Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY)

 - Class of 1905

Page 1 of 290

 

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1905 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 7, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Page 10, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 11, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Page 14, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 15, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Page 8, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 9, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Page 12, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 13, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Page 16, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collectionPage 17, 1905 Edition, Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 290 of the 1905 volume:

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Clothes, Hats, FL11'111Sl11HgS, 1n 2 2 , . . 4 z swell ellects, and partreularly adapted to the reqmre- 2 , , ,N 0 0 ments of Lollege men. 2 000 000 3 Mabel' Brothers g , o tooo 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000z W , iH2i'D Y'v2hf1 fhisfg' M . gg-ggffggm f MQ LH'Q i 'bdfkNf Nsifszxi 1 My + RW Y x Gm BUSSQQSS 3Vga V3Wz'9 W?' ' K5 QF V ,f , Q 1, I - 1 z . x 5 . I ariailiig fl '19 ,- 4:.11.1':-ia:-5 if-r31 '!1-7 'I '.' .-4 --- - : 145 1 ,., F 1'0 .wi 1 fl . Hfidfffp' ' -ii , , , . , ,,,,.....-..-15, --sgf-:s.f 5TYTEi??1'4'5'3' 21-5i-'1'iLL?siQ73Z3-Tfagl-L'-T-'-'fiirlif iii? 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' . 'K ,:i'-7 ' f '. ,-'v.v'vi5 ,M .,.7 - f .. ,, 3,-,f.w,f'1 parm: -H - '1',,,'.. 1 , . , , '.'-'1 v'5f . vv 4 'fs 'gf 51,7 's.'4s 3. -f' ' ' - 1-1'Qff-' hy . Q I' I :X ' ' 1 vu 1 ' 7 n Q4 ' I 4 K I 'A ' H .. 1- f .7 1- f . - - 'H' 1 .1 w ' N . Q A , 1.-1 ' I K i 1 . 1 1 i Y X L 1 X Q l k ' c x wg N 1 N. . . , . 55E:f1flfEi' :fi -Es ' --. - as-ia-s-Q-1-:15-f'--,--:lvl' A--'M ..:1:!1'f '-1 fr h-s.,.,:4n,.A.1- f.,.f,k, ,1.5,1:-,.,q.1,..g 4, .-1-,. ,..,y.,.,.L.-.-.,,,: -.-,.,,'.f.,--1. A K, ,. , ., ,-,-,.L ..... ...... ....- ......,..-. 4 THE HAMIL TONIA N Qlihiturial T IS with mingled feelings of satisfaction and ' ' anxiety that the 'Editors present this forty- . 'sv, ' seventh issue of the Hanzz'!f0fzz'azn for the con- sideration and criticism of the College. Like our predecessors we had ambition. We swore to surpass anything that had yet appeared and we had the opportunity. The mistakes and experience of others were our helpers. But, alas! ambition reaches not always its goal, and at last we came to realize that man's thoughts are too often air-castles which fade away before the won- dering onlookers can catch sight of their hazy glory. And thus it has been with our efforts. In many things we have failed, but the very height of our aim has helped to raise the value of our efforts, and we trust to your in- dulgence, ye critics, to whom we now turn over the re- sults of our labors. And may your judgment be not harsh. When you are about to condemn think of those who have spent the priceless hours of midnight, the early hours of sunrise, the jewelled hours of study postponed, in order to please your fancy. And if after this kindly thought you cannot find it in your heart to praise us for our attempt, then at least pity us and utter no harsh words when 'we are near, for what we do not know will not worry us. So, hopeful yet fearful, we present this volume to our classmates of nineteen-five 'who have stood by us loyally, to the faculty who have counselled us, to the whole body of students andalumni whose support we now need May you be pleased with our work and your sentence be, Well done. Ulu iBIaj.:Gen. Znsepb 3Rn51neIIZ9a 1nIep, ZLZLEB Qbf the Glass of '47 This hook is EIffFKCf0llHfB1U Drhirateh. ' ' . qw.-V. -.4.nn... 4,-,Q 11 -J -.4-. fu- 1 I ,u.. lm-J Hug. L 'lf ?T551'?434JT' 'i,55P7'4:f-' PM 2-+'fi1fiy3',J:-f'..., - 1- ,g,5,r,.f.-.n.1.: ' V 1 1.77.7::.',r:.L:,Jw1rA- ': ,:ui.:Q.:Q.,,, . , f mn ,., .-,. 'v 'J 9 01.5 0.4.4 p- -., wwf iff'-I - 'ffl'1,-an , -,--- - - -A ' 4- 1-2 ' J J.: -.4-f 1,-. -.-Jai. ,3- 'fuf1.','.+:.m':41 .,:':1,:,1,m, ,J , -J an ...M . .1 .Q - - Q W ' ' U-V W .,.Z1.',.r,r,2-L-,N, A, - -Q ,-4-' 4 mm- -.,., , - Y ,I H, ,,,,. .V , . .- - . ,,, ,. ,- ,.f, 471,-. ---,.-,. ,.A.,A.1 ,,,, rw, .. , 4 , , -... .w... ' -- - -b 5- Y. , , , LV, , -,.1,' ' f f .' 1. - . 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I , pw. , 3 .f.,, , W --1-.--5-...- ' by - a V V ' -S : 533 '3 H:5,j'-fygf..!1-r,.1T: I :fS ,'z:y., , K A- ' 2.!'!' -A 151-561232.- .-,-727!1z75gQ:qp:,..3.-,,.,, . -X ,VU vy ,H ,,..- 5, U- lv ,,, , A -V -'V:-.5--..!-,..,:,gigf,Q V ' ' 'fr' ,1 'if ,,,1ygvi, 1': :':.Q-5,3---' !!Q g- ing A - f F 7.1.1 jf, ,wl x x 2 24, 1 !,eg!3!g:,gX5g-E 4,f:iv3e7:jz:s1-gg-13,3 , 3. ,Viv uf r , - . f x . . .q-1-.-1-.f,,.,.':d4 ,j5- - -,.,... 4, , ' H V V. ., p 1 .'..A,., ,e'g.4'3:Q'x:!.,, N W in V H '5'ul'95N!72ll'M' guaiii-A-., ':h --.. ,, HAMIL TON COLLEGE 7 jklajfaaen. gnsspb iiusmell igainlep, ZLSLE. OLDIER, editor, reformer, statesman, genial compan- -- ion, and loyal friend-great in each and greatest in the V ' A combination of these rare elements-honoring his Alma Mater as she proudly owns him her son, Sen- ' 1' - 5 ator Hawley deserves the tribute which the Hamilton- ian honors itself in giving. Steadfast and loyal public servants Hamilton likes to think that she sends out, and there are facts to justify her faith. Among the most shining examples of her sons is Senator Hawley. 8 Born at Stewartsville, North Carolina, Qctober 31, 1826, of English-Scotch lineage, he removed with his parents to Connecti- cut, his ancestral state, eleven years later. At Cazenovia Seminary he prepared for Hamilton, from which he graduated in 1847, with especially good record in debate and other speaking. His law-practice began three years later in Hartford, Connecticut. Those were stirring anti-slavery days, which called out the sturdy fighting qualities of this college man. First in the Free Soil Party, and then in the Republican, the first meeting in Connecti- cut for the organization of which was held at his call and in his ofiice, he did valiant service. ln the interest of this cause he became, in 1857, editor of the Haryana' Evening Press. When the first call for troops followed the firing upon Sumter, he was the first volunteer in the State, at the head ofa company which he had armed with rifles personally ordered by him. Dur- ing the war his career was distinguished and his promotion rapid. At its close he was chosen Governor of his State, of which he has since remained the most distinguished among many notable citizens. Re-entering journalism as editor of the Harzfara' Coaranf, he was soon. called upon to enter Congress, where he served three terms in the lower House before he was elected in 1881 to the Senate, of which he has been since then continuously a member. Among many important services were his opposition to paper mon- -ey, and his vigorous promotion of civil service reform legislation. Busy as his life has been, Commencement has found him regu- larly climbing the old beloved Hill, and rejoicing in the growing evidences of Hamilton's prosperity. That the evening shadows may lengthen slowly upon his life, and that the sunset splendors 'may be worthy of the day, every son of Hamilton devoutly prays. b W x o E . , I ,j 3 5 1 l U 1 in : l t E i l '. I . 3 t , , 1 1 ,I fa ,t P .L 'L 1 f Q V x 4 Q 1 , 1 1 x I l II I 1 O Q X 1 i y A , i 1 , u W i 1 I Q l s ! .X jizifyy.. , , .X VT' Q M 1 , , f 'f , X F '4 H I 2 1 K , X fa 'Q , 4 S If :K P4 1. 1.1 if Y th !X K . L, Y x 1 Q . Q X Ji Y . C 1 v , 5 L. N J 9 v 1 Q i i ll J- vi 3 HAJIIIL TON COLLEGE ' 9 imufessur Qliuiuarh gwurtb. 5L.ZEa.E. P11oF. ARTHUR s. HovT, D. D., ,72. R. NORTH is notable for his length of service as a Professor of Greek. Sixty years have probably not been equalled by any other American Pro- .,a.aaa.:, f .. . I hi - essoi. n t is respect he outstrips the great names associated with the language in this coun- try, Tyler and Felton, Harkness and Hadley and Taylor. There must' be a peculiar preserving quality in Attic salts, for all these men were rich and individual, kept pure and sweet through generations of students without being dried. But it is not the quantity but the quality of service that made Edward North so dear to the sons of Hamilton. He was the interpreter of Greek thought and life. He gave us the literature of power. Above everything else he was a hzmzfz7zz'.rf.- it was life that he loved and taught his classes. His own training had been received before the era of the specialist, and the conquest of lan- guage-teaching by the philologist. But the minutest scientific drill could not have dulled the poet's love and vision. tl do not know whether he was a scientific eXpert in the Greek language. At least he did not care to write a grammar or give learned disquisitions upon particles. But I do know that he had imbibed the Greek love of life and beauty, he lived in the Greek thought, and had his golden dreams, and renewed the lost ages, and glorified all with the light of the Divine Humanist, and gave a finer spirit to the pushing, peering, questioning soul of this western world. He said to a company of students that welcomed him on his return from a year in Athens: We have the best IO THE HAZIIILTONIAN C C - h hell- we have the kernel. of Greece here. they h2lVC'f CS . , . . . The meat was indeed sweet and nourishing from the lips of 'four Greek. ' d love the Greek who still had to stumble He ma e men H along with grammar and leXicon. Men caught the sense of h b d of truth ' they had the taste trained for sim- form ast e o y , I , ple and pure joys, the spiritual element of life. They got of the joy of life and the beauty of the world. a new sense . Many a man dates a new mental era from a term with Theocritus or Aeschylus. Dr. North loved the College and the Hill with a love that never grew cold. He sent his roots deep into the soil of place, as he knew that the best life could only be f ' ' f H il- nourished by permanent relations. His love or am ton was not an exclusive and selfish possession. He was . . . . . . . . ther wide and magnanimous in his interests, rejoicing in o colleges, especially the new institutions where his own sons were giving their best life. But as for himself, he simply loved Hamilton. He -could be happy nowhere else. He never sought with a veiled self-seeking for larger spheres ' of influence. And as the College grew and made history, and became associated not only with this life but with a fairer world, his life became deeply connected with every- thing on the Hill. lt is no wonder that to him there was a pathos in the cutting of a-shrub or the trimming of a tree. Dr. North was a man of sentiment and association, but deeper than this, of genuine human interests. He had Arnold's love for even the dull students. l doubt whether any dullness ever tempted him into impatience. He saw something in the poorest and weakest man and believed in it. It was marvelous what ignorance and stupidity he would coax along. The current rumor that more than one man had entered College who learned his Greek alpha- HAMILTON COLLEGE II bet en route was only the exaggeration of the fact that he gave every man a chance, and some of the poorest men have wonderfully justiiied his faith. And then he followed his students through life. He never lost sight of them, and he was always looking out for them. He was a Teachers' Bureau in himself. Some of the men would hardly have recognized themselves in his recommendations, and sometimes it was the revelation of a nobler self that gave birth to a great ambition. Dr. North was never so happy as in getting a word from his students, or in meeting them. He remembered the most minute things concerning them and rejoiced in their suc- cess. There is no record in a college journal equal to the Alumniana of the Hd77ZZ-ff07Z Lit., which he edited for so many years. ' V And so to many minds Edward North has stood for Hamilton College, its finest culture and best traditions. No doubt we have idealized him, but it is the reaching out of the soul for the noble qualities that he represented. It should not be laid up against us that the Hill is not quite the same place since Edward North has gone. THE HAWIIL TONIAN I2 Trustees A Elected Charles C. Kingsley, A.M., Utica, 1367 Gilbert Mollison, Esq., Oswego, 1371 Hon. George M. Diven, A.M., Elmira, 1374 Hon. Joseph R. Hawley, LL.D., Hartford, Conn., 1875 David H. Cochran, Ph.D., LL.D., Brooklyn, 1875 :kProf. Edward North, LL.D., L.H.D., College Hill, 18814 Hon. Elihu Root, LL.D., New York, 1833 Hon. Charles A. Hawley, LL.D., Seneca Falls, 1884 Rev. Thomas B. Hudson, D.D., Clinton, 1884 Horace B. Silliman, LL.D., Cohoes, I 1885 A. Norton Brockway, A.M., M.D., New York, 1885 Rev. George B. Spalding, D.D., LL.D., Syracuse, 1886 Hon. Theodore M. Pomeroy, LL.D., Auburn, 1886 Thomas D. Catlin, A.M., Ottawa, Ill., .1890 George E. Dunham, A.M., Utica, 1891 Hamilton B. Tompkins, A.lVQ., New York, 1892 Pres. M. Woolsey Stryker, D.D., LL.D., College Hi 1 892 Charles H. Smyth, Esq., Clinton, 1893 Franklin D. Locke, LL.D., Buffalo, 1895 John N. Beach, A.M., Brooklyn, 1896 Alexander C. Soper, A.M., Chicago, Ill., 1897 Henry Harper Benedict, A.M., New York, 1 897 Charles B. Rogers, A.M., Utica, 1899 Hon. Chauncey S. Truax, LL.D., New York, 1899 :l:Robert S. Rudd, A.M., Glen Ridge, N. J., 1899 :fzlohn L. Jerome, Esq., Denver, Colo., IQQI Benjamin W. Arnold, A.M., Albany, IQQI Hon. William Cary Sanger, LL.D., Sangerheld, 1903 1 Qerreturp emu illreasurer Rev. Thomas B. Hudson, D. D., Clinton, Secretary Q1885j, and Treasurer Q1886j. . tlirecutihe fllibmmittee Messrs. Stryker, Kingsley, C. A. Hawley, Hudson, Dunham , K Tompkins, Smyth, Rogers, :l:D6C6d56Hl. J ea KU, xxtfflfgl keg-M 2 Cfw O 8 7qbboT'l' lVIelancthon Woolsey Stryker-A. B., I-Iamilton, 1872, D.D., Ham- ilton, and Lafayette, 1889, LL.D., LaFayette, 1892, CID B K, I CID. Auburn Theo. Seminary, 1872-76' Calvary Church, Auburn, 1876-78, Pastor Ithaca, 1878-83, Second Con- gregational Church, Holyoke, Mass., 1883-85, Fourth Presbyterian Church, Chicago, Ill., 1885-Q2, President Ham- ilton College, 1892, Compiler of sev- eral Church and Sunday school hymn books including College l-Iymnal, has published verse, sermons, speeches, and addresses, Editor of R4'r07'rz'. Oren Root-A. B., Hamilton, 18563 D.D., Rutgers College, 1892, L. H.D., Union College, 1895, CD B K, E CID. Instructor at Yates Polytechnic In- stitute, Chittenago, 1856, Tutor of Mathematics and Latin, Hamilton, 1860-62, Rome Academy, 1862-65, Professor of English, State University of Missouri, 1866-70, Superintendent Corrouth School, Mo., 1872, Presi- dent Pritchett, College, Glasgow, Mo., 1873-76, Pratt Professor of lVIathe- matics, Hamilton, 1880, Registrar, ? THE HAMIL TONIAN Co-editor Calzmzlyzkzn Speczfeevg' Frafzklifz . 7,- Speakefg' Hd7fWZ!f07Z Declazmzfoffy Qzfa ZWQ5' Author of ,Elementary Trigo- nometry. Herman Carl George Brandt- A. B., Hamilton, 1872, A.,lVl., Ham- ilton, 1875, Ph.D.,. Hamilton, 1896,CDBK, AACD. Studied in the Universities of Got tinffen, Strassburg, and Freiburg, In strictor at Hamilton, 1874 76, Asso- ' ' h H crate Professor in German, jo ns op- kins University, 1876-82, Professo of German, Hamilton, 1882, Author of a German Grammar for schools and I' colleges, a German Reader for Begin- ners, a German Science Reader, a German-English and English-German Dictionary, Editor of Lessing's 1Vrzz'fzcm der Wez'5e,' Contributor to the A71zf1'z'- can P!zz'!0Z0gz'mZ fozzwzal, M0dL'7'7Z Lan- guage Notes, .f0fL7ZS0lZ,S Ulzifufrsczl Cydo- O cb pedzbz, and the A7az'z'07z. Edward Fitch--A. B., Hamilton, 1886, Ph.D., University of Got- tingen, 1896, CD B K,.E. L. S. Professor of Greek, Park College, 1886-99, Assistant Professor of Greek, Hamilton, 1889-92 , ProfessorofGreek, Hamilton, 1902. Albro David Morrill-B. S., Dart- mouth, 1876, M. S., Dartmouth, 1879, A. M., Belmont College, 1885, CD B K. Student, Michigan University, 1875- 77, taught in the public schools in New Hampshire, 1877-78, teacher in Sciences and Mathematics, Lewiston Academy, Lewiston, Pa., 1878-83, Professor of Sciences and Mathematics, Belmont College, College Hill, O., 1883-88, Professor df Biology, Qhio HAMIL TON COLLEGE f5 University, 1888-91, Professor of Chemistry and Biology, Hamilton, 1891-96, Professor of Biology, Ham- ilton, 1896, on Editorial Staff offomf- 7Z6Zf of fVc'm'0!0,gy and of the fozzwzal of AppZz'm'fWz'c7'0sc0py,' contributor tof02w'- fm! of M07j2fz0!0gjf, ,f0Zl7'7ZIZ! 0fN2'zz1'0!- ogy, and fozzwzrzl of Ajbplim' M z'c1'0sc0py,' Charles Henry Smyth, Jr.-Ph.B., Hamilton, 1888, Ph.D., Colum- bia, 1890, Cl? B K, E CID. Studied in University of Heidelberg, 1890-91, Professor of Geology and Mineralogy, Hamilton, 1891, is As- sistant on U. S. Geological Survey, in charge of New York Geological sur- vey in VVestern New York, writer of numerous geological papers. William Harder Squires-A. B., Hamilton, 1888, A. M., Hamil- ton, 1891, Ph.D., Leipsig, 1892, CID B K, A T. Yale Divinity School, Auburn Theo- logical Seminary, 1890, Professor of Logic, Psychology, and Pedagogics, Hamilton, 1892, Dean of Faculty, Editor of the Ezz'1wz7'fz't'zz1z. Samuel Saunders-A. B., Univer- . sity of Toronto, 1888, A. M., University of Toronto, 1893 , D.Sc., Cornell, 1894, Phi Beta Kappa and Sigma Xi. Fellow in lVlathematics, Cornell, 1888-89, Fellow in Physics, Cornell, 1889-90, Instructor in Physics, Cor- nell, I8QO-Q2, Professor of Physics, University of VVisconsin, summer ses- sion, 1891, Professor of Physics, Cor- nell, summer session, ISQZQ Professor in Physics and Instructor in Astrono- my, Hamilton, 1892. ? YHE HAIWIL TONIAN Delos DeWolf Smyth-A. B., Ham- ilton, 189 1893, CID B Kg ECP. OQ A. M., Hamilton, Student in English, Heidelberg, 1890-91, student in English, Har- vard, ISQI-92, Assistant Professor in English, Hamilton, 1892-94, student in Columbia, 1894-95, A. M., Col- umbia, in Economics, Sociology and Comparative jurisprudence, 1895, Professor of Law, History, and Eco- nomics, Hamilton, 1895. William Pierce Shepard--A. B., Hamilton, 1892, A. lVl., Hamil- . ton, 1893, Ph. D., Heidelberg, 1896, CIJBKQ AT. . Associate Professor of Romance Languages, Hamilton, 1896-19003 Professor of Romance Languages, Hamilton, 1900. joseph Darling lbbotson-A. B., Hamilton, 1890, A. M., Hamil- ton, 13945113 B' Kg X ilf. Assistant Librarian, Hamilton, 1890- QI g student, Union Theological Semi- nary, New York, ISQI-Q41 Student in Berlin, 1894, student in Halle, 1895, Assistant Professor of English Litera- ture and Instructor of Hebrew, Ham- ilton, I8Q5-'IQOSQ Professor of English Literature, Hamilton, 1904. HAMIL TON COLLEGE I7 Arthur Percy Saunders-A. B., To- ronto, 1890, Ph.D., Johns Hop- kins, 18943 CD B K. Instructor at University of Wiscon- sin, 1894-Q6Q student in Germany, 1896-98, McGill University, 1898-99, Cornell University, 1899-1900, Pro- fessor of Chemistry, Hamilton, IQOO. Contributor to the Affzwfzkfzfz Chemical fozzwzal, the Chemzkrz! News, the fam'- urz! of Plzysical Chmzzkffjf, science and 'other scientific periodicals, on the Board of Reviewers of the journal of Plzysim! Che11zz'sZ1'y. E Thomas Flint Nichols-A. B., Bow- doin, 1892, Ph.D., Clark, 1895, CID B Kg 9 A X. Assistant in Mathematics, Univer- sity of Wisconsin, 1895-96, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Hamilton, 1896. Harry Barnes Ward-A. B., Ham- ilton, 1896, A. M., Hamilton, 18995 A T. Assistant Professor in Latin, Ham- ilton, 1899-1901, studied at Uni- versity of Munich, 1901-1903, As- sociate Professor of Latin, Hamil- ton, 1901. THE HAMIL TONIAN Henry White-A.' B., Hamilton, 18985513 B Ka AT- Intercollegiate Y. M. C. A. Secre- tary, Philadelphia, 1898-993 Official Secretary, Student Department Inter- national Y. M. C. A., 1899-19003 Associate Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, Hamilton, 1900. Martin Mercillian Post-A. B., Hamilton, 1899, E. L. S. Student at Harvard in English and History of Art, 1899-1900, Instructor in History and Latin at Atlanta Uni- versity, IQOO-OI, Librarian, Hamil- ton, 1901. Frank Hoyt Wood-A. B., Syra- cuse, 1891g A. B., Harvard, 1892, Ph.D., Leipzig, IQOOQ CID B Kg llf T. Studied History and Economics, Harvard, 1891-93, taught in Acade- my of Northwestern University, 1893- 94, Master in History, Worcester Academy, 1894-98, student in His- tory at Leipzig, 1898-1900, joint Principal of the Allen School, 1900-01 g Master in History in Mackenzie School, 1901-02, P. V. Rogers Professor of American History, Hamilton, 1902. HA MIL TON COLLEGE 19 Herman Louis Ebeling-A. B., Johns Hopkins, 18825 Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1891. Classical Instructor German Theo- logical Seminary, Bloomfield, N. J., 1882-86, post-graduate at johns Hop- kins in Latin, Greek and Sanskrit, 1886-915 Fellow in Greek, 1889-90, Teacher of Greek, Latin and French in Dr. Deichman's Gymnasium School, Baltimore, I89Of91g Professor in Greek, Miami University, 1891-99g Acting Professor of Greek, Haverford College, IQOI-O2 5 Acting Professor of Latin, Haverford College, IQO2-03g Assistant Professor in Latin and Greek, Hamilton, 1903. what diollegs Qbffirers John T. Crossley. Master of Gymnastics and Track Athletics, QIQOOD. Cornelius deRegt. Superintendent of Buildings, fIS76J. 9 Frank O. Rourke. Steward of Commons Hall, fIQO3j. 20 THE HAZWILTONIAN Gzuzral Qlunmt Qssnctattun HDfffCB175 for 19113919115 President: Daniel Finn, Esq., '68, Middletown.. Vice-Presidents: ,AleX. C. Soper, A. M., '67, Chicago. D.D. ' O, New York Rev. H. Hoadley, , 7 - Rev. Wm. D. Love, Ph.D., '73, Hartford, Ct. Executive Committee: Messrs. Brandt, Stryker, Hull, Scollard, ' D. D. Sm th Fitch, y . Recording Secretary: Prof. Wm. H. Squires, Ph.D., '88, College Hill. . Corresponding Secretary and Treasurer: Prof. A. G. Benedict, ' A.- M., '72, Clinton. Half-Century Annalist, QClass of 18547: Rev. W. H. Maynard, ' H 'lton D.D., 54, ami . Necrologist: Prof. Oren Root, D.D., L.H.D., '56, College Hill Qvlllllllli Q55IJDfHffDU5 6 ifizm 1Bnrk Qlitp President: Hon. Chester S. Lord, LL.D., '73. Secretary: Dr. A. Norton Brockway, '57, 28 W. 127th Street, .mem Burk Qrallemic mriuripals President: Prof. Edgar C. Morris, '89, Syracuse, Secretary: Clarence L. Hewitt, '92, 129 Furman St., Syracuse, Brunklpn President: Hon. A. E. Blackmar, '74, Secretary: Warren I. Lee, '99, HAJIIIL TON COLLEGE President: Secretary President President President Secretary: President Secretary : President: Secretary : President: Secretary: Jmurtbztn Mem jButk Rev. Richard G. Keyes, '48 Watertown : Samuel F. Bagg, A. M., '69 Watertown .Mem Qlinglanh : Senator R. Hawley, LL D 47 Hartford Ct jlilimilbuntinent : Major Gliver N. Wilson, 58 Kansas City Mo Western : Rev. John H. Morron, '59 Peoria Ill John P. Montrose, '87, 164 LaSalle St Chicago iliinglgamtun : David H. Carver, Esq., '71 Binghamton Schuyler C. Brandt, '89, Binghamton Wasbingtun, QD. QD Hon. Elihu Root, LL.D., 64 Ausburn Towner, '58, 611 Maryland Ave N E Qlcntral .Mem jBurk Hon. Abram B. Weaver, '51 Deerfield James H. Merwin, Esq., '99 Utica Z THE HAMILTONIAN Qilollzgz Qtalmtl at Autumn Term opened. -' Senior Prize Thesis presented. Autumn Field Day. Meeting of the Board of Trust. Thanksgiving Day. Term Examinations begin. Autumn Term closes. Examination of Delinquents. Winter Term opens. Head, Pruyn, and Kirkland Orations due. Day of Prayer for Colleges. Washington's Birthday. Curran-Hawley Prize Examination. Term Examinations begin. Winter Term closes. Examination of Delinquents. Spring Term opens. Clark Prize Orations and Prize Essays due. Spring Field Day. Inter-Academic Day, from II A. M. Graduating Orations presented. Munson Prize Examination in German. Decoration Day. . Southworth Prize Examination. Munson Prize Examination in French. Underwood Prize Examination Senior Examinations begin. Clark Prize Exhibition. Graduating Honors announced. Tompkins Prize Examination. Term Examinations begin. Prizes announced. Baccalaureate Sermon. Address before the Y. M. C. A. Prize Declamation. Entrance Examinations. Prize Debate. Alumni Day. Ninety-Second Commencement. 2l Tuesday and Wednesday, Prize Entrance Examinations. 22 1903 Sept. 17. Thursday, Oct. 8. Thursday noon, Oct. 8. Thursday afternoon, Oct. 20. Tuesday, Nov. 26. Thursday, Dec. 9. Wednesday, Dec. 17. Thursday noon, IQO4. jan. 5. Tuesday, jan. 6. Wednesday, 9 A. M., jan. 6. Wednesday noon, Feb. 7. Sunday, Feb. 22. Monday, Mar. 21. Monday, Mar. 21. Monday, Mar. 29. Tuesday noon, April 12. Tu esday, April 13. Wednesday, 9 A. M., April 13. Wednesday noon, May 12. Thursday afternoon, May 14. Saturday, May 26. Thursday noon, May 27. Friday, May 30. Monday. May 31. Tuesday, june 1. Wednesday, june 2. Thursday, fune 2. Thursday, june 8. Wednesday evening, fune IO. Friday, fune I 1. Saturday, fune 20. Monday, june 25. Saturday, june 26. Sunday morning, june 26. Sunday afternoon, lune 27. Monday evening, 5-une 28. Tuesday, -Lune 28 Tuesday evening, .wune 29. Vlfednesday, H une 30 Thursday, ' Sept. 2o- Sept. 21. Wednesday. Sept. 21. Wednesday afternoon, 7 Sept. 22. Thursday, 9 A. M., Oct. 1 . Thursday noon, Oct. AI3. Thursday afternoon, Dec. 22. Thursday noon, Examination of Delinquents. New Students meet Dean and in Chapel at 5 P. M. Autumn Term opens. Senior Prize Thesis presented. Autumn Field Day. Autumn Term closes. Registrar HAMILTON COLLEGE J Ebatker liemingtun ORDS are but a poor medium through which to - express the feeling of absolute loss which came ' ' to the entire College at the death of Parker Remington, of Brooklyn, which occurred at Faxton Hospital, Utica, on the evening of Tues- day, Nov. 24, IQO3. He had been taken there but a few days before to be operated upon for acute appendicitis and had passed away before any realized that he was in real danger. In his death the College sustained one of its severest blows, for he was a man with whom it was ever a pleasure and a profit to be, and a fellow on whose stanch- ness many depended. It is not necessary to say more: when a man is truly trusted of men he has reached the perfection of his manhood. Remington entered College in the fall of iooo as a member of IQO4. With the opening of the track season the College came to realize his athletic ability, and in the summer of 1904 he was elected captain. But he was never to act in his official capacity, for early in the Fall Term of his Senior year he decided to leave College for a year in order to become private tutor at the home of Col. Wm. Cary Sanger, of Sanger- field. He was there but a short time, but that was long enough, as Col. Sanger remarked to the writer, to win the respect and love of the whole household and to make themafeel that that household had sustained a real loss. Better words than these have seldom been spoken of any man. Y 'W V7 W ' 'figzl lgbff? ,.-fu?-Qt r :QQ x W Q 5145.-an A AF-' rw ' f zdgv 5 M M, f , -V 5-if Xxx-f W Ag, 1 mv!! 1 1 ' H i K WY' 24 K K i 'M 5w.'4mZ X36 gg, 15,13 r Q g -Sw ,QE A- ,'-IQQH3, Im ,f :ff 1 Ggf, w up M? ' Ngnxhlff gm- ,-' fn. 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'f'+'i ' -.1 ,L ij, B,.j.f?,'w,-,f- - f - .ff-P125-4-f',,: , Au Q .L .W . -' 4 9 3'f.. 4 If-W tg 'fi X vi 1 Q 1 YM' ,M df I 6:6 .- - . l H -.oy-. -.9 4 S ,!vin':z' .- +-sig:-51 1-W fx, gh I., 'i'-pi 'Q Q-, V 2- 2 ff ',5if 1i.-a'.j- 2',,f5 gg-g -1.x ' ' z '- ,- .-jillffvjf' 2' Si .1 HL f ,gn if 41'-5 1 '.,, -S j if Av W 4, , .- 4 3 W lil '- , ,Q - rg,-iz, f-,-., W -ex- . gina- 1 wg-fy x X ix 3 2 25- X f- 4 M, 'sf WTEWT7, X- 2 731 Q 5- f f' LL I N21-H, ,, ,.... , , f .. 1' - , 75.371, :az 7 Z-'If - ggi? Q., ,FQ ., -,,.H,N-14311.,g,qV.N?:,,N- , . . vwmmgmwwwm ,mf ' ' 647 1 'S fl 3 i we N- K IHFXJ4 l 5 '2F1..3S'.E 0171111 i -M 'iamww M ,K+-, -.,Y.n,.,.- 3 J 4' '. 3 4 5 i fs i 2 1r 5 4? J 4 I, il- Q11 rl A I! I X K ll.-MIIL Y'U.V COLLEGE 5 2 Senior Zkpistutp lll'wt0IllllS, the biographer of IQO4 is under fur- ehxugga fllfifu 'uid peculiar dirliculties. Our .scholarly ,qhgn Pt?Ii'CLflOI1.lldh left nothing to be dCS11'Cd: our attainments in Science are equalled only by our achievements in Literature. Our orat thenes at his zenith, or Prex in a football do not deny that in the aifffrevate we .Aklldill ED by the traditional modesty of class ory recalls Demos- speech. We bb D possess more genuine manlmess than any other class in any college in any coun- try. It our athletes are not personified perfection We feel justified in the belief that personified perfection does not anywhere exist. Yet in frankness we must admit that this class has one detect. The gem has a single Haw: one, and one only. liven in 1904 of Hamilton is found no one qualified to write the history of such a class. As we entered College, our numerical strength was remarkable. But who could have guessed, even after looking us over, the individual capacity that there lay dor- mant. lformerlv fraternity feuds and lierce factional fights had been frequent. Class oliices had been meaningless, the mere spoils of political trickery. 1904 rehelledl Uur oliicers were genuinely the choice ofthe class, and we inaugurated annual elections, which the Wisdom of the succeeding classes has perpetuated. BV Sophomore year we had grown a unit. Those WCFC the 'davs when upperclassmen were sometimes less than wise, and IQO4 was called to withstand misused authority. We are a liberty-loving class. We fought. ' To that CXCH' ing week we owe much of our present sol1da,r1ty and the College much of its equitable student g0VCI'I1mC11f- THE HAMIL TONIAN 26 Junior year-how can it be described! Our position established, our friendships formed, it was a happy time ' A d' lasses, had f culture and development. As prece ing c o done we defeated the Seniors in debate. As no preced- 7 ing class had done, our debating team remained uncon- uered in the sequent year. fl Now, as Seniors, somewhat sobered by greater thought- fulness and more serious. work, nearing the summit we ' ' h turn to review our course. Little do we regret. T ere has been no internal dissension that brought bitterness. There has been no unworthy act to cause us shame. Our influence has been strong: we trust it has been good. We have done our work, and done it heartily. We have grown truly fond of each other. Suflicitl 1 K 4,9--,.,f , 1 l l HAMIL TON' COLLEGE 27 The Qeuwr Glass Qiulurs BLACK AND RED 19211 Brake-koax-koax-kaczx, Brekcz-koax-koax-koazx, Wallager, wazllager, rip, mil, roar! Hamilton! Hamilton! 1904. Qbflirers John L. Strickland, President' Marion R. Davis, Vice-President William A. Ferguson, Secretary Robert R. Wicks, Treasurer - jilemhsrg Paul Richard Abbott, A T Camden College Monitorg Cabinet Y. M. C. A.g Mandolin Club Qzj. Qgj, Q.4jg Kirkland Prize Orationg Tompkins Mathe- matical Medalg junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg Ger- man Club. Ote o Frederick Gottlob Bastian, E CID g 'Varsity Baseball Team QQ, Qzjg Class Baseball Team QU, Q2j,g Class Track Team Qlj, QQ, Qgjg ffamiltozz Lzfe Qlj, Qzj, Q Q, Q4jg Advertising Manager IQO4 Ha11zi!t0nz'ang 3 D. T. Clubg junior Whist Clubg Latin Clubg English Literature Club. h A T Syracuse Theodore Day Beckwit , Glee Club Qgj, QLLDQ Literary Editor IQO3 Hafniltonzang jun- ior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg French Clubg Biology Club. 28 ' THE HAMILTONIAN Frederick Flandrau Brandt, A .A CD O Clinton Munson German Scholarshipg Ist Freshman Prize Essay, Ist Sophomore Prize Essay, Banjo and.Mandol1n Clubs , Qzjg Mandolin Club Qgj, Q4jg Junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg Buttinski Club. Cameron Handel Bristol, C9 A X . Manager Freshman Football Team: Assistant Manager Baseball Qzl, Manager Q3jg Business Manager IQO4 Hawr- z'!z'onz'ang Staff Hamiltovz Life, Reporter Qzj, Local Edi- tor Qgj, Associate Editor Q4jg Gym. Team fly, Qi, QQ, D. T. Clubg Advisory Board Qzj, fgjg Junior Wh1St Club, Senior Club. Edward Sumner Carr, A K E Russell College Choir Qljg Glee Club Qlj, Qgj, Leader Q4jg Class Base- ball Team Qlj, fzbg Class Debate Team Q3j, Q4jg Leader Columbia Debate Team QQ, Junior Prom. Com. g junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg English Literature Club. Dewey Jeremiah Carter, A K E Greene 'Varsity Track Team QU, Qzj, Q3jg Assistant Manager Foot- ball Team Qgj, Manager QQ, College Choir Qgj, Q4jg Glee Club Qlj, Clzj, Qgj, Q4jg 2nd McKinney Prize Speaker Qljg ' Representative at State Prohibition Contest in Gratory Cgjg Business Manager Ha1nz'!Z0n Lz'z'era1'y Jllagzzzivze Q4jg D. T. Clubg junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg Buttinski Club, English Literature Club. John Owen Collins, llf T Utica Staff hfczmiliorz Lzfe, QZQ, Qgj, Qztjg Interclass Debate Team C453 Columbia Debate Team Q4jg McKinney Prize De- bate, Press Club Q3j, f4jg President Junior Whist Clubg Senior Club, English Literature Club. Albert Samuel Davis, X llf Mt, Vernon Class Baseball Team QU, Qzjg Class Track Team Qlj, f2jg College Choir QIQ, Qzjg Glee Club Qlj, Q2j, C4jg Literary Editor Hd774Z.!f0H Lz'z'em1'yIWagazz'1zeQ1j, Qzji, Q3j3 ASSO- ciate Editor Ha11zz'!Zo1z Lzfe QQ, junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg English Literature Club. Fulton Marion Roscoe Davis, E. L. S. Niantic, Conn, 'Varsity Football Team Qzjg Assistant Manager Tennis Q3j, Manager Q4plg Vice-President of Class, Senior Club. Richard Price Davis, E. L. S. West Exeter 'V3fSlFY TfHClf Team CID, Q53 'Varsity Football Team Q4j5 Senior Cub. HA MIL TON COLLEGE 29 Daniel James Dowling, E. L. S. Waterville Class Basket-ball Team Cry, Qzj, Q4jg junifr Prize Speaker, Senior Club. William Francis Dowling, E. L. S. West Winfield 'Varsity Track Team til, Qzj, Qgjg 'Varsity Football Team Qzj, Qgj, Qzijg Class Basket-ball Team Qztjg junior Prom. Committee. V Seward Everett Edgerton C-J A X Clinton Class Track Team til, Qzjg 'Varsity Track Teamltlj, Qzj, t3jg Gym. Team C,2j, Qgj, Qztjg Banjo Club Qlj, Qzj, Leader QQ, Mandolin Club Qgj, Qztjg Treasurer junior Whist Clubg Senior Club. George Frederick Ehman, llf T Cuba junior Whist Clubg 2nd Vice-President Senior Club. Louis John Ehret, C9 A X New York Substitute on 'Varsity Football Team QQ, QQ, Class Base- ball Team Qlj, Qzjg 2nd Sophomore Prize Speakerg Read- . ' er with Musical Clubs Qgj, Qztjg D. T. Clubg Junior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg German Clubg Buttinski Club. Hammond Captain Class 'Basket-ball Team Qlj, Qzj, Qgj, Qztjg 'Varsity Basket-ball Qij, Qzj, Qgjg Class Football Team Qljg Sub- stitute on 'Varsity Football Team Qzjg 'Varsity Qgj, Qztjg Cabinet Y. M. C. A.g Pruyn Medal Orationg junior Prize Speaker, D. T. Club, junior Whist Clubg Senior Club, English Literature Club. William Archibald Ferguson, A 'Y' Entrance Prize Scholarshipg Class Secretary, Secretary Athletic Association Qgij, Qztlg Advisory Board Q3j, Q4jg Assistant Manager Basket ball Qgj, Manager Q4jg Cabinet Y. M. C. A., Hawley Classical Medalg D. T. Club, junior Whist: Club, Senior Clubg German Clubg Latin Club. William Knowles Hotchkiss, llf T y Assistant Manager Musical Clubs Qgl, Manager Q4jg Literary Editor IQO4 Hd77ZiZf07Zid7Z Boardg D. T. Clubg junior Whist Clubg Senior Club, English Literature Club. Albert Leslie Evans, A 'lf' Hammond L ons Alfred Edgar Hutton, X 115 Corning Mention Sophomore Prize Essay, junior Prom. Commit- tee' Chairman Senior Class Banquet, D. T. Clubg lun- ior Whist Clubg Senior Clubg English Literature Club. , THE HA MIL TONJA N 1 JO Philip Henry Judd, 2 fb , , , UU Citi, Pa' Captain Class Baseball Team t2l3 Vafffltl' Basebfi Team Qlj, Qzj, Qgjg Mandolin Club Q2jg Chairman lun1OY Prom. Committee, D. T. Club, Ju11iO1' Whist Club- Paul Knox, X llf Penn Yan Class Baseball Team rn, Q23, tgp, ,mls Class Track Team rig, Qzjg Class Basket-ball Team llj, Q2j, Qgjg Gym. Team rrj, Q2j, Qgjg College Choir C2j, QQ, l4l3 G16 Club lil- rgj, 435, QQ, Zlld Prize Speaker ligjg Dramatic Club D. T. Clubg Junior Whist Clubg Senior Club, Buttinski Club, English Literature Club. james Monroe Lowli, Jr., X 115 PC1111 Yan Advertising Manager 1904 Hd77ZZ.!f0MZ.d7ZQ Senior Club, Latin Clubg French Club. ' Charles Gibson McGaHin, C9 A X Ch0h0CS Tennis Tournament Qgjg College Choir Qljg Glee Club QZQ, QQ, QQ, junior Prom. Committee, junior Whist Club, Senior Club. Dana Monroe Miner, E. L. S. Oriskany Falls Class Baseball Team QU, Q2jg 'Varsity Track Team QU, Qzj Qgj, Q4jg College and Intercollegiate Record in Discus Throwg First Sophomore Prize Speaker, Senior Club. Claude Wilmot Monson, , Deposit Hawley Classical Medal, College Monitor, Latin Club, English Literature Clubg Senior Club. Arthur Edward Newton, E. L. S. Clinton College Choir Qlj, Qzj, Qgj, Q4jg Glee Club QU, Q4jg Hawley Classical Medal. l Walter Stephen Newton E L S Clinton Clarence Bede Post E L S Cllnton William Spencer Pratt llf 'I' Verona Track Peam 1 2 3 4 Interscholastic Entertainment Committee 35 junior Prom Committee junior Whist Club Senior Club English Literature Club Carl Service Schermerhorn E L S Warsaw Clas Track Team C1 25 Curran Classical Medal Truax Greek Scholarship Tompkins Mathematical Medal Chester Parsons Scovel A T Cllnton unior Whist Club Senior Club English Literature Club Charles Frederic Seiter A K E Boonvlue Entered junior Year junior Whist Club Senior Club HAMIL TON COLLEGE 31 Sherrill Sherman, E CID Utica Captain Class Track Team, Class Basket-ball Team Qlj, Q25 Qgj, Q4j, 'Varsity Basket-ball Team Qzj, Qgb, Captain Q4j, 'Varsity Track Team Qij, QZQ, Qgj, College Record in Two- mile Run, Captain Golf Team Q4'j, Assistant Manager Gym. Exhibition Q4j, junior Whist Club, Senior Club, Chess Club, French Club, English Literature Club. rederic ames Sisson E L S Unadilla F J , . . . lnterclass Debate QQ, Q4j, Cornell Debate Team Q4j, Mc- Kinney Prize Debate. ' Vernet Smith A T Frankfort Claude , McKinney Prize Debate, junior Prom. Com. , junior Whist Club, Senior Club, German Club, English Literature Club. ' nder So er 2 CID Penta on Verona Willard Phila p , , g , Class Baseball Team QIQ, Q2j, Q3DQ 'Varsity Baseball Team QQ, Qzj, Qgb, Captain Q4Q, Substitute 'Varsity Football Team Qgj, 'Varsity Q4j, Treasurer Y. M. C. A. Q3j, Vice- President Q4j, Elder College Church Qgj, Q4j, Freshman Prize Speaker, Junior XfVhist Club, Senior Club, Latin Club, English Literature Club. John Lyle Strickland, A A CD, Pentagon, Carth Class President Qzj, Qgj, Q4j, Substitute 'Varsity Football Team Qlj, 'Varsity Qzl, Class Baseball Team Qlj, Qzj, Class Representative Advisory Board Qlj, Q2j, Freshman Response, Sophomore Prize Speaker, Mandolin Club Qzj, Qgj, Q4j, Reader with Musical Clubs Q3j, Q4j, Art Ed- itor 1904 Ha1ni!!01zz'a1z,' D. T. Club, Junior Whist Club, Senior Club, English Literature Club. ag? Clermonte German Tennant, X llf Cooperstown Manager Class Football Team Qlj, D. T. Club, Junior Whist Club, Senior Club, English Literature Club. Milton Garfield Tibbitts, E. L. S. New Hartford Class Basket-ball Team Q45 , Tompkins Mathematical Medal. Charles Hansen Toll, 115 T, Pentagon, Denver, Freshman Prize Essay, Secretary Y. M. C. A. Qzj, Pres- ident Q4j, Elder College Church Qzj, Qgj, Q4j, Literary Editor Hamz'Zt01z Literary jlfagczzzbze Qgj, Editor-in-Chief Q4j, Interclass Debate Qgj, Q4j, Alternate Columbia De- bate Q3j, Leader Cornell Debate Team Q4j, McKinney Prize Debate, Tompkins Mathematical Medal, President Chess Club 4 , Chess Team Q4j, Vice-President Senior C 5 Club, French Club. Col 32 THE HAMIL TONIAN Montague White, A 'I' . 'Chilton Class Baseball Team Qlj, Qzj, 'Varsity Baseball Team Qlj, QQ, Qgj, Class Football Team Qij, College Reco-rd Shot Put, 'Varsity Track Team, Literary Editor IQO4 Ham- z'!z'01zz'a1z,' Associate Editor Hawziltovz Literary Zlfczgazzzney ' ' l h' ' 2d Tom kins Huntington Mathematical Scho ars ip, Mathematical Prize, Class Debate Team Qgj, McKinney Prize Debate, Junior Whist Club, Senior Club, Chem- istry Club. Raymond Chester White, A Cllnffm Class Baseball Team, QU, Qzj, 1st McKinney Prize Speaker Qgj, Honorable Mention Prize Essay tgj, Press Club Qzj, Qgl, Q4j, junior Whist Club, Senior Club. Robert Russell Wicks, A A CID, Pentagon, Utica Brockway Entrance Prize, Fayerweather Entrance Schol- arship, Class Treasurer, Class Basket-ball Team Qlj, Qzj, Qgj, -'Varsity Track Team Qzj, Qgj, Assistant Manager Track Team Qzj, Manager Qgj, College Record Pole Vault, College Representative to N. Y. S. I. A. U., Qgl, Business Manager Gym. Exhibition Q4j, Mandolin Club Q-1j,Q2j, Leader Qgj, Q4j, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Staff ffamilfon Lzfa, Reporter tlj, Qzj, Business Manager Qgj, News Editor Q4j, junior Response, Ist Freshman Prize Speaker, Ist junior Prize Essay, Curran Silver Medal, Soper Latin Scholarship, Soper Prize Thesis, Head Prize Oration, junior Prom. Committee, junior Whist Club, Senior Club, Latin Club. Floyd Montgomery Wills, A K E, Pentagon, Auburn 'Varsity Football Team Q1 9, Qzj, Qgj, Captain Q4j, Staff Hafn- ilton Lifg, Reporter Qlj, Qzj, Associate Editor Qgj, Editor- in-Chief Q4j,' Editor-in-Chief IQO4 Hd77ZZ'!f07ZZ.d7Z,' D. T. Club, junior Whist Club, Senior Club, English Liter- ature Club. - George Ellas Wisewell, C9 A X Phelps Glee Club Qlj, junior Whist Club, Senior Club, Latin Club, French Club, English Literature Club. Addison Wheeler Wood, A K E Wheeler Class Basket-ball Team QQ, 'Varsity Track Team QU, Qgl, Captain Qztj, junior Whist Club, Senior Club, German Club, s . l L L L I 1. I I L I I I l E V N u F I 1 B V f u .k. .,.1 f. . X - 4 .- f ..., ..- ', f-' .'..- f -V U,-., -, J-.,-4 .- . ,,.1 . ' .- -E: -.U . TJTC, fy, . ' , ',',fQ Q. 'ggfjfgfjqj'- -- ' T:-'T --f-.. - V. 1, ,. , , 4.4. rw, - . . ,., ' ' L' ' ' . , ,'?'f', ' U 'X f ' 'fl' -4111,guplnz1g1,r,.',,L:L: tgirl-1:jilli'.Af5iL'i-9 ,fhxigizd Mfg-irgq-ig, .,.....,,,, ...., ....2Jx,-Lev' gff. 1 14' ,J 54- ' - ' 75':::::.:,- 33:5-fjj' L Q .A ,, 7, '13, I u km f xl '. - I' 5 I' - ' - -- -1- , fl-. -- 4l,l,-.4 .v. . ' M - X' -X1 , 1- Q , . ,-i .. A - .. - - - - , - -. 4.0. A 2 Q - 4 -l-l..9tt . n ,, -4 - . .., - , .. .1 - ,,-Lf ,,,, -v-- ,,.,.. xcrtzuxzzgfzggaezpiazzfssz-:L ,,,,.,.,.L,,..,, L. , Y A N, .. .J U , , H f43'bV'J3q'f' I Q5 ' gun' 'W 5 F5' -.14..,..-f.M.ff,..,1f..-,.,-4-M,.f..f .f.....J'..-,.,:.'a.r-.17-Fr.....f..,,44H..-.-..c'.3z-.f-.,-4 Y .3 ,- uv MAJ, , Q Ji,-D ' ' VL' . . .273 .S fu'-1' Kaf- --'21 - 6-fm+,Q..:... H- . ---rf-ff,f,z',-1fr,, 'f.,4,:x:f4. 'K +G' JJ-f 4 , .... ,, ' -L .1.-ff:-.'-.'.x4 - --.w -4 .. .ggi ,...-v-a-14- , -J-V . ' , -4 - , Muni-nm W. .. 5.5 a.-4::. 1.4- -1 y1fu,w-,-ryan.-zyws-rf,4+1c-cu , ,, , , J13ezr1:cv zf,,11L4r'14aLf4:rx41fl1'f-l4LIf-'!ijf.hm.f-'5 X .li-i. ,Y u:1v1u:sKx-J-L-J.:-n f 5-0-3-fzlll' -4-4 ,,, an '-4 W 1 i 1 1 W '4 A' ff:-4-.,...,g A- gy-+.f.Qqqyg AT Fr-ll f A , , .. ..,,,-,,, ,.Q- ,.. ..,..A......B-..... N z 5, A 3 E 4 2 I . 1 I 9 4 1 , ' x.. 'ff 1 - I I ' -'--- -il--rf ' :h -:.:- IU- 44, I -f-e-fgg.-.L.,...,,.....-,., . ,,., ,- --.,, .-.M --, , , K, KA , Y -Mn-L -V ,W Ah I 11'.-IJWILTON COLLEGE 35 Eluninr ikaisturp RITE the history of the Class of 1oo5! Who - attempts to Write the history of a period in h which he lives? Ioo5 is making history and no one in this decade can Without bias or prej- udice write the history of the present Junior Class. After ten, twenty, thirty, yea, fifty Wide years have passed, then let the gray chronicler of history pen the rec- ord of this illustrious class. All that we can do now is to jot down a few of the most notable events and characteristics of our class history upon which the future historian of 1oo5 may base his seasoned and elaborate work. ln the midst of the gayeties of this gala year, scarcely can We find time to muse over the fading achieve- ments of underclassman years. The stunts which the class performed are recorded in Lgflf and the Lzit. 'Tis not so long ago since Qld Square, with Dr. Terrett to assist in receiving, gave the 5 o'clock chapel tea. How the Sophomores played horse with us unsophis- ticated and innocent boys! and took huge delight in rolling up our trousers and in turning our coats inside out, ef Cetera azz' fzfzmerwz. The next year when We did our prettiest to make the incoming class feel right at home, Square, in a stump speech on the chapel steps, made himself famous by threatening to lift our privileges if we did not leave those Freshmen alone. If we remember correctly, after a valiant fight in our first row We were forced to yield the palm to superior numbers. As our success was in this first row, such in the main has been the record of our athletic career. We make no bones over it, but simply declare, ex ccztfzedm, that 36 THE HAMILTONIAN our forte is not athletics. We are making no apologies and are not chagrined, nor go around with the tail-between- the-legs expression because we do not excel in athletics. 1oo5 may possibly not outshine her rival classes. in stunts of brawn and muscle, but her songsters and musi- cians can entertain par excelfence, either with the choice classical sort or 'with somethinglight and jolly-just as you prefer. Pardon if we appear to toot our own horn somewhat, when we tell you confidentially that the Col- lege Glee and Mandolin Clubs would be seriously crippled if the men of IQO5 should quit. But to hasten on to Scholarship-a half dozen High Honor men, and more than a score of Honor and Credit men. Why mention it, when all the data can be found in the records? Suffice to say that our class stands for thoroughly genuine scholarship. Crutches, horses, and other means of conveyance for the lame and feeble are discountenanced. The class is steadily approaching its ideal of true scholarship. However, more than their achievements on the grid- iron and on the stage and in the classroom, the men of IQO5' prize the bonds of comradeship and fellowship that bind the class together. The first row forged the initial link, the Hag rows added others, and the great deeds of Fall Term, Sophomore, still further helped to weld the mighty chains of class fellowship. The fire of class spirit was kindled and fanned by our class struggles. Heaven pity the successive generations of classes who-because of the Presidential decree-are deprived of this fundamental part of a liberal education. They that would be strong must strive. But also the days of protection and gym. shows, with their attendant sturdy struggles, are gone. I oo5 is thankful that she took the full course, and is proud of her united eHforts for the honor of class and college. T HAMILTON COLLEGE 37 l The Euninr mass Qbulurs NAVY BLUE AND WHITE 19211 Hockamcfea-Aocfmmckcz-kim-boom-ba, B0omalaka-izzyvacmcka-ralz-mls-ralz,' S habim-.vhazboom-.ffmbim-boom-bifve, H amilfon ! Hamilfon ! 1905. QBifirers Harley L. Stowell, President ' Homer H. Harwood, Vice-President George M. Day, Secretary ' George C. Kingsley, . Treasurer Members Edward fNorman Abbey, A T Smithtown Branch Abbey Well, I don't know. Curly, frizzly, crumpled hair Makes him look so debonair. THE HA MIL TONIA N Ernest Warren Ackerman, E. L. S. a Alexandria Bay Weary A very energetic and enterprising young man. Something of a bohnerf' Frank Cuyler Beach, A K E Brooklyn ff Frank Hard to solve. A peculiar prize-dodger. U I and Emerson. Arthur Henry Child, A T Fairfield, Conn. Kidlet A child would know better. Can't ap- preciate Bill Squires' Latin. Only man Bill ' ever tired out of class. Says Job had 3000 sons and 4000 daughters, then talks of race-suicide. Herbert Harry Crumb, E. L. S. Oxford Birdie The Latin reads crzzsizzlzzs. Has a stride to be proud of. Quotes from the Oxford Bama: First it blew and it snew and then, by jing, it frizf' HAMILTON COLLEGE 39 George Martin Day, E. L. S. San Anselmo, Cal. Georgie ' Y. lVl. C. A. shark. A wild and woolly XfVCStC!'1'l6I'. Seems to have quite a large ear for music. It is I, be not afraid. John Clark Dean, C9 A X Elmira Hans 'Tis Hans whose hairs are numbered all, Who Rally round the band-box cried, Und denkt sich Hans in Gluck vielleicht, For Syracuse it is his pride. Howard Carter Dickinson, llf 'Y' Buffalo Dickie Ran two miles in nine minutes to see a girl. Descended from Adam. flf you don't be- lieve it, look on Dick's family tree.j Jedediah Howard Edgerton, 9 A X Clinton Hoddy A Bible shark is he, A Little Minister to be. Of Hank forsooth a devotee, This sober, solemn Hoddyf' THE HAMIL TONIAN Edward Richard Evans, A T RCIHSCH Hunkus Wants a cage to take the place of a hat. Tries to blow himself in chemistry. Raymond Davis Eysman, Q A X Little Falls Smily H Smily is his nick-name, Staring are his looks, He smokes and swears continually. While poring o'er his books. Frank Oscar Farey, E. L. S. Sauquoit Commodore Promoted to the rank of commodore for gallant action during sophomore year. Spreads his sails quite frequentlyifor Ilion. I-lis word is: Don't give up the ship. William Eugene Farrell, E. L. S. Frankfort Bill ' A worthy contribution from Frankfort. No place like home. or Ilion. Seldom seen on the Campus, he is such a plugger. HA MJL fofv C013 LEGE 41 Harold Everett Hallman, A K E Ambler, Pa. Dominie Loves Deerfield. Tries for zero in Medieval History and gets two and a half. Claudius Alonzo Hand, LaFargeville ' ' ' Handy H - Hid three days in a wood pile. Pa makes the pennies, Ipitch them. . Cool bluffer. Homer Harvey Harwood, A K E Brooklyn H Rouen Inventor of the Roue hot water and cold air hygienic treatment. Dann nur, nur dann. Robert Ur Hayes, A K E Clinton Bob Advises freshmen to have money sent by checks. Charges 'for cashing keep Bob in peanuts. Faculty monitor. In love in New Hartford. Too bad the moon isn't up. THE HAMIL TONIAN Oliver Humphrey, A A C13 Uflfla Ollie n Scotch Wooleiw Company's fashion plate. First to Wear his class numerals, but not on his jersey. Qver-elects leisure. Leon Jenks, E. L. S. Clayville H Senator My chief delight's to scrap or Fight VVith the faculty whether I'm Wrong or right. . HSL50 last yearg 32.00 this year. I'm not making a cent. i Edward Peter Jordan, E. L. S. North Winlield Pete Red Mike. A staunch champion of the Irish. Who discovered America? It was the Irish. Bib gets familiar and calls him U Pete. George Caleb Kingsley, llf T Dansville Caleb Pride of Dansville. U Hank says he has a tone, Consumed with the desire to re- semble a misogamist, but it doesn't go. Bill Squires' pet, but Bib doesn't ap- preciate his dashing appearance HA MIL Tofv COLLEGE 43 Charles William Loftis, A T Frankfort Has a habit of suping the faculty by letting them overhear such remarks as: What will the old fool give us today? Head- quarters-Orpheum. Oscar Houghton Love, E. L. S. Albany Cupid A cute and irrepressible lad. The girls love to call him Cupid. Is said to have made a hit at the Mt. Holyoke Prom. Edward Campbell Maelntyre, 9 A X Johnstown Mac He's glib of word, At times absurd, , ls this jolly, dashing Merry-Qmacj. Albert Hamilton Merrick, A A CD Westernville Sock Melodious but modest. Company, villian- ous company, has been the spoil of me. THE HA M111 TONIAN Frederick Peter Mills, A A CID Mt. Morris UT. Willie Cornell expurgation. An advocate of Park- hurst's hell-box. Chief pigeon collector and target for the Gun Club. Mum as a drum with a hole in it. Henry Jairus Munger, A A CID Herkimer Jairus Left Cornell to get nearer Poughkeepsie. Noisiest man in College. Motto: When you don't know, grin. ' Walter Matthew Palmer, A K E Little Falls Peddler What's that? Grumpy. Trains on green apples. Gets cat-supfej on Bugs. F1'Cd Wade P2if011, E fl? I Bradford, Pa. Pat ' Affects Peter Kelly's walk. Is much given to doing slum work in East Utica. Takes his class on trips in the H good old sum- mer time. I HAMILTON COLLEGE 45 Ezra Weston Pound, Philadelphia, Pa. Ezra Bib's ride. Leader of the anvil chorus at P the Commons. 0h,'how he throws those legs! Peroxide blonde. V Russell Richardson, A A CD Little Falls Shucks I The joke's on me, I'll admit it. Thats the funniest thing you ever said. En- cyclopedic thesaurus of verbal English dic- tion. Charles Winthrop Rockwell, A 'T Oneida Rocks Overawed by his own personality. Doesn't smoke-carries a pipe to blow rings. William Dayton Rogers, C9 A X Clinton Bill A tender tenor and true, his eyes are balmy I blue. In Pretty's saloon he fills the glass, In Economics he thrills the class, .When Pretty says: Why, here's Rogers, too. 46 THE HAMIL TONIAN Edward Wales Root, 2 CID New York cl 9? The same old story of the fall of Adam, only with a vengeance and more than one Eve. He boasted in his immunity, too. Alas! for the soft and balmy South! Girls, beware l Arthur John Schwab, A A CID Binghamton Schwabie H Twice painted, once exhibited. Has a dis- pute with Hank over the propriety of bowing to the audience. Herman Anthony Speh, A A fi? Port Byron Tip One of the H Sliver Brigade. Says he's Dutch. They gazed, they gazed, and still the wonder grew That one small head could carry all he knew. Charles Alonzo Springstead, E. L. S. a Geneva Springie Disposition -a trifle fussy. An inveterate woman teaser and jollier. Has a stand with the good mamas in Geneva. Fusses in Utica on the plea of Ha17zz'!Z07zz'an work. HA MIL TON COLLZ: GE lsaac Edwin Stiles Clinton lkey lkey Stiles went down the hill To get the Bible notes for B111 He slipped and fell and swore like h Oh damn those notes fox B111 , . I 1 . . . J . cc V ' cc ' . a , .... cc .4 ' ' , . Harley Lord Stowell, 2 fb Ithaca Lord His glasses give him a false appearance of vir- tue. Laughs like an alcoholic ,patient. Tells shocking stories. Makes frightful noises when he works. Altogether a harmless imbecile. Charles Bruce Sullivan, E. L. S. Livonia Sully 1' 'When Sully shakes his head and his right leg, beware! The General '1 is somewhat of a bohner but keeps it shady. For- merly Principal Qteacherl of the Moscow High School. Robert H. B. Thompson, E. L. S. Thompson Ridge Batty A quiet individual. All the music in the world is within your grasp if you have a voice like Bat's. 48 THE HAMIL TONIA N V t Z ff P27 sQXZ A f WW W X W M W M QW 4 MW? WW , X Xa, Zn 4 Z fxy fys X I X N ZXW' ff . X f s f f ft if may f Q95 Nf f ZQX4 4 A MWNJW f A -rf. fkgf, SZ !,x4! X X 1 XWRQQZN 7 ' 1 ff gb! QW! 4 0 M Y? ' f fb Q f x f iw W XZ? ' f , X My J f' Y .nf IW N f 3 Josebh John Weber, E. L. S. Buffalo lc 77 The father of the class. ' Passed off for Prof. Nichols. The best stunt I ever did was to send a pair of white stockings to a young lady for an Xmas present. I 'Y Harold Andrew Williams, E. L. S. Port Leyden Beans H Hiram Kronkn of Stittsville. H Before God, I believe my last hour has come. Auth- ority on library statistics. l 1 4 Frank Merrill Wright, X llf Albany Barney H I ve got a story you ve probably heard t It s a little smutty but I ll tell it anyway ' uotes from Cool Schlitz Confuses black and white Sametime jfilzmhers uf 1905 Harry W Bosworth, 'T llf Richard A Polson, A li E ohn N Dayton, Zi CID I-Iarold E Post, E cb , Royal W France, O A X Daniel W Wardwell, 115 T ' 3 ' i . Q .K 97 . . , i J . , I Wilbur Downey, X ilf I James N. 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B , ovx I I ' ,QC 'Er-C. , -no ' 1 5 'FE ,,f ....' ' . ., . . . ,. 'fg4..'+. --C - -'!trf - ' ...C .mia -JA' , .J .. -,- ' s ' ' R , . in .1 . - . I4 1 1 1'U -'-..Q. Q 5 Q -.' v, ff..- gn' . can ,K ', f gn Nl 1 w 4 N.C'.i. Fx. J' HI .' 1 ' , . ' 9 I1 .1 . shafg: fi A, .'. . 'vu' . ,mug :gr H C 'n.,, '--I.. l ik x 1 'gmt hint' f3.z'aC ffl! v?--?1Qvf- ,, s .' -wlszsg R22 F' -2 v if . 'o W tf'.:k Q Q a ,.K HA1WlL TOA7 COLLEGE 5.1 Qnpbumnre Ziaistnrp REXIE says a Sophomore is a wise fool. That may be a good Greek derivation, but if you care to mix your Latin and Greek, hu in you might define the Sophomore as a good custom, in which light he would represent a more admirable character and one more true to tradition. He has various uses. ln the first place, he is a most fitting adornment to the Campus as he swaggers across, pipe in mouth, coat thrown back, and cap tipped jauntily to one side, casting defiance at a cringing world. Again, he fills a large place in the hearts of his college mates, because he is a genuine good fellow and no one can hear his merry hello without feeling better for having met one man who knows the world is good. Then, too, the Sophomore has lived just long enough in this little democ- racy of ours to realize that it needs him and can't get along without him. After that he takes off his coat and gets behind the wagon to push. Lastly, the Sophomore is a great educator. You may think that the only quali- ties of an educator are a Phi Beta Kappa key and a pro- jecting brow. You are wrong. All the Sophomore needs to become an educator is elbow room and a Fresh- man - if necessary, more than one can be accommodated. All the sad but enlightening experiences' of his previous years have helped make him capable to cope with. his great problem-how to keep the Freshman's head from swelling too fast. And the fact that proves him truly great is that he makes of his pupil an educator as great as himself, one who will be ready to fill the vacant shoes of the teacher. So our wise fool is invaluable as a custom, an adornment, an educator. THE HA MIL TONIAN vibe Qopbnmure Glass Qllulurs BLACK AND GOLD B Boom mb boom mb boom mb Boom Ono nme nought .vzx Boom oz room Boom clzzck zz boom mokefy mx Hoof, mon, boot, F or nineteen-six. QBfEfrns Henry R. Barrows, Alexander Thompson, Jr. Charles T. Roosa, Merwyn H. Nellis, jliilemhzrs Frederic M. Barrows, X 115 Henry R. Barrows, X II5 B Howard W. Benedict, G9 A X E. Harry Bennett, X 115 William R. P. Bloyer, E QI? Howard C. Bramley, ,E C11 Walter M. Brokaw, Z CID John D. Clark, A A CD James F. Crawford, E. L. S. Rumley DeWitt, A K E President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Clinton Clinton Clinton Pulaski A Cincinnati, O. Sandy Creek Utica Carthage Warsaw Butte, Mont. IIVAIWIL TON COLLEGE 53 Martin A. Driscoll, Jr., A K E Haverstraw A Alexander M. Drummond, A K E Auburn Ernest K. Edie, E. L. S. Springville George N. Fake, Festus, Mo. Harold L. Ferris, X llf Auburn Clifford P. Fitch, L. S. Sauquoit 1 Floyd D. French, E. L. S. Colden Harry Garvey, E. L. S. Oriskany Falls George F. Genres, X llf Brooklyn Allen R. Hallock, i Clinton Louis E. Haven, E. L. S. Sauquoit Grosvenor W. Heacock, A A CID .llion Clayton L. Jenks, E. L. S. Clayville Clarence R. Keeney, llf 'Y' .Rome ji. Wilford Kellogg, C9 A X Vernon Centre -Iohn P. Kelly, Clinton. Selden T. Kinney, C9 A X Easton, Pa. Fred A. Lawrence, Vernon James L. LeMunyan, X, ll? Addison Conklin Mann, 'X llf A Ballston Spa Colin Macdonald, A T Buffalo Robert M. McLean, A 'Y' Arthur B. Maynard, A 'T James A. Melrose, Perry A. Miller, llf T Walter G. Miller, E. L. S. Stanley H. Murdock, A K E Merwyn H. Nellis, f-J A X William T. Purdy, A K E Charles T. Roosa, A T Thomas M. Sherman I fl? George H. Sicard, E fb Chester A. Sittig, Charles E. Spedick, Lloyd P. Stryker, 2 fb John L. Tanner, A T' Alexander Thompson, Jr., E. L. S. George R. Warburton, A A CID William H. Watson, E. L. S. San Juan, Porto Rico Frankfort Rossie Herkimer Dolgeville Venice Centre Johnstown Auburn Buffalo Utica Buffalo Utica .Rockville Centre College Hill Utica Thompson Ridge Tarrytown Warsaw THE HAMYL TONIAN 54 Q I Qipzjflemhets Duffield K. Duncan, William Howlett, Peter F. Kelly, Jr. Frederic S. Easton, Jr., A A CD Orlo Ashley Pratt, Ralph S. Bennett, E C13 Morris T. Halliday, A A Cl? Duluth, Minn. Eaton Clinton Lowville Sherman Homer Ithaca l 44 f 1 I 1 ,A 1 4 4 I 1 Q 3 I. 4. . A- . uv I w 11. nu I. I 1 4- nu ll ul ua In nn O I 4 u Cul :lvl ru 4 . .li L. ap' . 1 nu 'H' n lfl up lu. 1 1 . . 1 . . -U '- 4 I. 1 -an Q 1 up v- W ,L . .. it ' ,,, , ,.. dvr .1. I n HT. uf, ,1 W l. ,:.'L, -111 ., .... .,,, .UI 1. . V11 ,rj-' nl. .. ,. ua: .-,- ,TJ .Q-. 1 I Hx: :Ln .117 13.1 3711 V- fl H.. H.. ,us ... inet Lili 'HH ll I .. ,- X I ,321 .1 ., VM A 115. 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Q ,,,' ' ., .vvv 5 .- - 4 f '49 ,Lf ,Xf XA ,,,. if i'-2 ,. f 'fp w 11A-A 4, if , Df'r'lc'd Plz Ha, 1 11 ,1. 11 111 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 I1 I 5 V 11 111 11 J 1 11 1 1 1' 11 1 1 11 1 i, .1 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 i 1 1 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ,HAJHL TON COLLEGE 57 freshman ifatsturp N day counting fashion we live through Fresh' man efu Our Blue book have you seen it? '1 black mark through each day that has passed 1I1tO history? And the twenty hfth of June do you see how that is underscored? lt's the day when the barrel staves find tender spots. To boast is not our province. Our history means not exaggerated realities nor fabulous bravery. We came as everv other class has come since Hamilton was Hamilton. Y C -. S. ,- - L . . Have you seen the calendar inside its cover with VVe were not large in numbers, or great in brawn, but our hearts were big, and they have stretched since that grand initiation day until there is room in each for every man in IQO6, in IQO7 Qyes, we can take them into camp, too,l in IQO5, in 1oo4- for all men who own this Hill as their home. College life, college tradition, college spirit-each has done its share in lilling us with an appreciation of our own courage and worth and with a respect for the prowess ' li and courage of others. Rough, uncouth, cumbrous nots we still have, but what class has not had them? Was ever a tree made perfect by one pruning? The firm, straight trunk comes only after constant care and training, and so we trust to Square H with his gloomy figures whereon no man looks, to PreX.', and to c'HC1111C,,, to train us in paths of power-and accuracy, that we may be ready and ' ' ' N t' ns ble to till the place which so many past genera 10 a have honored. And may that final day-that day of synornyms -come soon, when we can sing first with true appreciation our song to the Pea Green Slimer, our Hrst welcome to IQO8. 38 THE HAMIL TONIAN The jfrwbmau mass Qlinlnrs MAROON AND GREY 19211 Zzjr-ralz ! 1100-rala ! ki-yi-ya, Zip-rala ! laoo-rah ! ki-yi-ya, Razzle dazzle! razzle a'azzle! rip-ah-raven, Hamilton! Hamilton! Nineteen-seven. John G. Clark, QBfEicew William F. Grossmeyer, Robert M. Scoon, .Earl M. Clark, Cady H. Allen, A T Joseph S. Allen, A A fb Aaron C. Bagg, Z CD Edward H. Bright, 115 T Frank C. Brown, C9 A X Charles R. Carruth,'Jr. Earl M. Clark, A A fb Grover C. Clark, A T John G. Clark, E fb Edward C. Day, E. L. S. George H. Dudley, E. Raymond F. Dunham, I Richard M. Elsea, Arthur T. Freer, William F. Fuller, L. jlilemherz L. S. If T S. President Vice- President Secretary Treasurer Holland Patent Mendota, Ill. Holyoke, Mass. Rome . Westfield New York Binghamton Utica Holyoke, Mass. San Anselmo, Cal. Bath Utica Philadelphia, Pa. Gilhertsville Waterport HAMIL TON CIOLLEGE 59 Norman W. Getman, C9 A X Kansas City, Mo. Stanley E. Gilbert, X llf Frankfort Guy W. Gordon, Ilion William F. Grossmeyer, E. L. S. Utica James Hosmer, A K E Auburn E. W. Ward Hoyt, A A CID Port Leyden Carl D. Huntington, Pulaski Robert B. Jerome, llf 'Y' Wolfboro, N. H. Peter F. Kelly, Jr. Clinton ' Oscar W. Kuolt, 115 'T Utica ' James W. Lewis, E. L. S. Naples William E. Libbey, Clinton Archibald L. Love, Jr., E. L. Albany William E. Mansfield, Jr. Cayuga Edman M. Massee, A T Watervliet James D. Meeker, E. L. S. Camden Donald H. Miller, G9 A X Binghamton Earle L. Montgomery, Waddington Lester C. Newton, E. L. S. Clinton Charles C. Nixon, llf T Washington, D. C. Robert B. Peck, I fb Utica Harold B. Riggs, 115 T Auburn Wilson Rood, H A X Westfield Leon G. Ross, E. L. S. Ilion Charles Rynd, C9 A X Westfield Harold M. Schwartz, A K E Clinton Robert M. Scoon, X llf Geneva Lester F. Scott, A A fb Sandusky, O. Edward H. Soper, I CID Lakewood, N. Kenneth A. Sprague, llf 'Y' Roscoe Ralph W. Swetman, A T Camden Clarence M. Trippe, A 'Y' Salamanca Raymond G. Wearne, E. L. S Binghamton Philip McH. Wygant, I fb Fort Leavenworth, Kan Qipfjuenuhers Arthur M. Farmer, E. L. S. Norwood William M. Webster, E. L. S. Warsaw mx 'X : . m rs- ,fr ,lm 'X Q.. X. . ,iv 0 f EL40!LLYY1A7CXlLLZH2E Qummary of dllasscs Fellow in University course I Seniors 48 Juniors 44 Sophomores 49 Freshmen 49 1 9 I iiaamiltuu Grabuatzs jpumher of Qmahuates in Glasses one Enbzcane Qpart 1814 2 I 864 42 I 824 21 I 874 3 I 1 834 26 1 8 84 48 1 844 20 I 894 23 1 8 54 I 8 1 903 42 jpunrber of ebrahuates by Hlbecuhes 1314-23 145 1364-73 356 1 824363 157 1 374-33 302 1334-43 179 1334-93 351 1344-53 323 1394-93 313 1354-63 249 w ' 1 X A V ? . I P .V l 1 gi E g N 1 Y . Y ,XE 1 5 If 5 p I Q I i T I 1 wf' Ja A S 4 I i 5 I f I 1 I 1 Q I . X, YN 4 Q Nw. I QWXXQ-N X ltfwyix -D N ' Nui V. A X fl A ' PP fex X Q 7-' kk '- -Vx J A A wi .4d'?'ff2'4 X f 1 f f ,1'f '.'E xf.... ml S, 1 tw I mg --,. .1 M ' 'A A X b Q 1 SK rf ' ww ' W, , g X SN Q K X d J 51 XM ff KU' P N xx iff f f N Ldv? . I AX I 1,1 3 5 X Af- 6' A E N l f-SS ' x' .f Y X K , I . N, L v a K K N X J , f A X. . XX x 4 V- l iz! : f Q ? 2 7 ' k ,- X , 04' x Z ' ,rr TWC' 9 if UQQQO 911 I f 021170 Q, Q9 'X .1 '1 f E 'I x '15 1 N X ldfi-.!.'1'l I i W . X I M . My 1 in W FN gli? V, M Nyf, MQ xii M wh, mv mii wt ll l S Ui w 'r 1,1 Viv v l :F- V Q mi Ql' 1 I W il ilg, Y I HH. xii' I i ill! . N Ng- K lil? EL1, -a rf-, M ii IU Nm S ll N 1 L Rf? Fil I , 25 l li Ll! 1 N 5 vw I f. A ,- 4 L O mf fLiMTLTOA7COLLEGEi Q5 btgma ELEM fraternity 1Ko11of Glbaptsrs Alpha of New York, Union College, 1 827 Beta of New York, Hamilton College, 1 83 1 Alpha of Massachusetts, Williams College, 1834 Delta of New York, Hobart College, 1840 Alpha of Vermont, Vermont University, 1 845 Alpha of Michigan, Michigan University, 1 858 Alpha of Pennsylvania, Lehigh University, 1887 Epsilon of New York, Cornell University, 1890 iaamtltnn Qlbaptev OF T H E Qlpba Reita 1Bbt jfratzmttp ESTABLISHED 1832 jfrater in jtarultate Herman C. G. Brandt, A.lNl., Ph.D. jtratres in Ullrhr Rev. Thomas B. Hudson, '51, D.D. James R. Benton, '90 H. Platt Usborne, ,QI , Hrtihe Simnrhers Sentara Frederick Flandrau Brandt John Lyle Strickland Robert Russell Wicks fginniurs Oliver Humphrey Russell Richardson Albert Hamilton Nlerrick Arthur John Schwab Henry Jairus Munger Herman Anthony Speh Frederick Peter Mills Svupbunnurcs john Durant Clark George Robert Warburton U Grosvenor Walker Heacock .frcsbmuteu Earl Moshefi Clark Ebenezer Willis Ward Hoyt Lester Francis Scott Joseph Strong Allen Cqzynylzkd we W R. H,LOCKWDOU,- N.Y lf- 'r C 3 4.7.4 B50 55,51 Uk sm' ' -QV-.Qu an 4 U '. ,,r-'I isis , YF!- ,uff 'W qv U 'Bc' x 9- rv J. 1 fL4AfLL7KUVClQLLiR2E Hamilton Columbia Brunonian Ya e Amherst Harvard Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Manhattan Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa ohns Hopkins Minnesota Toronto Chicago McGill Wisconsin Qlpba Brita ABM ifioil of Gihapters Hamilton College Columbia College Brown University Yale University Amherst College Harvard University Adelbert College Bowdoin College Dartmouth College Univeisity of Michigan University of Rochester Williams College College ofC1ty of New York Wesleyan University Kenyon College Union University Cornell University Trinity College ohns Hopkins University University of Minnesota University of Toronto University of Chicago McGill University University of Wisconsin 1832 1836 1836 1837 1837 1837 1841 1841 1846 1846 18 1 18 1 1855 1856 1858 1859 1869 1878 1889 1891 1893 1896 1897 1902 qasi fnilgapter OF THE 5195i Mpsilnn jfratzrmtp ESTABLISHED 1843 jttatsr in gltacultate Frank Hoyt Wood, Ph.D. jhfatres in mths Rev ames H faylor D D. James H. Taylor Human Qlbenrhers Sentara ohn Gwen Collins William Knowles Hotchkiss George Frederick Ehman William Spencer Pratt Charles Hansen Toll juniuts Howard Carter Dickinson George Caleb Kingsley iupbumures Perry Anson Miller Clarence Rufus Keeney ftesblltsn Harold Burroughs Riggs Robert Bartlett erome Edward Huntington Bright Oscar William Kuolt Reginald Franklin Dunham Charles Carroll Nixon A19 N iv LSQEQEQEQEQEQEQEQEQ 'QQQ1g1f -',Q,f:Q. '.'. .'325:3:f 5 ,77I!l Q lic E X 'Q a 2. is V. ii Ei 'v 1 K I 1 I I , 1 l HA IWIL TOJV COLLEGE '- was - J -ingrymwdm 459 1951 Mpstlun Roll of dibaptets Theta, Union College, 1 833 Delta, New York University, 1837 Beta, Yale University, 1839 Sigma, Brown University, 1840 Gamma, Amherst College, 1841 Zeta, Dartmouth College, 1842 Lambda, Columbia College, 1842 Kappa, Bowdoin College, 1843 Psi, Hamilton College, 1843 Xi, Wesleyan University, 1 843 Upsilon, University of Rochester, 1858 Iota, Kenyon College, 1860 Phi, University of Michigan, 1865 Pi, Syracuse University, 1875 Chi, Cornell University, 1876 Beta Beta, Trinity College, 1880 Eta, Lehigh University, 1884. Tau, University of Pennsylvania, 1891 Mu, University of Minnesota, 1891 Rho, University of Wisconsin, 1896 Qmega, University of Chicago, 1897 Epsilon, University of California, 1902 Ei.. A I l Q l i 1 1 l 1 I. fi, ! f a 9 ill im, H f ' f LW 1 ...,, il , B ws ,f ,W Q I ZZ, ?i 4j :g , z., ,QE,,?Q '17 f. Q fi Pi ,l F 5 gy M ' V 'fy a ll or . . S ,x 4 ff, uf- vw ,pw X 47' . 1 .af -'.' ' ,I if ESTABLISHED I 845 ' , i 4 's glreater in glhxeultate Joseph Darling Ibbotson, ,go T h jfratees in Zilebe B Frederick E. Barrows, 772 Clinton Scollard, '81 ' Milton E. Gwen, D92 iw Scribe members B Sveuiurs lg Albert Samuel Davis James Monroe Lown, Jr. Alfred Edgar Hutton Paul Knox Clermonte Getman Tennant 'F Hunters ' Frank Merrill Wright 4 Supbumures Lp El Frederick Munroe Barrows Harold Lockwood Ferris Henry Robbins Barrows George Franklin Gentes ' Edward Harry Bennett James Lockwood LeMunyan A V Conklin Mann .freshmen i Stanley Elliot Gilbert Robert Maxwell Scoon l w 3 A I I l i E1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 ll ,1 XJ 5 LP ix: :1 , E 11 51 ,ui H Q . fi 1 H 1 31111 ,, 12' I1 i, 1.1 111 ,I E1 fl if U 131 ,I 11 FI 1 E 1 1! g1 . 1 1 , 111 I P I X lc K1 1 1, Drelwlfldlzo. 145 .IH 1 1 I3 I L P. fhctn Xiu. Aiphg. PHL l'.?fZ..- 'Y kh' Psa Vfau. XxL 10241. Rhw, Xl. .XXph Bcti i5anxu l,C!IJ EpQl I5 HA NJN, TUN COL f. li GE 71 1 Pi Theta, Mu, Alpha, Phi, Epsilon, Chi, Psi, Tau, Nu, Iota, Rho, Xi, Alpha Delta, Beta Delta, Gamma Delta Delta Delta, Epsilon Delta, Qlbi 195i Qlpbas' Union College, Williams College, Middlebury College, Wesleyan University, Hamilton College, University of Michigan, Amherst College, Cornell University, WoH ord College, University of Minnesota, University of Wisconsin, Rutgers College, Stevens Inst. of Technology, University of Georgia, Lehigh University, Stanford University, University of California, University of Chicago, 1841 1842 1343 1844 1845 1845 1864 1869 1869 1874 1878 1879 1883 1890 1894 1895 1895 T898 hamilton Qlhapter O F THE Brita Wpztluu jfratzrnitp ESTABLISHED I 847 jrratres in jtanultate Rev. William Harder Squires, Ph.D. William Pierce Shepard, Ph.D. Harry Barnes Ward, A.M. Henry White, A.B. jhfatres in Ullrhe Rev. Edward P. Powell Rev. Dwight Scovel Qstihe members A Ezniurs Paul Richard Abbott Chester Parsons Scovel Theodore Day Beckwith Claude Vernet Smith Albert Leslie Evans Montague White William Archibald Ferguson Raymond Chester White Huuiuts Edward Norman Abbey Edward Richard'Evans Arthur Henry Child Charles William Loftis Charles Winthrop Rockwell Svupbumures Colin McDonald Arthur Bennett Maynard Robert Norris McLean Charles Theodore Roosa John Ludden Tanner :IF VBBIJIIIBII t Cady Hews Allen Edman Munger Massee Grover Cleveland Clark Ralph Waldo Swetman Clarence Nlorton Trippe ,s L .AI iv x 1 I i L , yr Pa I 3 i X 'I Y f I 5 fx ix I y I S ! 1: 2 1 I ' n vi ,xxx ,e XX N U :C Y'... .- ,X Qkobgff Q g . i -' ! f'i- I -.4511 4 , f. by . Og ' 'X l, U - e 1 , , . Q H W0 gf ' , -N . A .Arif 9 ,j i f xl: ' 'Tim' x V ,fig - - 5 p f mx 1 ' oeeooiig HO' gf ' :awww f 1- X o -fi' . , v ,. ED V- 1 if 'ffiif s v.w m X H ' geM ,fw,QVf'fQs- Ql',,Pa2a3 '- ,,,4jff?42.-Qfw fb f5V2.1fF8n'3v4 fag, Q0fTffr Qp,vf3,73g 75 q ,q,0,,j4eff 'zfgfk I 1 , ' X 1' 9 '. Wye? c6i'eff0 ,f0'fffv A gg H' 55 'A . - ' 0 X - Q, 106, Q41 X X N I 22' fa5fr0'-5 , X v ff' fy ,Nh Je 5,0 ja -. , ,f J' G7- ffwfgfihf fwfyk, 'I J 'ST 'Wa ' M '- AAT 'W ag, K Oh - , J C4LrroRNfA :. fix' L MF GILL 5' f4,,. XNEBRASKA KE :z. X y XTORONTO Y' ' 'ffjiclig xy Drrl.-ff,17!f ff ff, , iff! ,f f A U XX'EQ.i1f7i Vdylfi. Hzzttfiff' ' I lf-'s X 1.sw 73- ' f -7 - r's.Q - - ,,..s 11 i gy, Wills! -4' W . QI ' D. .A .X .. , -,.v - s .N- x.11'Pl 'st R.. Y: 33 ,:.,.-1 ,fs x..-1' ' ' ,.u,. . 5.x- 'v- Lf Rf-'.R'1, I v0'o'. . . M., kE1f:fT1. Y.--Y- r ,,g...'.. XS'gT'QQ.f'.. X 'fi'-R:-' ll.-A -- V , 45. u-.x., . 'avi' M.-..... J.. L1 1-.rits 55 .g LJ' 4 T A. X I. -..K, ? 1 J: I an-, if . ., ', .- -.. Nc.n.A X ,.....,..x . 1 - . fofio- . f 4. x . q..v4 L u 'iriitv rc Lfjfjxi 5-1.1. 1L1T'1:rf.'g Mig, 1, . 2 Y . XQQL,-.U . L'-M. 'ww H.-1 JY I L 70.1-' Z3 VVilliams, Union, Hamilton, Amherst, Colby, Rochester, Nliddlebury, Bowdoin, Rutgers, New York, Adelbert, Colgate, Brown, Cornell, lVl arietta, Syracuse, Nlichigan, Northwestern, Harvard, VVisconsin, Columbia, LaFayette, Lehigh, Tufts, De Pauw, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Technology, Swarthmore, Leland Stanford, California, McGill, Nebraska, Toronto, Chicago, Brita Mpsilnn Elrtiur Qllyaptrrs Williamstown, Mass., Schenectady, N. Y., Clinton, N. Y., Amherst, Mass., Waterville, Me., Rochester, N. Y., Middlebury, Vt., Brunswick, Me., New Brunswick,'N. J New York City, Cleveland, Ohio, Hamilton, N. Y., Providence, R. I., Ithaca, N. Y., Marietta, Ohio, Syracuse, N. Y., Ann Arbor, lVIich., Evanston, Ill., Cambridge, Mass., Madison, Wis., New York City, Easton, Pa., South Bethlehem, Pa., College Hill, Mass., Greencastle, Ind., Philadelphia, Pa., Minneapolis, Minn., Boston, Mass., Swarthmore, Pa., Palo Alto, Cal., Berkeley, Cal., Montreal, Que., Can., Lincoln, Neb., Toronto, Ont., Can., Chicago, Ill., 1834 1838 1847 I 847 1850 1852 1856 1857 1858 1865 1865 1866 1868 1869 1869 1873 1876 188o 1885 1885 1885 1885 1885 1886 1887 1888 1890 1891 1894 1896 1896 1898 1898 1899 19o1 I I li '- il Tau Qllgapter I i ESTABLISHED 1856 il l jtratres in Ulirbe Elliot S. Williams, '67 Percy L. Wight, ,QI I Charles H. Stanton, ,72 Daniel W. Redmond, ,OI l Thomas B. Walker, A., 771 Morris DeE. Sample, D. Chi, ,Q4 . Scribe :Members 1 l . ' 1 Sentara 5 ll Edward Samuel Carr Charles Frederic Seiter fg Dewey Jeremiah Carter Floyd Montgomery Wills l Addison Wheeler Wood. Euniurs Frank Cuyler Beach, Robert Ur Hayes Harold Everett Hallman Walter Matthew Palmer Homer Harvey Harwood Richard Alexander Polson Supbumurw 'I Rumley DeWitt Alexander Magnus Drummond. Martin Ambrose Driscoll, Jr. Stanley Howard Murdock ll William Thomas Purdy ' 4 .ftesbmsn ' 1 James Jackson Hosmer Harwood Muzzy Schwartz .7 Kenneth Appling Sprague 3 1 I i C' ' 5 1 3lBeI,ta kappa Qipzilon P l 1 Lx A ll Qi 'I 1 L 3 5 , J! K Z1 'A .. :I ai if i s i i . -a I . , ,,,, 2 'QM m y XJR j X Tm C '5 MQXX X1 v, - Q TSO Gu wf U9 A I I ff 1, :VIL 1 O I 6 . qi, I 1,1 gf U mzlm . RIMM - .1 xqfgigf ,gf L ,- ,L .X if 1:4 ! fav' ff if .4- ,.. ft'-i 4524 E jim? a iii Q1 gzfiofd, 1,151 Nt-I N ,Vw-In Q-'-:JL Sig, L . . :r?.a:':x ' .Fw mv! ik'-1 V.. ima ?! if 4-'rrp YU' E' 512 fu. 511: :HQ D1 :rg 521 -will E' . LP' as W Yagi f 3:? 4 45-vfuc. Fl PL, 95144- Q 59031 hm 'M 1 f I I HA MIL Tofv COLLEGE 75 malta itiappa Qlipstlun 113011 of clibapters' Phi, Yale University, 1844 Theta, Bowdoin College, 1844 Xi, Colby University, 1845 Sigma, Amherst College, 1846 Psi, University of Alabama, 1847 Upsilon, Brown University, I85O Chi, University of Mississippi, 1850 Beta, University of North Carolina, . 1851 Eta, University of Virginia, 1852 Kappa, Miami University, 1852 Lambda, Kenyon College, 1852 Pi, Dartmouth College, 1853 Iota, Central University, 1854 Alpha Alpha, Middlebury College, 1854 Omicron, University of Michigan, 1855 Epsilon, Williams College, 1855 Rho, Lafayette College, 1855 Tau, Hamilton College, 1856 Mu, Colgate University, 1856 Nu, College of the City of New York, 1856 Beta Phi, University of Rochester, 1856 Phi Chi, Rutgers College, 1861 Psi Chi, De Pauw University, 1866 Gamma Phi, Wesleyan University, 1867 Psi Gmega, Rensselaer Polytechnic, 1867 Beta Chi, Adelbert College, 1868 Delta Chi, Cornell University, 1870 Phi Gamma, Syracuse University, 1871 Gamma Beta Columbia College, 1874 Theta Zeta, University of California, 1876 Alpha Chi, Trinity College, 1879 Gamma, Vanderbilt University, 1889 Phi Epsilon, University of Minnesota, 1889 Sigma Tau, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1890 Delta Delta, University of Chicago, 1893 Tau Lambda, Tulane University, 1898 Alpha Phi, University of Toronto, I898 Delta Kappa, University of Pennsylvania, 1899 Tau Alpha, McGill University, 1900 Sigma Rho, Leland Stanford University, 1902 'IT J 1 125i Qllgarge or THE Tlibeta iBeIta Qlbi fraternity ESTABLISHED 1868 gltrater in jtatultate l Thomas Elint Nichols, Ph.D. jteatres in Ullebe y Q! A. Gardiner Benedict, ,72 Rev. Charles Lewis Nichols F Charles T. Ives, ,QQ A Harry Earle y Qrtihe slljemhers Q Sentara Cameron Handel Bristol Louis John Ehret Seward Everett Edgerton Charles Gibson lVlcGaHin ll George Ellas Wisewell 1 Siuuiursi - John Clark Dean Raymond Davis Eysaman ' F Jedediah Howard Edgerton Edward Campbell Mcliityre ' William Dayton Rogers - l Supbumutes I Howard Wright Benedict Selden Talcot Kinney James Wilford Kellogg lVlerwin Humphrey Nellis l :Freshmen Frank Charles Brown Donald Herbert lVliller Norman Walter Getman Wilson Rood n Charles Rynd 4 X x. 1' W. b 'if A :V2w qi , Q A' v' ' , ' 9 ' ' 7 ' f 52- , 4 ,,' ef ax ' f . 3 A' Mt, qw. ,sy ,f '. -7 5. Agb A -- . 6g ff ' A K, fax 1,35 'L 5 X- , 54:0 , eb -N.:.- .I 1- - ' , A . H, WMA Q . fzfffpfg , X.f+f ',.f J 4 . 4. 1'.1 fQ. 4 p M' , i g , 1.1 A 1, , ' 1 Nfffi f 1' N 1 1 .K f swf, ' ffxxx x ' zfgrfx f 1 'J Q , y A KXb'Q 4 f If ,v LQN-ww:-If ,, . ff I-Mi gx A y? ' X1 Z 2 xx! S,-- Dm-6'rr,ff1 6711. .yif 114:11 1 15' fcill. 'Y l,.a. lnigl. kpq-px. XE. Phi. Chi. l's3. Ummm Beta. lglxtzbj.. PZ UCL-ff Rilu lit' Xu Urn Mu Hu hgmx1:1.z lull Ima' Taxa Us bigxzm I U12 Um Helm I' Zctgl IL 'itll Uv F .HHANZYUA7COLLEGE 77 Zeta, Eta, lota, Kappa, Xi, Phi, Chi, Psi, Omicron Deuteron, Beta, Lambda, Pi Deuteron, Rho Deuteron, Nu Deuteron, Mu Deuteron, Gamma Deuteron, Iota Deuteron, Tau Deuteron, Sigma Deuteron, Chi Deuteron, Delta Deuteron, Zeta Deuteron, Eta Deuteron, Tlllbeta Emu Qlbt Hull of eslliharges Brown University, Bowdoin College, Harvard University, Tufts College, Hobart College, Lafayette College, Rochester Universite , Hamilton College, Dartmouth College, Cornell University, Boston University, College of City of New Columbia College, - Qehigh College, Amherst College, A . University of Michigan, Williains College, Y Y University of Minnesota, University of Wisconsin, ' Columbian University, University of California, iVlcGill University, Qeland Stanford, ork, 1353 1853 1856 1856 1857 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1876 1881 1883 1884 1885 1889 1891 1892 1395 1896 19oo 19o1 1903 78 THE HAMIL TONIAN gi 9 li Mm fork epsilon Qtlgapter o OF THE - v, ibbi Beta itiappa glfrateruitp fr V, 3 2131115276125 fmt 19U3f4 . ipresinrznt Prof. Arthur P. Saunders, Ph.D. . Iniczfqe resiumts ii Clinton Seollard, A.M. Prin. Percy L. Wight, A.M. P ' Prof. Thomas -F. Nichols, Ph. D1 r I QBfIfBfHIfQ Prof. Joseph D. Ibbotson, Jr. illreazursr Prof. Samuel Saunders, D.Sc. marshal P 1 Prof Henry White, A.lVI. ll li ll E 3 Hn Wm mln . HAJ1 Rev. Pres. Clint Prof Prin Ma Alt' Stu Th Ad 1 . HA MIL TON COLLEGE 79 jrrutres in Zlllrbe Rev. Edward P. Powell, A.lVl. Prof. Oren Root, D.D., L.H.D. - Rev. Thomas B. Hudson, D.D. Rev. Dwight Scovel, A.M Pres. M. W. Stryker, D.D., LL.D. Prof. H. C. G. Brandt, Ph.D. A. G. Benedict, A.M. Prof. A. D. Morrill, AM Clinton Scollard, A.M. Prof. Edward Fitch, Ph.D. Prof. Charles H. Smyth, Ir., Ph.D. Prof. William H. Squires, Ph.D. Prof. Samuel Saunders, D. Sc. Prof Delos DeW. Smyth, A.M. - Prof. Arthur P. Saunders, Ph.D. Prof. Joseph D. Ibbotson, Jr., A.M Prin. Percy L. Wight, A.M. Prof. William P. Shepard, Ph.D. Prof. Thomas F. Nichols, Ph.D. Prof. Henry White, A.M :Members cllilecteh from Mass of 1903 Manley F. Allbright Harry C. Keith Alfred K. Arthur HCHTY T' Mwiwell Stuart B. Blakely 'Albert P- M1115 Theodore H. Burgess Edward O. Perry Adrian H. Courtenay Elihu Roof, ll'- '! rl in l 1 Q 1 jfiiqix , 'Q P f V-Grim .gin .i ff, . Marion Roscoe Davis Richard Price Davis Daniel James Dowling William Francis Dowling Dana Morse Miner Qtmersnu 5Litzrar1? Smitty GRGANIZED IN 1882 AT HAMILTON COLLEGE Sentnrs Arthur Edward Newton Walter Stephen Newton Clarence Bede Post Carl Service Schermerhorn Frederick James Sisson Milton Garfield Tibbitts, Jr. Ernest Warren Ackerman Herbert Harry Crumb George Martin Day Frank Oscar Farey William Eugene Farrell Leon Jenks juntntz J Edward Peter Jordan Gscar Houghton Love Charles Alonzo Springstead Charles Bruce Sullivan ' Robert Hezekiah B. Thompson Joseph John Weber Harold Andrew Williams ,Z James' Frank Crawford Ernest Kruse Edie Clifford Penny Fitch Floyd D. French Harry Miles Garvey Allen Robert Hallock Edward Carroll Day George Henry Dudley William Franklin Fuller James Ward Lewis Supbumurez Louis Edward Haven Clayton Louis Jenks Walter Gray Miller Orlo Ashley Pratt Alexander Thompson, Jr. William Herbert Watson :IF res bmzn James Drhu Meeker Lester Charles Newton Raymond Groves Wearne Arthur M. Farmer Archibald Longworth Love William Frederick Grossmeyer x XXX X . ,,,,7 N x M, if-. -xx ' EAWRB T4 I I I I I I I 6:4 I I I i I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I 1 I fr 1 Z7 I i . I I I I I 4 I Q' I I I I I z I . I II. I I I I I 5 I I I I I I I I I I. I I I I I I I I I . I n., .4 ... . .. J-.Z -.-. ' Viv' I 'i .,, ri.,.4..:ss.g.ag7:i5g:5 5.:a:.'.a:......faZ'ia5.fr:.!:'fZ.:.1.:.L-:::::::!::1t:r!'2a!I5.i- :gunz--r.,-7.:...-.i.:.g.:.:..:.:-F.- V.: :.,.i.-.:.-.:.v..,.T...... .-..,. V. .f.,. . .JJ ' - G . X MA. U ,ou ' -,inn M. U V N YI . ,:-.,.--.Y1,:-z,:,-,',:,:.:-:1:-'-'gzgxggggzl.3-:,:1:L:1:l117.. . - 'T---I-I. . .-.-.-. .3 1-2.1-1-.1..-I.--eJ-:-2.1.-. :.,:,:,,: 1 r,1,r'f,t 7,712 :A:,: ' ,, - - . - .f -.,---...-..-.,...-.--- - - ---,--- ..,.- .-k.-.- ... . - - : : - - : : ' .'-1-11 - - -'-':'f'. ':'- --':1-- ':-r-v'z'.'-'r':'-'p':A-'g-'rf'-':' -' : p':'-- ,' 'g . , . . 1 17 i n V ,1 'l r I 5, E w Q N E ' . E s 5 w 5 1 5 I 5 ,X Q. + i Q! 1 ' w l k , , 5 Q V w 3 . f E l ii L il E r ' , , ll ' ' --1--,: , v- V ..- --f'--- 'Vw-V .x,-,.... pry..--,. ,.,.f -. --.V.- .-.Y,-,. ,.,.. . , ,-.- -h. - V Y. .-..1 Q' h' 1- ' ' ' I ' r- I - , ' -' - 75- - 4- .QQ9-5'E!5?!-!v!r4!uu99i9-xaeoIoJ4-lv-!v-Kvf----,p-! D n-.---pegs-.1-..-,:--.,v... 82 THE HA MIL TONIAN i Qtbletic Qmociattnn Qbhisurp Baath President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Secretary, 7 . jlllemhsrs Manager of Football, Assistant Manager, Captain, Manager of Baseball, Assistant Manager, Captain, Manager of Track Athletics, Assistant Manager, Captain, Manager of Basket-ball, Assistant Manager, Captain, Manager of Tennis, Assistant Manager, Sophomore Representative, Freshman Representative, College Representative for N. Y. S. I. A. Prof Frank H. Wood Prof Henry White, '98 Prof. Edward Fitch, '86 G. C. Kingsley, '05 A. Schwab, '05 L. P. Stryker, '06 A. Speh, '05 F. W. Paton, '05 A. B. Maynard, '06 W. P. Soper, '04 G. M. Day, '05 A. M. Drummond, '06 A. W. Wood, '04 W. A. Ferguson, '04 E. C. Maclntyre, '05 S. Sherman, '04 M. R. Davis, '04 R. Richardson, '05 C. T. Roosa, '06 N. W. Getman, '07 G. C. Kingsley, '05 Ellumni Bepresentatihes T. M. Pomeroy, '42 M. W. Stryker, '72 J. S. Sherman, '78 G. E. Dunham, '79 F. M. Calder, '82 C. B. Rogers, '87 S. Kellogg, '88 S. C. Brandt, '89 J. Rudd, '90 R. G. Kelsey, '98 F. Cunningham, '99 R. C. S. Drummond, '01 R. R. WILJKS MANAGER OF TRACK ATI-ILI+l'1'ICS D. -I. CARTI-IR MANAGER OF FOOTBALL C. H. BRISTOL MANAGER OF BASEBALL XV. A. FERGUSON MANAGER OF BASKET-BALI, 1 p,.! C94 THE HAIIIIL TONIA N jfuuthall history A HE hopes of the College for a win- ning football team in IQO2 vs ere somewhat lessened at the opening of , .. , N C S N A . the season by the fact that the Fresh- man class did not bring such mater- ial as. had been expected. Nevertheless coach i and captain set to work with energy to build a team which should be creditable to Hamilton. 'c Though the goddess of victory proved adverse in the two most important games, the team bat- tled out the season with courage and pertina- city. The brightest feature of the season was the support given by the College to its team even in defeat, demonstratingvthat reward does not lie entirely in-victory. Night after night, in rain, snow, and sun, a considerable number of men :stood on the side lines cheering on the tired players. . Criticism of .the personnel of the team would be out out of place in this history, but it cannot be closed without reference to the splendidlservicesiof Captain Wills. His record for his four seasons on the grid- iron is seldom equalled in any college. I In that time he missed but one practice and played in every game, being removed from only one because of injuries. He won the support of every man, and his control of the team and conduct were beyond reproach. In Mr. Sweetland the College had the best man who ever coached ' her teams. In conduct on and off the Held and in football knowledge he exemplified the ideal coach. His presence was of inestimable value to the College and team and he will have always the loyal devotion of Hamilton men. QCORNELLH COACH PI. R. SWEET LAND HAZWIL TON COLLEGE 85 Baseball Zfaisturp HE prospect of the season of IQO3 was -most - favorable. The graduation of 'oz had deprived T - H u us of no regulars. We had the whole team of the year previous still in College and most M V promising material in the Freshman class. Be- sides, Durkee was an experienced and popular captain. Our system of coaching might have been better but no one can be blamed for the unfortunate circumstances. The coach was a good player and would have been satis- factory had not his deepest interests been elsewhere. Suffice it that he was dismissed. We had good coaches the rest of the season, but too many, and the views of one were not always consistent with those of another. After the first practice game we struck R. P. I. who did was undoubt- long drive to game but in scored twice not prove difficult. Our game with Union edly the best game of the season. Hunter's deep centre we thought had cinched the the ninth, when two men were out, Union and won. We compromised with Rochester, Hobart and Colgate, losing to each and winning from each. The Colgate game on Steuben lield was a surprise. V psig: .74 gm . as 5 They came expecting an easy victory, but lost. Y 5 Durkn realized that it was his last chance and he pitched as never before. The Amherst game was fatal. We were matched against a strong team and Y' Joe and Bramley were out of the game. We offer no more excuses. T U Durkee, Hunter and Peet left with ,og and rr rf'r s ..-X 'M -4' Easton did not return to college. Their places will be hard to fill but we have drawn some players in 'o7 and look forward to a successful season. , 86 If-fa HA MIL TONJA N Tllirank Zbisturp HE track team began indoor Work - in February immediately after H . Prom. Week, thus getting well under Way at the beginning of I Spring term. At this point, how- ever, three experienced members, who never failed to add to the score, were unable to continue Work. Their loss not only Weak- ened but had a disheartening influence upon the teanl COACHjOHN'L Our first-meet, with Wesleyan at Albany, was a spir- ited and interesting contest. For a long time the issue Was uncertain, but in the end the palm fell to Hamil- ton by a good margin. We entered our next meet with Colgate realizing that the odds were against us. But never was a team supported with more enthusiasm and encour- agement. The College was behind it to a man. The meet of' the N. Y. S. l. A. U. Was held in Utica under our auspices. The failure of one member of the league to enter a team, and the small repre- sentation of another, made this contest simply a repe- tition of our dual meet with Colgate. We lost fairly and squarely. In awakening interest and in general development of men the season was certainly a success. It brought out a number of new men Who did excel- lent work, and it saw six records made. Victorious or. defeated, each contest was fought out With that true spirit which more than victory or profit is the real aim of athletics. CROSSLEY HA M113 rofv COLLEGE ay Basketball Zbatstnrp ITH the loss of three good men by the gradua- . tion of IQO3, the prospects of a successful sea- . . son in basket-ball were not favorable. It has been only through the honest endeavors and co- A' operation of manager, captain and team, that the season turned out so successfully. The first days ofpractice looked doubtful, but when Mc- Laughlin, ,Ol, began to coach the team at the beginning of winter term a change for the better was immediately noticeable. Through his careful training the individual players became proficient in team work, a phase of the game which had been somewhat neglected before. On the northern trip we won at Potsdam and lost at St. Law- rence. When the latter played at Clinton, however, the score was 23-23 at the end of the game, but playing off the tie St. Lawrence scored the first basket, thus winning the game. The playing of our team in this game was of great satisfaction to all the fellows, and seemed to arouse more interest in basket-ball among the students. In looking over the scores it will be noticed that the men kept the points scored by their opponents comparatively low. That they did not win more games is unfortunate, but it is by no means discred- itable to the team. The loss of Captain Sherman will be greatly felt next year, as his individual work and presence on the floor has been of great assistance in many a tight place. Notwithstanding this fact is is no wild prophesy to say that with the return of the rest of the men who have been working together this year, we will have next year a team even better than that of this year. Qrflfii' f'f'i . r ,, .. .-. ,,. -L... xufl' W' -U31 .,. ... .ll vw L1 Sn' ' ,I lil I ..., , un... FGFLQ1 -nfs! , rug. 'tl :Ulm vulg- , . W - .. .. 3 , .ld , 4 I a I I .4 Id un u X I 'Um' C iles u s an car, I I41 Nt 595 F311 L: .ry scifi mf. .'L A EH' lin: . M ..5' I EE? 6295 ris- Jfggl, xiii' -:tial 'Lug-J tlflrl agar .ug fu.. LL., - Gia . W 1..1.-'J H955 ak? 'lu hifi His iii?-5 5513 'JL sae? ' 7271! iaiig 'iw .. gf-5 Liss 1552 : fix? 'ikifl 6 : .iii vi Y gun ,Hyun f 1 1 1117 if , 1 - 1,5 ' ,. 1 M ' l ' ' -f' 4 ff? 'Ii' rl I 1 11 11. ui 1 1 if II fn ' Wu f If s - N, , 'V ' 4 14 1, Eeasun of 19113 aa .,i1'll4, 4' If ij i QBffinew ,fi 1 11 if 7 no , .QM 4,5 , D. Carter, 04, Manager f rl, ill Q X752 F. M. Wills, '04, Captain 955, A M X 7. fm ' W' f' C.-Nellis, '065 R. AG.--Speh, '055 Z 5. L. G.-Wills, '045 R. T.-Barrows, '06, wil l Wygant, '07 5 L. T.-Thompson, '06 5 R llg 7 I ,Z E.-Soper, '045 L. E.-Evans, '045 xxlx . .ig Bramley, '065 R. H.-Roosa, '065 L. H X. l Q lI::i52fZ 2 ' y iW:555,?57 -Hosmer, 065 F. B.-Mann, 06 I , l HU491JjMll,1 ! Substituting 1.2 va- ' vnlpmgp l, f E.-Sicard, '06, LeMunyan, '065 Q-Maclntyre .VI LlM:'j '055 T.-W. Dowling, '04, Swetman, '075 H.--Pratt l'Ilft ,', ,,, 17, ff' '04, Stowell, '05, Bennett, '06, Stryker, '065 F.- --- .lf Ehret, '045 C.--R. P. Davis, '04, Merrick, '05 E. .IDIO7 , ,M5-,, 5 . CBHUIES BISYBU Sept. 23, HamiQton vs. Potsdam, at Clinton, 63- 6 26, Hamiiton Vs. Cortland Normal, at Clinton, 47- 0 Oct. 1, Hamilton vs. St. Lawrence, at Clinton, 1 1- 5 7, Hami-ton vs. Columbia, at New York, 0-29 17, Hamilton Vs. Union, at Schenectady, ' 28- 0 24, Hami-ton vs. Rochester, at Rochester, 1 1 6 31, Haminton Vs. Hobart, at Clinton, 16- 0 Nov. 4, H-ami-ton Vs. Williams, at Williamstown, 0-29 14, Hamilton vs Colgate, at Hamilton, . O-I6 Points : Hamilton, 176 Opponents, QI -tw 'L' 'WT Pita ill 1 Jn 9 2 M if +253 ba ii: dpi! Apr. May, June 25 30 2 8 9 I I I3 20 27 29 3 D 92811211311 of 1903 Q9ffirers C. H. Bristol, '04, Manager E. S. Durkee, '03, Captain Glizam Durkee, '03, Soper, '04, Bramley, '06, Catcher Judd, '04, Ist base Easton, '06, and base , Hami , Hami tOI1 fO1'1 Hamilton , Hami , Hami , Hami , Hami , Hami , Hami , Hami. Hamif. 'COI1 fOI1 tO1'1 ton 'COD tO11 fOI'l fO1'1 vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. vs. Amherst, at Amherst, Hunter, '03, White, '04, Peet, '03, Short stop Ferris, '06, Right field Stiles, '05, Left Held Farrell, '05, Centre Held Pitcher 3 d base c15ame5 iblayeh vs. Utica Free Academy, at Clinton, vs. Potsdam, at Clinton, Vs. R. P. I., at Clinton, vs. Hobart, at Geneva, Rochester, at Rochester, Hobart, at Clinton, Union, at Schenectady, Rochester, at Clinton, Colgate, at Hamilton, Colgate, at Clinton, Points: Hamilton, 89 3 Opponents, 76 hllit. , A WH win ...W 'l?'.!L 'agar' nl 1 -. I Q nu D o M lib on lu I an nu- u U 'vt Q o nn V I :uv It as an na Wm 1' 'f ,' ... l:In fu -I 5?-E5 'J' ft :QRS 'Chit' 'Ef3i'l vs 4, LAI iuq ..a. ug, gn.. ll ' -Q4 tis. L-L ' V 'iii 'ful '. Q11 H?E?ij .rs u- fra:-5 1 .rg Lge. Y .wif xiii iff? .pig .. J Em: F55 wi QM ,mil Il-if mai ,fm I. 7-fl ali: Pu' gba? Lag: 4555 525325 'if 'J 'Lf 3 faiifi 'u:v:g .V iii 4 5 ,.,, mf , V ' I l.lrHH il ,ll fl lb ' ' Nz' nlllfilly U ' ff , my Hwy lillff 1' . ' A - i ll lllllllill IMI M f 9285011 Df ISHS J A, V ' QBfEicers ' 5 A I R. R. Wicks, '04 Manager . 5 R. H. jones, '03 ' Captain ff' . - F ff Gleam , fffqr , M!! f , N ,Muni 11, X I 4 4 'I Blakely, '03 Wicks, '04 ,ll DeVotie 3 Wood, '04 ones 03 Edgerton, '05 ' ll llllq ' I 'T .ff .af -1 v f ' ' -E I, -- ff ff, . ' 1 J . A 54 I V.-f ff! 'Ill 1, .xf 1' fl: . ll. 5, JI I, I ,I .1 . Af ' e . 17 . fi? Morris 3 Evans, '05 Q Carter O4 Merrick, '05 Edgerton, '04 Speli, '05 X Miner '04 Bramley, '06 S Sherman, '04 Driscoll, '06 ggi 'Reniington, '04 Hosmer, '06 M. White, '04 Roosa, '06 'l'Deceased I I I V 1 6 3 :O K. ll' 4 '? f I! - 6 R f ' l llll A ' ' 4 1 .....ii .. I MHH' ' I ,M-2 Sicard, '06 94 I THE HAMIL TONIAN Tlllratk Smcurhs Returns uf ibamiltun :IFieII1 jiilzet, jllilap 16, 1903 Hamz'!z'0n 68 1-2 Wesleyan 56 1-2 IOO-yard Dash-Forbes, W., DeVotie, If., Bagg, W. IO 2-5 sec. 220-yafd Dash-Bagg, W., jones, H., Hosmer, H. 23 1-5 sec. 120-yard Hurdle-Martin, W., Sicard, H., Neeld, W. I7 2-5 sec. 220-yard Hurdle-Roosa, H., Martin, W., Neeld, W. 27 1-5 sec. 440-yard Dash-Roosa, H., Martin, W., Bagg, W. 51 4-5 sec. Half-mile Run-Corner, W., Pratt, H., Nixon, W. 2 min. II 1-2 sec. Mile Run-Wood, H., Rice, W., Palmer, IV. 4 min. 53 3-5 sec. Two-mile Run--Benson, W., Wood, H, Palmer, W. IO min. 5o sec. Pole Vault-Fletcher, Wi, Wicks, H., and'Eyster, W. IO ft. 6 in. Throwing 16-lb. Hammer-Miner, H., Blakely, H., Speh, H. IIS ft. 6 in. Running Broad jump-Roosa, H., Wicks, H., Fletcher, W. 20 ft. 4 in. Running High jump-Remington, H., and Neeld, W., Edgerton, H., and Nixon, W., 5ft. 2 in. Putting 16-lb. shot-White, H., Speh, H., Miner, H. 36 ft. 7 1-2 in. Throwing the Discus-Miner, H., Agard, W., Merrick, H. 1oo ft. 9 in. Returns at Qllulgate jiileet, jiilap 23, 1903 Cofgafe 73 Hamz'!z'01z 48 IOO-yard Dash-Castleman, C., jones, H., Murray, C. ro 1-5 sec. 2oo-yard Dash-Castleman, C., Smith, C., jones, H. 23 sec. I2O-yard Hurdle-Murray, C., Castleman, C., Burt, C. I7 sec. 22o-yard Hurdle-Roosa, H., Murray, C., Castleman, C. 26 3-5 sec. 440-yard Dash-Roosa, H., Smith, C., Murray, C. 52 sec. 880-yard Run-Porter, C., Partridge, C., Pratt, H. 2 min. 9 3-5 sec. Mile Run-Nasmith, C., Wood, H., Gage, C. 4 min. 46 sec. Two-mile Run-Nasmith, C., Burton, C., Wood, H. 9 min. 57 3-5 sec. Pole Vault-Wicks, H. and MacMillan, C., Carter, H. IO ft. 1 in. Throwing 16-lb. Hammer-Stevens, C., Blakely, H., Deming, C. IIS ft. 4 in. Running Broad jump-Wicks, H., Roosa, H., Buchanan, C. 20 ft. 2 in. Running High Jump-Lewis, C., Remington, H., and Stephens, C. 5ft. 4 1-2 in. Putting 16-lb. Shot-White, H., Castleman, C., Speh, H. 34 ft. 8 in. Throwing the Discus-Miner, PL, Deming, C., Stringer, C. 117 ft. 4 in. HAMIL TON COLLEGE 95 imurbs of gntmullegtatz Track Want ilgrlu at Zllltica, may 30, 1903 Colgvzfe 68 Ha1fzz'Z!0n 41 Roffzesfer 8 IOO-yafd Dash- Castleman, C., Jones, H., Sutherland, R. IO 1-5 sec. 220-yard Dash -- Castleman, C., Jones, H., Sutherland, R. 21 3-5 sec. 120-yard Hurdle - Castleman, C., Murray, C., Burt, C. 16 2-5 sec. 22o-yard Hurdle- Castleman, C., Roosa, H., Murray, C. 26 sec. A 440-yard Dash - Roosa, H., Smith, C., Bramley, H. 53 1-5 sec. 880-yard Run-Porter, C., Hanford, R., Pratt, H. 2 min. 7 1-5 see. Mile Run - Nasmith, C., Hanford, R., Gage, C. 4 min. 46 3-5 sec. Two-mile Run - Nasmith, C., Burton, C., Wood, H. IO min. 23 4-5 sec. Pole Vault - MacMillan, C., Grant, C. Wicks, H. 9 ft. 6 1-2 in. Throwing, 16-lb. Hammer- Blakely, H., Stephens, C., Dem- ing, C. 124 ft. 8 in. Running High jump-Remington, H., Edgerton, H., and Lewis, C. 5 ft. 5 1-2 in. Running Broad Jump-Roosa, H., Lewis, C., Edgerton, H. I9 ft. II 3-4 in. ' Putting 16-lb. Shot-White, VH., Runge, C., Castleman, C. 34 ft. 5 1-8 in. 96 THE HAMILTONIAN Qmmthnnr Qtblztic imcnrbs 100-yard Dash - Lee, '91, May '91, Van Allen, '02, May '00, Jones, '03, May '03, IO 1-5 sec. 220-yard Dash - Spurlarke, '89, May '89, Van Allen, '02, May '00, Jones, '03, May '02, 23 sec. 440-yard Dash - Roosa, '06, May '03, 51 4-5 sec. 880-yard Run - Ostrander, '99, May '99, 2 min. 4-5 sec. Two-mile Run - S. Sherman, '04, May '03, IO min. 51 sec. Mile Run - Gstrander, '99, May '98, 4 min. 35 3-5 sec. IQO-yard Hurdle -- Sicard, '06, May '03, 18 sec. ' 220-yard Hurdlel- Roosa, '06, 'May '03, 26 3-5 sec. Mile Walk - Seavy, '90, May '89, 7 min. 30 sec. Two-mile Bicycle Race- Stowell, '01, 5 min. I7 sec. Throwing 16-lb. Hammer - Blakely, '03, May '03, 124 ft. 8 in. Putting 16-lb. Shot- M. White, '04, May '03, 36 ft. 7 1-2 in. Running High Jump - MacLaughlin, '03, Remington, '04, May '01, 5 ft. 5 in. Running Broad Jump -f Robertson, '99, and MacLaughlin, '01, V 21 ft. 2 in. 2 Pole Vault - Wicks, '04, May '02, IO ft. 2 I-2' in. Throwing Discus - Miner, '04, May '03, 117 ft. 4 in. HAMILTON COLLEGE , 97 Znbunr Qtbletin 3KwJr7J5 Jump under Bar -- for distance, Miner, '04, 9 ft. 2 in., for height, Edgerton, '05, 5 ft. 4 in. Standing High Kick - Remington, '04, Rood, '06, 7 ft. 7 I-2 in. Running High Kick - M. White, '04, 8 ft. 9 in. Rope Climbing - Farrell, '05, 9 4-5 sec. Running High Jump - lVlacLaughlin, '03, and Remington, '04, 5 ft. 4 in. High Dive -.Wicks, '04, 5 ft. 9 in. Fence Vault -- Remington, '04, 6 ft. 6 in. Putting I6-lb. Shot - Speh, '05, 34 ft. 5 in. Pole Vault - Carter, '04, 8 ft. 6 in. Pull to Chin - Farrell, '05, 18 times. Dips - Stryker, '06, 23 times. Standing Broad Jump - Remington, '04, LeMunyan, '06, 9 ft. 7 in. Pushing 100-lb. Dumb Bell - Both arms, Ward, '02, 21 times, one arm, Ward, '02, 9 times. 'J' ,a 1 I I a 1 ,., .'L,+g v f. 4 - x rl frf! - Jr. wx . . ,I 1 iw Qeasimr of IHU5 I I ' 911111: If Y ,ill I 5 I I I f:r:5'. 'I U QBfEi:ms W A Ferguson, ,O4 Mana er S Sherman, ,04 R L. LeMunyan, O6 C.-G H S1card O6 R C. Bramlev O6 O W Ixuolt O7 L C Newton, O7 H M Schwartz, O7 mmm ielapen 1 6, Hamiion 23, Hami 26, Hami 27, Harni 3, Harni 12, HamiQ 19, Hami 25, Hamig 4, Hami 9, Hami fOI'1 tO1'1 tOI1 tOI'1 fOI'1 TIOH fOI1 ton 'EOD Points: Hannlton, 189 Opponents, 224 -1314-n.t45sSz,-G Qlbamptcm QEIM5 Qlieam 7.B85IiBtfhHIl-19116 Right Forward- T. M. Sherman QCapt.j Left Forward-J. L. LeMunyan Center -- G. H. Sicard Right Guard - H. C. Bramley Left Guard - C, M3011 HAMILTON COLLEGE Io! gutersnbnlasttc Bay AST year Hamilton iepeated her experiment of the past two years 111 setting apart a day which should be known as lnterscholastic Day The LWAL success of the undertaking surpassed the pectat1ons of the most hopeful The day was 1VC11 u entirely to the entertainment of our visitors who iepresented the preparatory and high schools of Auburn Binghamton Biooklyn Clinton Hamilton Potsdam Rome Syracuse Utica and Walton In the morning the Prize Speaking contest was held and was bv far the best CXl'11b1t1011 of its kind which has ever been given in the Chapel The prizes were taken by the representatives from Binghamton and Brooklyn But the chief 1nterest of the day centered in the Track Meet The track was dusty and the a1r sultry but in sp1te of these disadvantages the events were all closely con tested and many of the old mterscholastic records were broken. The honors for the afternoon were carried off by Colgate Academy and Syracuse High School. In the evening a reception was given in the Hall of Commons. lt was our first chance to entertain and right royally did we do it. Every visitor and every man in college was there doing his best. Speeches, college songs, music by the Mandolin Club, stunts, and the presenta- tion of medals hastened the evening hours. One after the other the different schools cheered for each other and for Hamilton. Everywhere was joy and good feeling. To many of our visitors this was the first touch of college life and the impression left will last for a lifetime. We did our best to show Hamilton as it is always and not in its holiday garb. That we succeeded in our undertaking the hearty and appreciative thanks of our visitors proved. 1 lin,-,nll , ' , CX- S P 1 1 . -,Q . , 7 7 7 7 7 1 s . K 7 7 7 7 ' J . . N . N ' 7 , .. u+1.f::.1ff ' ' ' ff fri' ZiL:i 'f'iliiiaa5.:-Lang-u:21L:aA-aL-a' 1-1-1-Z I -?z2rii 'i i l ' L I i'4 ? ' '+sg 'L ' ,t . eq-,gr i:-u m ' i 'r':',s:.1ff?fe- -- :sv-41:x-.uh HAMILTON COLLEGE IO3 Tllbe irflajwtic Qiutertainmmt y YMNASTIC, Athletic, Musical,-describes very well the character of the entertainment .given A by the College at the Majestic Theater in Utica . i on March second. lt was a most enjoyable and highly creditable event, and in every way a success. n The Prefs said: No better entertainment was ever given by the College and not only those who par- ticipated but those who witnessed were well pleasedf' , ,The committee of arrangement under the leadership of Bob Wicks worked faithfully to complete every de- tail. The best recommendation of their success is that the program was well arranged, was carried through with- out a hitch, and above all, the attendance was very large, nearly every seat in the house being taken. If the show was good last year, this year it was better. The work of the musical clubs cannot be praised too highly. All their selections were well chosen and pleas4 ing. Seldom does a college have two such impersonators as Strickland and Ehret. No language is better litted to stir sentiment than the French-Canadian dialect, and the technique of Strick in this respect is unsurpassed. Louis is already a star for the vaudeville stage. However, the Gymnastic and Athletic portions predom- inated, and while we do not wish to boast, much praise can be given to those men who participated therein. All praise to Uncle John who knows not only how to do things, but how to get them done. In his affectionate way he has won our hearts. He originated the idea of such an e'Xhibition. He told us what to do and helped us to do it. Our success is due to you, Uncle, and the College is deeply grateful. - li? F. G. Bastian, B. R. P. Davis, F. A S. E. Edgerton, T. A. L. Evans, F. W. F. Dowling, F. P. H. Judd, B. D. M. Miner, T. W. SQ Pratt, T. F. j. H. Edgerton, T. W. E. Farrell, B. A. Schwab, B. H. R. Barrows, F. E. H. Bennett, F. 1904 1905 1906 H. C. Bramley, F. B. T. 6. H. L. Ferris, B. J. Hosmer, F. J. L. LeMunyan, 6. . H. M. Schwartz, 6. F. f00l6all B. 6a.re6all 1907 S. Sherman, T. 6. W. P. Soper, B. F. J. L. Strickland, F. M. White, B. T. F. M. Wills, F. R. R. Wicks, T. A. W. Wood, T. H. A. Speh, F. T. I. E. Stiles, B. H. L. Stowell, F. M. H. Nellis, F. C. T. Roosa, F. T. G. HQ Sicard, T. 6. T. M. Sherman, 6. A. Thompson, Jr., F. P. MCK. Wygant, F. track 6. 6askel-6all C E 7- ' - A . - . . - 1 W 1 ,.e'Iu... . 1' 'S 'Q 1 'Q 5 . ' E , as . 2 5 0. 6 l' ll I ,- 'u I ..,. 5 ,E fl l pastor gf' President M. Woolsey Stryker, D.D., LL.D. . QBtber Qlrearberz uf the 1Bzat s Rev. Prof Joseph D. lbbotson, A.lVl., 'go Rev. Oren Root, D.D., L.H.D., '56 Rev. Willis Beecher, D.D., '58 1 Rev. William A. Bartlett, D.D., '52 Rev. Charles F. Goss, D.D., '73 6 Glilhzw Willard P. Soper, '04 George M. Day, 'og Charles H. Toll, 'O4 Joseph Weber, 'og Robert M. McLean, 'O6 Communion service once each term r . .N . V. -x , 3 A v ,, , , W Q , W . .W , -Q. f . :IFir5t2Z62Ienur D. Carter, '04 P. Knox, ,O4 C. W. Rockwell, '0 .QEEUUU Gltcnor W. D. Rogers, '05 N. W. Getman, '07 J. Slljenthers 5 Qbrganuit :Writ QB:-155 F. D. French, '06 W. T. Purdy, '06 iaecunh f2Ea55 W. S. Newton, '04 E. R. Evans., '05 A. H. Merrick, '05 G. Clark, ,O7 i W K X 1 ' 2-- ,firm ,gp 1 I I l I I I 1 - .j ' I J As N X1 , 'F Q ' . 41- , .. , . ,,,, . -' 41' ffiheh Tv L-ljkgsx 1 bl Q ,,i:,'i::Yy 5-, .', Q Q '-KVI 'Mi ' '1.l,ZiI,,if ki... 3 iw -.. ' 1 ' e ' mi-I, .415 1 6 6 Aff -,W :4 N ,f. re . JW- '-Mfze e- '-QW -I - jpg W I-1 J: -1: 1 X ' 232.37 J? 5 N . X N 'ls NN ' A . 1. V ' 1' r ,. . ..f 22. f,,':,E1,v ,: ,r , .- ll , '-, 4N9rr l'1lTI:1l1I-1m1umu- 5 'vY'mfw'w - :- I-.As !-'--rw: , 2 02 N- IN fl-:L---fl. . -4.1xj:?lg,' jgV,f:Q .--45.-9 'L-3. - 41, 2,1-v lllxx- M' 3, 'X LQ N-.wg Jiga :' - :' --, ' .lf-5 '..- ' ' W fsff-gf - 55192 zu.-ml 4521 Y-Qffza 'f'g,:u'2fe-uf.,':'L.' Q, f f 2 5 rx '71, fff, 112.gif 5-.tg A .gvp-.. era-:IJ R551 1 NFA 1 - '.',r,'-f- ' .J .'L .14 , . 4 , - ,Z 6' J,'. if ' Q 7' ', 1 .'.631'ffi ,f-6Tf:2Yv Q27 21-F913 Hfeliifii ish? -Q - ffl .1f,.g1.1,f1!f- ,:..f-fe, 1 L., Qkkezha -,ffxfgfifyfixygyf ,J ' , 'Jr gy V 'SI AM ff' 6 A- 'N -l fa ,' I - -1: I fa riffw wrzfezef fl if QB KBIT5 6711.1 JLQXZQF' Wai'-'Q - rw 1 s 497 T, President, Vice-President, Treasurer, Secretary, G. M A. Schwab, 05 R. M. McLean, '06 N R. M. Scoon, '07 . Day, ,OS 7 6 7 A . Al, if P31 if to Delegates Glu the ,ihurtbheih Qlunference uf 1903 C. H. Toll, '04 G. Warburton, '06 Qin the ibreaiihentpi' Qlnnference at ibarixarn W. P. Soper, '04 Qin the Qbihie Qtuhp Qlinnference at iapracuie W. A. Ferguson, O4 R. M. McLean, 06 HAMILTON COLLEGE 109 'illbz E. M. QE. Q. Bmczpticm ' FTER the athletic stunts of the two under classes had subsided, and non-protection had been de- clared off the first week last fall, the annual re- ception of the Y. M. C. A. was given Wednes- day evening of the second week to the incom- ing class. That the confusion and formality of introduc- ing the new men might be avoided, a simple and effect- ive scheme was adopted of having each fellow pin on his coat a slip bearing his name and class numeral. Thus freshmen were able to distinguish upper classmen and sophomores at sight. The gathering was very sociable. The older men endeavored to make the new men feel the spirit of fellowship that characterizes old Hamilton. Sev- eral members of the faculty were present and a sprinkling of faculty wives and daughters. It was an opportunity to come in touch in a social way with the professors and their wives. This introductory meeting at such a recep- tion between students and professors ought to open the way for a broader acquaintance. Let the new men follow up the advantage and cultivate the acquaintance not only of fellow-students, but also that of the professors. A man misses much who knows his professor only in the class- room. But we are digressing. President Toll made a brief address of welcome and then introduced Dr. Root as the speaker of the evening. The company listened attentively to the bright, pointed remarks from the professor whose heart has a particularly warm spot for freshmen. Pvrdy 'o6, entertained on the piano, and.,after some stirring Col- lege songs the reception was over. 6'1w,-. wh 'fa 'QQJLQMJ 1-4-1 -1 1: admnssoafzine- -,-1.15.42 ' ' m5-Qg,-QamQn6ms-tfQ-,.2pn1-4,-g4oQfi!innQ,Anv-rdiA- Q ...Lvl- f' I1 L 1 1 1 41 J 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 'rx HAMILTON COLLEGE I III A The ihmtagnu 7 Gllnhergrahuutes I 2 Wrllard P Soper Charles H Toll ohn L Strrckland Robert R W1CkS 7 Floyd M Wills Q5ruI1uate jjlilemherz JfR1chard U Sherman O4 ames S Carmer O3 oel D Hunter O3 Henry T Maxwell O3 Davrd K Peet 3 Ellhu Root r O3 Flhomas D McLaughl1n O3 Nelson L Drummond O2 Dewey T Hawley O2 ' Arthur H Naylor O2 f Charles G Signor O2 A X ohne W Van Allen O2 Rrchard C S Drummond or Warrenj McLaughl1n esse B M1llham or Edward E Stowell OI Goss L Stryker OI ibnuurarp jffleluhers Hon Ehhu Root 64. Henry H Benedlct 69 Dr W R Terrett W1ll1ams 71 Hon Chauncey S TIUHX 75 Hon ames S Sherman 78 George E Dunham 79 Deceafecz' JfL.cy'i funzor yea Cllnton Scollard 81 SchuylerC Brandt 89 oseph Rudd 9 Prof' Henry Whlte 98 H Murray Andrews QQ Rrchard S Cooklnham oo ' 7 7 . , . , 7 7 l - , - , l 7 I - J - , 7 7 ' , 7 JV ' 7 . . , . , o . . , . , . , ,J ., . , or , . . , . , ' 7 J ' 3 7 7 ' 7 ' 7 7 ' 3 . , . , ' J J ' 7 7 1 o , K n , :iz ' ' ' P ' ' ' 7 , 7 J 7 I 7 Pres. M. W7oolsey Stryker,, 72 Robert G. Kelsey, '98 1 I . J VA I , 7 7 . I . , . , 7 ' ' 7 ' J ' 7 :ic ' ' 7. ..-hd I L I 5 1 v s :E A Q fa 51 35. f Q-3: fx g 23 i 'ng 51 E :jig EE if 4 G' EEF? gg is i' eff P5 ., , - 235 .if :is 4 HAMIL TON COLLEGE Qmiur Qlluh W. K. H otchkiss, C . H. Toll, G. F. Ehman, J. M. Lown, Jr., P. R. Abbott F. G. Bastian T. D. Beckwith P. F. Brandt C. H. Bristol E. S. Carr D. Carter f. 0. Collins A. S. Davis M. R. Davis R. P. Davis D. Dowling W. F. Dowling, S. E. Edgerton G. P. Ehman L. Ehret A. L. Evans W. A. Ferguson E. O. Hoffman W. K. Hotchkiss A. E. Hutton P. H. Judd P. Knox J. M. Lown, Jr. 31366661564 Qbfficrw Qmrnhsrs President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer C. G. McGaHin D. M. Miner C. W. Monson A. E. Newton W. S. Newton C. B. Post W. S. Pratt XP. Remington C. S. Schermerhorn C. P. Scovel C. P. Seiter S. Sherman F. Sisson C. V. Smith W. P. Soper A J. L. Strickland C. G. Tennant M. G. Tibbitts, Jr. C. H. Toll M. White R. C. White R. R. Wicks F. M. Wills G. E. Wisewell A. W. Wood ,, If 1 rs .- :. ' . , .. . . . . M P A .. Q , r', n .. uf Q . '. F. G ! . fa .. .. 5 5 K I. .. .. 71, . g. gf. Ia' YF. Pl. .. u'. rf .. fs .. A. 5 pl ,. i. . F 4 . . ,. ,. hi. E4 gn. vp. iff .24 .:.. Lui . ga B. ri 31' .. 5 . ,, 52 .1-, .11 g. xl' .. , . Q. v. ,. ' 1 . .., Y qx r . . 'Fr di M. 'z H . Al Z :Q 'ORD '11 ... fl ml' .K 9: ve tx Y. E2 Xl .71 IT, If If P 5 P' v. ,. 5. i . I . I -..A.vA-- 77,07 YYY 7,-I I fi JYVH ,nw ,,.,., v . . Y .Ag 1 '.' . '-.VY n.,.: . . ..... .I ..'... n .. xl .1 1.15 ,. . .I ,,.. .... . .,,,.. .f. .. ..... .. -. li. .I .. 1:1-1-2 1i:Lr' 2' '12 J A 5. ..l.L.. .7. 'Ulu ,.. ... .. -L. 'L7R.h'. 'lf'..1 ,, .. ... ll '.' ,. .. ..- ... l'ilb:' .. ... .... .. .. -.J 'Hun ..,,'.: 'Un H...- fL . iii'- .A . H .H .... 'WE .. 'tilll 'nr' -1 'lfifl 'i'l:2' 'LHIQ 'lfkh 'Hail lbllvl v,..o I q'! .L...2 .4 .. .n .IV ul .. .fm ...... ar'-'-. ...lf lf!! .... . Nui .... 5.7 - .Hua .Ui ' . .. I yn .... ...... . .. . . . ....., ...rg l 'v HL.. rl' i'L ' D' ll ...E .... .1 L 1' O Y 2.1 .. . 7. - . '.-T, .fsf ,.3f. 'QUT 'L .. ., H-f Ly as 'frr M r. I I T. 'i -aw L ll I I . .z 3. .1 L1 L, . . r. .gurl- 5. . :W Irs. ! : ,n.., v- 'L. 'A S.. .. r: Q uv: JL 5 Q. 'i .r 11 .' I Yr t if ful ....4 I u ...J mv: gm! . ., Q . LQ 521 'T 'I 1 vu ' 1 1 . Sq . . . Y 1 . f 'E . . . L . , I . X Z . 1 . '-rx af' . L fngvgr v,,:.1-L Nl' 1' ' I . V HAMILTON COLLEGE II guuimf what Qlluh Qbffisma W. M. Palmer, President A. H. Child, Vice-President H. Munger, Secretary C. W. Loftis, Treasurer H. E. Hallman, Scorer A E. N. Abbey, Bouncer G. C. Kingsley, Ash Receiver F. M. Wright, Lighter ' A. Schwab, Chaplain A. H. Merrick, Judge Qlbentbers 2 CD F. W. Paton H. L. Stowell A A CID O. Humphrey F. P. Mills A. Schwab A. H. Merrick ' H. Munger H. A Speh llf T H. C. Dickinson - G. C. Kingsley X qs F. M. Wright A T E. N. Abbey E. R. Evans C. W Loftis A. H. Child C. W. Rockwell A K E F. C. Beach H. H. Harwood R. U. Hayes H. E. Hallman W. M. Palmer P o A X A J. C. Dean R. D. Eysaman E. C. Maclntyre W. D. Rogers ! 1 D 5 X 5 l . , , , , N ,,.fv.-.fr.1-V --,, ,,,.,,,- -- -.sv-v-r -w.-v -.-a -4- v 1 J' - 4' . , ' . NA.. vw -V . ---.- - - 'Y v- '- - ,555 M, X34-5,-,.-.f -,- -'1'-4-..-pn-1.,...v-v..v-.-. . .., .. v .,. .,. J , '-:JVNQ1 .y..:.1 '--..,- ' ?:?1F?Eff5:fF???E??1.EiE : i:fQi5Q?f.55fLf:f5Iii5i-Pig?- 5 f-5535?-?321':.::::::.-iz. ' ' - ,645 -g '-??l'3 1':9i.-!'.?' . - , gl: 41,-,Zz-i,.h,.. .P 5 , -T-f .11 ,Liza '53 .. .,,, . ,J . ..,. . .E-Lf. Q..- ....S...-'......A.. M..-A v ..-.....,.,f.r ..'4..,.:5Q:,4 1 'A ,X H - 3. - ' - 4 ' - u- . . .. 5f 1g':'7':f.:S3- ' 2.2 5.2.4-.. 3.11. .----.i.,.f..-..:..aL F,,:m,Q.c,,- , ,, 4-gate.-Q, 1-U gun, 4 V ii 'N 1 1, 1 5 Qi 1 1 i L1 i fl NI H 5 I ,V i li H ll Q. xp: ix! Aj ww' mx Vx, X, I .1 3 1, -il I 1 fiff 27x 1 QI N M m 1 1 l ,M ii' 11 ',N wi' I, : ! 4: ,, f, l, lx m, W li 1 ,qu 1 i ns am- has Ju Lian!! J, v I .- I 6 L -r' rim. -o 'D' Ixus... ' . .- N MQ , - 1 . 1- f ., .--1 4' '- 1 in 2- . ' V X I X ' l U k A . l -2 , ,, ,.,.,,: - 2 . ,LL ., ' T Y . Y lr ,I 4, f -.-.Q In ly k: V A - - .A h V , A W - .,- - - I L, 357, 1 5-.,A-:..,,.,, . -. HAMIL TON COLLEGE E. QE. Qlluh Qavuphnmore Qocietp H. W. Benedict H. C. Bramley A. M. Drummond G. W. Heacock L. LeMunyan Mann J. C. G. A. B. Maynard P. A. Miller M. H. Nc-:His W. T. Purdy C. T. RooSa G. H. Sicard R. Warburton SULLIVAN I COLLINS CARR SISSON TOLL SPEH HA Mm roar COLLEGE 119 Eehating Teams Zlntmollegiate Weamb' Debate with Qiulumhia E. S. Carr, '04 O. Collins, '04 F. C. Beach, '05 .imbstirutrz TC. B. Sullivan, '05 Eehatr with Qburnell F. Sisson, '04 C. H. Toll, '04 H. A. Speh, '05 QEIH55 TBHIII5 V IQO4 E. S. Carr F. Sisson J. O. Collins C. H. Toll . 1905 F. C. Beach H. A. Speh G. M. Day C. B. Sullivan 'fDebczZea' in place qf Beach ,11 BRANDT KNOX EHRET CARTER HAMILTON COLLEGE 121 3ButtiIt5kp Qlulurs WHITE, GREEN, AND YELLOW jllfluttu A When you see a good thing-Butt in. 5,9211 Kitty Chung! Kitty Chung! Kitty Chung! Chung! Chung! Biff, bang! Bing, bingl Bung! Bungl Bungl Stuhlinsky, Verplatzsky, Peninsky, Moninsky, Alumninsky, Buttons ! Buttons I Buttons I :IFIumet Four-leaf Clover QBfEicers F. F. Brandt, '04, D. Carter, 'o4, L. Ehret, 'o4, Paul Knox, 'o4, A. L. Kessler, ,97, Clinton Greene New York Penn Yan Brandt, Pa W 4 POUND RICHARDSON DRISCOLL TOLL I N i 1 1 A - QBffirers C. H. Toll, President H. H. Harwood, Vice-President H. R. Barrows, Secretary and Treasurer Zlntmnllzgiate mam. IHU5 C. H. Toll, '04 R. Richardson, '05 E. W. Pound, '05 M. A. Driscoll, Jr., '06 jliilzmhevz S. Sherman, '04 C. H. Toll, '04 M. White, '04 F. 0. Farey, '05 H. H. Harwood, '05 L. Jenks, '05 R. Richardson, '05 H. L. Stowell, '05 F. M. W1'ight, '05 E. W. Pound, '05 H. R. Barrows, '06 4 M. A. Driscoll, Jr., 06 S A. R. Hallock, 06 S. T. Kinney, '06 S. H. Murdock, '06 T. Sherman, '06 G. H. Sicard, '06 A. Tnompson, jr., '06 E. H. Bright, '07 C. D. Huntington, '07 R. B. Jerome, '07 O. W. Kuolt, '07 H. B. Riggs, '07 W. Rood, '07 During the season of 1903, a tournament was held with Syra cuse, which resulted in a draw. Two correspondence games were played with Rochester. The first was won by Hamilton the second was a draw. 124 THE HA MIL TONIAN A Qiuglisb Sltterature Cllluh Eimtur Prof. D. lhbotson, A. M. P. F. Brandt F. G. Bastian E. S. Carr D. Carter J. G. Collins A. S. Davis R. P. Davis W. F. Dowling A. L. Evans W. K. Hotchkiss A. E. Hutton QP. Knox J. M. Lown, Ir. QDIELBB Elf 1904 A C. G. McGaHin C. S. Schermerhorn C. P. Scovel C. F. Seiter - S. Sherman F. Sisson C. V. Smith W. P. Soper J. L. Strickland C. G. Tennant C. H. Toll F. M. Wills G. E. Wisewell jfrmcb 61511111 Eitestur Prof. W. P. Shepard, Ph. D. 1904 T. D. Beckwith C. W. Monson G. E. Wisewell S. Sherman 1905 F. C. Beach E. R. Evans E. W. Root H. L. Stowell F. P. Mills, ' G. C. Kingsley, E. W. Root, R. U. Hayes, F. G. Bastian, '04 A. S. Davis, '04 L. Ehret, '04 A. E. Hutton, '04 P. Knox, '04 C. G. Tennant, '04 F. C. Beach, '05 H. C. Dickinson, '05 C. A. Hand, '05 H. H. Harwood, '05 R. U. Hayes, '05 G. C. Kingsley, '05 Eflmznrbcrs Qbffirew ii Jw. President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer F. P. Mills, '05 V H. Munger, '05 E. W. Root, '05 H. L. Stowell, '05 F. M. W1'ight, '05 J. D. Clark, '06 G. W. Heacock, '06 S. T. Kinney, '06 C. Mann, '06 R. DeWitt, 'o6 W. Rood, '07 L. F. Scott, '07 iarws Qllluh Qbfficers J. Weber, President G. C. Kingsley, Secretary jfflemhem Prof. W. H. Squires, '88 Prof. A. D. Morrill Prof. H. White, '98 J. O. Collins, 'O4 R. C. White, 'O4 G. C. Kingsley, o5 E. W. Root, 'og A. Schwab, '05 A. M. Drurnrnond, 'o6 1 ' ' ' bk V -4 l --'gums , . , ,,,w,,,,,.5-,,, ,i5:3:,,,L.,.:::1-'1f'fAH-if lfzwfm ' ' 'Y b , 1 Q 4 . -. , I. F L 1. V r o g, 1 f . 1 s E'- E 1 In 4 1. H 1 E 1 I .g if EL? QI FE? si? V251 -Lf ... l I . :ft ,fi HAMIL TON 'COLLEGE wee Qtluh ' Leader, E. S. Carr, '04 V Manager, W. K. Hotchkiss, '04 Jlfiret citennr P. Knox, '04 J. Carter, '04 . W. Rockwell, '05 N. D. C W. Getman, '07 Jffirit Baie T. D. Beckwith, '04 E. S. Carr, '04 C. G. MCGHHHD, '04 C. A. Springstead, '05 ,iminigitpi A. S. Davis, '04 iaecrmh Cfltennr 'A. S. Davis, '04 c. A. Hand, '05 H. Munger, '05 W. D. Rogers, '05 iecnnh '9Ba55 W. S. Newton, '04 A. H. Merrick, '05 ' F. D. French, '06 W. T. Purdy, '06 G. R. Warburton, '06 A. H. M0fr10k, '05 c. w. Rockwell, '05 ilieahere L. J. Ehret, '04 J. L. Strickland, '04 jelanhuliu ann Guitar fliluh Leader, IFir5t 9l9anUuIin R. E. R. Wicks, '04 N. Abbey, '05 A. H. Merrick, '05 H. L. Stowell, ,05 ' N. W. German, '07 Guitar F. F. Brandt, '04 S. E. Edgerton, '04 J. H. Edgerton, '05 C. W. Rockwell, '05 5 R. R. Wicks, 'O4 020100 .manhuiin P. R. Abbott, '04 I. L. Strickland, '04 W. D. Rogers, '05 W. T. Purdy, '06 ' 3BiuIin E. C. Maclntyre, '05 F. W. Paton, '05 A. L. Love, '07 130 THE HAMILTONIAN The jlltusiral Qiluhs' Ziaistorp HE Musical Clubs have had another successful - season this year and have maintained through- .. out, the high standard set for them by the clubs of the two preceding years. There is no other department of College activity, in which there ,Q has been such rapid and steady improvement in the past three years. The reason is that we have had an abundance of musical material and at the same time ellicient leaders to work this material into presentable shape. just so soon as we secured this happy coincidence of talent and leadership, interest grew into enthusiasm and faithful, persistent work did the rest. The opening concert of the season was given in the Scollard Opera House at Clinton. The clubs were not at their very best because it was their lirst stage appearance. But after the first numbers, they did themselves credit and the concert, as a whole, was a great success. There, as in all the concerts, Ehret and Strickland won the au- dience and kept them applauding as long as there was any chance of eliciting another stunt Then came the trip through the northern part of the state. The Thirty Artistsl' covered themselves with honor each evening. The concert at Boonville was only eXcelled by the ones following and the last one at Car- thage was the best of all. If all the circumstances con- nected with the trip had been as enjoyable as the concerts themselves, the clubs would indeed have a pleasant story to tell. But stormy weather and disabled snow plows succeeded in spoiling' the joys of the tour as an outing. The train scheduled to reach Boonville at 2:30 actually arrived there at 7:30, sharp. For a vivid description of ...SZ A ' - Q , 1 . A U I.: I ..1 - -.-.-.-'-....,....-..-.-...-.-..,...,-2.7.1.I Q, 7-: I-I i A, 7 ,.,.,-,ff--A:-, --1-1-5' -1, 1- - :--1r..' . ...-.-.,.--- ...-A.- .-,-.-..-...- . . . 1 -' ' 'i..i.'-i-T-'-?ll.i-'i.?.I:.Tl1::':T:7. -.1 T!'.:.4g.:,.,4- -..'1.i., A ,z':7..'r. , jr- ' lg 1-P ,. , , - . .---.-.-.-.--.,. .,..,.,.,.- ,..- -.-.-.-.-.,-.-.-.-.,.-.-!,.-.-, . . .-. . . . .., . . ... .... .... ,,-.,.,. . -,. . - -V . . n---- ,-----Q.-J.-- . --.-. - - . -.- --- --- -.-:-'- . - . -3.'.'. -' '-'.'. ..'.: a-.-T- -z-,-.. ..'--,..I. .'-.-:-.g7.-.-f..-7' T.f3-- ijfq ,- 5: ,gg .'.,. '. uf, .R , - -... .5s,r--- - - - - - - , - - - -...- - - -.---.l4I.A!-I-- - 1-I 31.52-1..1o.'L.n.a-..1.-a..- -..-- --. , Z-. ,-:npr 1' - :'-': 7: I : ..1.:.r,.. ,:.,.,..,,., -.- -... - A, 5..DAv15 R. R. WICKS J. L. STRICKLAND E. S. CARR L. J. EHRET A. H.fMERR1CK W. K. HOTCHKISS Sie ?L'--zza5S-2isia5sir .1 ' 'aaaassasaaasasasusaanasssas,'41+Is54:a:,eaMz.aae:::4.:.,-sf.w:,mf5g:,z 132 THE HAMILTONIAN the miseries ofthe trip, consult the pedestrian quartette who left the train in a sno w drift at Alder Creek and came back after a hearty meal to find that the train had left them. There is no need to dwell upon the de- tails of the following day, and the day- after, and the next. They all furnish the same story of waiting for trains twelve hours late and getting into town just in time to snatch a brief lunch and hurry away to the opera house or church. ' . . The limit of human endurance was reached when on returning to Clinton at 12:45 a. m. the musicians found that the Oriskany had again arisen to the occasion, making it impossible to get up the hill. When the Col- lege was at last reached the gayeties of Prom. week were just about to commence, but that's another story. How- ever, it is not out of place to mention the Prom. concert, in which the inspiration of the audience furnished ample reason for the fine work of the entertainers. The one trip of several concerts was a great improve.- ment over the scattered and long drawn out single concerts of former seasons. We hope that next year the clubs will be able to take more extended trips than was possible this year. The .standard of the clubs is surely high enough to-warrant an expedition into some of the larger cities of the state and, what is quite as important, the faculty has always shown itself ready to give cuts to the men in the clubs. lt seems therefore that it is only a question of get- ting dates and we are confident that the manager next year will attend to this feature. rf I w w n L 1 . V , , if 1 if a xg, 5 Q. , fr ff Q ,, f' V ,.n..,. JN M 4. , f 1, 21 'f X wif x .ff A ,, f Q44fr'5??w ' ' QW?- via V. L W fix X Jw 1 4 , wb fic 7, , , of 1 ff , f I, , , . 0 V ,f W' 5 , 'iw-X ,e,, X 1 y vwifw1W M ,,f, - -f f W ' 4 f , W f , , 0 f f 7 f f 'ZS , f f ji f ff X f f W , , f Q f f, ' f ' f if ,, l ,L W7 X. QV! , V 3,5 X23 X If 77, Q ,WEA Q '72-' ,gf 2 , f' xffrsif ' lf, K , fi , -- , X Qfw I f,' ,ff V0 I f' 5 rg V ' 1, f' ,, v .Q , f , 25125, ' 5' g - , . MQW WN! 4 ,Q .4-Sf . ,4, , f . ff,ff4?W,v,,f f f ffZ'Zz.,Zw ,X f f P ,, ,.., ,KMA Agia? .7731 . , X f ww , , Z 4 iff ' W My , , EPM-fu-vmf.W,5g ' 1 f N fn an oLu:cE LIC 'non lb I I ? ,. 4, w Kg , A V E ' ' :g,,,,Qf,i2QfQejW1-Tgf 1 cf: .gan ww. P --- Wy, K nr ,-w ,Y-i HAMIL TON COLLEGE The iiaamtltnnian Published Annually by Members of the Junior Class A iliuarli nf Qlihtturs A. Schwab, . N. Abbey, . C. Kingsley, R. U. Hayes, E G C. A. Springstead, W. D. Rogers, H. L. Stowell, E. M. Wright, Editor-in-chief Literary Editor Literary Editor Art Editor Art Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Advertising Manager QF fe 'uv M fx ,nm px Nw. xx- A Q in L D ,D Q f HAMILTON COLLEGE I3 Zkaamiltnn itfe Published Weekly During the College Year Clin Qlihiturial Staif E. M. Wills, '04 Editor-in-chief R. R. Wicks, '04 News Editor F. G. Bastian, '04 Associate Editor C. H. Bristol, '04 Associate Editor J. 0. Collins, '04 Associate Editor A. S. Davis, '04 Associate Editor A. H. Child, '05 Associate Editor A. Schwab, '05 Associate Editor E. C. Maclntyre, '05 Local Editor G. M. Day, '05 Business Manager ' ilfiepurtnrial A. M. Drummond, '06 Alex Thompson, '06 W. M. Brokaw, '06 A. B. Maynard, '06 Conklin Mann, '06 140 THE HAMIL TONIAN The ifaamiltun Emnrh PUBLISHED QUARTERLY AS A MEANS OF INFORMATION , TO ALL HAM1LToN GRADUATES CONCERNING THE LIFE AND WORK OF THEIR ALMA MATER The Qtuhmts' Zfaauhhnok PRESENTED AT THE BEGINNING OF FALL TERM TO THE UNDERGRADUATES BY THE COLLEGE Y. M. C. A. Contains Schedules of Studies and Games, the College Calendar, College Records, Customs, Songs, History, Yells, Advice, etc., etc., etc. 11 ,X :wav 75 if NY X ff -1 X X11 V 'ffgf S MN 1' ,, , ' g1 i, 12,1 35,1 . 1 v'fffGX'f1S'14' ' A25 X XX vi ,X an Qu, l k! 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Emkw, 55Wf'F41f? fake www 20,1904 i 1 HAMILTON COLLEGE I jfratzruitp Beceptiuns Qigma phi Friday Evening, February 12, 1904 Blpba Bbeltu phi Tuesday Evening, June 23, 1903 Wednesday Evening, February 10, 1904 lpgi Epsilon Tuesday Evening, June 23, 1903 Wednesday Evening, February 10, 1904 ilibi 195i Wednesday Evening, February IO, 1904 Delta Epsilon Tuesday Evening, February 9, 1904 Hbelta iiiuppa Glipsilon 4 Monday Evening, June 22, 1903 I THE HAMIL TONIAN fraternity Qliomamtious Qiggnta Qliihi New Terk, j'eznuez1'y 4, 19071 Eelegatrs S. Sherman, W. M. Brokaw alpha Erbelta labi Cleieezge, M031 4, 5, 6, 7, 19071 . Drlcgatrs F. F. Brandt, H. A. Speh lpsi illipsilon Selzeneemffv, Nlezy 171, 15, 1003 Erlrgntrs G. E. Miller, C. H. Toll Ebclta Zlllpsilou New Terk, November 11, 12, 13, 1903 X Erlrgatrs P. R. Abbott, C. W. Rockwell malta ihappu Qlipsilon Symeufe, Nevemloer 11, 12, 13, 171, 1903 7-Delrggatr S. Carl' illhrtn malta fllhi New Terk, Februezry 20, 21, 22, 33, 1907! Erlrgatrs W C. H. Bristol, W. D. Rogers x r 3 1 HAMILTON COLLEGE 147 Qtlass Slizuuimw I '42 Col. E. L. Buttrick, Hon. T. M. Pomeroy. '53 M. H. Beach, Rev. W. B. Dada, R. L. Dakin, Rev. E. P Powell. '58 Prof W. Beecher, Dr. C. McFarlane, H. Mack, Hon. A J. Northrup, Rev. Dr. W. H. Webb. . 763 Rev. Dr. S. H. Adams, Rev. L. P. Bissell, C. E. Davenport Rev. H. NI. Dodd, Dr. A. B. Southwick. '68 A H. E. C. Daniels, D. Finn, Hon. D. Henderson, Rev. F A. Johnson. . '73 , Rev. E. E. Bacon, Hon. O. E. Branch, Hon. R. C. Briggs Rev. E. B. Fisher, H. W. Harding, Rev. Prof. A. Jones, Supt J. E. Massee, Hon. C. S. Lord, Rev. W. D. Love, Dr. G. W Miles, E. S. Peck, Dr. D. B. Ward. '78 Prin. H. W. Callahan, Prof. H. C. Holbrook, Rev. C. R. Kingsley, E. W. Lyttle, C. F. Parsons, Rev. H. A. Porter, Hon. S. Sherman, Rev. C. H. Stone. '83 Rev. A. Abeel, W. T. Busch, W. F. Campbell, Prof. C. O. Clark, S. F. Engs, Rev. G. K. Fraser, E. N. jones, Kruse, T. H. Lee, H. M. Love, Hon. G. G. McAdam, Rev. J. C. Mead, Dr. G. H. Rodger, Rev. W. A. Shanklin, G. Wen- dell, W. M. Wilcoxen. '88 A. R. Kessinger, Rev. Prof. W. H. Squires, Supt. F. S. Tisdale. '93 G. R. Douglass, F. C. McMaster, W. E. Mott, Rev. A. Wouters. A T1-15 HA MIL TQNJAN 148 Qinmmmremmt Banquet AIN dashed upon us between buildings, but, once inside, we were never cozier. It was the 1 first Commencement Banquet in Commons Hall, and the formal opening. The laden tables were too massive to groan, but noise enou h was supplied by class and college cheers. Well 3 , . that the roof was so sturdily rafteredl Our Commons 18 tempest-proof, be the assault from within or from without. ' h ' t' s. Security and good cheer were the first c aracteris 1C What, you ask, of the ladies? As we welcome them to the side-lines, so we welcomed them to the gal- . - 1 ilery, to behold our prowess. They saw the anima s feed and heard them roar. ' The roaring, then, is the next subject. The chorus- work was well-voiced. Trust an enthusiastic crowd of Hamilton men to supply the singing and cheering. So strictly did 't PreX. govern that all went like locomotive enginery. The spirit of wit and promptness presided in- carnate. There was no draft from empty gusts and gales. Remarkable was the great number which, in a limited time, and extempore, spoke all-spiced sense. Our honored Sec- retary Root was with us and gave the address of the day. It remains to tell the climax--the announcements. We had long been waiting to know, and now we were informed that the Commons was another gift of the brothers Soper. Our uproar attested our appreciation. VVhen it had sufficiently subsided came the-second an- nouncement, a complete surprise: that, thanks to An- drew Carnegie, fIO0,000 more was to be invested in our beloved College. 'ioog went home that night glad that they had been graduated not one day sooner. HAMILTON COLLEGE 149 4 5 S The jfnuthall Bittner HO will soon forget that first dinner in the Com- - mons, at which the whole College joined to u celebrate the season just closed and to anticipate its successor? Though the menu was not that of the Astor House, the good-fellowship of the company recompensed one for any lack of good things to eat. The melody of Cheer, Boys, Cheer, from two hundred lusty throats made the rafters ring and not a one of us was there who did not feel that this was his Hamil- ton to which he gave and from which he received his best. The same spirit eXisted which had cheered and comforted the fellows at the table of honor, through days of sun and rain and snow, in victory and defeat. And the speeches. after the dinner! From Dr. Woodls stories to FliX's farewell there was not a dull moment. Louie and Strick,' aroused the laughs by those stunts which we, who have been in College with them,will always remem- ber. Then at the last to stand and sing Carissima! Was there an eye that did not brighten or a heart that did not beat faster? The whole evening was the sort of thing which makes the College more united, and as we stood there together we were all Hamilton men and that alone. May it not be the last! FOVfd7Z ez' fzczec 0l7'777 77267722.- 7ZZ.J'J'6 z'77wz67'Z. l i 5 l I I O THE HAZIIIL TONIA N Glass nf 1904 Banquet HELD AT THE BUTTERFIELD, UTICA SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 12, AT 8230 O7CLOCK Toastmaster, Don't Know What, 'C Something Else, cc H CC CC CC CC Qloasts' Edward S. Carr John L. Strickland Cameron H. Bristol Change, Dewey Carter Some Senior Wisdom, John O. Collins Realities, Albert S. Davis Recollections, Willard P. Soper Any Old Thing, Future of the Classf' Dana M. Nliner Clermont G. Tennant xfffxff I f' 1 ami! g S x , mr HW A f M, X M ' V xx A ! h x: fy - . N WL Q ! 5 S r I 2, ' If N fm. 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C3-2-reflw-4,-,agaaivspa-Q-eeieoe-,, , cumin' , . - - ' - ' Q.--.z.a..,...::z:a:-1::.::f:r1''r:41:::::.: :-g--..:.-.:-vh.-----.-- --.- - , ,:n.n-'.1.:l-lal.n..l.e,., - -n,. , ,:.. 1 ' NX N. xxx HAMJL TOTV COLLEGE 157 Tlibz jam Builbtugs C The Dormitory V YEAR ago we were expressing the wish for new and more .elaborate dormitory accommo- . dations, and, wonder of wonders, today the main quadrangle has been advanced by the erection of one of the most modern and well equipped dormitories in the country. The new building is located on the site of the old Chemical Laboratory just on the eastern edge of Steuben Field. lt is the gift of Mr. Andrew Carnegie as a recognition of the public ser- vices of the Hon. Elihu Root, '64, ex-Secretary of War. The cost ofthe building will be 36o,ooo, which is a portion of Mr. Carnegie's gift, the other portion being devoted to scholarships. Carnegie Hall, or West College as it will be familiarized, is built entirely of stone, the material being drawn from local quarries. The outer dimensions are I5ox45. It has four stories and will accommodate fifty-four men. The building is divided in two sections by a solid brick and stone wall, and the hallways are of brick, stone, and iron, so that the dormitory will be practically fireproof. Each suite, save six which accommodate three, will give room for two men. There is a bathroom with all modern con- veniences in connection with each suite, and each study- room has a tasteful fireplace, is heated by steam and l' ht d b as The floors are of hard wood. . lg C Y 3 ' . . . . The work on the building was rapidly pushed from its beginning in June, IQO3, and the building will be com- plete and ready for occupancy in September next. The architect is Frederick H. Gouge, '7o. T The new dormitory is a monument to the generosity 1,8 THE I-IAJIIL TONIAN J . of its donor, and to Mr. Carnegie the College is .grateful for his timely and needed gift. It gives to' Ham1ltOIl, 111 connection with the Hall of Commons, living accommo- dations second to no small college in America, and of these we are justly proud. The laboratory A OW glad we were to see the old wooden struct- ure which had been used so long as a Chemi- cal Laboratory, taken down and a new and modern building erected for that course. The new Chemical Laboratory was begun in April, IQO3, and was ready for use by the last of September, so that the courses in chemistry continued their work unin- terrupted. The style of the building is entirely different from that of all the other buildings on the campus. The outside walls are built of ordinary rough field stone set in Portland cement, the windows large and arched, the roof low and tiled. The- cost of the building was SI6,000. This was made up of several contributions of SIOOO each by men whose names have not yet been announced, though the beginning was made by a contribution of 353000 by Franklin D. Locke, '64. The dimensions of the building are 805540. There are two stories, the lower of which occupies two-thirds of the basement and con- tains the main laboratory proper. The second story is used for a lecture room and contains seats in tiers for the students, and also a desk well equipped with appliances for demonstrations by the instructor. There are seven smaller rooms in the building which can be used for indi- vidual work and for the storage of apparatus. Everv feature has been added to this building to make its equip'- ment equal to that of the largest needs of the chemistrv course. Its addition to the campus is most welcome, and it is as picturesque as it is complete. A a J l A I 7. N xxx S D f- QA .fa sl q 5.1 ,U-197 ., . A 4 V Jl'i'r5'x: 1' -- 4, fri Af , , QW 9 Q , . 'i Y Hlf H.-I JUL Y'O,Vlf1A 160 Tllibe Qllnlleggr Qleiurtrry THERE's a little nook, at the break of the hill, '- i ' 1 l the long summer day, With the song of the buds thiougi .B And the plav of the breezes that never are still, And the hum of the world, lar away. A consecrate spot,-so secluded and high That it blends with the peace of the soft, azure skies, Where the sounds and Into Whispers of Paradise. the shoutings of mortal strife die I-led es and evergreens, the smooth, rounded sodg 3 . . And the plain little monuments, white in the sun,- Pause you to bow, nor unthinlaingly trod, Where they rest, by old l-laniilton. Here they return when their labors are o'er, r thev loved and the old College llonieg To the' lVlothe i And they lie down to sleep through the years, everniore,- No longer to wander or roam. 'Tis the peacefullest corner in all the land, As it smiles to the skies in the sun and the shadeg And it tells of the touch of an lnfinite lland, On the Hill Where our Brothers are faid. 'Tis a consecrate spot,-and the soul there will sigh For the song and the peace of that ltlonie in the sl-cies, Where the shoutings and sounds of niortalitx' die Into Anthems of Paradise. i D '7 fH1rler,'o,1 n . 1 i l I l HAMILTON COLLEGE 161 Quays from the Bust ibeaps of the '3O'5 ann '4O'5 PROP. OREN ROOT, '56 ' EVENTY years ago the Seniors of Hamilton Col- - lege faced an examination for a degreef, This Wi gwam examination covered the four years of the course. On the blank leaf of a catalogue of 1 832-33, in the handwriting of the late Dr. Oren Root, of the class of 1833, is this statement of the limits of the degree examination: The Senior Class of Hamilton College were examined for their degree july, 1 8 3 3, viz. : Tainter's Horace, Grwca Majora, Algebra, Geometry, Day's Mathematics, Spherical Projections, Natural Philosophy and Astronomy, Rhetoric, Locke on Human Understanding, Moral Philosophy, Political Economy, Geology, Chemistry, Mineralogy, Botany, Butler's Analogyf' I How many of IQO4. could pass such an examination? There was little scholarship in those days, but blessed be the New Hamiltonwl Notice the science! ' Alumnus Powell does not remember it: he was too young. In that same year, 1833, came one of the illustrations of the futility of Faculty action. In, reckoning the leading scholars of the classes for sev- enty years, Cliver A. Morse has been published as the Vale- dictorian of 1833, and David Malin as the Salutatorian. There the published record has stopped. The books of that time show that on the average for the course Oliver A. Morse had a grade of 8.7, David Malin a grade of 8.6. Oren Root having met the degree examination covering the whole course, had a grade of 8.9. 1 Si 162 THE HAJWIL TONIAN i R Ot was given the Philosophical oration and the Oren 0 - . F - lt assed a resolution that tor 1 833 this was the first hi-i1ib1r.y Efhe Faculty oi 1833 was not unlike the Faculty of later ears. l a , Y . sh - eculiar condition. On the TheClassof 1835s owsap . final degree examination Benjamin W. Dwight and James A Platt stood each 7.4. On all previous records, with- t an exception, Mr. Dwight was superior. By any iiulle of decision Mr. Dwight should have been Valedic- - J torian. The Faculty awarded it to lVlr. llatt. There was much excitement and loud protest. But the Faculty assignment stood. The ultimate result was the abolish- ment of scholarship honors from 1843 to 1854. The best I ,' . 7 holar of 1 835 by the record was B. YN . Du ight , the Y ale- sc dictorian by vote of the Faculty was James Augustus Platt. lt should be stated that with the present book-keeping such a perversion would hardly be possible. There were curious things at the other end of the scale. Of the Class of 1833, the average grade was 6, six stood below 5: seven between 5 and 6. The lowest grade was 3.9. And the man who stood 3.9 made a success in life. ln the class of 1834, the Valedictorian had a grade of 8, for the course. Grosvenor 8. Adams and Charles B. Sedgwick, both leaders afterwards in their communities, stood 7.7 and 7.6. ln 1835 the Valedictorian went to a standing of 7.4. Of twenty-eight men on the record but six graduated. The Valedictorian of 1 8 36 stood 7.9, and a degree went to a good fellow who stood 3.9. In 184o Theodore W. Dwight gained a grade of 8.2, and no liner scholar ever left the halls of Hamilton. All of which goes to show that the fellows who do not take the Valedictory, or stand even 8.6, may take courage and go for ducats and a wife. 1 HA MJL TON COLLEGE y , 63 Qballegt 71591325 g illbe football imager A cold gray day , November 1n the air , A storm of cheering rising to the sky , ' A high-pitched voice, Say l get together there l A deafening yell, the colors waving high With haggard mud-bespattered face he stands, Crouched, panting for the shock, With muscles tense , His teeth pressed tight and ,tight clinched both his hands, He hears the signals, straining every sense Thus, While the bleachers thunder out his name And noisy thousands run outside the rope, By dint of nerve he Wins a sweeter fame Than ever he himself had dared to hope. But with the Hight of half a score of years 'I 1S two to one he fades and disappears Eb: 19 in GE Q Qbbark His atmosphere is in the sacred hush Of sober meetings Where stained Windows Effulgent rays upon the purple plush And mortals are advised to pray and fast He holds h1s spine as stiff as any rail From out his glasses steady beacons shine At meeting which the Wicked often quail Although he is not nearly five feet nine He quotes the Scripture with sonorous grace Disputes he loves and fiercely can debate cast And tell to call a halt before too late A youth Who s nothing if not conscientious But given to verbosity pretentious , ,. . 4 9 9 9 9 , . . J . . . . S D u I , 9 . . 5 .S Q . And Whom he deems are Worthy he will brace, , I 1 . I J I 0 J I THE HA MIL TONIAN mhz jrlunkcr lndifferent happy, never in a g1'OUCh, He may be anywhere : upon the track Breaking the record, buried in a couch ' f ' d whack, Giving some mandolin a renzie Or may be found entirely at his ease Within a chair, cigar and latest book- which never fail to please- Two steady friends His sole companions. He can never brook The contemplation of the morrow's grind, And promptly banishes such grisly thought. Once in a while he wakens up to find With deadly terrors such a life is fraught, For flunking out is not a nice sensation, And comes from what is called procrastination. illbs 3lI5oo5rr Amid the uproar of a crashing band, White-aproned waiters running with small trays, He orders up the old familiar brand, And sips it, till a blissful golden haze Comes around the place. He lights a cigarette And looks benignly on the passing throng. It truly is most easy to forget That the exam. was difficult and long. And then he meets a company of friends And joyously proceeds to see the town. How strange it is-nobody comprehencls- They're very few who at the boozer frown. . They generously allow more rope to knowledge And smiling say, Oh, he is from the College. A I . K Qi. il it il I ,i .1 'i aa 5 l r If E: 5 2 4. W, i, , . il 1 7 Vph' N 3 'Z li ,init M. :- ,Mv ff' 4' gag :fwfr f1 l?Str9i'4 sf, 3 l ix 4? i HAMILTON COLLEGE I illbz ibobnrr Like Galileo by his lonely lamp He hunches over patiently and bohns 3 The hours speed by, his body's Filled with cramp, And yet he neither swears, complains nor groans, But, hair dishevelled, eyes inflamed and red, He keeps his dreary vigil most the night, And when he blindly totters off to bed He's got it cold. Perhaps 'twas Worth the light, But some there are who oft express a doubt, And say the cost is great, the gain is small. Withal 'tis true-the truth is sure to out: Round shoulders are coveted by all, Nor would all, e'en arrogate a key, Bleed daily the longsuffering Faculty 'S. T. K. '06, 7 'rf-4: '1:,oHNf:w, 7 Z 1 I u ---no 'ti' L I V 4 F Q i i I I I ,, ll 1 I .i 4 n i 4 v 2 I I E I ,, I I i, I 51 I I I gi I I I 1 I , i I I , I ii I li I i 1 3 I y e I l I 4 , . I 3 ii I I ll i is ii I I I 1 il l lf 1 ei , ll 2 , gg 1 1 I . I I I I 'l aw K 4 I 5 il I I i I 166 THE HAMILTONIAN Q Eton? of Gibran gram 1 90 1 would be an arduous task, el compliance with the request of the Ham Y . . literary editors of IQO5,S Hczmzlfomarz that I should write for their publication an article dwelling upon the deeds and achievements of h ' us members of the Class of IQOI, has resolved t e Vario itself into a Work fraught With mellowing pleasure, for close touch with all my loved associates of that immortal body through the medium of ' ' dd d the letters that almost everyone of them has a resse me inresponse to the circular request which I dispatched immediately upon my acceptance of the commission. As I peruse the pages of the stack of letters before me, my thoughts go back almost with homesickness, to the days when all these fellows Whose signatures now appear at the foot of business-like communications upon stationery bearing high-sounding inscriptions, were part and parcel of a care-free, joyous, half serious, half earnest crowd of boys Who had come to Hamilton College to do some- thing for themselves and for their friends and parents, and who succeeded before they finished, not only in having done themselves and those same friends and parents vast credit, in knitting themselves together by the closest ties of friendship and brotherly communion, and in having passed the most satisfactory four years which their earthly lives Will ever see, but also in having performed deeds in the name of the College, for the sake and the good of the College, which will ever remain as monuments to the Class of Iool g the men that saw and placed the Ham- ilton spirit higher than it had ever been before. This . HAT which ordinarily I have been brought into HAMILTON COLLEGE 167 is notqmere braggadocio. The records of IQOI, whether they be on the chapter house walls, in the College Gym- nasium, or in the archives of the New York State Inter- collegiate Athletic Association, or of the College itself, are open for inspection, and sustain my appeal to them to support this assertion. Now these selfsame fellows write me as principals and professors, as lawyers, scientists, advanced students and business men of high reputeg and all this within the short space of three years. The fact makes the lapse of time seem half a century, but their letters all breathe of the same devotion that signalized their college career and achievements, and they yet remain as they were, sturdy enthusiastic sons of their Alma Mater. From some of them I have been unable to hear, possibly because suf- ficient time has not gone by. Sweet, I understand, is studying medicine in Germany, Triess also. From reports I receive of them, the star of their college brilliance is on the road toward the summit of the heavens. Currie, I understand, is principal of the High School at Waterford, N. Y. Hank Keogh told me that he saw him in Albany sometime last year and that Joe looked not a whit less important and even more prosperous than in his palmy days as vender of high-priced books at the College bookstore. Abe,' Macardell I saw once or twice on my return to College to help the football team, and at that time I understood he was working in some bank in Utica. Since then I have lost sight of him altogether. Warren Mac attended the Columbia Law School for a time, and I believe he is there yet, although I confess a shame- ful lack of knowledge in regard to his whereabouts. My letter addressed to him upon the authority of the Hamil- ton Record, was returned, stamped Not found at this ad- THE HAMIL TONIAN 168 dress 'i'. Mac, however, showed his same old spirit by coming back to College during the past winter and put- ting the basket+ball team through a course of sprouts which showed immediate and effective results. The ' ' ' '- 'N h' re- Colle e ublications did their best to -express t err app S P , . . . . ciation of his efforts in this direction, but everything seems to fall short of doing justice to Mac, for his ' ' ' h' h con- sacrifice and willing eagerness in any matter w 1C cerns his friends and the things he loves. Of the friends who left ere their college course was done, Goodwin is now on the editorial staff of the Rocfzerfer Herald, is married to a charming Wife, and is doing his best to keep Jesse lVIillham straight. Goodwin also worked for a number of years on the staff of the Waferfown Smndczrd. I Henry Hull is studying law in New York City under the eagle eye of Caius Lee, 'oo, and I am not sure that he is not already admitted to the bar. The others I know not of. Churchill is professor of higher mathematics, physics and chemistry at Hoittls School at Menlo Park, Cali- fornia. I quote from the school paper,- Professor Frank N. Churchill is far ahead of anything we have had in chemistry, physics and the higher mathematics since the days of McIntosh. He is energetic and thorough in his work. Next year Churchill is to have the work of in- stalling courses in advanced physiology, physiography and geology. Since graduation, Churchill has acted asiprin- cipal of the Chaumont High School at Chaumont, N. Y., and while there he gave the star address at the McKinley memorial service. During the same year he also deliv- ered an address before the Jefferson County Teachers' As- sociation on the Study and Value of English in Grammar Grades. Later Churchill went to Owensboro, Kentucky, HA MIL TON -COLLEGE I-69 where he assumed the duties of professor of mathematics and science in the high school. During that year he de- livered an address before the High School on Glacial Lakes and Glacial Formation in Central New York. I sincere- ly hope that when he delivered all these high-sounding addresses, he wore the same boiled shirt, small green made-up bow tie and clerical coat that announced his ar- rival in chapel every Sunday morning during his college course, at precisely five minutes before the hour. Other- wise the edaect of his rotund oratory must have been sadly diminished. During the two years IQOI-IQO3, Bratt was principal of the public schools at Pocantico Hills, in Westchester County, and he is now principal of the High .School at Holland Patent, New York. Bartholomew is with the Remington Typewriter Company as salesman, having charge of the entire eastern part of the state of Connecti- cut, with New Haven as headquarters, and as he writes me a letter which is evidently dictated, I assume that H Bart is making good with the Remington people. ' Lonsdale put in a year at the Auburn Theological Sem- inary at New York City. From the tone of his letter to me, I should imagine he was going to make a pretty good minister. At any rate, his flow of eloquence has lost nothing since we knew him in College. Lonnie writes: Tis my fancy that a man could be a more ef- ficient lawyer after taking a year's work under our facul- ty. Ido not know, Lonnie, but I am afraid not. Lonsdale took a trip to Europe last summer and writes me a vivid description thereof. I cannot do justice to it without quoting in exfema, and I dare not attempt that at this time, this not being a humorous publication. Jenks, our valedictorian, is the boy that is doing stunts. I suppose you are all familiar with the fact that Jenks is ,W THE HA MIL TONJAN ance De- first lieutenant in the United States Army, Ordn partment, and is now stationed at Fort Hancock, New Jersey. He writes that, contrary to all predictions of our Hcmzflfonzmz, he is married. His wife 1S sister to our classmate Bratt. Jenks writes in his usual modest wayoin regard to himself and his doings, but.l .doinot deceiv-e myself into thinking that his duties are insignificant or his reputation small. We all felt confident that Jenks would do well, although l venture to say that we hardly expect- ed he would take up the line of work in which we see him so successfully engaged. Mintz since his graduation, has been instructor in the n 0 h Binghamiton High School in the departments of Englis ' ' ' ted El t' n The course in Elocution was inaugura and ocu io . and or anized by himself, and it has become a great fea- g ture of the school's work, so much so that its reputation b ad and has been the cause of several flatter- has gone a ro in offers from other places to Mintz. Mintz, however, S finds the attractions of his own vine and hg tree so strong that he would rather stay in Binghamton. I might mention ' ' ' l t' n also that in one of our recent interscholastic dec ama io contests Mintz's pupil carried off first honors in magnifi- cent style. I venture to predict that Mintz's fame as an ' ' d orator has suffered no decline since the days when he use to electrify our college audiences. Mintz announces that he is going to be on hand this June. We shall all be glad to see him. Jesse Millham is in the insurance business in Roches- ter and is making a lot of money. He is in all sorts of organizations in Rochester and more popular than ever. The recent fire in Rochester which destroyed the Granite Building, was a disaster to Jesse and his associates, inas- much as their offices were on the fifth Hoor of that build- lng which was completely gutted. Jesse is coaching high H.-4MfL Tofv COLLEGE , 71 school football teams and singing in fashionable church quartets, and all such things, and is as far from getting married as he Was three years ago, although, on the occa- sion of my last visit to him, I noticed that certain famil- iar photographs occupied prominent and conventional positions. A V James McKee is cashier of Richfield Springs' First National Bank, and he is also running a navigation line on some lake with an unpronounceable name near that fashionable summer resort. It Was reported that James was going to get married, and as he doesnlt say anything about it, I assume the report is true. James saves all his money and never travels by rail, always on a bicycle, therefore he never leaves Richfield Springs during the Winter time. Dan Redmond is assistant principal of the Clinton High School. Dan is, I suppose, the most popular man in the village of Clinton in spite of his Irish blood and physiognomy. Dan has had great success in coaching football and basket-ball teams, and it is creditably reported that he played in several games under an assumed name, being responsible in all those cases for the victory which his team won. Dan has studied lavv during the last two years a good deal and done a good many other things which his modesty commands me not to publish abroad. Davenport is putting in his third year at Johns Hopkins University Medical School, and is doing very Well, al- though he doesn't think so. He is seeing to it that Church, ,O2, and Barnes, 'o3, attend to business at the same institution and are not led aside by the attractions of lVIaryland's metropolis. Hicok is in the employ of the Morley Brothers Saddlery Co., at Chicago, Illinois, and seems to be doing famously. His business has car- ried him all over the West and he seems to stand high in ' YY?ZZ17k4HlYZL7Y9ALL4ZV 172 the confidence of his employers. Hicok, I maY.Sa3j: is also about to be married. I learn this from Prize. Johnson, who informed me in confidence, with the addi- h' nu tials. After grad- tional news ofhis own approac ing p . uation Prizen put in considerable time in recuperation. ' f four ears ' d needed rest after the severe strain o y His min to which it had been subjected. His letters of recom- mendation from the various members of the Faculty, all ' ' ' l h' rd f h omitted any mention of his scho ars ip reco o W om . ' d h'm a os1t1on with the in College, iinally procure 1 p Western Electric Company. Prize admits that the ' d l would not have done much good unaccompanie CttC1'S b the powerful influence which his green and innocent Y appearance brought to bear. He 1S now with the Hart SC Crouse Company of Utica, with headquarters at Chicago. His business carries him all over lllinois, lowa and Wis- consin, and Prize confesses that in this employment debate is not an elective. Bill Quinn and Sippell taught school at the Boys' Academy in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania, for two years after graduation. Since that time, Bill,' has been in Washington with the United States Civil Service Com- mission, studying law on the side. Sippell Wcllt to Chi- cago after his Mercersburg experience and is now holding down a position with the Western Electric Company as head of the lnterhouse Correspondence Department. He is in good company, there being a good many Hamilton men at that place with him. Sipp Seems to be the same old boy and glories in his invulnerability to the shafts of the love god. ' .Dingle,' Augsbury is down as instructor in mathe- matics and elocution at the Mount Vernon High School. From the' polysyllables which adorn the pages of his communication to me, I assume that he still keeps at his HAMILTON COLLEGE I73 elbow the same copy of Webster's Dictionary that spent four years wearing out the top of his desk at College. p Rickien Hatch is not far away from Dingle these days, but I believe he leans less upon Dingle than he used to do when it was necessary for ,him to get 'out a lesson in college algebra or analytics. Rickie is assistant treas- urer of the West Rockaway Land Company at Belle Har- bor, Long Island. It is creditably reported that he is making two thousand dollars a year, together with a repu- tation as an expert bowler. Rickie spent some time teaching at the Boys' Preparatory School in Clinton, and since then he has been with the above named company. He began at the bottom and worked up, and not only gives promise of being, but actually is at this time a successful business man, a fact which we all are glad to know. Rickie's future was always as dear to us as his much- loved personality. Hank Keogh has hung out his shingle as attorney and counselor at law at number 50 State street, Albany, N. Y. He is also a member of Troop B of New York State National Guard, and seems to have no difliculty in maintaining his popularity and prominence in Albany. He notes that his first year's practice netted him well over 3100 Qin large sized figuresj, and draws therefrom bright hopes for the future. Goss Stryker has been distinguishing himself in the ser- vice of Uncle Sam. Goss was too modest to record his achievements- in his letter tome, so I had to go to one of his friends for the necessary information. After restudying his mathematics, he passed the examination for the army and received his commission in October, IQOI, as of date February 2, 1901, in recognition of his previous services in the volunteer army during the Spanish war. He was attached for three months to the 11th Cavalry at Fort THE HAMIL TONIAN 174 Meyer, Virginia, until ordered to his own regiment, the 6th Cavalry, then in the Philippines.. En route he did duty temporarily at Port Columbus, Ohio, afterward .at t ue Presidio San Francisco. He sailed for the Philippines in April, I,QO2, was assigned to Troop G in May, the troop h b 'n at Cabuayo P l No superior officers being t en C1 g 1 - - Q with the troop at that time, he was placed in command ot the place and administered the affairs, civil and military, ' h l of that post with remarkable success. There was c o era there and no surgeon. He had to clean up the town, which owned six thousand inhabitants, and incidentally . . d he nursed two of his troopers, one dying. He passe through all the varied experiences of the service in that climate, was feted and banqueted by the Filipino oH'icials, .entertained at Filipino balls and courted by Filipino heir- esses,-and came out unscathed. He arrived in the United States in October last and is now stationed at Port Meade, S. D., among the Black Hills, the region where Custer met his death. He is now Commissary and quartermaster of the second squadron of his regiment, is in line for first lieutenantcy, and is coming home and to Commencement this June. We shall all be glad to see him. Marvin attended the New York Library School dur- ing the year Iool-Iooz and in the following June went to Boston as cataloger of the New England Historic and and Geneological Society for a time. Since then he has been in business with his father at 73 Federal Street, Bos- ton, Mass. Esty Stowell writes me from Columbia University upon the stationery of the Colzmzbzlz Lrzfw Re- 'UZ6'Z1J.a Estyu passed his bar examination last tall but is continuing his study in order to graduate from the law department of that University. He has been full of busi- ness since his graduation, as l know personally, and has discharged all of his duties with credit to himself and to ,JN .f'N ' 'Q L HA MIL rofv COLLEGE ,75 his friends. Esty's letter does not sound like the gay, careless youth that used to amuse dramatic clubs and foot- ball teams with his wit and antics, and I guess he is sort of growing old like the rest of us. He regrets it likewise. Jim Catlin is cashier or the First National Bank of Grand Ridge, Ill., and in that capacity has succeeded, in his own-words, in keeping the bank out of the hands of the receiver, and what is far more important, in making his cash balance at night. The man that can do those two things, particularly the latter, does not stand in need of any encouragement or assistance whatever-from us particularly who do not know anything about such things. Fred Cookinham was with the Bureau of Indian Af- fairs, Department of the Interior, at Washington, until January I, IQO2, at which time he went to New York and occupied a position in the home offices of' the Mutual Life Insurance Company until the typhoid fever laid him low, since when he has been in Utica recovering his strength and health. He hopes to be out again soon. They're a greatcrowd, and it's a creditable record they present for their first three years. May fortune smile upon each and every one of them, forever and forever! R. C. S. Drummond, '0f. 1902 O TELL you of the Class of nineteen hundred and two-its fortunes, failures, its pleasures and disappointments-in general, its history since the I I dear old Mother sent us out to struggle with our fellow men and earn bread for ourselves, I shall have totake you, gentle reader, long journeys across the continent, to the South, to the North, over the seas ll l L, l 1 l I l l l l , la ui ll I I l i l fl l l J l 1-y w J , l ll li H al 14 lt iz rl il ll El wa in li Tl lt l l l n Ma 9 l THE HAMIL TONIAN 176 Y rld. Let it suffice and into the farthest corners of the wo to write briefiy of them. . d t as the dollar in the affairs of We were small, an ye men, so we in the affairs of College during the four years lived and shared together, were a power for good, u Like this great age of vast opportunities and responsibilities- this century of centuries-fthat quartette of years was one which molded history, and we are glad to have lived and helped in its creation. The new dawn of another day then peeping over the distant hills has since broadened into the beauty of a new life-a new spirit. More men, more A ' -- ll oint to buildings, better endowments, better brains a p increasing prosperity--to expczmzon. We were thirty-three-we're thirty now-all alive and pushing forward. When Bill Slaughter assumed the rostrum that day in June and professed to have snatched aside the shroud which unveiled the future, he little h ear to the truth were some of his prognos- dreamed own ' tions The largest proportion of the class chose the tica . pedagogical profession, not from a linancial standpoint, to ' N b littled but as a matter of course, and it has not e be sure, the high standard which the Hamilton profession has always enjoyed. Last May Robert L. Weaver, Jr., began his preparation for the class of 1920. His father, the first of the class Qwith the exception, of course, of old H Pop Clark, of whom I shall write laterj to take the leap, is N Q ' ' 1- S uoit where for two years he has hlled the principa at auq , shi of the school most successfully. Hawley, after a P - year's post-graduate study on the Hill, married, and in the f llowin fall accepted the lerdership of the Drury Acad- 0 3 em at North Adams. Though supremely happy in his Y New England home, Dewey is not the man to elect ' ' 'll teaching as his life work, and I believe another year W1 find him permanently established in business. E. K. HAMILTON COLLEGE . 177 VanAllen is finishing his second year as head of the Albion High School. Warren's raise in salary last fall speaks well for his success as superintendent of the Mary Street Grammar Schools of Utica. The State Department reports in Hattering terms of the work done by Scoville in Prattsburg. This is his second year there. And Lewis in Little Falls is not far behind, for his re-election last fall speaks for itself. He is married. After a year's study abroad Dan Campbell returned to America and accepted an important position in the science department of the Rome Academy. Prin. Rev. Frank H. Clark-old 'F Pop Clark, who used to fondly speak of Polymachus and the Thuty, is now at Northbranch, Kan. Reeve is at New Rochelle and Payne teaches at Smyrna, Del. The historic Hudson is not without its share-Berry, Bishop and Mil- ler are winning praises there. Bish', bohns at New Rochelle, Bullet, Miller is showing the cadets at Mt. Pleasant, Cssining, the right road to Hamilton, and Berry is doing likewise at Chappaqua Mountain Institute, Chap- paqua. In 1 Q02-3 he was principal of the Remsen School. The medical profession will gainin Church, Slaughter, and Minor three strong, staunch adherents, men who can fight their battles unassisted, ready to kill or cure at a moment's notice and calmly claim their fees. Church is now in his second year at Johns Hopkins, Slaughter and Minor are finishing their second at P. SC S., New York. One sixth of the class turned to the church. Weid- man went to Hartford where he has continued his earn- est preparation for the ministry. ' If sincerity and earnest endeavor count for aught his first parish should count themselves lucky. Gilbert has one more year at the Gen- eral Theological Seminary, New York. His work there has been a credit to IQO2. Unrelenting, letting nothing stand in his way to the goal which beckons him, he has THE HAZIIIL TONIAN 178 C ll mi ht be there to listen orked on Would that we a g W . , , and learn when he assumes his duties as a fully-ordained ' ' h he s ent the sum- minister. Ward went to Buffalo, W ere p mer in charge of the outdoor physical department of the C A In the fall he began a four years' course in Y. M. . . the Auburn Seminary. lmbibed with and living in that s irit which dominated his college days and advanced him P . . . . with such astounding rapidity from the big, boisterous ' l -h's success is Freshman to the polished, powerfu man 1 assured. ,Charlie Frear passed the year tollowing his d ' ecu erating from the unfortunate illness in gra uation r p which his hard work had culminated, occasionally assum- his home. ln the summer of e married and moved to Cooperstown Junction, ing one of the pulpits at IQO3 h Where he has since served an appreciative parish. The call of the pulpit sounded to one other, and in the fall of Iooz Webster began his linal preparation for Chris- ' f New tian Work in the Union Theological Seminary o York. Within an incredibly short time his power and ability were recognized, and from that moment his advance- ment has been rapid. He is the chief organist, and as for his seminary Work, reports are not Hattering, they are modest. To Web and his live classmates we wish suc- cess and God speed. . Six men chose the law-Drummond, Harwood, Moody, Signor, Wood and Van Allen. The first and last are studying in Albany, Harwood with Mead in New York, t Moody in his native town, Binghamton, VVood and Signor at the Buffalo Law School. Nelse has kept in close touch with college afairs-he is loyally Hamiltonian if man ever Was. Charlie Signor tries the bar in une and will be admitted. All of them should make good for the Su- preme Cnourts. The time for their inHuence to be felt is not yet ripe. The college and class are waiting expectantly. N1 K HAMIL TON COLLEGE 179 It only remains to speak briefly of our business men. Early in the summer of 1902 Butler went to Chicago to begin work with the North Western Electrical Co. His advancement has begun, so watch for the announcement of his engagement. Collins spent his first year out of col- lege teaching in a Connecticut State private school. Last fall he accepted a position with the New York and New Jersey Telephone Co., and is now Evening Manager of the Brooklyn Exchanges. As for the writer, an enjoyable year in the Mt. Pleasant Military Academy, Ossining-on-Hudson, led to a business opening in New York with the L. Schepp Co. In Gcto- ber last he assumed the managership of the Canadian branch at Toronto and in the spring received a commis- sion for the company to Cuba and the Trinidad Islands. Should the foregoing notes err in any respect it is because it was impossible to communicate with all the members of the class. I am pleased to report that many have expressed their intentions of being on the Hill in June. To those of the class who can not be there, we extend our regrets and wish them a successful year. When that dear old Boom-jig-boom is sounded may its cheer- ing notes reach those who are absent, reminding them of our Mother whose arms are ever warm, that they still will be her boys. D. H. Naylor, ,02. 1903 O WRITE an account of the Class of 1903 since E graduation is comparatively easy, for the class is but a year-old infant in the world, and as yet i n there isn't much to say. One fall day in ,QQ three score unsophisticated boys climbed College Hill, and one June morning four years later two score of I 0 THE HAMIL TONIAN these Same boys-and boys they will always be--passed down the Hill to face the cold unknown world outside Alma Mater's arms. In college IQO3 WHS 21 remarkable l s Dud's diatribes and PreXy's pigs were as c as . chaff before it. It will be remembered as a class for its achievements on gridiron, track, and f1ClCl,l11 the class- ' ' D.T.C. d room on the stage, and in debating halls, for. an 7 Senior Clubs, and not only for its active bodies and sound minds, but also for its loyal hearts. But they are out of college now, and the question is, What are they doing? Allbright is out in Auburn-he's in the seminary there. The religion of the class is mainly bunched in him and five others. Of these Putnam, Stuart, and Hunter are also at Auburn. Put is there some of the time, Stuart is connected with the Hebrew Depart- ment, and Hjoen is right there. All are hard at work. Busch is on the top Hoor of a dormitory down at Prince ton and Foreman is trying to study theology in New York. These six men are going to take charge of the class next June, and preach about the folly of the past, the uncertainty of the future, and enjoy themselves in the present. Arthur is a coal magnate and Becker is in a Neighbor- hood House in New York in a responsible position. Blakely and Mills are pedagogues in New Jersey. Eleven Of.IQO3 are engaged in the noble employment of enlight- enmg the minds of the young and setting their feet in the paths- wherein they should go. Carmer is doling out wis- dom in Pennsylvania and Chapman is Proff, in a mining town of the same state. Carter is drawing pay down in Tenn., and Courtenay is out in Connecticut. Durkee, Grant, Lomber, Morris, and Perry are revolutionizing teaching in various schools of New York State. How long these fellows are going to follow teaching no one, HAMILTON COLLEGE I I not even themselves, know No doubt their pupils wish they would quit it soon Burgess heads the list of lawyers He and Mangan are studying in oflices at their respective homes Harkness, LeMunyan, and Youker are in New York Law School, and Elihu 1S up at Harvard. We have such implicit conii- dence in these that we should be willing to trust them with all we have-for it isn't much. Kid Childs is in a sanitarium for a job and his health, Huff is working at home and Croft is learning the felting business in Broome county. Jones and DeVotie are two of the business men of the class, and are employed in the metropolis. Jones is sprinting right along and Bunk is surely in something westernf' We'll hear from these later. Barnes is the first M. D. we meet. Owens and he are at Johns Hopkins. Pat doesn't study any more than he used to Qfor he can't3u, and Owens still puts up a good article of bluff Harper and Miller are in P. Sc S., Harper's g's still bother him-grinding and girls, and George is still overwhelmed with work. All can be assured that these have a future before them, and their careful avoidance is to be recommended, for they may have a stock of pills about them. Keith is over in Germany with his fellowship and is enjoying everything, work most of all. Lambert is tack- ling calfskins in a tannery up state and Brick Landers is wandering around Boston ff Techf, Maxwell was always a quiet sort of a fellow, never saying very much. He is rumored to be at home working. Davy Peet is kick- ing Brooklyn around-we mean, kicking around Brook- lyn-and making gains. Smelzer is out in the Windy City and working up fast. Tate is helping to run a newspaper and Tuthill is in the life insurance business. THE HAMIL TONIAN 182, r i This Compktes the liS'C. Of great deeds done there are none but the story is replete with promises of great things to Come. As the years roll around, the Class of IQO3 ' - ' ' the Shrine upon the will make its regular pilgrimage tO . Hill, and lay before it all that these years may bring. S. B. Blakey, '03 Q ffflzmutp DARK eyes, deep eyes, true eyes- Eyes that shine with purity- Eyes that thrall, enchant, but shame mel Hazel eyes, alight with fun, Brimming full with mirth and mischief, Leaving, though, within the heart, Remembrance sweet of sympathy! Eyes that search my very soul- Waiting, kind, till some clean page Turned, may meet the dear inspectors! The eyes whereof my dreams do find me Drowning in a limpid depth Withal, so clear and warm,-resistless, That dying, never would l choose to live! Oh, that all past years were such That every letter hewn by life Were traced so beautiful and clear That even thou mightst read undimmed,-- That every course my bark hath shaped Were steered beneath thy guiding light, . . . , Bright eyes-Bright eyes, which glowing, haunt me . Montague White, '04. HAMIL TON' COLLEGE 15:3 what glfarultp Trask meet LL the talent was there, from PreX legrof - to Martin le pefzr. It was PreX's duty to fire - the pistol. Martin stood at the finish with the - 3 water bottle. - Along the track were ranged the fair friends of the contestants. It was evident even to a novice at the games that among the spectators F' Square was the favor- ite. Hank White was a poor second in the betting. Bugs and Little Greekn were given long odds. Bib was a rank outsider. Bill Squires was consid- ered by many as a dark horse. You see, Bill had little form or speed, but plenty of wind. Many believed that it would tell in the long run. Stink, as clerk of the course, assigned the places. As the others held that Square was the fastest he was given the outside track. Bugs was to take the pole, but only after a prolonged and bitter address by Little Greek, who opposed it on the ground that he was inel- igible to run, as in the old Olympic games only full- blooded Greeks were allowed to compete. Little Greek was overruled, and after a few uncomplimentary remarks took his place next to Square just then it developed that they had chosen no judges. Bill Shep proposed the remainder of the Faculty. At this Square said there wasn't a man on the Faculty he would believe under oath, and he for one would be blanked if he would place himself at the mercy of any schoolboys. Besides, he thought there wasn't much need of running the race, for he had it cinched anyway. Look at those legs, they were the bestin the State of Missouri in their day. My brother Elihu says I am all right yet. 'E li 'l lf 'ri ll H jj vi THE HAIVIILTONIAN x i j, , V ll 1 y , l 1 . lil l, il l ill ll ji ll ui ljj l i lj: 4 li 1 l 184 Bib said he wasnit in favor of having the Faculty judge that race. lf they couldn't appreciate Lucy they didn't know enough to judge a trial of speed. After much argument it was finally decided that Pretty and Ward should act as judges. l Are you ready? came the voice of Prexf' Get Q11 ygur marks, get set. Time out! yelled Hank, l'd like to appeal to you as college men to do the square thing by me in this race. l ainlt very strong and five yards handicap wouldn't go bad. If you Won't do it this ll time, l'll take good care that you do it next time. I disqualify you for talking disrespectfully to an official, lj cries U Prexf' Hankf' in tears, was led off the track by his backers. Seeing that the disturbing element in this ,jf transaction has been removed to the farther precincts, QQ, said Bill, let's proceed to businessf, This time the gun was fired and the runners sprang for- ward, fell into a pace of 1,999 centimeters a minute, and are still at this speed for aught we know, though we hope that they will come out of it in the near future. ill ' ill ill 1 ill EJIDST thou ne'er consider how pleasant it would be, if for Hunks H made by you, all bloods were given thee. V Qidst thou ne'er consider how pleasant it would be, if all the letters sent you should enclose a ff V 'Q Didst thou ne'er consider how pleasant it would be, Not to have with your name the title C. O. D. I, E?-idstlfhou ne'erKconsider how pleasant it would be, ij i eac girl you asked should quickly answer Ouif' jl H. Harvey Har-wood, '05. ffl 1 llll lj nl M...-l llll il v HAMILTON COLLEGE 185 Q iieminisceucz URING my Sophomore year I had a sweetheart in Houghton Seminary. This made me sensi- tive to all news about the interests of that insti- tution, and I not only heard many rumors, but 9 VC 1 Joao X 'ww I sometimes misunderstood them. Among other reports that came to my ears was the story that on a cer- tain evening in the month of June the Seniorswere com- ing to the College Observatory to have a look at the stars through the telescope. , I still had sense enough to consider the story as not abso- lutely credible, but after watching the highway a long time I saw two hacks drive up and disgorge their loads of passengers at the Observatory door. I staid behind an evergreen until the last skirted figure had climbed the steps and then hastened away to assemble a party of my classmates to give them a serenade. This required quite a little time, and during my absence there occurred an incident which was the greatest sensa- tion of Dr. Peters' life. Some scallawag of a student fwith far less worthy feelings than my ownj had stealthily made his way to-the top of the dome and clapped a hat box over the end of the telescope. It was credibly reported that after the old Doctor had recovered from his first impression that the judgment day had come, he spoke many words that are not written in the observations which he recorded for the government. A It was just at the close of this excitement that I assem- bled my singers and inaugurated the serenade. There were many excellent voices in the crowd and the music was anything but bad. We gave them a large part of the repertoire of that far-off age. With our faces Hooded with 186 THE HAJWIL TONIAN on and our hearts thump- the light of that brilliant June m0 ing at the thought of the near presence of those angels, we sang Stars of the Summer Nightf, The Pfemest Girl I Ever Sawf' Little Brown Jug, and were right in the middle of Come Where My Love Lies Dreamingf, d d th visitors the door of the Gbservatory opene an e when filed out. And then there occurr g i . - these su osed females began climbing into the hacks, PP they threw-off their skirts-and disclosed to our aston- ished view eight pairs of trousers. For several consecutive seconds we stood in speechless amazement until we clearly saw that the -yoke was on us, ed a reat mystery For, just as and then several observations were made by some very dis- tinguished gentlemen which made an indelible impres- sion on my vacant mind. Thunderl exclaimed Prof. Jacob Arthur Jones, D.D., of Colgate University. Jack, you darned fool l shrieked Rev. Edward Ever- ett Bacon. I always did say, Goss, 'that you were a pseudo Goss- pill, said -the Honorable Oliver Brnesti Branch. Let's kill him l H coldly remarked the Rev. VVilliam DeLoss Love, Ph.D. But Johnny O'Brien took my arm and led me away to my room, where other troubles awaited me, for many kind friends had assembled to do me honor. Among them was the only Freshman in my fraternity, the Rev. Charles Carrol Hemenway, D.D., of Glasgow University, Missouri. He had many old scores which he had been waiting to pay, and Providence had at last favored him with a golden opportunity and a silver instrument- by which l mean his laugh. lt was altogether his own --original, unique, inimitable, and had frequently been HAMILTON COLLEGE 187 heard in New York Mills, Deansville and Vernon Center at the same moment. When he entered the room he tuned it up. Ha-ha-ha-ha-ha-ha l Ho-ho-ho-ho-ho-ho l After he had exhausted these two vowel sounds he took up the others: He, hi, hu, and sometimes w and y! There was only one thing I could say, and I said that with supreme confidence in its utter finality: Fresh! Fresh ! Fresh l Cfzdrles Frederzb Goff, '7j. r 'illlbe ibehwtrian Qllluh. ' OR the women, exclaimed Munger, bursting - into a convulsive fit of laughter, as he threw an armful of bread and butter sandwiches into the corner seat of the dingy waiting-room. T The other three students, Stowell, Carter, and McIntyre, joined heartily in the laughter as the humor- ousness of the situation dawned upon them. They had left the train which had been stalled for three hours at Alder Creek, in search of provision for themselves and for the hungry women on board. Returning, they found it gone, women and all, and they themselves left' in that snow-buried and desolate region, with no hope of a train for at least twenty-four hours. All for the women, yelled Munger again, and the four again joined in another laugh, on themselves. Someone-let his name never be mentioned-suggested walking to Boonville, seven miles distant, the first stop of ,gg THE HA MIL TONJAN the Musical Clubs on their northern trip. The suggestion met with approval and the quartette started. The papers of 'the surrounding country have fully described the terrible experiences of those four college students during the two hours and a half in which they f ht snow and intense cold between Alder Creek and oug Boonville. Faces, noses and ears were frozen stiff. But at last they reached the town. Exhausted and dazed by ' ' h dressin the extreme exertion, they staggered into t e g room of the Opera House, where the entertainment had been going on for over an hour. Munger laboriously ' ' ll' h l made his way to a chair by the stove, and fa ing e p- lessly into it, exclaimed, For the women! and the other three laughingly echoed, For the women. HAMIL TON COLLEGE I my meersubaum WHEN the campus is fair in the springtime And the twilight fades out from the west, Though my meerschaum and muse fail to rhyme, The meerschaum shall please me the best. For oft when Calliope's spinning Her weavings of rhythm and meter, An epic or lyric be giving, I've found my old meerschaum far sweeter. There's delight in a bright foaming stein, And a charm in the sweet Cuban weed. Let the topers extol their rare wine- My meerschaum shall fill every need. When cuts become woefully few Its fragrance will lull all my care. Though dreaded exams. rise to view, My meerschaum will bring visions fair. Let the Faculty frown as they may And zeros come thronging galore. My meerschaum shall brighten the day, At its shrine I will bow ever more. A man of his millions may boast, And fashion her gay devotees, The rose-colored meerschaum, I'll toast Its enchantment-care, ill-boding, flees. No Hagon of beer, brightly gleaming, Though precious indeed be its. brew, Let joy from its lustre be streaming, To the meerschaum I'll ever be true. Russel! Richardson, '05, 190 THE HAMIL TONIAN wball an an S T LACKED two minutes of twenty-five minutes e in their seats. Ward U of nine. The students wer and Post were the only members of the Faculty in their apportioned places. What was to be done? Prex had not come and some one had to take charge of the morning exercises. There was . T - a nervous feeling in the region of the Faculty seats. lXe1- d d ther of the two had ever stood on that platform an gaze into the eyes of the students since they had entered the role of instructor. Harry leaned over and whispered in Martin's ear. Martin paled and glanced anxiously toward the Chapel door. No escape. The palor spread. You ve been in this Faculty longer than l have, said Harry, and it's up to you this morning. H I can't, answered Martin, I don't dare. Besides, you're bigger than I amf, A pause ensued. Harry was reaching for argu- . ,,, ments. A moment of suspense and he had it. lxfiflftlll r 4' Well F was the answer. My shoes aren't shined, you must do it. The sword had fallen and Nlartin was caught. Trembling he arose, took off his 'overcoat and half of his undercoat and pattered up the steps to the plat- form. There was silence for a few minutes, during which some thought that a psalm was being read. Nlartin looked up, his mouth moved, and some one heard faintly Hymn 87.', The word was passed back to the Sophomores and Freshmen and the hymn was sung. Then came the time for the prayer, the students were in their seats with heads bowed. Silence. There will be a meeting of the Ath- letic Association this noon. Silence again. Amen, and Martin was off the platform and into his coat before anyone realized that the exercises were over. Thereafter for the rest of the term Martin and Harry used their Chapel cuts to the full limit. i X, rw ,fi 4 f Zi fxfkf . A,,,f.Qf ,.-me QA 2 YHE HAMILTONIAN I9 Zbamtltnu ilibirtpfjftm Esate Qgn NE who has not been able to keep in very close touch with the College which he loves, when y asked to write concerning it, naturally turns F alun, - toward the period of his own residence. Ham- A ilton College to me means what it was when I was a student there. Among those who were conspicu- ous in those days I can mention but a few in this article.- . ' H Samuel W. Fisher was then President. e was a man of undoubted strength of character, and of great abilty as l' ' I a preacher of the Old School. If he were 1v1ng now do not believe that he would preach the same kind of sermons that he did then, for the world has moved, and he would have moved with it. One test of preaching is the ease with which it may be rememembered, and I re- member the sermons of President Fisher as those of few preachers whom I have 'ever heard. I think he must have been one of the really great preachers of his time. He was stronger in the pulpit than as a teacher, but that was not surprising, for he had had no training for the professor's chair. He gave to our class but a single term, and that a broken one. If he had had a fairer chance he might have done more for us. My most vivid recollec- tion of President Fisher is of his speed as a runner, of which I learned one night when he came out to scatter the Sophomores who were bent on some mischief. I had just entered College and though a Sophomore, was ex- tremely fresh. Several of us were dodging around South College when some one cried, There comes PreX. We scattered in every direction, but he made toward me with almost incredible speed. I ran for dear life, and, fortunately,'evaded a wire fence which I did not know, 1 HA MIL TON COLLEGE ,gg but which caught him and held him while I escaped. If President Fisher had been as strong in his philosophy as he was nimble on his feet few colleges in the land would have surpassed Hamilton in that department. A One of the professors whom I have always fondly re- membered was Professor Root, father of the present Prof. Root. I never knew much about mathematics, but when I presented myself for examination in his department he happened to choose for me about the only subject con- cerning which I really knew anything. After the exam- ination, in a very kind manner he asked me if I liked mathematics. I told him that I did not. The Professor made no reply, but throughout my whole course seldom called on me for a recitation, and I think that he was right. With the preparation which I had had it would have been impossible for me to have done much in that department. But I always felt that his eyes were upon me, and that if I ever annoyed him in the least he would crush me in an instant. What a magnificent old Roman he was. I verily believe that a stronger man never held a chair at Hamilton. His strength was equalled bylhis self-efacement and modesty. He was one of the men whose influence was worth quite as much as his instruc- 121011. Professor 'lVIcHarg was in the department of Latin. I have been told that he is the only one 'of the professors of that time who is still living. He was not appreciated by the average college boy, who thought of recitation more as an opportunity for disturbing the over-cautious Professor than of adding to his own knowledge of Latin. Late in my course I came to understand the Professor better, and found that he was worthy of greater recogni- tion than he had received. One Sunday evening after a meeting on the Hill, he asked me if he might go down 194 THE HAMILTONIAN t n with 'me where I was then rooming. I was glad to ow have him do so, but told him that I had a sled, was 1n- ' ' ith me It tending to slide down, and asked him to go W . was a ainst the rules of the College to slide on the walk. 3 He hesitated a moment and then said, 4' Well, I never was I 'll o with ou Soon in favor of that law, I think W1 g y . after we had started, however, he spoke very softly to me, in I suppose it isn't necessary for us to go very say g, D fast. He was not afraid of the College law, but he was afraid of the turn on the lower hill. Of Professor North there is no need that I should speak. f me is dear to all the sons of Hamilton, and he has is a so lately departed that we have hardly ceased our services- of memorial. I have always felt that the greatest man that I ever knew at Hamilton was Professor Upson. Professor North ' ' l e Greek in was the most unique and beautiful sou , a pur - the midst of the harder conditions of a new country and somewhat hostile environment, but Professor Upson was a a typical American, alive to all the influences which, in ' ' ' h h d the those days, were moulding American life. I ave a rivile e of being under some of the greatest teachers in P g the English-speaking world. I studied theology under ' W'll' Wallace Park at Andover, and philosophy under 1 1am at Oxford in England, but Professor Upson equalled any man I have ever known in the power of inspiring his stu- dents with his own ideals and enthusiasm. His was the strongest influence in the College in our time. No man ever better understood the student community, or was 'more successful in any department of instruction. How . . h deftly he would humble those of us who imagined t at they were already accomplished oratorsl I went to Ham- ilton with the foolish idea that I possessed special gifts in public speaking. When I had finished my first declama- I HAMILTON COLLEGE 195 tion I was conceited enough to imagine that I should re- ceive some extraordinary compliment. Instead, however, he greeted me with these words, into which he put all the drawl and sarcasm that he could command: Where in the world did you get that horrible old Methodistical tone P It was a hard blast at the time, but one of the best lessons that I ever received. , Professor Evans held the chair of Law, and in addition taught the fellows French. He was a curious character, not very sympathetic with the conditions which were then prevailing at Clinton. He once said to one of my friends: I have the cheek to grant any request which you have the cheek to make. He had represented the American Government in Paris, and there was a touch of the Parisian about his manner although not about his ap- pearance. With his feet in bandages for gout, he looked more like the legendary John Bull than like a French- man. He filled a pretty large place in the Hamilton of those days. The one character who will be most vividly, remem- bered was old Pete. I suppose he has some worthy suc- cessor, but it seems as if the mould must have been broken when he was born. I can hardly imagine another such a character as he. One day President Fisher was standing on the steps of North College and some fellows poured a pail of water over his 'new silk hat. He summond Peter and told him to go and find the of- fenders, and Pete went through the halls crying out: Go to your rooms, boys, I'm looking for you. ' At another time some Sophomores were playing cards in one of the rooms, and one of them said to him as he came in carry- ing water, as it had to be carried in the days before there was a water supply: Pete, where are you going Wh,CI1 you die P In his squeaky voice he answered, O, IH1 196 , THE HAMIL TONIAN ' to hell sir ' The fellow made a mistake in pur- going , . suing his inquiry, for when he asked further: What are you going to do when you get there ? Pete answered ' H He instantly, O, l'll carry water for the Sophomores. made our beds, swept our rooms, carried the water, and l 'd d more amusement for the whole college than al provi eg the shows and entertainments that ever came to Clinton combined. Most of the men of that time in my opinion were not the equals of those who have succeeded them, but I doubt if Hamilton, or any other college, will ever have abler d- men or more successful professors than Oren Root, E ward North and Anson Upson. The atmosphere of a lle e does quite as much for its students as the teaching, co g and the atmosphere of Hamilton in the later sixties was, on the whole, singularly helpful. There were induences and customs which were galling in the extreme, and which make it hard for many to look back with satisfac- tion to their college days, but those I believe have entire- ly passed. In the retrospect it is far more satisfying to re- member and emphasize the things which were worthy of the college than those which were unworthy. When earlier history of New York State is written, there is little room to doubt th most potent of all the civilizing influences in that part ' ' h ld of the state which lies West of Albany came from t e o College among the poplars on the Hill. at it will be found that the HA MJL TON COLLEGE I jfair Zfaamiltcm Firm is our loyalty. Bright Hamilton We'll sing. Thine be prosperity. Thy praises long shall ring And Hoat in silver strain Where'er true sons shall live. Splendid shall be thy reign, A prouder glory give ' To happy memory ' That crowns and Wreathes thy brow. Our college day shall flee Beyond our ken. E'en now The sad farewell is near, That brings the parting Word. Our note of love, strong, clear And pure shall still be heard. Devoted thou has been, A mother to our need 5 Faithful We'll be again, Thy fortune strive to speed. 0 when fleet years have gone Then may thy star be bright, Truth in its beauty dawn O'er thee in fairer light. o Russell Richardson, '05, I98 THE HAMILTONIAN Ein gnu Qihet ibm Tlibis? ' OOD-MORNING, Pete. I see the laps put another Russian battleship out of business yes- - terda .U ' ' I . i gh, they did, did they? I suppose you think thim laps is goin' to lick the Roosians aisy, don't you? Well, they ain't, as long as France an, Im rer Willyum says they won't. Now, there's a mon for P b He's Dutch but he's bold enough to be you, me ye. , Irish. The other day he wrote a letter to King Edward of England an' he says in it, says he: 'See here, me foine ame-cock, I understand as how you re goin' to help S thim laps lick the Roosians. You're nuthin' but a domn ' ' ht Mikaydo anyhow,' sez he, ' an I want to tell you rig here that I'm goin' to stand by me frind, the Imprer Nicholas. If I find you sendin' ony of your red-legged throops er battleships er torpaydo boats around into aistern waters I'm goin' to take a hand in the game meself. Put that in yer pipe an' smoke it,' sez he. An' Edward b k d down ou bet. Next day the papers came out ac e , y with a long story about how England an, France was patchin' up their differences, but you can bet thim English won't stand by their bargain. . They're as bad haythens as the laps theylre shinin' up to so hard. Why, what makes England an' the laps so frindly, anyhow? Ain't it becuz the laps was in sympathy with the British whin they was oppressin' and murderin' the poor Bores down in Afriky? Anyhow, Ameriky ain't frindly to the laps. Whin we took the Philippines from Spain it was our ' manifest destiny to benivolently accetulate thim, but we ainit goin' to stand by an' see thim barbarous laps do the same to the Chinayse. No, sir! HA MIL TON COLLEGE ,99 Do you have the face to ask me why we shud be frind- ly to Roosia? Didnlt Roosia help us in the Civil War an' didn't she kape of England an' the rest of the furin' powers whin we was havin' our little doin's with Spain? Why, all thim English is lookin' fer is to gitrevenge on Roosia for the battle of Waterloo anyhow., An' the Japs are the most haythenish people on the globe. They ain't civilized at all. Why, they sneaked aroundan' blew up the Roosian battleships at Port Arthur whin they wasn't lookin'. Its the same thing the English did with the Bores. Now the British Ambassador in Washington has been doin' thraitorus tricks to us all the time an' you say we're goin' to help the Japs. No sir, we ain't. I'm goin' to see you yet, me bye, with a gun on your shoulder startin' out to lick thim thraitorus British. I I ' Roosia has got more men than the Japs an' the Siber- ian railroad is goin' to help her git them to the sate of war in a hurry. There won't be much doin' till next summer, but whin Imprer Nicholas does get movin' the Japs an' the English is goin, to hear somethin' drop. No, I ain't predijuced, an' I ain't fer Roosia just becuz I'm .Irish an' want to see the English an' their frinds git licked, but becuz Roosia is a highly civilized nation fight- in' fer her inalient rights, an' I want to see her lick them haythenish Japs. She'll do it, too. But, anyhow, .me bye, don't be a Mikaydo, don't be a Mikaydo. 200 THE HAMIL TONIAN F Q gust Emhmge I HALF-DQZEN Sophomores were coming down - the Hill, late one afternoon a few years ago, and as they sang, the tramp, tramp of their feet on the board-walk marked the time of the song. Farther down, four Freshmen looked up from their work on one of the tennis courts and said things - to themselves. Then they gripped the handles of their hoes with a tighter clasp, and renewed their task with greater vigor. That it is a umucker trick to rub it in on such an occasion every one knows-except a Sophomore. With hearty encouragements, such as Pretty work, slimers, Bohn in, Freshmenf' the crowd passed on down the Hill and out of sight. For several minutes nothing could be heard but the click, click of the hoes, mingled now and then by a louder, more pronounced stroke as some Freshman struck a more 'particularly obstinate tuft of grass. Suddenly Runt dropped his hoe and took ' ld out his watch. It was half-past five, and he felt he cou compromise his injured feelings and his sense of duty. So he picked up a clod and cleverly lifted the cap off Wing's head. Fm going to quit, he said. If those duffers can't appreciate a fellow's efforts to do a good stunt, they can try their own hand at it. And he went on into the fraternity house. The other three worked slowly, but with patience, until the sound of the dinner bell relieved them. Runt passed rather a disagreeable evening. He was sore, there was no getting around it. To have to work, and then to be horsed about it, went a little hard. And then, too, it had been going that way all year, and he was HA MIL TON COLLEGE 20, tired of being a F reshman, tired of doing every one's work, and hearing every one's censure. He was naturally of a somewhat belligerent nature, and this disposition often urged him to resist some of the indignities thrust upon him. In Wing's heart only did he strike a responsive chord, the other two always remarked, Freshmen have to stand it,,' and gracefully submitted. And so Runt was sore that evening. He bohned out his work forgthe morrow, scarcely ever raising his eyes from the book. Bedtime comes early for F reshmen-very early, and promptly at ten o'clock Wing, clad in pink pajamas and slippers, passed into his bedroom. In about two minutes he came running out, bringing to Wing the newsithat there was about a pound of salt in his bed. Then Wing investigated, and found that he was also supplied with a liberal pile. Just then the door opened, and the other two Freshmen came in, to complain of the same trick. just why salt and Freshmen were to be thought of in the same connection was a question that Sophomores could best answer. A heated discussion followed. There was very little to be said, but it was soon decided that they must take revenge. We might pluck those two fellows in South, sug- gested Runtf' They're over there alone, and we could go in and 'rough-house' them a little. Four against two-not very great odds, especially when the two are acting on the defensive, but the four were desperate. Sweaters and old clothes were soon put on, and the four men passed silently and quickly into the night. i lt was dark-cloudy and no moon, and so as they hurried past the Chapel they almost ran into a man before they saw him. But no sooner had every one sa1d. l-lellol than Runt was speaking in a firm but quiet voice: VVS THE HA MIL TONIAN 202 were just coming to see you, old man. Better come along with us. The Sophomore looked hurriedly around, peered out through the darkness, listened intently, and complied. While the other two men guarded the prisoner, Wing and Runt walked behind and discussed the best way of dealing with him. A They salted us down, said Wing 5 let's freshen him up in the clear waters of the old Oriskanyf' Thereupon the captive was urged to quicken his pace, and in about ten minutes they reached the bridge. Runt him in from the bridge, but the more wanted to heave conservative element won, and with some difiiculty they persuaded him to walk out into the stream. Then the Freshmen divided forces, and with two on each bank, they followed slowly along with him, almost to the power house. Along the way, convinced by a few stones judi- ciously thrown, he interspersed his entertainment with a few select songs. Away down the creek they helped him out, shivering and wet, and bade him a hearty good-night. A quarter of an hour later four panting Freshmen burst into the dormitory and hurried off to their rooms. Up on the top floor, Wing and Runt dropped on a win- dow seat and began to undress themselves. Do you know, Wing said, after a pause, salting our beds was the best thing those Sophomores could have done to help us stir up those other two fellows P H s - Yes, answered Runt, as he pulled his sweater over his head, but I wouldn,t say too much about it in the morning. I ' Why P Because, he continued, his head covered with the sweater, I did it! T ' 4 HAMILTON COLLEGE 203 Q 1Btnmt5z Out of the great night's stillness, In a moment of fitful sleep, Come the Words of her last short illness, Into the room they creep. And he wakes and stares at the ceiling, As he hears the promise anew, Out of her own lips stealing: ' Dear, I will come for you. Mystical, fragrant, tender, Her presence around him glows, And his heart and his soul surrender To the scent of her Hlower, the rose. For it's O, he's been waiting, Waiting The end of the ache and the strife, Waiting for her, and hating The irk of a broken life. But the Wearisome night is ended, And the ache is over and done, And black Fate flees offended To find that his course is run. And her breath comes nearer and nearer, And Whispers, You've lived it through, The day that shall be is clearer- , Dear, I have come for you. ' , S. T. K., '06. 'THE HAMIL TONIAN, 204 Robert: Q Elebautasp T WAS hidden away in the garret of the old l my mansion. High up one Washington Heights, it the ancient landmark overlooked the hustling 'i river and the new streets that have begun to push their way across the old lawns and gardens. Who was the original owner of this place, we could never definitely ascertain. But it is not in connection with the mansion that we are interested, but in a manuscript that was brought out of the garret. Dusty and crumbling with age, it was scarcely legible. Parts of it, in fact nearly all of the pages had disappeared. The great body of the book was missing, but a few of its finely written leaves yet remained, and from them we culled a curious old-fashioned tale, told in dramatic form, of events and people that have long been forgotten. The chief characters represented, so far as we could judge, consisted of the man around whom the story is laid-a Knight of England by the name of Robert, his sweet wife, Mary, and an old, hoary-headed, broken man, who seems to have been a sort of forerunner of evil. The first few pages were missing, but we take up the story at the .point where Robert and Mary have just been wedded : ROBERT : Now with this ring I take thee, sweet, A ' To be my lawful wedded wife. And here I swear, and swear right faithfully, To love thee, Mary, and but thee alone. In life and death to cherish thee, I Through joy, through pain, e'en to the grave I swear I'll go with thee. My sweet Rosemary, through our earthly life Y n HAMIL 70N COLLEGE 205 I'll love thee. Death himself shall fail Before my faith. So, hand in hand, We'll go-a pair of faithful lovers. MARY: Swear once again! ROBERT! With this, my knightly troth And Word, I swear it. The heavens and God, himself, above, Bear Witness that I swear it. IVIARY: I trust thee, and I promise thee To be thy faithful, loving spouse. To honor thee, and in my turn To do thy will. So let it be. IiThey clasp hana's.iI ROBERT: Then come, my love. I:Hana' in hana' they tarn ana' ga into the house. Music, at first light anc! changing, is heara' in the distance, then the saanci hecanies fwila' and heafvy ana' a shadow passes thrice across the land- scape. The ala' nian rises, looks after the retreat- ing pair, ana' shaking his heaa' sorrafwfaihf, passes eat, saying : But pain shall follow joy, and care Shall come apace. Then, love, bewareil At this point, the story goes on, telling of the happy life of the wedded couple, and their great faith and trust in one another. But trials begin to come, the crops fail, plagues fall upon the people, and they, turning against Mary, who was of foreign birth, demand her execution as a witch. Robert sturdily opposes them. In this crisis, Gwynne, a discarded lover of Robert, fills his mind with suspicions concerning the fidelity of his wife. In a great rage, Robert goes to her, and accuses her wildly of betraying his love. Mary is too overcome with grief at his lack of confidence to answer him, furiously Robert smites her to the ground, and dead and dishonored she is casttoutg Robert then engages himself to marry Gwynne, who was of the same people, and affairs appear to grow zo IHE HAMIL TONIAN brighter at once. The fields are fruitful, the plagues cease, and the people rejoice at the rightful destruction of the witch. Robert and Gwynne are married, and on the nuptial day repair to his castle in Fragenstorn Moor. So much we can glean from the pages remaining. Then follows a blank, and we find Robert alone in his chamber, confounded with the proof of Gwynne's treachery as re-. vealed to him in a dream. I-Ie calls Gwynne before him, and accuses her of duplicity. She coolly admits it, and claims his protection as his first love. GWYNNE: Yes, I'll admit' it. Granted that. Yet stay thy hand. Gnce thou loved'st me As thou hast her. And thee I loved. But thou didst let this hateful one Steal in betwixt ourselves. I:R0bert starts ap angribnzl Yet hold. Thou know'st I am thy rightful love, And love thee, as no mother loves. Forgive my fault. Condone my sin. Let love be ours as once before. l:R0bert is irresolateil Dost thou want love? Then take mine own. I pledge thee faith-all, all my heart. I give my very life to thee. VOICE : Robert, thy vow! fRobert starts ana' sinks back, shakenl ROBERT! How like her voice 1 GWYNN12: I heard no sound. 'Twas but the sighing of the wind. Wilt thou forgive? ROBERT: I would forgive thee, Gwynne, I do Forgive thy Wrong. Thou art my bride I Izffpparitien mf tbe murdered Mary appears at tbe entrance to tbe cbamber. She smiles and beckons to Robert. He starts fearfulbf up, in terrible amazementil ROBERT : My wife ! My wife! HAMILTON COLLEGE 20 GWYNNE: Why dost thou turn pale? Thy cheek- VOICE finterraptingj: Robert, thy promise I E.4Pp6l7 llZ071 moves toward the entrance, Robert followsfl ROBERT :I Let me explain. VIOOE : Thy promise! To the grave. GWYNNE fclasping his hneesj : Stay, stay, my lord, VOICE : Come I ROBERT: Oh let me stay. My promise rash I would revoke. My people's care- . My house- VOICE : Come ! I Gwynne ohserves the apparition for the jirst time, and sinhs back terrhiedfl GWYNNE: 'Tis she! fFaintsj VOICE : Robert, come. Thy promise keep. fStretches oat her bloody hands to him.j ROBERT: My wife, I come. Behold, I come! IDisappears throagh the entrance. The scene changes to the moor,- the 'apparition advances steadihf, closehf followed by Robert, who matterssj My bride in death, in death my bride. The grave awaits. My promise kept. t Iffhey come to the edge if a cliff With nnseeing eyes he clasps his hands in hers. The appari- tion moves on.I ROBERT: In death, my bride I ' IDisappears in the darkness. The lights flare dimhf. In the east the shy grows gradaalhf lighter. T he old man comes down the path, and stretching oat his arms, bows his head.:I Such was the manuscript. Of the fate of sweet Mary, and the irresolute Robert, we have no other knowledge. And now We ask, who was the old man whose person betokened evil? Who was the original of Mary, who of Robert? Gone into the dust of centuries, we have this slight remembrance, handed down to their posterity. Q .208 THE HAMIL TONIAN 1Brettp. EWERETALKINGABOUT -- ummmmm . --WAGES! . . . All right. . . . . Our author would urge, if you Will, that this subject is somewhat important .... Yes. . . . Without doubt. Well, talk that some--aaaaah--Blank!--- Go on: We're Waiting! Pardon me, but have you read this? Then excuse me for disturbing you. What thoughts have you on this subject, Dash? . 'HI think it means'-- ' All right. Evidently not his purse but his person, so to speak. Without question. Aaah, yes. To continue: he attacks a tax on-and so on and so forth. No, lot- teries are reserved for the churches. Now, supposing you could borrow a dollar from me, I would admit, if you Will, in my judgment, ummmm -- yes, all right. 1 W YHE HAMIL TONIAN ZIO Qinmmmnemmt wash Qnunhap, Ellune 215t The Baccalaureate Sermon to the Class of 1903, by President Stryker, at II A. M., in the Stone Church. f h Y M C A in the College The Anniversary Meetingo t e . . . ., Chapel, at 4:30 P. M. Report of the President, Manley Fiiield Allbright, '03, and the Annual Address, by Rev. Arthur S. Jones, D.D., '73, of Colgate University. 3 - ilwonhug, Blum 221133 Campus Day Exercises, at 3 P. M., on the Campus. McKinney Prize Declamation, at 8 P. M., in the Stone Church. muesnap, 3111112 23th Entrance Examinations, beginning at 8 A. M., and continu- ing morning and afternoon in the Chapel, third story. QAutumn examinations, September 15th and I6th.l Candidates with cer- tificates Will find Dr. Root, the Registrar, at his house on this day. Annual Meeting of the Trustees, at 2 P. M., in the Library Building. Class Day Exercises, at 3 P. M., in the College Chapel. McKinney Prize Debate, at 8 P. M., in the Stone Church. wsnnesnap, Ellmmz 24th Annual Meeting of Alumni Association in Chapel at IO A. M President, Daniel Finn, Esq., '68. Hay'-Century Anmzlist, Rev. W. H. Maynard, D.D., '54. Necrologisf, Prof. Oren Root, D.D., L.H. D., '56. Class Reunions, '53, '63, '73, '83, '88, '93, '98, '00, '02, HA MIL TON COLLEGE ZH Baseball Game between the Alumni and 'Varsity teams, on Steuben Field, at 3 P. M. Reception, by President and Mrs. Stryker, at their residence on College Hill, 4 to 6 P. M. illbursnap, glans 25th The Ninety-first Commencement, at I0 A. M., in the College Chapel. The Orations, by members of the Class of 1903, and the lVlaster's Oration, delivered by a member of the Class of '00, fol- lowed by the presentation of Prizes and conferring of Degrees. Announcements. Alumni Dinner in Commons Hall. Reception by the Class of 1903, at 9 P. M., in Soper Gym- nasium. 212 THE HAMIL TONIAN Baccalaurzatz 51111721519 morning Qmbits, Blum 215t Organ. Ken's Doxology. The Lord's Prayer. Scripture Reading. Hymn. Prayer. Announcements. Hymn. Sermon, Present Problems of the Church and College. Hymn. Twenty-third Psalm, in concert. Benediction. anniversary of the 19. fmt. QE. Ss. Qfternuun ierhire in the Qllullegz Qllbapel Organ. P Hymn. Scripture Reading. Prayer. Hymn. , Report of the President, Mr. Manley Fifield Allbright, log. Hymn. Address, Rev. Arthur S. Jones, D.D., ,73, Colgate University Hymn. Twenty-third Psalm, in concert. Benediction. Crgan. IJAMIL TON COLLEGE Q I 213 The dfuvtvfwsbw Qllark 19652 Qlirbihttiun Zin Qmatnw weianeshap Glihening, jilune 3th Prayer MUSIC Manley Filield Allbright, Boston The Message of the New Orient to the Occidentf' Stuart Banyer Blakely, 1 Otego The Loneliness of Great Men. MUSIC Theodore Herbert Burgess, Auburn John Marshall of Virginia. Sylvester Maxwell Lambert, Chadwicks The Loneliness of Great Menf' 1 MUSIC Albert Payne Mills, Oneida Dying Finland. Elihu Root, Jr. , New York The Qratory of the French Revolution. MUSIC Awarding QF the Prize 2,4 THE HA MIL TONJAN Ghz mmrwfifun jmlrkiuuzp lertgz Minute Qlussnag Glibming, EILIIIB 231TD PRAYER The Proposition: The Monroe Doctrine is Wise and is to be . maintained. ffjfrmezfifve Elihu Root, Jr. New York Stuart Banyer Blakely, Otego Fred Arthur Grant, Cape Vincent Negative Joel DuBois Hunter, Saugerties Manley Fiiield Allbright, Boston James Sykes Carmer, Lyons The dwezm' WG j! i ll 'S I I K V1 Q2 4 l 5 5 2:3633 wit 221 'F '3'?f-r 'tim ,ii '.-. .12.'. i1 1. -Fl 1 sl ,, ,,. il J HAMILTON COLLEGE 215 ifflfiiiiiliwp 1Bri5z Speaking 9901111812 Qlibening, jilnns 22nu ' CLASS or 1906 Howard Craig Bramley, New Hartford The Old Navy at Santiago, by M. W. Stryker, ,72. George Franklin Gentes, Brooklyn The Duty of Americaf' by Miller. Robert Morris McLean, Portland, Ure The Power of Sentimentf, by Robert McLean, '76. Lloyd Paul Stryker, Colle e Hill . S HIS Father's Flag, arranged from Eugene M. Rhodes. CLASS or 1905 Wilbur Jenkins Downey, 9 Brooklyn The Ironsides of Cromwell, by M. W. Stryker, 772. Jedediah Howard Edgerton, ' Clinton Protest Against the Seating of Brigham H. Roberts, by Landis. Homer Harvey Harwood, Brooklyn The Greatness of Obedience, arranged from F. W. Farrar. Edward Campbell Maclntyre, ,lOh11StOWn The New America, by Dixon. CLASS or 1904 Daniel James Dowling, Waterville Dangerous Legislation, by Hon. James McDowell. Albert Leslie Evans, Hammond The Home in the Government, by Grady. Paul Knox, . Q, Penn Yan Pensioners of the Revolutionary War, Anon. Raymond Chester White, Albany The Heroism of St. Paul, arranged from T. C. Burgess, 83. The Award WF P17265 216 THE HAMIL TONIAN Qlampus Bay of 1903 Qlbonhap, Elunz 221111 President, Herbert M. Tuthill Qration, Ernest Samuel Durkee Poem, .Paul Tompkins Harper Ivy Oration, Sylvester Maxwell Lambert Response from 1904, Robert Russell Wicks Response from 1905, Harley Lord Stowell Response from 1906, Merwin Humphrey Nellis Qllass Bay nf 1903 Qiuesnap, jlltme 23lTD In the Clmpef President, David Knox Peet Oration, Vernon Calhoun DeVotie Poem, Thomas Richard Lee Carter History, Burdette LeMunyan Prophecy, George Edmund Miller Presentation Committee, James Sykes Carmer Crosby Tracy Smelzer Harry Charles Keith Richard Eugene Morris HA .MIL TON COLLEGE 217 jainetpfjfirst Qlnmmmnemmt illibutsnuv, Qllune 25th Latin Salutatory, with High Honor and Kirkland Prize Oration - The Optimism of the Hebrew Prophetsf, Theodore Herbert Burgess. High Honor Oration- Progressive Conservatism. Manley Eiheld Allbright. High Honor Oration- Henry Clay, Presidential Candidate. Alfred Karl Arthur. N High Honor Oration- Amer-ica's Assimilation of the Nations. Stuart Banyer Blakely. High Honor Oration- Emile Zola, Author and Advocate of Justice. Adrian Henry Courtenay. Honor Oration - Hamlet, the Disappointed. QEXcusedj Lawrence Augustus Harkness. Pruyn Medal Oration- The Problem of Education in our Southern States. Paul Tompkins Harper. Honor Oration - The Search for New Frontiers. Joel DuBois Hunter. High Honor Oration- The Unity of the Universe. Henry Thompson Maxwell. High Honor Oration - Modern Materialism. Albert Payne Mills. Honor Oration - Preventional Medicinef, Ered Thomas Owen. Honor Oration - Zion's Hope. Edward Owen Perry. 218 THE HAMILTONIAN Clark Prize Oration, with High Honor, and the Head Prize Cration-- Alexander Hamilton, the Mentor of the First Administration. ' Elihu Root, Jr. I Honor Oration- Might or Right? QEXcusedj ' James Pronk Tate. Intermission The Master's Gration, In representation of the 'candidates for the Second Degree- The Moral Energy of Scholarship. Gurdon Henry Eggleston, A. B., Igoo. High Honor Oration, by the Root Fellow, with the Valedictory - Some Unsolved Problems of Science. - QOmittedj Harry Charles Keith. Prizes eine! Degrees Coiiferreei HAMILTON COLLEGE 21 19652 Qinarhs in 1903 Tenth Award of the Root Fellowship in Physical Science QI Chemistryjl Harry Charles Keith Forty-eighth Clark Prize in Original Oratory Elihu,Root, Jr. Forty-first Pruyn Medal Oration Paul Tompkins Harper Thirty-ninth Head Prize Oration ' Elihu Root, Jr. Thirty-first Kirkland Prize Oration Theodore Herbert Burgess MCKIHHCY Prizes 1n the Thlrty fifth Extemporaneous Debate s Elihu Root d Stuart Banyer Blakely Underwood Prizes in Chemistry ISt Harry Charles Keith d Albert Payne Mills Munson Prlzes ln German st Harry Charles Ke1th d Stuart Banyer Blakely Southworth PFIZC in Physics Harry Charles Keith Eleventh Soper Thes1s Pr1ze No Competitlon Darl1ng Prize 1n American History Theodore Herbert Burgess Munson Pr1ze ln French st Edward Owen Perry d Alfred Karl Arthur , - It. ' ,Jr. ' 2. 2. ' 1. i 2. 1. 2. 220 THE HAJWILTONIAN Tompkins Mathematical Prizes Ist. Richard Updike Sherman Qd. Montague White Medals Paul Richard Abbott Carl Service Schermerhorn Charles Hansen Toll Brockway Entrance Prize John Ludden Tanner Curran Medals in Greek and Latin Gold Medal. Carl Service Schermerhorn Silver Medal. Robert Russell Wicks Hawley Classical Medals William Archibald Ferguson Claude Wilmot Monson Arthur Edward Newton Edward Huntington Mathematical Scholarship Qin Class of 1904, Montague White Chauncey S. Truax Greek Scholarship Qin Class of 19045 Carl Service Schermerhorn Munson German Scholarship Qin Class of 1904.5 Frederick Elandrau Brandt Soper Latin Scholarship Qin Class of 1904, Robert Russell Wicks Kellogg Prizes in English Essays Yuniors : Class gf 1904 The Wrongs of the American Indian Prize: Robert Russell Wicks Mention: Raymond Chester White Soplzomores : Class rf 1905 Shakespere's Indebtedness to Plutarch Prize : George Martin Day Mention : Frank Cuyler Beach HA JLIIL TON COLLEGE 22, The Growth of the American Newspaper Prize: Herman Anthony Speh Mentions: Homer Harvey Harwood Royal Wilbur France Freshmen : Class of 1906 The Life Work of John Wesley Prize : Robert Morris McLean Mention : Selden Talcott Kinney The Needs and Methods of Forest Preservation Prize: Stanley Murdock Mention : James Kellogg McKinney Prizes in Declamation Class of 19o4: Ist. ad. Class of 19o5: is ad. Class of 16o6 : is ad. Raymond Chester White Paul Knox Homer Harvey Harwood Edward Campbell Maclntyre George Franklin Gentes Robert Morris McLean 2 THE HAMIL TOIVIAIV scholarship Ziannnrs 4131555 of 1903 High Honor Men, Standing 9.2 or Higher Harry Charles Keith, Valedictorian H Theodore Herbert Burgess, Salutatorian Manley Fifieid Allbright Adrian Henry Courtenay Alfred Karl Arthur Henry Thompson Maxwell Stuart Banyer Blakely Albert Payne Mills Elihu Root, Jr. Honor Men, Standing 8.6 io 9.2 Lawrence Augustus Harkness Richard Eugene Morris Joel DuBois Hunter Fred Thomas Owen Sylvester Maxwell Lambert Edward Owen Perry James Pronk Tate HJIIIIL TON COLLEGE 223 Latin Mr. Mills Greek Eepartmznt Ziamwrs Glass of 1903 QNO awardl Ethics Messrs. Allbright, Arthur, Blakely, Burgess, Keith, Root Mathematics Messrs. Courtenay, Grant, Keith, Maxwell, Morris Rhetoric and Oratory Mr Root Gei man Messrs Blakely Keith Maxwell Mills Perry l' rench Messrs Burgess Perry Root Italian and Spanish Mr Perry Physics and Astronomy Messis Hunter Keith Chemistr Y Messrs Barnes Blakely Keith Maxwell Mills Psychology Messrs Grant Lambert American History Messrs Arthur Courtenay Burgess Grant ' 7 3 D J -1 ' 3 7 ' J Q 7 3 D 3 ' 3 . i 3 J 7 224 THE HAMIL TONIAN Eames Qlunfmeb Blunt 25th, 1903 QL. QE., in Qliuurgin Manley Fiiield Allbright Francis Merriman Barnes, Jr. John Emerson Becker Stuart Banyer Blakely Theodore Herbert Burgess Albert Christian Busch ' James Sykes Carmer Thomas Richard Lee Carter Harrison William Foreman Edward James Graham 41900, Lawrence Augustus Harkness James Willard Huff, Joel DuBois Hunter Robert Hatch Jones Harry Charles Keith Maurice Birdsall Landers Burdette LeMunyan John Henry Mangan Henry Thompson Maxwell ' George Edmund Miller Albert Payne Mills Richard Eugene Morris Fred Thomas Gwen David Knox Peet Edward Owen Perry Frank Lee Putnam Elihu Root, Jr. Crosby Tracy Smelzer Elmer M. Tuthill Pb. QB., in Qfnursie Alfred Karl Arthur William Thomas Chapman Frank Samuel Child, Jr. Adrian Henry Courtenay Frank Delancy Croft Vernon Calhoun DeVotie Ernest Samuel Durkee Fred Arthur Grant Paul Tompkins Harper Sylvester Maxwell Lambert Edward Harvey Lomber James Pronk Tate Wilfred Earl Youker QI. SEQ., in Qliuurgie Thomas Hamilton Lee, '83 Clarence James Geer, ,QO Darwin Wilcox Congden, ,97 Edwin Coe Tibbitts, ,QQ Joseph Earl Carmichael, 'oo Charles' Reeve Clark, 'oo Gurdon Henry Eggleston, 'oo Talcott Ostro Ira Wemmel Henderson, 'OO Arthur Clark Higgins, 'OO Birdsey Northrup Holbrookfoo Benjamin Wright Moore, 'oo Joseph Banford Sheppard, 'oo a Ralph Hammond Sheppard, 'OO Robert Shannon Waddell, 'Oo m Vanamee, 'OO HEUUIL TON COLLEGE 225 531. QB., .lmllllt pru tant Samuel Carey Heston, ,74 Clarence Francis Parsons,,'78 Burt Isaiah Waldo, '75 Robert N. Hawley, M. D., '79 Gordon Walter Williams, '83 21. jill., all Qiuulicm Marcus H. Slosson, M. D., '43 Hon. Edward M. Bassett, '84 93. ED., Ibunurarp Rev. Ralph Watson Brokaw, QRutgers '74j Rev. James Beveridge Lee, '86 Rev. George David Miller, '8 9 iLiL.?D., Ibunurnpp Hon. James Schoolcraft Sherman, '78 Hon. Luke Edward Wright Hon. William Whiting f'if-li' - -L , P-- X, - ' T' T N N ,f-if ' -- - . Af-fir-+- ' 'K 'M .:iQ-f.Vf::2-f-':'Z1f.--y ,- 5, , ..4i-.TL ,g:j j'-117 'EF ' :EIT 15, s L'-174-ff-.- A l-'4ji 41 -4,153'11?t-E-i:iE4- 1117 -A ffliffgfff. TT ---- - -ii:Tf:9?':TV ' 1-- 'Li , A I :Q.E-EL f'7Q:rig. f.:Q-4794-1 J ,. lLf'E:g'5:iQi--4.5:--3 ,.:g,:g i lE ' f f 7 4 ' 7 f f?.' 1 Qi?-- 5 if- X mwfqwtfi 4. 'iz mag 1 W , s ' at g 1 Q ,th-, .524 -g,,f N X . ., ,fgff - 1' E. 5,74 iw Ya- .. 1, Q-T ,s r ,,,' 11, .- ff: '75, 7 . 1 X Ff: 'SL- 'J ' -V - ., ::ff. .,' .fha X Wm Xb : P A X mwgq 'P' ' Q ,QQL Q m-g,.'TxQx' NX M Viv, . f If .. 'w432T1g3L. -1-T-.T MIB, : -,J , ,, . ,, -- 'J :. ' T 'Z - arf. ggwf.. , T- - if 'j ' ' ,115-g:,2g,g,-L3 , 4 1 A I 1A W ,604 mkxi: Q' 4 fff ig: ar ' 2 JQ221 , , I TEATEVWTW X 4, ff 4 N , , ig, 14 L4 f vf 45 1' V-,',,f ,fl, ff ff g v'x 1 xx X X. 1 1 x .,l K I a 4 A1 ' 1.4 G I I 1 1 ?-3P S-uE' 25,- ff' ,ffi J '5xClVC1llSCI11C11tS, 'xlllllllll AQSOCIHYIOIIS Xthletlcs fXtl1let1c ASSOC13t1011 B1cc'1lau1e'1te Sundav, l aseball lu lsket bftll Bo'11cl of lidltols, 1 buttmsky C tlendfu C tmpus D1 C lless Club C luk P1 IC Clftss Dfty Clqss IQCLIUIOHS, C ollege Chon, College Chulch College Clubs N 0- ' Q it Commencement, Debatlng Teams, 1DCCl1C21lf1OI1, Degxees Confeued, Department Hono1s, 1DO1I1l1fO!V, D F lub liditoual, 130 Emerson L1te1a1y Soc1et hll'lgl1Sl'1 Lite1atu1e Club Faculty, Football, Football D1nne1 , F1 atermties, 1 College Publlcatlons Commencement Banquet C ommencement Week 7 Y, '72 212 120 21 122 21 21 1 10 10 10 1 20 1 210 11 22 224 1 2 11 8o 124 13 88 165 53 m 'fri sg Ei-3 C L1 '1 ig, U 11 L, , L. Y ll' fee me ' -'-f -1 + I '1- .-:Q-'., ., -: 4-'-Egg,-, 'I -' .--..f.-,f- ll' 'Ji' ','- ,F 1 -, 1 ft i',V.'5' -5 ie -. 1 if ' fi-I ll' l' 1 -f 3 1.4 1:14 1, , .. 1 1.-3211 3 ,111 8 iiulfs - 1' - - A , ,- ,.fLfjlL'.i1 gg, eff- 1 1 , f . , - 6 'L C , . 1 QQ , , , . J , , 81 A x 2 82 L C ' .l ' 90 ' 1 ' ' e . 93 I J ' D ' 2 N J A f ' -1 22 1 f N ' yr 6 N o J H 2 ' '12 , 3 ' ' ' 3 t 6 1 . ' - . 3 63 , ' 7 3 ' 1 6 WX ' .1 . 5 , 3 33 9 , 64 0, I , C .- 8 , 5 . . . f . . - 3 . ' .1 7 . ' . C , 6 1 4 2269 YHE HAZIYILTONIAN Fraternity Conventions, 162 North, E. 9 Fraternity Receptions, 161 Outdoor Track Records, 96 French Club, 124 Pentagon, 1 IO Freshman Class, 56 Press Club, 126 Gun Club, 125 Prize Awards in 1903, 219 Hamiltonian Board, 134 Record, 140 Handbook, 140 Remington, P. 23 Hawley, R. I 7 Scholarship Honors, 222 History of Athletics, 84 Senior Ball, 142 zndoor Athletic Records, 97 Senior Banquet, 166 nnterscholastic Day, 101 Senior Class, 24 funior Class, 34 4 Senior Club, 1 I2 U unior Prom., 143 j Social Events, 141 junior Whist Club, 1 I4 l Sometime Members '05, 48 ..aboratory, 1 72 Sophomore Class, 50 Qife Board, 138 1 Sophomore Hop, 144 Qiterary Department, 1 75 Summary, 61 Qiterary Magazine, 136 Track, Q2 Majestic Entertainment, 103 Vfrustees, I2 McKinney Prize Speaking, 215 4VieWs, 167 McKinney Prize Debate, 214 Wearers of the H , 104 Musical Clubs, IQ7 Y. Nl. C. A. Qflicers, IOS Ninety-first Commencenft, 217lY. M. C. A. Reception, 109 H.-UNL Tc XY ck U. Llilflz' 229 Elubrx to Qhherttwnrents Allen, H. .l. Baggs Hotel. Bowen X Kelley, Broadbent, C. ll. Brooks, Bros., Burns, Owen DI. Clark, Horrocks X Capes, Robert Collins X Yorhis, Cotrell X Leonard, Cox X Collins, Courier Press. The Clinton Bank, Dawes. Isaac Donovan, T. G. Dygert, Cafe, Esmay X Daggett, Ehrsam N Fitch. Fay lfngraving Co. French. H. P. Frey, Carl K. Gartlancl, rl. L. Gammel, G. W. Gibbon, G. lf. Hinfls X Noble. Keeffel, jack Kings News Room Kirkland Mineral S Lewis, S. R. Lynch X Kelly. Mahacly, Wm. Maher Bros., Co., 1 1 pring C h'l2lI'Sl'l, vlohn Martin, Henry Myrick, C, M, New Kenmore Hotel, New York Law School, Ney, Sidney Orpheum, Owens, A. L. Park Hotel, Payne, G. W. Roberts-Wicks Co., Rowley tk Son, W. C, Root, F. A. Robinson, A. L. Scotch lV00len Co Scott X Son, T. E. A Semple, W. A. ' 1 Sherman X Lacher, Smith tk Co., W. T. Smyth, C. H. Space, Charles Ten Eyck Hotel, Turnock, M. XVatson Drug Co., Wicks X Greenman, Wicks, Tailors, Williams X Morgan, Wilcox, W. B. Wi-igh t- Dana Hardware Co., Wells R Son, W. W. Wells 62 CO.. C. ,l- Westcott, F. D. 247 237 232 243 235 239 237 235 244 235 241 240 239 247 230 232 244 23I 234 249 239 231 240 233 249 251 233 25C 237 250 241 That lt ' not necessary to spend a great deal for clothes if you know where t buy? If you buy from us you will get goods at prices as low as good goods can be sold for. Suits, 510.00, 512.00, 515.005 Spring Overcoats, 510.00, 520.00 3 Trousers, 52.00, 55.00, Fancy Vests, 51.00 53.50, White Dress Vests, 52.50, 53.50. T. S. SCOTT ZS SON. Tailors, Clothiers, Furnishers, 71 Genesee St., UTICA. N. Y. The Largest, the Leading Hotel lu the City. Adjoins all stations. All local and suburban street ears pass the door. BAGG'S I-ICDTEL. Established 1794. UTICA, NEW YORK. LEWIS, The Utica Photographer, INVITES HAMILTON IVIEN TO INSPECT HIS WORK. SPECIAL RATES TO STUDENTS. I-IoRsEY BUILDING, opp. CITY HALL. 230 -re BOOKS-l e Best Place to Buy College Text Books. SMQOOKSI if FINE STATIONERY, Fountain Pens, Cac, ta. c. Smith .el QQ, 145 Genesee Street, Utica, N. Y, M' TURNCCK, NI. TURNOCK, lleattlqtmrtcrs for FURNITURE til ull kinds. w- CURTAIN SHADES, -QQ XYC have 21 lull assortment. We make a Specialty of Pictures, Picture Frames and Frame Making. Repairing and Upholstering Nezttly and promptly clone. Get us to make your wlnclow-seat cushions. College St. Livery 1 TURNOUTS OF ALL KINDS, HACK WORK A SPECIALTY. The best Tally:ho, the best Teams and Most Careful Drivers in Town. A Trv us. We are always prompt. If vou don't believe us, give us a chance' to prove it to you. ASK OUR RATES. ISAAC DAWES, Clie Pilrlvr Boot and S1206 5I0l'e. The finest grade of Boots and Shoes. We make a Specialty of Buell's Hand-made Goods. R?l73il'ilIS IZQEIIID DOUG- 2 I west Park now, clinton. Charles IIB Ilbgrich Watch and Jewelr Repairing. Non-leakable Fountain Pens. west Ilbarh 1Row. Gllinton, 114. LJ. That the best way to secure a position as teacher is to register in the Albany Teachers' Agency? -If you do not 'cnow this, send for our Illustrated Booklet and learn what We can do for you. We have been especially successful in finding positions for inex- perienced teachers, and are always glad to enroll the names of young men and women who are just about to graduate from college. No agency in the country has done more for such teachers than ours, and we can undoubtedly be of service to you if you are qualified to do good work. We shall be glad to hear from you and will use our best efforts in your behalf if you give us the opportunity. l-IARLAN P. FRENCH, Prop., ai Chapel si., ALBANY, N. Y. Correspondence is invited. Ghe Clinton 1fBanh, HAYES 81, CO., BANKERS. ESTABLISHED 1878. , A We solicit the business of responsible people, promising all of the courtesies that are usually extended by an obliging and carefully conducted banking house. IIDOHCQ orbers at VCPQ low I'8t6S. 232 .. if I XXX QW: mxvnxem APPAREL SHGP, 56 an? 57 FRANKLIN SQUARE, UTICA, N, Y, Distributors of Rogers. Peet Ci Co. Fine Clothing Hart Schaffner 6 Marx Fine Clothing, Guyer Hats Manhatta, Shirts and Fownes Gloves. l n Sportsmen's ccmlmcr B. Cililwt, H eadquarters. 5 Caamjwf - I I - A Dialllullhs, EVERYTHING IN immwf C5' U . . . FISHING TACKLE, Nl DD, :II mums' BASEBALL SUPPLIES, LL Y lim' GUN GOODS lircrptlnll ann BICYCLE SUPPLIES. Dffffillg QZHVUZ ann Dtdlfl' in Clark, Horrocks Co., fmf Qtannitgw' 54 Genesee Street, UTICA.. :ln Gfllfgff Etlifctf dltwa' PIANOS AND l'lUSlCAL INSTRUMENTS, CAMERAS AND PHOTO SUPPLIES. W. A. SEHPLE, 84 Genesee Street, 2 : : UTICA. iackawanna Goal. Q. 1-LSMYTH H stantly on hand ll the different si7 E th l b t d Iachavoanna Goal, --OF THE- ' Delaware 8L Hudson Canal Co sfNlVNl'Nf5sfNlV'NlS!N All kinds of Coal at th 1 t k t t at his ya d College Street, Clinton, New York. CDAL T0 BE PAID 'FOR WHEN ORDERED. 234 PARK I-IQTEL, CFormerIy Wirth JOHN BURDICK, Prop., House,j lfx'IIlUxIL'lL'LlY-lllxJciL'l'Il Ctlikli NUC t Fllinivlll ,x.itrxv11,xgx' Sulicilvml li tl l N. ' ' VS p ace for 130Ol,ete. ustom lotbing. xx lf 1a.x.x1:1.1-i 'ima .xx'1431x.xcs1f ecu1,1.1f:GE MAN TQ liltirw xx 1-31.1, .xi x'1c1qx' mc.xSQNix1s1,1f: PRICES V-lr filxli xwx' :min u1Q.x1J1f1 GMQMENTS ELE- i ffrNN'lil,x' IJIzwltQXIilJ .x'1' lfL'1,1.x' QM:-THIRD LESS 'IOHXX IS lSl'.XI,l,Y L'II.XlQC1Iil.J. SUITS AND UVER SXVISQS IAN XII-1,XSL'Rli, lfliiml 515.00 T0 535-OO. WF MXIQIQY .X I-'l'I.l, I.IXIf Ulf RAIN-COATINGS READY- 'lex i xxl-QXIQ ,xxli x1.x1ils'1'xi x11-3.xSUR1c. 1RobcrtS:'QU1icIzs Go., Utica. Nl .X N X l3L'II.DING. NEW YORK LAW SCHOOL, 35 Nassau St., New York City. 1. x x 'xxx 'ini lixx ight Method in I.-gal iIlNll'llt!ifII1.lllL'l1lk'IllUd of that great teacher, Prof. Theo 'Vx' Jxxigirl, ,. mx-v. Iiirwiiijilx practical instruction, tli-x't-Ixiyinxg thu principles ofthe law and the reasons 1,1111 xxi.i1 il Iixvx rr .r, . , IS in X4 xx Y-wk 1 irx. zln- In-NI 5 l. .4-rfxfx-ui'r1 New Yfrrklzxxxwlndprocedure,-the1nOSt deS1rab1e .ir 1- in xxiiif li I'1l'SI,1iiIjSI'1 ,. i,qxx yt-r'Kpx'.1mlim'n', llNlHl'LlliOl1il1lllC city affordsqzm ophporturuty tp attend In- Smxiixiis wr xiii' xi i.. .intl MW rf, gain girgwliunl experience in laxxyers' ofhces, in connection VVIIII lil' UH xfll1 Il uliflx 'il ir'g.uI px'i11iipl:'S, 1. ffi1t'c'iw xiii 111-gif xx: l.I. Hin lxxrix'm':nl'Sgrvi'I,I,. NI.i111l1rL-eycars. A 1 IMS .1 Day 5Cl1ll0l.xl1xl,almgllx Evening School. A Student can attend either. f, li,..1 ,,,il.,.1 ' In nmvllrillln 1. ll., WML 5-wr g,.,.,l-1..fi5yg of these Q77 were college graduates. GEORGE CHASE, Dean, 35 Nassau Street. 335 CLIN TON, N. Y A Welcome Gift in Any Home 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 alumnze WORDS AND MUSIC THROUGHOUT Songs of All the College-I' Attractive and durable cloth binding, 51.50 postpaid New edition with IO4 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 Collegef Notable and durable cloth binding, 51.25 postpaid Songs of the Eastern Collegef Novel and durable cloth binding 51.25 postpaid Ideally complete portrayal of the musical and social side. the joyous side, of the student life in our Western and Eastern colleges respectively. 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 the 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 Clubf Paper, 50 Cents, postpaid. Not less than twenty humorous hits, besides numerous others, senti- mental and serious. Not a single selection in this book but has been 'sung by some glee club locally to the delight of an encoring 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 instru- mentation, and last butvnot least with audiences, the catchonativeness. HINDS G NOBLE, Publisherf 31-33-35 West Fifteenth st, NEW YORK CITY Schoolbooks of all publishers at one store 236 Cha' LITICSI Styles in furnishings For men, ..3I O l ID. ID. IDQIIS 62 Son'5 AP' lfP:IO:Dc?IC Shop. ,ie Class and hamilton Caps a Specialfy, Earrabcc Block, Clinton, new york The most iinportnnt part of NI.1n's attire is his hat. It it duct not fit per- fectly---if it is not Correct in style---these defects .irc more noticeable than in any Other part of hisdrcsb. Wear .i Martin 1Ei51iSJ1EiNGHAT A light weight hat embodying A.. ...at the term goodqunlity means in its strictest sense:---absolutely correct in etylc---A per- fect fitting hat. SPRING SHAPES NOW READY. HENRY MARTIN, 104 Genebec St. Ebtablished 1857. Take Your Friends to the Vaudeville Theatre ORPHEUM Utica, N. Y. l'i4u ing nnly the best European and .XlllCl'iCllI1TCHNCLlxvHLldCVillCNOVC1tiCS Change of Bil Every Week l'ltlt'Ii5Z Nlatinees, every week d21Y 1 Evening perform- 10, I5 Zlllt 250. unces. H1351 35 and 509- WILMER Gt VINCENT, Props- You can Always get 3 Good Laugh at the Orpheum I-I Q Jo N I and 3 College St., Clinton Q Q a Hardware, Crockery, Cutlery, Lamps. Wo O C S9-FURNACE STOVE AND RANGE REPAIRING.-Q53 3'-TINNERS, STEAM AND GAS FITTERS.-Q Up-to-date Goods, Prices and Treatment 238 Tue TSN SYCK. XY ,f 4T1 . W ,veins ..u.n..xxx, N. Y. 1,5 2 f.f,.gg Q f. revs nf ' ' : - - - . ft l0bIlINI.l.N I-lm. vleool-. wg-.1,.3t,.X ,4I a ,' ifml. f l .n -L .pf 2- , my fi .ff 'ww-.1,.rQ. - - r ,fff uf:-.af tf- Sf. ff- r' -ls' '-'N N wr. Ll R0l'l.AN PLAN 'qgfcf-,9f,f,3g EDI if Ag :Qi ,- gs. ,Qf'fgf?LQ,. . was---is-f fri ' , -1 Must Atlructnc Hotel in Ncw York Slulu fL'1' ,EFL 'Cl' ,r. gel: 2 :Q agJ1fiY,31 N - A .V . ' . L. -1 4 ... I- N75 --Q ,u Nnall' blulv. xnnpnlnl and other plngcg gf !E 5 Myth qgg ,. ix: 123513.35 utcrcst. 'WY 'Y' 'Qi Q - ', Y' W-'f ' - ,I -' ., -.A--15? lu' -1.-NWI .A . . L5-' V..-4..ft..w...1 -'J KUlsHll'.tIl1lNtZw.1,t1-11214 l,,:1,,N1XlI,m1IH..l. L 547.111 -idly. , vitl-ihewjlxijmgfaiq I1-ug Ilxsuu. t .lk .1.l1.,U. U, ,U ,X ,Umm .-'Z 'LrLg'f,.Exj ,lfQ'f ff1L15 5 QA 4'.A.1-L:.Q'k5k,gQT nz mein! ma 1. .img 3,4 , ,,.,,:4mlmI X we :ugf'::EhC45a-ii-1 . ,:l1.n,l-,,,5nQ..H..sI! ..: .1.1..l1'...- . !.....e.. umxhmg 1.,,!,lml I N . A ,.,,5,,,,VM4JL im,,.,N:A wxwilb ' 11 1 N1 V- . ' ,,,v'. A r -I - L. I 1 5-j.:.-wig. 1 1 lt 1 1 1 1 1 n-,.t11i H1 I tu t lly, if-.1 LII Il.,.l,L T.. 'ling ILTII ...ul Y M V NM V' ops ' ' ' - V NA- ' - . I - .- fww EV. H. .l. RULRNN l1l.l. N SON, N BW A -'AUM ' A . iff Al Y XXEIIVIW til lqltfilmfll lJ.L1l'1n11ifQ 1Robinson's g 'Q pftofbatc iLivcrQ,f V Xxhclc' Xlli H121 1.1.11 .l51IIfyli1+1'l1l1L-Uf , .SIDNEY NEY Landau Fresh and Salt Rulvbcr-lin: Surrcyx, Runabouts .md Phnetons, Good Buggies, Tally-Ho Coach and 'Bus-L .X..1.a.wp1'-ttxitliy r'tfxI.mu!tr1Imrlaty' f-1' night. . X TERMS REASONABLE. R--ilirzsfn lilwrk. If-Cblfcgr-SI1'ul CLINTQN, N, Y. 1CliI'1tOI'1, New YOI'k Gartland's Concert Qrchestra and Gartland's Tenth Regiment Band. 1 Y V . . , , . . . , - f -, - u ' ' , O2, 02 I I 3 1 NIH 1 l 1lIlIlLfiHl 'L' w' 'M 'WM -'.- 'IN' '49' OO' OI , A. , I ,Q 1, th jg OO OI 00 OW rx: -.aw W: f N- -- .- , ...I .X -HV'.w',Q'.lw -tmgy , 1 OO XKlll1.e1usL1ll1NL 'In I 1 . y 7 .v . . ' . v ,-- -- w 's ' or, 02. O, U-4 llzmullwn Lwllcgtw HS- Wt- 95- W- 91' 25' 529' , Y . , x ' 'U 96 9' 95 991 OO' ' - V ' mix'-rsitv.'-rI.'1v2-'SW Htl- 95' ' f' ' . tmmll I1 L S l . v- ' 'cc.'oo,'O1,:O2'yOJ. ' - ' -rsxtx' Nl. U5-116' . ' 5 U gnlvm lmxc . h. , L91 9 , , . . v. to . . .,- '- g 'N 00, 01, O2 Ok. 4. f1f.xr1A11m'k Nlzmwlml. 'f-1- Ui- K 91' 9N' 99' ' E Call on or address, J oHN L. GARTLAND, ANY N. Y. 75 State Street, ALB a ' sw Greetings to '04, '05, '06, and '07, The Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume, Chartered 1902 by the Regents ofthe Univ. of the State of N. Y. Glotrell anb Ieonarb, Ellbany, Wholesale Makers of CAPS, GCVVNS and I-IOODS, To the American Colleges and Universities, to Hamilton, Cornell, Columbia, Har vard, Princeton, Yale, Williams, Dartmouth, Brown, Tulane, Univ. of Chicago Univ. of Pennsylvania, VVellesley, Bryn Mawr, and the others. Rich Gowns for the Pulpit and Bench. Illustrated Bulletin, Samples, 8:c. on application. FRED A. ROOT, UULLINS gp VUKHIS, i The Best, Latest, Nobbiest in HUC YGCQP, OPERA HOUSE BLOCK, S H 0 o CLINTON, N, Y. XVe especially cater to students' wants Prompt attention given to mail orders Ch ' C f t' 204 East State Street OICC O11 CC IOIICYV, ' Cigars, T0baCCO, Sic. ITHACA, 2 : NEW YORK, WATSCN DRUG CC., Books, Wall Paper anol Stationery. Blasting Powder and Dynamite at Wholesale. 8 and IO College St., - CLINTON, N. Y. Taloarcl lnn Library. 24.0 7 lEbt'9am X jfitcb ailore W--asa 136 Genesee St. Utica, 1H. 113. W. G. Roxmfleg 81 Son, FURMERLY ROWLEY at Hoaron, UTICA, N. Y., The Leading STATIONERS of the City. Blank Books, Fine Stationery, Artists' Materials, Architects' Goods. Fine Wallets and Leather Goods. SOLE AGENTS FOR THE GLOBE-WERNICKE BOOKCASE The Utica Steam and Hand Laundry, CONDUCTED BY FRANK D. WESTCOTT, Is the popular one among the boys. Have you ssgimpledl its work ? Laundry called for all over the Hill every TUESDAY and FRIDAY- 'Phong 236, Office, 225 Genesee St., UTICA, N' Y 241 KIACK9' KEEFEL, JR., JBarber, OVER WELLS SL SON'S STORE, LARRABEE BLOCK, WEST PARK ROW, CLINTON, N- Y lynch 8 1ReIIQ, CUSTOM SHIRT MAKERS, MEN'S FURNISI-IERS AND OUTFITTERS, UP-TO-DATE STYLES AT MODERATE COST. ' 106 Genesee Street, Utica, Mew llyorh BROOKS BROTHERS Broadway Cor Twenty second Street NEW YORK Clotbmg Lwerleo Hutomoblle S u It 5 ana Garments 55 Batg 811929 furnnsblngs Sbwtmgs Ready-made and to House Giarments Measure ranging ln Cravehng pr1ce from the medlum 0Utflt9 to the more expenslve A MAIL ORDERS RECEIVE PROMPT ATTENTION C t I g ' ' ' 9 9 1 ' 9 ' 4 4 4 1: ' , , f I QUJXPQ 1' 4 , I f 'Z Ii: I. , , xx Xa j r 2 -regkisz 4 4 y rlugxhllu ' ' IM f III . I , 2 - III ' ' ,I II I ' ' 'fit ' ' . II . I , , is . a a 0 ue contfunmg over one hundred and fifty illustrations, with prices, mauled on request 242 E Nejv Kenmore Hotel, uropean lan. ALBANY, N. Y. L, Smfflv Firstzclass. Om cmcm tommc Cilllllfll. Public Buildings Theatres t ' ,C C. CUISINE UNSURPASSED, Um- mock from dclllll Prices inoflei . . -vile. R. P. MURPHY Pro ' - prletor. 1860 ammel's, 1904 17 and I9 Liberty Street, UTICA, N. Y, Uhc JBest of Everything. Sole .agency for Schlitz Milwaukee Beer, Wuerzburger, Colburger and Pilsner, Why Go Down Town ? IVI A H A D Y Can Furnish You Good Horses anol Fine Rigs At Reasonable Prices. COLLEGE CLOTHES I v ii :irc in Search of Clothing that is si1appy,stylish arid perfCCI ' find it here in K1rschbaum f vo fitting, ycl rensoiizilalc in privc. you ll llzimluiizulu Clotlicsf' Y H 'I'lic most popiilzir styles among College men are the Hbtrand, the C'iirncIl :incl lllC I,l'lIll'ClUl1. See them. HQSBLA. X' Cl- DAGGETT, . , , UTICA, N. Y. C,l,o'i'iiii'1i4s ,mn l i IlNl8lll.li.. , I . . . S 343 as G. W. PAYNE, N JEWELER AND OPTICIAN. ' Lenses Ground to Prescriptions. A Broken Lenses Matched and Replaced. Jewelry Manufactured and Repaired, 88 GENESEE STREET, UTICA, NEW YORK DONOVHN Si SON, Pool and Billiard Parlors and Cafe. Lunches Served, also Cigars, etc. Special invitation to College Fellows. CLINTON, N. Y G. Floyd King. C. M. King KlNG'S NEWS ROOM AND MUSIC STORE. , Periodicals, Tobacco, Stationery, Sheet Music: Musical Merchandise, College Souvenirs. CLINTON, NEW YORK. Sherman 8 ilfacber, 52 Genesee St., Utica, N. Y. Shirts, W Gravats, 122 1Raincoats. ATHLETIC GO ODS. 244 . Graceful . . . PGSE lfltlttlltll. easy position and bggu tltul timlsli are the features that hav f r ' 6 llltldtx Frey s Photographs SQ popular: call and see sample ofthe New Sepia Finish Koclalas--all sizes and prices. Sup- plies of all kinds. etc. FR Photographer. ll BROAD STREET, UTICA, N. Y. 245 jfag Engraving Go., 1balftone Engravers. Hllustratora anb Eesigning 132 66116566 SIt'66t, 'lI11IiC8, TN, QQ. 246 192 SUI pane lilcgg Cor.h Jew X0 ch. linux xx: OV Fins 32 K scoTc1-1 wooLEN C0 192 GENESEE STREET, UTICA, N. Y. Iust the place for your extra Trouserings etc f Q SUITS MADE TO MEASURE. Best and most st l' h patterns, workmanship unsurpaseied. PRICES R1Gl-Iii? BOWEN at KELLEY, i CAFS AND RSSTAURANT. Elcggmtlux' Iilletl grutl the best equipped in the city. Dainty lunches served at all hours. Cor John and Broad Streets. - - : Utica New york J OH N MA RS H. Jeweler and Practical Uptician, Clinton, N. Y. S0 charm- lui Inline thi' sirhl. and siilisltuclioii giuiunlccd in all optical work. WATERMAN IDEAL FOUNTAIN PEN. II.miigr.iii tnliiggi- I-'gig l'IIlw, the liull' and Blue. lfine watch repair- ing .i sp'-.'i.iltx: llir' Cfollcgi- Spoon, ai souvenir of Hamilton. OWEN J. BU RN544 ll.is roi1s1.iiitIy on llllllllill1lI'gC2lSSUl'lIllClltOt Fine Groceries, Provisions, Dry Goods and Notlons' lit-st liiniiiils ul lfiour, vlioice lens and Lollccs, l u1ebp1CeS fiurulx pimiiptly ilelivereil free ol charge. ' , N. Y. 32 College Street. Clmton 147 CHARLES SPACE WILL CART ALL YOUR BAOGAOE AND PACK AGES TO OR FROM THE TROLLEY OR O 8t W. STATION. TRUNKS A SPECIALTY BAGGA KE T TINATIONS Cafe Dygert Bleecher Street, Utica, N.Y. Our meals are the finest in tbe City .fa av Cbeater parties will find the best at D9sert's awrder eookins a sveeialtya r be JButterf1eIo In the center of the business and theatrical portion ot UTICA, N. Y. American, 353.00 a Day and Up European, 51.00 a Day and Up Spaclous Sample Rooms. Free Bus to all trams CI. W. PEARCE, Manager FIRST CLASS RESTAURANT IN CONNECTION New Management New Furnishings and Equipment Danish Grill Room has recommendation of llamiltonzan Board 248 c. H. BROADBENT ee co., Manufacturing Jewelers. Dealers in Fine Jewelry li.1dges,l ','.N ' ' ' X ' ngs l9r.1tcu'l1iI,x' ligulges, etc., made to order. ll!L lulals, buuely PHIS, Class Ri Fine Repairing a Specialty. 4 Lafayette st. Utica llnamiltoniana ! Wlm.-n ,Q-ii wmi rw lmnv H,lRNl'l'llRE, remember we are the largest lfumutuu' llwuw in uentml New York. The variety is bewilder- ing .md the priew .ire nwre eloquent than 11 Hamilton Orator. CGI 8 Gollins, 73 ana TT Columbia Street. S 1 Utica, TH. LJ ROBSRT CAFSS. lfiiiu linens :incl Shoes tO Order- l uxx' l'i'iue-s :incl l ill'St:L'1ElSS VV Ork- lfkxlilllflllll' fl Spccialty' ON, N. Y. MILLER BLOCK. r CUNT FELLGWS! C 9 lizillzird is now in elizlrile Ulf Uprettyls 8310011 , 2 lces. 'me mx 50.1.1 xxfgim, lu CIM md All l7lgiwr5 in Season. - d ait for cars. The place for Hamilton MCU fo dropm an W 2.141 RUSSELL H. WICKS, HARVEY H. WICKS, ROBERT R. WICKS wicks TAILORS ezgoeueseeg sTREET qupsrausp, UTICA YOUR MEMORY IS GOOD L.2QYou will remember next winter that we carry the ' best line of Skis Skates, Snowshoes, Moccasins, 9 A g?And all accessories to be found in Central New York ln the meantime,.shoulcl you want a Pocket Knife, Razor, or anything in Fine Cutlery, W'll Look Up Our Stock You 1 . - L1EfWe can furnish anything from a 1Oc. Knife to a 2315 ' ff ' h e beauties, Carving Set. Our Charing Dis es ar 32.65 to 1512. Reliable Goods and Reliable Prices. Wright-Dana Hardware Co., .65'?Established 1801. 4 A2392 Genesee Street, UTICA, N. Y. A. L. OWENS, e 249 Genesee Street, College Elorh a Specialty. Ice Cream and Darty Supplies. Utica, New York- 250 UI' ......-,...-...,.. 4 M Et Burrah ! Gibbon, Photographs Different. Clinton, N. Y. K. ,. w C -- I-1 CJ T E. X. NN O e iq xinwxwm iff XT.. 2 D: ui I ALNU Every article of Furniture required in your room can be supplied at the right prices by the Furniture Leaders in Utica. williams KL Morgan, 3 I Genesee Street. 251 Kirkland Mineral Spring Co. Owners and Operators V g Spflilg, Natural Nlineral Water Glacier Splflllg, Pure Spring Water Glacier Ginger Ale, Superior to All Others C. E. WASHBURN, Treasurer 'Cibe Gourier llbreee, E CLINTON, N. Y. 3-Printers to Hamilton College.- ooon WORK,,..4s QUICK SERVICE, REASONABLE PRICES. We Print the Hamilton Literary Magazine, Also Life, and the Hamiltonian 252 C fi, X J. WRLIAS Cso., DIAMQND QMEWELERS, 122 Genesee, 2-4 Liberty Street, UTICA, N. Y. Edward D. Bates lllarxufaclurer c Steam and Bot mater Beating and Ventilating Hpparatus -i. - Exhaust heating for factories a specialty Contractor for Hutomatic Fire Sprinkler Equipment. Drincipal Office located at 218 KI. 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Suggestions in the Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) collection:

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Page 1

1901

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Hamilton College - Hamiltonian Yearbook (Clinton, NY) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908


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