UNIVERSITY DIRECTORY. GENERAL ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. Gerog-e G. Stephens, President. W. D. Carmicharl, Vivce-President. Jas. A. Gwjn, Secy, and Treas, UNIVERSITY FOOT-BALL TEAM. E. C Gregory, Captain. . Walter Brem, Manager. J. H. White, Assistant Manager. UNIVERSITY BASE-BALL TEAM. B. E. Stanly, Captain. W. D. Carmicharl, Manager.1 UNIVERSITY GLEE CLUB. Prof. Harrington, Director. Darius Eatman, Leader. Pride J. Thomas, Business Manager. ELISHA MITCHELL SCIENTIFIC SO . .CIETY, . Richard H. Whitehead, M. D., President. Henry V. Wilson, Ph D. Vice-President. Francis P. Venable, Ph D., Secretary and Treasurer. Charles Baskerville, Ph D. Cor. responding Secretary. Meets in Person Hall tne second Thursday night of each month. Journals issued twice a year. HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Kemp P. Battle, LL. D., President. Geo. T. Winston, LL. D.,Frst Vice Pres. Edwin A. Alderman,. Ph D. 2nd Vice Pres. J. H. White Secretary. SHAKESPERE CLUB. ' -Thomas Hume, D. D. LL D., President. Walter D. Toy, M. A., Secretary. Herburt Bingham, Treasurer. v Herman H. Home, Assistant Secretary. PHILOLOGICAL CLUB. -.Meets on the last Tuesday night of each month in the ,English Lecture room. Offi cers: . K. P. Harrington, President, F. K. Ball, Vice-President, W. D. Toy, Secretary .nd Treasurer. " FRATERNITIES (secret)! Delta Kappa Epsilon, Beta Theta Pi, Zeta Psi, Sigma Nu, Sigma Aalpha Epsilon, Al pha Tau. Omega, Sigma Chi, Phi Gamma Delta, Kappa Sigma, Kappa Alpha, Pi Kap 1 pa Alpha'. SOCIETIES. .Tb-eta JTu. Epsilon (secret),. , Pi Sigma secret).. .: j. , , Order of Gimghouis, (Junior secret). The society meets in Febuary and October.. Ban quet Thursday night of commencement. Philanthropic (secret, literary. Establish ed 1795. . Meets every Saturday night in the Phi Hall, New East Building. !, Dialectic (secret) .literary.) Established 179$. Meets every . Saturday night in the Di Hall, New West Building. , . UNTVERSITY GERMAN CLUB. E. C. Gregory , President- Jas. A. Gwyn, Vice-President, C. R. Dey, Secretary. R. S'. Busbee, Treasurer. Meets at call of President.' - Leader selected for each jger man. . . . ."'. v- UNIVERSITY MAGAZINE. t v-.s f l . jW R. Webb, editor in chief. , , ' Editors, t . - E, -C. Gregory, Dick Lewis, Burton Craige, D. Eatman, E. E. Sams. Y. M. C. A. H. H. Home, President, "" W. R. Webb, Vice-President, J. S. Wray, Secretary. R. E. Coker," Corresponding Secretary. J. W. Canada, Treasurer; Meets in Chapel on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday nights of each week. ' ' ' TENNIS ASSOCIATION. A. W. Myers, President. H. C. Bridgers, Vice.President. Jas. A. Gwyn, Secretary and Treasurer. Church Directory. Presbyterian Church. Rev. D, J. Cur rie. Services every Sunday morning, and night except the first Sunday in each month. Prayer meeting every Wednesday night. Episcopal Church. Rev. Paul Shubert, Services every Sunday morning and night. MijtTHOpiST Church.'--Rev L. S; Massey. Services every Sunday morning and night. Prayer meeting Wednesday night; Baptist Caurch. Rev. Dr. Thos. Hume Servics every Sunnday morning and night Prayer meeting evry Wenday night. . The Lost Tribe. OR HOW I DIDN'T BECOME ONE OF THEM. It all started back in those "good old days" when "Bobby", "Sly", "Hudy", "Hawks", "T. Bailey", .and all that crowd were here; and those to 'whom the above names are familiar will see that it was not at all strange for " most?anything"to. startjup thathuman or infernal ingenuity could devise. It was all a mystery and began when one morning those entering the- chapel observed upon-tne doors in large char acters the inscription "O. H." The chaplain read the services be- neath the same mysterious symbol and when we dispersed to the various reci tation rooms,lo, there they? were. The professor of mathematics gazed upon the letters on his black-boards but there were two unknown quantities and only one equation so he had to gave it up. The next night about two o'clock we were all' aroused' by.'the beating of drums and flocking to the windows we saw'abandof ghost like figures clad in white with black hoods march on the square infront of the Sonth building and after going throguh some mysteri ous manouvering marched away again. They were led by a figureMfl black who carried a large sword and in the midst wasi borne a large transparency on which were the mysterious let ters'. H", - Next day it spread through college that a new social order .had made its appearance, no badges were worn how ever and the membersjwere. (unknown. Various rumors at once ; got bout. Some said it was in opposition to the jGimghouls. Others even said that some members of the faculty were members and one member of the Glee Club insisted that thetman with the kettle drum was playing, "Mrs. Wins low's Soothing Syrup." j I didn't know what it was but Iihad a wild desire to be one. I thought1! about it all day and when I went to bed and said imy prayers ending with, "make me a good boy" I addedand anO.H," '. . ....it ' Little did I realize how soon these prayers were to be answered, for a few nights. , after, a white robed spirit stood by my bed and waking me silent ly f handed me the fatal invitation and then as silently stole awayj' I was instruced to go to the monu ment in the square '. at twelve ;o,clock next nighty and I went but,myJenthu siam had gotten very shaky arid my knees had a decidedly ' unsteady move ment. I waited about two hours and a half it seemed to me before two of the band approached and blindflolded me and after rolling me along on the ground until I had lost my ideas of di rection I was carried away I knew not where. : I was at- last unblinded in ' & dark dimly lighted compartment before the figure in the black robe who seem ed to be the most high muck-a-muck. I was first requested to answer a lot of most unearthly questions the ans wers to which were taken down by a sec reatary and sealed in an envelopejwhich I observed was addressed to my father. x Then began the fun only I didn't see it that way. It first become my painful duty to have extracted from my body some drops of blood. I was prostrated upon the floor and the. M. H.B.E. proceeded to execute the du ties of his office with a dull razor; and apparently regardless of the fact that my trousers were comparatively new. This blood was mixed in a concoction w hich all had to drink the othe rs didn't seem to mind it but it was awful, and I swore then and there I would never be a cannible, - ' - I. v I was then put in a coffin,' nailed up and lowered into a grave and I .could hear the dirt falling on the cof fin and the voices growing indistinct After I had stayed there until I sup posed I resembled old Rip Van Winkle was dug up; and then t!:q "band play ed on" but I was so scared that it all seems hazy to me now. As last it became their pleasure to reveal to me the grand secret of their order and I was accordingly placed upon my knees, with my face upon the ground. " The M. II. P. W. was commanded to come forward and I heard a kind' of whirring noise as if something was circulating very rapidly through the atmosphere. At last it struck-I wont Jsay what direction it struck in for that is not the: purpose of this story but I struck about this time.myself, struck something very hard and, disagreable and when I arose from it and looked around all was dark; but it was a mighty homelike, darkness and there was some one snoringon a very famil iar key, about four feet away. This is all I know about it. I got back in bed very quietly and next morning I arose early . and scraped up the remains of my knees l that ; were still sticking to the floor and then got excused from recitations on account of rheumatism. ' The O. II. 's are all gone now, but I am not one of them and never want to be. LIBERTY BELL. Proceedings at the Guilford Battle Grounds Mrs. Martin's poem. On January the 31st. the commit tee in charge of the "old Liberty Bell" on its return trip from Atlan ta stopped at Greensboro, and under the auspices of the Guilford Battle Ground Company the bell was car ried to the battle field. Here,upon this historic spot, where so many of North Carolina's sons nobly fought and died . in defence of the proclamation which it rang- out at Independence Hall in 1775, the bell was welcomed by an enthusias tic multitude and appropriate exer cises held in its honor. Prominent among- the exercises of the day was the recital of a poem written by Mrs. Leonora B. Martin. We publish below the entire poem knowing- that from this author it must be welcomed by all, while many of us who have had the pleas ure of knowing-Mrs. Martin person ally during- her recent residence in our village will read with a special interest the following beatiful and patriotic welcome to: THE GRAND OLD BELL, Here, where the Tory's footsteps turned, Here, where the Continentals spurned Their tyrants, while their brave hearts burned " For freedom, ere they bleeding fell: We welcome you, O, grand old Bell! Long past the day when patriots rung For a list'ning world, your stern old , tongue, Guilford echoed, the song you sung; Clarion of freedom! England's Knell! We welcome you, p, grand old Bell! Around the hills of Guilford spread All silent lie the honored dead, ; Heroes all, their brave hands sped ; To England's King your message well, ; Of "Liberty",0, grand old Bell! . ' Here Hooper lies and dauntless Penn, Who signed for right,' here Winston's men Made the last charge; here Greene again, Made Tories pause. Each hill, and dell, Are heroes' graves, O, grand old Bell! When British feet were at your door A nation's love sent on before, From harm, their Bell. The guard who bore Were from the Old North State and well Kept they their trust, the grand old Bell! ; Her patriot sons, the Old North State, Sent to keep from a despot's hate " The nation's Bell. And Tr'entons fate They share, Ur history still doth tell How well they guarded the grand old Bell. And now, as in those days ot yore , Carolines love comes out once more To meet theBell, and to out pour At Guilford, welcome! All hearts SV With joy to greet you, grand old Bell' Leadears for Y. M. C. A. Monday, Shannonhouse. Tuesday, Cobb Lane. Wednesday, Crawford. Thursday, Prof. Gore. Clothing, Furnishings, Shoes, Hats. W, A. Slater Co., Up-to.date Clotlii OF DURHAM, N. C. Want -your trade and will treat young-lit. W. J. WEAVER, Agent. A. A. Kluttz IS HKADQUAllTEKS FOR Ml me books used in the Oitersiiy m u Also Stationery and Students' Supplies I have a full Hue of Blair's Tablets and Note Books, Wirt's Fountain Pens and Perfection 1 Student's Lamps, Pratt's Astral Oil. . A COMPL,I3TI5 LINE OF Men's Furnishing Goods, Fandy Goods and Toilet Articles. Confectioneries, Fruits, Cigars and Tobacco, Potted Meats and Pickles. Fine Hats and Hand-made Shoes A Specialty. Having- served "The Boys" and the Public for a number of years, I am prepared to offer a line of g-oods unsurpassed in quality and at prices to suit the times. My Motto is: "Jnehcst Goods jor iie Loivest Cash trices. Respectfully, A. A. KLUTTZ Southern Railway THE GREAT TRUNK LINE and U. S. Mail Route ' BKTWEEN THK NORTH, SOUTH, EAST and WEST. Operates three passenger trains daily to Washington, Baltimore, Pliiladclpliia New York and Points East Three passenger trains daily for Atlanta, Birmingham, Memphis, Chatta. nooga, Montgomery, Mobile, New Orleans and Points South and West. The Short Line to Florida. Through trains and Pullman Palace Sleep ing cars to Columbia, Augusta, Savannah, Jacksonville and Tampa without change. The Washington and South-Western VcstibnH 1 LIMITED. This train is composed entirely of Pullman Palace, Drawing Room, Sleeping and ingCars. For rates, tickets, time tables, &c, call ofl any agent Southern Railway, or CIIAS. L. HOPKINS, Tiav. Pass. Agent. Charlotte, N. C. W. H. Green, W. A. TURK, - ' Gen. Maiigr. Gen. Pass. Agent. Washington, D. C. "I f