University of Virginia - Corks and Curls Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA)
- Class of 1902
Page 1 of 282
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 282 of the 1902 volume:
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.L 11; 571.1, m r W w . v V W w w w W m 39 l : ,,hE+$lik.-QIEE!. E33516: 'M anew? ' J I - a I r, A o a. $ 4 i ? g f' t ' u ' ; . McA-..m WQ 16 v,,-wv , 777- 7A , 7 , , ,m, .7 VW.VVW, 7 FIFTEENTH VOLUMEw--M'CMlI W P21555514 Xzy tlv FRATERNJ'HES qf tlvr UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA m -W- Eehimtinn. En anlnnel milliam E. lgetera, mhn fur thirtg-aehen geara hag taught h the 31.1mm tn hi5 tlaaaea in the laniheryaitg nf Hirginia. anh tn the inhale atuhent hnhg the ?Knmzm hirtuea 11f manlineaa anh puritg anh truth, anh tnhn fm' geara hefnre the name of anllege apirit 1mm familiar an the line? of hi5 pupilh, ahntneh them in hia eherg artimt the eaaenre nf ita reality, 3Jn atfertinnate appreriatinn nf hi5 unfailing frienhahip fur earh anh eherg atuhent of the lHttiheraitg nf Hirginia. we hehirate thia the tifteenth hnlume nf Glnrlm anh Qlurla. COLONEL WILLIAM E. PETERS i yua- ? , i J William E. Peters. Professor of Latin in the University of Virginia, 1865-1902. over like monkish misereres with the initials of bygone sessions; a dim winteris morning with gas-lights still afiame ; a great blackboard closely covered over with the Chalk manuscript of that renowned Latin Syntax tnot yet dressed by Anderson Brothers in the dignity of printerls inky; and the tall professor, with his solemn, earnest mien, and his long forefinger pointed at one of. those adamantine, inscrutable ll, facts of the language ' esuch is the writer's earliest recollection of the subject of this sketch. Bed and breakfast might be successful rivals of learning on other days; but no man, who wanted his Latin diploma, would have been caught out of his seat at half-past seven, or unready to hear then the beginning of that lecture, for which the roll was called with the sober gravity of a Roman augur at eight o'clock. I often please myself in seeking the marks of character in trivial or habitual acts, finding them unconscious revelations of authentic traits of the soul. And so, when I was asked to prepare this little notice of my old professor, my honored colleague, my valued friend, that early morning scene of my student days came back to me, and I said to myself: II There in miniature is the picture of your manf', Sober, earnest, concentrated; with something of a naive simplicity in his unconscious absorption in his work; magnifying his ofliee as teacher of Latin, and making it honourable alike in his own eyes and in the eyes of others, he has followed through all the seven and thirty years of his academic life one unper- turbed orbit, and has followed it like the planets, QN OVAL lecture-room in the old Rotunda, the rude benches all carved ti Ohne Hast, und ohne Rastfl This is not the place for a critical estimate. of Professor Peters as a Latinist, or of his published writings as a grammarian; nor is the writer one who would be fitted at any time to essay the task. Quite devoid of technical qualihcation for it, he has too long been wont to pin his faith to the dogmas of the syllabus to assume now the part of critic toward that guide and companion of his youth. But as he looks back upon those formative days in his intellectual life, he recog- 3 MJI; .4 .0 nizes one lesson, which no one could fail to learn who sat with docile spirit at the old professoris feet: The lesson that the one sacred thing in scholarship is veracity to fact, the one touchstone for opinion and speculation, the solid ground of truth. Even if it must be left to the specialist justly to appraise the scientific value of the work, his old boys can all the better judge the temper in which the man has done the work, and so judging, they one and all bow in honour before that unconquerable homage to truth and duty, that unflagging spirit of fidelity and service. The life of a professor in every college has also its more intimate and human side. Especially in our own University there is a rarely close and cordial inter- course between the professors and their students. Even in the class-room they meet as friends, rather than as master and pupil; as colleagues in the search for learning, rather than as neophyte and sage. If the teacher is a man in whose heart a genuine love for young men has living root, he finds ample verge among them for the growth of healthful and helpful friendships. It has been the peculiar priv- ilege of Professor Peters to elicit and stimulate many such friendships. To his goodness of heart, alike native and genuine, nothing that pertained to the true life of the student has ever seemed alien. It has mellowed and deepened with the advancing years like the rich savor of some sound autumnal fruit. In no member of the Faculty have the students shown more ample and unvarying confidence. To no member of the Faculty have they gone more freely for counsel and for aid. From no one have they met a reception more uniform in generosity and sympathy. In the consultations of the Faculty, no one has exhibited a more stead- fast and cordial regard for the interests of the student, or a more earnest desire to safeguard and promote them. There are few of his colleagues who could not give specific examples from their own personal knowledge of acts of unsolicited kindness, performed with delicate appreciation and generosity. I myself could, if it were fitting, speak of more than one. And I doubt not that the kind heart, which the years have made only truer in its devotion to the University and ten- derer in its care of the young lives around him, holds the unwhispered secret of many another no less courteous and no less kind. Many a good cause has known his helpfulness, which but for his aid and backing might have come to grief. Many a poor wanderer from the path of duty has felt his friendly hand-clasp, and been strengthened by his courageous counsel. A perfectly brave man, a perfectly sincere man, true to his friends, frank to his foes, his life has taught even better lessons than his lectures, and breathes forth a nobler harmony than all the meters of the Romans. There is one other aspect of Colonel Peters's work for the University upon which it is necessary to touch, even in so brief and fragmentary a sketch. The close of the Civil War brought into her service two men, without whose work the school would be to-day far other than it is. Charles Venable and William Peters had been brave soldiers and efficient officers in the armies of the Confederate 4 States. For four years they had lived in the tented held, shared danger and risked death with the private soldier, and l done things worthy to be written,H where others had perhaps only T written things worthy to be read? This training in a life of action deveIOped in both capacities and apprehensions rare in a professor. This life of daily want and peril, shared with uncomplaining fortitude, had earned for them the unstinted and abiding confidence of their old companions in arms. So-it was that when the Claims of the University were to be laid before the men of Virginia, before those bronzed veterans who for four years had marched and fought and starved with Lee, no voices so potent were to be heard as those of Venable and Peters. In this work they laboured together with perfect sympathy and perfect trust. Before the Legislature and before the people, on the platform and in the press, here were two men who everywhere faced old friends, and could speak for the college with all the authority and infiuence due to their approved patriotism, their known sagacity, their unselfish courage. The work which Colonel Peters did for the school extended itself in this way far beyond the doors of his lecture-room and the precincts of the University. No one without such training and such associations could have done the work he did. Those who know the history of our past will not forget its efficacy. Those who upraise our future will build upon its results. So it is that all who love this Universityestudents and professors, visitors and alumni--rise up this day to do him honour, and follow him into his V01- untary retirement with affectionate and regretful acclaim. Ave et vale, dear ll Old Pete! ll Greeting. two indispensable commodities, ingredients absolutely necessary to sweeten its welcomeeflowing time and a list of all the good things provided for the fastidious taste of the readers for whom the book is intended. Our greeting, we hope, is none the less sincere, although you will have to look for ll A Last Word L' at the end of the book for the noble verse, and instead of a literary bill of fare, we shall merely mention briefly some of the things you 'will not find chronicled in our pages. This kind of salutation is unceremonious, but it has its advantages, among them an opportunity for us to make some of the apol- ogies which editorially we can not make, for all these things we shall leave untold. There are so many patent omissions in what we have concocted, so many epoch-making events, which we should have chronicled and could not, that it would be impossible to recount them all. Beginning with the first days of the ses- sion, we should like to tell how the College Fathers were distressed at the utter absence of the old-time spirit in the Meds and Laws and Academs of 1902, until the bright October days had gone, and the game was played in Lynchburg, and also a ll show ii was played in the great play-house of Charlottesville, hard-by the Imperial; and how the ll whisper yell l' was given, and the charge of the Cop Brigade was made, to be followed immediately by the nery red hand-bills tone of which we have preserved for posterityy, and the fiery mass-meetingv-but time is wanting. Also time would fail us to tell how we all went up to Wash- ington, and how ll Virginia found the Georgeburg knights soft as a woolen string? And then, would we could tell how the long dark winter blew and snowed; but, nevertheless, the Fathers of the Faculty found no cause to weep for the absence of the old-time spirit, for it had begun to circulate as usual, and there was no stopping it, even though at times some good man would stumble and fall and die. We can not pause to tell you how it was; but some died upon East Range, and sometupon the Lawn tand most of these fell about tea-time at Easter, and tottered back to their caves to diey, and some, even while seeking sanctuary, died, all pure and white, upon the Chapel steps. And no one mourned for them, as they should have been mourned. Yet again, when one thinks of the pleasant springtime, it seems nothing less than a plain neglect of duty not to chronicle how the gallant blade of grass was IT HAS been customary for CORKS AND CURLS to greet its readers with 6 captured on the new field, and then how we had it in for old St. Albans, and could not get it out, and that fieldls name is, therefore, l1 Mud ' all this season. And we would tell how spring, having come, would not stop, but went, and winter came back, and with it Easter, with the girls and the Easter magazine, and how then the Faculty were moved to tears, for they and their lectures were cut to the heart. And how again many died, and many were carried away by the ravages of kalykosis, and of the many, one even as far as Norfolkabut that is a joke on College. ' r ' w a j y Oh! how many things should have been told! This has been a great year, this of 1901-2, and it would need the combined efforts of many pen-pushers to begin to describe it. Herr von Carlisle has sung early and often the glories of ll Rawlins, but a mightier task awaits him here. Dan Dorraine has written tales of more than Balzacian Vigor, with climaxes so startling that they had to be whispered in the hero's ears, yet he would be sorely put to it in this case. Arniado, too, has sandied ' much in his time, has Gadzooka l sewed up in a sack, Bobo ll backed off the board, and a vocabulary of slang ll right off the reel, for he only invented Boriology, and best ememplifles it; but the great Boriographos himself could not invent new words enough to tell what this year has seen. No. it is beyond them. There have been contests in the Wash. and the Jeff. and the cemetery that Topics itself could not find room for; there have been invasions by fair women too numerous for the Senator from Clarke to celebrate in rounded periods. The historians of the Classes have recorded, each in his kind, and Leota. the Egyptian Queen, has peered into the Future, but it is no use. The record of 1902 simply can not be written. N no b3 17. 18. HDJ CALENDAR. 1901. SEPTEMBER. Beginning of 78th Session. Reception to New Students by Y. M. C. A. OCTOBER. Fall Initiation tb. A. CD. tLaw Fraternity. Fall Initiation of T. I. L. K. A. NOVEMBERL Fall Initiation of A. H. tAcademiC Fraternity; Fall Initiation of H. M. tMedical Fraternity; Virginia defeats Sewanee in Richmond. DECEMBER. Fall Initiation of Eli Banana. Christmas Examinations in the Academic Department. Beginning of Christmas Holidays. 1902. JANUARY. End of Christmas Holidays. Academic Examinations. FEBRUARY. Spring Initiation of T. I. L. K. A. MARCH. Easter Examinations in Academic Department. Death of Eugene Frost Davis. Spring Initiation tb. A. Q tLaw Fraternity; Spring Initiation of Eli Banana. APRIL. Spring Initiation of A. II. tAcademic Fraternityy Spring Initiation of 11. M. tMedical Fraternity; Unveiling of h The School Of Athens?7 MAY. Election of Officers of General Athletic Association. Field Day. JUNE. Final Examinations in Academic Department, Baccalaureate Sermon. Annual Meeting of the Board of Visitors. Address before the Literary Societies. Final Celebration of the Literary Societies. Address before the Alumni. Annual Meeting Of the Alumni. Address before the Faculty. Closing Exercises 0f the Session. 1,1,!th .. u .. .94.; a-J Rama . , BOARD 0f VISITORS. CHARLES P. JONES,$ Monterey, RECTOR. JOSEPH BRYANT Richmond. DANIEL HARMONxf Charlottesville. R. WALTON MOOREJL Fairfax. R. TATE IRVINEJL Big Stone Gap. ALGERNON B. CHANDLERik Bowling Green. HENRY H. DOWNINGRK Front Royal. CARTER GLASSRK Lynchburg. GEORGE W. MlLEka Radford. Secretary of tbe Board. J. B. FAULKNER, UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. aleTo February 28th, 1902. , TTO February 28th, 1904. ,.: 3253 was $52 552 :96 mEovauaw: 033 $953 2: Ba 22: WEE; 05 EB 34m .4080 3018me 5 838m 80:3 :0 95x Jon: MESS: 5T5 $195 NC: 80:3 2.3 22E. wcism 2532 9: ,6 i . i i 3 i . 1 i 1 . Officers of Instruction and Administration. PAUL B. BARRINGER, M. D., LL. D. CHAIRMAN OF THE FACULTY. FACULTY. L122 1126 order Qf Ojicz'al seizz'arz'tyj FRANCIS H. SMITH, M. A., LL. D. . . . ....... . . . . . . . . . .VWest Lawn. - Professor of Natural Philosophy. WILLIAM E. PETERS, LL. D. . . . . . . . . ....... . . . . . . .IX West Lawn. Professor of Latin.ate NOAH K DAVIS, M. A., PH D., LL D . . . ...... -. . . .VII West'Lawn. Professor of Moral Philosophy. WILLIAM M. FONTAINE, M. A. . . ................. . University Terrace. Professor of Natural History and Geology. ORMOND STONE, M A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... . . . .Mount Jefferson. Professor of Practical Astronomy, and Director of the Leander McCormick Observatory. WILLIAM M. THORNTON, LL. D. . . .............. . .Monroe Hill. Professor of Applied Mathematics FRANCIS P. DUNNINGTON, B. S., C. E. . . ............. University Heights. Professor of Analytical and Agricultural Chemistry. JOHN W. MALLET, M. D., PH. D., LL. D., F. R. S. . . . . . . . . . . . .Monroe Hill. ' Professor of Chemistry. ' MILTON W. HUMPHREYS, M. A., PH. D., LL. D. ...... . . . ...... Wertland. Professor of Greek . ALBERTHENRYTUTTLE,M.S. ................IWestLawn. ' i i Professor of Biology and Agriculture. i PAUL B. BARRINGER, M D., LL. D. . . . ............ University Terrace. Professor of Physiology and Materia Medica CHARLESW. KENT M. A., Ph. D. . .......... . . . . . . . . . .IV East Lawn. Professor of English Literature. WILLIAM MINOR LHE, B. L. . . ................... . . .X East Lawn. Professor of the Law of Persons, Mercantile Law, Corporations and Equity. WILLIAMG. CHRISTIAN, M. D. ........... . . . . . . . Preston Heights. Professor of Anatomy and Surgery. AUGUSTUSH. BUCKMASTER, M D. ..... . . . . . . a . . . 1212 W. Main; Professor of Gynecology, Obstetrics,Surgica1 Disease and Abdominal Surgery. aleT0 June 19, 1902. II JAMESA.HARRISON,...,LHD LLD. . . . . .. ............IIEastLawn. Plofessor of Tutonic Languages. WILLIAMH.ECHOLS,B.S.,C. E.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VIIIEast Lawn. Professor of Mathematics. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY, M. A., P11. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .Preston Heights. Professor of Historical and EcOnomical Science. CHARLES ALFRED GRAVES, M. A., LL. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..VIEastLaw11. Professor of the Law of Contracts, 10115 211111 Civil P1 000111116 JOHN STAIGE DAVIS, M. A., M. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Preston Heights. Plofessor of Pathology and Practice of Medicine. RALEIGHC. MINOR, M. A., B. L. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .112 F0u1tee11th St1eet. Professor of the DLaw of Real Property and Public Law. RICHARD H.WILSON, M. A., P11. ......... ...........3WestRa11ge. ProfDessor 0f Romanic Languages. JAMES MORRIS PAGE,M.A.,Ph.D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .University Terrace. Professor of Mathematics. THOMASFITZHUGH,M.A. mmh Professor of Latin?l6 INSTRUCTORS AND IASSISTANTS. W1LL1AMA.LAMBETH,M.D.,Ph. D. . . .. .... ..........Carr,s Hill. Instructor in Physical Culture, Director Of the F ayerweatner Gymnasium, and Lecturer 0n Hygiene and Materia Medica. HUGHT.NELSON,M.D.. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .205EastHighStreet. Instructor in Clinical Surgery. EDWARDM. MAGRUDER, M. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .102 WestHigl1StreE2t. Instructor in Physical Diagnosis. WILLIAMM. RANDOLPH, M. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .101 West High Street. Instructo1 in Genito- Urinary Surgery. HALSTEDS.HEDGES,..,..MAMD... . ............ParkSt1-eet. Instructor 1n Ophthalmic Surgery. J.HAM1LT0N BROWNING,M.D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .301 East MarketStreet. Instructor 1n Orthopedic Surgery. LYMAN SKEEN, JR., M. D., Ph.D .. . . . . . .IWest Lawn. Demonstrator of Medical Bioiogy and Pathology. C.CHRISTQPHERWRIGHT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IoEastRange. Instructor in Latin. a'eFromiIune 19, 1902. 12 E I 3 1 D'g .CV. d ' r' 1...... ' , -t-+qu?,-u2m -.., J... Ww-H I WILLIAM J.HUMPHREYS,B.A..C.E.,Ph.D.. . . . . . . . . . . . . .Rouss Laboratory. Instructor in Physics. CHARLES HANCOCK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MechanicalLaboratory. Instructor in Engineering. LEWISP.CHAMBERLAYNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .ATAHouse. Assistant in English Literature. W1LLIAMH.FAULKNER,M.A.......................165HouseG. Assistant in Teutonic Languages. JAMESP.MCCALLIE,M.A. . . . . . . . . . .. .............Observatory. Assistant in Astronomy. JAMESB.BULLITT,M.D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21WestRange. Demonstrator of Anatomy. ROBERT M.C0LEMAN,M.D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dr.LambetHs. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. JULIAN H. MORRIS, M. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .UniversityHotel. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. ROLAND H. LATHAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1022W.MainStreet. Student Assistant in Medical Physics. J.HEATHLEWIS.... . . .........18Carszi11. Student Assistant in Rouss Laboratory. FREDERICK B. SAEGMULLER . 31 West Lawn. Instructor in Field Work. ERNEST H. VENABLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1201 Wertland Street. Instructor in Drawing. J. CARROLL FLIPPIN, M. D. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .25WestRange. Licentiate and Assistant Demonstrator of Histology and Pathology. BEN.C.WILLIS...............................Carr,SHill. Assistant Demonstrator of Histology and Comparative Anatomy. WADEH.FROST 27WestRange. Assistant Demonstrator of Pathology. WILLISC.CAMPBELL...... ....................DawsorYsRow. Assistant Demonstrator of Histology. EDWIND.WATKINS................ ...........IWestLawn. Student Assistant in Botany. GIDEONTIMBERLAKE................... .........Dispensary. Dispensary Pharmacist. LEWISW.POLLOK..............................DiSpensal'y. Clinical Assistant in Medicine. HARRYB.TAYLOR................ .............Dispensary. Clinical Assistant in Gynecology and Obstetrics. BENJAMIN W. BAYLESS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Dispensary. Clinical Assistant in Gynecology and Obstetrics. M0RT0NW.BAKER.............................Dispensary. Clinical Assistant in Surgery. PERCYF.MCMURDO............................Dispensary: Clinical Assistant in Physical Diagnosis. VIRGINIUSDABNEY.............................Dispensary. Clinical Assistant in Genito-Urinary Surgery. 'L O. HUNTER MCCLUNG Dispensary. Clinical Assistant in Ophthalmic Surgery. 13 LICENTIATES. JAMES B. GREEN, B. L. . . Licentiate in Law. JOHN E. WILLIAMS, A. B., Ph. D. , . . . . . , . Licentiate in Mathematics. THOMAS B. MCCARTNEY, JR., A. B. . . . Licentiate in Latin. BRODIE C. NALLE . Lincentiate in Medical Chemistry. OTHER OFFICERS. FREDERICK W. PAGE . . . Librarian. SAMUEL G. HAMNER . . . Law Librarian. SAMUEL P. WALKER . . . . . Assistant Law Librarian. JAMESB.BAKER Secretary of the Faculty. THOMAS H. CARTER . . The Parsonage. 123 House B. 307 E. Market Street. . 125 House B. . University Heights. . 6 Monroe Hill, . 1212 West Main Street. 1121 Wertland Street. 111 West Lawn- Proctor and Superintendent of Grounds and Buildings. SAMUEL B. WOODS . . Commissioner of Accounts. I4 . 401 E. Market Street. z: 7I;yyX7wMWMNl WI 40 xx , 4M W , . ,, , , , Omx H ,H , r 4111 I 11,711 177 7 14V IIIIPVI 4., .47 in the same dusk Sive of th toria pred tion this for 1 is H per: pleu C011 was mo be Ac un ac or or SU Academic History. tiinN the periml ml a year has passed. and it heemnes HCCCSS'dIZV tn thiHll tn the expectant wnrhl the history of that august body, the :XCZUlClUlC Class of Virginia. Again tlUCS the historian turn his mind upon that heterogeneous throng, the ghCEUlClllS. and hard does he strive to tliseern in them enlleetivel'x' sonie eharaeteristiewstnnething to distinguish them from the same hody in past years. And again. linally in' despair, does he come to the eon elnsion with the fact that-e tt' It is the same old comedy that is played Upon the same old stage from year to yearf7 Yes, history eertainly repeats itself. A glanee over the chronicles of sneees- sive elasses in any College Annual will eonvinee the most skeptical of the truth of the adage. 'llrne, one eanse of this sameness may lie in the fact that elass his-- at the work of their '9 torians are prone to take too many uf these glances predecessors. and, prompted either hy a feeling of admiration or hy one of despera- tion, are lCtl t0 horrow too freely of their thoughts antl lines of thought. lint he this as it may, there is eertainly no great held for originality in the reeonnting for the fifteenth time of the history of a never-ehanging htxly. And sneh a hody is this Class. I Of course, frnni year to year the Academic Class, like all others. changes its personnel to a greater or less extent, Ulil tignres vanish and new ones take their places, hnt the prneess is much like that of pouring new 1 ?atl into old molds, and. emiseqneinly, the Class is 0f essentially the same nature as when its first history was written. ,llenee. any attempt to portray the ehataeter 0f the Class must, he 1110TC or less of a plagiarism 0f forine' aeennnts: hut a few words, at least, must he written on this snhjeetw-else this were no history. llerhaps the hest adjective to use in tleseriptinn 0f the character of the Q! ACZIthIHlC Class is loose : hut a word 0f explanation must accompany it, or nntrne inferences will he tll'ZlWIl. The adjeetive is meant to he applied to the char- aeter 0f the ixCElthIIlS. eolhfetively. not individually: aml to their manner of organization, not their intrals. lior further information as to this' looseness of organization, eonsnlt any volume of CURKS :xNh Ct'itlis hitherto puhlishetl. The subject is ahly discussed in them all. 15 Besides thus treating of the things that the Aeatlenis have not in common, it will he notieetl that most of the ehronielers have dwelt upon one single, thing which all members of the Class share, namely. a mad desire for a 13. A..ileg'i'te They tell of how the Aeadems subordinate all other things to the attainment of this one end, and sit day and night in their rooms mapping out mysterious hyperbolic curves; thinking in Spanish, and chanting Latin meters, while the lazy Law and the morbid Med are enjoying the sweets of College life. Nor is this entirely an exaggeration; for, while we are willing to concede to our profes- sional brothers that theirs is not altogether an easy lot, yet we maintain that to some extent throughout the session, and, at all events. for the month preceding each examination period, the poor Aeailem is the most miserably overworlx'eil creature in existence. His trouhles--the exaniinations-eoine not singly, nor even in pairs, hut in hunches; and only the man who has tried to keep three or four tickets all paramount in his mind at once knows the meaning of true hard work. . And yet we have our pleasures. Vie, find time, most of us. to enjoy to the full the football and baseball seasons, and that time of all times, Easter week. we go to the tt show l occasionally; and at athletie mass-ineetings, and similar gatherings, no class in College, is ever better or more enthusiasticall'x' repree sented than is ours. There is one thing in connection with the Academic Class that is to he greatly regretted, and that is that by reason of the loose organization of this department we can not have more of Class feeling, or Class it spirit. ; hut weighing the social 1:1 xasnre which would ensue from changing to an organized Class system against the advantages of the elective system, as it stands, it must he admitted that the present way is better in the end. The Aeadems of the present session have never been called together as a class. XVe have thus far been particularly fortunate in that there has occurred no death of student or 1'n'ofesso12 nor any other matter of sufficient importance to merit the attention of the Class. xye will be assembled once before iinals for the purpose of electing oHieers for next session, and if our past good fortune continues with us for the few remaining weeks of the y at. this will have been our 01in Class meeting. It will eertainlxr' not he out of place. to mention here the fact that at the close of this session, there will go out from amongr us one who, with but a single excep- tion, has been longer lthlltlFlCtl with the i-Xeaileniie Class and with the University than any living man. It is hardly neeessary to name Colonel William 12. Peters, whose resignation takes effect at the end. of the present etoillege year. .liew professors have been so loved and honored by their pupils as has Colonel l teters, and it is with the profimnclest regret that his present classes, as well as those who have satinntler him in years past, see him give up the chair which he has so long and so ably filled. 16 . wxyh-L v-foa' 1.. i 0 1 , ,A. a i L - ' tk And there are many others who in a few short weeks will leave the Uni- versity not to return. Their term of college life, with its pleasures and its difficulties, is almost over, and they are about to enter upon that more serious struggle in the great wide world for which we are all preparing. And though for some of these the prospect may seem dark and the way obscure, yet if they are true sons of their alma mater, we have boundless faith in their ultimate success, and we feel sure that they will all be better and greater men for having once been Aeadems at Old Virginia. I7 20 ACADEMIC CLASS. OFFICERS. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President BEVERLY DANDRIDGE TUCKER, JR. . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer RICHARD PHILIPS BELL, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Historian MEMBERS. NAME YEAR. AEEEEES. XBEEEEE. CARY MCLURE ABNEY, JR.. . 2 . Waskom, Texas . . . . 49 West Range. JOSHUA SPEER ADKISSONV . 2 . Italy, Texas . . . . . . 28 East Lawn. PERCY ALEXANDER . 1 . Shreveport, La. . . . . . . Monroe Hill. CLIFFORD LUCIAN ANDERSON . 2 . Ocala, F121,. . , . . . . 70 East Range. ED. K. E. HUGH BLYTHE ANDREWS i . . . . . . . 1 . . . Mer Rouge, La. . . 1 . 17 CarrEs Hill. OTHO PAUL ARGABRITE. . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Bakefs Mi11,W. Va. . University Hotel. IRVIN WILSON AYERS . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Oakland,Ca1. . . . . . Mrs. DoswelPs. JAN DON BALL . . . . . . . . . . . . , .4. . . Rollin P. 0., Cal.. . 1218 W. Main St. ' JAMES MAY BALL, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Richmond, Va. . . . . . A. T. A, House, A. T. A. . ' WILLIAM HENRY BARLOW. . . . . . . . .1. . .Charlottesville, Va.. . 1. . .Home. CHARLES GODWIN BARRETT. . . . . . . . 1 . . . P01tsmouth,Va. . . . Miss Berkeley 5. RUFUS HANNAH BARRINGER . A . . . . . 3 . . . University of Virginia. . . . . Home. Z, NIR; A. H. LOUIS BAUM. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Montgomery, A1a.. . . . . 41 Randall. RICHARD BAYLOR, JR.. . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Norfolk,Va. . . . . . .3West Lawn. Q1 T A ROBERT CECIL BEALE, JRH . 3 . Fredericksburg, Va.. . . 26 East Range. General Secretary Y. M. C A. RICHARD PHILIPS BELL, JR. . . '3 . .Staunton, Va . . . . . .47 West Lawn. CD. K. Y; A. 11.; P. K. Manager of College TOfZ'HS Historian Academic Class. SAMUEL MCGOWAN BENET . , . . . . . .1. . Abbeville, S.C.. . . . .26 East Lawn. 18 o HOME COLLEGE NAME- 7 YEAR- ADDRESS. ADDRESS. HARRISON CAMPBELL BERKELEY . . . . . 1 . . .Danville, Va. . . . . .Miss Berkeleyis. B. 6. H. LEE BIDGOOD . . . 1 . . Churchland, Va. . . . . . . 226 14th St. EMORY WEST BITZER . . 3 . . Leesburg, Va.. . . . . . 3 Monroe Hill. DONALD MCKENZIE BLAIR . 2 . . Richmond, Va. . . . . 164 House G. ill T, A; A. H. FELIX BLUTHENTHAL . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Atlanta,Ga. . . . . . . .30 Randall JOHN BENNETT BODDIE . 2 . Birmingham, Ala. . . . Miss Berkeley 5. MICAJAH BOLAND , .4 . . Lawyers, Va. . . . . . 31 Carrs Hill. RICHARD WALKER BOLLING. . .2. .Huntsville,A1a. . . . . . 139 House D. X. Cb. JOHN BOOGHER. . . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .St. Louis, Mo. . . . . . . .13 Randall. B. 9. II. GEORGE HAMILTON BOOTH . . . . . . . .1. . .C01umbus,Ohi0 . . . . Mrs. Yanceyis. LOUIS HINTON BOSHER. . . . . . . . . 1 . . Richmond, Va.. . . . . . 9 West Lawn. A. K. E. BASIL DE LASHMUTT BOTELER . 2 .Ballston, Va. . . . . . . . . 3 Randall. Z, X, AUBIN LEE BOULWARE . . . . . . . . .1. . .Richmond,Va.. . . . . .9West Lawn. BALLARD PRESTON BOULWARE . . . . . .1. . .Richmond,Va. . . . . . Miss Cockeis. MARION PORTER BRAWLEY. . . . . . . .1 . .Charleston,S. C.. . . . .Miss Cockeis. A T 5.2 CHARLES SCOTT BRENT, JR. . . . . .3. . .Lexingto11,Ky.. . . . . .134 House D. X. th; A 11.0 F.C.;P. K.;E1i; AssociateEditorCORKSAND CURLs. WILLIAM MINOR BRYAN. . . . . . . . . .3. . .University of Virginia . . . . . Home. THOMAS PINCKNEY BRYAN . . . . . . . 1 . . .Richmond, Va.. . . . .45 West Range. 11'; T. 1. L. K. A. 4 LOUIs STANISLAUS BURDETT . 3 . . New York, N. Y. . . . Mrs. Peytons A. T. A. EDWARD JONATHAN BURNS, JR. . . . . . . 1 . . . Charles Town, W. Va. . Mrs. Skinneris. EMMETTE YOUNG BURTON. . . . . . . . .3. . .H1110,Va. . . . . . .900 W. Main St. WILLIAM WALKER BUTZNER . . . . . . .1. . .Fredericksburg, Va. . . .40 Carris Hill. REV. EDWARD NATHAN CALISCH . . . 1 . . .R1chm0nd, Va. . . . . . . . .Hotel. MALCOLM GRAHAM CAMERON . . . . . . 2 . . . Richmond, Va. . . . . .7 M00100 Hill. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CAMP, JR . . . . . . 1 . . White Springs,Fla. . Mrs. A. S. Jones 5. Kb. K. E. GEORGE LEONIDAS CAMP . . . . . . . . 1 . . .White Springs, Fla. . Mrs. A. S. Joness 1D, K. E. HORACE CALLOWAY CARLISLE 2 . Troy, Ala. . . . . . . 512 W. Main St. 3 WILSON FLOWEREE CARROLL. . 2 .Vicksburg, Miss. . . . . . 152 House F. A 111.- T I. L. K. A.; P. K. . CHARLES DABNEYCARTER, JR . . . . . .1. . .Charlottesville,Va. . . . . . .Home. Business Manager Magazine. LEVVIs PARKE CHAMBERIAYNE . . 4. . .Petersbu1g,Va. . . . . .A T A House. A. T. 23.; A. H. ;.O W. L. Goose Quill Club; Ed1tor 111 Chief College Tapas; Editor-in- Chief CORKS AND CURLS; Vice- President Academic Class. JAMES CHESNUTT . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . Hot Spri.11gs,rArk. .. . 39 West Lawn. FARLEY CARTER CHILDSeK . . . . . . ..1. New York .. . . . . . . 84 East Range. ZAP. I9 HOME COLLEGE NAME- YEAR- ADDRESS. ADDRESS. ROBERT EDWARD LEE CHUMBLEY . . . 4 . . . New River Depot, Va. . . 28 CarrAs Hill. DURANT CHURCH. . . . . . . . . . 2. . WWashington D. C. . . . . .5Randall. CHARIES HARTWELL COCKE . . . .3. . C01umbus,M1ss . . . . .146 House E. 1b. Kid; A H ;P. K.; Associate Editor College Topz'm Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLE RODNEY SNEAD COHEN. . . . . . . . . .1. . .Augusta, Ga.. . . . . Misses Cockeis. B. G. H. JOHN EUGENE COLE . . . . . . . . . . 2 .Fredericksburg,Va..900 West Main St. EDWARD TRIPP COMER, JR.. . . . . . . 5. . .Eufaula,A1a. . . . . .66 West Range. 2. A. E. WHITWELL WENTWORTH COXE. . . . . . 1 . . R0an0ke,Va.. . . . . . 15 West Lawn. . Theological Seminary,Va. A. K. E. House. to ANGUS MCDONALD CRAWFORD . AWKE;AH;O. F.C. JOHN LEWIS CRENSHAW 1 . . Grassland, Va. . . . Miss Kate Minoris. THOMAS HENRY SHELTON CURD . 1 . Schuyler, Va. . . . 1205 West Main St. HEBER DOUST CURTIS . . . . . . . . .1. . .San Jos6,Ca1. . . .1205 West Main St. JOHN ABRAM CUTCHINS . 2 . Richmond, Va. . . . . . 44 East Range. A. T. A. EDMOND PENDLETQN DANDRIDGE. . . . .3. . Leetown,W.Va.. . . .10 Monroe Hill. A. IL; President Y. M. C. A. ROBERT WILLIAMS DANIEL. . . . . . . .1. . .Richmond, Va. . . . Colonel Carteris. Ania EDWIN PRESTON DARGAN . . 3 . . Louisville, Ky. . . . . Rawlins Institute. 2. N. THORNTON HAWES DAVIES . . . . . . . .1 . . .Manassas, Va.- . . .Mrs.J. S. Patton's. K. A. RE V WILLIAM GRIMSLEY DEARING. . . .4. . .Sandys,Va.. . . . . . .31 Carris Hill. WILLIAM MORTON DEY. . .4. . . N01f01k,Va.. . . . . . . 122 House B. A.K.E,; A,.;H P..K ,T.I.L.KA. CARTER LEE DILLARD . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Rocky Mount, Va.. . . .Mrs. RivesAs. A. xP. COURTENAY DINWIDDIE. . . . . . . . . .1. . .Greenwood Depot,Va. . Miss Berkeley's. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE . . ..4 .,Norfolk Va. . . - - 1 . .114 House A. 1b 11 A ;,A 11,; P K.; O. W. L; Goose- Quill Club; Editor- 111- Chief fliagazme Assist ant Editor- 1n- Cliief CORKS AND CURLS; Assistant Manager Baseball Team; Pres- ident Academic Class; Secretary and Treasurer German Club. JOHN PEYTON DULANY . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Upperville,Va. . . . ColonelCarteris. 38.11. JOHN HAVERSHAM ELLIOTT, JR. . . . . .1. . .Beaufort,S. C. . . . .Miss Berkeleyis. B 8 H WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER . . . .6. . .,B0ydt0n Va. . . . . . .165 House G. B 8 H ; A H;Goose-QuillC1ub; Associate Editor College Topzcs. CHARLES JAMES FAULKNER,JR.. . . . . .4. . B.0ydt0n,Va. . . . . . .165 House G. A II JAMES BURTON FAULKNER 2 . Lexington, Ky. . . . . . 10 East Lawn. Z 1? 'E' ALLEN FAWCETT . . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Baltimore,Md. . . . . .44 East Lawn. WILLIAM CLYDE FERGUSON . . . . . . .1 . . . Lexington, Ky. . . . . .20 Carris Hill. 20 .1' 1 i I 1 NAME. CHARLES HOMER FIELDING. HARRY PROCTOR FISHBUR'NE JOHN SEDDON FLEET 41.11.11. 11110.15'C T1L.K.A WILLIAM ALEXANDER FLEET cD,K.11f.1 11.11. 3 BERKELEY MINOR FONTAINE EDMOND CLARKE FORSYTHE WILLIAM CHRISTOPHER FOUEKs WILLIAM EARLE FRETWELL ERNEST NORTON FULTON H. K. A. HUGH BLAIR GRISBY GALT . 11. K. A. WILLIAM BENJAMIN GATES. d1. K. 2. CHARLES WATSON GIVENS BENJAMIN DOUGLAS GOFF K. 2'. MARVIN DULANEY GORE WILLIAM MONCURE GRAVATT JOHN JAMES GRAVATT A. T. A. WILLIAM GRAY . ARTHUR POWELL GRAY . SAMUEL RANDALL GRIFFIN FERDINAND GROOS, JR. A. T. A. WILLIAM GROOS A, T, A. . FRANK WINSTON GWATHMEY A,H, HARRY JOPLIN HALE Z, 11f, MARSHALL CARTER HALL, JR. A, 1P, NICHOLAS CLIFTON HAMNER RUSSELL HARDY A 1P LEWIS CARTER HARRISON YEAR. .1. .2. .4 . 9 .H. N . . H H to IQ IQ DJ IO N OJ N N N 5. HOME ADDRESS . Fishersville, Va. . Roanoke, Va. . . Culver, 111d. . . Culver, 111d. . Beaver Dam, Va. . Little Falls, N. Y. . Brandon, Miss. . New HOpe, Va. . Bargetown, Ky. Norfolk, Va. Colleen, Va. . . Simmonsville, Va. . Winchester, Ky. . Roanoke, Va. . Bowling Green, Va. . . Richmond, Va. . Winchester, Va. . Amherst, Va. . Galveston, Tex. . San Antonio, Tex. . San Antonio, Tex. . Louisa, Va. . . Osceola, Ark. . Fredericksburg, Va. . Howardsville, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . .Richmond, Va. COLLEGE ADDRES$ . 110 Tenth St. 220 Fourteenth St. . 5 West Lawn. . 5 West Lawn. . M iss Berkeleyk. 512 West Main St. Miss D0uglas1s. . 209 Second St. . Mrs. Leathers's. . Miss Berkeleyk. . Carter House. . Carter House. . 121 House B. , South St. . 51 West Lawn. . A. T. A. House. . 128 House C. . 1103 Wertland St. . . IO Randall. .A. T. A. House. . A. T. A. House. . 163 House G. . Miss Berkelefs. . 17 West Lawn. 1203 West Main St. . 18 East Range. .40 East Lawn. A, T,SZ,; A 11;.0 F. C.; T. 1. L. K. A. ,Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS; Assist- ant Editor College Topics. JOHN WILLIAM HART. CHARLES CHEVES HASKELL. Cb A 9 1 A 11.; JAMES HAY,'1R.. B. 9. 11.; Editor zWagazzize. 11..LKA .Orange, Tex. . . . Columbia, S. C. . .Madison, Va. . . 37 Randall. . Miss Berkeleyk. .Miss Berkeley 5. Goose- Quill C1ub;Assistant Editor- in Chief CORKS AND CURLS; Associate NAME. RICHARD MCCORD HOFFMAN. ANSELM TUPPER HOLCOMB . EDWIN WILSON 'HOLLIDAY WILLIAM WEST HOLLAND JOSEPH MOSBY HORNOR E. A. E. JOHN HENRY HOUGHTON, JR. . JOHN EDWARD NORRIS HUME B. 9. II. GEORGE TYLER HUNDLEY K. A, CHARLES GRANDY HUNTER. A. Y; P.,K.; T. I. L. K. A. THOMAS SHANNON HUNTER 1 K.A. ARTHUR PRESTON HUTTON . X. Qt WILLIAM GEORGE JOHNSON . EDMOND RUFFIN JONES JOHN CURTIS JONES, JR, CLARKE TYNDALL JONES . K. A. I ROBERT LEE KEMPNER . ROBERT HORACE KERN, JR . B. 9. U. WILBUR FISKE KING, JR WYTHE LEIGH KINSOLVING . JOHN MILLER KYLE HENRY CARRINGTON LANCASTER . A. T. A. KENNY LANDES . GEORGE WASHINGTON LANGHORNE, JR H. K. A. ROLAND HILL LATHAM . STEWART CARLISLE LEAKE. WILLIAM LEIGH . . . . . . A. H; Goose-Quill Club. HARRY JACOB LEMLEY JAMES HEATH LEWIS . DAVID HENRY LEWIS . ANDREW LEE LINDER PAUL VIRGINIUS LITTLEJQHN . ROBERT QUARLES LOWRY JOHN EDWARD LOYD JOHN JENNINGS LUCK . THOMAS BARTON LYONs, JR. JAMES PARK MCCALLIE E,A.E,;A,IL IQ HOME ADDRESS Helena, Ark. . . Austin, TeX. . . St. Elmo, Va. . Richmond, Va. . . Norfolk, Va. . . Mobile, Ala . . Abingdon, Va . 1-Washingt0n, D. C . . Charlottesville, Va . . Gonzales, TeX . Columbia, Tenn . . Galveston, Tex. . St. Louis, Mo. . Vicksburg, Miss. . . Charlottesville, Va. . Jersey City, N.J . . Richmond, Va. . Stonewall, Va. . Lynchburg, Va . Onancock, Va. . . Richmond, Va. A. T. A.; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS. . Houston, Va . . Upperville, Va. . , Ivy Depot, Va. . Ivy Depot, Va. . Hartwell, Ga . . Leesburg, Va 1-. . . Bedford City, Va . . Clevillus, Va . . Roanoke, Va . . . . Charlottesville,Va. . Chattanooga, Tenn .. COLLEGE ADDRESS . Columbia Furnace, Va. . 2 East Range. . Portsmouth, 0. . . CharlottEsVille, Va. . . Eastville, Va. . 42 East Lawn. . . . . . . Home. . University Hotel. . 27 West Lawn. . Mrs. Rives1s. . 4 East Range. . 131 House C. . 154 House F. 13 West Range. 135 House D. . 17 Carfs Hill. . . Mrs. Dabney,s. Mrs. J. B. Minofs. . Mrs. E. M. Pagek. . 31 Randall. . 14 Randall. . University Hotel. Mrs. McFarlanCPs. . 1205 W. Main St. . A. T. A. House. . 1716 L0cuSt St. . . 5West Range. . 1022 West Main St. . A. T. A. House. . 164 House G. Miss Berkelefs. 21' Carfs Hill. 21 Carfs Hill. . Mrs.Peyt0n1s. . 3 Monroe Hill. . 1218 West Main St. . . .Home. 14 East Lawn. . Home. . Observatory. NAME. THOMAS BENTON MCCARTNEY,JR. A. H. JOHN PRESTON MCCONNELL CLYDE MCGREGOR JAMES JOSEPH MCLAUGHLIN. JOHN HAMILTON MCNEELY. CHARLES SENFF MCVEIGH :13 T A JOHN PATTERSON MADISON. YEAR. l0 OJ C I O 4 J - HOME ADDRESS. . New Castle, Va. . Wayland, Va . . Wheeling, W. Va . . Lynchburg, Va. . Evansville, Ind. . Richmond, Va. .Pete1sbu1g, V a A, II. ;-Goose Quill Club; Assistant Edit01 College Topzcy. ANDREW ADGER MANNING X. QM; A. H. JOHN DONELSON MARTIN . FONTAINE MARTIN . . A. T. 82.; O. F. C. RANDOLPH FITZHUGH MASON. A. 1P. JAMES NEWTON MICHIE RICHARD DUNNICA MICOU CHARLES GIBSON MIDDLETON A. 4,. GEORGE WILLIAM MILLER ALLAN JEFFERSON MOON RALPH DAVID MOORE 1b, A, 9. HERBERT EMMET MORROW . K. 21. ROBERT BALDWIN MYERS 42. F. A. JOHN CLARENCE MYERS GORDON GRANGER NELSON Z. 1P. SIGQURNEY FAY NININGER CHARLES POLLARD OLIVIER HENRY HAMMETT ORR A. T. 32. JULIEN OSBORNE A. T. 52. GRAHAM CROCKETT PAINTER. A. T. A. WINSTON PARRISH . X. Q; A. 11.; Eli. KENNET STEWART PATTON LESTER PATTON SOLOMON PEARLSTINE CLARENCE BRAIDEN PENN X. 41. GEORGE WILLIAM PEYTON PAUL VALERE PORTNER 111. F. A. .1. IO N Lu DJ N N to 0 23 V Spartanburg, S. C. . . Memphis, Tenn. . . Memphis, Tenn . . Richmond, Va . . O1'tis,Va. COLLEGE ADDRESS. . 307 East Market St. . Ivy Road. M15. Cracrafts . . 22 Randall. Mrs. Crockfo1dis . . A. T. A. House. . 11 Monroe Hill. . 115 House A. 150 House E. .34 East Lawn. . Brown,s School. .City. .TheoPg i1 SeminaIy, Va. Miss Berkeley 5. . Louisville, Ky. . . Vicksburg, Miss . . Lineville, Ala. . . Herkimer, N. Y. . Clarkesville, Tenn. . Norfolk, Va . . Broadway, Va . . . Charlottesville, Va . . Montgomery, Ala . . Charlottesville, Va . . Greenville, S. C. . Norfolk, Va. . Yanceyis Mill, Va. . . Portsmouth, Va . . Charlottesville, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Branchville, S. C . . Abingdon, Va . . Rapidan, Va . . Manassas,Va . 39 West Range. . 37 Randall. . Rawlingk Institute. . 1212 West Main St. 2 Randall. 113 House A. 1022 West Main St. Home. Professor Greenis. 1021 W. Main St. . 126 House C. . 14 East Range. 8 Carfs Hill. Misses Cockeis, 1222 West Main. 1222 West Main. . 39 Randall. 136 House D. 8 Carris Hill. . Box 126. NAME. YEAR. SAMUELPRICE..............3 E. N. BENJAMIN PURVIS. . . . . . . . . . .. 1. SAMUEL GLOVER RAY ......... 1. B. 8. H. WILLIAMS CARTER WICKHAM RENSHAW . 3 . A.T.SZ.; A.H. ROBERT HENRY RENSHAW, JR. . . . . . . 1 . A.T.Q N AMBROSE MADISON RICHARDSON Qt K. T.; A. H. JOHN WILLIAM RIELY, JR. . . . . . . . .1. A. K. E. EDWARD REINHOLD ROGERS . . . . . . .6. THOMAS JACOB ROLLER . . . . . . . . .3. K. A. HERBERT GORDON SAMUELS . . . . , . I1. SIMKINS SAVAGE 2 ERNEST RUDOLPH SCHCEN . . . . . . . .1. QDA. CHARLES TATESCOTT 2 H. K. A. ERNEST WINFIELD SCOTT 1 THOMAS HARLOWE SCOTT . . . . . . . .1. OTIS BURGESS SEARS . . 3 . EDWIN BOINEST SETZLER . . 3 . THOMAS SLATOR SETTLE . . 2 . GRISBY CAVE SHACKLEFORD . 1 . OWEN CARLISLE SHANER. . . . . . . . .1. EVERETT ASHLEIGH SHULER . . . . . .1. HUGH FLETCHER SYMMES . . . . . . . .1. THOMAS MCNIDER SIMPSON, JR . . . . . 1 . WALTER PENDLETQN SINCLAIR. . . . . .1 . 'JOHN JAMES SKINNER. . . . . . . . . . .2. STEVESMITH,JR... . . . . . . . . . .1. H. K. A. RICHARD ELLIS SMITHER. . . . . . . .1. LANGDON CHEVES MCCORD SMYTHE . . . 1 . RICHARD PERRY SPENCER, JR . . . . . .1 . deAP. FRANK TABLER ST. CLAIR . . . . . . . .1. CARROLL CLAIBORNE ST. JOHN . . . . . .1 . A. K. 111.; O. F. C.; Eli. ALBERT HENRY STODDARD, JR . JAMES LELAND STONE . . . . . . . . . .3. ROGER MOORE STUART. . . . . . . . . .1. 1b. A. 9. GEORGE CARY TABB .. ........3. K. A.; A. H. 24 HOME ADDRESS . Lewisburg, W. Va. . . Fredericksburg, Va. . St. Louis. MO. . University of Va. . . University of Va. . . St. Joseph, MO. . Richmond, Va. . Petersburg, Va. . Fort Defiance, Va. . Front Royal, Va. . Cape Charles, Va. . Richmond, Va. . . Lynchburg, Va. . Carmel, Ark. . . . . Freeman, W. Va. .Albany, M0. . . . Newberry, S. C. . Flint Hill, Va. . . Stony Point, Va. . Lynchburg, Va. . Staunton, Va. . Ivy Depot, Va. . . Danville, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . . Livingston, Ala. . Saluda, Va. . . . . Charleston, S. C. . Columbus, Ga. . Bluestone, Va. . New York. . . Savannah, Ga. . Roanoke, Va. . . . Washington, N. C. . LouiSViPB. Ky. . COLLEGE ADDRESS . 63 East Range. 1022 W. Main St. . 27 Randall. . Home. . Home. 146 House E. 45 West Range. . 58 East Range. . 35 Randall. . 35 Randall. . 16 East Range. 2 3 Randall. . Mrs. Bakefs. . Mrs. A. S. Jones1s. 428 First St. 900 West Main St. . University Hotel. Mrs. A. S. Jones,s. 25 Randall. ProfessorrThorntows. . . . Home. . Observatory. . University Hotel. . . Home. Mrs. DoswelPs. . 1113 West Main. . 112 House A. . 37 West Lawn. Mrs. Leathersk. 120 House B. Mrs. J. B. Minofs. . 226 Fourteenth St. 4 Randall. . 149 House E. :13 1 COLLEGE ADDRESS. ..A K. E. House. . . 200 South St. 12 Monroe Hill. Dispensary. . 47 West Range. . Miss BerkeleyIs. . 27 West Lawn. NAME. YEAR. 146113??ng DANIEL DEE TALLEY, JR. . . . . . .2. ..Rich1110nd,Va. A. K. E.; A II; T I L K A.; Associate Editor of CORKS AND CURLS. CHARLES WILLIS TAND1, JR . . . . . . .1. . .CharlotteSVille, Va. . EDWARD DICKINSON TAYLOE. . . . . . .1. . .N01f01k,Va. A 11A, - Eli. HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR . . .4. . N01f01k,Va 1b. F. A.; A II,; II M.; T I L. K. A.; President Medical Class. ADRIAN STEVENSON IAYLOR . , . . . . .2. . .Mobile Ala.. CD. A. 9. EDMOND TERRELL . Winchester, Va. . OSCAR THWEATT . . . . . . . . . . . . .3. . .Helena,Ark.. 2. A. E. N . Capon Road, Va. . . Richmond, Va. JOSEPH WINSTON TIMBERLAKE JAMES MCCAW TOMPKINS N $ T A THOMAS TOWLEs . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . University of Va.. ROBERT SMITH TROWER, JR . . . . . 1. . .Eastville,Va. BEVERLY DANDRIDGE TUCKER, JR . 3 . . . Norfolk, Va. . A. T. 82.; A. IL; Secretary Academic Class. CHARLES MCINTOSH TUNSTALL. . . . . .1. . .Norfolk,Va. . A, WP. BUFORD TYNES . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Tazewell,Va. ALEXANDER MONROE TYREE . . . . . . .3. . .Staunton,Va. A. H. JOHNUPTON...............1...N0rf01k,Va.. WHITMELL HILL URQUHART 2 . Richmond, Va. . A. T. S2. 'OHN IRVINE VINEY ROGER ATKINSON WALKE 0, A, 0,; A, 11, :OHN SCOTT WALKER . . . . . . . . . .4. .Orange,Va.. A. '99.; P. K.; Eli; Thirteen Club. La . 5 . . . Staunton, Va. JAMES 'WALKER WARREN, JR . . . . . .1 . . .Charlottesville,Va. . EDWIN DIAL WATKINS . . . . . . . . . .4. . .Chattanooga,Tenn. 2.11.11; 11,11. GARRETT WATTERS. . . . . . . . . . . .3. . .N0rf01k,Va.. A, H, . WILLIAM BRECKENRIDGE WATTS 2 . Roanoke, Va. CARY NELSON WEISIGER, JR . . . . . . 1 . . .Washington', D. C. A. T. 52. . Louisville, Ky. . N PHILIP BATE WEISSINGER THOMAS JEFFERSON WERTENBAKER . . . 5 . . . Charlottesville, Va. . 1P, K, NI'J A. H. 7 LEONIDAS RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE . Associate Editor Magazine. . St. Louis, M0. . l0 LUKE MATTHEW WHITE . . . . . . . .6. . .Huntsville,Ala. . X. CD. WILLIAM HENRY WHITE, JR. 2 . Norfolk, Va. . A. 9'. 25 . Newport News, Va. . . 200 South St. 7 West Lawn. .Home. . BOX 73. . 1103 Wertland St. . 28 East Range. . Mrs. Leathersis. . Miss Berkeleyk. . 33 Randall. 35 West Lawn. . Mrs. Irvinis. . 1103 Wertland St. 157 House F. . . Home. . 1 West Lawn. .117 House A. . . 24 Randall. . Miss Douglasis. . 127 House C. . Home. . Mrs. Peytonis. . 8 East Range. , 155 House F. NAME. YEAR. ASISQIEESS. WALTER MORRIS WHITLOCK . . . . . . . 1 . . . Richmond, Va. . HARRY GREGORY WHITMORE . . . . . . . 1 . . . Parnassus, Va. . JACOB HARRY WHITMORE . . . . . . 2 . . . Garth, Va; WILLIAM CONWAY VVHITTLE, JR . . . 4 . . . Norfolk, Va. CD. F. A; A. 11.; P. K.; Eli; Thirteen Club. CHARLES ROBERT WILLIAMS . . . . . .2. . .Bland, Va. tb. A. 9.; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS; Football Treasurer Fayerweather Gymnasium Association. EDWARD LELAND WILLIAMS . . . . . . .1. . .Nashville,Tenn. K, A. JOHN NEWTON WILLIAMS, JR . . Norfolk, Va. 0-1 COLLEGE ADDRESS. . . . 32 Randall. . 1022 West Main St. . . . . Home. Mrs. RowelPs. 18 East Lawn. Team; Secretary and Mrs. VVEIIkCIJS. Miss Berkeleyk. JOHN EDWARD WILLIAMS . . . . . . . .6 . . . Smithville, Va. . . 123 House B. A, H, , , HARRY WILSON . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . Churchville, Va. . Mrs. Crockfordk. BRUCE CARTER WILSON . . . . . . . . .3. . .Charlottesville,Va. . . . . 436Fi1'stSt. E. A. E. JAMES DUNLOP WISE . 2 ' Richmond, Va. . . Miss Kate Minofs. PHILIP HALL WORMAN 2 . Dayton, 0. 138 House D. X. 4.3. HUGH SKIPWITH WORTHINGTON . 3 . . TheologicalSeminary, Va. A. T. A.House. A. T. A; A. H. ' , CHARLES CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT . . . . . IO . . . University of Va. . . 10 East Range. A, H, RUFUS NORMAN YARBROUGH . . . . . 1 . . Richmond, Va. . 120 House B. A. K. E.; O. F. C.; Eli Banana. , HARRY ALLEN Yost . . . . . . . . , . . 1 . . . PhiladelphiaLPa . . C010nelPrest01fs. 26 aw x11 Q n ?zz4lrlzllzfyl x ; il. V! .History of the Engineering Class. engineers a history? Well, it wouldnt take a third or fourth-year man to unfold the mystery. Even a first-year man working in pro- jections would find that the perspective of our history vanishes at inhnity. This pen is decidedly of the opinion that we have none; so how can it write one? It would take a quill with more imagination than this one to scribble a sketch of that which is to be. a The engineer has many hardships to fulfil before he becomes full-Hedged. The first-year man is very much pleased with his course, when he is told by the professor that he can take three or four of his tickets and play half the time. But before October is spent, he forms an opinion of the instructor, also a very different opinion of his course. If he selects Mechanical Engineering as his course, he will be found in the shop and drawing-room every evening of the week, testing the strength of iron, timber, and cement; working on the various complicated machines; using bad language when his lathe or planer tool slips and ruins his work. i He makes butt, lap, and tongue welds in the forging department. Here again he has cause to .use expressions which seem to ease his scorched feelings after accidentally grasping the seemingly cold-looking end of his work. In the woodworking department he is making ten-pins, tops, and napkin rings on the lathe. He also makes tusk-tenon and dovetail joints. The Law or Med is not acquainted with the last mentioned joint, but no doubt could give a good description of a cocktail joint. The Civil Engineer's afternoons are occupied with transit and level in the held; surveying tracts of land; locating bridges and railroads. After returning to the drawing-room, he must make drawings of the locations from the data obtained that afternoon. Even after the Civil Engineer has obtained his sheepskin, he must take hold of the rod and Chain with a willing hand, or perhaps wield an axe. It is very humiliating for the transitman to tell him to do a thing one way when he knows full well that the transitman is in the wrong. He wasnit taught that way at College, so how could it be right? When the transitman orders him. to break the chain, he should not look amazed, but immediately should do so by cutting it in two with the hatchet. If told to hnd the lost hub, he must do so at once, and after finding it, pull it up and carry it with triumph to the transitman. Then he will feel proud of his rodman and probably let him carry the transit home. I I ERE we have before us a very intricate problem to solve. Have the 28 There is one thing to be said about the engineer. He is beyond a doubt the hardest working man in college, and is always ll boning? He never attends a baseball or football game. When told the score, he hasnit time to: fix it in his mind. He never has the pleasure of walking through the beautiful avenues of the City. If he did neglect his duties long enough to take a stroll that way, the first thing that would attract his attention tif he is a first-year many would be the water-tank at the junction. He then tries to imagine how an isometric or axonometric drawing of it would look. A third or fourth-year ti leer ,, would no doubt be thinking of its capacity, kind, and dimensions of timbers used, and whether the tank proper was made of pine, oak, or cypress. Yes, he will even go so far as to make improvements on it, and will erect one of his own design in the future. You will always find the Academs., Laws, and Meds. wherever there is any- thing doing. The bleachers, grandstand, and sometimes the lecture-room will be crowded with them. This can not be said of the engineer texcept that he will always be found in the lecture-roonQ, for he has but one place of business. The Mechanical Laboratory is his office and his hours are from nine in the morning until twelve hfteen at night, every day of. the week, Sunday not excepted. The student in the higher branches of Mechanics stares with wonder at the large steel girder spanning the avenue. He has never heard of one larger than eighty feet, whereas this one is a hundred feet long. He must look into the matter. It is the work of the Civil Engineer to build a structure of this kind. And by the way, we would like to mention here, that it is the duty of the Academs, Meds, and Laws to complete the work by stenciling the score of the last game on the most conspicuous part of the girder. This adds grace and beauty to it and is pleasing to their eyes. The bridge is not the only work of the Civil Engineer. He builds dams, dikes, reservoirs, etC., and has already bound together with bands of Bessemer iron most every County of the State and all the States of the Union. Now the Mechanical Engineer must see that these bands are put to their proper use. He does this by putting his locomotive on them. What would the world do without the engineer? An Academ could answer this question. . We should not leave the Electrical Engineer without mention, for who knows but that there is a Marconi among us, or perhaps Edisoni's peer? The reader of these meaningless lines must not forget the Mining Engineer, who brings to the surface, through adit level and shafts, various underground products. Here again the Mining Engineer is needed. He must bring into play his rope haulage or elevator, as the case may be. After receiving their degrees, all find that there is a great deal more pleasure in applying the principles of engineering in actual experience than, as heretofore, in being limited to cold text and imaginary application. 29 FREDERICK BERTHOLDT SAEGMULLER JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB . CHARLES ROSS THURMAN . ERNEST HAYMOND VENABLE NAME. JAMES MADISON ARNOLD. RUFUS HANNAH BARRINGER Z.NP.' , 1X, H, HAMILTON MEADE BASKERVILLE . FRANK GARDNER BEETEM DONALD MCKENZIE BLAIR Q T. A.; A. H. LAWRENCE BUGLE 1b. A. 9. HUGH PEYTON BRAGG WALTER DAVIS DABNEY JOHN BLACKBURN DILWORTH. A, H, ALLMAND BLOW ELLIOTT. . . . . . . . . B. 9. T1,; 0. F. C.; Eli; Thirteen Club. ALBERT RUSSELL ERSKINE CHARLES JAMES FAULKNER, JR. A, U, THOMAS GRAY GENTRY . Z. A. E. ERNEST WINTERS GOODWIN CHARLES HANCOCK . A,Dw WILLIAM CARY HANCKEL. Z. Y. HUGH HOLLIDAY HARGRAVE ROBERT BROWN HARRIS .I. Lu N to m 10 ENGINEERING CLASS. OFFICERS. MEMBERS. YEAR. HOME ADDRESS . Newport, Ky. . . . University of Va. . . Richmond, Va. . Flushing, N. Y. . . Richmond, Va. . . Seattle, Wash. . . Rio, Va. . . . . . . Charlottesville, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . . Wilmington, N. C. . Memphis, Tenn. . . Boydton, Va. . . . Chattanooga, Tenn. . Shadwell, Va. . Keswick, Va. . Charlottesville,Va. . . Sussex C. H., Va. . . . Charlottesville, V3,, . . . President . Vice-President . Secretary . Historian COLLEGE ADDRESS . 48 East Range. . Home. . 9 West Lawn. . Mrs. Rivesls. . 164 House G. . 30 East Lawn. . 4 Temperance Hall. ......H0me. . Mrs. Crockfordk. . 124 House B. . Mrs. McFarlandB. . 165 House G. . 2 Monroe Hill. . Home. . BOX 51. . Home. Mrs. Leathersk. . Home. 9-! ,. HOME COLLEGE NAME- YEAR. ADDRESS. ADDRESS. SENJI HIRAOKA . 2 . Tokio,Japan . . . . . .. . Mrs. Bryanis. Cb. A. 6. JOHN CLARKE JACK . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . Savannah, Ga. . . . . . 72 East Range. Z. 4'. PAUL VIRGINIUS LITTLEJOHN . . 2 . Leesburg, Va. . . 1. . 3 Monroe Hill. WILLIAM CARRINGTON LANCASTER . . . .3. . .Richmond, Va.. . , . .40 East Range. B 9 11.. 1 Eli Banana. JOHN AMBLER MASON . . 3 . . Richmond, Va. . . . . . . 12 3 House B. A.IX. 13.; A H O F. C.: T I. L. K A.; FootballTeam. EMMETT WINFREE MCCLINTIC . . . . . . 3 . . . Fort Lewis, Va. . . . . 68 East Range. 1D. K. 2. ' JOHN NEWTON MICHIE 3 . Ortes Va. . . . . . . C.ity. WILLIAM ELISHA MOSELEY . 2 . Prosperity, S. C . .900 West Main St. GEORGE SONNTAG NELSON . 5 . . University of Virginia . . . . . Home. 2 1A; A 11' ' JOHN LLOYD NEWC OMB . . . . . . . . 2 . . .Sassafras, Va . . . 1205 Wertland Ave. H. k. A.; A. H Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS; Vice- President Engineering Class. THOMAS RANDOLPH PRICE, JR. . . . . . . 1 . . . Richmond Va. . . . . . 29 Carrs Hill. B. 9. H. FRANK OREA RENSHAVV . . . . . . . . .1 . . .Boyce, Va. . . . . . ..Ho111e. FREDERICK BERTHOLDT SAEGMULLER . . . 4 . . . Alexandria County,Va. . 31 West Lawn. A E , President Engineering Class. PAUL PETERKIN SHAFER 2 . Richmond, Va. . . . . . A. T. A. House. A. T. A. CHARLES Ross THURMAN . . . . . . . . . 5 . . . Eastham, Va. . . . .740 Nalle St. ERNEST HAYMOND VENABLE 2 . Charlest011,VV.Va. . 1201 VVertland Ave. A. 11.; Historian Engineering Class. WALTER SMYTHE VOSE . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Charlottesville, Va. . . . . . . . Home. 2. X. ' NORVAL JOHN ELLSWORTH WELSH . . . . 1 . . . Yonkers, N. Y. . . . . . . J. S. Mauryis. CD. K. Y. JOHN CARY WHITE . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . Bowling Green, Va. . . Mrs. LeathersAs. 1D. K. 2. JOHN EDWARD WILLIAMS . . . . . . . . .6 . . . Smithville, Va. . . . . . . 123 House B. A. 11.; O. F. C. 31 Silence is Golden. Her lips are dumb. Oh, harsh decree Of Fate that their soft minstrelsy Should be thus hushed! The yearning rose Droops to its death; the fountain flows With saddened ripple tneath the tree. The thrushes voice no more their glee; Each summer breeze sinks wearily And echoless to dark repose-- Her lips are dumb. And yet I feel no misery, Could never hope to happier be, For as the blissful moment goes I know. and young Dan Cupid knows That 't is because she kisses me Her lips are dumb! DAN DORRAINE. 32 . . x . I . r a .a . . . : . , .. . .l. t . b 4 . l f .U 1 0.1 ; x . . .. 1 5:9 . 8, x . 1.3.3:. .1 I f- LGPJ 11. . , $34$$$ . x 1,1:qu ., . . . 1 , l. h x i v V .: IRIS . 1 '31 ,1 3 3c HISTORY OF THE LAW CLASS. A Sergeant 0f Lawe, war and wys, That often hadde ben atte parvys, Ther was also, ful riche of excellence; Discret he was, and of gret reverence; He semede such, his wordes weren so wise, Justice he was ful often in assise, By patente, and by pleyn commissioun; For his science, and for his heih renoun, Of fees and robes hadde he many oon, So gret a purchasour was nowher noon. Al was fee symple to him in effeete, His purchasyng mighte nought ben enfeete. Nowher so besy a man, as he ther mas, And yit he seemede besier than he was. CHAUCER PROLOGUE. 34 History of the Law Class. Some critics and teachers of history tell us that only reliable official data should be used as the source and basis of historical narrative. Upon this hypothesis, how would the story of the struggle of the celebrated Law Class of 1902 for the B. L. sheepskin appear in print? A recital of its enrollment, a chronicle of its various ordeals, called examinations, the bulle- tin mentioning those who came through unscathed, the catalogue of successful B. Lfs! It would be as interesting as the list of Moguls of some antediluv1an dynasty in far-off Cathay. . This plan is all right for the ll Congressional Record? but for a H1story Rather should it be tin order to give it a distinctive ll It is the only 1' HISTORY of the Law Class! Upon what theory should it be written? of the Law. Class, never! . legal flavory in the form of an extended ll Bill of Exceptions. way in which the man Of law knows how to clothe the dry bones of ofhcial facts upon record with the flesh. and blood of the it living issues as they arise? But alas! for our successors, and posterity in general, whom we believe will never cease to regret the misfortune, many of the most interesting ll points were not savecf, and ll few exceptions were noted? Consequently this sketch will lack many ll bits of colorli which should have illumined its pages. But far be it from us to allow such puny handicaps as these to prevent the recordation of at least a few of the ll stunts ,i performed by these mighty men of law. It would be unfair to the Juniors not to indicate the symptoms of the germ of genius. I . .With the punctuality born of a wilful, deliberate, and premeditated purpose, the Juniors of 1901 assembled on the ll first day ,l of the session, all animated with one common intent ll to learn the law and the reason thereof? Such a collection of it legal Reubens! i, That spot in the cranium where the Blackstonean lore is stored was an aching void in ninety noddles in the nascent state. It was a sight to appall a Faculty. Why, many of these novices had never read one of those pithy editorials in the Virginia, Law Register. Others were unacquainted with any of the opinions of it my friend, Judge Burks? and none had ever taken it a little memorandum, if you please, gentlemen? Every one, so overcome with the sense of their pitiful ignorance, took the kindergarten course and learned to sing lovely ditties, such as ll in pari delecto l, to the tune of ll Eli Banana? and : tt Birds on the bough, sing high, sing low; This is not trespass ab initiofl 35 After having mastered these simple melodies, the class is considered mature enough to take the natural history branch in the second year. This course is amply illustrated by free-hand sketches on the blackboard, where Hying-squirrels are seen taking their perilous and hair-raisingr flights, and big salmon making those daring leaps which the little fish fear to try. Next session, it is rumored, stereopticon views will be introduced to throw more light on the subject. Sic semper ad astral VVhateVer may be the improvements made in the pictorial department, we are sure the descriptions incident thereto will never be surpassed. The thrilling escape of the ll grey mare named Fan ii from the clutches of the sleuth-like sheriff will ever remain'green in our memories! The Uncle Remus anecdotes fill a prominent place on the illustrated lecture programme, and surely that worthy's favorite aphorism that ll seeing is better than hearing tell about? is an ample justification of the it autoptic preference ii theory. But think not, reader, that the feature of the law course just described indicates any lack of manly qualities in the Class of 1902. On the contrary, the sturdy Saxon traits of self-asSertion and self-confidence are its most prominent characteristics. Early did they declare their independence from the political domination of the Seniors. Acting on the good old Jeffersonian democratic principle that every organization has the right to elect its own officers, free from outside interference, the Juniors of 1901 adopted a strict suffrage clause and embodied it in their new constitution. Their unanswerable argument was that since they had no voice in electing officers of the Senior Class, there existed no basis on which a Seniorls claim to the right of suffrage in a Junior election could be founded. Forsooth! why should a Senior desire to vote for a Junior officer who would never preside over him? Ah! this is one of the mysteries of Law Class politics which the uninitiated can not understand nor fully appreciate. So without volunteering any explanation or answer to the above query, suffice it to say, the Seniors found themselves completely ll Crumpackeredf and that too without remedy! This was, however, only the preliminary bout of a yet more momentous domestic struggle. Having by their constitutional provision eliminated the ineligible voters, the question now for the Junior politicians was how to secure the eligible vote for their respective candidates. Two tickets were made out, buttonholing was begun; party feeling ran high, secret caucuses were held, deep- laid plans devised; there was an ominous quietness in the political atmosphere which foreboded an outbreak. Then came the coup! It was an attempt to pull off the election earlier than in previous years. This effort failed, but on the next day the party leaders got together and agreed on a compromise plan of holding the election. Professor Lile presided, and it is needless to say under his impartial ruling, all passed off smoothly. Thus ended one of the most memorable and hard- fonght political contests in Law Class history. With a magnanimity characteristic 36 of the profession, all animosities were immediately laid aside and forgotten. In the midst of a common trouble, the impending exams, was found the tie that bound us together again. The examinations are the milestones on our course for the coveted B. L. Each one marks the spot where occurred an ordeal which tried menis souls. lVell might one pitted member begin his paper with the invocation: tt Lord God of Hosts ! be with us yet, Lest we forget! Lest we forget I ll it is a conclusive presumption that the expression of this sentiment would meet with the endorsement of a hearty amen from every member of the Class. After each exam. a severe epidemic of tlvis inertiaeii always follows. The reaction from the mental strain, in some, takes the form of a small-sized frolic, which winds them up in a comatose condition, and it is many days before these Rip Van VVinkles wake up to the fact that a new subject has been begun. However. do not infer that any members of this Class go astray for lack of mottoes or good advice. On the blackboard are frequently found many bon-mots from our kind and fatherly pedagogue, such as ll Carpe diemf, ti Verbum Sap? H Nil factum est, dum aliquid faciendum est? l England expects eyery man to do his duty? etc. These inscriptions are received with such vociferous and hilarious approbation that in vain does the good professor try to ll overrule the motion.H Vleing treated to such frequent puns and apt quotations, the class became so ll handy with their feet as to provoke the following protest: ll At the last. recitation the members of this. class were somewhat too handy with their feet. When everything is striking, nothing strikes. and indiscriminate applause is mere noise. Judicious applause is the stamp of. a good Class? VVhereupon the class poet-laureate indited the following lines : The big, bad boys make too much noise In Pleading and Practice hour, For with applause they often cause The man of law to lower. It is not meet that with their feet They should so handy be. And where all is striking, it is not to the liking Of good Professor G. When they idly beat on the side of the seat, Or stamp with their feet on the floor, Such useless applause, without any pause, Is the stamp he stamps as a bore. Of the work done in the John B. Minor'Law Debating Society and the Moot Court, no extended description can here be given. They afford splendid oppor- tunities for the development of the embryonic barristeris lungs and brain. One 37 member, thol still a Ladd, has given unmistakable signs of becoming a Chief Justice in the near future. Another can even now. rival Chauncey Depew in telling jokes about t corpulent gentlemen of teutonic extraction ii twe can eat- egorically predicate the negative of the presumption that the latter is a quotation by the multi-syllabled member from Riehmondl ; while a third, the gentleman who asserted that a ll cow could be guilty of laehesfi not only has already l made his mark ll ton the walD in the law lecture-room, but will in the future ll make Mark ' Twain ll go way back and sit down ,l as a humorist. The attendance upon the Law Debating Society is voluntary, the debates informal, the proceedings usually full of ginger. In the Moot Court attendance is compulsory; elaborate Cl briefs are prepared, and the atmosphere soporihc. Both systems have much to be said in their favor, and the combination works out good results in the end. A Soon the toil of our preparation as men of law will be over. Each one will seek the field of his professional labors. Our dispersion, in fact, will be complete, but in memory, the time when we worked side by side for the coveted degree will ever live. Let us hope that the friendships begotten here by our association will continue to grow, overriding such obstacles as time, distance, and separation interpose. And may each one of us prove worthy of the high vocation whereby he is called. Junior and Senior Law, And one clear curl for me, And may there be no moaning of the bar, When I get my degree. THE LAW CLASS. OF F ICERS. W LLIAM CHR'STIE BENET, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President ROBERT HUIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President BRADLEY WALKER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer BRADFORD KILBY.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Historian MEMBERS. EDWARD ROBERT ALEXANDERH . . . . . 1 . . .Tuskegee, Ala. . .21 Randall Building. WARNER AMES . . . . . . 3 .Onancock,Va. . . . . . . . .Oliviefs. 1b,,gAG ,,,$Atb; PK ;E1i. NATHAN L1 NN BACHMAN . A 2 . WChattanooga 'Ienn. . . M15.Wa1kers.4 A E3111 A 6D,; O F C.:E1i:P. K.: Assistant EditOI College ??wzcs, AAZW JAMES SMIIH BARRON.. . . . . . . . . .1. . .Warsqw, V1,. . . .Andeison Building. K. 2.: 1D, .A, CD, JAMES ADAM BEAR. . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Salem,Va. . . . . . . .23Ca1'1JsHill. H. K. A . LANDON CQVINGTON BELI... . . . . . . .2. . .Wilburn,Va. . . . .500 West Main St. WILLIAM CHRISTIE BENET, JR. . . . . . 2. . .Charleston, 8. C. . . . .26 East Lawn. 1,2 52,111. A. 119.; Eli; P. K.: AAZE; Football Team; President Law Class. WILLIAM CHEW BIBB. .. . . . . . . . . .2. . .Louisa,Va. . . . .35 RandallBuilding. JOHN FRANCIS BLACKBURN. . . . . . . .2. . .Grottoes,Va. . . . .Mrs. Crockfordis. HARRY HALL BONNER.. . . . . . . . .2 . . . Sandersville, Miss. . . .32 East Lawn. Associate Editor Afagazz'ue. HENRY BOWDEN.. . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Norfolk,Va. . . . . . . .20514thSt. K. A. WALTER MARVIN BOWMAN. . . . . . . .1. . .F,rank1in W Va. .. . . . .217 14th St. AUSTIN BRANCH .. . 2. . .Augusta, Ga . . . . . .1 West Lawn. Z. A E.; Goose- Quill C1ub;Assistant Editor College Topzvs; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLs. NEWTON EUGENE BRASIE. . . . . . . . .2. . .Denver, C01. . . . . . .Gleason Hotel. WADE HAMPTON BRONSTON . . . . . . .1. . .Williamson,W. Va. . .Mrs. LeathersAs. THOMAS HUGHES BRONSTON . . . . . . .1 . . .Lexington, Ky.. . .Miss Kate MinorAs. K, A;T. I. L.K.A. OWSLEY BROWN .. . . 3. . .Louisville, Ky. . . . . .129 House C, d3 A 8 O F. C.; Eli; P K.Manage1BaseballTeam 39 NAME. JOSEPH R. ANDERSON BRUCE. X. dh JAMES LOFLAND BRUFF .. ROBLEY D. BRUMBACK ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD, JR. K. A.; ib. A. 1b.; P. K.; Eli. JOSEPH HUNT BULLOCK . . K. 2. LOUIS STANISLAUS BURDETT . AMTA EDWARD CALAHIL BURKS . . ZAR; AH.- P..;K OHFC. SAMUEL HULTON BUTCHER. DOYLE CAMPBELL . . JAMES RANDALL CATON, JR JAMES MORGAN CLARKE CD. A. Cb. CHARLES HOWELLS COFFIN . II. K. A. THOMAS STOKELEY COLEMAN . JOSEPH G. COLLINS . WILLIAM CARROLL CONNETT . . . . ch K 1P - d1 A Kb - Baseball Team. RICHARD DICKSON COOKE. . . 2.x.A,.-11 thumb TILKA.; 7 HUGH AYLOR CRIGLER . CARL HALL DAVIS 41...;A8 $..M; TIL.KA. STAIGE DAVIS .. 1D, A. B, CARTER LEE DILLARD A. Y. FERNANDO DOMENECH ALFRED WILLIAM DONEGON EDGAR LEE DOUGLAS JAMES HODGES DUKE, JR. . . A. T. A. PLUMER DAVIES DREWRY . . PAUL DULANEY . JAMES NATHANIEL DUNLOP. A. T. A. MILTON CARTWRIGHT ELLIOTT A. K. E.; Eli. ALLEN TAYLOR ESKRIDGE, JR. J. BURTON FAULKNER .. . . . Z. 11d; Associate Editor College Topzcs. GEORGE PETRIE FISHBURN EARLE HAMPTON FLEMING . BERKELEY MINOR FONTAINE . YEAR. l0 l0 l0 l0 0 .4 40 HOME COLLEGE ADDRESS. ADDRESS. . Richmond, Va. . . . . . . 136 House D. . Montclair, N. J. . . . . 51 West Range. . Hope Mills,Va. . . . . Mrs. ChildressIs. . Richmond, Va. . . . . . 29 West Range. . Lexington, Ky . . . . . . 205 14th St. . New York City . . . . . Mrs. PeytonIs. . Lexington, Va. . . . . . . 111 House A. . Fairmont, W. Va. . . . . Mrs. Minoris. . Monticello, Ga. . . . . . . 116 14th St. . Alexandria, Va. . . . . . Mrs. Cullenis. . Wheeling, W. Va. . . . . Miss CockeIs. . Chicago, Ill. . . . . . Miss DoswelPs. . Marye,Va. . . . . . . . . 7 Carris Hill. . Hood, Ga. . . . . . 900 West Main St. . St. Joseph, MO. . . . . . Miss Cocke,s. . .,Norfolk Va . . . . . 148 House E. ;Thirteen Club; Football Team . B11ghtwood,Va. . . . University Hotel. : Petersburg, Va. . . . . . 142 House D. . Mount Jackson, Va. . 1 Dr. J. S. Davis. . Rocky Mount, Va. . . . . Mrs. Rivesis. . Isabela, Puerto Rico . Mrs. Crockfordis. . Huntsville, Ala. . . . the Parsonage? . Atlanta, Ga. . . . . . Gleason Hotel. . Richmond, Va. . , . . A. T. A. House. . Martinsville, Va. . . . University Hotel- . Brist01,Va. . . . . . . . . 117 House A. . Richmond, Va. . . . . . A. T. A. House. . Wilmington, N. C. . . . A. K. E. House. . Elliston, Va. . . . . . . Mrs. SieburgIs. . Lexington, Ky. . . . . . 10 East Lawn. . . Charlottesville, Va. . . . . Home. . Marshall, Va . . . . . . .Mrs. Baker 5 . Beaver Dam, Va. . . i Miss Berkeley 5. , , HOME COLLEGE NAME- 3 EAR- ADDRESS. ADDRESS. . Fredericksburg, Va. . 7 Carris Hill. to CHARLES DALLAS FOSTER HENRY B. FREENY . . . . . . , . . . . . 1 . . Delmar,De1. . . 228 14th St. 1 ROBERT CARSON FUGATE . 2 Abingdon,Va. . . Mrs. Leathersis. ; STUART GATEWOOD GIBBONEY . . . . . . 1 . . Wytheville, Va. . Mrs. Leathersis. tb. A. tb. LESLIE GOODLOE . . . 2 . Springfield, Tenn. . . 72 East Lawn. GEORGE SAMUEL GOODWIN . . . . . . . 1 . . Gordonsville, Va. . University Hotel. CYRUS WILEY GRANDY, JR . . 2 Norfolk, Va. . . 158 House F. A xIA; P. K.; T. I. L. K. A.; Assistant Editor Collegg Tnpz'm JOHN JENNINGS GREIZNLEAF . . 2 . .Richmond, Ky. . . . 1212 West Main St. cb A 9 ,Cb, A 113,;O F. C.; P K HNZ. ii; Thirteen C1ub;E1i; Manager FootballTeam. GEORGE CRAGHEAD GRF110R1 . Warrenton, N. C. . . A. T. A, House. A T A ;Business Manager 111437222126. FRANK ALEXANDER GROSECLOSFL . . . . 1 . IQ . Burkes Garden, Va. 1 106 West Main St. WILLIAM SMITH HACKWORTH. SAMUEL GARLAND HAMNER . . A. T. 12.; 1.11.1. S. WAILES HANK. JAMES W. HARRIS . . JOHN JOSEPH HARRIS . CHARLES LEE HORSEY FREDERICK HOTZE A. T. 82. ROBERT THURSTON HUBARD, JR. X 1b, ROBERT MORTON HUGHES, JR. 11. A.; 11.11.11. ROBERT W. HUIE, JR. 16.2,; CF. A. CD. IQ lo M N N 2 41 . Shelbyville, Ky. . Lynchburg, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . Sandersville, Ga. . Seaford, Del. . . . . Little Rock, Ark. . Bolling, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . . Ruston, La. . . Mrs. Crockfordis. 6 Monroe Hill. .Home. . Home. .Mrs McFarlandE . K. A. 1 WILLIAM ROLAND HARRISON . 2 . Dyersburg, Tenn. . . Mrs. Walkeris. K 2, JOSEPH MANUEL HARTFIELD . . 2 . Henderson, Ky. . . . 52 East Range. 0. W. L.; EditOI -in- Chief College Topzcs CLIFFORD EAST HAYS . 1 . . Nashville, Tenn. . . . . . 205 14th St.' GEORGE GRAHAM HENDERSON . 2 . . Covington, Ky. . . 1211 West Main St. THOMAS PERKINS HENDERSON . 1 . . Franklin, Tenn. . . Mrs. Pageis. NEVILLE GRATIOT HENSHAW . . . 2 . New Iberia, La. . . 74 East Range. Z. 1I'.; 9.; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS. EDWARD BEVERLEY HERNDON, JR. . 2 . . Shreveport, La. . . . 119 House B. E. X.; 1b. A113,; P. K.; Eli. GERALD TOOLE HILL . 2 . Arlington, Md. . 144 House E. X. Cb. ALEXIS CORYDON HOBSON . . . . 1 . . .Richmond, Va . . 121 House B, A.K. E.; E1i;O.F.C.P.K.; F00tballT.eam ' RICHARD CAPERS HOBSON , 1 . . Memphis, Tenn. . 12 Anderson Building. THOMAS WYNN HOLLOMAN . . 1 . . Phoenix, Miss. . . University Hotel. K. A. . BENJAMIN MELTON HOOVER 2 . New Market, Va. . . 1106 West Main St. . University Hotel. . Mrs. Yanceyis. . 49 West Lawn. . Mrs. Perkinson,s. . 12 East Lawn. NAME. GABEJACOBSON..............1. JOHN RICHARD JOHNSON, JR. $.K.Y;;$,A,$. OLWORD LEE JOHNSON K. A. l0 N J. PELHAM JOHNSTON. . . . . . . . .1. K. A. JOHN LITTLETON JONES, JR. . . . . . . .1. A. T. A.; Associate Editor Zliagazz'zze. J0HNC.J0NES.......... ...1. THOMAS CATESBYJONES . . . . . . . . .2. B. 9. 11.; CD. A. dx; Eli Banana. RICE WINGFIELD PAYNE JONES . . . . . . 1 . BRANCH PRICE KERFOOT. . . . . . . . .1. BRADFORD KILBY. . . . . . . - . CD. A. 9.; Historian Law Class. l0 LESLIE DUNCAN KLINE. . . . . . . . . .1. CLARKE KNIGHT WALTER JAMES LADD 1b. A. CD. WILLIAM CARROLL LATIMER. 2.11.13; 11.11.11. HENRY GEORGE LAVINDER CD. A. 6. WILLIAM LUDDWELL LEE . MORONE ORSON LITZ . LORDON LOWRY . HFNRY E. LUTZ . . 2.11.13. 1b. A. cb. N N m m N N , . 1-1 1-1 ARTHUR FRANCIS MCGARR. . . . . . . .1. JOHN DANIEL MCJUNIS, JRg. 1. . . . . . 1 . A. K. E. MERRETT VAN MCKIBBEN . . . . . . . .1. 2. N. CHARLES PIERCE MACGILL . . . . . CD. A. 9.; P. K.; Football Team. to ELBERT SEIVER MALONEY . . . . . . . . . 3 . K. A. WILLIAM LOWE MASON . JAMES MONTGOMERY MASON Q,T,A,;$.A.$. N N HENRYA.MATHEWS. . . . . . . . .1. CD. A. 9.; 1P. A. 113. WILLIAM WILLIAMS MATHEWSON . A. Y; T. I. L. K. A. BERKLEY MINOR, JR. . tb. A. Q WILLIAM TEMPLE MOOKLAR . JACOB MOORE . IO N N O a 42 YEAR. HOME ADDRES$ . Meridian, Miss. . Christiansburg, Va. . . Washington, D. C. . Lexington, Ky. . . Newman, Ga. . . Gonzales, Tex. . Petersburg, Va. . Alexandria, Va. . . Louisville, Ky. . . Suffolk, Va. . . Vaucluse, Va. . Tampa, Fla. . . Providence, R. I. . . Belton, S. C. . . Martinsville, V21. . . Crawford, Va. . . Graham, Va. . . . . Bedford City, Va. . Sioux City, Iowa . . Denison, Tex. . . . Meridian, Miss. . . Jackson, Ga. . Pulaski City, Va. . . Washington, D. C. . .MCRae,Ga... .... . Lewisburg, W. Va. . . . Lewisburg, W. Va. . . Brooklyn, N. Y. . . Staunton, Va. . . Mangohick,Va. . . Diana, Tenn. . COLLEGE ADDRESS . Mrs. Leathersis. . 133 House C. . Mrs. WalkeIJs. age: . Mrs. Rives,s. . 22 West Lawn. . Mrs. J. B. Minofs. . 161 House G. . Miss Berkeley1s. . 147 House E. . Mrs. A. S. Jones,s. . 13 Carfs Hill. . 1021 West Main St. . 1 Randall Building. . Miss Cockeis. . Mrs. A. S. Jones1s. University Hotel. . 500 W. Main. . . 1208 W. Main. . . Mrs. Bakefs. . . 1103 W. Main. . Anderson Bldg. . 6 Randall Bldg. . Miss Masorfs. . Mrs. Irvinek. . 15 Carr1s Hill. . 21 W. Lawn. . 36 E. Range. . 158 House F. .433 N. Ist St. . . M1'S.Leathers1s. . .8 Anderson Bldg. .Q; NAME. YEAR- AgSIgIEES'S. JAMES HENDERSON MORAN. . . . X. 1b.; P. K.; Baseball Team. to . Dresden, Tenn. . ARTHUR ROBERT MORRISON . . . . . . . 1 . . . Denver, C01. . 2. A. E. WILLIAM JAMES MULDRON, JR. . 1 . Wayesville, S. C. . LE0JOEMUNDT.. .... ......1...He1ena,Ark.. ROBERT BEVERLEY MUNFORD. . . . . . 2 . . . Richmond, Va. A. 1.; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS. LAWTON BENJAMIN NALLEY. . . . .. . 1 . . .Villa Rica, Ga. . STEPHEN MAZY CK O BRIE11 . . .3 . . .Louisville, Ky.. A.T.S2.; A H 1b A 41.; O. F. C.; P K.; T I. L. K. A.; ThirteenClub. . 4 Anderson Bldg. RANDOLPH IRVING OVERBY . . Chatham, Va. . GUSTAVUS WINSTON PARRISH . . . . . . 1 . . . Portsmouth,Va. . X. 41.; 11.11.; 11.11.42,; Eli. A. PARKE PAYNE WILLIAM ALLEN PERKINS . 2.1.; P. K4112. Axb. JAMES CRAIG PHILLIPS . 2. A. E. N N to . Tampa, Fla. . l0 . Charlottesville, Va. . . . Charlottesville, Va. , . COLLEGE. ADDRESS 141 House D. . Gleason Hotel. 1211 W. Main. . Randall Bldg. ' . 14 Monroe Hill. . 15 Carris Hill. .Mrs. Yancey s. . Miss Davisis. . 200 South St. . Home. . 52 E. Range. . Mrs. Crockfordis. . 119 House B. . Mrs. VVallaceis. . Mrs. VVallaceis. . MRS. Crockfordis. . 1205 W. Main St. . 1205 W. Main St. Mrs. Dabneyis. .117 House A. . . 9 W. Range. . 22 Carfs Hill. . 31 W. Range. . Mrs. McKay,s. . 118 House B, . Mrs. Yanceyis. . 43 W. Lawn. . Rear of Prof. Davisis. . Anderson Bldg. . Mrs. Bakeris. . Mrs. Cullins,s. JOHN FRANKLIN PIERCE . 3 . Chester, Vt. . JAMES WILLIAM HANDY PILSON . . . . 2 . Staiunton, Va. . B. e. 11.; 1. A. 1.; '1. 1. L. K. A. JOHN HOWARD PORTER . 2 . Trenton, N. J. JOHN TERRELL PORTERFIELD . . . . . . 1 . . . Charleston, W. Va. . K. A. JOSE A. POVENTUD. . . . . . . . . .1. . .Ponce,Port0 Rico SAMUEL PRICE PRESTON . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . Lewisburg, W. Va. 2. N. JULIANS.PRICE. . . . . . .. ....1. . .Alma,Va.. . .. JAMES PATRICK REARDON . , White Post, Va . LAWRENCE ANTON REYMANN . . .- . . . 3 . . . Wheeling, W. Va. . M. H. A. RICHARD SAMUEL RENNOLDS. . . . . .1 . . . Brist01,Tenn.. . FLOYD HART ROBERTS . 2 . Abingdon, Va. . . JOHN ROBERTS . 2 . Broadford, Va. . Z. A. E. WALTER HENDERSON ROBERTSON . . . 2 . Plasterco, Va. . H. K. A. WATSONF. L. RODEMANN. . . . . . .2. . .,Newark N. J ALBERT LONSDALE ROPER. . . 2. . .,Norfolk Va. . 11A A..11;1DA1IJ;T.I.L.K.A.;OW..L HENRY MOORE RUSSELL, JR.. . . . . . 1 . . .Wheeling, W.Va. TOYDIXONSAVAGE .... ....2. . .Como,N.C.. . . . . . .. 111 K 2 Editor- 111- Chief. Magazz'mze O. W. L.; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS. JULIAN OREN SETH. . . . . . .. . . . 1;. . McDanie1,Md.. ORRIN LYNE SHACKELFORD . . . . . . . 2 . . . Warsaw, Va. . ELMER MALTOON SHAFEER . . . . . . . 3 , . . Raleigh, N. C. . 2. N. ROBERT STEPHENSON SIMONS . . . . . . 1 . . . Charleston, S. C. . 43 NAME. YEAR; AIETETTMEFSS. THOMAS W. SIMS . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . Mobile, Ala. . . HOWARD WORTH SMITH . 1 . . . . . . 1 . . Broad Run, Va. THOMAS BURTON SNEAD . . . . . . . . . 2 . .Etna Mills, Va. HERBERT ROLAND SOUTHALL . . . . 2 ..E1kt011, Va 2 X ;,1D A cb ,Assistant Business Manager CORKS AND CURLS. ROBERT STEVENS SPANGLER . . 1 . . .,York Pa. PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE . . . . . . 2 . ..Racc0011 F0111, Va. 2. X.; A. 11; T. A111,; P. K.; O. F. C.; Eli; Ti '1 Ti, G. A. A.'; Business Manager CORKS AND CURLS. JOSEPH CLAY STILEs . . 3 . Richmond, Va. A. T. 12.; Eli. ALBERT MANTELL TALTY . 3 . Washington, D. C. WILLIAM TAYLOE, J11 1 . King George, Va. . MALCOLM JOHNSON TAY 11011. . . . 2 . . .New Orleans, La. X,1D.; 1b. A.1b.; Eli; Sheriff of Moot C0u1t. SIMON SIDNEY TEISER . . . . . . . . . 1 . . Norfolk, Va. . Associate Editor Magazine. JOHN LEWIS THOMAS . . Portsmouth, Va. . to 1D. K. E. THOMAS M. THOMLINSON . . . . . . . . 1 . . Frederica, Del. JAMES MORTON TOWNSEND . . . . . . . 1 . . Petersburg, Va. . Goose-Quill Club. JOHN WILLIAMS STICKLEY TUCKER . . 1 . . Lowesville, Va. ROBERT BAYLOR TUNSTALL . . . 1 . . Norfolk, Va. . A 111 O. W L.; Goose- Quill Club. EDWARD MAGRUDER TUTWILER. . . 2 ..Bi1111ing11a111,Ala. ZAE,; O...;FC P..;K TI..LK.A.; FootballTeam. FREDERICK STANSBURY TYLER . . . . . 1 . . Washington, D. C. . A. T. A. SAMUEL POLK WALKER . . . . . . . . . 1 . . Charlottesville, Va. . 1b T A WP A 111 THOMAS T. WALKER. . . . .2 . .Butte,M011t. A T A.; Assistant Editor of College 71$st BRADLEY WALKER. . . . . . 2 . .Nashville, Tenn . . . . A T 524111 A 111,; Football Team; Baseball T;ea111 Advisory Board; G. A A SAMUEL GARbNER VVALLER . . . . . . . 3 . . Front Royal, Va. . H. K. A. THOMAS ROANE WARING, J11. . . . . . . 3 . . Memphis, Tenn. HERBERT DORSEY WATERS . . . . . . . 1 . . Germantown, Md. . . A. K. A. K. 13.; Football Team; 0. F. C. AUBREY GARDNER WEAVER . . . . . . . 2 . . Front Royal, Va. . WILLIAM HENRY WHITE. . . - . . . . 1 . . Norfolk, Va. . .A. NIA; Manager Track Team. GEORGE P. VVHITTINGTON . . . . . . . . 1 . . Darlington, S. C. JOHN TROWER WILKINS . . 3 . . Bridgetown, Va. . FREDERICK TUCKER WILKINs . . 3 . . Bridgetown, Va DAVID THOMAS WILLIAMS . . 1 . . Danville, Va. . d9. A. 9. CHARLES FREDERICK WINKLER . . . . . 1 . . Greenville, Ala. . 44 Thirteen Club; COLLEGE. ADDRESS, . 42 E. Range. . . Mrs. LewisTs. . 8 Anderson Bldg. . 111 House A. . Miss BerkeleyTs. . .11 C311 5 Hill. Advismy BoaId 7 Monroe Hill. . 22 Randall Bldg. . Mrs Pages. . 137 House D. . 4o Randall Bldg. . 20 E. Range. . 160 House G. . Miss Jenningsis. .153 House F. . 50 E. Range. . A, T. A. House. . Home. .A. T. A. House. . 24 E. Lawn. . Miss Berkeleys . Miss Ashes E. House, . Miss Berkeleyis. . 155 House F. . Mrs. McFarlandis. . Mrs OlivierTs. . The Parsonage. . Mrs. Leathersis. . 27 CarrTs Hill. NAME. FRANK BYRD WINSTON . ROBERT TUNSTALL WINSTON . DANIEL PRICE WALKER . K. 2. PHILIP HALL WORMAN . X, Q; CD. A. ill WILLIAM DE LAUNAY WORSLEY in K. 4'. JAMES FULTON WRIGHT . B. 9. 11.; it A. in YEAR. to IO N 45 HOME ADDRESS . Hanover C. H., Va. . . Hanover C. H., Va. . Danville, Va. . . Dayton, Ohio . . Columbus, Ga. . . Portsmouth, Va. . COLLEGE ADDRESS . 25 Carfs Hill. . 25 Carfs Hill. . 9 Anderson Bldg. . 138 House D. . 145 House E. . Miss Cocke,s. MOOT COURT OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. Judges. WILLIAM MINOR LILE, B. L. CHARLES ALFRED GRAVES, M. A., LL. D. RALEIGH COLSTON MINOR, M. A., B. L. Sheriff. MALCOLM L. TAYLOR. Clerk. THOMAS J. WALKER. Coroner. History of the Medical Class. 0 record each separate happening of interest among the Meds of 1901- 1902 would be as large an undertaking as that of Archimedes. It is not our intention in the least to presume to such a task, even were the space allowed; but we shall try to put into medical form the dangers of one type of Medical Student of the University; the other type being the hard boning lad who bones from the opening day of his experiences here until the hnish-and we are glad to remark right here that this type is by no means rare. T is with sorrow that we record the death of Mr. Eugene F. Davis at his home in Leesburg, Va, on March 24th, 1902. He was a member of the Grad- uating Class and one of our most promising men, and each one of the Medical Class deeply deplores the untimely death of our friend and companion. With apologies in advance for the incompleteness and pitifulness of this attempt, we will begin: i ll C crcbml H ypci'tmphyfi SYNONYM: Swell head. DEFINITION: An acute affection due to a specific micro-organism, and running a course of dehnite length. CAUSES: Predisposing: I. Certain fair faces known in Charlottesville during the Academic Plague. No one class seems more liable than another, both the robust and the weak being equally susceptible. 2. Youth, between the ages of seventeen and twenty-two years. 3. Race: White in this section of the country. 4. Sex: Male. i 5. Good habits and humanitarian instincts. Exciting: The Bacillus Ambitionis Prominentiaeque. 48 MORBID ANATOMY: The germ seems to be a parasite and no method of its destruction in the human subject without Vital injury to the host has been discovered. The mode of access of the organism has not been definitely deter- mined, though some observers deny the pathogenicity of the germ and declare the disease to be an autointoxication. The germ enters the Victim in the larval state well represented by the h first-year ll Med, and under favorable circumstances passes through a period of incubation of four years. At the end of this period it comes forth and blossoms as the fully developed organism, the M. D. SYMPTOMS: Perhaps the most prominent and important symptom is the gait, which is characteristic. The victim will strut with head held high, eyes. set, and an air of proprietorship of the earth and a knowledge of its work- ings. Next he will present those symptoms so well recognized in Dementia Paralytica, Viz.: Delusions of Grandeur in which he sees himself foremost amongst the surgeons of. the day, or as a specialist of note. Medical tickets will be to him very elementary, and he can neither understand nor sympathize with the man who has to work for what he gets. During this stage, the Victim displays marked lingual ability. These symptoms of grandeur, ability, etc., last about nine months. Then i follows a period of despondency, lasting usually until about October. If treatment has been persevered in,this passes away and the Victim shows a tendency to return to his delusions, The periodical relapses tend to occur every year, but with decreasing severity, until the end of the fourth ; year, when they usually disappear or else return, in which case the disease has become chronic and there is no hope of cure. n1 PHYSICAL SIGNS: On inspection, the Victim presents a self-satisfied air. On palpation, the cranium is found to be h swelled? On percussing the cranium, there is a hollow tympanitic note. On auscultation, a sound is heard similar to the buzzing of wheels, Which is confirmed by the ti spokes which come out of his month? All of these signs gradually disappear as the disease proceeds to a favor- able termination. DIAGNOSIS: This disease can scarcely be confounded with any other, and is based on the age, sex, andrace of the Victim together with the Physical Signs. PROGNOSIS: As to life it is good, as to recovery variable. Some cases recover after the first year, others bear the taint throughout life, and some suc- cumb to the toxin and do not return. 49 RESULTS: Many uneomplimentary remarks by your fellow students, and duringT the acute stage, failure on exams. systematically. During the stage of despondeney, the Victim realizes the gravity of his condition and that only by strict adherence to treatment, can he hope to recover his normal state. COMPLICATIONS: Female sex greatly aggravates the disease and interferes with treatment. TREATMENT : During the first year take the advice of the older men and don't think you are the whole show. Pay strict attention to Input, Output, Rest, and Exercise. XVork systematically, eat plenty of Carr's Hill grub, drink freely of pure water, and on Anatomy night, anything you please. During the second, third, and fourth years follow generally the above treatment, modihed as taste and circumstances require. For the brain fag. ete, following exams. and which requires prompt treatment, We have found the following prescription uniformly suc- cessful in our practice: 83 Spiritus Frumenti . Vini Gallici. . . . . . . t . . . .3fi Pulv. Myristicum . . . . . . . . . 3f Saccharum Album . . . . . . . . . q. s. Lac bovis . . . . . . . . . . . q. 5. ad. 5n? Mix and take at once. Repeat as necessary. HISTORIAN. E1 W ! FLEQENHEIanM U ' 1x7 , Iqok' KL eeeee M '1 Lb ..LfL kw, v MEDICAL CLASS. OFFICERS. HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President BURNLEY LANKFORD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President HOWSON WHITE COLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer JOHN JANNEY LLOYD, JR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Historian . . HOME COLLEGE NAME- Y EAR- ADDRESS. ADDRE 3r. GEORGE EATON ADAMS X, 61h; H. M.; P. K. N . Fort Worth, Tex. . . . . . 124 House B. JOHN ALLEN. . 3 . . Low Moor,Va. . . . . . 24 Carrss Hill. WADE HAMPTON ANDERSON . . 3 . . Wilson, N. C. . . . . . . . Mrs. Irvinss. K. E, ' PAUL VERNON ANDERSON . . . . . . . . .1. . .Wilson,N.C.. . . . . . .Mrs.IrVirfs. K. E. MORTON WHITLOCK BAKER. . . . . . . .4. . .Charlottesville,Va.. . . . .Dispensary. 11.11. 1.; A. 11.; 11. M. JANDON BALL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4. . .Rollin P. 0., C211,. . .1218 W.Main St. FREDERIC W.BARGER . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Shawsville,Va. . . . . . . .Sieburgs BENJAMIN WILHELM BAYLESS. . . . . . .3. . .Louisville,Ky.. . . . . . .Dispensary. A. 71182.; H. M. RICHARD PHILLIPS BELL, JR. . . . . . . . 1 . . . Staunton,Va. . . . . . .47 West Lawn. d2. K, 43.; 18.11.; P. K.; Business Manager College Topzks; Historian Academic Class. EMORY WEST BITZER . 3 . Leesburg,Va. . . . . . .3 Monroe H111. EDWIN PAGE BLEDSOE. 2 . Lexington, Va. . . . . . . 14th Street. JAMES R. BLOSS . 1 . Huntington,W.Va. Miss Grimes, Main St. MICAJAH BOLAND . 1 . Lawyers, Va.. . . . . . . 31 Carfs Hill. RICHARD W.BOLLING. . . . . . . . . . ,1. , .Huntsville,A1a.. . . . . . .139 House. X. ib. ' THOMAS V. BOND. . . . . . . . . . . . .2. . .Ocala, Fla. . . . . . .Miss Douglass KENNETH BRADFORD . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Montgomery, Ala. . . . . Mrs. Bakers SAMUEL C. BROWN . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Norfolk, Va. . . . 38 Randall Building. OLIVER CURRY BRUNK . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . Harrisonburg, Va. . . . . 24 Carfs Hill. JOHN DECKER BUTZNER . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Fredericksburg, Va. . . 41 Carfs Hill. EUGENE CALLAWAY. . . . . . . . . . . .1 . . .Selma,Ala.. . . . . . . .Mrs. Irvin,s. K. A. SI NAME. YEAR. 44115131143188. WILLIS COHOON CAMPBELL . 2 . Jackson, Miss. . 1D. F. A. TAYLOR ELLIOT CARNEY . . . . . . . . 1 . . Cherry P. 0., Va. . 1D K E CONRAD POWELL CARTER .4. . .,Oat1ands Va. tb A 8.; Vice- President G. A. A.; Captain Baseball Team WILLIAM NELSON CARTER . . . . . . . .2. . .Columbus,Ga.. . SAMUEL TROTTER CAVES . . . . . . .2. .Philadelphia, Pa. A. Y; Eli; P. K. HENRYC CHALMERS . . . . . . . . . . . 1. .News Ferry,Va.. CHARLES HARTWELL COCKE . . . . 1 . .,C01umbus Miss. COLLEGE ADDRESS. . 116 House A. . Mrs. Pageis. Mrs. Jones,s. . University Hotel. . 22 East Lawn. . 27 Carris Hill. . 146 House E. 49, K ch; A H.; P K.; Associate Editor College Tochs; Associate Editor CORKS AND CURLS; Baseball Team. HOWSON WHITE COLE . . . . . . . . . .3. .Danville, Va.. K 2 ROBERT M. COLEMAN. . .4. .Lexington, Ky.. K,,;A H..;M P..;K OFC TliirteenClub; T.....;ILKA KZh, CHARLES EDWARD CONRAD . . . . . . . 1 . . Harrisonburg, Va. . H. K. A. RICHARD LLOYD COOK . 2 . Washington, D. C. . B. 9. H. , THOMAS SANFORD COOKE . 3 . . P0rtsmouth,Va. . EDWARD V. COPELAND . 2 . . Round Hill, Va. . LEECH KEY CRACRAFT . . 1 . . Wheeling, W. Va. I Baseball Team. ' WILLIAM HAMILTON CROCKFORD . . . . . 4 . . University of Va. . JAMES H. CULPEPPER. . . . . . . . . . .1. .Portsmout11,Va.. d1 K 2 VIRGINIUS DABNEY . . 3 . . Trapp, Va. AK,,;E HM; O.FC TILHKUA.; KZW WILLIAM CECIL DABNEY . THOMAS HENRY DANIEL . . . , . . . . .3. EUGENE FROST DAVISeK. 11. K. 11.; 11. M. ARTHUR P. DERBY MARTIN DONELSON . JESSE W. DOWNEY JAMES ALVES DIXON HENRY OWEN EASLEY X. 1b. WILFRED S. EMBREY . ALLAN D. EVANS. . WALTER SCOTT FERGUSON . JAMES M. FONTAINE . Charlottesville, Va. . Memphis, Tenn. . . Leesburg, Va. LN . Danvers, Mass. . . Memphis, Tenn. . Henderson, Ky. . NHHHN . Lynchburg, Va. . . Charleston, S. C. . i-to-INt-e K. 2. PETER F ORCE . . . 3 . . Selma, Ala. K. A.; II. M. a1TD'ied March 24th, 1902. 52 New Market, Md. . . South Boston, Va. . . Fredericksburg ,Va. . . Christiansburg, Va. . . . 133 House C. ..Dr Lambethis . Captain Football Team. . Miss Berkeley 5. . Miss Cockeis. . Miss Berkeleyis. .216 14th St. . 1214 W. Main St. Home. . Miss Berkeley 8. . Dispensary. . . .Home. . 19 West Range. . Preston Heights. . Mrs. Crockfordis. . 150 House E. . Mrs. Leathersis. . Mrs. Rives,s. . 35 West Range. . 33 West Lawn. . 124 House D. . 5 West Range. . Prof. Fontaine,s. . 41 WestLRange. NAME. YEAR. HOME COLLEGE ADDRESS. ADDRESS. WILLIAM E. FORD,JR. . . . . . . . .3. . .Clifton,Va. . . . . . . .30 Carfs Hill. WADE HAMPTON FROST . . . . . . . . .3. . .Marshall,Va. . . . . .27 West Range. K. A.; H. M. EDWARD MAUPIN GAYLE . . 3 . Warrenton, N. C. . . . . 6 East Range. B. 8. IL; 1T. M. JOHN ALLEN GENTRY . . . . . . , . . . . 3 . . . Chattanooga, Tenn. . . . 2 Monroe Hill. 7 , K. A. HENRY CALLES GRANT 2 . . Middleburg, Va. . . . Preston Heights. WILLIAM SPENCER GRAY . . 2 . . Parrishville, Va. . . . . . 128 House C. GEORGE P. HAMNER . 3 . . Fabefs Mills . . . . . .30 Carris Hill. WALTER W. HARLOE. 1 . . Winchester, Va.. . . . . . 512 Main St. DANIEL WARWICK HARMON . 3 . . Atlanta, Ga . . .Mr. Daniel Harmonis. ARTHUR BUCKNER HARRIS . .4 .SanAntonio, Tex. . . . . A. T. A, House. A...TA;P..K;O..LF;TILK.A.;F00tba11Team. FRANK COLLINS HARRIS . . .4 . . SanAntoni0,Tex. . . . . A. T, A, House. A T A; O. F. C.; P. K.; FootballTeam. SAMUEL GOIiFREY HENKEI L . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Staunton, Va. . . . . . 70 East Ridge. tb K E A WALTER SCOTT HOEN . . . . . .3. . R.ichm011d,V.a . . . . .82 East Range. ' Z 11',; 11 M4 9.; Art Editor CORKS AND CURLS. CLIFTON H. HOGAN. . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Roanoke,Va.. . . . . Mrs. Leathersis. THOMAS LEON HOWARD . . . . . . . .1. . Selma, A121,. . . . . . . .Mrs. Irvinis. K. A. GEORGE F. HULL. . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Hightown, Va. . . . . 1205 W. Main St. HOWARD HUME. . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .St.Elm0,Va. . . . . . .128 House B. B. G. H. IRA HURST. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1. . .Grape,Va... . . . . . .26 Carfs Hill. JAMES CECIL HURT . 2 . Kansas City, MO. . . . . 59 East Range. K A- E111 WALLER JAMESON. . . .3 . Roanoke, Va. . . . . .23 West Range. 2 X.; 11 M.; T. I. L. K. A JOSEPH ARTHUR JEFFRIES, JR . . . . . . . 4 . . . Warrenton, Va. . . . . . A, T, A,H0use, A. T. A. FLETCHER JORDAN 2 . Murfreesboro, Tenn. . . 50 East Range. K A - P K. , THOMAS JACKSON KAGEY. . 2 . . Quicksburg, Va. . . . . . . 216 14th St. ALFRED KAHN 2 . N ew 121:1621313, L721. AAAAA UTIiveisity Hotel. ISADORE KAUFMAN . 2 . Charmifefsvilije V21: . : - .H0me. GEORGE LESTER KITE 1 . . Grixie0 Mill, V2,: i . 1203 W Main St. EDWARD F. KNERNMERLE . . . . . 1 . . . P111Fadelph1a, Fa; . ,3; ;.; .5: - BURNLEY LANKFORD . . . ..3 . .NOrfolk, Va .I .2 1. .-1:1 Wjest Range. K A311 M.; T. I. L.K.A.;F00tba11Team; Vice-PresidentMedicalClass. STUART LAWSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . Burkes Garden, Va 3. . .46 East Range. HARRY T. LAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . .Montgomery, Ala. . . . .Mrs. Bakeris. CLAUDE M. LEE . . - . . . . . . . .1 . . . Charlottesville, V3,. . . . . . . Home. ROBERT LEMMON . . . . . . . . . . . . .3. . .Lynchburg,Va. . . . . .143 House D. 41. K. W. 1 JOHN WARING LEWIS. 2 . Keo, Ark. . . . . . . . . 25 Carr1s Hill. 53 , r, ,V , 11mm: vmmmuu. RAM 14.. 2 Mh- ADDRESS. ADDRESS. j. MARYIC LEWIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . I . . .ManassagVa. . . . . . . . . . .City. K. E. JUHN ijNliY LLOYD, le. . . . . . . - .3. . .Lynchburg, V21. . . . .33 West Range. II, R, A,; ll. AL: T. l. L. K. A.: P. K.: O. F. C- Usum HUNTER MCCLUNG .3. . . Fairfield, Ya. . . . . . . . Dispensary. .. PERFY FITZGERALD Mth'mm 3 . Clmrlottesville, V21. . . . . Dispensary. x CHARLES MCLEAX . . . . . . . . . . , . l . . . Baltimore, Md. . Col. Prestmfs. A. 4'. CHARLES ngncmnx McPlauK 2 . Wheeling, W. Va. . . . . . . Olivierk. CHARLES L. MARKS . 2 . Montgomery, A121. . . . . 3o liast Lawn. HA'rLlay Numwx IWASUX . 2 . Louisville, Ky. . . . . . . I49 House 1i. 4h K. W. JAMES 'llx'nc MASON . . . . . . . . . . . I . . . Lahore, Va. .33 W'cst Lawn. 4h V. A.; Baseball Team. SIDNEY AL'GL'STUS NIERRIAM . 3 . . Annapolis, Md. . . . . 15 Randall Bldg. Smux WHhchs MICRRITT . 4 . . Baltimore, Md. . . . . . 3 JAMES lem; MILLER . 3 . . Huntington, W. Va. . . 15 West Range. tb. K. L. EDWARD Home MILLER, JR. 2 . Danville, Va. . . . . Anderson Building K. E. 3 WILLIAM CLINIC Mommw. . 3 . Cloverdale, Va.. . . . . . . . . . City. 3 WILLIAM CABELL MOORE . . . . . . . . 3 2 . Berryville, Va. . . . . . 34 East Range. $5 1;, 0, 11.; A. '11. r '2' BAXTICR SPRINGS Modma. . . . . . . . .4 . .Chester, S C. - . . . 22 Carris Hill. 2. X.; Football Team. jon JOSEPH MORAN. . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . .Salem, N. J. . . . . . 1211VV.Main St. EPHRAIM ROLAND MULFORD . 3 . Bridgeton, N. J. . . . . 37 West Range. 5. x.; H. M. FRANK EDMONSTUN NABERS 2 .Birmingham, Ala.. . . . . . . . .City. II. M; BRODHC CRUMP NALLIC . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . Raccoon Ford, Va. . . . . 125 House B. A, K. li.; A. 171.; P. K.; T. I. L. K. A.; Z; Thirteen Club: President German Club. joHX ALDINE NORFORD. . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . Priddst, V3,. - . . 900 West Main St. KARL OSTICRHAUS . . . . . . . 3 . Annapolis, M-d.. . . . . . 156 House F AAIA: T. I. L. K. A.: P. K. JOHN ATKINSON OWEN 2 . Turbeville, Va. 3. . . . 35 West Range. 4h K. W. ' HUGH NELSON PAGE, JR. . . 2 . . . . . . 1 . . . Norfolk, Va. . . 110 House A. tb. IX A. 2. SPOTTSWUUD HAYES PARKER . 2 . Portsmouth, Va. . . I Anderson Building. A, OLIVER BURNE PATTON, JR.. . . . . . . . 1 . . . Huntsville, Va. . A, K. E. CHARLES HENRY PliliTli jAMIas VVICST PEGRAM. K, A; 11, M, FERDINAND MITCHELL PERROW. . . . . . I 3 . Lynchburg, Va. DON PRESTON PETERS . . . . . . . . . .4 tb. K. 4h: A. 11.: H. 31.: P. K: T. I. L. K. . 54 East Range. . VVarrenton, N. C. . . . . 22 East Range. . Washington, D. C. . . . 17 West Range. 9; 1,; . , .Universityof V-a.. . . . . . . .Home. 54 A V NAME. JOHN BEVERLY POLLARD. 13.2.; II.M.: P. K. LEWIS WILLIAM POLLOK SAMUEL DAVIES PRICE. PAUL EMIL RAUSCHENBACH. FRANCIS THOMAS RIDLEY. BENJAMIN P. RuaLY. 53. X.; H. M.; Eli. ARCHER HAMILTON ROOF . THEODORE DUDLEY ROUNTREL: . VVALTER FRANK SCOTT . . tb. A. 9.; P. K.; Assistant Manager JAMES ARCHER SELLMAN . FRANCIS BATES SEWALL JOSEPH H. SHIELTON E. A. E. VVILLIAM PRESTON SIMPSON. K. E. WILFORD WALLACE SMITH . Z. W. JOHN VVILSON SOMERVILLIC. E. X.; Eli ; Thirteen Club: CHARLES PALMER STEARNS. ID, A. H. ALBERT CRIiIGHTON STONE . WILLIAM ALEXANDER STROTHER H. K. A. THOMAS BRACKHULST STUART VVALTER SUTHERLAND HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR LP. T. A.; A. 11.: 42777 Class. ADRIAN STEVENSON TAYLOR 4h 43, 9, CHARLES C. TENNANT . . 13.63.11,; 0. F. C.: Eli B PAUL TRICVILIAX TILMAN . GIDEON TIMBERLAKIC . WILLIAM NORTHAM TRADER, HUGH HENRY TROUT. 42. K. 1'. AUGUSTINE WASHINGTON TUCKER A. T. 82. EDWARD VICTOR VALZ . 4x K. '92.; 11. M. ISAAC RAY WAGNER HOWARD LOMBARD WALKER d2. F. A. HARRY WALL. 2111211121 : P. K.: jR. H. M.; T. I. L. K. A.: Assuciate Editor CnZlqgg YEAR- ASISWSS. Xgllikiwigg. 2 . Aylett, Va. . . Mrs. Minmns. 3 . Danville, Va. Dispensary. 2 . Montvale, Va. Anderson Building. 2 . Patterson, N. J. . . . . . . Gymnasium. . 3 . Portsmouth, Va. . . Miss Berkeleyk. . 4 . . Oakdale, Md. . 2 . 1 . Childress, VEL. . 900 W. Main St. . 3 . . Paris, Texas . .38 E. Lawn. . 2 . Charlottesville, Va. . . City. Football Team. 1 . . . Baltimore, Md.. . n2r VVertland St. 3 . Houston, Texas . . 38 East Lawn. 2 . Waco, Texas 13 Monroe Hill. . 3 . . Wilson, N. C. . H Anderson Building 1 . . . Shreveport, La. . 3 8 Monroe Hill. 2 . Mitchells Station, Va.. . 125 Hausa B. 1 . . . Richmond, Va. . Mrs. W'alkefs. 1 . . . University of Virginia Home. I . . . Lynchburg, Va. . 42 Randall Building. I . . . University of Virginia Home' 1 . . . Hillsville, Va. . . Mrs. Yanceyk. . 4 . . Norfolk, Va. Dispensary. 772162232: President Medical 1 . . . Mobile, Ala. . . 4.7 West Range. . 3 . . Richmond, Va. . East Range. Z. 2 . Charlottesville, Va. . Home. 3 . Staunton, V21. . Dispensary. 2 . Hudgins, Va. 10 Anderson Building. . 3 . . Staunton, Va.. . 57 'West Lawn 1 . Norfolk, Va. . . 1103 VVertland St. 3 . . Staunton, Va. 132 House C. 2 . New Hampton, Va. 1203 Main St. 1 . Charlottesville, Va. . . Home. 0 .1 55 . W'inchester, Va. - 32 East Range. HOME COLLEGE NAME- YEAR- ADDRESS. ADDRESS. GEORGE HARRISON WALLACE. . 3 . Canandaigua, N. Y. . . . 22 Carfs Hill. HUNTER WATSON. 2 .Charlottesville,Va.. . . . . . .Home. K. A. GEORGE WINTON WATSON . . . . . . . .1. . .Petersburg,Va. . . . . . 162 House G. GARLAND SOMERS WILEY . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . Greenville, Tenn. . . . goo W. Main St. BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS 4. . .VVinchester, Ky. . . . . Dr. Lambethk. K. A.; H. M.; O. F. C.; Eli Banana; Thirteen Club; Z.; President G. A. A.; Vice-Presi- dent German Club. JOHN W. WINSTON . . . . . . . . . . . .3. . .Bolling Green,Va.. . .Mrs. Leathersk. CHARLES A. WOODARD. . . . - . . . . .1 . . .Wilson, N. C. Wertland St. K. 2. CHARLES EDWARD WOODING . . . . . . . 1 . . .Watertown, Conn.. . . . .415 Park St. EDGAR LYONS WOODS 2 . Charlottesville, Va. . . . 19 West Range. 43. A. 9. THOMAS KASELL WRIGHT, JR. . . . . . .4. . .Portsmouth, Va.. . . . .Miss Cockels. CHARLES DICK WUNDER . . 2 . M00re7s Store, Va. . . . Mrs. Skinnefs. JOHN MILTON YARBOROUGH . . . . . . .4. . .Navasota, Va. . . . . .82 East Range. Z. W. 1ln flbemoriam Eugene 1f. Eavi$ Eieb March 24th, 1902 57 mosE 0m max Emit 8 Q3 om 4:8 55 935 i8 53 :83 SEA wan .mcmun 25x 85 3v? 3: xciv wcm wash. 5 quE 05 co wcSm 75v: $5 .53 .30 uQSmch n mm : x85; knew: me: Academic Degrees Conferrcd. BICKERS, WILLIAM A. BOLLI'NG, ALBERT S. . BONNER, HARRY H. BUTZNER, JOHN DECKER CHAMBERLAYNE, CHURCHILL G. CHAMBERLAYNE, J. HAMPDEN COLEMAN, ALGERNON COOTES, FRANK GRAHAM DOBIE, ARMISTEAD M. DUNLOP, JAMES N. FAULKNER, CHARLES J., JR. FROST, WADE H. HOXTON, ARCHIBALD R. . HURST, IRA . . HUTCHESON, ALLEN C. ' JONES, J. LITTLETON MINNIGERODE, GEORGE T. PILLOW, JAMES H. . POWELL, JOHN HENRY . STONE, VVILLIAM B. TAYLOR, R. E. LEE WADDELL, J. ALEXANDER VVQLFF, HERBERT D . BICKERS, WILLIAM A., JR. BUTZNER, JOHN DECKER . COLEMAN, ALGERNON COOTES, FRANK GRAHAM FAULKNER, CHARLES J., JR. HURST, IRA NEWMAN, CAROL M. PERSINGER, DAVID W. . STALLINGS, ROBERT E. WHITE, R0343, JR. WOLFF, HERBERT D. June 12th, 1901. Bachelors of Arts. Masters of Arts. 59 . Crooked Run, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Sandersville, Miss. . Fredericksburg, Va. . Richmond, Va. . Richmond, Va. . News Ferry, Va. . Staunton, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . Richmond, Va. . Boydton, Va. . Marshall, Va. . Alexandria, Va. . Grape, Va. . Houston, Tex. . Newman, Ga. . Louisville, Ky. . Helena, Ark. . Richmond, Va. . Roanoke, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . Garth, Va.- . Rileyville, Va. . Crooked Run, Va. . Fredericksburg, Va. . News Ferry, Va. . Staunton, Va. . Boydton, Va. . Grape, Va. . Bristol, Va. . Roanoke, Va. . Salisbury, N. C. . Charlottesville, Va. . Rileyville, Va. Doctors of Philosophy. BLAIN, HUGH M. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .COVESVILLE,VA. ENGLISH LANGUAGE, GERMAN, FRENCH. tThesis: A study of the Anglo-Saxon Verbs in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, 890 to 1164 A. DJ COOKE, A. B. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .SPARTANBURG,S.C. GERMAN, LATIN, FRENCH. tThesis: Development of the N ature Sense-the F eeling for N ature-in German Lyric Poetry, as shown by comparing the 12th and 13th centuries with the 18th and 19th centuriesj LAMBETH, DR. WILLIAM A.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. GEOLOGY, BIOLOGY, CHEMISTRY. tThesis: Geology of the Monticello Areal LONG,CHARLESM... LATIN, GREEK, MORAL PHILOSOPHY. tThesis: Indicative Apodoses with Subjunctive Protases in the Unreal Conditional Sentences 0f Livy and Tacitus. MOORE, CHARLES JAMES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, GEOLOGY. tThesis: On the Products of Interaction Between the Aliphatic Amines with Certain Metallic Saltsj MORGAN, HERBERT R.. . CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ........... .WASHINGTON, D. C. ASTRONOMY, MATHEMATICS. tThesis: The Orbit 0f Enceladusj SKEEN, DR. LYMAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. BIOLOGY, GEOLOGY, CHEMISTRY. tThesis: Bacterial Flora of Charlottesville Reservoir Waterj STEWART, ROBERT A. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .PORTSMOUTH,VA. ENGLISH LANGUAGE, GERMAN, FRENCH. tThesis: The Prose Text of Edgar Allan Poets Writingj Graduate in Department of Engineering. JUNE 12th, 1901. WORMELEY, PHILIP LIGHTFOOT, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Richmond,Va. Mechanical Engineer. WORMELEY, PHILIP LIGHTFOOT, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Richmond,Va. Electrical Engineer. 60 Graduates in the Department of Law. BRIDE, JOHN R.. BRUIN, JAMES 0.. . BRYAN, CHARLES M.. BURDEAU, JOSEPH A. BYRD, HALE HOUSTON. CATON, HARRY B. . CHICHESTER, FRANK M CLAYBROOK, JOHN N . COOPER, HENRY OJB . COSBY, DANIEL M. CRAWFORD, ERNEST B. DABNEY, ARCHIBALD D. . DANIEL, HERBERT S DAVIS, MANTON . . DILLARD, H. DALTON . DRUMRIGHT, ERNEST B . ELLETT, HENRY G. . GARLAND, HUGH A. GUY, JOHN H. HAAS, LEON S. . . HANK, JOSIAH D. ,JR . :IAYNES, GRAY. . . HEARD, JAMES LINDSEY. . JONES, ARTHUR C . LEARY,JOHN P. LEFFLER, EDWIN. MCCLOSKY, JOHN J. . MCINTOSH, CHARLES F. . MANOGUE, RAYMOND E . . MARTIN, JAMES G . . MEACHAM, MARION B. . MICHIE, ARMISTEAD R. MOORE, FRANK D. . MORRIS, ARTHUR J . NAYLOR, JOSEPH R . NELSON, ROSCOE C . . NELSON, ALEXANDER C . OBERDORFER, A. LEO. RICHEY, HOMER . RIGGS, LAURIE H ROBERTS, HENRY . SATTERTHWAITE, REUBEN, JR. SKEEN,J. D. . . . SMITH, LUCIAN R. SNYDER, KENTON M. STEVENS, FREDERICK . . VAN NUYS, MORTON H. WILKIN, DAVID R. . . WILLCOX, R. BOLLING, JR. . June 12th, 1901. 61 . San Francisco, Cal. . Alexandria, Va. . Memphis, Tenn. . New Orleans, La. . Williamsville, Va. . . Alexandria, Va. . Fredericksburg, Va. . Hague, Va. . Culpeper, Va. . Abingdon, Va. . Mt. Sidney, Va. . . University of Virginia. . Charlottesville, Va. . Mayfield, Ky. . Rocky Mount, Va. . Sarasota, Fla. . Richmond, Va. . Wilmington, Del. . Richmond, Va. . . Bayou Chicot, La. . Charlottesville, Va. . Owensboro, Ky. . Berkley, Va. . . Abingdon, Va. . Richmond, Va. . Savannah, Ga. . New Orleans, La. . Norfolk, Va. . Memphis, Tenn. . Norfolk, Va. . Pinewood, Tenn. . Charlottesville, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . Wheeling, W. Va. . Richmond, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . . Charlottesville, Va. . Starkville, Miss. . Laytonsville, Md. . Abingdon, Va. . Stanton, Del. . Plain City, Utah. . Louisville, Ky. . Lewisburg, W. Va. . Rockport, Tex. . Charlottesville, Va. . . New Philadelphia, Ohio. . Blaisz, Va. Graduates in the Department of Medicine. DOCTORS OF MEDICINE. ALEXANDER, L. DADE, JR. RBOGAST, PETER D . BAKER, JAMES T . BLACKWELL, H. BURKE. BOWCOCK, J. MCCUE . BUCHANAN,J0HN B CARROLL, JOHN W . COLEMAN, ROBERT M . COLEMAN, M. DUPUY . CONNER, CLARENCE H . CRACRAFT, WILLIAM A.7 JR. . CRAWFORD, GEORGE G . CROOK, MARTIN . DABNEY, THOMAS G., JR . DAVIS, ROBERT HILL. EBERT, HARVEY G. FAUNTLEROY, ARCHIE M . FLIPPIN, J. CARROLL . FREED, JOHN W GEIGER, JOHN C GRINNAN, ST. GEORGE TUCKER. HANSBROUGH, LYLE F. HATHAWAY, LEVY M . HIRSCHLER, D. LEE. . HUME, WILLIAM W. HUMPHREYS, LEONIDAS W. HUNTER, JAMES W., JR. KIRK, T. ALLEN LOYD, JOHN E MEARS, JOHN B. MILLER, ROBERT W. dune, 190m . MILLER, WILLIAM W., JR. . MOORE, A. WYLIE ' MORRIS, JULIAN H . JUNE 12th, 1901. 62 . New York, N. Y. . Travelefs Repose, W. Va. . Pulaski City, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Waco, Tex. . Lynchburg, Va. . Lexington, Ky. . Roanoke, Va. . Clinton, Iowa. . Wheeling, W. Va. . Strasburg, Va. . Jacksonville, Ala. . Vicksburg, Miss. . University of Virginia. . Vancouver, Wash. . Staunton, Va. . Danville, Va. . Fishersville, Va. . Staunton, Va. . Orange, Va. . Front Royal, Va. . Owensboro, Ky. . Norfolk, Va. . Culpeper, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Norfolk, Va. . Roanoke, Va. . Clevilas, Va. . Keller, Va. ' . Stephens City, Va. . Memphis, Tenn. . ChEster, S. C. . Macon, Ga. NEAL, WILLIAM O . OBERDORFER, ARCHIE L PRICE, J. WOODS . PRICE, VVILLIAM H . RICE, JAMES A . SCOTT, SIDNEY L. SELLERS, FRANK E. SIGMOND, R. HOUGHTON . SINCLARE, JOHN A. B. . STUART, DAVID TODD STUART, GARDEN C. STUCH, HOWARD W. . TAYLOR, JULIUS H . WERTENBAKER, WILLIAM . WHITMORE, VVALTER S WILKINS, ROBERT L151: . VVILSON, LOUIS F. WISEMAN, HENRY A . WOOD, NEILL B MILLER, WILLIAM WC, JR. Graduate in Pharmacy. . Asbury, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Mechums River, Va. . Montvale, Va. . Heathsville, Va. . Fredericksburg, Va. . Mauzy, Va. . Grand Lake, Ark. . Charlottesville, Va. Richmond, Va. .Washington, D. C. . Allegan, Mich. . Columbia, S. C. . Lexington, Va. . Mt. Sidney, Va. . Charlottesville, Va. . Waterford, Va. . Danville, Va. .West Point, Miss. . Memphis, Tenn. Alphabet of Celebrities. is for Ames; sufhce it to say He hails from the town of Onancock, Va. ; Also for Argabrite, Who is that same? Look in the Catalogue under his name. B is for Baggarly, Bogle, and Blair, Bitzer, and Bluthenthal, Brumback, and Bear, Bullock, and Bachman, and Beetem, and Brunk, And several who seldom or never get drunk. C is for Chestnutt, and Crigler, and Camp, Bob Coleman, and Carlisle, and men of their stamp. D is for Dobie, and Dabney, and Dey, Who is famed for his fall from the water-cart high. E is for Elliott tthe three of theim, Easley, And Eskridge, and Erskine; the best is but measly. F is for Faulkner, and Freeny, and Fleet, And Fugate, and Fretwell, and Force, christened Pete. is for Groseclose, and it Gwatnif and Gore, ' And Greenleaf, and Grandy, and Givens, and more, Such as Gibboney, Gregory, Goodloe, and Gray, And a large glob of others to rime on all day. H is for Hartiield, who is naturally iirst, Hiraoka, Hotze, Hank, Hoover, and Hurst, Henderson, Hogan, and Hackworth, and Hen- Shaw, and Hoen, and Hay of the passionate pen. I is for Indiane-one Sitting Bull, Of whose fame on the Warpath each Topics is full. J is for Jameson, and Jeffries, and Jack, With Johnsons and Joneses to hll up the pack. K is for Kagey, Kinsolving, and Kyle, And Kern, who invented the it calico smile ii ; And Kilby, and Kerfoot, who bone law by night; And last, the remorseless and bloodthirsty Kite. is for Latimer, 'Littlejohn, Luck, The Lancasters tCarrie, and Billy the Bucki, And Leake, who so amorously it calics ii away Seven days in the week; Lutz, Litz, Lemley, and Lay. 64 M ,s for McCartney, McClintic, McClung, McGan, and McLaughlin, Which tangles the tongue, McKibben, McCallie, McMurdo, McPeek, McNeely, McVeigh t1 am positively weaki, Three jolly Millers, and Masons by scores, A pair of young Martins, a whole tribe of Moores. N is for Nabers, Neff, Norford, and Nalle, And N elson, and N ininger; that ,s about all. 0 is for Osterhaus, Osborne, and Orr, And Owen, and Overby, learned in the law. P is for Pilson, and Pearlstine. But then It is also for Poventud, Pollok, and Penn. Qis the Quantity t0 damn the Quality 0 Of the ii bewze ii Which the Eliis consume in their 'ollit . J Y R is for Roundtree, and Renshaw, and Roop, And ii Herr Stuntsfi Who ties himself up in a loop. 8 is for Settle, and Southall, and Toy Dixon Savage, and Stiles, metaphysical boy. T 37202de be TUTWILER only, but faulty Indeed were the list that did not include TALTY. U is for Upton, and Urquhart, Whose lien On fame is his sozwrz'quezf, ii Tipsy Korean? V is for Venable, Vose, Valz, and Viney, And nobody else, for the list is but tiny; but W is long. Besides Whittle and White tLuke Matthewi, the Williamses, Walkers, and Wright, One Worthington lifts it Clean up out Of sight. X is for Xenophon, who, could he speak From the grave,would not fail to cuss out M. A. Greek. Y is for Yarborough, Yarbrough, and Yost, And we come to the end of our tether, almost. Z is for a hush! do not mention it! We Can not speak of a thing that begins with a ii Z? 50 In the Library L0' The interior of the 01d Rotunda. Within his shrine stands Thomas, cold and dumb, Careless of how the Elits tt make her thunder u With the melodious fife, boys, and the drum ! t :7 . l, .4... fukp? laxamd iatwwus. . .3? H' .h ?;s I 3 .. .. .1... 1!: .1 1.! .1.! . .ilgaI . 41.1.14 ..... ETA CHAPTER 0F PHI KAPPA SIGMA. Founded at University of Pennsylvania, 1850. Established, 1850. FRATRES IN URBE. JOHN NEWTON CLAYBROOK REV. WILLIAM HENRY EDWARDS WARREN R. LEE DAVIS BOWLES WILLS ACADEMIC. CLIFFORD LUCIAN ANDERSON GEORGE LEONIDAS CAMP BENJAMIN FRANKLIN CAMP WILLIAM BENJAMIN GATES EMMET WINFREE MCCLINTIC JOHN CARY WHITE MEDICAL. TAYLOR ELLIOTT CARNEY JAMES HENRY CULPEPPER SAMUEL GODFREY HENKEL JAMES IRVINE MILLER LAW. TOY DIXON SAVAGE JOHN LEWIS THOMAS WV ETA CHAPTER 0F DELTA KAPPA EPSILON. Founded at Yale 1844. Established l852. FRATRES IN URBE. FRANK AUBREY MASSIE CHARLES SCOTT VENABLE, M. D. FRATER IN FACULTATE. RALEIGH COLSTON MINOR, M. A., B. L. ACADEMIC. ANGUS MCDONALD CRAWFORD WILLIAM MORTON DEV RUFUS NORMAN YARBROUGH DANIEL DEE TALLEY, JR. CARROLL CLAIBORNE ST. JOHN JOHN AMBLER MASON JOHN WILLIAM RIELY, JR. LEWIS HINTON BOSHER LAW. MILTON COURTRIGHT ELLIOTT ALEXIS CORYDON HOBSON HERBERT DORSEY WATERS JOHN DANIEL MCINNIS, JR. MEDICAL. VIRGINIUS DABNEY BRODIE CRUMP NALLE OLIVER BEIRNE PATTON 69 VIRElNlA ALPHA CHAPTER 0F PHI KAPPA PSI. Founded 1852. Established 1853. a..- . FRATRES IN FACULTATE. JOHN STAIGE DAVIS, M. A., M. D. WILLIAM M. THORNTON, LL. D. HUGH T. NELSON, M. D, RICHARD HEATH DABNEY, M. A., Ph. D. CHARLES W. KENT, M. A., Ph. D. FRATRES IN URBE. COLONEL C. C. WERTENBAKER . SAMUEL B. WOODS J. THOMPSON BROWN, JR. ACADEMIC. WILLIAM ALEXANDER FLEET GEORGE WILLIAM PEYTON AMBROSE MADISON RICHARDSON RICHARD PERRY SPENCER, JR. THOMAS J EFFERSON WERTENBAKER MEDICAL. MORTON WHITLOCK BAKER ROBERT LEMMON RICHARD PHILLIPS BELL, JR. JOHN ATKINSON OWEN CHARLES HARTWELL COCKE DON PRESTON PETERS EUGENE FROST DAVIS HUGH HENRY TROUT HATLEY NORTON MASON EDWARD VICTOR VALZ ENGINEERING. NORVAL JOHN ELLSWORTH WELSH LAW. WILLIAM CARROLL CONNETT JOHN RICHARD JOHNSON, JR. JAMES MORGAN CLARKE WILLIAM DE LAUNEY WORSLEY 71 1 OMICRON CHAPTER 0F BETA THETA PI. Founded at Miami, 1839. Established 1854. FRATRES IN URBE. CLEMENT DANIEL FISHBURNE, A. B. JOHN RUSSELL SAMPSON, A. M. ENGINEERING. ALLMAND BLOW ELL'OTT WILLIAM CARRINGTON LANCASTER ACADEMIC. WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER JOHN HABERSHAM ELLIOTT, JR. , JOHN EDMOND NORRIS HUME . RODNEY SNEED COHEN JOHN P. BOOGHER HARRISON CAMPBELL BERKELEY ROBERT HORACE KERN, JR. SAMUEL GLOVER RAY THOMAS RANDOLPH PRICE, JR. JOHN P. DULANY JAMES HAY, JR. LAW. THOMAS CATESBY JONES JAMES FULTON WRIGHT I JAMES WILLIAM HANDY PILSON MEDICAL. WILLIAM CABELL MOORE CHARLES COLVILLE TENNANT EDWARD MAUPIN GAYLE HOWARD HUME RICHARD LLOYD COOK 73 ALPHA CHAPTER 0F CHI PHI. Founded at Princeton 1824. Established 1858. FRATER IN FACULTATE. WILLIAM H. ECHOLS, B. S., C. E. ACADEMIC. LUKE MATTHEWS WHITE ANDREW ADGER MANNING CLARENCE BRAIDEN PENN CHARLES SCOTT BRENT, JR. ARTHUR PRESTON HUTTON LAW. MALCOLM JOHNSTON TAYLOR GERALD TOOLE HILL JAMES HENDERSON MORAN GUSTAVUS WINSTON PARRISH PHILIP HALL WORMAN JOSEPH REID ANDERSON BRUCE ROBERT THURSTON HUBARD, JR. MEDICAL. RICHARD WALKER BOLLING GEORGE EATON ADAMS HENRY OWEN EASLEY 75 VIRGINIA OMICRON CHAPTER 0F SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON. Founded at University of Alabama, 1856. Established 1858. FRATER IN URBE. ROBERT HANCOCK WOOD LAW. NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN AUSTIN THOMAS PLUMMER BRANCH WILLIAM CARROLL LATIMER HARRY EUGENE LUTZ JAMES CRAIG PHILLIPS JOHN ROBERTS EDWARD MAGRUDER TUTWILER MEDICAL. KENNETH BRADFORD MARTIN DONELSON ACADEMIC. ? . EDWARD TRIPP COMER THOMAS GRAY GENTRY . JOSEPH MOSEBY HORNOR JAMES PARK MCCALLIE JOHN DONELSON MARTIN FREDERICK BERTHOLDT SAEGMULLER OSCAR THWEATT ' EDWIN DIAL WATKINS BRUCE CARTER WILSON 77 :Ji 1 I OMICRON CHAPTER 0F 5 PHI GAMMA DELTA. Founded at Washington and J efferson College, 1848. Established 1858. FRATER IN FACULTATE. JAMES BELL BULLITT, M. D. FRATER IN URBE. FRANK CYRUS MCCUE, M. D. ACADE M IC. WILLIAM CONWAY WHITTLE, JR. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE JAMES MCCAW TOMPKINS RICHARD BAYLOR, JR. ROBERT BALDWIN MYERS DONALD MCKENZIE BLAIR PAUL VALERE PORTNER ERNEST RUDOLF SCHOEN LAW. JAMES MONTGOMERY MASON ALBERT LONSDALE ROPER SAMUEL POLK WALKER MEDICAL. HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR WILLIS COHOON CAMPBELL JAMES TATE MASON HOWARD LOMBARD WALKER 79 HUGH NELSON PAGE, JR. ,.;x UPSILON CHAPTER 0F DELTA PSI. p Founded at Columbia 1847. Established 1859. FRATRES IN URBE. MICAJAH WOODS EDWARD MORRIS WOODS WILLIAM PAGE DAME LOMAX PLATER TAYLOE ACADEMIC. THOMAS PINCKNEY BRYAN : . WILSON FLOWERREE CARROLL ROBERT WILLIAMS DANIEL . CARTER LEE DILLARD MARSHALL CARTER HALL, JR. I RUSSELL HARDY CHARLES GRANDY HUNTER RANDOLPH FITZHUGH MASON CHARLES GIBSON MIDDLETON I EDWARD DICKINSON TAYLOE CHARLES MCINTOSH TUNSTALL JOHN SCOTT WALKER WILLIAM HENRY WHITE, JR. MEDICAL. SAMUEL TROTTER CAVES CHARLES MCLEAN KARL OSTERHAUS LAW. CYRUS WILEY GRANDY, JR. WILLIAM WILLIAMS MATHEWSON ROBERT BEVERLEY MUNFORD, JR. ROBERT BAYLOR TUNSTALL 8! . 60 ZETA CHAPTER 0F KAPPA SIGMA. FRATER IN FACULTATE. WILLIAM MINOR LILE, B. L. ACADEMIC. BENJAMIN DOUGLAS GOFF HERBERT EMMET MORROW LAW. JAMES SMITH BARRON WILLIAM ROLLAND HARRISON JAMES HUNT BULLOCK ROBERT W. HUIE, JR. DANIEL PRICE WITHERS MEDICAL. PAUL VERNON ANDERSON HOWSON WHITE COLE, JR. ; WADE HAMPTON ANDERSON JAMES CARROLL FLIPPIN ' JAMES MORRIS FONTAINE JOHN MARYE LEWIS EDWARD HOWE MILLER, JR. JOHN BEVERLY POLLARD WILLIAM PRESTON SIMPSON CHARLES AGUSTUS WOODARD PSI CHAPTER 0F SIEMA CHI. Founded at Miami, 1855. Established 1860. FRATER IN FACULTATE. PROF. CHARLES A. GRAVES, M. A., B. L., LL. D. FRATRES IN URBE. GEORGE M. PERKINS WILLIAM M. PERKINS ACADEMIC. BASIL DE LASHMUTT BOTELER PERCY ALEXANDER LAW. RICHARD DICKSON COOKE EDWARD BEVERLY HERNDON HUBERT ROLAND SOUTHALL PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE MEDICAL. WALLER JAMESON PAXTER SPRINGS MOORE EPHRAIM ROLAND MULFORD JOHN WILSON SOMERVILLE GEORGE HARRISON WALLACE 85 VIRGINIA DELTA CHAPTER 0F ALPHA TAU OMEGA. FRATER.IN FACULTATE. JAMES B. GREEN, B. L. FRATRESIN URBE. HON. GEO. WATTS MORRIS, B. L. REV. HARRY B. LEE, A. B., B. L. JAMES STUART HANCKEL ACADEMIC. SAMUEL MCGOWAN BENET JULIAN OSBORNE MARION PORTER BRAWLEY FONTAINE MARTIN LEWIS CARTER HARRISON HENRY HAMMETT ORR BEVERLEY DANDRIDGE TUCKER CARY NELSON WEISIGER, JR. WILLIAMS CARTER WICKHAM RENSHAW JOHN NEWTON WILLIAMS, JR. WHITMEL HILL URQUHART ROBERT HENRY RENSHAW, JR. WILLIAM CLYDE FERGUSON LAW. WILLIAM CHRISTIE BENET BRADLEY WALKER STEPHEN MAZYCK OBRIEN SAMUEL GARLAND HAMNER JOSEPH CLAY STILES FREDERICK HOTZE MEDICAL. BENJAMIN WILHELM BAYLESS AUGUSTINE WASHINGTON TUCKER THOMAS FEARN PERKINS HENDERSON 87 k? ALPHA CHAPTER 0F Pl KAPPA ALPHA. Founded at University of Virginia March 1st, 1868. FRATER IN FACULTATE. FRANCIS PERRY DUNNINGTON, B. S. FRATRES IN URBE. JOHN SHELTON WHITE FRANK M. MAGRUDER WILSON L.. SMITH JOHN M. WHITE CHARLES H. H. THOMAS LEWIS WATSON JOHN WOOD FISHBURNE WILLIAM G. PAGE GEORGE R. B. MICHIE CLEMENT D. FISHBURNE ARCHIBALD D. DABNEY ACADEMIC. STEVE SMITH, JR. HUGH B. G. GALT GEORGE WASHINGTON LANGHORNE, JR. EARNEST NORTON FULTON CHARLES TATE SCOTT LAW. WALTER HENDERSON ROBERTSON SAMUEL GARDINER WALLER JAMES ADAM BEAR CHARLES HOWELLS COFFIN MEDICAL. JOHN JANNEV LLOYD, JR. WALTER SMITH FERGUSON WILLIAM ALEXANDER STROTHER CHARLES EDWARD CONRAD ENGINEERING. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB 89 BETA CHAPTER 0F ZETA PSI. Founded at University of New York, 1846. Established 1868. FRATRES IN URBE. JUDGE R. T. W. DUKE WILLIAM R. DUKE L. T. HANCKEL, JR. GEORGE E. WALKER J. T. HAXALL MURRAY BOOCOCK FRATER IN FACULTATE. DR. PAUL B. BARRINGER ACADEMIC. RUFUS H. BARRINGER F. C. CHILDyk H; J. HALE J. B. FAULKNER G. G. NELSON LAW. EDWARD C. BURKS W. A. PERKINS NEVILLE G. HENSHAW MEDICAL. W. S. HOEN W. W. SMITH J. M. YARBOROUGH ENGINEERING. G. S. NELSON J. C. JACK W. C. HANCKEI W 91 VIRHINIA BETAOF PHI DELTA THETA. Founded at Miami, 1848. Established 187 3. FRATRES IN URBE. ALVIN KENNER FOOT, B. L. HALSTEAD SHIPMAN HEDGES, M. D. ACADEM IC. RALPH DAVID MOORE ROGER MOORE STEWART CHARLES ROBERT WILLIAMS LAW. WARNER AMES BRADFORD KILBY OWSLEY BROWN HENRY GEORGE LAVINDER CARL HALL DAVIS DAVID THOMAS WILLIAMS STAIGE DAVIS CHARLES PIERCE MACGILL JOHN JENNINGS GREENLEAF HENRY ALEXANDER MATTHEWS MEDICAL. CONRAD POWELL CARTER CHARLES PALMER STEARNES WALTER FRANCIS SCOTT EDGAR LYONS WOODS ADRIAN STEVENSON TAYLOR ENGINEERING. LAWRENCE BOGLE. 93 , V W, ,v , LAMBDA CHAPTER 0F KAPPA ALPHA. Founded at Washington and Lee University 1865. Established at University of Virginia in 1879. FRATER IN FACULTATE. JAMES MORRIS PAGE, M. A., PH. D. FRATRES IN URBE. CHARLES W. ALLEN CHARLES DOWNING SMITH WILLIAM F. LONG HENRY O'BANNON COOPER GEORGE PETRIE FISHBURNE THOMAS FITZHUGH ROGER A. PRYOR WALKER J. N. MOORE M E DI CAL. CLARK TYNDALL JONES THOMAS JACKSON ROLLER HAWES THORNTON DAVIES GEORGE CARY TABB GEORGE TYLER HUNDLEY THOMAS SHANNON HUNTER EDWARD LELAND WILLIAMS LAW. ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD, JR. JOHN PELHAM JOHNSTON HEN RY BOWDEN . ROBERT MORTON HUGHES, JR. HUGHES BRONSTON THOMAS WYNN HOLLOMAN ELBERT SEVIER .MALONEY ALWARD LEE JOHNSON JOHN JOSEPH HARRIS ANDREW LEE LINDER JOHN TERRELL PORTERFIELD ACADEMIC. THOM AS LEON HOWARD JAMES WEST PEGRAM EUGE NE CALLAWAY ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN JOHN ALLEN GENTRY WADE HAMPTON FROST BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS BURNLEY LANKFORD PETER FORCE FLETCHER JORDAN GEORGE WINTON WATSON JAMES CECIL HURT 95 -l H M n c llllle i'vw i$nrbisnuFHhVLfkw K IL,IVHH r NLHJhTKVK wanFllull Lu . r: 1....1 y I .7421 1 L I rlvll IL; d L :3 3' K N 27 :r :3 .1 ., . J 1, A J. x23..- BETA IOTO CHAPTER 0F DELTA TAU DELTA. Founded at Bethany, 1860. Established 1889. FRATER IN URBE. ROBERT ANDERSON WATSON db ACADEMIC. LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE 3 JOHN JAMES GRAVATT, JR. HENRY CARRINGTON LANCASTER STUART CARLISLE LEAKIE FERDINAND GROOS .PAUL PETERKIN SHAFER HUGH SKIPWITH WORTHINGTON $ ' JOHN ABRAM CUTCHINS JAMES MAY BALL, JR. . CHARLES SENFF MCVEIGH WILLIAM GROOS GRAHAM CROCKETT PAINTER LAW. JAMES NATHAN EL DUNLOP JAMES HODGES DRAKE THOMAS JEFFERSON W'ALKER GEORGE CRAGHEAD GREGORY FREDERICK STANSBURY TYLER LOUIS STANISLAUS BURDETT MEDICAL. JOSEPH ARTHUR JEFFRIES, JR. ARTHUR BUCKNER HARRIS FRANKLIN COLLINS HARRIS 97 Established 1 897. MEDICAL. HARRY T. LOY L. A. CRACRAFT LAWR: CHARLES L. MARKS LAW. ENCE A. REYMANN 99 JAMES A. SELMAN HARRY WALL E. GAINES THURMAN J V $ acW,-: '3 Wz- . iv a. 1-.. . J. JWWM MINOR CHAPTER 0F PHI DELTA PHI. Law Fraternity. Founded at the University of Michigan, l869. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. WILLIAM MINOR LILE, B. L. CHARLES ALFRED GRAVES, M. A., LL. D. RALEIGH COLSTON MINOR, M. A., B. L. FRATRES IN URBE. ALEXANDER CLIFFORD NELSON WILLIAM LONG BASIL JONES LOUIS TROTMAN HANCKEL ACTIVE MEMBERS. WARNER AMES ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD, JR. MALCOLM JOHNSTON TAYLOR ROBERT MORTON HUGHES ROBERT W. HUIE, JR. THOMAS CATESBY JONES JAMES MONTGOMERY MASON EDWARD BEVERLY HERNDON CARL HALL DAVIS WILLIAM CHRISTIE BENET, JR. JOHN JENNINGS GREENLEAF PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE ALBERT LONSDALE ROPER JOHN RICHARD JOHNSON, JR. ALMA BRADLEY WALKER JAMES WILLIAM HANDY PILSON RICHARD DICKSON COOKE SAMUEL GARLAND HAMNER HUBERT ROLAND SOUTHALL JAMES MORGAN CLARKE JAMES FULTON WRIGHT STUART GATEWOOD GIBBONEY WINSTON PARRISH HENRY ALEXANDER MATHEWS PHILIP HALL WORMAN NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN HENRY E. LUTz SAMUEL POLK WALKER WALTER JAMES LADD WILLIAM CARROLL LATIMER BERKELEY MINOR, JR. JAMES SMITH BARRON WILLIAM ALLEN PERKINS ' IOI : . - . t I MWWWIWHNWHNAKWNF ALPHA CHAPTER 0F PI MU. The Medical Fraternity. Founded at University of Virginia, 1892. HONORARY MEMBERS. DR. W. G. CHRISTIAN DR. H. H. BUCKMASTER DR. J. W. MALLET DR. W. RANDOLPH DR. H. T. NELSON ACTIVE MEMBERS. MORTON WHITLOCK BAKER ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN VIRGINIUS DABNEY JAMES CARROLL FLIPPIN WADE HAMPTON FROST JOHN JANNEY LLOYD WALLER JAMESON BURNLEY LANK ORD DON PRESTON PETERS HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS BENJAMIN WILHELM BAYLESS JAMES WEST PEGRAM WALTER SCOTT HOEN EDWARD VICTOR VALz GEORGE EATON ADAMS EPHRAIM ROLAND MULFORD EDWARD MAUPIN GALE PETER'FORCE JOHN BEVERLY POLLARD FRANK EDMONSTON NABERS 102 EDWARD CALAHILL BURKS BRODIE CRUMP NALLE HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR MORTON WHITLOCK BAKER RICHARD DICKSON COOKE LAMBDA PI. The Academic Fraternity. IN FACULTATE. WILLIAM H. ECHOLS, B. 8., C. E. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY, M. A., PH. D. JAMES MORRIS PAGE, M. A., PH. D. WILIAM M. THORNTON, LL. D. RICHARD H. WILSON, M. A., PH. D. dEABUATES. WILLIAM CABELL MOORE DON PRESTON PETERS ALBERT LONSDALE ROPER PHILIP PENDLETON STliPTOE CHARLES HARTWELL COCKE RICHARD PHILIPS BELL ACTIVE WILLIAM CONWAY WHITTLE, JR. JOHN PATTERSON MADISON EDWARD DIAL WATKINS L WIS CARTER HARRISON BEVERLEY DANDRIDGE TUCKER, JR. CHARLES CHEVES HASKELL HUGH SKIPWITH WORTHINGTON GEORGE SONTAGG NELSON GARRETT WATTERS WILLIAM ALEXANDER FLEET LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE JAMES PARKE MCCALLIE RUFUS HANNAH BARRINGER WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER FRANK W. GWATHMEY WILLIAM LEIGH ALEXANDER M. TYREE MEMBERS. JAMES B. DILWORTH CHARLES CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT CHARLES SCOTT BRENT, JR. WILLIAM MORTON DEY JOHN AMBLER MASON JOHN E. WILLIAMS ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE CHARLES HANCOCK WILLIAMS CARTER W. RENSHAW THOMAS BENTON MCCARTNEY, JR. ANGUS MCDONALD CRAWFORD DANIEL DEE TALLEY, JR. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB DONALD MCKENZIE BLAIR GEORGE CARY TUBB AMBROSE M. RICHARDSON ERNEST H. VENABLE 103 RUBAIYAT TO A PIPE FORSWORN. Blessings, aye brighten as they take their flight, T is of all apothegms perhaps most trite, Yet never did I realize the truth Of it before as I have done tvo-night. A Vision. rises dim before mine eyese Dim With the filmy clouds that With it rise-- And once again I seem to be enwrapped In smoke-clouds fragrant as the breath of spice, That rise in spirals 0f the thickest gray, Then change to fairy blue, and in their play Fill all the room With. a fantastic maze Of shadowy color as they die away. Without, the Wind drifts the midwinter snows Along the Range; Within the deep grate glows Down in its fiery heart, While you and I Fill up again our pipes with tt Golden Rose? Upwards in circles still the smoke-elouds float And curl about the lamp. Why not devote The night to good tobacco in good pipes? Fill up again. To-morrow is remote! Countless the songs that glorify old Wine; Homefs deep swell, Anaereonls lilting line Are redolent of it; from Lesbos blows Its fragrance mingled With the ZEgean brine. Scarce any page of Horace, but one learns The Virtues rare 0f sundry well-stopped urns Of rich Falernian 01' 0f Massic, till Even the most temperate heart among us yearns. And in old lays 0f derring-do, midst crack Of spearshaftvs, and tall men at arms in Jack And Marion, hear We not the lusty smack Of bearded lips, oler hippocras and sack? 104 But Who has sung the praises of the leaf, The incense burned to Manitou, When chief And brave all silent pass the ealumet 111 time of tribal joy or heavy grief? Then hrst the reed-root stem and then the bowl Of'Salamiea Clay, I tll sing, whence roll The fragrant fumes, and then the golden leaf That brings deep peace down on the blissful soul. tt 0 slender-jointed reed, O friendly reed, Grown where green Otsiers and tall cat-tails breed Along the pond-Side in the languorous 110011, When. dragon-flies across the water speed, tt Flashes 0f emerald, and the summer haze Dances upon the hilltops soon to blaze With yellow banners 0f the waving broome Still type art thou of grace, as in the days tt Of pixies, elves, and wee folk bad and good, And those more ancient dwellers in the wood, Dryads and sylvans 0f. the forest brakee- Those days When Pan midst of the slim reeds stood tt And listened With a yearning, sad delight T0 Syrinx sighing, as the summer night Breathed faintest music through the rustling reeds Which Shivered softly as a maid in fright. ttAnd thou, 0 smoking bowl, rude-shaped and gray, Fairer than fairest forms of potter,s clay Art thou in my besotted eyes, for in Thy incense all my cares I blow away. tt And, thou rich crumbled leafett But stay! my VOW 0f hard-wrung abstinence forbids it now, And pipe and stem as well, and I must knit At the mere smell of smoke an angry brow. GOOSE-QUILL. 105 t ATH A: PICS w '22.? ;,. ? W ------- W .A, A WW X b rAx m Wk ?:SEW EAA ' . xA WW5 A t? 1: , R Q i GENERAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. OFFICERS. BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President CONRAD POWELL CARTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President ADVISORY BOARD. BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS CONRAD POWELL CARTER PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE BRADLEY WALKER DR. W. G. CHRISTIAN PRESIDENTS OF GENERAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. G. L.SMITH . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1887-88 FELIXH.LEVY....................,.....1888-89 J.D.FLETCHER.1...................8...1889-9o J. BRECKENRIDGE ROBERTSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1890-91 R. C0LST0N BLACKFORD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1891-92 J. BRECKENRIDGE ROBERTSON . . . . .8 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1892-95 E. HOPE NORTON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1893-94 FREDERICK HARPER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1894-95 WILLIAM M. DABNEY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1895-96 MORGAN P. ROBINSON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1896-97 PAUL LEE COCKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . 1897-98 EUGENE DAVIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1898-99 BRODIE C. NALLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1899-00 ALEXANDER WILEY MOORE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1900-01 108 OFFICERS OF GENERAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. WALKER STEPToE WILLIS DR. CHRISTIAN CARTER THE FOOTBALL TEAM. ROBERT M. COLEMAN JOHN J. GREENLEAF . DR. WILLIAM A. LAMBETH WESLEY ABBOTT CYalQ B. C. CHAMBERLAIN OZalQ OFFICERS. . Medical .?. x . 2 TEAM OF 1901. H. D. WATERS, Centre B. S. MOORE, Right Guard A. B. HARRIS, Left Guard W. C. BENET, Right Tackle B. WALKER. Left Tackle C. R. WILLIAMS, Right End A. C. HOBSON, Left End B. LANKFORD, Right Half-back R. M. COLEMAN 3Captj. Left Half-back E. M. TUTWILER, Quarter-back F. 'C. HARRIS, Full-back SUBST ITUTES. J. A. MASON C. C. ST.J0HN R. D. COOKE W. F. SCOTT, Assistant Manager RECORD OF F OOTBALL TEAM. Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . Virginia . .28. .68. .39. .24. .. 5. .16. ..28. .16. .23. .23. . Roanoke College . .St. Albans . . Gallaudet . 3. . . Pennsylvania . V. P. I. . .V. M. I. . . Georgetown . . North Carolina . Sewanee 110 u Captain . Manager Adviser Coaches C. P. MACGILL . Washington and Lee . 0000 .20 O a mOOHwEL. Amp; afbrbwzm. w. E. Zoom? w. Q: mwwam E. 0;. w. w. EchFr. ms? r. m. szg. w. e. mmmmmewq. 335mg. 002cm. mac. b. m. w. me. uomz. mdw. m. w. omdwom Cormzwz Encamgv. b. m. w. byzxwowd. w. m. w. mowmoz. b. m. 2.532. mdw. 8. w. gbamwm. O. w. nwwwoeu 335 Comer mwwwi Cw. mp. E. Q. edeSme. 6. m. $8?me b. H. Zyrrm. r. H. UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA BASEBALL TEAM. OWSLEY BROWN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Manager A. M. DOBIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . First Assistant Manager I. W. SOMERVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Second Assistant Manager J. A. MASON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Catcher C. P. CARTER . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . . . . . . . . . . . . Pitcher R. N. YARBROUGH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . First base B. POLLARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Second base W. CONNETT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Shortstop 'J. T. MASON . ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Third base C. H. COCKE . . . . . . . . . 9 . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . Left field B. C. NALLE . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . Centre field J. H. MORAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Right iield SUBSTITUTE PITCHERS. CRACRAFT PEETE ' WINSTON SUBSTITUTE CATCHER. WALLER BASEBALL TEAM OF 1901. SCORES OF GAMES PLAYED. Virginia, 19; Woodberry Forest School, 0. Virginia, 5; Harvard, 8. Virginia, 29; Bellevue School, 6. Virginia, 2; Cornell; 9. Virginia, 6; St. Albans School, 0. Virginia, 9; University of North Carolina, 2. Virginia, 10; Lafayette, 9. Virginia, 0; Georgetown, 13. Virginia, 12; Episcopal High School, 0. Virginia, 16; University Of Maryland, 13. Virginia 13; Lehigh, 2. Virginia; 6; Georgetown, 9. Virginia, 6; Yale 9. Virginia, 9; Washington and Lee University,8. Virginia, 10; Princeton, 19. Virginia, 4; Virginia Polytechnic Institute, 3. Virginia, 5; Princeton, 9. Virginia, 8; Roanoke College, 5. 112 Sc m. czmem; OT. 57.0.2; memwg... Ami. Um. rbzwmem Wwoiz Agusammav $$me A0855 mazzmwaqbb UowE $$$de Sybmmgv SEQ gbbrmm Webbbwd 452302 OoZZmee a. 2,502 252be 55wa 002mm waemw 39333 .H. H5502 QWbowbwe Mwbwwwogwm FAYERWEATHER GYMNASTIC ASSOCIATION. OFFICERS. DR. W. A. LAMBETH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dircctor P. E. RAUSCHENBACH . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . Instructor W. C. LANCASTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' ' ' . . . . . President T. S. HUNTER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . a . . . .Vice-President C. R. WILLIAMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. DR. W. A. LAMBETH W. C. LANCASTER P. E. RAUSCHENBACH , T. S. HUNTER C. R. WILLIAMS EVENT. WINNER. All-round Championship . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . E. W. BITZER Flying Trapeze . . . . . . . . Heavy Man . . . . . . . . . T. S. HUNTER Flying Trapeze . . . . . . . . Light Man . . I . . . . . P. V. LITTLEJOHN Side Horse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . P. V. LITTLEJOHN Flying Rings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . T. S. HUNTER Parallel Bar . . . ' . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. P. BOOGHER Horizontal Bar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . J. P. BOOGHER Tumbling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .J H. MCNEELY TEAM. E. W. BITZER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Captain C. R. WILLIAMS . . . . . . . . . Manager J. S. ADKISSON J. P. BOOGHER B. M. FONTAINE H. C. GRANT SENJI HIRAOKA P. V. LITTLEJOHN J. A. SELLMAN x J. H. MCNEELY W. F. S. RODEMANN O. C. SHANER 114 . 7 7 , ZQZEHR mgwowb l7 HES; mdzamw marge bHeeonmz ofszxymEz. Hmbz. ggibzm Agvbmmouv Wwdmommzwbom 253.5353 Wozetg wHesmw 53333 ! Wuimmoz Woumzbzz mmbzauw woommmw 6 ,4 5.9.? TENNIS CLUB. OFFICERS. G. C. TABB . .President C. G. MIDDLETON . . Vice-President D. MCK. BLAIR . Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS. P. ALEXANDER C. J. FAULKNER, JR. S. W. AYRES H. B. G. GALT GI E ADAMS C. G. HUNTER F. G. BEETEM E. B. HERNDON, JR. D. MCK. BLAIR J. L. JONES JNO. P. BOOGHER B. KILBY B. D. BOTELER W. L. KINSOLVING E. C. BURKS R. H. KERN ' J. M. CLARKE R. H. LATHAM R. S. COHEN ' W. C. LANCASTER C. H. COFFIN W. C. LATIMER J. P. MCCALLIE J. D. MARTIN E. T. COMER C. G. MIDDLETON M. DONELSON J. C. MYERS T. H. DANIEL ' C. S. MCVEIGH C. DINWIDDIE J. H. MCNEELY E. T. DOUGLAS L. C. MCC. SMYTHE A. A. MANNING W. S. DEARING STEVE SMITH, JR. J. C. MCGREGOR PROF. R. H. DABNEY T. D. SAVAGE PROF. R. C. MINOR H. O. EASLEY G. C. TABB WINSTON PARRISH W. A. FLEET C. MCS. TUNSTALL H. M. RUSSELL, JR. W. H. FAULKNER O. C. SHANER FALL TOURNAMENT. WINNERS OF THE DOUBLES. C. G. HUNTER and E. B. HERNDON WINNER OF THE SINGLES. W. A. FLEET 117 4 IAIIIIA VIII Vlthhl. all? .Wl w; 1.7 . 1.7a ?wwy. . . 2 4V... M, Z7 7X y . Z2... ?ZZ X2? 4Z,.,., K UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA GOLF CLUB. C. W. GRANDY KENNETH BROWN A. S. TAYLOR L. S. BURDETT D. P. PETERS W. C. WHITTLE H. S. WORTHINGTON ' KENNETH BROWN L. S. BURDETT W. C. CAMPBELL J. A. CUTCHINS MISS FANNIE BERKELEY J. M. CLARK CLYDE MCGREGOR R. W. DANIEL J. N. DUNLAP J. H. DRAKE A. M. DOBIE C. H. FAWCETT C. W. GRANDY S. G. GIBBONEY W. A. FLEET T. S. HUNTER SENJI HIRAOKA R. C. HOBSON MISS ROWELL H. M. RUSSELL A. L. ROPER J. W. SOMERVILLE J. C. STILES E. SCHOEN OFFICERS. . President . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . Tournament Committee . Greens Committee MEMBERS. COL. HUNTINGTON MISS ELEANOR HUNTINGTON C. G. HUNTER FLETCHER JORDAN DR. C. W. KENT R. L. KEMPNER W. J. LADD WM. LEIGH J. P. MADISON C. G. MIDDLETON H. N. MASON R. D. MOORE JULIAN OSBORNE MISS MILDRED NELSON PAGE D. P. PETERS A. M. RICHARDSON W. C. W. RENSHAW MRS. ROWELL H. S. TAYLOR J. M . TOWNSEND W. C. WHITTLE J. WALKER B. C. WILLIS E. L. WOODS H. S. WORTHINGTON 119 :45 V RIDING CLUB. MOTTO: A Horse, a Horse, My Kingdom for a Horse! OFFICERS. JNO.DULANEY.. ......................President ? W. W. MATHEWSON. . . . . . - . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President N i JAS. MORAN ; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer S:- MEMBERS. P. V. PORTNER W. C. MOORE HOBSON SOUTHALL W. RENSHAW q; C. C. TENNANT J. W. H. PILSON E. D. TAYLOE B. C. NALLE PHIL WEISSINGER J. W. SOMERVILLE ; ' g; 120 1 v y r'!? X! ,5. unrulirr..muhl..vl.bir L y p MASS MEETING Of All the Student Body PUBLIC HALL TONIGHT NON.11T+AT 7.15 to take action on the recent .UTRAGE of the illegal arrest of certain students by the Charlottesville Police, Saturday night. Dr. Barringer will preside. Speeches by Pro- fessors Lile, Dabney, Dr. Lambeth, and others. Every Man in College Mdst Come W. C. Benet, Jr.. Pres. Law Class. . H. B. Taylor, Pres. Medical Class. A. M Dobie, Pres. Academic Class. B. C. Willis. Pres. G. A. A. L. P. Chamberlayne, Ed torein-Chief Topics. ii Unless above himself he can Erect himself, how poor a thing is man ! ii . . . . . . . . . . . HARTFIELD it A buck 0f the first head? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BACHMAN ii That man that hath a tongue, I say, is no man, If With his tongue he can not Win a woman? . . . . . . . C. J. FAULKNER it Our Pinch a hungry, lean-faced Villain, A mere anatomy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .HPOTHLUCK it A very gentle beast and of a good conscience. . . . . . . . . . . T ALLEY ti He doth nothing but talk of his horse. . . . . . . . . . DULANEY tt And his chin showed like a stubble- land at harvest home. . . . . . BUFORD it Thou hast damnable iteration, and art indeed able to corrupt a saintf, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . GEORGE GREGORY it Brain him with his lady,s fanf, - . . . .. . . . . . . T. CATESBY JONES it This bold, bad man. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . AMES itA gentleman, nurse, that loves to hear himself talk,a1id will speak more in a minute than he will stand to in a month? . . , . . . . . . . . h. . . . . . . . .JOHN MASON 121 i w , i tt 0 gracious God ! how far have we Profan,d thy heavenly gift of poesy V, . , . . . . . . . . . . . . Magazine tt Man, false man, smiling, destructive many . . . g . . . WINSTON PARRISH tt Be to her Virtues very kind, Be to her faults a little blindfi . . . . . . . . . . . . . T HE FACULTY tt His native home deep-imaged in his soul ii . BRODIE NALLE, 0f Raccoon Ford tt Time elaborately thrown away i, . . . . . . . . . . . . . FRANK HARRIS it Every tub must stand upon its bottom. . . . . . . ANGUS CRAWFORD ti For thy sake, tobacco, I would do anything but die. . . PROFESSOR WILSON tt To Where the stage, the poor, degraded stage, Holds its warped mirror to a gaping age. . . . . . . . . . . V it V. V. VW tt For he by geometric scale . 7 Could take the size of pots of ale? . . . . . . . . . . . . J. E. WILLIAMS tt And force them, though it was in spite Of nature and their stars, to write. . . . . . . . . . . . . Topics EDITORS tt High on a throne of royal state,-by merit raised To that bad eminence. . . . FINAL PRESIDENT OF THE ttJEFFW tt 0 hesh, hesh, how art thou fishihed. ,i . . . . A . . . . . . . . . . TROUT 122 The River of Thought. Far away ineath dark, oierhanging mountains, Pending, black, oier the shadowy Past, Is a valley imid which crystal fountains Spring forth into streams deep and vast: Let us glance at you streamlet swift-Howing, And mark its eier widening course As it winds far adown t0 the Present, E,er gaining in volume and force. Oh! this mystical river fiows onward, And few its first fountains have sought; A wonderful stream is our river, Our onHowing River of Thought. In the realm of the night How its currents, And deep are its eddies; and wide Is the stream oier which willows of Silence Are drooping from banks on each side. Then the River of Thought and its currents- Thoi weird be the darkness of nighta- Flow onward, caressed by grey shadows, Still joyful and full of delight; 0ft we drift into sable grey dimness, And oftentimes are we thus caught And carried away on the bosom Of this swift, wide River of Thought! Neither eye nor ear then avails us To show whither onward we go: But the swell 0f the eddying water Is felt as the swift currents How. Not a sound, nor a light, nor a shadow Remains any longer to show The way that our bark is now drifting- Not a single refiection below Appears on the shadowless surface, Not a murmur is heard as we fiow! The shores have eien vanished to blackness; No sunbeams nor moonlight now peep At these realms where reign Silence and Slumber, And sanctified, innocent Sleep. Now the River of Gold groweth wider Ever downward we drift in the darkness, And the sound of an Ocean is heard, And rise and fall, till it seems, And the roar of the emulous billows By the swelling, that Thoughtis Golden River Seems saying some wonderful word. Is 10st in the Ocean of Dreams! WYTHE L. KINSOLVING. 123 .Emohw meo o: x315 :26 beg mm 2835 06332 5:83 26?? :35 :8 oh. mammxw 81.2: 05 mo mmaucmS 33 2: awsoEF .muwaccgoa 05 535 $35 was? 30: x84 573 names? mcgq JEFFERSON LITERARY SOCIETY. 1901-1902. FALL TERM. C. R. WILLIAMS, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President H. H. BONNER, Mississippi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President F. W. GWATHMEY, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary INTERMEDIATE TERM. J. M. MASON, West Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President B. P. KERFOOT, Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President R. S. COHEN, Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . . Secretary FINAL TERM. JAMES HAY, JR., Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President J. J. LUCK, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President R. C. BEALE, JR., Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . Secretary W. M. GRAVATT, Virginia. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Treasurer FINAL COMMITTEE. C. R. WILLIAMS, Chairman I. W. AYRES J. N . DUNLOP WINSTON PARRISH J. I. BARRON STAIGE DAVIS SAMUEL PRICE W. C. BIBB G. C. GREGORY O. L. SHACKELFORD J. L. BRUFF F. W. GWATHMEY R. D. BRUMBECK H. H. BONNER W. L. KINSOLVING B. F. CAMP, JR. R. S. COHEN J. D. MCINNIS E. W. FULTON 125 WASHINGTON LITERARY SOCIETY. . R OFFICERS. FALL TERM. J. G. COLLINS, Georgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President T. S. SETTLE, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President JOHN UPTON, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary WINTER TERM. T. S. SETTLE, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President J. R. CATON, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President J. C. MYERS, Virginia . . . . . A . . . . . . . . , . . . . . .Secretary SPRING TERM. + W. C. LATIMER, South Carolina. . . R . . . . . . . . . . . . . President 0. P. ARGABRITE. West Virginia . , . . . . . . . . . Vice-President R. L. KEMPNER, Texas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary H. C. CARLISLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Treasurer for Whole year , MEMBERS. 5 O. P. ARGABRITE C. A. FAWCETT J. P. MCCONNELL L. C. BELL G. P. FISHBURNE J. C. MYERS i L. BIDGOOD W. H. FRETWELL L. B. NALLEY Ir F. BLUTHENTHAL L. GOODLOE S. S. PEARLSTINE J. H. BULLOCK F. A. GROSECLOSER J. C. PHILLIPS H. C. CARLISLE F. W. HOLLOMAN J. O. SETH E. Y. BURTON S. W. HANK R. S. REYNOLDS L C. D. CARTER C. L. HORSEY T. S. SETTLE J. R. CATON J. P. JOHNSON S. S. TEISER J. G. COLLINS R. L. KEMPNER J. W. TIMBERLAKE A. M. DOBIE W. F. KING J. UPTON P. DULANEY R. H. LATHAM L. R. WHIPPLE M. O. LITZ A. T. ESKRIDGE W. C. LATIMER V H. G. WHITMORE 127 UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA MAGAZINE. ESTABLISHED, 1840. FALL TERM. ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE . . . . - Virginia . . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief GEORGE CRAGHEAD GREGORY . . . North Carolina. . . . Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS. LEONIDAS RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Missouri SIMON SIDNEY TEISER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Virginia JOHN LITTLETON JONES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . Georgia HARRY HALL BONNER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . - . . . . . Mississippi SPRING TERM. TOY DIXON SAVAGE . . . . . . . .North Corolina. . . . .Editor-in-Chief CHARLES DABNEY CARTER, JR.. . .Virginia . . . . . .Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS. JAMES HAY, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . Virginia JOHN LITTLETON JONES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Georgia LEONIDAS RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Missouri SIMON SIDNEY TEISER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Virginia 128 v w mum. Exmuncxm WOZZax CZEmEmZJx Om Smog; ZpobEzm mOZOmw. gvarm 65$; . Cowwm mixing 3, ma; 902 90 K esazsA COLLEGE TOPICS. FALL TERM. LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . .Editor-in-Chief RICHARD P. BELL, JR,, Virginia . . . . . 7' . . . . . . . . Business Manager ASSISTANT EDITORS. W. HARRISON FAULKNER. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .sVirginia AUSTIN BRANCH. . . . . 7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Georgia JOHN PATTERSON MADISON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., .Virginia C. WILEY GRANDY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Virginia C. HARTWELL COCKE. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .Mississippi HARRYB.TAYL0R........................Virginia THOMAS J WALKER . . . . . i. . . . . . Montana SPRING TERM. JOSEPH M. HARTFIELD, Kentucky. . . . . . . . . . . .Editor-in-Chief RICHARD P. BELL, JR., Virginia. . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager GEORGE CARY TABB, Kentucky . . . . . . . . . . Assistant Business Manager ASSISTANT EDITORS. ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . .Kentucky WINSTON PARRISH. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Virginia NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Tennessee JAMES B.FAULKNER. . . . . . . . . . . . . i . . . . . .Kentucky CARLH.DAVst.................... ....-.Virginia LEWIS C. HARRISON. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Virginia w mwmamoz 0059:ka WEE wwwsz mozdmm OOrrmOm AOEOm. wazca Ooomm wwdrNme. g. m. warding? m. w. UwEm OmewHwaazm abww Wbcmwbwz wbwamm mwermrU awarow gwgmoz CORKS AND CURLS. LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE, J. 'l'. .l. . . . . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief PHILIP P. STEPTOE, 2'. X. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Business Manager ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE, 4?. 17'. J. . . . .1 . . . . . . Assistant Editor-in-Chief JAMES HAY, JR., If. 0. fl. . . . . . . . . . . . . AssistJnt Editor-in-Chief HUBERT R. SOUTHALL, 2'. X ., . . . . . . . . . Assistant Business Manager ' WALTER S. HOEN Z. 55.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Art Editor ASSOCIATE EDITORS. CHARLES S. BRENT, X. W C. HARTWELL COCKE, 60. IC 111'. AUSTIN BRANCH, .l'. :1. li'. ROBERT E. MUNFORD, J. 3F. STUART C. LEAKE, J. 'l'. J. DANIEL D. TALLEY, J. 'IV. E. CHARLES R. WILLIAMS, W J. 8. . BURNLEY LANKFORD, IC. :1. LEWIS CARTER HARRISON, ;l. T. 52. JOHN LLOYD NEWCOMB, 17. K. A. TOY DIXON SAVAGE, 4?. K. 2'. NEVILLE G. HHNSHAW, Z. T. EDWARD H. MILLER, JR., K. 2. CHARLES L. MARKS, M. 17. 11. 132 mozonm; 828 2,6 955. . Unjuwnm HEEL; momz 455.;sz Ewwxm Hizmmowd 2:543: 3133:? . mzwzni Qcoxm mums. ekybrma raisin EEZmeQ Epzimcz UowE Gmtammwbtim Ian memweom 032502 Agmmoos JACK B. CHAMBERLIN F. GRAHAM COOTES STUART H. TYSON C. J. MUNSON A. C. CRUMP DUDLEY GRAME T. J. WERTENBAKER RANDOLPH MASON WM. FLEGENHEIMER, JR. GEO. H. BARRETT, JR. MISS J. GREER ' MISS S. GLENN ATKINSON MISS A. B. CAMPBELL MISS MABEL H. HUME ART EDITOR. WALTER S. HOEN V k Kiin ulii :3. Fully. x. u..n!;.fw.l:whx$..l aw .. .;.. . .? .kid .I . . 6.1x . $ . 1 .. ' t . .58 snoutuommmm m 5T5 tam HESS RAE muox PH Ammo :0 3a 2a 0: 18m Sn 908 2:8 :8 328 H 3381 a mo :38 312: ,cow : 58 am hi .3 Ex SEEEOU E03 H van KEuuamo: 2? m, ob: m3? Examoz mil x Editorial. yearls CORKS AND CURLs. There are a great many things in this book that might be much better than they are, but there is also in it the best the Board was capable of, and the result of our work, such as it is, we present to you without more ado. We should be more honied and studied in our language, if we were not aware that you know we are really very proud of some of our masterpieces, and equally resigned to your criticism on the score of others. Indeed, but for the traditional humble tone of CORKs AND CURLs editorials, which we are determined to maintain, we should frankly acknowledge that we are look- ing for bouquets, as all our predecessors looked, and shall be disappointed, as most of them were. And as for criticism, we can hardly get more of it than we did before we went to press. But we must not forget to thank the critics for their help. But for their insight, freely put at our disposal, we should never have known that our grinds were most 01 them cribbed from bhakespeare; that our tt Alphabet of Celebrlties ii was not an epoch-making poem, or that George Ade, too, has written fables in slang. Also we take this opportunity of confessing our knowledge that we have failed to represent equally all the interests of all the men in College, although we have done our best; but when it is remembered that, outside of the Board of Editors, but two short contributions were received from the whole student body, we should scarcely be blamed for not being able to have some special stunt l, for the taste of each individual of the six hundred and twelve men we represent. So long as the present method of getting out the ANNUAL prevails- the method by which all the work and all the responsibility is left to a handful of men, while College at large washes its hands of the whole matter until the book appears, to be weighed and found wanting-so long will a faulty book be nobodyls fault but theirs who could write and draw and suggest subject-matter, and do not. But ways and means are not the subject for us now, when we are expected to show only the product, so we will say only that in the opinion of those who have had the most experience, the ideal CORKs AND CURLs will not be seen until the editors are elected the preceding year for the forthcoming session. Now, however, that our work is hnished, such as it is, we wish here to thank those who have helped us. First of all we wish to acknowledge our obligation to Professor William M. Thornton for his graceful and appreciative sketch of Colonel Peters in his connection with the University. We are doubly indebted to him, as well for kindness and promptness with which he complied with our request, as for the fine sympathy with which he has expressed the affection of the University for ll Old Pete? Our thanks are also due to Mr. James Hay, J11, Mr. Arniistead M. Dobie, Mr. N. G. Henshaw, Mr. R. F. Mason, Mr. W. L. Kinsolving, and Mr. J. H. Chamberlayne for contributions, and to the artists who have so generously given us their time and skill, and to whose work is due much of whatever approval our book may win. We cordially thank them all; and not least Mr. Jack B. Chamberlin, Mr. F. G. Cootes, Miss A. B. Campbell, and Mr. Stuart H. Tyson, to whom we owe our frontispiece. ' I l HE Board of 1902 has not the slightest intention of apologizing for this I37 THE OLD STUDENT SPEAKS. In the Age of Gold that was of old, in the dear old U. Va. there wasn7t any ring. and everything was better than it is tJO-day. In those good Old days it was higher praise to be president of the XVash. than it is to-day 0f the G. A. A. and that s the truth, by gosh! The tickets, too, didn't make you blue, as the durned things do tO-day. Why, M. A. Latin was slick as satin, and Math. was just like play. ti The perverting prism of athleticismf or so the pro- fessors say, it hadnit spoiled the white and pristine light of life at U. Va. When they went on drunks. they crept to their bunks, the boozers of that day, instead of prowling around College howling in this idiotic way; antlthe ribbons and frats. didnt get into spats, and a T. I. L. K. A. 01' any rib- bon man was taller by a span than the same men are tO-day; and the Eliis then were great big men, and even an 0. XV. L. to keep along at par as a literary star, had to know how to write and spell. The pink of perfection used to get the election. and they didn't try to pull any wool across the votersl ll spyersfl or to pull any wires, for there were not any wires to pull. One whiff of college spirit then, it' a man should happen near it. would lift and waft him miles and miles away; but now there. is not enough of the same all potent stulT in the Whole of the G. A. A. 138 to make every man in College quit. the useless quest of knowledge and buy a season ticket every day. 'Why, when I first struck this place, there was quite a little race for the front seats in the old Y. M. C. A.; but alas, from Mon- roe Hill to the end of Charlottes- ville you may hunt in vain for such a, sight to-day. In those good Old days lt was stale to say we ld lick 01d Yale, for we did it regularly every spring; but now we think it fine to shut out some prep-sehool nine! and tl old St. Albans l, did not do a thing. The Mag. of those old days used to blush at all the praise she got, until her stately head would bow; but 110W Frank Munsey, and the Harperls, and McClure, and all those sharpers, quite put the poor old lady on the bum. And last of all, degrees used to drop from 01? the trees just as easy as the Maple leaves to-day. 0 how I Wish that we were in the days that used to be, in the good old days of good old U. Va. I39 The Easter Air. any girl I knowmit fills in what would otherwise be embarrassing pauses. HI was an idiot to say anything about him? I remarked, gloomily, when she had finished the song. Music, however sweet, should not turn me from my purpose. , t I don't see why,'U she contradicted. It Well, it hasn't done any good? II No? She left the piano to take a seat on the sofa. II No, I said, resolved not to follow her. The man who sits beside Sue can not feel any angerehe forgets his grievances. II It worries you? I continued, II and hurts me, and that s all. Nothing is Changed? It How could it be different now? i she asked, resigned to the discussion. It You ought to have told me when I first came ! ii I But I didnt know you would do it? I objected. II After all, I haven't done anything so terrible? she pouted, and Sueis pout is a wonder of exasperation. It It is this way? I accused, more emphatically than was necessary, II you went to the Monday night german with him and gave him half your breaks, after refusing me! ,i It Is it wrong to dance with your partner? I, When she asks such questions, her eyes open wide and show her utter astonishment-she is pleased to appear piteously ignorant. t The next night, I said, steeling myself against a desire to tell her how pretty'she was, I you went with me, and not a single break did you give me. He got all he wanted! ,, He doesnit say so, she smiled, provokingly. Sue remembers every nice thing said to her or about her. tt Besides, I couldn't refuse without being rude, you know:', It You accomplished it very easily with me? She was convicted by her own words! It Did I, really-really? i, I Apparently? II Yesf she said, slowly, I the fact is, a lot depends on your man in a thing like thatea big lot? Sue's great weakness is saying biting things, things that make you feel small and wooden-headed. f iUE went to the piano and sang. She does this more opportunely than 141 It Wednesday night? I went on, almost angrily, llneither one of us took you, and he was at your side constantly! l' The statement of each outrage made me worse. ll Oh, yes! ' ' she agreed, sweetly; ll wasn't it just lovely of him? He kept me off the wall ! And last night at the Beta german too! i, I looked at her a moment in silence, and all anger left me. Sue is pretty to a subduing degree. . I Do you care anything for me at all?'l I surrendered, taking a seat by her. It Dont you know it? ,, Her tone would have been the same in asking for an umbrella at a down-town shop. ll Then what makes you carry on like this? ll ll Oh, it s in the air, I suppose? she said, lightly, It the gay and festive Easter air? II I fail to see the point,' I sulked. It Well, you must understand, sir, she exclaimed, merrily, llthat, through all the germans and drives and games in Easter week, another great game is being playedwthe game of hearts! i, ll You ire an adeptf I said with rather poor expression. ll I have to be? It Why? ll It Just to get attention, for if I didn't do that, you wouldnt think I was a bit attractive. You id die if nobody rushed me but you. Suels genius asserts itself at times. ll So you play at hearts? ll ll No, with hearts. They want to be played with, and it doesn't matter. Again I watched her silentlyefew can resist the temptation. But fmally a sense of wrong suffered urged me to play the fool. Who took you driving Tuesday morning? i, I asked, in assumed innocence. ll He did; you knew it already? And yesterday? ' He did. This time the answer was very loweSue has a charming way of telling disagreeable things nicely. ll To-morrow morning is my last Chance, I said. It May I take you driving as, thenr ' I m so sorry Ilve an engagement with vously. ' I 'm so glad you put him on my card; he is so nice? ll So very nice! ii It Everybody likes him, she concluded, dealing, as usual, in supeflatives. It I donltf I denied, rudely, and felt uncomfortable during the ominous pause that followed. It Will you break your to-morrowls engagement with him? ,i ll Of course not! l, 9 with him? She laughed ner- I42 3 l I! It You donit want to.' I ll No, indeed! ii ll As a matter of fact? I remarked, mildly, ll you and I are supposed to be in love with each otherq HYou dont mean it! I she exclaimed, in perfect surprise. b Who says so? ii II I expressed my feelings on the subject very forcibly, and you let me think you liked me-right much-more than anybody else? This was weak and eX- ceedingly unwisea-considering past situations. II Perhaps I did? she admitted. ll Is it so now? ii The utter foolishness of the question! ll Perhaps? ll Then why won,t you go driving with me to-morrow? Tl Because I cant; you know I eanltf'l There was real earnestness in her voice now, and it made me feel more eonhdent. b You could if you really wanted tof ' How perfectly absurd! L' she cried, thoroughly provoked. ll Don't be such a child! ii The earnestness of Sue's voice doesnlt always mean unbounded love. It Anyway, you go with him when you could go with me. You ye been doing it all Easter week, and it proves too much. I The Easter air? she laughed again; ll it is all the effect of the time. By the way, donit you think I ve put up with your catechism long enough? ii II Very well? I answered, stiflly; ll am I to take that as linal? i, ll What? ll ll What you just said, intimating you didnt want to hear any more of this? ll Oh-h! ii she drawled, a little smile rippling her lips, HI don't know-- perhaps.m i It You change quickly. Are you always like this with men? i, Sarcasm is my strong point. It Well, a lot depends on the man, she repeatedall his zeal and energy? It I m very sorry you came here for Easter? I said sadly, after a pause. Has it been so unpleasant for you? she mocked. ll I ive had a gorgeous time? II No doubtfl I answered, meanly significant. , II The games? she went on, It the germans, the walksaall have been deli- ciOus. And Sunday morning! I never had so many men to look at me in my life I Sue is not vain-she merely knows how pretty she is. I got up to leave, saying with dark solemnity, III. shall remember the long, happy hours i, ti Donlt do any such thing? she implored; II long hours are essentially tire- some? I went into the hall and picked up my hat. ll He , was coming down the other side of the lawn. I glanced back into the parlor where Sue stood looking 1'43 ; i L.- t out, sadly thoughtful, at the setting sun. I remembered she had said nothing about enjoying the drives; I thought her lips trembled in the red sunlight. My zeal and energy should not be lacking. In a.rnonunu5 both her handS'were hi nune; and, kn'tht the shghtau instant, her lips were shaded from the red sunlight. II You Ire going driving with me to-morrow morning , hzkn1IED Can.you geta buggyPIt IIYes,ifIhave to takf:rny'rivats! I H'YoucanItdothat,youknow, shesyud,shybn wVVhyPI H,Because--because you have no rhmdft II And you try to play with hearts after such a confession as that ! ' I ban- tered. I said, firmly. When II he a'e' came in. she was at the piano singing. Sue does this more opportunely than any girl I know. JAMES HAY, JR- t x .-.:; a aaL' ii 9V WTIJEQ. uixs I44 SLAPS. Made poetry a mere mechanic arty . . . . . . . . . . . . . KINSOLVING It His Wilt invites you by his looks to come, But When you knock, it never is at home? . . . . . . . . M. C. ELLIOTT tt In indolent vacuity at thoughtfl . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . JOE STLLES It In sooth, I know not why I am so sad. l' . . . . . . . . . . BEN WILLIS tt I saw and lovedf, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SWEETHEART SOMERVILLE tt Seven hours to law, to soothing slumber seven, 1 Ten to the world allot and all to heaven. . . . . . . CHIEF JUSTICE LADD tl He is the very pineapple of politeness.H . t. . . . . . . ROOSTER CAVES It Better to love amiss than nothing to have loved. . . . . . . . . . PILSON It Inspiring, bold John Barleycorn, What dangers thou caust make us scornf, . . . . . . . . AUSTIN BRANCH tl Ah, you iiavour everything ; you are the vanilla of society? BILLY LANCASTER tt Drink, pretty creature, drinkfl . . . . . . . . . . . . . . CAT MILLER tt Just at that age ,twixt boy and youth? . - . . . . . . . t . . '. KERN HAnd thou art long and lank and brown ' i As is the ribbed sea-sand.H . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BIG DICK COOKE thh sleep ! it is a gentle thing, Beloved from pole to polefl . ., . . . . . . . . . . . . CHOPNER HUNTER It The fair, the chaste, and unexpressive she.H . . CARRIE NATION LANCASTER tt i T were all one That I should love a bright particular star, And think to wed itfl. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MICOU tlAul I thought he had been valiant and so cunning in fence, I id have seen him damned ere I ,d have challenged him? . . . . . . , . . . MCINNIS tt When you do dance I Wish you a wave oi the sea That you might do nothing but thatfl . . . . . . . . . . . FINAL GIRL ll And if his name be George, I ,11 call him Peter, I45 100 - .' unai: 5:33., w, .- re For new-made honour doth forget ments namesf . . . . . . RIBBON GOAT Not marble nor the gilded monuments Of princes shall outlive this powerful rhyme. . . . . . . . . . CARLISLE tt For he being dead, with him is beauty slain. . . . . . . . . J. LIT JONES tt N ature did neVer put her precious jewels into a garret four stories highf, H. S. WORTHINGTON uA man of strife and a man of contention? . . . . . . . . . . . BRAWL-EY tt Patience, and shufHe the cardsf, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . THE PIKERS tt Why so pale and wan, fond lover P ,t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ST. JOHN tt When flowing cups pass swiftly roundW . . . . . . . . O. F. C.- GOATING - .,,.; ...........-a W W ANIZA TI 0 N s 02-- 1901-1902. MEMBERS. ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN VIRGINIUS DABNEY BRODIE CRUMP NALLE CHARLES COLVILLE TENNANT I49 JOHN WILSON SOM ERVILLE NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN JOHN JENNINGS GREENLEAF WILLIAM CHRISTIE BENET, JR. PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE BENJAMIN COLFMAN WILLIS RICHARD DICKSON COOKE 0 .$kakbm MVN 9N QNS Emtmmxl .8228 ow tag: 53me 4 mason HESS uohw oz :55 auuvcsau 5. n9:; .8 D .mvcaom Esmmmcwme E0 E5 582 mi ELI BANANA. Established at University of Virginia in 1878. FRATRES IN URBE. JUDGE GEORGE WATTS MORRIS THOMAS LAFAYETTE ROSSER, JR. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. WILLIAM HOLDING ECHOLS, B. 3., C. E. RICHARD HEATH DABNEY, M. A. Ph. D. WILLIAM GAY CHRISTIAN, M. D. JAMES MORRIS PAGE M. A., Ph. D. ACTIVE MEMBERS. PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE WILLIAM CONWAY WHITTLE, JR. BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS SAMUEL TROTTER CAVES JOHN WILSON SOMERVILLE OWSLEY BROWN JOHN JENNINGS GREENLEAF JOHN SCOTT WALKER ALLMAND BLOW ELLIOTT ALEXIS CORYDON HOBSON WILLIAM CHRISTIE BENET MILTON COURTRIGHT ELLIOTT NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN WARNER AMES JAMES CECIL HURT .t . ,,,,,, WINSTON PARRISH : WILLIAM CARRINGTON LANCASTER EDWARD BEVERLY HERNDON, JR. ALGERNON SIDNEY BUFORD, JR. . ; i . RUFUS NORMAN YARBROUGH A CHARLES CALDWELL TENNANT THOMAS CATESBY JONES ; CARROLL 0. ST. JOHN MALCOLM JOHNSTON TAYLOR CHARLES SCOTT BRENT, JR. SAMUEL BENET EDWARD DICKINSON TAYLOE T. I. L. K. A. WILSON FLOWERREE CARROLL VIRGINIUS DABNEY WILLIAM MORTON DEY CYRUS WILEY GRANDY, JR. CHARLES GRANDY HUNTER WILLIAM WILLIAMS MATHEWSON DON PRESTON PETERS HARRY BAYLOR TAYLOR ARTHUR BUCKNER HARRIS DANIEL DEE TALLEY THOMAS PINCKNEY BRYAN KARL OSTERHAUS ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN RICHARD DICKSON COOKE CHARLES CHEVES HASKELL LEWIS CARTER HARRISON JOHN AMBLER MASON BRODIE CRUMP NALLE EDWARD MAGRUDER TUTWILER, JR. ALBERT LONSDALE ROPER JOHN JANNEY LLOYD, JR. ' WALLER JAMESON BURNLEY LANKFORD JAMES WILLIAM HANDY PILSON CARL HALL DAVIS THOMAS HUGHES BRONSTON THIRTEEN CLUB. FOUNDED FEBRUARY 13TH, 1889. MOTTO : Superstitio 50111111 in animo inscii habitat.H MEMBERS. BRODIE C. NALLE ROBERT M. COLEMAN NATHAN L. BACHMAN RICHARD D. COOKE WILSON F. CARROLL WILLIAM C. BENET, JR. : WILLIAM C; WHITTLE BENJAMIN C. WILLIS ALLMAND B. ELLIOTT JOHN J. GREENLEAF 1 JOHN S. WALKER JOHN W. SOMERVILLE PHILIP P. STEPTOE x 151 MEMBERS. PHILIP PENDLETON STEPTOE NATHAN LYNN BACHMAN VIRGINIUS DABNEY ' BENJAMIN COLEMAN WILLIS . LEWIS CARTER HARRISON ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN A. CORYDON HOBSON STEPHEN MAZYCK OBRIEN . A. BUCKNER HARRIS : JOHN JENNINGS GREENLEAF JOHN A. MASON CHARLES SCOTT BRENT, JR. JOHN E. WILLIAMS ANGUS MCDONALD CRAWFORD CHARLES C. TENNANT ALLMAND BLOW ELLIOTT JOHN J. LLOYD, JR. WALLER JAMESON FRANKLIN C. HARRIS RUFUS N. YARBROUGH CARROLL C. ST.J0HN EDWARD M; TUTWILER, JR. DORSEY WATERS 152 HONORARY MEMBER. HON. DANIEL HARMON MEMBERS. POPULAR PETERS CUPID DEY STEP STEPTOE ZEKE CYBRIEN DIDDLE , GRANDY BROADY NALLE BOB COLEMAN BENNY WILLIS ARMADO , DOBIE TUT TUTWILER REV AMES LITTLE COCKE ALH PERKINS WALT SCOTT i MJUDGEH TENNANT ED, BURKS HJIMMIE MORAN W BILLY WHITTLE JOHNNIE WALKER CHOPNER HUNTER EDDIE , HHRNDON BUCK HARRIS BIG DICK COOKE CHOLLY , BRENT POLLY HOBSON HSID ' BUFORD ' OSTY , OSTERHAUS uJOHNNIEH LLOYD WILs CARROLL GEORGIE , ADAMS JACK GREENLEAF , BACH , BACHMAN WHISTLES,, HARRIS DICK BELL ' TIPPY JORDAN ' ZIP ' BENET MONK MACGILL K. WW BROWN POLLY POLLARD FELLOWS IN TOWN. MR. BULL HANCKEL MR. IRISH MURPHY MR. PAT. SMITH 153 TAR: mo 8523 St ESEBFN 0F bsv 8mm. P 043 :5 E5552 :umm wLm moZ meow $0 Sm 95 mocmccmaaa D5 805 03w $3? :83? a mo 33m 23 $ch 5: E :m ,w w: ,, - f1! '5 ... : Jo ,.$-xw1 - 52.s , , . -t: FOUNDED IN 1887. FRATER IN URBE. JOHN WOOD FISHBURNE MEMBERS. LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE ROBERT B. TUNSTALL ALBERT L. ROPER TOY DIXON SAVAGE ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE ' JOSEPH M. HARTFIELD CAROL M. NEWMAN EDWARD REINHOLD ROGERS 155 W. H M x ,1 . W . .m' mimww N KX .' xylA'IlilusiJ' + FOUNDED IN 1901. MOTTO : Dulce est Dissipare cum LibroW MEMBERS. ROBERT BAYLOR TUNSTALL ARMISTEAD MASON DOBIE AUSTIN THOMAS PLUMMER BRANCH I LEWIS PARK CHAMBERLAYNE WILLIAM HARRISON FAULKNER JOHN PATTERSON MADISON I JAMES HAY, JR. JAMES MORTON TOWNSEND WILLIAM LEIGH OFFICERS. MILTON C. ELLIOTT , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . K, President VIRGINIUS DABNEY.. . . . . . . . . . . . . A . . . . . .Vice-President COL. THOS. H. CARTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Treasurer MISS LOVING . . - . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . LSecretary S. T. CAVES . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Stage Manager MEMBERS. W. C. BENET MRS. H. B. BOONE H. B. BOONE , MRS. A. H. BUCKMASTER K. BROWN MRS. C. BUCKLE T. P. BRYAN MISS E. BURTHE AUSTIN BRANCH MISS H. BOLTON E. C. BURKS ' MRS; W. H. ECHOLS S. T. CAVES MRS. L. T. HANCKEL, JR. V. DABNEY MISS W. M. JONES A. B. ELLIOTT MISS S. D. JONES M. C. ELLIOTT MISS E. M. JONES C. W. GRANDY MISS B. LYONS J. J. GREENLEAF MISS F. LOVING M. C. HALL, JR. MISS M. MASTERS N. G. HENSHAW MRS. J. W. MALLET l L. C. HARRISON MISS J. PEYTON . A. C. NELSON MISS M. SOUTHALL i MISS C. THORNTON MISS H. M. WOLFE MISS ANNE LEE MISS L. WALKER MISS ROWELLE . M SS S. WOLFE I59 OFFICERS. BRODIE C. NALLE BEN C. WILLIS . ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE . ROBERT B. TUNSTALL 2 C. WILEY GRANDY, JR. 8 BRODIE C. NALLE . . . . . . . MEMBERS. WALTER F. SCOTT ROBERT B. TUNSTALL WILLIAM C. WHITTLE BENJAMIN C. WILLIS MORTON W. BAKER C. HARTWELL COCKE ALLMAND B. ELLIOTT BRODIE' C. NALLE DON P. PETERS JOHN W. SOMERVILLE LUKE M. WHITE HARRY B. TAYLOR W. CHRISTIE BENET D. D. TALLEY, JR. SAMUEL T. CAVES RICHARD D. COOKE WILLIAM M. DEY C. WILEY GRANDY, JR. CHARLES G. HUNTER JOSEPH C. STILES CHARLES S. BRENT, IR. JOHN S. WALKER EDWARD C. BURKS VIRGINIUS DABNEY ARMISTEAD M. DOBIE LEWIS C. HARRISON WM. W. MATHEWSON W. CABELL MOORE J. J. GREENLEAF W 160 . President . Vice-President . . Secretary and Treasurer Executive Committee . Leader EDWARD B. HERNDON, JR. RICHARD L. COOK J. WILLIAM H. PILSON ' KARL OSTERHAUS A. SIDNEY BUFORD, JR. MILTON C. ELLIOTT A. CORYDON HOBSON:k RUSSELL HARDY WILLIAM H. WHITE, JR. JOHN A. M SON PHILIP P. STEPTOE CHARLES P. STEARN?k WILLIAM C. LANCASTER JOHN J. LLOYD BRADLEY WALKER GRADUATE CLUB. Beatus est qui sapientiam inveniatf, OFFICERS. T. P. MCCARTNEY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President J. P. MCCALLIE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President G. W. PEYTON . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer MEMBERS. E. N. CALISCH J. L. NEWCOMB H. D. CURTIS T. D. SAVAGE R. C. FUGATE O. B. SEARS F. G. HAMNER T. MCN. SIMPSON, JR. C. HANCOCK LYMAN SKEEN W. A. LAMBETH C. R. THURMAN H. G. LAVINDER E. D. WATKINS J. P. MCCONNELL J. E. WILLIAMS EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. LYMAN SKEEN JOHN E. WILLIAMS I63 A Ghazel. The way-worn pilgrims reach the shrine at last; God,s mills grind out their grist full fine at last. The skilled interpreter may ponderrlong, 'But reads the meaning of each sign at last. t The herdsman seeking for his droves astray Hears the faint lowing of the kine at last. The fainting sailors wrecked upon the reef Lay hold upon the rescuersT live at last. The home-bound traveler through the gusty night Sees from his cot the lamp-light shine at last. Yea, though a lifetime be the price I pay, Yet will I serve and she be mine at last. GOOSE-QUILL. I64 INEZ. Below the palms, above the flowers, Where tra de-winds die in passing through, A hall, with north and southward towers And carven gateway low between, Looks westward o'er the swelling blue; And of this castle one was queen, Whose dreamy beauty scarce is known To maids of some less burning zone. For through her limbs the passion leaped That leaped in proud Castile of yore, And deeply were her dark eyes steeped In those soft, liquid mysteries Which dimmed the eyes of that old Moor Who read the sky for destinies ; And whose Arabic signs entwine The arms of her ancestral line. But as the clouds rose lazily Prepare my ships to reach those coasts, One eve above the fields of cane, She cried, where kings shall yield their crownsl She saw upon the Carib sea And bid the sculptors of their hosts Great galleons speeding on their way, Engrave the Lion and the Tower Below the Red and Gold of Spain. Upon the portals of their towns, Toward the fabled lands that lay Where, mindful of the vesper hour, Beyond all utmost former quest, Cibola and her cities seven Far down within the Golden West. Shall send up Spanish hymns to heaven! Then, at the springing of the breeze, They pushed her vessels from the sand; And, save the keeper of the keys, She left with all her retinue, And rounded from that pleasant land And vanished from the old man's view. To join the sails that, one by one, Dropped down toward the setting sun. Rank wave the palms, wild blow the flowers Unto that isle she came no more, Around that castle desolate; They say, but had a happy quest; The wind goes sighing through the towers, For seamen drifting past a shore Which gaze upon an empty shore, By night, long since, in unknown seas And lift above a broken gate, And far down in the Golden West, Through which fair Inez came no more . Heard notes so dulcct on the breeze To pluck away the weeds that wave That they declared Inez alone Above the ancient warden's gravc, Possessed so wild and rare a tone. I66 CALICO CLUB MOTTO. Hearts Bruised at all Hours. OFFICERS. JACK SOMERVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President BILLY LANCASTER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President ALBERT ROPER '. . . . . . . V . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer VALENTINE PILLY PILSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Winner ORDINARY CALICOISTS. NALLE TUTWILER LEAKE BURKS Big Buck HARRIb Little Buck ELLIOTT both . WILLIS COLEMAN HALL TENNANT Mascot.................CUPIDDEY MOT'PO: Dum Onus per Vitam, Vivamus per Viam. A. B. HARRIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Circuit Rider N. L. BACHMAN. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . v . . .Senior Wardcn J. J. LLOYD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Parish Clerk PARSONS. SINNERS. A. B. HARRIS E. M. TUTWILER N. L. BACHMAN J. J. GREENLEAF J. A. MASON 0. BROWN P. P. STEPTOE B. C. WILLIS A. M. CRAWFORD C. C. ST. JOHN F. C. HARRIS F. MARTIN J. J. LLOYD W. JAMESON I67 E. P. DANDRIDGE . T. H. DANIEL. . S. J. LAWSON . J. J. GRAVATT. Y. M. C. A. R. B. MUNFORD, JR. . R. C. BEALE, JR. H. B. TAYLOR . CHARLES HANCOCK . T. H. DANIEL . President . Vice-President . Treasurer . Corresponding Secretary . Recording Secretary . General Secretary CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES. C. J. FAULKNER, JR. . B. P. KERFOOT. . G. C. TABB . J. B. DILWORTH. S. J. LAWSON . E. T. COMER C. W. GRANDY, JR. . R. B. TUNSTALL, JR. 168 . Bible Study . Missionary . District Prayer-Meeting . Religious Service . Chapel . Membership . Sunday School . Finance . Advertising . Relief . Reception COLLEGE CHOIR. FIRST TENORS. POLLARD LANKFORD MCINNIS WILEY - GENTRY SECON D TENORS. BEALE KINSOLVING GRANT F IRST BASSES. HAMNER WHITTLE SECOND BASSES. HANCOCK WOOD FAULKNER I69 F lying Leaves. Look how along the lawn the leaves are iiyirig, Dancing and running races in their glee, The coming Winter and their death defying, In the first joy and flush of being free; While ever mocking them, the idle gust Lures them still further from the parent tree. Dance, little leaves, While yet you may; you must At last bow humbly to your doom as W6, For all the paradise you seek is dust. OOOSE-QUILL. 17o OFFICERS. NATHAN L. BACHMAN . . . . .President LESLIE GOODLOE . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President' FONTAINE MARTIN . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer BRADLEY WALKER . . A , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Toastmaster BANQUET: March zlst, 1902. COLOR: Anything Red. JOHN B. MARTIN HERBERT C. MORROW EDWARD L. WILLIAMS EDWIN D. WATKINS C. T. JONES FONTAINE MARTIN ENGINEERS. ALBERT R. ERSKINE T. GRAY GENTRY MEDS. THOMAS H. DANIEL MARTIN DONELSON FLETCHER JORDAN GARLAND S. WILEY JOHN A. GENTRY HOWARD L. WALKER LAW. NATHAN BACHMAN PAUL DULANEY LESLIE GOODLOE WILLIAM R. HARRISON CLIFFORD E. HAYES T. F. P. HENDERSON RICHARD C. HOBSON JACOB MOORE J. H. MORAN B. WALKER RICHARD S. REYNOLDS T. ROWE WARING SAMUEL P. WALKER POST-GRADUATE. JAMES P. MCCALLIE I71 Arkansas Club. OFFICERS. OSCAR THWEATT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President JOHN WARING LEWIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President JAMES H. CHESNUTT. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary ROBERT W. HUIE, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toastmaster MEMBERS. ROBERT W. HUIE, JR. ERNEST WINFIELD SCOTT JOSEPH MOSBY HORNER JOHN WARING LEWIS . H. JOPLIN HALE OSCAR THWEATT FREDERICK HOTZE LEO J. MUNDT JAMES H. CHESNUTT' I72 United we stand, divided we fall. OFFICERS. CHARLES S. BRENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . President BENJAMIN C. WILLIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President JOSEPH M. HARTFIELD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer T. HUGHES BRONSTON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Cork Puller MEMBERS. ACADEMIC. LAW. J. M. ARNOLD, JR. E. N. FULTON OWSLEY BROWN J. M. HARTFIELD C. S. BRENT B. D. GOFF T. H. BRONSTON J. P. JOHNSTON E. P. DARGAN C. G. MIDDLETON J. H. BULLOCK B. P. KERFOOT J. B. FAULKNER G. C. TABB . J. J. GREENLEAF S. M. O,BRIEN W. C. FERGUSON P. B. WEISSINGER. W. S. HACKWORTH MEDICAL. IN F ACULTATE. B. W. BAYLESS J. W. WINSTON DOCTOR JAMES BELL BULLITT J. A. DIXON B. C. WILLIS DOCTOR ROBERT MILLIGAN COLEMAN H. N. MASON N ORTH CAROLINA CLUB. T. D. SAVAGE G. C. GREGORY P. V. ANDERSON C. H. PEETE C. A. WOODARD P. V. ANDERSON M. C. ELLIOTT G. C. GREGORY T. D. SAVAGE W. P. SIMPSON HONORARY MEMB ERS. DR. P. B. BARRINGER OFFICERS. MEMBERS. W. H. ANDERSON I74 . President . . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . Toastmaster . Cork Puller A. B. ELLIOTT E. M. GAYLE C. H. PEETE E. M. SHAFFER C. A. WOODARD DR. W. A. LAMBETH WILLIAMDEL.W0RSLEY...........................President J.LITTLET0NJONES............................Vice-President E. LEE DOUGLAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer J.J.HARRIS................................T0astmaster M.VANMCKIBBEN..............................CorkPuller MEMBERS. F. BLUTHENTHAL, Atlanta DOYLE CAMPBELL, Monticello WILLIAM N. CARTER, Columbus R. S. COHEN, Augusta E. LEE DOUGLAS,At1anta J. G. COLLINS, Hood J. LITTLETON JONES, Newman A. L. LINDEN, Hartwell M. VAN MCKIBBEN, Jackson WILLIAM L. MASON, McRae L. B. NALLEY, Villa Rica J. J. HARRIS, Sandersville R. P. SPENCER,JR.,COlu1T1bus A. H. STODDARD, JR., Savannah WILLIAM DE L. WORSLEY, Columbus FLOWER: Cotton Blossom. COLORS: Red and Black. BANQUET DAY: March 22d. I75 SOUTH CAROLINA CLUB. Organized February 16th, 1902, for two purposes. Ist. To get our names in print, and 2nd. To have a blow-out, provided suflicient funds could be raised. OFFICERS. CHRISTIE BENET, JR.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President BAXTER S. MOORE. . . . . . . . . a . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President No agreement could be reached as to Treasurerj MARION BRAWLEY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Dispenser W. C. LATIMER. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -. . . . . . .Corkscrew CONSTABULARY. CHRISTIE BENET, JR.' B. S. MOORE S. MCGOWAN BENET W. J. MULDRAW MARION BRAWLEY HENRY H. ORR J. H. ELLIOTT, JR. S. S. PEARLSTINE C. C. HASKELL R. S. SIMONS W. C. LATIMER L. C. MCC. SMYTHE A. A. MANNING G. P. WHITTINGTON I76 MISSOURI CLUB. OF F ICERS. WILLIAM CARROLL CONNETT President. AMBROSE MADISON RICHARDSON Vice-President. LEONIDAS RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE Secretary and Treasurer. OTIS B. SEARS Toastmaster. SAMUEL GLOVER RAY Foam Blower. BANQUET COMMITTEE. JOHN P. BOOGHER WILLIAM CARROLL CONNETT ROBERT HORACE KERN BANQUET : April 26. MOTTO : You We got to show us. YELL. Chee Hee ! Chee Haw I Chee Haw I Haw, Haw! Missouri I Missouri I Hee Haw ! Hee Haw! MEMBERS. WILLIAM CARROLL CONNETT SAMUEL GLOVER RAY AMBROSE MADISON RICHARDSON ROBERT HORACE KERN OTIS B. SEARS JOHN P. BOOGHER JAMES CECIL HURT LEONIDAS RUTLEDGE WHIPPLE 120 I77 ALABAMA CLUB. MOTTO. COLORS. Here We Rest? Mulatto and Black. YELL. Alabama, Tongs and hammer! Sis! Boom! Bah! Here we rest! Here we rest! Rah! Rah! Rah! OFFICERS. LOUIS BAUM. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , .President FRANK E. NABERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President EDWARD T. COMER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer SIGOURNEY F. NININGER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toastmaster MEMBERS. LOUIS BAUM S. F. NININGER, EUGENE CALLAWAY F. E. NABERS J. P. BODDIE STEVE SMITH PETER FORCE O. B. PATTON, JR. R. W. BOLLING A. S. TAYLOR T. L. HOWARD r E. R. ALEXANDER E. T. COMER, JR. L. M. WHITE H. T. LAY A. W. DONEGAN KENNETH BRADFORD T. S. HUNTER C. L. MARKS H. W'. SMITH F. C. WINKLER ' E. M. TUTWILER, JR. 178 BANQUET DAY: May 18th. MOTTO : Remember the Alamo ! OF F ICERS. JOSHUA M. ADKISSON. R. LEE KEMPNER. J. MILTON YARBOROUGH . A. B. HARRIS FRANCIS B. SEWALL . MAVERICKS. CARY M. ABNEY S. RANDALL GRIFFIN . FERDINAND GROOS T. DUDLEY ROUNTREE J. H. SHELTON ARTHUR F. MEGARR JOHN H. HOUGHTON JOHN C. JONES. I79 . President . Vice-President . Secretary and Treasurer . First Cowpuncher . Chief Brander GEORGE E ADAMS FRANK C. HARRIS WILLIAM GROOS JOHN W. HART JACOB MOORE ; . A PATRON SAINT OF RANDALL BUILDING 'm. 'er EPISCOPAL HIGH CI-IOOL CLJB. COLORS : Maroon and Black. YELL: Hicah, Hicah, Hicah! Vir-gin-i-a Episcopal High School! Rah, rah, rah I MEMBERS. WARNER AMES BERKLEY M. FONTAINE CARROLL C. ST. JOHN HARRY C. BERKELEY CHARLES C. HASKELL CHARLES P. STEARIVS JOSEPH R. A. BRUCE WYTHE L. KINSOLVING PHILIP P. STEPTOE THOMAS P. BRYAN E. RUFFIN JONES EDWARD D. TAYLOE C. HARTWELL COCKE JOHN C. JONES, JR. CHARLES C. TENNANT ANGUS MCD. CRAWFORD STUART J. LAWSON HUGH H. TROUT JOHN L. CRENSHAW JOHN J. LLOYD, JR. EDWARD V. VALZ EUGENE F. DAVIS CHARLES P. MACGILL HERBERT D. WATERS STAIGE DAVIS RICHARD D MICOU HUGH S. WORTHINGTON JOHN P. DULANY BRODIE C. NALLE RUFUS N. YARBROUGH JOHN H. ELLIOTT, JR. JOHN W. RILEY HONORARY MEMBERS. L. M. BLACKFORD, M. A. PROF. W. H. ECHOLS, B. 8., C. E. A. R. HOXTON, A. B. W. H. RANDOLPH T. K. NELSON 181 WOODBERRY CLUB. OFFICERS. XVM. TAYLOR, JR. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ., President ROBERT BALDWIN MYERS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President CARTER L. DILLARD . - . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . Secretary and Treasurer MASCOT : FAVORITE SONG : Coleman Carter Walker Beans YELL: Woodberry Rah I Woodberry Rah ! Woodberry, VVoodberry, R311 ! Rah ! Rah ! FAVORITE DRINK : COLORS : Red Raven SplitsW ' Orange and Black. MEMBERS. MORTON BAKER WM. MINOR BRYAN GRAHAM CAMERON CARTER L. DILLARD EDMUND PENDLETON DANDRIDGE JAMES HAY, JR. ROBERT LEMMON ROBERT BALDWIN MYERS HENRY H. ORR HUGH, NELSON PAGE WILFORD SMITH JACK SOMERVILLE JOSEPH CLAY STIIES WM. TAYLOR, JR. JOHN S. WALKER WM. H. WHITE, JR. 182 550014 05.9; COLOR: Crimson. MOTTO: Nunc est tempus bibendi. OFFICERS. JAS. B. FAULKNER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Head Master CHAS. R. WILLIAMS L Monitors CHAS. S. BRENT, JR. j ' MEMBERS. CHAS. S. BRENT, JR. DANIEL D. TALLEY, JR. T. HUGHES BRONSTON CHAS. R. WILLIAMS JAMES B. FAULKNER FRED W. BARGER CHAS. L. MARKS . C. TATE SCOTT HERBERT E. MORROW MALCOLM J. TAYLOR JAS. H. MORAN RICHARD C. HOBSON GEORGE E. ADAMS R. E. L. CHUMBLEY HONORARY MEMBERS. BRADLEY WALKER VIRGINIUS DABNEY 183 AND REMNANTS OF THE PUNKADOO TRIBE. MOTTO. COLORS. Doggone your little buttons, three columns and last teacher! Orange and Blue. YELL. Q U-n-i-v-e-r-s-i-t-y S-c-h-o-o-l! 3 Rah! Rah! Rah! . , 3: TEXT: Ye shall see the abomination 0f desolation, spoken of by Daniel the Prophet, standing y where it ought not Get him that readeth understand3. '3 FAVORITE DISH: Johnsonlg Calf Hash. 3 FAVORITE NOVEL: McCabeis Binghanfs Latin Grammar. 3 OFFICERS. GEORGE W. PEYTON . . . . . . . King JOHN PATTERSON MADISON Vice-President BALLARD PRESTON BOULWARE Senior Warden LEWIS HINTON BOSHER . . . Jester ;. LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE . . . . . . . Lamp-post Holder ; MEMBERS. 3 LEWIS HINTON BOSHER AUBIN LEE BOULWARE BALLARD PRESTON BOULWARE MARION PORTER BRAWLEY LEWIS PARKE CHAMBERLAYNE JOHN A. CUTCHINS CHARLES H. DAVIS JAMES H. DRAKE, JR. JAMES NATHANIEL DUNLOP NEVILLE GRATIOT HENSHAW JOHN CLARKE JACK THOMAS CATESBY JONES R. LEE KEMPNER HENRY CARRINGTON LANCASTER WILLIAM CARRINGTON LANCASTER STUART CARLISLE LEAKE 3 JOHN PATTERSON MADISON 3 HENRY ALEXANDER MATTHEWS 3 SOLOMON S. PEARLSTINE 3 GEORGE WILLIAM PEYTON ' 3 THOMAS R. PRICE, JR. 3 EDWARD REINHOLD ROGERS PAUL PETERKIN SHAFER k WILFORD WALLACE SMITH CHARLES COLVILLE TENNANT J. MORTON TOWNSEND WILLIAM HILL URQUHART WALTER. MORRIS WHITLOCK FRANCIS BYRD WINSTON ROBERT TUNSTALL WINSTON JAMES DUNLOP WISE RUFUS N. YARBROUGH 184 j . .III ; E li:ll ' . IIIIII:: F 3?2K 2 llll-au $6. 030x . .1130: Wu . 8'. lurn$, ka. ' ' a '30; -::::'- -'3-';' x K '- rim .l-l-yzlgll' y; mm- 31: . ululqllra :1. ? . , . - .37 ,0- l- .r . 473' D I , ' A I I.. .. 631:: 53 DJ 0 0 EV COLORS: Red and Black. MOTTO: Perseverantia Vincit omnia. 2 YELL. i Red and Black! Cowack, Cowack, Cowack! . y Keno! Kino! McGuire! 1? l y PATRON SAINT: St. Patrick. BANQUET: St. Patriclds Day. ' OFFICERS. DONALD MCK. BLAIR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President 5 JAMES M BALL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Vice-President 5! CHARLES S. MCVEIGH . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Secretary and Treasurer 3 J. MCCAW TOMPKINS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Cork Puller ; ROBERT W. DANIEL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toastmaster i x MEMBERS. 'h D. MCK. BLAIR L. C. HARRISON A. C. HOBSON J. M. BALL A. S. BUFORD C. P. STEARNS C. S. MCVEIGH H. N. MASON J. J. GRAVATT J. MCC. TOMPKINS J. A. MASON J. C. STILES R. W. DANIEL D. D. TALLEY W. S. HOEN J. W. RIELY R. F. MASON 185 MOTTO : No1i retrorsum ireN OFFICERS. THOMAS PINCKNEY BRYAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President RUFUS NORMAN YARBROUGH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President GRAHAM CAMERON . V . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer CHARLES COLVILLE TENNANT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Toastmaster F AVORITE SONG. u JUSt a Little Bit off the Topf, COLORS. BANQUET NIGHT. Blue and White. - Christmas Eve. MEMBERS. THOMAS P. BRYAN GRAHAM CAM RON JAMES N. DUNLOP TYLER HUNDLEY WILLIAM C. LANCASTER HENRY C. LANCASTER STUART C LEAKE . THOMAS R. PRICE, JR. CHARLES C. TENNANT W. HILL URQUHART RUFUS NORMAN YARBROUGH I86 '9, ., f ' I , Z . M Jflrll gfj f ,R :2; ! MUNSOIJ ; J JQOa. 3 r: K1 MEMPHIS UNIVERSITY SCHOOL CLUB. OFFICERS. JAMES WEST PEGRAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .President SAMUEL POLK WALKER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Vice-President FONTAINE MARTIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Secretary and Treasurer RICHARD CAPERS HOBSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Grafter FAVORITE SONG: Home, Sweet Home? COLORS: Red and Blue. BANQUET NIGHT: Any'Old Time. h A MOTTO: Make 01' Break. MEMBERS. WILLIAM C. FOULKES JOHN D. MARTIN FONTAINE MARTIN RICHARD C. HOBSON JAMES W. PEGRAM ALBERT R. ERSKINE HOWARD L. WALKER SAMUEL P. WALKER CARY N. WEISIGER Dusky Definitions. THE e XF'W-A large, orange letter won 011 the athletic field, and ever after- wards worn by the proud owner in all places except the drawing-room, Where its appearance has been prohibited. THE LAW ELECmeN.--Awful confusion, a horrible chaos, where red-hot wires hum and fights are freely fought. THE VALENTINE lh,N.-Chie who profusely thanks girls for valentines they never sent him, and fmds out his mistake two weeks afterward. What a bitter pill, son! AN EASTER GIRL. --A beauty, a superb diplomat, an untiring creature, a per- petual smile, a Hash of sunlight a wonder! A GauteA pin wearing a boy. A STUmaNTrleI'eauing unknown in these parts. A QUEEN. to an Easter game, A11 unseen beautv whom, to Oblioee vour friend, vou Will take . b y ' .1 Tm; SOCIETY MANeA dress suit, a stream of talk, and a lost degree. THE MSEIMIJ; TlamL-nA bunch of endeavors and amplifled cocoas. A FINALS Gluin-WAU Easter girl, and more Of it. 188 I Lost-A Hunting-Ground. SCENE LeMiss Daisy LightfootIs Conservatory. Miss Daisy Lightfoot, a prospeciz've Easier girl, sz'tz'z'ng 072 a rustic awarlz. Cupid, wearing around 152's neck tile sign, II Lost-A Hmzz'z'ng-Grozmdf stmzdsyz'nfront qf izer. Cupid tsadlyf-Miss Lightfoot, the last time I saw you we were both very happy, werenItwe? I had helped you on With young Sportive, you know. Now U26 505.0 it ,s all very different I Miss Lightfoot tezzcoumg-z'nglyyeI ,m 50 sorry, Cupid! What can I do to help you P Cupid Icrz'es outrz'glzzQeNothing. N -nobody c-can help me. Miss Lightfoot-Ah, that ,5 too bad! What Is the trouble? That sign around your neck says you We lost something ; What is it? Cupid-A hunting-ground. Miss Lightfoot Uauglzs lzearizljo Come, Cupid ; that Is nothing to cry about! You have so many hunting-grounds, you know. Cupid IsullgnZyy-But this was such a good one. Miss LightfooteNow doth be cross, and I 11 tell you a scheme I Ive thought out that Will give you a hunting-ground to make up for your lost one. Cupid tskeptz'calmeHumph! What is it ? Miss Lightfoot tentlmsz'astz'cthell, I Im going to the University for Easter week, you know, and if I help you and you help me, dorft you think we could fmd a lovely one there. Cupid tdz'sgusledZyy-Pshavv! That ,s exactly Where the lost one is. I donIt think much of your scheme! Miss Lightfoot-Oh, how interesting! Tell me about it! How did you lose it? Where is it? Do you hunt much there? :2 Cupid-You ask so many questionsejust like a woman! Miss Lightfoot qumdedy-I think you ,re a very rude little boy, Cupid. Cupid tdryz'ng Ms eyes will; lzz's bowstrz'ngyeRude! Of course I Im rude! If you had as many women to fool With as I have, you ,d be positively ungodly! 189 Miss Lightfoot t7'eszgvzedlvm-Tell me about the lost llunting-ground, Cupid ; and donlt be disagreeable. I CupideIt ,s this way: for a good many years, hundreds of menethey ,re called that up theree-and girls have gone out to the University cemetery every Easter week to settle definitely the questions of love, marriage, and life; and I generally hide in the cedars or behind the tombstones, and shoot my arrows at them with great effect. It Is great sport ; but I cant do it any more. Miss Lightfoot-vI donlt see Why. Cupide-The truth is, my dear Miss Lightfoot, graveyard lovers are things of the past, because whenever there s a fight at the University, it comes off in the cemetery, and the hghting streak is on with awful vigor up there this year. The number of men carried senseless from the scene is forty-nine' ; slighter casualties are not recorded. Consequently, lovers donlt frequent the spot any longer. Miss Lightfootetpersz'sfenDeBut Why do a few fights prevent people going there ? i Cupid timpnssivdyytlf you were a Virginia man, you Id shudder at the merest possibility of being interrupted in an amorous f?le-d-lgic by a bloody, bruised-up lighter, suddenly springing before you. A prize-fightefs ring is not very well suited to be the scene of Easter tricks, anyway. So here I am, my hunting-ground lost, and not another like it in seven States. Miss Lightfoot--Do hghts take place every day? CupideCertainly; the average is eight and a half a week. If the ninnies want to light, Why dont they do it in the gymnasium ? What pleasure they can get from going out there and running all over dead people, I canlt see! Miss Lightfoot-It ,5 too bad, ian it, Cupid? Cupid tsDz'z'efulZyy-I lve one consolation, though, it ,s as hard on the girls as it is on me. There ,5 nothing doing for any of us! Miss Lightfoot Q?r77z410-Cupid, I lve made a resolutioneI ,m going to restore that University cemetery to such Easter popularity as you never dreamed of. Cupid-Pooh! Miss Lightfoot-Will you help me With the men I take out there? Thavtlis, if I need any help. Cupid tscomfullyy-Oh, yes! But if you take any, you Ill be sorry for it. See if you donlt! SCENE II.wU11iversity Cemetery During Easter Week. Miss Daisy Light- foot, sz'm'lzg on tile grass by a imnbszmze; Mr. Dawson Rowe beside X267. Cupid, invisible, perclzed on Miss Lightfoot's slzoula'er, still wears lzz's sign. Miss LightfooteThey tell me there have been lots of lights out here this session. Is that true, Mr. Rowe? 190 Cupid tank? to Miss szglzz'fooOeYou id better keep off that subject. Mr. Rowe-eYes. The fact is-ahern! Let is go on to that grove yonder on the golf links. Cupid Urz'umx Izmztyy-I told you so! Miss Lightfoot-Shut up, Cupid! t T0 Xilr. lxiowej Oh, no! Let is stay here ; this is so much nicer. CMockz'nglyJ There is no danger of a fight this afternoon. Mr. Rowe tgloomz'Zyy-J donit know. You canit .be sure about these things. tHe relapses into 5276an Cupid-Didnit I tell you so? Miss Lightfoot tvexedy-JYou ire such an idiot, Cupid! tA sozmd of flami- aiz'ng blows 2's lzeam', and tau; men, figlu'z'ng fizrz'ously, appear. 0726' lms a black eye, a k720i 07oz 122's forebead, and a bloodyfisf; tlze otlzer slzows a ?zosefrom which file blood pours, and his painted Zips reveal a space wlzere a footlz ought to 126. They are dressed in a Um'verszy manis usualjtglztz'ng ga rbj Cupid U0 Miss Liglzifoof, wlzo Izas lzasz'zZy 5757ng to lzer feeOeeNext time I speak you ill listen to me! The mills of the gods grind Miss Lightfoot 00 Mr. IxiozeleyeOh, let is go! let is run! How terrible! tHe grasps lzer lzcmd and leads ller away, 072 a rzmj SCENE HLeSame People as Above, in the Woods a Hundred Yards West of the Cemetery. Two Minutes After Scene 11. Mr. Rowe Ue7mierlyyeWere you frightened much? Miss Lightfoot tpmztz'ng'y-Noeyesea little bit. Cupid tslzools an arrow ai Rowe, and sclz'loguz'zex at z'nft'mials-e-By Jove! W hat was that? ii Do you love me ? ii tSXzoots another arrowy What? More of it! My! he talks rubbish well. ii Look up at me.ii Now I wonder what he wants her to do that for. QSlzooz's a Mini arrowj He is asking her again-he is put his arme veil your eyes, 0 Venuslehe ise-he is kissed her. SCENE IV.eA Parlor with Windows on the Lawn. Miss Lightfoot. i Cupid. Miss Lightfoot-eYou havenit your sign on, Cupid. Where is it ? 191 Cupid Onerrz'lwwl think you could hnd it out there in the woods to the west of the cemetery. I ,11 never wear that sign again! I Miss LightfooteThen your hunting-ground iSIYt lost? Cupide-No, indeed! You see I Ive refilled my quiver and tightened my bow- string. If I dth bring down some big game, I ,11 be Miss Lightfoot tscvereZyy-Cupid! Cupid UzyzmwlyyeShot by my own arrows! I Im starting out now on a com- plete round of all the boarding-houses here. You taught me an invaluable lesson yesterday in the woods. Miss Lightfoot-Oh, did I, really ? How, Cupid? What was it? Cupid-That Prince Cupid never lacks a hunting-ground at the University ; the whole place is a reserve full of wondrous game, and no one can hunt there except me. It Is the best hunting-ground in the worldethat is, during Easter week! 192 Contradictions. Love like a whiling-s form Des true iion blows : - Love is the incense-hrea th 0 f worship, wazm And quivering round the dear-helovedhs form Lihe sunlight round a rose. Love is a lwiliglzt gleam Rosy against the grey, Dim as the faded memory of a dream ; Love is the burning lord of life, whose beam Siarlles the night with day. Love is the brimming cup Of lifehs best wine; Love is the T an talus slream which none can sup, T he grapes for which in vain our hands reach up, Up lo the T an talus vine. G OOSE- Q UILL. 13c 193 Henry Martin This courtly ringer of the chapel bell Will soon ring out the sessionhs passing knell; But ere he lays his hand upon the rope . He turns to bid us all a' dignified farewell. e The Fable of Anxious Louie, and Why He , Didnlt Suit. who bore the Euphonious title of Louie. He was a Wise Mark. On Saturday evenings, after extracting the milk from the cow, he would repair to the General Store and, having seated himself on the counter, would proceed to enliven the agricultural conversation by such brilliant and novel witticisms as: X Why did the Hen Cross the Road? ll and ii When is a door not a doorP'i and so on ad 110115170111; and he never failed to make a Pile-driver hit. Everybody said Louie was the Durndest, Smartest boy in Seven Counties. One day there was a great commotion, when it was learned that Louie's Uncle Abner had gotten the wrong bottle and taken Dr. Sander's Spavin Eradicator ' instead of his usual Evening Bonnet of XXX Rhottghutt. So this poor Printer rode in the Long Buggy with the Black Topknots, and that will be about all from Louiels Uncle Abner. After due process in the Law Court, Louie inherited con- siderable of the Government Posters, for his Uncle was a Tight man in more ways than one. About this time, the confines of Louieis domicile became too diminutive, the Jug of Ambition began to Buzz beneath his Cephalic covering, and the inevitable conviction was pushed at. him that it was a Clever Play to go to College and give the world the benefit of his Solomonic Wisdom. The depart- ure of the Village Comedian was an event from which his fellow-citizens reckoned time, and it was unanimously declared that he would be a Star Performer at the College and a Prince amongst his fellow-students. On arriving in College, Louie proceeded to invest in a College Cap and pin, and began to get close to the way things were Manipulated. In a few clays he knew all about Frats, and it worried him considerable. There were some Frats he ll Just wouldnlt Join? and he prepared several neat speeches which he intended handing out to them when they insisted on his becoming a member. He was also afraid that some crowd that he did not like would overcome him with Booze and Goat him when he was in an Alcoholic Coma. But Louie was worry- ing himself unnecessarily. The nearest he came to being Goated was the Kidd- ing which was Donated from all quarters. After the lapse of a short interval, it became apparent to him that his great natural talents and abilities were not 0 NCE upon a time in the Rural Metropolis, there lived a Learned Youth, I95 appreciated, so he began to drop in on his acquaintances who had been Favored, but it did not reach. On his next Tack, he gave a series of Free Lunches, Beer Teas, and Oyster Suppers, and Gouged a Cavity in Uncle Abneris Wad that would have qued that Worthy Man a Quick Finish were it not for the fact that he was already doing The Fire Dance and other specialties, but there was nothing happening for Louie . At last he Pried his way into what he was told was the most exclusive Frat in College, being no less than the celebrated Alpha Sigma Sigma, and for several days he slept on his Feet and converted his Mantel into a Lunch Counter. When the Truth rose up and Smote him that he was the Entire Machinery in this organization, he became disgusted and left Col- lege, the only piece of emblematic Junk that adorned his Garments being the College pin he had acquired on his arrival. ' ' Moral: Many are called, but few are Choesn. i HENSHAw and HOEN. IiNOW THY FATE. IT LAYS IN YOUR HAND CCLEOTA39 THE WONDERFUL ORIENTAL PALMIST REVEALS ALL. orary membership in the Wash, the society editress-ship in next yearts Topics, and the flrst vacant positien as Sibyl in the tt School of Athens? CORKS AND CURLS, during Easter week, succeeded in securing Leota, who knows the past, present, and future, to read the hands of some of the most prominent men in College. When we called for prominent men to offer them- selves 0n the altar of College spirit and support the reputation of alma mater and the new Cleopatra tsee Topics passing, exactly six hundred and twelve men, modest but self-sacrificing, stepped forward in a body. Of these Her Majesty Leota herself selected the fortunate ones. B Y OFFERING the most extraordinary inducements, including an hon- I97 XVheu the seekers after knowledge stepped into the 111yste11ious 13aViliou. adorned with life- 9i7eL1 paintings of liOOZV the Bulgarian YVllLl Man who lives oan L311 eraelLeLl 1ee a11L1 1311L3111o- seltzer 2111Ll Lli11e9 but once 21 Vear theV 13ehelL1 the Engtian Queen a1raVeLl in a venerable 13eL1-L1uilt of Oriental pattern and 211321ir of Turkish trousers 13urehaseL1 when Mr9.Arou11 al RasehiLl 13ro lLe u13 houselL Lee13- iug, and with her golden locks of ebony hue aeHowiug LloVV 11 her 13aLlL , 21 21121 Seu- ator Gold, of Clarke County. Taking each of the pilgrims to the shrine by the scruff oftlieueelL, shL 11111115311111 all of a heap into the corner of the tent of my stery , 2111L1 seizing the f1119t hand that 1311L31eeteL1 from the li11113 13i1e of 2111119 and legs, she began in a low 11a13iL1 monotone fixing her Victim with her L1litteri1111 eyes. 13m C. 1YiLLI.9.-YL31111 line of. lifeereuiarkahle. You will live to see your 9011 President of the G. A A. of the University of Virginia. XYell, well, well 1 your mirth li11e 2113solutelV astounding. Never in my tweutV wars of experience have I ever 13e11elL1 its equal. In Vo our eaer Vouth Vou must have taken a large dose of l21uL1hi11L1 gas, from the effects 01 which you have never recovered. You are 2111 nerves. Your nervous system constitutes by far the largest part of your 211121to111y. You think that life is a continuous 111i11strel show, but the time is not far Llistaut when you will see that this is not to be This little line here l3oL1es trouble. I see in the Lli1111a11L1 Llistaut futur , a dark -haired siren who will do all in her power to wreck thy young life. Now. let 9 see your head line. You have 21 very strong will, but you are very easily leLl. Do you see this long line here? That '9 your heart line Your heart has entire control of your 11 12111, and under auV strL311L1 emotion Vou LoulLl not tell a 1aLlL 12113l3it from eerel3ro-913iual 111e1 11i112 gitis; but you are so111ethi11L1 of a sa11Llie11, and will LL311seL1ue11th 111alLe 21 sueee992 ful L1L3Ltor. You ar also htteLl to he a 13L3litiLia11, 21ml I expect to hear some day that you are Governor of Kentucky. Your character is neither Llee13 11or com- plex; so, that is all. BL'CK HA'i:::i9.--1 see 1110111 this line. called the line of accident, that you have often come near L111e21t riches, but not so great 11011 so small neither, 13ut kind of betwixt and between, 219 it were. I see also that you hav 1 21 1L111L1 heart and a 'lL'illi11L1 eye. 13y the s131e11L1iLlly Llevelo13eL1 mount of 111e111L3ry at the base of the thumb, which is 21 little larger than Pike's Peak, .1' see you are a L1L3L3L1 shot with the lougbow. Do '1 read truly, 1311etty g1ei1tle111a11? You have evidently 1311aeti9eLl with this weapon on the plains of Texas. You have an eloquent tongue, and would 111a1L 1 21 good preacher. But your practice 11219 evi- Lle11tly 13ee11alway9 small. Cross my palm with silver and 1 will tell you the truth. .1 see by your feet that you play 111 the line, and also other places, but 1 tell you under the rose that at the last you will probably descend to the gridiron once more. Thank you, kind ge11tle111a11. Next SAM TRU'I FIZR CLVVE9.21 can see 13y the general shape of your hand that you are far from 21 spring ehielL'eu. This little riLlL1e here tells me that you are 198 something warm on the society racket. A Professional Calicoist, may I say? You will float along on the stream of life, whichever way the waves and currents may take you. If ever you dive down beneath the surface current to find the pearls of wisdom that lie in the great depths, please drop a line to LEOTA, Char- lottesville, apprising me of that fact. It would surprise me very much. The society game is your forte; never attempt anything else, or failure may be the result. There is nothing complicated, astounding, or original in your palm, and Cheiro himself could not tell you anything more. AusTIN BRANCILaI see here by the Mount of Bacchus and the muscular development of the wrist running clean up to the crook of the elbow, that you were once a Kangaroo, and in the vast and dim Australian Bush danced inter- mittently a wild, weird dance. But you follow the gleam, as I see from this deep and devious line of constancy. From this line of stiCk-to-itiveness, you should be a gardener or a librarianayou are so fond of turning over a new leaf. Also you should be, as you are, a poet, for I see by the Mount of Apollo, so close to the Mount of Bacchus, that you have much of the divine afHatus twhat you call ith, or, so to speak, you are capable of a divine ll toot. When you go out into the. dry, dry world, you will probably make a name for yourself in Doko and estab- lish weekly a New Era by which to reckon your declining days. These will be few. But fear not, your accepting days will be many. Be counseled by Leota, who knows it all, and quit following the gleam. VALENTINE PILLY PILSON.aYour ridge of amativeness is a regular moun- tain, but your loving has not always been successful. It is crossed righthere by the line of trouble. Some girl must have recently extended to you the ice pitcher. But never mind, I see by your thumb that you have plenty of nerve, and your line of modesty could be measured on the millimetre scale; so that in the years that are to come, you will doubtless talk some maiden into marrying you. Donlt get discouraged, though, if she does not send you a nice stock of valentines, such as I see by this finger here that you have been accustomed to receive. The area of philoprogenitiveness, astounding. You could pitch a circus tent on it, side- show and all. You have too much nerve to be anything else but a lawyer and a judge ; but you will never, take my word, afhx a severe penalty on any pretty girl who is brought up before you. You have, perhaps, been spoiled, but some time soon a little filly is going to prance into your life, who will handle you all right. Your hand tells me nothing more. JOE CLAY STILES.--The most remarkable hand I have ever readf Won,t you let me take a cast of it and study it at more length? You have only one line in your liaiicl-smzmrizrcizt. You could doubtless sit on the seashore when the moon is bright, and the waves are softly washing the myriad sands, with a pretty girl at your side, and pour out your soul in a line of hot air that would do credit to James K. Hackett in some of his most amorous scenes. Your knowledge of logic does not extend to the fact that it begins with an 1. Your idea of heaven is a place I99 with babbling brooks, shady nooks, etc., with multitudes of maidens, good-look- ing, of course, just waiting for some handsome lad with dreamy eyes, like yourself, to come along and make love to them. These maidens, too, will believe every- thing that you say. Your line of sentiment makes a regular capital 5, completely obliterating every other line. TOY DIXON SAVAGEeYOur line of Gab shows extraordinary development. Doubtless, when you were a child, you talked in your sleep. Many of your speeches, perhaps, sound as though you were still doing it. Donit lose your nerve, though; buck up and stick at it. Some day, I am confident, you will rise to be barker of a side-show. Your depression of nerve is a regular sunken val- ley. This, too, will help you in the profession mentioned above. Stick to it, as Leota counsels you, and you are bound to become one of the best barkers in the business. You are something of a lover, also, and perhaps you may marry the snake-eharmer, retire on a competence, and pass the declining years of your life in ease and idleness. . , n 'i WI see in this handewhat, do my eyes deceive me?- nothing at all ! You have the unique distinction of exhibiting a palmless palm. I see by the entire absence of head and heart lines that your past has been short, and not epoch-making ; your present insignificant, but innocent, and your future, nit ! I see, however, that you have corresponding possibilities, and, with train- ing and the aid of your blase air, you would make a magnificent bell-boy. Apparently you have a perpetual cold in the head, but Leota knows better. It is only your hautmtr. Now run along. 200 The Marvelous - Results of Those Inquiring Postals. tions on the postals sent out by CORKS AND CURLS, for the purpose of ascertaining how high, how old, how heavy, how engaged, how smoked, and how temperate College is, we announce the following: The average age of the students is 21 years. The average weight is 151 pounds. The average height is 5 feet, 9-3; inches. Each man studies 6-; hours a day. Only twenty-hve men are engagede-the count was made before Easter week. , Four hundred and thirty-three smoke. Nobody drinksgin the daytime. Five hundred dance in thesummer; one hundred and thirty at Easter. Five hundred and hfty play cards-f0r pleasure. The average College expensesenot counting calico-eare.$650 a session. . S FTER a careful counting and recounting of the answers given to the ques- The most popular Professor in the Medical Department is Dr. P. B. Barringer; in the Law Department, Mr. W. M. Lile; in the Academic Depart- ment, Mr. R. H. Wilson. The smartest man in College, Austin Branch. The most prominent, B. F. Willis. The most popular, Brodie Nalle. The handsomest, W. C. Benet, Jr. The best athlete, Brodie Nalle. The best wire-puller, J. M. Hartfleld. The vote on the best editor-in-chief of C0llcgc Topics this year resulted in a tie; the counters were, therefore, much relieved to get, at the last moment, one belated postal which they thought would decide the close race. Alas ! the vote on the editor-in-Chief was as follows: ii Hard to say which is the mitenestfi Modern Fable of the Lizzie Boy and the Beta Iota Tauls. they didnit know any better ; the Cows were mooing at the discovery that they had Nothing to Eat but Food, while the river was gently flowing in the Opposite Direction from which it came. The Breeze was from the North, and blew into University Station a Lizzie Boy. He was the Genuine Article, Fae Simile Signature, Name Blown in the Bottle, Beware of Imitations. ll Oh, I say, my man? he warbled to a Bystander in a Flute-like Falsetto, Two lines above the Staff, ll could you diwect me to the University P ll My man, who happened to be Snowball, promptly diwected him. Two days later found Chauncey Witherspoon, Jr., a matriculated student. Chauncey hailed from Boston, and knew everything and everybody. Our authority for this statement is C. VVitherspoon, Jr. As a Captivating Calicoist tiaccording to the same authorityL he was eight up and one to play on Captain Racket Burks; his Valentines were more Numerous and more Handsome than those of Pilly Pilson; he knew the Value of Three Aces in a Randall Building Jackpot even better than eea----- tyou all know his namey, while his list of Honors outmeasured Don Petersls Virginia string by two and one-half feet, Linear Measure. A week after College opened, Chauncey was invited to become a member of that most select of College Societies, Beta Iota Tau. Could 'Witherspoon, Sr., have seen his son and heir on the Night of the Goat- ing, the Expression on his Face would have Driven a Physiognomist Mad. Chauncey had, while blindfolded, asserted categorically on the Rotunda Steps, llI am a Goat ,i just three hundred times; had struck half-past eleven by the Cuckoo Clock till his throat was as dry as a House it D ,, Soire'e when the Booze is out; recited an Ode composed especially for the occasion by Milton Shakes- peare Carlisle, and delivered a Red-Hot Speech which had the average Wash. Orator Spotted so that he could hardly be Distinguished from a Leopard. After this, the Beacon Street gentleman was led to a Subterranean Cellar for the Regular Ritual. All the Old Men had to Whistle for Down Brakes and Back Pedal to restrain their Laughter, while their smiles were as broad as some of the Fiercest Scenes of llZazalii 'The Master of Ceremonies, the Senior Sultana, then administered this awful Oath: ll Do you solemnly swear, That you will wear, In the Easter season bright, A nice cravat, A new straw hat, And an outfit out of sight? l, The goat swore. The S. S. went on: ll Look to the I T WAS a beautiful September Day. The birds were Softly Singing, because 201 West, the Sun Rises Clear. The Barbarians, O Boreographos, Swarm upon the mountain-tops, but the All-Seeing Eye shall behold them; the Book of Knowl- edge shall Reveal their Character; the Scales of Justice shall Weigh them; the Lamp of Truth shall Betray them, and the Sword of Vengeance shall Slay them. Do you, O Neophyte of Nature, take oath never to take a drink unless you are By Yourself of With SomebodyPii A11 present then sang the Beta Iota Tau Song: Then let us away To the land of Cathay, Where the Booze in Bunches hows ; ' And the Faculty thinks That the Man who Drinks Is above the Man who Knows. After which all but the Goat Awayed. When, after a long wait, they did not return, Chauncey tOre the Bandage from his Lookers. He was in a Vacant Room on Carris Hill, the sun was rising, but not in the West, around his Neck was hung a sign on which were the Signin- cant Letters, FOOL; his flowing locks were pinned in Curl Papers, while his Face was Painted Black. Then the truth hit him in the face like a Brick, and Chauncey VVitherspoon, Jr., felt like Scrambled Eggs. ii Oh Fudge Vi he exclaimed, ti and to think that I, a scion of one of New England's most illus- trious families, have been ignoniiniously Held up to Scorn by these Lusty Southern Lads. Fancy, how Provoking! i Chauncey had Foozled; he was It. Among the trunks that Tom Preston hauled down to the North-Bound Train that afternoon was one marked: C. W., JR, BOSTON. Moral: You can't fool education. 202 Modern F able of the Nevada Sandier and the Shot-up Neophyte. and a Pair of Aces were worth Three Dollars of any Manis Money, there came to the University a Piker, who upon his own Say So was All Wool a Yard W ide, absolutely Fast Colors, and guaranteed not to Shrink, Ravel, Tear, or Run Down at the Heel. His Yarns were the Best Yet. Compared to some of his Prize Ones, Gulliveris Travels were like-the Elsie Books, while at Catch-as-CatCh-Can Lying he had Munchausen Howling for Mercy and Seeking Safety in the Dim Distance. h I can never forgetfi he used to say, ti how I sandied Joe Purvis out of that $20,000 pot in Nevada? His associates were especially competent to testify as to the Strength of his Memory on this point. There was no variety of Bluff he had not worked. Fifty-seven Varieties tthe limit of Heinz, the Pickle Many was the Starting Point on his list. An Approximate Idea of the number of his Suc- cessful Sandies may be had by Multiplying the number of Grains of Sand on the Seashore by the Drops of Water in the Ocean, and then Cubing the Product. As a' Persistent Poker Prevaricator, he was Right off the Reel during the Entire Scrimmage. . Great was the Joy in the Pikeris Camp one night, when a Neophyte was introduced into Sub Rosa to learn Poker as it should be Played. The Piker from Nevada nearly broke his Neck for the seat immediately on the Beginneris Left. He had brought with him a Needle and Thread to Sew up the Game; also a Revolver for the express purpose of Making a Killing. According to the old players, the best game to learn on was a $2 Limit. Nothing less than that, they quoted from Hoyle, was a Gentlemanis Game. A Yard or so of this Guff always tells on a New Man. Another Rule of Hoyle tannotated by the Pikersy provided that no beginner could take out less than a $25 Stack of Chips. Of course the Neophyte had to stand by Hoyle. it My old College Chump and Co-Pikerfi the Old Ducks affectionately termed him. The Neophyteis playing strongly suggested some of Lavinderis infield work last year, so in a few minutes his Stack had somewhat the appearance of Jimmy Drakeis Face after the Lovely Billiards of Wood and Page. The long-legged banker, who hailed from Arizona, here remembered another rule of Hoyle,s that I N THE Halcyon Piking Days of yore, when ii I. 0. Us. ,i were not known, 203 the Second Stack had to be double the First. This Glob Of South Wind the new- comer could not gainsay. With a Dreamy Smile he separated himself from a Fifty. Thus the game went on till Dawn, when the beginner looked like the Last Half Of a Misspent Life. He was dealing a Luscious Roodle. The Boss Sandier ' pelted back Four Aces, which he promptly Passed for a Raise. He got it. The next man opened it, and everybody stuck. The Nevadan boosted itell to keep out the pikersfl he Joked. But every one was Out for Bear, and a wiry, black- haired devil from Arkansas, gazing fondly into a Small Full, hiked it again. ll A small full? he slyly Observed, solto 'ZJOCU, llis my Lucky Hand? The Recent Edi- tion Of Ananias had to put on Brakes to Check his Joyful Emotion, as he peeled back those Aces to make sure they were Still Grazing in the Meadow. He was afraid to Pull the Elevator Cord and lift the Pot again, he didnTt want to scare them out. ll The pot is so big- I think 1 ill break and draw to itfl he said, trying to Look Innocent, like Pictures Of Edward W. Bok in the Ladies Home Journal, at the same time mentally Patting Himself 0n the Back, and calling in a voice of a C. 8z 0. conductor for One Pape. The Nifty Neophyte had broken a pair of kings to draw to the Jack, Queen, and King of Clubs; draws like this are common to such players. The Shot-Up Luck of beginners is Proverbial, the Inexperienced Lad skinned back the Nine and Ten of Clubs, making his Straight Flush. Caddy Whitehurst Munchausen was too fondly regarding his Four Bullets to notice the Lambs Emotion. Then the Fun Began. When the Smoke Cleared Away, the Neophyte had the Gentleman from Nevadais Chips, Ready Money, Watch, Clothes, Sight Draft for his Fatherls Farm, Books, Knife, Keys, Furniture, and Contingent Deposit. Ananias was brought to his senses by a Large Dose Of Dr. Paynels Popope Kakaraka Painless Eradicator. Diligent search into the Y. M. C. A. Directory showed that his name was Mud. M oml: Never play with a Shot-Up. 204 The Fable of the Grind Who Was Not a Grind. Chauncey Depew sewed up in a Sack, and Cicero backed clean off the Board. In his own distended Opinion, his Brain was more than com- petent to deal with the pusillanimous Farces called Lectures. The Art of Recitation was his strong Point, and from the Start to the Finish, his Course was a meaningless Current of Hot Air. However, he gave his gullible Class- mates the false Impression that he had Pinched a vast Amount of Learning by Midnight Lucubrations. In the Lecture-Room he always propped himself up on the front Bench, with a Kant-like Expression on his Face; and this Close Atten- tion to what was being said greatly flattered the ancient Solon, who handed out the tri-weekly Globs of worn-out Knowledge. Consequently the apparent Grind was called on oftener than anybody else, and thought he had his Sheepskin Cinched. Every Day when the Lecture was over, he retired hastily to a seques- tered Nook and furtively wiped a eoek-eyed Grin of Complacency from his Face. Then he rushed back to his doting Professor and anxiously asked to be told how States Rights differed from Constitutional Privileges, or how Slavery affected Religion. But such things as these were only Side-plays; his Star Exhibition was his Manner of shoving out Stunts in the Spieling Line. Adopting a greasy Utterance and a Self-sufficient Pose, he would state unheard of Facts with such Precision that his old Pythagoras would gasp with Wonder. He never lacked Language; his Figures of Speech were as the elevated Effusions of a Gleason Hotel Clerk. When the Day for Final Exams. came and the Man with the oily Gift of Gab walked in a little late; the whole Class rippled a Roar of Applause. He reeled off a Paper tilled with such unmistakable Signs of Knowledge as ii the Inalienable Right of Franchise? ii the .Ineradicable Craving for Liberty? and numberless Terms of this Nature. On handing up the Marvel of Scholar- ship, his Grin was offensively diffusive, and more than one furtive Rub was required to remove it. When he met a Friend at Andersonis later on, he remarked patronizingly that the Exam. had been somewhat stiffer than he had Anticipated. Somehow, his ten-yard, highly aristocratic Name did not illumine the list of Graduates that Year. Moral: A Grind who is not a Grind will be ground. ' I lHERE was once a Young Man who, with his oily Gift of the Gab, had 205 56 A LAST WORD. 73. f 3s, B. Lfs, M. Dfs, and Ph. Dis; C. 338, F. O. 0. Lfs, M. Afs, M. 1433s; B. st, and all you who hold degrees On any letter; And you who worship not. the god ll Degree ll; And you who ne'er to save your soul could see On retrospecty how oxmiing him you ill be A n ywise better: We We come before you for the fifteenth time; lVe Re 0017in or 01111ch in picture, prose, and rime; W'e We played the Cicerone and played the mime For your diversion. And haply if while on our little stage We whiled away, for either fool or sage, One not unpleasant hour, we We earned the wage Of our exertion. Now that our little plotless play is clone And even the curtains down-roll has begun, Whether most of praise or blame our work has won 1s yours to say; One only thing we ask: lVith lenient mind Be judges of such things as here you iind; lVith all our faults, of whatsoever kind Deal gently, pray. But long ere this we should have been away. T is farewell for a twelve-month and a clay; Yet leaving, let. us pause one word to say, As said of yore: We ive did our durndest; and it is true tas sweet For us to thile that angels, pacing street Of pearl 0r golden floor with golden, feet, Can do no more? THE BOARD. 207 . iymrp CONTENTS. SKETCH OF PROFESSOR WILLIAM E. PETERS. Calendar . . . Board of Visitors . 9 F acuity . . . 11 Academic History 15 Academic Class.18 Engineering . . . 28 Engineering Class . . . 3o Silence is Golden iPoemi 32 Law Class . . 33 Moot Court . . 46 Medical Class 47 In Memoriam . . 57 Academic Degrees Conferred . . . . 59 Graduates 1n the Department of Law . . 61 Graduates in the Department of Medicine 62 Alphabet of Celebrities . 64 FRATERNITIES: p Eta Chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma . . 67 Eta Chapter of Delta Kappa Epsilon 69 Virginia Chapter of Phi Kappa Psi 71 Omicron Chapter of Beta Theta Pi 73 Alpha Chapter of Chi Phi . . 75 Virginia Omicron Chapter of Sigina Alpha Epsilon. 77 Omicron Chap ter of Phi Gamma, Delta . . 79 Upsilon Chapter of Delta Psi . 81 Zeta Chapter of Kappa Sigma . 83 Psi Chapter of Sigma Chi . . 85 Virginia Delta Chapter of Alpha .Tau Omega 87 Alpha Chapter of Pi Kappa Alpha 89 Beta Chapter of Zeta Psi . . . 91 Virginia Beta of Phi Delta Theta . . 93 Lambda Chapter of Kappa Alpha . . . 95 Beta Iota Chapter of Delta Tau Delta . 97 M11 Pi Lambda . . . . . . . . . . A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , . 99 Phi Delta Phi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F acing 100 Minor Chap ter of Phi Delta Phi . . . . . . . . . . , , , 101 Alpha Chapter of Pi Mu . , 102 Lambda Pi . . . . . . , 103 Rubaiyat to 21 Pipe Forsworn . , 104 ATHLETICS: General Athletic Association , 108 Football Team . p 1 10 University of Virginia Baseball Team . . 1 12 Fayerweather Gymnastic Association , 114 Tennis Club . . , . 117 University Of Virginia Golf Club , 119 Riding Clyub . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 . 1 . . . . . . 120 Mass Meeti11g.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , , T i 2 Grinds . . . . . P ac Hg, 12? The River 0i Thought iPoenU . 123 Jefferson Literary Society ........................... . . . 125 Washington Literary Society ........... . . . ..... . ...... . .127 University of Virginia Magazine ........................... 128 College T062231 . .................................. 13o CORKS AND CURLS . . . .............................. 132 Artists ....................................... 135 Editorial . . ............................ 1 .......... 137 The Old Student Speaks tPoeIm ......................... . . 138 The Easter Air .................................... 141 ORGANIZATIONS: Eli Banana . . . ............. . . . . ' - - ........ Facing 148 T. I. L. K. A. . . ............................ Facmg 148 1122, ..................... , ................. 149 Thirteen Club ............................ . . . . 151 OWFC ............................. 152 P. K. . . . . . . . . . . ............................ 153 O. W. L, ................................. . . . 155 Goose-Quill Club ................................. 157 V. V. V ...................................... 159 German Club . . ........... . . . . ................. 160 Graduate Club ............. ' ................. . .. . 163 Calico Club ................. . . . ..... .- ..... F acmg 166 P. S. C. ...... . . . ............................ 167 Y.M.C.A.. . .. ............................ . .168 College Choir ......................... . . . . . . . . 169 Tennessee Club . . . ............ . . . . . .......... . . 171 Arkansas Club . . ............................... 172 Kentucky Club ........................ . . . . . . . . . . 173 N orth Carolina Club ............................... 174 Georgia Club ...... 1 ......... . . . ................ 175 South Carolina Club . . .............. . . . . ........... 176 Missouri Club . . ......... . . . . . . . . . ........... 177 Alabama Club ................................. 178 Texas Club ............ . . . .................... 179 Episcopal High School Club ................. . . . ..... . . 181 Woodberry Club ...... ' .......................... 182 St. Albans School Club ......... . . . . .................. 183 McCabes School Club . . ........... . . . ........... . . 184 McGuires School Club . . . . .. . . . . . . . . ................ 185 N olleyTs School Club ........... . . . . . . . ............ 186 Memphis University School Club ........ . . .......... . . . . 187 A Ghazel tPoem7 ...................... . . . .......... 164 Ine; tPoem7 ............................... . . . . 166 Flylng Leaves tPoem7 ................... . . . . 1 . . ..... 170 A Patron Saint of Randall Building ...... . . . . ...... . ..... Facing 180 Dusky Definitions .................................. 188 Lost-A Hunting Ground . . . ............................ 189 Contradictions tPoem7 ............................... 193 The Fable of Anxious Louie, and Why He DidnTt Suit .......... . . ..... 195 Know Thy Fate . .................................. 197 The Marvelous Results of Those Inquiring Postals . . ........... . . Facing 200 Modern Fable of Lizzie Boy and the Beta Iota TauTs ........ . . . . . . . . . 201 Modern F able 0f the N evada Sandier and the Shut-up N eophyte ...... . . . . . 203 The Fable of a Grind Who Was Not a Grind . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 205 A Last Word tPoem7 ........................... . . . . . 207 Advertisements. I h Mhau- -A-vr $w LEMMERT TAILOR .. DRAPEB BA L TIM O R E Garments of Every Description made in the natest Style. newest Patterns and Swellest Stuffs made to Order n'om $20.00 and $25.00 upwards. WE HAVE A LARGE OUT-OF-TOWN MAIL ORDER TRADE WHICH RECEIVES OUR SPECIAL ATTENTION. AND ALL GARMENTS ORDERED BY MAIL ARE GUARANTEED TO GIVE SATISFACTION. WRITE NOW FOR MEASURING BLANK AND LINE OF SAMPLES. ' LE M M E RT, 14 East Fayette Street, BALTIMORE. THE OLDEST ESTABLISHED DIAMOND, WATCH, JEWELRY, AND SILVER- WARE HOUSE IN VIRGINIA L YN CHB UR g . . VIR GINIA MANUFACTURING GOLD AND SILVERSMITHS With a corps of the Best Jewelers, Engravers, and Watchmakers in the State. We carry a large and well-selected stock of the Finest Manufactures of Gold and Sterling Silver- ware made in the world. Quality considered, our PRICES are as LOW as can be obtained anywhere. We manufavture all kinds of CLASS PINS, RINGS. MEDALS, BADGES, 6130., in best quality and finish. Correspondence solicited. Address H. SILVERTHORN COMPANY, H. SILVERTHORN. LYNCH BURG, VA. FOUNDER OF THIS BUSINESS-'183T. h SCHNURMAN Stands for Me Best there is 2'24 HIGH-CLASS TAILORING. SCHNURMAN Tailor am! Importer of Novelties m Suitings cma' Trouserings. CHAS. J. HUGHES, ' 909 E. Main Sireei, Cuftier. RICHMOND,VA. To Fine Engraving I I I I I I Th UHIVCrSItV of V1rg1n1a mg p322?livtehiriltilird?gdegsliBi-iegitogvgi? f$$5$ bly characterized by correctness, neatness, and M . artistic linish. Estimates furnished for Mono- en 0 gram Dies, Address Dies,1nvitation Cards, and College and Club Emblems, in black, one color, and combination colors. N USBAUIVPS, If you would have your 100-102 Granby Street, NORFOLK, VA. J vacation profitable J CAPITAL, $200,000 SURPLUS FUND, $200,000 The Peoples National Bank of LYNCHBURG, VA. C. M. Blackford, President J. W. lvey, Cashier wnle to tlze South Atlantic Life Insurance Company, R. W. Crenshaw, Vice-Pres. G. T. Lavinder, Assit Cashir Richmond, Va. DIRECTORS: C. M. Blackford C. V. Winfree G. H. Wilkins R. W. Crenshaw J. Gordon Payne Wm. C. lvey Jno. D. Langhorne 1th R. Wiliiams Thos. N. Davis FOR TERMS TO AGENTS. C. S. Hutter Walker Pettyjohn C. B. STEVENS Carries the F ollotving WelenoWn Lines: E. 86 W. Collars, Cuffs, and Shirts, u Star Negligee Shirfs, FownEs Imported Gloves, Fislgs Domestic Gloves, AuerbacHs N eckwear, Stetsods Celebrated Hats, Stein-BlocHs WelI-Known Clothing. Can you think of anything better? A call in person, or an order by phone or mail, Will be appreciated and re- ceive prompt attention Jam; - 304 East Main Street, Charlottesville, Next to Keller 0 George, VIRGINIA a a a a gagggggggggvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvtvvvvvvvvVII: asessssss' , : 'U'VU'U' It 3 Better for You to Have the BEST, . yyvy'gy ----- . ---------- . ------ ---------- ------ mso go to-v- ----- .- ------------------ , ------------- 2:52:' '3'? ' 9 w 1bolsmger s U r r r Glmverslty Stubto $ t, f t, FOR ..... i llllll I ................. a 15 ac mu 2 HIGH-CLASS PHOTOS CB 11 a F3 n 1'8 e D ' pnom SUPPLIES, PICTURE FRAMES, Etc. . Grounb :lfloor Stubio, 719-721 west Ilbain Street. CHAR'LOTTESVILLE, VA. UUUUU $VUUUUUUUVUVUUU$VUVUVUUVUUVUUUUUUUUUVV S. C. Chancellor 8: Co. physician? lDre: lDbarmacists W fully compounbcb i1 i K i iii1i1 iii 1 $ 111 i1i1idd ti .anb. Eruggists UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. v: UUU zurum tm nob '33:: 11 mg 0 rugs, . 6 ICIIIES, VV'U'VU Gbemtcals, anb Immeral , Ugvggggg I I waterSo vvvvvrvwv u UUUIVUUUUUU U . VUUUUIWUUUUU UUUUUUUUVUUVIIUUUVUUUUUUUUVVUUUVUVUVIUUVUUVUU i i i 1i K i i K i ii Kt di i id d I I I I? . I Up-to- Date Drinks 3: Ladies, and Gentle: menIs Dining Room I i i i I ! 1 ! i OPEN ' ; DAY AND NIGHT g ; I I a I i i I I i i I I E I I I i 5 Banquets Served at Short Notice J. J. KELL; Caterer. .3. I I I IIIIIIIIIIII IIWIIII II; All I I0? . '02; '02 And 7 . II; I; + :2 Bottled Goods. II ?on I II J I III $0? I No. 421 East Main Streef. II on .0. dI-c II ImIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIgw . . I .2: $0? I HOTEL I II R U E G E R , II III . II II; WM. RUEGER, Proprietor. 3: I .. I .2: $0? .. I04 20:: European $1011 for Qen- I I tlemen. $02 I J' :: g . Ninth and Bank Streets, I II $2 I RICH MOND, I I VA. I We ........................ row IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIWIIIII HOTEL PROBJ'T 4 4 COURT SQUARE 4 J Formerly The Albemarle a EMODELED, renovated. and refur- nished throughout, which makes it the best and only modern hotel in the city. Rooms en suite and with private bath ..... Mr. J. E. Davis, recently of the Clermont Cafe, will have charge of the Buffet, which is a guarantee of its proper management. . . The cuisine will be the best. and the management is prepared to furnish banquets and private dinners at any time and on all occasions. C. L. PROBST. 090- or -m-m-m-mQ-m-m-m-WJ TWO LIMITED TRAINS DAILY between UNIVERSITY 0f VIRGINIA med New York, Thiladelplzia, 613a! timore, Washing ton, ?Riclzmond, Old 6Point Comforl, Cincinnati, Louisville, S 1. Louis, and Clzicago. HANDSOME VESTIBULE TRAINS OF DAY COACHES, PULLMAN SLEEPERS, DINING CARS AND OBSERVATION CARS. THROUGH ' THE ' MOST ' PICTURESQUE ' REGION ' OF ' AMERICA MOUNTAINS, RIVERS, CANONS, BATTLEFIELDS, COLONIAL LANDMARKS, HEALTH AND PLEASURE RESORTS, AND SUMMER HOMES IN HIGH ALTITUDES. . MR. OLIVIER WILL FURNISH INFORMATION AT THE UNIVERSITY. H. W. FULLER, . . . . GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT, . . . . WASHINGTON, D. C. SUNDAY, $1.50 ggx DAILY, $3.00 WEEKLY, 50 ms. F$ 4g, W. , gwwsggggggfg THE TIMES RICHMOND , 14 Virginia Paper for Virginia and Virginians Prints Me News, ALL of it, from Virginia and all the World 5esz'a'es. Browrfs University School, NEAR CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. A High-Grade Preparatory School for Boys and Young Men. Healthful Location. Modern Improvements. Athletics. Home Influences. Individual Attention. Endorsed by Professors of the University of Virginia. Write for Illustrated Catalogue. J. THOMPSON BROWN, IR., Principal. 10.1 Keller 8; Z0. The Stetson Shoe FOR WELL:DRESSED MEN matter what the occasion, or how well you dress, if you wear the STETSON SHOE it Will al- WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF ways be in keeping with your attire. The man Who wears the STETSON SHOE W111 never hes- COLLEGE I itatg what shoe to buy.v SHOES. 1E31Qj9g xxxaaaeweaawzaaaa;a FQNE Y A Is always absolutely good form, QW1GDE. good flt, flnish, and fashion. No xxxxxxxxxxeeaaawwwe Sold Exclusively by 404 E. Main St., CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. JOHN SMITH, Binghampton, N, Y, at OdendhaPs. We We Contracted the Habit of'Having the Newest mam a1 3mm, FEQDEEEES Novelty Ideas in Shirts, Neckwear, Gloves, and Underwear. SUITS Made to Order and Ready to Wear. F. Odendhal 8: Son, Norfolk, Va. Fine Rosebuds, Carnations, and Violets a Specialty. Flowers and Foliage Plants in Great Variety. ?$': 53$ g; t$g$yg$$ w$$x$$$$g T. C. CONLON wmamx THE LEADING TAILOR OF THE SOUTH xxxxxs ENGLISH RIDING BREECHES, GOLF BREECHES, AND UP- TO-DATE LADIES TAILORING W LATEST IMPORTATIONS IN LADIES' RIDING HABITS T. C. CONLON wage: TAILOR AND DRAPER 6:239:23: 207 W. Main Street, Charlottesville, Va. ggggggxggggggg 0W.y.yu .Uy.0p.memWWWmWWWWWWW R g A. We W? V WW mwm 9 v WwW Mwm Q K, Mmm .. , i .. .. WW a . m m We Wow a a WoW Wow 0 E m. WOW Www S S S m WOW WW 0 G V W 3 R R T 0 WOW Wm D WicwmmmWNW WW N w. WW 3 I T X WOW gw o s A S O ymx m? s A .l. O . ye Row R 3. R m. Q R? Q T F N WOW me 5 my Rm WWW mm 0 TmTK Mmm WW . E T B c 40W .W 3 N W U r. a WmW qu WW W W AWoW WW WW H U WOW 2 : , t m WW WOW $ M , F a WOW Wow Mn N N w 9 Av $4 S m gov Roy E E 9 m Wok W . W W W W be M M W W .. I i .. W .1 .. WM an W W W W er W MW . . W 3K . . r . .W . o . 6 WW WmW W .J W W W F, W W .. a .. . ROW 3 30HN Rthk.R.R.R.R.R.RHRHKHMMVHMUHMHMHMHWR Thomas 8: Waddell MAKE A SPECIALTY OF zollcgc Shoes THE CELEBRATED J. 6 M. SHOE AND THE. STETSON SHOE ARE THEIR LEADERS. 46F LET THEM SHOW YOU. Headquarters for College Men. U U THE DELMONICO'S OF WASHINGTON. U U U BARTOH'S FAMOUS F0? SUPPERS. EXQUISITE SUITES AND ROOMS WITH BATHS. EUROPEAN PLAN. U U 723 FIFTEENTH STREET, NEAR U. S. TREASURY. J. BARTON KEY, MANAGER. LEWIS 86 COCHRAN, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ancerg Wines and Liquors for Family Use. Special Agents for American Tobacco Co. Teas and Coffee a Specialty. Che monticello wine ac. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. Incorporated l873. H. E. MAGRUDER, PRES. D. R. SNOW. SEC. AND TREAs. w. R. DUKE, Vlcz-Pnzs. A. RUSSON. SUP'T. Directors : L. T. HANCKEL. JAS. D. JONES, MICAJAH WOODS. A. L. HOLLADAY. SOL. KAUFMAN. Prices ?urnisbcd upon application. S' c2 cx. O 8.70: Czizk 329?: 30$. 44ggsuccnssoa'10444; IRVINE 63 STEVENS T378 03$. cc Kat? hbd 5.. 20's 83' J O, 0 Q. .00 H -- G .'.'-. . 83 $?f '. c253; $3 9 0 1K 0 g g7 0 cs 9?: W. ?W. 87 ?7 O A Is A 0 08X? Clothier x TAILOR and M erfs Furnisher ? Cb O 0E: K? 0; z: A S 0 O, P; ? ' 0 Q 3.2, :24, x3 .CXVP. a A0 '8 AW 9 ?7 81's ?AW. , C15 2'8 . 0 .. A's 1S: O '35 xx? 7 6' .00 ?JA x'0 g. .041 37?, $433 $070 ?JIS 5Y0 94 K3 0v ' Q3 .455. 33 AB. E .3 AW. '85 0357 AS ?4' 5 d .4 9'8 gzs: 507E; 45$? , 8 ?m. 30's; 93's w$ a .061 f3 . AR? IKMQ 7: aoe go's w$$$m$ g 5 ? W hdw-..b . ' F A TI M A 322359576356? ;,,Qk 62' AN .4 $$$QgQZVg $$$WMV4 No Gold Tips, No Disagrcca- But ble Odor, Finest th Finest .. Quality .. Fragrance N ,VA. 5. A. . 1111b? 351mm: . white $ulpbur gprtngz, GREENBRIER COUNTY, WEST VIRGINIA. aHE Representative Resort of the South. RATES AT WHITE SULPHUR Immediately on the Line of the C. 8a 0. . Season. J une 15th to September 15th. FOR. 1902 . Hotel, Cottages. and Grounds Lighted Entirely Per Month 0f Twenty-elght Days, by Electricity. $50.00, $65.00, and $75.00 Passenger Elevator. Per Week, $15.00, $17.50, and $21.00. The Famous Hot Sulphur and Plunge Baths. Per Day. $3.00. $3.50, and $1.00. Caf6 Remains Open Until After Arrival of Even- - Young Men, $1250 per Week; 310-00 per Month. ing Thins. HARRINGTON MILLS, Manager. PORTHERE ANDERSQN SPECIAL BRE WING BRQTHEDS Etubentg JBook Etore PUBLISHERS OF minors Institutes Of Law, Cowle's and almstian's Hnatomv, And Notes and Syllabi of Lectures by Other Professors. Directly Opposite Post-office, EXPORT BEER. FOR SALE EVERYWHERE. University Of Virginia- HTHROUGH THE LAND OF THE SKY. may, The Short Line Between New York, Washington, Charlottesville, and Charleston, Savannah, Jacksonville, Atlanta, Asheville, Chattanooga, Memphis, New Orleans. hK M f The Southern Rai THE STANDARD RAILWAY OF THE SOUTH. Washington and Southwestern Limited. All Pullman train; club and observation cars to Atlanta and Macon; sleepers to N ashville, At- lanta, Macon, Memphis, and New Orleans. Dining car service. United States Fast Mail. Through cars between New York and New Orleans and Birmingham. First-class coach be- tween Washington and New Orleans. Dining car service. New York and Florida Express. First-class coach and sleeper to Savannah, Jacksonville, and Port Tampa; sleeper to Sum- merville, Charleston, Augusta, and to Thomas- Ville, Ga., and connection for Aiken. Dining car service. FRANK S. GANNON, Third ViceaPrest. and Gen. Manager, Washington and Chattanooga Limited, via Lynchburg. Through cars between New York, New Or- leans, and Memphis. Cafe, parlor, and observa- tion ear between Radford and Attalla, Ala. First- class coach between Washington and Memphis. A A A A The Southern Railway Passes in full view of Monticello, the home of Thomas Jeiferson; the University of Virginia. and through many of the battlefields of the South. For Further Information, Schedule, etc., address any agent of the Com- pany, or write direct to . . . . S. H. HARDWICK, General Passenger Agent. 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue. WASHINGTON. D. C. L. 5. BROWN, General Agent, 705 Fifteenth Street, Northwest, WASHINGTON. D. C. OR TO ANDERSON BROS., City Ticket Agents, Charlottesville, Va. Jenkins Paint and Oil Co. NORFOLK, VA. ??????33? 1 Everything in the Paint'Line. $$$$$$$$$$k$$yw$ Ebarlottesville Woolendlbills CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. Cadet Cloths, Dark and Sky-Blue Flannels, Manufacturers of Cassimeres, $ Dark and Sky-Blue Coat Cloths, Cadet Gray Doeskins, ; Dark Blue Overcoatings. WARRANTED PURE INDIGO COLOR mnexcelleb in lealityz anb finish. cl- miw..,.V-:8.V.. ,mhw - n -1 iriwnwvg . , FOR Many Years Students8 Headquarters, 6:! West Main Street. THE LEXINGTON. 'PHONE 295 WINES AND LIQUORS. A A A L. O. GIANNINY, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES. J. A. CROISSANT. IR A A 621 West Mam Street, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. Fraternity Eats. H BALZ 81 SONS, O K. BAKERY. CONFECTIONERS. BREAD, CAKES, AND 2m 2m 1m CONFECTIUN- FRESH PASTRIES AND CAKES DAILY ERIES. 2m 1m 2m .. Agents for .. No. 110 West Main Street. HUYLER,S FINE CANDIES. T J. WILLS 81 CO., FAMILY SUPPLY STORE. CANNED GOODS AND FANCY 1m 2m 1m GROCERIES FOR FRATERNITY SPREADS. HIGH'GRADE GROCERIEa BEST FLOUR, 88 Brown Dick8 Smoking Tobacco, 50 Cents a pound. COUNTRY PRODUCE, Corner East Main and Second Streets. Hay . Mill Feed . Oats and Corn. HARPER WHISKEY. G S. BRUCE 81 CO., ON EVERY TONGUE' Wholesale and Retail I Gold Medals Awarded for Purity and Exrellence: GROCERS. NEW ORLEANS, . 1884 CHICAGO, . . . . 1893 PARIS ,,,,,, 1900 DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS. BERNHEIM BROS, LOUISVILLE, KY. 200 and 202 Main Street, Sole Owners and Controllers. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. FOR Many Years Students8 Headquarters, 611 West Main Street. THE LEXINGTON. 'PHONE 295 WINES AND LIQUORS. 11x 11 11 L. O. GIANNINY, FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC WINES. J. A. CROISSANT. A A 1111 621 West Main Street, Fraternity Eats. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. O K. BAKERY. H. BALZ 8t SONS, CONFECTIONERS. BREAD, CAKES, AND A m A CONFECTIUN- FRESH PASTRIES AND CAKES DAILY ERlES. 111 11 11 .. Agents for .. No. IIO West Main Street. HUYLER,S FINE CAKDIES. T J. WILLS 81 CO., FAMILY SUPPLY STORE. CANNED GOODS AND FANCY 11 111 111 GROCERIES FOR FRATERNITY SPREADS. HIGH'GRADE GROCERIES BEST FLOUR, 8 Brown Dick8 Smoking Tobacco, 50 Cents a pound. COUNTRY PRODUCE, Corner East Main and Second Streets. Hay . Mill Feed . Oats and Corn. HARPER WHISKEY. G S. BRUCE 81 CO., ON EVERY TONGUE. 1 Wholesale and Retail Gold Medals Awarded for Purity and Exrellence: GROCERS. NEW ORLEANS, . 1884 CHICAGO, . . . . 1893 PARIS ,,,,,, 1900 DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS. BERNHEIM BROS, LOUISVILLE, KY. 200 and 202 Main Street, Sole Owners and Controllers. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. MCKENNIE, THOMAS N. CARTER, REAL ESTATE AND ATTORNEY AT LAW. INSURANCE, CHAMBER OF . . CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. COMMERCE. RICHMOND, VA. THE. . .. C. L. 6L H. L. DENOON, ' REAL ESTATE PROGRESS AGENTS, PRINTING AUCTIONEERS AND BROKERS. COMPANY RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. BARNEY E. MYERS, USE ONLY TAILOR. ALBEMARLE AND STAR 720 EAST MAIN STREET, EXAMINATION RICHMOND, VA. PADS Rx MARY BALDWIN SEMINARY W. W M O S S , FOR YOUNG LADIES, STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. DEN TIST. Term begins September 4th, 1902. Located in Shenandoah Valley of Virginia. Unsurpassed climate. TWO hundred and forty students the past session from twenty-seven States. Send for cat- No. 112 EAST MAIN STREET. alogue' M155 13- 0- WEIMAR. Principal. WYNDHAIVI BOLLING, Banker and Brozlm', RICHMOND, VA. Investment Securities. . . . Uirginia Bonds. Virginia-Carolina Chemical and other stocks bought and sold on margin. or for cash. '10. IO East main Street, Liberal cash advance made on securities depos- ited for sale. john l2. williams 8; Sons, BANKERS. CORNER TENTH and MAIN STREETS, RICHMOND, VA. the Bank of Hlbcmarle, MAIN STREET, h CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. .9! .3 JAS. D. JONES, President. 8. V. SOUTHALL, Vice-President. C. D. FISHBURNE, Cashier. R. T. MARTIN, Teller. The State Bank of Virginia, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. zapital, $500,000. Surplus, $240,000. JOHN S. ELLETT, Pres. WILLIAM M. HILL, Cash. DIRECTORS 2 ALEXANDER CAMERON JOHN S. ELLETT T. C. WILLIAMS. JR. GRAN. C. VALENTINE JAMES D. CRUMP A. R. ELLERSON J. M. FOURQUREAN J. L. ANTRIM WILLS DRUG CO., 323 East Main Street, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. Our Mr. Wills has had more than Fifty Years' Experience in serving this community and this section of Virginia as DRUGGIST, STATIONER, AN 33.3.3.3 $3.59: DRUGGIST SUNDRY DEALER. Mail orders have prompt attention. Call and see us. CAPITAL, $50,000.00. SURPLUS AND UNDIVIDED PROFITS. $65,000.00. The Peoples National Bank, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. JOHN M. WHITE, President MOSES LETERMAN. Vice-President J. M. ROBERTSON, . . Cashier JOHN P. HARMAN, . Assistant Cashier SAFE DEPOSIT Boxes FOR RENT. VALUABLES TAKEN FOR SAFE KEEPING. The Jefferson National Bank. Checks Collected for Customers Anywhere in the United States Without Exchange satay; LARGE OR SMALL ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. C. J. RIXEY, PRESIDENT. G. S. BRUCE, VICE-PRESIDENT. THOS. P. PEYTON, CASHIER. JOHNSON 8: PRICE, Druggists. DOWN-TOWN HEADQUARTERS FOR STUDENTS. No. 500 EAST MAIN STREET. n Seaboard Air Line Railway. 9 ll Capital City Routef En Iers tlze Capitals and 6Principal Cities of Six Soullzem Sta tes. poc IOI e OUBLE daily service between New York, Washington, and Rich- mond to Points in Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. Finest Pullman and dining car VJ service. The famous Florida and Metropolitan Limited, daily ' between New York and St. Augustine, Fla., carrying Pullmanls finest drawing, compartment, observation, and sleeping cars ; also drawing-room buffet sleeping :3 car New York to Atlanta. The fine service and fasi schedules of the SEABOARD - l AIR LINE RAILWAY afford pleasant and guide mp: to and from home and a a longer vacation to students. Florida and Atlanta Fast Maz'lePullman drawing- fc I room buffet sleeping car daily between New York and Jacksonville, Fla., con- ; meeting at Hamlet, N. C., with Pullman drawing sleeping car for Atlanta, Ga. These trains, unsurpassed fo'r speed and elegance, make double daily connections 0 at Atlanta, Ga., for New Orleans, La., and all points in Texas, California, and :9; Mexico. m I v For information and tickets apply to Z. P. SMITH, District Passenger Agent, ll No. 836 East Main Street, RICHMOND, VA. ,Phone 405 l: J. M. BARR, . R. E. L. BUNCH, 51 First Vice-President and General Manager, General Passenger Agent, l Portsmouth, Va. Portsmouth, Va. DP ORGANIZED 1867. The Citizens Bank, OF NORFOLK, VA. WALTER H. DOYLE, President. J . W. PERRY, Vice-President. TENCH F. TICHLMAN, Cashier. CAPITAL Qaaid m SURPLUS and PROFITS . $ 300,000.00 . $200,000.00 Interest paid on time deposits by special con- tract. Bills of Exchange issued on all of the prin- cipal cities of Europe. Charter authorizes Trust and Fiduciary accounts. Lock boxes for rent in the best appointed safe deposit vaults south of Philadelphia. ..City.. Bank of Richmond, VIRGINIA. WM. H. PALMER, President. E. B. ADDISON, Vice-President. J. W. SINTON, Cashier CAPITAL, . . . . $400,000.00 SURPLUS, . . . $100,000.00 Eirectors: WM. H. PALMER JAMES N. BOYD H. HAWES A. DL. HOLLADAY WM. JOSIAH LEAKE I. CARDOZO B. B. VAIENTINE E. 'Dl. D. MYERS S. W. TRAVERS W. R. TRIGG E. B. ADDISON Students .. Would a knowledge of Shorthand assist you in taking notes of lectures? One hour a day will do it. We can arrange the hour to suit you. M Southern Business College, Peoples Bank Building, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. Episcopal High School of Virginia, FOUNDED IN 1839. L. M. BLACKFORD, M. A. Principal. HREE miles west from Alexandria, Va., and eight from Washington, D. C. Ele- vated and beautiful situation, with extensive grounds. Full corps of masters. Fits for college or business. Refers to its old boys, especially those now students of the Univer- sity of Virginia. Session Opens the Fourth Wednesday in September. Illustrated catalogue sent on application to the Principal at Alexandria, Va. University of Virginia Session Begins September 15th, 1902. $$$EE$$$E$$KQ$$$$ Equipment . . . . . . . Hcademic Department . raw Department . . . . medical Department . . Engineering Department ngicultural Department FOR CATALOGUE APPLY TO . . . . The new buildings just completed at a cost of nearly half a million dollars, in- clude Law Lecture Rooms, Academic Building and Auditorium, Rouss Physi- cal Laboratory, and Mechanical Laboratory. Other buildings include Library tcontaining more than 40,000 volumes in addition to department librariesi, Leander McCormick Astronomical Observatory, Lewis Brooks Museum of N atural History, Chemical, Biological, and Anatomical Laboratories. Clinical Dispensary, Hospital, Fayerweather Gymnasium, etc. The facilities both for undergraduate and graduate instruction are constantly increasing. Undergraduate courses, s0 selected as to include instruction in all the great departments of human knowledge, lead to the degree of Bachelor of Arts. Graduate courses lead to the degrees of Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy. The course in this department has been so extended in recent years as to re- quire two sessions for its completion. The Library facilities have been much improved and much attention is given to practical work in the Moot Court. The Medical Department offers a course of four years, consisting of nine months sessions. The laboratory instruction is thorough; equipment good; clinical facilities expanded. Daily examinations on all subjects. and practical examination on clinical work required. The course of study in the Engineering Department covers three years in each of. the divisions of Civil and Mining, Mechanical and Electrical Engi- neering. Much attention is paid to Drawing and Design, Field Work, Shop Work, and Laboratory Work. In the Agricultural Department, thorough instruction is given in the sciences relating to Agriculture. The course covers a period of three years. P. D. DARRINGER, CHAIRMAN. 5. Coionnade Hotel, E. T. Linnard and Geo. Arthur Cramp. Corner 15th and Chestnut Sts. . . One Block from Broad St. Station, PHILADELPHIA,4 PA. Entirely Remodeled, Refltted, and Refurnished ..... Steam Heat. European Plan. $1.00 per Day and Upward. American Plan. $3.50 per Day and Upward. RESTAURANT Wirst Floor, Fifteenth Street DoorL Unexcelled for convenience of location and beauty of appointments, CAFE Chestnut StreeU. Especially arranged for prompt and excellent service. WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY OFFICE LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER SPECIAL RATES TO COLLEGE TEAMS 6779 IROQUOIS 3 4, CAFE AND REJTA URANT 212:214 E. Main Stu CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. Banquets and Fraternity Suppers Served on Short Notice. Ladiey Dining Room. JOHN M. CAMPBELL, 4 Proprietor. M--x..+-a. M 4 , ..-4.. ......A 4 - . - 4' 6A '0 l $ '1 m T j 9 JAHNKE BROS. Watchmakers, Jeevelers, and Opticians, 912 Main Street, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. Is the place to have your eyes fitted With Spectacles and Eye-Glasses that are really comfortable. EXAMINATIONS FREE OF CHARGE. lTI-IE GREAT SOUTHERN NOVEL: WALLANNAH v9;$voxli?.N138E:Th?rh$XE8EX$$ A'VIVID AND THRILLING PICTURE OF LIFE IN THE CAROLINA COLONIES. LARGE lZmo. CLOTH. ; PRICE, Poshpaid, $1.50. B. F. Johnson Publishing'Co., Richmond, Va. CORRECT DRESS FOR MEN AND,BOYS. . . . . Opposite Post-Office. GANSaRADY COMPANY, Clothing . . Furnishing Goods . . Hats. Entire Building, 1005 East Main Street, ' RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. University Bookstore, Sieburgk GINGER ALE. ESTABLISHED 1825. J ,9; 1Itaha GEO. W. OLIVIER, SODA UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. PUBLISHER, BO0KSELLER, and STATIONER Appollos Mineral Water in Syphons. Take No Sub'stitute. .3 C. 86 0. Ticket Office and Adams Express Office at SIEBURG 8: CO., University Bookstore, GEORGE w. ouvnsa, Agent. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. 011315 ?llmtual is? a iaptcimen of nut iBtinting, QEngtahing, ant: awnhmg Is to handle your order for print- ing just as if you were the only customer we had, and yours the only order in our establishment; as indeed it is, so far as you are concerned. If you don,t get this kind of service, you donht get what we want to give you; thats the idea we train our forces to follow. The Stone Printing and Manufagturing Compoy 110-112-114 Nortlz 76fferson Street. EDWARD L. STONE, President. Roanoke, V3. A. SIMON c8: SON. Makers of. fine QClotbes RICHMOND, VA. 708 East Main Street, You Can Always Find the Latest Style in garnisbing 600135 at MUSCOE H. GARNETTS. Corner 8th and Main Streets, RICHMOND, VA. Ten per cent. discount on HA TS to Students. HATCH c8: DEAN, Manufacturers of Custom - Made Shirts Collars, Cuffs, and Underwear. Merfs Fine Furnishers. 25 AND 27 GRANBY STREET. CITY BY THE SEA. NORFOLK, VA. SOLE AGENTS IN NORFOLK FOR DR. JAEGER' S SANITARY WOOLEN UNDERWEAR. fibe Cibarlottesville Bargain E?ouse 412 EAST MAIN STREET. J3 MENS AN 0 BOY? CLOTHING $9.3 Mews Furnishing Goods, Shoes. Haiis, Under- wear. Notions, Dry Goods, etc. We carry a line of strictly up-to-date goods. and sell everything at cut prices. We only ask an opportunity to conyince the most skeptlcal that we are in a. positlon to save you money. A GPOSTAL will connect you with the Finest and largest . . QZlotbierg I N T H E S O U T H We Fill Mail Orders. 0. H. BERRY a. 00.. RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. CONSTABLE BROS., Shirt makers MEN'S FURNISHINGS, and UP-TO-DATE a! TAILORINC 907 East Main Street, RICHMOND, VA. JOHN R. KIRACOPE, metfs Surnisbings, bats, SHOES, AND FINE TAILORING. STAUNTON, VA. D. Lowenberg A. E. Gampe Jacob B. Lowenberg Che D Siemenberg Boot anb Shoe iompang. MODERN, ARTISTIC. COMFORTABLE FOOTWEAR. Main Street :3 :3 J NORFOLK, VA. C. LUMSDEN 8c SON, HOTEL CARROLL, LYNCHBURG, VA. 3eweler5 J . . . . ano . . . . wptiaang FIRST-CLASS IN EVERY RESPECT. PPOPRIETOR. 731 Main Street, RICHMONDVA, w. w. LYNN, MOOSE BROS. CO. JOSEPH AUERBACH, printers and ; 1bigbgdila55 JBIEHIR JBOOR Makers furnishingg COLLEGE WORK OUR SPECIALTY. WE THRIVE UNDER THE SEARCHING LIGHT Best Make Hats . . Shirts Made to Measure OF INVESTIGATION. 623 Penna. Ave. LYNCHBURG, VIRGINIA. WASHINGTON, D. C. IfTHEYHREHW BRYAN 8: 00., 1RI'Cb,8 5'3068 15th and FSIs., WASHINGTON, D. C. Importers of . . . MENHS AND WOMENS jfine furnishings THEY,RE PROPER College Shoes Our Specialty. NEW BUILDING, 1001 F STREET, CORNER TENTH, . . . and HATS. WASHI,NGTON,D.C. SoleAgenlsforDUNLAPSzCO. A. C H E s H I R E M ITC H ELL, cm' $150,003 SWFingo'tzozms- Troprielor of . . MITCHELUS SYSTEM OF The Flrst Natlonal Bank motels anb Restaurants Of Lynchburg, Caters for Banquets. Special Suppers, etc. L See him about Menu and Prices. LYNCHBURG, VA. HOTEL GLEA'SON, HOTEL CLERMONT, T . q. UNION STATION RESTAURANT JLDGE JOHN D. HORSLEX. PreK 1dent. W. A. O'BRIEN, Vice-President. ALL UNDER HIS MANAGEMENT. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA- E. P. MILLER, Cashier. 4 H m ' z . H . x haw aw nuvA-n-nm' ..H , w. mm 1. M 3,10 yw ,. V H 4H,: m w H k4,. ,, A k 2 Na r ; J L. V Hi. - . JO H N F. K O H L E R, c. F. GREENWOOD FRED. GREENWOOD C. F. GREENWOOD 6.. BRO., 318 MAIN STREET, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA. ins e eIr 5W3? 99 9 ma JEWELEKSW U f all I I 11$ I n n 5 Special attention given to the repairs of Chro- nometers and Fine Watches. J ewelry made to order and repaired by bes workmen. 209 5' BROAD ST' RICHMOND' VA' Society and School Medals made to order. ESTABLISHED 1856 ron GIFTS. KELLER 8c GEORGE, SBEW Designs in Gold J ewelry, Diamonds. and Precious Stones . . . Sterling Silver Table- 38m BIEtg ware, Toilet Articles, and Novelties . . . Watches. With best American or imported movements . . . . Clocks and Clock Sets. Qbarns QEIIEIHIIEU THE NOWLAN COMPANY, NO. 921 EAST MAIN STREET, RICHMOND, VA. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. CUT GLASS W. C. PAYNE, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA. COVINGTON 85 PEYTON, $bina Glassware, Lamps, Table Cutlery, and House F urnishings. PIANOS AN D ORGANS Regal and Washburn Guitars, Mando- lins, and Banjos. 208 E. Main St, CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. PIANOS RENTED- 9 VIRGINIA FEMALEINSTITUTE JARMAN s BOOK STORE, STAUNTON, VIRGINIA. H E A D Q U A R T E R S F 0 R Diocesan School for Young Ladies. $ tnElecLixaefourses in English, Music, Art, Elo- W cu 10n, an anguages. dfine tationer Fifty-Ninth Session Begins y September I 9th. 3mm 62500115 . . wail paper For catalogue, apply to Picture Frames Made to Order. MISS MARIA PENDLETON DUVAL, PRIN. Successorto Mrs. General J. E. B. Stuart. 216 East Main Street. JAMES E. JARMAN. W. A. Irving, A. D. PAYNE a 00., Successor to GENTRY a IRVING. LI VERY 6' 6' JTABLEJ : : I Y Up to Date L V E R mama 625 West Main Street amm 4 4 Corner Market and E. Fifth Street STYLISH RIGS Students, Patronage SOIiCitedJJ'! Fine Driving and Saddle Horses. Expert White Hot and Cold Stylish and Up--to-Date Barbers. Baths. Rubber Tire Vehicles. Nice Single and Double , Driving Horses. DA V1319 001...... . Tonsorial Parlors. P010 C e L l v e ry GRAFTON D. PAYNE 63 CO.. Propr's. Next to Clermont Hotel. Stables: 242 West Main St. Foot Vinegar Hill. B A R B E R S ' New 2Phone 154 :1 n7 n7 Old 2Phone 55 M 0 d e I Home Steam Laundry. CHARLOTTESVILLE. a! VA. In 1.4 n r . Stea an d y Modern Machtnery E. A. JOACHIM. Modern Methods Pmprwtor' High:Grade Work 'Phone 250. e! No. 212 W. Main Street. Students' Work Solicited and Patronage SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. Appreciated. A. N. ADAMS J. PAYNE CARROLL E. M. REA Buyyour coal,WOOd, and ADAMS a 00., Kindling H A R :0 WA R E F R 0 M M. TIMBERLAKE Agents Deerilng Harvesting Machinery and Old Hick Farm Wagons. University Drug Store. Agent for H. P. Porter Coal Co No. 406 East Main Street, 7 CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ' . i1 1km . In; u, R ,l 13$!ng REPUTATION Z BU 1 LT ON QUALITY + mi ' g ; . 1;. ,9 . EDWARD J. QUINN, ..! ' R 604 Penn. Ave., I' and through to Penn. R. R. Depot. WASI'llNGTON, D. C. JIMIINN '7 m... 04 6-uoB w... i $1.00 PER QUART $4.00 PER GALLON. IV 15. .am -- Wmmgwgwm -i5:iif lesm BROWMFORMANfCO. LOUISVILLE. KENTUCKY. thleyf v.60 Zoqffy. FRANK HUME, ...SMOKE . .. IMPORTER BRISTOL CLUB and WHOLESALE GROCER. SuPeWe $ Granulated 454 PENNSYLVANIA AVE., Smoking Tobacco WASHINGTON, D. C.
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