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‘ University of Kentucky
5. VOL. VII. LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY, DECEMBER 3, 1914. N0, 12,
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Kentnekians Give Sister · Graduates of State Univer- Some Works of Professorsl Mass Meeting of Student Cgwtter $**01:98 Touchdown
· State Defeat for Defeat sity in Years Gone by Are That Have Brought Fame I Body in Chapel at or entgc &a°“ Fumble
Thanksgiving Day. Put in Control. to Institution. 3:30 Today. ‘  
——-— ···_- —‘*_ ·‘—"- HARD FOUGHT GAME
M PUTS STATE TO FRONT_BODY IS STRONG ONE RECORD IS GOOD ONE BOARD TO BE ELECTED —-
.....   —-— -—. -—- Outwelghed, but not outcloaoed, the
· ln one of the hardest fought b¤tt16¤`·|• 0 O O 4 0 O 0 ·I• O 0 O Q (By Anlta Crabbo.) A large number of the students of Iwudcat muh lost ns mul num at me
. on the local grldlron this seasonl•|» NEW TRUSTEES O Interestlng and valuable oontrlbu- the University have petitioned J. T. season to me volunteers 23 to 6. on
Tlgert‘s fast Freshman eleven rompedlé P. P. Johnson, Jr., L•xIngton.466 ol tions to the world': literature have Gelder, preoldent of the Student Ath· wan Fmd_ u pm of · wr", du
_ over the scrubs from the Unlversltylt J. E. Brown, 8h•Ibyv|||• .... 461 0 been made from tlme to time, by mom- lettc Association, to call a meetlng of c8|,,b,,m0n_
I of Tennessee, Thanksgiving Day, to O J. I. Lylo, New York, N. Y .... 370 0 bers of the faculty of State University the Association. The students have, Surely, if ever. the mu Vu on an
I the tune of 33 to 0. Io G. G. Brock, London, Ky ..... 361 O‘of Kentucky. In addition to many as on previous occasions, become dIs· mum in tm, num, fm. Puk md mm
The game was scheduled With the O John W. Woodo, Aohland, Ky.348 O monographs and magazine artlclos, ntlsded with conditions pertaining to both wom injured md removed from
' Freshman eleven from Tennessee, bnt=·|~ Dr. S. B. Marks, Loxlngton. . .298 O published at various times by profes- the present management of athletIcs.`th6 game baton the ond of the unt
ln thelr anxley to win, the Tenne¤o•0`¤I» O rt ·I» ·I» 4 4 0 0 O 0 O O. sors of the University, the books ot A meeting, as requested by many hm; park mined · com god by
' boys brought along several other men, The ballotlng for members of the Dr. A. S. Mackennlo on Southcn: and students, has been called by the pres- inches and mmm fumbled puns n
. from the scrubs whom they played in ` Board of Trustees from the Alumni of English literature; a mechanical ident of the Association, which will be l very inopponum mmm
the game on Stoll Field._ Howover.`State University closed Tuesday, De- treatise by John Pascal Brooks; Prot. held In chapel this afternoon at 3:30.i This victory for Tonnage pnctb
L the Freshmen were in position to show , cetnber 1, at noon, and resulted In the J. T. C. Noo'| book of poems, and A proposed constitution will be sub- cally gives umm the cmmpionship of
_ their own prowess against even the election of P. P. Johnson, J. E. Brown, Judge Lyman Chalkley’s historic mitted to the Student Association and Dixie fm. th, anon Auburn, on ·c_
I scrubs of Tennessee, and after mak- for the term ot stx years; J. I. Lyle, works have established an enviable sboudl It be adopted the election oficount of chtmpiommp of 1913 md
I lng ilve touchdowns while the Tenne¤· G. G. Brock for four years and John reputation for tho Institution from a ofncers will be chosen at this date. being undgfonod this seuom hu put
= see crowd was thlnklng about setting W. Woods, Dr. S. M. Marks for the literary viewpoint. All students are requested to belm A claim, but football men of me
l started, permitted them all to so back term of two years. \ Maok•n¢I•'• Work Notable. lpresent and take part In the atfalrs of   South concede me Knoxville mm as
i to Knoxville, with the exception of the A total ot 616 votes were cast In the The ilrst member of the present too- adopting the constitution and election me champions of the S_ It A_ A_
i • left hnlfbaek, William Ragland, who election by alumni from all over the nlty to ORS! S work of Ultdll DON of 0f¤¢•|'|· \ The game was hard {ought and
i was badly hurt ln the latter part of Unlted States and trom Chinn, So¤tn\w•s Doctor A. 8. Mackenzie. D••¤ of` —-··•·••······‘ Tennessee earned every yard gained
I, the game. . Africa, Honolulu and the Philippines. Graduate School and former professor over our 155-pound line. Every mm
{ “ A late report from Good Samaritan who ‘rh•y Arc. of English In the University. In 1904       lon the team fought true to has tltle
  H0gp{tn]_ where Mr, Ragland is under P, P. Johnston, a member of the Doctor'M•cken2ie wrote the tlrst 111B-I and made the game alive at all stages
L treatment tor concussion of the brain. class of 1899, Is a prominent land tory of Lexington Lodge, No. 1, Freel       of me gum,
g was that he was resting easy. owner and farmer of Fayette County and Accepted Masons. This W3 al Tennessee in Lindsay, Vowell, Kel-
E Doctor Tiggrt, as coach, has de- and has been a member of the Fayette  small Work, but slnce the lOd8e IB overg -—-—— ley and Carroll have a quartet good
  veloped a winning team, which prob- County School Board slnoe 1908. lone hundred and twenty-Ilve years old 5 Impressive Song is Impr€S— enough for my mam in the south
- ably rgnkg as high as any Fresh- J, E. Brown graduated In 1903, De-land no complete record of It had e¥81‘ . 1 S b M. C   Most of Tenuess»ee’s gains were made
man team ln the country. Dur- partment of Agriculture, and is nowlappeared, It Involved a great deal of Sw? y upg y _ ISS a' ° Iby vowel; and Lindsay. For Kentucky
  lng the season only six olnts Were presldent of the Shelby Loose Leai’_research. €1°U1€ M1t·€h€11 U1 Chapel Sch,a_d€,._ Tuttle, Scott ud Cmmhel,
  scored against them, by the Strons Warehouse Company and a director ini In 1908 Doctor Mackenzie collab- Judge LymmQalkley has com-xlgd in the most consistent work on
IO team from the Institute for the Deaf the Citizens' Bank of Shelbyville. Iorated with other southern scholars In ' jboth the defensive and offensive,
· and Dumb at Danville. A total of 287 J. I. Lyle graduated from the Colyproducins the"L|br¤1'y of Southern· p°°°d mr Bmw University an imuwm while Bailey and Hedges did good
» points was piled up by the Freshmen, lege ot Mechanical Engineering In Literature," whose sixteen volumest Wlllcll mey be used ¤·¤ ¤¤ l¤V°°¤·t1°¤`work ln many lustnuctm
whleh equals the record of almost any 1896 and took his Masters degreeLwere published at Atlanta, Ga. Hel hymn at chapel exercises and as an? Hedges run rm- 30 yards new- close
mum ln the country. three years later. He is now head en- was one of the four writers to bel Alma Mate, Song for the g[udgn[g_·0f third quarter through the Tennes-
Although Tennessee’s standardFWnS glneer and general manager of the singled out for special mention byiTh€ Song was Sung beautifully in`S€., team_ was me greatest gain for
lllfted up to the breeze on Walt ield Cvarrler Air Conditioning Company of reason. of style and thought, " ichapell Wednesday, by Miss Katherine the day The punung of Schrade,.
hanksgivlng day, their colors Werelhew York City. He was president ot. Evolution of Literature. lmimheul a Junior in me College of ave,-aged 10 yards more than K€“8y_
trampled in the dust on Stoll Field. K, S, U. Alumni Association 1913-1914.% Again In 1911 appeared the "Evoln- Agriculture. who punted for Tennessee. Tuttle,
Z?;’§ZL“.EZ2 ’ ?.’.?§’.If’.ZZf§’.Z?EZI.EZ‘.1 TEE l ...IQ1;..E‘.;  “‘§’.;’§§§"ZL‘2I’.Z`§   if LZT12.‘§I,5 ‘§$§ZL“2‘?"...Z.‘If5.ZZ EEZ. "JZZI M **·* —· em       T· C-     "?“’   *" “’€“  
*1* see llne tor lon and shortflr lh- d Com n d ted from even bee bll h d I th U It d\Ecmn addressed the Students and LBO  { game of football {Dime Blue and
ennes H i d 08 D8 Y. STR UB ¤ DU 9 G ¤ 6 ¤ 6 J. Sandman and Miss Katherine \\hlte. His allaround work, both on
‘ gains, while the Tennessee backs were I the Arts College of this Institution in|States and It IB the only anthropologi- Mitchell sang Solos. end and at half back, should give him
unable to make consistent gains. 'I`he|1898. cal study of literature ln the world. The anthem, Set to the mm of ,,_ plane, on me All_S0uth€rn mam
long runs by Captain Rodes, often} J. W. Wood, ot the College of Arts, It received the commendatlon of schol— __Am€Mca’,, follows: Rainey played his nrst game slnee
through the whole Tennessee team, class of 1896, Is county attorney of ars, not only In America but in the early In season against Louisville and
were features or the day. The line-up l lloyd County. He is one of the most European countries as well as in In·\ To th. cl". 0, 1915. made many gains on end runs,
follows: _successfuI attorneys ln the State. dla, Japan and Australia. It has been I Park, near end of tlrst quarter, be-
Ky_ Fresh, Posltlons. Tenn. Fresh.; Dr. S. B. Marks graduated fromltranslated Into Spanish for use In thelhmucky, NOW ti) thee gan to pass, and lr he and rllte had
qiuuydon, Klnne.L.i}.lt ..... llrInk1ey)State University In 1895 and receivedlSpanIsh-speaking countries of the`Smm l,“{vm_my’ ’ `not been put out the score would have
llleke;-son ,,,.., L,T.R ....... Spivey k his M. D. at Columbia University In world and is considered one of the our {ami we pledge. been closer.
  ‘‘‘‘‘‘‘   ‘‘‘‘‘‘           and     “°“’        
spalslngy ....... R.G.L .... Mambaughl - .........-........ “HI•tory of Englloh LIt•ratur•" Tempmm mums, tgleirnellillrfhe Tennessae soul only to
, · t·l..n., om, from enemies 8 ¤*~·¤¤¤I¤e¤· -<>¤l¤ try *0
Server ,,,,,.,.. R,T.L ........ MorrIs  MR. PHILO DIX WIILL MAKE AN Next the author Complewd h1S "H1¤· About Thee hedgel kick, which never netted anything,
C. Haydon ..... R.1·1.l. ......... Welch ADDRESS TO THE V. M. C. A. SUN- tory of English Literature" lt was In the tlrst quarter Tennessee
Rodes (C) ...... Q.ll ...... Donaldsonl DAY EVENING AT 6:15. L. J. SAND- published In 1914 by the Macmillan u rushed the ball down the field and
Grggfelder .,... L.l~I.R ....... Lothropl MAN WILL SING. ALL YOUNG Company. This work was unanimous- Oh, Alma Mawr dam,. Vowell went over tor the tlrst toucll·
llrltton, Kinne ..l·‘.ll ....... Gllbreuth   MEN AND FACULTY OF THE UNI-lly adopted by the Kentucky Textbook Thy mw upon us hem, 'down_ Carroll kicked gnnk Many of
Gibson ......... l1.H.l. ...... Ra land VERSITY A INVITED TO AT- Commission last Ju .
suhstltutes; Kentucky ~— l·Ju:ank,iTEND THISTAEETING. thas been accepted I:'vTsl;'11o1?;ntT;ct1lOilI; Now let thou Shine!   wfurgowirs lbegun in
Kelley, Ilarrlson, Flynn. 'I‘enncssee—| .___..•..._... of Missouri and Washington. lim up my coumenumxn lm,. sn,. ;,,m,·es:h D? gotlrg [Gym? 8
Kolth Fowler and Adams. THE FOUR-K CLUB WILL MEET 'I‘hIs one is the only book In exis- Thy grace and peace enhance; lt . ·L · A lg or W . (fun-
· ` I Hung. flgm [hy crown Shun glangth I 0* r"- relxnessee 1111B 1111lt* 1B(‘t‘lVt*d
()|'|lt·lals—~(‘uswell, of oeorgetown.‘MONDAY, DEc.7, AT NOON, IN Trllltence that meets the college require- And strength dmml the Itlck-ori, hut ralled to gnln gud
Referee; Rodeo, of Kentucky, Umpire; |EDUCATION BUILDING. IMPORT-I ||l0ll1B for UIQ Yell' 1915 to 1919. A wwr M ,kIckcd to Park, who returned 5 yards,
lvltzgernld, of 'I‘cnnessec, llead Lines- ANT BUSINESS. EVERYONE ll valuable feature of the book Is Its one ALL STUDENTS IN QHAPEL ATI um, und Tumt, furled to mak`, uw
man. IVERV PROMPT.   3:30 TODAY. lneccssury gains, Schrader punted 6.3
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