xt7q833mwx83 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7q833mwx83/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19161013  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, October 13, 1916 text The Kentucky Kernel, October 13, 1916 1916 2012 true xt7q833mwx83 section xt7q833mwx83 THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
University of Kentucky
LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, OCT. 13, 1916.

VOL IX

DEAN ANDERSON.

FIFTY YEARS OF LIFE OF

No. 4

DR. PATTERSON GIVES

BE

TO BATTLE TOMORROW

President

Old Students To the Number of 10,000 Expected To Re-

turn To Enjoy the Entertainment Which Has
Been Provided For Them.
TUG-OF-WA-

R,

The Jubilee Committee, of which
Dean F. Paul Anderson is chairman,
has been busy since early in the summer, making plans for the entertainment of the great throng which will be
here tonight and tomorrow. The tug- between the Freshman and
Sophomore classes, the alumni smoker
and the alumnae dinner tonight, the
"K" dance at the armory, the parade
of the classes and the faculty tomor
row morning, the speeches and the
burgoo, and to cap the climax, the
dedication of Stoll Field and the
football game in the
afternoon, are on the Jubilee program,
and if the guests and students are not
too weary, in the cool of the evening
some more dancing will be indulged in
parade will be given,
and a night-shir- t
altho all the plans for this delicious
event have not yet been completed.
of-w-

The Lexington Alumni Club has
made arrangements to care for the
visitors to the University for the celebration, and they will be taken care
of in a style befitting the traditions of
the University and of Kentucky hospi
tality. Registration will begin at the
Phoenix Hotel, where the Alumni
Club will have a special desk, this
morning at 10 o'clock. Badges, pro
grams and tickets to the alumni and
alumnae celebrations of the evening
will be distributed at this desk.
between the two
The
lower classes of the University will
bo held at Clifton Heights pond at 2
o'clock this afternoon, and a real battle royal is certain to be pulled off.
The Fresh outnumber the Sophs
slightly, but the latter insist that experience and the prestige of last
year's victory will more than make up
the deficiency. Many of the old students have never seen a tug, and to
them, as to nearly everybody else, the
affair will be more enjoyable than any
circus. Captain Fairfax, commandant
of the battalion, will fire the pistol
that will consign the hopes of one of
the valiant classes to a watery grave.
Alumni, former students, faculty
and friends of the University will attend the alumni smoker at the Phoenix Hotel this evening, probably as

Dis-

Greatest Gridiron Struggle
In the History of
Kentucky

PRAISES THE JUBILEE COLLEGE

SMOKER AND BANQUET TODAY

Fifty years of the life of the Unl'
versity of Kentucky, fifty years of
service and exalted sacrifice, fifty
years of struggle and of triumph will
be celebrated tomorrow with a Golden
Jubilee that will far surpass any like
event ever held' in the South. Grad
uates and old students to the number
of 10,000 will return to honor their
Alma Mater and for them the gates
to all the joys of the University will
"be thrown wide.

Emeritus

cusses Institution's 50
Years' Existence

many as 400. Large delegations will
attend
from Cincinnati, Louisville,
Pittsburg, Chicago and New York.
Railroad presidents, men of letters,
college presidents, engineers, jurists,
former football stars, army officers
good fellows will make
and
up the distinguished throng that will
attend this great
dinner.
The dance at the Armory this evening will be given for the benefit of
The Kentuckian, the University annual, and an admission of fifty cents
will be charged. The "K" dane is always one of the best of the student
dances, and coming at this time a very
brilliant crowd is expected. The old
boys will have a chance to shake a
s
foot with the fairest bunch of
in the world, and no doubt all of them
will take the opportunity.
d

The scenic feature of the Jubilee
will be the parade Saturday morning
at 9 o'clock. The committee has offered a prize of $100 for the class
making the best showing, and each
one of the four has made plans that
appear unbea'table. From the Freshmen in their "caps and gowns" to the
undignified Seniors in their wild variety of garb, the parade will be a regular scream.
The Sophomores will stage a "Kentucky" circus parade in an effort to
win the prize. The wildcat for whom
ours was named Is to be featured.
Kentucky colonels will be in evidence.
Kentucky suffragettes will advertise
Kentucky's superiority
the cause.
over Vanderbilt will be shown by the
contrast between the largest man and
the smallest man in the Sophomore
class.
The Juniors will represent the important events in the life of the University during the past fifty years.
The class has been divided into five
sections, each of which will have
charge of the happenings for a
period.
The Seniors will represent themselves as diplomas, each member being entirely encased in a sheet of cardboard eight feet high. Those in
charge promise novel effects.
ten-ye-

The Freshmen will typify childhood
in the parade. The girls will dress as
and wear their hair in
braids down their backs. The boys
will dress in short trousers and carry
school books.
On returning to Patterson Hall
after the march thru the city, the students will be joined by the faculty and
alumni, and all will march to the
chapel in the Administration Building,
where the speeches of the day will be
(Continued on Page 3)

President Emeritus James K. Patterson in an interview with a Kernel
representative concerning the Golden
Jubilee which will be held tomorrow
to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of
the founding of the University of
Kentucky, emphasized the importance
CHA'MAN OF JUBILEE COMMITTEE of such a celebration both to the alumni and to the student body. He told
of the great work the University has
FIFTY YEARS.
done in the fifty years of its existence
and said that he anticipated even
greater things in the next half century.
Touch of sunshine, touch of shadow,
Dr. Patterson, who was president of
Rainbow smiles and flitting tears;
the University from the time it was
Life and love and youth exultant,
founded until 1910, also gave a brief
Age but mellowed with the years;
sketch of the institution from its bePortraits in the frame of Time,
ginning until the present time. It is
Gold and gray October's haze
chiefly due to Dr. Patterson, who
Come; we'll paint the picture over;
worked long and hard during the early
Memories of other daysl
days of the University when there was
much opposition to it, that the instituWine and waywardness 'and wassail,
tion is in existence today, ranking
"Heaven," music and the dance;
with the best State Universities in the
Patt Hall and the lawn where dimly
country. Dr. Pattersons' interview in
Shone the warm lights of romance.
substance follows:
Wondrous ladies, sweet, appealing;
The Golden Jubilee will excite an
Satin, lavender and lace;
interest among the alumni and the
Whispers lost in sighs that told
student body as nothing else would be
Truest love in other days.
likely to do. Every alumnus is interested in the prosperity of the instituSerenades beneath the window,
tion from which he takes his degree
White parades along the street,
and whatever reputation it may ac
And the screechers In the bleachers
quire thruout the country brings to
When the Wildcat killed his meat.
him a reflected importance.
Cannon law and politics,
livery graduate of Yale feels any acSeniors with the mustache craze,
cession of dignity to his Alma Mater
Mathematics, chem and physics
in a certain sense an accession of dig
s
of other days.
nity to himself and altho Johns Hop
kins has been in existence during a
Years of trial; years of triumph;
comparatively
short period, every
Years of hope and high endeavor.
alumnus of that great institution feels
Paint the picture what a canvas
that its growing reputation at home
Life and love and youth foreverl
and abroad brings added lustre to him
Fifty years Kentucky calls you;
self. So the students of the UniverYours to censure or to praise.
sity of Kentucky have a conviction
Welcome, welcome home again,
that the work which it has done is
To the joys of other days.
only an earnest and a pledge of the
W. S.
(Continued on Page 3)
Bitter-sweet-

UNIVERSITY OF KENTUCKY 1915 TEAM.

SPIRIT HIGH

Kernel Scribe Analyzes Situation and

PROBABLE UNOFFICIAL
LINE-UP-

.

Kentucky.
Kinne

Vanderbilt.
Adams
Left End.

Heick

Cody

Left Tackle.
Brittain

Williams
Left Guard.
Dempsey or Clements . . Hamilton
Center.
Simpson
Carmen
Right Guard.
Hickerson or Murphree. .Lipscomb
Right Tackle.
Crutcher
Cohen
Right End.
Rodes
Curry
Quarterback.
Grabfelder
Zerfoss
Left Half.
Haydon
Beasley or Floyd
Right Half.
Gumbert or Mcllvain .... Norman
Fullback.
OFFICIALS: Referee, Walker, Virginia; umpire, Hollens, Illinois;
linesman, Lyons, Louisville.
(By Thomas Underwood.)
Vanderbilt, the great, and Kentucky,
the sensational, will meet on Stoll
Field tomorrow afternoon. The Wildcats have high hopes to fulfill, the
Commodores have a glorious reputation to maintain.
Tomorrow's sun
will smile upon the greatest gridiron
battle in the football annals of Kentucky.

That baa boy, College Spirit, has
sprinkled the sneeze powder of excitement in the class rooms of the
University of Kentucky. Itching, fidgety Is boss of the situation.
The
green grass on the campus is nervously wiggling and the factory whistle that calls the "collegians" to
class has changed its customary
groan into an excited shriek that reminds one of the yell of a boy in the
gosling era of his career.
True Spirit Abounds.
Cheer Leader Whayno Haffler, with
a voice already as strong as tho sweet
odours that rise from a cabbage patch,
and as vigorous as Nuxated Iron
makes a nervous wreck, is chewing
orico root to got his yelling faculties
s
in
shape. Modest BUI Shin- nick has been practicing up in his
sweet soprano on "Do, Re, Ml, Sol, Do"
until he sings like a Siren, and Is now
ready to lead "Hall, Kentucky."
Charley Planck has been working to
first-clas-

* I

THE KENTUCKY KERNEL.

Page 2
get both lmnda to work

In unison
when ho bcglnn the milking motion of
Tnylor, with tho billiard-bal- l
appearance upstairs, is also ready.
Charles Straus, who has chorgc of the
sale of tickets, was so happy over the
first day's Balo of scats that ho felt
like licking the sticking out of all the
postago stamps in tho Phoenix cigar
stand. Addison Foster says ho will
mustache
bet hiB molasses-colorethat Kentucky wins. Nowlnnd Waters
is willing to wager his cano. All is
Byron Bacon Black, of
turbulence.
Bedford, says all of him is bo excited
that ho can't think about himself or
anything but the game.
Dr. Tlgert's Attitude.
Dr. Tigcrt sits in his office in a
chair and grins. It is not the
same grin that lit up his face before
the Purdue game. It is not the grin
that ho grinned before the Sewance
fracas. It Is not tho grin of the night
before Tennessee came and went. It
is not a doubtful, or a confident, or a
grin
certain grin. It is the sphinx-likof Bomebody who knows something
he's not going to tell.
On the eve of the game tonight,
more than one Kentuckian will fight
the game before the whistle blows. It
is a safe prediction that by morning
the beds of the 'Varsity will look more
like mules, who have rather noted
hind-leproclivities, slept in them
than Wildcats. There is a rumor that
some reckless youths have been wagering wealth. They too will toss as
they dream of fortunes made or the
despair of being broke.
"Su-Ky.- "

split-botto-

e

g

Seating Arrangements.
Stoll Field, like the students, will be
all dressed up in a new suit.
The
bleachers have been added to and the
management has rented some chairs
like those used at home funerals, and;
will set them in the gridiron and usej
them for boxes. The students will all!
sit in the cheering section of the'
bleachers, which will be reserved for!
Re- those having college tickets.
seats have been marked off toj
served
the right of the press stand and all
seats on the
the centrally-locatenorth side are reserved at 50 cents per.
The sale of seats up to the present
has broken all records and it looks like
the overflow crowd will reach to Brit-- '
tingham's. The game is scheduled to
begin at 2:30 o'clock, Ingersoll time,
and
and like the
twin sisters, Time and Tide,
it will not wait for anything or anybody.
d

well-know-

With
of the
South.
iams,

The Vandy Bunch.
Vanderbilt will be seen some
cleverest football men in the
In the line will be seen Willa

Cody,

and Lipscomb, 205. These
three are said to be the best line men
in the South in their positions. Our
own Tom Zerfoss will be seen at halfback and doing the punting. Zerfoss
is making good this year and is recognized as a punter without a peer in
those parts. "Rabbit" Curry, touted
as the greatest quarterback in America, will be piloting the team. It will
be a rare opportunity to see him
working against "Doc" Rodes. Many
claim that "Doc" is just as good or
better than Curry. Certainly two of
tho greatest quarterbacks in football
history will be Been working against
each other.
Vandy will bring a largo number of
subs. Floyd, Ray and Richardson,
known as her "battering backs," much
heavier than the men expected to start
in her backflold, will probably bo put
in before tho first half is over. Mo
Gugln, Vandorbllt's wonderful coach,
will direct the fight of tho team.
The Immortals of 1916.
according to
Kentucky will line-u-

custom. The same men used in tho
Centre and Butler games will bo called
upon. Dr. Tigcrt hns not nnnounccd
Haydon,
even a prospective llnc-up- .
Grnhfeldcr and Itodcs will start in
unless tho situation
tho brickfield,
changes. Mcllvnln nnd Gumbcrt will
both bo used nt fullback, in all probCaptain
On
ability.
tho ends,
Crutcher nnd Klnno will start.
Hoick nnd Murphrec will nil bo
Brit-taigiven chances in tho tackles.
and Simpson will start out In the
guards with Dempsey or "Fats"
Clements at center.
The team is apparently in splendid
physical condition. Whether the players are in good mental shape is another question. The cxcitlment of the
Jubilee,
and other celebrations may dlBturb their minds. At
present no men on the team are injured and everything looks lovely for
the start.
Shaking the Skeleton.
Vanderbilt has played tho University of Kentucky five times. In these
games the University
has never
scored on the Tennessee club. The
smallest score by which Vandy has
beaten Kentucky so far Is 18 to 0.
The average weight of the Vanderbilt
team is 180 pounds, which makes them
about 14 pounds heavier than Kentucky. The team is considered unusually strong because of its heavy line.
Its light backfleld, which will probis
ably appear In the original line-up- ,
hardly as fast as Kentucky's. Neither
team will be at a loss to draw upon
its substitute.
Sure, Kentucky Will Win.
The sporting scribe of The Kernel
does not claim any honors as a ouija
board, altho from a side view he may
somewhat resemble one in figure.
However, if forced to do the Sibylline
stunt, here goes The Kernel's prophecy:
It will be a great game.
The best team will win.
Kentucky has not the
line of Vanderbilt. She has not
two sets of backfleld men. She has
not a Curry, Zerfoss or McGugin, but
in the cool, cool of the evening, when
Haydon, the wily; "Doc," the wonderful; Grabby, the great; "Mac," the
marvelous; Gumbert, the
Crutcher, the steady; Kinne, the
sensational; "Hick" and Heick and
Murphree and those two bears, Brit-taiand Simpson; Dempsey and
"Fats" kick their cleats in the sod of
Stoll Field, she'll be around here.
She cannot make Vandy bite the dust
of Stoll Field, for there's no dust out
there, but she can make Nebuchad-nezzar- s
out of the Commodores and
make them chew the grass of defeat.
Kentucky will "Unbuild (what) Vanderbilt" and the old school will forget she bears the cares and wrinkles
of fifty years and feel like a
Hick-crso-

n

This is the first work of tho apple
lenm which Professor Mntthows tnkes
each yenr to tho National Apple Show
to compete with the teams from

WE ARE NOW SHOWING A COMPLETE LINE
OF FRATERNITY JEWELRY INCLUDING

sever-n- l

Tho
other agricultural colleges.
contest will bo hold nt
Columbus, Ohio, this year, probably
during December. Usually seven to
eight tennis compete but it is thought
that there will bo more this year. Tho
University team will bo trained by
Professor Matthews and Professor

Badges
Novelties
Wall Skins tie casket jewelry co.

apple-Judgin- g

Successor

Mr.

J.

Collis Ringo in Charge

127

Watt

lo A. K. LYON

Main, Laxingten, Ky.

Olnoy.
One of the boys, speaking of tho
Henderson trip, stated that after tho
first day's work they had learned
more about that phase of tho work
than they would have learned in years
In the laboratory.

"Lexington's Bigger and Better Men s Store'
OFFERS TO THE COLLEGE YOUNG MEN

tug-of-w-

The World's Best Clothing
FOOTBALL RALLY IN

Hart, Schaffner & Marx

CHAPEL THIS MORNING

Last

Before
Vandy Game Has
Many Features
Get-to-Geth-

er

You pay no more for these good
clothes than you would just

ordinary clothes.

BARKER WILL PRESIDE
Rousing speeches, an abundance of
pep and cheers galore will be
a few of the many features of the biggest football rally of the year, which
will be held in chapel this morning at
10 o'clock. After chapel the holidays
for the Golden Jubilee will begin and
continue until Monday morning.
Speeches will be made by Maury
Crutcher, J. I. Lyle, J. W. Carnahan,
Professor E. F. Farquhar, Charles
Straus, R. C. Stoll, Mr. Carey, and Dr.
J. J. Tigert. President Barker will
preside.
This will be the last
before the Vanderbilt game and all
students are urged to attend and learn
the yells and the plans for cheering
at the game. Cheer Leader Whayne
Haffler confidentially assured a Kernel representative that there were a
number of other good things in store,
so as an inside tip The Kernel suggests that every student be there.
old-tim- e

Won't You Come in and Look?

Kaufman Clothing Co.
Don't Neglect
Your Eyes
Your Abilities are Handicapped When
Your Eyes are Strained

20 PER CENT. DISCOUNT OFFERED
To Students of State University on Every pair of Glasses Fitted and Made
Here, Duplicated Lenses Included.
We Make Them Any Style
You Desire and Charge Only" the Standard Price

A Thorough EYE EXAMINATION Included
C. F. THATCHER

KIDTint' Past two years located
nUIIUC.
ot Short and Lime
NOW IN

First and City Bank Bids., Main and Cheapiide

CITY BANK BUILDING

MITCHELL TO LEAD

OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN
Room 202

JILTED BRETHREN

n

The national order of the Jilted
Brethren held a meeting in the club
rooms last Saturday night and elected
the following officers for the ensuing
year: Robert Mitchell, Grand Senior
Mogul; Frank Crum, Grand Junior
Robertson, Grand
Mogul;
Elmer
Herbert
Scribe and Finance-her- ;
Schaber, Keeper of the Seal; T. L.
Rector, Chairman of Poultry Committee; J. D. V. Chamberlain, Chairman
of Old Maid Committee; "Rusty"
Edens, King of Hearts; S. H. Brown,
Right-hanBower; C. T. Dotson,
Bower, and J. P. Ricketts,
Trumps.
Mr. Mitchell's election to the exalt
ed position of Grand High Mogul
marks the third time he has been
chosen to that office. It is customary
for the one who is hardest hit in his
love affairs to lead the society, making
Mr. Mitchell the logical man for the
place.
The principal talk of the meeting
was made by J. H. Coleman, an alum
nus member of tho club, who de
clared the organization to be the most
humanitarian In the world, being dedicated to the extension of sympathy
and consolation to bereaved brethren
who have been jilted by their
d

AGS. SPEND A WEEK
AS APPLE PACKERS
W. V. Owsley, Frank T. Street, G
B. Nance, M. G. Lewiss, V. R. Pfinstag
and F. H. Johnson, Seniors in the Col

lege of Agriculture, returned Sunday
where they had
from Henderson,
spent a week packing apples on the
Barrett farm. This is the first oppor
tunity the students have had to get
experience
and practical
practical
work in the grading and packing of
apples. As hands were scarce, tho
students having satisfactory grades,
were given an opportunity to go with
II. N. Elliot, of the Extension Depart
ment and Professor Olnoy of tho Hor
ticultural Department, who were there
with them most of tho time helping
and Instructing them in tho work.

Left-han-

Co.

Graddy-Rya- n
INCORPORATED

d

Clothing,

Hats,

Furnishings
Shoes,

and Tailoring

The College Man's Store
Patronize Our Advertisers.

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL
Restaurant

Metropolitan

The Place for Good Things

!o

.

THE UNIVERSITY'S GRAND OLD MAN.

Page 3

Co.
C. D. Calloway & KODAKS
SUPPLIES, SWEATERS,

FOOT BALL

Eat

146 WEST MAIN STREET

Franz Josef Spengler
The Photographer

clnaacs of tho University proper.
In 1809 there was but ono grndunto,
Last
tho first from tho institution.
yenr thcro wore 169 graduates.
Its
alumni aro among tho best graduates
In America and readily find employment as soon as they rocelvo degrees.
Many aro engaged ovon In advance of
graduation.
With this record behind it and with
tho prospects of increased usefulness
before it, tho University of Kentucky
Is destined to become ono of tho greatest universities In tho country and its
alumni to rank among tho best graduated from any Institution in America.

in your Town

Has pleated the exacting
student and the best people generally for fifteen
years. Can he show you?
Phone 1092--

311 W, Main Sf.

y

STUDENTS!

ATTENTION

The Mess Half
on the Campus is the very
best place in the City for
Students to Board, Excellent
food and the best Service
at the lowest price.

Our United
Special
Suits and
Overcoats

$16.50 with

Are Scoring

big

College Men, Come in
and let us show them
to you.

United (Tjrtfiih

Stores

INCORPORATOR

115

EAST MAIN

STREET
KENTUCKY.

LEXINGTON.

When You Are Hungry
SEE Mrs. Barnetts

At the

University Lunch Stand

WATCHES
OF DEPENDABLE ACCURACY

$1.00,

$1.50,

$2.00

$2.50, $5.00 and Up

HEINTZ,

Jeweler

East Main'.Street
Opposite Phoenix
Lexington, Ky.

123

WE REPAIR WATCHES

battalion, will bo master of ceremonies at all tho events on the program,
and will bo nsslstcd by tho officers of
tho companies. President Barker will
preside at the exorcises Saturday
morning.
TO MEET.

Society, which Is
The
composed of all students doing major
work In Anatomy and Physiology, will
moot Monday evening in tho Sclenco
Building. Tho meeting will bo called
to order promptly at 7:30 o'clock.
AGS ATTEND TROTS.

FIFTY YEARS OF LIFE
(Continued From rage Onr)

made and honorary degrees conferred
on a number of prominent men. Dr.
James K. Patterson, "The Grand Old
Man of tho University," will deliver
an address on "Firty Years of the
University," and Dr. Charles W. Dab- ney, president of the University of
Cincinnati, will speak on "The Univer
sity and the State." The presentaPRESIDENT EMERITUS JAMES K. PATTERSON.
tion of a portrait of Dr. Patterson on
behalf of the Alumni Association will
1887 a bill was Introduced in Con be made by Charles R. Brock, a dis
(Continued From Page One)
gress Dy Kepresentaiive naicn, oi tinguished alumnus, of Denver, Colo.
still greater work that it is destined
under Providence to accomplish in the Missouri, to endow with an annual inThose who will receive honorary decome experiment stations In connec- grees at the celebration are:
years that are to come.
grant colleges thruout
Henry Watterson, editor and statesThe University of Kentucky, as al tion with land
the country.
man, Doctor of Literature.
most all state universities, had its ori
The bill was regarded as likely to iProfessor John L. Patterson, Dean,
gin in the Land Grant made by Congress in 1862. The late Senator Jus fail in its passage because of the College of Arts and Science, Univertin S. Morlll while a member of Con brief time that intervened between Its sity of Louisville, Doctor of Literagress from the State of Vermont in passage by the Senate and the ad ture.
Those who
President George W. Stevens,
1862, introduced a measure, the ob- journment of Congress.
ject of which was to stimulate agri- had charge of the bill telegraphed to Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company,
cultural and industrial development, Dr. Patterson to go to Washington Doctor of Laws.
Professor Thomas H. Morgan, Deand for this purpose grants of land and induce Speaker Carlisle, if possi
were given to each State In the Union ble, to recognize Mr. Hatch when he partment of Biology, Columbia Uniin proportion to its representation in arose to move its passage. Speaker versity, Doctor of Laws.
Carlisle promptly promised that he
Dr. Charles Dabney, president Uni
Congress.
following morning versity of Cincinnati, Doctor of Laws.
The State of Kentucky received would and on the
arose to
Right Reverend Bishop Brossart,
over 300,000 acres of land for this pur- when Representative Hatch
holding the land and move the passage of the bill, he im Bishop of Covington Diocese, Doctor
pose. Instead of
awaiting the increase in value, the mediately recognized him. The result of Laws.
fifteen minutes
President Emeritus James K. Pat
State sold it for fifty cents an acre of this was that within
money in Kentucky the bill had passed the House and only terson, Doctor of Laws.
and invested the
signature of the Speaker
Dr. R. H. Crossfield, president
State bonds, the interest of which was awaited the
and of the President to become a law. Transylvania "University, Doctor of
to be applied to the support and mainIn 1893, after the adoption of the Laws.
tenance of an agricultural and menew constitution in Kentucky, a meaDr. W. A. Ganfleld, president of
chanical college.
passed by the General As- Centre College, Doctor of Laws.
This fund was not sufficient, and in- sure was
Commonwealth authorDr. M. B. Adams, president George
stead of providing a supplementary sembly of the
to izing each representative district of town College, Doctor of Laws.
amount, the State readily consented
to appoint on comDr. J. L. Clark, president Kentucky
attach it as a college to the Old Ken- the Commonwealth
petent examination properly prepared Wesleyan College, Doctor of Laws.
tucky University, reserving the right
as an
President J. H. Frost, Berea Colto withdraw at any time. It was found students who should receive
on each lege, Doctor of Laws.
an experience of thirteen years equivalent for the tax levied
after
county for the maintenance of the colCharles R. Brock, attorney-at-law- ,
that this partnership worked badly.
Us college lege, free tuition, the privileges of the Denver, Col., Doctor of Laws.
In 1878 the State withdrew
dormitory, fuel and lights, exemption
Following the conferring of the deand placed it upon independent footfrom all fees and traveling expenses. grees, lunch will be served on tho
ing. In 1880 the State provided by a
legislation was to campus to all who attend. That no
of a mill for its mainte- The object of this
tax of
remove the discontent of the remote one may go hungry, the committee has
nance and support. This income addof the State, who urged that arranged to make so much burgoo and
ed to the income from the investment counties
s
barbecue so much meat that the Imagmoney received from the sale the college was in the main a
of the
institution conferring benefits ination is staggered at the contemplaof the land gave the college an inupon Fayette County and the adjoin- tion. The dainty hands of the Home
come of over $25,000 a year.
colleges ing counties, which they could not Ec students will serve the viands to
In 1882 the denominational
the guests.
of the State made a united effort to In- - share.
Before the football game In the aftpurposes of this legislation
The
duce the State to repeal the tax for its
ground that it were achieved and the college was ernoon, Stoll Field will be dedicated.
maintenance on the
was unconstitutional. A long and acri placed virtually in every county in Major John T. Geary, in charge of the
Bay,
monious contest ensued. It was the Kentucky. The institution under this mine defenses in San Francisco
came be- wise legislation, both State and Fed- and a native of Lexington, will demost important measure that
ulti- liver the dedicatory address, and Govfore the Legislature of that year. Dr. eral, prospered and expanded
mately Into the University of Ken- ernor A. O. Stanley will respond in
Patterson fought all the colleges and
behalf of the University. A concrete
the Legislature, and won. He also tucky as It is today.
From time to time the standard of box for the use of the President and
fought the colleges in the Court of
by that
AppealB where he won another vic- education was raised. Fifty years ago his visitors will be finished
75 per cent of the students were In time and a brass plate commemorat- tory.
Today ing the dedication will be placed on
The next Important feature was the the preparatory department.
are changed, and all the front of this box.
establishment or the Experiment Sta- these conditions
are in! Captain Fairfax, commandant of the
tion by Dr. Patterson In 1885, and in the students matriculated

President E. A. Tipton, of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breeders' Association, had as his guests Monday, tho
first day of the fall trots, the Agriculof
the University.
tural students
Tickets were distributed among the
"Aggies" by Prof. J. J. Hooper and
those who were so fortunate as to
have no classes Monday afternoon or
else declared themselves a holiday,
enjoyed a big time at the "Trots"
Monday afternoon.

"Here Arc suits
WIN a

college Education"
Exclaimed a young fellow
purchasing one of our suits.
He was right. Each garment
must come up with the required number of College credits to get in here.

New Styles, New Colors,
New Belted Backs, Double
and Single Breasted Styles.

Blue-gras-

New College Men's

Hats, Shoes, Shirts,
Furnishings, etc,
That rank right along with
the suits.

Graves, Cox & Co.
Incorporated.

"COLLEGE FELLOWS' SHOP'

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL.
The Sweet

The Kentucky Kernel

who are takThe Kernel wishes to thank the
ing such interest in the preparations for the Jubilee.
Last week at the suggestion of the cheer leader, the
girls of the University congregated on one side of the
chapel and with their own leader gave the yells that are
to put the extra ounce of endeavor into the football
team when it meets its most formidable opponent tomorrow. And there were more girls in the chapel than
boys!
intend to
We are reliably informed that the
"pull some stunts" at the game that will make mere
men students look like novices in the enthusiasm line.
'Tis even said that "dates" for the game are being declined', as the girls want all students in the cheering section. If you don't believe that, try to make one.
Suffrage is on its way, and any Kentucky d
with that spirit can have The Kernel's support if she
wants it. It behooves our boys to show a little more
speed if they intend to stay in the race on old Kentucky's campus.
co-e-

Published every Thursday throughout tho College year by the student body of
the University of Kentucky, for tho benefit of tho Btudonts,
alumni and faculty of tho Institution.
THE KENTUCKY KERNEL is tho official nowspapcr of tho University.
is issued with tho view of furnishing to its subscribers all the collcgo news
of Kentucky, together with a digest of items of interest concerning tho universities of other States and Canada.

It

FIVE CENTS PER COPY.
SUBSCRIPTION, ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR.
mail matter.
Entered at Lexington Postoffico as second-class

ds

co-e-

EDITORIAL STAFF.
William Shinnick
Dlllard Turner
Wayne Cottingham
J. Franklin Corn
Miss Eliza Plggott
Thomas Underwood
J. R. Marsh
Miss Mildred Graham
Eugene Elder
Herbert Schaber
Harry Cottrell

EDITOR-IN-CHIE-

F

Assistant Editor
Managing Editor
"Squirrel Food"
"Coed"itor
Athletic Editor
Exchange Editor
Y. W. C. A.
.. Mining
Literary
Agriculture
REPORTERS.
Thornton Connell.
BUSINESS STAFF.

John S. Sherwood.

Flowers which tasto liko cabbages
havo been discovered and found to bo
a good substitute for meat. It remains for some good mnn to step into
the breach and offer a good substitute
for tho flowers.

ds

that tile floors have been laid
Mechanical Hall it will be somewhat difficult to haul the Senior
"mocha" upon tho carpet.
Now

In

co-e-

"Women start most of tho fires,"
says the Louisville Courier-Journawhich statement Col. Enoch Grehan
emphatically disputes and offers as
evidence tho fact that thruout every
winter his chubby, dimpled knees are
a mass of
and
l,

Byron Bacon Black

"goose-pimples-

Business Manager

Joe M. Robinson

An Auspicious Event.
The University this week celebrates with fitting