Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN)

 - Class of 1893

Page 1 of 282

 

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1893 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 282 of the 1893 volume:

.) vrumbrrlaiit |Jrcsbntrrian jJubliglung % ou r. 'asl)Uillr, f niinwc. Ye Editors............................. Introduction......................... Calendar,.............................. Board of Trust.................. Officers of Instruction and Government, Fellows, Post-Graduates......................... Classes, ...... Irregular and Special Students, Our Co-eds,.......................... Manual Training........................ Theological Department, . Law Department......................... Department of Pharmacy. Recapitulation,........................ Fraternities, . Literary Societies,.................... The Hustler.......................... The Observer,.......................... Y. M. C. A.,........................ Clubs, . ........................ Athletics............................ Miscellany,............................ Literary,............................ Advertisements . 4 5 9 10 11 16 «7 22 40 42 43 44 48 52 54 55 81 87 89 90 93 113 129 «43 87 Comet Editors. John C. Brown, Jr. Chas. C. Trabue. John H. DeWiit. R. W. Clawson. W in. Foster, Jr. Harry L. Seay. Tlios. G, Kittrell. G. B, X’ugh. B. Beauchamp. G. Hamilton I lisle. A. M. Trawick, Jr, ThE ink’s scarcely dry, the occasion is nigh, WhEn out from its homE in thE cloudless blue sky Must dawn on the world, with its tail all uncurled, And into the literary firmament hurled, □ ur heart's dearest treasure, in prose and in measure, Designed with the object alone to refresh you, May you not rue the day when there came in yaur way That divine luminary which now holds full sway □ ’Er Vanderbilt, alike thro’ night and thro’ day, We ask you to buy it and not to decry it, But give it a chance and evEr stand by it, Nat far this sonnEt, nor what you’ll get from it, But simply because it’s the VANDERBILT CDMET, • ) l| hail fo thee,celestial Come) Which fo esj whepesoeep tljou ivilj- Qlitferrncj fpon the skies aboJe a tn rou5hot'| the bread emja peaa sea jnd hai| iotti ee terrestrial Comef Whidp shines abroad fron? Voiderbil( Gjaddenma alj -ftis 'vorld below . qai| the Come( -— © oj riinetvj-nrhr ( (j alenJniu. 1893. Session begins................................................September 20 Law Lectures begins ..........................................September 20 Examinations and Classifications of New Students . September iS, 19. 20 Lectures on Pharmacy begin....................................September 20 Introductory Sermon...........................................September 24 Lectures on Dentistry begin ....................................October 1 Medical Lectures begin................................................... Anniversary of Dialectic Society.......................Thanksgiving Day 1894. Second Term begins ....... Anniversary of Philosophic Society.............. Dental Department Commencement Exercises .... Medical Department Commencement Exercises . . . . Last Day for Receiving Essays and Theses. .... Founder’s Day. and Contest for Founder's Medal (evening) . Final Examinations begin ........ Celebration of Literary Societies Young Prize Medal (evening). Class Day ........... Commencement Sermon ......... Annual Meeting of Hoard of Trust (9 a.m. Monday) Alumni Day (evening) ........ Contest for A. L. P. Green Medal (10 a.m.) .... Annual Address before Literary Societies (evening) Commencement Day (Wednesday) ...... February 1 February 22 February 23 . May 15 May 26 • June 3 June 15 . June 16 June 17 . June 18 June 18 . June 19 June 19 . June 20 Boa hd ok T ktj st, R. A. YOENG. I).I)., Officers of the I oard. Bishop K. K. HARHBOYK. I .I .. President. Rev. GKO. A. DAXXKKI.Y. Vice Presidents. R. A. YOENG, D.D., .Secretary, Nashville, Trim. E. XV. COLE, Treasi rer. Nashville, Trim. WILS WILLIAMS. Birs.vr. KxccntiVc ( U) 11) i u i 11 c c. Bishop R. K. HARGROYK, R. A. YOUXG, D.D.. E. II. LAST, ROBKRT W. BROWDER, AXSOX WEST. I .I . Bishop .(. ('. KKKXKR. Bishop A. XV. WILSON, Bishop J. C. GRAXBKRY, Bishop R. K. HARGROVE, Bishop W. W. DEXCAX, Rev. S. II. BABCOCK. Rev. ROBKRT W. BROWDER. J. XV. BROWN, M.D., A. R. CARTER. B.A Rev. G. A. DAXXKLLY, K. II. EAST, T. T. III LLM AX, Bishop C. B. (J ALLOW AY, Bishop K. R. HENDRIK, Bishop S. KKY. Bishop A. G. HAYG0OD, Bishop O. P. FITZGERA LI), ANDREW IIEXTKR, D.D., XV. C. .lollXsoX. D.D., Rev. R. M. STAXPEFER, II. .L LIVIXGSTOX, J. XV. STAY TON, s. K. STOXK. AXSOX WEST. I).I)., Hon. K. II. KAST, XS(.)X WKST, I .! .. Rev. S. II. BABCOCK. ANDRKW IIEXTKR, D.D, 10 Cam its View. ©j?j?ieer£ oj? dJnAfruefioq anil ( o ernrrjeaf. L. C. GARLAND, A.M., LL.D., Chancellor and Professor of Physics and Astronomy. JAS. M. SAFFORI), M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Natural History and (ieology and Dean of Pharmaceutical Faculty. WILLIAM M. BASKERYILL, A.M.. Pii.D. (Leipsic), Professor of Knglish Language and Literature. CHAS. F. SMITH, A.M., Pii.D. (Leipsic), Professor of Creek Language and Literature. WILLIAM J. VAUGHN, M.A., LL.D., Professor of Mathematics. JAMES H. KIRKLAND, A.M., Pii.D. (Leipsic), Professor of Latin Language and Literature WILLIAM L. DUDLEY, M.D., Professor of Chemistry. COLLINS DENNY, A.M.. ILL., Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy. A. R. HOHLFELD, A.M., Pii.D. (Leipsic), Professor of (lermanic Languages. J. T. McGILL. B.S., Pii.D., Adjunct Professor of Chemistry. JOHN DANIEL, M.A., Adjunct Professor of Physics. 1 1 FREDERICK W. MOORE, Ph.I). (Vale), Adjunct Professor of History ami Economics. WILBUR F. TILLETT, A.M., D.D., Professor of Systematic Theology and Dean of Theological Faculty. GROSS ALEXANDER. S.T.D., Professor of New Testament Creek and Exegesis. V. V. MARTIN. M.A., B.D., Professor of Hebrew and Old Testament Exegesis. O. E. BROWN. A.M.. B.D., Professor of Biblical and Ecclesiastical History. THOMAS H. MALONE, M.A., Dean of Law Faculty and Professor of Equity Jurisprudence and Corporation and Commercial Law. R. McPHAIL, SMITH, M.A., Professor of Common, Statute and Constitutional Law. ED BAXTER. Professor of the Law of Evidence, Pleading and Practice. THOMAS MENEES. M.D., Professor of Obstetrics and Dean of the Medical Faculty. WILLIAM T. BRIGGS, M.D., Professor of Surgery. THOMAS L. MADDIN, M.D., Professor of Principles of Medicine and General Pathology. WILLIAM L. NICHOL, M.D., Professor of Practice of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. JOHN H. CALLENDAR, M.D., Pii.I)., Professor of Physiology and Psychology. THOMAS A. ATCHISON, M.D.. Professor of General and Special Therapeutics and State Medii inc. CHARLES S. BRIGGS, M I). Professor of Surgied Anatomy and Operatic Surgery. ORVILLE II. MENKES, M.D., Professor of Anatomy ami Histology. G. C. SAVAGE, M.D., Professor of diseases of the Eye and Ear. WILLIAM G. EWING, M.D., Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacy (Medical department). RICHARD DOUGLAS. M.D., Professor of diseases of Women and Clinical (iynecologv. E. A. RUDDIMAN, Pu.M., M.D., Adjunct Professor of Materia Medica and Pharmacy 1 department of Pharmacy) WM. H. MORGAN, M.D., D.D.S.. Professor of Clinical dentistry and dental Pathology and dean of dental Faculty ROBERT R. FREEMAN, M.D., D.D.S., Professor of Mechanical and Corrective dentistry. I). R. STUBBLEFIELD, M.A., M.D., D.D.S., Professor of Chemistry and Metallurgy in Dental department. AMBROSE MORRISON. M.D.. Professor of Anatomy and Physiology in dental department. HENRY W. MORGAN. M.D., D.D.S., Professor of Operative dentistry and dental Hygiene. OLIN H. LANDRETH. M.A., C.K., Professor of Engineering and Dean of Engineering Faculty. C. L. THORNBURG. C.E., Ph.I)., Adjunct Professor of Ci il Engineering and Practical Astronomy. WILLIAM T. MAGRUDER. M.E., Adjunct Professor of Mechanical Engineering. AUSTIN II. MERRILL. A.M.. I list ructor in Eloeui ion P. A. RODRIGUEZ. B.D.. Instruct r in Spanish. C. C. FERRELL, M.A., Pi-i.D. (Leipsic), Instructor in Greek and Latin. E. L. RICHARDSON, M.A., Instructor in French. W. H. HOLLINSHEAD, Pii.G., Post-Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Chemistry. CALVIN S. BROWN. B.S., I).Sc., Post-Graduate Fellow and Assistant in English. PAUL M. JON ES, B.S., I).Sc., Post-Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Natural History ami Geology. A. H. WILSON. B.S., Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Mathematics. EDWIN MIMS. A.B.. Graduate Fellow and Assistant in History. R. W. CLAWSON, B.S., Instructor in Physics. P. H. PORTER. C.E., Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Engineering. J. H. OGBURN, C.E., Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Manual Training. S. H. WHITE, Pii.G., Assistant in the Chemical Laboratory (Department oi Pharmacy). J. I). B. DeBOW. Esq., Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence. SIDNEY S. CROCKETT. M.D.. Demonstrator of Anatomy. GEO. W. SICAV, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator. JOHN M. BASS, M.D., Assistant Ilemonstrator. 14 LARKIN SMITH. M.D., Demonstrator of Histology and Microscopy. M. II. BONN HR, M.D., Assistant to ('hair of Obstetrics. C. R. ATCHISON, M.D., Assistant to (’hair of Materia Medica Medical Department). A. L. PURINTON. M.D., Assistant to Chair of Chemistry Medical Department). GEO. H. PRICK, M.D., Assistant in Diseases of the Eye and Bar. SAMUEL S. BRIGGS, M.D., As istant to Chairs of Denera! and operative Surgery. OWEN H. WILSON, M.D., Assistant to Chair of tiyneeology. JAS. A. DALE, Jr., D.D.S., Instructor in Crown and Bridge Work. J. L. STOKES, D.D.S., (). G. MINGLKDORF, D.D.S.. Demonstrators of Operative and Mechanical Dentistry. WILS WILLIAMS, Secretary of the Faculty. J. T. GW AT IIM ICY, M.D., Director of the Dymnasium and Instructor in Physical Exercise. CHARLES C. WASHBURN, Instructor in 'ocal Music in Biblical Department. JOHN ASHFORD, Engineer and Instructor in Machine-shop. P. O’CONNOR, Instructor in Wnod-shop in Engineering Department. Cl I AS. F. FINCH, Instructor in Korgt -shop and Foundry. DAVID DOUGLAS, Superintendent of hounds. POST-GRADUATE FELLOWS. W. II. Ilollinshead, Pli.G.. Calvin S. Brown, I).Sc., Paul M. Jones, I) Sc.. GRADUATE A. II. Wilson, B.S., Edwin Mims, A.B., John II. Ogburn. C.E.. . P. H. Porter, C.E., SCHOLASTIC F. R. Alexander, A.B., J. B. Browder, A.B., B. M. Drake, A.B., George ICllsler, A.B., J. M. Hawley, A.B.. B.D., . J. S. Johnston, A.B., G. C. Miller, A.M., J. W. Neal. A.B............ J. A. Robins, A.B., J. B. Thomas, A.B., M. J. Yeomans, A.B.. . P. I). Youngblood, A.B., Fort Yalley, Ga. Obion, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. FELLOWS. Saundersville, Tenn. Little Rock. Ark. Spring field. Tenn. Clinton, ky. FELLOWS. Oak Ridge, La. Nashville. Tenn. Jackson, La. . Baltimore, Md. Little Rock, Ark. Jackson, La. Conway, Ark. . Clinton, Tenn. Gun town. Miss. Marion, Ya. . Milieu, Ga. Atlanta. Ga. ID F. R. Alexander, A.B., . . . Centenary College. J T J Knulisli Philology. English Literature. History, Moral Philosophy. V. B. BlvA t’CHAM 1 . A.B.. 2' English Literature. V. C. Branham, A.M . n h Eeonomies. Fellow in History, ’87-89. Ranclolpli-Macon. Vanderbilt. J. Bailey Browder. A.B., .... Vanderbilt. ! (•reek, Latin Eujdish Philology, English Literature. Manager Tennis Association, ’91-93 : Scholastic bellow '92-93. Vanderbilt. C. S. Brown, Jr., B.S., I).Sc.. English. Gothic. Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Technology. 89-90: in Eng- lish,’90-92; Member of American Dialect .Society and Mod- ern Language Association. R. V. Clawson, B.S., 2' .1 ;; A 1' 1’ Electrieitv. Vanderbilt. Treasurer Class ’92 : Assistant Editor Observer, ’91-92 : Local Editor Hustler, 92-93: Editor Comet. '92-93: Instructor in Physics, ’92-93; Bachelor of Ugliness, 93. H. A. Davis, 2' English Literature. . Vanderbilt. B. M. Drake, A.B., .... . ' Centenary Col 1 ege nglish Philology, English Literature, Greek, Latin. G. W. Dyer, A.B., .... (dee Club. Moral Philosophy. Randolph-Macon. George Ellslkr, A.B., Latin, Greek. Swarthmore. M. C. Hardin, B.P. Central College, 2' . B.D. Vanderbilt. •'.nulish Literature, M ral Philosophy, Economics. E. H. Hawkins, A.M.. i J H Southern University. English Literature. Ilistoiy. Contestant for Founders’ Medal, '93: Thanksgiving Debate, '92. Jas. M. Hawley, A.B., B.D., . . . Vanderbilt li h English Literature, Moral Philosophy, History. Economies. Founders’ Medalist in Theological Department, '92: Glee Club ; Scholastic Fellow, '92-93. IS J. B. Henry, Randolph-Macon. Moral Philosophy. V. H. Hoixinshead, Pii.G., . . . Vanderbilt. Chemist ry. Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Chemistry. '87-88: Post- Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Chemistry,’88-93 : Mem- ber American Association for Advancement of Science. J. S. Johnston, A.B.. . . . Centenary College. A 1' English, Mathematics, History, Economies (•lee Club; Scholastic Fellow, ’92-93. P. M. Jonhs, I .Sc., ' ' J H Biology, (icolojjy. Vanderbilt. Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Natural History and Geology, ’89-91; Post-Graduate Fellow. ’91-93: Editor Comet, ’90; Secretary V. A. A.. ’90-93: Treasurer Alumni Association, ’90; Delegate to Phi Delta Theta Convention, '91 ; Assistant Geologist 1 . S. Geological Society, 90-93. Thomas II. Malone, Jr., A.B.. . . . Vanderbilt. A .1 English Literature, History, Economics, Moral Philosophy. Class President, ’89; ’Varsity Nine. '90-92; Comet Kd- itor, ’91 ; Class Historian. ’92. C. F. McKenzie, A.B., J A . English Eiteratmv. Scholastic Fellow. ’91-92 : Captain ’Varsity ‘Varsity Eleven, ’91. Nine. Brown. '91-98 : G. C. Miller, A.M., .... Hendrix College. Ark. English, Latin, French, «erman. Economics. Scholastic Fellow. ID Vanderbilt. Edwin Mims. A.B., j « : English Literature. English Philology, Economies, Moral Philosophy. Vice President V. M. C. A., ’91-92; Class Historian, ’90: Thanksgiving Debater, '90: Observer Prize Essay, 91-92; Class Representative, '92; Editor-in-CIlief Observer, '92-93; Graduate Fellow and Assistant in History, '92-93. Charlotte Moore, .... Wellesley and Cornell. English Philology. J. W. Neal, A.B., .... Emory and Henry. Greek, Latin, English. Mathematics, History. Scholastic Fellow, 92-93. John H. Ogiurn, C.E . If H II Engineering, Electricity, Astronomy. Vanderbilt. Engineering Club; Varsity Nine,‘90-93: Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Manual Training, ’92-93; Special Artist to the Comet. '93. P. H. Porter, C.E., ..... Vanderbilt, j a ; Engineering, Astronomy. Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Engineering, 91-93; ’Var- sity Eleven, ‘90: Manager 'Varsity Nine, '90-93; Business Manager Hustler. '91-93: Editor Comet, '92. Herman D. Ruhm, B.E., .... Vanderbilt. If H II Astronomy, Engineering. Delegate to Beta Theta Pi Convention. '90; ‘Varsity Eleven, ’90: Editor Comet, 92; Manager'Varsity Eleven, ’92. Jas. A. Robins, A.B., .... Vanderbilt. Greek, Latin, English Literature. Moral Philosophy. Thanksgiving Debater,'90; Assistant Editor Observer, ’90-91 : Class Vice President, '88, '92; President Mississippi Club, '91-92 : Assistant Editor Hustler, ‘91-93; Founders' Medalist, ’92; Contestant for Representative in S. 1.0. A; Bachelor ol Ugliness, '92. Scholastic Fellow. Olive R. Ross, University of Xashville. English Philology. J. W. Stovall, . . . . Vanderbilt. Greek, English Philology. Editor-in-Chief Observer, ’85-86. J. M. Strother, j A ; Geology. Vanderbilt. F. M. Thomas, A.B., 2' Moral Philosophy. Ogden College, Ky. J. B. Thomas, A.B., 2’ A i: Mathematies, Emory and Henry. Physics, A st ronomy. Scholastic Fellow. A. H. Wilson, B.S., ..... Vanderbilt. A 2’ Mathematics, Electricity, Moral Philosophy. Treasurer V. M. C. A.. '91-92: Class Secretary, ’90: Class President. ’91 : Assistant Editor I fustier, ’90-92: Editor Comet, ’90; Faculty Representative, 92; Graduate Fellow and Assistant in Mathematics, '92-95: Treasurer Athletic Asso- ciation, 92-93. M. J. Yeomans, A.B., . . . University of Georgia. 2 V Economics, History, English Literature, Geology. Scholastic Fellow. P. I). Youngblood, A.B., . . . University of Georgia. ! Chemistry. Scholastic Fellow. Senior (JInss. CLASS JAMES M. STROTHER, JOHN W. CROOK. . W. W. CRAIG, JNO. C. WALL, W. R. NANCE. R. ALLEN. H. A. DAVIS, . T. C. MEADOWS, . W. R. NANCE. W. W. CRAIG, OFFICERS. President. I'ice President. Poet. Historian. Secretary. Treasurer. Captain of Eleven. Captain of Nine. Faculty Representative. Class Representative. Richard M. Ai.i.kn, Academic. Dixon Springs, Tenn. 2’ .1 : ■ I 2' 2' Varsity Eleven '90-91. ’91-92. ’92-93: Medal. Putting Shot, ’93: Medal. Throwing Hammer, '93. John A. Bell, Jr.. Academic, Nashville, Tenn. 2' I ; Contestant for Young Medal, ’93. Lytle Brown, Engineering, Nashville. Tenn. ; h n Treas. Engineering Club, '90-91 ; Class President, '91-92. William Y. Craig. Academic, . . Friendship, Tenn. Medal. Quarter Mile Race. '90: 'Varsity Eleven. '90-93: Assistant Editor Observer, '91-92: Medal. 440 Yard Run and Running Broad Jump, '92: Crawford Scholarship. '92: Class Representative, ’93: Medal. 440 Yard Run, '93: Broad Jump, '93. Ai.hert P. Crockett, Academic, . • . Arrington, Tenn. i J 7' Assistant Editor Observer, '91-92; Treas. West Side Row, ’90-93- John W. Crook, Engineering, .... Paris, Texas. Vice President Engineering Club, '92-93. Henry A. Davis, Academic.................................Cayce, Ky. 2' ‘Varsity hdeven, ’92-93. J. Henry Dinning, Academic, .... Gleason, Tenn. A 2' Thomas C. Meadows, Engineering, 2' , Owen Prize Medal. '92. Columbia, Tenn. Cornersville, Tenii. Walter B. Nance, Academic, j a •: Assistant Editor Observer, '90-91 ; Observer Prize Essay, '93; Faculty Representative, '93. John S. O’Neal, Engineering, .... Palmyra, Tenn. II H U BTP; Class President, 91-92. James M. Strother. Academic. . . . Vanceburg, Ky. J A 1: Anniversary Orator Garland Lyceum, ’89; Editor-in-Chief Observer, ’91-92; Class President, 93. John C. Wall, Academic, .... Franklin, Tenn. J A .'; I 1’ 1' Contestant for Founder’s Medal, ’93; OlTicialscorer,’92-93; Sub 'Varsity Eleven, '90-91. Samuel F. Wynn, Academic, . . . Tiptonville. Tenn. i Vi k4)T Jiii)ioi (-lass. Yell Hip, hurrah ! hip. hurroar! Walilaca, wahlaca. ninety-four! CLASS OFFICERS. W. II. BATHS, J. P. H ANN HR, . W. K. BKARI), . C. T. KIRKPATRICK, W. R. COLIC R. A. WKAYKR, M. M. CULLOM, . T. (). KITTRKLL, C. R. BASKHRYILL. 'reside . I ice 'resident. Secretary and Treasure Historian. Toet. ( af tain of Nine. Manager of Nine. ( af tain of HI even. Manager of '. even. R. A. Barr, Medical, .................................Gallatin, Tenn. ' ' J H ; A 1’ r Manager 'Varsity Nine, ’89-90; Captain 'Varsity Nine, '90-91 ; Varsity Eleven, ’91-92-93; Varsity Nine, 88-93. C. R. Baskervii.l, Academic, . . Stanton Depot, Tenn. •b J h Wahlaca Ivleven. ’91, '92; Manager Ivleven. '92. W. II. Bates, Academic, .... Woodbury, Tenn. Class President, ’92 93; Thanksgiving Debate; Entrance Examination Prize, '90. W. K. Beard, Academic, .... Murfreesboro, Tenn. A 2' Class Secretary and Treasurer, ’92-93; Varsity Eleven. ’92 ; Vahlaca Eleven. '92. John S. Buti.er, Engineering, . . . Nashville, Tenn. ! J. W. Clark, Academic, .... Lake Charles, La. 2' W. R. Cole, Academic, ... . Nashville, Tenn. ! Delegate to Chi Phi Convention, ’90 and '92; Comet Editor. '92; Class Poet, ’92-93. M. M. Cullom. Academic, .... Clarksville, Tenn. J A ; Class President. '91-92; President of Y. M. C. A., 92-93; Hustler Editor, ’93; Manager Wahlaca Nine, ’92-93. J. II. DeWitt, Academic, .... Nashville, 'Penn. b J H Class Poet. '91-92; Editor Observe . 92-93; Editor Comet. '93; Contestant for Young Medal, '93. C. F. Finch, Engineering, Eden, N. C. Instructor in Forge and Foundry. Grace Fuepin, Academic, .... Brownsville, Tenn. J. W. Fort, Academic, ...... Macon, Ga. J. P. Manner, Jr., Academic............................Franklin, Tenn. i j H Class ‘ice President, ’92-93; Wahlaca Eleven, ’91, ’92; Sub on ’Varsity Eleven, '92. J. Granhery Jackson, Engineering, . Mt. Pleasant, Tenn. Thanksgiving Debate, '91 : Manager West Side Row, '91-93; Contestant for Young Prize Medal, 93; Comet Editor, 93, Observer Editor. 92-93; Varsity Eleven. 91-93; Assistant Captain of 'Varsity Eleven, ’93. A A Prize on Entrance Examination, ’90s T. G. Kittrei.l, Academic, j a ; Linden, Tenn. J. A. Lewis, Academic, Water Holes, Miss. II. II. Lyon. Academic, i‘ .1 ; Louisville, Ky. C. T. Kirkpatrick. Academic, Nashville. Tenn. A Class 11istorian, ’92-93. J. (). Mahoney, Engineering, L nn ille, Tenn. 2' . Wahlaca Eleven. 91 93. N. H. Morris, Engineering, Wahlaca Eleven, '91-93. Lebanon, Tenn. N. Row hi.1.. Academic, .... Wichita Falls, Texas. Annie Pasciiall, Academic, Tullahoma, 'Penn. Stephen Ritchie, Academic, . Sardis, Miss. A. F. Smith. Academic, . Clarksville, Tenn. J. W. Stovall, Academic, Bee ville, Texas. Shiri.ey Thompson, Engineering, ’Varsity Nine, 90-93. Louisville, Ky. A. M. Trawick, Jr., Academic, .1 T il Na: liville, Tenn. Clas President, 90-91 ; Comet Editor, '92, ‘93- W. T. Walker, Academic, Bass Station. Ala. j a : Wahlaca Eleven, '91-93; Sub Varsity Eleven, 92. R. A. WEAVKR, Academic, .... Memphis, Ten . ' ' J H Captain Wahlaca Nine, 91 93; Editor Hustler; Treasurer Tennis Club. 92 93 ; Winner Mile Run, '92 and 93. W. I . Wendell, Academic, .... Aberdeen, Miss, j : II. J. Wright, Academic, Mayfield, Ky. SopIjOIIJOI'C (dclSS Yell.—M. I), Three C, Nonaginta quinque! Colors.- Old Gold—Crimson and Blue. Eloivi r.—Carnation. CLASS OFFICERS. J. V. BA V LI CSS. President. II. J. UVINGSTON, Jr,. . I ire President. G. B. OVKRTOX, Jr., Secretary and Treasurer. MISS GKRTYIC JONHS, Historian. Poet. II. C. AUCXANDKR. Capt. and M'gr. of Nine. BIN FOR I) TI IRONIC, ( apt. and M yr. of Eleven. II. C. Alexander, Academic, ... 1 7' J 'Varsity Nine. Captain Class Nine. 'nion City, Tenn 11 M. Hailey, Engineering, A 1' Class Nine and Eleven ; Engineering Club. Franklin. Tenn. J. V. Bayless, Engineering, .... J a ; Class President; Engineering Club. Memphis, Tenn Clkanth Brooks. Academic, .1 ’ •' Clinton, Ky. John C. Brown, Jr., Academic, j r j Editor of Comet. '93. Nashville, Tenn. J. E. Buchanan, Academic, .... 2 A : Class Nine and Eleven ; Record lor High Dive. Franklin. Tenn. Benj. Childers, Academic, .... ' J h Pulaski. Tenn. L. A. Davis, Academic Weatherford, Texas. A A Vice President of Glee Club. W. vS. Davis, Academic Class Eleven. Nashville, Tenn. E. C. Dennis, Academic, .... A 1 Bishopville, S. C. Vice President Class ’91 ’92; Observer, 92 93. ; o Nashville, Tenn. X. Farrell, Jr., Academic. ' ' J n Class Eleven and Nine. W. H. Flowers, Jr., Academic, .... Bolling, Ala. i t a Frank Fletcher. Engineering, . . . Nashville, Tenn. i: h ’Varsity Nine. '93; ‘Varsity Eleven, 92; Class Eleven. _ • , ’ E. O. Harris, Academic, ' J H Nashville, Tenn. V. R. Hendrix. Academic, j a ; ( lce Chib; ’Varsity Nine. Nashville, Tenn. W. '1'. Hi’ee. Academic. Class Eleven. Bellbuckle, Tenn. J. R. Hunter. Academic, Ducktown, Tenn. Oertve Jones. Academic, Class Historian. '92-’93. Nashville, Tenn. H. M. Jones, Engineering, 1 T a Class Nine and Eleven. Murfreesboro, Tenn. E. E Jordan. Academic, 2' Class Eleven. Murfreesboro, Tenn I . E. Kelton, Academic, I T a Corsicana, 'Pexas (Mve Club; Class Eleven; Class Poet, ‘91-92 and ‘92-93. Ml Somerville, Tenn. M. K. Ketchum, Academic..................... J A ; Class Nine. H. J. Livingston, Jr. Academic, l j H Class Nine; Vice President Class, ’92-93. Lettie Lynch, Academic, .... R. L. Lund, Engineering, .... j a : («lee Club : Manager of ('.lee Club. V. K. Matthews, Academic..................... j a : B. B Mooney, Academic, .... R. M. Moorman, Academic..................... J A : S. A. Myatt, Academic,........................ G. B. Overton, Jr., Academic, 2’ Secretary and Treasurer Class '92-93. II. Powers, Academic,......................... A 2’ Cummins Ratci.ieke, Academic, A A Class Eleven and Nine; High Jump, 92, ’93. W. D. Riiea, Engineering, . . . . 2’ Brownsville, 'Penn. Bellbuckle, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Eranklin, Tenn. Beechville, Tenn. Somerville, 'Penn. I)ickson. Tenn. Louisville, Kv. Nashville, Tenn. Little Rock, Ark. Nashville, 'Penn. Nashville, Tenn. II. M. Robert, Jr., Academic, II H II A. A. Rodriguez, Engineering, . . . Nashville, Tenn. 2 A : Class Eleven and Nine. T. B. Scoggins, Engineering.......................Nashville, Tenn. i ; Class Nine. J. K. Stephens, Academic, .... Brentwood, Tenn. Class Eleven. Winner of Entrance Examination Prize. Binford Throne, Academic...................................Nashville, Tenn. . ' ' 'Varsity Eleven: Class Eleven and Nine; Class President, '91-92. J. H. Weatherford, Engineering, . Memphis, Tenn. II H II C. P. Williams, Academic, .... Mansfield, La. ! J H G. W. Williamson, Academic, . . . Cnlleoka, Tenn. R. E. Woods, Academic.............................Darlington, S. C. ! R. L. Yeager, Academic, I T it Mineral Wells. Texas. pYesfyijnij (.'hiss. Yell. Ninety-six, Sis, Boom All! Iii Vo. Hi Vo, Rah, Rah, Rah! Colors.—Green. CLASS OFFICERS CAMPBELL BONN HR, WILL HUGHKS, JANIE COURTNEY, J. T. HENDRICK. G. A. MORGAN, W. P. CONNELL. LUCIUS BURCH, W. B. MALONE, 'resident. I 'ice I 'reside?! t. 'oet. Historian. Secretary and Treasurer. ('apt. and M' r. of lit even. ('aptain of Nine. Manager of Nine. :u J. L. Andrews, Academic Meridian, Miss. vS. W. Alexander, Academic, 1' McKenzie, Tenn. Warren Atkinson, Engineering, Charleston, S. C. A. M. Ballentine, Academic, A A Pulaski, Tenn. J. T. Barbee, Academic, J A •; Ripley,Tenn. M. I). Boland, Academic, . Paris, Ky. Campbell Bonner, Academic, Nashville, Tenn. T. H. Brewer, Academic 2' Louisville, Ky. J. P. W. Brown, Engineering, ! J H Nashville, Tenn Class Eleven, ’92. Lucius Burch, Academic, A A Nashville, Tenn 'Varsity Eleven, ’92; Class Eleven, ’92. W P. Connell, Academic, 2' Nashville, Tenn ’Varsity Eleven, '92: Class Eleven, '92; Assistant Captain Field Sports, ’93. J. T. Cotton, Academic, .... Brentwood, Tenn. J an in Courtney, Academic Franklin, Tenn. Nashville, Tenii. J. Vat lx Crockett, Engineering, P J H G. B. Dantzi.hr, Academic, I John Dorgan, Engineering, R. E. Dotson, Academic, C. K. Dunbar, Academic, 2' A. D. Eathkrly, Engineering, Winner of Entrance Examination Prize. A. E. Elrod, Academic, J T J W. P. Fisher, Academic, K 2' Mabki.i.k Flippin, Academic, W. B. Eritii, Academic, H. E. Frost, Academic, R. B. Goodwin, Academic, R. V. Hale, Academic, Class Eleven. W.T. Hale, Academic, 2' rl : II. S. Manner, Academic, Moss Point, Miss. Nashville, Tenn. Vale Mills, Tenn. Augusta, Ga. Elkton, Tenn. Rutherford, Tenn. Franklin, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Nashville, Tenn. Memphis, Tenn. Murfreesboro, Tenn. Murfreesboro, Tenn. Columbia, Tenn. J. W. Han nek, Academic, ' ' J h Franklin, Tenn. J. T. Hendrick, Academic, ! Nashville, Tenn. W. P. Henritze, Academic, d u Rome, Ga. W. H. Henry, Engineering, 2' Louisville, Ky. William House;, Jr., Academic, j a : Franklin, Tenn. J. H. Hildebrand, Engineering, H h n White Haven, Tenn. Sul) ‘Varsity Eleven, ’92; Class Eleven, 92. W. W. Hudson, Academic, ! J H Mobile, Ala. R. C. Hughics, Academic, Grenada, Miss. William Hughes, Academic, j a •: Union City, Tenn. Class Eleven, 92. A. W. Jones, Academic Huntsville, Ala. M. M. Jones, Academic, Cornersville, Tenn. L. M. Jordan, Academic, Seneca, S. C. E. W. Jungkrmann, Academic, n h II Nashville, Tenn. Glee Club, ’92-93. r O E. F. Kennedy, Academic, Louisville, Miss. L. I). Kirby, Academic, J J Nashville, Tenn. Deyekevx Lake, Academic, Mobile, Ala. A. B. Lipscomb, Academic, Nashville, Tenn. L. J. Loventhal, Jr., Academic, Nashville, Tenn. C. M. Lutz, Academic Madisonville, Ky. W. B. Malone Jr., Academic, P J h Class Eleven. Memphis, Tenn. J. A. McVov, Academic, A A Mansfield, La. Calvin Millar, Academic, V Sardis, Miss. J. A. Morgan, Academic, j A . Glee Club. Shelbyville, Tenn. B. M. O’Connell, Engineering, Montgomery, Ala. J. B. O’Bryan, Jr., Academic, . Nashville, Tenn. C. C. Ogilvie, Academic, j a ; Bellbuckle, Tenn. Julian Oglesby, Engineering, Dalton, Ga. B. B. Phillips, Academic, Flournoy, La. Lexington, Mo. K. M. Rankin, Academic, ' J H F. M. Sanger, Academic, 2’ V McKenzie, Tenn. S. Taylor Sevier, Academic, 2’ A i: Chattanooga, Tenn. H. A. Spellings, Academic, Jefferson, Tex. R. G. Throne, Jr., Academic. ! Nashville, Tenn. J. B. Treanor, Engineering, ' H II Nashville, Tenn. Class Historian. '91 -’92. Daniel Epthegroye, Academic, j a •: Greenville. Tex. W. Weatherhy. Engineering, Durant, Miss. Graham Webb. Academic, Nashville, Tenn. B. G. White,, Academic, j a •; Bellbuckle, Tenn. A. E. Wilson, Academic, Franklin, Tenn. J. F. Woody, Academic, 2 .1 : Cape Girardeau. Mo. Bert E. Voi ng, Academic, A A Louisville, Ky. Irr ular apd Special Stud pts Noble Atkisson, . V. N. Avers. Jr.. . a 2' W. I. Bays. A T Li Johnson Branseord, V P H. L. Cooler, . William Foster, . 2' Comet Editor, ’93. S. S. Fraser, . C. E. Little. . J. B. Parks, Geo. B. Pugh, A 2 Comet Editor, ’93; Assists H. N. Pharr, . A A . Fort Worth, Tex. . Fort Smith, Ark. . Rome, Ga. . Nashville, Tenn. . Smith's Mills, Ky. . Hartford. Ky, . Georgetown, S. C. . Eaton ton. Ga. . Winchester, Tenn. . Hamburg, Ark. 1 Editor Observer, ’92-93. . Fairview, La. 10 J. A. Pharr. . A I Fairview, La. Tacitus Short, Loth air Smith, . 2' C. C. Taylor, . J h ;: ,1 2’ 2' Youl FAft s T O ft£S-5S W’ashington, Ga. Cedar Chapel. Term. Hope. Ark. n M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M M ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss ss Fannie Alexander, Mamie Bays, M. K. Boddie. . Jennie Con well. Kstelle Corlew, Lillian Crockett, Janie Courtney, (.race Flippin, . Mahelle Flippin. Virginia French, Pauline (iattinger, Fannie (.oodlett, Fli aheth Green. Gertye Jones, Lily Letton, Lettie Lynch, Vallette McGehee, . I a rg n e r i te M c I n t y re Charlotte Moore, Sal lie McLean, Lucy Meriwether, Mary Myers, Annie Paschali, Olive R. Ross, Nellie Taylor, Kdna Tulloss, Stella Vaughn, . M. K. Watson, . Mattie Witt, Nashville. Tenn. Rome, (La. Nevada. Mo. Nashville, 'Penn. Kvansville, Ind. Rock Hill. Tenn. Franklin. Tenn. Memphis, 'Penn. Memphis, Tenn. Nashville. Penn. Nashville. 'Penn. Nashville, Tenn. Rattle Creek. Mich. Nashville, Penn. Bethel. Ky. Bellbuckle, Tenn. Como. Miss. Nashville. Penn. Nashville, Penn. Gallatin, 'Penn. Guthrie. Ky. Nashville, 'Penn. Atlanta. Ga. Nashville. Penn. Canisteo. N. V. Wichita h'alls, Texas. Nashville, Tenn. Nashville. 'Penn. Lynnville, Tenn. Manual Training M. J. Akin . Columbia, Ten n. Chas. Cammbrkk . Nashville, Tenn. J. M. Curry, . Nashville, Tenn. J. P. Dorris, . Nashville, Tenn. Driver Fulton . Nashville, Tenn. Lucius J. Luke, Jr . Nashville, Tenn. Stewart McKenzie, . Lebanon, Tenn. J. II. Polk, Jr . Nashville, I enn. Robert Wilson, . Nashville, 'I I enn. (! bfologual Department. S iX OU CLASS. m. Benj. Beauchamp, A.B. (Randolph-Macon), - Kmmerton, Ya. 2’ Contestant Founder's Medal, ’93 ; Editor of Comet, ’93. Howard S. Bettis, A.B. (Emory and Henry), - - Kansas, Tenn. Mortimkr S. Gardner (Vanderbilt), - - - Lavernia, Tex. Samuel I . Hager. A.B. (Kentucky Wesleyan), - Jackson, Tenn. Contestant for Young Medal, ’92; ’Varsity Eleven, '92. Eugene II. Hawkins, A.B. (Southern), - - - Decatur, Ala. ! J H Contestant for Founder’s Medal.’93 ; Public Debater Dialec- tic Anniversary, ’93. Thomas G. Herbert, A.B. (W offord), - - - Johnston, S. C. Contestant for Young Medal, ‘92. Tokichi Masao (Kwansei Gakkuin),..............................Japan. Frank M. Thomas, A.Ik (Ogden), - - - Bowling Green, Ky. 2’ Vanderbilt Representative in Southern Interstate Oratorical Association. ’92. 44 MIDDLE CLASS. Thomas Carter, A.B. (Tulane), - New Orleans, La. Gustaves W. Dyer, A. B. (Randolph-Macon), • - Axton, 'a. Glee Club. Robert Alston Few, A.B. (Wofford), - - Greer's Depot, S. C. ! Wii.eiam Wisdom Newberry, A.B. (Roanoke), - Bland C. II., Ya. William B. Ricks (University of Virginia), - - Buena Vista, Ya. 2' Peter Stokes, A.B. (Wofford), - - - Karly Branch, S. C. V 'V Glee Club. Walter O. Vreei.and (Vanderbilt), - - - Louisville. Ky. .1 ' a Glee Club; Manager Wesley Hall. JUNIOR ('LASS. Felix H. Coleman. A.B. (University Tennessee), Winchester, 'I'enn. M. Sami ei. Colonna, A.B. (Randolph-Macon), - - Hickory, ’a. Jessie L. Cunninggin, A.B. (Univ. of N. C.), - - Raleigh, N. C. Frank L. Day, A.B. (Roanoke),........................Hollins, Ya. Glee Club. Clyde B. Garrett, A.B. (Southwestern Univ.), - - Klgin, Tex. A I R. W. Greene, B. S. (Alabama A. and M. College), - Opelika, Ala. ! J n Palmyra, Ya. T. H. Haden, Pli.B. (University of Virginia), Ira P. Hawkins (Southern University), - - Enterprise, Miss. A T L! John C Henry (Randolph-Macon), - - - Gaithersburg, Md. S. W. Hoi.t. B.S. (.Southwestern University), - - - Yell, Tex. Kb Ilrri akkr. A.B. (Kentucky W esleyan), - Shearer Valiev, Ky. Bknj. E. Laxcastkr, A.B. (Kentucky Wesleyan), - Spears. Ky. H. V. Moore, A.B. (Kentucky Wesleyan), - - Hamilton, Ohio. Sa.mi'ki. J. Rucker. AM. (Southwestern Univ.), - Robinson, Tex. h A Winner Founders’ Medal, '93. Hubkrt M. Smith, A.B. (Emery), - LaGrange, Tex. Ernkst A. Stki.ar (St. Charles), .... St. Louis, Mo. John Joel Stowe (Vanderbilt), - A Assistant Editor IIustla 92- 93 ; Anniversary, ’93. THEOLOGICAL Atkinson, Benj. F., Bates, Win. H., - Brooks, Cleanth, - Cotton, Janies T., Drake, Benj. M., - Frith, William B., 40 Opelika, Ala. Public Debater Dialectic VAX HI DATES. Campbellsville, Ky. Woodbury, Ten 11. - Clinton. Ky. Brentwood, Tenn. - Jackson, La. Nashville, Tenn. Hardin, Melvill C., Ilawley, James M., - Hunter, James R., Jones. Amos M., Lewis, James A., Morgan, (Veorge A., - Nance. Walter ! .. Parks. Joseph B.. Powell, Nathan R.. Sanger, Fenton M.. - Stovall, John W.. Trawick, Arcadius M., Wynn, Samuel F., Wendell, William ! ., St. Joseph, Mo. Booneville, Ark. Ducktown. Tenu. Huntsville, Ala. Water Holes. Miss. Shelbyville, Tenn. Cornersville, Tenn. Winchester, Tenn. Mexia. Texas. HI Paso, Texas. Bee ville. Texas. Nashville, Tenn. Tiptonville. Tenn. Aberdeen Miss. 17 S iXIOft CLASS. Carrington C. Bacon................Bell’s Post Office, Ky. Clarence T. Boyd......................................Maysville, Ky. 2' A i: President Law Class, ’92- 93. L. H. Carter, A.B. (Kentucky Wesleyan). Mortonville, Ky. Winner of Senior Scholarship. L. T. Clotfeltkr..............................Three Rivers, Col. Hustler, '92-’93. W. H. Harden, Jr.. A.B. (Wofford College). . Chester, S. C. A I ’Varsity Eleven. Horace N. Hawkins.............................Huntingdon, Tenn. (p J H W. K. IIcdson. B.S. (Southern Kentucky College), Nashville. Tenn. . ; Secretary Law Class. ’92-’93. Elliott H. Jones, A.B. (Vanderbilt), . • Lexington, Mo. (P J H ’Varsity Nine, ’89-’93; Captain ’Vanity Eleven. ’9(' '9W Count Editor, ’91 ; Editor-in-Chief Hustler, ’9i-’93. 48 Robert L. Kennedy, Watkins, Tenn. Harry C. Long, A. H., (Southern Liiiversity), . Verona, Miss. 2' a ; Ed. L. McNeilly, ...... Nashville, Tenn. 2' .1 : Oscar T. Peebles, ..... Chattanooga, Tenn. 2' i ; Class Representative. Henry E. Smith...............................................Nashville, Tenn. i: H II Winner of Senior Scholarship. jrxroit class. Mat . Ai.i.en, Jr., ...... Nashville, Tenn. Sam. K. Ri.and, . . . . . . . Franklin, Ky. A A ; A 2' 2' Anniversarian Philosophic Literary Society, ’91 ; Assist- ant Editor Observer, '92: Young Medalist, '92; Business Manager Observer, ’93; Manager of Field Sports, ’93 : Rep- resentative of Vanderbilt in the S. I. (). A., ’93. Joe G. Cox, B.S. (Otterville College, Mo.), . Clifton City, Mo. Albert P. Crockett, ..... Arrington, Tenn. ! J H Assistant Editor Observer, 91-92; Treasurer West Side Row, 90-93- Jose Pinto DeAlmeida, .... San Paulo, Brazil. Poet Law Class, 92-93. 40 Matrice Click. Clarksville, Tenn. SamrHi. X. Harwood. Nashville, Tc-nn Prince A. Hawkins, . . . . . Huntingdon, Tenn. A A Sub. ‘Varsity Nine, '93. G. L. Lari more.........................................Florence, Ala. 11.1.1 am T. Locke, A.B. (Vanderbilt), . . Richmond, Ark. j a ; Thanksgiving Debater, '89; Contestant Founders Medal, '91; Orator, February 22. '92; President Delta Kappa Kpsi- I011 Convention. '91 ; Historian Law Class, 92-93. Jeff McCarn, ...... Brownwood, Texas. j a •; Assistant Kditor Observer, ’90-91 ; Bachelor Fgliness. '90. J. F. McKenzie Midland. Texas. A T Li s. B. McLin Orlando, Fla. Jos. H. Norwood, ....... Camden, Miss. Robert K. L. Saner,....................................Washington, Ark. A I Li Contestant Young Medal. ’93. Harry L. Seay...........................................Gallatin, Tenn. A .1 Comet Kditor, ’93. o() James K Smith, Russellville. Ala. Nashville, Tenii Chart.ics C. Traihk, A.B. (Vanderbilt), I! H II Manager Tennis Association : Class I Iistorian. ’89 ; Class Sec- retary, '91; Com 1ST Kditor, '90 and '93; Assistant Kditor I lustier, ’91 ; 'Varsity Nine, ‘92; Class Day Orator,’92; Sec- retary Fifty-third Convention Beta Theta Pi, 92: Treas- urer of Law Class, ’92-93. Gordon Wheeling..................... Fresno, Cal Emii.e V. Whitaker........................................... Sarasota, Fla 2' Norman M. Windsor, 2' Boonville, Mo annacn. Samuel Hali-: White,............................Ocala, Fla. Assistant in Chemical Laboratory. S iX O t CLASS. Oswald Q. Bradley............................Dallas, Tex. Vice President f Pharmacy Club. Elijah ( . Burcheiei.. r j : Secretary of Pharmacy Club. John Calhoun Creech, Eugene I). Lehman, James H. Pittman, - Treasurer of Pharmacy Club. Harpersville, Ala. Wad ley, S. C. Nashville, Tenn. Ocala, Fla. Adam C. Smith,...................................Hunker Hill, Mo. Eugene H. Taylor,................................Brownsville. Tenn. Sim C. Tucker,.............................................Pickens, Miss. Presi lent of Pharmacy Clu'). Richard W. Walker,....................................Dyersburg, Tenn. K 2’ James L. Ames. JCXIOK CLASS. Casevville, Kv. James L- Barton, Kdward Beazley, - Wii.i.iam G. Beli.enger, - Keli hr A. Bennett, Howard 'I'. Castlererry, - John 1 Cordill, H h II Joe G. Cox, - Wahlaca Kleven. John B. Cur rev. James Fly, - Samuel IC. Goodman, ICdward (). Hahn. Joseph G. Hahn. - Kldredc.h W. Hodges, IIerhert II. IIrNT, 'Varsity Nine. George K. McLau rin, Zero W. Xichoi.s. - ICrnkst J. Schott, Memphis, Tenn. Alto, La. Xew Orleans, La. Florence, Tex. Talladega, Ala. Como. La. Clifton City, Mo. Cuthbert. ('.a. CentreYille, Miss. XaYosota. Tex. Nashville, 'Penn. Augusta. Ga. Georgetown, Tex. Mayfield, K . Nashville, 'Penn. - Hendersonville, N. C. Nashville. Tenn. William T. Terry. Hamburg. Ark. Recapitulation Departments. Academic....................................... 1 M Biblical.............................. . : i Law............................................. 34 Medical........................................ 30S Dental.......................................... id Pharmacy........................................ 20 Engineering..................................... 47 Total.................................... 704 Deduct names counted twice...................... 31 Total number students.................... 33 States and Countries. Alabama......................................... 62 Arkansas........................................ 35 California....................................... 7 Florida.......................................... 0 Georgia......................................... 33 Illinois......................................... S Indiana.......................................... 4 Kentucky........................................ 56 Louisiana....................................... 24 Massachusetts.................................... I Michigan......................................... I Mississippi..................................... 33 Missouri........................................ IS New York......................................... 2 North Carolina.................................. 20 Ohio............................................ I Oregon.......................................... 1 Pennsylvania..................................... I South Carolina.................................. 20 Tennessee...................................... 201 Texas........................................... 73 Virginia........................................ II Washington....................................... I Wisconsin........................................ I Brazil........................................... I Canada........................................... 2 China............................................ 1 Japan............................................ I Mexico........................................... I Total r,4 Founded, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, December 26, 1S4S. Incorporated under the State laws of Ohio, March 12, 1SS1. Annual Alumni Day. March 15. Open motto— Colors, white and blue. Flower, White Carnation. Yell Kali! Kali! Kali! I'lii-kri-A ! Phi Delta Theta ! Kali! Kah! Kali! College Chapters. A1 1 11 A Pltov I s« i .—Maim Alpha, Colby t' ni versit v : New Hampshire Alpha. Part mouth (‘o liege : Vermont Alplia, I ni entity of Vermont; Massachusetts Alpha, Williams College; Massachusetts Bela, Amherst College; Khodc Island Alpha, Brown Pniversity: New York Alpha, Cornell Fniver- 'ii , New York Beta, 1 nlon University : New York Gamma, Collie of tbo( ity of New York: New York Delta. Columhia College; New York Kpsilon, Syracuse I'niversily; Pennsylvania Alpha, l.afayetlc College; Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania College; Pennsylvania (•amnia. Washington and .lellerson College; Pennsylvania Delta, Allegheny Collcgo; Pennsylvania Epsilon, Diekinson College; Pennsylvania .eta, I'niversily of Pennsylvania; Pennsylvania Kt’a, Lehigh Pniversity. Bkia I'icuvix 1 Virginia Alpha, Bonimkc College: Virginia Beta, I niversity of Virginia Virginia Comma. Bamhdph Maeon College ; Virginia Delta. itichniond College; Virginia Zcta. Wash- ington and Lee I'niversily ; North Carolina Beta, I'niversily of North Carolina ? South Carolina Beta, South Carolina Pniversity ; Kentucky Alpha. Centre College; Kentucky Delta. Central! niversity. (• a M m a I‘no vim 1 Ueorgia Alpha. Pniversity of tieorgia: (Ieorgia Beta, Emory College; (ieorgia (iamma, Mercer Pniversity; Tennessee Alpha. Vamlerhilt I'niversily; I'cnnessee Beta, Cni- versity of the South: Alahama Alpha. Pniversity of Alabama; Alabama Beta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute; Alabama (iamma, .Southern Pniversity. Dki.Ta PitnvtNCK.- Mississippi Alpha, Pniversity of Mississippi; Ixmisiaua Alplia, Tulane Pni- versity of Louisiana; Texas Beta Pniversity of Texas; Texas (iannna. .Southwestern Pniversity. Krsti.oN Pl« vi mi:.- Ohio Alpha, Miami University; Ohio Beta. Ohio Wesl van Pniversity; Ohio (iamma, Ohio Pniversity: Ohio Delta, Pniversity of Wooster; Ohio Kpsilon. Buehtel College, Ohio Zcta. Ohio State Pniversity; Indiana Alpha, Indiana Pnive.sitv; Indiana Beta, Wabash Col- lege; Indiana Camina, Buller Pniversity; Indiana Delta. Pranklin College; Indiana Kpsilon Han- over College; Indiana Zcta. Del’auw Pnivers ty ; Michigan Alpha, University of Michigan; Michigan Beta, State College of Michigan ; Michigan (iamma, Hillsdale College. Zi1 a PitoviM 1:.- Illinois Alpha, Northwestern I'niversily ; Illinois Della. Knox College: Illinois I.psilon, Illinois Weslcvan Pniversity; Illinois Zeta, Lombard I niversity; Wisconsin Alpha, Cni- versity of Wisconsin; Missouri Alpha, Pniversity of Missouri; Missouri lletn, Westminster College; Missouri -anuii.i. Washir gton Pniversity; Iowa Alpha. Iowa Wesleyan I'niversily: Iowa Beta. State Pniversity of Iowa; Minnesota Alpha. I'niversily of Minnesota; Kansas Alpha. I niversity ot Kansas; Nebraska Alpha, Pniversity of Nebraska; California Alpha, Pniversity of California; Cali- fornia Beta, I .eland Stanford (Junior' Pniversity. A limn 1 Chapters. New York Alpha, New York; New Jersey Alpha, Princeton : Pennsylvania Alpha. Pittsburg; Pennsylvania Beta, Philadelphia; Maryland Alpha. Baltimore; District ot Coin nib a Alpha. ash- iiigton ; Virginia Alpha. Biehmoml: (ieorgia Alpha. Cohimhu -; (ieorgia Beta. Atlanta; Alabama Alpha, Montgomery: Alabama Beta, Selma; Tennessee Alpha, Nashville; Kentucky Alpha, Louis- ville; Ohio Alpha,'cincinnati; Ohio Beta, Akron; Indiana Alpha. Pranklin; Indiana Beta, Indian- apolis: Illinois A Ipha, Chicago ; Illinois Beta, (iahshurg: Missouri Alpha, Kansas City; Minnesota Alpha. Minneapolis and St. Paul ; I tali Alpha, Salt Lake City ; alilornia Alpha, San I ram-isco; California Bela, Los Angeles. ')( I - I ? I'm Dei.ta Theta. jennessee jlpl|a oi fM flelta Jl|Bta. JANUA R V 20. 1376. II. Armistead, '84. L. K. Campbell, Ksq., SO. W. r. Harris, ’SS. 10. A. Price, Ivsq., '82. .1. ('. McRcviiolds, Ksi|., ’82. Louis M. Palmor. ’! . . I. .1. Stubblefield, '87. 10. II. Vaughn. 'Jio. I an F. C. Puntiu. Tennessee Peta. II I i in 1 m; i FRATRES IN URBE. R. A. Armistead, TO. J. T. Henson. '70. C- T. Cole, ’S3. W. II. fSo k1 pasture, Esq-, ’81 A. E. Howell, ’82. R. F. Iacks m, ’81. W. It. Manier. ’SI. J. W. Manier, Jr.. ’81 . p. D. Maddin, Esq.. '81. W. P. Palmer, ’so. P. Richardson, 'si; Walter Stokes. Esq., ’86. l.ytton Taylor, Esq.. '70. F. P. Turner, ’111. Claude Waller, Esq., ’81. J. R. West. ’SO. ...i....i-% II..I Firman Smitli. Esq., Mississippi Alpha. UNIVERSITY OFFICERS. A. It. Carter, 'S7, Memlwr Poard of Trust. .lohii Daniel (Alabama Alpha), Adjunct Professor of Physics. Paul M. Jones, D.Se., ’P2, Pnst- Graduate, Fellow ami Assistant in Natural History ami (ieology. S. S. 'rockett, M.D., ’8o, Assistant tot'hairot Anatomy ami Histology. Larkin mith. M.D. Tennessee Petal. Demonstrator !' Histology ami Microscopy. ). i. Minglcdorfl'. D.D.S., Demonstrator of )| crativc ami Mechanical Dentistry. CHAPTER ROLE. Class of 1893. Albert P. Crockett..................Arrington. Tom ... Eugene H. Hawkins. M.A .............Do,atm. Ala... Horace N. Hawkins...................Huntingdon, T ■nn Elliott II. Jones, B.A..............Lexington, Mo. Class of IS94-. Kiebanl A. Parr. P.A.,’ 2....................«Jallatin, Tenn.... Charles R. Baskervill......................... Stanton Depot, Tenn.. John H. DeWitt Nashville, Tenn... James P. Danner......................................Franklin, Tenn Harry S. Vaughn .............................. Nashville, renn Robert a. Weaver...............................Memphis, Tenn....... William II. Witt, M.A.,’87..................... Lynn ville, lenn ...M.D. ...P. A. .. P. A. ... P. A. ...D. D.S. ....P.S. ....M.D. Harvey ( . Alexander............. Hen Childers...................... Norman Farrell. Jr............... Eugene i. Harris................ Henry J. Livingston, Jr........... « barb's P. Williams............. Raleigh W. (ireene (Alabama Petal John 1 . W. Prown................ J. Vaul.x Croekctt............... John W. Haulier, Jr. .. William W. Hudson............... W. Pattle Malone................ I'd win M. Rankin............... Class of 1895. I'nion « ily, Tenn Pulaski, Tenn........ .Nashville, renn. .Nashvill , lenn Prownsville, renn. . Mansfield. La...... |M-lika. Ala...... ... P. A. ..P.A. P.S. P.S. P.A. P.A. ....P.D. Class of 1896. ......Nashville, lenn. ... Nashville. Trim. ......Franklin, Tenn. ..... Mobil-, Ala ..... Memphis, Tenn.... .......Lexington, Mo.... ....P.K. .... P. E. B ...P.A. P.A. P.A. Roll of Active Chapters. Alpha Washington and Leo Cniversity, Beta - Sul rosa, ...... Gamma— Cniversity of Georgia, Delta Wolford College............... ISpsilox— Emory College, Zkta — Kandolph-Macon College, Eta-—Richmond College, Tiikta Stale College ol Kenturky. . Iota —Furman I'ni versi tv. Kappa—Merecr Cniversity, .... Lamupa Cniversity « f Virginia. . Mp— Krskine College, Nr—A. and M. ('ollege. . Xi—Southwestern Cniversity. . Omi kon University of Texas, l i- Cniversity of Tennessee, lino—South Carolina College, Sn ma Davidson College, Tap—Sul rosa, .... Cpsilox - Cniversity i North Carolina Psi—Tulane Cniversity, Pm—Southern Cniversity, Cm— Vanderbilt Cniversity, 0mi: ;a—Center Coliege, ..... Alpha Alpha —Cniversity of the Smith. Alpha Beta Cniversity of Alabama, Alpha Gamma Louisiana State Cniw-rsity, lpiia Delta William .1« Well College, . Alpha Epsilon—S. W. Presbyterian Cniversity, Alpha Zkta William and Mary College. Alpha Eta Westminster College, Alpha-Tiieta— Sub rosa,.................. Alpha-Iota - Centenary, .... Alpha Kappa .Missouri State Cniversity, Alpha Lamhi a—.Johns-llopkins, Lexington. Va. Athens, ia. Spartanburg, S. ( ()xford, a. Ashland. Va. Richmond. Va. Lexington. Kv. 1 ireenville, S. ( Mneon. ia. ('harlottesville, Va. Due West. S. C. Auburn, Ala. ieorgetown. Texas. Austin, Texas. Knoxvdle. Tenn. ('olumLia. S. ( Mecklenburg, S. ('. ('Impel 11 ill. N. ('. New Means. I .a. Greensboro, Ala. Nashville, Tenn. Danville, Kv. Sewanee. 'Tenn. Tusealoosa, A la. Baton Rouge, La. Liberty. Mo. (’larksville, Tenn. Williamsburg, Va. Fulton, Mo. •lark-son. La. Columbia. Mo. Baltimore. Md. «50 6HI ©HftPTEFJ OP KftPPft ftLPHft. Colors—Crimson and Gold. ICSTAIJLISIIHI) Apkii.o. iss: . FRATRES IN URBE. E. 10. Hart hell (Chi), S. K. Cowan (Chi), J. E. Hart (Chi), Thomas Hart (Chi), E. T. Kirkpatrick (Sigma), M. M. Ross (i hi . J. L. Whitworth ( Lambda), ('. N. Burch (C'lii , Rev. C. S. (Jardner Eta), Foster Jones (Chi), (’Inis.C. Washburn (C’lii), R. C. Plater (Chi). W. ’. Cherry (Chi), .1. M. Williams i(’lii). A. M. Shipp iDelta , Ross Thomas Beta . Rost 1 raduate Stmlent : J. T. i wathmey ( Beta . Lawrence )’ Bnen i (’hi). CHAPTER ROLL. ( L V. Gibbs Sigma), V. M. Jones i(’hi). T. Tanner Ri), R. L. Burch ('hi . M. W. Handley (Chi), John B. Kcoble i Chi), J. (’. Ramsey Ri . II 1). Dallas ( Beta), Thomas H. Malone, .Jr., B.A.. Nashville. Tenn.. A.M. Class of '94. Sam. K. Bland, Franklin, K , ...... I.L.B. Rrince A. Hawkins, Huntingdon. Tenn., .... LL.B. Harry L. Seay, Gallatin, Tenn.. ...... LL.B. J. Graubery Jackson, Mt. Pleasant, Tenn.. .... B.E. Class of ’95. L. A. Davis. Weatherford, Texas, Ed. C. Dennis. Bishopville, S. C., Cummins RateliH'o. Little Rock, Ark.. (’lyde B. Gamut, Elgin, Texas, S. J. Rucker, Robinson, Texas, Class of '96. A. M. Ballentine, Pulaski, Tenn., ...... B.A. Bert E. Young, Louisville, Ky., ...... B.s. Lucius E. Burch, Nashville, Tenn., ...... B.A. James A. MeYoy, Mansfield, La., ..... B.A. Irregular. John A. Rharr, Berwick, La. Henry N. Rharr. Berwick. La. B.A. B.S. B.A. B.D B.D. ;i ofii Ffii Frvjfcrnitsf. CHAPTER ROLL. Alpha. University of Virginia, . Bkta Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Gamm a—Emory College, ..... Delta — Rutgers College, ...... Kpsilox—Hampden Sydney College, . Zeta — Franklin and Marshall College, Eta—University of Georgia,....................... Theta Rennsalaer Polytechnic Institute. Iota-Ohio State University,...................... Kappa Brown University,........................ Lambda —University of California, . Mr—Stevens Institute of Technology. Nr—University of Texas,.......................... Xi—Cornell University,......................... Omk uon Sheffield Sricntific School, Yale University. l i—Vanderbilt University,..................... Rno - taifavette College, ...... •Skjma WoIlQrd College, ...... Tap— South Carolina University, . Pm—Amherst College............................. ('in—Ohio Wesleyan University, . Psi - Lehigh University........................ Omeoa —Dickinson College, ...... 'harlottesville, Ya. Boston. Ma.'S. Oxford, (ia. New Brunswick. X. .1. 1 lampden Sydney. ’a. Lancaster. Pa. Athens, (ia. Troy, N. Y. ('olnmhus, ()hio. Providence, R. I. Berkeley, Cal. 1 loboken, X. .J, Austin, Texas. . Ithica, X. Y. Xev 1 laven, Conn. Nashville, Penn. Easton, Pa. . Spartanburg, S. (’. ('oluinbia, S. ( Ainberst. Mass. Delaware, Ohio. Sotith Bethlehem. Pa. (Carlisle, Pa. Chartered November 13. 18S3. Colors Scarlet and Blue. Fratres in 1 [arris Allen, W. F. Buist, James L. Byrd, J. I . Ihouillard, Jr., B. II. Fnloe, Kislev Lawrence, P. 1). Youngblood, B.A., Urbe. II. W. Low lie, J. W. Madden, Jr., Burr J. Bamage, Paul Kidley, W. II. Stevens, C. B. Wallace. MEMBERS. Atlanta, ia ACT I V E Post Gka i r te Ser.ei l. Class or ISP.' . Jonathan Bailey Browder, B.A., Nashville, Tenn., . . M.A. George Hamilton 11 isle, Winchester, Ky., .... B.S. ('lass of 1S94. Johnson Bransford, Nashville, 'h im.. John Soule Butler, Nashville, Tenn., Whiteford Bussell Cole, Nashville. Tenn.. Bohert Alston Few, (ireers Depot. S. ( Benjamin Magruder Drake, A.B., .laeksoii. La., Class of 1SI1.' . Evan Park Howell, Atlanta, (ia., . . . . • M.D. Binford Throne, Nashville, Tenn., ...... B.A. Henry Ash hum Tyler, Jr., Nashville, Tenn., .... B.A. Class of 1SIM5. Driver Fulton. Nashville, Tenn.. ...... B.F J. T. Hendrick, Nashville. Tenn., ...... B.A. J. B. O’Bryan, Jr.. Nashville, Tenn., ..... B. . Bohert G. Throne, Jr.. Nashville. Tenn., ..... B.A. . B.F. B.A. B.D. M.A. Hi;ra Tiikta I i. geta-jjambda (Rapter of jeta |l|eta fi. Established February 23. 1SS4. Colons Pink and Pale Pine. Flower White Niphetos Hose. Fi.au Azure Field, White Bonier, Bed Rose and Three Stars. Fratres in Urbe. Andrew Allison, (•ranville Allison, .las. I’. Atkinson, (ieo. F. Blackic, .1. W. Black more, W. C. Branham, (Ieo. Brown, Rev. R. K. Brown. J. S. Buchanan, .los. V. By ms, l r. B. I’. Charles, David Crutchfield, B. B. Davis, II. M. Drifoos, Albert N. Kite, R. D. (ioodlett, Jr., Maj i. B. tiuild, Dr. J. II. Handley, A. G. Hall. Richard Hall, James A. Harris. Dr. E. E. lloss, W. i. Kirkpatrick, Rev. Ira Landrith, .las. !•'. Lipscomb, Judge H. H. Lurton, A. I). Marks, Jr., K. C. Maury, R. L. Morris, Hamilton I’.irks, J. 0. Race. Bartow B. Ramage, J. B. Robertson, E. B. Rucker, John Ruhm, Jr., c. C. Slaughter, K. W. Thompson, (ien. •. R. Thruston, Col. J. S. Walker, Thomas A. Weaver, Dr. R. L. C. White. Fratres in Facultate. .las. M. Salford, M.D., Rh.I . (Beta Kappa, ' ll ). Dean ol Rliarniaeentical Kaeultv, and Rrofessor of Natural Sciences. ( has. L. Thornburg, C.E., Rh.D. (Beta Lambda, “Sli. Adjunct Rrofessor of Civil Engineering and Rrac- tical Astronomy. Win. T. Magrudcr, M.E. (Sigma, 81), Adjunct Rrofessor of Mechanical Engineering. Instructors. ( . . Ferrell, M.A., Rli.D. (Beta Lambda, ’sin. Instructor in Latin and (ircek. E. Ix'e Richardson. M.A. (Ri. SS), Instructor in French. Graduate Fellow. John II. Ogburn, C.E. (Beta Lambda, 8Sj, Instructor in Manual Technology. Chapter Roll. Herman D. Rulim, B.E., CLASS OF Nashville, Teiiil., . C.E. James M. Hawley, B. 1 . Little Rock. Ark., M.A. Henry E. Smith, John S. O'Neal, Lvtle Brown, Nashville. Tcnn., . Ralmvra, Tcnn., Nashville, Tcnn., . I.L R. B E. B. E. Chariest . Traluie, A.B., . CLASS OF i l. Nashville, Tcnn., . I.L. B. John V. Snyder, Como, Li., B. E. James R. Cordill, Como, Li., Rli.G. J. Heiskell Weatherford, CLASS OF ’05. Memphis, Tenn., B. E. John B. Tream r, Nashville. Tenn., . B. E. Henry M. Robert, Jr., Nashville. Tenn., . A. B. Frank M. Fletcher, . N:i'hville, Tenn., . B. E. Ernest W. Jiingcmiauu, . CLASS OF Nashville. Tenn.. B.S. James 3. Hildebrand, W hit hav n, Tenn.. B. E. ). ) 6 f rjfernitij of Kjjiju Founded at University of Virginia. 1867. Alpha, . Beta, Gamma, . Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda. Mr. . Nr. Xi. . ( )mickon, Pi, . Sigma. Tap, Ups i i.on, Phi, . Chi, Psi, . Omega, . Chi-Om EGA, Alpha-Alpha, Alpha-Beta. Alpha-Gamma, Alpha-Delta, Alpha-Epsilon, A lp ii a Zeta. Alp ha-Eta. Alpha-Theta. A LPHA-IOTA, A LPIIA K APPA, Alpiia-Lam bi , Eta-Prim e. Emory College, Georgia. Butler University, Indiana. University of Louisiana. Davidson College, North Carolina. . Centenary College. Louisiana. University of Virginia. Randolph-Macon College, Virginia. Cumberland University, Tennessee. Southwestern University, Texas. Vanderbilt University, Tennessee. University of Tennessee. Washington and Lee University, Virginia. . William and Mary College. Virginia. University of Arkansas. . Emory and Henry College, Virginia. Swathmore College, Pennsylvania. Tulane University, Louisiana. University of Texas. llampden-Sidney College. Virginia. Southwestern Presbyterian University, Tennessee. Perdue Universitv, Indiana. Maine State College. University of the South, Tennessee. University of South Carolina, jolms Hopkins University, Maryland. Mercer University, Georgia. University of Illinois. Pennsylvania State College. University of Pennsylvania. University of Michigan. Columbian University. Washington. I). C. Southwestern Baptist University. Tennessee. U. vS. Grant University. Tennessee. Cornell University. New York. University of Vermont. Trinity College. North Carolina. K.U’IW S|(,m, . Kapp Opter Established 1S77. Re-established 1SS5. Colors—Old Gold. Maroon, ami Peacock Blue Flower—Lily of the Valley. Lee Brock, II. B. Buckner, .1 r., Frank loodinan, V. (). Harris, E. T. Hollins, L. N. Kirkpatrick, II. N. McTyeirc, Fratres in Urbe. ,1. 2- Moore, IL F. O’Neal, .1. M. Patterson, McNeil Bom I. J. T. Kcrrheval, W C. Phillips, M. II. Sharpe, C. V. Thompson, K W. Thompson, T. .1. Tvne, J. K. Wilson, .lames Vaughn, Sam Pointer, .1. Howard Allen. Fratres in Facultate. (). II. Mcnees, M. 1)., Professor ni Anatomy :m«l Histology. I). R. Stubbletiel I. A.M., M.D., D.D.S., Professor of Cliciiiislrv and Metallurgy in Oeiital Department. )wcn 11. Wilson, M.D., Assistant to Chair of Cyueenlogy. Graduate Fellow. Albert II. Wilson, B.S., Saundersvillc, Tenn., Assistant in Mathematics. Class of '93. .L IL Craig, • • Friendship, Tenn.. . Ml). W. W. Craig, Friendship. Tenn., . B.S. IL W. Walker, . Dyersburg. Tenn.. . Pli.G W. E. Beard, Class of ’94. Murfreesboro, Tenn., . B.S. Tvrold ’. Kirkpatrick. Nashville, Tenn., . B. A. (leo. B. Pugh. Hamburg. Ark.. . B. A. .Iere L. (’rook, .laekson. Tenn., . M 1 . IL A. Burke, Dversburg, Tenn., . M.l). J. B. Bell, Parrottsvilie, Tenn . . M.D. . Jackson, La., . A.M. W. X. Avers, Class of '95. Fort Smith. Ark.. . BE. II. M. Bailee, Franklin. Tenn., . B.K. F. IL Powers, Nashville, Tenn., . B.S. Thomas 1 . Rice, Friendship, Tenn., . M.D. Wilson P. Fisher. Class of '96. Franklin. Tenn., . B.A. Lotbair Smith. Paducah. Kv., . B.A. CHAPTERS. Alpha .... Allegheny College, Mcadville, Pa. Beta .... Ohio University, Athena, Ohio. Gamma . . . Washington and Jefferson College, Washington, Pa. Delta .... University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. Epsilon . . . Albion College. Albion, Mich. Zeta .... Adelbert College, Cleveland, Ohio. Eta.............Buehtel College, Akron, Ohio. Theta .... Bethany College, Bethany, W. Ya. Iota .... Michigan Agricultural College. Kappa . . . Hillsdale College, Hillsdale, Mich. Lambda . . . Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. Mu..............Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio. Nu..............Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. Ni..............Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa. Omieron . . . University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa. Pi..............University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss. Rho .... Stevens Institute of Technology. Hoboken, N. J. Tau.............Franklin and Marshall College’ Lancaster, Pa. Upsilon . . . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Troy, N. Y. Phi .... Hanover College, Hanover, Ind. Chi .... Kenyon College, Cambier. Ohio. Psi.............University of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio. Omega . . . Iowa State College, Des Moines, Iowa. Beta Alpha . . Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind. Beta Beta . . DePauw University, Grcencastle. Ind. Beta Gamma . University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. Beta Delta . . University of Georgia, At liens, Ga. Beta Epsilon . Emory College, Oxford, Ga. Beta Zeta . . Butler University, Irvington, Ind. Beta Eta . . . University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn. Be a Theta . . University of the South, ewanee, Tenn. Beta Iota . . University of Virginia. Beta Kappa . University of Colorado, Boulder, Col. Beta Lambda . Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. Beta Mil . . . Tufts College, Somerville, Mass. Beta Nil . . . Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. Beta Xi . . . Tulane University, New Orleans, La. Beta Omieron . Cornell University, Ithica, N. V. Beta Sigma . . Boston University, Boston, Mass. ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. New York Alumni Association. Chicago Alumni Association. Nashville Alumni Association. Twin City Alumni Association. Pittsburg Alumni Association. Nebraska Alumni Association. Cleveland Ahum i Association. OS Delta Tai Delta Ca r bda Rapter of Delta Jau Delta Established as the I. P Chapter Of Rainbocu, 1882. Consolidated ujith Delta Tau Delta, 1886. FRATRES I N W R BE. E. Ashcraft, Frank Vaughn, William Simmons, Walter Cain, Preston Vaughn, T. T. Tyler, Henry Evans, H. M. Scales, J. W. Randolph, John Lellyett, John McClellan, W. R. Smith, W. T. Walters, Frank Fite, Frank B. Fogg, Leon I). Kirby. W. K. McAllister, II. S. Wilson, R. T. Smith, ('.oulding Marr, I). M. Bright, John C. Brown, J. W. Sprowls, FRATER I IS FACULTATE, J. I). B. Debow, B.L., Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence. CLASS OF 93. F. R. Alexander, B.A.......Oak Ridge, La.................M.A. CLASS OF '95. J. C. Brown, Jr............Nashville, Tenn...............B.A. CLASS OF '96. A. E. Elrod................Rutherford, Tenn.............IP A. L. I). Kirby...............Nashville, Tenn...............B.A. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Colors- 1'tirplc and Old (JoUl. Established in at Pniversity of Alabama. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS. alpha province. Massachusetts Ileta Epsilon, Ikiston University. Boston Mass Massachusetts lota Tau. Massachusetts fust i tut. of Teel.logv............Boston.’ Mass. Massachusetts Gamma, Harvard Universitv Cambridge Hass Connecticut Alpha, Trinity College.......................... HartforcJ,’ Conn’. k. . BETA PROVINCE. w York Alpha, Cornell University......................................... Itbi.a N V Pennsylvania Omega. Allegheny Col leg Meadville, Penn. Pennsylvania Sigma Phi, I iekins4 n College..... ........................Carlisle. Penn. Pennsylvania Alpha eta. Pennsylvania state College... State College, Penn. CAMMA PROVINCE. Virginia Omieron, Pniversity of Virginia.................. Virginia Sigma. Washington and Lee Cniversity....... Virginia Pi (sub rosiO.................................... North Carolina XI, Unlvcrstty of North Carolina........... North Carolina Theta, Davidson College.................... South Carolina Delta. South Carolina College.............. South Carolina Phi. Furman Pniversity..................... South Carolina Camina, Wo (lord College................... South Carolina Mu, Erskine College........................ (ieorgia Beta. University of Georgia...................... Georgia Psi, Mercer University............................ Georgia Epsilon, Emory College............................ Georgia Phi, Georgia School of Technology................. DELTA PROVINCE. Michigan Iota Beta. Cniversity of Michigan................ Michigan Aloha. Adrian College............................ Ohio Sigma. Mt. Union College............................. Ohio Delta, Ohio Wesleyan Cniversity...................... Ohio Epsilon. University of Cincinnati.................... Ohio Theta. Ohio State University......................... Indiana Alpha. Franklin College........................... Indiana Beta. Perdue Cniversity........................... EPSILON PROVINCE. Kentucky Kappa. Central Cniversity........................ Kentucky Iota, Bethel College............................. Tennessee .eta. Southwestern Presbyterian Cniversity..... Tennessee Lambda. Cumberland University................... Tennessee Nu, Vanderbilt University...................... Tennessee Kappa, University of Tennessee.................. Tennessee Omega, University of the South.................. Tennessee Eta. Southwestern Baptist University............ Alabama Mu. University of Alabama......................... Alabama Iota. Southern University......................... Alabama Alpha Mu. Alabama A. ami M. College............... Mississippi Theta (sub rosa)........................ ..... ZF.TA PROVINCE. Iowa Sigma. Simpson College.......-....................... Missouri Alpha. Cniversity of Missouri.................... Missouri Beta. Washington Cniversity...................... ETA PROVINCE. Texas Rho. University of Texas............................ Colorado Chi, University of Colorado...................... Colorado Zeta, University of Denver....................... California Alpha, Poland Stanford, .Ir., Cniversity....... Alumni Chapters («oorgia Alpha Alumnus......................... Oeorgia Beta Alumnus....................... (ieorgia Sigma Alumnus......................... (ieorgia Omega Alumnus......................... Alabama Mil Alumnus............................ South Carolina Eta Alumnus..................... North Carolina Theta Alumnus................... Tennessee Alpha Alumnus........................ Mississippi Theta Alumnus...................... Mississippi (ianiuia Alumnus................... (Miio Alpha Alumnus............................ Kentucky Alpha Beta Alumnus.................... New York Alpha Alumnus......................... Pennsylvania Alpha Alumnus..................... ............( harinttesvillo. Ya. .............. Lexington, Ya. 'Rapid Mill. N. (’. ................Da idson, N. c. ................ 'oliimbia. s. C. ...............(ireenville. S. ('. .......... Spartanburg, S. . Due West, S. C. ................. thens, (ia. ......................Macon, ;«. .....................Oxford, (ia. ................. tlanta, (ia. ..........Ann Arbor. Mieli. .................. Adrian, Mich. ........... Alliance, Ohio. ..............Delaware, Ohio. .........Cincinnati, Ohio. .................Columbus, Ohio. ..................Franklin, hid. ...........Lafayette, I ml. .............. Richmond, Ky. ...............Russellville, Ky. ..............Clarksville, Tenii. ..................Lebanon. Teun. ................Nashville, Tenn. ................Knoxville. Tenn. ................. Sewanee. Tenn. ..........Jackson, Tenn. .............. Tuscaloosa. Ala. ............... (ireensboro. Ala. .....................Auburn, Ala. ................Indiunola. Iowa. ...Columbia. Mo. ................. St. Luiis, Mo. .................Austin. Texas. ....................Boulder, Col. ........... Cniversity Park, Col. ................. Paio Alto, Cal. .........Atlanta, (ia. ...........Mbany, (in. .......Savannah. ia. .........Augusta, ia. ... ..Montgomery, Ala. ....Honca Path. S. C. ......Charlotte, N. C. ...Chattanooga, Tenn. .....Stark ville, Miss. ..... Meridian, Miss. .......Alliance. ()hio. ....Nicholsville. Ky. ....Now York, N. Y. ........Pittsburg, Pa. Tu IM'MLOX. (©ftapter flu of? igma oMpfta Gp ifon. Established in 1875. Re-Established in 1883. FRATRES IN URBE. I . 1 . Adams. Nu. ’7«i. R. W. Cantrell, Kentucky ('hi. '7:5. B. F. Cheat ham, Jr., Tenn. Omega, ’85. W. B. Cheatham. Tennessee Omega, '7 1 . R. Cheatham. Tennessee Omega, '8S. J. R. Coleman. Nu, 8-. 1. John Early. Nu, 'Mi. V. L. Martin, '79. Mav Overton, Nu. ’75. 4. 1 Ion. .1. M. 1 )ickinson. Nu, Mat. M. Gardner, Nu, 77 . Norman Kirkman, N11. ‘81. II. B. Millar, '87. R. Vaughn, Nu, ‘75. W. P. Bimlett, ’79. J. II. Fakin, Nu. '71. Joel Orillin, Georgia Epsilon, J. W. Horton, .1 r., Nu, ‘78. Prof. A. D. Wharton, Nu, 7‘J. F. M. Compton. Nu. 80. W. I . Ferguson, Nu. 'M . M. S. 1 Iawkins, N u, M. Eindsley, Nu, '81. S. M. Meek’, Tennessee Eta. 'M. I Ion. VV. 11. Washington. Virginia Sigma. F. ( . Met iavoek, N u, ’( 1. J. H. Thompson,Tennessee Candida, 75. James Douglas Anderson, Candida, 89. J. M. Thompson,Tennessee Candida, '72. J. Washington Moore, Nu, '91. Thomp S. B. Davis, Candida, '89. I)r. J. W. Waters. C. Stahlman, Nu. ’91. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. C. S. Bitior.s, M.D., Professor of Surgical Analoniv and (i|M rativc Surgery. Richahi) Doroi. vs, M. I Professor of Gynecology. C. R. Atchison, M.D., Assistant tot hair of Materia Modica Medical Iiepartincnt). I N ST RUCTOR. RlCIlAKD W. ( LAWSON, B.S, Instructor in Physics. ACTIVE MEMBERS. Class of '93. Richard M. Allen................Dixon Springs, Tenn John A. Bell, Jr................Nashville. Tenn Clarence T. Boyd. P A..........Maysville, Ky.. Elijah (I. Burchfield ..........IIarpersville. Ala.......... Washington E. Hudson. B.S....Nashville, Tenn Havry C. Cong, A.B..............Verona, .Miss...... Edward C. Mt-Nrilly............. Nashville. Tenn Oscar Peeples................... Chattanooga. Tenn Glass of '94 B.E. CC B. a Pli.G. CC. B. CC B. 1 Ian v 11 vde Cvon Couisville. Kv B.S. M 1 Class of '95. J. Edward Buchanan Alphonso A. i.odrigcnz .. . Thomas P . Scoggins Nashville. Tenn .. Class of ’96. William T. 1 laic . s Taylor Sevier .John E. Woodv Richard W Clawson B.S Post-Graduate Special. J. Berkley Thomas. BA. . Marion. Va. .AlpiKi Tau Omega. Founded 1S65. Incorporated IS6S. Alabama Alpha Epsilon....... Alabama Beta Beta........... Alabama Beta Delta.......... California Beta Psi......... Georgia Alpha Beta.......... Georgia Alpha Theta........ Georgia Alpha Zeta......... Georgia Beta Iota.......... ieoigia B ta Nu............ Louisiana Beta Kpsilon...... Massaehuselts Camilla Beta ... Maine Beta F psilon........ Maine Gamma Alpha.......... Miehigau Alpha Mu........... Miehigan Beta Kappa........ Miehigau Beta Lambda........ Miehigan Beta t)niieron... North Carolina Alpha Delta. North Carolina Alpha Kta... North Carolina Alph i ( hi . New Jersey Alpha Kappa..... New York Alpha Oinieroii... New York Beta Theta........ Ohio Alpha Nil.......... hio Alpha Chi............ Ohio Beta Kta............... Ohio Beta Mu............... hio Beta It ho......... )hio Beta I psilon........ Pennsylvania Alpha Iota.... Pennsylvania Alpha Kim..... Pennsylvania Alpha I psilon Pennsylvania Beta Chi .... Pennsylvania Tan....... ... South Carolina Alpha Phi .... South Carolina Beta Kilo... South t arolina Beta hi.. Tennessee I-ambda.......... Tennessee fmoga........... Tenncsseee Alpha Tan....... Tennessee Beta Pi.......... Vermont Beta Zeta......... Virginia Beta.............. Virginia Beta Sigma....... Virginia Delta............ Virginia Epsilon....... ACTIVE CHAPTERS. .......................... and M. College, Auburn. Ala. .Southern University, Greensboro, Ala. ...................Cniversitv of Alabama. Tiise.doosa, Ala. ............I.cland Standford, Jr., University. ....................... I niversily of tieorgia. Athens. Ga. .......................Emory Coll c. ford, !a. ...........................Mercer University, Macon, Ga. Seliool of Technology, Atlanta, (ia. ..... . M. and A. College, Mlllcdgcville, Ga. ..............Tulane University, New Orleans, La. .... ..... — Tufts College, College Hill, Mass. .......................Stale College, Q'rono, Me. Colbv Cniversitv, Waterville, Me. .............................Adrian College, Adrian, Mich. .... .........IlilBdale College, Hillsdale, Mieh. I Diversity of Michigau, Ann Arbor, Mich. ........ lbion College, Albion, Mich. ..........University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.c. ................... slioville. N. C. ...........................Trinity College, Durham, N c. ...................Stevens Institute, Hoboken, N. J. ..........St. lamis University, Canton, N. V. .......... Cornell University, Ithiea. N. Y. ....................... Mt. Union College, Mt. Union, Ohio. Wittenberg College. Springfield. bio. Wesleyan I 'niversily. Delaware. Ohio. ..... ..Worcester Cniversitv. Worcester, uliio. Marietta College. Marietta, uliio. ........................State University, olumbns, Ohio. ..... ... .......... Muhlenberg College, Allentown. Pa. .................ladtigh Cniversitv. South Bethlehem, Pa. ..... ........... Pennsylvania Collegi-. Gettysburg. Pa. ...... .......... Ilavertord College. Ilaverford. Pa. ..... Pniversily of Pennsvlvania. Philadelphia, P.i. ................. South Carolina University, Columbia, s. C. ................Wo (lord College, p:irtanburg, S. C. .......................Charleston College, Charleston. 8. ( . ....................Cmnherlaiid Cniversitv, Lebanon. Tenn. ..... I niver-.ity of the South. Sewane Tenn. Soufhwestern Presbyterian Pniversity, Clarksville. Tenn. .................... Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. ................... I niversily of Vermont, Burlington. Vt. ..........Washington and Lee. la'xington, Va ...................... Hampdon-Svdney College, Va. ............... Cniversitv of Virginia, Charlottesville. Va. ......................Poaimke College, Salem, Va. Alumni Ass ciations. Alabama A soeiation........................................ A rka usas Associat ion.................................... District of Columbia Association .......................... Florida Association.... ....... ...... .................... «•• --igia Association... ...... Kentucky Association....................................... North Carolina Association........ .. . New York Assoeiati m ............. ........................ South Carolina Association............ .................... )hio Association.......................................... Tennessee Associ.ition..................................... Virginia Association ...................................... !hicago Association........ .............................. (Cleveland Association...... Montgoincrv. Little Kook. Washington. Jacksonville .......Macon. .. . I.miisvillr. Mehane. — New York, t harleston. ...Thorn ville. . Nashville. Kiehnioiid. V!)3KQ .1VX VII.I I V Jos. IT. Acklen. Percy Kinnaird. Wirt Hughes. J. W. McFaddin. A. F. Whitman. I)r. J. A. Draughon. J. A. Spurr. Sain. Orr. Henry Spence. A. E. Clement. R. M. Leland. Herbert Godwin. R. L. Johnson. Jos. W. Bradley. Re ;. S. II. Chester. FRATRES I|M UNIVERSITATE. Class of ’93. John R. Goodloe, Nashville, Tenn., Class of ’94. M.I). J. F. McKenzie, Midland, Texas. LL.B. W. Q. Vreeland, Louisville, Ky. . B.I). A. M. Trawiek, Jr., . Nashville, Tenn. . B.A. R. E. L. Saner, . Washington, Ark. Class of ’95. LL.B. Cleanth Brooks, . . Clinton, Ky. . . B.A. W. H. Flowers, Bolling, Ala. B.S. Leslie K. Kelton, . . Italy, Tex. . B.S. Howard M. Jones, Murfreesboro. Tenn. . B.S. Ira F. Hawkins, . Enterprise, Miss. . B.I). Robert L. Yeager, Mineral Wells, Tex. . Class of ’96. B.S. W. M. Bays, . Rome, Ga. . B.vS. V. P. Henrit .e, Lebanon, Ya. B.S. • ( ' Delta Kappa Epsilon Phi, Thkta, Xi, Sigma, Psi, Upsilox, Chi. Beta, Eta, Lambda, Pi, Iota, Alpha Alpha Omicrox, . Epsilon, Rho, Tau, . Mu, Nr, Beta Phi, . Phi Chi. Psi Phi, Gamma Phi, Psi Omega, Beta Chi. Phi Gamma, Gamma Beta. Theta Zeta, Alpha Chi. Kappa, Phi Epsilon, Gamma, Sigma Tau, Active Chapters. Vale College, New Haven, Conn. Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me. Colby University, Waterville. Me. • Amherst College. Amherst. Mass. . University of Alabama. Brown University, Providence, R. I. University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss. Uni versit of North Carolina. Chapel Hill. X. C. University of Virginia. Kenyon College, Cambier, Ohio. Dartmouth College. Hanover, X. H. Central University, Richmond, Ky. Middleburg College, Middleburg, Yt. University of Michigan. Ann Arbor, Mich. Williams College, Williamston, Pa. Lafayette College, Easton, Pa. Hamilton College, Clinton, X. V. Colgate University, Hamilton, X. V. College of City of New York. . rheological Seminary, Rochester, X. V. Rutgers College, New Brunswick, X. J. DePauw University, Greencastle, End. Wesleyan College, Middleton. Conn. Polytechnic Institute. Troy, X. Y. Cornell University, Ithaca. X. Y. Syracuse University. Syracuse. X. Y. Columbia College, New York. University of California, Berkeley, Cal. Trinity College, Hartford, Conn. Miami University. Oxford, Ohio. . University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, Minn. Vanderbilt University, Nashville. Tenn. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. Dki.ta Kappa Kpsii.on I _ ia r a.p.pa T7 L-k L -V Founded 1844. Established 1S47. Re-established 1S9I. Coi.OK.s Crimson, Blue, and Cold. S. V. Childers, Joel B. Fort. J. I . (ioodlet, J. R. Green, W. M. Hart, Rev. J. K. Winchester, Fralrcs ir) Clrbc. J. McE. Stone, (Jen. I ra 1 . Jones, J. R. McClelland, W. 0. Nelson, I . L. Nichol, J. Phillips, J. E. Sanders. J. S. Pilcher, 1 r. G. W. F. Price, W. A Wray, R. M. Smith. Prof. II. A. Nance, Rev. Jerry Witherspoon. Fralrcs ii) Facullalc. Win. J. Vaughn, M.A., LL.P., I’ioIVsmh- of Mathematics. J. II. Callender, M.D , Professor of Physiology ami Psychology. R. McPhail Smith, M.A., LL.B., Professor of Common, Statute, ami oust national I .aw. Edwin M inis. B. A., Instructor in History. P. H. Porter, C.E., Instructor in Civil ICnginccring. P©sl Gradual© Sludcpls. C. F. McKenzie, B.A., Boston, Mass. P. II. Porter, C.E., Clinton, Ky. Edwin Mims, B.A., Little Roek, Ark. Class of '93. W. B. Nance, Cornersville, Tenn., B.A. J. M. Strother, Yaneeburg, Ky., B S. J. C. Wall, Franklin, Tenn., B.A. W. I . Wendel, Aberdeen, Miss. B.A. Class of ’94. M. M. Cnllotn, Clarksville, Tenn., B.A. T. 5. Kittrell, Linden, Tenn., 1 .A. W. T. Walker, Bass Station, Ala. B.A. Jell' McCain. Brown wood, Tex., I.I..I . W. T. Locke, B.A., Richmond, Ark., LL.B. Class of '95. J. Y. Bayliss, Memphis, Tenn., 11.10. W. R. Hendrix, Nashville, Tenn., B.A. R. M. Moorman, Somerville, Tenn., II.A. M. C. Ketchnm. Somerville, Tenn.. B.A. W. K. Matthews, Franklin, Tenn., B.A. R. L. Lnnd. Nashville, Tenn., I5.lv Class of '96. Win. Hughes. Enion City, Tenn., B.A. .1. T. llarhee, Ripley, Term., B.A. Wm. Mouse, Franklin, Tenn , B.A. B. (J. White, Bellbnekle, Tenn., B.A. C. C. Ogilvie, Bellbnekle. Tenn., B.A. I . Epthegrove, Greenville, Tex., B.A. G. A. Morgan, Shelbyville, Tenn., B.A. Irregular Student. C. (Taylor, Hope, Ark. ) Sigma Chi. FOUNDED 1855. ACTIVE CHAPTERS. Alpha..............Mianii I'niversity, )xford, hio. B ci............... 1 niversitv of Wooster, Wooster, Ohio. Gamma..............Ohio Wesleyan I’niversity, Delaware, Oliio. Zyta...............Washington ami Lee I’niversity, Lexington, Ya. l‘ta ..............1 ni versi t-v of Mississippi, Oxford. Miss. Epsilon............ Columbian I’niversity, Washington, D.C. IJieta.............lVnnsylvania College, Gettysburg, Pa. Kappa .............Buckuell I'niversity, Lewisburg, Pa. Lambda.............Indiana I Adversity. Bloomington. lml. 1 ...............Denison I’niversity, Granville lii . Ni.................DePa-.w I'niversity, Greeneastle. Iml. Omicron............Diekinson College, Carlisle, Pa. Pho......... ...... Butler I’niversity, Irvington, Iml. hi...............I lanover College, I lanover, I ml. Psi ...............I’niversity of Virginia. Omega..............Northwestern I’niversity, Iron ton, 111. Gamma Gamma........ Randolph-Maeon College, Ashland. Ya Delta Delta........Purdue I'niversity, Lafayette, Iml. Delta Chi..........Wabash College, (’raw fords ville, Inti. .eta .eta........Ont re College, Danville, Kv. Zyta Psi...........I'niversity of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio. Ida Eta............Dartmouth College, llanover, N. II Theta Theta........I'niversity of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Kappa Kappa........I’niversity of Illinois, Champagne. III. Lambda Lambda......State College, Lexington, Kv. sigma Sigma........I lampden-Sidney, College. Virginia. Alpha Beta.........I'niversity of California, Berkley, Cal. Alpha Gamma........Ohio Stale 1 Adversity, (’olnmbits, ()hio. Mpha Epsilon.......I’niversity of Nebraska, Lincoln. Neb. Alpha .eta........Beloit College, Wisconsin. Alpha Theta........Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass. lpha lota......... Illinois Wesleyan I’niversity, Bloomington, 111. Mpha Lambda........I’niversity of Wisconsin, Madison. Alpha Nu...........I'niversity of Texas, Austin. Alpha X i..........I'niversity of Kansas, Lawrence. Mpha Omicron.......Tulane I'niversity. New Orleans, La. Alpha Pi...........Mhion College, Michigan. Alpha Kho..........Lehigh I'niversity, Pennsylvania. Alpha sigma........I'niversity of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Alpha Tan..........I'niversity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. N. C. Alpha Cpsilon......I Adversity of Southern California, Los Angeles, Cal. Alpha Phi..........Cornell I'niversity, Ithiea, N. V. Alpha Chi..........State College, Pennsylvania. Mpha Psi...........Vanderbilt ( Adversity, Nashville, Tenn Alpha Omega........Leland Stanford. Jr., I Adversity, Palo Alto. Cal. Alpha Alpha........Hobart College, Geneva, N. Y. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. New York Citv, Washington, I). C., Chicago, 111., Cincinnati, Ohio, I ndianapolis, I ml., Lincoln, Neb., Springfield, Ohio Lafavetie, Iml., Montgomery, Ala., New Orleans, La., Philadelphia, Pa. 7 hPHA PSI o«=SlV.MA PHI. Colors—Blue and (.old. Fratres in Urbe. Judge Robert Ewing, L. B. Fite, A. P. Gaines, E. E. Duncan, Tuos. S. Weaver, Daniel Hillman, Prof. J. D. Blanton, Hon. Ernest Pillow, W.m. D. Thomas, L. L. Rodgers, (). M. Yerger, Jr., D. Weaver. Frater in Facultate. W.m. E. Dudley, M.D , Prjps;jr of Chemistry. Class of ’93. M. C. Ilardin, ! .! ., St. Joseph, Mo.................................M.A. F. M. Thomas, B.A., Bowling Green, Ky.................................B.D. T. (’. Meadows, Florence, Ala.........................................B.F. Y. B. Beauchamp, B.A., Emmerton, Ya........................I . 1)., M.A. Class of '91. Win. B. Kicks, Buena Vista, Ya........................................B.H. Thos Carter, New Orleans, La..........................................B.H. J. J. Stowe, Opelika, Ala........................................... Class of ’05. W. D. Rhea, Nashville, Tenn...........................................B.E. G. B. Overton, Louisville, Ky........................................B.A. W. II. Henry, Louisville, Ky..........................................B.E. K. I.. Jordan, Murfreesboro, Tenn.....................................B.A. Class of ’96. Theo. H. Brewer, Louisville, Ky.......................................B.A. Philip Connell, Nashville, Tenn.......................................B.S. (i. P . Hant .ler, Moss Point, Miss...................................B S. (’. E. Dunbar, Augusta, Ha........................................... B.A. J$ iqma JK'u FUaLraiiq, Founded 1869 at Virginia Military Institute. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS. Beta, Birr a Beta, . Beta Theta, Beta Omicron, Beta Lam da, Beta Gamma, Beta Delta, Beta Fpsilon. Beta Kappa, Beta Zeta, . Beta Kta. Beta Iowa, Beta Chi, Beta Psi, Beta Nr, . Delta Theta, Delta. . Zeta. Kta. Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda, Mr, . Nr. Xi, Omicron, Pi. Rho, Sigma, U psi lon, Phi, . Chi, University of Yirginia. Charlottesville, Ya. l)e Pauw University, Greencastle, Inch Alabama A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala. University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn. Central College. Fayette, Mo. Missouri Yalley College, Marshall. Mo. Drake University, Des Moines. Ia. Upper Iowa University, Fayette, Ia. Southwest Kansas College, Winfield. Kan. Perdue University, La Fayette, Ind. University of Indiana. Bloomington, Ind. Mt. Union College. Alliance, Ohio. Leland Stanford. Jr., University, Menlo Park, Cal. University of California, Berkley. Cal. University of Ohio, Columbus Ohio. Lombard University, Galesburg. 111. South Carolina College, Columbia, S. C. Central University. Richmond, Kv. Mercer University, Macon, Ga. University Alabama. Tuscaloosa, Ala. Howard College, Fast Lake, Ala. North Georgia College, Dahlonega. Ga. W ashington and Lee University. Lexington, Ya. University of Georgia, Athens, Ga. University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan. Fmory College. Oxford, Ga. Bethel College, Russellville, Ky. Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa. University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Yanderbilt University. Nashville. Tenn. University of Texas, Austin, Texas. University of Louisiana, Baton Rouge, La. Cornell College. Mt. Yernon. Iowa. 3’icjma C bop!er of icj ma ESTABLISHED 1386. Colors- -Old Cold, While and Mack. ACTIVE MEMBERS. Post-Graduate. M. J. YEOMANS (A.H.) M.A., Class of ’93. J. F. ALEXANDER. M.D., F. M. BROWN, M.D.. II. A. DAVIS. B.S., J. H. DINNING, B.A., - C. W. LEE, M.D., Class of ’94. J WARREN CLARK. B.A., R. E. FORT, M.D., - J. OWEN MAHONEY, B.E., S. R. WEAVER. M.D.. E. Y. WHITAKER. LL.B., N. M. WINDSOR (A.15.) LL.B., Class of ’95. A. S. ROBERTSON. D.D.S.. N. S. WEST, D.D.S.. - Class of ’96. F. M. SANGER. B.A., S. W. ALEXANDER, B.A., Special Stubent. WM. FOSTER. JR.. B. S., - Milieu, Ga. Cherokee. Ala. Nashville, Tenn. Cayce. Ky. Gleason. Tenn. Clayton, Ala. Lake Charles, La. Sadlersville, Tenn. Lynnville, Tenn. Brownsville, Tenn. Tampa, Fla. Boonville, Mo. Plaquemine, La. Bowling Green, Ky. l''.l Paso, Texas. McKenzie, Tenn. Hartford, Ky. so SI OFFICERS. J.J. STOWE. • M. M. CUELOM. W. H. BEAUCHAMP, E. M. RANKIN............ G. B. Overton,.......... President. I 'ice Presidetit. C ritic. Secretary. Treasurer. S2 Rou u II. C. Alexander, W. E. Heard. V. H. Beauchamp, John A. Hell, Jr., J. K. Huchanan, Henj. Childers, R. Colinan, V. S. Colonna, V. V. Craig, A. P. Crockett, M. M. Cullom, J. II. DeWitt, C. K. Dunbar, W. P. Fisher, W. II. Flowers, R. V. Green, E. II. Hawkins, J.T. Hendrick, W. V. Hudson, G. S. Johnson, E. L. Jordan. C. T. Kirkpatrick, C. P. A. B. Lipscomb, II. J. Livingston, Jr., Lee Loventhal, W. P . Malone, Edwin Mims. R. M. Moorman, G. A. Morgan, W. P . Nance, J. W. Neal. J. E. Norwood, C. C. Ogilvie, (' . H. Overton, G. B. Pugh, E. M. Rankin, C. Ratcliff, II. M. Robert, Jr., J. E. Stephens, Lothair Smith, J. J. Stowe, J. B. Thomas, F. M. Thomas, J. C. Wall, ,’illiams. 8B E. F. KENNEDY, Pkksidknt. R. E. L. SANER, Yick Pkksidknt. M. C. KETCHEM. Skcrktary. W. HrOIIES. Trkasirkk. S! Roll. C. R. Raskervill, V. II. Rates, S. K. Rland, C. Rrooks, J. G. Cox, K. C. Dennis, R. K. Dotson, A. W. Dyer, W. Foster, M. ,S. Gardener, Maurice «lick, S. I-. Hagar, R. Henritze, Ira Hawkins, W. T. Huff, William Hughes, J. R. Hunter. H. M. Jones, L. K. Kelton, 1C. F. Kennedy, M. C. Ketchum, T. G. Kittrell, W. T. Locke, J. A. Lewis, V. K. Matthews, J. McKenzie, J. R. Parks, S. Ritchey, J. A. Robins, R. L. L. Saner. Harry Seay, J. M. Strother, A. M. Trawick, Jr., W. T. Walker. R. G. White. G. W. Williamson, S. F. Wynn, J. A. McVoy. 85 8 I'i t KdITOHJS « l 11 UsTLhK 5wf- II. JONES (Mo.), Editor-in-Chief. P. II. PORTER (K ), Business Manager. R. W. CLAWSON (Tenn.), Local Ed! o J. A. ROBINS (Miss.), Exchange Editor. R. A. WEAVER (Tenn.), Athletic Editor. J. J. STOWE (Ala.), Theological Department. U. T. CLOT KELT ICR (Cal.), Law Department. M. M. CELLOM (Tenn.), Assistant ICditor. 87 ss Editors of the Ouserver. IC I) WIN Sam K J no. H (iKO. B Thos. Kd. C. Mims (Tenn.), Dialectic Society, Editor in Chief. Bi.and (Ky.), Philosophic Society, Easiness Manager. . DicWitt (Tenii.), ) . Pitch (Ark.), S ... . Exchange Dialectic Society. ( Editors. i. Kittkhli. (Tenn), ) Philosophic Dennis (S. C.), S Local Society, ( Editors. SI) lUnuici Itlcns (Christian Association OFFICERS. M. M. COELOM. PR ESI DENT. E. H. JONES, - - - Yice President. THOS. C. MEADOWS, j Skcr eta R IKS. ED. C. DENNIS. W. W. CRAIG, - - - Treasurer. DO Poll or ei be s. II. M. Hailey, J. L. Barton, W. H. Bates, J. V. Bayliss, J. T. Barbee, (J. O. Bradley, W. P. Connell. J. T. Cotton, J. G. Cox, M. M. Culloni, 1C C. Dennis, L. A. Davis, J. H. Dinning, A. E. Elrod, A. D. Katherly, Geo. Kllsler. V. P. Fisher, W. T. Hale, J. P. I Ianner, J. V. Manner, J. B. Hildebrand. W. House, Jr., W. Hughes, II. M. Jones, M. M. Jones, K. H. Jones, L. M. Jordan, L. E. Kelton, K. I;. Kennedy, M. C. Ketclunn. C. T. Kirkpatrick, II. J. Livingston, Jr., R. I,. Lund, B. Malone, V. K. Matthews, J. (). Mahoney, Jeff. McCarn, Edwin Mims, R. M. Moorman, G. A. Morgan, X. E. Morris, S. A. Myall, V. B. Nance, J. V. Neal. C. C. Ogilvie, X. Powell, A. P . Phillips, Geo. B. Pugh, K. M. Rankin, V. I). Rhea. S. Ritchie, J. A. Robins, F. M. Sanger, A. C. Smith, A. F. Smith, L. Smith. R. V. Walker, W. T. Walker, B. G. White, G. W. Williamson, A. Iv. Wilson, A. II. Wilson, R. F. Woods, S. F. Wynn, II. S. Vaughn, R. L. Veager. i)2 u est Side Dining Club. A. I Crockett, Treasurer.. T. (j. Kittrei-l, Manager. Monitors. Buildings. Alpha - R. 1C. Dotson. Belleview - W. V. Craig. Cumberland - C. V. Williams. Delphi - J. A. Robins. ICuclid - J. M. Strother. Franklin - A. II. Wilson. Dining Hall C. T. Kirkpatrick Do 0| I V C LU B.f3 ernb c rs. DR. L. DUDLEY. DR. J. T. McGILL. DR. J. H. KIRKLAND. PROF. JOHN DANIEL. DR. FREDERICK MOORE. Wssley Hall Emma £lub, W. O. VREELAND, Manager and Treasurer. fDonitors. . . . PETEK STOKES. S. E. HAGER, M J. L. CU X NIX GO IX. m embers. TUOS. G. KITTREU-, J. P. HANNER. C. R. BASKERVILL, R. A. WEAVER, J. W. FORT, M. M. CULLOM, E. BEARD. C. T. W. T. WALKER, KIRKPATRICK. s OFFICERS. A. A. Rodriguez, H. J. Livingston, Jr., . President. Set ret ary. R. L. Yeager, V. Weatherby, J. B. Hildebrand, W. W. Hudson, mEfflBERS. W. B. Malone, II. J. Livingston, Jr., A. P. Crockett, T. C. Meadows, J. Y. Crook , G. B. Pugh, A. A Rodriguez, J. T. Barbee. M EM B E R S. J. C. WALL. K. A. WKAVKR, R. H. JONHS, S. K. HUM), R. M. ALLHN, S. THOMPSON, H. L. SHAY. ) 001 • IH(in IOYI I 'X A HOMH SHXOf IV 1 IHIXYU Xliof HOMH ‘(I VHHSXrriOH II A ‘AH'KI.KI I A ’ (1 SH3aiAI3IAI AHVHONOH XXYIVMHDX.ll' A H ‘(IX YMHHd'I111 ’H 'f (IMOHMHIIXYH.W II f ‘SSI'IAYH A f XOSMAYf O f ‘XM.1HOO II f ‘AH'IIYH ’IV II MHXMOH II d SH33 IAI3 1AI 'jj.nisvj.tj P -CjvjjjjjJ 7itjpisjjj jji i 7 itjpisjjj ‘XX YIVMHOX.lf ‘A 'H XOSMAYf 'O f (IMOHMHIIXYH.W II f SH 3 013 3 0 y ANDEI BIlifl 1 NGINEB m-i officers. J. Gran hick y Jackson, - President. Jno. V. Crook, - - 1 ice President. J. V. Bayliss, - Secretary. Ii. M. Bailey, - treasurer. W. N. Ayers, - Set yeant-at-Arms. Lytle Brown, J. H. Weatherford, MEMBERS. Pi rectors. W. N. Ayers, Ciias. F. Finch, H. M. Bailey. J. Oraxbery Jackson, J. V. Bayliss, R. L. Lund, Lytle Brown, P. H. Porter, J. V. Crook, T. B. Scoggins, J. H. Weatherford. HONORARY MEMBERS. Prof. Oi.in II. Landreth, I)r. Wm. L. Dudley, I)r. Chas. L. Thornburg, Prof. Wm. T. Magrudkr, R. A. Wkavkk, J. V. Bayliss, R. M. Moorman. President. I ice President. See. and Treas. M EM BERS. V. W. Craig, Friendship, M. C. Ketch mu. Somerville. J. Iy. Barton, Memphis. Will Hughes, I'nion City, R. W. Walker, Dversburg. J. H. Weatherford, Memphis, H.J. Livingston, Jr.. Brownsville, W. B. Malone, Memphis, C. R. Baskervill, Stanton, II. C. Alexander, I’nion City. Lothair Smith, Ced.ir Chapel, S. W. Alexander. McKenzie, Albert K. IClrod, Rutherford, R. A. Weaver, Memphis, R. M Moorman, Somerville, J. B. Hildebrand. White Haven. J. V. Bayliss, Memphis, K. II. Tay'or, Brownsville, J. Taylor Barbee, Ripley. HONORARY MEMBERS. Miss Grace Flippin, Miss Mabelle Flipp n, Dr. W. M. Baskervill, Dr. C. ,S. Brown, Memphis. Memphis. Faculty. Faculty. Sxpoaivs naoToy, z]y£ Toy z« V ijii-nay tj'uy .noi'oo 70 , to o o . .o. r c rnyr . ( The Alcestis of Euripides.) John C. Brown, L. Anrkw Davis, Johnson Bkanskokd, President. I ice President. Sec. and Treas. MEMBERS. H. Lauderdale Seay, II. Hyde Lyon. II. Crenshaw Alexander, R. F. Woods, A. Mitch'll Ballentine, K. Colgate Dennis, J. Calvin Brown, ■ - ' I)udley Youngblood, L. Andrew Davis, •, G. Hamilton 11 isle, Johnson Bransford, L. Edwin Burch, A. Alfonso Rodriguez, Richard M. Allen, J. P. Washington Brown, C. Clay Trabue, R. Alexander Barr, Bert E. Young, C. Cleveland Taylor, Oscar Peeples, J. Yaulx Crockett, R. White Clawson, F. Marion Fletcher, vS. Knight Bland. J. Edward Buchanan, A. Percy Crockett, Jno. Coles Wall, Clarence T. Boyd. Vsijdepkill Clr)i ersily Glee Club- SEASON 1 8 9 2 - ’ 9 3 . OFFICERS. I)k. W. L. Dudley, . W. A. Davis, . W. R. Hendrix, C. C. Washburn, R. L. Lund, President. Vice President. See'y and Treas'r. Leader. Manager. embevo. First Tenors. First Bass. L. I . Kelton, '95. (i. A. Morgan, '96. F. L. Dav, ’95. Brazier Barks, '96. C. ( Washburn, ’92. I '.. W. Jun rerinann, '90. R. L. Lund, '95. C. T. K irk pat rick. ‘94. Second Tenors. Second Bass. W. IL Cooper, '96. .1. M. Hawley, ’93. Peter Stokes, ’94. W. Q. Yreeland, '94 I.. A. I)avis, 95. W. M. Hendrix, ’95. .1. S. Johnston, ’93. i. W. Dyer, ’94. 10 I ONCERTS GIVEN BY AT Franklin, Tenn., Jan. 13, 1893. Murfreesboro. Tenn., Feb. 3, 1893. Hellbuckle, Tenn., Feb. 10, 1893. Columbia, Tenn., Feb. 16, 1893. Pulaski, Tenn., Feb. 17, 1893. Columbia, Tenn., Feb. 18, 1893, (by request). Clarksville, Tenn., March 10, 1893. -25.'ANNUAL concert GIVEN --------------------- THEATRE VENDOME. March 23, 1893. 'I'lie Club assisted in following events : Concert for benefit of Nashville Relief Society, given by Miss Fannie Dorman, Dec. 20, 92. Kntcrtainmcnt given by Students of Martin College, Pu- laski, Tenn., Feb. 17. 1893. Annual Celebration of Vanderbilt Literary Societies, Feb- ruary 22, 93. Commencement Kxercises Vanderbilt Dental School, Feb- ruary 23. ‘93- Lecture by Mr. Locke Richardson, Jan. 20, '93. Lecture by Kx-Gov. Hob Taylor, Jan. 24, ’93. 105 i7 t)T)uqi Copcerl. Hcalrc Vend on-)c, MARCH 23. 1893 Programme. PART I. 1. The Two Roses.......................................Werner 2. Simple Simon at the Fair...........................Herbert 3. Nut Brown Maiden.............................College Songs 4. Anthem...............................................Ryley 5. Suwanee River.......................................Foster 6. Watermelon Song...................................Arranged Mr. Dyer and Club. 7. Tennessee....................................College Songs 8. Rosalie.............................................Knight Mr. Washburn and Club. 9. Round—I Saw Esau...................................Nodifer 10. Hunting Song ( Robin Hood)........................DeKoven Mr. Davis and Club. PART II. 1. Where Would I Be?..................................Zollner 2. Old Cabin Home.......................................Paine 3. Sunday-school Scholar........................College Songs Mr. 1 lawley and Club. 4. B .t Bzt.......................................Yale Songs 5. Old Thompson's Mule.............................Westendorf Mr. Johnston. 6. “ Brown October Ale ' (Robin Hood).................DeKoven Mr. Washburn and Club. 7. Son of a Gambolier...........................College Songs 8. Gwine Back to Dixie.................................. 9. Good Night......................................Methfesse! IDE History of 11 e Vanderbilt Glee (.’bib TMIE history of the Vanderbilt I'niversity Club is necessarily short, inas- mnrli as it is only a few years of age, the majority of those few years being a most obscure infancy. In the school year of issd 1S87 there was a move- ment toward organizing a I'niversity dee Club, and in the Annual of that year, which was the first Count that appeared in our heavens, the organization was noticed, and the name of a few aspiring and ambitious young vocalists appeared. There was no foundation to the Club, however, and no regular work was done, huiing the next year the project seems to have been given no thought, and not until the session « f 1S90 1S . 1 was anything like a permanent organization effected. This was brought about early in the year by tin suggestion of a few of the most progressive st udents who voiced themselves in the lustier, ami a good start was made. The Club began as a singing class under the tuition of Mr. and Mrs. Ashford, but soon the time was given to the practice and learning of some of the more familiar college glees No public work was done, but regular meet- ings and rehearsals were held, and at the end of the year the Club had improved, and felt that they had only to begin next year where they had left off, and the I'niversity would have a Club of which it would not be ashamed The next year the old management was resumed, the policy being slightly changed, and new and better music purchased. Work was resumed in earnest, but some- how things did not proceed auspiciously, and, at the end of the year, an exchange being made in the management shortly Indore Commencement, the Club was in a disorganized condition. It had, however, appeared in public several times, having given a concert in the city, at Watkins Hall. December is, I.SIM, and having sung on different occasions at the I’niversity. There were some false principles in its organization which were patent to all who studied the matter, and at the beginning of the present session September, 1X92 the Club was organized on an entirely new basis, with Dr Duuley as President and ( ieneral Overseer, and Mr. Charles Washburn as Director. The failure of previous years was no help to the organizing of a new Club, which was, however, effected alter numerous attempts and discouragements. However, about the beginning « 1 October, fourteen voices were selected out of less than twenty that applied for examination, and thirteen remain, o h being lost by reason of removal from school. It is the policy of the Club to work for the advancement of musical interests at underbill, which has already made distinction in the athletic world, and the (dee Club boys are jeali us for jest he t ic reputat ion for their alma mater as well as the other. Rehearsals are held semi-weeklv, and once each month the Club meets in a business meeting to consider questions already discussed in the Execu- tive Committee. which is composed of the President. Vice President. Secretary and Treasurer, Leader, and Manager, fin majority of business is trusted to this committee, thus economizing time and avoiding useless and fruitless discussions, taking care not to be arbitrary, for the organization is purely Democratic, and as devoted to its President and head as is our great country to its acknowledged leader. In these lew months a rrpertoir of almost fifty songs has been mastered, and this is equal to the repertoire of the average college club. Prom such a number programmes of varied q ualit and quantity can be drawn. Work has been given to (dees. Southern Melodies, and some heavier Part Songs. It is hoped that the measure of success that this year has brought to tin Vanderbilt Cniver- sity (Jlee Club will serve as an encouragement and an impetus to make the work even more acceptable as the succeeding sessions come, and if such hopes can be realized Nashville need depend no longer on Eastern colleges for a Glee Club Concert, lor home talent w ill then be sufficient as an entertainment. 107 litem hex J. I Hanner, K. F. Kennedy, G. C. Miller, H. vS. Vaughn, V. V. Craig, II. C. Alexander, M. M. Jones, R. A. Weaver, J. F. Woody, E. II. Jones. 10S R. A. BARR. V. H. BATHS, J. T. BARBEE. BEN CHILDERS, H. L. COOPER. A. P. CROCKETT. DALTON CROMER. II. J. LIVINGSTON, Jr., W. B. MAL )NE, G. A. MORGAN, R. H. MANN, EDWIN MIMS, B. NANCE, R. E. DOTSON. V. K. EARTHMAN, W. T. HUFF, R. C. HUGHES, w. uroHES, J. B. HILDEBRAND, L M. JORDAN, T. G. KI I'TRELL, LINCII. PASCI I ALL. A. B. PHILLIPS, C. C. OGILVIE, J. A. ROBINS. V. T. WALKER. S. F. WYNN. W. II. WITT. B. G. WHITE, W. WEATHER BY. M. M. CULLOM. Miss LHTTY Miss ANNIE Iv. F. KENNEDY. W. T. LOCKE, 10!) ll rgq,.v II. M JO. J. T. X. K W. I Win. W. K [. Bailey, M. C Ketchum. A. M. Ballentine, Mahoney, J. K Buchanan, R. M. Moorman, Cotton, W. K Matthews. Miss Janie Courtney . Morris, A. J. HI rod. J. K. Stephens, Fisher, J. C. Wall. J. I Manner, ( . Williamson. J. W. Manner, A. K. Wilson. L. Hendrix, Dan Cpthegrove, Win. I louse. Jr. Xlcinhcrs Prop. John Daniel, M.A., Kxpert Examiner of luminous incan- descent phosphorescence due to electrostatic discharge in rarefied gases, by alternating currents of enormous frequency. Official Rotator of the Cog Wheels of the Kther. Manipulator of the elastic “ rubber bag. R. W. Ci.awson, B.S., Lord High Mixer of the “perfectly rigideous subtle imponderable fluid. Special designer of multipolar, alter- nating current dynamos and multiphase motors. Patentee of “ Clawsonian Storage Battery. J. H. Ogiurn, C.K., Grand Master of the Theory of the “Shunt. Kxpert Surveyor of “ Magnetic Fields. Contractor for “ Wheat- stone ” Bridges. A. H. Wilson, B.S., Special Correspondent to the Academie de Science. Sole agent for “ Lines of Force. Staunch Advocator of the Theory that (J== J,' HONORARY MEMBERS. Herr von 11 ki.m molt .. Pli.I)., Sir Wm. Thomson Bart, Lord Kavleigii, Ph.I).. F.R.S., II. A. Rowland, Ph.I).. Thomas A. Kdison, F«sq., Silvanus P. Thompson, Ph.I)., F.R.S. H. C. ALEXANDER. J. V. BAVUSS. REX CHILDERS. W. P. FISHER, W. T. HALE, R. M. MOORMAN. R. A. J. (). MAHONEY, N. R. PHILLIPS, Y. WILLIAMSON, R. W. WALKER, A. M. RALLENTINE, J. W. CLARK, FEW, A. E. ELROD. W. W. HUDSON, II. M. JONES, R. L. LUND, C. M. LUTZ, W. K. MATTHEWS. C. R. OVERTON, R. THORNE, W. I . RICKS. S. C. TUCKER. PHARMACEUTICAL CLUB. President, S. C. Tcckkr. Vice President, O. (). Bradley. Secretary, 1C. G. Bukchfiel. Treasurer, J. II. Pittman. Executive Committee, S. II. White, IC. G. BiRCimici.. J. Iy. Ames, J. L. Barton, O. (). Bradley, IC. G. Burchfiel, IC. T. Castleberry, J. C. Creech, .11 i; 11 it i; k s . J. P. Cordill, J. B. Currey, J. M. Ely, Jr., Z. W. Nichols, II. II. Hunt, 1C. I). IyUrman, S. II. White. J. II. Pittman, IC. II. Taylor, S. C. Tucker, W '1'. Terry, A. C. Smith, R. W. Walker, Honorary Member—Dr. 1C. A. Ruddiman. 4 EMsaaasssaeas V' -V Dr. Wm. L. Dudley, President. Dr. J. II. Kirkland, I'ice President. P. M. Jones, Secretary. A. II. Wilson, 'Iren surer. C. F. McKenzie. £ . Baseball Team. F. H. Porter, Manager Baseball Team. H. H. Jones, Captain Football Team. H. I). Rtiim, Manager Football Team. vS. K. Bland, Captain Field Sports. llo ’Varsity JVJine. P. II. PORTER, Manager. C. I:. McKEXZIE, Captain. FRANK M. FLETCHER ) SHIRLEY THOMPSON H. H. HUNT JOHN FLETCHER T. SHORT CHAS. F. McKENZIE - E. H. JONES H. C. ALEXANDER R. A. BARR W. R. HENDRIX Substitutes. Catchers. Pitcher and hirst Base. First Base and Pitcher. Shortstop. Second Base. Third Base. Left Field. Center Field. Right Field. II. S. VAUGHN, JOHN H. OGBURN, P. HAWKINS. COfficial Scorer—J OIIN C. WALL. 11 a unity Nine Vanderbilt vs. Nashville League, March 15, 11-18. Vanderbilt vs. Nashville League, March 26.0-11. Vanderbilt vs. Nashville League, March 30, 1-9. Vanderbilt vs. University of Nashville, April 8, 5-1. Vanderbilt vs. University of Alabama, April 14, 1-2. Vanderbilt vs. University of Alabama, April 15, 2-2. Vanderbilt vs. University of Alabama, April 21, 10-5. Vanderbilt vs. University of Alabama, April 22. 4-1. Vanderbilt vs. University of the South, April 28, o-r. Vanderbilt vs. University of the South. April 29, 3-1. Vanderbilt vs. University of the South, May 8, 8-12. Vanderbilt vs. Cumberland University, May 19, 4-0. Vanderbilt vs. Cumberland University, May 20, 6-6. 117 Bwt Ball N:f B. G. White, Centre Home. E. H. Hawkins, . Left Home. J. P. Hakner, Right Home. H. A. Davis, .... . Centre. R. W. Greene, Left Centre. W. W. Ne WHERRY, . Right Centre. F. L. Day, .... Guard. L. J. Loventhal, Jr., . . Right Guard. G. W. Williamson, Left Guard. Result of r,aii)c Played. Vanderbilt vs. Nashville V. M. C. A., 9 1 IS Baseball Averages. TIIK following are llie averages of all those that have played in any game this season up to present time. The list is given in the order that the players rank on the total average of batting, field- ing, and base running: batting and fielding being counted i,000 each and base running 500: the greatest number of bases stolen by one player being counted perfect. First is given the times at bat (A.Ik), then the safe hits (II.). and then the batting average; then follows the number of chances in fielding (C.), then the errors (K.), and then the fielding average: then comes the per ceutage in base running (S.B.), and lastly the total average. Of course, in forming an esti- mate of the fielding of the different players, one in one position should not be compared with another that played another position. For instance, it would not be fair to draw a comparison between first base and short stop, or catcher and second base. The first base has many chances and nearly all easy, while the chances of any other inlielder are frequently difficult, and he not only has to stop a grounder but throw it. The catcher, of course, has a hard position to fill, but his passed balls are not counted as errors. The scoring is not at all accurate, being kept by different ones in different games, and it is especially faulty in the matter of stolen bases, they not being scored according to rules at all. But the follow- ing is the score from the score book: A.B. 11. I'.C. c. E. I'.C. S. 15. T. A. 1 .!. Fletcher .. 48 14 292 02 0 734 428 1004 • 11 unt in 11 221 or 5 933 280 1 143 • 1 lendrix in 200 17 5 700 500 1400 1 F. Fletcher.. is 11 « «) 104 10 925 214 1 is 5 .h IU s 4! a IS4 42 0 85 7 280 1527 0 Thompson .. 20 1 200 : r 5 000 71 1240 1 Alexander ... a 243 15 4 33 214 1 100 s Barr • 127 19 • 842 214 1183 n Ighurn 0 1 111 19 • S04 145 1 1 IS in McKenzie. .. 40 11 239 II in 750 145 1 158 11 Short 11 305 27 t 740 71 1 110 12 aughn 0 0 0 n 1000 0 10(H) 13 1 organ 0 0 • l 000 0 000 14 1 lawkins 17 1 AS 11 500 71 020 I IU V A I S 1 T ' £lE eN Herman D. Ri hm,..................................Manager. E. H. Jones, ------- Captain. Center. H. A. Davis. W. H. Harden, Guards. Lucius E. Burch. T. G. K ITT KELL, Taekles. R. Craig. R. A. Harr, Ends. W. W. Craig. Quarter. V. E. Heard. Halfs. Him. Connell, S. K. Hager. Pulls Hinford Throne. E. II. Jones, Rip Ai.i.en, Substitutes. J. B. IIlLDEHRAND, H. S. Vaughn, N. E. Morris, Frank M. Fletcher, J. P. Manner. F. L. Day. Clarke Howell, Jr., ahmty Ki.kvkn S eduff oj? © arrjed . c u-anee October 15 '22' Vanderbilt vs. Sew a October «. 3-4- Vanderbilt vs. 1 .versit ol Ld........ Vanderbilt vs. Washington University. November 5. 4 '4- Vanderbilt vs. Sewanee, November 12, 14-2S. Vanderbilt vs. University of Tennessee. November 17, 10-0. Vanderbilt vs. Georgia Institute of Technology. November Vanderbilt vs. University of North Carolina, Thanksgiving, , 20-10. -24. rr i T. G. Kittrei.i., Captain. C. R. Baskeryiu,, Manager. Centre, .... J. G. Cox. Left Guard, J. (). Mahoney. Right Guard, G. C. Millar. Left Tackle, .... T. G. Kittrell. Right Tackle, X. K. Morris. Left Hud, .... R. A. Barr. Right End, .... II. L. Seay. Quarter Back. V. E. Beard. Full Back II. S. Vaughn. Left Half Back, V. T. Walker. Right Half Back. J. P. I fanner. ( C. R. Baskervill. Substitutes, . . . . S. Ritchie. 1 M. M. Cullom. Result of Games Played Wahlacas vs. Class of 96, 4-6 Wahlacas vs. I'niversity of Nashville, 6-0 of 95 Eleven Bin ford Throne, Center. Left Guard, . Right Guard, Left Tackle. Right Tackle, Left End, Right End, Quarter Back. Left Half Back, Right Half Back, Full Back, Substitutes, Captain. V. E. Kelton. J. E. Stephens. F. L. Day. X. Farrell. C. Ratcliffe. J. E. Buchanan. II. M. Bailey. V. S. Davis. II. Jones. F. M. Fletcher. Bin ford Throne. 1 A. A. Rodriguez. ( K. L. Jordan. RESULT OF GAMES PLAYED. Class of ’95 vs. Class of '96, 124 4-2 Phil Connkll, Lrcics Hi rcii, Centre, Left Guard, Right Guard, Left Tackle, Right Tackle, - Left End, Right End, Quarter Back. Left Half Back, Right Half Back, Full Back, Captain. Manager. W. Hughes. - Lucius Burch. J. Hildebrand. - B. G. White. J. P. W. Brown. - Bert Young. J. T. Hendrick. W. B. Malone. R. W. Hale. - B. M. O'Connell. Phil Connell. BSTITUTES J. L. Andrews, L. Smith, W. H. Henry, II. S. Hanner. Ipesull o[ Gcirrjes played. ► ◄ • ► ◄ Class of ’96 vs. Class of ‘95, Class of ’96 vs. Wall «N: Mooney School, Class of '96 vs. Wahlaca, 2—4- 28—o. 6—4. Best Records -'fit Vanderbilt. 100 yards dash................Pope Taylor, S9............................10 sec. 1 0 yards dash ..............Pope Taylor. ’ss..........................15i} sec. 220 yards dash................ 1. ioldthwaite, ‘93. I . S..............24J sec. 440 yards dash................W. W. (’raig, ‘03...........................55 sec. 1 mile run....................II. A. Weaver. ‘03,............... min. 17 sec. 120 yards Hurdle (36 in.).....E. J. Timberlake, Jr., ’80, V. N ...........18 sec. 120 yards Hurdle 42 in. •..... i. (Ioldthwaite, 03,. I.S................ISA sec. 1 mile bicycle race...........I . A. Edwards, ’03, F. N........3, min. 0 sec. Standing high jump............I. N. Parker, S. W. I’. I ..........4 it. 0] in. Standing broad jump...........b. L. Rice, 00, (’. I'..............0 ft. S} in. Running high jump.............Ratclifle, '03.......................5 ft. 5 in. Running broad jump........:...I'. I’,. Fogg, ‘S7 .................20 ft. 10A in. Throwing hammer (10 lbs. ...... F. E. Price, 'S7..................74 ft. 0 in. Putting shot 10 lbs.).......... I. T. Nolen, '91..................35 ft. 2 in. Pole vault....................b. P. Manner, ‘03,.................0 ft. 0 in. Running high kick.............E. B. Fogg, S7.....................0 ft. 3.1 in. Throwing 50-ll . weight.......E. E. Price. S7..................17 ft. 0A in. Throwing baseball.............b. b. Rice, SO, ('. I ............ 107 yards. Running hop, step and jump....F. B. Fogg, 'S7.....................41 ft. Oj in. RECORDS FIELD DAY, 1893. R. M. Mien (‘ Ratclifle 120 yards hurdle race (42 ini i. (Ioldthwaite, 1 . S 1 So sec. 100 yards dash . G. ioldthwaite, I.S 10 j sec. 1 mile bicycle race I . A. F 1 wards, U. N Throwing hammer (10 lb.).., II. M. Allen 72 ft. 440 vards run W. Y. raig Pole vault ()ne mile run II. . Weaver Y v Crai ' 220 yards dash i. ioldthwaite, 1 ’. S 24■ sec. O F F I C E R S . I)R. Y. L. Dl'DU ', President. DR. J. T. McGILL, Vick President. R. A. WEAVER, Skcristary and Treasi rer. |. P . BROWDER, Manager of Grounds. A Icmtars, V. L. Dudley, J. T. McGill, A. H. Merrill, I . A. Rodriguez, John Daniel, F. W. Moore, A. R. IIOIILEEI.I), Y. I I. Hoi.Li nosh ea d, Chas. C. Trabue, P. H. Porter, J. A. Robins, Kdwin Mims, T. II. Malone, Jr., F. R. Alexander. M. J. Yeomans, J. B. Browder, R. A. Weaver, H. H. Lyon, J. C. Brown, Norm an Farrell, Jr., Lotiiair Smith, Oscar Peebles, Lucius Burcii, H. A. Tyi.er, E. M. Rankin. II. M. Robert, Jr.. W. R. Cole, G. H. 11 isle. US I 4 - ' i ojonte J 'ell-li no ini jfot ti JodcinicCif d underbill. “ Opening a Chestnut Burr ; or, II. A. Davis Telling a Joke. “A Comedy of Krrors ; or, The Observet Hustler Game. “ Bleak House: or, Wesley Hall. “At the Mercy of Tiberius ; “ or. The Last Lxam. in Psychology. “ Nothing But Leaves ; or, Freshman I Css a vs. “ In Darkest Africa: “ or. A Trip Through Black Bottom. “Twice Told 'Bales; ” or, Clawson's Father's Jokes. “The Penniless Man ; or. He Didn’t Pick the Winner. “ Reveries of a Bachelor; or, The IV. Club. 1 ) “A Little Child Leads Them : ” or, Eatherly and the Freshman Engineers. “ Something to Shun ; or. An Interview With the Chancellor. “ History of Greece: or, Wesley Hall Gravy. “ Roughing It: ” or. Life at West Side Row. “ Seekers After God ; ” or. The V. M. C. A. “ Innocence Abroad:” or, Manager Porter in Chicago. “ Love's Labors Lost: ” or. Playing the Boarding Schools. “ Did He Fall or Was He Pushed?” or, Ritchie’s Last Boxing Match. “ Looking Backward : ” or, Goldtlnvaite in the 220. ” Search for the Star ; ” or, He Lingered at the Stage Door. “All's Well That Ends Well: ” or, The Senior’s Final Exams. 131 'c r i rc c q wo f. c7oAs? C f cJr c rc rf C ri_. cfTq r u e 4? ( ' c . 7ft fiorV A «r r C arvnce, CT oK l : - “Alpha Skjma Sk;ma. + I. The clock in the tower has just struck twelve. In an upper room of a dormitory a lamp is burning upon a table, and its gleam falls athwart the grass, where the dew is forming. A solitary student is bending wearily over an open book. His heart is depressed by a terrible weight of anxiety. On the result of the examination in the morning depends his hope of winning the scholarship and returning to school in the autumn. Can he open the gate of opportunity lead- ing to the larger life of which he dreams? The night wanes, the dawn awakes, and he has not slept. Ilis eyes are sparkling with the freshness and firmness of an invincible purpose. He will win. In another room a light is burning, but no ray escapes into the outer darkness; for the blinds are closed and the key is in the door. The occupant is seated at a table, covered with a thick green cloth, around which are gathered three boon companions. Before him is a small pile of circular pieces of celluloid of different colors. In the center of the table lies a much larger pile of the mysterious discs. His features are drawn, and dark hollows are visible beneath his eyes. With nervous impatience he scans five bits of pasteboard, some of which bear spots, and some painted figures of royalty. Can he open the jack-pot? The stars fade and the Hast becomes a ruddy splendor. Worn and tired, he flings himself upon his couch and slumbers. Without, life and sunlight are calling him to duty; but he hears not the sound ol the voice. He is trusting in chance and fortune. He will fail. II. Some Timms Tb.1t We Hem I)k. Garland.—“ Mr. Schott, give me some sticks so that I may illustrate.” I)r. Safford.—“ This, you may see, is well shown in the wax pea pod which I have here. Dr. Baskervill.—“In my reading, I find withal—.” Dr. Vaughn.—“So. Dr. Smith.—“ I was gratified to find that vSteup agreed with me exactlv in my correction of Classen's translation. Dr. Kirkland.—“ Discuss the laws of cum clauses.” Dr. Dudley.—“ Bonds of affinity. Dean Tillett.—“ I cpioth, it is not becoming a pious youth to sing these college songs. Dr. Thornburg.—“ V-e-M, g-e-n-t-l-e-m-e-n, I shall give you all zero. I)r. McGill. “ Tis only one of the innumerable hydro carbons derived by the destructive distillation of coal tar. Dr. Hohlfeld.—“ That is perfectly wrong,” Dr. Ferrell.—“ I beg your pardon.” Dr. Moore.—“ By the law of diminsihing returns. Prof. Denny. “ Discuss chapter ' 111 line 211. Prof. Daniel.—“ A strain in the dialectic medium. Prof. Landretii.—“ All that is needed is the requisite data. Prof. MerrilL.—That was a false cadence.’ Prof. Alexander.—“ I will meet my class in Testament Greek the usual hour.” Prof. Magruder.—“ Stress and Strain. Prof. O. K. Brown.—” When I was in China. Prof. Martin.—“----------------•” Prof. Ruddiman.—” I refer you to the Dispensatory. Prof. Rodriguez.—” I am dearly fond of playing the Tennis.” Prof. Hollinshead.—” Co-ed. Judge Baxter. ” Next. Col. Malone.—” My horse Cadet, and my son Tom. Prof. R. McPiiail Smith.—” Hem. hem. hem! H int I’ortci is going lo accomplish ohen he cai'cs I 'underbill. !: ♦ tUuhelov of lli ltni'oo. AN HONORARY DEGREE FOR MERIT. Established by Dr. Dodd. Continued by Dr. Jas. H. Kirkland. 1884- 85. 'I'. P. (Polly) Branch, 1885- 86.—B. G. Waller. - A. E. Clement, ) 1886- 87. Tie Vote. ( R. K. Crockett, 1887- 88.—FRANK TAYLOR, 1888- 89.— V. S. Rosebroigii, - I 889-90.—J E I E McC A R N. 1890- 91.—H. E. Bemls, 1891- 92.—J. A. Robins, 1892- 93.— R. W. Clawson, Rockwood. Tenn. Morgan field, Kv. Humboldt, Tenn. Union City, Tenn. Austin, Tex. Memphis, Tenn. Brown wood, Tex. Jefferson. Tex. (iuntown, Miss. Mt. Pleasant, Tenn. J PcW of lV)C Parasites. Jordan, E. L., Matches. Taylor, C. C.,..............Canes. Hale.......................Stamps. Davis, L. A...............Jacks. Porter....................Umbrellas. “ Harvard,” Towels. Wali...........................Car Fare. Allen.....................Language Exercises. Baskeryili...............Coal Oil. Myatt................I)ress Su its (?) Buchanan,................Razor. Mahoney.....................Soap (?) Craig,....................Orations. Ritchie........................False Face. “Co-Eds,”.................Crinoline. Alpha Sigma Sigma, . . The “ Key.” Thompson,................Everything. Your Neighbors, . . . Morning Paper. Yeomans...................Gas Meter. IBS i REFLECTIOXS DVRIXG MATII. EXAM. I was on a glorious “ bust “ last night About that I should not bother. Hut find myself in the sorry plight Of being to-day on another. 1 in We are indebted to ’e local editor For many a gag and many a hit. The columns of his page he decks With some of humor, some of wit, Some to flatter, some to vex. Though oft sarcastic, little recks Ye local editor. We are indebted to Ye local editor For more than ’s in his paper. When a furious subscriber Filters with a goat-like caper, Though his enemy ’s a diver, Still maintains his rep. for fibre, Ye local editor. I il 1 143 THE LAST ADIEU. Hide, gorgeous sun, thy kindly face. Let darkest clouds thy brightness screen. Let Heaven her every light efface To view this parting scene. Come ye storms with inky scroll, And veil the sky’s cerulean hue, While o'er the vault the thunder’s roll Mantles this last adieu. Oh, let the founts in sympathy Their Hoods of tears now downward pour. To mingle with th' artillery Of the thunder’s roar. T will be fit symbol of the scene, Which lurks about the moss-grown gate ; Twill fitly greet the youth, I ween. Who goes to meet stern fate. Brush back the damply clinging hair. Kiss the pale cheek, suppress the sigh. Then breathing up a hopeless prayer, Murmur the word “good-bye.’’ With dewy eye and lips all mute, And spirit bravely bent on fame, lie strides away to don his suit For his first football game. 144 HAVI INC FUN.” lieu the stars grow weary shining. And the moon is fast declining. When the greyly-lighted east Breaks in upon the feast. You may see him home returning, With his hot head aching, burning, And a heart that 's dryly yearning His thoughts within him turning c To the fast approaching morrow, And the money he must borrow To pay the cost of revel, The price of which the d Exacts of devotees. And when the rosy morning All heaven’s arch adorning— Has brought him to his senses, In summing up expenses, He sees the empty bubble. That isn't worth the trouble Of eternally pursuing. For he's spent his time in wooing That fair and fickle maiden, With golden treasure laden, 14() Who will never, never wed him, Though into debt she led him ; But will leave him lone and stranded. Where he never would have landed. If he had n't sought for pleasure In unrestrained measure. 1 17 A liberal conclusion Will dispel the vain illusion. As to what he has been doing And what is now eschewing— Will sustain us in conjecture That he’ll miss his morning lecture; 1 IS Whilst the recitation “ busted ' Because to luck lie trusted, Will be a solemn warning Not to revel till the morning, If you want to gain the favor Of the “ Profs ' who never waver In charging up a zero To every social hero Who neglects his college duties For more attractive beauties. This is the price of revel when it s done ; This is the world’s sad way of having fun. I I!) yap - r. CT ’ i C yP njj) p p looiy l c l i oW H)0 l a «7 • ' •'C cr| f Wrot M A - l, mif,' r i v - only . ' 1;«. « . M ;• ••-; ••'. • ■ jon M Ijol ll vvorAv ' J t r v c fo cl( H f‘ Co ’C 7t l %0 « ) l , JI ' •' N J r| Vyi M OVCnlvT tf ’U'A ? Co'Vic f lj Ih s Itfrf'-'f'V |or | rit« -----------N ------------ I ) WORKS AND DAYS. With Apologies to the Shade of Hesiod Ye who may come to these portals as innocent Freshmen and guileless, Hark, to the message of warning from one who has dwelt here before you ; Unknowing the ways of 1 he student, the sum of his deeds and his duty. You may falter and faint on the wayside, nor taste of the joys ol the hour. Troubles, indeed, are before you; but he who can master the moments May snatch from them pleasures unlooked for—yea, even on the Vanderbilt campus. There is time for all things, saith t he Preacher, but dear is the fruit out of season ; And many an untimely frolic has ended in pain and repentance. So the lot of the Vanderbilt student should ever be tuned to the hour, Lest grief and despair overtake him, and he says of the wide-spreading campus, As tin- far-famed hard of Iheotia once mourned of the upland of Ascra, “ It is dreary in winter and dismal, and sultry it is in the summer Sultry it is in the summer, and surely tis good at no season. But others there are who will tell you the lot of the student is blissful — Marred, it is true, by vexations caused by unfeeling professors. And fair is the Vanderbilt campus 'mid the snow-wreaths and frost-work of winter; Lovely and luring in summer, with its wealth of magnolias and roses; av in the splendor of autumn, with its masses of gold and of scarlet ; But fairest of all in the springtime, when the shimmering green of tin maples First spreads but a tint o’er the landscape, then Hoods all at once on our vision. But enough of description; I write of the works and the days of the students; How to grasp of the times most propitious for all of our tasks and our pleasures. When the winds of the autumn are sighing through the yellow leaves in Sep- tember, Comes the day when instructors and students must meet in the Vanderbilt chapel For the wearying list of announcements that come with the opening session; And each of tin many professors, as he stands to assign recitations, Must ever outdo the last speaker as to length of the lessons In gives us: lol Too long to he learned, it is certain, ’mid tin- tumult of meeting and greeting, lien Greek meets with (ireek in deep conclave on the subject of suitable “spiking.” It is then, in the days of September, some new man is wooed bv the Betas With a depth and a warmth of devotion only matched by the Phi Delta Thetas. He is seldom without a full escort, each fraternity fearing the other, When a rumor strikes chill to their bosoms that his brother is claimed by the Chi Phis! And the innocent cause of contention accepts of their proffers of friendship. Is taken in turn to the Yendome, and treated to ice cream at (ierding’s; 1 hen, in fulness of time and due season, he startles West side on some Sunday P v wearing the badge that proclaims him a brother of all Kappa Alphas. Hut soon is the “spiking” time over and only on Saturday evenings, The work of the day being over, comes the time for the weekly reunion, W hen brother meets each with his brothers in happy and soulful ?) communion. And again arc fraternities useful when the student goes calling on Sunday: When speech fails, for want of a topic, they always run come to the rescue, For ever since days pre-historic this dialogue rings through the ages: “ Will you wear of my colors, fair lady? ” “ Perhaps, but the others have asked me.” “The:, accept of this pin with its jewels, the badge that I tenderly cherish!” “ Well, since you insist, then I’ll wear it,” and that always settles the business. No more needs to be mentioned, I fanc of the works that are timely for Sunday — With church, and with writing, and calling, too soon is the day of rest over; Monday is dull on the campus, with many a lame recitation; A good day is this for the student to ward off professors’ hard questions By enquiries eager concerning the charms of the city of Leipsie. Tuesday may slip by unnoticed, but the reckoning hour comes Wednesday, When each man is due at the chapel and must answer for previous “cutting;” For the rest of the week, Friday evening alone is deserving of mention, When debaters and orators earnest may try for their due meeds of laurel In the hall of debate Philosophic, or perhaps it may be Dialectic. What boots it to us what the questions that call forth the orators' powers? If they themselves know, it is lucky; but knowing or not ’tis no matter. For, were knowledge and eloquence equal, how many of earth’s famous speakers Would quickly subside into silence, nor again in the future be heard from? So the weeks pass, for tin most part, but sometimes the programme is varied. Autumn’s the season for foot-ball; in the springtime comes base-ball and tennis; Both autumn and spring bring the races; but, Murchison no longer with us, What “sport” has West Side now to boast of? for Burch, too, is gone from the campus. April the first is propitious for cutting the classes in Knglish, With small fear of getting a zero— hr. Baskorvill s glad of tne pretext To spare us a lecture on Shakespeare, nor hear us recite Anglo-Saxon. Some day in April the “concour’ brings means of revenge to all students Whom boring professors have wearied they now have to listen in silence While eloquence soars forth untrammclcd from the Seniors e’en down to the freshman. ’Twere best that you study at all times; but you’ll find it especially needful In the days of out dreary midwinter, and again in the first days of summer, When out ultimate knowledge is tested by examiners careful and patient. Such days are of all the most fateful, lie is blest w ho hath knowledge sufficient To emerge from their shadow unvanquished, and be ' passed by the powers of the campus. A WOLF IX SHFFP'S CLOTH IXG. There was a wolf in olden time, There was—there was : He wore sheepskins, so runs the rhyme, lie did—he did. Worked day and night to get his frock, And bought it from a job-lot stock. But you bet he played, when he got in the flock, Singing tra-la la-la la-la. The wolf of to-day to college goes, He does—he does; He has no trouble in getting sheepskins, ()h, no! oh, no ! As a student he is without renown, But being an athlete all around, The Faculty hands his sheepskin down. Singing tra-la la la la-la. Hight on the Campus. I low calm and sweet the night! Half shade, half light, As through the odorous air Soft blossoms steal into sight. And gleam like stars of snow. Beyond and far above. The wide-arched canopy glows Against its dark bine covering; Like fireflies the distant worlds Trembling, twinkle in their orbs, Then smile serenely down I’pon this little ship of clay. As by a Hand unseen, yet known. It is steered its vast and silent way. Through the luminous dreamy air. But the feeble human mind Tires of winging a dazzling flight To countless starry bowers. And sinks back again to earth, Then down the broad avenue, Thro’ silent trees, by odorous flowers, Its thoughts play hide-and-seek; With elfish fingers doth it pry Into the lily’s jeweled cup. And lo ! a fairy passing by Drops upon it pearls of dew. Ah. how the mind doth play to-night, On Nature's tuneful harp, A full low sweet melody, That touches. () so deep! The human heart and soul. T is a quiet thrilling theme, The silent power of (iod, That mysterious mighty force Working through lifeless matter. And bringing beauty out of naught. I'p yonder the nascent nebula becomes a gleaming sphere of fire : Over there, the bursting bloom breathes out its heart's desire In subtle, sweet perfume. While yon glistening leaf Catches the starlight s sheen. Through each delicate vein. And along each curving edge, Hidden workmen are building New walls of living green. u ;s. (Inscribed by a )'ouny I.ady to a Student t 'irst Seen in (,'ywnasiuni ( arb.) () seraph slim, sweet “ Walter Quint! () cypress slender, sugar-plum 1 Forsooth When first I saw thy Psychic shape. O youth. I sobbed a soulful sigh : a wriggling writhe Ran round my rosy ribs; those legs lank, lithe. Like lolling lilies 1 joking wrought rare ruth — Less ruin on my hard-hit heart. I truth Thy wan wiles won my buxom beauty blithe. I ve loved thee since, arrayed in raiment rare. Thy stark shank snug in seldom stripe breeched well. Thy gaiters glossed, thy saffron sacque so swell. Waving the wayward winds thy waxy hair. To-morrow’s turquoise twilight let s assign In titillating transport's tug to twine. ].■ • :n m«ik Waiting for the JVIail. j HO said that letter writing was fast be )j coining one of the lost arts? Surely the author of that statement could never have seen the throng of eager, anxious students who daily wait for the coming of i Doc to West Side Row. Some of them are openly expectant, others are quiet with the silence of hope long deferred. Messages of love and friendship may be subordinate in the minds of a few to the expected check that seems a necessary condition of a continued sojourn at the University; but one and all bear testimony to the fact that the writing and receiving of letters is no unimpor- tant feature of existence to-day. The telegraph, the tele- phone, and the phonograph has each it place in the economy of civilization ; but it is a far cry indeed to the day when they will supersede epistolary effort as a means of inter- course between parted friends. Perhaps the letters for which we wait every morning are not precisely the sort that could be called examples of the art of letter writing: but to us, at least, they are far more interesting than the old models of correspond- ence could ever be. The penny postage made the mail service an important factor in every-dav life : and while letters may have become less studiously correct since the transportation is a matter of so little account, they have a greater present value to the recipient than the old, formal effusions probably had. Letters are. indeed, a part of the lile ot many of us. and the postman’s whistle on the street is power- ful to bring the sparkle of joy to the eye, the Hush of hope to the cheek, and the tremor of anxiety to the lip. lo youth particularly must the province of letter writing belong. Among a few ol the great souls of earth, for whom expression was a necessity ot their natures, we find instances of long-continued corre- spondences in middle life and old age, but they have always been exceptions to the general rule. Of late years we have been favored with many hitherto unpublished letters written by the men who helped to shape the thought of the world in the early days of the century, but I doubt if the literary historians of the future will dis- cover many similar treasures as the posthumous bequest to humanity ot the authors and statesmen of our own time. Letters are less carefully preserved, and thinking men are rather more chary, I fancy, of the free and copious expression that has a monetary value if sub- mitted to the editors of reviews and magazines. Such cynicism applies only to full maturity however. Friendship is considered more worthy to be deified in early youth, and many a ream of inconse- quential confidence is consecrated upon its altar zwa the postal service. The time must come, for the average man, when a letter to be written signifies a necessity of business or a family duty : but in the blissful season of his callow youth a letter is a thing to be prized for the avenue it affords for self-expression, for its power to keep the writer and recipient mutually ni rapport with the ideas and ideals that must often give way to the real conditions and possibilities of life. A ' for love letters, they may be left out of account. Not by reason of their unimportance perish such an iconoclastic thought! On the contrary, their very universality, to say nothing of their sacred character, gives reason for their lack of discussion here. They are a necessary evil or an inevitable blessing, as you choose to consider them : and the youth whose home letters from college consisted of a single weekly page (and large scrawled at that), will often astonish his mother in the summer by the writing of lengthy and mysterious epistles, composed under the dripping of the dictionary, as it were. It is an admitted fact that women are generally more facile letter writers than men; and when a youth has the further consciousness that his orthography is uncertain even where lie spells with most assurance, then his lot as a letter writer is truly not a happy one. There is a great deal said in ridicule of schoolboy and schoolgirl friendship and the voluminous correspondence it entails, but we can- not believe that so much sincerity of feeling and generosity of expres- sion can be utterly fruitless. Ten years from to-day we may smile at the verbosity of the letters we now write; and the friendship that at present finds expression in long and frequent epistles may then be evinced only by a hearty greeting when a friend is met by chance, and bv a willingness to serve another's interest if opportunity should offer. These things belong to the future; but for the present we may still write our twenty-page letters, and stand expectant among our fellows who daily watch for the postman's coining with an interest that never fails and a patience that never wearies. Twice a day to the Row, Shine fair skies or foul winds blow, Comes “ 1 )oc : And with patience tried and true Now we wait, for he is due By the clock. Is it news of home we crave? Do we for love's message rave? Still we wait. Are we wanting funds from home? — Ah ! at last 1 see he's come In the gate. On his face a smile is seen. But a disappointment keen Kails on some : When he answers, Not to day, To the eager words they say, They look glum. But for many there is joy, And delight without alloy As they read Words that loving mothers penned. Or clasp the checks that fathers send To their need. “ Doc then gathers up the spoil Of epistolary toil From the box; All the words of angry pride That a homesick heart has cried, I Ie unlocks, 1 AD With the cheerful lines of one Who tells only of the fun lie enjoys. Other scrawls are tilled with lore That shows forth the college bore Such are boys! Then the postman drives away. And again the dreary day Closes in ; Class rooms, “quiz. examination, Study, “ cuts,” and recitation What a din ! In the course of evolution, And the old earth's revolution, We will see Many changes brought to bear On the place and people here. I '11 agree. Hut at Vanderbilt, I trust, Though some changes come there must, I s to shock. Whatever things may evolute, His function will not devolute From 44 Doc. Hil) More like a woman than woman herself. Slyly coquetish, as quick as an elf, Gay as a fairy on gauzy wings borne. Tripping light measures from twilight till morn Cute to perfection, Beau tv’s re fleet i on, Humanity's bane. So fair, false and vain. Causing more trouble than the very old Sphinx. More perhaps, too, than ever she thinks ; Shyly retiring, so modestly coy, She cl send us all to the very Old Boy— A dear little maiden we can t do without. With sweet ruby lips that often will pout; Vet better, far better, than Venus or Flora, Better than all, is loved Pandora. (LItc i tolncc. When wearied with the mental strain That tasks his too susceptive brain. When disappointments crowd around, And sore neglect his feelings wound. When luckless on th athletic field Ellipse or sphere his fate has sealed, When his dear pater’s last remittance Has dwindled to a beastly pittance, Or worse than that when debtors sue, And not a shekel greets his view, When Intermediate exams. Blast his pure soul with frequent “damns,” And, what I shudder to assert, When she he loves but proves a flirt, When e’en the wind that chills his cheek Like all the world, is cold and bleak, When all within, without is blue, What does he do—what can lie do? II. % He calmly hies him to his cell At West Side Row, where he doth dwell : Builds up a bright and cheerful fire That flings its blazes high and higher, Draws close the ragged old arm-chair That s built for comfort and for wear : Adown he sinks—in manner mete Upon the table rest his feet; With match and sack and old cob pipe You now behold the finished type. 'I'he mazy clouds uprising dwell About his head- his cares dispel, And soon within its charmed circle It works a wondrous miracle, For with each subtle whiff he there Breathes in new hopes and breathes out care: And soon forgets his every folly In universal hymn to Raleigh. D : slX IDYL. I sat on the campus one evening, As the clock was striking the hour, A shadow was cast by the building, Behind the old bell tower. By my side was a fair young maiden. Whose beauty and form were sublime, Her tresses were beautiful golden. And her crinoline like olden time. The mock bird sang from the magnolia tree, Dame nature was “sporting her new velvet green, No others could be so happy as we. A student just twenty and she eighteen. There is a man at Vanderbilt, And wondrous wise (?) is he. He thinks a theolog. too good To join the college “ dire. And so he tells the theolog, “ You are doing very wrong, Devote your time to mission work, Sing not the (dee Club song. But still he sings the ( lee Club songs, Good sense still has full sway, And wisdom like this learned man’s, Is dead and in decay. 1 )4 Campus View A TYPICAL! SPEECH, Nominating a Candidate for Bachelor of Ugliness. Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Convention : Our search to-day is not over green fields, thro’ mystic dells, in fairy grottos, or on sunny plains, to redeem some flower or gem by nature lost and place it in its sphere of beauty. No: such, thank heaven, is not our purpose. I can but feel in looking over the mate- rial here, that were this so our cheeks would never mantle with enthusiasm, or our voices cry in victorious exultation, “Eureka!” Our object now is to find the chiefest horror in all this field of hideous sights and to classify it as the parens of its species. We must select some ugly brow ‘round which to twine the jimson wreath of this dis- tinction. Twenty-three years ago. or more—in all probability more—in the quiet recesses of Woodford County, Kentucky, near the little city of Versailles, all was heat and July. The bright sun laughed with a wilting ardor. Xo cooling breeze did blow its kindly breath to bring the mercury down from the frightful height to which it had risen. The birds, their throats parched, had ceased their carollings and had rendered the place real of which the day seemed typical by each one calling to his mate, “Is it hot enough for you?” The brook had almost ceased to run—in fact, it did no longer run —it merely oozed adown the hillsides like trickling drops of perspiration down the face of Nature. The trees, their arms outstretched suppliantly, held forth their parched leaves and seemed to pray for rain. The sage brush victoriously held the fields that it had wrested from the hand of husbandry, and the pokeberry rejoiced in the prospect of an abundant harvest. Humanity, its heads bedecked with cabbage leaves and hands bearing fans of largest size, were earnestly search- ing for some cooler atmosphere under whose benign influence they might solidify their liquifying mortalities. But fruitless was their search no ray of hope to them there came. No prospect bright its Km arms outstretched. They seemed to be subjected to a repetition of the Hebrew children incident, without the protective features of the fire insurance clause. Sadly they saw their frames dissolving, and madly mopping the perspiration from their brows, gave up in despera- tion. Hut generally calamity seems more certain just when rescue is at hand. In this instance this was certainly true. The people heard a sound as of “ An infant crying in the night; An infant crying for tin light, And with no language hut a cry.” They turned, and there almost beneath their eyes they saw—O ! words, how feeble to describe : O, phrase, how powerless to express the sight! There outstretched it lay. Its cry had in it the sound of humanity. But, oh, its form : its hideous features! Its hairless head presented the appearance of a meaningless mass of conic sections. Its bleared and reddened eyes stood forth like knobs upon its counte- nance. Its nose, violating every law of symmetry, hung like a per- forated catastrophe upon its face, while the rest of its system was applying itself assiduously to the development of a master mouth. Speechless the people gazed horror-stricken and fearful lest this Caliban was but the forerunner of some dreadful curse. Their eyes were fixed in a death like stare. Their cheeks were bloodless. Their forms trembled like leaves in the wind, and the cabbage leaves which they had worn to cool their brows now stood at the distance of a hair's length from their heads. The pores of the skin had closed and the perspiration had ceased to flow. The chill of terror was on each heart. They who, but a moment before had cursed the heat, now stood frozen with fright “O’er all there hung the shadow of a fear, A sense of mystery the spirit daunted, And said, as plain as a whisper in the ear, The place is haunted ! But from where did this frightful monster come? What fiend incarnate had placed him there! What incantation known to the blackest art had called him forth ! Ah! we may never know. Another mystery to be revealed, perhaps, at the last day. One thing certain, it subserved a purpose. It saved the people lrom involuntary liquidation. Moved by the sympathy characteristic of the human race the ! ( populace took it. housed it. and fed it. It lived, thrived and grew, until in later years its neighbors acquiesced in the calling of it -a man. Vet he was always regarded as the ugliest man that ever moved thro’ those parts. Cripples, who hadn't walked in years, saw him. then ran. He looked at the family clock—it has been running ever since. As in Old Scotland children were frightened into obedience by threats that if they were bad they would be given over to the Black Douglas—so in this neighborhood was this man held up as a terror to the disobedient child. With such a bete noire it is needless to say that those crops of children were the best ever reared anywhere. To illustrate, pardon the mention of an incident that occurred near his home: One afternoon, passing the home of an acquaintance, and, being tired, he stopped in, and engaged the lady of the house in conversation. Looking about him he saw a little girl of some three or four summers and, thinking to please the child by noticing it, said : “ Come here, my little dear, and kiss me. The child looked, shivered with fright, and, throwing up its hands, rushed to its mother exclaiming, ‘‘Oh, mamma! I'll be good! I'll be good ! ” I might dwell at length upon such incidents, but this is illus- trative. We are told in mythology of how Narcissus rejected the love of Echo, and was condemned by Aphrodite to sit and watch the reflex of his image in the spring. How he fell in love with himself, and pined and wasted into the tender flower which bears his name. In looking at this man. I can but feel that had he been condemned to watch his mirrored hideousness, he, too, would have wasted, but not pined, and that now we should have at least one more species of pig- weed. Two years ago he came among us and matriculated at this insti- tution. During this time he has never failed, whether appearing in the brightness ol sunshine or in the darkness of night, to be regarded as very, very ugly; and to-day I bring him forth as the ugliest man I ever saw. You see him—and you feel that comeliness has taken per- petual leave of earth, and in your cars there seems to sound the death knell of the beautiful. II is hair, subject to no general law, runs, clambers, and stands in. on. and about his head, defying alike the analytic influence of the comb and the organizing power of the brush. 11 is forehead is an unknown quantity in his make-up. His eyes, those windows of his soul, hang trom the corners ol their sockets, each trying to see the 1 )7 other around the back of liis head. His nose, disgusted with the things of earth, turns toward the things that are above us. Should he follow his nasal bent, he must surely land beyond the stars. And when we gaze upon his hearing appendages we think how prodigal has nature been of her gifts. In this connection, I might say lie was afflicted with an erethism, but I ’ll let that pass. Ah ! many a mule has looked on him and sighed to see the human race outstrip him in his pride. His lengthy arms can only be understood by an applica- tion of the theory of limits. His body he wears straight up and down, but it wouldn't alter his appearance did he wear it sideways. And then his legs! when I looked on them I could hut exclaim with Mark Twain’s oracle, “ I take them to he the pillars of Herkewls.’ They are so delicately curved that, were they arranged vice versa. the gen- tleman must surely he knock-kneed. His feet hut I can go no further I will not attempt a description of infinity. Such is the man. Gentlemen, you may safely select him. He will always he ugly, unless, perchance, he fall from the top of an Kiffel tower, or become inseparably intermixed with a railroad accident, in either of which case he could not fail to improve his personal appearance. He is such a man as Carlyle would love to count among his heroes, for in the matter of being ugly he is “ terribly in earnest. But, gentlemen, his ugliness is confined to his form and features, and when his human vestiture is cast aside, and to our hearts there stands revealed the man as he is, all thoughts of unsightliness fade away and all is light in the brightness of his character. He is a man of large and loving heart. Kvery drop of his heart's blood is warm with love for his fellow man. From that holy of holies pour forth his characteristics like sweetest incense from the altars of the true and beautiful. Around him we feel ourselves forever hound by golden ties of friendship. His devotion and nobility have won our love. Truly of him “ Nature might stand up and say to all the world : This is a man.” And so I nominate him to-day—not in the interests of any class or any faction, not as the representative of any party or any.politics —hut as the ugliest representative of ugly men. I nominate in the name of the ugly men of the past, of the present, and ol the future. I nominate him as the climax of human hideousness, as the perfect work of distortion. I nominate in the name of all lands from “Greenland’s icy mountains to India’s coral strands; in the name ol all peoples, from the Ksquimau who pales amid the glittering splen- dors of the ice-hound seas to the Bedouin who browns beneath the ICS burning rays of the tropic suns. I nominate him in the name of the ugly men of every kith and of every kin. of every race and of every tribe, of every faith and of every creed, from the perfect civilization of the nineteenth century to the wild, unrestrained democracy of West Side Row. In the name of all that is ugly and hideous and misshapen in man’s features, in the name of all that is strong and noble and true in man’s nature. His face “ is but the guinea’s stamp. The man’s a man for a' Mr. Chairman, for Bachelor of Ugliness of Vanderbilt University, I nominate the Right Ugly U. II. Carter, of Kentucky. that.” At.IjrikiJ rf -itrw jhJ_i.itAatl tAXs Ji' iirii (t'it l i I 7 Gushing maiden, passing fair, Step so dainty, light as air, Eyes of azure, golden hair, Wishing sadly ‘ Jn were there.' Blooming woman, passing fair, Walk so stately, married air, Kyes of longing, golden hair, Wishing vainly ‘ he were’ where? • 173 THE FIRST AXXUAL FLOW-OUT. IT was one warm night in April. The dew began to fall in large, damp lumps about six o'clock. The loyal student who had spent the dollar and a half his father had obtained by the sale of his last shoat was cussing his stingy neighbor for not going to hear the Glee Club sing. The man whose sweetheart lived in some remote part ol the city, far from the hum of the trolley, was muttering be- tween his teeth, “This is h—but in an instant the moisture in the eyes of the elements persuaded him “ this is more like thunder.” By seven o'clock the solitary stingy student at West Side Row was as lonesome as a preacher at a prayer meeting. The occupants of Wes- ley Mall had left everything in charge of the cook. Xo sound was heard save the constant dripping of the dew-drops and now and then the croaking of a tree frog muttering to his mate, “ I told you so.” A stranger passed the campus and asked the stingy student at West Side Row, “ Is school out? ” “ Xo. said the stingy student. “ they've all gone down to hear the Glee Club sing.” By this time the dew-drop had assumed the proportions of a small house cat with a tail. The atmosphere was so full of electricity that the farmer’s spring wheat was shocked. The cars either stopped in some dark corner on the street, or ran into the shed from fright. The tired but loyal student who had pored over his books all day complacently sat watching the elements pouring over his sweetheart, 'fhe gentle spring zephyrs got scared at the lightning, and started across the city with a house-top under each wing. The owners of vacant lot in the suburbs were delighted to find their property occu- pied by small wooden houses. Handsome residences had windows smashed in and mortgages blown off. Small fragments ot the Glee Club were scattered from the penitentiary to the poor-house. A few dress suits were found hanging on the telegraph wires Crowds of bent and broken students either wended their way home at midnight or blew themselves in for a hack. Thus ended the first annual blow-out of the Vanderbilt Glee Club, and every old chestnut in town has pronounced it a howling success. And the Glee Club itself, though never known to sing its own praises, has acknowledged that it did very well. 171 Vanderbilt! Rah! Rail! Rail! W'liiz! Boom! Zip Boom ! Rah! Rah! Rah! Vanderbilt Rah ! Rah ! Vanderbilt Rah ! Rah ! I loo! Rah! I loo! Rah! ’Varsity, ’Varsity, Rah ! Rah! Rah! Hoo Rah: Hoo Rah! I loo Rah Ree! I loo Rah! Hoo Rah! ’93. Hip Hurrah! Hip Hurroar ! Wahlaca, Wahlaca, ’94. M. 1). Three C ! Nonaginta Quinque! '96 Sis Boom Ah ! Hi ! Vo! Hi! Vo ! Rah ! Rah ! Rah ! Vanderbilt Rah ! Rah ! Ree ! Pill Roller, Pill Roller, Pharmacy ! I T. C. Meadows, W. A. Christian. . R. H. Wynn, Sain K. Bland, J. A. Robins, A. H. Wilson, J. M. Hawley, T. A. Hughes, J. W. Waters L. I). Hoffman, R. A. Jones, Jr J. H. Ogburn, W. B. Beauchamp, W. W. Craig, Jno. Dorgan, L. H. Carter, H. E. Smith. is Owen Prize Medal. Engineering Department, . Biblical Department, A. L. P. Green Medal. Biblical Department, . R. A. Young Medal. Philosophic Literary Society, . Founders Day Medal. Philosophic Literary Society, Founder's Department Medals. Academic Department, . Biblical Department, . Law Department, Medical Department, Pharmaceutical I)epartment, Dental Department, Engineering Department, . Elliott F. Shepard Prize. Biblical Department, Crawford Scholarship. Academic Department, Manual Training Scholarship. Law Department Scholarship. i i Tennessee. Virginia. Louisiana. Kentucky. M ississippi. Tennesse A rkansas. Tennessee. Tennessee. Tennessee. Alabama. Tennessee. Virginia. Tennessee. Tennessee. Kentucky. Tennessee. Presidents, Orators, and Poets, of Vanderbilt Alumr 1879- 80. LYTTOX TAYLOR, Tennessee, GEORGE C. JONES, Tennessee, 1880- 81. LYTTOX TAYLOR, Tennessee, PERCY W GARDNER, Missouri. 1881- 82. J. T. McGILL, Tennessee, DUNCAN U. FLETCHER, Florida, - 1882- 83. Y. G. EWING, Tennessee, D. R. STUBBLEFIELD, Tennessee, 1883- 84. R. F. JACKSON, Tennessee, - R. E. CHEW, Missouri, 1884- 85. C. L. THORNBURG, Tennessee, T. E. MATTHEWS, Tennessee, 1885- 86. J. C. McREYNOLDS, Tennessee. C. W. BEALE, Tennessee, i Association. President. Orator. President. - Orator. President. - Orator. President. - Orator. President. - Orator. President. Orator. President. Orator. 1886-87. R. P. WHITESELL, Tennessee, ALLEN G. HALL, Tennessee, - W. R. SIMS, Mississippi, President. Orator. Poet. 1887-88. JAMES A. HARRIS, Tennessee, A. F. WATKINS, Mississippi. - President. - Orator. 1888-89. I). R. STUBBLEFIELD, Tennessee, J. C. McRKYNOLDS, Tennessee, President. Orator. 1889-90. ALLEN G. HALL, Tennessee, JOHN E. HARRISON, Tennessee, E. I. CROCKETT, Kansas, President. Orator. Poet. 1890-91. JOHN J. TIGERT, Tennessee, ROBERT H. MARK, Jk., Louisiana, - R. E. CROCKETT, Tennessee. President. - Orator. Poet. 1891-92. WALLER DEERING, Tennessee, CLAUDE WALLER, Tennessee, JOHN BELL KEEBLE, Tennessee, President. - Orator. Poet. 1892-93. JOHN E. HARRISON, Tennessee, - JOHN J. TIGERT, Missouri, MRS. LILIAN FITZ GERALD-BANKS, President. Orator. Poet. 1891 1892 1803 Ffepres ?9tative5 of l aQd ?rbilt IN THE ilicrrj 'J-ntcF-' Ttatc ©ratorlcal -ssocxaKon ESTABUISHHD 1S91. . . J. Washington Moore (Medalist), . Tennessee. . Frank M. Thomas.................................Kentucky. . . Sam K. Bland....................................Kentucky. ISO Class ) i ll: Yan-der-bilt, 11nlla-bal loo, Ki-yi, Ki-yi, Xine-ty-two. Class I'loivn Sunflower. CLASS OFFICERS A. B. Sanders, ...... J. A. Robins................... R. W. Davis,................... R. Y. Clawson................. T. H. Malone, Jr............... Mrs. Lilian FitzGeralij-Banks, ◄•PROGRAM M E« - Chas. C. Trabue........... J. Bailey Browder, Mrs. Lilian KitzGerald-Banks. • • • PRESENTATIONS' • R. P. McReynolds, ..... Handsomest Man. J. H. Ogburn,...................Laziest Man. C. W. Scarritt,.................Biggest Liar. President. Vice President. Secretary. Treasurer. I Iistorian. Poet. Orator. Prophet. Poet. 1 1 PS’I (Bommcnecmcnu c lunc, 1892. v-J ' f ‘ ' ■ ' • i • Degrees Conferred. Doctor of Science. — w C. S. Brown. Jr., M.S. • • • • Tennessee. Paul M. Jones, M.S., Master of Arts. Georgia. M. M. Black, A.B.. . Mississippi. G. H. Meixell, A.B., Pennsylvania. W. J. Roberts, A.B., Louisiana. G. H. Swearingen, A.B., Georgia. A. T. Walker, A.B., New York. W. A. Stuckey, A.B., Master of Science. South Carolina. C. I). Rice, B.S., . Civil Engineer. I exas. J. H. Ogburn, Tennessee. P. 11. Porter, B.E., Bachelor of Arts. Kentucky. R. A. Barr, Tennessee. J. B. Browder, Kentucky. R. W. Davis, . . Texas. W. T. Locke, .... Arkansas. T. H. Malone, Jr., • Tennessee. T. N. Merriam, • Tennessee. Edwin Minis, . Arkansas. J. A. Robins, Mississippi. C. W. Scarritt, Missouri. J. I). Standard, Kentucky. C. C. Trabue, . . Tennessee. is: Bachelor of Science. R. L. Burch, .... R. V. Clawson, .... R. H. Crockett, .... Bradford Knapp, .... R. P. McReynolds, A. H. Wilson, .... Bachelor of Literature. Lilian FitzGerald-Banks, C. M. Walker, .... Bachelor of Divinity. William Daniel Brad field, William Asbury Christian, . Melville Coxe Hardin, James Middleton Hawley, . John Richardson Mood. . Henry Ware Van Hook, Bachelor of Engineering. H. I). Ruhm, .... A. B. Sanders, .... Bachelor of Laws. Lem Banks, .... A. W. Biggs, . J. II. Bowman, .... R. L. Brown, . W. H. Harden, .... J. A. Hynds, ..... T. A. Hughes. .... A. vS. J. McCoy, .... J. (). Middleton, .... W. St. G. Murray, .... (). A. Park, .... R. C. Plater, ..... (j. Rankin, .... U. M. Sanderson, . Graduate in Theology. Thomas Crews Betterton, Thomas Lewis Triplett, Tennessee. Tennessee. Tennessee. Louisiana. Kentucky. Tennessee. Tennessee. Tennessee. Texas. Virginia. Missouri. Arkansas. Texas. Mississippi. Tennessee. Virginia. Mississippi. Tennessee. Tennessee. Tennessee. South Carolina. Georgia. Tennessee. California. Tennessee. Tennessee. Georgia. Tennessee. Tennessee. Texas. Tennessee. North Carolina. Certificate in English Theological Course. Daniel Melville McLeod, Charles Campbell Washburn, Yoshikimi Yoshioka, Graduate in Pharmacy. J. II. Orme (Diploma), J. W. Coffee (Certificate), L. I . Manner (Certificate), L. I). Hoffman (Certificate), R. W. Reynolds (Certificate), South Carolina. Kentucky. Japan. Kentucky. Tennessee. Tennessee. Tennessee. Texas. IS I sr, o J A?o Aof ,70 yy Oc'S fop cA , ftp ? Too wef, 7o sro t 00 A eo af- jOor's refttr Z nc s vs ore s W Z o ZZzr es 0 oy t sy ays' Q u ee K JlV es V ros o nr, 0 ?o rorey syor Aoo rry es As vsy toA r A ctfer s ros exce e , J3e A row 'o fzjf rr your ? r 7 A e,ss ry Cp 7 q 7 £- orse j oyf A ess zy or - ss 2)o s ref jOoc t c o Oe rroy ee sZ'ay At yosAvoq 0 e Jfe f zA 3oy !m; ©de Io Var)de rWli. 0 Vanderbilt! within tliy walls I ’ve many a battle fought, 1 've struggled in thy spacious halls For victory dearly bought; Within my breast my heart beats warm, It never shall grow cold To thee and to thy colors dear, The Sable and the Gold. 'Xeath Time in his onsweeping march My hair is turning gray. And I look back with sad desire Upon that halcyon day. When first I proudly donned them In the joyous days of old, And ever after wore the two, The Sable and the Gold. Far, far away, where Time has swept Me on his heaving wave, I long to see you once again Ere resting in the grave; I must come back to you once more And stray amid the fold. And view the spot where once I wore The Sable and the Gold. 1ST In. tr e: G ha pel. The chapel bright, Dialectic night. A seat, the pillars hide, A maiden gay, she held full sway, A youth upon each side. One youth with sand, he seized her hand And pressed it in his own, And smiled with glee to think that he In this was all alone. Another hand, the t'other man. This maiden quite bereft; For tho one wight had done just right. She had another left. 6he: Student's Reuerie. r I rest in my old arm chair Before a cheerful grate, A quiet reigns about me, Indoors, without t is late. Alone in my quiet study, Tired and worn and weary, With pondering o'er the lore Of ancient and modern, so dreary. Deep in my old arm chair, While the circling clouds of smoke From my cob pipe rise and hide me. As with an hoary cloak ; I gaze on the fiery coals, Sinking low and ever low, I watch the circles of gray smoke Soar upward like drifts of snow. When h ighest to sink from sight, Torn by a breath of air And I cannot resist the thought How with these our hopes compare. When the hopes of youth burn warmest, As the warm coals’ ruddy glow Wanes early and sinks to ashes, So sink our hopes as low. As are the billows of creamy smoke Dissipated by a breath, So our loftiest aspirations But compass their own death. T is an axiom, sad but true, In life it finds its test, The attainment of highest hopes Is found the most fruitless quest. : c sjc ’ So I love to sit and wonder, While I smoke my old cob pipe, Of the truths of life, how nature Is ever a fitting type. HIO AX EPITAPH. ruder here Doctor Leipsic Lies with faults and virtues too. He had many of tlie former. Of the latter just a few. It had never been imagined That disease could lay him out, For he never slighted any, From the tooth-ache to the gout. He had tried all kinds of measles And unheard of kinds of mumps, He had even tried the spavin And the sweeny and the thumps. Hut his strength was unabated, So his intellect and wits, 'fill the man who made his trousers Gave him epileptic fits. DH A PASTUI. IX PJtOSIi. I. It was on a beautiful afternoon on the first day of the pleasant month of April. Dame Nature was busy completing her toilet, tint ing herself with the lustre of chloraphyll. The bursting buds of spring were fast bedecking the plain unassuming twigs of winter, and everything seemed to be the ideal of spontaneous vigor. A new song had been put into the throats of the chirping birds. The brooks seemed to babble with a more pleasing rhythm. The gentle zephyrs seemed to caress the sun rays as they played hide and seek through the evergreens. The vernal equinox had not long since occurred. The rough waters of the monsoon were yet washing the rugged shores of Australia. It was the Iasi day of the fasting season. On the morrow the merry bells would ring out the glad tidings of Kaster. Our campus was a fit emblem to inspire one to the expression of poetic feeling. I dare say the Muse would have hearkened to the call of the most unpretentious versifier. Nature is full of Luxury and Beauty. II. In contrast with this new life and stimulating vigor were the blighted hopes of an ambitious youth. In the eyclorama of life there are many inextricable threads, which make up the skein of happiness and content, some of which, stretched at too great tension, do often break. At this moment, the ideal pleasantries of college life had given place to its stern realities, and his fevered imagination seemed to see the index linger of consuming scorn pointed at him witheringly. The usual twinkle in his erstwhile merry eyes was no more - gone from the face of the earth, and the place where it was knew it not no more again forever—gehabt haben. His very optics seemed the starring emblems of humiliation, wrought by the weird fancies of a lost cause. The fuzzy extremities of his Cupid s bow, though dimpled once, now drooped despondently, and the sombre folds of foul pessimism weighed upon his boyish heart, a very in- cubus, smotheringly. Alack-a-day, lie now failed to feel like he felt lie would feel, when he once hoped to feast forever upon the fortunes which his fancy had fashioned out of the filmy and phosphorescent future. Hut yesterday, the picture of health, hope and heartiness, with sprightly step and peach bloom suffused about his beardless cheeks. To-day with dragging and uncertain step, bowed head, and eyes suffused with bitter, briny, burning tears, through high and classic corridors, he takes his slow and errant way in a painful and melancholy manner: while his tender-hearted fellow students, re- specting his sorrow, but lapped their Webj-terian brows, and muttered in voices eloquent with innuendo: “ T was the Concour. Life is full of Disappointment and Adversity. Reflections Oil, years ago. when Indians played At peace in Tennessee, Could they have dreamt of what in years Would in those forests be? And could the wind that loudly breathed Through forests bending meek, Have known that it would ever play With Jake’s sweet downy cheek? And did the birds so free to play From rise to set of sun, ICer think their offspring victims of Alley's unerring gun ? Oh, did the wreathes of flowers wild That clung to the old oak rare, K’er dream in their forgetfulness There d be other Garlands there? Oil! dost thou think the widespread fields. When sowed with grass and millet, Did ever dream that there would come Another who would Tillett? But stop! I now must leave you all, And why you soon will see: Alas! my tailor sends a note, Lo, Vand-a-bill to me. VE RUSTIC RENCH There s many a rustic uncouth bench, Cool in yon classic shades, Blissful resort until the summer Into autumn fades. Gnarled and ancient, knotted here. And there in much decay, Yet strong to hold two lovers close, Discreet to not betray. Thus in the cooling eventide, Amidst these fragrant bowers Stroll boy and girl, the young and gay, Ah ! those are pleasant hours. No sweeter music in their ears Than katydids’ low tone, No other light so suited them As when the fire-flies shone. The velvet grass beneath their feet, The bending leaves above. What wonder then that seated there They only speak of love? Year after year the scene comes back And Freshmen, treading after. Stroll idly through the self-same shades That echoed Seniors' laughter. When we recall in after years, With hearts that throb with pain, These pleasures of our college days. We ne’er will know again. Our hearts may not a sweeter scene, Nor sadder one repeat, Than when we strolled these classic shades That veil von rustic seat. ur “ KXTUA DRY.” They were sitting close together By a little brook in June, Where the friendly maple branches Hid them from the prying moon. There was just the slightest struggle And she started up in haste, s|c £ £ Then he bore the dripping maiden From the brooklet to his waist. Now I fear he kissed the maiden. Quite a wicked thing to do. For I heard the maiden murmur. And the brooklet murmur too. Then the brave true-hearted soldier Said, “ I '11 do the right or die. Though it give me rheumatism, 1 shall squeeze this maiden dry. 15 M; CKITIOUE, After the Manner of the Junior English. WE feel moved to offer a few comments in regard to a production offered us for publication in short, we intend to make this the subject of our first critique—with apologies to the author. It is a poem. We don't know whether it is customary to write critiques on poems or not, but we presume so, and we are not to be deterred by so insignificant an objection. As we said before, it is a poem. This remark is no reflection upon the author, for everyone would immediately recognize it as a poem—by its title. Its title is “ How It Rained! A Poem. We might suggest that the “kind reader' will not be very interested in o o o learning how it rained in any particular instance, since there is but one method of raining, and that has been followed for quite a while, so that all have become more or less familiar with it. But let us to the first verse: Sing a song of ('lubs, Pocket full of tin, Third and twentieth night of March, Its like was never seen. A faint reminiscence lingers in our mind of having heard some- thing vaguely like this in by-gone days—or years. Xo! we cannot admit that either the style or the words are wholly original with the author. Can this be plagiarism? We have often had it shown to us, but never before found it all by ourselves. Yet the word “ tin, as meaning swag, stuff, rocks, etc., is of recent invention, and argues strongly against the theory of plagiarism. However, we cannot ap- prove of the use of the word “ tin in this sense. It is low, vulgar, commonplace, and savors strongly of the canaille, not to speak of the bourgeois. We feel a pardonable pride in our familiarity with ancient languages. It is a great study. We cannot forbear to recommend it. Again: 197 For when the sky was opened, The water-spouts came down; I waded forti to seek a hack, Oh, why did I not drown? Ha! t is so! Our memory did not deceive us. There is plagia- rism lurking in tlie atmosphere. There is a crudity about this verse, a lack of acquaintance with the most elementary principles of atmos- pheric phenomena, that only escapes the searing hiss of our scorch- ing pen by the fact that in this verse we find the redeeming feature of the entire poem. Without the line referred to it would sink fathoms deep below the level of mediocrity; with it. our poem rises resplend- ent to the heights of sublimity. A successful poem reflects the senti- ments of its readers. Gaze upon this line— “Oh, why did 1 not drown ? ” and say, is not this effusion the offspring of genius? But let us on : Two-fifty for those lovely flowers, For seats and colors four, And when that hack had cost me three, My tin was then no more. This is not poetry. Poetry deals with the ideal, the phantasmic, the ethereal, the world of imagination. The above verse brutally cites the real, the commonplace, reveling in base statistics, dispelling all thought of poetic fancy. And yet there is a certain pathos in these few lines that overflows the furrows of our cheeks with rivulets of burning tears. A feeling sympathy pervades us. We, too, were there. Even now we can see as through the inverted horoscope of memory this youth, his pockets bristling with shekels, his face the picture of honest joy : and even as we look, the bottom drops from the skies, and the rain oh ! horrible, let us draw the veil over so harrowing a scene and weep. And lastly ( inis esi omnibus )— And sadder than this sad, sad talc, My friends at me have joked, For tho’ I was not wet at all, I yet was badly soaked. This is post-climactic, and a patent failure to sustain the highly- wrought interest of the reader. We see nothing supernally sad in the picture here presented. It strikes but a minor chord in this wail of anguish. The climax is reached in the third stanza, which so forcibly, Referring to tlu hark aforementioned—rub suj ra Stanza HI. yet crudely, recites the monetary deficit of the hapless hero. This stanza is also strangely contradictory. How a man (even though he be the hero of a poem) can exist at one identical moment “ not wet at all” and “badly soaked” is something that surpasses the bounded compass of our understanding. We do not hazard the statement that it cannot be, but through memory's dim vistas we recall certain sects of philosophers, ycleped Kleatics, Ionics, et cetera, and divers proposi- tions set forth by them as to the existence and non-existence of one and the same thing in one and the same place at one and the same in- stant of time. And Heraclitus—becoming-but let that pass. We believe the poet has made a grave error, either due to gross negligence —crassa ncgligcntia—or upon the hypothesis that the poet is Vang Phun Lee. special laundryman to the Theological Department, and bosom companion of Jacob (we believe that we have pierced the veil of anonymity and unerringly spotted the modest laureate), we will generously overlook this fault as due to an excusable unfamiliarity with the American language. And in conclusion we would bid the poet be not discouraged at the faults which stand revealed but to the critic s eye, assuring him that the numberless merits of his poem blot out its few deficiencies. j ) TAIL END. While the poet sang the door bell rang, 'fiie servant went to answer; Soon back he came and blushed with shame: “ It’s just the Comet man, sir.” “Just one more page, oh, writer sage ! To make the thing complete, And poet, dear, I often hear Your verses are so sweet.” On thick he laid it—quite well he played it; Then so blandly says he: “ You know you could, oh ! if you would. Our Comet then ’s a daisy.” The poet blushed at the way he gushed. And said he doubted whether. Work as he may, in one short day, He could get his wits together. ‘‘Go call tlie muse, she wont refuse. And don t our future menace: Now all is night. If you don t write, The Comet’s name is Dennis.” The muse was called. He loudly bawled: “ True reverence now I show you.” “Oh, please subside,” the muse replied, Young man, I do not know you.” “ All right, old maid,” the poet said, “Go hunt your little kitten. Or play solitaire with vour old red hair; I ve got the last page written.” 1 ()() 15 1 fsjs s stc. ’safaj 3f£ 3 3j cj. cl _ , vsisf r sis. ayH E s s R a fci e c rf ie 73i3fe.it -:rcif3t3Jt3f3faje Fiije Tailoring. oderate ppicefl. :j Kahn Bros.! 230 NORTH CHERRY STREET, NASHVILLE, TENN $uit$ to Otdei1 FROM $20 UP. pants to O der1 FROM $5 UP. IRA h. AR WSTRONG, Hatter cS: Men’s Furnisher PROPRIETOR OF THE McEWIiX SI 11 RT FACT()RY, 22i NORTH CHERRY STREET. The newest and most select line of Hats ami Men's Furnishing roods in the city. Fine shirts made to order on short notice. Kit guaranteed. Dr. D. R. Stubblefield, DENTIST. 4-2 i-2 I 11it i l St. Peleplione 71. w. c. COLLIER, President. POPE TAYLOR, Vice President. J. EDWARD HART, Secretary and Treasurer. AUTHORIZED CAPITAL $100,000. W. C. Collier Grocery Co. — WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN- FINE IMPORTED DOMESTIC GROCERIES. Nos. 601 and 603 Church Street, NASHVILLE .... TENNESSEE. ©Jfte DEAHH Steam fump COMPANY. HOLYOKE. MASS. I Have You Sitsterts to IvcluCcite? l'or interesting information apply to J. I). BLANTON, President --OF--- ULiard Seminary for Young hadies Nashville, Tennessee. The Duncan. New I Iotel. C. D. COLLINS CO., Proprietors. o LARGEST TAILORING HOUSE IN AMERICA HEADQUARTERS: 222, 226 and 228 FOURTH AVENUE. Near Main Street, LOU ISVI LLE. - K Y. BRANCH HOUSES: Nashville, Ticnn.. No. 2 20 N. Cherry Street. M lmimiis, Ti N n., or. Flout and Madison Sts. Dai.i.as, Texas, No. 7F5 Main Street. OUR TRADE BEING AMONG THE MOST DRESSY ANI) FASTIDIOUS CUSTOMERS, WE ARE ALWAYS SUP- PLIED iWITII THE BEST ANI) CHOICEST WOOLLENS .-. WHICH ARE PRODUCED EVERY SEASON, AND AMONG OUR STOCK. THIS SEASON WILL BE POUND ALL THE LEADING NOVELTIES OP LONDON AND PARIS. WE RESPECTFULLY INVITE YOU TO CALL............ |. Winter, Jr , Co , Opposite JVIaxcuell House, Nashville, - 6 Tennessee HAS handled more Students to and from Arkansas and Texas than all other Southwestern lines combined, and its continued popularity with the principal Southeastern Schools is the highest guar- antee of the excellence of its service and the truthfulness of its representations. The Only Line toitl] Througl] Cat1 pervice --FROM - MEMPHIS TO TEXAS. Ro 0Range oj? ©arA to Kort Worth, Waco, or d ntermeeliafe point . Two Daily Trains Carrying Through Coaches and Pullman Sleepers. Coinrortalile Reclining Chair Cars. With all modern eonvenienees. in charge of special agents are furnished for the exclusive use of larger parties, while individual students receive careful atten- tion and are met 1 y agents at junction points, en route, who render all necessary assistance and advice. Principals of schools and colleges, parents and guardians are requested to address any of the following for whatever information they may desire eoneerning THE COTTON BELT ROUTE: W. G. ADAMS, Traveling Passenger Agent, Nasiivii.i.k, Tknn. H. H. SUTTON. Traveling Passenger Agent. Ciiatt. noo ;a, Tknn. E. W. LaBEAUME, General Passei FRED M. JONES. histriet Passenger Agent, Mkmmiis, Tknn. S. G. WARNER. (ieneral Passenger Agent, Tvi.i-at, Tkxas. rand Ticket Agent. Sr. Lot is, Mo. i American .Vutioiul IajiiI;, f.L, l )()(),ooo. SURPLUS, $100,000. BOARD OF DIRECTORS. .KMIN M. 1.1C A, T. ATCHISON, V. |„ KIKKM AN. JOHN WO()l VAKI , W. «i. HI Sll, I!VKI IMMOLAS jR II. KoHINsoN. H. I. ICAKI.ICV, Okn. W. II .1 ( k’son” T. I . 'HA KilllC A I , NOKMAN KIKKM AN, 1C. II. I'A 1.1. W. W. BERRY. President. JOHN M. LEA. Vice President. A W. HARRIS, Cashier. WM. N. TIPPENS. Assistant Cashier. WM. P. TANNER. Assistant Cashier. HAS A DOUBLE FEEDER - ■ That never fails and preven flooding. Solid Gold Pens. Our Unconditional Guarantee for ten years accompanies each pen. Correspandcnce solicited. Catalogue Free. Address ALBERT P. CROCKETT, Agent for Vanderbilt ITii.wrsity, will be pleased to show samples. W. W. HICKKV, A. W. II A KKIs, K. W. TI'KNTCK, .1AM K lil'KNS, THE FISK TEACHERS’ AGENCIES, EVERETT O. FISK CO., Proprietors. 4- Ashburn Place. Boston. Mass. : 70 Fifth Avenue. New York, N. Y. ; 371 Main St.. Hartford. Conn. : 106 Wabash Avenue. Chicago, III.; 131 Third Street. Portland, Ore.; 220 1-2 S. Spring St., Los Angeles, Cal. eloHN Branham, SHOES of Every Description. HIGH GRADE GOODS. LOW PRICES. 207, 209 and 211 North Summer Street, First Floor Connell-Hall-IVIcLester Building, Nashville, Tennessee. s t Pdblist? Pous ......... . . . f[ . s?l?urel7, Soutl? Order any book you want, no matter where published. Our arrangements with other publishers are complete. m Our I'acililies for Bool bi r?di 9 , Prir?ti - Eleetrotypir . Etc;., Arc of the Host M BOOKS OF BIOGRAPHY. HISTORY. POETRY. MISCELLANY. CLASSICS. Holiday, Birthday, or Anniversary GIFT sis Of General Use for Old and Young. BARBEE k SR1ITH. Agents and Piiisners. NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE. GOULD A- ERERHARDT, Green an«l Ilmen Streets. N. .1. 1 . U. Avenue, NEWARK. N. J. guilders = of = f 1 i c) li = Class = (Machine = Tools 12 , l.i 20 , 24 , at, , 32' •13 . t‘!c. Nashville’s Hatter! W. 6. WALfON, JR., 5ole Agent. 224 NORTH CHERRY STREET, Dunlap’s Celebrated Hats. Miller’s Unexcelled Hats. DR. JAEGER’S SANITARY WOOLEN UNDERWEAR, FINE SILK AND OPERA HATS. RRIN COATS, NIGHT SHIRTS GLOVES. ETC. Maxwell House Billiard Hall Fifteen Fi st-Class Tables. CAUVIN • HVRONE WUS, 1 )ROPRIETOKS. ♦ ♦ ♦ •Scj oiuHo Clothing That, irr are still headcpiart-ors for Eton's and Young Mens Fashionable Ready-to- wear Cothing there is no doubt..... If you think otherwise, come now, or at your convenience, and convince ourself that for the nearest approach to tailored-to- order garments in ready-to-wear........ CUE ARE AT THE FRONT. 'I'lie reliability of our make must interest you, for clothing, to be sat- isfactory, must be good wearing as well as good looking. PRICES NO HIGHER THAN ELSEWHERE FOR RELIABLE GOODS. HUNTINGTON c,othin9andh JVIen’s Furnisher. 409 CHURCH STREET. We keep a full line of - - - GEATS' FINE FURNISHINGS And are Sellers of Fine Clothes and Overcoats. FISH’S SHIRT FACTORY, 230 and 232 North Summer Street, NASHVILLE, TENN. Montgomery Bell Academy. FOUNDED 1S67. LEADING BOYS’ SCHOOL, NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE. For Catalogue Address WE MAKE SHI RTS TO ORDER. N. A. I). CLARK. A.M., Principal. OWNERS AND OPERATORS Resistance Boxt's f r ;i11 int asiir tncnI OF Tire Greeley Electrical Laboratory Troy, New York. Scud for a copy .•! our Electrical Measurement and 1 ‘StinK pparat us Catalogue. Telegraph InslriMiii'iiis, I,eanier ' Outfits, and Supplies in Oeuoral. E. S. GREELEY CO., 5 and 7 Dey Street, New York, Manufacturers, Importers, and Healers. ' teX.Src t e s T M-Clure „ CtN WUNACIH 210 N. F ONT ST.ff NASHVILLE TENN Wall Sc VloonevJ’s School, I 'rn 11 k 1 i n, loin lessee. S. V. WAUL, J Pineipals. n r w. d. jvioonhy, A Training School ok High (ikade. Oi k Boys Knter Yanderrilt on Certikicate. APPLICATION MUST BE MADE AT ONCE. Address POSITIVE ENGAGEMENT NECESSARY. W. D. IVIOONEY. Sec. 2 W.A.JACKSOrs ' • • G A mag GR LS-MACCfABER. SURtTARV. JO -AN HASTINGS PP.E5 t TRlia. . CMAS.S-LAWfeCNCE- VlCt- PRES- kttOTO PARK PLACE NEW YORK, B. H. STIEF JEWELRY CO., 2oN ,uni 2io Union Street, NASHVILLE, TEW. JAMES B. CARR,...................Manager. --OFFER WE- Largest, Fjel?est atyd $l?oieest StoeK to be poured ir? tl? ? Soutl?. DI-A.MOMDS, Sterling Silver and Fine Silver-plated Ware, 11 routes. Onyx To Tables and Fine Lamps, Cloeks, W A TC H E S • A hill line of tin host American. Sole agents for the celebrated Patke, Phillips A- Co. Swiss Watches. GOLD HEAD CANES AND UMBRELLAS. GOLD PENS, NOVELTIES FOR WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY GIFTS. Repairing a specialty, and all work warranted. Prompt and careful attention to all orders. All the old force of the house retained. To the Friends and Patrons of Vanderbilt University: iak this method of asking your patronage when in want of the following articles: MU. nKKSS oi’l'pC princk albert M 1 1 Prince Cliarles Suits, Ivngush Cutaway Suits, one button, Chesterfield Cutaways, HUNTING SUITS, Corduroy, CLERICAL SUITS, in drepclete and cloth, GENTLEMEN’S DRESS SUITS. These Goods are all our own Manufacture. CURS. THURM GO. Corner CHERRY and UNION Streets, NASHVILLE. TENN. ('lothing Made to Measure and Fit Guaranteed. •) Z iC ZiZ iZ CADET RIFLES 00 Y «5£ CO CO Suitable for use in Military Schools. Colleges and Young Ladies’ Seminaries. MUZZLE-LOADING CADET RIFLE a P rfect Model for cadet schools Bar Lock. Case hardened. Polished Blued Mountings, length 0f barrel 27'. Inches, weight 3 . lbs.. Blued Barrel, two Bands and Swivels, with 10 inch Angular Bavonet. Two Click Lock and IX Cleaning Rod ............ each net. s—J Robert Remington Cadet Rifle. 32 Calibor. Rim Fire. Chambered for Blank Cartridge. Rifled Bright or Brown Barrel with Bayonet. Total length with Bayonet. inches without Bayonet. 431 inches Length of barrel. 28 Inches cTn s Weight, 4 . II each net. VpXr.Ov—' E. C. MEACHAM ARMS CO., - ST. LOUIS, MO. I 1893 is ENDRON V TCycles. SL 1893 7S Warranted the Highest («rade. Write for Catalogue. Our Light Koadstur No. l'«. wit Ii I«l« ;i I I’m-ii- Our Ladies' Wheel No. II. with Ideal Pneumatic malic Tire, all on 30 pounds Priee, Slot). ; Tire, all on :50 pounds. Price, Sl. 0. Geiulron Cycles are the only that have the Adjustable Handle Bar with forward and backward adjustment. Demand it, as no wheel is complete without it. GKNOKON IKON WIIKKL CO.. 5i8 to 540 Superior st.. Toledo. Ohio. @ ou 1- S S sporfS Bo Not Buy Before Writing for Our Arp Pamphlet • • • ABOUT • • • Mycr’s Federal Decisions. All Federal Cases in the Best Arrangement for Practical I’se. SAVES rod LOTS OF MONET, Pour Good Books: Myek on Vested Rights (1891)...............$6.00 Webb on Record ok Title (Late Edition) - - 6.00 Murfree on Sheriffs .......................6.00 Mills on Eminent Domain ................... 5.00 GILBERT BOOK COMPANY, ST. LOUIS. Publishers of Texas and Missouri Reports and Local Books. POND'S EXTRACT If you irish to take Regular Daily Bxercise, and not hr compelled to desist from work because of Sore Muscles, 'Oti must, after exercis- ing, thoroughly nil) the muscles with Do in Is H x tract. By its use you are made quick and active, and all soreness, stiffness or swell- ing is j)rerented, and you will avoid the danger of taking cold on going out after exercising. U'e have a hook full of testimonials from the most famous athletes ; to ( note them is superfluous. Al- most everyone in training uses it. But don’t ('Xpert some cheap sub• st it ut(' for Bond’s fix tract to do w hat the genuine article will, for you will surely he disappointed. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY Pond's Extract Go., 76 Fifth Avenue, York. 18 0000000060000000000000000000 i$.0t O DORIDER SI DEBOTTOM, Sl’cckssors to GERDING CO. 513 CiiiRCH Street, Nashville, Tenn., Telephone 427. Manufacturing Confectioners. ICE-CREAM, CAKES and CANDIES A SPECIALTY. WHOLESALE ADD RETAIL 0r,le“ 'loMv''re'' ',r ,',,lv 0,1 shor' ,K icc 'AlK LUJULL iliji.. Parlies ami Weddings supplied on short notice. Cream far Fraternities a Specialty, 0000000000000000 00000000000000000000000000 9 .9‘£ horv anvfine.tenhis t N£AK TC PERFECTION EVER I ATTAINED kto mh ANYTENNIS PLAYER WILL APPRECIATE- fi THIS DRIVING POWER. FRAME OF CHOICEST ASH t H EAVI LY R EIN FO RCED TWINE WRAPPED HANDLEMAKING.THEJiASIEST AND MOST h EFFICIENT GRIP OBTAINABLE THE TUXEDOES BUILT FOR THE NEEDS OF THE TENNIS EXPERT AND FOR HARD PLAY. N E.I.HORSMAN 34-1 BROADWAY,N.Y. I O ■ c-' i' . - - o Vt § i: J. ........M__9...„ _ . _ ., . S. OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO O IO. j IK. G. TIIUSS.---- A. . . THUSS. FOR FINE FINISHED PHOTOGNAPHS GO TO + T H W S S 230.MfNTHTRRBv°sCTREET, NASHVILLE, TENN. Special Kates to Stcdknts. CHICAGO MEAT AND FISH COMPANY, C W BURTON, Manager. — DEALERS IN — ► Fresuoysiers. Fin. name. ceieig. Fulls. Veseiaoies. ICE, ETC. 509 Church Street Hook’s Old Stand . Telephone 827 Nashville, Tenn. AGENTS FOR CLOVER NOOK BUTTER. Theodore Tafelt® -fDonufaoturer of and Dealer in- SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS And Apparatus for Deformities. Keeps on hand Surgical Appliances, Batteries, Trusses, Shoulder Braces, Elastic Stockings, Abdominal Supporters, Crutches, Rubber Goods, Razors, Saddle Bags, Buggy Cases, Vial Cases, and all kinds of Antiseptic Dressings. All Kinds of Repairing and Pol- ishing promptly attended to. 157 North Cherry Street. TELEPHONE 1467. NASHVII.I.E, TENN. J. I). Andrews. C. I Andrews. J. D. ANDREttlS BRO., Uenl IC tnte A «rentes. Lonns Negotiated. 245 North Cherry Street, Nashville, Tenn. 20 ft


Suggestions in the Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) collection:

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1890 Edition, Page 1

1890

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 1

1891

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 1

1892

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1894 Edition, Page 1

1894

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1895 Edition, Page 1

1895

Vanderbilt University - Commodore Yearbook (Nashville, TN) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 1

1896


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