THE BATTALION. Dedh'cafory Cfass r 97* We soon must leave these dear old halls, Our Alma Mater, fare the well; No more we’ll respond to bugle calls, But stern labor rings the bell. A tear of regret and then a sigh, For mementoes which you keep; Of many a hope of learning high, And wisdom broad and deep. You, whitewashed walls could tell the tale, If you. with tongues could speak; How oft in here we did our duty fail, And professors vengeance wreak. Each cranny nook, and battered chair, A name or an initial keep; Each warped floor and winding stair, Much worn by tramping feet. No more in seat we’ll timid sit, Thinking is it my time next; An eight or a nine, or a zero what was it? I thought I knew the text. Oft we did sit in section room, While the professor was “having his say;” The wind howled by with a bang and a boom, And the window frames rattled away. No more to the hospital will we hie, When the days task is hard, To ride a “gim” fool “Doc” or try, Is the way we played the card. But, these things are gone we put them hence, Deep buried with the past; We look to the future and from whence, Our die for fame we’ll cast. We are graduated with diplomas white, And a thing or two I ken; That from henceforth we’ll try what’s right, And show that we are men.