others, for we challenged all but played none. For the varsity baseball nine, we furnished four men. — Chrcitzbcrg. IIowlc. Hadley and Shannonhousc. Our Junior year was but a repetition of our former years, and laurels new were placed upon our brow. Our football team drubbed the doughty Sophs., and when our dirt-begrimed gridiron heroes left the field of battle, the score stood 5 — o in our favor. This vear our Class put out five men for the varsity eleven — Abernethy, Hadley. Lykes, Scifert and Squires, and three for baseball — Chreitzburg. Hadley and Howie. Our second banquet was the next event thai brought our Class to notice, and it is hardly necessary here to say that this second dinner was even more successful than the first. Our Class was given credit by the Faculty for instituting such affairs as these, and we were proud indeed. Our next attempt to place the Class before the world in which we lived was made in organizing a Dramatic Club. which met with every possible success. Several of our members demonstrated their feminine ability to a perfection. The play ' s success was much due to Mr. Bowen. the College bursar, who gave his every thought and idle moment to its development, and the Class extends its thanks to him for thus aiding us in gaining fame. Commencement was now near, and we were all jubilant over the thoughts of soon being dignified Seniors. With the closing of our Junior year, our Class history practically ended. At the beginning of our Senior year, the Class met its Waterloo, and the facts from then on concern us not as a Class, but as a body of its truest members, known as Thugs, whose history, whose origin, and whose motives are amplified in other pages of this annual. Good-bye. A. and M. ; we go with thousands of others into the cold, harsh world of strife and enervating toil. In the day-dawn of life ' s battle we pause in peaceful contemplation, sadly gazing, seriously pondering, with a coiubination of curiosity, anguish and alarm. But we find refuge in the future — it is then that magical horizons spread out before us ; it is then that such splendid visions appear to us ; it is then that we hope to bestow wonders upon our old College, which form its true glory, its true wealth, and its true pride. HlSTORI. .N. The Class of 1905 The sand in the glass at last is run. Our college life has reached its close. But with the setting of its sun A brighter light in the new dawn glows. A light whose beams shall point the way To a life beyond the college walls, A world where each his part must play When that stern bugler. Duty, calls. And in the playing let each one be Noble and brave, steadfast and true. So that old ' 05 ' s memory Shall receive all praise and honor due. Then in that last roll-call beyond the skies I ' nfalteringly shall each man answer Here. And stand and look his Master in the e es And in the looking know no fear. Framed in a prodigality of nature. LicKOY FRANKLIN ABERNETHY, -. .V. J. ' .. Hickory, N. C. Agy ' icnUnvc. Captain football team ' 04; football team ■03-04; track team ' 03- ' 04: vice-president PiiUcn Literary Society ' 04: vice-president Y. M. C. A. ' 04-05; Atbletic Association ■o3- ' o4- ' o5 ; Dramatic Club ' 04-05 ; Rural Science Club; Biological Club. Age 19 ; beisjht 5 feet 1 1 incites : vei ' .;lit 195 pounds. ROBERT JAMES WVSX.A.Z. Thug. ] IoKC., NTON, N. C. Aii vlcuUnrc. Vice-President Biological Club ■o3- o4; Sec. and Treas. of Farmers W. Raleigh Sub- Alliance ' 04 ; Scientific Contest Biological Club ' 04; Rural Science Club; Y. i L C. A.; Leazar Literary Society ; Athletic Associa- tion ; Dungeon Baseball Team ' 02 : editor Agricultural Bducatiou ' o4- ' o5. Age 24: height ' 1 ft.: weight 150 jiouiids. ' ■ Sot lean enough to be thought H koo 1 ludeiit. BEXJAMIX ALEXAXDER BROOM, Marsiiviui.k, X. C. Mccliaiiical Engiiiccrhig. President Tenerian Literary Society ' 04; Manager Team III T. L. S. ' 04-05: Sec. and Treas. Senior Class 04-05 : Chief Marshal T. L. S. Entertainment ' 05 ; Y. M. C. A.; 1st Corporal Co. D ' 02-03. Age 2 : height 6 feet 1 inch; weight 150 ])oiinds. He Is a friend to all. ( )SCAR LUTHER BAGLEY, • Thug. B.xGi.EY. X. C. Chemical Engineering. Capt. Co. .A ' 04- ' 05: 1st Sergeant Co. D ' 03- 04; Corporal Co. F 02- ' 03; Pres. Jnnior Class ' o3- ' o4; ice-Pres. Leazar Literary Society ' o3- ' o4; Sec. L. L. S. ' 02- 03 : Treas. L. L. S. ' 04- ' 05 ; Sec. Berzelius Chemical Society ' o3- ' o4 : Chairman Devo- tional Committee Y. M. C. . . ' 04- ' 05; Ju- nior Dramatic Club ' o3- ' 04; Marshal L. L. S. Debate ' 04; Marshal Commencement ' 04; Sec. L. L. S. EntertanTment ' 04 ; editor Red and ll ' Iiite ' o3- ' o4: editor Agko.meck •o4- ' o5. Age 23 : height 5 feet 71-2 inches ; weight 140 pounds. Jt)HL WATKIXS I ' .L ' LLOCK. . . ; . ' ll,l,IA.MSi:cik(i. X. C. Agriculture. I ' resiflent Biological Club ' 04-05: ' icc- I ' rcs. Rural Science Club ' 03-04: I ' res. I ' ul- len Literary Society ' 05 : Scrub Football team ' o3- ' o4, ' 04- ' 05 ; winner Second Pri e Biological Contest ' 03 ; Asso. Editor Agri- cultural Education ' 04- ' 05 : Assistant Comic Editor Red and Jl ' Iiitc ' 03-04. Age 2 : heigbt 6 feet 2 inches ; weight 178 pounds. oh rowarri pon oienre. lu) v lluni does afflict me. IIUXRY r.ROZIER CARTWRK .HT. Ei.iz. i ' ,KTii C r . X. C. Civil Engineering. Capt. Band ' o4- ' o5 : 1st Sergt. Iland ' 03- 04: 2d Sergt. Band ' o2- ' o3 : ' ice-Pres. Ath- letic Association ' 04- ' 05 : Sub Class Foot- ball team ' o3- ' o4 ; Pullen Literary Society. Age 21 : height 5 feet 8 3-4 inches ; weight 148 pounds. A iniiu.l mini. .Irc-s,.,! In a lllllr In li-l ani hurily. ' WILLIAM MILLI ' .R CI lA.M I ' .I ' .KS. ,. i ' i;. i iiK ' i II. X. C lilccliical l ' .ii; iitccriiig. Majnr (if I ' .atlaliiin ' ()4- ' o5 : Serial. -Major ' o3- ' o4: 1st Cnrp. Co. A ' 02-03 : I ocal Editor Red and White ' 03-04 ; Assistant Athletic Editor Red and White ' 02- ' 03; Class Historian ' o2- ' o3 : Trcas. I ' ltllen Lit- erary Society ' 01 : Sec. 1 ' . L. S. ' 02; Critic 1 ' . L. S. 02; Debater Public bjilertainmenl I ' . L. S. ' 03; Marsbal I ' uMic Entertainment r. L. S. ' oi- ' o2; Marshal Coniniencenient ' oi- ' o2; .Auditor Athletic Association ' 02. ' ice-Pres. . thktic Association ' 03; Tha- lerian C.ernian Club; Librarian I ' .leclrical Society ' o3- ' ()4; Class Dramatic (. ' hib ' 03- ' 04; I ' res. I. ( ). V. Club ' 04- ' o5. Age 28 ears ; heii iu O feet; weight 14(1 pounds. Hei.-sol.lnKuy |„ 1.1 Ilial 111.- .I. ' iilli li.keii- IIILLL KI) l ' R. . CIS CIIRI ' :i ' r l ' .l ' :KC,. ' I ' Iiul;, ' i. si ' ox-Sai.i;.m. X. C. Entered Sophomore 02; Lieut. Cd. 11 ' 04-05; Scrgt. Co. 1) o3- ' o4; arsity I ' .aseball team o3- ' o4; Class fontball team ' 03; (. ' apt. Class baseball team ' 04; .Ms r. Tennis Club ' o3- o4 ; I ' res. Tennis C ' lub ' 1)4- ' 05; Leazar Lili ' rary Society; I ' res. ( )ra- torical Contest ' 04. . .i;e 22: height 5 feet d 1-2 inches; wi ' i. ht 138 pounds. ■■Tlio i hast neither honesiy. manhood or Kooil-felloHsliiip in thee. WALTER GOSS FIN ' CH, Lr:xi c.T(ix. X. C. Mechanical Hiii:;iiiccriiii;. y. M. C. A.. Athletic Association. I ' res. I ' lillcn Literary Society ' 04: Class football team ' 03 ; Secretary Debater ' s Contest P. L. S. May ' 04; Commencement Marshal ' 03 ; Secretary P. L. S. ' 03. Age 22 ; height 5 feet 8 3-4 inches ; weight 180 pounds. Liars hi uli1 have kooiI memories. STERLLXC. CRAYDOX. Thug. Capt. and Quartermaster ' 04 ' 05 ; (Juar- termaster-Sergt. ' 03-04 : 2d Corp. Co. B ' o2- ' o3 : Capt. Class football team ' o2- ' o3 ; Class football team ■oi- ' o2: Scrub_baseball team ■o3- ' o4, ' 02- ' 03; Capt. Scrub baseball team ' oi- ' o2: Scrub football team ' o3- ' o4, ' 02- ' 03, ' 01 - ' 02; Vice-Pres. Class ' 02- ' 03; Junior Dramatic Club, Tammany Hall, Ar- tist Club. Rcil Olid White staff; 04- ' 05, Skil- let Club, Artist Club. Chief Rooter, Ger- man Club, l!us. .Mgr. Acro.meck. . ge 20; height 5 feet 8 1-2 inches; weight 155 pounds. ■• He spoke, and into every heart his words carried new strength and courage. FRED. WATSON H.VDLEY, A. 2 ' . Clwiiiislry ami Metallurgy. 1st Lieut Ci). .X 04- 05; Color Script. ' o3- o4 : 2(1 Corp. Co. A 02-03 : X ' arsity football team 04. 03. 02 : Capt. baseball team 05 ; baseball team 04, 03. 02 ; Class baseball team 04. 03. 02 : Coach Class football team 03 ; Pres. Athletic Associa- tion 05: Treas. Athletic Association 04: Thalerian German Club ' 04- 05. ' 03-04 ; Pres. Artist Club ' 04-05. ■o3- ' o4; Skillet Club 04- ' 05 : Berzelius Chemical Society ' 04- ' 05 ; ice-Pres. Liebig Chemical Socie- ty 03- ' 04: Mgr. Junior Dramatic Club ' 03- ' 04: editor Art Department Agromkck ' 04- ■05- Age 21 ; height 6 feet ; weight 175 pounds. Honorary Thug. ■■. mail of cheerful yesterday ami confident RICHARD HLC.H HARPER. A. A. I ' ATTEKSON. X. C. Choiiistry and Mcliitliiri y. Capl. and Drum Major ■o4- o5 : 1st Lieut, and Drum Major. Sergt. and Drum Major ' o3- o4: Corp. Co. .-X ' o2- ' o3 : Leazar Lit- erary Society: Critic P.erzelius Cluniical Society ; Thalerian C.ernian Club. Age 20; height 6 feet i inch; weight i()3 pounds. JERE ISAAC HERRITAGE. Jackso.wii.i.I ' , N. C. Ci-c ' il Eiis iiiccriiii;. Charter member Tenerian Literary So- ciety ' 02: Manager of team III, same ' 04. Age 26; height 5 feet 9 1-2 inches; weight 165 pounds. III s]ieak in a monstrous little voice. LABA MILES HOFFMAN. Jr.. A. A. Dallas, N. C. Textile Bii};inccriiii;. Capt. Co. D ' 04-05 ; ist Sergt. Co. B 03-04; 1st Corp, Co. D ' 02- ' 03; member Leazar Literary Society; member Tennis Chib ; member Thalerian German Chib ; Censor same ' 04 ; Secretary same ' 04 ; mem- ber Lion ' s Head; Textile Society; Athletic Association; Associate Editor Acromkck •05 ; Thug. Age 22; height 5 feet 5 1-2 inches; weight 125 pounds. ■ A i roj?eny of learninK. l.I.( )VI) RAIXEV HlXT. i. A Lexincton. X. C. Electrical Eiii;iiiccriiii;. Entered Junior Class Jan. 04: Ai ' .romkck editor : Electrical Society ; Capt. Track Team ; President German Club Fall Term ' 04 ; Honor Roll Spring Term ' 04. Age 22 : height 5 feet 9 inches : weight 150 pounds. . man that bath a mint of magic phrases In his brain. ARTHL ' R TEMPLETOX KEN VON, Clinton. X. C. Cii ' il Eiigiiiccriiig. 1st Lieut. Co. D ' 04- 05: 2d Sergt. Co. F 03- 04: 3d Corp. Co. B 02- 03: Edi- tor-in-Chief ' 05 Ac.komeck; Editor-in- Chief Red and White ' o3- ' o4; san.e ■04-05 ; Literary Editor Red and White ' 03: Class football team ' 03- ' 04; speaker Class P.an- (|utt ' 03: ' ice-Pres. Rooting Club ' 03-04; ' ice-Pres. Leazar Literary Society 03 ; Orator L. L. S. March 05: Debater L. L. S. May 04: Marshal L. L. S. Entertainment 04: Debate Committee L. L. S. 05; n;em- i)er Press .Association: Y. M. C. A.; Tha- lerian (lerinan Club: .Athletic Association: Civil Fjiginecring Society : CommencemeiU ( )rator 05: Thug Historian: memiier Athletic Committee ' 03: Tliiig : Pros. L. L. S. 05. -Age ig: height 5 feet 10 inches; weight 146 pounds. ■A little roiinil Int. oily man ot ' Ciod. STARR EELV KXOX, PlXE ll.I.K. N- C. 2,1 Lieut. Co. D ' 04- 05; 2d Sergt. Co. ■l-V ■03-04 ; 3d Corp. Co. ' •£ ' o2- ' a3; V. M. C. . . : Leazar Literary Society; ice- I ' res. Mecklenburg Union ' 04; Class foot- ball team 03; Punctuality Honor Roll ' 03- 04: Civil Engineering Society. Age 23 : height 5 feet 6 1-2 inches ; weight i-() pdiinds. Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil O ' er Ijooks. cousnmed the midnight oil. JAMES HERRITAGE K lOXCE, Riciii.AX DS, X. C. Age 26 : height 5 feet g inches ; weight 1 30 pounds. A ' lion7 among ladie. ' . is a most dangerous thing. ; LIPSCOMB G. LYKES.r.;.V. Thug, Tampa, Fla. Chemical Eni iiicerin . Entered Soph. Class ' 02 ; Librarian Lie- bis; Chemical Society ' oz- ' ot, ; Pres. Berze- lius Chemical Society 04-05 ; Sec. and Treas. Junior Class ■o3- o4: Historian Se- nior Class ' 04-05 : Pres. Athletic Associa- tion ' 04-05 : arsity football team ■o3- ' o4. 04- 05 : ' ice-Pres. Thalerian German Club ' o3- ' o4 : Leader same ■o4- ' o5 : Marshal Bat- talion dance ' 04: 3d Sergt Co. B 03- ' 04; 1st Lieut. Co. ' F ■o4- ' o5 : Aoromeck edi- tor ' 04- 05 : Pres. (German Club ' 05 ; Pres. ••Skillet Club ' 05. Age 21 years: height 6 feet: weight 178 pounds. •■ l.ove can make n lien i a well a angels. GRORGF. GRFFX I.VXCH. ] ..h l ' ■■ Thug. W ' ll.M INT.TciN. X. C. Mechanical liiii iitcciiiii . Entered Soph. Class ' 02 : 3d Sergt. Co. • F ■o3- ' o4: I.St Lieut. Co. ■ B 04- 05; Class football team ' o3- ' o4: Commencement .Marshal ' 04: Leazar Literarv Societv: mem- I)er Skillet Club ' 05. . ge 20: height 6 feet : weight 150 ])ounds. ■• His iaith verpimps in some nice leiu ' t. miKhl He wrong, liis life I ' m sine «« in the ritilit. ROBERT CHARLES LEHMAN, ■ Thug. Rai.ku.ii. X. C. Ch ' i! Eiii;,inccriii . Corp. Co. A ' 02-03 • Scrgt. Co. E ' 03-04; 1st Lieut. C(j. C ' o4- ' o5 : ' icc- Pres. Piillen Literary Society o3- ' o4 ; Mar- shal Society Debate 04; Red and White staff ' o4- ' o5 ; Agromeck editor ' 04-05. Age 20; height 5 feet 8 1-2 inches ; weight 155 pounds. ■The tall, the i HEXRY L R 1X LILLY. C. E.. ■■ Thug, Rest, X. C. 2d Lieut. Band ■o4- ' o5 ; Pres. V. M. C. A. o4- ' o5 : Missionary Com. Y. L C. A. ' o3- ' o4 : Censor Leazar Literary Society ' 03- 04 ; Marshal Leazar Entertainment 04 ; Chief Alarshal Leazar Entertainment 05 ; Marshal Commencement ' 03; Sec. Leazar Literary Society 04 ; ' ice-Pres. Junior Dra- matic Club ' 04 ; Banquet Committee ' o3- ' o4 ; Scrub football team ' 04: .-Vgro.meck editor ' 05 : Glee Club ' 05. Age 23; height 6 feet i inch: weight 160 ])ounds. ■ Wftiili the man. iioi liis mark. MALCOLM RuLLAXI) McCIRT, Tlni . Riiwi.AM). X. C. A ncnlluial Course. Mci ' iber V. M. (. ' . A.. Lca .ar Literary Society, niolotjical C ' liiL. Rural Soiciici- Club: Cliainnan I ' .ihk ' Stiulv Committee: Secretary ljiolo_t;icaI Cliil): I ' resiiK ' iit l ural Science Club. Asje 24: hei-lit 5 feet 10 incbes : weight 150 ijounds. • EKrcgiously an ass. WALTKR H. McIXTIRE. W ' li.MIXr.ToN. X. C. I ' .iUered Soph. Cla s ; ;vl Serial. Cn. ■]) ' 113- 4: Capt. anil Adjutant ' 04: Cajit. Co. !•■ ' 04- ' 05: Class footliall team ■02-03 ; Class baseball team ' o3- ' o4; Scrub baseball team ' 03-04; Junior Dramatic Clnb 04: Sec. and Treas. Lit ' biij- Cliemical S iciet - ' 04: Sec. and Treas. lierzelius Chen-.ical So- ciety ' 04; Leazar Literary Sociei . A-e Mr. beio-bt 5 feel S 3-4 incbes; weiiibl 14X pdunds. ■ One ihat xvoiihi iieepami botanize. ' 1AMI-:S OSCAR MORC.AX, A. Z., Etowah. X. C. Ai ' ricitltiiral Coiirsr. Member L. L. S. ; Athletic Association . I ' .iological Club : Rural Science Club ; Farm- ers West Raleigh Sub-Alliance : winner Sec- ond Prize in Agr. ' 02 ; winner First Prize biological Club Contest 04; Sect. Biologi- cal Club 02- 03 ; Pres. Rural Science Club 03: Pres. Farmers West Raleigh Sub-Alli- ance ' 04-05 ; Editor Agricultural ISditca- tioii ■o3- ' o4- ' o5 ; Editor Agromeck ' 05 ; Class foot-ball team ' 03 : Thug. Age 24 ; height 6 feet : weight 1 58 pounds. Silent in seven lan -na.w-. ' CARLAXn P. MVATT, Raij-ic.ii. X. C. Chciiiicul Biigiiiccring. 2d Sergt. Co. D ■03-04 ; 4th Corp. Co. D 02- 03 ; member L. L. S. ; Sec. and Treas. Berzelius Chemical Society; Sect. Ci-ntral Division L. L. S. ' 02-03: Thug. Age 21 : lieight (1 feet 1 inch: weight 155 ixiimds. ■ I itMiuMiiher. I remember. How my i-hihihood Heeled by. UXDSI.I-.V A, .MrRR, ' .m)i;si ' .(ik(i. X. C. Ciril liiiL iiu ' criiig. Kntci-(.-il Sii])hnnii]rc Class ' 02; 21I l.icut. Cii. C ' o4- ' o3 ; 4tli vScrijt. Co. F ' 0 04; ■■ Tlui.i;; ' At;c 21; lu ' i.Ljhl 5 ti ' ct 6 inches: weight 130 pdiiiuis. • ' He is detested as the gates of Hell. JolIX .XLSI ' A ' PARK, II. K. A. Rai,i:u;.ii. X. C. M cchiiiiical liiii iiiccriiii;. 1st I,iriit. Hand ' o4- ()5 ; 2(1 Sersjt. Band ■(!3- ' (i4: I ' its. I,. !,. S. ' (14 : Chairman Cani- piign Ccininiillcr n :; ; Marshal I,. 1,. . ' . F,n- UTlaimnrnl l ' li. ' 01 anil ' (i.|; winn -r De- hat. )r ' s Ak ' dal I,. I,. S. ' (14; siH ' akrr in Oratorical Cnnlrst ' 03: honurs in schcilar- ship ' o2- ' o_ ; Chairman N ' . .M . C. . . .Social Coinniittci ' ' ()4- ' o3 ; Di ' lcgatc to Southern Student Cnnfermce ' 04; . rtist . ( .ko.mix ' k ■03-04 ; lUisiness .Manager ' ( ' ( and White ' 04- 03. . ge i ); height 3 fei-1 f) 1-2 inches: weight 143 ])(iini(ls. ■ Wise men say nothing iu dangerous times. p. H. POIXDKXTl ' J , DoNOHA, N. C. .li riciiltiiral Course. Member Rural Science Clul): llioloq-ical Club: L. L. S.; Declamation Trophv P. L. S. : •■ Thuo-. Age 25 ; heiglit 5 feet g inches ; weight 130 ])oun(ls. Self love is not so vile a sin. EDWARD GRIFFITH PORTER, Jr., ' k1 Crril Engineering. Capt. Co. B ' 04- ' 05; 1st Sergt. Co. C ■o3- ' o4; 1st Corp. Co. C 02- ' 03; honors in scholarship 02- ' 03 ; Sect. Civil Eng. So- ciety ' o2- ' o3 : Marshal Feb. Oratorical Con- test L. L. S. ' 02 ; Marshal Feb. Oratorical Contest L. L. S. 03 ; Public Debate L. L. S. Ma - ' 04: Public Orator L. L. S. 05; Class Dramatic Club o3- ' o4; College Dramatic Club ' 03-05 : Tennis Club ' o3- ' o4; Second Tenor Glee Club ' o3- ' o4: Athletic Associa- tion: Thalerian German Club: Chief Plun- ger in I. O. U. Club ' 04-05. Age 20; height 5 feet 10 1-4 inches; weight 130 pounds. ■In nrKUini; li.i.. lu ' (. iK-d hi- -kill K Cii llio vnn.|MMic.l. lie- coiihi mx-iif still. jAMI ' .S lllCKS I ' lURCI ' .. A. 2 ' •■ ' I ' hii-, Warsaw. X. C. Chciiiislry and Mclalliiri y. C ' apt. Co. i o4- ' o5 : isl . ' i-ri;!. Co. F ' ()3- ' ()4; 4tli Corp. Co. Ij ' 02-03 : - ' lHini- cal baseball team ' 03-04: X ' icc-l ' ri ' S. Thale- ran (icrman Clul); .Allilclic .Xs.so. ; ' rciini.s CI11I5; editor Red and White; Asst. liusincss Alanarjl-er Agkomkck; ' icc-l ' res. T ' .erzeliiis Cbemical Society; Skillet Club; Liebis; Cbeiiiical Society. Aqe 23 ; beiijbt 5 feet 7 iiicbes ; weinlit 150 pounds. ■■ I love tmiiquil solitiiile. K( ir.l ' .kT W ' Al ri ' .R SCOTT. Ji;., A. ,., . li:iA ii.i.i;. . . C. . li;iiciilliii-al Course. I,r,i ar l.ilerary Snciety ; N ' . .M. ( ' . A.; Rural Science Club; I ' .iolo-ical Club; l ' ar- iini l Ivaleii b Snb-Alh.-nici ' ; ice- I ' ris. Rural Science Club ' 04; I ' res. Rural . science Club ' 04; Lecturer Wist RaleiLjb Sub-. lliance ' o4- ' o5 ; llnsiness .Mauam ' i- . I rieidliiral lidiiealinii ' ()4- ' ()3. A e II) ; bei-ln (1 feel 1 ineb : weii bl ido I pimds. ' Late he sat at night, and bleared his weary eyes with boolis. J( )XATHAX RHODES SMITH, •• Thug. Merkv Hill, X. C. Ciz ' il EiiL inccring. Entered Junior Class Sept. 03; 2d Lieut. Co. F ' o4- ' o5 ; appointed Corp. Co. B .May ' 03 ; Leazar Literary Society ; Capt. Technology Section Leazar Society ' o2- ' o4. Commencement Orator ' 05. Age 24: height 5 feet 4 1-2 inches ; weight I T.C) pounds. ■ Men of tew words are the best men. JOHX DA TI3S()X Sl ' IXKS,r.V. ■■ Thug, . i.r;i:. L ui.H, X. C. Ciz ' i! Eiii inccring. Capt. Co. E ' 04-05; 1st Sergt. Co. E ■03-04: Corp. Co. F ' 02-03; Class base- hall team ' 03 ; Marshal Leazar Literary So- ciety ' 04; I ' resident Class ' o4- ' o5 ; Treas. Athletic Association ' o4- ' o5 ; Editor . i.ro- M i;cK ' o4- ' o5. . ge 21 ; height 5 feet ) 1-2 inches : weiglit 143 pounds. ■ An iKiiu ' l miinS the nohlcsi wcirk of God. DALLAS Mll ' l ' LLV STAXTOX, Jr., ■■ Thu. -. LAGuANC.r-, N. C. .li riciiltiirnl Course. Ai v 21 ; lifi. ln 5 tVct 7 inclics : weiglit 1 , 3 ]jijun(ls. ■ A creatiin- iidI Icd liiiKlU ir uorvl.-- s ■IA■I•.ST :R .M URA ■ if.lf., r. .v. S i.isi;rKV. X. C. I ' .lcctncol liir inccrin . LiUcrcd So])li(jnu)rc 02; 1st Lieut. Co. M ' 04-05: 3(1 Scrgt. Co. E ' 03- ' 04; Lea- zar Literary Society ; Cla.ss Proplict ' o4- ' o5. Age uj: lieigln 5 tVi-t 7 inches: weiu;ln 125 pounds. ■ Nature halli framed strange fellows in her time. KDW ' IX I ' .LAKENEY STACK. Ciiil Engiiu ' crini;. 1 ' resident Electrical Engineering Society ' 04: Organizer of Electrical Engineering Society ' 04 ; Thalerian Literary Society ; Di- vision Manager T. L. S. Age 22 ; height 5 feet 8 inches ; weight 140 ponnds. arrant traiin WALTER JENXLXGS WALKER. Electrical BiiL iiiccriiii:;. Entered Sophomore Class ; member of Board of Organizers of E. E. S. ; Sect. E. E. S. ' o2- ' o3; Vice-Pres. Winston-Salem Club ' 03-04 : Pres. Winston-Salem Club ' 04- 05 : Pres. E. E. S. ' 05: 4th Sergt. Co. C ' 03- ' 04 ; 2d Lieut. Co. A ' 04-05 : Censur L. L. S. ' o3- ' o4; Sect. L. L. S. ' 03; Red and White stafif ' 04- ' 05. Age 18; height 5 tVt 8 1-2 inches : weight 126 pounds. sTi ' . i-:x i)( K ' Ki ' .m w Ai.i.. I l HKI M.ll A.M. X. C. Mcclhiiiical ;; ;, ' )((• iT. i.tf. 3(1 Corp. Co. -D 03: 2,1 Sergt. Co. B ' 04; Capt. anil .Xdiiilaiil ' 05: nienibcr of I ' . L. S.; Honor 1 , ,11 n,:; ; A ' ,-, „, , While ■04: ice I ' rcs. Senior Class; Ch ' ss luisrhall ti-am. .V. v 21; iK ' ii lit 5 feet S inches ; viMt;ht 145 ponnds. An iniimal wiih.mi IVmiIht- ini.l whIUitil- mi 1« legs. V. LTER W. W. TT. Jk.. Cii. i;i.iirTi;. . . C. 7V.r i ' liiii iiicrriii . jil Corp. Co. ••! ' . ' o2- 3: 3(1 Script. Co. (.■ ' ()3- ' o4; _ ' (1 l.icnt Co. 1 ()4- ()3 : lly- lo v Connnitic(. ' ' l -. tilt ' Sociiiy; nicnihcr !,. I,. . ' . ; nicinlur ' . .M . (. . . .; nirnil)(. ' r M(. ' ck- Icnhur- Clnli. . i.j(.- jo: lu ' i ht 5 l ct 11 inclu ' s; vci.L;lil ].[2 ponnds. He tlinl hnlli nii beani is le s tlinn a man. ARCHIE CARRAWAY WILKINSON, ClIAUL.OTTE, N. C. Ciz ' il Biigiiiccriiig. Entered Sophomore Class ' 02 ; iiicniber L. L. S.: Junior Dramatic Cluh ' 04: Class football team 03. Age 18 ; height 5 feet 6 inches ; weight 130 pounds. •■ Faith, thats as well said as if I had salil it myself. RONALD BONAR WILSON, n. K. A. GkliKXSl ' .dRO, X. C. Textile Engineering. Entered Junior Class ' 03 : Sect. L. L. S. ■o3- ' o4: Debater L. L. S. May 04; Orator L. L. S. March ' 05 ; Debate Committee L. L. S. 05 ; General Director L. L. S. ' 04-05 ; Pres. L. L. S. ' 05 ; Associate Editor Ac;ko- MiccK ' 05; Associate Editor Red and White ' 05; Textile Society; Athletic Associaticm ; Class Poet o4- ' o5 : Thug. Age 21: height 5 feet 11 inches; weight 138 pounds. • A man more Miiiieil asaiii l than : inning. ILIJAX .MEREDITH HOWARD, r. .V. While in colleg;e Howard took a pronii- iK-nt part in many phases of college life. He was appointed Captain of Co. A for 04- ' 05. and was elected football manager for 1904. Was Chief Marshal Commencement 1904, and served as Marshal on other occa- sions. He ranked high in scholarship, and as a debater and orator in his literary socie- ty. When the Senior trouble came on in 1904. he left with the Class but never re- tnrned. At ])resent he is doing well for himself in . e ])(irt News, a. CHARLES AL l. SEIEERT. Scifert attended college for three years and was on his way to enter for his Senior year, but when he hcaril of the ■Thug nioven ent he turned back and never entered. During his three years in college he figured Ijrominently in athletics, being a member of both the varsity football and track teams, as well as member of Class football and baseball teams. He was . thletic Editor nf Red and White, and was elected Editor- in-Chief of ' 05 . c.KoMKCK. Seifert is now in business at Xew l ' crn. . C. He was a good man and a just. LATTA ' ANDERIAX EDWARDS. Edwards left college with his Class and did n(.)t return. He was a bright, earnest student, and the Class felt the loss of such a one. He is at present located at Thom- asville. X. C, and is engaged in Civil Engi- A Few Revelations SHERE is amonj college men a strange and foolish eusloni. that each year as the graduating class is about to put aside the sweets and joys of college life some member of the Class shall from the depths of his soul — or mavbe from even more profound depths — bring forth an inspired prophecy concerning his class-mates. But as the victim to perform this Hercidean task- is usuallv chosen without regard to his prophetic abilities, it not infrefpiently happens that the resulting prophecies are just a bunch of lies uixin which no reliance can be placed. Now. deep down in the innermost recesses of my heart 1 have a well-defined feeling that it was not intended that I should be a prophet: yet 1 have been picked out as It. . ud 1 can ' t even foretell the result of a ball game! So what the deuce am I going to do about it? . s this query came to my luind one night. su(I lenly a i)ecuiiar voice said: Mavbe I can help you. I jumped, and well I might, for there in front of me was the tjueerest looking little figure I had ever seen. I can t describe it, except to say that it was crippled and wore a curiouslv arranged costume of white, and its eyes were a beautiful violet. It looked perfectly inoffensive, so in a moiuent I recovered from luy surprise enough to ask : Who are you? I am the Spirit of the Class of Xaughty-Five, and 1 have come to tell you all about the men of the Class, if you want me to help you. I ga.sped — then laughed. That thing the Spirit of Naughty-Five — it was ]irei)osterous! Then 1 remembered that once the Class spirit had met with an awful accicleiU. so luaybe that woukl explain. . ud the S]iirit wanted to help lue. So 1 said: .Mright. Co ahead and tell all you know of the future of Xaughty-Five ' s men. ' . nd this is what the Spirit revealed. Abernethy has just as nuich moral as physical strength, so in spite of tlie tempting offers that will be made him to play football, he will decline to degen- erate into a professional college athlete, but instead will at bis did liome carve for himself a successful and bappy career as a farmer. •. Avery has a sad future before bim. He will try to lie a farmer, but the beauty of sitting- on an empt ' crackcr-l)i ix in the cross-roads ' store and wbitllin sticks will so appeal to bim that it will be only a question of time before be ceases to be anything but a country gossip and whittler of sticks. rSroom, poor fellow, thinks he is going to be a mechanical engineer, but that is just one of his many mistaken ideas. As a matter of fact, after many weary years of effort, he will be elected Chief of Police of Marsbville — the town has only one policeman, by the way. From a village constable to a college professor is a big jump, but the latter is just what Bagley is going to be. He will keep on with his hard work, and in ten years will have gained such a reputation that upon Dr. Remsen ' s death at tliat time Bagley will be offered the Chair of Chemistry at jnhns Hopkins. The fact that cattle may be raised with profit in North Carolina will be demonstrated by Bullock, whose stock farm will be a model one. The kindliness of heart and native good sense of the man will be the factors most responsible for his success. There is just one chance for Brozy Cartwright. If he can develop enough political pull to land him as one of the engineers in charge of the proposed inland waterway along the eastern coast he will make a great name for himself. lUit unless he gets that it is impossible to tell exactly what will lieconie of him, though the chances are he would become an ideal fisherman. Chambers has begun his career rather late in life, and he will always be ham- pered I)V his years. By persistent effort, however, he may overcome tliis handicap and some day be so successful as to become Chief Engineer of the Wentworth Light and Power Company. Chreitzlnirg will go on the road selling a certain Burglar Ejector of % -hich he is the inventor, and which be claims will catch and kick out any burglar who ever tried to burgle. So plausilily and winsomely will Christy tell his little tale of woe, that he will sell those magic ejectors even in tnwns which could never afford to support a burglar. And so fast will the shekels flow in that he will soon be able to take unto himself a wife, and that is the one dream of his life. Everv dav Finch is getting fatter, and if he don ' t stop eating so much, in a short while he will be dead of fat on the heart — he couldn ' t die of fat on the brain. However, he may live to a ripe old age and some day may become one of Lexington ' s aldermen — he has the aldermanic figure. But he was not cut out for a mechanical man. All liars are successful more or less, so all Graydon will have to do is to continue to refrain from telling the truth. He will enter some machine shop, but his genius will lift him above that, so that inside of a year he will be the walking delegate of the union. The only danger will be that some day he might quite dv accident tell the truth. . nd right then he would get his bumps. Just at present Hadley thi nks he is going to be a chemist, but he doesn ' t know his own mind. His skill in caricaturing will increase with study and practice, so that before long people looking over the jrasliiiiiiton Post, instead of Berryman ' s bear will see Hadley ' s goose — for a goose will be his sign. Harper doesn ' t ever appear worried. His troubles don ' t cause any flurries in the outward calm of his nature. Yet deep back in that dark and scheming brain of his there has long lingered an unreasonable fear of old age. He will spend his life in a private laboratory vainly endeavoring to wrest from nature the (-ecret of longevity, and will die a prematurely old and broken-down man. It was this idea of an eli.xir of life that induced Harper to finally choose the chemical course at college, after having tried five of the others. Herritage, though not very brilliant, is nevertheless made of the stuff that will win out in the long run. If life isn ' t too short for him. he will make a success in his profession. t Hoffman will find some comfortable position where little thinking and less work is required, and at it will make a howling success of himself. But it is doubtful if he will ever get over the habit of telling the ladies that he really doesn ' t know how to dance. 51 Unfortunately for himself. Hunt knows too nuicii. This will be an inipeili- inent to him at the start, but after rubbintj up with the world awhile he will get over it and w ' ll be snccessfu ' in e(|ui])])ino- the cotton factories of the South with his im])roved induction motors. J Kenyon at present has rather happy prospects, but they are doomed to fade awa ' . He will decide that civil engineerings is too slow and will go to New ' ork, where lie will endeavor to make himself famous as a news])aper reporter and as a short story writer for the magazines. At last he will become discouraged and eventnall ' will drift back to Clinton, wdiere he will take charge of the Sanipsoii Democrat. This position will have its advantages, hciwever, for then lie will be able to sleep all the time if he cares to, ami after all sleep is Kenyon ' s main oliject in life. Knox, on account of his weight, will never rise very high in his profession — liis avoirdupois will always hold him back, .Some day, though, he may become a ■ chairman, Koonce will tire of the civil engineer ' s life, and will go back to Richlands, wliere he will establish a cafe run on lines similar to those of the college mess- hall. In this work the training and experience gained in the mess-hall will be of great benefit. Jt Dick L kes. after several years of experiment and research work, will discover an organic compound which will be a sure ctu e of the drink evil. After testing the efficiency of the ciini])ound upon himself, he will give it to the world and countless thousamls will rise uj) and call him lilessed. . After leaving college, L nch will accept a position with the . . C. L. Iv. R. Here his executive ability have a chance to slunv itself, and so George will he ra])idlv promoteil to Chief of the Ilridge Department. He will then be able to return to Raleigh for the girl for wdiom he so often neglected studies during his Senior year. Lillv, on account of his high ideals, will be dissatistied with the ordinary ])Ositions of the everyda ' world. He will at length become a traveling lecturer for the V. M. C. A., in which capacity he will be able to inflict on others his own views without having in turn to listen to theirs. As he becomes more experi- diced in liis work be will ,s;ain a rci)Utati(in for (k ' ciincss nt thoiiL lU and for ihe ])octrv-likc bcanty of his ultcranc(. ;. And this will be as l)alni to his soul. , McCiirt will prove unsuccessful as a farmer, and in castinj. about for another occupation will remember tlie days at college. And the result will be a sign like this in the growing town of Rowland: M. R. McGIRT— TONSORIAL ARTIST HAIR ARTISTICALLY CUT. PAINLESS SHAVING. SATI.SFACTION GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED. Tn the refining room of the ' ilniington Cotton-Seed Oil Company, Mclntire will find a haven. Occasionally he will emerge from his obscurity with a 1)ook which will create a temporary excitement. Some of the things he will write will be: Autobiography of an Ass ; The Fine Points in Infantry Drill : I ' p to a Captaincy — or. The Art of Legging ' ; Back to the Ranks — or, The Folly of Betting ; Etiquette for Receptions. ■ -J Morgan will start a dair - farm, of which he will make a great success, his experience with Messrs. Kendall and McClelland proving very valuable to him. His oratorical powers will help him at the farmers meetings, and he will some day be sent to the Legislature. Myatt, in spite of the tact that he is silent in seven languages. will lie eniincntlv successful, for he will become iiiited as the discoverer of the germ ol ■ that tired feeling. But sad to relate, the remainder of his life will be devoted to an unavailing attempt to rid himself of the germs which he has discovered. Murr will follow the ups and downs of civil engineering with varying success until finally he will become chief of the staiT of engineers of the Ashelioro and Aberdeen Railroad. Jobmn I ' ark. with his sunn - nature and quiek Irish wit. will have an easy time getting on in the world. In s])ite of the fact that he has devoted five years to the attempt to make himself a mechanical engineer, he won ' t I ' ollow this profession. Instead, he will go on the road selling ' .Mi ' U of .Mark in .Xorth Carolina, at which he will be very successful. Poindexter. no matter how things may be going with him, will alwavs be able to thrnm his banjo and be happy. He may not make an extra big pile of money, Init he will have a comfortable farm and around him will be many faces, miniatures of his own, anil so he will be happy. ■. Porter, lieing refused a position with the Howland Improvement Companv, will go to Panama. There the information gained from an extended studv of the Panama Canal while at college will come in useful. Air. Wallace, the Chief Engineer, will take Porter on his personal staiT, and after the completion of the canal the two will form a partnership. •J Pierce will go lack to Warsaw, where he will pitch on the local baseball team. When not doing this or arguing some perfectly obvious point with the wise ones of the village he will carry on a few experiments in chemistrv, and thus accidentlv discover a method of extracting alcohol from corn-stalks. This will bring him a good deal of money. Scott will continually experiment in grafting until he will at length succeed in obtaining a cross between the peach and apple, the resulting fruit having all the good qualities of the two others. This he will name the Scotia, and from its sale will amass a fortune. Smith will find that carrying a chain in Panama is entirely too hot for comfort, and will return home, where he will be appointed Justice of the Peace. In this capacity he will be able to unload some little of the immense stock of knowledge which he had stored up in college. L ' pon his death the communitv will erect over his grave a stone with the inscription : HERE LIES JONATHAN RHODES SMITH, THE SAGE OF MERRY HILL. HE KNEW IT ALL. Spinks will return to his native county, where he will be elected County Surveyor. His life will be one of great loneliness, and at an early age he will pass across into the great beyond. lack ' ick- will suffer smiie time from ihc otii ' ects of the euld eaiiii ' lu late in liis Senior vear on account of the lieavy clew one night. L ' pon his recovery he will accept a position with the Salisbury Electric Light Coin]5any. but his natural tendency to raise a rough house will prevent him from holding it for long. He will then become a tramp electrician and will wander around until he reaches Mexico. There he will find an agreeable atmosphere and will locate. making a success in e(|uip])ing mines with electrical a])paratus. , { Stack, working u])on the theory that light waves may be transmitted by electricitv, will spend his life experimenting, and will die at last broken hearted on account of his failure. Walker. ;ifter leaving the . . and M., will go to Cornell for further study. After spending a cmiple of years there he will consider himself equipped for his life ' s work, and will go back to Winston-Salem to accept a position as street-car motorman. Wall will, in spite of his modesty, succeed in life. He will become a very successful designer of machines, and his services will alwa s be in demand. Upon graduation. Watt will go in a mill to work bis way up. steady a])plication to his work and sticktoitiveness ' he will some day cnnie In he first hand in the spinning-rcmm. ,«t ■ ' Kid Wiikinsiin, tlinugli he has ne er saicl anything abmU it, has alwa s been sensitive about his shortness. He will devote the Ijest years of his lit ' e to an effort to add a cubit to liis height, but will fail. Then, too late, he will see the uselessness of it all and will lay him down to die with the knciwleilge that he ha.- wasted his life. Wilson — he of the Ouaker ( )ats smile — will be too lazy to wurk in a cutton mill. Instea l. w th tlie aid of his smile anil bis hypnotic dicc. lie will sell life insurance to tnisiis])ecting victims. And that ' s all. The Thugs J. D. SPINKS, H. AI. LILLY, L. O. LYKES, R. C. LEH] L N. S. N. KNOX, J. R. SMITH, J. H. PEIRCE, R. J. AVERY, R. R. HOLT, M. R. McGIRT, STERLING GRAYDON, C. W. MARTIN, L. A. MURR, J. H. SQUIRES, S. D. WALL. L. M. IIOFFAFAN. G. P. MY ATT, W. W. WATT, G. G. LYNCH, P. H. POINDEXTER, A. C. WILKINSON, L. ' . EDWARDS, D. M. STANTON, R. B. WILSON, A. T. KENYON, O. L. BAGLEY, JULIAN HOWARD, R. H. HARPER, H. F. CHREITZBURG, E. B. HO XE. L. R. HL ' NT, J. O. MORGAN. 4Wl H j ' HPiBM T W . . Vrf k 1 gn Thug History TU WRITii an uii])rfjuc ' iicc(l. impassionate accuunt of the ' Thus- affair of the Fall of 1904, is a hard thing; for one who was a participant to do. But the writer shall endeavor to set forth the whys and wdicrefores of this movement. It has been the custom of the College to allow all the members of each } ear ' s Senior Class the privilege of visiting Raleigh at anv time, provided that in doing this no class or other college duty is negle cted liy the students thus privileged. The supposition being that a man wIkt had been under the discipline of the College for three years, was capable of enjoying special lil3ert - without abusing same. The Class of 1905 was brought up to look forward to this liberty. But when the eventful day arrived, and ' 05 men were really Seniors, this privi- lege was suddenly and entirely removed. The Senior Class was put on a level with the Freshman Class, and et the burden of the military discipline of the College rested upon the Seniors ' shoulders. The Class arrived at the College in Septemljer, facing this condition of affairs, and for a time registration was delayed. After an earnest meeting in Ptillen Hall, it was decided best to register, and then b ' drawing up petitions, endeavor to have matters made better. Accordingl}- a petition was drawn up, an appeal made to the Faculty, and a committee appointed to represent the Class in the matter. The Class then voted to stand b} ' the committee, no matter what happened, and the petition was sent in. The petitidu fell thniugb, and the Faculty voted to extend no privileges. The Board of Trustees was next in line for appeal, but as the Board was not to meet until December, the Class felt that no immediate help could be obtained in this direction. Accurdinglv, a joint meeting of the classes w ' as arranged for, so that by drawing up a petition signed by the College at large, something might be done. ( n Tuesday night, September the sixth, the night the joint meeting was called. Dr. Winston stepped in and took a hand personally in affairs. He had the joint meeting called off, and he himself met with the Senior Class. He ti:)ld the Seniors that there was no hope for the restoration of what they beliex ' ed to be their rights. That the Trustees liad brought about present cnnditii ins, and that they would back the P ' acnltv. He also said that unless tlie matter was closed at once and fur all time that the committee appointed by the Class would have to leave college. After he had finished, and in spite of the fact that the Seniors had listened patiently to his fiery and often faulty logic, he refused to let the Class hold a meeting, and remained in the room until the Class had dispersed. This matter figured promi- nently in bringing matters to a sudden crisis. Class meetings are held sacred by classes, and no one has the right to force a ])caceablc meeting to a close, . ftcr leaving the room, the Seniors gathered in fnmt ni tin- I ' ulk-n TSiiildiiiu; to talk over matters, and here Dr. Winston again intruded. This lime applying to us the decorative epithet of Thugs. As there was nothing to be done so long as the President persisted in attending our meetings, we adjourned. But the name Thugs stuck to us, and from then there was a Class division of Seniors and Thugs. However, coming under the conditions that it did. this title was accepted as an honor, and we will always be proud of it. On Wednesday morning the Class held another meeting, and this was broken up by Captain Phelps, and the Class adjourned to the Park in hopes that in this place one unmolested meeting might be held. But our hopes were barren, for over the green hill of the Park came Captain Phcljis, and he ordered the Class to disperse. This time we stood firm, and we were informed that the committee would be expelled if we did not adjourn at once. Tired of being driven from place to place in order to hold a Class meeting, and feeling that we had been unfairly treated by the Faculty, and knowing that we had agreed to stand behind the committee, we determined to take action at once. There remained but one thing to do as we saw it that September morning, to withdraw in a body from the College that was depriving us of our every privi- lege. The committee would have to go if we held the meeting, and the meeting must be held in order to decide upon something. And as we had agreed to back the committee to the last, we would leave with them. So a paper was drawn up io this effect and signed by all present. . ])aper saying that because of the trend affairs had taken, that we had severed our connection with the College. Of these signatures, four of them were later repudiated by their authors. -Messrs. Finch, Broom, Cartwright and Scott never even leaving the Hill after agreeing to leave College. Their signatures apparently having no meaning to them whatever. Wednesday, after dinner, the Thugs began to leave, and by Saturday morning the Class of ' 05 was badly scattered. Some were at home at work, some at other colleges, and some working in different States. The ■■ Thug movement had been effected. Then the reaction set in. The College authorities decided to reinstate the committee, and one by one members of the Class returned. Some, however failed to come back, and the Class has often felt their loss. By October the fifteenth the la.st Senior had returned, and tlie Thug ' movement was a thing of the past. This is a statement nf things as they happened. The Class may have been in the wrong, and then it may not have been. We made the (|ucst;(in of Senior Hbertv the main issue. The Faculty evaded this and shifted the centre of attack to the committee. These men of the committee were appointed by the Class, and served in the ofificial cajiaeity of Class representatives, so it was up to the Class to side with them, and, if they must leave, why. let the Class go too. The Faculty carried their point because of the fact that might can make right. They had the authority, and if they chose to use it harshly, there was no appeal to he made, because the Board of Trustees sti.md liack of the Faculty. The Thugs accepted the situation, as soon as the committee was reinstated, as gracefully as possible, and resumed their college work, liut the heart of every man is still true to the lost cause, and in the years to come the word Thug will serve as a binding link between the true members of the Class of 1905. And in closing the foll owing quotation may be appropriate : ■■ Men seldom, or rather never, for a length of time and deliberately, rebel aeainst aiixtliiiii: that docs not deserve rebelling against. — Carlylc. THE L11!1{. UY. The Alumni GHORC.E F. SY.ME, B.E. C.eorgc F. Synie is of the Class of 189S. ami duiini; L k his Senior year held the position of Cadet Captain of E Co. C. On leaving College, he worked with the Rich- ■■ - mond, Petersburg and Carolina Railway as levelman, and A H later held a similar ])osition with the Raleigh and Cape B l Fear Railroad. In iS(; ; was principal assistant to the B Resident Engineer on the I ' eoria and Pelican Terminal L g V Railway, with headquarters at Peoria, 111. In 1900 was k ' m a])pointed member of Government Engineering Expedition which made surveys for the proposed Isthmian Canal through Xicarauga and Costa Rica. Central America. i XH-iy02, Civil Engineer with ' irginia Central Railway. 1902-1903. Engineer in charge of location and construction of S. A. L. Railway bridge, one mile long, across Manatee River, Florida. 1903-1904. Civil Engineer making surveys and location for the Coal and Coke Railway through the coal belt of West ' irginia. 1904-1905. Resident Civil Engineer in charge of construction of a tunnel 1.118 feet in length. Also in charge of six miles of heavy grading, including ccmstrnc- tion of bridges, culverts and arches. .■ J WILLIAM D. FALCETTE. L.E. Wni. I). Faucette entered College in iIk- winter of i8i;7- ' S. from Halifax, X. C. after having attended Miss Alderman ' s School at ' ilmington, X. C, and the Halifax High School. He entered the department of Civil Engineering, and graduated in 1901, second in a class of about twenty-five. During his Senior year he was Senior Military Cajitain of the Battalion. ' as also President of the Leazar Literary Society, and was orator and debater at several public exercises. After graduation, he was. at one time, principal alternate for West Point Military .Academy, and duly qualified for admittance, but did not enter. Prior to graduation he won the College scholarshi]) from Halifax County by public comjietitive examination. After leaving College he was for a short lime with the State Engineer; but soon acce])ted a ])osition with the S. A. L. Railway in Savannah. Ga., as inspector of dredging, wharf and river work. He was then Resident Engineer on a short line at Ouincy, Fla., and subsequently .Assistant Engineer to the ofiice at Savannah. . t one time was successful candidate for Instructor in Civil Engineering at Michigan College, at Lansing, but withdrew. He was elected Junior of the .American Society of Civil Engineers of .America in January, 1903. upon the api)roval of Professor Cain, of the University of Xorth Carolina, Col. J. L. Ludlow, at Winston, and Mr. Moncure, of Raleigh. He is at present Assistant Engineer with the Seaboard .Air Line Railway, and is at this time in charge of its southern engineering office at Savannah, Ga. Junior Class Officers CONNER C. CLARDV President ROBERT P. IZZELL Nice-President GEORGE C. ALLEN Secretary WILEY T. CLAY Treasurer Dl ' RANT V. R( )BERTS( )N :::.Mrian THOALAS J. OGBURN. Ju Poet ..t , Colors: Orantje and lilack. A [otto: Wisdom is power, therefore i et wisdom. Junior History '  DOUBT, dear reader, that if you would stop for a moment to think, ou would see how utterly useless it is for me to attempt to give to the present and leave t(j the future a realK true record of this Class — the Class of ' 06. 1 say useless, because tliis illustrious lody of young men is assuredly laying the foundation for a greatness that will live when records are no more. These young men are not going to write the ' r names in the sands of time, but, better than that, their wonderful achievements will he engraved on the smcxDth face of the indestructible rocks of immortality. The will swell the list of those who have attained immortal fame. L ' pon their appearance on the campus in Sei)tember. 1902. a poet might have, from some of them, received suggestions of roaring mountain torrents, jagged rocks, cliffs and chasms, and the snow-capped peaks of Grandfather or Mitchell: and again, it might have been a ])icture of peace and quiet — the close of day on a quaint little farm, vivified by the distant lowing of cattle, the whistle of the partridge, or the melancholy notes of the whip-poor-will. This bringing together, of the vigor and life of the niounta ' ns, the peace- fulness of the valleys, and the hustle of the cities, was nevertheless exactly the thing necessary for the making of an active, fighting hoily. Action and battle, however, are the two things which are always found in the life of the successful Co man, and so much does this class believe in the above statement, that it has been fitjhtinjj somcthinjj or somebody ever since the night of its birth, wiicii it arravetl itself ajjainst the Sophs, and gave them a battle royal. Since then it has strug- gled witii the restraining arm of discipline with an rU-die-but-I ' ll-wear-my-sjiurs spirit that would perhaps cause some surprise if the inside facts were made public. As Fresh. and as Soph. the Bloody Fourth ' has rung with the cry of its men. Pitting brawn against brawn, it has, and not without success, shed its blood upon the athletic field ; in battles of brain, the debating halls have trembled at the power of its voice, and in the class-rooms its men have stood with the highest. Each year has found ' 06 well represented on the varsity, both in baseball and ii. football. In 04. si.x of the varsity eleven were members of the Class of 06. This year ( 1904) the Faculty offered a cup to the champion class foot-ball team, and the Juniors having won every game played, the cup was ours, and ■■ 06 will be the first to have her record engraved on this cup of honor. Another will be offered for baseball, and (if my readers will pardon a ])ro]ihecy ) that will be ours, too. Onlv one more year, and our college life will be at an end. and we will realize that our backs are turned toward home, and the world — cruel, pitiless and .selfish — is before us. We are conquerors so far, however, and so it shall ever be. Through the aid of brain and brawn, and by the power of wisdom, the Class of ' 06 ' a ' ill succeed, and obstacles in the path of this success will be swept away by determination and strength, as chaff before the winds of a tornado. In years to come, when we are greeted at night, after a long day ' s work, by the pattering of small feet and a smiling glance from ' her eyes — be they brown or black, blue or grey — we can but think of our old college days, and more particularly of our Junior days, when our work was hardest, and realize that those days and that work made our happiness. Historia.v. Junior Class ABERXETHV. DURAXT STEWART, Hickorv. X. C. ALLEX. GEORGE GILLEROY. Hiddenite. X. C. ASP.URV. GEORGE PAGE. lUirkmont. X. C. ASHE, JOHX GRAXGE. Rak-itrh, X. C. BEA ERS, JAMES CLALDIUS. rorrisvillc, X. C. BELL. XEEDHAM ERIC. Kinston. X. C. BLACK. KEXXETH LEAX. Mt. Mourne. X. C. BROCK. TLLL M FRAXCIS. Famiinjrton. X. C. BUYS. TLLL .M AXDERS. Havelock. X. C. CHESI ' .RO, . L RK HOPKLXS. Claremont. iri,Miiia. CLARDY. COXXER CALHOUX, Anderson. S. C. CLARK, DA ID McKEXZIE, eldon. X. C. CLARK, TOHX WASHLXGTOX, Raleigh, X. C. CL.ARK, L -MES DIXCAX. Tampa. Florida. CLARKE. SA.ML ' EL HERBERT. Statesville. X. C. CLAY. MLEY THEODORE. Hickorv, X. C. COX, Dl ' XCAX ARCHIBALD. Rowland. X. C. CROMARTIE. ALEXAXDER DOOXE. Garland. X. C. CRLMP. WILLIAM OSBORXE. Polkton. X. C. EGERTOX, BEXJAMIX BALLAD. Insjleside. X. C. ELLIS, WELDOX THOMPSOX. ESCOTT, ALBERT EDWARD. Charlotte. X. C. ETHRIDGE. WILLIAM CARL YLE. Manteo. X. C. EWART JAMES BECKETT, Henderson, X. C. FOSTER, SHIRLEY WATSOX, Xance. X. C. GREGORY. ARTHIR WYXXE, Halifax, X. C. HACKETT. CHARLES WATSOX. Xorth Wilkeshoro. X. C. HAMILTOX. HORACE LESTER. P.ihmore. X. C. HAXSELMAX. lOHX FREDERICK, Manson, X. C. Hl-.WLETT. CLAREXCF WILSOX. Wilson. X. C. HIGGS. lAMES ALLl ' .X. Ik.. Rakish, X. C. HODGES. CYRIS WALKER! LaGrange. X. C. HL ' BAXD. WILLIAM CLAUDE. Winston-Salem. X. C. HUGGIXS, CLAl ' DE BIAERLY. Goldsboro. X. C. loRDAX, Li:si.il . LAFAYETTE, Raleigh, X. C. KNOX, WILLIAM GRAHAM. Charlotte, N. C. LIFE, MARTIN PEARL. Mint Hill, N. C. LO ' IL, JOE POINDEXTER, Mt. Airv, N. C. LYKES, THOMPSON MAYO, Tampa, Fla. McLENDON. HORACE SMITH, AnsonviUe, X. C. : IAX ' ELL, RAYMOND, Resaca, N. C. MOORE, JAMES EDWARD. Williamston. N. C. MOORE. LACY, Graham, N. C. M00R: 1AN, WALTER BOOKER, AshevHle, N. C. MORRISON, JOSEPH GRAHAM, Mariposa, N. C. MYRICK, TESSE CLARENCE, Littleton, N. C. NI -EN, CHARLES FRANKLIN, lorven. N. C. NIVEN, LOLA ALEXAXDER, Cairo, X. C. ODEN, LEWIS MILTOX, Hunter ' s I ' .ridc e. N. C. OGBURN, THOMAS JEFFERSON, Greenshoro, N. C. PARKER, CLYDE ESTER, Rak-ii h, N. C. PASCHALL, ARTHUR LEE, auqhan, X. C. PEPPER, CARL RANDOLI ' H, Southport, X. C. PERKINS. SAMUEL OSCAR, Muttenz. N. C. PI ' ER, ALONZO BETTLINA, Wilson, N. C. PI ' ER. WILLIAM CRAWF( )R1). ils.)n, N. C. ROBERTSON, DURANT WAITE, Washini,non, N. C. S.MITH, COLEMAN MORELL, Crvstal Hill, N. C. TOLTON, FREDDIE lACKSON, Pikcville, N. C. TILLETT, LUTHER RUSSELL, Corolla, N. C. TILLMAN, RICHARD HENRY, Deep Creek, N. C. TOMLINSON, WILLIAM SIDNEY. Gol.lshoro. N. C. TULL. REID. Kinston. N. C. TUTTLE, JACKSON COPENING, Lenoir, X. C. UZZELL, ROBERT PEELE, Goklsboro, X. C. VALAER, PETER, Jr., Winston-Salem, X. C. VAUGHN, LILLIAN LEE, Franklin, Virginia. WALTON, CHARLES MANLEY, Morj anton, N. C. WILLIAMS, lA lES HARLEIGH Rialto, N. C. WILSON, HARLAN RAPHORE, Knoxville, Illinois. WINSTON, LEWIS TAYLOE, Raleiqh, X. C. Sophomore Class ,« J Officers G. F. HIXSHAW President H. S. MONTAGUE ice-President V. C. STAPLES Secretary R. S. GRA ES Treasurer W. B. TRLITT Poet W. X. HOLT Historian Motto : Per aspera ad gloriam ( Throiisjh difficulties to glory). Colors : White and ()k Gold. Yell lioom Rail, l!oom Ree, Boom Rah, Boom Ree. S-{)-P-H-()-M-()-R-E ! To the Class of ' 07 I am thinking of you, dear boys. As I sit by my table alone — As the shadows of evening are falling. Proclaiming the day is done ! I am thinking of da_ s that are past, now. And I ' m th-nking of future days, too: lUit of all, first, uppermost always. Dear bovs. I ' m thinking of you. Two years have we now been together; How swiftly the time has gone by ! We begin to think of the time we must part ( Tis steadily drawing nigh ) ; The time we must part from our College, With ambitious purpose, sincere, To ourselves, to each other, our College. And seeking a nolilc career. ( )h. class-mates, be earnest, be ndble ! Make most of your time while you ' re here Prepare for the life that ' s before you. And face it without a fear ; P)e true to ' 07 furever. Remember the boys therein ; 15e zealous, be faithful, be patient. For patience can only win. W. P.. TuriTT. Sophomore History H( ) V Wl ' .l.l. VL- rcnienihcr tlu- I ' all nf 11)0;,. ' haw f.ond canst- to raiicmbcr it. tor that was the date of the hirlh of the Class of ' oj. We came here, some of lis very homesick, lonely, and with hut ft ' W friends. Some of the Sophomores, upon our arrival at the station, when asked the way to this institution, were so cruel as to direct some of us to tlie State Penitentiary, and some even to tlie State Hospital for the Insane. We were r ' reshnien. and we were certainly treated as Freslimen. An u])i)er classman would liardly speak to us. and the only way to sjct one to do so was to take him ilown to Doc Davis ' s drug ' store occasionally. ( )nr rece])tion was an informal o!ie. Here may be added that we were ,t; iven si ' veral receptions. p-M ' iahly as many as ten, during the year, and they were all informal. These, of course, were given l y tlie Sophomores, of whom, in less than three hours after our arrival here, we had grown to be very much afraiil. Ah. the sweet s ' eep and tlie pleasant dreams they caused us to lose ! We can certainly boast of having used barrels of water that year. Some of our number had the niisfo-inne to have some chemicals smeared on their faces. The stuff that had to be worn otT. It ma be safely said that two or three of us wore this coating in •)laces until away after Fair week. In the year iijo_ . we were represented on the arsity football team by Wilson, on the track team by W ' atkins and llattie, and on the arsit b;iseball ' cam by Harris and .Mcl.aurin. the twirler who put I ' . X. (. ' . out of the business. W hen we came back in the Fall of 1004 we wi-re feeling ery nnieh different from what we were just a year before. Probably we directed some I ' reshmen to the State Penitentiary and to the Hospital for the Insane, and probably we gave ' ■ several recejjtions to the Class of oS. here we took So])homo es to Doc Davis ' s store once, in order to get them to sjieak to. and to have anv thing to do with us. the Class of ' 08 took us twice, even three times. Perhaps some of their number wore the ehemical mixture on tlieir faces unt 1 after I ' air week. They lost a very large amount of sleep on somebody ' s account. I ' robablx ours. Ill the Sprins of 1904. vc were clialleii.trcd by the Sophomores for a wame of liaschall. This s;;,nie we very easily won by the overwhehning; score of 14 to 6. We expect to beat them by a larger score this vear. In the Fall of 1904, we put Sadler, Hardee, W ' atkins and Lykes, four of the best men on the best team A. and M. ever put out. The team that Virginia beat by the small score of five to nothing, and the team that tied Carolina on her own S ' iron. Historian. % Sophomore Class BATTIE, HERBERT SCANDLIN, Greensboro. X. C. BIVINS, JOE PITTMAN, Goodman, N. C. BORDEK, ALLEN HARRALSON, New Orleans, Lonisiana. BROOKS, JAMES PITTMAN, Grifton, N. C. BRYAN, CARNEY JOHN, Washington, N. C. BURACKER, RICHARD, Shenandoah, Mrginia. CARLETON, LINDSAY FERGUSON, Boomer, N. C. CARPENTER, OSCAR BENJAMIN, Stanley. N. C. CARTER. ROBERT HILL. Black Stone, N. C. DAMS, WELDON, Areola. N. C. DAWSON, CLAUDE COUNCIL, Grifton, N. C. EATON, JACOB TATUM, Farmington. X. C. ELDRIDGE, SEBA, Dunn, X. C. E ' ERETT. B. B., Palmyra, X. C. FERGUSOX, JOHX LIXDSAY. Kendall. X. C. FOWLER. ELIAS AN BUREN, Glenville, N. C. GARNER, CLEMENT LEVISTER, Beaufort, N. C. GILL, RAY JOSEPH, Raleigh, X. C. GRAVES, ROBERT STRICKLER, Syria, irginia. GRIMES, JOHX CLAREXCE, Lexington, X. C. HARDESTY, GROVER CLEVELAXD, Morehead City, X. C. HARDESTY, GEORGE ROM, Waket eld, X. C. HARDISON, JOHN GABRIEL, Thurman. X. C. HARRIS, GORDOX. Raleigh. X. C. HEMPHILL. JOKTAN LAFAYETTE, Morganton. X. C. HENLEY, JAMES HOO ' ER, Sanford, X. C. HERRING, L. J., Clinton, N. C. HINSHAW, GUY FRAXCIS, Winston,Salem, X. C. HOLT, WILLIAM XORMAX, Smithfield. X. C. JOXES, ALBERT CARL. Trinity. X. C. JONES. LAWREN ' CE OTOOLE. Raleigh. X. C. JOXES. RUFUS HEXRY. Jr.. . shevillc. X. C. JOXES, WILLIAM WHITMORE. Franklin. X. C. KOOXCE. LAFAYETTE FRAXK. Richlan.l. X. C. LATTA, CHARLES EDWARD. Ralei-h, X. C. LOUGEE. LOUIS EDGAR. Raleigh. X. C. LYLE. JAMES OURTt X. Franklin. X. C. LYXCH, JAMES BORDEX. Wilmington. X. C. McCOXXELL. HEXRY KREIGER. Rnbbit Hash. Kentucky. McXAIRY. OSCAR FRAXKLIX. Greensboro. X. C. MEADOR. EUCEXE FRAXKLIX. Rtidsv lie. X. C. MIAL. BEXXETT TAYLOR. Raleigh. X. C. MICHAEL. FRAXK CURTIS. Gibsonv;ile, X. C. MIDDLETOX. OSCAR DURHAM. Warsaw. X. C. MILLER. FRAXK THOMAS. Rural Hall. X. C. MILLS, JOHX MAPLE. Raleigh. X. C. MITCHELL. ROY HERBERT. Rolesville. X. C. MOXTAGUE. HEXRY STARBUCK. Winston-Salem. X. C. M( )kS( )X. J( )HX LIGHTFOOT. Raleigh. X. C. ( )SB( )RXE. CHARLES CULLEX. Lawndale. X. C. 0 ERT0X. JAMES ELWOOD. Ahoskie. X. C. PARKER. THOMAS FRAXK. Hillsboro. X. C. PARKS. FRED. M. YXARD. Morganton. X. C. PEGRAM. ELWOOD XEWTOX. Gastonia. X. C. PIXXER. GUY. Elizabeth City, X. C. PITTMAX. WIXSL( )W GERALD. Lumberton. X. C. PLUMMER. JAMES KEMP. : Ii(I(lleburg. X. C. SADDLER. THOMAS WILSOX. Sandiper, X. C. SCHWAB. LEOX JACOB.. Goldsboro. X. C. SHUFORD. JOHX OSCAR. Gastonia, X. C. SMITH, JAMES LAWREXCE. Jr.. Linden. X. C. SMITH. LEOX MARTIX, Goldsboro. X. C. SMITH, RALPH HUNTER. Xew Bern, X. C. SPOOX. JESSE PAGE, Oakdale. X. C. STAXCIL. CLIFTOX E-XKLIC. Hills. X. C. vSTAPLES. WILLIAM CRAWFORD. Rcidsvillc, N. C. SYKES, VANCE, Rock Sprino. X. C, TATE, CLAUDE STRATTOX, Littleton, X. C. TRUITT, WILLLAM DROOKS, Crcensboro. X. C. Tl ' RLINGTON. JOHN l DWARD. Crm.ni, X. C WATKLXS. E.ARXEST MOXROE, Anderson. S. C. VEA I-:r, LIXDSAV AIORADE, Lexinqton. X. C. WILLS. JOHX JACKSOX, Elizabeth City, X. C. WHITE. DA 1D LYNDON, Trinity, N. C. WHITFJIURST, CECIL LERXARD, I ' .eanfort. X. C. Freshman Class Officers HFRIUCRT I . CARROLL . I ' rcsidcnt J( )SEI ' ri K. AL j()R ice- [ ' resident L( ) ICK R. GTLI ' .ERT Secretary ASA G. liOYXTOX Treasurer JIXIUS T. GARDNER Historian WILLI AM T. LII ' SC( ).M I ' . Pmt MdTTo: Get in (irder to give. Colors: l ' uri)le and Old Cold. . Class Yell I ' .oonia — laca — booma — laca. iJow — wow — wow ! Cliica laca, cliica laca, Cliow, chow, chow ! 15oonia-laca, chica-laca. Who arc we? Freshman. Frcsliman. A. ar.d M. C. Freshman History TllIC FRESH.MAX year of the Class of 08 is drawin,!.;- to a close, and it l)econies niy duty as Ilistor ' an of the Class to relate what we have done durin;; the time. .Mtlioujjh we haven ' t much history, still we are prouil of what we have accomplishid durinq; the short time wc have been here. When the Freshman Class, 116 strontr, irst landed at old A. and L, iiur So])homorc friends told us that wc were the greenest lot of men that have ever struck the Hill. Then dicidins; that one c l( r wasn ' t sufficient, thcv heean t(i make nir fceliiii s blue and our faces black. For the first tew weeks it was all we could do to keep from fretting- blacked by the So])hs. or stuck by the Captain. To add to this, most of us havinsj never been to eolle,;:;e. we had to s ' ct used to e( -liege life. . bout two weeks after Collejc o]jened. Captain Fhelps called the Clas; tosjether for the ])urpose of electing- a tcmjxirary president. The meeting re- snlted in the election of Mr. H. F. Carroll, who held that office until his election as permanent president in October, lly this time the Sophs, had rela.xed their blacking activities enough to allow us to hold a meeting in peace. At the meeting the following officers were elected: Carioll, President: Major, ' ice- 1 ' resident : (lilbert, Secretary; lloynton, Treasurer; Lipscomb, Poet; and your humble servant Hi.storian. Four months slipped by very soon, and almost before we knew it, we were face to face with Christmas e.xams. The majority of the Class jiassed these successfully, only a small per cent of our men being unable to come back on accotmt of them. Our men have been among the foremost in athletics. P esides furnishing men for the first and second football teams, we got up a Class team which gave the Juniors a close race for the cuj). In view of the records we have made as Freshmen, we ought as Sophs to walk off with everything in sight. Freshman Class -M ' ,I ' :R. 1-.TII Al.lil ' .RT KDWIX. Cata vi)a, X. C. ALSr.KOOK. n.WID XEILL. Scotland Xcck, X. C. ASHCROFT, WILLIA r PARTEE. Cliarl .itc. X. C. r.AEDWlX. FRAXK OSCAR. Raki ■! ' . X. C. 1;AS()X. GEORGE FRAXCES. Jr.. Charlouc. X. C. i ' .EDDOES. HL ' UERT. Charlotte. X. C. iU.ACK. WILLIAM LA.MAR. Mt. .Mournc. X. C. llLACKIiURX. LEONARD AXDERSOX. Winston. X. C. BOOXE. JOSIAH AGIT. Lnniberton. X. C. nOYXTOX. ASA GRAY. I ' .iltmorc. X. C. P.ROOKS. Howard .miller. LauHnhur--. X. C. r.RooKS. XATHAX COHX. Xl-w IScrn. X. C. I ' .RoWX. XE ILLE TL ' RXER, Raleigh. X. C. 1;L RC:ESS. WILLIAM llRYAXT. Rocky Mount. X. C. CAXTWELL. Rt )l;T. COLDER. Jr.. Wilmini ton. X. CARPEXTER. JAKE Ol ' ICKEL. TliLinial City. X. C. CARROLL. HERPERT FILLER. Rak-igh. X. C. CLIXARD. RALPH ROLER. Winston-Salcm. X. C. COUCH. LOUIS HILL. Southern Pints. X. C. DALT( )X. ALFRED SCALES, Winston. X. C. DEAL. CLYDE WATTERSOX. Ralci-h. X. C. DELI.IXCER. I ' .LAIXE CHAPMAX. Shelby. X. C. Dl-.W AR. EDWIX SEX ' D )X, Raki-h. X. C. DI ' .WEY. EDWIX .MIAL. Gol.lsh,)ro. X. C. DR.VKE. LOUIS. Mc.V.lensville. X. C. DUXLOP. GEORGE THOMAS Jr.. Norwood. X. C. DUXLOP. TYLER I ' .EXXETT, .Adar Hill. X. C. DrPRl ' -.l-:. AL IX DEAXS. Greenville. X. C. KAGl.l . kAYM( )X R( )WE. Statesville. X. C. I-.ARGLI ' .. MIXXIl . LUTIIl-.R. Leesville. X. C. EDWARDS, ALULLIK MAKIOX, Mars Hill. X. C. ESKRIDGE, WILLIAM HENRY, Shelby, X. C. FARMER, ISAAC HERBERT, Wilson. X. C. FERGUSON, BENJAMIN TROY, Kimhollon, X. C. FERGUSON, WARREN GR( ) ' , SouiIktu rines, N. C. GARDNER, JUNIUS TALMAGE, Shelby, N. C. GAYLORD, WILLIAM TURNER, Gaylord, N. C. GIBBS, SETH MANN, MidcUeton, N. C. GIBSON, FRANK DUNCAN, (nljs.m. . C. GILBERT. LOVIC RODGERS, I ' otccasi, X. C. GOLD, MOSES HENRY, Benfonl. X. C. GOODMAN, JOHN MILLER, Winst.m-Salciii, X. C. GRADY, JOHN DAVID, Albertson, N. C. GREEN, ANDREW HEARTSFIELD. Raki-h. X. C. GREGORY, EDWARD WM., EHzaljeth City, X. C. GRIFFIN, CECIL LIMWOOIX Manteo, N. C. GRIMES, WILLIAM THOMAS, Lexington, N. C. GRIMSHAWS, THOMAS DELAWARE, Montvale, X. C. HAGAN, DORSEY YATES, Grecnsh..n,. N. C. HALL, HENRY HAWKINS, Wilniin-t m, N. C. HARPER, FRANK, Baltiniurc, Maryland HARRIXGTON, HENRY WILLIAM, Diggs, N. C. HARRIS, THOMAS. Raleigh, N. C. HEATH, ALLEN ARM FIELD, Monroe, X. C. HEATH, FRAXK LEE, Waxhaw. X. C. HUBBARD, WILLIAM SILLERS, Charleston, West Nivginia. HUNTER, MILTON WALKER. ( )xfor l, X. C. INGRAM, THOMAS CLINTON, Mt. Gikad. X. C. JONES, CORYDON SPENCER. Raki-h. X. C. JONES. JOHN McLAURIX. Durham, X. C. KEUFNER, HERBERT WILLIAM. Durham. X. C. LAMBE, CLAUD MILTON. Durham, N. C. LANCE, HUGH BURTON. Hot Springs. X. C. LATTIMORE, BEXJAMIN BUSSEY. Shelby. X. C. LINDSAY, DA ID, StoneviUe, N. C. I.irSCf )Mr,, Wll.l. TFIO.MAS, Crrrnvillc, . C. l, ■kl■•.l. ■. ciM ikci ' . i.a1 ' A I ' ' .tt1 ' :, iiickdry, x. c. Mcl ' .R A ■l•■.k. WIl.l.l AM CAUI.AXI), Slu-lln, X. C. MrCi ) AX. I ' .DWARI) ( )SCAk. I{lni Cily. X. C. .MA|()R, M)Sl ' :i ' ll I ' .D.MrXI), Andcrsmi, S. C. .vIARSll. (. ' l.ARI-.XCl ' : TAI.MACI-:. Aiilamk-r. X. C. AL S()X. JolIX SAXl ' DRD, Ralci-li, X. C . MI-.RRlT ' l ' , LEWIS LARKIXS. Wilmin-t.m. X. C. MIDDIJ ' .TOX, DAXll) |()I1X. Warsaw, X. C. .M()RR1S()X, RAI.l ' ll, I ' ioiKvr Mills, X. C. M R1 ' H , Rni;i.:R ' r I.I IXCSToX, Mcii-aiUnn, X. C. .M ■RRA •. CIA ' ! ' ( ) VKRS, Wallace-, X. C. Xl ' AXI ' .l.K. 1)A ID W ' HARKA ' . Xcwdl, X. C. r. RKER, JAAIES CALEll. Elizabeth City. X. C. I ' ESCUD, JOHX SIIAW, Raleigh, X. C. I ' lTTEXCl ' .R, I ' Al ' E X ATI I AXll ' .l., Raki-h, X. C. I ' lTTMAX, I ' .l ' .XjAMIX FRAXKIJX, ' Path.)!-,.. X, C, IMTTMAX, EAWREXCE LVOX. Whittakcrs, X. C. r( )1SS( )X, I.( )L ' [S JL ' LIEN, Wilmington, X. C. l ' ()l ' l ., ROl ' .ERT EDWARD STL ' ART, Durham. X. C. I ' OWEl.l,, llARRV AEEXAXDER. Fair lllut ' f, X. C. POWELL, JAMI-:S ALEXANDER, Rak-igh. X. C. P( )VX1 ' :R, TIK  MAS M1LT( )X, l ' ..i)lar llranch, X. C. I ' RICI ' ' ., WILLIAM Tllo.MAS, Xew Ikrn. X, C, RAXD, I ' llILII ' i ' .ALLl ' .XTlXl ' ,, Raleigh, X. C. RIDDLI ' ., Cl ' .ORCh; I ' .ARI ' .l ' .R, Raleigh, X. C. SIMI ' SOX. WILLIAM DUDLEY. Raleigh, X. C. SKIXXER, FRANK EVINS, ClreenviUe. X. C. SMITH, EDGAR ENGLISH, ( .reenshoro. N. C. SMITH. HENRY l.l ' .WlS, Dunn, X. C. STANI ' .ACK. HARRIS INGRAM. Alt. Gilead. X. G. STEWART, GH. RLES EDWARD, Carem..nt, irginia. SLTTl.h:. ALIlk ' .RT i ' .l ' .XJ AMI X, Slulhy, X. G. Tl ' ,. ll ' Lk:, WILLIAM TIIADDI ' .LS. . anfonl, X. G. TIK  . II ' S( )X, lAMl-.S I ' .RIAM-:, ( ' ...klshnn., X. G. TILLETT, WILLIAM NOLLIE, Corolla, N. C. TROTTER, WILLIS MOORE, Charlotte, N. C. VALEAR, PAUL, Winston, N. C. WALKER, CHARLES ALBERT, Greensboro, N. C. WALTERS. JOHN TIPER, Charlotte. X. C. WELLS, GUY, Shelby, N. C. WHITE, ROYAL EDWARD, Aulander, X. C. WHITE, SYDNEY RUSSELL, Scotland Neck, N. C. WHITLEY, ORLAND WAITT, Wakefield, N. C. WILEY, SAMUEL HAMILTON, Salisbury, X. C. WILLIAMS, FRANK GRAHAM, Inez, N. C. WILLIAMS, JOHN, Linden, N. C. WILLIAMS, OSCAR DEY, Edenton, X. C. WILLIAMS, THOMAS DICKSON. Matthews, N. C. WILSON, FRANK. Greenville, X. C. WILSON, JOHN KELSO Jr., Baltimore, Maryland. WYATT, ROBERT JOB, Raleigh, N. C. YARBOROUGH, WOODFIX BRADSHER, Locust Hill. X. C. ZIGLER. JOIIX FRAXKLIX. Winston-Saleui. X. C. To F- I passed to-day, on my downtown way, A campus lonely and bare. Ar,(I sad I grew, when I tliouglit of ou ho will never again be there. Seen from the street, ynu made a piclure sweet. You with your hair so gokl. And your dress of blue and your e cs so Irue, In those dear, sweet days of old. But now you ' re gone and how forlorn Seems the place where you used to Ik : But you can ' t depart from your ihroie m m heart Nor out of mv memorv. K— . True to the Last AXD so you are to be married to-morrow morning, child? Irene Clift ' ord ' s little room, pink with the shadow of the morning roses that crowded the rustic casements, was full of the dainty parapjier- ' nalia of the wedding-day. White lace, white orange llowers, and pallid jessamine buds, lay around in graceful confusion ; pearls gleamed from an open velvet case on the dressing-table; and folds of priceless w-hite silk shimmered like snow wreathes on the bed. Irene, sitting in their midst, looked herself like a fair white lily, w-ith her comple.xion of cream and roses, and her pale-gold ringlets and shady blue eyes. Yes, to-morrow morning, Maria. Come, wish me joy. laria Hewitt shook her head where the silver threads were already liegin- ning to gleam through the sunny brown braids. ■■ I can ' t wish you joy, Rena — I can ' t, indeed. Oh. I had hoped to see you stand at the altar with another man than Mark Eluon by your side. Don ' t think me unsympathetic. Rena; but to-night, of all nights in the world. I keep thinking of ' ilfred Mayne. Had it not been for the pink slu ulow of the roses still on her cheek. Irene ClifTord would have been very pale, as she rose from her scat, with one hand pressed convulsively to her heart. ' ■ Of Wilfred Mavne, Maria? ( )f the noble hero who died two years ago off the coast of Spain, when the Otranto was wrecked, and every one on board perished ? ■■ But I can ' t believe he is really dead. Rena, said the elder lady, six-aking with passionate emotion. Suppose — only suppose, for an instant — he shiiul l one day return, to find you. his affianced bride, the wife of another man. Do the dead ever return from their ocean graves, Maria? The dead, no. ' ' Maria, said Irene, clasping her slender hands together, and speaking in a voice that betrayed powerful, though suppressed emotion. you .should know how trulv and tenderly I loved Wilfred IVIayne. how precious his memory still remains to me. But you should also know that the many benefits Mark Eldon has showered upon my poor father, the years of devoted love he has given to mc, ought not to go entirely unrewarded. I do not love him ! That feeling perished when the Otranto went down along the orange-blooming coast of Spain ; Init I respect and esteem him. I will do my best to be a good and dutiful wife to him. Oh, Maria, you of all others should be the last to disturb the convictions of my conscience at such a moment. Maria Hewett said no more, she only shook her head, and began quietly to arrange the disordered room, touching the pure white wedding decorations as sadlv as if thev had been funeral habiliments. . nd Irene, trying to throw off the heavv weight that lay upcm her heart, spoke softly of other subjects, as the red sunset died away among the crimson petals of the clustering roses, and the radiance of the western sky began to soften into tender, dusky gloom. Do von like those stiff, artificial orange-blossoms, Maria? asked the expectant Ijride. Sometimes I fancy that a few simple white roses from my own garden would be sweeter and less conventional. Well, perhaps they would, commented the spinster, thoughtfuUx turning the wreath around. Irene started up. At all events, I am determined to try the eft ' ect, she said. Til run down into the garden and gather a few, just to see. The solitary, vine-embowered garden walks lay in a sort of violet shadow beneath the warm twilight firmament. Through the dense boughs of a grand old .Xorway pine, one star glimmered like a lace of gold sh(X)ting downward from the heavens, as Irene Clifford fiitted along, her dress brushing perfume from spicv clusters of clove pinks, and velvety pansies, and both hands full of rose branches, while almost unconsciously she murmured the Ijurden of some old song. Such a wild, piercing cry as suddenly rose up into the twilight softness, as the roses fell from her hand, and her cheeks blanched whiter than their own petals — such a wild shriek of terror as rent the evening stillness. And when -Maria Hewitt reached the shadowed garden walk, she found Irene lying on the ground totally senseless, with her hands clasped tightly over her forehead. To bring some water from the old well under the laburnums was the work of but a moment and under Miss Hewitt ' s skillfully directed care Irene soon returned to her senses, with shuddering sighs and faint, hysteric gasps. Dearest, what frightened you? asked Maria, when at length Irene sat u]) on the low garden bench and looked aroiuid her with wild, uncertain eyes. Did vou hear anvthing? No. Did you see anything? Irene ' s face of white horror struck a chill even to Miss Maria ' s stout heart, as she said, in slow, measured syllables, speaking like one under the influence of strong mesmeric power, I did see something. I have seen Wilfred Mayne ' s ghost ! Irene ! I tell vou I have seen Wilfred Mayne ' s ghost ! The ghostly face I have so often beheld in dreams lying amitl sea-shells and coral — but I never thought to see it thus. Tell me how and where, cried Miss Hewitt, intent only on quieting the strong spasmodic emotion that racked Irene ' s slender frame. As I came round the path, singing idly — Heaven help me ! — I saw it standing among the laurels, erect and motionless, looking at nie with such sad. reproachful eyes ! My dear, it must have been optical delusion. It was no optical delusion. I saw it, Maria, as distinctly as I now see vou. Miss Hewitt glanced toward the black, sepulchral clusters of laurel, with a slight chill creeping along her blood. ■■ But. Rena. we know that such things are impossible. Ghosts are but a relic of old-time superstition. ■■ Impossible or not, broke in Irene, wildly. I know that this night I have .seen the shadow of him who was once ' ilfred Mayne! I know that his ghost has risen up from its grave under the green billows that wash the Spanish shores to warn me against this fatal marriage ! It is enough — it is enough ! I will never plight my troth to Mark Eldon at the altar. I will live and die sacred to Wilfred ' s dear memory. But. Rena. you surely do not believe — Believe, believe ! interrupted Irene, with passionate emphasis. I tell you. laria, I know that Wilfred ' s ghost rose up before me this evening ! And Irene fell, weak and trembling, on her faithful friend ' s bosom. All that night Maria watched at Irene ' s bedside with anxious, loving care, much fearing lest an attack of brain fever should follow on this sudden shock and unwonted excitement — and her tender precautions prevailed. Put away the silk and the pearls, and the long white veil. Maria, said Irene, as the ruddy dawn peeped in through the open casement ; I shall never need them now. When Mark Eldon came at the appointed time to claim his promised bride. Irene told him all that had occurred to her. in a faint, stifled voice. I can not marry you. Mark. she said, at the close; I can not give mv hand without my heart, after this warning from the very depths of the grave. Mark ' s dull complexion turned a shade more yellow and sickly as he listened. Irene, you will surely not let this figment of a disordered brain come between us now ? I shall never marry. Mark. she answered, with a tjuiet. calm determination, against which he plainly saw that his will was but as nothing. ' ■ Irene. he remonstrated. I have loved you better than my own .soul. Do not leave me alone through life. But her answer came, fimi and changeless, I shall never marrv now. And years ebbed by. and Irene Clifford kept her word. An old maid ! she murmured to herself, as she stood at the mirror in her little chamber, at a sea-side hotel, brushing out the sunshiny luxuriance of her long, yellow hair. I heard the little sixteen-year-old girls telling their com- panions this morning in the hall, that I was an old maid! Well, perhaps thev are right ! And yet — how I should have laughed ten years ago. at the idea of my ever becoming an old maid. ' ' She smiled in the glass as the fancies passed through her mind — and the glass smiled back a sweet, oval face, with tender blue eyes, and a skin yet delicate as the lining of a sea-shell. Irene saw it, and took courage. I am not an old maid yet, in spite of my thirty years, . ' ;he thous:ht. trying on her hat for a morning stroll through the woods, with a book in lur hanci. bv way of companion. How ciuiet they arc, those still, i reen aisles, with shifting gleams of sunlight and the starry gleam of the wild-flowers dotting the turf at her feet. Irene wandered on. and on, unconscious of the slow lapse of time, until — hy the singular sensation that one can not analyze or describe — she suddenlx ' felt that she was no longer alone. Looking tip, she saw. seated on an old dead stump, with a sketching board on his knees, and his forehead shadowed with the broad rim of his hat, a solitary man. He glanced up at the same instant. It was the self-same face she had seen among the laurels in the violet gloom of the midsummer night, ten years since, no longer pale and ghostly, but bronzed and swarthy — it was the face of her lost lover, who sailed in the Otraiito. long, ii ng ago. Irene ! He rose, and stood half hesitating an instant. She tried to speak, but her tongue clove to the roof of her parched mouth. Was this. also, a sickening delu- sion? Wo uld his semblance of humanity, too. fade away into mist and shadow? ■■ Irene, my dearest, fate has thrown us together once more ! he said, advanc- ing at last with the color coming and going on his cheek. But she sank away, shuddering. You are not Wilfred Mayne ! she articulated wildly. Wilfred Ma ne died at sea twelve years ago. But I am Wilfred Mayne. and he did not die at sea twelve years ago. Irene. he said, taking her hand in his — no ghostly haml, but the soft, warm palm of pulsing life and vitality. ■ He was preserved by an interposition of Providence little short of a miracle; and when, recovering at Madrid from the long fever that succeeded his peril, he wrote to the girl who had promised one day to become his wife, no answer ever came. Irene, iiow do vou account for this? I never got the letter! she gasped. As heaven is my witness, the last news I ever heard from you was that you had perished with all the crew of the Otranto when she went down ! And yet I directed it to the care of your law_ er. Mr. Eldon. A burning crimson spot rose to Irene ' s cheek. Like an open book, before h.er rose up the wdiole network of Mark Eldon ' s treachery and deceit. She knew it all now. And when. he went on. after a moment ' s silence. I had waited in vain for months, I came here only to hear the idle gossip about your wedding. That was the way in which I learned the blight of every hope I had ventured to cherish. ' Well, ' I said to myself, so let it be. I will not disturb her dream, of happiness with my white, wasted face and broken heart. I will be to her as if I had never been. ' But in spite of my good resolution. Irene. I could not resist the temptation of trying to see you once again. Do ou remember that summer night in the garden? I remember it! Wilfred. I firmly believed that your ghost had risen up from the dead to warn me against the coming marriage. And (lid vou acce])t the warning? I did. His face lighted u[) under the shadow of the liroad-brim hat. ■■ I had not looked for such hapi)incss as this, he said, in a low. deep voice. ■■ I have dreamed of it sometimes: but the waking has always followed too soon. Thank heaven, the dreams are over at last. My love. he spoke eagerly, with his mistv eves searching the depths of her own. the morning of our lives has been shadowed by dark fate and still darker treachery. Is it too late to devote its noontide to each other, still? Is it in vain that we have been constant to each other all these years ? They walked home together, with her hand resting lightly on his arm. and her heart beating close to his own. Ah ! such a dreamy, happy, lingering walk. And long before the green, quivering leaves turned to pendants of gold, the old maid became a happy wife. W. J. W. — ' 05. A Freshman Pome Oh grate indeed is the fresh class their favorite color is green green, grass Their one hoap is but to Pass. oh in this class some grate men are Some fellows who Ought to star but too soon indeed they ' ve left their nia. We had a fine football team we Ought to won the cup it seamed But this wuz only a pipe-dream. but Gardner says, and he Ought to know That uex year we ' ll win it sho. So from now til then we are goin to blow. oh I would like to make this Pome more longer but I ' m fraid my verse is gettin far too stronger So here no ling I ' ll longer. By not the Class Poet. irTz £=0®KI The Battalion THE 1)ATTAIJ( ). iif ihc Cullciix- is iikhU- up of six companies and the band. The Commandant is Captain I ' helps (L ' . S. A., retired). The major, captains and heutenants are all chosen from the Senior Class. From the Junior Class conies the sergeant-major and the sergeants. From tlie Sophomore Class comes the corporals. Since the establishment of military discipline at the College, September, 1893, six commandants have served. Captain Phelps being the si.xth. During this time the iiattalion has grown from two companies to six, from 130 men in ranks to 5J5 men. The drill and discipline are good things. They teach a man regularity of habits and broaden him out physically and mentally. And it is worth something to be made familiar with military tactics, for in time of war, trained men are needed. There are two things, however, that the ilattalion both needs and desires. These are a flag and flagstaff. It is a pity that money can not be secured with which to purchase these two things. Not a great amount would be required, and this would be a valuable addition to the College. A college run partly on Govern- ment money, should have the flag of the Government flying above it at all times. That this is not the case is merely another instance of the policy of frenzied economy on the part of those in authority. To the outsider the military side of the College may seem a sort of .soulless mummery. But this is not the case. The men take an interest in military mat- ters, and turn the drills ami nther duties into pleasures. That the Battalion may l)rosper and flourish and sduie day evolute into a regiment with 1,200 men in ranks, is the sincen- wisji of the writer. K — . Miss Annik SoriT Lindsay, liATTALIOX SPONSOR. Staff Officers Commandant Capt. F. E. PHKI.I ' S. r. S. A. ( Rktikf.d). Cadet Officers V. M. CHAM I ' .F.RS Major of Battalion S. I). W AI.I Captain and Adjutant S. ( iR ' i)( Captain and Uuarterniaster V. C,. K. ( ). Sergeant-Major T. M. LYKKS Color Sergeant W. S. TOMLIXSt )X Quartermaster Sergeant Comparisons Like thf pure-white lilies that bend ami i fow, Out where the evening breezes blow ; Like the tender skies at the close of day As the purplish shadows fade away ; Like the gentle calm at the hour of rest When the weary birds have sought their nests- Is the heart of a maiden pure and free, A maiden ever loved by me. Her eyes are like the clouds above, The gray that all true artists love. Her hair is like the sunset light That floods with gold the landscape bright ; Her voice is soft ; like the peaceful hush That comes before the storm ' s mad rush. Like ( things lovely and bright and clear Is she whom I love and still hold dear. L— . Company A Miss May DeBerry, sroxsoR. Ashecraft. W. P. Black. K. L. Buvs, . A. Baker, W. W. Bell. N. E. Cox. D. W. Collins. R. F. Darling, E, Eagle. R. R. Eargle, .M. L. Fisher, W. 1!. Gibson. 1. M. Gibson, F. ( ). Graves. R. S. Henley. J. H. O. L. Bac.ij:v . F. W. Hadi.kv V. I. Wai.kkr Captain. . . .First Lieutenant. .Second Lieutenant. S. H. Ci.ARKK First Sergeant. D. A. Cox Second Seti cant. L. jM(K)RE Third . ' ieri eant. B. B. Er.URToN Fourth Sert eant. J. 1 ' .. Lynch First Corporal. W. B. Truitt Second Corporal. G. R. Harddstv Third CorporaL B. B. Fakkktt Fourth Corporal. Privates Hester. T. Hanirick. M. F. Koonce. L. F. Laval. W. L. Major. T- E. Marsh. C. Midgett. A. L. Murphv. R. L. Mial. B. T. McXairv. C). F. McConnell. H. Xewsonie. ' . B. Xelnis. D. R. Parks, F. M. Rowland, H. Somers, C. X. Spruill, C. E. Sykes. . Spoon. T- P- Tull. Reid. Weaver. R. R. Weaver. L. M. White. S. R. White. D. L. Whitlev. ( ). W. Wvatt. R. I. Williams. T. II. Wilson, a! T. Wilson. H. r. d i r,a-l)y. W. M. llaiclwiii. F. ( ). Boone, J. A. Cantwcll, R. C. Carpenter, 1. S. Carroll, II. l . Clardv. C. C. Dunl. ' .p, S. T. Erwin, l. S. Etheridge. W. C. Ewart, J. P., Ellis, W. T, Fiirgeson, ' . S. Cibbs, S. M. f irinisliaw, T. I ). Company D ],. M. IJoi-i ' MAN, JK Caf taiit. A. T. Kl■: ■ ■o ■ I ' irsI Lieutenant. S. X. Kmix Second Lieutenant. L. T. W ' lNS ' i ' ox I ' irst Seri ea)it. I. I). C ' l.vKK Second Seri cant. W . W. Moorman Third Seri eant. S. I ri;i;KiNS L ' ourth Seri;eant. I ' .. M. Watkixs - ' VaV Corl oral. A. C. joXKS Second L ' orporal. U. 1). M 11.1)1. KToN Third L ' orporal. ( ' ,. T. 1 li . sil AW l ' ourth Corporal. Privates Crady. J. D. dainex, I ' . L. (joodnian, |. M. Gregors . Iv. . Hamlin, 11. 1. Hewlett, C. W. Harper, F, Knotts, ' , E. i.ipc, W. V. Lattiniore, S. . ' . Mason. W. 1.. Ma.ssie, .M. ! ' . Martin. 1. I ' .. McEend.m. II. ritnuni, W. . . I ' itnian. 11. S, Pescud, J. S. Pearson, P, M, Pope, R. E. E. Porter. I. A. Poyner. T. M. Pinner. ( ■. Price, j. M. Saw_ er. J. C. Swann, II. P. Smith, C. M. Smith, R. E. Smith, S. H. Temple. W. T. Wells, 0, Miss Ki.i: M ' i; Sriii:i:r MciNiioic, SrilNMII! Company B I ' .. ( ' .. P(iuTi:i (. ' apltiiii. ( ' .. ( ' .. I. NCii I ' irst Lirii i ' iKint. 11. 1 ' . C ' iikI ' ;it .i;i:ki;. Jr.. .Sccaiitl l.icutcnanl. . 11. ' rii.L.M.w I ' irst Scri caiit. I. 1 ' ' . 1 l. . si;i.M. Sccciiil Srri caiit. 1,. h. ' . ii;ii. . ' fliiril Scr: cciiit. ri;ii:i ' Ai.i:. k Fourth Scrt cant. [,. Sen AW i; I ' irst Corf iinil. !• ' . T. M M.i.KR Second Corf ' oral. J. 1,. 1 1i;m I ' ll ii.i Third Corf oral. r. W. IIakdik I ' oiirth Corpond. Privates Abernetliv. D. S. Black, W ' . L. Best, J. I.. Caldwell. ( ' .. II. Cromartie. Daltoii. A. vS. Deal, C. W. Dunlnp, ]■. i;. l{ldri lg;c, S. Faster, S. W. ( ■anlner, J. T. Criffith, . Gilbert. I,. K. Hamilton, ( ' .. 1 Heath, F. 1.. Harris. T. Islev, K. W. Kimball, W . K Lverlv, G. L. May, C. L. Norman, G. S. Overton, j. I{. I ' lumnier, J. K Pitman. 1.. 1,. Powell, H. A. Smith. E. E. Shelburn. J. W. Turlington, 1. 1- ' Ward. ' W. I. Warren. C. ' .M. Warren, W. C. Williams. ]. C. Williams. F. D. Wilson. I. K. Woodv. |. II, Miss Kaik DkHkkhv, SI ' ONSUK. Allen. G. C,. Allsbrook, 1). X. Eiivens. J. I ' . Bcddocs . H. Ijlackburii. I,. A. ilorden, A. H. Couch. L. U. Clay. V. T. Duprec. A. D. Dawson. C. C. Ferguson. ! ' . ' T. Ferguson, P. II. Company C .•« . I. I ). Si ' INKS i ' ol tiUII. R. C l.i;ii MAX I ' irsI Lieutenant. L. A. .MiKk Second l.ientenant. 1). W. Rni:i:i TSo. I ' irst Seri eont. J. Ci. MoKKisoN S ' eeonii Seri;eant. C . AsiUKV Third Ser secant. A. I ' l. ri i:i fourth Scri cant. E. X. l ' i:i,u. . i I ' irst Corf ' oral. C. E. St wcii.i Second Corf ' oral. 1,. r . W ' li iTi:iUNs; ' ' t ' hird Corporal. E. r . .MiCAi). u J ' onrth Corporal. Privates Fiiwler. l ' .. . Xiven. C. I . Gold. M. H. Xcwrl, 1). W . Garner. C. L. Price. W. T. Herring. I., j. Parker, j. C. Harrington. II. X Stalev. A. M. Killebrew. M. L. Stanhack. II. F. I.ind.say. 1). Steele. H. S. Lattimore, I!. II. Stuart. G. E. Michael. F. C. Sianeil, |. C. Maxwell. R. Tilleit, ' . X. Middleton. 1). I. alaer. I ' anl. Mvrick. I. G. f ' rt ' Wjjf -V J m ■ ' ' H . 5 Hk ' n - ' j4i . m jtmm f .1 y. Id @ fL . th HH r 4 « i; Tw ■njb i oMi if fL«V ' f ' • E p Allen. V. A. Aberiiall u . Brooks. H. .M liiirtjcss. Carter. W. Dillin-er. Drake. L. C. Dewey. Drake. |. S. Company E J. H. Pkiuck Captain. L. C. l, Ki; I ' irsl Lieutenant. . W . Watt Seeond Lieutenant. C. W. I loDCHS First Sert cant. I). M. Ci.AkKK Seeond Sen eant. J. W. Ci. AKK1-; Third Seri eant. M. H. Ciihsi:K() Fourth S ' er};canf. R. H. Cautkr First Corf oral. H. S. MiiNTAUK Seeond Cor[ ' oral. 1 . II. S. i nil ' I ' hird Corporal. W. C. Staim.i;s Fourth Corporal. Privates Escott. Heath. A. A. Iseley. Lamb. .Mills. Merritt. L. . icliolson. Price. W. T. Saltlierwaite. Siittle. Tuttlc. Thi pen. C. I Tliig;]5eii. R. D Tliuni])son. Wliitley. Watson. Willia-.ns. Aivr.(kH. M. 11. Alison, I,. .. Alexanck-r, W. S Rank, W. H. Bason, G. F. Brown, N. T. Dewar, 1 ,. S. Eskrid c, W. Foscuo, M. W Gill, P. ]. Green, A. 11. McGowan. 1 ' ' .. Alorson, J. 1. Grifliii, C. k. 11. Company F W. 11. . U 1. tirp: Captain. S. . 1. ' ii ' :i.i-; I ' irsf l.iciitriiaiit. 1. K. Smith S ' l-cmid l.iciitcinint. W. v. I ' .korK First Srri cant. . W . ( ' ,u :m k Second Si ' r: cant 1.1 ' . l,(i ii.i Tliird SiTi rant. I. !■■.. .MonKh: Fourth Scrt cant. ]. k. l i;Kr,is(). First Cor ' oral. I. k. C. ki.i-;ti)N S ' i ' fonii (. ' orporal. C. S. T. TK TliinI ( ' ,irporal. j.k. S-Mil ' ll I ' oiirtii Corporal. Privates Hampton, W. R Hi--s, k A, |r Hutoff. C. I ' , Hnnter. M. W. Haygan, D. Y. Jones, J. McL. Jones, C. S. Harris, G. KneiTener, I 1 kalUi. G. I ' .. IJnker, Z. W Lipscomb, W. T Parker, C. Iv Pierce, k R. W Poi. ' -son, k. J. Paschalk A. L. Price, L. L. Rand, P. H. Smith, H. k. Sanntlers, R. k. Towe, H. I ' . White, R. Iv Wonimack, Wells, k ]■ ' Walters, j. P. ' arboron, ■h, W . B Yountr, R. T, D. Band l- ' .. T. I (ii;i;sci. histructof. 1 1. 1 ' .. CAKTWKir.HT ( ' iiptiiin. I. . 1 ' i;k I ' iist l.inilciKiiit. II. M. I.ii.i.v S ' ccoinl Lieutenant. I. ( ' ,. I lAKiiisnx I ' ivst Sci-i caiit. W . C. ' i:k Second .SVrj a n . K. II. I l. Kri:K Pnini Major. T. |. ( )i,iuKN Principal Musician. Miss !M, ik W ' miti-iki.I), r.altie, K. S. r rvan, J. C. Eaton, J. C. Farmer. F. H. Grimes, ]. C. Privates Grimes, W. T. Holt, W. X. Huhaiid, W . C. Louijee, L. F. Morgan, I. H. Oden, L. ' m. Parker, T. F. Powell, T. A. Riddle, k. Simpson. Uzzell, R. P. Commissioned Officers Staff Cai ' T. V. K. T I lELPS Coiiiniandant W , M. CllA.MI ' .ERS Major S. D. WALL Captain and Adjutant S. GR A YDON Captain and Quartermaster Captains O. L. BAGLEV. !.. M. H( )FF.MAX. E. G. rORTER. j. n. SIMXKS. J. H. I ' EIRCE. W. 11. MclXTIRE.. H. !!. CAKTWRIGHT. K. 11. ILXRIM-.R. Lieutenants E. W. 1L 1)LEV. . . T. KI-:XV()X. G. G. LYXCH. R. C. I. EH MAX. L. J. LVKES. S. M. 1ELE. W. J. WALKER. S. X. KXOX. H. E. CHREITZr.ERG. Jr. L. A. Ml RR. W. W. WATT. J. k. S.MITII. J. A. PARK. 11. . 1. LILLY. Sergeants W. ( ,. KXnx Serseant-Major T. M . LM KS Color- Sergeant W . S. Ti iMLIXSc )X Oiiarterniaster- Sergeant First Sergeants S. H. CLARKE. L. T. WIXSTOX. 1). W. ROBERTSOX. C. W. IK )I)C.ES. W. F. BROCK. R. II. TII.1..M.VX. j. C. H. R1)1S( )X. Second Sergeants D. A. cox. J. I). CLARKE. J. L. HAXSELM.XX. J. ( ' ,. M( )RRIS()X. IJ. .M. CL.KRKi:. A. W . CKEC.oRV. W. C. PI ' ER. Third Sergeants L. . 1( )( ' RE. W. I!. .M( )( )R.MAX. L. L. .M ' CHAX. C. P. ASIURV. J. .M. CLARK1{. J. P. L( ) ILL. Fourth Sergeants li. B. EC.ERToX. S. ). I ' I ' .RKLVS. PETER X ' ALAER. . . B. l ' l I ' .R. M. H. CHESBRO. J. E. .MOORE. 1 amm Corporals J. p.. LYNCH. L. SCHAWL!. T. S. FER(U S() . W. i;. TRriTT. F. F. .MlU.l ' R. H. S. M( )XT. C.L ' E. First Corporals E. -M. WATKIXS. E. X. PEG RAM. R. H. CARTER. Second Corporals A. c. jOXES. C E. STAXCILL. I. S. CAREETOX. G. R. HARUESTV J. S. HEMPHILL. R. H. SMITH. Third Corporals (). 1). DL)LETl)X. L. p.. WHITEHLRST C. S. TATE. P.. P,. lAERETT. P. V. HARD IE. W. C. STAPLES. Fourth Corporals j. T. IIIXSIIAU ' E. F. MEA1K) V. J. L. S HTH. A Prediction Fulfilled WHAT is so clianning as a lovely May morning;? All nature seems to harmonize in rapturous adoration of the goodness of the (jreat Creator, as the weary nights of winter are past, and the glorious resurrection of Spring has dawned, awakening newness of life and beauty. ' egetation never seemed more lovely, the flowers never were more beautiful, and the dear little birds never before sang so sweetly. Unconsciously my eyes are lifted from the perusal of a most interesting Ixjok and turned in the direction from whence a ripple of happy childish laughter comes, wafted as flute notes by refreshing breezes across the great meadow. Heigh oh ! Lilly. said a lad of nine as he came running to meet a little white figure of seven summers, with golden hair and eyes of violet blue, as she was leisurely enjoying the wandering path across the field, stopping now and then to add another daisy to the boquet held in the left hand, while a small bucket was iield in the other. Thrusting back cjuickly a blue suubomiet that shaded a l)row of angelic beauty, she laughinglv returned, Why. heigh oh. Dave ! I am so glad you have come, I was just wishing you would. You see, says Dave, I have nearly run myself out of breath, coming as fast as a fellow ' s legs would carry him. and stumping oflf nearly all the ends of my toes; but its all right now that I have caught you. Poor boy ! Lilly is so sorry for those little toes ; now be still and let me tie them up in mv bonnet string, and when you get home your mama will fix it better, lor mamas ahvavs know how to tie up fingers and toes. There, now. let s go. ■■ Thank you. Lilly. said Dave ; you are .so good, and luy foot is almost well. Now. please let me go with you and help you carry your things. Tell nie where ou are going with tliis bucket and these flowers ? And won ' t ou pin one of vour daisies on my coat ? ■■ Surely I will, she said, picking for the freshest flower of the bunch. There, now, it ' s so becoming ; but come, let us hurry along, or the coffee w-ill get cold, and I want her to enjoy it warm. You know she lives over yonder in one of those little huts, and her name is Mammy Sue. She nursed my mama when she was a tenincy wee bab -. and me. too. when I was my luama ' s tenincy wee baby. 1 love her and she loves me, but she is old and crippled now ( poor old Mamnn Sue!). Every morning I take her breakfast over, and mama sends her dinner and supper. Hush! we are there: do be as still as a mouse, Dave, and wait on the step for me just a minute. Cautiously entering, she says, Good morning. Mammy Sue ! how you feeling to-day ? Bless vo hart, honev. am dat mv chile come? savs Mammv Sue. Blige ' o feel better when dat angel come in de do. Taint no sin to call her angel, no, case she am angel in degnise, angel wid close on, sure and sartin. Mark my words, honey, God gwine bless you fo all yo tention to dis po old cripple nigger. Vo ma was good befo yo, and yo chillun gwine be good, gis ue same, down to de ' ouf and fif generation, for dat is de wild of de Lord in de mandments dat Moses writ on dem two big stones, an Clammy Sue gwine to member dcni de longest day •ihc live. Honey, tank you tousand times for dis nice, hot cuji coffee. Listen good. ?klammy Sue got a fine joke to tell you to-morrow, if she be livin and the sun be shining clar in de blue firmament of de Heaben. Xow, chile, run home, but fo yo go, say dat portion of de Scripture what say, De Lord am my Shepherd, ■io my mine kin have dat to feed on till you come back agin. Little Dave felt every moment an hour, and was delighted when the door ' ijjened and Lilly reappeared. ■■ Are you coming again to-morrow? he asked. Yes, indeed: and just think how nice, Dave — Mammy Sue says she will have a fine joke for us. Good, said Dave, and can I come, too? Do say ves, and let me come every day, for — For what. Dave? said Lillv. Why. I was just thinking, suppose you should be frightened by a big dog  jr something ! That ' s so, said Lilly : I had not thought of it, but these bushes do look like bears and snakes might live in them, and I am awfully afraid of such things. Then to-morrow at nine are we to meet at the little gate near the big cherry tree, and remember, I will sure be there waiting for you, smiled Dave. By-by, said each cherry voice as they parted, Lilly returning to a home of affluence and luxury, and Dave to his humble little cottage, but each to hearts of loving mothers who impatiently awaited them. Mrs. James and ] Irs. Cleaves were both noble and high-minded women, but very naturally Mrs. James was highly ambitious that her only child should have every advantage possible, mingle with the most cultured, and marry a man of reputation and rank. Next morning promjjtly at the appointed hour Lilly and Dave were chatting inerril} . and tr ing to guess what it was old Mammy Sue had to relate. Thev found the old woman seated in her door, apparently enjoying the fine refreshing air, and humming a singular tune. ■■ Bless my soul ! dats my chillun coniin now ! Come in. honeys, come right in : you looks bright and fresh as de May mornin : all seem bright, de wedder, de chillun, and eben dis old nigger. Arter Manmiy Sue drink dis nice freshin coffee dat my old missus sen and my young missus brung, I ' s gwine to make you chillun laugh, I am. Xow, den, come yer soney : what ' s yo name, and did you come case vc ' u lub my angel ? A shy little nod from Dave caused the old darkey to continue. Dat ' s right, sjjeak de truf gis like de great-grand fader of the couiitrv done — Genel Washinton. dafs him, and he set all de folks good desample. Xow, bof of yo come and stand befo INIajumy Sue. Bof of yo is ristocracks, I tell dat plain by de color of yo har and eyes and skin. Is yo gwine be good and lub one anudder. ' The children nodded assent, and Mamm - Sue continued. Xow. open bof ck-ni hans, so : dat long mark in tie middle say, some day when yo gets grown, yo gwine lib in fine house an be happy, an hab — never mind, de Lord knows the rest, an lie gwine bless bof of my chillun ; but Mammy Sue be sleeping under de yartli. an her spirit be gone up hcaue to de New Jerusalem, when all (lis come to pass; but its so, every wud 1 tell you settin here in (lis old shanty, and Mammy Sue is no fortune-teller, nuther. As Lilly and Dave left the home of tin- faithful old servant, their little hearts were innocent and pure, much alike in disposition, thoroughly congenial and happy, while puzzled to miderstand the meaning of the conversation of Mammy Sue. Mr. James (Lilly ' s father) was the owner of (juite a large jjlantation. and being physically unable to attend to business, had recently employed Mr. Cleaves (the father of little Dave) to take charge of his afifairs. Mr. Cleaves had been highly recommended as a perfect gentleman and a man of excellent business ca])acity ; and having recently met with financial reverses, and having a large family to sustain, was only too glad to accept the liberal offer of Mr. James. As children always love novelty and change, Dave was delighted with his new country home, and insisted his father would give him as pleasant emi)loyment, the charge of l(X)king after the sheep. Lilly often called him David, and loved to sit with him under the inviting shade of the lovely trees and listen to the mouth organ and Jews-harp. Then ihev would play see-saw and wade in the rocky branches and fish for minnows, or hunt for the little hlue-bells that help to sweeten Spring. Always cautioned by Lilh, Da e never forgot to carry his sling-shot as protection against bears and lions. The time soon came, however, when their little hearts must have the sadness of separation cast across their lives, for their growing attachment for each other s(jon caused the watchful eyes of Lilly ' s parents to deem that she should no longer attend the country school, but be sent to mix and mingle with others. As the time drew near for Lilly to leave her dear home and loved ones, each walk with Dave seemed sacred, and each interview dearer. They agreed to be true and write often to each other. Cold Stream no longer had a charm for little Dave. The mouth organ and har]) were never taken from his pocket, he little cared to sing or play, and the long-looked for letters never came : for Lilly ' s teachers were requested to keep strict watch over her correspondence. Months and years slowly passed, and after a long absence Lilly returned to find everything sadly changed. The Cleaves had years since removed from the country, and Mammy Sue had gone, we trust, to the home she loved to speak of as New Jerusalem. Mr. James ' s rapid decline grew more noticeable each day. causing l,ill ami her mother to realize he could mily be with them a short while. ( ne morning he requested them to sit near his reclining-chair, while he talked with them of the future. ' S ' ou know, my dear wifr and daughter. he said, 1 must .soon leave Nou; lie resigned and cheerful, for it is Cod ' s will. My bu.siness is so arranged ' ou will have no tnniMe. M hrothcr. living in . tlanta. wishes you to come on ai;d scttlr tlKic. N ' ou know he is n giKul lawvir and will manage for you. Sell 122 or rent the plantation. Have my body placed near my ancestors in the old church-vard at L — , and some day I trust to come back and welcome you to our home above — that ' s all — there, now — don t cry. After the lapse of a few months, Mrs. James and Lilly have left the old home and hallowed associations, and we find them surrounded by strangers in a strange city, yet cozily and comfortably fixed in their attractive cottage home. Some davs must be dark and dreary, thought Lilly, as she retired to her room in order that her tears should not serve to deepen the sorrow already too heavy in the heart of her mother. ' Twas ever thus from childhood ' s hour, I ' ve seen my fondest hopes decay; I never loved a friend or flower, r.ut it was sure to fade away. How sadly true. thought Lillv ; he is gone, anil 1 must try to love another just to please my dear uncle. She threw herself upon the lounge and was too deeply occupied with her pitiable condition to notice the cautious opening of the door and the entrance of a servant girl in white cap and apron, bearing a waiter upon which was placed a small sealed envelope. I was afraid you was sleep. Miss Lilly, said Frances, and your ma said it was very important for you to have sleep and rest. I sorry to ' sturb you, but the gentleman seemed mity frustrated like and in a nervous hurry. A lovely maiden fomi of eighteen summers was slowl ' raised to a silt ng posture, and a lovely face of unusual emotion was upward turned as she exclaimed, I can not ! I can not ! I am sure I never can ! Not dare to please niy own dear mother. What have you there, Frances? as the girl insisted on her receiving the contents of the silver waiter. Who under the sun can this be from? The writing is not familiar — yet exquisite. ' Miss Lilly James, — yes — well, this is certainly a mystery. Frances, just say to the gentleman I will be down in a few minutes, then step back and help me arrange my toilet. — Really, I feel inadequate to the task of meeting a stranger, yet courtesv demands I should on this occasion make the attempt : dear me, I am so tired meeting strange faces. Xow, Miss Lill ' , ou looks sweet as a peach, but just let me pin this daisy in your hair anil you will look still finer — now de dais - can ' t look prUt aj de Lilly no way you fix it, an Francis not the (inl - ime gwinc think so, neither. Quite unconscious of the admiration of her humble maid, Lilly was revolving in her mind what the business of the stranger could be, as the note onl said, ' ■ I wish to see you a few minutes on important business. The caller, meanwhile, was pacing impatiently the floor. What will the young woman think of such presumption? thought he, and what can 1 sa in justify my actions? I feel sure she will take me for a numb-skull, or maniac. or — -well, after all, it is worth the experiment if she shoidd (inl - pni -e in be my little Lilly of Cold Stream. In gross ignorance of the presence of the strange visitor, Mrs. jauies abruptly entered, and confronting so unexpectedly such a handsome specimen of humanit)-, blushed, begged pardon, bowed and retired. 123 The stranger ' s face grew grave and pale as he exclaimed, After all, I am mistaken — my hopes are forever blasted — for that white-headed woman is a perfect stranger, and not the Mrs. James I once knew — yet 1 confess there is something about her I like. Thank you, mother, I am feeling better, says Lilly, as she passed Mrs. James on the stair; all unconscious that the sound of her musical voice caused d mingled emotion of love and fear to startle the waiting stranger. Softly her steps are heard, and she enters timidly. For a moment the silence is unbroken, and they stand spoll-ljcmnd. viewing each other with embarrassing admiration. Truly she is an angel in human form, he thinks, lor mortal was never so lovely. While she in turn wonders who this person can be with form so manly and brow so noble, and e es so elociucnt ; but stepping forward he breaks the silence by .saying : Pardon me. please, for this intrusion, but I saw from this morning ' s paper that Mrs. L. C. James, of Xorth Carolina, had recently moved to this city, and I am anxious to know if they are related to a family ot James I knew years ago. Indeed, I am very sorry to trouble you. but would be greatly obliged if you could give me any information on the subject. Really 1 can not tell, she said, somewhat embarrassed. We have only been here a few days — ' twas hard to leave our dear old home, yet — Before she could finish the stranger advanced and said with uncontrollable emotion. Tell me, did you ever know Lilly James? With an u])turned face of surprise she said, Well, really, I ought to know myself. ■■ My Lilly ! Can it be true ! So long lost and found at last ! Feeling sure this stranger must be an escaped lunatic. Lilly says, in fright- tned tones: Excuse me. I must retire, I have important business demanding immediate attention. Xow I have fixed matters and played the very mischief by being in such a luirrv : I must have things righted ; I can not leave this house until she knows me. Evident!) she fails to recognize her old friend, and takes me for an impostor. He steps to the door, rings the bell vigorously, and hands his card to Frances, saying, Please hand this card to Mrs. James at once. Dat very same gentleman coine straight back and say, give this card to l Irs. James, and he seemed kinder worried, mam, said Frances. Mrs. James at once reappeared and introduced herself as Mrs. Harry James. Of course a hurried explanation of affairs ensued and all was made ]ilain. frs. James was simply charmed with the high-toned, gentlemanly man- ners and handsome personal appearance of the young niian, and hastened to her daughter ' s room to infomi her that the mysterious stranger was only little L ave Cleaves. Lilly at once returned to the parlor ' mill smiles and blushes to welcome her long-lost but not forgotten friend and lover. The remainder of the story can easily be guessed. David Cleaves was now a skillful physician of rising ])opularity. His father having inherited large possessions, went abroad in order to give his family the very best educational advantages, and a short time since returned to settle permanently in his own native land. The pure, childish love of Dave and Lilly had not been extinguished by time and separation, but had lived as smouldering embers, only to burst forth into unremitting flames. Many pleasant evenings were spent talking of their bright future and of their past happy childhood days at Cold Stream. Their visits to the cabin of Mammy Sue. and her prediction concerning their future was never forgotten, and strange to say, was nearing fulfillment: for the wedding day was at hand, and the handsome home across the way was in a few days to be occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Gleaves. CnA( II KlKNIIol.T The 1904 Football Season THE FOOTUALL season of 1904 was in all ways a successful one. When ilie Colleg e opened in September, the Senior trouble came on. ;uul lor a while prospects of good football were somewhat dimmed. But A. and M. had a man on the spot who not only knew football, but also knew how to train others for the game. This man was Coach Kienholtz. Mr. Kicnholtz was not discouraged because of the poor outlook, but set to work with redoubled energy to make the best of a situation somewhat strained. How well he succeeded in his work is shown by the brilliant record the team made. The first game resulted in a walk-over for A. anil M. by the score of 69 to o. Guilford College was greatly outweighed by . . and M.. and at no time came near scoring. The team went to irginia next and pla etl . . 1. I. at Lexington. This game resulted in a hard-earned victory for the wearers of the Red and White. ' . M. I. played good, steady l)all, but failed to score, while .A. and M. succeeded in making A touchdown and gt)al. The game with the L ' niversity of X ' irginia was a magnificent one. netting us. however, the only defeat of the season. . . and . 1. pla ed hard and fast, bill time-up the score stood 5 to o ag; iinst her. Then came the game with South Carolina College, and neither side was able to score. The South Carolinians were lighter than the A. and M. men. but by [Hire, sheer grit, they held the score O to O. At Chapel Hill was pulled ofT the big game of the year — the game with Carolina. Carolina had boasted that she would defeat us by at least twelve points. Hut when the game was over neither side had won. for the score was o to 6. The showing made by the team in this game was superb, and every player starred. For the third time in the football history of the College L ' . X. C. was tied, and while not a victory in fact, the game was one in spirit, for Carolina vas confident of winning and regarded a tie game as a defeat. On Thanksgiving day the season was closed by a game with Clemson College of South Carolina. The men from Clemson played good ball, the m en from . . and M. played better. That tells the whole story, for the score was A. and M. 18. Clemson o. So the season closed, with a record of three victories, one defeat and two tic games to its credit. When we remember thai X ' irginia administered the only defeat, and that one of the tie games was with Carolina, we feel like saying to the team, Well done, we are proud of you. and then. ' Hats off to Kienholtz, the man who brought success out of the shadow of defeat. K — . THLETICS Athletic Association Officers First Term L. C. . KE rresidcnt H. H. CAKTWRICHT Xice-Pn-sident J. I). SI ' JXKS TreasuriT R. T. ALLEN Secretary Officers Second Term F. W. HADLEY Presiilcnt REID TULL Nice-President J. I). Si ' fXKS Treasurer L. T. WLXSTOX Secretary Officers Third Term T. M. LYKES President REID TULL ice-President L. MOORE Treasurer )AiLt Football Team Officers (). M. CARDXER Manager C. W. 1 K )UGES ssistant Manager L. F. AHERXETHY Captain W. S. KIEXHOLTZ Coach Dr. JOEL WHITAKER Assistant Coach Statistics Name. Gregory, A. W Abernethy, L. F. (Captain). Syke.s V Lvkes, T. M Perkins, S. O Gardner, O. M Lvke.s, L. G Sadler, T. W Wilson, A Wilson, H. R Hadley, F. W Darden, W. L Age. Weight. Height. Si-Bs. Hardie, P. W.... Watkins, E. M Tull, R 145 190 194 180 178 220 175 1 65 186 180 ' 75 J.S5 170 5ft 9 in Sit II in... 6 ft 6 ft I in . Sit 1 1 in 6 ft 2 in 6 ft .Sit 9 in 6 It I in... 6 ft 6 ft Position. 9.in Left end Left tackle. Left guard. Center Right guard. Right tackle. Right end. (Juarter Ijack. Right halfback. Left halfback Full back. Full back. 5 ft. 10 in...l Halfback. 6 ft I Full back. Average age, 20 years. Weight 177 pounds. The 1904 Football Record ,t ,■ Date. Sept. 24- Oct. I. Oct. 15- Nov. 6. Nov. 1 6. Xov. 28. . . antl M. Opponent. ( .uiltonl at Raleigh ( ) O ' . M. I. at Lexington, a C) o I ' . a. at Charlottesville o 5 S. C. College at Raleigh o o L . X. C. at Chapel Hill ( 6 Ck-nison at Raleigh 18 o Total 99 ' Scrub Football Team TILLETT (Captain). LILLY. H. M. KLMBALL. BELL. X. E. PRICE. TILLETT. L. R. BULLOCK. J. V. PITTMAX. W. G. GRAYDOX. S. SHUFORD. J. ( ). HEMPHILL. J. L. COX, D. ■. -ALAER. Jr.. PETER. GRADY. Games Played Scrubs 6. Bingham 1 1 , at Mebanc. Scrubs 2 . Bingham o. at Raleigh. Baseball Schedule and Results Season 1904. March 14 April May 28 and M. C 19 and M. C 10 and M. C 3 and M. C 3 and M. C 4 and M. C 1 1 and M. C 3 and M. C o and M. C 9 and M. C 10 and M. C 11 and M. C s and M. C S and M. C 3 and M. C 5 and M. C 2 and M. C 4 and M. C 6 and M. C 13 and M. C 8 and M. C 2 and M. C 7 Graham o Bingham 4 Oak Ridge 6 Lafayette 6 University of Maryland 5 Syracuse University 12 Syracuse University 8 New York Americans 18 Universit3- of North Carolina 2 Wake Forest College 2 St. Albans i Wake Forest College 6 Randolph-Macon o University- of Virginia 11 Trinit - College 4 Trinity College 10 University of North Carolina, (seven innings) 7 Guilford College 9 Davidson College 3 St. Marv ' s 5 Guilford College 6 Wake Forest College 2 Line-up of Team, 1904. BROCKWELL, Catcher. McLAURIN, Pitcher. SHANNONHOUSE. Pitcher. SPRINGS. First Base. KNOX, W. G.. Second Base. ASBURY, S. W., Third Base. MILLER, Short Stop. HADLEY, Right Field. HARRIS, G., Center Field. HOWLE, E. B., Left Field. .SUBSTITUTES : SMITH, W. L., CHREITZBERG, and DRAKE i f ;ytich. m Track Athletics TRINITY AND A. M. C MEET. APRIL 30. 1904 Score: Trinity 29; A. M. C. 75 Dr. Joel WliiUiker Prof. Bragg Squire.s, (A. M. C.) 10! Burn.s, (A. M, C), 2:17 = Squires, (A. M. C). 24 Perrovv, (Trinitj ' ), 9 ' 10 OFFICIALS Prof. Wilson Dr. Mann 100 Yard Dash Half Mile Run 220 Yard Dash Pole Vault Prof. Durham Prof Webb Pitts, (Trinity), 20 120 Yard High Hurdles One Mile Run Culbreth, (A. M. C), 5:45 Seifert, (A. M. C), 31 ' loj Karrior, (A. M. C), 19 ' 4; Broad Jump Squires, (A. M. C), 272 Howie, (A. M. C), 57 Scarlett, (Trinitj ' ), 89 ' Miller, (A. M. C), 5 ' ! ' 440 Yard Run Hammer Throw High Jump One Mile Relay Farrior, (A. M. C.) Wonible, (Trinity) Howie, (A. M. C.) Hunt, (A. M. C.) Richardson, lA. M. C.) Tuttle, (A. M. C ) .Stein, (Trinity) Miller, (A. M. C.) Burns, (A. M. C.) Venable, (A. M. C) Watkins, (A. M. C.) Perrow, (Trinity) Trinity — Parker, Stein, Howard A. M. C. — Carroll, Farrior, Howie, Richardson li. 11. Hakpeb, MHiiairir iif 1905 Track Teaii L. i;. Hint, I ' apiaiii of i;i05 Track Team. mmcei f Junior Football Team With Kecord Made During Season 1904 . . ( )I)KX Centre Kii;lu ( nard M()()KMA. ) l K I. oft Cuard AHRICK Ri.ulu Tackle McLEXDC )X Left Tackle 1 K )( )Rr:. I K ' .-ln End L( ) 1U Left End 1 ' 1- .I ' 1 ' 1 .R (Juarler I ' .ack ETHI ' .RIDGE Lull Mack . S1 ' . ■R ■ Rinln Half Rack RR( )CK Left Half Rack TXST( )X. L. T Mana-er Substitutes — Hdd.i es (Capt.l. Ahernelhv, A. ' Iv, Tnttle. J. C, au lian. L. L. Score: — Juniors 5. Suplis. o; Juniors ( ' . Freshmen 5. Juniiirs won Class Chani])ionshi|) and the Cuj). Sophomore Football Team 1904 WHITE, D. L Centre K( )(h CE Ki-ht C.iiard WELLS Left (uiard F( )WLER l i lit Tackle PITTALW. W. C. Left Tackle GRLMES. J. C Ri-lit End JONES, W. W Lett I ' .nd STAPLES ( Captain ) (Juarirr WHITEHCRST Full I ' .ack B( )RDEX Riirht Half Hack HEMPHILL Left Half Back McXAIRV I HIXSHAW j S-MITH. R. H Mana.ijer Record Sophs, o — Juniors 5. Line-up and Record of Freshman Football Team For the Season 1904 I ' .SKklDC.l ' : Ia-U I ' .iicl C, k ADV Left Tackle I ' Ol ' F. Left Guard ASllCRAl ' T Ri-ht Cuanl PRICE UiRln Tackle POISSON Risht KikI PORTER Quarter I ' .ack GAYLORD Left i lalf Hack FARMER Ri.uln 1 lalf Hack MAJOR I ' ull r.ack Snhslitnles: — Walker, lUiri ess. 1 L ' alh. Sccire; — Juniors ' ); I ' resii. 5. Tennis Club L. T. WINSTON President E. N. PEGRAxM ' ice-President S. H. CLARKE Secretary and Treasurer W. N. HOLT Captain and Manager Members ALLEN, W. A. HUBAND. ABERNETHY, D. S. KIRKPATRICK, W. F. BELL, J. C. LIPSCOMB. BLACKBURN, L. A. MAXWELL, R. COUCH. MOORMAN. CLARDY, C. C. MOORE, L. CHREITZBERG, H. F. SMITH. E. E. DRAKE, J. S. UZZELL, R. P. ESCOTT, A. E. WALTERS. FERGUSON . WALKER, W. J HAMILTON, G. P. WILSON, F. Red and White Editor-in-Chief ARTHUR T. KEXVOX. Business Manager JOHN A. I ' ARK. Associate Editors R. i;. WILSON. n. v. Robertson. STERLING GRAYDON. R. C. LEHMAN.- T. J. OGBURN. V. J. WALKER. J. H. PEIRCE. The Red and White is the official organ of the Athletic Association uf the College, and is gotten out monthly -by the students to advance all athletic interests. — ms rifM. I, fncb _ Y. M. C. A. Officers H. M. LILLY President L. F. ABERXETH Y Xice-I ' resident S. O. PERKINS Secretary Ci. G. ALLEX Treasurer Committees Bible Study Coiinnlftcc — Mcmhcrshifi Committee — McCIRT. M. R. (Ch.) PERKIXS. S. O. ( Cli. i WILLI A.MS. j. H. FERCUSOX. J. F. PERKIXS. S. (). CARLTOX. L. T. BLLLUCK. J. V. MITCHELL. R. 11. fiiuiiice Coniinittee — ALLl-.X. C. C. iCh. I AllLRXl ' .TllY, L. F. CKL ' .MP. W . (). Dciotioiial Comiiilttee — Missioiuiry Cumiiiiflee — BAGLEY. O. L. ( Ch. ) C11F.S1;R( ). M. T l. (Cli.) KXOX. S. X. Ml )RR1S( X. j. ( ' ,. HEXLl ' .V. J. 11. COX, I). . . SCOTT, R. W. SPOO.X. J. P. On Reading a Book Tlie story o ' c-r. the Ixiok 1 lav aside, And watch the shadows creep. Over distant hill and meadow wide. From mountain top to valley deep Tired nature seems to gently sleep And peace doth now betiile. In fancy, in the gloom I see The friendly book- folk go. Hand in hand they turn from me Who learned to like them so. Into the dusk and walking slow They fade from memory. . hoii ■z ' oyoi c for old-time ' s sake. 1 call ; You leave, but still your teaching stay; How well I ' d like to kee]) you all, lUit you nuist go your different ways. Still, all the balance of my days Wnw lessons I ' ll recall. A. K. Leazar Literary Society Officers Fall Term ' 04 J. A. PARK President J. P. LO ILL ice-President C. V. HUBAXD Secretary O. C BAGLEY Treasurer L. F. CARLETt ). Censor Officers Winter Term ' 05 R. H. VILS( )X President G. P. ASHURY icc-President C. W. HEWLETT Secretary J. P. LO TLL Treasurer W. J. WALKER Censor Sergeant-at-Arms A. L. PASCHALL. May Entertainment Leazar Literary Society J Programme Deliatc. May. ii ' )4- W M. RICHARDSON. 04 [ ' resident H. M. IJLLV. 05 Secretary Query Resolved. That an industrial and commercial age is detrimental tn tile ])n duction of literature. Debaters .1:: riiiali-i e — Xei atiT-e — A. T. KMXVOX. 05. E. G. l ' ( )RTF.R. 05. R. 1 ' ,. W ILSOX. 05- J. A. PARK, 05. Judges Hon. 1;. R. L.VCV. Ri:v. R. F. r.L ' .MI ' AS. I ' kok. E. V. . l( )SliS. Marshals P. S. GRIERSUX. 04. Chief. J. D. SPIXKS. 05. ). 1.. i;agi.i-.v. 05. G. G. ALEEX. 06. I. G. . |( )RRE ( )X. ' 06. E. X. I ' l ' .GRA.M. 07. j. I.. j ' l-.RGrSi )X. 07. ' Winner of me lal. PuUen Literary Society Organized 1889 Officers 1904-1905 First Term W. G. FINCH, 05 President J. C. BEA ' ERS, 06 Vice-President L. L. ' AUGHAN, 06 ; Secretary A. C. JONES, 07 Treasurer D. W. ROBERTSON, 06 Critic C. C. OSBORNE, ' 07 Censor D. L. WHITE, ' 07 UilM-arian J. H. WILLIAMS, ' 06 Chaplain Second Term J. W. BULLOCK, 05 President J. E. MOORE, 06 ice-President A. C. JONES, ' 07 Secretary F. HARPER, ' 08 Treasurer L. R. TILLETT, 06 Critic J. C. MYRICK, 06 Censor H. W. KEUFFNER, 08 Librarian B. B. EVERETTE, ' 07 Cliaplain Fifteenth Annual Debate, May 6th, 1904 Programme E. C. BAGWELL. 04 President W. G. FLNTH, 05 Secretary Debate Subject: Rcsolc ' cd. That our civilization is endangered by the advance of the yellow races. Debaters AfKnuativc — C ' ahvc — L. L. AUGH.AX. 06. V. M. HAIGLER. ' 06. J. H. SQL ' IRES. 05. J. M. HOWARD. 05. Marshals J. A. MILLER. ' 04, Chief- R. C. LEHMAN, 05. C. C. CLARDY. 06. C. C. OSBORNE, 07. THOS. HARRIS. ' 07. Tenerian Literary Society MdTTo: [ ' .cycinil the- Alps lies Italy. Coi.ous : Purple and White. Officers 1904- ' 05 First Term r.. A. I ' ,R( )( )M I ' residint W. (). Ckr.Ml ' Nice- 1 ' resident j. r. l;l K Secretary j. 1 . Sri )()X Treasin-er I.. I ' . KOONCE Censor . ],. K. ( )TTS Serscant-at-. nns Second Term J. I. lll ' .KKITAGE I ' resi.lenl r-;. II. Til, 1,. MAX ice- 1 ' resident 1,. R. l ' ,ll,i;i ' :kT Secnlary j. I ' . Sl ' )( ) Trea.surer 11. I .. 1 1 A .M 1 i;r( )X Censor I. A. 1!( )()X1 ' , Scroeant-at-.Vnr.s May Entertainment, 1904 Debate W. W. RAXKIX President W. O. CRUM I ' Secretary Query Rcsohcd. That Xortli Carolina slioiilcl adopt a conipulsorv school attendance law. Debaters Aifir]nathc — Xcj atlrc — R. T. ALLEX. J. F. HAXSELMAX. R. H. TILLMAX. C. H. DURHAM. Marshals T. Kl.nKinC.E, Chief. H. L. HA.MlEToX. W 1.. KXoTTS. D. A. C( )X. I. I . Sl ' )OX. Loneliness The sun hangs low in the western sky, The day is slowly dyiniL;. (Jh, far from here my llKni hts do lly To where my lo e is lyinj . . i.L;ht comes on in stately tread. And cold the air is growing. A voice calls to me from the dead. And (Ml and on my thoughts ari ' going. Xight has passed away, and now ' tis morn. And hright the world is st-eming. Alone I wander, all forlorn, Saildened hy my dreaming. Sometime shall come the call lor me. And homeward I ' ll hi ' turning. . nd then in Heaven I sliall set ' ller for whom mv heart is earning. H- Tne Fraternities Ox THE pages following is given a list of tlie fraternity membership of the College. L ' ntil recent years fraternities were not allowed in the College, hut finally the Board of Trustees and the Faculty decided to allow them to come in. They are five in number, including an agricultural fraternity, and have about fifty members. The fraternities are hence not very strong numerically, but they come in for a large share of the honors of the College. The feeling between fraternity and non-fraternity men. is of the best good-will and friendship toward all. The College is democratic in principle, and while the fraternities are not, they have imbibed enough of the spirit of the College ti recognize their true stand. The fraternity often serves as an index to the stand a man has taken in college, but one should look for the work of the man and not for the badge he does or does not wear. The privilege to become a fraternity man does not come to every one, and is not accepted by all of those to whom it does come. So whether a man is in a fraternity or not throws no real meaning upon his true worth. The writer has known non-fraternity men who were in every way the superiors of many of the fraternity men about him. He has also known fraternity men vastly superior to others outside of fraternities. So there the case stands. The fraternity as a circle of brothers and for the advancement of congenial comradeship, is probably a success. Rut as far as picking out from the common lot, tlie men worth most to themselves and to the world at large, it is a failure. K — . BETA Ll ' SILON OF KAl ' l ' A SKiMA. Kappa Sigma Fraternity l- inj.if-.| III ihe riiJMi-iiy ..I Vii-;iiiia. Dt- ri-nil.i.r. iMiT. Beta Upsilon Chapter Fratres in Facultate Dr. C. V. I ' .urkett. j. C. Ken. kill. C. L. Mann. Dr. C. A. Walker. Fratres in Urbe Dr. T. X. Ivcy. O. Tolnian. H. E. Aorns. Duncan Faison. Robert Brown. Graduate Jarvis llcnjaniin Iiar lin,s;. Undergraduates Ci,. ss OK 1905. Fred. Watson Hadley. William .Miller Chambers. Edward C.riffith Porter. Jr. James Hicks Peirce. Geor},a ' Green Lynch. Cl. ss oi 1906. Lewis Ta l(ie Winston. William Sidne - TomlinsoTi. Thmnas .Mayo Lykes. James Allen llii K ' J ' ' - Ci.. ss 01 1907. James I ' ordcn Lynch. Henry Starbuck Montague. Allen Harralson I ' .orden. Philip William Hardie. Cl.. SS OF H)OS. Dorsey N ' ates Hainan. Paul Xathaniel I ' ittenger. Robert Calder Gantwell. jr. William .Vnders.ni .Mien. Kappa Sigma— Chapter Roll Psi — L ' nivcrsity of Alainc. AlpIui-RIw — liowdoin College. Bcta-Kal ' pa — Xew Hampshire Colle,y;e. Alpha-Lambda — L ' niversity of ' er- mont. Gamma-Delta — Massacliusetts State College. Beta- Alpha — Brown Uiiiversit)-. Alpha-Kappa — Cornell University. Pi — Swathmore College. Alpha-Delta — Pennsylvania State Col- lege. Alpha-Epsiloii — L ' niversity of Pennsyl- vania. Alpha-Phi — Bucknell University. Beta-Delta — Washington and Jeiiferson College. Beta-Iota — Lehigh University. Beta-Pi — Dickinson College. Alpha-Alpha — University of Maryland. Alpha-Eta — Colnmbian Universitv. Zeta — University of Virginia. Eta — Randolph-Macon College. ' Mh — Washington and Lee LIniversity. Xii — William and Mary College. Upsilon — Hampden-Sidney College. Beta-Beta — Richmond College. Delta — Davidson College. Eta-Prime — Trinity College. .llpha-Mii — l ' niversity of North Caro- lina. Bcta-Upsilon — North Carolina A. and AL College. .-J ' ia-.V!(— Wofiford College. Alpha-Beta — Mercer L ' niversity. Alpha-Tau — Georgia School of Tech- nology. Beta-Lamlnla — L ' niversity of Georgia. Beta — University of Alabama. Beta-Eta — Alabama Polytechnic Insti- tute. Thela — Cumberland L ' niversity. Kappa — ' anderl)ilt L ' niversity. Lambda — L ' niversity of Tennessee. ' ' ; — Southwestern Presbyterian L ' ni- versit) ' . Omci: a — L ' niversity of the vSouth. Alplia-Theta — Southwestern Baptist L ' niversity. Beta-Xii — Kentucky State College. .Ilpha-i ' psilon — Millsaps College. iiaiiima — Louisiana State L ' niversity. Sii iiia — Tulane LIniversity. lota — Southwestern L ' niversity. Tail — L ' niversity of Texas. . ' — L ' niversity of Kansas. .llpha-(Jmc! a — William Jewell College. Beta-Caiihina — Missouri State LIniver- sity. Bcta-Sigma — Washington L ' niversity. Beta-Chi — Missouri School of Mines. Alpha-Psi — University of Nebraska. Beta-Tail — Baker University. Beta-Omicron — LIniversity of Denver. lyeta-Omega — Colorado College. Camma-Gamma — Colorado School of Mines. .llpha-Sigma — ( )hio State University. Beta-Phi — Case School of Applied Science. Chi — Purdue University. Alpha-Phi— Wabash College. Beta-Thcta — University of Indiana. .-llplia-Gamma — University of Illinois. Alpha-Chi — Lake Forrest LIniversity. Gamma-Beta — LIniversity of Chicago. .Upha-Zeta — LIniversity of Michigan. Beta-EpsUon — L ' n,iversity of Wiscon sin. Beta-Mil — L ' niversity of Minnesota. Beta-Rho — L ' niversity of Iowa. Beta-Zcta — Leland Stanford, Jr., Uni- versity. Beta-Xi — L ' niversity of California. Beta-Psi — University of Washington. Gamiiia-Alplia — L ' niversit - of Oregon. Kappa Sigma Alumni Chapters Boston Danville Waco Washington. Norfolk. Atlanta. Yazoo City. Philadelphia. Pittsburif. . e v York. New Orleans. Chicago. Indianapolis. Lxnchburg. St. Louis. Pine Bluff. Ruston. Memphis. Buffalo. San Francisco. Denver. Louisville. Concord. Ithaca. Fort Smith. Los Angeles. Little Rock. Sigma Nu Fraternity Beta Tau Chapter Fratres in Urbe Dr. Joel Wliitakcr. T. .Murray Alkii. Mctor Boyden. p (; Lamb William 1!. Junes. Ei er Schaffcr. Dr. Win. Del;. .McXidcr. . lhert Latta. Waltt-r Clark, Jr. w. p M,,rs,,n. James -McKimmon. w jj Crow- Graduates C). M. C.anlncr. Undergraduates Ci,. ss (iK 1905. L. F. . lKMMuthy. J. D. S])inks. L. G. l.vkes. S. .M. ick-. Ci.. ss oi 1906. A. W. C.rc. Dry. r .j,] Tnll. Class oi ' 1907. F. M. Waikins. C. E. Latta. W. . . Hi)lt. J. L. Morsun. k. II. Smith. Ci.. ss oi 1908. Frank Wils.Mi. F. L. Heath. W. T. Lipsonnl). A. A. Heath. A. 1;. Tntilc. S. H. Wik ' v. Chapter Roll Pi — Lehigh L ' liiversity. Bcta-Sigma — University of ' eniioiit. Gaiiiiiia-Dclfa — Stevens Institute of Technology. Uainiiio-Epsiloii — LaFayctte College. Bcta-Rlw — University of Pennsylvania. Gainma-Thcta — Cornell University. Lambda — Washington and Lee L niver- sity. Sii ma — ' anderbilt L niversity. Psi — University of North Carolina. Beta-Tail — North Carolina A. and ] [. College. Gamma-Iota — State College of Ken- tucky. Mil — University of Georgia. Thcta — L ' niversity of Alabama. Iota — Howard College. Kappa — North Georgia Agricultural College. Eta — Mercer L niversity. A ' ( — Emory College. Bcta-TItcfa — Alabama Polytechnic In- stitute. Gaiiima-Alplia — Georgia School of Technology. Epsilon — Picthany College. Beta-Beta — De Pauw U niversity. Beta-Xu — Ohio State College. Beta-Zeta — Purdue University. Beta-Eta — University of Indiana. Gamma-Pi — L ' niversity of West Mr- ginia. Beta-Iota — Mt. Union College. Gamma-Lamihda — University of Wis- consin. Bcta-U psilon — Rose Polytechnic Insti- tute. Gamma-Gamma — Albion College. Gamma-Beta — Northwestern L ' niver- sity. Gamma-Mii — University of Illinois. Gamma-Nii — University of Michigan. Gamnia-Rho — University of Chicago. Dclta-Tlieta — Lombard LTniversity. Beta-Mil — State LTniversity of Iowa. Chi — Cornell College. Gamma-Tail — L ' niversity of Minnesota. A ' ;( — Kansas State LTniversity. Rlio — Missouri State University. Beta-Xi — William Jewell College. Gamma-Xi — Missoiu-i State School of Mines and Metallurgy. Gammi-Omicron — Washington Univer- sity. Upsilon — University of Texas. Phi — Louisiana State LTniversity. Beta-Phi — Tulane LTniversity. Gamnia-U psilon — LTniversity of Arkan- sas. Gamma-Eta — Colorado State School of Mines. Gamma-Kappa — L ' nivcrsity of Color- ado. Gamma-Chi — L ' nivcrsity of Washing- ton. Gamma-Zcta — L ' niversity of Oregon. Gamma-Phi — LTniversity of Montana. Beta-Chi — Leland Stanford, Jr., Univer- sity. Beta-Psi — Universitv of California. Alumni Chapters Alabama, l!irmiiiL;liani. Massachusetts, lioston. California, San I ' rancisco. .Missouri, Kansas Cit -, Colorailn. rnrhlii. Missouri, St. Louis. Colorado, Denver, X ' ew ' ( rk, Xeu nvk fit -, Georgia, Atlanta, .Xorlli Carolina. Cliarli tt(. ' . Illinois, Cliicago. X ' ortli Carolina, Salislmry. Indiana, Indianai)olis. ( )liio, Colnnihns, Iowa, Davenport. ( )lii(], Cleveland. Iowa, Dcs Moines. Texas, Dallas. Kentucky, Louisville. asliin,L;t(in, Seattle. Kentucky, Slu ' lhyville. W ' i.sconsin, .Milwaukee, Louisiana, Uaton Rinio-e. ALPHA-OMKGA OF KAPPA ALPHA Kappa Alpha Fraternity v ( Founde.! 1S65. ) Alpha Omega Chapte r ( liijlalluii 1903.) Frater in Facilitate V. C. Riddick. Fratres in Urbe M. A. Roystcr. E. C. Smith. J. S. Mann. L. M. Smith. W. ' ass. J. V. Perkins. G. M. Hunter. L. B. Newell. W. C. Tyrcf. R. C. Howison. S. F. Telfair. C. D. Harris. R. S. McGeachy Graduates T. M. Pickel. W. F. Kirk])atrick. G. W . Rogers. Undergraduates L. R. Hunt. R. H. Harper. S. D. Wall. L. M. Hoffman. Jr. J. D. Clarke. J. H. Ashe. C. W. Hodges. E. N. Pegram. J. C. Bell. B. B. Lattimore. J. M. Goodman. Kappa Alpha Chapter Roll .llplhi — Washington and Loo Univer- sity. iianuna — l niversitv of Georgia. £■ (;— Wofford College. Itf ' siloii — Emory College. Zcta — Randolph-Macon College. Eta — Richmond ColTege. Tlicta — Kentucky State College. Kappa — Mercer University. Lambda — University of Virginia. .Vh — Alabama Polytechnic Institute. Xi — Southwestern University. Omicron — University of Texas. Pi — University of Tennessee. Sigma — Davidson College. UpsUon — University of North Carolina. Phi — Southern University. Chi — Vanderbilt University. Psi — Tulane University. Omega — Central University of Ken- tucky. Alpha-Alpha — University of the South. Alpha-Beta — University of Alabama. .llpha-G amma — Louisiana State Uni- versity. Alpha-Dcita— M Jewell College. .llpha-Efsilon — South western F ' rcsby- terian University. Alpha-Zcta—Wmiam and Mary Col- lege. Alpha-Eta — Westminister College. Alpha-Thcta — Kentucky University. Alpha-Kappa — University of Missouri. Alpha- Lambda — Johns Hopkins Uni- versity. Alpha-Nn — The George Washington University. Alpha-Mu — Millsaps College. Alpha-Xi — University of California. Alpha-Omicron — University of Arkan- sas. Alpha-Pi — Leland Stanford, Jr., Uni- versity. Alpha-Rho — University of West Vir- ginia. Alpha-Sigma — Georgia School of Tech- nology. Alpha-Tan — Hampden-Sidney College. Alpha-Upsilon — University of Missis- sippi. Alpha-Phi— Trinity College. Alpha-Chi — Kentucky W esleyan Uni- versity. - (fl-Pji— Florida State College. Alpha-Omega — North Carolina A. and M. College. Beta-Alpha — Missouri School of Mines. Beta-Beta— Hcihany College. Beta-Gamma — College of Charleston. Beta-Delta — Georgetown College. Beta-Epsilon — Delaware College. Bcta-Zcta — University of Florida. Alumni Chapters of Kappa Alpha orf..lk, a. Kicliinond. a. Xcw ■lll■k City. Rak-ii;li. X. C. Macon, (ia. Lexintjlriii. Ky. Pcter.sl)!!!;.;. a. Talla(le_sTa. Ala. St. Louis. A[o. Alexandria, La. Jackson. Miss. .■ tlanta. Ga. Hampton. ' a. Chattanooga. Tenn. Montgomery. Ala. . iigiista. Ga. Staunton. ' a. Jacksonville, Fla. Shrevcport. La. Centreville, Miss. Ilattieshurg, Miss. Mobile. Ala. Dallas. Tex. Franklin. La. Kansas City. Mo. San Francisco. Cal. Baltimore. Mil. Little Rock. Ark. Anniston. . la. Joneshoro. . rk. Nashville. Tcnn. Selma. .Ma. Mem])his, Tenn. Knoxville. Tcnn. New ( )rleans. La. Houston. Tex. Griffin. Ga. ( )klalioma City, ( )kla. Washington. D. C. Boston. Mass. eJw t State Associations of Kappa Alpha .Missouri. Georgia. Kcntuckv. Arkansas .Alahama. North Carolina. Louisiana. ALPHA-EPf?ILON OF PI KAPPA ALPHA. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity ,4 K Alpha-Epsilon Chapter KMttljIl-ln-.l 111 N. I . A, ,V M. 1 oik ' f.-, IH(I4. Praters in Urbe Frankliu McXeill. Class of 1905. Dr. A. W. Knox J. A. Park. Cla.ss of 1906. R. 11. Wilson. D. W. Robertson. J. ( ' ,. llanlison. J. G. Morrison. W. . . Iluys. A. E. Escott. Class of 1907. L. T. Jones. Class of 1908. J. K. Wilson. A. S. Dalton. J. A. Powell. Si ' i;ci. i,. J. S. Drake. Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity Fmiiideil at the University of Virginia Miucli 1st, USS. CoU)KS : — Old Gold and Garnet. PUBI.ICAT10N ; — Shield and Diamond. Active Chapters Al[ ha — L ' niversity of Virginia, Charlottesville, ' a. Bctii — Davidson College, Davidson College, N. C. Camilla — William and Mary College, Williamsburg, ' a. Zeta — University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Eta — Tulane University, New Orleans, L,a. Thcta — Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn. Iota — Hampden Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va. Kappa — Kentucky University, Uexington, Ky. Mil — Presbyterian College, Clinton, S. C. Xti — Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C. Omicron — Richmond College, Richmond, ' a. Pi — Washington and Lee University, Lexington, ' a. Rho — Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn. Sigma — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Tail — L ' niversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. Upsilon — Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auljurn, Ala. Phi — Roanoke College, Salem, Va. Chi — University of the South, Seewanee, Tenn. Psi — Georgia Agricultural College, Dahlonega, Ga. Omega — Kentucky State College, Lexington, Ky. Alpha-Alpha — Trinity College, Durham, N. C. Alpha-Beta — Centenary College, Jackson, La. Alpha-Gamma — Louisiana State University. Baton Rouge, La. Alpha-Delta — Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Alpha-Bpsilon — North Carolina A. and M. College, Raleigh, X. C. Alpha-Zcta — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. Alpha-Eta — University of Florida, Lake City, Fla. Alpha-TIieta — University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W. ' a. Pi Kappa Alpha--Alumni Chapters mis Al[iha — Ricbmond. a. nus Beta — Memphis. Tcnn. nils Gamma — White Sulphur Sprins s. W. ' a. iiiis Delta — Charleston. S. C. mis Efsilon— ' SoTMk. a. mis Zcta — Dillon. S. C. mis Eta — Xew Orleans, La. mis Theta — Dallas. Texas. mis Iota — Knoxville. Tenn. mis Kappa — Charlottesville. ' a. mis Lambda — )pelika. Ala. MA! !SEY CHArXEK OF ALPHA ZKTA Alpha Zeta Fraternity Massey Chapter Fraters in Facultate Dr. C. W. P.urkctt. J. C. Kendall. C. K. McClelland. Undergraduates Ci.. ss (IF 1905. L. F. Ahernethy. j. W. I hillock. R. J. Avery. |. (). .Mors;an. R. W. Scott, Jr. Cl.. SS OK 1906. J. G. Hardison. H. S. Mcl.cndon. J. G. Morrison. Class oi 1907. B. U. Uvcrett. J. IJ. Ovcrlon. Cl.vss of 1908. E. (). McC.owan. I). R. Xclnis. Alpha Zeta--Chapler Roll Toii ' iiscnd — ( )liio State Universitv. Morrill — State College, Pennsylvania. Cornell — Cornell University. Kedzie — Micliiijan Agricultural College. Granite — Xew Hampshire .Vgricultnral College. Morrovj — University of Illinois. Xebraska — University of Nebraska. Massey — Agricultural and Mechanical College of Xorth Carolina. 1905 Junior Dramatic Club ■■ The .Muniinj After. by was preseiUed A])ril 2},. 11)04. Cast Artliiir Hiiniiniiigtui) Mr. Chas. W. Martin Joshua Gillibrand Mr. Chas. . . Seiteri Ralph ( )nieroc ' i Mr. 1 )scar L. I ' .aijlcv Dob.son .Mr. Williani M. Chambers Mrs. Gilh ' brand Mr. Walter H. Mcliitirc Mrs. Huinmingtop Mr. Stcrliiisj Graydon The Guttapercha Girl Mr. Chas. T. enable Daisie Maitland Mr. . rchie C. Wilkinson r.arbara Mr. John H. Sfjuires Officers ( ). L. HAGLEV President H. M. LILLY ice- President F. . HADLE Secretary and Treasurer . . F. i;( ) EX Director Members C. W. Martin. S. Graydon. C. T. enable. (). L. Barley. W ni. .M. Chambers. H. .M. Lilly. A. C. Wilkinson. F. W . Hadley. J. H. Sqmres. W. L. Smith. C. A. Seitert. Honorary Members i ' rof. . . F. I ' .roxvn. .Miss .Mary . ndre vs. -Miss Helen Smedes. .Miss .Mariraret Harris. The Dramatic Club Tlic Good Xaturud Man. In Dr. ( .(■Idsniitli. w a. ' i)rcsfiitcd Easter Mdiiday night, 1904. Cast Sir illiani llnncywood .Mr. jnnins Sidney Cates J loneywoiu ' i .Mr. Waller Lee Uarden Croaker Mr. (). Max Gardener J. ' irvis .Mr. Cha.s. V. .Martin Leontine .Mr. Cleveland Douglass Weleh I ' ' iitler Mr. Kay M. Huntley Lofty .Mr. W ' ni. Sidney Tonilinson Dubardieu .Mr. Eugene Culbretli liailiff Mr. LeRoy Abernetliy Elannigan Mr. Lewis Winston Servant . lr. James A. Higgs, Jr. I ' assboy .Mr. Edward G. Porter, jr. Mrs. Croaker Miss Margaret Harris Miss Richland Miss Gertrude Sanborne C ' livia Miss Claire Stainback Garnet Miss Helen Smedes Landlady Miss Pattie Carroll Officers C. D. WELCH President C. W. L RTL ice-President E. E. CI LBRETH Secretarv and Treasurer 1)K. CIIAS W. l. lll ' KKETT . ' Director Members Iv 1 ,. Culbretli. C. W. .Martin. Harding. W. D. Darden. B. F. Huggin.s. H. M. Hunter. C. D. Welch. L. T. Winston. L. I- ' , . henietbv. (). M. Gardener. J. S. Gates. R. . lluntlev. ' E. G. Porter, Jr. W . S. Tondinscm. Jas. A. Higg.s. Jr. Honorary Members Dr. C. W. Ilnrkett. .Miss Grrlrude Sanhorne. .Mi;s .Margaret ! larr ' .s. .Mis I Iflcn Snu-iK- .Miss Claire Staiid)aek. .Miss I ' attie Carmll. The Night : : The shroud of night hath falltn now; In sober folds .t ilrapes the mow. While spectral forms in silence glide. To tombs of rest where Death doth bide. The living sleep, the dead awake. And prowl about as ghost or shape. ( )h. night! ( )h. solemn night so weird. Thy head o ' er all the earth is rear ' d. .And ' neath thy sable gown ' s sad folds ' 1 he rolling seas, the hills and w(jlds In darkness deep are sleejiing now. A gentle breeze the trees doth bow. And through the woods is heard a moan. .• heavy sigh, almost a groan. In myster - deep and darkness cold Thou doth my dreary thoughts enfold. And lost in thy protect ng care, I dream of peace and visions fair. So let the night its shadows cast. For in their path is rest at last. R- GLR H j-au ' Thalerian German Club Officers First ' Icnii. L. R. HUNT rresidcnt. I. H. PEIRCK ico-Presi.lcnt. E. M. WATKIXS SecrctaiN . I.. T. WIXSTOX Treasurer. R. H. HARPER Censor. L. G. LYKES Leader. Srcmul Term. ( ' .. LVKICS President. II. HARPER ice- President. .M H )RE Secretary. T. W I XST( )X Treasurer. Tl 1,1 Censor. T. W IXSTOX Leader. ' third Term. II. HARPER President. TL ' LL ice-l ' resident. MOORE Secretary. T. V IXSTOX Treasurer. n. CLARKE Censor. T. V IXSTOX Leader. Members Ashe. I. G. Hadlev, F. W. McClelland, Prof . llen. W. A. Hunt. L. R. Moore, L. Hell. J. C. Harper. R. H. Peirce, J. H. Hragrg:. Prof. Hoffman. L. M.. Tr Porter, E. G. Jr. Borden, A. Hardie. P. W. Pegram, E. X. Clarke, L I). Holt, V. X. PiUent;er, P. Clianiljers. W. .M. Harris, G. Roherts, Prof. Cantwell, R, C. Kendall, Prof. Suttle. . . P.. Car|)enter. O. P . Ken von, . . T. Tull. R. Darden, V. L. Kirkjjatriek, W. I . Tomlinxm, W. : Goodman. I. M. Lvkes. T. r. Wilson, !• . Gravdon, S. Lvkes, L. G. atkins, Iv M. (jregorx. . . W. Lii)scomh, W. T. Walton, C. .M. Haskell, Prof. Mann. Prof. McCall, Prof. ' inston, L. T. Electrical Engineering Society Officers W. J. WALKlvR President C. W . HEWLliTT Xicc-PiesidiMU R. S. t ' .R.W P ' S Secretary and Treasurer R. H. TIM, MAX Liln-arian Honorary Members Professor Paine. Pn l ' essiir Ada ms. Members I ' .ivens, J. n. llenipliill, |. P. P.ryan, C. J. Hewlett. C. W. Carlton. L. F. Hunt. 1,. R. Carter, R. IP J..nes. W. W. Chambers, ' . M. Moorman. W. P . Clardy, C. C. .Myrick. J. C. Couch. L. F. Shu ford. j. ( ). Escott, A. E. Stack. E.P.. Ewart, J. n. Stancil. C. 1 ' .. Feri uson. J. h ' . Tillman, R. IP Fero-uson. w. G. Tuttle, J. C. Fowler. F,. ' . alaer, P. Groves. R. S. iele. S. .M. PPimilton. H. L. Walker. W. j. Whitehurst. C. P. Winston-Salem Club Ci i.dRS: I ' .iiK-rald and Wliitt-. Ki.iiw i;i : Miss Annie Sloan. MiiTTo: I ' rcparc tor lnsi)(. ' Ctlon. Yell Wall! Wlio! Wall! Who an- wc? Tvn ]ilus two — A. M. C. ' riiis naut;ht-fivi what ' s oin- lul]? Of course — W ' inston-SalLin C ' lnli. Officers W. J. WALKI ' .U President PETER N ' ALAICR ice-President C. F. HIXSIIAW Secretary J. M. ( ,()( )1).M AX Treasurer H. S. Ml )XTA( .rE His|..rian Members r.lacklnirn, 1,. A.. oS. Munia.mie, II. S., 07. Chreitzberj;. If. Iv. ' 05. Miller, I ' . T.. 07. Dalton, . . S., ' 08. alaer. I ' anl. ' 07. C.ood.nan. j. M.. 08. alaer. Trier, ' o(,. Unhand. W. C oO. Walker, W. |.. ' (K. Ilinsli.iw, C. I ' ., ' 07. y. ' AV. J. I .. oS. Glee Club Officers l ' N(ii ' . ' . W. r)RA( ' ' .( I President and Manager Vhuv. C. K. MlCLELLAXI) Director X. E. liELL Librarian J. F. HAXSELMAX Treasurer T. I. )( ' ,! ' . I RX cconipanist Voices First Tenors — McClelland. Clardv. Carleton, Hcnlcv and Staley. Second Tenors — Escott, Lovill. Hewlitt. ( ' ainey and Fowler. First Itasses — l!rai;ij. Summev. . shin-v and Maxwell. Second llasses — I ' air.e. L ' ell. Eill -. Ilanselman and Xornian. The Virginians i;alu vi . f. o. iil ' rackkk, r. chesbr ). .m. ii. GRA ES. R. S. HAXSELMAX. J. F. MASSIE. M. P. ML ' RRY. G. P. POYXER. T. M. S.MITH. C. M. STE ' ART, C. E. AUGHX. L. L. Senior Civils A. T. Keiiyon. H. M. Lilly. J. H. Koonce. S. X. Knox. E. G. Porter. G. W. Rogers. K. 1,. I ' .lack. Rcid Tull. S. II. Clarke. W. . . lUiys. J. A. Hijjgs. J. P. Lovill. D. M. Clark. W. S. Tomlinson. L. L. Jordan. D. S. Abernethv. Junior Civils J. R. Smith. J. I. Herritage. A. C. Wilkinson. J. D. Spinks. L. A. Murr. J. B. Harding. W. F. Brock. J. E. Moore. B. B. Egerton. W. VV. Baker. Lacy Moore. T. M. Lykes. A. B. Piver. R. Ma.xwcll. G. P. Asburv. Ye Artist Club Members CRA ' IM ). . STICRIJXC. II ADI.l ' .N ' , I ' kl ' .l). W TS( i. lAWII, I A.Ml ' .S l ' .( )R1)| ' . I ' ARK. |( )ll. A. Cli C ' h Ch Cli Ch Ch Cli CI) The Skillet Club MdTTo: Whatever it is. fry it. Yell Cock — a — doodle — de — doodle — do. We eat chicken. What do you? Coi.CRS: IJrown lei horn, white plynnHith-rock and turkey red. lUisines.s hdur.s. i i ;i3 ]).ni. to 4:1 i a.m. ef Cook S vi]X ' the C.oo.se ' IIadle - ef Kleptomaniac Pinch the Shoat C.ra -don ef Carver .Steal the l- ' ai le I ' eirce ef Fowler Hook the Guinea Harper ef Dish-washer i ' iag; the Alligator Lykes ef Forager Crlh the Rooster Lynch ef ' intagcr Siphon out the Milk Chreitzberg ef Provider of the Staff of Life Break into the Cookerv Wall Rural Science Club Officers M. R. McClkT President A. A. I ' ASCHALl ice- President T. I ' , PARKIER Recording Secretary 1 . I . h.AT( ). ' Corresponding Secretary Members A-hcraft. W. I . Furi;ers..n. P. H. Mcl.endon, II. S. Allison, L. .. (kiiney. T. L. Al.ir-an. J. ( ). Avery. R. J. Canlner, ( ). . 1. Morrison, J. G. lieavers. J. C. C.ilison, J. X. Nivrn, C. I ' . P)Oone. J. A, Sixion. j. I ' . Xiven. P. A. P.rooks, J. P. Smith, T. 11. ( )(kn, 1.. . 1. i ' .ullock, J. W. Steele. II. S. ( )verton, J. K. Chesbro. M. H. Swan, H. S. Parker. T. 11. Clement. H. AI. Talton. F. J. Pascliall. A. 1,. Cox, D. A. Harde.sty. C. C. Poindexter. P. II. Cromartie. A. D. Hardison. j. Ci. Price. . L. Deal. C. W . Herrino-. L. j. Sctl. R. W. i ' .arie. . I. L. Jenkins. W. I ,. ' niiopen. R. D. Katon. J. T. Jones. .K. C. Tnrlinf.ion. J. I .. Etlirid e. W. C. Kelly. W. I .. Winslea.l, I,. I ). I ' lverett, K. I ' ,. lApc, .M. P. W ' hhv. D. I,. I ' oster, S. W. .McCanlman, P. I Izzell. K. P. McCirt. M. R. The Biological Club Aheniclliv, L. F. Aslicratt. ' W. P. Avery. K. J. lieavers. T- C. r.ullock, j. W. ClK-shro. M. H. Ckincnt. K. M. Cox, I). A. Crciiiiartic. A. D. Kate Ml. J. T. Everett, B. B. Foster. S. W. r.avlonl. W. F. Cilisnn. I L. Members Merring, L. J. Hester, ' T. T. Isley. F:. W. Kirkpatrick, W. F. Koonce, L. F. Lipe. M. P. McCnrt, M. R. .McFcndon. H. S. Men- an. J. O. M.in-isnn, [. G. Xiven, L. a. Xivcn. C. F. ( )den. L. M. Overton. J. E. Parker. T. F. Paschall, A. L. Poindexter, P. H. Price. W. L. Roberts. L. E. Scott. R. W. Spoon. J. P. Stanton, D. M. Talton, F. J. Turlington. T. E. Uzzell. R. R ' arren. W. C. ' hite, D. L. insti n. L. T. Mecklenburg Club •« . Motto: Always win. Soxg: I got mine. Coi.oKs: Red and lUack. Rexdkzvous : Anywliere you can lock the door. Yell A-A-A-A-. HC )-( )-( i-i ). OLD MECKLEXBURG. Officers KNOX. STARR XEELY o:; IVc.Mdent WATT. WALTER W. 05 ice- President WILKLXSOX. ARCHIE C. os Historian ESC( )TT. ALBERT E. 06 . . ; Secretary HA.MILTOX. GEORGE P. 06 Treasurer Members Ashcraft, W. T.. 08. Bason, G. F.. 08. Reddoes. H.. 08. Caldwell. G. H.. 08. Jetton. F. P.. 08. Knox, W. G.. ' 06. Kirkpatrick, W. F.. 03. Lii)e, M. P.. 06. Williams. I. C. 08. Xewell, D. ' W., 08. Saddler. F. M.. ' 07. Trotter, W. M.. 08. Walters. J. P.. 08. Williams. T. D.. 08. (Hi; NKXT sTrnv. The Gambler LLHKiiY walked slowly from the post-office to his room, entered and sat down upon a large divan before an open window that looked out ui)on the campus. He pulled a letter from his pocket and glanced at it carelessly and then at a check that fluttered from tlie letter to the floor. He picked u]) the check and glanced at the tigures on it, figures that in the light of existing conditions seemed pitiably small. And as he looked he realized that the end of his rope had at last been reached. For months past he had been living beyond his means, for months past his debts had been piling up one by one, and now his last appeal to his father for aid had been met with a stern refusal. . ik1 this was the Spring of his Senior year. He had kept his name bright and clean for nearlv four vears, and here at the last it stood in sore danger of becoming tarnished. He turned from the letter and looked out across the canijius. The breath of Springtime was upon everything, and all nature seemed bursting into bloom. There was no help for it, he thought, he must leave college and go to work, clear up his debts and save his good name. Little pleasure there would be in graduation if any one standing around could sneer at the large amounts of monev he owed. There would be some disgrace about leaving abruptlx ' , but i)etter that than to stay on and helplessly face the situation. Then a thought trashed over his mind, there was one way in w-hich he might make good his financial short-comings. A poker game. He had always been lucky at that, z ' er lucky, and to be sure chance would not desert him now. He who stood in such need of aid. And, as if in answer to his thoughts, Flint strolled into the room. Flint was the college gambler. A clever fellow at heart and very enter- taining, and also a mSn who would gamble on anything. ( )n football, on baseball, on the weather even, but most especially on cards. Hello. Lubrey, said Flint, genially. What you looking so glum about? Didn ' t flunk on class to-day, did you ? ' No, not on class, said Lubrey, ruefull ; still 1 must say that 1 have failed on some of my calculations. Ah, T see. .said Flint: finances. Now Lubrey cordially disliked Flint, ;nid a girl was at llie hmtoin of it all. U ' hile home during his Xmas vacation, this iiarlicular girl frientl of Lubrey ' s had talked Flint so much and often that Lubrey had finally asked her impatiently one day if he shouldn ' t go get Flint, who was only a few hundred miles away, for her. She had not taken this chaff g(Ki(l-naturedly at all, and a quarrel was the resuU of his sarcasm. So he regarded Flint with an unfriendly eye, for the college gambler took very well with tin- fair sex. and he might. if opportunity presented itself, prove a dangerous rival for Lubrey. But for the present all of this feeling was overlooked. Before him stood the man who might serve as a stepping-stone to his staying on in college. ■• How about a poker game to-night? said Lubrey, with feigned indifference. Flint looked up from a picture (of the girl) hung on Lubrey ' s wall, a picture that he had been regarding intently, and said, A what? •• A poker game to-night, Lubrey repeated. A game from eleven until morning. A twenty-five-fifty game. •■ . nd you said finances, said Flint, wonderingly ; but alright, just as vou sav. You and I and Billy — how does that suit you ? Splendidly. I will be over at your room at eleven sharp, Lubre - said ?.s Flint passed from the room. So on the result of a poker game hung the future of Lubrey ' s college career. If the cards would come across the table to him in that friendly way of old in l)airs and threes and fours, all would be well. But if they turned their faces Irom him, defeat alone remained. But inaction was deadly, if he did nothing he was defeated anyway, so better to invoke the aid of the goddess of chance who smiles upon the favored few of the world ' s denizens. Late that night Lubrey ' s face wore a pleasant smile. Luck had favored him, and Wilson ' s and Flint ' s money had come to him in a steady stream across the table. At last Wilson dropped out, and with a muttered Good-night, fellows, fight it out, clinibed into bed. Lubrex- and Flint faced each other across the table. Lubrey was over a hundred dollars ahead, but Flint with his usual steady nerve was still in the game. ■■ Let ' s put some time limit on this game, said Lubrey eagerlx-, fearful lest if the plav lasted too long Flint might recoup his losses. ' • All right, said Flint, we stop when the college clock strikes three — how does that suit you. Exactly, was Lubrey ' s answer, and the play went on. At length Flint decided to make a final eiifort. Lubrey dealt the cards, and as he dealt Flint felt that the time to strike had come. He glanced at his hand, a pair of kings. Xot a phenomenal starter, he reflected, but called out I open. All right, Lubrey murmured cheerfully. How many? Flint took three cards and looked at them hopefully ; yes. the time to strike had come. The dealer took one card and asked Flint to start the ball rolling. Flint bet cautiously, and Lubrey raised. The betting grew fiercer, and chip after chip was pushed upon the table. At last Flint ' s nerve deserted him, and I call you, he said to Lubrey. Lubrey dropped four queens on the cloth before him. Ah ! a good hand, was Flint ' s answer. But he put down four kings with one hand and raked in the large pot with the other. Lubrey smiled ; after all it was the fortune of war and he was still way ahead, and timt was nearly up. Xot long after four kings came to Lubrey on the deal, and he determined if possible to make good his recent loss. He opened, and Flint stayed and drew three cards. The betting began again in earnest, and Lubrey. confident of success, put dollar after dollar into the pot. At last with but a few chips left. :)n ti R ' 1 t ' lVC- -ll- lirtv train. (1 I ' l iiil hy! ,,1.1 !.,. , ' mi ' w -c. IIK 1 Ik ■ 1 iaii l c l him a ri ,11 of : . 11 .■■ Ik- s: aid. ■• llu- .i; aiiK ' was Ill will. Ihr n. , ' k1 hvu, ; :lii.1 .U c)(l lit- callcil. l ' liiit |)ul lour ac(.-.s (l(, vii and ijlanci-il at l,iil)rL- . i.ul)ri- looked up, defeated, ruined, his college career cut off at the last, he still could smile. He rose and went to the window and gazed out into the night. The college clock chimed three in ringing tones that seemed to startle the soft stillness of the night. Time was up in more w-ays than one, he reflected bitterly. With iikhkv left to carry him to some place of work, he was going to begin hfe over again. Flint sitting there behind him and counting the little heaps of chips, was the winiK-r, ] ' lint had often won from him in tlu ' (,ld days, and now had taken his last Cent. And perhaps Flint would win the girl — perhaps. lliit here In- shruggt-d his shoulders — it was the f(,rltiin- (,f war. all could iii,t lie winiuTS .-it the game, l.uhrey turned from the wiiulow ti, the il(, ,r and lu ' ld mit his hand to Flint, Good-bye, old man, he said. Good-bye? said Flint, (iuestii,niiigly. N ' es, Fiibrey answered, ' I leave college Why its not as bad as that, is it? sa welcome to all vour inone ' back if that ' s tin- c;i bills. Hut Lubrey pushed them back gently. . i fair, you won, I lost — good-bye. Flint took the outheld hand and said, luck to you always. The door closed anil Lubrey passed nut iiiti, the night. Flint switched off the light and sat for a long time after he was j , ,iu gazing iiitn lln ' i;li,(,ni. ].vubrey he knew was in a hole, but he had not hiiaginrd it to be as Ijad as this. And he felt badly for having won his friend ' s last few dollars, Jlnl .-ifler reflection and thinking of the girl, he thought it for the best after all. With Lubrey removed from the field he would have a chance to win. And thai Lubrey had by his actions effected this removal Flint never doubled for a mniiKiit. Years passed away after the night of that iiK-morable poker game, h ' liiit. lucky at cards, lost at love, however, and Lubrey wmi the woman. In Lnbrey ' s memory that fatal poker game still rankled, and he often thought what siiKx-rt ' pleasure it would be to bring Flint low. Lubrey jirospered on the NWsUiii wheatfields of his home, grew rich, and as his momy came to him a ],lan pnsenieil itself whereby he might make a name and fortu ne f,ir himself. And to c;iiry out this jjlan he rentt ' d out his farm and moved l(, Chicago. And line lie fi,iind Flint in his glory, a bn,ker in the Sloek l ' ' , eli;mge, and I, ill, rex ' s plan gaiiie,! a d(,iil)le interest. Lubrey reached his home at last, went sl(,wl iiiti, his eleganth furnisheil sitting-room and flung himself into a chair, lie re;H-lied for an electric button and rang im])atiently for a servant. . t last the man came fr(,iii soiiu ' reniole p,irt of the house, his clumsy feet clattering along the liardwo.nl lloors. . linmdy and .soda, James, and waste ik, time about it, saiil l.ubrey irritably. With a muttered Ves, sir. the servant lunu ' il .-md went slow K awa . The time w;is late afteriKjon and the brilliant snnlighl touched i1k- crimson hangings of the room with gold. The glass doors of a massive book-case flashed the light about the room, lessening the heavy effect of its luxuriousness. Lubrey glanced about him wearily, and wondered why the servant was not quicker with the drink. x nd as he sat waiting his mind went back over the past. The day had been a long and terrible one, and the wear and tear of those strenuous hours of the market were fast telling upon him. Five years had elapsed since lie had come to the city, fresh from the wheat-fields of the West, and had cast his lot with the speculators of the street. A scheme born in his busy brain ears before had resolved itself into his one ambition. An ambition that led lum on and on in his financially successful career in stock dealings. When he finally felt himself in a position to put his plans in working order, he chose a few of his friends and laid the scheme before them. To a man they laughed at him, and Flint, his old rival, led in the opposition. Disappointed but not defeated, lie set to work again to carry out the scheme. And as he worked, he swore that the first one to be caught in the toils of his plan should be Flint, who had laughed and jeered at its possibility. A year or two passed, and then the idea was perfected, and he stood at the head of a pool formed to corner that most gigantic market in the world, the wheat market. The street lavighed in the ■ Pool ' s face at first, but as time went on its grip began to be felt. Higher and higher the market climbed, and day after day Lubrey ' s fortune grew. The price of wheat went up point by point, and his daily mail was flooded with letters from the farmers of the West hailing him as the miracle worker, one who had put wealth within the easy reach of them all. But the corner had a different and dismal side. Bread was going up in price rapidly, and the poor of not only the city, but the world at large, were feeling the effects of the raise. .Vnd as the pool grew more successful the future of these people grew darker. But Lubrey was jubilant. The corner was almost effected. In a short while he would unload his shares of the stock and retire from the field a millionaire many times over. His one ambition gratified and Flint probably wrecked financially. . nd then the unexpected happened and the reaction set in. Lubrey was called out of the city by the death of his brother, and immediately upon his leaving, the opposing forces, headed by Flint, began to batter down his corner. The market swayed for a day, and then grew steady. In answer to an urgent telegram from one of his partners, Lubrey left his brother ' s house before the funeral had even taken place and hurried over the ribbon-like miles of steel back to the street. But he was too late. The market grew unsteady, hung in the balance for a moment, and then toppled. The corner was broken one day too soon. The street had anticipated him and he was caught in his own trap, buried as it were, under bushels of the wheat he had been forcing up. The pool deserted him, unloaded on him, and he had to bear the brunt alone. Till the last fatal hours Lubrey fought against the inevitable, but the bottom had dropped out of wheat and with it he had fallen, utterly broken and ruined. But even his enemies could not fail to admire the splendid nerve of the man, who after seeing a large fortune swept away, strolled over to his suite of office rooms, dismissed the clerks and calmly locked the doo rs. Then strolled past the angry crowd about the office, indifferently, unconcerned, a cigar in his mouth and a smile, almost a sneer, upon his face. Unthroned and downtrodden, he was the hero of the street still. He passed Flint, who sneered at him and said. The fortunes of war — eh? Yes, d — n you. l.ubrey rejoined cihjIIv, but 1 will break you yet. you and your crowd. Be careful. said Flint, meaningly ; there are other things to lose besides money. Perhaps you will not be able to reckon your greatest loss in dollars and cents. The words had a sinister sound, and Lubrey hurried away. What could Flint have meant? What other loss coukl he have been referring to? Going ;o a phone, he ordered a carriage and drove home. . t last the servant came with the whiskey, and Lubrey mi.xing his drink swallowed it eagerly . Where is Mrs. Lubrey? he asked. I don ' t know, sir, the servant responded. but she left a note for me to give you when you came. A note ! that ' s strange, thought Lubrey as he reached for it. Broken and Iragged in the dust, he had come home for comfort, and his welcome was a note ! He read it over, and then again, hoping that he had made some terrible mistake in the ending. But the words stared at him from the written page, words that the years to come could never blot out of his memory. The life- beats of the city pulsated about his windows, but he heard no noise. Down there in the street the wheat storm was still raging, but he. the cause of it, had forgotten that long ago. The little note that meant so much seemed to gaze at him reproachfully. She wrote every word o f it. she whom he had almost forgotten since he began to dabble in wheat. Out of the stillness that seemed to benumb his brain, the echoes of Flint ' s words came to him, and in the moment he understood. It was Flint once more. He rose from his chair unsteadily as a man might do in a dream. He walked over to a cabinet, took a pistol from its recesses and slipped it into his pocket. And still walking softly, he climbed the flight of stairs that led to his room. . s he reached the landing he turned aside, and as he did so he gazed at his wife ' s room across the hall. She had gone from it her last time, he thought. He would never see her any more, she had left his world and now he, too, was leaving. To-morrow the house would be sold ; he hoped vag iely that his creditors woidd be partly repaid. How long he stood in this manner he did not know, but finally the door swung open and his wife dressed in a traveling suit stood before him. You! he cried, his voice broken with emotion, you haven ' t gone? The woman surveyed him coldly. This man had starved her soul of his love and companionship for years. For years his one thought had been wheat, wheat, wheat. But when she asked for bread a stone had been given. . nd yet her woman ' s heart went out in pity to him. because he looked so worn and broken. No, she answered, gently, not yet. But why have you come home at this time of day? she asked. Margaret, he said, listen a moment. I am ruined. I have lost every tiollar that I possess in the world. The corner in wheat fell through. Those cowards in the pool betrayed me, sold me to enrich themselves. I came home to find you, to get your sympathy and consolation, and I am handed this note . I am ruined, ruined, broken in money and in spirit and sick at heart — still 1 love you. The woman looked at him wonderingly. Years had passed since he had uttered words of love. Her mind went to the time of his boyish college days. A time when broken in spirit and leaving college under a cloud he had come to her for sympathy. And the words, I love you, had been an open sesame to her treasure-house of love. -And now it was the same thing over again on a larger scale. She thought that he had forgotten her existence, but he still loved her. She went to the head of the stairs and called softly to her maid : ■■ Jane, when the carriage comes, pay the driver and dismiss him, and then she turned to her husband, her eyes fast filling with tears. Dear, she said, tenderly, it is good to hear you say those last three words, but can you ever forgive me now ? Can you ever do anything but hate me for what I ' ve tried to do? Forgive you? he said, and his voice failed h.m. why, dear, I love you best in the world. Its all my fault. I ' ve been wrapped up in this wretched wheat and I ' ve taken too much for granted. I have loved you all my life. You are dearer to me than anything else on earth. I ' m to blame. I ' ve treated you badly, and now I ' ve lost every dollar of our money — to-morrow everything must go to my creditors. ■■ I ' m almost glad, the woman said, coming to him and putting her hands in his. ' ■ I ' m tired of Chicago. I long for the old life. The vast, waving wheat-fields. The pure, free air, and you whom I love, beside me. Can ' t we go back to it and begin over again ? Yes, Lubrey said gladly, taking her into his arms. Yes, we will forget all of this, all of it. The house can go. to-morrow we will go back to the dear old days. I forgive you, who needs not to be forgiven, and you forgive me who has sinned much. I have lost much to-day, but I still have you and am content. They turned to the window hand in hand and faced the city. The sun was setting behind the ragged Chicago sky-line. The clamor of the city floated to them, an indistinct murmur. To-morrow the new life was to begin, the close city was to be given in exchange for the bold, open country. Lubrey drew the woman to him and kissed her ; the brilliant afterglow of the sunset flooded the autumn sky and cast crimson shadows across the hall. Dear, dearest, he murmured, his face close to hers. And they stood there together in the twilight as the mantle of darkness fell soothingly about the tired shoulders of the citv. Kenvon. Thigpen to Capt. Phelps, on day of inauguration : Captain, are we going to drill down town in overcoats ? Captain Phelps- No, I guess not. White, S. R. (standing to one side), In city, I ' m going to wear mine. ' ' Captain P.— Well, that won ' t make any difference, we don ' t let yon drill down town with gentlemen, anyway. White— I know you don ' t, but I ' m going down with you. Captain P— No you are not, I ' m particular as to whom I associate with. White— But you see I ' m not. Tubly Kno.x enters room. Ewart throws up his hands to show they are not in his pocket. ,«t ..«t Question — Where is Harding? Answer (in chorus)— At the library, of course. Why did the visitor find signs of Spring in Harding ' s manner ? A Trip to Hell Vumi-r Hanj;s. a frraduate of the A. ami M. C ' ollesre of North Carolina, havinir notliiii}: hetter to ' lo aivepts the invit-.uion of his frieml Mephi.sto. wlioui lie hail known in his follefie days, ami visits him in his iloniain in the unknown. -Vfter talkin r over oM times, he is introilueeil to I ' rince Henry, who nmlertakes to show him .some of the sight ' s of hell. On his trip he sees many stransie sights ami timls old friends in a had way. I ' rince Henry shows him the former St?ward of the institution, who is compelled to eat the mess-hall provender he prepared for the students. Horrible fate I lie is next sliowu the ooniniuiilant ol ' eailet-;. who is doomeil to serve eternal solit.uy eon- tiiienieiit. Tlie I ' lofessor of Kiiglish is compelle;! to listen to his own jokes The pioiVssor who hail cliartre of the heating ' jjlaiit is pluceil on cold storage on one of liis jwn ladiator;,. Finally they liml the I ' l-esideiit, who is idiMuiu-d to weai- a tiLrhl-littiuLr and nni-dMilnita- ble uniform on all occasions. TH : FALL OF THE MANTLE OF KLLIAIL II Kings. 2fha|)ter II. 13. U. And it came to pass as they still went on and talked that hehold and Elijah went up by a whirlwind into heaven. And he (Elisha) took up also the mantle of I ' ilijah that I ' ell from hini. and went haek, and stood by the banks of the Jordan. And he took the mantle of Elijali that fell fidiu liim. and smote the waters, and said. Where is the Lord God of Elijah? T?uL,« Cornes+o C oU Here is shown ye great and distinguished president exaniinini; ye candidate for aihnission to ye college. He asks him where is China, and for answer ye yokel pointeth his tluunh in ye direction of ye aforesaid place. Ye president seeth that ye can.lidate knoweth all things because of this brief and true answer, and straightway hath his name entered upon ye rolls of ve aforesaid institution. The A. and M. Art Gallery r.enr- -i lew clioTf selei ' ti.ins. .lepictin : ve Ihiillinj: an.l fxnting life of ye A. and M. College .tu.lei.t . Als., a feu select ones .lepietin- .■luuaeteiisties of people not A. and M. students. Exiiimr One. Here we see ye luave ' laiUiat? havint; emerged into the ipen, doing business for himself. Notice his pleased expre.s- KxLiiiur Twn. Here is shown ye discipline of ye college, which be- ing chased from iiillar to jiost and post to jiillar, is linally driven to the wall. Verily a proper jilace for .such contamination. To ■ ,£ Wad A Man of Note. KXUIIUT Tl[KKK. Here is ye man of note. This is affectionately dedicated to Kill Wilkinson by liis loving creditors. li Ki U iski I ' oitrayinj; ye collf te liUiiidry ai fiit joyfully cullectiiif; ye week ' s washing:. l (ilicat(il to ye Chemistry I ' rofessor, known as I ' horney. The thinj; in ye cradle is the |iiece of machinery that kept ye main Iniililing awake ' o nights last fall. Exhibit Six. Dedicated to ve Poker Club. eMTno. )-LU 7n ' truy . Exhibit Seven. A work of art fharafteristie of ye .stirrin r times during ye Senior trouble 1904, A. Ii. E.xmniT Eight. IVMIIIIIT NiNK. A Mam with a 5TEf N AppEAf AMCt Here is shcnvn ye trreat chieftain, known as • ' olil i ' hel]is. ' Ye man with ye stein apiiearanee anil likewise ye wielder of ye l i}r stiek. Exninir Tkn Here i.s ye ]?oarilinfr I e|«artment Trust making ye luckless stiulent cou h up for ye hoard. Ye student shown hath already jiaid full lioard for all the time before ye student ever enteretl folle re, liut ye trust promoter, known as Skinner, is not satisKeil with ye amount and seeketh liy ye i;entle art of persuasion to add to ye Uoanlinir ] epart- menfs 1-unds. T - MT |a, TriiiTajj, Tacifrv , tiiC Bo i Art n iN r .h)na Ye Ijujrle call haviuji soundetl ye ' • Kail In ye hoys |ire- jiare to take ye war-path. Ye hoys won ' t he home until ye morning. Pointed Paragraphs • ' The greenest of the green. — Fresh. Class. Who said there was any graft in the Boarding Department ? •■ Well versed in books but shallow in himself — Smith, J. R. Wh} ' did Kenyon go in the pool one night and brag that he could swim a mile? A suitable motto for some people. If you can ' t be fresh be as fresh as you can be. Eskridge — Oh, Kenyon ! Kenyon — Hush, Willie, my foot ' s asleep. Professor Dick — One-horse power is 33.000 foot pounds. Judge Ewart-- Does that hold good for a mule ? Professor — Mr. Lynch, what are the properties of alcohol ? Lynch, J. B. — It has a verj pleasant smell and tastes all right. Prof. Riddick (on mechanics) — Mr. Asbury, what is your weight ? Asbury — W. Fresh at hospital ! want some medicine. What kind. ' I think I need a purgatory. Ogburn — Gentlemen, would you like to join the V. M. C. A. ? First Doc. — Yes, my name is . Second Doc. — No, I reckon not. First Doc. — D n you, why don ' t you join ? First Junior. — I see Uncle Bryant (the colored servant) has been promoted from chief trash hauler to the mess-hall. Second Junior. — Yes. they chloroformed his old mule the other day, and his affection for the beast was so strong that Bryant was allowed to follow him. Break, break, break, On thy cold gray stones, O sea, But, break as much as 3 ' ou want to. You ' ll never be as busted as me. —Kid Wilkinson. Some Recent Fiction Issued by the A. M. Publishing Company- Frenzied Finance .... by Montague. The Man Witho jt a Country . . by Mclntire. Love Letters of a Liar .... by Robertson. An Old Sweetheart of Mine . . . . by G. G. Lynch. The Simple Life ..... by Stack. The Strenuous Life . . . . -by Harding. The Call of the Wild .... by Herritage. The Masquerader ...... by Lilly. Lucille by Dalton. Pilgrim ' s Progress ..... by Tubby Kno.x. The Castaway by Captain Phelps. Little Stories of Courtship .... by Dick Lykes. Far From the Maddening Girls . . . by J. Rhodes Smith. Sentimental Tommy by Ogburn The One Woman by Wilson. The Chatterbox by Poisson. Black Beauty by p-reshman Class. Ships That Pass in the Night . -by Sophomore Class. The Crossing by Junior Class. The Crisis bj ' Senior Class. Men of Mark Chambers, William Miller t ' ;ist his liist look (if luithdiity U|ion a won- ilering puhlic one chilly iiioining in 1.S77. He is e.specially noted for his line military bear- ing ami his steady nerves; the latter having been proven upon several occasions, the most striking of which was probably a cer- tain dress parade, when he maintained his beautiful pose despite the fact that his best girl was sticking pins in his padded should- ers. Kenyon, Arthur Templeton . Made his delmt upon earth witli an ap]iro- priate remark for the occasion. At the early age of two years he gave evidence of his lit- erary talent l)y tearing to pieces the family Bible, but he soon discovered that it is less painful to construct literature than to des- troy it, hence his many impositions upon a [latient and long-suffering public — for in- stance, Bright sayings of mine. ' Twas he, instead of Omar, who .said, a book of verse, a jug of wine, and thou, but he is still looking for the thou, who shall make for him the wilderness a paradise. Knox, Starr Neeley Shocked the good people of Pineville by his unseemly behaviour when only a few minutes old. He insisted upon crawling un- der the cover to avoid inspection, saying explanatorily : O mother, I am so ashamed with no clothes on, and all these people around. He still continues excessively modest. Indoubtedly he is a living proof of the proverb, — Train a child up in the way he should go and when he is old he will not depart from it. Finch, Walter Goss At an early age developed an enormous appetite, to the great alarm and impoverish- ment of his parents. Now at the earlv age of twenty-two he is the fattest man ' ami biggest eater in college. He is the only man who has ever got more than his money ' s worth from the mes.s-hall. Estimated avoir- dupois, 320 pounds. Wilkinson, Archie Carraway Came to light in the dark of the moon and eon.se [uently has never grown very much. hence his appellation of Kid. He has been very unhappy in all of his numerous love affairs, having so far failed to find one who is willing to start a kindergarten. In- tends to be a civil engineer if he ever gets tall enough to look through a transit without having to stand on a box. Mclntire, Walter Hoge Was liorn when .Mars was in the ascen- lency, which accounts for his warlike spirit. Butted into prominence at the A. and M. by endeavoring to ]]nrcliase a corporal ' s |josi- tion. He is a recognized authoritv on mili- tary tactics, having, at the reipiest of the Army Tactitian Board, furnished the inter- pretations for the new edition of infantry reg- ulations. Is also an authority on all ques- tions of social eticpiette. Smith, Jonathan Rhodes A little man luindic.i|)ped with a big name. When only six months old he greativ sur- prised his parents by proving to theiii that a circle may be s(|uared at infinity. Mathe- matics has since been his favorite amuse- ment. He conscientiously believes he is real smart. At present he is engaged in at- tempting to prove mathematically that suc- cess is dependent upon the personal equa- tion. Peirce, James Hicks Droppeil rlown from heaven one lovely morning in June, and has been dropping away ever since. His chief interest is in col- leL ' e politics, while his principal amusement consists in empty arguments. Though he came from Warsaw, the town couldn ' t help it. lie has the distinction of beinir the onlv man in college who can dissipate all the time and still kee|i his babyish appearance. Stack, Erwin Blakeney Was born during a violent thunder-storm with the result that his tongue now moves with lightning-like rapidity. Has only re- cently come into the public eye, but is now faniiius as the man who talks faster, says less, and spends less money than any one else. Principal occupation is looking wise, and being otherwi.se. Viele, Sylvester Murray Was accidentally left out in the rain when very youni; and his hair rusted. Started his lirst rongh-honse by throwing his milk-liot- tle at the nm-.se. Now throws his boots at unsuspecting Kreshmen. His chief fad is stenography. He is a dear, innocent little thing despite the fact that he poses as a bold, bad man from the wild and woolv West. S te I) Have You Ever Wondered Why Tubulars always excel for light niiiinng, clean skimming, perfection of cream, few repairs, small consumption of oil and great durability ? Here is the reason: Tubulars are the only cream separators that conform — in all respects — to science and mechanics. THE IS NOTHING HIT AND MISS ABOUT DAIRY TUBULARS-EVERT PART AND ARRANGEMENT HAS A REASON. SIT IF Yor I,IKE The supply can is set waist low to fill easily. The howl is Ions ami slender to obtain greatest centrifagal force with least speed. The liowl is simple ami liu ' lit to be easy to handle and wash. The bowl is hnn;: helow its lieaiing to avoid top heaviness. The bowl is hunfr from a ball bearing to reduce friction. The liuttoni feed ami toji delivery are used to increase capacity and reduce power. A disclun ' . ' e very elose to the eenter uf mtation is iisud to make smooth cream. Whdlly cm-liised L ' ears insure perfect safety and freedom from dirt .Viitdiiiatii ' diliuL ' gives perfect lubrication with little attention and no loss of oil. Only perfect construction gives perfect sati.sfactioii. If you want perfect satisfaction insist on getting perfect construction. As we have beeu making separators over twenty years, we ought to know what we are talkingabout— and we say we l)elieve a Tubular w ill give at least twice the .satisfaction you can get out of any other separator. Write for oui hand- some lltOo catalog. THe Sharpies Separator Co., WEST CHESTER, PA. Toronto, Can. Chicago, 111. HINTS = HINTON NOW IS THE TIME TO PLACE YOUR ORDER FOR THAT NEW SUIT The range of Woolens we are showing for this season selections is very great and very attractive — for you may exercise your fancy in looking over the Largest Tailoring Line displayed in the State. If you make a selection from our line it will be made up Promptly, Satisfactorily and in the Style j ' ou wish. B03S give nie a call. A. C. HINTON FINE TAILORING Office, Trust Building Raleigh, North Carolina WHITIN, KITSON AND WOONSOCKET COTTON MILL MACHINERY We havefurnislicd Plans. Specificatioxs and Engineering Work for over one hundred cotton mills in the South. Having furnished Machinery and Complete Equipments for nearly all of these mills, and for many de- signed by other engineers, our large experience enables ns to insure the very best results. A large majority of southern mills use some of our machinery, many use it exclusively. KiTsoN Improved Picking Machinery. WoONSocKRT Roving Machinery, with their Patented Improvements. WiiiriN Cards, Drawings, Railways, Combers, Silver and Ribbon Lap Machines. Spinning, Twisters, Spoolers, Reels, Looms, QnilJers. M1SCELLANE0U.S Equipment: Winding, Slashing and Warpi- g Machinery; ( loth Rfiom and Finishing Machinery; Nappers, Dye House Machinery, Power Plants, Steam, Water and Electric, Fire Prot ;ction, Electric Lighting, Humidifying Apparatus, Healing and Ventilating Apparatus, Shafting, Pulleys and Hangers, Belting and Supplies. Complete Equipments for Cotton Mills Plans and Specifications for Cotton Mills STUART W. CRAMER Engineer and Contractor MAIN OFFICE: BRANCH Of FICE: South Tryon St., CHARLOTTE, N. C. Equitable BIdg., ATLANTA, GA. First- Class Tailoring AT MODERATE PRICES A Full Line of Woolens Always Ready to Show Furnishing ' Goods, Hats Shoes, Underwear runks. Bag ' s Etc. A LARGE STOCK POPULAR PRICES Quaker City Uniform Co. PHILADELPHIA, PA. HEADQUARTERS FOR High-Grade Uniforms For Military Schools And all their Equipment, such as Swords, Belts, Caps, Chevrons, Badges, Banners, Etc. Regalias for Secret Societies Also Uniforms for Police, Fire, Mail Carriers, Motormen and Conductors FIRST-CLASS WORK MODERATE PRICES WHITING BROS. SOLE AGENTS FOR RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA WRITE FOR SAMPLES AND J ' RICES 24S J. H. KING, President Capital, $30,000.00 ALTON HULBERT, Vice-President M9? INCORPORATED RALEIGH, N. C. AND CHARLOTTE, N. C. A personal investigation will convince anyone that Kind ' s are absolutely the best equipped and the most Kuccesslnl colleges of Business, Shorthand, T i ' E VKiTiNO, Pknmanshh and Enhi.ish in Noiili Carolina, regardless of any clalriiB any ramipetlliir nniy make. We (|iiallfv and place more students in posilions tball all oilier schnols in the Stale. SlronK tiiiauihil bnclini ' ;. Uekkhk.nck: Any leading liusliiess eonccrn In llalelKli or Chiirloilc. Kor Ciilal.igiic. address J. H. KING, President, Raleigh, N. C. HEINZ 57 Preserves, Apple Butter, Baked Beans, Pure Cider Vinegar ABOVE AKt KOUR OF THE 57. WE WILL MAIL YOU ELILL LIST IE Vi.U WILL ADDRESS US AT OUK BALTIMORE BRANCH H. J. HEINZ CO. BATTALION ATTENTION! A EEW WORDS EROM Alfred Williams Ci Co. BOOKSELLERS AND STATIONERS You will always liml at mir store, or at College Agency, the best selected and best quality of Stationery to be had, and the price of our Text Books as low as they can be had anywhere. Your Patronage Solicited. Our personal attention to jour orders Agents for Eastman ' s Kodak and Supplies ALFRED WILLIAMS CO. RALEIGH, N. C. JOSEPH G. BROWN, President HEISIRY E. LITCHFORD, Cashi THE CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK OF Ri LEIGH, N. C. Capital _ _ _ $100,000.00 Surplus - - - 100,000.00 Circulation - - 100,000.00 Assets - - - 1,200,000.00 ALL CLASSES OF BUSINESS HANDLED WITH UTMOST CARE Safe-Deposit Boxes for Storage of Valuable Papers, Jeicelry, Etc., for Rent at $4.00 per annum CORRESPONDENCE AND PERSONAL CALLS INVITED TM05. M. BRIGQ5 50N5 RALEIGH, N. C. HARDWARE SAFETY RAZORS RAZOR STRAPS PAINTS OIL GLASS STOVES and CUTLERY Best Goods Lowest Prices Square Dealings GIERSCH S CAFE 216 FAYETTEVILLE STREET Private Dining and Banquet Rooms PRICES MODERATE CUISINE EXCELLENT R. E. LEWIS Cigar and News Stand Opposite Post-Office RALEIGH. N. C. FRATERNITY PINS For nearly llt ' ty years we have heeii iiianui ' aetiiriiii; FUATKKXITY lunbleiiis of all ilescriptionsand the ]iins worn liy your Father ami (irandfather are as good to-day as wlien they left our KsTAULISlIMKNT Designs and Estimates Arv rimil lif.l on n|.|,lic,Ui..n II ml wcirk Is expniitcil by llic must skilful Artisans Cold and Silver Our stuck 111 ' Jewelry and Silverware is the largest in the (State and prices to suit every purse H. MAHLER ' S SONS ESTABLISHED 1858 MAKh;KS and SELLERS of JEWELRY RALEIGH. N. C. BOYLAN. rEARCE C0. Z06-Z08 FAYETTEUILLE ST.. RALEICH. N.C. A riKiiiiiriiiii.Y rr-To-DATK sTiiiK iMii; riiK LADIES ONLY. ( ' ar|iets and Hangings Fuilirdideries and Faces Millinery and Fani-y Coiids Ihcss ( ; Is and Tiininiings Tailiii-Madc.- uits and Waists .M M I. ( )i;iii:i;s Sni.ni ri:ii si ' lMMi STOCK Foi; I ' .MC, NOW i;i; iiv FANCY AND 5TAPLE QROCERIE5 FRUITS, VEGETABLES AND COUNTRY PRODUCE Thi; Best of 1{vervtiiin ' g of its kind at ROCK BOTTOM PRICES Ve rftke I.UkmiiI HiM ' tniiif. on nil (lriU-i I ' lom Schools and Colleges D. T. JOHNSON SON 16 E. HARGETT ST , RALEIGH, N. C. Keuifel Esser Co., ' ' . Yo t. DRAWING MATERIALS. SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS. Paragon Drawing Instruments are the Standard! luslniments are used at most colleges. Everything reijuired for Drawing. We are the largest and the leading hou.se in our line All goods warranted. Catalogue (.500 pages) sent Free. Highest Award, tJrand Prize, St. Louis Exposition. Candies, Toys, China Pictures Frames Calumet Tea and Coffee Company Mirrors Pencils Tablets fe Writing Paper Toilet Soap All oP these and manij more useful tilings to be had at THEJ.D.RIGGANCO. ' S r.l AND So FRANKLIN STREET 132 FAYETTEVILLE ST. CHICAGO The Charlottesville Woolen Mills CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. WERE AWARDED BY THE LOUISIANA PURCHASE EXPOSITION A GOLD MEDAL FOR THE BEST AND ONLY ENTIRE EXHIBIT OF UNIFORM CLOTHS CONSISTING OF Cadet Gray, Dark and Sky Blue Meltons, Doeskins and Kerseys THESE GOODS ARE USED FOR THE UNIFORMING THE CADETS OF THE NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE AND MECHANIC ARTSj . j . MECHANICS AND INVESTORS UNION RALEIGH, N. C. Chartered May. 1893 AN INVESTMENT AND LOAN COMPANY A MONTHLY DEPOSIT SAVINGS INSTITUTION LOANS MADE lO AID IN BUILDING HOMES JOHN C. DHEWKY. President B. S. JERMAN, Treasurer GEORGE ALLEN, Secretary, Raleigh, N. C. ALLEN ' S FORTY LESSONS DOUBLE ENTRY BOOKKEEPING EIGHTH EDITION OVER 7,000 COPIES HAVE BEEN SOLD Teachers and Business Men say that it is Clear, Correct and Practical Price $1 .00, Set Blanks 40 cents Sent Postpaid on Receipt of Price GEORGE ALLEN, Raleigh, N. C. ALIZARINE COLORS ANILINE COLORS H. A. METZ , CO, 122 HUDSON STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. branches: branches: Philadelphia, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Boston, Mass. Chicago, III. Providence, R. . Newark, N. J. Charlotte, N. C. Montreal, Canada Atlanta, Ga. Toronto, Canada Hamburg, Germany INDIGO MLB CHEMICALS SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY SHORT TiME TO ALL POINTS NORTH, SOUTH, EAST, WEST THROUGH TRAINS BETWEEN PRINCIPAL CITIES New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Richmond, Norfolk, Raleigh, Wilmington, Charlotte, Atlanta, Columbia, Savannah, Jacksonville, Tampa, St. Augustine, Macon, Montgomery, New Orleans TICKETS SOLD TO ALL POINTS PULLMAN BUFFET SLEEPING CARS AND VESTIBULE DAY COACHES ON ALL TRAINS FASTEST SCHEDULE TRAINS NEW YORK TO FLORIDA For Rates, Time-Tables and General Information. Address Any Agent of this Company or H. A. MORSON, C. P and T. A. C. H. GATTIS. T. P. A. RALEIGH. N. C. T O PROFESSORS, STUDENTS AND PATRONS OF THE CROSS LINEHAN  ' X A O A XT NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE OF AGRICULTURE =CvjMrAN Y AND MECHANIC AR.TS WE RESPECTFULLY REQUEST YOU TO CALL AND SEE OUR IMMENSE STOCK OF FURNITURE AND CLOTHIERS AND FURNISHERS HOUSEFURNISHINGS WE WILL DO THE REST Royall Borden Furniture Co. COKNEK VlI.MINGT(JS ANIi (lAEOErX STS. RALEIGH, N. C. 234 AND 236 FAYETTEVILLE STREET NEW TUCKER BUILDING RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA Saco and Pettee Machine Shops NEWTON UPPER FALLS, MASS. COTTON MACHINERY Pickers Roving Spinning Spoolers Cards Drawing Reels Works at Biddeford, Maine, Newton Upper Falls, Mass. Southern Office: Charlotte, N. C. A. H. WASHBURN. Southern Agent CHARLOTTE STEAM LAUNDRY T. C. P O W E L L OLDEST, LARGEST, BEST COAL DYEING AND CLEANING WOOD SHINGLES AND LATHS CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA JOLL Y WYNNE JE WELR Y CO. WATCHES, JEWELRY, OPTICAL GOODS Class Pins and Rings First-Class Repairing at Moderate Prices 128 FAYETTEVILLE STREET RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA FUANACE BARS. J. H. GILL Manufacturer Agricultural Implements and Architectural Castings It.Vl.I.Uill. N. ( ' . (olton Planters. IMows. I ' low « a- tiiiL ' s. Amlirons. Sash Weit ' lils. Door sills. Oil; I ' ilusters. Urate liars. Fire ;ratfs fur Dwellings. All Kimlsor ( ott.iii Mill onstriiction C astint-s. Perry Rosenthal NOTHING BUT SHOES Sole Agents for Nettleton ' s Shoes TRUST BUILDING RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA OAK C I T V L A U N 13 R V FAYETTEVILLE ST. Men ' s Work A SPECIALTY DOMESTIC FINISH ONLY ODEN AND McLINDON ROOM 1 WATAUGA AGENTS IF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN THE PURCHASE OF A GOOD Piano, Organ, Guitar Sheet Music, Violin, Mandolin, Banjo, Instruction Books, IN FACT EVERYTHING MUSICAL, YOU WILL FIND IT HERE, AND THE VERY BEST TOO, tT LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT = = WITH QUALITY === It Will Pay You to Get Our Terms and Prices on Pianos and Orerans Before Placingr Your Order Elsewhere Darnell Thomas RALEIGH, N. C. T. W. BLAKE Jeivelry and Fine Watches CUT GLASS AND NOVELTIES 117 FAYETTEVILLE ST. T. L. DARNELL PHOTOGRAPHER Very Best Work Moderate Prices SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Your Patronage Solicited J051 Fayetteville Street, „• RALEIGH, N. C- A. H. PETTING MANUFACTURER OF Greek Letter Fraternity Jewelry TEMPORARY LOCATION: 213 N. LIBERTY STREET. BALTIMORE, MD. .Meinoianduni j acka-re sent to any fraternity nieiiilier throui:h the sei-retary of the eha|iter Special Designs and Estimates Furnished on Class Pins, Rings, Medals for Athletic Meets and Etc. EIMER AMEND ESTABLISHED 1851 204-211 THIRD AVENUE, CORNER 18TH STREET, NEW YORK IMPORTERS AND MANUFACTURERS OF C. p. CHEMICALS AND REAGENTS, CHEMICAL, PHYSICAL AND SCIENTIFIC APPARATUS ASSAY GOODS WE HAXDLE THE BEST OF EVEKVTHIXG . EEDED FOR A LABORATORY fi - ' 1 !!! t?nfiii y 93ji nmu OUR SHOP BUILDING The D. fl. TOIVIPKINS CO. t Manufacturers Engineers and Contractors MACHINE SHOP and ROLLER COVERING SHOP CHARLOTTE. N. C. To make your annual a good one, you must look to tlie illustrations. Your engravings must lie the best. There is as trreat a varia- tion in the quality of engravings as in any othercniunin.lity. aii.l the lUlST is not necessarily the highest in cost. BARNES-CROSBY QUALITY IS THE BEST. lOur work is used by the most critical buyers of eii ' MaviuL ' throughout the country. It is shown in this, and many other current annuals. We are well exuerienced in College Work, probably handlini; more than any other concern in the country. To learn more of the advantages we have to oft ' er, it is only necessary to ask us for prices and give us a general idea of the amount of work that you expect to have. Our booklets and beautiful samples will not fail to interest you and we wi ' gladly give you information and suggestions. Address our nearest house. BARNES-CROSBY COMPANY ENGRAVERS S W. S JOHNS KENSEY JOHN ' ;, JR. SALES AGENTS W. C. ATWATER CO. •W. C A •• POCAHONTAS COAL JOHNS BROTHERS COAL Main Office and Wharf Atlantic City NORFOLK, VIRGINIA BOTH PHONES SCHOOL PRINTING OUR BUSINESS IS PRINTING AND BINDING OF ANY KIND IF YOU HA VE AN ORDER LET US HAVE IT IF YOU DESIRE FIRST-CLASS W WORK EXECUTED QUICK AT REASONABLE PRICES!! EDWARDS BROUGHTON, RALEIGH, N. C. HAVE YOUR PICTURES MADE BY Wharton RALEIGH ' S HIGH-CLASS PHOTOGRAPHER STUDIO: 119 ' . FAYETTEVILLE ST. i m . ■ ■a t? V■f ■- ' ■• -%. ' -. f. r -; ■;■ L . ' ■ - ' ;■- .J-


Suggestions in the North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) collection:

North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

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North Carolina State University - Agromeck Yearbook (Raleigh, NC) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

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