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  42 THE KENTUCKY ALUMNUS =
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  documents as the originals of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitu- 5
  tion of the United States, the Emancipation Proclamation, etc., are kept. Miss
ij Fitzhugh has made herself valuable in the classifying and cataloguing of the
  volumes and also as being quick and ready with reference and information
  sought by members of the diplomatic bureaus and departments of state. , 
E Henry Bush has made a recent change in business, by giving up his work  
Q as electrician and establishing a delicatessen and poultry house on East Main  
  Street. We all wish him success in the new venture. There are two little ‘
E Bushes, one masculine, one feminine. i 
· Mary Atkins is doing useful work at the head of a community school ;_
’ at Brazil, Indiana. This is run in connection with the high school and she 5
g has afternoon and evening classes in domestic science, sewing and cooking  .
· for the benefit of those unable to attend the regular courses.
T; Asa McConathy has been a stayer-at—home, in that he has remained in  {
Q Lexington, but he has ventured on the sea of matrimony. He is interested r-·
Q in varied successful business enterprises, has a coal yard in Lexington, besides L
j being considerable of a farmer and one of the largest buyers of lambs in the  
.; State.  
Y} L. S. Barber has been taking special work in entomology at Cornell this ,
gi summer. His old friends and classmates were much interested in meeting lj
jZ his young son, Bascom Barber, who has been in Lexington for a few weeks. ·i·
I He looked into the matter of entrance requirements at the University and  ,
_ expects, after finishing his course at the University of Florida, to retum here j
for his Master’s degree. .
To see our class mates with sons ready for college makes us realize it has  
`Q been twenty years since we graduated.  ,-
  CLASS OF 1900. ~  
  BY L. K. FRANKEL, Cr.Ass Sncnnrnizy.  
‘ Fifteen years seems a long time when we look backward and yet the years  
, have sped by so swiftly, each bringing much pleasure and many disappointments -
to the members of the class of 1900. It matters not what our lots have been,
. no doubt, we have all at times looked back to our days in college and re-
i Hected with much satisfaction on the happy time when we were undergraduates
x and we wonder what has become of the “rest of them" and would like to `
‘ know. »_
, The secretary of the class of 1900 shall endeavor to locate its members {2
and have them tell us what has happened _s1nce graduation, thus bringing them L? -
into touch with each other again, that old ties may be renewed and strengthened. __
VVe hope and believe that every member of the class will gladly co—operate
~ with the secretary by promptly answering all correspondence pertaining to this ;
matter.  
cLAss on 1903.  _ 
, BY Mmzcuenxrn McLAU<;HL1N, C1.Ass Sncmzrnny.  1
The fourth tri-ennial reunion of the class of 1903 was held at State Uni- , 
versity this year during commencement week and was attended by four mem- ‘ 
bers of the class. In reply to the forty cards sent previously there were live e 
, letters received and, strange as the statement may seem, this was encouraging,  g
4 as there were only two replies in 1914 to the same number of invitations. g
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