University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN)

 - Class of 1903

Page 1 of 256

 

University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1903 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 256 of the 1903 volume:

1y I L ,i m. h 1 M 27673' 5H1?! WWWIWM 1!er '7 I H We Voluntear The Students association OF THEi,,W:: UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE J Vol. VII. 1903 Euglp-Etwtmr: Wimw ,. ' ' mu. . W Tum mumme W 'HmRLL' M w-lwll'w WWL IN: E: In ;1-2 rLI71Jl' thXty- Fronft'spt'ece Treface Wedt'caft'on ?oard of cTrasfees In Wemoriam of E. f. Sanford Board of Editors Facalfy oqlumnt' oqssociafion Tennessee Classes College Life in Limericks Liferary ?Debafz'ng Societies Inspiraft'on Frafernt'tt'es Song of tbe Frafs. The Secret of 77m Star The Cause of Sighs athletics cUarst'ly Club Voyage of Good Ship Tennessee Wilitary Spring-cl'z'me Clubs Dreaming a4t EcoenCtt'de Yells Statistics Grinds M Preface a HERE comes to every student, days when he dreams dreams and enjoys life. And it has been our task to portray a part of that life wherein the dreamings are more enchanting, and the enjoyments more pleasing-a year at College. But fate has so decreed it, in human affairs, that nothing can be done without meeting with obstructions and discouragements. These we have met with in the publication of this volume. But they are over and the work is finished ; and thanking and acknowledging our indebtedness to those who have assisted US, we give to you the best work we are capable of giving, having for its highest aim, that in after years when College experiences are but faintly visioned in memory, you may look these pages over and have again made vivid the days of 1903. $ 7;. 1711916 we deIQOjE, MD? A Q! m1 6 R, 'f , a Cm 21 W 12233313? 'gtgogfigeg? chn 5Tfer2a05 01y; arc slope 11515 1b p Izlgol dream of b a wblk WC look jeffibe logf a lover $769151de 01A hen quwnnq row Q0 01 901 651' OF Clad unawarg k boar; Slipped hay. 7 Be with us 1bgn, expel A5 WQ go I , abackjlbc lepq roadmmlq 1.37 milQ, , HCI'Q erT 1b: foxes we. id now; Cbmme every Tear 1'0 SWQQ 3 51min. $641 Bear 111:6 niumzarmq verges chm; C one w 1C1, 0:01 o Iona a 00 03111 cogzahke some 1351111?de 13m. 5 Fibee we dcdmbfk oar 1366K; M 614 nollndy BOARD OF TRUSTEES LEGAL TITLE: TRUSTEES OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TENNESSEE. His Excellency, the Governor of Tennessee . . The Secretary of State . The Superintendent of Public Instruction . . T. F. P. ALLISON, Nashville JOHN M. BOYD, Knoxville HARRIS BROWN, Gallatin JOSHUA W. CALDWELL, Knoxville HU L. CRAIGHEAD, Nashville CHALMERS DEADERICK, Knoxville WILLIAM C. DISMUKES, Gallatin Z. W. EWING, Pulaski JAMES B. FRAZIER, Chattanooga JAMES W. GAUT, Knoxville JAMES M. GREER, Memphis THOMAS E. HARWOOD. Trenton J. B. KILLEBREW, Nashville HUGH G. KYLE, Rogersville SAMUEL B LUTTRELL, Knoxville . Ex-Qiicio . Ex-Ojicio . Ex-Qz7i6i0 JAMES MAYNARD, Knoxville SAMUEL MCKINNEY, Knoxville HU L. MCCLUNG, Knoxville THOMAS R. MYERS, Shelbyville J AMES PARK, Knoxville JAMES D. PORTER, Nashville WILLIAM RULE, Knoxville EDWARD J. SANFORD, Knoxville EDWARD T. SANFORD, Knoxville FRANK A. R. SCOTT, Knoxville OLIVER P. TEMPLE, Knoxville SPENCER F. THOMAS, Brownsville MARYE B. TREZEVANT, Memphis XENOPHON WHEELER, Chattanooga MOSES WHITE. Knoxville. OFFICERS OF THE BOARD CHARLES W. DABNEY . JAMES MAYNARD . JAMES W. GAUT . . . .President . .Treasurer . Secretary IN MEMORIAM-E. J. SANFORD. Copy of a minule adopted by the Baam' of Trustees aftlze University on October 29, 1902. uThe Board of Trustees of the University of Tennessee, de- siring to make appropriate and deserved record of the many vir- tues and of the strong and admirable qualities of E. JJ Sanford, and more especially of his services to the University of Tennes- see and to the cause of education in this state, declares: ttFirst, That for thirty-two years he was one of the most active, most in iiuential and most valuable members of this Board, having been for all that time, the earnest and capable friend of the University, and the efficient promoter of every movement in its behalf. Morally and mentally he was conspicuously a strong man, always zealous arid persevering in any work to which he put his hand, and fortunately the University was among the ob- jects to which he was most devoted. ttSecond, That to Mr. Sanford more than to any one else be- longs the credit of securing for this institution the appropriation by the state of Tennessee of the fund provided by the federal government for the support of an agricultural and mechanical college in this state. It is proper to say that he was the leader in this important matter, and that without his aid the University probably would not have received the appropriation, which has been, and continues to be the chief source of its prosperity and usefulness. It is therefore right that the records of this institu- tion should contain an explicit and adequate acknowledgment of our great indebtedness to Mr. Sanford in this respect. tlThird, That Mr. Sanford was the constant, active and lib- eral friend and supporter of education. He served as president of the Board of Education of Knoxville, was a member of the Board of Trustees of the East Tennessee Female Institute, and a member, and at one time president of the Board of Trustees of the Lawson-McGhee Library, and it is to be remembered that he was unfailingly active in working for all these educational insti- tutions, while his attention was constantly demanded by the most varied and the most important affairs of business. This Board, therefore, is justified in declaring him a model of good citizenship in that he united to an exceptional activity and com- petency in affairs, this constant and praiseworthy devotion to public concerns, and especially to the all-important work of education. HFourth, That he gave constantly and generously to all works and institutions of public charity, and was a man of great private benevolence. Fifth, That he possessed the esteem and good will of the members of this Board, and that by his conduct as a trustee of the University, he deserves to be most kindly and honorably re- membered by us. 'tTherefore, leaving to his business associates and to the many organizations with which he was connected the honorable duty of recording his abilities and success as a man of affairs, and of paying proper tribute to his high character as merchant, as railroad president and as financier. Resolved, That in the death of E. J. Sanford this Board of Trustees loses one of its most influential, most valuable and most esteemed members, and the University one of its most faithful and efficient supporters, whose services to it cannot be too highly commended. ttThat the friends of education in this community and state mourn his death and proclaim him worthy of all honor for the good work he has done, nThat we tender to his surviving- family our sincere sympathy. HThat this memorial be recorded upon a separate page of the minute books of this Board ; that a copy of it be furnished the family of Mr. Sanford, and that it be printed in the public jour- nals of this city. A E L J. W. C LDW L , J. W. GAUT, C. DEADERICK, tAdoptedJ Committee. ii E. d. SANFORD BOARD OfEDITons WILLIAM A. COPELAND Editor-in-Chief 3 3 THOMAS H. ALLEN Business Manager 3 ? CLIFFORD J. FULLER 5.x xi 3 5s . I .szx sx x Ax I Assistant Business Manager 3 3 Art Editor HARRY R. RYDER ? ? Academic Editors from Senior Class. R. L. BAYLOR, H. H. HAMPTON Editors from Junior Class. R, A. MCCARTY, BERNA E. SCHMITT Editor from Sophmore Class. JENNIE BURGNO Editor from Freshman ClaSS. W. H. SMITH 3? Law Editor from Senior Class. W. J. DONALDSON Editor from Junior Class. R. A. ELKINS Chi Delta Philomathesian L. L. HEISKELL J. C. DENTON Barbara Blount McKinney Club VERNA CASTEEL C. M. SEYMOUR Ar: CHARLES W. DABNEY Faculty CHARLES W. DABNEY, Ph. D. LL. D., President of the University THOMAS W. JORDAN, A. M., LL. D , Dean of the College HENRY I-I. INGERSOLL, LL. D., Dean of the Law Department PAUL F. EVE, M. D., Dean of the Medical Department JOSEPH P. GRAY, M. D., D. D. 8., Dean of the Dental Department FLORENCE SKEFFINGTON, A. M., Dean of the Womants Department RALPH W. MCGRANAHAN, A. M., D. D., President of the Industrial Department ' gAcademic Department CHARLES WILLIAM DABNEY, Ph. D, LL. D., President of the Uni- versity and Professor of Economics WILLIAM WALLER CARSON, M. Am. Soc. C. E, Professor of Civil Engineering THOMAS WALDEN JORDAN, A. M. LL. D. Dean of the College and Professor of the Latin Language and Literature CHARLES E. WAIT, C. E.. M. E, Ph. D., F. C. S, Professor of Gen- eral and Analytical Chemistry and Metallurgy COOPER DAVIS SCHMITT, M. A, Professor of Mathematics CHARLES ALBERT PERKINS, Ph. D, Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering ANDREW H. NAVE, Captain in the United States Army, Professor of Military Science and Tactics CHARLES WILLARD TURNER, A. M. Associate Professor of Law and Professor of Constitutional History ANDREW MACNAIRN SOULE, B. S. A., Professor of Agriculture and Vice-Director of the Tennessee Experiment Station CHARLES A. KEFFER, Professor of Horticulture and Forestry JAMES DOUGLAS BRUCE, M. A, Ph. D., Professdr of the English Language and Literature SAMUEL MCCUTCHEN BAIN, A. B Professor of Botany HENRY JOHNSON DARNALL, tLeipzigL Adjunct Professor of Modern Languages CHARLES E. FERRIS, B. 5., Professor of Mechanical Engineering. CHARLES HENRY SHANNON, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of the Greek Language and Literature JAMES DICKASON HOSKINS. B. S., M. A., B. L., Assistant Professor of History FLORENEE SKEFFINGTON, A. M., Dean of the Womants Department and Assistant Professor of English WESTON MILLER FULTON, A. B., M. 8., Instructor in Astronomy and Meteorology THOMAS DALLAM MORRIS, R. L., Bursar-Registrar CHARLES OTIS HILL, A. 8., Ph. C., Instructor in Pharmacy JOSHUA W. CALDWELL, A M, Lecturer on Constitutional History of Tennessee SABRA WILHUR VOUGHT, A. B., Librarian EUGENE PARSONS Choirmaster, Licentiate Instructor in Voice Cul- ture, Piano, Organ and Harmony WILLIAM A. KNABE, Bandmaster FRANK B. DAVANT. Instructor in Machine Shop Practice JOHN R. FAIN, B. S., Foreman of Experiment Farm and Instructor in Animal Husbandry SAMUEL E. BARNES, M. S. A., Dairyman Agricultural Experiment Station and Instructor in Dairying PHARES O. VANATTER, Foreman of Plot Experiments MOSES JACOB, V. M. D., Instructor in Veterinary Science VOORHEES, Instructor in Physical Culture for Men ALEXANDER C. LANIER, B. 8., Instructor in Mechanical Drawing WILLIAM P. WOODCOCK, Instructor in Bench Work and Manual Training Methods MARY READ COMFORT, Instructor in Freehand Drawing T. N. POWELL, Assistant in Chemical Laboratory J. A. HARDIN, Licentiate in Latin W. H. KEEBLE, Licentiate in Mathematics Law Department HENRY HULBERT INGERSOLL, LL. D., Dean of the Law Deparment and Professor of Common Law and Equity, Pleading and Practice and the Law of Corporations CHARLES W. TURNER, A. M., Associate Professor of Law LEON JOUROLMON. Esq., Lecturer on the Law of Real Property JOSHUA W. CALDWELL, A. M., Lecturer on Tennessee Laws JAMES H. WELCKER, A. B., LL. B., Lecturer on Torts EDWARD T. SANFORD, A. M., LL. 3., Lecturer on Law of Corpara- tions in Tennessee medical Department PAUL F. EVE, M. D., Dean and Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery J. BUNYAN STEPHENS, M. D., Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics and Clinical Midwifery WM. E MCCAMPBELL, A. M., M. D., Professor of Theory and Prac- tice of Medicine and Clinical Medicine HILLIARD Woon, M. D., Professor of Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat W. C. BILBRO, M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics JAMES S. WARD, A. B., M. D., Professor of Medical Chemistry and State Medicine WILLIAM D. SUMPTER, M. D, Professor of General Descriptive and Surgical Anatomy R. 0. TUCKER, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Clinical Midwiferjr PERRY BROMBERG, M. D., Professor of Physiology and General Histology WILLIAM D. HAGGARD, M. D , Professor of Gynecology and Diseases of Children JAMES W. HANDLY, M. D, Professor of Genito-Urinary and Venereal Diseases W. SHACKLEFORD NOBLE, M. D., LL. B.. Professsor of Medical Jurisprudence J. P. GRAY, M. D., D. D. 8., Professor of Oral and Dental Surgery PERRY BROMBERG, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Surgery and Lectu- rer on Minor Surgery HAYDEN A. WEST, M. D., Lecturer on Bacteriology and Microscopy W. B. LEE, M. D, Assistant to Chair of Diseases of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. W. R. SIFFORD, Lecturer on Rectal Diseases R. L. HAYES, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Obstetrics J. G. GRAY, M. D, Assistant to Chair of Physiology ROBERT CALDWELL, Assistant to Chair of Chemistry Directors of Laboratories JAMES S. WARD, A. B., M. D., Laboratory Medical Chemistry PERRY BROMBERG, M. D., Laboratory Operative Surgery HAYDEN A. WEST, M. D., Laboratory Microscopy and Bacteriology Demonstrators of cAnat'omy L. D. FREEMAN, M. D. DOUGLAS HAGGARD, M. D. Dental Department JOSEPH P. GRAY, M. D., D. D. 8., Professor of Prosthetic Dentistry and Oral Surgery L. G. NOEL, M. D., D. D. 8., Professor of Operative Dentistry and Dental Pathology R. BOYD BOGLE, M. D., D. D. 8., Professor of Orthodontia, Dental Anatomy, and Dental Therapeutics THOS. P. HINMAN, D. D. 8., Professor of Crown and Bridge Work ALTON HOWARD THOMPSON, D. D. 8., Professor of Comparative Dental Anatomy PAUL F. EVE, M D.. Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery JAS, S. WARD, D. D. S., M. D., Professor of Chemistry, Metallurgy, and Physiology WILLIAM D. SUMPTER, M. D., Professor of General and Special Anatomy CHAS. A. ROBERTSON, M. D., Ph. C., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics LARKIN SMITH, M. D., Professor of Histology, Pathology, and Bac- teriology HON. EDWIN A. PRICE, Professor of Dental Jurisprudence I. B. HOWELL, D. D. 8., Professor of Special Pathology GEORGE G. WARREN, D. D. 8., Assistant to the Chair of Prosthetic Dentistry W. C. KING, D. D. 8., Assistant to the Chair of Operative Dentistry and Dental Pathology, and Demonstrator of Technic FIELDEN N. LUCK, D. D. 8., Assistant to the- Chair of Orthodontia and Dental Anatomy, and Demonstrator of Technic R. L. HAYS, M. D., Assistant to the Chair of Materia Medica and Therapeutics YOUNG W. I-IALEV, M. D., Assistant to the Chair of Physiology L. D. FREEMAN, M. D., Assistant to the Chair of Anatomy WM C. KING, D. D. S., Demonstrator in Charge and Demonstrator of Operative and Prosthetic Dentistry C. L' BRITTAIN, D. D. S , Assistant Demonstrator P. A. WILLIAMS, D. D. 8., Assistant Demonstrator Directors of Laboratories JAMES S. WARD, A. B., M. D., Laboratory Medical Chemistry L. D. FREEMAN, Practical Anatomy THOMPSON ANDERSON, Laboratory Microscopy and Bacteriology Demonstrators of Anatomy L. D. FREEMAN, M. D., and DOUGLAS HAGGARD, M. D. 3??? Department of Education 3 ? Officers of Administration PHILANDER PRIESTLY CLAXTON, M. A., Head of the Department of Education THOMAS W. JORDAN, A. M., LL. D., Dean of the College FLORENCE SKEFFINGTON, A. M., Dean of the Womanfs Department PHILANDER PRIESTLY CLAXTON, M. A., Graduate. Student John Hopkins, Professor of Science and Art of Teaching WICKLIFFE ROSE, M. A., Graduate Student in Philosophy and Edu- cation, University of Chicago, Professor of History of Education BURTIS BUR BREESE, M. A., Ph. D., Professor of Psychology and Ethics LILIAN WYCKOFF JOHNSON, B. A., Professor of History and Methods of Teaching 1,7 9 a v g9? , . 9 79244717 Q Wig 51 1 1X1 '1twwgwmw fim m 4 Officers J. W. CALDWELL, Knoxville, Tenn, President. W. B. LOCKETT, Knoxville, Tenn, First Vice-President THOS. B. COLLIER, Memphis, Tenn, Second Vice-President THOS. D. MORRIS, Knoxville, Tenn., Secretary JAMES D. HOSKINS, Knoxville, Tenn, Corresponding Secretary J. PIKE POWERS, JR., Knoxville, Tenn, Treasurer Alumni Orator, June, 1897, William B. Bachman, Esq., Bluif City, Tenn. Alumni Orator, June 13, 1898, Prof. Eben Alexander, University of North Carolina. ' ' Alumni Orator, June 12, 1899, Hon. Reese DeGraffenreid, Member of Congress from Texas. ' Alumni Orator, June 19, 1900, James D. Hoskins, Knoxville, Tenn. Alumni Orator, June 17, 1901, Harvey H. Hannah, Oliver Springs, Tenn. Alumni Poet, June 13, 1898, Norman H. Pitman, University of Tennessee. The Alumni Association is, by recent resolution of the Board of Trustees, closely related to it and through its representatives shares in the manage- ment of the institution. Tennessee A song bursts forth from loyal heal ts, Our alma mater Tennessee From loyal lips the accent starts, Let thy bright star our beacon be. Come raise your voices in a song, 0 may thy glories never fade, In concert high your notes prolong. . Nor harm thy sacred walls invade. 0 Tennessee! 0 Tennessee! 0 Tennessee! 0 Tennessee! Our hearts will ever turn to thee, ' Our hearts will ever turn to thee. Thy honor, glory, fame abroad we sing, Thy honor, glory, fame abroad we sing, With gladsome souls we tribute to thee bring. With gladsome souls we tribute to thee bring. When college songs and college lays Are faded with their makerls days, When sol's swift wheels have made us old And college life's a tale thatls told, Then Tennessee, 0 Tennessee ! Our hearts will ever turn to thee, Thy honor, glory, fame abroad welll sing With gladsome souls welll tribute to thee bring. 2. SCIENCE HALL 1 W ,, HIlzr 'I, , IV,I k l K 0 k a I 3418, , CM, a ?:?9; 3M giCVHQIHK l R 4 ?abt; 5542 u ,v 2411 o 6 ! x. '1, m WI, p M III a if H W a w - 4H 1 HQ: yM Freshman Class Class Colors Crimson and White Class Yen Hickety! Hacketyl Cwa, quatw, ?vocw! Rickety! Rackety! Rocw, r0922, rovw! Weha'tv! Wehaivl Rah, re, rz'x! Tennessee! Tennessee! Nineteen Six! Class Officers BEVERLY WINSLOW HOWE, President; HIRAM TOUSLEY MATSON, Vice-President; ANNIE MARIA CRAWFORD, Secretary and Treasurer; HARRIET CONE GREVE, Editor on Magazine ; WILLIAM HOWARD SMITH, Editor on Volunteer; BEAUMONT MACON STRATTON, Manager Basket Ball team ; LEMONT BYE LOCKWOOD, Captain Base Ball Team. Class Flower Crimson Poppy Motto Semper Fz'delz's, Semper Paratus ACREE, GEORGE BARRY, ROBERT LEE BARTON, WILLIAM, JR. BASS, BERNARD CHARLES BEAMAN, HARRY EDGAR BEENE, JONES, JR. BOBBITT, ERNEST GRANVILLE BOND, JOHN JAMES DAVID BRABSON, JOSEPH REESE CAMPBELL, THOMAS CLIFT CARSON, JAMES FINNIE CHASE, JAMES PHIPPS CLAXTON, CLAIRE COCHRAN, JOHN WALLACE COFFIN, HECTOR, JR. COOK. SAMUEL NICHOLSON. COVINGTON, CLARENCE LESLIE Cox, WILLIAM ELLIS CUNNINGHAM, MORRIS CROVVELL, SAMUEL RANDALL CRAWFORD, ANNIE MARIA DALLAS, FRANK WILLARD DALTON, ELMO MURRY DEADERICK, WILLIAM VON ALBADE DEATHRIDGE, OWEN SCOTT DEGOLIA, FANNIE ELVIRA DONALDSON, RIVERS MERIWEATHER DOUGLASS, ARCHIBALD HUGH DKYZER, FRANK MOSES ELLINGTON, JOHN FERNNER EVANS, ROY HENRY EWING, WILLIAM CLARKE FAGAN, ELIZABETH FAIR, MABEL AGNES FRIERSON, LAURENCE WILLIAMS FULLER, EUGENE FRANK FULLER, MARSHALL ANDREW FULLER, POWHATTON LEE GAMBLE, NEIL MCADORY GALLAHER, WILLIAM FRANKLIN GANT, HARRIS PAUL GARRETT, WILLIAM NEILSON GLOSTER, FLORA NELL GANCE, JOHN WILLIAM GOODPASTURE, RIDLEY ROSE GRESHAM, WILLIAM FULLER GREVE, HARRIET CONE HACKER, VICTOR NEWTON HAGAN, WALLACE ZEDCOCK HALL, ELIZABETH IDA HAMILTON, J. W., JR. HARRILL, FRANK PRESTON HARRIS, EARNEST MASSEY HARRISON, RAMON BURTON HAYNES, RICHARD HELM, BRUCE HERNDON, LEONARD GEORGE, JR. HICKS, JOSEPH BENJAMIN, JR. HOLT, JOHN ALBERT BROADUS HOWE, BEVERLY WINSLOW HUBBARD, ANNIE BRIGGS KERN, ROBERT ALEXANDER KIMBROUGH, EARLE CALVIN LAZARD, ALBERT LOCKWOOD, LEMONT BYE LONG, GEORGE EDGAR LYNN, RALPH ROBERTSON MCCALLA, JOHN BOYD McCULLEY, DAVID GILSTON MCDANIEL, BOWERS WILLIAM MCDONOUGH, MARGARET MCFARLAND, MARGARET VIRGINIA MACLIN, EDWIN SILVER MATNEY, ARGUS GAINES MATSON, HIRAM TOUSLEV MAYO, JAMES LAURENCE MILLER, WALTER WINFIELD MITCHELL, WILLIAM WRIGHT, JR. MOORE. ROSCOE ROPER, JR. MORTON, EMMETT MURRELL. BEMJAMIN HORTON NOBLE, CHARLES DAVID NORTHRUP, HOWARD KENDALL OATES, EDWARD RODGERS PAINTER, ANNIE BELL PARKER, HENRY FRANKLIN PATTON, RAULSTON SCOTT PRESTON, AMY FRANCES RAHT, FRANCES MATHILDE REEVES, THOMAS EDWARD RHEA, EDWIN BRUCE RICHARDS, JOSEPH BAIRD RODGERS, HORACE PHILIP ROWELL. ADELAIDE CORINNE RUSSELL, ROBERT MILLIARD SILCOX, JAMES ALBERT SMITH, ROY CLIFTON SMITH, WILLIAM HOWARD STRATTON. BEAUMONT MACON SUMMERS, NORMAN SWANN, JESSIE TAYLOR, ALFRED WILSON THOMAS, PAUL DEEN TOMS, JAMES HENRY VINCENT, IRWIN ARMSTEAD VVARDREP, ARTHUR JOSEPH WILLIAMS, AMOS TRIMSLEY WILLIAMS, WILLIAM BATE WILLIAMSON. JOHN EELDOW WINsLow, J OHN COOPER WOOD, JOHN AMBROSE WORD, ROSCOE History J the Freshman Class N SEPTEMBER, 1902 there gathered together at that famous institution commonly known as U. of T. a rare assemblage repre- I senting almost half Of the States in our Union. Mingled through this august body were certain individuals discriminated from the rest by their sedulous curiosity and eccentric actions. These were looked upon with contempt and were at once dubbed fish, abominable fishii ; and to a large number were given the even more appropriate title of itwater-dogs. Soon, however, these singular persons were organized into the class of 1906, with the regulation number of officers. At first there were about one hundred, which number afterwards increased to one hundred and twelve. Like all its predecessors, it fell a victim to the initiators treatment of the upper classmen, bot bore it all with the courage of martyrs. The first class contest of any consequence was the cane rush; and it was not until after a desperate struggle that the class of i06 was defeated. But sweet are the uses of adversity, for like Autaeus, who gained sevenfold strength every time that he was thrown to the earth by his adversary, the class rose in the full- ness of its strength to show the disdainful Sophomores that on subsequent occasions they were not omnipotent. The Freshman Class was well represented on both the foot ball and the base ball teams, furnishing four men for the foot ball team, and two pitchers for the base ball team. Its basket ball team made a fair reputation. The class not only ranks high in athletics. but in what is higher and better, scholarly standing. And in one matter, by no means unimportant, this class excels all others-it is a correct belief among them that should Tennyson be so fortunate as to visit the earth as a member of the Class of i06, he would find an inspiration for a new dream of fair women. In March. 1903, the Freshman Class was grieviously shocked by the untimely death of one of its most faithful and loyal members. It is not possible that space should be taken here to express the profoundness of this grief. But this can be said, it was God's Will to take him, and to repeat the words of a martyred president, His will, not ours be done. The Class of i06 being a new organization, its history must of necessity be brief. At present its future is very promising, and it bids fair to continue the journey upward, upward, ever upward, remembering that- Heights by great men won and kept, Were not rwon by sudden flight; But while their companions sIept, Were failing upward in the night. Motto Virta omm'a Vt'ncz't Sophomore Class Class Colors Maroon and Pearl Gray Class Yell $oomer-Iacker, Boomer-lacker, Boomer-lacker, lime, Tennessee, Tennessee, Nineteen fime. Class Officers MR. MARION GREEN HOPE, Secretary and Treasurer. MR. JOHN WAVERLY BACHMAN, President. MISS MARY NELSON WILLIAMS, Vice-President. ALBERS, EMMA CARHART BACHMAN, JOHN WAVERLY BALTHIS, RUSSELL FOREST BARNETT, JOHN WILLIAM BAUMAN, HARRIET KATHERINE BRAINE, CAVINETTE LEE BULLOCK, EMMETT HOGE BUQUO, JENNIE CAMPBELL, J OHN PEYTON CAMPBELL, LEVI Ross COFFEE, CHARLES SHELBY Cox, ARTHUR BOGLE COX, WILLIAM HENRY DAVIS, CHARLES LEWIS, JR. DUNGAN, SEXTON WILLIAM EATON, SCOTT HARRISON Class Flower Mareschal Neil Rose MISS DOROTHY GREVE, Correspondent to Magazine. MISS JENNIE BUQUO, Editor on Volunteer. CLASS ROLL ELLIS, J ACOB RUSSELL FARRAR, JAMES OBEDIAH FERGUSON, J AMES ERNEST FLOYD, 150M EARL FORTUNE, WILLIAM HAROLD Fox, GEORGE DAVID HORACE FRANCIS, SALLIE WOODARD GREVE, DOROTHY HARDISON, J OSEPH BARKSDALE HARTZELL, J ACOB LOTT HENDERSON, WILLIAM THOMAS HICKS, JOHN BERRY HITE, NELLIE MAE HOLT, WILLIAM THOMAS HOPE, MARION GREEN JACOBS, DALLAS, LUKE WILLIAMS, JANE JARNIGAN, MILTON PRESTON JENKINS, HUGH WILSON KELLER, MAUDE KING, HASERD KIRKMAN, OTIS CLIFFORD MCADOO, ELMER CLARKE MCALLISTER, SAMUEL J ACKSON MCCLUNG, CHARLES JAMES, JR. MCKAY, J ESSIE MELVILLE MCKINNEY, STEPHEN BOOTH MAXWELL, LUCY GALBRAITH MILNOR, IDA JEAN ' MOONEY, HENRY KEMPTON NEELEY, FINIS HUNDLEY OVERTON, ELBERT PATTON, WILLIAM AUGUSTE WILLIAMS, MARY NELSON PERKINS, MARCIA VILLETTE RAINEY, JESSE GREEN RITTER, LOUIS ERNEST ROLLOW, JAMES GRADY, JR. RUSSELL, HUGH CAMPBELL SAXTON, JESSE JAMES SHEA, JAMES MCDONALD THOMAS, MATT GRAINGER TREADWELL, MARY L015 TYLER, HUGH CLAVERLY TYLER, LAURA WHITMAN WAGGONER, FAY WALTON, GEORGE TEMPLETON WASHBURN, WILLIAM PARSONS, JR. WILLIFORD, HENRY LEE, JR. WHITE, HENRY BENTON Class History HE CLASS of l05 began its career with a membership of one hundred and fifteen; but seventy of this number seem to have T failed to catch the spirit of its motto, Wirtus omnia mincz'f, for only forty-five returned to battle with Sophomore difficulties. However, the addition of twenty-two new students partially compensated this loss, and the Sophomore Class began the year with sixty-seven, all of whom are from Tennessee except four, who represent the states of Kentucky, Ohio, Florida and Iowa. It is customary to sitig of Freshman troubles and Sophomore trials, but the Class of i05 feels more like singing of Freshman triumphs and Sophomore glories. We enjoyed every 'day of ouf Freshman year, and notwithstanding the interference of the Sophomores, we held our election of officers, and we won the cane-rush. And if we could accomplish these two things as Freshmen, we think that no one will be astonished at our Sophomore record. For as Sophomores we have again won the cane-rush, stolen all the Juniots' caps, returning them when we pleased, and secured the basket ball championship. And yet, although we feel that we have right to be ,proud of our exhibition of class spirit and loyalty, we are not conceited; for even if we were inclined to be, certain of our professors would counter- act the tendency. One of these compares us to the Freshmen mob; another takes down the Juniors by saying they translate like a Sophomore does; and still another says that our obtuseness is wonderful. And we still receive a liberal amount of red ink on our themes, but we do not now have to be experts in solving puzzles in order to know what is said about them, and we read on their margins good hand show to the editor of the Magazineil as often as we read correct and correct for the main part. And so, only confident in its own strength, the glorious Class of l05 is expecting to be attended by the success that so far has charac- terized it, for up to to this time in its history, it has accomplished all that it has tried to do. l J. CB Editor Soph. 0.25.9.1 President . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . Captain of Basket Ball Team . Class Colors Purple and White Junior Class . Motto cDem rw'a quamtvis ardua Class Yell 7acka-packa 1 Rip I Rah! Tennessee I Nineteen four! Class Officers . THOMAS B. GREEN . JONAS E. HITE AYMETT, JULIAN BLAKE, JOHN HERON BRABSON, THOMAS DOUGHTY CHUTE. ELMER IRENIUS CLARK, ROBERT LITTLE CRESAP; JAMES LAWSON DODSON, GEORGE DAY FULLER, CLIFFORD JUSTIS GRAINGER, JAMES MOSES GREEN, THOMAS BELL GUDGER, VONNO LAMAR HEISKELL, LUCIUS LAMAR HITE, JONES EWING JOHNSTON, THOMAS . THOMAS B. GREEN Class Flower Violet ?acka-packa I Roar ! Tenngssee I Editors on the Magazine . Editors 0n the Volunteer . . VONNO L. GUDGER Manager of Basket Ball Team . CLASS ROLL KEELING, DICKERSON KING. JAMES JOSEPH KNESCHE, JOSEPH ALBERT LATHROP, LAWRENCE HENRY LAUGHEAD, FRANK LOCKWOOD, OLIVER LADEVV, JR. LOVE, ROBERT J OHN MCCARTY, Roy ANDERSON MASHBURN, LEON WADELL MATSON, JOSEPH TOUSLEY MILLER, REUAEN ELCANZO SCHMITT, BERNADOTTE EVERLY THOMAS, J ACOB, LITTON. JR. THORNBURGH, LAURA j LAURA THORNBURGH QJAMES J. KING 5 Rev A. MCCARTY BERNA E. SCHMTTT . .ROBERT L. CLARK Junior Class History 0 WRITE the history of the Junior Class is not a difficult task; for it is a repetition of the history of classes gone before, with T merely a change of names and numerals. Of course we were fishyi' and sophy, and everything else which the genius of overbearing upper-classmen could think of; but thanks to the various professors and our own faithful labors, about twenty-five can at last call themselves Juniors. In our Freshmen year we were worked uponli; we were laughed at because we could not keep step to the inspiring music of the University band, not execute right shoulder arms with all the skill and facility of the haughty Sophomores. Nevertheless, we took the cane from them, and we helped the members of the Class of I902--then Juniors-to recover their red caps from the jealous Seniors. The following year we assumed that haughty, indifferent, overbearing, conceited, pretentious, obnoxious air which only a Sopho- more can have, and which every Sophomore does have. How we did abuse the poor innocent Freshmen, and laugh at their follies and failings, in return for treatment we had received the year before. Toward the latter part of the year quite a violent explosion took place, a result, it is supposed, of the ignition of some Sophomore Analytic Geometry in an atmosphere of hydrogen and oxygen; and when the death list was finally completed, the majority of the class had places on it. But now those days are passed, and we are enjoying the latter half of our college lifewthat half in which we realize that then, if ever, we must retrieve a lost reputation-that we are upper-classmen, with whom, together with the Seniors, it lies to maintain the honor of the University; and that in another year, if all goes well, we will be called to bid farewell to our dear old Alma Mater and the scenes we love so well. Still, it must be so, and nothing can change the destiny fixed so long ago. We only hope that, when college life is as a tale thatis told, when our course is run and our star is set, someone, still fostering that friendship which only college life can beget, will say: He was a U. of T. man, of the Class of 1904. ' 5; ' mm m r ' Wwb ; 5H lek3;; ;xetln. , '7 V J ' 7 . v . Y, .- .. , q C ' ' ' ' V I I ,3: A u , Q, r r :W Hh;? 1wl .wal ,7 .5 A . u I I . 2M H ' , 4 ,1 '7 'A L3H Hm 7. 4' x '7 M? m x 7 7 ,, 7 ' a W ? WW MM f , ; ; $H , ,, , : W mu W! MN MW W 7 , , -: . '3' ' 3 I 7 V 1:9 W . . , . ' x I I , 4 . ' - KIM VWHIIWW HMIVIW I !' , W 7 M: W: I -7 r m nlw Senior Class Motto Class Colors Class F lower Opperz' Opperare Confenti Blue and White Red Clover Class Yell Chick-a-Iacker, lacker-lacker, ChiCk-a-lacker, Iacker-lacker, Boom-a-rack-a-ree, Boom-a-rack-a-ree, Tennessee, Tennessee, 1903! Class Officers 0. P. PARKER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President VERNA CASTEEL. . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President W. S. BELTON. . . . . . . . , . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer H. H. HAMPTON, R. L. BAYLOR a . . Editors on Volunteer MIRIAM HART, J. C. DENTON . . . Editors on Magazine W. H, KEEBLE . . . . . . a . . , , . . . . . . . . . . . Valedictorian R. A. ELKINS- . . . . . . . V . . . . A . . . . . . . . .Orator G. C. LARKIN . . , a . , . . , . V . . . . , . . . . . . Historian NINA J. GOOKIN . . . . t . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . Prophet P.H.C0RNICK...,.,............,....Poet llTwixt a Smile and a Tearll IT is with a mingled feeling of joy and sadness that we pen this, the fourth and last chapter of our class history. We are glad that our work has been accomplished. We rejoice that after having been content to labor and to wait for four long years we are soon to reach the coveted goal of graduation. Yes, with pride and with joy we look forward to commencement day when each is to receive that long-sttiven-for parchment, that scroll which will represent so many hours of study and labor, and many more of joy and pleasure. But when we reflect on the past and look beyond graduation to the future when we are to go forth as ltcarvers of our own fortunes, thete comes over us a very different feeling. When we realize that for most of us, at least, these are the closing days of our college life, there steals into our hearts a feeling of sadness and reglet. For four years we have been banded here together by a class tie that has made us as brothers and sisters. From year to year we have adjourned each June to meet again the following September, but soon we are to dishand again, not for the Summer, but foremer. But still may that class tie remain unbroken, though we be scattered to the remotest ends of the earth. To those we leave behind we cannot give better advice than that they give perfect obedience to our beloved teachers, who, as we well know will never guide them awrong. To you, kind teachers, we ascribe all credit for what good we have done in college and are to do hereafter. Thus with a feeling of gratitude and love, we bid you all lladieu? Verna Casteel, Meridian, Miss., B. A.; A. B. E. BI. F. College, 1901; Phi Kappa Phi V President of Barbara Blount Literary Society 1902; Secretary of Y. XV. C A. 1902-3; Vice- President of W'umelfs Athletic Associatiun 1902-3; Rouge and Powder Dramatic Club; Vice-President of Senior Class 1902-3. Tllexz's: Classification of Proper Names in llnmcr. Frances Foster, Ripley, TemL, B. A.; Phi Kappa Phi. Thcxfx: Regular polygons. Katherine 1Villiams, Knoxville, Tenn, B. A.; Chi Omega; Phi Kappa Phi; X'icevl'resident of Freshman Class; Rouge and Powder Dramatic Club; President of Barbara Blount Literary Society 1901; President of Y. W7. C. A. 1902-3; Captain Girl's Basket Ball Team 1903. lexis: Synonyms of Life and Death in Aleutis. n the Mary Lee lfachll, 13. 8,, Mooreshurg, Tennessee; Member of Y. 1V. C. A. Tlrcsm: A Comparison of the Historical and Shakespeare's Richard III.71 Blanche Mclntire. B, 5., Cambridge, Mas ; Euston University, 1899-1902; Secretary Bar- hara Blount Literary Society, 1903; Secretary and Treasurer Girls' Glee Club, 1903; Rouge and Powder Dramatic Club; Keeper of HBilly Dues Attic Philosophers, Thesis: HFourier and His Socialism. Miriam Heart, A. IL, Knoxville, Tenn. Then A Comparison of the Subjectiou in Goethe S Faust and Byroxfs Blanfred. Nina Jackson Cookiu. 13. A., Bristol, Tenn: Member Alpha Omicron Phi Fraternity; Girls Glee Club; Y. W. C. A.; President Attic PhiL osophcrs; President Barbara Blount Literary Society 1902-3; Class Prophet. Tlxcsis: The Keactionary Pulicy of Mcttcr- nich in European affairs. Mary Christian Johnston. J3. 5,. Knoxville, Tenn; Graduate of Maryland State Normal School; Phi Kappa Phi. lecxis: Technical Education; Its Relation to Commercial Supremacy. Dcllc Dulancy Smith, l3. 8., Bristol, TemL; Member Girls, Glee Club; Member Y. 1V. C. 11.; Senior Tennis Club; C. C. C.; President of Gan'cttc Girls' Athletic ssociation. Thexix: The Volumetric Analysis of the Common Occurring Metals. Henry 11. Hampton, 11. 5., Chattanooga, TcmL; 11. 5. Chattanooga Normal University; Pllilunmthcsian; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; President of Smut and Musk Club 1902-3; Member of June Jubilee Committee, 1903; Man- ager of Truck Team 1902-3; Senior Class Editor on Volunteer 1902-3. lemix: NH : Determination of Sulphur in Pig Iron.H 11'111. Theodore Robinson, H. A.; A. B. Ten- nessee Normal College 1899; Principal Roberdell Academy, Roberdell, N. C.. 1899-1901; Instructor in Greek zmd Latin, American University of Ilarriman, 190112. Tlmxis: HTIIC Life zmd Education of Roman Youth.h ' James Clarence Demon, B. 5., Newport, 'l1ennesscc; Alpha Tau Omega; Member of Y. M. C. A.; Philo Literary Society; McKinney Cluh; Athletic Association; Phi Kappa Phi Fraternity; 1Yinner of Freshman Scholarship; President of Sophomore Class; President of Athletic Association 19012; Editor from Phi1o 011 Magazine; Editor from Philu on the Vol- untccr 1903; Senior Editor on the Magazine; Principal A'Iusiciun in University Band. Thesis: The Diary of Edward Hooker. 0. P. Parker, R. S. Literary, Gihsun, TcnlL, Pi Kappa Alpha; Philomathesian Literary So- ciety; President of the Senior Class; First Lieutenant Company C; Manager of the Cir- culation of the Tennessee University Maga- zine 1900-1901; Husi'iess Manager of the Uni- versity of Tennessee Annual tVolumceO, 1901-1902; Member of the Student Senate 1902- 1003; Saturday Afternoon German Cluh; Knox- ville German Cluh; Fencing Club; Pharmacy Class; Gihson County Cluh; Athletic Associa- tion; Y. M. C. A.; Editor and Publisher of the Souvenir for the Summer School of the South 1902; Chairman of the june Jubilee Ticket Committee 1902; General Business Man- ager 0f the Students' Association 1902-1903. 771:3.vix: The Economic Ettects 0f the Dis- solution of the English Monasteries. 1Vilh'am Quail jnhnstnn, 1;. 5., Knoxville, Tenn, lecxix: A Study of the Veins in the Zinc Ores of East Tennessee. John Alexander Hardin, 11. Au Sweetwatcr, Tenn; Phi Kappa Phi; Chi Delta; Y. M. C. .1.; Athletic Association: Sophomore Scholar- ship, 1900-1901;, President of Junior Class 1901- 1302; Medal for Best Drilled Man Co. C. 1901- 1902: Captain of C01 C. 1902-1903; Board of Di- rectors Y. M. C. A. 1902-1903; President of Chi Delta 1902-1903; Presiding 0t1icer Inter-Socicty contest 1903: Business Manager 1J1ennessee Uni- versity Magazine 1902-1903; Licentiate in Latin 1902-1903. Thesis: .X Compzu'isxm 0f Grecian and Ro- man Slavery. 1Va1ter H. Brown, R. 5., Knoxville, Tenn. Thesis: Zinc Blendc in East Tcnnessec. Philip Heinrich Cornick, I3. 8., San Angelo, Texas; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Assistant Busi- ness Manager of Magazine 1901; Medal for Improvement in Debate, Chi Delta 1901; Busi- ness Manager of Magazine 1901-2; Medal for best story in Magazine, 1902; Editor in Chief of Magazine 1902-3; First Lieutenant in Band 1902-3; President of Glee Club 1902-3; President of Chi Delta 1002-3; Phi Kappa Phi Thais: A Study of Assnying George Carrigau Larkin, IL S., Morrismwn, Tenn; Phi Gamma Delta; Chi Delta; McKin- ney Club; University German Club; Athletic Association; President Chi Delta; Chi Delta's representative in Inter-Socicty Contest and 1Vinncr 0f Declaimer's Medal, 1901-2; Editor on Magazine 1899-1900, 1900-1, 1901-2, 1902-3; First Sergeant Co. B. 19012; Individual Drill Medal Co. B. 1901-2; First Lieutenant and Signal Officer 1902; Quartermaster 1903; Class Historian. Tlrcxis: Thc Treaty of Peace Between the L'nited States and Spain. Jack Thorpe Edmonds, B. A., York, AIZI.; Philomathesian; Baseball Team 1902-3; Pi Kappa Alpha. Tllcxz'x: Financial Policy of Andrew Jack- son. Thus. H. Allen, 11 5., Memphis, Tenn.: Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Manager Annual 1903: First Lieutenant Co. A., 1902-3; Vice-Presideut Chi Delta 1002-3; Awarded Nash Scholar- ship; President Episcopal Club; President University Afternoon German Club; Vice- President University Ccrman Club; Manager Senior Basket E2111 Team; Glee Club; Phi Kappa Phi; Athletic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Member 1903 Basket B2111 Team. Thais: Test Knoxville Ice Co.'s plant. Roht. Lawrence Baylor, l1. A., Knoxville, Tenn; Philomathcsian; Y. M. C. A.; Repro- seutative of Plxilo as urator in IntexuSocicty Contest 1902-3; Editor from Senior Class on Volunteer 19033; President Philomathesian Society 1902.3. 'I'lmxix: The Financial Policy of Alexander Hamilton. James Garfield lieaman, B. 8., Knoxville, Tenn. lexz'x: HZinc Blends in East Tennessee? Elkius, Robert Asa., H. A;, Dyer, TcmL; Chi Delta; McKinney Club; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Senior Basket Ball Team; Chi Delta Correspondent m Magazine 19012; Junior Law Class; Editor Volunteer, 19023; anrd Directors Y. M. C. A. 1901-2; VicevPrcs- idcnt Y. M. C. A. 19023, President Chi Delta 1902-3; Clerk McKinney Club 1902-3; Third Sergeant Company C 19012; Gibson County Club; Phi Kappa Phi; Class Orator. lexix: A '10111115121tiunz Lucian's Charon. R. Ernest Fox, BNSW Knoxville. Tenn. Tllmix: Holy Alliance of 18151 1Villizun I'Iouston Kecblc, B. 5., Bank, Tenn; Junior Scholarship 1902; Phi Kappa Phi; Chi Delta Dchatcr in Tnter-Society C0111 test 1903; Elected Chi Delta Representative in the Annual Intercollegiate Debate with Van- derbilt; President Y. M. C. A.; Licentiate in Freshman Mathematics; Valedictorian. lexix: Some Expansions of Series by Maelaurin's Theorem. 1Vi11iam P. Angel, B. .NY Knoxville, Tenn; Phi Kappa Phi. lecxix: Hyperbolic Trigcrnometry H'illiam Alexander Copeland, J12, B. 8., Smithland, Tenn; Chi Delta; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Glee Club; Smut and Mask Club; June Jubilee Committee; Vice; President Glee Club 1903; Business Manager Smut and Alask Club 1903; Third Lieutenant Company B, 1903; Editor on Volunteer from Junior Class 1902; liditur in Chief Volunteer 1003; Captain Senim- Basket Ball Team 1903. lexix: HEngland's Intervention in Egypt. L. M. Hacker, H. 8.. Greeneville, Tenn. Tlmxix: Pacific Blockades. chjamin 1,. Capsll. Ii. An Hmwnsville, Tennessee; Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Kappa Phi; l'hilomathesian; McKinney Club; Athletic As- sociation; Y. BL C. A.; President Philn Liter- ary Society. 1902-3; Declaimer's Medal Philo 1900-1; medal for best drilled man Company A 1900-1; Philo's rcprcscntativc in Inter-Society contest in debate 1902-3; Editor 011 Annual 1899-1900, 1900-1901; Governing Hoard Univer- sity German Club; Representative of Univer- sity of Tennessee in Annual Contest in DC- bate with Vanderbilt University; Captain uf Company A 1902-3. Tllr. .. HThe Action of Congress on the Louisiana Purchase. James Monroe Troutt, IL, B. 11.. Jackson, Tenn; Alpha Tau Omega; Chi Delta. Thais: The Black Death and Its Economic Effect in England. Robert Snead Young, 1!, A.. Swectwntcr, Tenn; Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Kappa Phi; Chi Delta Literary Society; McKinney Club; Uni- versity Gcrman Club; AHIlctic Association; Y. M. C. A.; Chi Delta1s Representative in Intel'- Socicty Contest in Debate 1902-3; 1Vinncr Chi Deltzfs Imprnvcment in Debate Medal 1901-2; Chi Imlmk Alternate and Real Debatcr for Annual U. of T. Vanderbilt Contest 1903-1; Captain of Co. B 1902-3. Tllml'x: The Function of :1 Supreme Court in a Representative Government. Donald D. Swisher, H. .k, Danvillc, Ills; Phi Gamma Delta; ThmiJ: The Sources of 1Yagner1s Operas. H'infleld Scott Belton. 1:. 5., Lenoir City. Tenn: XYinner 0f Medal for best drilled man Cu. II 1900-1901; Track Team 1900-1901, 1901- 1902, 1902-1903; Captain of Track Team 1901- 1902. 1902-1903; Holder of U. of T. records for half mile and mile runs; 1Vinner 0f mile run at lfighth Annual Field meet, 5. T. A. A. 1903: Vice-Prcsident of Athletic Association 1901- 1002; Secretary and Treasurer of Senior Class; Philmnathesian Literary Society; Smut and Mask Club; Blember Tennessee Varsity Club; First Lieutenant and Quartermaster 1902-1903; iattalion Adjutant 1903; 3v--0y-3. lecsix: A study of the Carbonates and Silicates of Zinc with the Associated Gauges in the Zinc mines of East Tennessee. Robert Erasmus BransfortL B. 5., Union City. Term: R. A. 1M; Pllilo. Tlxcsix: Concrete Construction. Victor Garnett Kee. B, A., Ripley, Tenn.; Graduate High School. Ripley. Tenn, 1895-96; Literary Student S. W. B. U1, 1897-1901; XVin- ner Eatuu Medal S. 1V. 13. U1 for highest pro- Fxciency in Education and Oratory, 1899-1900; Principal of Tallahatchia Academy, Ourerand, Miss... 1902-3; Student U. of '11., 1902-3. XVilliam Riseden, B. 8.. VVartbm-g, Tenn. Thesis: History of '111'ansportation. Columbus Powell Smith, 1!. 3., Knoxville, Tenn; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; 3021111 of Cow CI'HOYS University German Club 1902; President L'niversity German Club 1903; Tennessee 'Varsity Club; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Associa- tion: 1Yinner Tennis Club 1902-3; Baseball Team 1902; Manager Baseball Team 1901 Thcxix: The Financial Crisis of the United States. James Dumpster, J11, B. 3., Knoxville, Tenn. lesix: Tests of Transfonners1 Huhen Bruce Finch, B. 5., Dresden, Tenn; Kappa Sigma; Member Executive Committcc Studenfs Association; Secretary Students' As- sociation; Secund Lieutenant CO. C: Managu' Football Team 1902. lesixz Niles' Register for the Years 1814 zmd 1815. George Susong Stokely, French Broad, Tenn; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; V. P. L 1899- 1900, 1900-1901, 190111902; Athletic Association. The. liconomy of a Condenser in the plant of the Producers Marble Mills. It is better to have a little than nothing.-Kee. Daring nonsense seldom fails to hit Like scattered shot and pass With some for wit.-?Belton. ,Tis pride, rank pride, and haughtiness of soul: I think the Romans call it stoicism.- Young. eTis hard when dullness overrules, To keep good sense in crowds of fools.-Hacker Is she not more than painting can express, or youthful poets fancy when they love ?-3Wiss Williams. Old as I am, for ladies, love unfit; The power of beauty I remember yet-Keeble. XVilliam Harding Johnson, Be 3., Gallatin, Tenn; Gallatin Male Seminary 1898; Chi Delta; Editor hCrescentW Secretary Chi Delta; Cap- tain Sophomore Football Team; Manager Jun- ior Football Team; Sub Guard on yVarsity 1902; Chemical Club. lexl'x: A Comparison of the Methods for the Determinaiton 0f Phosphorus in Pig Imn. Applied Quotations From every blush that kindles in thy cheeks, ten thousand little loves and graces springeMissjohnston- She sits, like beautyes child, whom nature gat For men to see, and seeing, wonder athz'ss McIntt're. With just enough of learning to misquote.-cDenfon. Why, man, he doth bestride the narrow world like a colussus; and we petty men walk under his huge legs, and peep about to find our- selves dishonorable graveseCapell. He Greek and Latin speaks with greater ease Than hogs eat acorns, and tame pigeons peas.--Hardt'n. He knew what everhs to be known But much more than he knew would own.-'-Brocwn, Applied Quotations--Continued He that holds more Wine than others can, I rather count 3. hogshead than a man.-Ft'nch. Thy modestyls. a candle to thy meriteWiss WazwelL A needy, hollow-eyed, sharp-looking wretchea living dead man. eQaaz'lfohnston. Hail, social life, into the pleasing bounds again I come to pay the common stock, my share of service; and, in glad return to taste thy comforts, thy protected joys.-Allen- Eternal smiles his emptiness betray, As shallow streams run dimpling all the way.-Srwisher. A mighty man, had not some cunning sin, Amidst so many virtues, crowded imeElkt'ns. And he has learned to loveeI know not why, for this in him seems strange of moodeEdmonds. His wit invites you by his look to come, But when you knock it never is at home.-cDempster. Look on her face and youlll forget them all.wMt'ss Gookt'n. Satirels my weapon, but Pm too discreet To run amuck, and hilt at all I meetePorwell Smifh. The lowest and most dejected thing of fortune.-Riseden. Fie, my lord, fie! A soldier, and afeard ?-Larkin. I am the very pink of courtesyeCorm'ck. O flesh, flesh, how art thou fishilied?eTroutt. I would the gods had made thee poetical.-Copeland. . I am a Jew. Hath not a Jew eyes ? Hath not aJew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions ?-$ransf0rd. Wee, modest crimson-tipped flower.-3Wiss Hart. . The table crumbs attract his slender feet.-Hampfon. She never yet was foolish that was fair.-:9Wiss Foster. Famine is in thy cheeks.-Robt'nson. Oh, were I seated high as my ambition, Ild place this naked foot on necks of monarchserAngel. His love is passionis essence--as a tree on fire by 1ightning.-Parker. His industry is upstairs and downstairs.-Eeaman. A cats a cat for at that.- W. Hjohnson. Her sunny locks hang on her temples like a golden fleece. -:9Wz'ss Smith. Scared out of his seven senses -F01. He seemid, for dignity composed and high exploit; but all was false and hollow.-Baylor. Shels beautiful. and therefore to be wooed; she is a woman, and therefore to be won.-3Wiss Casteel. $1.;L E' '1 ; ' WW lf' uh Motto WIT martalz'bus arduum est Junior Law Class Class Yell Hobble, gobble! Razzle, dazzle! Sis cBoom 04h! junior Lacw, nineteen four, Class Colors Orange and Black Rah I Rah! Rah! Class Officers JOHNW.HUDSON. . .. .. . D. RALPH MILLARD . SOUTH B. WILLIAMS . ROBERT A. ELKst . GEORGE C. LARKIN . CLASS ROLL BEENE, PATTON BRANSFORD, ROBERT ERASMUS CAPELL, BENJAMIN LEWIS, JR. CLEMENTS, WILLIAM HENRY HARRISON, JR. CRAWFORD, SAXTON DARYL DALTON, ELMO MURRAY DEARMOND, JAMES MERRITT DENTON, JAMES CLARENCE EDMONDS, JACK THORPE ELKINS, ROBERT ASA FAGAN, CHARLES HENRY FISHER HUBERT GAMBLE, ROBERT MCDUFFIE . President . Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer . Volunteer Editor . Magazine Editor GETTYS, PARK EVANS HUDSON, JOHN VVILLIAM JOHNSTON, POWELL KERN, CHARLES MARTIN LARKIN, GEORGE CARRIGAN MCTEER, CHARLES, JR. MERRITT, ORTHNIEL JOHNSTON MILLARD, DAVID RALPH PATTON, PRESTON F. RISEDEN, WILLIAM WEBB. JOHN CREW WILLIAMS, SOUTH BUCHANAN YOUNG, ROBERT SNEAD Law, ,04 , I hHE greater part of the history of the Class of '04 remains to' be made. As individuals many of us doubtless have varied and interesting careersiwhich we would not of course care to reveal, but as a class there is little to be said of us-either good or bad. That we have been as faithful as those who have gone before us is perhaps true, and that we have learned a. great deal of law, each member of the Class is content to believe. In point of numbers our Class has not fallen behind those of former years. Moreover, there is one department of the College in which several of our fellows have taken the leadwthat department is Athletics. I believe that no Class in the University has taken a greater part in real college life than the Junior Law Class. Furthermore, our members, for the most part, have been true to their ideal of a student, and this means of course that some of them have made very fine records in their chosen work. It now becomes my duty to leave the remainder of the history of the Class of i04 to be recorded by some historian of the future. A R. A. Elkins. Senior Law Class Class R011 ALBAN, GEORGE GAUTT COOPER, JOHN SHERMAN DASHIELL, WILLIAM ROBERT DONALDSON, WILLIAM JAY EMERY, WALTER MATSON GOODMAN, LEO GRIM, JOSEPH, JR. IMCINTIRE, FREDERICK MAY PEERY, CLIFFORD'VAN BUREN SEYMOUR, CHARLES MILNE RAWITSER, EMANUEL CHARLES SMITH, CHARLES HENRY STRANG, SAMUEL BARTOW STONE, DAN LUTHER TATE, HUGH MCCALL llOur Sayii It pleases time and fortune to lie heavy Upon a friend of mine, who, in hot blood Hath sfept into the Law, 'halu'ch is past depth To those that without heed do pJunge into it. HIS saying is none the less true of him who llhath stept into the Law as a profession than it is of the poor mortal who has placed T himself within its clutches by reason of his misbehavior. If there is any difference the latter has the best of it after all, for the law supports and protects the convict while he works out his sentence; whereas the lawyer is compelled to uphold and defend the law while he drags out an existence of perhaps longer duration and one almost as miserable. But, enough of grumbling. If we have placed ourselves into an uncomfortable position, we have no one to blame but ourselves; and besides, it is too late to lock the barn of fortune after the horse of opportunity has been stolen by the thief of time. Here we are-a. dozen or more ilpoor, weak, palsy-stricken, church yard things who had little enough sense to think we might make lawyers of ourselves. It is not necessary to reiterate here the host of great things which we have done since we became students of the Law. In the first place, it would take a volume to hold them, where we only have a page; and, in the second place, it would be telling an old story which is not worth repeating. All those marks of distinction which are worthy of recordeand many which are not-are set down on another page alongside the reproduction of our memorable faces. If you wish to know them7 gently turn to that hallowed place and take a solemn, reverential look at a record of the noble deeds of a noble body. We are a modest set, and very careful of tootingii our own libazoos. Judge Ingersoll or Prof. Turner either will tell you that we know more law than the men who wrote the books. But we are modesthyou must ask them if you desire to learn of our marked achievements. And, though the periodicals have been filled, lately, with blood-curdling accounts of how Billy Black stone kicked open his cell in Wallingford Church, or ilHow Chief Iustice Marshall and Chancellor Kent caused Infant Earthquakes by turning over in their graves through iealous rage because of our superior knowledge of the Law, we are not going to mention it to you. The facts speak for themselves, and if you donit find them out you will be the ones to suffer. Perhaps the shortest and simplest statement which we could make concerning ourselves, and at the same time not lltootii our own 'lbazzoos would be: We are lawyers, we know the law and are hankering after your business We are now preparing to start on that long road of starvation, which, for some goes on forever; but for others after a time branches off to the right into success. May we all keep to the right. Kind friend, you will pass us by the wayside; if the wagon of your pros- perity should happen to crash with your comradels vehicle of progress, won't you call on us to clear up the wreckage? All we shall ask in return will be tla fee simple. But please remember when you tender that fee simple that, We minimis non carat ler. -W.5r.D. 1,00 Goodman, Memphis, Tenn, LL. 13.; Omar Khayyam; Phi Kappa Phi; Philomathe- sian Society; McKinney Club; Athletic Asso- ciation; President of Philo, 1902-1903; Speaker and Justice of McKinney Club 190211903; Dc- claimefs Medal, Philo, 190112; Improvement in Debate Medal, Philo, 190172; 1Yinner Debatcr in IntelkSnciety Contest 1902-3; Poet and Edi- tor t0 Magazine Senior Law Class; Right for- ward Senior Law Basket Hall Team. Philo orator's mednl 15102-113. mul hush debuter's mmlnl 190.503. lecsix: Duress as :1 Defense to an Action 011 a Contract. Frederic May Mclntire, LL. 1., Cambridge, Mass.; Philo Society; McKinney Club. leexl'x: SURiciency of the Common Law to Regulate Corporate Trusts. Emanuel Charles Rnwitsvr, LL. 1L, Mem- phis, Tenn; Secretary and 'chusurcr Law Class 1901-1902; McKinney Club; Philo; Athletic Association; Y. M. C A.; 3 0y,,3; Treasurer Philo 1902; Vice-IH'esident l'hilu 1902; Critic Philo 1903; Clerk McKinney Club 1902; justice McKinney Club 1902; Spcakcr McKinney C1th 1903; Fire Commissinnm- McKinney Club 1903; Second Lieutenant Cu 11 1902-23. lexz'x: The Public I'nwcr m'cr Corpora- tions Supplying Public I'tilitics. Charles Milne Seymour, Knoxville, Tenn, I1. 14.; Kappa Alpha; Class llismrian; Editor to Volunteer from McKinney Club. Titan's: Sufficiency of the Common Law to Regular Corporate Trusts. Han Luther Stone, LL. 1L, Lea Springs, Tenn; Member Chi Delta; Y. M. C. A.; Athletic Association; Smut and Mask Club; McKinney Club; Vicc-Prcsidcnt Junior and Senior Law Classes; Vice-Prcsidcnt Chi Delta; Solo Cornetist 13. T. izmd 1901; Second Lieu- tenant CO. A: Member House Of Reprcsentzr tives, 1901-2 and 1903-4; Republican caucus nominee for Speaker uf the 53rd Central Ask scmbly of Tennessee. John Sherman Coupcr, LL. 13., Knoxville, Tenn; Academic Department 1900-1; Tennes- see 1Varsity Club; Football Team; Track Team; Glee Club; Speaker McKinney Club; President Philo; 1Vinner Declamation Inter- Socicty Contest; Manager Football Team 1903. Thais: Duress as a Defense to :1 Con- tract. George Guutt Alhan, LL. 11., Memphis, Tenn.; Sigma Alpha l'lpsilon; McKinney Club; Junior Law Scholarship; Senior Law Basket Ball Team; Member Governing Board l'. of T. Afternoon German Club; Track Team 1903; Valedictorian Senior Law Class; Phi Kappa Phi. Thesis: Durcss as a Defense to Actions on Contract. 1Yillium Rnhcrt Dashicll. LL. IL, Knoxville, Tenn; Captain 24th U. S. Infantry; W'. M. 1.; 1?. S. M. A.; Speaker and Justice of the McKinney Club. Charles Henry Smith, LL. 15., Knoxville, 01131111.; Entered Academic Department 1899; R. A., Y. of T. 1902; Entered Law Department 1901; Phi Gamma Delta; Captain of C0. l'y 19012; McKinney Club; Editor on Volunteer from Junior Law Class 1901-2; Glee Club 1899- 1900, 1901-2, 1902-3; University Quartette 190112, 1902-3; Chi Delta Literary Society; Prophet of Senior Law Classs1 lexz' HConstitutionality 0f the Jim- hargo. 1Yalter Matson Iimery. LIp 13.. Memphis, TemL; Phi Gamma Delta: McKinney Club; Glee Club; Episcopal Club; Y. M. C. A.; Uni versity of Virginia. 1901-2. leexix: Sufficiency of the Common Law to Regulate Corporate Trusts. Joseph Grim, Jr., Bridgman, New Jersey; South Jersey Institute 1899; h'owu Universtty; McKinney Club; Yicc-Prcsidcnt and Critic Chi Delta; Declaimer for Chi Delta in 1903 In- ter-Socicty Contest; Secretary and 'Heasurer of junior Law Class, and Senior Law Class; 'IH'easurcr of Tennessee 1Varsity Club; Right end 1901-2 and 1902-3 Football Teams; Forward Senior Law Ensket 1:111 Team; Member 1902 Track Team; Captain and Second Base 1902 Baseball Team; Second Base 1903 Baselxallv Team. 5. Harlow Strung, LIW 11.. Chattanooga, Tenn; Graduated Chattanooga High School 1899, with Teachers' Honor; Clerk to U. S. Pensinn Agent, Knoxville. TennH 1901-2273; Member Kappa Alpha Fraternity; Member Governing Board University German Club; Member Episcopal Club; Member BchinuCy Club, lexix: 0Sufticiency of the Common Law to Regulate Corporate Trusts. Hugh McCall Tate. IL A17. 1.1.1 11., Morris- town, Tenn; Phi Gamma Delta: Phi Kappa Phi; Chi Delta; McKinney Club; Glee Club; Y. M. C. A1; Athletic gXSsociation; XVinner of Second Scholarship. 1898-99; Allen Medal, 1899- 1000; Chi Delta's Orator's Medal, 1900-1; Do- claimcfs Medal, 1901-2; Best Dehatefs Medal. 1901-2; Medal for best drilled man in Co. A 1899-1900; Chi Delta's Representative and win- ner in lnter-Society Contests. in Declamation, 1899-1900; in Oratory 1900-1; in Debate 1901-2; President of Chi Delta; Speaker and Justice of the McKinney Club; Captain of Co. C 1901- 1902; Captain of Senior Law Basket 12111 Team; Leader fur University of Tennessee in Annual Contest in Debate with Vanderbilt l'niversity 1902-3. Tllmfx: Duress as a Defense to an Action 011 a Contract. Clifford Van luren Perry, Swan Muff, Tenn, LL. IL; 11. A. 11'. Uf TU 19021; Phi Kappa Phi; Philn; Y. M. C. 11.; Athletic As- sociation; Tennessce 'Varsity Club; McKinney Club; 'lH'ack Team; Senior Law liasket Ball Team; l'hilo Improvement in Debate Medal 1900; Philo liest Delmter Medal 1902; Vice- President Y. M. C. A. 1901-2; Vice-Px'csident Athletic Association 1901; Manager of Track Team 1901-2; President of Philo 1902; Exchange Editor of Magazine 1901-2; President Y. M. C. .1. 1902-3; President Students0 Associatiun 1902- 1903; Philu Dchater in lntcr-Society Contest. 1902; Representative of L'niversity of 'l1ennes- see in Annual Contest in Debate with Vander- bilt University, 1902; Justice McKinney Club 1903; President Senior Law Class. Thmix: Duress 213 a Defense to a Cm'ltrzlct, 1Yilliam Jay Donaldson, LL. L, Morristown, 1131111.; I3. A.. U1 of T. 1902; Phi Gamma Delta; Phi Kappa Phi; Chi Delta; McKinney Club; Y. M. C. 41.; 1'. T. Glee Club; U. T. Ger- man Club; President Sophomore Class 1899- 1000; Chi Delta's representative in lnter-So- Ciety Contest in Debate 1900-1, and in Oration 1901-2; Rest Debaterk Medal Chi Delta 1900-1: Poet's Medal F. T. Magazine 1900-1; Captain Co. A and Senior Officer of Battalion 1901-2; Class Poet 1901-2; Editor in Chief of the V01- unteer 1901-2; 1Vinner Second Junior Law Scholarship 1902; Editor on Volunteer from Senior Law Class; Speaker McKinney Club; Clerk of Moot Court; Manager Class Basket Ball Team; Advance Agent of Glee Cluh: Commencement Orator. Titavix: uUnrest; as a Defense to an Action on a Contract. Shakespeare on the Senior Law Class This bud of love, by Summeris ripening breath, may prove a beauteous fiower when next we meet.-Alban. O ! judgment, thou art fled to brutish beasts, and men have lost their reasonr-Cooper. His life was gentle, and the elements so mixed in him that Nature might stand up and say to all the world, tithis was a man. -DashielI. This weak impress of love is as a figure trenched in ice; which, with an hours, heat, dis- solves to water, and doth lose its form.-730naldson. He was a man of an unbounded stomacheEmery. A jestis prosperity lies in the ear of him who hears it, never in the tongue of him that makes iteGoodman. But we all are men, in our own natures frail; and capable of our iiesh, few are angels. eGrt'm. I have neither wit, nor words. nor worth, nor actions, not, utterance, nor the powers of speech.-8Wc1ntt're. In peace thereis nothing that so becomes a man as modest stillness and humility.-?eery. You play the spaniel, and think with wagging of your tongue to win me.-Raquifser. The miserable hath no other medicine, but only hope.-Seymour. Deformed, unfinished, sent before my time into this breathing world, scarce half made up.-Simerly. As in the sweetest bud the eating canker dwells, so eating love inhabits in the finest wits of all.-sz'th. Turn him to any cause of policy, the Gordian Knot of it he Will unloose familiar as his garter.-Stone. 1,11 make my heaven in a ladyis lap, and deck my body in gay ornaments; and witch sweet ladies with my words and looks.-Strang. If that thy bent of love be honorable, thy purpose marriage, send me word to-morrow, and all my fortune at thy foot 111 lay, and follow thee, my Lord, throughout the worldeTate. BOARD OF EDITORS, DENTAL DEPARTMENT JUNIOR CLASS. DENTAL DEPARTMENT Junior History, Dental Department Y REVIEWING THE RECORDS we find the Class of 1904 to be the record breaker of the Dental Department. Out venerable dean has B told us this again and againwhe has also told every other Class the same story-and will continue to fan the same hot air into the face of the unsuspecting until he is called upon to turn his toes to the daisies. Nevertheless, our record will confirm my statement. Our Class first broke the record by working three months on one set of teeth Next we were given a four-tooth bridge to construct. This called forth our skill and ability, so at the end of the second day we handed in our beautiful golden dentures. Then we paid our respects to Drs. Freeman and Hays, the high muck-er-mucks of the dissecting room. By paying these gentlemen eleven dollars and sixty-five cents we were permitted to be- come acquainted with that peculiarly sweetish odor which dental students never forget. These gentlemen had visited our Class several times prior to this, therefore they knew we would not be satisfied with any ordinary stiff. So they sent a cablegram to some of their Egyptian relatives asking them to ship six mummies to the U. of T. They arrived in due time, and the Juniors, with a mighty array of scalpels attacted this royal army of iistiffsii Five of them worked well. It seemed that they had not been dead more than two thousand years. But the sixth, the subject of Class num- ber two, was perfectly dry and very badly shrunken. However, after soaking him a few days we succeeded in unraveling his mysteries. Being forcibly struck by the distinguished appearance of this ancient individual, we were led to inquire as to his ancestry. After a long and tedious investi- gation we learned that he was Raamses II, grandson of Raamses the Great. This royal person lived for others but died for us, and in his silent tomb he waited many centuries for our coming, that he might teach the mysteries of human anatomy. Then we cast lots for his bones; they fell into the hands of Dr. Kelton, a foreigner of Arkansas, who kindly presented them to the College Museum, where they may be seen by tipping the janitor. Another evidence of our greatness is the regard which the learned QPl Seniors have for our Class. Many of our Seniors have never been Seniors before, so they are very likely to err. This they did about the fifteenth of February when they tried to relieve our coat tails of any superfluous dust that might be hanging around. For the tables were turned and we got next. Some escaped, but most were captured and led to the altar of repent- ance where we kindly applied a piece of red hotii raw-hide to the gable end of their pants until they shed tears of gratitude. But with all our amusements we have ever done our duty as it becomes a student of this grand old University. We have tasted the hardships and sacrifices of college life; we have given up social engagements to spend long tedious hours with our books; we have torn ourselves from friends and comrades at home that we might sit at the feet of our honored faculty and learn to select right means for right ends. In the past we have made blunders and have been guilty of many short-comings, yet in the end we have come out victorious because we have refused to be daunted by blunders and defeats. The tissue of the life to be, We mean with colors all our own; And in the field of destiny, Weill reap as we have sown. -Carroll. Senior Dental Class E. E. BULLOCK ...................... Mississippi J. L. WALKER ....................... Kentucky A. M. NOEL ........................ Tennessee R. L. BLANTON ......... . . . ....... Tennessee E. G. MATTHEWS ....................... Missouri E. S. NIXON . . ...................... Louisiana C. F. GLENN ..... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . North Carolina E, G. ATLEE .......... . . . ............ Texas J. L. HAYES ...................... . .Tetmessee J T. FERGUSON ....................... Tennessee J. M. COLE ........................ Tennessee S. R. HARDISON .......... . . . . ........ Tennessee E. O. WELLS ........................ Tennessee J. W. WEIM ........................ Tennessee History if Class if 1903, Dental Department HOW inadequate it is to say that the Class of 1903 is merely a remarkable body of dental students. Have we not such names on our roll as that of Nixon the Famous, who, at the age of nine, slew a thirteen foot alligator with a weeding hoe in the swamps of Louisiana, and still lives, telling the tale? Have we not our Fergy, the original tlHappy Hooligan, whose drumsticks twinkle along the quivering pikes of summer time, while his own soprano voice, lifted in his own version of Dreamy Eyes, so dilutes the air with its thinness that all the dust settles to the ground? Have we not Wells, whom the gods made so beautiful that he once sought to perpetuate that beauty in a plaster cast, from which he came very near having to be removed in pieces, so loth was it to give up its prey? These are only examples. Each member of the C lass has performed some noteworthy exploit, from which, like an Indian Chief, he has taken his nickname. Needless to say, this nick-name is different from the one given him by his mother and sister at home, and never becomes familiar there- if he can help it. We have never had any co-eds in our Class, and our laboratory work has always been a stag affair. When one of us sees his darling bridge, over which he has toiled for weeks, suddenly dwindle into an airy nothing in one ornate flourish of the blow-pipe flame, he is deprived of feminine sympathy in his bereavement. But the absence of the lifairii does not take from the vitality and grand solemnity of the funeral oration which follows. One thing for which our Class deserves credit is its determined stand in discouraging the use of the big, big D by its members. Formerly all articles of silver had to be kept under cover in the laboratories, lest they unite with the sulphur in the atmosphere and be ruined. iBullock can explain this process and give you points l Now, however, things are changed and a committee of three -waits on every gentleman who indulges, to see that he duly undergoes the application of the board. 50 successful has this committee been that rubber dam is never mentioned above a whisper without permission of the committee. We thought for a while of changing the name of this article, but our patients objected; Some fellow has said that the truest sign of greatness and prosperity in a nation is lack of eventfulness in its history. Why should not this apply. equally well to a class of students, tus for exampleJ? The Class of 1903 has had a very uneventful history. It didnit seem so to the historian till, at the request of his loving class-mates and a few hints from the committee of three, he at last set about the task of writing it. The only catastrophe worth recording is the frightful epidemic of mumps, whim laid as low during our Freshman year. It may be due to the broadening influence of that suffering, that we have escaped some of the misofrtunes that have beset some of the other Classes. But we should be tolerant of their shortcomings now. It will be a long time before they can discuss their iipractice before State Board men, or call themselves DOCTORS.-9'. IV. Applied Quotations, Give me base ball or give me death.-Henry. Be kindly affectioned one to another with brotherly loveeCamp. Above all weapons the umbrella is the besteCarroll. Stand up and grow tall.-cBlanton. Never gamble or in any way speculate.-?arks. Is he busy? Well, he's thizzy-IzzyF-Hadson. The light-footed M FreshmaneRoberson. Sampson,s strength lay in his whiskers.-Walker. Fore-thought is better than after-thought, but inner-thought is best of all.-Haynes. Boasting is only begging for praise.-Glenn. The worst combine of all is that of hGray, Noel and Bogle. eSftxdents. Blank cartirdges will often make the most noise.-o4tlee. Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy mighteDr. Ward. With all your getting, get hand-pieces.eUnknotwn Thief. The longest bone in the body is the back-bone.eCrocwnomer. Lee Stanfill is the great American gum chewer. F. G. Huston said he didn't know he was such a swell fellow until he had the mumps. Norman Henry has not yet lost his religion reading ltGray, as he has informed us he was starting out as a missionary in the anatomical field. Bart White, who is our ttbureau of information,,' said that a ttwise old sawl, was one that had cut its wisdom teeth. Dave Houstonetin Kress, dry goods store admiring red checkered half hosed How much are these pretty flve-cent socks? A still tongue shows a wise headeriIliam. Two heads are better than one.-Taylor. Talkers are not good doers.ec?icorfhcrass. Give every woman thine ear but few thy voice.-Hammons. Dental Department Three questions in Dr. Grayis examination were as follows:- 1. Describe the first superior cuspid of the right side. 2. Describe the Gluteal muscles of the face. 3. What branch of the inferior Messenteric artery supplies the lower teeth? Wanted Two bottles of anti-fat.-Wayfield. A room mate. A congenial Billie goat preferred.-Kelton. One pair of curling tongs.-Harpole. A chair with twelve-inch cushion, for use while lecturing.-$r. Noel. A chew of good tobacco.-E. H.10hnson. One pair of high heeled shoes.-Coffman. A cure for chronic morning headache. tCaused by boozeJ-j. C. Francis. Lost One good-night kiss.-L. D. Granlof. One two.ounce bottle of hair oil. Finder please return to Ed. Francis and receive reward. Ten pounds good quality of Limberger cheese. Please return to Ross. Three volumes of Bart Whiteis Temperance Lectures. Bring to E. V. Wood and receive liberal reward. Cheap Column-For Sale A skeleton by McDonald. A pair of old brogan shoes by Buryear. A pair of pants. tGood except bosomJ Apply to Fred Grim. A pair of good socks, only been worn six weeks. tNever laundriedd Apply at once to Ferguson. One bottle of Hoytls German Cologne. Apply to Tomlinson. A song-will sing it free of charge. Apply to Graham. Motto Vel pace cvel belle clamm fierz' licet Class Yell Rackety-Cacwhack Catwhack, Carwhack Rackefy-Caqvhack Ca'hvhack, Caquhack Hogaqv, Hogaqv Specials, Specials Rah, Rah, Rah. Special Class , Class Colors Red and Yellow MISS THORNBURGH MISS BROWN MISS DODD MISS MCWILLIAMS MISS FARMER MISS BROOKS MISS KERR MISS WATSON MISS BAUMAN MISS FULWILER MISS J OHNSON MISS FOSTER MISS MCCLURE sts SUSONG MISS YOUNG MISS BONDURANT MISS MORRIL MISS LEE Class Flower Stramonium Class Officers PAUL H. RUSSELL RALPH W. BELL , . J. W. LONGLEY . . MISS SUE BAUMAN J. M. LOVE g ' ' MISS MAYME LEE LAPSLEY W. HOPE; I ' CLASS ROLL MR. W. W. BERRY MR. W. B. CONLEY MR, R. W. BELL MR. W. W. BAKER MR. Y. B. STONE MR. A. F. HOBBIE MR. L. W. HOPE MR. W. J. LONGLEY MR. J. M LOVE MR. J. M. LEA MR. T. N. POWELL MR. P. H. RUSSELL MR. D. B. TURNER MR. W. P. WASHBURN MR. A. G. WEXLER MR. D. M. COWARD MR. J. H. CALLOWAY MR. A. A. THOMASSON MR. M. P. HOLLINGSWORTH Class Favorite Drink High-Ball a la Specia1 . .President . . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . Editors on Magazine Editors on Volunteer Agricultural Short Course BANKS, ROSCOE BEASLEY, CLIFFORD BENSON, JOHN SIDNEY BROADWELL, CLARENCE BUCKNER, DAW FULLER, P. L. GRIFFITTS, JOHN HAGLER, JAMES ALLEN HENDERsoN, WILLIAM STUART HOLMGREEN, GEORGE HOFFMAN, EPHRAIM KIMMINs, JACOB WILLIAM KINNEv, WILLIAM HAMPTON LATIMER, MORGAN LINCH, RALPH WALDO EMERSON LOVE, ALLEY ATHELSTON LOWE, GEORGE KEELING First Year MCCAMPBELL, BENJAMiN P. McM'URRv, SAMUEL FRANKLIN MALONEY, HUGH CONWAY' MURPHY, ARTHUR ELMORE MYERS, BRUCE A NEELEY, FINIS HANDLEY PATTON, PRESTON FIDELIQ . RAWORTH, DICKSON BREWER -, RING, ARTHUR RUCH, AUSTIN SANDERS, RICHARD CAIN SCHLICTER, HARVEY TELLENER THOMAS, CRAWFORD HOLMES WALKER, HILL LANE WILLIAMS, DAVID LLOYD WILLIAMS, LEE ,' WILLIAMS, SAMUEL LEE WOODSON, EDWI N Second Year BROOKE, STANLEY PIERCE, JOSEPH E. College Life in Limericks. 3 $ ? I 2 C.I'here once 6was a green little fish, cThere was a bold, dang'rous Soph 'more, Whose face cwas as round as a dish. Who smoked, drank, chewed hbaccer, and scwore. He tended his books; He rlvas bad at intrigue, Quite serious his looks; 04nd worse at Soph Trig; To be a wise man rbeds his wish. o4nd so had to try it once more. 3 4 5 7here once cwas a Iight-heaa'ea' junur, cThere once cwas a rwise learned Senior, CHM? 'lvas a sweet, lomely co-ed, Whose pa 'lvrote: Youhll soon enough ruin your Who said to his girl : Wonht you lean your Whom lowe from her studies had led: Old fatherhs bank-book, Srweet head on my arm P She sat on the lawn Your goose I quill cook. I canht see the harm, Until almost darwn, 04nd so he quit being a lunar. For 17! soon 'lvant a 'hzz'fe, said this Senior. And now, alas, she iSedead. 6 7 There rwas a prospective M. A., cThere 'lvas a dignified Prof. Who studied each night until day. Who at other menhs business did scoff. When asked, Why so? x Seemed always to say: He said, Don't you know, Theyhll ne'er see the day One must hustle to get an M A P When they are as smart as a Prof. -CARL HOLLIDA Y. Chi Delta Founded 1836. Color -Red Yell Hang-a-napper. Hang-a-napper. Hang-a-napper, rwe! ?ang-a-flapper. cDang-a-flapper. Old U. of T. cRag-a-fan-a-Belfa. ?com-a-Iack-wHelta. Long live the Crescent of old ChbDelfa. Presidents, 1902-1903 GEO. C. LARKIN ALLEN, T. H. BACHMAN, J. W. BALTHIS, R. F. BARNETT, J. W. BARTON, W. J. BEAMAN. J. G. BERRY, W. W. BROWN, W. H. BULLOCK, E. H. CAMPBELL, L. R. CARSON, J. F. CLARK, R. L. COFFEY, C. S. COPELAND, W. A. JOHN A. HARDIN ROBT. A. ELKINS PHIL. H. CORNICK MEMBERS CORNICK, P. H. CRESAP, J. L. DODSON, G. D. ELKINs, R. A. FULLER, C. J. GAMBLE, ROBT. GRAINGER, J. M. GREEN, T. B. GRIM, Jos. HERNDON, L. G. HOWE, B. W. HOLT, J. A. B. HARDIN, J. A. HARRILL, F. B. WORD, R. Representatives in Contest, 1903 JOSEPH GRIM ....... Declaimer J.W.BACHMAN . . .. W. H KEEBLE R.S.YOUNG s - ' HEISKELL, L. L. HITE, J. E. JARNAGIN, M. P. JOHNSON, W H. JOHNSON, T. B. KEE, V. G. KEEBLE, W. H. KING, H. LARKIN, G. C. LOVE, J. M. LOCKWOOD, O. L. MARFIELD, P. B. v MOORE, R. R. REEVES, T. E. YOUNG, R. S. . Orator . . Debaters RITTER, L. E. RODGERS, H. P. SMITH, W. II. SCHMITT, B. E. SAXTON, J. J. STONE, D. L. TATE, H. M. TROUTT, J. M. VINCENT, I. A. ROLLOW, J. G. WHITE, H. B. WILLIAMSON, J. E. WINSLOW, J. C. WILLIAMS, S. B. .v g m. x , g... X$x w $3.5 a x; . is xxx x; V, .a, .,.... ax 1..,.W ,: ?r...WIW a , , ; . , $ Philomathesian Organized 18 J 6. Color-Bluc PreSidents, 1902-1903 Representatives in Intet-Societv Contest, 1903 B. L. CAPELL J. S. COOPER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Declaimer R. L. BAYLOR ' R, L. BAYLOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orator BEN. L. CAPELL Debaters I. s. COOPER LEO GOODMAN . . .. . . LE0 GOODMAN W. J. LONGLEY . . . . . . . Reader of Star and Crescent ROLL AYMETT, J. I EDMUNDS, J. T. LONGLEY. W. J. ACREE, G. T. ELLIS, J. R. MACHLIN, S. BAYLOR, R. L. GOODMAN, L. MASHBURN, L. W. BELTON, W. GUDGER, V. L. MCINTYRE, F. M. BOND, J. D. HAMPTON, H. H. NEELY, H. BRANSFORD, R. E. HENDERSON. W. T. OVERTON, E. CAPELL, B. L. HOLT, W. T. PEERY, C. V. COOPER, J. S. HOLLINGSWORTH, M.-,P. RAINEY, J. G. CROWELL, S. R. HOBBIE, A. F. RYDER, H. R. DALTON, E. M. , KEELING, D. ROWITSER, E. C. DAVIS, C. L. ' KIMBROUGH, S. , TAYLOR, I. C. DENTON, J. C. KING, J. J. WEFLER. A. G. WILLIAMS, A. T. mcKinney Club The McKinney Club. Comparisons are oderoustt says Mrs. Partington, nevertheless, I venture the assertion that the McKinney Club is the best debating society on the ttHilW and Why, if you please, should it not be? Does not the cream of talent from Chi-Delta and Pnilo assemble at its meetings to wrangle over questions of law which have agi- tated legal minds time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary thereof? The scholastic year just closing has been a prosperous one in the McKinney Club. The idea of occasionally devoting an event ing to practicing the rules of parliamentary procedure was first acted upon, and afforded the members a great deal of amusement and incidentally, some instruction in that very complicated sub- ject, Parliamentary Law. This is the fifth year of the Clubts existence. Born as it was on the threshold of one of the most eventful periods of American history, it has caught the spirit of these events; that spirit Which is crying from the house tops, Progress! Progress! Progress! Members of McKinney Club. ALBAN, G. G. BEENE, PATTON CAPELL, B. L. COOPER, J. S. DASHIELL, W. R. DEARMOND, J. MERRETT DONALDSON, W. J. ELKINS, R. A. EMERY, W. M. GAMBLE, R. M. GOODMAN. LEO GR1M,J0E,JR. DENTON, J. C. JOHNSTON, POWELL LARKIN, G. C. MCINTIRE, F. M. PEERY, C. V. ROWITSER, E, C. SEYMOUR, C. M. SMITH, C. H. STONE, D. L. STRANG, S M. TATE, H. M. WILLIAMS, B. YOUNG, R. S. Barbara Blount Literary Society Founded 1893. Motto Colors Flower Esse quam widere Green and White White Clover Officers NINAx JACKSON GOOKIN . . . . . . . . President JESSE MCKAY . . . . . . . . . . , Treasurer EMMA.ALBERS. . .. . .. . . .Vice-President BLANCH MCINTIRE. . . . . . Secretary ROLL EMMA C. ALBERS VERNA CASTEEL FANNIE E. DEGOLIA NINA J. GOOKIN MIRIAM HART NELLIE M. HITE MAUDE KELLER MARGARET MCDONOUGH BLANCH E. MCINTIRE JESSE MCKAY IDA M. MILNOR JENNIE MORRELL MARCIA PERKINS SIDNEY THOMPSON LAURA THORNBURGH JANE WILLIAMS KATHERINE WILLIAMS MARY WILLIAMS ADELAIDE C. ROWELL INSPIRATION I 2 3 There sat beside a dashing stream $3; chance upon the farther bank The hrawe ladjumped into the stream, A lad and lassie gay, The maid a flower spied; 115 torrents beat him hard; In careless mirth and youthfaljoy, She wanted it, she Ionged for it, But steadily across its width, Whiting the hours away. She wen teased and cried. He struggled yard by yard. 4 5 0ft cwas he tempted to giwe oter, 04nd so, a wictor o'er the flood, His journey to retrace; He plucked that flocwer so neat; But ewer on the hank he saw And, straggling back across the stream, His sweethearths lowely face. He laid it at her feet. 6 7 8 There sits beside the stream of Life His hair is gray, his form is bent, And often has it cheered him on, A man now stooped and olde Yet lifefs still filled cwith jay, This face so true and sweet; What! Can it be P Yes, so it is For therehs beside him that sweet face 70 call the flowers of success, That boy once 50 hold. Which cheered him when a boy. And lay them at her feet. -HUGH 3!. TA TE. Song of the thratsh The path of the pledged man is not one of ease, His experiences oft make him weak in his knees; He sings and runs errands, makes speeches galore, Does tricks by the dozen and stunts by the score. But he does them all gladly, till he pauses for breath, In the bonds that shall flourish still--e'ben till death. 04nd the tortures, the dim lights, the terrible goat, The chorus of groanings, the weird sounds which float To and far in the hall--oh, these make men quake; These make men tremble and make their hearts ache. But the neopalytes pass them to speak in awed breath The vows that shall hind them in love until death. Then ho! for the rattle of dead menhs bones, And ha I for the anguish of neopalytes groans; And ho! for the wows made in low solemn breath. And the bonds that shall perish not--e'ven till death. The Phi Kappa Phi Fraternity is a College and Alumni Society composed of honor graduates, of all departments, of American Colleges and Universities. The Fraternity selects its regular members from the best students within one year of the completion of the Bachelor or higher degree course. The membership is thus 3. Phi Kappa Phi Honorary Fraternity Founded at the University of Maine University of Tennessee Chapter Organized 1899 college honor, all the more prized because it is intercollegiate. It stands for the Unity and Democracy of Education. Its general object is to unite college graduates of high rank without regard to department, course of study or sex, for the advancement of highest scholarship. The special subject of each Chapter is to hold its Alumni more closely to their Alma, Mater, and to organize them for the promotion of true education. Object Official Staff PROF. JAS. D. HOSKINS. . . . . . . . . ...... President PROF. COOPER D. SCHMITT ............. Treasurer JOHN A. HARDIN .................. Secretary Fratres in Urbe DR. JAS. PARK, 40 JOSHUA W. CALDWELL, 75 W. B. LOCKETT, t81 EDWARD T. SANFORD, ,83 W. O. WHITTLE, ,89 J. PIKE POWERS, 794 NORMAN H. PITMAN, 95 JOHN H. FRANTZ, Law 94 W. T. KENNERLY, Law 01 A. B. HYMAN, Law JAMES T. Cox, T01 33 Fratres in Facultate CHAS. W. DABNEY, Pres. W. M. FULTON H. H. INGERSOLL C. W. TURNER A. M. SOULE CHAS. A. PERKINS P. P. CLAXTON CHAS. E. WAIT C. O. HILL COOPER D. SCHMITT CHAS. E. FERRIS HENRY J. DARNALL JAS. D. HOSKINS ALEX C. LANIER Fratres in Universitate 1903 W. J. DONALDSON, A. B. t02, Law THOS. H. ALLEN HUGH M. TATE, A. B. t02, Law J. C. DENTON CLIFFORDhV. PERRY,A.B.,02,LaW WILLIAM H. KEEBLE R. M. WILLIAMSON, A. B. t02, Special MARY JOHNSON 01 J. A. HARDIN W. P. ANGLE KATHERINE WILLIAMS ROBT. S. YOUNG PHIL. H. CORNICK ROBT. A. ELKINS BEN L. CAPELL VERNA CASTEEL GEORGE G. ALBAN, Law FRANCES FOSTER 'LEo GOODMAN, Law 1904 BERNADOTTE E. SCHMITT Tnos. D. BRABSON LAMAR HEISKELL R. L. CLARK Pi Kappa QAIpha 3 3 Chapter Roll University of Virginia . Cumberland University Davidson College Vanderbilt University William and Mary College University of North Carolina University of Tennessee Alabama Polytechnic Institute S. W. P. University Roanoke College Hampden-Sidney University University of the South Kentucky University Georgia Agricultural College Presbyterian College, S. C. Kentucky State College Woiford College Trinity College Richmond College Centenary College, Louisiana Washington and Lee University 3 3 Alumni Chapters Richmond, Va. Norfolk, Va. Memphis, Tenn. Dillon, S. C. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Dallas, Texas. Charleston, S. C. Knoxville, Tenn. Pi Kappa QAlpha Founded University of Virginia 1868 Zeta Chapter Organized 1874 Colors . Flower Official Organ Secret Organ Old Gold and Garnet Lily Shield and Diamond Dagger and Key K L' ' , Yell Wall! ripefy zip! Hip bang hi! Hurrah! Hurrah I Hurrah pz' 1 Fratres in Urbe Fratres in Facultate JOSEPH H. BQRCHES LYON C. MCMULLEN CHARLES E'?:AIT, PH' D' PHILIP J. BRISCOE, JR. J. PIKE POWERS, JR. ' ' . Fratres m Umversxtate GEORGE BROWN DANIEL K. LEE 1903 J. BARD FRENCH WILLIAM N. BRISCOE J. T. EDMONDS O. P. PARKER JAMES G. COMFORT , P. E. TEMPLETON 1904 J. W. HUDSON HARRY W. CURTIS, JR. JAMES J. PRICE 1905 CURTIS J. CULLEN ' JAMES H. MCCALLUM SAMUEL J- MCALLISTER GEORGE T. VVALTON J. R. CAMPBELL EARL R. HARRISON HENRY P. WILLIFORD DR. HOWARD A. IJAMS WILLIAM K. HUNTER 1906 H P I C N., W 1 THOMAS C. CAMPBELL WILLIAM V. DEADERICK ARRV ' JAMS 0R ELmS, UHIAMS ALFRED A. TAYLOR WILLIAM GALLAHER L. M. HARRISON HENRY F. PARKER ,v WW :1 imI-HL. flu 1 ,. DISTRICT 1 University of Maine Bowdoin College New Hampshire College University of Vermont Brown University DISTRICT 2 Cornell University Swarthmore College Pennsylvania State College University of Pennsylvania Bucknell University Washington and Jefferson College Lehigh University Dickinson College University of Maryland Columbian University DISTRICT 3 University of Virginia Randolph-Macon College William and Mary College Hampden-Sidney College Richmond College Davidson College Trinity College North Carolina State College University of North Carolina Boston New York Philadelphia Buffalo Pittsburg Kappa . Sigma Chapter Roll DISTRIC T 4 Wofford College Mercer University Georgia School of Technology University of Georgia University of Alabama Alabama Polytechnic Institute DISTRICT 5 Cumberland University Vanderbilt University Universi'ry of Tennessee Southwestern Pres. University University of the South Southwestern Baptist University Kentucky State College DISTRICT 6 Millsaps College Louisiana State University Centenary College Tulane University Southwestern University University of Texas Alumni Associations New Orleans Washington Memphis Norfolk Boston Atlanta Pine Bluff Danville Waco Yazoo City DISTRICT 7 University of Arkansas William Jewell College Missouri State University Washington University University of Nebraska Baker University University of Denver DISTRICT 8 Ohio State University Purdue University Wabash College University of Indiana University of Illinois Lake Forest University University of Michigan University of WiSCOnsin University of Minnesota University of Iowa DISTRICT 9 Leland Stanford, Jr. University University of California Chicago Indianapolis St. Louis Chihuahua San Francisco Colors White, Scarlet and Emerald Green S. G. HEISKELL W. M. HOUSE B. L. LOYD W. A. PARK C. G. ARMSTRONG D. D. ANDERSON E. M. KENNEDY J. W. PARK Frates in Urbe G. A. GAMMON J. H. BEAN J. P. GAUT E. C. SOTHARD J. W. GREEN R. P. BOYD J. M. LOGAN R. J. LOWDER J. N. MITCHELL Kappa Sigma Founded at the University pf Bokgna 1395 University of Virginia 1867 Lambda Chapter Established '880 Flower Official Organ Secret Organ Lily of the Valley Caduceus Star and Crescent Yell A! E! K, D, cB! Kappa Sigs of Tennessee! Cossere! Cossera! Lambda Chapter! Kappa Sig-ma! Fratres in Facultate S. M. BAIN CHAS. H. SHANNON, Ph. D. A. C. LANIER A. G. PAYNE M. W. DOYLE Fratres m Umvcrsxtate W. M. G N 1903 REE H. B. FINCH P. H. RUSSELL D. C. GREEN I905 - CURD W. T. HOLT J. J. SAXTON N A 1906 E L L. G. HERNDON . J. C. WINSLOW H. P. GANT W. C. HELFER B. W. HOWE G. P. GAUT . Specml D. B. TURNER W. J. LONGLEY PROVINCE ALPHA University of Maine Massachusetts Institute of Technology Boston University Harvard University Worcester Polytechnic Institute PROVINCE BETA Cornell University St. Stepharfs College Dickinsoms College Bucknell University Columbia University Alleghany College Pennsylvania State College Gettysburg College University of Pennsylvania PROVINCE ZETA University of Missouri University of Nebraska Washington University University of Arkansas University of Kansas Sigma Alpha Epsilon Chapter Roll PROVINCE GAMMA University of Virginia Washington and Lee University University of North Carolina Georgia. School of Technology Davidson College Wofford College Mercer University Emory College University of Georgia PROVINCE DELTA University of Michigan Mt. Union College ' University of Cincinnati Franklin College Northwestern University Adrian College Ohio Wesleyan University Ohio State University Purdue University University of Illinois University of Minnesota University of Wisconsin PROVI N CE EPSILON Central University Kentucky State College Southwestern Presbyterian University University of Tennessee Southwestern Baptist University Bethel College Cumberland University Vanderbilt University University of the South University of Alabama Southern University Alabama Polytechnic Institute PROVINCE ETA University of Colorado Leland Stanford, Jr. University Denver University University of California Colorado School of Mines PROVINCE THETA Lousiana State University 'University of Mississippi Tulane University University of Texas Adrian, Mich. Alliance, Ohio. Americas, Ga. Atlanta, Ga. Augusta, Ga. Birmingham, Ala. Boston, Mass. Chattanooga, Tenn. Chicago, Ill. Cincinnati, Ohio. Cleveland, Ohio Dayton, Ohio. Alumni Associations Denver, Col. Detroit, Mich. Florence, Ala. Indianapolis, Ind. J ackson, Miss. Kansas City, Mo. Knoxville, Tenn. Little Rock, Ark. Los Angeles, Cal. Macon, Ga. Memphis, Tenn. New Orleans, La. New York, N. Y. Philadelphia, Pa. Pittsburg, Pa. San Francisco, Cal. Savannah, Ga. St. Louis, Mo. Talladega, Ala. Washington, D. C. Washington, Ga. Wilmington, N. C. Worcester, Mass. Colors Purple and Old Gold Sigma Alpha Epsilon Founded at University of Alabama 1856. Tennessee Kappa Chapter Organized 1879. Official Organ Secret Organ The Record of Sigma Alpha. Epsilon Phi Alpha Yell ?hz' cAIpha, Allacazee, Cth' o4lpha Allacazon, Sigma o4lpha. Sigma oqlpha, Sigma o4lpha Epsilon. Flower Vio let Fratres in Urbe DAVID C. CHAPMAN ROBERT H. SIMMONDS HENRY MCKELDIN CHARLES S. NEWMAN, JR. CHARLES MCGHEE RODGERS CHARLES MCCLUNG THOMAS HUGH MCCLUNG THOMAS JESSE THOMAS JAMES BASCOM WRIGHT RICHARD E, GETTYS ELMO E. CARTER HARPER T. CHAMBERLAIN SAMUEL TALBOT LOGAN FRED CHAMBERLAIN ALEX. MCMILLAN JAMES CHRISTIE RODGERS DONALD WILSON RODGERS COWAN RODGERS WILLIAM BALLARD LOCKETT ALFRED F. SANFORD HOWARD CORNICK SAMUEL BOYD ALLEN TULLY R. CORNICK SAMUEL BELL LUTTRELL SAXTON DANYL CRAWFOR D Fratres in Universitate 1902 THOMAS NEWTON POWELL 1903 THOMAS HAMPTON ALLEN COLUMBUS POWELL SMITH GEORGE GAUTT ALBAN GEORGE SUSONG STOKELY PHILIP HEINRICK CORNICK I904 LUCIUS LAMAR HEISKELL JACOB LITTON THOMAS CLIFFORD JUSTIS FULLER WILLIAM HAROLD FORTUNE 905 MATT GRAINGER THOMAS STEPHEN BOOTH MCKINNEY ARCHIBALD HUGH DOUGLASS MILTON PRESTON JARNAGIN POWHATAN LEE FULLER WILLIAM WRIGHT MITCHELL CHARLES JAMES MCCLUNG, JR. 1906 BEAUMONT MACON STRATTON, JR. WILLIAM BATE WILLIAMS MARSHALL ANDREW FULLER HECTOR COFFIN Norfolk, Va. Raleigh, N. C. Dallas, Texas. Petersburg. Va. San Francisco, Cal. Atlanta, Ga. Montgomery, Ala. Richmond, Va. Franklin, La. Jacksonville, Fla. Augusta, Ga. Kappa Alpha cAlumni Chapters Macon, Ga. Talladega, Ala. Alexandria, La. Meridian, Miss. State associations Hampton-Newport News, Va. New York City. Mobile, Ala. Lexington, Ky. St Louis, Mo. Jackson, Miss. Chattanooga, Tenn. Staunton, Va. Kansas City, Mo. KAPPA ALPHA STATE ASSOCIATIONS-Missouri, Georgia, Kentucky, Alabama, North Carolina Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va. University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. W'oiford College, Spartanburg, S. C. Emory College, Oxford, Ga. Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va. Richmond College, Richmond, Va. Kentucky State College, Lexington, Ky. Mercer University, Macon, Ga. University of Virginia, Charlottsville, Va. Polytechnic Institute, A. 8: M. College, Auburn, Ala. Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas. : University of Texas, Austin, Texas. University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn. Davidson College, Davidson, N. C. Roll of Active Chapters Southern University, Greensboro, Ala. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Centre College, Danville, Ky. University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. University of Alabama, University, Ala. Louisiana State University Baton Rouge, La. William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo. S. W. P. University, Clarksville, Tenn. William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va. Westminster College, Fulton, Mo. Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky. Centenary College, Jackson, La. Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C. John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss. Columbian University, Washington, D. C. University of California, Berkely, Cal. University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark. University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W. Va. Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga. Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sitlney, Va. University of Mississippi, University, Miss. Trinity College, Durham, N. C. Kentucky Wesleyan University, Winchester, Ky. Florida State College, Tallahassee, Fla. North Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical College Colors Old Gold and Crimson Members in Faculty THOS. D. MORRxs Kappa Alpha Journal Special Messenger Kappa cAlpha Founded at Washington and Lee University 1865 P1 Chapter Established in 1883 Headquarters Kappa Alpha House Publications $ecren Yell Hurrah for the Crimson! Hurrah for the Gold! Hurrah for the Kappa Alpha, Knighfs of old! Rah, Rah, Rah! Uniruerst'ty of Tennessee, rah, rah, rah! Kappa Al-pha 1 Members in Town CHARLES H. DAVIS LUTTRELL G. RICE EDWARD SANFORD ALBERS DICK WILSON BOYD PARK GETTYS WILLIAM M. MEEK JOHN GUILFORD LOGAN JOHN MCMILLAN BROOKS ROBERT CRAIGHEAD BROOKS JAMES B. KINCAID WILLIAM LEE NEIL McADORY GAMBLE ERNEST C. MORRIS JONIE C. BEENE GEORGE F. MILTON ERNEST R. ZEMP EDWARD OTIS BROWN VONNO LAMAR GUDGER HOWARD KENDALL NORTHRUP Flowers Magnolia and American Beauty Rose Members in University 1902 RALPH WILLIAMS BELL 1903 JAMES MORRIS LOWE 1905 LAUEREME W. FRIERSON JAMES PHIPPS CHASE JOE BARKSDALE HARDISON Law 1904 JOE TEDFORD MCTEER DICK BLOW CHARLES M. SEYMOUR ROBERT MCDUFFIE GAMBLE I903 SAMUEL BAXTER STRANQ 5A. VWWGI-q' FHILA, SECTION I University of Maine Massachusetts Institute of Technology Worcester Polytechnic Institute Brown University SECTION 2 Dartmouth College Amherst College Trinity College Yale University SECTION 3 College of the City of New York Columbia University New York University SECTION 4 Colgate University Cornell University Union College Syracuse University SECTION 5 University of Pennsylvania Lafayette University Lehigh University Johns Hopkins University Indianapolis, Ind. Chicago, 111. New Haven, Conn. Phi Gamma Delta Chapter Roll SECTION 6 Bucknell University Gettysburg College Pennsylvania State College SECTION 7 University of Virginia Roanoke College Hampden-Sidney College Washington and Lee University Richmond College SECTION 8 Washington and Jefferson College Allegheny College Wooster College Adelbert College SECTION 9 Denison University Wittenberg College Ohio State University Ohio Wesleyan University University of Michigan SECTION 10 University of Indiana DePauw University Hanover College Wabash University Purdue University Graduate Chapters Kansas City, Mo. Pittsburg, Pa. Dayton, Ohio. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York City. Minneapolis, Minn. Cincinnati, Ohio. Bloomington, Ill. SECTION 11 University of Tennessee Bethel College University of Alabama University of Texas SECTION 12 Illinois Wesleyan University Knox College University of Illinois SECTION 13 University of Wisconsin University of Minnesota University of Chicago SECTION 14 William Jewell College University of Missouri SECTION 15 University of Kansas University of Nebraska SECTION 16 University of California University of Washington Philadelphia, Pa. Albany, N. Y. Toledo, Ohio. Phi Gamma Delta x Founded at Washington and jeffzrson 1848 Kapra Tau Chapter Organized 1890 Flower Heliotrope Color Royal Purple Fratres in Urbe WILLIAM P. MARFIELD DR. WILLIAM S. AUSTIN WELLINGTON DONALDSON JEROME TEMPLETON GEORGE F. HARRISON NORMAN H. PITMAN JAMES THADDEUS COX ARTHUR B. TARVVATER CLAUDE M. LOTSPEICH JOHN M. THORNBURGH Fratres in Facultate HENRY J. DARNALL Umipzigj FRANK B. DAVANT CHARLES W. DABNEY, PH. D., LL. D. Fratres in Universitatc 1903 BENJAMIN LEWIS CAPELL GEORGE CARRIGER LARKIN PAUL BENSON MARFIELD ROBERT SNEED YOUNG DONALD DEWITT SWISHER Official Organ The Phi Gamma Delta. Yell Hippi, hippi. hi, Rip, zip, zelta, Fiji, ah, ha, Phi Gamma Telta! Law 1903 Headquarters Phi Gamma Delta House WILLIAM JAY DONALDSON, A. B., W12 WALTER MATSON EMERY CHARLES HENRY SMITH, A. B., '02 HUGH MCCALL TATE, A. B., 02 1904 THOMAS DOIIGHTY BRABSON BERNADOTTE EVERLY SCHMITT 1905 JOHN WAVERIX BACHMAN I906 RIVERS MERIWETHER DONALDSON VICTOR NEWTON HACKER Special GEORGE DAY DODSON JAMES MOSES GRAINGER SEXTON WILLIAM DUNGAN WILLIAM FULLER GRESHAM GEORGE EDGAR LONG JAMES LOUIS GETAZ llrtllrm l'lH'IH , Alpha Tau Omega Directory of Chapters and Alumni Associations PROVINCE l-Alabama and Georgia Polytechnic Institute Southern University Emory College University of Alabama Mercer University School of Technology University of Georgia PROVINCE 2 CaIifornia, Colorado, Louisiana and Texas University of Colorado University of Texas University of California Tulane University PROVINCE 3-Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Nebraska University of Kansas University of Minnesota Hillsdale College Albion College University of Illinois Polytechnic Institute Adrian College University of Nebraska PROVINCE 4-Maine. Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Vermont Colby College Brown University University of Vermont University of Maine Tust College PROVINCE 5-New York and Pennsylvania St. Lawrence University Columbia University Pennsylvania College Cornell University W. and J. College University of Pennsylvania Muhlenberg College PROVINCE 6-North Carolina, South Carolina and Virginia Trinity College University of Virginia University of North Carolina College of Charleston PROVINCE 7-Ohio Mt. Union College Wesleyan University State University VVittenberg College Wooster University Western Reserve University PROVINCE 8-Tennessee S. W. Pres. University Vanderbilt University S. W. Baptist University University of the South University of Tennessee City and State Alumni Associations Allentown Alumni Associatiom-No. 5 South 5th St, Allentown, Pa. Augusta Alumni Association R. G. Merry, Augusta, Ga. Birmingham Alumni Association C. N. Jones, Montgomery, Ala. Boston Alumni Association -R. H. Dennett, Waverly, Mass. Chicago Alumni Association-P. H. Hoag, Roanoke Building, Chicago. Cleveland Alumni Association E. F. Eldridge, Cleveland, Ohio. Dallas Alumni Associati0n Leonard A. Hardie, Dallas, Texas. Dayton Alumni Association-E. J. Weaver, Dayton, Ohio. D. C. Alumni Association-H. P. Simpson, Washington, D. C. Georgia Alumni Association-E. A Werner, Atlanta, Ga. Louisville Alumni Association R. W. Bingham, Louisville, Ky. N. Y. Alumni Association-T. W. Jones, 114 W. 109th St, N. Y. City. Pittsburg Alumni AssociationwE. J. Shives, Greensburg, Pa. Tennessee Alumni Association H. Lee Parrish, Nashville, Tenn. Texas Alumni Association-R. E. L. Saner, Dallas, Texas. gAlpha Tau Omega Founded in Richmznd, Va. in 1805 Tennessee Pi Organized 1371. Reorganized X901 Colors Official Sky Blue and Old Gold Alpha Tau Omega Palm Yell Hip hurrah! Hip hurrah! Three cheers far Alpha Tau! Hurrah, hurrah, hurrah! Frater in Facultate PROF. WILLIAM W. CARSON Fratres in Urbe II. T. AULT J. W. CALDWELL J. M. KENNEDY W. J. MCNUTT J. B. CALDWELL C. DEADERICK F. A. MOSES G. H. PEPPER HENRY EASTER J. F. HOARNE 7 J. W. PERRY W. L. WELCKER Fratres in Universitate 1903 JAMES CLARENCE DENTON JAMES MONROE TROUTT . I904 OLIVER LADEw LocKwoon, JR. LAPSLEV W. HOPE 1905 MARION GREEN HOPE HENRY BENTON WHITE JESSE GREEN RAINEY 7 JAMES MCDONALD SHEA 1906 . LEMONT BYE LOCKwoon Roy HENRY EVANS JAMES FINNIE CARSON-Died March 23, 1903 Chi Omega Chapter Roll University of Arkansas University of Mississippi Randolph-Macon Womarfs College Tulane University University of Tennessee University Of Illinois Northwestern University University of Wisconsin University of California University of Kansas University of Nebraska Belmont College Columbian University Chi Omega Foundei '895 at University of Arkansas .Pi Chapter Founded 1900 Colors Official Organ Flower Cardinal and Straw The Elensis 6f Chi Omega White Carnation Yell Zippee, zippee, rzacw! Zippee, zippee, zaw! Cardinal, Cardinal, Cardinal-Straqu! Chi Omega! Chi Omega! Rah, rah, rah! Sorores 'in Urbe MARY HAZEN WILLIAMS LUCY MCDANIEL CURTIS ANNIE PORTER BEACH KATHERINE WAELER CARSON LILLIAN LONG JONES MARY MOORE KELLER Sorores in Universitate KATHERINE WILLIAMS, 03 LAURA THORNBURGH, 704 JESSIE MCKAY, ,05 MAUDE KELLER, ,05 LAURA TYLER, 05 MARCIA PERKINS, 05 JANE WILLIAMS, 05 MARY NELSON WILLIAMS, 05 FRANCES RAHT GERTRUDE RUTH ELLID'IT puma Alpha Omicron Pi Chapter R011 Bernard College Sophie Newcomb College Randolph-Macon Woman's College New York University - University of Tennessee Alpha Omicron Pi Founded at Barnard, New York City 1897 Omicron Chapwr Established 1902 Sorores NINA JACKSON GOOKIN DOROTHY GREVE EMMA CARHART ALBERS HARRIET CONE GREVE SALLIE WOODARD FRANCIS FAY WAGGONER JESS EWANN Urged the beau. May be so. Wonlf you be my srweefhearf, dear P So he pulled his chair up near; Hugged and kissed her wiflxouf fear, And she answered will: a fear, Said fhe man. ll You may think it would be funny, If Ican. n O .U u 1 O V E ,S C V O L Wonlf you be my sweetheart honey 9 cBuf Illl give you all my money, And rwill make your days all sunny !I And said, no. Said her beau. Woolf you be my sweetheart, darling P If you cwill, Illl be your bireling, And will seme you withouf gnarlt'ng. But she turned away in snarling VVVVV - OFFICERS Pres.-W. H. Keeble ' , A u , V.-P.-J. M. Grainger AM; $. , - ,- ' Treas.-C. D. Schmitt f I'- ' ' Gen. Sec.-W. W. Berry 72,-. - WpramxyW ! !;:;:.;21 .$.gm, a mu; m . Members 77777 , Jlnygwl'g . '3?! 1 W W! ' , , oar o irecors W13 ; ,m ngrmikim ' ' i: ' R. 13: Willfagsmf g8; ' I J . A. Hardin J. J. King T. B. Green Dr. T. W. Jordan 7 1 , Y. W. C. A. EDNA EARLE HOPE ............ President ALICE DEADERICK .......... Vice-President MAUDE KELLER. . . .. . . . . .Secretary MARIA CRAWFORD . . , . . . . . . . . . , Treasurer A MARCH DAY ON THE HtLL Hf Staff of JVIagazine PHILIP H. CORNICK.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Editor-in-Chief J. A. HARDIN, y03.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . .Business Manager DOROTHY GREVE, ,02. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Exchange Editor J. C. DENTON, '03 MIRIAM HART, ,03 LAURA THORNHURG, 04 JAS. J. KING, 04 LEO GOODMAN, Law ,03 GEO C. LARKIN, 04 HAR R IET GR EVE, ,04 OoaofH GRava'os E.MHANGE Ecwoa J,A.HARD1N 03 QRPARKERJOS P.H.CORNK.K'03 . BUS MGR . GEH MGR STVDENTS A55 EDITOR m cHiEF .J.q,mNG 'o+. Students QAssociation C.V.PEERY..................1.President H.B.FINCH....................Secretary O. P. PARKER. . . . . . . . . .General Business Manager The Secret of the Star The skies are clear, For the winds from there The clouds have swept. And from the onmshing wiolet dark of even Flashes a star- A single star, Which seems to have slept Forth from the every Ionelt'est point of heawen In desolate splendor. 04 turret high, 7hat pierces the sky Looks to the quest: And at a great, dark twina'orw opened wide, Looks out upon the nighte The gorgeous night, When all the 'haorld's at rest, 04 sweet Dream Princess fair and gentle-eyea'. And from afar, LThe setting star, Whose golden darts Ritual the radiance of her streaming hair, Catches a ray of light From her eyes so bright, And shines it softly down on lonely hearts 0an makes them tender. The reason why they cannot realize, They do not know those eyes. e11. W. W, '03. mmmmmm The Cause of Sighs Dead! Dead! King john, With apologies to Hood. One more unfortunate After the goal, Rashly importunate Gave up his soul. Take him up tenderly, Lift him with care; He's not formed slenderly 50 young or fair. For he weighs in pounds Ten score and five; And we know from his wounds Hehs no longer alive. He was a famous guard On a College eleven; 04nd backed the lines so hard, He backed into heaven. U. of T. Foot Ball Team, 1902 H. F. FISHER, Coach H. B. FINCH, Manager T. N. BUCKINGHAM, Captain J. GRIM. . . . .Right End V. GUDGER E . . Right Tackle J. T. Cox 8 J. H. SILCoX . . . .Left Guard J. BEENE. . . .Left End A H. DOUGLAS . Left Halfback P. GETTEYS 2 P, BEENE 8 ' ' A. E. SIMERLY. . . . . . . Center CALDW L M4 8 . .Right Guard R. WORD S , ' T. B. GREEN. . . .Left Tackle S. CRAWFORD ..... Quarterback T. N. BUCKINGHAM. . .Fullbapk . Right Halfback Substitutes R M. GAMBLE . J. AYMETT. . C. J. FULLER . Substitute End and Quarterback . . Substitute Cen ter and Halfback . Substitute End and Halfback IBase 13311 CAPT. R. M. GAMBLE. P. L. FULLER. N. M. GAMBLE. . RYDER . . . DENTON V . PATTON . C, T. FULLER . GRIM GUDGER . DUNGAN . BARNETT . LONGLEY . MILLER . . 'Teanm M.G.HOPE..... .... FRANK MOFFETT. . C. POWELL SMITH . 1903 Catcher Pitcher . Pitcher . Pitcher . Pitcher . First Base Second Base - . Third Base . Short-Stop Left Field . Center Field . Right Field . Substitute . Substitute . Coach . . Manager l903 M A E T L L A B E S A B I Track Team, 1901-1902 W. S. BELTON, Captain C. V. PEERY, Manager GRIM Cox CRAWFORD BERRY BUCKINGHAM ALEXANDER Track and Field Raccords 9 EVENT 1- OUR RECORD -9 BY WHOM MADE DATE 5. 1. A A RECORD 100 yard dash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 1-5 sec. . . . . W. W. Berry , . 4 ....... 1903 . . 10 1-5 SECOFjldS 22oyarddash 1............9231-4sec.....JackKirhy..1......... 1889 ..231-5secoxglds 440 yard dash . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 4-5 sec . . . . . W. Longmire . . . . . . . 1901 . . 50 2-5 seconds' Half mile run1 ... . ... . . . . . . 2 min. 11 sec .. . W. S. Belton. . ... . ... . . 1903 , .2 min. 5 1-2 sec Mile rim ............... 4 min. 66 1-5 sec . W. S. Belton . . 1 . . . 1 . 1903 . . . 4 min. 48 sec 120 yard hurdle race .......... 17 seconds . . '. . W. Donaldson .......... , 1900 . . . . .16 4-5 sec 220 yard hurdle race .......... 27 4-5 sec . . . . . W. W. Berry . . . . . . . . . . 1902 . . 4 . .27 1-4 5:0 Putting 16 pound shot . . . . . . . . . 36 feet. . . . . . . W. Longmire. .......... 1901 . . . . . .40 ft 7 in Throwing 16 pouxid hammer . . . 1 . . 94 feet 7 inches. . H. M. Edmonds ........ 1899 . . 110 ft 2 1-2 in Running broad jump . . . . . . . . . 21feet14-5inches H. M. Edmon'ds . . . . 1 . , . . 1899 . . . 21 ft 14-5 in Running high jump ......... 5 feet 7 1-2 inches 9 Bishop . . . . 9 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 ft 8 in Pole vault .............. 9 feet4inches . . J. Bernard ...... '. . . . . . . . . . . . . .10 ft 3 in Raccord of the Foot Ball T cam for 1902 Tennessee . . . Tennessee . . . . . Tennessee . . Tennessee . . Tennessee . . . Tennessee . . . Tennessee. . . . . . . Tennessee Total for Tennessee . . 12 34 5 6 .10 .11 10 Kings College Maryville. . . Vanderbilt Sewanee. . . University of Nashville Mississippi. . .. Georgia Tech Clemson ...... Opponents . . G u .4 OJ O Tennessee . . . . . . Tennessee. . . Tennessee . . . Tennessee. . . . . Tennessee Tennessee . . . Tennessee. . . Tennessee Tennessee Tennessee. . . Tennessee ...... Tennessee mmmmmmm Base Ball Scores, 1903 8 4 6 7 On 6 .11 1 EmoryandHenry. . . . Emory and Henry. . 3 Emory and Henry. .. 7 A1abama..............8 Alabama... ....... 6 A1abama..............13 Georgia School of Technology . 1 Georgia School of Technology . 4 Georgia School of Technology . 5 1 Sewanee ....... Sewauee ............ 7 Sewanee . . . ......... 4 Tennessee Varsity Club OFFICERS. DR. C. E. WAIT .......... President C. V. PEERY. . . .. . . .. . . . . Secretary JOSEPH GRIM . . . . . .Treasurer MEMBERS. Jos. GRIM R. M. GAMBLE N. M. GAMBLE A. E. SIMERLY J. A. SILCOX R. WORD T. B. GREEN T. N. BUCKHINGHAM V. S. GUDGER J. BEENE P. BEENE A. H. DOUGLAS P GETTYS C. J. FULLER J. N. BARNETT S. W. DUNGAN W. S. BELTON S. D. CRAWFORD J. AYMETH J. C. DENTON DR. C. E. WAIT J. T. EDMONDS C. V. PEERY C P. SMITH - CALDWELL H. R. RYDER HONORARY M EMBERS. W. W. BERRY J. S. COOPER H. B. FINCH R. F. BALTHIS PROF. C. A. KEFFER m Voyage 5f the Good Ship Tennessee T was about October lst when the good ship Tennessee, with Ad- miral Fisher in command. Captain Buckingham on deck, and a crew of able seamen, set about getting ready for a voyage. By the 8th, she was in commission, and on the 10th of October, 1902, in full war paint, amply equipped, amid the well wishes of all, sailed out in quest of the Golden Fleece of Southern Footballethe Championship. Early the next afternoon, not far from port, the schooner, Kings College, iiying alien colors, was sighted, and refused to surrender. For twenty minutes the Tennessee, in a heavy, murky sea and a gale of rain, manoeuvered around her little opponent, and then drew 0E. Again they closed and this time the gunners did their work well, for in twenty minutes more, the Kings College, with twelve big holes in her hull, struck her colors and was towed a prize into port. The star- board bulwarks of the Tennessee were slightly damaged. . I Again the Tennessee set forth, cruising near home, for rumors were 8:04,. V haw current of an attack by a powerful enemy, the Kentucky University. 490,1: Vsz . MW; Close hauled and with guns double shotted, the Tennessee awaited her coming, but at the last moment news of the Kentucky Universily's alliance with two notorious powers, caused the Cabinet of the Tennessee Naval Board to meet and decline the issue, on the ground that the Professional Doctrine had been violated. The little sloop, Maryville, chanced along and gallantly gave battle. As a result, she was completely riddled, and hauled into port disabled, with half her crew wounded and her decks presenting a scene of frightful carnage. A week later the battleship Vanderbilt, with an insolent, mixed crew, appeared off our coast, and the Tennessee sailed out to meet her on Baldwin Bay. The day was cloudless, the sea smooth, the engagement a terrific one. The aim of the Tennesseeis gunners was the surer and more powerful, but the Vanderbill had luck on her side. At a criti- cal moment the steering gear of the Tennessee parted, exposing a weak spot, and a lucky stroke sent a disabling shot into her Vitals. Still she fought on, riddling her big opponent, until, under cover of darkness, the Vanderbilt slipped away with a lucky victory, but left the glory to her opponent. , But by far the greatest engagement came seven days later, when from her mountainous harbor, the battleship Sewtmee sailed into our port. Even more bitterly contested was this battle, for the Tennessee was crippled ; but grap- pled to her opponent, she fought with the desperation born of previous defeats and bondage. And when the sun went down, the Sewanee, brooding and chafing under as fair a defeat as was ever sustained. sailed back to her home, beaten, but unwilling to admit it ; not disgraced, but with the hag of a Hard Loser streaming from her mast. Upon boarding the Sewanee to receive the surrender, Admiral Fisher is said to have remarked to Admiral Boynton that hhe thought he was receiving'the surrender of a cattle steamer, from the number of tbeefersl aboard. And now the Tennessee, well provisioned, set out upon a long cruise. Some three hundred miles to the west, she encountered a gigantic enemy, the Nashville, with a crew of barbarous Titans, who fought slowly but courageously. They were encouraged by hordes of natives, who swarmed along the shore, even venturing out at times to attack any member of the Tehnessee unfortunate enough to get separated from his shipmates. Circling about her big enemy, the Tennessee raked her fore and aft, and under cover of darkness put to sea, leaving the Nashville a battered hulk in the trough of the Sea of Despondency. Putting into the neutral port of Memphis, the Tennessee ran amuck the IVIissz'ssippi. Both vessels put out from the harbor and met on Red Elm Bay. Tennesseels crew was in bad shape from'the long cruise and the men were suf- feringifrom scurvy. One lucky shot broke the Mississippi's boiler and left her surrounded by transports taking off the wounded, while those of her crew able to do so, mounted the rigging and hurled curses and imprecations at the Tennessee. The latter,ibadly shot, twixt wind and water, maiie off to the south. Hearing- of a p't'ize lying in the harbor of Atlanta, The Tmnetsec swooped down and on November 22nd, surprised the lugger Georgia Tech, but met stout resistance. Aided by treachery and the co-operation of land forces, the Tech at one time had the Tennessee cornered, but the latter stuck to her guns and fought her way out. She then put for home, badly in need of rest, but with hard-earned victories to her credit. With but one vessel between her and the Golden Fleece, the crew of the Tennessee was in a bad way. The hard, long cruise, scurvy and other things had wearied the crew, and slight murmurings broke out. A lay-over at Monday Island gave the ma! contents a rest and a chance at shore duty. The'day before: the coast was sighted found the regu- lar crew feverish with spirit, and even the apprentices, the cabin-boys, the powdepmonkeys crying for a chance to help fight the guns. And so, on Thanksgiving Day, 1902, OR the coast of Championship, the Tennessee spoke the privateer Clemson, flying the black Hag with the skull and cross-bones of Heisman. On a choppy sea, in a rising gale, the battle raged. Quick attacks by the Clemson, heavy assaults by the Tennessee, proved alike unsuccessful until the afternoon had worn itself nearly away. Suddenly the Clemson grappled herself to the bulwarks of the Tennessee, and her freebooting crew swarmed about the latter's deck. After two successful attacks they were forced back, leaving several wounded on the disordered decks of the Tennessee. Cabin-boys and powder-monkeys came up helped fight the piratesback, but the Tennessee was leaking and it was apparent to all that the end was near. Rut she reared proudly for a last volley, and with officers at their posts, her crew at the guns, shetwent down with the pennant of Orange and White iioating defiantly at the mast-head. NoTE.-After the battle, the Clemson magnanimously hove to and picked up the officers and crew of the unfortu- nate Tennessee. Freebooter though she was, her treatment of the prisoners-of war was most courteous, and in accord with all the rules of civilized warfare. eT. N. BUCKINGHAM. r ; u , 7 X 1 X , X im ' I ' JG: ,- I ' .'.' ' I ' ' r 7' i . 9... '3 , g ' ,z n g V ::.' - . ' ,7 'r le , t I 1 L ! I 3, l I 5 5 ; 1 4 A -! , -Au- I llllli u-.-9, , ill Sophomore Basket Ball Right Forward .......... . . . . . S.J.McA11ister Left Forward ................ E. H. Bullock Right Guard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. W. Bachman Left Guard .......... . . . . . . . H. B. White Center. . . ............. 1Captaim M. G. Hope Manager ................... J. G. Rainey Substitute Forward . . . . . . . . . ...... J. M. Shea Substitute Guard .............. W. H. Fortune Record g Class Games Sophomores ....... 25 Sophomores ....... 20 Sophomores ...... 14 1,600 7,, Sophomores ....... 33 Freshmen.. . .. Senior Law ..... J uniors ....... Inter-Class Championship Game Sophomores ....... 30 Senior Academic . . . . .13 ..12 . ..30 ..1l Other Games Senior Law ..... Sophomores ..... 10 Sophomores ..... 15 Sophomores ..... 14 Sophomores ..... 17 City Y. M. C. A. Business men . 8 City Y. M. C. A. Senior team . . 12 Tigers 1Champion city team1 12 Maryville College 1A1 Maryvilm - 22 R.E2F0X . W. A. Copeland . . . R. A. Elkins . T. H. Allen . . . E. M. Hacker . . T . H. Allen . . V. S. Gudger . T D Brabson T. B. Green . . . G. D. Dodson O. L. Lockwood . R. L. Clark . . Seniors ...... . .Forward Leo Goodman. . . . 4Captaim Forward Joe Grim . . . . ..Center H.M.Tate.. ..Guard G.C.A1ban.................... . . Guard C. V. Peery . . ......... Manager W.J.Dona1dson. . . . . . . . Senior Law. . ..... 24 Seniors ...... . . . 16 Seniors .......... 9 Sophomores . . , . . . . . 20 Senior LaW. . . . . . .24 Juniors ...... 2 . . 5 Seniors. . . . . .16 Freshmen. .... .23 Senior Law . . . . . . . 14 Sophomores . . . . . . . . 16 Sophomores , A . . . . . 25 Freshmen. . . . . . . . 13 Seniors .......... 10 Juniors . . . . . . . . 9 Senior Law. . . . . . . 12 Freshmen . . . - ' . . . .14 Juniors . . Forward M. A. Fuller ..... . . . 2 . . . . Forward L. B. Lockwood . . . . . . . . . maptaim Center W. H. Smith . . . Guard R. M. Donaldson . . . ..... . 2 Guard H. T. Matson . . . Basket Ball Team Senior Law Freshmen . . Manager B. M. Stratton . . . . . . . Forward ..... Forward . waptaim Center . Guard ..... Guard . Manager . . Forward . . . 2Captaim Forward ..... Center . .Guard . .Guard . .Manager Girlsf Basket Ball Varsity KATHERINE WILLIAMS. . , . . . .......... FANNIE DEGOLIA . . . . . BLANCHMCINTIRE........ ....... MARY TREADWELL. . . . . A ...... . . ..... LAURATHORNBURGH. MAUDE KELLER JANE WILLIAMS. . . . KATHERINE WILLIAMS . . LAURA THORNBURGH . Scrubs JESSIE MCKAY JESSIE SWANN MABEL FAIR JENNIE Buguo HARRIET BAUMANN . . Center . . Forward . Forward . . Guard . . Guard . Substitute . Substitute . . Captain . . Manager JVIilitary Department A.H.NAVE,CAPTAINU.S.A. . . . . . . . . . . . . A . . . . . . . . , . . . . .. ..... Commandant W. S. BELTON. . . G. C. LARKIN. . . . . First Lieutenant and Adjutant . First Lieutenant and Quartermaster Non-Commissioned Staff J. M. TROUTT. . . . . Sergeant-Major R. L. CLARKE. UYOUNG GENTLEMAN, WHAT'S your: NAME? ............ . . Quartermaster Sergeant Companies uA,, uBn uCn Captain . B. L. Capell . . . R. S. Young . . . J. A. Hardin First Lieut . . . T. H. Allen . . W. Q. Johnston . . . O. P. Parker Second Lieut . . D. L. Stone. . . E. A. Rawitser , H. B. Finch Third Lieut . W. A Copeland . ..... First Sergeant . . , T. D. Brabsou. . , B. E. Schmitt . . T B. Green Second Sergeant. . . J. A. Silcox. . . . . J M. Shea . . . . . D. Keeling Third Sergeant . . . .J. J. King. . . . . J. Aymett. . . . . . L. W. Hope Fourth Sergeant. . . V. L. Gudger . . . ..... . C. J. Fuller Fifth Sergeant . . . G. D. Dodson . . . .................. First Corporal, . . J. W. Bachman . . J. B. Hicks . . . R. W. Dungan Second Corporal. . . M. P. Jarnagin . . . M. G. Thomas . . . . . C. S. Coffey Third Corporal . . . , . O. C. Kirkman . . . H. B. White . . . . . E. H. Bullock Fourth Corporal . . . Fifth Corporal . . Sixth Corporal. . .M.G.Hope.. . . -A.B.Cox.. . .. .H.C.Russell... W. H. Fortune. . . .J.G.Rainey . .. .J.O.Farrar. . . . L. R. Campbell W. A. KNABE . . P. H. CORNICK . E. M. HACKER . . J. C. DENTON . . L. E. RITTER. . . R. F. BALTHIS OVERTON J. W. BARNETTE F. P. HARRILL . . A. H. DOUGLASS S. B. MCKINNEY L.E.RITTER. . . . . . . .. A. H. DOUGLASS B. M. RUSSELL - J.C.DENTON. . ... S. B. MCKINNEY MCCLUNG. . . . U. of T. Cadet Band Officers Privates BASSES. ALTOS- . Eb Bass F, P. HARRILL ..... . Eb Bass B. M. STRATTON, JR . A Bb Bass M. A. FULLER - - BARITONE. CORNETS. P. H. CORNICK J. B. HOLT . . .- TROMBONES. J. H. WOODS . . Slide Trombone . . Valve Trombone CLARINET' ........ Valve Trombone ...... Captain and Leader First Lieutenant ............. Second Lieutenant ....... Principal Musician ...... Assistant Principal Musician . . First Sergeant and Drum Major Second Sergeant , ............ Third' Sergeant E. M HACKER . . First Corporal Second Corporal . . . First Alto . . Second Alto . . Third Alto . . First Cornet . Second Cornet QUEEN OF l902 dUBlLEE In The Good Old In Summer tha...' Spring Time In Spring-tt'me . hTis sweet the hills and wales to roam; aqlong the brooks, In shady nooks; 0f woods where squirrels build their home. In Spring-tt'me But in Spring-tz'me hTis sweet to hear the mock bird sing; The sweetest yet is green-green grass The breezes blow, 04nd blae-blae skies; gecause you know A bright, coquettt'sh, laughing lass It's gentle winds that blow in Spring. With goo-goo eyes. eD.N.Y. , V .7 - AcxII-I gIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII IIIIIII IIIIIIIIIIIIIIK xLJIL IIIIIW $IIIIIIII IIIII IIIIngIIIIL'HIIL I'd TMIIIIH IIIIIII WWII IIII IIIIIIIIII'I ' IIIIII WIHHIIIIT I IIIIIIII IIIIII IIWUW ' WIIII w I. T I A IIIIIIII II'IIIIIIIIIIIIIIII University of T ennessee Glee Club Officers P.H.C0RNICK..........:....President W. A. COPELAND . . . . . . . Vice-Presidgnt T. N. POWELL. . . . . . . . Sec., Treas. and Bus. Mgr L.E.RITTER........... ..Ass,tBus.Mgr First Tenors Second Tenors R. F. BALTHIS T. H. ALLEN J. S. COOPER H. HUDSON P. CAMBELL T. N. POWELL A. LANIER B. M. STRATTON L. E. RITTER H. M. TATE R. M. RUSSELL R. M. WILLIAMSON First Bass Second Bass T. D. BRABSON P. H. CORNICK W. J. DONALDSON ' W. A. COPELAND W. EMORY E. M. HACKER F. P. HARRILL S. B. MCKINNEY J. F. VOORHEES S. J. MCALLESTER C. H. SMITH E. OVERTON Girls, Glee Club GERTRUDE RUTH. . . . . . . . . . . President ELIZABETH HALL.. . . . . . . . .Vice-President BLANCHE MCINTIRE . . . . Secretary and Treasurer PROF. PARSONS. . . . . . . . . . .Director Members EMMA ALBERS GERTRUDE RUTH IDA MILNOR CLAIRE CLAXTON DELLE SMITH BLANCHE MCINTIRE ALICE DEADERICK SYDNEY THOMPSON LUDY MAXWELL BESSIE FAGAN NELLIE HITE ADELAIDE ROWELL CARRIE GALVON EDNA HOPE LAURA TYLER NINA GOOKIN ELIZABETH HALL LAURA THORNBURGH FLORA GLOSTER MAMIE JOHNSTON MARY WILLIAMS ooonooocoeeecwoe oeooooeooeuoaaoeooaeaaq .mooacoeaoaco coo cocooaeoecgp 4000006 0 oooooooooco 000 00-999; xaa cuuD 9c.cooouoc:gage;cnognaocogooooooooooooccaooooccueoa eeeeeeeee oaoooooDovoonoeeooaboOocoeowomouooooo oooooo c ooooo hw 'szu- 19,: Members JANE WILLIAMS CLAIRE CLAXTON MARGAR . MCFAR AND FRANCES RAHT MARY WILLIAMS NELLIE HITE ' ET L , G RTR D RUTH AURA TYLER. MAUDE RELLER HARRIET GREVE E U E L HAR T B MANN MARCIA PERKINS SALLIE FRANCIS JESSIE MCKAY RIE AU MARI CRAWFORD LAURA THORNBURGH EDNA HOPE E BLANCHE MCINTIRE DOROTHY GREVE Honorary Members KATHERINE WILLIAMS EMMA ALBERS MISS SKEFFINGTON MISS VOUGHT Smut and Mask Club Offlcers H. H. HAMPTON . . . . A . . .President W. A. COPELAND .' . . . . . . . Business Manager 0 L. LOCKWOOD, JR. . . . . .Sec. and Treas members D. L. STONE M G. HOPE W. J. LONGLEY W. A. COPELAND H. H. HAMPTON W. S. BELTON L. B. LOCKWOOD O. L. LOCKWOOD R. F. BALTHIs am; y 7M! J. A. HARDIN Iyu University German Club Officers C. P. SMITH. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Presideut T. H. ALLEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President PAUL MARFIELD . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer CLIFFORD F ULLER ' . Assomate Members of Board BARTOW STRANG 5 Members MARFIELD WILLIAMS STRANG CAPELL FULLER YOUNG ALLEN BACHMAN SMITH POWELL ALBAN STRATTON FORTUNE DODSON PARKER GAMBLE EDMONDS BRABSON BUCKINGHAM MCK INNEY WILLIFORD HEISKELL CRAWFORD Kwara 12 17M; 4w 2 ?K 3 i . 3 .- iMJ, gaps; ; 2f University Afternoon German Club Officers THOS.H.ALLEN.. ..................t..President P. B. MARFIELD. .. , . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President S. J. MCALLESTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer W. H. FORTUNE . B. L. CAPELL ; - . , . . Assoc1ate Members Members W. B WILLIAMS G. C. ALBAN G. C. LARKIN B. M. STRATTON M. A. FULLER T. N. POWELL O. P. PARKER C. P. SMITH R. S. YOUNG G. D. DODSON J. W. BACHMAN S W. DUNCAN JAY DONALDSON J. T. EDMONDS H. L. WILLIFORD T. C. CAMPBELL L. L. HEISKELL RALPH BELL P. A. RUSSELL C. J. FULLER Dreaming How sweet it is with some obscure old book, Singing of chiwalry in strange quaint rhymes; To steal to some quiet far-off meadow nook, And in those dear impossible old times, All heedless of the swiftly flying hours, To lose onehs self in dreams 'mongst quarut'ng flowers. 0an then, at length, cwith hands behind the head, To sigh and gaze into the deep blue skies- Behola' them part, and far beyond them spread Fair happy lands before the longing eyes; cBrt'ght in the slanting splendor of the sun, To gaze enraptared, and dream on and on. -04. :9 . W. '03 H. R. RYDER T. H. ALLEN L. L. HEISKELL MARY E. COMFORT JVIembcrs P. L. F ULLER CATHERINE WILEY ELEANOR WILEY MARY E. GRAINGER LINCOLN H. SM 1TH mmmx xx u xx QEwa 9 n3 .i x A as A v A XX m K P . A ALBAN GOODMAN ALLEN GAMBLE, N. M. CHASE GAMBLE, R. M. EMERY HEISKELL FULLER, C. J. LANIER FULLER, P. L. RAWITSER FULLER, M. A. STRATTON FORTUNE WILLIAMS WILLIFORD r6? v7 k. 7 t 5m 1 1' 2-, Kkzmmuuy X Chattanooga Club Flower Annual Banquet CauliinWer Thanksgiving Night Officers RALPH W. BELI ................ President HARRIET GREVE ............. Vice-President HENRY H.HAMPTON. .. , . . . . . . . . .Treasurer LAPLEYW.HOPE. . . . . .. . .Secretary JVIembers DOROTHY GREVE MARION G. HOPE ADELAIDE ROWELL LAMONT B. LOCKWOOD JENNIE BUQUO H. B. WHITE SAMUEL J. MCALLISTER OLIVER L. LOCKWOOD ALBERT LAZARD C. S. COFFEE WALLACE Z. HAGAN Rural Science Club Object Promulgation and preservation of Pastoral Patriotism. Qualifications for Membership Candidates must have handled a. hoe, sowed Wild oats, pull- ed a bell-cord and raised cain. 4! Flower Color Egg Plant Grass Green Yell Rah, Rah, Rah! Rah, Rab, Rah! Gee, Woe, Hacw, Tennessee! idlinces Officers T. B. GREEN. . .. . . . ............ Teamster R. F. BALTHIS . . , . . . . ......... Gardener J. G. RAINEY . '. . . . . . . . . . . . Keeper of the Swine J, E. HITE ..... ............... Shepherd H.K.M00NEY........ .........Vetenarian M. P. JARNAGIN . . . . . . . . ...... Herdsman M. A. FULLER ................ Water Boy Agricola in Facultate PROF. J. R. FAIN Agricolae in Universitate J. E. HITE T. B. GREEN R. BALTHIS J. E. RAINEY W. H Cox EATON E. OVERTON W. H. SMITH GALLAHER M. A. FULLER H. COFFIN JARNAGIN M. HOPE Tennis Club E A E Yell Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Ree! Teenessee Kappa S. A. E. Colors Old Gold and Royal Purple . President OHicers C.P.SMITH......., . Vice-President C.J.FULLER. .. . Secretary and Treasurer L. L. HEISKELL . Manager of the Grounds HAROLD FORTUNE . . . . . . . Members MATT THOMAS N A B L A G. G P. L FULLER T. H. ALLEN W. B. WILLIAMS M. A. FULLER C. J. MCCLUNG BEAUMONT STRATTON Pi Kappa Alpha Tennis Club J.W.HUDSON........ ...... A.W.TAYLOR.............. G. T. WALTON W. DEADERICK H. L. WILLIFORD T. C. CAMPBELL S. J. MCALLISTER O. P. PARKER H. F. PARKER J. T. EDMONDS . . . President . . Vice-President Phillip Cornick . . . . . . . . Walter Brown . T. N. Powell . .... H. H. Hampton . Miss Thornburgh . . MissSmith. . . . Precipitators . Chief Solution Maker . . Head Oath Keeper . . Grand High Cusser . . . . Fumigator for the Vistors . . Head Fudge Maker . . Kind Sympathizer Motto HWhen you do not at iirst succeed, try, try again.H Chief Occupation-Working on the Sophomores. Favorite Gas-Hydrogen Sulphide. FIower-Flowers of Sulphur. Favorite Drink-Poom Apple Tree. WihnilgHring h w-rhw? a f: MWNWSA Ne 'JIUA ' ks : 111 ' WHEREAS, the all powerful maker of the almanac, in his wisdom, has seen fit to deprive us of our Mess Hall in the fourth year of the reign of C. E Ferris, be it RESOLVED, that we, the members of the aforesaid club. living in East College, do hereby unite, join hands, bind and cement ouselves together with the following name, principles, motto and officers. ARTICLE I.-Name. The name shall be Old Bachelor! Club; or the Table-Ft'n- ishers of East College. ARTICLE IIr-Principles. Some students live to eat, but we eat to live. ARTICLE III.-Motto. Live or die, survive or perish; a bachelofs life is the one we cherish. OFFICERS AND MEMBERS. Bachelor in-chief . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ritter Chief Engineer of Tea Urn . . . . . . . . . . . . . Fuller Custodian of Pantry. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . Belton Compounder of Gumbo and Slick ..... . . . Ayme'rt Past Grand Dishwasher ; . . . . . . . . h . . . . Grim Manipulator of dirty dish rags ......... Bobbett Guardian of Mice. . . h ......... Heironemous Board of Review and Equalization . . Acres and Moody Dishwashers . . . . . . . . . . . . In alphabetical order TABLE FINISHERS. Aymett Fuller Acres Grim Bobbett Heironemous Conway Moody Chute Ritter Belton Reeves l gN NJ; $Yx$wx A A mm Jhx xC. P BMSOVMVE Mm. SHnu.l 1115mm xmwa onuus. Galoy 2, :5 mm w 8M. 0 S 3 x L I vs. bX-AXXxn mun; Ducks m C: nokm. Cl. Ark. hunky UYXOHWXL K39 Blundw JV? Xan; LAW. x-XyUu AKM 3km. QX Skuuwylanqg Cyuup VJ, AX Ymuiw 01. QHA Ln. c3- ELM: Emit $533 G Mr dt Fools SWIVH. J. huh nous; 115$ mun anti Hun. Is. durxsmi 11'! my mlsgal mmv ?us D u; 0 ulumB 5511M h. go v oXXx w. u V 5a MAMA?! muyu Tums. 23un Yr mums. 9 U Luuvu TXxui-uVm-j x. QY- . FEMS mngollvF Cow hssv wmn 5:36 Ecdwl $5 M.SO 115 , gAt Even-Tide I. 11. At emen-tt'de the shadows fall Some e-ven-tt'a'e 'lve'll roam arway, Athwart the fields and cottage rwall, And life shall seem one gladsome day; And in the silence comes a call We'll lime and lame, and cease to stray o4t ewen-tt'de. At ecoen-tt'a'e. 04nd some one whispering by me bows Then, rwhen the westward sun is low, With earnest kiss and earnest mocws, When round as falls the cwinter snorw, A vvoice my soul with joy endows God grant that :we together go At ewen-tt'a'e. At e-ven-tt'a'e. i CARL HOLLIDA Y. Yells Boom-gt'g-CBoom I Boom-gig-Boom I U. 0f T: Rah, Rah! Boom jig a rig a fig Hell-oo-ca-nack, ca-nack. U. 0f T. Rah, Rab! Boom-jig-Boom 1 Helloo-ca-nack, ca-nack. Hurrah! Hurrah! ?com jig a rat trap Skimmer a ricks, Skimmer a ricks Tennessee, Tennessee! Wigger than a cat trap Boom bah, flippety-flop 'Rah, Rah, Rah! Boom, Boom, Cannibal, Cannibal, W979 0'1 top! Tennessee! HeIl-a boo-loo wab, cTennessee, 7ennessee, Rah, Rah Rah! Statistics On the whole, the results of the statistics were very gratifying, es- pecially as there was little evidence on the part of the various organi- zations on thettHill combining to elect any one man to any of the various positions. 143 blanks were turned in-the same number as last year. The only thing that could be desired would be more exact an- swers to the various questions. When several answers are given to one question, they are in order of their respective votes. The average student is 19 years, 6 months and 11 days old. He weighs 144y2 pounds; is 5 feet 10 inches in height; and his expenses amount to $375.80 for the year. 68 per cent of the student body are Democrats, 27 per cent Republi- cans, and 5 per cent are of various affiliations. 32 per cent are Metho- dists, 29 per cent Presbyterians, 16 per cent Baptists, 5 per cent Episco- palian, 3.51per centCumberland Presbyterian, 31', per cent Christian, 3 per cent Congregational, 2 per cent Catholic; while 6 per cent have no religious preference. 28 per cent smoke, 10 per cent chew tobacco, 52 per cent dance, and 71 per cent play cards. 44 per cent subscribe to the Magazine, and 64 per cent to the Volunteer. The favorite drinkseSoda water and the like, 'tKernTs Bestj, milk, coffee, wines, beer, chocolate, coca-cola, whiskey, tea. The favorite occupationseDoing nothing, reading, athletics, sleep- ing, eating, farming.1aw,engineering, doctor. The favorite studieshMathematics, chemistry, history, English, physics, latin, law, economics. The most disliked studies-English. latin, mathematics, physics, chemistry, military tactics, geology. The favorite poets-Longfellow, Tennyson, Shakespeare, Byron, Burns, Scott. The favorite prose authors-Dickens, Scott, Thackeray, Irving, Mairk Twain, Poe, Macaulay Cooper, Bulwer, Lytton. The most popular professor-C. D. Schmitt. The most popular student-J. W. Bachman. The most popular young lady-eMiss Dorothy Greve. The handsomest student-B. L. Capell. The handsomest young ladyeMiss Greve. The ugliest student--D. R. Millard. The most prominent studenteH. M. Tate. The laziest student-R. W. Bell. The sleepiest studen'w-R. R. Moore. The fishiesB' student-L. G. Herndon. The greatest tttantalizerh-W. H. Fortune. The biggest liareR, H. Evans The biggest dude-J. C. Denton. D. R MILLARD. The most appropriate nick-name-ttFat FishW Hampton 31; uMouthH Cooper 27; HPlug Ugly Cunningham 21; ttMaude Oates 9; ttRed Horseh Harris 5; uT. Nearlyt? Powell 5. uThe best fellow of them a11 -W. Jay Donaldson. Respectfully, BERNA E. SCHMITT, OLIVER P. PARKER. DOUGLAS B. TURNER, W. H. FORTUNE, Com mittee. Cast of Caricatures DR. JIMMIE D . . . . . . ttAnd the way we love Dr. would tickle the very deuce BENTON WHITE . . . . President of t'United we Bust Club HOPE, SHEA. MOONEY, MCALLISTER, SAXON, ETC. Members of U. W. P. Club SHEA . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . StatisticanofClub ttLONG HUNGRY FULLER. . . . Who sleeps, when present MISS BUQUO. . . . . . . Leader of theitAnti-Bust,i MISS WILLIAMS,J . a . . . . . -, . .Who asks questions PlacaeEnglish recitation room, headquarters for the mumps, in South College. ACT THE FIRST. tThe curtain rises. Jimmie is seen walking up and down, hands behind his back, eyes engaged in rapt contemplation of the ceiling. Temperature 273-C. Enter students hurrying from Chemistry ; they pause at the door, turn up their coat collars and don overcoats. The doctor sits downJ jimmie DettWell then, I can : wait any longer on the bellii iCalls the rollJ ltI see that Miss Milnor is not present. Can any one tell me where she is? Small vaicefrom the rear seat-tlSheis in the Psycology class at this hour. jimmz'e D-JOh Lud, Lud, Lud! Sophomores taking Psy- cology. Lud, Lud, Lud P, tIs seemingly prostrated by the sad intelligence. Recovering a littleJ the have, then, for to day in Ward's selections from Milton. Miss, er, then, aw, then, Mr. White, was Milton a dra- matic poet? WhileetWith serene confidenceJ HYes sirP jimms'e D-ttI canit,1, I, Ican,t, then, I canlt have any- thing like that in my class. I, then, I am afraid that you don't know much about it. Can you recollect one of his dramas? WhiteetNot so confidentlyJ ttEr, I'm not quite certain, but wasnit Julius Caesar one of them? Thats what I gathered from the lesson.w jimmie DetAssumes his famous Hright first formation : that is, places his right ankle on his left knee, the ele- vated foot wriggling violently. This formation is a sign of extreme wrath, and is one of the most original of the Drls many formationsj hYou didnit gather much, then, Mr. White; I cantt understand it; you must simply swallow it down, then, so to speak. Milton lived in the 17th century, and Julius Caesar was written ine Mr. Fuller, then, can you tell me when Julius Caesar was written? l, Long HungryetProdded and punched, awakes confusedJ uAbout 55 B. C.; he then came to Rome and-ell limmie DetlThat, that will do, Mr. Fuller; it would seem then, that you would know something about the lesson once in a. while by accident, but it, then, it donit seem so. tLaughter and applause led by FullerJ tlIt is nothing to laugh at; you should never laugh at ignor- ance, Mr. White, it is unbecoming in you, particularly. 1,1, canlt understand it, etc. tSotto voice from the rear seat, ttgood boy, White; wind him up. The Dr. holds forth on the iniquities of his class for about 20 minutes, and then breaks of? suddenly and assumes his justly celebrated Htackle back righti, formation, that is, sits on his right handJ ttMr. Shea, then, can you tell me how old Milton was when he wrote Paradise Lost? ti .S'lzea-tWho has been keeping a record of the number of times the Dr. has used the word ttthen since the term opened, and has gotten his figures mixedJ Two thousand and thirty-six, sir. jimmie DettWell then, I canlt give you pass on such work as that. Here it is, only one week from examination, and there is, then, there seems to be little or no knowl- edge on this side of the room; I canlt understandelY tThe usual twenty minutes for rest, punctuated by snores from Long Hungry and the rest of the United We Bust ClubJ ttWell, then, I see that we can't give any more time to that. Miss Treadwell, then, will you tell me Milton's most famous lyrics. Go ahead. that is, if you know anything about it? Miss Treadwell-ttl donlt know? 7' t 4 I$$$$$$$$$$K DV fimmit D-ttWell, thatls the same answer that I always get from that quarter; you never, then, seem to make an eEort. Do you remember, then, Mr. Ellis, Miltonls most famous lyrics? Ellz'settYes sir. They are, er, ersfl jz'mmz'e D-ttI canlt have that; don,t then, hesitate on the preposition? Ellise-ttYes sir. As I was saying, they are Gulliver's Trav- els, and, and, Cantebury Tales, and, er, I believe I I omitted Tom Sawyer, ande. jimmz'e D-tRight-flrst formation againJ thr. Hope? Hope-tWrinkles his brow and appears to think deeplyJ g I believe thatls all sir. jimmie D-tElevated foot going like a rattle snakeq ttCan anyone answer the question'Pl M1755 BuquovttThey are Comus, one of those delightfully interesting and complex poetic productions called masques, Il Penseroso, a beautifulel, tAccompanied by groans from the U. W. B. ClubJ Jimmie D- That will do, Miss Buquo. that is very goodf, IReaches down into his pockets and pulls out a watch like a warming pan, closes it with a snap that effectu- ally wakens the sleepersJ uWe will take then, for our next lesson selections of page 12-first-on-sleep-on-lol- turn-to-Waller-take-on-page-l41-poem-on-death-etc.-etc. Going at a ten second gait, giving for a lesson about one hundred selections from Wardls, and an even fifty pages of HalleckJ l l l l t l gggggggggggm Curtain Falls. The Seven Great Wonders of the World Cooper wk Trig cBruce's English Uncle Tommyis Latin Perks Physics Uncle Billie? Mechanic's Waifs Chemistry, . Andy's Bandy; 5' : iv In x W v $$$wa . W 18meij ' I ., ,mWU N Know all Men by these ?resents, that 9r. l , Wait killed a Moose. Farewell! Farewell! A Sophomore, after having one yearls experience With Mess Hall, on leaving home wrote as a farewell to the old farm table, the following stanzas : I Farewell, old farm fable, with all your scenes, With your baked potatoes, and well cooked beans ; With chickens fried, fhaf number in the leens, Wifhouf coanfing fhose on slecw. Farewell f0 hominy, turnips and fish, Pickles and salads, a faworite a't'sh, Together with all an appetite could wish, To lhese a cwarm, fond adieu. II For ere a week, I'll be miles, miles away, ?Decvourz'ng biscuits from another tray ; Where butter is gimen bal once a day, And then in a half pound ball; Where meals are complele with a dish of hash, With bread that a hydraulic press couldlnt mash, But sft'll if all calls for your hard-earned cash, This belowea', renowned, Mess Hall. mmwmmmm Trouttls Tantalizing Syrup The only safe remedy for timidity and bashfulness. Those who are unsuccessful in their love aifairs are espec- ially urged to try it. Only twenty-five cents a. bottle. TESTIMONIALS. I have used Mr. Trouttls Tantalizing Syrup with great success. and can safely recommend it to any one. e-Emery, Law ,03. To Mr. Trouttls Tantalizing Syrup I owe all my success as a tantalizer. e Fish Herndon. I have been in college four years. During my first three years I could not get up courage enough to tantalize, but at the suggestion of one of my friends I begun the use of Mr. Trouttls Tantalizing Syrup. I have only taken two bot- tles and a half, and now in my senior year, tantalizing; comes perfectly natural with me. Thanks to Mr. Troutt for his wonderful remedy. - I. Edmunds. WM'NK Vf-W' '33 X v. - - K fgigfg WW j K cc; :sziwig J J QC; K r , , CA Theme With Names NE Easter, 3. Hunter decided to take a Holliday. So he mounted his Campbell, and rode to a lovely Green. After being there for quite aWhile, and only getting one Chute at a Fox, he decided to fish, as that was his Hobby. So he took out his fishing line, put on his Bate, and very soon Fortune was with him, as he caught a Troutt and a Bass. Then he was ready for dinner. He spread his table cloth on a huge Stone, after frying his fish, and begun Eaton-Buchingham, without saying a Word. He ate 8. Berry, With one big, and one lit- tle White Beene, for desert. After dinner, he walked to a Hite near by. Not being there but a short while, he heard in the distance the soft Knoll of a Bell, which made him Greve for Love. His heart was touched. His brain began to feel the eifects of Grim despair. He thought of the little White iiower she had the day before pinned on the Capell of his coat. Could he yet Hope, that she was true and Noble. While he was thus thinking, a Brown-Bullock stole out from the Lockwoods, and made straightway at him; as this animal was very young and furious, he did not Wait for any thing. So he moved forward as rapidly as a fleeting Swan; soon his short horns struck so Hard-in the side of the ill-fated Hunter that he Keebleid over nearly killed, and perhaps would have been killed, had there not been a Wagoner driving by in at Shea of Casteel and rescued him. After the rescue the Wagoner carried the Hunter over and around a Hill or two; across several Leeis, and put him out at his home, the next morning when the Cox were crowing for day light; and thus ended the Holliday. 3 5' 3' There was a man called Mister Troutf, Who, in strength, cwasn't mery sfouf, But even in the glades He'd tantalize the shades. When Miss geilvas no where about. hCThe Great Hoo-doo Club, and Companyh O. P. PARKER, General Business Manager and Advance Agent. HFAT FISH HAMPTON, President and Chief Hoo-dooer. h SON HOPE, Vice-President and Assistant Salesman of Caps and J erseys. hRABBuW LONGLEY, Clerk for the Shirt Department. hDUDE DENTON, Head Cobbler, and Agent for the Regal Shoe Company. h JACK EDMUNDS, Professional Hoo-dooer in the Jewelry Department- h FISH ,h BOBBIT, General Superintendent of the Laundry Room. Customers will please remember that our company is incorporated, and is entirely seperate from the Morris and Ferris hIncorporated Book Store. 92?; There was a man named Rainey, Who no doubt was quite brainy ; But cwhen called bershz're Hehd rise up in in? And would appear quite insan-ee. a: One day a little hCo-edh, came out the labratory, after Paul Henry Russel had proposed to her, and sighed- h My, what a slim chance ! WILLIAMSON-Ta.te says he haan: any use for this Weather Bureau, or any other kind of bureaus. VOORHEEShI don : blame him much, if it has 21 looking glass on it. 'wm'vwmv w. u-v XWAhK 1. 32a Muck u ,. Mmyha -wm...,,.nl O 1 S h, h . ! 'I I'M L at! um! f W Wreck g the Schooner Hesperus I With an apology to Longfellowj I It was the Schooner Hesperus That sailed the Tennessee, And tt Mouth Cooper had taken the Harding J ohnson To bear him company. II Gray were his eyes as the fairy dawn, His mouth like a berkshire shoatIs, Which was ever ready to gulp down The things that touched his throat. III The skipper stood beside the helm With an oar in his hand; And Oh ! how the angry wind did blow, Oter both the stream and land. IV Then up and spake the tt Mouth II Cooper, Who wore his orange T ; I pray thee put into yonder port, I fear a catastrophe. V For last night only one moon we saw, But to-night two moons we spy ; For they had quickly emptied a bottle Of Uncle Johnnie's corn and rye. VI Swifter and louder blew the wind, A gale from the Northeast, And Cooper foamed at the mouth Just like an African beast. Mom WWW mew wgmm 0th ?hhm VII tt Come hither, come hither, my companion tCat' And do not look so troubled; For I can weather the roughest stream That ever foamed or bubbled. VIII He wrapped him warm in his Mackintosh Whilst they were scarce atioat; He took a string from his pocket, And tied him to the boat. IX tt 0 Cooper, I see some gleaming lights, In the air, a hanging loosegh tt 'Tis some poor fellow studying late tCramming' up for Bruce. X tt Cooper, I hear the sound of guns. What you suppose it kills? tt yTis some Logan on the bowery Defending Montana bills. XI 't 0 Cooper, I hear the church bells ring Drole sounds Iive heard before; But the Cooper answered never a word. He was rowing with his oar. XII Then the little schooner struck a wave And bounded up so high, That Johnson swore his head had bumped, ,Gainst theponcave of the sky. XIII So quick and fast the boat moved on Lunged and slashed about; Until it struck a rock and then it turned The ttCatI, and Cooper out. XIV But down at the Maryville bridge Where the stream is very swift; Both managed to he landed Quite safely on a drift. XV And fast through the midnight dark and drear Sped the little capsized boat; Bearing very safely under neath CooperIs watch and coat. XVI Then Johnson clasped his hands and prayed That saved he might be; And thought of co-eds, whose hearts he had On the Hill of old U. T. XVII For he knew, how sadly hetd be missed, By girls at Barbara Hall; If this mad storm on the Tennessee Would never let him call. XVIII Then came to his visionary mind A11 careless things he'd done wrong; And very earnestly he remarked: ti Mouth Cooper, let,s sing a song? XIX So soon upon the air was ringing In deep tones loud and free; The tune of the only song they knew tt Nearer my God to thee.H XX At day break, on the bleak streams shore A boatman stood and raved; To think that he had lost his time, With the two he had saved. XXI For in front of him in an awful plight There lay the ship-wrecked mates; Whose equals can no where ere be found In the realm of twenty states. XXII And as they were lying on the shore Both cold enough for the dead; The itCaW aroused himself from his pain And to Cooper calmly said: XXIII ti B-by-George! Cooper, I had you this one time, In all the things were done: For in the wreck if wetd been drowned I had nine drowns to you one.H XXIV Such was the wreck of the Hesperus Almost a. year ago. And may the two never experience Another such a row. t UNCLE JAKE. e K ,E could not think of publishing this volume With- out giving ttUncle Jake, his due, for he has been for the past three years one of the most admir- able and respected personages on the Hill. His choice fruit, his legendary tales, his war stories, have been the means of causing him to be revered and honored by every student. He is a Southerner in the truest sense, and when the Civil war broke out, he showed his love for the South by taking up arms and fighting for Southern principles, and his descriptions of these four years, have given him the highest respect of the student body. For if there is any thing in the world that is deserving of honor and respect from Southern life, it is that old Southern soldier who has endured the trials of the Civil war, and lives to tell of them in a manner not enviable to his enemy. He is sixty-flve years of age, and though quite feeble, he manages to be on the Campus every morning at eight o'clock, to begin the sale of his fruit. And from the fact that he has endeared himself in the hearts of the students, they every year send him to the Confederate Reunions, held in distant cities. And as the old soldiers of the South will have soon passed away, it is our wish that the students who come after us,wi11 keep up the custom of sending Uncle Jake to the annual reunions, where he can again, live over the trying days of the Civil war. The Last Word Close the book and turn away- Sawe it for a later lay- tTis not time to dream as yet ; ?reamt'ng comes when sun is set. In the twilight of thy life Time for dreaming will be rife; Open then the pages sear; Thou wilt find both smile and tear. -CARL HOLLIDA Y. W4 499th .9 5 W Mm; gt W9 ' , ' .151qu ll IZVMWZ ' qwitl X $1?th . , J A gyfga a W F 9 9 , GOTHARD 8: CALLAWAY COMPANY, :515 GAY STREET Hats and Mervs Furnishing Goods. Hats, Shirts, Sweaters, Neckwear, Fancy CUests, Underwear, Nigbt Shirts, cPajamas, Hosiery, Belts, Suspenders, Fawelz'ng Bags, Suit Cases, Umbrellas, Canes. If from as, they are right. Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah! Rah. Nerw Firm, New Firm, New Firm. Rah! Rah! Rah! $$$$$$$$$$ BAKER HIMEL SCHOOL $ g g $ $ g g $ $ $ g a g a g g g g Knoxville Boarding School for Boys. $ gggggggggg Pure Food Popular Prices BILL OF FARE DON'T YOU KNOW French Drip Coffee . . . 5c YUNEDA 13233262; Mivlkl g: DAIRY LUNCH? $ng : : :1 : : 2: D. L.JACKSON, Prop. Boston Baked Beans . . . 5c Deviled Chicken Sandwich SC 427 Gay Street '3' Opposite WoodrufPs TongueSandwich- . . . 5c Branch of Yuneda. Dairy Lunch, Asheville, N. C. Ham Sandwich ..... 5c Fried Egg Sandwich - - - 5c A NICE PLACE J Corned Beef Sandwich- - 5: FOR NICE PEOPLE Boiled Egg Sandwich t - 5c . Pie, any kind, per slice - . 5c Famous French Drip Coffee 5 Cents Chocolate Edam . ' . 5c LADIES AND Norfolk Deviled Crabs . . 10c T E Grape Nuts, with Cream . 10c GEN LEM N Malta-Vita and Milk -. - - 10c Quick Service Clean and Light Shredded Wheat and Milk' 10c SOME FACTS ABOUT TYPEWRITERS. Great progress has been made in building typewriters in the last three years, greater advances than in all the time previous. Years of experience have shown what was valuable and desirable and what should be sacrificed. Some typewriters do good work and are durable, yet are hard to operate and are cumbersome; others are too complicated and easily get out of order, do not keep alignment, etc. Operators who have used The Fox Typewriter are unami- mous in agreeing that it combines more desirable features than any writing machine yet produced. It is a basket type machine, with ball bearing carriage, two oz. key tension, half inch key dip aluminum finger leavers with individual tension, adjustable typebars-insuring perfect alignment even after years of service, line lock, automatic line spacer, and auto- matic ribbon movement, combining the features that give durability with the lightest touch, easiest action and most simple construction. Our 1903 catalogue tells all about it and wiil be sent for the asking. Our free trial plan enables anyone, anywhere, to try THE FOX for ten days. Write us today about it. Fox Typewriter Co., Ltd., Front St., Grand Rapids, Mich. Fm: Home: Steam Due WorRs 7 I 2 ORV STREET Is the best place in town to have your Clothes pressed, cleaned, dyed and repaired, and all kinds of alterations, for reasonable prices. Special to the University students. We call for and deliver all goods. Give us a trial. 5. LEVENTHAL, Droprieror OLD ,DHONE NO. I200 A Vacation Without a KO DZXK is a vacation wasted. Kodakery is more fascinating than ever now. No dark room needed in any part of the work. Kodaks ........... $5 to $75 Brownie Cameras ...... I and 2 Kodak Developing Machines. 2 to 10 Supplies for all Cameras. We do high-grade developing and printing for the Amateur. 0. C. WILEY 5 l 0 GAY STREE'I- Evcrvthing Dmtrv 0: increasing demand for LIllEY U NIFDHMS Always superior. n e v e 1' interior. Thanls the rea- son you 11nd Lil. ley Untforms in all leading Mili- tary schools and Col- 1 leges in America. band for prices and catalog. Address: THE M. C. Lilley t Co. Columbus, Ohio. in Drv Goods and Notions GT THE BAZAAR 409 Gag STF66T PEPUTRTION Is a potent. factor with SouthernerseOur Athletic Goodst reputation in the North is of the Highest possible order. Your Base Ball Team can tell you about A. J. 65 Co. supplies. We sell high grade supplies at reasonable prices. APTHLII? JOHNSON 8L CO. Athletic Specialties 55 West 42nd St, NEW YORK ll You know fine clothes when ou see them. casimslzslzea 7879 . . . y Come 111 see our Sults, examlne cloth,sty1e, seams, linings and tailoring. Expert custom g 5. g. Jvmmm w Tl tailors cant tell them from their own pro- xnoruille, 7elznessee ductlons. The prlce 1s nght. your money back if anything goes wrong. Old gelia5le . ngngwg MEET ME AT MCNABBS g IMPERIAL BILLIARD PARLORS 'LQZQIZA $00A WQAQPS THE BEST IS NOT AS GOOD AS WE WANT Qrixzfers anal $00k Lgilzalers YOU lTiS WILL BE PROM PLEASED For his CANDIES are PURE and DELICIOUS, fit for your QUEEN A : : Soda Fountain ., Treat : : at Ice Cream Parlor Will make your BEST GIRL .yHappy TRY IT AND SE54 EMMWWWWWEEW eyes. Wrong glasses make present and future trouble. Make E Right fitting glasses are eye helps to defective or overworked E E sure of the right kind by consulting our E GRADUATE OPTICIAN Scientific examination free. H. J. Cook Optical and Jewelry Company, EMW E 433 Gay Street. Knoxville, Tenn. E EEMMWWWWWEEWW EMWWEEWWWEWW EMCPAVAT:S The Ascot English Square, Culross, Once Over, Four-in-Hand, Graduated Club and Bat Wing. We have the most distinguished styles in all these shapes. CORRECT CRAVAT SIZES. Bat Wing Graduated Tie For 13E and 14 Collars, 28-111. 32-in. For 14x and 15 Collars, 29-in. 33-11:. For 15x and 16 Collars, 30-in. 34-in. mm MWEWME 1E Emj W WEW WWWWMWMWWWWWE EMWWEWEWWWWWEEE Knaffl cS Bro. E Photographs Frames Portraits, Etc. LMWWWWWEEWW E E E E E E E WE WWWWWEWWWWEME EMorrison Bros. Dental Depot NASHVILLE, TENN. E E Best Goods Only 9: E Prices Always Right E SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO STUDENTS OUR STORE IS HEADQUARTERS FOR THE DENTIST E E E E AND THE DENTAL STUDENT EWWWWEWEWWWWE Iynrx A If T here is no Kodak but tit: Eastman Kodak IXUUHIX YOU SHOULD NOT FAIL TO VISIT OUR GALLERY OF FINE PAINTINGS, ETC. MCCRARY 6: BRANSON::Photographs MCCRARY 6: BRANSON::Picture Framing a Specialty MCCRARY s: BRANSON::Art Materials MCCRARY 6: BRANSON::Phot0graphic Materials fa 604 Gay Street S. KNOXVILLE, : : TENNESSEE 4 WVVWWVV'WWV-V-WW'V VWV'WWVWVWV wvmv WKWVMMMWNWVVV F xrvvvww'V'VV'Wm0VW WV COLLARSZ Peysers 2100 Pure County Down Linen Collars in Quarter Sizes... 3 0 AM PROVIDENCE. R. l. Makers 9f Tilden-Thurber Company. g; 3 150., two for 25c. 14X. 140. 15X. 150. 16M. 1634. Also regular sizes in Peysers 2100 Pure County Down Linen Collars, 10 cents. College, Class and Fraternity Pins WNW 0f Every Description. 3 Badges. Class Rings and Prize Cups a Specialty. NM WMVVMMMVWW -vawwv,wv V M0Wm VW $ 02am 96M 0 SEND FOR CATALOGUE. 0 FW i i F0 MW VWWWN 0W; mVWxW-mevmmmmm m Mm1 VvVv The Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume COTRELL Q LEONARD. Albany. N. Y. Wholesale Makers cf the Caps, Gowns and Hoods WWJ 0 a: A. Mg. w- 7? to the American Colleges 3 nd Universities from the Atlantic to the Pacific. g3 Illustrated Bulletin, Samples 84c. ' ' - fa Percy Whitaker, Southern Representative Class Pins and Rings, Invitations and Diplomas. i llllllllllXIIIIIEIIIIHIHIIlllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIH!IIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllIlllllilllUlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIDIIIIIIIIIIllIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIHIIIIIHIIIIHIIIIE i' llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIlllllllllHllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIlllllllllllIllllllIllllllllllIIIIIUIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllIIIINIIUIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllIIIIHIIHMIIIIIIIlllllllllllllE R. N. Payne 8L Co., Recognized Headquarters for Trunks, Bags and Umbrellas DUNLAP 8: CO., HATS and again the mcrning that one must not be judged by his clothes, SllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilfllllllllIllllllllllHllllllllllllllffllllllllg andyct everybody knows that everybody doesjudgc everybody by his ap- penance: m mum: m, ' PATRICIAN SHOES A. E. NETTLETON SHOES A man never respects himself quite so much as When on occasions he dons his best suit of clothes. Most men in this community buy suits from us and not without good reasons. Brandau Q, Kennedy 309 and 311 Gay Street, KNOXVILLE, TENNESSEE. Onlv Shoe and Hat House in Town Selling Strictly for Cash On this account are enabled to cut profits just half NEW FIRM AND NEW GOODS 513 Gay Street J KNOXVILLE, TENN. lllllllllllIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHlllllillllllll'lllIiIlIIlllllllIllllllllHlllmLlllIIIll1IIIIIIllllllllllllllllll'IllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllliIlllIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIDdllllIIIHIlllllllllllllIIlllllill'llIlllllllllllMIlIlIlllllllllll.IlllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllUllllIlIllIlllE lllIllIlIlLllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllll'lllllllllllllllllllllultllm'IIlIIIIIllllllllllllllllll!llllllhlllllllllllllllllIIIIIIJfllllllllllflllmllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllHllIIIlllIlllIlllIlIllllIIllllIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllIIIlIIlIIlIIIlIIlHIlIIfllllllllll IlllllllIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllI'llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllulllllllllllllllllHMnllillllIllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllIlllllIIIllIlllllllllliUllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllIllIlIIIIIlIIlIllllllIlllllll'IlllIlllHll EMIIIIIII MIIHIIIIIIllIIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIII IIIllllIllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIIIHIlllllllllllll!llllllllIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIII?IllIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllillllllll IIIHIIII.IMHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIVIHIINIIllIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIHlIIIIHlllllllllllHlllIllllllllIllllllllll1IllIINlllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllillIIIIlllllllIlllllllllllllllillIlllllllllll m . IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllIIIIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII!llIIIllllIIIIl IllIVMillHIllIllllIIllllllIIlIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllTllllaIlllllll'IlllllIIIllllllIllMIllIllllllJlJlUlIllll a HARRISON,S OPPOSITE KERN38 Only Store in Knoxville that sells nothing but Shoes. See Show Windows for Samples and prices in plain figures-and remember when you can? find it nowhere else, try HAPBISONS No. 2 Mamet Square: Sh065 Clothing This label WMH w. N Is m XL 46 ED Earnestly Solicit ever found pg fdf; a on mzax Share Unworthy Mglbf glxngy of Merchandise can are. mu 573' KNOXVILLE. ram Your Patronage Hats Haberdasherv .OG;VOHE0 .35on :wdAMB co .mm 33m .00 awkmaumwdm $me PNN'NE $3 NNIQNEmeEQN mgmakumwm t3 xak. Ema. .nwumxm. MN 3.55:3. eCRN .3 SEN. mhcmaEaNaE 3 $333ng min $33 kkw oobm. S WNW KW BEN: 2 x3 .3uhkg.x$m3mw.mku3uw EQERSE MEKMQMNB u? 23$th HNiExzwl...m4bVNxmQNQNEGN QR NbNrN DE 4.3x kukEmSmmN .aotnvtd dmnwwiwam ?SNV m3... by 638.5 wnw 5595 03 buo nmo unowgm some mo mnoudowzmsv wad 3.688?me 9a. .533 HOH Duudummwmd Umeudo Ora WOOG HO JUOm OB .HQENU hHQpVO $?moowh Ou UGN COmumMSU xAHQDQ. hwgmgm oquOmmB 396 30325 B mmmmw :2: 5 EM: mum meQ 4 EszW wax owmm .H ENBUM $033805 wunmEvmmtmed MEEHB NE. maaowsum 850 :2: FEB QomumuQQEOU Guam MEMHOHEO uOE UTA-Ob? 03w Cm MHQEOdwu wnmwmukwbwd a:ao 05w Omgd de kaH J: Du UOHumuGQ QHN UuHN OUme-Qm mi: MOM NANQ bow .Mumvhmunm memugo xAd-d Ow yon UGN muawwdum hmOJu OH WQqumeu mm um NO MDOJ EPKW .wam 3.5.9an mnEowB 3 Eozmgoxu 05$ .32: mo :m 03m wuouomuQOum wad mummasg omega, 2.53 mi uTwumeumSEw mo Hoosow Ema 9: boiummom mm .00 ndeanWNm .3923 mmmmmmsa N 315 3 3053 mom: uomumwasa Ramona Human .2: 5E? oaowm ou Emmmm qomuntumam 9: mo woamontm or: mmddoon muumvam mnghwwmm Eng uoE mmonmmsm .2038st cm :mqmmwuwn: o: 0.8 mumaunlznmads$tsaz on mm PBFH .wmnwm aoEEou .buEddlmwwammsn mcmwmtmkywm 9t am mmouodm Mo mummmswg umum 05 mwvmmom won ow Macon Somm .ucoEvondonnm mEu uvadm won 6mm: waEOE 085 .5 95 E :omummom mug? Mom 006on Ow co.mumW .m FEE 3 :st 0L3 uaovnm .unmawodsoudm E5 3398 Hon Uwoa 63::qu :domummom Uwvuanmsm: m 3:2. wdeuo: Rom wnEEEOm i225 0J3 waownm :503 Suing? Ge 50? hem wdmnwmaow .Nawmux NSNERNE ANEX NRSE .99 hprJVMSN SE S PSS $me a 3,332. ESQSNNRN hkx 5 db MEEQIMMNQDN El 2 ummmt g $ NBS: HEMNSV. npwgummvwnw thZumEtEEd HE; G... zmduu. CHAS SCHMID, PROP'R Schmids Barber Shop Three Doors Below Imperial Hotel 376 Students Barber Shop. 3 LIEBER BROS, SHIRT MAKERS AND Meer Furnishing Goods. CADET COLLARS AND CUFFS MADE TO ORDER. Underwear and Shirts Repaired. BEST LINE OF NECKWEAR IN THE CITY. thzl GAY STREET. WWW in each town to take orders for our new High Grade Guaranteed Bicycles. New 1903 Models Bellisef Complete $8. 75 cossack,,, Guaranteed High Grade $10. 75 Siberianf, ' A Beauty $12. 75 Neudorff, Road Racer $14.7 5 , no better bicycle at any price. . Any other make or model you want at one-third ; , 13 ; usual price. Choice of any standard tires and best equipment on all our bicycles. b't'rongcst guarantee. We SHIP 0N APPRO VAL C. O. D. to any one without a, cent deposit and allow l0 DAYS F REE TRIAL before purchase is binding. ' 500 Second Hand Wheels $3 lo $8 g 3 taken in trade by our Chicago retail stores, ' ' all makes and models, good as new ............ no 0T Buy a bicycle until you have writen for our . . FACTORY PRICES AND FREE TRIAL OFFER. Tlres. eqplpment. sundries and sporting goods of all kinds, at; half regular price, in our bug free sundry catalog. Contains a world of useful information. Write for it. J. L. MEAD GYGLE 00., Ghicago, III. 55$ 6 gadg klkz2m E 573 gay 922w! llHllllllllIIIIIIIlllllllllIlllllllllllllllIIIlllllIllillllIIIllllllIIIHIIIIIIIllllllllIIIllIlIIIIllIIIIIIIllHllllllllllIIIIIIlIIlllllllIllIIIIIIlllIIIIHlllllllllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllllllllllllilllmlll i' IlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIllllllllllllllh'llllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHHIIIlIlIlllllllHlllIlIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllE IlllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllll Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pen IllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIllllll MINNIE Honors z E E E g for graduates are fully expressed E by presenting a E E E 9 . g Waterman 5 Ideal E , l E . INCHESIER E Fountaln Pen , , AKE DOWN REPEATING SHOTGUNS E l A Winchester Take-Down Repeating Shotgun with E . 4- v l- a strong shooting, full choked barrel, suitable for g If you are not mformed as to the 116811351: l l 2-: f trap or duck shooting, and an extra interchangeable E . d .11 d . l V H modified choke orcylinderbore barrel, forfield shoot- 10C31 dealer, wrlte us an we W1 9. V156 you V 1 l ing, lists at only $42.00. Dealers sell them for less. This makesa serviceable all round gun within reach of everybodyls pocket book. Winchester The Ideal Pen for the Student w Shotguns outshoot and outlast the most expensive . f . , j double barrel guns and are just as reliable besides. E WINCHESTER REPEA TING ARMS 00., - NEW HA VEN, CONN. E - , E L. E. WATERMAN 539. CO. E g E . E E E The Largest Pen Manufacturers 1n the World E E E E E E 173 Broadway, New York E F g E E E E E E E E E E illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllliUlllmllllllllllllllllllllllIHIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllilllllllll4lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll! IHlIlllllllIE Mum lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll?IIIIIIIIHIIIIIllllllllllmlllllllHllllllllllllllHllllIlllHllllllllllllllillIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllg QW$ $X$WX$X$WQX$X8XQX$W $ $ZMIQ9I$E92 WW CD W E O H F F Arrangements have been made for taking care of the Linen eXeI-ECQBE O V for the Summer School of the South by the HOME STEAM LAUNDRY 617 GAY STREET, 6 zeza'ea' $$$$$e V t J.JIIONE 1 57, I Which has special privileges on the HILL. Drop your Laundry in their baskets in the buildings and it will be collected three times a day by their representatives. QVMIw HMWQE3WQBE9WX9XQQEE3WQQQQQQ$$ thl FOR W UNDERWOOD THE , MANHATTAN 8 SUN BLICKENSDERFER And all kinds of Second-Hand Typewriters You Should See Us. We Buy, Sell, Rent, Exchange, Repair and Furnish Supplies for all kinds of TYPEWRITERS Do you play BALL, GOLF, TENNIS? When it comes to WHEELS we can 6 B CA R-l-t R CO compete with any house south of Chicago. We carry the famous B. G. I. I I I We carry these well known makes: The Golf and Tennis, and A. G. , Crescent. Rambler, Columbia. Imperial,- Spaulding's Base Ball Goods. 7 63y Street, Day, LacIede, ShapIeigh Special, Rugby, These need no introduction, K ,F ',F ,J B'd,C - For you know them as being THE BEST. KNOXVILlE, - IEN N ' f0::f:;:5p'22::Ilteangfnan:yse;n$1.31; kinds in good shape. We Repair Wheels. Office Supplies from a Pen Holder to the finest Expansion Book Case, Letter Files, Carbons, Stationery, Blank Books, Desks, Tables, Chairs, Ink, Pencils, Inkstands, Copy Holders, Ribbons, Stencil and Po- rous Paper, etc. are among a few of the We are enabled to furnish anything in l Supplies we carry. EMQQQQQQQQQQQEQQQQQQMEQQng? g F me Shoes and Hats nag H a AT RETAIL Handle only the'best goods and those made especially for us. AGENTS FOR The rTu ner Mens Shoes. and Lad rd. Schober TS Co. Women's Hm ' Sho es , A15 0 the . Knox Ne ew Yor k. and Stets son.' 'iPh ladelphi :3. Hats. H DON' T FAIL TO SEE OUR NOBBY LINE OF STRAW HATS. FROM 50c T0 $4 00 .353 V Hm T. F. HAZEN H CO. 333 ??K SEES g ??WWFWWWM dwmmmmawwm Md WWVM p? WEI w the awowalivc Book Store, Incorporated. 011 the University zampus. Is not a money making scheme, though a financial success- paying an 8 per cent. dividend to stockholders. Besides this the store has contributed about ONE HUNDRED DOL- LARS t$100.00y to student publications, and SIXTY-FIVE DOLLARS t$65.00y to the Athletic Association, and is al- ways willing to accommodate the students in any way it can. the university Postomcc Is a great accommodation and is made possible by the exist- ence of the store. These are two great conveniences and de- serve to be encouaged by every loyal student. WWWW W WWMWMFWWMW gymmmm VWWMV EVE 4W WWWWtWWWWhWW l mmmmmmg gmwawwmggammmamm . - ea Batalh-OWN! Attentl-OWN H 5 SPECIAL ORDERS No. 113. 6362363 SQQL $ VV- A CQBXWX$X$XQ$X$WW$X$WW8WW ; J. H. PITTEP, W$XWW$X$X$ 63 69 6:9 639 69 607 60;; St, Knoxville, Tenn. . 416 WILL FURNISH LI. OF T. BOYS WITH FINE CIGARS, TOBACCO, DI DES AND COLIPTEOLIS S LESMEN . AT ALL HOURS. ' WIII$II WXQBXWU GIMWII$$I$Q :11 MURDOCK I IPHOTOGRAPHER.' Corner Prince and Clinch Streets, McTownlee Building. PHOTOGRAPHS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION HIGH-CLASS WORK A SPECIALTY. Call and get our prices on work before going elsewhere. I SPECIAL PRICES TO STUDENTS. l 2 Newest Lid Best Shakespeare The Eversley Shakespeare . '1Reg;;1gig;i;:sog;gg Complete works in eleven volumes, in handsome red cloth, including Mr. Hamilton W. Mabie's biography of Shakespeare i Macmillan COJ $17.00 R 1 r ' fth The Connoisseur 5 Collection 01 Rare Shakespeare Prints 1 egguingg'ecfsog f ,0 00 150 interesting Shakespeare Prints in a beautiful portfolio : - :1Regularprice : $27.00 Offered to Subscribers to the REVIEW OF REVIEWS Paying $9 50 $5.00, the Regular Price of a Two Years Stibsct'iption, for : a . Three Guarantees Three Guarantees There are so many comparatively worthless hooks being offered 011 the installment plan nowadays that it is worth while for every reader to note that there are THREE GUARANTEES. each one good enough to stand alone, of the genuineness and excellence of this great Shake- speare offer from the Review of Reviews Company. First. the offer is from the Review Of Reviews C0.. whose first aim must he to please its subscribels; second the Lversley Edition is the product of the great hook pub- lishing house of the Macmi11an C11.w11ose name is 21 11a11 mark 111 refinement and exce11e11ce in book- -111aki11g; finally we offer to take the hooks back if a purchaser 13 not pleased. MONEY REFUNDED AT ONOE IF NOT SATISFACTD RY we wi11 send this charming Shakespeare set, including the beautiful portfolio of prints to any responsible reader. If you wish to keep the FOR bofoksdanld prints, remit $1 a month for only 14 months. If you do not wish to keep them return them at once. and your half- dollar will be re 1111 et. 50 t 1718311 payments will also entitle you to rcmivc the nRE VIEW OF REVIEWS for two 3101115.. .It is in consideration of your thus 11w 0 80 coming a subscriber to the REVIEW OF REVIEWS at the regular price of $2.10 a year that we give this opportunity of pulchasing the Shakespeare set and the rare print collection at a tritie over 011e-t11i1'd their usual cost and on the small monthly payment plan at that. TH E EVERSLEY EDITION The Eversley Edition of Shakespeare 5 works the latest important edition to he completed is edited by Dr. C. H. He1fmd P fessor of English at the University of Wales. and coulams introductions. notes and explanatir 11: by that yfamcus anzlish who! For the purpose 01' American readers. the set has been augmented b addingM1'.Han1ilton Wright Mabie 5 recent volume. uShakespeare. Poe Diamatist and Man in a new :1 edition planned with binding and printing to he absolutely uniform with the ten volumes of the Eversley Edition The books are handsomely bou. in red diamond- -pattern Ins 06 terlaken cloth. I he type page is beautifully clear and well proportioned. The publishers' price for the books alone' 15 $17. 00. :6 9K 1. - 9! We have obtained the entire edition of this beautiful and interesting Connoisseur' 5 Collection of Rare COHnOlsseur, S COIICCtion 0f Rare Prints. Shakespeare Prints, Edited by Mr. Seymour Eaton Librarian of the Book- Iovers' Library. The regular OK I accept your price of this portfolio is $10.00. e ' ' The book bargain chered 111 this announcement is open to two- ear suhscrihevs to the Rnwwoj er'eu'x. The Ma azine has 19 The RCVICW 0f REVICWS. come fully into the position of the chief purveyor and interpreter gt current atiairs to the Amencan home. Dr. Albergt' Shaw 5 gee Progress of the World. 'tthe timeiv contributed articles the departments giving reviews.s11mu1aries and quotations from the other important magazines of the 0'9 world. the monthly chapter of telling cartoons and the hundred or so 1151:1111 illnstrations' 111 each number of contemporaneous news interests are now the chief pi a reliance of the substantial people of America in the task of 'keeping up with the times The next two years--- -with their important political events. the elec- '91 x- tion of a President and the working out of the new problems before this country-win g1ve an added zest and value to the monthly visits of the Return; afRem'ews. 0v v.59 Remember. flu! valuable books and collection ofprznt: 2011! be sent an approval. 7711311 may be 1 eturned atany ttmc 201111171 a week after then waipl. andyom mom'y will be tefundea'. THE REVIEW OF REVIEWS 00., 13 Astor Place, New York Shakespe a r e otter with the 11 11 d e 1 st auding that the set a n d portfolio mav be re- turned within a week if not satisfactory. Enclosed find 500. in stamps, being my first paymens. H. H. Petting Manufactuttett of Greek better Frategiily Jewelry 1446 and 18, St. Paul Strveet BFUJTIIVIORE, H MD. Memorrandum package sent: to any Fraternity Member: tbrrough the Seerree tarry of his Chaptev. Special designs and estimates futw nished on Class pins, Medals, Rings, 818. ANOTHER BIG BARGAlN-l SENT FREE FOR EXAMINATION That every American home should have a good History of the United States admits of no discussion. FHEREFORE THIS OFFFR OF THE BEST MUST APPEAL TO ALL. We ve secured at just about the cost of pape1 printing and binding, 119 sets of that magnificent Library of United States History. Ridpathis History of the United States Dr. Ridp ath 5 name as a historian and scholar 1s a household word from Maine to California for he possessed to a wonderful degree the rare faculty of making HIS- TORY as fascinating as ROMANCE. You lose yourself completelv in the irresistable fascination of the story, entering with heart and soul into the creation of this Nation. Old Lief Erickson, roaming the seas with his hardv band of Norseme11.is your friend. You share the voyage with Columbus when he sets his prow s to the West You tight Indians with John Smith contend for Liberty under Washington sweep the B1iti5h Channel with Paul jones endure the heart- breaking Civil War. bombard the Spanish forts at Mauilla with Dewey and emerge into the light of the present day. realizing as never before jllbl why and how we are a nation whose influence is universal. whose power is felt in every corner of the globe. That is why over 500,000 sets of this great work are treasured 10-day in as many homes. That is why AlRicipath is used and endorsed by all the leading educators, scholars and states111e111 That is why we know it will interest you. The New 1903 Imperial Edition Revised and Enlarged into FIVE Superb Royal Octavo Volumes and Lavishly Illustrated contains our country 5 history from earliest times 1111 to and including the first year of President Roosev eltis Ad111i11istratio11a11d has hundreds of new Maps RaceCharts Chronological Lha1ts hundreds of text i1111st1ations together with over 100 full- -page Photomavures and half- tone Etchings of F2 1110115 Historical Paintings by lRUMBULl . CHAPMAN and other great 31' lists making1 it the most valuable collection of historical illusuations ever embodied 111 any w01k. Every American Home Should Possess It The workmanship of this new edition 15 of the very first quality, the type new and cleal the paper specialiyselected the leather binding is a beauti- 1111 half calf with gilt tops gold niarhle- veined sides and Hy- leaves and gold hack sta111ps,111akingit a treasure for the family bookcase. The dark red cloth binding is artistic and durable. $??pon er D. A. McKinlav Company 11710 Flfth Avenue New York City Please semi me on 1.1111rov .11 111cp:1i1i. n set of Itidlmth n 151111 y of llw lnilo-d 8111119, 1111- 11e1i.1l I 1l1t10n 5 11111111113. lmuml in half c;.1lf If r1:- t'1i11crl I Agree to 11.1y $1 00 The Chance of a Lifetime is in that Coupon 13$ Sent Free For Examination The regulm'scllingprice of this 11111;:11if1cent work is 530.00 fur the 111ie-hah leather and 325.00 fur the cluth hinding, yet we are closing out them 119 sch tcveryset new 111111 pcrfccli at juzl 111113-1121 this price on the 11111.1 lihcml terms of 11r1yu.e1it. Further than this. 511C111f1dcntm'c we that the value of this bargain will he instantiy realized when seen that we take all the risk of dimllr W 1111i11t111u11t, place the hooks 011 your lil 1ryt:1l1le at 0111' cxlieihe for you 111 see before buying. 111111. if 5111 factory. leave them there for 311111211111 your E1111ilyto enjoy. It not satisfactory, return the set :11 ourcxpensc. B111 you 1111151 he 111111111111. N11 more can he had at those prices or 1111 those terms. promptly, and $1.00eael11nonth thcwaitui' fur 141110111115. If not 5: itisfnctury 1 mill return them to ynu within 10 days :11 your expense. D. A. MCKINLAY 6: CO. 150 mm Avenue, New York City Nam? ..................................... MAGNIFICENT VOLUMES Size 10 x 7A inches 111 ordering cloth. change 14 to 11 montl ! ?WFHZ mewmmm 2505 we: Soon m was v5: Donn one arm nu: Um 925592.. uvonloum 53 mm Hommgn. 352 cm None? mmBEo mum numw 3 ouonwno. .55 38.55 Wmvmwmdm muonmca mm mnmn Em Eng Onw ma? H mm $5.65 On ooumnaomon wan Hum 95 Ha Hamm Uwuam Ema vnw naunmnbm mvonmcb Swan. 5 rum u. momm 8m wan mam among. mun 535d 35 083v. mUnSm 2.3V 3.03 mnwnmmm On 53 $5 mroononi mwoo. H mm mm www-nocnm mun SEO? SE 5.55me v.Oa mvo: ww Sn: mm 63: nonmoa. H 45: :0 055. 538 $52 scan 0m 90 wow. 9m :95! 0;; on Sommng U5 mm moon m9. NDV Ema Om N350. .Hro gunman Ewan moor 35m r05. no nwnn mop. wan res no awn manna? Ham 3:555 voor 360 S. v65 43: moan $235 new vOmnwWo 8 v CALLAN, MERCHAN T TAILOR . . . . AND STUDENTS TENNESSEE. d. F. SPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO PROFESSORS S. W. COR. GAY STREET AND CHURCH AVENUE. H KNOXVILLE. Fine Tailoring AT DODU LAP PRICES Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing Promptly Attended to. OLD PHONE 501.4 y429 GAY STREET. $ STECKER a: GESSER, l KNOX VILLE TRANSFER COMPANY BROWN 8:, McCULLA, PROPRI ETORS. Office and Stable, 314 West Church Street, KNOXVILLE, TENN. McBATIPS For the Best Goods and the Lowest Prices. Money Saved on Everything You Buy. That is why we have so many Satisfied Customers. ALL DRINKS AT OUR SODA FOUNTAIN are the Best that can be made. Our Ice Cream is made from Pure, Rich Cream. All Drinks 5 Cents. Agents for Huyler's Delicious Candies. Always Fresh in Sealed McBATH'S, Knoxvillds Busiest Drug Store. Open Day and Night. Cor. Gay and Wall Sts. H The Greatest Spoken Thought of the Living Century. . 0051211 ELQgUENCE W A FEW OF THE MANY CONTRIBUTORS Hon. THOS. B. REED. Editor-In-Chief Joseph H. Choate Lord Bcaconstield James G. Blaine William M. Evarts John Hay King Edward IV Richard Olney Oliver Wendell Holmes Charles A. Dana Robert J. Burdette Russell H. Conwcll Canon Farrar John B. Cough Andrew Lang Wendell Phillips Josh Billings Henry Cabot Lodge Carl Schurz Wu Ting Fang Lyman Abbott Charles Dudley Warner VVilIiam Cullen Bryant. Rufus Choate Theodore Roosevelt Arthur J. Balfour Jonathan P, Dollivcr Sir Henry Trving Mark Twain Edward Eggleston Horace Porter William E. Gladstone Chauncey M. Depew Edward Everett Hale Henry Ward Beecher Henry W. Grady Joseph Jefferson Robert G. Ingersoll Seth Low W'illiam McKinley George VViIliam Curtis Artemus Ward John B. Gordon William J. Bryan W. Burke Cockran Newell Dwight Ellis John Morley John Ruskin Paul D11 Chaillu Henry M. Stanley Charles Francis Adams John L. Spaldiug Justin McCarthy James M. Beck Henry Watterson Ex-Speaker Thomas B. Reefs Splendid Library 0f the Best A fter-Dimzer Sptetlzes, Classic and Popular Lectures, Famous Addresses, Remilzisceme, Repartee, Illustration, and Story, 2'7; ten handsome volumes, illuslmtgti by 15716 plzologmvm'es and color plates. THE LIBRARY OF 6tMCHDERlV ELOQUEIVCJEi9 Stand? without a peer. Nothing like-it was ever attempted before. Edited by one of the greatest of Modern Leaders of Men, ExuSpeaker Thomas 8. Reed tassisted by a corps of Eiditors faEnous wherever English is spokeni, MODERN ELOQUENCE is the masterpiece of one who has lived close to those who have made and those who are making the tistory 0 our times. In these volumes the reader runs the whole gamut of eloquence. from laughter to tears, from pathos to ridicule; keen satire is mingled with unctious humor; the A Fine strong. trenchaut utterance of action with the droll fancies of the humorist. . Portfolio We see the speaker. we hear the laughter. we surrender to the spell of the words; we can feel the tense silence as the speaker mounts in his suhlimest o$oe Sent Free tiights. then hear the outburst of applause as the audience catches the speaker at his climax. One sits at the banquet board where the greatest after-dinner orators, wits, and humorists are at their best. One listens to those master minds who from the platform have swayed multitudes and held men's minds captive by the magic of their words. These are the hooks for the homeefor an idle hour-for the days and nights of preparatiouefor an eveningis entertainmentefor the future. They are filled with living thoughts for living men. Here DEPEW puts you off your guard with a laugh. before his keen blade. with a quick thrust, drives home the truth. Here may be seen something of that marvelous power and poise by which BEECHER, singIe-handed and single-voiced. conquered and calmed the . howling mobs in English halls. and won from the hostile crowds a hearing for the Union cause. Here the reader. as he feels the thrill of GRADY'S immortal words on HThe New South, realizes something of the wondrous change of national feeling wrought by tithe velvet splendor of that mellow tongue, and how it was by the banquet speech in a single night the speaker leaped into national fame. Here such men as GLADSTONE and CHOATE, EVARTS and CURTIS. HILLIS and GOUGH.revea1 in their words something of the secret which every aspiring man longs to discover-the secret of p0wer over the minds of men. JOHN D. MORRIS AND COMPANY, Publishers, Philadelphia, Pa. JOHN D. MORRIS a co. 1201 Chestnut Street. Philadelphia Gentlemen-Referring to your advertisement of Hon. Thos. B. Reed's Library of Modern Eloquence in Tennessee University Annual. I should be pleased to receive portfolio of sample pages. photogravures, and chromatic plates; also particulars regarding binding, prices, etc. lfuxz'rwsx. Stratunwn City and State. WWWWWWWWWNWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWE g77777: nyf777 C67777777777 E $ E 9714777777777 E957177777767 $777 7777.. E E 777XE7X .ngw 777777757717 E EZCg7777'771Z47 77777 Q2777. ,, E E E ME $45777 4777977777 777' Q 7 Q7177? 7.777777717012772. VWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWg V MWMMWWMMMMMMMMWMMWMMMMMMWMM Shirts To Order. PERFECT FIT GUARANTEED. Collars, Cuffs, Hosiery, H Pajamas and Suspenders. Write for Prices. S. L. McGONGAL. 229 5th Avenue, New York. HOME STEAM LAUNDRY Cleaning and Dyeing Establishment. Office and Works with Home Steam Laundry, 617 GAY STREET. Special arrangements for Me work of the Summer School. Oar agent is on the Hill and will call any minute f0 get your garments, and return fhem prompfly well Cleaned and Pressed. Darmll 8L BacRman, Stationers, Engravers, Primers, Philadelphia. General Designing, all Rinds 0f Engraving Business Stationcrv, Announcements and Calendars. Arch St. Hutchinson to Cafhberf Sf. Office and Salesroom, 924 oqrch Sfreef. cPercy Whitaker, Southern Represenfafz'cve, Class CPt'ns and Rings. Invitations and Diplomas. HOTEL Best Location. Strictly First:Class. All Modern Conveniences. SPECIAL RATES Meals. To STUDENTS Mrs. M artin, 717 Walnut St. Opposite Episcopal Church IMPERIAL KNOXMI LLE. TEN E5566. 9.0.3 40? 90? Terms, $2.50 to $4.50 per Day. R. W. FARR, Manager. LON WEBB, LIVERY, FEED AND SALES STABLE. CARRIAGES AND FANCY RIGS Always to be had on short notice. BOTH PHONES 375. 529 HENLEY STREET. KNOXVILLE, TENN. ngcgggggggg$m 5E: 00 ZDU JANUAQNIFWN .NJNNDS. NIP OF 41.th0 $0 02-mun1... m.m ZOFUJMIW EOIE1Z MI... .oomw 8 omd; mmUthaadm vad aweEdHIU-H .mcsm mo 898m 383wa 3 uMdE 0.3 .3; .58 macaw ad csw mo uMdE 850 ES emf 988 mmm 5.83 3 out Qmmhzzxmzwbw .3. 30m $80 .262 wcmBoam Auuuum exz mug gage 2E WWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWWTWg MWWWWMWWWiMWkWWNWWMWWWW W Go; 230 dmuaof: w .zmoz agggggggggggyzw im 5723 University Of Tennessee CO-EDUCATIONAL Classical, Literary, Agricultural, Wecham'cal, Engineering Courses in Languages and Literature; Chemistry and Pharmacy; Civil, Elecfrical and Mechanical Engineering. Separate and quell equipped Laboratories for ..... Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Cbemt'slry, Physics, Electricify, Botany, Horticul- ture, Efc. Shops, Drawing Rooms and Testing Laboratories for Steam, and Scientific Departments. V, $3ng '7 15:93 ' A LAW DEPARTMENT Mechanical and Hydraulic Engineering and materials. Magnificent new building for the Me- chanical Department. A short course in Agriculfure for Farm ers. 04 completely furnished Woman's cBuilding, with rooms for thirty women students, recently opened. State Scholarships, with free tuition, for cTenmzssee Students. With course of study covering two years, leading to the degree of Bachelor of Laws. Tuition, $60.00 perlyear. Expenses very moderate in all departments. In Academic. Agricultural, Scientific and Engineering Departments, $150.00 $200.00 per year. In Law Department, $200.00 per year. CHARLES W. DABNEY, President. Eammemmag QXWX'SBW WW CEEEXQXXE eamwzzea 69 369m at 60pm wines Perqu Stock g ......... DRIN K Cut Prices on all and at OUR FOUNTAIN. your money back if you are not satisfied. Q3 63 369 59 69 $39 69 Q9 '3' Q9 a 8 :63 LIMEADE g 629 69 S639; ' CINCO Out Prescription e9 63 COCA COLA D . 69 69 apartment :5 well 639 :69: PHOSPHATES W stocked and in charge 63 fig ICE CREAM e3; 32 SOD A of competent Register- 639 Q ed Pharmacists Q X With Crushed Fruits. ' 69 639 J a 3 ANY DRINK Q3 5 Let us fill your Prc- g CENTS scriptions. 69 V 6 V 6 The Place Where Your ; Gay and JVIain. 9: Car Stops and Starts 9: Prompt Delivery. m$m11$nx $UQ9X$X1W '$ $$$ 63. $$$X$X$XQCQWXW DEW 793 63 TennCssee Flag Pins. With Uffivgfjltiyngcgiir. Gold Plated. STATE SEAL FOBS. CHARMS AND BROOCHES :In Sterling Gray Finish or Rose Gold. Souvenir Spoons with State Seal on Handle and Flag q Science Hall in Bowl HOPE BROTHERS, iSign J the Big Clock:::: 519 GAY STREET KNOXVILLE, TENN. Bean,WartersC3,C0. e Printers, Blank Book JVIakers LOOSE LEAF LEDGERS . 3' OFFICE SUPPLIES One J the best equipped offices in the South for high grade printing gf all. kinds This Book is a product of our plant. What more could be said ? ' 706 GAY STREET KNOXVILLE, TENN.


Suggestions in the University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) collection:

University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

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University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

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University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 1

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University of Tennessee Knoxville - Volunteer Yearbook (Knoxville, TN) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

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