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X A THE KENTUCKY ALUMNUS. 31  
light.- The other delegates were: Y. W. C. A.—Misses Linda Purnell, Mildred i
rtleyj Graham, Eliza Piggott, Marie Becker, Vivian DeLaine, Idelina Castro, Lelah l
attle;' Gault, Cecilia Cregor. Y. M. C. A.—T1lford Wilson, Richard Duncan, ]oe l
pbelly T0;-rence, H.  Robertson, ]. A. Hodges, ]. P. Ricketts, Ray Gilbert, Harry T
gvjnef _M§lward and erbert Schaber. ,
arris, "’;  
3;   TAU BETA PI SCHOLARSHIP.  
ben; A. W. Davies, a son of Hywel Davies, former business agent at the `  
.w0,, University of Kentucky, a junior in the College of Mechanical and Electrical j
i Engineering, was awarded the prize of $100 offered to the Tau Beta Pi “honor y
man" at the annual initiation banquet of the fraternity. The prize was five $20
gold pieces given by D. F. Crawford, superintendent of motive power of the `
Pennsylvania Lines West of Pittsburg. Q
A At the banquet Richard C. Stoll, a visitor, offered $100 for next year’s i
. prize and Mr. Crawford offered $100 for the prize year after next. ¤
N L. B. Allen, ,99, and S. A. Bullock, JQ7, were taken into the fraternity.
These men were not members because the Tau Beta Pi fraternity had not been `
A installed here at the time they graduated. ]
‘._ CLASS SECRETARY SECTION
3 CLASS OF 1909.
{ BY P. L. BLUMENTHAL, Secretary.
~ Dear Friends and Classmates: There are two important subjects to be
· § V called to your attention this time. The Association will no longer send The
V Alumnus to those alumni who have not paid their dues. Our class membership `
lg totals 65. Of these, twenty-three are paid up to june, 1916, and three have
signified their intention to pay soon. This brings our standing up to 38 per cent.
Hoxéveger, the_Associ%t1onAexpects molrfa oflyouxat leasa 7;, per gent and thés 1;
_ nee e to maintain ie umnus. ie c ass o 1909 e t a co ege recor o
L boosting everything of value to our Alma Mater. Are we going to lay down V
V _ after seven years of realization of what our University has done for us? The
Alumni Association has plans, effective plans, for aiding the University to take
t its proper place in the State and among similar institutions in the United States.
dl To accomplish these ideals, you must help-every alumnus must help. Our motto
u€l$l;l§ 1s: OEverybody boost—then watch us grow."
SC *0 ? n October 14th the University will celebrate the Fiftieth Anniversary of its
‘_ establishment. There will be big doings on that day-Vanderbilt and Kentucky
udgeS§ ~ wil; bg pitted against each other for the championship of thef South. On lllg ’
.wyers, mg t e ore, there will be a big smoker for the men, a party or the girls, an .
;s and; at high noon on Saturday an old fashioned Kentucky burgoo dinner will be ,
ny the; Served. Besides, the local members of the class are going to make you have t
itativc; the time of your life. You can’t afford to miss it. Remember, you will be g
  sorry if you do. i
. PERSONALS. . _
_   "Charley" ]ohns, with 11is wife and baby daughter, visited his family here for
mioml Several weeks. Charley has almost a dozen blonde hairs on his upper lip. ,
i Bluft A kW. O. Stackhouse, who has been teaching in the high school at Helena,
*· r ansas, is also home for the summer vacation. 1
Theyi _"L. L. D." Wallace is doing post-graduate work at the University of ‘
erfoss.; Chicago, and expects to receive his Ph.D. in English shortly.
A. all — Dr. W. Dan Reddish is now City Physician in Lexington and vows that "the ~
E ~ greatest of all virtues is charity." l  
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