Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN)

 - Class of 1900

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Indiana University - Arbutus Yearbook (Bloomington, IN) online collection, 1900 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 289 of the 1900 volume:

., , 4 Uq. :'-I , 1 . v -,J , . nu' , N . r. ff. J' - I ', A ,.x',.n .X X + A 'fed 4 K .1-F l ,A wtq' 'I-51 N .AH 'JF T .Q .,.,, I1 '.l ,wrlfi-I . ffl'-L, hi Y 1. IV. 1, '-f-' 1 'L' . :'-, l , -,,A.,,.- f .. aa, ,, , J xg '1M.qxe.g,:m, 1 l T.5:U':,2:J-jlzlrf' LH.,-7 -Igm ,F A: ' LU - 1'f:f?Tf?,. Lwuu WJ, f A- .lg-.H-.w' - . ' , Jr-. - 4-- Jlfj U' LI -v 'rv EIN- AI MJ 46 X L,r,. DR. DAVID STARR JORDAN THE ARBUTUS THE CLASS OF rgoo passes from the loved F Alma Mater into the opportunities of the ,P .::.,f twentieth century, We extend a last greeting in the pages of this 'little book to the loyal friends Whose sympathy and love have made happy our college days. In it we have sought to mirror the lights and shadows of college life. The scenes amid the classic shades of old Indiana form memories which no future can eiface, and, although they may here be drarvn with an uncertain hand, the spirit is one of gratitude and love. To those whose lives have been touched with the humor and the pathos of student trials and aspira- tions, but by Whom these paths have long been unfre- quented, we trust this volume may come like an echo of the past. The same voices now whisper in the summer trees. The same ambitions beckon us. NVe are but old friends in new faces. To those who have 'shared with us the life here reflected, we mingle our greeting with farewell. The present takes hostage of the future, and, as we stand at the close of college life, in the twilight of the cen- tury, We bid God-speed to this book, imperfect though it be, to our gentle readers, one and all, of whose indulgence we feel assured, and to our Alma Mater- Whose name we'1l ever cherish, And to whom we'll e'cr be true. X 'M-wa. vim, I! if V AT NOON JOSEPH SVVAIN, L. L. D. President WILLIAM LOWE BRYAN, PH. D Vice-President BUARD OF TRUSTEES f'?f'?2?' ISAAIC JENKINSON, BENJAMIN F. SHIVELY, CHARLES L. HENRY, ALBERT A. OOO, ROBERT I. HAMILTON, JOSEPH H. SHEA, NAT U. HILL, EDWIN CORR, LAM Richmond South Bend Anderson Kokomo Huntington Scottsburg Bloomington Bloomington Greek X. 'V 'BV - -. KX XX Latin English Romance Languages Germanic Languages History Economics Philosophy and Pedagogy Mathematics ' Mechanics and Astfonomy Geology Physics Chemistry Zoology 9 Botany Law DQDGNUIIQIII of GYQQR O 1. HORACE ADDISON I-IOFFMAN, Professor of Greek and Dean of the Departments of Liberal Arts. A. B., Indiana University, 18815 A. M. Harvard University, 1884. Graduate student Harvard University, 1883-85: stnded in Greece, Sicily, and Italy, 1890. Instructor in Latin and Greek, Indiana University, 1881-83: Professor of Greek, from 1885, Dean of the Departments oi Liberal Arts, from 1894. 2. FRANK WILLIADI TILDEN, Assistant Professor of Greek. A. B., Hamilton College, 18929 A. M., Harvard University, 1807. Graduate student Harvard University, 1896-98. Instructor in Greek, Carroll College, 1892-96, Assistant Professor of Greek, Indiana University, from 1898. Gl'ddlldf2 3. BLANCHE NICIIOLSON 11 4 DQDMIIIIQIII of Edlill O 1. HAROLD WHETSTONE JOHNSTON, Professor of Latin. A. B., Illinois College,1879: A. M., 18825 Ph. D., 18913 L. H. D., Kenyon College. 1898. Principal of Whipple Academy, 1880-843 Instructor in Latin tin charge of departinontj, Illinois College, 1882-86, and Professor of Latin, 1886-95, Professor of Latin, Indiana University, from 1895. 2. JOSEPH HENRY HOWARD, Assistant Professor of Latin. A. B., Indiana University,1888, A. M., 18905 Ph. D., 1898. Graduate student, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1891-923 University of Chicago, 1892-93, Johns Hopkins University and University of Chicago, 1895-96. Instructor in Latin, Indiana Universiiy 1893-915 Assistant Professor of Latin, from 1894. 3. MURREY KERR MARTIN, Tutor of Latin. A. B., Illinois College, 1893. Graduate student, University of Chicago, 1898-99. Instructor in Latin, Southwest Kansas College, 1895-96, Professor of Latin, 1896-995 Tutor in Latin, Indiana Uni- versity from 1899. 1 Graduates 4. HENRIETTA MARY HYSLOP 5. MARY JOHNSTON 6. BLANCHE ICARNS 7. CHARLES LECKRONE 8. ALVIN JOHNSON RUCKER 9. JAMES BERNARD RUCKER 10. HELENA GRACE SHIRLEY 11. MARY CATHERINE SMELTZLY 12 LYDIA WHITAICER 13. EMILY VIRGINIA CLAYBAUGH. 13 D Ddl'll11Qlll of ROIIIGIICQ KGIIQIIZIQQS O 1. ALBERT FREDERICK KUERSTEINER, Professor of Romance Languages. A.B.. University of Cincinnati, 1888. Graduate student Johns Hopkins University, 1894-18955 student in Paris, 1895, and 1896-975 student, University of Madrid, 1895-96 and 1897. Instructor in Modern Languages, Wabash College, 1888-905 teacher of Latin and Mathematics, Hughes High School, Cincinnati, 1890 945 Assistant in Romance Languages, Johns Hopkins University, 1897-985 Professor of Romance Languages, Indiana University, from 1898. 2. GEORGE DAVIS MORRIS, Assistant Professor of French. A. B., Indiana University, 18905 A. M., 1895, Student in Paris, 1895-96. Principal of High School, Independence, Kans., 1890-915 Instructor in French and German, Jarvis Hall, Denver, 1891-935 Instructor in French, Indiana University, 1893-965 Assistant Professor of French, from 1896. 3. COLBERT SEARLES, Instructor in Romance Languages. A. B., Wesleyan University, 18955 Ph. D., University oi Leipsic, 1899. Instructor in French and Ger- man, Ohio Military Institute, Cincinnati, 1895-975 Instructor in French, Indiana University, from 1899. 4. ANTON THEOPHILUS BOISEN, Tutor in French. A. B., Indiana University, 1897. Graduates. 5 EMMA AGNES CLINTON 6. LouIsE TURNER LOUGHRY 7. LETTIE ALMIRA MILLER 8. ELEANOR ADELIA PROTSMAIST 9. Jnssrn AGNES SMITH 15 x I-5 i Q 4 QIDGNIIIQIII of G2l'lIldlliC IIGIIQIIOQQS 73? 1. GUSTAE IQARSTEN, Professor of Germanic Philology. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Marienburg,1878g Ph. D., University of Freiburg 1883 Student Universities of Leipsie, Konigsberg. Heidelberg, 1878-833 student at Tnbinffen, London, D Pa ris, 1883-85. Docent in Germanic and Romance Philology, University of Geneva, Switzer- la cl 188'-864 P - ' ' ' ' n , a , rofessor of Romance Languages, Indiana University, 1886-905 Professor of Germanic Philology, Indiana 1? niversity, from 1890. 2. CARL OSTHAUS, Associate Professor of German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Hildcsheim, 18805 A. M., Indiana University, 1890. St d t U ' u en, ni- versity of Gottingen, 1880-84. Instructor in German, Indiana University, 1887' Instructor in German, Summer School of Georgia Chautauqua, 1889, Associate Proiessor of German, Indiana University, from 1888. 3. EUGENE LESER, Instructor in German. Graduate of the Gymnasium of Sondershausen, 18823 Ph. D., University of Berlin, 1887. Student U . , . , , . , ,. . . niveisity ol Berlin, 1882-81. Tutor, Reichenheun Orphan Asylum Berlin, 1891-925 I Instructor in French and German, Depauw University, 1893, Instructor in French, Univer- sity of Michigan, 1803-943 Instructor in German, Indiana University, from 1895. 4. PHrLrPP SEIBERTH, Tutor in German. Graduate, of Elmhurst College. 18945 and Eden College, 18979 A. M., Indiana University, 1898. Tutor in German, Indiana University, from 1899. Gl'ddlldfQS 5. FERDINAND HENRX' Bossa 6. PURLEY CLARENCE Emmons 7. GEORGE WAsHrNGToN SPINDLER Q 17 ,. A 'Qai- -M.:-:4...,.,, 4 , ,. QDZIYIIIIQIII of Ellgli I7 O MARTIN VVRIGHT SAMPSON, Professor Of English. A. B., University of Cincinnati, 1888, A. M.,1890. Student, University of Munich, 1887-885 Univer- sity of Cincinnati, 1888-89. Instructor in English, State University of Iowa, 1889-915 Assist- ant Professor of English Literature, 18913 Assistant Professor of English, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1892-935 Professor of English, Indiana University, from 1893. CHARLES JACOB SEMBOWER, Assistant Professor of English. A.B.,Indiana University, 1892. Graduate Student, Cornell University, 1895-97. Instructor in English, Indiana University, 1892-97, Assistant in English, Cornell University, 1895-97, Assistant Professor of English, Indiana University, from 1897. JOHN IVIANTEL GLAPP, Assistant Professor of English. A. B., Amherst College,1890g A. M., 1893. Instructor in English. Illinois College. 1890-915 Professor of English and Cratory, Illinois College, 189-1-993 Assistant Professor of English, Indiana Uni- versity, from 1899. GUIDO HERDIAN STENPEL, Assistant Professor of English. A.B ,State University of Iowa. 18893 A.IXI., University of Wisconsin, 1894. Student, University of Leipsic,1895-97. Assistant Principal of High School, Kendallville, Ind., 1888-893 Principal of High School, Litchtield,Ill ,1889-90, Instructor in German, University of Wisconsin, 1890-91, Principal of High School, Oskaloosa, Iowa, 1891-94: ,Instructor in English, Indiana University, 1894-985 Assistant Professor of English, from 1898. HENRY THEW STEPHENSON, Instructor in English. B.S., Ohio State University, 1894: A. B., Harvard University, 1898. Graduate student, Harvard University, 1897-98. Instructor in English, Indiana University, from 1895. EDWARD PAYSON MORTON, Instructor in English. A. B., Illinois College, 18905 A. M., Harvard University, 1893. Graduate student, Harvard Univer- sity, 1891-93. Professor of English, Blackburn University, 1894-95, Instructor in English, Indiana University, from 1895. HABIILTON BYRON MOORE, Instructor in English. PAB., Cornell University, 1897. Principal of Parker Academy, Woodbury, Conn., 1897-98g Instructor in English, Indiana University, from 1898. GIYICIIIGWS 8. FRANK AYDELOTTE 15. MARY MEEK 9. EFFINE PATTERSON BLOUNT 16. CHARLES BRONSON MCLINN 10. MARIE LOUISE BOISEN 17. DE EARL MUSHLITZ 11. JOSIAH HADIILTON CASTLEMAN 18. N ELLIE BLANCHE PERIGO 12. J USTUS COLLINS CASTLEMAN 19. SELMA ANNA STEMPEL 13. EDITH CATHERINE HOLLAND 20. JEFFERSON DUDDLESTON BLYTHINO 14. GRACE SIMONTON IRNVIN 19 rf , I 1 L le 'ui ' Qlidfillltllf of WSIOYV dlld Political SCRIICQ J AMES O ALBERT WOODBURN, Professor of American History and Politics. 1890. Graduate A. B., Indiana University, 1876: A. M., 18859 Ph. D., .Iohns Hopkins University, student, Johns Hopkins University tFellow, 1889-90l,1888-90. Instructor in Preparatory School, Indiana University, 1879-SGQ Lecturer in American History, Chautauqua College of Liberal Arts, 1889-919 Professor of American History and Politics, Indiana University, from 1890. SAMUEL BANNISTER HARDING, Associate Professor of History. A. B., Indiana University, 18903 A. M., Harvard University. 18945 Ph. D., 1898. Graduate student, Cornell University, 1890-915 Harvard University tlrlorgnn Fellow, 1894-951 1893-95. Instructor in History and Geography, Ethical Culture School, New York City, 1891-93: Assistant Pro- fessor of European History, Indiana University, 1895-985 Associate Professor of History lrom 1898. AMOS SHARTLE HERSHEY, Assistant Professor of Political Science. A. B., Harvard University, 18925 Ph. D., University of Heidelberg, 1894. Student, University of Hei- delberg, 1892-94: Fellow of Harvard University, studying in Paris, 1894-95. Assistant Pro- lessor of Political Science, Indiana University, from 1895. WILLIABI IRAYVLES, Assistant Professor of History and Economics, A. B., Indiana University, 188-l 3 A. M., 1895. Graduate student, Cornell University tFellowl, 1895-96. Principal of High School, Mitchell, Ind., 18845 Assistant in Preparatory Department of Indi- ana University, 1885-875 Principal of High School, Vincennes, Ind., 1887-893 Principal of High School, Sedalia. Mo., 1889-92 and 1893-943 Assistant in High School. St. Louis, Mo., 1892-935 Instructor in History, Indiana University, from 1894. JXLFRED MANSEIELD BROOKS, Instructor in Fine Arts. A. B., Harvard University, 1894. Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1894-955 graduate student, Harvard University, 1895-96. Instructor in Fine Arts, Indiana University, from 1896. Gfddlldft SYIIGQIIIS 6. FREDERICK AUSTIN OGG, A. B., De PauW,1899. 7. RUPERT RAYMOND SIMPKINS, 8. HAROl.D OTHO STONE, A. B., Merom Christian College, 1899. Graduates 9. XVILLIAM LICCLELLAN ALsoP 16. Ross FRANKLIN LOCICRIDGE ' 10. LAURA GRACE BRADLEY 17. EDITH LYLE MARTIN 11. JENNIE ETHEL BROWN 18. LUCY NICHOLS 12. GEORGE YVILLIAM CURTIS 19. ELLA SARA SMELTZLY 13. LENPHA ALFRED FOLSOM 20. EDNA STEWART 14. IRA CALVERT HAMILTON 21. HELEN TRAYLOR 15. IHATTIE BASHABEE LACY 22. SAMUL OESCAR WRIGHT 21 A. B., 1899. 3 13 1, 3, 41: :: :.f,,41'5vQ.f grim. 5gigQ,w.+ za Q-gt 4- , K . 4, . .- e'f?N:f . ,5 ,,,,y,,,ff 41- f f- ., .s:1::'x33e1a ,Eff ' -, , :www 1.9: L-f 72- 4- 2 . 1, ' - 4 ::,1f.f?1fr.,-.,. -, q?:5EZZu.a.m::WmQ.r, ,, f., W cpartmcnt of Economics and Social Scicncc 0 1 ULYSSES GRANT VVEATHERLY, Associate Professor of Modern European History. A B Colgate University, 18905 Ph. D., Cornell University, 1894. Graduate student, Cornell Univer- sity, 1891-935 President White Traveling Fellow in Modern History, studying in Heidelberg and Leipsic, 1893-94. Principal of Marathon Academy, New York, 1890-91: Instructor in History, Central High School, Philadelphia, 18953 Assistant Professor of European History, Indiana University, 1895-983 Associate Professor of Modern European History, from 1898. Absent on leave Columbia University until June 20, 1900. ERNEST LUDLOW BOGART, Assistant Professor of Economics and Social Science. A B Princeton University, 18905 A. M.,1896: Ph. D., University of Halle-Wittenberg, 1897. Student, Universities of Halle and Berlin, 1894-95, Princeton University lSouth East Club University Fellow in Social Sciencey, 1895-963 University of Halle, 1896-973 Columbia University, 1887-98. Teacher, Hillman Academy, Wilkes Barre, Pa., 1891 -933 Acting Professor of Eco- nomics and Sociology, Smith Colle:-:e,1898p Assistant Professor of Economics and Social Science, Indiana University, 1898-1900. GYBGIIGIQS GEORGE NOBLE BURKHARDT 4. ROBERT SPURRIER ELLISON 5. J AMES CLARENCE PATTEN 23 DQIDGYIIIIQIII of PNIOSOPIW dlld PQGZIQOQV O 1. 'VVILLIAM LOWE BRYAN, Vice-President and Professor of Philosophy. A. B., Indiana University, 1884, A. M., 18863 Ph. D., Clark University, 1892. Student, University of Berlin, 1886-873 Clark University CFellow5, 1891-92. Instructor in Greek, Indiana Uni- versity, 18853 Associate Professor of Philosophy, 18853 Professor of Philosophy, from 18873 Vice-President of Indiana University, from 1893. 2. JOHN ANDREW BERGSTRON, Associate Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy. A. B., Wesleyan University CConn.l, 1890, Ph. D., Clark University, 1894. Student, Clark Univer- sity Clfellowl, 1891-9-1. Instructor, Preparatory School, Middletown, Conn., 1890-913 Assist- ant in Summer School, Clark University, 18921 Assistant in Psychology, 1893-943 Assistant Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, Indiana University, 1894-963 Associate Professor of Psychology and Pedagogy, from 1896. 3. ERNEST HIRAII LINDLEY, Associate Professor of Psychology. A, B., Indiana University, 18933 A. M., 18945 Ph.D., Clark University, 1897. Student, Clark Univer- sity qFellowj, 1895-97. Universities of Jena, Leif-sic, and Heidelberg, 1897-98. Instructor in Philosophy, Indiana University, 1893-983 Instructor in Summer School, Clark University, 18963 Associate Professor of Psychology, Indiana University, from 1898. 4. ELIIER BURRITT RYAN, Associate Professor of Pedagogy. f A. B., Indiana University, 1893. Principal Kokomo High School, 1893-94: Teacher, Indianapolis Manual Training School, 1894-963 Professor of Sociology and Education, Butler University, 1896-973 Assistant Professor of Pedag0gY. Indiana University, 1897-995 Associate Professor of Pedagogy, from 1899. Absent on leave at Clark University. 5 SANFORD BELL, Assistant Professor of Pedagogy. Graduate of Indiana State Normal School, 189-L. Student. DePauw University, 1888-91. Superin- tendent of Schools, Roachdale, Indiana, 1891-92, Ward Principal, Huntington, Indiana, 1892-943 Superintendent of Schools, Aurora, Indiana, 1895-96, Head of Department of Psy- chology and Pedagogy, Northern Indiana Normal School, 1896-985 Assistant Professor of Pedagogy, Indiana University, from 1898. Gfddlldft Sflldtlli 6. PETER VANNIOE VORIS, A. B., 1899. Gl'ddlldlQS 7. WILLIABI FREDERICK BOOK ' 10. JOHN WALTER LAIRD 8. ELLIS BURKE GIBRs 11. WILLIAM W ESLEY MERSHON 9. ANDREW JANEWAY KINNAMAN 12. JOHN PAUL SPOONER 18. DANIEL MCCARVER. 25 DQDGYIMQIII of mdll7Qll1dfiCS 0 ROBERT JUDSON ALEY, Professor of Mathematics and Secretary of the Faculty. A B Indiana University, 1888: A.M., 18905 Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1897. Graduate student. University of Pennsylvania tFellowj, 1896-97. Principal of High School, Spencer, Ind., 1882-85 and 1886-875 Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University. 1887-885 Professor of Mathematics, Vincennes University, 1888-915 Professor of Applied Mathematics, Indiana University, 1891-935 Acting Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Leland Stanford Junior University, 1894-955 Professor of Mathematics, Indiana University, from 1893. SCHUI LEE COLFAX DAXVISSON, Associate'Professor of Mathematics. A B Indiana University, 18905 A.M.,1892. Student, Clark University tFcl1owl,1895-96. Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 1890-935 Associate Professor of Mathematics, from 1893. Absent on leave. DAW ID AIwDRElV ROTHEOCK, Assistant Professor of Mathematics. A B Indiana University, 18925 A,M., 18935 Ph.D., University of Leipsic, 1898. Graduate student, University of Chicago tScholar, 1894-953, 1894-95, and summer term, 18965 University of Leipsic,1897-98. Assistantin Bunker Hill Academy, Bunker Hill,Ill.,1,8885 Principal oflrligh School, Brighton, Ill., 1888-915 Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 1892-955 Assistant Professor of Mathematics, from 1895. JOHN BEOOKIE FAUGHT, Instructor in Mathematics. Graduate of Indiana State Normal School, 18915 A.B., Indiana University, 18935 A.M., 1895. Graduate student, University of Chicago, 1896-97. Professor of Mathematics, Vincennes University, 1893-945 Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, from 1894. ERLEST WILLIAM RETTGER, Instructor in Mathematics. Graduate of Indiana State Normal School, 18915 A.B., Indiana University, 18935 Ph.D., Clark University, 1398. Student Clark University Qlfellowl, 1895-98. Principal of High School, Rensselaer, Ind., 1893-945 Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 1894-95, and from 1898. Graduate Student 6. MOETON CLARK BRADLEY, A. B., 18995 A.M., 1900. ' Gl'ddllEliQS 1 CLARENCE ELMEE FRYER 11. JAcoB CHARLES SEITZ 8 Emi ARD ERNEST INICUIILLEN 1'Z. ALBERT IVIILLER WILSON 9. WALTER PIETY MORGAN 13. ELIZABETI-I YVILSON 10. JENNIE FERN Sco'r'r 14. JOSEPH CHRISTIAN BOLDT 27 DQDGNIIIQIII of m2Cl7dlliCS dlld HSIYOIIGIIIV 0 1. JOHN ANTHONY MILLER, Professor of Mechanics and Astronomy. A. B., Indiana University, 1890g A. M., Leland Stanford Junior University, 1893. Graduate student, University of Chicago,1895-97, Ph. D., Chicago University, 1899. Instructor in Mathematics, Indiana University, 18905 Superintendent of Schools, Rockville, Ind., 1890 913 Instructor in Mathematics, Leland Stanford University, 1891-93: and Assistant Professor of Mathematics, 18949 Acting Professor of Mathematics, Indiana University, 1894-959 Professor oi Mechanics and Astronomy, from 1895. Graduate 2. JAMEs SAYRE DODGE 29 Q, -f, X - 4' W H '1'152S53'?fN WNV A be ..... .' 29+ X gx 5-., bi P1 f :wsvt - 2 5, 45 E , ,, 4 W5 3 Mx 22359 14 f W' 4 M ,W , ,, i , ...-W 5-'za---ge: ,wc 3 I M, -awry -f ,W gufmzkr .f, iw' 1:41. 1 V, .. V . V ,,,,.f.- LW. W 2 ,, n., L I v DQDGYIIIIQIII of Pbvsics vt ARTHUR LEE FOLEY, Professor ofPhys1cs. A. B., Indiana University, 1S90g A. M., 1891 5 Ph. D., Cornell University, 1897. Graduate student, Chi- cago University, 18943 Cornell University, Clfellowj, 1596-97. Instructor in Physics, Indiana University, 1890-91: Associate Professor of Physics, Indiana University, 1891-975 Professor of Physics, from 1897. CHARLES TOBIAS KNIPP, Instructor in Physics. A. B., Indinna University, 18945 A. M., 1896. Instructor in Physics, Indiana University, from 1893. Absent on leave. ROLLA ROY RAMSEY, Acting Instructor in Physics. A. B., Indiana University, 18959 A.M., 1898. Professor of Physics, Westminster College, 1397-985 Scholar in Physics, Clark University, 1898-995 Acting Instructor in Physics, Indiana Uni- versity, from 1899. JOHN ANDREW STONEKING, Laboratory Assistant in Physics. A.B., Indiana University, 1898, Laboratory Assistant in Physics from 1398. REUBEN Enson NYSWX'ANDER, JR., Laboratory Assistant in Physics. Graduates 5. JAY GOULD GENTRY 7. OWEN ORVILLE IVIILLER, 6. NVHITTIER LORENZ HANSON 8. LLOYD MAJOR MOORE 9. JAMES MILTON STEWART. 31 T F x DQDGITMQIII f It lIliSfl' O 1. ROBERT EDWARD LYONS, Professor Oi Chemistry. A. B., Indiana University, 18895 A. M,, 18905 Ph. D., University of Heidelberg, 1894. Student, Fresenius's Laboratories twiesbndenj, Universities oi' Heidelberg, Munich, and Berlin, and Joergensen's Institute for Physiology of Fermentations iCopenhagenj.1892-95. Instructor in Chemistry, Indiana University, 1889-915 Associate Professor of Chemistry, 1891-925 Pri- vate Assistant to Professor Kratft, University of Heidelberg, 18955 Professor of Chemistry, Indiana University, from 1895. 2. LOUIS SHERMAN DAVIS, Associate Professor of Chemistry. A. B., Indiana University, 18915 A. M., 18925 Ph. D.,University of Marburg, 1896. Student, Univer- sity of Marburg, 1895-96. Instructor in Chemistry, Indiana University, 1892-955 Associate Professor of Chemistry, Irom 1895. 3. OLIVER W. BROXVN. Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry. B. S., Earlharn College, 18955 A. M., Indiana University, 1896. Student, Missouri School of Mines, 18975 graduate student, Cornell University, 1898-99. Demonstrator of Chemistry, Indiana Dental College, 1896-975 Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry, Indiana University, from 1899. 4. HARVEY ALBERT BORDNER, Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry. A. B., Indiana University, 1896. Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry, Indiana University, from 1894. 5. LEO FREDERICK RETTGER, Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry. A. B., Indiana University, 18965 A. M., 1897. Laboratory Assistant in Chemistry, Indiana Univer- sity, from 1897. Graduates 6. AUDASON ALEXANDER CHARLES 1l. DAVID VVALTER ICURRIE 7. CHARLES NATHAN COMES 12. OLIVER CURTIS MARTIN 8. FREDERICK NEWTON DUNCAN 13. RYLAND RATLIFF 9. WALTER PERRY JENKINS, 14. JOHN BENJAMIN ROBERTSON 10. FLORENCE EMMA KNIFE 15. EDWIN ORREN HARROLD 33 7. ..,,, .NJ DQDZIYIIIIQIIY of GQNOQV dild GQOQYGIDI5 0 1. VERNON FREEMAN NIARSTERS, Professor of Geology and Geography. A. B., Arcadia College. N. S., 18865 A. M.. Harvard University, 1898. Graduate student, Cornell University, 1888-895 Harvard University, 1896-98. Instructor in Geology, Cornell University, 1889 913 Professor of Geology. Indiana University, from 1891. 2. EDGAR ROSCOE CUn1rNGs,Instruoto1'in Geology. A.B, Union College, 1897. Graduate student, Cornell University, 1897. Instructor in Geology, Indiana University, from 1898. 35 1 5 5 QIJGYIIIIQIII of ZOGIOQV 0 1. CARL EIGENIIANN, Professor of Zoology and Director of the Biological Station. A. B., Indiana University, 18865 A.M., l887: Ph.D.,1889. Graduate student, Harvard University, lS87-885 San Diego Biological Laboratory,18S9g Wood's Holl Marine Station, 18S9,1890 and 189-Lg California Academy of Sciences, 1890, summer explorations for the British Museum in California, Oregon, Idaho, Montana. Dakota, and Western Canada, 1890, 1891, and 1892. Professor of Zoology, Indiana University, from 1891, Director of Biological Station, from 1895. 2. J AMES ROLLIN SLONAKER, Instructor in Zoology. Graduate of Indiana State Normal, 1889: B. S., University of Wisconsin, 1893: Ph. D., Clark Univer- sity, 1896. Student, Clark University tFellow in Bio1ogyJ,1893-965 U. S. Fish Commission, Wood'sHol1, suinrner of 1895. Principal of High School, Elroy, Wis., 1889-91, Instructor in Zoology, Indiana University, from 1896. 3. XVILLIAM MOISNKI-IAUS, Instructor in Zoology. A.B, Indiana University, 1894: A. M.,1895. Assistant Directorof Museum,Sao Paolo, Brazil, 1895-98: Assistant Professor of Zoology, Williams College,1899g Instructor in Zoology, Indiana University, from 1894. Graduates 4. JACOB GRANT COLLICOTT X 5. ULYssEs ORANGE COX 6. IDA MARIE CULBERTSON 7. ABEANI VARDIDIAN MAUCK 8. GEORGE DANIEL SHAFER 9. RICIITER SOLOMON TIOE 10. OLIVER PERRY WEST 11. ANDREW JACKSON REDBION 37 ' I H1 f N . w- 1 ' 7 Y DQDUYIIIIQIII of B IGIIV C52 1. DAVID MYERS MOTTIER, Professor of Botany. A. B., Indiana. University, 1891 5 A. M., 18925 Ph. D , University of Bonn, 1897. Student University of Bonn, 1895-975 University of Leipsic, 1897-98, Smithsonian research student, Zoological Sta- tion, Naples, 1898. Instructor in Botany, Indiana University, 1891-93, Associate Professor of Botany, 1893-98, Professor of Botany, from 1898. , 2. FRANK MARION ANDREXXVS, Instructor in Botany. A. B., Indiana University, 18915 A.M., 1894. Assistant in Botany, Indiana. University, 189497, Instructor in Botany, from 1897, Gfddlldfk Sflldmf JAMES M. VAN Hoorc Graduates 4. CHARLES MARION EK 5. MAUD SIEBENTHAL 6. CLARE SNYDER 39 18 DQDGYIMQIIY of IIGW 0 1 WILLIABI PERRY ROGERS, Professor of Law and Dean of the School of Law LL.B., Indiana University, 1892: A. B., 1895. Student in Indiana University, 1871 80 Attorney at Law, Bloomington, Indiana, 1882-92: Lecturer on Equity Jurisprudence Indiana Unix er . sity, 1890, Professor of Law, from 18929 Dean of the School of Law, from 1896 2 GEORGE LOUIS REINHARD, Professor of Law. LL.D., Miami University, 1897. Student, Miami University, 1866-68. Attorney at Law Rockport India.ntI,1S7O-829 Prosecuting Attorney of the Second Judicial Circuit of Indianft 1876 80 Judge of the Second Judicial Circuit of Indiana, 1882-915 Judge ol the Appellate Court of Indiana, 1891-963 Professor of Law, Indiana University, from 1896. 3 WILLIABI ELLSWORTII CLAPHAM, Assistant Professor of Law. Graduate Of Indiana State Normal School, 18895 A. B., Indiana University, 1894 LI B 1896 Attorney at Law, Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1894-985 Lecturer on Medical Jurisprudence Fort Wayne Medical College, 1894-985 Assistant Professor of Law, Indiana. University, from 1898 . ROBERT YVYCLIF ARMSTRONG . HERBERT VALODIN BARBOUR . OLIVER CROMWELL BLACK . JACOB IMANCIL CLINTON . RICHARD FRANCIS DAVIS . SAMUEL EDGAR DILLEN . THOMAS LEE DILLON . RUDOLPII FREDERIC FRITSCK . FRANK GARDNER ' . DAVID IWCKINNEY HAMMOT . GEORGE DANIEL HEILMAN . BLANCHARD JACKSON HORNE . HENRY WILLIAM KAMMAN . FRANKLIN MARION ICIMES . BURDETTE LU'rz . WARD :MARSHALL . A. F. MOOD . EDWARD EVERETT NEEL Graduates 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34 . 36. 37. 38. -11 CHARLES IMAHLON NIEZER IVIASTIN THOMAS 0'BRIEN ROY OAKLEY PIKE CHARLES WALTER PORTER YVARNER ANTHONY Ross CORNELIUS LIARCELLUS SMITH IVIARION L. SPITLER WVESLEY TAYLOR WILLIAM CLARENCE YVAIT DANIEL AUGUSTUS VVASMUTH HIRAM PRESTON XVI-IITE CHARLES WILLIAM VVITTENBRAKER RFDDIOK ANDREXV YVYLIE LOUIS BRAREMAN ERWIN BENJAMIN VENARLE GOSI-IORN THOMAS DIARSTERSON JOHN MCGLOIN 2Ddl'll11Ql1I of PIWSKGI ffdillillg WWW 3325 mQll'S 'GVlllIlZlSillm JAMES HOXX'ARD HORNE, Director. A. B., Bowdoin Colleg -, 1597. Student, Har- hool of Physical Training, vard Summer Sc 1898. Assistant to Director of Gymnasium, Bowdoin College, 1895-97. In charge of . Y b gymnasium, Hebron Academy, He ron, Me.,1897-98. Director of Men's Gymnasium, Indiana University, from 1898. WILLIALI ALBERT ALEXANDER, Assistant. THOMAS WATTERSON RECORDS, Assistant. womenfs Gymnasium JULIETTE NIAXWELL, Director. A. B. Indiana. University, 1883. Student, Sa.rgent's Normal School of Physical Train ing, 1890. Physical Director, Coates Col- lege. 1890-92: Director of VV01Tl6Il'S Gym- Indiana University, from 1893. nasium, REBECCA ROGERS GEORGE, Lecturer on Physiology and H ygiene. M. D., University of Michigan, 1893, Lec- turer on Physiology and Hygiene, Indiana University, from 1898. BLANCHE KARNS, Assistant. URI' ffiC2l'S . ff I Dv ' N nh' . -- , L 'D 1 y 0 . 9 :AQ GEORGE FLAVEL DANFORTH, Librarian. 0 Ev Ph.B., Cornell University, 1890. Graduate of Auburn Theological Seminary, 1893. Graduate student, Yale University, 1890-91: x . Auburn Theological Seminary, 1891-933 Cornell University, A 1895-98. Member of Cornell University Library Staff, 1895-983 Librarian of Indiana University, from 1898. X I LOUISE DIAXWELL, Assistant Librarian. 0- L ' 3 A. B., Indiana University. 1878. Acting Librarian, Indiana Univer- f:,' sity, 1893-96, Assistant Librarian, from 1896. QD HELEN TRACEY GUILD, Library Cataloguer. Assistant in charge of Loan Department, Scoville Institute, Oak Park, Ill., Librarian, Hamilton Library, Fort Wayncg Cata- loguer, Manistce, Mich., Library: Catalogner, Fort Wayne Public Libraryg Cataloguer, Indiana-University, from 1899. JOHN WVILLIAM CRAVENS, Registrar. A. B., Indiana University, 1897. '1- ' Q V' G ! ULYSSES H. SMITH, Assistant to Registrar. 7 - A. B., Indiana University,1893. 6 W EDWARD ERNEST RUBY, Assistant to Registrar. A. B., Indiana University, 1897. n LUCIUS BIATLAC -HIATT, Director of Music. A. B., Wheator College, 1890g Baritone of Schubert Quartette, 1898-993 Musical Director, Indiana University, from 1899. 43 THE WINTER CAMPUS K awww, ..X QUE N' 4 S BUG amd Pi Founded at Miama. University, July 4, 1839 Pi Zbapter Established 1845 Colors, Pink and Blue CHAPTER ROLL CHARLES MAHLON NIEZER, '99 HERBERT VALODIN BARBOUR, ,99 Seniors FRANK WAYNE RAY JEFFERSON DUDDLESTON BLYTHING' ALEXANDER CHAPMAN MOCALLISTER 3'l1I1lOlZ5 ROSCOE W. BARKER WIOKLIEEE PARK RAY HARRY RUSTIN DAVIDSON JOHN RANDOLPH GILLUM OZRO BERTSAC PHILLIPS RODNEY 1-IOWE BRANDON JOHN MADISON SADLER THOMAS M. WRIGHT JfI'C5l'Jl116l1 HARRY RAWLEY BATTERTON BENJAMIN DOBYNS DONNELL WILLIAM WHEAT RAGSDALE THOMAS SAMUEL HARRISON :HONVARD BRUBAKER FRANK LOGAN 46 E , nk, x 1 1 i i 1 y . 'N 2 1 1 . Pbi Delta Cbetd Founded at Miami University, 1848 llldldlld Hlpbil Established 1849 Colors, White and Blue Flower, White Carnation CHAPTER ROLL IDOBf:6l'8Dll8f65 EDXVARD E. RUBY, '97 REDICK A. WYLIE, '98 Seniors WILLIAM M. ALSOP JAMES S. DODGE LENPHA A. FOLSOM JAMES C. PATTEN WILLIALI F. BOOK . Suniors CHARLES M. DICKEY HARRY S. DIOKEY FRANK H. NIASTERS WILLIAM G. ROGERS. SODDOITIOIIZ CLARENCE H. KENNEDY 1fI.'68bITl6l1 CLYDE E. BOYER GUY W. MITCHELL ERNEST F. GRIFFITH GEORGE E. SHAXV J. GUY HOOVER ERNEST E. STRANGE A JOHN R. MCGINNIS JOHN A. TREHER LAURENCE K. TULEY ARTHUR C. MELLETTE 48 I I ? X 5, Q- M V .2 A R, L w x L -'J-A ,. ,, V. . xl, I 1 f . ' if ff? 1? Sigma bi Founded at Miami University, 1855 llnmbdd Zbdvtel' Established September 30, 1858 Colors, Blue and Gold Flower, White Rose CHAPTER ROLL IDOBI 6l'8Ull8f6 MORTON, CLARK BRADLEY, '99 5Clll0l'5 JUSTUS COLLINS CASTLEMAN JOSIAH HAMILTON CASTLEMAN EDWARD ERNEST MCNIILLEN ROBERT SHELBY MOORE 3' ll l1f0 F5 FRED HENRY BATMAN EDYVARD WOLEE DAVIS ALBERT JACOB FELTON MAX CHARLES HAXVLEY FRED BATES JOHNSON DUDLEY O,DELL MCGOVNEY SODDOIUOYZS CHESTER ARTHUR BATCHELOR THEODORE RICHARDSON REED EVERARD NOLAN WHETSEL ilfresbmen JOHN GIPE ERNEST WARD HEADINGTON EDWARD HALE KEENEY 50' V 5, 5 i A f, I n v 1 v Phi KGDDG Psi Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, February, 1852 llldidlld Beta QDGDIQI' Established May 15, 1869 Colors, Pink and Lavender CHAPTER ROLL lD05fs6t80ll8T6 THOMAS EDWARD BRACKEN, QLawJ 5CI1lOI'5 BLANCHARD JACKSON IHORNE fLawj OLIVER CURTIS MARTIN ROY OAKLEY PIKE CLIIWJ WARNER ANTHONY Ross QLaw5 CORNELIUS MARCELLUS SMITH CLILW lVIAR1'ON L. SPITLER fLawl Suniors - CHARLES LEWIS BIEDERNVOLF CLaWJ BURCHARD HAYES ROARII MARC RYAN CLawl WALTER SHIRTS fLawJ WINNIE ALLEN SUTPHIN WILLIABI EDXVARD SHOWERS Sopbomores , V FRED BECK WALTER PIENSHAW CRIM LEONIDAS LOCKE BRACKEN NVADE HAMPTON FREE if YCBDIUCI1 CHAUNCEY WARRING DOWDEN JAMES BUREN HIGGINS MARTIN J. GRIEEITH JAMES EVEIITT SMITH IDICDQCD IIDCI1 PHILLII' HILL NATHANIEL HILL RALPH A. PIKE 52 5 I,- I W E l 1 X w 1 W I I v I l I I I i N f x Y - QMQ? Pbl Gamma Delta Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848 ZQFG QIMDTQI' Established 1872 Color, Royal Purple Flower, Heliotrope CHAPTER Seniors ROLL JOHN WALTER LAIRD ROBERT ELAN MARTIN Suniorz ARTHUR GAREIELD ALLEN CLAUDIUS HERBERT MARSHALL ELIIIER EUGENE SCOTT FREDERIO WARD STEVENS WILL CARLTON SPARKS HANS OTTO STECHAN SODDOWOITCS DAVID ELMER Fox JOHN EDWARD HAHN CHALES O. LEMON WILL STEENROD IICMASTER HARRY HELM ORR HARRY GORDON SPARKS ifresbmen I'IOMER ELBERT COTTON DELANEY R. DODD WILL THOMAS ZHAYMOND J OSEI-H DANIEL HEITGER 54 JOHN FOSTER MOMILLAN JAMES GARFIELD ORR Q QI!! i'fl'N Y N lv. .gli QQ ATA ! ,WIFI '-I DQII3 Cdl! Delta Founded at Bethany College, Jamlary 1, 1860 Beta Hlpbd Qbdpfel' Established 1887 Colors, Royal Purple, Old Gold and White Flower, Pansy CHAPTER ROLL IDO6f:6L'8Ull8fC5 DANIEL AUGUSTUS WASMUTH, '99 CARL YAPLE 56 I1 f 0 I' 6 LUTHER BENSON CLawQ GEORGE DANIEL I'IEl'LMAN fLaw5 OTTO FLOYD ROGERS 3uniOr IRVIN LORENZO GRIMES Sopbomores FRANK MONROW GIXYAN NAIN DELF HCAMILTON CHARLES NIUTSCHLER VVILLIAM ALEXANDER PATTON 1fl'65bm6l1 EDWARD BENSON SCOTT BRITTON ARTHUR BYRON COOK JOHN J. MORRISON FOX CHARLES HOMER McKEE E 56 WILLIAM A. PARKER SIDNEY LEE SCHWARTZ .ff XZ l i, A Nz. .IVJ fi IN ff ir KRW if Sigma Du Founded at Virginia Military Institute, January 5, 1S69' Beta Eta Qbapter I Established April 14, 1892 Colors, Black, White and Old Gold CHAPTER ROLL SZIUOPS FRANK AYDELOTTE ROBERT SPURRIER ELLISON CLARENCE ELMER FRYER GEORGE WILLIAIWI CURTIS 5l1l1lOf5 OSCAR EDWARD BLAND QLawJ ARTHUR LEROY MURRAY SODDOHIOFEB ROBERT YVALLACE COFFEY J ESSE DORMAN HARRY VIRGIL NEXVTON IIOXVARD HERR 1ffC5l3lTl6Il CLYDE FLOYD DRIESRAOK CLARENCE DUDLEY RIDDELL JOHN I'IILL JOHNSON CLAUDE I1ENDERSON 58 to W ,,,,-h,,,.Y,1A-, Y Mfulw - vi Q M i .l.- A 2593 liavva Sigma Founded at University of Virginia, 1867 Beta Chad Zbdptel' Established 1900 Colors, Old Gold, Maroon and Peacock Blue Flower, Lily of the Valley CHAPTER ROLL 5El1l0I'5 CHARLES BRONSON MCLINN SAMUEL OSCAR WRIGHT Liuniors ALFRED ELIHU JONES GEORGE ARTHUR MATLACK MELVILLE M:ONROE Woon QODDOITIOFGS THOMAS WILEY KINSEY HARLEY FRANKLIN HARDIN Jfl'Z5l9l116l1 ROY EVERETT RONDEBUSI-I HERMAN CALL RUNYAN BLOOMER ELLIS MEYERS BERNARD CLYDE CRAIG 60 ATL VT, 5 z- sd-AV -1-,L , . A A, 1 I Che Skullsmdllpba DQIIG Sigma Founded at Indiana, University, February 22, 1893 Colors, Black and Blue Flower, American Beauty Rose ROLL OF MEMBERS FRANK WAYNE RAY, B 9 II. JEFFERSON DUDDLESTON BLYTHING., B 9 II. JAMES SAYRE DODGE, 111 A 9. HARRY ALLEN AXTELL, E X. MoRToN CLARK BRADLEY, E X. FREDRIC WARDE STEVENS, fin I' A. VVILLIAM STEENROD MCMASTER, 412 I' A. GEORGE WVILLIAM CURTIS, E N. CLARENCE DUDLEY RIDDELL, E N. CLYDE FLOYD DRIESBACK, E N. FRA 62 f--W --- Y-A -M ---- ---'- - NK MONROWV GIVAN, A T A. ARTHUR BYRON Coox, A T A. VY ,,,., , 771. .vp ,Tw---,, W! Phi DQIIG Pbi QLRW Fraternityj Founded at University of Michigan, 1867 'foster Zbapter Established January 25, 1900 Colors, Garnet and Blue. Total Membersliip, 4,816 CHAPTER ROLL 1ReslOznt Zllumni LAVVRENCE VAN BUSKIRK HZERBERT VALODIN BARBOUR CLAUDE GUTHRIE M ALOTT 56I1lOl'5 CHARLES MAHLON NIEZER CORNELIUS MARCELLUS SMITH DANIEL AUGUSTUS WASMUTI-I BLANCHARD JACKSON HORNE MARC RYAN VVARNER ANTHONY Ross GEORGE DANIEL HEILDIAN DIIARION L. SPITLER DAVID NICKINNEY LIAMMAT ROY OAKLEY PIKE FRANK WAYNE RAY OLIVER CROMWELL BLACK Suniors WALTER SHIRTS CHARLES LEWIS BIEDERNVOLF BENJAMIN FRANKLIN LONG WICKLIFFE PARK RAY 64 I 1 i N N 1 i 1 w A r? A N ' Y hd' .fi .. X RGDDG Hlpbd chad Founded at DePauw, January 27, 1870 Beta QDGDIQI' Established May 18, 1870 Colors, Black and Gold Flower, the Pansy 56l1fOI'6 MARIE LOUISE BOISEN EDITH CATHARINE HOI.LAND VIRGINIA EMILY CLAYBAUGH MARY JOHNSTON EMMA AGNES CLINTON , LETTIE ALINIIRA IWILLER DAISIBEL HENDRIX SELMA ANNA STEMPEL 3'lllll0l'5 Lors ALTA BRUNT JESSIE RICHARDS SIMMONS SYLVIA Cox MARY EMDIA WEIR BESSIE HENDRIX BEATRICE WILLIAMS STELLA DAISY MARSHALL LAURA ARNOTT WOODBURN SODDOIIIOFC CAROLINE FORKNER , ilfresbmen MARGARET LOVIA ALLEN BERTHA ORR :NIETELLA DRULY CLARA LOUISE ROELKER EMMA HONNEUS BONNIE ALIGN SIIINK HELENA WASHBURN 66 1 V 1 w r i 1 i i 5 Y E w I , I ! s 1 1 4- 1 N Ii Q , V Ek W i 5 V il if -my Kappa Kappa Gamma Founded at Monmouth, October 13, 1870 Delta Ghapter Established October 12, 1872 Colors, Light and Dark Blue Flowers, Fleur de Lis CHAPTER ROLL Seniors MARY MEEK LOUISE LOUGHRY MATTIE BASHABEE LACY 3111110125 NANCY FRANKLIN Cox MARY CATHERINE LYNE ELIZABETH WILSON OLIVE MARY DAILY Sopbomoree EDNA BRONVNING BARTLETT HARRYE BOYNTON BRANHAM LILLIAN GILLETTE LENA TRIPLETT CARRIE EGNOR CLARA VIERLING 1f1.'65l'Jl116Il PEARL FISHER CLARA DAVIS NIILLICENT Coss HELEN DAVIS VESTA TRIPLETT MARGARET BURNSIDE MADELINE NORTON 68 MARGARET DRINKUT MARY MCPHEETERS, T W l 'I I W N u Q Vial -: :Q 'V maj Pi Bm Phi Founded at Monmouth, April, 1867 Beta Zbapter Established April 13, 1893 Colors, Wine and Silver Blue Flower, Carnation CHAPTER, ROLL I Seniors ELEANCR PROTSMAN HELEN SHIRK EDNA STEWART SADIE LEOPOLD LAURA BRADLEY HELEN TRAYLOR 3unior5 ANNA CRAVENS HARRIET HAAS GRACE GRIFFITH BERTHA LINGLE MAEEL BEYCE GEETEIUJE IIARBISON EODDOITIOYCB OLIVE TEAYLOR ALICE HOWE ELEANOR HARMON MARY MILTIER ilfrefsbmen ETHEL TEIPPETT AVA HABIMERSLEY HELEN TRACEY GUILD GRACE AIIDRICH 70 1 E K, I 4 ' X 1, E Q u il If 1 A f 41 l yu M 'Wa .-1 ,. Delta Gamma Founded at University of Mississippi, 1872 theta Qbapter Established December 10, 1898 Colors, Bronze, Pihk and Blue Flower, White Rose CHAPTER ROLL 5Cl1i0f5 NELLIE BLANCHE PERIGO EDITH LYLE MARTIN CLARA SNYDER HELENA GRACE SHIRLEY 3unlot5 I'IELEN POSEY ICATIE MARIE OPPERMAN QODDOYIIOIZZ5 VERNA BASIL DARBY RUTH HANNAH PAULL :lfresbmen ALPHA GREEN ' DELPHA ROBINSON J OSEPHINE ABEI4 MAUD BOWSEE 72 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 , x 41- -xxx 7 v3 lb idly finkgw I lxihjx cf ,QM 53 1' 3 4 f N, . 5 2 ri f wig! W1 W 7 .f r w ' 1 , A QM? K fx D . Fx N ' tx -EPZ' Q? Q19 Q52 I ul 'A was A27 :HA W 57B,J ' :E LSL' ' W f W mm 111C1QlJQ11C1Q111 lliterarv Society FOUNDED NOVEMBER 14, 1885 List of mQ111bQ1'S lDost:CBtaOuates A. W. HANSON KATE MEEK 561110135 W. L. HANSON I. C. TIAMILTON ' FLORENCE E. KNIFE JESSII-: A. SMITH R. F. LOCKRIDGE 311111015 ETIIEL STRONG XV. E. HANGER R. E. NYSXVANDER C. H. DII.s SODDOHIOIIZS DAISY EAST J. W. TETER G. E. TETER A. C. HARRIS BESSIE :HAIYGER NORA SMITH DAISY I-IEATI-I LELA IQERN GRACE SMITH ELSIE SHUCKLEY E. V. SHOOKLEY JfI'C5bl116l1 MIXLIIE NORQUEST ETHEL HAYS 7 6 J. O. BATOIIELOR O. E. GRANT i 3. married olks' Klub MR. AND MRS. B. L. STEELE Ma m2lIIb4Zl'S MR. AND MRS. G. E. DERBYSHIRE MR. AND MRS. J. M. STEWART MR. AND MRS. A. J, KINNAMAN MR. AND MRS. C. L. HAUCK MR. AND MRS. R. S. TICE MR. AND MRS. RYLAND RATLIFF' MR. AND MRS. O. H. BLOSSOM MR. AND MRS. C. L. HUFFRIAN MR. AND MRS. BRAINAIRD HOOKER MR. AND MRS. ALFORD ELLABARGER MR. AND MRS. G. H. MINGLE MR. AND MRS. T. W. RECORDS MR. AND IMRS. O. B. UNNEWEHR MR. AND MRS. WEBSTER KINDER MR. AND MRS. J. E. RADCLIFF 78 ll Q, 1 L 1 i I r 2 , , V i , u 1 I ir -x u N 1 Che Lecture Board 0 President, S. O. WRIGHT Vice-President, B. J. HORNE Corresponding Secretary, O. C. MARTIN Recording Secretary, G. E. DERBYSHIRE Treasurer, XV. F. BooK Advertising Manager, R. S. ELLISON Chairman Committee on Arrangements, W. M. ALSOP U72 EQCTIIN QOIIYSQ ...l899'l900... Scalchi Concert Company, November 1, 1899 XVilliam Dean Howells, November 17, 1899 Charles W'il1iam Stubbs, December 1, 1899 Montaville Flowers, December 15, 1899 Chicago Grand Concert Company, January 24, 1900 George Kennan, February 21, 1900 Marc, March 7, 1900 Sousa, March 16, 1900 Cincinnati Concert Company, April 26, 1900 General Gordon, May 29, 1900 80 'l w. I , ,U 1. '1 1 ,a , iii Q5 .-. QE, V1 5 jg! 11 'Q ET , if Hi H 'Zi , f' W- -'f --- Y li i, Y . 31 ilu 1 . PllbliSl7illQ HSSOCidIi0ll f'5'f'9'f'? President, J. A. FOSTER Secretary, W. M. ALSOP Directors PRESIDENT SWAIN N. R. SMITH PROF. C. J. SEMBOWER O. B. PHILIPS W. F. BOOK FRANK AYDELOTTE 'ON viS.a4,. NY'- Cbe Student Board of Editors VVALTER HENSIIAW CRIM, '02 XVILLIAM ALEXANDER PATTON, '02 JEFFERSON DUDDLESTON BLYTHING, ' CORNELIUS M.LXRCELLUS SMITH, '02 MORTON CLARK BRADLEY, '99 LESTER XVINTER, '02 ARTHUR LEROY MURRAY, '01, CLAUDE GUTHRIE NIALOTT '99 Law 7 7 82 0 Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Editorial lVriter Local Editor Athletic Editor Literary Editor Special Reporter Business Manager THE STUDENT STAFF Z0:0DQl'dliVQ HSSOCWUOII Board of Directors DR. S. B. HARDING, President PRESIDENT JOSEPH SWAIN, Member ex oHicio DR. E. H. LINDLEY W. J. HUDDLE A. J. FELTON FRED JOHNSON J. H. CASTLEMAN J. S. DODGE O. C. MARTIN, Secretary Secretary-Treasurer of Association J. C. HUISBARD Assistant Secretary-Treasurer of Association J. A. FOSTER Clie junior Himual STELLA DAISY NIARSHALL, Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editors BENJAMIN FRANKLIN LONG F. W. STEVENS M. M. WOOD A. L. MURRAY ETI-IEL STRONG J. J. EARLY D. O. MCGOXVNEY, Business Manager Democratic Klub President Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Financial Secretary Treasurer Sergeant-at-Arms N. R. SMITH W. L. Ross J. G. MILLER O. P. BARROWS W. H. FREE G. W. BURKHARDT Executive Committee A. J. FELTON LESLIE C. MCCA RTY C. M. NIEZER Republican Zlub President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer T. S. GERHART H. F. HARDIN M. M. WOOD CHARLES DICKSON 84 Connis Hssociation President G. D. BTORRIS Secretary J. A. BERGSTRONI Treasurer M. C. BRADI1 I 0l'df0l'iCdl .HSSOCHUOII President B. F. LONG V ice-President WVILLIS TYLER Secretary D. O. BTCGOVNEX Treasurer H. A. W ALKER Pbvsical Klub Composed of thirty advanced students in Physics President J. M. S'rEWAR'r Secretary T. W. RECORDS 0 Zoological lllub Composed of advanced students in Zoology President, R. S. TICE 85 CIGSS of l900 Colors, Lavender and Yellow. ' YQII Rioliety Rus! Ruckety Roo! Century Class of Old I. U.! Haly Kazah! Kazuh! Kazoo! Nineteen Hundred all the way through! Ufficers President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Poet Track Cap tain W. M. ALsoP P. C. EMMONS LETTIE TNTILLER VV. F. Boori J. P. SPOONER J. H. CASTLEMAN 0 QIGSS of l90l Colors, Green and White YQ!! Heike, Yeike, Zeike, Zum! Rip! Rah! Zip! Zaw! Nineteen One!! 0ffiCQl'S President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Poet Track Manager Athletic Captain GEORGE A. lNLrrLAc1r G. H. HURLEY SYLVIA Cox M. C. HAWLEY STELLA BTARSHALL E. M. NEHER D. O. MCGOVNEY 86 , 2-5 . Glass of l902 Colors, Orange and Purple YQII Alle Goreh! Gorahl Goroo! Alle Goreh! Gorah! Goroo! Hi Yip! KiYip! President Secretary Orator Editor-in- Poet Chief Nineteen-two! 0ffiC2l'S T. XV. IQINSEY MYRTLE MITCHELL J ESSE DORMAN LESTER WINTER ELEANOR ITARMON Scrap Captain Vice-President A. M. ITIGHLEY Treasurer E. N. XVI-IETSEL Athletic Captain XV. H. CRIM Historian L. D. GAULT Baseball Manager W. A. PATTON E. B. ELFERS 0 ZIGSS of l903 Colors, Lavender and White YQII Rah! Rah! Boornl Boom! Rah! Reel In-di-a-na Nine-teen-three! 0fflC2l'S President Vice- President Secretary Treasurer Scrap Captain J. R. NICGINNIS A. B. CooK CLARA DAVIS B. D. DONNELL HONN'ARD BRURAKER 87 Senior Law Glass Colors, Purple and Cream Yell S-e-n-i-o-r, Future Members of the Berg Hickory Haw! Hickory Haw! State University, , Senior Law! 0ffiC2l'S President S. E. DILLON Vice-President G. D. HEILBIAN Secretary H. P. W HITE Treasurer C. W. PORTER Crator C. M. NIEZEE Historian E. E. NEEL 0 jumor llaw Glass President T. S. GERHART Vice-President H. F. IIARDIN Secretary REBECCA C. SWAYNE Treasurer RUPERT SIMPKINS Historian J. P. SWAYNE Orator JESSE DORMAN Judge CARL X7APLE Clerk F. E. GILKERSON Sheriff J. E. BEASLEY Deputy-Sheriff L. HENNON Prosecutor M. M. Woon Deputy-Prosecutor J. R. LJCGINNIS Bailiff VV. P. RAY 88 , 35 LTRS. MRS Che womalfs League Officers President REBECCA SWAYNE Vice-President .MIARY MEEK Secretary ELEANOR PROTSMAN Treasurer BLANCHE :KARNS Patrenesses and Representatives of 0rganizatiens KGDIM Hlpbd URW MRS. G. H. STEMPEL SELMA STEMPEL KZIDDG KEIDWI Gdmmd MRS. G. L. REINHARD MARY MEEK Pi Beta Phi MRS. J. A. MILLER ELEANOR PROTSMAN Delia Gdmmd MRS. J. A. WOODBURN XIERNA B. DARBY 1IIdQl92lld2llIl:iIQl'dl'V SOGQW TMRS. JOSEPH SWAIN FLORENCE E. IQNIPE nOll:'fl'dfQl'l1iW RQDl'QS2l1fdfiVQS LEO CHAMBERS REBECCA SWAYNE J. A. BERGSTROM . R. E. LYONS MRS. L. S. DAVIS LUCY NICHOLS MRS. F. W. TILDEN .MiYRTLE MITCHIZLL MRS. YV. L. BRYAN BLANCHE ICARNS S9 oung en's bristian Hssocianon alfa? 0fflCQl'S l900:l90l YV. E. HANGER President M. E. HAGGERTY Vice-President R. A. CHANDLER Treasurer LEsTER WINTER J. B. TARNEY A. W. HANSON Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary General Secretary sifsii' The Young Men's Christian Association at Indiana University closes the year s work grat- ified with what has been accomplished. Its members are strong men who ight the world squarely and are satisfied wi-th what is received in return for their effort. Athletes, debaters and orators, as well as the more reclusive students, have joined together in this organization that they may better sympathize with each other-that they may better live the Christian college life. Since its organization, November 4, 1891, the Association has seen many changes in the tone of the student life at the University. One very noticeable change has been the return of the student body to a conservative attitude towards religion. In those earlier days evolution was striking its most destructive blows at Christianity, and the general feeling of ,the student was that of scepticism. But as the dust has cleared away the evolutionist in biology has recognized a brother evolutionist in the student of the Christianity of the folk, and both unite in saying that the fundamental principles given to the world by Christ are the only true guide to the best life. NVith this change in thought in the student body there has come a change in the methods of the Association work. For some time after its organization little attention was given to any work except that of holding religious meetings. This is still considered one of the most im- portant parts of the Association's work but much emphasis is also now placed upon the Bible Study, Missionary, Social, Reading Room, New Student, Employment, Hand-book, Student Directory, and many other of what were once considered unimportant departments. A carefully outlined fourfyears course in Bible Study has been followed by more than one hundred and fifty men this year. Dr. Bryan stands at the head of this in an advisory relation, So thoroughly efficient has been the work at Indiana that associations from the institutions of Minnesota, Illinois, Chicago and others have personally interviewed the Indiana representa- tives at conferences concerning their method of conducting this department, The Missionary Department contributes regularly to the support of V. W. Helm who visited the Association during the Fall Term, and who is now the National Secretary of the City Young Men's Christian 90 Association work in japan. The Social Committee has held three men's socials attended by over five hundred men. Through the instrumentality of the employment bureau a number of men have been assisted in securing work, thereby making their college course possible. The Finance Com- mittee has raised the local budget of seve11 hundred and thirteen dollars and a part of next year's budget has already been pledged. For special ser- vices were secured Mr. H. W. Rose, In- ternational Secretary of the College De- partment, for a three days' visit dur- ing the winter term, and Mr. F. B. Smith, also an International Secre- tary, for an evangelistic address at the opening of the spring term. In order to properly supervise all of this Work it was found necessary last year to secure some one who A. YVAYNE HANSON would devote his entire time to the association. Accordingly the Faculty and Alumni, co-operating with the State and International Committees, raised a Secretarial fund and A. YV. Hanson, who had been president of the association for the past two years, was chosen General Secretary. The efficient work of the association during the past year proves the Secre- taryship to be indispensable. Mr. I-Ianson's excellent work here has caused him to be called to the Secretaryship of the college work of the State. 'We regret very much to accept his resignation, for it is largely due to his efforts that the Association at Indiana has grown from the ranks ofthe weak associations of the State to one of the strongest among the colleges of the West. ' I An Advisory Board, consisting of two members of the Faculty, three Alumni, one business man and one student has been chosen. They will select the General Secretary and stand in an advisory relation to the Association. They are already enthusiastic over the work for next year, having made plans for the raising of the Secretarial Fund and the construction of a large association house. This hearty co-operation from the Faculty and Alumni portends much greater usefulness for the Association during the coming year than in the past. 91 6U8Dll8f6 5tl1U6l1f5 Young lllomews Gbristian Hssociation wfftcers for 1900 President-SYLVIA COX Corresponding SQC1'6t2l-Pj'-IROXAN.-X JOHNSON Vice-P1'e-side-11t-SARA H.-ANNA Recording Secretary-VERNA DARBY TI'92'l-Slll'P1'-EVA HURST Q ' HE Young Women's Christian Association of Indiana University is but ' one of the similar organizations existing in many of the colleges and cities Of the world. The object of such organization is the development of Christian character in its members and the prosecution of active Christian work. Membership is open to all Women, and an urgent invitation is extended to every young Woman to put herself on record as being in sympathy with the Work, and to exert an iniluence for good among her associates. Devotional services are held on Wednesday evening and Sunday afternoon. Classes are organized in which systematic study of the Bible is made. This year classes are studying the lives of Christ and Paul. At the beginning of each term a social is given for the benefit of the new students, and during the term efforts are made to create a social atmosphere for all the young Women. 35.15 :MARGARET PORCH LYDIA lVHITAKER J ENNIE SCOTT HEIIEN ROSE NELLIE PERIGO DOTTIE DAMAND ETIIEL STRONG ANNA lYARD REBECCA SWAYNE NIARIE OPPERMAN LAURA WOOIJRIIRN NELLIE BIORRIS .TENNIE PUGI-I GERTRUDE HARRISON LELA KERN HELEN BATOHELOR ALPHA GREENE YIOLA DAVIS HELEN POSEY DIARY HARRAH IIAY ROSE BIARY IIAINES BERTHA KILLEN ETI-IEL HAYS LIZZIE JANEXVAY JUNE DEMING LYIIIA NEWSOME MYRTLE CLARKE KATHERINE INIEEK 56l'lfOl'8 ELIZABETH WILSON GRACE SHIRLEY VIRGINIA CLAYBAUGH LAURA BRADLEY 3'l1I1f0I'5 LYDIA GEMHER DAISY LOWIJER SARA HANNA l1ANNAI'I COX ESTORIA DUNHAH JESSIE RITTER ELIZABETH BEATY BIAYME lVILLARD Sopbomorea BESSIE HJKNGER LEO CHAMBERS BIYRTLE RIITCHELL GRACE SMITH ELEANOR I-IARIION VERNA DARBY ifresbmen HELEN FULTZ CLARA ROELRER TELLA DRULEY BIAUDE BOXVSER FRANCES JOHNSON ESTELLA LEAS 92 BIAUDE PLUNKETT EDITH IIARTIN BLANCI-I NICHOLSON BLANCH IQARNS ALICE BECRWITII BIABEL BONSALL GRACE POTE SYLVIA COX STELLA DIARSHALL ZORA MILLER BIABEL BRYCE lNIAE CUNNINGI-IAM BERTHA STOCKINGER RIAY I-IURST HIXRIIIET REED ELLEN NEW ROXIKNA JOHNSON ALICE HOWE ERSIE RAILSIAAER LUCY ITIESSLER CARRIE RUPEL HEIIEN GUILD VIDA NEWSOIIE DIARY WILLIAMSON mllSiCdl 0l'QdlliZdli0llS L. M. HIATT, Musxcal D1rector. ' 93 ll ' lll lllllli- ll' F ' will llllll lie' I' ' ll l I Wall!!! -W----ill , , ID llll lllllllllll .Ill ll? A j j i ll mlllll nv 'l ii mlllwf X Il lllll u llmllmll lf ,ulllllff n, 4 X Hmm an it li l President J. D. BLYTHING Secretary E. W. DAVIS Treasurer J. G. COLLICOTT Manager T. E BRACKEN L. M. HIATT Director Glee Klub FIRST TENOR- SECOND TENOR- THOMAS EDWARD BRACKEN OLIVER CURTIS MARTIN EDWARD AVOLFE DAVIS XVILLIAM FREDERICK BOOK PURLEY CLARENCE EMMONS SIDNEY LEE SCIIWARTZ IIERMAN AMES COMPTON LUCIUS IIATLAC 11IA'l'T FIRST BASS- SECOND BASS- LEONTDAS LOCKE BRA-CKEN JEFFERSON DUDDLEF-TON BLVTIVIING BLANCIIARD JACKSON HORNE HoIlIER ELRERT COTTON YV.-XRNER ANTHONY ROSS CIIAUNCEY XVARRING DOIVDEN RUPERT RAYMOND SIMRKINS JACOB GRANT CoI.I,IcOTT FIRST BIANDOLIN- J. D. BLYTIIING S. L. SCIIWARTZ mandolin Club L. M. HIATT Leader ' SECOND MANDOLIN- B. J. LIORNE W. A. ROSS GUITAR- C. W. DOWDEN W. F. Boon O. C. DIARTIN KAI.0-:HARP- CLARIONET- FLUTE AND PICCOLO- VIoI.INcEI.l,O- J. W. BICCRACKEN R. R. SIMPKINS L. M. IIIAT1' H. E. COTTON Quartette FIRST TENOR- SECOND TENOR- FIRST BASS- SECOND BASS-. T. E. BR,-XCKEN O. C. Ml-XRTIN L. L. BRACKEN J. D. BLYTIIING Dbllblt Qlldrtette FIRST TENOR- SECOND TENOR- FIRST BASS- SECOND BASS T. E. BRACKEN 0. C. DIARTIN L. L. BRACKEN J. D. BLYTIVIING P. C. EMMONS E. W. DAVIS L. M. HIIXTT J. G. CoI,r,IcOTT ,. Special Hrtists READING AND AVIIISTIIING SOLOISTS- TYSNOR- PIANIST- J. W. BICCRACKEN December 15, Paoli December 22, Shelbyville December 23, Suinniitville December December 26, Marion December March 26, Bloomfield March 27, Carlisle Mu-rch 28, Princeton M arch March 29, Mt. Vernon 30, New Albany T. E. BRACKE A Zbristmas four Dcceinber 27, Elwood DQXCGIIIDCI' 28, Montpelier Decenilier 29, Portland 25, Hztrtford City Decelnber 30, Albany Jnnulmry 1, Bluffton 26, Red Key, Matinee Jzuiuztry 2, Ashley Spring tour March 30, Jeffersonville, Matinee Inclizrnu. Refornnrtory March 31, North Vernon April 2, Madison April 3, Carrolton 94 N H. E. COTTON Jniillary 3, Ligonier Jmiuzrry 4, Goshen .l7.Llll1iLl'y 5, Ju.nuu,ry 5, CtLl'lflliLg9, Matinee Knightstown Jzmuztry 6, CzL111bI'iclge City Januumy 12, Bloomington April 4, Vevny! April 5, Anrorzr April 6, Brookville April 6, lHJ.Ll'l'lS011, Ohio, Matinee April 7, Lltivrenceburg if J. UIliVQl'SiW 0l'CbQSfl'd O mdllCi0lill D. BLYTHING HOWARD BRUBAKER R. W. COFFEY H. R. DAVIDSON B. H. ROARK W. A. Ross S. L. SCHWARTZ CHARLES SOUDER Glliidl' FRANK AYDELOTTE W. F. BOOK H. A. COMPTON C. W. DOWDEN CURTIS MARTIN O. R. SHIELDS 'flute A L. M. HIATT C. P. CLARK J. R. GILLUM Clarinet 'Gello R. R. SIMPKINS H. F. IIARDIN BGIIIO Kdl0:Bdl'D FRANK LOGAN J. W. MCCRACKEN 96' X 1 1 K ? x 1 , 1 A H 5. fi 1 1 W w 1 I P 1 L 1 1 I 1 41 N 3 4 3 1, , 1. 1 , 1 r 1 N ,, ,, , l i , Ulli0Ql'SilV Bdlld 9? W. R. HARDRIAN, President H. S. DICKEY. Business Manager L. M.. HIATT, Leader 9? L. M. HIATT, Solo Cornet J. A. FOSTER, Solo Clarinet G. E. MOWRER, lst Bb Clarinet R. R. SIMPKINS, 2d Bb Clarinet H. J. BLUE, Sd Bb Clarinet ALBERT FIELDS, Eb Clarinet C. P. CLARK, Piccolo FRANK LOGAN, Solo Cornet OLNEY PATTERSON, 2d Bb Cornet H. S. DICKEY, Solo Alto O. O. EMMONS, Solo Cornet J. H. VYAN HOOK, lst Bb Cornet J. W. MCCRACICEN, lst Alto O. D. MELLON, 2d Alto ED. HARROLD, Tenor F. N. DUNCAN, Baritone W. R. HARDMAN, Bass B. D. DORRELL, Bass 98 JOHN FOX, Tenor Drum J. R. GILLAM, Bass Drum I . I I I I I 1 - :I I QI I fm I I I I I I 31 Z! '1 5 'I I ,I ,I 'I I I 2 5 I E .4 I 'I , I I . I II, Che womarfs Glee Klub 9391 President NELLIE PERIGO Secretary HARRIETT REID Treasurer LYDIA NEWSOM Director L. M. IJCIATT if 'Fil'Sf SOPYGIIO SQCOIIG SOPl'dl10 NELLIE PERIGO CAROLINE MENICE HELENA SHIRLEY EFFINE BLOUNT SARAH SCOTT BERTHA LINGLE CLARA ROELKER MYRTLE CLARKE SADIE LEOPOLD BERTHA ICILLEN 'fil'Sf HUG SQCOIIG HUG ESSIE RAILSRACK DIYRTLE MI'FCI-IETJL LYDIA DTEWSOM RUTIAI PAULL BLANCHE NICHOLSON IIARRIETT REID VIDA NEWSOM 100 1 1 4 . 1 . 1 . E. W , Y 3, 5 J J1 i ' P5 - 'If' xtxrs x f p s- llgxx HR? 5 ,V- , xv rf COACH HORNE Center ......,.. Right Guzud. Left Guarrd... Right Tackle Left Tackle... Right End .... iioot Ball Manager - - H. T. STEPHENSON Assistant Manager YV. P. RAY ' - f J. H. HORNE I K. L. BROOKS Captain - CLARK HUBBARD Coaches Che '99 team Left End .......,.... Quamtei' Back ..... RightHn1f Left Half ....... Full Buick ..... Substitutes the '99 Schedule October 7 ............ R. P. I. VS. Indizmzt, atB1ooinington ....... October li. October 23. Illinois VS.Illdill1l1iIi, :Lb Cl1n,1npa,ign ............... Notre Diune vs. India.nz1,, at South Bend ..... .. October QS.. .......... Vzuiderhilt vs. Illdimizi, nt Nnsliville. ...... November 4 ..... .......Cincinnn,ti VS.Il1diZLl1iL,2Lt B100l11il1gtOll November 11, November 18. November 29. Pauw vs. Iiidizum., at Bloomington... ...........No1'thweste1'n vs. Indiana, at Evzinston......11- 6 ...........PL'l1'd'L'l6 vs. Indiana, at LaFayette.................. 5 Points scored-Opponents 33, Indiana. 133. 104 C.i1f'r,i1N Huisnnim H URLEY RAY ......PIKE DAVIDSON JOHNSON ......NIEzmz AYEDELOTTE IYICGOVNEY FOSTER TIMER , ...... 1'IAXVI1EY CAPTAIN HUnB.xiz1s SMITH YIIGIILY BARBOUR ' O-16 0- 5 17- 0 U-20 0-35 0-34 lone-hztlfj -17 . -. ., ji X STATE CHAMPIONS FGSTER tQU,inTE1t-BACKU Captain of 1900 temn be Season W ,. M,..,.of'99 799 was without doubt, the best year in football that Indiana ever had. This is true not alone in tl1e sense which justifies this statement about the teams of almost every year, but in a more real and wider sense. Our victories were great and we rejoice. We won the championship of the State and we never had. it before. But above and better than all this, we have received recognition from a class of teams stronger than those over which we will win the State championship every year. At a convention held at the Chicago Beach Hotel, November goth, the Big Seven -an association for 'athletic purposes, com- posed of Minnesota, Michigan, VVisconsin, Northwest- ern, Chicago, Illinois and Purdue-was enlarged by the admission of the Universities of Indiana and Iowa, thus becoming the Big Nine. V The teams of the Big Nine rank well with the strongest teams of the East, and to meet with any of them successfully is to play a class of football which will receive recognition anywhere. But the climax of the season, from the point of interest and excitement, was the game with Purdue, Thanks- giving day. A train load of rooters were there to see the game. Everyone felt that this was the time. The INDIANA'S BACKS 106 HAWLEY QLEFT-HAI,lij Who carried the ball M8 yards in Purdue game rooters were confident that it would be the time, but as the two teams scat- tered out over Stuart field, more than one loyal Indiana man felt his breath stop a11d 11is nerves tingle as he watched the teams, tense and determined, waiting for the referee's whistle. Two false starts, when Purdue kicked out of bounds, only added to the suspense. Then the Whistle blew again and a big Indiana player kicked the ball far down in Purdue's territory. Purdue's ball. First down, rang out. Then twenty-four, sixty- seven, eighty-six, nine, a rush, a ' ' Hifi -, . -. - : -329 -, I ' 1' 1 . . N. LIZ! u -. :eta g'- 2' -.swf 252, Yi-R ' ,,2,.Qi,' -f iiH!PZu,gi1.tF 'J ' '-32' 'V i 1' I . V X I 1 .-ww! V . I 1, 1 - , . 4- 1 gf lizgw-l?' 5..3I, X ' I FHEMQ iw -.ilk-3: ff , inf f P-3 , 5,-Vg Q- ax , 1 ...e Xl x tx, - - 3. , V..,.1V-f..pcd,, I 5 .1 1.1 f -, ., 7, V-21 ,y 4,3-..,Q:,'g .. ,,..,p,,:g., V like K f sfv fw gui.: 1' .,-f,:g? +fs a '- V .r z , -, - . i ,K , ta,-V , Y - , - .1 L...,g1--1,-,,s,,g J.,-,Vf f,, ,H,1.. '. ' ii 3 X lift .'Vf 2iV I fZ',.u'4l.'w'V-vs- o f? 'i'-w4sk: z-,f -Q. '-V .- L- ' . 1' , V-Juv' 5 U, . -v 'io 'I W, 44f a-'Fm.-wQf:,-, ':'- 1 . tk 188 4 ,, gf Q, ,Ie ale, f 1' - ,lv , 1..f- V' r 1 - ,rs-,XJMV ,rl-.W '- I I V v 4- ,kg ., lf, - . 24 4 I - . 1,,.e2.,V:-!:4,s.a9f1 V.. .. 1 123, 2 1 ' ,-11 'if .--9 1 -v 'r 1 -4 if l1P1:541aVqc-tiff? U,-1 . - V ,JgifigvfSsZi'f3:s4-ziyfggfiIzfegggivmfa' ' 45 22, -V y Q, A .1V.V.-e!mv'aT1.f5.fiqf2,pw-'-1 ' f an154512:-z-l.1,' 11' A 2 .Q V I gzigfzff:-r-.,:1,51yqv'V ' . rs. 1 y1i,,,,,3:Q,, Ext, l,.mV-ff,-V--W,,.,V--HV ' . w 1 1 ':f'. ..'-.-:vVPa- SA' . ,.-- :V -- w ' nimd. bf Wirtfzl 325:-!!.V. - . -- 1 75' ?2'F 'fJ1-19'..V,1I'if,,!'? 'mi-.J - ' f AV fdrlhl HUA' ,lg -1-af.-. -,-1-vrvvtvfh-.JI-3111952nbliifl' 'f-1 - -an-Qgfif .Ir 12. -,-9'-'.g,,, 'Final-1115-5 431594-' -Eiga vy7af?1if'5'i-'KV .,. - i!th33T1V:I,1:-.iw:a,iC1,:,'.,f,-palm.-N. v:-wif!!-':z1gg?mf2.4'.,..1 i ,sfwz-Ptn..-5.f-,-151 fi-I-J V'w.V!1!.:Vef.f , 1 'rf-'!-MFE:-2f ,.,'1 -- wlwfifw tew, .- . V, . .V V .--V V , .' -.e - ., - . A a-.V V1 ,- V, ,. Vw! ,YL-I.1x' .V ,.- J. 1 1 54.1341 .5501 1 F' JL, 1. JV ', V'v,w7-Yi'-4-1' 'Fl - 'X - -,'g,g',--wiv.i,.j,lZ-,L 5-ffgvfs-21 I ' ' ' 'f' ' ' ' ' ' ' I -.e-q,.'-,fggQV,'e!fV. Y- -'qi Q-5pfm1'. 11.1, ,C Zi i Sf. , ,, ' V. W ! ,fn :IJ-'-1-5 -hefmffg . 1,1 i In I ',, ' ' wc-.. to i',,'Zi:ZV.:i 1:.:.iZi?,' , H A I wa. - QQ, 41,33-F, -ag 1 ,553 x- - ,fy f-,gi-:Lf . . 34,1 - c- '- , fai-11 141-2' '-B225 4 f'Z.:1Vf3- fx -:gm V wa ' at 2.2-44 4 Nfmcfiifeillffla E , 61 2 ,A IS PFA- 42551.-I. !Y. 'l 'i 'af-. :Vins u MPST. Q 545 15 I, - .far 4, ,. , af- - '- v' 41' - ' '- ' '- 1 - - .:1' ff .V'..9.b.- ' T- . '1!73f't-'.. ' ,. in?-ef7.ZZ1 'fi'slffi:zZ','ZfiVE1!5521?3'--' ' 'Vw 1-vt.:. g 4f.! ' VV - we-I.-f5ff:f, '1Vlfs:,1.vf.zV.-,fwfam-m.V,a.-was-1' ..,.-, ' .9--4 4 -A-1-, V ww I V -- sf ,ur Ar: M---,i.-My 4.1! . 1-,z-a,.!:.':f,V:-.5-fra, fel, g.- A.--I-.+,4.'1 ' FIRST DOWNF- CINCINNATI GAME fumble, a quick scramble, and Indiana's balll' caused a shout from the side lines, Smash ! smash! smash! went Indiana against the opposing line and tackles. Fast, hard and all together, right down the field, yard after yard, and, in three minutes, over the goal line. Indiana Rah ! Indiana Rah ! Rah l Gloriana! Indiana! Rah ! l' yelled the rooters. The team drew a long breath and walked back to their places and then turned around and did it again and again. A blocked punt gave Purdue a chance for a suc- cessful place-kick and that was all they scored. When the Indiana crowd, wild with joy, car- ried their victori- ous leam off the field, the State championship was Purdue's no longer. Seventeen to five, the score was de- cisive, they long- looked-for victory was ours and ours completely. A The game was hard and THE BETA TEAM worth the winning. 107 BASE I3 LL PIKE, Captziiii IMERRELL, Catcher PORTER, Pitcher Miinagers-J. H. HORNE, M. C. BIRADLEY Captain-ROY O. PIKE CQEIIII Catchers-MERRELL, FIELDS Pitchers-PORTER, BRACKEN, MILLER, HANNON First-ALSOP Secon d-SHAW Third-HoovEE Short-CAPT. PIKE Left Field-SUTPI-IIN Center Field-BRACKEN Right Field-J. H. CASTLEMAN April 6-Alumni at Bloomington April 7-Alumni at Bloomington April 14-lvlichigan at Bloomington April Q5-Louisville H. S, at Louisville April 26-Louisville H. S. at Louisville April 27-Center College at Danville, Ky. May 1-Notre Dame at Bloomington May 5-R. P. T. at Bloomington Schedule for woo May 8-9-Cincinnati at Bloomington May 12-Purdue at Lafayette May 15 May 17 -Butler at Bloomington -Nebraska at Bloomington May 24-Butler at Irvington May 25 -Notre Dame at Notre Dame May 26-R. P. T. at Terre Haute June 2- 108 Purdue at Bloomington ,,,,,,. -11 ,, ,. , ,.,7.-..-.... i I 1 llldidlld' Bas Ball SQGSOII ff 'fbgfi-Qi 2.3.35 K W. L- T, , rf Hp,- X 4 ' 1 .3-s 'Alf . , '- ' L- 'bi .N '- '. ' .' .' . gr. . - ,f 'fzwvar fl ,KY ,V At' .f ,z P 1 V -4 -'-T' .11 ' 'Zi-'f' pi: 'v 'f':!1f X' ', l aw-L LQ: 'i- ji ' 'fA 11,-'frail 3'fl: 7': qi 'f l V N- ' Q -. 1 ,,- 'Q-msgs, ,v '4 X. il ' 1 4 X W kr- AZ: ,zzff 'iiwtsf 'fi wwe .1 any ,fame W at-W. nm w -n,:Mf. : - , , i, 45,1 lg x ., 2- f - gn ' I ,4 - 1- Q-Z141415' f f' -' a- ' -'vi tareftisaf , fill: ff 0 Y , V -' V News .- ' it HE outlook for the base ball season at Indimm University, at the time the ARBUTUS goes to press, is very promising. Several of last year's team are playing their old positions, and the new inzrterial, of which there is an ztbuiichrnce, is showing up well in practice. Porter and Merrill, Indianzt's crack battery, are both in school, :ind are again playillg that excellent article of ball, which lust yezrr'1na.dc them the terror of our rivztls. The schedule for the season is 21.11 unusually long and liuvrd one. lrlzrny of the best teams of the West are to he met, and if Indiauzl. wins hztlf the games, the tetun will have lnztde rr record to be proud of. Two trips will be taken by the team. The first. into Kentucky, where four games are scheduled,z1nd the other at northern trip, on which Purdue, Butler, Notre Dzune and Rose Polytechnic are to he contested with for the State championship. ' DR. SWAIN AT THE BAT 110 I 1-- rack and Field Htbleiics at Indiana University HE progress made in track and field athletics at Indiana University, during the last two years, has excited much favorable comment b th CAPTAIN N1-:HER at home and among rival institutions. In fact, our growth in this branch of College athletics has been nothing short of remarkable. Three years ago a track team was scarcely dreamed of at I. U. To-day the White and Crimson is upheld by a team which acknowledges no superiors, and few, if any, equals in the State. . At the annual meet of the I. I. A. A., held at Lafayette, in May, '98, George Teer and Ora Rawlins first demonstrated the fact that Indiana University athletics properly trained and properly supported, could win their share of victories over the equally well-trained athletes of other institutions. From that time, thanks to the efficiency of Coach Horne, and the enthusiastic support of faculty and students, repeated victories have crowned the eHorts of Indiana's bare-legged contestants. I 9 -31.5131-sf'- 1: vwfej:-1 fav, ...iffy ::, . 5 , ,, , rw- if: , ' , 1,:a,f.v.a5!1c,. -:gg va... i f , . . , '- ef , - P- 'Qi--Ei. Egfr. 1 - .17 , ' , ev-. 55511: . ' ,: A :rg , -...ff ,. r an . Nz - ' 'f A - N ' ' ' , we -Him: 1 ' 'H '- ' 2 42.,- ll--iw . f-'-2 ' ' : ,. 3.:21f2?-eiiieefar-' . f -' ,gf-,Q L '5-212.-Lf?-,', K ,- ' 2, -, J-mfg,-x5,',Q.vi,,,:5f4 1 ' 1 1 fa . ' , ,ff - ., .if :mc .:-ff:gs49f.f,,,wg-'.'.,-.,.,..,,1f.. - 1 ' rv- 1 '-42:35,'f:..:1:2s '::.:t11.1:1--5.11- czX-be-..'-2-,s -4 if Q :,2:,.,.a.yiyp,-3-tr,5:rq,.e:-4.1.53 M-a..:t. ,,.,. m.s.-.Q-wa.: .f-, N . if J. H. CASTLEMAN Winner of Handicap Trophy E. B. ELFERS 111 ,..,.,.,,,... ,.,...,,, , In the spring of '98, our old rival, DePauw, was met and defeated by a score of 68 to GO. Last spring our team defeated Purdue in the duel meet held with that institution on Jordan Field, by a score of 80 to 63, While DePauw was again overwhelmed by a score of 108 to 20, her representatives' Winning only a single , A . first place out of fit- t I ' , teen events. Indianafs tearn this Q, 'i ' ,f ' I d year gives of being the K ' .,i:, lyg best in the history Of the University. Con- sistant indoor training, it , hwdiwp meets, and the annual inter-class CAPT. N1-:HER J. A. F0511-Ju meet constitute a large part of the work done, combined with the untiring energy manifested by Coach Horne and Capt. Neher have rounded the boys in fine form for the hard schedule which has been arranged for the season. ROUNDING THE Comma 112 'HWFFVQ ' fr- ET,-Q. K -V-I1-ui THE ,99 TRACK TEAM cm Dllllll mQdd0W GOH' Qlllb O INDIANA UNIVERSITY belongs the honor of having organized the first college golf club in this State. It is known as The Dunn Meadow Golf Club, taking its name from the Dunn Meadow north of the campus, on which the links have been laid out. As early as 1897 attempts were made to organize a golf club at Indiana, but there were not enough patrons of the game at that time to realize the end. Matters drifted along until one rainy morning in October of 1899, a dozen enthusiasts, most of them uninitiated in the mysteries of the game, met and suc- cessfully organized the Dunn Meadow club. A limit of fifty was originally placed on the membership and it was feared that the number might not easily be filled, but since that time the membership has been successfully increased to seventy-live. Grounds were secured at once and the links were laid out under the direc- tion of Mr. E. L. Bogart, the club's president. Nine holes varying in distance from 125 to 4oo yards constitute the course, which covers a total of 2,105 yards or something over a mile in length. Nature has provided the meadow with all sorts of obstructions so that the club was spared the trouble of making artihcial hazards. No permanent improvements have been made on the links, for it is feared that the club will not be able to play over them longer than the present season. Very few of the Dunn Meadow players have had much experience with the game but they are all applying themselves to its principles faithfully. Tradition has it that two years are necessary to develop a golfer, but that does not dis- courage the enthusiast, Let a novice Hfoozleu once and he will be willing to try again and again, until he can make a good drive. And when once he learns to send the ball away far over the green, he will want to keep on doing so for the rest of his days. Such is the irresistible charm of golhng. ON THE LINKS 114 -5- --- ?' '----'BT H 'TB' ' R 'Q ' '?'f ON THE TENNIS COURTS Connie OR a number of years tennis has been played at the University, each year with increased enthusiasm. Tournaments are held every spring :li 4-,- and intense interest is always taken in the contests. The Tennis Asso- ciation, composed of twenty members from the faculty and student body, has always had applicants waiting for vacancies in the membership to occur. Much impetus was given to the popularity of the game two years ago when six new courts were laid out on the north edge of the campus, beyond the Jordan. Although golf has to a small degree supplanted tennis as a sport, there is no doubt that it is but a temporary change and that those who have left tennis will return and be the devotees they once were. MEMBERS OF THE ASSOCIATION SANFORD BELL L. F. HUNT J. A. BERGSTROM V. F. MARSTRRS E. L. BoGART J. A. MILLER A. T. BorsRN H. B. MOORE M. G. BRADLEY G. D. MORRIS G. F. DANFORTH W. A. Rawrlns J. S. DODGE E. W. RETTGER J. B. FAUGHT M. W. SAMPSON S. B. HARDING J . R. SLONAKER - J. H. HOWARD J. A. WOODRURN 115 raxtorg Almost ten years ago Indiana's last great judges of these contests? Regardless of our orator, Dr. Frank A. Fetter won the laurels own peculiar notions let us accept their de- in the State and Inter-State contests. He mands and win out at their game. What achieved a brilliant and unrivalled success, but the decade which he opened so well has al- most gone in disap- pointed hopes. When shall come another son of Indiana to raise vic- tory from this list of defeats? Year after year earnest ability has sac- rificed itself in vain. False ideals have some- times been pursued. The pursuit of true ideals have brought fail- ure because they were not adapted to the na- ture of the contest nor in harmony with the ideals of the judges. lVe have the persever- ing ability and intelli- gence to win if we only apply them advantage- ously to the specific conditions of the problem of which the sought for answer is ni-st place. It is a ' practical problem- a mere question of fact. What kind of oratory is demanded by the ALBERT J. FELTON 99? Schedule - 1 9oo they demand is just good old-styled emo- tional, popular, elo- quent and polished ora- tory. Let us give it to them. It is compara- tively easy. Last year our representative de- livered as fine a brief lecture on Municipal Government as could well be heard. This year Mr. A. I. Felton gave a clear, logical and convincing argument. His alone of all the ora- tions would have carried weight in a deliberative assembly to mould opin- ion or change it. But Plymouth Church is not a senate chamber. Both of these orations con- tained the necessary thought and matter but they lacked elegance of form, grace of delivery and perhaps the effervescence of mere beauty for its own sake, which, however false as an ideal, seems to be demanded i11 Indiana College oratory. FEBRUARY 2.- State O1'ato1'ical at Indianapolis. DIAY 25.4 Central Oratorical at Champaign, Ill, Representative-ALBERT J. FELTON. Representative-Janus RONALD BRANSON. Subject- Boer or British-Which Should We Support T' 116 ,xwg-,.,Jq.,,h,L,,,,g.T, ,wt M - ...H ,.. 5... Q.-.Y .,.--fd g-we f essex-.E Debating W N the debate with Illinois all the spen.kers acquitted themselves with much credit, Mr. Long inziking it p:trticul:1.rly strong speech. Although Illinois sent ii cap:-1.ble team, she won only by at very nztrrow nmrgin. Iiidizmn. had no reason to be nishzunecl of her representatives. Owing to 21' inisunderstanding of the preliininn.ry correspondence on the part of E:u'llm.n1, she a.ddressed herself to proving tlmt her interpretation was the correct one, and succeeded in convincing two of the judges. Indiana. devoted herself mainly to at tuir discussion of the issue as she saw it. Both sides performed splendid fezits of iiimlcsiimiisliip without injuring each oth er, for they were uiniing in opposite directions. THE ILLIN OIS TEAM The wziy the burden of proof was juggled around in the air throughout the rebuttal was quite ltuigha-ble. It was the old gzune of blowing the feather over ti. sheet. One puff of hot air sent it flying in one direction only to be thrown buck by an opposing current. Finally all six debaters united in blowing the burden of proof 'l up to the ceiling and finishing in :Ln aside over the correspondence. It is to be hoped that the next time Em-llmm and Indimni try to collide their debating locomotives they will run them on the szune truck an d at each other. SCDQGIIIC fOl' V700 Feb1'ua.ry 9: Debate with Illinois at Bloomington. The Temn: B. F. LONG, C. W. WITTENBRAKBR, L. D. GAULT. Question: Resolved,ThzLt the Conduct of the British Government in the Present T1'Sl'llSVzlv2Ll Controversy is .l'nstiliai.ble. Ailirnmtive: Indiana.. Negative: Illinois, April 20: Debate with E!L1'lll8,IIl at Bloomington. The Team: FRANCIS EARL GILKINSON, JAMES BAMFORD BIERRIMAN, YVILLIS OLIVER TYLER. Question: Resolved, That the Regular Army of the United States Should he 11111111- titined at its Present Strength of 65,000 Men. Affirinuitivez Eawllnini. Negative: Indiana,. 117 .astffa 'db db db df! 'lv it rv Iv' ll i' db Q' 4b li as as. - - is S? nnverelty ongreee WP WP WP WP db db db db WP 'ZF WP 7? dh db db db WP av 1 wr wg NDICATIONS of an oratorical Waking up at Indiana are quite noticeable. One of them is the organization of a University Congress as a means of develop- ing public speaking. It is a representative and deliberative body organ- ized entirely on political lines. Each party is entitled to one representative for every three of its members enrolled in the University. The meetings are held every second week and have as their object the discussion of national issues and political measures. ' The first meeting for organization under the constitution was held April 30, 1900. The roll- call show 139 members present. The Republicans were con- siderably in the majority and elected oflicers as follows :- PROF. ROGERS-PFGSlClGDt of the United States Qhypotheticalj. His duties are mainly advisory and include supervision and general direction of the Welfare of the Congress. He serves one year. For the spring term 1900 and holding over to the fourth Monday of the fall term 1900- Speaker-W. A. ALEXANDER Clerk of the House-I. W. RIGCQINS Ass't Clerk of the House-Miss HARRIET REID Sergeant-at-Arms-J. M. GRIFFITI-I 118 Competitive Essay Prizes 0 HE John W1 Foster Prize for the best essay on an assigned subject in Ameri- can History and the Wm. J. Bryan Prize for the best essay on any subject in Political Science were offered for the iirst time in the spring oi 1899 and fall of 1900, respectively. The prizes are derived from the interest of funds donated to the University by the generous and noble men whose names Will be annually recalled to generation after generation of students, as of men Who not only set the lamp of inspiration for the ambitious feet trudging the path to true expression of keen and original thought, but gave material assistance as well. The John VV. Foster Prize, 3550. 00, was won in the spring oi 1899, by Dudley O. McGrovney. Subject of essay-The French Alliance of 1778. D. O. RICGOVNEY The NVm. J. Bryan Prize, 532500, was won in the fall of 1900, by Benjamin F. Long. Subject-The Separation of Powers in the Federal Government. B. F. LONG 119 Q-'Vg .':1.:.-4,-X'-,-,. :E?1l 4 . A ggi 'E A EESP L X - wx XX 55 'MSX A x Kel , Y NI Q Q ix GS' 9 1 w 1 iw 3 ,Q x 2 Q 5 SM .,.. 'X Q 3 1 Q mm? ww, s- fs' 3 z N. 1 PQQQ- i mg , gp-N .: . 3 er? 72 . , ,- .Mz?.Mf'zf- V , RX x N A , Q X X D e ' Q5 Xt 1 X X X4 X X 'EP QQ Q gi M Q :ix Q' X px Q X7 W- S B' ga 4 Q 3' Q W- es Q . .... .. 1 W Q 2 z 51:3-514' . 5-' .1 -2. G .-:X . x.5,.4,355i, ' .31 , Q' iv S f- r':r:.f,:.- , Q-1 g - 1 -1. 4' x.,,g, -,px .1-pg - :xx-rp, .lv-.Aw , . I ,, -56, '- f , A -- -'-V V. A 552411. R255 E 5. 521- Y: RQ. U V- v -4.5 M -' 5? W - 'f v :asv --,'-'Pi :' : '--wgwgp-fgcz ' -f H as 21 1 12 iw-1 f fg gf 39 71! '- I w JM f ' ' Zffmfifwgfi 4 ? 5 W 'F if 1 A VF Q. A '-5 5 A V , f X4 IN -- gm: -: 4215 V iixfw-wwf'.-x-nwqwg-fu . - , MQW fi D ' 3 :'- -. wp- sb A'-is PM Iv Saw?-'fx-2 X f-ma, gf --1, 39? .. .Q MQ 1 zg71'.v.. ' wwzf QL' s::4-fora-g,,,l. Izzifszfz, X25 ff' V. M52 ',,Z??1? 1, 3?5:. -E1.',f2'w ,Q-ci-gt--.V .- .M E 5- f v, 'gg .r -- 5-rg-.h-,'.f ,-A 'fs ill IFES WMU HQUHXSE HT Presented by Iht Students of Indiana university, january ls, woo ii THE CAST Duke, living i11 banishment MR. PATTON Frederick, his brother and usurper of his dominions MR. MCGOVNEY Aniiens, lords attending on MR. BLYTHING Jaques, the banished Duke MR. SCOTT LeBeau, a courtier attending upon Frederick MR. CRIIVI Charles, a wrestler to Frederick MR. JOHNSON Oliver . MR. UNDERNXVOOD ' sons of Sir Jaques - MR. SIEBENTHAL Orlandio, Rowland de B015 MR. AYDELOTTE Adam, servant to Oliver MR. ALEXANDER Touchstone, a clown MR. STEVENS Corin MR. CRAIG Silviuis, Shepherds MR. DRIESBACH XVilliam, a country fellow, in love with Audrey MR. RUCIQER Rosalind, daughter of the banished Duke Miss STEVENS Celia, daughter to Frederick MISS CLINTON Phebe, a shephercless Miss BRANHAIXI Audrey, a country wench MISS CRAVENS V CASTLEMAN I SIEBENTHAL Lords, Attenclants, etc. MESSRS. ?:gIEILLEN I BRITTON L BENSON Business Manager, Mr. Bradley Prompter, Miss Brunt 121 LOOKING VVEST FROM THE CAMPUS Indiana's mathematical Prodigy FWF ,, Nrvirasifrv interest was aroused about the middle of the fall term by the arrival of Arthur Grifhth. He is a boy nineteen years old, who has developed remarkable talent and genius in handling arithmetical numbers. His ability was dis- played before several classes, and then a public exhibition was made at Chapel. On this occasion he demonstrated, beyond a doubt, his great facility in making arithmet- ical calculations. The audience was as- tounded at the ease with which he added, subtracted, multiplied and divided numbers containing in some cases, as many as nine figures. And this was all without use of paper and pencil. Asked the product of 468 and 397, he replied without hesitation, 18557965 the square of 4,976 came at once as 24,76O,576, such startling performances as these brought almost unlimited laughter ARTHUR Gramm and applause from the amazed audience. Griffith is 'very sure of his results, and, on Professor Lindley' s disagreeing with one of his answers, he calmly replied, VVell, you are wrong, to the great delight of the students. ' Griffith is the son of a poor stone-cutter at Milford, Indiana. He is the first of his family, on either side, to have any unusual ability in this direction. He began to count as soon as he could talk, and later counted the grains of corn he fed to the chickens. The number for three summers was 42,173 grains. Owing to sickness he did not enter school until his tenth year. In the seven years he spent in school, his attention was given mainly to arithmetic, though he was fairly pro- ficient in his other studies. At the age of twelve he began to devise short methods of calculation, and, at the present time, has fifty for multiplication, six for division, six for addition, and one for substraction. By means of these methods he per- forms calculations with wonderful speed. 123 In multiplying two three-place numbers his average time is sixteen seconds, for four-place numbers, it is fifty-four seconds, 363x287 required twelve seconds, 54G2x3476, twenty-six seconds. The cube root of 331, 373, 888 was given in four seconds. The square root of 375, 769 required four secondsg that of 522, 729, twelve seconds, his average time for extracting the square root of six-place num- bers is fourteen seconds. He divides four-place numbers by four-place numbers in eight seconds. This power in multiplication and division results largely from his enormous command of factoring. By the time he was fifteen years old he knew the multiplication table up to 120, and has since increased his average to 130. With these tables, and other type forms which he has learned, he easily breaks large numbers up into factors which fall within the range of his quick processes, and so handles large numbers with ease and rapidity. His work is confined chieily to multiplication because he likes it better. In addition he works more slowly, but still much faster than the average person. He frequently entertains listeners by giving the day of the week on which any date falls. He spends all of his time in going over his methods and searching for new ones. He may sit for hours at a time lost in meditation over numbers In walk- ing along the street, he is so preoccupied that he does not see his friends as he passes them. On one occasion, after being awake all night in traveling, he went about his arithmetical work much as usual the next day, not caring to use daytime for sleep and rest. This constant mental work kept him from taking much exer- cise, so that his rather large body is somewhat awkward in movement, but he retains considerable strength by reason of long and sound sleep. After coming to Bloomington, a study of his powers was made by Professors Bryan and Lindley. Their work was an investigation of Griffiths physical and mental condition, of his memory and imagination, of his rapidity of calculation, and of the origin and significance of his methods. The results of this investigation will soon be published. In company with these gentlemen, Griffith attended the meetings of the Psychological Association, held at New Haven, December 27-29, 1899. While there he made an exhibition of his extraordinary ability before the leading psy- chologists of the country. There was no hesitation whatever in gaining recognition for his genius from this distinguished body, as well as from other eminent men present. After this he remained several weeks in Bloomington and then returned to his home in Milford. QW ' 124 I-is i n.....-,,... . .-.... V l,,.f.f,,.-L,-..:wf----- -4' W-Wai ,,:. ,, 3. 1.7, .LTLIQQ , Y ,, V .1-1'-gr, :,- if ,ITL 711414, vfu, -, ,, W 7- Y ,, , W , 1 X f' in .X X. N X X - . V 1, Qi? . '- x-Q f . Q -lf? fEQX3figf, 1: . .X ,xx X xfXM'j ' .pix f -- -.-X -1 A x 'CY X' 'W if ,,-. - F ,,.x iv 'J was 1 I AT THE END OF tttt I I THE TERM THIS STORY WAS AWARDED THE PRIZE OF TEN DOLLARS OFFERED BY THE UARBUTUSI' FOR THE BEST STORY OF COLLEGE LIFE Annb 'r was a grey cold day in late March. An occasional flurry of snow was followed by a iitful burst of sunshine that made the sky only darker grey, and heightened the prevailing gloom. 'A boisterous March wind came sweeping down across the campus from the north, causing the students hurrying to and from their classes, to make queer bows and lean at all sorts of awkward angles in a Vain endeavor to keep their equilibrium and their hats at the same time. Everyone was in a hurry. It was the last day of a week of examinations. There was an atmosphere of suppressed excitement in the halls and recitation rooms. Everywhere were students gathered together in twos and threes quizzing each other in preparation for the next hour's work. Do tell me something about these declensionsf' Oh, I know I iiunked in pedagogyf, Say, what did you say on the third ? H What are the principal parts of- The third, let me see-I' Can you compare Shelley and-H 4' Oh, yes, Rabbi Ben Ezra. I didn't say-3' Coleridge-H And so it went on. In a chilly recitation room some shivering students huddled about the radiator and discussed the weather and their coming examination. Once or twice during the winter this room had been so cold that the classes that met in it had to be dis- missed. Now, whenever there came a cold day, we grumbled about the low temperature of the room in a fond hope of another dismissal. This morning the usual little cold weather farce was enacted. The 1'oom wasn't quite comfortable. VVe must persuade ourselves that it was unbearably cold. One man ostentatiously turned up the collar of his overcoat. This was always his part in the performance. The girl next him nodded approval. She laid her hand on the radiator and smiled significantly. H That thing's got a lot of heat in it,'7 he said by way of answering her smile. H Do you suppose he' ll make us stay in here this morning ? 126 ff' She shrugged her shoulders. H Oh, yes,', she said in a conclusive tone. They had examination in here last hour. VVe'll have to stay. This is the last day of the term, you know. If it is the last day of the term, thatis no reason why we should freeze to death interrupted a facetious little man in the corner. There' s another term coming. It won't come for us if we have to stay in here an hour, 77 squeaked a burly fellow who had just entered. H What's the matter with your voice, Brownson, asked the man who had spoken first. HFroze up. H Brownson tried to laugh, but only wheezed dismally. Just then Milburn came in laughing. The faces of the rest brightened responsively. His laugh was infectious. You people seem to be cold he said. H Oh it won't work this morning. You might as well give up. He dropped into a seat at the back of the room and looked about him. Just look at Miss Blake and Miss Presslar, he said. They're improving the shining hour, aren't they? '7 Miss Blake turned, quickly. Icrammed last night until one otclock, and began again at four this morning. I have five exams to-day. I think Miss Presslar studied all night. Miss Presslar laughed hysterically. 'C I did, she said. They bent over their books again. Miss Blake and Miss Presslar never really studied until the last week of the term 5 then they crammed steadily and effectively. Over by the window a little group oi three or four was comparing note books. Mary Franklin joined them. She was a pretty, vivacious girl, a general favorite. She usually had her lessons passably well without seeming to study at all, and always had plenty of time at her disposal. She began to hold forth on the futility of cramming. 4' Just look at everybody digging away as if their lives depended on it. I do believe I'm the only person in the University who hasn't been cramming hard all week. Good students, and bad students, and mediocre students, it's all the same. Every one has fallena victim to the cramming fever. It's a plague that strikes the University as regularly as the terms end, besides appearing in mild form at mid- term. I'm going to write a paper on Examinations, A Cause of Insanity, for my next English One theme. I'll pass out on it. I know I will. Oongratulate me. Only think, she went on, yesterday I found my room-mate dissolved in tears-I speak figuratively-because she had an extra hour that she hadn't counted on, and couldn't use it, she had lent her book to some one else. I never cram, partly from principle and partly from laziness. It's so utterly futile to get every- thing perfect, and if you don't get everything youtre sure to leave out the very 127 thing that comes up on examination. I have only eleven exams this week-three in one class, two in another, three in another, one in this and two in each of two others. I-Ias anyone a more appalling list than that? Imagine me trying to cram for all eleven. I'd rather trust to luck. IVhat's the use of killing yourself just because you can? I pause for a reply. Does anyone know anything about this stuff? broke in Brownson irrele- vantly. 4' I don't. Miss Marcy does, and if I-Iarlow doesnlt it won't be her fault,'7 laughed Milburn. 'C Look, he's literally drinking it in. Far up in front a thin-faced, studious looking girl was discoursing with nervous rapidity to a showily dressed, heavy-featured young man who listened in profound attention, leaning toward her, his hands on his knees, and his mouth slightly open. Harlow cultivated Miss Marcy's acquaintance once every term-twice if we happened to have mid-term examinations. She was never happier, seemingly, than when she had a chance to cram some one. If ever there is a school for cramming founded, Miss Marcy ought to occupy a prominent place in the faculty. It is the one thing that she is eminently fitted for. Now her sharp-featured little face seemed almost pretty as she eagerly enumerated the kings of Scotland with the dates of their respective reigns. You could always count on Miss Marcy for dates, mythological allusions, definitions, and references of all kinds. Memory work was her strong point. A piece of information once hers was hers forever. Indeed, it seemed almost an encroachment on her domain for one of the rest of us to look up a reference or define a word. Perhaps that was the reason we so often neglected that part of our work. W'e could always trust to Miss Marcy to have it, and, besides, it saved time to have one person do the work of the whole class. Conversation and cramming ceased as Professor Mills entered. I-Ie carried a package of yellow paper which he distributed hastily. Then he stepped briskly to the board and began writing the examination questions. Oddly enough, no one had until that moment remembered that his pencil needed sharpening. As if by a pre-arranged signal, as soon as Professor Mills' crayon began its hurried tap-tap on the blackboard, a dozen knives began to scrape out an accompaniment on as many lead pencils. The effect was more startling than melodious. Those who had fountain pens utilized this last opportunity for what one of the boys called a brief general survey of the term's work. After explaining the questions Professor Mills left the room, and the students fell to work, each in his individual way. One man began writing at once, hur- riedly as if in fear that he would not have time to tell all that he knew in the brief space of an hour. A girl had made such a fine point on her pencil that it broke off at the first word. She turned hastily to her neighbor who was using a pen. Oh, have you an extra lead pencil 5 give it to me quick. I read the answer to that first question just a minute ago, and I want to write it down before I forget it. This 128 ' '13 Was Miss Blake. She and Miss Presslar were still Working on the co-operative plan. There is nothing like a division of labor for getting work done expeditiously and well. Their pencils scratched on in steady unison. Up in the front row little Miss Marcy worked steadily. She wrote as she did everything else, with painstaking precision. So Harlow still sitting beside her had no trouble at all in keeping up. 'fMiss Marcyls going to get herself and Harlow through H whispered' some one at the back of the room. Harlow thought so too. If there is any one who doubts that a certain intenseness of expression is characteristic of the American face let him look into a university class room on examination day. Even Mary Franklin was affected by the actual presence of the examination. The laughing curves of her mouth were straightened out into lines of determina- tion, her brown eyes were fixed on the page, and she frowned with concentrated earnestness. Her head was bowed on her hand, and her pen traveled nervously over the page. Evidently her faith in her luck was not perfect. The man who had turned his coat collar up wrote with such energy and vigor that he soon found the temperature of the room rising. He pulled down his collar with a vicious jerk, a few moments later he drew off his coat and Hung it down savagely as if he had a grudge against it. His face was Hushed, his eyes bright. Hurlburt's warming up to it, whispered Milburn to the girl who had stood by the radiator. She raised her troubled face, and for answer held up a much erased and blotted sheet of paper. She was in no jesting mood. She shook her head dolefully, then bent to her task again. l One man seemed completely stunned. He gazed in a dazed fashion at the blackboard, poised his pen over the paper, rubbed his eyes, scratched his head, looked out of the window, then fell to gazing at the blackboard again. Finally he seemed to have an inspiration. He began writing rapidly. At the end of the third line he stopped, stared at what he had written, then began, with unnecessary vehemence, to erase it. Another, a self-conscious little man, evidently had a desire to appear cool. He stared critically about the room, smiling in a superior way, as much as to say, Look at me. I am not at all dismayed. I am perfectly collected. VVhat a hurry you are all in! Oh, you may think I'm not writing because I don't know anything 5 but that's your mistake. The fact is this exam's too dead easy to be taken seriously. Miles always boasted that he could do an ordinary examination in fifteen minutes. Then there were others who wrote in a steady, business like way, only stop- ping now and then for a glance at their watches or to erase a too hastily Written 129 word. Still others fumbled with their paper, fussily arranging and re-arranging it, sharpened their pencils to needle-like points or critically examined their pens. The less a person has to say the more particular he is about such things as these. Meanwhile the hour was fast slipping away. It was morethan half over. Faster and faster pencils and pens hurried across and across the pages. Those who had begun writing at the tap of the bell were still hastening furiously on. Those who had dawdled fell to work in desperate earnest. Miles, the man who had smiled so complacently at -the beginning was having a bad half-hour of it. His complacency was gone. If his life had been at stake he could not have worked with iiercer determination. His pen fairly fiew over the paper. For once he had forgotten himself and was wholly engrossed in his Work. It was such moments as these that gave Miles a chance to boast. If he could have always been kept under heavy pressure Miles might have accomplished great things. The trouble was that only now and then could he rise to an occasion, and once having risen he could not keep up for any length of time. He accomplished a little well, and then was content to rest complacently-satisfied with a sprig of laurel where he might have had a whole wreath. Brownson, who worked so slowly and laboriously, could accomplish more in the long run. He was working now with a dogged persistency that was fine to see. He formed every letter slowly and with effort 5 but he had been working steadily all the hour and at the end would present a creditable paper. Brownson never did remarkably well 5 but he never failed completely. Down in the front row little Miss Marcy toiled steadily on, and Harlow copied as fast as she wrote. His face was aglow with satisfaction. It is good to feel sure that you are going to pass. He had made a few changes here and there in his manuscript, quite cleverly, he thought. It was better not to have it exactly like Miss Marcy's, though out of so many it might not be noticed. There was no use of running any unnecessary risk. Mary Franklin sat directly behind him. She had only been in the class this term, and this was her first experience of Harlowls method of passing an examina- tion. She first noticed him when she straightened up in her chair to rest an instant. She was plainly astonished. She Watched him for a moment, carefully. No, she was not mistaken. He was copying. Just then Miss Marcy moved slightly in order to see the last question. Her arm fell across her manuscript. Harlow stopped writing. When she began to work again she changed her posi- tion. Harlow had to turn in his seat to get a good View of her paper. Miss Franklin was looking on, fascinated. As he turned he saw that she was watching him. She did not attempt to conceal her disgust. He flushed dully. Vlfhy couldn't she attend to her own affairs? He took out his watch and looked at it -only five minutes longer, and he was gettting behind. He would have to copy the rest straight, and risk it, and that was what he proceeded to do. Miss Marcy was working on the last question. Several of the class had finished and passed out. They were comparing results in the next room. The murmur of 130 '-Y 'uz'i A their voices came back to the class-room and incited those remaining to still grcater haste. Miss Blake and Miss Presslar finished at the same instant, signed their names simultaneously and withdrew. Somehow we never thought it cheating for Miss Blake and Miss Presslar to work together. As one of the class remarked, they were two souls with but a single thought, and we couldnlt blame them for wanting to share it. When Professor Mills called for the papers of those who still remained at the end of the hour Harlow was copying automatically, his whole mind concentrated on Writing just what Miss Marcy wrote. It was a long. involved sentence, and he did not understand the import of it. So the only way to get it was to copy each word as she wrote it down. She finished with a precise little period, and folded her paper quickly. Professor Mills was beside them now holding out his hand for their papers. Mattie N. Marcy, she wrote in a prim, angular hand. Miss Franklin had finished and again sat watching the pair in front of her. Professor Mills was gazing abstraotedly from the window. So it happened that Mary Frank- lin was the only witness of an odd little oceurence at the last. Harlow wrote his last word while Miss Marcy was folding her paper. He folded his hurriedly and then mechanically copied in bold, sprawling characters, Mattie N. Marcy, March 20, 189-. Then they filed out-the professor with his loundle of examination papers, Miss Marcy, bearing an expression of duty bravely done, Harlow serene in the assurance that he had made a sure thing of one more examination, and lastly Mary Franklin, laughing all to herself. V ETHEL STRONG. an 131 College Case if UFFMAN was a fake. A good looking one though, and not a fool. He came to college and was spiked on his handsome face and well fitting clothes and his few earnest opinions which he remembered carefully and used often and with entire faith. There is great virtue in two or three opinions used often with blind confidence. When a forty-five dollar suit looms up with a diamond tie pin prominent and says: N ow the greatest mistake they are mak- ing here is in not moving the university to Indianapolis, it never can be a big school here, this town is too slow-not enough going on, this is no place for a great university. Now that's what I think about it myself, don't you? -it is really very telling. This particular one Huffman had received from the fellows as they had shown him the university and town during spiking season. However, as lf said before, Huffman was not a fool, if he had been he would have tried some opinions of his own and would have been found out. As it was, ofcourse, he was found out anyway, but not until college society had passed its approval on him, and then it didn't matter. No one wanted to tell him to his face that he was an impostdr, and he really made too little difference to be much talked about behind his back. And I donlt know whether Huffman would have cared or not, anyway. He was too serenely self-satisfied and too busy living. Mere living is an interesting and an absorbing employment to a man who has to take his cues from somebody else 5 such people are always too busy to get seriously into more wickedness than they tliink their station demands. Among the freshman girls that year was one-slender, fair-haired, blue-eyed- who was fast becoming the most popular girl in school. A fraternity- brother, in whom he placed great confidence, had told Huffman that Miss Langford was a peach,7' a fine dancer and an hall 'round hot girl. And so Huffman got started with an opinion entirely correct. For, indeed, Alice Langford was all that. She was a delicate, graceful girl, the best dancer in college, and she had the very purest complexion, in which even the pink was refined and would have shown white on anyone else-a girl to be given the best of everything. One thought of the rnedizeval princess, at whose word swords flew from their scabbards, and the victorious knight was richly rewarded for his wounds by receiving My Lady's glove to wear on his helmet. V And sometimes Williams-the big six-foot tackle-would almost wish that these were mediaeval times and that he could win the love of his ideal by force of arms. As it was, he tore up the scrub line fiercely in the daily practice, and 132 ' the coach predicted that he would make the best tackle in the State. lVilliams appreciated his own athletic ability at times, and then he only felt the more strongly that Alice Langford was just the girl for him. Indeed, this big, strong, boyish Williams felt very strongly and enthusiastically, only it was so hard to find words, or even actions, to express his thoughts, even if he was a senior and should have been experienced. Alice received his admiration in a manner, not just as he had intended it, and yet as well-as indeed Williams reasoned to himself-as could be expected. They had met early in the term and Williams had, from the start, when she did not know many people, helped her to pass her time pleasantly and she had enjoyed and appreciated it. She had treated him very well , she was pleasant naturally and she liked to be popular. But she was not equal to the task of read- ing chivalry into the courtesies of every-day college life. If a man took her to dances and concerts and sent her candy and flowers she really did not require any fighting to be done in her behalf. She had no enemies among the boys and the girls in the different sororities vied with each other as to who could show them- selves the most friendly. But she liked Williams and went with him whenever he asked her. Thus matters stood when Huffman, being impressed with the idea from his fraternity that a case with Miss Langford would be an eminently desirable thing-decided that he would get one up. He did not doubt that he could. XVilliamsl he said scornfully in answer to an objection suggested by his roommate and confidential adviser. L' Hels slow-dead slow. Because a man can play football all right don't make him a society man. You know that, don't you? VVell, how do you like I. U. by this time, Miss Langford ? asked Huffman the next Sunday afternoon when he called to begin matters. HO, very much! Don't you? I think this muddy old town is just horrid, though. I do, too, said Huffman. I think they are making a big mistake in not moving this college to Indianapolis. Bloomington is so dull and slow. There isnlt enough going on. I think Indianapolis is where the University ought to be, don' t you ?.' Why-yes. That would be nice. This was the first time that idea had ever come to Miss Langford and it rather widened her horizon to that of moving I. U. But she didn't like the thought very well and changed the subject. 'K By the way, what did you think of the concert Friday night, Mr. Huffman ? All right. W'a.sn't that little girl that sang soprano a swell locker? Really, I like girls with light hair and blue eyes. I think they always look sweller some way. 't Now, Mr. Huffman, you are trying to jolly mef' said Alice, feeling that she was really getting into college life. And, besides, her hair wasn't light. 133 vgnrma J. --1-te--f-L .Aer 1,51-.--A----'-------' '--------'-Hz'-Q - ' . O yes, it was Miss Langford. I'll bet you a box of eandy.'7 'tTakenl Welll leave it to my room-mate when she comes home. Which do you say? Huffman half amused her and half impressed her as being a swell fellow and a typical college man and hence as worthy of reverence. Anyway she soon made up her mind that at least he was a very agreeable companion. For his part Huff- man was eonndent and happy. 4' VVell, Miss Langfordf' he said, as he rose to go, 'LCan't I call XVednesday evening, and your room-mate can decide the bet then? I All right,'7 she replied laughing, and she went up to her room rather Well pleased with Huffman and good-humored toward everything. :ai rl: ac 24 if sk :k I saw you with Huffman last night,'? said Williams to Alice one afternoon as they walked out to college together. H Isn't he- 'C Isn't he nice? broke in Alice. 4' W'e were going to an Alpha Tau dance. I think he's lots of fun. t'HuEman is a great fellown said IVilliams sarcastieally, and then, a half- jealous, impulse coming over him, his bantering tone changed. In a moment he had recognized Huffman as a rival and disdained to speak ill of him. Williams pulled up his sweater collar a little and looked away. Alice looked away too-and both thought of Huffman. On the last night of the term there was to be agbig Pan-Hellenic and Alice received two invitations, both by note and on the same Saturday morning at the same time-almost, that is, the boy handed her one while he felt around in his pocket for the other. But the two senders did not know this. Williams had written his note early that morning and had sent for a colored boy to take it. An hour later, going down stairs in the gymnasium he overheard the following con- versation. Come on. Then from Huifman. No, I ean't. Got to go home write a note for my date to the Pan-Hellenic. H Who? Sweet Alice? H Sure. Guess I'll go past the barbershop and get Tough to take it. VVell, old nian, you're beat this time, thought lVilliams. He had been just a triiie jealous of Huffman of late. But he had asked for a quick reply to his note and he expected to find it waiting for him when he should go home at eleven o'clock. But he had not allowed for Tough. Huffman went into the barbershop and addressed this worthy, who was commonly employed as messenger. HSay, Tough, I want you to carry a note for me. All right, Mistah Huffman. Who to? 'ITO Miss Langford. Know where she lives? Miss Langford! O yes, on State street. I, se got to take one there for Mistah VVilliams purty soon. and 77 134 i HJ Huffman smelt a mouse. But here was a chance to get ahead. Come on, Tough, and go past my room to get the note, he said, and then, when they were out on the street : Say, Tough, you take mine to her first, will you? I orter tuk Mistah W illiamsi around afore thisf' said Tough, dubiously. O, that' ll be all right. You can take his around just a little while after mine. Do it. l'll give you a dollar. 4' All right, said Tough, 'T ll give her yours first. And give it to her hrst he did, but he decided that he had better give her Williams' the next instant. From his point of view, Tough had seen a great deal of college life and he believed in fair play. Besides he should not have neglected Williams' note so long for the sake of a run of shines in the barber shop. Alice was in doubt. She ought to go with Williams,-but he was so serious and acted so funny sometimes. She didn't like moody fellows, Huffman always had something to say. She could say she got Mr. Huffman's note first and VVilliams would never know any better. Indeed, she did get it first-on the in- stant she remembered-but she blushed the moment after at the self-deception. But she didn't care, she went to dances to have fun and she was going to do as she pleased. And so she sent an acceptance to Huffman and regrets to Williams. 't She was so sorry, but she had received an invitation from Mr. Huffman first. Hurt and jealous Williams threw himself across his bed and thought. He did not think Alice would do that. But maybe something had happened that she had received Huffman's note first. No it could not be. He had had too much the start. Finally he made up his mind. He would not judge her. He would go and ask her. Yes he would ask her whom she preferred. She must decide between them. If she would choose him he thought with leaping heart how little the would care for his one dance. lVhy, how do you do, Mr. VVilliams? said Alice surprised, as she opened the door. tt Come in, won't you? 'C I just wanted to see you a minute, Alice. Alice, what do you mean by going to the dance with HuHman instead of me? Alice blushed but she managed to gain enough composure to say, in what was meant to be a surprised and injured tone: Why, Mr. Williams! What do you mean? You know why I could not go with youf' WVell, Alice, it has come time for you to decide between us. You can take me or Huffman, but not both. t' Why, Mr. Williams- I mean it. Alice, I liked you the first time I ever saw you, and- Just then they were both startled by the door bell. Alice went to the door, and a moment later Huffman walked in. H if How do you do, Miss Langford? I just came in to see you a moment. Why, hello, Williams! And Huffman sat down cheerfully. 135 zzz- I-fin?-1.e-f,n:,,?-72:92-Y,-1 fe ---ff.--7-,.,3-...-----.--D -.---....s.. ...A .--...An .. I.. After a moment he broke the silence. I just now saw that little soprano that sang in the concert, he said. O did you! Vlhere? from Alice. She was on the eleven train, and I just happened to see her. And, say, her hair is dark. Don't you know, I never really believed it till now. O, I knew it was,', cried Alice. That's a joke on you. Didn't you think she was a swell looker, llfilliarns? said Huffman. I didn't like her, said VVilliams. ' I did. Didn't you, Miss Langford? Alice, may I speak to you a moment? 7 ' said Williams rising. His voice was hoarse. Why-en certainly. Excuse us, please, Mr. Huffman. 'L Alice, Wfilliams said when they were in the hall. 'K Will you take me or Huffman? You must decide noW.'l Alice's first impulse was not to understand but just then a firmer impulse came. She felt unconsciously ashamed of herself and consciously angry towards Williams. Then she saw Huffmanls pleasant face in contrast to Williams' moody one and the thought of all she would have to explain to Williams came over her. She set her foot down square and looked up, her face cold and decided. I have a date with Mr. Huilman, she said. H CC H H U FRANK AYDELOTTE. in ::' 4 -99 4120 ,:: Qg:, 136 l' A ia L Q .lx zff 13,111 NN 4f XX ,J '1 XX' 4 fx. Upon il' stage il te11c11-1'-111.11-cl, 1o11eso111e spe11.ke1' spokeg A1141 :Lt his 1001: the 1'211ftQ1'S shook, the wi11c1ow glasses hrokeg A1111 at his 4-21.11, 1111111 off the 1111.11 t11ep1:1Ste1'1111.f 21,11 came, And with each yell some Ty1'z111t fe11. It was the 521.1110 old g:1u1 e. I11sp11'ed with 111SIJ11'iLf1011, with his 1111ge1's 111 his 11211111 With F1'eec1o111's shrieks i1111L1 sc-1'ez1111s the f1'G2,l-k did 1111 the empty air. He sp11,tte1'ed it, he sp1z1tte1'ec1 it, he SCi'l1ftG1'k?d it 21-1'011lldQ Most eye1'yth111g11e Sllfl-ttQ1'Gd it. He 111z1.c1e 2111 2LXVfl11 Sound. T11e while he spoke :1,1'o1111r1 111111 hroke the h111,1'i11,fzg of 21 hz111c1, The A-flat 1111141 the B-fiat 111111 the 1z111ky t11h11 1111111, The t1111111p-d1'11111 of the 111111111 d1'u111 -it's 1'eve1'hz1t111g 1700111 : This bz1,11d was 011 the 1111111-h11111. It was 1ike the crack of doom. They t1111111p-ta,-tt1'c1, they 1'11111p-ta,-tafd, they 11111p-ta-tz1'd a,1'ou11c1, They 1111111p-t:11-tafd the spez1.1te1' t111 they 1111.11 him 11.11 hut d1'O1Vl1Pd. A11 t1 they 110011111-11e-111-110-11awn1pec1 111111 ti11 the cows 0511119 home to roost. The while they plalyed :1 jz11ck:11ss strayed 111111 stopped to see the show. He came from -we11, he 0111110 f1'o111 11'he1'e the best juckasses grow. . . 1 1 T , I ,' 1 1 1'Desist! 1' they said. U Pe1'siSt? they said- the SDGHIIPIJS ire wz1s1o0sed. I I as A - --'-N.. . 1 G It'S:fi11e, 11e said. HDivi11e! 1' 11e said. He s111i1ed:1k11o11'i11g5 grin, H Such t1l111QQS21.1'G 111 111y 1i11e he S2111d,H 21111r1 111911 he sta111'tec1i11. He h1111ched himself, 11e 111111011961 himself, he pawed the weeping g1'o1111c1g He 1'i11ec11to11t,he Sp111ec1 it out. It was an E11XVfl11 sound. The hmsses 1Tl0H,119C1Q the ass sti11 drouedg the e:11'11est speaker pz11ec1. H I 21.111 not 111 your c1:1ss, he g1'oe111ec1, I fear you 1111.119 p1'evz1.11ed. T11e A-flat sq11a,wked, the B-flat halked, the drums 1'o11ec1 011 the f1o01'g The lanky tuba sunk att 1e1st - the 11111155 hz111c1 was 110 111016-. Ah 1119, what foo1s these 111o1'ta1.1s be, the jackass said with scorn, Do11't monkey with 11 11211161 11111ess you can p1111y O11 LL 110111 ! 5 ft 1 -3 X 17 Nm 111 1 1 1 1 1 hi 'W W mm' 1 ' Q 11111-1' , -1 N -es 137 ff'-A J - 2 'iw PFW N 131 1 1 2971 Y Y, ,M -., mm ..,.....,..n.,, . ., 4.7 Y ,Y . .X Y..--. ..Y,..f.-.......,......,.--....,.3. ,112 M Avfoefill Qt, .ammmf BV David Starr jordan Qvwymr MQW The Blood of the Dation ABSTRACT OF ADDRESS T IS recognized that the blood of a nation in large degree determines its history. Knowing the nature of a race, we can forecast its achievements. The Saxon will make Saxon history wherever he goes, the Jeiv will make Jewish, and the negro wherever he goes will do deeds after his kind. I wish to show that in similar fashion the history of a nation determines its blood. The word blood in this sense is a figure of speech, meaning heredity, for we know that the basis of heredity is in germ plasm, not in literal blood. But the old word will serve our purposes. The blood which is thicker than water is the expression for race unity. The nature of a race is determined by the qualities of those of its number who leave offspring. If any class of men is destroyed by the action of social or political forces, these leave no offspring and their kind in time fails to appear. In a herd of cattle, to destroy the strongest bulls, the fairest cows, the most promising calves, is to leave the others to become the parents of the coming herd. This we call degeneration, and it is the only kind of race degeneration we know 5 yet the scrawny, lean infertile herd which results is of the same type as its actual parents. If on the other hand, we sell or destroy the rough calves, the lean, poor or ineffective, we shall have a herd descended from the best. These facts are the basis of selective breeding, the magician's Wand 7' which may summon up any form of animal or plant useful to man or pleasing to his fancy. , These same facts are fundamental in human history. Viewed in the large sense, a race of men is essentially like a herd of animals, and if similar processes are followed, its nature is as readily changed. 138 illi- The only way in which any race as a Whole has improved has been through its preservation of its best and the loss of its worst examples. The condition which favors this is democracy, equality before the law, the condition which equalizes opportunity, and gives each man the right to stand or fall on the powers God has given him. The only race degeneration ever known is that produced by one or all of dem- ocracy's arch enemies. Slavery, aristocracy, militarism, imperialism, the four tyrants of human politics, not one of whom appears without the others. The edect of these forces is to destroy the best, leaving for the fathers of the future, those which armies and power could not use for its purposes. Degeneracy of the individual is quite another thing, and has its own series of causes. But such degeneracy is not inherited. Unless entangled in the meshes of disease, every child is freeborn the son of what his father and mother ought to have been, Neither education, indolence nor oppression can be inherited. They affect the individual life but they cannot tarnish the blood. The degeneracy discussed by Nordau and the school of journalistic scientists which he represents is thus individual. It has no permanence. A lot of crazy painters, drunken musicians, maudlin poets and sensation hunters on the boule- vards proves nothing as to race degeneracy. Any man of any race degenerates in an environment of vice, disease and absinthe. But he may leave his race all the cleaner for his degenerating. I take a concrete illustration, the degeneration of France. An official commis- sion has lately investigated it, reaching scanty results. Perhaps we may help them. I wish you to assume that Millet's Man with the Hoe is in a large degree typical of the French peasantry. Dull, lack-luster-eyed, with low forehead and brutal jaw, he is not the product of oppression. His like has always lived in France. His qualities are ancient, aboriginal. He exists today and increases because better men have been destroyed. And this is the primal cause of the fall of France, of the decline of any nation whatever, the destruction of the best, the survival of the uniittest, a reversal of nature's method of race purification and of race advance. 139 In French history how has this happened? Let us look at a few instances among many. 4 The French Revolution. In this outbreak of the oppressed the best that the nation could bringn were destroyed. The nobility of any nation furnish its best blood, their failure comes from bad training, luxury, vice and irresponsible power. The strongest, wisest, fairest, were the noblemen, when races were young. And these fell in the Reign of Terror. The old drummer in Thackeray's Chronicle of the Drum H tells us that : 'Those glorious days of September A Saw many aristoerats fallg 'Twas thus that our pikes drank the blood In the beautiful breast of Laballe. Pardi! 'twas a beautiful ladyg I seldom have looked on her like, And I druinmed for at gallant procession That marelied with her head on at pikef' And so with the rest of them, not fogetting the Queen and the King. And the blood of France has been poorer, her men less manly, and her women less fair, Since the day of her great slaughter, whatever one may think of the political changes it brought about. Q 1 Primogeniture-the basis of English polity has been and is inequality before the law. Men have tried to take a certain few, to feed them on Hroyal jelly as the queen-bee is fed, to take them out of the struggle and competition of life, and to make them by such means harmonious and perfect men and women. Thus in England, the eldest son is chosen for this purpose, H a good thing, says Samuel Johnson, because it insures only one fool in the familyfl In making perfect men it has certainly failed, for men are made by effort and resistance. But it has forced back again and again the other sons and daughter' s sons, back into the mass of the people. The English people of today are the sons of the old nobility, and their growth has crowded out the sons of the swineherd and the slave. The evil of primogeniture has been its own antidote. It has begotten democracy. The younger sons, with Richard Rumbold, never could believe that God has sent into the world a few men already booted and spurred, with countless millions already 140 - - A-- - - -:I --A , .,... .,.,,, ,M ,MY saddled and bridled with these few to ride. And so they became the Round- head, the Puritan, the Pilgrim, those who in all the ages have fought for liberty in England and in the United States. Genealogical studies clearly show that all the old families of New England and Virginia have noble and royal blood in their Veins. The Massachusetts farmer, whose ancestors came from Plymouth of Devon, has more of the blood of William and Alfred than the Queen of England has, for she is mostly German. And it is well for England that her gentle blood runs in the veins of all her citizens. On the continent it was not so. In France, all of noble lineage were noble. Thus the blood of nobility and the blood of the clown were kept separate, and the clown increased with the failure of his betters. Other influences destroying the best were social repression, irreligious intoler- ance, the centralization of activities in Paris, the effects of alcohol. The celibacy of the religious lowered the degree of religious feeling, while indiscriminate charity vastly multiplied the brood of paupers. But all these and other influences, large and small, count for little beside the great destroyer, VV ar 5 war for glory 5 war for gain. i Not long ago I visited Novara, in Italy, and there in a wheattield the farmers have plowed up skulls of men till a pyramid of lifteen feet high has been reared, over which some one has placed a canopy to keep clit the rain. These were skulls of young men of France and Austria, from 18 to 35 years of age, without physical blemish so far as may be, peasants from the farms and workmen from the shops, who met at Novara to decide whether a little princeling called Albert should sit on his little throne or yield it to some other of like insignificance. It matters not the decision Here they died. On beyond, they died at Magenta. You know what color that is, the hue of the blood that flowed out under the olive trees. Go over Italy as you will, hardly a town that has not had its gardens crimsoned with French blood, that has not somewhere its pile of skulls. You can trace them across to Egypt, across Germany to Moscow, across Belgium to Waterloo. A boy will stop a bullet as well as a man 7' said Napoleon, and with the rest are the skulls of boys. Read the dreary story of Wate1'loo, the wretched tale of Moscow, the miserable deeds of Sedan, the waste of Algiers, and you can see Why the 141 countrymen of France are not like the embattled farmers of Lexington, who set their stern faces against the murderers of the common man, and fired the shot that the whole world had to hear. The same fate has followed each war for empire. ' Tis Greece, but living Greece no more, for the Greek of today is not the son of Leonidas and Themis- tocles. He is the son of the stable-boys, scullions and slaves, those whom imperial Greece could not use in her wars of conquest. In his noble history of the Downfall of the Ancient iWorld, Professor Seeck of Greifeswald finds but one real cause of the fall of Rome. This he calls the Exter- mination of the Best C Ausrottung der Bestennj. He shows how Marius and Cinna slew the aristocrat, while Sulla murdered the common man. lVith the demands of the imperial domain in every direction, the Roman disappeared. Wlfhoever was bold enough to rise politically was thrown to the ground. Only cowcrrcls 0'ema'mecZ, amZ from their brood arose the new genemtzfon. Cowardice showed itself in lack of originality and slavish following of masters and tradition. Had the Romans been alive, the Romans of the old Republic, there would have been no Fall of Rome. As to Spain, a word from La Puente, an Augustinian friar, who wrote in 1630 on the Philippine question, then a burning one with Spain : Against the credit for redeemed souls, I set the cost of armadas and the sacrifice of soldiers and friars sent to the Philippines. And this I count the chief loss, for mines give silver, and forests give timber, but only Spain gives Spaniards, and she mayigive so many that she may be left desolate and constrained to bring up strangers' children instead of her own. 7' This is a Castile said a Spanish knight, she makes men and wastes them. '7 'fThis sublime and terrible phrasef' says Lieut. Calkins, from whom I take the quotation, sums up Spanish history. Thus it has always been in history. The warlike nation of today is the deca- dent nation of tomorrow. It has ever been so, and in the nature of things must ever be. 142 L1i As to England, testimony of the same kind can be had in abundance in the verse of Kipling, the poet of so much that is good, vigorous, and stirring, as well as of all that is bad in English life and history. We have fed our sea for :ii thousand years, And sho calls us still unfr-cl. If blood be the price of Admirality, Lord God, we have paid it in full? 't Walk wide of the widow of Windsor, for half of ereu tion she owns, We've bought her the saline with the sword and the ilame, And salted it down with our hones, Poor beggars, itis blue with our bones. And again in the stately Ave Imperatrix: 'L O thou, whose wounds are never healed, Whose weary race is never won, O Crouiwell's England must thou give For every inch of ground a son? But childless, and with thorn-crowned head, Up the steep road must England go. This suggests Byron's Words of Rome: The Niobe of Nations-Orownless and childless In her voicele-ss woe? It suggests the inevitable end of all empire, of all dominion of man over man by the force of arms. More than all who fall in battle or are wasted in the camps the nation misses those brave men and fair women who should have been their descendants, those who might have been and who never were. A late writer-one of many who are prone 'tto think with their iists,'7 as Lummis said of Roosevelt-declares that War is essential to the life of a nation, war strengthens a nation morally, mentally and physically. Such a statement is the result of sheer ignorance. One cannot at once respect the honesty and the intelligence of the man who makes it. W'ar may seem to make men strong when the hot passions are on, but hot passion is not inherited, least of all when the warrior is slain and leaves no in- heritance. War can only Waste and corrupt. Its origin is 'I in the evil passions of men, and even when most necessary it is most deplorable. 143 If any War is good, civil War must be best. The virtues of victory and the lessons of defeat would be kept within the nation. It would protect the nation from the temptation to fight for gold or trade. Once Tom Hughes gave this model of an English boy, one who never bullied a little boy or turned his back on a big one. The motto of modern Imperialism is the reverse of this, never to bully a big boy or turn one's back on a little one. Civil War under proper limitations could remedy this. A time limit could be adopted, as in foot-ball, and every device chosen to get the good of War and to escape its evils. For example, of all our States, New York and Illinois have suffered most from the evils of peace. They could be pitted against each other, While the other States looked on. The dark and bloody ground of Kentucky could be made an arena. This would not interfere with trade in Chicago, nor muss up the streets of Cincinnati and Baltimore.. The armies could be filled up from the tramps and hoodlums, While the paste-board heroes of Delmonico's and the Chicago Clubs could act as officers. All in decency and order, With no recriminations and no oppression of an alien foe, and .we should have all that is good in war, its pomp and circumstance, the grim resolution of the London Clubs without its long train of murderous evils. W'ho could deny this? And yet who could defend it? Who can speak of the healthfulness of War, for warls sake, and yet condemn cock- iighting, bull-baiting, or murder? If war is good We should have it, regardless of its cost, regardless of its hor- rors, its sorrows, its anguish, havoc and waste. If it is bad, let it be the last resort of 't mangled murdered liberty,'i a terrible agency to be evoked only as the last resort of self-defense. The remedy for most ills of man is not to be sought in war, not in whirlwinds of rebellion that shake the World, but in peace and justice, equality among men and the cultivation of those virtues We call Christian, because they have been virtues ever since man and society began, and will be virtues still when the era of strife is past, and the red- coat bully in his boots no longer it hides the march oi man from us. 144 IN MEMORIAM ELME R E. GRIFFITH ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ENGLISH DIED FEBRUARY 15, 1900 145 W' sf, Q5 A . J uv 'J xiii' In the autumn of 1883 I met Elmer E. Griffith at the University of Indiana. From that time till his death seventeen years later we were the closest friends. We formed our plans and our ideals together. We ioyed in each other's triumphs and one's sorrow was the other's affliction. His statement for one unconscious of the situation and five thousand miles' away was the basis of my election to the superintendency of the schools of Indianapolis. It was-my pleasure to offer him at the request of the State Board of Education the post of State Librarian after the passage of the law reorganizing the libraryfof the State. He was before all the men I have known, mature, wise, patient and just-a gentle- man and a scholar-a prince among men. His letters to me are a rich possession. His themes were worthy, his diction noble and his thought was turned in a lofty prose, refined, elegant and true -the perfect expression of his marvellous personality. When Death came to us as it had already come to him, taking his first-born, he wrote a letter dripping full of human sympathy-rich in tone as the deepest notes of a harp. His mental and spiritual growth through years of school and after life was remarked by faculty and friends. Who was the first man of the student body of his time is not a question with us who knew him. In the prime of power, less than two score years of age, just facing the real work the world had for him, he falls, and who shall reckon the account and who shall forecast the years and justify the acts of fate? We have stood by his open grave. We have laid down our flowers and wreaths. But we have known him. He is ours forevermore. We close our lips and clench our hands. Bitterness will give way to a consoled memory and that regret and sweet sorrow which no man would blot from his heart. DAVID K. GOSS. Indianapolis, May 5, 1900. 146 1 1 i ET!-W QW l 'iii -'Y .E- UR illdidlld UIliV2l'SiIV Biological SIGUOII Was removed last year from Turkey Lake to 'Winona L a k e i n t h e grounds of the Winona Assembly, near VVarsaw, In- diana. The Assembly Directors erected t W o commodious buildings and placed them at the disposal of the U11i- versity for Station purposes. All accommo- dations for the increasing number of students are infinitely better at the new location in Winona. Park. A great variety of natural conditions, constituting the environment of the Station, to- gether with the excellent equipment of the laboratories makes biological study fascinating and successful in a rare way. The popular evening lectures, con- ' certs, athletic sports and other facilities of entertainment provided during the season by the Winona Assembly afford delightful recreation to all patrons of the park. Indiar1a's Biological Station happily combines work of a university standard with a wholesome summer outing. 149 Life Oli Zbitdgb Bill As seen by a HILL BILLY in a reflective mood. There is perhaps no phase of life at the biological station more interesting and enjoyable, than that of camp life. From the pitching of tents till the close of the session, life is one continuous line of pleasure mingled with new experiences. Last summer the scene of camp life was ep Chicago Hill, a beautiful knoll overlooking the Y 'ri it - Y 'iijff as lake. Here the boys revelled in freedom and his Q? . . ? f Av i The most novel experiences are met with f Qtr A it ,,,aa3f ' nm .. . the first few days, ere complete outfits have I : f arrived. One has a tent, another a cot While I jf! others have some ofthe necessaries, so, by com- bining, a fairly good outfit is gotten together. Above all the first night is usually the most likely to be remembered, for then 'nothing is in order, and the chilly lake lit 41 W 1 ff as te ll fv af ,film VV' ,- ,aiu '71 1 11 ,g...-fttgag' , ,A ,,,q,s' ,f,u'.-,tf , 'wif -257 9-,mfffgt ,7,.f1, ,Q I in f., ,A ,, f 4, T p' ' ll :L . fy , V- gg, . :ez-'L X K ,, Q if ess: MA- . 'Q' if ff! ' -. , - A-js! iv ' . ,...f 5 5 7 LPI . Ei - ,C W i, 9 , f .. H A -, I fl - , f , ff T'Z'22,,,- ' I ' 47 V 42755 ,. ,. L fl breeze, bearing on its bosom brawny mosquitoes, comes gently on and shivers play up and down one's spinal column. Fellows have even been known to light a small oil stove and place under the cot, in order to keep warm and incidentally to ward off the mosquitoes. QSee Bobbitt for particularsy. Finally when camps are complete real pleasure follows 5 and none are so happy as those Who, free from laboratories, return to their tents to prepare those delicate dishes suited to such life. 150 ' ' ui: ' 1 'i- - ' -if--ff -,vars :,,, In the evening when the grocer comes round bringing luxuries of all sorts, there is a general stirg each tent sends a man to market, and hither- and thither they go With the supplies. Q f At last the feasts are spread, all eat to i XX satisfaction, and after an hour's resting they irllllllll begin to scatter-some for bathing, others ' 7' 1ff,,LSkQ9W for boating or up to the park. The days come and go, bringing enjoyment, but alas! summer passes, labora- , tory work draws to a close, and the sad day of kt IE K part. if -fa ...Y ix U 1 , 1.1 iff farewells arrives. , L H r P . The beautiful lVhite City vanishes, rl I-I , ll the resounding laughter dies away in a faint echo. With Well wishes and fervent good f Q Q , Q ee-'Q ' . . . . If-5 M byes the inhabitants of White City de- - fgk- '- ggv V ff f , i mn Y , I ., M g x g A, .lwaz-v-af If ' i i' I el f? NV w - f '- 1' -LL 151 Q, ' , . . wi ,-L ff VTX Q JUNE 19. Cafe opens. JUNE 20. All biologs V Vhl, , 5 JUNE2l A Bill of fare: Prunes, rice and water. Bates, 3152.50 per week. part with 325. Samuel Wright makes a thorough and original investigation of an air-bubble. Grand Heister Clark appears with his can. W ,Q ' ' l ' JUNE 23 X JUNE 24. Bugs and Flowers play ball-Andrews against Slonaker. The W fff Hon. Milton McCarty umpiring,4 calls ball K as Gilluai Swiiggs aitlpne. Oillprotfst ' says: a , i a e ow stri es a a a J when it is too high fsi- hihi sihm it h ball? 5 JUNE 25. Mr. Danforth, college librarian, arrives with his cigarette. x X210 'Q D3 JUNE 26. Botany I takes an excursion M356 5-iff: , on the lake. Clark not being ...QL 1 able to row gets becalmed in the middle of the lake. qT - ' ffwv ,W! - 1 JUNE 28. Harrold, Hamilton, Neher, and Brown receive E: ii their lady friends at the station. Brown M Q- I it scores a hit. T 'ig - JUNE 29. Grand Heister Clark appears in Botany I ' if in his bathing suit. JUNE 30. Tom Brown leaves Chicago Hill to enter society. if Q I I l I'u1 Tommy Rossie Browng K Pm known for niiles aroundg The girls all sigh, when I pass by- There's Tonuny Rossie Brown! N.. '.,. JULY 5. Shafer enjoys the wonders and beauties of a speck of dirt as seen under a microscope. JULY 10. J. Franklin Bobbitt goes back to Work at Miss Hays' table. W if JULY 12. Charley Dickey climbs a tree to keep out ofthe way ofthe girls. K? JULY 13. Ellis Biiddis Gihhs teaches the girls with yo? G . how to swim. Enjoys it immensely. 1' 5 ,fl JULY 19. Spooner and Coughlin indulge in a il iiais sfrsii- of honor sh Chicago Hill- M L Weapons: The former a baseball bat, I - fi, the latter a oatcher's glove. Distance, uncertaing asf' i time, 20 seconds. Result,a draw. i52 Q EIB-YAFJXSQ5 JULQ 21. 1 4- Dr. Slonaker goes to Boston to look after his kindergarten. Prof. Rettger gets up a party, mostly girls, to take a twenty-mile walk around the lake. A party rows to Warsaw sight-seeing. Miss Culbertson becomes frightened at the roughness of the lake and com- J ULY 20. 0 1 155 -4 . 4' JULY 22. fj ip L ' pels Redmon to walk back with her. later: Redmon to JULY 31. AUGUST 1. Neher Hllawdy, Ne'r, but Pm ta'ad. John Franklin Bobbitt studies day and night for the spelling match, but in the ' test goes down ingloriously. YV. T. H. Howe, Ph.D., of Boston, becomes a member of the facnlty CFD but later the directory appears with the name of Wm. Howe, of Boston, in the roll of students. A Purdue maiden of twenty summers presents Collicott with a new straw hat handsomely trimmed in Purdue colors. . AUGUST 2. Hamilton and a friend spend ,W N a day in the woods. Result, ? jf .1-:ga EBSQ some very impressive kodaks. 'v X ll 1 AUGUST 3. Siamese twins Ek and Clark, I X X ,lm go into partnership heisting. 'B , A -law X .. Y . . - I Lflll J l 1 ffllliffwi Hally Dlclcey and W M evil - . Harrold go to Warsaw I E lr il lr-'il ' ls iif'?igiMZ- 'Wi to a dance and come W F X5 A .X 1, , S home just before f I -' ' , X , 'fr r ll - If .J ' . in A dawn. W Y ll I l mln ' V ' I AUGUST 4. David- I ,Y ' ff , son goes ,, 5- ff, .s fishing T 2 - f fo J- ' from 11 to 4 a. m. 57 X WDW . . . ff - ' - Biological glee club serenades xts I . Q 4 friends. ' f ' AUGUST 5. AUGUST 6. .1 The Hon. Milton McCarty umpiring the Bug and Horner game calls balls as Gillum swings at one. On protest Mac says: 1' Well if a feller strikes at a ball when it is too high for him, aint it a ball? A' John De Hufll- Yes, Iv'e mixed in politics considerable. I was elected road supervisor in our district. 1175 'il' Q 'H AUGUST 6. Levi Erskine carries her grip to the train. eff' Qt ,l ' AUGUST 7. Stout, of Earlham Cat a Warsaw dancel, en- lf lf! ' gages the Home Sweet Home with his f 1 fd? RQ company, Miss M. - ' J? AUGUST 9. iuissrayioi-, of the Homestead: 'fob 1 justej ' ,J think Dickey-bird QH. sg is the Sv.-eetesn thing! QA!! mm ,Y 153 HI DY. DlCkQU'S 501112 BULLETIN : CURFEW RULE--Citizens of the park must bein their homes, park lights must be out, 10:00 P. M. 10:30 P. M. 11 : 15 P. M. 12:00 M. 1:00 A. M. LIORAL No. 1. MORAL No.'2. 8:00 A. M. 8:45 A. M. 9:00 A. M. 9:15 A. M. 10:00 A. M. 10:15 A. M. 10:25 A. M. 11:00 A. M. 11:15 A. 191. 11:20 A. M. 11:30 A. M. 11:45 A. M. 12:00 M. and quiet reign, after the sounding of the curfew, at 10 p. m. S. C. DICKEY, Manager. QRule: Last fellow in must lock the door.j Bobbitt arrives. Thinking everybody in, locks the door. First installment of sleep. Dr. Dickey's son and sisters-in-law arrive with a friend. Clamor to wake the dead. Bobbitt must let them in. Rag-time music and cake-walk on bare floor above. Low mutterings, indicative of neighbors' appreciation, borne on the evening breeze. But not safe to swear owing to thin parti- tion. Ask Davidson. Quiet again, but for the frogs' serenade on the lake's reedy marge, and the far-away divine cadence of the I. U. Glee Club at Miss -. WVell elsewhere. Sleep. Neher arrives. A tap on the window, Say, Bobbitt, let me in. WOuldn't tell where he had been. Sleep knits at some more raveled sleeve. Dr. Dickey arrives. Must go around to the window, too. Speaks low for the benefit of the neighbors, Mr. Bobbitt, will you kindly let me in? With a yawn, This is no time to be making calls: come around to-mor- row. 1t's already to-morrow: let me in. Guess he had been to prayer- Ineetingg didn't ask. The Doctor's habits are good. Better late than never. The early bird catches it. if Davidsows Ddilv Program Prof. Mottier lectures for one hour. Davidson arrives in time to hear the closing words. Goes down for a drink-oh, cold water, of course. Inspects the snakes. Goes to the post-office. Arrives with mail for everybody but himself. Takes out his microscope slowly and carefully-according to directions. 'WVright, let me see your drawing of this plant. Proceeds to copy the drawing. Goes out to the pier in his official capacity of Lord High Inspector of the Lake Returns from observation tour. Puts away his microscope. Listens while Moore tells another story. Starts to dinner. Laboratories close for dinner. AFTERNOON SESSION! Same tune with variations. 154 11:00 A. M. 11:01 A. M. 11:10 A. M. 11:15 A. M. 12:01 P. M. 2:00 P. M. 3:00 P. M. 3:005 P. M. SHAFER forgets to take in his washing on Sunday. 53 gif X f .Mx L J - ' ' M V fix! , V , Q . ' lgfirg. 4 Q' ll 1 llVt il 3:00 P. M. Bulletin: Ball game this afternoon. Gillum, catcher, etc. 3 Moore, center field, etc. Moore goes in Search of a ball suit. He returns after a Wild goose chase. -12 M. He searches through his effects for a certain pair which- He takes to the tailor to have niade into golf trousersn-since that style is good for ball playing, bicycle riding-' ' any old thing' ' Tailor returns U golf trousers. Moore critically inspects himself in the mirror. They are not even good for any old thing. fhOf41 ' ' l X, ff if J I fp 4 l My pk f git l X x ' W X ,. - l ,g ' nffffii 3? ' Tig .. ,f 'YW A zrxbmii ll ,LN J - K., . 'J P -li' Qi i 2 ii wi. 'iiwliillili 1 'Ulrike' 155 Incubawrs, mal and Real 'Twas at Winona Station, On the breezy Eagle Lake, Wlhere the incubator fizzled And the eggs began to bake. John Spooner, With a vengeance, Tried to regulate the lamp, But he found he could not do it, Just because the oil Was damp. Then he called the noisy Harrold, The young doctor, don't you know, To help him in his trouble And make the old thing go. Harrold soon became disgusted And told the doctor straight He must furnish him a hatcher, Or else a big rebate. Dr. E. began to hustle h ,JM And to work the old thing oter, But the more he monkeyed with it, All i The more the boys got sore. , Mgfx But the doctor soon got angry And pronounced it all a fake, as ,i,, , , f vi! And gave the boys permission ,lv X N To throw it ln the lake. 'Qi 1 t 52 if k iln N And said, ffcome, my little children WU Mft' p , To the country We will go, , l , - S41 f ' And procure some feathered hatchers N , ,,, XJ, f K l f l ' So they hasten to the country ll i And each buys his little hen 3 2 M, In the picture you may see them E IVPA f-2.1-J Nm, All returning home again. DK if 21 X Frolnthefarmefswhom weknowf' ,V f Y - U VNV! 'I 1 'f'Wllff Incubators, then, are simple, -If attention you have paid- For they, too, are just like poets, Always born and never made. -Contributed by the Lake Poet. 156 U99 next DW Charlie Combs on returning from his regular evening swim, discovered that his incubator was escaping. Remembering that she was the real thing upon which his work in Embryology depended, he frantically grabbed his trunk rope and sped gleefully out across the meadow. , f ' X we 'fl' if , fi 'V r f Gigi :er r 5 ,foray im l E 0 tvflblzx will H ACROSS THE DIEADOXV O HI fb? Bvdfdillg 501159 Mr. Erskine- Waiter, may I have another glass of water? Mr. Bobbitt, in his serene, dignified tone- He wants a glass of hydrogen oxide. Mr. Erskine, trying to cut his beefsteak-'K No, I already have enough ox 'ide' ' Ed Calias Kid7'j Showers: I have been out on the lake ever since three o' clock this morning contributing to the cause of science. Mr. Hockhalter: About all you could contribute would be your carcass when you die. 157 1 f . 'f. ,wx ,mv ,' Q NV Ag - A X fx ' ' j ' f Q, ri A N i,,, ? W f QW f am QW' 'XXX Q7 Y Riddle and Merriman go after roasting ears, but become discouraged. W I 1 iffy, If N 'iffiif ' n f W -fi X is i i g ! li l 'i ijlwixi I , ,Zi f' 1 4, YQ' LYNX R X DR. D L ff, - ,- f-.i.,,!n,.-.-an-V., Q, -. f- Dr. Eigenmamn on Blindfisbes 9797 f'The blind fishes have been unable to see anything, probably ever since they lost their eyes, which certainly occurred long after they had gone into the caves, where it is dark and no light can get to them unless they hear a naturalist coming with a lantern. Now these blind fishes are blinder than the blind rats because they have been in the blind caves longer than the blind rats have been in there. You see the blind rats could only get into these blind caves after the water had worn away the rocks considerable leaving dry places where the blind rats can see to inake their nests so that they can rear more blind rats which is the chief end of all rats excepting the end off their tails. 'K Last year you probably heard the very interesting but exceed- ingly ignorant lecture by Dixon, about striped gnats, white gnats, red gnats, big gnats, little gnats, swell gnats, gnats and blind gnats. Well these blind gnats are not half as blind as the blind fishes be- cause I have already proven that the blind fishes are the blindest things in these caves, because they went in first. V Now the blind crayfishes are just as blind as the blind fishes be- cause they probably went into these blind caves together. Then you can easily see that both of these are blinder than the blind gnats be- cause the blind gnats rode into the caves on the blind bats and the blind bats serve as food for the blind rats, and I have already shown that the blind rats went into the caves long after the blind fishes went in there. Probably I don't niake myself very clear here but you see what I ani driving at. I am like the preacher who said he did not know exactly what he was talking about but was undoubtedly on his road to glory just the same. 159 AT WINONA HIS coURsE is open to all students and has proved to be one of the most popular courses of the University. One of its chief recommendations is the opportunity afforded for original researchfif Students who elect English I as their major subject must take in it a four years' course of two recitations a Week. They will be required to attend class at least three times a monthg and in order to be graduated from the department, they must be able to spell words of two syllables, to use the period and interrogation point correctly, and to write their names properly on the back of the themes. The fee for this highly instructive and beneficial course is two dollars per term, which money is donated to the inartyred instructors for Hpin-money. '7 A few of the best samples of work done in this department are given. XFO1' old themes. 161 Che Freshmen Glass F ALL the freshman classes of this University, was there evcr another as apt, loyal, and valiant as the class of nineteen hundred three. It is with pleasure that we turn back to the past because all herein has been perfect harmony, not even Dr. Swain has been caused the least anxiety on account of our attitude. But can this aforesaid be said of other classes? For reply we need only turn for a moment to the sophamore class of this year, Where we find discord at every turn. D This class tried in many ways to entice us from our course but without avail. The took pleasure in saying such things as we were milk fed babies. Now the question to me is, what do they think of themselves, especially since the scrap of the twenty-second. . MORAL.-Beware of sowing evile for others, ,cause you yourself must generally devour the fruit. sf e f'?f'2'f'? QOIISQQIIQIICQS of d RGSID Deed NE of the most sensational features of the class meet last Thursday was the ascention of a baloon with the freshman colors attached. It rose to the center of the ceiling and remained there for several minutes. During this interval the class was in great suspense. Would ,the baloon ,come back to the place from which it was set free or cross over to the opposite side, if the latter happened the colors would be laid at the feet of the sophamores and nothing but a hard contested scrap could follow and how many would be hurled from the galery to the floor below. This had become the uppermost thought of most students when the baloon began slowly to descend to the eager freshmen. There was however another danger of which we had not thought until the colors were lowered, when Doctor Swain came to the front of the stage and said Hthat was a fool-hardy act, I set here all this time thinking that the bunting would take fire and every one in the roorn as well as myself would be burned to death before he could escape. But the bunting didenlt take fire. 162 EllgliSl? CWD 1 Y Mosr interesting course is English Two, under Mr. M. We do not spend our time in obsolete words and useless English history, but on the plot and characters of the novel, and the manydevices the author uses in making things come about natural. An interesting feature of the course is the instructerls extremely original illustrations, which tends to awaken a living interest in the story. As an example of this originalesim, I will relate an illustra- tion given to make clear the ungentlemanly manner in which Roderick Dhu pro- posed to Ellen. Well,'7 said the instructer, 'tfor instance, you was in love with a girl, and as an argument for her hand, you would say, 'Ellen Ifve got a nice brown-stone front down to Indianapolis, won't you have me? I got a ine horse and carriage rubber tires too.' In this very common illustration the point is brought out plainly, and at the same time it is something that will not be forgotten before the next recitation. s?f9f H womarfs Bat OME WOMEN wear very large hats and look very nicely with them on. But when they wear these large hats to a concert it would be better to remove them, as they cut off the view of the stage from people setting in the back part. Once a woman who lived in a city Wore a large hat to a theatre. People who set in the back part of the room could not see anything on account of it. The hat was made of black velvet over a large frame, and trimmed with 3 or 4 large tips and lagrets. The hat was turned up beautiful and was an expensive one. Finaly a man Who was directly behind her, kindly asked the Woman to remove the hat off from her head. She refused to do so and replied, that it was not every day he had the privilege to view a S50 orniment. 163 H Sight at the fire sifvf T IS AMUSING to note the manner in which people sometimes conduct them- selves When excited. The fire last Wednesday furnished an excelent opportunity for numbers of the crowd too become excited, and many of their cappers were better' than a monkey show. There was a certain english instructer there, and you have no idea of either the appearence he made nor how he walked. He attempted to assist the firemen in carrying the hose into XVylie Hall and quite naturl he got his fingers muddy. You could see that he was not used to having his feet in Water so much for he was evidently in a state of the greatest mental agony for he even walked more pitiful than the worst deformed child. His hands were very muddy, and he held them straight over his head. His glasses felt as if they were cumming off, and conscquencly he held his nose as high in the air as if he was looking for bees. 164 CUNCERNHNG wi VWM f M T' X gk gy 4 X f4S,! V AQ si? 1 xg x W Q -40 K , f -fp QNKVXSIM Wf x V -Wi' 'L 'W ,417 -J ff 'n my an 'V df f WM ,f zf fo Kgs W0 , 4 21 M H ,A ' ,fi 1-IV, :ij mx' QL lI BHNvxQ?X'Wf A All J J- . , b 'MWrf 54 i Jz T5 - ff Q Mm I-uw fffm J gwfc-X?MXf1w 6 f A X5 M xf Qf .f W Q Q2 ji if ,Mllgw N ?S? if Wfy-ff 'wwf f Q3 ,f' X 1 THE1Rf 3usY DAY -f SCENE 'N THE THEM FEffWER'H0U5E 1 H CD U1 - . gi FD 5 P?- U2 , ff N 5 LT' ef Q. l i CD FP .5 H 5.3 5-3 C3 pm Ph 4 J 9 5 c-F r Q ij 25 72 XA'-F 5 5 la TL O - : no o PF: f-'F 7 Q M C D :ei 5 UQ - H CJ .. : -. K4 2 U1 H 'Mx ai- f -Um' i ef L gif? My . -Z ev 111, f fl Q ' , +1 e:S::2?Xfr:g-::--to CU CD 'i Q Q '1 3' 3 -4 Cb N 'Q Cb cm 3 fw- oit the Junior class eallefl to report on the progress ot the University, which had been left in their Charge. The President seeniecl worried, but this was clue, no nloubit, to the einharrassnient. of their presence-eso the' visitors inferred, at least, for sfhioulcl not even the President regard with revereait awe the 'tpeople who run the eollegen? Say, Longf, whispered Stevens, t'there's something wrong with 'Uncle Joe. D'v spose the faculty inacle ai kick because we ivoulrl not let them clot as they pleasecl while he was gone?f' But just then Dr. Swain spoke. '4Aheni, he began., glaeing ata green-hacked journal on the desk, xl ani greatly clistresserl at the coniplainte that have reaehenl nie, anll l tear that my eonliclenee has been inisplaeetl. You clon't seein to know how to run a College after all, noltwit-hstancling the assurance you gave ine to the eontrary. You have all had experiences with eo-untrv schools, but a great university heyoncl your reach. Wait a nionient, Mr. Wood, l will give you a ehanee presently, as that gentlein-an began to mutter something about the 'football reception banner anrl the troph-v cup in the lihran'-v. Xow, the chief inisitake whieh you have niacle is the pub- lication olf this annual. You have failed to 1'0COQlllZl? the signifkanee of sucfh pub- lications. 'Fliev shoulcl represent the wit ancl intellect clevelopecl bv a. college erlu- cation. ancl relleet ereclit upon the institution. flow, T greatly cleplore the appear- ance ot' this 'Megaphone' You see, I inust look after the interests of the Uni- versity, and it isn't. policy to let such things get abroacl. We have a reputation to sustain. But. he'l'o1'e paseing juclginent upon the 'perpetrators of this incliseretion, I. 166 wish to understand fully the motives and limitations that affected you. Miss Mar- shall, I see, to my surprise, that your name heads the list. Have you anything to say in your defense? W ell, Doctor, she replied, HI defy anyone to produce a het-ter booklet with the talent in our class, and I think I deserve a great deal of credit for cutting out an abundance of material that some of my assistants wanted to publish, and I never did think we could run the college, anyhow. That was Mr. McGovney's idea. Mn Long, you may proceed. I--I-Doctor-it was on account of the title tha.t I wanted to get on the hoard. When I was in the Logansport schools I had the reputation of heing one of the most successful rfuiors in the city, and when I heard that this was to he a Megaphone, I felt it my duty to lend a voice. After all, I don't think it- is so had an effort. Prof Clapham didnit like it, suggested lflarly, mildly, and Long subsided to give place to McGovney, who stood nervously lingering the hank hook in his pocket. As far as the literary excellence of the Megaphone is concerned, I had nothing to do with it. Iim not a. literary man anyhow. But the linancial side oft the matter has heen keeping me awake nights. Itm glad ot this opportunity to express myself, for I think the University ought to help me out. It it hadn't heen for the local ad- vertisements, I donlt know where I would have come out. Indiana University stu- dents won't huy a. good thing even when I recommend itfi That will do, Mr. IXICG-ovney. I should like new to hear from Mr. Murray. 'Til tell you how it was, Docj' eagerly responded that embryonic journalist, for he hegan to fear of losing his stand-in, I was a little afraid we couldnit run an an- nual this year, hut you see I wanted to he- on the Arhutus hoard next. year, and a fel- lowis got to have practice. I tried all I could to hring myself up to ai high stand- ard hy associating with Seniors. I even attended th-e Senior hop uninvited, in or- der to get a few pointers on social conduct.. To tell the truth, I think the real merit ot the Megaphone may he attributed to nie. But I assure you that the Arhntus next year will he a 'peaehj for I am certain of election, and I aim pe'riie.cting a pla.n for disposing of kickersf' That7s just it, broke in Wood. 'flt it ha.dn't heen for the kickers we'd have had our pictures in the Megaphone, and then it wouldn't. have heen such a. drug on the market. The pictures of this hoard would have sold the whole edition of any annual, irrespective of literary worth. But I7111 sure of getting my picture in the Arhutus, and that scores another advantage it will have over the Megaphone. Then, too, sixteen pages of my jokes were cut- out, and in tact several important items of my advice were disregarded. I am not willing to he responsihle for anything I couldn't ahsolutely controlf, Well, well, said President Swain, Wwe don't seein to he getting anywhere. Personally, I should he glad to dismiss this whole matter: hut owing to pressure from the English departinent, I shall have to condemn you to six months' further work in English One. Yes, I know it's too had tor Juniors, hut the reputation of the school must he sustainedf' And the Board withdrew. 167 ff J lfll send the beaU,.l.?U?'0IZrn0Y I, OU A Cglx 7 f'cLEg?9Xh'.5 O 50gl,d , V X X VZXK ya pf- NOW For Atfe N Q -W EQ ,Up l ' ff-A xf- ' X 5 V xx ff NW N ,J -za . -11 . f ' Swanton V-gg 4' 0 J i !A-bf i'!?'X'A j ' E YA in? 'ia f' J I' i, Q N kc, IW in-vu, If R XX su ' I D ,Q :LMI ' Z w I ? r X to this-df tciujtr See che Point W II A , X ul X E greek? WhaGll doeS bet.,-1,1 - ,-5 A OO fdoes HT 'nk H115 ,S UI A . ,jfs P F Old dad if WQDI' If-O 52?-,dIg0fAPh of Muff lfhehgisf 0 Why 5 ,- .. T' Or? GY 'f' b ' 1 V Ialwa 5 f N Y Oy! , - f Q 5 were 7 b0Qgl-,fy i 'Lia' 450mg to Schgcju 71? x X af Q, - QA A K X S, 5-55 Q . K ! I h bf, 'gg X?f V' A Sv-2 R QX..,.ffZ XS A ff N U If If Tixfig ft AWA I . V A Z 1. 1 r K V f X by -MADSMHDQ N V, A , . i SL ' - X Q x Q5 2 x R. ' M W , f f 1. TZ ' + Xf A ,W A l 1 5 , FGHXN gf ! 9 K5 ., M aw rff ,WE W XXX. Y Q hi fglllwuwudv. 'K III gl H1 hi L VH Y X xx? I 1 mx li-154LI:'7rsR'L9llst Y1fy., ,l . , f ' fn 1 I X ' n , ' vm X A XM 1' Eivyfgi' N N U ff' 'fri f ia lx f - 'ffNWfmf'M1'1Ml KV 1.1 f 1' ' NEW 5 e I W - 'T Xi K I 16? X X 3. x .. -5 XQQK Life 5 7 -J' Q If gk xii ., w x? KKK M ee? .I f ' e H75 D of-U f01iH CPRCULATING LHSSRARYE His Majesty, 1l157SG1'f--DHDfO1'tll. A Brass M o11key-My-Higgins. g . 'ii 5 2 Friends--Phi Gam and Sigma Nu. L, on 21 High Level-J. F. Bobbitt. L flw ' 5 elim' ' EQ? 1 . J Anglo-Saxon Superiority-Olive Dailey. The Liars-Home and Barbour. Little Master The Betrothed-Clara Snyder. 169 pieces-Misses Triplett, Trayl 01' and Forkner. WW iff my X The Man in the Iron Mask-Sampson. ' NJ :N Q Kiln . When Life is X?Ol1Hg--ETOWIIIT1 Brubaker. IW -x- ,ffm V 1 ,LX QW ff? Onlyean Irish Boy-McGinnis. egg f- - A ., 4 vw Wlde Awake-McA1hst01'. f e f . W!!! , ff f ' . ' W W 2 'r g, W To Have amd To Hold-Dr. Searles. ff fe M x K fp, V WW, Q '7 My Lord and My Lady-Tom Bracken and Olive Dailey. 2 W he -X ki!! ex 9.19 170 Z Which Loved Her Best?-Mcllette or Masters. gg 1 K When Knighthood Was in Flower-Grim. K' f, 2 :7 The Christian-MI71'ed Stevens. E.-5 nf p 5 :Y IS f Of Such is the Kingdom-Doe Bowles, Dodclridge, McGinnis. N fjff y . K Q , 2 M X K nf -A Q43 X .J X L,,1 Q He A Qu fl My f . 'Y ea11Gf1BaCk--E1fe1-S, 'X , L, Q 4' N HJ , U . . I L? f X .. KX Tn Lmlglllalld-C'l1arhe Dickey. LW I 3 ,K O - iinfi The Art of Dining-Max Hawley. 'I aj 5 E7 lg gr 4-W 9 M y Wife and I--Ruby. 171 . 1 1 1 1 I h , . W yr W X' . W1 W QA 'af I The Cigarette and the Youth- Doe Doddrjdge. MW 21:9-1923 . Q Q 'Q The Secret of Hrlppiness-Carrie Forkuer. 2 gif? A e-5 xzfulgntjgs Am ff X ' One of the Two-J. C. Castlemau. Ah 1? ' X X Jo X The Illustrated Horse Doctor--Prof. Morton. I .. W6 Q 5 Nt tt' f WY ff Q- 5 MM, ,fg.QLp4fft Xt f ,Z , Love Me Little, Love Me Long+Ste11:L Ma1'sl1z1H. if ' .. 'Z The Mmm Behind the Gun-Dr. Swain. XB wk ' gt 1 kfi X-Q'-Ex A x gh? KI t ,tt , A 4 mYlANgx' 'l The Daly of Vengivanee-When the Arhutus comes out. ,fv- K W f X I - N 4, .. E M Q Q9 ga K J X X 1 la!.nflunu' . Q all - l bxgmwx - 4 Y ' X N X4 elf Nb K? T-mx M Ns lf :RE Q f I 'Twas just a nice, fat little It came 1 wn to I. U., 1 rm 5 But O, the ro that germ k k d p And it so 1 ttl too! 173 -Q i t oi, l In ff ,EWG p p . . , lcgexil Qommoul at giii25Q'QilLC'3CQZiii Muomobes V i s a e as gf at ae.. .4 .. . U oo I t.-4, - iv O R 3 n ,- QU IHI if Q we c 73 Q kwa-scwxhm X42 CONSTITUTION. ARTICLE I. This society shall be styled The Local Council of Isolated Microbes. , ARTICLE II. Its purpose shall be mutual consolation. ARTICLE HI. The officers of t11is Council shall be: Major and Minor Parasites, Magnus Bacterius, Registrar of Diag- noses, Chief Virus, High Queer Microbe, Chief Sus- pect of Lazaretto, Chief Dispenser of Fumigation, Senior 'Transferred Microbe, junior Transferred Mi- crobe, Patron and Patroness. ARTICLE IV. Any member shall be eligible to office of Parasite upon tl1e 1'6COIIlll16I1d9.tlOI1 of Microbicide. l74 Founder, B. V. GosHoRN, Clay City. Major . . . Pair 07 Sights 5 Minor' . U Magnus Bacterius .......... Registrar of Diagnoses ..1. Chief Virus .... .... . High Queer Microbe. . . . . . Chief Suspect of Lazaretto .... Chief Dispenser of Furnigation .... Junior Transferred Microbe.. Senior Transferred Microbe.. Patron . ...... . .... . . Patroness .... Chief Microbicide ...... Assistant Microbicide .... OFFICERS. HONORARY MEMBERS. 99? F. E. GILKISON '01 Law R. A. HIGGINS,,7O3., M. E. H-AGGERTY, 01. C. I. GEORGE, 702. J. A. TREHER, '03. E. E. STRANGE, 703. HARRY GRAY, '01. M. F. SULLIVAN, 01. J. R. GILLUM. J. D. BLYTHING. MR. SAMUEL ORCHARD. MRS. SAMUEL ORCHARD. DR. ROGERS. DR. HARRIS. This organization was established in J anuary, but it proved too exclusive to be popular. Membership was coercive, no resignations were allowed, and a few of the members who chafed under the severe rules of the order sought to escape into the outer world, but were captured and returned by the cruel minions of the law-sometimes. After the original council had disbanded, two or three attempts were made to re-establish it, and on a certain Wednesday afternoon in March, forty young ladies of the University were forced to become members. After a closed session lasting from 2:00 p. rn. until 10:00 p. ni.-the members failing to break out-the club broke up. 175 Lfmm fmsg H CHRONICLE N JAN. 20, 10:00 P. JAN. 21, 7:30 A. A. 10:00 A. 11 :30 A. 11:35 A 11.355 A 11:40 A. 11:45 A. 11:50 A. 11:55 A. 1:00 P. 1:30 P. 3:00 P. 3:05-5:00 P. 5:00 P. 5:45 P. Chief Mierollieicle establishes quarantine. Walks away whis- tling, 1 Guess Tliait Will Hold You for a While? 11. C. I. 11. rolls out of lied and finds itself lielrl. Breakfast with Mrs. Oreliaril. Higgins pronioted to the olliee of Minor Parasite on second floor. CX Strange reads Les Misdralnlesfl llifotion before the House to substitute More for Lesfsj. Motto, uS1113111JOX,:j posted. fl ?7'!,,ly Pavement on north siflo of fl'l1i1'cl boycotted. tl ' 11. 0. 1. M. ormlerecl into liarraelis from front porch. Clippenger, standing on the corner of the square, tlirows our mail across. L. C. 1. M. sings Annie Ilaurief' George and Gray write the last eoinniunieation pending quar- antine. Dinner. Higgins absent. - I4 Haggerty and Sullivan offer to wash dishes. 35. Refused. 1 1 Hinlcer walks along the other side of the street , Xe fighting inierolies with a club. Talmleaux in bay winclow. Dixon and Clippenger toss bananas and eliewing-gum to us. Supper. No further promotions. 176 6:10 P. M. Higgins eontributes the following poein: I guess Weire kind oi istinguished like, Ani feelin' kind o' proud, Because the doetor Caine last night, An' then my niaw she 'lowed TTS young 'uns all should stay at hoine, An' be as good as pie, An' just be Careful how we'd talk To folks 'at's going by. An' ever sinee we all have been A feelin, pretty line, Because the doctor said held give U all a quarantine. An, there it was right out in front, A great big, bright red card, A sayin, plain as eould be said To keep out of our yard. An' nie an' Sally looked around, O, alniost erer'wliere, An' our house had the nieest look Of any house thatis there 3 ,Cause there froin right on our front porch, We could see eight or nine, An' ours was all the house I see That had a quarantine. The only thing that I don't like Is Benny's feelin, bad, An, inawis a cryin' like she does, An' jest a.-actin' sad 3 An, then Pd like for Lucy Green To eoine and play with ine, But when I asked my inaw, she said She eouldn't-no-sir-reel If she and Benny'd eonie and play., And niaW'd just stop her cryin', I know Weid all feel awful proud To have a quarantine. 6115-S300 P, M, Meeting for further organization. 8:05 P. M. Treher prophesies liberation on or before January 27th JAN. 22, 10:30 A. M. Groeeryman sets provisions in alley and runs. 177 10:35 A. M. 12:00 M 12:45 P. M. 1:40-4:00 P. M. 5:30 P. M. 6:00 P. M. JAN. 23, 9:00 A. M. 9:00 A. M. to 1:00 P. M. 3:45 P. M. 3:46 P. M. 5:30 P. M. JAN. 24, 10:40 A. M. 1:15 P. M. 7:00 P. M. 8:00 P. M. 9:00 P. M. JAN. 25, 7:45 A. M. 10:30 A. M. 11:10 A. M. 12:30 P. M. 4:30 P. M. 7:30 P. M. 7:45 P. M. 8:00 P. M. 6 :ilk w7s mrA1l QQ - - g ,, ,: cc.'.' . Gioce -Hlggllli rnalres upll, giying, I, , f , . . ax fri to each member that which It i W, Q5 f - - lm ,r--...! ' F - ' he stands most 111 need of., faekggff , fo - J N ' -A v. f ,ma 'fzrfiwt Articles too numerous to C 4 ,W Q E fo lllflrse , ' f mention. ' mba oto 0 0 Treher snnnnoned to trial for assaultine' Haggerty. Masters favors Council with oranges and cigars. Treher's trial: acquitted. Great consternation over the report that L. C. I. M. is to be ren1oved to pest-house. All take oath to iight tothe last rather than go. Neighbors l1old council and decide that smallpox does not exist. Everybody studies f?j. Greatest eve11t up to date-telephone put i11 by L. C. I. M. Great discord as to who first communicates with Central. George successful. Student Affairs Connnittee spy us. ,Phone still in use. Gray and Treher sun themselves on top of P , wood-house. -, K- - -. f na? Q Gilkison pronnsed a parole. -'93 Qx fggefs .-i,,f,,:v , Chocolate drops found on window-sill. Each niemher punches fifth hole in his lecture ticket. l breaks quarantine' and visits us. Gray nuitilates his Clllll with a stick of laindling. Doctor prescribes hot teddy for Higgins. Haggerty springs a. surprisc?batl1cs. Gillcison comes down stairs. ' Mrs. Hodge contributes a loaf of excellent hread. Gray 'phones that we get about eighteen hours, sleep every night. Explains hy saying that we go to hed at 1llllC and get up at nine. Strange plays a joke on the telephone with the alarm clock. Tir. Bryan sends magazines. Perused by all. 178 JAN. 26, 7:00 A. JAN.26,1OZ15 A. 6:00 P. 7:00 P. JAN. 27, 8:00 A. 11:00 A. 1:00 P. 4:00 P. 6:00 P. 6:30 P. 9:00 P. JAN. 28, 8:15 A. 10:00 A. 11:00 A. JAN. 29. JAN. 30. 11:00 A. 11:30 A. JAN. 31. P-sg? Tramp calls, but when shown our motto concludes he isn't hungry. f G-ray asks l to pay his debts, and then tries to explain that he isn't dunning him. Sullivan telling a story---4'An engine of 120 l101'S6-POWGTQ no, it was double that, 260 horse-power.', Dr. and Mrs. liyons present us with a fine roast. Miss Hanger sends tatfy. Dr. Woodburn brings books to Gray and Higgins. Chief Mierobieide dines with us. Strange receives telegram. ff Patten brings magazines. 5' - Strange gives an exhibition sleigh t-of-hand ,: performance. A Dr. Bryan sends pies. . .. - N 2 I I 154 ' . i s 5 'hy c. Dr. Eigenmann puts a jar of jelly onthe front porch, and , A JG then runs for lns lite. 'L li, l . 1 . Bible Class. ' Vague rumors of a Sophomore scrap last. night. Nothing very important. Haggerty indisposed. Haggerty more indisposed. One rofom funiigated and occupied by Sullivan and Gray. Blything a.nd Gillnm transferred from Quarantine No. 1. L. 0. 1. M. spikes them and they become members, Mr. Bly- tlring being elected Senior Transferred Mierobe and Mr. Gil- lum Junior Translierred Mierobe. 0 6 , V X 1 I gg N George dreams that he is a clown in F 7 ,K , Joe Swain's circus. A rr efilbowv Mrs. O'Harrow sends us a cake. Q, , Md 179 'gil I, iff! . - 93. lllt tw FEB. 1. Minor Parasite permittecl to come clown to first Hoor. FEB. 2. Mieroliieicle goes to Indianapolis. Turkey for dinner. 2:00 P. M. Great uproar on seeoncl floor. 3:00 P. M. Gray escapes by means of twisted hemp. FEB. 3, 3:00 P. M. Tr. C. 1. M. plays 'CDucli on Davyp' in the hack yzircl, and then lives upon roof of the woocl-slied. ' 'WG--+ 5:00 P. M. Gillcison talks to Miss A. over the 'phone 6:15 P. M. Last meeting of L. 0. I. M. for the mon th. FEB. 4, 4:00 P. M. Chief Mierohieicle parclons us and sets us seot free. Here encleth the chronicle of this great mutual consolation organization QX 4 . X 'N .lm f. - fill . ..,,7 - X nmlllm X X . H il - P f . -'. ' ' l ll. . Kun 1 180 Bow Smallpox Hffected Dr. Iiersbev fr THE TIME when the greatest excitement prevailed in college circles over smallpox, the Kappas gave a reception, and naturally the chief subject of conversation was smallpox During the evening, Dr. and Mrs. Hershey called, and soon the doctor became greatly alarmed at the rumors that were rife. He was seen to motion Mrs. Hershey aside and whispered excitedly to her that as they valued their lives they must hasten to be vaccinated. He rushed upstairs, grabbed his hat, but in the hurry lest a inicrobe should catch him on the way, he forgot to put it on. Soon Dr. Shafer had vac- cinated the two frightened ones, and succeeded in quiet- ing the learned Professor's nerves by assuring him that despite his delicate constitu- tion he was now safe. Much relieved, the doctor put on his hat to go, when, lo! he found that he had some Junior's .QNX r- ,f Nw QQ 1' F, . . ix 511, S Q' :QA .w ,f 'lii'iiif3i?f! lgrfgnrfiif fllyn ll M J ah! headgear-it came down to his ears. He hastily returned to the Chapter House for his own property. At daybreal: on the following morning Dr. Shafer was aroused from his dreams by a violent ringing of the bell. He went to the door and found there Dr. Hershey, Who said: H It's just my cuffs, Doctor, I left them here last night. Yfsif 1.T,xxn.xi:Y 24, 1900. To THE BIEMBERS or THE FACULTY: Please ive to the Re 'istrar on or before next Saturday niornin'-', the year of va.ccina.tion of each SS 1 . s of your students, Please note abseiices, witlidmwnls, and those never vaccinated. This data may be secured by calling the roll, or othcriuise. Please be careful to get every student. Josnrii SWAIN. This notice will account for some of the following, obtained otherzvisc. JOHN FOX, 'O3. V,xce1N.i'rED Sunday Afternoon. Did not take. 500. HOMER COTTON, V.xcc1NAri-in-Nov. 26, 1S99g Dec. 18,1S99g Jan. 5, 1900. I ani willing to undergo the opcratioii again if the Faculty deem it necessn ry. 1-S1 Chev Fled 5 5 l X 1 f- xii i 1 E ,laglglizillfx I 5 , 1 i A lg f' ll l i J K ' i l 3 ' . i Q i :sw-,,,::l ,L-1. -1 ' The following delicately constituted individuals were the first to leave town when the germ arrived: 4 C 2 M limi Q X f- 2 L gf 4 Q3 1 Miss HUFF MISS FORKNER Miss GILLETTE Miss LEOPOLD and MR. BIEDERWOLF 182 J, .'l r I 4 TIME 1 'QWXW I fi ' if , EXW H BUT 1, I fig' f Z ' D U fi -was -' ,, if N 'WY ,. 'Y 3-iff V'9Z , 'I J X E ki. V1 U 77.5 f I v4 N: D-.ul , A U -2' 1 In VX Aff 1 N fr Hy M X NU , 3 ' ,M m, ' 51 ,N KE X I EWff' 'E'?lI' n ,Mx g Cir- g is ' ifhwx 07-va, l IQ! if Vis x U 1. 'f.!fT'i1 xxdq, hi R f Q4 n, .fg 1 !lf' Li f 'K yflxf? :X 4 Q1 Jaxx I! ,Viz X law' fi 0 ' f gf U fi, t N' 1' 0 'V Rl UV! ff ff 9 if U L Q 9 'ff jf 5 U 'x is 85 A Q fi jf'j? fEEf.-gn, AI ?Q X5 Lfgj Xrw , X-' WE Tune greui pleasure in introducing To ine nicrure-loving public, some of ine most icimeus nerimiis of ine greoi iXi2l3U'i'LIS COI- leeiion. We are Dreucl of ine iuei inei among ine number we eun Claim 0 genuine Dubens, No. 5633 glso No. 3315, 0 genuine Tiiiung and Several einers snow faint Truees of G Vun Dgen, as Ne. 7 und NO. 5l0, Dui Time is needed io mgne ine Van Dveiz verg evident. The urii5i5 nuve nap- Dilg Cciugni ine 5uDjeCi5 in 'ineil' fuveriie cliiiiucles, and rnus ine Iilzeness is :nude cleublg sirilzing. 18-1 wh' D MM! f 2-A 5 if X it Wi B Widen' f ii K 2, T-'QMA fl: , EM 'N . , liiiiiiliii fr i f' i limit ff Tix ' . ii N ' x LK W XS , 4 , i 0 L ' ,rm Q' inf' , , l ,, - 7f.f','si N ' if WWE X i t 1 I i 1 M 'Niki-g ' Q lil'-ici, 'i E-es .ll If lil '1 Z 9 7' v-e 4 A , f Kawai llawrence K. 'Culev His DEAR little boy lives far away in the South CNew Albanyj, and is one of the few tender young plants in the University Herbarium. He is a bright little fellow, and can converse on topics of the day almost as well as a Junior. If Lawrence is good and studies well, by and by he may wear real long trousers, the breadth of his collar will develop into height and his bag of books Will have dwindled to one little note book, in which he may write notes to the girls during recitations and chapel hours. Lawrence is very fond of books and music, and is happiest when he is studying or practicing his finger exercises. This picture was taken the first morning Lawrence came to college. 185 'N 5 l f m! 4 M l fft lik it X is it 4 It 1' li V: . N. I i 1 i.ffsvM l , 'v My' ll L? 4'7lg5a l yi M. P . lx lil lil l l li lil if fftlliei j f if i ll l N, il wil l vlll X ,il li f mll wll , f ll l l-'lit it 1 WW ml filwli xlxx I ,H vi, Ffa ll' 'I A H ' ' f QED' No. 5105 john J. morrison 'Fox HE chief aim of this little boy's life is to lead people into believing that he is not a Freshman. But he must remember that he is only a tender blos- som and that Time alone can help him. One of the great fears which he has not yet overcome, is fear of the dark. He is afraid of the spirits that haunt Forest Place, and it is whispered among his intimate friends that he is the little boy one of the Professors told about who stopped saying his prayers at night for fear when he kneeled down at the bedside, that something would out his legs off. Still there are many upper elassmen afilietecl in the same way. May this little Fox he cunning enough to escape the snares and pitfalls set for him. tfSl1ortly after this portrait wus nizule, Mr. Fox p11i't-lmsevl :L new hat. with it heuutiful blue polka dnt band of which he is justly proud. He wears it :1 little fill'fll0l'lbtlClilJl1 his head than this.-ED. 186 . i if X ff'- -Q If , fa J 'lx bei M l ll .Nlllll ' L lm l i i SMX XY: K it N th l 'ilix l Vx K li ' ,V 'gl lm! ll lwli l. it-IPM i j i iw' -A: W i l lriiii lfiiidi fsssssisal, fl, 11 lil W' WEEE 1, il NO. 20. j. Buren Higgins ABY HTGCZINS is very large for his size, but he has not outgrown his charming little childish ways. The scornful Soph might say that he was Hcoivzircly-calf because he crawled under the Gymnasium porch during the scrap on Illinois night, but all the other classmen know better-it was just as Baby said: He didn't Want to get hurt. 187 ff? KEN. 'NW ll! TEM' f 76 il , sun A' W I ' , ll, W xii No. 4-11-44. Ebarles IZ. Biederwvlf R. BIEDERWOLF is not indigene- ous to Indiana University-this will account for any peculiarities of manner, such as his extremely Chester- fieldian bow and his style of dancing. One of Mr. Biederwolf's chief charac- teristics is his open countenance. He has an extended smile and a pleasant word for every one. Some of the girls also think that he is funny. Mr. Bied- erwolf is one of the hardest law students in the University and has chosen for his life work the honored calling of Justice of the Peace. A brilliant future lies before him! Biddy -Cas he is called, though not from any resemblance to onej is quite an athlete, despite the seeming contradictions of the above portrait. He can play ball, and also his own horn. is .gfgy f I ' ' - X if fx if W W S f , mm it K 2 .Af -.' . ,. 1 . e , , . ffl .- fill Q.. Wifi , oO A f X nn fwtstighfiatv -R ' -4coma4w,9w'eM.r - l ' Ill ,1 ,,, l ilmnfw- - 'w 'muy f1gW,,W3j agggstpeegx ,,,,- N M, fl llllf 1 -'E'-Wars V s 104441f,fg?Lftstsazas, 1 W Ne. 4W 'f40?f47m4ae2v1a2is:2s r X 4' wt-irztewrzdffsesstf' W X .fy .. it . 14.19 7 X , fl vi X ,N 171:31 . f W N ,f XX,- f 11 f 1.1 X I , .fl 11 -,,,,,,.,.!n, 1 ,f Q f -5 V. X Zzf f f f f f S . M fan rs f yr: f'ff jf 2 X f g N ,Tp JZ.-ilu I V, iv I fs N 'WX f 049355332232 i???59fFi'54i3SS54 '. 'I X ff :is X G' H51?ETf45':Q'ii M971'-1 f 1455?-'f'M24x f f N w3Qf.wmmaQ ,saggy ll, ,.5.q,..s:,',e--1-. 2 f , X r IQ - -!---I-4551112 gg Y'?5f- ?TE'552. rira?f23-.s :PE gf 1 T i2.4: 1Ls!QQhg QWl.41-nn '. Q - -' 'wigs'-isrsiftmtg5:e3laa::' s ,, N la at X 1-00.79.513-4'iiwsazmiimii f ,. ff' x ,fif- Q4,'mvAv5wQi1'f45:?iZ1:2f r 7 '-.,4' -' -5 'mtl--:f'1-2:.i ' f I ' Y , if rr 7 g:4a.mi5E '3ig55? 1 fl ff .r-- .- f as -ll ,f .... f X' fxx ,wilnmttrdy . f A 43l0'F9W1.y ' , XX Mmw' X ' WMV 7 s . X 'W r , 3 pgqsixgvggiffz- Q X . f llbwzi-'fa?raq:aeqw,y. , emisiif' ' gf-2,34 ,,,, .,.. 4, X lfgeq,-me env.-wav'-a gm,-.--7.5 -J-.--15, ,-- 4, ,- . ,.- - 94-:WHPYHEMQ??25?2v1L'ar1!2i'5?::Iziafiix-iivirwass -2, ..-:i02'.' 0 02'-W v - Q v. e O at s ,355 f-'2 34 . A Q x YPVQ vz-v1-1-w.-f .Hr ... ,ag , Y-uf, - .Q - A f S A ' v 'Jensen' .2e'v.:.-:'!a'L-el:-aasgvx 5-.: afar, ,,. X 4,- Z, LN . W ... 6. , 7 - Jv1xQ,4:23N , Z-Q f-2111 NO. 329. George william Kurtis ERE You see George William Curtis riding his hobby. George William is conceded by the Student to be the greatest living authority upon rats with -the possible exception of the Chinese, and Dr. Jenkins of Harvard. He is strongly attracted to anyone who is interested in rats. At one time this year he evinced a deep admiration for a young lady who possessed an extraordinary rat, but when he found out that it was not a white rat, but only a poor wire one, his sentiment rapidly Waned. 189 '7 1.77 - fiv . i , in .X ZIL l l r I al jj it . I M' ttf 1 4 i tiff Milam? i It dmsb f i so Z 0 7 ,rt f'i'l, f ji i 4 in rj . f is q,1i?i1t1:siltl l i its i xii Vmi ri 9 1 u t W ii tt fa N0.2333. Che President of the 'freshman Class qmwmeg 1-:L phy of me sfo 1'Lx Hmm Y name is John R. McGinnis and I don't know as its any- body's business when I was born nor where. I come from down about Princeton and my father and mother was Irish, but I haint, only just my face and hair. Some folks say I have the Irish wit, but I haint, its just mother wit. I aint very fas- tidious about my appearance nor my talk, and I ,low that I am just as well off as them that's always goin, on about grammer, or always wearing stiff collars. When I was a kid I used to fight and cuss and lie but since I have growed up I don't Hght no more only with the Sophs. I have went to district school and High School and now I am a leading member of the Law School. I am going to be a great lawyer some day. I have saw lots of men no more brighter than I am get to be big guns. I haint no time to tell more about this bright subject but if anybody would like to know more about me, I'd be glad to tell them. R. BTCIKEE has the true in- stincts of the artist, though he has seldom attempted to paint the town red. When just a little boy, not more than ten years old, he could draw pictures of such things as saw-bucks, boot-jacks and slip- pers, objects with which h e was W ell acquainted. His teacher often re- proved him for idle- ness, but one day she accidentallydiscovered one of his beautiful drawings of a saw- buck. Her conscience pricked her for the unkind Words she had spoken to him, and folding Homer to her bosom, she cried, My dearest child, how can you ever forgive me for being so blind to your talent? From that time on he studied little except drawing, and by dint of in- dustry he became so Nm NW ti H img it fir-fr r AiiN'm,'fF?- If , fi F 3 I guy ' -u f , f ffl wi ff sv, gg W , , X 1 5m WA! If if? aww ui. g I QWANXNHQ if O , ' in the is e , ill' X L, rf!aW3' mggs 4 , X at Q 4tit e eea'ff' ,X 'lt g is ' is Q I w if if ' n ' 'R , xii , ' f k ' . 4 X i if K , N i i, ,Mgmt 'X X N llllwx M illi: K S I Wil? lomm S fx ' r fam xg? - g A: fg W -- wx 'i? A ww ,x No. 308. Bomer mcliee skilled that he was selected to illustrate the great Junior Wfegfqiirovza. He is now at work, as you see in his picture, upon what he considers his c71ejlcl,oe'z1w'e-the portrait of one of the bright lights of the Junior Class, Mr. D. O. McGovney. We predict for Mr. McKee a future even more brilliant than his past, :ind we earnestly hope that some day he may be able to draw a check. 191 rg l s all l it , , GQ ip rg! ,i f MiWt M i will f Wflg li i lr r Portrait of me myself wood Hrs IS only one among the many genuine Rubens in our gallery. The subject of this sketch was first brought prominently before the public as the mighty Coon Hunter of Forest Place. Since then he has taken his proper place as one of the bright and shining lights of the Junior Class, and one to whom they will point in future years and proudly say: He was one of the compilers and collaborators of the great Junior .Megap7i0ne. Mr. Wood has now taken up his life work of rewriting Dickens. He has found some very commendable things in Dickens but much that is crude and useless. By judicious treatment Mr. Wood be- lieves that these novels may be made acceptable pieces of literature. Mr. XVood is also prominent as an authority in politics, as an orator of remarkable wind, a debater and or- ganist Cmouth organistj. He hopes some day to have the world realize his Worth, and will, no doubt, make himself heard as he now practices talking twenty hours a day. This portrait was painted for the Megaphone, but owing to the supe1'abundance of valuable material it l rd to be left out. It is now inserted by request of thc Original. 192 1 if xx X 'Che 0nIv and 0riginaF 32715 vie L 1,1 QWQ A J X if 7 fa ? -If ,f ' f 2 1 y, my l lm , fr ,sw l f W' t M , that will '50 '-vii it X' X 'fi K, Vx , Q , Xi X N E th X Q7 at X X s ?, , R Xfuf M831-Z H. Il. liiltilirav Would you know a man of gall P Meet Murray. He's the king-pin of them all, This Murray. He's the would-be 4' biggest gun, ' Laughing-stock of everyone, XVho the ,Varsity would run, This Murray. Notice once that swaggering walk Of Murray. If you're able, hear him talk, This Murray. If he ClOGS11't drive you daft, With that cultivated laugh, Then you haven't seen by half, This Murray. True, our friend has got a pull, This Murray. O'er some eyes he draws the wool Mr. Murrayg But to those who really know, NVhat he is, he aint no go, It's too bad, and yet ,tis so, O, Murray. Wfhis poem is the spontaneous effusion of Edw-11 M-rkh-ui, upon first viewing our ll1'tlSf,'S inzlstorpiece. 193 X- I Y , I X 4 Maxx W VJ-M f QQW WW' f -' '-'J g :W ng K S! f if uf Z lfx K X I WSJ M X X S! + . A My ' f f H, I X i U W 'N W WH Y XX ,X ' Af No. 100. P0l'fl'dif Of d GQIITIQIIIGII --2.- X Ni F 7 W W ' A Q bqgrlf gs L ff ff ' - I ,svfix X var' 'gif XX f I X XXQ IXNLDM X W .. wo 1 1 X I X Nl by h 5 ,6 i 1' I ' f 5Vl f fif Qff'7Q ', I N! ,f WW Z f V X fi 1 V' - Wm U H 5 X X i J ' 2? l' 1' f y R X Q , kg N 7 'f f 1 'iA' if f v 5 A f -- .f Kam - ,+x9v:x X N X ji 1 A ,Mr I v -x fi ,4,,. R ff W it MWA' 1 Oi A QW F , I . -,', --, ? M, v 1 ' ff W t' X' ,fLf r 1L l Y 'W ' wx X x ,g1 5 , , Yi' Q . 55 .'...A,l , i - Y E in 4-EI. 'M v fx Wv, Ix K X WW X X V XM if X vw W W ' Q f f J f W . WHl?ZLfWfW'f'Q454KWff w W lf ww Y ' Once on a time, A professor, who looks a little like Rudyard Kipling, Had the hallucinaetion that it was going to rain stars. All other astronomers had it, too 5 And nearly everybody thought that he knew wha-t he was talking about when he got out his weather forecast. So everybody took their umbrellas, To keep from getting hit by any of the shower, And went out to- the campus at night a.nd got on the high places To keep from floating away in t.he Hood. They sat there under their umbrellas, Two to an umbrella, Un-til they thought that the danger had passed. Nobody knows whether it really rained or not, lt was too dark to see, and you can never tell anything about the weather. 196 xwlid 2906 J, TW L il rr HIIIOS Ibe HlllDl7ibi0llS Once upon another time Another Professor, who looks like I don't know what, Together with his wife, gave a party. And the day after, when the guests had all taken their departure, His wife found that her beautiful table cloth was all stained. So, calling her husband, she said: Amos, telephone at once to Dr. Lyons, And get some of his wonderful chemicals, So that I may remove this spot from my table cloth So Amos did as he was bid, And having procured the chemical, He wended his way to college. 96 -D6 96 96 -K 'K At noon Amos came home, And being very thirsty, He looked around for something to slake his thirst. Soon he saw a glass of a clear crystal liquid- And drank it eagerly down. Amos! Amos! shrieked his wife, You have swallowed the chemical- Telephone at once to Dr. Lyons, or you die! So, Amos, trembling in every limb did as he was he bid. And Dr. Lyons said, You A have swallowed a terrible poison. You must drink a gallon of water at once, And continue drinking it by the quart all afternoon. So, Amos, trembling still, did as he was bid. ae -x- -me ae ae ae 1 And late that evening, Dr. Lyons telephoned again, And told Amos That the chemical was harmless. 197 wood Hddresses the llniversitv Zongress LADIES AND GENTLEMEN II I am a Republican I I was reared a Republican I Qfiathering forcej I was born a Republican I If I had not been I would have taken the Hrst opportunity to have been born again I I swell with pride Qand here the orator swelled visiblyj, when I think of the man who, years ago, wandered over the hills and valleys of Virginia, and rested not until he became the Father of his country I I swell with pride when I think of Abraham Lincoln, the Savior of his country! The blood flows faster in my veins when I think of that great Republican, that great Ohioan, William McKinley, the Expander of his country I It is with pride this evening, Ladies and Gentlemen, that I put in nomination for Speaker of this Congress, a man who has been brought up on Republican milk, a man who is not only a Republican, a true-blue Republican, but who is a red- headed Republican. He is as patriotic as IVashington, as broad-minded as Lincoln, as expansive as McKinley-that man is Mr. IV. A. Alexander fwild applausej. Ladies and Gentlemen, I am a Republican I I I i C9 Q I I ll.SiN' 193 Che Perfesser an' the Freshman .36 VVell, to reshume, continued my companion, this Perfesser Shtoneking wuz settin' in his shtudio, dramin' av some nonsinsical phisicks, that wuz goin? to distroy the ripitashun av the immorthal Ikey Ne-wthon. The perfesser didunt know pwhat a job he had undertook, but in the words av the poet, 'Whin yure happy in ignorince, pwhat's the use av havin, the sinse av Solomon? lVell, the perfesser's miditashuns was intherrupted by a light tappin' at the window av his shtudio. It scart the docther, an he sez tu himself, sez'e, 'pwhatls that.' Sez himself to him, tit's some disprit robbers afther gittin in tu shteal yure money and out the throats av all av yez.' Quiet as a mouse, he opined a dror and tuk out his gun. Wid a shtidy hand, he popped at the window. An thin no noise comin' from outside, he thought he'd kilt the bloodthirsty scutt. Steppin' to the window, he opined it an found the inthruder squattin' on the ground below. The perfesser sez, sez'e : 1 Pwhat do yez mane by disthurbin me in me contimplashun an me own iverlastin' fame? Pwhat do yez want?, 'Wa-wa-want Hurleyf sez the other man, wid a thrimble in his voice like he had the ague. fAn who's Hurley,' sez the perfesser. ' Wan av the freshmins,' he sez. 'An who are you,' sez the perfesser. ' Souderf sez he. tWell, Misther Souder,' the perfesser sc z, 'Fll notify Prisidint Swain ut wan av his freshmins is thryin' tu ginerate a scrap, an he will tache yez how tu disthurb the pace and quiet av yure betthers wid yure ondacint manners' An as the perfesser shut the window, the freshmin wint across the lot fifteen fut tu every shtepf' 199 HI! Essay Oil SGWSX There are many kinds of saws in the world. Among the oldest of which we have any record is Esau. Poor fellow! Esau when it was too late. Then in one of the old Latin manuscripts there is mention made of Caesarls 'I saw.' Now after Esau I saw comes the old saw and a great many of this species are still extant. Per- haps the best known is sawing wood at the same old standf' Speaking of wood reminds me of the wood saw which wouldn't saw without an attachment in the form of a boy. But the attachment would rather see-saw and besides there is about as much exercise connected with a see-saw as with a wood-saw and a vast deal more pleasure. Then there is the buzz-saw, which is apt to he rather cutting if one shows familiarity with its teeth. But of all the saws, both ancient and modern, the one whose rasping is oftenest heard on the campus and oil is the Mc- Ginnis have saw. You may talk about progress and change and all that, But the old Hebrew law suits us poor students best. For, six days We labor, we toil and we sweat, And then-when the seventh comes-we do the rest. 'Cwas Ever thus They talked together-he and she, Qi uf' L, Qgyyq' 1 Two Freshmen on the campus nearg lpli f'i5?lllax Qi . . 3-gs But what they said, for the life of me, ll if I could not ten, though I tried to wtf. K lax I- For he whispered low what he had to say, Z W f As he fondly gazed in her bonny face, V L, 'M And I knew by her flaming cheek that they g . Wil Were just developing their first spring case. Q..-l :This was found in a load of saw-dust and evidently had been sawed out with much diineulty. Signed-A SAIYYER-UIOC Thomasj 200 pins .... THZIT AND :HE orurnms Miss Hannaersley- Will Sousa's band parade t.he streets this afternoon ? Somewhat disconifited by the burst of laughter around her, she exclaimed: Well, Si Plunkard's did? Dr. IIershey giving a toast at the .Iaclzson banquetj-'cChauneey Depew could always talk be-tter after eating. Now, I zun not built on that plan 3 in fact, I some- tiines doubt whether I ani built on any plan. Prof. Morris Cin the hall of Maxwell, after making a frantic grab at Miss Brad- leyj- Oh, I beg pardon. I thought you were an overcoat. Mr. Sniith treading a report in Econ-oiniesj-f'The inniaites of the County Poor Farm have very poor inemories. They don't seein to reineinber anything. I fo-und only one exception, in the case out an old nian who remembered that Dr. Bogart vis- ited the 'Poor Farm a year ago and ate green persi1nnions. Dick Wylie- I hope the Phi Delts wontt make me leave Phi Delta Phi, for I've already paid my tuition? Prof. Sampson fto Elfers, when up for writing the Sophomore bogusj-NlNIr. Iiliters, have you had English seven ? ' No, sir? I thought not. Mr. Boisen fin Freshman Frenchj- Mix Brown, will you please read sentence two?,' Mr. Brown begins. Mr. Boisen Cinterruptingj- Oh, no, no, Mr. Brown 5 sentence twof' Mr. Brown-NWell, tha.t's what I,1nreading.', 201 Prof. Clapham Qin Equity Classj- If Daniel Webster were living to-day, as a lawyer he would be sinall potatoes and few in a hill compared with sonie of our great attorneysfi R. F. Davis Qresenting the unoornplinientary reniarlil- That may be, but his great work, the 'Unabridged Dietionaryf will last forever. In the University Congress. Mr. Bland a.rises-- Mr. President, I rise to a point-'J President Long- I desire to say that there is nothing before the house? The house unanimously agrees with the President's proposition. . 455 ii ' t l H - Dr. Swain Cabsent-niindedly ringing up Centralj-'IIs that 6 Q 17 thee, dear? X X! i' The girl at Central Qindignantlyj--NNO, it isn't. What .I , 4 i number do you want?', H . Y. iiiiliiillyllu g., ,- ,, I 333313. tif O. C. Martin fto a confidential friend during the Lecture If Board eanvassj-f'Noxv, ii? I had this bunch of iifty tickets A WI? K sold, and one hundred more that I have at my room, I would if v have sold one- hundred and fifty? 1 l . Why is November 22, 1899, an eventful day in the life of George Arthur Mat- lack? Because on that day he was elected President--of the Junior Class. A Why is November 23, 1899, a long-remembered day with Mr. Matlaclfs friends and acquaintances? Because they were bored to death by hearing him tell how it happened. 202 Prof. Clapham- Mr. Smith, what is evidence ? Mr. Smith-'il don't believe I know, Professorf' Prof. Clapham- Now, that is an honest confession, and you are just the kind of person that needs to take this work. One of the opportunities of a student is to come in Contact with master-mind,-s. You may take advantage of this opportunity it you will, but you must put yourself in the attitude of a. st-udentf' Entire Innocence i Freshman ftranslating a word thant means Hembrace'ij- Comprehended. Dr. Leser-HI do not know whether that is comprehended or not. It may be, when you do it. I do not know? HI IM BOdl'dilIg Qlllb , Tuley---ifllave you your Spanish sentences, Miss l,0llgl11'y?U Miss L.- Yes.', Tuley- Well, bring them around. that was Hll Shortly after he entered college, Mr. Bagjsdale met Miss Mclgheeters, and was quite impressed by her charms. A few days later he saw John Arthur MePheeters for the first time, and, being struck by the name, he said to Barbour: Say, what relation is John Arthur to Miss Mcl7l1eoters iw None at all. Why? answered Barbour. Well,v sa.id Willy, I was just thinking if--- Harry Eliot received a letter the other day. It was addressed: Dearllarry, . s 303 E. Sixth St., V Bloomington , Incl. Cook- The hardest thing that I ever had to learn was the preamble to the Dec- laration of lndependencef, 203 that trait Called Zandor ROgGI'S-MIDI. Leser, niy sister is going to be inarried, and I'd like to go to the wedding, it you don't think it will injure my work. Dr. Leser- Oh, I guess it won't You are so very poor anyway, you know. Boyer shaking hands with Miss Forkner at onen 1'l'10GlTlllU'-NIVIIV what a fat ., O D .1 P 73 pahny pahn you have! Matlack ftwenty-four hours after the appearance of Kappa Sigina at I. UQ- Yes, this chapter-house idea is becoming very popular with us fraternity nienf' Dr. Lindley-NIt is a. well-known fact that it takes great ability to get up a case quicklyft Blancha.rd Horne ton his twenty-first birthday, when taking a girl honie from a. dancej- 'Illie' nioon is fullf' f'Ye+s,v replied the young lady, but that isn't the only thingf' Miss Hannnersley tat her first open ineeting, trying to start a conversation with Lon Brackenj-xOh, Mr. Bracken, I know whoin you are in love with. Leo-nidas vanishes in thin air. March 2d--Blanchard Jackson Horne goes to Anderson to visit his parents. March llth-Blanchard Jackson Horne returns-ininus the whisk on his chin. McGinnis fatter the Thanksgiving gaine at Purduej- Oh, I tell you they have soine swell girls up there. They wuz peaches! they wuzln V But It was too Date Dr. Bergstrom Qexplaining sonie electrical apparatus to Misses Woodburn, Cox, and Messrs. Dickey and Phillipsj-C'Now, do beware of sparksln Hppearances Deceive The other day Mr. Barbour was standing near the-Christian Church, his counte- nance hearing a more than usual saintly look, when two timid niaiden ladies, of ad- vanced years, approached and asked: Kind sir, can you tell us if the Christian En- Q57 deavor meeting has begun yet But Herb had fled. 204 The duties of Registrar Cravens are many an d varied. In less than five minutes he O Kid six bills, wrote a recommendation for a preacher, bought some grease, and started down to give one of his Dailey talks in the Library. On one of his trips to Indianapolis, Dr. Rogers had oeeasion to examine some typewriters-the machines. Shortly before, Dr. Swain had been in the same store. The clerk eyed the Dean for several minutes, and then asked: Aren't you from that school down. at BlUG-llllllgl7Ol1?v Clxvcy, 93 Well, are all the men down. there as big as you and Dr. Swain ??' Oh. no. no 7' cried the De-in tr 'ine' to be 17umiv.'fwe are the least amono' them. , , a Laila -1: But I meant physieallyf' returned the elerli. Contrary to the Senior Custom, MeLinn went to church. During prayer he set his watch by a clock wound and set in 1850. Dr. BG1'gfSl1'Ol11-iCll'IT. MeKelvey, have you ever been vaccinated ?w Mr. Melielvey-ffNo, I never have been. I've thought some about it, but I de- cided ltd better wait and see if I took the smallpox. Charlie Dickey, who is noted for his modest laugh and quiet ways, fell in with a. Crowd of noisy fellows on his return to eollege, winter term. In his happy mood Charlie forgot himself and laughed quite loud two or three times. As the train whistled for Bloomington and the boys prepared to get off, an old gentleman who sat near leaned over and said to Charlie: CfSay, young feller, ain't this where that Re- form School is loeated? Dr. Hershey Qealling the smallpox rfollvj-- Mr. Fritseh, when were you vaeei- nated? Mr. Fritseh fpromptlyj- Yesterdayf' Dr. I-lershey- What year was that?', Charlie Dickey Q before Christmasl- It,s fine to have a lot of girls-until Christ- mas eomes--and then-well, I had to buy three presents this yearf' 205 Doon Doddridge fto Professor Rogers, in Public Corporation Classj- If a horse hitched to a delivery wagon went up to a peanut reaster and a.te some of the same, could the owner of such horse be made to pay for them ? Mr. Neher Cto Dr. Eigenmannj- Don7t you reckon, Doctor, that it is on ac- count of your blind fishes that you was elected a member of the American Academy of Science ? Miss Rose fjust before Christmas vaeationj- Are you going to be in town this vacation, Dr. Searles?U Dr. Searles- I expect to. Miss Rose- Well, I'm going to be here, too, and I was wanting to read over a little French with somebody during the vacation, but perhaps I ought to give Dr. Kuersteiner the hrst chance. McGinnis fto a, number of Freslnnenj-- Boys, I have a whole bottle of whisky up to my room, and it has never been drinkeclf' Dr. Bergstrom- Will you please tell me about reaction-time, Miss Phillips- ah-er--Miss Cox? '4Lets cl.on't have frat meeting u in in the hall U said 'fBrad.'-' lt's too cold with O 1 J J the wind whistling in from the north and west and south and--U Yes, and you forgot the bank below it, where all the drafts are,', said Hawley. Mr. W. .CL Patton fait boarding-housej-- Why is it that the hero and heroine of every story are called Jack and Dorothy? You cannot pick up a story without hud- ing Jack and Dorothy. And I have never seen a, girl of that name. I am on the lookout for a real live Dorothy, and when I lind one, I will surrenderft Miss Nichols-UMy name is Dorothy, Mr. Patton. J. C. Boldt- The1'e's only one reason why I donat get married, my boarding- house keeper won't count two as onef' Mr. Harris will certainly be the last Among great heroes to be classed, At sight of Freshmen densely massed, 'Tis wondrous how behind him the earth he cast, 206 Dr. Leser Qpointing to dot over letter cj- What is this! Do we write it this way? No-o-ol VVe do not write it this way. We will rub that out.', But the good Doctor soon discovered that places where the paint has scaled off cannot he mended with an eraser. ,E ' H E0glCldlI 'L , Professor Bordner was on the way to make a date for a Lf. W' ' , . concert. Wh-en about half way there, he suddenly realized ' that it was snowing irettv hard. It this snow-storni liee as ,W h cl ., 1 79 up, it will he had walking Friday night. If I have a date, I , jx.-' my jf X shall have to hire a eahff Thus eonmmunine' with himself l,ll ffff D ' ,V the Professor' turned about and retraced his steps. ,ll dm :fig-X .s g , 1---J Barker treading a reportj-NGalloway was horn in 1730, died in 1803, and I donit know what- became of hiin thenf' Heaclington- Yes, sir. I had fifty cents when I went to Chicago, and I was de- terrnined to spend it if it tooli a whole weelif? Student--- Say, Professor, in that case, what reinedy would a fellow ha,ve?', Claphani- Well, about the only thing he could do would be to go out behind the barn and kick hiinselff' ' Miss Forlzner-HI won't have to go to a iinishing school. I see rny iinish at the end of this termf' when men Hre Equal. Higgins gat, the firejT IIey, there, Bryan, come on and help. 207 Chapel ..... Law School ....... Bloomington Board .... Dr. Swain ........ Dr. Hothroek.. . . G yinn asiuui .... Miss lVillianis .... Harry Davidson. . . Wade Free. ..... . f'Gyn11' Horne.. . . SVIIOIWIIIS Zhoice Literary Expressions Salvation-. Rubberation. Starvation. Moral suasion . . . ..Flirtati'on. Recreation. Animation. Fluiilcation. Ostentation. Pronunciation Porter flaw st-udentj-KNO!! It could not do it solely alone by itselffi Bobbitt-f'My ancestors Caine from Germany. I guess I will go over and visit theni this suinm erf' Prof. Clapp- I want you fellows to get up more gingerf: Dr. Bergstroin-C'Children should sleep nine hours a day in high school. Beard at the DQSK Mrs. Blossom calls for 4'Barney Blair Bush by Watson. Miss Stella Marshall asks for Bacon's New Organ. Dr. David A. Rothrock for that newbook on Mormonisin-Davids Hareinf' Mr. Gentry asks to go to the Stock Rooinf' flft was supposed that he wanted to see the ponies., Hurley fthe young onej wants. to take the Library Catalogue home with him. 208 f ESPN IR HHHCEITEQS f xf , IW I A pfmfgj V A A ' I I M f .Lf Color: Snow White. Flower : LzuI1b's Tongue. Song 1 To the Vfork, To the YVo1'k. Motto : A soft word turneth away 21, Hunk. President, LOUISE LOUGHRY Vice-President, EMMA CLINTON Secretary, DUDLEY O. MoGovNEY Trezmsurer, HIXRRY SPARKS I Guardian, A. L. BIURRAY mQllIbQl'S ill 'fllll Sfdlidillg J. D. BLYTHING W. EIENSHAW GRIN C. A. VAN ATTA OLIVE DAILEY A. CHAPMAN :MCALLTSTER 209 1 I eff 1 f me A470 X 4 E!?LXeiY0ee-X'7 LgE6f:k ' 011 ow ' fvf ninaHlllllllllllllllillllllIlfrljfllf.. I , E? '---9'-i Yes, we know 'that you have El, elassieal name-- A name that is fair to see- But a person grows tired of it, just the same, 2. Of seeing your Q Omen' gm It isn,t at all that your name doesnjt Rook All right where your name ought to beg But to Hnd 'that it's serawled everywhere in a book S-. Ts too much--O, omepx geo, We would not find filllltffill' rather would praise- And trust you'l1 outgrow the diseuseg You are youugg you muy yet mend your ways, L And Iinnt your OMER +5 C L 5 210 gf 1, ff U v fee 'K f f I Recent Qbanges in the French Department ,xn K n M e V F n fig 2'-.,, ff-. XY A iegtqfymxjk ft Q W ff an 552.5 f ' , een t t 2 ? ? 1 I sf 1 if ,AA 1 Rm t in X ,4-,get W - 1 V n e me e een , A.. N f wx f q gm tn XX EEK Q ett't t if ,,n,,, ttttt '1, ' .--e . N ' 41141-:-iffn : 1 l Q Lyw V 2 wif:-11 - i. t X 'W x 4-22 fn W ff W X ff! wtf K it T t t fffV 1' 'J 211 PYOT. Brooks EllIQl'IdillS X 'F ww' i e it HE town clock strikes the hour of ten, i s d 'Tis the eve before Foundation Day, When Fine Arts Brooks, the busiest of men, Toils on, nor does he weariness display. Now disappears a frail pine box from view, X y And all the air a solemn stillness holds, Save when the artist pounds a tack or two, To keep in place the oriental folds. V ,V y ni 1 F, And when at last the window seat is done, ll He calls his friends the work of art to view, lI!ffi.',,,, ' It's strong enoughf' says H. T. Stephenson, 2, H If no one sits there heavier than you. QQ Foundation Day is oier, and Fine Arts Brooks, f The applause of Mrs. Sewell to command, And demonstrate himself the best of cooks, Invites her to a dinner party grand. ' fslj XVith many a courtly bow and beaming smile, i l lj The artist ushers in his honored guest, li And bids her seat herself, the while 'I Still smiling, then he turns to greet the rest. I I Alas! the gracious host has scarce turned round, ' When falls upon his ear and outs his heart, 1 ,N N , ' A cracking, rending, dread portentous sound, ' 1 ff Heavens! H he moaned, there goes my work W I? of art I '7 'qu-DTT ix pr 212 ' , , , , , , , , ,,,,g, , .5 1 T - - g, 4-:.-nz: :e:: 2-..n-'.,-f- f141 -elf T ZVDQS W FN f WNV 'f : '5 Plviizi M Q fi 7 N K F ' X ff Q K WI f , ww JM ' G ,- ' 7 A -.:, - transportation ' I like to ride upon the cars As o'er the track they whirlg I like-all fellows do-to ride In a cab with just one girl. I like to ride a bicycle, too, And a tandem I adoreg ' A-speeding down the boulevard With Dorothy on before. But when it comes to downright likes, I want right here to say, That I like to ride a pony best Examination day. 0 Ht the 'fire They rushed them madly up the stairsg The flames leapt round with mighty stir They smashed the bottles on the walk, But saved the fire extinguisher. 214 b - H g -3- - V, ---.1 -2: I '.f:, J-..-'-i-- 1 'I NIVLLHQQ '11 SNOILOVHLLV X A Q ig jlff-sk 'Q-' I rn Z K ff 55 ' ma X S x . ' W m Q -,g T ff ' 2 5, ff J 2 ' ' Q X 42: QQ-Q XJR ,QQ-A f P Q E 2 - M PFW X w 252 if ,f ' -I N: F 'QE Gb - Y . 51 Pj - + I ' L - if 2'-A lv Q .ef ' Q Q Lf6,jfQ-af 0 hs,m m ,EH A X -m ..-,F fkfl A .D E I if , x , fiA w ifi 1--nam W 1-35 52001 if Q, 5 xii 'fi f AQ- 2 gx 5 151350-1 7'5 K , ' x ., mf B z 5f fi 'NA gif., 3m -- X H - .W Y 7-1: W f- F Z Q f X Leg: I 7 Q N5 Qs X H ,' 2 A- 4 , ' P. 1,25 -1 N bm i , ,xx ,, 1, , L , migsg igl 'l J 5 fwfr' y in W. ,,. : -f Y , 7 ,.,. -XM! , .- l AW -2-EIQQ? K W W .i,?i1i4, f2 ,, , . ? QY7 hw --.-- L up I, J, Z- ' g X ' xr ' ':::: , A --I' V ' J Y Egsgjmw I . 6 V . ' ff' , NSS' X ,...:g ll , I - uv A v A f ullfm I wforrmmgilrxf 'UH aax .'k .. .xx K , ry :ig j 1 Z . X 1 T' G. - --A mm X ixx- K- Nxx w xxit N YB ,Z Q v 1 :J-4 I-, W 7 x N, CENfe2ikg,g.Qs2': P . N fy ' A -X - FT ' 'khk' fx XX 2 - f x g -siwx - N, ff? Q ,X-N j gg .441 . , X x i, -N ! ix 2725555 N, 7 5 I 1 fu X rn 'fu Arg 2 , A - M rn f rn 45: Y- 37 A. 10, , fi 57 ' mu? - Tis x X L if iz rg ,VN RN ' 'Y xQX f in 5' w gi College Scraps H? Ulli0Ql'SiW Hflilvtlk QQIISIIS, l899:I900 AQL7720-CHAS. W. RECORDS. Number of 710117-S per 100070 070007017 70 0101-0050-About five. In 'ZUILIZZ7 Ollli-I7007' 507717071703 71000 youjnawiczjyaffecl?-Little or none. In 1071015 01125-c7000 n77zZ0z'ei0.s do youjwqyaose fo j7fll'f'iL 0j1I6Z'U 1070570 in 7710 Ifiriveirsity? Such as seem to be most helpful. University Htbletic Census, lseeaeoo Nfune-CHARLES IWILTGN DICKEY. Iifzzifzbei' Qf 7101005 pei' 10007: 170007007 Z0 m:01'0z's0-Not definitely known. In 10710025 out-c7004r 02571707003 71000 you jJC67'Zil.C'lQNLZf0lZ?-NOI16 to speak of. In 1070005 oeznf-07000 0771707003 do yoznp-rojzosa Z0 j9m'fi01QJaz'0 107Lizfl0 in M0 Zhziucfrsity? Not positive of any, but Whateverithe VVo1nan's League thinks best. University Hthletie Qensus, lseeaeoo A0000-RALP1-1 PERCY SCUDDER. Numbei' qf 710003 per 10007: 1700025047 70 091000050-Eight. In 1070005 out-z7001' 0771707005 710000 you pm'6f1'0ipmf0zZ?-Gym, bike, farming. In what out-door flf7l7l'f'l7CS do yozijfrfyuosa 70 jJfLi'Li7UZj1CLlE 20717711 in 7710 ZI'n000v'sily? Bike and gym. ulIi0Ql'SiW Htbletit QQIISIIS, 18994900 Name-ROBERT ALLEN CHANDLER. Nmnbcr Qf7l0'7l7'Sj,1UI' wnck f7c00Zea7 70 0:001'0is0-Oiie-half. In 107mZ 0212i-C7007' 0771707705 M00 youpm'Zz'ffijJai0fZ?-Farming. In 10710415 0217-07000 az'7zZe7ics do you propose Zo j7IL7'f'l'CiiZJt'Lf6 1070570 in 1710 Ulz'i'zfe7'.s1f7y ?- I propose to try to sprint. 216 - fA?f 'f of Ulli0QI'SiW Htbletic QQIISIIS, 189921900 Nome-DUDLEY ODELL MZCGOVNEY. Number of hours per week zleootefl fo 0.l'0I'C'IfS0-NIIIG hours. In MIM!! owl-floor offzleffcs Iuwe HON'VlIlll'!I.f lQIf1fC?IZ?-AH kinds. In 'IUIZUI olff-floor ofizlefios do you propose L'opor!2fe1j1oZe fzohile io Nm U11.i1,'e7'S1fty? All kinds. ulliVQl'SiW Htbletic ZQIISIIS, lS99:l909 AICUIHZ-CIIAS. LECKRONE. IVu11zIJe9' of hours por week clerolonl lo o.rero1'.ve-Th1'ee. Io MIM! oz!!-door IINZIHJIICTS IHl'I'0 you j1m'!1fr'1QfotenZ?--No speciality. In what 01115-fiom' IlfILI0l I'CS do yrmp1,opo.so !opo1'151'e1j1o!e zofzfzfle ?f'7Z- the Ulzizfemizfy ?- D0n't know, but would be glad to participate in some. ulli0Ql'SiW HTDIQUC ZQIISIIS, l899:l900 Nome-GEORGE BRASHEARS DODDRIDGE. Nomoev' of hows per week devoted fo 6IU'7'L'7fS0?NO116. I iz wimt ozzf-door ntizlezfeies have you j1orf1fcf1j1oz4efZ ?-Fighting and chasing cats. In fzoizol oznf-floor ILZIIIZGHIIS do you propose fo j?CL7'Z'lTC?jJCLf6 wiafile in the Umf'L'e1's'iiLy? Playing pool. UIliV2l'SiIV HIDIQIR QQIISUS, l899:l900 Name-E. W. DAVIS. Nzmvoev' of hours per week CZC?'Z.'0fI'fl Io ea:e1'o'1'se 5?-Eight. I IZ. 'mimi oz!!-floor of71Iefzfe.s Izfrezfe you po1't1'o1j1rzz'o1I ?-Tennis. In- what ou!-door HH!-Z0f'l:L'-9 do you propose to povhezjjate zolzzfle in the U1zioe1'sfizfy? Golf and skating? Wie skated. 217 HDDIKGIIGII TOI' PQl'llIiSSl0ll I0 Zdffv EXll'd w0l'li LTO BE FILLED OUT BY TII1-I APPLICANT AND LEFT AT THE REGISTRAIVS OFFICI-1.1 1. .Nrfl77Z0-ERNEST WARD HEIXDINGTON. 52. Uizfleersizfy Residence-North Vllashington St. 3. Date of time Application-April 4, 1900. 4. For llle CISQ9rmgD lerm, 1900. 5. Number of terms alreacly spent in Imllana Umlverslty-Txvo. 6. 2V2lml1e1'0f hours of ereflll alreflcly seezwecl. Qflpproximazfe vf not lenozou exaellyj-Txvoilfths. 1 7. Mfgov' Subject-Nobody knows. 8 Studies cleslrefl this term, for tlze 1'egzllo1'flfleen hows. QGlee 1Lu.m.be1'of lzouvxs and catalogue zmnzlev' of eoell sulgjeelj-Analytics, five hours, Astronomy, two hoursg English 2, three hours, English 1, two hours, History, three hours. . 9. Exim worl: clesireel anal mwnber of llozwxs. CLel this be llze szlbjeel 'lUlLllJlL you prefer fo elrfyn il becomes vzeees.sm'y lo cltrop e.zflm worlej-GyInnasiunI, one hour. V 10. R0llfS07L.Slfl07' fleslring ezvlm worle- All play and no work makes Jack a dull boyfl U79 Dean RQSDOIIUS THE INDIANA UNIVERSIT1', OFFICE OF TI-IE DEAN, BLOOMINGTON, IND., April 11, 1900. Ilia: Ernest lVm'cl l:IOCLCl1:lZ,glUlL.' Tlzefaeulzfy Uommllzfee on Ewlm Slfzlrlles has gmnlecl you jJ0l'liLlS.Vl07l lo erlwy one lzozu' fl week of ezclm Iworle lu ggnwzaslzlnzclzlrlngllzeterml1egflmzf1'1LgApril3, 1000. P. S.-Zllore worlc fmcl less play or Jzcele will get no ereclil. 218 H Bl! of RQgiSIl'dl' Zl'd0QIl'S QOYYQSDOIIUQUCQ Wa, Wwwff W 'WWWQW JZ ,l,,Wo1fl,zf 01745 gi ww afym, me 240-efiwvfdlgef Q HWMV-41 Qgowfb 07 9 Law School Poetry Wlion N091 was slivriff Ther? was ai imiin nzimod New-I, Ho msoiiililf-cl ei, Kailipli g Who wi,-nt at-fcosliiii' in at Ile-lclg Hi- iiovdlc-cl no bailifi- Himself he would rail oil. Hu clonal: ovoi' ll, fence, And gzive evidence That he injurecl ai, norve in his howl. 'found in a 'fresbmaws English zo ltotobook Well we know in Maxwell Hull Thermo ztbidvs ai, Stonipol tnllg Of :ill the nn-ii, the wiscst ho, Who are vwsocl in Philology. Ali ! Tolnzicco strongr. I sinellg Surely comes our Sombowcr swell For about his little poll A cloud of smoke doth ailwziiys roll. Thun wliisliowcl, lainky Morton, Truly, ho doth iii-vcd suppoi'tin'g In his cl:-iss we ztlwzliys lzcau' Nzivught but slung tho blwssod year Then, angziin, thei'0's Stoplionsou- Whole-souled, jovial, good old gun Wrote at hook to show itis true There :irc itiitltors :it I. U. H110 was written in ai stimigo hZLllClZ For this crime Szuupson slow the auithoir with liisjiw bono lic Iois lic gaould write Moore. God pity the Profs-God pity us :ill Upon whose ours :auch rhyuies must full. 219 Ill U72 l:db0l'dI0l'iQS E Q i X f-ff ' ' e o iv fy QQQFM A fl . -f - 1 I x ' i V is it ll' . K f' is K X' X Q xx Q X5 Mr. Spooner and Mr. Bobbitt do 9, little original research in reaction time. sir : f ew auf fix 'N-4 5 2, i f Ki xi jg Z A K ft ' Q! lv' 1 e llie? 1 7 Inspired with the spirit of thrift, Mr. St-oneking undertakes to act as his own dentist. 220 ll li ,WW Sitting festive at the lecture, Master Higgins and Miss Coxg Higgins-rapt in lovely Nancy, Thinks of naught but her fair locks Steppeth in the tall Miss VVooclbui'n, Sinks clown gently in the seatg Lael:-an-clay for Higgins' derby, Once so shapely and so neat. ' ss fffefl if l J we ll i li 221 QW an I II L - 12. 32, 5:1115 .55 I R Q Nj! N QINTMEN R a yi 6 me CEREBRAL INFLATION, BIG I , Imcmovvume 0p,N,5N5, -I 5 GAS ON THE BRFVN emo HLL me iLLS GOMMUN T0 UNDER GRHDUHTE5 in Q Q9.E9f-IUREF?. BY 'mffff-5,z5UTU5 COM-CHL CQ lw ky UNIVE.fRi5lfFYM l ' 9 ': il l' E .A u itiig , -'ig '41 , il - I Jay BROOKVILLE, IND., April 26, 1900. Dear Dr. R. Bums- It allforcls me unalloyecl pleasure to testify 'co the merits of your ointment. Since elmildhood I have been suffering from a complication of cerebral inflation and big-I, but 'for the past two years the disease has made alarming progress. Last year I was warned of my dangerous condition, but I heeded not I,a.tely I have realized wliaf the loss of my i1rigl1'fyoungli'fe would mean to the community, and, yielding lo The prayerful enlre-aries of my friends, I have begun llie use of your oinfmenl. I feel. as- sured that by constant use for two or three years more, The aggrayalion will have al- most disappeared. I cannot sing your praises 'foo mueli. Hoping that these few words may help some fellou'-sufferer, I remain, Yours lill death, T. E. BRACKEN. 222 ---vffwfa-7:2-., - --, IND., May 10, 1900. The R. Bums Oomical Oo., Lzdiana University- Gentlemen-Last year, from some cause wholly unknown to me or my friends, I began to be troubled with pains in my head. I did not consult a physician aft one-e, as I thought it was only a slight swelling, but the pains g1'OW worse, and after a careful diagnosis by Dr. J. Swain, he pronounced my disease that dreaded cerebral inflation. I-Ie recommended the Ii. Butus ointment, and to rub it in well. I have used up four boxes, and, to my great joy, I can notice a. decrease in the size of my head. Please forward t.hree boxes at once, as some of my relatives are threat- ened with the same disease. You may print this letter if you wish, and I would be glad to answer any questions of fellow-sufferers. Gratefully yours, HARRY GoRDoN SPARKS. ix . Dear Doctor R. Bums- I am scarcely competent to express to you my profound and abiding gratitude. An acute and chronic state of cerebral ineflation, supcrinduced in the cranial cavity by the weight of my own importance and the oppressive honors showered upon me by unthinlqing classmates, was already causing grave anxiety among my friends. My malady, however, has been greatly relieved by the timely application of your unrivaled nnficea Ma hea en re fi d You I can g t C i 1. . f cy w. r - 't. Yours with reiterated Gratitude, A. L. llIURRY. 223 PRINCETON IND., May 29, 1900. Dere Dr. R. Bums- I feel an affackt of iugrowing opinions Coming on, and I mmf you fo send me a box of your ointment at once. I feel so b.lfI I HIIIII- got time To write no more, but I will say I have saw some wonderful cures effected by your snlve. Yours truely, JOHN R. MCGINNIS. ,'ul'. ' I . ' if Z If ' K J Q I igfgzkif I I f I Q 1 ',?4 ' 175' mfh-vjfl M I AI' Q '.. gf ffflllfwqw - K N 'V 5 -I lr Zh -4 I i , Z-A... ,I 4 N YI 'Im IV E! I M IIN I II W MC I If N- Q Xu g 7 I 7- ' . W !j 8INNX ef f I f' -- I iy f 2 IJ W mw ix we If I I IoI e WKW ,KI I , ,f . Q I EI 2? II We f IGI I W W wb 5913 IFE , ,F , , 1 , ,ff I Al., 523 ' - ' .. 'A Z. e'.. '4,. 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A - -+-r' - .- A QQ - ws- Af,-r -2 iss-1-2-ew f2mh K5f:'.-41 -ggixc 'ft 1 1 -- - --'55,-1 -. . -- - .- -'- - -Ke: his -LAN -.'u--ygi5?Fl-f- ith-M my-N 4-'ff---v-G1 -f-,3rx'5zfdsK3g,,..S-xux 'gZ3Q: A 'Jin - .h- f fd- . ,, - yr :H H , N -. we . ---. -,. 1 -.qv-5.g5r:,-:?,'j4Q5d ,.3,-asf -- --.1rgSz1,,.:sw2e64-5fiv4.1p:4a.:.9 f si' ' Y -E' ff:75?' ?f 3ig '5 ., . Q 1 -x 13 - 1'i':.-GwS715?5'if?4Lilif.Afi 3? , . -Qi , .. .. , WA. .. - -1 . 4.4. ,-......-My . - AA..f-- s:,:A.a--:..:,A5g, Q Ax. THE OLD COLLEGE QWEN HALL XVYLIE HALL THE WYLIE HALL FIRE, FEBRUARY 6, 1900 MAXWELL HALL Q E- 'X - Ti Q,-fi? 25 if WIT. ' + f-. f4-4 I-f , 1' HR: 'L Q- H: 'A-11 'Lx' ' -' ,. ':. '- ' ' -- , 1 1113 f f f -' 5 .-,ef-212. 1 as 'A 'KNg,S2!42-i f ' .fffxgfa fb 1 -y?gAqfYff,',:,' W ic: ei -f W. aw'-I 5' -Wi. 'Q aff A . 1-4+-r if. , .git-Fgyai , ,' g -1' N bg , - if fs, 'pfif -1:5 ' ' ' xi Elifsfgiivp 'X 'E fi, ' ..,yy:' . . nf-1, '- 1 -4 s:::e:1,':xa .. .L -- - -Q - . ' Jr. I '-Us-fr. 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HY- SMH.. .QI 2357 ', M134 Q' 'fi' ,g - ,- ':,.f:1?Lffv2M'gA?Z?5f-gflbfxgm 1-6l'f'i'42,l':fT'9fi 1 J --51-ikgusggf 1 , f- wr ,A La3if:pfiy.'v4QQ,i'V ' - H 'f'Ii1,2'ff12+-E7L'Ef2g-'E ss Kf1ZfJ ,6 2uJf3Fi?!rff',p 12-'iff 5 V, . A, .. .L . 4 Jw , Wi.. ,4..,,,,. nw! , ,wV:,V.f., - 'z ' 5 '24 '-f'- -H,r.3f' A-L-15 A ix - :52'f35k,4, ., f,,.L-xii-'pzllf w A nhm ,?ff'24..fw: . -3' g4y1:-4.'Vg,-25:fw- 5,-1.4: 515,-ja..,Q-.fr g5L 4 A ,,V f-f rfizqff-.V.-3,132-5 ' ' ' - - gw .. ' ' ' VVHERE THE ARBUTUS Gnows 1...-:.4 .., ' 'Y ' sian-1 'if Aur- be SQIINI' QIEISS DFW OUR VOTE You know the Seniors had a hop last winter. Since we were all together, we thought it wo-uld he well, in the in-terest of suflering humanity, to make a careful canvass of the class and find what the opinion on certain subjects of vital interest was. As a result, we are able to lay the following statistics before the public. The questions given and the answers were: Whom do you consider the most self-exalted man in college? T. E. Bracken led with 38 votes. J. C. Patten was a. close second with 32 votes. The windiest? The vote was unanimous for Free. The best blutfer? Davis Qlidward Budj led with 40 votes, Matlackffollowed with 36. ' The most melancholy? Charlie Dickey led the vote. Ca-lm and deliberate? The vote was unanimous for Bobbitt, Sr. Funniest? Everybody thought Biederwo-lf was. Laziest? Scott, McAllister and Davidson tied. Nerviest? McGinnis and Neil Smith tied. Most agreeable? Hurley led the vote. H-andsoinest? Coffee. Meelqest? Elfers and West. tied. Most sanctiinonious? The vote was unanimous for O. B. Phillips. ww' Our time and wind being limited, and as we want our Arbutus to bc something more than a category of our own virtues, we will not attempt to give the public a. list ot the otiices we hold, however, the Class of 1900 would like to call attention to the fact that we have the youngest graduate that Indiana University has ever had- Mary Johnston, who is sixteen years old. - 233 U72 SQMOI' ZIZISS 0 TUNE-H EZ OrQ1itmz. You see in us, kind friends, A class of eonsuniinate abilityg We'Ve shown our Alma Mater dear The truest liind of loyalty, And you should Cherish, Ne'er let perish, The records of our deeds so great. CHORUS2 Hurra li I Hurrah 1 For the nauglity-nauglits. Behold our senior Class! See our intellectual air, Behold our condescending stare! Come, match us if you Can, For we,re a senior class beyond compare Throughout our long Collegiate course We've won a-many a vietoryg The other classes oft have lied Before us ignominiouslyg The boys the fleetest, The girls the sweetest That ever entered the University. 234 HIIOIDQI' S2lIi0l' S0119 AIR-H The Girl I Loved 'in Sammy Tevwzesscafl 'Twas a, morning bright and clear When as Freshmen we came here, Just a. troop of merry, hopeful boys and girls, We've been speeding on our Wray, And been working day byidny, And now We come to finish up our college course It has been but four short years Since we Caine, with hopes and fears, To first enter dear old Indizinals door, And e-zieh day that we've been here She has grown to us more dear, But in June we have to leave forever more. CHORUS: We'll be here a. little longer, s Then we'll sa-y good-bye to thee, And that dear beloved eannpus Then no longer we shall see 5 When commencement day is over Then We'll say farewell forever To dear Indiana University. Soon we must go forth in life To take up its toil and strife, And to ight the battles Coming day by day, But wherevelr we may be, Still our thoughts will turn to thee, Our dear old Alma Mater far away. CHORUS: And whatever heights we reach, Though we climb fame'sl1igl1elstpealz, And the world's delights lie spread on every side, We'll remember old I. U. And the Century Class so true, And may good fortune e'er with her abide. CHORUS: 235 I7 HYDIIIIIS '09 9737 Board of Editors J. C. CASTLEMAN J. P. SPOONER G. D. HEILMAN FRANK AYDELOTTE J. W. LAIRD R. S. MOORE S. O. WRIGHT L. A. FOLSOM RYLAND RATLIFF O. C. BLACK O. C. MARTIN R. E. MARTIN MATTIE LACY EDITH HOLLAND LAURA BRADLEY NELLIE PERIGO FLORENCE KNIPE LUCY NICHOLS B0dl'd Of mdlIdgQl'S J. G. COLLICOTT W. F. BOOK W. M. ALSOP C. O. WEST R. S. ELLISON 'IIIllSil'dfOl' WILL VA WTER 236 Y va: Xi- I'-,gl to xf x ' f x' X ' 4 I ,-SW Y f X f - X X ., UQ' N - Xl. xxx Q - b x 1. - xf' , A , h X N X Q ffxvvi 3 . N-. , QQSMQ 5 f Q vb. .1 ,X , X !4V4 ff ,, X X XS5 k I Y, XY JI , I Q iii, f L f ' V f ' NY Ax - .r ' A x l xi-.xv if X '.. X XX f' NX - ' N fwgffgvkp Sw 9 m ww xx 4 X, X 9 XW 5 1 N! , ,,,, b N KN x WA KE. Z, X J iff wx .jf 3 OIIIQIIIS IN' TITLE PAGE . . . . . . DEDICATION . . DR. JORDAN . . GREETING ..... .... AT NOON ............ DR. SYVAIN AND DR. BRYAN . . BOARD OF TRUSTEES .... DEPARTMENTS ..... THE WINTER CAMPUS . . FRATERNITIES ....... ORGANIZATIONS ....... MUSICAL ORGANIZATIONS . . ATHLETICS .......... ORATORY .......... DEBATING . . CONGRESS . . . PRIZE ESSAYS . . STUDENT PLAY ...... LOOKING TOWNWARD . . . ARTHUR GRIFFITH .... LITERARY .......... THE BIOLOGICAL STATION . . ENGLISH ONE ....... THE JUNIOR ANNUAL . . NEW BOOKS .,..... THAT RECENT SCARE . . ART EXHIBIT ...... MISCELLANEOUS . . A PORTFOLIO ..... THE SENIOR CLASS. . THE ARBUTUS BOARD . . ADVERTISEMENTS . . . Our readers may see by the following adver- tisements what business men interest themselves in a material way in the efforts of the student body, and direct their patronage accordingly 239 I 2 3 5 6 7 8 ' 9 44 45 75 93 IO3 116 117 118 119 120 122 123 125 147 161 165 169 173 183 195 225 233 236 240 OOOOO0OGOO00O0-0O-OOO00O0O0OO0OOOOOOO000-OO0000O-OOO00OO0OO0O0O0 iszo-fy -.-.woo 0 I I I O 4 Qinbtana mvet tty jl3lO0mll1QtOl1 Sixty-three members of the Faculty. Two hundred and eighty graduate and undergraduate courses. One thousand and fifty students, every county in Indiana represented. Nineteen departments, as follows: I. II. III. IV. V. VI. VII. VIII. IX. X. XI. XII. XIII. XIV. XV. XVI. XVII. XVIII. XIX. Department of Greek, two teachers and eleven courses. Department of Latin, three teachers and twenty courses. Department of Romance Languages, four teachers and fourteen courses. Department of Germanic Languages, five teachers and fourteen courses. . Department of English, seven teachers and twenty-four courses. Department of History and Political Science, four teachers and twenty-nine courses. Department of Economic and Social Science, two teachers and sixteen courses. Department of Philosophy, four teachers and eight courses. Department of Pedagogy, four teachers and seven courses. Department courses. Department courses. Department Department Department Department Department Department of Mathematics, six teachers and twenty-four of Mechanics and Astronomy, one teacher and nine of Physics, four teachers and fourteen courses. of Chemistry, five teachers and twenty-four courses. of Geology, two teachers and fifteen courses. of Zoology, three teachers and eight courses. of Botany, two teachers and nine courses. of Fine Arts, one teacher and four courses. 8 Department of Physical Training, four teachers and seven courses. Department of Law, three teachers and twenty-three courses. Special courses for teachers the Spring Term. Graduates of commissioned high schools of Indiana are admitted without exam- ination, except in conditioned English, to the freshman class of the University. Catalogue will be sent on application to the Registrar, or to JOSEPH SWAIN, President 0O0-OOOO00-O0OOO00O0OO-00OOOOOOO0OOO-GO0OOOO000OOOOO000OO0O0000O 240 A. -.. ar. ,,-Y---,:,:.,..- -. Illdidlid df Pllfdllt QFQF XYORDS AND Mvsrc HY WIl,1.Is 0, TYLER As l'CllLl0l'l'tl by thc Tylvi' Colored Q,u:i1'ti't'tc' :I 11 the 'tlfl font-haill culelxration On Stuart Field Thanksgiving day, Great laurels were at stake, When I. U.'s brave and gallant array, Won the championship ol the State. CHORUS. Come along, I. U. Students, come along, Let's forget the past, lVe are Sta.te champions of football, YVe've beaten Purdue at last. After nine years of victory, That made her heart so light, Purdue has met her Waterloo, And we celebrate tonight. CHORUS. Purdue had boasted ol' her team, And praised her captin 't Robbie, But she saw the best captain in the west, H 7 Wlien she viewed our captain Hubble? Purdue was banking on trick plays, And thought by chance to win it, But when our Teter hit'm a lick, She found her tricks were'nt in it. CIIORUS. Foster! Foster! little star Foster! I. Ufs quarter back, Every time Robertson kicked the ball, Our Foster brought it back. Pike's punts were long, high and hard, Hubbard kicked two goals Teter made a wonderful tackle on McCoy, That stirred our very souls. t'Gov. Ray played in his old time style, Fierce, hard and true, He snapped the hall straight and fast, And then helped to push 'er through. CHORUS. Our Niezer has long been known, As a tackle very line, NVhile he played he showed great skill, And he tore up Purdue's line. UlIUI!l,'S. Hurley, I. U.s' big tower of strength, Played with grit and push, Purdue's line never will forget, I. U.s' big center rush. DFW 241 CHORUS. Hawley made a gain of forty yards, He made a touchdown too, He always tackled true and hard, And he broke Purdue's line in two. Along with Davie played Barbour, A tackle iierce and hard, He was great on defensive, madegood gains And made one run for fifteen yards. CHORUS. Davidson is now loved by all, 1-Ie made his fine rushes tell, Davie gave Miller a real good time, As through Purdue's line he fell. CIIURVS. Like a leaf that is tossed by the wind, And rests where'er it may light, Just so was Dushane tossed about, By our grand old right guard, Pike. CIIUHUS. Johnson, Johnson, Tubby Johnson, Tackle on the I. U. team, Every time Johnson hit the line, An opening could be seen. McGovney, the champion on left end, On their interference made raids, He carried the ball forward for old I. U., And he made hard wear on Spades, CHORUS. Aydelotte the victor on right end, Had nerve, speed and grit, Every time Purdue started his way, He made a decided Hitt. CIIORYS. 21 Teter is an all around good man, A tackler true and hard, Every time he Hbucked the line, He gained about live yards. Brooks, Searles and our dear old Horne, All have well done their parts, The second eleven has helped out, too, And has a warm place in our hearts, 7 Ts ATT as 7.o'4a7n'4n'4ss 4n' as Regularly Incorporated cl hatlonallv BRANCHES anRecoanlzed Fon EACH YEAR S, wo 'freshmen 13 Anatomy. Physiology. Dental Materia Medica. General Histology. Dental Histology. Operative Dentistry. Operative Technique. Dental Anatomy. Chemistry. Dissection. Prosthetic Technique. Prosthetic Dentistry. Specimen Work. l..l.-i- juniors Anatomy. Physiology. Dental Development. Dental.Pathology. Chemistry. Operative Dentistry. Prosthetic Dentistry. Clinical Dentistry. Crown Work. General Materia Medica. Dissection. Orthodontia Technique. lnhrma-ry and Laboratory Practice. Specimen Work. Seniors Operative Dentistry. Dental Micro scopy. Orthodontia. Special Clinic. Oral Surgery. Pr0sLhetic Dentistry. Crown, Bridge and Porce- lain Work. Aural, Optic and Dental Relations. Naso - Pharyngeal - Dental Relations. General Surgery. General Bacteriology. General Pathology. llietallurgy. Dental Jurisprudence and Ethics. Electricity. Hygiene. Inhrnmry and Laboratory Practice. Specimen Work. it to of sv nz sv or in entrant liollleaes ti? Dentistry CORNER ILLINOIS AND OHIO STREETS INDIANAPOLIS EXDQIISQS 'For one seven months' session There are thirty Weeks in seven calendar months as required by National Association of Dental Faculties. Board, thirty Weeks, at 53.00 per week . Room, thirty Weeks, at 51.00 per Week Laundry, thirty Weeks, at 50c. per Week . Books-new standard Works .... 590.00 30.00 15.00 25.00 Instruments-best, and will serve for future practice, 30.00 College Tuition complete . . . . 100.00 Total . . 5290.00 Graduation Fee to be added to the Senior Year. For information, address M. F. AULT, Sec'y, Indianapolis, Ind 242 .V - V-ae T-' ' H-1 -f:1i ' ' fl l P 'Wy f , f If ff ,V gzip' Wcarfm , lily ly iZ?C?o WQQ T f' f Q i Z-l f l ,Vf l R T T K flux - ' A X ' 1 .-,,, Z T THE CAST 7' RNS We 1. JZ-4 Z l 4 if go 1 61 llll 4 lf fl l I , .1 l I ' -if 1 I 'Twas only 21 tin woman, But the Senior felt so good, That he simply had to hug her- As there she stiflly stood. fSee McLinn for particularsj 2-L3 'T SITUATION Wylie Hall in llamesg tele- phone inside the ofhee 5 door locked. Prof. Morton, leading man. Dr. Bryan, his support. V Il 732 if Y I T who I I MTNXX K' WIFE-TSELL V kg A., l ll ,,yfij5.m lm ,j,V', f -, V SHOES lla X xW l SENTINEL PRINTING CUMPANY 9f9?'s9 97's? 9fsYf97 s2f9Yf PRINTFRSE STATIONIIRS COPPER PLATE ENGRAVERS COUNTY SUPPLIES OOK IANUFAC U TR B NIDTRS J92 9?'99f97'9f9f9'f9i'9f si? A . -4 ITASHIONABLE SOCIETY STATIONERY A SPECIAI TY BLANII 13 A T R Q, 1 sf' 9? 123 125 121 W MARKET ST INDIANAPOLIS IND mm 244 -I -f -I' df- ' QI 1 , , . ' s . 1 , Q , , Glee lub notes i 0 December 15th.-Paoli. The quartet makes a fluke, but Tommy's girl being a Kappa, he at once Ends the key and continues Kiss Her Softly Windsft Cotton, Swartz and Dowden practice the Freshman yell at midnight. Director Hiatt, rooming next door, kindly requests the boys to save their five hundred dollar voices. December 23d.--Club arrives in Summitville with no concert billed. Tommy finds the president of the reception committee out in the woods about two miles. The boys return to Hotel Doxey, Anderson, where Compton hrst admits- that he is no longer hungry, and Martin writes a twenty-seven page letter to Zionsville. Cot- ton linds an oyster in a. bowl ot milk and exclaims Help! Help! I've found an oyster? December 25th.-Hartford City, at request of President Swain. Audience num- bers one hundred and sixty-eight. Applause by O. Harrold and Miss Fargo. Cot- ton gets peevish and causes Emmons to swear. Hiatt thinks of a Khot schemei' for club practice next term, viz., quartets instead of chorus practice. December 26th.-Marion. Compton and Ross become chums and use one pair ot overshocs between them. December 28th.-Montpelier. g'tCollicott impresses Miss S. because he has such a manly appearance. Ross prevented from making a big hit. with a girl by Comp- ton's talking with her mother in the same room. Hiatt and McCracken entertained by a minister. Lucius refuses to smoke, and John does with out swearing. December aastii.-treatise at Redkeybeliore the Farmers' Institute. After Mc- Crackenjs whistling solo he is presented with a bird cage. Collicott is captured by a Portland girl. Cotton decides to send home part of his baggage. He thinks seventy-one cents too much for the express, so he carries the bundle to' Redkey, where he sends it for seventy cents. Gain, one cent. Cotton gives the Freshman yell and continues to swell. December 30th.-Portland. Lon Bracken is taken to Sunday services. Doc Compton is entertained by three belles from DePauw. January lst.-Bluffton. Manager Bracken makes his Dailtejy call at Decatur, and is unable to get away unattended. 245 YYYYYYYYIYI?Y?IYIii?IIYYYYYYIYYYIYYIYIIYYIYYYYYYIYIYYYIYYIIYIIYYIIIYYYYYYYYYYIYNY!!YIYYIY Z 0- -4 Q- -Q 0- -Q o- -o Q-' I 0 4 4 Q -Q' 0- -o Q- -o f lldlilllilp llS llld illIilD0llS -. cv- -Q Q- -'C 7- , -o 0- -Q Q- -4 L BIISIIIQSS ollege 3 0- ' -4 0- -Q o- o Q --o 5- -4 2 UIIIVQYSIW I lliilll 1 0- -Q o- -Q 0- -Q 0- -0 4,...' Givc5IunI oduclition that is cupitzllfm' PI'I'D21.I'0S im' bn 1' Ivxzuniiiuliniis in ull -4 lr ai. liiv tune. bla1rc's,z1n1l uontvrs clvgim-, -3 9-I No Ufllliilllilll is moroliiglily cstovliiml. Exe-vptiniizil ndvuiitn-gcs in Svlinul of -1 9'l Tin- cz1Ils for our QIXILILIZLIUS vxcvcd the l'rz1vct1cv. -.4 9. Supp y. Acvvss to County, Stuff' :incl l1'mlv1':1I -0' of Mm-v than 25,000 Students pleuszmtly Q'm1'tSf :Ind U' HW muff' b'i1 3 Q.. ,ituurk.dI Cvnurt L1ln'u,l'y, thc' lnrggvsl in tho -4 'P' . Unilccl Siam'-s. -1' 'P-I Bnuliml by 21 half century ot sucfcc-ss. -0, :H StgI1III:Ints c'n1'ol1cd uvory clay in thu Strong -Faculty of professional 3 0- ' lnstructors -0 0- -o 3- 4 , -qp 0- In 52591011 all Summer Spring and Summer 'Cerms 3 0- . -Q Z Cziiuloygilc and full 1m1'tic11l:u':4 lwv. Cmitinuvs vntiw yvzw. Stlulmilismm-1':i,11y 3 Q- IMENTION THIS FUSLICMIOND tcrin. Uutulogxuo und lhllll1lIIl4flQI1l2Iil'S lrw. 3 9- I INDIANAPOLIS COLLEGE OF LAW -0 T Adclu-an PRESIDENT HEEB EI JI HEEBI SeC,yITreaSI '0- Q- N. Pennsylvania St., Opp. Postoifice. NI pennsylvania stu OPPI poston-iceI -4 0- -o Q- -Q 9- -o : - , 1: 9- II , nj -Q I USlI'EllIIl ' Lf I 5- 4- I -4 0- 1.-. ' fa -o 9- -I I - . -C Q-' TAUGHT BY NIAIL j -4' Q- on IN oun RESIDENT SCHOOL T U vb -4 Z ., a g y Z 9- NI'IYS1l2I41Ii'1' Slwicliillg amd ull -Q ff- I11:Il1Iv1IIlllustmiing tamglit suc- Fm.yi.uI1.S W0 have imln .3 0- wssm 5 ggivi n ff' th u B E ST II n cl '9- 9. Aduptc-cl to ull. Individual 1n0qz3YtmNiw, L.0m.., I , ' -4 I W I I I I I ., . . , bl my . Q.. 53153, ' instruction and CVIIICISIII Cm.1.v5p0ngomx. vvm. M- -.Q -9-' iillf, snnu- as in our resident mm t. 1 ' tl - 1 . r. , -a - II IIIIWI I I I I p nc in Ilh Loun N15. . Q- mChu0l,Nxl11L'l1l1alazL wi, gmU.mm,L, to qlmlify .9 I 3 , . I' 'zilllz ' ' r' -1 .H Spfmg and -:llcwlforlgll-finililgjmllxailililllin- - ' 'O f ummer erm ally from our resident : 9- -9, 2 ' Host m0thUdSI I,1.k,ImI1.0S inntitutiun - IIncli:1.1mp- 1: O- quickly for proiitulilc work. Ubi Willem' U1 Law- -o 0- 1733 X4 Studi-nts n-iitliusizistic OYUI' Whlch has il -0 0- '1 '3 ,,' their sllccuss. I-lighust en- Spring and Summer Cgfm -C 0- 3. Q3-K clorsa-nieiits. Enroll now. . , , . . -0 0- Ivy IIlll'1'lIiIll0IlI1l DiIilI'lIIIIIl.fl'. lvI'2ldII2I'll'S III suv- -0 Z G-in wi-irc fm- full particulars. gvffful iflvlglivv. Wriw your l11'Si1'f? FOI' I: 0- - u purticu urs. -o o- -o L' NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ILLUSTRATING NATIONAL CORQESPONDENCE 1 0- l lC0 P0'a'ed5 SCHOOL OF LAW -0 O- 34236 N. Pennsylvania Street l '1C0fP0fa1ed I -0 0- Indianapolis, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind. -0. Q- -Q o- -o WWIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIR 246 .- iiTL,,,,, , L+ i- . ...,, January 2d.-Ashley. The boys walk two miles to reach the town. Rupert gets tired. Martin loses his heart. Swartz loses out. Collicott and Emmons he- eonie interested in priniary work and visit the schools. Hiatt and McCracken decide not to pack their shoes together any longer, he- cause McCracken never gets to go where there are any girls on account of Hiatt. The ho-tel ofhce is the scene of a dramatic separation. John niadg Lucius un.- relenting. January 3d.-Ligonier. Hiatt and McCracken pack their shoes in the same grip again. Lon Bracken wears his dress suit all day. J'anua.ry -lth.-Goshen. Compton goes home and returns next morning with market baske-t full of fried chicken, bread and butter and apples. Davis and Simp- kins become friendly. Curtis Martin continues singing WTO Zion, to Zion, beautiful, beautiful Zions- villef' January Gth.-Cambridge City. Greek meets Creek. Bracken quarrels with Bracken. Tommy isn't in at 11 p. m. Lenny is sorry he has treated Tommy so mean: fears he has been waylaid, and goes out to hunt him. .igmu-ai-y Tth.-En route to Bloomington. lilartin meets the Zionsville girl and is serenely happy, but the Big Four conductor causes him much uneasiness. Martin declares he will patronize the Vandalia hereafter. rn? March 26th.-Bloomfield. Collicott and Book are entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Mason, assisted by two charming belles selected by Mrs. Mason. lltareh f2T't-h.-Carlisle, Hiatt and McCracken stop off at a. restaurant. Mc- Cracken gets a piece of pie. Hiatt gets left. Cot-ton and Hiatt have their usual quarrel. Cotton decides to lea.ve the club. Hiatt apologizes. Cotton stays. Doe Compton spends eighty-six cents for lunch and candy. During the night Doc has everything but sweet sleep. , March 28th.-Princeton. Davidson tries to be impressive and falls od the stage, and 'fgreat was the fall thereof. Hiatt eats his dinner on Pike's Peak. March 29th.-Mt. Vernon, Book calls Hiatt down for allowing the boys to smoke in church. Hiatt apologizes and promises to do better. March 3Gt.h.-Jeffersonville. Daniel Augustus Wasmuth, a former Century member who tried for ai place on the club, was visiting friends in the penitentiary, and was admitted free to the concert. He realized the fact that the club had slept none the night before and wa.s singing to criminals, so in his broad noble-hearted- ness he sympathized with the boys and said: :T-Boys, you have done well indeed. I will see President Swain to-morrow and let him know about it. Dan is now a. gen- eral favorite, M U , 247 reputzvion and reliability-rt house that stands fairly and squarely back of every instrument it sells. This house protects its FI 6 Is easy if you come to a house with known 'Y H W- W W ' customers besides handling the highest L grade instruments known to the musical as as W Wm. WE MANUFACTURE THE BALDWIN, ELLINGTON, VALLEY GEM, HOWARD AND HAMILTON PIANOS GET OUR PRICES AND COMPARE . 1b. JBaIbwin 8 Go. REPRESENTED BY MANUFACTURERS H. T. KITSON BLOOMINGTON. IND, INDIANAPOLISNMINDIANA RUSH MEDICAL CO LEGE ln affiliation with the University of Chicago l-ORGANEZED l837 The academic year ol Rush Medical College is divided into tour quarters, corresponding with those recognized with the University of Chicago. They are designated as Summer, Autumn, Winter and Spring Quarters, beginning respectively the first of July, first of October, iirst of January, and first of April, each continuing for twelve weeks. A recess of one week occurs between the end of each Quarter and the beginning ofthe next following. Instruction in all departments of medicine will be given in each quarter. The general course of instruction requires four years of study in resi- dence, with a minimum attendance upon three Quarters of each year. A student may begin his college work on the first day of any Quarter, and may continue in residence for as many successive Quarters as he desires. Credit will not be allowed, however, for more than three successive Quar- ters. At least forty-five months must elapse between the date of a tirst matriculation and the date of graduation. Instruction is given in two capacious, well-lighted edihces. One is devoted to Clinics, Didactic Lectures, and practical courses in Manual Training, in manipulation in the use ofthe various Instruments employed in Medicine, Surgery, Obstetrics and the specialties. The other building contains iivc Laboratories, in which are conducted Practical Laboratory Courses in Atatomy, Physiology, Histology, Chemistry, Materia Medica, Therapeutics, Pathology and Bacteriology. For further information address correspondence to- RUSH MEDICAL COLLEGE, Chicago, III, 2i8 March 30th.-New Albany. Ross persuades Irene to kiss him. Lon Bracken stays out to swear on account of the Bracken in him. March 31st,-North Vernon. Rupert sleeps on the train and requires three seats to hang out, in and over. April Bd.--Madison. Martin meets a Pi Phi sister. Rupert makes a big hit as a lawyer. X- April -Ltli.--Vevay. In the hotel mail box are found letters addressed as follows: Mrss EFFINE P. BLOUNT, . 320 Fess Ave., Bloomington, lnd. Miss CARRIE FORKNER New Castle, Ind. 7 Miss ELEANOR HARMON, Zionsville, lnd. Miss l.lllABEL RYAN, Terre Haute, Ind. Mrss OLIVE DAILEY, Decatur, Ind. April 5th.-Aurora. Cotton and Schwartz catch a, 6:55 train at 7:00. Bracken takes the price of a rig to Harrison out of their Hdivvyf, Cotton gets mad at Lon Bracken and threatens tio go home. April Gth.-Harrison, Ohio. Ross meets an old gamester, an early chum of his father. He invites Warner to his otlice and gives him a big write-up in the Harri- son QOhioj News: Among the number comprising the Indiana University Glec and Mandolin Club is Warner Anthony Boss, who is the son of Charles Boss, who will be remem- bered as the son of Uncle Johnny P. Boss, of Oxford, Indiana. Warn-er has grown from a. little tot to manhood since he left here, but this will make his welcome none the less cordial, and we anticipate a pleasant time during his brief stayf' Brookville. Lon Bracken is really interested in having the club do its best. April 'Yth.--Lawrenceburg. Closing concert. Manager Bracken is entertained by a.n old sweetheart who married the other fellow. During the concert he becomes dangerously ill and calls for a physician and surgeon. Club leaves at midnight in charge- of Collicott, and Bracken remains till morning. l,loc1tor's bill, thirty cents. Nurse, Lon Bracken. 249 be eoical Ollege I DEPARTMENT 'E 6 n UNIVERSITY or or MEDICINE 5 n 3 INDIANAPOLIS THIS COLLEGE was organized in IS69 and will open its 3ISt session September 25, 1900. A four years' graded course g ample clinical facilities g free dispensary in college building main- tained and conducted by the Faculty, at which over I2,000 cases were treated during the past year, clinics at City Hospital and St. Vincent's Infirmary, bed-side instruction, obstetric ser- vice and operative surgery on cadaver. New building, especially erected for medical teaching, containing spacious lecture rooms and laboratories adapted to the requirements of advanced medical education. - -I FACULTY I- ISAAC C. XVALKER. M. D., Professor of Diseases ofthe Mind and Nervous System. HENRY JAMESON, M. D., Dean. Professor of Principles and Practice of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. ALEMRERT- W. BRAYTON, M. S., M. D., Vice-Dean, Professor of Dermatology, Syphilology and Clin- ical Medicine. EDWARD F. HODGES, A. M., M. D., Professor of Obstetrics. PIIILIP S. BAKER, A. M., M. D., Professor of Chemistry. FRANKLIN W. HAYS, M. D., Professor of Dermatology and Clinical Medicine. FRANK A. DIORRISON, M. D., Professor of Physiology. WAI. N. YVISI-IARD, A. M.. M. D., Professor of Genito- Urinary and Venereal Diseases. DANIEL A. THOMPSON, M. D., Professor of Diseases of the Eye. JAMES H. TAYLOR, A. M., M. D., Professor of Diseases of Children and Clinical Medicine. LEI-IIIIAN H. DUNNING, M. D., Professor of Diseases of Women. JOHN N. HURTY, PHAR. D., M. D., Lecturer on Hy- giene and State Medicine. C. RICHARD SCHAERER, M. D., Lecturer on Materia Medica. DIELVIN E. CROWELI., A. M., Lecturer on Physics. CHARLES E FERGUSON, M. D., Lecturer on Diseases of Women. JOIIN S. NVRIGHT, B. S., Lecturer on Botany. NORMAN E. JORES, M. D., Lecturer On Ostcology. AI.OIs B. GRAHAM. M. D., Lecturer on Gastro-Intesti- nal and Rectal Surgery. ROSCOE H. RITTER, M. D., Lecturer on Physiology and Demonstrator of Histology and Microscopic Technology. FREDERICK R. CIIARLTON, M. D., Lecturer on Genito- Urinary and Venereal Diseases. EUGENE DAVIS, M. D., Demonstrator of Pathology. DAVID Ross, M. D., Demonstrator of Anatomy. EDWARD A. BROWN, M. D., Demonstrator of Surgical Dressings and Assistant to Chair of Surgery. lVILLIAM T. S. DoDDs, M. D., Deinonstrator of Bac- JOIIN H. OLTVTSR, M. D.. Treasurer, Professor Of Sur- teriology. gefyi C11mCf11 21110 Ofthopedw Sufgew- JOHN D. Nici-Iots, M. D., Assistant Dcmonstrator of lVILLIAM FLYNN A. M. M. D. Professor of Ph 'sical Pathology. . . I 5 Diagnosis and Diseases of the Chest. GEORGE J. COOK, M. D., Secretary, Professor of Gastro- Intestinal and Rectal Surgery. THEODORE POTTER, A. M., M. D., Professor of Bacteri- ology and Principles of Medicine. LEWIS C. CLINE. M. D., Professor of Laryngology, Rhinology and Olology. ERNEST C. REYER, M. D., Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics and Lecturer on Anatomy Of the Nervous System. EVAN HADLEY, M. D., Professor of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. AVILLIAM M, YVRIGHT, M. D., Professor of Surgical Anatomy, Minor and Clinical Surgery. FRANK B. VVYNN. M. D., Professor of Pathology. JOIIN W. SLUss, M. D., Professor of Anatomy. JOIIN F. GEIS. M. D., Professor Of Toxicology and Forensic Medicine. EDMUND D. CLARK, M. D., Professor of Surgical Pathology. ORANIIELLPEAEIP, M. D., Adjunct Professor of Ob- stetrics and Diseases of Women. GEO. W. SLOAN, PI-IAR. D., M. D., Lecturer on Phar- macy. FOR INFORMATION ADDRESS THE SECRETARY GEORGE J. COOK, Nl. D., lt! FRANCIS O. DORSEY, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Pathology and Assistant to Chair Of Principles and Practice of Medicine. GUs'rAvE A. PETERSDORF, M. D., Assistant in Cheni- ical Laboratory. C. H, C. POUCIIER, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. CHARLES E. AVRIGIIT, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy. ROBERT L. XVESTOVER, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Bacteriology. , HARRY K. LANODON, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Bacteriology. WILLIAM J. SANDY, M. D., Assistant Demonstrator of Histology. WALTER D. HOSKINS, M D., Assistant Demonstrator of Histology and Instructor in Latin. ROBERT O. MCALEKANDER, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Obstetrics. A. M. COLE, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Diseases of Children. JOIIN A. PFAFF, M. D., Assistant to Chair of Physi- ology. FRANK SOAIMER, M. D., Prosector. HENRY JANIESON, M. D., DEAN NO. 28 EAST OHIO ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND, No. 224 NORTI-I MERIDIAN ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 250 V 'YW Y V r l:r:Q.E:::A1 f '-'f'- S+? It gives us great pleasure to publish the following little lyrics, written by an member of our own faculty. They were given away to the Arbutus by Dr. Joh11so11's youngest son. 35 251 EfdhisccachuchaitaaocstcncibdibdocGohibohachaocachadilfi? ig o U R EP 3 GENERAL CATALOGUE Q3 AND BU Y ERS? GUIDE -413 THE MOST COMPLETE ISSUED BY ANY HOUSE E in the world. It has 17,000 illustrations, '70,000 quotations of prices, and contains 1,100 pages. E? 3:33 There's nothing you vvearlor use but is listed in itg G 613 and the prices quoted place you in a position to buy from us, gb 43 in large or small quantities, at wholesale prices. We do not sell ig this General Catalogue and Buyers' Guide-We give it away. E ' t-f-t ll fh t 't ' 3533 axceolidlyfm1tOcosctsW'i8CiJ:eIei1tsmin0pxiistaiggutoSpiiirietlzinlzlrihigiitiitti Wt? gp 4:3 want you to have a copy, and will be pleased to send one to you Eb if you'll send 15 cents to partly pay postaffe or expressave. It ig will tell you what you should pay for 6 r 6 Egg? C53 everything. You will have a two Wi gp 4:3 million-dollar stock of goods to ' C? Q3 select from, and when you f'ANfX gb 43 learn what we offer goods mfg-6 ,,,: . Q33 for, and compare our prices 413 With what you are paying, E37 cg you will open your eyes in amiga. gb 413 astonishment. We guar- A Eb 4:3 anteegoodsasrepresented. , S E33 413 If you don't find them so, ff? CQ3 you can have your money 413 back as soon as you ask it. - fig On request, will tell you a gi: 413 just what your goods will ' il?- C23 cost laid down at your sta- J f gy 412 tion. Send 15 cts. for our ,AF C? General Catalogue and lilfiilleihilliliililitiQflllfliiiif' '1l?fI2'L'ffy E33 BHYefS'GHide- DOSO today- zmziziffs222352g:2Lf:f:i.:Iiii'551?I?,22f QQ MONTGOMERY WARD E99 CO 57? MICHIGAN AVENUE AND MADISON STREET:::CI-IICAGO gg Q ORIGINATORS OF THE CATALOGUE BUSINESS gb 252 K Fo- . Lb Q , ,. YWWQ ' , Mun tggkgggcgwg 330 OOUOOOCB 0 Ou Y 7 +46 'M f , ' A 0 f . V Wo sicr :5 Azpy. S gl Q ' of . 'xi ,f'7i'T' N.. ,la ,' 4. . . . ez FI K0 ll, Tx ,V I -f-. .. My ,. M ., .qsifxzffk 7' '---f MN: , f- M , X ' hXi 'f' .'1 f' x jf 'A' . ff W. 2 ' L35: W-?fi?fTA I-ivzgxbk x k f ,.. Al': Y- Z f l --' A- fq, 2 5,NXX 'k5L gm Qi 1 w-.--mu... Mm ..N4c.. .uw .,.,u.,R ' x x N- mcg..- s..,., , nt um . -. New- W liu' R t x 4 Q0 , 1. Em - f,L-QM 'W -1 f:. :.b 5 f Nu-. - There was Once axjounq laohi fvom Woosfer N' A R, W' V ff wWh0 WGS onCQ IJLLTSKLQKIX B Q Qggfgr 2 VICE, Arg? 2 ca Jumped on OL je, Bhd Could not C156 heme her fellow did come and clicl Paooslq her' + lx W1 5 + 55 2 jx ! -11 lim- ' I i 1 um w J , I, N 'ig fl . , X ' I , W 1 N ,,.. WMI Wm 1 lllsezsi I l Hin Millie! W I 1 M' msg? W QB- Www l wi n lm Indiana I llastrating Company West Maryland Street ENGRA VERS ..... DESIGNERS ELECTRO TYPERS 4 E have one of the largest and K most completely equipped shops 'N -,,' - .I ' in the West. XVe are prepared I to handle anything in our line, I and we guarantee satisfaction in quelity and promptness : 1 Indianapolis LET US FIGURE ON YOUR WORK f 2 IPM WHETSELL 5 'llfvlational gg, JB Is the best place in Bloomington to buy 'ii -i Stylish and Up-to-Date GENERAL lg! BANKERS E0 SHOES AND SLIVPERS 3BlOOminQtOl1, HUD. Prices 'Q' -J1QAlwa,ys the Lowest C BQFOFFICE T L SOUTH SIDE SQUARE 254 - R- '-M--me-11-11-f -' 4 ' TVX' X A-i. Q tT15S I W X WMU Q5 mmm 4 IV' 'Q :1!fiYs1N4fQj'i! I ' KKK 3 Kim Qmdwb Q i 6 6 W A Q R J 1 We N25 M7:X Qb'fm Z 1 ' ne ndred and fem Weiss ji? 1' -N -RUG, Jgmepbam ostrich mb A EE Which me bottles md sich fi r- X 1 :1 b I4 - h K fg J 2 V i X51 L ,Q I, l , U blb' ' K 5 4? Z 5 2 2 ff Q f 1 Tr ' ' i IX J QV iff ,A j! I .. Iq j .4V' .5115 ,.. JJ, .--va -E X , X, ! I A g ,1 f f 1' . qA,'A Ai-5 -,,.l ,uqlilvni :, :5i-.131 4... , :i.,' ij-liii,f J i xv . 615 ar ' f z Ny l He f ff ' 'l -' '-,A 1- .'f..' l' . '12-Elia - 'rT , f vqQQwwvwweQgwfsi fffwaaQ7'ifWfffQff V Sw f - IQA' Y ' X ' qggmiii L1f Qi2iF7ifg QNgiig?9 ,- r ,EDWARD ROSE is GJ-, '.CUST0-M TAILORSIACHICAGQIJA '- THE AMERICAN CITIZEN , - -,.,' 1.-g.s,5,.f T .g1g,,I,g, ' .' .,:f-1. A 5932 rf J ', y pl ,I 5, - IL Q29 Furnishers to His Majesty, R? , FL'RNISHING GOODS J Latest Styles in Hats , Q and First-Class Mer- if . . , chant Tazlorzng : : : ' Quality, Pr' F't Et all Gua t d Your in p t p tf Hy I t Ii S FRANK J. DIETZ as ide Squizre 106 WALNUT ST. UHARRO STUDENTS' SOUTHSIDE DRUGGIST HEADQUARTERS EOR LOWERY ' CANDIES ATHLETIC AND THE ELITE IN GOLF STATIONERY Goons exam-4.11. 119 WEST KIRKWOOD AVENUE 256 IZ. K. Culev vivf lf was a liappy little boy, My playinates were so very kinclg I never lackecl fliOI' any joy To- keep nie in a pleasant iniml. My pa, lie sent me liere to learn- Tliey say 'twas nice in pag But l. would quit the wliole coneein For just one look at nia. I lmrouglit my ball and bat and sled, My knife and fork and cup and dislig But tlie boys all think niy games are dead, Anil Swain wo'n't let ine Iisli. They tried to teach nie liow to dance, But the ladies were so' tall That I Cliclnit stand a half a. chance, For I always let them fall. So now Tin going lionie to stay Until. I ani a niang Then, if tl1ey'll let nie Conie away, itll do the best I can. 257 LCLIISVILLE VIEDICAL CGLLEGE FIND Iurlemahvcafsss l L 522 A,4 .V L We ' L ,Q', l , ' ',, we -. , ', ,I ,KQQ fi L f , G' The Most Derfectl p 5 at c . ,x-- t ix ' 5 D . Appointed Medical 3 Institute in The L' ' Southwest W2 l ' , ..,,1 5 Thoroughly Ef'l Cd Q gf 3 -- H im? ha gf .V g Laboratories 1 . . l M ML :-. . Z fr i Yidvohtagcs 1, 1ho . Q nx- A Aiou ff' 1' .4 ' 4Y'1 W f .'1- Q. .,,': iiililmhllpuvl. HE Thirty-Second Annual Session of the Louisville Medical College will begin the last of September, Igoo, and terminate the last of March, 1901. This well-known institution is supplied with every facility for modern medical training, and its opportunities for clinical instruction are unsurpassed. Graduates from Indiana University will be allowed , credit for one year's work on our regular four-year 1 graded course, thus allowing them to apply for final 1 examination at the end of their third year. Special rates to sons and brothers of physicians, and the clergy. For further information, address- GEQIQGE VI. WYYIPNEIP, lvl. D. NO. 904 5. SCCONI Street LOUISVILLE, KV. 258 flrbllti In recitation rooms they're found- Arbutig In corridors they loiter ,round- Arbutig They haunt the campus night and day, And for your jokes in ambush lay, And book the one who would get gay- Arbuti. They're tough on such as have a case- Arbuti5 The fiends I They know each Hspooning No odds if in the hall or stair You press the hand of maiden fair, place Just glance around, you'll see them there- A Arbuti. v 1 I ii 5 f r I' 1:2 4-'ff 'l'rffflli-if liar r v . N , ,, ff ,JV it l fl T' . ' lvl B, LK: ifi' yi i Xl ll , ,, fox.,-1, ,-' 259 Buy Your Shoes Second Largest Shoe Store in the GQ World. They give you the largest as- i sortment and lowest prices. referee? Geo. Maron Nail Orders Dfvmvfly Filled Indianapolis, Indiana N. B. ROGERS' I-'VERY 5 DR. G. C. SCHAEPPER Our Rigs are rubber-tired and up-to-date. physician and Our Horses are good, Surgeon stylish movers. Our tRATES THE LOWESTY H OO K R 2I5 W. Fourth Street 'PHONE 50 P 336 S 207 E 133456 cook M REPRESHINC- ONVOC ounty DRINKS 'ilelaroyje jfountain State ank 'Phone 98 202 N. Walnut St. 'Ury our Delicious 3ee Cream. Does a s SEE - General Banking Business BEN CKART I as lt! .!iL. fl! SATISFACTION GUARANTEED 445 UU 100 WALNUT STREET Over Star Store, North Side Square BLOOMING1-'ONf IND' 260 Qlumpluint COMMONNVEALTH OF INDIANA COUNTY or MONROE, l ' . ,159 Sampson vs. Riddle Here ,comes Sampson, the plaintilf, and eomplains of lliddle, the defendant, and says, that heretofore, to-wit, tha.t is to say, on the Sth day of May, Anno Domini, 1900, when the baseball team of my alma mater, eoniposed of good and valiant kiekers like unto myself, on Jordan afield were contesting with Certain alleged ball playersby lndiana, University put up for slaughter by t-he aforesaid valiant ltieliers, said defendant aforesaid did, then and there, get pertinent7' and in a rude, inso- lent, vile, malicious, and impertinent. manner, unto the said plaintiff, the aforesaid Sampson, say certain words that were Ctpertinentvf' thereby Causing the said plaintiff, the aforesaid Sampson, to be greatly humiliated and niortiiied before and in the presence of said ball players from my Halma materf' to the great injury of said plaintiff, the aforesaid Sampson, in the sum of one cent, good and lawful money of the Commonwealth, and contrary to precedents made and established for English I, which said defendant, Riddle, aforesaid, has heretofore failed to pass in a lawful and satisfactory manner, that is to say, like unto the said plaintiff, the aforesaid Samp- son, being the same who was greatly humiliated, would have passed the same, or tried to have passed the same. Therefore, by reason ofthe aforesaid, the said plaintiff, the aforesaid Sampson, more formally known as Martin ldfright, brings said aforesaid suit in this court and offers battle. . llLlA,llTlN WRIGHT SAMPSON, By his A t-torney, JOHN R. MCGINNIS. Hummer COMMONWEALTH OF INDIANA, QS. COUNTY OF NIONROE, R ' I Riddle vs. Sampson. And now comes Riddle, by his alleged lawyer, O. E. Bland, and says that the declaration and matter therein eontained, of said Sampson, the aforesaid defender of my alma materft do not in law constitute a legal Cause of action, for the reason that the said plaintiff has employed one John li. McGinnis as his lawyer, it being well lcnown to the frequenters of this court that said John R. McGinnis is not eom- petent to act as a lawyer in this court, by reason of the fact that said McGinnis is 261 PHOTO BY SHAW Do NDT FAIL T0 SE E SHAW For artistic Work. We keep the latest style Nlounts, Kodaks and all Amateur Supplies. Our Nlotto: Good and Courteous Treatment to All. Call and see us. Work L. E. SHAW Northwest Corner Square 262 1- W Ire., Bloomington, lnd. president of the Freshman class, largely composed out persons who have been intimi- dated and coerced by plaintitt aforesaid to try to pass English I, and tor the addi- tional reason tha.t when the players come from 'tiny 21l1llil.IlI2lltCTll to do battle at I. U., the aforesaid plaintiff becomes non eomposmentis, an intense and virulent enemy ot I. U. and her alleged ball toss-ers. Wherefore, the said defendant, the said Riddle, by his alleged lawyer, the said Bland, prays that said suit abate. ' ' RIDDLE, By BLAND, Orator. fluhgnrznt COMMONWEALTH OF INDIANA, SS, COUNTY OF llIONROE, ' Samrsyyon vs. Riddle, and Riddle vs. Sampson. And now, the court having heard the tales Ot woe ot the said alforesaid Sampson and the aforesaid said Riddle, by his alleged lawyer aforesaid, the said Bland, orat-or, and having talcen the same under advisement, and having slept on the same, doth say,'de.elare, and adjudge that there are no precedents tor said action, and because it being the settled policy of this court to establish no precedents that may become dangerous, and for the additional reason that said Sampson was aided and abetted to become non eompos nientis by a certain Spaniard, one Kuersteiner by name, an- other bigoited partisan ot 'fmy alma inat-cr, who from the grand stand did emit cer- tain ejaeulations that tended to excite said Sampson and cause him to place himself in a position to be by said Riddle in person, and not by his said alleged lawyer, Bland, talked to in a certain pertinent manner, thereby being guilty of contributory neg- ligenee. But by reason of the fact that said Riddle was in his proper person pertinent, to said Sampson, therefore it is by this Court adjudged and declared that the said Riddle shall never pass Englisli I so long as said Sampson remainsvnon eompos men- tis, Or so long as Kuersteiner ejaeulates from the grand stand. SWAIN, J. By his Personal Representative, HOFFMAN, Dean. 263 9 Books f Books Books Athle1fe's Gear 25' Everything For Collegian and Teacher The Library and Gymnasium Dealings on Suspicion. If you live in'IVIanila or Spitzbergen, merely drop us a postal with your wants thereon, and THE CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION OF INDIANA UNIVERSITY Bloomington, Indiana, U. S. A. WILL DO THE REST Students as well as others find ATERlVIAN'S DEAL OUNTAIN ENS A NECESSARY CONVENIENCE They are used and endorsed by People of Education as the best Writing instru- tw U ment of today. It is the Popular Pen at all the Universities, Colleges and Schools. Ask your dealer or Write for a catalogue. L. E. WATERMAN 85 CO. ll 155-157 Broadway, NEW YORK l Largest Fountain Pen Manufacturers in the World Xl ,,.3 i W DANFORTH BLOSSOMS OUT QETTQTETTT S 3 c 1 s G 3 S MERTCHANT 9 Q TA1LoR Q Q 5- Q C 3 G 102 East Kirkwood 7 Q c Q c Q 9 Q c Q c Q Elyilly Bloomington, Ind. DR. J. M. TOURNER, M. D. 0 o AND RESIDENCE 2 I4 SOUTH WALNUT BLOOMINGTON, IND PHONE 44 H. c. CARMICHAEL FIRST-CLASS ficab Service RUBBER TIRES Headquarters at O'Ha.rrow's Drug Store 7 E have every necessary ap- pliance for getting out Perfect Laundry Work-high- gloss or domestic finish - Which- ever you may wish. Mending done free of charge. ENTERPRISE STEAM LAUNDRY J. H. S. KELLER, Proprietor Corner Third and Morton Sts. PHONE 25. SWHSD HDDGYQI TGI' YOIIIIQ l1TQll,'f,wf and men Hlwavs Young WM BE FOUNDAT GARRITT A. ARCI-1IBALD'S lIldTdIld'S lkddihg BMW? and 'flll'l'liShQf 38 E. Washington Street Indianapolis SPECIALTIES: S3 O0 HATS. SI.OO, SI .50 AND 82.00 SHIRTS. 6Oc, S OO S 5 ECKWE EJ- 11:5-I Y - -lu Pl' Cl'dSIilldIi ll 98 I-I0 stood illfllli' ill thv 1-o1'1'idn1', With 2l1YRlL'tlllfSK211l'l' in his uyvsg As shi' K'llti'1'l'dl11lIL1iiiy 211111 clnsvd tht' drum' 101111 should g11z1.1'd zxgainst Sl1l'llI'iF0l. Shu gljliltllttiid2Il'Ol11lfi, hut he-ard llUSU1llld' N111' saw shc'z1.ny sawn- hm-, And hm-1' h1':11-1-11-ts rung with :1 nn-1'1'y 1-1:11115 And il joyous s111iIvs111il1-rlsliv. 'l'l10'su111uwl1z1tshy KI tvll nn lin-J, Shr' trippvnl to whc'1'0 hc stomlq Hu thn't hm' gay and t111'n1'd away, But it did not any good. Sho Ifllllfhldd his a11'1n, in wild Lltiil 1'1n' Ho tn1'n0d1111d gzizvci upon ht-rg O, what wilt thnn!I'11lv111x'vyo11 now. IVn1'l10tl1n't ho was 21 g1jl'illl'1'. But all tho while hifi'swvc't1rsts111ih-, Full on l10l' fv11tu1'vs plziyvdg And shi' i'111,1kl1is hund with 1nm'c sohlz111d ,Ns low those words sho sntycd. tt Why turn away fl'0l11 1110 I 111'uy? I'll do not any ll2ll'lIIQ Nu 0110 is 110211, you nvod not fC'Ell'--U A nd she 11-tgu of his 111-111. Hv draw him buck, hut, alas! illilfkf Saw nowl1111'c 116 could Ilom-1 Sh0tl1n't he sworn the had hot'o1'oj, And u tom' shown in l101 co. 5' 0, Marx E cried sho, 4' why t111'11 fi'Ulll nw, O, think you not itis invest? That hero alone, all uixhukiiown, You should give me somothiiig sweet? 'KA kiss, I IIIGZLII,l101'02L111ll1SOGIl, You can on nw hcstowg 'Twerv fziyur 21'tx2l-t-d0l'l,I nmko mv wait, But kiss away my woo. I-Iv stcpped tiwzird her, but thc corridoi' 'S not for such interviews : Ho thoit he hezird, itlld-NV011-d0fQ'1'I'Gd The kiss when 'twus 110 use. An d so, my friend, my tulu I Gnd, I hope without offencesg The way 1 d0's to kiss, donit you? And take the consequences. 267 blll ll! li! l7Ol'OQ'Y3pl79e' f Q' ef Q' W to be appreciated must be of some friend or event of personal interestg and even then will not be fully appreciated until you have been separated from the sub- ject 'or scene of the picture. In after years nothing will be more valuable to you or more highly appreciated by you than a collec- tion of pictures of university friends and its surroundings. If you have a collection, add to itg if you have not, commence at once. , , iceley Che rogressive LZ hotographer Dhotographer to the Hrbutus 268 ,.,,,,- ,. , ,.,,.-..,......-,..,,..... -, ....-v- l-gif.. ,-,4 g ff: X f j X! ff! wk A V - 5 NIZZjfff it-x X. V. w ,l W x 7 . 171- V! Q' fxf 5 'ml' V Q --.J-if lwwleo- if XFX 4- bs V fi J' Y if A 44 X 3 I X P W W -L ,ff fgff?-...s':..-1- 3 55.11 M ,. 'I5 -Z. ' ff LET THEM BARK O, Miss Ho, Miss Whither do uou go Miss? If I did Dui hhow Miss, I would go there loo. DPEJU, Miss, IB X QR Suv, Miss Whilhol' and awau, Miss? I would siarl Todclu, Miss, lil Could go wilhvou. ff- Whu, Sir I, Sir, If you did Dui Iru, Sir, Vou could go with me. Follow, Follow, Over brick ahd hollow To the lice Hive Store, Sir Where Pm sure lo be. WILES DRUG CO Leading Dispensers of Drugs and Medicines Prescriptions Carefully Filled New Stationery The Latest in Toilet Articles Soda Water The best Cream and Fruit Juices in the City EAST SIDE SQUARE P. C. HOLLAND, M. D. BLoolvllNoToN, IND. DWELLING OFFICE 'ith and Walnut Sts. 212 N. College Ave. - Harbaugh 84 Harbaugh 1?- ' - '4'l A FULL LINE OF 4 fxhiisusies W BICYCLE SUPPLIES GUNS AND GUN MATERIAL Repairing a Specialty 111 S- College Ave- BLOOMINGTON, IND. 270 --4:-:z-ff-' H Musl go Tripping Du, Sir- Sbt IOIIIICI BQYSQIT At twilight Neher strolled down Dunn street His face wreathed in a smile, He climbed some steps-then rung a bell, And paused a little while. Not long in silence waited he, Until a bright co-ed, Ssvung open wide the parlor door, And listened While he said: WVill you kindly Call Miss Willard ? 'Tis she I wish to see. The co-ed smiled profusely, And answered certainly Walk in and make yourself at home, My absence you'l1 excuse, l'll try and find Miss W'illard, And not a moment lose. She lit the lamp and searched the house, But the effort was in vain, VVhile Manson rocked in the parlor, And twirled his new watch chain. YVhile thinking what he ought to say, He heard a step once more, In came the same dark-eyed co-ed, lVho had been there before. Rellected in a mirror, Her face she chanced to see, Then loudly laughed as she exclaimed, U Why, I myself am she! 271 IIN? Wil? ' V K V AVENS BROS 097.97971 , .ivggoggmv I bxllglqlgxll slfilixlfxlf l Pususuens or o THE Book and job may mafia I .SIZSIZIINY xllxlrxllili m The largest and best equipped ofiice in Southern Indiana. Especially prepared for the prompt and astistic execution of students' printing. We have the finest and most expensive press in the world, the latest faces in type novelties. the most skillful labor in the city, and can please the most exacting typograph- ical critics. . .SIPSIZSINI . .SWZSIHW .rsgesgesgzllf - VVVV VVVV I ,wwiljilj open Dag ann mtg bt Hglgglqlgkli -we -mmm gimp N. Walnut Street I-lnb T1U1eIcome 'waiters ..S'ZS'ZSW? BLOOMINGTON, IND. xlfxlfxlfxll DR L T LOWDER HURW5 DRUGS AND ' ' ' STATIONERY MEDICINES OFFICE AND SANITARIUNI 202 South College Avenue 5 , Bloomington, Ind. OFFICE HOURS 9 TO I2 A. M. T H E 2:30 'ro 5 P. M. DR. HOMER E. STRAIN , tore Vg! souTH SIDE DENTIST Tlfi OUNTI'IER'S Bloomington, Indiana CANDIES 272 TOILET ARTICLES QIIOIGUOIIS QQ RIGGINS-ctNOXX'hGY6 so busy a man as he there was. And yet he seemed busier than he was. MCLINN-f'How long, Mon Dieu, how long! Mrss BRAKE-H Shy she was, and I tho't her cold. DR. ALEY-H Ye gods, how we do miss that moustache of thine! MCGINNIS- Whose deep conceit is such as passing all conception needs no defensefi STEVENS- C' Whilst smoke arises from my pipe, Thus to myself I say: Why should I anxious be for life Which vanishes away? PHILLIPS-4' By virtue ripened from the bud.'7 GILLUM-HA stranger to the calm delights of study. LoN BRACKEN-HA face which gladness did anoint. T. R. BRowN- Old Orpheus played so well he moved Old Nick, Whilst thou mo'vst nothing but thy fiddle-stickf' A. J. ICINNAMAN-H Whose conscience is his strong retreat.'7 MARY Jo11rNsToN-'fWhat majesty is in her gait? SIMPKINS-H116 was the very genius of famine. OLIVE DAILEY- Black brows, they say, Become some Women best, so that there be not Too much hair there, but in a semi-circle, Or a half-moon made with a pen. RETTGAR- Whene' er he spoke his voice was heard around Loud as a trumpetf' BUD DAVIS-H He never did any harm that I heard off' 273 R. F. JCONES, Manager C, L, JONES Che ew entry inIlllllllllgiifgaggrggjrqgfflifiilllui JONES CO., PROPRIETO s Rate 552-OO per day Bloomington, Indiana HARRY A. AXTELL N DR. vv. I.. WHITTED LAWYER No. 2I4I W. SIXTH STREET NEW ALLEN BLOCK Loans Collectols MR d 8 and mu me Off Residence, 410 N. Walnut sf. Ill E. Kirkwood Phone lol BLOOMINGTON, IND. PATRONIZE I Reade Steam Launch' i NO Rough Edges on Our YX7or14 414 G. Kirkwood Hvenue Wagon will Call and Deliver 'Dhone 400 y CLOTHING CLEANED l AND PRESSED AT . l Live r 4 f Y T Maeton 9 T r-Tint-1 Buckboards, Rubber-tired Traps i CLEANING AND DYEING WQRKS Phaetons and Single Buggies. Special Cab Service Phone 28 i 4,5 E- Kirkwood 274 FREE- He his Own merit sees. This gives him pride, For he sees more than all the world beside. BOYER--HAYICI just began to bloom his yellow beardft BOBBITT- HOW with giant's might He heaves the ponderous thought. ELFERS-ILA modern Sampson whose weakness is beneath his hairf' PROFESSOR JOHNSTON- Full well they laughed, with counterfeited glee, At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. Miss COX AND MR. PHILIPS- Like a pair of turtle doves they could not live asunder. Miss STEMPEL-H Modest and simple and sweet, the very type Of Priscilla. O DODDRIDGE- C' I am a stranger here below, Heaven is my hOme.'7 QOH ' '7f3i1 W' 'fdWl'ilQ SOIIQS new 'K I Love My Love Though Far Awayf'-HELEN TRAYLOR. H I Sing Because I Love to Sing. --TOM BRACKEN. The Lost ChOfd.7,-UNIVERSITY QUARTETTE. I Wlant Somebody to Love MG.77-ETI'IEL TRIPPET. H Amazing Grace, How Sweet the Sound. -CLAUDE HENDERSON. 4' Leaning on the Everlasting Arms. -Miss ROBINSON. ' O, for a Thousand Tongues to Sing My Love to All the Girls. -BIEDERWOLF. 275 we especialfy recommend our nzylzer yrarie J? J. CE o be we!! Qressedfi' flfe musf wear food cloihes gslzaf does noi mean expensive eloilzes our :flock every reazuremenz' of fashion, uaZz2y, and dieonomy .fr fulfy me! guery arlfeie hz our .riore 1:9 .refeefed ,uersonalfy and mas! ,vase Me severesf ies! of .rlrenyflz ana' wearbzy qualzlfzes. ive lzaoe an e.x!5au.r!1'oe lhze of Wenfs' cfzuzlfhzys hz Jfrlyzes, .73!a121.9 ana' Qlforsiede, ai 55. 00, 57. 50, 5570. 00 ana' -512. 00 W. make o f yuaranieea' CZoMhzy ai Jl2.0Q 313. 52 315.00 and 316.00 Werefzani' 5Da17or1ny 'zde are Me ayenle for tlze eelebraierl .lfahn Zoailorbzy co., of ..7nd1'an- apolzlv. CS-,very pafiern 115' new and every piece of elofll 115' a durable one. fe! a popzdar UHIYOT do your iadorhzy :youflz Jfde 9 ?,, ,. 276 ,V-A Q-.Y Y -,nqglftfif 7 ------'---iig - 'rT:'... ,1' ' ' 'l--7' 'W' lin. '- ug, N' 'n W .: 'qi yffu if w'w 'M W ' 'EW f in My ml- '14 e 'i9aff'r'f'Qf 4'Lf:2z1'll' I If mww A rn .1 ' I 1 5!i'sql' I 1 . r r , 'min I .Wo 1 Pr ,' W-. I 4qv.'l pw: FH.. ,- .'. - :- :..,4,,. x In V l , 4,Q,1 flf f Wi , -we 1. .4 wp, 5 . .. 1 X U H va wi f XX 'P..f'g, 1' 51 ' :LUX . r.. Q H NN 'Viv 1 g . fvQw +p5 veiava . ,JL A- 'Y I 'A Ml o - I ,:,Qff1'Y' ,gfaf V ' , ,Q ! 1f,f'51 Y917::E'q '3 'i.E: 2'Q'i,:1'i'is--'T' , : 'I Av ,ww nas 1-wqg4ff w- H. 'V M.. fd' wfffw- -1 k ' ff Ury!! .. K 'fi V ,'pa'n'! , Awwz i9wg J , ', V , '-:sm-W A Q Y 'Q Qvi .f:2Wj4f.'f52P-E - ?1? - ' NM ---,,- Qfffiisgw gi-L - , . ----- 9 If W ' xl f V! I uf 1' f N ' -- r QQQQIJIV K 5' ,fiiif Kr' fHmWW4fy,fmwwUwQM X f f ' M , - M 2-.ms-.-ff 1? f 7 We 'ff -'-'vu 7' ' v ..:2:21.H 17 ' iA ff .sfQ,..,j..QQ 7 W 1 ' Vi? . ,fSQ1-Qx.f K,9'i'5'. x -f ' M 5 f y :H f M W W 1 J UV .V ' 'H lil M' V V! im x'xWx' my! 'M 'V-.,':G5,uvf J , ' '.-q51l f- ' '- ,' X 'A 4- f ' ,L Q ggijgfzgyllfzzl l . I q fa xil ggix X xii ff fifim ag ll !'1'fr,7 , 1 IM P , . , , + q w 1 Y, , W N,WWMHb.wq QMN EmWW'gw'WjW11 'M .U ,, U . ,,,, y,,..'. 1- a 1 , 'g. ' L! :Pl 321 ' 'I Y' Q U If ,3'3f:2l'h,'h,Qfg1xE-131, TPHFI: 1 X , 1 12 gp nl mg fw w wwf N gf ng- 7 ?i1'g 'fMfff1?i-fg' V 523' 'MWSZ 'Win' 1 ' n F' n f,- .551 ', ,y'g-',f', 113' -.sigh I2 U ..1' ,I . , 7 9 'f 91i 'Jjmhx X 'J .196 ily! I Ah M ,EY U VK! I fm .L4 Xkxxxq, ,z-'iii JI ,1 Wf 1 . X QNX IIIJW 'ml ' 4 as B .J , N' -J I, ' xx 9 NX , M. 4fw wfyWMw M F . ' 1 ' ' Ai ' i W ! 5 ,.1 'Wfff f f' 5 f.-02 -fi' ' ' , ph . iff 1 H .' 1112- vu: .,: . f ' V yf, . ' .1 N A -- A 13 1.3210 , l ar: j - '-.QE 'wfq+gfr, 3 f X '1 ,f.rwlW? ' W . 1 QQ?-gv' yw511o4+2vg1 ,X-yf, ,iuiifif g'z,',iPil'1iE-i l 1,-1,1 i 1 ff ,. Y E5,1:fW1Q1Q5ji ,K 1 .11 han-D , QW Z llzwwx 41:1 i l I' 4 all -- . V I 4 ian 'Nfgi WWW AW F:i'FH 'i figiim ff QM' , z31,'.1 fVf, .,f-6.,4.elf5-1 ff' My N- 3 1 X ,X-A -l lk M 'EE A7 x :ifc.i'.l- W nawy u I - 'lv H gWQi XUNQAwf:wfbQmwwwVWwwmqf,.y' XHW Ax! .13jj5.g? f5, gk? iW' XxA , , . , Q. 1 V 1 ff ,V ,, ' was m -,K-lg., . 'I 31251 X F ' MQ' .gfl-1i'Q,:i e!'f'Y. 'm1f'NM - 1 if :!!,f,f'Q ' Q' Q.. fl Wgw' f fww - fU'1 -Q . '7 d.,.54jjiL' ffl '- -.2-1331.1-f-'1f1?: - I . ' ,. -. ' - L . .. .xi 11, - MMA, ', ff:'q?f?'1 ' 18 Y-3721! - ,M 1 vw .,ff1f1f' .. ' f - -- W' W ffzrf if Y 'C r. 14' ,mia T 12 ', g, , , L- ,',.,,-1.1- '-f,L,-- sxMRpwmQf?:p xx? whggfwf ii,fQ?f?z' .. 42Hfb, 231,g5,, 'J Asif -T.-Y---'L I 2-Ziifi,:4:fggQg:5??2E-S Q f5jJ'f ,,. . , .f ' ' X gggsvyzzii ff,f2Hf2A5,,ff f,ff ,f- ,,f gas ,f 1 ff! ,ff' .f .ff ' ff MQ. . X -, ,z' Zzff 3 --A. -' . 'iii X-'-11' Af .f 1132 2 .. H.,-,g,,f' ,, ,V X x I :ff Firiisei P- V -- v.f--r- -91.1- , ,,,. .. .Y FEBRUARY 22, 1900 Shorthand Typewriting fAmerican Standardj C Touch Method j GENERAL OFFICEI TRAINING No Classes Individual Instruction BLOONIINGTON SHORTHANDJYPEWRITING SCHOOL Rooms 1, 5 and 6 Buskirk-Hill Block MISS LITTLE, Principal JOHN F. POTTS . . . . Dhysician and Surgeon OFFICE AND RESIDENCE 407 North College Ave SURG ON ONON RAILWAY CO. YOU WILL FIND DR. E. WILLIAMS, DENTAL PARLORS -AT- 6L tS thSt First-class in every particular HUC SWWMWWMMWWWE HENRY a KERIQI Restaurant anb Bakery Refreshments of all kinds fur- nished on demand 2 Southwest Corner lj 2 LMMMMWMMMQWJ THE EAGLE O 0 l Ties, Suspenders, Collar Buttons THE EAGLE Yi -wav,-A,-Ll,g ,.5.- i,?,--3.1. Q -- feffffff wb e - ' Jf--. fi N. X Hilfe aN ,f 1 . L ,M 2 !iaai!!!S If + e 1--f ffqlaiggwx e ll!!! K A flue X7 ig e e I, I. , Leaf from Dr. Eigenmzmnks diary, March 7, 1900: 'fMa1'o, the magician, visited Blooming- ton, to-day. He performed many wonderful trioksf, 279 EAST SIDE BARBER .Snow 4 Iil4lilA liJf-TQJS C 5 C 5 C 5 6 5 6 5 Cilrfklylilyfhlyc PU 5-19 m Dv N F IT! S o o D ES OG rv We extend a cordial invi- tation to all students and respectfully solicit a share of their patronage. A porter always in at- tendance. vnvfwwnvnvn Bloomin gton, Indiana J. E. HARRIS C. E. HARRIS M. D. M. D. Physicians and Surgeons Bloomington Telephone Published Daily and Weekly WALTER BRADFUTE Oldest Paper in E the County PR The Largest Circulation i Uflll 2332 fM.Ss 2,353 llga Tl Job Office i Only Republican Paper in City or County Job Department- Programs, Invitations, Circulars and General Stationery Printing. The Bloomington ,lnhrmary of Osteopathy l'lONlER WOOLERY, D. O. Miss LINDA HARDY, D. O. PHONE 40 ln charge of ladies' department 213 South College Avenue 223 North Walnut Street C. A. CllLLl'lAl'l 6' CO...,.,W,. .3 N 5221552 Q1 Coal and Coke Try our Cannel Coal. No slack, no clinkers, kinclles quickly and burns to white ashes. We handle GAS HOUSE COKE Phone 7 301 WEST KIRKWOOD AVENUE 280 ' , , , If 5g2:f'Ef52' j4.:f:: 1-T :f'::1:, ' T -' i, ,ii '-- liis EQIIQI' STRAUGIINQS IND., January G, 1900. Dem' Hiaw- Ilm sorry I couldn't mind you and come home like you told me to when school was out, but I did want to see Elsie so bad. I hadn't seen her since I was down here so long last summer, you know. I didn't write sooner 'cause I got a awful sore throat, and the doctor says I got tonsleetus. I been sick down here two weeks. But I've had a real good time. Elsie didn't have any school last week and she stayed home thistn, and she jist looks at me and smiles at me all the time, till I'm glad I'm sick. Q Elsie don't leave me even to eat. She brings things in and puts them on a little table and we just have the nicest little meals all by ourselves like we done when she got dinner for us when Paw and Maw Shockley was away last summer. NVe had a good time then too. IVisht they didn't come home when they did. But they treat me like I was their own little boy. They don't let Ernie and Frankie, them's Elsie's little brothers, come in this room cause they laugh at Elsie and me cause we look at each other all the time. I feel ist like I was at home. I'll have to quit now cause I don't know what else to write. Your Boy Rossria IJOCKRIDGE. 281 CP iSTER'S INT I RNATIONAL I wiaissreas nrreRNAnoNA1, , I , Digriomy Biography, Geography, Fiction, etc. S, . Tqfiiex . QA R . X1 J i Ex a m A Dictionary of ENGLISH, What better investment can be made than in a copy of the International ? This royal quarto volume is a vast storehouse of valuable information arranged in a convenient form for hand, eye, and rnind. It is more Widely used as a standard authority than any other dictionary in the world. The International Should be in Every Household. We also publish Wgb5tgr'g Collegiate Dictionary with a valuable Scottish Glossary, etc. First class in quality, second class in size. Nz'rba!a: fllurray Buffer. Specimen pages, etc., of boil: books sent on applzkalzb MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, M 'OSX nf iam is ,- Liv' 'ii 'r ll6 E. Kirkwood X6 Q X 'AD i a a? 2 eu.ooMlNc'roN ir-Trifimx. if Phone 7 CLAY BEARD R X - Che llivervman . 4-'?'z?xx 1:5 252 Sita ami .1139 73 V- I-if. , ' T --bay I, Q Headquarters for Fancy Rubber-tired Rig g lnqk 5 Traps and Party Wagons. 5 4 1' - ' V iii- l 4' 1 '-2'-A - 4. f . SA Q fy 7 gi gm M the ma may suman fl - ' ,f S7 g N ull, ll' Phone 183 217 h. walnut St BUNDY HOTEL Board by Day or VVeek 282 - -H , ,-.-3 -v-'+f?1.i.f:a::e:1i 7-:lf'--'3- - -f l DR. ROBERT c. ROGERS Bloomington, Ind Central Location Good Roorns Bloomington, Indiana 0ll IDQ SGIITDQYII Bill' Crip BRACKEN Qafter he had passed the first three batsmen to firstl: Say, you fellows out in the field-you ginger up, I canlt win this game all by my lonesome. DAILY PAPER, page 7: U Fields beat out a bunt and was safe at firstfl SAME PAPER, page 8, head line: LJESSE FIELDS DEAD. 'Twas only a coincidence, however. STRANGER, to Pike: i'Your brother said- PIKE: My brother! H STRANGER: Yes, there he is- as he pointed to Bottlel' Fields. NOTE: H Botw and Capi' each took a turn at the aforesaid stranger. FIELDS Qafter he had taken his first running lesson from Brackenj: W'aiter, approach me with a stewed sprinter, set, and make a long distance run. Not even Bracken can get next to the combination. R525 H mQdiClIIQ mail ill the TGCIIIW WYE' Louise T. L. had been very ill during the day, but late in the evening pleaded with her sisters to carry her to the parlor so that she could look pleasant and cheerful when the Pedagogical Professor of elementary law made his regular evening call. How astonished he was to find her propped up in the arm-chair with pillows and pillows. A frantic but professional scanning of the pulse, the tongue, the eyes, the face, and the underlying principle of all law as well as disease glimniered upon his mighty mind and he solemnly ejaculated, H You need a tonic my dear, and I will send you a bottle of Pabst's Extract of Malt. 7' Louise blushed and said that she believed she could pull through with only a hair tonic but the Professor, with the tone of a class-room oracle said, 4' You have heard the law, can you not obey ? ff? HIISWQYS IO 1IIqllil'iQS g ww MISS HESSLER: No, it is not good form for a young lady to hold a young gentlemanks hand in public without having asked his permission. It is always well to he prudent regarding such things. MR. NEHER: It is not proper for a young man to take two young ladies to a social unless he can remember them both when he goes home. 283 N S R H H E I W VIA .THE ff ' M MU UNRIJU ffi QDCIM-INDIANAMLISGDMERIMKG K ' If' H-R V9 5 S., f f f F 1 . . :AEEF3-:I:l?F::'fL sl-ivili-'-a .1 : K- 1 -L' 5 K H -,E I , 1' ' --- '4 .2 I6 M f if H ,f EE W ff? g e Qfilfvwv ?,m f , X' 5.5 V i ? -- - gb S E Eggggiiwi -Y '3EEE :EiE 153 I - . x 5511 f 5 -M Jug Lf! E , A u , A- ' Li ,Si1' : ' ' f V- E f' 1- ima , - .l' :ehg. 61147 67 464,17 V E1 - ' - 'Y I - -- ' . 1 , 1 ,' 6 Mm . W T x y 1 A A L A,,A A , A' , Ekx fi f X - ,,.- 3,-vii gf, T Z ' f f f-ff - . , 'I 'xx N, Q' A ,Q Y , - fl V fl- . , ... ,. . ..,, ., , f X fnANK-J-nEED- A T7 GENERAL PASSENGER AGENT E 'W-H-McDOEL-CHASH-DOCKWELL' X Q Eg5,iE -v-D-AND ocN'Lmf:.NAoEn- -TRAFFIC MANAGER- G . - CHWAG0' ii 1 1, .,:,,,. ,,.....Y .mr - 'V1 7n- in ifgi- W - jg ll Ii fi ','ff '7 ' 4 mr ,. 4 ,519 I I My 3-V H. JZ Z. fra f ' 'Axe - in , ,' -f K , , X -1-I f ' ATL N I -W . 5 iff K 1 1, M, Z , if ,, ' t 'I I N ,XE5 l ' f i jf 1' I ,Q X claw!! McMillen will never again open a cab door until the cab stops-unless he is absolutely certain that no hitching post is in the neighborhood. MIss SPINK Qwho is trying to assist Mr. Hoover in overcoming his extreme tirnidityy- Why, Mr. Hoover, youvnever give the girls a chance to like you. PIKE 'ro BRACKEN Cwho insists on Walking the length of the car two or three tirnesy- Sit down, Lon, everybody in the car has seen you. THE NIONON NEwsBoY had been vainly tryin for an hour to sell a copy of Sappho to Harry Davidson, who insisted that he had never heard of it, and he wasn't going to buy a book he knew nothing about. Finally the boy gave up but, as a parting shot, said 1 lVell, I didn't think you were a farmer if you did look like one. EDITH HOLT,AND TO A FRIEND-HI7D'1 teaching Mr. Spooner to dance. FRIEND-'C Indeed I and how does he do ?'7 Miss H.- Oh fine, he just takes right hold. MR. IVHETSEL Qafter reading the line-up for the All-Indiana football team J- Say, fellows, whornis this All-Indiana team going to play, anyway ? Prior. Moonn tlecturing in English 23D-'fNot till then had Swift the slightest thought of-ah-er-what is spoken of as love.'7 CAP. ALLEN Qshouting across the gymnasium to some one, just after the Scalchi concertj- Well, how did you like Scheeleski ? Miss MEEK Ctranslating They all gave oath to the emperornj- And they all swore at the emperor. Judge Reinhard.-4' What is meant by the sovereign people? H Mr. Wasmuth. - The sovereign people I I s'pose it means the political bosses. H 285 The Central College nl Physicians and Surgeons INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA Twenty-Second Annual Session begins September 20, 1900, and continues Six Months 0 Comprehensive Curriculum. Elaborate Operative Courses on the Caclaver. Touch Courses in Gynaecology. Splenclidly equipped Laboratories. . Free Dispensary in College Building affords opportunity to Senior Students to acquire actual experience in Practice of Medicine, Obstetrics and Surgery, prior to graduation. For Catalogue address the Secretary. DOES NOT LEAK, DOES NOT DLOT , I 5599fTB'N47f0Qv.rT,L, ALWAYS READY o ,f -- , vQ?nI flNI,f5,011LYf I- ,', AND WRITES CONTINUOUSLY , LY NN FILLERIACLEANER Qiili ' FORFOUNTAINP 5 WITHOUT 0 or SIE If W' FULLY A GUARANTEED ON SALE AT ' ,v P- CO-O P. I HM' IAS. A. ALLISON . I Manufacturer A I57 North IIIIAOIS Street INDIANAPOLIS ALL KINDS OF PEN REPAIRING 286 -1-ff A-A-1 ' Y' 1' :'e5'E5 5 iC:.fT? T wi Y' ini! ii -f I ' I-Iorsmants Celebrated Rackets. ' e ' A ,I Improved for 1900. IIIII mf Al The f l'uxed0 Expert nnunue Strung. The 'tPrlnceton Special .Nl .l ,:::llElllllHH,i D .-Ween' .:::::::::i::gl:::.'f: x - nl I I Q ' ' . I,., . , . , ,,n.K,-tx. ggggglgllg, if lllllllrllllllmlulllll. :ll lll:lll'l.FE:fl Ellllllglllgel if llllill:5EEEE:e:'nE:EEEilllllf The f'H0rsman Special- 'lllllllllllllillllillg XS3g!:::5.',::::::!' X THEY ARE THE TOP-NOTCH IN nAcKET .... ' x.... ..f'f CONSTRUCTION. BUILT Fon EXPERT PLAYERS. Send lor lllustratrated U -My HORSMAN'S FINE GOLF FOR 1900. Catalogue of Gull and E Igglllufn, l Tennis ....... '5 ' if fig' ' in' :I 'f LI E. I. I-IOR,SDIAN, 380 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. ON JORDAN FIELD: Bot Fields to Lon Bracken as he watches that indi- vidual gracefully covering the ground-H Learn me to run, Long learn ine to run! LON-'lW'ell, oorne on. Step high now. Get a little knee action. HBOTN fatter taking two or three steps in an animated mannerj-K'But it hurts, Lon, it hurts ll' HE Was ON THE STAFF: Murray, in Junior meeting- Now, we want to rnake this annual a go. I tell you, it's going to be a literary feast. MR. WASMUTH-'tWhenever I see anything red I go right after itfl Miss I'IAMMERSLEY-HI,1'Il going to get a new red dress. ' CAP. ALLEN Cwho has come across a word he doesn't knowj-f'Say, Clark, what does p-h-y-s-i-o-l-o-g-y spell? Miss BEATTY TO MR. KINDER-H Mr. Kinder, don't you want to change your boarding place ? MR. KINDER Qhastilyj-UNO, thank youg I have a wife. ROARK Qwhen he first sees Maroj- Say, boys, I don't like the looks of this fellow-Marog he looks like a tricksterf' 287


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