Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA)

 - Class of 1889

Page 1 of 326

 

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1889 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 326 of the 1889 volume:

• ■ - -K f !■■ --h -fw ■ - ; i -i ' ,, ' : -f irr i ' i fM YOUNG ' S n NEHAISAiUmSNlS ttRixii r m HEADQUARTERS FOR THE CELEBRATED •H 7-PLHX EL-SHIKT-S ;uTT?m.g« . COMPLETE LINE OF ALL STYLES. YOUNG, The Hatter, Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. Mrs. M. B. Hoppes, proprietor, Bethlehem, Pa. DREKA Fine Stat ionery and Engraving House, 1121 Clnestm_it Street, Ptiilacielphiia. Commencement, Class Day, Fraternity, Reception and Wedding Invitations, Programmes, Menus, c. Steel Plate Work for Fraternities and College Annuals. Fine Stationery with Class Die, Monogram, Crest, Address, c. All work is executed in our establishment, under our personal supervision, and only in the best man- ner. Our unequaled facilities and long practical e.vperience. enable us to produce the newest styles and most artistic effects, while our reputation is a guarantee of the quality of our productions. Designs, Samples and F rices sen.t on. application. F raternity Stationery always on. hand.. «LAUBACI-[ ' S CHIN ? STORE 22 S. Main Street, Bethlehem, Pa. We make LAMPS and LAMP FIXTURES a specialty. Always have the latest improved Burners, and a large a. iortment ol Decorated Shades. THE FAMOUS ROCHESTER UIVlPSi IX ALL I VLES AND PRICES THIS IS POSITIVELY THE BEST KEROSENE LAMP IN THE MARKET. NOVELTIES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. CHAS. BOERS ' i RESTAURANT! 60 Main Street, Bethlehem, Pa,, Next Door to Lehigh Valley Natioial Bank. ► LTIDIES ' DININ6 -f ROOM T CpED MEALS AT ALL 1£0URS. — -S-ALL THE DELICACIES IN SEASON - — SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO CATERING. MANUFACTURER OF  IGE GREAM ANB IGES, • WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. Fine Cakes constcDitly on hand and made to Order. 42 MAIN STEEET, BETHLEHEM, PA. ■3|C- -. 3|C-- - |cp. fB.-f ]g- jS j gSgjS gi. . .g g . . . . . . . . . 6 -orr ' i0rtraite. ' ' ' p ' - - ' ' ' -i i ip i .- ' Studio : 1-42 SoutP) H air) Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. - |C -r3|e- BOOK EXCHANGE FOR BUYING OR SELLING BOOKS OF ALL KINDS : - ] SCHOOL, COLLEGE OR MISCELLANEOUS, - EITHER NEW OR SECOND-HAND. OUR STORES IN BETHLEHEM AND SOUTH BETHLEHEM OFFER UNUSUAL ADVANTAGES. WE BUY ALL KINDS OF BOOKS, PAMPHLETS and MAGAZINES, MA THEM A PICA L IXS TR UMENTS and PHYSICAL APPARATUS, AND PAY THE BEST PRICES POSSIBLE. Our prices for Books, new or second-hand, are low, and our constantly increasing stock renders it easy to supply wants. - on.r)y jc)ool ) r rocurcd WHITMAN WE IYDK 34 BKOAD STREET, 7 E, FOUETH STREET, BetUleUem, F a. South BetlT lehiem, F ' ti. Hh 4 4, ►f. 4 Established 1752. SIIVEOX RAU CO., DEALERS IN 1 DRUGS, CDEDICI.N S A.ND CHEMICALS.I The careful Compounding of Prescriptions a Specialty. STUDENTS will find with us a supply of BLOWPIPES and Blowpipe Apparatus, Chemical Glass- ware, PHOTOGRAPHIC CHEMICALS, Gelatine Dry Plates, Eastmans Bromide Paper, Ferro-Prussiate Paper, Etc., Etc. RITTER Sc HACKMAN, PROPRIETORS -lEH(3IjB4-p0TEL-IiIVERY+HND + B©;qi DINSiSTHBLE.?- Always on hand a first-class stock of horses and carriages CAREFUL DRIVERS. Telephone Connection. BETHLEHEM, PA. All ORDERS BY LET- TER, TELEGRAPH OR TELEPHONE PROMPT- LY ATTENDED TO. FREIGHT DELIVERED. Office Eagle Hotel. QUEEN CO., 924 CHESTNUT STREET, M. NIF. CTURERS OF ENGINEEI ING INSfPI UMENrUS, DRAWING MATERIALS, INSTRUMENTS, PAPERS, StC. CATALOGUES SENT ON APPLICATION. CARPETS, UPHOLSTERY CURTAINS, COR iICE POLES. STUDENTS ' ROOMS FURNISHED AT SHORT NOTICE ON LIBERAL TERMS, BEZ HIVE BUILDING, BETHLEHEM. PA. BROAD STREET Livery and Boarding Stables, t REAR OF M. K. MUSSELMAN ' S STORE, 1st Alley above American Hotel m m BOARDING Wk: ' -:: , fwsiljl .. ,; -, For a limited number SINGLE AND DOUBLE f n TEAMS TO HIRE |) jf gj W- Robt, j. ott, Propv, At REASONAliLE RATES. I B il SsR ' ' 34 Broad St. FIRST-CLASS CO TO -HicRODGERSsi Nos. 26 AND 28 THIRD ST., SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA., FOR YOUR FURNITURE, CARPET, OIL CLOTH, c. A Specialty in Studints Furniture. Ur:iaertcjk;ing fcinci Emlaalming in till its larfanclies pron ptlv attended to. A. RODGERS, 26 and 28 Third St., South Bethlehem. Fraternity Badges SIMONS, BRO. CO., MANUFAOTUEING JEWELEES. IMPORTERS OF AND DEALERS IN AMERICAX WATCHES. 611 . 613 Sansom St., 618 Chestnut St philadelphia. ¥urni ur , FOR THE PARLOR. OFFICE, LIBRARY. STUDY AND SLEEPING APARTMENTS, Modern and Antique, _ eARPETS, BEDDINGS, WINDOW SHADES AND POLESa PICTURE FRAMES, Etc., Etc , Go TiJ WORSLEY BROTHERS, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. N. B. — Repairing and Carting executed J.F.NEWMAN MEDALS.KLYSt CLAJBS RINGS 19 JOHN STREET, iiPORJBK COATCS,i Ninth and Chestnut Streets, Philadelphia. WEDDING IXVITAIIOXS CRUSTS. ELEGAXTL V EXGRA I ' ED. MOXOGRAMS. FINE XOTE PAPERS. ADDRESS DIES. LOLLIi(;E IX VITA TIOXS, COMMEXCEMEXT IXVTTA TIOXS AX D PR GRA MMES. APARTMENT HOUSE, o — FOUNTAIN HILL. — o O. 1-J. L.orncr lourlr) aod vA7yandolic Olrceis. SOUTH BETHLEHEM, I ' A. A.cicire««, mW. T. MILCHSACK, ' BETHLEHEM, PA. TROXELL HUTH, DEALERS IX -:-PJJME PUl jMJTLlI E-:- J2 Hroad Street, Bethlehem, Ta. PARLOR SUITES MADE TO ORDER. THE BOOKSTORES No, 146 South Main Street, I No. 11 East Pourth Street, BETHLEHEM. PA, I SO, BETHLEHEM, PA. For BOOKS and STATIONERY use d by the Students of the LE HIGH UN IVERSITY — .--S- A N D ,- ' ' - THE PREPARATORY SCHOOLS of the towns. B0@K, NEWS HND JQ B PI INTINQ. I ' he Best Equipped Establishment in the Lehigh ' alley for .- FINE BOOK WORK AND ARTISTIC JOB PRINTING.. •• ' HLiPRED C. SHYIDSE, - PRACTICAL SANITARY + PLUMBER. UND IR Sr.V HOTEL. BETHLEHEM. PA.. — AND — 42 j Wyandotte Street. South Bethlehem, Pa. Established 1851 EIMER AMEND, 205, 207, 209 and 211 Third Avenue, NEW YORK, MANUFACTUREKS AM) IMPORTERS OF Chemical Apparatus, Str!CTl Chemically Pure CHEMICALS and ACIDS. POLARISCOPES, HAMMERED PLATINA, NICKEL WARE. Glass Blowing and Engraving Done on Premises. ASSAY GOODS. BUNSENS BURNERS, COMBUSTION FURNACES. AGATE MORTARS. COPPER STILLS, Etc. We carry the heaviest and best selected stock of Chemical Apparatus, Chemicals, Platina Goods, Filter Papers, Bohemian Glass, Royal Berlin China, Acid-Proof Stone Ware, Balances, Weights and Wrought Nickel Ware We have special facilities for furnishing Laboratory Outfits at shortest notice. TRY liTICK. -TRY L-HCK, i Mi ' + -f f - n ilif iii W ' ■ LACK THE TAILORti 140 South Main Street, BETHLEHEIVl, PA. J. E. CAIDWELL CO., Prize and • oken TDakers, go2 CHESTNUT STREET, PHILADELPHIA. Messrs. Caldwell Co. furnish special designs for Gold and Silver Trophies, Prizes and Tokens for IPolo ' tennis (pricket 13oating eurling Canoeing Hunting Q-eneral Base Ball Shooting -Athletics. °° gachting Badminton Bicycling ■ obogganning Ice achting ' njroop TBeetings The designs of Messrs. Caldwell Co. are given the preference over all competitors, in nearly every instance where they are submitted, for superiority, APPROPRI. TENESS and MODERATE COST. xii L3-J ' K 884 5G W KLS ?V USVA UG CO., THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED ro Elisha T. ' Slilbup, Esq., SECRETARY OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES, IN ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF MUCH ACTIVE INTEREST IN THE UNIVERSITY AND MANY GENEROUS GIFTS TO ITS STUDENTS. (Sonl ' enl ' s, Alpha Tau Omega, Alumni Day, Athletics, General, Base-Ball, Bicycle Club, Board of Editors, Board of Trustees, Brown and White. The Cheers, Chemical Society, Chi Phi, Chronicle of Events, . Class Day, . Class of ' 88, Class of ' 89, Class of ' 90, Class of ' qi, Coppee, H., Cremation, Life of. Delta Phi, .... Delta Upsilon, Eating Clubs, .... Eleclricals, Electrical Engineering Society, Engineering Society, Faculty, .... Foot-Ball, .... Founder ' s Day, Fraternities, List of Chapters, Fraternities, Members with no Chapter, Freshman Class Supper, . Graduates, .... Gymnasium, ■ 87 129 142 151 7 9 . 162 146 96 55 Jests. Junior Oratorical Contest, Junior Reception, . Lacrosse, Lamberton W. A., Life of. Lawn I ' ennis, . Library, The, Mining Club, Musical Organizations, Mustard and Cheese, . Packer Memorial Church. Phi Beta Kappa, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Photographers ' Club. The, Post-Seniors, Preface, Psi Upsilon, Publications, Records, . ' thletic, . Sigma Chi, Sigma Nu, . Sigma Phi, Societies and Clubs, Sophomore Class Supper, Special Students, Summary of Fraternities. Summary of Students, Tau Beta Pi, Ten Strongest Men, Theta Delta Chi, . Tug-of-War Team, PAGE 163 ■ 99 89 ■ 145 86 . 152 15 . 121 113 . 124 14 £4 ■ 74 70 . 125 17 8 62 . 118 5i 64 151 Historical Memorabilia, Inde.x to Advenisements. In Memoriam, . 156 xm 127 University Day, University Guild, . University Sunday, EDITOR-IN-CHIEF, WILLIAM DOLLOWAY FARWELL. BUSINESS MANAGER, ARCHIBALD JOHNSTON. SECRETARY, AUGUSTUS THOMPSON THROOP. WILLIAM BUTTERWORTH. CHARLES HERBERT UEANS. CLARENCE WALKER. ARTISTS, HERBERT MACKENZIE CARSON, JOHN LOCKETT. WALLIS EASTBURN HOWE, LOUIS AUGUSTUS ROUND. IPpefaee. THE Epitome Board has but few words to say in presenting this issue of the Lehigh annual. The task of editing and ilhistrating the book is, in some respects, one of the most difficult imposed upon mem- bers of the University. Being published under the auspices of one class, The Epitome has rarely been free from exhibitions of class spirit and personal abuse. The day for this is past. At the first meeting of the ' Eighty-nine Board it was decided with entire unanimity to depart from the old custom and omit all literary matter of questionable appropriate- ness. The exception was made, however, in favor of a few pages of the usual Quotations and Grinds, which, in general, tend to relieve the possible monotony of the book ' s essentially statistical character. The aim of a college annual is, as we take it, to preserve records, ath- letic and otherwise, and to provide lists of undergraduate organizations. With this in view, we have endeavored to present these data in as attrac- tive a form as possible, embellished with considerable artistic work. Be- lieving that contributions in the latter department should be no more confined to the Epiiome Board or even to the Junior Class than the pub- lication itself is the exclusive representative of that class, we have made calls upon various members of the University, and have been gratified by the hearty and material responses. To such as have aided us artistically we desire to extend our warmest acknowledgments. Several new features have been added. The department of Histori- cal Memorabilia is one which, from its present and, in particular, its future value, will, we trust, be permanent in succeeding Epitomes. The fact that this is the thirteenth and not the fourteenth volume of the book, was called to our notice too late for correction in the title page. The mistake was originally made when the Epitome issued by the whole University w as called Volume XI instead of ' olume X. With these few prefatory remarks we surrender the ' 89 Epitome into the hands of our readers with the hope that it may be found worthy of the class under whose auspices it is published and of the institution which it represents. 8 IBoard of H pusfeez.- :- The Rt. Rev. M. A. DeWolfe Howe. D.D., LL.U., Reading. Robert H. Savre, Esq., . . . . South Bethlehem. William H. Sayre, Esq., .... South Bethlehem. John Fritz, Esq., ..... Bethlehem. Hon. Eckley B. Co.ke, .... Drifton. Elisha p. Wilbur, Esq., .... South Bethlehem. James I. Blakslee, Esq., .... Mauch Chunk. H. Stanley Goodwin, Esq., .... South Bethlehem. Charles Hartshorne, Esq., . Philadelphia. Charles H. Cummings, Esq., .... Mauch Chunk. Honopap]? PuzJees. The Rt. Rev. Cortlandt Whitehead. D. D., . Pittsburgh. Charles Brodhead, Esq., . . . Bethlehem. George W. Childs, Esq., .... Philadelphia. The Rev. Leighton Coleman, S.T.D.. . Sayre. Franklin B. Gowen, Esq., .... Philadelphia. W. L. Convngham, Esq., . . . Wilkes-Barre. Charles O. Skeer, Esq., .... Mauch Chunk. Michael Schall, Esq., .... York. The Rev. Marcus A. Tolman, . . Mauch Chunk. Hon. Robert Klotz, . Mauch Chunk. Hon. Henry Green, ..... Easton. Honorary Tilumm %vmzH2Z. TERM EXPIRES. H. F. J. Porter, M.E., Class of 1878, 1888, New York City. J. S. Cunningham, M.E., Class of 1879, 1889. Everett. Allen A. Herr, C.E., Class of 1874, 1890. Lancaster. Charles L. Taylor, E.M., Class of 1876, 1891, Pittsburgh. 0ffiecp2 of the Board. The Rt. Rev. M. A. DeWolfe Howe, D.D., LL.D. President. Elisha p. Wilbur, Esq., Secretary. H. Stanley Goodwin, Esq., Treasurer of the University. Rohert H. Sayre, Esq., Chairman, The President of the Board of Trustees, Elisha 1 ' . Wilbur, Esg., James 1. Blakslee, Esq., John Fritz, Esq., H. Stanley Goodwin, Esq. R. Morris Gum.meRE, Secretary. Ijibrarg ommittzz. The Director of the Library, Chairman, The President of the Board ok Trustees, The President of the University. Hon. Eckley B. Coxe, Elisha P. Wilbur, Esq. (SommiWee on Buildings and Grounds. Elisha P. Wilbur, Esq., Chairman, Robert H. Sayre, Esq., H. Stanley Goodwin, Esq. ' • ' Eaeult;?. Robert A. La.mberi ' On, LL.D., Campus. President. Henry Coppee, LL.D., 435 Seneca Street. Professor of English Literature, !nter?iational and Constitiitionat Law, and the Philosophy of History. William H. Chandler, Ph.D., F.C.S., 251 Cherokee Street. Professor of Chemistry. Benjamin W. Frazier, M.A., Campus. Professor of Mineralogy and Metallurgy. H. Wilson Harding, M.A., 115 Market Street. Professor of Physics. Charles L. Doolittle, C.E., 117 Church Street. Professor of Mathematics and Astronomy. +W1LLIAM A. Lamberton, ALA.. ■ 442 Seneca Street. Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. Mansfield Merriman, C.E., Ph.D., 241 S. New Street. Professor of Cii ' il Engineering. ln Europe. tResigned. December. 1887. Severin Ringer, U.J.D., 424 New Street, S. Professor of Moderti Languages and Literaturts, and of History. Henry C. Johnson, M.A., LL.B., 237 S. New Street. Professor of the Latin and Greek La igiiages and Literaitires. Edward H. Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., A.C., 21 Market Street. Professor of Mining Engineering a?td Geology. Joseph F. Klein, D.E., 357 Market Street. Professor of Mechanical Engineering, ajid Secretary of the Faculty. The Rev. Albert W. Snyder, B.D., Campus. Professor of Psych ology arid Christian Evidences. Ijeei ' upep. William L. Esles. M.U., St. Luke ' s Hospital Lecturer on Physiology and Hygiene. Instpuetors. Spencer V. Rice, C.E., 233 S. New Street. Ins nirfor zn Drawing. Arthur E. Meaker, C.E., 156 Market Street. Instructor in Mathcjnatics. Harvey S. Houskeeper, B.A., 424 Walnut Street. Instructor in Physics. Preston A. Lambert, B.A., 422 Walnut Street. Instructor in Mathematics. William K. Gillett, M.A., 4th Wyandotte Sts. Instructor in Modern Languages. FONGER De Haan, C.N.L., 468 Vine Street. Instructor in Modern Languages. Lester P. Breckenridge, Ph.B., 139 W. Broad Street. Instructor in Mechanical Engineering. Henry S. Jacoby, C.E., 28 S. Maple Street. Instructor in Civil Engineering. Fred. Putnam Spalding, C.E., 312 S. New Street. Instructor in Civil Engineering. James B. Mackintosh, E.M., C.E., 313 Cherokee Street. Instructor in Quantitative Analysis. Charles N. Lake, Ph.C, Eagle Hotel. Instructor in Qualitative Attalysis and Assaying. George F. Duck, E.M., Eagle Hotel. Instructor in Minifig. 3 Edwin F ' . Miller, M.E., Eagle Hotel. Instructor zji Mechanical Engineering. Fayette B. Petersen, C.E., Eagle Hotel. Instructor in Metallurgv and Mineralogy. Charles V. Marsh, Ph.D., Eagle Hotel. Instructor in Organic a?ul Industrial CJionistry. Joseph W. Richards, M.A., A.C., 75 Church Street. Instructor in Metallurgy and Blo%vpiping. Lewis B. Semple, B.A., 17 North Street. Instructor in Latin and Greek. Simeon C. Hazelton. E.M., Eagle Hotel. Ijistructor in Mineralogy. %hz Packer UDemorial ©hureh. The Rt. Rev. Nelson S. Rulison, D.D., 3d Cherokee Sts. Rector of t ie University. The Rev. Albert W. Snyder, B.D., Campus. Chaplain. J. Fred. Wolle, 226 Monocacy Ave. Organist. ♦Resigned, De cember, 1887. 14 (Si Tnricizmm.W Charles F. Seelev, Director. Assistant. Eagle Hotel. iljibrar - William H. Chandler, Ph.D. A. W. Sterner, Wilson F. Stauffer, Peter F. Stauffer, Director. Chief Cataloguer. CataloiruiiiiT Clerk. Shelf Clerk. 251 Cherokee Street. Birch (S: Packer Ave. 517 Pawnee Street. 520 Broad Street, S. 15 ©raduatcz. ' ? Richard Singmaster Breinig, B.M., a t Harry Augustus Butler, B.S., M s Robert Grier Cooke, B.A., if ' Y Francis Joseph Crilly, B.A., William Henry Dean, A.C, E.M., George Francis Duck, E.M., tY Harvey Sheafe Fisher, B.A., Y William Kendall Gillett, M.A., A William Theodore Goodnow, C.E., i i John Daniel Hoffman, B.A., Charles Colcock Jones, B.S., k a (So.) Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., Y Elmer Henry Lawall, C.E., Wilson Franklin More, B.A., George Spencer Patterson, E.M., George Arthur Ruddle, Ph.B., at Lewis Buckley Semple, B.A., y William Patterson Taylor, B.A., I ' Y Leonard Blakslee Treharn, B.A., AT James Hollis Wells, C.E., i: x FOR DEGREE. RESIDEN ' CE. i2 E. L, Breinigsville. M.S., .Mauch Chunk. M.A., Bethlehem. M.A., Philadelphia. M.S., Clarence, Iowa. Ph.D., Bethlehem. M.A., Pottsville. Ph.D., Bethlehem. M.S.. Birmingham, Ala. M.A., Bethlehem. E.M., New Orleans, La. M.A., South Bethlehem. M.S., Audenried. M.A., Catasauqua. M.S.. Mahanoy City. M.A., East Mauch Chunk. M.A., Bethlehem. M.A., Philadelphia. A LA., Boston, Mass. LS., New York City. i6 TPozt - Zzniorz. NAME. FOR DEGREE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. R. W. Barrell, B.M., E.jM.. 56 Church St., New Providence, X. J. M. H. Fehnel,B.S., 4- 0 A.C., West Bethlehem, West Bethlehem. H. B. C. NiTZE, B.S., A-I- E.M., 442 Seneca St., Baltimore, Md. R. K. Polk, B.S., A T H E.M., 328 Fourth St., Columbia, Tenn. H. H. Stoek, B.S.. A4 E.M.. 454 Vine St., Washington. D. C. H. A. J. WiLKENS, B.S.. A4 E.M., 442 Seneca St., Baltimore, Md. F. Williams, B.S., e A X E.M., 328 Fourth St., Johnstown. W. H. Woods. B.S., I E.M., 448 Vine St., Philadelphia. 17 %bz Senior (Blcizz. ' Motto: . ■ ,. ' Post P7-celiu n PrceiuiiDii u J IJ ' ' ' Class Colors : Colli and Dark Blue. ©ffieers. H. S. Miner, . President. H. H. McClintic, Vice- President. H. L. MClLVAlN, . Secreta?y. H. iVl. Wetzel, Treasttrer. G. R. Baldwin, NAME. . Historian. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. c. L. Addison, t M.E., 1 8 Market St., Reading. F. F. Amsden, e a X E.M., 328 Fourth St., Scranton. G. R. Baldwin, y M.E., 18 Market St., Elmira, N. Y. C. L. Banks, Sci., Eagle Hotel, Bridgeport, Conn. E. A. Bates, 2 x M.E., 13 Fourth St., Charlestovvn, W. Va. W . D. Beatty, C.E., 23 E. Fourth St., Pottsville. H. A. BONZANO, X 4 C.E., Seneca St., Phoeni.wille. W . Bradford, x C.E., 23 E. Fourth St., Dover, Del. A. T. Bruegel, 2 X M.E., 59 Church St., Cherryville. 0. C. BURKHARDT, AG E.M., 158 Market St., Bethlehem. C. N. Butler, fa C.E., 56 Church St., Loag. M. L. Byers, C.E., Vine St., Pittsburgh. J. J. Clark, M.E., 315 Fourth St., Corning, N. Y. G. P. Connard, 1 ' T C.E., 18 Market St., Reading. A. Crawford, Jr., E.M., Fourth St., Baltimore, Md. R. Daniels, SN C.E., 517 Pawnee St., Saxton ' s River, Vt. G. H. Davis, C.E., 517 Pawnee St., Cavendish. Vt. W . S. Davis, C.E., Eagle Hotel. Reading. 19 p. H. DeWiTT, 4 ' FA M. ' . DOMENKCH. 4 ' 1 ' A G. P. Dravo, t r C. W. FOCHT. G. S. Franklin, x i S. W. Frescoln. L. P. Gaston, x i W. Gates, Jr., J. B. Glover, a t u H. Hardcastle, 1 4 G. A. Hart, R. B. HONEYMAN, S. H. JENCKS, i ' N F. H. Knorr, X i A. E. Lewis, x C. W. LOHSE, 1- X J. S. Mack, C. D. Marshall, i x H. H. McClintic, 2 X W. A. McFarland, ? A H. L. McIlvain, t T C. H. Miller, 4 a e G. P. Miller, 4 k J. H. Millholland, tT H. S. Miner, a T H. S. Morrow, a Y D. L. Mott, i r A W. L. Neill, e a X H. S. Neiman, 9 a X H. Palmer, C. J. Parker, a T R. S. Perry, a J F. W. B. Pile, a A. G. Rau, $rA C. E. Raynor, W. P. Richards, O. RiCKERT, W. R. Sattler, 2 X COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES RESIDENCE. C.E.. 56 Church St., Weatherly. C.E., 35 Cedar St., Isabela, Porto Rico, M.E., 18 Market St., Allegheny. C.E., ' ine St.. Pottsville M.E., Seneca St., Lancaster. C.E., Birch Packer Av. , Reading. E.M.. 23 E. Fourth St., Somerville, N. J. C.E., Eagle Hotel, Kittanning. M.E., 311 Cherokee St., Marietta, Ga. M.E., 314 Fourth St., Easton, Md. M.E., 417 E. Third St., South Bethlehem. E.M., 365 Broad St., Bethlehem. C.E., Birch Packer Av. , Providence, R. I. A.C., Seneca St., Philadelphia. E.M., Seneca St., Milford. C.E., 3 Graham Row, Wheeling. W. ' a. C.E., 9 Third St., Mauch Chunk. C.E., 3 Graham Row, Allegheny. C.E., Birch Packer A V. , Lewistown. M.E., 54 Church St., Mt. ' ernon, N. ' . A.C., 18 Market .St., Reading. C.E.. 421 Pawnee St., Strasburg. C.E., Fourth Pawnee, , Lewisburg. C.E.. 18 Market St., Reading. A.C., 31 N. Centre St., Chester, Vt. M.E., 311 Cherokee St., White Ash. C.E.. 236 New St., Sangerfield, X. V. L.S., 1 12 Market St., Titusville. A.C., 44 Church St., Phoeni.wille. C.E., 450 Vine St., Wilmington, Del. C.E., 454 Vine St., Watertown, X. V. A.C., 442 Seneca St., I ' hiladelphia. E.M., 23 E. Fourth St., London, England. Sci., Main St., Bethlehem. C.E., 229 Xew St., Manorville, X. N ' . C.E., 422 Wyandotte St. , Milford, Del. C.E.. Birch Packer Av. , Black Ridge. M.E., Sun Hotel, Baltimore, Md. 5 Graham Row, Clinton, N. J. 314 Fourth St., Clark ' s Green. Fourth Cherokee, Gordonsville, Va. NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. E. H. Shipman, C.E., W. A. Stevenson, S M.E., W. H. Stokes, xa- E.M., W. M. Webb, M.E.. 29 Fourth St., Lancaster. H. M. Wetzel, 2X C.E., 81 Church St., Bellefonte. W. L. Wilson, C.E., 229 S. New St., Elkton, Md. E. B. Wiseman, i X C.E., 236 S. New St., Elmira, N. Y. S. Yamaguchi, C.E., 229 S. New St., Tokio, Japan. L. R. Zollinger, a T C.E., 454 Vine St., Harrisburg. -« Senior ' Hiztor - I OUR years ago was planted the seed which, by the careful cultivation of its foster guar- dians in the deep soil of Lehigh Univer- sity, has now reached maturity, and soon yields its rich harvest of necessities to the world. Tares — but a noticeable fewness of them— were sown along with the good seed and sprang up at first with much vigor, threatening to choke the young blades, but discovered by the earnest watchfulness of our protectors these were speedily weeded out and cast away. The members of ' Eighty-eight have from the first recognized the fact that the object of college life is not alone to acquire knowledge from books, but to form and broaden character, to have the sharp edges of pr ejudice and self-conceit knocked off and worn down by the mtmiate association with equals and betters; in short, to matriculate as boys and to graduate as men, and under this belief have undergone a marked trans- formation. Entering in ' 84 as typical freshmen, for the majority of us were neither prodigies nor precocious youths like Bede, we had dur- ing the first year some of our rough corners polished off— thanks to the upper classmen— but like the uncut diamond, this only revealed the bril- liancy of the material within. As gentlemen and scholars the members of the Class of ' 88 have com- manded the respect alike of the Faculty, the other classes and all people ; but the historian following the old adage that one ' s prowess and brave deeds sound better in the mouths of others, will depart from the ancient custom of class historians and not declare that the record of the pre- eminent superiority of his own class as shown by its deeds of wondrous 23 valor and mighty victories will be written in indelible ink on indestructi- ble parchment, to be handed down to the succession of classes at Lehigh as an example ; believing that much noise never emanates from real worth and transcendent virtue, but that from the geniuses, long heads and strong bodies already prominent in the class and college, the world will yet receive some benefit. Whatever ' Eighty-eight has undertaken or entered into, she has done fairly well. In athletics she has been successful and many are the prizes which have adorned the breasts of her members. She won the first inter- class championshijj honors in base-ball and foot-ball, and in the Spring sports exceeded all other classes in the number of prizes taken, also break- ing two college records ; but in the Winter sports, from laxity on the part of her athletes and by the almost superhuman exertions of those of another class, she lost first place, though easily holding a close .second. The annual hop to the graduating class was held in the Gymnasium on the evening of June 21st, and under the management of ' Eighty-eight pas.sed off with much eclat. Returning from the pleasures and needed rest of the Summer vacation, ' Eighty-eight began her senioric career. With becoming dignity she has since as a spectator enjo}ed the rushes and rackets and petty turmoils in the lower classes, while befitting serenity has been preserved within her own l)ounds. But that part of the history of ' Eighty-eight most interesting to her members, the Senior class supper with all its jollity and the grand yf a with all its satisfaction ; the graduation day and the awarding of the di- plomas — that culmination of all our hopes and the goal upon which so long we have held our eyes, reached at last after .such an effort and so much fatigue — this will never appear in the pages of The Epitome. It is with mingled feelings of pleasure and .sadness that we are nearing the end of our course, that the fourth and last lap in the race is nearly completed. We are eager to start in the world for ourselves, but with regret we leave the plea.sures and good fellowship of college life. Inti- mately a.ssociated together as a class for four years, many mutual friend- ships have been formed, and it is sad to think of the separation which must sever them ; but into whatever profession we may chance to fall the sincere wish for one another is success. 24 To the Faculty and college friends, to the kind people of Bethlehem, and to all who have contributed pleasure to ' Eighty-eight, it is with re- gret we say Farewell. Historian. be Junior (Slazz. Motto : RH..! Class Colors : Certum pete Jinevi. ' ' ( oy Wintson and Black. ©ffieepz. E. DiEBITSCH, . President. J. LOCKETT, Vice-President. C. H. Deans, . Secretary. L. C. Taylor, . Treasurer. H. M. Carsox, . Historian. NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. J- W. Anderson, E.M., 311 Fourth St., Washington, D. C. p. Atkinson, at M.E., 454 Vine St., Chicago, 111. G. Ayres, a T i2 M.E., Birch Packer Av ., Washington, D. C. R. P. Barnard, $ a C.E., 421 Pawnee St.. Washington, D. C. A. H. Bates, Y M.E., 18 Market St., Cleveland, 0. S. E. Berger, Clas., Ouakertown, Richland Centre. C. H. Boynton, A4 L.S., 442 Seneca St., Washington, D. C. J- L. BUDD, A.C., Vine St., Mount Holly, N. J, W . Butterworth, t Y M.E., 18 Market St., Cincinnati, 0. E. Campbell, Clas., 444 New St, South Bethlehem. F. D. Campbell, a t fl C.E., Fourth St., Kansas City, Mo. F. J. Carman, A.C., 57 Market St., Washington, D. C. H. M. Carson, a M.E., 442 Seneca St., Baltimore, Md. L. Bravo y Castro, 2 ■ E.M., 314 Fourth St., Santiago de Cuba. H. W. Chester, C.E., 1x8 North St., Shamokin. C. W. CORBIN, 2 X E.M., Birch Packer Av. , Telluride, Col. W . A. Cornelius, tY M.E., 18 Market St., Philadelphia. C. H. Deans, eAX C.E., 57 Market St., Phoenixville. 27 NAME. E. DiEBITSCH, C. E. DiCKERSON, Jr., J. W. Dougherty, R. M. Dravo, a y A. E. DUCKHAM, E. H. DuViviER, W. D. Farwell, t T A. H. Frazier, A-f F. L. Grammer, a i G. W. Harris, e a x L. Henderson, C. E. Hesse, C. W. Hudson, A. Johnston, e a x J. S. Kellogg, Jr., J. M. S. Kerlin, S. E. Lambert, T. S. Leoser, T J. J. Lincoln, i a o J. Lockett, A. Long. J. J. Martin, a t u C. H. Miller, C. W. Moffett, R. H. Morris, Jr., 2 N W. E. Morris, x J. T. Morrow, a 4 T. F. Newby, i)Ae A. D. Oberlv, J. M. O ' Malley, R. H. E. Porter, s A. K. Reese, a A. L. Rogers, Y L. A. Round, J. R. Villalon, l i C. W. Schwartz, Jr., x A. M. Smyth, A. W. Stockett, COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. C.E.. 57 Market St., Washington, D. C Sci., 1 1 8 North St., New Germantown, EM., 454 Vine St., Steelton. [N.J. E.M., 460 Vine St., Allegheny. C.E., Birch Pacl erAv. , Pittsburgh. A.C., Vine St., New York City. Clas., 18 Market St., Oswego, N. V. Clas., Campus, Bethlehem. E. L, 442 Seneca St., Baltimore, Md. E.M., 57 Market St., Silver Brook. C.E., 1 18 North St., Gap. E.M., 454 Vine St., Washington, D. C C.E., 118 North St., Manasquan, N. J. M.E., 335 Broad St.. Bethlehem. A.C., 412 Pawnee St., Atchison, Kan. M.E., 57 Market St., Elwyn. Clas., Seidersville, Seidersville. A.C., 18 Market St., New York City. C.E., Delaware Ave., Farmington, Md. M.E., 140 Market St., Glengoffe, Jamaica. A.C, 422 Wyandotte St , Wilkes-Barre. C.E., Fourth Pawnee, New York City. A.C, 44 Church St., Norristown. M.E., 405 Pawnee St., Athens, Greece. E.M., Eagle Hotel, Bristol. A.C., 422 Pawnee St., Portland, Ore. M.E., 311 Fourth St., Washington, D. C C.E., 504 Pawnee St., Harrisburg. C.E., 125 Church St., Easton. A.C, 279 Broad St., S. Wilkes-Barre. . LE., 314 Fourth St., Morristown, N. J. E.M., 442 Seneca St., Baltimore, Md. M.E., 18 Market St., Fort Wayne, Ind. M.E., 125 Church St., Providence, R. L C.E., 444 Seneca St., Santiago de Cuba. «i)M.E., , ] Seneca St., Germantown. E.M., 4 Graham Row, Philadelphia. CE.. 4 Graham Row, Mauch Chunk. 28 NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. L. C. Taylor, a y C.E.. 454 Vine St., Pawtucket. R. I. A. T. Thr(3op, a ft C.E., 421 Pawnee St., Port Gibson. X. V. C. P. Turner, M.E., 125 Church St., Oxford. N. Y. C. V ALKER, t T E.M.. 23 E. Fourth St., Pottsville. H. R. WuODALL, 1 X E.M.. 8 1 Church St., Philadelphia. W . E . Weimer, A.C., Eagle Hotel, Lebanon. E. A. Wright. C.E., 125 Church St.. Northampton, Mass. J- B. Wright, C.E., South Easton, South Easton. 29 - ; Juniop Iriizfof - ' N approaching nearer and nearer to the top of that mountain of ambition, college life, it is with greater and greater pleasure, as well as a tinge of sadness for the joys that are no more, that we pause from time to time to look back upon the events of the past, and gain fresh courage for what is to come. And first of all rises before us the ivy covered tower of Packer on a cer- tain bright day in September some three years ago ; when, marching up the campus four abreast, comes the future Class of ' 89 to pass the first ordeal of college life, the chapel rush. At last the portals of old Packer are gained, and after a twenty minutes ' struggle are won, and we are gr inside ; coats torn in two, hats, collars and neck- ties gone to limbo, but still we are victorious. Even the awful presence of the powers that be cannot stop the cheering; and the banners on the Chapel wall seem to rustle solemnly, as if stirred with recollections of the past. And thus the Class of ' 89 came into ex- istence. Our foot-ball team was soon organized, and we won our first victory in November at Philadelphia. Our record in athletics, however, did not stop at this, but has steadily grown better, as the banner won at the last Winter sports will testify. To ' Eighty-nine belongs the honor of placing lacrosse at Lehigh on a firm foundation ; and last year, when out of five games played we lost only one, seven men on the team were from ' Eighty-nine. 31 Our record in foot-ball has been brilliant. Last year our class team won the championship in the inter-class games, and we are represented by five men on the college team, whose record for the past year speaks for itself. But we must stop, else we will be accu.sed of boasting; and it will be thought that ' Eighty-nine has had no troubles to harass her; but, alas ! it is not so. We also have had a skeleton in our closet, and on his head have at last been poured out the vials of our wrath. His name is Math. For two long years we grappled with him. In the daytime we fought him in the class-room, and at night struggled with him in the seclusion of our chambers, and at last we have conquered. But what a victory! Half of our members were slain. Some even who had fought w ithhim since the freshman days of ' Eighty-seven, had at last to surrender, and retire from the field forever. But it must not be .supposed that the conquered ones were vanquished in fair fight. Most of them were afflicted as the Assyrian army in days of old: their eyes gave out. It gives us pleasure to say that after he was conquered he got his de- served reward. In solemn assemblage, surrounded by those he had wronged, he was tried and hung. But sad to say, we have since learned that, Phcenix-like, he has arisen from his ashes, and now, in conjunction with the freshmen, torments the Class of ' 90. (Jur Junior (Oratorical Contest was the first ever held in the new Chapel, and was an entire success. One more thing remains to be mentioned, and the historian will lay down his pen — that is our class spirit. We have passed the three years of our life together as a class without a single quarrel or split. A more harmonious body of men was not to be found than that which last year rode ten miles and back through mud and cold to celebrate our union in a class supper. But it is time for us to resume our march up the hill of difficulty. Only one more stopping place, and we take our first plunge into the world. Therefore let us while we may ' ' Take our ease Smoke our pipes and sing our glees. 32 And let us once more fill our glass, as we did a year ago, and sing ■■ Here ' s to dear ' Eighty-nine. Long may her mem ' ry shine Bright as the sun. Historian. 33 %hz Sophomore (Slazz. - Moito : . ' e tentes aut fierfice. - ' ! A|| - , , Class Colors : Jl 1 ' Crimson and Steel Gray ©ffieerz. J. W. Stone, Jr., Preside?! . E. H. Beazell, . I ' zee- President. W. C. Perkins, Secretary. C. G. Howe, Treasurer. A. H. Van Cleve, Historian. S. S. Martin, Captain. NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. H. E. Alcott, M.E., 452 Vine St., Mount Holly, X.J G. K. Anderson, 2 x L.S., 44 Church St., Franklin. T. C. J. Bailv, Jr., C.E.. 44 Church St., Newark, N. J. G. Barclay, A.C., Centre St., Bethlehem. F. R. Barrett, C.E., Fourth Vine Sts. , Ft. Selden. N. M. E. H. Beazell, $ a e C.E., 504 Pawnee St., Chillicothe, Mo. W . H. Beck, a t C.E., 25 Fourth St., Utica, N. Y. H. S. Borhek, J ' r A Sci., 211 Main St., Bethlehem. C. M. Breder, E.M., 332 Market St., Bethlehem. J- W. Boyd, C.E., 8 Third St., Seek. A. Cardenas, at £2 C.E., 13 E.Third St., Nicaragua. C. B. Ca.ssady, e a X C.E., Graham Row, Baltimore, Md. M. Chace, x L.S., Cherokee St., Elizabeth, N. J. F. R. Chapman, C.E., Third St., Steubenville, 0. H. T. Chester, M.E., New St., Williamstown. F. Clarke, Jr.. M.E., 454 Vine St., incennes, Ind. W . P. Cleveland, A.C., 311 Fourth St., Waterville, N. Y. NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. F. R. Coats, 4 a e E.M.. Pawnee St., Philadelphia. W . S. Cope, C.E., 125 Church St., Philadelphia. C. E. COXE, X 4 E.M., Seneca St., Reading. J- B. CULLUM, A T A A.C., 313 Cherokee St., Meadville. J- R. Davis. C.E., Fourth Vine Sts., , Phoenixville. c. H. Detweiler, C.E., High St., Iron Bridge. D. E. Downey, E.M., 523ButtonwoodSt. , South Bethlehem. C. DUGAN, A.C., Third St., South Bethlehem. D. Emery, A.C., 13 Fourth St., Bradford. W . L. Fairchild, C.E., 59 Church St., Hammondsport, C. E. Fink, ay C.E., 454 Vine St., Harrisburg. [N.Y, F. E. Fischer, C.E., 44 Church St., New York City. F. R. Fisher, C.E., 23 Third St., Philadelphia. J- W. Flack, Jr., i M.E., 314 Fourth St., Baltimore, Md. J- G. Fleck, C.E., 27 Third St., Philadelphia. H. A. FOERING, Sci.. Fourth St., Locust Valley. R. D. Frey, L.S., North St., Centre Valley. E. U. GiBBS, M.E., 10 North St., Mt. Holly, N. J. R. Goodman, C.E., Fourth Vine Sts. , Atglen. G. E. Greene, y C.E., 122 Market St., Rochester, N. Y. H. W. Harley, M.E., 125 Church St., Gloucester, N. J. D. G. Hearne, e a X C.E., 128 Main St., Wheeling, W. Va. J- G. Hearne, e a x A.C., 128 Main St., Wheeling, W. Va. J- S. B. Hollinshead, E.M., 57 Market St., Dayton, 0. P. D. Honeyman, L.S., 363 Broad St., Bethlehem. J- T. Hoover, sx C.E., Cherokee St., Philipsburg. F. K. Houston, r a M.E., 236 S. New St., New York City. A. C. Howard, x } E.AI., Cherokee St., Pittsburgh. C. G. Howe, A 4- C.E., 442 Seneca St., Charleston, S. C. A. D. Kennedy, i ' x M.E., 6 Third St., Philadelphia. H. H. King, M.E., 155 North St., Bethlehem. W . ' . KULP, C.E., 59 Church St., Norristovvn. H. M. Kurtz, M.E., Fourth Vine Sts., , Allentown. G. C. Landis, C.E., 454 Vine St., Middletown. H. K. Landis, E.M., 14 N. New St., Landis Valley. J- E. LiTCH, M.E., 25 Fourth St., Steelton. S. S. Martin, }i; x E.M., Fourth ' ine Sts. , Steelton. A. M. Masser, tY A.C., 18 Market St., Scranton. 36 NAME. COUKSE. W. D. Matheson, SX A.C, R. S. MERCUR, S I) C.E., C. H. Miller, tT A.C, R. D. MiLLHOLLAND, Y M.E., D. McF. Moore, M.E.. G. Nauman, Jr., C.E., R. E. Neumeyer, C.E., A. N. Palmer, a ! E.M., W. C. Perkins, -i) r A C.E., A. E. Phillips, C.E., C. W. Platt, at A.C, E. W. Pratt, Y M.E., E. J. Prindle, M.E., Vw. C RiDDICK, C.E., J. S. RiEGEL, 4- PA M.E., F. W. RiTCHEY, S X CE., J. E. Sanborn, A.C, E. A. SCHNABEL, Clas., H. J. Sherman, C.E., S. A. Shimer, M.E., W. C Shoemaker, C.E., R. W. Smith, C.E., C H. Stevenson, C.E., W. A. Stevenson, s x M.E., J. W. Stone, Jr., ay M.E., T. A. Straub, Ae C.E., R. P. Stout, M.E., F. D. Thomson, M.E., C C Tomkinson, M.E., C. A. P. Turner, C.E., A. H. Van Cleve. ay Sci., W. A. Webb, M.E., F. A. Weihe, M.E., G. E. Wenule, M.E., D. T. Williams, r a M.E. H. Wright, M.E. UNIVERSITY RES. Fourth St., Fourth Cherokee 1 8 Market St., 1 8 Market St., 304 Broad St.. 29 W. Fourth St., 16 Goepp St., 442 Seneca St., 35 Cedar St., 48 Vine St., 44 Church St., 18 Market St., 452 Vine St., 448 Vine St., Eagle Hotel, 59 Church St., New Broad Sts., 33 Linden St., 452 Vine St., 106 Third Ave., W. Third St., 31 5 W. Fourth St. 9 E. Fourth St., 44 Church St., 21 Fourth St., Pawnee St., 57 Market St., 423 Pawnee St., 330 Fourth St., 125 Church St., 452 Vine St., I 51 S. Centre St., 448 Vine St., 6 Third St., Catasauqua, 125 Church St., RESIDENCE. Brooklyn, N. Y. Wilkes-Barre. Huntingdon. Reading. Bethlehem. Lancaster. Bethlehem. Baltimore, Md. Williamsport. Washington, D. C New York City. Fort Atkinson. Wis. Washington, D. C Wake Forest, N.C Riegelsville, N. J. Pittsburgh. Bellows Falls, Vt. Bethlehem. Mt. Holly, N. J. West Bethlehem. Reading. Trenton, N. J. Snow Hill, Md. Lewistown. New Orleans, La. Allegheny. Audenried. Shanghai, China. Harrisburg. Lime Rock, R. L Easton. Bethlehem. Wonneberg, West Prussia. Philadelphia. Catasauqua. Northampton, Mass. V-v i ' ■ p Zophomovz Riztov - pT is said that John Balantyne once refused ' to print a manuscript for the Earl of Buchan because he had not enough capital I ' s in his office. In these days class historians find it a great temptation to adopt the Earl ' s style, probably because classes are necessarily so much alike that the writers feel they must draw on their imagination. But in this short account of the Class of ' 90, the historian will try to narrate events with- out partiality, with malice toward none, with charity for all. Just at the close of the year, when we were think- ing of those at home whom we so soon expected to see, our hearts were sad- dened by the loss of one of our brightest and most popular classmates by drowning. During the summer yet an- other left us in the same way. On Sept. 14th about ninety of our men assembled on the campus to welcome the freshmen to the untried scenes of college life. (Some ot them had been previously welcomed at the station and provided with accommodations.) We had lined up and prepared to assist them to enter the chapel with proper promptness and celerity, when the President opportunely (?) made his appearance, placed himself at their head, ' • and calmly, as shepherds lead their flocks, he led them into the house of prayer. After several preliminary skirmishes between the classes, eighty-three sophomores and ninety-nine freshmen met on the Athletic grounds to 39 decide whether the new-comers should be allowed to carry that appen- dage of modern society, for which they so earnestly longed. The rules according to which the contest was decided were certainly more favor- able to the freshies than those previously in vogue, as they obviated the disadvantage of not knowing their own men, for they had now simply to push in one direction. Nevertheless, superior strategy and weight were irresistible, and in three and one-half minutes the victory was ours. It is to be regretted that a rush so bravely contested by both sides should have been followed by the disgraceful fight which took place when ' Ninety-one attempted to prevent us from having a class picture taken. This attempt of a freshman class was entirely without precedent at Lehigh, and cannot be too severely condemned. How sad that Whet- ford had to countermand his order. Probably ' Ninety-one tried to for- get that there ever had been such an order. If so, they were reminded of it at the Fall sports. As they had no occasion to use their class yell, which they had prepared to sound their victories, ' Ninety gave it for them, which afforded them great pleasure (?). Since then an almost un- broken truce has prevailed between the classes. On the base-ball field last year, ' Ninety had, considering that we were freshmen, a very creditable record. We were constantly represented on the college team by two men, and in one of the games the majority of the players were from our ranks. To our class team belongs the honor of winning the first genuine athletic victory over Lafayette, a victory which reflects honor on the college as well as ourselves. The class also contributed to the success of the Lehigh foot-ball team by the men whom she furnished. The class team succeeded in defeating ' Ninety-one, but I can say but little more about victories. The one great fault was lack of steady, earnest team practice. As soon as the men will do this we can expect greater glory. In general athletics our course has been onward and upward, the sports of each season bringing more prizes into our hands. Yet there is room for great improvement. The Fall sports encourage us to hope that, by constant training, the large number of seconds there taken may be changed to firsts in the future. Last, but far from least in the history of our sophomore year, which is to go in this year ' s Epitome, is the class supper. How shall the his- 40 torian do justice to it? For those who were there it needs no history; the memory of its pleasures will never fade away. For those who were not there, how can any feeble words of the scribe set forth this joyous affair? We did ample justice to the good things provided, although our ajjpetites were not sharpened by any struggle with the Freshmen. These gentlemen seemed to have taken for their motto, Discretion is the better part of valor. By the presence of so large a percentage of the class, we see a growing class spirit of which we have long stood in need. Let us hope that this spirit may become deeper and stronger, and that every member of the class may take an active interest in whatever con- cerns the success of ' Ninety. If such be the case, my successor will be able to chronicle a year even more successful than that which has fallen to my lot. Historian. 41 %he E rczhman ©lazz.-© Aloiio : Sufierare Contendc g) ] Class Colors : ' .met atid Gold. ©ffieers. W. E. Fertig, . President. J. P. Rafferty, Vice-President . H. F. Lefevre, Secretary. H. H. Davis, Treasurer. H. T. Morris, . NAME. Historian. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. H. E. Atkins, x i C.E., 440 Seneca St., Pottsville. W . A. AUCHINVOLE, A.C., 218 W. Third St., Harrisburg. M. B. Augur, M.E., Seneca St., Washington, D. C. H. C. Banks, M.E., 210 S. New St., Savannah, Ga. J. R. Barrios, 2 x E.M., Vine St., Bogota, U. S. Col. J. M. Beaumont, e a x M.E., 54 Church St., Scranton. J. B. Beck, Jr., v M.E., 59 Church St., Williamsport. H. W. Biggs, 2n C.E., 141 Market St., Glendale, O. F. E. Blakeney, C.E., 140 Market St , Little Rock, Ark. J. E. Boatrite, C.E., 443 New St., Columbus, Ga. F. C. Bredt, A.C., High St., Bethlehem. G. Briggs, M.E., 69 Garrison St., Scranton. J. B. Buckley, M.E., 330 Fourth St., Oxford, N. Y. W . F. Burden, a e C.E., 468 Vine St., Washington, D. C. F. S. Camp, t M.E., 18 Market St., Brooklyn, N. Y. G. V. Chandler, E.M., Fourth St., Washington, D. C. E. Chao, C.E., 140 Market St., Cienfuegos, Cuba. H. Clark, Jr., E.M., Vine St., Montgomery City, J. A. COLWELL, 2 N A.C., 122 Market St., Kittanning. [Mo, J. M. COLWELL, 2 X A.C., 122 Market St., Kittanning. J. C. Connelly, M.E., Third Pine Sts., South Bethlehem. C. H. Corbin, 2 X A.C., Birch Packer Av ., Telluride, Col. E. H. COXE, X ! C.E., Fourth St., Reading. W . Cresson, M.E., Cherokee St., , Swarthmore. A. G. Croll, C.E., 152 Market St., Weatherly. 43 NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. R. T Davies, F. H. Uavis, tr C.E., M.E., Catasauqua, 1 8 Market St., Catasauqua. Watkins, N. Y. F. Davis, t C.E., 1 8 Market St., Watkins, N. Y. H. H. Davis, :i x M.E., 218 W. Third St., Philadelphia. M. Davis, E.M., 140 Market St., Mt. Carmel. J. W. DeMover, X a- C.E., 10 W. Fourth St., Houtzdale. P. Drayton, x E.M., Fourth St., Philadelphia. A. Eavenson, 4 a e A.C., 422 Pawnee St., Philadelphia. H. S. ECKERT, X a- A.C., Fourth St., Reading . W. p. Ely, oax C.E., 9 North St., Lambertville, N. J. F. D. Ermentrout, 4 a e L.S., 422 Pawnee St., Reading. J. C. Escobar, M.E., 415 Birch St., Matanza.s, Cuba. W. Famaris, C.E., 539 Broad St., Beverly. N. J. W. E. Fertig. L.S., 54 Church St., Titusville. A. H. Fetters, M.E.. Central Hotel, Barneston. G. B. Fife, a C.E., 12 Fourth St., Washington, D. C. W. Forstall, ■f T M.E., 18 Market St , Chicago, 111. S. M. Graham, M.E., Vine St., Philipsburgh. J. S. Griggs, M.E., 412 Pawnee St., Lakeville, Conn. I. L. Hartman, C.E., Hokendauqua, Hokendauqua. G. S. Haves, Sci.. 1 1 E. Fourth St., Painesville, 0. J. S. Heilig, W. A. Heindle, M.E., C.E., Spruce Packer Av 118 North St., ..Catasauqua. Baltimore, Md. J. F. Hersh, C.E.. Allentown, Allentown. H. V. Hesse. E.M., 229 LInion St., Bethlehem. R. R. HiLLMAN, i C.E., 317 Cherokee St., Wilkes-Barre. W. R. Hillyer, M.E., Vine St., Pt.Richmond, N Y. B. W. HOMANS, C.E., 29 PVjurth St., Brooklyn. N. Y. W. Jennings, at W. E. Johnson, C.E., C.E., 18 Third St., 10 Broad St., Harrisburg. Glastonbury. Conn. J. J. Jimenez, C.E., 229 S. New St., Aguadilla, Porto Rico. H. Kemmerling, C.E., 1 1 E. Fourth St., Scranton. H. M. Knapp, C.E., 109 N. New St., Louisville, Ky. H. Kramph. C.E., 59 Church St., North Platte, Neb. H. G. Lamberton, C.E.. 44 Church St., Franklin. J. L. Langdon, E.M.. 5 Ciraham Row, Buffalo, N. Y. F. C. Lauderburn, Clas., 31 1 Cherokee St., Hazleton. G. E. Lefevre. 2X E.M., 69 Main St.. Panama, U. S. Col. H. F. Lefevre, ] ' a E.M., 69 Main St., Panama, L S. Col, C. McK. Leoser, Jr.. T ■ E.M., 1 8 Market St., New York City. F. K. Leslie, 4 r a A.C., 313 f ourth St., Sharon. H. W. Lloyd. Jr., J. S. LOCKWOOD. M.E.. M.E., 470 Vine St., 315 Cherokee St,, Stanhope, N. J. Brooklyn, N. Y. N. J. Loos, E.M., 29 Broad St., Bethlehem. G. H. Lynch. C.E.. 431 Cherokee St.. Wilkes-Barre. J. Macfarland, A.C., 202 N. New St., Washington, D. C. G. E. Meily, X A.C., 12 Fourth St., Lebanon. 44 V J- G. F. H. H. F. A. J- H. P. W J- E. J- E. W W J- M. R. A. L. F. I. C. J- M. O. M. W. H. M. W, E. D. M. E. H. J- F. F. G. R. Mendoza, ATi2 C.E., Z. Miller, a h M.E., S. MiSH, C.E.. K. Morris, Sci., T. Morris, M.E., V. Myrick, Sci.. H. McCall. e x M.E., L. McClurg, a t a M.E., A. McClurg, a t a E.M., S. McKee, E.M.. M. Paine, ay C.E., T. Patterson, a e M.E., Prieto, 2: X M.E., A. OUIER, T A.C., P. Rafferty, 2 N M.E., R. Reets, i: i C.E., . F. Rench, C.E.. . C. Rice, C.E., I. Riegel, C.E., . H. Robbins, Jr.. M-E., Schmitz, C.E.. Schneider. C.E., R. Shellexberger, C.E.. W. B. SCHUTTE. A.C., A. Shimer, Clas., H. Simpson, C.E., V. Smith, M-E., . C. Smith, C.E., E. Smith, C.E.. D. SOHON, A.C.. B. Spengler. M.E.. T. Stillson, C.E., B. Tate, -i ' T M-E., , S. Topping, L.S., S. Townsend. Sci., A. Usina, C.E., N. Usina, M-E- Vander HORST, A O) ME., Wadleigh, X Sci., W. Welsh, a 4 C.E., S. West, A.C, N. Whitney, M.E. B. Zahniser, ATA C.E., H. Zimmerman, E.M. UNIVERSITY RES. 13 E. Fourth St.. 10 W. Fourth St., 454 Vine St., 11 E. Fourth St.. 54 Church St., 22 Broad St.. 54 Church St.. 313 Fourth St., 313 Fourth St.. 31 1 Fourth St.. 418 Wyandotte St. 422 Pawnee St.. 14 New St.. 18 Market St., 140 Market St.. 431 Cherokee St., 18 North St.. 18 North St.. 533 Broad St. 412 Pawnee St., 1 1 E. Fourth St., 4g Market St., !i8 North St., 8 W. Third St.. Redington. 448 Vine St., 44 Church St., 229 S. New St., 29 Fourth St.. 468 Vine St., 313 N. Main St., 18 North St., 18 Market St.. 452 Vine St.. 14 N. New St., 210 S. New St., 210 S. New St., 442 Seneca St., Packer Ave., 442 Seneca St., 457 New St., Fourth St.. Third St., 109 New St., Guadalajara, Mex. Harrisburg. Middletown. Moorestown, N. J. Pottsville. Springfield, Mass. Binghamton, N. Y. Chambersburg. Meadville. Washington, D. C. Troy. Mahanoy City. Bogota, U. S. Col. Reading. Chicago. 111. Wilkes-Barre. Cumberland, Md. Bridgeton, N. J. South Bethlehem. Lakeville. Conn. Egg Harbor City, Summit Hill. [N.J. Benjamin. Philadelphia. Redington. Pensacola, Fla. Franklin. Birmingham, Ala. Portsmouth, Va. Washington. D. C. Bethlehem. Cleveland. O. Harrisburg. Sagg, N. Y. New York City. Savannah, Ga. Savannah, Ga. Charleston, S. C. South Bethlehem. Washington, D. C. Philadelphia. Pottsville. Mercur. Louisville, Kv. 45 v 5 46 - Freshman ' Hizl ' or ' g- ' ••3 HE magnitude of undertaking to present the history of the Class of ' Ninety-one of Lehigh University to the world is not much lessened by the fact that only one year ' s mo- mentous events are here recorded. But however futile the efforts of man may be in attempting to sketch the grand and sublime, there must be some channel through which the world in general and its posterity shall be informed of its greatest progeny. Hence your his- torian is deputed to do what he can in this direction. The first of the remarkable series of events connected with our equally remarkable body, was the assemblage of the whole college at 3 p. m. on Wednesday, Sept. 14th, 1887, to show us all honor by first opening to service on that day the beautiful new Chapel of the University. As usual, the Sophomore class were the hosts of the occasion, and they ar- ranged themselves to receive us as rapidly and with as much impressive- ness as possible. Prex., however, foreseeing that the ceremonies of the reception would be long, and possibly tedious, suggested an informal meeting inside the chapel, an idea which was thankfully received and speedily followed up by ' Ninety. We had not been long enjoying our college life before we realized the fact that sophomores play rather important parts in freshman history. 47 And consequently a series of meetings between the two classes were held in a convenient and appropriate spot — the entrance to the Chemical Laboratory — which were designed to promote our mutual acquaintance and good fellowship. The object thus sought was speedily accomplished, and we soon became familiar enough with our yearling brethren to playfully break their hats and seat them on the ground, and finally to induce them to furnish window-glass to be broken for our amusement. Saturday, Oct. 8th, 1887, dawned a beautiful morning, as well it might, for it marked an epoch in our college life. The time for the historic cane-rush then arrived, and with our usual thoroughness and tact we played the historic freshman part, occupying the brief space of five minutes ' time. The sight was wonderful and never to be forgotten, noble, inimitable and grand. Some thoughtless sophomores were so elated as to unconsciously attempt to mar the sublimity of the occasion by sitting for a photograph, but these were soon informed of the error of their ways, and willingly relinquished their idea. The fates, always propitious to our class, were not le.ss so on Nov. 3d, 1887, when we were spared the mortification of being beaten in a class game of foot-ball with ' Xinct -. by a score of 52-0, as predicted by their learned seers. We succeeded admirably in keeping their score down to 12, and ours to the symmetrical and beautiful o. Of course ' Ninety admits that she ' ' did not play foot-ball, and we ourselves are willing to admit that she could not. As the month of December opened upon us and we began to look back over our brilliant and un.stained record, a natural and, we think permissible, pride prompted us to secure a likeness of ourselves, in which we could ever after find the symbol of success. Wishing to avoid any- thing like ostentation (for we are not vain), we committed the care of this project to our president, w ' ith instructions to proceed as quietly as pos.sible. This he did, and on the 15th of December we assembled and, with the beautiful north door of the chapel as an approj riate, cor- responding and original background, were indelibly j rinted in fac simile upon the photographer ' s plate. Some interested and well-wishing members of ' Ninety were present to see the operation, but they grew restless and would probal)ly have prevented our achie ement by their too ardent endeavors to forward it, had we not wisely hindered them by 48 gentle, patient and continued restraint. We used an old and efificient treatment with them, involving a quantity of rope. Far be it from our intentions ever to set an illustrious example, and then prevent others from following it. Hence, when an humble and timely petition from our sophomore friends, requesting permission to be photographed, came to us, without deliberation or even concerted action, we individually agreed that they might do so. The opening of the year 1888 brought us, as it did everybody, renewed ambition for the good qualities of life, and they came to us profusely — among them the desire for a class supper, which we held on the 13th of February. Although we appreciated the honor of being the first freshman class in Lehigh ' s history to hold a class banquet, the same aversion to undue display as has always characterized us, pervaded our preparations therefor. We were gratified in the extreme at the unexpected success of our enterprise, and joyfully receive the congratulations of ' Ninety and all our friends upon our achievement. Our history continues in frequent occurrences of importance, but our innate and characteristic modesty forbids us to dwell upon them all at length. Therefore, it seems best to close our first year ' s record abruptly, while we assure our admirers that we shall continue in our path as an honor to the University and a joy to the public during our whole course of life. Historian. 49 5peeial St ' udcnte. • -- — =— NAME. COURSE. UNIVERSITY RES. RESIDENCE. A. H. Babcock, z t A.C., Eagle Hotel, Oakland, Cal. H. M. Byllesby, I ' T M.E., 1 8 Market St., New York City. H. C. Carter, B.S., A.C., Sun Hotel, New York City. C. J. Coll, 2 N C.E., 140 Market St., Broad F ord. W . E. Howe, x l C.E., 431 Cherokee St., Reading. A. E. JUHLER, AT A.C., 315 Cherokee St., Pomeroy, O. E. K. MacNutt, A.C., 229 Broad St., Wilkes-Barre. J- E. Strong, E.M., New Fourth Sts. , Birmingham, Ala 50 E-leemealz of ' 88.- C. X. Robinson. C. W. White, . F. R. DURANT. V. H. Hubbard, Offieepz. President. Vice- President. Secretary. Treasurer. A. BRODHEAD, J. E. Cochran, e j x V. F. Dean, • Q F. R. DURANT. I J. C. FiNNEV, C. L. FORSMAN, Z t H. Frauenthal, R. O. A. Heinrich, J. A. Horner, W. H. Hubbard, i x D. H. Jenkins, C. J. Miller, J. L. Moore, C. X. Robinson, x 4) J. P. Ryon. x i R. C. Segur, 2$ W. A. Stedman, Jr., a C. W. White, J. B. Whitehead, l H. C. Young, UNIVERSITY RES. 121 S. Centre St., 9 North St., 535 Broad St., Seneca St., 190 North St., Eagle Hotel, Fourth St., 1 1 E. Fourth St.. Bath. Sun Hotel, 427 Elm St., Main St., 6 E. Fourth St., 440 Seneca St., Fourth St., Seneca St., 442 Seneca St., 25 Fourth St.. Pawnee St., 418 Wyandotte St. RESIDENCE. Bethlehem. Emporium. Se Tnour, Conn. Morristown, N. J. Milwaukee, Wis. Williamsport. Wilkes-Barre. Gotha, Germany. Bath. Beaver Falls. Edwardsdale. Bethlehem. Moorestown, N.J. Germantown. Potts -ille. Morristown, N. J. New York City. Utica, N. Y. Pittsburgh. Wellsboro. 5« Summary o Sfudenl ' z. (According to the Registers.) YEAR. SPECIAL. FRESH- MAN. SOPHO- MORE. JU.NIOR. SENIOR. POST- SENIOR. GRADU- ATE. TOTAL 1866 . . . — 39 I — — — — 40 1867 . — 19 25 6 — — — 50 1868 . — 34 16 15 5 — — 70 1869 . — 24 25 1 1 15 — — 75 1870 . — 14 ' 3 1 1 7 — 2 47 187I Prep. • 49 34 15 10 13 — 121 1872 ■ 44 35 20 13 5 — — 117 1873 • 24 44 33 16 14 3 J 34 1874 . — 51 33 21 10 — 115 1875 . — 41 26 22 22 — 2 113 1876 — 60 16 19 13 2 I III 1877 — 35 16 15 15 — — 81 1878 Law. • 24 35 14 10 7 — — 90 1879 . — 44 21 9 II — 2 87 1880 7 44 41 8 7 — 5 112 1881 4 66 33 30 7 — 4 144 1882 10 80 35 25 30 2 5 187 1883 12 f 10 106 60 27 26 5 ' 3 249 1884 . -, Elee. ( 13 131 70 44 22 5 12 307 r 10 1885 ■ ■ ■] ee. 115 83 52 37 4 15 324 ( ' 2 1886 . . A Elec. ( 12 122 82 70 49 6 16 369 1887 f 7 . ■ Elec. I 23 121 9 ' 65 66 8 20 401 52 ' ji uijz- y Henr Soppee, T:T:?.T). JJ ENRY COPPEE was born in Savannah, Georgia, on the 13th of } October, 1821, of French West-Indian parents. After studying at Chatham Academy, then one of the best schools in the South, he entered the Sophomore class at Yale College in the Summer of 1836 and re- mained one year. He then studied engineering and was engaged on the Georgia Central Railroad from Savannah to Macon. In 1841 an ap- pointment to ' est Point was given him and four years later he graduated from that institution in the Artillery. In 1846 the Mexican War broke out and Lieut. Coppee, although attached to no regiment sent to the front, procured his dispatch to the seat of war and served the entire length of the contest, remaining two and a half years in the territory. Be- sides several minor actions, he was engaged at the siege of Vera Cruz, February and March, 1847 the battle of Cerro Gordo, the 17th and 1 8th of April, 1847; the battles of Contreras and Cherubusco, both fought on the 20th of August ; at the storming of the Castle of Chapul- tepec on the 13th of September, and in the capture of the City of Mexico on the following day. He was brevetted captain for gallant and merito- rious conduct at Cherubusco and received a vote of thanks from the Legis- lature of the State of Georgia. From the close of the war until 1855 he was stationed at West Point, and then resigned from the army to take the position of Professor of English Literature and History in the University of Pennsylvania. In 1866 he resigned this position and accepted the Presidency of the newly established Lehigh University, which he organized. He resigned as President in 1874, but performed the duties a year later. Since that time he has been the Professor of English Literature and History, and Inter- national and Constitutional Law. 53 He was a member and secretary of the Board of Visitors to West Point in 1868. He traveled in Europe in 1870. In 1874 Dr. Coppee was appointed Regent of the Smithsonian Insti- tute for a term of six years and has bjen twice reelected by Congress, in 1880 and 1886. He has been twice a United States Commissioner on Government Assay of Coin, 1874 and 1877; ' ' d Dejnity to General Conventions of the Protestant Episcopal Church, in 1874, 1877, 1880, 1883 and 1886. He is President of the Aztec Club, an association of officers who fought in the Mexican War, a position held at various times by Grant, Hancock and other famous American soldiers. He is an honorary member of the Pennsylvania Historical Society, of the Ameri- can Philosophical Society and corresponding member of the Delaware Historical Society. In 1848 he received the degree of Master of Arts from the University of Georgia; in 1866 the degree of Doctor of Laws from both Union College and the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Coppee ' s works are: Elements of Logic (1857); Gallery of Fa- mous Poets (1858); Elements of Rhetoric (1859); Gallery of Distin- guished Poetesses (i860); Select Academic Speaker (1861); Manual of Battalion Drill (1862) ; Evolutions of the Line (1862) ; Editor of Trans- lation of Marmot ' s Spirit of Military Institutions (1862); Manual of Court Martial (1863) ; Songs of Praise in the Christian Centuries (1864J; Life and Services of Gen. Grant (1866); Editor of United States Ser- vice Magazine (1864-66) ; Manual of English Literature (1872); Editor of Translation of Comte de Paris ' Civil War (1877); Conquest of Spain by the Arab Moors (1881), besides many occasional and fugitive pieces in reviews, magazines, c. Dr. Coppee married, on the 9th of July, 1849, ' J ' iha Dewitt, daughter of John Dewitt, Esq., of one of the early families of Holland, who came over to the new colony of New Amsterdam. Six children have blessed this union, the second of whom, a son, now in charge of government works on the Mississippi at Vicksburg, is a graduate of the University. Two of the daughters have married graduates of Lehigh. 54 Ijizt ' of Shaptcpz.- Psi Chapter of the Chi Phi Fraternity. Established. 1872. Alpha Run Chapter of the Alpha Tau Omeca Fraterxitv. Established, 1882. Nu Chapter of the Delta Phi Fraternity. Established, 1884. Eta Chapter of the Psi Upsilox Fraternity. Established, 1884. Nu Deutfron Char(;e of the Theta Delia Chi Fraternit -. Established. 1884. Lehioh Chapter of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity. Established, 1885. Pi Chapter of the Sigma Nu Fraternity. Established, 1886. Beta Chi Chapter of the Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity. Established. 1886. Alpha Chapter (.)f Penn.sylyania of the Sigm.a Phi Frai frmty, Established, 1887. Penn.sylyania Eta Chapter of the Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. Established, 1887. Alpha Rho Chapter of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. Established, 1887. 55 -«(Sbi Phi. - I oll of (Shapl ' epz. Alpha, Gamma, Delta, Epsilon, Zeta, . Eta, Theta, Iota, Kappa, Lambda, Mu, Omicron, Pi, Rho, Sigma, Phi, Chi, Psi, Omega, I ' niversity of ' irginia. F mory College. Rutgers College. Hampden-Sidney College. Franklin and Marshall College. University of Georgia. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Ohio State University. Brown University. University of California. Stevens Institute of Technology. Sheffield Scientific School. Vanderbilt University. Lafayette College. Wofford College. Amherst College. Ohio Wesleyan University. Lehigh University. Dickinson College. S6 hi ' Fhi. 4 f 2i (ghaptep. Francis Weiss, John Julius Zimmele, Lester Paige Breckinruxie, o, Andrew Reeder Ferridav, p, Frederic Hayes Knorr, Atherton Blight Wadleigh, Charles Miner Dodson. Wvndham Harvey Stokes, William Bradford, George Steinman Franklin, William Ellis Morris, Alfred Eli Lewis, Jr., Louis Mallet-Prevost Gaston, John Percy Ryon, Charles William Schwartz, Jr. Wallis Eastburn Howk, Hubert Alexander Bonzano, Charles Ellery Coxe, Henry Wadleigh, Alexander Chambers Howard. Morgan Chace, Edward Haviland Coxe. Harry Sweyer Eckert, Charles Norris Robinson, Percival Drayton, Hanson Entriken Atkins, John William De Moyer. 57 - !?llpha au (9mega.« l oll of T etiTpe (Bhapi ers. Virginia Beta, . . Washington and Lee University, Virginia Delta, . University of Virginia, Virginia Epsilon, . . Roanol e College. Kentucky Zeta, . Central University, . Kentucky Mu, . . Kentucky Military Institute, Tennessee Omega. . University of the South, Georgia Alpha Beia. . University of Georgia, . N. Carolina Alpha Delta. University of North Carolina, r,r,, T, T n,T rrn.r, , T i Alabama AgHCultural aocl Alabaima Alpha Epsilon, ■ at u • i r- n ( Mechanical College, Georgia Alpha Zeta, . Mercer University, . N. Carolina Alpha Eta, Georgia Alpha Theta, . Emory College, New Jersey Alpha Kappa, Stevens Institute of Technology, Michigan Alpha Mu, . Adrian College, Ohio Alpha Nu, . Mt. Union College, New York Alpha O.mickox, St. Lawrence University, Pennsylvania Alpha Rho. Lehigh University, Tennessee Alpha Tau, . S. W. Presbyterian University, Penn. Alpha Upsilon, Pennsylvania College, . Ohio Alpha Psl . . Wittenberg College, South Carolina Alpha Phl South Carolina College, Florida Alpha Omega. . University of Florida, Iowa Beta Alpha. . Simpson Centenary College, Alabama Beta Beta. . Southern University, Mass. Beta Gamma, . Mass. Institute of Technology, . Alabama Beta Delta, . University of Alabama, 58 !LISHl-;i) 865. 868. 884. 870. 877. 878. 879. 879. 83o. 881. 881. 88 f. 88l 882. 882. 882. 882. 882. 884. 883. 884. 885. 885. 885. 885. ERE KA, PHI LA. TiQt ivc TDemberz. GUSTAV AVRES, F. Dlxcan Campheli., Adolfo Cardenas, J. BoLAN Glover, J jHN Martin, Victor Mendoza, RuFus K. Polk. 59 :T)clta l hi.- l oll of Tietivc (Chapters. Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, . Epsilon, Zeta, Eta, Lambda, Nu, . Xl, Union College. Brown University. New York University. Columbia College. Rutgers College. Harvard University. University of Pennsylvania. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Lehigh University. Johns Hopkins University. 60 - T)clM l hi. 45 Du Shapl er. P()ST-f;RAI)UATES. WlILIAM KEXDALLGILI.ETT. M.A.. HARkV Harkness Stoek. Hexrv Charles Xitze. Henry August Julius Wii. kens. MDCCCLXXXVin. Robert Swain Perry. mdccci.xxxix. Charles Hudson B(jynton, Frederick Louis Grammer, Herbert Mackenzie Carson. John Thomas Morrow, Arnold Karthaus Reese. MDCCCXC. Christopher Gadsden Howe, Albert Nickerson Palmer. mdcccxci. George Buchanan Fife, Elias Vander Horst, Joseph Wickes Welsh. electrical. William Augustus Sted.man. Jr. 6i P2l Upziloi}. l oll of Tiel ive ( hapl ' epz. ESTABLISHEU Theia. Union College, • ' 833- Delia, University of the City of New York, 1837 Beta, . Yale University, . ' 839 Sigma, . Brown University, . 184.0 Gamma, Amherst College, 1841 Zeta, . Dartmouth College, . . 1842 Lambda. . Columbia College, 1842 Kappa. . Bowdoin College, . 1843 Pm, . Hamilton College, •843 XI, Wesleyan University, . 1843 Upsiujx, . . University of Rochester, . 1858 I() ' rA, Kenyon College, i860 Phi, . University of Michigan, . 1875 Pi, Syracuse University, . 1867 Chi, . Cornell University, 1876 Beta Bei a. Trinity College, . 1880 Eta, Lehigh University, 1884 62 - Tzi XlpziloT}. Hexrv Clark Johnson, M.A., LL.B., x, ' 73. Edward Hi(;ginson Williams, Jr., B.A., E.M., B, ' 72. Preston Albert Lambert, B.A., H, ' 83. George Francis Duck, E.M., n, ' 83. Lewis Buckley Semple, B.A., 11, ' 84. Simeon Cole Hazleton, E. L, ir, ' 86. In Xlrbe. William Augustus Hooker, . LE., a, ' 66. Garrett Linderman Hoppes, C.E., H, ' 83. Robert Grier Cooke, B.A., h, ' 84. J. Davis Brodhead, h, ' 85. George Washington Walker, ii, ' 87. In HniT?eP2il ' at s. mdccclxxxviii. Charles Lambert Addison, George Patterson Dravo, George Reade Baldwin, Howard Leoser McIlvain, George Philip Connard, John Hoff Millholland, mdccclxxxix. Albert Harlan Bates, William Dollowav Farwell, William Butterworth, Thomas Smith Leoser, William Albert Cornelius, Abraham Lincoln Rogers, Clarence Walker. MDCCCXC. George Ellsworth ( reen, Robert Douglass Millholland, Allan Moore L ssER, Edward Williams Pratt, Charles Herbert Miller. mdcccxci. Frederick Stanley Camp, Walton Forstall, Francis Hewette Davis, Charles McKnight Leoser, Jr., Frederick Davis, Edwin Addams Ouier, Mercer Brown Tate. 63 Uhct ' a T)cll ' a hi. l oll of Tleh ' C ' e (Shapl eps. ESTABLISHED Eta, Bowdoin College. 854. Thkta, Kenyon College, . . i 854 Iota, Harvard University, . 855 Kapi ' a, Tufts College, . . .1 856 Xi, Hobart College, . . 1 857 Sigma, Dickinson College. 861 Phi, Lafayette College, 866 Psi, . Hamilton College, 867 Omicrox Del ' if.kox, . Dartmouth College. . [869 Beta. Cornell University, 870 Lamkda, Boston University, 876 Pi Deuteron, College of the City of New ork, 881 Rho Deuteron, Columbia College, 883 Delta, (Reestablished), Troy Polytechnic Institute, 884 Nu Deuteron, Lehigh L ' uiversity, 884 Mu Deuteron, Amherst College, 885 Zeta, Brown University, 887 Epsilon Deuteron, Vale University. 887 64 CUheta Delta (Shi. •Tlu TDeuteron Sharge. l esidcnJ TQember. Horace A. Luckenbach. Tieh-oz TQzmbzvz. Frank F. Amsden, Frank Williams. W. Lynville Neill, Charles H. Deans. Charles B. Cassady, Lester H. Ely, John M. Beaumont, 1889. Arch Johnston. 1890. 1891. electrical. Joseph E. Cochran. Howard S. Neiman George W. Harris, D. Garth Hearne, Julian G. Hearne. Frank H. McCall. 65 T)cll ' a XlpziloT} I oll of (Shapl ' eps. ESTABLISHED Williams, Williams College, 1834. Union, Union College, • 1838 Hamilton, Hamilton College, 1847 Amherst, . Amherst College, . • 1847 Adelbert, Adelbert College, 1847 Colby, Colby University, . 1852 Rochester, Rochester University, 1852 MiDDLEBURY, Middlebury College, . 1856 Rutgers, Rutgers College, 1858 Brown, Brown University, i860 Madison, Madison University, . 1865 New York, New York University, . 1865 Cornell, Cornell University, 1869 Marietta, . Marietta College, . . 1870 Syracuse, Syracuse University, . 1873 Michigan, . Michigan University, . 1876 Northwestern, Northwestern University, 1880 Harvard, . Harvard University, 1880 Wisconsin, Wisconsin University, 1885 Lafayette, Lafayette College, 1885 Columbia, Columbia College, 1885 Lehigh, Lehigh University, 1885 Tufts, . Tufts College, . 1886 De Pauw, . De Pauw University, . 1887 66 T)el a XIpziloi].- 1888. Harlan Sherman Miner, Harry Semple Morrow, Charles Jeremiah Parker, Luther Reese Zollinger. 1889. Pearce Atkinson, Ralph Marshall Dravo. Lester Clark Taylor. 1890. Wesley Hudson Beck. Franklin Clarke, Jr.. Charles Edward Fink, Charles Wiltberger Platt. Joseph William Stone, Jr., Aaron Howell Van Cleve. 1891. William Jennings, Albert Edward Juhler. Paul Mayo Paine. 67 Sigma llu. l oll of Cbapterz. ESTABLISHED Alpha, Virginia Military Institute, . 1866. Beta, . University of Virginia, . 1870 Theta, University of Alabama, 1874 Iota, . Howard College, 1879 Kappa, North Georgia State College, 1881 Lambda, . Washington and Lee LTniversity, 1882 Epsilon, Bethany College, 1883 Zeta, . Central University, 1883 Eta, . Mercer University, . 1884 Mu, . University of Georgia, . 1884 Nu. . University of Kansas, 1884 Xi, . Emory College, 1884 Omicron, Bethel College, 1884 Delta, . . University of South Carolina, 1886 Pi, . Lehigh University, 1886 Rho, . University of Missouri, 1886 Sigma, Vanderbilt Lhiiversity, . 1886 Tau, . South Carolina Military Institute, 1886 Upsilon, University of Texas, 1887 68 . felBS !: i Retivz TDembers. CLASS OF 1888. Adolph Theodore Bruegel, Charles William Lohse. Reuben Daniels, Charles Donnell Marshall, Sterry Henry Jencks, Howard Hale McClintic. CLASS OF 1889. Richard Henry Morris. CLASS OF 1890. Amos Dey Kennedy, Frank Weyman Ritchey, Simon Strock Martin, William Alston Stevenson. CLASS OF 1891. Harry Weed Biggs, James Mosgrove Colwell, John Alexander Colwell, Jr., Herman Haupt Davis, James Pius Rafferty. 69 ih ' Phi ©amma T)ehdi. l oll of Pietivz (Ehaptcpz. ESTABLISHED Alpha, Washington and Jefferson Colleg-e, 1848. Eta, Marietta College, . 1855. Lambda, De Pauw University, . . 1856. Xi, Pennsylvania College, 1858. Omicron, . University of Virginia, • 1859- Pi, . Allegheny College, i860. Tau, Hanover College, . 1864. Upsilon, College of the City of New York, 1865. Psi, Wabash College, . 1 866. Omega, Columbia College, 1866. Alpha Deuteron, Illinois Wesleyan L niversity, . 1866. Beta Deuteron, Roanoke College, 1867. Gamma Deuteron, Knox College, . 1867. Epsilon Deuteron, Muhlenburg College, 1867. Theta Deuteron, Ohio Wesleyan University, . 1868. Delta Deuteron, . Hainpden-Sydney College, 1870. Zeta, Indiana State University, . 1871. Kappa Deuteron, Georgia University, 1871. Xi Deuteron, Adelbert College, . 1876. Omicron Deuteron, Ohio State University, 1878. Delta Xi, California University, . . 1880. Pi Deuteron, Kansas University, 1881. Delta, Bucknell University, . . 1882. Rho Deuteron, . Wooster University, 1882. Sigma Deuteron. Lafayette College, . 1883. Alpha Phi, Michigan University, 1885. Sigma, . Wittenberg College, . . 1885. Lambda Deuteron, Denison University, 1885. Zeta Phi, William Jewell College. . 1885. Beta Chi, Lehigh Univer sity. 1886. 70 - Phi (Samma IDell a. 4i13el a (Shi ©hapl er. Ii2 s ' Eaeull ' . H. Wilson Harding, M.A., a, ' 54. William L. Estes, M.D., 0, ' 76. Preston M. Gernet, B.A.. k a, ' 78, Alfred C. Mover, M.D., E A, ' 82, Frank E. Lewis. B.A., E A, ' 85. I12 2 Hiji ' c sit ' - John Bush Beck, Jr., Herman Stadiger Borhek, Charles Noble Butler, Philip Hoffecker DeWitt, Manuel Victor Domenech, Frederic Kidder Houston, Henry Francis Lefevre, Frank Kino Leslie, Walter Ashfield McFarland, Daniel Livermore Mott, William Cassidy Perkins, Albert George Rau, John Stover Riegel, David Thomas Williams. 7 - Sigma TPhi. l oll of (2hapjjcP2. Alpha of New York, Beta of New York, . Alpha of Massachusetts, Delta of New York. Alpha of Vermont, Alpha of Michigan, . Alpha of Pennsylvania. Union College. Hamilton College. Williams College. Hobart College. University of Vermont. University of Michigan. Lehigh University. 72 Zigma Phi. 4 Slpha of l ennsgl ania. George Goddard Convers, Robert Packer Linderman, RoLLiN Henry Wilbur, Garrett Brodhead Linderman, Charles Philip Coleman, Philip Sidney Webb, Warren A. Wilbur. post-graduate. Wade Hampton Woods. 1888. Hughlett Hardcastle, William Alonzo Stevenson. 1889. Leonardo Bravo y Castro, Robert Henry Eddy Porter, Jose Ramon Villalon y Sanchez. 1890. Robert Sayre Mercur, James William Flack, Jr. 1891. Murray Blachley Augur, Ralf Ridgway Hillman, Edgar Randolph Reets. electricals. Frank Ross Durant, Robert Crittenden Segur, John Brinton Whitehead. J 73 - ' Phi cll ' a ' CEhcl ' a.Js l oll of Rehvz (Ehapl-ers. Ohio Alpha, Indiana Alpha, Kentucky Alpha, Indiana Beta, Wisconsin Alpha, Illinois Alpha, Indiana Gamma, . Ohio Beta, Indiana Delta, . Michigan Alpha, Ohio Gamma, Indiana Epsilon, Indiana Zeta, Virginia Alpha, Missouri Alpha, . Illinois Delta, Iowa Alpha, Georgia Alpha, Georgia Beta, Georgia Gamma, New York Alpha, Ohio Delta, . Pennsylvania Alpha, California Alpha, Michigan Beta, Virginia Beta, Virginia Gamma, Ohio Epsilon, Nebraska Alpha, Virginia Delta, . Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania Gamma Tennessee Alpha, . ESTABLISHED. Miami University, . . 1848. Indiana University, . . . 1849. Centre College, . . . 1850. Wabash College, . . . 1852. University of Wisconsin, . 1857. Northwestern University, . ' 859. Butler University, . . 1859. Ohio Wesleyan University, . . i860. Franklin College, . . . i860. University of Michigan, . . 1864. Ohio University, . . . 1868. Hanover College, . . . 1868. De Pauw University, . . 1868. Roanoke College, . . . 1869. University of Missouri, . . 1870. Knox College, . . . .1871. Iowa Wesleyan University, . 1871. University of Georgia, . . 1871. Emory College, . . . 1871. Mercer University, . . . 1872. Cornell University, . . 1872. University of Wooster, . . 1872. Lafayette College, . . ' 873. University of California, . . 1873. Michigan Agricultural College, . 1873. University of Virginia, . . 1873. Randolph-Macon College, . 1874. Buchtel College, . . . 1875. University of Nebraska, . . 1875. Richmond College, . . .1875. Pennsylvania College, . . iS S- , Washington and Jefferson College, . 1875. Vanderbilt University, . . 1876. 74 ESTABLISHED. Mississippi Alpha, Alabama Alpha, Virginia Epsilon, Illinois Epsilon, Illinois Zeta, . Alabama Beta, Pennsylvania Delta, Vermont Alpha, Pennsyvania Epsilon, Missouri Beta, . Minnesota Alpha, Iowa Beta, South Carolina Beta, Kansas Alpha. Michigan Gamma, Tennessee Beta, Ohio Zeta, Texas Beta, Pennsylvania Zeta, New York Beta, New York Gamma, Maine Alpha, . New York Delta, New Hampshire Alpha, North Carolina Beta, Kentucky Delta, Massachusetts Alpha, Texas Gamma, Alabama Gamma, Virginia Zeta, New York Epsilon, . Pennsylvania Eta, University of Mississippi, University of Alabama, Virginia Military Institute, Illinois Wesleyan University, Lombard University, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Allegheny College, University of Vermont, Dickinson College, Westminster College, University of Minnesota, State University of Iowa, . South Carolina College, University of Kansas, Hillsdale College, . University of the South, Ohio State University, . University of Texas, . University of Pennsylvania, Union College, College of the City of New York, Colby University, Columbia College, Dartmouth College, University of North Carolina, . Central University, . Williams College, Southwestern University, . Southern University, Washington and Lee University, Syracuse University, Lehigh L niversity, . 1877. 1877. 1878. 1879. 1879. 1879. 18 18 1881. 18 18 18 1883. 18 18 18 „ 1884. 1884. 1884. 18 . 1885. 18 , 1886. 1886. 1886. 1887. 18 . 1887. .75 Elumni (Shapl ' eps. ESTABLISHED Indiana Alpha, Franklin, . 1876. Virginia Alpha, . Richmond, 1878 Indiana Beta, . Indianapolis, . • 1879 Kentucky Alpha, Louisville, 1880 Maryland Alpha, . . Baltimore, . 1880 Alabama Alpha, Montgomery, 1880 Illinois Alpha, . Chicago, . I88I Tennessee Alpha, Nashville, 1881 Illinois Beta, . Galesburg, . I88I Ohio Alpha, Cincinnati, I8SI D. C. Alpha. . . Washington, . IS84 Georgia Alpha, . Columbus, 1884 Ohio Beta, . Akron, . 1884 New York Alpha, New York City, 1884 Missouri Alpha, . Kansas City, . 1885 Minnesota Alpha, Minneapolis, 1885 Georgia Beta, . Atlanta, . 1886 California Alpha, San Francisco, 1886 Pennsylvania Alpha, . Pittsburgh, . 1887 76 - Phi T)el a heta. Penns l ania Eta Chapter. l czidsnl ' TDembePZ. George M. Harleman, C.E., Pa. a, J. Louis Hoffman. M.D., Pa. z, C. Edward Stout, M.D., Pa. z. Tiehvz TBemberz. po.st- graduate. Milton Henry Fehnel, B.S. mdccclxxxviii. Otto Cornelius Burkhart, Charles Henry Miller. mdccclxxxix. Ralph Putnam Barnard. Thomas Franklin Newby, John Joseph Lincoln, Augustus Thompson Throop. MDCCCXC. Edwin Herbert Beazell, Frank Raymond Coates, Theodore Alfred Straub. mdcccxci. Walter Frederick Burden. Fitz Daniel Ermentrout, Alban Eavenson, John Zollinger Miller, William Taylor Patterson. electrical. William Fairchild Dean. 77 - Bigma (Shi.- l oll of Beta, Zeta, Eta, Theta, . Kappa, Lambda, Mu. . Xi, Omicron, . Rho, Tau, Chi, Psi, . Omega. . Gamma Gamma, Delta Delta, Delta Chl Zeta Zeta, Zeta Psi, . Theta Theta, Sigma Sigma, Alpha Beta, . Alpha Gamma, Alpha Delta, Alpha Epsilon, Alpha Zeta, . Alpha Eta, Alpha Theta, Alpha Iota, Alpha Lambda, Alpha Nu, Alpha Xi, Alpha Omicron, Alpha Pi, Alpha Rho, TlqI ivc (Chapters. Wooster University. Washington and Lee University. University of Mississippi. Pennsylvania College. Bucknell University. Indiana State University. Denison University. De Pauw University. Dickinson College. Butler University. Roanoke College. Hanover College. University of Virginia. Northwestern University. Randolph-Macon College. Purdue LIniversity. Wabash College. Centre College. University of Cincinnati. University of Michigan. Hampden-Sidney College. University of California. Ohio State University. Stevens Institute of Technology. University of Nebraska. Beloit College. University of Iowa. Mass. Institute of Technology. Illinois Wesleyan University. University of Wisconsin. University of Texas. University of Kansas. Tulane University. Albion College. Lehigh University. 78 5igma (Shi. 4 !aipha l ho Shapl er. l ezidenl TDemberz. Emory J. Lipps, L. R. Myers, W. B. Myers. Retivz TGemberz. MDCLCLXXXVIII. EDMUN-D A. Bates. Harvey M. Wetzel. William R. Sattler, ED VARD B. Wiseman. MDCCCLXXXIX. C. WILLIAM Corbin, Harry R. Woodall. MDCCCXC. George K. Axdersox, John T. Hoover. William D. Matheson. mdcccxct. Ju N de la R. Barrios, G. Edwin Lefevre, Charles H. Corbin, Joaquin Prieto R. electrical. William H. Hubbard. 79 Ha-c)ing no (Shapl-cp al l ehigh. F. W. B. Pile, G. P. Miller, . A. H. Babcock, A. H. Frazier, . J. B. CULLUM, A. L. McClurg, J. A. McClurg, G. B. Zahniser, De fa Psi. Phi Kappa Psi. Zeta Psi. Delta Psi. Delta Tan Delta. Delta Tan Delta. Delta Tan Delta. Delta Tan Delta. 4 Si:in7rnar2. X ATH A tr HAX AT 2X •J-FA l ' 4 Ae sx NO CHAP. TOTAL Resident, . . 7 — — II I — — 5 7 3 3 37 Post-Graduate, — I 4 — - — — I I 9 Senior, . . . 6 I I 6 2 4 6 6 2 2 4 2 42 Junior, . . . 3 3 5 7 3 3 I — 3 4 ' I I 35 Sophomore, . . 3 I O 5 4 6 4 5 2 3 3 2 40 Freshman, . . 6 I 3 7 -i 3 5 3 3 5 4 3 45 Electrical, . . 2 — I — I — — — 3 I I — 9 Total, 27 7 16 36 15 16 16 19 21 19 17 8 217 80 - O au IBcto IPi. 4 !aipha of Tznnz2 vD.m3.M %.dvizov2 ommitlfee. Wallace M. Scudder, ' 73, Henry S. Jacoby. ' 77, ©ffieerz. Henry S. Jacoby, ' 77, Fred. P. Spalding, ' 80, Edward H. Williams, Jr., ' 75- Charles N. Butler, ' 88, James B. Glover, ' 88, Charles Bull, ' 78, Augustus P. Smith, ' 84. President. Vice-President. Corresponding Secretary. Recording Secretary. Treasurer. -«tEau IBem l?v TDemberz. 1869. Miles Rock. 1870. George A. Jenkins. John M. Thome. 1871. Frank L. Clerc. 1872. George P. Bland, James S. Polhemus. 1873- Wallace M. Scudder. 1874. William D. Hartshorne. 1875. Arthur E. Meaker. Edward H. Williams, Jr. 1876. Henry Richards, Charles L. Taylor. 1877. Henry S. Jacoby. Lewis T. Wolle. 1878. Charles Bull, Frank P. Howe. 1879. R. H. Tucker. 1880. Murray M. Duncan, Fred. P. Spalding. 1881. Charles W. Grey. 82 i882. Charles C. Hopkixs. 1881. George F. Duck, Alfred E. Forstall, Nathaniel O. Goldsmith, Edwix F. Miller, Richard R. Peale. Harry K. Myers, Theodore V. Birney, William H. Dean, Lewis J. H. Grossart, Solomon J. Harwi, Simeon C. Hazleton, Robert W. Barrell, Benjamin A. Cunningham, Milton H. Fehnel, John B. F. Hittell. John V. LaDoo. 1884. James A. Watson. 18S5. John B. Price. 1886. Augustus P. Smith. Irving A. Heikes, 1887. Henry G. Reist, John H. Spengler, Edwin S. Stackhouse, Joseph K. Surls. Walter A. McFarland, Mason D. Prat t, Elmer E. Snyder, Harry H. Stoek., Henry A. J. Wilkens, Frank: Williams. 1888. Charles N. Butler, Philip H. DeWitt, Manuel V. Domenech, Louis P. Gaston, James B. Glover, Charles D. Larshall. Charles H. Miller. 83 ' Phi IBcM ' Kappcn The Rt. Rev. M. A. DeW. Howe, D.D., LL.D. Henry C. JohnsoxV. A.M., LL.B., . Edward H. Williams, Jr., A.B., A.C., E.M., William K. (Iilleit, A.M., Milton H. Fehnel, Charles F. Zimmele, . . . . President. I Icc-Presidciit. Cor. Secretary. Treasurer. Recordi7ig Secretary. Assistant Treasurer. 84 l hi IBe a appa. George Pomeroy Allen, William K. Gillett, Mark Antony DeW. Howe, Herbert Parvin Jerrell. Henry Clark Johnson, Harvey Sheldon Kitchel, Edward Hh;ginson Williams. Jr. K3embcpz. 1 87 1. W. H. McCarthy. 1878. Frank P. Howe. 1880. Thomas Hughlett Hardcastle. John Daniel Hoffman, Preston Albert Lambert, Robert Grier Cooke, Robert Packer Linderman, 1883. Henry Allebach Porterfield, Richard Rembrandt Peale. Augustus Parker Smith, Lewis Buckley Semple. Charles Ellsworth Clapp, George Rodney Booth, Harry Toulmin, M. Antony DeWolfe Howe, Jr., George Arthur Ruddle, William Patterson Taylor. Milton Henry Fehnel, Harvey Sheafe Fisher, Garrett Brodhead Linderman, Wade Hampton Woods, Charles Frederic Zimmele. 1888. Albert George Rau, William Lynville Neill, Charles McCombs Wilkens. 1889. Samuel Erwin Berger, William Dollowav Farwell. rtllilliam S. Ijamberton, 1B.!fl. OlLLIAM A. LAMBERTON was born in Philadeli hia on the 26th of November, 1848. He entered the University of Pennsylvania in September, 1863, and left in April, 1867; was granted the degree of Bachelor of Arts without examination in June of the same year. Mr. Lamberton enlisted in the United States Army and was detailed as clerk in the War Department, April, 1S67. In September he was honorably discharged to accept the appointment of Instructor in Mathematics in the University of Pennsylvania, from which position he resigned a year later; and in September, 1869, was made Instructor in Latin and Greek in the Lehigh University. He was appointed Instructor in Mathematics in September, 1873, and Professor of Latin and Greek four years later. In March, 1880, the two departments were separated and Prof. Lamber- ton occupied the chair of Greek. He has taught various other branches in the literary courses at different times. His lectures on Christian Evi- dences to the Class of ' 87 were pronounced among the finest ever de- livered in the University on any subject. He has written a number of articles for reviews and magazines. His Notes on the Sicilian Expedition of Thucydides (Books VI. and VII.), published several years ago, were very favorably received by the scholars of the country. Prof. Lamberton resigned, December, 1887, and thereby the University has lost a teacher who was honored and respected by every student in the institution, and whose reputation as a gentleman of sound scholarship and unquestioned ability is widespread. He is now at the Johns Hop- kins University, Baltimore, Md. 86 ! — - fe-. Xlnivzvzit Sunday. June iqth, i88; IBaeealaureal ' e ZzTmoiq DELIVERED BY The Rt. Rev. Nelson S. Rullson, D.I). Psalms viii : 4-6. and Hebrews ii ; 8-9. - Alumni T)a2. June 22, 1887. Tiddvzzz Before the Tilumm BY Gen. Francis Walker, LL.D. Subject — The L. bor Problem. 87 TuKSDAv, June 21, 18S7. CVtrss Pociii, Prophecy, Toast — Class of ' Sy, ©rder of ' E ereizcs. MUSIC. Introductory Address, . . Charles C. Jones, Class President. Toast — The Unhicrsity, .... ALEXANDER BONNOT. L uh ' crsity Cheer. MUSIC. Charles P. Pollak. MUSIC. Ge(3rge T. Richards. MUSIC. Samuel D. Langdon. C ass Cheer. Procession to the Steps. MUSIC. . NiSSLEV J. WllMER. MUSIC. Harry H. Stoek. MUSIC. Procession to the Chapel. MUSIC. . Otwav O. Terrell. MUSIC. Oration, Iw Oration, Tablet Oration, •(21azz of ' 88. Tuesday Evening, June 21, 1887. Frederic Haves Kxorr, William Donaldson Beattv, Howard Leoser McIi.vain, (jEoroe Reade Baldwin, Hughlett Hardcasti.e, Charles Philip Coleman, James Struthers Mack, William Bradford, George Steinmax Franklin. T ditTomzzcz. Mrs. Robert A. Lamberton, Mrs. William H. Chandler. Mrs. Robert P. LindeRxMan, Mrs. Elisha P. Wilbur, Mrs. William B. Mvers, Mrs. Rollin H. Wilbur. Charles Philip Coleman. Frederic Haves Knorr, John Hoff Millholland, Charles Lambert Addison, Daniel Livermore Mott. 89 Xlni ' ozrzil! ' T)ci June 23, 1887. ©pdcp of E ' ereizez. MUSIC. Reading of Scriptures and Prayer Bv THE Rt. Rev. M. A. De Wolfe Howe. D.D., LL.D.. Bishop of the Diocese. MUSIC. Satiitatory Oration. . . . H.A.RRV Harrness .Sioek. The Dark Continent. MUSIC. Oration, ... . Robert Hexrv Phii.i.ip.«:. The Age of Engineering. Oration, .... ChaRLE.S FREDERIC ZiMMELE. LoT e of Country. MUSIC. Oration, ..... John Mvers Howard. ■ ' The Labor Problem. Oration, ..... Harvev Sheaee Fisher. Man ' s Inhumanity to Matt. MUSIC. Oration, tuith the ] aledictory Addresses, . MiLTON Henrv P ehnel. Civi ised and Uncivilized. MUSIC Award of the Wilbur Scholarship to John Lockett, first in rank in the Sophomore Class, with honorable mention of .Samuel Jirii ' in Berger, to whom was awarded the Wilbur Prize. Award of Certificates for the Advanced Course in Electricity. 90 Conferring of Degrees upon the Members of the Class of iSSj. B.A. +ALFRED DOOLITTLE, HaRVEV SHEAFE FISHER, Kenneth Frazier. B.Ph. Charles Frederic Zimmele. Garrett Brodhead Linderman. B.S. Milton Henry Fehnel, +Wade Hampton Woods, C.E. Alexander Bonnot, Robert Henry Phillips. +BENJAMIN Amos Cunningham, Charles Pope Pollak, John Benj. Franklin Hittell, Mason Delano Pratt, James Wesson Kittrell, +Evan Turner Reisler, Frederick Bowman Langston, George Thomas Richards, +JOHN Walter LaDoo, Elmer Ellis Snyder, Harry Smuller Meily, Nissley Joseph Witmer, James Alexander Morrow. M.E. Julian Carter Buckner, Samuel Davis Langdon, Eugene Diven, George Francis Pettinos, Henry Stevens Haines, Jr., John Warwick Scull, John Myers Howard, Otwav Owen Terrell, William Frederick Kiesel, Jr., August Julius Wiechardt, +GEORGE Frederic Yost. B.M. ROBERT Webb Barrell, Edward Power Van Kirk. B.S. (In Mining and Metallurgy.) Charles Colcock Jones, Harry Harkness Stoek, Harry Benjamin Charles Nitze, Henry August Julius Wilkens, ■RuFUS King Polk, +Frank Williams. A.C. Charles Austin Buck, +Frank Stuart Smith. E.M. William Anthony Lydon, B.M. ( ' 86), Priestley Toulmin. B.M. ( ' 86), Edwin Stanton Stackhouse. B.M. ( 86). Benediction. MUSIC. Of equal rank with the Valedictorian. E.xcused from speaking t Excused from speaking. ©pcmation of (Saleuluz.- (Slaz2 of ' 89. Wednesday Evening, June 22, 1887. F ' ART I. THE TKIAL. CHARACTERS. Judge, L- C. Taylor. Prosecuting Attorney, . . . . E. Diebitsch. Attorney for the Defence, . . . A. T. Throop. Clerk of the Court, . . . . . C. Walker. witnesses. J. Hug-Lass Dorster, . . . • J. D. Forster. John Dockett, . . . • • J- Lockett. Earl Flunkmuch, . . . • F. J. Carman. B. E. Serger, . . . . • . S. E. Berger. Dr. Meefront Main, . . . . C. H. Deans. Court Crier, ...... H. R. Woodall. Sheriff P. Atkinson. Priest, ...•••• W.D. Farwell. ED VARD Olney Calculus, . . . C.W. Schwartz. Jury, Clerks, Deputy Sheriffs and Guards. F ' ART II. THE F ROCESSION. PART III. THE CRENIATION. ORDER OF EXERCISES. MUSIC. Reading of the Death Warrant, . . The Shicrikk. Binding the Prisoner to the Stuke. Prayer, The Priest. Song, .....■■ The Choir. Applying the Torch, ..... The Sheriff. Song. The Choir. (Sommil ' l ' ce. Arch Johnston, John T. Morrow, William D. Farwell, A. Lincoln Rogers. 92 (Spemal ' ion of E. Q. (Saleuluz. Translated from La Gazette de Police. (Srime and T wful l etribul ' ion ! GREAT EXCITEMENT IN A PENNSYLVANIA BOROUGH! COMMONWEALTH OF LEHIGH IN TURMOIL! Zophomopez Tivznqzd mHE flourishing Commonwealth of Lehigh, in the Borough of South Bethlehem, County of Northampton, and State of Pennsylvania, was recently thrown into a fever of excitement by the partially successful at- tempt of a fiend, calling himself Edward Olney Calculus, to exterminate the whole of a certain community known as the Class of ' 89. The ex- act details of the terrible affair were ascertained by our special corres- pondent, and we are enabled to present the full account with all its revolting particulars. According to the most plausible theory of the crime, it is evident that it was a darkly-conceived and well-executed conspiracy, which may have been originated by some of the Lords of the Commonwealth, in order to crush the constantly increasing energy of ' Eighty-nine in conduct- ing aggressive sophomoric operations towards their fresh and puerile neighbors, the members of ' Ninety. It is even rumored that the deed was done with the direct cognizance and approval of the Lord High Mathematician. But whatever the mysteries surrounding the conception of the crime, it is indisputable that E. O. Calculus was the immediate agent. The morning of June nth. 1887. dawned beautiful and bright, and 93 beheld the whole community of ' Eight-nine assembled in the Hall of Chemistry, where H„S is wont to be made by Henry and the kid, according to the rules of the laboratory. It may be supposed that the members of the class were deeply affected by memories of former days when, in this same sacred place, they learned the secret of the demise of Mrs. Lucas, and the mysteries of the everlasting pill. While they were under this stress of intense emo- tion. Calculus took advantage of his opportunity and made his murderous attack. It was not, indeed, an assault against flesh and blood, but was an attempt to utterly dethrone the reason and judgment of his victims. The first onset was truly terrible. Strong and stalwart men (e.g. H-ss-) rushed from the scene with weeping and tearing of hair and gnashing of teeth, while the stentorian voice of W — d-U died away in one expiring gasp of ' ' nihilo iiiliil fit. In four hours the slaughter was completed, and a careful calculation showed that twenty-five distinct intellects were ruined beyond all i)ower of recognition. The crime caused great consternation in the Common- wealth, and especially in the community of ' Eighty-nine. Indignation meetings were held at many different points, and the mourners attempted to drown their sorrows in copious libations of Charley ' s Head-Ache Cure. Lynching was strongly talked of, and was seriously contem- plated, but better counsels prevailed, and it was decided to hold a fair and impartial trial, in order to prove to the Lords of the Commonwealth that the members of ' Eighty-nine were still law-abiding citizens. The Court convened in the Forum of Music ( . c. , the Lehigh Skating Rink) on the evening of June 22d, 1887, Judge Taylor, of Rhode Island, presiding. Witnesses had been subpoenaed from all parts of the United States, and the Forum was crowded. It was, in truth, a wierd scene. The judge and jury were seated in state in the court room, and could be dimly discerned through the clouds of smoke which emanated from the torches of the freshmen. The gods of electricity had been propitiated by the friends of Calculus, and had refused to illuminate the scene, hence a combination of torch, coal oil and freshmen was improvised for the occasion, and the trial proceeded. The chief interest centered in the testimony given by Hug-lass Dorster, Earl Flunkmuch, and Dr. Main, of Harvard University. 94 The prosecution opened with a scathing indictment of the prisoner, which was ably sustained by the testimony of Dorster and Dockett. The defence set up the usual plea of temporary insanity, and attempted to establish it by proof that the prisoner had often acted in a totally in- explicable manner. To off-set this, the prosecution introduced Dr. Main of Harvard, an expert in brain debility, who stated that he had had experi- ence in this line with the Class of ' 90 and ' Eighty-eight ' s Epitome Board, and as this was considered sufficient guarantee of his qualifications, his testimony was accepted . By means of an instrument of his own device, called by him a ' brainyscope, he tested the prisoner ' s cranium, and found that the crime was fully premeditated and executed in cold blood. Previous testimony had shown that the ancestors of Calculus were villains of the deepest dye, and this the defence attempted to deny, but without success. The argument for the prosecution was conclusive, and after a masterly charge to the jury from Judge Taylor, they retired, and without hesitation returned a verdict of murder in the first degree. The sentence was that the prisoner should be hanged by the neck, and his body disposed of by cremation. In order that the curiosity of the public might be gratified, the pris- oner was marched around the Forum, preceded by the guards in Roman uniform, and accompanied by his spiritual adviser. Owing to the opposition of Old Probabilities, the execution took place in the Forum instead of at Execution Square. The ceremony of .suspension was performed with neatness and celerity, and all that re- remained of Edward Olney Calculus was laid aside to be cremated when the elements were agreeable. The witnesses withdrew ; the torches burned still more dimly, and gave forth noxious carbonaceous vapors ; the devotees of Bacchus made Rome howl and daubed the town with vermilion ; the darkness of night and the steady fall of the gentle rain made the walking disagreeable for the wandering mourners, but in the heart of every ' Eighty-nine man there was a feeling which ever and anon forced from the lips a yell of horrible dimensions and fiendish glee — ' Ekihtv-nine is .avf.X(;f.d, and Cal- culus IS NO MORE 1 95 SefC)iee for thz (Sonzeeparioi} OF ' IHE 4 Packer TDemorial Church. i FdUXDEK ' S Da -, (XlOBER 13th, 1887, Ar II A.M. ©rder of E ' ereises. Meeting of the Bis iop at the entrance to the Church by the President of the University and the Board of Trustees. Reading of Psalm. Bishop presented ruith the Resolutions of the Board of Trustees acknowledg- ing the gift of the Church. Prayer by the Bishop. Reading of Sentence of Consecration. Hymn. Order of Daily Morning Prayer. Hymn. Ante-Communion Service. Hvmn. Sermon l)y Bishop Henry C. Potter. Prayer. Hymn. Benedict ion . 96 January 26. 1888. P raxklix House, Eastox, Pa. J. W. STONE. Jr., Toastmaster. Class of ' 90. .... Our Alma Mater, .... Cane Rush, ...... Our Foot-Ball Team, The Faculty, ..... Athletics, Our Nine, . Our Future. . The Ladies. The Band, The Frexch Sectiox. Fraterxities, . A. H. ' ax Cleve. F. Clarke, Jr. S. S. Martix. W. H. Beck. C. E. Coxe. . C. C. Tomkixson. G. K. Axdersox. C. H. Miller. J. S. B. Hollixshead. V. P. Cleyelaxd. D. Emery. G. E. Greexe. (Bommitl!cc of ppangcments. J. V. Stoxe, Jr., Chairman, C. E. CoxE. S. S. Martix, D. Emery, A. H. Vax Cleye. 97 February 13, i Franklin House, Easion, Fa. %oo.ztz. W. E. FERTIG, Toastmaster Class of ' 91, Class Photos, . The University, . Our Foot-Ball Team, The Ladies, Future of our Class, The Faculty, Our Banquet, . The Bethlehem Police, . Odd Numbers, . . H. T. Morris. C. H. Simpson. . W. FORSTALL. . J. P. Rafferty. . M. B. Augur. J. W. Welsh. . G. S. Hayes. C. J. Coll. R. H. Zimmerman. C. Lp:oser, Jr. (Bomminzz of Tivvcinqzrmnfz. J. p. Rafferty, Chairman, C. J. Coll, C. Lt:osER, Jr., S. M. Graham, J. R. Barrios, E. A. QuiER, W. E. Fertk;. 98 Junior (Dral ' opieal onizzi. (glass of ' sg.i Wednesday Morning, February 22, 1888. Judges. William Griffith, C.E. Harry A. Butler, B.S., John D. Hoffman, B.A. IProgramme. Proc£Sszonal. Prayer. Oration-- The Uses of Heroesr • _ • John Thomas Morrow. America. Oration-- Nature and Manufactures, . . Edgar Campbell. ' •T w Star Spangled Banner. Oration-- The Uses of Heroes, . WILLIAM DOLLOWAY Far vell. -Union Song. Oration-- The Next Centennial, AUGUSTUS THOMPSON Throop. -Hail Columbia. Oration--The Uses of Heroes, . •__ • Pearce ATKINSON. IVashifigton. T)eei2ion of Judges. Fir ' t Prize . ■ William Dollonyay Farwell. Second Prize Pearce Atkinson. Third Prize, . ■ John THOMAS Morrow. 99 4 (2hroniele of E- enlJS. Feb. 22. Junior Oratorical Contest : Class of ' 88. March 26. First day of Winter Sports. April 2. Second day of Winter Sports April 15. Installation of Pennsylvania Eta of the Phi I ' )elta ' I ' heta Fraternity April 22. Base-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs Johns Hopkins. April 23. Base-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs. Dickinson. April 28. Base-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh ' 93 vs. Lafayette ' 90. April 30. Lacrosse, Hoboken : Lehigh vs. Stevens. April 30. Base-Bal ' , Easton : Lehigh vs. Lafayette. May 6. Base-Ball, Reading; Lehigh vs. Reading. May 7. Base-Ball, Carlisle : Lehigh vs Dickinson. May 7. Lacrosse. South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs. University uf New York. May 13. Base-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs. Stars. May 14. Spring Sports. May 14. Base-Ball, New Brunswick: Lehigh vs. Rutgers. May 18. Lacrosse, South Bethlehem ; Lehigh vs. Rutgers. May 19. Lacrosse, AUentown : Lehigh vs. Allentown. May 21. State Inter-Collegiate Sports, Philadelphia. May 21. Lacrosse, South Bethlehem: Lehigh vs. Brooklyn Athletic Club. May 26. ' Eighty-eight ' s .£ (7;« issued. May 28. Inter-Collegiate Sports, New York. June 2. Installation of the Pennsylvania Alpha of Phi Beta Kappa. June 6. Installation of Alpha Rho of the Sigma Chi Fraternity. June 19. University Sunday. June 21. ' Eighty -seven ' s Class Day. Junior Reception. June 22. Alumni Day : Address by Francis A. Walker, LL.D. President ' s Reception. Sopho- more Cremation — Class of ' 89. June 23. University Day. Sept. 14. College Opened. Oct. 8. Cane Rush : ' Ninety vs. ' Ninety-one. Oct. 8. Foot-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs. Swarthmore. Oct. 13. Founder ' s Day : Consecration of Packer Memorial Church. Fall Sports. Founder ' s Day Hop. Oct. 14. Foot-Ball, Easton: Lehigh ' 91 vs. Lafayette ' 91. Oct. 15. Foot-Ball, Princeton: Lehigh vs. Princeton. Oct. 22. Foot-Ball, Carlisle : Lehigh vs. Dickinson. Oct. 29. Foot-Ball, South Bethlehem : Lehigh vs. Lafayette. Nov. 12. Foot-Ball, Philadelphia: Lehigh vs. University of Pennsylvania Nov. 23. Foot-Ball, Easton; Lehigh vs. Lafayette. Nov. 24. Foot-Ball, Elmira : Lehigh vs. Cornell 1888. Jan. 26. Sophomore Class Supper, Easton. Feb. 13. Freshman Class Supper, Easton. Feb. 14. Musical and Dramatic Entertainment. Feb. 22. Junior Oratorical Contest — Class of ' 89. March 2. Lafayette Winter Sports, Easton. 100 Arcadia Established February, iS F. W. B. Pile, ' 86, H. M. Carson, ' 89, F. L. Crammer, ' 89, F. DuP. Thomson, ' 90, W. E. Howe, ' 89, W. K. Gillett. l cfircd IQembePZ. C. O. Haines. F. H. Purnell, A. S. Reeves, Richard H. Davis, M. A, DE Wolfe Howe, Jr., C. Belmont Davis, E. E. Stetson, G. R. Booth, Kenneth Frazier, A. H. Frazier. Honorary TDemberz. Rev. Geo. Pomeroy Allen, D.D., L. Clarke Davis, J. Davis Brodhead, W. W. Thurston, Edward P ' ales Coward. %hz Swopd and (Spcsecnt JUNIOR SOCIETY. fQzmbzvz. RuFUS K. Polk, Henry B. C. Nitze, Frank F. Amsden, Henry A. J. Wilkens, Frank Williams, Wade H. Woods. George P. Miller, Wyndham H. Stokes, George S. Franklin, William D. Beatty, Louis P. Gaston, Hubert A. Bonzano, Allen H. Babcock, William Bradford. Charles W. Moffett, Thomas S. Leoser, William E. Morris, Clarence Walker, WlLLL M D. FaRWELL, Charles H. Boynton, John S. Kellogg, Jr., Arnold K. Reese, Wallis E. Howe. Xightecn (Blub. - l ehped fDembers. J. B. Price, E. M. McIlvain, A. P. Shaw. G. W. Snyder. H. L. Bowman, C. E. Clapp. E. E. Stetson. L. C. Smith. L. Bravo. l esidenl ' Members. R. H. Wilbur, G. B. Linderman. F. H. Knorr, C. p. Coleman, R. P. Linderman. W. A. Wilbur. ' etivc TlQembePS. G. S. Franklin, R. H. E. Porter. C. W. Schwartz, Jr., H. Hardcastle, C. E. Coxe. W. a. Stevenson. ' Delt ' a Phi (Shezs ©lub. H. B. C. NiTZE, H. A. J. WlLKENS, A. N. Palmer, R. S. Perry, H. M. Carson, J. T. Morrow, A. K. Reese. F. L. Grammer. 103 Established 1625. Leonardo Bravo y Castro, A. X. Palmer, h. A. J. Wilkens. H. B. C. Nitze. C. H. BOYNTON, J. vv. Flack, Jr. Tibzznl! TDembers. H. B. Douglas, A. Jardine, c. L. Flack. 104 %hz ' Kepula. - (Dramoz. R. H. Wilbur. E. E. Stetson, S. D. Langdon, K. Frazier, J. M. Carter, Jr. F. H. Knorr, L. C. Smith. ' Kerala. WvNDHAM H. Stokes, Charles E. Coxe, RuFUS K. Polk, William A. Stedman, Jr. ' K John S. Kellogg, Jr., George S. Franklin, Charles H. Bovnton, William E. Morris. ©lub Hizpano- mcrieano. Manuel V. Domenech. Juan de la Cruz Escobar. losE Ramon Villalon y Sanchez, G. Edwin Lefevre, TuAN de la Rosa Barrios, Enrique Francisco Lefevre, Emanuel Chao. Jo.aquin Prieto Rico. Founded as ihe Sigma Alpha. 4 1Qu ©hapl ' er. Established iS l esidenl ' TQcmhzvz. C. p. Coleman, ' 88, A. B. Wadleigh, ' 89, F. H. Knorr, ' 8 P. S. Webb, ' 89. 1 02t-2enior2. R. K. Polk, H. A. J. Wilkens, W. H. Woods, W. D. Beattv, H. A. Bonzano, W. H. Stokes, A. H. Babcock, G. S. Franklin, Seniopz. (}. p. Miller. F. F. Amsden, H. B. C. NiTZE. F. Williams. H. Hardcastle, W. A. Stevenson, G. R. Baldwin, W. Bradford, H. L. McIlvain, Juniors. C. H. Bovnton, W. Butterworth, A. K. Reese, C. W. Schwartz, Jr., C. Walker, C. W. MOFFETT 2ophomope2. I ; 6 II Z 1 + N M : d Y X b K n. ocLS ORffLI 7 M .? K c A M •; c X !I = N JE D z O P L + m iE ff ; II Y Tff z II X W. E. How e. T. S. Leoser, W. D. Farwell, W. E. Morris, F. L. Grammer, C . e : T ffi s 4 K 11 L M 4 h J K 5 ' M I .5 2 V R K ff 7 11 G ; II $ 7 X + o h — L d 8 ff ![ II M s T M b 5 2 9 I 8 X b cU7SOa;A4 ' 106 ill % Charles L. Addison, George R. Baldwin, George P. Connard, Howard L. McIlvain, John H. Millholland, William Butterworth, William D. Farwell, Thomas S. Leoser, A. Lincoln Rogers, Allan M. Masser, C. Herbert Miller, Walton Forstall, Charles McK. Leoser, Jr. Edwin A. Ouier, Mercer B. Tate. 107 - Pawnee Eating (Slub. •is 2aehem. Charles P. Coleman. TQappiopz. William A. Stevenson, HUGHLETT HaRDCASTLE, Robert H. E. Porter, Leonardo Bravo, Jose R. Villalon, Robert S. Mercur. TDedieine TClan. James W. Flack., Jr. Zquaws. John B. Whitehead, Robert C. Segur. Fappooses. Murray B. Augur, Ralf R. Hillman, Edgar R. Reets. -: %hc (Balumel (Slub. - Founded 1885. CHEER : P« c Koja; Kua; Kua;. PuK Kua Koja Kua . ' Oiijoi ' niijot Tlapa 3a ' v. Calumet ! : 1D0embeP2. F. H. Knorr, G. S. Franklin, A. E. Lewis. Jr., C. W. Schwartz, Jr., C. E. CoxE. P. Drayton, H. E. Atkins, C. N. Robinson, G. E. Meilv. W. H. Stokes. H. A. BONZANO, W. E. Morris. W. E. Howe. A. C. Howard. E. H. Coxe. H. S. Eckert, H. Wadleigh. 109 Established iS L. R. Zollinger, P. Atkinson, H. S. Morrow, C. J. Parker, L. C. Taylor, R. M. Dravo, C. E. Fink, J. W. Stone, Jr. F. Clark, Jr., A. E. Juhler, W. H. Beck, W. Jennings, A. H. Van Cleve. Founded i Ah YELL: H ! Ah I ' m next on that ! !?letiT?e ISembePZ. R. P. Barnard, J. J.-LlNCOLN, C. H. Miller, ' 88, T. A. Straub, A. T. Throop, W. T. Patterson, W. F. Dean, F. D. Ermentrout, J. Z. Miller, F. R. Coates, A. Eavenson, T. F. Newby Ijafe and ' Earl WAR CRY: Hoo Ray ! Hoo Ray! Who ' s First? Coffee! Latez. Mr. J. B. Mackintosh, G. P. M., J. B. CuLLUM, Senior P. M.. F. R. DuRANT, Junior P. M., G. B. Zahnizer, G. H. Lynch, A. L. McClurg. ' Earl z. F. N. Whitney, A. M.. J. A. McClurg, F. K. Leslie, H. H. Davis, W. Cresson, F. K. Morris. Tschigh Univerzif hoip. Oi TO C. Blkkhardi, ' Albert G. Rau, ' 88, Charles H. Boyntox, JOHX T. Morrow, ' 89, ' 88. Wallis E. Howe, Special. Herbert Wright, ' 90, William Jennings. ' 91, Frank K. Leslie. ' 91. Joseph W. Welsh, ' 91. IBasses. Arnold K. Reese. ' 89, Chas. W. Schwartz. Jr., ' 89. Lester C. Taylor. ' 89, James B. Cullum, ' 90. Ralph Goodman, ' 90. Frank W. Ritchey. ' 90, Henry Wadleigh. ' 91. Henry C. Carter, Special. ♦ -ic XJnwe?zif2_ ©lee (Blub.- ©ffieepz. Albert G. Rau, Charles W. Schwartz, Jr., Arnold K. Reese, Dirccto)-. Business Ma im Secy and Treas. Musical Committee, Harry H. Stoek. Alber ' i G. Rau. Harry R. Wadleigh. Yodler, V. Bltterworth. First Tenors, O. C. Burkhardt, A. G. Rau, A. H. Babcock, I). H. Jenkins. First Basses, H. H. Stork, M. H. Fehnel, A. K. Reese, H. R. Wadleioh. Second Tenors, J. T. Morrow, C. H. B nNTON, F. K. Leslie, H. WRKJH ' r. Second Basses, H. S. Miner, C. W. SCHXYARIZ. Jr. L. C. Taylor, R. Goodman. Leader, Mr J. Fred. Woi.le. 114 5 !IBanjo and (Euil ap (Slub. E. K. MacNutt, J. V. Anderson, C. H. Miller, ' 89 V. M. Webb, J. V. Anderson, G. Ayres, G. R. Baldwin, J. E. Cochran, F. H. Davis, R. R. HiLLMAN, E. K. MacNutt, W. P. Cleveland. ©ffieerz. Membzvz. Banjos. A. N. Palmer. Guitars, Mandolins, President. I ice-President. Secy and Treas. Business Manager. R. P. Barnard, W. BUTTERWORTH, C. H. Miller, ' 89, W. D. Matheson, A. K. Reese, W. M. Webb, H. R. Woodall. A. M. xMasser. %hz Band. Okgamzeu 1 S7. ©ffieepz. w. p. W. D. C. H. E. U. Cleveland, ' 90, Matheson, ' 90, Detweiler, ' 90, GiBBS, ' 90, President. Secretary. Treasurer. Director. IDemberz. Piccolo, J. C. Escobar, ' 91. Eb Clarionet, E. U. GiBBS, ' 90. First Bb Clarionet, L. A. Round, ' 89. Solo Bb Cornet, W. P. Cleveland, ' 90. First Bb Cornet, W. D. Matheson, ' 90 Solo Eb Alto, H. C. Yoi ' Nc;, Elec. Trombone, T. A. Straub. ' 90. Second Tenor, R. Goodman, ' 90. Bb Base, D. Emery, ' 90. Tuba, C. H. Detweiler, ' 90. .Snare I) nun, J. E. LriCH, ' 90. Bass Drum, F. W. RiTCHEV, ' 90. - Delta Fhi ( uartet t e. )s First Tenor, J. T. MORROW. Second Tenor, C. H. BOYNTON. First Bass, A. K. REESE. Second Bass, H. H. Stoek. Vzi XIpzilon ( uartct ' t ' c. G. R. Baldwin, Banjos, Mandolin, A. M. Masser. Guitar, F. H. Davis. W. BUTTERWDRTH. Seneea !IBanjo (Slub.js A. N. Palmer, C. H. BOYNTON, W. E. Howe. R. C. Segur, A. K. Reese, M. B. Augur, First Banjos, Mandolin, J. T. Morrow. Second Banjos, Guitars, J. W. Anderson, H. B. C. NiTZE. W. A. Stedman, Jr. R. R. Hillman, H. A. J. WiLKENS, F. R. DURANT. 117 Lehigh PublieaMonz. ■ %hz Epitome. Published Annually by the Junior Class. %hQ ' 89 tBoard. Edito) - in - C i icf, William D. Farwell. Btisiness Manager, Arch Johnston. Secretary, Augustus T. Throop. William Butterworth, Charles H. Deans, Clarence Walker. Artists, Herbert M. Carson, John Lockett, Wallis E. Howe, Louis A. Round. .%Yiz Engineering Zoeiel - •Editors for fhz Zoeiel ' . H. S. Jacoby, ' ■]■], Corresponding Editor. ]. B. Glover, ' 88, A. T. Throop, ' 89, L. R. Zollinger, ' 88, Business Manager. The Journal is issued quarterly by the Engineering Society, and contains abstracts of the proceedings of its meetings, selections of papers read before the Society, and papers and communications from professors and alumni of the University. 118 Published Semi-Monthly during the College Year. Editor-in-Chief, WvxDHAM H. Stokes, Business Managers, Louis P. Gaston, Clarence Walker, ' i Manuel ' . Domenech, William A. Stevenson, ' I Howard L McIlvain, ' i Harlan S. Miner, ' 88, William D. Farwell, Charles H. Boynton, ' i Herbert M. Carson, i Wai.lis E. Howe, Charles E. Coxe, ' 90, Allan M. Masser, 90, Joseph W. Stone, Jr., ' 90. Thos. C. J. Bailey, Jr., ' 90. 119 •K ©ffieepz. c. H. Davis, President. H. H. McClixiic, . Vice-PresideiU. C. J. Parker, Secretary. L. R. Zollinger, Treasurer . A. T. Brue(;el, . Librarian. Tilemberz. F. F. Amsden. E.M., K. K. Polk, E.M., F. Williams, E.M., ' . H. Woods, E.M.. A. T. Bruegel, M.E.. G. H. Davis. C E., W . Bradford, C.E., H. A. BONZANO, C.E., C. H. Miller, C.E., G. p. Miller, C E., O. Rickert. C.E., H. H. McClintic, C.E., C. E. Raynor, C.E., D. L. MoTT, C.E., H. Palmer, C.E., c. J. Parker, C.E., W . A. Stevenson, M.E J- B. Glover, M.E., S. V. Frescoln. C.E.. w . D. Beattv, CE., M. , L. Bvers. C.E., R. Daniels, C.E., S. H. JKNCKS, C.E.. H. M. Wetzel, C.E., W . P. Richards, C.E., v . L. Wilson, C.E.. s. Yamaguchi, C.E.. J- S. Mack, C.E., G. P. Dravo, M.E., J- H. MiLLHOLLAND, C.E, V. S. Davis, C.E., J. R. ' lLLALON, C.E. A. T. Throop. C.E., C. H. Deaxs, C.E., J. J. LI ' COL C.E., R. M. Dravo, E.M., A. D. Oberlv, C.E.. C. W. Hudson, C.E.. C. E. Hesse. E.M., P. Atkinson, M.E., J. T. Morrow. M.E., H. R. WOODALL, E.M., L. R. Zollinger, C.E. L. C. Taylor, C.E.. A. V. Stockett, C.E E. DiEBITSCH. C.E., R. P. Barnard, C.E.. F. L. Grammer, E.M.. T. F. Xewbv, C.E.. A. M. Smyth. E.M., H. M. Carson, M.E.. G. W. Harris, E.M., C. P. Turner, iM.E., E. A. Wright, C.E. -««-Uhe THining (Slub. ©ffieepz. Prof. E. H. Williams, Jr. Frank Williams, H. H. Stoek. President. V he-President. Sec ' y and Treas. F. W. B. Pile. R. W. Barrell, H. B. C. Nitze, C. W. CORBIN, J. W. Dou gherty, TDembeps. S. C. HaZ ELTON, Instructor. POST-GRADUATES. F. Williams. senior. L. P. Gaston. juniors. R. K. Polk. H. H. Stoek. H. a. J. Wilkens, .A. K. Reese, C. Walker. Eleetpieal Engineering Soeict . Established i8 W. F. Dean. H. C. Young, . R. O. Heinrich, ©ffieepz. . P)-csidcut. 1 ' tec-President. . Str ' v a)id Trcas lOembcpz. Albert Brodhead, W. F. Dean, F. R. Durant, Herman Frauenthai R. O. Heinrich, J. A. Horner, W. H. Hubbard, D. H. Jenkins, C. J. Miller, J. L. Moore, C. N. Robinson, J. P. Ryon, R. C. Segur, H. M. Seitzinger, C. W. White, H. C. Young. I ECT ICAL ENGINEERX SOOJETf WN a V V£RS SS7- 8SS ' CH. O O. r ' iVffiCf .Tifi %hz (Shcmieal Soeiel ' OF •%hz Lehigh Unit erait - KSTABLISHED 1871. ©ffieerz. W.M. H. Chandler, Ph.D.. F.C.S., President. H. S. Miner, Vice-President. J. S. Kellogg, Jr., . Secretary. H. L. MClLVAIN, Treasurer. C. Herbert Miller, Librarian. T. S. Leoser, Curator. TlOembePZ. Wm. H. Chandler, Ph.D., F.C.S. Professor of Chemistry. 1888. H. L. MClLVAIN, H. S. Miner, H. S. Neiman. 1889. F. J. Carman, J. S. Kellogg, Jr., W. E. Morris. 1890. W. P Cleveland, T. S. Leoser, C. Herbert Miller. 123 - TlSuzl apd and (Sheezc- ©ffieepz. Arnold K. Reese, . RoBT. H. E. Porter, Charles H. Bovnton, Chas. W. Schwartz, Jr., John T. Morrow, . President. I ice-President. Business Manager. Stage Manager. Musical Director. E eeuti-oe (SommiWee. TJie above officers. Wvndha.m H. Stokes, William D. Farwell. TQembePZ. F. W. B. Pile, H. B. C. NnzE, L. M. P. Gaston. W. Bradford, F. L. Grammer, Clarence Walker, R. R. Hillman, W. Butterworth, J. S. Kellogg, Jr., H. M. Carson, M. B. Augur, H. R. Wadleigh, C. E. CoxE, Percival Drayton. 124 Established January, 1888. ©ffiecps. W. R. Sattler, Presidetit. H. K. Laxdis, Secretary. L. A. Round, . Treasurer fOembcrz. S. Yamaguchi, c. iM. Breder, E. H. DuViviER. F. R. Coats, T. S. Leoser, F. K. Houston, J. W. ANDERS(JN, G. C. Landis, T. F. Newby. R. W. Smith, A. W. Stock ETT, J- L. Langdon, P. Atkinson, J. Prieto, A. Brodhead, C. H. Simpson. 125 %hz %lnivz?zit2 ©uild.- Organized i8 Thk Rr. Rev. N. S. Rulison, D.D., Thk Rkv. a. W. Snndkr, tlonoyarv Pycsidcnt. . Ho)iorayv I ' icf-l ' rcsiiieiit . €)ffieeps. H. Palmer, I ' ycsidcnt. Pearce Atkinson, I ' icc-Preside it. V. Louis Grammer, Secy and Treas. fiBembePZ. M. L. Byers, C. H. Miller. H. H. Stoek, D. S. Mo ' ir, O. Rickert, R. S. Perry, C. E. Raynor, L. R. Zollinger, H. M. Carson, C. Walker, A. D. Oberly, A. K. Reese, A. H. Bates, C. H. BOYNTON, W. E. Howe, J- S. B. Hollinshead A. N. Palmer, W . A. Stedman, Jr., F. R. Fischer, F. K. Houston, E. H. Prindle, G. K. Anderson, W. C. Perkins, F. S. Camp, P. M. Paine, A. E. JUHLER. J- A. Colwell, 126 ►(2hcer2.- Hr)(), Rah. Rav I H )(), Rah, Rav ! H ' rav! H ' rav! H ' rav ! Lehii;h L-3 X V-2 I ' ElGHTV-SEVEX OF LEHICH Ho, Yah, He! Ho, Yah, He! i8 OF THE ' Varsity ! L-E-H I-G-H ! Lehioh ! Rah, Rah, Rah ! Rouge et Noir ! We cry, We cry ' 89 Lehigh ! Rah, He, Hi! Rah, He, Hi! _I_ ; E-T-Y Lehigh ! Rah, Rah, Rah ! X— C— I Noxaginta Unus OF Lehigh ! 128 4 Inl ep-SoUegial e ©ffieerz. 1887. Randolph Faries, University of Pennsylvania, President. F. B. Stevens, Stevens Institute, ' ice- President. W. M. Spalding, Princeton, Secretary. L. D. Godshall, Lafayette, Treasurer. 1888. W. H. Seward, Jr., Yale, .... President. R. K. Polk, Lehigh, .... Vice-President. A. L. Doremus, C. C. N. Y., . . . Secretary. C. E. Seitz, Lafayette, .... Treasurer. !?Tlthlel ie T lssoeiation of IPenn ' aj ©ffieerz. i« 7. L. D. Godshall, Lafayette, . . • President. H. A. DUBBS, Franklin and Marshall, . . Vice-President. R. K. Polk, Lehigh, ..... Secretary. W. A. Davis, Dickinson, . . . Treasurer. 1888. R. K. Polk, Lehigh, .... President. W. P. Harvey, Swarthmore, . . • Vice-President. A. W. Cummins, Lafayette, .... Secretary. W. D. Boyer, Dickinson, . . . Treasurer. q 129 1)1 ' I III-: lntcr=(Sollegial ' e Ijhlel ' ie zsoeiation, ON THE Manhattan Athletic Club Grounds, N. Y., May 28, 1887. I. Mile Run, 1. roo Yards Dash, 3. Brnaif [iiiiip, 4. Mile Walk, 5. Putting the Shot, 6. 4 0 Yards Dash, 7. Half Mile Run, 8. Two Mile Bieycle Raee, 9. 120 Yards Hurdle Race, 10. 220 Yards Dash, 11. Running High fuinp. 1 2. Tug-of- War, 13. Throwing til e Ha miner, 14. P A ' Frt ' , Record Broken. W. Harmar, Yale, C. H. Sherrill, Yale, T. G. Shearman, Yale, H. H. Bemis, Harvard, A. B. COXE, Yale, S. G. Wells, Harvard, R. Faries, Univ. of Penna., L. J. KOLB, Univ. of Penna., W. H. LuDiNGTON, Yale, E. H. Rogers, Harvard, W. B. Page, Jr., U. of P., Columbia, A. B. CoxE, Yale, L. D. GODSHALL, Lafayette, 4 min. 36 3-5 sec. 10 3-5 sec. 21 ft. 7 1-2 in. 7 min. 16 sec. 4o ft. 9 1-2 in. 53 3-5 sec. 2 min. 7 sec. 6 min. 53 1-5 sec. 17 2-5 sec. 23 sec. 5 ft. 10 3-4 in. 3 in- 98 ft. 6 in. 10 ft. Second Snnual ' Field TDeehng OF THE Int er-CEollegial e Sthletie S.szoeial ' ion of IPenn ' a, ON THE Grounds of the University of Pennsylvania, West Philadelphia, May 21, 1887. 1. 100 Yards Dash, C. Thibal lT, Univ. of Penn., 103-4 sec. 2. 220 Yards Dash, C. Thibault, Univ. of Penn., 24 sec. 3. 440 Yards Dash, J. S. KULP, Univ. of Penn., 56 sec. 4. 1 20 Yards Hurdle Race, . H. SEAMAN, Swarthmore, 18 3-5 sec. 5. Half Mile Run, R. Faries, Univ. of Penn., 2 min. 8 sec. 6. One Mi ' le Run, R. Faries, Univ. of Penn., 4 min. 44 3-4 sec. 7. One Mile Walk, T. G. Grier, Univ. of Penn., 7 min. 21 4-5 sec. 8. Two Mile Bicycle Race, L. J. KOLB, Univ. of Penn., 6 min. 5 1-2 sec. 9. Tng-of-War, Lehigh, 3 1-2 in. 10. Putting Shot [16 lbs.), J. H. I OHRBACK, Lafayette, 38 ft. 5 1-2 in. 1 1. Throwing Hammer, Geo. Brinton, Univ. of Penn., 95 ft. 3 in. 12. Pole Vault, L. D. GODSHALL, Lafayette, 9 ft. 7 1-2 in. 13. Running Broad fuiiip, GEO. Brinton, Univ. of Penn., 19 ft. 6 1-2 in. 14. Running High Jump, W. B. PAGE, Jr., U. of P., 6 ft. i 1-4 in. 15. Standing Broad Jump, . D. WEBSTER, Swartlimore, (oft. i 1-4 in. Record broken. SUMMARY OF PRIZES. FIRSTS. SECONDS. University of Pennsylvania, ID 4 Swarthmore, 2 6 Lafayette, 2 2 Lehigh, .... I I Dickinson, I Franklin and Marshall. 131 ' Pall I ' hleJie TDeehng OF THF, Chester (Sit Sriekel ' (Sluta, Oct. 15, 1887. I 1-2 sec. T. F. New BY, Lehigh, 10 1-4 sec Mtle Bicycle Race i n tj „.r . . , t i • i ,, j ,,, R. P. Barnard, Lehieh, 3 nun. i? sec. { landtcap), - j 3 Ha f Mile Run ) r-uAr,TT,. tuu ,- ' ,,, C. H. Miller, Lehieh, 2 min. 12 sec. {scratch), T1V0 Mile Bicycle 1 t u u . , . , ■.r i u- 1 (. r 1 J- J.. R- i ■ Barnard, Lehieh, 6 min Race { lanaicap), 100 Yards Dash I (Iiandicap), Tte -of- War, Swarf li- ,,.,,, .,. ' r !■ I Lehu;h, 4 1-2 in. j iore 71s. Lehigh. Mile Run {scratch), C. H. MiLLER, Lehigh, 4 min. 58 3-4 sec 440 I ards Dash t t t i „ t u • u {handicap), s i ' J LINCOLN. Lehigh, 51 2-5 sec. %f;f?5 f ' ' ■ ' ' 3 in. Lehigh Tiig-of-lVar Team, A. T. Throop, Anchor, J. J. Lincoln, R. P. Barnard, E. H. Beazell, Drop. OF THI-; liafa eWe (Bollege TiH hlctie T zsoeial ion, Friday Evening, March 2, 1888. T o Yards Dash, J. S. Ensor, Lafayette, 5 1-5 sec. (Second, T. F. Newby, Lehigh. J Tug -of -War, Le- I , 1 -• 1 „ T f r Lehigh, 2 1-2 in. htg i vs. Lafayette, Half Mile Run, C. H. Miller, Lehigh, 2 min. 17 sec. (Walk-over). Running High funip, T. S. L RCH, Lafayette, 5 ft. 5 1-2 in. [Second, M. L. Byers and A. W. Stocreti, Lehigh. | Lehigh Tiig-of- War Team. A. T. Throop, Anchor, H. K. Landis, J. R. Davis, J. J. Lincoln. 132 lnl ' CP=(Sollegial ' e %znmz Uournamcnl ' , New Haven, Conn., Oct. 8 and 9, 1887. SINGLES. First Roimd, Porter, Lehigh, beat Brooks, Amherst, . . . 6-3, 6-2. GiLLETT, Lehigh, beat Davidson, Amherst, . . . 6-4, 1-6, 6-1. Sccomi Round, Shaw, Harvard, beat Porter, Lehigh, .... 6-4, 6-3. Brinlev, Trinity, beat GiLLEir, Lehigh, . . . 6-4, 6-2. Final Winner, Se.ars, Harvard. DOUBLES. First Round, LUDINGTON et HURD, Yale, beat Porter et Gillet]-, Lehigh, 6-1, 2-6, 6-2. Final Winners, Ludington and HuRD, Yale. llQiddle Sl al e lntep=(2ollegial ' e tennis ' oupnamenl ' . Philadelphla, Oct. 15, 1887. SINGLES. Second Round, Gillett, Lehigh, beat Marshall, Swarthmore, . . 6-0, 6-0. Tlizrd Round, ScoiT, U. of P., beat Porter, Lehigh, . . . 2-6,6-1,6-1. CoATES, U. of P., beat Gillett, Lehigh, . . . 6-2, 6-1. doubles. CoATEs et Thomson, U.of P., beat Porter et Gillett, Lehigh, 6-1, 6-4. 133 Sl ' hlel ' iez. - }T seems, in the popular opinion and the notice of the world, that ath- letics mark the onward progress of an institution of learning equally with, if not more than, its reputation for scientific knowledge and research. Thus to-day we hope that our Alma Mater is not only becoming better known for her solid learning, but also for her athletics. Looking back at our necessarily humble beginning, we are pleased to notice the vast im- provement made. We have profited by our defeats, acquired greater re- liance on ourselves, and still more, have advanced by laying aside those petty jealousies so destructive to everything with which they come in contact. Summing up then our work of the past year, we see our base- ball, lacrosse, foot-ball and tennis in a more prosperous condition than ever before. The effects of training are evident. In foot-ball, we have had our fair measure of success and have been able to win, for the first time, several games off the home grounds. It seemed almost a fated season for us, as so many promising and old experienced men were incapacitated by unfortunate accidents, which no doubt had their weakening effect on the team. By the loss of the guiding hand of our last year ' s captain, the team was especially handicapped. In lacrosse, the team was beaten only once and defeated some of the best teams of the country, thus showing its qualifications to enter the League. Its admission into the League showed in what esteem it was held and the name it had acquired in such a short season. Now that the team will this year play Harvard, Princeton, and the other members of the League, the University itself will attract the notice of men who are themselves proficient in this sport. With many of our last year ' s team still in the University, we can, without doubt, look forward to a continu- ation of its deservedly won success. 134 In base-ball, we have certainly advanced and have lost some of that tendency to go to pieces at critical points in the game. The series of inter-class games helped to raise an enthusiasm in this branch which it had not known before. With the addition this year of a cage for train- ing our pitchers and catchers, we can look .to a good start being made and of being in good condition to cope with other college teams at the commencement of each season. Already we are beginning to move out of the rut into which it seems we were destined to be fixed. In tennis, we have maintained our place, and although not most success- ful at the inter-collegiate tennis meeting, still we can hope to keep our front place in this State. In our other sports, records are being continually broken, and ere long we hope to be able to contend succe.ssfully with the larger colleges at the inter-collegiate meeting and do ourselves credit. 135 Founded 1875. Qffiecvz. C EORGE H. Davis, ' 88, .... President. Arch Johnston, 89, . . . . Seeretary. Charles C. Tomkinson, ' 90, . . . Treasurer. A u nin ' . E. H. Williams, Jr.. B.A., E.M., ' 75, E. F. Miller, M.E., ' 83, R. P. Lfnderman, Ph.B., ' 84, R. K. Polk, B.M., ' 87. Undcr-Graduatcs. G. H. Davis, ' 88, A. Johnston, ' 89, C. C. Tomkinson, ' 90, S. M. Graham, ' 91, VV. Bradford, ' 88, H. H. McClintic, ' 88, Captain Foot-Ball Team, Captain. Base-Ball Teatn, R. H. E. Porter, ' 89, A. K. Reese, ' 89, President Laivn Tennis Assoeiation Captain Lacrosse ' Team, C. F. Seeley, Acting Director of Gymnasium. Withdrawn from the Athletic Association, February, 1888. 136 Eourth tQinfer TDeel ing OF THE Tsehigh Uni-cersil ' I ' hleJie T szoeial ' ion, Held in the Gvmxa.siu.m. FIRST DAY— MARCH 26, 18 RiDining High Jump, Swingztig Rings, Putting Shot (16 lbs.). Horizontal Bar, Hitch and Kick, Tumbling, Spring-Board fjcmp. Fencing, Middleweight Sparring, G. C. LaiN Feather Weight Sparring, G. Hart, ' 88. Light Weight Wrestling, C. H. Ml LEER, Heai ' v Weight Wrestling, G. Ayres, ' 89. WINNER. RECORD R. J. JOXES, ' 89, 5 ft. 2 3-4 in. L. A. ROUXD, ' 89. J- V. LaDoo, ' 87. 34 ft. I in. L. A. Round, ' 89. R. J. Jones, ' 89, 8 ft. 2 5-8 in. J- S. B. Hollinshead, ' 90. C. H. Miller, ' 88, 7 ft. II 1-4 in V. Mendoza, ' 90, 5-0. G. C. Landis, ' 89 SUMMARY BY classes. ■87. •88. ■89 First Prizes, I 3 6 Second Prizes, . 2 3 4 138 Eoupth tdintep TlSeehng OF THE Tsehigh ' Uni- erzit Sthletie Zilzzoeiat ' ion, Hkld IX THE Gymnasium. SECOND DAY— APRIL 2, 1887. 1. Standing High Jiiinp. R. J. JONES, 89, 4 ft. 6 1-2 in. 2. Parallel Bars, L. A. ROUND, ' 89. 3. Fence ] anlt, E. H. Beazell, ' 90, 6 ft. 4 9-10 in. 4. Z ' Vault, M. L. Byers, ' 88, ' 8 ft. 8 1-2 in. 5. Running High Kick, R. J. JONES, ' 89, 8 ft. 8 in. 6. Rope Climbing, C. E. Ray ' NOR, ' 88, 14 4-5 sec. 7. Broad-Sword, J. M. Kittrell, ' 87. 22-9. 8. Ttig-of-War, ' 8g vs. ' go, ' Eighty-nine, 6 1-2 in. 9. Middle Weight Wrestling, C. H. Miller, ' 88. 10. Light Weight Sparring, E. P. VanKirk, ' 87. 11. Heavy Weight Sparring, O. O. TERRELL, ' 87. 12. Featherweight Wrestling, . L. Byers, ' 88. Record broken. SUMMARY BY CLASSES. ' 87. ' 88. ' 89. ' 90. First Prizes, ....3441 Second Prizes, . .0231 TcriAL PRIZES FOR BOTH MEETINGS (WINTER). ■87. ' 88. ' 89. ' 90. First Prizes, . 4 7 10 3 Second Prizes, .25 71 139 spring TDeel ' ing OF THE Ijehigh Xlnivzvzif ' I ' blst ' ie TilszoeiaMon, Ox THE Grounds of the A.ssoctaiiox, May 14, 1887. EVENT. WINNER. RECORD. I. oo Yards Dash, T. F. Newbv, ' 89, 1 1 1-5 sec. 2. 440 Yards Dash, C. H. Miller, ' 88, 55 2-5 sec. 3- TiL ' o Mile Bicycle Race, C. H. Miller. ' 90. 7 min. 50 sec. 4- 5- Thrcnuing Base-Ball, 220 Yards Dash, G. S. MiSH, ' 90, R. J. Jones, ' 89. 296 ft. 4 in. 25 sec. 6. Half Mile Run, C. H. Miller, ' 88, 2 min. 194-5 sec. 7- 8. 9- Running High Jump, Putting the Shot, Thrcnuing Lacrosse Ball, R. J. Jones, ' 89, J. W. LaDoo, ' 87, John Lockett, ' 89, 5 ft. 1-2 in. 35 ft. 6 in. 324 ft. I in. 10. Pole Vault, M. L. Byers, ' 88, 9 ft. 8 1-2 in. II. Otic Mile Walk, 0. C. BURKHARDT, ' 88, 8 min. 38 2-5 sec. 12. TJiroiuing the Hammer, J. W. LaDoo, ' 87, 76 ft. 1 1-2 in. 13- Running Broad Jump, R. K. Polk, ' 87, 17 ft. 8 1-2 in. 14. One Mile Run, C. H. Miller, ' 88, ' ' ' 4 min. 52 sec. 15- 120 Yards Hurdle Race, R. K. Polk, ' 2 7, 19 1-5 sec. 16. Tug-of- War, ' 8g vs. ' go. ' Ninety, 5 in. Record broken. SUJ kIMARY BY classes. First Prizes, . Second Prizes. ■87. ' 88. 4 5 I 2 89. ' 90. 4 3 5 5 140 •©all lOeet ' ing OF THE Ibehigh Vnnivzvzil I ' ls is szoeial ' ion, On thr Grounds of the Association, October 13, 1887. 1. oo Yards DasJi, 2. Running HigJi Jump, 3. Pole Vault, 4. Putting the Shot, 5. 220 Yards Dash, 6. Otte Mile Walk, 7. Half Mile Run, 8. i ' o Yards Hurdle Race 9. 77£ Mile Bicycle Race, 10. o Yards Dash, 1 1 . Thrmving the Hammer, 12. Rtenning Broad Jump, 13. C ;? i ZA ' 7?z , T. F. Newb y, ' 89, M. L. BVERS, ' 88, M. L. BvERS, ' 88, J. W. Douoherty, ' 89, T. F. Newby, ' 89, F. R. CoATES, ' 90, C. H. Milter, ' 88, M. L. Byers, ' 88, R. P. Barnard, ' 89, C. H. Miller, ' 88, F. A. Weihe, ' 90, T. F. Newby, ' 89, C. H. Miller, ' 88, 14. Tug-of- War, ' Sg vs. ' go, ' Eighty-nine, SUMMARY BY CLASSES. RECORD. 1 1 sec. 5 ft. 2 in. 9 ft. I 1-2 in. 32 ft. 2 1-2 in. 25 sec. 9 min. 45 2-5 sec. 2 min. 23 sec. 19 2-5 sec. 7 min. 35 3-5 sec 55 4-5 sec. 70 ft. 5 in. 17 ft. 2 1-2 in. 5 min. I 5 sec. (Walk over.) 6 1-4 in. First Prizes, . Second Prizes, 141 M%lmvz? 2 ii2 ean .r H. Palmer, ' 88, c, G. S. Franklin, ' 88. p., C. Walker, ' 89, s. s., H. H. McClintic, ' 88, i b., C. R. Phillips. ' 89, 2 b., G. K. Anderson, ' 90, 3 b.. B. A. Cunningham, ' 87, 1. f., (capt.) W. Jennings, ' 90, c. f., E. R. Hopkins, ' 90, r. f. Johns Hopkins vs. Lehigh, Dickinson, vs. Lehigh, . Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Reading vs. Lehigh, Dickinson vs. Lehigh, Stars vs. Lehigh, Rutgers vs. Lehigh, . Epsshman Game. Lafayette ' 90 vs. Lehigh ' 90, . . April 28. .S. Bethlehem, 15-18. ■nzz Placed. SCORE. April 22, S. Bethlehem, 22-20, . April 23. S. Bethlehem, 13-6. April 30, Easton, 12-6. . May 6, Reading, 12-2. May 7, Carlisle, 10-9. . May 13, S. Bethlehem, 17-38. May 14, New Brunswick, 8-12. 142 (BldiZZ Baze-IBall eamz - 1887. ' 8T ' eam. C. p. PoLLAK, c, B. A. Cunningham, 3 b. J. W. KiTTRELL, p., R. K. POLK, S. S., J. W. Scull, i b., . j. w. LaDoo, 1. f., J. C. BucKNER, 2 b., c. C. Jones, c. f., E. P. ' an Kirk. r. f. ' 88 %2am. M. L. Bvers, c. f., w. Gates, Jr., 1. f., G. H. Davis, r. f., h. H. McClintic, i b., (capt.) C. W. FOCHT, s. s., W. L. Neill, 2 b., G. S. Franklin, p., h. Palmer, c, A. C. Spotts, 3 b. ' 89 eam. W. BUTTERWORTH, 2 b., R. H. £. PORTER, S. S.. A. L. Rogers, p., a. K. Reese, 3 b., J. W. Dougherty, c, C. Walker, 1. f., C. R. Phillips, i b., F. D. Campbell, c. f., C. V. MOFFETT, r. f. ' 90 nJeam. S. S. Martin, c, g. K. Anderson, 3 b. W. Jennings, p., (capt.) M. B. Tate, s. s., J. T. Hoover, i b., A. M. Masser, 1. f., J. E. Litch, 2 b., M. Chace, c. f., E. R. Hopkins, r. f. ' Eighty-eight won the Championship. H3 4 !I:nter-T)ining (Slub 13ase-13all 4 T3eague. Arnold K Reese, . . . President. Clarence Walker, .... Vice-President. WVNDHAM H. Stokes, . . . Secretary. William D. Beatty, .... Treasurer. Champions of the Inter-Dining League. W. K. GiLLETT. c, C. Walker, p., (capt.) C. W. Moffett, I b., J. S. Kellogg, Jr., 2 b.. R. K. Polk, s. s., W. D. Beatty, 3 b., F. Williams, 1. f., F. D. Thomson, c. f., F. F. Amsden, r. f. (galumet ISase- ' Ball ©lub. G. S. Franklin, p., (capt.) W. E. Morris, 3 b., M. Chace, c, a. E. Lewis, Jr., s. s., F. H. Knorr, I b., W. Bradford, 1. f., C. E. COXE, 2 b., C. W. SCH YARTZ, JR., C. f. H. Wadleigh, r. f. Qridiron IBase ' Ball Slub. A. K. Reese, c. (capt.) H. H. Stoek, 2 b., J. T. MORRO V, p., F. L. ( RAMMER, 3 b. H. S. Meily, s. s., D. Castleman, 1. f.. C. H. Boynton. I b., H. M. Carson, c. f., H. B. C. Nitze, r. f. 144 Gacrb; %aep02se. R. W. Lee, ' 88, goal, W. Bradford, ' 88, point, H. M. Carson, ' 89, cover point, F. L. (iRAMMER, 89, first defence field, R. P. Barnard, ' 89, second defence field, Adolph HoEHLlNG, ' 89, third defence field, David Castleman, ' 90, centre, J. W. Anderson, ' 90, third attack field, J. M. Howard, ' 87, second attack field, Kenneth Fraziek. ' 87, first attack field, A. K. Reese, ' 89, (capt.), second home, C. H. BOYNTON, ' 89, first home. Qames IPla ed. Stevens vs. Lehigh, New York University vs. Lehigh, Rutgers vs. Lehigh, Allentown vs. Lehigh, . Brooklyn vs. Lehigh, SCORE. April 30, Hoboken, 2-3- May 7, S. Bethlehem, 4-2. May 18, S. Bethlehem, 0-12. May 19, Allentown, 1-6. May 21, S. Bethlehem, 2-3- 145 1887. AfiiJtager, R. K. Polk. ' 87. Rns icrs, S. S. Martin, ' 90, (centre) J. P. RAFFERTY, ' 91, J- W. DOUGHERTY, ' 89. G. H. Davis, ' 88. H. Palmer, ' 88, H. M. Wetzel, ' 88, F. Williams, •87. (Jiiarh-r Back, C. Walker, ' 89. Half Backs, A. Long. ' 89, C. W. Corbin, ' 89, (capt. B ' tiH Back, O. Rickkrt, ' 88. Sicbsf fufcs, C. H. Boynton, ' 89. W. H. Beck, 90, C. H. Detweiler, ' 90, M. Chace, ' 90, S. M. Graham. ' 91. R- P- Barnard, 89. D. Emery, ' 90. 147 (Sla22 Eoof-IBall %zcimz. 1887. ' 88 eam. G. S. . L. Neill, H. Davis. W. Frescoln, Rushc7-s, H. S. Miner, (centre) C. H. H. E. Ravnor, Palmer, (capt.) M. Wetzel. Quarter Back, C. H. Miller. 0. Rickert, Ha f Backs, Full Back, A. E. Lewis, Jr. C. L. Addison. R. B. HOXEVMAN, Substitutes, 0. C. BURKHARI)! ' ' 89 %zd.m. A. R. T. T. Throop, p. Barnard, F. Newby, Rushers, A. Johnston, (centre) G. A. C. AVRES. K. Reese, Walker. Quarter Back, C. H. BOVNTON. A. Loxc;, Half Backs, Full Back, J. W. DOUGHERT C. W. CoRiux, (ca A. L. Rogers, Substitutes, J. L. BUDD. 148 J- J. Lincoln, ' go eam. Rushers, S. S. Martin, (centre and capt.) F. R. Coaxes, C. H. Detweiler, R. S. Mercur. F. W. Ritchev, E. H. Beazell, E. V. Pratt. (Jiinrfer Back, A. M. Masser. Half Backs, D. Emery, V. H. Beck. FieH Back, V. L. Fairchild. Sttbsf tufes, M. Chace, F. K. Houston, V. S. Cope, W. C. Shoemaker. ' 91 %Zdim. Rushers, J. P. Raffertv, (centre) G. ' . Chandler, R. Schmitz, C. H. CoRBiN, J. B. Beck. Jr., H. Wadleigh, W. E. Fertig. Quarter Back, J. A. COLWELL. Half Backs, E. Vander Horst, G. S. Mish. Fiill Back, S. M. Graham, icapt.) Substitictes, P. Drayton, J. B. Buckley, L. R. Shellenberger. lass (Eames. SCOKE. ' Ninety VS. ' Ninety-one, . . Nov. 3, . . 12-0. ' Eighty-eight vs. Eighty-nine, . Nov. 14, . . . 6-12. ' Eighty-nine vs. ' Ninety, . . Nov. 17. . . 24-0. The Juniors thus won the championship of the University. Erezhman (Same. Lafayette ' 91 vs. Lehigh ' 91, . . Oct. 14, Easton, . lo-o. 149 ' Eoot-IBall 2ca2on2. SiN ' CE I 1884. SCORE. Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Oct. 25, Easton, 50-0. Rutgers vs. Lehigh, Nov. I, New Brunswick, N.J., 61-0. Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Nov. 12, South Bethlehem, 34-4- Haverford vs. Lehigh, - Nov. 22. South Bethlehem. 36-12. 1885. University of Penna. vs. Lehigh, Oct. 10, Philadelphia, 54-0. Haverford vs. Lehigh, Oct. 17, South Bethlehem, 24-8. Lehigh vs. Lafayette, Oct. 31, South Bethlehem, 0-0. Stevens vs. Lehigh, Nov. 7, Hoboken, N. J., 20-4. Lehigh vs. Rutgers, Nov. 14, South Bethlehem, 10-5. University of Penna. vs. Lehigh, Nov. 18, South Bethlehem, ,5-0; Lehigh vs. Lafayette, - Nov. 21, Easton, 6-6. 1885. University of Penna. vs. Lehigh, Oct. 9, Philadelphia, . 26-4. Dickinson vs. Lehigh, Oct. 16, South Bethlehem, 0-26. Stevens vs. Lehigh, Oct. 30, Hoboken, N. J., 0-0. Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Nov. 6, Easton, . 12-0. Stevens vs. Lehigh, Nov. 13, South Bethlehem, 0-14. University of Penna. vs. Lehigh, Nov. 17, South Bethlehem, 0-28. Haverford vs. Lehigh, Nov. 20, South Bethlehem, 4-18. Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Nov. 24, South Bethlehem, 0-0. 1887. Oct. 8, South Bethlehem, . 0-24. Oct. 15, Princeton, N. J., . 80-0. Oct. 22, Carlisle, . . 0-20. Oct. 29, South Bethlehem, 4-10. Nov. 12, Philadelphia, . . 6-4. Nov. 23, Easton, . . 6-0. Nov. 24, Elmira, N.Y., . 10-38. Lehigh won 4, lost 3; scored 96 points against opponents and had 106 scored against her. 150 Swarthmore vs. Lehigh, Princeton vs. Lehigh, Dickinson vs. Lehigh, Lafayette vs. Lehigh, University of Penna. vs. Lehigh, Lafayette vs. Lehigh, Cornell vs. Lehigh, - 1jehigh IBie ele ©lub.- ©ffieerz. John H. Millholland, Ralph P. Barnard, John S. Riegel, C. Herbert Miller, Delevan Emery, President . Captain. Secy and Treas. Lieutenant. Biiir er. flOemtaePS. Ralph P. Barnard, Albert H. Bates, Otto C. Burkhardt, William S. Davis, Delevan Emery, John C. Finney, Eugene U. Gibbs, John S. Heilig, Robert B. Honeyman, John J. Lincoln, James S. Mack, C. Herbert Miller, John H. Millholland, Robert D. Millholland, Daniel McF. Moore, John S. Riegel. %ehigh ug-of-tOlap O eam. A. T. Throop, ' 89, Anchor, J. R. Davis, ' 90, C. W. Cor BIN, ' 89, H. M. Wetzel, ' 88, Drop. table showing the relative strength and development of the first ten men according to tests made at the LEHIGH university GYMNASIUM DURING THE YEAR 1886 AND 1 887 : NAME AND CLASS. A. T, THROOP, ' 89, G. C. LANDIS, ' qo, H. PALMER, -88, H. K. LANDIS, ' 90. C. H. DETWKILER. C. H. MILLER, ' 88, J. J. CLARK, ' 88. - H. M. WETZEL. ' 88, J. J. LINCOLN, ' 89,- F. WEIHE, ' 90, - DEVELOP- TOTAL CONDI- MENT. STRENGTH. TION. 535 2 loog 2 +474 .11 509 8 947 437 .6 537 8 914 I 376 •3 513 7 875 5 361 .6 555 5 873 7 318 7 507 7 853 8 346. 3 522 3 841 I 318. I 5 9 832 4 320. 6 512 7 829 I 3.6. 3 556 9 826 4 269. 151 Ijawn %znn z (Slub.- (Dffieepz. R. H. E. Porter. V. D Beattv, . A. C. Howard, Prcsuii ' itf. Vtce-Preszden . Secy and Treas. ' E: eeuh ' oe CommiWee. R. H. E. Porter. V. E. Howe. A. C. Howard. H embeps. H. B. C. XlTZE, ' 87, R. K. Polk, ' 87, H. A. J. WiLKENS, ' 87. W. Bradford, ' 88, W. D. Beatty, ' 88, H. A. BONZANO, ' 88, G. P. Conxard, ' 88, G. P. Dravo, ' 88, C. W. Focht, ' 88, G. S. Franklin, 88, L. P. Gaston, ' 88, A. E. Lewis, Jr., ' 88, H. H. McClintic, ' 88, G. P. Miller, ' 88, J. H. Millholland, ' 88, D. L. Mott, ' 88. W. A. Stevenson, ' 88, J. W. Anderson, ' 89, C. H. Bovnton, ' 89, F. L. Grammer, ' 89, J. S. Kellogg, Jr., ' 89, C. W. MOFFETT, ' 89, R. H. E. Porter. ' 89, A. K. Reese, ' 89, C. W. Schwartz, Jr., ' 89, W. E. Howe, C. Walker, ' 89, T. C. J. Baily, Jr., ' 90. A. Cardenas, ' 90, M. Chace, ' 90, J. B. Cullum, ' 90, F. E. Fischer, 90, F. K. Houston, ' 90. A. C. Ho VARD. ' 90. G. C. Landis, ' 90, S. S. Martin, ' 90, A. N. Palmer, ' 90, W. C. Perkins, ' 90, J. W. Stone, Jr., ' 90, F. DuP. Thomson, ' 90. M. B. Augur, ' 91, P. Drayton, ' 91, W. Forstall, ' 91, C. M. Leoser, Jr., ' 91, E. Vander Horst, ' 91, H. Wadleigh, ' 91, F. R. Durant, Elec, J. P. Ryon, Elec, W. A. Stedman, Jr., Elec. J. B. Whitehead, Elec, W. K. Gillett, Spec. Spec 13 H n Z o O o -j o z OF ' he Ijawn TEznniz ©lub. 2pping ' oupnamenl ' , COMMENCING MAY ig, 1887. SINGLES. R. H . E. Porter, ' , first, W. K. Gillett, Spec, vtw . A. H. Frazier, ' 89, third. DOUBLES. R. H. E. Porter, ' 89. et W. K. Gillett, Spec, ;.? . W. A. Stevenson, ' 88, et C. L. Flack, ' 89, second. all SJoupnamcnt, COMMENCING OCT. 5, 1887. singles. W. K. Gillett, Spec, _ frj , M. B. Augur, 91, second, W. A. Stedman, Jr., Elec, third. DOUBLES. R. H. E. Porter, ' 89, et W. K. Gillett, Spec, r.r , W. A. Stedman, Jr., Elec, et J. W. Anderson, ' 89, second. ' Hcft ' 2 Lawn %znTi z (Slub. W. K. Gillett, .... President. F. W. B. Pile, ..... Vice-President. J. S. Kellogg, Jr., .... Secy and Treas. IBembePz. C. W. MOFFETT, F. WiLLIAAL ' , W. D. Be. ttv, r. k. Polk. F. DuP. Thomson, w. H. Woods, C. Walker. ■53 ■— r--) (-1 C C « ■- CO H- I 5 e p fOp ' - ' ' - ' p iJi -iJ: - - ' vO i-n ' + ' — O _ t _ nvo LOCI — o n o o oocooooooooocooooooocoooooco-g ' ' OOCOOOCOg0200000COOOCOCOOOCO -OoOCO Tt • vo t CO O lA o ' ri ' - ■- 0 od m od oo ' r - Z, n fs) — — — — n M c M N f M ,P IU ,■ ; -, !- - . - -• - Ji . -.Cl o j:j W OJ 0! rt !U o 1_ V- CC T rt n3 nJ rt P- cfl TJ Ti K I X rt rt M- c rt u H-l Pi tf :i; JU O I en w til O E ffi ' 5 x 5 O c T (tT o J hJ J ■s L) ' V M [rl _1 ; Pi -J P 3 pa o V Oh Q Q 2; :?; (-1 K d: u ffi K ra w w w w ffi K J :k n3 03 oJ H - ' A w X ■ ' :x c : W W X X td COW ' ■ d Q Q fd fd (J p: ::S H J (J u a --s s;; s2 1 -- : ' ! ' ' , . o q:5 e i: o r ; C A t K K 2 -Ci, s - 2 ' b.S - S -S V ' :! v ' S S .5 ' S N 5; Qi J S , 5 § § = T T -l c • E = c •54 Oo S: .S S;- V,- , ,S ' ! J 0 Cf ? b3 h S $ ? § I S ? 5 I ' 3 l r H 7 cc?a 7dpdjd?orrni;n_2 2 ■r- t- P M r ' -r- w . en H W P w 2 03 • r X 2 S T3 B 2 S ?=3 5« ?c M M D a o ?o 2; W h % s 2 z V) 50 C o c ?o O t) w 3 M c p Q a ( 06 2  03 00 CO CO 00 y 1 -j •z f ' j vp c a: 3: H S CO CO O r 2 06 CO P ' CO O O 2 2 2 j: p CU ; - 10 41. i +. O 2 O 2 2 2 O [u o -o p ■ • 3. to „ — 3 p 4i. 2 2 2 2 2 „ P 03 P3 P PJ - to ( VO — — OJ OJ — CO CO CO CO CO CO CO 22 CO CO -- COOOOO,OOoo ' ° , -c _«00CO— — ooco COOO J J cocooo-M Co I OoCO-f vO tSk o o (5) o o t3 c oj ■ VJ vO -P _ VJl CO — , CO ' OJ — j _ j J -4 tj r: - ■ r ' 5 ' CC - to - 4- co l J 3 IJ -ri 10 — 3 3 5-3 3. 71 7 C 5 I C l fn to 155 - lilizt ' opieal TDcmopabilia. - [..EHIGH UNIVERSITY incorporated by the Legislature of Penn- sylvania in 1866. Founder, Asa Packer. Christmas Hall first used as a building for recitations, chapel and dormitories. Competition Scholarships were awarded from 1866 to 1870; Foundation Scholarships from 1867 to 1870. The first literary society, the lunto, established in 1868. Observatory erected by R. H. Sayre, Esq., in 1869. Packer Hall completed in 1869. In 1871 tuition was made free and scholarships were annulled. Chemical Society established in 1871. Wilbur Scholar- ship and Engineering Society established in 1872. Saucon Hall erected in T873. Athletic Association founded 1874. First ?wi?, issued by the Class of 1878, appeared in 1875. Library erected 1878. The Burr established 1881. First Junior Oratorical Contest 1883. Gymnasium opened 1883. Laboratory completed 1885. Wilbur Prize established 1887. Packer Memorial Church completed 1887. Henry Coppee, LL.D., .... 1865-1875. John M. Leavitt, D.D., .... 1 875-1 880. Robert A. Lamberton, LL.D., . . 1880. Oaledietorians. 1869. M. Rock. 1874. W . I). Hartshorne. 1870. W. R. Butler. 1875. E. H. Williams, Jr. I87I. W. H. McCarthy. 1876. C. L. Taylor. 1872. G. P. Bland. 1877. G. M. Heller. 1873- H. D. SCUDDER. 1878. R. H. Read. 156 1 879 1880 1881 1882 1883 R. H. Tucker. T. H. Hardcastle. L. Stockton. C. C. Hopkins. A. E. FORSTALL. 1884. A. P. Smith. 1885. I. A. Heikes. 1886. S. J. Harwi. 1887. M. H. Fehnel. Salul ' atorians. 1869 J- M. Thome. 1879. J- H. Paddock. 1870 w . G. Clapp. 1880. F. P. Spalding. 1871 F. L. Clerc. 1881. B. F. Haldeman 1872 F. R. C. Dec.exhardt. 1882. E. H. Lawall. 1873 R. B. Claxton. 1883. P. A. La.mbert. 1874 H. C. Wilson. 1884. L. B. Semple. 1875 E. W. Sturdevant. 1885. W . H. Cooke. 1876 R. W. Mahon. 1886. H TOULMIN. 1877 L. T. WOLLE. 1887. H. H. Stoek. 1878 H. F. J. Porter. laps. mnbuT Sehc 1874 W . D. Hartshorn E. 1882. C. C. Hopkins. 1875 A. E. Meaker. 1883. P. A. Lambert. 1876 C. L. Taylor. 1884. L. B. Semple. 1877 H. S. Jacobv. 1885. V . H. Cooke. 1878 L. J. Barr. 1886. J- K. SURLS. 1879 R. H. Tucker. 1887. H S. Fisher. 1880 M M. Duncan. 1888. S. W. Frescoln. I88I A. P. Crilly. 1889. TGan. J- L(JCKETT. dlilbup l pize 1889. S. E. Berger. Junior ©ral opieal IPnzzz. 1885. 1886. 1887. 1888. 1889. A. p. Smith. H. L. Bowman. C. A. Luckenbach. G. T. Richards. A. G. Rau. W. D. Farwell. SECOND. H. H. Hillegass. J. H. Wells. W. P. Taylor. H. S. Fisher. G. R. Baldwin. P. Atkinson. E. B. Wiseman. J. T. Morrow. 157 ' Prezident ' z of I ' hs Tillumni Tilzzoeial ' ion. 1876-187: 1877-1878 1878-1879 1 879-1 880 1 880-1 88 1 1881-1882 C. E. Donaldson. C. E. Donaldson. W. R. Butler. H. S. Drinker. C. W. Haines. C. L. Taylor. R. . Mahon. H. F. J. Porter. E. H. WiLLLAMS, Jr. E. H. Williams, Jr. W. yi. Scudder. W. M, Scudder. IPi zzidznt-z of I ' be ' E-ngineering Zoeizt ' . 1872-1873 1 873- 1 874 1 874- 1 87 5 1875-1876 1876-1877 1881-1882 R. B. Claxton, ' 73. 1882-1883 A. A. Herr, ' 74. 1 884-1 885 A. E. Meaker, ' 75. 1885-1886 E. H.Williams, Jr., ' 75. 1886-1887 L. T. WoLLE, ' 77. 1 887- 1 888 L. O. Emmerich, ' 82. X. O. Goldsmith, ' 83. F. B. Petersen, ' 85. H. G. Reist, ' 86. J. W. LaDoo, ' 87. G. H. Davis, ' 88. l rezidents of thz T Ll ' hlel ' ie Hzzoeiation. SINCE THE REORGANIZATION C. Whitehead, ' 85, C. E. Clapp, ' 86, R. K. Polk, ' 87, . G. H. Davis, ' 88, 1884-1S85. 1885-1886. I 886- I 887. 1 887- 1 888. epitome dil ' orz. 1878. H. F. J. P ;rter, F. p. Howe, M. P. Paret. 1879. M. M. Duncan, H. R. Lindkrman, (k.. J. H. Paddock. 1880. F. P. Spalding, F. C. Wooten, W. H. Bradbury. 1881. B. F. Haldeman, R. H. Lee, Jr., F. S. Phillips. 158 C. C. Hopkins, W. Briggs, G. Leighton, A. P. Smith, H. B. Douglas, [. W. Reno. J. D. Ruff 1883. W. T. Wilson. 1884. N. O. Goldsmith, R. R. Peale, R. P. Linderman, S. D. MORFORD, C. M. Tolman, T. W. Birney, C. F. Zimmele, C. E. Clapp, M. A. deW. Howe, Jr., W. H. Dean, J. K. SURLS, J. A. Watson. 1885. H. W. Rowley. W. H. Cooke, G. W. SxYDER, Jr. R. H. Davls, W. P. Taylor, S. C. Hazelton, R. S. Breinig. Artist, H. A. LUCKENBACH. 1885. Issued by the whole University. H. B. Douglas, ' 84. H. L. Bowman, ' 85, W. H. Cooke, ' 85, M. A. deW. Howe. Jr.. ' 86, G. H. Cobb, ' 86, H. S. Fisher, ' 87, G. W. Pettinos. ' 87. Artists, H. W. Rowley. ' 85, G. L. Lara, ' 86, K Frazier, ' 87, L. A. Round. ' 88. G. T. Richards, H. S. Fisher, F. S. Smith, K. Frazier, C. F. Zimmele, W. A. McFarland, L. B. Stillwell, H. H. Stoek. Artists, J. A. Morrow, H. A. J. Wilkens. 159 L. R. ZOLLINCiER, C. N. Butler, E. H. Shipman, C. L. Addison, W. D. Farwell, A. T. Throop, C. H. Deans, H. M. Carson, J. LOCKETT, W. H. Stokes. Artists, A. G. Rau, H. S. Miner. W. A. Stevenson, W. M. Webb. 1889. Artists, J. B. Glover, A. Johnston, W. Butterworth, C. Walker. W. E. Howe, L. A. Round. IBurp %di ovz. 1881-1882. MONTHLY. C. C. Hopkins, ' 82, Editor-in-Chief, N. O. Goldsmith, ' 83, Business Manao;er, J. D. Ruff, ' 82, R. R. Peale, ' 83, H. B. Douglas, ' 84, s. D. Morford, ' 84, A. P. Smith, ' 84. 1882-1883. N. O. Goldsmith, ' 83, Ma7iaging Editor, J. A. Watson, ' 84, Business Manager, F. H. Purnell, ' 83, H. A. Butler, ' 83, A. P. Smith, ' 84. H. B. Douglas, ' 84, C. M. Tolman. ' 85, F. W. B. Pile, ' 85. R. H. Davis, ' 86. 1 883-1 884. A. P. Smith, ' 84, Managing Editor, R. H. Wilbur, ' 85, Business Manager, H. B. Douglas, ' 84, c. O. Haines, ' 84, J. A. Watson, ' 84, I. A. Heikes, ' 85, W. H. Cooke, ' 85. M. A. deW. Howe, Jr., ' 86, R. H. Davis, ' 86, Wm. Wirt Mills, ' 87. 1884-1885. W. H. C(JOKE, ' 85, Managing Editor, C. E. Clapp, ' 86, Business Manager, G. W. Snyder, Jr., ' 86, M. A. deW. Howe, R. H. Davis, ' 86, Wm. Wirt Mills, 160 JR.. ' i ' 87. M. A. deW. Howe, Jr., ' 86, Managing Editor, Wm. Wirt Mills, ' 87, Business Manager, C. E. Clapp, ' 86, G. M. Richardson, K. Frazier, ' 87, W. H. Stokes, ' 88. R. McA. LovD, Elec. 1886-1887. F. S. Smith, ' 87, Managing Editor, C. P. Coleman, ' 88. BTisifu-ss Manager, A. Doolittle, ' 87, H. S. Fisher, ' 87, K. Frazier, ' 87, W. H. Stokes, ' 88, H. M. Carson, ' 89, W. D. Farwell, ' 8 W. E. Howe, ' 89. SEMI-MONTHLY. W. H. Stokes, ' 88, Managing Editor, L. P. Gaston, ' 88, ; „ . , C. Walker, ' 89, ( ' ' ' ' Managers, M. V. Domenech, ' 88, H. L. McIlvain, ' 88, W. A. Stevenson, ' 88, H. S. Miner, ' 88, C. H. BoYNTON, ' 89, H. M. Carson, ' 89. W. D. Farwell, ' 89, W. E. Howe, ' 89, C. E. CoxE, ' 90, J. W. Stone, Jr., ' 90. A. M. Masser, ' 90, T. C. J. Bailey, Jr., ' 90. Ediljorz of the Engineering Journal. 1885-1886. I. A. Heikes, ' 85. H. G. Reist, ' 86, B. A. Cunningham, ' 87, A. S. Ross, ' 86, Business Manager. 1886-1887. E. S. Stackhouse, B.M., ' 86, B. A. Cunningham, ' 87, L. R. Zollinger, ' 88, C. C. Jones, 87, Business Manager. H. S. J ago BY, ' ■]■], Corresponding Editor, J. B. Glover, ' 88, A. t. Throop, ' 89, L. R. Zollinger, ' 88, Business Manager. i6i ' he Brown and tQhil e. I .ET others don the Black and Gold. - Or wear Yale ' s ribbon Blue ; We all unite for Brown and White, To our own colors true. No Harvard Crimson floats aloft, Nor Blue and Red so gay. The Brown and White for Lehigh ' s men, Will always win the day. Maroon and White, for Lafayette, May all z ' s men unite ; But when we score a winning point. We cheer the Brown and White. And maidens fair in far-off States, And charming girls in town, In honor of Old Lehigh, wear Her colors. White and Brown. May Sophs, and Freshies ever aim To keep these colors bright ; And upper classmen never mar The matchless Brown and White ! Long may our Alma Mater live I Increasing be her fame ! May brain and muscle mark the men Who bear her honored name. Wherever Lehigh men may go — Or meet, the wide world o ' er. May memories of the Brown and White Recall some scene of yore : Some merry hour by Lehigh ' s side. When life was new and bright. When Techs and Classics rallied o ' er. And Icwed . Brown and White. 162 ■■ In other men we faults can spy. And .blame the mote that dims their eye : Kach little speck and blemish find : To our own stronger errors blind. ( uol ' at ' ionz. N. B. ■■ The editors are not responsible for any opinions expressed in these columns. No anony- mous communications published. Richards, ' 88 — On either side, he would dispute. Confute, change hands, and still confute. iSUODHEAD, Elec. — Be wise with speed ; A fool at forty is a fool indeed. Whitney, ' 91 — Now, in the name of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this, our Ca;sar, feed. That he hath grown so great ? u 163 Carter — He would not, with a peremptory tone, Assert the nose upon his face his own. FORSTALL, ' 91 — Of small anatomy and infinite precocity. BURKHARDT, ' 88 — And the wind blew through his whiskers. Johnston, 89 — Cares not a pin What they said, or may say. HOLLINSHEAD, ' 90 — Thou cherub, but of earth ; Fit playfellow for fairies by moonlight pale, In harmless sport and mirth. Dr. Coppee — Whose powers shed around him, in the common strife, Or mild concerns of ordinary life, A constant influence, a peculiar grace. Palmer, ' 88— All things I thought I knew. Harris, ' 89 — A man I knew who lived upon a smile ; And well it fed him ; he looked plump and fair. West, ' 91 — So young, so fresh, so fair. Coates, ' 90— To hear his girlish voice in laughter ring. But oh, ye gods, to hear him sing. SCHMITZ, ' 91 — Scared out of his seven senses. MiLLHOLLAND, ' 88 — His knowledge, hid from public gaze. He did not bring to view. Morrow, ' 89 — All gall is divided into one part. Dutch — Lo, all things can be borne. We bear it calmly, though a ponderous woe. Chief of Police Ache — Ye gods, it doth amaze me, A man of such feeble temper should So get the start of the majestic world. And bear the palm alone. Shipman, ' 88 — Subtle and penetrating; eminently a thinker. 164 Phillips, ' 90 — Oh he ' s as tedious As a tired horse, a raiUng wife ; Worse than a smoky chimney. CORBIN, ' 89 — My sceptre of rule is the spade I hold. Smith, ' 89, ' 90, ' 91, ' 91, ' 91 — One of the few, the immortal names, That were not born to die. H()llinshe:al), ' 90 — I awoke one morning and found myself famous. Barnard, ' 89 — He is no student made by learning pale. Yet still he holds a deal of science by the tail. S ' I ' OKES, ' 88 — I do loves poetry, sir, ' specially the sacred. For there be summut in it which smoothes a man ' s heart like a clothes brush. Alcoti ' , ' 90 — As heedless and idle as clouds that rove. Prof. Doolittle — For optics sharp, it needs, I ween, To see what is not to be seen. Frkscoln, ' 88 — The world knows nothing of its greatest men. LoCKETT, ' 89 — Think you a little din can daunt mine ears. Have I not in my time heard a mangoose roar? 8.5 Rule— Behold, we live through all things — famine, thirst, Bereavement, pain; all grief and misery. All woe and sorrow ; life inflicts its worst On soul and body, — but we cannot die Though we be sick, and tired, and faint, and worn, — Lo, all things can be borne ! Jenkins, Elec. — •■ Delicious verdancy ! Unbounded cheek ! Unquestionably nature ' s strangest freak. Ermentrout, ' 91 — Behold ! he spreadeth himself like a green bay tree. Babcock — He draweth out the thread of his verbosity, Finer than the staple of his argument. 165 Morris, ' 89 — ' Cause I ' s wicked, 1 is. I ' s mighty wicked, anyhow. I can ' t help it. Dr. Ringer — A taste for books, which is still The pleasure and glory of my life. Addison, ' 88 — He Cometh unto you with a tale which holdeth children from play, and old men from the chimney corner. F. D. Campbell, 89 — But curb thou the high spirit in thy breast. For gentle ways are best, and keep aloof From sharp contentions. C. NE-RUSH — We met — ' twas in a crowd ; The joy of meeting not unmixed with pain. Berger, ' 89 — Away with him ! away with him I he speaks Latin. GRUHiS, 91 — Full many a flower is born to blush unseen, And waste its sweetness on the desert air. F. E. Fisher, ' 90 — Let your literary compositions be kept from the public eye for nine years at least. I will not choose what men desire. Because I will not jump with common spirits. Who for the poor renown of being smart. Would leave a sting within a brother ' s heart. You have such a February face ; So full of frost, of storm and cloudiness. Nitze, ' 87 — Frescoln, ' 88 Hesse, ' 89 — Whitney, ' 91 — Little epitome of man. C. H. Stevenson, ' 90 — A great, green, bashful simpleton, The butt of all good-natured fun. Sterner — I am the very pink of courtesy. Carman, ' 89 — But man is a carnivorous production. And must have meals, at least one meal a day ; He cannot live, like woodcocks, upon suction, But, like the shark and tiger, must have prey. 166 Boyd, ' 90 — ' • ' irtue is choked with foul ambition. Prof. Harding — A merrier man. Within the limit of becoming mirth. I never spent an hour ' s talk withal. BlTTERWORTH, ' 89 — He danced and sang from morn to night. No lark so blithe as he. Babcock. — ' • Then he will talk — good gods, how he will talk. He maketh such a spendthrift of his tongue. Janitor Myers — Like a watch-worn and weary sentinel. Perry, 88— ••Oh ! couid 1 throw aside these earthly bands. That tie me down where wretched mortals sigh. J. G. Hearne, 90— The deed I intend is great. But what, as yet, I know not. Prex.— •• Vet despair not of his final pardon. Whose ear is ever open, and his eye Gracious to re-admit the suppliant. Cornelius, ' 89 — • ' He is of stature somewhat low. Turner, ' 90 — • ' What a slave art thou, to hack thy sword. As thou hast done, and then say It was in fight. Grammer, ' 89 — •• And mark the mild angelic air, The rapture of repose that ' s there. Glover, ' 88— „ Like a young fawn that hath lost the hmd. HOLLINSHEAD, ' 90— He hath borne himself beyond the promise of his age; doing in the figure of a lamb, the feats of the lion. New by, ' 89 — •Nor do I think the man of safe discretion. ' Dravo. ' 88— I must to the barber ' s, for, methinks I am mar elous hair ' about the face. Lacfarland, ' 91 — Whose freshness has braved many a storm. 167 Oberly, ' 89 — He was more than over his shoes in love. Mr. Breckenridge — Of the two, less dangerous is the offence, To tire our patience, than mislead our sense. GiBBS, ' 90 — It is an intellect to which one still listens. Epitome Editors — A chiel ' s amang ye taking notes, And, faith, he ' ll prent it. V. S. Davis, ' 88— He doth nothing but talk of his horse. E. Campbell, ' 91 — Three-fifths of him genius, and two-fifths sheer fudge. Jenkins, Elec — It will discourse most excellent music. AVRES, ' 89 — He had a head to contrive, a tongue to persuade, and a hand to execute any mischief. RiDDICK, ' 90 — A pale martyr in his shirt of fire. Lauderburn, ' 91 — Oh, here ' s a villain ! Webb, ' 88— A wit with dunces, and a dunce with wits. Brodhead, Elec. — I do not give you to posterity as a pattern to imitate, but as an example to deter. ' Hardcastle, ' 88 — I am to myself dearer than a friend. Miller, ' 91 — It requires a surgical operation to get a joke into his understanding. DiCKERSON, ' 89 — He will lie, sir, with such volubility, that You would think truth were a fool. Howard, ' 90 — I ' ll be at charge for a looking-glass, And entertain a score or two of tailors. To study fashions to adorn my body. MOFFETT, ' 89 — He could songs make, and well indite. Spengler, 91 — A hard, unmeaning face, down Which ne ' er stole a gentle tear. 168 BUDD. 89 — Has produced several new srins of his own invention. LiTCH, ' 90 — He stands erect ; He steps right onward, martial in his air, His form and movement. Sattler, ' 88 — With his own tongue still edifies his ears. And always listening to himself appears. (Belva) Lockwood, 91 — I am no proud Jack like Falstaff ; But a lad of mettle, a good boy. DOUGHERTV, ' 89 — The ladies call him sweet. Ravnor, ' 88— He mouths a sentence as curs mouth a bone. CULLUM, ' 90 — Will back his own opinions by a wager. HE.SSE, 89— Who never mentions hell to ears polite. Stillson, ' 91 — The barber ' s man hath not been seen with him. Jenkins, Elec. — Who thinks too little, and who talks too much. Bailv, ' 90 — Comb down his hair ; look ! look ! it stands upright. Ye PdOR Student — Heaven sends us good meat, but the devil sends us cooks. Heinrich, Elec. — For he by geometric scale. Could take the size of pots of ale. SCHUTTE. ' 91 — You beat your pate, and fancy wit will come ; Knock as you please, there ' s nobody at home. Mr. Meaker— He is wise who can instruct us, and assist us in the business of daily virtuous living. Straub, ' 90, and Coates, ' 90 — Pray take them, sir ; enough ' s a feast ; Eat some, and pocket up the rest. Perry, ' 88— Him who uttered nothing base. Seitzinger, Elec— A would-be satirist, A monthly scribbler for some low lampoon. 169 Newbv, ' 89— For e ' en though vanquished, he could argue still, With words of learned length and thundering sound. Franklin, ' 88 — No recognitions of familiar people, No courtesies for showing ' em. No knowing ' em ! Atkinson. ' 89 — ' ■ Thou say ' st an undisputed thing, In such a solemn wav. Pratt, ' 90 — LOHSE, ' 88— Long, ' 89 — Moore, Elec- I know I ' m not popular among the students. But I have a very high reputation with the F aculty. Seldom he smiles, and smiles in such a sort. As if he mocked himself, and scorned his spirit. That could be moved to smile at anything. He chuckles and crows, and nods and winks, As if his head were as full of kinks And curious riddles as any sphinx. That smile, if oft observed and near, Waned in its mirth, and withered to a sneer. ' Johnson, ' 91 — A mind quite vacant is a mind distressed. Weimer, 89 — A solemn youth with sober phiz. Who eats his grub, and minds his biz. WiLKENS, ' 87 — Thou pretty opening rose I Balmy and breathing music like the South. (He really brings my heart into my mouth). Bethlehem Justice — Where law ends, tyranny begins. ' 170 4el eeer2t T)i2 eovzTizz in 2eienee. Davis, ' 91 — Sulphur exists in three states : sulphur, flour and isnmorphous. Zimmerman, ' 91 — An atom is a small, invisible, indivisible, indestructible, indescribable mass. Barnard, ' 89 — Has found that the mineral known as Staurolite in Dana ' s Mineralog} ' is wrongly named, and should be called Topaz. Macfarland, ' 91 — The chief use of sulphur is to cure diseased grape vines. RiEGEi., ' 91 — Water was discovered in the Sixteenth Century. F. D. Campbell, ' 89 — Decides that the color of the mineral Chalcopyrite should be changed, in order that it may be distinguished from gold. Graham, ' 91 — A base is the opposite of an acid; an acid is the opposite of a base. Dougherty, ' 89 — Found the specific gravity of wood, floating on water, to be 2 ; and then wondered why he received zero for his mark. Johnson, ' 91 — Water was discovered in the Seventeenth Century. Barnard, ' 89 — Has made a complete analysis of Stibnite and found it to be Ca Soi. Briggs, ' 91 — The atomic theory was discovered by Demosthenes. Graham, ' 91 — Atmosphere is found all over the earth. Dougherty, ' 89 — After considerable research, calls his mineral a piece of silicious quartz. Miller, ' 90 — Has found how asbestos grows. W. S. Davis, ' 88 — Among the lower terrestrial cryptograms the remains of Moses (mosses) have not yet been found. 171 S T lpha Omega. 4tSlpha Chapiter. H 4 1890. Claude Allen Porter Turner. 1891. Frank Shriver West. 4 Safe ISoulanger Poker Slub. Batiker. H. Lefevre. (?(: ' Opener, D. C. Hearne. H. G. Lamberton. Bl2tffer, J. G. Hearne. W. E. Fertig. Cap. Turner expelled from the presence of the Grand Mogul for objecting to receive the sacred nails. 172 Qpinds. TowNSEND, ' 91 — (Describing one of his instructors in mathematics) — I don ' t know who 1 have, but he is a tall, thin man with a round bald spot on the top of his head, and, if you know your lessons by heart, he stops you in the middle of your demonstration and asks you some questions, and the first thing you know, you don ' t know where you are. Prof. Harding — What is the direction of the Amperian current. FORSMAX, Elec. — When you face North, the current moves anti-clock- wise. Mr. Gillett — Mr. Dougherty, what is the construction of that sentence. ' Dougherty, ' 89- (After some hard thinking) — The construction is all mixed up. Kerlin, ' 89 — (In Calculus recitation) — Mr. Meaker, what sort of an in- strument is this geotneter spoken of in the lesson ? Mr. Meaker — (After laughter subsides) — Why, that refers to the man who discovered the proposition. At the theatre in AUentaiun : F. K. Morris, ' 91 — (With freshman superiority) — That is a calcium light. Straub, ' 90 — (With sophomoric wisdom) — Come off, freshman; that is an oxy-hydrogen light. Banks, ' 88, to Rev. Mr. Snyder — Well, to change the subject, who do you think will be the next President ? Harris, ' 89 — (Evidently thinking of home ; asks a junior civil) — Are you calculating the tresses in that bridge ? Mr. Hazleton — Mr. Barnard, what is the hardness of this mineral? Barnard, ' 89 — Soft. Neill, ' 88, TO Fertig, 91 — What do they celebrate Ash Wednesday for? Fertig — Oh, that is the day they plant the trees. 173 Teddv — (In the ' 88- ' 89 foot-ball game) — Well, dang it, go on, but I ' m playing this game under protest. Wetzel— What does that mean. Teddy ? Teddy — I don ' t know what it means, but I know I ' m playing it under protest. Villa LON, ' 89 — What has become of the little tin glass in the cellar under Packer Hall? Bradford. ' 88 — Life tickets of membership admit the holders to all games free of charge at nominal rates. CULLUM, ' 90 — I never saw a dollar bill one time consecutively. C. H. Stevenson, ' 90 — (Constructing locus of the versedsine)— Com- mence at the lower left hand corner of the circle. Prob . Doolittle — Mr. Stevenson, please point out the lower left hand corner of a circle. Dr.-wo, ' 88 — (Observing a red ochre factory) — Can ' t red ochre grow in this climate ? Junior Recitation in Literature : Dr. Coppee— What happened to Spenser in the North of England. ' Oberlv — (Slightly mixed) — He was introduced to Sydney by Harvey Gabriel. Dr. C. — What about his love affair.? Oberlv— (Hesitating)— He - he - he wath a little skittish. | Applause |. Reese, ' 89 — (Sample of spelling seen at the top of his board) — I ' o ionn of parobolic spindat. Blakenev, ' 91 — I want an engineer ' s scale, graduated in kilometers. Junior MECHAN]CAL—(On a shop visit)— Mr. Miller, what is that big lound thing there } Instructor— Don ' t you know what that is. Mr. Atk-ns-n ? Junior Mech. — No, sir. Instructor— Why, that is a blast furnace. Finney, Elec. — If the faculty does not take off my thirteen ine.xcused ab- sences I shall leave college. Vander Horst, ' 91— (After his physical examination)— Say, one of my arms is one kilometer longer than the other. 174 DuCKHAM, ' 89, AND BARNARD, ' 89— (Crack level party; neither desiring to carry the level and rod up to Packer Hall) — Barnard — Let ' s toss up for it, Duckham ; heads I win, tails you lose. DuCKHAM — (Who knows Barnard of old) — That is fair; let Lincoln toss the penny. [The penny is thrown, and comes down tail up. | Duckham — Tails; therefore I lose; well, give me the level. [Starts for the LIniversity in deep thought.] Mr. Lambert — What is a cone? FORSTALL, ' 91 — (Slightly confused) — A sort of hollow cylinder with a hole in it. Recitation in Englis i Literature : Dr. Coppee — What odes did Dryden write ? Long, ' 89 — (Whose knowledge of the subject is extremely vague) — He wrote -he -he wrote an ode on St. Cecelia ' s Day. Dr. C. — Who was St. Cecelia. ' ' Long- (Sadly rattled) — She was a great admirer of Dryden ' s works. Dr. C. — Rather, he was a great admirer of her works. HoLLlNSHEAD, ' 90— (At Union Depot, to members of the Mining Club en route for Bangor) — 1 suppose you will have no objections to my going along, although I am not a member. ' [See Mining Club for sequel.] Mikado Reynolds — (At Sun Hotel first night after returning to Bethle- hem) — Fellows, you go out and occupy the police, while I slide home. [ They leave. Mickey soon follows. The police occupy Mickey. L sual fine. | Examination in Assaying : Marks are posted ; the whole class, consisting of two members, rushes to the board, and Dougherty finds that he has done exceedingly well and stands second. Wiehe, ' 90 — (Speaking to a crowd of his numerous admirers in the gym- nasium) — Base-ball is a good game ; lacrosse is a good game ; but foot-ball is the game. Next year I will play next to centre and no one will get through me. [Rapt attention on the part of his satellites.] I will play next to centre and go through like a hurricane. [Applause.] Later — I am too quick for anchor ; I come up and the other man takes in the rope. Recitation in Analytical Geometry : Mr. Meaker — Is there anything to be explained ? Stone, ' 90 — Mr. Meaker, I don ' t quite understand this conchoid of Nico- demus. 175 Settlor Recitation in AstronoDiy : Prof. Dooliti ' LE — Mr. DeWitt, when did the present Christian calen- dar come into use? DeWitt, ' 88— (Promptly)— 55 B. C. Lincoln, ' 89 — (Reviewintj skew bridge at Glendon) — Here ' s a bridge on a bender. Recitation in French : (Banks, ' 88, reading a passage in which a story is told of a student paying his way through college by selling sardines.) Mr. DeHaan — Mr. Banks, what does that mean ? Bank.s, ' 88— The Faculty, I suppose. Bradford, ' 88 — He is one of the tabernacles of the church. Augur, ' 91 — Why, yes ; Archimedes was an electrician I He got a bath tub to show how much flowed over, don ' t you know. Prof. Harding — What will be the effect of shortening a platinum wire ? Frauenthal, Elec. — There will be less of it. JUHLER, ' 91 — Does Dr. Coppee lecture on Hygiene? Durant, Elec. — Climatalogy is the science which influences organized beings. Frauenthal, Elec, to Mr. Rice — Will you please show me how to draw this figure with the inr ' ariable curve? Brodhead, Elec, to Mr. Hou.sekeeper — As regards the knife with which to sharpen the pencils, are there 2lX prescriptions to be observed? Carter — (In Crystallography) — That is the rhombic dodecahedron. Mr. Richards — Oh, no ! Mr. Carter, that is the pentagonal dodecahed- ron, or the holohemihedral form of the tetrahe.xahedron. Carter — Oh, yes ! I see, I see. You are quite right, Mr. Richards, quite right. Budd, ' 89 — (Translating from the German) — Here comes the great — (Hesitating and inquiring, What is it ? What is it? After receiving the asked for aid from Pearce, he continues) Here comes the great dog- catcher. [Whereupon the whole class comes up.] 176 Barnard, ' 89 — Mr. DeHaan, what is my mark for last week? Mr. DrHaan— Sree (three). Barnard — Why, man, how ' s that. ' ' Wasn ' t my exercise good? Mr. DeHaan — Yes, perfect ; therefore I know you did not write it and gave you the sree. Mr. Breckenridge — (Taking absences) — Has Mr. Morris left the class? Rogers, ' 89 — (Who supposes the usual complaint keeps Morris away) — ■ ' He ' s sick. Mgrris, ' 89 — (At the board, after the applause subsides) — Present. (Rog- ers sinks.) Mr. Breckenridge — Mr. Morrow, you notice a small space between the ends of the brasses; what is the object of this space? Morrow, ' 89 — To keep air in. Mr. B. — What is the air for? Morrow — To keep the box and brass cool, of course. BuT ' l ' ERWORTH, ' 89 — (After listening to an explanation of the working of a nest of boilers, by the instructor, asks innocently) — Is there water in those boilers, Mr. Miller? ' Eighty-nine Mechanical Engineering Department : Ayre.s (trainer on link motion). SCENE I. (Enter Lockett and Ayres.) Ayres — Lockett, the best record on this machine was made by Wiehe, ' 90; he made lo revolutions per minute. You can ' t beat it. Lockett — (Who bites hard) — By gum, I ' ll see about that. (Takes off his coat, rolls up sleeves, and turns furiously.) Ayres — (Meanwhile retarding motion of slide with his foot, announces after )4 minutes hard work) — Lockett, you have the record; 22 revolu- tions. (Enter Woodall, while Lockett is turning.) SCENE II. Woodall — Ayres, try me; see what I can do. Ayres — Well, you ' ll have to hump yourself to beat Lockett. (Watch in hand; same position with regard to slide. Keeps Woodall, who is nearly played, working about 2 minutes.) If you make 10 more in the next 2 sec- onds you ' ll beat Jamaica. (Enter Harris.) 177 AVRES — Harris, try your hand. Harris— No you don ' t; some gag here; you don ' t get me to work. (Enter Reese, Dougherty, (irammer, Cornelius and others. Each one takes his turn and increases the record.) Whereupon Dougherty takes the crank for the fourth time in order to make the college record, and, succeeding in beating Woodall ' s fifth attempt, finishes exhausted with 804 revolutions to his credit. 178 5 ■ o o y w c! • W O in O O Inde to Sd ' C ' epl ' izemenlfS. PAGE Allam. J S.. Carpenter and Builder, . xxxix Allen r.inter. Cigarettes, . . xxvi Alteneder, Theo, l5rawing Instruments, xxviii Anthony iS: Co., E. H. T., Photographic Instruments. .... xi.x Bailey, Banks : Biddle. . front cover Baldy, Stephen, Dry Grods, Notions, xxvi Bentley, Charles H. Jeweler, . . xxxiii Birk, Lewis, Boots and Shoes, xxxii Blackwell Co., Durham Smoking To- bacco. .... xxviii Boers, Charles, Restaurant, iii Caldwell, J. K. Co.. Prize and Trophy Makers, .... xii Davis, William H.. Paper Hanger, xxviii Dietrich, H. A. R., Steam and Hot Water Heating, .... xxxiii Dreka. Louis. Fine Stationery. . ii Kagle Hotel, . ii Kggert, H. B., Photography, . . iv F.ichenberg. Theo.. Cigars and Tobacco. . xxxii Eimer .Amend. Chemical Apparatus, xi Emery, J. D., Coal, Wood, Lime, c., . xxviii Engle. F. J.. Picture Frames, . . xx Giesenderfer, F.. Merchant Tailor. Gillott. Joseph. Steel Pens, Groman Bros., Fine Fruits and Oysters, . Hartman, John H., Cigars and Cigarettes, Hesse, Anton, Practical Bookbinder, Hess. T. K, Stylish Shoes, Horsman. K. I., Sporting Goods. . Hoyt. F. A. Co., Merchant Tailors, Hutton, .Addison. Architect. Jacoby. Cyrus. Drug Store. Jones. Dr. V. S., Dentist. . Kerschner, H. I., Livery and Boarding Stables, .... Kimball, Wm. S. Co., Cigarettes, Klose, Edwin G., Bookeller and Printer, Knauss, Chris. C, Stationery, etc., Kresge. E. H . Dry Goods, Lack. J. J., Merchant Tailoring, . Lamb, J. R., Stained Glass, Laubach, C. D., China and Glassware, Laubach I.erch, Hats. Caps and Furs, Laufer. Edwin, Plumber. Gas and Steam Fitter. Leary ' s Old Book Store, Lehigh Burr. The, Lehigh University. The, Lehigh Valley Brass Works. The, . Lehigh Valley Railroad, The, . Lerch Rice, Carpets. Upholstery, etc., Lockwood, Geo. R. Son, Booksellers, Stationers and Engravers, Luckenbach Krause, Hardware. Preceding reading matter. 3 xxvi xliv xli XX.X xxxii XXX -xviii xxi x.x, i xviii xxxiv XXXV) xxix XX.X xliv xliii xxiii xly .xxxviii vii xvi xxxvi PAGE . . v XXIX xxiv Meyers, Geo. D., Artistic Tailoring, McPherson,W. J., Decorator of Churches, Residences, Theatres, etc., Milchsack, H. T., Apartment House, Mitman S: Weaver, Book Exchange, Moravian Female Seminary, Moravian Parochial School, Newman. J. F.. Fraternity Badges. Ott, R. J., Livery and Boarding Stables, Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, xxxiv Person. Dech Riegel, Carpets and Dress Goods, ... xvi Photo-Gravure Co., The. xlii Porter Coates, .... ix Queen Co., Engineering Instruments. . vi Rau. Simon Co.. Blowpipes, Chemicals, vi Ranch, John F., Confectionery, iii Ranch, J. K , Jeweler, xx Reach, A. J. ifc Co , General Sporting Goods, ..... xlvii Rennig, C. vV., Restaurant, Pool and Billiard Rooms, . . xxxviii Rhoad, Geo. W., Merchandise, xvi Ricksecker. E. C. Music Store, . . xli Riegel, Cortright Solt. . .xli Kitter Hackman, Livery Teams. vi Rogers, A., Furniture, . vii Savidge, Alfred C. Sanitary Plumbing. . x Schnabel Bro., Shoes, etc., . . xviii Schutte, L. Co., Injectors and Conden- sers, .... xxvii Schwartz Barron, Text Books, Mathe- matical Instruments, etc.. xxv Sheridan. J. H.. Druggist . . xxxvi Shimer, C L , Hardware, . xx Simons Bro S: Co , Diamonds, Jewelry, Fraternity Badges. viii Starr, Theo. B., Diamonds. Watches. Sil- verware, etc. , . . . xvii Thompson, E. O., Clothing. . back cover Times Publishing Co., Printers, Rulers and Binders. . . xxxvii Traeger. Joseph H., Dry Goods. . . xxxiv Troxell Huth. Furniture, ix Uberroth. J. R., High-class Foot-wear, Ulrich, William, Preparatory School, . xiv xxii Wanamaker. John. .... xiv Webster ' s L ' nabridged Dictionary, . xlii Welch. R.R. Son. Catering and Barbering, xxxii Whetford. E . Gents Furnishing Goods. xlvi Worsley Bros.. Furniture, Carpets, Bedding. viii Yates. A. C. Co.. Clothing. . xy Young, Geo. H., Hats. Furnishings, etc., i wanamaker ' s, The biggest General Store in the world. The largest Dry Goods house in America. You buy at Wanamaker ' s because you are sure o{ the best for the least. Books as well as other thinors. o A Book is no better because you get it for a fair price, but you ' re likely to feel better when you know the price was fair. monp:y saved On Books is as good as money .saved on anything. One of the easiest things to save on, too, if you only have a care. At WANAMAKER ' S more Books are sold over the counter than in any other house between the oceans. Timely works on Agriculture and Horticulture; a large assortment of French Books; Seasides and Franklin Squares; Standard and Miscellaneous Works, bound and unbound; and almost any printed thing that proper people read. The prices are always fair, and any getable book is there or will be got. BOOK NEWS. How little the title of a book tells you ! Even if you see all the new books, how many have you time to get at the inside of? That is where BOOK NEWS will serve you a good turn. We send it out once a month, a-brim with just what you want to know of the latest books and the gossip of the book world. By the best judgment of the best judges it tests the new books, and sa) ' s why this book should be read and that skipped. With each number an author portrait. 5c., 50c. a year. An acre of space, almost, for our play and sporting things. More fun-making and health-giving stuff for a little mone) ' than we know of anywhere else. Any going good thing for hand-wear or foot-wear, or head-wear, or any wear. JOHN WANAMAKER, PHILADELPHIA. CLOTH IN (i PHIL ' A OUR CONFINED STYLES OF ;CARPKTS3| «- Are appreciated by the buying public. Prices are no higher than are asked for ordinary styles ; in fact lower. Merely call and see them. Choice things in CURTAINS, CORNICE POLES, dic. gEP SON, DEGH I IEGBL. NEW STORE. Our name is a guarantee for the correctness and refinement of our various productions. GEO. R. L.OCKWOOD HON, Publishers, Booksellers, Stationers and Engravers, 812 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. Correctly engraved Invitations for Commencement, Class Day, Fraternity and Wedding Receptions. Steel Plate Work of every description for P aternity uses. Heraldic Plates and Illustrations for College Annuals. Dance Orders, Menu Souvenirs, Class Crests, Monograms, Address Dies, Lodge Headings, Calling Cards, Etc. Lockwood ' s Approved Fraternity Stationery from new steel plates. Samples and Price List on ap licath i. YOU ALL WANT IT! p I p M P Q The easiest way to prosperity is to buy economically ; spend n I unto less than your income. Charity begins at home — hence we have an eye to business : WEARING APPAREL AND FOOT-WEAR escription. GENTS ' FURNISHING GOODS, A COMPLETE LINE. Carpets, Rogs and Oil Clotlis. LAWN TENNIS SHOES a special feature during the season GEO. W. RHOAD, J20 to J 26 Fourth Street, South Beth ehei i. xvi THEODORE B. STARR, Fine Jewelry, Precious Stones, Watches, Silverware, .c. 206 Fifth Ave., (Madison Square,) NewYork, Throutih tu 1120 Broadway, Importer 9?? Manufacturer. GENEVA Non-Magnetic Watches. Uninfluenced by Magnetism or Electricity. 5 Paillard ' s Patent Non-Magnetic Com- pensation Balance and Hair-Spring. . . . I have been carrying the watch sent, and going about dynamos, etc., without taking any precautions. I find that while my own watch, with a steel hair-spring, is varying all the time, your watch, which is in a pocket ne.xt to mine, is keeping admirably. ELIHU THOMPSON, Lynn, Mass., October lo, 1887. Electrician Thomson-Houston Electric Co. . . . I ascertained its rate before testing it, and now after twenty-one days ' trial I can detect no variation. It is an e. cellent time-piece. J. L. MORRIS, Prof. Mechanics, Ithaca, N. Y., Nov. 10, 1887. Sibley College of Mechanic Arts, Cornell University. . . . I think you have met the question squarely and found the true solution to the problem, by using non-magnetic material instead of trying to shield the magnetic. OSBORN P. LOOMIS, Boston, Mass., Oct. 10, 1887. Electrician Loomis Electric Mfg. Co. . . . During the past si.x months I have submitted the watches containing Paillard ' sPatent Non- Magnetic Compensation Balance and Hair-Spring to tests in different fields ot magnetism. I find them e.vempt from magnetic influence, however strong, and practically no retardation of the balance nor change in the rate occurs, even when in actual contact with dynamos or powerful electro-magnets. I have been carrying one of your watches in my pocket and going around dynamos and other elec- trical appliances where I have never been able to carry a watch without ruining it, and it has proved an e.xcellent time-keeper. I consider Paillard ' s Balance a most w ' onderful and valuable invention, not only for workers around dynamos, but wherever accuracy ot time is required. Very truly. Orange, N. J., Dec. 7, 1887. (Signed) T. A. EDISON. 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Send for Horsman ' s Tennis Catalogue for 1888. E. I. HORSMAN, 80 82 WILLIAM ST., NEW YORK. 7Zr LEADING T)pug 8d ' Ppezepipl ' ion Ztore. CYRUS JACOBY, Comer F ouirthi and New Streets, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. xviii E. H. T. ANTHONY CO., 591 Broadway, N. Y., MANUFACTURERS AND IMPORTERS OF PHOTOGRAPHIC IXSTRUMENTS, APPARATUS AND SUPPLIES of every descriptioti. — :o: — Sole Proprietors of the Patent Detective, Fairy, Novel, and Bicycle Cameras, and the Celebrated Stanley Dry Plates. Amateur Outfits in great variety from $9 upwards. Send for Catalogue 01 call and examine. ' Sr More than Forty Years Established in this line of business. Satchel Detective Camera, [patented stptembbr 14, 1886.] JFHE latest achievement in liglit A and compact pliotographic ap- paratus. Consisting of a thoroughly practical Camera, meeting every possible requirement, ingeniously disguised as an ordinary hand-sat- chel. With this Camera the opera- tor is enabled to take pictures at random, by the instantaneous pro- cess, while walking in the streets, or while traveling by rail or water. Apart from its elegance of appear- ance, and its perfection as a photo- graphic Camera, one of the most charming features of this apparatus consists in the extreme ease with which it may be handled. For fur- ther details, see our Catalogue; sent free on application, to any address. E. H. T. ANTHOITY CO., 591 BROADWAY, NEW YORK. HOO-RAH-H ' RAV: HCXJ-RAH-H ' RAV I H ' RAY: H ' RAY, H ' RAY, LEHIGH : : — AT— Kry Bros., Of f osite Kaofe hotel. Next dook Tf) Riegei., Coktright Solt ' s Globe Store, X Iain Street, Bethlehem, Ra. Finest Selection oe Watches, Clocks, Canes, Jewelry, SIL KR VAKE and OPTICAL GOODS. C. L. SHIMER. HARDWARE AND HOUSE-BUILDERS ' MATERIAL AND SPORTING GOODS GENERALLY. 8 So7ttli Main Street, - - Beth e ieui, Pa. - (cF. J. ENQLE,3t PICTURE FRAMES, CHROMOS, ENGRAVINGS, AND WINDOW SHADES. 8i Broad Street, - - Bethlehem, Pa. IRAMES TO UNDER A SPECIALTY. F. A. f)OYT CO., 1026 Chestmtt Street, Philadelphia. Ready Aabe GuetHiNS FOR BOYS AND YOUNO IVLKN. MEKCHANT TAILOKSIi WE HAVE IN STOCK AT ALL TIMES A CHOICE ASSORTMENT OF English, Scotch and Domestic Goods TO SELECT FROM. Lames ' JacKets, Saops aim 11 HaHits MADE TO ORDER. xxi PREPARATORY SCHOOL FOR liEHIGH UNIYBr SITTY. WM. ULRICH, Principal, 26 NEW ST., BETHLEHEM, PA. THE ONLN ' PREPARATORY SCHOOL RECOMMENDED AS SUCH HN ' K. A. LAMBERTON, LL D., President of the Le i tr i Unhwrsitv. and any of t ie Professors belonging to the Faeitltv of the Lehigh University. A TTENTION is given exclusively to the requirements for admission to LEHIGH UNIVE.R- - - SITV. During the past eight years Two Himdred and Thirty-six of our scholars have been admitted to the University. — , OUR WORK IS OUR RERERENCE.-V — This work has secured the luianimous endorsement of the lliiiversity F ' aculty. The teachers are instructors and graduates of Lehigh University. - (u urr n er Uolipsg -:;-- will be opened immediately after the June examinations, for the bcuffit of young men who wish to pre pare themselves for the September examinations, 20 Pupils will be Admitted as Boarders at the House of the Principal. FOR CATALOGUES AND FURTHER INFORMATION APPLY to the PRINCIPAL. xxii THE LEHIGH UNIVERSITY, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. FOUNDED BY ASA PACKER. - ' I H E object of this Institution is to give a thorough education in Civil, Mechanical, Electrical and ■ - Mining Engineering, in Chemistry, Metallurgy, the Classics and in General Literature. Through the liberality of its Founder, the tuition in all branches is FREE. REQUIREMENTS FOR ADMISSION. Applicants for admission must be at least sixteen years of age, must present testimonials of good moral character, and must satisfactorily pass the following subjects : MATHEMATICS. Arithmetic, complete, including the Metric System : Algebra, through equations of the second de- gree : Chauvenet ' s Geometry, six books. ENGLISH. Cirammar; Geography ; United States History, including the Constitution. For admission to the various courses, in addition to the requirements above given, the examinations are as follows; For the Courses in Science and Letters, Civil, Mechanical, Mining and Electrical Engineering, and Analytical Chemistry : Elementary Physics. For the Latin Scientific and Classical Courses : Physical Geography. LATIN. Latin Grammar ; Csesar ' s Commentaries, four books; Virgil: .(Eneid, six books, and the Bucolics; Cicero: six Orations, including the four against Cataline; Latin Composition ; Roman History. And for the Classical Course : GREEK. Greek Grammar; Xenophon ' s Anabasis, four books; Homer ' s Iliad, three books; writing Greek with accents ; Greek History. The examinations will be rigorous, and no student deficient in .iny branch will be permitted to enter in full standing. For further information apply to the President, ROBERT A. LAMBERTON, LL.D., South Bethlehem, Pa. pe HYi N ¥mQmn gcpeeii, Bethlehem, Pa. ;i operatum for more than a century under the direction of the Moravian Church of Bethlehem. Pa. rriHE scheme of instruction is comprehensive; embracing every grade 1 ' from a completely equipped Kindergarten in charge of an experienced teacher, up to a Preparatory Course, which affords young men and young women every facility for the acquirement of a thorough pre-collegiate educa- tion. The sexes are not associated in the class-rooms. THE PREPARATORY COURSE FOR YOUNG MEN includes all the requirements for admission to the Lehigh University. Special attention is given to students who wish to be prepared for the entrance ex- aminations. The text-books and the methods employed are those recommended by the ■ TJ AOTIT.TV OK THE UNIVERSITY,® -. and the instructor in charge of this department is a University graduate. The school is endowed by the Moravian Church and hence the terms are liberal. Tuition in the Preparatory bourse, $60 per annum, — . EUGENE L. SCHAEFER, Superintendent. tlCLASS WINDOWS OF MOSAIC AND STAINED GLASS. FIGURE SUBJECTS A SPECIALTY, CLASS BANNERS and FLAGS OF SILK, V. h ' o ' I il ' ' Memorial Tablets For Colleges, Libraries, Chapels, Churches and Public Buildings, made of Polished Brass, Modeled Bronze, Carved Wood. For Designs and Estimates or Illustrated Catalogue, address J. R. LAMB, 59 Carmine Street, NEW YORK. HEADQUARTERS FOR Lehigh University Supplies. We have facilities for supplying everything in our line at very short notice. COMPLETE LINE OF « TEXT BOOKS, MATHEMATICAL INSTRUMENTS, Drawing Paper, Stationery, Leather Goods, c. Stylographic and Fountain Pens. Our prices are the lowest. We solicit a trial. SCHWARTZ BARRON, 11 SOUTH MAIN STREET. CALL ON - tcMEYERS Ie THE No. 13 S. MAIN STREET, BETHLEHEM, PENN ' A. RICHMOND STRAIGHT CUT N!L I CIGARETTES. Cu;arettf. Smokers who are willing to pay a little more than the price charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes will find this brand superior to all others. The Richmond Straight Cut No. 1 Cigarettes are made from the brightest, most delicately flavored and highest-cost GOLD LEAF grown in Virginia. This is the OLD AND Original Brand of Strakjht Cut Cigarettes, and was brought out by us in the year 1S75. Beware oflinitalioiis, and observe that the firm 1 every package. NAME AS BELO ALLEN iL GINTER, MANUFACTURERS, RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. -:-F. GIESENDERFER,-:- IBerehanl bailor, SOLICITS THE FURTHER PATRONAGE OF THE STUDENTS. No, 134 Birch Street, South Bethlehem, Pa. BALDY ' S ► NEWvDE(Yv60eD5vgT0I E c 10 W. Third Street, South Bethlehem. Pa. m GOODS, NOTIONS, CARPETS, c.,t IN LARGE ASSORTMENT. VT I OP XJLA.Il PRICE©. x.xvi L. SCHUTTE CO., Owners of Patents and Sole Manufacturers TWELFTH THOMPSON STS.. PHILADELPHIA, PA. THE UNIVERSAL DOUBLE-TUBE INJECTOR, THE MOST COMPLETE AND RELIABLE BOILER FEEDER KNOWN. THE EXHAUST STEAM INDUCTION CONDENSER. OPERATED ENTIRELY BY ONE HANDLE. WILL LIFT WATER TWENTY FEET. WILL TAKE HOT WATER UP TO 150° FAHRENHEIT. Send for Descriptive Catalogue. •:XHAUST STEAM INDUCTION CON- for Steam Engines, SteamI)oats, Pump-; and Pans. ng its own water supph ' under suction of feet and under or using pressure water, ater-check is perfect, automatic and noiseless. Send for Illustrated Catalogue. WILIvIANl H. DAVIS, laiuanrt Ilcccivatiuc il pcv itauciiiuv No. 8 Broad Street, Bethlehem, Pa. LATEST DESIGNS IN PAPER HANGINGS. ALL WORK GUARANTEED. pOR PLEASURE, OMFORT,HEALT i SMOKE THE MANUFACTURED ONLY BY W .T-TBUlCKl BILIi. S! Co. ' = other: PPPULAR BECAUSE RliLIAEfc 5 JOS. D. EMERY, -DEALER IN — ftc0 L,T3 ND,• W00D.• mME,• §c.3|£ Office and. Yard: Foot of Main Street, opposite Lehioh Bridge, BETHLEHEM, PA. THEO; ALTENEDER, mWl PJiLLAJElPH ML -M.XNT-FACTUKER OF — ALTENEDER DRAWING INSTRUMENTS ARE STAMPED WITH NAME OR TRADE MARK. WARKA-NTED J-|| M J— ' J-- _ J-- J (_J J--( STVLE OK CONSTRUCTION. CATALOGUE ON APPLICATION. TEMI ER AND FINISH. a— - ,, BEWARE OF T A INFERIOR IMITATIONS. People of refined taste desiring specially fine Cigarettes should use our Satin, Pour-in-Hand. Athletic and Cupid STRAIGHT CUT, Hand Made, from the best X ' irginia and Turkish Leaf. Peerless Tobacco Works, Established 1846. - FOURTEEN FIRST PRIZE MEDALS.a WM. S. KIMBALL CO., ROCHESTER, N. Y. IcMOMYIHN SEMIN FOR YOUNG LADIES, AT BETHLEHEM, PENN ' A. Establishi ' d ijS . and in Successful Operaf on crer since. Offers t ' o IJoung Toadies a hopough dueal ' ion m all T)epapl ' menl ' 2 al ' a moderat ' e eosl . Kor Circulars and information apply to the Principal, The Rev, J, BLICKENSDEREEK. 1; xxix FOR FINE, STYLISH AND DURABLE iiSFlOESi CALL ON T. K. HESS, 17 IVIAIN ST., Opposite Sun Hotel. BETHLEHEM, PA. JOHN H. HARTMAN ' S 1T0BACC0 CIG K STORE}  106 SOUTH MAIN STREET. -:- DEALER EXCLUSIVELY IN HAND-MADE CIGARS. -:- The largest stock of Smokers ' Articles in town. Splendid lineof Cigar Cases, Pipes, Cigar and Cigarette Holders in Meerschaum and Briar Wood. A ' so, a large assortment of CANES. EAGLE STORE. IZ EiNE Groceries, Dry Goods and Notions. ' I All customers promptly attended to. E H. KRESGE, Prop ' r, No. g East tli St., SOUTH IiETHlL,3EHE]Vt, PA.. EDWIN LAUFER, LUMBBi , Gas and Steam Fiitpbi , Also, Manufacturer of and Dealer in STOVES, HARDWARE, PUMPS, TIN, WOOD and WILLOW WARE, PAINTS, GLASS, e. 22 E, THIRD SL.SOUTH BETHLEHEM, 55 MAIN STREET, BETHLEHEM. Telephone Connection. - HDDlg0N + HU1 ' TOfl, ' ARCHITECT. FINDLAY HUTTON, Assistant. Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, W. J. McPHERSON, — — -« Office AND Studio; Nos. 440,442 and 444 Tremont Street, ?o ?sYloS. s B OSTO N , M ASS. ARTISTIC STAINED AND MOSAIC GLASS MEMORIAL WINDOWS. nCnnDnTinM ' Residences, Churches. L) L. J J i r I 1 vJ IM Theatres and Public Buildings. Original Designs submitted in every case and Estimates Furnished. Special facilities for undertaking large work in any section of the country ' . The following are a tew examples of prominent work executed by Mr. McPherson : Asa Packer Memorial Church, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa.; Memorial Hall and Appleton Chapel, Harvard University, Cambridge, Mass.; Smith College, Northampton, Mass.; Church of St. Mary of the Assumption, Brookline, Mass.; East Room, White House, and Library, i-tate Department, Washington, D. C; State Capitol, Hartford, Conn,; Equitable Life Assurance Society Building, Mutual Life Insurance Company Building, and Hotel Brunswick, New York City; Hotel Rennert, Baltimore. Residence of H. B. Hyde, Esq., New York City; J. B. Lippincott, Esq., Philadelphia; Ex-Gov. Witmore, H. G. Marquand, Esq., and Mr. D ' Hautville, Newport. R. I., etc., etc. SEND FOR LIST A. FlJlGKINeER. - PO RTR A I TS.ife The Finest Equipped Gallery in the Lehigh Valley. STUDIO AND PARLORS: •50 WniJ 3TI EET, BETHI EflEM, PH. BETHLEHEM BOOK BINDERY, ESTABLISHED 1785. ANTON HESSE, PRACTICAL BOOK t BINDER, 144 South M.mn Street, I Moravian Publication Office Third Floor. | Blildinc;. BETHLEHEM, PA. All kinds nf Rinding and Re-binding. Plain or Ornamental. Special care taken in Binding Plates. c. Also. Mounting .Maps. STUDENTS ' HEADQUMERrPOrTOBACc ' d AND CIGARS, Btirljer iShop ContT.ectecl. Nos. 3 and 5 West Fourth Street, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. P-HSHION BLE BOOT HND 3HGE MT KER, NEW STREET, BETWEEN THIRD AND FOURTH STS., Custom Work a Specialty. SoUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. CHTERINS R. R. WELCH SON, FASHIONABLE — Shaving and Hair Cutting Emporium, Class Suppers, Dinners, Weddings, - «°™- wyandotte street. SOUTH BETHLEHEM. PA. Served in first-class st ' le. • C. W. WELCH, HOT AND COLD BATHS. Fashionable Caterer. Bgst Brands Glgaps, Tobacco, Etc. xxxii ymtK INVITE YOUR ATTENTION to the new and latest styles in Ladies ' and Gents ' Fini ver Rings in elegant designs and manufacture, which we have just placed in stock for our Spring Trade. They embrace designs in Garnets and Pearls, Diamonds. Emeralds, Rubies and Opals. WLSO, a full line of AMERICAN WATCHES, in • Gold and 14 k. Gold Filled Cases, which for elegance of workmanship and beauty of finish cannot be surpassed. W LL goods sold by us are guaranteed to be ju.stas represented- • • Very truly yours, CHARLES H. BENTLEY, JEWELER. 9 E. Third Street, South Bethlehem, Pa. SIEl AND mjm HEMING. AM SELLING THE EOLLOWLXG BOILERS: The Auburn Cast Iron Sectional Magazine Eccd. Gold ' s Improved Cast Iron Sectional, for Direct, Indirect or Chamber Heating, and Gourneys Hot Water Boiler. PLANS, BIDS AND SPECIFICATIONS FURNISHED. icH. A. R. DIETRICH,3|E - Catt at LehigJi I ' alley Hotel, or address P. O. Box 248, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. KK ♦ Fenn Mu ua Eife i Vou know it, and } ' ou mean to do it. W ' h}- not f rj now? There are many good Life Insurance Compa- nies ; take any in preference to none ; but there is none OUGHT better, with better plans and surer results than the TO I XSL ' nL R Ask an - one of its 25,000 members, and — then insure. I IFF ' =_ |lon)c. Office,. 911. §. 925. Cbcslnui. St. JOSEPH H. TRAEGER, Underwear, Hosiery, G ozrs, Handkercliiefs, Embroideries, Riiybo is. WE CALL SPECIAL ATTENTION TO OUR STOCK OF GROCERIES. 21 South Main Street, BETHLEHEM, PA. T)r. X). Z. Jonez, ooms over eqi h y alle Jlfational ' arz , BETHLEHEM, PA. Office Hours: 8 to 12:30; 2 to 5:30. i S i- r-fTT mp No, 35 SOUTH MAIN STREET, BETHLEHEM, PA. Complete Assortmen r of UNDEf WE R SD0YE3, H03IERY, AND NECKWEAR. ' i THE - UNIVERSITY -BOOKSTORE University Text Books, Drawing Instruments and Materials, Hot and Cold Pressed and Manila Drawing, Egg Shell, Mounted, Thesis and Essay Papers, Tracing Papers and Cloths. A MOST COMPLETE ASSORTMENT OF STUDENTS ' REQUISITES FURNISHED UPON THE MOST ADVANTAGEOUS TERMS. JOB PRINTING PROMPTLY, NEATLY AND CHEAPLY EXECUTED. The Leading New York and Philadelphia Daily and Sunday Papers promptly delivered. CHRIS. C. KNAUSS, agent, BOOKSELLER, STATIONER AND PRINTER, Third Street, near post office, South Bethlehem, Pa. XXXV ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED BY PHARMACEUTICAL GRADUATES, AT Cor. Third and Locust Sts., South Bethlehem, Pa, Fine Brands of Cigars and Cigarettes. Fancy Soaps.ToiletArticles. c. Telephone Connection. SHERIDAN, THE PHARMACIST, Third and Locust Streets, - South Bethlehem, Pa. DEALER.S IN HARDWARE. A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF POCKET CUTLERY AND RAZORS ALWAYS IN STOCK. 25 SOUTH MAIN STREET, BETHLEHEM, PA. KERSCHNER ' S Elegant . eBXJSa|li ' uil able %ViVno jitz tmmh ' ' - .{ Carriages (Earsful |l IK lJ Kl tcleddings T)piT?eP2. k li i- g; ' and Puneralz. ► gaj POTEL LIVERY P D B0 RDIj G ST BIiE?4 BETHLEHEM, PA. TIMES PUBLISHING COMPANY, BETHLEHEM, RA. D i n G) e Printers of The Lehigh Burr, the Engineering Journal, The Ready Helper, and this volume of The Epitome. NO OTHEE OFFICE in the Lehigh Valley is so well equipped to do FIRST-CLASS WORK and turn it out so promptly. Send your work where you will be certain to get Grood Work and where you know the facilities are the best. Jos. A. Weaver, Manai.kk. THE PEOPLE ' S FAVORITE LINE. Passenger Trains of this Road run in Direct Connection with trains to all points in the UNITED STATES AND CANADA. Pullman Sleeping Cars, Parlor Coaches, or Chair Cars on all Through Trains. SEVEN TRAINS DAILY (except Sundays) each way between BETHLEHEM and NEW YORK. TWO SUNDAY TRAINS each way between MAUCH CHUNK and NEW YORK. THREE SUNDAY TRAINS each way between BETHLEHEM and NEW YORK. TW(J TRAINS between BETHLEHEM and BUFFALO. FIFTEEN TRAINS between BETHLEHEM and EASTON.and BETHLEHEM and ALLEN- TOWN. FOR PARTICULARS SEE TIME TABLES. E. B. BYINGTON, H. STANLEY GOODWIN. General Passenger Agent Oeneral Superintendent. - IcC. W. REXNIG ' S3fe NEW RESTAURANT, 417 AND 419 NEW STREET, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. «H,EADQUAR.TERS FOR STUDE-MTS;: Lunch Served at all Hours. Oysters in Every Style, ALL THE BEST BRANDS OF lilQUOI S, (SlGAr S AND SOBAGGO. J. S. ALLAM, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, FA. OFFICE, SECOND STREE T, GVEN AT 4th SI RES EEE OE DENCE, r, near BROAD. [S ' MATES EOR ALL KNDS ' SHORT NOTICE. BU LD NGS Book Cases, Book Shelves, Drawing Boards, MADE TO ORDER AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. -i JOBBING OF ALL K[Kbiy PROMPTLY ATTENDED TO BY COMPETENT WORKMEN. xxxix FA rZINGHR ' S «3RESTAURANTi - Cor. Fourth and Wyandotte Streets, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. ELESHNT BHLL @ B NQ ET R00MS. FIRST-CLASS LUNCHES. DTSTf IIS K WEtY STY TDealz al ' all Hours. h30:r)cy iTyixcd JcJpiql s a Opccially. PUNCHES IN BULK OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS MIXED AT SHORT NOTICE. xl FANCY GROCERIES — GROMAN BROS., 108 S. MAIN STREET, BETHLEHEM, PA. Telephone. RIEGEL, CORTRIGHT SOLT, (Sappetz, Bim Dress Qoodz, NOTIONS AND FANCY GOODS. THE BEST ASSORTMENT AT THE LOWEST PRICES. BETHLEHEM, PA. Established 1867. - -B. 0. RIOK EOKBR ' 3 MUSIC STORE. SOLEAGENT_K ORJ HK_ ,SOHMER PIANOS, Krakauer Pianos, Smith American Organs and Pianos, .c. . FULL LINE OF ALL KINDS OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS AN.. SHEET MUSIC ITALIAN AND GERMAN STRINGS, AC. PIANOS FOR RENT. ALL KINDS OF INSTRUMENTS REPAIRED. 52 Broad Street. Bethlehem, Pa. xli WEBSTER ' S UNABRIDGED THE BEST INVESTMENT for tlie Family, the j School, or the Pro- fessional or Puhlic Library. 3000 more Words, and 2000 more En- gravings than any I other American Dictionary. I foiOTIONAfiyf fTSFLF ALWAYS A CHOICE GIFT for Pastor, Parent, Teacher, Chihl, or Friend. Elegance and usefulness combined. In quantity of mat- ter, it is believed to be the largest book published. In various Styles , f J ' .indint;.— Illustrated Paraphht mailed free. The latest issue of this viorVi contains A DICTIONARY c.f lls,ii()i) Words and SnOO Engravings, A GAZETTEER OF THE WORLD locating and briefly descril ing over L :i,(«l(l places, A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY of nearly lo,iioo Noted Persons ; also various Tables, A LL BN ONE BOOK . Webster is Standard Authority in tlic Government Printing OtTice, anil with the U. S. Supreme Court. It is recommended by the State Sup ' ts ofSchools in 36 States, and by leading College Presidents of tlie V. S. and ( anada. Published by O. C. 3IERKIA3I CO., Springfielcl, Mass. ART PARb0RS Of he1?boto-©pa upc (Sompan Tlo. 853 Broadway, TJew XJork. The Art Parlors of tlic I ' hoto-Oraviire Company are in the Domesjmc BuiLDiNc;, at the corner of Broadway and Fourteenth Street, facing U.I ion Square. They are easily and quickl y reached by Elevator from thj Broadway Entrance of the Building. A Collection of Photo-Ciravures and Representations of all the newest and best Works of Art and Current Events of Interest will be found here in a variety of forms, framed in the most artistic shape, and unframed — on Satin, India and Japanese papers — mounted as banners — or adapted specially to the wants of the ])ublic. An inspection is respectfullv solicited. xlii THE LEHIGH BURR. F tjiblisl:ie(d Seiiii IVIcnitlily dxirin g ttie College Vea.r. A Distinctively Students ' Journal, and the only monthly published at Lehigh University. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1,50 A YEAR, Payable in Advance. Adclressi, THE LEHIGH BURR, Box 6, South Bethlehem, Pa. Louis P. Gaston, K. • ■ , Clarence Walker, { iness Managers. xliii JOSEPH GILL O T TS STEEL PENS. Gold Medal, Paris Exposition, 187 8. For Artisi ' ic Usk in Fine Drawings, Nos. 659. (The celebrated Crowquill), 290 and 291. J ' oR FiNR Writing, Nos. 30 :;, 604, and Ladies ' , 170. For Broad Writinc, Nos. 294, 3 S9, and Stub Point, 849. For (iEXKRAi, Writinm;, Nos. 404. 332, 390, and 604. JOSEPH GILLOTT d- SONS, g I John Street, N. Y. HENR Y HOE, Sole A}-e it. n WONDEI FHIi BOOK gTORE. DEARY ' S OLD BOOK. STORE, so well known throughout the country, is the largest, best arranged, cheapest and most complete, as well as the most popular OLD BOOK STORE in America. The immense stock oi several hundred thousand volumes embraces Works in every department of Literature, and in every language — including rare books, scarce editions, and choice library sets of the standard authors. We are daily augmenting our stock, and the additions include purchases made in all parts ol the country : thus presenting to the book-lover an ever-changing, and at the same time, the largest and most varied selection of the world ' s literature to be found in the country. The several departments are arranged under their respective heads, and superintended by competent as- sistants. We invite every one to pay us a visit, and spend an hour inspecting our vast collection; in- formation is cheerfully given without your feeling under the slightest obligation to purchase. • LE l Y ' ? 0I1D B06K m m No. cj S. Ninth Street, First Store Below Market Street, PHILADELPHIA, PA. xliv IMPROVED QiiicK Opeiil Level Yalv e WaXH DOUBLE STEM. Adapted to all pressures and perfectly reliable, whether full or partly open or closed. It is particularly adapted for Hoisting Engines and all Engines Where Quick Opening Valves are required. MANUFACTURED ONLY BY LEHIGH VALLEY BHASS WOUKS, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. B. E. LEHMAN, Manager. UJ. R. UBDRROTH,i HIGH-CLASS FOOTWEAR, OPPOSITE EAGLE HOTEL, BETHLEHEM, PA. MY (;OODS MAY COST A TRIFLE MORE THAN THOSE OF some other dealers, but the difference in quality fully justifies the prices. Herein lies one of the secrets of my remarkable success, as my patrons soon learn that they receive full value for their money. KINKST SHOE STORK. xlv WHETFORD, LDHIGK UNIVERSITY « FURMISHER. Special Attention is given to Goods required for all out and indoor SPOKTS and GAMES. THE ONLY HULSE IN THE TRADE THAI ' IMI ' OR ' l ' S T ?ovon and tQhite !Piannei op ISlazepz and ©apz, -AND DEALS IN— SYMN; .SiaM G00DS IN L. a. C0L0R3. WE ARE THE LEADINC. HOUSE, A ' STYLE AXD Oi ' ALlTY. 18 THIKD STREET, SOUTH BETHLEHEM, PA. xlvi LAWN TENNIS. A. J. REACH CO., MANUFACTURERS OF The celebrated QUAKER CITY and RENSHAW TENNIS RACKETS, AND ALL, KINDS OF I.AWN TENI IS fSUPlMilKS. BHSE BnUh, CRICKET, QYMNH iaM. —AND— Catalogue mailed free upon application. 23 S. EIGHTH STREET, F hilacielplnia, F a. . lvii p ijul ® IaK W l ' ! 1 IM mm p i - pl l i., 1 (B ! S w yO K IJiv f! i Jylvvs M 36 MSi 2 M Sg xv 1 n ]i f! )if !SHQ 2 W l [ i ' SI fe i l jj lf J i SKjH H J ;iC ' U i [V a] Hbi S 1 3 HO S S B v M 3 ■ E 3 1 y L H ' vAl ' - L ' - £i: fi0 feO W l ' Llr lA x |vOv ] WyWl l¥ g ■ ! S 1 fe ri T f T S0B0 H r l i f 0 i ' : ' Sli ' S ISs53 li S i s 1 1 ifz i T U 6 6 6 i S Si i s H H 1 1 H y M 60 i M 0 l fn C i Jif % 1 1 1 H p 3 ! M 1 I ]I M ' M l i i ]f jT ij l iJ P 1 S H B M! Bp MC ! K i KJl KJL Jl p A Cy7 J; J Sm m m6 t i - M. S J ' | [ ii i i ?! Si£i ' ' ; ! ' ?J Sl Sl 1 wk S ; 2j ::Wi w 8 i ] s i i}! P ] f ' M 3 j j] ffl i Ho M| M S O p 1 1 iM L i :S (. 6 3 2 5 ffm ll M ll M S Of w S ' S S 1 S3 S 1 .! u (_l ivr -S S M 0 Mli yw l -iAMi vw Iji Ml Ij oMi ' y m Sh h h v j l p5 i H T7 ? | j t7 ? ' ' 7 ? 2 S SH i i • sMyO! li w K SlB- ' S E€ 1 M i M P Ml 3 W 0 MM 0 £ym ' c |i M 1 K si ' - kS V A | ( W ru Mr i iP FT ' ' Mi i S0 Sl M M M ' jj l jl j m. M 1 H K I-!: s p mI B 0 ? ?j7 Sw pfe 3 pfei 5 M mm! s 1 1 JyC H pB S 1 rafe 1 2 0 0 m K S H l ll [M == - V !l ??= -r-,r y ' ' q - i : lisS - ; r . ?« - y - : • - - •1 k. _ -H. r7 ? R f k


Suggestions in the Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) collection:

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1886 Edition, Page 1

1886

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1887 Edition, Page 1

1887

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1888 Edition, Page 1

1888

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1890 Edition, Page 1

1890

Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 1

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Lehigh University - Epitome Yearbook (Bethlehem, PA) online collection, 1892 Edition, Page 1

1892


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1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.