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Carolina 'Varsity !
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Tar Heel
tJUU
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N. C. U.
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M\ )if Carolina 'Varsity ! Doom ! Rah
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-14'. «&£. 4&e,
WHITE AND LIGHT BLUE
*Or Baseball.
TO THE
l)oti. TrancU Donnell minston
who by loyal service to his
State and University has.^
shown himself to be a states-
man and alumnus worthy of
our esteem, this volume is J-
respectfully dedicated J- J- J-
Vl/A,
f . ]VI. Osborne, A K E
Editor-in-Chief.
m. f . Bryan, z T
Chief Business Manager.
B. I., ttlatson, K A
f . 3. Coje, * A e
m. H. J^Iurpby, 2X0
6. «l. «loodard, K 2;
T. <Sl. 'Jones, s x
]V. C. Curtis, A T 0
C. B. Denson, 3r., Ben
C. J^. Niller, n K A
JVI. BeUamy,l[r., 2 A E
HON. FRANCIS DONNEI.I, WrNSToN.
^on. ^vanciB ©onneff iVimion
urru
'he subject of this sketch comes of distinguished ancestry, a family that
has impressed itself upon not only this but other States. The blood is
English, mixed with Scotch-Irish.
Francis Donnell Winston was born in Bertie county, North Carolina,
October 2, 1857. His parents were Hon. Patrick Henry Winston, one
of North Carolina's ablest jurists, and Martha Elizabeth Byrd, a
ladv of rare womanly virtues.
'The Winstons came originally from Lincolnshire, England, and settled in Hanover
county, Virginia. One of the family, Sarah Wincton, was the mother of Patrick Henry, the
great orator of the American Revolution.
The Byrds came from Scotland and settled in Virginia. Colonel William Byrd, of West-
over, Va., the most cultivated Virginian of the last century, was a member of this family.
Thus Mr'. Winston is a descendant of two of the oldest, most talented and most eminent
families of the South. His brothers are Hon. P. H. Winston, lawyer, author and wit, Spokane,
Washington, and at present attorney-general of that State; George T.Winston, LL. D.. Presi-
dent of the University of Texas, Austin, Texas, and Hon. Robert W. Winston, ex-judge of the
Superior Court, Durham, N. C. Their sister, Mrs. F. S. Spruill, of Louisburg, is one of the
most talented women in our State.
Mr. Winston's education was received at the Fetter School, Henderson; the Horner School,
Oxford; Cornell University, New York, and the University of North Carolina. From the latter
institution he graduated with distinction in 1879.
At the University Mr. Winston's talents and universal popularity won for him honors
prophetic of those which he has since reaped in life as a lawyer and a
citizen. He was assistant ball manager in 1876, representative of the
Philanthropic Society in 1877, revived the University Magazine in 1878, ^-^
and twice elected editor thereof, Washington orator in 1878, president "^s-
of the Philanthropic Society, historian and president of the Class of 1879.
In January, 1881, he was licensed to practice law, having been a
student at the Dick and Dillard Law School at Greensboro. Just after le was WX
licensed. Judge Aug. S. Seymour appointed him clerk of the Superior Court of V/H
Bertie count}*.
Mr. Winston was nominated for State Superintendent of Public Instruction
bv the Liberal patty in 1884. In 1886 he was elected and served as a State Senator
from Bertie and Northhampton counties.
In 1890 he was nominated for Judge of the Second Judicial District by the
Republican party but declined the nomination and declared his allegiance to the
Democratic party. Since 1892 he has been a member of the Democratic State
Executive Committee and a member of the Second Congressional District Democratic
Committee. He presided over the State convention of Democratic clubs in 1894 and
over the Congressional convention of that year in his district.
At the request of Hon. F. M. Simmons, State chairman of the late campaign. Mr-
Winston had charge of the formation and organization of the "White Government
Unions," which were most potent factors in the campaign.
7
In every campaign since 1890 Mr. Winston has canvassed a large
part of the State, and his public speeches are strong, and filled with a
fund of humor that renders him popular with the people.
Mr. Winston takes an active interest in education. He has been
a trustee of the University since 18S7, and was one of the orators at
the last commencement. He is a large-hearted, philanthropic man ;
I and largely at his instance the county of Bertie has established a
house of correction, with a farm attached, where the aged and infirm
are cared for. He was chairman of the board of directors until
removed by the Fusionists. In his professional relations Mr. Winston
enjoys the confidence of the people of his section in a high degree.
He is an advocate of power — a well equipped lawyer.
On the loth day of October, 1898, he was unanimously nominated
for the Legislature by his party in Bertie county. He at once
entered upon an aggressive and thorough campaign, which resulted
in his own election and that of the entire ticket on which he ran by
an average majority of 100, in face of the fact that the Fusion ticket
had carried the county at the previous election (1896) by 900 majority.
In the Legislature of 1899 he took high rank and served on
the following committees : Privileges and Elections, chairman ;
Election Laws and Constitutional Amendments ; Counties, Cities
and Towns ; chairman of the committee to name trustees for the
University and the College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. In all matters relating to suffrage
Mr. Winston took a most prominent part, but the most important piece of legislation he per.
formed for his State was his introduction of the Constitutional Amendment Bill relative to the
qualification of voters in North Carolina. Not only was he a member of the above-named
committees in the House but he was one of its recognized leaders, abounding in tact and good
sense, eloquent and convincing in debate, and always ready with kind word and sympathetic
heart to help his friends and constituents. Our distinguished friend was frequently men-
tioned for the speakership of the House. He occupies a place in the front rank of that able
body. His native county is fond of her distinguished son and sees in the future high honors
awaiting him. He has the boldness to declare for the principles and policies of his party and
the abilit)' to take care of himself in any emergenc}'.
He takes a great interest in Masonry and has been one of that order's grand officers for
some years. As the chairman of the special conmiittee appointed in January, 1898, to raise a
fund for the construction of girls' buildings at the Orphan Asylum at Oxford he ha^
raised the splendid sum of |5,ooo.
Mr. Winston is most happily married to Miss Rosa Mary Kenney, a musician of rare
ability, and a most excellent help-mate to a man who finds his chiefest pleasure around his
fireside.
Jnfrobucfion
tJU u
BEFORE perusing the pages that are to follow, pause for a
moment to hear the story of Criticus of Rome.
Criticus was a man who was much troubled with bodily
afflictions, but, worse still, he was troubled with an ever-critical
mind. He was a man who would criticise the orator who
harangued the multitude that gathered daily in the Forum, saying that
he could deliver a better speech himself. He criticised the preceptor
who came to give instruction to his children.
One day it happened that this unfortunate man was suffering greatly
from one of his numerous infirmities, and on this particular occasion
Mansuetus, a friend, paid him a visit. After enumerating his many
troubles and assuring Mansuetus that "the world was out of joint,"
Criticus then began his usual complaint about medici in general and
his medicus familias in particular. Mansuetus listened patiently, and
when Criticus was done he asked: "Criticus, have you ever prescribed
for yourself for one single day ? "
This story, dear
reader, has a moral,
which you must seek
for. So, with this
modest introduction,
we present to you the
tenth volume of The
Hellenian.
Respectfully.
THE EDITORS.
1898
September 5-10. Monday to Saturday. Examinations for the Removal of Conditions.
September 7, 8, 9. Wednesday, Thursday, Friday. Examinations for Admissionin to the
College.
September 9, 10. Friday, Saturday. Registration.
September 10. Saturday. Assignment of Rooms.
September 12. Monday. Lectures begin.
October 12. Wednesday. University Day.
October 12. Wednesday. President's Reception.
November 24. Thursday. Thanksgiving Day.
Christmas. Recess from December 23, 1898, to January 2,
1899, inclusive.
1899
January 3, 4. Wednesday, Thursday. Registration.
January 3. Tuesday. Assignment of Rooms.
January 4. Wednesday. Lectures begin.
February 22. Wednesday. Washington's Birthday.
May 28. Sunday. Baccalaureate Sermon.
May 30. Tuesday. Meeting of the Board of Trustees.
May 30. Tuesday. Anniversary of the Alumni.
May 30. Tuesday. Orations by Representatives from the
Dialectical and Philanthropic Literary Societies.
Ma}' 30. Tuesday. Senior Class Day.
May 31. Wednesday. Commencement.
Summer Vacation from Commencement to the Second Thursday in September.
QXnmxeit]^ of (Uort^ CaroPtna ^xuekcB
u n n
DANIEL, LINDSAY RUSSELL, Governor, President cx-ojficio of the Board of Trustees
RICHARD HENRY BATTLE, Secretary and Treasurer
(Wlem6cr6 of f^e (jSoarb
1899t
1901
Kemp Plummer Battle, LL.D
George Samuel Bradshaw
Fab 1 us Haywood Busbee
Marion Butler
Bennehan Cameron
John Summervile Cunningham
John William Fries
Robert McKnight Wurman
William Anderson Guthrie
Thomas Stephen Kenan
William Reynolds Allen
Alexander Boyd Andrews
Jacob Battle
Richard Henry Battle, LLD
Joseph Pearson Caldwell
Julian Shakespeare Carr
William Henry Day
Warren Grice Elliott
Robert Donnell Gilmer
Augustus Washington Graham
1903
Abner Alexander, M. D
Christopher Thomas Bailey
Edmond Spencer Blackburn
James Edmund Boyd
William Hyslop Sumner Burgwyn
Charles Alston Cook
^Albert Barrow Gorrell
John Washington Graham
John Thomas Hogan
John T. B. Hoover
George Edwin Butler
William Hobbs Chadbourn
Ben Franklin Dixon, M. D
Claudius Dockery
RuFus Alexander Doughton
Hiram L. Grant
Stephen Porter Graves
Robert Terelius Gray
F. W. Hancock
1905
Richard Henry Lewis, M.D
Charles McNamee
Abraham Hay'wood Merritt
James Dixon Murphy
Jesse Lindsay Patterson
Frederick Philips
John Wesley Starnes
Henry Weil
William Thornton Whitsett
James William Wilson
Alfred Williams Haywood
William Edward Hill
Edmund Jones
Thomas Alexander McNeill
Thomas Williams Mason
Paul Barringer Means
Lee S. Overman
James Parker
John Andrew Ramsay
■* David Gaston Worth
James Barlow Lloyd
Thomas Franklin Lloyd
James Montraville Moody
Robert Bruce Peebles
James Bion Schulken
Harry Skinner
Zebulon Baird Walser
Elihu Anthony' White
Stephen Otho Wilson
Francis Donnell Winston
Virgil Stuart Lusk
William Thomas McCarthy-
Edward Hughes Meadows
Benjamin Sidney Mitchell
Nathan Alexander Ramsey
Wallace W. Rollins
Alfred Moore Scales
Frank Shepherd Spruill
David Alexander White
Thomas Bernard Keogh
^tanbing Commiffecs of f^e ^ruefeee
EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE
Governor Daniel Lindsay Russkll, Chairman
Alexander B. Andrews
John W. Graham
Alfred Williams Hay'wood
Richard H. Battle Marion Butler
Thomas S. Kenan Richard H. Lewis
James W. Wilson
committee of visitation
Charles Alston Cook, Chairman
Julian S. Carr
Virgil S. Lusk
Jesse Lindsay Patterson
tXhe legal term of office expires November 30 of the year indicated
''Deceased
^ietox^ of ;^acuftj ani ©fftceta of t^t QXnmxeit^
of (Uotf ^ Carofina
truu
Edwin Anderson Alderman, President.
Ph. B., University of North Carolina, 1882; D. C. h-. University of the South,
1S96; American Historical Society; Maryland Historical Society; National Educational
Association; Ai)icrican W/iig, Princeton; Phi Kappa Sigma; Di. Society; Superintend-
ent Goldsboro Schools, 1886; State Institute Conductor, 1889; Professor of History,
State Normal College, 1891; Professor of Pedagogy, University of North Carolina,
I S93; President of University, 1S96; Published "Life of William Hooper," ''Short
History of North Carolina," numerous addresses. Born at Wilmington, N. C, May
15th, 1861.
Kemp Plummer Battle.
Alumni Professor of History (in charge of Political Economy); A. B. , 1849; A. M.,
1852 (in course). University of North Carolina; LL.D., Davidson College, 1879; Corre-
sponding Member of the Historical Society of Maryland; Corresponding Member of
the Historical Society of Alabama; Dialectic Society; Tutor of Mathematics, Univer-
sity of North Carolina, 1850-54; Director Bank of North Carolina, 1858-1868; Director
Insane Asylum, i857-i86r; Delegate to the State Convention, 1861; President Chatham
Railroad Company, 1862-66; State Treasurer, 1 866-68; President North Carolina Agri-
cultural Society, 1869-72; Trustee University of North Carolina, 1S62-68 and 1S74-99;
Secretary and Treasurer University of North Carolina, 1874-76; President University
of North Carolina, 1876-91; Professor of History, 1891. Published " Early History of
City of Raleigh," 1876; continuation of same, 1S92; " History Supreme Court of North
Carolina; " " Trials and Judicial Proceedings in New Testament; " " Colonial Leaders
of the Church of England; " " Sketches of Historj^ of the University of North Caro-
lina; " " The History Involved in the Names of the Counties of North Carolina;"
articles " North Carolina," in Johnson's Cyclopedia, and "University of North Caro-
lina," in Chicago reprint of Encyclopedia Brittanica. Sketches of the lives of Hon.
A. M. Lewis, R. P. Dick, Z. B. Vance, John Manning, and othe- historical mono-
graphs. Address, "The Head and the Hand." Born near Louisburg, Franklin
County, Dec. 19, 1831.
Francis Preston Venable.
Professor of Chemistry; Ph. D. \Gottingen); Delta Kappa Epsilon; Philanthropic
Society. Has published "Qualitative Analysis," " History of Chemistry," "Inor-
ganic Chemistrj^" " Development of Periodic Law." Born at Longwood, Va , Nov.
17, 1856.
Joseph Austin Holmes.
B. Agr. (Cornell) iSSi; B. S. (Ibid) 1888. State Geologist and Lecturer on the
Geology of North Carolina. Fellow of the Geological Society of America; Member of
the American Institute of Mining Engineers. Professor of Geology and Natural His-
tory University of North Carolina, 1881-92; State Geologist, 1892. Published a num-
ber of reports on the Geology of the State.
Joshua Walker Gore.
Professor of Physics; C. E. University of Virginia, 1875; Kappa Alpha; Phi. So
ciety; Fellow in Mathematics, Johns Hopkins University, 1S76-78; Professor Natural
Science, South Western Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn., 1878-81; Assistant in
Mathematics, University of Virginia, 1881-2; born January 10, 1852, Frederick County,
Virginia.
John Manning.
Died at Chapel Hill, February 12, 1899. Judge Jas. E. Shepherd elected to fill the vacancy caused by
Dr. Manning's decease.
Professor of Law, University of North Carolina; A. B., Universit}^ of North Caro-
lina, 1850; LIv. D., University of North Carolina, 1883; Phi. Society; Delegate to Con-
vention, 1861-62; First Lieutenant Chatham Rifles, 1861; Adjutant Fifteenth North
Carolina Volunteers, 1861; Receiver under Sequestration Act, C. S. A., 1861-65; Dele-
gate to Convention of 1875; Trustee University of North Carolina, 1874-94; State Rep-
resentative, 1881-83; Commissioner to Codify Laws, 1881-82; Professor of Law at Uni-
versity of North Carolina, 1882-99. Published "An Address Before the Alumm
Association," " The Code of North Carolina " (in conjunction with Dortch and Hen-
derson), "Law Lectures" (in press). Born at Edenton, N. C, July 30, 1830; died at
Chapel Hill, February 12, 1899.
Thomas Hume.
Born at Portsmouth, Va. Professor of English Language and Literature; A. B.,
Richmond College; Graduate of University of Virginia; D. D., LL. D.; Phi. Society;
Chaplain in Confederate Army; Principal Petersburg Classical Institute; of Roanoke
Female College, Danville, Va. ; Professor of Latin and English, Norfolk College; Pastor
of Churches in Danville and Norfolk. Published "Helps to the Study of Hamlet;" con-
tributions to Magazines, and Reviews on Shakespeare, Milton, the English Bible, and
on Educational Subjects.
Wai,ter Dallam Toy.
Professor of Modern Languages; M. A., University of Virginia, 1SS2; Chi Psi;
Phi. Society; Published College Text-books. Born at Norfolk, Va., November 13, 1S54,
Eben Alexander.
Professor of the Greek Language and Literature; A. B., Yale, '73; Ph. D., Mary-
ville, 1886; LL. D., University of North Carolina, 1893; Phi Beta Kappa; Psi Upsilon
(Junior); Skull and Bones (Senior); Di. Society; Instructor in Ancient Languages,
University of Tennessee, 1873-77; Professor of same, 1877-86; Professor of Greek, Uni-
versity of North Carolina, 1886; on leave of absence, 1893-97, serving as United
States Minister to Greece, Roumania and Servia. Born at Knoxville, Tenn., March
9. 1851.
William Cain.
Professor of Mathematics; A. M. at North Carolina Military and Polytechnic In-
stitute; Member American Society of Civil Engineers; Phi. Society; Professor o^
Mathematics and Engineering, Carolina Militar}- institute, Charlotte, N. C, 1874-80;
same, South Carolina INIilitary Academy, Charleston, S. C, 1882-89; Professor of
Mathematics, University of North Carolina, 1889. Born at Hillsboro, N. C, May 14,
1847. Published Works on Applied Mathematics mainly; two volumes on " Theory
of Voussoir Arches, " one volume on "Solid and Braced Arches," one volume on
" Retaining Walls," one volume on " Stresses in Bridges," and one volume "Notes on
Geometry and Algrebra."
13
Richard Henry Whitehead.
Professor of Anatomy and Pathology; A. B., Wake Forest College, iS86; M. D.,
University of Virginia, 1SS7; Kappa Alpha Fraternity; Di. Society; Demonstrator of
Anatomy at University of Virginia, 18S7-89; Contributions to Medical Journals. Born
at Salisbury, N. C, July 27, 1865.
Henry Horace Williams.
Professor of Philosophy, A. B., A. M., University of North Carolina, 1883: B. D
Yale '88; Grad. Stud. Harvard, 1888-90; Wilson Fellow, 1889; Professor Trinity
College, 1885; Professor Universit}- of North Carolina, 1890.
Henry Van Peters Wilson.
Professor of Biology; A. B. Johns Hopkins, 1883; Ph. D., Johns Hopkins, 1888;
Philological Society; Assistant United States Fish Commission, 1889-91; Professor
Biology, University of North Carolina, 1891. Publications on the Development of
Maricina Areolata, Journal Morphology, 1888; The Embryology of the Sea Bas-s; Bull.;
United States Fish Commission, 1891 ; Observations on the Gemmule and Egg Develop-
ment of Marine Sponges, Journal Morphology, 1894, etc., etc. Born Februarv 16,
1863, Baltimore, Md.
Karl Pomeroy Harrington.
Professor of Latin Language and Literature; A. B., Wesleyan, 1882; A. M., Wes-
leyan, 1885; Phi Beta Kappa; American Philological Association; Archtelogical Insti-
stute of America; Psi Upsilon; Phi Society; Classical Master in the public High
School, Westfield, Mass., 1882-85; Professor of Latin, Wesleyan Academ5% Wilbraham,
Mass , I885-87; Tutor of Latin, Wesleyan University, 1889-91; Publisher " Helps to the
Intelligent Study of College Preparatory Latin " (Ginn & Co ); '" Harrington and Tol-
man's Greek and Roman Mythology" (B. H. Sanborn and Co.); Editor of the tenth
edition of the "Songs of the Psi Upsilon Fraternity"; Contributor to The Methodist
Review, Classical Review, New York Times, New York Evening Post, New York
Christian Advocate, etc. Born at Great Falls, N. H., June 13, 1861. Organist and
Choir Director of the Methodist Episcopal churches at Stamford and Middletown,
Conn., the American Church in Berlin, Germany, etc.. Director Chapel Hill Choral
Society.
Collier Cobb.
Professor of Geology and Mineralogy; A. B., Harvard, 18S9; A. M. (Ibid), 1894;
Fellow of the Geological Society of America; Member of the Harvard Natural Historj-
Society, and of the Boston Society of Natural History; Phi. Society, Assistant in
Geology at Harvard, 1888-90; Instructor in Geology at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, 1890-92; Instructor in Geology, Harvard Summer School, 1891; Instructor
in Geology, Boston University, 1891-92; Assistant United States Geological Survey,
1S86-1892; Assistant Professor of Geology, University of North Carolina, 1892-93; Pro-
fessor of Geology, University of North Carolina, 1893, Published School Map of
North Carolina, magazine articles and articles in scientific journals.
Charles Staples Magnum.
Assistant Professor of Medicine; A. B., University of North Carolina, 1891; M. D.,
Jefferson Medical College (Philadelphia), 1894; President Hare Medical Society of
Philadelphia; Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, Jefferson Medical College, 1894-95.
14
Edward Vernon Howell.
Professor of Pharmac)-; A. B., Wake Forest, 1892; Ph. G., Philadelphia College of
Pharmacy, 189^; Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Phi. Society. Born at Raleigh, N. C,
March 30, 1872.
Marics Cicero Stephens Noble.
Professor of Pedagogy; Mason; Phi; Commandant of Cadets Bingham School,
1879-1882; Superintendent City Schools, Wilmington, N. C, 1882-1898; State Institute
Conductor, 1882-1890; Author of Williams' Beginners' Reader ; North Carolina Sup-
plement, Maury's Geography, Co-editor Davies' Standard Arithmetic. Bern Louis-
burg, N. C, March 15, 1855.
Charles Baskerville.
Assistant Professor of Chemistry; B. S., University of North Carolina, 1S92; Ph. D.,
1894; Graduate in Chemistr}-, University of Virginia, 1890; P. G. Fellow, Vanderbilj
University, 1891; F. C. S. (Fellow London Chemical Societ}), (Fellow American Asso-
ciation of Advanced Science) ; Alpha Theta Phi; Master Mason; Delta Kappa Epsilon;
Order of Gimghouls; Phi. Society; Secretary Council A. A. A.S., 1899; Secretary
Section of Chemistry of American Association of Advanced Science; member of Coun-
cil of American Chemical Society for 1899; President North Carolina Section American
Chemical Society, 1899; Member German Chemical Society; Member Society of
Chemical industry; Corresponding Secretary Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, 1S95.
Born June 18, 1870, Noxubee County, Miss. Publications — numerous original contri-
butions (twenty to thirty) on subjects in Chemistry, published \n Journal of the
American Chemical Society, London Chemical News, and Cheniiker Zeiinng : History
University of North Carolina (in three volumes); American University Illagazine.
Henry Farrar Linscott.
Assistant Professor of Cla^ssical Philology; A. B., Bowdoin. 1892; A. M. (Ibid),
1893; Ph. D., 1895; Phi Beta Kappa; Alpha Delta Phi; Fellow University of Chicago,
1893-95; Instructor, Brown University, 1895-96. Published "Studies in Metaplasm
and Syncretism " and various articles in the Classical Review and Proceedings of
the American Philological Association. Born June 4, 1871, at Chicago, 111. Mem-
ber of the Philological Association, the Oriental Societj- and the Archaeological Insti-
tute of America.
James Crawford Biggs.
Assistant Professor of Law; Ph. B., University of North Carolina; Alpha Theta
Phi; Zeta Psi; Order of Gimghouls; Phi ; Mayor of Oxford, j8^ and 1898; Teacher of
St. Albans. 1893-91. Born August 29, 1870, Oxford, N. C. Secretary and Treasurer
North Carolina Bar Association, 1899.
Samuel May.
Instructor in Modern Languages; A. B., Howard, 1S96; Delta Kappa Epsilon; Phi.
Society; Order of Gimghouls. Born at Honolulu, Hawaiian Islands November 26, 1872.
William Cunningham Smith.
Instructor in English; Ph. B., University of North Carolina, 1S96; Alpha Theta
Phi; Kappa Alpha Fraternity; Di. Society; Instructor of Pedagogry 1S96-97. Born
at Greensboro, N. C, April 19, 1871.
Archibald Henderson.
Instructor in Mathematics; A. B., University of North Carolina, 1897; Alpha Theta
Phi; Sigma Nu Fraternity; Di. Society; Order of Gimghouls. Born at Salisbury, N. C.
15
Joseph Hyde Pratt.
Lecturer in Mineralogy; Ph ,B., Yale, 1893; Ph. D., Yale, 1896; Sigma Chi; Phi
Society; Alpha Tau Omega; Assistant in Chemistry, Sheffield Scientific School, 1893-94,
(Yale University); Instructor in Mineralogy, 1894-97. Has published numerous
articles on chemical and geological subjects. Born at Hartford, Conn., February 3, 1S70.
Fellow of the Geological Society of America; Member American Institute of Mining
Engineers; Member American Chemical Society; Mineralogist State of North Carolina.
James W. Calder.
Director in Gymnasium; Student at Davidson College in Spring of 1898. Trained
in the gymnasium of the Young Men's Christian Association in Brooklyn and New
York; Physical Director at Charlotte (Y. M. C. A.) for two years, at Davidson College
one year, and in Brooklyn and New York (Y. M. C. A. ) for a year and a half.
Alfred Franklin Williams, Jr.
Assistant in Biology; A. B., University of North Carolina, 1897.
Edward Jenner Wood.
Assistant in Biology; Class '99.
Henry Mauger London.
Assistant in Geology; Class '99.
Thomas Clarke.
Assistant in Chemical Laboratory; B. S., University of North Carolina, 1896;
Ph. D., University of Bonn (Germany), 1898. Born October i, 1875, Goochland
county, Virginia.
William Edward Cox.
Assistant in Phj'sics, Class '99.
Jesse Knight Dozier.
Assistant in Physics, Class '99.
Francis Moore Osborne.
Assistant in Mathematics, Class '99.
Ralph Henry Graves.
Librarian; A. B., University of North Carolina, '97; A. M., University of North
Carolina, 1898; Alpha Theta Phi; Zeta Psi; Phi. Society. Born at Chapel Hill, North
Carolina, July ir, 1878.
Eugene Lewis Harris.
Registrar; at present Treasurer University Alumni Association; Treasurer Presby-
terian Church, Chapel Hill; Ph. B., University of North Ca'-olina, 1881; Phi.
Society; Artist; Dealer in Art Materials; General Secretary Young Men's Christ-
ian Association in Raleigh, Winston and Mobile, Ala., and Robeson County; Member
State Executive Committee Young Men's Christian Association and Treasurer of same
Committee; has assisted several years in Y. M. C. A. Handbook. Born at Henderson,
North Carolina, March 12, 1856.
Willie Thomas Patterson, Bursar.
(Jjreac^ere to f^e (Uniuereitg.
Reverend Peyton Harrison Hoge, D. D.
Reverend Rodney Rush Swope, D. D.
Reverend Howard Edward Rondthaler.
Reverend Samuel Bryant Turrentine, D. D.
Reverend Junius Millard.
16
In memory of
John manning, JI.B.. CC.D.,
Professor of Caw
Born 3uly 30, i$30 Died February 12, i899
Their hearts are light and courage firin,
As the breezes merrily blow;
No task is irksome; nor is there heard
Complaint of hardship; the only word,
Is a hearty yo he ho.
In the golden autumn, a great fleet sails.
Far over the heaving sea,
To the richer waters, where fishers bold
May seek for the oc.ean's wealth untold
Afar from the sheltering lee.
19
€fa00 of 1902
u n u
Cofors
BLACK AND LILAC
(motfo
^eff
Rip turn Rah! Rip turn Rine!
We're the Fresh of '99!
Rip-tum Rah! Rip-tum Ru !
Seniors of 1902 !
A. H. Vanu, President
IVEY F. Lewis, First Vice-President
J. C Nash, Second Vice-President
R. S. Hutchison, Secretary
J. C. Allison, Treasurer
H. A. Lambeth, Historian
S. P. Fettkr, Prophet
F. I. NiSSEN, Poet
O S. Thompson. Orator
J. H. Alexander, Essayist
J. C. ExuM, Statistician
Alexander, Emory Graham. Chtrlotte Cobb. Edward Barham, Wilson
Alexander, John Howard, Chapel Hill Conley, Ralph Perkins, Lenoir
Allison, James Cumming, Charlotte Cook, James Sion. Stokesdale
Atwater, Carney Bynum, Chapel Hill Crews, William Edward. Germanton
Ballard, David Clark, Louisburg Deaton, Romulus Stevenson, Mooresvi le
Barnhardt, Harold Morton, Pioneer Mills Dowd, Okrin Wesley. Carbrnton
Blue, William Alexander, Aberdeen Duncan, Julius Fletcher, Beaufort
Brem, Tod Robinson, Charlotte Ehringhaus, JohnC. B , Elizabeth City
Brooks. Julius C-^sar, Marshville Elliott, Madison Lee. Cuba
Carr. Albert Marvin, Durham Everett, Simon Justus, Palmyra
Chamberlain, Claude Spencer, Goldsboro Everett, Reuben Oscar, Palmyra
Champion, John Dixon, Chalk Level Exum, Josiah Call, Snow Hill
Cheshire, Joseph Blount, Jr., Raleigh Fetter, Samuel Prichard, Wadesboro
Ford, Edward Stegall, Louisburg
FouST, Thomas Bledsoe, Winston
FowLE, Daniel Gould, Raleigh
Gibson, John Shaw, Adamsville, S. C.
Gibson, Richard Puryear, Concord
Godwin, Robert Linn, Dunn
Goodman, Louis, Wilmington
Gregory, Quentin, Halifax
GuLLEY, Edwin Kerr, Goldsboro
Hadley, Wade Hampton, Siler City
Harris, Frederic Henry, Chapel Hill
Henderson, John Steele, Jr., Salisbury
HiGHSMiTH, Chancy, Maitland
Hogan, Percy Vann, Chapel Hill
Hoover, Aubrey Ramseur, Concord
Humphrey, Clen Simmons, Goldsboro
Hutchison, Robert Stuart, Charlotte
Jacocks, William Picard, Windsor
Johnson Preston Bright, Gift
Johnson, William Theophilus, Concord
■ Kellam. Claude Dolby, Shiloh
Kennedy, Claude Melville, Goldsboro
Kerley, Alonzo Commodore, Morganton
Kerr, Basley Graves, Yanceyville
Kluttz, Whitehead, Salisbury
Kornegay, Henry Arthur, Kenansville
Lambeth, Harvey Allen, Fayetteville
Lewis, Ivey Foreman, Raleigh
LiCHTENTHAELER, ROBERT ARTHUR, Salem
McIver, James Harry, Greensboro
Maddry, Charles Edward, Chapel Hill
Means, Gaston Bullock, Concord
Merritt, Robert Amsei, Chapel Hill
Miller, John Preston, Winston
Mitchell, Louis Philip, Franklinton -
Nash, Joseph Cheshire, Tarboro
NissEN, Fred Irvin. Salem
Oliver, Thomas Clifford, Charlotte
Owen, W^alter Benton, Liberty
Palmer, Charles Christian, Gulf
Peirce, Wentworth Willis, Warsaw
Prior, Warren Stebbins, Jr., Fayetteville
Reynolds, George Lee, Queen
Reynolds, Joseph Roscoe, Ora
Robins, Henry Moring, Asheboro
Sallenger, Edward Duncan, Sans Souci
Smith, James Thomas, Pineville
Stafford, William Paris, Burlington
Stephens, Kemp Battle, Chapel Hill
Stern, David Pony, Scotland Neck
Stevens, Harry Pei-ham, Goldsboro
Stevenson, Reston, Wilmington
Strickland, George Burder, Smithfield
Sutton, William Wallace, Fayetteville
Swain, John Edward, Democrat
Stroud, Thomas Moody, Sanford
Thompson, Oran Stedman, Raleigh
Vann, Aldridge Henley, Franklinton
Walker, Nathan Wilson, Poplar Branch
Whitaker, Vernon Edelen, Raleigh, Tenn.
Whitaker, Spier, Davenport, Iowa
WiLLCOX, John, Carbonton
WiLLCOx, Jesse Womble, Putnam
Williams, Buxton Barker, Ridgeway
Williams, Robert Ransom, Newton
Wood, John Hunter, Wilmington
Woodward, William Sadoc, Raleigh
Worth, Thomas Clarkson, Asheboro
Siref ^cax Optionaf ^tu^cnte
Adams, Thaddeus Awasaw, Finch
BasnighT, Thomas Gray, Scuppernong
Brown, Earl Henderson, Concord
Brown, Jennings Caney, Asheville
Burgess, James Lafayette, Liberty
Calder, James William, Charlotte
Cannon, Claudius Lillingtox, Ayden
Chastian, Rufus Benjamin, Brasstown
Cromer, Clarence Franklin, Winston
Drake, Otis Branch, Washington, D. C.
DuLA, Alfred Wimer, Old Fort
GuLLETT, Benjamin David, Tampa, Fla.
Hill, Ethelbert Lucius, Beaufort
HiNSHAW, George Miller, Winston
Holmes, Andrew Allgood, Atlanta, Ga.
Hunter, Will, Jr., Chapel Hill
IviE, Allan Denny, Lakeville
JOYNER, Edmund Noah, Jr., Columbia
Lynch, James Simpson, Cuba
McGehee, John William, Madison
McIvER, Evan Gordon, Gulf
Matheson, Percy Beverley, Wadsboro
Monroe, Stansbury MarTain, Fayetteville
Nichols, James Thomas, Barnard
Porter, Nathan Anderson, Tarboro
Slate, Jasper Abraham, Mizpah
Wall, Henry Clay, Jr., Rockingham
There are some who strive with manhood zeal
For the ocean's hidden spoil,
And secure their portion, while others near
Sit idly and sigh with many a tear
O'er the fate so fraught with toil.
Less eager now are many hearts,
As duties multiply;
Some, empty-handed, sail for home,
And over the ocean, flecked with foam,
Draw a fisher's dying cry.
-wr- -irr irr
tiaee of 1901
Cofore
MAROON AND GOLD
urrn
^fficetB
J. K. HAiyL, President
E. C. GUDGER, First Vice-Pres.
W. D. PriTchard, Second Vice-Pres.
A. E. WoLTz, Secretary
D. M. SwiNK, Treasurer
P. A. Bryant, Historian
R. O. E. Davis, Prophet
J. E. AvenT, Orator
A. W. Graham, Poet
R S. SatTERFIELd, Essayist
23
Abernathy, CtAUDE Oliver ......... Enfield, N. C
Y. M. C. A.
Alexander, Ebenezer, Jr, 2 A E Chapel Hil', X. C.
Di Society. German Club. Class Treasurer ( i ).
Atkinson, Jasper Sidney ...... . . . Saloani, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A. Historical Society.
AvENT, Joseph Emery .......... Raleigh, X. C.
Phi Society. Class Orator ( 2 ) .
B.\TEMAN, Herbert DalTon ... . .... Plymouth, N. C.
Phi Society.
Battle. William Kemp, S A E, n 2 Raleigh, N. C.
German Club. Scrub Baseball Team (2). Secretary and Treasurer Ttnnis A.ssociation {2).
Bennett, Hugh Hammond ... ..... Wadesboro, N. C.
Di Society.
Bell, Benjamin, Jr. ......... Wilmington, N. C.
Di Society. Press Club. Class Secretary ( i ). Y. M. C. A.
Blackman, Neill Robert Jesup, N. C.
Brooks, Bernard Alexander ........ Nashville, N. C.
Phi Societ}-.
Brooks, Baird Urouhart ......... Nashville, N. C
Phi Society.
Burns, Clarence May ......... Wadesboro, N. C.
Di Society.
Busbee, Philip Hall. Z 4', n Z Raleigh, N. C.
Phi Society. Second Vice-Prgsii^ent of Class ( i).
Bridgers, John Mapleton ......... Hertford, N. C.
Brinn, Rossier Emmett ......... Hertford, N. C.
Phi Society. Class Football Team (2). Y. M. C. A.
Bryant, Pegram Andry ......... Pineville, N. C.
Di Societ}'. Class Historian (2).
Carr, George Augustus ......... Durham, N. C.
Champion, John Dixon ......... Clark Level, N. C.
Clarke, Montague Graham Sandifer, N. C.
Di Society.
Cleveland, Frederick L Chapel Hill, N. C.
Cobb, Palmer, A K E Danville, Va.
Dramatic Club. Chapel Organist.
24
Cobb, Edward Barham Wilson, N. C.
Phi Society.
CoBLri, Charlie Paul Gilmer's Store, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A.
CoNLEv, James Robert Lenoir, N. C.
Di Society.
Copeland, James Watts, Jr., K - E Statesville, N C.
'Varsitj- Football Team (2).
CowPER, Bryan Thurman ......... Gatesville, N. C.
Phi Society.
CowPER. George Vernon, K A . . . . . . . . . Winton, N. C.
Phi Society. Shakespeare Club. Historical Society. Inter-Society Debater (i
and 2). Recording Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. for 1899. Marshal
at Washington's Birthday Exercises (2).
Craven, William Wilhelm ......... Bristow, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team (2).
Crawley, Charley Peyton Morganton, N. C.
Di Society.
Davis, William St. Paul's, N. C.
Historical Society. Class Vice-President (2).
D.AVis, ROYALL O. E Chester, S. C.
Di Society.
Dees, Daniel Alfonso ......... Grantsboro, N. C.
Phi Society.
DORTCH, James Tyson, Z ^, IT 2 Goldsboro, N. C.
Class Football Team (2).
Edwards, Albert Dollie ........ Winston, N. C.
Di Society.
Eskridge, Robert Lee, n K a Shelby, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team ( i and 2).
Everhart, Lawson Anthony ......... Arnold, N. C.
Di Society.
Gibson, William Henry, Z ^, n S Concord, N. C.
Glenn, Chalmers, 2AE Winston, N. C.
Y. M. C. A. Football Team of '00 ( i) .
Gray, Eugene Price Winston, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A.
Gudger, Emmet Carlyle ......... Asheville, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team (i and 2). First Vice-President of Class (2).
Graham, Archibald Wright ........ Charlotte, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team (i and 2).
Graham, David Sloan .......... Charlotte, N. C.
25
Hai,!., James King Dulap, N. C.
Di Society. President of Class (2). Historical Society. Press Association.
Hand, Hubert Walton Belmont, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team ( i and 2).
Hardin, Arthur Worth ......... Sutherland, N. C.
President Inter-Society Debate (2). Di Society. Secretary of Inter-Society Debate ( i ).
Harkins, Thomas Joshua Asheville, N. C.
Di Societ}-. Scrub Baseball Team ( i and 2). Secretary Washington's
Birthday Exercises (2).
Harrington, Wilton Daniel ......... Jesup, N. C.
Harris, John Lory ......... Elizabeth City, N. C.
Phi Society. Class Football Team ( i). Scrub Football Team (2).
HoBBS, Julius Charles .......... Holton, N. C
Phi Society. Class Football Team ( i and 2).
Huhn, John Edward ......... Wilmington, N. C.
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A.
Jarratt, Augustus Henry Mana, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team (i and 2).
Jenkins, Robert Franklin ......... Ayden, N. C.
Phi Societ)'.
Johnson, Lawren Thomas ......... Ingold, N. C.
Phi Society. Inter-Society Debater 12).
Kellam, Claude Dalby ......... Shelby, N. C.
Phi Society.
Kerner, Charles Caleb ........ Kernersville, N. C.
Di Society. Scrub Football Team (2). Scrub Baseball Team (2).
L,YON, Homer Legrande . . . . ... . . Elizabethtown, N. C.
McCanless, Walter Frederick Trinity, N. C.
Di Society. Chapel Hill Choral Society.
McFadyen. Henry Richard . Clarkton, N. C.
McInTosh, Milton Laurinburg, N. C.
McIvER, Claude Robertson ....... Greensboro, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team ( i ) . Scrub Football Team.
McNider, William DeBerniere ....... Chapel Hill, N. C.
McLamb, Joel Robert ......... Orange, N. C.
Phi Society.
McLean, Alexander Purcel • Laurinburg, N. C.
McRae, Cameron, ATfl Chapel Hill, N. C.
Class Football Team (i). Scrub Football Team (2).
Makely, Metrah, Jr., A KE, n 2 Edenton, N. C.
German Club. Scrub Football Team (2). President of Class (i ). Class Football Team (i).
26
Martin, Joseph Bonaparte, A K p] Chapel Hill, N. C.
Scrub Football Team (i ). Captain of Scrubs (2). Sub (Juarter Back 'Varsity (2).
Class Prophet ( i).
MizELL, William Henderson Jamesville, N- C.
Phi Society.
Murphy, William Alexander, S X Morganton, N. C.
Di Society.
Murray, Hugh Hargrave Wilson, N. C.
Neal, Alexander Weldon, A K E Scotland Neck, N. C.
German Club.
Newby, Gerald Bruce, * A e Hertford, N. C.
Manager of Class Football Team ( 2 )
Ottinger, Charles Albert Asheville, N. C.
Captain of Class Football Team (2). Quarter Back Class Football Team (11.
Shortstop Class Team (i).
Patterson, Lemuel Bruce Troutman, N. C.
Di Society.
Philips, Joseph Battle Battlesboro, N. C.
Plummer, John Franklin Archdale, N. C.
Scrub Football Team (i and 2).
Porter, Robert Edwin Greensboro, N. C
Di Society.
Post, James Francis, Jr., K A Wilmington, N. C
Y. M. C. A.
Pritchard, William Douglas Marshall, N. C.
Di Society. First Vice-President of Class (2).
Reynolds, Abram David, Jr. ........ Bristol, Tenn.
Class Baseball Team (i).
Reynolds, John Asheville, N. C.
Di Society.
Riddick, William James Gatesville, N. C.
RiDDiCK, William Mills Gatesville, N. C.
Rogers, Shober Justin Deerfield, N. C.
Di Society. Historical Societ)-. Class Statistician (2).
Root, Aldert Smedes, Z ^, n S Raleigh, N. C.
Class Poet (i).
RiERSON, Frank Clayton Winston, N. C,
Di Society.
Sadler, Frank Lee Sandifer, N. C.
Di Society.
Satterfield, Robert Samuel Mt. Airy, N. C.
Di Society. Class Essayist (2). Y. M. C. A. Historical Society.
27
Shore, Clarence Albert Salem, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A. Shakespeare Club.
Skinner. Benjamin Smith ......... Hertford, N. C-
Phi Society. Scrub Baseball (i).
Speas, Wesley Bethel Vienna, N. C.
Di Society.
St. Clair, David L Sanford. N. C
Stevens, George Phifer Monroe, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A. Scrub Baseball Team (2).
Stevens, Luke Learv Shiloh, N. C.
Phi Societ}-. Historical Society.
Stokes, John Frank Greenville, N. C.
Swain, Thomas Lee Bay, N. C.
Di Societ}-.
Swift, Wiley Hampton Amatha, N. C.
Di Society.
Swink. David Maxwell ......... Winston, N. C.
Di Society. Class Treasurer (2).
Tart, Braston Isaiah Blackman's Mills, N. C
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A. Secretary Inter-Society Debate (2).
Taylor, Edmund Brodie, A T S2 Townesville, N. C.
Thigpen, Kenneth Bayard Conetoe, N. C.
Phi Society.
Thompson, Dorman Steele Statesville, N. C.
Di Society. Inter-Society Debater (2).
TuRRENTiNE, John William Burlington, N. C.
Di Society.
Webb, John Stanford, A K E Bell Buckle, Tenn.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A.
Webb, Brown Ruffin, Z '4' ........ . Hillsboro, N. C.
Webb, Joseph Cheshire, Z 'I' Hillsboro, N. C.
Weil, Herman . Goldsboro, N. C.
Phi Society.
Whitehead, William Bynum, S A E, n 2 Wilson, N. C.
Assistant Manager of U. N. C. B. B. T. German Club. Class Essayist (i).
Manager of Class Team (i).
Willis, Emmet Clive Germanton, N. C.
Di Society.
WoLTz, Albert Edgar Dobson, N. C.
Di Society. Class Secretary (2). Inter-Society Debater (2). Class Football
Team (2). Historical Society.
Wray, Franklin Stough, n K A Shelby, N. C.
Class Team (i).
28
Ciaee of 1900
About their craft the damp fog rolls,
By the blast of the east wind brought;
The many voices of ocean speak,
In shriller tones; and the storm-winds shriek
With fearful menace fraught.
Cofore
WHITE AND OLD GOLD
3unior "^car
And yo he ho is different cry
In a tempest far from the lee;
No charge of course will now avail;
The anchor must hold, or with tattered sail,
They are lost in the angry sea.
^eff
A NOCTE AD LICEM
(From darkness to light)
Zip! ro! ya! ha!
Zip! ro! ya!
1900!
Car-o-li-na!
Officers
N. E. Ward, President
D. P. Parker, First Vice-President
G. N. Coffey, Secretary
J. W. Greening, Treasurer,
C. F. HoEivL, Historian
T. T. Allison, Essayist
A. J. Barwick, Orator
R. W. Boyd, Poet
W. E. Hearn, Statistician
29
^ietox]^ of 1900
HE third year of our college life will soon
draw to a close, as all pleasant things do
sooner or later. In the beginning we viewed
it with fear and trembling, realizing full well
the difficulties of overcoming the two " bug-
bears " of a Junior's life. But now many(?)
are happier, having overcome these two by
their valor-
The
class
entered with its
ranks somewhat thinned, but those
who did return entered with a
determination to do their duty
manfully and to uphold the record
of their class as they had done in
the past.
This year, as for the past two
years, she has taken an important
part in the athletic life of the Uni-
versity, furnishing manj^ star play-
ers, both to the football and base-
ball teams, though for some reason
no class team was put in the field
this season.
Soon we will enter upon our
our last stage of college life. May
we gird ourselves to the contest
and leave a record for scholarship
and manliness which few can equal
and none excel.— Class Historian,
30
00.
^tatxeticB of CPaae of 1900
VXJXJ
Adams, Stonewall Jackson ......... Raleigh, N. C.
Di Society. Class Baseball Team (i and 2). Class Football Team (i and 2).
Allison, Thomas Tillett Charlotte, N. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A. Class Essayist ( 3 ) . Representative Speaker (3).
Anderson, Halcott, 2 A E, n S . . . . . . . Pensacola, Fla.
Gimghoul. Y. M. C. A. Class Prophet { i ) . Glee Club (i). Secretary of
Y. M. C. A. (2). President of Class (2). Vice-President
of Y. M. C. A. (3).
Anderson, Thomas Jackson Calahan, N- C.
Di Society.
AsBURY, Joseph Jennings, * A 9 . Charlotte, N. C.
Tennis Association.
Barwick, Allen Jackson . ........ Grifton, N. C.
Phi Society. Treasurer Y. M. C. A. (3). Class Orator (3). Assistant Business
Manager Tar Heel (3). Representative Speaker (3).
Bennett, Frank, Jr., Z ^ ........ Wadesboro, N. C.
Di Society. Right Tackle 'Varsity Football Team (i, 2 and 3). Class Baseball
Team ( r and 2). Second Vice-President of Class (i). Right
Tackle All-Southern Football Team.
Berkeley, Alfred Rives .......... Atlanta, Ga.
Di Society. S A E. Gimghoul. Y. M. C. A. Dramatic Club (i and 2).
Treasurer German Club ( 3) . Class Football Team f 2 ) . Scrub Football
Team {3). Assistant Manager of 'Varsity Football Team (3).
Secretary of Inter-Society Debate (2). Repre-
sentative Speaker (3 ). Shakespeare
Club.
Bernard, Wm. S., * A 0 Greenville, N. C.
Phi Society. Magazine Editor. Orator Washington's Birthday.
Bitting, Alexander Thomas, S A E Winston, N. C.
Di Society. Manager Class Football Team (2). Class Baseball Team (2).
Secretary Class (2).
Boyd, Robert W ...... .• Waynesville, N. C.
• Class Poet (3).
Branch, Lester VanNoy, A © <I> Brooklyn, N. Y.
Honors (i). Mandolin Club (i).
31
Bryan, William Frank, Z ^, A 0 $ Goldsboro, N. C.
Phi Society. Gimghoul. Highest Class Honors ( i). President of Class ( i).
Manager Class Base Ball Team (2). Editor and Chief Business
Manager Hellenian (3).
Byerly, Thomas Jefferson Yadkin College, N. C.
Di. Society.
Cates, Alonzo Enoch Swepsonville, N. C.
Di. Society. Y. M. C. A. Annual Debater (3). Magazine Editor (3).
Chadbourn, George, A T fi Wilmington, N. C.
Phi Society. German Club. Sub-Marshal Commencement '99. Y. M.C. A.
Cheatham, Thaddeus Ainsley, a T li Henderson N. C.
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A. Class Baseball Team (i and 2). Class Statistician (2).
Sub-Marshal Commencement '99.
Coffey, George Nelson .... Patterson, N. J.
Di Society. Secretary of Class (3). Y. M. C. A. Inter-Society Debater (3).
Representative Speaker (3).
Collins, Henry Whitaker, K S Enfield, N. C.
Phi Society. Class Essayist (i). Hqrner School Club. Class Baseball Team (i).
Captain Class Baseball Team (2).
CowLES, Henry Clay, Jr., 2 A E, n S Statesville, N. C.
Gorgan's Head. Mandolin Club (i). Secretary of German Club (2 and 3).
Class Poet (2). Leader October German (3). Class Baseball Team
(i and 2). U. N. C. Orchestra (2). Shakespeare Club.
Manager of Dramatic Club (3).
Curtis, Nathaniel Cortlandt, A T 12 vSouthport. N. C.
Phi Society. Shakespeare Club. Hellenian Editor ( 3 ) . U. N. C Orchestra ( 2 ) .
Historical Society (3).
Curtis, Walter Clarence, A T 12 Southport, N. C.
Phi Society. Shakespeare Club.
Gant, Joseph Erwin Burlington, N. C.
Di Society. Class Football Team (2). Scrub Football Tram (3). Sub-Marshal
Commencement '99.
Graves, Ernest, Z 4', 11 z;, a 0 * Chapel Hill, N. C.
Gimghoul. Scrub Baseball Team (i). 'Varsity Baseball Team (2). 'Varsity Foot-
ball Team (2 and 3). Honors ( I ).
Greening. John Wesley Harrellsville, N. C.
Phi Society. Honors (i). Class Treasurer (3). Inter-Society Debater ( 3).
Harris, Isaac Foust, * A e Chapel Hill, N. C.
Di Society. Dramatic Club (1,2 and 3). Ball Manager Com.mencement '99.
Hearn, Williamson Edward Chapel Hill, N. C.
Di Society. Class Baseball Team ( i and 2). Class Statistician (3). Sub-Marshal
Commencement '99.
32
Hinsdale, John Wktmore, /^ ^' ....... . Raleigh, N. C.
Phi Society. Honors (i).
HoHi.L, Charles Fr.\nki,in Aurora, N. C.
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A. Class Historian (3).
HoLLOWELL, Frank Whitelv EHzabeth City, X. C
Phi Society. Shakespeare Club.
Hopper, Allen Taylor Leaksville, X. C.
Di Society.
Jones, Thaddeus Winfield, Jr., S X, 9 \ E Acton, X. C.
Y. M. C. A. Class Football Team (2). Scrub Football Team (3). Editor
Hellenian (3). Sub-Marshal Commencement '99. Gorgan's Head.
Latham, Miss Maracia Louise Plymouth, X C.
Lewis, Kemp Plummer, Z ^, n S, A e *, 6 N E Raleio-h, X. C.
Gorgan's Head. German Club. Honors ( i ). Secretary of Class. Class Baseball
Team (rand 2). Class Tennis Champion ( i ). Vice-President
of Tennis Association.
Lockhart, James A., JR Wadesboro, X. C.
Di Society.
Lynch, James Madison ... Fairview, X. C.
Di Society. Class Baseball Team (i and 2). Class Football Team ( r and 2).
McEachern, RoBT. Alexander, w X Lumber Bridge, X. C.
Y. M. C. A. Track Team (i and 2).
Massey, James Buckner Fort Mills, S. C.
Di Society. Y. M. C. A.
Miller. Claude Lee, iika Shelby, X. C.
Y. M. C. A. Honors (i).
Moore, John Augustus, A K E, n S, e N E . . . . . Littleton, X. C
Phi Society. Gimghoul. Horner Club. German Club. Class Historian (2).
Sub Ball Manager Commencement '98. Floor Manager October
German (3). Chief Marshal Commencement '99.
Xevillh, Ernest Long Chapel Hill, X. C
Di Society. 'Varsity Foot Ball Team(i). Sub-Marshal Commencement '99.
Parker, David Preston A 6 <!> . . . . . . . Benson, X. C.
Phi Society. Inter-Society Debater (2). Honors (i). First Vice-President Class
(3). Annual Inter-Society Debater (3). Editor of Jar Heel (3).
Representative Speaker (3).
PtCKARD, Marvin .Alfred Chapel Hill, X. C.
Scrub Foot Ball Team ( i and 2).
Reynolds, Henry . . Winston, X. C.
Di Society. Iiiter-Society Debater (2).
33
Rice, Thomas Donneli^y Sydney, Fla'
Di Society.
Rose, Charles Grandison, K S Fayetteville, N. C.
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A. Shakespeare Club.
Taylor, Willi.a.m Franklin Norfolk, Va.
Thompson, Charles Everett Elizabeth City, N. C.
Phi Society. Y. M. C. A.
Ward, Needham Erastus Wilson, N. C.
Phi Society. President of Class (3). Representative Speaker (3).
Watkins, Fonso Butler Rutherfordton, N. C.
Di Society. Shakespeare Club.
Wharton, William Gilmer, - A E) Greensboro, N. C.
Di Society.
Wilson, Henry Evan Davis Chapel Hill, N. C.
Dialectic Society. Y. M. C. A.
Woodard, Graham, K S, II 2, 6 N E Wilson. N. C.
Gorgan's Head. Manager Class Football Team (1). Captain Class Football
Team (2). Class Orator (1). Scrub Baseball Team ( i ). 'Varsity
Baseball Team (2). Editor Hellenian (2 and 3). Vice-
President German Club (3V Dramatic Club (3).
Floor Managi r October German ( 3 ).
W godson Charles W Salisbury, N. C.
The season ends and the fisher folk Of the sun-lit fleet which gathered anon
Sail away for home on the main ; Where the nameless currents flow-
But a storm-tried few have weathered the gales Not all have equal profit, but he
Which have tested the strength of hull and sails Who has toiled may say farewell to the sea
In the struggle with death for gain. With a happy yo he ho !
Officers
W. S. Crawford, First Vice-President
J. S. Carr, Jr., President
J. Ed Latta, Historian
T. C. Bowie, Orator
Poet
W. E. Cox, Statistician
J. L. McFadvex, Secretary -Treasurer II. B. Holmes, Prophet
.^5
Senior Cfaee J^xetox^
OMMENCEMENT DAY is coming again and soon
another class is to be graduated from the Uni-
versity— the Class of Ninety-nine. Hard though
it may be for us to realize this fact, it is never-
theless true that for most us college life is rapidly
drawing to a close. For nearly four j-ears we
have trod the scholastic road whose end is now in
view. While for some of us this journey has been weary plodding, many
others, to whom it has been easier, have had time to pause here and there,
and erect monuments to University of North Carolina and Ninety-nine.
The history of Ninety- nine would fill many times the space here allotted,
and an abler hand than ours would be needed to write it. The historian
can but say a few words concerning the achievements of his class.
In numbers, our class is one of the largest that has ever been graduated
from the University; and we can say, without boasting, that no class has
ever been more thoroughly representative of the best manhood of this and
other States
In every phase of college life we have been well represented.
In social circles Ninety-nine is a star of the first magnitude.
In athletics we have done our part. The president
of the Athletic Association at this time is of our num-
ber, and through his efforts much has been done toward
promoting the athletic interests of the University. Though
we may not have had so many men on the football team
as other classes have, for the last two j'ears we have
given them one of the best managers they have ever had.
In man}' other ways, too, did we help win the champion-
ship of the South in the football season of ninety-eight.
Concerning our record in baseball, nothing more ^s^»<s-j
need be said than that Carolina's great first baseman,
37
who for two years has been captain of the team, is a mem-
ber of the Class of Ninety-nine, and that the manager of
this year's team belongs to us also.
In scholarship Ninety- nine will compare favorably with
any class that has been graduated from the University within
many years. In our Junior year, however, many of us —
but no more on this subject. For further information the
reader is referred to the professors of psychology and junior
physics.
In addition to social, athletic and scholarly attainments,
the opinion seems to have prevailed that we have a decided
taste for art, and that we have manifested considerable skill
in that direction. Though there is no proof at all conclusive
that we painted the blackboards in certain recitation rooms,
being Sophomores when the painting was done, we came in
for a large share of the credit. While this display of artistic
talent did not result in the establishment of a department for instruction in
art, the damage fee was instituted to encourage ( ? ) any who might after-
ward feel disposed to engage in painting or similar pursuits.
And now, as a last word, let it be said again that ours is a class to be
a member of which any man could well afford to be proud. And though we
are soon to be parted, Ninety- nine is not to be disbanded, for a common love
for Alma Mater will always bind our hearts together, and for years to come
we will be, as we now are, the Class of Ninety nine.
Historian.
Cfa^0 of '99
u u u .
CofoxB
WHITE AND GREEN
Hullabaloo ! belie beline !
Hullabaloo ! belie beline !
Hullabaloo! N. C. U.!
Ninety-nine !
PER ASPERA AD ASTRA
(Through diffieulties to glory)
^onoxB
Alston, Chari.es Skinner, A K E, 0 X E, n 2 Littleton, N. C,
Gorgon's Head. German Club. Captain " Scrub" Baseball Team '97. Class
Champion Tennis '97. Ball Manager '99. Secretary and Treasurer General
Athletic Association '99. President Tennis Club '99.
Askew, Edward Stephenson, * A G Windsor, N. C.
Glee Club (i, 2, 3). Treasurer Press Club (3). Editor Hellenfan (3).
Declaimer's Medal (2). Historical Society. Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Bellamy, Marsden, Jr., S A E, n 2, AG <I> Wilmington, N. C.
Gorgon's Head. Honors (i, 2). Ball Manager Commencement '97. President
Wilmington Club (2). German Club. Horner School Club. Stage Manager
Dramatic Club (4). Editor and Business Manager Hellenian (4). Editor-in-
Chief Tar Heel {&,). Shakespeare Club.
Bowie, Thomas Contee Obids, N. C.
Historical Society. Class Orator (2). Inter-Society Debater (2, 3). Declaimer's
Medal (2). Representative Speaker (3). Georgia Debater (4). Class Orator (4).
Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Broadhurst, Edgar David ........ Goldsboro, N. C.
Class Prophet (i). Manager Class Baseball Team (3). On Committee to
receive Georgia Debaters (3). Representative Speaker (3). Assistant Manager
of Tar Heel (3). Georgia Debater.
39
Brown, Charles Connor Cottenwood, N. C.
Class Football Team (3). Debater's Medal (3).
BuNN, James Philips, 2AE Rocky Mount, N. C.
German Club. Class Football Team (3). Sub-Ball Manager '98.
Buxton, Cameron Belo, 2 A E, n S, e N E Winston, N. C.
Gorgon's Head. Vice President German Club (3). Floor Manager October
German '97. "Scrub" Football Team (2). Ball Manager Commencement '98.
Substitute on 'Varsity Football Team '97. German Club (4 ); Football Team (3) (4).
Caldwell, Julius Alexander, Jr., II Z, e N E, 2 N . . . Salisbury, N. C.
Glee and Mandolin Clubs (2). Class Poet ( i). German Club. Assistant
Manager Baseball Team (3). Editor and Business Manager Hellenian (3).
Sub-Ball Manager. Editor Tar Heel (4).
Canada, Charles Stafford Summerfield, N. C.
"Scrub" Football Team {2). Y. M. C A. Shakespeare Club.
Carr, John Robert, Z ^, e N E, II 2, A e * Durham, N. C.
Gimghoul. German Club. Sub Marshall Commencement '98. Highest
Honors (i) (2). Captain and Catcher Class Baseball Team (i) (2) (3) Dramatic
Club. Shakespeare Club. Horner School Club. Advisory Committee (4). Man-
ager 'Varsity Baseball Team (4). President A 0 4>.
Carr, Julian Shakespeare, Jr., Z ^, O N E, n 2 . . . Durham, N. C.
Gimghoul. German CluD. Class Baseball Team (2). Secretary and Treasurer
Horner School Club. Class Historian (3). Y. M. C. A. President General Ath-
letic Association (4). President Class (4).
CoKER, Francis William, 2 N Darlington, S. C.
Glee Club (2). Y. M. C. A. Shakespeare Club.
Connor, Robert Diggs Wimberly, 2 A E Wilson, N C.
Editor Tar Heel (3). Editor yl/a^a^'/;/^ (3). Editor and Business Manager
Hellenian (3). Inter-Society Debater (3). Representative Speaker from Phi
Society Commencement '98. Y. M. C. A. Editor-in Chief Tar Heel (4). Gor-
gon's Head.
Cox, William Edward ......... Coxville, N. C.
Inter-Society Debater (2). Class Football Team (3). Treasurer Y. M. C A.
Editor Tar Heel (3, 4). Representative Speaker from Phi Society Commence-
ment'98. Business Manager Magazine (4). Class Statistician (4). Assistant in
Physics (4). Shakespeare Club.
40
CoxE, Fred Jackson, * A B . . . . . . . Lilesville, N. C.
Second Vice-President Class (3). Shakespeare Club. Historical Society.
Y. IM. C. A. Sub-End 'Varsity Football Team '97. Sub-Half-back '98. Editor
and Business Manager Hellenian '99. Assistant Librarian.
Crawford, John Gurney .... . .... Graham, N. C.
Y. M. C. A.
Crawford, Walter Scott ......... Leer, N. C.
Scrub Football Team (4). Vice-President Class (4). Editor Tar Heel (4).
Shakespeare Club (4). Y. M. C. A.
Davis, Harvey Lewis . . . High Point, N. C.
'Varsity Baseball Team (2). Class Football Team (2, 3). Class Statistician (21.
Davis, Robert Greene, A T 0 . . . . Henderson, N. C
German Club. Class Football Team (2, 3 ). Class Statistician 12).
Denson, Claude Baker, Jr., Ben, AG* Raleigh, N. C.
Honors ( i, 2). Essayist Class (2). Treasurer Class (31. Shakespeare Club.
Raleigh Club. Editor Hellenian. Editor Magazine ( 4^-
Donnelly, John, 4> A e, A 0 4> Charlotte, N. C.
Honors (2). Second Vice-President Class ( 2). First Vice-President Class ( 3).
Class Baseball Team (2). Class Football Team (3). Sub-Marshal Commence-
ment '98. Y. M. C. A. Shakespeare Club. Editor Magazine (4). Scrub Base-
ball Team ( 3). Scrub Football Team (4).
Dougherty, B. B Boone, N. C.
Y'. M. C. A.
DoziER, Jesse Knight, AG* Conetoe, N. C.
Honors (i). Sub-Marshal Commencement '98. Glee Club (2). Instructor
in Physics (4).
Greenfield, John M., Kernersville, N. C.
Graduate Guilford College '98. Inter-Society Debater (4). Y. M. C. A.
Grimes, Junius Daniel, Z ^, II S Grimesland, N. C.
Class Essayist (3). German Club. Historical Society. Shakespeare Club.
Sub-Marshal '98. Leader February German. Chief Ball Manager for Commence-
ment '99. Assistant Librarian.
Hardini;, Henry Patrick, 2) A E, A G * . . . . . Greenville, N. C.
Y. M. C. A. Class Orator ( i, 2). Honors ( i ). Treasurer Shakespeare Club
(4). Editor Magazine ( 4 ) • President of Washington's Birthday Celebration 14).
President of Inter-Society Debate (4).
41
Harris, Charles FousT, Falkland, N. C.
Class Football Team ( i ). High Vault Medal (2).
Hartley, Eugene Fuller, Tyro Shops, N. C.
Shakespeare Club.
Hewitt, Joseph Henry Mapleton, Va.
Y. M. C. A.
Holmes, Howard Braxton, ........ Franklinton, N. C.
Editor Magazine (4). Class Prophet (41. Shakespeare Club. V. M. C. A.
Hume, ThoxMAS, Jr., A K E Chapel Hill, N. C.
Class Football Team (2, 3 ). Sub-Marshal Commencement '98. Shakespeare
Club.
Jones, Virgil LUSKE . . . . • Jonesboro, Tenn.
Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
KiTTRELL, Robert Gilliam, <J> A 0 Kittrell, N. C.
Honors (I ). Class Football Team (r, 2). Class Orator (i). Class Historian (2).
Historical Society. Y. M. C. A.
KluTTz, Warren Law.son, 4> r A, O N E, n 2 Salisbury, N C.
Gimghoul. Vice-President ( i ). President Class (2). Scrub Football Team (2).
Manager Class Baseball Team (2). Manager and Right-End 'Varsity Football
Team (3). Manager 'Varsity Football Team (4). Floor Manager February Ger-
man '98. Sub-Ball Manager Commencement (3). German Club. Horner School
Club. Athletic Advisory Committee (3). Editor Hellenian (2, 3). Marshal
Inter-Society Debate (1). Sub-End Football Team '98.
Land, Edward Mayo, K A, 0 N E, n :: Littleton, N. C.
Gorgon's Head. German Club. Class Treasurer (i, 2).
Lane, Benjamin Benson, Jr., Chapel Hill, N. C.
Honors (2). Class Football Team (3). Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Declaimer's Medal Phi Society (3). Scrub Football Team (4). Inter-Society
Debater (4).
Latta, James Edward Durham, N. C.
Honors (2). University Press Club. Class Historian (4).
LocKETT, Everett Augustine, 22 A E Winston, N. C.
Shakespeare Club. vSecretary U. N. C. Press Club. Manager Class Football
Team (3). Y. M. C. A. Dramatic Club. President Medical Class '00.
42
London, Henry Mauger, 2 A E Pitt«»boro, N. C.
Vice-President U. N. C. Press Club (41. V. M. C. A. German Club. Sec-
retary Inter-Society Debate (2). Assistant in Geological Laboratory ( 3, 4 )• Tar
Heel Editor (3, 4) Secretary Historical Society Ul- Editor Magazine (4).
Shakesi)eare Club.
McFadyen, John McLaughlin Raeford, N. C.
Class Football Team ( 3 ). Shakespeare Club. Class Officer.
MiLT.ER, Alex. Cunton, :f: A E, II 2 Winston, N. C.
Class Baseball Team (2). WinsLon-Salem Club.
Osborne, Francis Moore. A K E Charlotte, N. C
Scrub Football Team (2). Sub 'Varsity Football Team (3, 4). Sub-
Marshall Commencement '9S. Track Team (2, 3). Class Essayist (3). Gimghoul.
Business Manager Tar Heel (4). Editor Magazine (4). Editor-in-Chief Hel-
LENiAN '99. Washington Birthday Orator (4). Assistant in Mathematics (4).
Y. M. C. A. Shakespeare Club.
Patterson, Edmund Vogler, ::: A E, e N E, n 2 . . . . Winston, N. C.
Gimghoul, Mandolin and Banjo Clubs (i). Leader Mandolin Club {2). Class
Football Team (2|. German Club. U. N. C. Orchestra. Chief Marshall Com-
mencement'98. Vice-President General Athletic Association (4). Assistant in
Chemical Laboratory (4). Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. Shakespeare
Club. Y. M. C. A.
Pearson, Thomas Gilbert Archer, Fla.
Class Football Team (3 ). Graduate Guilford College B. S. '97. Inter-Society
Debater (3). Representative Speaker from the Li Society (3). Editor Maga-
zine (3). President Y. M. C. A. Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society. Editor of
Magazine (4). Corresponding Secretary Y. M. C. A. (31. Assistant Curator of
Museum.
Reaves, S. W Marion, S. C.
Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
SiTTERSON, Joseph Murden, Jr Williamston, N. C.
Shakespeare Club. Historical Society. Y. M. C. A. Inter-Society Debater 13).
ViCK, George Davis, K A, e N E, n 2 Selma, N. C.
Gorgon's Head. President Class ( 3 |. Class Baseball Team i 1,2). Manager
Class Baseball Team ( i ). Editor and Business Manager Hellenian (3). Assist-
ant Manager Dramatic Club. Treasurer German Club. Floor Manager October,
'97, and February, '98, Germans. Ball Manager Commencement '98. Horner
School Club. Shakespeare Club. President German Club. Scrub Baseball
Team (3, 4). Manager Dramatic Club '98-'99.
43
Wagstaff, Henry McGilbert .... ... Olive Hill, N. C.
Class Football Team (3 I. Editor 7"rtr //if^/ (4). Shakespeare Club.
Watson, Henry Legare, K A . . . . Phoenix, S. C.
U. N. C Press Club. Editor Hellenian. Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Wii.soN, L. R. ...•••••■•■ . Lenoir, N. C
Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Wilson, William Sidney ......... Gatewood, N. C.
Class Football Team ( 2, 3). Historical Society. Inter-Society Debater (2).
Manager U. N. C. Magazine (3). Editor-in-Chief Magazine (4). President
Press Club (4). Shakespeare Club. Y. M. C. A.
Winston, Robert Alonza, * A 0 . . . . . . . Franklinton, N. C.
"Varsity Baseball Team ( i, 2). Captain 'Varsity Baseball Team (3, 4).
Captain Class Football Team (2, 3, 4). Sub-Marshall Commencement '98.
Member Advisory Committee. Shakespeare Club.
Wood, Edward Jenner ......... Wilmington, N. C.
German Club. Assistant in Biology 'gy-'gg. Chief Marshall Commencement
'97. Historical Society. EHsha Mitchell Scientific Society. Shakespeare Club.
Y. M. C. A.
Woodson, Ernest Horatio ........ Salisbury, N. C.
Class Baseball Team ( i, 2). Scrub Baseball Team (^3, 4).
44
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Ahern, Katharine Cecilia, First Year HartTord, Conn.
A. B., ( Smith College I iSgS. German, Latin, Pedagogy.
Canada, John William, Second Year .......
A. B , 1896. English, Greek, German.
CuRRiE, Daniel Johnson, Second Year ......
A. M., 1897. English, Greek, Pedagogy.
CuRRiE, William Pink.nev Martin, First Year
A. B , 1894.. Greek, Pedagogy, Philosophy. Non-resident.
Gregory, Edwin Clark, Third Year .......
A. B.. 1896. English, Latin, History.
Chapel Hill.
Chapel Hill.
Raeford.
Halifax.
Chapel Hill.
Henderson, Archib.\ld, First Year .......
A. B., 1S9S. Instructor in Mathematics. Mathematics, French, Latin.
Hornky, William Johnston, Second Year ...... Greensboro.
A. B., 1897. English, Latin, Greek.
Howell. Edward Vernon, Second Year ...... Chapel Hill.
A. B., (Wake Forest College) 1S92. Ph. G., (Philadelphia College of
Pharmac}' ) 1891. Professor of Pharmacy. Chemistry, Botany, Mineralogy.
Kendrick, Mary Pearson, First Year Boston, Mass.
A. B., (Smith College) 1S98. Greek, Latin, Pedagogy.
May, Samuel, Second Year Chapel Hill.
A. B., (Harvard) 1896. Instructor in IModern Languages. French, German,
English.
Slade, William Bonner, Second Year ...... Columbus, Ga.
A. B., iSSo. Latin, French, Political Science. Non-resident.
Webb, John Frederick, First Year ........ Crisp.
A. B., 1898. Greek, Latin, German. Non resident.
Whitener, Robert Vance, Second Year ....... Hickory.
A. B., 1897. English, Latin. Non-resident.
Wilson, Nathan Hunt Daniel, Second Year ..... Chapel Hill.
A. B., 1886. B. D., ( Vanderbilt University ) 1890. Greek, English, Philosophy.
-^x.
47
^oung Babies (pursuing ^^ubtee at t^c QXnmxext^
Katharine Cecilia Ahern 55 Sigourney Street, Hartford, Conn.
A. B., 189S, Smith College, Northampton, Mass. Applying for A. M.
Marv Pearson Kendrick . . . 83 Elm Street (Jamaica Plain ), Boston, Mass.
A. B., 1S9S, Smith College, Northampton, INIass. Applying for A. M.
Bessie STaeEV Franklinton, N. C.
A. B., 189S, Elon College. Senior Class, A. B.
Marcia Louise Lathaji Plymouth, N. C.
Norfolk College for Young Ladies. Junior Class, Ph. B.
Bessie WhiTaker • Raleigh, N. C.
North Carolina State Normal and Industrial School. Graduate Course.
Susan William Moses Raleigh, N. C.
South Carolina State Normal. Optional Course.
Alice Jones Goldsboro, N. C.
Norfolk College for Young Ladies. Optional Course.
Hanna F. Crawley Adriance, Va.
-Danville College. Optional Course.
Angela Be.^trice Ahern • • • • 55 Sigourney Street, Hartford, Conn.
Burnham School, Northampton, Mass. Optional Course.
u u u
E. C. Gregory
P. C. Whitlock
E. J. Barnes .
J. E. Little .
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Historian
-WT- -vr- if^
(^nitjcreifi? (Jltoot Court
J. C. Biggs, Ph. B
J. D. Parker
E. B. Grantham
R. B. Morrison
R. T. Poole .
Judge
Associate Justice
. Solicitor
Clerk
. Sheriff
49
QtubmtB in Batt?
CuNiNGHAM, Herbert Banatine Shtll, Samuel Eakin
Reynolds, William Avres A.B.,t Smith, Daniel Westley
(Princeton I 1897 Wetmore, Silas McBee
Siref ^tax
Adickes, Henning Frederick, Jr.! Koehler, Herman Jules
Alexander, Thomas W. Koonce, Elijah MuRRiLLf
Allsbrook, Richard Gold, A. B., JS96J Little, Judge ELDERf
Askew, Edward Stevenson Luther, Charles TuRNERt
Baker, William A. MacAllister, John David
Barnes, Elijah Jesse! McCall, Joseph Herbert
Best, Benjamin Claude MacLean, Angus Dnut
Blair, David Hunt, A.B.,t McNinch, Frank R._
(Haverford College) 1891 McRae, Cameron Farouhar, jR.f
Buxton, Samuel Roland, A.B.,t MacRae, James C, Jr.
(Wake Forest College) 1S95 Mason, William Wallace
Cantwell, William Lt Miller, Bachman Brown
Carver, Flemiel OscARf Morrison, Robert Brucei
Cobb, John Walter Newell, John Franklin
Cole, Willis Westbrook Parker, Jamks Daniel, Ph. B., iSgSJ
Connor, Henry Groves, Jr., S.B., 1897! Patterson, Adolphus Sherman
Cook, John Henry! Phifer, Isaac Avery
Cox, Walter Oscar! Poole, Robert Terrill, A.B.,;
Cox, William Gaston! (Trinity College), 1898
Cranor, Hugh Armfieldj Pugh, James Thomas, A. M., 1894!
Curtis, Zeb Frasier, A. M.,! A. M., (Harvard) 1896
(Trinity College) Roberson, Wescott A.B., iS96t
Barden, William Edward, A. M., 1896! Rodman, Whey Croom
Freeman, Richard Columbus Ruffin, Thomas, LL. M.,t
Fuller, Jones; ( Georgetown University ), 1897
Gallaway. John Marion, Jr. Russell, David Lester
Grantham, Elonzo BowdenJ Siler, Walter Davis
Gregory, Edwin Clark, A.B., 1896; Spence. John Brantly
Hill. Walter Liddell! Tomlinson Charles Fawcett, Ph.B.,
Howard, William Stamps, Litt. B., 1S97 ! 1895!
Hurley, Riley Thomas, Ph., B., ! Turlington, Zebulon Vance
(Elon College), 1894 Warren, Thomas Davis!
Kelley, Benjamin Franklin Weatherly, J. M.!
Kelly, Samuel Lvin! Whitlock, Paul Cameron, S.B.,
Kluttz, Theodore Franklin, Jr. 189S, i
White, James Albert Wilson, John Nelson X Woodson, Walter Henderson S.B. 1896 !
t In attendance at both sessions. t At summer session only.
50
QYlebtcal thee of '00
Cfa00 Coforg
ORANGE AND BLACK
Tempus fugit, corpe diem
€t(xBB Officers
^r' Everett A. Lockett, President
J. R. Paddison. Vice-President
S. R. Stalev, Secretary and Treasurer
Jas. W. Peacock, Historian
W. K. Lane, Surgeon
F. Baggett, Assistant Surgeon
F. J. Cook, Statistician
R. V. Brawley, Prophet
(mebicaf €fa00 of '99
tr u tJ
R. S. Cromartie, President
W. F. Hargrove, Vice-President
D. Thompson, Secretary and Treasurer
W. H. Bynum, Historian
E. J. Wood, Statistician
H. H. Kapp, Surgeon
J. I. HocuTT, Prophet
51
€fa00(Roffof^OO
urru
Ben. T. Atkins, Tro}- F. Baggett, Lydia B. F. Bomes, Elm City
R. H. Bellamy, Wilmington R. V. Brawley, Mooresville
Walter Brem, Jr. Charlotte J. W. Calder, Charlotte
F. J. Cook, Louisburg C. L. Duncan, Beaufort
E. S. English, Brevard W. R. Galey, Graham
Chas. E. Houston, Florence, S. C.
J. M. Harding, Chapel Hill W. K. Lane, Goldsboro
ROBT. B. IvAWSON, Virginia Eyerett A. LockeTT, Winston
P. R. McFadyen, Clarkton J. C. Moore, McColl, S. C.
J. R. Paddison, Mount Airy Jas. W. Peacock, Salisbury
S. W. Staley, Liberty H. P. Underbill, Selma G. H. Wilkinson, Tarbora
QneMcaP Cfaea of '99
n u u
Abernethy, Eric Alonzo, Beaufort McIyer, Lynn, Sanford
BynUxM, Wade Hampton, Germanton Pridgen, Claude Leonard, Kinston
Costner, George Henry, Lincolnton Ouickel, Thomas Grouse, Lincolnton
Cromartie, Robert Samuel, Garland Rogers, Francis Owington, Concord
FoscuE, John Edward, Polloksville Sikes, Gibson Lewis, Clinton
Hayes, John Mortimer, Raleigh Speight, Richard Harrison, Wrendale
HocuTT, John Irving, Carpsboro Thompson, Dunlop, Morven
Kapp, Henry Herman, Bethania Weir, Claud Will, Raleigh
Kornegay, William Emmet, Goldsboro Williams, Albert Franklin, Kenansville
McEachern, Edward Clemmons, Wilmington Good, Edward Jenner, Wilmington
52
^^s<>
u u rr
Officers
D. C. Swindell, President
C. D. Gruver, Vice-President
J. A. SuTTLE, Secretary
P. C. Gray, Treasurer
T. W. Kendrick, Historian
C. S. Smith, Statistician
^tuienta in (p^armacj
^eccnb ^ear
Gray, Poi^k Cleburne, Chapel Hill
Gruver, Charles Dayton, Stroudsburg
Kendrick, Thomas Williams, Chapel Hill, Pa.
Smith, Charles Henry, Greensboro
SuTTLE, Julius Albert, Shelby
Swindell, David Clarence, Rocky Mount
Tate, George Knox, Greensboro
^itst ^ear
Bailey, Reginald, Winston
Brantley, John Calvin, Marshville
Brooks, Jonathan Fleming, Hendersonville
Craven, Frank McKnight, Coddle
Ellington, Cope Winslo, Elm Grove
Jacocks, Francis Giulam, Windsor
Koonce, John Edward, Richlands
Landouist, Thomas Eugene, Salem
McKinnon, Murdoch Hector, Red Springs
McKinnon, William Louis, Red Springs
OuiCKEL, John Carl, Jr., Lincolnton
Reed, Joel, Concord
Taylor, Frank Leonid.\s, Oxford
Young, Cadmus Turner, Polenta
54
55
founded at Yale, 1844
Phi — Yale College
Theta — Bowdoin College
Xi — Colby University
Sigma — Amherst College
Psi — University of Alabama
Upsii.on — Brown University
Chi — University of Mississippi
Beta — University of North Carolina
Lambda— Kenyon College Eta— University of Virginia
Pi — Dartmouth College
Iota — Central University
Ar.PHA Alpha — Middlebury College
OmicPvON — University of Michigan
Epsilon — Williams College
Rho — LaFayette College
Tau — Hamilton College
Mu — Madison University
Nu — College of the City of New York
Beta Phi — University of Rochester
Phi Chi — Rutgers College
Psi Phi — Indiana Ashbury University
Gamma Phi — Wesleyan University
Psi Omega — Renesselaer Polytechnic Institute
Beta Chi — Adelbert College
Delta Chi — Cornell University
Phi Gamma — Syracuse University
Gamma Beta — Columbia College
Theta Zeta — University of California
Alpha Chi — Trinity College (Connecticut)
Gamma — Vaaderbilt University
Kappa — Miami University
Psi Epsilon — University of Minnesota
Sigma Tau — Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Delta Delta — University of Chicago
Tau Lambda — Tulane University
Alpha Phi — Universit}' of Toronto
56
>
S5
<i
M
tu
c w
w ■
K td
■s.
C^da t^apkv
established tn 1851
Srafree in Sacuffafe
Francis Preston Venable, Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry
Charles Baskervii^i^e, Ph. D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Samuel May, A. B., Instructor in Modern Languages
Sratree in (Ut6e
Edward Warren Myers
Charles Skinner Alston
Class of '99
Francis Moore Osborne
Class of '00
John Augustus Moore
Class of '01
Palmer Cobb
John Stanford Webb
Joseph Bonaparte Martin
Metrah Makely, Jr.
Alexander Weldon Neal'
Thomas Hume, Jr.
featt)
Wiley Croom Rodman
Samuel Eakin Shull
Herbert Banative Cunningham
58
{^da t^da (pi
founded at ^liami Clnivcrsity, 1839
C^aptcT (Roff
District I
Eta— Harvard Upsilon— Boston Beta Iota— Amherst Mu Epsii.on— Wesleyan
Kappa— Brown Beta Eta— Maine At.pha Omega — Dartmouth Phi Chi— Yale
District H
Beta Gamma— Rutgers Sigma- Stevens Beta Theta— Colgate
Beta Delta— Cornell Beta Zeta— St. Lawrence Nu— Union
Alpha Alpha— Columbia Beta Epsilon— Syracuse
District HI
Gamma— Washington-Jefferson Alpha Chi— Johns Hopkins
Alpha Sigma— Dickinson Phi — University of Pennsylvania
Alpha Upsilon — Pennsylvania State College Beta Chi — Lehigh
District IV
Zeta— Hampden-Sidney Omicron— Virginia
Eta Beta— North Carolina Phi Alpha— Davidson
District V
Epsilon— Centre Mu— Cumberland Beta Beta— Mississippi
Beta Alpha— Vanderbilt Beta Omicron— Texas
District VI
Alpha — Miami Alpha Gamma — Wittenberg
Beta Nu— University of Cincinnati Alpha Eta — Denison
Beta — Western Reserve Alpha Lambda — Wooster
Beta Kappa— Ohio Beta Alpha — Kenyon
Theta— Ohio Wesleyan Theta Delta— Ohio State
Psi — Bethany
District VII
Delta— Du Pauw Pi— Indiana Tau— Wabash Iota— Hanover
District VIII
Lambda — Michigan Lambda Rho— Chicago
Alpha Xi — Knox Alpha Epsilon — Iowa Wesleyan
Chi^ — Beloit Alpha Pi — Wisconsin
Alpha Beta— University of Iowa Rho — Northwestern
Beti Pi — Minnesota
District 1%
Alpha Delta — Westminster Alpha Nu — Kansas Alpha Zeta — Denver
Alpha Tau— Nebraska Zeta Phi— Missouri
District ^
Omega— California Lambda Sigma— Leland Stanford
(g^fumni C^aptere
Akron, Ohio Denver, Colo. Nashville, Tenn. Springfield, Ohio
Boston, Mass. Hamilton, Ohio New York, N. Y. Terre Haute, Ind.
Charleston, W. Va. Indianapolis, Ind. Philadelphia, Pa, Washington, D. C.
Chicago, 111. Kansas City, Mo. Pittsburg, Pa. Wheeling, W. Va.
Cincinnati, Ohio Los Angeles, Cal. Providence, R. I.
Cleveland, Ohio Milwaukee, Wis. San Francisco, Cal.
Columbus, Ohio Minneapolis, Minn. St. Louis, Mo.
established at eta prime, 1852
( " Star of the South " Chapter of Mystic Seven, established 1S44, became
Eta Beta of Beta Theta Pi, 18S9.)
Srcitcrnifi^ Cofore
PINK AND BLUE
^din (^tmhxB^ip
Ole^icaf
WlLUAM EmMETT KoRNECAV
Claude Leonard Pridgen
(Jp^armacg
Class of '99
Claude Baker Denson, Jr
60
^igma @Pp^a (Bpaifon
founded at the Clniversity of Hlabama in 1856 Colors
Incorporated 1892 OLD GOLD AND PURPLE
Publications— 77/,? /Record and Phi Alpha (Secret).
e^a^ter (Roff
Province Alpha, J. A. Stetson, President
Massachusetts B T — Boston University, Boston, Mass.
Massachusetts 6 T — Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass.
Massachusetts r — Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.
Massachusetts A — Worcester Polytecnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.
Connecticut A — Trinity College, Hartford, Conn.
Province Beta, H. I. Huber, President
New York A — Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
New York M — Columbia University, New York, N. Y.
New York S *— St. Stephen's College, Annandale, N. Y.
Pennnsyi,vania O — Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa.
Pennsyi^vania 2 4> — Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
Pennsylvania A Z— Pennsylvania State College, Pa.
Pennsylvania Z — Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.
Province Gamma, F. C. Furlow, President
Virginia 0 — Lfniversity of Virginia, Charlotteville, Va.
Virginia 2 — Washington and L,ee University, Lexington, Va.
North Carolina S — University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
North Carolina 9 — Davidson College, Davidson, N. C.
South Carolina T— Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C.
Georgia B — University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.
Georgia ^ — Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Georgia E — Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Georgia <I> — Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
6i
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Q
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■A
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w
2 zo
ffi OS
w w
53
- o I*
rl wOBCeSTER'
POLYINST
IN 1855
.^^ S^ T^
Province Delta, W. A. Snow, President
Michigan I B— University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Michigan A — Adrian College, Adrian, Mich.
Ohio S — Mount Union College, Alliance, Ohio
Ohio A — Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, Ohio
Ohio E — University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, Ohio
Ohio G— Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio
Indiana A — Franklin College, Franklin, Ind.
Indiana B — Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.
Illinois ^ ii — Northwestern University, Evanston, III.
Illinois B — University of Illinois, Champaign, 111.
Province Epsilon, J. J. McNallv, President
Kentucky K — Central University, Richmond, Ky.
Kentucky I — Bethel College, Russellville, Ky.
Tennessee Z — Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Tennessee a — Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.
Tennessee Jf — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Tennessee K — University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Tennessee fi — Llniversity of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
Tennessee H— Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn.
Alabama M — University of Alabama, Univ. P. O., Ala.
Alabama I — Southern Universit}^ Greensboro, Ala.
Alabama A M — Alabama A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala.
Mississippi T — University of Mississippi, Oxford, Miss.
Province Zeta, R. M. Snyder, President
Iowa S — Simpson College, Indianola, Iowa
Missouri A — University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.
Central College, Faj^ette, Mo.
Missouri B — Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.
Nebraska A n — University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.
Province Eta, B. M. Webster, President
Arkansas A T — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark.
Texas P — University of Texas, Austin, Texas
Colorado X — University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.
Colorado Z — University of Denver, Denver, Colo,
California A— Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal.
California B — University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Louisiana E — University of Louisiana, Baton Rouge, La.
Louisiana T T — Tulane University, New Orleans, La.
(^fumnt (^06cciafion
New York City Cleveland, Ohio Savannah, Ga. Boston, Mass.
Cincinnati, Ohio Augusta, Ga. Chicago, 111. Pittsburg, Pa.
Kansas City, Mo. Detroit, Mich. Chattanooga, Tenn. Jackson, Miss.
Alliance, Ohio Atlanta, Ga. New Orleans, La.
63
CDorf^ CaroRna (Xi C^apkr
Sigma Hlpba epsilon Gstabltsbed 1856 Suspended 1862
Re-established 1886
Srater in Scicuffofe
Edward Vf:RNON Howell, Ph. G., A. B.
Henry Groves Connor, Jr.
(JVtebtcine
Robert Harllee Bellamy George Wilkinson
Moore, S. C Gamma
George Knox Tate
Class of '99
Marsden Bellamy, Jr. James Phillips Bunn
Robert Diggs Wimberly Connor Cameron Belo Buxton
Henry Manger London Everett Augustine Lockett
Henry Patrick Harding Alexander Clinton Miller
Edmund Vogler Patterson
Class of '00
Alexander Thomas Bitting Halcott Anderson
William Gilmer Wharton Alfred Rives Berkeley
Henry Clay Cowles
Class of '01
Eben Alexander, Jr. Chalmers Lanier Glenn
William Kemp Battle William Bynum Whitehead
Special
Fr.^nk Wharton Miller
64
?efa (p0i
founded in 1846 at the Oniversitv f ratcrnUy Color
of the City of ^few ^ovh WHITE
(Roff of (^diu C^apUxB
Phi — University of City of New York
Zeta — Williams College, Williamston, Mass.
Delta — Rutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J.
Sigma— University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Chi — Colby University, Waterville, Me.
Epsilon — Brown University, Providence, R. I.
Kappa— Tufts College, College Hill, Mass.
Tau — Lafayette College, Easton, Penn.
Upsilon— University of N. C, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Xi— University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Lambda — Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.
Beta — University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Psi— Cornell University, Ithica, N. Y.
Iota — Universitj^ of California, Berkley, Cal.
Theta Xi— University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario
Alpha — Columbia College, New York City
Alpha Psi — McGill University, Montreal, Quebec
Nu— Case School of Applied Sciences, Cleveland, Ohio
Eta — Yale University, New Haven, Conn.
Mu— Leland Stanford, Palo Alto, Cal.
(^fumni ^BBociaiiorxB
Central Association of Zeta Psi, 8 West 29th street. New York City
Pacific Association of Zeta Psi, 310 Pine street, San Francisco, Cal.
Northwestern Association of Zeta Psi, 306 Opera House Block, Chicago
Capital Association of Zeta Psi, 8 Iowa circle, Washington, D. C.
Philadelphia Association of Zeta Psi, 2107 Walnut street, Philadelphia
65
(Upaifon Chapter
established 1858
Suspended 1868 Chapter Color
Reorganized 1885 GARNET
Stater in Sacuffafe
Dr. Charles Stapi.es Mangum, Ph. B., M. D.
J. Crawford Biggs, BL,., A B.
Rau>h Henry Graves, A. M.
Stafres in (Ur6e
Rev. N. H. D. Wilson
Class of '99
Julian Shakespeare Carr, Jr.
John Robert Carr
Class of '00
Junius Daniel Grimes
Frank Bennett, Jr.
William Frank Bryan
Ernest Graves
John Wetmore Hinsdale, Jr.
Kemp Plummer Lewis
(^ebtcaf €fa66
Francis Owington Rogers
featw Cfa00
Edward Clarke Gregory, A. B., '96
Class of '01
James Tyson Dortch
Philip Hall Busbee
Albert Smedes Root
William Henry Gibson
Browne Ruffin Webb
Joseph Cheshire Webb
67
founded at Richmond, 1865
Hcttve Chapters
Alabama Alpha Epsilon — A. & M. College, Auburn
Alabama Beta Beta — Southern University, Greensboio
Alabama Beta Delta — University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa
California Beta Psi— Leland Sanford, Jr., University
Georgia Alpha Beta— University of Georgia, Athens
Georgia Alpha Theta— Emory College, Oxford
Georgia Alpha Zeta— Mercer University, Macon
Georgia Beta Iota— School of Technology, Atlanta
Illinois Gamma Zeta — University of Illinois, Champaign
Indiana Gamma Gamma— Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute
Louisiana Beta Epsilon — Tulane University, New Orleans
Massachusetts Gamma Beta— Tufts College, Medford
Maine Beta Upsilon— State College, Orono
Maine Gamma Alpha — Colby University, Waterville
Michigan Alpha Mu— Adrian College, Adrian
Michigan Beta Kappa— Hillsdale College, Hillsdale
Michigan Beta Omicron — Albion College, Albion
Nebraska Gamma Theta— University of Nebraska
North Carolina Alpha Delta— University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
North Carolina Xi — Trinity College, Durham
New York Alpha Omicron — St. Lawrence University, Canton
New York Beta Theta — Cornell University, Ithaca
Ohio Alpha Nu — Mount Union College, Alliance
Ohio Alpha Psi — Wittenberg College, Springfield
Ohio Beta Eta— Wesleyan University, Delaware
Ohio Beta Mu — Wooster University, Wooster
Ohio Beta Rho— Marietta College, Marietta
Ohio Beta Omega— State University, Columbus
Pennsylvania Alpha Iota— Muhlenberg College, Allentown
Pennsylvania Alpha Rho — Lehigh University, South Bethlehem
Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon — Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg
Pennsylvania Tau — University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Rhode Island Gamma DelT.a. — Brown University, Providence
Tennessee Alpha Tau— S. W. Pres. University, Clarkesville
Tennessee Beta Pi— Vanderbilt University, Nashville
Tennessee Beta Tau— S. W. B. U., Jackson
Tennessee Lambda — Cumberland College, Lebanon
Tennessee Omega— University of the South, Sewanee
68
Dr^huu Phila^
Texas Gamma Epsilon— Austin College, Sherman
Vermont Beta ZeTa— University of Vermont, Burlington
Virginia Beta — Washington & Lee University, Lexington
Virginia Delta— University of Virginia, Charlottesville
(^fumni (^seociaftone
Alabama Alumni Association
Allentown Alumni Association
Boston Alumni Association
Chicago Alumni Association
Cleveland Alumni Association
District of Columbia Alumni Association
New York Alumni Association
Ohio Alumni Association
Pennsylvania Alumni Association
Pittsburg Alumni Association
Springfield, Ohio, Alumni Association
Tennessee Alumni Association
Texas Alumni Association
«^__-^^
^^^^
69
@fp^a <S)dta C^aptit
Gstabltsbcd 1879
Colors flower
OLD GOLD AND SKY BLUE White Tea Rose
Srafer in QXrSe
R. S. McRae
Srafree in QXnttjereitafe
Class of 1899
Robert G. S. Davis
Class of 1900
Thaddeus Ainsley Cheatham George Chadbourn W. Clarence Curtis
N. CoRTLANDT Curtis
Class of '01
Cameron McRae Edmund Brodie Taylor
Class of '02
Thomas C. Worth
&at» '98
Thomas Ruffin
£at» '99
S. IMcBee Wetmore James C. McKae Isaac A. Phifer
Frank L. Taylor
71
Happa @fp^a
founded at Cdasbington and
J.ee, 1865
Chvitx (Hoff
Alpha — Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.
Gamma — LTniversity of Georgia, Athens, Ga.
Delta— Wo fford College, Spartanburg, S. C.
Epsilon — Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Zeta — Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.
Eta — Richmond College, Richmond, Va.
Theta — Kentucky State College, Lexington, Ky.
Iota —
Kappa— Mercer Universit}-, Macon, Ga.
Lambda — University of Virginia, Charlotteville, Va.
Nu — Polytechnic Institute, A. and M. College, Auburn, Ala.
Xi — Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas
Omicron — University of Texas, Austin, Texas
Pi — University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Sigma — Davidson College, Mechlenburg Co., N. C.
Upsilon — University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Phi — Southern University, Greensboro, Ala.
Chi — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Psi — Tulane University, New Orieans, La.
Omega — Centre College, Danville, Ky.
Alpha Alpha— University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
Alpha Beta — Universit}- of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Alpha Gamma — Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.
Alpha Delta — William Jewel College, Liberty, Mo.
Alpha Epsilon — S. W. P. University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Alpha Zbta — William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va.
Alpha Eta — Westminster College, Fulton, Mo.
Alpha Theta — Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky.
Alpha Iota — Centenary College, Jackson, La.
Alpha Kappa — Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo.
Alpha Lambda— Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md.
Alpha Mu— Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.
Alpha Nu — Columbian University, Washington, D. C
Alpha Omicron — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Ark.
Alpha Xi — University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Alpha Pi — Leland Stanford, Junior, University, Stanford, Cal.
Alpha Rho— University of West Virginia, Morgantown, W. Va.
72
.. Y
(^fumni Chapter
Richmond, Va., Julien Bossieux, 7 West Grace St.
Norfolk, Va., T. T. Hubard
Raleigh, N. C, Edward C. Smith
Macon, Ga., D. Q. Abbott
New York City, Thomas Wallace Stevens, 18 W. Ninth St.
Washington, D. C, W. W. Millan, T417 Ninth St., N. W.
Mobile, Ala., Richard H. Vidmer
Atlanta, Ga., R. A. Redding, 19 Edgewood Ave.
Athens, Ga., John White Morton
Dallas, Texas, M. T. Stratton, Jr.
Higginsville, Mo., Ai Edgar Asbury
Franklin, La., Don Caffery, Jr.
Lexington, Ky., W. O. Sweeny, Jr.
Petersburg, Va., Wm. T. Davis
Falladega, Ala., F. P. McConnel
Kansas City, Mo., Gordon A. Beedle
73
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m
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X
H
W
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s
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DJ
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(Updfon Chapter
established 1881
Sratree in Sftcuffafe
J. W. Gore
Professor of Physics
R. H. Whitehead
Professor of Anatomy and Pathology
W. C. Smith
Assistant Professor of English
George Davis Vick
Harry Legare Watson
Srafree in (Untoereitaf e
Class of '99
Edward Mayo Land
Class of '01
James Francis Post, Jr.
George Vernon Cowper
(ttle^tctne
Robert Samuel Cromartie Frederick Kingsbury Cooke
Jones Fuller
75
(p^i ©efta t^da
founded at >Itami dniversity, 1848 Colors
ARGENT AND AZURE
Publications — Savll and Palladiinn (Secret)
(^fp^a (Jprot)tnce
Maine Alpha — Colby University
New Hampshire Alpha — Dartmouth College
Vermont Alpha — University of Vermont
Massachusetts Alpha — Williams College
Massachusetts Beta — Amherst College
Rhode Island Alpha — Brown University
New York Alpha — Cornell University
New York Beta — Union University
New York Delta— Columbia University
New York Epsilon — Syracuse University
Pennsylvania Alpha — Lafayette College
Pennsylvania Beta — Gettysburg College
Pennsylvania Gamma — Washington and Jefferson College
Pennsylvania Delta — Allegheny College
Pennsylvania Epsilon — Dickinson College
Pennsylvania Beta — University of Pennsylvania
Pennsylvania Eta— Lehigh University
(jBcfa (JJrouince
Virginia Beta — University of Virginia
Virginia Gamma — Randolph-Macon College
Virginia Beta — Washington and Lee University
North Carolina Beta — University of North Carolina
Kentucky Alpha — Centre College
Kentucky Delta — Central University
Tennessee Alpha — Vanderbilt University
Tennessee Beta — University of the South
(E>amma (J}rot>ince
Georgia Alpha — University of Georgia
Georgia Beta — Emory College
Georgia Gamma — ^Nlercer University
Alabama Alpha — University of Alabama
76
Alabama Beta — Alabama Polytechnic Institute
Mississippi Ai^pha — University of Mississippi
Louisana Alpha — Tulane University of L,ouisana
Texas Beta — University of Texas
Texas Gamma — Southwestern University
©effa ^rooince
Ohio Alpha — Miami University
Ohio Beta — Ohio Wesleyan University
Ohio Gamma — Ohio University
Ohio Zeta— Ohio State University
Ohio Eta — Case School of Applied Science
Ohio Theta — University of Cincinnati
Indiana Alpha — Indiana University
Indiana Beta — Wabash College
Indiana Gamma — Butler University
Indiana Delta — Franklin College
Indiana Epsii.on — Hanover College
Indiana Beta — De Pauw University
Indiana Theta — Purdue University
Michigan Alpha — University of Michigan
Michigan Beta— State College Michigan
Michigan Gamma— Hillsdale College
(BpBifon (Jjromnce
Illinois Alpha — Northwestern University
Illinois Beta— University of Chicago
Illinois Delta — Knox College
Illinois Zeta — Lombard University
Illinois Eta — University of Illinois
Wisconsin Alpha — University of Wisconsin
Minnesota Alpha — University of Minnesota
Iowa Alpha — Iowa Wesleyan University
Iowa Beta — University of Iowa
Missouri Alpha— University of Missonri
Missouri Beta— Westminster College
Missouri Gamma — Washington University
Kansas Alpha — University of Kansas
Nebraska Alpha — University of Nebraska
California Alpha — University of California
California Beta— Leland Stanford, Jr., University
78
(^fumni C^apttve
Alpha— Boston, Mass.
AI.PHA — Providence, R. I.
Alpha— New York, N. Y.
Alpha, Pittsburg, Pa.
Alpha — Baltimore, Md.
Alpha — Washington, D. C
Alpha — Richmond, Va.
Alpha — Louisville, Ky.
Alpha— Nashville, Tenn.
Alpha — Columbus, Ga.
Gamma — Cleveland, Ohio
Delta — Columbus, Ohio
Epsilon — Athens, Ohio
Alpha — Franklin, Ind.
Beta — Los Angeles, Cal.
Beta — Indianapolis, Ind.
Alpha — Detroit, Mich.
Alpha — Chicago, 111.
Beta— Philadelphia, Pa
Beta— Atlanta, Ga.
Gamma — Macon, Ga.
Alpha — Montgomery, Ala.
Beta— Selma, Ala.
Gamma — Birmingham, Ala.
Delta— Mobile, Ala.
Alpha, Salt Lake City, Utah
Alpha— New Orleans, La.
Alpha — Cincinnati, Ohio
Beta— Akron, Ohio
Beta— Galesburg, 111.
Alpha — La Crosse, Wis.
Beta— Milwaukee, Wis.
Alpha — St. Paul, Minn.
Alpha — Kansas City, Mo.
Beta— St. Louis, Mo.
Alpha — Denver, Col.
Alpha — San Francisco, Cal.
Alpha, Spokane, Wash.
79
established 1885
f rater in QXrfie
Frederick Geer Patterson
(^ca^emic
Class of '99
Frederick Jackson Coxe Robert Gii^liam Kittreli,
John Donneli-y Robert Aeonzo Winston
Edward Stevenson Askew
Class of '00
Joseph Jennings Asbury Isaac Foust Harris
William Stanley Bernard
Class of '01
Gerald Bruce Newby
8o
-^^p"
founded at the Virginia l^Iilitary Institute, 1869
Chapter (Roff
Division I
Beta— University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Lambda— Washington and Lee, Lexington, Va.
Psi— University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C
Beta Tau — N. C. A. and M. College, Raleigh, X. C.
Division H
Xheta — University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Iota— Howard College, East Lake, Ala.
Upsilon— University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Phi — University of Louisiana, Baton Rouge, La.
Beta Theta — Alabama A. and M., Auburn, Ala.
Bet.\ Phi — Tulane. University, New Orleans, La.
Division HI
Sigma— Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Omicron— Bethel College, Russelville, Ky.
Zet.a — Central University, Richmond, Ky.
Division IV
Nr— University of Kansas, Lawrencp, Kan.
rho— University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.
Beta Mu — University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
Beta Lambda — Central College, Fayette, Mo.
Beta Chi— William Jewel College, Liberty, Mo.
Si
C^apicx (Hoff-Contmuc^
Division V
Pi — Lehigh Universit -, South Bethlehem, Pa.
Beta Sigma — University of Vermont
Division VI
Eta — Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Kappa — North Georgia College, Dahlonega, Ga.
Mu — University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.
Chi — Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Gamma Alpha— Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
Division VH
Beta Beta — De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind.
Beta Eta — University of Indiana, Bloomington, Ind.
Beta Zeta — Purdue Univensity, Lafayette, Ind.
Beta Iota — Mount Union College, Alliance, Ohio
Beta Nu — University of Ohio, Columbus, Ohio
Beta Upsii^on — Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Ind.
Gamma Beta — Northwestern University, Evanston, 111.
Gamma Gamma — Albion College, Albion, Mich.
Delta Theta — Lombard University, Galesburg, 111.
Division VHI
Beta Chi — Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Palo Alto, Cal.
Beta Psi— University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Gamma Chi — University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
82
f rater in f acuUatc
Archibald Henderson
(glc^icaf
Walter Vernon Brem
Thomas Wilus Alexander
£at»
Theodore Frankijn Kluttz, Jr.
Francis William Coker
Class of '99
Julius Alexander^Caldwell
Class of '01
William Alexander Murphy
Edward Noah Joyner
84
founded at T^iami amverstty, 1855
pUblicatione— 5/>v«(Z Chi Quarlexly and 2 X lUtUetin f Secret. )
e^d^jter (Roff
Alpha — Miami University, Ohio
Gamma — Wesleyan University, Ohio
EpSii^on — Columbia University, District of Columbia
Zeta — Washington and Lee University, Va,
Eta — University of Mississippi
ThETA— Gettysburg College, Pa
Kappa — Bucknell University, Pa.
Lambda — University of Indiana
Mu — Denison University, Ohio
Xi— De Pauvir University, Indiana
Omicron— Dickinson College, Pa.
Rho — Butler University, Indiana
Tau — Roanoke, Virginia
Chi— Hanover University, Indiana
Psi — University of Virginia
Omega— Northvi^estern University, 111.
Alpha Alpha— Hobart College, New York
Gamma Gamma— Randolph-Macon College, Va.
Delta Delta — Purdue University, Indiana
Zeta Zeta— Centre College, Kentucky
Zeta Psi — University of Cincinnati, Ohio
Eta Eta — Dartmouth College, N. H.
Kappa Kappa — University of Illinois
Phi Phi — University of Pennsylvania
Lambda Lambda — Kentucky State College
Mu Mu — University of West Virginia
Nu Nu— Columbia College, New York
85
o
Sigma Sigma — Hampden-Sidney College, Va.
Delta Chi — Wabash College, Indiana
Thkta Theta — University of Michigan
Alpha Beta — University of California
Alpha Gamma — University of Ohio
Xi Xi — University of Missouri
Omicron Omicron — University of Chicago
Alpha Epsilon — University of Nebraska
Alpha ZeTa — Beloit College, Wisconsin
Alpha Theta— Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Alpha Iota — Illinois Wesleyan University
Alpha Lambda — University of Wisconsin
Alpha Nu — University of Texas
Alpha Xi — University of Kansas
Alpha Omicron — Tulane University, La.
Alpha Pi — Albion College, Michigan
Alpha Rho — Lehigh University, Pa.
Alpha Sigma — University of Minnesota
Alpha Tau— University of North Carolina »
Alpha Upsilon— University of Southern California
Alpha Phi— Cornell University, N. Y.
Alpha Chi — Pennsylvania State College
Alpha Psi— Vanderbilt University, Tenn.
Alpha Omega— Leiand Stanford University, Cal.
(^fumnt C^apttYB
Alpha — Springfield, Ohio
Beta— Montgomery, Ala.
Gamma — New York, N. Y.
Delta— Philadelphia, Pa.
Eta— Lafayette, Indiana
Theta — Cincinnati, Ohio
Iota — Indianapolis, Indiana
Omega — Chicago, 111.
Epsilon — Washington, D. C.
Zeta — Louisville, Kentucky
87
(^£p^a B.m C^apUt
Sigma Cbi
established 1889
Colors
BLUE AND GOLD
(^c^ictne '99
Edward Jenner Wood
John Mortimer Haves Claud Hili, Weir
Edward Clemmons McEachern Dunlop Thompson
(Wc^tcme '00
Robert Vance Brawley
(Jj^armacp
Reginald Bailev
88
fO
U<D
^appa ^tgma
founded at the dniversity of flower
Bologna, Italy, 1400. Lily of the Valley
established at the Oniversity Colors
of Virginia, 1865 OLD GOLD, PEACOCK BLL'E AND MAROON
journals— 77/<' Cadiiceus and The Crescent and Star (Secret)
a}(x^itx (Roff
Gamma — Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.
Delta — Davidson College, Davidson, N. C.
Epsilon — Centenary College, Jackson, La.
Zeta — University of Virginia, Va.
Eta — Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.
Theta — Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.
Iota — Southwestern University, Georgetown, Tex.
Kappa — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Lambda — University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Mu — Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.
Nu — William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va.
Xi — University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark.
Pi— Swathmore College, Swathmore, Pa.
Sigma — Tulane University, New Orleans, La.
Tau — University of Texas, Austin, Texas
Upsilon — Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va.
Phi— Southwestern Pres. University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Car — Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.
Psi — Maine State College, Orono, Me.
Omega — University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
Eta Prime— Trinity College, Durham, N. C.
Alpha Alpha — University of Maryland, Baltimore, Md.
Alpha Beta — Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Alpha Gamma — University of Illinois, Champaign, 111.
Alpha Delta — Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa.
89
Alpha Epsilon— University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.
Alpha Zeta — University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich.
Alpha Eta— Columbian University, Washington, D. C.
Alpha TheTa— Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson, Tenn.
Alpha Iota— U. S. Grant University, Athens, Tenn.
Alpha Kappa — Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Alpha Lambda — University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.
Alpha Mu— University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C
Alpha Nu— Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C.
Alpha Xi— Bethel College. Russellville, Ky.
Alpha Omfcron— Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky.
Alpha Pi— Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Alpha Rho— Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.
Alpha Sigma— Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
Alpha Tau— Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
Alpha Upsilon— Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.
Alpha Phi— Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.
Alpha Chi— Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, 111.
Alpha Psi— University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.
Alpha Omega— William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo.
Beta Alpha— Brown University, Providence, R. I.
Beta BeTa— Richmond College, Richmond, Va.
Beta Delta — Washington and JefiFerson College, Washington, Pa.
Beta Epsilon — University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.
Gamma— Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo.
^fate (^60ociation6
Virginia Texas North Carolina
Louisiana Tennessee
(^fumni Chapters
Yazoo City, Miss. Pittsburg, Pa.
New Orleans, La. Philadelphia, Pa.
New York City Chicago, 111.
Indianapolis, Ind. Ruston, La.
Somerville, Mass. Chihuahua, Mexico.
90
Kappa Sigma established 1893
(^ciin (JUemBere^ip
Smtree in QJlnitjersitafe
Law
T D. McAllister R Bruce Morrison
pharmacy
D. Clarence Swindell
Hcadcmic— Class of '00
Graham Woodard Charles G. Rose Henry W. Collins
Class of '01
A. A. Holmes
Optional
James W. Copeland, (A)
91
(pi ICappa (^Pp^a
founded at the Clniverstty of Virginia, 1867
Colors
OLD GOLD AND GARNET
CW^v (Hoff
Alpha — University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Beta— Davidson College, Davidson, N. C.
Gamma — William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va.
Zeta — LTniversity of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Theta — Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Iota — Hampden-Sydney College, Hampden-Sydney. Va.
Mu— Presbyterian College of South Carolina, Clinton, S. C.
Nu— Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C.
Xi —South Carolina College, Columbia, S. C.
Pi— Washington and Lee LTniversity, Lexington, Va.
Rho — Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.
Sigma — Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Tau — University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Upsilon— Alabama Polytechnical Institute, Auburn, Ala.
Phi — Roanoke College, Salem, Va.
Chi — Universitv of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
(^fumni C^apUxB
Alpha — Richmond, Va.
Beta— Memphis, Tenn.
Gamma — White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.
Delta— Charleston, S. C.
Epsilon — Norfolk, Va.
Zeta— Dillon, S. C.
Eta — New Orleans, La.
Theta— Dallas, Texas
Iota — Knoxville, Tenn.
2 i
O -7,
g o
Pi Kappa Hlpba
R. T. Hurley F. Oscar Carver
John R. Paddison, Jr. Paul R. McFadyen
Charles E. Houston
Thomas W. Kendrick Julius A. Suttle
Class of '00
Claude L. Miller
Claes of '01
1-'. Stough Wrav Robert L. Eskridge
94
Organizations
(pi ^igma
uurr
RAI.PH Henry Graves
Class of '99
Charles S. Ai^ston Junius D. Grimes
Marsden Bellamy, Jr. Warren L. Keuttz
Cameron B. Buxton Edward M. Land
Juuan S. Carr Alexander Clinton Miller
John R. Carr Edmund Vogler Patterson
Julius A. Caldwell George Davis Vick
Class of '00
Halcott Anderson Kemp Piummer Lewis
Henry C. Cowles John Augustus Moore
Ernest Graves Graham Woodward
Class of '01
Philip Hall Eusbee Metrah Makely, Jr.
William Henry Gibson Aldert Smedes Root
William Bvnum Whitehead William Kemp Battle
J. Tyson Dortch
Jones Fuller
James C. McRae
Samuel E. Shull
W. Croom Rodman
(met)icaf
FRANCIS O. ROGERS r. HaRLLEE BELLAMY
96
founded at Cilesleyan, 1870
rr u u
Chapter (Roff
Alpha — Wesleyan University
Beta — Syracuse University
Gamma — Union College
Delta — Cornell University
Epsilon — University of Rochester
ZeTa — University of California
Eta — Madison University
Theta — Kenyon College
Iota — Adelbert College
Kappa — Hamilton College
Kappa, Second — Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Lambda — Williams College
Mu — Stevens Institute
Nu — Lafayette College
Xi — Amherst College
Omicron — Rutgers College
Pi — Pennsylvania State College
Upsii,on — University of Michigan
Pi, Second — Lehigh University
Omega — Allegheny College
Rho — Dickinson College
Sigma — Wooster University
Phi — Bucknell University
Psi — University of North Carolina
Chi — University City of New York
97
{p6i Chapter of C^eta (Tlu (Kpetfon
established 1893
(^e^icine
I'rancis C). Rogers
Jones M. I'"i i.ler James ]\IcRae Samuel E Hhull
WiEEY C. Rodman
Class of '99
Charles Skinner Alston Julius Alexander Caldwell
Cameron Belo Buxton Edward Mayo Land Julian S. Cakr, Jr.
Ivdmund Vogler Patterson John Robert Carr
George Davis Vick
Class of '00
James Hume John Augustus Moore
Kemp Plummer Lewis Graham Woodward
Thaiidlus Winfield Jones
Class of '01
Jatus*ffHJ?S::''4A*
Y z w 5 L 4 ff * i ! te J E d
K o V ! 5 : : A II 2 h k
E*flF*^ A J M 2 ni z u L t o
j4stamDHs8g!''
Z * \" ! G A^ Y h 5 : : e 4
98
C^e (Borgon'0 ^zai
Charles ;Skinner Alston Kemp Plummer Lewis
Marsden Bellamy, Jr. Alexander Clinton Miller
Cameron Belo Buxton George Davis Vick
Robert Diggs Wimberly Connor Samuel E. Shull
Henry Clay Cowles, Jr. Graham Woodward
Ralph Henry Graves Wiley Croom Rodman
Edward Mayo Land Thaddeus Winfield Jones
99
Orber of (Bimg^ouf^
uurr
61m— Gim— Gtm— Gimgbcul
ZP AVVS, KJL HRNKJ, FSNR
CGA SIEJA SOLAC MUWTHK
TLBRW YKZ ZBVV HVF TIDIOCHL,
RPK OVD ZP JCATZPBWAL
ZVZ BBBCG DCEK.
VALMAR X.
(Rufere
179 Edmund V. Patterson, '99, R.
175 Jri.iAN S. Carr, Jr., '99, K. D. S.
176 John R. Carr, '99, W. S. S,
177 Warren L- Kluttz, '99, K. M. K.
126 Charli S Baskerville, Assistant Professor of Chemistry
132 J. Crawford Biggs, Assistant Professor of Law
136 Howard E. RondThaler, University Preacher
170 Charles S. Mangum, Professor of Physiology and Materia IMedica
172 Sami'EL May, Instructor of Modern Languages
174 Archibald Henderson, Instructor of Mathematics
jSo E. Vernon Howell, Professor of Pharmacy
152 Edwin C. Gregory (Law)
178 Francis O. Rogers (Med.)
i8r Francks M. Osborne, '99
182 Halcott Anderson, '00
I S3 Ernest Graves, 'go
1S4 W. Frank Bxvan, '00
185 Alfred R. Berkeley, '00
186 J. AUGUSTU.i MOORK. 'OO
1S7 Jones Ftller, (Law)
1S8 Walter V. Brem, Jr. (Med.)
©lafecfic Bitoar^ ^ocid^
founded in 1795
Color-BLUE.
J^Otto— Sons of Virtue and Science.
Adams, S. J.
Alexander, Eben Jr.
Alexander. J. H.
Allison, J. C.
Allison. T. T.
Anderson, T. J.
Atkinson, J. S.
Bell. B. Jr,
Bennett, F., Jr.
Bennett, H. H
Berkeley, A. R.
Bowie, T. C.
Brooks, J. C.
Brown. C. C.
Bryant, P. A.
Byerly, T. J.
Caldwell, J. A. Jr.
Canada, C. S.
Cates, A. E.
Clark, M. G.
Coble. C. P.
Coffey, G. W.
Coker, F. W.
conley, j. r.
CONLEY, R. P.
Cook, J. S.
CoxE, F. J.
J^embers
FousT, T. B.
Gant. J. E
Gibson, J. S.
Graham, A. W.
Graham, D. S.
Gray, E P.
Greenfield, J. M. Jr
GULLETT. B. D.
Hall, J. K.
Hand, H. W.
Hardin, A W.
Harkins. T. J
Harris, F. H.
Harris, I. F.
Hartley, E- F.
Hearne, W. E.
Henderson, J. S. Jr.
HiNSHAW, M.
Hopper, A. T.
Hutchison, R. S.
Jarratt, a. H.
Johnson, \V. T.
Kerley, a. C
Kerner, C. C.
Kluttz, W.
Kluttz. W. L. Jr
Craven, W. W.
Crawford, W. S.
Crews, W. E. Lynch, J. M.
Daniel, Z. V. McCanless, W.
Davis, L. H. McIver, C. R.
Davis, R. O. E. McIver, H.
Deaton. R. S. Maddry. C E.
Donnelly, Jno. Massay. J. B.
Edwards, A D. Mathesox, P. B
Murphy, W. A.
Neville, E L.
Nichols. J. T.
Oliver. T. C.
Osborne, F. M.
Owen, W. B.
Patterson, E. V.
Patterson, L. B.
Pearson, T. G.
Porter, R.E.
Pritchard, W. D.
Reaves, S. W.
Reynolds, G. L.
Reynolds, H. H.
Reynolds, J.
RiERSON, F. C.
Robins, H. M.
Rogers, S. J.
Ross, J. K.
Sadler, F. L.
Satterfield, R. S
Shore, C. A.
Smith, J. T.
Speas, \V. B.
Stevens, G. P.
Swain. J. E.
Lichtenthaeler, R. a. Swift, W. H.
Lockhart, J. A. Jr Swink. D. M.
London, H. M. Thompson D. S
TURRENTINE, J. W.
F. Watkins. F. B.
Webb, J. S.
Wharton, W G
Williams
Willis, E C
Wilson, H. E D,
Elliot, M. D.
Kskkidge, R L.
Means, G R.
Miller, C. L.
Wilson, W. S.
WOLTZ, A. Iv
founded in 1795
uuu
Color— WHITE
l^otto — virtue, Liberty and Science
IVIemberB
Barwick
Bryan, W. F.
Bateman
BUSBEE, p. II.
Bernard
Cheatham
Cowper, G. V.
Dees
Greening
HOELL
HOBBS, J. C.
Johnston, L. G.
Parker, D. P.
Skunner, B. S.
Tart
Thompson, C. E.
Ward, N. E.
Jenkins
Harris, J. L.
Brooks, B. W.
McLamb
HoiXOWEI,L
Avent
Adams
Brooks, B. A.
Bahard
Chambp:rlain
Ehringhaus
Everett
Godwin
Highsmith
Jacocks
Kennedy
Lewis, I. F.
Monroe
Prior
Reynolds
Stern
Stevens, H. P.
Whitaker
Woodward, W. S.
Sahenger
Keli<am
EXUM
Stokes
Brinn
Hinsdale
Curtis, N. Burgess
Huhn Broadhurst
Thigh EN Connor
Rose Cox, W, E.
Moore, J. A. Denson
Abernethy, E. a. Dozier
Wood, E.J. Grimes
Kornegay Holmes
Barnes Lane, B. B.
Hardy, I. M. McFadyen
SiTTERSON
Wagstaff
Harding
Askew
Bunn
KiTTREI.L
Hume
Latta
Hewitt
Weil
Chadbourn
Stephens, L. L.
Curtis, W.
I02
@fp^ci chapter
Hlpba €beta phi
uuu
A e * was founded in 1S94 by H. C. Tolman, Ph. D., now Professor of Greek in
Vanderbilt University. Its purpose is "to stimulate and
increase a desire for sound scholarship."
John R. Carr, '99
J. K. DoziER, '99 .
M. Bellamy, '99
^fficere
President
Secretary
Treasurer
(WlemBere
Class of '92
Charles Baskerville
Class of '96
W. C. Smith
Class of '97
R. H. Graves
Class of '98
Archibald Henderson
Marsden Bellamy, Jr.
jNo. Donnelly
Class of '99
C. B. Denson J. R- Carr
J. K. DoziER H. P. Harding
Class of '00
W. F. Bryan Ernest Graves
L. V. Branch K. P. Lewis D. P. Parker.
103
u u u
^fftcere
Thomas Hume, DD., LL. D.
H. F. LiNSCOTT, Ph. D.
W. J. HORNEY, A. B.
H. P. Harding
President
Vice-President
Secretary
Treasurer
Characteristic Papers Read
'Unturned Leaf in the Love Affair of Hal's Queen"— B. B. Lane
"Warwick, the King-maker, in Drama and Novel" — Miss WhiTaker
"Margaret of Anjou in Shakespeare and Scott"— H. B. Holmes
"Shakespeare and The Dark Lad}'"— J. W. Canada
'The English Novel and Its Relation to the Drama"— Dr. Thos. Hume
''Shakespeare's Treatment of Melancholy in As You Like It"— Miss WhiTaker
"The Famous Victories of Henry V" — M. Bellamy, Jr.
"Battle of Agincourt" — Dr. Hume
'Hotspur and the Douglas in Shakespeare and the Ballads"— Mr. R. D. W. Connor
"The Sources and Uses of the Plot of Romeo and Juliet"— Mr. Hal Anhekson
"How Do Circumstances Affect Characters?" — Mr. Shore
"Lyrical Element in Romeo and Juliet" — H. L- Watson
104
Dr. Thomas Hume President
Dr. H. F. Linscott Vice-President
Mr. Samuel May Secretary and Treasurer
Some Papers Read During the Year
Note on Busch's Bismarck ; Secret Pages from His History — W. D. Toy.
The Letters of Lipsens — K. P. Harrington.
The Date of Zoroaster — Dr. H. F. Linscott.
The Third Episode in Beowulf and Nibelungenlied — Dr. Thomas Hume.
Conceptions of Death and Immortality in Latin Sepulchral Inscriptions— K. P. Harrington.
Scenery in the Elene — Dr. Thomas Hume.
A Note on Cyrano de Bergerac — W. D. Toy.
Athenian Newspapers — Dr. E. Alexander.
C3-newolf — Dr. Thomas Hume.
Virgil's Conception of Man's Relation to the Infinite— Dr. H. F. Linscott.
105
ifc^A^^ig^^^
Officers
J. A. Holmes, B. S.
C. S Mangum, M. D. .
F. P. Vexable, Ph D.
Charles Baskerville, Ph. D.
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
Corresponding Secretary
Some Papers Read During the Y^^r
The Chemistry and Physics of Taste and Smell."— Dr. Thos. Clarke.
"Conant on the Cumbomedusse "— Dr. Wilson.
" National Science as Interpreted by Societies."— Dr. F. P. Venable.
"Some Notes on Some of the Colony Breeding Birds of Eastern Carolina."
—Mr. T. G. Pearson.
"A New Rhizopod."— Dr. Wilson.
" A Case of Spontaneous Combustion in a Cotton Mill."— Dr. Charles Baskerville.
ic6
Officers
Dr. Kemp P. Battle, LL. D.. President
E. A. Alderman, D. C. L., Vice-President
H. M. London, Secretary-
Che following were arnong the papers presented before the Society during
the past year:
Tlie Fall of Fort Hattress"— Mr. H. P. Harding
" The Government of North Carolina Under the Lord Proprietors" — Mr. E. J. Wood
"Some Early Famous Schools and Their Teachers" — Dr. K. P. BaTTLE
"The Battle of Bentonville"— Mr. R. D. W. Connor
" A Sketch of Captain Johnston Blakely " — Mr. H. M. London
'James Madison and The Constitution" — Mr, C. C. Brown
" Cornelius Harnett— Mr. M. Bellamy, Jr.
" C )1. William Lenoir at The Battle of King's ?kIountain"— Mr. H. M. Wagstaff
" Historical Reminiscences " — Dr. K. P Battle
107
George D. Vick
g. woodard .
H. C. CowLES, Jr.
A. R. Berkei^ey
QXnmxeit^ (Berman €fu6
Officers
President
X'ice-President
Secretar}-
Treasurer
H. C. CowLES, Jr. ..... Leader October German
J. A. Moore and G. WooDAKD .... Floor Managers
J. D. Grimes, ...... Leader Februar}' German
E. KoRNEGAv and E. N Jovner . . . Floor Managers
r S
O 58
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5 <
o
o
2 X
o
n g D
5?
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> M M
t: t^ f
7: f <
X O -^
hi' U
(^emBere
EbEN AIvEXANDER
T. W. Alexander
C. S. Alston
W. K. Battle
A. R. Berkeley
C. B. Buxton
J. P. Bunn
E. H. Brown
J. D. Grimes
J. W. Hinsdale
E. N. JOVNER
E. KORNEGAV
W. L. Kluttz, Jr.
K. P. Lewis
E. M. Land
H. M. London
James McRae
J. A. Moore
J. A. Caldwell
J. S. Carr, Jr.
J. R. Carr
A. M. Carr
George Chadbourn
F. K. Cooke
H. C. COWLES
R. G. Davis
Jones Fuller
M. Makelv
A. W. Neal
E. V. Patterson
F. O. Rogers
W. C. Rodman
E. B. Taylor
G. D. ViCK
G. Woodard
E. J. Wood
C. Baskerville
J C. RlGGS.
T. Clarke
R. H. Graves
C S. Mangum
A. Henderson
S. May
•^IK.
QXnmxeit^ ©ramaftc €fu6
Season 1898-'99
truu
R. II. Gravks
G. D. ViCK .
M. Bellamv, Jr
Saff term
Director
. Mauager
Stage Manager
^
Christmas Trip, presenting " The Little Rebel " and "Evening Dress."
t^t feiftfc dCcfief
Cast of Characters
Stephen Poppincourt E. A. Lockett
Arthur Ormeston G. Woodard
Mrs. Wingrove . CD. Gruver
Laura J- R- Carr
Kitty Vinks I- Harris
(Btjemng ©rese
Cast of Characters
Edward Roberts E. A. Lockett
Willis Campbell G. Woodard
Mrs. Roberts J- R- Carr
Mrs. Campbell " I. F- Harris
Bella CD. Gruver
December 9, 189S
December 27, 1S98
December 28, 1898
December 29, 1898
December 30, 1898
feief of (Jpcrformancce
Gerrard Hall, Chapel Hill, N. C
Opera House, Tarboro, N. C
Opera House, Wilson, N. C
Opera House, Goldsboro, N. C
Opera House, Wilmington, N. C
Easter Trip, presenting " Evening Dress" and "' Lend Me Five Shillings,
Spring ^erm
S. May Director
H. C. CowLES, Jr. ... Business Manager
J. A. Moore Stage Manager
(Btjening ©reee
Cast of Characters
Edward Roberts E. A. LocKETT
Willis Campbell A. A. Holmes
Mrs. Roberts I. F. Harris
Mrs. Campbell A. R. Berkeley
Bella J- H. Alexander
Cast of Characters
Mr. Golightly E. A. Lockett
Captain Phobbs W. C. Rodman
Captain Spruce H. Alexander
Morland P- Cobb
Mrs. Major Phobbs I- Harris
Mrs. Captain Phobbs A. R. Berkeley
113
QX. Qt* €♦ ^tzee ^eeociation
u u u
W. S. Wilson
H. M. London
E. A. LOCKETT
Officers
President
Vice-President
Secretary and Treasurer
(^emfiers
E. A. Abernethy — Raleigh News and Observer
Benj. Beli,, Jr. — Wilmington Messenger
J. W. Greening — Northampton Patron and Gleanor
J. K. Hall— Statesville Landmark
W. J. HoRNEY — Greensboro Record
Whitehead Kluttz — Charlotte Observer
J. Ed. Latta — Durham Daily Sun
E. A. LoCKETT— Twin-City Daily Sentinel
H. M. London — Raleigh Morning Post
F, M. Osborne — Charlotte News
D. L. St. Clair — Sanford Express
H. L. Watson— Greenville (S. C. ) Mountaineer
W. S. Wilson — Caswell News
114
Y
M
,"vj
\
^
T. Gilbert Pearson, President Halcott Anderson, Vice-President
George p. Stevens, Corresponding Secietary
George Vernon Cowper, Recording Secretary A. J. Barwick, Treasurer
117
QXnmxBxt^ Chapter
Officers
F. M. Osborne
Director
W. E. Cox ....
Vice-Director
T. A. Cheatham
Secretary
J. M. SiTTERSON, Jr.
Treasurer
l^embers
;. Alexander, Jr.
T. N. Cheatham
H. Anderson
G. V. CowPER
E. S. Askew
W. E. Cox
A. R. Berkeley
N. C. Curtis
J. A. Caldwell
R. G. S. Davis
J. C. B. Ehringhaus
C. F. HoELL J. E. Huhn
F. G. JACOCKS W. P. JACOCKS
A. H. Jarratt H. M. London
C. MacRae F. M. Osborne
J. M. SiTTERSON, Jr. B. S. Skinner
St. Hndrcw's Day— November 28th
periodical— 5"/. .-Andrew's Cross
Convenes — Sunday noon
Rymn — "Jesus calls us o'er the tumult."
Object:— The sole object of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew is the spread of Christ's King-
dom among young men; and, to this end, every man desiring to become a member thereof
must pledge himself to obey the rules of the brotherhood so long as he shall be a member.
These rules are two: The Rule of Prayer and the Rule of Service. The Rule of Prayer is to
pray daily for the spread of Christ's Kingdom among young men and for God's blessing upon
the labors of the Brotherhood. The Rule of Service is to make an earnest effort each week to
bring at least one young man within hearing of the gospel of Jesus Christ, as set forth in the
services of the church and in young men's Bible-classes
118
Campus Views
^iMoPublicdtions
u u u
OflRcial Organ (Kleehlyi of dniversity Htbletic Hssoctation
Saff ^erm
R. D. W. Connor Editor-in-Chief
H. M. Wagstaff
J. A. Caldwell
W. S. Crawford
E. D. Broadhurst
M. Bellamy, Jr.
W. E. Cox
F. M. Osborne Business Manager
A. J. Barwick Assistant Manager
M. Bellamy, Jr. Editor-in-Chief
H. M. Wagstaff
E. D. Broadhurst
D. P. Parker
W. S. Crawford
W. E. Cox
H. M. London
F. M. OsBORXE Business Manager
A. J Barwick ■ . . Assistant Manager
O
td 2
W O
50
O
>
a
2 50
50 ^
North
[UN0\/[E[^Q1]¥
M^dziRe.
ItBriUAfiy, 1899,
PUBLISHED BYTHE,,,^ . -
is}6 rafer:::j;;s
Chapel Hill, N.c.
Q$oarb of (B^ifors
W. S, Wilson, '99, Di, Editor-in-Chief
W. E. Cox, '99, Phi, Business Manager
H. M. London, '99, Di H. B. Holmes, '99, Phi
F. M. Osborne, '99, Di C. B. Denson, '99, Phi
A. E. Cates, '00, Di W. S. Bernard, '00, Phi
124
magazine editors
Osborne Gates
Cox Wilson
Bernard
125
Holmes
London
Denson
u u u
editor-!n-Cbief
F. M. OSSORNE
Commiffeee
Business
W. F. Bryan, Chief Business Manager
M. Bellamy, Jr. and F. J. CoxE, Assistants
H. L. Watson
ejeecutive
W. F. Bryan
M. Bellamy, Jr.
W. A. Murphy
Quotation
H. L. Watson
C L,. Miller
Htbletic
T. W. Jones
C. L. Miller
tumorous
G. Woodard
M. Bellamy, Jr. N. C. Curtis
Organization
F. J. Coxe
W. A. Murphy
Hrt
H. h. W.\tson C. B. Denson
Subscription
G. Woodard
T. W. Jones F. J. Coxe
126
2 ►!!
r
r o
to O
^i
>
Chief Ball ]vianager
J. D. Grimes
Officer 0 of t^t 104f ^ (^mm(
Commencemenft 1899
rruu
Chief IVIarshal
J. A. Moore
6ub->Iarshals
G. Chadbourn J. E. Gant
T. A. Cheatham W. E. Hearne
T. W. Jones, Jr. E. t,. Nevule
Sub-^Ianagers
E. N. JOYNER E. S. Asken
J. A. Caldwell I. F. Harris
R. G. S. Davis W. E. Kornegay
Representative Speakers
phi
A. J. Barwick
D. P. Parker
N. E. Ward
Di ?
T. T. Allison
A. R. Berkeley
G. N. Coffey
Between the aniverstty of ]Sortb Carolina and the Clniversity of Georgia
1897
Resoli'ed, That the Principle of the Swiss Initiative and Referendum be Incorporated
in Our System of Government.
Affirmative (North Carolina). Negative (Georgia).
II. G. Connor, Jr. C M. Walker
D. B. Smith George Jackson
Debate won by Georgia
1898
Resolved, That the United States Annex Hawaii.
Affirmative (Georgia). Negative (North Carolina).
J. S. Roberts
W. F. Upshaw
C. M. Walker
E. K. Graham
Debate won by North Carolina.
1899
Resolved, That United States Senators Should Be Elected by Direct Vote of the People.
Negative (North Carolina).
E. D. Bro.ydhurst
T. C. Bowie
Affirmative (Georgia)
P. H. DOYAL
J. L. TisoN
Debate won by North Carolina.
129
dnder the Husptces of the Dialect and pbtlantbropic Literary Societies
u u rr
Officers
H. P. Harding, Phi
T. J. Harkins, Di .
F. M. Osborne, Di
H. M. TvONDON, Di
E. Alexander, Jr., Di
President
Secretary
Orators
Hrrangement Committee
C. G. Rose, Phi
J. E. HuHN, Phi
J^Iarsbals
G. V. Cowper, Phi
J. C. B. Ehringhaus, Phi
130
W. S. Bernard, Phi
T. C. Bowie, Di
A. E. WoLTz, Di
'3'
Xnnivetsitis of Bortb Carolina
Htbletic Hesociation
J. S. Carr, Jr., President E. V. Patterson, Vice-President
C S. Alston, Secretary and Treasurer
jfootball
W. L. KluTTz, Jr., Manager A. R. BerkeIvEY, Assistant Manager
F. O. Rogers, Captain
:©ascball
J. R. Carr, Manager W. B. Whitehead, Assistant Manager
R. A. Winston, Captain
^racft
W. E. Kornegay, Temporary Captain and Manager
J. W. Calder, Director
atbletic BCtvlsorg Committee
Charles Baskerville, Ph D. J. C. Biggs, Ph B. R. A. Winston
m
Tootban
133
Schedule of Games and l^Iembers of football Ccam
134
Q
m
1bistori2 of Zhc XTeam of '98
M. 1R. IRegnolOs
trun
ROBABLY no single year in the history- of athletics in the University has been
so important as the one just past.
Virginia had given us many reasons to believe that she considered us too
weak to be a rival, and after many difficulties we succeeded in arranging our
Thanksgiving game. Virginia must necessarily win another time if she wished
to discontinue the annual Richmond game, and the Athletic Advisors, Alumni,
and student body of the ULiversity of N. C. soon realized the great importance
of the season of '98.
This probably was the greatest factor in our success, coupled with the same
coaching and training methods being continued with the fact that many of the
old players were back in the University
The coach, captain and players were constantly being encouraged by the
deep interest displayed by the Alumni all over the state and country.
The student body soon began to realize the possibilities of the team and gradually grew
encouraged, then confident, and finally intensely enthusiastic. The team worked faithfully,
with a grim determination and confidence that could only result in success. Thus we see at
the very beginning that our success can be attributed to no single cause, accident, or ability,
but was the logical sequence of a united bod}' of determined men, acting with but a single object
in view — i e., a victory over Virginia and the Championship of the South. The season opened
with nearly the whole of the team of '97 ready for work. Belden, Collins, White and Borland
were the only ones who failed to respond to the roll-call.
New material was not very abundant, but made up in quality what it lacked in quantity.
Gregory (Captain '95 ) and Koehler added considerable strength at the ends of the line, while
Phifer added much power to the middle of the line. Copeland soon proved his worth as a good
back, both in offense and defense, while Graves moved from substitute to full back, and credit-
ably filled the place left vacant by Belden, who had been a tower of strength to the team in the
two seasons just past.
The team spent but little time in preliminary practice and almost immediately began where
the close of the previous season had left them. The same plays were continued and but a few
changes made in the plays of the previous season.
Straight football was the text and but two trick plays were used during the entire season,
although many more had been practiced but not found applicable. Guilford, A. & M. , Greens-
boro and Oak Ridge were all beaten by very small scores, and it was much feared that there
would be a repetition of the season of '97, when the team was strong in defense and weak in
ofiense. Just previous to the V. P. I. game, the scrub games were hard and fierce, and a slight
improvement in the offense gave us nmch hope on our departure for Winston. Here, much to
our surprise, our much-vaunted defense was broken by the superb attack of the Blacksburg
team, who managed to score six points, and at the same time Carolina, supposed to be weak in
attack, gave the finest exhibition of fierce and finished team attack that has ever been seen in
the State. The Blacksburg team was simply powerless before the formidable plunges of the
backs and the quick charging of the line men, and were easil}' defeated by score of 28-6. The
following day we journeyed to Charlotte and put up a lifeless game z'S. Davidson, which was
beaten it to o in a poorly played game.
141
At Macon, Ga., Carolina administered a most crushing defeat to Georgia, in fact, the most
decisive victory ever won in the South— 53-0 (44 S. I. A. ) tells the story in the fewest words.
The following Monday we journe5-ed into Alabama. A. P. I., championship aspirations were
nipped in the bud at Auburn by a goodly margin. We invaded Virginia with a strong faith
in our power of attack — some fear of our defense — but with the highest hopes of victory. When
the rival teams entered the grounds it was apparent to all that Virginia had much the better
of it in the matter of weight, and it was to be a game in which the odds favored Virginia from
the first. As the Virginia game is the one great game of our season, let us discuss it in a some-
what critical manner. Almost the whole of the first half was fought in Carolina's territory,
through the fumbles and misplays of Carolina's men, aided by the judicial kicking of Virginia,
backed by a good steady wind. Three times Virginia secured the ball within Carolina's 15 -yard
line, but failed to advance it any further. During the last few moments of the first half, Caro-
lina pulled together, and by good line plunges and end skirting, carried the ball from her
lo-yard line to Virginia's 25-yard line, when time was called. The half closed with honors even.
ScconO Ibalf
After several exchanges of punts, Carolina started her machinerj- to work on her forty-
yard line, and never let up till Howell crossed Virginia's goal line by a magnificent run of
forty yards. With the score 6-0 in favor of Carolina, we then played a purely defensive
game. Virginia made a splendid brace in the last few moments of the game, but was gallantly
met by the stubborn defense of the Carolina lads, and only succeeded in scoring a "safety" by
throwing the catcher of a drop kick back of the goal line.
Carolina had but few opportunities to show her power of attack, as the individual misplays
and fumbles of the team so often gave the ball to Virginia in Carolina's territory and naturally
threw her on the defensive. She rushed the fourth down when inside her forty-yard line, and
this accounts much for her failure to keep the ball such a short time during the game.
The team of '98 not only will be remembered as champions, but also as a team strong in
every department of the game, with great resources of attack and an impregnable system of
defense, and as a team composed of gentlemen.
Hats off to the gallant champions of the South in the year 1898.
JFootball Scores for previous l^ears
uuu
18S8='S9
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest
University of North Carolina versus Trinity
33-0
17-25
t889*'90
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest .. .. .. •■ ■■ 8-18
University of North Carolina versus Trinity . . forfeited to University of North Carolina
1891
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest .
University of North Carolina versus Trinity .
143
6-4
4-6
IS92
University of North Carolina versus Richmond College . . 40-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . 18-30
University of North Carolina versus Trinity 24-0
University of North Carolina versus Auburn . . . . . . 64-0
University of North Carolina versus Vanderbilt .. 24.-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . 26-0
1893
University of North Carolina versus Washington and Lee . . 40-0
University of North Carolina versus Virginia Military Institute 6-10
University of North Carolina versus Trinity . . . . 4-6
University of North Carolina versus University of Tennessee 60-0
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest . . . . 40-0
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh 0-34
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia 0-16
1894
University of North Carolina versus A. & M. College
University of North Carolina versus A. & M. College
University of North Carolina versus Trinity >
University of North Carolina versus Sewanee
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh
University of North Carolina versus Rutgers
University of North Carolina versus Georgetown University
University of North Carolina versus Richmond College
University of North Carolina versus Universit}' of Virginia
1895
University of North Carolina versus A. & M. College
University of North Carolina versus Richmond College
University of North Carolina versus University of Georgia
University of North Carolina versus Vanderbilt . .
University of North Carolina versus Sewanee
University of North Carolina versus University of Georgia
University of North Carolina versus Washington and Lee
University of North Carolina versus A. & M. College of Viginia
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia .. .. .. 0-6
144
44-
-0
16-0
2S-
0
36-4
6-
-24
. 0-
-5
20-
-4
28-0
. . . . 0-
-34
36-
■0
34-
-0
6-
-0
12-0
0-0
10-
-6
16-
-0
32-5
IS96
University of North Carolina versus Guilford College . . 26-4
University of North Carolina versus Guilford College . . 34-0
University of North Carolina versus Virginia Poly. Inst. . . 0-0
University of North Carolina versus Hampton Athletic Club 0-18
University of North Carolina versus Charlotte Y. M. C. A. . . 0-8
University of North Carolina versus Greensboro A. A. . . 30-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Georgia 16-24
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia 0-46
IS97
16-0
. . 24-0
University of North Carolina versus A. and M. College . . . . . . 40-0
University of North Carolina versus Guilford College
University of North Carolina versus Greensboro, Ala.
University of North Carolina versus Clemson College
University of North Carolina versus Virginia Poly. Institute
University of North Carolina versus Sewanee .. .. .. .. 12-6
University of North Carolina versus Vanderbilt .. .. .. .. 0-31
University of North Carolina versus University of Tennessee . . . . 12-0
University of North Carolina versus Bingham's School . . . . . . 16
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia
28-0
0-4
0-12 ^ ,
^ I
111
145
"Scrub" football tEeam
SeconO ^eatn
UUU
iXctt iBn^
B. B. Lank, Jr. T. W. Jonks
Xcft ^Tackle
E. L. Nkvii.lk W. S. Crawford
IRiQbt ©uarD
T. R. Brhm
Xcft 6uar5
J. M. Hayes
Center
J. F. Pi.rMMiCR J. E. Gant
TRidbt ^acltle
J. H. MCIVER
IRigbt j£n&
C. R. McIvER
(Siuartcr JBacft jfull JBaci?
J. B. Martin, Capt. H. A. Lambeth M. Makei.y, Jr. C. C. Kerner
IRicibt 1balf=36acl?
R. H. BKIJ.AMY J. DONNELIA'
Xcft jHalfsaSacft
C. McRae F. J. CoxE
146
iim»v„
m
^' 'if' f ■
147
Baseball ^eam of ^99
uuu
E. Graves
/7 R- B. Lawson
R. ^. Winston . .
C. S. Alston
G. WOODARD
H. A. Lambeth
T. T. AijjsoN . .
F. O. Rogers
J. Donnelly
Catcher
Pitcher
First Base
Second Base
Shortstop
Third Base
. . Left Field
Center Field
Right Field
Substitutes
T. J. Harkins ) pj^^j,^
W. K. Battle )
F. Bennnett
W. V. Brem
Baseball Scbet)ule
March 8
U. N. C.
March ii
. U. N. C.
March 15
U. N. C.
March 22
U. N. C.
March 27
U. N. C.
March 28
U. N. C.
April I
U. N. C.
April 3
U. N. C.
April 5
U. N. C.
April 22
U. N. C.
April 19
U. N. C.
April 29
U. N. C.
May I
U. N. C.
May 13
U. N. C.
versus Horner School, at Chapel Hill
" Bingham School ( Mebane ), at Chapel Hill
" Guilford College, at Chapel Hill
" Oak Ridge, at Chapel Hill
" Lafayette College, at Chapel Hill . .
" Lafayette College, at Chapel Hill
" Lehigh University, at Greensboro
" Lehigh University, at Winston
" Lehigh University, at Chapel Hill
" University of Maryland, at Chapel Hill
" Roanoke College, at Chapel Hill
" University of Georgia, at Atlanta, Ga.
" Mercer University, at Macon, Ga
" University of Georgia ..
148
SCORKS
24-2
14-0
I4-I
II-O
4-13
5-2
18-4
7-5
5-0
5-6
15-1
2-1
10-4
10- 1
Baseball Scores '9l^'98
u u u
1S91
University of North Carolina versus Trinity . . . . . . . . 8-3
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest .. .. .. .. 7-10
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . . . 1-6
IS92
University of North Carolina versus Guilford Colle,tce . . 14-1
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . . . 7-4
University of North Carolina versus Winston .. .. 3-^3
University of North Carolina versus Davis School . . 6-2
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . .
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia
University of North Carolina versus Washington and Lee
University of North Carolina versus Richmond
1893
University of North Carolina versus Durham Athletic Association . . 17-5
University of North Carolina versus Vermont . . . . . . . . 1-2
University of North Carolina versus Vermont . . . . . . 2-5
Universit}' of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . . . 14-0
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest . . . . . . . . 23-6
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . . . 2-5
University of North Carolina versus Washington and Lee . . . . . . 9-3
1894
University of North Carolina versus Durham Athletic Association 6-3
University of North Carolina versus Yale .. .. 4-7
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh . . . . 12-7
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh 6-1
University of North Carolina versus Durham Athletic Association 20-4
150
University of North Carolina versus University of Vermont . . 6-7
University of North Carolina versus University of Vermont . . 10-3
University of North Carolina versus Oak kidge Institute . . 6-1
University of North Carolina versus Richmond College 14-1
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia .. .. 4-2
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . 2-10
University of North Carolina versus Richmond College . . . . 6-3
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette . . 1-2
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette . . . . 6-5
1895
University of North Carolina versus University of Vermont . . 4-r
University of North Carolina versus Boston League .. .. 3-17
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette College 1-9
University of North Carolina versus Lafaj'ette College . . . . 3-4
University of North Carolina versiis Lafayette College . . . . 6-3
University of North Carolina versus Franklin and Marshall . . 21-5
University of North Carolina versus Franklin and Marshall . . 12-1
University of North Carolina versus A. & M. College . . . . 20-0.
University' of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . . . 12-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . 0-7
1896
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . 9-4
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute .. 12-7
University of North Carolina versus Lafa3-ette College 18-9
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh . . 7-4
University of North Carolina versus Princeton . . . . . . 8-10
University of North Carolina versus Vale . . . . . . 8-4
University of North Carolina versus Hobart College . . . . . . 16-14
University of North Carolina versus Hobart College . . . . . . 12-10
University of North Carolina versus Mebane High School . . 18-3
- University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . 14-6
University of North Carolina versus Washington and Lee . . . . 19-0
151
1897
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute .. .. 19-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . . . 6-7
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest. . . . . . . . 7-2
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette College .. 11-9
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette College . . 6-3
University of North Carolina versus University of Pennsylvania . . 6-1 1
University of North Carolina versus University of Pennsylvania . . 5-6
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh University . . 8-8
University of North Carolina versus Lehigh University . . . . 4-7
University of North Carolina versus Yale . . . . . . . . . . 15-19
University of North Carolina versus Princeton . . . . . . . . 2-9
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . 4-10
1898
University of North Carolina versus William Bingham's School . . 9-1
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . 8-1
University of North Carolina versus Trinity College . . . . . . 6-0
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest . . . . . . 28-1
University of North Carolina versus Wake Forest . . . . . . 7-1
University of North Carolina versus Lafayette . . . . . . . . 9-19
. University of North Carolina versus Lafayette . . . . . . . . 9-7
University of North Carolina versus Johns Hopkins . . 20-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Pennsylvania . . 9-0
University of North Carolina versus University of Virginia . . . . Rain
Universit}^ of North Carolina versus Harvard University . . ..... 10-10
University of North Carolina versus Oak Ridge Institute . . 11-2
University of North Carolina versus Trinity . . . . . . 5-9
University of North Carolina versus Trinity . . . . . . 1 1-2
152
Sopbomoie Claes jfootball ^eani
C. A. Ottinger, Captain
R. E. Brinn
A. W. Graham
H. W. Hand
J. B. Daniki<
A. H. Jarrktt
J. C. HOBBS
E. C. GUDGER
J. T. Dortch
R. L. Eskridge
A. E. WOETZ
UUU
Quarter Back
Right End
Right Tackle
Right Guard
Center
Left Guard
Left Tackle
Left End
Right Half-back
Full Back
Left Half-back
Substitutes
W. W. Craven
A. D. Edwards
G. B. Newbv, Manager
R. E. Porter
J54
Team
Emmet Kornp:gay Captain
W. E. Hkarne Manager
J. W. C ALDER Director
1S6
Xriniversit\> Uennis Hssociation
uuu
©fficevs
C. S. Al.STON
K. p. Lewis .
\V. K. Batti.h .
President
Vice-President
Secretary-Treasurer
158
159
(Wi^ ^a^ Sono
Tanrittcn for ^be Ibellcnian
WOULD write a song to the mad,
glad spring,
\_ But.pshawl it is scarce worth
while.
As long as so bright
Is the warm, sweet light
Of one dear maiden's smile.
If I do but seek for a stray
^-st;^^^ sunbeam
^ To render my lines more fair.
Every gleam, I rind,
She has snared and twined
In her meshes of golden hair.
I look for the red, red rose of love,
Filled with dew, which the wild bird sips,
But the lovliest rose
Pale and faded grows
By the roses that live on her lips.
And if for wisdom I search the stars
That glow in the evening skies,
Neither near nor far
Is so bright a star
As the two that w-e call her eves.
Ah, then is it strange that my song is hushed,
And its throbbing notes are stilled?
Yet why need I care?
Full well I'm aware
That my poem already is — maid.
— William Gilmer Perry.
1 60
B fool anb Ibis foH>^
^^ MONROE CRAVEN was a queer sort. Not that he was an architectural
VV enigma or anything of that sort ; for at a distance he might have been called
■ "good-looking," as we Southerners say. " It's that snap-turtle way of his,"
____JL-|- said Marshal, "and nothing ever suits him." Marshal thought he knew human
|l nature better than any other man alive— or dead, either, for that matter. He
j was a dry goods clerk and a fellow-boarder in misery. Craven's personal ap-
pearance at a distance has been remarked. Closer inspection revealed sundry
and divers brown marks on his face, and even ears, and he had a way of turn-
ing red in the face and around the neck when embarrassed. "There are
others," as the badge button says; but the difference in Craven's case was, he
would say cutting things, words not to be written while in these fits of embarrass-
ment. Perhaps this was due to his vScotch-Irish blood, for he certainly had it,
— -^p-^though how he came by it was as great a mystery to him as any one else. He
jl ■ hardly knew his grandfather's name. His ancestry beyond his father and
^T^^^^^ mother cut no figure with him.
^■^^^ That way of his, saying uncomplimentary things, did not make him pop-
ular with women. The majority of the few who numbered him among their acquaintances
positively hated him ; the rest gave him a wide berth. He did not mind it at all. In fact, his
attitude toward women was that of a devout Mohammedan toward the rest of mankind. As an
incentive to this feeling he read Schopenhauer.
How we ever became friends I can not say positively. For one reason, we were both
Chapel Hill boys ; second, and most likely the real reason, we were both fond of speculative
theories. Whatever was the cause, our friendship was cemented by the fact that we were both
aspiring young journalists on the staff of TAe Mot-ning Post. Our talents were as yet confined
to reportorial work, but we had high hopes -something more than anybody else had for us.
In the meanwhile we worked doggedly at our regular " copy " and drew soul-solacing comfort
from one never-failing source — our cigarettes.
During a common-place conversation one day ( indulged in during a lull in the rush created
by that exorbitant monster, the foreman i an idea struck me rather suddenly about Craven's
future, and I hastened to apply it.
" Monroe, old man, suppose you were
to fall in love ? "
"Just as likely try to find the North
Pole" — his pet expression for an absurdity.
" Not so fast with your redudio ad ab-
surdujii,^^ I replied. " Like death it comes
to every man sooner or later."
"Let it come and come soon then,"
he answered dramaticalh'.
So much for the prologue. Now for
the story. It all began with Miss Holt. I
drearily foresaw trouble for niy friend at
the first and could only wait. This young lady was visiting her friend and former schoolmate,
Miss D'Alvigny. Now Miss D'Alvigny was one of the few young ladies who recognized
Craven when he bowed, so, in his opinion, was about the only girl he knew in Raleigh. Her
home was about the only place we ever visited, and this was quite frequently on Sunday
nights after church. Not that we went to church, but ]Miss D'Alvigny did and we had to
wait until she returned. Strange to say we never went with her, but somehow it did not strike
us that way then. On Sunday nights we invested our car fare in cigars and waited for nine
o'clock to roll around.
Neither of us knew of the existence of Miss Holt, and it was with a small degree of astonish-
ment that we looked upon the young lad}- who stood slightly behind Miss D'Alvigny as she
greeted us. "Where in the world have you been keeping yourselves?" said she, " I have
been looking for you both for days. I was determined that Bess should know my reporters
before she left — do excuse
me. My old chum, Miss
Holt,— Mr. McCall,— Mr.
Craven.
It wasn't exactly like
our usual levee there, but
time sped spiftly without
our knowledge. In the
language of the street.
Miss Holt knew her busi-
ness. She had been fore-
warned as to Craven in
case he should fall into
her hands, and such hav-
ing actually occurred, she
wasfullyequal tohertask.
I could hear snatches of
their conversation, and
gasped at the woman's
daring. She flattered, be-
littled, pitied, defied,
praised craven by turns
till he didn't know his
head from the proverbial
hole in the ground. He
walked away from the
house as if under the
influence of a brace of
"Manhattans."
The next time we
called it was just on the
eve of Miss Holt's de-
parture. It seemed, at
first, but as the truth
separated itself from the
thousand and one un-
162
necessaries with which young ladies will embroider it, we learned that " Bess " would not go
to-morrow. Perhaps there was an explanation or more of the statement itself, but I was not
interested and Craven onh' heard that she was not going away.
Usually we slept until ten, had breakfast most any old time, and got to the office by one
o'clock, according to contract. Craven was so hard to arouse I had to almost murder him
daily to get him out of bed. Imagine my surprise, then, when I waked up the next morn-
ing about the usual time to find him gone. Mrs. Reed, the landlady, asked if there was any-
thing wrong — said Mr. Craven went out about eight o'clock without any breakfast. I knew of
nothing but ventured "business" and finished my breakfast.
Craven turned up at the office on time and began work as usual. No explanation was
given, but his tie would have given him away under any explanation. Three times that week
the same thing happened. The third time, on his return, he wore a small bunch of violets on
the lapel of his coat, and put them in water before they had time to wither. We had no vase
or anything of that sort, so Craven had to resort to strategy to get something in which to keep
his violets fresh. He pretended to Mrs. Reed that he had the toothache and had her to send
him a cup of hot water to use on his face. The hot water was quickl}' poured out, the lie for-
gotten, and cold water with a few stray violets wearily straggling on its surface filled the cup.
It was the first fatal symptom. Others rapidly manifested themselves, and in a remarkably
short time this case appeared in its most malignant form.
The crisis was at hand. Miss Holt was to leave on Wednesday. Tuesday afternoon
Craven got "off duty" and went down to Miss D'Alvigny's. "Off duty" meant relief from all-
work except a fire or murder. Instinct would make him
"scoop" these anyway. Of course, no one knew exactly what
was said or done, or how it happened, but from later develop-
ments and the testimony of Miss D'Alvigny we have a pretty
complete idea of how it was that Miss Holt did not become
Mrs. Craven.
Miss Bessie, as Craven called her now, was sitting out on
the vine-enclosed piazza, almost hidden from view, and the
sudden sight of her somewhat startled him as he came up the
steps. Of course, it was the very and only human being he
wanted to see that afternoon, but the suddenness rather threw
him off his guard as it were. "Why, good evening, Mr. Craven.
I'm so glad to see you. How have you been this spring after-
noon?" As if he was an old acquaintance whom she had not seen in a month. Craven
mumbled out a reply, and went down like the flounder on an innocent little camp-stool near the
bench where Miss Bessie was sitting. If he had any sense he would not have done this. It
left him no excuse to move to the bench. "I am going away to-morrow, and was afraid I
should not see you any more. Where is Mr. McCall ? "
"In the office, I suppose," with a tone as if McCall might be just anywhere, so far as he
was concerned. Then he tried to begin a speech about there being no gladness for him, and
some other things which the keenest listener five feet away could not have made head nor tail
of. But Miss Bessie was about four and a half feet away, and even if she did not hear she
seemed to understand, for a very curious expression was now on her face. She looked down
at her hands and began to twist her fan, while at intervals she raised her eyes to Craven's face
as he went on rambling and stumbling about in his little set speech. He was not looking at
anything, apparently. Everything was strangeh- silent. His voice, low as he had pitched it,
163
sounded as it had when he tried to "say" his first "piece
of poetry" in the old school house. He was in an awful
jungle now — words were falling fast. They seemed to
have no connection, his heart was beating faster, and
unconsciously he was rising from his seat. Things were
getting clearer. There was a lime-light distinctness to
the surroundings, and his own eyes glittered strangely.
Miss Bessie was feeling the strange influence now as
her quick breathing and the rapid up and down move-
ment of her eyelids showed. In another minute and the
trial would be over, when suddenly — "Dong, Dong," —
the iron clamor of the fire-bell broke on the stillness.
Reporter that he was. Craven would have made the end
iinmindful of his duty if it had not been for Mrs. D'Al-
vigu}-. Women usually go wild about a fire and Mrs.
D. Alvigny was no exception. I forgot Miss Holt; she
was calmness personified so far as the fire alarm was con-
cerned. However, Mrs. D' Alvigny was not under any
such influence as her guest at that moment. This estimable matron having a care for her prop-
erty only — her matrimonial affairs being quite beyond the effects of fire— rushed out on the
lovers to get Mr. Craven's opinion as to the location of the fire, and also the feasibility of get-
ting the piano out of the house. He assured her that the fire was at least a mile away and
might have added that she ought to be a like distance. But she did not stir until Craven, grown
desperate, told them both "goodbye" and was gone before anything could be said to detain him.
Miss Holt gazed pensively after him and Mrs. D'Alvignj- had a most clearly cut " now-
what-haven't-I-done " look on her face. But it was not yet " too late " for Craven. He could
go back there after the fire, but there is such a thing as " reckoning without mine host " even
in Ihe newspaper business, Craven had hardly got seated at his desk when in came Boyd, the
managing editor, with a telegram in his hand.
" Mr. Craven, there's a race row of some kind on down in Fayetteville, and I want you to
go down there on the 7:35 train this evening." It was 7:20 then. Craven made an unchristian
remark about rows of all kinds and this one in particular — but said to Boyd, " all right, sir."
There was no use throwing up a job like his for the sight of a woman as long as letter postage
was two cents an ounce. He would write Miss Holt at once. In a week he was back in
Raleigh, but in the meanwhile Mrs. D'Alvigny and daughter had left town for the summer,
and Miss Holt's address could not be found out, for she was still visiting away from her home.
Erotomania of the worst kind set in, and my friend seemed hardly able to get through the
Summer. What I had drearily foreseen was now at
hand. A presentiment possessed me that the worst
was in store for my friend. Sure enough it was. ]\Irs
D'Alvigny and daughter were again at home, nnd
Craven and I called at once to see them. One of ll e
first things Miss D'Avigny said was somewhat aboui
" Bess," and the next was to announce her approach
ing marriage to a young man of Selma.
Craven stood it like a soldier.
164
opinion of women.
II.
Time will do one of two things to a man in a profes-
s.on : It will either grind him into or out of the said profes-
sion. With us it did both. I speak of its action on the
firm, "we " : individually, it fixed Craven in journalism and
forced me out.
About two years after the sad business detailed above
I paid Craven a visit in his new capacity as editor and pro-
prietor of the Dispatch. I found him quite the same
fellow as of old in all things but one; he now had a respectful
We were seated in the front end of the building, which served
Inm as office, job-room, press-room, and all the other rooms necessary to a news-
paper building, and I had just complimented him on his success in his earthly
pilgrimage so far, then added :
" Monroe, old man, all you need now is to get married."
I stopped, expecting an outburst of vitriolic comment. Imagine my surprise
when he answered with very cool concern that he'd " been thinking about it."
" I'll tell you, McCall, " he said, " I would get married if I could. And I'll
tell you the kind of woman I'd like to marry. First, she must have black eyes.
That's the only thing about her face I'll require. You've seen girls with large
black eyes that seem to follow you around begging protection, like a deer's, I
believe, the lady novelists call 'em "
"George Eliot calls that variety 'the divine cow. ' Remember Madame Lauvre
in Middlemarch? " I put in.
I saw immediately that I had done wrong, and suspected that Craven had actually selected
some particular individual as the object of his worship. To palliate my oflfense I began to de-
preciate George Eliot. To lead him back to his reminiscent track I tried questions, and finally
succeeded in securing the following monologue :
"Yes, that's the kind of woman I admire. They are not the sort to get mixed up in fairs
and festivals and that kind of thing; make you go on cold meals and all that, while thej- are
going wild over a venture to wheedle the public out of a couple of dollars for the poor heathen.
This kind will never do that. It's a bad way for a.uy woman to get into. One of my sisters went
in for all kinds of fairs and bazaars, and she wound up by marrying a Methodist preacher.
Why, if a woman takes up with such notions, she never has any time to see about a fellow's
laundry. D — n laundries and barbers, anyway. They are the bane of my existence. I want
somebody to keep up with my laundr}' above all things else. Did you ever notice how these
sort keep a house ? They seem to take pride in it, you know. It must be because they don't
like to be eternally "out calling," and that kind of nonsense. She — "
"Well, but, Monroe," I interrupted, "who is she? You certainly have some particular in-
dividual in mind. Tell me who 'she' is."
"Tell you who she is? If I do it will be a confession, for I have certainly never breathed
a word of it in any mortal ear. I am going to very soon. There is a girl down — not very far
from here — living with an aunt of mine who will make just the woman I have described. I am
convinced of this ; in fact, I am going down there next week and tell her so. If she agrees to
my proposition, I'll write you — I'll wire j-ou ' O. K.' at once."
16.=;
" Thatik you, I'm subacutely interested, a la Craddock. Be sure to tell her you love
her, tho"."
"Why?"
"Why? Just so, that's why."
The next week I received a telegram containing the abbreviation " O. F." I took it to
be "O. K.," and supposing that Craven had made suit for and gained the woman he desired,
I wired congratiilations.
The following letter showed my mistake :
Mr. H. H. McCai.l, Brunswick, N. C.
My Dear Mac — Your telegram of the 7th inst. received. It showed that you are as
dense as ever in translation. By " O. F." I meant that I was an " Old Fool," and would have
used extraordinary decorations and trimmings if the rules of the company had allowed. The
dear creature — your "divine cow" — had given her heart, she said, to an innocent Freshman
now at U. N. C If you still have my old copy of Nordau's Degeneration please send it at once.
Sincerely yours, J. Monroe Craven.
166
Zo tbe jfootball XTeam of '98
Beside the flag that long has hung
A trophy on the wall,
Since last from rival hands was wrung
At Alma Mater's call,
Place that to which all honor's due,
Worth while to emulate,
And with the flag of ninetj'-two
Hang that of ninety-eight.
One speaks of many a foughten field.
And of a mighty strife;
And of a rival forced to yield.
With such fierce spirit rife;
And now the other full as oft
Has strived in battle hate.
And now we all shall fling aloft
The flag of ninety-eight.
The team of ninety-two we hold
In verse and story shrined.
And deeds performed by brave and bold
On Georgia's* field we find;
But now in scales the self-same weighed,
But with a later date.
Again from Richmond comes a team,
The team of ninety-eight.
*In 1S;2, at Atlanta, Ga., the North Carolina team defeated the Virginia team by a score of 2()— 0.
JJL ^JJL JJL
Cobb Ipoem
urru
EOLOGY is a pud.
And all it took who could ;
Geology is no longer a pud
Is the experience of those who stood.
It's a science of recent growth,
It deals with ant hills, volcanoes, Ben Booths and so forth.
In it we have the fishy stories of liquification,
Fives and sixes in abundance on examination.
Radiolarians and pterpods sublime.
Make the beauteous land out of bits of lime ;
The Bible is a failure and Moses has lost his job,
For it took a million years to evolute a Cobb.
167
Zhc Skies at Bigbt
O man that say'st past these mortal years,
The grave not this still form alone embars,
But with it all of bliss and all of tears —
Behold the revelation of the stars!
— Hi':nry Jkromk Stockard.
XLhc Song of ^be lPine*^ree
notr
Oh what is the Pine-tree seeming to say,
Sighing and sobbing the livelong day?
Oh listen ! — the weird and mystic song! —
As if borne on the breeze from a distant throng
In a churchyard far away.
It rises and falls like the waves of the sea—
This song of the sorrowing, sighing tree —
It goes to the soul like a solemn knell, •
Like the lingering notes of a tolling bell.
Oh tell me, what can it be?
The Pine-tree's song is a funeral hN'mn,
One long, continuous requiem.
'Tis sung o'er the grave of the mouldering past.
In the evening breeze, in the midnight blast,
In the morning bleak and grim. '98
"ni>a^m" Hlone Mas Zbevc
{ 1 892 J Seven years from date I stood alone in life,
At the foot of the shadowy path that leads to fame ;
No one was there to speak a cheerful word to me.
Save she whom I address — my little " Maym."
Columbia, S. C, Ic
She alone held out to me the olive branch of peace.
And bade me climb to ambition's shining height ;
I'll some day reach it — and praised be her gentle name,
She was my morning star and beacon light.
J. Gordon C00G1.ER.
Written for The Heli^Enian.
ifS
jFables
(initb HpolO(iics to Bcsop anJ la jFontaine)
jfable H.—XLhc jFoi anO toe Crow*
Once a Raven, perched on a limb of a tree, held in his beak a piece of
cheese which for six months had made its appearance on the table at Commons
and yet had proved indestructible.
The olfactory nerves of a Fox were excited by the exhalations of this
tempting morsel, and he ambled up at a ten-second gait to investigate the
\~' X^ cause of the disturbance. Readjusting the lens of his opera glasses he fixed
_^_;>^ his gaze upon the Raven.
"Good morning, my old college chum! Have you used Pear's soap?
Surely the application of Dentifirice has helped your appearance. Really, you
would make a walking advertisement for Pearline."
The dumb old Raven, not perceiving that the sly Fox was jollying him, made an attempt
to show him that he had a voice that would guarantee him a place in the Chapel Choir or
Chapel Hill Choral Society.
The cheese fell to terra firma (according to Newton's law of gravitation, V'-'=2AS), and
the Fox swiped it before the Raven was on to his game.
The moral of this, dear "Moon," Grimes and "Subs," is that even if 3-ou do have a
"rag," you must not think that you are the only canned oyster on the shelf, for when j-our
"rag" is gone "they'll all do you."
*Literally translated from fables used in French II. One fable to be learned by heart each week.
H Xegenb
uuu
FTER the earth had taken form,
Was ready for habitation,
The angels all together were called
In solemn convocation.
And all the angels then were told
This should be the plan.
That together they should try
To manufacture man.
Here a bit and there a bit.
Each one did a fraction;
After a while they had him made
Quite to their satisfaction.
They made him then a garden,
Told him it to keep;
But man laid down beneath the shade
And straightwaj- fell asleep.
The Lord then thought he'd try his hand;
The angels' work he bested,
For since woman was made, the legend runs,
Neither Lord nor man has rested.
169
r Ipictuve (Bailer^
N THE opposite page will be found a collection of famous paintings. The
originals, of which these are reproductions, can be found in the editor's
office. They were secured through the "Co-op" at great cost, (of course).
No. I.
"The Three I'ates." This beautiful painting is fully appreciated by students in English
I, Psychology and Junior Physics. The following beautiful and well adapted lines were sent
us by an admirer of the beautiful picture.
"Freshmen, Juniors, who ere they be
Alike await the Fates' decree,
Grecian Clotho, once who spun
The work of Atropos has begun,
While Lachesis, measuring life for many years,
Has lately claimed her partner's shears.
Clash, clash, Clotho, clash,
Lachesis too, and Atropos sever,
Our hopes from the highest pinnacle dash.
Shall such destruction last forever?"
No. II.
"The Milkmaid of Glenburnie." This well-known work of art is the favorite of those
who have for years past enjoyed the beautiful supply of lacteal fluid furnished at Commons.
No. III.
"Napoleon (of Orange) in Egypt" When the president of this University arrived in
Egj'pt and calmly surveyed the Sphynx the spectacle pre'^ented was that of two great and
opposite types of development. Why? Do you forget the old story of the silence of the Sphynx.
No. IV.
"A Modern St. Cecelia." When St. Cecelia of old played the organ, angels came down to
hear the sweet music. When our St. Cecelia plays they stop their ears, but that does not seem
to worry "Fatt}'."
170
^rM
171
Zbc ®lb Stubenrg ITale
uuu
E DROPPED in on us the night before Commencement, telling some
likely tale about having been here in college with my room-mate's father
twenty-five or thirty years ago. His jokes were pretty good, and finally
he got down to business in something like this strain:
"But, gentlemen, there is really quite a strange stor}- I have to tell
^, you; in fact it is something which has brought me here at this time. I
spent four years here in the Old East, spent them in this very room,
smoked and dreamed before this very fireplace. My room-mate was
named Wilson — Charles Wilson. He loved a girl up at Greensboro, and
r^fey"""^ .so did I — the same girl. He was a quiet, gentle, confiding sort of fellow,
and would sometimes talk to me about his Edith, but I think he never knew that I
loved her also, for I kept the secret well to myself.
" Sometime after Christmas, in our Senior year, Wilson announced one day with great
glee that Edith would be over the last of the week to attend a debate in which her
cousin was to take part. 'I'll try my fortune then, old man,' he said, 'if she gives me any
encouragement I will be the happiest man on the Hill.' That evening while he was adjusting
a ring to one of our curtains, the chair on which he stood slipped and threw him heavily across
the wood-box. The fall hurt him — hurt him bad. I had helped the chair to slip with my foot,
for I was wild with jealousy, but he did not know that I had thrown him. I felt mean enough
to go hang myself the moment he had fallen, for I really had not meant to hurt him.
"He kept his bed a few daj-s, and then went home. Edith came to the debate. I was with
her, and for the hundredth time told the lie about Wilson losing his balance and falling.
About the first of April he died. Poor fellow, he went to a better
land to get the diploma which is given to good and pure men. You
can guess I felt mean and vile. I hated and loathed myself. You
wonder wh}' I sit here and tell j-ou of the murder I committed.
Listen, and learn why." The stranger leaned forward in his chair,
his hands shook, his gray hair trembled, his gray eyes wandered
about the room.
"One night I sat here by the fireplace, thinking of Wilson —
Wilson. I never thought of anything now but Wilson. It was late;
two o'clock I suppose. I heard a noise in the corner of the room,
then a groan. Great Scott ! a groan. As I looked W^dson raised
up out of the wood-box, groaned, and fell back. Then the skidl
172
on the mantle snapped its jaws with a loud, empty rattle. I staggered
to my feet, pale, I know, as a ghost. There was nobody in the wood-box;
no string tied to the skull. I turned the box on its side, wired the jaw
tight to its skull, then went to bed and had nightmares until morning.
"One night a week later the same things occurred. Wilson raised
up out of the wood-box and groaned, the skull broke the wires and
snapped its jaws. I was wild, but what could I do, to whom could I tell
my awful secret? There was no help for it. One night each week from
then until Commencement I was obliged to listen to the horrid groaning
in the woodbox, the hideous snapping of the jaw on the mantle I came to
look forward to their occurrence every week as a man might contemplate a case of periodic fits,
dreaded their coming and glad when they were over with. Somehow I passed my examinations
"The night before Commencement I sat here wondering again and again if there was not
something wrong with my head, and why I did not drown my troubles with drink. Suddenly
I heard a slight noise behind me. The door opened and shut. I was conscious of someone
approaching. My flesh began to twitch in long streaks down my back; cold chills
shot around the edges of my scalp. My whole person seemed bound to the chair
With the tail of my eye I saw in the mirror the reflection of a muffled man close behind
me. In his hand he held a flat box about the size of a 12 mo. book. In an instant all
was dark. I had not been struck, but a cloth had been thrown over my face. A
hand gripped my arm. It was not a ghost's hand. No ghost, gentlemen, ever had
a grip like that. 'Don't move,' said a "voice. Then I heard 013^ visitor removino-
part of the bricks of the hearth. I sat as still as a man well
could.
"In a few minutes the voice said: ' Beneath the bricks on
the right lies buried the jaw — one cause of your trouble Be-
neath the bricks on the left lies buried an iron box containing
the cause of mine. I, too, have been guilty of murder, but my
crime was for gain. When I am dead the property shall go to
the rightful heirs. You are the man who shall right the wrong
wh'ch I have done this night. When the skull is left at your
door one morning in the years to come, bring it here, fit it to
the jaw, dig up the flat iron box alone at twelve o'clock at
night, and act on what you find. Swear I' And I swore." The
old man reached for his package and unwrapped with tremblino-
hands, a skull. "Gentlemen," he almost whispered, "this
skull was left at my door two mornings ago have I your per-
mission to examine the hearth?" "Certainly," said I. "Dig
up the whole floor,'' echoed Jack, my room-mate. With the
173
aid of a poker and a stick a few bricks were soon removed and a human jaw was found. Wires-
were attached to it. It fitted the jaw exactly. " It is now two minutes of twelve o'clock," said
the stranger, glancing at the clock, "may I be alone to dig up the box?"
Ten minutes later he called us in from an adjacent room. He was greatly excited. He
held in his hand a rusty iron box, an old leather pocketbook and a bundle of papers. "Gen-
tlemen," he exclaimed, "these papers involve the interests of this University to the amount of
half a million dollars. I must see the authorities at once. In an hour I will return and
explain." He left. We wondered and waited for an hour. We waited and wondered for two
hours. At length we started to retire. " Hello," said Jack, "my trunk is open." I rushed to
mine. Yes, our money was all gone, as well as Jack's watch. "Shoot the man in the wood-
box," I groaned. " Darn the skull on the mantle," snapped Jack.
T. Gilbert Pearson.
174
Cbamptons
There was once a night in )-e olden days
Who fought in the tournament's round;
And being so strong and trained so long,
He brought ev'ry foe to ground.
But there came a chevalier out of the south
To challenge this doughty knight;
And— ( there on his lance in zvhite and blue
Were the colors of his lady true ) —
He conquered in the fight.
There was once a team— a football team,
Not so very long ago.
Through superior pounds, with a few touchdowns
It conquered its every foe.
But a little team— a plucky team —
Came out of a sister state;
And, strong in the strength of the blue and zvhite.
Knights of the gridiron— born to fight —
It settled Virginia's fate.
— Then—
Here's to ye knight of ye olden days,
Who fought for his lady true;
And here's to the Champions of the South,
The fellows of N. C. U.
A College Girl.
175
Dosage of a fIDobern (3uUiver to the
ILanb of Xabooter
Contents of iprevious Chapters
Chapter I.— The author sets out on his voyage. — Is overtaken Viy the
royal yacht of Lord Alderhoinme.— Captured. Chapter II. — The perilous
voyage from Unistation to Labooter. — Kindness of Captain Smith.
Chapter III.— The author is conducted to the court of Lord Alderhomme.
— States his intention of becoming a citizen. — Purchases the right of
franchise — Great delay at the office of Prime Minister Harrass — All
requirements having been fulfilled he becomes a naturalized citizen.
Chapter IV.
OW it was much to my satisfaction to know that all things were settled and in order.
My tiext wish was to see something of the Academy of Labooter, which was sit-
uated at the isolated spot where I had taken up my abode.
Conceiving that my readers will be anxious to know the particulars of the
Labooteran University I shall now proceed to describe it.
I was received very kindly by the students and wardens and spent many days
about the Academy.
Every room has in it one or more projectors, and there are not fewer than
fifteen rooms. The first man that I saw was of meagre aspect and small statue,
but one who seemed to be overflowing with energy. Before him was seated a class
of thirty or more students who, I was informed, were Juniors in Course Four.
The energy and enthusiastn of their teacher seemed to be contagious and frequently his dis-
course was interrupted by bursts of applause. I seated myself on a back seat and waited to
hear what the little man was saying.
" Now, gentlemen," he began, " this is a very interesting study if we do it in the right
way. Are we doing it in the right way ?" Here he remembered that in his eagerness to begin
his lecture he had forgotten to call the roll. About half the men were found to be absent and
so some of the students suggested to him that certain of the absent men had dropped the course.
• " Yes," he replied, " that is the way some men have of doing things here. You must not
do it here and you must not do it in my other courses. Now there is Course Three which is a
very beautiful course, and very valuable too. I receive letters quite frequently from our
alumni saying how valuable this course is. One man said it helped to get him a wife. Some
of our men would have us drop it from the list of required studies. That would never do.
Why, how could you men learn expression? How could you learn pedagogy? And ethics?
And philosophy? And history? And religion? How could you learn any of these without
Course Three ? You could not learn how to write a decent thesis without my methods. I
insist upon having this as a required course at the risk of popularity. What do I care for
popularity ? Now we will go on to the lesson. Course Three is required because it is for the
salvation of the University and not because I wish it. We will now begin our lesson. I
already have nine more hours than any decent man ought to have. I missed my breakfast
this morning to get to a recitation at the first hour. I w^ould like to know how many of you
students would miss your breakfast to come to class. Extra work in other departments is paid
for, but not so in this. I have Senior thesis, society debaters, Shakespeare Club, lectures at
Burlington and about the State, all these take up my time. Now we are going on to the lesson.
Please wake up that gentleman on the back bench there. Wake him gently, please. Do not
give him too sudden a shock. Now, Mr. Jones, show the thought transition from Act I to
Act II of the play which we have here for our lesson to-day and tell me what Hudson says on
the subject and what is the variorum reading of the last ten lines. No book, eh ? "
While Mr. Jones was collecting his thoughts after this sudden assail the eager little man began
his lecture and did not stop until interrupted bythebell which ringsat the end of each recitation.
"Now you see," he said, "how you have knocked tliis recitation in the head. Then, too,
that bell is wrong. I stood fifteen minutes in the postoffice this very morning before the first
bell waiting for it to ring."
I now crossed by a walk and went into a chamber in another part of the academy. I went
in but was ready to hasten back, being almost overcome 1)y the vile odors that assailed me.
Three projectors met me and gave me a warm welcome. Their employment from their first
coming into the academy had been to find some new property of zerconium. The youngest
and smallest of the three was constantly engaged in drawing and tasting some kind of a
liquid from a large barrel labeled "Gun Powder."
I entered another room and soon decided that I must be in the presence of the Professor
of General Information and Statistics.
This instructor lectured for at least fifteen minutes on Political Economy. Then followed
a lecture which embraced many such subjects as "Recipes for Making Rabbit Stew,"
"Oysters in North Carolina," "Endurance of Laborers in United States," "Products and
Exports," "Hew to Extinguish a Plre," "How to Cure Burns," "Currency," "Bank
Money," " How Yarn is Woven in India," etc. I am told that this gentleman has a series of
jokes which he relates to his classes according to a regular schedule, but in order to avoid the
possibility of any pupils missing these anecdotes and reminiscences on account of irregular
attendance (which sometimes happens ) he often repeats them as often as four or five times.
Going into the school of modern languages, we found two personages, one of them tall and
slender, and his partner otherwise. It was the latter of these who greeted us— "Come in, gentle-
men, come in, come right in, sirs, and take a seat. Take this seat right here, and let me hang
\-our hat on this nail and put your coat right here, just so. I am verj^ happy to see you, I am
delighted that you have come — Ah, do those little bugs bother you? I am very sorr}-. I told
William Jones, the janitor — he is the colored man who waits on this building; he brings our
wood and sweeps, and makes our fire— I told William to kill those little bugs to-day. You
know to kill a bug — "*
Entering the lecture room in which the Professor of Physics was accustomed to conduct
his classes, we there found another individual whose expression seemed to indicate that he was
thinking upon some great subject that if properly worked out would produce some great
revolution in modern thought.! After a vain effort to begin ( which was manifested by the
contraction of his brows and the muttering of a few inarticulate sounds ) he rose to his feet
and grasping a cord that hung down from the ceiling, he began to gaze intently out of the
window. Soon the inspiration came, and with the same thoughtful expression, he uttered these
carefully selected words, so full of meaning and fraught with such good sense and power:
" I w-a-nt to in-ter-est y-o-u young m-e-u of the Uni-ver-si-t-y in r-ais-ing blood-ed C-O-W-S."
After this theme was exhausted, our Solomon gave two questions to his pupils to answer.
Believing that the reader will be interested to know what was the further trend of this great
mind, I will give the questions as he asked them.
Question i. "Trace the association of ideas and thought transition in the following
schoolboy's composition on a goat: ' A goat is larger than a pig and gives milk. He looks at
you; so does the doctor. But a goat has four legs. My goat butted Deacon Tillingham in a
bad place and a little calf wouldn't do so. A boy without a father is an orphan and a goat
don't give as much milk as a cow but more than a ox. I saw a ox at a fair one day and he went
in on a family ticket. Some folks don't like goats, but as for me give me a mule with a paint
brush tail. I will sell my goat and go to see the elephant which is bigger than five goats.' "
Question 2. " Wh}- is the ' Co-op ' called a ' monumental fake ' ? "
Thus ended my visit for that day. Events of the next few days are related in later chapters.
END OF CHAPTER IV.
[Editor's Note. — The full account of the adventures of the Modern Gulliver is pub-
lished by Mockmillion & Hardy, Pubs., and is on sale at the " Co-op " at advanced price.
*The editor suggests that the reader see '95 Hellenian for this important receipt.
jThe editor suggests that meditation on " How to run Commons " might produce such an expression.
^^Ilrailino Hrbutus"
©n Xaurel Ibill at IRiUQ's /IRlll, near Cbapcl 1[3ill, 1W. C.
From the gray old "halls of learning,"
In the cool of the morning hour,
Through many a glade and deep cool shade.
Past many a rustic bower,
We sought the old mill by the brookside.
In the shade of the laurel cliffs.
Where its moss-grown walls dream by the placid stream
And the broken sunbeam down-sifts.
And we stepped over the narrow log-crossing
Close under the lofty hillside
And the coy peeping eye of the May-flower
shy
We searched for, far and wide.
And some we found white as a snowdrop,
And some blushing red like a rose,
The white blanched with fear, when our foot
steps drew near.
While the pink blushed its face to disclose.
" Oh, stranger, I know thou hast loved me
And I lifted its dark leaves gently,
" Oh whence, homeless one, canst thou be?
Thou waif that doth rest on Nature's broad
breast
And what is thy m.essage to me?"
Then a strange and delicious fancy
Came home to my heart by the smell
Of the floweret rare, as its petals fair
Its story to me thus did tell:
Far away in thy cold northern home,
And so gladly I'll meet thee and brightly I'll greet the
Out here on this hillside so lone.
And seek'st thou to know how I came here ?
And to read my mission on earth ?
Then take heart of grace, thou hast found the right place.
For this is the spot of my birth.
178
'Look down on yon rock far below thee,
Neath the steep, loft}' wall of the hill.
Where the streamlet doth rest, from its first hurried quest,
As it rushes away from the mill.
Ouce ages ago came the daughter
Of an Indian chieftian brave
On the boulder to rest, while her lover made quest,
And found her there close by the wave.
"And sad was the heart of the maiden,
.•\nd sad was the warrior bold.
For by stealth they must meet, each other to greet,
Though their love long ago had been told.
Because, should the stern old chieftian
Know his tribe's ancient foe is so near,
A Catawba brave, with no friend near to save,
His visit would cost him dear.
"Then spoke the Indian maiden,
'Soon must I bid thee farewell,
For e'er many moons go the cuckoo's note slow
Shall sound my tribe's last funeral knell.
For the food is all gone from our wigwams
And pestilence stalks through our town,
And the death-songs wild strain sounds again and again
As our bravest are stricken down.'
"Then fierce grew the chieftian's proud spirit,
And the warrior-ambition grew strong,
Now his love he could take and his thirst he could slake,
F'or her tribe's conquest, wished for so long.
But softly spoke he to the maiden,
'Oh, my love, fly with me to the west,
Where our campfires gleam bright, thou shalt find love
and light
And our lodges are filled with the best.'
" 'And in the sweet air of the mountains
The fever-taint never can stay.
Come and dwell there with me, from sorrowing free
All our life shall be one sunlit day.'
But the maiden drew back from him proudly,
'What ! shall I leave mj^ sire in his need ?
Nay, with him I'll abide and will die by his side.
No temptation so base will I heed.'
'Deep with shame flushed the swarthy warrior
At the girl's noble words and thought,
And his wlid savage breast for the first time was blest
With impulse from heaven's gate brought.
And he fell at the feet of the maiden
And confessed what first he had planned.
First to take her away, then her tribesmen to slay
With the warriors that owned his command.
' 'But right is the heart of Natala,
By her mouth the Great Spirit did speak.
And her words true and brave her people shall
save,
Come thy sire's lodge now let us seek.
If not for the love of his daughter
Our tribe's ancient feud he'll forgive,
Perchance he'll relent, of his anger repent,
If his people may lind food and live.'
Full soon came this warrior and maiden
To his lodge by the mountain side,
Yet not by fierce war, but by gentler means far.
Had he won his bonnie young bride.
For his warriors reached eastward in myriads,
But bore not one weapon to kill ;
As their foe's land they sought, in abundance
they brought
Food and help for the starving and ill.
"But there by the rocky hillside,
Where first the battle w^as won.
By victorious truth and mercy and ruth
A marvelous thing had been done.
For a bit of the incense that gladly
The news bore to heaven's bright bower
Was caught on the cliff in a moss-covered rift
And was translated into a flower.
'Now from yonder halls of learning
And yonder rambling town
Youths and maidens bright, with hearts and
footsteps light,
Full oft come straying down.
As they lift my dark green leaves gently
And pluck my delicate flower,
I weave them my spell and my story I tell
Of love and beauty's power."
Chapel Hill, N. C, March 20. 189S.
And this is the tale that was wafted
With the perfume and delicate hue
Of the arbutus sweet, as its face I did greet,
So with these buds I send it to you.
May the tale of its mission it told me
Of mercy and truth without end,
With a meaning as fair and a fragrance as rare
Be told unto thee, Oh my friend.
— F. L. Goodwin.
I So
THE BLACKVILLE GAZETTE
Devoted to the interest of Blackville social circle
Vol. I. No. 1.
BLACKVILLE, OUT-OF-TOWN DISTRICT, APRIL 1, 1S99.
Price One Cent
Entered at Blackville P. O. as Low Class
matter.
A BRILLIANT SOCIAL EVENT!
The Most Successful Cake Walk of the
Season— Mr. Linscott and Miss May
Chappie the Successful Couple.
Never has our society had the
pleasure of witnessing a more
charming event than was seen last
night at the Seven-Eleven Social
Club. The hall was beautifully
lighted, and back of the judge's
seat was a massive festoon of incan-
descent lights, which set off with a
most brilliant effect the coat-of-
arms and motto of the club —
" Seben Come Eleben ; Razzersand
Watermellons."
Music was furnished by the well-
trained musical artists who com-
pose Mr. Bug Kelly's band. Soon
after nine the guests began to
arrive andat ten o'clock the judges,
Messrs. Pres. Battle, A. A. Kluttz,
Baron Williams of Glenburnie and
Prof. Thomas Dunston, Laird of
Occen, Jr., took their seats, and
the event began.
There was a sight for the gods !
Such grace ! Such skill and such
individuality of movement !
At twelve the judges announced
their decision in favor of Mr. Jack
Linscott and Miss May Chappie.
Miss Chappie was gracefull}' attired
in a sateen gown of Harvard
crimson with a cheese-cloth over-
piece of Yale blue. Miss Chappie
also wore a Parisian necklace of
blue glass beads and carried a large
bunch of roses from the Commons
Floral Gardens. The solemn dac-
tyllic hexametric step of Mr. Lin-
scott, in perfect accompaniment to
the quick .5jsclepiodean pace of
his partner, easily carried the day.
Other couples on the floor were:
Mr. Muncher Toy with Miss
Tony, in Sewanee purple with
white and blue lace and red, white
and blue waist in puffed-pigeon, or
rammed-down-his-back, effect.
Mr. Collier Cobb with Miss
Cora(l) Harrington, romanesque
gown with necklace of Roman
antiquities, black-eyed susans.
i8i
Mr. Bill Battle with Miss Magna
Hoover, in green and blue with a
"6a" crescent of Sorrell's jewels
Mr. Hal Anderson and Mi.ss
Francis Cokes, in Spanish yellow
and black .with a brilliant displaj'
of society, class and college pins,
callah lillies.
Mr. Harris Registrar and Miss
Tee Hume Junyer, in orange and
blue waist, clock-work overskirt
with embroidered motto, ' 'A Stitch
in Time Saves Nine." If this
couple had arrived on time they
would have come in as a close
second.
Stags: Messrs. "Coach" Weir,
Jule Carr, "Long Hungry" Webb
and Bennie Booth.
Chaperones: Mesdames Berkley,
Kenneth Dunston, Connor, Rogers
and Fatty Holmes.
NOTES
Mr. Registrar was delayed on
account of having to mail some
invitations to Miss Tony's reception,
which is to be held next Monday
at her apartments in South Build-
ing and which promises to be the
largest occasion of its kind for
many years.
The cake was furnished b}- Ward,
"the onh' white man's restaurant
in town."
Mr. Dutchy Haywood of Raleigh
was expected, but hearing of Mr.
Anderson's being in the contest he
decided not to take part.
Refreshments were served by
Mr. Sample Merritt and the Com-
mons committee.
" Prelude " CowLES
"Red-Headed" Brown
"Young Pot " Wood
Freshman Ford
" Brick " Adams
Chief
Captain of Engine
Captain of Hose
Nozzle Holder
Bearer of Hand Grenades
T. C. Ouver
fflrcmcn
C. Nash
Alex. Murphy
.JJLJJLJJL
IRb^mes for jFveebmen
' Where are you going, my pretty maid?"
' I am going to college, sir," she said,
'To study and flirt (blushing red)
' In other words to be a co-ed. ' '
Hickery, dickery Doc,
Who never wound up his clock.
The clock ran down —
"The bell is wrong — "
But the class had deserted the spot.
JJLJJLJJL
"©be to Ibarri?"*
O Harry! great, omnipotent divinity —
Thou god of Cicero and all Latinity;
Thou propagator of the ancient L,atin tongue,
Thou great ahnighty dread of Sophs, both old and 3-ounj
We pray thee, scowl and frowns upon us never,
But sweet and serene as the summer sky be thou ever, •
* Written (at request of seniors in Latin II ) by a student of Latin hymns.
182
Ebitors' Maste Basket
a OList ot Contributi.ns Mbicb tbe Ibellenian Editors IRefuscO to ipublisb
utrtr
'HE Horrible Peter Stirring," by G. D. Vick. A simple story of how a young
politician resolved to be strictl}' (?) honest in all his undertakings. The book
shows how such a plan has proved unsuccessful, and the author offers his own
career as an example of the truth of his statement.
An article on "Infinitives in Tibullus," by Kharal P. Harry. A page of
statistics from the Report of the United States Fish Commission would be more
interesting.
"Puns," by Professor Howell, revised and enlarged by' Dr. Hume. The
article is entirely too long. Lack of space prevents its publication.
"The Celebration of National Holidays," by T. C. Bowie. We cannot agree
with Mr. Bowie in saying that one of his speeches will amuse the children and
take the place of the usual cannon cracker, sky-rocket and " spit-devil," although
we do admit that they are "just as good."
"Aces {'A's') and Three Sixes," by "Magna" Hoover (a revision of "Four
Fives," b)' " Nosey" Davis). This is not the story of a poker game, as the title might lead
us to suppose, but simply tells how the author distinguished himself in the fall of his Freshman
year.
"The Art of Cock Fighting," by T. Hume. Jr. Such subjects are popular with none of
our readers except E. Alexander, Jr., Stafford, Harris and Kenneth Dunston.
" How to Make Love Successfully," by M. Makely, Jr. The author was not successful
himself, and so his advice does not come from real experience.
Our refusal to give the following a place among our advertisements will meet with the
approval of the public :
"Just received — a full line of calliopes, bag-pipes, tin horns, Jew's-harps and squedunks.
Public exhibitions of my stock will be held every afternoon in the sky parlors of New West
West Building.
"Kharal P. Harry, Leader of the Chapel Hill ' Caraal ' Society, Agent."
".V Review of Antigone," by C. S. Alston. The author is apparently unacquainted with
his subject, and dwells too long on outside matters, which, perhaps, is a result of his method of
study. His article should be entitled, "Which One of Three," or " The Choice of Paris."
183
Zo the Evening Star.
UUtJ
Star of Evening, far away
In the sunset's roseate glow,
Other was thy tender ray
Long ago.
Homeward turn the bird and bee
When thy taper pale doth burn,
But no more shall I, ah me!
Homeward turn!
Over home's low fields thy light
Lingering fell, in years forgone —
Now, o'er mountain pines — and night
Sinks anon.
She is gone, the sister sweet
That once met me at the door-
Mother, father there could greet
Me no more!
While no sundering oceans bar
Me from those lost scenes beloved,
Still thou art, than they, O Star,
Less removed !
— Henry Jerome Stockard.
Zo Hlma riDater.
OCTO
As when, above the lowering tempest cloud.
Arises high the lighthouse crest serene,
Triumphant o'er the frenzied intervene
Of whirling strife and breakers dashing loud;
So Alma Mater stands n'erwhile more proud,
Unscathed, secure, with venerable mien,
And bids the sons of Carolina glean
Wisdom and truth from fields virtue-endowed.
O, mother, loved! — be still our guiding star
Soft shedding through the long and drear arcades
Of weary years — through mists and shades
Clear beacon glow to light us from afar;
To cheer the yearning hearts that o'er this land
Their vigils keep, awaiting thy command.
—Thomas Bailev Lee, '94.
Song of the Xowl^
SING the song of the lowly, of the many who stand and wait,
Who strive and struggle, and silently bow to the strong and great;
I sing of those who follow, who serve at the banquet of life,
Who do and die, and forgotten lie, crushed in the endless strife.
'Tis not theirs to gather the treasures the sea and the earth unfold.
To sway the fate of the nations with the magic scepter of gold;
Not for them are the heights of power, whence, laden with hopes and fears.
The words of command shall echo far down through the darkling years.
Not for them is the purple of wisdom or the crown of the realm of mind;
No glittering chaplet of glory 'round their humble brows is twined;
No legend of siege or battle is woven about their name;
No story of daring valor, no whisper of civic fame.
It is theirs to endure and to suffer, and patiently learn to bear,
To quiet the word complaining, and stifle the burning tear;
It is theirs to wear unflinching the shame of the bitter wrong,
And to tune the sound of sighing to the note of the victor's song.
It is theirs to toil unceasingly, and wearily, day by day.
To watch their labor come to naught, to see each hope decay;
To struggle upward and onward from colorless year to year.
And see the goal almost attained, then mockingly disappear.
To battle bravely, unfalteringly, for the little the world bestows.
Yet know that the wreath they struggle for shall rest on less worthy brows;
Always to flight for another's weal, and then, when it all is done.
Unblessed, unthanked, unsung, to sleep in a nameless grave alone.
i»5
'Tis not theirs to do the
age's work, but only the
work of the day —
Not to sing the world's
grand choric song, but
the humble tuneless lay ;
Yet whether their labor is
well or ill, or their giv-
ing is great or small,
Their toiling is ever the
best they know, their
gift is their little all.
I sing the song of the
lowly, but, ah 1 'tis a
hero's song —
•^l A song of those who did and bore, and feared but to do
a wrong.
■^■I'J^\ No grander tale does the ages hold, nor the rolls of
eternity —
Man's measure is not what he is or does, but that which
— WlIJ.IAM Gir.MKR Pkrry
Written for Thk Hkllknian.
iS6
Concert b^ Ulnipersit^ Stars
u u n
mk
Given in the Alumni Building on the evening of Sept. 30, 1950, on the occasion
of the con:pletion of this structure:
I~" Believe :\Ie" Solo
Biij.v "Ananias" Revnoi.ds
(Refrain "Beware," by all who know him).
II— "Rock of Ages" Solo
Ed Wood
III— "Bacon and Greens" Chorus
Commons Co^imittke
IV— "I Want to be an Angel" Solo
Emory Alexander
V— "Don't Forget Old Ireland" Duet
"Mike" Shull and Bro. :MrRPHV
VI— "They All Love Jack" Chorus
Co-Eds and "Jack" Linscott
VII— "Tommie Atkins" ..,.-.. Solo
Jack Weir
VIII— "W"e Have Seen Better Days" .... Chorus
Junior Physics Class
I Am Going Back to Dinah Once Again" Solo
E. C. Gregory
-"Happy Days in Dixie" ........ Cliorus
'9S FooTBAEE Tp:am
-rr TT 'fFT
Xatest Books IReceiveb in our Xibrar\?
IX—'
X
U U U
"Gilbert Among the Birds"
"The Sphinx and I"
"A Feline Catechism" .
"Great Expectt or lations"
■'Scientific Set-back"
"Loafing as a Fine Art"
"The Art of Expression"
"A Treatise on Perpetual Motion'
///,
187
By T. Gilbert Pearson
By "Tony" Alderman
By "Puss" Bryan
By Steve Askew
By W. B. Whitehead
By "Willie" Battle
By Daniel Webster Bryan
By Frank Rogers
Sweeping Cbanges!!
Bew H)epartment Hbbeb!
XEbe TUniversit^ to be
IFnfuseb witb IRew Bloob!
[From News and Observer, Feb. 20, iSgg.'\
At a meeting of the trustees of the Univer-
sity last evening in the Governor's office some
very important changes were made in the per-
sonnel of the faculty. Dr. Alderman's resigna-
tion of the presidency of the institution was
accepted in order to allow him to assume the
more congenial duties of Chief Landscape
Gardener, to which position he was unani-
mously chosen. He has some original ideas as
to the use of crepe paper in adorning the
campus, which, when carried out, will add
very much to its beauty. Everett Augustine
Lockett, M. D., D. C. L., was unanimously
elected to fill the vacancy caused by Dr.
Alderman's resignation. Under his adminis-
tration the University can be expected to con-
tinue its remarkable growth of the past few
years. Our congratulations and best wishes
both to the institution and its new executive.
Another fortunate selection was that of W.
Bynum Whitehead, Ph. D., D. D., L.L.D., D.
Litt., etc., etc., for the associate professorship
of English Language and Literature. Dr.
Whitehead has been long pursuing a special
course in English, and is admirably fitted to be
the associate of Dr. Hume in this department.
The University was also most fortunate in
securing for the important Department of
Physics Dr. E. Jenner Wood, one of the fore-
most scientists of the day. For the past few
j-ears he has devoted the whole of his time to
physical research, and to him science owes
some of its greatest triumphs.
Dr. J. B. Martin and Professors E. Alex-
ander, Jr., and R. G. S. Davis are to have
charge of the Department of Mathematics. Dr.
Martin's recent discovery of the equality exist-
ing between the square of the hypoteneuse of
a right triangle and the sum of the squares of
the other two sides has startled the whole
scientific world. Its importance cannot be over-
estimated.
A Department of Music was ordered estab-
lished, with Prof. K. P. Harrington as Musical
Director, and the following assistants: Pro-
fessors A. Smedes Root, G. Woodard and W.
DeBerniere McNider, all graduates of the Bos-
ton Conservatory of Music. Messrs. McNider
and Root are already known to fame as mem-
bers of the famous Black Diamond Quartet, of
which Prof. jNIcNider was leader and Prof.
Root the famous silver-toned tenor. Prof.
Woodard has refused flattering offers to con-
tinue his connection with Prof. Win,ston's cele-
brated orchestra.
Some of the above-mentioned gentlemen
are strangers to this state, but are by no means
strangers to the world of science and art, and
the old North State gladly welcomes them
within its borders.
v^
^beta
Officers
lIEUcte^ ScmisHnnuallv! I
"Hi Rosas Bosas "
Commander of the "Enshrouded Throne"
"Alex" Bitting "Stony" Adams
" guvascutus "
Holy Messenger to His Lord High Excellency, "Hi Rosas Bosas
"Funk" Beixamy "Wili.ik" Batti^e
" HiNKIDINK "
Keeper of His Lord High Excellency's Jeweled Passage
John Hinsdale "Monk" Bailey
■J-nitiatcs
" Xmas Gift" Gray
Pat Lane " Rusty " Oliver
lPIc^c^c^
Ward McAllister Carr
W. Sutton Chamberlain
" Sneigastratus "
Preparer of "The Throne's" Sacred Incense
' ' Captain ' ' Collins
" Pharatarturous "
Wielder of His Lord High Excellency's Persuasive Wand
"Jaybird" Copeland
©rber of the **1barpies"
unrr
"Fatty" Weil Bio Di:;k
Bill Whitehead LiTTi,!' Dink
Tyson Dorlch Dixky Dink
"Mike" Woodard Dinky
"George" Lewis A. S. Root
®rber of ^^Muckets"
fell
Huzzy ! Fuzzy ! Fuzzy !
Huzzy ! Fuzzy ! Fuzzy !
Curls 1 Cork-screws! Bed-springs!
Object of society is to secure a monopol}- on supplying hair for
sofas and mattresses.
M. Makki.v, Jr., President " Ghor(;h " Lewis, Vice-President
WutUE " Battle, Secretary " Wui.rjE B." Ehringh.aus, Historian
" There are others "
-?r" -FT- TTT
*' Cyrano be fficrgerac" Club
Monsieur "Nosey" Davis, Le Commandant
Monsieur "Rooster" Coxe, Majorin
Monsieur "Snort" Webb, Lieutenant Major
Monsieur "Dude" Lockett, Ecrivan
/Members
J. C. Biggs Dr. Alderman A. W. Neal
191
F. O. Rogers
Expansionist anb Hnti==l6.tpan8ioni8t
CInbs of the XTlnipersit^
urru
Bipanslonist Club
"Fatty" Holmes
Queen Lit. of Honolulu
"Tubby" Brem . . . .
IRegalcg flnflatores
"MuNCHER " Toy
Gex. Shafter
anti=}£ipansionist Club
■Criumviratc
" Jack " Linscott
*lpcrfoiator
Chas. S. Canada
. Rex
Regina
"Chappie " May
Scriba
" Fatty" Weil
Palmer Cobb
ipicbee
"Long Hungry"' Webb
Froggy" Wilson
Freshman Vann
,JJL -JJL JJL
Society of Hncients
wu
President
Vice President
Poet
Historian
Marcus Cicero i S. Noble '
( Misses i Moses and Aaron
Horace (Williams)
(Dr.) Alexander ....
flDembers
Samuel (Shull) (Z.B.j Daniel Luke i L. Steyens)
( A. ) Enoch i Cates ) ( A. ) Dayid ( Reynolds )
^Secured his membership in the .'Vnti-Expansionist Club on account of his " boring" qualities
192
3ack^H8S Club
u u u
Yaw-he ! Yaw-he !
Yaw-he ! Yaw-he !
Yaw !
fflower /Iftotto
Chrysanthemum " We are pleased to be called Hobson's Choice."
E. V. Howell Starter
" Joseph " McRae . . . Assistant Starter
"Mike" Shull Shining Light
" Fanny " OSBORXE ..... Torch Bearer
" Mick" Cunningham .... Torch Lighter
Note — "Billy " Reynolds blackballed in Macon, Ga.
©rber of jfeatber^Xegs
" Funk" Bellamy, Commander C. G. RosB, Lieutenant-Commander
"H. P. Daddy" Rodjl^x, Janitor
privates
p. H. BusBEE Emory Alexander
Thad " Shafter" Jones " Bill" Whitehead
JSooters of tbc ©rC>er
"Stoney" Ada^ls " Fatty" Weil
193
©ictatorsbip in the Ibouse of Commone
Subjects
J. M. SiTTERSON, H. W.
"Muncher" Toy
Committee
Chappie" May
" Horace " Wiluams
^/^^L^^
.z^-
'94
Unteresting dfacts Hbout ©ur jfootball XTeam
nun
£ HESE facts are from reliable sources, and are sworn to as correct by the
^ ^, J 3 best authorities on athletics in Georgia and Virginia.
Casper Whitney and
can produce conclusive evidence that these state-
T/ie Texas Range r'
nients are true:
"The athletic management at the University of North Carolina shows
remarkably good judgment in being able to select such a fine lot of profes-
sionals to represent her on the gridiron."
"The salaries of eleven of Carolina's players amount to more than five
thousand dollars."
" In 1892 Cromartie was on the All- American Football Team."
" Bennett played for three years on the Carlisle Indian Team."
"Shull, who receives five hundred dollars and expenses for his fall's
work on the gridiron , cannot write his name. ' '
" Koehler, in 1891, won the Light-Weight Boxing Championship of New Jersey."
" Cunningham, Carolina's center, weighs two hundred and sixty pounds when stripped."*
"Rogers was Athletic Director in Leland Stanford University for the years '94-'95."
" x\ well-known southern football player states that he played against Copeland in '94.
Copeland was then right half-back on Cornell's team."
"Gregory is an old player from the Boston League team."
"Our correspondent at a prominent southern college writes: 'Our desire to secure
Howell and McRae for this fall's work has failed. The larger salaries ofiFered at U. N. C have
been accepted, and so we must look elsewhere for material for our team.' "
"Next season Graves and Phifer will hold their former positions as Yale's coaches."
* Note. — The Virginia and Georgia centers will verify this statement.
197
!pick*'Ops
rruu
Gus Moore (in physical laboratory trying to be funny): "Professor, do you think that
this magnetic current could be effected if I should scrutinize it very closeh'."
Prof. Gore (who appreciates a joke): "No, sir, magnetic currents are not influenced by
brass."
Scene — Dr. KliUtz's store. Time — 8:30 p. m.
The Doctor is entertaining a crowd of farmers and Freshmen with "The Ravings of John
McCullough," on his gramaphone. Piece ends amidst murmers of applause.
. Freshe Alexander: " Why, Doc, that nnist be that laughing song."
Dr. Ven (questioning on examination): " What is hard water and how do you make it
soft?"
A. W. Graham: " Ice is hard water, and you melt it to make it soft."
Friend: " Where have you fellows been for the past few days ? "
"Nosey" Warren and "Young T.:" "Confined to the Math, room with a spell of
" chronic sections."
Friend: " Poor Seniors ! Did you pass ? "
No, it's chronic."
Trio:
WANTED.— A cigarette. Jute C.ildwell,
N. B. Left mine on the train coming down last fall.
WANTED. — A place to hide coal. The FAcrr/rv.
Mr. Suttle, where
Prof. Howell (during lecture on whale oil, seal oil, etc. ):
do you get porpoise oil ? "
Mr. Suttle: " From the poor house, I suppose. That's where the paupers stay."
TO LET. — To any one desiring the means of becoming hilarious, I will loan
my laugh for a fair consideration. Eskridge.
198
FOR SALE. — Natural hair in large or small quantities. Excellent for
making hair mattresses. McCali^.
Oh talk not of the student's joy,
The rapture in his books expressed ;
His truest bliss is when he finds
A quarter in his cast-ofF vest.
Ask Gruver what floats on the Atlantic ocean.
Hoover: " Mr. Kluttz, what is j^our opinion of imperialism?"
Whitehead Kluttz: " I can't give you my view of it, as I am afraid it will get in the
papers. You know my father holds a very important position under the Government."
Ask Gray if the white owl scratched him.
Dr. Alderman wishes to have it understood positively that
he did NOT hug "Bo-Kitty" McEachern on the football-
field at Richmond after Howell's famous run.
Free!! For a two cent stamp, to paj^ postage, we will
send free of charge our latest pamphlet containing 999 well
selected jokes and anecdotes. Appendix by Prof. Shaler.
— Dr. Battle axd Prof. Cobb.
" Happy Thought " pant-stretchers. For sale by W. B. Whitehead, sole agent.
Jule Carr, Jr. : "A crowd of ladies stood about me waiting for me to say something brilliant."
Admirer: " Of course you held them in suspense? "
Jule: " Of course."
As a maid so nice She slipped — her care in vain
With step precise And at her fall
Tripped on the ice The school boys call —
"Third down, two feet to gain."
Daniel Wedster Brj-an will begin his classes in elocution and orator}' on June
I, 1899.
Notice! All classes from now until May will be held for the benefit of the
Athletic Association; Admission 25c. Booters' row 50c. J. S. Carr, Jr. Pres.
Dr. Hume (calling roll for second time ) : " Mr. Abernathy ! Miss Ah !"
Miss Ah (who has come in late): "Here "
Dr. Hume: "Mr. Alston — Ah ! Mr. Alston has come in nozv has he ?
bl^^=^
Co-Ed. to Chappie: " Are you engaged, Professor — that is — busy ? "
Hostess: " So the young lady is making a specialty of j-our courses."
Muncher: "Yes, she is a very hard student, too, and is carr3'ing a
heavy course. On Thursday's she spends three consecutive hours in my
class room."
Hostess: (with much feeling for the hard-working Co-Ed.): O, the
poor girl ! How tired she must get! Oh — I mean — " (Confusion and
apologies, t
199
©notations
JV'iat rage for fame attends both great and smalt.
Better to l)e datinied tlian mentioned not at all.
" As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean.'' — W. K. Battle.
"Thank you for your voices, your most sweet voices." Kemp, Lewis and Root.
" Behold thy friend and of thyself the image see." W. C. Wood and W. C. Smith.
" A duck will not always dabble in the same water." Drake.
" Far from gay cities and the ways of men." Chapel Hill.
"A wit among dunces; a dunce among wits." Bisbee.
" Gods! how the sons degenerate from the sire." How.a.rd and Eben Alex.\nder.
" Where did you come from, baby dear? " Berkeley.
" Meek as the day is long {?)." JOE Cheshire.
' ' Much the ladies I do fear. " " Pot ' ' Graves.
" The sweet psalmist of Israel." Weil.
" He has a lean and hungry look. Such men are dangerous." " Long " Webb.
" A delusion, a mockery and a snare." Psychology.
"Aftermath." " BiLLiE " Cain.
" Beauty is but skin deep." Skinner Alston.
"Now much I fear that he past hope hath strayed." T. Hume in regard to graduation.
" Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard are sweeter " South Building Choral Club.
" All is not gospel that thou dost speak." Coach Reynolds.
" A material fool." "Rustic" Oi^iver.
"The traditional fool." Fresh Fowlk.
" The cheerful liar." Ford.
" With mirth and laughter let old wrinkles come." Prot. Cobh.
" I wish I was to home one time." " Skinny " AlsTox.
32 parts brass, i part brain,
7 parts nonsense, 5 parts hypocrisy,
5 parts " Booter. " Soph. Class.
" Who is the gentleman ? Is he the great unknown ?" Dougherty.
The noisy "infant." " Pete" Alex.\nder.
" Full well he sang the service divine,
Rntuned in his nose full sweetly." "Harry."
" Night after night
He sat and bleared his eyes with books." Denson.
" Heaven bless thee !
Thou hast the sweetest face I ever looked on." Ivey Lewis.
" He was as freshe as is the monthe of May." Joe Cheshire.
"Sweet bells out of ti;ne." Chapkl Hill Choral.
" Come, shall we go and kill us turkeys ? " The Gobblers.
So mild, so merciful, so strong, so good,
So patient, peaceful, loyal, loving, pure. Dr. Al-x-nd-r.
" There are many people who do not know how to waste their time alone. They are the
pest of the busy." "Bill" \Vhitehe.\d.
"Each man to his own vocation, and the cows will be well looked after."
Horace Williams.
" How soon do we percieve how fast our youth is spent." Senior Cl.\ss.
"Pity thyself, none need pity more." Alex. Neale.
"That fatal freshness." Emory Alexander.
" Which I take to be either a fool or a cipher." " English" Brown.
"God formed him, therefore let him pass as a man." 6. Gray.
" Is his head worth a hat ?" Fresh. Kellam.
" The pig-headed man." Fresh. Gibson.
"Oh wonderful, wonderful, and most wonderful wonderful, and yet again wonderful,
and after that— nothing," "JuTE" Caldwell.
" I am owner of the sphere.
Of the seven stars and the solar year." E. V. PATTERSON.
"How firm a foundation." Profs. Ma\''s and Linscott's.
"It was you." "Tip" Berkeley.
" God help thee, shallow man ; God make incision in thee, thou art fresh. Fresh. M.\Theson.
" A politician, one that would circumvent God." Vick.
" How can the merciless expect mercy ?" Profs. Smith and Harrington.
" Call me saint or call me sinner;
But never call me late to dinner." H. C. Cowles.
" The soul of this man is in his clothes." JONES FutLER.
" Never heard he an adventure,
But he himself had met a greater;
Never any marvellous story,
But himself could tell a stranger." Watson.
" His studie was but litel on the Bible." T. Hume, Jr.
" A good farmer spoiled to make a poor student." " Moon " Grimes.
" Arise ! shake the hay-seed from out thy hair." F. Bennett.
" Perhaps he'll grow." Stevenson.
" What's in a name ? That which we call a rose, by any other name would smell as
sweet." Rose.
" A studious lad." C.B.Buxton.
"But, Oh ! ye gods to hear him sing ! " Copeland.
" Words cannot describe him." GEO. Carr.
'"They constitute a body of self-knighted lords of creation." Senior Class.
" No one falls low unless he attempts to climb high." WiLi, Gibson.
•'Take care of your tin." Buck McEachern.
"Long hair, little brains." B. B. Lane.
" College life is milk and honey,
Knowledge tends towards matrimony."
" CoxiE " Tate and " Bow Kit " McEachern.
" The lazy man aims at nothing and generally hits it." Graham Woodard.
"Not Hercules could have knocked out his brains, for he had none." "Fresh Fowle.
His Highness Sir Robert Diggs Wimberly Connor.
" O, that tired feeling ! " Fresh Brown.
" Their two souls hold a single thought.
As one their two hearts beat;
Each yearns for what may there be bought,
Each wonders which will treat."
" Shrimp " Post and Battle at Yearby's.
•'We have seen belter days." Junior Physics Class.
"Faith in womankind beats with his blood." W.\rren KluTTz.
" Of all the hearts that you have won.
Of none you are possessed.
Because in keeping whole your own
You've broken all the rest." Miss A. A .
" Brevity is the soul of wit," Makely.
"One of God's fools." GanT.
" He has such an angelic countenance." Ivey Lewis.
"A slovenly dress betokens a careless mind." Bill Whitehead.
" I keep mine own thoughts to myself." " Monk " Bellamy.
" Better is the end of a thing than the beginning thereof." Exams.
" Buy cheap; sell dear." Co-Op.
" He that knoweth least is best fitted to answer these questions." Psychology Exam.
' ' The last leaf on the tree. " Ed. Wood.
" You can't down a workingman." '98 Football " 'Varsity."
" An high look, and a proud heart." R. D. W. Connor.
" For, surely, there is an end." Commencement Day.
" Length of days, and long life." Old East and Old West Buildings.
" All truths must not be told." Prof. Cobb.
"There's something rotten in the state of Denmark." 3D English Recitation.
" Much study is a weariness to the flesh." " Magna " Hoover.
"He says dam " —
'•Yes, and worser ones I " " Young " Gregory.
" Ye whose hearts are fresh and simple." '02.
" He was gentle, mild and virtuous." Francis Coker.
"I've wandered wide, and wandered far,
But never have I met,
In all this lovely western land,
A spot more lovely yet." The Campus.
'• Down with her. Lord, to lick the dust." U. Va.
" Behold what a weariness is it ! " 2D English.
" Large will be his footprints in the sands of time." Dr. LinscoTT.
" Rare compound of oddity, frolic and fun.
Who relished a joke and rejoiced in a pun." Prof. Howell.
" Our muse (mews)." " Puss " Bryan and " Bo-KiT" McEachern.
" The era of good feeling." After The Game.
" What's mine is yours, and what's 3'ours is mine." South Building.
"Nature, after making him, broke the mould. Thank God ! " Oliver.
"A shadowy phantom of the thing called man." Bernard.
" Remove the ancient landmark." Alfred Williams.
"See here, I have got a pistol." Byerly.
" I have thrust myself into this maze,
Haply to wive and thrive as best I may. Coxey Tate.
"You know not what night may bring." Freshman.
•'Thou say'st an undisputed thing in such a solemn way." Houston.
"A savage roaming through the wilds
In quest of prey." Claude McIver.
"And when j^ou stick on conversations burrs.
Don't strew your pathway with those dreadful urs."
Mr May.
" I was not born under a rhyming planet." Canada
" I'll speak in a monstrous little voice." " FaTTv" Hoi,mes.
" Sleep on, you fat and greasy citizen." " Theta " Gray.
" My cake is dough." Commons.
" I am sure care is an enemy to life." Hinshaw.
" On thy face the springing beard began
To spread a doubtful down and promise man."
Gant.
"The book-full blockhead ignorantly read,
With loads of learned lumber in his head."
B. B. Lane
" How he loves its giddy gurgle,
How he loves its giddy flow,
How he loves to wind his mouth up
How he loves to hear it go." Bowie.
" I am Sir Oracle, when I ope
My mouth let no dog bark." R. D. W. C.
"A gentleman that loves to hear himself talk, and will sa}- more in a minute than he will
stand to in a month." " Gus " Moork.
" I have thought that some of Nature's journeymen made him and not made him well, he
imitated humanity so abominably." Cheatham.
" It will discourse most excellent music." Bennett's Band.
"And unextinguished laughter shakes the skies. ' ' Pres." at his own jokes.
" I live an idle burden to the ground " Asbury.
" Little things are great to little men." Fresh. Class Officers.
"On their own merits modest men are dumb." Henry " MoGUE. "
"A lovely being, scarce formed or molded." "Snort " Webb.
"And still they laugh with counterfeited glee
At all his jokes, a many a joke had he." " Bieey " and the Sophomores.
:o4
H problem
[The incidents of this narrative are true and concern a former student of the University
of North Carolina.]
^HICAGO never looked more dreary than it appeared to a party of three Southern
people who arrived there during a downpour of rain on the afternoon of the
first of June, 1S98. Mr., Mrs. and Miss Hales had come to the city to attend
a wedding. Charles Hales, a fine young law3er who had resided here for about
a year, was to marry the daughter of his law-partner, P^x-Chief Justice Bolton.
Alice Bolton was beautiful and the only daughter of a multi-millionaire. She
had been seen only one week before as the " sweet girl graduate," and now, in
stead of the debut anticipated in society circles, her wedding was announced. The approach-
ing nuptials had excited much comment by the press.
Charles Hales had stolen enough time on his wedding day to meet his parents and his
sister at the train. As the carriage door closed, his sister Agnes exclaimed, " O, Charles, her
last letter was even more charming than usual! I know she must be lovely 1 You say she is
pretty? Oh, you needn't answer that question as you are not the best authority; we'll judge
for ourselves when we see the bride in church this evening!" Her brother was for the minute.
strange to say, thinking of her beauty, which was mainly due to the brilliant lighting up of the
countenance, the wonderful play of expression. Charles asked his father some questions
about the delay of their train. His mother, as she felt the pressure of his hand on hers,
expressed her regret that they had arrived only in time for the wedding. Then they reached
their destination, an elegant little boardinghouse. "Tell me about Laura and James," said
Mrs. Kales, as Charles was about to leave them. " They have been here two days," he replied.
" Both will be with you directly; James will make the ideal best man. Laura is told that her
bridesmaid's pink is her most becoming gown. You know pink is the color this evening, the
idea is Alice's." "She knows your taste, I see," laughed Agnes.
The hour for the wedding soon arrived, and our three friends were in their places in the
church, one of the handsomest in the city. All was couleiir dc rose. Pink roses were in pro-
fusion in the chancel, and festooned throughout the church ; pink ribbons streamed from the
pews, and the pink light from the chandeliers shed a soft glow over all. The maid of honor
was gowned in white satin. The other bridesmaids, all in pink, carried bouquets of pink
roses. Laura's pink and white complexion was made especially effective by the pink gown.
She and Agnes would be recognized as sisters, though with her soft brown hair and eyes she
was almost a blonde, while Agnes, by some not considered comparable to her sister for beauty,
had sparkling black eyes and dark brown hair. The bride was a perfect blonde, and in her
simple but very handsome conventional dress of purest white was entirely satisfactory to her
prospective father, mother and sister, who saw her for the first time. The strains from the
grand old organ, as the bridal party left the church, could be heard for some distance, in spite
of the rain, which was still pouring in torrents. The carriages, each in pre-arranged order,
drove away to the home of Judge Bolton. The reception, Agnes thought, was of even niore
interest than the ceremony, under the circumstances, and consequently she was inwardly
. impatient at the slight delay when her carriage. No 3, did not at once appear, and she stepped
aside for the party for No. 4. No. 3 left the church as the other carriages were disappearing,
and the coachman was directed to drive rapidly.
205
II.
■■j;-^?si-V
The carriage soon stopped in front of the brilliantly illuminated residence. Guests were
hardly conscious of the rain, as a canopy from the door to the sidewalk afforded full protection
from the weather. The bride and groom were already receiving, as could be seen from the
^^ } outside. Mr., Mrs. and Miss Hales were, of course, to be of the receiving party, and
their late arrival was unfortunate. They were ushered into the large drawingroom.
" Wh}-! Where is Charles? " said Mrs. Hales to her husband, iu a tone of excla-
mation, as she saw that some one, probably a groomsman, was standing in her son's
place.
"He must have been called out for something; possibly is looking for us,"
replied Mr. Hales.
"Well, we can't wait for him," Agnes remarked, emphatically. She quickly
reached the bride's side and grasping her hand heartily, said mischievously and mer-
rily, " Why! has he deserted you already? "
She was greeted in return with only a mild smile and an unmistakable expres-
sion of surprise. It was evident that the bride did not guess who she was, and she
was about to tell her when her parents arrived on the scene, introduced themselves,
and were formally presented by the bride to Mr. Smith, the gentleman standing with
her.
They likewise were received courteously but with chilling formality. It was a great
reliefto all when agentleman, who seemed to be actingas master of ceremonies, approach-
ing our party of three, asked if he might have the pleasure of showing the wedding
presents. He introduced himself as Mr. Arsden. Agnes had noticed him for a moment
when she first entered the room. His appearance was somewhat striking. He was,
we may say, handsome, but his chief attraction was his ease of manner and fine bear-
ing. Appropriate, commonplace remarks passed pleasantly until they reached an
upper room, where there was an elaborate display of cut glass and silver. Mrs. Hales
devoted herself to a search for her own present to the bridal couple, in order to re-
assure herself that she was not dreaming. Mr. Hales also had an idea. He had deter-
mined to find Laura or James and obtain from them information regarding Charles'
absence from his post and the general mystery. Mr. Arsden had left them as soon as
they became apparently interested in the bridal presents. Agnes was wishing that
he would return, for she strangely felt that he was to solve the painful problem. She
may have unconsciously hoped for assistance from him merely because he had been
'""''' the means already of relieving some embarrassment. She longed to understand the
bride's peculiar attitude toward her new relatives. She was noting now that in this
fairyland of ferns, flowers and growing plants, where they seemed under the influence
of some weird enchantment, the scene had lost its pink glow. Pink was no longer the pre-
dominant color, as in the church. She was lost in thought, believing herself unnoticed in the
crowd, when she heard someone say, "Miss Hales, can I be of service to you? Would you
like to meet some of these people, or do jou know them all? " As if in answer to a thought,
Mr. Arsden had appeared. The question came from him.
Though Agnes felt at the moment no special interest in the people, she did not say so.
" Who is the lady in black satin," she asked, designating a person in the center of a group not
far away. " Why, that is the bride's mother. Did you not meet her in the drawing room?"
"No indeed. If that is Mrs. Bolton, of course I want know her. Wait a moment and let me
tell mother!" Agnes had gone across the room before the gentleman she was talking with
206
realized it. In the confusion of voices he had not heard distinctly all she said. But he joined
Agnes and her mother again and introduced them to the lady referred to, the hostess of the
occasion, who, like her daughter, was studiously polite but showed no trace of the affectionate
cordiality due Mrs. Hales and Agnes. Mr. Arsden, a perfect stranger, curiously seemed
to have a delicate and intuitive perception of something painful in the situation. Ilis interest
in these people, who had no claim upon him, was by no means presuming but was decidedly
evident. Whether there was a selfish element in it we cannot say. One of his friends said to
him, as he saw him intently watching Agnes across the room — "Arsden, do you know that
girl with the black eyes and fine figure? You seem inrerested in her." Slightly startled, he
replied, " I never saw her until to-night, but there is something about her expression occa-
sionally which reminds me strongly of someone I have known; that is all. Would you like to
meet her? " Of course his friend gave him the opportunity to present him. Agnes was soon
in the midst of a little circle and conversation was at its height. Her mother was talking with
another party near her. Mr. Arsden only loitered a moment; he seemed constantly occupied-
As he left the group in which we are interested some one spoke of his soldierly bearing,
remarking that his life in the army, as war correspondent, had been fine for him.
" Doesn't he speak several languages? " asked another person. " Yes, extensive travel-
ing seems to have made him a noted linguist," was the reply. Then the conversation drifted
into other channels. " You have the southern voice, I notice," said someone to Mrs. Hales.
" Where is your home ? May I ask? " " We are from Virginia," replied Mrs. Hales. " The
journey to Chicago has been quite a fatiguing one. Our train was delayed or we should not
have arrived so late ; we actually never saw the bride until this evening." Mrs. Hales, as will
be noticed, was partially at her ease. "But I suppose you have known the groom for
some time?" was the calm, interrogative reply to her last statement. "Yes," she said,
" for some time ; we are slightly related." Then, with a smile, which she made no effort to
suppress, she added quietly but with emphasis, " / atn the groom's mother.'' A most painful
and complete silence followed this remark, a silence which could be felt. Suddenly all
seemed to have lost the power of speech, and the faces, all of them, were a study. Mrs. Hales
was at a loss to account for the astounding impression of her most natural and simple
assertion. Agnes, who had contrived to hear part of what passed, saw at once that Mr.
Arsden heard the remark and was affected by it, though he was now at some little distance,
chatting with other people. Fortunately, for the diversion of the company, supper was
announced at this juncture. Agnes was excited and seized an opportunity to say to her mother
in a horrified whisper, " We must have made a mistake ! This is the wrong wedding 1 " Mrs.
Hales herself clearly had at last recognized this, and meeting Mr. Hales in the hall, they saw
by his face that he, too, had discovered the fact.
Dispensing with formal adieus, they quickly made their escape and found their carriage in
waiting, as the driver had suspected his awkward blunder. He had, contrary to orders, during
the ceremony, used his carriage for accommodating guests of another wedding reception in the
neighborhood, and this had been the cause of the trouble.
There was a mystery still unsolved for Agnes. She had not failed to notice something in
Mr. Arsden's manner which betrayed an interest in hereself and she half imagined that he
thought her some one else whom he had known. Perhaps this was all that puzzled and con-
cerned her now.
The party was quickly conveyed to Judge Bolton's, where they were received with open
arms. Their delay had caused anxiety, but the rest of the evening was ideal. It was now
clear that Alice Bolton or Alice Hales, we should say, was a far more beautiful bride than the
one who received them earlier in the evening. But both were blondes, and the effect of the
207
veil and the wedding-gown had made the likeness appear
greater than it was. The collation was elegant and recherche,
the pink decorations, arranged by an artist's hand especially
for the table of the bridal party, added greatly to the effect
of the already picturesque scene. After a great deal of mer-
riment, mingled with some little irrepressible sadness, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hales. Jr. , took their departure in the midst
of the pelting of rice and throwing of old shoes. Thus
began their wedding tour, a trip to Europe in which Alice
was throughly competent to act as guide, for though she had
scarcely seen eighteen summers she had crossed the ocean
already sixteen times.
Ill
The following week found our three friends and the
other members of their family in Baltimore, where they
spent a few days with relatives before resuming their home-
ward journey. While in the city Laura Hales called with her
father at the office of his friend. Dr. , a noted occulist ot
the city. Mr. Hales was called out unexpectedly and Laura
was left chatting with the doctor. "A friend of mine, a ris-
ing young author, whose name you may have noticed in
the magazines, is with me for a few days, and as he is from
the South, I want him to know you all," said Dr. to
Laura as they sat in the doctor's little reception room. "Oh !
here he is now," he continued, as he glanced out of the
window. " Come in, Henry; you are just in time," he said,
as he arose and opened the door for [him. " I want you to
meet Miss Hales; she is the daughter of a special friend of
mine." This last was by way of introduction as the j'oung
man entered the room. The doctor forgot in his haste that
he had omitted the gentleman's name. But it seems that
was unnecessary, as the parties appeared, to his .surprise,
already acquainted.
The name Hales was evidently familiar to Henry. But
he merely said, " Why, I met you. Miss Hales, at the Uni-
versity of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, about two years ago.
But I hardly think 30U remember me." " Yes," she said,
" I think you and my brother James were fraternity mates."
" Oh, tell me about James; where is he?" "He is with us
here at present, and 3-ou may be sure will find you," said
Laura, and, she continued, "What shall I tell him about
you ? " She had not recalled his name and did not ask it.
" Tell him," said Henry, " that I am on my way South from
Chicago and won't see him very much — have been in Chi-
cago attending the marriage of my friend Jack Smith. He
may remember him."
Chicago and SmUIi were significent words for Laura,
208
and, with great animation, she said, "I think I know something of that wedding; my parents
and sister were uninvited and unintentional guests there!" "Why, that is exceedingly
strange," said the gentleman, looking almost startled. What is the explanation, may I ask ? "
"Yes," added the doctor, becoming exceedingly interested, dropping into his oflBce chair and
assuming the peculiar listening attitude, "Tell us about it, by all means ! " Laura was herself
astonished. She had never dreampt of meeting anyone connected with that Smith wedding.
The keen interest of the two gentlemen was sustained throughout her narrative of the driver's
mistake and the two weddings. At times the young man, in his restless surprise, paced the
floor, uttering here and there an involuntary, half-unconscious and emphatic whistle.
W'hen she reached the climax, he was standing directly in front of her, and he said
slowly, " You have solved a mystery for me ! " Then, addressing both the doctor and herself,
he remarked, with a smile, "When I heard a lady at the reception say she was the mother of
the groom I was really shocked, for I happened to know that the groom's mother had been dead
ten years! The sudden disappearance of the two ladies and the gentleman was also decidedly
mystifjing." " But " he continued, as if thinking aloud, " you have made another revelation
of interest; is your sister considered like you ? " "No." Laura replied. "Well, she is, "he
said," and I knew it the evening of the reception without understanding it!" Mr. Hales
returned to the office just at this point in the conversation, and Laura said as he came in,
" Father, this is Mr. Arsden ; do you know him ? " " Mr. Arsden," repeated Mr. Hale, slowly,
scanning the face attentively. "Oh," he said, the next minute, as he took a step backward,
and looked directly at the gentleman again. "I begin to understand! Mr. Arsden. this is
almost wonderful ! It is very strange that we should meet agsin ! " He shook his hand
vehemently, saying, ' It must be intended that j'ou and I should know each other ! Come to
see me ! " he said, handing him an address which he had been scribbling on the leaf of a
notebook. " Doctor, will you bring him to see us ? "
The doctor assented. He was standing with his hands
in his pockets, beaming with interest in this peculiar
coincidence.
Mr. Hales turned to the young man again and
said: " Don't disappoint us; Mrs. Hales and Agnes
will wish to renew their acquaintance."
The last name mentioned by Mr. Hales, it seemed
to the doctor, had perceptibly attracted Henry Arsden's
attention. In a moment more Mr. Hales and Laura
had gone ; but Henry held the address in his hand.
It meant much to him. Perhaps it was merely the
opportunity for the talking over of peculiar coinci-
dences and the prospect of passing a pleasant even-
ing which interested him. Possibl}- he longed to
investigate further the newly discovered family like-
ness. Of great importance is the question as to the
state of mind and heart in the case of both Laara
and Agnes. What was their sentiment in regard to
this Mr. Arsden, almost a stranger to both? As to Henrj- himself, the case is possibly clearer.
But was it the name Agnes which had the charm for Henry Arsden. or was he most interested
in Laura? A commonplace confidential remark made some time after our last scene and acci-
dentally overheard is the only clue we can furnish and is of little value. The words were only
these : " Isn't it strange he should like Die! "
209
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