f LXF5 P189 1907 THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA I—\ PANDORA 1907 VOLUML XX By The Students of THL UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ATHENS, GEORGIA THE GENERAL LfBFIARY THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA GEORGE FOSTER PEABODY. Befctcation TO GEORGE FOSTER PEABODY g»djolar, ^fjilantfjropigt, patriot Who first unveiled to the eyes of Georgians the vista of a Greater University, the students of the University of Georgia dedicate the twentieth volume of PANDORA, as an expres­ sion of their gratitude and esteem. THE GENERAL LIBRARY THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA ATHENS, GEORGIA PANDORA BOARD, 1907. Cbttor* of $anbora, Volume XX, 1907, Editors-in-Chief. PHIL W. DAVIS, JR., * A 0 J. K. MACDONAU), JR., X * Business Manager. THOMAS E. SCOTT. Art Editor. W. H. GRIFFITH, K A Assistant Business Manager. H. M. WILSON, 5 N Associate Editors. T. S. WINN, A T n W. G. BRANTLEY, JR., 2 A E W. T. McCAFFREY, K 5 R. S. PARKER, X * J. H. NEISLER, U P L 3805 Cbttor* of $anbora, VOLUME I, 1886—Editor-in-Chief, G. N. Wilson, K A. Business Manager, W. B. Cook, A T a Associate Editors, W. E. Wooten, 2 A E ; McDaniel X *; C. F. Rice, X *; C. II. Wilson, K A; W. A. Speer, X A 0; F. F. Ston,, * A 0; R. D. Meader, A TO; M. B. Bond, A T A; W. S. Upshaw, A T A; R. S. Moye, * T A; P. L. Wade, * T A; A. W. Wade, 2 N; W. G. Brown, 2 N. VOLUME II, 1887—Editor-in-Chief, C. F. Rice, X *. Business Manager, J. W Daniel, K A. Associate Editors, T. W. Reed, * A 0; G. Waters, * r A; W. J. Shaw, 2 N; II. K. Milner, A T fi: A. L. Franklin, A T A. VOLUME III, 1888—Editor-ill-chief, Albert Ilowell, K A. Business Manager, A. W. Griggs, A T A. Associate Editors, W. L. Moore. 2 A E; T. K. Crawford, A T 11; F. W. Coile, 2 N; Lucien L. Knight, X *; W. M. Glass, A T A. VOLUME IV, 1890—Editor-in-Chief, John I). Little, 2 A E. Business Manager, W. K. Wheatford, 2 N. Associate Editors. F. E. Callaway, K A : S. -I. Tribble, * A 0; J. C. Crawford, 2 N; W. D. Ellis, X *; W. L. Stalling, A T A; W. N. Smith, X *; E. A. Cohen, X *. VOLUME V, 1892—Editors-in-Chief, J. F. Lewis, X *: L. L. Brown, A T O. Business Managers, W. E. Cristie, 2 N; W. T. Kelly, A T O. Associate Editors, J. C. Kimball, 2 A E; Roy Dallas, * A 0; J. R. Lane, 2 A E : E. W. Frey, X *. VOLUME VI, 1893—Editor-in-Chief, Harry Hodgson, K A. Business Manager, F. G. Barh'eld, 2 A E. Associate Editors. C. R. Xisbet, X <J>: X. B. Stewart, A T O; A. O. Ilalsey, 2 N; II. A. Alexander; E. G. Cabanius, * A 0; F. G. Johnson, A T Ii; Eugene Dodd, X *. VOLUME VII, 1894—Editors-in-Chief, C. R. Tidwell, A T n ; Xoel Moore, 2 A E. Business Managers, Paul L. Fleming, X <I>: John I). Stalling, A T fl. Asso­ ciate Editors, L. D. Fricks, 2 N; W. P. Harbin, X 12; 11. Brown, K A; George Beckett, * A 0. VOLUME VIII, 1895—Editor-in-Chief, W. A. Harris, X *. Business Manager, J. J. Gibson. A T n. Associate Editors, II. II. Steiner, 2 A E; J. W. Morton, K A; W. W. Chandler, A T ti; W. L. Kemp, 2 N : J. T. Dunlap, * A 0; H. V. Black, X *; J. G. Smith, Xon-Fraternity. VOLUME IX, 1896—Editor-in-Chief, Pliny Hall. K A. Musiness Manager, J. G. Pitman, * A *. Associate Editors, M. M. Lockhart, 2 A E; J. B. Connally, X *; Fred Morris, 2 N; C. H. Holden, A T II; A. V. Black, X *; T. A. Neal, R, B. Nalley. VOLUME X, 1897—Editor-in-Chief, 11. (i. Colvin, 2 A E. Business Manager, R. E. Brown, A T n. Associate Editors, F. L. Fleming, X *; J. W. Spain, K A; Harry Dodd, X *-. P. S. Smith, * A 0; A. L. Tidwell, A T O; II. Lovejoy, 5 N; W. B. Kent, J. W. Hendricks. VOLUME XI, 1898—Editrtrs-in-Chief, Harry Dodd, X *; Hugh White, 2 N. Business Manager, J. C. McMichael, K A. Associate Editors, C. II. Black, X *; E. E. Pomeroy, 2 A E; C. Westhrook, A T JJ; J. T. Dorsey, * A 0; 11. R. Perkins, A T n. VOLUME XII, 1899—Editors-in-Chief, Garrard Glenn, 2 A E; A. P. Adams, X *. Business Manager, P. E. Johnson, X *. Associate Editors, J. B. McCurry, K A; W. S. Blun, A T O; F. E. Broadnax, A T n; \V. E. Watkins, 2 N; D. G. Heidt, J. W. Mason. VOLUME XIII, 1900.—Editors-in-Chief Archibald Blackshear, K A; Fair Dodd, X *. Business Manager, F. E. Broadnax, A T O. Associate Editors, F. P. Calhoun, X *; E. P. Shannon, * A 0" F. G. Tupper, 2 A E: J. P. Gardner, 2 N: William Davis; E. H. Hamby. VOLUME XIV, 1901—Editors-in-Chief, E. P. Shannon. * A © ; J. D. McCartney, 2 A E. Business Manager, Jack Banks, X *. Associate Editors, P. A. Williams, 2 N; V. II. Ballard, A T n ; R. G. Stephens, K A; I. M. Putnam, K 2; W. D. Hoyt, X *; James L. Sibley. VOLUME XV, 1902—Editors-in-Chief, Frank H. Barrett, 2 A E ; Sterling H. Blackshear, X *. Business Managers, J. K. Jordan, A T O; M. W. Lewis, X *. Associate Editors, C. 1). Russell, * A 0; I. S. Peeples, 2 N; M. S. Johnson, K A; H. M. Fletcher, K 2: Dewald Cohen. VOLUME XVI, 1903—Editors-in-Chief, G. Dexter Blount, K A; Frampton E. Ellis, 4> A 0. Business Managers, J. Benton High, Claude W. Bond, 2 N. Associate Editors, Marion 11. Smith, 2 A E; Hugh M. Scott, X *; Preston Brooks, A T Q; W. G. England, K *; Marvin M. Dickinson, K 2; Sidney J. Nix, T. P. L. VOLUME XVII, 1904—Editors-in-Chief, I,. P. Goodrich, 2 N; I. S. Hopkins, Jr., * A 0. Business Managers, M. 11. Blackshear, A T Q; G. W. Nunnally, X *; J. B. Gamble. Associate Editors, J. D. Bower, K A; Roderick Hill, 2 A E; Wailes Lewis, X *: W. B. Shaw, K 2; W. 0. Roberts, U. P. L.; R. N. Burt, Ind. VOLUME XVIII. 1905—Editors-in-Chief, A. L. Hardy, Business Managers, Roderick Hill, 2 A E; C. P. Editors, H. W. Telford, U. P. L.; T. G. Stokes, X *: W. O. Marshburn, <J> A 0; J. C. Upshaw, 2 Bloodworth, Jr., K A. K 2; V. B. Moore, X *. Pratt, A T O. Associate Ind.; A. H. Carmichael, N; Art Editor, O. II. B. VOLUME XIX, 1906—Editors-in-Chief, W. 0. Marshburn, * A 0; Lansing B. Lee, 2 A E. Managing Editor, H. L. Covington, K A. Assistant Managing Editor, J. II. Bradberry. IT. P. L. Art Editor, J. G. Mays, X *. Asso­ ciate Editors, R. S. Parker, X 4>; G. A. Greene, A T O; W. B. Hambleton, 2 N ; E. R. Lambert, K 2; J. R. Turner. VOLUME XX, 1907—Editors-in-Chief, Phil W. Davis, Jr., * A 0; J. K. MacDonald, X *. Business Manager, T. E. Scott. Art Editor, W. H. Griffith, K A. Assistant Business Manager, H. M. Wilson, 2 N. Associate Editors, W. G. Brantley, Jr., 2 A E; W. T. McCaffrey, K 2; J. H. Neisler, U. P. L.; R. S. Parker, X *; T. S. Winn, ATI). An Historical Brief. Tin1 I'liiversity of Georgia was chartered by the General Assembly of th(! State, January 27, 1785. The charter is entitled, ''An Act for the more full anil complete establishment of a public seat of learning in this State," and its pre­ amble, in the language of a distinguished president of the institution, "would do honor to any legislature, and will stand a monument to the wisdom and patriot­ ism of those who framed and of those who adopted it." The independence of Georgia, as a State, had just been acknowledged, and. says the preamble, "it should be among the first objects of those who wish well to the national prosperity to encourage and support the principles of religion and morality, and early to place the youth under the forming hand of society, that, by instruction, they may be moulded to the love of virtue and good order." Founded with the purpose thus indicated, the University was possessed only of "an unproductive and, for the most part, uninhabited tract of land," and it was not until July (i, 1801, that George Walton, Abraham Baldwin. John Milledge and Hugh Lawson, acting as a committee of the Senatus Academicus, selected the historic site on which the parent institution at Athens now stands, • and during that year the University was opened. The general scheme of organization and the course of study, modeled after the English colleges of that time, provided for the single collegiate degree of "Bachelor of Arts," and literature, with the so-called disciplinary studies, consti­ tuted the entire curriculum. Science as now recognized had no existence. For more than half a century the history of the University is the history of Georgia. The prosperity of the one was the growth of the other, and many of those who afterwards illustrated the State in peace and in war received their training here during this period and under this organixation. But no college thus designed could keep pace with the growth and dif­ fusion of knowledge. The expanding intelligence of the nineteenth century de­ manded wider areas of culture and knowledge. Science added new fields to human thought. With new knowledge came the impelling force which planted scientific and technical schools throughout the world. In July, 1862, the Congress of the United States granted to each, of the States a munificent donation of public lands for the purpose of establishing a college in which science and its application to agriculture and the mechanic arts should be taught. The funds arising from the sale of Georgia's quota of the land scrip were transferred by the State to the Trustees of the University of Georgia May 1, 1872. and the Trustees at once established and opened the Georgia State College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, as a co-ordinate department of th'1 institution at Athens. In accordance with the act of Congress, "the leading object" in this college is, "without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and including military tactics, to teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and the mechanic arts." In October. 1872. the Trustees entered into a contract with the local Tru - tees of the North Georgia Agricultural College, situated at Dahlonega, by which this institution became a department of the State University. In July, 1873, by arrangement with the local trustees of the Georgia Medical College (founded in 1329), at Augusta, this institution became the Medical Department of the State University. In August, 1867, the Lumpkin Law School, at Athens (incorporated 1859), was merged into and became the Law Department of the State Uni­ versity. The Constitution of Georgia (adopted 1877) permitting the appropriation of public funds to education other than "the elementary branches of an English education" to the State University only, the following, institutions have been established by legislative enactments as departments or "branches" of the State University and under general control of its Board of Trustees, and each is main­ tained in whole or in part by annual appropriations from the State Treasury: The Georgia School of Technology, at Atlanta, established 1885; the Geor­ gia Normal and Industrial College for Girls, at Milledgeville, established 1889; the Georgia Industrial College for Colored Youths, near Savannah, established 1890; and the State Normal School, near Athens, established 1895. The School of Pharmacy was established in 1903. The Summer School was authori/ed by an Act of the General Assembly in 1897, and an appropriation was made for the same by the General Assem­ bly of 1904. The establishment of the State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts as an integral part of the University at Athens, and the addition to the or­ ganization of the other institutions named, have given completeness to the system by incorporating that scientific and technical education which was needed to sup­ plement the liberal training already provided; and the University is now, as far as the Trustees have been able to carry out their plans, "a place where students can be trained for any and every respectable path of life and where, at the same time, the interests of higher education and science are cared for." Thus the "foundation of the fathers," a simple college with a close curricu­ lum, has grown to be a complex university, planned upon a broad and philosophicsystem, where literature and science are taught, and liberal and technical edu­ cation supplied. * f f Government of the University of Georgia. The government of the rniversity, by Act of the General Assembly, ap­ proved August 23, 1889, is vested in a Hoard of Trustees, appointed by the Gov­ ernor for a term of eight years, and confirmed by the Senate. The Hoard con­ sists of one member from each Congressional district of the State, four from tliP State at large, and two from the city of Athens. The Governor and the Chair­ men of the Hoard of Directors of the School of Technology, the Georgia Normal and Industrial College, and the Colored Indiurtrial College are ex-officio mem­ bers of the Hoard. The immediate control and management of each of the departments of the I'niversity situated elsewhere than at Athens is entrusted (subject to general control by the I diversity Trustees) to a "Local Board" or a "Commission," the number of members, mode of appointment and terms of office of which vary. The I'niversity Trustees meet in stated annual session on the Thursday preceding the Commencement Sunday, and at other times at their pleasure. The present organization of the Board is as follows: His Excellency, Gov. J. M. TERRELL. Atlanta, ex-officio. Term Expires June, 1907. G. P. GORKR, Marietta. From the State at Large. Term Expires Sept. 1. 1907. CLARK HOWELL, Atlanta. Prom the State at Large. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1909. \V. E. SIMMONS, Lawrenceville. Prom the State at Large. Term Expires Sept. 1. 1911. HAMILTON McWnoRTKR, Athens, From the State at Large. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1913. S. H. ADAMS, Savannah. First Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 191:1. B. B. BOWER, JR.. Bainbridge, Second Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 191:1. Drm.Kv M. HUGHES, Danville. Third Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1911. HENRY PERSONS, Tal-botton, Fourth Congressional District. II. 1). ilcD-ANiKL, Monroe, Fifth Congressional District. A. O. BACON. Maeon, Sixth Congressional District. I). B. HAMILTON, Home. Seventh Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1911. Term Expires Sept. 1. 1911. Term Expires Sept. 1. 1909. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1909. JANUARY 2—Second Term begins. Short Winter Course in Agriculture begins. JANUARY 19—Birthday of General R. E. Lee. FEBRUARY 19—One Hundred and Sixlh Anniversary of the Demosthenian Society. Eighty-seventh Anniversary of FEBRUARY 22—Washington's Birthday. the Phi Kappa Society. MARCH 2 — Freshman Competitive De!>ates. MARCH 16—Sophomore Competitive Debates. MARCH 23—Junior Competitive Debates. MARCH 24-Second Term ends. MARCH 30—Short Winter Course in Agriculture ends. APRIL 21-27—Cadets and Engineering Corps go into encampment. MAY 20 -All Prize Essays must be in by this dale. JUNE 10—Board of Visitors meets in Athens. JUNE 13—Board of Trustees meets in annual session in Athens. JUNE 13-15 — Examinations for entrance. JUNE 15, SATURDAY—5 p. m.. Prize Drill of the Corps of Cadets. 8:30 p. m. Champion Debate between Phi Kappa and Demosthenian Societies, JUNE 16. SUNDAY-11 a. m.. Baccalaureate Sermon. JUNE 17. MONDAY—11 a. m.. Sophomore Declamations. 4 p. m.. Junior Orations. Delivery of Sophomore Prizes. JUNE 18. TUESDAY—10 a. m.. Meeting of the Alumni Society. 12 m.. Oration before the Alumni. Alumni Luncheon. 4 p. m., Exercises by undergraduates representing the branches of the University. JUNE 19. WEDNESDAY—Commencement Day. Orations by Academic and Law Graduates. Baccalaureate Address. Degrees Conferred. Summer Vacation begins. JULY 1—University Summer School begins. AUGUST 2—Summer School closes. SEPTEMBER 14—Faculties meet. SEPTEMBER 16-18—Examinations for entrance. SEPTEMBER 16 -Registration Books open. SEPTEMBER 18—Recitations and classesi begi in all Departments. NOVEMBER 23—National Thanksgiving D; DECEMBER 21—Christmas Recess begins J. T. NEWTON, Pennington, Eighth Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1'Jll. HOWARD THOMPSON, Gainesville. Ninth Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 11*07. E. H. CAI.LAWAY, Augusta. Tenth Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1907. J. W. HENNETT, Waycross. Eleventh Congressional District. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1909. A. L. Huu,, Athens. Resident Trustee. Term Expires Sept. 1, 1907. HOWELI. COBB, Athens, Resident Trustee. Term Expires Sept. 1, 190!'. G. F. PEABODY. New York, By special act of the General Assembly. Life Trustee. N. E. HARRIS, Macon, President of Board of Trustees of School of Technology. Ex-officio. F. G. DuBiGNON, Savannah, President of Board of Commissioners Georgia Normal and Industrial College. Ex-officio. P. W. MELDRIM, Savannah, President of Board of Commissioners Industrial College for Colored Youths. • Ex-officio. W. P. PRICE, Dahlonega, President of Board of Trustees of North Georgia Agricultural College. Ex-officio. II. D. McD.\NiEi, .......... Chairman. A. L. HUM. ....... Secretary <uitl Treasurer. PRUDENTIAL COMMITTEE— Messrs. Cobb, Hull. MeWhorter. FINANCE COMMITTEE— Messrs. Callaway, Hamilton, Harris. PROPERTY COMMITTEE— Messrs. Cobb, Gober, Bower. COMMITTEE ON HONORARY DEGREES— Messrs. Adams, Bacon, and the Chancellor. COMMITTEE ON BROWN FUND— Messrs. MeWhorter, Persons, Adams. GEORGIA The University Faculty and Other Officers. DAVID CRENSHAW HARROW, C. and M. E., Chancellor. *DoN QUITMAN ABBOTT, A. M., Instructor in Mathematics. ALFRED AKERMAN, A. B., M. F. Professor of Forrestry. SAMUEL CALDWELL BENEDICT, M. D., Dean of the School of Pharmacy, and Professor of Medical Jurisprudence. WILLIS HENRY BOCOCK, A. M., Milledgc Professor of Ancient Languages. DUNCAN BURNET, Librarian. JOHN PENDLETON CAMPBELL, A. B., Ph. D., Professor of Biology. HOWELL COBB, A. M., B. L., Professor of Law. URIAH HARROLD DAVENPORT, B. S., Adjunct .Professor of Physics and Electrical Engineering. MARION DERRELLE DuBosE, A. B., A. M., Instructor in English Language and Teutonic Philology. SARAH A. FRIERSON, Assistant Librarian. TOMLINSON FORT, A. B., Tutor in Mathematics. JOHN W. GALLOWAY, Ph. G., Assistant in Operative Pharmacy. THOMAS FITZGERALD GREEN, B. L., Lecturer on Federal Procedure, and Legal Ethics. ERNEST LEE GRIGGS, (Graduate V. M. I.) Adjunct Professor of Civil Engineering and Drawing. JAMES FORCE HART, JR,, Instructor in. Horticulture. WILLIAM DAVIS HOOPER, A. M., Professor of Latin. AUGUSTUS LONGSTREET HULL, Registrar. * Deceased. JAMES MARTIN JOHNSON, B. S. Ag., M. S. AS:., Professor of Agronomy and Animal Husbandry. HARVIE JORDAN, Director of Farmers' Institutes. JAMES MOBI>EY KIMBROUGH, JR., First Lie ut. 27th U. S. Infantry, Commandant of Cadets. ISIDORE Kopi/owm, Rav Morenu Vehorooh, Lecturer in Hebrew. JOSEPH LUSTRAT, Bach, es Lett., Professor of Romance Languages. JOHN HANSON THOMAS MCPHERSON, A. B., I'll. D., Professor of History and Political Science. ROBERT LIGON MCWHORTER, A. B., A. M., Instructor in Latin and Greek. JOHN DAGG MELL, A. B., B. L., Professor of Parliamentary Law. CHARLES JAMES MOORE, B. S., Ph. D., Adjunct Professor of Chemistry. JOHN MORRIS, A. M., Professor of Englisli Language and Teutonic Philology. SYLVANUS MORRIS, A. M., B. L., Dean of the Law Department, and Professor of Law. ARTHCR JOY PALMER, Ph. (!., Professor of Theory and Practice of Pharmacy. ROBERT EMORY PARK, A. M., Litt. D., Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature. ANDREW HENRY PATTERSON, A. B., A. M., Professor of Physics and Astronomy. WILLIAM OSCAR PAYNE, A. B., A. M., Instructor in History and Political Science. STEADMAN VINCENT SANPORD, A. B., Junior Professor of Rhetoric and Knglisli Literature. CHARLES MERCER SNELLING, A. M., Dean of Franklin College and Professor of Mathematics. JOSEPH SPENCER STEWART, A. B., A. M., Professor of Secondary Education. CHARLES MORTON STRAHAN, C. and M. E., Professor of Civil Engineering. *ANDRE\V MC\AIKN SOCLE, II. S. A., ' Dean of the Xchool of Ayricultnrc. PHILIP ROBERT WKI/TNER, Assistant in 'Library. HENRY CI.AY WHITE. 1'h. 1).. 1). I'. L., LL. D., I'resident of the State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts, and I'rofessor of Chemistry. MARY I'K.MHROKK WII.DE, Cattilogncr. THOMAS JACKSON WOOFTER. A. M.. 1'h. I)., Professor of I'hilosoi>lii/ and Education. ERNEST LEE WORSIIA.M. B. S., Tutor in liioloyi/. •Elected but has not yet officially accepted. Ocean Song. There is life in the breath of the morning, There's joy in the swell of the sea, 'Neath the whitecap foam of their ocean home The billows dance with glee. When the boat glides out of the harbor, On the sea god's waving crest, There is love and joy for the sailor boy In his sweetheart's tender breast. And hope's in the sunset's splendor, Then home on the starlight steep; Oh, the world is bright in spite of night, For God's on the rolling deep. HARRISON JONES. Senior Class Officers. HARRISON JONES .......... President. J. L. STANFORD ........... Vici'- C. L. TURNER ........... GEORGE II. (III.I.ON L. C: BOWER ......... ........... Secretary-Treasurer. I'oct. Historian. History of the Senior Class. KXI! vidi! vici! Each member of the outgoing class can proudly proclaim it. We came as a hand of verdant Freshmen, ahout eighty strong. We saw loom before us the outlines strangely clad of another class of men; they stood on a step above us in the college world. We.hailed them as we marched on and there was war. Then; were no broken hearts nor sad farewells connected with this war. Xo dying, but many wounded and afterwards many congenial and happy hear!'. There are still on the campus places where the turf is torn and the soil is rugged, and these bear noble testimony of the prowess of war times when the class of naughty-seven took the scalps of the enemy for two years. It was the Junior year, beyond the valley of the shadow of the trying Sopho­ more period. And now, in this year the gracious professors of the University look with a kind and proud eye upon the transition from youth to youthful manhood. They in their inmost thoughts begin to survey the future of this great class of '07. And they say: "Surely these are the noblest Romans of them all." There is no man in our Class who does not possess some individual celebrity ol' manner or speech or temperament which, when combined with that natural and common thirst for learning (and the faculty attest this) will mark him as illustrious in the society of mankind and distinguish him in the career that he might choose. The historian could particularize the deeds of his gallant classmates, and by such evidence win from the distant reader of the Pandora a wish to share the high opinion with which we are favored at home. But after all the individual is only a private in the vast army of society and society should represent thfc highest and profoundest type of the individual. Hence Ave write in the name of the Class and feel that the term does not slight its original avocation. We do not outcast hope with the paltry thoughts of what the past "might have been," but, rather we flatter the future with salutes for what it might bestow. This "past" which so many shun the signs of when we do contem­ plate flits across the page of memory with marshal tread or like a panorama of antiquity, in so far as it pictures noble thoughts \vhich have been executed. The University band is playing "(!lory. (Jlory, to old (Jeorgia." It is a football game, the college yells are given. The chapel bell is sending the tidings on the breeze. A member of the class of '07 has proved himself a worthy captain of his band and just placed the sphere behind the 'goal and made the winning score. Or perhaps it is a baseball game, where the contest is strained and the faces intently watching are anxious and troubled. It is then that a twirler from the Class of '07 saves the day. From the chapel there comes the sound of cheering. It is an inter-collegiate debate and Georgia's representative has just begun to speak. He is tall and handsome and his voice, vibrating with many melodies that go to make up the perfect orator, rivals in beauty of tone and clearness the deep thought and intense logic of the speaker. He also is a member of the Class of '07. "And she looked like a queen in a book that night." It is commencement and the dances have begun. Deupree Hall is beautifully decorated in Red and Black. The lights mirror themselves in the polished floor and joy is in every heart. It is the Senior Hop, the last of the week of revelry, and somehow as the couples glide on in the sea of dances; beautiful women of Athens and Georgia, with their heads thrown back in an attitude of listening, possessing the wealth of graceful neck and shoulders, and each a Dixie belle with her own true knight; as they pass the elderly ladies of grand old Athens who are sitting over on the right watching the galoxy of the evening, notice that there are some faces that are sadder tonight than others, and they know what this means. And somehow the voices are lower and hope is sweeter. And when the orchestra plays "Home, Sweet Home," perhaps there is a tear in the eyes of the handsome man of '07. It is commencement day. A noble file of youths who have bravely stood the siege of years, walk slowly down upon the stage. They do not hear the words that are said. They pass out with a piece of sheepskin. This is their talisman and with this they go before the world. ERNKST ANDKRSON, A. B., I*. I*. L.,. Demosthenian. Sl'MMIT, OA. Freshman Debater, ('<>r|M»ral, Sergeant, ami First Lieutenant Corps Cadets, Secretary, Vice-President, and President of Demos thenion Society. "Here virtue finds it-* counterpart.'* WILLIAM GORDON BRANTI-EY, JR., A. B., 2 A E, Demosthenian. HRI'NSWU'K, C!A. Kntered Sophomore, Winner Sophomore De­ baters' Modal, Master of (Vremonies DCIIIOHtlieniun Annivcrsiiry '00 und I.e<> Memorial Kxerrisps '07, I^ocal and Athletic- Kilitor Red and Hlack, Associate Kditor Pan<lora, As>AK-iate Kditnr and Kdi tor-in-Chief (leorKian, M(>inl)cr Itoatinir ('lull. President <J. M. A. Club, MfinlHT Citv (ioviTinnent Club, Member Senior Itoimd fable, Member Sphinx, I'niversity KepreKentative at Si nit hern Kdui-ation;il ConfereiH-*' '07, Baseball Simud *0f> and '(Mi, Soph. Junior and Senior Baseball Teams. Junior Class l*<H-t, Captain of Senior Cla*Baseball Team. "I would the Rods had made tbee more poetical." WILLIAM AUTIIUK A. B., Demosthen rr.KM. GA. Freshman Historian, Treasurer V, M. C\ A. ' "Like one in praver I st* ROLUN BROUGHTON, A. B., X *, * K. MADISON, GA. hark, I hear it rain of RtruttinK chanticleer." WlUJAM WlIjDFORD BROWN. V, t . ,-. VL' A. B.. Demosthonian. ATHENS. GA. C'aptain Sophomore Football Team, Capta n Senior Football Team, Tarkle Varsity KIK • dull '(Hi, Guard Varsity flasket Hall Tea n '(HI and '07. Varsitv I)'a»eliall Team 'Crt ai d '07, Member Honor Board '(la-'IXi and '<»!-'<". "Thou bast the patience and the faith of saints." AMBROSE HOMER CARMICHAET,-, A. B., X *, Domosthenian. JACKSOX, OA. NIVERSITY OF GEORGIA GEORGIA Manaper Varsitv Baseball Team '07, Mem­ ber of Senior Hound Table, Captain Co. B Corps of CadetA, Member of Sphinx, Casque and Gauntlet, Delta Iota Delta Club. Thalians. Assistant Manager 'IM» Varsity Baseball Team, Business Manager Red and Black, Assistant Manager Hed and Black, Corporal and First Sergeant Cor|w of Cadets, Winner of Sophomore Speakers' Ctip, Winner Sopho­ more Debaters' Medal, Freshman Debater. "Farewell; a long farewell to all my great­ ness." EU.IOT EVANS CIIEATHAM, A. B., A T Q, * K. SAVANNAH. CA. "Where did you come from, baby dear?" NATHAN COPLAN. B. S., Deinosthenian. CEDARTOWN, GA. Entered Sophomore, Sergeant Co. B, Master Ceremonies, Champion Debate 1906, of North Carolina Debater 1!H)7. "His reasons are two grains of wheat in two bushels of t-haff." BRYAN BROWN DAV B. S., 2 A E, * K MACON, GA. Entered Junior, Sergeant Corp Member of Honor Boanl, Junior i Baseball Teams, Manager Seniol Team, Member Macon Club. "Lord of himself; that heritage iiii.ii' W ATKINS DAVIS, JR., H., <I> A 0, Demosthenian. I.KXINCTOX, OA. plioinore. Sophomore Declaimer, ian. Sergeant Corps Ca lets, Sec-I'resit ent and Preside! t Demofl[in. Annlivcrs. rian cif Denuwlhe lian Iflofi, Delia IT 1!NMI, MfiulHr Senior ', Mi-i l>er City (Jovernn ent Club, IMial r 1!K)T, Kditor-ii-Chief of lira, li«)7. jinceit mav puff a man up hut never prop |i|>." JAMES BANCROFT KITES, B. S., C. E., Demosthenian. ATHENS. GA. Kditor-in-C'hief Engineering Annual. "With sanctity of reason." GEORGE HAZLEHURST GILLON, A. B., Demosthenian. ATLANTA. GA. "A soul of power, a well of lofty thought.' "1 JUAN GONZAJ.EZ, B. S., E. E., C. E., * K. LEOX, NICAKAOUA. "Wise t< resolve ami patient to perform.' LI.OYD HENDERSON GRANDY, B. $., C. E., Demosthenian. 1'ICKKXS, S. C. Entered Junior, 1'reniilent Engineering Soeiety. "Whence and wliere art thon, execrable shape?" WAI/TON HARRIS GRIF A. B., K A, K, ATIIEXS, GA. Sergeant and First Lieutenant Cadets, Art Editor Pandora 'IK, .1 Senior Ilasehull Teams, Associate I and Black, .lunior Fmitliall TCMM •01! and '117 Iliisketliall Teams, M:ii kethall Team '07. "(iood and liandntime enong THOMAS HIMA*PS HUDGIN, l)i>mosth(*nian. ATHKNS. GA. "I have immortal longing* in »"-'•" JOHN ATKINSON HUNNICUTT, JR. A. H., 3> A 0, & K. ATHENS. GA. Corporal Corps of Cadets, Sergeant Corps of Cadets, Vice-President and President of Phi Kappa, Secretary and Treasurer Athletic Association '<H1, Member of Honor Board '04-Ni.VOfi, President of Honor Board '07, Member Delta lota Delta Club. "The mirror of all courtesy." HARRISOX JONES, A. B., Demostheniaii. Entered Sophomore, Member City Govern­ ment Club, Boating Club, Casque and Gaunt­ let, Senior Round Table, Sphinx, Vice-Presi­ dent Junior Class, President Senior C'lass, Assistant Manager and Manager of Track Team, Assistant Business Manager and Man­ ager of Georgian, Toast Master of Junior Banquet, Master of Ceremonies North Carolina Debate, Master of Ceremonies Freshman De­ bate '(Hi, Junior Orator, Athletic Council, Meml>er Senior Baseball Team, Sergeant, Color-Sergeant, Captain Co. D Corps Cadets, Secretary, Parliamentarian, Vice-President and President of Demosthcnian. "Away with him, uway with him! he s[>caks l^itin." IjKO JOSKPH, B. S., C. E., A T n, * K. MII.LKDCKVII. I.K, li\. "Who run foretell for what high cause Thia darling of the gods was born." WIUJAM WARREN LANG, B. S., Deinosthenian. FAIRBrKN. GA. Member Agricultural Club, President of Demoethcnian. "In (Jod ifl mv trust." SAMUEL LANE LEWIS A. B., Deniosthcnian RKD OAK. GA. Kntered Sophomore, Sergeant Corp Member "IKi anil '(17 Track Teams mcntarian. Vice-Prcsiik'iit an<l Pre! Deinosthenian. "His words are bonds, his oaths arc i KENNETH MAC-DONALD, JK. g X *, Deinosthenian. ATIIKXS. GA. Sophomore,, Secretary-Treasurer •e Class \dvisorv Board, Speaker Sopho>nd Senior Banquets, Committee Junior t run-Hellenic Hop Committee 00, lie Kilitor Georgian,, x>cal, Athletic. te Editor,, ami Kditor-in-Chief Red lack, Winner ,l\mior Speakers' Med.il, henian Annivcrsarian '07. North Caroebater '07, President College Y. M. C. mhor Delta lota Delta '07 Club, Casque mntlet, Senior Round Table, Editor-inPandora, '07. ,'ise from the top of his head up!' WILLIAM THOMAS MCCAJPFREY, K. B. S., K SAVANNAH, CA. Winner '04 Drill Medal. Meiiilwr Track Team 'OS and '08, and Captain '07, Member German Club, Meml>er Advisory Board '06-'07, Pan-Hellenic Hop Committee '0(3 and '07, Associate Editor Pandora. "Though equal to all things, for all things unfit, Too nice for a statesman, too proud for a wit." GROVER CLEVELAND MIDDLEBROOKS, A. B., $ A ©, * K. "Plain without pomp, and rich without a show." JOHN GLASCOCK MAYS, B. S., X *, * K. ATLANTA, OA. "Earth sounds my wisdom and high ilt-uven my fame." AI.VIX WILKINS NEEI.V, A. B., 2 A E, * K. WAYXKSHOHO, GA. •'f)oiilit that tl»' start arc tire, Douht that the sun doth move, Doubt Truth to he a liar, Hut never doubt I love." WIUJAM KEVIU, O'H A. B.. K 2. DtMiiostluCRKKNVIM.K, (!A. • Corporal Co. A, Pn-sidont of Dell \fcmlMT Triliunal I>i-iii»s1hriiun, Manilolin ami Cuitar C)u)>, Kxrhat Itrd and Hhu-k I'.KHi, Athletic Kdito niuck 11)07. "A Christian is the highest style T PAYNE, B.. I'. P. Ij-, Demosthenian. FOHT LAMAK, UA. The very pink "f |«Tfr<-lkm." THOMAS ASBURY PERRY, JR., B. S., Demosthenian. DECATUR, GA. Entered Junior. "Gentle of speech, beneficent of mind." LORING RAOUL, B. S., 2 A E, Demosthenian. Kntcred Sophomore, Sophomore Debater, Captain Track Train '00, Captain Football 'IXi, Captain Co. C, Member of Senior Round Table and Sphinx. "A stoic of the woods,- a man without a tear." JAMES LKI.AND STANFORD, B. S., Demosthenian. HAMILTON, GA. Vice-President Demogthenian, Vice-Presi­ dent of Senior Class, Member of Engineering Society. "A heart from every evil thought set free 1 count the noblest work of deity." \ JOSEPH JORDAN SWENSON, B. S., C. E., Deinosthenian. ATLANTA, <!A. "The chief of a thousand for grace." SIDNEY JOIINSTON TAYIAH A. B., * K. DAVISBORO, GA. Entered Sophomore. nomore. "A lovely being si-an-cl formed or mol A rose with all its sweetest leav(| unfolded." RALPH LELAND TAYLOR, A. B., * K. DAVISBORO, GA. pre is niilhing more frightful than an ignorance." CURTIS LEWIS TURNER, B. S., X *, * K. ATLANTA, GA. "Eternal smiles his emptiness betray, run dimpling all the streams shallow As TALMADGE SWALL WINN, A. B., A T n, © N E, * K. SAVANNAH, GA. Sophomore Debater, Sophomore Derlaimer, Junior Orator. "One of the few, the immortal names, That were not born to die." PHILIP ROBERT WELTNER, A. B., $ K. COM MHIA, S. C. Corimral, First Sergeant, Appointed Captain Co. C, Freshman Debater. Sophomore Debater, Soplioinore Declaimer, MeinlHT Honor Hoard, Historian Sophomore Claw, Vice-President Athletic' Association, President Junior Class, Champion Debater '()(>, V ire-President and President Phi Kappa, .Master of Ceremonies Phi Kappa Anniversary '1)7, MemlM-r of Jeffersonijin I«uv Deliatini; ft^K-itny, Member City <Government Club, Assistant Itusiness Manager Hum-hall Team 'IMI, Member Boating Club, Member S«»nior Kound Table, Meml»er AdvJ»«iry Board. Kxclianire Kditor (Jenrcinn '(Mi, Kditoriu-Chief CJooi'Kian '(17, MeinlMT of Sphinx. *'Xo preat ffenhis is uver without some mixture of madnesd." LEE JEWETT WILLIAMS, A. B., $ K. MACON. GA. Kntereil Kreshman, Winner Freshman De­ bate, Sophomore Dpclaitucr, Junior Orator, President I'l.i Kappa, As^K'iate Kditor of the "(Jeornian," Winner Prize Drill 11X6, First Corporal, Sergeant- Major, and Senior Cap­ tain CorjH of Cadets, Member Macoiiites, Boating Club, Citv Guverimient Club, Senior Hound Table. 'Deep sighted in intelligence)*, ideas, utoins, intltiences." EDWARD BANCROFT, JF A. B., Deinosthenian, ATHENS, 0 A. "Knowledge comes but wisdom lin BOWER, A. B., K A, * K. B \IXBBIDflE. GA. ,,, would talk-good gods, how he JACQUEUN EMIL KNIOHT, B. S., 2 N, * K. WAYCROSS. GA. Entereil Junior '04 anil Senior '07. "Men who undertake considerable things . . ought to give us ground to presume ahility." EDWARD LEE McCAY, A. H., Demosthenian. DAXIET^iVIU.E, GA. ''And when love six-uks, the voire of all 'he gods, • Makes heaven drowsy with the harmony." BAYNARD MARCELLUS TAYI.OR, B. S., C. E., Demosthenian. /.EBIT-ON, GA. "All preat virtues heeome all great men." JOHN HAROLD WINTER, B. S., E. E., Demosthenian. WIXTERVILLK, GA. "He adorns all that lie touehes." J. DOZIER LOWNDES. Junior Class Officers. .......... J. D. LOWNDES C. G. MILLS ........... S. B. HATCHBHI .......... STANLEY M. GATES L. F. ELROD ......... ........... President. Vice-President. Secretary-Treasurer. Poet. Historian. History of the Junior Class. T is a difficult thing to write a true history of any aggregation of college men and especially is it so in writing the history of the Class of '08. To write a detailed history of this-class would require the weaving in the history of the entire student body. The '08 men have been at their posts whenever duty called and they have acted their parts well in every phase of -college life. Words are inadequate and thoughts insufficient to express their many noble deeds and brave actions. The Class has written its own history, and the historian merely pens these words as a record for posterity. When in '04 we came on the campus as Freshmen, not only did we paint the tower, the goats and the fences as other Freshmen have done, but we deprived a larger number of Sophomores of their coveted locks than any other class in the history of the University. Our record as Sophomores has been well written and recorded in a former issue of the Pandora. When the Class assembled last September, at the beginning of a new year, it \va's with true hearts and a steadfast determination. A determination to win the battles of another year, and no one will doubt that we have succeeded 'well. In regular college work our class has showed a never-failing spirit. Very few have been lost on the climb upward. We can boast of a class full of enthusiasm, teeming with activity, men with bright minds and noble hearts. Men that are willing to work in order to accomplish the honored seat at the height of fame. In athletics our men have been especially noticeable. As Freshmen we l»ad four strong men on the football squad, two star players on the baseball team, and the 100-yard dash was won by an '08 man. As Sophomores we held prominent places '^pvell, furnishing strong men in every phase of college athletics. As Juniors we had the half-back and end on the football eleven, short-stop and right-fielder on the baseball team, champion in tftmi* tourna­ ment, captain of the football eleven and many lesser lights. In the literary societies we have done more than our part. The '08 men are among the most prominent participators at each meeting. We have done our part in the publications. Our men have not only held positions on the staffs, but they have contributed articles that have passed the severest criticisms as well. True, we did not have a class banquet until our Junior year; yet it Was not our fault, but the fault of the hotels who refused to give it. When in '07 we assembled around the festive board it marked a new epoch in the history and spirit of the class. Courage was increased and enthusiasm inspired. We had met as men with bright and clear records behind us, and a brilliant and shining future before us. In the toasts proposed were no doubt prophecies, which will be inscribed on the scrolls of the State in the very near future. Then Three cheers and a tiger, give them with a will For "Georgia" the pride of the State, And three times three, and three more still, For the sovereign class of '08. For three long years have we fought the good fight, Against hardships, professors and fate, But our foundation principles so just and so right Have brought glory and honor to '08. With shoulder to shoulder and hand clasped in hand, Indifferently have we met love and hate; And whenever with boldness we have taken our stand, There was no backward turning for '08. Then all pull together boys in friendship and love Let each regard the other as mate; May peace and prosperity be showered from above On you, old glorious '08. Junior Class Roll. FRANKLIN COLLEGE. ALLEN HAMILTON BUNCE ........... Statesboro. JAMES SAMUEL BUSSEY, JR. ........... Augusta. CARROLI, DANIEL CABINESS ........... Atlanta. ROBERT BOYD GATES ............ Waynesboro. CLYDE FRANCIS COLBERT ........... Kingston. JOHN ALBERT DAVISON ............. Comer. JOSEPH EUGENE DUNSON ........... LaGrange. MINNIE THOMAS EDGERTON ........... Atlanta. LUTHER FRARY ELROD ............. Jefferson. JOHN WILLIAM FITTS ............ LaGrange. JAMES WESLEY FLORENCE ........... Odessadale. HOMER WOODWARD GARRETT ......... Buena Vista. WILLIAM MAYS GOBER ............. Marietta. JOHN BURKE HARRIS .............. Macon. WILEY CLAYTON HENSON .......... Rocky Creek. WILLIAM SAUNDERS JONES ........... Atlanta. OEL HEIDT LANGFORD ............ Fort Lamar. ABRAM LUTHER LOYD ............. Newburn. MILTON RANDOLPH LUFJ.BUKKO>V .......... Oliver. SAMUEL EMERSON MORTON ............. Gray. JOHN HOWARD NEISI.ER ............ Reynolds. SAMUEL THURMOND OLIVER ........... Elberton. JAMES ADDISON PRICE ............ Farniington. HAROLD ERWIN REYNOLDS ........... Lexington. WILLIAM ARTHUR SHELTON ........... Calhoun. HARRY RICHMOND SLACK ........... La Grange. WILLIAM FRANKLIN SLATON ........... Atlanta. SIDNEY OSLIN SMITH ............. Gainesville. JAMES PEEK TILLEY .............. Conyers. WILLIAM TELFORD TURK ............. Homer. GUY OSLIN WHELCHEL .............. Comer. FRANK BARTOW WILLINGHAM ........... Forsyth. WILLIAM WALLACE WRIGHT .......... Bainbridge. STATE COLIJSGE. ROBERT OLIVER ARNOLD ............ Hampton. GEORGE MCGRUDER BATTEY ............ Atlanta. RAY WELBORN BLACKMAB ........... Columbus. EDWARD FRANKLIN BROOKS ........... Lexington. MERCER BLANCHARD ............. Columbus. CLIFFORD CLEVELAND BROOKS .......... Lexington. HENRY GBADY CANNON ............. Winder. CARLYLE COBB ................ Athens. HENRY HEYWARD DEANE ............. Griffin JOHN ALLEN FORT ............... Americus STANLEY MATTHEW GATES ............ Atlanta. FRED NICKERSON GRANT ............. Athens. SAMUEL BENJAMIN HATCHER .......... Columbus. WILLIAM RUTHERFORD HUTCHINS .......... Athens. RALPH REGINALD HODGSON ............ Athens. DEWITT TALMAGE HUBBARD ......... Flowery Branch. AI.FONSO L. IVEY .............. Union Point. GERONIMO WAY KING ............. Cusseta. JACOB LIPSCHUTZ .............. Savannah. JAMES QALHOUN McDouGALD ........... Atlanta. STAFFORD MONTGOMERY ............. Home. FLOYD CHILDS NEWTON ............ Madison. WALTER ELLISON STONE ............. Athens. GEORGE PARKER SWIFT ............. Columbus. PERCY HEARD TIIORNTON ........... Union Point. EDMUND BYNE WALKER ............ Madison. WILLIAM SMITH YEATES ............. Atlanta. ELECTIVE. JACKSON PORTER DICK ............. Marietta. WALLACE WOOD DRAPER ............. Atlanta JULIAN EUGENE GAMMON .......... Mariannu, Fla. WALTER INMAN GRAY ............. Atlanta. SIGN BOON HAWKINS ............. Americus. FRANCIS PORCHER L'ENGLE ........ Jacksonville, Fla. JACK DOZIER LOWNDES ............. Atlanta. FRANK HILL MARTIN .............. Atlanta. OSCAR LEE MILLER ............. Carnesville. CHARLES GARDNER MILLS ............ Griffin. PERCY BRAND MCNEKLY ............. Athens. EUGENE MASON RANSOM ............ Columbus. RICHARD KYLE SMITH ............ Greensboro. R. S. THOMPSON ............... Atlanta. I 1 /. o c I MARCUS P. McWHORTER. Sophomore Class Officers. M. P. McWHORTEK IT. G. BENNETT ......... .......... BOIJJNG DuBosE .......... President. Vice-President. Secretary-Treasurer. W. WALKER ........... Poet. 0. P. BEAU. ........... Historian. History of the Sophomore Class. (>R more than one reason the work which the writer is now enter­ ing upon is a difficult one. To write the history of any class is no easy task; to write the history of a Sophomore Class is still harder, but to give an account of the greatness of these Sopho­ mores of Class '09 is the most difficult of all. If I had the genius of Shakespeare, the eloquence of Burke, and the descrip­ tive power of Macaulay, and with all these had unlimited time and space at my command, I might hope to come somewhere near giving an adequate account of the great deeds of these mighty Sophomores, but with the knowledge of the meager space allowed me for this article always impressing itself upon me, I am woefully perplexed to decide just which valorous deeds to pick for this purpose from the divergent infinite series of famous exploits and great feats performed by the members of the present Sophomore Class. But to begin. On the evening of September 17th, 1906. five members of this Class decided to go on the hunt for Freshmen wool. Starting out just after supper they per­ formed a useful service for a Freshman who was just going to see his lady-love, lie had been hard at work combing and oiling his locks but in spite of all his labor their length made him look somewhat out of place. This trouble was soon remedied by the Sophs with a pair of clippers and some scissors and the young fellow went on his way rejoicing. From then on these Sophs proceeded to cut hair promiscuously, but I cannot dwell further than to say that one of the leading upholsterers of Athens gathered around the academic building enough of the harvest from the Freshmen heads to stuff a large sofa pillow, and he now says that wool from off the innocent lambs of the Freshman Class is the best he ever used. (The '11 class are hereby notified that high prices will be paid for '10 wool by all the Athens upholsterers next fall.) In all the scraps the Freshmen were put to the bad in spite of all the efforts to organixe them made by the Juniors and the lawyers, who never ceased from those efforts until our team took from the Freshmen the college baseball champion­ ship by overcoming a lead of .'{ to 1 after two men were out in the ninth inning. In the line of banqueting this Class did something that had never been done before. Announcing the time and place two days beforehand they dared the Freshmen to break it up. On the afternoon of January 23 the Freshmen were defeated in several battles and prisoners taken from them were carried through the streets bound hand and foot. At night in the Imperial Hotel we enjoyed the rewards of victory, the banquet being marred by the absence of none of our members who had fallen into the hands of Freshmen. But enough of this. Anyone seeing in our ranks the biggest and the least man in college will admit that v>e are a distinguished class. Who could doubt the bravery of these Sophomores who going with empty hands into the most terrible frays, face unflinchingly the terrific firing of Prof. Hooper, Prof. Sanford, and Col. Snelling? Who would say that we will not be represented on the track team after seeing the record-breaking sprint of two '09's from the Opera House to Candler Hall on the night of the Freshman banquet? And who could deny that the Sophs can play baseball when every afternoon he sees the great work of Callaway, Kid Walker, Lucas, and McElhannon; and when he sees sitting on the bench Derrick, Morton, Marcus McWhorter, Foley and Harmon from whom I have little doubt could be picked four who could fill their places without lessening greatly the chance of Georgia's winning. If time and space would permit, I should like to write the biography of each and every man of this our class in order that, in future years when each has reached the climax of his life, we might be able to look back at those accounts and see the indications of greatness that appeared in these men as Sophomores. But I must deny myself that pleasure and bring these remarks to a close. SOPHOMORE CLASS. Sophomore Class Roll. FRANKLIN COLLEGE. FREDERICK ALLEN ............... Chipley. LINTON EUGENE ALLEN ............. Chipley. OLIN PERDUE BEALL ............. Carrollton. ULRICH JOSEPH BENNETT ............ Jefferson. THOMAS WAYNE BRUTON ............ Claxton. EDWARD MITCHELL BROWN ............ Athens. GORDON BENNETT CALLAWAY .......... Lexington. PHILIP MCLAREN CLEVELAND ........... Griffin. BRADLEY BURNS DAVIS ............. Xewnau. WALTER LEE DOWNS ............ Watkinsville. Louis FLASHER .............. Valdosta. GORDON WESTON GLAUSIER ........... Baconton. DENMARK GROOVER .............. Quitman. HENRY PERSONS HEATH ............ Talbotton. THOMAS AMBROSE HERNDON ....... ... Crawford. GEORGE THOMAS LANCASTER .......... Forsyth. JEROME COHEN MICHAEL ............. Athens. TROY GAINES MORROW ............. Rutledge. ALEXANDER RAMSAY McDoNNELL ......... Savannah. FONVILLE McWuoRTER ............ Woodville. MARCUS PHARR McWuoRTER ........... Athens. PAUL EARLE PALMER .......... Jacksonville, Fla. THEOPHILUS ROSCOE PEACOCK ............ Kite. MARCUS PEARSON PENTECOST ........... Winder. CHARLES THOMAS PHILLIPS ............ Atlanta. JAMES ARCHIE ROBERTS ............. Xichols. ROBERT BUCHER SCOTT ............. Decatur. MARION SILVER ..... .......... Augusta. ISRAEL ABRAHAM SOLOMON ........... Savannah. JOSEPH AUGUSTUS STEVENS ........... Berkeley. CLYDE ZACHARY WALKEB ........... White Plains. JOHN RANDOLPH WALKER ............. Cass. STATE COLLEGE. W. WILSON ARMISTEAD ............ Crawford. JAMES LESTER ARRENDALE ..'........... Grove. PAUL DREW ATKINSON ............. Madison. HARLE GRADY BAILEY ............ Logansville. HENRY GREEN BOSTWICK ............ Bostwick. HUGH BOSTWICK ............... Bostwick. THOMAS WALKER BROWN ........... Marshalville. WILLIAM GAMMELL CANN ........... Savannah. CARVII.LE HYNSON CARSON ........... Savannah. TROY GREEN CHASTAIN ............ Kennesaw. EDGAR VERNON CARTER .............. Atlanta. ALEXANDER SMITH CASSELLS .......... Thomasvilk1. WALTER BRANHAM COOK ............ Valdosta. HOMER ABBEY DAVIS .............. Atlanta. WILLIS FRANKLIN DOBBS ............ Kennesaw. CLAUD LESTER nERRicK ............. Clayton. BOLLING STOVALL DuBoSE ............ Athens. .............. Augusta. USHER EDEI.STEIN WILLIAM ESTON EPPES ............. Athens. JOHN PORTER FORT .............. Mt. Airy. LITTLETON HILL FITZPATRICK .......... Culloden. LENTON GERDINE ............... Athens. JOHN KYRGESS GILES ............ McWhorter. MORTON STRAHAN HODGSON ............ Athens. ROBERT WILLIAM HOLM AN ........... Commerce. WIUJAM DEIANKY Huu> ............ Athens. WILLIAM DUDLEY HUNT .......... Pensacola, Fla. JAMES EDWARD LUCAS ........... Waverly Hall. STEWART MCELIIANNON ............ Winder. HARRY ANDREW MILLER ............. Corinth. HERMAN CRESCY McCuTCHEON ......... Adairsville. BURNETT PETTIGREW MCWIIORTER ......... Ceylon. CHARLES HAMILTON NAPIER ............ Macon. ROBERT LEE NIXON .............. Bowden. HENRY NEWSOME ............. Union Point. HOMER KITTRELL NICHOLSON ........... Athens. WALTER MORELAND GATES ........... Louisville. EDMUND MATTHEW OLIVER ............ Plains. ELNATHAN PRATT PEARSON ........... Lumpkin. JOHN HART PORTER ............... Augusts. ARMAND CARLOS PRADOS ......... Camaguay, Cuba. ........... Augusta. WILLIAM STEVENS POTTINGER HUBERT MORTON RYLKE ............. Statham. DANIEL HUNTLEY REDFEARN ........... Barwick. THOMAS JESSE HAMILTON ........... Robertson. FOSTER RHODES HEPIIZIBAH .......... Carrollton. DWIOHT LOING ROGERS ............ Reidsville. DAVID £ ...OMON STARR ............. Royston. JULIUS JAMES SCOTT .............. Decatur. JOHN ADAMS SIBLEY ............ Milledgeville. ALVAN CARSWELL SANDEFORD ........... Midville. TATNALL DANIEL SIMKINS ............ Albany. ANDREW GUY SMITH ............. Palmetto. SUMNER JEWELL SMITH ............ Jefferson. YOUNG BERRYMAN SMITH ............ Atlanta. ALLEN G. THURMAN ............. Barnesville. FRANK VON SPRECKEN ............. Augusta. CLAYTON GUESS WEAVER ........... Logansville. WATSON WALKER ............. Hawkinsville. JOHN BENSON WIER .............. Athens. ELECTIVE. DAVID FRANCIS BARROW ............. Athens. CARROLL DEMCEY COLLEY ........... Washington. HERMON PRESTON DELAPERRIERE ......... Hoschton. FRANK DANIEL FOLEY ............. Columbus. RICE BURKETT GREENE ............. Boston. HARRY E. HARMAN .............. Atlanta. HAMILTON RICHARD HORSEY ........ Fernandina, Fla. ABRAM LINK ................. Athens. JOSEPH LODATO ............. Baltimore, Md. R. L. MCGRUDER .............. Columbus. WILLIAM Cox MILLER >............. Americus. CHARI-ES FRANCIS PEKOR ............ Columbus. J. MASON WILLIAMS. Freshman Class Officers. J. M. WII.UAMS .......... President. II. G. ATKINSON .......... Vice-President. II. A. NEWMAN .......... Secretary-Treasurer. HUGH W. WHITE W. T. Nix ......... ............ Poet. Historian. History of the Freshman Class. |S I begin this history. I feel my inability to record, as they should be recorded, the achievements of the Class of 1910. Realizing that this is true and that the class has made a history for itself that will shine forever in its glorious deeds, I will mention only a few of the most important steps in its progress. Immediately after arriving in the city, the class, which is one of the largest in the history of the University, began to showunusual pluck and energy, qualities which have characterized it throughout the year. Many duties have come to the inexperienced Freshmen this year, but each of them has been boldly and fearlessly met. Many of the beautiful locks that graced the craniums of the '09's on the morning of our arrival were trampled beneath our feet ere the setting of the sun, and the shouts of the victorious Freshmen, which were to be heard from all parts of the Campus, struck fear to the hearts of the quaking Sophomores. The "goats" received their usual visit and the water tower was given another ornament. A few days after the first visit to the tower, it was repainted and our insignia erased, but without hesitation, and despite the vigilance of the city officials, another Freshman scaled the dizzy heights, and now '10 at the very topmost round of the ladder blazes out the path up which all future Freshmen must come. In athletics our Class has taken a very important part. A number of men from the Class showed a great deal of nerve and strength in football practice this season, and when next year's team is drawn several of them will undoubtedly be in the line up. This year's team was greatly strengthened by two Freshmen: one, the greatest punter Georgia had this season, was noted especially for his work at end, the other for his work at quarter. On the baseball diamond our men have made a most enviable record, two of the best men on Varsity nine are from our Class. The good work of the first baseman excites the admiration of all who see him at his post and the utility man who plays with the skill of a veteran any position on the diamond is one of the strongest men on the team. Some of the '10 men are doing excellent work on the track and the team will be greatly strengthened by their work. The progress of the Class in literary activities has been remarkable and we sincerely hope that each man will continue to do in the higher classes the conscientious work which he has done as a Freshman. In the literary societies our men have taken a great deal of interest in all matters connected with the societies. Finally, I will say that our first year has been a success. Each man in the Class has tried to avail himself of the golden opportunities offered him by his State for the intellectual uplift. I hope that we may all return next year, ready and willing to take up our work with still greater zeal and that we, having seen our faults this year, may rise on stepping stones of our present mistakes to still higher things, and by doing our duty become an honor to ourselves, to our people, and to our State. FRESHMAN CLASS. Freshman Class Roll. FRANKLIN COLLEGE. JAMES ALFRED ANDERSON ............ Summit. ROBERT S. BLATCHKORD ............. Cordele. JOHN HOLMES BOCOCK ............. Athens. POPE TCRMAN BROCK ............ Eastannollee. WJNSHIP EMORV CABINESS ............ Macun. SPENCER WILLIAM .............. Connerat. JOHN CAMP DAVIS ................ Rome. WASHINGTON FALK .............. Savannah. JAMES HOLMES FOSTER ............. Monroe. MAYNARD CROVES .............. Lincolnton. PIERRE HEARD ................ Augusta. JAMES SINGLETON HOWELL ........... Thumaston. GEORGE WILLIAM JONES ............ Herndon. AUBREY MATTHEWS ............... Dallas. EVAN HOWELL MC£LMURRAY ......... Waynesboro. HENRY NEWMAN ............... Atlanta. HOSEA ALBERT Nix ............. Commerce. WILLIAM EI.ROD OLIVER ............. Athens. JOSEPH JAMES MEMORY PAYNE ......... Carnesville. FRANK RODGERS ............ Jacksonville, Fla. ERNEST ROLLING SAYE ........... Ball (iround. HUGH WILLIAM SHEALY ........... Oglethorpt?. VIVIAN BURNETT WADDELL ........... Marietta. ARTHUR TII.LMAN WILLIAMS ........ Jacksonville, Fla. BOYKIN CABELL WRIGHT ............ Augusta. STATE COLLEGE. THOMAS GARRETT ANDERSOX ........... Athens. GEORGE DOUGLAS APPIJ-:BY ........... JefTerson. GEORGE CLIFTON ARNOLD ............ Elberton. BRADFORD DENIIAM ANSLEY .......... Thomasville. GRADY ATKINSON .............. Madison. FREDERICK WILLARD BALL ........... Fitzgerald. LEWIS BENSON ............... Tallapoosa. LANIER FRANK BRANSON ............. Athens. CASPER BUCHWALD ............... Athens. ROMNEY LYLE CAMPBELL ............ Snellville. JOHN FOSTER CARY .............. Bostwick. WALTER McCoNNELL COLLEY .......... Savannah. HAROLD NEWMAN COOI.EDGE ........... Atlanta. .MILTON DARGAN, JK. .............. Atlanta. HENRY DAVISON .............. Woodville. FRANK BARTOW DENTON ............ Savannah. SAMUEL KENNEY DICK ............ Marietta. JOSEPH BROWN DUNBAR ............ Talbotton. PAUL ROMARE EVANS ........... Lawrenceville. LEONARD FARKAS ............... Albany. EDWARD LEE KARRIS .............. Athens. THOMAS MALLORY FITZPATRICK .......... Culloden. LAMAR LAURIE FULCHER ........... Waynesboro. JULIAN ARNOLD FOWLER ............. Athens. HENDERSON HUNTER GALLOWAY ...... Johnson City, Tenn. LEWIS CARL GERCKE .............. Augusta. LKROY BUNYAN GRANDY ........... Piekens, S. C. RICHARD AUGUSTUS GRAVES ............ Sparta. HENRY COMER GREEN ............. Bluffton. OSCAR MJLLEDOE (!RESIIAM .......... Waynesboro. DANIEL STEW ART GKIGGS ............ Dawson. JOSEPH BUDD'GORDON ............. Columbus. WILLIAM HEMPHILL HADDOCK ........... Athens. THOMAS ALBERT HARBER ........... Commerce. HENRY HENDRICK ............... Jackson. GEORGE HAROLD HUI.MK, JR. ........... Athens. WALLACE CRISP JAMES ............. Blakely. HENRY JERGER .............. Thoma-sville. JACOB JOEL ................. Athens. JAMES ALLEN KING ............. Point Peter. ARTHUR MERRILL KNIGHT ........... Waycross. BERTOW BINOHAM LEE ............ Covinpton. DICK RANDOLPH LONOINO .......... Douglasville. CHARLES OVERTON LOWE ............ Augusta. HARRY MASON ................ Athens. RALPH JOSEPH MINEIIAN ........... Brunswick. JOHN MILTON MORROW ............. Rutledge. JESSE ROGERS HURRAH ............. Chipley. WALTER FRANKLIN McMtiRRAiN .......... Cusseta. ALBERT BACON XICOLL ............. Savannah. WILLIAM THOMAS Nix ............. Commerce. GRADY PADGETT ............... Reidsville. JAMES DANIEL PALMER ............. Millen. NICK PARKER ................. Millen. HIRAM GROVER PRICKETT ........... Commerce. MALCOLM LAWSON PETERSON ............ Edna. RALPH RAGAN ................ Atlanta. HUGH LIVINGSTON RAY ............. Norcross. RAYFIELD FRANK REVSON ............ Atlanta. PERCY C. ROSSER .............. Eatonton. KENELM EARL RUCKER ............ Elberton. EDGAR GORDON SIMMONS ............. Rincon. SCOTT SELL ................ Iloschton. MOSES SLUSKY ................ Augusta. HOMER CLIFTON SMITH ............. Winder. PAUL HUBERT SMITH ............. Jefferson. FRANK GEIGER SPEARMAN .......... Shady Dale. SILAS HENRY STARR ............. Mansfield. CLIFTON MAURICE STYEHMAN ......... Thomasville. JAMES LESTER SWEAT ............ Waycross. CHARLES S. TAYI/OR .............. Atliens. JOSEPH AUGUSTUS THOMAS .......... Columbus. OSCAR THOMASON .............. Madison. WILLIAM HANSUN UNDKRWOOD ........... Carrs. LINTON GIBSON WEIGLE ............ Augusta. HUGH WELCH WHITE ............ Whitehall. LEE HAYS WILLIAMS ............... Hull. PAUL WILLIAM WHITAKKR ........... LaGran<ro. JOHN MASON WILLIAMS ............ Madison. WILLIAM BAYNARD WILLINGIIAM ........ College Park. WILLIAM ALFRED WINHURN .......... Savannah. WILLIAM STEWAKT WITH AM ........... Atlanta. MAX WRIGHT ................. Rome. ELECTIVE. BERT M. ATKINSON .............. Newnan. ALBERT SIDNEY BACON ............ Pembroke. ERAN ALEXANDER ERWIN ............ Winder. GUY GARNER ............... Lnxomini. HARRY BRITTAIN (!ILBEKT .......... Rising Fawn. ALBERT SIDNEY HAWES ............ Elberton. GEORGE WIGGINS HOLLINSIIEAD ........ Milledgeville. GHOVER CLEVELAND KETRON .......... Clarkesville. JOHN KING ................. Cusseta. ROBERT TOOMKR CAMP ............ Carnesville. JAMES RODGERS ............... Eastman. JAMES LINDSAY SAMPI.E ........... Statesboro. CLIFFORD M. JAMES. Officers of the Senior Law Class. C. M. JAMES ........... President. R. M. DAI.EY ........... Vice-President. T. E. SCOTT ........... Secretary-Treasurer. JOSEPH LAW ........... Poet. W. J. FIELDER .... ..... Historian. History of the Senior Law Class. Historians only things of weight, Results of persons, or affairs of State, Briefly, with truth and clearness should relate: Laconic shortness memory feeds. COLLEGE man always thinks that his class is the best one in college, and rightly he should, for nothing so becomes a man or is so indicative of strong character as loyalty to his associates and friends. Now viewed from the standpoint of a member of the Law Class of 1907, we have the best class ever turned out into the cold world with a Bible, a Code of Georgia, and a Form Book to maintain justice and in time to become worthy of the name of lawyers. In the early fall of 1905 we gathered here from "various and sundry" parls of this old State and entered with more or less fear and trembling into the mysteries of Blackstone. However in a few weeks time we had amassed a vocab­ ulary of legal words and phrases that would cause an ordinary layman to sit up and wonder that one small head could carry it all. But somehow these legal terms were strangely lacking in the class-room and we couldn't just exactly decide which one would serve our purpose best, and hence got roundly "shot." And thus under the tutelage of teachers who are scholars, gentlemen, and lawyers in every sense of the word we managed to come through our Junior year and at the end to know something, however little, about the law. Some few of our members fell by the wayside during the summer vacation and didn't return to college in the fall but we picked up several men who were dauntless enough to try to do two years' work in one, and our ranks were not much depleted after all. Refreshed and invigorated by a rest of three months we entered upon the hazardous task of learning Common Law Pleading, and with the aid of Messrs. Abraham Baldwin and John Milledge, who began to litigate in the time "whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary," we gained some slight knowl­ edge of Pleading in our own State. Throughout its course in college the members of the Law Class of 1907 have taken part in every phase of college life and no small part of the honors which fall to the lot of college men have been bestowed upon them. In oratory, debate, athletics and even in the pleasant, rivalry of politics our members have always shown thmselves to be true men imbued with the spirit that makes old Georgia famous. And now after graduation and in the struggles of life may each member of our class prove himself as worthy and live as truly and as well as he did in his college days. In whatever position the wheel of fortune may cause him to take in the future the member of our class can point with pride to the University of Georgia, his "alma mater" and say, "I was in the Law Class of 1907." SAM TEL AARON BOORSTIN, B. L., Deinosthenian. MOXROE, GA. "Who can foretell for what high can*? this darling of the gods was bom?" WILLIAM CHAUNCEY BRINSON, B. L., Deinosthenian. WKIGIITSVILI.K. GA. "Shake off the shackles of this tyrant vice, Hear other calls than those of cards and dice." DANIEL RICHMOND Bnr< I?. L., Dcmostlu'iiian. I'lXEVIEW, GA. "Who pants for glory finds hut slmrt re| ASA WARREN CAXDIJSR, . B., B. L., K A, Demosthenian. ATLANTA, OA. paled out of mingled dust and glitter." RUSSELL MELVILLE DALY, B. L., Dcmosthenian. WH1GIITSV1I.LK, OA. "I drink nu more than a sponge." CLIFFORD MASSEY JAMES, B. S., B. L., U. P. L., 0 A 4>, Demosthenian. C!.\. Kntered .hininr Uiw Class, Leader Mandolin and <:uitar Club, President Deinostlieni.in. Leader Hanjo C'lul), Member Thalians, Second Lieutenant C.adet Cor|>s, Member Glee Club, Preuident Senior Law Class. "Let us have wine and women, song and laughter." JOHN RUTHKKKOKD FAWCETT, A. B., B. L., * K. SAVANNAH. GA. "Ilia tribe were God's almighty gentlemen." WILLIAM JAMES FIELDER, B. L., Demosthenian. OKI).\RTO\VX, GA. Secretary, Vice-President and President of Jeffersonian l*aw Debating Society, Historian Senior I-iw Cla*, Historian Deinosthenian Society, Pilclier Varsity Baseball Team I!«K>, Ca|itain I.iw Class Baseball Team 11107. "A justice with grave justices shall sit; He praise tti«ir wisdom, they admire his wit." CRICHTON BROOKS HOLTZESDOBKF, B. L., * K. MAC-OX. GA. Vice-President and President of Phi Kali Secretary anil Treasurer of (leoruia Debating Society, Manager Basket ll.il! Tl'•' 1905-]!>oe, Captain Basket Ball Team ll«»-'^' "I am going to seek a great |H-rhaI*' FAMES LINDSAY JOHNSON, JR., B. L., 2 A E, * K. ROME. GA. The gladsome light of jurisprudence." JAMES ANDREW KELLY, B. L., Demosthenian. \VHITKSHrKi;, GA. President Dcmoslheniaii Society. JeffenAmian l.aw DrliatinK Sm-iety, (ieneral .leffersotiian Law Debating "How ill white hairs become a jester." President SolicitorSiK-iety. fool and JOSEPH LAW, B. L., Demosthenian. HERNDON. CA. "For idleness ig an appendix to nobility. WALLACE MILLER, K A, 4> K. SIACON, OA. "Sweet smoke of rhetoric." ROBERT SHUMATE PARKER, Ph. K, B. L., X *, * K. ATLANTA. <!A. Washington and I.ce Debater '07, te Editor (leorpian. Associate Kititor Associa '07, President Georgia Law Debating Pandora Society, Member Sphinx, Member Casque anil (Jauntlet, Member Tlulians, President City Govern­ ment Club. "The noble lord i» the Rupert of debate." THOMAS ELISHA SCOTT, B. L., Deinosthenian. ATLANTA, GA. Knteretl Junior La\v Class JaniKiry Second on tenant ami Major CorpH Cad^ta, Parliainen arian, Vice-President ami Presiden Demosthen Demosth en in. Impromptu Debater 1!K>7, Sec­t retary, V e-Prcsident and President Jeffersi.-iian l,i Debating Society, Member (!l« Club, Me I|MT City (Jovernrnent Club, B"*1 ness Mai tier The Georgia lntcrcollepi:i'i,' Hii^inedt Manager Pandora 1!N>7. "Hope smiled when your nativity was cast. ,, VERLY BLAIAJCK TlIOMASSON, B. L., * K. CARKOU.TON, GA. leml Junior Law Class *OB; MrnilxT Club, I'rosultnt Jeffersonian lav, Dchatiociety. "The trit'k of sinKularity." WALLACE JONES WILLIE, B. L., Dcmosthenian. MKTTKR. CA. "He thouglit as u sage, he felt us a inun.' HARRY MANASSA WILSON, B. L., K 2, * K. WAYCROSS, GA. "The soul of this man is his clothes." THOMAS FRANCIS HANCOCK, B. L., * K. TAMPA, TLA. "Come give us a taste of your quality." WALTER OCTAVIUS MARSHBURN, A. B., B. L., * A 0, * K. BARNESVILLE, OA. "The world knows only two, that's .Ronie and I." Officers of the Junior Law Class C. C. KINO ............ President. R. T. CAMP Vice-President. ........... J. W. DENNARD C. H. Cox ..... .... ............ Poet. Historian. History of the Junior Law Class. \ September, 190(5, tin- 1'niversity of (icorgia registered a Class the equal of \\hich was never before, Large it was and manly to the man. Marvelously true, it seems that every college in the State, and some beyond, were eager to send their most gifted sons to form this elass. Even the University herself retained, it seems, some of her most gifted graduates to mingle them with the best of her sister colleges. From I'rinccton. from Emory, from Mercer, from others they came, fully equipped to enter the study of law. Arrayed as they were, the mysteries of Hlackstone were easily over­ come. The mareh was wearisome, but none have faltered. Thy were fully Jirmored; the sure aim and the steady fire of Col. Mell. the brave invasions, and the heavy charges of .Judge Cobb. the furious attacks and merciless onslaughts of Prof. Morris, have not broken the ranks. Scarred some of them are, but when the roll is called the ansuer is still "here." This Class has not only worked nobly in its own hall, but has numbered far beyond its share in every college pursuit. When the intellectual and oratorical powers of other colleges were pitted in a test of the power of this institution, fifty per cent of the men chosen to combat them were ours. When athletes were most needed we furnished stars; when panegyrics were proper, none could com­ pose or deliver them so well as the Law Class of "1908." Kit for anniversarians, we had plenty and furnished one. When our college magazines and papers were preparing for press our boys reviewed them. When balls were the most enjoyable, our boys were the trippers. When cupid was sporting we furnished the most handsome targets. When married men could be used to greater advan­ tage, we had them. When modest timidity was in demand we could supply it. I'nder Col. MeH's exceedingly pleasant method of instruction, we mastered parliamentary law in a shorter time than any preceding class, .ludge Cobb's lovely and sympathetic entreaties tempered the disposition of every man, and instilled in every member the dignity of his profession. I'rof. Morris in his marveloiis and unique way has taught us that life is not made up of flowery beds of ease. He has adroitly found, and persistently endeavored to mend the weakest point of every member. This he did more easily than with any class that has gone before us. Realizing as we did and do, his tireless efforts, we did not and will not spare any time or energy in doing him and this institution all the honor we can. My mission is not one of prophecy and I shall not prophesy. But with such a splendid past, such an enviable present, you can judge the inevitable future. One Year Course in Agriculture. CLYDE SWAIN ANDERSON WVI.IK R\XTKK Bl'RNKTT ............ ............ Summit. Athens. I)K\\'ITT CALIIOI'N ............. .Mt. Vernon. LEWIS PALMER CORKER ........... Wavnesboro. ROBERT CLINTON DKI.OACII .......... (ilennvillc. \VILLIAM FREDERICK EVE. Ji.-. .......... Augusta. CLYDE HUGH LEE ............. Ilaleyoiidale. LEWIS FRANKLIN McLEh-ov ........... Bogart. WILLIAM ALFRED JIcN'EEi.v ........... Athens. EFF J. PULLIAM .............. llartvvell. LEROY EDMUND HAST ............. Pidcock. DAVID C. RKDKEARN ............... Pavo. ROBERT ALLEN ROGERS ............. Athens. WILLIAM DANNETTE SIM KINS ........... Athens. OLIVER CROMWELL STEIMIENS .......... Cusseta. PKESTON TRAHNELL .............. Metter. WILLIAM FRANK WEBB ............ Elberton. Winter Course in Agriculture. RrssEi.L PRESTON HOSCH ........... Iloschton. JAMES WRIGHT PATTERSON ........... Pidcock. Pharmacy Students. CURTIE EDISON BRINSON .......... . Wrightsville. ADAM DWIGHT DBAS ............. Augusta. WILLIAM HARVEY HATCHER ......... Wrightsville. GERALD MORAN ................ Athens. JAMES AUGUSTUS REDFEARN ........... Barwick. LUTHER ROGERS ............... Eastman. <~* e,^-^:'^^ €*::>-'::*;.^-^i- Students in the Graduate School. JOHN ANDREW BROWN ............ Augusta. WILLIAM NATHANIEL DANIELLS ........ Madison, Wis. WALTER T. FORBES .............. Athens. FRATERNITIES-07. SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON FRATERNITY. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity, Founded at University of Alabama, in 1856. Georgia Beta Chapter Established in 1866. COLORS: Koijal 1'nrplr and Old Gold. LAW CLASS, 1907. J. L. Johnson. LAW CLASS, 1908. Robert Jones, C. II. Cox. W. T. Gary, Harry P. Jones. J. M. Cozart, R. P. King. CLASS OF litOT. W. G. Brantley, Jr. A. W. Neely. L. Raoul. B. B. Davis. CLASS OF 1908. J. U. Lowndes. S. B. Ilawkins. Carlyle Cobb. H. II. Don HP. E. M. Ransom. G. P. Swift. CLASS OF 1909. W. G. Cann. A. S. Cassels. J. J. Scott. Robert Scott. C. D. Colley. CLASS OF 1910. Emory Cabaniss. Pierre Heard. Max W right. J. B. Gordon. CHI PHI FRATERNITY. Chi Phi Fraternity. Founded at Princeton University in 1824. Eta Chapter Established in 1867. COLORS: Scarlet and Blue. LAW CLASS, 1907. Robt. S. Parker. LAW CLASS, 1908. Thos. F. Fleming. CLASS OF 1907. C. L. Turner. Rollin Broughton. CLASS OP 1908. S. T. Oliver. John B. Harris. Inman Gray. F. II. Martin. W. W. Draper, Jr. J. P. Dick. CLASS OF 1909. Edward M. Brown. Alex R. MacDonnell. Paul D. Atkinson. CLASS OF 1910. Ralph Ragan. Grady Atkinson. Frederick Eve. Wm. S. Witham. Albert B. Nicoll. Sam K. Dick. Wm. Spencer Connerat. Boykin Wright. KAPPA ALPHA FRATERNITY. Kappa Alpha Fraternity. Founded at Washington and Lee University in 1S6.S. Gamma Chapter Established in 1868. CoiX)KS: Crimson and Old Gold. LAW CLASS, 1907. A. W. Candler. W. W. Miller. LAW CLASS, 1908. T. H. Holcomb. R. D. Tavlor. Cr.ASS OK 1!)07. Walton Griffith. II. E. Parker. H. M. Strickland.* S. C. Bowen. CLASS OF 1908. Saunders Jones. Mercer Klanchard. Samuel Hatcher. Floj'd Newton. E. B. Walker. Ray W. Blaekmar. Carville H. Carson. CLASS OF 1909. Hamilton Horsey. Clyde Walker. Dudley Hunt. Frank Foley. H. K. Nicholson. Paul Palmer. Boiling DuBose. Denmark Groover. Morton Hodgson. W. D. Hall. Wallace Wright. Francis L'Engle. C. H. Napier. CLASS OF 1910. J. Mason Williams. William Winburn. Oscar Thoiiiasoii. A. T. Williams. Hunter Galloway. Frank Rogers. J. H. Bocock. Bert M. Atkinson. POST-GRADUATE. II. B. Van Valkenburg. "Left College. PHI DELTA THETA FRATERNITY. Phi Delta Theta Fraternity, Founded at Miami University in 1848. Georgia Alpha Chapter Established in 1873. » Coixms: Argent and Azure. LAW CLASS, 1907. Walter 0. Marshburn. LAW CLASS, 1908. Earl B. Askew. CLASS OF 1907. 1'liil W. Davis, Jr. Grover C. Middlebrooks. Jr. llunnietitt, A. John CLASS OF 1908. Sidney 0. Smith. Charles G. Mills, Jr. Hubert B. Cates. Harry 11. Slack, Jr. R. Kyle Smith. Frank B. Willin-rham. John W. Fitts. Joseph E. Dunson, Jr. James P. Tilley. CLASS OF 1909. Walter K. Holme's. Marcus P. McWhorter. G. Thurman. Alien E. P. Pearson, Jr. Alien. Linton Fred Alien. McWhorter. Fonville Ed. V. Carter, Jr. Young B. Smith. CLASS OF 1910. D. Stewart Griggs. Kit-hard A. Graves. Thomas W. Brown. I9OT •:••* GEORGIA ALPHA BETA CHAPTER ALPHA TAU OMEGA FRATERNITY. Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity* Founded in Virginia Military Acadamy in 1865. Georgia Alpha Beta Established in 1878. COLORS: Sky liluc <ui<l Old Gold. LAW CLASS, 1907. K. M. Daley. LAW CLASS, 1908. J. F. Roberts. CLASS OP 1907. Leo Joseph. T. S. Winn. E. E. Cheatham. CLASS OF 1908. II. 0. Cannon. H. I. Reynolds. CLASS OF 1909. B. B. Davis. II. P. Heath. J. A. Stevens. J. II. Porter. CLASS OF 1910. E. L. Farms.* G. W. Jones. V. B. \Vaddell. 'Lett College. E. II. McElinurray. L. L. Fulcher. G. C. Arnold. SIGMA NU FRATERNITY. Sigma Nu Fraternity. Founded at Virginia Military Institute in 1869. M. U. Chapter Established in 1881. COLORS: Black, White, and Old Gold. LAW CLASS, 1907. H. M. Wilson. LAW CLASS, 1908. E. T. Talmadge. CLASS OF 1907. J. E. Knight. C. S. Bryan. CLASS OF 1908. C. C. Brooks. A. L. Ivey. P. H. Thornton. •I. A. Davison. Luther Rogers. 0. O. Whelehel. CLASS OF 1909. P. M. Cleveland. W. M. Gates. E. T. Newsoin. H. L. Ray. CLASS OF 1910. W. M. Collins.* J. S. Howell.* James Rogers. H. A. Davison. A. M. Knight. R. A. Rogers. J. L. Sweat, "Left College. CHI PSI FRATERNITY. Chi Psi Fraternity. Founded at Union College in 1841. Alpha Delta Chapter Established in 1890. COLORS: Royal Purple and Old Gold. CLASS OF 1907. Jno. Kenneth MacDonald, Jr. Ambrose Homer Carmichael. Jno. Cilascock Mays. CLASS OF 1908. Carrol I Daniel Cabaniss. Geo. Magruder Battey, Jr. CLASS OF 1909. Chas. Thomas Phillips, Jr. Harry Erastus Harman, Jr. CLASS OF 1910. Henry Alexander Newman. Frank Lanier Hranson. James Daniel Palmer. William Haynard Willingham, Jr. KAPPA SIGMA FRATERNITY. Kappa Sigma Fraternity. Established at University of Virginia in 1869. Beta Lambda Chapter Established in 1901. COLORS: Scarlet, White, and Emerald. LAW CLASS, 1908. Phillip G. Dodd. CLASS OF 1907. W. T. McCaffrey. W. R. O'Hara. CLASS OP 1908. S. E. Morton. G. C. Ketron.» CLASS OF 1909. J. L. Wright.* "Left College. J. B. Wier, Jr. U. P. L. CLUB. U. P L Club, LAW CLASS, 1907. W. C. Brinson. C. M. James. Joseph Law. LAW CLASS, 1908. W. P. Autrey. B. C. Gardner. C. C. Kinjr. W. D. Martin. J. A. Watson. W. 11. Watson. CLASS OF 1907. E. Anderson. D. W. Payne. T. A. Perry. CLASS OF 1908. L. F. Elrod. W. M. Gober. W. II. Hatcher. M. R. Lufburrow. J. H. Neisler. W. A. Shelton. CLASS OF 1909. II. U. H. L. G. Bailey. J. Bennett. A. Davis. H. Fitzpatrick. 0. E. T. C. L. M. R. F. Miller. Oliver. Peacock. Pekor. J. A. Sibley. CLASS OF 1910. T. M. Fitzpatrick. A. Matthews. N. Parker. SENIOR ROUND TABLE. • SENIOR.* TABLE ^ LOO - BLOOOWOR.TH . 07 / 9 Prof. Robert E. Park. William (!. Brantlev, Jr. A. Homer Carmichael. Phil W. Davis, Jr. George II. Gillon. Harrison Jones. John K. MacDonald. Jr. C. Lewis Turner. 11. L. Jewett Williams. Philip K. Weltni-r. • Loring Raoul. THE THALIANS. RUHR IT. R. Hodgson, C. 51. James, W. O. Marshburn, Enpene Ransome, Wallace Draper, C. H. Cox, S. J. Smith, F. C. Newton, F. H. Martin, J. 51. Cozart, Prof. Robert E. Park, Jr., W. C. Brinson, II. II. Deane, J. D. Lowndes, R. S. Parker, John W. Welch. MANDOLIN AND GUITAR CLUB. Jackson Dick, Leader. Ray Blackniiir. Hamilton Horsey, Director. Carville Carson. Revil) O'Hara. H. L. Rubcnstein. Arthur Knight. Clifford James. Floyd Newton. Frank Martin. Francis T/Engle. George Battey. Homer Davis. Boiling DuBose. Lanier Branson. Percy McNeely. De Forest Tavlor. (•' V (^ THE SPHINX CLUB. !*>';."'°'"" '.-'.^-'-•:•" /C7» ' i tWa »»».... • 'XW%4YV ; \ • | • - 1,; .'• 'J'~ •''•-• 1: ••'. - ~f.r\ .: S:-.t ''.'."*..."•>''.'.',':. : >: ;c'- " •-. - r-rIra "jv • '•••SIT -, . • • • ' .--•;•:/? .. - . . The Sphinx Club. W. 0. Marshburn. R. S. Parker. * C. H. Cox. C. D. Cabaniss. ^ Wallace Miller.* H. Jones. J. L. Kaoul. J. A. Brown. ^ A. H. Carmichael. W. G. Brantley. P. R. WeltiiiT. Chancellor D. C. Barrow. Colonel C. M. Snelling. Prof. R. E. Park. • v» lv f V> •'. •'. y CASQUE AND GAUNTLETT. Casque and Gauntlet. OFFICERS. CHAS. H. Cox ............. Kg. A. W. T. GARY .............. W. W. R. S. PARKER W. T. ............. ROLUN BROUGHTON ........... W. E. MEMBERS. C. II. Cox. W. T. Gary. W. 0. Marshburn. T. F. Fleming. R. S. Parker. J. W. Cozart. A. IT. Carmichael. R. Broughton. J. K. MacDonald, Jr. F. H. Martin. J. D. Lowndes. C. D. Cabaniss. Kyle Smith. S. 0. Smith. Harrison Jones. Sam Hatcher. PI ALPHA PHI. Pi Alpha Phi. Founded at Stone Mountain, 1901. Alumni Club Founded at University of Georgia, 1903. OFFICERS. SAM HATCHER ......... M. H. M. GEO. BATTEY ......... K. C. CI.YDK WALKER ......... G. G. MEMBERS. Asa Candler. Grady Atkinson. Sam Ilatc-her. Chas. Mills. Geo. Battey. Boykin Wright.* K. P. Oscar Thomason. Henry Hodgson.* Clyde Walker. 'Left College. Pierre Heard. Joe Gordon. UNIVERSITY BOATING CLUB. University Boating Club. MEMBERS. Prof. Park. Harrison Jones. Loring Raoul. C. N. Feidelson. W. G. Brantley. G. H. Gil Ion. P. R. Weltner. John Fawcett. Jewett Williams. Roll in Broughton. Lewis Turner. G. C. Middlebrooks. B. B. Davis. Sidney Smith. F. C. Newton. J. B. Harris. C. D. Cabaniss. J. H. Neisler. J. P. Dick. Harry Slack. H. R. Horsey. William Goner. K. B. Walker. Geo. Battey. DELTA IOTA DELTA. Alumni and Active Members. R. M. Strickland. L. D. Hill. E. R. Park. W. K. Howard. F. B. Clay. T. Scott. J. D. Rogers. R. Broughton. A. II. Carmichael. W. T. Gary. J. K. MacDonaUl, Jr. J. A. Hunnicutt, Jr. C. Cobb. R. R. Hodgson. L. Raoul. STONE MOUNTAIN CLUB. The Stone Mountain Club. F. C. Walker. Kyle Smith. Grady Atkinson. S. 0. Smith. Remsen King. C. G. Mills. R. A. Graves. S. K. Dick. Linton Alien. Marcus McWhorter. G. W. Jones. E. H. McElmurray. B. B. Lee. Oscar Thomasson. Julius Scott. L. L. Fulcher J. B. Gordon. THE G. M. A. CLUB. The G. M. A. Club. R. B. Gates. A. H. Carmiehael. W. G. Brantley, Jr. DeForest Taylor. II. II. Galloway. Frank Rodgers. Hugh White. Henry Davison. J. D. Palmer. \V. B. WSllingham. -Ir. THE MACONITES. The Maconites. Eryan B. Davis. Walter R. Holmes, Jr. 11. L. Jewett Williams. Charlie II. Napier. John B. Harris. Emory W. Cabaniss. HONORARY MEMBERS. Prof. S. V. Sanford. * Deceased. Prof. U. Q. Abbott.* ALPHA SIGMA PHI. Alpha Sigma Phi. 1\. A. (iravi-s, S. K. Dick, Oscar Tliomasson. J. M. Williams, Robert Scott, Milton Darsran. Jr., II. II. Galloway, Pierre Heard, Frank Rodders, Henry Newinan, Boykin Wright. City Government Club 1906-'07 K. S. PARKER ........... JNO. A. D.VVISON \ C. C. KING ......... ............ W. G. Brantley, Jr. President. Vice-President. Secretary-Treasurer. W. O. Marshburn. A. Homer Carmichael. Wallace Miller. P. W. Davis, Jr. Floyd C. Newton. Jno. R. Fawcett. Loring Raoul. Thos. F. Fleming. Thos. E. Scott. C. N. Feidelson. S. O. Smith. G. II. Gillon. Eugene Talmadge. J. B. Harris. P. R. Weltner. Harrison Jones. II. L. J. Williams. Tomlinson Fort, Tutor Mathematics. C. M. Snelling, Professor of Mathematics. II. E. Park, Jr., Professor of English. Dr. J. II. T. McPherson,Pr0/Vsso;- of History. D. C. Barrow. Cliancdlor. Roll of Active Members. IN THK FACULTY : Chancellor David C. Barrow, C. & M. E., C. M. Strahan, C. & M. E., A. H. Patterson, A. B., A. M., E. L. Griggs, (Graduate V. M. I.), U. II. Davenport, B. S. H. C. White, Ph. D., D. C. L., F. C. SENIORS : J. J. Swenson, , Grandy II. L. J. B. Eppes, .1. 11. Winter. J. L. Stanford, Juan Y. Gonzalez, , Joseph L. JUNIORS : W. E. Stone, Kin« W. G C. Carson, E. B. Walker, tx, Lipshu J. F. F. Clower, W. S. Yeates. S. Montgomery, 1). T. Hubbard, SOPHOMORES: A. G. Smith. II. K. Nicholson, L 11. Fit/.patrick, M. Williams, J E. M. Oliver, W. D. Hull, Wier, B. J. J II. Porter, W. D. Hunt, r, Walke W. A. C. Pradas, J. II. Lucas, rn, Jr. Winbu A. W. en, Frank Vim Spreck B. B. McWhorter, F. D. Simkins, 11. A. Miller, SUSTAINING MEMBERS: J. W. Barnett, City Engineer, Athens, Ga., ta, Ga. H. C. Brown, District Manager Southern Cotton Oil Co.. Augus Ga. a. L. C. Ransom, Southern Cotton Oil Co., Atlant W. M. Robinson, Roadmaster Georgia R. R., Augusta, Ga. W. W. Wadley, Wright, Williams & Wadley, Waycross, Ga. Rosebud. As lovely as the morning, The roseblown dawn passed by, When the sunlight's stream dims the Dryad's dream 'Xeath the still of the starstrewn sky. As gentle as the moonbeams That shimmer on Lucerne When the nights are bright with Heaven's light That shines on the heights of Berne. As constant as the Ocean, One Mood of boundless blue, To its briny bed where the Naiads tread In their haunts of emerald hue. As radiant as the diamonds, Dew-dashed on flowered sea; She's a jewel fair, a rosebud rare; She's the gift of God,—to me. MILITARY DEPARTMENT. CADET STAFF. Cadet Staff. J. M. KiMBROtTGH . . . Commandant. Cadet Major—T. E. Scott. Cadet Adjutant—C. L. Turner. Cadet Quartermaster—J. J. Swenson. Cadet Sergeant-Major—II. II. Deane. Cadet Quartermaster-Sergeant—W. C. Henson. Cadet Color Sergeant—C. D. Cabaniss. Cadet Color Sergeant—R. O. Arnold. Cadet Drum Major—W. S. Jones. o DO z o Cadet Band. R. E. HAUGHEY SAUNDERS JONES ........ ....... Director. I)mm Major. Y. B. SMITH ......... Cornet. J. P. TILLEY ......... Cornet. ........ Cornet. L. C. BENSON ......... Cornet. F. L. BRANSON ........ Cornet. W. C. BRINSON ........ Bass Horn. J. B. WIER ......... Bass Horn. H. A. DAVIS ......... Baritone. A. M. KNIGHT H. G. CANNON ........ First Tenor. C. H. CAKSON ........ Alto. .......... Alto. F. F. GLOWER ......... Alto. .......... Alto. P. ROSSEE W. T. Xix J. P. DICK ......... Trombone. II. C. SMITH ......... Trombone. J. J. ROGERS ......... Trombone. A. S. CASSEU.S ........ Clarionet. H. R. HORSEY ........ Clarionet. J. Y. (JONZAI.X ........ Clarionet. F. P. L'ENGLE ........ Clarionet. L. B. ORANDY ........ Clarionet. W. W. DRAPER ........ Bass Drum. J. D. LOWNDES ........ »S'»i«/'c Drum. E. RANSOME ......... Cymbal. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. Commissioned Officers. .... Commandant. ...... Cadet Major. J. M. KIMBROUGH T. E. SCOTT CADKT CAPTAINS. Co. "A." Co. "B." H. L. J. Williams. A. H. Carmichael. Co. "C." Co. "D." II. Jones. L. Raonl. CADET FIRST LIEUTENANTS. C. IA Turner ..... Co. "A." (1. 11. (iillon. Co. "C." R. Broughton. Adjutant. Co. "B." E. Anderson. Co. "D." IT. P. Jones. CADET SKCOND LIEUTENANTS. Co. "A." J. R. Fawcett. Co. "C." Co. "B." E. T. TalmadKC. Co. "D." J. M. Co/art. L. Bower. C. H. Cox. W. A. Candler, Jr. Q < CO Q < O Cadet Band. R. E. HAUGHEY SAUNDERS JONES ........ ....... Director. Dmm Major. Y. B. SMITH ......... Cornet. J. P. TII.LEY ......... Cornet. ........ Cornet. L. C. BENSON ......... Cornet. F. L. BRANSON ........ Cornet. W. C. BRINSON ........ Bass Horn. J. B. WIER ......... Bans Horn. II. A. DAVIS ......... Baritone. A. M. KNIGHT H. G. CANNON ........ First Tenor. C. II. CARSON ........ Alia. .......... Alto. F. F. CIXWER ......... Alto. W. T. Xix Alto. P. ROSSEE .......... J. P. DICK ......... Trombone. II. C. SMITH ......... Trombone. J. J. RUOKHS ......... Trombone. A. S. CASSELLS ........ Clarionet. TT. R. HORSEY ........ Clarionet. J. Y. (ioNZALZ ........ Clarionet. F. P. I/ENGI.E ........ Clarionet. L. B. GRANDY ........ Clarionet. W. W. DRAPER ........ Bass Drum. J. D. LOWNDES ........ Snare Drum. E. RANSOME ......... Cymbal. COMMISSIONED OFFICERS. Commissioned Officers. J. M. KIMBROUGH T. E. SCOTT .... Commandant. ...... Cadet Major. CADET CAPTAINS. Co. "A." Co. "B." II. L. J. Williams. A. II. Cannichael. Co. "C." Co. "D." L. Raonl. II. Jones. CADET FIRST LIEUTENANTS. C. L. Turner ..... Co. "A." (i. II. (iillim. Co. "C." H. Bronyhton. Adjutant. Co. "B." E. Anderson. Co. "D." II. I'. .Jones. CADET SECOND LIEUTENANTS. Co. "A." J. R. Fawcett. Co. "C." Co. "B." E. T. Tahmuljrp. Co. "D." J. M. Coxart. L. Bower. C. II. Cox. \V. A. Candler, Jr. Non-Commissioned Officers, CADET SERGEANTS. Co. "A." Co. "B." J. E. D. F. H. F. C. Newton. J. A. Price. M. R. Lufburrow. W. F. Slaton. W. M. Gober. II. Neisler. B. Walker. T. Hnbbard. X. Grant. R. Slack. Co. "D." Co. "C." R. H. S. J. J. J. B. Harris. G. 0. Whelchel. J. S. Bussey. A. L. Loyd. C. G. Mills. Blackmar. I. Reynolds. B. Ilawkins. W. Fitts. E. Dunson. CADET CORPORALS. Co. "A." Co. "B." P. E. Palmer. J. C. Michael. F. Von Sprecken. B. P. McWhorter. D. H. Redfearn. W. F. Dobbs. W. E. Eppes. IT. J. Bennett. F. McWhorter. W. S. Pottinjier. L. H. Fitxpatrick. W. L. Downs. Co. "C." Co. "D." I. A. Soloman. C. H. Napier. A. R. McDonnell. J. J. Scott. J. A. Stevens. W. D. Hunt. J. K. Giles. W. M. Gates. H. G. Bailey. D. L. Rogers. M. Pentecost. H. K. Nicholson. ARTILLERY SQUAD. COMPANY A. COMPANY B. COMPANY C. COMPANY D. THE GEORGIAN STAFF. The Georgian Staff, 1906-7. P. R. WELTNER. W. <i. BRANTLEY, JR. . HARKI.SUN JONES Business Manager. LrciEN BOWER. R. S. PARKER. H. L. J. WILLIAMS. G. H. BILLON. G. II. GILLON. J. K. MAG-DONALD, JR. R. S. PARKER. JOHN B. HARRIS. E. B. WALKER. Edilors-in-Cliicf. . \ Associate Editors. Exchange Editors. Assistant Managers. Red and Black Staff, 1906-07. FIRST TERM. SECOND TERM. THIRD TERM. Red and Black Staff, 1906-1907. FIRST TERM : J. K. MAcDoNAU). JR. Editor-in-('hi(f. Business Managir. C. D. CABANISS Associate Editor. W. II. GRIFFITH Athletic Editor. W. (J. BRANTLEA-, R. BRUfGIITON . Local Editor. Exchange Editor. W. R. O'llARA J. II. XEISLER . Assistant Business Manager. SECOND TERM : \V. O. MAKSHBURN . .1. II. NKISI.KH . \V. 11. (iKIFFITII . w. R. O'llARA . . . H. R. IIORSKY . . . A. R. MAODONNEU, . 1). \V. I'AYNE . . . Editor-in-Chief. Business Manager. Associate Editor. Athletic Editor. Lin-iil Editor. Exchange Editor. Assistant Business Ma KK.M W. R. O'HARA ............ D. W. I'AYNE ........ ... S. J. SMITH ............. (',. M. HATTEY ........ ... S. JONKS .............. (i!. P. SWIFT ............. K. 0. ARNOLD ............ Editor-in-chief. Business Manager. Associate Editor. Athletic Editor. Local Editor. Exchange Editor. Assistant Business Manager. HQ8-E> SCOTT-BUS-MGR L-F-ELROD-AS50CIATE- E THE GEORGIA INTERCOLLEGIATE STAFF. HOS-E • SCOTT HARRI3ON JO/S PRESIDENTS OF THE DEMOSTHENIAN SOCIETY. PRESIDENTS OF PHI KAPPA SOCIETY. PRESIDENTS OF THE GEORGIA LAW DEBATING SOCIETY. BiB.THOVlASSG/S THOS' E-SCOTT PRESIDENTS OF THE JEFFERSONIAN LAW DEBATING SOCIETY. C. W. FEIDELSON. J. K. McDONALD. JR. Demosthenian and Phi Kappa Anniversary Exercises. FEBRUARY '21, 1907. MASTER OF CEREMONIES, DEMOSTHENIAN, GEORGE H. GILLON. Oration: "He Called for a Man to Stand in the Gap." JOHN K. MAcDoNAU), JR. MASTER OF CEREMONIES, PHI KAPPA, P. R. WELTNER. Oration: "The Saving Remnant," CHARLES N. FEIDELSON. NATHAN COPELAN. J. K. McDONALD, JR. Georgia-North Carolina Debate. KESOLVED: That the government ownership and operation of interstate railways would subserve the best, interests of the people of the United States. AFFIRMATIVE: NEGATIVE : I'liiversity of Georgia. Nathan C'opelan, John K. McDonald, Jr. University of X. (.'. C. J. Katzenstein, L. P. Matthews. Negative won. R. S. PARKER. R. H. JONES. JR. Georgia-Washington and Lee Debate. WASHINGTON AND LEE UNIVERSITY, APRIL 23, 1907. "Resolved, That immigration, aided and supervised by State Governments, is the best source from which to draw labor for the South." A ffirma live—G EORGI A. R. II. Jones, Jr. R. S. Parker. Negative—WASHINGTON AND LEE. II. H. Ragon. C. H. Pilkington. Negative Won. C. N. FIEDELSON. WALLACE MILLER. Georgia-Tulane Debate. NEW ORLEANS, MAY 9, 1907. 'Resolved, That the immigration of the laboring classes of Southern Italy to our Southern States would be advantageous to those States." A ffirma t ive—G KOIU: i A . Negative—TULANE. C. N. Feidelson. J. Gayle Aiken. Wallace Miller. St. John I'errett, Jr. Affirmative Won. IMPROMPTU DEBATER?. Impromptu Debate. APRIL ;SKD, 1907. SUBJECT: "Resolved, That tin- I'niversity <>f Georgia should be made Co-educational." Affirmative—PHI KAPPA: L. C. Bower, W. O. Marshburn, C. N. Feidelson, K. T. Talmage. R. S. Parker. Wallace Miller. Negative—DEMOSTIIENIAN : P. W. Davis, ,lr Thos. E. Scott, W. C. Henson. B. C. Gardner, W. II. Watson, C. C. King. Affirmative Won. CLASS DEBATERS. Sophomore Debate. MAY i4, 1907. SUBJECT: "Resolved, That the State Road should be extended to the sea.' Affirmative—DEMOSTHENIAN : E. V. Carter, Y. B. Smith. J. Michael. Negative—Fm KAPPA : 0. P. Beall, II. G. Bailey, D. L. Rogers. Affirmative Won. FRESHAtA N A TC APRIL 14TH, 1907. SUBJECT: "Resolved, That the annexation of Cuba to the United States would best subserve the interests of both countries." Affirmative—DEMOSTHENIAN : J. A. Anderson, A. Mathews, \V. II. Underwood. Negative— PHI KAPPA : G. E. Arnold, W. Folk, R. T. Revson Affirmative Won. The Athletic Association. \ EUGENE T. TALMADGE. OFFICERS : E. T. TAKMADGK F. II. MARTIN President. ' . . J. A. IIlINNlCUTT, JR. Vice-President. Secretary and Treasurer. Wearers of the Athletic "G.' FOOTBALL. Lowndes. Cox. Hattey. Marshburn, ~\\gr. Arrendale. Turner. Ixaoul. Smith. Ransom. M. Hodgson. Farriss. Harman. (i raves. Hatcher. Thnrman. II. Ketron. G. C. Ketron. W. W. Brown. •]. A. Brown. I>elaperriere. BASEBALL. Foley. Brown. Kedfearn. Graves. J. A. Brown. Lee. Cobb. Derrick. Martin. M. Hodgson. Watson. McWhorter. .Cox. Carmichael, Mgr. C. Z. Walker. Fielder. TRACK. K. Smith. Y. B. Smith. Lipshutz. Hatcher. Haoul. JtcCaffrey. Lewis. Arrendale. Gillon. Hunt. Draper. TENNIS. Carter. Middlebrooks. Deane. Gary, Mgr. BASKET BALL. Holtxendorf. Derrick. Griffith. \\'. Brown. Von Sprechen. Cheatham. Deane. Ransom. M i) G>2 W. O. MARSHBURN, Manager. LORING RAOUL, Captain. Football Team, 1906. COACH Whitney. Fn.i. BACK— Kaoul. HAI.K BACKS— K. Smith, M. Hodgson, Ransom. QUARTER BACK— Farriss. ENDS— Raoul, Graves, Hatcher, Thunnan. CAPTAIN MANAGER Raoul. Marshburn. TACKLES— II. Ketron, G. C. Ketron, II. P. Delaperriere, W. W. Brown. Gl'ARDS— Harman, Arrendale) McCay, Nicoll. CENTER— II. Ketron. JOHN A. BROWN, Captain Base Ball Team. A. HOMER CARMICHAEL. Manager Base Ball Team. VARSITY BASE BALL TEAM. Varsity Base Ball Team, 1907. COACH CAPTAIN MANAGER Stouch. J. A. Brown. Carmichael. PITCHERS— Foley. Brown. Redfearn. Graves. Harman. CATCHER— John Brown. FIRST BASE— Lee, Cobb, Cozart. SECOND BASE— Derrick. SHORT STOP— Martin— THIRD BASE— M. Hodgson, Graves, Cobb, Williams. LEFT FIELD— Watson, Hodgson. CENTER FIELD— McWhorter. RIGHT FIELD— Watson, Cobb. w. T. MACCAFFREY, Captain Track Team. J. B. HARRIS. Manager Track Tepm. TRACK TEAM. Track Team, 1907 CAPTAIN MANAGER W. T. McCaffrey. J. B. Harris. K. Smith. Raoul. Hatcher. Lipshutz. Y. B. Smith. Ragan. Lewis. Gober. Arrendale. Gillon. Alien. Hunt. Draper. Tennis, 1906-7. CHAMPIONS IN DOUBLES— Carter and Middlebrooks. CHAMPION IN SINGLES— Deane. Neeley & Bocock vs. ) Jerger & Nicholson 6-3-6-2 Jerger & Nicholson ) Jerger & Nicholson Default Scott & Scott vs. \ Mays & Newman Mays & Newman j Default Cox & Swift vs. ) Cox & Swift Davis & Taylor ) Default Middlebr'ks & Carter 6-1-6-2 Middlebrooks & Carter vs. ) Middlebr'ks & Carter 6-0-6-0 Anderson & Branson ) Deane & Gary vs. ) Deane & Gary Slaton & Cooledge ) Default Deane & Gary 6-2-3-6-6-2 Fitts & Holmes vs. \ Fitts & Holmes Parker & Mills j Default Brooks & Reynolds vs. ) Brooks & Reynolds Walker & Williams ) Default Griffith & Harris 6-2-6-3 Griffith & Harris vs. ) Griffith & Harris 6-0-6-3 Fort & Smith ) MIDDLEBROOKS & CARTER 7-5-6-4-6-1 G. C. MIDDLEBROOKS, MANAGER. Middlebr'ks & Carter 6-2-6-2 J Deane & Gary 8-6-6-2 TOURNAMENT 1906-07. 1. Fitts vs. Reynolds——__ 1 Revn°ldsc J ) 6-2-6-3 I Reynolds 2. Witham vs. Scott, R_-_ t Scott [ 1-6-8-6-6-4 I 6-1-6-Oj Gary 6-4-6-4 3. Gary vs. Middlebrooks__ (Gary Gary 6-3-6-4 L Swift vs. Brooks.————. [Swift ) 6-4-5-7-6-3 Gary | I 6-3-8-6 fGary 5. Scott J. vs. Anderson T_ \ Anderson ] Bye J J 6-3-2-6-6-2 Anderson 6. Anderson E. vs. Graves— (.Graves j j Default J 7. Fort vs. Newman _ . » 6-3-4-6-6-4 8. Cox vs. Mays _______ I Mays I 6-4-6-2 Default Mays 6-4-6-3 Mayg J 6-0-6-3 9. Smith P. vs. Carter___ I Carter } » 6- 1-6-3 I Carter 10. Weltner vs. Roberts.—— | Weltner f f 6-3-6-1J Default 1. Taylor vs. Alien___— | Allen . 1 ) -d- - I ]i ranson 2. Walker vs. Branson.—— > Branson | 6-2-8-10-62 [ 6-1-6-1J .3. Griffith vs. Ragan——— I Griffi ' hn „ , ] » 6"°"6"3 I Griffith ) William, I 4. Tillev vs. Williams..—— I Wllll£ mSg 2 I CARTER }• 4-6-6-4 I 6-3-6-2 Carter 6-2-6-1 Carter 6-4-8-6 l p . fflf . 6-4-6-0) Gnffith Carter 6-0-6-4 > Holmes I 5. Brantley vs. Holmes ——— \ 6-2-6-2 I jJerger Jerger f 3-6-6-0-6-2 Jerger 6. Jerger vs. Harris. ——._ J "I i)efaultj ,12-10-0-6-61 L Jerger Bye J 7. Wright vs. Davis——. j Davi^ 1 i 6-3-6-0 I Davig 8. Taylor vs. Cozart...—— | C°Zt4.6 .2 J 4"6"6'4"6" 1 IEANE___________. I Last Year's Champion I DEAXE, Champion ARTER——————.._———. f 7-5-6-2-1-6-6-3 Runner up J G. C. MIDDLEBROOKS, MANAGER. Football 1907 R. KYLE SMITH, Captain. CHAS. G. MILLS, Manager. Basket Ball Team, 1907. CAPTAIN C. B. Holtzemlprff. MANAGER W. H. Griffith. CENTER—Griffith. FORWARDS—Iloltzemlorff, Captain; Derrick, Choatham. GUARDS—Brown, Von Sprechen, Cheatham. The War of Naughty Seven—An Heroic Epic. BOOK I. The sun with splendor red Rose from his eastern bed, And dewy dawn sank back in Nykte's arms; The world was gay with light, A morning not more bright Had smitten stoic Nature with its charms. It was the winter deep, When flowers are asleep, When February's spell is over all; On Athens' ancient hill The chilling blasts were still, And rustic Peace's wings spread o'er the mall. A slatted belfry rose With never-changing pose Upon the city's most conspicuous height, And grouped about the rise The halls of students -wise Stood, symbols of eternal Learning's might. The people of the town, The youths who sought renown. Each man in peace had placed his trust; The days of war were o'er, No longer did the roar Of youthful conflict rise from battle dust. In Learning's classic realm, Beneath the oak and elm, Two rival classes cherished thoughts of wrath, For each with other vied. In uncurbed youthful pride, Though each were daily shot in Greek and Math. Hence e'en when man is fresh, Scarce 'scaped from out the mesh Whose warp is apron strings, whose woof is switches, His most emphatic trait, Which cynics oft berate, Takes hold upon the heart that it bewitches. AVhen forth the hint of strife, Had gone with stories rife Of plunder and of carnage to ensue, The townsmen were afraid, And not with needless dread, For well the student's ruthless hand they knew. Such warriors as these, Now came upon the breeze, Were calling on the mighty gods of war, The city would invade, With boisterous parade, And hurl themselves into the frav from far. It happens in this wise: When January dies, And his successor fills the world with frost, 'Ere March has blown a breath, A battle to the death, Each year in Athens, Georgia's won and lost. The fateful day had come, And Sophomores fond of rum, McWhorter, Phillips, Harman, and a host Of other spirits bold, Had gathered in their hold, Which rung with cheers that shook the stoutest post. "My Lords, we feast tonight, The annual delight In which we noble Sophomores all indulge, The Inn's already let, Our banquet board is set; No detail to our craven foes divulge." "And ere the night is spent The news of this event So glorious will flash around the Earth: Our names with lustrous fame Will dim the flashing flame Bright kindled on the sacred Hestia's hearth." A storm of lusty cheers, Now filled the classmen's ears, The class's yell was shouted long and loud, Then others spoke at length, Who gloried in their strength. While many wary slipped without the crowd. No idle fear was their's For mad as wolves or bears. The Freshman horde raged fierce without the hall, And vowed by Heaven and Hell, By Gods and Demons fell. The coward Sophomores should not feast at all. BOOK II. The noonday sun rose high To the zenith of the sky, And then a fearful omen did it show, Its luster seemed to dim, And all around its rim A blood-red, fiery cycle 'gan to show. * Yet this was not the first Thing ominous that had curst While emptying Life's chalice of its dregs, For in the Dining Hall, Which the Beanery they call, That morn the students ate a feast of eggs. In all the flying years Of smiles, of hopes, of tears, No Beanery boarder hailed a like event, And hence when eggs were served, Each starving youth unnerved, Concluded that the meal was Heaven sent. The hour of two was nigh, The Sophomore President high, Was seated in the last Imperial story, The wind began to blow Upon his guards below Who stood and bared their arms and heads for glory. The town was struck with awe, Policemen looked and saw The riot that on Athens soon would fall, Then shrank in deadly fear; They fled in terror sheer, And hid within the distant City Hall. For just before the inn A most infernal din Arose, loud shouts and battle cries, And now a missle's thrown, Some ancient eggs, a stone,— The tumult in a twinkling breathless dies. That grim and awful hush Which just precedes the rush, Lasted but an instant—in a flash The gallant Sophomores leap Upon their foes and sweep Them fighting, cursing, yelling, in a crash. No coward there was seen, They fought like men I ween, Each doughty youth a mien of valor wore, And down through Jackson street, The tramp of hostile feet Re-echoes and the battle wages sore. All obstacles that chanced To meet the tide advanced Were \vrecked and ruined strewn in tiny bits, And blood was freely bled, And shirts and trousers shed Had stirred the joking laughter of the wits. The flagstones were uprooted, And all became unbooted, Blow rained on blow, and carnage reigned supreme, The hapless passerby would vainly shout and cry, No earthly power could stem the battle stream. Thus long they fought and well, Till pitying darkness fell, The veil of night upon the carnage threw, And then the battle ceased, The Sophomores to the feast, With scanty garments, stained with blood, withdrew. And thinned and battle scarred, They seized the menu card, And drank and answered toasts divine; Their splendid class they blest, And spent in ribald jest The winter night, and loudly called for wine. uo Principal Facts in University Chronology for Year 1906-7. SEPTEMBER 21.—Fall term commenced. SEPTEMBER 22.—117 Freshmen called to meet Prof. Park. SEPTEMBER 30.—Lucien Bower joined French Class. OCTOBER 3.—Wallace Draper, found sober, was arrested for unbecoming conduct. OCTOBER 10.—University Prayer and Praise Club held first session in Henson's room. OCTOBER 29.—Cheatham put oil' long dresses and discharged his nurse. NOVEMBER 25.—17 false alarms answered by Athens Fire Department before 2 A. M. DECEMBER 20.—Linton Alien made his first society call. DECEMBER 21.—Christmas holidays began. JANUARY 16.—Bunce wrote an article for the Georgian. JANUARY 19.—Candler spoke at Lee Memorial .Exercises. FEBRUARY 1.—Will Fielder was voted champion college liar. FEBRUARY 30.—Major Scott attended drill. MARCH 10.—"Pusillanimous Puns" by W. G. Brantley, Jr. and .1. D. Lowndes, -appeared. MARCH 27.—Daly lost at poker. APRIL 1.—Lucien Bower paid his board bill (for January). APRIL 21.—Lawyers gave beer drinking at Candler Hall. APRIL 22.—73 inches rainfall in 24 hours at Gainesville. APRIL 23.—Eight cadets froze to death at Chattahoochee Park. MAY 7.—Fall supply of Butterine laid in at beanery. MAY 18.—Montgomery walked to Bogai-t and back. MAY 26.—Special session of police court for students. JUNE 10.—Winn passes on Chemistry exam. JUNE 19.—Swenson and Fawcett made farewell visit to Chancellor. Senior Orations, '68. The following extracts are taken from a publication called "Senior Orations," and dated "University of Georgia, 1868." They are of interest be­ cause they furnish us an example of the wit of that time, and because of the prominence that the subjects of the jokes have since attained. These extracts were very kindly furnished the PANDORA by Miss Mary Lyndon.— (Eds. Note.) Senior Play, University of Georgia, '68. Andy Lipscomb, Stage Manager. L-adies E-xclaim (of) LeConte "To see him is to love him!" Why (did) W-icked Thomas—Cry after his Latin Examf WANTED—By Messrs. Rucker, Gordon, Yancey, Alfriend, and Thomas— a rich wife. (Don't sell yourselves for gold, boys, and you will be glad of it afterwards). Extract from "Macon Journal."—"We are pleased to learn that our talented young friend, H. W. Grady, has become editor of 'Binkes' Weekly,' a children's paper. In the last number there is quite a spirited article concerning an attack made upon him by the Ku Klux Klan of Athens. 'Tis gratifying to know that he acted with his accustomed bravery. In a foot race which occurred shortly afterwards, he distanced all competitors." Mr. Emory Speer will soon give to the public his celebrated treatise jn Baseball. The book abounds in humorous passages, and the author explains why he allows the "grounders" to playfully meander between his legs, and piously defies grasping flies. OBITUARY.—It is with unfeigned regret that we learn of the death of Mr. Dessau's pet rat, Flaver. WONDERS— Hill refused a drink of liquor. Henry Grady told two ladies different things. His youthful brother told the truth. Ben Hill went to sleep without the use of a "sugar teat." NOTICE—Political speeches will be made during Commencement week by Messrs. Henry Grady, Verdery, and others, to prove that they have as much brains as General Cobb has—as was lately declared by Carlton Hillyer. These having nothing to do are invited to attend. WANTED—H. Grady, Meldrim's wit; Yancey, an empty head; 6ra«ly, lips (?). The Magi. "Donkey De Forest" Taylor. "Girlish Giddy" Gary. "Married" Mays. "Haughty Harry" Jones. "Braying Baalam" Bower. "Wise" Wilson. "Warring" Webb. "Philosophic" Feidelson. "Dispensary" Draper. "Majestic Mule" Marshburn. "Chink" Candler.— (Given name ac­ quired by virtue of Coca-Cola, and his trip to China.) Young Men's Christian Temperance Union. Founded at the University of Georgia in the year of our Lord nineteen hundred six, by Chan Brinson and Carroll Cabaniss. MOTTO: "The University for Temperance." MEMBERS. The Bacchant Mr. Bower. His Guzzling Grace, Colonel Bob Hancock. The Eloquent Honorable Robert S. Parker. Wallace Draper, Dispensary Mascot. Squire Lindsay Johnson, of "Five and Costs" Fame. Harry Jones, the Cocktail Chancellor. Mobile Buck Daly, Attorney at Law. Inman Gray, of the Trans-Oconee Club. Jesse James, of the Ladies Auxiliary. W. C. Henson, Ex-Officio Member. "Pretty Boy Papers" in the May Issue of "The Gentleman's Home Journal." Every Pandora during the last ten years has passed frivolous comment upon the satin texture of my blooming cheeks, and the innocent charm that settles on my features. How may this delicate beauty be eradicated ? W. OCTAVIUS MARSHBURN. From the description, your beauty is hopelessly permanent, but as a relief from foolish college jokes, you might try <;raduation. A certain class of rude young men persist in holding hands with me, and upon one occasion, I was even kissed in the dark. How may this unseemly conduct SISTER SAUNDERS JONES. bo corrected? You should either find new associates, or use a false mustache and a deep bass voice. Just in the prime of life, I find myself almost bald. My head is fast assum­ ing that polish peculiar to the billiard ball or the peeled onion. What would C. C. KING. you advise? Try a mixture consisting of 1 drop of lemon juice to an ounce of rain water applied vigorously three times per year. This remedy has met with some success in the case of Mr. II. L. Jewett Williams, who, nineteen years ago, was almost as bald as yourself. I have lately noticed a freckle upon my countenance. How may this be RALPH HODGSON. removed? Mr. Bobby Parker attributes his present rosy and delicate complexion to the faithful use of cold cream and Florida water. You might try the same prepar­ ations. A Sojourn With Satan. BY G. B. RECENTLY had a very peculiar dream, in which I took a trip to the nether world, and while groping about down there stumbled over Old Scratch. He cordially oft'ered me one of his long, rough appendages by way of greeting, and bade me make myself at home. "I wasn't looking for you today," he began, "but all the same you are welcome. I have lots of room here and I like to have my friends with me. Come along and I will show you around." For a few seconds I stood still, looking about me. The trees were dead and the soil was dry and dusty. Many huge serpents lay basking in the sun­ shine; several raw-boned monkeys chattered and made hideous faces overhead; and thousands of featherless jaybirds hopped frantically about, piercing the air with their discordant cries, and thereby evidently resenting my intrusion. I was somewhat discomforted over the presence of the snakes, but the devil assured me that they were harmless; so putting aside my fears, I stepped off with him down a narrow, winding path. Presently we crossed a brook of dark water, and from thence came out into an open spot where a good view of the surround­ ing country could be obtained. To the left the devil pointed out a tree in which there was an arbor of thorns. "That is old Adam's bower," he said, laughing. "He's a charter member of this thing, you know." Then he showed me not far off a gray-haired old man who sat with his head in his hands. Around his neck was a chain at the end of which was a large iron ball. The old man was mur­ muring to himself. "That's Julius Caesar," the devil explained, and continuing, he said: "I believe you have some friends here. Follow me.'' So saying he took me to the top of a hillock where we could get a good view of the valley which Jay at its foot. The scene there filled me with wonder. In front of me was the largest rock pile that one could well imagine, and a number of individuals were heaving huge rocks from the heap and carrying them to a smaller pile far down the valley. The devil motioned me to be silent and we stood there watching intently for some moments. I had no difficulty in recognixing Bill Brantley, Bob Parker, Harrison Jones, T. E. Scott and Lucien Bower. The crowd, led by Parker, was singing, "Everybody works but the devil." The singing ceased and Brantley went off into verse which ran something like this: "Milton was a poet, As great as great could be; But he couldn 't hold a lantern, To mighty William G." "By the way, what is Brantley doing down here?" I whispered. "We always thought on earth that he meant well." "Oh, it was for persecuting his fellow men with an everlasting dose of bad poetry!" he exclaimed. "This is the very place for his kind. Bower had a similar failing, but he was not a poetaster. Praise be for that!" "How about Scott?" I continued. "We considered that there was a large measure of good in him." "Well," came the answer, "he was too slick on his trades. There is always room here for the man who takes more than he gives. As for Jones and Parker, they are here on general principles. There is no definite charge against them." "Were they not lady-killers?" I asked. "Yes, that was one thing," he said. At this juncture I noticed an immense cauldron which sat some distance up the valley. A blazing fire raged underneath it, and the steam escaped Vith a hissing sound from beneath the lid. A grinning creature whom I took for Red Hodgson sat on his haunches near the pot, occasionally stirring the fire with a long, slender poker. "Tom Fleming and Charley Cox are in that pot," the devil said, as he laughed wickedly. "Horrible!" I exclaimed. "I know they deserve to be there but I think they should be shown some mercy, as they were led astray by their friends." To this the devil did not make reply, but took me to a dense forest where numerous dark figures wearing masks stalked about with hands folded behind them. On looking closer, I noticed that they all carried pistols in their belts. The devil again motioned me to be silent. Then I whispered: "Some of these forms seem familiar. Who are they, devil, and why are they here?" He smiled knowingly and replied: "The masks they wear are a sign that they must not be known. They are murderers, all of whom have shot at least a thousand students each." "Impossible!" I exclaimed, as I stepped back terrified. A twig broke beneath my foot and instantly a volley of pistol shots rang out through the forest. I jumped backward and my head struck something hard and s(>'id. My sleepy eyes opened and I saw that it was the wall next to my bed. Then I heard the chapel bell pealing merrily, and my room-mate's cheerful voice came floating through the hall: "Get up, Rosa, you've missed your nine o'clock!" Ancient and Rancid Order of Fowl-Snatchers. (Legal.) "Thou Shall Xot Steal." (With conditions subsequent.) WATSON, W. II. ......... Keeper of the Crowd's Conscience. KELLEY ................... Chief Acquisitor. SUDDETII .............. Custodian of the Wool-Sack. SMITH, J. A. ............. Administrator de Bonis Xon. .................... High Chef. FIELDER .............. Chaplain and Chief Invokcr. MARTIN BOORSTIN ................... Legal Advisor, PICKETT ...... Cuslos Boozorum. (Ruled out for Professionalism.) .................. Tenant in Fee-tail. BROWN Elongated Order of Attenuated Moonnxers. "Live 'High' mid You'll Be Merry." MOTTO: MEMBERS. ....... "LENGTHY" NEWTON "FRESHMAN" JONES ........ "RED" BATTEY .......... ......... "GfiiF" GRIFFITH "Y.M.C.A." McDoNAi.D ....... "PROF. ROMEO" FLEMING "HEFTY" HARMAN "THE" WINN ........ ........ .......... "JOHNNIE" COZART "Bio" ATKINSON Chief Custodian of Ettra tftars. Warder of the "Head" Li</lit. Unardian of the Ladder. Keeper of the "Moonshine." ...... Reflector. "BOTTLE HANSOM GILLON" CABANISS . . "MILORD 'ARKY" JONES ....... "TiGE" ANDERSON Chief Moon Polisher. Chief Star Flhiger. Chief of Ktar Wearers (Police). Inspector to His Majesty. Hewer of "Moon Beams." Director of Celestial Orchestra. ........ Percnlator of Liyht. ......... Elevator Boy. HONORARY MEMBERS IN FACULTY. "Prof." Tomlinson Fort. "Bob" Parks. OTHER ACCESSORIES. "RUNT" GORDON ......... "TWIN" CONSTELLATIONS Water Boy. ...... Starr (Statesman). . . Starr (Freshman). Organized December 13, 1906, by Beelzebub, Prince of Devils. HONORARY MEMBERS. Mayor Dorsey and Chief McKie. CHARLEY PHILLIPS ... ........... Grand High H. K. I,UCIEN BOWER .............. Vice Grand High H.. K. EARL ASKEW ..... Secretary and Keeper of Grand Arsenal of H. K. T. MUT GROOVER ........... Grand Pirate and High Bouncer . RAY BLACKMAR ............. Custodian of the Cannon . HARRY HARMAN .......... Supreme Archon of Alarm Boxes. FALLEN ANGELS. Mercer Blanchard. Frank Foley. Kid Walker. Oscar Thoinasson. Jim Tilley. Mason Williams. Hugh Parker. "Co-Eds" of the University. Under the special instruction of Prof. "Romeo" Fleming. MEMBERS. CLASS OF 1907 . . "Miss Puss" Hancock. CLASS OF 1908 . . "Sister" Jones. "Rosa" Hatcher. "Mattie" Martain. CLASS OF 1909 . . "Lizzie" Brown. "Maud" Horsey. CLASS OF 1910 . . "Jennie" Jones. "Mary" Heard. The Boxing Club. COLORS: Blood Red and Bruise Blue. MOTTO: Take that! and that!! and that!!! An honorable organization, having for its purpose the advancement of the noble art of self-defense, should receive recognition from the public print, as well as from the officers of the law. We therefore transcribe below the roster of the same. PROTAGONISTS. ANTAGONISTS. Cabaniss— Gillon. Webb— Dargan. Broughton— Holtzendorff. Lindsay Johnson— Everybody. Freshman— Sophomores. The Goat Painters— The Night Watchman. REFEREES—The Police Department. TIMEKEEPER—Warden of the City Jail. University Menagerie. Organized specifically for the amusement of the Lucy Cobb Institute and the State Normal School. SPECIMENS Now ON EXHIBIT. 'Hippo" Scott. "Guinea Pig" Harris. "Baby Elephant" Cleveland. "Monkey" Gordon. "Magpie" Bower. "Bug" Taylor. "Hedgehog" Raoul. "Porcupine" Williams. "Wampus" Turner. DEPARTMENT OF PECKERWOODS. Carmichael. Hodgson, Battey. Dick. MASCOT: "Butterine" Battey, Co. D. Specimens of University Verse. From the advance sheets of GEORGIA POEMS, edited by Prof. R. E. Park. THE EIGHTH WONDER OF THE WORLD. The Is a But The wonder known as Number Eight theme for speculation, when Cheatham gets as big as Scott guessers can take recreation. AN UNSTEADY SUBJECT. A brilliant young squire is Parker, That ferocious and eloquent barker, When he mounts up the stage, he thunders in rage, While his rum-red mug grows darker. ROYAL TROCHAIC TETRAMETER. At an ex-professor named King Your scribe would fain make a fling, But the length of his locks gives a fierceness that shocks, Hence discretion has saved him the sting. DIDACTIC. If you care to learn about poker, And stack to your draw the joker, Foley's the man who will show you the plan, But each game you will get to be broker. ODE TO THE FACULTY. The truth about the Faculty is, As a business bunch they are shifty, When of Horsey they tired, he was promptly fired, But they took him back for fifty. A THRENODY. Alas for Harrison Jones! As a Freshman he only bones, In his Senior year he smokes and drinks beer, And is shot on the Ides and the Nones. EROTIC EDMUND. A well-meaning swain named Walker Was not such an eloquent talker, When shot in the heart by the love-god's dart He proved to be only a balker. L 'ENVOI. But enough, O Muse, of this rhyme, For more, by the gods, would be crime, I now call a halt 'ere the dangerous fault Degrade me to Brantley's time. Fantasy. Your eyes are all the eyes I know, Your smile is all I see; Your voice is the only voice I hear, That seems to call to me. Your face is the face that shapes my dreams, Your lips are the lips for me— But what's the use of thoughts like these, When they're all in reverie! —G. B. Pan-Hellenic Hop. DEUPREE HALL, FRIDAY EVENING, THE FOURTEENTH OP JUNE, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. COMMITTEE : Dozier Lowndes, Rollin Broughton, Morton Hodgson, Walter Marshburn, J. C. Mays, W. T. McCaffrey, Luther Rodgers, Leo Joseph. ^MILITARY ( O.M.MITTKK : Rollin nroughton. Lncien Rower DEUPREE HALL, SATURDAY EVENING, THE FIFTEENTH OF JUNE, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. COMMITTEE: Charles Phillips, Frank Foley, Julius Scott. DEUPREE HALL, MONDAY EVENING, THE SEVENTEENTH OF JUNE, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. •-JUNIOR HOP." .). I). Lowndes, J. P. I)ic-k. G. P. Swift. DEUPREE HALL, TUESDAY EVENING, THE EIGHTEENTH OF JUNE, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. COMMITTEE: John M. Cozart, W. T. Gary, J. L. Johnson, Jr. DEUPREE HAI.L, WEDNESDAY EVENING, THE NINETEENTH OF JUNE, NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. COMMITTEE: Loring Raoul, Lucien Bower, Will Brantley. DEUPREE HALL, THURSDAY EVENING, THE TWENTIETH OF JUNE. NINETEEN HUNDRED SEVEN. University German Club. J. D. LOWNDES ......... President. J. P. DICK Vice-President. .......... ROLUN BROUGHTON ....... Secretary and Treasurer. COMMITTEES. INVITATION—R. K. Smith, Chairman, Robert Parker, Tom Fleming. FINANCE—J. D. Lowndes, Chairman, J. P. Dick, Rollin Broughton. MEMBERSHIP—W. 0. Marshburn, Chairman, Harry Harinon, S. 0. Smith. DECORATION—F. H. Martin, Chairman, E. M. Ransom, Frank Foley. Music—Jno. M. Cozart, Chairman, M. S. Hodgson, Geo. Battey. Goodnight. I bid thee adieu, Heart of My Heart, Til another night goes by, Till Aurora wakes and the Sungod breaks O'er land and sea and sky. Now tell me goodnight, Queen of my Life, (Words sweet as the sea-nymphs sing), Let the love light shine, let your white arms twine Round the breast of your heart's love King. May the Angels guard thee, Soul of my Soul, With them let Diana vie, As she fills with light the world of night; Till morn, Sweetheart, Goodbye. © © © EUGENE V. HAYNES CO. Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry and Silverware © © ® © © If there is any one line of business in which experience, concentrated thought and undoubted integrity is most important, It's the Jewelry business. Our patrons know this and frankly speaking, this is the secret of our phenomenal success. © Highest Grade Diamonds, Most Reliable Watches. 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If you have missed the chance of taking a degree in art or science you can add many degrees to your appearance with College Brand Clothes. They confer the right to B. S.—Bachelor of Style. College Brand Clothes have just a bit more dash to them than the usual clothes—though exclusive in style and make they don't exclude you from wearing them as they are priced reasonable. © © College Brand Clothes are sold exclusively by © CHAS. STERN CO , Outfitters to Men & Boys, CLAYTON STREET, © © ATHENS. GEORGIA © t CANNING'S This is the place where you can always find pure drugs and @ medicines of all kinds— prescriptions compounded with care. ®. @ Fine Perfumeries and Toilet Articles. Lowney's Candies always fresh. Fountain drinks— Lithia Water and Ice Cream. Cigars, Cigarettes and Tobacco. Pipes. Post Cards. Students will always find a welcome at this drug store. and see me —your busiuess will be duly appreciated. © L. P. CANNING, Jflt Athens, Ga. ® Arnold's Old Stand ^ ——— &* »i — £* i i i i i ip > > >• ' >• Call © © © ® PHOTOGRAPH/ Satisfaction Guaranteed AT Frederick J. Ball's Studio © & f © © * © The Economy of Buying © Good © Clothes © is Universally Acknowledged © We call special attention to the fine goods we offer Dunlap Hats Paragon © j* © © & jf- jfr Manhattan Shirts Fownes Gloves © © © © © Suits from $1O.OO to $37.5O © HEAD & McMAHAN 254 Clayton Street, ATHENS, GEORGIA V © © © © _, © ./ ist Ice Cream and Sodai © w E. G. HALE, C. V. RAINWATER, Proprietors. ATHENS.GA. © © © © © © © © CIGARETTES IN THE CITY © EASILY THE FINEST CIGARS AND El Principe, © SmoKers* Supplies Fine Candies Cortex, CIGARETTES-Etfyptian Deity , Victor Hugo. Jules Verne, Murads, Fatima, Moguls, Martinez. © Jchinasi Naturals. © © •ASK THE STUDENT." © Webb & Crawford WHOLESALE GROCERS For Vacation Work or permanent employment, there is no more pleasant or profitable business than writing insurance. We represent first-class Life and Ac­ cident Companies and offer liberal con­ tracts to Agents. Stewart & Davis —Office220 EAST BROAD STREET © — Warehouse— CENTRAL R. R. TRACKS, ATHENS, GA. 504-5-6 PrudentialBldg., ATLANTA, - .© © © © © © © © © GA. © t Hurrah the College Boys K iu jgt © © ^T^lHE College Boys and Muse's have long been fast friends. /•? The "Modus Operand!" of I many stores that sell young men's clothing seems to be one long protest. But the truth I of the matter is. they don't give the young fellows' wear the attention that it requires. In this store we make the youths' clothing a MAN'S business, and show you styles that @ © **• a/, *S* @ ® ® match the young man's taste and requirements, /f Our young men's clothing has for its backbone the same fundamental principles as have won admiration in men's wear. I Suits $12.50 to $40.00 | »lf And the same is true of Hats and Furnishings and Shoes. We look after Special things in these for young men until Muse's has become known as the CollefiTC Man's Store. © ® ^*t ® 2 ———————————————————————— © ^ § Muse's, 3-5-7 Whitehall Street I 18* | © f «. A. H. FETTING, —— © GREEK LETTER FRATERNITY JEWELRY. * MANUFACTURER OF————————— © « Memorandum package |» sent to any fraternity member through the Secre© tary of the Chapter. Special designs and estimates furnished on Class Pins, Medals for Athletic Meets, Rings, etc. © © TEMPORARY LOCATION 213 N. Liberty Street - = BALTIMORE, MD. | »*»• Ballard Bifocal and Toric Lenses HAVE GAINED A REPUTATION IN TWO YEARS NO OTHER FIRM HAS MADE IN A HALF CEN­ TURY. NOT THESE LENSES ALONE GAVE US THE LEAD, BUT OPTICAL SERVICE IN EVERY WAY NOT USUALLY FOUND ELSEWHERE. WE CAN GRIND ANY GLASS ON THIS DEEP BALLARD BIFOCAL TORIC CURVE. © © Walter Ballard © © Optical Company, © ATLANTA, GA. 75 Peachtree Street, ASK THE OCULISTS ABOUT US. Brenau Summer School and Chautauqua © Gainesville, Ga. OUMMER SCHOOL, JUNE 19-JULY 31. Chautauqua, July 18-31. ^ Special normal courses for Music and Oratory teachers. Courses in English, Mathematics, Ancient and Modern Languages. Location among foot-hills of Blue Ridge Mountains, beautiful scenery, delightful summer climate, mineral waters. Boating, fishing, mountain excur­ sions. College dormitories open. Chautauqua held under canvas tent near the shore of Lake Warner. Camping outfit and privileges provided © Regular Session of Brenau College-Conservatory begins September 15. © Write for Handsome Catalogue. © © © © © © * © 5CHAUL & MAY © ® ' ® ® © |j Are direct Importers of Diamonds We can save you 30 per cent, on ® |£ © ® © all purchases. v ® ® ® | ATLANTA, - - - GEORGIA | PHOTO GRAPHY | ____^—^—_________ J. ^=^=1^=^:^=^=:==^=:^^=^= S in all its branches !t 1x extended in the latest and most artistic manner at 1 CLIFTON'5 5TUDIO, College Ave., =:= Phone 443=2. | © f® © I© © | I INSURE AGAINST I FIRE AND LIGHTNING f © © © © © IN THE © OF LIVERPOOL |A\Z4£U9J ENGLAND The Leading Fire Insurance Company in the World C. Losses Paid in Cash © © Without Discount C. Agencies in all the Principal Cities and Towns © © © © | /OUTHERN DEPARTMENT, Atlanta, Oa. I © MILTON DARGAN, Manager © © © The Representative House in America for © College Uniforms © © © HIGH-GRADE OXFORD GOWNS UNIFORMS AND MORTAR BOARDS EQUIPMENTS © © © FLAGS OF EVERY PENNANTS DESCRIPTION © ETC., ETC. © THE M. C. LILLEY & CO. COLUMBUS, OHIO © © © © © © Write for Prices and Full Particulars © See our Representative, E. H. DORSE Y, - 115 Clay ton Street © Jamestown Exposition © © "T f ...via... The SEABOARD AIR LINE RY. Hampton Roads, Norfolk, Va., April 26th. to Nov. 30th. 19O7 Hampton Roads, on which the Exposition Grounds are located, where the waters of the James and Elizabeth Rivers, the Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean meet, is an ideal situation for a great naval display. During the Exposi­ tion, battleships of all nations will form a great Naval Rendezvous on Hampton Roads. Jamestown Island is about forty miles from the Exposition Grounds and can be reached by a most delightful boat trip up the James River. During the Expo­ sition, the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway will operate trains from Newport News (reached by ferry from Exposition Grounds or Norfolk) to Williamsburg, the original capital of colonial Virginia. There will be a line of automobiles from Williamsburg to Jamestown Island, thus making an all land trip from Newport News. Among the Interesting Features of the Exposition Will Be: Greatest military spectacle the world has ever seen. Grandest naval rendezvous in history. Inter­ national races by submarine warships. Competitive flights of airships from all countries. Mag­ nificent pyrotechnic reproduction of war scenes. Great museum of war relics from all nations and all ages. Reproduction of the famous battle between the Monitor and Merrimac, at the place where that battle was fought. Indian relics of three centuries. A beautiful city of colonial build­ ings owned by the various States of the Union. The largest motor boat regatta ever held. Greatest gathering of warships in the history of the world. Unique and gorgeous night harbor illuminations. You cannot afford to miss this great attraction. A glance at the map will convince you that the Seaboard is the best and most direct route. For all other informa­ tion as to rates, schedules, berth reservations, call on any agent. 0 J. S. ETCHBERGER, T. P. A , Atlanta, Ga. C. B. RYAN, G. P. A., Portsmouth, Va. J. Z. HOKE, Agent, Atlanta, Ga. W. E. CHRISTIAN, A. G. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. © © ® ®© S * © "The Journal Covers Dixie Like the Dew". | ® The Atlanta Journal m^^H^^^H^^^^MMM^^^^^M © © S » © ® Daily Sunday »Semi-WeeKly. ® © ® © ® ® The Sotith's greatest newspaper. Largest circulation — greatest advertising medium in the Southern States. © © @ ® © © I ff © © S The Journal is recognixed as the tribune of the people and the defender of the people's rights. A live, wide awake, modern newspaper in every feature. If it is not already in your home it should be. @ * ® @ ® * I DAILY............... $5.00 Per Annum. | j DAILY and SUNDAY. . 7.00 " " | I © © SEMI -WEEKLY........ 1.00 " " | © © | ® | I ® © I © ADDRESS =^r^—O THE JOURNAL, ATLANTA, - GEORGIA. f © | 1 *w* & © © "The Journal Covers Dixie Like the Dew". | WEAR S * High Art Clothing "Looks Right When You Buy It; Stays Right After You Wear It." * £ 2 No other make is so well and favorably known as is 2 I© ^—m^^m—^^—*^————^——— —^ ———————————————————————————— HIGH ART CLOTHING I* • ® © & @ r. ® ® 8® jgt It is not only stylish, but it is just a bit ahead of other clothing with the distinctiveness which imparts to its wearers that feeling of satisfaction, resulting from being better and more differently dressed than the other fellow. Made by Strouse & Brothers, Baltimore, whose forty years of uninterrupted success guarantee its worthfulness. @ © ^t *»» |* i $ ® ® || f* <r ® ® @ A g | $ CHAS. STERN & CO., Athens, Carry a complete assortment of patterns at decidedly moderate prices, and back of all this is the *^good service which has made their store so popular. TKe "Farmer's Manual". A Book That Every Farmer Should Have. The Most Valuable and Best Selling Book Now on the Market. It gives a complete course in Bookkeeping and Business Law. Shows you how to wrile all kinds of notes, receipts and leases. How to draw deeds and wills. How to write bills of sale, saving the expenses of hiring a lawyer. It shows you how to make your own fertilizer at half price, and how to destroy the insects in your farm and garden Irish potato bugs, insects in fruit trees, etc. A complete veterinary department showing you how to doctor your horses, mules, cows, hogs and chickens for any kind of disease. Tells you what causes the disease, how they act when they have it, and gives you a table showing exactly how much medicine to give at one dose. It concludes with a lightning calculator, telling you what any bale of cotton would come to at any price or fraction. It contains halves, quarters, eighths, tenths, fifths, sixteenths and twentieths of a cent *•* *•* © © AGENTS WANTED. © © © WRITE TODAY FOR OUTFIT. SAMPLE COPY SENT TO ANY AD- © DRESS FOR $3.90. SEND FOR 100-PAGE CATALOGUE FREE. J A. N. JENKINS & SCOTT CO., 914 Austell Bldg. * © ATLANTA, GA. © © ———————————————————————————————————————————————— © © © LIGHTING COOKING POWLR © © © © © © © HEATING! © © © © ATHENS ELECTRIC RAILWAY CO, © © Athens Evening Call Fairyland i 142 Clayton St., ATHENS, GA. THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE HIGH GRADE MOVING PICTURE ENTERTAINMENT in the CITY _____________________ PROGRAMME CHANGES MONDAYS, TUESDAYS AND FRIDAYS ::::::: Has the LARGEST CITY CIRCULATION © © © © © © f © f «»F • Splendid Music with each Programme © © Admission 5 and 10 cts. jgt ©©• C. editor L. (Bantt, E. W. BULLOCK, Manager. JOHNJ. WILKINS.Pres W.P.BROOKS,Cash'r. © A. T. CONWAY, Asst. Cashier © © © © 8 The Georgia © ° National Bank © of 1 ATHENS Capital ... Surplus and Profits - © © $100,000.00 $90,000.00 Invites correspondence and (he accounts of Corporations, Finns and Individuals and offers to depositors every facility their balances, business and responsibility warrant. Promptness, Courtesy, Accuracy and Safety Guaranteed. Investigation Invited -DIRECTORS:© © w. A. CARLTQN. Physician THOMAS P. VINCENT. PrM. © © and Suneon. HAMILTON McWHORTEK, Asst. (Jen. Counsel So. Ry. Co. A. S. ERWIN, ol Erwld & Erwln. Ally's it Law. Athens Mff. Co. J. N. WEBB, ol Webb & Crawlord. Wholesale Grocers. J. J. WILKINS, Prcsidrnt .© © '*•* Candies THE HARAWA © © © * © *i* EXCLUSIVE AGENT ATHENS, GA. * *-">» ^«* SAM JONES HIS LIFE and SAYINGS © © © SAM P. JONES Cloth B'g, $2.50 The greatest evangelist the world ever knew = I\ = Over 450,000 converts. His memory .-> • « cherished in every Christian home. ^^ *-* *-^ *^You have heard him, or you know of "y Q 14 his wonderful power. You caji't hear ^^. « him speak now, but you can read His ^^rlOUIlCI Life and Bright Sayings compiled • w BY HIS WIFE, assisted by his co-worker, "^ ** W e WALT. HOLCOMB. It contains over 400 pages and 50 full page illustrations. The type is plain and splendidly printed on good paper. Sent to any address on receipt of price. Size, 9^ x 7. Half Morocco B'g, $3.50 Full Morocco B'g, $5.00, (De Luxe) Send 50c for canvassing outfit. Book sells on sight. Over Great opportunity for agents. 10,000 sold the first week. © © A. N. JENKINS & SCOTT CO., Eppes - Wilkins Co. * (INCORPORATED) WHOLESALE GROCERS. 914 Austell Building. © © © Dentistry © © DR. CHARLES A. RYDER, © College Ave., ATHENS, GA. SPECIAL PRICE TO STUDENTS WHITEHEAD & CO. CASH STORE © © *»r © Dealers in Fancy and Family Groceries, Farm Supplies and Country Produce. © ATHENS, Phone 173 GEORGIA. No. 5 Clayton Street, - ATHENS, GA. © © © © © MISS RUTHERFORD'S BOOKS. © Southern Authors....................................SI English Authors ..................................... 1 American Authors.................................... l French Authors...................................... 1 Mannie Brown .................................... Bible yuestion Book.......... ....................... An Old Fashion May Party........ .................. © © 50 50 50 50 50 25 25 pp. pp. pp. pp. pp. pp. pp, 650 750 653 625 148 80 13 Laughable Farces for School Girls' Entertainments—15 Cts. Each. © Old Maids of Lickskillet, Convention to Exterminate Man. " " " " Trial by Jury—Breach of Promise Suit. " " " " Boarding School. " " " " Edit a Paper. Polly Peablossoin's Wedding (Col. Lamar's Story dramatized.) © Address, * ©. © MISS M. RUTHERFORD, Athens. Ga. © © © © © © © © © * © © © © © ,© © The City Market. © © © © © © J. H. PATMAN, Fine Meats, Fish, Oysters, Poultry, Game in Season. No. 9 Jackson St., ATHENS, Ga. Telephone 154 for Choice Meats. The Huggins China House Broad St., Athens, Ga. DEALERS in everything in Cliina, Glass, Enamel, Tin and Woodenware. Refrigerators, Ice Boxes, Cream Freezers, Water Coolers, Fine Lamps, Silver Plated Ware in Knives, Forks, Spoons, &c. HOUSEKEEPERS' HEADQUARTERS. © © © © © Counties that have gone dry since cut was made: GRADY MARION TERRELL EARLY BEN HILL Is Your County White? If Not, Why Not? DICATUR IGRADY Prohibition Map of Georgia, April, 1907 124 Dry Counties, While 22 Wet Counties. Black Congressional Districts indicated by heavy lines. Large maps may be had for the postage by applying to MRS. MARY HARRIS ARMOR, Pres. Georgia W. C T. U. EASTMAN, GEORGIA. STUDENTS Should see the Sights at Just the thing for y^u to do; have your picture made. reamlanb ). Go to The Palace of PLEASURE ® First-Class Cafe and Cigar Stand in Connection CLAYTON STREET ® SUPERB NEW LINE OF STER| LING SILVER | Wedding I Gifts @ A complete assortment of Chests of g Silver Flat Ware. © ————— ®© CHAS.W.CRANKSHAW Diamond JVlcrcbant and © Century Bldg. Whitehall Street L. CRISLERS, The Photographer. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Special Prices and Attention given to Students. Broad Street over Ga. Nat. Bank, ATHENS, GA. Busk & Startck ® Makers of Fine Clothes STUDENTS' PATRON AGE SOLICITED 1318-1319 FOURTH NATIONAL BANK BUILDING :ATLANTA, GA.: ® Dorsey & Funkenstein © The Largest Furniture Dealers in the South The Latest Creations of the Leading Furniture Makers of America © IT IS AN UNDISPUTED FACT THAT © WE CARRY THE LARGEST ASSORT­ © MENT OF FURNITURE IN THE SOUTH. © OUR DESIGNS ARE THE LATEST. CON­ STRUCTION THE BEST. IT'S ANY­ THING IN THE FURNITURE LINE FROM THE KITCHEN TO THE PARLOR. AT- Thornton's Cafe YOU WILL FIND © ICE CREAM AND COLD DRINKS £ CANDIES MADE DAILY £ A FULL LINE OF CIGARS AND TOBACCO Great Line of Summer Goods. «5t Dorsey & Funkenstein Clayton Street - - - - ATHENS THE BEST OF EVERYTHING 122 Clayton Street. Moore's Old Stand REGAL OXFORDS in X Sizes. The College Man's Shoe, SEND FOR CATALOGUE. Atlanta Store, 6 'WHITEHALL ST. © J. W. Goldsmith, Jr., © © (HOCOLAJE5* BONBON} © © © © The Citizens Bank of Athens will appreciate the © © © business of students. Careful attention given collec­ tions. © W. R. Canning, Cashier. © When Buying Clothing LOOK FOR THE EMMONS LABEL the best that brains ITandMEANS skill can make—the best © hand tailoring, the finest all-wool materials, perfect fit and the smartest style. And for such clothes you will say Emmons' prices are reasonable—very. : : The best of everything else to wear, from Hat to Hosiery for Man and Boy : : : : M. R. EMMONS COMPANY, 39 and 41 Whitehall St., ATLANTA. Da vison- Nicholson Company Headquarters for the best in Standard Style and Quality in Dry Goods, Shoes, Housefurnishing Goods, Dress Suit Cases, Umbrellas, etc. Clayton Street, ATHENS, - GA, © © © © © © © © © © © © © The patronage of the University Students © is respectfully and cordially invited for our UNIVERSITY SHOE in all leathers and up-to-date styles. © E. I. Smith Shoe Co., 114 Clayton St. © WAGL5 MUSIC CO. © © All kinds of Musical Instruments £g PALMER'S gg Peerless Cold Cream and supplies. A full line of latest Has no Superior. Few Equals. Sheet Music always on hand For Relieving Sunburn, Tan, Freckles and Chafed Conditions of the Skin. Clayton Street, Athens, Ga. i, © © Dornblatt Plumbing Co. (JULIUS DORNBLATT.) © © Steam and Hot Water Heating a Specialty. © © © Telephone 347 West Washington St. © © © IF YOU NEED ANYTHING IN © © © WRITE OR PHONE © © © © Fruit and Produce Athens Brokerage and Commission Co. © © © © © © Swift Building. 105 Clayton Street HEADQUARTERS FOR Souvenir Goods, Fine Stationary, Blank Books, Office Supplies, Ath­ letic Goods, Pictures and Frames, Photo Material, Waterman Fountain Pens, etc. Up-to-date Printing'. THE McGREGOR COMPANY, 118 Clayton St. DR. MASON THE CAREFUL DENTIST Special attention to students' work ATHENS, GA. V. E. OLIVER, Manager. Phone 131. PALMER & SONS, ATHENS, GA. STEPHEN LflNE FOLGER. © ESTABLISHED 1X92 © © Watches, Diamonds, Jewelry, Clubs and College Pins and Rings Gold and Silver Medals © © © ISO Broadway, NEW YORK © Made in Georgia. o * jst © © © © © © © © © © ©©© ©©© ©©© © © 1© E. H. DORSEY © © © CLOTHING, HATS FURNISHINGS © © © A Stock With an Individuality About it That College Men Admire © © © © © 115 CLAYTON STREET The Athens Hard­ ware Company, HARDWARE, CUTLERY, GUNS, WOODENWARE, ETC., ATHENS, GA. ...For The... BEST JOB PRINTING © © © © © © © © © © -TRY THE © 248 and 250 Broad St., Athens, - - Ga. Banner Job Office, f ATHENS, GA. © © a. There's Beauty © © © © *w I © © © © © © © in a well finished Photograph. Not the cheapest, but the least expensive. If you would have such, go to © © The 5alter Studio We can furnish you with any Style and Finish desired. ARISTO, CARBON or PLATINO1YPE in Black or Sepia tones. Special Attention and prices given the School Girls and boys. Call and see Beautiful Line of latest Mounts and Folders kept in stock at all times : : : Flash-Light Engagements Filled © J. 5. & MI55 M. L. SALTLR 125 1-2 BROAD 5TRLLT © © 3 ZIOfl 04bS3 M403