xt7j0z70wf0c https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7j0z70wf0c/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. 8, 1899 text The Kentuckian : a monthly magazine, vol. 8, no. 8, 1899 1899 2012 true xt7j0z70wf0c section xt7j0z70wf0c I Unhrcrsitv #I*`II`IV€s II II
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I I LEXINGTON I EDITED BY II YEIIIII I .
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l Jno. A. Keller, r,
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I The place to get your flowers for commencement.  
l Everything home grown. Satisfaction guaranteed. ;
Full line of seeds, bulbs and bedding plants in season. i
59 East Main, jlhnne 354. ‘ I ,
  LUNIBER.  _
5 1 ;All Kinds;  
    • • • • •
PLANING l'IILL WORK. I  
I See us for estimates on anything you need.  
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l Lexington Lumber and Ml g. C0.
l 327 East I\/Iain Street. I I
 V Long Distance `PI‘10l1€ 156. 2
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I GENTURY PEN @0.. \*Jhitew;1*.er. WIS.
PHO'I`OGRAPHS
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 at State Gollege  
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  Of Kentucky
  NAD Dil//gé.  
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Qui Offers to the public the following (Tourses, viz:  
  Agricultural, Mechanical, Engineering, Civil Engineering, Classical,  
‘- -r Normal School and three Scientific Courses, eazh of which covers four  
  . years in the College proper and leads to a degree.  
‘ * Its faculty contains twenty-nine professors. Its gronds, buildings  
  Bild €qlllplll€Il'(S l'€pl'€S€lllZ $450,000 lll V3.lll€. I’[S ltli)Ol'3lZOI'l€S, Chemical  
  Physical, Biologcal, Botanical, Geological, Physiological, Mechanical,  
  and Electrical are the largest and best in Kentucky.  
Each Legislative District is entitled by law a free tuition, room  
Q,. p rent, fuel and lights for four properly prepared students in the college  
  pI`OpCI°, Zllltl to {Ill Eqllfll `I]l.lllll)€I“ ll] tll€ NOTl1lL1l D€p3I'tIl1€llt, Alllllllll of  
i Otll€I' colleges lll K€lllllCl{}' £1l`€ €Ilt€l'€(l lll pOSlQ—gl`11(lll€1t€ COllI'S€S. For  
i catalouge and other information apply to jluucs K. PATT1€RSoN, Ph.  
` l D_, L. L. D., President ofthe College., Lexington. Ky. .  
  MISS lVllLLlKAN’S  
  Schco  ai Phono ra h  
. é   .  
5 Q Northern Bank Building:  1
, and her l)epartn1ent of Phonography in connection with the State Col-  
`V J lege of Kentucky. Most thorough, reliable and highly-recom-  
‘ mended school of Shorthand in Lexington.  
‘ Taught by a practical court reporter.  
i x Devoted exclusively to the training of in
· EXp€l‘iZ St€l10g'l‘2lpl‘l€l’S. H
_   p&_Spccial rates to nu1trir·ulatt·soi tht·Stat4; (.`olh·gi·,  I
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A B. B. JONES, President ° E. G. SPINK, `\'iee·P1·eside11t, `{
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lltlttttk     taxing an usmsss  
BllSlll3"‘S Qelltlw · it
5 s `1 iJlIl2§ . G   (5  
tmcom=oRA·re0.> $3     0 €03°  :
i I   V   tI11<·orpo1·;1te·.l,;  
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  $?;Q§.Zj§-;;;E?~€;j§’ l€:—t:1bli~l11·¤l IRM. l|\t’Hl`]lUl'ltll'll un·lt·1· Aet ofthe ,§Q;;
  -'··   L¤·gislz1t111·e, July lriéui,  
—  *”’°‘s~l*;‘·i;t»?2'*2.·».;»si’i  E 1 .. _. ... - 1
, ?#9¤‘ra; 1;  ..7?2’»m.;:1~°f=:¤l‘T v ?
1        Hu’1‘n@R1zED G7-\I?!'I`HL $7;,¤o¤. ‘
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  Y  _4$5¤;·.~:¢"-7*  `;»‘@~¤¥l..·*<*$·*q12¤#»-»V4“é==·;;;»l?§r =
Ft @ Q 1 r~lzs1t§hers, etc. This is wood as far ` i
P I A $1 1 fw 4
Aivi   as it goes, but, it does lltjll go for enougli. `€_'
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  The Lex111gto11 Busnness College ,
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  is El Two ()li_[l·]L"l` sehool, *1*111a l*ll<5’l`, heing the thorough prep;u·z1tio11  
  of its pupils fo1·l>nsiness. *1*1112 SICCONI), being the securing of good po- l `
  sitions for those who pntronize it. It has for over IO years heen tl1e  
 ` lending Business School of the South. lt is :1t tl1e present time the only  
  School in Kentuelqy ()1lC1`[lllllQ(ll1 ,l€1ll]ll<)}'lllt‘lll. liurezui for the purpose   ij
  of securing positions for its gmdurttes.   1
  Send for our ".l{A'l`-A—I,()G" und speeiul Cll'ClllIll`S C}~Z])lLl.l`lllll§ how I
  you cnn he helped to :1 good l)OSl'l`It)N hy 1lllCll(llll§ this School.  
  ADDRESS ’l`t) DAY iii
f  B. B. JONES, Pres·ide11t.  
.21  :5
i  106-116 Iizrst Y\~I:1i11 Street,  
 V £té<§“‘W€ Make Written Secured Contracts ],QXlllQl()11, Ky. lf;
 i to furnish our QI'Lltlll21lt‘F s:1lu1·i1~~1   » _ —; --Le-·. 7 v         . -, · --— (

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  Headley band, y tl
    College Bays Headquarters. C
  Fruit Baskets a Specialty.  
  AGENT Fora LOWNEY’S AND ALLEGRITTIS y
 , Gelebrated Candies,  
  ,_ Cigars and Srnoking ’I`0bacc0.  
r sdi _   `
  ovster Parlor.   y
  U     46     Ky. l  
.  _  VV. S. Bradley,  
  i —-—-—Dcaler in-—————  
lt ·  
 t Searle are same maccrres,  
Q Fish, Oysters and Creme, Fine Cigars and Tobacco,  
_ Country Produce Bought and Sold.  
ri l’n>1trpr Attention to Orders.  
i l` Cor. Winslow and Limestone Sts, ll.

  
1 _ _ , 1 e E 1
. The Benn Pnman bystem        
l of Phnnography CAMERAS. ‘  
'   —e~.   _ l  
I5 the only one which has stood I      E.
- the test ul i1>1’t}'-l`OllI‘ years of _    
  3· ·     57* if "V? 25. F Zi?
h;u·4lwearintl1ul1:uir1·*1 
V ‘ This system is pnl>lisl>e¤.l by   •   Skill {unl 1;:11-{ect _;
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—'  CNKNMTI, (,_ i ments than any other camera. -
. t'nLnlny;11r· mznihyrl free __; `
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  D1. S. A. D<>na1ds<>n, · BUCKNEK  
 i  4.9 S. Lnnestone. 1
" DF WT ` ‘
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  { bhoe Reparrmg, ‘
  Oflice and lh-sirl<—in·<— Til N. ,l4llll("5i0ll(‘, T `
*1... Neatly and Cheaply done, p . » _
  ,· . , `
 1 Lexln gt()H’ l{} ‘ Large per cent. off t0 students. Y
  Cleaning, Pressing & Repairing, H _ [ _ [-[ aylam  
. ev
  Suits made to order from sample. DENTISjT_ A  
A ` Cheap pants a leader.   `{·
_‘          l`/131]] StIi€Ct., `  
A ‘ 101 E. Main. Opp. Phmnix Hotel,  
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 » 1 l l MEN S FENE SHOES.
  “ — Our Reputation {
  1 You can depend 1s111;11I1·~l>y !<(I‘lllll§` good shoes at .
1} ; • ? llUlll*>l \2ll|lL‘>.
  011 us for all that IS V your Reputation] 5;
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  . · . Local. _ _._   . — . . — y _
  p .  . One Boy: V V V l `   V. VV __ V
p Qi _ That K. U. bachelor club seem to be right good looking
' _ fboys from the picture at Van Hoose’ window. _ V ` r _
  _ ` Barr: Yes my sonnv, but if you’l1 see,them uglyd—s. you’ ll » ` . .
. _ say the girls were right in shaking them. Van. Hoose is — .
. V _ { certainly the man for ugly fellows. ‘ · _ .
¥ V » . . » "Bob"‘V'l`aylor, May 23. V 5
\ _V - _ _ Bob Taylor the apostle of "Love, Laughter and Song’“’ V V
. will lecture on those themes for us on May 2_;d. 7Tis the ‘V »
V treat of a life-time to hear this man; he is the sublimest orator,  .
Hnest story-teller and the sweetest si11ger on the AlU€Yl.C§1l1-`
E _. . platform. People don’t like to hear "B0b" Taylor,——they love 4
V - to hear hi1n—"his lectures are delicious." ‘ ·
- t y ‘     V`"—"“*# ''''` 'P*V"V »·‘__ 
* lt g P t t y- .
        Lexan len and Blue Grass Baker  
  · .. _ \Vl1olesale and Retail . _
  ·. o   at   tzontectnoncrv. liakcrv. l o
. — And Creamery. _  l
V Zl Broadway and 36.38 West Short Street. Phone 6l3.- V
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4% _ é-·  p .
$1 5 0 O   ttt 
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V ls our price this week for your uu- ”=    
restricted choice of over two hundred j  7, l  
fine ’    
. . ALL=WOOL WORSTEDS gy    
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In the preytu ing neat e tcts. Many        
of these suits we have heretofore of- {     _
fered for $:6.50 and $18. All made    
well, or they would not he offered for    i
stile by us. Here quaht) counts.    J
_ . Men of every sort of build can he     V  
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Distributors of l-lig`~closs Clothing at     V  iz:   
» Low Prices if  ;·`  
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  °4»Y_   ISSUED MGNTHLY.  
   V "EXPRESSION IS POVVER,"  
fl ,Q ` j Printery Building, Entered at the Postoihce at Lexington A { C C
4 ` A ` Lexington, Ky. ns sccoiid-class nmtter. .
_; p ? VoL. 8. MAY 1899. N0. 8. — r
   .   g
Y i. . , Lesson of Senator Nlorrill’s Life. _  
  t [ · BY Rav. Jonx SII.\CKLI-ZFORD, Vice Pres. K. S. C. C
 ; Wl1en a man born to the estate and dignity of a gentle-
i  man is lifted up into the fierce glare of great place, and there A
. V reveals not only ability, but the manner and speech and spirit - p
 - of his birth and courtly breeding—is dignified and truthful and T
t _, S magnanimous, the hearts of his fellow—men pay him the in- —
,  Z: stinctive tribute of admiration and homage. Such men were
i Washington and Lee. Birth, wealth and high associations
S  V fashioned them from boyhood to age as gentlemen, They ,
l were aristocrats, in no mean and vulgar sense, however.
E W'hen man bears the much rarer mark of genius-is
C ,   stamped and sealed by his Creator in the silent processes of pre- ·‘
g ; natal life with the prophetic and creative faculty and then for-
t { tune opens up the way to distinction or the genius creates it,
, . his fellow-men behold him with something of awe and wonder, .
, ,` and accept him as prophet or leader, or cry out against him as
· ‘ mad and having a devil. Such men were Shakespeare and
-_   Milton and Napoleon, and I think I may safely add Clay and
 l Webster-—born to soar above the Aonian mount, or to lead men _
? ~ · with joy to death, or charm them with eloquent speech to tears 4 I
` Y or stormy passion or heroic devotion. 4
` _ But where a man having neither high birth nor dazzling  
? ’ genius is called to play a conspicious part in the great drama , ·-
  of history and shows himself wise and noble, men often draw '
, I { near to him with affection and feel that they share his glory W _
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    me THE KENTUCRIAN.
V  _ ,  and enter into a fellowship with him in his great estate—that,
  }   though very highly exalted, he is still a friend and brother. _
  i   Such a man was Abraham Lincoln. Thos. Lincoln was a car- ~
    penter. Nancy Hanks was the daughter of a carpenter.
    What a name! Nancy Hanks! Compare it with Helen or I
    Lncretia or Portia, or Martha Dandridge. Could a woman ‘  .
    have a less pretentious, less high sounding name than Nancy s
    ` Hanks? There is no note of the English peerage in it.  
    Yet, dear woman of the lowly log cabin, thy name shall live _,
ill   forever. Thou, too, humble Kentucky mother, didst bring I
 __.."`   into the world a mighty man; thou didst give birth, too, to A
— · _ , ·  ' "I ove tot in o ra iam inco u, itt e e, in a en- ii
    tucky cabin, lying in his pine cradle wrapped in his home-spun
    baby garments, and Nancy Hanks singing her lullaby to him  
is   or lifting him to her bosom and nourishing him with her own if
"   `   life for God and the American people a11d the poor slave and  
{ `   all the other poor of the earth and the assassin’s bullet and  
  T •·—{; immortal fame——and let us trust for the eternal service of the  
{ T ·g* Carpenter and reputed sonzof the carpenter who fills the throne  
    of the universe and is invested with authority both in heaven  
‘ {   andnpon earth .Parting from my theme a little, I desire to call  
_ V   your attention to the remarkable fact that the two great leaders  
P ._   in the most stnpendious conflict of history were born in Ken-  
    tucky. Jefferson Davis, the trusted statesman and intrepid  
S     leader and courtly gentleman, was born on the grd day of june  
, {   1808, in Christian county, Ky. Abraham Lincoln, on the fol-  
      lowing 12th of February, 1803, was born in Hardin County,  .
‘ ii   Ky. All hail! old Kentucky. In these births was prefigured  
, i   the division which marked Kentucky in the great war. South  
l   Carolina was a unit. Massachusetts was a unit. Kentucky  
»   was divided, yet Kentucky furnished a President and leader  
.`   ior South Carolina, aud, strange to tell, a President and leader  
'   or Massachusetts as well.  
l   justin Smith Morrill, whose birth we celebrate to-day,  if
‘ *   was not of aristocratic lineage, and certainly he was not a man  
‘ -   of genius. His parents were obscure and humble people. He  
_   belongs to the class of Lincoln. He was lowly born. At the  
¤ ~    
   
   

 · A'-.-i-____A _______ , ,,..— -1... .t- .:———-  
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SENATOR MORRILI/S LIFE. 2i7 iii;
{1 ,
» age of fifteen he was a clerk in a country store. At twenty-one ‘  
__ he was apartner in the store, and continued in the business until i  
· he was fifty-fiftee, at which time he entered upon his Congress- ,  
- ional career. He served forty—four years in the two houses of  
_. Conress, twelve years in the House of Representatives, and  
`  . thirty-two in the Senate.   A
"He framed the protective tariff bill of 1861 and the — 1  
A great war tariff bill of 1864, which bears his name, A simi—  
A lar measure now, Senator Allison says, would produce a rev-  
A enue of two thousand million dollars.   i
' "He introduced a bill in the Thirty—sixth Congress for the  
t establishment of agricultural and mechanical colleges, en- A i
i dowed by land grants in the several states. The bill passed A
both houses, but perished under the veto of President Buch- _
‘-  anan. It did not cease to live, however, in the heart and
‘ mind of Representative Morrill. In 1862 he introduced it i
_; again, and carried it through both houses of Congress the sec- ..Q .
  ond time, and it became a law with the sanction and approval  
F of Abraham Lincoln.  
  '1`here are now fifty colleges for white pupils and fifteen . A
fg for colored pupils established by this act of Congress and the _
  concurrent acts of the different state legislatures. .`
  "Senator Morrill was the author, too, of the supplement- .
  ary bill of 1866, providing for the additional endowment of
  the Agricultural and Mechanical colleges. ·
  "'We commemorate to-day no mean and ignoble spirit. I
  ‘The hot furnace flame of life searched his heart and tried his
Z  frame’ and stamped him with honor, not with shame. All   r A
  Senator Morrill‘s colleagues bear testimony not only to his .
  ability and patriotism as a public n1an,but to the probity, tem- .
  perance and purity of his private life as well. In this conuec- §
  tion I beg leave to call attention to a matter of supreme im-  
  portance in the education of youth suggested by the worthy  
  life of Senator Morrill. ·l\·fere technical and scholastic instruc-  
  tion is not enough in any of our institutions of learning. All  
  of our schools, from the least to the greatest, should strenu- QS
  ously endeavor to develop in the pupil a sound judgment, if
 . strict justice, temperance, economy, aspiration for the improve  
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 Q ’_: 2IS THE KENTUCKIAN.
  ment of his condition, that fortitude wl1icl1 enables him to
gl   bear the misfortunes of life calmly and patiently, and that in- .
  spiring hope and confidence which will urge him to rebound i
  again to renewed effort after every defeat or failure in life.
  The moral nature of man is his crown and glory, and it must "
  receive assiduous attention and culture, or the educated races  _
  of the earth will become races of pirates or devils., Is it not _-
  time here in Kentucky to make a distinct advance in civi1iza·
  tion, both in our schools and in society at large? Can we not if
  ~ agree that no man can be disgraced by the abuse and villifica-  
 _.j` tion of a venomous tongue? That no man can be disgraced _
 1   save by his own disgraceful act? Conscious of his own truth i
  ’ and justice, let the upright man ever feel assured of the sym- ._, 
 7 p pathy and moral support of all good men when he dares to  
  . turn a deaf ear to vulgar detraction. Let the lesson of the  
  _ higher courage and the loftier self-respect be the lesson of all jg
* ` our class-rooms in all our schools. A courageous man does  
; A · not need to prove his courage; it proves itself on every the-  
  l atre, both by what it does and what it forbears. A high char-  
N acter asks no affidavits as to its existence——it certifies itself A 
” and issues its ow11 credentials and carries its passports over all  
‘ l i seas and to all lands. But remember, young men, if you  
_ it { would pauoplv yourself from detraction, you must not tra-  
; _ Q duce. Be no brawlers. I indulge the hope that in the com-  
  l ing years there shall go forth from these halls a growing com-  
g     pany of youth to play a worthy part in the strange, eventful  
Q · V history of human life—teachers of youth, preachers of the Q 
A i ;_ word, lawyers and doctors, engineers to tunnel the mountains  .
* G I and bridge rivers, machinists to master and apply the forces of `  
, E 5, nature, chemists to reso