Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN)

 - Class of 1914

Page 1 of 235

 

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1914 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 235 of the 1914 volume:

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'1'f5A-- J -f' ', .i?11i 'f 1 -- , EMM 'r 2529'.-JQ1'A'-if 'W' '17'A5'YE?5'fffC14 1 ,' - -11 . - 1 'fl Y- ,. 111l'-F73vl'Vf,1..- L., . 11 fs-114 1 ' . A , I ina JW-'fb fi 1.-1if1gf1M,l , 11' '14 sf' 'A' 652554 3' A2f5 ' gif ff -. 1:11 'Hi ,111 AJAAYAQ Y -ea? ', g '-2-v?5Qg2'1+ ' T1 A ' 1 Q. f I a z, , ,a: 1 , SY? f-,ff N551 54,1 f? Qg. 31, , '13 -ez' 11 1' J' MS' ,r e' 1-1,-1: , 1,f-' wi'f 1, .1 - 1 1 ' -.1 ' 1, '1 f.1 17 NEP' 'W ' 1 f '. 'A ' 'hfavy 19 -ff?5 xv.H 1- , . , 'en' , 11,371 WL- f1 ., ff. ra ' 11- '11 faq F5595 M ' 51,1 QLVV 1 f q11 +1w v1 z 1 L5 , pl Zmigr, , W , ' 4 1 15? - gq11: , ' ,, g+ ' 51' 1' -F1 'kffrw2'a1' .L '-figs: 42 1 f M1 1 41? wil w er 4' A4 '1 2 1 A5 5-' ' fi5fff1' ?T ' 4-' 9'1f YA-5 559.1 --1' 11 '- 'W ' 1 - ' V7' A f'1 Ai.511ff'g?'Q'51.,5L?:ifA 1 . . f ' Signer W Alma Mater ' By Morris Le Roy Arnold towers of old Hamline are shining bright 'Neath clear Minnesota i Skies: On the elm trees green the sunset sheen With mysterious shadow vies. May we always remember this hal- lowed hour When our youth's staunch friends are nigh: May we always he true, Alma Mater, to you,- We'll be leal mates to do and to die. Dear Hamline, thy sons and thy daughters true Sing loyally now thy praise, And the red and gray forever and aye We will wreathe with the laurel and bays. May we never forget llamline's sons of old Who fought in their country's cause: May we fight for the right-O God show us the lightl- May we uphold our common- wealth's laws. Hamline, hail! College dear, Never fail thy good cheer. - Alma Mater, hail to theel - Stand thou for Truth through eternity. I , Og 0 . in . ol at on , 0, lg.. 'ou ,O as ff- ' :sr I , r' Q 1' ' N Dig Q ' H O: 'jug' x ' eff-' ' 4' of 1911 SQ 4' . :Sf 'Sis 90 Q 0 ,N N S 2fiZ5 M 5 0 QU f QE? u se 22 :52 .- no Q 1 1 N f S Q' qs Q, T .Q op' ' IEE-I! sg on T as ge I Published 5 , - by the Junior Class of Hamline lf-lniversity g D O O in t e ' qi Q: Year A. D., 1913. 1 .gg 1 - ' I I' I -1-I . U I . I Q . I In l'f - . .' in :JO .8 , .ljl N . x , L , t Q . K 'ijt M , I s ' I f '- V J I In . 'C I J . tl -' fggrilnralium 'Go wean 'lloren 'ilfarrison ffaatcheloer, TAJB., T. TD., who for thirty years, with un- tiring zeal ano unselfish oevotion has lahoreo for a Greater '.ll'l'amline, ano to whom, more than to any other she owes her present eminence. as a token of appreciation ano esteem this book is respectfully oeoicateo. t D u BIl1-in iq ' Fi S., X 1111111 UI' 1111111111 EI 511Q11g1111 111 11111111 11111111 511 'sl 111 111111111151 11111111 5111111 111111 1111h YP KF .1111f11- -1 1-. -1- 11111 111111 111111111111, 111111 11111 51111113111 x ' 1 - ,E .Q - - 1111111111 111111111115 111111 11111111151 11 511111111115 111 11111111151 PHhBH 3 5111111111511111, 111 11111 11151251111 111' 111111111 11111 1111111151 lllllh 5111111 1 111111, 11111111111g, 111111 1112-jc51':1?11f 1 111111111111 1Ui1111l11'111 11h,PlIPi1QifP1J: ,QL M M 11 5I11H11II'511I1w,111 1111111 1 whIQ 111111 1111111 5111111 111111 11513111 1511111, 11111 11111111 111 111111111, 11111 111111111111115 5111111 1LII'HIIh1,g 1111111 11111111 1111115 nrvmnrh N presenting this, the ninth edition of the Liner, we have tried to mirror as clearly and completely as possible the myriad and diverse activities of Hamline University. If there is any virtue in it, we ask only that credit be given those who have so kindly and so readily co-operated with us, to make it what it is. We are conscious of its many shortcomings but our apology is that we have done the best we could. If there is anything to bring pain to any one, or if there has been any- thing omitted which should be here, it was far from our intention that it should be so, and we beg forbearance if there be such a contretemps. We desire to express our gratitude to those who have in any way helped to make this book possible: to the student body who have given to us their Financial support: to those alumni who have responded so generously: to the faculty who have so graciously given us every assistance and to those who, either from personal friendship or regard for the institution have given us so liberally of their time and talent. We shall feel that all our efforts are repaid if this volume, even in a small measure, repfesents the true Hamline spirit. --The Editors. . - v N .,,,,,:.-nfv -7- - -----....-1.-.. ..-w-- , -- -Y -,--- f-.,-..-.-.-- --N... -,N-w-.---v---w- 5 -4 5.4 1 ..., u 1 ff' Samuel Fletcher Kerfoot, A.M., D.D., LL.D. A'-'Mtg REACHER, educator, executive, theologian, ltd H T' 1 philosopher, but above all a man-this IS Sam- uel Fletcher Kerfoot, Hamline University's new lrA:li' president. He is a red-blooded man. I-le is a man with a vision as broad as the heavens themselves. He is a man with the faith to carry his vision to ful- filment. With a dream of a Greater Hamline fostered through a quarter century as a loyal son, President Kerfoot was given the reins of destiny of the institu- tion last June. The foundations of his dream had already been laid. What was needed was one to rear the superstructure to magnificence. With the courage of an Alexander seeking new worlds to con- quer, he set about his task, and the results that have followed pay him rich tribute. By his sterling personality, he has inspired the confidence of the board of trustees, of the faculty, of the student body, of the alumni, and of the great body of Methodism of the Northwest, both lay and clergy. The power of these mighty instruments has never been measured, or even tried out. In the hands of the master wielder, President Kerfoot, with compel? ling, irresistible force, they will drive Hamline upward to an eminence than which none other shall be greater. rpqqwgvw1'-- -'-- f- -1--y-r. I. . nrsvfr--wvvvvff-fx---0 - v nyvwv- 94.48-1 . -, George Henry Bridgman Da Lo, Lo LI DI for twenty nine years put his untlrlng efforts into RESIDENT Emeritus of Hamline University, who lbringing Hamline to her present standing among the . ,1-. L president in l884. . colleges of the Northwest, came to Hamline as At that time there were but two buildings on the campus: the administration building and the Ladies dormitory, which was only half the size of the present Ladies Hall. In l887 Goheen Hall was extended and a Hall of Science was built. In l907 the sum of 330,000 was added to the endowment, one third of which was the gift of the board of education. In l907, 334,000 was raised for the erection of a Library building which was endowed with 330,000 by Andrew Carnegie, the interest on this sum now being used in the extension of the Library. The building of the gymnasium was made possible by Doctor Bridg- man in l908 and in l9l0 an additional endowment of S200,000, gifts from various sources, one-third being a gift from the Rocke- feller fund. N Doctor Bridgman, however, was not spending all his time in raising money. During that twenty-nine years of service he gathered about him a faculty of which any institution might be proud and with their help he gave Hamline a scholastic standard which has made her famous throughout the country. More over, all those'who knew Doctor Bridgman grew to love him and his sage council and good judgment have been of assistance to many. And though his connection with the institution is not now as close as it was for so long. he still is taking a vital interest in the institution to which he gave the best years of his life. Loren Harrison Batchelcler A.B.. A.lVl., LL.D. William Elliot Thompson A.B.. A.M. George Swan lnnis Plx.D., D.D. Henry Leslie Osborn A.B., Ph.D. LOREN HARRISON BATCHELUER, A.B., A.M., LL.D. A.M., Middlebury College, l874g LL.D., Board of Trustees, Hamline University, l906g Professor of Mathematics and Chemistry, Newark Conference Collegiate Institute, l874-BI: Professor Chemistry and Physics, Hamline University, I883-g Dean, Hamline University, IB83-. A T WILLIAM ELLIOT THOMPSON, A.B., A.M. A.B., Brown University, l873g A.M., Brown University, IB76: A.M., ad eundem, Syracuse, 1886, Professor of Ancient Language, Genesee Wesleyan Seminary, IB73-88: Professor of Latin Lan- guage and Literature, Hamline University, I889g Member of American Philological Association, Member of Classical Association of the middle west and south. fIJBK GEORGE SWAN INNIS, Ph.D., D.D. A.B., A.M., Ohio Wesleyan University, I872g B. D.Boston Theological Seminary, I872-765 Professor of Latin language and Literature Hamline University, l88l-89: PL.D. Illinois Wesleyan University, l880. D.D. Hamline University, l90l: Professor of History and Education, Hamline University, 1889, Member of the Minnesota and Northern Minnesota Conference, 1877, Member of America Geographical Society. CIJBK HENRY LESLIE OSBORN, A.B., Ph.D. A.B., Wesleyan University, l878g Ph.D. johns Hopkins University, I884g Assistant- in Biology, Wesleyan University, l878-Sl: Fellow at Johns Hopkins University, l88l-84: Professor in Zoology, Purdue University, l884-87, Professor in Biology and Geology, Hamline University, I887-. CIDBK NPT L - ? MORRIS LeROY ARNOLD, A.B., A.M., Ph.D. A.B. University of Minnesota, 1904, A.M., Harvard University, l905g Ph.D., Columbia University, l9l I g Assistant Professor, Columbia, I907-08g Professor of English, University of Minnesota, I905-065 Professor of English Literature, Hamline University, I909-. B H GREGORY DEXTER WALCOTT, A.B., A.M., B.D., Ph.D. A.B., Brown University, I897g A.M., Columbia University, 18995 B.D., Union Theological Seminary, 1900: Bonn and Berlin Universities, l900-Ol g Ministry, l90I-03: Professor of Latin and Greek, Blackburn College, Illinois, 1904-05, Professor of Greek and Philosophy and Dean, Blackburn College, l905-07: Professor of Philosophy, Ethics and Psychology, Hamline University, l907-g Member of the Western Philosophical Association and American Association for the Advancement of Science. CIJBK AT JAMES SHERMAN KING, A.B., A.M. A.B., Northwestern University, l90l: A.M., Northwestern University, I9I0g Professor Greek, German and French, Hamline University, l90l-04, Professor of German and French, Hamline Uni- versity, l90l-: Member of the Modern Language Association and the German Pedagogical Society -of Minnesota. EN CDB K THOMAS PERCIVAL BEYER, B.S., M.A. B.S., Wesleyan University, l903g M.A., University of Minnesota, l907g Professor of English Literature and History, Tarkio College, Missouri, l903-06, Professor of English Language, Ham- line University, l906--. CIDBK A GEORGE WILBER HARTWELL, Ph.B., A.M., Ph.D. Ph.B., Wesleyan Uni- versity, l903g A.M., Columbia University, l906g Ph.D., Columbia University, l909: Instructor in Mathematics, Michigan Agricultural College, l903-05: Univer- sity Fellow and Assistant in Mathematics, Columbia University, 1905-07, Lecturer in Mathematics, Columbia University, l907-08, Assistant Professor in Mathematics, University of Kansas, I908-09, Professor of Mathematics, Hamline University, I909-g Registrar, Hamline University, I9I0-g Member of the American Mathe- matical Societyg Member of the Circulo Maternatico di Palermog Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. CIJBK EE L . I I l 5 ELIZABETH ASENATH HALL, A.B., A.M. A.B., University of Indiana, 1895: A.M., University of Chicago, l906: Harvard University, l908: Research work in British Museum and at the Sarbonne, l9l I g Dean of Women, Hamline University, I9I2-. ALBERT HENRY JOHNSTONE, A.B. A.B., Wisconsin University, l905g Harvard University, 1906: Leland Powers School of Oratory, l906-07: Instructor of Public Speaking, University of Wisconsin, l907-IO: Member of the Faculty, Leland Powers School, l9l0-I lg Professor of Oratory and Debate, Hamline Uni- versity, I9l 2-5 Lecturer in the Extension Division for the University of Wisconsin, I908-. fIJAT ANNA MARIA DAVIS, Ph.B., Ph.M. Ph.B., Hamline University, l889g Ph.M., Hamline University, l90l: Librarian Hamline University, 1898-. ROY TOWNE, A.B., A.M. A.B., Brown University, 1905, A.M., Brown Univer- sity, l9l0: Professor of Greek Language and Literature, Hamline University, I909-g Member of the Branard Club, Rhode Island, Kasa Club at Brown Univer- sity: Member of Harkness Classical Club, Member of the Classical Association of the Middle West and South. WILLIAM BAIRD, B.S. B.S., School of Architecture, University of Pennsyl- vania, I903: Holder of World's record in pole vaulting for distance, 27 7-4, l902- 07, Coach Track Team, Hamline University, l909--g Physical Director and Athletic Coach, Hamline University, l9l0-. DON DIVANCE LESCOHIER, A.B., A.M. A.B., Albian College, l905:A.M., Albian College, I907g University of Wisconsin, I907-09, Special Agent, Wisconsin Bureau of Labor, l908: Expert, Minnesota Bureau of Labor, l909-: Professor of Social Science, Hamline University, l9I l-: Lecturer in Economics, Minnesota University, l9l2-: Secretary, Minnesota Association for Labor Legislation: Member, Minneapolis Vocational Commission. EN J f Trustees Francis Asbury Chamberlain, Esq. Rev. George Henry Bridgman, D.D LI...D. Hon. William Henry Eustis, A.M. Jerome Winthrop Wheeler, Esq. Rev. Edward Henry Nicholson, D.D Biihl-olb William Alfred Quayle, D.D Hon Rev. Rev. Hon. Hon Hon. Rev. Matthew George Norton William McKinley, D.D. Frank Adelbert Cone, D.D. joseph Malcolm Hackney Hascal Russel Brill, l..L.D. james Thomas Wyman Samuel Fletcher Kerfoot, D.D Erastus Fletcher Mearkle, LL.D. Col. Perry Harrison Eugene Marion Phillips Benjamin Franklin Nelson, Esq. William Moses, Esq. Rev. Ezra Charles Clemans, D.D. William Henry Cold, Esq. Rev. Willard-Isaiah Kern, A.M., S.T B The Student Council as MONG the movements originated in President Kerfoot's administration lhas been the Student Advisory Council. Through this organization ,the faculty and student body work together for the best interests of I T Hamline. lts aim is the welfare of the undergraduates and the co- ordination of their activities. In providing a forum for the discussion of the student questions it fills a long felt need. Because of Hamline's situation near the large cities, the problems as well as the advantages of college life are increased. To help meet some of these problems is one of the first objects of the Council. It also seeks to broaden the spirit of social activities and to create an atmosphere of all Hamline fellowship. As one means toward this end a mid-year Jubilee has been established. The Council is 'composed of twenty-four members, including a faculty com-i mittee and student representatives, of which there are eight chosen from the Senior Class, six from the Junior class, four from the Sophomore and two from the Freshman. The usefulness and power of the Council in coming years will grow in propor- tion to its expression of the best student sentiment for what ought to be clone can be done, and Hamline stands for the best. x lu I-1 5 W 1 7' 7' fl V 5 . E-v . : T: V HM.. .:g. 'i 'IT . . . ,u 1 ..r. E- if Qi' wr -5 if? ' if 5 .ga ' is sfo ' . . M sf C. el ef f ,Wt H Q rip . O .. -igif ',N 3:3 - 1, Afrsfiinq NJJAXH Q4 2 at l :-fn ., 5, , A . -'fix '6e.:'iQ.'9 'BA 12 ' O gl ' ll 3g .- r 2 - .1 may Wag. fa ew- ff-f-e is -r pf . 1 -9 G Z,?, CQ zfasqgj ' ,. 5 sz' Sli sm- 0 i EE H 2? ig? V ' Q at G we fi' rf EE . Zi ' Q' 5353! fb ll' 1 If ' 2221 A ' E . C3 if ii' E5 K . V is . I ,- fi 'fi NJ E: H M as f ' jing W fi F92-fm 12535 Z-ififf . ,, Wigwam X7 Z 'X 2 'll Q ya-J., .5 'ff UR cw abr DIHO . ,EE 'cgjgf 'E C 19 f' f T 0 L 19 V E , --1w.--Q..- .-, ----. A ei . A Fi U7 fl VH The Campus Improvement 'IL-Q,I.j ilAlVll..lNE is to have an improved and beautified campus. As a fitting 5 approach to the remodellecl university grounds, the streets are to be I paved and widened up Snelling Avenue to the bridge, likewise on the Jopposite side along Simpson Avenue, the streets are to be curbed and on the campus side to be boulevarded. The campus itself has been given into the hands of a landscape architect, who plans to develop it with a view toward the old classic quadrangle, which the new buildings will form, in conjunction with the old. A row of elms will extend around the entire campus and the portion which this encloses will be landscaped and platted with such arrangement of walks and shrubbery as seems most effective and beautiful. Thus, while in the class room, the college is fulfilling her motto: Hamline Stands for the Best, on the campus she will be approaching the fulfillment of still another motto: Hamline Stands for the Most Beautiful. l............. LCLHSSES L I-Wie.. - I MANFORD R. WALTZ Preparatory Equal to every trial, every fate, he stands LILY ELMENA SWENSON Cleveland, St. .Paul For I am nothing if not critical. CLARA CORNELIUSSEN Preparatory I-Ier hair was not more sunny than her heart. BENJAMIN ALFRED BROWN Preparatory Loyal and faithful and ever true to baseball, Clara and Hamline U. Class fy QB EARL FREDERICK BAUMHOFER Montevidio Forbear to judge for we be sinners all. CHARLES FRANCIS BLYLER Mankato I love my voice's sweetness I love its Iimpicl How. GERALD J. CALDWELL Mankato I love to wind my mouth up I love to hear it go. Class ,IENNIE DODSWORTI-I CASTLES Kasson We grant that though she has e much wit, she's very shy of using N ir. GERTRUDE FLORENCE CLARE Mankato When I have anything to do, I go and do it. BLANCI-IE EDNA DEAN Shakopee Art became the shadow of the dear starlight of her haunting .. eyes. PETER MARC GOERTZ Mountain Lake How bitter a thing it is to look into happiness through another man's eyes. JOHN WILSON GOODMAN Sheldon, N. D. He trudged along unknowing what he sought. He whistled as he went for want of thought. ANNA BARBARA HANNA Preparatory Her voice was ever gentle, soft and low-an excellent thing in a wo- man. LILLIAN HART Winnebago This lady doth protest too much methinksf' GAIL P. HELGESON V Litchfield What, my dear lady Disdain, are you yet talking? C-lass QE Eli. Class FRED HENEMAN Lester Prairie His prowess is too wondrous. We can do him no customary honor. VIOLA ANNA HIRSCH Charles City The fairest garden in her looks, And in her mind the wisest books. CHARLES KING HOLMES . Cleveland H. S., St. Paul I have a reasonable good ear in music. Let us have the tongs and the bones. ROY JOSEPH HOLM ES Cleveland H. S., St. Paul C-od made him, therefore let him pass for a man. LORENZO JOHNSON Redwood Falls What ere he did was done with so much ease. In him alone 'twas natural to please. EVA N. KIDDER Marshall The things are few I would not do in friendship's name. ANNA LOUISE LEONARD Aitkin Her very frowns are fairer far Than smiles of other maidens are. CLARENCE ARTHUR NELSON New Richmond, Wis. just one small Dot in Shorty's life made a period. MARY SCHOFIELD NICKERSON Watertown, S. Dak. Whatever skeptic could inquire for For every why she had a where- fore. HARRISON EDSON NORTON Mantorville This Spaghetti hath many strings to his bow. , Class Sf is Class Sf Wi RU IDA OLI EN Clarkfield. A mind that's rich in all that's good. LeROY DUSTIN PENNIMAN Preparatory His name shall be a Portion in the Batch Of the Heroic Dough which balc- ing Time Kneads for consuming Ages. LlLLlAN MAE QUA Hartford, N. Y. Her heart was qpen as the day, Her feelings all were true. TH RADAMACKER Fairmont What e'er she wills to do or say, to her is wisest virtuous 1 is ln other men. PHILIP CLIFFORD REYNOLDS Lamberton I am not only witty in m s lf b , est, dis- creetest, best. y e ut the cause that w't ' ' LILLIAN LOUISE RICHARDSON Faribault In work conscientious: in theshot put victorious. MARION EDITH ROBBINS Dodge Center Thus we confess thy writings be such As neither man nor Muse can praise too much. EDNA ALMIRA SHULTZ Spring Valley She is a woman who does her own thinking. FAUS PETER SILVERNALE Montevidio He is no less than a stuffed man- but for the stuffing-well, we are all mortal. C. PAUL SMITH Preparatory Most friendship is feigning, most loving mere folly. Class I E M7 A 'l ,, E x DE'A if w w 1 l Class W T Bl CHARLES F. SPRINGSTED Preparatory He was a very parfit gentil knight. HENRY SWANSON Olivia He makes a swanlike masterly stroke. finish: a MARJORIE WELLS Preparatory Faithful, gentle, good. Wearing the rose of womanhooclf' CHRIS J. WERNLUND Baldwin, Wis. Oh, curses, I haven't got that pat yet. RUDOLPH JOSEPH WOSMEK Pine City Friends, Romans, Countrymen, Lend me your ears! Q. ,..1-.,...w.M-!7. .- -Lf: -. -f', ---- T vm- -,-- -,.4-- .-,-4 1-.-gwvzf--7, .-.-- M- V V. , ,,.,,, IfiD6Z7JlP.MJwrni?x:'1.v 13:4 wxn1f1.tw'f::,fgfmi+ ,- P- ,.:.n.-yixznx'-.'. , - Mfg V :, W 1 Chronicle of the Class of 1913 BY A SENIOR gag 'S in the history of Ancient Egypt a period of plenty and prosperity pfxttl X' 'preceded a cycle of barrenness and misfortune so in the annals of tl, Hamline the illustrious class of 'I3 preceded those that have followed. L When in the far distant horizon, thin vapor-like clouds of dust first proclaimed their heralded approach, the faculty, wise to the indications of a marvelous coming wonder that would eclipse the fame of past decades sent forth an edict for the building of a new gymnasium. After registering each one with due respect, Dr. B., Hamline's grand old man, endowed the institution for another year, added, since the class deemed it neces- sary, three new members to the faculty, attended the Ecumenical Conference at Toronto Canada, and trimmed the trees on the campus. Early that Fall this precocious class was presented with the Sophomore Hag as a souvenir of the Hag scrap. Basketball championship, cane rush, baseball supremacy, everything of value they snatched and carefully hoarded. ln fact they made a hit in everything, their winning ways were so effective. As a result of this capacity the same year, Hamline had a champion track team. The Year of the Big Wind-the following one-blew in the class of ' I 4. Vividly does the chronicler recall how the kind preceptress received them at Ladies Hall and marshalled in her little army, guided them gently through the intricacies of registering and pointed out the beauties of the campus to them while the sound of their childish treble as they played ring-around-the-rosy, and drop-the-hand- kerchief still rings in his ears. That was the year the class of 'I3 showed their kindly interest and protection by taking the candy away from the baby-they feared it would give him colic. As a pacifier they took only the flag scrap, the inter-class basketball game and championship and gave him the cane rush. The next year the 'l5ers came-to tide them over the effects, the faculty invested in hypodermics. Hartwell was driven to marriage but Wally and A. M. Davis still survived the deluge. How worthy now was the class of 'I3 in this time of stress and need. The good Samaritan was left in the shade. Their pres- ence was felt in every nook, niche and cranny. They soothed the squally, squab- bling under-classmen encouraging them by worthy deeds and virtuous examples, and tutoring the Seniors with the patience of Job. Alas that ere the year should come As Seniors all we see them now That must be called their last With stately cap and gown Too soon their noble course is run The bright and shining guiding stars T00 soon their day is passed. This class of great renown. QQ 24 X, 1 . .5 fp. .: iff fl 331 if Q51 411.1 U: rf v. nl 4 x. , -.. ,. ,,--..- - -W-. X---V '- W ' ' V7 ki W .5 u ,A 1 4: ? J 'I -I H. T, 'a ., . Qfgff- x !1Q ' ig' v A' . f J gg 'Xt xB v i MQ JUNIORS W Class Poem ILCIEZNT toniihi are all thy reammg a s. The yellow glow of yon slow waning moon Thy humblest stone doth bathe with mystic light. The wanton breezes wandr'ing through the leaves, Bestow a soft caress upon thy walls, Then die away too soon Among the whisp'ring voices of the night. In nestling tenderness the ivy cleaves And wreathes with green thine every roughened spot, . That all the storm and stress of years have wrought. Ahl beautiful thou art to me tonight, And swiftly rushing mem'ries throng my brain. Once more ' thy halls resound with tramping feet, I hear the sound of laughter and of song. I see them all with joyous faces bright, We grip the hand again. Once more upon the field our foes we meet, The chant of victory echoes from the throng, Around the fire our song of battle rings, I The deep toned bell our challenge wildly flings. But ah, the vision swiftly fades away. Night from o'er the heavens lifts her veil, The moon has sunk far down the western slopes, The flush of morning stains the eastern sky, And all too soon the garish light of day Shall tell another tale. The story of those early youthful hopes, That were fated one by one to die. For youth dreams out its feverish years ahead, Before the strife of life has brought its dread. O Mother Dear, though long the way has been, And far, far beyond us shines our goal, Our hearts for thee will never cease to beat, Thy voice we hear at every path we cross. The laurel on thy brow to us is green, Still beautiful thy soul. And where'er shall go our wandering feet, Or on whatever sea our ship shall toss, To thee shall rise our grateful song of praise, I An altar fire to thee shall ever blaze. -+Charles Ross Richardson. The Junior Class Organization President, Edward Voorhees Vice-President, Goldie Squire Secretary. Ethel Featherstone Treasurer, Roscoe Kirkpatrick FLOWER: , YEL!- Yellow Jonquil, Razzle Dazzle, Razzle Dazzle, MOTTO: Razzle Dazzle do. Superanda ferendo est Who0P ie' UP' Wh00P 'el' 1-lp, Victory thru endurance. Walla Walla WOO. COLORS: ' One a zippa, two a zippa, three Royal Blue and Cold. 9 2iPP3 ZH- Nineteen-fourteen, rah, rah, rah. EARL CRAVEN Hamline Amphic, Phi Delta. Liner Editor, News- paper Reporter. Oracle Editor. EDWARD VOORHEES Sauk Center Amphic, Junior President, Fellow, Associ- ate Editor Oracle, Maga Staff, Liner Staff. Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Intercollegiate Debate, Orator. 'There is a tall person named Craven Who of words is exceedingly savin' At acting the beau He is there with the dough And he writes columns and columns for the St. Paul Dispatch. Our own heart, and not other men's opinion, forms our true honor. -1 meer'-We 'fri ,-'wwf--- wR'f'-1:2 1 'jT - A re in 3 COLDIE SQUIRE Aberdeen, S. D. Alpha Phi, Oracle Staff, Liner Staff, Jun- ior Vice-President. l-lere's to the gladness of her gladness when she's glad, l-lere's to the sadness of her sadness when she's sad, But the gladness of her gladness And the sadness of her sadness Are ngtnin it with her madness when she's ma . LEONA HEINS Le Sueur Alpha Phi. Liner Artist. Class Treasurer. A girl of many talents and a perfect jewel of usefulness. lf you want a thing done, done well and on time, delegate it to Leona. She combines with her ex- ecutive ability a natural artistic taste that is evident in everything she does. ETHEL FEATHERSTONE. Red Wing Athenean, Liner Staff, Class Secretary. Everybody likes Feather.' ll U Favor to none, to all a smile extends, Oft she rejects but never once offends. ROSCOE KIRKPATRICK Hamline Philo, Class Treasurer, Student Council, Liner Staff. Phi Delta. Kirk, is another of those baffling Math sharks. Some day he will up and demonstrate the fourth dimension. His substantial type of ability has always been useful to his class and he has never re- fused to do his parts Kirk is also a Nim- rod and can vdraw as pretty a bead on a flying deer as could Daniel Boone. ROGER S. ANDERSON Hamline Phi Alpha, Beta Kappa, Track Captain 'IZ-I3. Basketball Manager, Football H, Track H, Liner Staff, Student Council. lt takes a fast one to keep up to Rog. lf you don't believe it read the track records. Whether on track, gridiron or in the drawing room, Rog can meet all comers-and he never Hunked under the Dean. RHUDY H. BEMMELS Lisbon, N. D. Phi Alpha, Liner Photogapherr, Phi Delta. There was a young fellow named Rhudy As active as famed Punch and Judy. At his books he was gude To his profs never rude But rather inclined to be dudey. MARY BASKERVILLE St. Paul Liner Staff. Student' Council. The Top Notch-ess in Liner sales. A dainty Southern bud that unfolded with rare fragrance among our Northern snows. Bright, vivacious and majestic. Mary, Mary, quite contrary: Still, we love the name of Mary. KENNETH BREWSTER Roswell, N. M. Phi Alpha, Fellow, Business Manager of Liner, Lab Assistant, Rog's affinity. There's a rollicking youngster named Brewster Who don't be so fat as he used tuh. He's a cowboy, you know, From New Mexico, Though he doesn't punch cows like he used tuh. -vr.,1,'-ww. Z.-' f ...,.-...,. , ,, ,, ,, .., .. . , 'fe-1 r-'W W - snare K.:x.:,.,a.4,g.a:..fa...Q-gm:rLx.u.a.fB:,e+.wAoeng:-:.....,.s..:r L,-,..- WILLIAM CRAYS Winnebago Euphronian, Fellow, Track H, Football H. Bill is curly-headed, good natured, Heet as the wind on his feet and altogether Viva-fying. Especially fast at the game of Fox and Goose. All the world loves a lover. MABEL CROMMETT Warwick, N. D. Alpha Phi. To all obliging, yet reserved to all. L EARL MAHLE Red Rock Amphictyon. A thinker, deep and profound, a steady nature and a generous heart, a gentleman and a scholar. ROBERT CROSSLAND Hamline Amphic, Fellow, Musician. How noble in reason! How infinite in faculties! In apprehension how like a god! -1 if 4' N-sift' 1 l ROBERT CULBERTSON Hamline Amphic. Phi Delta. Y. Nl. C. A. Pres- ident, Track Captain 'l I-'lZ, Student Council, Liner Staff. Rob is a fellow whom everybody likes. He is always loyal and ready to do his best. He has been at Hamline so long and would be missed so much that there is some discussion about a life scholarship. Bob is a preacher and none the worse for it. HELEN DORAN Hamline Browning. O ruby lips adorable, O wells of light divine! Your feminine wiles irresistible Do make one sulk and pine. lt's sad, Helen, but too true. HAZEL DINGLE Devil's Lake, N. D. Athenean. Those lustrous eyesl What secrets deep Within thy limpid depths enfold? Much wisdom rare And wit and grace Yet then the half has not been told. BESSIE ELLIOTT Redwood Falls Athenean, Liner Staff. A maiden charm, a womanly grace And wisdom rare, in her combine To make for her a welcome warm And promise much for future time. PM .ts3I. ' ' ii' i ' gg VIVA FOX Winnebago Eu terpean , Liner Staff. Viva can think in Greek, make a good drawing with one stroke of a pen, has wit that can wound or heal at pleasure, and a Will all her own. Moreover, she has a perfect Crays for parties and all such. LUCRETIA GOFF Draton, N. D. Athenean, Sophomore President,Liner Staff Lu is a girl who is capable of doing whatever she sets her mind upon. If women had the suffrage, she could be President, but even then she would prob- ably prefer to remain what she is-an un- crowned queen among the girls. LUCY GILBERT St. Paul Deserves the Noble Prize for work in Mathematics. TEhere was a young maiden named Gil- ert Who for men did not give a filbert. Though stately and fair, 'Twas her typical air To be content with her family name, Gilbert. HARRY B. GOUGH Clarkfield Euphronian, Y. M. C. A. President. An orator, a man of clarion tone, who will one day awake the nation from its lethargy. Stands high in his classes and is somewhat of a musician. l have never read a novel and never intend to read one. i ELFREDA COULD St. Paul Park Alpha Phi, Liner Staff, Student Council. Here's to a clever girl l-lere's to a witty girl Here's to a girl with star-like eyes. Here's to her winsome ways Here's wishing happy days ln that beautiful kingdom where youth never dies. GEORGE HAGGANS Hamline Amphictyon, Track H, Preacher. One of Nature's humorists. On the platform, a man who can make you feel funny in ten different places at once. In private life, George is a jewel, with as big a heart as ever beat against a fifth rib. Ceorge's hobby is math. and he rides it to death. SADIE GRANT Hawley Athenean. Sadie is a real scholar. She can roll off Latin by the yard, and college math came right along without making the least fuss, when it found out who was taking it. Moreover, she is a girl whom one can de- pend upon in emergencies. JOSEPH HAUBRICK Bertha Euphronian. joe comes from the tall timber but he is a wise one just the same. The way he came in six weeks late and made it up in college chemistry, almost startled the Dean. joe is some fusser, too, but he is just as quiet about it as the night before Christ- mas. NEVA MABEL HEATH ,Ionesville Euterpean. A modest little girl of the shrinking violet kind, who, nevertheless, has opin- ions of her own. RUBEN JOHNSON St. Paul Euphronian. Besides being a good student, Ruben is a Hoor manager in one of the largest down-town clothing stores. The pro- prietors spealc to him in only the mildest of tones, while the mere clerks always salute and say, lf you please, sir, and Thank you, sir. , ROSE HEDLAND Red Wing Euterpean. As much of life and pep as two ordi- nary girls. Life at the Red Wing Semi- nary was rather quiet and humdrum for Rose, so she came to Hamline. And certain stars shot wildly from their spheres To hear this sea-maid's music. ALTA JONES Revillo, 5. Dak. Alpha Phi. h What should a girl do, but be merry? She doubts the wisdom of being too wise, and she sees much wisdom in some folly. 1 HARRY HOEGH Selma, Cal. Euphronian. For he could draw such- strains from his instrument that the fairies came out of the trees to dance. VAERNA JONES Revillo, S. D. Alpha Phi. Her eyes as stars of twilight fair, Like twilights' too, her duslcy hair, A countenance in which did meet Sweet records, promises as sweet. A creature not too bright or good For human nature's daily food. ARTHUR JOHNSON Rush City Euphroniang Winner of Sophomore Scholar- ship Prize. There is a young man from Rush City Who is reported to be rather witty: He cracks jokes in class But won't look at a lass, So we dolefully wind up our ditty. WALTER KEMPE Red Wing Phi Alpha. Business Manager of Oracle in-and Maga, Phi Delta, Sales Manager of mer. As Business Manager of our college publications, Kempe has made everybody sit up. rub their eyes and take notice. He moves rapidly, noiselessly and without raising a dust. but he always delivers the goods. Moreover he is first, last and al- ways, a gentleman. 1- - :' FYFTY''.'! 1'-w'F-VXEQil'WN:' f'f 'f'-f2f r f ' '7 'Z?'--TZ'5F'T'?f 'F'l1 ff'7 K' ' 7' E W L, L ,M .A ,JA 577. EDWARD KROLL Arlington Amphictyon. Spoit has had his garish day trying to live up to the nickname so thoughtfully presented to him by the class of 'l3. But he is now sobering down and goes through even Professor Lescohier's classes without a special. NATHAN C. KUSKE Olivia Euphronian, Intercollegiate Debate, Liner Staff. A good fighter and a tough one, A sincere fellow and a bluff one. A man who can study and fight and win A friend who's a sticker through thick and thin. FLOYD KUFUS Minneapolis Philomathean. A favorite with his profs and a good conversationalist. Floyd went over to the Aggies' one year but became homesick and had to come back. Girls we love for what they are: young men for what they promise to be. ELSIE LEAVITT Hastings Browning, Assistantzin English Language. A girl of good, solid ability. Has many loyal friends. The heights of great ones reached and kept Are not attained by sudden Flight, But they, while their companions slept, Were toiling upward in the night. MARGIE M. LEE Athenean. Margie is an athlete and the way she knocks that basketball about is anything but slow. In the piping times of peace she is clever with pen and brush and can do a vaudeville stunt with the best of them. SARAH MacKUSlCK Stillwater Browning. Just the airiest, fairiest slip of a thing. She's up and she's off, With a smile and a laugh, Carelessly giving her books a fling. OLIVER LINDBERG Rush City Amphictyon. Lindberg is the St. Peter of the Athletes' Paradise, the presiding Fate at the Gym. Even Phil Hamlin, his room-mate, does not dare get Sassy, Our subject is a mighty sachem among the boys' clubs and a good platform man. RUBY MATHER Faribault Euterpean. Oh, what a lot of pleasure smiling faces bring. She has a gem of greater worth than all the jewels of the earth It is her mind. iAs though she lived to write and wrote to ive. H ' gf: lf' 5 ' 'is' .'- 4.5 Th--'rx r -ii... N133n':13'5g. . ' i'1Q5:g.-sq.',- :.' '-it '-10 - 'W ' 'ufgrra---lgigjg' ' yr-f , '-il.-5f5r 'Q E 1-1-Q. --..z. ' V Q '.. ' ELOISE MOREY St. Paul Park Euterpean. The girl worth while is the one who will smile When everything goes dead wrong. GEORGE NEWLOVE. Hamilton, N. D. Euphronian, Hand ball shark. Lives of great men all remind us That we too, like sharks may be, And by imitating Newlove Crow in time as bright as he. WILLIAM MULDER Hamline Amphictyon, Fellow, Y. M. C. A. Cab- inet, Football H. Tis great to have a. critic's eye. Has lots of push-in the line and behind his laundry cart. ELENOR NUNN Detroit. Browning, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Liner Staff. To hear her sing, to hear her sing, It is to hear the birds of spring. To those who know her not no words . t . can pam , While to those who know her, all words are faint. ALMA MUNSON St. Paul Browning. Liner Artist. lf she will. she will, and you may depend .t, Anodl if she won't, she won't, and there's the end on't. RUTH PERRY Hamline Athenean, Liner Staff. . She is pretty to walk with, And witty to talk with And pleasant too, to think on. MARION MUNSON St. Paul Browning, Liner Staff, Maga Staff As dauntless as a daffodil That braves the bending breeze, So laughs her soul from out deep eyes Brown as some leafy pool that lies ln shade beneath the trees. EVA PETERREINS Echo Alpha Phi, Y. W. C. A. Cabinet. She is so very sweet and fair With such a heaven in her eyes, lt almost seems an overcare To ask them to be good and wise. ' - . A . ,fe . 'f'-1 .1.-. ',-f-- - 2-1 .-arffr-2 Qm mawmm1. me.mnsaa1i...sz.a..s1.a,zmaa:,'...L -. L a .- . -. .v-1. .J QE' v 190, 1 1, J ' I ' r ah' ,, A Q . Q A . EDITH QUIGLEY Drayton, N. D. Browning, Liner Staff, Student Council. Why is it that everybody loves her? Because she is so lovable. She was of that endearing kind Whose natures never vary, One whom at every time you'd find So bright and sweet and merry. LILLIE RYDEN Cambridge Euterpean, Student Volunteer, Y. W. C. A. President Elect. How doth the grace of womanhood sit upon her placid brow! CHARLES RICHARDSON Hamline Amphic, Fellow, Liner Staff, Oracle Staff, Football H. Intercollegiate Debate, Orator. Ma Richardson has mothered more Freshmen, cooked more delicious feeds: done more for the Boy Scouts: flunked in more hours: and played in more football games than any other man in Hamline. FRANK SANDERSON Minneapolis Euphronian, Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Phi Delta. Aller Anfang is Schweru--Frank's daily thought for two years in Dutch. All he will care for when his college days are over is the Ring and the Book and a chair with a little Padden in it. Ma: :vi I N m 1 1 he L. ..,....,..,.. 345 TQ? 'Q 5 F' ix, 1 f -Q U W - -- -' 1' :. ixyfqiw-.far1w..4 -L, JENNIE B. WATT Carlton Euterpean. The fault of Jennie is a mad endeavor To leap to heights that were made to climb, By a burst of strength or a thought that is clever, She plans to outwit and forestall time. ELMER WICKHAM Rochester Philo, Liner Artist, Baseball Captain I2- IB: Athletic Board, Baseball H, Football H, Betta Kappa, Glee Club. He can draw, he can write, he can sing, Play football and most everything: And we know 'tis not rank nor state But 'Get up and get' that makes men great. INEZ WENZ Aberdeen, S. D. Alpha Phi. Beauty is its own excuse for being. A calm more awful is than storm Beware of calm in any form. ELIZABETH WOOD Cass Lake Athenean, Associate Editor of Liner. A maid in whom nature blended the divine trio: grace, beauty and intellect. 9 3fiiLiQE.mwi'Au N ' I J in 1 -P 1 fi ,IENNIE WOOD Milnor, N. D. Athenean. As she does well here, she will do well there, We could tell you no more if we talked for a year. ALICE ZIMMERMAN Spring Valley Athenean, Y. W. C, A. Cabinet. She has the charm of courtesy 'And gracious words so sweet Ancl other virtues of the soul That make her so complete. NELLIE. C. WOOLLEY Lanesboro Athenean, Liner Staff. Hers is the look, and hers the face, That makes simplicity a grace, A grace that wins who sees to wish her stay. MINNIE ZIMMERMAN Spring Valley Athenean. l-ler care is never to offend. lt's gucle to be merry and wise, lt's gude to be honest and true. History of the Class of 1914 PREFACE I 1 ALLQIA est omnis divisa in partes tres we learned in those golden Prep. 4 li' 3-L 'days under dear old Tommy l...lk6WlS6 this history naturally 'A ,':L? M! H In - - l ' ' Vf a . . , . . . . - ,Z divides Itself into three parts, which from the momentous totallty of their effect on the human race, we will call epochs EPOCH I It was on a bright sunny day in September, A. D. CMMX, that Destiny, looking out from her battlements beneath the clock whose hands are ever idle, saw the purple and gold cohorts of the Nineteen-fourteeners gleaming in the sun- shine. She saw them disembark from their caravelg she heard their triumphant slogan, Razzle, dazzle, razzle dazzle, razzle dazzle, dog she watched them as they swept majestically over the greensward, youths and maidens full of hope and high ideals, toward the halls of wisdom. And as Destiny watched them she smiled her enigmatical smile. 'Hin Ullemoriam Touts Tlfaemmer Uiutb Grow Tfreberick Tlfingslanb I I There was a goodly majority of maidens in this great company, and with their swift instinct for quality they aided the youths in choosing a tall, curly-haired Romeo of soft accents, Philip Hamlin, for their leader. The Hrst Monday was a blue one, caused by a slight reverse which came to their land forces when the bar- barians of Nineteen-thirteen, with overwhelming numbers, wrested the Flag Rush from their heroes. However, as before, their maidens continued their victories in the drawing rooms of their small republic, carrying off upper classmen from under the very noses of the indignant but helpless Thirteeners, who could only bite their lips in baffled rage. Before spring, our Amazons had not only beaten them into silent submission in basketball but had gathered in the inter-class championship. ln the meantime they had revelled in song and parties galore, and their junior friends had banqueted them at the new Radisson, where they were first awed, then stuffed and finally enchanted. Before spring topped the hills with green, the youths had fully demonstrated their prowess over the Thirteener males by capturing four of their mightiest moguls and forcing them to sleep in a barn thirteen miles from town, from which they were given the privilege of walking in next day through a snow storm. Destiny, from her seat in the belfry, saw them coming and laughed aloud. This feat, together with the fact that they won the Cane Rush from them on the following Monday, so won the admiration of one of the Big Four, Charles Richardson, that after two years of calm deliberation he joined the class, and has become one of the most beloved and trusted partisans, always there with the helping hand and the delicious concoctions for tickling the palate. Nor was all their energy spent in Class Scraps. Seven l'l's were won by their men that year, W. Waltz, Kaemmer, Wickham and Russel, in football: Roger Anderson in track and Wickham in base- ball. Nor were they free from the discipline of sorrow. Three times during that year did Death reach with an icy hand into their ranks to take from them those whom they needed most. EPOCH II Several of the youths and maidens did not return with their class in the fall of I9l I. But' a great horde of the inevitable Green Ones did appear, and the class of 'I4 struggling against most fearful odds, lost KO Muse, dry those tearslj the Flag Rush. But now may be noted the ripening of those individual powers which are not dependent upon mere majority of numbers for effectiveness. Lu Goff, by unanimous acclaim, was chosen to pilot the Ship on her second year's voyage. Kenneth Brewster was chosen as Zoology Assistant to teach the Green Ones the whys and wherefores of amphibian alimentary systems. Arthur johnson won the twenty-five dollar prize for scholarship. Edward Voorhees won a place on the intercollegiate debate team, second place in.the College Oratorical Contest, had the Associate Editorship of the Oracle and Maga thrust upon him, and played tackle on the scrub team. Roger Anderson, not content with taking every- thing in sight on the indoor track, accomplished the prodigious feat of taking five firsts in our track meet with South Dakota. Will Crays was a close second and these two Sophs practically won the meet, as they did the Tri-State event, a few 'mwgmhr lf 7'13.f'Tr':f--,.....,, A'--V- M' Tin-nf-'w-, -M-,. -- -V .1 --1,41,'fw.y,,1f W ?l E'r g:5,.w- ... IW uA 'M' rx - 'fu ' P wa-,. yr., W 4 I 9,6 A-453, I YY Q f- ,535 i days later. Elmer Wickham made a place on the Glee Club and won two l l's, football and baseball. Marion Munson won a position on the Maga staff. Rhudy Bemmels of white duck trousers fame and later of Want Ad notoriety, like- wise represented the class on the Glee Club and was prominently concerned in the founding of the Phi Delta fraternity. The big social event of the year was the Sophomore-Senior Banquet at the new Leamington in Minneapolis. Ralph Drew, one of our piking classmates, was toast- master, and this event from the standpoint of wit, beauty, gowns, menu and music, was undoubtedly the most brilliant in the history of Hamline. And Every Little Movement had a Meaning all its Own. Meanwhile, Destiny in the belfry kept on smiling her cryptic smile. EPOCH Ill September, l9I2, saw the Fourteeners back on Campus Isle. But oh, what a difference! No longer green Freshies, no longer bold nor bad, but well-poised, serene, confident,-in short, juniors. They individually welcomed the incoming class in a manner due their latent genius and made plans for a more formal welcome later. Edward Voorhees was elected Captain of the Ship 'I4 for the Junior year, with Goldie Squire as First Mate. Then a great discussion arose. At first, low like the crooning of a mother, it arose and became insistent like the buzzing of a distant army. It grew nearer and louder and at length broke into the overwhelming cry of pent-up genius, We must have a Liner! Instantly there was a cyclone of activity. Earl Craven of newspaper reporting fame, was elected Editor-in-Chief. Kenneth Brewster, Business Manager, and Elizabeth Wood, Associate Editor. A staff of leading literary lights was soon gathered together in noisy session, and the present volume was launched. ln carrying off blue ribbons in administrative and athletic honors, Roger Anderson takes the lead with another football H, the Managership of Basketball. the Track Captaincy, and will undoubtedly work more wonders in track this spring, Elmer Wickham brought down another football H for his collection, and was chosen Baseball Captain. Walter Kempe is the hustling Business Manager of the Oracle and Maga and has made his classmates proud of his business ability. Bob Culbertson, another Thirteener who was glad to step back into so distinguished a class as ours, is Y. M. C. A. President. Nathan Kuske has made the Intercollegiate Debate Team this year. Fearless of breaking the much feared precedent, they this year gave a single reception and party to the Freshmen. Thus the Juniors more than hold their own in college activities.' With their star man, Roger Anderson, absent, on account of illness, they have just won the first of three lnter-Class Track Meets, and with the big fellow back, they stand an excellent chance of winning the series.' These are a few of the achievements of the Fourteeners. Nothing has been said of the spirit of loyalty to each other, and devotion to Hamline which they have fostered. Such things cannot be measured in medals won or titles gained. But Destiny from her seat on high, sees all and calls it good. 11:51 53 .f 53 JE , :I EQ ,2 'rl 5.:-41:J.-k41..a..4-A14..f-,......,,..:..,...Lw.,-.,,.n...,p....-..., .. .p....H. M-..:.-,..,.m. n 1:1:,.:.LJgw... . '.. 4i...Le:iLz.4t,':L.-ra, 4'1'.:.EiLnE1i..4- BWEUPJVHYIMUBEER V HQ-2 ff ' IE., 3 Sophomore Class William Everett Baker Esther Olive Bane Floyd Baumhofer Franklin Leslie Blume Amy Lende Brusven Dortha Grace Calkins Allen D. Collette George R. Cowgill Robert E. Crossland Thaddeus D. M. Davey Edna Eleanor Davis Elmer Doyle Clifford Thoren Ekelund Mildred Evelyn Fitschen Willard C. Fuller Hazel Getchell Norman Leta Goodell Gladys Greenslit Blanche Evelyn Grenon Lola V. Grinnell Etta Luella Halvorsen Philip L. Hamlin Harry Harper Walton Orel Harrison Ruth Marie Harvey Rose Carolyn Hedland Harold M. l-leneman Nellie V. james Reuben N. Johnson lvan Traveller jones Verna Ann Jones Arnold Kirkpatrick Esther Sarah Koenig Elizabeth H. Lambert Theo. Larson Alma Gladys Lee Ruth S. Lee Clarence N. Lindberg Ray Little Lawrence R. Lunde Sarah Alcott MacKusick Henry C. Mecklenberg George Leroy Merkert Jessie L. Nelson Annetta Elsie Padden Ruth Louise Perry Marjory Norma Person Esther L. Peterreins Violetta Alvina Peterson Leland McLeod Pryor Samuel F. Radebaugh Clifford E. Reed Charles Edward Sauter Alfred Delos Steadman Charles Harry Sweitzer Eleanora Swenson Karl Henry Trout Grace May Umpleby Warren F. Woodcock Blanche Workman new r .113-Wie? g' , , - ' ,, ,. ,'...:. ',- f .9 fwsf -gs '-44. .-.-,L-Vg. -r ' ' 2 .i By a Sophomore Not with more glories in the ethereal plain, The sun first rises o'er the purpled main Thus issuing forth his rivals fair are seen The beautiful, big, bright, brilliant class 'l5. CWith apologies to Alexander Pope.D AR be it from us to boast, for is not the braggart, nature's best abomination? Far be it from us to render ourselves undue laud and honor! But no tribute which the human mind can conceive of, no symposium which a Waterman Ideal can record would do even partial justice to the temper- amental talents, the abiding abilities, the genuine genius of the class of I9I5. If, Gentle Reader, you are inclined to doubt or distrust any of the statements here recorded, we earnestly entreat you to remember that truth is stranger than fiction. With the entrance of our class did Hamline receive the mighty impetus which is sending her onward and upward, higher and ever higher, toward the glorious throne of Eternal Success. ' Our class it is to which the Faculty has A ever been able to point the finger of pride and call upon other classes to imitate. Our class it is which has produced the most learned scholars, the most brilliant orators, the most powerful athletes as well as the classi- est boys, the prettiest girls and most success- ful fussers that have ever graced the Halls, field or campus of our beloved Alma Mater. We have left no sphere of action unpre- empted but have swept onward with ever con- 4 quering tread, victorious in everything from Flag Rushes to Trig. We have never recognized a rival, have never considered ourselves as competing but regard our victories as the just record of our U X perseverance and general excellence. Violetta Peterson. Class President Our stately, self-possessed but withal unassuming air of suc- cess has made the classes of 'I4 and 'I6 appear in comparison like very small boys who have been caught stealing jam, and who are momentarily expecting the correcting influence of the hair brush. As valiant Freshmen did we win the Flag and Cane Rushes with a casual grace and wonder- -- ful sang froid. Our gold and black banner was kept floating above Goheen by the fair brave co-eds for six long months. In baseball, football and track did we also excel. And though the Flag Rush this year resulted in a shade of victory for the Freshmen, still we acquitted ourselves so honorably that the applause and glory were all for us. Our class organization has been the foundation of our success. It is a monu- ment of parliamentary perfection. Its stability and unity excite universal admi- ration. The ease with which dues are collected, the readiness with which disputes are adjusted, the brilliancy with which our social affairs are conducted call forth universal commendation. Such superior abilities as ours, uncommon even in Hamline have surrounded us with a dazzling halo of brilliancy, making us appear as a radiant sun amidst pale stars. Of course there have been, are, and will be, other classes except that of l9l5, but no other one class has combined all the good qualities common to classes to the utter exclusion of the bad ones. Our sterling worth joined to our quality of perseverance and our natural aptitude has raised us to an eminence far above that which any other class has ever dreamed of attaining. With becoming modesty and humility do we occupy our sup- reme position on the exalted mountain peak of fame. We have become an ideal class regarded by all other classes with awe and reverence, an ideal class which all others may aspire to emulate but can never hope to equal. We commend this to our readers as an example of modesty, par ex- cellence. -The Editors Q gi 7 W - sgifmifkaza xii I I 1 L I I II EL 1 I L L I 1 1IIIliIlglIIiIEl r 'fn :E f ilk Q - E Q .., .m 'Q The History of the Freshman Class Qyf t UR tribe here assembled, in the Ides of September 'Twas a miserable day--we can't help but remember GQ We were homesick and lonely and weary and blue L31-.., ,. H1 - - - 4- A peevlsh and sickly, pea-green looking crew. But we made up in numbers for whate'r was wrong For the class of 'I6 was near 209 strong. The first day was a nightmare, we wandered around Like a flock of lost sheep-never sure of our ground, We went from the Dean to the Registrar's desk, And back to the Dean-a continuous quest. Paying bills, signing cards, fixing programs-Alas! 'Tis a wonder we ever survived!-this rare class. But once registration days' fears were all past, We began to revive and recovered quite fast. We showed the material of which we were made, Homesickness was banished and gloom, too, did fade. We organized into a well controlled crowd, Chose president and officers of whom we're most proud. Gave parties and picnics-the last at Frog-Pond, For of that antique place we became very fond. When Flag Rush came round we were true to our creed, The Sophomores were vanquished, 'I6 had the lead. We won in a fairly, but Hercely waged fight, And came out with colors untarnished and bright, We survived frantic rushing for five weeks or more, But when finally the bids came, were glad it was o'er. We attended Athletics, supported the game, With cheering and shouting, in sunshine or rain: In the class room, our lessons were always done well, For in learning and study the Freshmen excel. We will always be true, when at work or at rest, And will prove this our Motto: Hamline stands for the Best -c.c,1v1. '16 Raymond C. Alley Astor Alexnis Anderson Arthur C. Anderson Florence H. Anderson Howard C. Anderson Henry O. Anderson June Anderson Ruth E. Anderson Ruth V. Anderson Sherman L. Anderson Ruth Askeland Vinette Babcock James Ballentine Clarence C. Bausman Grover C. Beatty Einer A. Berg Oscar H. Berg Lester H. Bergeson lngvald Bergh Mary D. V. Berryman Frank A. Betts Isabel R. Birnberg John Blackhurst Ida M. Blehert Hazelle Bliss LaForest P. Blyler ,Iohn Derwin Booker Arthur H. Booshardt Cecil Frank Brantner Mae Brewster Royal Newton Brown Florence Anna Buelly Marguerite Calkins Henry D. Campbell Florence E. Caswell Clayton R. Champlin Truman Benton Clark Leslie Lewis Colby Alfred Colle Norma Cone Fanny Coveney Rudolph C. Dahl Bertha Marie Dahlberg Harold Morgan Dakin Paul Dille Herbert O. Dittbenner Leonard Allen Dobner Neal E. Dow Florence J. Dunnell Ezra A. Durbahn Walter E. Durbahn Cora Lucile Edwards Arvid Andrew Erickson Donald Curtis Farley Nellie Lucile Feetham Arthur 5. Felien James D. Ferguson Lewis E. Fiero Edwin Roy Foss Leora Foster Carl Cooper Francis Laura E. Francis Casper T. Fredrickson Melvin Galchutt Lillian H. Cebharcl William F. Cnennrich Clifford Wilson Hague Halsey Harrington lna Harriet Harris Warren L. Harris Russell Healy Anna C. Hedenberg Henry Hedin Harold Helliwell Glenn S. Hendryx Evelyn Alice Heneman August A. Herrmann Siegfried F. Herrmann Ray R. Hirt Orton Hoel Frank W. Howe Mildred Edna Huff V Henry Moe. President of Class of 1916 Levin the Freshman Cheer Leader Milton Recksick Beth Alice Ross Helen Lucile Ross Paul Wylie Sandberg Edith Mary Sanford Georgiana L. Sanford Raymond W. Schmaith Leslie N. Schoonover Lorenz Herman Schulz Daniel Scott Mabel Myrtle Sell Dorothy Sherman Merl E. Hummell Ruth Humphrey Willard D. Humphrey Helen R. Hyde Grace Evelyn lverson Walter Henry ,Iacke Grant Jacobson Albin August johnson Abner L. johnson Esther Johnson William F. johnson William R. Johnson Ellis Kaber William G. Kahlert Robert G. Kelis Louis Otto Kemp Paul Samuel Kerfoot Saul B. Kramer Henry Kuhrmeyer Harry M. Lanpher Leonard Norman Lee Edward G. Lehman Dorsey S. Lenz Abraham l. Levin Clarence l. Lillehei Milton B. Lindberg David E. E. Lundeen Clifford N. Lundsten Abigail Lutz Genevieve C. McKean T. Harter MacKenzie Josephine M. McNeil May Irene Millbrook Sherman Millbrook Henry Moe Thomas Moe Hazel M. Murray Leonell E. Nelson H. Laura Nichols Charles N. Olien Walfred Andrew Olson Chester H. Orrison Ernest Cecil Parish Minnie Parish William M. Parker Hazel Ruth Paulson Paul Gerhard Peik Ralph Newell Powell Elmer Henry Ralston Luella Traver Arthur W. Turner Thea Wohler Lester G. Wood Lee Alton Workman Donald Arthur Young William Basil Young Oscar F. Youngdahl Durwood B. Sherman Geneva Mable Silver Lillian Louise Skinner Fred L. Smock Olive Elizabeth Sperry Lawrence P. Stubstad Abraham L. Sugarman Rolla Tanner Grace lrene Taylor E. Tetreu E. Myrle Tinker john N. Torvestad Winners of the Flag Rush Q - 6.6.5 m sb, Es Music at Hamline 'HE musical atmosphere of a college is largely indicative of its degree culture, and to many people is its chief recommendation. To all Hamline must appeal at once as an institution whose foremost ' W' ' care is to surround her students with all that is finest and best, not only in academic and religious interests, but in musical as well. a Hamline is exceptionally well located between two great music centers. The homes of equally famous symphony orchestras, each is in itself a veritable musical Mecca, offering in concert the world's greatest and best loved artists, and thereby drawing together the music lovers of the Northwest. Thus the musical work of thecollege finds a supplement in the Twin Cities which many another institution might well envy. The musical department itself is under the direction of three very well-known instructors whose increasing number of students attest the excel- lence of their work and their growing popularity. The work of the department does not include all of the musical interest at Hamline, for there are soloists, orches- tras, choruses and quartettes amongst the students which furnish music for the various society and other local affairs. These-not to mention the famous Hamline Glee Club. of whosesuccess the college has always been proud-all make for a musical atmosphere, which is one of Hamline's many attracting features. Rollin M. Pease, born in Cambridge, Mass., A. B., attended Northwestern University l898. Won Castle Scholarship in Chicago Musical College in I899, over 200 contestants. Studied two years in College of Music, University of Denver. Vocal Instructor at Fort Worth, Texas, University, three years. Director of Music S. W. State Normal School of Oklahoma, three years. ln St. Paul at present time. Choir Master and Baritone Soloist in the First Methodist Church for four and one-half years. George A. Thornton, born in Carlow, Ireland. Pupil and Assistant for seven years to the organist of Selby Abby, Yorkshire, in piano and harmony. Violin pupil of Edgar Haddock at Leeds College of Music. Passed all qualifying exami- nations for piano at Royal Academy, London. Organist and Choir Director at Wexford Parish Church for thirteen years, Ferns Cathedral, live years. Official Accompanist at Diocesan Festivals for ten years. In St. Paul, Choir Master and Organist of St. Clements Episcopal Church for three and one-half years. First Violinist, St. Paul Symphony Orchestra, for three years. President of Minnesota Music Teachers Association, l9l2. Sub. Dean of American Guild of Organists, I9l2. William Rhys Herbert, born at Resolven, South Wales. Bachelor and Doctor of Music, Toronto University. Composer of the well known cantatas, Bethany and The Nazarenef' of the equally popular operettas A Nautical Knot, and Sylvia, of smaller works and of many songs. He is organist and Choir Master at the Church of the Redeemer, Minneapolis. ,df :5 1-f 'i w'- 'fv:' :H W' - ' - -. , . ,, J ff.'-'-ala.: -. i ff ' .-: gf . , M s:'?':f1--f .. . ,A f ,-Ah Wahl? My-Wh V 0- A 45- Qghlgvklm-A L:-cv-' 1- 5' cg:-5-..:15ggf ,?5Z 3, 9' l ,x. A-A4523 'B- 1 T E N7 as 44 . 1 I 1 - 1 'f f :s-iff. 'f'fZ54 '.ft'i,'-f?:wiS?fES:'. rS'5A,:g-H' 3'f:-ff-' . ,. f Y 1 . Y' f-- A -w: 1A.-f.-'53 233 :fl ,:1f1L:..1-aaa'-,-7:Eg-f.,.'11.x 1a'..r2K , L--1 - E A-1 fu-..f Hamline University C-lee Club, 1912-I3 lr-3' Lx.. The Glee Club First Tenor First Bass C. Franklin Blyler P. M. C-oertz Rhudy E. Bemmels Willard Fuller La Forest Blyler Frank W. Howe Second Tenor Second B355 Gale P- Helseson Howard C. Anderson C. Paul Smith Chas. K. Holmes Lee A. Workman Rocert E. Newens O one can realize what it means to belong to the Glee Club unless he has been a member of it. From the time that the car is taken at Snelling Avenue, for the beginning of the noted Spring Trip, to the fall of the T ' i 'A curtain at the last concert, is a space memories of which will linger long after other scenes of college life have been forgotten. It is not alone the excitement ancl pleasure of getting ready for a concert every evening for ten consecutive nights, or the losing of various baggage, but the friendships formed, the knowledge gained of one another, and the practical experiences, all these help to form that wonderful spirit of Camaradie that cements the club together, and that in after years is looked back to with such enjoyment. The Clee Club has been the musical organization of Hamline for years, and has always been one that she could be proud of. Loyal always to Hamline, Hamline in turn has always been loyal to the club and supported it strongly, by filling the chapel at the annual Home Concert. ' Going back to the year IS93 there is found the germ of the present Culee Club, but it is a big step from the Hamline University Quartette of that time, to the well trained, modern club of fifteen men of today. There are three names which stand out clearly during this time, three men who have been mainly responsible for this step. They are, A. Z. Drew, former Professor of Mathematics, who became director in I898g W. Keller, former Professor of Greek, who was director from l903 to I9l0g and R. M. Pease, who is the present director. The value in experience and training to those who are fortunate enough to win a place on the club is of course apparent, but there is a value to the college which sends out a club of this kind that is not always so readily understood. It is prob- ably the greatest and best advertising that ia school can have. But one does not think of all these things afterward. For .then from the blur of the many concerts, events and experiences, rises clear and distinct the memory of those two songs which to all glee club men have become immortal, Dear Old U and Boys of the Old Brigade. , jg? 5,661 I Gy x ffl? 115 URHIURY-IDEBH Debate and Oratory Eu O student has received a complete college education, unless he has had training in debate and oratory. In ancient tlrnesilt was customary to ,i fain YI fl settle all problems by brute force, but as civilization progresses we are more and more to settle all questions more equitably by dis- cussion. It is absolutely essential that anyone who in later life wishes to influence the opinions and actions of his fellows has such training 'as is conducive to cogent thinking, effective handling and skilful presentation of evidence and good platform deportment. In accordance with this fact, debate and oratory has always occupied a promi- nent position in the Hamline University curriculum. The Hamline Debating and Oratory Association has been organized to take charge of this department of college activity. The purpose of this organization is not primarily to win all intercollegiate debating and oratorical contests as might be supposed. That is only an incident. The prime motive is to make the less fit, more fit, to be thoroughly in accordance with the motto Hamline stands for the Best. The hope on some future day of representing the University on one of the debate teams or in an oratorical contest is an incentive to application and keen individual competition. To realize the former, a position must first be attained on the society debating team, each society putting two teams in the field for the inter-society debates. If one attracts favorable attention in these debates he is chosen for the debate seminar composed of twelve men. Here under the instruction of Professors Les- cohier, Beyer and Johnstone he is taught how to detect argumental fallacies: the most forceful methods of introducing the subject, handling the material and attack- ing the opponents' arguments. Instruction is also given in the use of the voice, gesture, 'and all around platform deportment. A short time before the dates of the debates the coaches select the six men from the seminar whom they think best qualified for the teams. Every individual who makes the team is given two hours credit 'on his college work. A triangular debating league composed of Hamline, Macalester and St. Olaf, has been organized for a period of three years. A method similar to that of debate is pursued in oratory. Each society enters two contestants in an inter-society oratorical contest held during the first semester. The winner of the contest represents Hamline in the State Oratorical Contest. And as an added incentive a prize of one year's tuition is offered to the winner of the first place and a half year's tuition to the winner of the second place. The Ladies' Oratorical Association was formed in 1902 and since that time. a Ladies' Contest has been held every year. This is conducted along the same lines as that of the men, with the exception that there is no inter-collegiate contest, owing to the fact that this department is not maintained at other colleges. RUDOLPH WOSMEK Twice Intercollegiate Oratorical Representative. Wosmek came to Hamline from Pine City. He immediately broke into the forensic limelight by win- ning the home contest in his freshman year. He represented Hamline in the State lntercollegiate contest in his sophomore year. Then as a junior, he again appeared and claimed the honors in the home contest. He creditably upheld the institution in the state contest of l9l3, and although he was not given a high place in the markings of thejudges, he has anchored himself firmly in the hearts of all Hamline friends and students. ' He also was a member of the intercollegiate debating team which met Lawrence University in l9l I-l9I2. l889 I 890 I 89I I 892 l895 I 896 I897 l898 I 899 I900 I 90l Debate and Oratory Statistics Intercollegiate Oratorical Representatives since l889. C. L. Dobner E. Campbell Guy E. Maxwell' Guy E. Maxwell E. M. Phillips' A. H. Tasker b Guy L. Caldwell A. L. Richardson' Raymond McKaig Frank Drill F. W. Allen I903 l904 l905 l906 l907 I908 l909 l9lO l9II I9I2 l9I3 'Won first place. Hamline intercollegiate debating T. N. Swinnerton l. B. Wood Floyd Persinger Fayette Leavitt' Howard Robinson Sumner Koch James Morehouse Thomas Huser Rudolph Wosmek Harry Hanson Rudolph Wosmek record since l899. IS99-I900 Carleton, won by l909-l9l0 Lawrence, won by Carleton. Lawrence- . I900-1901 Carleton, wan by Noffh- Pakm' Won by C It Hamline. are on' Dakota Wesleyan, won by l905-l906 Lawrence, won by Dakota Wesleyan. Lawmce' 1910-1911 Lawrence, wan by l906-l907 Lawrence, won by Lawrence. Hamlme' l9I,I-I9l2 Lawrence, wan by l907-l908 Lawrence, won by. Lawrence. Hamline. Gustavus Adolphus, won by Dakota Wesleyan, won by Gusta-,usAdo1phus. Dakota Wesleyan' l9l2-l9l3 Macalester, won by Hamline. St. Olaf, won by St. Olaf. l908-l909 Lawrence, won by Hamline. ' FF e ' 1177-alia? fl5?'3?Tff55Fi Macalester Debate Team Abraham Levin, fHonest Abej. Amphictyon. Freshman. Hails from Humboldt High, St. Paul. Has had two years debating experience in high school being on the team for the years l9l0-ll and l9l I-l2. both of which teams were con- testants for the state cham- pionship. Oscar F. Youngdahl. Phi Alpha. Is right there when it comes to shooting the breeze. Comes to us this year from South High, Minneapolis. Was a member of the l9ll-I2 high school team which won the Minneapolis high school championship. Raymond Cowgill. Amphic- tyon, Sophomore. Varsity Debating team for l9ll-l2. Was on the .Mankato High School debating team for the years l9l0 and I9ll. Russell Healy. Freshman- Philomathean. Alternate on Macalester team. Drayton High School debate team which took fourth place in North Dakota debatingleague I 9 I 0-I I - -1 f .. -Y,'4-53--p,,,.c1-1.3.-.5.:-1 ff - ..t..,m..a,.u.f,.a. -- St. Olaf David Lundeen. Fresh- man. Phi Alpha. Hails from South High Minneapolis. Member of team l908-09 and l909-IO. Nathan Kuske. junior. Euphronian. Member of society debating team for l9l0-ll, l9ll-I2. Alternate on St. Olaf team. Debate Team g.s:'Q1L4, .-,-. Q Philip Hamlin. Sophomore. i Amphictyon. . Member of the Pine City High School team, which was twice cham- 5 pion of the Eighth Congres- sional District and contestant for the State Championship. ' Amphictyon debating team for l9I0-I I. Leland M. Pryor. Sopho- more. Philomathean. Mem- ber of the Washington Uni- versity Stevens Literary So- ciety team as a freshman, and of Breckenridge High School championship team l903-04. l903 I904 i905 l906 I907 AELFREDA COULD Winner of Ladies' Oratorical Contest, l9I3 LADIES' ORATORICAL ASSOCIATION President, Gertrude Clare Vice-President, Ruth macher Secretary, Ida Olien Rada- Treasurer, Mary Nickerson RECORDS OF LADIES' ORATORICAL CONTESTS Grace Canclell l908 Belle Matchett l909 Beatrice Billing I9I0 Frances Conkey I9l I Reca Craling I9l2 Ethel Ackerman Edna Anderson Cenevra Davies Sadie Wood No contest EXTRA! HAMLINE DEFEATS ANCIENT HIVALS Macalester Breeze-Shooters Not Strong Enough for the Methodist Forensic Uomhatants DECISION IS UNANIMUUS Hamline M. E. Church, March 14, 1913. CSpecial to the Linerj. Ham- 1ine's debating team, composed of Cowgill, Levin and Youngdahl, defeated the Macalester team here tonight by a decision of 3 to 0. Hamline's men argued the affirmative of the debate, on the question of federal charters for interstate corporations. ' HAMLINE LOSES St. Olaf triumphs by a decision of 2 to 1. Northheld, Minn., March 14. CSpecia1 to the Linerj-Orating gamely, the Hamline debating team, Lundeen, Hamlin and Pryor, lost by the decision of one judge to St. Olaf. They sup- ported the negative. WOSMEK GETS FOURTH Hamline man does fine work, but judges don't see it that way Central Presbyterian Church, March 11. CSpecial to the Linerj-Against the orators of Carleton, Macalester, St. Olaf and Gustavus Adolphus colleges, Rudolph Wosmek, Hamline's orator was awarded fourth place by the judges, although he had been given first or second by his audience. His subject was The Solving Principle. I I 1 1 4 i 3 I 1 5 1 r Q 1 5 ? fx 5' x K 47' I: 31 5. il i lm .R 1. Sl F. if N gl ix 5 1 i ii Hamline University Board of Athletic Control Thomas P. Beyer, Faculty Representative, President A. Wallace, '98, Alumni, Vice-President Ceo. W. Hartwell, Faculty, Treasurer Wm. Baird, Athletic Director Henry Swanson, 'l3, Secretary Robert Culbertson, 'I4 Ray Little, 'I5 E. A. Berg, 'I6 FOOTBALL Manford Waltz, 'l3, Captain Philip Reynolds, 'l3, Manager BASKETBALL Fred Heneman, 'l3, Captain BASEBALL ' Elmer Wickham, 'l4, Captain Benjamin'Brown, 'l3, Manager TRACK Roger Anderson, '14, Captain The Athletic Purpose iw' THLETES are invariably men of the spirited type, with an exceptional 12 ix '5 amount of physical energy, that must express itself in one way or another: , so athletics have been placed in our institutions of learning for a purpose: that young men may use up their surplus energy in clean wholesome athletic competition, and at the same time gain a knowledge of character, deter- mination, will power, and self-control, which prove essential later for success in life. Life is more or less a fight or a search for power, and a man must be able to stand by himself if he expects others to stand by him. Victories must be won in the head, before they can be won on the athletic field. The highest condition of health and beauty, come through care and exercise and at the same time one fs given a chance to express the vital life in that spirited team work which harmonizes the individual in spirit, mind, and body into a loyal union, that goes to make up the bigger men in life's schooling. - Some of the young men who come to the athletic field, remind one of a crude piece of iron, given to a blacksmith, from which he hammers and moulds a horse shoe. If the athlete lives properly according to diet and hygiene-provided the coaching environment is what it should be, he will end the season a good luck product, whether he has made the varsity, won or lost, in competition. It matters not whether a man is a varsity or scrub man if he has tested and found his weak and strong points. It is granted, the athlete must deprive himself of some of social advantages, yet he is doing something for his school. I am a great believer in team workg in the consistent working of men, one with another, to accomplish a desired end. It matters little whether it be in glee club practice, on debating teams, in gymnastic drills, or in competitive athletics. Young men after college should be broader than any one branch of a liberal education. I know there are men in the business world, who are measured as a success, mentally, physically and financially, yet some of them are mighty poor specimens infringing on the name of man. The student who comes to college and goes out of college, having slighted all the electives, hasicheated himself of one half of a college education. The bigger, higher things of life were wrought for the fame and glory of their achievement, and the man or woman who is not willing to match mental or physical wit, for the purpose of reaching something beyond the ordinary, stands for little. The man who plays the game is the one who gets the gain: and to him a prize means nothing unless it stands for something. Men who work with men in any branch of work, become bigger, broader men, because they learn to understand man, as man is. Will Baird. - 1 l '1....:.:... F., ' 'Q 1 .-:1.:.':..',5.'I..':..1--, L :QA V.:- H.. , 4 ..--.-.- ,.,,...,. ., -'-' '.'.- .'.1.- .' .' .'. '1, , -l-9 A- -.'...f,. ..-.,.', 5 M., A 8 Wearers wif theliil it Roger Anderson Einer Berg Franklin Blume William Crays Robert Culbertson Thaddeus Davey john Goodman Walton O. Harrison Harold l-leneman Fred Heneman Helmer Hougan Louis Kemp Theo. Larson Ray Little William Mulder Milton Recksiek Henry Swanson Charles Sweitzer Manford R. Waltz Welcome Waltz Elmer Wickham Football, Track Football Basketball Football, Track Track Baseball Football Football, Baseball Track Football, Basketball Track, Baseball Football Football Football, Track Football, Basketball Track, Football Football Basketball, Track Baseball, Football Football Football Football, Baseball The Four Captains on the' 1912 t Football Team Heneman M. Waltz Baird Rog. Anderson Wickham Right End Full Back Coach Left End Right Half Back Captain M. Waltz, of the l9l2 Football Team. Captain F. Heneman, of the l9l2-I3 Basketball Team. Coach Wm. Baird, of all four sports. Captain Rog. Anderson, of the l9l3 Track Team. Captain E. Wickham, of the I9I3r Baseball Team. Football the tri-state conference championship carefully stowed and a fair claim to the state championship, Hamline look back on the I9l2 football season' with a large degree satisfaction. Only one dark spot looms up on the whole luminous firmament of the season, but this is easily forgotten in the contemplation of the joys immediately following, supreme among which was that concomitant with the fixing of the habit a certain North field institution thought it had. Out of six games played during the season, Hamline won five. North Dakota, champions of the state, and South Dakota Wesleyan, likewise state champions, fell before the machine which Coach Baird had built up. This together with the defeat of Carleton, who had tiecl with St. Thomas early in the season, it would seem, gives Hamline a just claim on the tri-state conference championship, although it is a mooted question as to whether Hamline or' St. Thomas is best entitled to the state championship. No critic who saw the Hamline team of l9I2 in action will disagree with the statement that it was a wonderful organization. A large share of the credit for its efficiency is due Coach Baird, than whom as a trainer, no other coach in the state can stand higher. The team-work built up, and the strategical excellence of the plays which Baird worked out, went a long way toward the team's success. The season started out in fine style. A trip to Pillsbury, October 5th, was fraught with victory, and a week later, North Dakota bowed before the Hamline juggernaut, by a score of I2 to 0. Then something happened, no one knows what, but there is a general tendency to lay it to over-confidence, but the next week, Macalester kicked over the dope- pot, and beat us up in a heart-breaking game, 20 to I3. It is a horrible memory! And to add to the sadness, the team came out of the game with Harrison laid up for the rest of the season with a broken shoulder. A trip to Mitchell, S. D., where amid dust storms and rolling tumbleweeds, sweet revenge in part was achieved by a score of 35 to 0 over Dakota Wesleyan, and a secret trip to Menomonie, which brought victory by 25 to 0, while Carleton was gnashing its teeth inwardly because it didn't know where Hamline was playing, lead up to the final climax of the season. It is only necessary to mention the habit to recall vividly to every Hamline student, alumnus or hanger-on what happened at that last game, November IIth. Exciting, close, hair-raising, but above all successful, it will go down in history as one of the greatest events in Hamline's athletic annals. At the end of the first two quarters, Hamline, in spite of plucky fighting, stood behind Carleton 9 to 0. Things looked black. But the fighting spirit of the team never quailed. Instead with renewed energy they came out on the field in the third quarter. Shortly the crowd saw Manford Waltz's arm rise, the ball shoot high in the air, bound off two Carletons men's arms and into the hands of Roger Anderson, who ran over the line for the first touchdown. They cheered wildly and yelled fo: more. Hamline was still two points behind. The third quarter passed, and the fourth wore on. The ball was worked up and down the field but with no success on either side. Then the crowd held its breath. Heneman had dropped back to the thirty-yard line. The ball was passed back. Cooly and easily he caught it. With three Carleton men almost upon him, he dropped the ball to the ground, and with perfect precision, raised it in a perfect spiral and sent it over the bar squarely between the goal posts. The game was won. The habit was Hxed. The rooters burst forth into one thunderous roar of cheering, shouting and celebration. It was a great game. It marked the breaking of a hoodoo which had seemed to overhang Hamline when meeting her ancient rivals on the gridiron for the past three years. And it marked what all Hamline hopes is the starting point of a long line of similar successes for the Red and Gray. FOOTBALL SCORES, I9I 2 October 5, I9I2-Pillsbury Academy, 3, Ham- line, I4, at Owatonna. October I2, I9I2-North Dakota U, 0, Ham- line I2, at Norton Field. October, I9, I9I2-Macalester, 20: Hamline, I3, at Norton Field. October 25, I9I2-South Dakota Wesleyan, 05 Hamline, 36, at Mitchell, S. D. November 2, I9I2-Stout Institute, 75 Ham- line 25, at Menomonie, Wis. November II, I9I2-Carleton, 93 Hamline, IO, Norton Field. I Opponents, 39, Hamline, IIO. .f?f52'f'.' ,'7g,-gg'-''i'-'?',,755l'1?:3'f?71 lu -?-7'751f -T4?T'- 'TT - ' ' --Sa:-QQ-14.-:4-f-ann.l4,-u.4 44.54-.im Y ,- M.. Hamline-Carleton Game. Norton Field courrrssv OF w. sf DE Lone L , , - . .v Y, .V Q-.L fd -,......-ii. , ,,,,.'.:.i N,-,T-,V ,M .,'i,,A ,,.,y ,, . . . . - , ,, , ,,,, , ,. ., W,s,1...Z.,.q,.,.,A ., , - Football ATeam of I9l2 , 1 0 . 7-' 1,5 '. ,f 'y The Team COACH BAIRD. No coach Hamline -Q has ever had has been able to turn out so ' many championship teams as Baird in as ' many lines of sport. His great forte is train- ing and conditioning men, but he is also there when it comes to working out bewildering ' ' ' formations for his opponents. He took his letters in athletics at both lllinois and Penn- 'h , 'I sylvania Universities. He has been directing ' ,ax every branch of athletics at Hamline since Q 1 Lx gf- the spring of l9l0, and in that time has turned rf, H :J out one champion baseball team, one cham- L pion football team, two champion basketball teams, and three champion track teams. J 5 Billy lron Sides lRONSlDE.S WALTZ. Captain. Waltz is known variously as the human bullet, the human plow and the human gunboat, among opposing lines, who have tried and failed to stand up against him during the last three years. He has been unanimously chosen all-state fullback for two successive seasons. He will be sorely missed next year. I-IEINIEX' HENEMAN. Ex-captain Heinie, who played his last game against Carleton last fall. and fixed the habit by booting the drop kick which decided the game, is by far the best all-around athlete Hamline has had in recent years. He was almost universally selected as all-state end by newspaper critics, both last year and the year before. He has played four straight years at end, playing with a coolness and precision that made him feared and respected by every opponent. Besides, he has won H's in baseball, track, and basketball. Long live Heneman's toel jAWN HARRISON. Captain-elect. This hard hitting half showed his grit and fighting spirit in the Mac game, when he played a half hour after his shoulder was broken. This injury kept him out of the game the rest of the season, but next fall he should be ready to lead the Habit Fixers on to victory. Heinie' jawn 'Eggheadn Crouch .EQ Thursday lner Rex EGG-HEAD GOODMAN: The man who can be depended upon to go into the game in an emergency in some one else's place, and keep the team-work running smoothly, as well as measuring up to the work of the man whose place he has taken so there will be no loss, is as important as the regular players. Goodman for the last four years has patiently stayed on the sidelines, and every chance he had has given every ounce of strength he possessed. His touchdown in the Menomonie game is one of the bright spots in his memory. lNE.R BERG. This lanky guy came over to Hamline from Humboldt High School and Baird immediately put him to work at quarter. He proved that he had the goods, and delivered them. He shone most brilliantly however, in punting. His long, spectacular spirals were the delight of all the Ufans' hearts. REX RECKSIEK. Rex is the only man on the team who can boast of having played three different positions and having played them well. First he was placed at end. He showed up so well here, that Baird thought he wanted him back at half. Then a good quarter was needed to help Hlfix the Habit, and Rex was called upon. He delivered the goods. He -comes from Lake City. Next fall he should make a sensa- tional quarter, with more experience. UGROUCHIEU MULDER. Mulder started out on the scrubs and soon graduated into the varsity. His exhibition of pluck early in the season in continuing to play after several injuries had befallen him because of his aggressive tactics, won him a place in everybody's heart. He played hard all the time as utility center and lineman. THURSDAY HOUCEN. Thursday came to Ham- line after he had spent a year under the tutelage of Dcc Williams at the University of Minnesota. He added what he had learned there, to what Baird taught him, mixed in his physical strength and brain power, and gave to Hamline a first-class tackle. He broke up many pet formations of his opponents, and in the next two years, will keep Hamline's line unbroken, so far as his side is concerned. I X-,gn - .iff -ff .. 4 ff.. X, rf. pr, fs . . W .A I ., www- I7 QTVLV, - Cutey S ip ar 'I M I nv CUTEY BALLENTINE. Cutey came to Hamline from South High, Minneapolis, last fall. He is little, but oh, my! When turned loose on a broken field, there was almost no stopping him. His work at end was at many times of a spec- tacular order, and his punting was also a joy to behold. The cute one also has aspirations in track, at present holding the inter-scholastic record for the West in the quarter, which he made last june at Chicago. SLIP LITTLE. Rheumatism kept this big tackle from doing all he was capable of last fall, but nevertheless, he was chosen all-star state tackle by one critic. It was Lit's second year at Hamline. He is one of the best lineman Hamline has ever had. He uses his head all the time, and this coupled with his physique, makes him a tower of football strength. DAC-O WICKHAM. Wick played half most of last season, although he had been utility quarter for two years pre- viously. Baird shifted him over to half, where his weight would be more effective, and thereby showed wisdom, for Wick was on the job early and late, working hard all the time. He has another year in which to fight for the Red and Gray. DEWDROP WALTZ. Welcome conditioned himself in the coal mines of Lead, S. D., all last summer, and had not the charley-horse come around, he should have been a star of the Hrst magnitude at half. His greatest work was on defense. He was a real smashing half. BEEF LARSON. This big Scandinavian had scarcely seen a football when he came to Hamline two,seasons ago. After spending a year on the scrubs, Baird put him in at guard on the varsity last fall. An iron physique, and the strength of an ox, which had the previous spring helped him break college records in heaving weights, stood him in good stead here. With more experience, he should take first rank among Hamline's gridiron knights. Dago Dewdrop ' ' Beef' ' 5 E J l Big Swede Fat Tough BIG SWEDE ANDERSON. Rog didn't get out for football until after the Macalester game, and then went against the doctor's orders in doing so. But the old fighting spirit within wouldn't let him remain inactive after that defeat. He made the team the first week, his speed and slipperiness making him a terror at end. He made the only touchdown in the Carleton game. FAT KEMP. The little dimpled boy who played at left guard and surely made good. He came from Lake City, and almost filled two men's places. He was one of the biggest rocks in Hamline's stone wall. TOUCH SWEITZER. Tough is without doubt the best center in the state, and one of the best Hamline has ever had. For the last two seasons, he has been the mainstay of the Hamline line, and with two more years in which to develop, we fear any predictions we may make as to his future prowess will fall far short. He was unanimously chosen as all-star state center last fall. A A .. Q The l9I2 Squad The Scrubs The title 'Scrubs' is in many ways a misnomer. For the men who, night after night, with little hope of promotion, get out and let themselves be mauled and kicked around in order that the varsity may be in shape to win against the other big teams, cannot be called Scrubs. There is not a piker among them. The Scrub oftentimes possesses even more loyalty than the varsity man. The man who finds it easy because of his physical prowess, to hold hislplace on the team, and so receive the plauclits of the student body, has no great struggle to get out every night and keep in training. But the one who plugs away in oblivion, working his hardest every night, with but slight hope of ever making the team, possesses the type of loyalty that places Hamline where she is, and is deserving of the highest praise. The Scrubs of l9l2 were composed of such men. The twelve or thirteen who staid out to the very end of the season, scarcely- missing a night, were every one of them true blue, and men of the highest type of sportsmanship. Captain Sandberg, Dowe, lngvald Berg, Royal Brown, Lee, Harold l-leneman, Craven, Newans, Lundsten, Stedman, Doyle, Voorhees, .Frederickson are the men who made up the I9I2 Scrub team. They staid out until the very last day of the d h h h cl o chance season, although they knew shortly after the season opene t at t ey a n of making the varsity. They played three games and lost them. The first, with the Aggies, went by a score of I5 to 0. The second, at St. Cloud, giving the Scrubs their only trip of the season, they passed up by a score of 23 to 0. And Carleton's Scrubs got the habit by winning 'IZ to 0. 'ug-m-,Lf,':5' B., , . , 'fri ' ' 1 4 vf'.,.,.'f , . v, . QHRLI The Brams I' Henei11 am's 'toef 1, J'l'ng121-0 f 'horfi-LW . .. ,N ANI, X. .x x.,-4 G 'Goal ' wiki 'ns CAar1,efo:fSl if si it flirt . . J- . .11 Baseball is a chapter which most Hamline students and 5 followers would rather pass over quickly. The l9l2 x Q4 baseball season is not a pleasant retrospect for any ' iff' A i ff but l'lamline's opponents, and even to them, it should :A seem pathetic. The fates of evil, and other things, conspired, Q it seemed, to keep Hamline out of the win column practically A .1 the whole season. The one victory over Macalester at the 5 beginning of the season provides the only bright spot in one long record of gloom. H . Coming after the glorious record of the l9l I team of sixteen '2- straight victories out of eighteen played, and a great big fat championship on top of it, the l9I2 season, to be frank about it, was a disappointment to all Hamline. It is not the intention here to offer any excuses or apologies for the l9I2 bat- wielders. Nor is it the intention to lay the blame at the door of any person. The team somehow simply couldn't win and that is all there is to it. It was not because there were no ball players in the institution. The material at the beginning last spring was as good as Hamline has ever had. ln Davey, there was a pill-heaver who, given a well-organized team behind him, and a few more of the breaks in luck, should have proved the sensation among the recruits in the conference. Wickham, always a dependable slab man, was there. Wheeler, after three years of erratic work on the second team, finally found himself and was able to dispense the slants of the woozling kind. Dopey Glass, captain, was as good a first baseman as ever donned a pad: not spectacular, but on the job all the time, and able to swat the ball on the nose with regularity. Then there was Lokke, by no means a phenom, but a man .of three years' experience at the backstop job, and able to handle the willow for a good average. Lienke, who assisted him, displayed ability at the game. Fred Heneman and Tough Sweitzer both proved to be trustworthy out-gardeners and handy with the bludgeon, while Harrison, Sanborn, and Furu were fast in the inner lot. It would seem that out of this bunch a strong team could have been developed. It was a fighting team. c Manager Mallery Lienke Kirkpatrick Wheeler Wickham Coach Baird Sanborn Sweitzer Furu Lokke Captain Class Davy Harrison Heneman fi! Capt. Elect Wickham Even when the tide of victory had ebbed almost beyond hope, they kept up their spirits. But they couldn't win, somehow. But let us not consider the past any more. The future is in store and is to come. It is unsafe to hazard any predic- tion as to the outcome of the season of l9l3. There is material enough here. Davey and Captain Wickham are on hand to deliver the pill, and Tough Sweitzer will again don a mitt and tend the out gardens. There is every reason for hope, but baseball is the most un- certain of sports. All Hamline is pull- ingffor a championship team. All we say is, give Coach Baird a fair chance. sa'-Tv r-, - ! 5 a - .3 I UL Capt. Glass April 24, I9Il April 27, l9ll, April 29, l9ll May 3, I9II- May 6, I9II- May 8, l9Il- May l2, l9ll May I3, l9ll May I6, l9ll May IS, l9ll May 20, I9lI May 22, l9Il May 24, l9ll May 25, l9ll May 26, l9ll May 27 BASEBALL SCORES, l9I I --Minn. A. C., 2, Hamline, I4, at Norton Field. Minn. U , 3, Hamline, 4, at Norton Field. -Carleton, 5, Hamline, 6, at Carleton. St. Olaf, 2, Hamline, 8, at St. Olaf. Minn. U , 6, Hamline, 0, at Northrup Field. Macalester, 2, Hamline, 6, at Maclaester. -River Falls Normal, 3, Hamline, 7, at River Falls, Wis. -River Falls Normal, 3, Hamline, l2, at River Falls, Wis. -North Dakota U , 2, Hamline, 6, at Norton Field. -Fargo College, 6, Hamline, 3, at Norton Field. -Minn. A. C., I, Hamline, 3, at Minn. A. C. -Carleton, I, Hamline, 7, at Norton Field. -North Dakota, U I, Hamline, 3, at Grand Forks. -Fargo College, l, Hamline, 0, at Fargo. -State Science School, 0, Hamline, IO, at Wahpeton. -St. ohns U , I0 inningsj, 2, Hamline, 2, at Collegeville , I9Il ,I Q june 3, I9I I-Macalester, 7, Hamline, 8, at Norton Field. june 5, l9l I-St. Olaf, 2, Hamline, I, at Norton Field. Opponents, 48, Hamline, l02. The l9ll State Champions Class Champions for 1 911 - 1 9 1 2 I 1 Basketball HEN it comes to basketball, Hamline is able to speak with authority. With two state championships in suc- N I f E P gcession, won, not by a margin of one or two games, iifiib but by a clean sweep of all the conference games played during the last two seasons, the position of the institution in this sport is supreme. It was scarcely a question .as to whether the team would win or lose, the only question was the size of the score it would make. In all the games played during the last two seasons, but four games have been lost, out of nearly thirty played. Three I4 of these have been to the Minnesota Aggies, which team has 3 seemed to possess a peculiar hoodoo for Hamline. ln the l9l I-I2 season, the only two games lost were both taken by them in extra session games, while during the last season, they won by a margin of one point, after the Hamline five had previously overwhelmed them. The fourth defeat was at the hands of the University of Minnesota team, and this was made up by a previous victory for Hamline by a score of 30 to I5. To Coach Baird must be given the credit for the great success of the quintettes of the past two years. His ability to train men, and to develop team work among them has shown in its greatest brilliancy here. True, he had good material to work on. But very little better were his men individually than those of his oppo- nents. Even the Hamline scrubs, it is pretty safe to say, could have beaten some of the big teams met by the varsity. .,,. i f t e . , f H ' .AP . ' ,J I MEMBERS OF THE l9l2-I3 BASKETBALL SQUAD Much credit, however, is due the men who have made up Coach Baird's quint's. Had they not been faithful, and steady in training, they could not have stood the gaff. But they followed their director explicitly. The results can best be seen by a perusal of the records of the two seasons. I ln Captain Swanson, of the I9I I-I2 team, Captain Heneman of last season's team, Little, Blume, Parsons, and his successor Jacobson, and Waltz, Coach Baird has had men upon whom he could depend in any crisis: men who were willing to make any sacrifices for the good of the team. For that reason, they developed into stars. It was not the chance of fortune that brought the stars to Hamline. The men came here, and became stars because they did as they were commanded, and showed a willingness to do it. Swanson, Heneman, Parsons, and Waltz, were all developed as basketball players practically from the embryo by Coach Baird. None of them had more than a speaking acquaintance with the game when they came here. But not one of them now is a man not feared by every other college player in -the state. Blume, Little and Jacobson had all played basketball in high school before I9I I-I9I2 BASKETBALL SCORES January I3 January I7 January 23 january 3I I9I2- I9I2- St. Paul Y. M. C. A., I2, Hamline, 45, at Hamline. I9I2-Minnesota Aggies, 37, Hamline, 3I, at Hamline. I9I2 -St. Johns U , 2I, Hamline, 25, at Collegeville. l9I2-Carleton, I7, Hamline, 24, at Carleton. I9I2-Minnesota Aggies, 26,1Hamline, 24, at Minnesota A. February 20, I9I2-St. Paul Y. M. C. A., 22, Hamline, 28, at Hamline. February 24, I9I2-St. Johns U , I7, Hamline, 46, at Hamline. February 27, I9I2-Macalester, I5, Hamline, 26, at Hamline. March 4, I9I2-Carleton, I0, Hamline, 24, at Hamline. Opponents, 200, Hamline, 3I7. February 3 February 5 f Macalester, 23, Hamline, 44, at St. Paul Y. M. C. A. C I' ' i 'T I ss I ew A g - , X , ' w e I ' 5 ' , ' v 1 2 v 1 5 ' ' , ' ' l I I e..2,i.i .1 f - , 1 - I Hilfe '-1 ' ' l i A x , , 3 ' Ali - -V' 1, ? I I A f-- W, A 1 STATE COLLEGE CHAMPIONS coming to Hamline. All had their reps behind them. But when they came, they found that they had barely skimmed the surface of basketball knowledge. They found the finer points of the game by working hard, and training faithfully. As a result, Blume is the recognized peer of any basketball center in the state, if not in the Northwest. Little is known as the smoothest playing guard the state has seen in years. While Jacobson, in his one year, has made an enviable reput- tion for himself. A word should also be said about the subs and the scrubs. Roger Ander- son was on tap and could have filled a center or guard position with credit. Tough Sweitzer was ready all the time to step in at guard, and keep the teamwork running smoothly. While Oscar Berg, atforward, lngwald Berg at center, Art johnson, Mulder and Hummel made a reserve list of which to be proud. I9I2-I9I3 BASKETBALL SCORES December 7, l9l2-Stout Institute, I6, Hamline, 29, at Hamline. December I4, l9l2-St. Johns, I4, Hamline, 26, at Collegeville. December, I9, I9l2--State University, I5, Hamline, 30, at State University Armory. January Il, l9l2-State University, 20, Hamline, 9, at State University. January l8, I9I3-Carleton, I5, Hamline, 23, at Northfield. january 20, l9l3-Minnesota Aggies, I8, Hamline, 43, at Minnesota A. C. January 25, l9l3-Macalester, I3, Hamline, 25, at St. Paul Y. M. C. A. February 6, l9l3-Minnesota Aggies, 26, Hamline 24, at Hamline. February l5, I9l3-Stout Institute, 22, Hamline, 26, at Menomonie, Wis. February 2I, l9l3-St. Johns, 2l, Hamline 4l, at Hamline. March 4, l9I3-Carleton, I4, Hamline, 37, at Hamline. March 8, I9I3-Macalester, I7, Hamline, 44, at Hamline. Opponents, 2II, Hamline, 357. l State College Champ1ons 1 9 1 2 A Coach Baird Blume, Center Lokke Little, Left Guard Swanson, Right Forward Heneman, Right Guard Parsons, Left Forward Scheer M, ,W - H I I .Q-ig Gym Work . Egg NDOOR gymnasium work holds no less a place than the out-door sports at Hamline. This is brought about b5:l.l?,1-6 partly by the excellent facilities furnished by the gym- hlf4 ,l'l3.SiUI1'l, which is undoubtedly one of the best in the Northwest, and partly by the excellent instruction of Prof. Baird. Classes are held for both boys and girls on alternate days of the week from Thanksgiving 'til Easter, at which time the Annual Gymboree is given. The Gymboree is a public exhibition of the work that has been done during the winter months on the part of both the boys and girls, and consists of fancy drills, Indian club and dumbbell exercises, etc. At this time is also held the gym- nastic contest. This year the first place was won by Faus Silver- naleg Kirkpatrick and Helliwell tying for second place. The indoor track championship was won this year by the Jun- ior class, although by a very small margin, for the Sophomores, who held the championship last year were loath to lose it. The biggest point winners for the Sophomores were Heneman and Len Nelson. Nel- son broke the indoor record for the 440 yard dash, besides capturing several other firsts. Booker was the biggest point winner for the Freshmen. The junior team was composed of Crays, Anderson, Culbertson, Kirkpatrick, Newlove, Wickham, and Sanderson. The freshmen girls captured the interclass indoor track meet held for the young women. l i i I 1 Junior Class Indoor Track Champions . . -- .. 1-f . 5'ff---,+farfw':J',-ff.-mt,-. ' . , , , . . . V... .',, W .M gwlwv Not the least in interest among the sports of the gymnasium for the young men, is handball. Every afternoon finds the handball court occupied, with a long waiting line. This is true in summer almost as much as in winter. The handball court is one of the best in the Northwest, and many excellent players have been developed. A championship tournament is usually held late in the winter. but for some reason this was not the case this year. Interest is not limited to students by any means, several faculty members also being ardent devotees of the game. lnterclass basketball this last winter, as every year since the new gymnasium was opened, aroused great interest among both sexes. The freshmen came off at the end of the series this season with both championships safely under their arms, the freshman boys easily defeating the veteran seniors, who had previously held the college championship for three years, and freshman girls defeated the senior young women. The interclass games furnish an excellent method of calling out good material for the varsity, as well as keeping interclass spirit at a high pitch. With practically the whole school body taking active interest in basketball, every bit of available basketball ability in the institution is brought to the front. And these class teams not only furnish stiff practice for the varsity, but also from among them appear the future varsity stars. ' .1 ' V, I Freshmen lnterclass Basketball Champions for the year l9l3 W 15 72 , fi l 1. ' r?: 'Z V If ,,. -:'sVpi14y'.-:ff .: ::::Q:, .. :-,-:QVf:g:w:.wLfa1 Event I 00 yards 220 yards 440 yards 880 yards Mile run Two Mile run Mile relay 120 yard hurdles 220 yard hurdles I6 pound shot I6 pound hammer Broad jump High jump Pole vault Discus Hamline University Records FIELD AND TRACK RECORDS I 9 I 2 Roger Anderson Crays Crays Berg Berg Henry Swanson Wm. Wm. Nels Nels Roger Anderson Roger Anderson Ray Little Theodore Larson Roger Anderson Nels Berg Elmer Doyle Record H. U. Holder T. E.. Huser Bay Dyer IO Sec' H. A. Schoening Roger Anderson 23 sec. Bay Dyer 52 I-5 sec. G. N. Drew 2:I0 Paul Bliss 4:5I Paul Bliss I0:48 R. Sweitzer 3:4I I909 team I6 I-5 sec. C. N. Drew 25 3-5 sec. Roger Anderson 36 ft., 9 in. McPheeters I09 ft., 4 in. D. Storlaerg 2l ft., 5 I-2in.Bay Dyer 5 ft., 4 in. Geo. Dunn 9 ft., 6 in. Cordon Kidder A. Scheer Theodore Larson I I4 ft., 9 in. Theodore Larson GIRLS' INDOOR RECORDS 75 yard dash-Mary Nickerson, I9I2. 3 3-5 sec. Shot put C8 pounds,--Clara Von Seen. I9I0. 25 feet, 3 inches. Running high jump-Marion Munson, I9I2. 4 feet. BOYS' INDOOR RECORD 25 yards-Schoening, I9I0, and Rog Anderson, I9I2. 3 sec. 25 yards, hurdles C2 lowj-Rog Anderson, l9I3. 3 2-5 sec. 220 yards-R. Culbertson, I9I2. 26 sec. 440 yards-Leonell Nelson, I9I3. 58 I-5 sec. 880 yards-P. Bliss, I9I0. 2 min., I2 I-5 sec. I mile-R Sweitzer, I9I0. 4 min., 55 I-5 sec. High jump--Nels Berg, I9I I. 5 ft., 4 3-4 in. Standing high jump-H. Schoening, I9I I. 4 ft., 5 in. Standing broad jump-H Schoening, I9I I. I0 ft., I-2 in. Running broad jump-H. Higbee, I9I0. I8 ft., SM in. Pole vault-G. Kidder, I9I0. 9 ft., 7M in. Shot put-H. McPheeters, I9I I. 36 ft., 9 in. One half mile relay--I9I4 class. I min., 47 sec. QR. johnson, Wickham, Sanderson, Craysj Record I 0 sec. flat 22 sec. 52 sec. I:59 3-5 4:33 I-5 I0:I4 3:36 4-5 I6 sec. 25 3-5 37 ft., 5 in. I I9 ft. 2I ft., 6 in. 5 ft., 5 3-4 in I0 ft., 4 in. SCC. I I4 ft., 9 in. I ' i . . - . . all Track 435 Y taking the first Tri-State Conference Meet 425, at Northfield, the l9I2 track team last spring won the conference championship for the fifth A 5. ff. consecutive year, thereby establishing Hamline 1 on the pinnacle of track and field athletics in this section. The season's prospects at the beginning, last spring, were none too rosy. There were only five old H men , 'A w on the job, and after a week's training one of these, Cap- , tain Culbertson, was put out for the season by a broken ankle. Coach Baird was not discouraged, and proved equal to the occasion. The first meet was held on Norton Field with South Dakota State College, May llth. The atmosphere was gloomy. With a new and small team, no one had any hopes of success. But when the dust had cleared away after the contests, it was found that Hamline had taken eleven firsts out of fifteen events, and seven out of fourteen second places. The result was Hamline MM, S. D. S. C. 42M. The next meet was held at Carleton, May l8th. The day was cold and wet, and the track was heavy. Once again Hamline had the best men, this time taking ten firsts out of the fifteen, but with only ten men making up the team, it was impossible to take much more than one place in each event. Consequently Carleton was only two and one-half points behind when the relay, the last event, was called. Hamline came out ahead in the relay, but Carleton officials claimed that one of Hamline's runners had fouled, and the relay was awarded to Carleton, thereby giving them the meet by two and one-half points. Hamline sent a team of nine men to the last meet of the season, the Minnesota- Dakota conference meet at Northfield. Competing against seventy-five athletes, the pick of five other colleges of Minnesota and the Dakotas, the same team came home lugging ten gold medals for first placs, out of fifteen which were possible: several medals for second and third placesg and two shields, one for the meet, and one for the relay race, which Hamline won by a big lead OVCY all the Other tCHmS. Carleton included. X0 C WIA 6 X . W I I The season brought out a number of new men T, in various events, whom Coach Baird developed. ' Henry Swanson, who had been hanging around X 3 . . . . 1 f , g - Q the institution for two years, playing basketball H ,i 5 and other things, came out and straightway '- l H 5' rf 0 I stretched himself into a winner in the two-mile I ' K' event. Harold Heneman, freshman, showed him- - 8 Ill self to be a coming half-mile and mile man, while l' ' Doyle displayed a remarkable aversion to the 4 4 ground in the pole vault. Larson, another fresh- A ' man Viking, took the lead in the weights, and Q' l D' broke the only conference record of the year, A heaving the discus for a new record in the confer- ence meet, as well as being a member of the win- ning relay team. Little also came forth in the weights and won several points. while Townsend was a winner in the 440. Of the old stars, there was Rog Anderson, always a winner in the dashes, and who equalled the record in the IOO yard dash, of I0 seconds in the S. D. S. C. dual meet, and made a new state college record in the 220 yard hurdles. He took no less than three firsts in each meet, and at the end of the season had ten firsts to his credit, including firsts in the broad jump in the Brookings and Carleton meets. Then there was Crays, who was a running mate to Anderson, and a big point winner. Berg in the high jump completed the team. Of these men, only Townsend and Berg are missing in the present season. ln addition, Culbertson, a reliable man in the 220 and 440 yard dashes, will be out again, and with the freshmen who will undoubtedly appear another championship is in sight. Cross Country Running The second annual cross country run was held November 7th, last fall. It brought out five entrants to compete for the cup offered by Coach Baird. Harold Heneman won first place making the three-mile course in l7:20, making a new record. John Booker, freshman, showed stamina in the long distance, coming in close behind Hene- ma n . 4:AZf:E!iliSl3.2l1?Z-3' .f9EzLi?2 1 Tri-State Conference Champions M- JA Event Summary of Meets HAMLINE VS. SOUTH DAKOTA STATE COLLEGE Held at Norton Field, May 11, 1912. Won by Hamline. H. U. 74V2. Event 120 yard high hurdle High jump Mile run 100 yard dash Shot put, 16 lbs. 440 yard dash Broad jump 220 yard hurdle Discus throw 220 yard dash Half mile Pole vault Two mile run Hammer throw Mile relay S. D. S. C. 42M. First Second Record Anderson, H. F. Heneman, H. 16 2-5 sec. Catlett, S. D. S. Berg, H. 5 ft. 6M in. Strachan, S. D. S. H. Heneman, H. 4 min. 48 sec. Anderson, H. Crays. H. 10 sec. flat Littel, H. Britsen, S. D. S. 36 ft. 3 in. Crays, H. Knox, S. D. S. 52 1-5 sec. Anderson, H. Catlett, S. D. S. 21 ft. 55 in. Anderson, H. Catlett, S. D. S. 27 1-5 sec. Larson, H. Townsend, H. 107 ft. ZW in. Crays. H. Knox, S. D. S. 23 sec. flat. Berg, H. Caldwell, S. D. S. 2 min. 10 355 se. Catlett, S. D. S. Doyle, H. 9 ft. Swanson, H. Clifford, S. D. S. 10 min. 49 2-5 sec. Jensen, S. D. S. rlearson, Hzr d 110 ft. Zyg in. - rays ownsen - Hamline U-'arson Anderson 3 mm. 46 sec. HAMLI NE VS. CARLETON Held at Laird Field, Carleton College, May 18, 1912. Won by Carleton. C. 595-. H. U. 573 100 yard dash Pole vault Mile run 220 yard dash 120 yard high hurdles 440 yard run Two mile run 220 low hurdles 880 yard run Discus throw Running high jump Shot put Broad jump Hammer throw One mile relay First place Second place Time Day, C. fgayf, I0 1-5 sec. - - oy e, .. - Lmdsmlth, C. Ipetersoni C. Tied Heneman, H. Setrum, C. 4 min., 53 sec. Crays, H. Day, C. 23 3-5 sec. Anderson, H. Church, C. 16 2-5 sec. Crays, H. Knote, C. 54 sec. Swanson, H. Carpenter, C. 10min., 43 3-5sec. Anderson, H. Day, C. 26 1-5 sec. Berg, H. Heneman, H. 2min., 9 3-5 sec. Larson, H. Holm, C. 107 ft. 3 in. Haskins, C., and E. Peterson, C., tied for first and second 5 ft. 45 in. Huhn, C. V. Johnson, C. Distance, 37.1. Anderson, H. Carleton 19 ft. 85 in. Larson, H. Carleton 109 ft. 4 in. Won by Carleton by default. DAKOTA INTERCOLLEGIATE CONFERENCE MEET 10.3 sec. 16 1-5 sec. 4 min. 51 3-5 sec. 2 min. 3 3-5 sec. MINNESOTA Held at Laird Field, Northfield, Minn., june 1, 1912 Won by Hamline University. Hamline U. 63: Carleton 54: N. D. U. 275 N. D. Aggies 85: Macalester 3. 100 yard dash Rog. Anderson, H., Day, C., Wirtenberger, Haskins, C. 120 yard high hurdles Rog. Anderson, H., Talbert, N. D. U. One mile Berg, H., Zipay, N. D. U., H. Heneman, H. W. Zipoy, N. D. U. One-half mile Chittick, N. D., Berg, Hamline: Nolet, N. D. A., Baldwin, Mac. 440 yards Crays, H. Chitticlc, N. D., Townsend, H., 220 yard dash 220 yard low hurdles Two mile run Pole vault High jump Shot put Broad jump Hammer throw Discus throw One mile relay Knott, C. Crays, H. Day, C., Shielc, Mac., Kemp, N. D. Rog. Anderson, H. Day, C., Gillott, C., Heneman, H. Swanson, H., Carpenter, C., Stetrum. C., Zipoy, N. D. Peterson, C. Haskins and Peterson, C., tied for first Huhn, C., James N. D., Schroder, C. Gillett, C. Larson, H., Milclcelson, N. D. U., Holm, C. Larson, H., Huhn, C., Holm, C., Gillett, C. Cnew conference recordj Won by Hamline CTownsend, Fred Heneman, Larson, Crays.J 52 3-5 sec. 23 3-5 sec. 25 3-5 sec. 10 min. 48 sec 10ft. 22 in. 5 ft. 25 in. 36 ft. 45 in. I9 ft. 5 in. 105 ft. 4 in. 114 ft. 9in. 3 min. 41 sec. Records of the Colleges in the Conference Event 120 yard high hurdles 100 yard dash I mile run 440 yard run 220 yard clash 220 yard low hurdles Half mile run Two mile run Pole vault Discus throw High jump Shot put Running broad ump Hammer throw 1 mile relay race Holder of Record Stee, N. D. U. Drew, Hamline Knox, S. D. S. Bliss, Hamline Hayter, S. D. S. Deyer, Hamline Seager, S. D. S. Bliss, Hamline Sweitzer, Hamline Mathews, S. D. S. Larson, Hamline Binford, S. D. S. Smith, Carleton Bell, N. D. U. johnson, S. D. S. N. D. U. Time or Distance 16 sec. 9 4-5 sec. 4 min., 33 1-5 sec. 50 3-5 sec. 22 sec. 25 2-5 sec. I min., 59 1-5 sec. I0 min., 14 sec. I0 ft., 11 in. 114 ft., 9 in. 5 ft., 8 in. 39 ft., 9 in. 21 ft., 9 in. 137 ft., 7 in. 3 min., 36 1-5 sec. fStee, lVlacFadclen, Chittick, Owenj Minnesota State College Records Event 100 yard dash 220 yard dash 440 yard clash 880 yard dash I mile run 2 mile run High jump Broad jump Pole vault 16 lb. hammer 16 lb. shot put Discus throw 220 hurdles 120 yd. hurdles I mile relay M mile relay Holder of Record B. Deyer, Hamline M. Bill, Carleton T. Huser, Hamline H. Schoening, Hamline R. Anderson, Hamline B. Deyer, Hamline E. L. Haig, Carleton P. S. Bliss, Hamline P. S. Bliss, Hamline R Sweitzer, Hamline Roy Payne, Carleton Bay Dyer, Hamline Christiansen, St. Olaf L. Smith, Carleton T. Larson, Hamline Rog. Anderson, Hamline G. N. Drew, Hamline Hamline Year 1899 1907 1908 191 I I 91 2 1899 1899 1909 1909 1909 1909 1899 1907 1909 1912 1912 1908 1909 CCulbertson, Wheeler, Huser, Schmidt, Hamline 1909 fSchmidt, Huser, Schoening, Pierce, Time or Distance 10 sec. 22 sec. 50 2-5 sec. 1 min., 59 I-5 sec. 4 min., 33 1-5 sec. 10 min., 14 sec. 5 ft., 7 in. 21 ft., 6 in. 128 ft. 39 ft., 9 in. 1 14 ft., 9 in. 25 3-5 sec. 16 sec. 3 min., 36 4-5 sec. I min., 35 I-5 sec. W EEFINDFIL-5 laFf1Wlff1l1n rrMmMmnun1ma1ww1u . L NOT A Brr or-' avr: 5y1ooTHE f ' - M M X GRA D M ,. s N W I ,Town Q Jgf 9 ff X Z .. L J-- A QD QQ' 4ff?592ZQ2s2g4:?2?2P',, ' . ' X 11 1 i 1 . 6 ' ' I :I--ai. ' X j filiwi 1 W . lv .1 ': mf! KQXN QM' ' - ' I , X Q . 9: HE' I' . x 2 ...gp 1 55 M YM? gpg W f. kx v F.. , W. I ' H, 'I 'Nfl y ' f 1 X . I A if ' M iii.: ' ff L ' ' 2 j 'iff if Sqn: .N'g' ,' 'l l fy I ff W QW' X- sis: W M 'ff Z r f X K V23 1 135 U x 9 f N f 'zf ' Z ' f ZW7 ' , I EW 1 - nnIl'ml'-'fum 1 1 1 I ' Y ff H .' 'l'l1l llll ' ' ff l 7,1 X I7 6 X, -,gk I 4-.xNXX , b ZH V fi ,, f ' A-f v .1:Q. N 15:3 y f' ' N ix W f Q R , 'S X , 1-ssii f ' ff' V ' 2-Q 7 sem- f f M 1 u Z my 1 , uf ZX' .H no ' 1 w -S:'.Z ' U 'E I Navi or 9? lr X X XXX JE '-' f .,,A '.'.--:!u,'g. f Z :Q W 4 'g 1-'e wg-mf., M X ,,,,'f2: :N ': .g vb? '-ui' A X 1 f I' -'see n T lt' I- x X X 1 kj I 'xXx j 53511 , , , af: ,' ,gi - X N 2 ,,,,, -11:2 g A p Q22 ::','L' 1 V K ..1 ' fx in ll ZZ?-1 fl If ' f f Lf3fc 'Q' 1? - f -Hb-'Z-QYJ, ' Q , qi l l ,ao 1 i Ig. f, gui U '1 w P 1 4.. ,115 'fnfI3f H5115 1 Caught from the Faculty Prexie: If you will dance, you'll have to pay the fiddler. Pack up. Dean Batchelder: After the fresh- men have been here for a while, they will learn that there is a time and a place for everything. Miss Hall: Such a thing would never have happened in Indianapolis. Why, when I was there-Miss Dingle come out of that closet at once. f I e J 1:9 K -.A 1' .' Es! X Prof. Beyer: I am sorry that I cannot return the papers to the class, but the baby likes them so well that I did not have the heart to deprive him of them and he chewed them up. But as he seemed to think them Hrst class I will give you a good grade. Prof. Towne: The only reason that I know of for that word being in the female gender is because it gives so much trouble. Prof. Lescohier: A very promi- nent man, one whose name you would recognize at once if I were to mention it, came to me the other day and begged me to give him my advice in this matter. I will now explain in a few words what Taussig has been trying to explain in ten pages. Prof. Hartwell: Damn. Prof. Osborn: There's - another perfectly good pair of scissors gone to a place we need not mention. Doctor Morris Leroy Arnold, A.B., A.M., Litt.D., etc: All the great critics agree with me so you see I am not alone in my opinion. When I took my doctor's examination at Columbia l was the only one in the whole class that knew that this line was written by Ben Johnson. Prof. Innis Cafter listening to a long-winded chapel speakerj: Jim Hill says that what we need is a proper terminal system. What does the class think? Miss Davis: A cup of hot water, a little stale bread and a soft boiled egg will do very well. Prof. King: Yes, Wilson is a good man He's served his country well, But when you come to Teddy, Gee, don't he give 'em --T Prof. Thompson: You wish to know your mark for today? Well, perform the same operation that I did when you recited. Subtract nothing from nothing, and you have it. Prof. Walcott: The affectional element in consciousness is due to the stimulation of end organs which are not end organs at all, if you will pardon the bull. Prof. Johnstone fearly in the yearjz This is the deadest bunch I ever saw. CTwelve p.m., ten days after the elopementj. I-Iere's five dollars boys, please go away, you've wrecked the house. Prof. Pease: Cin chapel? Everyone keep still and let me show you how to sing this correctly. Who's Who? editor of this department tried to settle who should be on this roll, but being accused of partiality he put it to a vote of the students as to who should be on the great honor roll. If the results do not will of h majority. 4.1932 please you, do not blame the editor. He was forced to bow to the Who is the biggest fusser? The voting was not very exciting over this. Hougen won sixty to twenty- three over Mecklenberg. Who thinks that he is? Harper won this in a walk-away. Only one dissenting vote was cast and that was by Reg who voted for himself. Who is the best formed boy? Fat Kemp won this, although he was almost defeated by Shultz. Vote was 67-69. Who thinks he is? Recksiek won this unanimously, although Kroll was also nominated. Who is the handsomest boy? This contest almost broke up the meeting. A fierce fight was put up by Ben Brown's friends. The first vote was a tie, between Kahlert and Brown, but on the second ballot Abe Levin voted for Kahlert because they were both from Humboldt High. Vote I I I-I I3. Who thinks that he is? . Betts had a clear run in this, everyone realizing that it was useless to oppose him. Who is the biggest liar? Paul Smith won this unanimously. Some people voted twice for him to be sure that he got it. 550 votes were cast. Who is the freshest freshman? This was a close race between Kuhrmeyer and Youngdahl, Kuhrmeyer winning by two votes. Votes, 3-5. Who is the worst knocker? Swanson made a hard run for this but Newlove beat him to it, it being generally felt that his constant acquaintance with cheap theatres had developed a critical faculty that could not be overlooked. Vote, 58-73. Who has been engaged the most times? This was a very difficult question, but the honor was finally given to Siegfried Herrmann, everyone feeling that he had Tinkered around more than anyone else. 4 F'-'WJ'- ' '7'f if , I IWW' 'f rg JT rif f ' fr?- a . . 15 l V i smfmmwmnlnkmuiif . vu 7 ,,,.......4i' 4444, --...- ..-...,.--- ... . -..-.-- .. 1 i L Who is the most unappreciated boy? Rhudy Bemmels plucked this little tribute, for everyone knew how hard he had tried to show how the college should be run and how little he had been thanked by the faculty for his untiring efforts. Everyone voted but Shorty. Who thinks that he is? Roy Holmes was elected, but Ivan Jones put up a stiff fight to the end. Vote, 93-82. . Who has done the most for the school? It was felt this honor should be evenly divided between Mallery and Richardson because they had kept the Preparatory Department going so long. Who thinks that he has? No one voted on this because Shorty threatened to punch the nose of anyone who voted for him, and there was no one else who stood a chance if put up. Who is the toughest guy? Haggans won this although Workman put up a very creditable fight. Meck- lenberg wouldn't vote. Who thinks that he is? Kroll got this in a landslide vote. Mecklenberg voted. Who is the worst gossip? This was a very fierce contest between Ingvald Berg and Lorenzo johnson. Berg tried to get the freshmen support but Lorenzo beat him by nine votes. Who is the biggest grafter? It was felt that no names ought to be mentioned but the bookstore proprietor received an overwhelming vote. Prof. Arnold made a heart-breaking plea for the culprit, but as everyone had received their marks they refused to change their verdict. ' Who is the faculty pet? It looked as though Stedman had a clear field in this, but Tubby Lundsten entered at the last moment, and as he was the only student that the Dean had ever spoken to when he met him on the campus, he won the day. Vote, 93-26. Mecklen- berg did not vote. Who thinks that he is? - Rog. Anderson won this. Prof. Towne spoke for him. Mecklenberg voted. Who is the most talked about boy? ' Einar Berg made a never-to-be forgotten run for this, but Lester Wood's cute- ness had made too great an impression upon the occupants of Goheen and he carried the day. Vote, Wood 97, Berg, 43. Who thinks that he is? Shorty won this without an effort. Bemmels voted. Who is the cutest girl? Sally won this easily. Dopy did a lot of electioneering but it was entirely uncallecl for, for she had the whole bunch with her except Mecklenberg, who didn't vote. Who is the best dresser? Rudolph Dahl won this after an exciting contest in which it was charged that the ballot box was stuffed. Ezra Durbahn made a speech for himself claiming that his pompadour was cuter than Dahls and that he ought to receive some considera- tion for that, but Dahl, in an impassioned speech, exposed the double life that Durby was leading and won the day. ' Who is the biggest bluffer? Gerald Caldwell ran a neck and neck race with Tough Sweitzer until the fifth ballot when Prof. King was asked to settle it. He broke all the speed records that we have in getting to the ballot box to deposit his vote for Tough. Who is the most religious boy? Q Philip Hamlin made a close run in this, but his visit to the Grand leaked out and Kuske carried the day. Vote, 78-56. V ' ' Who thinks that he is? 4 Everyone instinctively turned to Pete Coertz. A unanimous vote was given him. Who is the worst Crouch? Mecklenberg won this in a landslide. Sally went without her lunch in order to vote for him first. The l-lomiletic Club tried to save him but all in vain, for the Frivolette Club downed them on the First ballot. Who is the most popular boy? Ben Brown, The Peerless One, entered once more and won easily. Everyone voted but Mecklenberg. Who thinks that he is? Elmer Doyle won this. Only freshmen voted. What boy has attended chapel the most? This was very hard to settle, everyone feeling that the lucky one would have too good a stand-in with Prexie. Egghead and Salome ran against each other, but Prof. Arnold swung the vote for Reynolds at the last moment because Reynolds had once asked him for a copy of his prayer. ' ffiifilli Limericks A youth of fair Hamline named Hirt, Aspired to be a great flirt, But the girls all smiled And said My Dear Child, You'll have to be much more alert. Young Sweitzer, The Sophomore Tough, Said to all of my Profs I will bluff, But he found, alas, That just plain gas, Was not suflicient enuff. A cute little boy is our Wood, To the girls he's awfully good. He takes them to shows, When they've no other beaus, As he thinks every gentleman should. There is a young fellow named Tanner For pure brass he carries the banner, And the way he can fuss Makes the other boys cuss, When their girls go out with this Tanner. E Oh, a wonderful boy is Nat Kuske, So handsome, so brave, and so husky, l'le's the pride of the bunch, And let me give you a hunch, When he's around best make your- self dusky. Young Recksiek, the Lake City wonder, Who never has yet made a blunder, In his own mind, we mean, For in most things he's green, Though in football he made the crowd thunder. A bashful young guy is Lehman, l'le's as plump and fat as a seaman, But he's not very bold For we've often been told, That he runs from a girl like a demon. A gallant young man is Herrmann, With a shape like a South Sea merman And his pleasure is this, Just to be with his Bliss, . Ich liebe dich, says he, in German. A real nice boy is John Booker, And the girls all think he's a looker, But he passes them by So timid and shy, John, John, you never will hook 'er. Our Clara's a girl of renown, And her golden hair is her crown, But we very much fear That within the next year, She'll become entirely Brown. A classy young man is Paul Peik, With a face like an Angelo Mike, ln class he's a wonder For he ne'er makes a blunder, He can bluff any way that you like. Miss Murray a maid of Goheen, With a boy is rarely e'er seen. But you bet that her eyes' Can make your pulse rise, And make you feel queer in the bean. Merle T-nk-r is sure a cute girl, And she keeps H-r-m-n-s heart in a whirl. We wonder oft-times, If e'er the glad chimes Will announce that he's captured this pearl. Lou Goff is a name we all know, And you bet nothing about her is slow. And the whole Junior Class Without this bright lass, On the blink would be sure to go. There is a young lady named Dingle, Who keeps Miss Hall's nerves all a tingle. In the closet she hid, Behind Woolley's lid, When sought by Miss Hall with a shingle. Hazel Bliss on the banjo can play And sing l-lerfrf' Manfnj's praise by the day. And we don't care a hang, When we hear her twang, twang, For our troubles, which fade far away. Esther Bane is a girl of fine reason, But to l..izbeth she was guilty of treason, And the All Hamline Ball, Was too'much for Miss Hall, So Esther went home for a season Bill Kahlert who hails from St. Paul, ls the handsomest Freshie of all. His Apollo-like form, Takes the girls by storm, And from envy the other boys bawl. My! we almost forgot Mary Nick, For she sure is a regular brick. She has her own ways, And she thinks that it pays, When you don't like a thing, to just kick. Young Bausman is sure some nibs, For his Dutch book is chuck full of cribs, King thinks he's a shark, But oh, you should hark, If he knew, how he'd bang his darn ribs. 55:1 '1.1..1v'-. z..-Y -- . -- -- v- - , -- ' ' '.'- -'r1-:f1'.'fl 'f 'JN L'. 11 S' . b . ' ' ' ' ' i bmi... 1-LC.-.---........,L...a.La-1...-f.pq.,,hv,.-.:h..,.2a-.-...........-.-....:..a,:.g35...QQ.,.. pw..-w.....4.,.---.. . .m...f.....4....,.-..-.......,..- .......- A Tis' gn ww ig -ro Q PM -Q I 'I 141' 'Y ...A 1 . 4 1 I 1 . s Fkmvi , l- ' ns. 4 il. I- , 1 I I UZ! 4' H L ., Ig' r ,' 1' , l We Would Like to Know HY Prof. Hartwell never leads chapel? Who first got up the Hamline ball? Who put the feathers in chapel? Who blew out the gas at the Philo joint? Who led the nightshirt parade through Goheen hall? nigga' put the pepper in Waltz's hair? Who swiped the cakes at the Euphronian rushing party? Who doused the glims at the freshman show? How Salome got his name? Why Herrmann is always singing the Tinkers song? Who advertised for Bemmel's office girl? Where Prof. Beyers buys his neckties? What john Goodman's telephone bill is each month to Dodge Center? Why hash is served three times a week at Goheen Hall? What our incidental fees are spent for? What Reg and 'Salome really did at Menomonie? Who swiped the mustard pickles from the Hall and thought that they had preserves? Why lngvald Berg is always talking? 'Why Prof. Towne never combs his hair? What Miss Hall says to Prof. King in chapel? Where Albion College is? If Ezra Durbahn is really as tough as he claims he is? If Prof. Johnstone really thinks the boys are dead? Why, Waltz Me Around Again, is Miss Hart's favorite song? What the sophomore class would do without Ivan Jones? How much Prof. King lost on Teddy? Why My heart, oh Lord, shall ever Quayle, is Ed Voorhees favorite scriptural quotation? What would happen if Arnold should forget his prayer? What Miss Hall would say if Wallie should propose? What would Prexie do if he saw Mecklenberg flirting with Sallie? Why Miss Hall found Hazel Dingle in the closet? If Penniman ever got the girl he slated? 'le-AFT ' . Y- P..ZL:.t1Am3m M.. . - ' .tv as EF 65 in L . ii? :f1'1 aw I-R! 521 Hi - 1 JQQV FW' Sf? e f J? Hepzibah Hall's Helps to Hungry Hearts EAREST Hepzie: I am four feet and nine inches tall, with bewitching E, blue-gray eyes tinged with hazel, and two braids of black hair, the best French kind, none of your split Chinese for me, lady. My nose is very piquant and my skin is what I call ivory-white. My room-mate calls it olive. I think she does this because she is jealous of my extreme popularity with the boys. Dearest Hepzie, tell me quite frankly do you think I am pretty? I do hope your opinion is the same as mine. Thanking you in advance. G. ANN SARAH MAUD. Dearest Little G. A. S. M: I am sure that you are one petite mademoiselle tres charmant. You see my opinion coincides with yours exactly. Of courseyour room-mate is jealous. I am so glad you can afford good hair. H. H. My Dear Miss Hall: I am a daughter of the gods fand a bishopj tall and most divinely fair. I am extremely interested in a certain youth whose beauty and virtue surpass those of Apollo, and whose name reminds one of the mellow music of flowing brooks, that go on and on forever. I thought that we were truly affinities, that our minds, our hearts, our wonderful souls moved in clouds of aesthetic delight far, far above the sordid commonplace. But only yesterday I overheard a remark, which as much as I abhor its vulgarity I will, nevertheless, repeat- That guy tried to go with Miss Pl and she turned him down thirteen times before he got wise to the fact that she didn't like him. lsn't that what you call egotism? Shall l go to this-this.person and demand a proof of the statement or shall I disregard it utterly? Heartbroken. ALY GAYLE. You had better disregard it utterly. From your description of the young man and my knowledge gained through your letter, of your own personality I should judge that Providence destined you for each other. Let nothing interfere with your vision of aesthetic bliss. HEPZIBAH. Miss Hepzibah: I am a very popular young fraternity man, handsome, and a tremendous favorite with the girls. I have had fifteen girls perfectly wild about months here. Don't you think it is a shame to break so many trusting hearts. l've done everything in my power to discourage them but still they persist in adoring me. I come to you for aid. EZRA. me during my nine My Dear Young Man: Stop cultivating a pompadour and part your hair in the middle, wear a bow tie and celluloid collar. Allow seventeen days to elapse between shaves. Dear Hepzie: The first day I came to Hamline I heard some of the girls talking about something they called fussing. I did not wish to appear verdant so I did not question them. Now nearly every evening when I come in at eleven o'clock some girl is sure to say Aha, fussing again. I try to look wise but don't succeed very well. Will you please tell me what it means? ' BLONDE HAZEL Dear Blonde: Authorities give the best, most inclusive definition of fussing in one word, strolling. I understand that fussing is particularly appropriate to evenings. I advise strongly against it. ' My Dear Miss Hepzibah Hall: I take much pleasure in reading your columns. Sometime soon I shall write offering a few suggestions for its improvement. I saw a late edition in which you said that peroxide was good for freckles. I have concluded that it must indeed be good for them because I have taken two bottles of the horrid tasting stuff and my entire oodle of freckles is still flourishing. What am I to do in order to get them off before commencement time? Do boys like girls that lisp? SLIM My Dearest Deluded Slim: Let me congratulate you on your cast iron con- stitution which can withstand the ravages of two bottles of peroxide. The peroxide should be applied with a camel's hair brush. Touch each freckle with the solution before going to bed. When you are through it will be time for breakfast. After breakfast apply again. Boys love a properly cultivated lisp. You Darling Miss Hall: When I first came to school I went with the dandiest senior boy. He was just too splendidly splendid. Such beautiful broad shoulders. Lately I've refused to go with him because I've grown to like a freshman better. I-Ie is just the cutest cute boy. But he says the oddest of odd things like, I love your eyes, I love the right one the best. Isn't that too funny! Once he said, Kiss me kid, nothing makes me sick. Don't you think he is rather rapid? BETSY I think he paid an adorable tribute to your eyes, dear, so original. Do not follow his last suggestion. My Dear Miss Hepzibah: I may address you thusly, may I not? I am merely a mere man craving your advice. I asked a girl going to school here to go to church with me Sunday, to go to Como Monday, Frog Pond Tuesday, Prayer Meeting Wednesday, Basketball game Thursday, Shadow Falls Friday, the Empress Saturday and she refused every time. I asked seven other girls to go to the same places and they all refused. Do you think that I am unpopular? LE ROI DUSTYN My Dear Young Man: There are I57 other girls left in school. Get a com- plete list and try them all. System means success. By quiet persistence you can get exactly what you go after-almost. Hepzibah: A certain young man has been annoying me extremely by his unwelcome attentions. I'Ie's asked me to go oodles of places and I've told him that I was going to have previous engagements, company and headaches. Even after that he asked me to go to Sunday School and actually promised to put a 381 S ,. ..A 4 . 'K' 5 fs iii ,i ,... -,-. .. H .. . -f,.f1--- , ,-Q Wy- -v,.4-.f.-w --.H......- . , . ,. , . . . , . .,. fin , --,,,,',,!-1'---A -- ' H - . ' L , ha ,w.',.'L'::-.:,- -- '. .g..-p-:.1..,'..-.,.,-,.,...-X-..,.4.y...-A-,-.-,f..,.....--g.ax1:-if . . . I -N 72 --,'1+f'f4-W'- -C-.-1 '-r 1 'f?H4 nickel in the collection for me. I said coldly, l've got to stay home, and study. Wouldn't you think that after that had percolated through his pompadour he would feel like three cents? Well, he came back for more. Now I want to know if it will be quite proper for me to ask another boy I know, to go to this first young man and tell him in strong, more definite language than I have at my command to keep off, stay away, desist and vamoose? MODEST VIOLET Certainly call in a third person. You might also write three or four letters to the young man stating that you prefer not to be bored to death. HEPZIE My Dear Miss I-Iall: Do you think that it is wrong to dance with a boy if my parents do not object? Do you think that the Washington Waddle and the Crab Crawl are a trifle extreme? There is a preparatory student here whom I like very much. Is it proper to let him kiss me and if so should the number of kisses be limited to six in one evening. I apologize humbly and abjectly for taking so much of your time and hope that in your inhnite goodness you will be kind enough to settle these points for me. AMI BON-BON Ami, as your best friend, I must say that I am shocked beyond measure that you in your innocence should even have heard of those vulgar dances. The rye waltz, the square dance and the wand drill are proper between young girls, but never, never dance with a boy. Do not kiss the prep. At the University of Chicago queening is strictly prohibited. Dear Miss I-Iallz I feel so shy about questioning you of things which lie so close to my heart, but I feel that I must ask someone's advice. One of the boy students here rode down town on the car with me and paid my fare, an entire nickel. A week after that he walked from Science I-Iall to the University building with me, and a week after that he looked at me in junior Bible. Do you think that he is in love with me? I just hate to think of his having an affection for me that I can not return. CINEZD INIE W. Dear Inez: I feel that you have done wrong in leading this young man on at such a furious rate and encouraging him in this shameless way. Remember dear, that modesty is the chief virtue of our sex. It would be best for you to go to this young man, repay his nickel and tell him firmly but kindly that he must look at Dr. Innis during Bible class. Say Hepzibah: It's just like this, during rushing season I tooted around a lot. I went out with three different boys and went to two shows. But now I consider myself stung, as it were. Whereas I was a popular, so to speak, I have now become a lemon tree. Tell me how to cease being a scarf and become a fas- cinator. FANNY My Dear Young Lady: In l853 some of the most charming young ladies of Indianapolis fmyself among them? organized the Society of Associated Sirens, for the purpose of becoming popular. Why not do something of this sort at Ham- line? Adopt as your motto, Everything comes to him who waits, and then do as I did-wait. I-IEPZIBAI-I X 6 x E - Z -i in 1 f 1-3 '1 I '11 f A 3 ii, gg Z' Y Q' 5' v 1 fi IG' 2 ,L L' U 1 1 . TQ , , . - My Dear Miss Hairflaxs I am a butiful young girl. I have a friend named Sarah. I'work in the American Can Factory: she pushes bedspreads through the mangle in the Wrekit Laundry. One night we was in the Royal Lunch when to young men come in. Soon they begun to talk to us. The one who talked to me had a swell pompador and dressed fine. He said his name was Johnson. His first name must be Durham or Durbon because his friend called him that a cuple of times. I got a great affectun for him. But now he has forgotten me and gone over to Sarah. He is much to good for her becaus she ain't got any egucation or refinmunt. How can I win back his love? His ficilty has tored my bleding heart. From one who is h IN ANGISI-I FOR HIM. My Dear Madam: ' During my life of studious activities a condition of single blessedness has constantly obtained. It might now be said, speaking after the manner customary in society, that I am a bachelor. This state of existence has seemed to me, both from an empirical and ideational viewpoint one that is most consonant with the hedonistic world view, which is not altogether in disfavor with me. Now it 'seems that my colleagues, all of whom have entered into the marital relations, are desirous that I should also enter into the arduous du ties of wedlock. In making these recom- mendations they seem to squint toward our librarian and Dean of Women, both of whom they seem to regard as possibilities. I am forced to say that their action, especially in this last regard, is distinctly unfair. However, I may have misjudged. Shall I follow their recommendations or my own inclinations? Which course of action do you consider ethical? D.D., LL.D., Ph.D., M.D., B.S. Dear Miss: - Being a young man, naturally bashful and reticent, you will be able to realize how deeply I have been affected by the following circumstances. The charge was brought that six successive times I committed an osculatory indiscretion with a young lady in the entrance to the Ladies' Dormitoryof this institution. What had best be clone in regard to this matter? I cannot let this untruth stand as at present. I have considered two courses of action, either to hunt down the purveyor of this infamous falsehood and force him to swallow his dastardly lie, or else write a thorough and lurid refutation and explanation which shall be published in the college paper. I am a desperate man and this plot upon my long and otherwise unsullied course in this institution must be wiped out. Answer quickly before I do violence. PREP. Quips These are only put here to fill up space. We admit they are old and that they are not funny. ln fact we wept long and bitterly when reading them the first time. We gave one perfectly good Liner, and one per- fectly good pennant for them.-Ed. Campus Visitor fgazing at candy studentjz Ah! some wealthy resident l suppose? Professor l.: Oh no, only a poor scholar. Exchange Ed- itor of Oracle: How will l clas- sify this item? The editor of the T Carletonia has a boil on his nose? E. d i t or - i n - Chief: Oh, just call it a feature story. .'ff'gjf':',- I df' ' Q-if N 'Y 1 Fresh: I don't Soph: Because there's no parting Fresh: I know know. its all shining and there. a better one than that. Why is the top of Prof. Thompson's head of heaven? like the kingdom 1 Soph: Can't guess. Fresh: Because man never beholds Yes I have ob- served, said the old maid school teacher, that a man usually prefers a w el l fo r m e d woman to a well in- formed one. the eye of mortal it. , I 4? Helen: When you told my father that your love for rushing river, what me was like a did he say? Ralph: l-le said dam it. if Soph: Why is t he top of Dean Batchelder's head like the kingdom of heaven? 56 Dean Batchelder: How was iron first discovered? Mecklenberg: They smelt it. Prof. Johnstone: A fool can ask questions that a wise man cannot answer. Baker: Then that explains- why so many of us Hunked on your exams. Spike: l am indebted to you for all that l know. Arnold: Don't mention it. lt-is a mere trifle. : - College bred is too often a four years' loaf. Any Hamline Girl: Would you really put yourself out for me? L. R. D. P: Indeed I would. A. H. Cz' Then please do so, I'm awfully tired. reasons I-Ie: Harkl what is that noise? She: Oh, that's only Grace Taylor banging her hair. The one who thinks these jokes are poor Would quickly change his views Could he compare the jokes we print With those we did not use. Visiting Preacher: Do you have to ring two bells to start class? Jerry: No sir, I ring the same bell twice. Coach Baird: Did you take a shower bath? Freshman: No sir, is there one A middle aged farmer accosted the serious-faced Kirkpatrick outside the St. Paul Union Depot the other day. missing? gi Young man, he said, plucking his sleeve, I wanter go to Como Park. Kirk. seemed lost in consideration for a moment. Well, he said after a while, you may just this once, but I don't want you to ever, ever ask me again. Esther was afraid that the girls wouldn't notice her engagement ring. Did they? Did they? Six of them recognized it at once. 'Et Fat Kemp was going away to Hamline, full of high hope. I shall make the football team and color two pipes the first year. he said bravely. His mother kissed him and wept. I-Iis father wrung his hand in silence. They were too full for speech, then. But when he was gone, and they were calmer, they talked of him together and prayed his ambition might not carry him beyond his strength. Mrs. K: Jamie, has Eleanor come home from school yet? James: I think so. I haven't seen her yet, but the cat is hiding under the kitchen stove. I pay as I go, said the bland young Freshman. Not while I'm running this house, declared the angular landlady, You'll pay as you move in. 4 I I .41 Mistress: Put plenty of nuts in the cake, Bridget. Bridget: I'll crack no more nuts today. Me jaw hurts already. S wif' Q i 6: i Miss Hall Cto the maidjz I saw the milkman kiss you this morning. In the future l will take the milk in. Maid: It won't be any use, mum. l'le's promised never to kiss anyone but me. Helen: Ah, Professor, what would this old oak say if it could talk? Ossie: It would say, I am an elm. Doctor Arnold: fquoting in Soph. Lit.J: Fling but a stone, the giant dies. Miss Bane, can you tell why everyone likes this passage? Esther Olive: Probably because it is so striking. 0 . ' A Roy: Isn't dinner ready yet? Mrs. H: No dear. l got it ac- cording to the time you set the clock when you came in last night, and dinner will be ready in four hours. A POEM Conditions we are sometimes told Are governed by the stars But 'tis not so at old H. U. For Hartwell gives us ours. To the Poet: Why be so exclusive? Why not give Johnstone, Towne, King, and the Dean a little space? --Editor. To the Editor: l didn't want to, you got to quit bothering me.-Poet. Advertisements I N. B.-The following advertisements came in after all the space in the regular advertising section had been sold. We were at first in- clined to refuse them, but when offered double price we finally accepted. --The Liner IIIPIIPIII llll IHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII Illllll Illlllillffllllmlxllllllilllllllilllllfullllill WWlUlll4x mlm YINI Ulmlllllmlll llll WINMIMIMIIIllNINQQIIllI1IIWWIIIIIIUWIWWmIIIIlllllvlrdllllljlllllllllllllllllYQHILQH JOHN GOODMAN BEN BROWN. Toilet Cream Expert The F aultlessly Clad One Information Gladly Given on Every Tailor Lee Satisfies Him t Kind Why not You? mnnumumaunuumnnum unnn namuummmumnnummIunnmmumm:mumumummnunmmnuunnnummumnlnnx xImmunmmmmmsmmnmmlnumnluumnmunpmlm.gmwuqmw,,wmmu,m,m,gqw.,,,q BLYLER 6: CALDWELL No Student's Desk Complete Without Dealers in Brass Our Book Also Extensive Line of Hot Air HOW TO RUN A COLLEGE Furnaces Only Three Dollars a Copy Give Us a Trial Bemmels Sz Co. I numulwuumunnuIuIuIIIIrI:numulIlluanlInII1nz1mInIummmnnuunnunlmlnlnnunumnunnmmuwmuuunuuuunux xnummuummmnn nunnvu ummmmnnmlulunnuumwmuugglumgmmm,.,,,m...g-.-1,953 ,TIMID 'TRESUMEN TOUGH SWEITZER Don t be afraid of girls. Let me .. . , . The White Hope! ' teach you how to become acquainted. , , F d . . . He Eats Freshmen Alive ree emonstration every night in . .. . front of Ga t Th atre. on Exhlbmon Daily ye y e . . EZRA DURBAHN Admission, One Bone lllmll IIII DilllllllllllllllllIllilmulmllrnlnluwnillwwumulnlunvl Inll lmmnlunuummluulnlululnunln llnl umuuulununlmlul xmnnuunnmlwuuunnumnnmm nnnn nmnIinIunuunnunrnnmnmmmggllmmmmmypmggqqymmulgg IVIECKLENBERG SEMINARY Ivan Jones' Latest Song Hit Up-to-Date Courses in Antique OH, AIN'T I SURELY IT Theology Sold at all High Class Music Stores For Information Write to Ernest No Piano Complete Without It Parish, Secretary Price Three Cents 4 J J .1 'X ui u.unuumumuuuunuu.a!'sinnInmnnmnuu uummmunnmlulmlnuu..mnmnmunmunuur Daily Magazine NME., Problems of All Sorts Taken Up And Settled Roy Holmes, Editor and Publisher. mmlnnomulllunamlulnlmunulnuulunurrunnmumnnn:nlInnannmumulumulmnuumumnmunmunlurxxmmml annuInuulnnnatannIuInunnnnInunmmnlmunnunnumumvlunuumwmluumnlnmA mnmnmmmummumu - DO NOT FAIL To buy my Little Booklet HOW TO FUSS PROPERLYH xummumnuunumummu muuuwnuunnummu:umnuummumnunsumlumuumnumunuuunmnmlnnmuuuu GIRLS! STOP! LOOK! LISTEN! Let me tell you how to care for your hair. My own used as a model. Can give you expert advice on what to use and how to use it. ' BLUME. munmnnmmnn mmm Inmuumlmlulunouuulnmmmlunmnlmummullunmnuuunmunnuulunuululnl lmunmmluuux nnmmnmuu uuummnnnnnunnunsunmInnmnmuzmulmnmmmuoanlmunwlmlumlummnnumu SANDBERG 6: LUNDE Now at the Empress, in their great Soul Thrilling Act. entitled X Everyone Should Subscribe to Myl Full Instructions for Each Step ONE NIGHT Especially Valuable to Freshmen Engagement Limited. No Freshmen PAUL SMITH 6: CO. Admitted HARPER TONIGHT! AT THE GAYETY THE PERFECT MODEL Colle 'Y Cha-mPlain Am willing to pose for anyone at any In 8' Little Skit I . Why I Came to Hamline time. Let me teach you how to or become perfect' I The Longest Way Round is the Terms Easy- U0 Pay Shortest Way There ,,.,,.....,,.,.........,...l....m.. .!.. .mmmmmu-an-mmm-mm-1-wlwuwmmml-mm-gg -:..! mmmm-Imm1.1mn.M...WW.ia-M.-M........a........,....f.............,.,..............,.,..,......,....,,., x uma:mnnwmauuueaxluvuulumImomnunumImnIumm1II1Iumuaunnnnlunaxnnunmnnnmuumnnnlmnnmunmuunluwuuulmuu 1nnnvnInIIumnnuuaumnlI1nIuInrrmInunInmmIueueanlnInummInumnu1nommlulnnmmuosmmmunnuunmnmnnnomuu THE WALCOTT HIGHBALL Q1 Gives you that Fuzzy, Wuzzy, Wizzy, Woozy Feeling. . . . . iixllllmxh . Try it Once. Nothing Like It. y, For sale at Ritschels ' ' Q annvan:nm-nnuunnmunnunmnnnulmmmuununuulumnnuummnmmmnnnuuummunmumunn numuuunmuunnluxmm iumummmmnmnnmllummmnuuunuuuammnuz. mnvunnuucxallnlluunnwm.llrlmmluuunmluwnmmnlnr At the Hamline Ball Tune: At Mephisto's Ball. With Apologies to Mephisto. f had a dream last night, that ??1'YfQ filled me full of fright, I dreamt that I was in St. - 'i i Anthony Park, In a place of evil and sin, a place called Fireside Inn, I checked my coat and hat and started gazing at, Some naughty students, who had come out for a lark, And I must confess to you, there were many there I knew. - CHORUS At the Hamline Ball At the Hamline Ball Was a minister's son very happy and gay, Three delegates from the Y. M. C. A. Four or five who lived in Goheen Hall Doing the Boston at the Hamline Ball, Didn't tell Miss Hall, They were taking the matter most dreadfully cool, The whole blooming bunch could be canned out of school, For breaking that good old Methodist rule, That cuts out all the dancing Ragging round and prancing. Dancing at a Hamline Ball. I ' 1 I i i I E n E I w 7 1 I 9, S ll r l I I I I I i LD.l ll ., A al Elghg I V 1 ,Y 1 . J ,. ,, , , ,, W gi . A -. L 9 r ' '7- rua- ,mm--,V .v..,. :Q-Q :Q-'qs-w-v-..,- .,,. .... rv - WW. y . 1 1 5 G H ' I r ii 2 Lx::w , ww 7 W,,:..,.: , Hamline Literary Societies HE Hamline Literary Society was organized about the year 1880. On account of the small number of students there was, for a few years, only one general organization: but as time went by and the attendance increased it seemed best that the society should divide in order to do more efficient work. So in i882 a number of young men withdrew and formed a separate organization, to which they gave the name of Philomatheang the follow- ing year a number of young ladies withdrew to form a sister society under the name of the Brownings. Later on in the same year the remainder of the general Hamline society was formed into the Amphictyons and Athenaeans. These four societies sufficed for almost twenty years, then, again the numbers in each seemed to have become too large and another division was necessary. ln the year of l898 about twenty boys withdrew from the Philomatheans and the Amphictyons to form a new society which was called the Phi Alpha and three years later a sister society of ten Atheneans and ten Brownings was formed and known as the Alpha Phi. Still Hamline's numbers increased and in l906 a fourth division occurred and the Euphronians and Euterpeans were formed with a total membership of thirty- six students. These societies furnish opportunity for the general culture of the students of Hamline. The chief aims being to make them strictly literary in character: to develop personal ideals on the part of the members. Secondary to this literary ambition and auxiliary to it is the social one which through frequent exercise has afforded much pleasure to all participants. 'o' f ' '5 3 xr 4, A Q . 532:74 .x .Q 'Q ff, ,vw . li 44, 4 PHILOMATHEAN BROWNINC Eisto, Eisto, Eisto, Star Es-ta-na-wash-ta! Rah Rah, Rah ,- Philos, Philos! Yes we arel Hurrah for the Brownings, Rah rah, rah Motto: Always Progressingf' Motto': Semper Progredientesf' Colors: Maize and Blue. Flower: White Rose. ,sg AMP:-ucTYoN ATI-IENAEAN Ra-ta-tel Ra-ta-tal Ra-ta-ta! Rixl Che-he Che-l1a Che-ha-ha-ha. Automaton-gar-ouden Hear the Amphicsl Athenians Athenians Rah, rah, rah. Motto: Nothing comes of itself. Motto: According to our Strength' Colors: Pink and Green. Flower: Pink Rose. l I 1 W... I 4 q 51 O, ff, ' xx f.fi'1' A 'A ALPHA PHI PHI ALPHA Alle Ka me Ka me Ka mi. Alle Ka-me Ka-me Ka-ma Alpha Phi Alpha Phi Phi Alpha Phi Alpha. Motto: Truth Lovers. Motto: Lovers ofthe Truth. Colors: Purple and White. Flower: White Carnation. in 0 SY T xc '--f. 'ff' EUPHRONIAN EUTERPEAN Alle Ka zoo Kazi Ka zan Alle Ka zoo Ka zi Ka zan Bim Boom Bah Euphronian Bim Boom Bah Euterpean Motto: Think and Act. Colors: Green and White. Flower: White Rose. ,s-213-w ffefnzziii , L ,,-FW 5:5 f jf!! Browning Society x 3 -I. Olive Sperry Grace Umpleby Nellie Feethan Ina Harris Ruth Askeland Genevieve McKean Anna Heclenberg Cecil Quinn Bertha Dahlberg Evelyn Heneman Florence Caswell Alma Munson Dorothy Sherman Lura Francis Grace Iverson Gladys Greenslit Eleanor Nunn Marion Munson Elsie Leavitt Sarah -MacKusick Helen Doran Elizabeth Lambert Edith Quigley Clara Corneliussen Gertrude Clare Jennie Castles Sarah Ravndal Helen Ross Beth Ross Norma Cone Nellie james Lily Askeland f -'T' P Y 1 Philomathean Society Q M N- il. Leonell Nelson William Gennrich Harter MacKenzie Merl Hummel Robert Newans john Booker Fred Smock Harold Helliwell August Herrmann Leslie Schoonover Henry Campbell Carl Francis Arnold Kirkpatrick Russell Healy Royal Brown I..aForest Blyler Clifford Lundsten Lawrence Lunde Lew Fiero Arvid Erickson Lester Bergeson Astor Anderson Clifford Ekelund Charles Sweitzer Leland Pryor Harold Heneman Paul Kerfoot Grover Beatty Elmer Wickham Frank Blyler Ben Brown Rudolph Wosmek Philip Reynolds Gerald Caldwell Fred Heneman Roscoe Kirkpatrick Frank A. Betts Floyd Kufus W. Porter Waltz y, -nj. 4 .Q .:-6-2. 7? Fr'--L4 ' ,fh 3EE'.:,:L:5-i'ii'E:kff'i'fv Athenaean Society Eva Kidder Myrle Tinker Esther Bane Ethel Featherstone Helen Hyde Lu Goff Gail Lutz osephine McNeil Marjorie Wells Minnie Zimmerman Edna Schultz Hazel Murray Alice Zimmerman Fanny Coveney Violetta Peterson Florence Dunnell Eleanora Swenson Ruth Rademacher Elizabeth Wood May Millbrook Ruth Lee Bessie Elliott Nellie Woolley Hazel Dingle Marguerite Calkins Margie Lee Hazel Paulson Sadie Grant Dortha Calkins Ruth Sills Ruth Perry Hazelle Bliss . Blanche Workman , U . V X , . .. ,,:,,.... - ihf'E5:f?i'?.nE ':a:sf:dzifai'.,t 1 ,. f Amphictyon Society Siegfried Herrmann Grant Jacobson Chester Orrison Halsey Harrington Arthur Turner Clinton Dana Thomas Moe Herbert Dittbenner Walter Durbahn Oscar Berg Daniel Scott LesterWood Robert Kells William Parker Henry Hedin Lorenz Schulz Warren Woodcock Thaddeus Davey Everett Baker E. Tetreau Raymond Cowgill jesse Nelson Allen Collette William R. johnson Alfred Stedman Philip Hamlin P. Edward Kroll Ivan C. jones Edward Voorhees Clarence Nelson Robert Culbertson Paul Smith William Mulder Robert Crossland Oliver Lindberg Henry Moe Merton Brann George Haggans Abraham Levin Leonard Lee Charles Sauter Lee Workman james Ferguson Earl Craven Charles Richardson T' ' 'if V -V - gs 4 Alpha Phi Society :,,:E.1H, Thea Wohler Stella Beach Marie Gage Ruth V. Anderson Amy Brusven Anna Leonard Lillian Hart Inez Wenz Mabel Crommett Verna Jones Lola Grinnell Grace Taylor Meta Holmes Mary Nickerson Edna Davis Allie Gayle Quayle Eva Peterreins Aelfreda Gould Mildred Fitschen Alta Jones Mabel Sell Leona Heins Alma Lee Ruth E. Anderson Blanche Dean Florence Anderson Goldie Squire Ruth Humphrey Esther Peterreins Ruth Harvey Hilda Anderson . 14.1, .Z FI' Eg... - ., 1 A rf TW' Q 5-mwah . 151,11 Q-gqfvlrcfui ,'g'j3YQ'ifj 'i 'j7 ' 'TQIQ-:,4 nQ..'zr,- .e ,.im1r ,. . ,EE ay: Phi Alpha Literary Society g! la, QEY +3 , 5 :rr 5 S E, ,I E if E5 E? . r ,. Fe Eff ,Zu ,fi if? V V li. James Ballentyne Allen Dobner Donald Young Harry Harper Walter Kempe Donald Farley Einar Berg Howard Anderson William Kahlert Ezra Durbahn E Warren Harris fd Rudolph Dahl Kenneth Brewster Helmer Hougen Walton Harrison Roger Anderson Elmer Doyle Paul Peik Henry Kuhrmeyer U3 Rolla Tanner fl' s , Franklin Blume Peter C-oertz Charles Holmes Chris Wernlund Roy Holmes Gail Helgeson John Goodman Manford Waltz 1 Rhudy Bemmels Le Roy Penniman Q.: Raymond Alley Clayton Champlin Neal Dow Louis Kemp David Lundeen Alfred Mallery Clifford Reed Oscar Youngdahl ' rig Gia .---, :Lia-.'....1ff. .. L25 1.3.2 599 El Euterpean Norma Gooclell Ida Olien May Brewster Mary Berryman Eloise Morey C-eorgiana Sanford Lillie Ryden Jennie Watt Evalyn Stevens Etta Halvorson Neva Heath Lillian C-ebhardt Elsie Padden Ruby Mather Marion Robbins Vinette Babcock Blanche Crennon Viva Fox Rose Hedland Edith Sanford Geneva Silver Lillian Swenson Lillian Skinner Esther Johnson Laura Nichols lsabel Birnberg Ida Blehart Hazel Getchell Mollie Hill Mrs. Johnson Esther Koenig - ' '1i:RkE 3?' fy Euphronian Society P' 'f -' J' -. ti'-'-1-:vifvf-:A-'wr'1,'.'-,fr - -V5 is Charles Springsted Hillis Newlove Cyrus Erickson Karl Trout Harry Hoegh Joseph Haubrick Charles Olien Ray Little Paul Sandberg William Barr Harry Gough Raymond Schnaith Harrison Norton Frank Sanderson Arthur Johnson Lorenzo Johnson Reuben Johnson Williard Fuller Arthur Felien Casper Frederickson Theo Larson Earl F. Baumhofer Edwin Foss Faus Silvernale Nathan Kuske Henry Swanson Floyd Baumhofer William Dittes Elmer Ralston William Crays John Blackhurst Albin Johnson William johnson Harry Lanphear Clarence Lindberg Earnest Parish Arthur Bosshardt lngwald Berg ,,., M ,, , U4 . I-191 ..L - -4... . :, ?' . , 5, V. X1 2 5 k . I L E f S 5, 'ji -,ve -sl V , . z 3, 1, Y . 4 ' s Te I H2 .Q F .-. .1 .5 V, W-.4 ivnrlies-:npi:mmff,',.43'xf', , ' P : f'ff'9'fL'-.Q .: ffQf,1:'f L-:1 'J LEW:5- 'w?67-1u.'1i1i4fQ'f,1,-. PM I P v 1 A fd 'Z x A va faq ' W 5 .1 . 1 A x 1 A -vu-sl . . . '-e 'X A 'ab- + c ,. 4 , V,,,,,,,...,,.....v....., ---5 -. H .- . V -4 ,f , vf-. - --gf,-p:,.- -'-M - '-- qQ:L.,.-375 .. V-k 1 ,- ,A . .,. W1-A M. -, nf,-.-get-7 -nu. ITELIEI U5 URCHNISH ' 5 I - 6 - Our Home Church Dr. Taylor Our Pastor ....,.....1..- A-.. .........L,u...g,u:.t,.....u.4..gm..............sa......,...,.......l.......-....,..-....-..'.. .-.-s.,..,...L,..:,..-.u .. u. :s...... 4-.aJi-.Q.-mrmflitkfg '- Qi is tg. z,f x 'f Homiletic Club HE Homiletic Club was organized on December I, l9l I, at the home of Doctor Geo. S. lnnis. The purpose of the club is to study the nature l i ii jof pastoral and pulpit work, and to secure for its members a greater I 'W in efficiency in all departments of active Christian service. Any student of Hamline University who is engaged in, or intends to enter the work of, the Christian ministry is eligible for active membership. The work of the club is directed by officers elected annually, and inspired by the influence of Doctor lnnis, who was chosen as honorary president at the time of organization. The club has found in Doctor Kerfoot a staunch friend. The active members are: Earl F. Baumhofer, L. C. Benson, Wm. A. Mulder, L. O. Penniman, G. L. Haggans, Merton Brann, Henry Mecklenburg, R. S. Culbertson, E. Tetreau, Lorens Johnson, Frank Sanderson, E. C. Parish, Wm. J. Barr, F. C. Gilchrist, Wm. Parker and A. D. Collett. OFFICERS COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN ' S Robert B. Culbertson, Presi- dent Devotional,WilliamA. Mulder: L. Haggansg Employment, Vice-President. Harry B- Bible Study, Edward L. N. Gerald Caldwell: Six O'el0ck Gough Voorhees' Membershi Frank Cl b F T I Ch I F. S - - . . P, u , red l-lenemang Geneva, Tgiilrer ar es prmg W. Sanderson: Social, Manford Harrison E, Norton- Secretary, Harrison E. Norton Waltz: New Students, George Young Men's Christian Association FRATERNITY of the young men of the college banded together for the Iif!' 'X'i purpose of keeping them in warmer touch with the best in themselves and quickening the spirit of devotion and religious reverence. The hA Young Men's Christian Association at l-lamline aims to develop in its members a greater physical, mental and spiritual strength. lt aims to make felt strongly the need of offensive Christian living and the responsibility that goes along with being a brother. The association each week throughout the year holds noonday prayer meetings where topics of general religious interest are discussed, and also joint meetings with the Y. W. C. A. where topics of local religious and social importance are taken up. We aim to foster in the lives of the students those habits and thoughts which will best carry them over the doubts and difficulties of life. -, J-........x.....,...4..a.A4...z4..s...L..-....2g.L..:..1 ..-..1 .. .'...4imr,-ing.. ..i.1.'... , - 1... . CABINET COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN President, Ruth Rademacher Efligioug lYlietg1gs,. Gertiiide Aelfreda Gould: Finance, Lillian V, P ,d B , EH- are, ocia ervice, ice Ice' res' ent' essle 'Ott ZimmermangBible Study, Eva Intercollegiate, Lillian Rich- SCCTCWFY, Elizabeth Lambert Peterreins: Mission Study, ardsongCeneva,EthelFeather- Treasurer, Alma Lee Violetta Peterson: Social, stone. Young Women's Christian Association ET, WENTY-FIVE years have passed since an association secretary first Hartg Fellowship, Edna Schulz: rr-' visited Hamline and organized our C. A. The response of the Hamline girls to the call of the association was as hearty then as now. the years, as the student body increased, this organization has grown also. But this growth has not been in numbers alone. With the rising interest in social service and the development of social ideals, the scope of associa- tion activity has ever broadened. It has a well organized department to carry on works of uplift in the city. But chiefly the Hamline Y. W. C. A. tries to serve the needs of all our young women students. From beginning to end the fellowship idea is carried out. Letters are written to the new girl before she leaves her home, she is met at the depot and assisted through the trying days of settling, registra- tion and Hrst acquaintance. Help and cheer are offered whenever need arises. Frequent social meetings help bind the tie of sisterhood. Most important of all, the association aims to minister to the spiritual needs of the young women by the devotional service each week: by stimulating interest in Bible and mission study, by co-operating in all the larger religious activities of the college. Fl if -l fig as fi., gg . F 2. , ie. Q1 its .iff 5-1: fi Eff: :fa E4 Aff 1 ,. W . 5 in i L- ,, zaf- g . . as n The Sheepskin Club 'GH ' N organizing Bible classes last fall, the Young Women's Christian W ,'Association departed fromits usual routine in forming a club for the senior bfi, Lili girls. lts purpose is the discussion of things of vital interest to college Yefilllii- particularly from a religious standpoint. The name 'Sheepskin Club' was given it, and it has held meetings each week at the homes of various members. Miss Edna Schultz is president, and Miss Jennie Castles, secretary. The meetings have proved both helpful and enjoyable. Minnesota at Geneva wWWhu1qh,,,.U .MwM,,f. m,N,M. ,RJ E , k ' 'rr-as, A f THE HABIT ' HASBEEN . FIXED .ns ,. N1 f if QRADLB M L T ff X ' NA KAL umm mmvm IFTIN Hamline University 05552 - mdin: fg- E Hamline Literary Publications -1y,g, g2,yg- F there is one department in which Hamline University excells other Q I W colleges of her class, it is in her student literary publications. Made possible by the apportionment from the Student Enterprise Fee paid 1 A -by all students, the Oracle, a weekly newspaper, and the Maga, a monthly literary magazine, are maintained, in addition to the Handbook, published annually by the Christian Associations, the Alumni Quarterly, published by the Alumni Association, and the Bulletin, published bi-monthly by the faculty. No institu- tion of the size of Hamline in the northwest can boast so many and so varied pub- lications. Even the large universities have no more, while some of Hamline's sister colleges have but one publication, which includes all of the functions of her five. Modesty forbids our mentioning the Liner in this connection. Its merits can be judged from a perusal of these pages. It is to be hoped that in the future, every junior class may see fit to issue a souvenir annual such as this, or better. The Oracle and the Maga are issued under the direction of the literary board, composed of a representative from each college class and one from the faculty, with the editors and business manager of each publication as advisory members. While it has never been called upon to exert itself to its full capacity, owing to the universally satisfactory service that has been given by those whom the board has placed in charge of the publications, its power is almost unlimited. MEMBERS OF THE LITERARY BOARD Doctor Morris LeRoy Arnold, faculty representative. Gertrude Clare, president, senior representative. Earl E. Craven, junior representative. Ivan C. Jones, sophomore representative. Paul Kerfoot, secretary, freshman representative. Marion Edith Robbins, editor-in-chief of the Maga. C. Paul Smith, editor of the Oracle. Walter A. Kempe, business manager, Oracle and Maga. EDITORIAL STAFF C. Paul Smith, Managing Editor Edward Vorhees, Associate Editor Walter Kempe, Business Manager DEPARTMENT EDITORS Faus P. Silvernale Goldie Squire Frank Blyer Aelfreda Could Gertrude Clare Philip Reynolds Violetta Peterson Charles Springsted Charles Richardson The Oracle Oracle was first published in October, I888, as a monthly magazine. October, 1898, it became a semi-monthly publication and in October, l908, it became a weekly. With this change in form has come a corre- sponding change IH the character of the magazine. At first it was of a more literary nature than it is at present and contained learned discussions upon civic problems and other general topics. Now it has assumed more the type of a newspaper, having turned over its literary functions to itsisister-The Maga. MAGA STAFF Marion Edith Robbins, Editor Marion E.. Munson, Associate -in-Chief. Harry Norton, Associate Lily E. Swenson, Associate E. L. N. Voorhees, Associate Walter A. Kempe, Business Manager. The Maga Maga at the age of live is a healthy, vigorous youngster. It was first issued in November, l908, in response to a demand that the func- tions of a literary magazine be left to a single publication instead of 'ff-fr being combined with the news-gathering and news-dispensing work of the Oracle. It has fulfilled its purpose well. By preserving and fostering the best of literary effort in Hamline University, it occupies a position of great importance. The Handbook Gerald Caldwell, 'l3, Editor HO doesn't know what the Handbook is? ' The Hamline student who Mig has never rehearsed to himself over and over again before coming to college, the procedure outlined in the hints to the uninitiated, must is have had a hard time of it indeed in the first few days. Everything a freshman ought to know, from how to buy his ticket to the proper shade of stockings to wear, is contained within the little compendium. It is seldom changed from year to year, so it acts as the one complete link between the past and the present, the one thing that keeps Hamline traditions undefiled. The book is published each summer under the auspices of the Christian associations. The editor is chairman of the handbook committee, and also acts as business manager, advertising solicitor, office boy, and circulation manager. ' The Alumni Quarterly A. l. Inwood, Editor This magazine is a mighty force for keeping bound together the sons and daughters of Hamline. It is the official organ of the Hamline Alumni Association. One of the mostsurprising as well as gratifying things about it is that its circulation is greater than the number of graduates of the institution. The Quarterly first saw the light in June, l904, with A. Z. Drew, '86, then professor of mathematics, as editor. It was then but a pamphlet, containing eight pages, and its first issue embodied the report of the annual meeting of the Association, and its constitution. It now has an average of forty-five pages of matter, all news of the institution l of peculiar interest to the alumni, as well as matters concerning the individual alumni, being published. The Bulletin The bulletin of Hamline University first appeared under the editorship of Dr. Gregory D. Walcott, in the year l9I I. This bulletin is sent out to all parts of the Northwest, especially to Minnesota high schools. The variations in thechar- acter of this publication are most interesting. It tells of the achievements of the faculty, both literary and otherwise. The noted success of alumni and under- graduates are also chronicled here. One of the most successful issues has been Professor Thomas P. Beyer's presentation of Why go to College? Why come to Hamline? Many cuts add to the attractiveness and value of these publica- tions. How to get out a Liner ITH the experience of getting out the present publication behind it, the staff and the editors feel the duty thrustlupon them of leaving be- hind full instructions for succeeding classes who wish to attempt a task r A of this magnitude. We feel that had our predecessors left such infor- mation, we would have been saved untold mistakes, unmeasured heart-aches, and unmitigated anxiety. We therefore feel that we are contributing a service to humanity which will go down through all ages as a tribute to ourselves in leaving these few words on the methods of getting out a Liner. First, begin early. Establish a correspondence system among the prospective members of your class two years before you become Freshmen. Elect your editor- in-chief, and other officers. Then maybe, by Christmas of your Junior year, you will be ready to start work. Second, make all your class members of the staff. This will then do away with innumerable petty jealousies, and then you can't be accused of playing politics. Then select a committee of five and go to work and put your Liner to- gether. You'll have to do it ult'imately, so you may as well start in early. Third, equip yourself with the following. I double-barrelled shotgun, I2-gauge. I Krag-Jorgensen long-range army rifle. 10 .32 caliber Colt automatic revolvers. I0 six-inch daggers. I sharpening stone for above. IO regulation loaded policeman's billies. I pen. I bottle ink. I00 blue pencils. I I0 reams embossed linen writing paper. I professional photographer. With these articles, 'you should be able to get your staff to do at least one per cent of what you want them to do. You may, perhaps, wish to add a few items to this list, but these are all that are really necessary. Good dry-goods boxes make excellent desks, and you can usually borrow enough chairs and rugs as well as divans and couches from the Y. W. C. A.. to complete your oflice equipment. They will never miss them. V 4 It is best to leave the shot-gun and army rifie in charge of the editor-in-chief who will stay in the office, so that in case he sees any of his staff in difficulty at any point on the campus, he can help them out. It also helps to keep out intruders, although one great drawback is that a shotgun makes the blood spatter too much on the walls and floor. Also the shot scatters, and mutilates the woodwork. The revolvers, if distributed to the members of the committee should prove useful in extracting orders from the unwilling, and also in making people get their pictures taken, and turning in copy. The daggers are of use when you have emptied the chambers of the revolvers, while the billies should be used only when you do not wish to call attention to yourself. With these few suggestions, we feel that you should be able to make an attempt at getting out a Liner. Matters of detail may be worked out by the individual editors and managers. .rl I FKMQUMHHTHES nmnu- lllllllll uunw- vwillll :Eff-. 1:11155 'fiT:?f-i -11121. :exif :-:q':g,'.'.r5,1Q:f531' I my X f 'lf-fiw f--see? xy W o 3 S H X ' MW- Q . iz ' :ji ll' l 1 'I my 'gl Nx Ay NA 1 .Eg q N l 4 Q' 2 r vf 1' . iff' I r ' X x ' 3 ' ,U QQ, -. a. s li H, it 9 725 2 5356115 J il iff: - 5' ' .1523 'J -if GEEK TAAILILAWH iff z-.- ul ' E 353251 v Qi A --' 52222: E Q12 -tgqflff. 1 2 52 :zen KW 1 11 ' ., 1 IAUIIIIH ' Illf 5 - UIHIIIHII IIHIII X5 iwlzzsmmzsxie, VNKVERSHW 'A ,wr , .19 I , ' .Q , x'X Gio? .Ji ,X ye 55.7 ' '51 '09, ' 1 f' -ar f BETTA OMICRON SIGMA KAPPA FRATERNITY Organized Oct. I5, l90l. Moved from l605 W. Minnehaha to the new house at 823 Snelling, Oct. 17, l9l2. mua- I Betta Kappa 5 -N wx Q. -' 1 R Paul Rollo A. Tanner Clifford Lundsten oyal N. Brown john D. Booker Leslie N. Schoonover Kerfoot Helmer Hougen Charles Sweitzer Elmer Do Elmer Wickham Roger Anderson Ben Brown Fr Frank Bl Willia yle H ecl Hen yler m Kahlert arold Heneman ' eman Philip Gail Helgeson Amer Reynold Berg s Peter Coertz ..,g -ii., M. .v -..LHNQ-. 4... ... .....,-..Y..J H 4. ' U4 'Ei X -1 1.5 'Z Y I, If ' -, 4 , Q ,c 51' . , W.: . Af L f I . fb ii .:, rj!-M XX ' 'N -4,11 1 ' ' is-M, Ei THE FELLOWS Founded Feb. I, 1908 The Fellows Paul Sandberg Charles Richardson Siegfried Herrmann Lester Wood Milton Reclcsiek Grant Jacobson Oscar Berg Raymond Alley Thomas Moe Leonell Nelson Ray Little Phillip Hamlin Clifford Ekeluncl Clinton Dana Walton O. Harrison Robert Crossland Leonard Lee Henry Matthews Alfred L. Mallery C. Paul Smith John W. Goodman Fans P. Silvernale Clarence A. Nelson Kenneth C. Brewster Edward Voorhees Louis Kemp William Crays Ivan Jones Ciro Whited William Mulder John Blackhurst Allen Collette Henry Moe A CF 1. A ml FH-1 G 4 25- .'. 6-52 agp U5 if 5 .,, ,., ,,,, . V --,. 1, J-V -, ,.....h.ag-....,.,g...---.,u..-,,,,., -W ' M- 4 ,fm - , 2 ' ' 'U' M V A fs-mrszvfv 1 e..-wexgwsg.-ep. v X235 A .ffwv - zhtr' I. PHI DELTA FRATERNITY Founded, june 6, l9ll PRESENT MEMBERS Howard C. Anderson Warren Woodcock Franklin Blume Earl E. Craven Rhucly E. Bemmels Ezra Durbahn Oscar Youngclahl Chris Wernlund Welcome P. Waltz Thaddeus Davey Walter A. Kempe Manford R. Waltz Rob. B. Culbertson Lawrence R. Lunde Harter McKenzie Alfred D.Stedman Harry E. Norton Carl E. Francis James Ballentyne Frank Sanderson Roscoe Kirkpatrick Arnold Kirkpatrick Neal E. Dow M. gp SE . if' V.: J,- I F 2 ,, , ,. ,771-Q' . ,F I 1. Taallam AN HONORARY SCHOLARSHIP FRATERNITY Organized by the men of the class of I9I0. It has for its object the re of excellence of scholastic record among the men of the college. Thomas I-Iuser, 'IO Ed. Engson, 'I0 Guy I-Iargrave, ' I 0 Elmer Lund, 'IO Owen Ely, 'I0 Earl Frank, 'I0 Harold Quigley, 'I I K. P. Squire, 'II Wallace Kidder, 'I I MEMBERS - David Peterson, 'IZ I'I. C. Tregoning, 'I2 I'Iarry Hanson, 'I2 J. C. Could, 'IZ Fred C. Heneman, 'I3 Gerald Caldwell, 'I3 Phillip C. Reynolds, 'I3 Manford R. Waltz, 'I3 cognition Sigma Theta Flower-Iris. Q, Colors-Iris blue and Silver Lily Swenson, President Jennie Castles Ruth Rademacher, Secretary 'iii Mary Nickerson Marion Robbins Anna Leonard Sigma Theta Honorary scholarship sorority is comparatively recent in organization, owing its foundation to the class of I9l2. The society came to satisfy a long felt need of something to stimulate interest in :ff scholarship and reward efficiency in that line. Before l9l0 the Taallam had existed for these purposes among the men. The charter members of Sigma Theta are: Effie M. Hake, Elizabeth Collins, Alice Van Fossen, Harriet Van Fossen, Edith Burmeister, Ella Evans, Edith Lindberg and Alta Cass. The purpose of the sorority is not primarily social although that is one feature of its activities. ' Girls are given all of the first three years of their college course to show what work they are capable of and if at the end of the junior year their marks come to the satisfactory average of ninety, they are candidates for membership and are permitted to wear the pin of the organization. It is in a measure regrettable that there is no branch of a national honorary society at Hamline but this with many other good things is in the near future and until it is possible to introduce the Phi Beta Kappa into the college, the present local society carries on the work very efficiently. Therefore all credit is due, both for aims and work accomplished, to the Honorary Scholarship Society of Sigma Theta. f- N ll wk!! i . I 6156 W0 nm , gy Q W Z cm ? ' Uh M PP NNW X YE ,VS 6 T all . w N B 'vm f'Q 91 KX' X gm ' , N .L 2 ' ' X- Q, aw ,L 'DI Q- 'vm' ., 4 j X P f A Dramatic Diversion ln three fits Qof which the first is a Spasm, the second a Partial Recovery, and the third a Complete Relapsej. Time: Study hour in general, 7:47 in particular. 1 DRAMATIS PERSONAE Would-Be Sigma Theta Shining Light Star Performer Mathematical Star Intellectual Crouch Philosopher Optimist Fit l. The Spasm fCurtain rises, the Goheen Shakespeare Club, lounging in various intellectual attitudes are' seemingly absorbed in Midsummer Night's Dreamnj. Shining Light fintensely dramaticl: How now, my love, why is your cheek so pale. Why chance the roses- Star Performer: O Kids, don't take it so hard! Look at this a minute-do. l-low's the effect? Qdisplaying a remarkable coiffure, a la Billie Burkel quite fetching, don't you think? Intellectual Grouch fsarcasticallyj: Perfectly fascinating! ls it Blanche Ring tonight? Mathematical Star: fwith a twinkle in her eyejz See Paul! Cgeneral laugh in which the Star Performer joins, thrusting in a hairpinj. Would-Be Sigma Theta: l say, we positively must study. fllnheardj. QA delicious odor is delicately wafted to the nostrils of the busy studentsj. Optimist: Gee, something smells good! What is it? Freshman Centers with half a peanutjz Have one on me. fSi!ently ignoredj. Intellectual Grouch: Oh, it's toast, and !'m literally starved. Chorus: Come on, !et's find it! , fSeveral Williams descend with a thud to the floor, and are mercilessly trodden under foot. Down the ha!! the onslaught goes, until room 28 is reached. The door is thrust open and the culprits are surprised in the act of removing two crusts of bread, beautifully browned, from an electric toasterl. Shining Light: Toast or your life! Philosopher: My kingdom for some toast! Would-Be Sigma Theta: We came, we saw, and wi!! conquer fwith a desperate grab procuring the luckless crusts-the retreating company, booty held high in the air, rush down the hall, the enemy in hot pursuit! Alas for Romance. A sudden halt is called by the Dean, standing at the head of the back stairsj. Dean Csternlyjz Girls! Girls! Go to your rooms at once! This noise must cease! CA rush-doors bang-quiet reigns on Secondl. QCurtainj Fit ll. The Partial Recovery QCurtain rises on aforementioned group, in aforementioned attitudes con- ducive to mental digestion of Shakespearej. Intellectual Crouch: Now maybe you will take my advice and study a while. Mathematical Star: Yes, that's the trouble with us-we don't get down to business. Now if I had my say- Optimist finterruptingj: Shakespeare would be in Ha!!-elujah happy land- I suppose you were going to say. That'!! do for you! Now, it's just like this, I'm going to study. fReads impressivelyj. The course of true love never did run smooth. H Philosopher: No, but really. Do you believe it? Mathematical Star: Why surely we do-eh. Ester? CVoice of night maid calling Miss B.-te'ephone D. Star Performer: Oh, help! My freshman bid for the joint, I suppose- Mathematical Star fsarcasticallyjz Oh yes, we all suppose so- Shining Light fcalling after herl: Be sure to turn it down. fStar Performer takes the stairs in three jumpsl. Would-Be Sigma Theta: Now she's gone, maybe we can get to work. Optimist: Oh, what's the use. We've worked so hard tonight. Let's quit. Mathematical Star: That's what I say Cthrows book asidej. Intellectual Crouch: Well, good-night! I might as well go and study alone. Star Performer: O Kid, don't go home sore! Come on back in the morning. We'!! get up and study before breakfast-won't we girls? Chorus: Of course. At 6:30. Intellectual Crouch: Do you mean it? Optimist: Of course we do, come and see. Intellectual Crouch: All right! Don't forget, 6:30. All: We won't. Coodnight. ' Intellectual Crouch: Goodnight. fE.xitQ. fChorus of male voices outside begin in tender'tones: Steadi!y, shoulder to shouldernj. Chorus Call starting upj: Ah, a serenade! Quick, lights out! fUp goes the window. The Shakespeare Club, head and shoulders bathed in the night air- are eagerly drinking in the captivating strainsl. fCurtainj - - Fit III. The Complete Relapse 16:35 next morning. A kimono-clad figure moves quietly down the hall, opens the door of No. 3!. Within-darkness, and the sound of peaceful breathingj. Intellectual Crouch fwrathfullyja I knew it. Any morning those kids get up to study Shakespeare, just tell me about it. fWalks slowly homeward, sits down at the tablel. Suppose I might as well study. fOpens book, Qyawnsj. I'm horribly sleepy! fReads a line or two-nods-tries to read once more-then with a resolute thrust, pushes the book asidej. Cee! what's the use? I'm going to sleep. fOne jump-the covers rise and fall gently over a prostrate form-almost does oblivion reign-and then a smothered exclamationj What do you know about it! Today's Tuesday! We have a lecture in Shakespeare! And we nearly studied our heads off on the stuff last! night! A sigh-oblivion. I fCurtainj WI SP AL T l l WO UD run SALE HOW AT na IND THING EVE TWINS PRICE MLLE PETERSON cLAmvnYAN1 UN LUVES TRAIL sv sp. Macxusrcx Lmsrmrna mme Maman !VIVEl HON I0 LIVE EVERYBODY GET IT NOW EC 0 55 A SEANCE T0 HCT BRN QUET ON AMEAL A DAY BETH ROSS cum noon Y ,,w1,, Q: TM-Tx BIB W T T ANNOUNC e my SHINE MVNWN N055 The Rime of the Much Dunned Co-ed fWith apologies to Coleridgel vhyg- T is our class Assessor X That stoppeth one of . three X'1-'alma V Oh bother, quoth the pretty maid, Now wherefor stoppest me? I merely wish to tell you ' That any time you choose, l'll be quite happy to receive Your long past banquet dues. It is a jolly junior Politely beckons thee By that strange glamour in thine eye Wherefor dost beckon me? Twas merely to remind you That when your purse is full, You really ought to buy, you know. A junior Annual. It is the timid laundress Desires to speak with thee, By thatrlast fancy waist you spoiled What woulds't thou have with me? Why really-it is nothing- And-yet-if you but will, I really need most awfully bad Your last month's laundry bill. lt's letters on the hall stand, A dozen more or less, From Smith's, from Ritschel's, and from Dip's And at the rest, you guess. It is the careworn father, Opens the evening mail, But stop-propriety forbids, Continuing the tale. qR. cg ,T . v F Q o , fa 'A lil 6 A, 4 Irv ' s '-:ll a H Q o n . asrnxam V ' M 1549+ pr? 'A- 8000 ffl X S Z' ff? Palm Readings byMadame Vieriet de Xhyrse V ALMA LEE. Some confusion here. The gods evi- dently intended you for a stump speaker but various influences have thwarted this gift. I see by the slant of your little finger indications of a loud and over- bearing nature. A pugnacious temperament such as yours may be best subdued by some active out-of- doors employment, such as coal heaving. but as I perceive that you have a well developed musical sense, I should advise that you seek employment with Ringling Bros., as player of the steam calliope. ESTHER BANE.. Here there is every indication of an over serious and studious nature. The lines clearly indicate a deep aversion to the theater and all things theatrical. You have, my dear, an almost prudish attitude toward social gaieties of any sort, and dancing in particular. The life line is short, indicating poor heart control and the lines branching from it show a positive hatred of men. RUTH RADEMACHER. The head line shows a deficiency in outline, indicating a lack of application to work. This doubtless accounts for your very low standard of scholarship. The heart line seems well defined, although a proud and haughty nature is apparent in the peculiar shape of the thumb. I should advise you to pay more attention to the advances of the faculty. It is hard for the very young not to have their affections reciprocated. OLIVE SPERRY. Seldom have I read a palm showing such splendid lines. There is something magnetic here that draws-many checks on father's bank account. The lines at the wrist reveal a sunny disposition and a sweet nature. There is every indi- cation of growing popularity-I predict a bright and happy future. . fi Ag g :-. .35 Q3 4.1. 5.5-T J.- 'W viii? 'Wa Q X X4 77' 1 f s XY BESSIE ELLIOTT. The peculiar shape of the fourth finger would seem to indicate a wild and ranting nature. A tendency to go to great extremes in all things is plainly apparent. Do check this. It does not become a college girl. Your addiction to popular music and rag dances may best be curbed by a thorough course with the Crossland Correspond- ence School of Music. In addition, I advise life in a convent. ALTA ,IONES3-,The shape of the fingertips points to a philosophic bent, coupled, I am sorry to observe, with a tendency to disturb the peace and thereby annoy the faculty. These unfortunate traits, however, are more than over-balanced by keen wit and a loyalty which endears youto your friends. When morose, ponder upon the brilliant achievements of brother Rob and be content. FANNY COVENEY. Lines of pure genius pre- dominate here. a genius for inveigling societies into rushing you, and all into liking you. I see peculiar tell-tale markings: some overpowering passion pos- sesses youg the object of your affection is--ah yes! the matron. In this and in all other things remember that wisdom lies in moderation. l see a patriotic inclination which will lead you to make any sacrifices to protect the class flag, even after all hope is lost. l predict a career as militant suffragette. ELEANOR NUNN. The prominence of the mount of reason would indicate a fondness for all things mathematical, Trig. especially. An overly retiring and unassertive nature leads me to believe that you should strive to acquire a graceful manner of intrud- ing and haranguing. Your extreme aversion to gossip is' highly commendable. 55 512 we 'ix . as W F4 4 x-51, 1 , 55:1 V5 if ,f ,t fi' 1 .1 . t f 4 1 ,YA SQ I , Ya v 3 f , ff 'I H' ms? .'v1'i fri 5559 A19 In After Years wilight shadows I in changing forms Over the prairies ' M l come and go, The faces change, but the spirit there Does not change with a name. Brooding and watchful it ever Daylight fades on a crimson stands sky Cherishing hopes and dreams While in the east the moon sublime hangs low: To be carried afar to many Back through the halls of lands, memory Their fruits to abide through Fain would we fly to those happy days When the heart was young and life was a song, A golden gleam through a rosy hazef To college years with their dear old friends l And lessons learned day after day Of the way of life and how to weave Threads of gold through the grey. The sky is bending tenderly Over a building grey of wall, Dear indeed to many a heart, Sheltering, motherly Goheen Hall: With troops of girls about the door, Eager chatter or graver talk, Carolling birds careening o'er And lilacs down by the walk, A picture it makes that is bright and fair, E Year after year it is just the same, all time: O, moulder of souls while the heart is young Foster the vision and bring the dream, Teach the song that is good to be sung, Strengthen the courage to follow the gleam! Dear old Hall, how many hearts Yearn for a sight of thee! Yearn to reclasp a comrade's hand At their college-mother's knee, And thinking of friends we repeat the lines So often murmured while there together: May the Lord watch between me and thee While we are absent, one from another. -Genevra Davies, ' IZ. 'W N 1 1 W ff:--7' L-L-1,.....,, FWZ!! ff 1: ff i L--JJ, V , , w I ' w k 5 I 1 v r , L1h-Lngaziln-t Tug ' 4. I 1 W Y ' r 4 w PEE The Hamline University Alumni Association Charles E. Collett, '0l, Presi- Pearl Heal, '02, Fourth Vice- Edna Huser King, '03, His- dent President torian ' Ma Whitney Haley, '67, vice. Ray Irie, '12, Fifth Vice-Presi- Martha Winston Hartwell. '04. Pxesident dent Treasurer , , L. J. Van Fossen, '85, Second Jennie i-mi Hackney, '02, cor- A'MQm,Yfjlf'feH 'EQ IQIQQQQ Vice-President responding Secretary Board J. L. Silvernale, '00, Third Julia Bevans, '03, Recording A' 1, Inwood 'Ol Manager of Vice-President Secretary Alumni Qugrtegly I O factor in Hamline's progress, is of such great potency as the Hamline n' , 'yig University Alumni Association. With its rapid increase in numbers Mill dd a C1 fhb fh .llylsnfgilu in . e past eca e, 1ts.1n uence an , power or t e etterment o .t e AM... institution which gave it birth has likewise been extended. It is just now getting into action, and as an example of some of the big things that may be expected of it in the future, may be cited three enterprises which the association has begun and finished in the last two years. The first was the construction of the Alumni Way, leading from the gymnasium to Norton Field, at a cost of 3600, raised by subscription among the Alumni. At the same time, the Bridgman scholarship fund of 55,000 in honor of President Emeritus George H. Bridgman, was started, and in less than a year, the whole amount was raised in small sub- scriptions. Another scholarship fund, in honor of Professor lnnis was begun last June, with 53,500 as a goal, and by March Ist, three months before the time set for its completion, the committee reported that all had been subscribed. These two scholarships will in time provide funds for the support of from eight to ten young men through their college course. The first two beneficiaries under the Bridgman fund will enter Hamline next fall. They will be selected by a com- mittee of the Alumni, trustees and faculty. Branches of the general Alumni Association have been formed in several sections of the country. A large Hamline Club was formed in the Twin Cities during the past year, with seventy-five charter members. The officers of this club are as follows: Mrs. Mabel McKinstry Wallace, '98, President. Mrs. Clara Sperry Benham, '0I, Vice-President. Arthur O. Garrison, '09, Secretary. Charles S. Kidder, '08, Treasurer. Alumni in Northwestern Minnesota also formed an organization during the past year in Duluth. Lucien Merritt, '99, is president: Mrs. C. Annand, '90, vice-president: Miss Ellison Clifford, 'I I, secretaryg and B. N. Wheeler, '94, treas- urer. Branches also exist in most of the large cities, Chicago and New York both having healthy organizations, while everywhere else where there are two or three Hamline grads gathered together the spirit of the institution is fostered. History of Hamline University gifs N MARCH 3rd l854 the territorial Legislature granted the charter X for Hamline University and the Honorable W A Gorman Governor .564 TRW nf , , at XS.: 15' of the Territory of Minnesota, signed it. Doctor Jabez Brooks was made O.: H.. f 1 'l . . . principal of the preparatory department, which was opened at Red Wing in November of the same year, and in the fall of l857, the college of liberal arts was established with Rev. B. F. 'Crary as president. ln I86l, Doctor Brooks became president and held this position until the school was temporarily closed in I869. ln I880, Hamline University was re-opened in a new building midway between St. Paul and Minneapolis, on what was then an open prairie. Doctor D. C. john was the first president in the new location. The present Ladies' Hall was com- pleted in l883, and almost immediately used for recitation purposes, because of the fire which destroyed University Hall. Doctor George H. Bridgman began his long reign in this year, remaining in charge until his retirement as president emeritus, last June. During his admin- istration University Hall was rebuilt, and Science Hall, the Library and the Gym- nasium were erected as well as an addition made to Goheen Hall. Hamline graduated her first class in 1859, numbering two. There were two in 1860, and three in l86I. Between l86I and l865, no young men were gradu- ated, nearly all having given their services to their country in the Civil War. Since those early times, nearly eight hundred have passed through the institution. Many have achieved fame. Many more have remained at home and performed the duties close at hand. Whatever they are, and wherever they may be, Hamline is proud to acknowledge them, and they in turn are loyal to their Alma Mater. In the following pages may be found the names of the living alumni. A glance through them will show that Hamline graduates may be found on every quarter of the globe, in every honorable occupation, each contributing his full service to society's welfare. We have obtained pictures of a few of them, which may also be found here. Samuel Fletcher Kerfoot, Hamline's Greatest Alumnus i f IKE his predecessor, Doctor Bridgman, and like many other great Americans, President Samuel Fletcher Kerfoot is our countryman only il by adoption.' He was born in Smith Falls, Ontario, February I I, IS65. 'lf if He was barely seventeen years old when he entered Hamline University as a preparatory student. After earning most of his way through college, partly by preaching, and partly by other means, he was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts in ISS9. He immediately entered Drew Theological Seminary at Madison, N. J., acquiring the degree of Bachelor of Divinity after three years of study, and at the same time completing a course for the degree of Master of Arts at Hamline. He was later given the degree of Doctor of Divinity by the trustees of Hamline. Since his graduation from Drew, Doctor Kerfoot's career has been one con- tinuous record of achievement. He joined the Northern Minnesota Conference and was pastor of churches in Minneapolis and other places until l898, when he was transferred to the Minnesota Conference and became pastor of the Central Methodist church of Winona, one of the largest churches in the Conference. ln l906 he was appointed to raise an endowment fund of a quarter million dollars for the support of aged ministers in the Minnesota Conference. This seemed no task at all for him, and he soon completed it. Then he was made Pre- siding Elder of the Mankato district, but this was not for long, because Dakota Wesleyan University wanted a man of his qualifications to put the institution upon a sound financial footing. He responded. ln the four years he was president of the Uni- versity at Mitchell, he built one new build- ing, started another, raised an endowment fund of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars,and increased the attendance greatly. When his Alma Mater called him last June to take up the scepter laid down by Doctor Bridgman, he came with the same spirit and zeal which had characterized all his work previously, now intensified ten- fold by his filial love. He has already begun to achieve results and what he is to do in the future, the most optimistic proph- ets can only in part foretell. Doctor Kerfoot was married to Miss Margaret Share, also a graduate of Ham- line, in l892. Although Doctor Kerfoot through modesty is loath to speak of his successes yet whenever he does so, he attributes a large part of them to her inspiring help and counsel. Directory of Hamline Alumni Association Membership Ackerman, Ethel M., '09, Pipestone, Minn., H. S. Teacher. ' Adams, Ellen M., '99, 737 Asbury Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Charles N. Orr. Addison, Stanley H., '09, North Dennis, Mass., Minister. Albertson, Anna V., '90, 105 Park Terrace, Duluth, Mrs. G. Annand. Albertson, C. N., '02, 1654 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Real Estate Realer. Albertson, Faye, '07, Sioux Falls, S. D., Bookkeeper. Allard, lna L., '09, Lansford, N. D., Mrs. Fred Lamp. Allen, Wm. B., 05, 213 Gerlinger Bldg., Portland, Oregon, Real Estate Dealer. Allin, Ernest A., '04, 148 155th St., Harvey, Ill., Congregational Minister. Allin, Fred W., '02, Hill City, Minn., Reading Law. Anderson, Arthur, '1 1, Olivia, Minn., Hardware Business. ' Anderson, Cora B., '09, Redwood Falls, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Anderson, Edna B., '11, Graham Hall, Mitchell, S. D., Teaching Mathematics, Dakota Wes leyan University. Anderson, Lydia M., '00, Winona, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Anderson, Pearl H., '10, Grantsburg, Wis., At Home. Anderson, Russell A., '09, 1108 W. Johnson St., Madison, Wis., Student, Engineering Dept. Wisconsin University. Anderson, Wesley G., '09, Corning, Cal., Ranching. Andrews, Arthur P., '04, Bruce, Wis., Newspaper Publisher. Archerd, Hays P., '08, Casilla 123, Callao, Peru, District Supt. of Peru. Arneson, lnga E., '00, Watson, Minn., At Home. Arthur, lrene, '09, 205 Laflin Ave., Waukesha, Wis., H. S. Teacher. Ash, Anna I., '12, Madison Lake, Minn., H. S. Principal. Atha, Earl T., '99, Linton, N. D., Merchant. Atkins, Blanche E., '09, St. Cloud, Minn., Normal School Teacher. Atkins, Eunice M., '02, Erzroom, Turkey in Asia, Teacher in Missionary School for Girls. Atkins, Ruth E., '07, 6 Mt. Sophia, Singapore, S. S., H. S. Teacher. Axness, Julia M., '12, Elgin, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Babcock, Geo. P., '99, Dyas, Alabama, Carpenter. Babcock, Wm. G., '02, Lake Crystal, Minn., Minister. Baldwin, Gertrude, '00, 201 2nd Ave. S. Kent, Wash., Mrs. C. G. Chittenden. Barkuloo, Ella S., '93, Lester Prairie, Minn., Mrs. J. J. Birkebak. Barnum, W. W., '93, New Richmond, Wis., Real Estate Dealer. Barr, Arthur S., '12, Oriska, N. D., H. S. Principal. Barr, Josiah H., '01, Port Colden, N. J., Minister. Barrett, O. E., '86, Seattle, Wash., Newspaper Publisher. Bean, E. E., '91, Seattle, Wash., Anti-Saloon League Work. Beardsley, Grant S., '04, Eugene, Oregon, Physician. Bell, Bertha, '94, 214 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., Mrs. E. N. Tuckey. Bell, Maude, '06, New Richmond, Wis., At Home. . Benham, Grace, '00, 4611 Oneota, St., West Duluth, Minn., Mrs. Lucien Merritt. Benham, Pearl, '97, 124 E. 28th St., New York, Mrs. R. P. Kaighn. Benham, Rich. S., '01, 215 Palace Bldg., Mpls., Real Estate and lnsurance. Bennett, Mary L., '89, 521 E. 61st St., No. Portland, Oregon, Mrs. A. R. Bolderston. Benson, Elsie, '00, Torrington, Wyo., Mrs. H. S. Kirk. Benson, Lois, '02, 101 W. 109th St., Apartment 314, New York, Studying Art. Ber, Adelaide, '05, Fairmont, Minn., H. S. Principal. Berg, Nels A., '12, Hackett, Minn., Homesteading. Berry, Nina L., '06, Waterloo, lowa, H. S. Teacher. Bevans, Julia, '03, 1419 Langford Ave., St. Paul, Minn., Assistant Librarian, H. U. Bill, Harriett, '11, Cannon Falls, Minn., At Home. Billing, Beatrice, '05, Wabasha, Minn., At Home. Billing, Lillian, '11, Zumbrota, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Billing, Oliver D., '08, Mabel, Minn., Teacher, H. S. Science. Bloomfield, Winifred, '99, 308 W. 97th St., New York, Mrs. W. W. Young. Bonney, W. L., '93, San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, The American Consulate. Borne, Mary T., '09, Clinton, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Bostwick, Hattie, '12, Milbank, S. D., H. S. Teacher. Bradford, Ethel, '04, Buffalo, Minn., H. S. Principal. Bradley, Luella J., '85. 2115 Blaisdell Ave., Mpls., Mrs. L. J. Van Fossen. ,, .. M, .i Ui E . C 'Vi ,ww Pl fic' fi H I if 1 1 -Q rl Lil LL Y: 1 F ' :fi I, flu ' - jf I., 1 1 H' Q 'G .4 34 :ff 7: ,5 95 I ,JS V. ,., M Q4 QF Brady, Stella M., 02, 771 Pascal Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. A. l. lnwood. Bridgman, Donald E., '03, 1121 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Lawyer. Bridgman, Dorothy, ex-'09, 308 Ridgewood Ave., Mpls., Mrs. Frederick G. Atkinson. Briclgman, W. B., 97, Sunnyside, Wash., Lawyer. Brierlay, Jessie B., '07, Stanfield, Oregon, Teaching. Brothers, Vera, '1 1, Menomonie, Wis., At Home. Brown, A. W., '96, Park River, N. D., Minister. Brown, Frank J., '08, Hanley Falls, Minn., Farmer and Stock Raiser. Brown, Wesley C., '06, 207 E. 19th St., Vancouver, Wash., Teacher of Science, H. S. Brown, W. W., '94, Kasson, Minn., Methodist Preacher. Bryan, Clara, '11, 1677 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, At Home. Bryan, Ruth, '08, 511 Bank of California Bldg., Tacoma, Wash., Mrs. Rodney A. Putz. Burmeister, Edith A., '12, Elmore, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Bush, Carroll D., '08, Grand Meadow, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Bushnell, Esther, '89, Cumberland, Wis., Mrs. F. H. Harvey. Butler, Arthur J., 'I 1, 1401 6th St. S. E., Mpls., With Frasier-Smith Com. Co. Butler, Bertram T., '01, Leonia, N. J., Teaching Botany, College of City of New York. Butler, Colvin G., '07, 1116 Court St., LeMars, lowa, Ministe . Cahoon, G. A., '95, Mankato, Minn., District Supt. of M. E. Church. Caldwell, D. Knox, '99, 1569 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., Physician. Caldwell, Guy L., '98, N. Y. Life Bldg., St. Paul, Lawyer. Campbell, Bruce R., '07, Lamberton, Minn., Minister. Campbell, I. Charlotte, '09, Brownton, Minn., Assistant H. S. Principal. Campbell, E. C., '91, Redlands, Cal., Lawyer. Campbell, Margaret, '08, 515 So. 3rd St., Stillwater, Minn., Teaching English and History. Candell, Grace, '04, Ashland, Oregon, Mrs. H. Seward Palmerlee. - Candell, Pearl, S. '04, Oklahoma City, Okla., Mrs. Louis L. McDonald. Carell, E. A., '87, Zumbrota, Minn., Farming. Carver, Gertrude C., '08, Pine City, Minn., Teacher. Casady, Catherine E., '10, Fertile, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Cass, Alta, '12, Monticello, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Catlin. Pearl l., '09, Albert Lea, Minn., Teacher, Albert Lea College. Chadbourne, A. G., '97, Redwood Falls, Minn., Physician and Surgeon. Chaffee, H. G., ex-'92, 434 S. E. Molino, Pasadena, Cal., Grocer. Chamberlain, Grace E., '04, 112 Nob Hill, Ashland, Oregon, Mrs. Wm. Gillis. Chariton, John W., '06, Cameron, Wis., Minister. Chase, Lena E., '94, Gresham, Oregon, Mrs. H. L. St. Clair. Chinn, Winnifred, '10, McKinley, Minn., At Home. Clare, Rev. Peter, D. D. degree conferred by H. U. , 1688 Van Buren St., St. Paul, Minn., Conference Claimants' Sec. Clark, Alta K., '90, 1470 Wesley Ave., St. Paul, Minn., Editorial Writer, St. Paul Pioneer Press-Dispatch. Clark, Hester J., '95, Ortonville, Minn., At Home. Clark, Martha, '89, 1470 Wesley Ave., St. Paul, Principal, Philip Crowley School. Clark, O. J., '97, Sherwood, N. D., Banker. Clifford, Allison, '1 1, 1917 East Ist St., Duluth, At. Home. Clifton, Nettie, '99, Wahpeton, N. D., Mrs. Earl Burch. Cobb, lrene, '65, 1017 E. 23rd St., Los Angeles, Cal., Mrs. lrene Tubbs. Coffin, lsa, '94, 4411 Morgan Ave. N., Mpls., H. S. Teacher. Coghlan, Edwin R., '98, Wood Lake, Minn., Farmer. Coghlan-, Maude, '96, Worthington, Minn., Mrs. Byron Mork. Colby, Esther J., '00, 1113 W. 3rd St., Red Wing, Minn., Mrs. J. V. Anderson Coleman, Fred, '99, Carlos, Minn., Physician Coleman, Helen, '02, 715 6th St., Marysville, Cal., Teaching. Collett, Chas E , '01, Globe Bldg , St. Paul, Minn , Lawyer. Collins, Elizabeth B., '12, Le Sueur Center, Minn , H. S Teacher. Colyer, Mollie B., '01, 1909 Penn. Ave., Mpls., Mrs. H. H. Stevens. Colyer, Rebecca F., '97, 547 N. Mentor Ave.. Pasadena, Cal , Mrs. J. H. Lash. Cone, Bernice, '12, Goodhue, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Cone, F. A., '86, Worthington, Minn., District Supt. of M. E. Church. Conkey, Frances E., '08, Sheldon, N. D., Mrs. Climo Ellery. Conrad, Ella V., '06, Narsinghpur, C. P., lndia, Mrs. H. C. Scholberg. Constance, Margaret R., '09, 4349 N. Hermitage Ave., Ravenswood, Chicago, lll., Studying at Columbia College of Expression. Constance, Jennie M., '09, Rice Lake, Wis., Teaching H. S. English. Cook, Floyd, '11, Chaska, Minn., Assistant H. S. Principal. Cook, S. A., '98, Winona, Minn., Minister. Cooke, E. A., '96, Renville, Minn., Minister. Cooke, J. C., '99, Dawson, N. D., Minister. Cooley, Daisy A., '08, Heron Lake, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Cooley, Myrtice E., '07, Elk River, Minn., R. F. D., Mrs. Herbert O. Orton. Corneliussen, Oscar J., 'l l, Care of Leland Stanford Jr., Palo Alto, Cal., Post Graduate Work, Leland Stanford, Jr Cotton, Anna L., '99, l904 Park Ave., Mpls., Room Principal South High. Countryman, Levi N., '6l, 4726 Fremont Ave., Mpls., Salesman. Cowan, Grace J., 'l2, Box Elder, Mont., Principal of Schools. Crandall, Elbert U., '08, Urbana, lll., Graduate Assistant in Biology State University. Craven, Olive, O. 'l2, Deer River, Minn., Assistant H. S. Principal. Crawford, Robt. A., '04, l2l5 l7th Ave. N., Mpls., H. S. Teacher, North High. Crawford, Walter M., '03, Chung King, China, Methodist Missionary. Crist, Henry J., '69, II2l Meridian Ave. S., Pasadena, Cal., Superannuated Minister. Cummings, Emogene, '0l, White Bear, Minn., H. S. Teacher. ' Dack, Ora. E., '99, Stanton, Minn., Real Estate. Daggett, Nellie M., '05, Hayfield, Minn., Mrs Edgerton Carey. Daniels, Sarah E., 'l l, Mankato, Minn., H. S. Principal. Davidson, Elizabeth H., '04, Sitka, Alaska, Box 34, Mrs. R. W. DeArmond. Davidson, Harriet M., '08, 2544 South L. St., Tacoma, Wash., Grade Teacher. Davies, Genevra, B. 'l2, l225 5th St. S. E., Mpls., Graduate Work at U. of M. Davis, Anna M., '86, Goheen Hall, St. Paul, H. U. Librariarf ' Davis, Elsie, C. '08, Dupree, S. D., Mrs. Roy R. Miracle. Davis, Josie, 'l l, Boardman, Wis., H. S. Teacher. Davis, Nellie G., '04, Billings, Mont., Mrs. H. B. Randolph. De Graff, Chas. W., '04, 490 Magnolia St., Portland, Oregon, with Portland Trust Co. Denny, Charles E., '09, Huntington Park, Cal., Teaching Science, Union H. S. Dewart, F. W., '88, 804 Old Nat. Bank Bldg., Spokane, Wash., Lawyer. Dill, Eleanor, '96, 2220 Park Boulevard, Long Beach, Cal., Mrs. E. H. Wallace. Dimond, A. W., '93, l0l5 llth Ave., Spokane, Wash., Linotype Operator. Dittmer, C. G., 'l0, I9 Kawaguchi, Cho, Osaka, Japan, Government Instructor. Dobner, Chase L., '9l, 20 St. Albans St., St. Paul, Banker. Dobner, H. G., '97, Thief River Falls, Minn., Banker. Dobner, L. J., '84, Glove Bldg., St. Paul, Minn., Lawyer. Donahue, Blanche B., '99, Clear Lake, lowa, Teacher of Biology. Donaldson, Chas., '05, Fort Benton, Mont., Minister. Door, Ella, '9l, l707 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Edward Bell. Door, Hattie A., '94, l707 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, At Home. Douglass, George R., '97, Valparaiso, Ind., Physician. Douglas, S. Warren, ex-'96, Selma, Cal., Y. M. C. A. Secretary. Drew, A. Z., '86, Crystal Springs, Sask., Can., Farming. Drew, George N., '08, Moosejaw, Canada, Manager Security Lumber Co. Drill, Franklin, '01, N. Y. Life Bldg., St. Paul, Lawyer. Duebendorf, Laura G., 'I0, Farmington, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Duff, Dardania, '04, 69 Central Ave., St. Paul, H. S. Teacher. Dunlap. Vena M., '90, San Luis Potosi, San Luis Potosi, Mexico, Mrs. W. L. Bonney. Dunn, Charlotte E., '92, 1939 lglehart St., St. Paul, Mrs. G. H. Ten Broeck. Dunn, Edgar M., '96, Anaconda, Mont., Box 335, Chemist for Amalgamated Copper Co. Dunn, Grace A., '09, I220 Broadway, Baltimore, Md., Graduate Student, Johns Hopkins U. Dunn, George R., 'l0, I220 Broadway, Baltimore, Md., Medical Student, Johns Hopkins U. Dunn, I. J., '96, Chesaw, Wash., Ranching and District Judge. Dyer, W. P , '95, Bemidji, Minn., Supt. of Schools. . Eames, Blanche, '9l, 4721 Langley Ave., Hyde Park Sta., Chicago, lll., Assistant Principal, Correspondence School of Gospel and Scientific Euhenics. Earl, Alva S., 'l l, Slayton, Minn., Minister. Eberman, Emma, '64, 4l4 Union Ave., Fergus Falls, Minn., Mrs. W. C. Ride. Eberman, Mary C., '64, 233 West St., Freport, Ill., Mrs. Mary C. Clark. Eckenbeck, N. Ray., '10, Estevan, Saslk., Can., with lnternational Harvester Co. Edmunds, H. M., '00, 249 Selby Ave., St. Paul, Trav. Salesman. Edmunds, W. M., '98, Grand Forks, N. D., Banker. Eginton, Charles, '03, Staples, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Elford, Clarence F., '00, I309 N. I0th St., Boise, ldaho, H. S. Teacher. Ellery, Chas. G., '08, Amenia, N. D., H. S. Principal. Elliot, Ruth A., 'l2, Kerkhoven, Minn., Domestic Science Teacher. Ellison, Chas. E., '04, Elbow Lake, Minn., Farming. Ellsvxrth, E. H., '89, Zl l Portsmouth Bldg., Kansas City, Kan., Mgr., Mid-Continent Teachers' gency. . Ellsworth, Wm., 'l2, Eveleth, Minn., Banking Business. Ely, Owen, 'l0, 217 N. Division St., Ann Arbor, Mich., Post Graduate Work, Boyer Fellow in Transportation . 1 9751 ZH al rl r ki 5-f' 'J Ui pil hd' . ,W ,fu f Q1 J P ,, is 2: 21 ' -A Z is 1 A1 3- 3 L? Emerson, Ethel, 'l2, Cllie, Mont., Teaching. Emery, Edna, P., '05, Patterson, Cal., Mrs. Fred Brownlee. Empey, G. W., '9l, Hinckley, Minn., Banker. Engson, Edward, 'l0, Luverne, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Epton, Effie M., '09, Mt. Morris, Ill., Teaching English, Mt. Morris College. Erbst, Wilhelmina, ex-'-, Malolos,' Bulacan, P. I.. Missionary. Erickson, Cyrus, 'l2, 875 Aldine St., St. Paul, with Minn. Bureau of Labor. Evans, Elizabeth, '03, Red Wing, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Evans, Ella, 'l2, Montevideo, Minn., At Home. Evans, Jeanette R., '93, 73 E. 5th St., Winona, Minn., Mrs. G. E. Maxwell. Evans, Jessie H., '99, l7l0 James Ave. S., Mpls., Mrs. R. H. Benham. Evans, John, 'l l, Exeter, Cal., Horticulture. Farrar, F. F., '90, White Bear, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Faus, Cora Mae, 'l0, Breckenridge, Minn., Mrs. Gordon Kidder. Faus, Ruth I., '97, Granite Falls, Minn., Mrs. C. F. Hall. Fawcett, A. C., '98, Rochester, Minn., Dentist. Featherstone, B. G., ex-'02, Red Wing, Minn., Farmer. Ferguson, Bertha, '05, Drayton, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Field, Florence, ex-'03, Orange, Cal., Mrs. F. E. Hallman. Fierke, Edwin W., 'l0, 25l4 Prairie Ave., Chicago, Post Graduate Work. Finney, John M., ex-'07, I644 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Building Contractor. Fluke, May C., '99, I9 W: l29th St., New York, Stenographer. Follensbee, J. W., '86, ll33 S. Laguna St., Los Angeles, Cal., Contractor and Builder. Foster, Adele M., '97, Buffalo Lake, Minn., Mrs. Everett Gaines. Foster, W. Bainbridge, '01, Mandan, N. D., Physician and Surgeon. Foster, Mable G., '06, 603 N. lst St., N. Yakima, Wash., Mrs. W. Naylor. Foster, Ralph H., '03, 562 Empire Bldg., Seattle, Wash., Lawyer. Foster, Thomas, '04, Buffalo Lake, Minn., Newspaper Publisher. Fowble, Louise S., 'l0, Aurora, Minn., Teaching. Frank, Earl N., 'l0, 33 St. Botolph St., Boston, Mass., Post Graduate Student, Mass. of Technology. Franklin, Mae, '0l, Caldwell, Idaho, Prof. of Latin, Idaho College. Fraley, Fred, 'l0, Morristown, Minn., H. S. Principal. Fryckberg, J. W., '0l, Calallen, Texas, Land Dealer. Gale, Lottie C., '85, Modesta, Cal., Mrs. C. H. Griswold. Garrison, Arthur O., '09, i706 Wesley Ave., St. Paul, with Minn. Bureau of Labor. Gates, Bessie M., '02, Athens, Mich., Mrs. Elijah Van Camp. Beer, James, '02, Brown's Valley, Minn., Minister. Geiser, Helen M., '05, Wimbledon, N. D., Mrs. M. S. Mallough. Gennow, Mabel A., 'I0, Wahkon, Minn., Teacher. Gibbons, Anna L., '09, Heron Lake, Minn., Mrs. Paul Benson. Giberson, Wm., '05, 403 N. Y. Life Bldg., St. Paul, Minn., Lawyer. Gillis, Edith, '05, Walnut Grove, Minn., Mrs. Claude C. Albertson. Gillis, May G., '0l, Walnut Grove, Minn., At. Home. Gillis, Wm. H., '04, Ashland, Ore., in Business. Gillis, Winnifred, '0l. Walnut Grove, Minn., At Home. Gilmore, Ephriam, '06, l3l Reel St., Vincennes, Indiana, Minister. Givler, John P., '06, Winfield, Kansas, Professor of Biology, South Western College. Givler, Robt., C., '06, Care of Harvard U., Cambridge, Mass., Post Graduate Work. Glass, Warren, 'l2, I487 Taylor Ave., St. Paul, with International Harvester Co. Goertz, Henry P., 'IO Mountain Lake, Minn., in Business. Goff, John L., '09, Valier, Mont., Real Estate. . Gold, Edith M., '02, Newport, Cal., Mrs. Chas. Wallace. Gold, Ella S., '95, I739 Scarth St., Regina, Sask., Mrs. A. H. Tasker. Gold, Ruth, '08, Bigstone City, S. D., Teaching. Goodsell, Rev. Henry, '66, Tropico, Cal., Minister. Goodsell, Mabel, '06, Fairmont, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Gould, John, 'l2, Carrington, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Gould, Raymond, D. '04, Wadena, Minn., Traveling Salesman. Gove, Mattie L., '09, Windom, Minn., At Home. Graling, Eva B., '06, Portage, Wis., Mrs. Lee L. Earle. Graling, Mary M., '98, 44l2 Grimes Ave., S., Mpls., Mrs. Wm. Crandall. Graling, Reca E., '08, Hayfield, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Granger. Arthur H., '09, Brownton, Minn., Principal of Schools. Grant,'W. Mortimer, '97, Box 3l4, Portland, Oregon, Traveling Salesman. Gray, Fannie A., '08, Pine City, Minn., H. S. Principal. Greeley, Eddy H., '87, P. B. Old Umtali, Rhodesia, S. Africa, Missionary. Greenley, Parris C., 'l0, Heck Hall, Evanston, Ill., Minister. GriFHn, A. D., '02, Kasota, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Institute 59 22 L A 5 ,f 'Ei' f 2 1 wr.. 30: r?'s!4.ff2i1 .1.41j.L.f.L.'Q,lLZt 1. .MQ . ... ., L . . . , ,. :H ML, n , 1 N .la We E? ef ,,. rf :af .., Q. A 21 1 We Griffin., L., E'95, Manila, P.l., Care of U. of Philippines, Dean of the Universit of the Phili 'n Griswold, C. H., '85, Modesta, Cal., Physician. y pp' es Grout, Effie L., '91, 25 Seymour Ave., S. E., Minneapolis, Minn., Mrs. F. F. Lindsay. Gunderson, Henriette, '09, Flandreau, S. D., Teaching English. Gunderson, Rose B., '10, Argyle, Minn., H. S. Principal. Gungmolxip, Horace, '05, 1012 E. lst Ave., Monmouth, lll., Professor of Biology at Monmouth o ege. - Gunthorp, Olive, '09, Edgely, N. D., At Home. Guse, Herman, '02, Khandive, C. P., India, Missionary Dist. Supt. Hackney, Joseph M., ex-'01, Hackney Bldg., St. Paul, Manufacturer and Real Estate. Hake, Effie M., '12, Kenyon, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Hall, Benj. F., '01, Belle Plaine, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Hall, Mary R., '97, Pewaukee, Wis., Mrs. J. l. Gates. Hall, Nellie G., '01, Gardena, Cal.. Mrs. C. D. Lewis. Halverson, Cora, '09, Dawson, Minn., At Home. Hambleton, R. T., '11, Unknown. Handy, J. C., '93, Fulton, Mo., Minister. Hanson, Amanda J., '03, Anoka, Minn., Post Graduate Work, U. of M. Hanson, Harry, '12, 307 Waverly Ave., Syracuse, N. Y., Assistant to Dr. E. N. Tuckey '93, in Dept. of Economics at Syracuse U. Hargrave, Guy D., '10, Monticello, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Hart, Rev. F. W., '86, Indianapolis, lnd., Minister. ' Hawker, C. S., '95, Buffalo, Minn., Lawyer. Hayes, Allison J., '08, Kittery, Maine, Minister. Haynes, Jessie M., '10, Bowbells, N. D., H. S. Principal. Haynes, Wm. Herman, '11, Y. M. C. A., Vaughn St. Branch, Winnipeg, Can., Membership Secretary, Y. M. C. A. Hazelton, Ellen, A. '10, Mountain Lake, Minn., Mrs. Claude Perkins. Heal, Pearl, '02, 1462 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, Teaching in St. Paul Schools. Heckert, J. Walter, '00, Oxford, Ohio, Professor of Education, Miami University. Heilman, Emma H., '09, Tracy, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Heins, Warren, H. '09, Olivia, Minn., Banking. Hendrickson, Minnie, '86, 781 Goodrich Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. E. A. Konantz. Henneman, Blanche, '1 1, Lester Prairie, Minn., At Home. Herbert, B. B., '65, 4618 Ravenswood Park, Chicago, Editor and Publisher. Hesketh, Clara, '10, Rolla, N. D., Mrs. Andrew Mundy. Hesketh, Frank C., '09, 875 Aldine St., St. Paul, Land Business. Hess, Mary, '11, St. James, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Hickman, Eugene C., '09, Spring Valley, Minn., Minister. Hickman, Laura M., '07, 04128 Wall St., Spokane, Wash., Mrs. E. B. Johnson. Higgins, Etta B., '86, Marietta, Stanley Co., S. D., Mrs. W. E. Spaulding. Hill, Daisy M., '09, Gibbon, Minn., Teaching English. Hill, Fred W., '00, St. Cloud, Minn., Minister. Hill, Jennie E., '02, 1523 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Joseph M. Hackney. Hitchcock, J. R., '95, Madelia, Minn., Methodist Preacher. Hoffert, Henry J., '04, St. Paul Park, Minn., Prof. St. Paul's College. Hohman, Susan C., '99, Virginia, Minn., H. S. Principal. Holliday, Walter B., ex-'04, Dayton, Ohio, Y. M. C. A. Secretary. i Honey, Ada M., '09, Gresham, Oregon, At Home. Hoover, Arthur W., '06, 700 W. Broadway, Decorah, lowa, Traveling Salesman. Hull, Elsie C., '09, Princeton, Minn., Teaching H. S. Mathematics. Hunt, Marion E., '09, 92 Greenwood Ave., Madison, N. J., Mrs. Blaine Lambert. Hurd, Archibald, '06, 1215 17th Ave. N., Mpls., Teacher, N. Side H. S. Huser,' Edna I., '03, 1633 Van Buren St., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. J. S. King. Huser, Thomas E., '10, 627 W. 113th St., N. Y. City, Law Student, Columbia U. lde, Archie L., '04, Washtucna, Wash., H. S. Principal. lde, H. P., '02, Page, N. D., Supt. of Schools. lnnis, Ethelwyn, '02, 2701 N. Junette, Tacoma, Wash., Mrs. E. A. Rich. lnnis, Homer C., '00, Port Lavaca, Texas, Abstracter and Real Estate. lnwood, Anna M., '04, Bathgate, N. D., Teaching. Inwood, Arthur l., '01, 771 Pascal Ave., St. Paul, Real Estate. lrle, R. L., '12, Elgin, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Jarvis, Chas. W., '02, Davenport, Wash., Abstract Business. Jenks, Genevra B., '93, New Dayton, Alberta, Can., Mrs. R. E. Skeith. Jennings, Grace A., '96, I4 W. Washington St., Chicago, Proofreader, Methodist Book Concern. Jennings, Pearl, '02, 232 Victoria St., St. Paul, Pearl Jennings Brockway. 1 Jensen, Arthur, '11, Wyndmere, N. D., Farming. Johnson, Evelyn, '01, Goodhue, Minn., At Home. Johnson, Geo. B., '93, Goodhue, Minn., Dairyman and Farmer. gm ...A iuij in 7 W1 I .. ki? . . fi 3 E 1 ,f 1 5 I .lg ' 4 su 1 5 ' L 5 11 13 X351 W ,f . . il ' . ,z f' rl. C bl M: 'n - . gr ,. qv' -' 5.,:j IE i . X F? 23 . Q5 ai? V . 1 i , 1 1 . , I Johnson Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Johnson, Josephine, '08, Enderlin, N. D., Teacher. Lewis, ex-'65, Goodhue, Minn., R. 4, Farmer. Mattie, '92, I8II Harvard Blvd., Los Angeles, Cal., H. S. Teacher. Merrill, '08, Red Wing, Minn., Solicitor for Red Wing Adv. Mina B., 'l0, Enderlin, N. D., H. S. Teacher. ' R. C., '02, Unknown. Johnston, Frederick, J., '07, Wiggins, Sash. Canada, Minister. Johnston, Gertrude, '05, Lake Park, Minn., Mrs. Frank Morse. Jones, Sara, '05, Luverne, Minn., At Home. Judson, Wm. E., '99, Duluth, Minn., Physician. Julien, Albert E., '03, Braham, Minn., Teacher. Kaighn, R. P., '98, l24 E. 28th St., N. Y. City, Educational Director, Y. M. C Keast, C. P., '06, Breckenridge, Minn., Minister. Kemerer, S. W., '95, Unknown. Kerfoot, George B., ex-'94, 2335 5th Ave. W., Vancouver, B. C., in Business. Kerfoot, S. F., '89, I495 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, President of Hamline University Kern, Willard, '02, 359 King St., St. Paul, Minister. Kern, Beatrice, 'I I, Cut Bank, Mont., Mrs. John Vallentyne. , Kerr, Catherine, ex-'03, Long Prairie, Minn., Mrs. W. G. Anderson. Kidder, Chas. S., '08, Andrus Bldg., Minneapolis, Lawyer. Kidder, Gordon E., 'I0, Breckenridge, Minn., H. S. Teacher, Kidder, Wallace J., 'I I, Wadena, Minn., H. S. Science Teacher. Kimball, Elizabeth, '95, 7Il Fry St., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. Perry L. Payne. Kimball, Jeannette, '96, I668 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., At Home. King, Mae J., '06, 924 Greenwood Ave., Wilmette, Ill., Mrs. W. E. Brann. King, Clare L., 'I0, 584 Fairoaks Ave., Pasadena, Cal. Kinney, Geo. V., '02, Buffalo, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Kinsman, Geo. R., '98, 739 Pascal Ave., St. Paul, Dept. Mgr. Farwell, Ozman Kirk 8: Co Kirk, Harry L., '00, Torrington. Wyo., Supt. of Schools. Knott, Laura A., '87, Bradford, Mass., Principal Bradford Academy. Koch, Clinton H. S., '05, II Creek Row, Calcutta, India, Missionary. Koch, Leonora, '05, Zumbrota, Minn., Mrs. Gustave C. Hoff. Koch, Summer L., '08, 25I4 Prairie Ave., Chicago, Instructor in Anatomy N. W University Koelsche, Arthur, '09, Rochester, Minn. Kottke, George G., '08, Hayfield, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Kratky, Archie W., '09, West Concord, Minn. Kruntz, Ada B., '08, Cloquet, Minn., Assistant H. S. Principal. Laidlaw, Alden J., '00, Ladysmith, Wis., Lumber and Real Estate. Lambert, Blaine, '09, 92 Greenwood Ave., Madison, N. J., Student Drew Theological Seminary Lasell, Mabel, '05, Vona, Colo., At Home. Lassell, Edith, '96, Renville, Minn., Mrs. E. A. Cooke. Lassell, Grace, '0I, Mandan, N. D., Mrs. W. B. Foster. Lathrop, John E., ex-'93, 3759 McKinley St., Washington, D. C., Newspaper Correspondent Lauver, Lillian B., '99, 9I6 Forest Ave., Kansas City, Mo., Teacher of Physics and Biology Law, Edith, '93, New Richmond, Wis., Mrs. W. W. Barnum. Lawrason, R. O., '98, Unknown. Lawson, Floyd A., '00, 36 Laws St., Toronto, Canada, Real Estate. Lawther, Wm., ex-'66, I37 Main St. Dubuque, lowa, Merchant. Leach, A. R., '96, Faribault, Minn., Lumber Dealer. . Leacher, John, '0I, 77 Smith St., River Side, R. l., Minister. Leavitt, Fayette E., '07, Unknown. Lee, Barbara, 'I I, 5I3 2nd Ave. S. W., Puyallup, Washf, H. S. Science Teacher. Lee, Gertrude, A. '08, Ivanhoe, Minn., Mrs. G. L. Jacquet. Lee, Raymond A., '04, Long Prairie, Minn., Banker and Manufacturer. Leland, Blanche, '92, Fulton, Mo., Mrs. J. C. Handy. Lewis, Chas. D., '94, Gardena, Cal., Minister. Lewis, Leona, '00, 6II 8th St. S., Fargo, N. D., Mrs. Fred Taylor. Lewis, Winona, '96, Fergus Falls, Minn., Mrs. R. B. MacLean. Libbey, Gertrude, '03, Red Wing, Minn., At Home. Libbey, S. Wm., '02, North Yakima, Wash., Farmer. Lindberg, Edith, 'I2, ZI69 Scudder St., St. Paul, Teaching History in Bethel Academy Lindsay, Effie E., '96, I420 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. Nels Martmson Lindeman, Ella, 'I I, Gaylord, Minn., H. S. Principal. Lingman, David, '00, Beaverton, Oregon, Ranching. Link, Lillian C., '99, Gibbon, Minn., Mrs. W. M. Carver. Little, Mable J., '05, Chung King, China, Mrs. Walter Crawford. Lvingston, Hazel, 'I2, Olivia, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Loag, Julia, '98, 1599 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, Teacher of Biology. Locker, Vera M., 'I0, Le Sueur, Minn., H. S. Teacher. 'J lu r 553 xc La: 1,2 'Vu 41 x ! 'Q ' ,JI sg fl' :xg ue-Q 4:3 Lokke, Gilbert, I2, Rice Lake, Wis., Coach and Physical Training Director. Lord, R. L. H., '90, Fairmont, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Lowe, John, '03, Waterville, Minn., Minister. Lueben, Elizabeth, R. 'I0, Mantorville, Minn., Mrs. Allen Norton. Lumley, Mabel E., '09, 430 Union Ave. N., Fergus Falls, Minn., Teacher of English. Lund, Axel, B., '02, Leeds, N. D., Physician. Lund, Elmer, 'I0, Care John Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md., Graduate Student. Lyman, Adelbert R., '97, Gresham, Ore., Farmer. McCann, Chas. A., '94, 4I2Q Pioneer Bldg., St. Paul, Minn., Land Dealer, Western office, Hedgesville, Mont. McCIay, Laura A., '98, Montevideo, Minn., Teacher. McCollum, Etta, '94, 27I5 Russell St.. Portland, Oregon, Mrs. E. C. Rossman. McCombs, Vernon, '03, l4l9 Diamond Ave., South Pasadena, Cal., Supt. of Spanish and Portu- gese District, So. Cal. Conference. McCormick, John D., '02, Waseca, Minn., Minister. M,cCrea, C. H., '03, Detroit, Minn., Minister. McCrea, Ezra E., '88, Alexandria, Minn., Editor and Publisher. McKaig, Robt. R.. '00, Fort Rice, N. D., Ranching. McKinley, Mary, 'I0, Hallock, Minn., H. S. Principal. McKinstry, Mabel H., '98, 705 Snelling Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. A. J. Wallace. McLaird, June M., '09, Brainerd, Minn., H. S. Teacher. ' McNeil, Mary C., '00, 4I66 Normandy Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., Mrs. Robert Taylor. Mackay, Edward H., '95, Redding, Cal., Minister. Mackin, Samuel L., '07, Boardman, Wis., Merchant. MacLean, R. B., '96, Fergus Falls, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Magraw, Florence, '00, Bronxville, N. Y., Mrs. W. Wellington Massee Mallery, Albert Lea, 'I0, Inverness, Mont., Teaching. Mallery, Melvin N., '00, Page, N. D., With First Nat. Bank. Manthey, Jessie J., '02, Vermillion, S. D., Supt. of Schools. Manuel, Arthur, '07, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, S. A., Caixo 254, Y. M. C. A. Secretary. Marlatt, Edward, '03, 7I8 W. I78th St., N. Y. City, Teaching in Private School. Marshall, J. C., '87, Princeton, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Martin, Arthur W., '99, I5428 Turlington Ave., Harvey, lll., Post Graduate Work at Chicago U ' ' . mversxty Martin, Clara, '96, l52 Anson Road, Penang, Strait Settlement, Malaysia, Missionary. Martin, Ernest, '97, I8 Francis Ave., Cambridge, Mass., Assistant Professor of Physiology, Harvard University. Martin, J. Royal, '02, I707 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, Clerk, Farwell, Ozmun, Kirk 81 Co. Massee, F. C., ex-'92, East Grand Forks, Minn., Lawyer. Matchett, lsabella, '05, Wheeler Ave., Merriam Pk., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. Sterling Temple. Mathews, Henry, 'I I, 803 Snelling Ave., St. Paul, Real Estate. Maxwell, G. E., '93, 73 E. 5th St., Winona, Pres. Winona State Normal. Maxwell, Jennie A., '97, Benson, Minn., Mrs. Julius Thorson. Meacham, A. J., '60, 739 Pascal Ave., St. Paul, Real Estate. Meacham, Rolla K., '09, Edgerton, Minn., Hardware Business. Merritt, Lewis H., '99, l908 E. Superior St., Duluth, Minn., Mining. Merritt, Lucien, '99, I04 Providence Bldg., Duluth, Minn., Mining. Miller, J. C., '94, Bertha, Minn.. Cashier, First Nat. Bank. Miller, Lillian, 'I2, Howard Lake, Minn. Millie, Margaret, '04, Hanyang Baptist Mission, Hankow, Central China, Mrs. Earl H. Cressy. Mitchell, Howard W., '04, 3I3 Sherman St. N., Mankato, Minn.. Minister. Montgomery, Edith, '95, 507 S. 2nd St., Mankato, Minn., Mrs. De Forest B. Catlin. Montgomery, E. A., '88, City Hall, Minneapolis, Judge of Municipal Court. Moore, Dan'l W., '09, 43l9 60th Ave. S. E., Portland, Oregon, Minister. Moore, Henry G., '09, Elmore, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Moore, Mabel, 'I I, White Bear, Minn., H. S. Teacher. , Morgan, Blanche J., '90, 5l2 N. W. 4th St., Galva, lll., Box 525, Librarian. Morgan, Edward J., '09, 504 Yellowstone St., Miles City, Mont., in Business. Morgan, W. H., '89, No. 6 E. Park St., Newark, N. J., Minister. Mork, Byron, '98, Worthington, Minn., Physician. Morrill, Robt., '0I, Sidney, Mont., Physician. Morrison, Sade, 'I2, Flandreau, S. D., H. S. Teacher. Morse, Frank S., '05, Lake Park, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Morse, Robert D., 'I0, Mankato, Minn. Moses, Wm. J. B., '00, Alexandria, Minn., Author. Murphy, Walter L., '09, Two Harbors, Minn., in Business. Murta, Hugh, '06, California, Pa., Prof. Chemistry in State Normal School. Neill, Annie L., 'I I, Unknown. Nelson, Adolphus P., '97, Grantsburg, Wis., Banker. 'a .-J Q :J 92:3 . Qg -,, 4 ia 577- 4 -' f Q L1 1- lhj - Tw 1 fi iff L 1 551 VS. E' ffi , J V . .. ax 5 fl F? 4: , . Nelson, Fred C., '04, Plainview, Minn., Minister. Nelson, Ida Y., '08, Dawson, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Nesom, George H., '00, Kenyon, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Nickerson, Ernest, '05, Prescott, Wis., R. F. D. 2, Farmer. Nickerson, Mark, '07, Prescott, Wis., R. F. D. 2, Farmer. Nissen, Anna H., 'I0, Groton, S. D., Teaching. Nitzkowski, Ellen, 'I2, Waseca, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Nobbs, Florence E., 'I0, Harvey, N. D., Assistant Principal. Noltimier, Harry B., '0I, 6I E. 5th St. St. Paul, Salesman for Hagstrum 8: Co., Tailors. Nordburg, Ruben, 'I I, Unknown. Norton, Minnesota, '93, 534 39th St., Des Moines, Iowa, Mrs. O. G. Chesley. Oleson, Peter, '05, Cloquet, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Oliver, Guy E., '09, Pottstown, Pa., Teaching Oratory in Hill School. Olsen, T. A.. '99, Minot, N. D., Minister. Olson, Clara J., '08, Cando, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Olson, Mary E., '03, Singapore, Malaysia, Missionary. Orr, Charles N., '0I, Glove Bldg., St. Paul, Minn., Lawyer. Packard, Frank E., '0I, Bismarck, N. D., State Tax Commissioner. Packard, Richard A., '07, Iron River, Mich., Bank Cashier. Page, F. Geno, '09, Crystal Springs, Sask., Can., Teaching. 1 Palmer, Claude E., 'I I, Winona, Minn., Y. M. C. A. Secretary. Palmer, Della M., '90, 6I7 N. Main St., lshpeming, Mich., Housekeeper. Parish, John L., '07, Hibbing, Minn., Mahoning Location, H. S. Principal. Parish, Samuel L., '06, Fergus Falls, Minn., Minister. Parker, Geo. S., '86, University Park., Colo., Minister. Parks, Eleanore T., '97, 2424 Harriet Ave. S., Mpls., Mrs. A. D. Meads. Parsons, E. Dudley, '03, 4242 Alden Drive, Mpls., Instructor of English, West Side High. Parson, J. Lowell, 'I2, I539 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul. Patchin, Chas. A., '95, Springfield, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Payen, Carroll E., '98, Waseca, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Pemberton, John, Sr., '97, I642 Blair St., St. Paul, VMinister. Pemberton, John, Jr., '03, 38l4 Colgate Ave., Mpls., Science Teacher and Manual Training D' . - irector Peoples, Benj., 'I2, 1401-6th St., S. E. Mpls., Sporting Editor, Mpls. Journal. Perry, Esther, 'I I, Caledonia, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Perry, Garrett S., '88, I63I Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, President of Edwardsville Seminary. Persinger, Floyd T., '05, Cloquet, Minn., Attorney at Law. Peterson, David, 'I2, Hawley, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Peterson, Francis G., '05, Hopkinton, Iowa, Teaching Expression at Lennox College. Peterson, Paul, '98, Fairmont, Minn., Photographer. Pettibone, Sarah E., '6I, 203 E. 7th St., Red Wing, Minn., Mrs. Sarah E. Hasler. Phillips, Eugene, '95, I946 Laurel Ave., St. Paul, State Supt. of Rural Schools. Porter, Bertha, 'I I, 875 Aldine St., St. Paul, At Home. Post?-31, Bertha, 'I2, 250 I7th Ave. N., Mpls., Friendly Visitor in Settlement Work at Unity ouse. Poston, Frank J., ex-'I2, Thief River Falls, Minn., in Business. Preston, Carrie B., '95, Elgin, Minn., Mrs. Frank Rollins. Pringle, Wm. A., '00, Le Sueur, Minn., Minister. Prosser, Myrtle, '03, Olivia, Minn., Mrs. Warren Heins. Puffer, Lewis M., '98, 293I S. Street, Lincoln, Neb., Teaching. Putnam, Lena W., '9I, Plainfield, N. J., R. I, Mrs. Chas.'W. Russell. Quick,-Kittie N., '0I, Beverly, Wash., Mrs. S. B. Dyer. Quigley, Harold, 'I I, Herfoot College, Oxford, England, Post-Graduate Student. Ralston, Basil E., '08, Park Place, Oregon, H. S. Teacher. Randolph, H. B., '04, Billings, Mont., Teaching. Randolph, M. G., '04, Care of Barrett 8: Barrett, St. Paul, Minn., Bookkeeper. Ranson, Carrie M., '89, 6I3I Greenwood Ave., Chicago, Ill., Mrs. W. M. Squire, Business Mgr. of Estate. Ranson, Mary, '94, Sleepy Eye, Minn., Mrs. Strickler, M. D. Rhode, Henry J., '07, San Rafael, Cal., Teaching in Hitchcock Military Academy. Rice, Beryl, '04, 30I Dayton Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Eugene L. Grimm. Rice, Wm. A., '0l, Clinton, Minn., Minister. Rice, W. C., '64, 4I4 Union Ave., Fergus Falls, Minn., Minister. Rich, Edward A., '97, 270I N. Junette, Tacoma, Wash., Physician and Surgeon. Rich, Lucy D., '01, I549 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. C. E. Collett. Richardson, A. La Verne, '98, Aitkin, Minn., Minister. Richlzgrdgore Elmer, '98, I494 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., Law Writer with West u . o. Richardson, Emma, '88, 3356 Bryant St., Denver, Colo., H. S. Teacher. 4,3-I PEG Ed: Ev? fb 'f 7 iv iii .ALL H ' ff -we-fa Qwarmrxw' Richardson, Fanny E., '09, Bingham Lake, Minn., H. S. Principal. Richardson. Winnifred, 'I2, Belgrade, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Ridgway, Beatrice L., '98, Raudenbush Bldg., St. Paul, Mrs. Walter M. Thurston. Roan, Anna Mae, 'I0, 300 Mill St., Austin, Minn., Teaching English and History. Robbins, Almira, '07, 305 E. Alvarado St., Pomona, Cal., At Home. Robbins, Hortense, '99, 40I S. Chatham St., Austin, Minn., At. Home. Robertson, E. P., '85, University, N. D., Pres. of Wesley College. Robinson, Florence, 'I I, I706 Wesley Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. A. O. Garrison. Robinson, J. Howard, '08, I964 Hutchinson St., Montreal, Canada, Professor of History, Wesleyan Theological College. Robinson, S. F., '05, Preston, Mont., Ranching. Robinson, Wm. Z., '09, Bemidji, Minn., Teaching H. S. Science. Robson, Eunice, '04, 206 Hendrie Ave., Detroit, Mich., Mrs. Benj. W. Loye. Robson, Maud A., '05, IOI2 E. Ist Ave., Monmouth, III., Mrs. Horace Gunthrop. Robson, Minnie May, 'I0, Red Wing. Minn., At Home. Rossman, Eugene C., '94, 27I5 Russell St., Portland, Oregon, Dentist. Rossman, Floy, '00, North Yakima, Wash., H. S. Teacher. Rounds, John L., '09, 904 Globe Bldg., St. Paul, Lawyer. Ruenitz, Ed. J., '0I, I733 7th Ave., Los Angeles, Cal., County Group Y. M. C. A. Secretary. Rule, Lulu, '04, North Yakima, Wash., Mrs. Chas. H. Libbey. Russell, Rose Belle, 'I0, Lakeville, Minn., Teaching. St. Clair, Harry L., '94, Gresham, Oregon, Minister. Sampson, Della, '06, Thief River Falls, Minn., Mrs. Truman Herber. Saunderson, H. H., '96, 47 Lee St., Cambridge, Mass., Cong. Minister. Saxe, Vera M., '09, Plainview, Minn., Mrs. John Bolton. Schaefer, Esther B., '09, Dassell, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Schaefer, Grace, 'I I, Dassell, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Scharff, Maud, 'I I, Cokato, Minn., Dom. Science Teacher. Scheer, Alfred, 'I I, Palouse, Wash., Teaching H. S. Mathematics. Scheer, Henry, 'I2, Creston, Wash., H. S. Teacher. Scheer, Lydia, 'I I, Howard Lake, Minn., Dom. Science Teacher. Schei, Laurence B., '07, 606 N. Y. Life Bldg., Mpls., General Sales Solicitor, Sacramento Suburban Fruit Land Co. Schlichting, Florence, '05, Kasson, Minn., Mrs. Ed. W. Senn. Schmoll, Lewis V., '09, Arlington, Minn., in Business. Schoening, Harry, 'I I, 823 Snelling Ave., St. Paul, Law Student. Schoening, Herbert, 'I2, Litchfield, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Scholberg, Henry C., '06, Narsingphur, C. P.. India, Missionary. Schow, Olive L., 'I0, Inverness, Mont., Mrs. A. L. Mallery. Schumacher, John P., '08, North St. Paul, Minn., Su t. of Schools. Schweitzer, F. R., ex-'04, Central City, Neb., General 'Sec. of Y. M. C. A. Scofield, Estella, '94, Kasson, Minn., Mrs. W. W. Brown. Scott, F. N., '96, Highahiyama, Nagasaki, Japan, Dean, Chinzei College. Scott, J. Wesley, '0I, Los Angeles, Cal., Osteopathic Physician. Seamer, Mary R., '07, St. Paul Park, Minn., At Home. Seliger, Charles H. B., 'I0, Townshend, Vt., Minister. Server, Edna, 'I I, Hudson, Wis., H. S. Teacher. Severna, Hattie Lee, 'I0, 739 Pascal Ave., St. Paul. Mrs. Geo. R. Kinsman. Shadinger, Guy H., '00, I40 W. Hyde St., Carlisle, Pa., Chair of Chemistry, Dickinson College. Shannon, Paul C., '08, 47 Mt. Vernon St., Cambridge, Mass., Post-Graduate Student. Share, Margaret, '89, 1495 Hewitt Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. S. F. Kerfoot. Shaw, Geo., '0l, Upland, Ind., Prof. at Taylor University. Shedd, Harry L., ex-'04, Phoenix, Arizona, Banker. Shepherd, Mary C., '06, Winfield, Kan., Mrs. J. P. Givler. Shepherd, Susie S., '04, I733 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Paul Sauber. Show, Kathryn, '92, 540 Locust St., Elgin, lll., Mrs. H. K. Vernon. Shuck, Adria, '98, 2537 Dupont Ave. S., Mpls., Mrs. P. A. Barkuloo. Shuman, Bertram A.,'08, Paseo Colon, I6I Buenos Aires,Argentina,S. A., Y. M. C.A. Missionary. Silvernale, John L., '00, Red Wing, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Simonds, Clinton, '07, Waterville, Minn., Teaching. Slocum, C. H., '89, 55 E. 6th St., St. Paul, Bookseller and Stationer. Smail, Bessie E., '08, Webster, S. D. Smith, Annette, 'I2, Hallock, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Smith, Beatrice, '04, Pollock, S. D., Mrs. L. A. Woodard. Smith, Cora, '09, 623 S. Smith Ave., St. Paul, Mrs. Erwin F. Halverson. Smith, Esther E., '02, St. Cloud, Minn., Mrs. Arthur G. Scullin. Smith, Francis N., '97, I762 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Piano Salesman, with W. J. Dyer 81 Bro. Smith, J. Wesley, '94, Prineville, Oregon, Supt. of Schools. Snodgrass, Geo. M., '00, Oconto, Wis., Supt. of Schools. 91 Fu f UNI -4 4 Snow, Etheleen D., '93, Monticello, Minn., Mrs. Arthur Hill. Snow, George H., '94, 604 Hanselman Bldg., Kalamazoo, Mich., Osteopath Physician. Sorin, Emily R., '59, 3325 Decatur St. N., Denver, Colo., Mrs. F. A. Meredith. Southwick, Claude E., '94, Wells, Minn., Lawyer and Real Estate. Southwick, Gertrude, '88, 5l I W. l l2th St., New York City, Mrs. Frederick Kingsland. Taking post-graduate work at Columbia U. Spaulding, Homer, 'l2, Alexandria, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Spear, Albert, E., '05, Belfield, N. D., Physician. Spence, Mary E., 'l l, Anamoose, N. D., H. S. Principal. Spencer, Viola M., '07, Wabasha, Minn., Teacher. Squire, F. Howard, '06, Fargo, N. D., Real Estate. Squire Pinkerton, '09, Aberdeen, S. D., Real Estate. Squire, Ka., 'l l, Aberdeen, S. D., Real Estate. Stark, Mary B., '02, 537 W. l23rd St.. New York City, Post-Graduate Work. Stark, Phoena J., 'l0, Arlington, Minn., Box I64. Stebbins, Anstis, '98, Buenos Aires, S. A., Paseo, Colon, l6l, Mrs. B. A. Shuman. Stebbins, Dwight, '98, Virginia, Minn., Banker. Sterling, Alice, '04, Red Wing, Minn., At Home. Stevens, Chas. P., '93, 788 Simpson Ave., St. Paul, Painter. Stevens, Mamie, '90, Hotel Clinton, Minneapolis, Mrs. Geo. A. Greene. Stewart, Mabel F., '95, Baraboo, Wis., Mrs. A. C. Kingsforcll Stewart, S. D., '05, Williston, N. D., Lawyer. Stirratt, Oliver J., '98, Red Wing, Minn., General Secretary of Y. M. C. A. Stockdill, M. Carlotta, '04, l66l Blair St., St. Paul, Voice Culture and Concert Work. Stocking, Lyman C., '96, 5890 Julian Ave., St. Louis, Mo., Physician. Storberg, David W., '07, Cambridge, Mass., Post Graduate Work, Harvard University. Stowers, Josephine M., '86, Crystal Springs, Sask., Canada, Mrs. A. Z. Drew. Strayer, Ethel, 'l2, St. Paul, Minn., Clerk. i Sutton, J. A., '88, 8423 S. G. St., Tacoma, Wash., Minister. Sweitzer, Lee R., '09, l424 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Dental Student, U. of M. Sweitzer, Russell, 'l l, l424 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, with Washburn-Crosby Co. Swinnerton, T. N., '03, Hibbing, Minn., Assistant Secretary Y. M. C. A. Sylvester, Nellie M., '96, Bemidji, Minn., Mrs. W. P. Dyer. Sylvester, Nettie H., '09, Plainview, Minn., Studying Muisc. Tackels, Verna, 'l2, Detroit, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Tandy, Douglas H., '84, Hillyard, Wash., Newspaper Publisher. D Tart, Myrtle, '06, Windom, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Tasker, A. H., '96, I739 Scarth St., Regina, Sask., Dealer in Farm Lands and Mortgages. Tasker, Prudence, '97, Minot, N. D., Mrs. T. A. Olsen. Taylor, Edwin, 'l l, Herman, Minn., Teaching. Taylor, Fred H., '00, 6ll 8th St. S., Fargo, N. D., Real Estate. Taylor, Maude, '06, Eugene, Oregon, Mrs. Grant Beardsley. Taylor, Mayme J., 'l0, Pipestone, Minn., Teaching. Taylor, Robt. J., '00, 4166 Normandy Ave., Los Angeles, Cal.. Minister. Teague, H. W., '96, Detroit, Minn., Mining Engineer. Teichroew, Peter, 'I l, Bison, S. D., Assistant Bank Cashier. Temple, Sterling, '05, Wheeler Ave., Merriam Pk., Minn., Instructor at U. of M. Terry, Robt. W., '98, Slayton, Minn., Lawyer. Terry, Selina, M. '03, Sibley, lowa, H. S. Teacher. Teter, Walter C., '85, I0 Wall St., New York City, Banker. Tether, Chester H., '98, 84 Seneca St., Oswego, N. Y., Prof. State Normal Training School. Thomas, Ethel, 'll, care Mrs. E. C. Porter, Hubbard Woods, Ill., Companion. Thompson, C. Verne, 'l0, I268 Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., At Home. Thompson, Frank, '03, Kerkhoven, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Thurber, W. L., '97, Washington, D. C., U. S. Patent Examiner. Trapp, H. A., '04, 975 Euclid St., St. Paul, Principal of Quincy School. Tregoning, Henry, 'l2, Adrian, Minn., Banking Business. Trelford, Thomas, 'l I, Two Harbors, Minn., Chief Clerk in Train Dispatcher's Ofhce. Tucker, James H., ex-'02, 353 Howell Ave., St. Paul, Newspaper Work. Tuckey, Edson, N. '93, 2 I4 Comstock Ave., Syracuse, N.Y., Prof. Economics, Syracuse University. Turner, Leonard S., 'l0, Broadview, Mont., H. S. Teacher. Tyrrell, C. C., '02, 2428 Central Ave., Mpls., Physician. Uhl, Lucy, '09, l527 W. Minnehaha St., St. Paul, Minn., Teaching Science. Umpleby, A. L., '96, Broken Bow, Neb., Minister. Umpleby, Ernest R., '08, Greenbush, Minn., Newspaper Publisher. U'Ren, Edna, '96, 748 N. Y. Life Bldg., Seattle, Wash., Mrs. Edna Carwile. Vail, O. S., '96, Breckenridge, Minn., Supt. of Schools. Vallentyne, John, 'l l, Cutbank, Mont., Ranching. Van Camp, Elijah, '00, Athens, Mich., Physician. Van Fossen, Alice, 'l2, Anamoose, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Van Fossen, Harriet, 'l2, 2I I5 Blaisdell Ave., Mpls., At Home. Van Fossen, L. J., '85, Guaranty Loan Bldg., Mpls., Lawyer. Vennerstrom, Jennie, '95, Tucson, Ariz., Mrs. Wm. Cannon. Walker, Jessie, '95, Redfield, S. D., H. S. Teacher. Wallace, A. J., '96, 705 Snelling Ave., St. Paul. Feed and Fuel Dealer. Wallace, Chas. H., '02, Newport Beach, Cal., Bank Cashier. Wallace, Ed. H., '95, Long Beach, Cal., Assistant Cashier Exchange Nat'l Bank. Wallace, Ernest H., '97, Ill Broadway, N. Y., Lawyer. Wallace, Lewis H., '00, Newport Beach, Cal., Bank President. Wallace Wallace , Mabel A., '00, l738 Van Buren St., St. Paul, Minn., Mrs. H. L. Brink. , Maude E., '98, Anaconda, Mont., Box 335, Mrs. E. M. Dunn. Wallace, Wm. H., '95, Long Beach, Cal., Vice-President Exchange National Bank. Waltz, lrene, 'l0, Edgerton, Minn., Mrs. Rolla K. Meacham. Wanner, Anna M., '0l, care College Osteopathy, Los Angeles, Cal., Mrs. W. Scott. Wanner, Theo. L., '01, l006 7th St. S., Fargo, N D., Prof. Chem. and Physics, Fargo Warner, Beth., 'l I, Wheaton, Minn., Teaching H. S. English. Warner, Evelyn, ex-'87, 4l I7 N. Verde St., Tacoma, Wash., Mrs. A. E. Chantler. Waters, Hazel B.. '09, Fergus Falls, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Watson, Bessie, '06, Togo, Sask., Canada, H. S. Teacher. Way, G enevieve, L., 'l0, Claremont, Minn., H. S. Principal. Webb, Louella O., '0l, Sumner Apartments, San Diego, Cal., Teaching, H. S. Literature. Wedd, Cora E., '07, 930 l5th Ave., S. E. Mpls., Mrs. Mathew Willing. Welch, Nellie L., ex-'l2, Clinton, Minn., Teaching. Weld, Ethel, l., '99, Chesaw, Wash., Mrs. l. J. Dunn. Wells, Ardelle, 'l l, Lindstrom, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Wells, Florence, '04, l56 W. Washington, care Nat. Prohibition Headquarters, Chicago, lll. Mrs. H. S. Warner. Wenger, F. A., ex-'98, I470 Capitol Ave., St. Paul, Real Estate. West, L Westma Wahler, Wheeler, aura, '65, 45 Laurent St., Santa Cruz, Cal., Mrs. Edwin B. Philleo. n, Edward, 'I I, Alexandria, Minn., H. S. Teacher. lnez R., '96, 5890 julian Ave., St. Louis, Mo., Mrs. L. C. Stocking. B. N., '94, 3406 W. 3rd St., Duluth, Minn., Real Estate and lnsurance. Whitcomb, Orrin J., '00, Raton, N. Mexico, Physician and Surgeon. Whitney, David H., '98, ll Bleeker Ave., Troy, N. Y. College Whitney, Mary G., '94, 432 W. 5th St. Superior, Wis., Cashier, State Mutual Assurance Co., Worcester, Mass. Whitney, May A., '67, Hotel Yorke, San Francisco Cal.. Mrs. M. A. Haley. Whitney, Maude, '04, Onamia, Minn., Mrs. Fred Burrell. Wilkinson, james E., '08, 823 Foster St., Evanston, Ill., Attending Garrett Biblical Institute. Wilkinson, Mrs. Louisa C., Student of H. U. at Red Wing, 403 E. PearlSt., Owatonna, Minn. Wilkinson, T. H., '97, Brawley, Cal., Minister. Williams, Joy, 'I2, Dodge Center, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Williams, Sarah L.. '60, 77 Mackubin, St., St. Paul, Mrs. Sarah L. Noble. Willing, Mathew, '06, 930 l5th Ave. S. E., Mpls., Teaching English, Mpls. East High. Willmarth, J. Scott, '0l, 726 Washington St., Evanston, lll., Post-Graduate Work Northwestern University. Willmert, Sadie. '09, Blue Earth, Minn. Willsey, L. A., '86, Epworth, Georgia, Pres. Epworth Seminary. Wilson, Fannie E., '09, Clarkfield, Minn., H. S. Principal. Winship, Louis C., '02, North Adams, Mass., Electrical Engineer. Winston, Martha D., '04, 737 Fry St., St. Paul, Mrs. Geo. W. Hartwell. Wolf, Will F., '09, Centralia, Wash., H. S. Science Teacher. Wolfe, Edna, '11, Buffalo, Minn., H. S. Science Teacher. Wolfe, Rebecca, '09, Plainview, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Wood, Clarence W., 'l0, i055 Everett Court, St. Paul, Mimi., in Business. Wood, Effie M., '07, Emmons, Minn., Principal of Schools. Wood, lrven, B., '04, Rochester, Minn., Minister. Wood, Sadie, 'i2, Pine City, Minn., H. S. Teacher. Worman, Alwin E., '07, Fillmore, N. Y., Minister. Worman, O. E., '04, 504-505 Andrus Bldg., Mpls., Refractive Eye, and Optical Work. Wright, Ellen M., '92, Nooksack, Wash., At Home. Wright, Helen E., '04, 86l Snelling Ave., St. Paul, Teaching, St. Paul Schools. Wright, Ridley F., Ex. '9l, 208 W. Wabasha St., Winona, Minn., Editor of Winona Republican. Wright, Wm. A., '67, 68l Oakland Ave., Pasadena, Cal., Real Estate. Wylie, Lulu E., '03, Valley City, N. D., Mrs. S. A. Zimmerman. Young, Wm. W., '99, 2 Rector St., N. Y. City, Lawyer. Ziesenis, Hazel I., '09, Beach, N. D., H. S. Teacher. Zimmerman, Annie, '02, Plainview, Minn., Mrs. F. C. Nelson. Zimmerman, S. A., '03, Valley City, N. D., Physician. 1 N 1 w THE AMLINE BOOK STORE BLYLER 8: I-IENEMAN, Props. I HAS A FULL LINE OF Text and Reference Books, College Pillows, Pennants, Society, Class and College jewelry, Fountain Pens. IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF A SWEATER, JERSEY, MACKINAW, ANYTHING IN THE ATHLETIC LINE, COME IN AND SEE US. WE ARE AGENTS FOR THE BEST IN THESE COMMODITIES. RITCI-IEL'S PHARMACY Takes pride in announcing that their Drug Store is one of the most up-to-date in the city of St. Paul. YOU never take chances in having your prescriptions filled here. Every one is compounded by a Registered Pharmacist. Our line includes everything always found in a first-class Drug Store. Bring Us Your Films We operate our own Developing Department which occupies the entire base- ment of our building. Films developed and printed same day as received. We are sole agents in Hamline for Eastman Kociaks and Supplies We strive to please Hamline students. y Rifchefs Pharmacy Bordering on the Campus 761 Snelling Avenue Sf. Paul, Minn. Private Office of MALCOLM EMORY NI Cl-IOLS. LL.B. of the NICHOLS EXPERT SCHOOL, Saint Paul The only business school that YOU would even THINK of attending. Favored by Hamline. A Business and Shorthand School with astandard and a Reputation. Wonderful Equipment, Selected Students, Faculty of Experts, Individual Instruction, Certainty of Employment - iffy' ' Established l870 . J. DYER 6: BRO. LEADING MUSIC HOUSE ' Pianos Victor Victrolas Violins Mandolins Guitars I Band Instruments Sheet Music Music Books Expert Repairing of all Musical Instruments. NEW PHOTOGRAPHIC GOODS DEPARTMENT NOW OPEN Cameras and all Photo Supplies. Developing and Printing 2I-27 WEST FIFTH STREET ,.......,.......a....w...,.....n..........W...u.i....,..,........m...... ...W ......,........i. gg N...........,.....,.....i,............ Vander Bie's l Ice Cream lr is the Best 1 For sale at all leading Drug and Confectionery Stores. Q Both Phones f. C. Vander Bie 496 Partridge Ave. St. Paul SAINT PAUL Whenever you come M inneapolis- be sure to stop in at the famous Glass Block, Sixth and Nicollet, and make free use of all the many conven- iences provided for patrons of this great Department Store. Studente are always Welcome. Bring your friends to see this center of interest in the business' district. Interurban cars direct to the door. ' 4 x:mniuunrunmmunuuinmm-1nnnuunuunmn:mlnuummm:inununnmmnnuummmumzsnnnmmrunm Our Two Best Salesmcn From Hamline Last Year Why not be a Salesman? ALESIVIANSI-IIP is the highest paid profession. I The experience and knowledge of people gained in one summer are worth as much as a year in college. You can pay your way through college selling The Peoples Home Library the new Medical, Cooking and Veterinary work, companion books in German and Danish-Norwegian languages. We will take the book back and refund the money if it does not pay for itself within a year. We train our men thoroughly. Records for the Summer of 1912 l man made S2,075.l5 profit in 74 days. W 5 men averaged SI,068.IO profit each 7 men averaged 920.94 profit each I2 men averaged 728.81 profit each 27 men averaged 5l3.94 profit' each All who worked twenty or more days averaged 515322.57 profit each. All together, without any exceptions, averaged 37.54 profit per clay. These statemenls made uncler oath and verified by Cleveland fludit Co. ' WRITE FOR POSITIVE EVIDENCE. A DESCRIPTIVE BOOKLET. MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. CLEVELAND, OHIO KANSAS CITY, MO. A Combination Tractor and PowerMachzne F I I The Hackney Auto Plow THE ONE-MAN OUTFITH OR Plowing, Seeding, Discing, Harrowing, Harvesting, Road Grading, Orchard Work, Hauling, Grinding Feed, Sawing Wood, Threshing, Etc. Two speeds, 2M and 3M miles per hour, driving machine in either direction. Can be worked day and night. Light in weightg does not pack the soil. Large radiator and internal expanding Clutch. Plow your ground, put in the seed, harvest the crop, thresh, haul your loads to town, grind your feed, pump your water, fill your silos, at half the expense and twice as quick as the old method of farming. Weight of machine ready to plow, approx- imately eight thousand pounds. Length 14 feet 6 inches, width 6 feet 6 inches. Investi- gate this machine before buying any other make. Catalog free on request, Hackney Manufacturing Company St. Paul, Minnesota P. M. KCI-ILg8z co. Class Pins our Specialty '-Q U1 -1 X WHOLESALE - - -Q' Q ' TELEPHONES AND MANUFACTURING i ly ' N. W. Nicollet l9ll JEWELERS W Tri-State 2586 X .1 F 1 ' r Qi' V f f'ugN-insmv A V AINMHPNLW' . ltwrufli 30l-305 Nicollet Avenue Third Floor Minneapolis, Minn. uununrnssmnmunmnnnnmuuummnunniulummnnmnwuuaulluumimm:uunnuumumnuuunml1nnnuuInnmmmumnnuuunlu x immmmoaInlnulummuunlnummunnmnnunnnummmmummnnmuumnmumm1unmnumnmnuulnnmnuuuulmmunumuvuunmmmu ' Good Things to Eat The Freshest Stocks-The Biggest Stocks THE most up-to-date Stocks. The lowest prices-the highest values. ONE big Store-no branches. Broadway and 7 th Saint Paul Regular Deliveries to White Bear Beginning May I GRGCERIES .Q The Security National Bank ,J - QQIiiai.Ng M 1 N N E A P o L 1 s -' I' 4 mg.. . f',l '! vi : ls,l. V ' ' . ' ffl ' gl igggig i OFFICERS 4 3 ' ' F. A. CHAMBERLAIN, President 1 Hin 'Il , Ill!! ll Egailigggilln F. o. WINSTON, vice-Prem FRED. SPAFFORD, cashier ll PERRY HARRISON, Vice-Pres't GEORGE LAWTHER. Ass't Cashier pll will Bllllggnsgg E. F. MEARKLE, vice-Pfam STANLEY H. BEZOIER, Ass't cashier mllllllllll Ellil Ing In J. S. POMEROY, vice-Prey: WALTER A. MEACHAM, Ass't cashier '-J L -f Capilal, Surplus and Profits Three and one-half Million Dollars . ll ' 5 l'nl:1li:llj In nil' :l 'fm lllillaiuig ll I I. im A f Elf. :.- - -- II ' ' l -:L- fi.if1f..2.,f', f' M limi? H '?LtLFl',3 i 1' :. 1 4- TTIFH-H-H-4' gwfilu:-A 'kr -at i5 'fr-'fi 'ff' ' rf'-A ....f......,..........,.. i.i............... gg L. L. AY 8: CCD., Inc. Florists, Nurserymen and Seeclsmen 289-9l-93-95 COMO AVENUE 78-80 EAST 5th STREETI' I St. Paul, Minn. Call on us for Cut Flowers for all occasions. We carry a com- plete line of seeds, plants and nursery stock. Our Landscape department is the best in the northwest. Send for our 1913 Catalogue of 125 pages of useful information mailed free on application. L. L. MAY 8: CO. . nunnmuunmnmnmmmnnunmn ummnummnr x nummmuunn The Student Tonsorial Parlors 706 SNELL-I NG AVE. Wm. R. Bucknell Proprietor rumnnuu nnuuvruvl 3,2 wdios 1, lx P .J-rg ' 11AA 'f -W N' ' , in 15' Maker of Fine Portraits I Nicollet at Eleventh M l N N E A P O LIS ....,.,..,..,..... gg ..1,.,,.....,......l... 1-IE You ARE HUNGRY Come to the Campus and we will satisfy your Wants. During the past year We have been supplying the Hamline students with Good Things To Eat and we invite your patronage in the future. Hot and cold Lunches served at any time and meals at regular hours. We also have a complete line of Confectionery and School Supplies. LET US PREPARE YOUR AFTER-SOCIETY FEEDS The CAMPUS Jens SigV?l?e'Lig,i iE3leE3E We Mak, a Specially of Low 'Rates to Students Group Pbotos 4..'4..fgi' PHOTO STUDIOS Dyer Bldg., 25-27 West Fifth Sl. St. Paul, Minn. Minneapolis, Minn. 525 First ,Avenue South ln L ,n ' xr-1 ' ' F, 1: ix V ' 1 mr-ai :zum leur' lin!! :ma-f-uxfrsinnnu CLASS and FRATERNITY PINS. Designs Submitted and Estimates given. Lowest Prices ST. PAUL, MINN. The Northwest's Headquarters for SCHOOL STATIONERY ENGRAVING Samples Submitted and Estimates given on Request. We make a Specialty of Special Class Prices to Graduates Commencement Announcements and Invitations. of about one-third. on Calling Cards-a saving . i 1 COLLEGE CLOTHERS l HERE are no yesterdays in 'l -l our Young Men's Garments- we've the Clothes of toclay. Come, see the Suit Swellman, Mr. Young Man! THE BOSTGN CLOTHING Co. A r ll SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA L 5 lunnununlnnuummmmnlmIvII1II1IIuI1nnmIIummmmlnnununnlmmnmmunmmmlmnmmmnnmnmnnmmnmlmnmmmnnlmmmmmvunr x Res. l60l Wesley Avenue If your eyes rebel--See Ubel A X T qs' WW? , H MI TRADE MARK and when in need of first-class optical scr- vicc you will do well to call on mc. We grind our lcnscs in our own workshop on the prcmxscs. A Frank A. Ubel 478 Wabasha St. Opposile Empress Thwlre mnmnnsllnwmmmmmlulmlmrrmlurnmmu mumauunuunnmmnummnnnmunmummnnuunmnnsmuuuunm C. F. APITZ A n d D e a I e r i n ME1N'S and CI-IILDREN'S SHOES 708 Snelling Avenue ST. PAUL, MINN. i BURKHARD'S The Place to Buy Base Ball, Tennis, Athletic' Supplies Swealers, ferseys Track and Field Goods, Bicycles Morris and Veazie Canoes PATRON IZE THE ADVERTISERS We are a strictly St. Paul Institution. Special Discount to Students High Quality Goods-Best Stock in the City. THE WM. R. BURKI-IARD CC. 319 ROBERT STREET Near Corner 4th Street mmm liin mmm-mum inlull up liul ummm nunn uuumuqnuunmn llll u uuwul-mum-In 'l-ll.ll-lnl mnululilmululnl-mg rlnlnlvllul nunuuuu unnn uuvuuul u nufuu I uvuu om nmunun uuvu n unruiuu n uruunuv mm uuuuuuu mm uuvunfn mmm nvlrl nm-I-mmlnnmmm..um....,n.,,.,..,,,,, Jifid. 275 Park 6326 I Phones: N. W. Midway 624. Tri-State 6672 l Bass at CO. A. J. allace 8C CO. HAMLINE MARKET Dealers in D ' ' r Coal, Wood, Hay F h cl C d M t . . res an ure ea S ' Grain and Mlllstuffs B G d d X. est ra es an l Trunks Hauled and Furniture Moved DRAYING Choice Cuts I 731 Snelling flue. ST. PAUL, MINN, F 753 Snelling Ave. St. Paul, Minn. New Model Price S75--same as for Model l with Tabulator. No extras. Ro al Standard Typewriter F you seek up-to-dateness in typewriter improvements the New Model 5 Ro al ' v ' L y offers the Two Color Ribbon device, Tabulator, Back-spacer, Tilting Paper Tableg Hinged Paper Fingers-and other features, fmany exclusively our ownj, which place the Royal unquestionably in the lead. If simplicity and durability of construction are uppermost to you, remember the Royal has less parts, and less weight than other standard typcwritcrs while its st tl . , . ., 1 .' 'reng 1 and sturdiness are such that a Royal Typewriter has never yet worn out in reasonable service. If you judge. a typewriter by its action, you will lind in the Royal a delicacy and lightness of touch combined with perfect alignment and marvelous manifolding power, which will meet the most exacting requirements. Old mistakes are avoided, and new eliieieney added, in the Royal. Let us prove our state- ment, you'l1 find the proof interesting. 'Phone or write for The Royal Book and Free demonstration of New Model 5. N ,Royal Typewriter Company 4l4 Second Avenue South 73 Endicott Arcade Minneapolis, Minn. St. Paul, Minn. iwniummmluuiunmiiiiuiulilmmuiunnuinuunmvnuinirmummmmunmiumiunuiuu mununmi x rr.munnnmuu nmmunmuimuniununinumuiiuunuuni muuiuninmmumnmiuuuu Phones:-T. S. 6432 N. W. Midway 639 HAMLINE ICE AND FUEL CO. 735 Snelling Ave. Get us to haul your trunks and do your express work. We sell first-class Wood and Coal. Prom t d C ' p an ourteous attention given all orders. he Giveat Western iaviuting nmpang Printers to l the particular advertiser OLLEGE Year Books printed as they should be printed. We do more than merely print your books. We help in every possible way so that you may have the very best book. ' ill The design for the cover, title page, etc. of this book were made in our special department. lsn't this the sort of service you want? Ask those who have had the service what it is worth. ill Monotype composition-means a new and perfect piece of type for your entire book and gives you the hnest selection of type faces. We have an appropriate combination of type face for every piece of work. 'll Modern machinery and material in the com- posing room, press room and binclery and the men that know how to handle this material, means that we can and do handle your Annual so that you get the very best possible. 'll We are printing this year: The Gopher, University of Minnesota: The Hawkeye, University of lowag The Agrarian, School of Agriculture, U. of M.: Agassiz, School of Agriculture, University of North Dakota: The Jack Rabbit, School of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, University of South Dakota: The Liner, Hamline University: The Moccasin, Minnesota College, and the Red Wing High School Year Book. 518-22 Thi d Ml pblll Street Soufh The Graaff V5-1'f2'D lvilfiiii-fbsota Pflhflfy Ga wwf i 42TBYi?exnth6g-za ffffu BITE, llimf J gvabing Qiumpang -554' Glhiragug mnaap alia, H uruluuuumnmnn mm mmmuuunlnuumumnm xnuuuurusmmu x mmnuunnmuuuuunnuulxuumunnrxnuulunulnlmmumiu I-IAIVILINE I-ICDIVIES Fine Residences near the University on casy terms. Loans readily placed on first class security to net the investor 6 per cent payable semi- annually. Farm lands. Large and small tracts. Insurance. Care of property. DIATTES REALTY CO. 422 American Nat. Bank Bldg. ST- PAUL MINNESOTA 3. T is to your own best interest to Qin examine the many beautiful suit- Qil A L33 ings I offer to make to your meas- Hl V ure for only 3525. My materials are all wool, and linings as well as fit absolutely guaranteed. Buying as I do direct from the mills, enables me to give you the best possible values. A trial will convince you. . Tailor Lee, he satzs es Grand Opera House Annex Sl. Paul, Jffinn. nnniummnm ve , ., W .-....,,.. ,.,..-..,,,.-,..,,... W... .,...-, . .. -...-...W -..v ..... Y... ... .....,....,..... -.-.v-.. Gold-Staheclc Loan 8: Credit Co. Capital and Surplus 35S00,000 . Farm Loans, Commercial Paper and other High Class Investments F. O. GOLD, President C. O. R. STABECK, Vicc-Prcs't W. O. NEWHOUSE, Vicc-Prcs't H. N. STABECK, Secretary F. 0. ORTH, Trcasuln' Guaranteed Boncls for the Small Investor Phones: Tri-State 33l6 N. W. Nic. 783 iInIummmnunulunmnmlnlluni lunnlnnunllunmmmntlmmuu vnmmnmll Students' Shop Celebrated Chocolates and Bon Bons at Bans C9 Son Ice Cream Sodas Sundaes Fancy Drinks Cigars and Tobaccos Light Lunches Telephones: N. W. Midway 9589 'G S. 6850-8010 Cor . Snelling and Minnehaha 2 I 7 Palace Building MINNEAPOLIS mnummnlmmunlnmnmmnuummnunmnnmnnlununluliuummnnlulum mnumnmnununnmnuunnmnmunilmuuur N. W. Tcl. Mid. 183 Tri-State 6710 Frank . Fetschl Fresh and Salt Meats, Poultry Oyslers in Season Beal Prices Paid for Veal and Poulhy 7l2 Snelling Ave. St. Paul, Minn.


Suggestions in the Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) collection:

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1920 Edition, Page 1

1920

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

1925

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Hamline University - Liner Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936


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