xt78gt5fbx28 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt78gt5fbx28/data/mets.xml  McDaniel, J. M. 1899 v. : ill. ; 23-25 cm.  Volume numbering changed during 1899 from Volume 8 to Volume 2.  Description based on Vol. 8, no. 2 (Nov. 1989) journals  English Lexington, Ky., [s.n., 189?-] Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentuckian : a monthly magazine University of Kentucky. Kentucky University. Agricultural and Mechanical College of Kentucky. University of Kentucky--Students--Periodicals. State University, Lexington. State College, Lexington. The Kentuckian : a monthly magazine, vol. 8, no. 7, 1899 text The Kentuckian : a monthly magazine, vol. 8, no. 7, 1899 1899 2012 true xt78gt5fbx28 section xt78gt5fbx28 ,’\ ` . I >
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I PHOENIX HO I Bb ,  
   
> MRLEXINGTON, KEN'I`UCKY.¤¤¤ a   '
Zbas. Seclbach, manager.  
  ‘
llns ull inorlt-rn iin|n·ov¢·nn·nts, znnl is the only lirst vlttss llotel _
in l.i-xington . 'l`he only strictly lirst—t·l;1ssllestnntrniit in the
vity for hnlies nnrl g¤·ntlt·nn·n is <·oinn·t·te¤l with it.  
  Y
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I G S   ~
A SPECIA I/l`Y. ' Wl
E
My \·<‘l|l¤‘l<·>:t1‘t*:tll now, stylish und up-to date. un·l yon erin get any style rlesirt-il.
Picnic Wagon to carry fifty-five persons.
My prices are very low; I sell ull styles of Coltnnlyns ztnil Curtis & Reed
Vehicles und will sure you 25 per cent. cull and- see
I
B B. B. WILSON.  
r GRUIGKSHANK, THE SHUEMAKER.
. Klannn';n·tnrerot` l·`in¤· l{oots:itt*zS.;.i‘é¥5§L‘§f%3§3§: Lexingwn, Ky.
J. M. GULP. W. H. TURK, Wm. H. THYLOE.
'l`mili1· Mgr., <.iun'I. Pass. Agl., Ass`!. (jlfllvl. Pu$s,Ag!.,
“'zl. B11ss,1l.I>..)in11.n1.:¢·r,
Pittsburg, Toronto, New Orleans, New York. \\'nsI1i11;;to11. Sun l‘vl`2\ll('l$t'<>, (`lll('l\g0, St, Louis 6: ‘
Denver. There are thousands of positions to he 1i1lt·<1. \\'t· hud over S.ll()ll \'1ll'1\Ilt‘ll‘Slll11'lIl_L{ the past
season. Teachers needed now to contmet for next your. lllllllllllllltul ftwilitit-s for placing teachers
in every part of the U. S. and Canada. P¤·int·ipuls, S\1[>t?I‘llIlt*l1¢lt‘lIlS, .\>sistnnts. Grade Teachers, `
Public, Private, Art, Music etc.,wantct1.
Addressall izpplications to \\'.\S111Nt:'1`¤1N. 11. tf,. or 1*1'l`”l`SBl'R<.&, I’.\.
 .._;,_..-—·—__,_.....-4
\\' nxsist lu ‘l ~ .‘ ' : '
  ptiititnis 1»y‘£1l11ipl-;iiii;  
, , \S(‘hf)fll$ und l:IlllllllL'$ \\`itl1 l‘r<11'c:.7 1
' turned with 12 fine copies in one week. .   ’ —. ..  · ’-· ’ .·¤ V ·¤‘ NQ  11;,; y
  .   { ·¤($|1|¤i8’g”U' `
F. J waism        
253 Perry St., Trenton, N. J. 1 .     ., i j; ‘‘r4    
}~*ll¤l‘U °FF'¤E, JNf·`P.HifNlXT·*Q-HQI€l€¤
 ,_......
Frank W. Gunn, Fee & Treas. f`. <‘. (`1llll0\1ll, Attorney. _
€ 611 F3 O €C 1011 g€11Cy. _ 
Th C1 t 1 C ll t' A `
All Collections given prompt attention. Bad ones il stiecialty.
Oflice--22 North l'p]wt·r St. l,
Rt>ferences·—Fayette National Bank; National lGxt·l1a_11ge_ Bank: Second National Q
A Bank; Trust and Safety Vault Co; Phoenix Bationztl Bank. T
i
7 {ll`.,  ·  · " VA  \-_-it {_-'glm - {T U V  
" °_°‘·. M-!. ' ., I I V ·_. _:

 _,, J .2.;;,  { p
~¤—TH E··==-·
Of Kentuok y
pun DIV/gc,. l
  # 2 °’a
  G   `{·`
 isi gl" ·•.1; F H
mm a, It .
Offers to the public the lollowinz Courses, viz; ‘•W
A rieultural Mechanical, En ineerinrr, Civil En ineerin , Classical, I
i g r g is gi gl
Normal Scl1ool and three Seientihc Courses, each of which covers four
years in tl1e College proper and leads to a degree.
Its faculty contains twenty-nine professors. Its gronds, buildings
and equipments represeut$45o,ooo in value. Itslaboratories, Chemical,
, Physical. Biolog`cal, Botanical, Geological, Physiological, Mecl1anieal,
i and Electrical are the largest and best in Kentucky.
i Each Legislative District is entitled by law a free tuition, room
rent, fuel and lights for four properly prepared students in the college
PTOPEY, 211lCl to HI] Gqlllll llll1llllC1' lll lllC ;\TOl'IIl&Il I)€PH1'tlll€llt, Alllnllll of
other colleges in Kentucky are entered in post—§;raduate courses. For
  catalouge and other information apply to _lAM1¤ts K. PA’1‘T1·;RSoN, Ph. .
D., L. L. D., President of the College., Lexington, Ky.
i   J "{Y
MISS MlLLlKAN’5 ‘
S h I f Ph h  
  C OO O 0llOgl'3p Y. ·
121 East Main Street,
and her Department of Phonography in connection with tl1e State Col-
lege of Kentucky. Most thorough, reliable and highly·recon1·
mended school of Shorthand i11 Lexington.
  Taught by a practical court reporter.
Devoted exclusively to the training of
; EXp€l‘1Z S1l€l`lOg°I‘élph€l‘S.
. ngjpocial rates to mntriculates of the State College.
  VA; q
‘ -   ....   .  ~ i,·  i   S _ .

 "`* · _ —rr1 ·•*··—=-·-*"—··$ .. __ -_,_-,___ _   __/_,:...y;y
i`·'·{—:.— I l ,-1 ""’th.»<_’:.;»’·~·»•—-·*--·——‘··*·"··-*a-·-¢""*颷 `“`~ _ **1* A i “ ‘ ,
‘ B. B. JONES, President E. G. SPINK, Vice-President.
' I
 llPlP¤·¤%*¤¤    e    Lexln tun Busmass
g · 4* °
3 Business Galle c it t
uN¤oa»=onAra¤.» y      I Egg ‘
I  . · '“g{ tincorpomted.)
  ‘;   /; ,.,--*., 7   Established 188.%. lncorporated under Act ofthe 4
5 ·     ..-· . wé/4 . ,
  Lvgnslmure, July nsw-,
s·a‘=_¤.gj    
     E      lll) Yllll EX|lBGl
I Eli ; =4=s·s;:T· ag i‘a‘ri;*£·:‘:·:  
j E-E _.· gh       T 0 attend a Business College for
. _ [Z`.  -—  L ’ "   1 ii   ie iur ose o ac uirin a rac ica
1.,     tl 1 P f P1 g P P *
J ?·fiilj ,’;¤  t., §?‘LéP·I‘i?_   education that will yield A POSITION
’ ,‘»§_iY        I   through which you can earn a hv-
ml ‘1'i?`°* ·?  |_`,:li"-ii;  *illi,Ef§i§E in ? Many Business Schools have
Y ik E}.¤-E,·;&:;.=~ g .
. i Q1   but ONE O1sj1acT, that object being
is   t he thorough preparation of their
i` pupils to act as Book-Keepers, Stenographers, etc. This is good as far A
, as it goes, but, it does not go far enough.
n
8 O O
, The Lexington Business College _
I
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is a TWO OB]ECT school. THE FIRST, being tl1e thorough preparation •
of its pupils for business. THE SECOND, being tl1e securing oi good po-
` sitions for those who patronize it. It has for over IO years been the
J V'! leading Business School of the South. It is at tl1e >resent time the only
_ l
School in Kentucky operating an Einployment Bureau for the purpose  
M- of securing positions for its graduates. l
» Q Send for our "KA'l`-A-LOG" and special circulars explaining how l
you can be hel >ed to a ood l’os1T1oN b 1 attendin this School. .
l 8 > E
l
ADDRESS TO DAY {
B. B. JONES, President.  
l
P 106-116 East Matn Street, ,,
38*Wc Make Written Secured Coutracts Lexington, Ky. Z 
to furnish our grarlnates szilariwl posi-
tions under mont. reasonable conditions i
l i
M pj c _ and 4- g ___ gg A t _ _ .

   - W- C i`  `  ·;;;,».;;_;,;r._,,..-..-, _., xw,   r 
C   Headley Land,  
Guiiege Buys Headquarters.  
  Fruit Baskets a Specialty.    
A AGENT Fora LOWNEY’S AND ALLEGRITTIS  
_ Celebrated Candies,  
_   Cigars and Sn1oki11g Tobacco.  
' .  
’ OVSIQT Parlor. e  
i i Headley Land, "° E ’rX‘.3i‘.ii‘..§Ee.’.., K,.  
  t VV. S. Bradley,  
i ——Dea1er in—é  
$ldDIQ dild TGIIW GYGCQYEQS.  
Fish, Oysters and Game, Fine Cigars and Tobacco, ; Q
  Country Produce Bought and Sold. ‘
A Prompt Attention to Orders.
C Cor. Winslow and Limestone Sts. `
` ` —`   g g} *_,,___.a_' i   iv   

 il
  The Benn P1tmzm System   Nl 0  
  of Phonography GAMERAS. 1. 
QE Is the only one wlncli has stood Ay     
 a . all    
  the test of forty-four years of fl i;.·   ,
  ,s.j — .3-lt l l ?”s;’-<..2,€§F . 
  h2ll‘<.l weurin the ln11nlsolw1·itt>1·s         1.% ,k ‘   ;   . 
  of all gl`2ldt‘S-·{l`Ol1l tlxt·l>usi11t~ss   ally g     T lt   ‘    
  clerk to the reporter of the Nat-  Q-‘ . 3 _:,‘ 1 Q} ·   QQ;. li;
»¤ *· 1   ` V-L` "# *1*-*  §" ‘-   »>
, ionul Congress; and it is the only     `Il
  one called by the United States    
  Blll`(51\l1 of ELlllC3l.lOl1 ]’:R()M ,1lhg guru Of l ga ( 
  "The American System of Sh0rlhaml," $ 5 0 0    
  This system is published by • Skill and perfect  
  \V(')1“li1l12lllSl1lP. E
  Tm: P1r0x0un.·.1·n1c Ixsrrrwrxz Co. UPWARDS; MOH. i m P I- O V c -  
  CINCINNATI, O' lll€1llStl10.ll {lily OlQl1€1' Ci1l`l1€Y21.  
  (‘a1alognt· innilwl free
  Benn Pitman. President. ` ROCHESTER O1)'1‘ICA;XI4 C()_ I
  . = F
  J·>¤>¤¤¤ B- H<>-e·¤*· Mmger- lsouni saw, Rscimsy, N. Y. _
  .....~_._.,...»-»-—~e,.#-»»-»— ·
  — A D ld T BUCKNE  
  V \ T ` 4Q S. Limestone. I
  Db1\TIbT' Shoe Repairing, '
  ·.¢1 . -. ·: N. lj S - "
y   Offxce and Rt ·~1t ente A nne tone, Ncmly mid cheaply done.
A Lcxingtorh I{y‘ Large per cent. off to students. y
· ~ Gleamng, Pressing & Repairing, l—l _ l__ l—l gylgm, i
" Suits made to order from sample. DEN]`]ST, p
Cheap pants a leader. ·
\Vh{' l\ICELI,II‘NNYy Q7 1*,5151 l\lt.t1\1 Street,
101 E. Main. Opp. Plimnix Hotel.  
Sh &P F 10% Ptltllltit  
\ Bllfll Bill! Ul- al.  

 ··‘a‘• . ..-.  .._ __./· A ° A _
~ li l; ‘ ;_
.. -   - l;
V ‘¤? i‘
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S. BASSETT & SONS,  N
· »  
. MEN S FINE SHOES.  
Our Reputation  
you can dc end is murle by selling good shoes ut Q
p honest values.  
New Ill Style, asu good and up—to-date dresser I
• · · will be inmle by allowing us to
. Right in Price,. m you-  
Best '“ Q““"*Y· $:::;;;·a·::a·::;¢:..:::.:::.item  
_   $3.00 ·$3.50 $5.00
I` B. HAY & CO., r
HARDWARE, CUTLERY ' `
Q AND BICYCLE5. HSE H lI[]|] IBS.
4   . I FISHING TACKLE.
g Buy the best bat==Louisville Slugger. 67 E. Main St.
v` —*-?·=-GIGHH S··&*
2 mzucious ICG GPGHITI
r i AND Soda Water. ..  
  The "O]]Iy" Shoe, “'¢¢ keep the best known makes in solid L
Q lv leather Tons and .Blu¢·ks
  _  ;§ j      U I $1.50, $2.00 $2.50 ‘ `
` A   `  jj: ‘ »— ·..»    l. shoes, uml sell the most rlcpenrlzzhle and
      $3· $3·50· $4 & $5 5h0¢S·
` 5 ‘ 5      'Al   None l»s·|tor sold lmywlnere for smne
 $gJ..._.]};s Ng;    prices. M;u·lu·d in plain figures.
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-.:;i<.‘:‘**i‘"‘ei¢1  ry-JI J   S = I
 ‘ ""···4 ,.g_—~;;¥~i ;¢      __W - »__   _
é A to_E. 5 to u. Cor. Main 6: Mill.
  All Leat-liersi, Colorsi, Toes. " I-` I’. S. Discount Lo students. :
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(Neur Ashluml.)
\\'here the Mute College huttullion will eneunip. }
Sjwrfrrf.
The Stute College hoys ure to he eongrutnlutecl thut thron;;h the
eilhrts of Mu'. .lones uml the niilliturv inenilvers of the fueultv thev will " 
now he perinitteml to eneunip for ten tluys or two weeks ut (`lyil`esi
 
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{  ‘ ••EXPRESSION IS POWER," `,
· 
Priutery Building, Entered at the Postotiice at Lexington Q
{ Lexington, Ky. as second-clius matter. Z
  Vox,. 8. APRIL 1899. No. 7.  
   
  Such is the Death the Soldier Dies. l  
 . . ‘f" .  
»  ° Such is the death the soldier d1es:——— {
B   He falls,-—the column speeds away ; _  
· V ` it I Upon the dabliled grass he lies, ·
His brave heart following, still, the fray. l
The smoke wraiths drift among the trees,
Q The battle storms along the hill;
The glint of distant arms he sees, · ·
. He hears his comrades shouting still.
Z _ A glimpse of far-borne flags, that fade
'. ° . . . . l
· And vanish in the rolling din: T
He knows the sweeping charge is made, _
_ The cheering lines are closing in.
*   l» Uumindful of his mortal wound, ·
  He faintly calls and seeks to rise;
  But weakness drags him to the ground: ’
  Such is the death the soldier dies. .
jm  -—R0b¢·rl Burns Wilsolz., in J1¢.u·¢·h rltlantir.
lzw  Q {aww Vmnm if D ( D    

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’ Y exft T
· 2 nfl ’. 
. ;-.  I90 THE KENTUCKIAN. ,  
. t_:·__ V  
A   "C0l|egcs and the Professions?  
Ei:.1 § ¥_  
t` .; ·_`    During the past eighteen months there has been much  
    discussion as to the real benitit to be derived from a modern  
    college education, Recently at a meeting of the American  
Q,   Bar Association judge Simeon E. Baldwin, judge of the su-  
  { preme court of Conueticut :111d professor of constitutional law  
  5 in Yale University, delivered a strong address 011 "The Read-  I
  i justmeut of the Collegiate to the Prosessional course." In  
_ gg g the address Judge Baldwin brings out many points that are of  
  é great interest to all students and educators.  
    Speaking of tl1e address the Courier Journal (editorially)  
i     says: I V rf
Q ·¥ i "Naturally he felt it necessary to show that a readjust-  
i _"`· r ment is necessary. He calls attention to the fact that since  
' I i the civil war there has been a prolongation of every course of  
  -   study. Orignally, i11 Harvard and Yale, the course was for  
§   three years only. This was extended to four. The Virginia  
T   `   University I1l£1(i€ a departure by granting honors to those who  
Y   I deserved them irrespective of the time they had spent at Char-  
{     lottesville_ The general requirement now is still for four years.  
E k   At the same time the preparatory schools have been obliged to  
° A { add an additional year to their course of study. The lllllllllllfll  
l `   age for entering college was formerly fourteen. Now it is  
  1 nominally fifteen, but in the older and larger colleges it is A  
  , actually eighteen or nineteen. Thus the average age ofentrance la *""
  ) into the college is that which was once the age of graduation.
    Then the professional schools have courses of three or four L_
    years‘ The result is that the college course extends to the if
  ,’ pupils` twenty-third year. Three years of professionaltraining '° ° °
L  · brings him to twenty-six years of age. Even then he goes out
T",   still a learner, £l1l(l has to get i`l‘Ol11 the world at large that
A ] roundingout of his acquirements that is necessary to his success  
`>"f' i in life. judge Baldwin insists that this is devoting too much x
  _ Q time to learning in colleges and professionalschool. "The new ca- i
  _ techisu1," he says, "of the American university comes very close  
  A to teaching that the chief end of life is to get an educati0n,"  
L . “, r     Yl>»`~ _} ,,,. ‘ ~ 7 .. _ _’ _ .7 ’ { N’f · »`·-·

 i -
—  
V   COLLEGES AND THE PROFESSIONS 191  
  when it would not be far wrong to say that it is to use an  
`I education. — i ·
  These severe requirements act injuriously in two waysi T  
  They keep a great many college graduates out of the profess~ z  
  ional schools; what is worse they keep so many prfessional l 
  students from entering upon or completing a collegiate course.  
  Less then 20 per cent. of our law students are college graduates A  
L  They can not wait so late in life to begin their chosen profess· i 
  ion. They must become breadwinners before they attain the _  
A age of twenty-live or tweuty—six years, and they either shorten i E
é their college course or omit it all together. On the other hand i
  college graduates, lacking the time or means for four years of   i
  professional study, enter the legal profession after a short  
  period of reading in a lawyers oflice.  
  judge Baldwin believes that public sentiment will soon L;
1.: demand an abridgement of the period for the preparatory school  
  or for the college course_ Ile thinks the best solution of the ‘  l
  problem would be to restore both to their old position. The  
  teaching of the senior year is such as was formerly in the post- T
  graduate course. lt might be restored to it, and the time of
  preparatory school abridged. By this means the student might .
  enter college at seventeen and leave it at twenty. A profess-
  ional course of three years would enable him to go to work at l
  twenty—three, which seems late enough in life to begin the l
  — work of self—support. `
  ]ud·ge Baldwin suggests without elaboration the idea that
up too long a residence within the walls of schools and colleges, i
surrounded by an atmosphere that is largely artificial, is not   ,
ig favorable to the development of those qualities that bring suc-   ·
J pi Q cess in most departments of human endeavor. It may do for i 2
the professional scholar who expects to spend his life in such
an atmosphere. llut "the proper study of mankind is man,"
. and nowhere more so than in the profession. \Vhen men go
i to work as lawyers, physicians and clergyman their business
is not principally with scholars, but with those of moderate
  educational acquirements or none at all. They have still to
  form the acquaintance of the great public to wl1on1 they must
E look for employment. The earlier they begin this study, other
 
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f =   x‘`   192 THE KENTUCKIAN. A
  —
  things being equal, the better for their success in life. The  
  study of books can not fully equip them for this work. The  
. }   longer it is deterred the more the professional 1nan has to un-  -
T   learn. Allowing for exceptions in the case of men of pre-emi·  
  nent gifts, the professional career begun early is the one most  
_ J;.   likely to be successful. Geniuses may take care of themselves;  
if .‘.i T our educational advantages should be adapted to the average il
  l standard. .  
;;‘_·   Whether this protest will he heeded by the great educa- ; 
  tional institutions may well be doubted. Their disposition to  
  Y teach all that is knowable will hardly be restrained. There is  
I     r no reason why it should be, but they 11eed not insist on teach- a _-
~     ing it to everybody. or as a prerequisite to a degree. But elec-  
;     tive courses are likely to come more and more into favor, and  
_     if the long courses are insisted on professional men will continue  
l i to get along without the degree of bachelor of arts,"  
  · ' . \Vhen such men as judge Baldwin, john Brisben \Valker,  
i A Z   and Edward Bok are serionly peering into our system of higher  
I F   education, we may know that all is not well and it is only a  
  if ? question of a comparatively short time ’til the curricula of our  
    colleges and universities will undergo a radical change, and in-  
T . » stead "cramming." we shall have more real practical training  
l l   —training that will actually prepare for duties of life. Then  
i'     it will not be said that a boy must spend four or five years after li?
._   leaving college i11 tearning to do something,  
  Y ——————  
  i "lf you strike a thorn or rose,
I    Keep agoin’, ig
    If it hails, or if it snows, j
  ‘ Keep agoin‘. i ` {
  i i ’Taint no use to sit and whine,
  Y \Vhen the lish ain’t on your line,
T   Bait your hook and keep on tryin'. .
,, , Keep agoin,."—Atlanta "Constitutiou." . ·
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  Value of Self-Education.  
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  DUNBAR’S VISIT RECALLED. r95  
l
  Dunbar’s Visit to Louisville Recalled.   .
  ~—· zi
  lr. L. wn,m,t»u.)  li
  In the fall of 1894, Paul Lawrence Dunbar came to Louis-  
I.? ville to give some readings from his poems. While his com-  
  ing had been heralded by his friends, yet it was not regarded  
ir  i by the people of Louisville as an event of special importance; l 
  for, at that time, while Mr. Dunbar had written some poems of if
  merit, and had published his booklet»—"Oak and Ivy," he wae  
  still "unknown to fame"  
  Preparation for Mr. Dunbar’s visit and entertainment had  
  been made by Prof. j. S. Cotter, whose guest he was during  
  his stay in the city. It would not be amiss here to say that  
  Prof. Cotter, also, is a poet of no mean ability and, in the last  
 ’ decade, has assiduously cultivated his muse, and has given to 1
 .` the public twoconnnendable booklets-—‘ ‘A Rhyming,' ’ publish-  
  ed in 1894, and "L1nks of Friendship," sent forth from the f
  press in the summer of 1898. Prof. Cotter has a place with V
 · Kentucky verse-makers which is destined y