College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH)

 - Class of 1905

Page 1 of 230

 

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 230 of the 1905 volume:

, 0 I x as I i THE IND EX O F Nineteen Hundred and Five Compiled by members of the Junior Class of NVooster being The Twenty-fourth Volume WOOSTER, O. 1904 n f K f : N , ,Kay ,tum ffZ5'5+X,' 65' ' 4-wwf, x J- - , e my f- Ximjff' ,. rx ' ' V ll' 9,1 Jiffy PH. YM f M m,.3W25 w fic? -uwlwfnyl MIX' 4 ,wmwplmp Q 032, ,sw WH f'f .f,, 'E A3v'mkg'f'-iff:- 1f 's Milla, , ,.4EW',J 141 0 , N , 4 gang!! . 14 , H !.' j ig! 1ULUgL 7 , K if Q' 'A , ' - -fif ' f ,, , , , ' fx-My KQV' '9'f7Wff4 M ' I ' fl 'X' - L n fr? 'Mff2'2gG u+- X , . 4245 dgiff ' M450 , fm 'N WW ' W. f-S ix I k 11, ff I QI' Am qw ll V ' ,lf rx A ' V. A H -M + X 2 A ,iff 1 g vyfgrggeyl , f VJ CQK K 1 K SX, X 'f X F f ,5 'XLS 1 gl ,MQ 4 ' Q N 6 ' , Wflf - vm ' x Uijjwlmr Q .. f -yflz I' f .jg X 'ff' ,AVNA , .-mxixyfk It 1 57 'W' m ail ff 'lf wi kk? ,Q 1511 J' fl U A L 13,1 jp: , W .H M, I W 1, JY f 'Q X 1 'A 11 H ' 4 QI:-XM ff ZW 1 A . Q' X V 4777 ew ' 5' Inmx X X X I , I, Hwy f 'X ei ' U, 1 1 LK if SSM jf ,mf Wfn ' , I , K I X , , I 1 km x Neff, 1 ,N xxx C xg? 1271-I 5 V N NH -,13 XX l .yj7 1,,1,'fkx' - H pjgfmf sf .A ??,6i.g'z.,ff 'f7 I 3 - , fw gf 15.7 .H '. , f- -V-I .- -fr 55? aa f N 1 P , iw vu' . 1.'l'., , v H AUM. K, afh. lx 'WHT f . Q52 7 fb: ,4 XX X--,A gist. fy-fn xii-. f K N, En E. Q. Sruvranrr, the Ingal frienh nf mnnnivr Hniuvrziig this 51121226 is resperifullg hriliraivh bg the ehiinru A X.-VY m f, f ff C A , Co v P7 f wg Eb fd Q 5 nfnrnnpp Qs S CAUTION The Index is not essentially a joke, and who so regards it, overlooks the Annualis chief mission. The volume is the only record of events social, athletic, political, intel- lectual and religious, issued during the college year. The future historian of the Wooster University will find the iles of the Index invaluable helps. The catalogue and college records are cold and colorless recitals of facts. The Annual is always tinged with the red life of the school and faithfully reflects its activities. It is, moreover, the only volume that preserves a pictorial record of the different teams and social organizations as well. The Board has kept this function of the Index in mind throughout all of its deliberations and has made this compilation a labor of love. It this volume has kept pace with the advance of our college and is worthy of the Wooster of today, we are more than satisfied. TIIE Enrroizs. 7 K .Q I T ilitnriall Explanations are very often best left unsaid or unwritten. Our friends do not need them and our enemies are usually unconvinced by them. Nevertheless it should be remembered that for financial reasons Very obvious to the initiated, the INDEX is limited to two hundred pages or thereabouts, including the advertising. Since there are certain matters of such general interest as class rolls, literary societies, athletic teams, social organizations and a host of others, that take up no small part of this space, it follows that what is left for the literary end is necessarily limited. In addition to these, this volume conta.ins more half-tones and zincs than any other INDEX ever published. We have chosen to give more space to the illustrations than to the class, club and other write-ups, believing that they would in the end be of more interest and importance. in in in It is much to be regretted that J. S. Weaver was unable to continue his connection with the Board until this volume was published. He proved an able and efhcient member ot the staff while in school. ui su in The greater part of the zine etchings in this INDEX are due to a for- mer loyal member of '05, Mr. George Goshorn, now of Columbus, O. Mr. Goshorn was very much interested in the success of the annual published by his class, and gave freely of his time and skill. The illustrations are by long odds the best ever secured by a Woosrnu INDEX Board. The editors are deeply indebted to Mr Goshorn For his interest and work- in in in To Miss Margaret Peebles, 708, and Mr. R. Brintnall, '07, the thanks ot the '05 Board are extended for their aid in illustrating this volume. 7 We must not forget to mention that the Faculty rendered us no small amount of assistance this year-the only suggestion made being in regard to the Senior Prep- picture q. Y. ui au in One dollar in the coin of they realm will purchase this gem for your library, together with the blessing of the Business Manager. Twenty cents additional will bring the same to you by mail. Address Jnssn BICCIAETJLAN, Wooster, O. il? iii W All persons deeming themselves slandered or mistreated by this book are respectfully requested to call upon John M. Spencer, the Business Manager, at his home in Piqua, O. He is a six-footer, a tackle on the foot-ball team and has practiced diligently all winter with boxing gloves, Indian clubs and fencing foils. He will be glad to see you and discuss the matter. The College Yearg A Retrospect With the gracious consent of Gustavus Eberly, the instruction corps of the New Wooster opened the educational emporium on the Hill for the college year 1903-4. The customary rites and ceremonies were observed and a solemn and fitting dignity pervaded all. The old guard of students straggled in at odd hours during the week but bright and early there ap- peared an unusual crowd of novices to college Work. 4 These Freshmen, nearly one hundred strong, proved the right material to make the Ufs ,record keep pace With its material advances since the epoch-making ire. The class is well represented in athletics, social organ- izations, debating clubs and literary societies of the school. Briefly, '07 is a cause of satisfaction and congratulation. 71? I - - 2 - f - 11 if-' ,.551.:4f:1:1::-2:5 IRL.: X' --e.f-qwfrf. 3: 1 .-any A L5:i:?:,:?415g3 4. fs-?t'f'E!1. i ' -' ' , 5 -rE1'.:'-f'1-221:20 13, -.zz-ixr k-f-.F - ' gm-.:Z-1sE3',A g.:.f,:1E2i2ZIZ1:4Q-f :if ,'2?sf:iw?s .2:2f'f1-b?1a2:f'L iw Em . sf : -. -wer. 1. U ---- -'W ,Qf 5 aaa-::?:i?:-1:,:1' '.f'3-,,::ffgJ.':1. N'.w,11'mSf1, v, ' '51'2E2:L-fi'5if5,51! 154-sf 'F 1- 'IEW 3 - iiiifwfififa .Q 1ii1.:-1?-i2::J:??5:sf-ati.-11-,? 3'11.L F fi ve W . -' lufwfi 1.71 E7. i1.f .7 Ki.-:-1 hw- -1- I - .- 5-:1 1'ig :Ss .I-jf' 1' A ' 1 ': 1-1 fe' ' . e- c..c file .gi area' WEE 1-ee---.felis , 5fj.'.::-45'qiA ' ,ex ' : I :1 T1 -' j i -- - .pS5T3?25:,i::1 .11-----:-ff--:1 -, 1--4, 1 ' zu- I 55 2 e- - ' ?-:fgexsaats -Q.-3,1-1:5--153 . A, 1 .9 , f , -.4 . ,HI .. all ei ll El me y wa s El . :g EA:-Iii A 2. ' ' - .. ,g, -WW' l E . Ei-'.iE1:I ,Q . .... I-in ! ic! llll l Ill! ,. 3 ,'.'5..1I'-:Z3:11- 11.1, . -' - T- -.T1Tf.,. ' ' 'Q' ' ' .Ixus-'i:':-:J -a.,,:fg:', if if .1fiE:Q:33g,Ag1-1-A-'Q-L , i ' v 1 . . V:Yii.:1,-:M--,.4,:'x:4.'mQ.b'+:5?:'4 v. 4,5- v 'qu f .e Hem-v-' fizczzt-:sea - QQ T. 'Eff-' ' -'f'5f-'Tiff -- 4' , :g . .. -:az-21'-A . - we -:--ge-ff-r..:':sf--f':s::.'.rss1'--1-1?s:.'-15292r::.--1:':1s.:gr1e.r:1sifss.:':.vf-:fa-e5:rmanZ1'1f,fK'm-:?zs',f.-salts ,..., ,.., . Q. .,,. ,.,,,.. .... , . ,...... ..., .,1,:.,. , ,.,..,,.,. , ,... .. , , ,4,x, , l,.,,., ,, .,.,,. , -' The past year has been one of unusual activity in lines literary. One new society, Philomathean, was organized during the first term and has attended strictly to business ever since. The newly formed Ruskin Club, whose avowed aim and purpose is a wider and more intimate knowledge of literature and art, is a welcome addition in lines literary and social. There are now six collegiate and three preparatory literary societies, three strong debating clubs and the organizations, Ruskin and The Stratford, help ing on the good Work of literary advancement in Wooster U. Our debating and oratorical attempts have resulted somewhat adversely, it must he admitted. Wooster received third place in the state contest, was soundly trounced by the squad from Delaware in the Hrst debate of the year and had the misfortune to lose the decision though winning the ques- 9 tion at W. and J. The time attorded the men who debated Delaware was so short as to make adequate preparation out of the question. These contests however, have placed Wooster in the class where she rightfully belongs. There will be a different tale told in the future. A marked era of good feeling characterized the year that has passed. True, there is still a coterie of students who-se profound insight would enable them to manage the institution vastly better than does the present regime, but they have not been aggressive. The general faculty attitude -ffwmis-v1.::S1'1:1:221312:-:lm-xfs5:1:-:f:rwt:sfsr:1,:sea:- . .,.:-gg-4:-'-req.-'res W ' -, 5 .- 't .M-,fm-. -..e-.5-..-..,.,-..v,.4.-asa. ff- ,- .-A... ..f.. W ,rQ,s,i,.,,.,,. f2:i12.?-:2:'?zefeE: e ' ' ' ?3if1Eig:gi3ig.Z2,g: A f ' . . K. ,vw wg K-wer 7' 'uh Qw...s,.-f 'e fr WV 3-1654 9+ www X: AI? 555953 his lil fig , A 9 f 'f Nv1nuw1-G-f4v ' Y f2i1f5fi5iEi'?a'f2 A 1 - - gy 1. - , .fs1.W. .P-:ii V. , ' ' , - , E!EP:3:?'d 1-:ff-' . il- Y .. :rig-1311355 ' Q :if -, , . .. ---- v. - s -. --:,:.:-, . 5, . 3 Y :, ' hs vw- o f ,.,., ,-1, . ga-fe . , fee -N:gpj.ei:Esk9 2- -'f-swf:-f -f- I.., s...-me-:2 fM:4f ' 1 - : ,,,-,, . -14:1 p-121 gf-ei: px: ,553 Law 'WVU 1 I 1:1 -:5r.:i?EfEr1QZ .. --,- . ,- .Q-,. 1. ..f 1.4,-an 1-f -.ev gg- ..., - - . ., .f g M.,--'.'s-.-.'.q.-.-.1 .. .,--far' ffl - 'A' -fiat.1::'f1-'--1:f'2:' wan: .sy gee 's .,e::.f5'Ss1:r:::-.str ff:-'-H. .:- 4: 'r:4.':15'?' :q Ht.: 2333? 1-1.1.1af lff:-psf-e :tri ffsim ze - 1 3.:fgs..:',r-.-J , tr- 1 ?35gzg32: z 1 gig, 2i .i1H :'W12 2 l f i f v ' 5 : fgL'2i.5s..-'f': 1 V :gas-amfaeaesaff esazaagnv-1.25221 . A M' -J.-rs , 1' .' . A ' - U :re . ne w : -- ass- :sew -1-V . f :ff:3..'1-:lisa :3Ei.g5-fjg egglefz ff 1 55 V 111: xr- ' .9 2 .,: ispgg:-.,?ef5,gq:5g55ag.- as 1 - 2 f 3 :fr K' S 2211? grAj:.fj'f-4, .5-3:1214 5 - : 5 f -.-1' ss. 5 . gp: , 2 711+ 5.-itff-. :fg:'5:-5:5521-: ae,,4.q,s: V .- '- - 1 . 'V -z.. :-:,,...,,.::f-f r :5 ,V .:p- f- 11: L,::1- .-.fv:.n- 1- '.- - ,' .-KSMSW 1 - :V 11: -V ' :1,.a:y2.,.5 ' -' i1,g.,.:-'g'.r:1:f'sw-1 If, .3 gf.-.-gg,,f.fwig-1,111.3,Q:.:,:,:,:f.j-'ff-155122-,fg'f'fa1:e1f:1:-:-: :V-4-a:.:..,: ,..1i. f: ,1 ,:s:5mi155..:Qi12::1s2?aff4:i: . 1 . '-' if2l5:1'si21?7'?-5Ez2'laf2fz'f5',2xi2 fifs-12223135f1i:2fi2'52-23f?1:?iZ:Ei-ESS:Q5Eswf?22i-125221121152i'1 1ffMefi3ff222522622551:Feie2iii2526f2i:si5EaE.f.I+i21L' 1? .fl . has been marked by fairness and reasonableness as Well as an appreciation of the student side of questions. 10 Little has transpired to inar the peace and quiet of the Hill. lt must not be forgotten, however, that the erstwhile meek and unobtrusive Preps did boisterously capture a Senior and with malice aforethought and mirth unseeinly, purpose to treat hiin to a free hath in a Watering trough. The .. .... .,,. 02.7 AX4 fi! Ab 2959! -- -'-- A '--- - V+: ...::f:,--4 v. 144-:-:-1.415110 .' 0 owlwfs' f 1 A H- ,,rf,M.-.1 :ww J if ,S - ,. ::.,i4f-iw 44-:-14--:aw aa'-1:5 4-,nam-i:w few-we gf,-ff-' '..r. --f,- .n f ' ,f.m.,4:.,.- af--1.-1,,,'f-.:i.4v, --:.:f-'.-1. f wf-at-. 4-1.4,-f .f 1 --' M- ' -f- - 91 -.v -521759 ,H o, . Q , ,,3,,, . ' ' fn, if -ff - , v y,-. ,,g- ,-C ,,.,'- ,r+'.,3, , - .,,,.,,,:,,.f.-V, .4 . 1 ATU., '., ,ygvm .ZF i wifi'- . '.:.,'-xc ga-ag? , 1 ,-'gfge-. A CH ',': , A'-.W :g..-1.-ig,-95 f ., , ,mv 4, . wt,-.-:'1'fy'2,,?iwil., ffff , - . '-v- ' -:.-H1 A. ' xiklf'--,z,v-' 'Dfr'+r:'i A, ' 'fr 'Ui .ilglif T? ' .-W:,.a122:e.2-1,1 .1-I v, -. ez ' - ff f-'fflik' ' 1 ' 1f3':-'ff-2 ,, 14- -' f f ..f','f':1E-Q .. Wigs: if 2 r 'La-73-'-1:-V '. ' fr .v'r1::.1 i ' -L V . 311. A ' , , 1 - 4 f -1 ,:::. 1, I 15, . ' In wpwags F' -.SQL if ff 'W y. 'l5'fqjc.-1',--,-MMO:-1 V. , --jg .. -A . ,.Zg'E 'iw ' ' , .2,,1,fr'i.f' ,. 5 fafwa'-fg,1.. V1 ' .. .f . 3, . f. Q .. 5 13 :- -- . --V 1:1 '11-?37'3 Ti: , f lff A 1, ' 1 ' 1 .L f t ' ': ' it1tf ' ' 1 f ' , e3?5fW'. ff- :w,ef:22ww ., 111- G' 4.g1,.-, -- 1' 92 ',-Y 14' 2fv,.4-M,-f'xz1f'aA,-. -,.e1436212251335-are-fa-'f' .4 ' . W' A., '-- ' f:.v1'.'IlA' .' : A' ,- 1:1 ,f r 4 eloquence of John McSweeny, however, freed thein from the grasping hands of the local police who had swooped doivn upon thein while carrying out their little plan, and soon once more already yet, everything was quiet on the Killbuck. Ko propriety shocking paraders, arrayed, in I'0ZJP-9-CIC-lI7lllIf, have aroused the stout burghers oi' Bealle Ave., Nescoiisecl on their pillows, lavendered of down, from their sun bleached nestsj'-to use the richly figurative 11 language of a local poet. Save the nightly rough house at the Roth and an occasional outburst of the self-styled college quartetft no rude and raucous clamors have disturbed the peaceful slumbers of dwellers o-n the Hill. Politically there has been no little activity. A secret vigilance commit- tee has cunningly prevented the dark machinations of the Greeks from accomplishing the ruin of the institution and the subverting of republican government in Wayne county. The elections in the Athletic Association and in the several classes were hotly contested and afforded all kinds and varieties of political experience to the future bosses of our land. A survey of the successful candidates shows that good men and women were selected all along the line. The time has evidently gone by when a student with little or no qualification for otlieelcan be elected. The different fraternities and sororities have all prospered during the year and in addition have gotten along unusually well together. It is to be regretted that a third sorority did not obtain a charter this year. In view of the increasing attendance it is to be hoped that 57-VY and 4'-IU Will be re- established in the near future. Wooster is a school so well and favorably known that a chapter of 4' If 11' should be one of the institutions of the school. The rapid advancement of the Preparatory Department, its unprece- dented attendance and the fine class about to graduate therefrom are mat- ters of profound satisfaction to every lover of the gold a.nd black. The Prep, usually mild but at times brash and obstreperous, is withal, a very necessary evil, but as has been shown, at tight rein and plenty of work reduce his troublesomeness to a minimum. 12 A grievous plague of dogs at times threatened to seriously disturb the continuance of operations, but prompt actior. by our President averted the danger. The endowment fund is slowly but surely accumulating, Which, perhaps, is the most that can be said for it at this time. M Dramatic efforts, while not receiving any profound encouragement from headquarters, have nevertheless far enough eclipsed last yearis record. Damon and Pythiasf' The Minstrel Sliowfl Rebecca?s Triumphi' and 4'The Lady of Lyons were genuine successes-in some cases even finan- cially. The religious organiations of the college have accomplished a tremen- dous work during the year. The work has been so thoroughly systematized and so conscientiously done as to set a standard far in advance of any point heretofore attained. In the real Work of the school the high standard of the institution has as usual been rigidly maintained. Now the rest of the chronicles of the year that is past, are they not mentioned in the calendar of this Index? Verily! . WX R sb Av ,f- - h ,Q-zfw .I Xl 'sa' ' 1 ?':E-F, Q - , . .- I 2, -- .hgdr f ' 7' 13 Faculty and Officers REV. LOUIS EDWARD HOLDEN, D. D., LL. D. P'7'C,S'lClHl'IIl of the U1l'llL'67'S7:lfj JONAS O. NOTESTEIN, PH. D., LITT. D. Aglswortll Professor of the Latin Lo-rzlgrzzoge alncl' La1te1'o.tw.re REV. SYLVESTER E. SCOVEL, 19911 Eos-Preslderzaf, cmcl Hoge Professor of Morals anal Sociology WILLIAM Z. BENNETT, PH. D. WM' Brown Professor of Olzemfislry REV. ELIAS COMPTON, PH. D., D. D. ffl' Professor of Plrilosoplzy, and Dean of the Urz'irvers'ity REV. JOI-IN O. BLACK, A. M. GAA' Adjunct Professor of Mcatlwmazfies, aucl Instructor in Geolog HORAOE N. MATEER, M. D., PH. D. B011 Professor of Biology. 14 .U JOHN 0. BOYD, PH. M., Am Acljunot Professor of German ELIZABETH IJENDLETON, A. M. Actjunct Professor of Evtgttsh, ct-nel Instructor 'in History WILLIAM J. SEELYE, A. M. WV Professor of the Greek Lcmguage anal Literature IIENRI G. BEHOTEGUY, A. M. Professor of the Frerzdt Language cmd Literatu-re cmd Registrar GERTRUDE GINGRICII Professor of the German LC!-7lg1tfLgG cmd Literature JOHN HOWARD DICKASON, A. M. Principal of the Preparatory Department, fmt! Acljunet Professor of Latin REV. SELBY FRAME VANCE, D. D. Mercer Professor of Biblical I'lZSLL7'ltClf'l:0II. GEORGE P. BACON, A. M., UAA' Professor of Physics 15 FRANK H. KIRKPATRICK, PH. B. Professor of Orato-ry HARVEY O. GRUMBIN E, PH. D. XY Professor of the English Lfmgua-ge afryl Litemtzw'e, cmol Secerta-ry of the Faculty REV. CHALMERS MARTIN, D. D. Professor of Old Testememf History and L1ltera.ture REV. THOMAS F. ARCHIBALD, A. B., LIKE Professor of Missions WILLIAM HYATT WILSON, PH. D. Joimsorz Professor of Mathematfics. NELSON SAUVAIN, LITT. B. Instructor in Science cmd Mot71,e.mat1Ics ROBERT EMMET CHADDOCK, A. B. Inst-ruetov' in Latin. and Hi.sto1'y LYMAN COLEMAN KNIGHT Instrucvfov' in Mathematics and En.g7'Ls7L 16 EMELINE MCSWEENEY, A'A'I Inszfructov' in Latin and GG7'777ffHZ, JACOB K. NOLD I7'LSf7 LlfCf01' in C1T'1:ics PAUL DAVIES SWARTZ, fl' LczZJ01'ai0v'y flssfsm-11.t in C'i1.em'ist'ry REV. THOMAS K. DAVIS, D. D. Professor of B'iZ1Zi0gTrap7zy, and Librariazz, ROBERT GRANDVILLE CALDWELL, A 7152 LaZ101'a.t01'y Assfisfcuzt fin. Biology ROBERT CLYDE CALDWELL, Aki? Labomiory A.S.S ?TSlfCL7Hf in. Physics - J. BYRON OLIVER D2i1'0c:1f01' of the C0'IZ'S0'7'I'flNf0'l'.U of Music MARY TRAVELLI GLENN Ill.Sf'I'lI.61f07' in Picuzo rind Organ EDNA B. RIGGS IllSl7 llC'f0l' 'in Picmo 17 FRANCIS ALICE GLENN, PH. B., KK! I7lSZf'I 'Ll07f0'l' in Vocal Music EWALD SONTUM Ivzstructofr 'in Violm CLARIBEL DURSTINE Inst7'uctor in Art ALICE SENSENEY DAVIS flssistant Lib1'cw'i6m, , LYNN W. ST. JOHN Dwectoo' of Avfhletics GUSTAVUS EBERLY Ja,1Li7f01' 18 Gfficers of the Faculty LOUIS EDWARD HOLDEN .... ..., ELIAS COMPTON ............ HARVEY C. GRUMBINE ..... HENRI C. BEHOTEGUY ................... Trustees of the University Elected by the Synod of Ohio Retire 1904 WALTER D. FOSS ....... REV. JOHN C. HOLLIDAY, D. D. . ROBERT LAIDLAW .... WILLIAM H. MCSURELY . . . REV. BENJAMIN K. ORMOND, D. D. . ALEXANDER RENICK . . . . HARRIE N. REYNOLDS . HARRY TRUE . . . MYRON WICK . ..... . Retire 1905 EUGENE W. ALLEN ..... CHARLES KRICHBAUM A. M. . JESSE MOCLELLAN . . . REV. DAVID J. MEESE, D. D. . WALTER J. MULLINS, A. M. . LOUIS P. OHLIGER . . . . ROBERT E. RAYMAN . . . ALBERT SHURE ....... SIMON STEFEENS, PI-I. D ...... REV. HARLEY J. STEWARD, PIfI.D., D.D. . Retire 1906 REV. SAMUEL B. ALDERSON, D.D. . . FOSTER. COPELAND ..... REV. OSCAR A. HILLS, D.D. . JOHN H. KAUKEZ51 . . . ' Deceased 19 . . . .PRESIDENT .......DE,IN . .SECRETARY . . .REGISTRAR . WOOSTER . NORWOOD CINCINNATI . CHICAGO . TOLEDO C IIILLTCOTHE . DAYTON . RTARION YOUNGSTOWN . FOSTORIA . CANTON . 'XVOOSTER RTANSFIELD . ETOOSTER . WOOSTER . EAST LIVERPOOL . WOOSTER . . LIIIA . . LOGAN PORTsMOUTI'I . COLUIIBUS . WOOSTER . WOOSTER IOIIX C. MCCLARAN ..... . IVOOSTIJR III-xv. SAMUEL S. PALMER, D.D. . . COLUMBUS I.OI'IS H. SEVEIIANCE . . . . CLEVELAND IIEV. PAITL F. SUTPHEN, D.D. . . CLEVELAND WILLIAM S. THOMAS . . . . SPRINGFIELD JOHN WEST . . . f ........ BELLEFONTAINE IZEV. WILLIAM GASTON, DD ....,... CLEVELAND REV. LOUIS E. HOLDEN, D.D., LL.D., E..c Officio . . XVOOSTEIY OFFICERS OF THE BOARD PRESIDENT ..,.... REV. SAMUEL S. PALMER, D.D. FIRST VICE PRESIDENT . . REV. DAVID J. MEESE, DD. SECOND IYICE PRESIDENT . . . . . JOHN H. KAUIQE TDECRETARY ....... REV. THOMAS K. DAVIS, D.D. 'I'RE.xsIIRER ........... JESSE MCCLELLAN EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE .IOIIN H. KAUIQE, CHAIRMAN, JOHN C. MCCLARAN IYALTER D. FOSS JESSE MCCLELLAN, SECRETARY OSCAR A. HILLS LOUIS P. OHLIGER LOI'IS E. HOLDEN ALBERT SHUPE u RIQ .ml r III! I Iii-I IIIZIIID CI A A I n Ii! If-If ff' :fl 'IVF It , X 1- . ' ' - I N- I +L I :Ef1af'---.Fuss .U , ' ' W ' , 3 L' V if me fl '5'3:,f 7' I .qi I ,l!,,,ri fww ,bf In I '7fff,, 20 UQ --ff 511924-1 .. 'P ,.f' '. F w-'uve --.-. ,X vu ry . 1 f.. f- K wr--ml, .- , , 0. w w . -. 1.. ' I x I n :!Pl .- . I ' N, M L , ' . -, .- w . 'VIL I 4 ' 1 1 1 ' , L L Q -.41 L- ff L' 'H L Fluff ' . Q- - w -1 N - V . .h ,,..v l f Y '- ,- -- ww' . '- , M, , ,u ., P , - '- ,F ,1 I w Y.. . warg, ' , A' ' A ' . A, f - .-,. ,.1-. ,I --,Q ,. L---,W , ,- -,. my L- .-up ,. .: . :Iv f' ' .4 li5j3,Bq.u,-1.-Q-Q'C7. 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' .-'1,gIg4., in - .J QL-A... .I A I . 5 I r -.T .,-, , -23.1 ' V- X 7 .,: , . 4,5 -I . .. . l,. , H . X. . X X v . A - f A ,H 4 H -' '--...' M- ' ..1-,.-u:rA .--A ,- ltr 'IL .U.h,?n V r . . w U 'F , l,,.I I -Cn L. I K 1 :J 12.-El, F ,.. ' w. . I-9 'I-Q' .I-' ' he-, 11 X . . . .gx L , '-.z-- - V - A - i A - ' .- '-.u--V-'A' 1--- k . - r v-l--4 '1 IJ, A ..-- , - ' , , , ,L 1-rf :...rr : ' , Qu' I-,, ', . nl ' J Captain Kauke Captain John H. Kauke' Captain John H. Kauke, Vice President of the Board of Trustees, after whom Kauke Hall was named, died Sunday, March 20, 1904. Born in Wooster December 15, 1817, he passed the 86 years of his life as one of its most universally known, loved and honored citizens. His prominent connection with the chief local enterprises and his readiness to help in every civic need, made him an invaluable factor in the eity's growth and government. His connection with the University began with its earliest beginnings. He was the man who turned the scale in favor of Wooster when the Synod was about to choose another location. The college then became one of the absorbing interests of his life and received his most careful thought and planning as well as his most liberal contributions. He was Vice President of the Board of Trustees and Chairman of the Executive Committee from the founding of the college until his death. The great ivhite building that bears his name is a fitting memorial to one who cheerfully sacrificed so much of himself to aid and further Wooster University. Women's Advisory Board This lioiml t-onsists or mic rvprl .-soiitizttivo 'From ouch presluytcry of tho Slviioil ol' Ohio :mil an oxocuti,X'o coininittuo consisting of eight local iiitfiiilaws. lkcifsisyrriciix' liliisinmcxz Mus. XXI ll. .Xi-iiX.xNDrQn. . St. Cflairosvillu Bellaire Mies. XX'li.I.i.ni 4XNN.X'l'. .. ............. Wooster Mus. E. D. B.xx'i'1-.i:... XXvt2USll'l' ..... Mansfield Miss Kyrie l2oii'Li:Y ..... i-Xtlwns ..... Logan Mies. W. C. .HU'i'oi11':iz .... Marion ...... Ivlarion Mus. H. G. 0. tixiziax' .... Zziiic'svi'lle .... Zanesville Mis. ll. XX'. flIl.XLI'.XNI'.. l-lollotioiitniiie. Belletontaine Mies. Jlooiz lfizioii ...... ............ X Vooster Miss Gi1ZIi'l'lIlllJlC Gmoiiicifiii Wooster Miss. L. E. .l'lOl,Dl32N ...... ...... X Vooster Mus. C. W. KAUKIXL .,.... ......... X Yooster Miss IJUCY lil. liiciiigifziz ........ lfluron ..... Frmnont Miss ELIZA J. IQYLE ..... t'i1icimmti. . . Cinoiiniati Xliis. H. W. Lowiix' ..... . ................ .... X Yooster Mies. R. A. MoliiN1.11:X'.. Stciilwiivillo.. Steubenville Mus. F. J. Miiipuxs .... Xlulioning .... Suloni Mics. J. 0. Nowiisfrisix.. .............. .... X Yooster Miss M. J. lJ'1Q1cIsI.i-'S .... . . l.50l lSI1'l0Nlll. . . Pottsnionth lXl'llH. N. J. l'7L.X'l ll1.ll .... ............ X Vooster MRS. IQ. lil. llocalclrs ...... Miuumcc .... Bowling GTGG11 Mus. O. B. Hiir.1fi:i1JrHf:.. Lima ....,... llima. Mies. A. A. E. 'll.fX.YLOIi.. t'olumhus .... Columbus MHS. J. lil. llliHON ...... t'lt-voluml .... C'lCVelancl Mus. J. l. Xfix Micrrific.. l'hillioothe. .. Chillicothe lXl.llS. J. illl. XXv.lN'I.'IilIS .... ll2l'X'l'Oll ............... Dayton OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Pill-is,ini2N'i' .................................. Mics. I-l. G. O. CAREY X'ioia ljllI'SIIJilCNI' .................... Miss MARG.-XRET J. PEEBLES Si3oi:ia'1'.xiiY. .. ..............,................. MRS. C. W. KAUKE EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Miss. XX'.lljllIAM AXNAT. CIIAIIKMAN M ns. JQXCOJB JI+'HlC'li, Si5Cim'1'.l1:Y AND 'llicissisuniin Miss Gl+lR'l.'li.TlDE GINGI-ZlC'lfI Mics. J. O. NOTSTEIN Mies. L. E. IIOIJIDICN Mus. H. W. LOWRY Mies. N. J. QPLATTEJH Matron of Hoover Cottage MHS. HEN'liZ.lE'l l'A R. DAVIDSON 2-l WWW H 5 Q Q ,mu Q iiiifiiiezuumaaaqgnxunu XX J 1 X V X' ' W '. .ea B A XX X NX '- .N im- . .- U' j , 1 ' H A J ig ggjiln I . K .Q X, .5,5jEF:,- -fi.. u1:,.U-I . Je, , H 1 W. '7 ' - e' A--gash--' LX Q gfff A ? DMX - - '-'- F!-:Q,i,5d.-3:11 A ml W- MV' Ih 1 ks'M f f? wp . + lff w H- M ,fb -- 2 E-1 . ,L H -3 f F K - N L41 ff.sg:4eE V.. 'x -1 - A ' h l::15??a:-Sfigfiiii N-E:.E.5.j:. z- 2: l Q .f ix ' X K WI. , an -sf www The Seniors COLORS: Yale Blue and Pearl Gray. CLASS YELL Boom-a-lac-a ! Boom-a-lac-a I Woo-wah-woo ! Chic-a-lac-a ! Chic-a-lac-a ! B u-rah-ru ! Wooster U! Wooster U! i0Ji, Gray and Blue! The Poet stood on the chapel steps and turned his melancholy gaze Kauke-hall-ward. Dawson, the-never-to-be-seen-without-his-eamera man stood patiently in front of a crowd of somber robed mortals and awaited the subsidence of the feminine giggling and masculine stale jokes incident to such occasions. The scene was one to arouse tumultuous emotion even in a disembodied spirit. The Poet, deeply affected, smote his lyre and sang- for a space as follows: ' 'fMust I sing about the Seniors which can mean but torture dire? Bring to light these fickle beings-pray, what can my soul inspire? Could I merely tell their virtues, leave their sins concealed from view- What a joyous undertaking! Early would my task be through. N ow must I disclose the secrets which they fain would have me keep, Tho? they curse as those poor mortals whom so oft they roused from sleep. Wherefore, O ! ye pitying muses come, control my erring pen, As I sing of luckless students, them to reconcile with men V' Alaek! the ubiquitous Eberly at this moment fired the Poet off the steps, else he would have finished this dinged write-up on the spot. But to proceed. As Freshmen this class was greener than the essence of chloro- phyll-so awfully verdent that even the Teachers' Review class reviled them. Coneealing their real nature, however, and keeping their freaks in the background, they passed on to Sophomore. Of this stage the Poet, standing with ruffled clothes and broken lyre before Scovel Hall, sang a few lines laden with truth and to the point: f'Here-about they chose a class prof, one befitting such a throng 3 Chose a mighty man of valor, e'en his very name was 'Strongf :But small wonderf muttered Prexy, when it was proclaimed one dawn That Prof. Strong was missing, broken-hearted he had gone? 'N . 26 Short Cummings deserted the crowd at this stage but Kinney, Vogt, Meese and Strauss, contrary to all hopes, hung on. Along about this time.Doc Mateer was elected honorary member. His feelings may be imagined. Simon Miller joinedgthe class in its Junior year. He couldn't classify elsewhere. He should, not be too severely blamed. Hemp-the president-of whom it was said, If you don't know who. the president of any college organization is, guess Remp, youill rarely niiss itf,-was another victim ot circumstances. We might mention a few others-though they very much object to seeing their names in print. Who wears the saturnine, Mase look? 'Tis Tritiit, Editor Trittit ot the Voice. Note the stern face of Caldwell and the serene countenance ot his cousin ,whose heart is in South Charleston. What might the Poet have sung ot Etling- and his mustache! Alasl Limljach and'Gerig? Yes. They are Dutch-but not from Holmes county. A - V There is Marie Turner, of whom it has been secretly whispered that she favors the Alpha Taus. That talldgirl? Oh, tha.t's Miss Cecelia Remy. What's that? Why, 7ie's in Pittsburg now. Of Smith, the shrewd calculating politician, Hibbard, whose peculiar yiews are so widely disseminated, Swartz, Nthe handler ot stinking cheini- cals, Miss Lind, whose capacity for hard work and whose good nature seem unbounded, Ringland, the mighty in love-ot all these, what ought to be written? We give it up entirely. Paisley edited the ,O-L Index. That is the worst that can be said of him. Here are a few lines that the Poet sang as he slowly meandered down College Avenue. They it precisely. 'fLittle realize these Seniors their inevitable fate, While the loud exulting students their quick riddance but await. Never has a class existed with diversity so marked, Xever yet on li'lie7s great ocean has so motley crew embarkedfi 27 x - Senior Officers MARTIN RREMP . ROBERT G. CALDWELL MYRTLE E. ATEN . ALBERT li. HIBBARD .... Seniors Aten, Myrtle Edith, ph .............. Bailey, Charles Hodge, e lil' UNE . . . Beatty, Frank Ernest, e A T52 ...., Caldwell, Robert Clyde, c. JI!!! .... Caldwell, Robert Grandville, CJ TM. .. Correll, Bertha Ellen, se ....... . Correll, Mary Luella, ph. . .. Davis, John Ker, e.IiUll. . .. Donald, Nellie May, ph .... Downing, May, ph ......... ............ . Etling, Alton Herbert, ph ................... Frazier, Florien Frederick, e.lfHll HJYIT NJN . .. Gerig, Daniel S., e ..... A .............' . Grnhuiu, Roscoe Springer, e. .. Greene, Virginia Louise, e .... Hibbard, Albert Keyes, ph ..... . Houston, Leslie Robert, ph.Wl J ...... . Kinney, Williunr Sloane, se.f.li NNE Knight, Lyman Colenmn, ph ........ Koch, Edwin Oswald, e ........ . Limbaeh, Charles Franklin, ph ...... Lind, Emma Louise, ph .............. 29 . . PRESIDENT VICE-Pmfs1D12N'r . SECRETARY . Tnnnsulusn ..........Nevada Philudelphiu, Pa. . . . . . .Greenfreld . . . . . . . .Lyndon Mayaguez, P. R. . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . , .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . .Zanesville . . . . . .Smithville .. .li'oduli, India . . .Bazznng Kan. . . .Eitehville . . .Wooster . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . .Columbiana . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Canal Dover Meese, Edwin Woolworth, c-10121 . .. Miller, Simon Murray, ph ..... . Mumaxv, Daniel Webster, e ..... . Myers, Claudia Grace, ph ........ Paisley, Fred Bacon, 0.0121 IMI? . . Remp, Martin, c .............. Remy, Cecelia Forney, e.A'AH ,...,. Ringland, Paul Franklin, o. ATS? Rowlan ,Edith Belle, e ........... Shanklin, Glenn, ph. IMT .. Smith, Hugh Roscoe, ph. . .. Strauss, Harry Harrison, e .... Swartz, Paul Davies, se.f.fl'. . . . Taylor, Sallie, c.KI1'F ............ Trifiit, Earl Lytton, e.CPI'L1 QNE . .. . .Mansfield . . .Sterling .Mt Eaton . . .Wooster Cumberland . . .Millville . .Mansfield . . .Wooster . . . .Canton Cutler, Ind. . Smithville ........Orrville .... . . . . .Wooster . . . .Washington, Ky ...........Lodi Turner, Marie, ph. KKI' . ..... ,,,, 13 Iayjon Vogt, Clarence Charles, e. B011 .... ,, ,Zanesville Vogt, Jessie Mae, e. KKI' ..... ...Zanesville Warren, Lucy Durbin, e.1fflH .... ,HWOOSIEQT i -N I 04511 I l 1 . Z W AI! . , ' x - ff Jig !!-.F V Es QXN R ' V E W DEQ, , W' f ilzgfiiz-:ZNI of-E, ' .4 ff 1 Aff' if , .x 3-2 221 9:-1 f 1 -JSA . .ff - . as E' vi' -- 4' - r f s A - - P L -b H3 f'. ' ,,.f- W ffxf 1 -if-' H n 30 V I HH! .s I -.L L f ' f 5-5- i- i rv, ,. 1 - -Ti mia: ,T ' N - A 1-l ', - 74- 'i fr: GLUQL K J umor Class H1StOIy QOIOI s Bed and Blue. CLASS YELL i 1 X11 ii 76 ki-Zi! Uv inse er high! Ilippi l unu' Hippi-kunaek I Xl no tu' XX oostei Bed and Black! PROF. SELBY FRAME VANCE, D.D., was born at Oneida, New York, Nov. 17, 1861. He- 'linislied his Aca- deniy and College work at Lake For- rest, Wisconsin, graduating from that University in 1885. He taught Latin and Greek at his Alina Mater until 1888 when he entered Princeton Semin- ary for two yearsp He spent the tol- lowing year at McCormick Seminary, graduating there in 1891. Following this he was pastor of the Presbyterian Church at Girard, Kansas. Two years of study in Berlin, five years as teacher of Greek at Parsons College, Iowa, and we have the history of the honorary ineniber of 705 to the time that he became a. inexnber of Wooster's Faculty in 1900. Prof. Vance is at the head ot the department of Biblical lnstruction and Apologetics. PLATTE T. AMSTUTZ is a tair- haired youth known to the school at large as ':Stootsy or Dad,'. While living an uneventful life at Sterling, O., he was discovered by one Dickason, the crafty Sunnner School originator, and by hini induced to enter Wooster Prep. By a, special decree of Provi- dencehewasperniitted to enter the colle- giate department and ally hiniselt with '05, He 'first attracted attention by his nielodions singing in the chapel choir. Alterward he took to oratory as a pas- time and won the 1902 Sunnner Breeze Contest. the State Prohibition Contest at Zanesville in thesaine year and was given third place-in the interstate con- test. l-le was football manager in 1903, was a' charter' ineniber of the University Debating Club and is a member of ithenaean Literary Society. He is acting High Bajah ot the student Prohibitioni t ind the hninciil supervisor oi' the Both. Club German Village and Popuhst X sociiiion No 212 N. Market. He was horn July 12, 1880. WILLIAM DEFORD CUM- MINGS, our ownliest own matchless and inimitable 'fShorty, was born at Nankin, O., on Oct. 6, 1881. William was early siezed with a desire to be a rising young man in the world and has since more than realized his own most sanguine expectations. In due time G'Short exhausted the facilities ot the public schools and became exceedingly desirous to communicate to others some of a load of knowledge already becom- ing burdensome. By stealth or other- wise he secured a teacher's certificate and at once began to instruct' the near- by youth. Success in this work en- couraged Deford to honor Wooster with his presence. Twice leaving the in- stitution to wield the birch for a season, he signalized himself particularly as an instructor at South Salem Academy. The appreciative College faculty, un- able to dispense with his presence and services enticed him back to Wooster for the third and positively last ap- pearance. Taking practically a bird's-eye view of the situation after arriv- ing, he thoughtfully cast his lot with 705. Hereis a health to Short', 5 may his honorable shadow never grow less! It is quite in accord with the sup- posed titness of things that a Daisy should come in May. On the second day of the month of flowers MISS DAISY DERR'S name was added to the roll of Uncle Sam's daughters. Wooster is her native city. She at- tended the city schools, graduating from the High School in 1901. That tall saw her a Freshman with 705 and she has been with us ever since. After a diligent. search by the member of the INDEX staff detailed to find things to roast people about in the Annual, he concluded that Miss Derr had too cleverly concealed her college escapades to be found out. However that may be, we know that she is a staunch mem- ber of 705 and a good worker in Wil- lard Literary Society. 34 MISS CLARA ERBECK confided to the INDEX representative that she was born at Mason, O., Oct. 17, 1880. It is recorded of her that she made a journey with her family to Seattle, Washington. Her stay there was brief, however, and once more we find her in Ohio, this time at Middletown. A longing for the life intellectual brought Clara to Wooster and for the past three years she has been a hard- working member of ?05. She is a thorough believer in co-education, a loyal member of Castalian, president of Ruskin, president of the Y. W. C. A. and secretary of '05-all of which goes to prove that like the little busy bee, she improves about all the shining hours of her existence. We neglected to men- tion in the above the fact that she be- longs to the Volunteer Band and that consequently we may some day hear of her on Greenland's icy mountains or lndia's coral strandl' or some place thereabouts LAURA DEBORAH FULTON comes to us from the wild and unter- rified west. She was born at Falls City, Neb., on Nov. 6, 1883, but did not stay there very long. Pawnee, Neb., welcomed her as a promising future woman suffragist, but a little later we find her living in Parker City, Ind., and next at Kenton, O., where she graduated from the High School. She then spent a year at Western Col- lege, Oxford, and the following year at Pennsylvania College for Women at Pittsburg. In the fall of '02 she en- tered '05 at Wooster University. It is evident to the observant reader that this progressive eastward migration will eventually land Miss Fulton in the Atlantic Ocean if not curbed in time. Her views on social engagements may be found verbatim in the College Dic- tionary of this volume. Miss Fulton is a member of Willard, the College Choristcrs, the Chapel Choir, the Oraloiio Choiu ind brlon to lxappa Alpha Theta sorority. Sho was secretary of the 05 Index 35 Please do not be too impatient, gentle reader-wait a iuinuteg an in- troduction should not be too precipi- tate. Now, perniit us to introduce to you, MISS GRACE HARROLD, formerly of Mt. Eaton, but now of Wooster. A Junior? To be sure, they are the only people entitled to extensive mention lin this volume of 'tWho's Which in Wooster. But to continue, Miss Harrold spent one year of her preparatory work in Mt. Eaton High School and shortly afterward en- tered Wooster. The fates were kind to 'her and she became a ineinber of '05-a cause of congratulation to both Miss Harrold and the class. Inas- niuch as the INDEXPS aiin is to report lf chiefly r'breaks and such, we are sorry to let our subject otlf so easily, With but slight changes, hyinn No. 4.37 of 'ii' the Chapel hyinnal will tell you the P AV.f.. IV- ' i -est. Born in 1383 at Mt. Eaton. -A prize to the one guessing the correct day ind 11 011111 MISS GERTRUDE CRANE ORR was born in Wooster, O., in 1880, on the sixth of October. She has never for a moment thought of deserting her native city. Her favor- ite songs, as rnight be anticipated, are Heine, Sweet Horne and Theres Only One Place In The World For Me. Miss Orr attended the public schools of Wooster and later joined '05 at the University overlooking her hoine town. Roller skating is her chief hobby and the study of Greek is for her but a pleasing diversion. She is also a nature study enthusiast and spends the good old suinnier time rusti- cating in the country. Gertrude Orane is further, a inost pronounced advocate of co-education, believing that thus girls have inany more oppor- tunities than in a girls' school. She has always been a loyal ineinber of '05 and a faithful worker in Willard Liter- ary Society. 36 1878 lt happened this way. The Busi- ness Manager one day asked MISS NETTIE RUPERT for her picture -in his irresistible way-and she blushed and said of course he might have it. Then he had a cut made you know, and here is her portrait as nat- ural as life! Nettie graduated from Urbana Academy in 1902 and entered W ooster with OG in the same year. The next year, however, saw her com- fortably esconseed in the Junior rows in Chapel, happy in the thought of the excellent company she had now found. a roller skater Miss Rupert won the unstinted applause of her classmates at tl'e great tournament at the Armory. She is a member of Willard Literary Society and a prominent worker in Y. W. C. A. The time to send her birth- day presents is October 2. for on that day, 1882, she appeared in Westville, C.. for the Hrst time. 57 MISS FERN RENICK knows a genuine good institution uhen she sees it. In 1898 she entered Wooster as a Freshman and completed the first two years of College After this she de eided to take a course in applied peda gogy or the exact science of assrstrne the young idea how to assist ltself This practical work rn the school rooms ot Lewiston tools up all her time up to OJ when she came back to her college home rust at the right time to join that sagaerous agglomeration numerically ltnoun as 05 rss Renick rs exrdently a lor er of art roi she is a member of the Ruskin Club whose expr ess business is a study of the same She rs also a member of Cas talian Literary Society Miss Renrck was born at Leurstoun O Sept 19 ' - ,Q tx, - x y I MISS I-IARRIET SINCLAIR iirst heard the sound of her own voice on April 27, 1883, at Dayton, O. At an early age she took to Writing poetry as a pastime and thus adds one more to the imposing array of rhyming talent in 305. Harriet Clyne Sinclair gradu- ated from Dayton H. S. and entered Wooster University with 705 in the year 1901. She has added much to the class's mirth and has contributed a large share towards keeping the average grade of the class at a high mark. Since she was a member of the 905 Index board she compelled the editor to cut out any reference to the hand- holding episode of her Sophomore year with-but there! We almost tor- ffot. D She is a member ot' Castalian Liter- ary Society and of Kappa Kappa Gam- ma Sororiety. MISS MARY SANBORN first made her acquaintance with the great X- ' buzzing confusioni' known our en- 18S1, so a Christ- Having geometry and algebra at the age of five and also counting the classics as but child's play, Mary naturally graduated from High School in due time with high honors. The very next year she entered the UU with '06, but feeling strangely out of place with this crowd she made haste to catch up with ,05. Miss Sanborn and psychology are the best ot friends. Whoever would have a searching analysis ot his mental states would do viromnent on December 18, that she came very near being mas gift to papa and mama. mastered the rudiments of well to apply at her residence on North A X 'x Market. She is a member of Kappa N ' Alpha .Theta Sorority. 38 This is an etiigy of JAMES SHOLES WEAVER, a young 1na.n well known in these parts. The light of day percolated through the eternal smoke of Allegheny and iirst illumined his countenance sometime between January and December of 1883. fJim forgot the exact date, he said, and didnit have time to write homey He did nothing at all remarkable when he came to Wooster as a Prep, conceal- ing or perhaps, developing his talents until he became a collegiate. Then he blossomed forth as base ball manager in 1903-4-though unable to complete this work because of being out of school the last term, basket ball captain the same year, as well as member of the Athletic Board from the Junior class and Art-Editor of the 1905 INDEX. He won the 'Varsity NWN as quarterback of the college eleven in 1903. He is one of those who does things. He is one of the leading lights of that exclusive society, Websterian, wears the pin of Theta Nu Epsilon and is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. On Oct. 5, 1883 ,in the far away heathen land of China ROBERT PARSONS ABBEY began to ex- ercise his vocal organs-a practice which he has never since outgrown. Here for eleven years Robert romped with the almond-eyed youngsters of the Celestial Empire at the end of which time he set sail for the United States. The following four years ot his ex- istence he spent at a New Jersey boarding school where daily combats with the omnivorous mosquitoes greatly aided that magnificent phy- sical development which has since made him famous. Three years at Wooster High School followed this and then our globe trotter turns up at Olivet College, Michigan. Hearing ot 705 at Wooster, however, Ase hasten- ed to return to Wooster University and ally himself with that favorite band. I-le has since made a state reputation for himself in athletics. He is 'fullback and captain of the 'Varsity eleven, right Helder on the baseball team, and in 1903 was captain of the track team. He has taken a prom- inent part in the oratorical contests of the school. He is a member of Irving Literary Society and of lil-Ill 'l'raternit.v. versity Debating Club and belongs t Wouldtst know, gentle reader, naine of him whose oval-cut here c fronts you? With pleasure we an- nounce it. 'Tis he, CARL HER- BERT CAMPBELL, born at C field, O., April 20, 1883. This in est representative of the clan wh the old song announces to be CCCO11111117, Finally arrived in Wooster in Septem- ber of 1903-just as it had been or- dained trom all time, according to Herbert's Scotch theology. Perceiv- ing '05 to be the whole thing he joii -by perinission of the faculty. Carl for a space attended an institution the western part of the state named Ada, but as has been stated he repented in tiine. He is inuch addicted hard study and the use ot boxin' gloves. Possessed of sturdy connnoi sense, he has never yet written poe nor joined the S. D. W. F. He i HEBER BLANK E N H O R N spent the first years of his life in a slow but sure growth. After the pre- vailing 'fashion of Orville youths lie at- tended the schools of that place and graduated therefrom 'in due season. ln 1901 he made a part of a day's jour- ney to the extent of three parasangs and landed in Wooster, a village noted for its splendid local -police and edu- cational facilities. Perhaps it ought to be mentioned here--lest we forget- that Heber was born March 26, 1881. Well, as we said before, Blanky ar- rived in Wooster and at once contract- ed a violent liking for his studies and afterwards acquired a taste for Omar Khayyain and The Pliilistine. lt is further to be said of him that he rooms at the Roth Club, though no one would suspect it at hrst glance. He a star meinber of Athenaean 'Literary Society, a hard worker in the lini- o The Stratford. th e on- H11- od- om ied in tc. try S 3 member of The Ruskin and a silent though ardent admirer of what Gibson has pleased to call ':The Eternal Questionf, 40 who can do divers and sundry thii JOHN JOSEPH DIDCOCT records November 26, 1882, as the date of his birth and mentions Dan- ville, Vermillion County, lll., as the place where. He graduated from South Salem Academy in 1901 and entered Wooster the same year. He was class president in his Sophomore year. Tecliiiieally considered-for John Joseph is assistant in the Bio- logy Department, our subject is a triploblastie coelomate animal of the sub-division vcrtebrata, with a very considerable differentiation anterior- ally. His prime function isvthe over- sight ot 'Fornialdehyded frogs, lobsters and dogfish, with the furnishing of ifood to the ravenous Myers' Club as his chief amusement and diversion. Being also football manager, a proin- inent Y. M. C. A. worker and a mem- ber of Athenaean Literary Society, he exemplifies that rare class of students igs in addition to his studies, Without mixing his dates. He is the inseparable companion of Irvin, The Hungry, and rooms at the Tiefentollar house. He is a member of the H7192 frater- nity. Stevens Point, Wis., claims the honor of being the birthplace of one of the most learned maidens of the class of '05. This auspicious event is re- corded as having occurred May 25 1884. .-Xt an early age the young lady 2 showed a marked disdain for Grinnn s somewhat exaggerated narrative and a decided dislike for the unconventional meter of Mother Goose7s rhymes. ln- stead she spent her time perusing the Scientific American and other similar light literature. In 1895 she mover' to Wooster and in 1901 joined '05 as a Freslnnan. In her Sophomore year she won the class prize scholarship. She is a inemher of Willard Literary Society, of Stratford and Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority, We must not neg- lect to mention this vonng ladv's name n is MARGARET FRAME. 41 No, this is not a piece of printer's pin, Uhdjow is the unpronounc- able name of a village-or a city may- hap, in India. RALPH HULL GRAHAM, according to the belief of the inhabitants of Uhdjovv at least, was reincarnated there October 28, 188-1. As soon as TuckerU was old eiiough to see the name of his native town in print, he wisely made a bee line for civilization, arriving in the United States of North America in' 1887. Atter the then prevailing fash- ion he attended the public schools for a time after his sixth year and next cast his lot With Wooster's Preps. So far as we know he never painted the tower ot the old University nor did he commit any other depredations that were ever 'found out. ln timejs discreet tlovv he became a. Collegiate and a Junior He is a member of Irving Literary So- ciety and belongs to WPA fraternity. Among the most illustrious of the excrueiatingly noble sons' of the Celes- tial Kingdom, worthily ranked with Li Hung Chang, the most beauteous Tsi Ann and our own Wooster hand competitor of the steam process- Chan Soon, must be inscribed the name of LUTHER NEWTON HAYES. Luther celebrates on the 19th day of April every year be- cause on that day, 1883, he joined our mortal procession at Soo Chow, China. In May, 1893, he journeyed to the United States and was admitted Without serious difficulty. Arriving at Wooster he joined '05 in Junior Prep. ln his Freshman year he conceived a violent liking for hymn No. 121, seeing at once that the author had been named after him. He was treasurer of '05 in his Freshman year, Editor of the Hand-Book in his Sophomore year and manager of the Basket Ball Team in his Junior year. He also president of the University Tennis Club, belongs to Irving and is a member of the Volunteer Band. A 42 CHARLES WENDELL HOCH- STETLER had the felicity of choosing the modest hamlet of Trail as his birthplace. The family bible shows that he made his bow to the un- terriiied democracy of Holmes County on January 16, 1877. By industrious- ly attending to his duties at meal times, the small Charles grew large enough to secure a teacher's certificate and it is related of him that he wield- ed the birch with becoming dignity and frequency. Charles Wendell graduated at Ada in 1899 after which he took charge of the schools at Wal- nut Creek, O., and later acted as Superintendent of Qehools at Berlin, O. He secured a state life certificate in 1901. ln 1903 he showed com- mendable discretion and discrimination by joining 905. Hoch is a shark in Chemistry, being the only living man. who ever saw an atom. He is member of Irving Literary Society. ln the pretentious Village of Bel- laire, 1 O., some twenty years ago- Mareh 9, 18811-to be exact, HARRY NEWTON IRWIN became 'Fac- tor in world affairs. Discreetly awaiting until the proper age lrwin entered the High School in his native city and from thence entered Wooster as a Freshman in 1901. ln Faculty meeting he has always been mentioned as one who attended to his knitting with connnendable per- sistency. He has a ravenous liking for mathematics of all sorts and simply thrives on such minor details as Logic and Psychology. As a side line and for the sake of his health, lrwin sings in the Prohibition Quartet. He is a member ot Athenaean, of the Univer- sity Debating Club, of the Chapel Choir. College Band and of the Ora- torio Chorus. 43 HUMPHREY NEWTON ER- VIN added one to the population of Dayton, Ky., on March 19, 1883. The state of line horses, fair women and the fiery Huid that not only cheers but also inebriates, sent this proinising son to Wooster after his graduation at Dayton H. S. in 1900. In his Fresh- man year, he distinguished himself by his gastronomic feats at the Christy Club, and not long afterwards he won the title which has since inade him fanious. Later the foundations of the Damon and Pythias friendship which couples Didcoct and himself as one and inseparable, were laid, and the twain chose the Wide renowned Tiefen- tollar mansion as their abode. ln 1901 he won a. place on the 'Varsity track teani. He is a nieniber of Athenaean literary Society and a charter ineniber of Fo- l'lll man of the social coinniittee of '05 in 1883 was a year of mighty seismic disturbances and of glorious sunsets. On the 26th of August in this year LESTER MCCOSH LAUGHLIN was gently deposited on niother earth by the busy old stork who tends to such affairs. Barnesville, O., is the place innnortalized by this event. The portents that ushered hini into being. augur the scintellating irridcscence of his future career-the earthquake fore- telling the shaking up the staid old earth will get when Lester tackles it after college days are oter. McCosh a Hfussern of no sinall renown, if he enjoys it, however, the INDEX has no suggestions to offer. He is a char- ter nieinber of the Ruskin Society, is an enthusiast in Botany and a shark in in Music. lf attention to the fair ones do not too greatly interfere, our cannv Scot will be found, high up on the list when the returns are all in. 44 ll debating club. He was chair- his Junior year. RALPH MANIFOLD LOW- RY was born in Youngstown, Ohio, June 22, 1883. His middle name in- dicates his Various-too-numerous- to-be- mentioned accomplishments acquired while living in the above mentioned city, Parker City, Pa., Wellsville, 0., and iinally in Wooster. He is awalk- ing base ball encyclopedia, at renowned Greek scholar, one of the literary lights that scintillate in Websterian's galaxy, organist and choir-master of the First Presbyterian church, a member of the Oratorio chorus and of the 'Varsity choir. He saves enough time from all these duties, however, to do some little 'Fiissing7' and incidentally does some work every day on the Wooster Jour- rml. He is the only genuine simon- pure Roycroft invincible 'gKid Lowry, there is none like unto him- no, not a single solitary individual. The subject of this 'effusion came to Wooster in 1898 and joined 705 as a junior Prep. He is a member of the .4 7392 Fraternity. HELEN TRIPP LAYPORT began litc's uncertain journey on June 23, 1883, from lyoudonville, O. Her middle name doubtless is accounted for by the fact that she has lived in Co- lumbus Grove, Akron, Loveland and Van Buren as well as her native city. She spent three years at the Western, but tiring ot the lonesomeness of a girls' seminary, decided to try co-ed Wooster where she had the exceeding good fortune to become a member ot '05 Miss Layport has proved a valuable j member ot Williard literary society and 4 'V jT'L'v'?f'fi1.5 jj , 1 1 of Ruskin and is at present president of the Vigilance Committee ot the Dorm. In the latter capacity she is at once a joy and a stay, to the long suffering matron and the vigilant dean. 45 Freeport is a misnomer. It is no nearer the restless briny sea or the sun kissed rippling northern lakes than is Piqua, O. In short it is a town in Pennsylvania and is of interest to us chiefly because MISS CAROLINE MCCULLOCH was born there on December 1, 1883. Of course shc at- tended school and presumably gradu- ated from the Freeport I-I. S. In the fall of 1900, one never to be forgotten morning, Carrieis papa flagged the fly- er and brought his daughter to his Alma Mater Where she entered Senior Prep with '05. Since coming to Woos- ter Miss Mcflulloeh has identified her- self with varied college interests, being a member of the Chapel choir, Casta- lian literary society and of Kappa Al- pha Theta sorority. Besides her stud- ies she has found time for other pur- suits at least equally interesting and instructive-which perhaps is all We care to write at this point, since the Busin looking over our shoulder. 46 On a .glorious winter's day, Janu- ary 13th, 1882, the inhabitants of Pittsburg-a city great and prosperous, were pleased to learn that EDWIN SHIELDS McCONNELL had ap- peared among them. His early history ' lies enshrouded in the eternal smoke of his native city. A foreboding that he should become a Greek led him to Parnassus I-I. S. and prepared him to enter middle Prep. at Wooster in 1899. In his Freshman year Mac Won the 'Varsity initial in base ball and bas- ket ball. In 1904 he played first base on the 'Varsity nine and was one of the most brilliant and consistent play- ers on the basket ball team.- I-Ie was elected treasurer of '05 in his Sopho- more year and president of the Y. M. C. A. at the close of his Junior year. He is a member of Irving, of the Vol- unteer Band and of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. - ess Manager of the INDEX is It does seem odd to remark that MARCH was born in May, yet such was the ease with ARTHUR WIL- LIAM, the hero of this tale. The auspicious event occurred on the 27th of May, 1883. Zahleh, Syria, boasts the honor of being his natal place. Filled with the restless spirit indicated by his name, Arthur journeyed to Aireriea in Sep- tember, 1899, and ended his wanderings at Wooster U. He entered the prepar- atory department with 7015 but by em- ploying his time between meals he over- took P05-a feat upon which he is to be heartily congratulated. Having contracted the habit of industry in his Freshman year, Arthur promises to graduate with flying colors in due sea- son. He was a member of Lowell lit- erary society while in Prep, and at present is a loyal member in Irving and the Volunteer Band. - MISS NELLIE ROSE blos- somed forth in the quiet little city ot Wellsville, O., on August 19, 1883. After a childhood spent on the banks of the rolling Ohio, she embarked for Wooster in 1900 and safely landed at the Union station near the foot of Bealle avenue. Entering Senior prep. with ,05 she has kept her place with the class although not in school in 1902. It must be confessed that Nellie is never without her short coniings but nevertheless she is a most necessary and valuable member ot '05 and a liv- ing refutation of Billy Shakis dictum that every Rose has its thorn. Miss Rose is a member of Castalian literary society. Fearing lest we be tempted to pun on a name so appro- priate, we respectfully refer the reader to the original whom he will find vastly more interesting than this briet biog- raphy. 47 Ax might also add that he belongs to In Toliiyo, Japan, September 22, 1882, E. A. OHORI first. saw the light of day. He is of the class called in his native country,.,gth'e Samurai. He attended the publir schools from eight until fourteen and then had the nerve and foresight to come to Ameri- ca, and in September, 1902, introduced the students of Wooster University to a. genuine hustler from the 'CSunrise Kingdomff He enttred with '06lbut soon deserted that aggregation for the superior associations ot 905. In the 1901 miustrel show this enterprising oriental was a star performer. So tar as ive have been able to learn there is no discount on Ohori. He is a mem- ber of Athenaean literary society, of the Independent Debating club and of the Volunteer Band. The same pluck and perseverance that have so far charac- terized his career will someday make him a power in his native land. We the Meyers club and is said to be a member of the S. D. W. F. p T. M. PATTERSON wailed his greeting to an expectant world on Sep- tember 26, 1875, at Portsmouth, O. So far as he remembers, no extraor- dinary episode marked his youthful career. His sojourn in the public schools left him as a rich legacy, an unbounded love for literature, and so it is not at all surprising to find him spending several years in a book bind- rey. Naturally longing to give expres- sion to the knowledge here acquired, T. M. sought training at Moody's In- stitute in Chica go. Soon after, strange to relate, we find him working as a fireman on the C. P. 85 V. R .R Pat's next venture was matrimony, which master stroke he executed in 1898. In 1902 he entered O. S. U. and in 1903 he arrived in Wooster, right side upiwith care, as a smiling and happy member ot 705. ' 48 LYLE RINGLAND was first heard from on April 7, 1884, at Hast- ings, Neb. Neglecting Greely's famous bit of advice, he chose rather to jour- ney eastward to Granville, O., where he made more or less use ot his time in Denison preparatory department during the years '98, '99 and J00. In the fall of 1900 he deserted the educa- tional emporium at Granville and brought up at Wooster. He is assistant in the Physics labora- tory, a member of A T52 fraternity and a stockholder of the Websterian Literary Society. In 1903 Lyle won the Varsity ini- tial as quarterback of the 'foot-ball team. The year 1876 will be noted in his- tory for all time to come as the year ot the Centennial of American Inde- pendence, of Cfuster's massacre and of the birth of LYNN WILBUR ST. JOHN. This portentous event oc- curred at Union City, Pa., on Novem- ber, 1877, to he exact as to time and place. C'Who:s Who in American does not mention any of Wilbur's youthful esca- pades, so the INDEX 'Feels justified in passing them over in silence. Gradu- ating from Monroe H. S. in 1896, Lynn taught the youth of Barberton for four years. In 1900 O. S. U. was favored with his presence. Here he played half-back on the ,Varsity eleven in his Freshman year. In 1901 we find him teaching in Fostoria H. S. In 1902 Wooster had the good fortune to secure him as University coach, a position which he has most admirably hlled. Having learned in Vance's Bib class that Hit is not good for man to be alone? St. John decided to join the large and increasing order ol' Bene- dicts in Wooster University and in 1903 was married. The coachts heart to heart talks with his men have become classics. His work with the differ- ent Wooster teams shows him one of the best and most versatile coaches in Ohio. 49 When the secretary read f'Loveland at the INDEX board ineeting, the Busi- ness Manager began to look somewhat self conscious+if not einbarrassed. He was inistalien, however, for the place referred to is a genuine town in Ohio, the place where MISS NELLIE SHIELDS was born August 19, 1883. Wooster tirst niade her acquaintance in '98 when she entered Junior Prep. with '05-the fall after graduating Eroni Loveland H. S. She has been a loyal supporter of the black and red of ,05 ever since. Willard Literary So- ciety' counts her one of its niost faith- tul and efficient nieinbers. Miss Shields is deeplv interested in pedagogy and will doubtless wield the terule after her graduation. JCI-IN 14 SPENCER, the records show, inade his in- itial appearance on June 10, 1883, at Piqua, O. Of a domestic turn ot niind Spence did not stray from that his- toric spot but attended severely to the inaitter of growing large enough to play foot-ball and to graduate from Piqua H. S. Corning to Wooster in 1901, John saved tiiue enough ifroni his Freshman studies to niake the JVar- sitv eleven and he has been a victim of foot-ball habit ever since. Because of the 'Fart that Ji. Mitchell is the owner of Molly,v Prexy is one of his ardent adinirers. Of Speiice's alfairs of the heart we would gladly write at length, were it not that he is an inliuential ineinber of the lnnicv board and thus able to blue ptncil the whole business. We will remark in passing. however, that when J. goes to the Dorm theniatron never stops to inquire whoni he wants, but rings her up at once. Sncncrr is a inember of HH!! fraternity, of Irving literary society and of Half. He was business manager of '05 Ixniix. 50 ARTHUR TIDD was born on one of those glorious days in June of which the poet so ecstatically sings- the nineteenth day of the month, and in the year of our Lord, 1881. Columbiana., O,. boasts the high honor of the place Where. The influence of environment is here most clearly exemplified for Tidd has been radiating the sunshine of that day ever since. He is the happy pos- sessor of 'tthe smile that won't come off. Arthur graduated from Colum- biana H. S. in 1901 and set sail via the Penna.. Lines west of Pittsburg for Wooster, in the same year. Tidd is of an unusually reverent turn of mind and is especially noted for his profound respect for the 'Var- sity profs, all of whom he treats with the most punctilious consideration. He is a member of Athenaean liter- ary society, of the Volunteer Band and of that most voracious and mysterious organization, the Myers club. EDWIN MARTIN THOMAS first attracted public notice by being born at Perrysville, O., on August 18, 1883. After one uneventful year at this pla.ce, he permitted his parents to carry him to Springfield, O., where he tarried six years. Thence we must fol- low him to Columbiana, O., where he entered the public schools and under the gentle adlnonitions of his beloved teacher, together with the helpful and invigorating iniiuences of a suppleinen- tary whaling at home for every one received at school, Timmy developed into a hard student . In 1898 Ed brought his parents to Wooster and in the fall of that year he sauntered into the preparatory depart- ment ready to take a fall out of any one from Black Jack to Aunty Pen. He has been with us ever since. He has held a number of class and liter- ary otlices, is a valuable nieniber of Q X . Irving literary society and is a prominent, earnest and iaithtul worker in the Y. Nl. C. A. 51 WARREN CHESTER TODD was ushered into this vale of tears at Rifton Glenn, N. Y., September 22, 1881. From his own account We conclude that the part of his early life not spent in eating and sleeping must have been taken up in moving. He has lived at various times in Gallatin, N. Y., Saddle River, N. J., Newton, N. J., Springield, Pa., and Wooster, O. Chester in some way, however, ob- tained a public school education and in 1900 entered Wooster as Senior Prep. Warren C. has done gilt edged Work in Wooster along lines athletic and intellectual. Being a six-footer with all kinds of nerve he proves a valuable man on the foot ball team and won his WVU in 1902. Withal, he is a frequent visitor at Hoover cottage and it cannot be said of him that he is neglecting the glorious opportunities of a co-ed institution. Todd is a member of Athenaean literary society, a prominent worker in the Y. M. C. A. and one of the main -stays of the Ruskin club. ROBERT BOYD WALKIN- SHAW iirst introduced himself to the natives of Millwood, Pa., on March 24, an even score of years ago. A char- acteristic ifaculty for attending to his knitting Won Walky'J a diploma from Derry H. S. from which institution he started on the hot foot to Wooster. Unusually mild and unobtrusive as a prep, he nevertheless distinguished himself as a member of the riotous push that so thoroughly bedeviled Prof. Boyd during the Winter of 1902-703. In his Sophomore year he came to the front as a member of Athenaean liter- ary society and of the University de- bating club of which he is a charter member. In his Junior year Walky cut a large swath as a debator and made a place on the first debating team of the college-the team that debated W. 81 J. Out of motives purely philanthropic Walkv disposes of Dr. Chase's Recipe Book and other like classic litera- ture, during the good old summer time. CORA MCMASTERS WEL- DAY was sent into this vale of tears on September 15, 1882, at Union- port, O. At an early age she moved with her family to Salineville, O., where she graduated from H. S. in 1897. Two years of teaching in the local schools followed and in 1902 we find her at Wooster University ready and willing for college work. First identi- iied with '06, she soon realized the de- sirability of associating with '05, and by facing the horrors of summer school, successfully joined that class in 1903. Cora has taken a prominent part in Willard literary society, is an enthusi- astic basket ball player and a member of The Stratford. JOHN OLIVER WELDAY was first announced at Unionport, O., Sep- tember 21, 1878. He early manifested a dislike for the strenuous monotony of farm life and chose the village school as the lesser of two evils. Mov- ing froin this hamlet to Salineville, Ohio, he graduated from the H. S. at that place in 1895, and at once began to teach. After wielding the ferule two years at Monroeville, two years at Salineville and for an equal time at Solon, O., J. O. drifted into Wooster University. He was chosen president of the Freshman class in 1902, was twice elected treasurer of the Athletic Asso- ciation and acted as editor-in-chief of 1905 INDEX. In 1904- he won a place on the Wooster-Delaware debate. He is the founder of the University de- bating club, a member of The Strat- ford, of Athenaean literary society and of the A T53 fraternity. 53 Shreve, O., is the place of his nativ- ity, and right proud she is of the fact, too. Here he passed a happy child- hood in doing chores and going to school-always, however, keeping a wistful eye on the great brick structure A plainly visible ten miles to the north. He completed his H. S. work in 1901 and soon afterward set out for the be- iforcnientioned brick. His arrival was announced by the college band and admiring Profs. hast- ened to do him honor. He was end man in the celebrated minstrel shoxvs ot 1902 and 1901 and a promising member of the base ball squad in 1901. He also toys with the gay and festive basket-ball. He is a member of Athenaean liter- ary society in which his Work is of the gilt edged sort. The Worst that can be said ot him is that he once roomed at the lloth Club and that l e is inclined to break into poetry on very slight provocation. JOY ODELL WARNER, born October 17, 1892. FRED ORLANDO WISE, un- der protest, told the INDEX, man that he was born September 28, 1880, at Bellaire, O. - At an early age, while playing on the banks ot the pleasant Ohio, Fred determined to become a pirate and to scour the river from Pittsburg to Oairo, but an early love affair made him a poet instead. , Freddie did his Prep. Work in Woos- ter just atter a three years' sojourn in the law oiiicc ot Congressman Danford of Bellaire. To this experience may no doubt be ascribed his intensely dig- nified and legal air. F. Orlando is a member of Athenean literary society, is a charter member of the University debating club, was chosen alternate on the Wooster-Wes leyan debate in 1904, is a member of the College band, belongs to the Ora- torio Ohorus and is a member -Y X 'ftraternity Thus it may be seen that he is a very busy young man. CHARLES ARTHUR WIL- DER, Piqua, O., August 27, 1883. The above date indicates the first 'fact of note connected with Chass, history. lt will he noted that his name is the comparative degree of an adjec- tive often applied to Piqua young men. Doubtless this cliaracteristie saved Chass from the sad fate of the good- who, alas! are prone to die young. Charles Arthur arrived in Wooster in 1901 and began at once to practice those fascinating arts that have since made him so irresistible in love. We cannot here chronicle the kaleidoseopic changes in Chass' affairs flu c0'zw',,' space forbids. Sui-tice it to say that he has not been seriously accused ot con- stancy in such matters. ln his junior year '05 elected Wilder president of the class. He is a member of Irving, of the Independent debating club, of Beta Theta Pi fraternity and of Theta Nu Epsilon. By searching diligently on the map, and in the right place, one may iind Carrollton, O., an insignilicant village which owes its place in the geography to the fact that JAMES HARVEY WHITCRAFT condescended to be born in it on August 15, 1882. The short and simple annals of his youth are written only in the minds of his former playmates and companions where the INDEX leaves them for future biographies. HBluch graduated from Carrollton H. S. in 1901 and in Sep- tember ot the same year landed feet first in Wooster where he at once ai- traeted notice on account of his bar- barous taste to neclities. He was elected president of 905 in his Freshman year and has since Won the 'Varsity initial in foot-ball and base-ball. He was captain of the ,Var- sity eleven in 1903 and of the base- ball team of 190-L. Whitcral't is a mem- of Athenaean literary society, of the University Debating club and belongs to .-I T52 i'raternity. He is a modest genius of a taeiturn disposition and much given to meditation. He is also much addicted to the use ot the untranslatable Carrolltonism-- garsh. ORIE CHRISTIAN YODER states that he was born at Weilersville, O., March 21, 1880-it his memory serves him rightly. At his earliest pos- sible convenience he forsook the school of that classic village for the' larger ad- vantages of Smithville Academy. Speedily outgroiving that educational center, Orie journeyed to Elkhart, Ind., and graduated from that school in 1902. The foxy men of Elkhart, perceiving a. good thing, elected the subject ot this sketch president of the Alumni Association of that place. Yoder entered Wooster in Septem- ber, 1902, and executed a master stroke by affiliating with '05. He is a mein- ber of the Independent Debating Club and an enthusiastic -Worker in Athen- for the fair ones of Wooster and ean Literary Society. We cannot forbear saving in conclu- sion that he has a decided Weakness We feel justified in predicting his en- gagement before the close of his Senior vear Heis a. hummer and no mistake about it. Mav be itys because his name is GEORGE EDWARD ZINNIN- GERT-onomatopoetic, you know. George Edward began humming at Canton, O., January 1-l, 1876. He surived all the vicissitudcs of youth it is perhaps totally unnecessary to relate, and after a season began to teach school in Stark county. Fate soon af- ter directed him to Wooster Where, together with his antithesis William Deford Shorty G111'I1111l11gS,l1Q began to strive for higher things. In spite ot nature's handicap, he has been plucking the fruit of knowledge's tree without stint. G. Edward has devoted his time in large part to his studies. though after hearing of Prexyfs prow. ess in that exciting meet-the high kick for a short man, he has had ain- bitions in athletics. When '05 honors are passed out, Zinninger will not take a back seat. He is a member of Irving literary Debating club. I society and ot the University Junior Class Roll OFFICERS. CHARLES ARTHUR WILDER CAROLTNE MCCULLOCH. CLARA ERBECK . . . HARRY N. IRWIN . JOHN M. SPENCER . .... ATI-rLE'rlo Juniors Abbey, Robert Parsons, se. HH!! .. Arinstutz, Platte, ph ........... Bissell, Maria Jeannette, ph .... . Pnizsmnxr Vreiz-PRESIDENT . Snonisrrnir . Tnmsnnisn Rnrnrsemrarrvir . . . . . . . . . . .Nanking, China . . . . . . .Sterling . . . .Wooster Blanlgenhorn, Heber, e .,.... .... O rrville Campbell, Carl Herbert ........ .... C airfield Cummings, William De Ford, e ..... .... N ankin Derr, Daisy May, ph ........... .... X Vooster Dideoct, John Joseph, ph.A71Q.. ..... Joliet, Ill. Erbeek, Clara Martha, se ........ ..... S eattle, Wash. Ervin, Humphrey Newton, e ........, .... D ayton, Ky. Frame, Margaret Anna, ph.l1'Kfl .... ...... X Vooster Fulton, Laura Deborah, e.h'JH .... ......... X Yooster Graham, Ralph Hull, e.0I A .... Hayes, Luther Newton, e. . . . Hoehstetler, Charles, ph .... Irwin, Harry Newton, e ..... Laughlin, Lester MeCosh, e ..... Layport, Helen, ph .......... Lowry, Ralph A T52 ............. Lovett, Grace Vivien, ph ....... McConnell, Edward Shields, e. NUI! .... . . . . .Kodali, India . . . .Sooehow, China ..........Trail . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Barnesville . . . .Van Buren . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . .Wooster . .Parnassus, Pa. McCulloch, Caroline, se.A'.467 ......... .... F reeport. Pa. March, Arthur William, ph ..... Orr, Gertrude Crane, ph ..... Patterson, T. M ........... Reniek, Fern, ph .... ...... ..Tripoli, Syria . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Lewiston llinglzind. George Lyle, ph. A 732 .. . llnpert. Xettie Lorena, c ....... Sanborn, Mary Alice, pl1.l1'.4H. .. Shields, .Nellie Bard, ph ...... .. Sinclair, Harriet fllyne, c.f1'll'lf . .. St. John, Lynn ............... . ...... . Spencer, John Mitchell, ph. HHH H.Yf '. .. Thomas. Edwin Martin, c .......... . Tidd, Arthur .......... . Todd, Chester Warren. 1-. Townsend, Edwin..1lTSJ .,.... . . . lYallcinslmn'. llohert Eolvd, ph. .. . Weaver, James. will .........i. Welrlnlv, Corn Hcllusters, ph... Weldny, John, ph.A732 ............ Wliitcratt. James Harvey, sc. 147192. . .. Wilder, Charles Arthur, c-.lftllf fM'!f Wise, Fred, O., c ............... Yoder, Orie Clrristian, ph ..... . . .Wooster . . . .Westville . . .Wooster . . . .Loveland . . . .Dayton . . .Wooster . . . .Piqua . .,... Wooster . . . . . . . . . . .Colurnbiana . . ,East Springfield, Pa. . . . . . .Adrian, Mich. . . .Millwood, Pa. . . .Pittshnrg, Pa. .... .Wooster . . .Wooster . . .Carrollton . . . . .Piqua . . . . . .Bellaire . . .Weilersville Zinninger, George Edward, ph. . . . . .Rohertsville , 1 XX ' I . i: X f f-Ax, xii I 7' V ,,9.fg,,. , ef- ,WQQW Q X X' XNML 3. 4 1 K fx, on XX , irc? ziylllgh K . . Yf- - -xg Q ' . I f A Rs . r -g -' L ,rs 2-. . E ' X- y'f ,.?'! - , 5 .-.. W ..1':g5 'ff lg 175 '-X .gt 1 -- X X f -fi-yr 12112 1 '-.X . ,- Xxr ff' 1x l',-1:45 1' ' Lf L T --mf ff- -, .5211 rl ' e'.:,'gl.5-f-ai 58 f K f- ,nf 5 -wx -f Alf S X 2-Pzgsf Wx f'X ei' 5 9 -'ff7WM?N - , ,J 5 Qlghl XE 1755 ZZ if ,.x The Sophomore Class CoLons: Red and Gray. CLASS YELL. ltickety-rix I Riekety-rix ! l yell, I yell, for Nineteen-six! In the melodious tongue so ably taught hy the Elder, there are to he found two words, sorrros and Monos. These mean respectively, Wise and foolish. By deftly combining these terms some prescient Wag in times long past hit upon precisely the proper appellation for second year students of our colleges. The line-up of '06 strictly fulhlls all the terms of the Word as denned. But even the most prejudiced must admit that the moms ingredient in '06 is not obtrusively apparent. C'Credit to Whom credit is duej' as Doc remarked when he put the zero on his little card. The class passed thru the Sophomore stage with honor and credit. lt has made itself felt in every department of college life. A survey of the officers of the different organizations shows an unusual proportion of Sophomores-due either to their ability or smoothness in manipulating the Wires. Let us take a look. If the scene Wearies you, avert your head. There is Dunn, poet and author. 7TWas he who invented ffThe Vanished Em- pire,'P a tale moving and pathetic. He yearns for that which makes the World go round-Qsee page 99 of his hookj, and dotes on neckties of a varied hue. Here is Hayman. His famed sweater would stand alone. He slams the hammer, puts the shot, twirls the disk, smelleth the battle from afar on the foot ball squad and is purveyor of music and entertainment at Platte's Place. Who is Allen? Ah! he is the fierce debater. They tremble when he arises. And there is Helen Butterfield who would change her name and Plumer who tinkles the ivories with an Orpliean touch. There is George Fitch, too-and Miss Lillian Durstine! 'Nuff said! Did We forget to mention the august J. Mason Ormshee? Nay, we think not, for We had Mahelle Keener in mind. One who did not know would imagine this to be a Senior Class since certain affairs are so far developed. What eo I of Hoover, Mowry and Good-do they not belong to the S. D. W. F.? But like the little singing, babbling brook described in Townsencl's Love Songs To An Absent Charinerft this narrative niight wobble on forever. And that would be a very sad thing, wouldn't it? Of course, 706 is going to be a large factor next year. We niust expect to see its inagnitude increase in a geometrical ratio as it nears its culini- nating point in the spring of 706. XVe might anticipate and tell of its-We niean the classjs-future, but we will refrain. The class speaks in tones not low and uncertain, for itself. Scan the roll from Howard Lewis Acton to Edna Zinnnerinan and imagine how the faculty niust feel as they think of what they are partially responsible for. Further history is unnecessary, for next year 706 will give all the niinor details in its own Index. And now, reader, if you feel the same blessed relief in having Hnished this description of this outfit, 106, that the writer did as he feebly wrote down this concluding sentence, how awfully relieved you must feel! ,AIM 'X 61 Sophomore Class Roll OFFICERS. JAMES BOYD CROUCH .... . PRESIDENT CHARLES H. RICE . . . VICE PRESIDENT JULIA O. MERBICK . . . . SECRETARY H. H. HAYMAN . .... . TREASURER E. G. CBABTREE . .... ATHLETIC BEPRESENTIITIVE Sophomores Acton, Howard Lewis, ph. A7162 .............. . . .Bellefontaine Alexander, Charles Kirkwood, C. ....,. Bellaire Alexander, Jean Hamilton, c. . . .. Allen, Leroy, ph ................ Allis, Clarence, so. N011 TNE . Anderson, Edith Jane, c. '. . .. Anderson, Laura KA9 .......... Axtell, John Harold, ph. lftlll Bonar, Leonard, e. ............ . . Benedict, Verne, will ............. Butteriield, Helen Jane, ph. A14 W ..... Carroll, Ralph, c. ............... . Crabtree, Ernest Granville, ph .... . Crainer, David Harold, ph. .... . Crouch, James Boyd, e. A TS2. .. Cunningham, Philip, c. ...... . Davis, Alice Parker, ph. H1-IH. . . . . Dickey, Margaretta Theodora, sc. . . Digel, Estella Helene, c. ....... . Douglass. Jean Smith, ph. ..... .. Dunn, Waldo Hilary, e. WJH ..... . . Dnrstine, Lillian Wenona, ph !1'!1'l'. .. Felger, Helen, ph FAT .....,... . Fitch, George Ashmore, sc. . . . . Fletcher, Harriett, ph ...... Flucky, Martin Loy, c. ..... . Gihnore, Lloyd Streater. cl .......... . 62 ........Bellaire .........Wooster Santiago, Chili . . . . . . . .Dayton ..Bochester, Pa. . . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Bound Bottom . . . . . .Massillon ......Piqua . . . .Wooster . . Q .Zanesville . . . .Fostoria . . . . .Mansfield . . . .Denison . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Massillon . . . .Wooster . . . 'I .Monroe . . . .Cleveland . . . . . .Mansfield Shanghai, China ........Dalton . . .Toledo . . .Lisbon 1 N , . Good, Albert Irwin, e ....... Gorgas, Charles Andrew, sc ..... Hayman, Herbert Harry, e ....... Heindel, William Wallace, c.5X .. Hoover, William Homer, e ..... Hunter, Grace, e.H'AH ...... Keener, Mabelle Ruth, c. . Keys, James Brown, sc .... Keys, William Albert, sc ........ Lehmiller, Ruth, ph ............. Liggett, Woodford McCallip, ph .... Lowry, Bernard Ford, c ........... McClelland, Mary Beaeom, c.KAO .... McCulloch, William Herbert, sc ..... .... McKinley, Mary Gladys, e.A'KI' .... ..... Merrick, J ulia Olmstead, ph ..... Morrison, Elsie. Blanche, ph .... Mowry, Eli Miller, c ....,... Murray, James Robertson. ph .... McDowell, Waldo E., AT52 .... Neff, Clarence Alvin, ph ....... Ormsbee, John Mason, sc. EX. .. Peebles, Elizabeth Steele, ph .... Platter, Robert, RHI! ........ Plumer, Ralph Etsweiler, sc ..,. Pore, Orin, C .......... ...... Price, Gracie May, ph .......... Rice, Charles Herbert, c.AT52 Rose, Christina Helen, ph .... Scheidemantel, John, c ......... Schorger, Arlie William, ph ...... Schwartz, Julius Foss, sc.AYLQ .... Shriber, Carrie Elizabeth, ph ..... Stone, Maud Frances, ph .......... Tyler, J. Frick, WTA T NE .......... Taggart, Margaret Wallace, sc.KK1' Vance, Catherine Stuart, pl1.f1 hT . . . . Wadsworth, Robert, ph. A T52 HNE. . . . Warden, lda Elizabeth, ph ...... Zimmerman, Edna, ph ....... . . . 64 Parl . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . .Wooster . .Caldwell, Ida. .Leechburg, Pa. ........Dalton .Butfalo, N. Y. .Kittanning, Pa. ........Shreve ........ShreVe North lndustry . . . . .U richsyille . . . . . . .Wooster ..Pittsburg, Pa. ......Mt, Hope . . . .Steubenville cersburg, W. Va. . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Belleville Chinantu, China . . . .Millersburg . . . .Bueyrus . . . . .Erie, Pa. . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Loudonville . .. .. ...Creston 1lWO11tiCellO, Ind. . . . . . .Wellsville . . . . .Kenton .....TitHn . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Barberton . . . . . .Salem . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . .Warren .... ...Bellaire . . .Marshallville l , rrwlimggmg The Freshmang a Commentary COLORS: Blue and White. CLASS YELL. Rippa Zappa! Rippa Zappa! Rippa Zappa Zu! Chickalaclia! Chickalacka! Chicltalaclia lu! 1907! The White! The Blue! The class of '07 has served its apprenticeship in college life. Ere this volume has been exhaustively perused by its throngs of expectant readers or, possibly, by the time our readers have been exhaustively exhausted by it, the Freshmen-all of them, let us hope-will have passed the final exam stage on their road to Sophomore. The evidence is all in and we can but summarize. This class has been well represented in all college activi- ties. A goodly number of its members are to be found in the literary, social, athletic and religious organizations of the school. The scholarship of the class is fully up to the high standard of the institution. In its social doings and other purely class affairs '07 has given evidences of a commendable originality. Moreover the members of this class-with but few exceptions, have been sufficiently conscious of the fact that they were Freshmen and have been duly modest and studious. It might be said in passing that While a forward Prep is as sand and gravel in one's strawber- ries and cream, an unduly fresh Freshman is indeed a grievous vexation and a sore trial. An excuse may be readily advanced for the former, but a dawning capacity for reasoning and an opportunity to gain some idea of his limi- tations by comparison, should make the latter as the Man of 'Uz for humility. It is a pleasure to record that the class as a Whole has considered its importance through the tother end of the 'scope The several editors of the Index therefore, have had no occasion to dip their skillful pens in gall and roast ,the individuals of this crowd until the very marrow should 66 freeze in their bones. fWe trust tha.t the rapid oscilla.tion of our ngure in the above sentence will give no otfensej We are pleased then that this crowd came along. They added much to the gaiety of the opening, were useful in paying tuition, helped sustain the Voice, bought INDEXHS and mainta.ined the eternal balance. The preponderating mentality a.nd scin- tillating brilliancy of the Seniors at one end of the line demanded com- pensating antithesis, at the other-else how were progress possible and where the need of colleges? Freshmen must of necessity be a part and parcel of the student body politic. We must bear the inevitable and smile as sweetly as our visages will permit. A Hux of words is the quintessence of weariness. Let us cease. I-0 fa 0:- if ill T' Q' . .il 67 Freshmen Class Roll OFFICERS. ROBERT WATT . .... . . . PRESIDENT HAZEL EMERY . . . AKTICE PRESIDENT CHARLES LAMALE . . . TREASURER MIRIAM HARD . . ..... SECRETARY MARY HICKOK . . . . . CLAss HISTORIAN JOHN D. OVERHOLT ...... ATHLETIC REPRESENTATIVE Freshmen Alms, Ernestine, ph .... .............. .... O XI fensboro, Ky. Anderson, Edna, sc ..... ..... B urgettstown, Pa. Anderson, Helen V., sc. . . ........ Mt. Vernon Baird, Ruth Agnes, ph ..... ..... F ruitdale Beaver, Elizabeth May, ph ..... ..... P ataskala Blocher, Harry Haiber, c .... ....... D ayton Boyce, Anita Rapp, ph. Klfl' .... .H ..... Jalapa, Mex. Caldwell, Albert Oscar, c ..... .... B Tayaguez, P. R. Carson, Edgar Paul, C ....... ........ T oronto Chapin, Merle Everett, ph ..... ..... O strander Chidester, Charles ........... . . .Massillon Conley, Le Roy, ph .... ..... N Vooster Correll, Charles, sc ........... ...... X Vooster Coupland, James ................. ......... P anlding Cowles, Frank Hewitt, ph. ATS! ..... .... D esMoines, Ia. Craig, Cyrus Burns, c. ill' ........ . . . . . .Cambridge Creamer, Myrtle, ph ..... A ........ Key Crockett, Lela Ethel, ph ..... .... C elina Douglass, Edward c ............. ..... l Vooster Elder, Mary Florence, sc.lfAf'1 ..... ..... X Vooster Elliott, Manford, c ............ ....... B ellaire Emerson, Harold, ph.lff9fl ...... .... .... B e lletontaine Emery, Hazel Kerr, ph.A'A0 ,.......... ....... I Kenton 68 Forman, Hugh Lockhart, c .... Foss, Clifford .............. Garvin, Gordon Goodale, sc ..... Garvin, Gordon Goodale, so ..... Gasche, Miriam, ph ......... Graham, James, sc ......... Greegor, Ralph Harold, sc .... Grove, Mary Ellener, c ........ Hardin, Miriam Blanche sc ...... Harrison, William Zenas, c. A 7192 . . . Hartman, Wilson Donelson, sc ..... Henshaw, Harry Griggs, ph, A TQ , . . . Heusch, Elbert, ph .............. Hickok, Mary A249 ..... ..,..,... Jacobs, Albert Gordon, c.lfUll ...I Jones, Mary Wilson, ph ...... . Kessler, Frank Da.niel, ph... Lamale, Charles Evans, c .... Laughlin, Clinton, c ........ Lind, Amelia Mary, ph... Martin, Ruth, c ...,... Miller, William James, sc.. Moore, Alfred William, c .... Musslman, Earl Austin, ph. .. Nold, Jacob, ph ............ Overholt, John D., sc.f11l'.I Pfeifer, Harriet Kathryn, sc. .. Pollock, Albert Emory, le .... Pratt, Allan Harlow, ph .... Price, Merle, c ........... Reese, Edith, c.A'lfl' ........ Richardson, Guy Arthur, c ..... Ritter. Clytie Claire, c .............. Roesley, Joseph John sc ............. Sanborn, Martha Virginia, IJl1.ll'ftU ..... Saunders, Frances Edna, ph .......,... Stophlet, Leta, sc .......... SWilI'tZ.EStllQI' Lynch, sc .... ....... Tate. Hiram .......................... Tliomas, Jonathan Winters, ph.4fl'J 69 .Eerozepore, India ..........Wooster . . . .Copiapo, Chili . . . .Copiapo, Chili . . . . . .Dresden . . .Mt. Gilead . . . . . .Shreve . . . .Greenfield . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .DesMoines, la. Derry Station, Pa. . . .Des Moines, Ia. . . . . . . .St. Marys ..... ...Wooster . . . .Detroit, Mich .........Penfield . . . .Fort Recovery . . . . . .Lindsay . . . . . . .Warsaw . . . .Canal Dover . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . .Middletown . . . . .Orrville . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Chillicothe ... ...Lisbon . . . .Minerva .......Creston . . . .Girard, Pa. . . . . .Hicksville . . .Bellefontaine . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . . .Wooster . , . .Denison, Tex. . . . .Winfield, Kan. . . . . .. . .Wooster . . . .Paulding . . . .Dayton Thomas, Mary Lois, c ....... Vandersall, Stanley Byron, c. Watt, Robert ............... Weckesser, Elizabeth, ph ...... West, William Fullington, ph .... Wiles, Annie Lorena, ph ..... Williamson, Mary Edna, ph.. Wilson, Ivan Otis, C ......... Wingert, Rufus, c. .. e 'M x bvfm 5, Ya Xu In 6 5 s F -n. 7 Wflllltlliwl' - rqffflll nnmv ,. 's I6 .. n 19:4 ,.. :'Vs'f J. . ul 1 ' i will nl I ,A I1 In 70 Bellefontaine . . . Canton . .Jacohsburg Marshallville Belle-fontaine . . . . .Canaan . . . .Salem . . . . .Dayton . . .Dalton 1 g,.,T.,,.-,,L ..- A 5,4 -.-....xg.,:f ' 2313- V Anderson, Belle. . . Beckwith, Juanita .... Beckwith, Mae ..... Black, Charlotte.. Chidester ,Charles Clark. Trla ...... Colville, Mary Dinsniore, William Falconer, William . Ganyartl, Geneveali Hincllnan. Nettie P Johnston, Ralph . McClure, Florence McManigal, lllauil McManigal, Nell . McQuigg, James . Maxwell, Grace .. Ohori,Ernest ...... Peters, Marie Edith Reflett, Ora ...... Redick, Ralph .... Renick, Marybelle Sloan, Edith .,... Smith, Sarita .... Taggart, William . Ticlcl, Arthur ....... Tsehuiny, Corinne Wallace, Charles . Warner, Jay ..... Watt, Margaretta . PARTIALS J . . . .Wooster . . . .Fostoria . . . .Fostoria . . . .Wooster . . .Massillon . . . .Wooster . . . .Cireleville . .New Athens . . . . . .Wooster ............Akron rgettstown, Pa. . . . . . .Bucyrus . . . .Wooster . . . .Logan . . . . . .Logan . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Tokyo, Japan . . . . . .Wooster Freclericksburg . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Lewistown . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . .Columbiana . . . .Chillicothe . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Cedarville REPAR UR 1 5 . rl . 7 :r x 5 L2 ti x, U - ? 4si . , , 'X X M- ,- I WMI Aix 5 l ' 3 y' Q. X 'I I -x I M ,f r ' 1 I 5 T Q ' ' - I li - -' ,gsgf . - . , 7- ' ' P ' 4--- . . - ' 1 - -.h 7 'I' f, ,, J y MM!! If-Qf5la,.:an! .X x ffy - I 'A I J v' ' ' '- hugh, I ' 5 1I!d . l fll ulll lll.-,,-4 G ...: -1.51 ,f1'.',g Q. j h , fl - E ,,,,, .KW 1. ' -- ' ? ,Q --' ,AWX 41 l g i i , i,,,,...w 3 if 1 QQ, ,---,--5,-x Q ' ' . 1 I f I L ' 1 N 3 ,f , fi 4 ' -5 Ei may-. K 1 - if Preparatory Department SENIOR CLASS Allsup, Herbert Justin ..................... Axtell, Lois Elizabeth ..... Bayly, Charles Bertrand .... Bonar, Ferdinand ...... Brintnall, Roy Arthur .... Cameron, Isaac Thomas. .. Candor, Edward Ramsey .... Carson, Willard Parker .... Chapin, Roy Vinet ...., Clark, Clarence Roy ..... Compton, Karl Taylor ..... Conley, Bertram Huston .... Dorsey, Frank ......,...... Crossman, Darwin ......... Fankhauser, William Charles Fisher, Edith May ......... . . . . . .Cincinnati ..........Wooster . . . .New Hagerstown . . . .Round Bottom ............Liverpool . . . . . .. . . .Carrollton . . . Bogota, U. S. Col., S. A. . . . . . . . .Wapakoneta ..........Cstran,de-r . . . .Mingo Junction .. .. .. .. . .Wooster . . . . . .East Liverpool ..............Dresden .Sioux Falls, S. Dak. . . . . . . . . .Winesburg ....... ...Jeannette Foss, Clifford Paul ......... ........................ Y Vooster Fraser, Elizabeth Snodgrass . . Fraser, Clayton Hugh ..... Frye ,Walter Adam .... Gerberich, Warren ..... Gilson, Agnes Louise .... Glenn, Robert Wyckoff .... Haines, William Albert ..... Hammond, Johnson Francis Hayes, Egbert McCrinnes Hearst, Edith .............. Ingleiield, William Armour . . Kelso, Elizabeth J ane' ...... Large, Josephine ...... Laughlin, David Black .. Love, Danvers Coe .... Kamerum, Batanga, West Africa . . . . East Palestine . . . . . . . .Wooster ..........Wooster . . . Pittsburgh, Pa. . . . . . . . .Wooster ........Minerva . . . . . . . .Coshocton . . . . .Sooehow, China .Crown Point, Ind. . .Murdocksville, Pa. . . .Saharanpur, India . . . .Portland Station ..... . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster Love, Robert Buell .. McClure, Rob Roy ...... March, Bessie ........... Mitchell, Carrie Langley .... Morrison, David Herron .... Moses, Elbert Raymond .... Nicholls, Henry Alton . . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Belle Center . . . .Tripoli, Syria . . . . .New London . . . . .Kasur, India . . .Mapleton, Minn. . . . .Detroit, Mich. Peebles, William Losley ..... Parnassus, Pa. Peterson, Bessie ......... Rankin, Charles Calvin Redett, George Kent .... Robinson, Frank Nelson Ruse, Viva ..... ....... Sarles, Urna Mate Sarles, Verna Kate . .. Smith, Adah Pierson .... Smith, Agnes Jean .... Sonnhalter, Aaron Leo . . . Steele, Frank Amos ..... Stentz, William Howard Suhrie, Ambrose .......... Thomas, Vesta Alverta Thompson, William Clarence ........London ........,Wooster . . . . .Fredericksburg ..........Kenton . . .Congress . . . .Bucyrus . . . .Bucyrus . . . .Pataskala . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . . .Massillon . . . . .Marshallville ........Manstield , . . .Pittsburg, Pa. . . . . . .Wooster ........Kipling Van Anda, Hattie Currey .. ........ Georgetown Varner, Nellie Frances .... . .. Workman, Bessie ........ Yawberg, Alfred George .. .Wilkinsburg, Pa. ..............Klee . . . .Waterville Third Year Class Ballmer, Newton Emil ..... Barns, Zeno De Forest ....... Ba.rr, Harry .............. Behotcguy, Henri Grandsierre. .. Blaser, William Edward ..... Boeshart, Albert Henry . . . . Colville, Robert Gordon ..... Cornell, Benjamin David Donaldson, Mary Lydia. . . . . Douglas, Richard Steele . . . Duval, Laurel ........ Eberly, Virgil Allen .. Eddy, Dora Elizabeth .. Eddy, Ruth Margaret .... Foster, Charles Henry Frisbee, Roy William . . . Geddis, Henry .......... Greene, Morris Baldwin .... Heiby, Albert Hermann .... Kilgore, Claude Russell Klein, Ro-bert Clarence .... Lehman, Francis Scott .... Love, Ethel May ...... Lucas, Flvelyn Charles . . . McClaran, John Walter ..... McClintock, Charles Blaine .. Maize, Florence Alice ..... Martin, Edwin Allen . . . Moore, Charles ..... Moore, Wayne ...... . Neff, Olive Dale ...... Peebles, Robert Denny .... Peebles, Margaret Louise Randles, Quineey ......... . Reynolds, William Alexander Richards. Hayward Thomas. .. Risser, Louis David ........ Royer, William .lesse ...,, Seelye, Laurens lliclcok .. . . . .Pandora . . . .Creston . . . .Amanda . .... Wooster . . . .Winesburg . . . .Glenmont . . . . . . .Circleville ...........Bucyrus ..Eighty Four, Pa. ...........Wooster . . . .Wapalioneta . . . . .Smithville . . . . .Sidon, Syria . . . . . . .Sidon, Syria . . . . . . . . .Venedocia West Pittsburg, Pa. . . . . .Pittsburg, Pa. Gittings P. O., Md. . . . . . .Ft. Recovery . . . . .Fredericksburg . . . . .Apple Creek . . .. ...Wooster ...Wooster . . .Allaliabad, lndia . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Beach City . . . .Wooster . . . .Wooster . . . . .Paulding . . . .Wooster . . . .Bellaire . . . .Wooster . . .... Wooster ...... .Warsaw . .Re.vnoldsville, Pa.. ........Zanesville . . . .Pandora . . .Orville . . . .Wooster Smith, Byron Porter .... Smith, Alfred Newton . . . Snell, Ralph Blaine ........ Stewart, William Ca.ssell .... Strickler, Ray ........... Thackwell, Edith Mary Timmoncls, Frank Linzee . Todd, Robert Lester ...... Wilson, Amorine .... .... . . ., .......... . . . . Second Year Class Armstrong, Eva May Coan, Elizabeth Veeoh Coan, Frank Speer ..... Compton, Mary Elesa Crosser, Evelyn Bower Funok, Paul -Abram Garvin, James Francis .... Goheen, Paul Milliken . . Hay, Eva Anna . . . . . . Hoise, John ............ Hollis, Forest Manning Johnson, Clarence Walter . Laughlin, Mary Jean ..... Lehman, Boyd De Forest . Lester, Sarita Margaret. .. McCoy, Harriet ....... McCoy, Sylvia .... Martin, Dorothy ..... Mizer, George ......... Morrison, John Hunter . .. Notestein, Lucy Lilian ..... Snyder, Frank Albert ..... Thackwell, Lawrence Henry Thorn, Brooks ........... Zaring, John Walter ..... Barnard, Dwight Blaine .. First Year Class Behoteguy, Willis Chidester . . . .. Bruce, Florence . .. ...... 78 . . . .Wooster . . . . .Congress .. . . . .Canaan . . . . . .Zanesville . . . . . . . .Lancaster .. . Amballa, India . . . . .Portland, Ind. .............Wooster . . . .Pleasantville, Ind. ............Lisbon . . . .Uruniia, Persia . . . .Urumia, Persia .... . . . . .Wooster .........Lisbon .............Warsavv .Copiapo, Chili, S. A. .........Tyrone, Pa. . . . . .Beach City . . . . . .Doylestown . . . . .Pottstown, Pa. . . . . .Fredericksburg . .......... Wooster ...,,........Wooster Santiago, Chili, S. A. .......,.West Salem T . . .West Salem . . . . . .Wooster ........Wilmot . . . . .Kasur, India . .. .. ...Wooster . . . . . .Millersburg . . . ...Amballa, India .. . . .. ...Wooster ........Creston . . .Burbank . . . .Wooster . . . .Wooster Boeshart, Charles Rollen . .. Candor, Elesa Rebecca ..... ...................Glenmont Bogota, U. S. Col., S. A. Collins, Frederick Rawson .... .......... C hieng Mai, Siam Collins, Celia Marie ......... Compton, Willis Martindale Davenport, William Harkness Douglas, William Carson .... Fetzer, Zorah Belle ....... Gault, Harry Davidson ..... Goheen, Joseph McGinnes .... Hawk, Lulu ....,....... Hemperly, Willis . . . Hiner, Jennie June . . . Hutton, John Peter Johnson, Glenn Adna .... Lehman, Beulah ........ Love, William Hanna ...... McClaran, Wade De Witt .... McGuire, Mabel ........... March, Amy Gillson ..... March, Earnest Frederick . . . Martin, Harry Quinby Mateer, John Gaston .. Morrison, Robert ...' ...... Mowrey, Walter Wayne .... Myers, lzora Susanna ........ Palmer, William Carleton ..... Peckinpaugh, Weston Bradley Peebles, Richard Elmore ...... Platter, Francis Bonnell ..... Smith, Margarite Elva .... Wilson, James Barr ....... Zimmerman, Cleve George . . . .Chieng Mai, Siam ...........Wooster . . . . .Marion . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Creston . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Overton . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster ...........Wooster . . . .Fredericksburg . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . .Wooster . . . . .Tripoli, Syria . . . . .Tripoli, Syria .... ...Burbank . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Kasur, India . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Mansfield . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . . .Cleveland . ...West Salem . . . .McAlevy,s Ft., Pa. ...........Wooster l1!:J FSL 4, Q2 ,BR frrlffll A A Teachers' Review Classes and Partials Beach, Paul ............ Burkey, Albert ...... Burns, Alta Emma ........ Campbell, Walter Clemens .... Clarke, Jean Sinclair ..... Cunningham, Ethel Duncan, Ada Given .... Dunn, Elmer Howard . .. Faudel, Jessie Belle .. First, Walton ...... Foster, Eva ........... Erick. Charles Webster .... Hamilton, Donald Thomas Hanne, Frederick ........ Harrold, Howard ....... Hunter, Bertha Leonora .. Johnson, Nellie ....... Lamb, Chester Daniel .... Laub, John Julius ....... McCracken, Ada. Elizabeth McKean, Anderson ....... Mateer, Agnes Margaret .. Mills, Clara Elsie ...... Morris, George Delbert Myers, George Sylvester . . . Ober, Elmer Ivan ..... Palmer, Fred ....... Pfouts, Royal Edgar .. Pfouts, John Jay ....... Shoemaker, Louis Henry . . Smith, Robert Andrew .. Snavely, Ethel .......... Steiner, Elizabeth Marie . Wilderson, Nellie Claribcl Young, Oliver ........ ., Conservatory of Music ...Seville . . . . .Berlin ........Shreve . . . . . .Cambridge . . .Mingo Junction , N ew . . . .Apple Creek .. . . .Killbuck . . . . . . .Monroe , . . .Independence . . . . . .Massillon . . . .Venedocia . . . .Wooster . . . . . . . .Marion . . .Stone Creek . . . .Mt Eaton . . . . .Loudonville . Fredericksburg ...Toledo . . .Stone Creek . . . . . . .Wooster Kensington, Pa. . . . . . .Mosgrove, Pa. . . . .Kensington . . . . . . . .Marion . ...Rising Sun . . .Apple Creek . . . . .Solon, O. . . . .Wilmot . . . .Wilmot . . . . . .Massillon . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .West Lebanon .........Orrville . . . . .Hicksville . . .West Salem Allis, Clarence Livingstone ...................... Santiago, Chili, S. A. Anderson, Edna. O .......... . . . , . . , . Jlurgettstown, Pa. Barnes, Regina ..... Beatty, Mary Ewing. .. Beckwith, Juanita Beckwith, Mae ......... Bissell, Marie Jeanette... Bolus, Drucilla ........ Burns, Alta E. ...... . Campbell, Harriet Christy, Laura ........ Clarke, Jean Sinclair .... Coan, Mrs. F. G. ..... . Coan, Elizabeth V ..... Coan, Frank Speer .... Colville, Mary Edith .... Donald, Nellie May. .. Duncan, Ada ....... .. Eddy, Helen E. ........ . Fa.lconer, William Charles. .. Felger, Helen ......... Fike, Kathereene Fisher, Florence ....... Fitch, George Ashmore ..... . . . Foltz, Ethel Kieffer ..... Foss, Mildred .... Foster, Eva .... Geesinan, Edith ........ Graber, Estie ........... Gritfith, Maynie Josephine Haupert, Mary Margretta Hearst, Helen ........... Henderson, Ruth ..... Hindnian, Nettie ...... Hoegner, Mae Eugenia .. Hunter, Bertha ........ Hunter, Blaine ....... J ennings, Maude M Johnson, Nellie May Kaltwasscr, Mrs. Julius .. Keener, Adah ........... Kerr, Florence . .. . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Greenfield . . . .Fostoria . . . .Fostoria . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Holniesville .........M1tthn . . .Cedar Valley Mingo Junction .Uru1nia, Persia . . . .Urun1ia, Persia Urnini a, Persia . . . . . . . .Circleville . . . . .Wooster . . . .Killbuck . . . . .Wooster . . , , .Wooster . . . . .M anstield . . . . .Smithville . . . . . . .Wooster .Shanghai, China ...........Shreve . . . . .Wooster . . . .Venedocia . ........... Shreve ..Mount Eaton .......Arnanda ..............Wooster . ..... Crown Point, Ind. ..............Logan . . . Burgettstown, Pa. . . . .West Salem . . . . . .Perrysville .........Lodi . . . . . .Reedsburg . . . .Fredericksburg . ........ Wooster . . . . .West Salem . . . . . .Wooster Kettering, Daisy ....... Knapp, Winnifred ..... Laughlin, Lester McCosh Lee, Osea Coral ........ Lewis, Nyda ........... Loofburrow, Dhel H. E. . . . Lowry, Jessica ......... Lowry, Ralph Manifold . McCoy, Mary Alice ..... McCulloch, Carolyn ..... McManigal, Ella Maud . McManigal, Nell ....... Mateer, Agnes ........ Maxwell, Ethel Grace Miley, Mrs. L. S. . . . . Muay, L. s. .......,. . Mills, Clara .......... Mitchell, Carrie Langley . Morgan, Dora .......... Morrison, Amy ........ Mullins, Dorothy K. .. Mullins, James ........ Packer, Grace Elizabeth . Penick, Sylvia ........, Plumer, Ralph Etsweiler Pratt, Allan H. ...... . Price, Clada ........ Redett, Orra M. ..,.. . Remy, Cecelia Forney .. Renick, Marybelle ..... Rice, Charles Herbert . . . Robison, Mrs. M. A. . .. Hockey, Lucile ..... Saurer's Esta .... Sloan, Edith A. Snavely, Ethel ....... . Stoll, Verda Margharet . Sweeny, Mrs. Harry Watt, Margaretta .... Yarnell, Don ....... Zook, Howard C. . . . .Loudonville . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Barnesville . . . . .Big Prairie . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Mt. Sterling . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . ......Wooster . . . . .Freeport, Pa. .........Logan .........Logan . . . .Mosgrove, Pa. . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Shreve .......Shreve . . . . .Kensington .... . .New London ..........Wooster Dehra Doon, India ..........Wooster . . . .Wooster . . . .Wooster . . . .Wooster . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Minerva .... . . . .Wooster . . .Fredericksburg . . . . . .Mansfield . . . . . . .Lewistown . . .Monticello, Ind. ..........Shreve . . . . . .Wooster . . . .. . . .Orrville . . . . .Jae-nette, Pa. . . . .West Lebanon ........Bucyrus . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Cedarville . . . .Perrysville . . . .Wooster SCHOOL OF ART Anderson, Belle . . . .................... . . . . Beckwith. Mae Bruce, 'lflorence . . . flliristy, Ethel .. Clark, Ida. . . . . Uollins, Fred .... Follins, Marie ..... Compton, Wilson .... Condor, Elsie ....... . . . . . .Bogot Dienst, lllayinc .......... ........ Douglas, Williani Carson .. Ellwood, Della Edith ..... Fitch, George Ashmore G a nlt, Harry .......... Gilson, Agnes ...,........ Gohcen, Joseph ll'IcGinnes.. Hickok, Mary ........... Hines, Jennie -J une . . Love, William ...... .. March, Amy .............. March, Earnest Frederick Martin, Harry ......... Mateer, John Gaston X ifrcifrumgai, ifraufif- ... ...Q McCracken, Ada .... ...... . rt. . . MoCla.ra.n, Wade .... ..... .... Nice, Walter ........ . .ln . . . . Peekinpangh, Weston . . . Peebles, Richard I .... .. . . . . .Wooster . . . .Fostoria . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . . . .Wooster . . .. .. ...Wooster Ch ieng Y Mai, Siain .Chieng Mai,-Siani .........Wooster H, U. s. ea., s. A. New Philadelphia . . . . . . . . .Wooster . New Philadelphia . Shanghai, China . . . . . . . . .Wooster . . Pittslnirg, Pa. . . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . . .Wooster . . . .Tripoli, Syria . . . .Tripoli, Syria . . . . . .Burbank . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Logan . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster . . . . .Wooster Platter, Bonncll . . . . .fi . . . .Cleveland Henry, Cecelia ....... f fi .... . . .Mansfield Rose, Nellie ........ 'f . . . . . .Wellsville 'l'a,gga.rt, Emily Jcanx .... .. .... Wooster I, , . 1 1 . 1 5 f 1 . BIBLE AND MISSIONARY TRAINING SCHOQOL . 1 . Aten, Myrtle Edith ........ . .......................... ...... N evada Beatty, Frank Ernest, . . . . . . . .Greenfield Patterson, Thonias M 1.'Nntt' . . .I . . . . , .Portsmoutll 1 X X X . X Reed, Augusta G. lficnniclc, Fern ..... . llenick, Mzmljvlxollo ....... Robortson. Mary Etta Wallace, Helen M .... Watt, llI?lI'gEl1'Qtf?l . . , . xllll L11 ll 4059! ff XM. lg! ffl lf! Z -lMu f 11X still , B1'oolil,yn, N. Y. . . . . .Lewistown . . . . .Lewistown . . . . . . .Wooster St. Paul, Minn. . . . . . .Cedarville ---'Xvi'--va fl N-xii 19' f . 5 r H 1? -' v . uf' X PW f ifk mx 'P ff P Ls, nr,1 . 'SM Xg f x X yg-x . 1Q :ggfji YX F I1 QL- A Q , we ,f1 Xl' 'XQ1 iwx + N pf ff ' h 1 X x-1 N ,gy ' 2 Q X ' Q :gay X NK ' ' X Ny ' in f N w . X It Q33-:sf ,X . l K X' ' 1, ' ' lx. 'UN I . . - 1 ' , - .--'E W 1 ff X S 9 I q KL 47 X A 'x N: 4- I, y 4,-Auf 1. ' u-L ful ' A W- N ' . , . 1 Y N9 . KJ' 1 f' ff' .mp jimi -'H W ' 91 , - I 1 H Fm w H ww 2 1 ff X QX sy xvf X W , N W' M if Y Qi' fm W l 1 f ,ix .tr- .955 LMI Q ft ,. .1 Q f x'rz,n Q , , 1 Y 'i'-'-'Ill L-f -J Y xx Of?Y5QRXt TX N E' ?fi2 ,1v f-T f W .aw , . f Jr MF' f' 'J 4 9-,, Ks.. , wi ' 7-i T1 f W3 -,Lgidjx 3 453-44? '13 ' f L H?-' 9 N of --glXf1 '1:N'+ 5 A A Q 2611 MQW? i1 gf??- L... ILM N Q I f Q' :JE X' f ! gf Q ---- 1, ZS - Q f U XJ 4 is-. 7 Q Q X ' it E' - A f g'i g1g: -- -- 7: 5 f '.h'7h!i-l x fi 1 44.E? gig! ' ' fx ,ik 'Tf ,437 fl Qnifw H? '4f'iZ 1 F ff K 551. ZZ , A .::- 1 -41255 W M 5. 51 ,fzvf fg' ffvf -4 if -L f gag. J . .! :gg3' 4'-X .F 1 X -1ff-- 1 'gig if 443.1 flrf'x T 2 5?-iff Q 2 , -. M'-I . M- ff' ?' T.. '.',1f x X ,w wf Lgzfywwgq . 0 .. 'T' I ' x '- ag 21733 f j wif? if 1? X W g,M' 'T- f-: X QE A R F -Q nw FA x' N- A ,Lf -' 2 N93 Q. ,JN NXT I-2 A ,fav-4 A I ' w mf? U College Fraternities There are today as many as twenty-tive regular national or intercol- legiate fraternities, established, roughly speaking, between the years of 1820 and 1870. Each is named by two or by three Greek letters. Each is made up of local clubs in various colleges, some having more than sixty branches, while the average number is about thirty. More than one hun- dred and sixty thousand college men have owed their allegiance to one or another of the Greek-letter societies. This re.presents only a fraction of the total number of men who have attended college, perhaps we may name 30 per cent, as a typical proportion in a college of today. The chapter, or unit, of the national fraternity is generally a club of about twenty men, who club together for social purposis, seeking mutual encouragement and strength of numbers. This unit has a double influence on the college man. lt works for uniformity but not at any loss of individuality. The influence of the chapter is not merely negative and repressive. There is a profound stimulus, a pressure forward. Every man encourages the next man's talent. The entire chapter will work and hope steadily tor each member's success 5 whether he he football player, musician, chemist or journalist. ' At no place can discussion be more frank, sincere and well meant than in chapter talk. Men may come from opposite sides of the continent, men differing in experience, in political, social, religious views. College, alone. might not reconcile such elements. The largest collegcs of America have as many circles, creeds and antagonistic units as the world itself. But when these elements occur in a small coterie founded on friendship and equality, and blend as they can blend in a good chapter, the result is broadening and uplifting to every individual. One knows something of the southern planter from living with his son three years, sontething of the boy from the West and the young Termonter that can never be learned in casual meeting for study, business or society. Chapter life means years of family life and of business partnership at the same time. The fraternity man acquirgs executive power. As a 88 freshman, he learns to obey, as an upper-class-inan, to command. He learns the work of committees, and he may in turn serve as a treasurer, steward and president' But it is what the men do for each other tl1at makes the basis of fraternity influence. Self-sacri-Hee and loyalty for the COHIIHOH cause is a lesson which must be learned if one is a good fraternity man. The atti- tude tl111s developed will be carried out toward college and toward the world. There is good and evil in fraternity life as in all else. The systen' itself is neither inherently perfect, nor inherently pernicious. A chapter may drift from its standard of work, and become a crowd of sports and loafers. The charge has been made that chapter life encourages this, b11t that is no more true than that trade encourages cheating. It has been charged that the fraternities are a pernicious monopoly of social affairs. Any combination may grow beyo11d its legitimate field, and become a trust. But a fraternity which has forgotten its Hnoblesse oblige is not our best type. Moreover it should not be forgotten that any one may found a society to his liking. The chapter is. only one sort of natural organization. It can do things for men that larger unwieldly groups cannot accomplish. Hostility to fraternities is directed chieliy against the secrecy which surrounds most of them. Nearly all have a secret grip, motto, ritual an? passwords. Some keep their publications secret. This feature of mys- tery has a certain charm. A degree of business privacy is any n1an's right, and the language of lovers is said to he sweetest because of a little nonsense known only to two. One may ask, is there need off a national bond between these college homes? It is the national order which works for stability and a set purpose. New branches will be founded resembling the old. By annual conventions delegates meet from many colleges, and the result is eminently democratic and broadening. ln alumni catalogues and magazines one reads the record of those who preceded him, successful today, prominent perhaps in public life. By an exchange of xisits with neighboring chap- ters the fraternity n1a.n sees that me11 of other colleges are likewise human. He has a ready introduction through his pin. He need never feel an otlishness, a hostility toward the college tl1at rivals his own. The fraternity hastens evolutions, for good or for bad. lt makes work and culture easier, or it ca11 make dissipation and decay more rapid. An institution with such power should he nurtured. Tts capacity for good should be developed. The chapter-house at college should be studied 89 as Well as Hull House ot the slums. lt is a permanent and efficient factor in college life, which cannot be suppliecl by the haphazard of the dormi- tory and lunch-counter. The college fraternity is American. A man can learn through fra- ternity life the equality of equals, and the Welfare ot the majority as Well as the value of an energetic minority? w jim M- ibn r 6 X N rf 90 Beta Theta Pi Alpha Lambda Chapter 1872-1904 RESIDENT MEMJBERS S. F. Scovel, D. D., LL. D. H. N. Mateer, M. D., Ph. D. O. A. Hills, D. D. Judge Frank Taggart Rev. G. C. Smith C. EM. Yocum Bertram H. Thorne Hugh Wayne Hart ACTIVE MEMBERS Florien Frederick Frazier John Ker Davis Robert Parsons Abbey John Mitchell Spencer Clarence Livingston Allis Robert Irwin Platter Albert Gordon Jacobs Johnson, Edwin West 1904 Clarence C. Vogt 1905 Charles Arthur Wilder Edward Shields McConnell 1906 John Harold Axtell 1907 Harold B. Emerson Alfred William Moore 91 Brown Boston Maine Amherst Dartmouth Wesleyan Yale Bowdoin Rutgers Cornell St. Lawrence Steven s Colgate Union C oluinbia Syracuse Vanderbilt Texas Mianii 4 Cincinnati Western Reserve Ohio Ohio Wesleyan Bethany Wittenberg Denison Wooster Kenyon Ohio State West Virginia Do Pauw Indiana Wash-Jefferson Beta.. Theta ACTIVE CHAPTERS Dickinson Johns Hopkins Pennsylvania Penn. State Colle Lehigh Hampden-Sidney North Carolina Virginia Davidson Central California Stanford Washington State Nebraska Denver Wabash Hanover Michigan Knox Beloit Iowa Chicago Iowa W esleyan Wisconsin Northwestern Minnesota Illinois Westminster Washington Kansas Missouri i'olorado .93 8 Aiken Akron Ashville Austin Baltimore Boston Budalo Charleston Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbus Dallas Dayton, O. Denver Des Moines Detroit Galeshurg, lil. Hamilton ' Hartford, Conn San Francisco Selieneetady, N. .. Seattle, Wash. Sioux City, la Spri ngtielcl, O. Syracuse Beta Theta Pi ALUMNI CHAPTERS Tnclianapolis Kansas City Los Angeles Louisville Memphis Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Haven New York Omaha, Neh. Piqua, Ohio Philadelphia Pittsburg Portland, Me. Providence, R. Richmond ,Va St. Louis, Mo. San Antonio, 'lex Terre Haute, Ind Toledo, O. J Waco, Tex. Washington ,D C Wheeling, W. Va Zanesville, O. Rev. Francis Hickok, Fred Zimmerman Prof. John C. Boyd Robert G. Caldwell Frank E. Beatty James H. Whitcraft John J. Didcoct Ralph Lowry Robert Wadsworth Howard Acton Julius Schwartz Frank Cowles William Z. Harrison Alpha Tau Omega 1888-1904 FRATRES IN URBE D. D. Dr. Nold Hoelzel George J. Schwartz ACTIVE MEMBERS 1904 Paul F. Ringland 1905 John O. Welday George L. Ringlanfl Edwin Townsend 1906 James B. Crouch Charles H. Bice Waldo E. McDowell 1907 Harry G. Henshaw 95 N, ,,,, ,, , p Alpha Tau Omega 1865-1904 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alabama Polytechnic Institute Illinois St. Lawrence Columbia Washington and J effcrson North Carolina Mt. Union S. W. Presbyterian Vanderbilt Vermont Colora clo Georgia Minnesota S. W. Baptist Albion Georgia School Technology Tulane Texas Hillsclale Wi ttenburg Tennessee Kansas Cornell California Allentown, Pa. Augusta, Ga. Birniingliain, Ala. Boston Chicago Cleveland Dallas, Texas Dayton, O. Wash ington, D. C. Atlanta, Ga. Ohio State Maine Rose Polytechnic Muhlenberg Western Reserve Wooster Virginia Charleston Pennsylvania Tufts Southern Colby Nebraska Aclrian Brown Emory Mercer Alabama Ohio Wesleyan Trinity Pennsylvania Sta University of the Lehigh ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS Ven us, Texas Manila Institute te South Ann Arbor, Mich. Georgia. State A, Denver San Francisco Louisville, Ky. New York Pittsburg Jackson, Tenn. A. Phi Gamma Delta RHO DEUTERON Established U. of W. May 26, 1882. Colors: Pink and Royal Purple Fratres in Urbe Hon. Ross W. Funk Dr. James C. Todd Oscar H. Foss C. E. McAfee E. Boyd Gill Dr. Geo. W. Ryall FRATRES Edwin W. Meese Leslie R. Houston J. Sholes Weaver J. Friek Tyler J. Winlers Tliomas W. C. Curry R. Russell Gill W. C. McClure Donald J. Foss W. H. Miller IN UNIVERSITATE Seniors Earl L. Tm-Iii' Fred B. Paisley Juniors Ralph Gralmm Sophomores H Verne D. Benedict Freshmen John D. Overliolt 98 Lafayette, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. Kansas City Chicago Dayton, O. Maine Mass. Tech. Worchester, Poly. Brown Da rtin outh Ainherst Trinity Yale College City of N. Coluinbia New York Colgate Cornell Union Syracuse Pennsylvania Lafayette Lehigh Johns Hopkins Bucknell Gettysburg Penna. State Virginia Roanoke Hampden-Sidney Phi Gamma Delta FOUNDED 1848 GRADUATE CHAPTERS H New York City Pittsburg Toledo, O. i Cincinnati Allentown, Pa. ACTIVE CHAPTERS Y. Wooster Adelbert Dension Wittenberg Ohio State Ohio Wesleyan Indiana De Pauw Hanover Leland Stanford Wabash Purdue Tennessee Bethel Alabania Texas Ill. Wesleyan - Knox Illinois Michigan Wisconsin Minnesota Chicago Williain J ewel Missouri Washington and Lee Kansas Richmond Nebraska Washington and Jefferson California Allegheny Wa shi n gton 100 Sigma Chi BETA CHAPTER. Established in the University of Wooster, March 1, 1873 Fratres in Urbe. Dr. Elias Compton W. E. Feeman Fratres in Universitate 1904 4 William Sloan Kinney Charles Hodge Bailey Paul Davies Swartz 1906 J. Mason Orinsbee William Wallace Heindel 1907 C. Burns Craig Pledged lflrefl O. Wise '05 101 I Sigma Chi 1855-1904 I A ALUMNI CHAPTERS Boston New York Baltimore Peoria Chicago Philadelphia Cincinnati Pittsburg Columbus St. Louis Denver St. Paul-Minneapolis Indianapolis San Francisco Kansas City Los Angeles Milwaukee Nashville New Orleans Springfield, QIll.j Washington Detroit Western New York State of Washington ' ACTIVE CHAPTERS Mianii Wooster Ohio Wesleyan Columbian Washington and Lee Mississippi Pennsylvania College Bucknell Indiana Denison DePauw Dickinson Butler Lafayette Hanover Virginia Northwestern Hobart California Ohio State. Nebraska ' Beloit Iowa I7 Mass.gInstitute Tech. Illinois Wesleyan Wisconsin ' Texas Kansas Tulane Albion Lehigh Minnesota South California Cornell Pennsylvania State Vanderbilt Leland Stanford Purdue Central Cincinnati Dartmouth Michigan Illinois Kentucky State West Virginia Columbia Missouri Chicago Maine Washington Pennsylvania Washington State f - 102 Mrs Mrs. Mrs Mrs Mrs Kappa Alpha Theta EPSILON CHAPTER 1875-1904 RESIDENT ALUMNAE John McSwe.eny H. N. Mateer John Criley T. L. Flattery Martha McClellan Miss Alice Brown Miss Arletta Warren Dr. Kate Johnson Miss Nina Given Miss Mary Notestein Mrs. David Metzler Miss Blanch McClellan Miss Bess Davidson Miss Mabel Moderwell Miss Margaret Platter Miss Irene Flattery Miss Elizabeth Beebe Miss Fay Blayney Miss Josephine Taylor Miss Mary Haupert Miss Margaret Elder ACTIVE MEMBERS Cecilia Remy Mary Sanborn Caroline McCulloch Alice Davis Laura Anderson Grace I-Iunter Mary Elder Mary Hickok 1904 Lucy Warren 1905 Laura Fulton 1906 Mary Mc Clelland Helen Butterfield 1907 Martha Sanborn Hazel Emery 103 'YW Kappa Alpha Lheta 1870-1904 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Cornell University Univeristy of Terinont Allegheny College Syracuse University Swartlnnore College Baltimore Womeifs Colle Brown University Barnard College DePauw University Indiana State Ivniversity University of Wooster Vanderbilt University University of Illinois University of Michigan University of Kansas Albion College University of Nebraska North-Western Universi 1 p, Ifniversity ot Minnesota University of Wisconsin Ohio State University Leland Stanford I'nive1'su University of Cal itorn ia ALUMNI CHAPTERS New York City Burlington, Vt. Greencastle, Ind. Colurnbns Indianapolis Cleveland Pittsburg Athens, O. Wooster, O. Minneapolis Chicago Kansas City Los Angeles 105 Kappa Kappa Gamma 1876-1904 BETA GAMMA CHAPTER RESIDENT MEMBERS Mrs. William Annat Miss Lura Kean Mrs. Wallace Schinuck Miss Frances Glenn Miss Cora Hoelzel Miss Jane Glenn Miss Grace Ihrig Miss Kate Deer Miss Eineline McSweeney Mrs. Alpha Sloneker Miss Gertrude Vollrath Miss Alice Firestone Miss Eilzabeth Black Miss Clementine Axtell Mrs. Frank Taggart ACTIVE MEMBERS ' 1904 Sallie Taylor Marie Turner Florence Evelyn McClure Sarah Glenn Shanklin Jessie May Vogt A. I 1905 Margaret Anna Fraine Harriett Clyne Sinclair 1906 Lillian Durstine Margaret Taggart Mary' McKinley Helen Felger Catherine Vance 1907 Edith Reese Anita Boyce 'l06 7' 1 'I VV Lf, , ' Q .- n V: -- I 2 ' -1 X ' . -J fl' E 2 N A . n ' Q 5 - f in 1 1. , P 5 ,e , .is-We .- af E- 1-5 f x 'f .,,,' 1 2 , - 31. ' . H . -V A '- ,l X '- . , 5 S .'- K ' .lil .- -- i if E-. .--:xl ' ,Q '. ' 1 Kappa Kappa Gamma 1870-1903 ACTIVE CHAPTERS Boston University Cornell University University of Ijennsylvanit Allegheny College Wooster University University of Michigan Hillsdale College DePauw University University of Wisconsin Northwestern University University of Minnesota Missouri State University Kansas State University Texas Sta.te University Barnard College Syracuse University Sivartlnnore Buclitel College Oliio State University Adrian College Indiana State University Butler College University of Illinois Illinois Wesleyan Iowa State University Xebraslia State University Colorado State University University of California Leland Stanford Jr. Unixersity 4 ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Boston Philadelphia. Cleveland Wooster Indianapolis Greencastle, Ind. Minnesota Kansas City New York Columbus, Ohio Akron Detroit Bloomington, Ill. Chicago Lawrence, Kan. 'Denver 108 Theta Nu Epsilon Theta Nu Epsilon is a Sophomore society composed of members of fraternities of recognized national excellence. It was founded at Wesleyan College in 1870 and since that time has manifested a continual but conservative growth. Its objects are to diminish the factional feeling generally manifest among the dierent fraternities and to approach the ideal secret Working of a fraternity. Sophoniores only are received as mem- bers and these remain sub rosa, until the close of their Sophomore year. The Spin of the fraternity is a small gold skull with keys crossed beneath and the letters 0 N E on the forehead. The colors are green and black. Tau Chapter was organized June 4, 1891, the chapter members being E. J. Hudson 42 N W R. S. Wallace W A 9 R. M. Shannon H011 B. B. Nelson -5' -vl' C. L. Brilles lv' 9 ll. The local chapter now contains representatives of all the fraternities in college. 109 Theta Nu Epsilon TAU CHAPTER 1890-1904 FRATRES IN URBE John M. Criley Bertram H .Thorne John Ames Will R. Curry Jaines Todd John R. Zinnnernian Oscar lfess William S. Kinney FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE 1904 Florien F. Frazier Charles Hodge Bailey Earl L. Triflit 1905 John M. Spencer Charles A. W ildei James S. Weaver 1906 Clarence L. Allis Robert Wadsworth Jacob F. Tyler ACTIVE CHAPTERS Wesleyan .... ............................... B Iicldletown, Ct Syracuse ....... Syracuse, N. Y Union ..... Schenectady, N. Y Cornell .,............. ........ I thaea, N. Y Rochester ............... ..... R oehester. N. Y University of California ..... ...... B erkeley, Cal Colgate ................ . . . .Haniilton, N. Y Kenyon . .............. ...... G ainbier, O Western Reserve ...... Cleveland, O Haniilton ........ ..... C linton, N. Y. Rensselaer Tech . . . ....... Troy, N. Y Stevens ........ .... H oboken, N. J Lafayette ..... ....... E aton, Pa. Amherst ....... ....... . . .Amherst, Mass Alleghany .............. .... I Ieadville, Pa Pennsylvania State College ..... ..... C enter Co., Pa University of Pennsylvania ....... ,.... P hiladelphia, Pa University of City of New York .. ......... New Yorlt University of Wooster ........... ....... I Vooster, O Ohio State University ......... ...Colunibus, O Swarthmore ......... .... P a lll Beta Delta Beta JUNIOR SOCIETY Alpha, 1887, Syracuse University. Beta, 1889, Colgate University. Gannna, 1891 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Delta, 1902, University of the City of New York. Chi Mu, 1896, University of Wooster. Beta Delta Beta inter-fraternity, so tar as the granting of charters is concerned, has been very conservative. The roll of chapters is given above. The inenihers are taken from the national fraternities of good standing. In 1896, by the absorption of the local suberosa fraternity of Alpha Beta Phi, Chi Mu Chapter was founded at the University of Wooster. The colors are Crimson and light blue and the pin is a small imp displaying the let.ters 1941 1? Annual Report of Chi Mu Chapter 1903-1904 To all the Brothers, greeting-.-.-. secf-Sz 20 y48 67 z4x215294 X2z4bcosl 5x3cotzz4cosx27 56 7z47 5acot 2 ' 3 x cotcotsmy . sin 3sin y354secsec52 78 cosy-3268115 -v3xz425 x2+5x2sir1sec6 lsinsin8cot. - 1 81246243 y3V7V+z3 seczilsecseccosxi bcot secz387see? 3X2 c1z26z3x2y37 sin cos z34y3sec 3+ztan y3sinz3 costantancoS52V. sin3sin 3135456056052 z2zdz3 Vcos tanlcsec21X2V sin5 2tancot41d6d 5x6seesincosx? tauztsinsec 8aXy3cosbVcy2. dy3cot7y4y3sec9cos. y394tansecy3c5x3. y3z4V94x3z252, Chi Mu cipher, 197. 112 College Theatricals REBECCA'S TRIUMPH Presented by Castalian Literary Society April 21, 1904. H.DIl1'C7L sich selbst biZdc1z. Act I. Mrs. Delaine's Kitchen. Act ll. The Cooking Cluhjs Picnic. Act III. Mrs. Rokeinanis Parlor. Cast of Characters Mrs. Rokeman, EL wealthy lady .,............ Mrs. Delaine, a widow ..... Rebecca, a foundling Clarissa Codman, a Spinster. .. Dora. Gaines Sadie Morrell Cooking . . . Jennie Woodman Club .... Nellie Dunbar Gyp, servant ....... ue... Katie Conner, servant Meg, a vagrant 113 Edna Anderson . . . .Lela Crockett .Julia Merrick ..Ruth Martin Nellie Rose .Leta Stophlet . . .May Beckwith .Jean Douglas Miriam Casche . .Grace Lovett . .Amelia Lind THE LADY OF LYONS Presented by Willard Society Thursday, April 28, 1904. Claude Melnote . . .' . Col. Dainas .' .... Beauseant .... Glavis ............ M. de Chappellis Landlord ........ Cast of Characters Gaspar ..,.......... Pauline .............. Madame? de Chappelles . . . Widow Melnotte ..... Marion ......... 114 Florence McClure .Laura Anderson . .Ruth Lelnniller . . . . .Grace Price ..I-lelen Layport Corinne Tsehumy Mary McClelland .Jeannette Bissell Margaret Taggart . .Mary McKinley . . . . .Edith Reese DAMON AND PYTHIAS Presented by Athenaean and Irving Literary Societies Under the Direction of Prof. F. H. Kirkpatrick. City Opera House. Cast of Characters Damon, senator ............... Pytliias, soldier friend of Damon Dionysius, tyrant of Syracuse .. Philistius, senator .......,... . Daniocles, senator . .. Procles, soldier ........... Lueullus, servant of Damon. .. Calanthe, 'Iianeee of Pytliias .. Hermion, wife of Danion Arria, Wife of Calantlie . Attendants of Calantlie ..... .... . . . . . . . . . . . .F. H. Kirkpatrick . . . .Elbert R. Moses . .i .... F. F. Frazier . . . .Leslie H. Houston . . . . .Earl L. Triitit . . . .Robert P. Abbey . . . . . .L. Newton Hayes M. Jaennette Bissell . . . . .Amelia M. Lind ......................Hazel K. Emery Edna A. Anderson, Nettie F. Hinclman Nettie B. Hinclrnan Senators-Watt, Bloclier, Miller, Townsend, West, Hainnioncl, Ervin, Beatty, Stentz, Anistutz. SOlfllC1'S-Cl1iClQSl'G1'. Elliott. f'owlm,s. l'ralitree, West, Lainale. 115 COLLEGE MINSTRELS City Opera House, February 23, 1904. PROGRAM Part I. Grand Overture ........................... 'Tm Going to Start a Little Graveyard of My Dat's the Way to Spell Woostern ........... Good Night, Beloved, Good Night ....... .. Under the Anhauser Bush ....... My Little Japanese Belle ...... Eat, Drink and Be Merryf' ...... Chorus- By the Pale Moonlighti' .,..... Part II. Orchestra O wil .Circle . .... Mr. Acotn . . . .Mr. Warner . . . .Mix Thomas . . . .Mr. Palmer . . . .Mr. Frazier . . . .Mr. Meese . . . .. .Circle Quartet .......................... Thomas, Bingland, Acton, Huston Japanese Apparatus Work ................ Ohori, Allis, Houston, Meese Illuminated Indian Club Swinging ........................ Mr. Moses College Quartette. The University Minstrels present for the first time to the people of Wooster the grand farce, Mr. 'fDainon, closing with the grand gloomy transformation scene, '4Finis Canis, or Mr. Damonf' Time, Friday evening, 7 p. in., 1904. Place, University Library. ' Mr. Damon ............... Prexerino .... Compy .... Benny . . . Behot .... Noty . . . Ajax . . . Exy . . . Vance . . . Arehbald . . Martin . . . Grumpy . . . Gus ..... . . . Pythias .... .......... Curtain l I6 . . . .F. F. Frazier Leslie R. Houston . . . .Paul T. Ringland . . . . .R. P. Abbey N. Hays O. Welday . . . . . .C. E. Chidester B. M, Wadsworth . . .J. M. Ormsbee .....H. N. Irvin .. . . .C. H. Bailey B. Crouch ..W. W. Heindel . Molly Spencer lterary J Sf 1,355 I 'f Ll I .sffw Qi- Wfgiifg fI'f-, ., 1, 1 .5 'I Ny , ' NZ Aff The Stratford The Stratford was organized in November, 1899, by John D. Fackler, ?O0, now of Oleveland, Ohio. The purpose of the Organization is to make a systematic study of Shakespearefs plays. The aim of the club has been carried out, each year three or more dramas being read and portions of them presented. Aside from the literary program, a part of the evening is devoted to social enjoyment. Meetings are held on alternate Saturday evenings throughout the college year. Membership is limited to eighteen. 'ifulius Caesar, Richard the Thirdp' and A Midsummer Night's Dreamv were read during the year 1903-0-L. OFFICERS MARTIN REMP ..................... ........ P RESIDENT ROBERT G. CALDWELL ..... XTICE PRESIDENT CORA M. WELDAY ..... ...... S ECEETAEY J. BOYD OROUOH ..... TREASURER Martin Remp Oora M. Welday John O. Welday J. Boyd Crouch Julia Merrick Edith Reese THE ROLL 1904 R. G. Caldwell 1905 ' Margaret Frame Heber Blankenhorn 1906 Margaruite Dickey Charles H. Rice Waldo H. Dunn 1907 Amelia Lind Sarita Smith GRADUATE MEMBER Prof. R. E. Ohaddock l18 The Ruskin uc. -zz mg gnuZer3uv7-5 Believing a college education to be incomplete without a general knowledge of Art, particularly along the lines of Painting, Sculpture, Music and Architecture, a number of Wooster students organized a society in order to systematically pursue such a course of study. Details and technique are not dealt With, the aim of the society being rather to acquire an intimate acquaintance with the names and lives of the great Masters, and to seek and to cultivate the power of intelligent, appreciative criticism of their Masterpieces. MEMBERS W. H. Hoover C. W. Todd Estella Digel . Ida Clark Frank E. Beatty Harriet Fletcher 'Clara M. Erbeck C. H. Campbell Lester Laughlin E. M. Mowry Jessie Vogt Clarence A. Neff Ralph Correll Helen Hearst Miriam Gasche Marybelle Renick Ivan O. Wilson Fern Renick Grace Price H. G. Henshaw ,Helen Layport Margaretta Watt Belle Rowlen Harry Blocher Marie Turner OFFICERS CLARA M. ERBECK ...... . , PRESIDENT W. H. HOOVER . X7ICE PRESIDENT HARRY BLOCHER . . , SECRETARY LESTER LAUGHLIN . TREASURER ESTELLA DIGEL . LIBRARIAN 120 University Publications THE WOOSTER VOICE Published Weekly EDITOR-IN-CHIEF . ...... EARL LYTTON TRIFFIT BUSINESS MANAGER . . ALTON HERBERT ETLING ' THE SUMMER BREEZE 1 Published Weekly during the Summer Term. J. O. WELDAY ..... i ..... EDITOR AND NlANAGER THE POST GRADUATE AND WOOSTER QUARTERLY EDITED BY ...... S. F. SCOVEL AND ELIAS COMPTON THE INDEX College Annual, edited and published by the fraternity and sorority mem- bers of the Junior Class. THE HAND BOOK Published annually by the members of the Y. W. and Y. M. C. A. L. N. HAYS ............. . EDITOR 122 I X E '5 W X 7 Football After carefully reviewing our team's record for 1903, Wooster stu- dents have every reason to feel proud of their eleven. That fewer victo- ries were placed to our credit than in the preceding year was due to the fact that this yearis schedule included a number of the best teams in the state. Woosteris work in football since the re-establishment of Athletics four years ago, ha.s been largely one of preparation. Few schools can put out a championship team in three seasons 5 it takes time to develop football men. The days of preparation are almost over, however, and We hope to again realize the victories of 1890-'91-192. Prospects for 1905 are very bright. The strong team of -last season will be With us practically to a man, While the large squad that practiced so faithfully last year insures a strong second team-one of the very essential factors toward making a Winning eleven. THE TEAM PLATT T. AMSTUTZ .... ' . . . NIANAGER Janns H. ivnrrcngkrr . . oiprim LYNN W. ST. JOHN . . . . Cofiorr V. D. Benedict ...... ..... L eft End G. A. Jacobs . .. ..... Left End S. M. Miller ..... Left Tackle J. O. Wilson .... ..... Left Guard W. C. Thompson ...... Center H. H. Hayman .... .... T' ..... ..,.. R i ght Guard C. W. Todd .. Right Tackle H. C. Harrold .... . . . .... Right Tackle H. R. Smith .. ..Right End L. W. Ringland Quarter Back J. S. Weaver .. Quarter Back J. H. Whitcraft ...Left Half H. L. Acton . . . . . .Left Half R. P. Abbey ..... Right Half J. M. Spencer .... .... ..... L e ft Tackle H. L. Tate .... .......... .... F u ll Back RECORD FOR 1903 Sept. 26-Wooster: Woosterm6, Massillon 0. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Nov. Nov. Nov. 3-Wooster: Wooster 11, Canton 0. 10--Oberlin: Wooster O, Oberlin 39. 17-Cleveland: Wooster O, Reserve 17. 23-Tiffin: Wooster 22, Heidelberg 0. 21-Wooster: Wooster 33, Berea O, 31-Westerville: Wooster 11, Otterbein 12. 7-Wooster: Wooster 6, Denison 17. 14fGambier: Wooster 11, Kenyon 10. 21-Wooster: Wooster 0, Case 40. THE SECOND TEAM J. M. ORMSBEE ......... W. W. HEINDEL .......... Wooster Second Team O, Wooster High School 0. Wooster Second Team 11, Wo-oster High School O. Wooster Wooster Second Team 21, Wooster High School 5. dw ff Vg s of gl ctr Skit psig .K I --xa , I 'J' ex f s fe. S Q Wjd 125 Second Team 23, Massillon High School O. MZANAGER CAPTAIN Hr f Base Ball 1904 It was disheartening to say the least to lose all of last yearjs mag- nificent team but three. All kinds of gloomy prophesies concerning the season's work were indulged in early in the year. The large squad that appeared for practice, however, made matters look better and by the time for the first game a good team had been developed. The players are for the most part inexperienced, but of the material that makes ball players. The fielding Work is gilt edged and with the season's practice and experience the batting that will put the team in last year's class is but a matter of time. The schedule was an unusually heavy one, including the best teams in the state, and too much should not be expected for this year. 127 I EDWIN MEESE . . . JAMES H. WHITCRAFT The Team LYNN W. ST. JOHN ..... James H. Whitcratt Roscoe Graham R. P. Abbey .... E. S. McConnell G, L. Ringland W. E. Blaser Carl Compton . .. Gordon Jacobs Henry Schmidt I. R. St. John . D. O. Wenger H. Emerson J. D. Copeland Schedule April 23-Wooster 6, Case 12. May i-Wooster 8, Ashland 2. May G-Wooster 15, Buchtel O. MFANAGER CAPTAIN . COACH . . .Shortstop Center Field . . .Right Field Lett Field . .First Base Second Base .Third Base and Pitcher . . . . .Pitcher . . . .Pitcher . . . . .Catcher . . . .Substitute Second Base . . . ,Substitute Na-Y 13-Wooster 7, Uniersity of West Virginia S. May lei-Wooster 3, University of West Virginia 5. Manx' 27-Wooster 1, Baldwin-Wallace May -Wooster .Tune -Wooster ,Tune -Wooster 129 0. Basket Ball 1904 ' Wooster's fourth season of Inter-Collegiate Basket Ball was her best and her showing in every department this year demonstrates the fact that basket ball under the supervision of the Athletic Association can care for itself. It is in fact the only self-supporting game in Wooster, for after all bills were met for the past season there was reinaining a surplus of about twenty dollars. It is true that Wooster cannot claim the state championship, nor can it be said that every game played resulted in a victory for us. However, comparative scores are such that well qualified judges of the game place our team second only, in Uhio. to Hiram, the champions of the state. 130 The Team L. NEWTON HAYES . EDWIN W. MEESE . . . . . LYNN W. ST. JOHN ...... J. Slloles Wleaver Albert I. Good ...... James D. Coupland Edward S. McConnell Edwin W. Meese D. Harold Cramer FIANAGER CAPTAIN Co.-xcn .Forward .Forward .Forward . . .Center . . .Guard . . .Guard W. D. Hartman, Clifford P. Foss. Ernest G. Crabtree ........ Substitutes J an Jan Jan. Jan Feb Feb Feb Feb - Games 12-Wooster 30, Canton High 10. 18--Wooster 21, Co. D. 22. 23-Wooster 31, Kenyon 24. 30-Wooster 27, Case 26. 6-Wooster 49, Cleveland W. H. 15 19-Wooster 20, Buelltel 49. 20-Wooster 16, Hiram 45. 27-Wooster 31, Case 35. March 12-Wooster 23, Hiram 29. 132 The Track Team The year 1SHl-lvirinurlis the second year of Woostefs participation in this hraneli ot College Athletics. The preparation for the G-yin exhihition and the indoor inter-class track awalceiied et lively interest in the track team this year and 21 nunmher of P1'O1'l'1lSlll.g nien took up the Work. The lack of an adequate track on the athletic field and the fact that inany men were husily engaged in other hranehes of atlileties greatly handicapped the team this year. The Kenyon ineet reinforced the need of hard conscien- tious training' it Wooster is to put out a winning team. The time is not tar distant, however, when Wooster will take her proper place in this as she has done in other lines of athletics. 133 J MASON ORMSB E HUGH R. SMITH . Hugh R. Smith John D. Overholt W. Z. Harrison D. H. Morrison J. Mason Ornisbee Rohr. Wadsworth E The Team E. G. Crabtree J. Garvin N. E. Balmer H. H. Hayman Waldo McDowell H. N. Ervin Meet Kenyon at Gambier May 7. 135 NIANAGER CAPTAIN Tennis The University Tennis Club is an organization financially independent of the Athletic Association although under its patronage. Organized four years ago for the purpose of niaintaining some good court for lovers of the sport and to encourage Intercollegiate nieets, it has oarrie.d out well its original intention. lt was not until last spring that the club, with the financial assistance of Mr. T. M. Hills, '02, could realize its desire for some good grounds. As soon as the worlnnan could get on the campus three of the best courts in the state of Ohio, together With substantial baclinets, were erected upon the old site. Since the tinie of its organization Wooster tennis teanis have played O. S. U., Buolitel and two gaines each with Mt. Union and Oberlin, win- ning all but the first Oberlin ineet. This record cannot be duplicated in the state. This year efforts are being put forth to secure a greater number of games than ever before and the prospects for a successful season are good. 136 University Tennis Club L. NEWTON HAYES JOHN Ii. DAVIS . ED. M. THOMAS . JULIUS E SOHWARTZ . GEORGE A. FLICK Ilobert IJ. Abbcy Prof. T. B. Arclulmld C. Iloalge Bailey 1'T?1l'TOll-l Axtoll I-Iuller Bl2I1lliGNllOl'N Clmrles Cluidestel' O. Burns Craig John lf. Davis Hurolfl Emerson Goorge F. Filcll Ifluglm AFO1'Ol1l2l1l Flo1'iQ1,1 F. Fmzim' Allmorl l. Goocl Wilson D. I'T2'l1'lllHll1 OFFICERS V101 Mc111'1Imc1'sl1ip Limit, 30. MEMBERS L. Newton Hayes Ralpll M. Lowry Prof. Cllalmors Mzlrliu Edward S. Mc-Collnell Robert Platter Charles H. Rico Paul Ringlaucl Julius SCl.1WHl'l'Z .Iolul M. Spcucol' Ed. M. Thomas Eclwiu B. TOW11Sl2llfl llolwrt Wurlswortlw .Iolmson Wm-wi Cllms. Xvlllllll' PRI-:SIDENT PRESIDENT Snommny TREASURER MAN.s.G12R lVl1iteC1'aft Acton Toflfl Hiller, S. Ha.yma11 Tate Smith Spence? Wllitcmff Grab am Hayma I1 Meese Cramer Good M. Wearers of the W FOOT-BALL Benedict Jacobs Riugland Wilson Abbey Thompson Weaver BASE-BALL Abbey McConnell TRACK TEAM . Smiih BASKET-BALL Couplaucl McConnell Weaver 138 The Athletic Association MARTIN RE M I S. M. MILLER EDWIN MEESE J. O. WELDAY AIICE PRESIDENT PRESIDENT SECRETARY TREASURER The Athletic Association is composed of the entire student body of the University and is desi gned to aid and direct the various athletic inter- ests of the school. The Athletic Board, composed of the oflicers of the Association and representatives from the diiifercnt collegiate classes, with one representative from the preparatory department, has general control ot all games and entertainments designed to raise money to aid any par- ticular athletic enterprise, cares for the athletic grounds and awards the University initials at the close of each season. The Association, however, does not control the fund collected by the tcrni assessment of 5Oc for every member of the student body,-this sum being handled by the joint student faculty :ind alumni counnittee. The Athletic Board also elects all team managers. Class Representatives C. H. BAILEX '... . . JOHN M. SPENCER . E G. CRABTREE . I . JOHN D. OVERHOLT . CASSELL STEWART '....... JOINT COMMITTEE Dr. H. N. Mateer John J. Didcoct Prof. W. H. Wilson Edwin Moose J. C. -AICC1EL1'1'G11 COACH Lynn Wilbur SI. J ohn 140 . SENIOR . J UNl'O!?. SOPIIQIIORE FIILSI-I I1 AN . PREP illluniral Obrganizzxtinng The College Choristers J. BYRON OLIVER ............ DIRECTOR The College Choristers, Selected each year by competitive examination, constitute the glee club ot the University. The work of the club consists in a study of standard and classic part songs, glees, inaclrigals, college songs, etc. By its excellent programs the club has gained an enviable repu- tation not only in its college honie hutqthroughout this and neiglihoring states as well. SOPRANOS Lillian Durstine Mary McKinley Dhel Loufharrow Jeanette Bissell ALTOS Grace Hunter Laura D. Fulton Laura Anderson TENORS Bechtel Alcoclq Edwin B. Townsenrl Leslie Houston .V l BASSES Mason Orin shee Florien Frazier 142 Ralph Pluin er George Fitch Uratorio Chorus Membership in the Oratorio Chorus is open to students and others who possess voices of pure quality and considerable compass and who read music with facility. Admission is 'determined by an examination of voices by the conductor and is limited in numbers only by the preservation of an even balance of parts. The chorus meets on Monday evening of each week preparing standard choruses which from time to time are rendered pub- licly. I E Tivo concerts have been given this year, one consisting of a program of selected choruses and solos from Handel's ffMessiah and the other of Hay- denps CreationJ' and Coleridge Taylorbs F'Hia,watha's Wedding Feastf' Among the Works given in recent years with musical accompaniment are Spohids Last Judgment, Mendclssohnis tfLobgcsangjJ Han delts Judas Maccabaeusi' and Gounodns 'fRedemptionF, . ,,. Q SFS! u -I Ns . .6 FL: 144 lfleluor Blaukclulloru W. W. l-leiuclel E. W. Douglass A. H. Pratt J. T. ll2l1'1lHl011Cl Bllmcrt. Moses Walter Frye University Band HUGH SMITH, DIRECTOR. B Flat Cornets Roy A. Brintnall First B Flat Comets R. D. Elliott Second B Flat Cornets R. C. Kitllcart Mellophone Fred O. Wise Altos Rufus Wiugert Slide Trombone Grover G-ourly Eufahonium Ha l'I'lY W . I 1' win B Flat Tenors T. BI. Hollis E Flat Basses Ralph Correll Snare Drum W. Il. Peebles Bass Drum W. ll. l'lm't1m111 1115 Religious Wrganigations Y. M, C. A. HOSCOE GRAHAM . ED. M. THOMAS . . CHESTER W. TODD . ROBERT PLATTEH . E. S. MCCONNELL . ALBERT GOOD . . . ED. M. THOMAS . . EDWIN B. TOWNSEND F. E. BEATTY . . . JOHN J. DIDOOOT. . L. NEWTON HAYES . OFFICERS COMMITTEES Chairmen . Piussiinami WEICE PRESIDENT BEC. Sisoinziranv Con. SECRETARY . Tniafvsunniz . Bnsmz STUDY Mnnsisnsnir . Drvorroxiu, . Miss roNA1iv . Drrnrarrox . H ANDBOOK The purpose ot the Young Mens Christian Association is twofold: to develop the spiritual lives of Christian young men, and to lead those who do not know Christ to love and serve Him. With this one aim constantly in mind this year-to lead every young man in Wooster University more nearly into his relation with Jesus Christ-our Association has grown in numbers and in spirituality, and now at the Close of its twenty-Fifth year has a membership of one hundred and lifty. It has been a source of great joy to those interested in the welfare of the Y. M. C. A. to see men who are recognized as leaders in every college activity,-the'literary, the class- room, the fraternity, and on the athletic field,-come out one by one and put themselves on record as standing for Ohrist and Christian living. The happy results of the meetings of the Week of Prayer under the leadership of Prof. Vance will not be soon forgotten. I But no account of this yearjs work would be complete without mention of the tact that there are nine Bible classes, in which one hundred young men are enrolled, that meet every Sunday morning. The object of the courses that are offered is to promo-te daily, systematic, devotional Bible Study. The first annual Bible Study Institute held in J anuary, when State Secretary McLachlin and Edmund Lucas, 303, State Secretary of Kentucky, were present, was of much help in strengthening this department of our work. There is little doubt that the results of this year's work are in large measure due to the 'Fact that so many men are engaged in daily Bible Study. 148 Y. M. C. A. CABINET Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS. CLARA ERBECK . . . Pin-:siD1QNr MARGARET FRAME . Vice Piecicsinnmz JEAN DOUGLASS . . . Snoizirrinzr MARY SANBORN . COR. Siiciinrixnr The Young Womenis C'hristian Association of the University of Woes' ter was organized in 1883 with a. charter membership of thirty-tour. ln the twenty-one years since its organization its membership has twice dou- bled itself, there being now 123 girls in the association. This is more than 98.1 per cent. of all the girls in college, and is proof enough that the Y. W. C. A. is recognized as one of the most important organizations in the Uni- versity. Its aim, the deepening of the spiritual life, the development of what is best in us, and the preparing for a useful and happy life. is one vvhich every young woman can well afford to inalie her own. The Missionary and Bible Study departments have been especially emphasized, and it has been the one aim to show to every one the importance ot systematic Bible Study, without which the college course of no young woman is complete. We have been fortunate in having with us besides M rs. J. Livingstone Taylor, who was here for the Bible lnstitute, Dr. Pauline Boot, Traveling Secretary for the Student Volunteer Movement, Who visited us twice in May, 1903, and again in the winter term of this year. We feel encouraged over the progress that has been made the last year and hope for greater things in the years to come. 150 K, xx 24 X Sf 1 E 1 I U W 3 E Y E Y. W. C. A. CABINET A Volunteer Band The Evangelization of the World in this Generation. The Volunteer Band is eoniposecl of einen and wonmen whose purpose it is to become foreign niissionaries. The Wooster Band is but a branch of an international inovenient, which believes it possible to accoinplish the Evangelization of the Worlcl in this Generation. Its purpose is both to interest and educate its own inenibers and as inany others as possible, in missionary enterprise, and to reinforce rapidly and satisfactorily, the army of missionaries now engaged at the front. Meetings are held every Sabbath afternoon of the college year at 1 :30 o'elock at the Conservatory ot Music. t'l-ARA Til. ICIQBISICK . . Pnrsmisxr l4IAllYl2S'l' A. OHORT . .... . Sl2C!Rl2'l.'-lRY MEMBERS Augusta G. Reecl Wni. .Falconer Marybelle Renielc Mary E. Robertson Helen M. Wallace Edith Sloan Eclith J. Anderson Clara M. Erbeek Nettie Rupert Marie Collins Elizabeth Kelso Bessie March Julia Merrick Bertha. Correll Luella Correll lcla Clark Eclwarcl S. McConnell 152 Manforcl Elliott Merle li. Chapin E. M. Mowry Win. Dinsniore Roscoe Grahain Ralph Grahain Albert I. Good H. H Hayman Arthur W. Mareh E. A. Ohori Frank E. Beatty Luther N. Hayes Arthur Tifld Buell Love H. A. Nicholls F ,Za Athenaean Literary Society ORGANIZED SEPTEMBER 16, 1870. Nlottgg Wlmirrce susllusz I-lvlfifiv Among the tiine-honored institutions of the University ot Wooster, is Atheuaean Literary Society, which, since 1870, has been inolding the literary side ot large nuniber of Wooster's students. Tt is with pardona- ble pride that the society looks over its past records, and notes that from her rolls have been selected many who are now holding positions ot trust throughout the world. Sonic of Wooster's strongest Professors were nieni- bers of Mold Athenaeainff Nor does the society rest on its past record only -it is the strongest one in the University at present. The Faculty-ruling, making literary work non-conipulsory has not affected it in the least--the loyal nieinbers, proud of their past record and present success, preferring to reinain on the roll. 'ln th'e Inter-society contest Athenaean's record is an enviable one and its inenibers have always been in the front ranks. Of the eight debaters and alternates chosen this year to represent Wooster in debate against Washington and Jefferson and Ohio Wesleyan Universities, six are Athenaean inen. The societv is now in possession of its new hall. which is being rapidly fitted up and furnished. 154 ff 5 Athenaean Literary Society OFFICERS PRESIDENT ........... ...................... I 'RANIX E BI' -Uflvl I ICE Pmisinisxw .......... ' ..... .... I JIEBER BLANLENIIORB SLORETI-LRY AND Voion ARTEPOIITICII ................. WALDO H DUNN l.REASUllER ...,.........,.... , .............. CLARENCE X WIFI' CRITICS .......... ..... C . F. LIMBACH, R. B. WALIXINSHAII SLRGSEANT-:i'r-Aizms ............................ R. G CALDWELL LIST OF MEMBERS Acton ' Laughlin Anistutz Liggett :IlCXEL11Cl91' Liinlmch Blooher Miller, W. J Beatty Hiller, S. M Blanlienhorn Mowry Cowles Neff Crabtree Notestein Calclwell, R. C. Ohori Caldwell, R. Orinshee Caldwell, A. Pore Crouch Pollock C1'tU'I1G1' Hemp . Didcoct Rice Dunn St. John Erwin Townsend Gerig Ticld Gihnofe Wallfinshaw Good Warner Haynian Wolclay I-Iibharcl Whitecraft Heindel Wilson HH.I'1'lSO1l Win govt Koch Yofler 156 Irving Literary Society Since itsfounding Irving Literary Society has occupied hrst rank among the literary organizations of the University. On its roll appear the names ot many of Wooster's most prominent alumni, and among its mem- bers will always he found those men prominent in every line of college activity. It is among the traditions of the society, that from Irving is chosen the man who represents Wooster on the oratorical contest. During the past year Irving has experienced an unprecedented success in the line of literary development, and has added to its enrolhnent those who will maintain the Kesprit du corps of the society and supplement its glorious past with at no less glorious future. 157 Q Irving Literary Society OFFICERS EARL L. TRIFFIT ......... . . . . . . .P111ssL1J12NT EDWARD S. MCCOXXELI, .. ...V1c1a PRESIDENT LEROY ALLEN ...... .. ...... Con. SEC. CHAS. WILDER .... ED. M. THOMAS E. F. FRAZIER ...... EDWARD ZINNINGEIZ JOHN M. SPENCER . Abbe-1' Allen Axtell Allis Bailey Davis Eiling F itch Frazier Fluckey G 121.11 11 111 G111'vi11, J. Gz11'vi11, G. H11 yes Houston I ww 1' y M11 1-1-11 H1-C011 111-ll M111-so Bill l'l'2lAX' IRVING ROLL 159 .........S1so1112TARY . , .. .. . ...TREASURER . . . . .S1s11c1mNT-AT-ARMS . . . . . .FIRST 01:11:10 BLLUIIZIW Paisley Peebles Platter Spencer Stmuss Tl1o111s1s Triflit West, J. WQS1, 111 Wviider Wait Zi1111i11geT Moore Craig Ci'llll1JlJOii i'I1iciusier Douglass P1100 S 12CoND CRITIC P1 Websterian Literary Society FOUNDED AND CHARTERED A. D. 1897. Motto: Itll'llCfZl'HZ, Fert Labor. Seven years ago 33 of Woosteifs choicest young nien, dissatisfied with the condition of literary life then prevailing, resolved to found a new society which Should niore completely enihody their ideals of literary ex- cellence and organized unity. Websterian Literary Society was founded for a definite purpose and its- subsequent career has demonstrated the wisdom of its founders. Although younger than its fellow societies, Websterian has won an unique place in the student life, and has gained a standing in the eyes of faculty and students which it is not likely to lose for many years. 160 WEBSTERIAN OFFICERS PAUL SWARTZ .... .... P RLSIDEXTT C. C. VOGT ........... ..... V IOL PRESIDENT PAUL F. RINGLAND . . . . . . SECRETARY W. H. MCCULLOCH ....................... . TRTXSURER WEBSTERIAN ROLL Benedict Lowry K inn oy Plummer McCulloch Riugland, G Pratt Swartz, P. Rillgland, P. Schwartz, J. Taggart Weaver Tyler Vogt Wadsworth Thomas Johnston 161 Philomathean Morro: He C'Ul7f11lC I'8 'Il'IlO an.cZ'urc's. Corions: Green and White. Philoniathean Society was organized at the beginning of the present school year, on September 25, 1903. The usual obstacles and ditliculties which confront an infant organization were niet and overcome one by one, until now the society stands on a plane With the others in literary work. PllllO1l1El.tllGt1I1,S members have envinced a great interest in their Work and are looking forward to a strong and aggressive society in the years to come. It is hoped that inany others shall be added to the present nuinber, who will join us in upholding the high standard of Philoniathean. PRESIDENT ...... Vlon PRESIDENT . . . Snoiinriinr ...... 'l'RnAsURnr4 .... Ciurio .......... SERGEANT-,ir-Aims Voroia Riiroizutrn . llonar Carson Chapin C orrell Dinsinore Elliott Gorgas Graham Haniinond Henshaw Heuseli OFFICERS JACOB K. NOLD . HARRY G. HENSHAW ..... . . . MERLE E. CHAPIN . . . . . . . .LEONARD E. BONAR . . .STANLEY B. VANDERSALL . . ......... FRANK D. KESSLEB ...............f'HARLES E. LAMALE MEMBERS 162 Kessler Knight Lainale Mnssleni an Nold Patterson Roesley Shorger Taggart Todd Van dersall Williard MOTTO: A posse ad essef' Cononsz Blue and White. Williard Literary Society was founded by the girls of Wooster Univer- sity in 1873, with the design of promoting the mental and moral culture of its members. The society has always had the distinction of holding a high place among the literary societies of W ooster, and it is endeavoring to maintain its good reputation. That it is being successful in this endeavor is proved by the excellency of the Weekly Friday programs and by the two annual entertainments, Willard Farewellv and f'Willard-Castalian Public? The society has revised its constitution by which the limit to the num- ber of members is changed from fifty to sixty. . The inenibership is now complete. 164, LUCY WARREN . .. MYRTLE ATEN ..... ELSlE MORRISON CORA M. WELDAY MAY DOWNING . BELLE ROWLEN . JESSIE VOGT ..... Myrtle Aten Helen Anderson Laura Anderson Jean Alexander Ernestine Alms Ruth Baird May Beaver Jeanette Bissell Anita Boyce Bertha Correll Lnella. Clorell Alice Davis Daisy Derr Margaruite Dickey Estella Diegel Mary Donaldson May Downing Lillian Durstine Hazel Eniery Margaret Frame Urna Sarles Edna Saunders Nellie Shields Sarita Smith Esther Swartz Sallie Taylor Laura Eulton Mary Grove Grace Harrold Miriani Hard WILLARD OFFICERS WILLARD ROLL Mary Hickolt Grace Hunter Mabel Keener Helen Layporte Ruth Lehiniller Mary McClelland Mary McKinley Elsie Morrison Claudia Meyers Gertrude Orr Harriet Rfeifer Grace Price Edith Reese Belle Rowlen Mary Robertson Nettie Rupert Martha Sanborn Mary Sanborn Ada Sniith Maude Stone Margaret Taggert Lois Thomas Corinne Tschuni y Katherine Vance Cora Welday Mary Williamson Jessie Vogt Lucy Warren Anna Wiles Jeanette Wright . . . . .PRESIDENT Vron PRESIDENT . . . . .SECRETARY . . . . .TRTEASURER . . . .FIRST CRITIC .Snoonn GRITIO . . . . . .MIIRSIIAL Castaliani . Morro: Du'1'c7L Sick Selbst Bilclen. COLORS: Crimson and White. Castalian Society was organizetl February 5, 1897, by the young women of Wooster University for the purpose of obtaining greater profi- ciency in literary work. The history of the society has been one of continuous growth, and though the youngest of the literary societies, it has Won for itself a high rank. Regular Weekly meetings are helcl on' Friday afternoon at which pro- grams are rendered which are both interesting and beneicial. Besides the regular meetings two public entertainments are given each year, f'Castalian Farewell? given by the girls of the Freshmen and Sophoniore elasses, and :'Castalian Publicfi by the Junior and Senior girls cluring Commencement week. During the current year, great interest has been manifested not only in the careful preparation of all literary procluctions but in the special effort put forth to provide for a more complete furnishing of Fastalian Hall. 167 OFFICERS CECILIA REMY ............... GRACE LOVETT ......... HELEN BUTTERFIELD .... JEAN DOUGLASS ........ IDA WARDEN ...... FERNE RENICK ....,. GLENN SHANKLIN .... CASTALIAN Anderson, Edith Anderson, Edna Black, Charlotte Butterfield, Helen Beckwith, Juanita Beckwith, Mae Clark, Ida ROLL 1904 Lind, Ennna Lovett, Grace Merrick, Juli Martin, Ruth 21 . . . . .PRESIDENT VICE PRESIDENT . . . . .SECRETARY . . . . .TREASURER . . .FIRST CRITIC .SECOND CRITIC . . . . . .lllARSHAL McCulloch, Caroline Parker, M ay Peters, Marie Crainer, Myrtle Crockett, Lela Donald, Nellie Douglas, Jean Erbeck, Clara ' Eelger, Helen Fletcher, Harriet Ganyard, Geneva Gasche, Miriam Green, Virginia Hearst, Helen Hindnian, Nettie Jones, Mary Lind. Amelia 169 Remy, Cecelia Renick, Fern Reniclc, Marybelle Ritter, Claire Rose, Nellie Schrihcr, Carrie Sinclair, Harriet Shanklin, Glenn Sloan, Edith Stophlet, Leta Turner, Marie Warden, Ida Weckesser, Elizabeth Zimincrman, Edna Lowell 'Pc15a-mils C0l'7flL7l7, Fincmf' Lowell, the oldest of the Preparatory literary societies, was formed by the union of Bryant and Philomatliean in 1892. The society has led in literary work in the Preparatory department and has been particularly successful this year. The membership is larger than ever before and the meetings have been particularly Well attended. OFFICERS D. H. MORRISON .... ......... - .... ........ P R ESIDENT FRANK COAN ..... ..... X Tron PRESIDENT FRANK SNYDER ...,.... SECRETARY LAUREXS SEELYE -... ........ ..... T R RASURRR ROLL Foster Foss Frye Hartman Glenn Kilgore Morrison MoClarran Coupland Snyder Duval Lehman, S. McClure Zaring Blaser Ballmer Kline Shoemaker Smith, R. Smith, B. 170 Garvin Thackvvell Goheen Richards Stewart Striclrler Seelye - Goan Martin Risser Brintnall Moore Reynolds Fraser Sonnthaler Johnson Hayes March Gault Burkey X 0 r Lincoln This is si coinparatively young Prepan'ato1'y O1'gklDlZ2l.llO11, being founded September 22, 1899. The society has done excellent work since its incep- tion and has now an enthusiastic and liarcl-working nienibership. The society occupies a line room in Taylor Hall and is doing first-class literary work. . OFFICERS BERTRAM H. CONLEY . . . ,... . . . . A. G. YAWBERG ...... .... Y 71013 R. DOUGLASS ....... WAYNE MOORE .... ............ MEMBERS Allsup Frisbee Barr Funk Bonar Gecldis Bailey Haines Bebotegny Inglefielcl Buch S-iclell Cameron Thompson Candor Kithliari Compton Love, D. C. Conley Love, R. B. Chapin Lehman Heiby Moore Smith Morris Timmons Meyers Crossinan Rankin Colville Boyer Collins Randle Dorsey Stentz Douglass Steele Douglass, Wm. Snell Elliott Yawherg 172 PRESIDENT PRESIDENT SECRETARY 'l'1:12AsURER Orio Our Roacl Is Oil-1t'fL'7'CZ.u Orio, the only ladies' literary society in the Preparatory Department, was founded twenty years ago. Its object is to prepare members to take up literary work in the collegiate societies and to aiord training to students in the preparatory department. The name of the society is made up from the initial Words of the motto-C'Our Road is Onward. Orio has maintained the reputation of being a good Working organiza- tion With excellent attendance and programs. The society has kept pace with the rapid growth of the Preparatory department in recent years. OFFICERS PRESIDENT ....... ........... N HSS ELIZABETH PEEBLES VICE PRESIDENT .... MISS ELIZABETH MARCH SIQCRIITAIIY ...... ...... B HSS EDITH HEARST ROLL Miss Goan Miss March Miss Compton Miss McCoy, H. Miss Crosser Miss McCoy, S. Miss Duncan Miss McCracken Miss Eddy, D. Miss Mitchel Miss Eddy, R. Miss Neff Miss Fisher Miss Martin Miss Gilson Miss Notestine Miss Hay Miss Peebles Miss Hearst Miss Peterson Miss Hunter Miss Ruse Miss Kelso Miss Smith Miss Large Miss Thomas Miss Laughlin Miss Varner Miss Lester Miss Van Anda Miss Love Miss Workman Miss Lucas Miss Fraser Miss Maize Miss Axtell 173 University Debating Club The University Debating Club was organized January 7, 1903, and the irst nieeting held January ll of the sanie year. A desire for more fre- quent praetiee than was possible in the larger literary societies led to its foundation. The niain part of each erening's program is the debate. Four research topics on subjects of general interest are assigned each Week. The nieinbership is limited to fourteen. Meetings are held on Monday night of each week. The success oil this club led to the 'Formation of tivo similar organiza- tions and has been the cause of pronounced debating activity in Wooster. The quality of the work done by the University is attested by the fact that both College debating teanis tor this year were composed of University club H1 GTI . C. F. LliMBACH .. W. L. HARRISOX . J. O. WELDAY .... Heber Blankenhorn R. G. Caldwell D. W. Murnaw W. C. Falconer R. B. Walliinshaw LeRoy Allen J. O. Welday OFFICERS . . . . . . .PRESIDENT . . . . . . . . . .XTICE PRESIDENT . . . . . . . SliCl1E'l'.lllY AND TH'E.'SSURlTl? MEMBERS ' 174 A. H. Etling Cl. F. Liinbaeh L. C. Knight Harry Erwin Alfred Yaivberg Martin Reinp .Taines H. Whiteraft Dabating Teams FIRST TEAM A. H. ETLING, Leader. H. Etling, R. G. Caldwell, R. B. Walkinshaw ' Martin Remp, Alternate. SECOND TEAM J. O. W1zLD.xY, Leader. J. O. Welday, C. F. Limbach, LeRoy Allen. Fred O. Wise. Alternate. 175 Independent Debating Club 'F1-eo Speech the Glory of American The Independent holds high rank as a debating organization because of the faithful attendance and hard Work of its nienibers. It was Organized t Dive to its nienibers that drill in close rapid thinking and skillful coni- on posed delivery which is in no way so well attained as through debate. The club ineets each Monday evening in the University Library and cordially welcomes all who are interested in its work. The club will be particularly strong next year, losing but few nien by graduation. H. H. HAYMAN .. W. H. HOOVER .... J. B. caoucn A. ononi J. B. Crouch W. H. Dunn E. M. Mowry Rufus Wingert Philip Cunningham E. A. Ohori H. H. Hayman A. O. Caldwell OFFICERS . . . . . . .PRESIDENT . . .VICE PRESIDENT . . . . . . .SECRETARY . . . . .Tinaxstinna ROLL Lester Laughlin A. K. Hibbard W. H. Hoover Hugh Smith Chas. Wilder Allen Pratt C. A. Neff W. H. Stentz 176 flllllllll HIIHIIIIIIIII 99- 2 The Kieffer Club This aggregation, eaptained by Dad Simon Miller, holds meetings regularly three times a. day at 93 E. Bowman street. It is a heterogeneous combination of Pennsylvania Dutch, Holmes County Democrats, Iowans, a. few upper elassinen and divers Preps and Freshmen. They possess strong husky appetites to a man, and in ravenousness and voracity are very close to the Meyers Club or the training table in foot-ball time. The club trains its preps and Freslnnen Very carefully, deeming it no small offense for one ot' them to eat pie with his knife, blow his coiee in his saucer or swallow his spoon to the handle. For further information apply to Vandersall or Thompson. . SOCII Thompson Yoder West Hibbard Grossman Henshaw Harrison Gerig ' Duval Carson Maurer Smith Bloeher Snyder Cowles Evans Greddis Elliot Kilgore Palmer Keyes, J. Keyes, W Leeper Kline Booth Miller 178 The Limbach Eating Palace This organization flourishes at 233 N. Bever and is presided over by one Acton, Sophomore, It was early consecrated to the members of the foot-ball squad, but later, others-and it must be admitted -of their own choice, joined it. The visitor is 'impressed both by the appearance of those who frequent this place thrice daily and by the skill and rapidity with which the food is made to disappear. Quality is more or less .insisted upon but quantity seems the sine qua non. The visitor would note, too, that the manner of eating appeals quite as much to the ear as to the eye. The most eloquently suggestive thing that could be written about this club is the roll of its members, which we here append. ROLL ' Senior Table Bailey Trittit Paisley Meese Mumaxv Whiteraft Cummings Hochstetlcr Sophomore Table Benedict Pore Liggett McDowell Heindel Acton Ormsbee Hoover Prep Table Royer lllatt Reynolds T'IdI'lI1'112l.11 Cameron Coupland ' Bayley Scebring Dorsey . Lehman QNO. 25 Lehman Pfouts Wingerd Surree Steel Hamilton Lehman Peebles Schmidt Shmnaker Reddiek Blaser Clhidester Tate 179 Platte's Place 212 NORTH MARKET The Roth is a place. It stands at the neither end of the paved portion of Bowman street. Let the reader imagine a giant old-fashioned whisky bottle with a cork-screw inserted as to its cork, and he has some faint idea ot the wierd architectural beauty and simplicity of this building. Within everything from the spiral stairway to the kitchen is admirably arranged for rough house and comfort. These considerations, particularly its shape, including Platte Tootsy Amstutz to operate it in the capacity of business manager. He is a model provider. The place is chiefly inhabited by Populists and Preps, and is the home of the far-famed German Village. It is also the headquarters of the Prohibition party of the school. The Roth is Sui gezwris. Below are those who frequent Plattffs Place. ROTH ROLL Price ln gleli cld Cunningham Amstutz Graham Beach Hayman Xelf Schei deinantel Fluckey Pollock Graham Blankenhorn Pratt Haines Holl Wilson Starner Clark ' Brintnall Richard son Johnson Heusch Goudy Heinig 3IcClintoc Timmonds Boeshart 180 The Meyers Culinary and Supply Establishment , Any one who desires will find this club on N. Bever street, but a short distance from the universally known Tiefentollar House. A certain Did- coct, purveyor of flesh, fish and fowl to Dr. Mateer, is its recognized head. Divers diverse elements make up the number of those who deceive the inner man at its table. What more antithetical specimens than J. Winters Thomas and Robert Boyd Walkinshavv? A multitude of Alpha Taus infest the place which is perhaps the rea- son that Koch chose to honor the crowd by his presence. Preps are to be found at every turn. A demoralizing democracy runs rampant. The faculty otherwise absorbed, have not as yet inspected the club. There is some satisfaction, however, in knowing that the inevitable cannot be side-tracked. Justice will be done. To re-enforce our remarks we print the list of those guilty. THE LIST Ervin Wadsworth Beatty Walkinshaw Ohori Caldwell, R Thomas, J. Winters Strauss Caldwell, A. Wingert Moore Crouch Strickler Crabtree Fraser Koch Didggct Hammond Townsend Moses Ballmer Gilmore Risscr SJCGINZ Rigg Dunn Hemp Tiaughlin Caldwell, B. G. The Young This club is not quite so recent as its name would indicate. In fact it has been the rendezvous of the Spinli street and Far East aggregation since time out of mind. It is not ditiicult to find. Let the adventurous one stand on the corner of Bowman and Spink at the noon hour. The house toward which he sees a rushing crowd of Preps and Freshmen con- verge, is it. Its members never take any cuts at meal times and pride them- selves on their appetites. Dad Mowry, Editor-in-Chief, Sporting Editor and Manager of the Weekly Chapel Bulletinf' runs the club on hu ine principles. THE YOUNG ONES. Wise Morris Dinsmore Funk Elliot Campbell Craig Wallace Zinninger Yawberg Falconer Barr Laughlin, Lester Eli Mowry Colville 182 1 + 1 ll1 l Ng-I., 1 f ff,-,-,f.. 42 1 ' 'Ill'- . f 1 ,:,..,..,,. ..,,.U pil I fl ., A k W vW 'g:yg,3fi. Wwffwfffh 'Wu I 'lu Im 'fW' ,.., V f 'ffl 'lIIII lil., 1 -IXLN-'.f '41 r f ,fl , I YMW - - -Www I ' 1 fl fvlfrgwfb I E j 'ffl UQ! h 6715! 154 'H i in mf-'I : MPA ' ,f fm-lf'fW'1 ' 1 if-WW mf-N -I If f ffif '--:X , M' ,un ...- W fl i P K ,I I E' Sw ,ffl If LA-muff-as ',- .p Z' lk . , ll ' I 55: 1 mm, ' l '- 4 'ik 1 ' lIl ' ull! iff!! 1' mm 8 'I I W ll' 'IIT lIIl'1' WI llnu , pQ lllllll ' ,ml If I In 1lllIIlIIl ' 'I ull' if L, .Q my - I , 1 ' f f! W Illllllllll A Chapel Service . 9 :20 A. M.-Bell for Chapel rings. Students' great zeal for morning service shown by joyful looks on their countenances. 9:25-All but a few in their regular 'places in chapel. 9 226-Hazel Emery yawns. 9:27-Limbaeh ditto. 9:28-Willie Kinney and his overcoat make their way to the second row. Q Those who are occasionally late have the privilege of going to their regular seatsflj 9:29-Miss Gingrich takes her seat by Cosine. 9:31-A few straggling couples scat themselves in the rear to the utter disgust of Behot and Prexy. 9 3372-A dog appears. Smiles and a general air of expectancy among the less devout. 9 133-Dr. Holden shows signs of interest in the beast. 9 :34-Beatty-a Senior, too, in great embarrassment and confusion, conducts the pup to the outer court. 9:35-A note concerning an after meeting starts around the Senior class. 9 :36-A note requesting the boys to remain circulates in the Junior class. 9 237-Ll1T1lJ3.Cl1 and Hazel yawn. 9 138-Sir John Winters Thomas arrives a trifle late, but undismayed. 9:39-9:50-Sophornores busy themselves with personal notes. Bug lessons reviewed. 9:40-Hymn number 1:21 announced. Prexy desires that all should learn to sing this with expression. 9 A2-Prof. Seelye and Dr. Scovel disdain to consult their hymnals, 9 :43-The organist foozles. The choir giggles. 9 144-The Freshies decide to have a class meeting after chapel. Note sent round. 9 :45-Seelye and Dr. Scolvel tlnd it necessary to consult their hymnals. Behot fixes his eyes on the upper northeast corner of the chapel. About 9 :50-Grand rush for classes led by the Freshmen. Finale. 184 The Same Old Storyp ' , , f ' -.ax N ' Q 4:1 K iii lyllf x ax I N lx i e l s fl e :U 315' - l f l l i E ii P M is f l s so jf!! NA: li ge s N X f f y 4 Yes! This is Hoover? 'Tiate for Thursday night P '4Awfully sorry, Mr. l, but- THE WOOSTER UNABRIDGED CSpecimen Pagesj ATHLETIC BOARD-Tlie high chiefs of the Athletic Associationg the object of the scramble for oflice at the beginning of the school year. BLUFF-A sniooth process of concealing onc's ignorance. CUT-An absence from reci'fa.tions caused by scverc illness or failure of alarm clockg what 21 class lakes when the prof. is SSW min. late. CTNCH-A study requiring only nominal hrain exerciseg any popular electivc CLUB-A comniunistic eating cstablishinentg a destroyer and pervcrter of table manners. DATE-A co-cd rcccpfiong ai clclicious fruitg 'Ufwo hours or more of lll'lll'llO1'l'llpl7Cfl bliss? Qliaura Fultorrl 185 DOUGH-Sl1GliQlS3 plunks5 the necessary 5 the needful5 the wherewithalg what Prexy daily solicits and prays for. Essar-A writing5 written hot air5 a hurried compilation from an encyclopedia. FUSSER-A busy man among the ladies 5 a gallant 5 a dispenser of shekels on the fair. ' FLUNK-Mental para.lysis5 a refusal or inability to answer the Prof 5 a result of an unskillful stab. Friar-A Klu-Klux, Mafia or Highbinder association 5 a bad lot5 the source of all deyiltry and political intrigue. GRINDS-Occasional individuals whose poor taste and bad judgment lead to hard study and high .grades5 nearly extinct. Ho'r-,rin-Chief component of Sophomore essays 5 rantg rot5 yocalized conceit. , HORSE-A 4'trot5 a pony5 a very present help 5 a bearer of burdens5 a luxury 5 a. necessity. INDEX--fxll alleged humorous publication. JOLLY-TO tatfy5 to pat on the back5 to give the glad hand. KNOCKER-One with a poor digestiong a sore head. KNQCKED-H1s-nrn-onr-A phrase used to signify tha.t one has recited Well 5 used by modest students. RIARK-ODE who gets the short end 5 one easily separated from his coin 5 a prep 5 a freshman. POUND-oNn's-iviniin-To study 5 to di.g5 to grind5 to get busy on one's lessons. ' POUND-oNn s-EAR-To recline in the arms of Morpheus5 to frequent onets downy couch5 to dream-perchance. PREP-A beginner5 a novice 5 a tyro5 a synonym for insigniieanceg an opprobrious epithet. RUSHING-Disinterested attention paid to Freshmen by upper class- men at the beginning of the year. STUNT-An unusual performance 5 difficult feat5 a. daring deed. STAB-lncolierent tall: about what is not understood 5 Worth from 25 to 100W-depending on the Prof. i SUPE-A new initiate who gets busy at the Mysterious High Chiefs eornn1a.nd5 a hewer of woodg a drawer of water. STI.-XRK-A prodigy 5 a Wonder5 talso a rarityj. SPREAD-A feed indulged in just after meals by Hoover inmates 5 as a verb,-to put on the dog5 t.o magnify one's importance. Voion-A weekly sheet edited by philanthropists who are satisfied with 186 their labor for their painsg wliat short-skates and sore-heads read, kick about and never pay for. WORK-To nninipulateg to deoeiveg To cajolog to make a good excuse. SHORT-sK,iT,li-One loath to part with his shekelsg one who makes church daies only one who reads his DQigi'1i3OI'7S Ivzclemr instead of buying one hi1'1'lSCi'i:. CASE'--A had atigcfkg a. 'feniporary attailhnieiitz a crushg iwo dozen bottles g one hunched cenisg ai buck. 187 N BOY AND FIOUSTABOUT FCOETC7?iUHE'FG2HER OPEN ALI. NIGHT O. E. HEINIG STOCKHOLDERS: STOCKHOLDERS' Y Fzmx Hsuscr-1 WART PRICE FHQ GRAHA , S UBEY ACH D HAY N Q. 'lla K' FREA sow V ING ESTABLISHED QD' oFFucE HOURS: 212 1n. fmarhet ' Srb jfloor SA. ,, ,, ,A M Semis mmbcmuun. malmu ,F ,NZRM E A Private and Home Office No. 6, Second Floor-Telegraphic Communication Solicited. O. E. A N N E X - - - - L oW 'Nfq LLEY m Heinig, Office Boy. If not in-walk in-get some Satisfaction and call tomorrow. Come up ' U N CH OOM' 7 in the elevator and slide down on the banister WOOSTER, O., April 1, 190 4 Dear SirZ-- You are respectfully requested to attend the mass-meeting of the Populist Party, to be held in Hayman Hall, The Roth Club Temple, on the evening of April Slst, 1904. Bishop Neff, of the Universalist Church will begin the exercises by the chant HGaudeamus Igitur, fol- lowed by a short discourse on the Heathen and the Prohibition Party. We will then listen to an exhortation by our famous stump speaker Missionary Price, with many allusions to this most AUGUST assembly. A Wiener supper will conclude ceremonies, with the Roth Club Ode. Since the Prohibs. captained by Infant Hayman, will attend in a body, it is necessary that every true Pop should turn out. By order of Pres. Cunningham l. - n A RECITATION IN SENIOR APOLOGETICS. Chapel over, the Seniors and a few others repair to the recitation room of Prof. Archbald. They take their seats in alphabetical order, each con' fident that he will not be called upon to recite. The following is after the ufsual order of exercises. Prior. ARCHBALD- It is my painful duty to report the chapel attend' ance of this class. You will please answer Mpresentp' if you attended church last Sunday. Mr. Abbey? Mn. A.- Absent.,' QTrainp-tramp-tramp is heard in the hall. Enter the Emperor Charles Hodge Bailey, executes column left--right about face and takes his seat. Stiiied snickers from Vogtj 4 PROF. A.-f'Miss QSjatin-CVogt laughs loudlyj. ,MISS ATEN-::P1'6SQlll-.JJ PROP. A.-- Miss Bailey? QVogt roars with delight, Prof. looks up in some confusionj Mr Bailey, I-I really didn't mean anything.'7 Mn. B. Qin deep bass voicej- Chapel-lf, Prof. A. continues calling the roll to the vast amusement of Vogt. When he has finished he makes a few remarks to the class concerning the difficulty of the lesson, opens the book, studies the roll for a few minutes amid breathless excitement and calls out-UML Beatty, what does Hegel -assert in the first paragraph of the lesson ? QThe Emperor Chas. H. eagerly leaps to his feet to the immense relief of Beattyj I Prior. A.-Well, Mr. Bailey, if you want to recite Mr. Beatty can get ready for the next question. QClass smiles audibly.j THE EMPEROR C. H.-'fWell, according to Spinoza, Elbert Hubbard and Dr. Compton, the unsophisticated continuity of the ultimate is indubit- ablef' PROP. A.- Mr, Bailey, will you kindly explain what you incan by the unsophisticated continuity of the ultimate ?9' THE E. C. PI.-A-hem! In the first place, Professor, you perceive that you will have to admit according to law and logic that the postulation of the unsophisticated continuity of the ultimate, wherein the mind escapes from itself and soars above the essential limits of synchronous subjectivity is absolutely necessary. PROF. A.- I think I see your point, Mr. Bailey. We will let the class consider the matter and come to its own conclusion. C To classi I hope you will all feel free to ask questions on this inattcr and if T can't answer thein, wc'll refer them to Mr. Bailcyf' 189 VOGT-tftIIaw, haw, haw-w-w! j PROP. A.-f'Beally, Mr. Bailey, I didnit inean anything. Mr. Beatty, what does Kant atiirin eoneerning the Absolute ? Mn. BnAi1'rY-'fProfessor, I-I-donit believe I fully understand the Absoluteff V PROR. A.- That will do, Mr. Beatty, very good. I think I can clarify this point by reading a few lines from Fraser. Qlivery one looks at 'iSoelcs.Dj Reads a couple of paragraphs. T. E. C. H.-ffProfessor, question please Z PROP. A.--MThat's right, Mr. Bailey, if there are any points that may enlighten the class or niyself, I ani always glad to have you bring them up. T. E. C. H.-:iThat last statement you read is utterly contrary to all the laws of reason. Why, Aristotle, Kant, Spinoza and inyself all agree that-H QBell ringsj PROP. A.-'II will try and answer your objection at the beginning of the next lesson. Take the saine lesson for tomorrow. Class exeusedf' EXTRAVAGANCE. One wint7ry night the shrieking wind Hurled ieebergs through the sky. The ineretry was too low to find, And anthraeite too high. Engaged in study full profound Q?j Sat students two in all- Said one, Gee, I ani chilly, 'Whit'f' 'fThen fBobbie,? here's a shawlf' Nant, here eonies 'John Of, answered Bob. Say, tell hiin to fire up. Poor 'iBlueh W John only heaved a sob 5 AW, go to bed, you fPup.' 'fIt isn't cold, and do you 'spose That I could do niueh more? To-day at 3 :OO a. ni. I 'rose And shut the furnace door? 190 ff m W Q 9-fu D E N RPR! T UR f k fl x 'ffj,'i5?sQM M ! 5 .5 C lk v Q3 ' ,w g If A --lz ' f v 59 fc, X 'i ff ' , f 1 ,f,, A'ff f 4' ,W j f iy4, ?'QQgr3g5,,, 5' 1 w f JW W G ,J A di I V 'f M if ? KU ve, 4, f iiggiygx, 'f I fg i Q wg f f 5'-2 9 . . Ikfffj .pf I gh ,gf 7 Y I -...-,,,1A,,., I ..... . .... K Cs R221 --lllln Q Q X . 0 f nxqggszg ,L Q A 5 Q , Higgs Iuii :meta bii:3a:AEEi a h . h , 'lhtsi THE TALE OF THE MAN OF LETTERS. QHere beginneth the Tale of the Professore and the do Whan that Aprille with his shoures colde At cursing muche had made .good peple bolde, And every veyne congealed like swich licour As prompts the evil deed a blameless doer, Bifel that in this seson on a day, A smale dogge which one might call a stray, Did goon forth, so pricked in his corage, Whan quickly he espied a pail of porage That stood hard by a lerned professoreis dore, And thither did y-ronne as neier before. But eek at this tyme with his piercing ye, The sly professore did this puppy see, And strayteway drew his gonne and shot his beste, And cooly put the miscreant to reste. It were not long until he got a message S89 Thit swich bolde deed might have an evil prestige, So, shortly to conclude, this gory slayer Was then arraigned and fined before the mayor. The forfeit paid, with full sarcastic grin, Quoth he, Sir, ye thus call my act a sin, But should ye sene my .garbage can unsitely Then wold ye seye that I had done full ritelyf, CHere endeth the Tale of the Man of Lettersj THE ODE OF THE MARKSMAN PROF. Come friend and let us sing a while, Of Harvey and his cunning guileg Of how he slew a canine vile In his back yard. ' Two cops with warrant quick appeared And to the court-room straightway steered, While all the students loudly jeered, The guilty Prof. 192 His classic talk was all in vain 5 E'en pleasant raillery, a bane. Release fro-in court he could not gain Without the price. Then quickly to the bank he tied, Anon returned with vissage red And to the stern faced judge he said, Sir, may I speak PJ' Permission granted, up he rose, I-Ie struck at once a Harvard pose, And in the face of grinning foes He boldly said: Charge twice or thrice your paltry fine, But still the freedom shall be mine As truly as my name's Crruinbine, To shoot stray curs. A good long shot I truly made And one well Worth the price live paid. My reputation neier will fade As a crack shotf' Ch Proxy clapped his hands in glee: By my endowment fund -swore he, That Crrunipy's job shall ever he A dead sure thingf' Hi diddle diddle, a pup in the chapel As Prexy steps out on the floor 3 The students all laugh to see such sport And Beatty shows doggie the door. Trittit, one day, saw a dog wandering aimlessly about on College Ave. Catching the contiding beast and summoning one Meese, a pious indivi- dual, he gave him a talk something like this: Now, Meese, Ijll take the dog into chapelg you stand guard and see that he doesn't get out. Meese cheerfully assented, and took his station at the inner door, While the non- chalant Tritfit struck an attitude on thc chapel steps. But Behot was 193 in the chapel. Seizing the cur by the neck he led hini out past Meese and gave the faithful friend of nian an artistic and graceful Parisian kick to send hiin on his Way rejoicing. 'I'riftit saw the dog speeding away and thinking that some student was to blaine, wrathfully exclaimed: 'fWhat blooininp ass let that dog out ? Just then Behot stepped outside: nl let Zee dog out, Mr. Triititf: he said. Miss SINCLAIR Qin Logicj- Isnjt it also true that all the fair de- serve the brave F Piiisxr Qspeaks in Volunteer Bandl- I donit want any student froni Wooster to say that he is not married. Doo BIATEER-aF1'OgS are hard to gitg we can't ketch enough to go roundf' A Cfoirifr Qin Elective PhilosophyQ-'4How,,can we deseern intelligence, Mr. Hochstetter? For instance, by looliingfift ine, how could you tell that l ani intelligent? X, ff HOCH-- Wliy-er-Doctor,-AI!guess I'd have to take it on faith. tGRUMBINElRMr. Thomas, can you naine nie any of Cliattertoifs works Pt' 'l'i-ioirixs- Chatterbox is one, I believe. VANCE Qin Bib,j-g'Mr. Correll, do you know anything Pi' Corziusri,-UNO, sir. . VANCE- Monasticis1n has at some tiine or other been favored by every religion. I-Iii1'MiiN- IIoW about Morinonisni ? BAILEY CIIodgej- I'll tell you what, Whitcraft, I wish we had the fellows that were here last year in Biology-I niean Dad Crowl, Inez Kinney and Bill Graves. ' TIDD-:CHI111g1'j', what does this word 'Tuskeegee' inean ? IRVIN-Holi, it's a new kind of breakfast food I guess? TYLER, SR.-ccTlliS is what you call joining TNE is it? You cer- tainly are a beautiful sight ?7' CGTICIQEILU-YIOII think so? Just wait until you see the next fellow that joins W 194 IKINGLAND QIn Psyclrj- My theory that the dog came at this a p1'L01'iL. ALLEN- Look here Etling, isnit a man who has one wife too many a bigamist PH ETLING- Not necessarilyf' ' IJLUBIER-KI'I6l6H Jane Butterfield! What a deucedly queer name V' Miss BUTTERFIELD- Well, you can change it you know, Mr. Plumerf' DOC.- Mr, Conly, what is an animal W CONLY- Why-er-one of its functions is indigestionfp Hoovnn-4'Are there three degrees of infinity? Cosixn-'Terhaps so. They are degrees I never look a.t any ratef' XVTATE Qin Bugj- The peristomeuin is shaped like an inverted Spherefi Aignizinnnn Qduring Sig sleigh-ridej- Well that arrnis tiredg I guess its JElD1'G.fEO change arms? Miss REMY- Glu, girls, today I was approached by an Alpha Taun- Crronus or Trrnrns- Why Cecelia, it's the first time since your Freslinian year isnit it iw IIAMMOND Qin Bfigfy-ciTl1G haemal arches support the gills of the tailf' Bnifror-'4You must learn these things by heart in your head. GRUMPY- Let us take ten pages in advance-from 88 to 90. DR. SCOYEL in Fresh. I-Iist. as he closes the door between his rooin 2 and Ajafsj-'fWe will not disturb the Greeks with our modern politics? JACK MOORE Qwho has a case j- Fellows, if I had scads of money you wouldn't be able to see Ii ate for diarnondsf' 'I'HOMns Qat Dr. Holdenis Freshman receptionj- Mrs, Holden, I was afraid that Miss Riggs could not play this difiicult accompaniment, so I brought Mr. Chidester to play it .For nic. FOUND IN CHAPEL. Nellie Dear: Hodge and Gretchen are going to the Archer for dinner today. Wonder it we could go along. Q'I'he following answer was on the same notc.j SIIORTY--HXVC can so far as I ain concernedg but what would they iLl1ll1li?l,. . 195 j ?:' ! - fA!:.L-2-,.ii7 ' iii! A KjF gl1:fxi!Qf,,.,,,, - f 2,2 - -f S -, 5 WZ 4 1 V- S7151 ' Q ,X T 'F'-QXLFU 1 A NW Mm pgrmusumv nnummns. X-,.,V. EuS.uJJRN 1 !e f h,,- L - xl I wi - ' gl, , , I M . M 1 H ' 3 m f 3 9 I X gs , HlIIlllH6,,.,-, -.Aus--vn.s-f xxx-sxAx-,K .Q .5 S-l.l::lIl:llllllllvlIllllllUlllllllllllM1NlIllllll ll Wxfxrmgi A--N :,,-X., N ,fx . N. ,XLR M , -X, N x M . PYROTECHNICAL PERILS or THE YELLOW AND THE RED. LIMBACI-I-ccTl1C-I horror of the onrushing yellow hordes will make the World's blood curdle and run eoldfi ALLEN-ullvllat will happen when the yellow race mad with a thirst for blood pushes on through seas of gore to universal sway?U LAUGHLIN Cltreshinanj- And so this coalition would be dissolved before it could be formed. A COSINE Qdiscussing the eycloidj- Now this equation would be all right if these Thetas were not variable quantities. Whereupon Caeho Allis begins to evinee an interest in the demon- stration. Miss SHRIBER- Penicilliuin flourishes on-leather and other vegetable substances? BENNY- Qto '06 Chem. elassj-C'What does sea-water contain beside sodium chloride ? CLASS Cunannnouslyj-f'Fish. Two Preps. were overheard discussing the last election in Lowell 5 one said that he had heard there was not a dissenting voice. No, said the other, it was carried anonymously D 137 COSINE BILL Cto class in Calculusj- These are called osoulating curves. I assume that you catch the meaning of the word. You see we have a little poetry even in Calculus. 197 A Reddicks Dam Tragedy, No. I 'gli fn' if qifgxxs YK? ff f1r'54fff,'f : -fri y ,Y My ig? ff ld ,QVQJXPQXLQ Yefffj-, -,.,.,- l H X' . w 5 ii 1:7'Z i' , ., 2' Q rif f, . S' ' ' We ,711 I -Q1- , WW 'l i 'lL1llllWII ! mm 'ml' ml f I 56, if-, A X5 I I ., -1 ll A' , .1 V ,- -- -,222 'sf' Vlllilwge I L ff' -02:13 71 ,gn I 'L ji I lx In . Q I! . ' g I F 'I - fag, IN ' W 'I H HH fl' It 4 ii- iir 1 I I re ,lx . I igji ,Q '23, If ily 4 fl fllfl Mg- Q gill gs, ,A ,qx ' -33 3 If hu 'al 53 SV: s x . Kg, X Q53 ' s i 5 -, X Y. El - I fl.: XX X3 -S-fx -'A 4L,'7K,p 'r Cf? hx-L A Now for a nice quiet smoke! BEATTY-'4Wl1en I'm acting I forget everything terrestial. I see nothing but my role 3 the audience disappears entirely. We don't wonder at that! HOOVER Cin lab.j- Is there any dilute H20 aroimd here ? LUTE HAYES- Qto Irwinj-'fOh, you canjt get ahead of me! I'ni a regular Shylock Holmes. WILSON fnn Biologyj-f'The lobster has six pairs of legsg two in each pair. MISS KEJSNEIQ. Cin Chem. Lab.j- Oh, Mr. Swartz, where can I find some alimony lm 198 A Reddicks Dam Tragedy, No. 2 II' , ff X ,W I I e'l3lg 5: f ' KT? , ' xt M ii i71? f f 6? nf- ' ,lf '!I72 ':'Lf ' mia? eff? o N j if .xi N 'M T 41 fi :ff X l in ! I -is N!! HKU' iss' ' aes :Qi 1 y i I 'ffl d I - ' .WWH1 E21 l H1 71 ,1 I X If P egglk x V 2' all I II ll' lffi 'lmmff ef? 45 111 Xa wwf: 'Mp ' Max! -' C+:-3 is 5 2 Q1 ,L if I ,n ? we i f Q f 5 ,JJ i Z X' --F , J 'Wim ii, Q :?f: i ii af J M .. v J' I' G ,A -5 ES -ag- f fi iv U 1' 5- J -ff' 57? 5 E-, Q' . K. I How grateful is 21 cool Havana to a Wearied mind!-I believe this proof is making me dizzy. I ZINNLNMQI:-'fl hear that Miss Martin get seasick yn-si'e1'da,y in C hapel ehoirfi YODER-qI'i0W7S that ? ZINNIGER-MYQS the hi 'h C's were too much for her. , 8 LOWRY-HFe11ows, live just passed off my last Junior condition. WHITCRA1f'T-'4Sort of delayed pass, wasn't it? PREP. FRAZIER Cro Dawsonj- Say, I dou't want a large pictu DAWSON- AH right. Just keep your mouth closed, please? BEHOT-KNOW ihis is Called the coffee-mill scheme of the Frei-nc'h xlib -l ' Xa , A ..' O. ,' 7.7 1se its such an axxiul bimd. 199 A Reddicks Dam Tragedy, No. 3 W ,fffzff 1 ' Q U r y fe ffm fr W - 1 f 1 ,Mgr f f f ' 1 Aufihw If ',4-fi' -fy .' ' X f Z MW' l f ff Z Q if V Milf ' K 0 J ' rf: f l l 0 A Wa' ,.l, n 'if fi ei it ,W We it 'Q qv I 'fy , A W l F12 Q A32 , fr! II xxxx ????-!!I BOBBY Wanswonrrr-':No student should allow his studies to inter- fere with his college education. PROF. B.-xCON-f'Mi'. McCulloch, how can we find the angle 'Mu'?,' MCCULLOCH-J'Why,, pinch a cats tail V' N OTE-Tl1lS is inserted as a specimen of Sophomore wit. FITCH-At dinner table absent-inindedly addresses Mrs. Sherman: Miss Durstine, please pass the bread. HODGE BAILEY Qon ex tempoj-ffMorlcy's autobiography of Glad- stone is a magnificent literary productionf' 200 A Reddicks Dam Tragedy, No. 4 fi... -iif ,,...-- . iffl. ,-- 'i .,...-- ,...- 'ZY -'.-- gf- -':,,,, ,,. 'f'-fl - --- ' ? f-'..,4- .9 ,-,,,- , f- f Z 'f' 4? -ZT- 4 JZ fy f ,find-fg l 2 Xgxx '. Z Lcx X ,I -bf R i IZ 2 WN 1. 4 1'2 - 5 4 W, X' 1 4 6 A i 'W' .2 I? - 1 417' -.ji 1 : a-i f'7' . . .iw 4 , .- I . mags' '-Z ' 7 .,, 'ii -1.45, ff, 15101-9 Myffwh ,W 4. If 'l f MNH lst Student-I wonder-ha-ha-ha-what he's looking for? 2nd Student-Ha-ha-ha-a nice cool smoke I guess ha-ha-ha! ' f . I I W ff .lil W 1 i W JI 7 X' lv xii liiiiii L ft I '.:IJ,n. 4' ' Z .fx I I SW Aix 'Z M 'T e7 -. x,,f,Q fi' 42 Jacobs and Emerson discussing girls: JACOBS- How inuch money have you spent on girls this term ? EMERSON- Fifteen cents. JACOBS-C'H0w's that P EMERSON- Had three Sunday night dates. ALLSU19-ciDOCtO1', how long could an extraordinary student keep an ainoeba if he gathered it in his room ?,' DOO -'4We find students honest when we trust themg there isn't anything in the drawers worth Stealing' anyhow. S01 C0s1Ni3- Mi: Gilmore, does my question embarrass you? GILBLORE-CCXO, Professor, it's the answer that bothers ine? ALEXANDER--Moll I wish I were the czar of Germany. Miss KEENER- An infusion is a wet bit of moist organic matter in solution in water. ZINNINGER Cto ':Short', Cuminingsj- Cuniinings, why in thunder do you always laugh whenever you see me ? Cnooci-r tin Athenaeanl-'flf an one here has ever been to a beer gar- den on Sunday, he lnioxvs in what condition a fellow is when he starts homef, Lrirnaci-1 Qdiscussing the Blue Laws of Connecticutj- The gentle- man who has just left the floor will find out after he is married, that kiss- ing his wife on Sunday is not merely an amusenient 3 it is a necessity and a dutyf' WALKINsr-raw-f'Hibby, what form of exercise is most popular in Notyts and Ajax's classes? HIBBARD-C'Equestrianism, I guessf' 77 GERIG fin Psycho-4'And this stone represents a certain fat savage lady in Van Dieman's land. C'By a hundred guileless little ways two hearts become enamored with each other. Then it is that the heart sings its sweetest song. The thrush's song at eventide cannot compare. The full gush of the spring flood is in it. The ripple and hysterical laughter of the little brook, the coo of the dove and the sercnade of the nightingale all ind their counter- part in 111211173 song of love. EDWIN B. TOWNSEND. BONAH, the elder-speaks at the Prohibition talk-fest in Chapel base- ment November 16: Thus McKinley, that great and good man, was inhumanly forced to sign the bill permitting the sale of liquor in the Philippines-to do a hell- ish deed-by that most corrupt and diabolical of all vicious political con- spirators, Marcus Hanna? MUir,xW-Speaks on Joseph Cannon: Ciloseph Cannon is now about 70 years old. His father died at 10 years of age. Dinoocr-'fPrexy says that his cat followed him to the conservatory. Great lover of animals isnit he ? l HUNGRY-'tThat's nothing. Pvc got a pony that stays in my room all the time? 202 The Smokers' Club ff :xp fffl, 13 3 luissrnizmi . PREP. PEEBLES Yron-Pines. . PREP. BAILEY Woosrnn, O., May 1. DEAR MEESH5-I write you these few lines to let you know that I ani in the bonds of affliction, having been laid up by the heels bv that con- founded enemy of inankind, the niunips. Likewise I ani suffering from a niost grievous ennui. Knowing your cultivated taste, I would beseech V tl ' V ou iat if you have in your library any of the works of that peerless writer J Nicholas Carter, you would Concleseencl to loan them to nie for a season Likewise if thou hast any other novels of a luricl and sanguinary tint, I pray thee send them ine bv the hand of the Scum of the Earth who bears this message. Of a truth I ani consumed with languorg as the psahnist says Nniy bones wax olcl through iny roaring all the clay long. Truly, as the prophet of olcl hath written, The mumps is -well you know how Sherman clescribecl war. I trust this will find you in your aeeustomecl health. Yours in affliction, CK H. l'l.lTl.liY. 203 HARTNIAN-cfFHCt is, youtre the only girl I've ever loved I SHE- Gracious! What a good time you still have a-comin I C M S BUNNIE- Say Polly, what kind of a girl is Miss X, anyhow ?,' RINGLAND- Oh, she rather likes to be kissed, and gets mad if you try itf' BUNNIE-uTl'l6 dence! I thought she was really original. ANSWERS TO ANXIOUS ENQUIRERS. B. C.- Rusty'J will probably Work a year first. MG.-Doc may have contracted the habit of saying git and ketch at faculty meetings. According to the law of habit as formulated by him- self he will probably never reform. FRESHMAN-Yes, he and his box are inseparable. We hardly think he carries his money in it. Perhaps he does let Mrs. W. and the children open it. D R. W. W.-We 'must decline to answer your question as to Whether Miss G. teaches German or merely German history. ANXIOUS ENQUIRER-We do not know which one Chas.', really prefers. WVALKY-SO far as we can learn Nero and Machievalli were not frater- nity men. ORIE-Starting with the proposition Haste makes waist, we cannot see how you logically infer that 4'Laced makes waistf' EDDIE-YOL1 should not be cross because May turned you down for the lecture. Ten minutes before seven is no time to make a date for a seven-thirty function. 20-l Cacho's Catch Can you guess what 'fCachov caught? Are you not glad that We caught 'fCacho'7 with our little camera? 103 Y Y - - , , ,, -,.1 k ff fgax Ju' 'n, x ii i' .- f, YK H 5 :gf X ,,,,,, , I E-:2 M f 7. - f il ,-. zsgxgff-X ? :I - ,lug-ax ' ' X ' 1' -II, 1 -,Y , 5 . : : A-Y :- ,I Jul,-I Y V vl 5 i - Z.: E 2 E :xl fi? 'J ' u 1- -I -- -T ng 11-I : 1 -r ,, , 4-Q: gg 5 .ef -.-5-' ,si g-1 - ' ...... .-5 : - . .1 2-1?-' i , 2 -2 2 t : lg' 2 V U Y an-Tu, L 'llll - -A , .5 X , , :J1-F- 1:4 . lg' ,ali 1 V fu- E 5 ,:,. . ,fu N :- - .A ' : -5 'W 1 1.1 W S: l 4 , . ' f-- -X .' ' HI, ,L ZFMQWQ L 'm X..-f!-EQ,-'..':f' .,. 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'-71+ -5 -. f Q00 5 I SEPTEMBER. NINTH MONTH. Lnsnii. This nionth was called Septeinbcr purely for convenience. Its sign, the scales, indicates that inany would-be collegians are weighed and found Wanting. A inonth sacred tolfreshnien and other novices. 16. Exy. opens with his usual 19 point lecture. Seniors appear in cap and gown. 17 Registration of ldfooster Bible School. Enrollment 1 student and 2 Profs. ff ' W-1 18 Y. YV. C. A. reception at Hoover. Y. 'R I M. C. A. reception at Conservatory. ' ED TMNT' JEWU-ER 19 Joint reception at Kauke Hall. Tennis party of A T SFS a-t SchWartz's. 5' --- Q 20 Thomas and Miss Harrold attend I church. Exit Benny. 21 Thetas entertain at VVarren's. - . ,N -lm 22 Kappa party at Tav0'ert's. I S 23 Miss Ganyard and c'CClh,id go shopping. a 1 sw it '1 H Preps. attempt to drown little Bill me ' 'Q N S L Kinney. lllooster police to the res- J' 1 - e cue. ? : V 'I ' N i 'P 94 Bic' doings in ' Q , , L , 2 . D , police couit. Q rl i-if, ,T 25 Hayinanminalces a church date. qi, 2- fl Lyn ' Z3 26. Football game with Massillon, VVooster 'E Wins 6-O. A -J ' 27. First genuine Roth Club rough-house. ' 28. Second real article at the Roth. 29. It is instituted as a regular affair at the Roth. Each frat has a rushing party. 30. Phi Gains under J. lVinters serenade the Dorni. OCTOBER. TENTH MONTH. SQORNO, The naine is derived from the Latin octo, hence appropriately the tenth inonth. Its sign shows what sort of things one sees who indulges to excess. QXLUH My Rt- R ' Stu T 'fe eg' . - . .1 L um -ui Emmy 'Z' , 4 A' E -E , pw 1 1 2 D 4 2 l W I 3 XX .1 -1 l 1 5 . A 'vin 1 9 , ' 5' i, r . 2 l xg: 5 E 3 X 10 .' 1' 4:1 f Q- , ., Ja: 1 fp. 2 gp 1 B, ' Ll T at 2 l 212 -' ff' 15 S B M208 The Betas entertain. Index Board organizes. Fluckey takes her walking. Phi Gain party at Foss's. Senior-Sophoinore social at Conserva- tory. Junior-Freshmen social at Lowry's. Spence and Carrie have a walk. Ober- lin beats YVooster 39f0. J. Mason takes a stroll with her. Synod arrives to take in Wooster Street Fair. Excitement on The Midway. Gilmore celebrates. Big doings. Ferris-Thackwell Wedding in Chapel. Hayes fLuteJ pronounces it foxy work. Alpha Taus have open hall 17. Reserve trounces Wooster, 17-0. 18. Stragglers get in from Cleveland. 19. Compy. disciplines Sabbath breakers. Jacobs explains that he stayed to hear a sermon. - 21. Rice and Miss Taggert go house-l1unt- mg. 22. Congressman Littlefield lectures at Opera House. 23. 1d'ooster heats Heidelberg, 22-0. 24. 1Tooster beats Berea. 33-0. 27. Prof. Oliver gives an organ recital in Memorial Chapel. 29. K K 1' supper in their frat room. Vogt introduces Bailey and Miss Shanklin in their famous wedding performance. 30. Inter-frat races in Kauke Hall. Hen.- shaw meets his affinity. 31. Otterbein beats 1Vooster, 11-10. Phi Gam Halloxve'en party at their hall. NOVEMBER. litsvisxriei MONTH. SAGGITARIUS. The month for the fair ones to 'tall in love with gridiron heroes. lts sign indicates that the little blind archer is getting very busy. 1. Engaged couples attend the German Church. 2. Dr. Bennet has his hair cut. 3. Jenny Osborn company at the Chapel. 4. Chapel choir selected. Bailey, Meese and Carrie Mc. discover that they have fine voices. 5. Y. Wi. girls go to Oberlin. 6. Ringland, Jr., recites 35 minutes in Bib. 7. Denison wins from Wooster, 1813. 12. On Spencer's account Index Board ceases to meet on Thursday nights. 14.1Vooster beats Kenyon, 11-10. Miss Butterfield: 'Thatis because ive had a good quarter back. 15. Sermon at English Reformed Church, How to Choose a Wiifeng Alpha Taus attend en masse. P. Ring- land loses his hat. 19. Beta party. Molly's friends receive her picture. 21. Case defeats Wooster, 40-0. 23. Alpha Tau party at Schxvartz's. U, ' I T 1 Non 5' 5 IW I D-I '5 Q e Mil 1 . j fl ii? 'ie ' ge ! if Q M-ff , If- t' in Y v Vi i i ks-f-fi Y 24. Freshman social. Rush at Hoover Cottage. Miss Remy kidnapped. 26. Thanksgiving, Pittsburg Orchestra.. 28. Dance at Schwvartz's. Alpha Taus celebrate. O. Abbey in Junior Psych.- He cut off his arm and came in xvringing his hands. DECEMBER. Twi-31.1- ru Moxru. C.ir1uoonNUs. The sign of December shows that the rushing season is over and also what the initiates must ride in order to become full-iledged Greeks. A month set apart for hilarity a.nd good cheer. 1. Benny entertains his elective classes. 2. Houston moves to the McKinney house. 3. Alpha Tau party. 4. Frazier wins the oratorical contest. 5. Juniors win the basket-ball champion- ship. 6. Frazier and Miss Remy take a cross- country run. S. Xmas party at Hoover. Santa. brings Carrie and John little tin dishes. 10 Montville Flowers presents The Mer- chant of Venice. ll. Oratorio Chorus gives The Messiah. 12. Big blizzard. Belief party rescues skaters at Highland Park. I-L Irving and Athenaen present 'iDamon and Pythiasf, P1'0fitS 952-50. 209 fee H H a X 'Ju' ll, i if 2 it in l Q ' Wm swf L Girls' basket-ball game. Castalian wins. 20-l2. Behot and the Freshmen taken in by Faculty announcement. YVilson. Axtell and Crowl return for reasons too obvious to mention. Trolley party to Creston. Everybody except Abbey and Miss Aten eut Chapel. Juniors present Prof. Martin with a timely gift. The desperate cases cut exams. for fare- well walks. Shorty and Miss Rose lead olll Everybody pilies for home. JANUARY. Fuisr Momiifr. Pisces. A month reserved for new resolutions. The sign indicates poor fishing in liillhuc-lc. The season when Clompy relates his prowess with rod and hne. ' 3. fHundayl Everyone packs for return. 4. Beatty and Miss Turner arrive at 4 a. m. Ormsbee waits six hours for the team from the east. Fred Wise and Ralph Graham reappear in the ranks ot '05. 6. Sleigh-ride to Shreve. Miss Emery's narrow escape. :Q s 'L' , 1 ' Yt?4' u w. 1 Q Y 7. Compy's kid brother talks in Chapel. S. Engageinent of Prof. Oliver and Miss Hills a.nn,ounced. Sleigh-ride to Smithvilleg Molly chaperons. 9. Miss Roses catches cold. Cunnnings anxious. l0. Prexy preaches S2 minutes. ll. Dorm girls d-ine with hats on. l2. Basket-ball. XYooster beats Canton. 30-10. 210 Nothing doing. Holiday. Bible Institute. Bible School loses 50 per cent. of its enrollment. Miss Wallace goes home. Sigma. Chi sleighing party returns from Fredericksburg two hours late. Coasters also late. X Ji-pf.ze W DhNQgg l ,,,- N K ' ,-. fSunday.J Unusual number of church dates. Many Couples late. Self-governing committee gets busy. Puts the Dorm on P. Miss Foltz and My son, Jimmyfl escape. How did they work it '? Chapel lecture, UNO Dogs in Heavenf: by Louis Edward Holden. First semester ends. Epidemic of ton- silitis at Hoover. Abbey iills choir loft. Etling. Cald- .gg 95 1. 2 4. 5 6. 7. 8. 9. 11 12 13 14 15 18 19 20 21 1. well and YValkinshaw win on W. SL J. prelim. debate. Faculty makes literary work optional. Basket-ball. Wooster beats Kenyon, 31-24. McConnell, Caldwell, llieaver, Fraz- ier! ! ! ! 26..N01'1112111 Guthrie lectures at Opera House. 27. Etling ainputates his mustache. 28. Day of prayer for colleges. Great Prep. prize iight in the Gym. 31. Basket-ball. lN'ooster beats Case, 27- 25. - FEBRUARY. Siicoxn lloxri-1. AQU.u21Us. A certain George Washington was horn on the 22d of this month- hence its name. Its sign signities that an awful lot will be needed to wash Ha ynianps sweat er. Paul Swartz otl' S. P. Senior Apologetics. 10 o'clock, Miss Green leaves class. 10:05 Swartz follows. Delaware prelim. debate. Welday, Linibach and Allen chosen. The Right Reverent Father Joseph Nugent fails to arrive. Calling night at Hoover. Lowry and Miss Ahns fall through the settee. Annual petition of Seniors concerning commencement orations. lYalky thinks of making Sunday night date. He doesn't do it. Molly creates a rumpus in Chapel. Prof. Andrews of Oberlin gives an organ recital in Chapel. Theta dinner party at Fulton's. Dr. Mateer leads Chapel. Valentine party at Hoover. General swiping of sofa pillows. First Vcsmer services in the Cha nel. f I I 'H 1' ' ka. Ja iartv at l'a.wne s. lnxciting .1 - . . . C meeting of University Debating Club. Twenty-tive students accompany Sox', Frazier to Alliance. 'Wooster wins third place. Special edition of the Voice. Castal- ian holds iirst night session. Water main breaks. Freeze-out at the5Dorni. Hegira to Cleveland, Shreve, etc. Freeze-out at 16 College. 22. Alpha Tau conclave. Reception at Hoover.. Banquet at Archer. 23. College Minstrels at Opera House. Show 30 minutes late. Misses Orr and Rupert practice roller skating. 2-1. Sherwood Eddy speaks at Y. M. and Y. W. I S fan. zo S l 1 - f 7 - lunge -, lj S - 1 gg , 7 is at 25. Junior skating party at Armory. Miss Rupert and Miss Orr the stars. 26. The Minstrels serenade Hoover. 27. Basket-ball. Case wins from 'Vars1ty, 36-30. 2b.CUll1l1llllgS has grand trousers' press- ing. Hoover Cottage edition of the Voice. 251. MARCH. '1'1-man Moxrn. Lno. Called llarch because ot the haid traveling at this season ot the year. lts sign suggested hrv the roaring noise ot the College Quartet. D Phi Gain party at Foss's. Night ses- 4. Miss Lovett reads a paper in Junior sion in Physics room. 3.l,ll1ll101' improvises a postlude from Wooster Y. Psych. Hodge liilllfj' attends the recitation. V 5. Bliss lirhcck leads lflooveriles on a 211 i 'AQ G .. 2 ie, R s N -l a. ff 3 1. .., , kip it lc Beatty carries the dog out of Chapel. Gym exhibition. Basket-ball. Second Team wins from Marion H. S, cross-country run. Houston and Thomas give a smoker at Phi Gam hall. Theta Nu Epsilon initiates Ticker and Cacho. Prexy describes the man with black hair and fiery face. Proliibs shocked. Goss, of the 'tiiery face, speaks in Chapel. Chidester deposits 35.60. i'Three cheers for the Xllooster police. Delaware wins the debate with Wooster in Memorial Chapel. Basket-ball. Hiram beats lVooster, 27-23. Siberian exile system at the Dorm. Miss Rose departs. Dr. Lester presents the Chili side of missionary life. Exam. agony begins. Creatore, his hair and ltalian band in Memorial Chapel. Second term ends. Vacation. APRIL. Fomcr ir MONTH. All IHS' Farmers begin ploughing and students begin to dig for linal exams. Aries signiiies the general knocking done by the ilunkers at this season ol? the year. A month sacred to fools and moving-van owners. Spring term begins. Scotch? Kirky falls a victim to Fitch meets all the cars from Cleveland. Miss Durstine arrives at 7:30 in the evening. Oh, Joyli' Plain Chalmers Martin condemns the artful dodgers. Wlebstcrian holds its term meeting. In.ter-class track meet in Gym. Freshies carry oil honors. More about missions. Mr. Hillis and Dr. Forman represent home and for- eign iields respectively. Dr. Bennet gets his second hair-cut. Archie lectures on Korea. Vernon D'Arnalle at Opera House. Phi Gam dinner at Tyler's. Voice Editor and Miss Emery dine to- gether. lYooster loses the YV. d: J. debate. Grumbine falls into hands of the 'Wooster police. Triiilt and Miss Emery take dinner at Creston. Triiiit and Miss Emery dine at the Archer House. Kappa Nus out in colors for Grumpy. 'Wooster girls give a leap year dance. Triffit dines at Hoover Cottage. Mel- drum lectures on Scotland and the 2 the measles. 20. Trifht and Miss Emery dine at the Archer. -1 ' i Xlitl I Q y 1'FP'wfC3.- I Q W' is N -.1-f' ' 1 1 X, 'i2.........J' -A-if :I ,.'1.., ff. I MW 'R ww. . M t. It Castalian girls give 'fRebecca.'s Triumph. Remember ! Prelim track meet. Sophomores carry off honors, but Houston takes the 23. 24. 25. 28. l. 2 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8 9 4. 6. 8. ll. hurdles. Red hot election in Ath- enaean. Orinsbee wins. Baseball. Case beats Wooster, 12-6, at Cleveland. Jam Seiler sings in Chapel. Dr. Green. lectures on The Key to the Twentieth Century, City Opera 30. House. Dinner party at Missionary home in - MAY. FIFTH MONTH. honor of g'Ja1n. Prof. Vance in Chapel. 'fl've been trying for two months to make a date and can't do it. Thetas have open hall. 'The Vanished Ern- pire reappears. Miss Dickey entertains Stratford. Miss Grace Packer's recital. JV TAURUS. This month so-called because you have the chance if you only take it. Sign supposed to account for the number of Irish jokes Qstale onesj related by Acton. Qlf you don't see the connection send for a diagrainj Prof. Vance lectures on Syria. Alpha Taus entertain their Theta friends at Schwartz's. Cunningham calls. Wooster wins from Ashland, 8-2. Miss Nell McManigal's recital at Me- morial Chapel. S. D. VV. F. holds secret session. Lowry gives a function at Reddick's Darn. Prof. Miller of Case lectures on Radium. Hal comes. Lee Wilson appears. Alpha Taus entertain at their hall. Rob Wadsworth rises in time for JUNE. SIXTH MONTH. breakfast. Sigma Chis reappear. Prexy reads the parable of the prodi- gal son. Sophomore-Senior banquet in Kauke Hall. Beta Preps give a dinner party. Base- ball, 'Varsity vs. West Virginia. J ungior-Freshman banquet. Beta party. C1ay's lecture. Baldwin-Wallace vs. 'Varsity, at W7ooster. Stratford picnic. Phi Gam drive. Alpha Tau drive to Lodi. GEMINI. Commencement time and the month of weddings. The sign teaches that race suicide should be sedulously avoided. The month when the col- lege graduate finds out how many jobs are not awaiting him. 'Varsity vs. Denison at Granville. Exams begin for the third and last time. Pipe of peace, '04 and '05 reconciled. Case plays VVooste1' at XVOoster. Alpha Tian banquet. The Baccalaureate sermon. Prep. commencement. Class Day. Oratorio Chorus. Alumni banquet. Tlg.'1'ty-third annual commencement. . ...L ,I -,,. jr . 11,1- .431 1 w 1 ..-.. - - ,. P X . , . 1 1-. ,M . J Af , .. t:.' 7' t' iff. ' fc L4-, ,.. . '-K,-15' Lai V-' V LY 0. ,L .HV . NN .wil 5' .X-.,,5 A ,z ' in w I ilk-I. ' M N. U., . iw, . r w 3 A ESTABLISHED 1851 ' EIMER sz AMEND 18th Street and Third Avenue New York, - N. Y. Manufacturers and Importers of Cbemiraly, Cbemaal, Pbyjaal, Baaeriological Apparafas aaa' Alsxvay Goody We handle the best of everything needed for a Iaboratory Y We are sole rep esentatives of the Foremost European Houses in our 11ne of whose goods we always have a large stock on hand WRITE FOR DESCRIPTIVE CIRCULAR 215 ESTABLISHED 1818 1' 1' Mrnnka Ltrnthvra , Clothing Liveries Automobile Garments and Requisites Hats Shoes Imported Furnishings Shirtings House Garments Leather Goods etc. etc. EM ii 11 , 1 C SUITS and OVERCOATS ready-made and to measure ranging in price from the medium to the more expensive. Covert Coats, Sandovvns, Newmarl-iets, Scotch Ulsters and heavy and light Weight Overcoats. Rain-coats, Riding Breeches and Leggins, Hunting, Pole and Driving Outfits. English Neckwear, Pajamas and Shirtings, Breakfast Jackets, Dressing Gowns, Room Suits. Leather Trunks, Valises, Fitted Bags, Dressing Cases, etc,, etc. Agents for Herbert' Clafczlog c0m'az'1zz'1zg over 150 1'1- Johnson's, New Bond Zuszfraizons wzihprzces mczzlea' St., London, Derby 012 ffequesf and Silk Hats 216 Uhr Qlliehielanh Q1 nl 1 12 g P n f Idhgairinna unh Svurgruna Medical Department of the Ohio Wesleyan University, Cleve- land, Ohio. C-'HE Forty-fourth Annual Session opens September 1904. Stand- ard of requirements high. Thor- ough graded courses of instruction cf four years. The laboratories are equipped for individual and class work. The clinical material is abundant. The school affords special advantages from the fact that the teachers give individ- ual attention to the students, and in- struct so the student may acquire the best practical working knowledge, as well as the theory of the subject in hand. Address all communications to the Dean or Secretary. R. E. Skeel, M. D., Dean J. B. McGee, M. D., Secretary 217 'E +14 430 fi' 0 ,Q 0 eg.. Princeton Theological Seminary E Francis L. Patton, D. D., LL. D., President gf elf ---.. 'Ia C , J Y 92d Annual Commencement May 10th, 1904. 'if fa' li 'Ie C J fl' College graduates oi all denominations welcome, Faculty ii? 'fi' of seventeen. Modern methods of Instruction. Theological 4? Ei' Library containing 102,000 bound volumes and pamphlets. 4? 'fl' Choice of extra curriculum courses, and privileges of advanced 'ly el' study in Princeton University. A strong Y. M. C. A An 'IQ QI. address each Week by men prominent and aggressive in Christian -ga els work. Annual conference of leading Christian workers. Three el? ,Eh ine dormitories. ,ISL 'EI' The ninety-third session opens September 16th, 1904 4? Yi' Opening address in Miller Chapel September 16th. '17 421' 'Ie CI: :I-L El' Address all correspondence to 'Ii 3 Prof. Geerhardus Vos, Princeton, N. J. 3 el' 45+ ieiiiviieidiivieiifififdilfiffi-ffifififviiflifififi'iiFP ieivieifiiiiieieiiieiiiiiiiiel a -e ei . . -e The Western Theeln Ieal S mmar +I . 4 I gi FOUNDED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY1825 i? 'fl' . -Ig 61' 'Ia C 3 EI' The Faculty consists of six professors and three il? fi' instructors. Modern methods The course of 43: EI' study is practical, including instruction in the '17 QI' English Bible, Elocution and Church Music. A '19 QI' library of 31,000 volumes. Post-graduate scholar- 'IQ gp ships of 355400. Gymnasium and grounds for rec- ala 565. reation. 43, in -I3 'EI' -I9 els For further information address al? Sl 9 ,gif THE PRESIDENT, ALLEGHENY, PA. 1131 C :s 4.5 4? +P 5103014 218 t i -1'- '- 'N Dawson Leading I Photographer Opposite Archer L..........T.....iJ THOMAS A. ELDER, B. S. A., M. D. msefxses 0F THE Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Office over lfaubach 6: Boyd's Drug Store Public Square - e : 2 WOOSTER, OHIO DR. H N. MAT!-EER y Office and Laboratory Southwest corner North and Bucke e Streets y Special attention given to Chemical and Mic: roscopical Analyses as an aid in diagnosis rand treatment , Office Hours 2:30 to 4:30 and 6:30 to 8 p.m. the mack tailoring Zompanv Ladies and Gents Custom Tailors New York and Paris Styles Wooster, Ohio - -Call on 'T Jmitb 6' Lautzenbeisjer FOR FINE CANDIES, CAKES And a Full Line of Picnic Goods Try some of our Curtis Bros'. canned goods and you will use no others. They are the best packed. 220 AXTELL ca TowNsEND University Book Exchange NEW and SECOND HAND BOOKS BOUGHT AND SOLD Fraternity and University Stationery, Fountain Pens and Diaries. IRA DROZ Coach and Transfer Line Special attention to Students Telephone 81 LVIN RICH N. E. Corner Public Square Hardware, Stoves, Spalding's Base Ball, Foot Ball, Tennis and Golf Goods. Winsor and Newton's Artists' Materials n , n l ALL KINDS FORBES W CQEQERY ALCQCK Q E KS th St. Wo0ster,0. Zl I Dewitt The Florfist Q I KM :IKHZPE aterman 'L' anh Ideal Ounfm Pe arnaiinnn Pen Penhold r ina Ink ik One 'yf f ' Our' Spemalty Jr E-W f . , . , ' ML ' ' .. 'lox V . . Ili, x, . ,E -A ., . ' :lf-'4: . ' : ': '- ' .-'..4.-:M V- . . ' ,zf - f f , .' .A - , .' Q' ., - - Yi. ' . 5 -'li' 1 '., , ' -1, '. 2. f ,x qw, f ,I , , ,. ,3 57 x P , . H ' , 2'-:Fl .Q 'J I 'x ':'?':'fe. , I - . I - - -V.' .V.W. . -Q3 I, . +... II '- in -x 1 -, --N I fax? R Y .L N V. 'ff . 1 ' ' N--was . -5 V ,,i.4ff'i - ,V za X., Y. I , , .L., P I Q .,.. L. I , :JE- : Q .xx I . ,f . . b ., 5.. X W ' I---1-15:3 I vig? , ' A , e ff' 2 d i fini o er ec ion All Dealerg S011 The Ask orDesc1-1ptiveBookIe 'Rig - X . a erman Comp y, 2 5 Ill lluouhrnw c IN X 3 ,..,.... ,X-Qiiiiaf x- .X,,, . . .. ..,. ' ' Cort' B oz-I1 In S n a nd fx -- ' ,I ' -E Beaver! Stveets DAVIS LFIUIIIDRY FOR STUDEIITSL - BEST WORK HND PROMPT DELIVERY 'Phone 38 84 E. Liberty St. NIINGLEWOOD COAL COMPANY DEALERS IN HARD AND SOFT COAL AND COKE STUDENT ORDERS A SPECIALTY PHONE 32 OPPOSITE ARCHER HOUSE 222 ,- -X. l I NICK AMSTE One Pricetl to For Snappy, Up-to-date CELQTHHNG x Up-to-Date' see, . fy , FS5U0CQCQQlHGUUfQlQ2UO9S ,fm led ' E Hand Tailored W , 'A,-, 5 1, 20 years square dealmg ll ', Elljl2lw , FRICIQS MEMQRIAL BL'K l , Stein-Block Clothing lf Wi College Brand Clothing l W1 Clothcraft Clothing E ,f ff , 1,1 BAKER AND CUN F ECTION ER l E L'b t St W f 0 1 15 15 71 . I el' y , 005 er, , . 1 Che Hrcber liouse Copyright mm hy nm sfxmffner at wi Monarch and Manhattan Shirts J. B. Stetson Hats H ats our Hobby Modern first-class Hotel Remodeled and newly furnished throughout Special zlttention to student parties 223 ... .X X X 1 at 0- s ii X iff W if J ?' X f X N . 4, :L A 55 - ' - . A qc. .., , V . -X, fl f i V- , ' . ,-f - , ' -- Q , '35-gg.-Ja, ,f ,,' ,- ':'.j.-:qtg..:.33:'.n iii!! IH!! I I I gl ', .yi Wild. - rn - fn',g,,-I' - .3 ' 'lg 1'- fg!' A .f ,L m viifiiaiiffi' ' Gasoline is Dangerous Buy a GAS STGVE of the WOOSTER GAS LIGHT COM PANY nn '57 'A fi .Q Z ,. mx x 4vI X .1, X ' n'.rw,'n-.Y , . . .,, ,,,, I ,..,-,.T .- ll D We , 1 I Wooster o X Steam elaundry 24'Ni. Beaver St. 'Phong 52 Everything new and up-to-Cigfe Student's Work a specialty Domestic or gloss finish Ellillil 80 Mann Brllihers 4 A. Irngard Merchant Tailor DOWNING BLOCK 204 Uhr Slntvrataiv Evrtnrv 'iiurvan 0111. 610 Neave Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio. P Now Booking for the Season 1904-5 Send for circulars and prices of our attract1o1 We have some of the BEST TALENT on platform in all lines Dr. hold Boelzelg Dentist I2. IJ. MORRISON THE STUDENTS' BARBER Hot and Cold Baths 5 Opposite Archer Hotel 11. W. BECHTEL THE RELIABLE WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADE MAN 225 WILLIAM ANNAT We aim to show complete and satisfactory stock in the follow- ing departments Silk G. Velvets Dress Fabrics Ribbons, Laces Umbrellas Notions Muslin Underwear Wool and Cotton Underwear Carpets and Curtains Table Linen Towelings Kid Gloves Neckwear Tailor-Made Gowns Wooster National Bank CAPITAL AND SURPLUS S118,000 L. P. OHLIGER, Pres. DAVID THOIVIAS, V-Pres. L. R. Kramer, Assistant Cashier C. E. Ohliger, Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS E. P. Willaman, L. P. Ohliger, A. D. Metz, J. R. Zimmerman, David Thomas Nieglnre Q Ciiemnypany 21 North Buckeye Street Contractors for Plumbing in Severance Hall, Scovel Hall and Taylor Hall ALL KINDS OF PLUMBING Phone IOI Ghe Jyndzcate 6 E. Liberty Street ' Wooster, Ohio SUMMER UNDERWEAR, HOSIERY, DRY GOODS, SKIRTS and SHIRT-WAISTS Sdwarcl ..93ay.s0n Usborne Hrizsl 55 South market Sf. woosler, Glzio 226 22-1 I Ghgilgrirlinw QHIIPHE Elhv Qlhamplin Igrinting Glnmpzmg CAPITAL 350,000.00 FOURTEEN PRESSES College Stationery ll l College Annuals College Catalogs T4-T6-78-80 E. GAY ST. COLUNIBUS, OHIO A Welcome Gift in any'l'lome FOUR GREAT SUCCESSES Compiled by college men Endorsed by college presidents Programed by college glee clubs Rah-rah'd by college students Brothered by college alumni Sistered by college alumnae Words and Music Throughout Songs of All the Colleges Attractive and durable cloth binding, 51.50 postpaid New edition, with 104 songs added for 67 other colleges. Over seventy college presidents have actually purchased this volume to have at their own homes, so they tell us, for the students on social occasions, Ten editions have gone into many thousands of homes. If you have a piano but do not play, the PIANOLA and other piano-players will play many of these songs for you and your friends to sing. Songs of the Western Colleges Novel and durable cloth binding, 51.25 postpaid Songs of the Eastern Colleges Novel and durable cloth binding, 31.25 postpaid Ideally complete portrayal of the musical and social side, the joyous side, of the student life in our VVestern and Eastern colleges respec- tively. Plenty of the old favorites of all colleges, While crowded with the new songs which are sung-many never before in print. To own all three of above books is to possess the most complete, the most adequate illustration ever attempted of this phase of the genius, the spirit, of Young America New Songs for College Glee Clubs Paper, 50 cents postpaid Not less than twenty humorous hits, besides numerous others, sen- timental and serious. Not a single selection in this book but has been sung by some glee club locally to the delight of an Hencoring audience. Never before published, they are really new. Glee club leaders will appreciate a collection every piece in which, by the severe test of both rehearsal and concert, is right-the musical notation, the harmony of the voice parts, the syllabification, the rhythm, the rhyme, the instrumentation, and last, but not least with audiences, the catchonativeness. HINDS Cd NOBLE, Publishers 31-33-35 West Fifteenth St. New York City Schoolbooks of all publishers at one store 229 , I THE w G KERN no 12 5 Q.. w ig ? 4, ' ' ' ' I ' -411 East 57111 sf., CHI-:Acc 1 FEL , g4 ,y 1 1: Caps and Gowns made to order - F w i ff ,a ff -r ' -flu 1 M510 and rented. ff V der A W f -- 4' ff if PENNANTS fun ALL COLLEGES Ann fnmnumfs -ff if 4f,,:5,. 1- f f N . I . .,,r,. . , ,1 j , L A iiifffg ' Carried in Stock W O,,?f:vQ 5016 .: .. - ', - 2,-1 1 wf f 2gfi4'j11f,gf lv, ' ip. . . 6,1 9 'J 5' xl' 5 - ,L GN Dfspffva' C0ZKZCMf4co ...f ffizfffilpffcf f A- ' '- CLASS PINS, V x... ,: F V ' A faq 'Ps ,f .1 , ff- -.. ff'-:Ja-IL, -f :N ' C4 ,fbhpjf Zjf?'t'Z '-,V XA. I C L A S S A N D T E A M C A PS THE HERALD PRINTING CO. DOERS OF PRINTED THINGS WOOSTER, OHIO The Wayne County National Bank Established 1845 J. S. R. OVERHOLT, President Paidzup 1: Sl00,000 00 FRANK TAGGART Vic Pres dent JOHN M. cR1LEv Cash er 5lll'PlUS Q : 751000-00 WOOSTER, OHIO Extend every facility consistent with safe banking AL E LUCE WM. ARMSTRONG LUCE 81 ARMSTRONG ivery, Bus and Cab ine Bus and Cab furnished to all parts of the city 'PHONE 7 3 230


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College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

1917

College of Wooster - Index Yearbook (Wooster, OH) online collection, 1919 Edition, Page 1

1919


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