Ohio State University - Makio Yearbook (Columbus, OH)
- Class of 1890
Page 1 of 226
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 226 of the 1890 volume:
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I u V E F I W DR. C. A- ECKERT, V f. -.-' Q5 THIRD AVENUE gl HIGH STREET. if ET - I SPECIAL RATES STG STUDENTS I I DEEICEIDPEN EVERY DAY AND EVENING. ITA, -X, . I k . . .N , 9 , 2, , A fr 3 fi . 5' 3 -, .11 ,f .fi ' 'E A . ,z A fiDE TISTA2 kneel? fe us fer eneee... n ef all Rinds. e + e e Sffrengig Qau'rell'5 A Yeung Mens 2 Sbees, n lease Eall and Tennis Geedg, Sieberf ci Esffill, Ne+ 835 Nevin High Sheet Don't be a Clam. VALENT NE, The Draper. Fd67Zk5 amd Wokfewaansfzzf Me Fzkzesi. U IDUCGZ 'IRGHEOHHUIQ ' CBentIemen's 'woolemm Suitings anb Cvouserings to Meer. The only establishment in the eity that has EL full line of fabrics, manufactured by Seryis LQ Co., Lendon, Eng., suitable for tennis players, trousers, etc. A l Q-l ..1 , l t .3 . -t swam M urns MOSES.-- A goose gcl1bbl15 mud the, Illblfifllfill Qbwuarenlnvlted fe vlslf I X h . sf, 9 I ' A if wa megs S .' ,1 T43 5! I 4 ' 2 f P 5' Q M I ' f' Yi ,ii 3 1 1 I 7135593 R5 'Ei d 7 5 'W i 'Y 3 ,I 9 115 3 7' Q-we lbw 92 Jwf r' U ffm . ,lf xr? fl EMM ? MH O 1 , : 5 9 I. 'E' ytgz, fu 41 ,Vo H 1 Q sf fm 4,4 ,l', A6 l ' 3- ' fb 1 l in .4 l 4 90 1 ' -L .- 9 ' , 'W A! U3 1 - 0 65 S, , ? it .,, -Pm ' ,q 15 I5 'L ff , 1 . it ul 19, Pi l998e2Ol HIEH U OUSEBLOCK Emu STREET UQLUQQQMSO we are without Doubt makmg the Finestm abinetmphoisographs the largest, jfinest 3 ever probuceb In the west - ' ,7 in the west S C BEN1xET1'.--I'm a ra b beer? hug Wreck of povelty and a son of a gun for --at-uP-'L- NU 556512 IEQIIIDIJCD 5811012 R. S. GOODELL-.U He was addictedto the bottle? C17 ine ifilfllatthes, HDI ONDS, llc! RieI7 -1-jewelry, -:- Sterlimg -1- Silver, locks, LfBr 11565, Etc. FRANK F. BONNE , No. 18 North High St., P COLIUIVIBUS, OHIO. 'ul13fCl365, QIOCR6 HND QBWCIPQ TRCIJEIUCD. And the ship sails Friclayf, EllVlER Cgl AME , COR. THIRD AVE. AND EIGHTEENTH ST., J Y ,ff KBLL fE9jEgK-LiQ t L x ti UQQWEE,--fkfid wlwi fa 1 II I Illl' ML ' we g Ing: ...M l , I. .M lIiDn' u z l I '-f-A ,IE Q iNVhX2?i7i'lI EMI I H I, ZNISIVZIQ I .- 4 'IN i In I IIIQNXU n ,Ima 0 ,I 'pgs Q ,WWW Q f ,fqlgyi L'm l,y5 lil: f .I If . ...I 124.4 as 'gf IL nfl I UM' ' MW M1 W W fi V-F? it if 1 'IL I llllll!-Qi lIl m1i '1M'Le-f-is-rl: I jllilfh JI,-,lwjW,,,gIAIZH.L wifi MII: mnuu, i 'UI nun 'W' 10 -' Q5 L aid ' 2 3,1 . illlIllIl'IllIIillLi,EKW 7 ijt fish. J, Z N. V - 1 'I' ' - f.-fl , - 2.12. -. . , - , :sv scaly: fy.-,'.'.. ' Lf' 1:--1'1f'i'. - K 3 3 f'iJ7'f.I'fIf ' . . .ESU i ' A A. ' ' ,im 'ifS..f.' . . .,.--Bair? Q'- 3-' ' .. 2'T' 'II-IA--.': ' ' ,:7f?-'if 1 1 Tai-li 17- ' ,...-.il-7 .l!S!-.V VX itll 47 2 M- f-'if-iiflflf: ',,,..:.46 'n. - 1 V... I' ,uv-'-S-. :-of-2'x:a'Q -, - 'I ..-- -.- .. ... . f , . if 5- ..-If- ',v ' ,-42:9 i is -'-s '- -Q-2 HIL. 1 1 ' I 1 -wjwmif 2,-'.,gas. --' get 4 ffl ? '5 i - , Fig.. .. .g..,,,,i ...Q rg i - If .V 'T I 1? fr i rg-jg .i,Q..I: S -3 E 1' 1 '- ' - ', 3. 2 ,' uf' 1.14 liI 'll2i Ei',i,f,i' i I if Irllil' i. -E-:x5 ili:1IM204! -4 :' I ffl. .iw 25'ffFV3S'Qf f'I 2?1 if '9' if Ui' ,ig.,Ig5g,,fI-Q , Ianni 'IT -rw 'I I I 'gr mlm .1 WIMI - . I- '. - . -111. -Inu' s 'X'f'f:fv:'!V if p J ,I ' 1 I ,.E.v - WY . Ijnjjivg H I 5 .'.-I - -u - -'- .mu L , .igMfg...,,.0f55f21u:?-4,1will 1530 ,,..,n1IlIAug,11 E w- l,,. .--P, ,,,g-.W -1.,.,,f01m-.2-bl - nm 7- - ' ,, ll 415: .110 Q, -., I0 -EI. s1'lIfWPf'f i ill'!tli.'ii 'ilffhm '75 IE .' --N -ef. Zi rv 'fl I .... .... 5?1fG51:4,E- -77: f . flfiflf :ii -I ana iffy - '-- 'if f -' ' 'T 5f.g.k ,qi ,.- -: Hin - , ,uw ' vi 11. x5v....-- 1, -K . 'V 7, I Q h -:-. ..:::::m 4' ml. . -'U Q , 'ff'7Lff'l ,., f, -I I! 'f' 1-'I - I-W1 4 -M. : - fu 1 gaifw- 'P '- s' lf Wit :'lI-'I .f II-Q. nh .. L. ' ...Q : ,, ,f I H I f :..,,y::f H-.--1' I Iisi-1 mg iff ' -'S -ill-5.:f,' 21.2, Tl llllllll .f g.,, , . .,.i.. 'I A . f l ' .H-S' 'P.-.f44? T4 It ' - ' . K-Q. ' ',' XY' if , i : SVIF ff' 1 7w 'H' 9 rv ' I' 'TTS-'ii..r'1f-fbil R-.IfiX i 95 Ji 'Lim ,If -.. , -. , -a-saga.-. -i,.f,,.g5,.-. n , L., spa ,ly ai 'N-1, :-. :I i' ,P -I 'su rw if , H ' z . - I , I i -l .J . I 4 , , I . s 4 .uw.n.....u ,g ,M ,, 7, ii f J. - I , sw I ,,::,... ,i -an ,. ,li ..--..,....3+ ! xl., k, ., 1 if - .I-E ir'-n!In,f5,1i tg V531 Nf f .ml 'F ,g ,fl ,-.E .imply ai! .-: -5 nw fl 1' 5- --'fr ' 5 55 56' 1 , .-1,1 I-Ir1w: j.Q!:iJ.7 ' Q 1 rl. 'II' 5--m 27,11 .! - , I' W HU: I5ggg.i,,m,I.LflIfZ,1.1.1-2. Y, Q, r 4 -pg, sy .- 1, - 5 , -I ' I-E . -ilhhll .Iv :N--V: 1 lf, A I: ,, I .yjutgi , I L J I, ,Y I ,WW ...G ,,-.... ---'Q in - .f - - ,..... ... '- - -. -,- . ?' '-463 -gf 'F--3?-ifNf'1a'111fflf17fWn'-1'W7'vf2V-Y 1 C. P. Chemicals and Ac-ids, Bunsen's Burners, Rubber Tubing, Balances and Wfeights, Furnaces and Cruci- bles, Bohemian and German Glass and Porcelain lVare, Filter Papers, Blowpipes, Apparatus, etc. SOLE AeEN'rs Fon Carl Zeiss' Microscopes, F. dz M. Lautenschlaeger's Bacterioscopical Apparatus, F. Schmidt 85 Haensch Sugar Testing Instruments, F. Des- montis, Lemaire dz Co. C. P. Ham- mered Platinum, etc. - Chemists, Colleges and Labora- tories supplied with the best goods at the lowest prices. ' BIATTIE GUERIN.- Foxes are all tail, women all tongue. 11 - Full of himselff, We O ZMWZ O No. 379 South Hicgb Street, GOITUMBUS, OHIO. - l i Filye merelyalyt Tailorilycg, Mititarg 'Uniforms Specialty. PEN PER OENT. GIVEN ON CITIZENS, CLOTIIICS, TO STUDENTS ONLY. - FI -z-Pe11feet-:- Fit -z- Guaranteed. X Bnssuc Hom..- Ugliness Without tact is horrible. H, -H nk 'Ann' 'n F x ' Pl - 2 U 'V V' - U' ' .pn - PROF. SMITH.-H lVhat at spendthrift is he of his tongue. olumbue Cabinet onlpamg, MANUFACTURERS OF AND WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN Ann KINDS H 011 FURNITURE, 236, 238 6: 240 South High St., CODUMBUS, O I Special inducements made to Colleges, Societies and Fraternities. All are invited to inspect our stock. Renieniber the number, ENDS. 236, 238 85 240 SOUTH HIGH STREET. WV. L. GRAVES.-- Only to fill up spacefl GQODMAN C31 CG., illberehant aiIor5,2:Q-2 D288 1lflortb1bigb Street, Golumbue, Ohio, ' ' . ' . 'A A ' , Miss llANNAlI NEll,.---Kc There are some for whom my szntm 6111116 too l1ol4l. HIGH GRADE Co11sistin.g of the best lnztuufzxctures in the country, mul 2 l7GCO1ll1HQl1ClOCl by the best A0't1'sfs t7lT0f?lff7I,IJ'llAf ffm t,UU'I'lll. My pztrlors are the liuest in the State. No troulrlo to slum goods. All are invited to Call whether they wish to purvlmso or not. - PRICES REASONABLE AND TERMS EASY. G.VV.E RRY, NEIL HOUSE BLOCK, COLUMBUS, OHIO. LEETE.--H Remote, unfrienclly, melancholy, slowf, POTTS 8a MCQQY, Brass Goods, Wrfought Irfon Pipe, llblumbers' ano Gas jfitters' ano !lDiII Supplies. HEADQUARTERS FUR NATURAL GAS suPPuEs. Telephone 395. 308 181. High Sweet, COLUMBUS, OH1o. 'A . S Q it 'I 656 6687771071 'Q m lm Q C5 ,ju R R D . x -5 -R EE , Eu fjg 3 QOZIBI' iY?Hf?t?7f?I'. H G 5 ' 3 -..A----L-, P14 Q l 1u!gQlmm,f ml 5 8 N I, , I Y X pg ,,,, 5, llllt1Z6S. Lltrllaltem loom R- as, rs 5lITllDllfl9d and Perfedodg ll'l' E. W. SCHUELLER.-U His studie was litel on the Bible. iLang'e Zionsorial llbarlor fU:il165t HND Best in the GUQ. PHILL. DHINIG, Prfoprfietorf. Exdusively Qefail 37 HIGH STREET. HOSTER BLOCK- 0 Miss SESSIONS.- There is one secret a woman keeps--her age 93 9 . I i v6 A rcs E9 ,5 'aa Q- .fl . 'ef' v-X-4 Q. ,J 'CJ ISI S- fc 2 E 'f' 'G O of Q 0 ac ,Q O -9 ga '- Q U1 J5 9 e 2 2- 56 E. 'f' 2 as g Lg.. 3 E .0 So OJ Q N '3 83 LPA an- w 6 CD gg no fs 5 DGN -I N : Cr m JZ .Cb I 0 vi: Fi , o . S-1 W 53 Q4 TKELLY.-Q-SKA Freshman by descent, from the Emerald Isle I steer? Miss LAMME.--HLGSbi2l, hath a hezuuilmg eycf' THE QNLY BUCK STQRE In Central Ohio which carries :L full. line of thu Universiffy IPQXT ci QQICQFQHCQ IQJDDIRS, 11-L 1-1. SMYTI-IE, Nos. 41 and 43 S. High Street. AVG: call Special Attention at this Season to our carefully SL-looted lima uf JBDDRQ suitable for Srabuating llbreeents. W I'11 tell you how it Was. fn H. Brahma Sons 5 Gow Qgvugs, Ghemicals, Surgical gnsirumenfcs, fpfusses, Supporfers, Elagfiq Sfoqkings, Eff. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. AT THE OLD RELIABLE STAND ' 24 Tmortb 1bfQb 5tYCCt, GOIIINIUIIS, WING. 'Che 1Rauffman:iLattimer CED. 'Ibeabquarters for 'laboratory Supplies. Q--p-.---.- UCICDDDDQ 486. Columbus, M310 C, 9, POWELL.- Who thinks too little and talks too uma-h,', THE MAKIU PUBLISHED BY THE FRATERNITIES. ,1l.....l.-lli-. 7 QI-II0 STATE UNIVERSITY, IIINE, IEE 30930 J111111' BU11Ns.- I can assure yout I1z1t itwuko or nslec-p In- IF IIN- ug-In-st oi the works of God. CCDCDKIS Prescription -1- PI721 rmaey, 1165 Norfth I-ligb Strfeet, CCO14. Gneenwood Hve.j ' A COMPLETE LINE OF PURE DRUGS, cz:-ismlenus, anb Stanbarb llbbarnmcellticals. We have a choice line of Imported and Domestim- Cigars, 111111 ull llfllrllllll' brands of Tobaccos. Physic1:1n's PI'GSlfl'11If1OIlS am-111':1teIy p1't-purctl ut 1111 l1ours, from the purest mator1z1Is fjbtllrlllilllltt. FREE SPECIAL TELEPHONE- Inducements to Students is familian to all O. S. U. Students. W. B. I-ItENDE1zsoN.- To spend too 11111011 time Ill studies is sloth. H. COLE, 'WOPTI IAN,'24+ AND DEALER IN Eurveying Instruments, Mathematiqal Instruments, elrqhiteqts and Engineers Supplies and Stationery. 82 North I-Iigh Street, NELLIE TALBOT.-H I would for beauty. Lt It ' ' ' 9 su1-1-e11de1- 111111157 gcnjus and 1L.m.nin,,, in vwllm v TABLE CF CC TENTS Editorials ........ ........ Trustees ............... ........ Lives of New Trustees. ..... . The Faculty ............ ..... Senior History ......... Senior Biography. ..... . Junior History ......... .. Sophomore History . ..... . Freshman History ....... Alumni Association. ..... . Fraternities. ....... ...... ...... . Phi Gamma Delta. .... . Phi Kappa Psi ....... Sigma Chi ......... .... Phi Delta Theta. .... . Chi Phi ......... .... Beta Theta Pi. ....... ...... . .. Kappa Kappa Gamma. ...... . Summary of Fraternities ..... Conventions ...... ......... ...... Societies and Associations Alcyone ...... ......... .... Horton.. Browning .................. Kirtland . ....... ...... ...... . . . Oratorical Association. ............. . Y. M. C. A., King's Daughters. .... . Biological and Bicycle Clubs. .... . Boarding Clubs . ............. ...... . Glee and Banjo Clubs. ..... . Tennis Association ...... .. Athletic Association. ..... . Base Ball... .......... . FootBall. ................ Sketch Club ................................. History of Military Department Roster of Battalion .................. . Senior Promenade ... .. .. 3 Q... 1... '... ,... --.- ... .vu ...- -... -... -..- -... Q... -..- .- ...- ...- ...- -... ...-. '...' ..... -,... -.--. PAGE 8 12 13 14 17 20 23 25 .. 27 29 30 31 34 31 .. 40 43 46 50 53 .. 54 55 56 59 62 65 67 68 69 70 ... 72 74 75 .. 76 .. 73 .. 79 .. 80 .. 82 .. 8-1 IDIICSS of QEISCUC Ilbfilltillg TDOIISC, GOIIIINDIIS, wbio. PREFACE. HE tenth volume of the MAKIO is completed. If it meets with the cordial reception that has greeted pre- vious volumes, we shall be well repaid for our labor. The thanks of the editors are due all who have in any way aided the publication of the book. 'We are especially indebted to Prof. J. N. Bradford for a number of very fine drawings and photographs, also the Ghio Savings Bank for the loan of 310,000.00 in gold certificates in preparing our frontispiece. Hearing that the photographing of money is unlawful, we sub- mitted to the Secretary of the Treasury the photo that had been taken and learned that we were each liable to 35,000.00 fine.and 15 years imprisonment at hard labor. The design was at once abandoned and the present frontispiece adopted. We have tried to grind impartially and if any one has escaped rather easily, it is because he is a ram cms whose delineation has found no place in literature. Those who think they have been badly treated and thirst for gore are referred to our Grievance Committee, which consists of the editors who solicited advertising. These editors have endured all things and been all things to all men if perchance they might get an advertisement. They are tougher than book agents or thc Juniors and would be a dangerous crowd to tackle. Our lWAGIC NIIRROR has had to reflect images this year that would have stopped a clock and this explains its dilapi- dated condition as seen in the finis. J Tanmc or CONTENTS-C07lf'lil?UUd- Happenings .................... 1. .. . . .. Announeemenls .............. Sunday Lectures ............... . ............. Horton and Aleyone Anniversaries. .... . Dorm. Tliaiiksgiving ..... ...... ......... Tlniversity Day. ....... Arbor Day ......... ................. .......,. .... ....,. ......... . Class Day P1'Hg'l'2l.1ll :mil Commencement Urulors Field Day .............................. A...4.. ..... ...,.. ..,, . State Field Dav. ......... . Best O. S. U. Beeords .......... Fort Ancient Expedition ...... .. Dorm. Happenings ...... ...... ...... . . . Democratic National Convention. ..... . Springfield Trip ...... ............ ...... Memorial of Queal and Gut-hridge ..... Professor 1Velsh. 'K In lvlemoriam .. Miscellaneous. ....... ......... ...... ...... . Prize Poem. ..... . .......... .... ...... . . . To Prexy. ................... ...... ......... ...... . . Novelette-How Bill 1Vent to College ...... Pensive ......... ......... ........................ . Torture.. . . . Fossils Quotations . .... . p LIST CF ENGRAVINCS Our Alumnus Trustee. .... .... ...... ............ . . . . Senior Heliotype .,.. C. Phi Gamma De1ta...... Phi Kappa Psi ...... Sigma Chi ............ Phi Delta Theta. .... .. Chi Phi ...... ...... . Beta Theta Pi. ............. . Kappa Kappa Gamma.. Foot Ball Team. ....... . Battalion Oflieers Professor VVelsh ..,.. I' Uili. 85 843 S7 88 SH HSP fill Sll SP2 112.5 1:4 SM Q5 1.1 101 105 108 1 UU fb 110 11-1 117 121 125 126 128 1551 13 17 31 34 Ol -10 -13 -lti 50 TS S12 1021 4 1 BOARDQDFIINTURS. JESSE JONES, '. 49 I' A. LOUIS F. KIESEWETTEE, . 111 If Alf. G. E. MOCOLLOOH, Z X. J. E. THOMPSON, . Q A 0. H. C. LAUGHLIN, . X QD. H. L. JOHNSTON, . B 0 17. MAHEL BASTERDES, . . K If F. J OFHCERS. JESSE JONES, . . ' President. LOUIS F. KIESEWETTER, Secretary. G. E. MOCOLLOOH, . . Treasurer JOSEPH R. TAYLOR, '87, . SpeOia1Artist. ,,. . - , .-- .HIL 2. 52 J .4033 d 7-ff ' ' . A f f. - f fl Q A 1 mn X wg . 0 IM Q f f P Z 5 f fn Q6 a fjfr X N XNRf7L7f7 X THE Field Day held on the State Fair Grounds was one of the most successful the CP. S. U. has ever witnessed. Those of the winners who went to the State Field Day at Vllooster did well, securing second place for us, although they had not enjoyed the benefits of gymnasium training and were other- wise handicapped. ,1... IT is difiicult to see the necessity for the frequent changes 'in text-books that have been made during the past few years in certain departments-notably those of Philosophy, and His- tory and Political Economy. If this were a public school, there would not be wanting persons to say that these changes were in the interest of some publishing house. IT is to be hoped that the petition of the students to the Board of Trustees for inclosed athletic grounds for tennis, base ball, foot ball, and general athletics, will be met with a liberal appropriation. If we can not have a gymnasium we should have a good athletic field. The field east of the new chemical building could be leveled and drained and used for this purpose. THE Lantern is not and can not be a success under the present management. The literary societies should assume the debt that hangs over it. They might then place it in the hands of some responsible student, and by paying him a small salary retain nominal las at presentj control of the paper. The Scroll and PM Gamma Delta are conducted very successfully on this plan. THE plan adopted by the Faculty at the beginning of the year of having the seniors mark absentees from chapel, has been given up. Although the class of '90 undertook this un- pleasant work, the class of '91 refused to follow its example. Nine out of ten of the better class of students are opposed to senior spotting 5 it is therefore no surprise that the action of '91 was approved by the mass of the students. 9 ' ' a I i Y ,. ? I .. yl ,Q Eoiroamrs. i ! 1 u . i----,-, ,Lil THE current year has been a. most successful one. 9 l -...... E, THE growth of college spirit is to be most heartily com- mended. lt should be encouraged 'by both p1'ofcSSOT 211161 f i student. 4 f 1 .lili- IT' should result in an increased attendance next year, for f ' as an advertising medium nothing can equal an enthusiastic student. 5 PROFESSOR QUEEN, who has had charge of the Department it ot' History and Political Economy during Professor Knightis absence in Europe., has filled the place Very acceptably. rlllllf new chemical laboratory will furnish facilities for teaching general agricultural and metallurgical chemistry that can be equalled by few, if any, western colleges. It should attract many new students. I l .. i , . l iw - N - - - 1 'l HE system in vogue in the battalion at present, ot mak- ing promotions according to seniority, is not conducive to its K highest efiiciency. The battalion is Well officered, but if pro- motions were made in accordance with merit, the oflicers would be still more capable and there would be better discipline. - 'llnic literary societies have done better work tha.n for a number of years. This is shown by the rivalry between Alcyone and Horton. Contests should be held each year 5 f They help to keep up interest in literary Work, which tends to L lag in a school so much devoted to purely technical studies as the O. S. U. 1 . . x ig vi ict r v . c b j THE Board of Trustees has for a number of years been furnishing rooms rent free in the two dormitories to the stu- dents. It has been decided to charge each student 31131.50 per term for the use of his room. This seems to us a step in the wrong direction. Heretofore itihas not been the policy of the Board to raise a revenue from the students, but to furnish the agricultural, mining, and manufacturing classes as cheap an education as possible. This looks like the entering wedge of a new policy that will certainly meet the approbation of Very few. THE question is often asked VVhy is not elocution taught in the Ohio State University 'F 7' In the life of every American citizen, oratory plays an important part. The man who can get up before an audience and say what he wishes to say in an easy, convincing manner, is sure of success. It wouldbe better that some of the studies of the curriculum be given up, rather than that we should do without training in elocution. Let us hear of no more recommendations to the Board of Trustees to establish a Chair of Pedagogy until we have a Chair of Oratory. , 11 Tint: disposition of a number of the professors to eneour- age class and college spirit is commendable. The ball team was given permission to make a three-day trip, there WHS 110 drill don the day of the freshmaii-sophomore rush. The stu- dents will work all the harder for a little recreation. A ehanee to see other eolloges and meet other eollege men will broaden our views and add more to our stoek of knowledge than the few reeitations missed. lr was quite a disappointment to the friends of the Uni- versity that no appropriation was made this year for a, gymna- sium and drill hall. During Winter and bad weather for over two hundred students to be oooped up in an ill-smelling, dark, dirty basement, makes drilling by far the most disagreeable of our eollege duties. It is to be hoped that the time will soon come when the state treasury will be in sueh a. condition as to admit of a handsome appropriation for a gymnasium at least. lr is to be hoped that the Fraternities will before next year put the Maisto on a. business footing. At present there is no cfonstitution governing the Board of Editors, except Custom and no fixed time for their eleetion. Eaeh ehapter should eleet its editor during the first week of the sehool year. A eonstitution should be adopted also. By organizing in Septem- ber instead oit March, the editors eould secure more advertise- ments, both foreign and domestic, and issue a better annual. - T , l t a sha.me that the Board of Trustees should allow the young lady students to be eooped up in quarters that are little Nffifiieillillifllftffiffillilli.ffLhQfii tie tbmfho-H to M' for them. if a eourse could be den' a G msuucuon iS Plfwldod . I Vised that would give li reneh. Ptt1I1JL1l1g,NlLlSlC, and a few other desirable studies, instead of Soph. Physics, Anatomy, and sueh stuff as the VOUNQ Limos are eompelled to take, their number would be doubled in 21 single year. 10 BOARD OF TRUSTEES HON. -JOSEPH H. BRIGHAM, . DGU21 ffox. C1k1'.x1-:ms C. MILLIQR, Ottawa lux DAVID M. MASSIE, . Ch1H1CO'fh0 HON. R.rf'1'1IE1:FoRD B. HAYES, Fremont -Tux Lui'1Lfs B. W ING, .V Newark Klux. THm1.'xs J. GODFREY, Celina Q' 511. J. B. SCHUEI.LER, ' ..... Columbus . OFFICERS OF THE BOARD. T1mM.xs J. GQDFREY, J P,-gmipnf, ID.xx'1n M. MASSUQ, Vice Pmsaiclvnf ALEXIS COPE, . fS'ecrctaTry. FRED. XV. PRENTISS, .... T5'cczszw'er. COMMITTEES OF THE BOARD. EXECUTIVE. FARM. FINANCE. T 7-T T' '1w L. B. WMNLI. R. B. Hfuns. J. B. SCHUELLIQR. rw , 1. yt - 1. A. C..mm1LI.. J. H. BRIQHAM. D. M. TWASSIE. J. B. SCHUELLER.. L. B. VVING. C, C, B1-ILLER' 12 LIVES CF THE NEW TRUSTEES. CHARLES C. MILLER, appointed by Governor Campbell to fill the vacancy on the Board of Trustees caused by the resig- nation of Hon. H. J. Booth, was born at Baltimore, Fairiield County, in the year 1857. He taught in the schools of Fair- field County, afterwards graduating from the Fairfield Union Academy in 187 6. After teaching some time he entered the Chio State University, graduating here in 1883 With the degree of Aj B. He Was a member of Alcyone Literary Society and Phi Gamma Delta Fraternity. During his juniorand senior years he was tutor in Latin and Greek. Upon graduation, Mr. Miller became superintendent of the schools at Eaton, Where he re- mained three years. From there he Went to Cttavva, Where he has for five years conducted the schools With a marked degree of success. He is a member of the Fairfield County Board of Examiners, and was last year candidate on the Democratic ticket for State School Commissioner. lt- gives the greatest satisfaction to the students of the University to have on the Board an alumnus of the institution, especially one so identified With the interests of education as Professor Miller. . DR. J. B. SCHUELLER Was appointed to fill the place vacated by Hon. Thomas A. Covvgill. Dr. Schueller was born in 1838, at Bain, a small town of Bavaria. Dr. Schueller attended the common schools, at Bayreuth and from his tenth to his sixteenth year he studied at the gymnasium, which he had to leave 'When in 1854 his parents emigrated to the United States. He took up the study of medicine at Starling Medical College, and in 1861 Went to Germany to complete his studies at the Univer- sity of WuC1'ZDH1'g in Bavaria, and Prague in Bohemia. He graduated in 1864, and came to Columbus, Where he has prac- ticed tvventy-six years. He will prove an active and untiring Worker in behalf of the University's interests. -13 5,3411 J , ' . ...-.f,1,,, 1 , V , ijMAJG'Q- ' J 2,1 ,l ' fyfv .f, 3.h ' 1 ..,5, - f, . 10-'mp-q ., .. -, ggi.,-1 5 ,, 1 ,,. F ,, , , . , ,, f 1,Q.5':-.W Y ,Sl .. ,,-.1 ,.,'. , x f 0 ft . N 5: J u! ,1 1 I , , K 's4v.Txq'- -A PF4- - ---- V- -4, ' ' '.-Y - ,TQY -V V ,Q W J JOSIAH R. SMITH, M. A., Indianola Place. Professor of the Greek Language and Literature. HENRXL A. NVEBER, PH. D., I 1342 Forsythe Avenue. Professor of Agricultural Chemistry. BENJAMIN F. THOMAs, PH. D., University Grounds. ' Professor of Physics. XGEORGE VV. KNIGHT, PH. D., Professor of History and Political Science. ' y HENRY J. DETMEEs, M. v. D., st King Avenue. I Professor of Veterinary Surgery. GHAS. E. IZILBOURNE, lst Lt. 2d Art., U. S. A., 815 Franklin Ave. Professor of Military Science and Tactics, anol Assistant Professor of Mathematics. B. DANIEL BOHANNAN, B. SO, G. E., E. M., 101 King Ave. Professor of Mathematics ancl Astronomy. 'DAVID S. IQELLICOTT, PH. D., University Grounds. Professor of Zoology and Comparative Anatomy. G. NEWTON BROWN, C. E., University Grounds. Associate'Professor of Civil Engineering. .XALICE K. VVILLIAMS, t Associate Professor of the French Language and Literature. I ERNST A. EGGERS, Broad and Fourth Streets. Associate Professor of the German Language ancl Literature. PGEORGE B. KAUFFMAN, B. SO., 60 Garfield Avenue. Associate Professor of Pharmacy. JAMES CHALMERS, PH. D., , 1447 Hunter Street Associate Professor of the English Language ancl Literature. JOHN W. QUEEN, PH. D., Indianola Place Acting Professor of History ancl Political Science. BENJAMIN L. BONVEN, PH. D., 54 West Second Avenue Acting Associate Professor of the French Language and Literature. iiAbsent in Europe. 15 0 P SY . F - l 3 fr. f - 5 , ,S , rel 'fl 'N' v- I ll' QE. ll' L' w g I ll N ftrlf QI. r 1 ra I to 5 Qf mH ' ml :F. s'l.x -., l V' .. -gll'la1flf !1:.l' gi I5'! .,,i::'f IUmnmuumnuueunllvxultulllnlllxanul1 7, ' 'ff h!! Ul:::::::'lll IU lllllilllllllllllllllligliugg nilinumn Z X ' ' 'f num lHlllIfllIlL-- THE FACU LTY. W1I.I.1.xM H. Soofrfr, A. M., LL. D., University Grounds. President and Professor of Philosophy. Emvsnn O11.'roN, PH. D., LL. D., 100 Twentieth Street. Professor of Geology. SIDNEY A. No1z.ToN, PH. D., LL. D., Town St. and Grant Ave Professor of General and Applied Clzemfistrg. Nonfrox S. ToWNSHEND, M. D., University Grounds Professor of Agriculture. STILLMAN VV. ROBINSON, C. E., A 1353 Highland Street Professor of Mechanical Engineering. lNATHANIEL XV. LORD, E. M., 205 East Broad Street Professor of Mining and Metallurgy. SAMUEL C. DERBY, M. A., IIICMQIIIODI .Place Professor of the Latin Language and Literature. ' J 7 , V -, ' ' XX ILLIAM R. LMENBY, M. Aon., Un1vQ1-Slfy G1-,mmls 'Professor of Botany and Llortficfaltare. ' 1 14 N s I i I ASSISTANT PROFESSORS AND INSTRUCTORS. I f W r I i L Glsolzelc XV. McfCoARD, M. A., GO West Iiourth Avenue. J1SSl'SlfCL7l1f Professor of llhihevnatvfcs. Fli.EDICRIC.'K XV. SPER11, E. M., 1461 VVO1'thi11gtO11 Street. A-lssistcmzf Professor of llfinivzg Enghzeoring. ,IIJSEPII N. BRADFQQHD, M. E., G1 WVest Eighth Avenue. - Assistcmt 'in D1'cm'ing cmd Meolzcmfzfcal Engineering. JAOSEPI-I T. WHITNEY, 1321 Highland Street. Assistcmt in Physics. FmcD1f:1Q:1c-:1c IQEFFER, E. M., Wfest Ninth Avenue. Assistcmt in Chemislry. ' J.x.MEs'A. XVILGUS, M. A., 77 West Lane Avenue. f flssistant in Latin cmd Hfislory. C11ARLE.s P. SIGERFOOS, B. Se., Eighth Avenue. A.SSI'Sf!l7lt fm 'Zoology ofnd C077'Ij9CL7 CLliL'l? xlrmtomy. C1A1.x1aL1cS W. BIIESLOI-I, B. A., 1360 Hunter Street. Q Assfistcmt in Gormcm. , Joslin-I R. 1.-xYLoH, B. A., 53 McMillan Avenue. r -issviszicmt in Dr'awing. g ' N 7 Y7 7 . T NX ILLTAM B. Lmmn, North 1JO1'1H1fU1'y. 5 1188581566715 in V efzferivzcm-.11 0Iocllz'cim'. 1, ALVIN D. HMNES, . 34 QH11 Stlwt. Asszstant in Jmfoltctorzioal Laboratory. f 16 CLASS OF 990. COLORS: Pink and Peacock Blue. MOTTO: Age ei Vince. YELL: Wahoo, Wahoo, '9O'S lhe O Brains of the O. S. U. .il OFFICERS. 1 O. B. NIORREY, . . . . , Ponesiolent. J. H. LARGE, . . Vice Pmsfiolent. H. S. MITCHELL, . . Seoretcwy. O. E. SKINNER, . fZl'easWe1'. ALICE MOODY, . Hvlstofrelan. J. O. RI'TCHEY, . . Sergecmt-at-Arms. .QFFICERS OF PERMANENT ORGANIZATION. NELL1E TALBOT, Oolunilous, O., . . . Seowetaoiy. O. L. ARNCJIJD, Milan, O., . Assfistcmt Secretary. Q . HISTORY. HE Fall of '84 witnessed the arri- val of the first division of Uwe? 'unsf' Of that noble band of prepsthere survive but a hand- ful of the faithful ones,-Bertha, Mana and three of the rural COlllZl1l0'O11t--J . Ohahners Ritch- C A X ey, O. Pinokney FOX and one of the MAKLO editors. Of the rest, some have .flunkedg some are cultivating the 17 -71 1232? 1 Q . ,I , ..f'l 'Q I 1 A :S+ 42 9 , gr. 1 ,cm iff' ..1, Fllf. -. 71:13 a ' I-Jin, ':W N fig! 'S X. N 1'f'5Q.ff as' ' f ,rw-, . ,vgffw-' x .- . 'fi' N wie, , . L A lf? V 4 'nl . X ,, 1, Q, A I if I f' AA'-A .49 4' ,wifi . , 11-9 F 4 A . ht' v- ' . -. ff '12 - 'f:1,Q2L'-.- , ' 'nf 1 fy .v f--w. - X 1 -,X N x ,xx , , X . , X X X f H ' X 1 ,,f.. 5 r ik PQ! f 1 I 1 gave themselves away. They lost their dinner and we did not let them out till 4 P. M. In our sophomore year we sustained a loss which it was not possible to replace, for C. Casper Oviatt and Tommy You- mans left us to return no more. The year wa.s marked by the Hallowelen. party which was an affair pleasantly to be remem- bered, notwithstanding the infantile attempt of 789 to mar the festivities. We read of the grasshopper being a burden to the land, but they could notcompare to those sophs, who were a thorn in our flesh from prepdom till they graduated. On the eve of the party, they stole the dress suits of all the boys-hats, coats, trousers, shoes, ties, gloves and a.ll. lVe had to go in our old clothes and were hopping mad. Since that time we have pursued the even tenor of our way, always sustaining our part in college life, wearing plugs and doing our duty ever. Leav- ing out of consideration the remnants of '89 which have come down to us for heir-looms as it were, we may say that our class is not distinguished either for its beauty or its brawn, but pos- sesses enough brains, Qsee our class yell,j to recompense us for their lack. Its prevailing characteristic is expressed in its motto, Age et Vince 'l . 1 QGet up and get therej. It is this sublime sentiment that has been the guiding star of 'Harry QProfessor Tuttle tried to change it to Henry but failedj Mitchell, Russell Feicht, Mer- shon and Ritchey in their successful efforts in every field, especially among the ladies. lt is this inspiration which has given Robert Kellogg Beach of Kelloggsville, Ashtabula County, this State, that unique style of eloquence which, as Heller says, catches the rural population? lt is this- Printer telephones for copy and the Historian of '90 takes the first car for the Gazette office 19 g succulent maize and mealy potato, some are married and the rest are-H though lost to sight, to memory dearfl ln the second year many notable additions were made to our ranks, not thetleast of whom was our adorable Fannie. .Hut alas ! of these none are left but Perry Grimsley, Ed Skinner and Clyde Smith. This year was marked by many events wortliy of note. Our first, last and only dudes-Tonnny Yfmmzms and C, Casper Oviatt labored to impress upon our minds the necessity of class organization. And it was so the class of 790 became a legal and accomplished quantity. The air was full of schemes. The granger element, led by Licutenant-Colonel Thompson's big brother Frank, rebelled against frats in general and Tommy and Casper in particular. They found efficient allies in the dear girls, who Wanted a president who had a moustache. So it came to pass that Cas- perls presidential aspirations went glimmering and the mous- taehed Ewing became our first president. He is not in the pcnitentiary like Prof. L's prep. president, but it has been re- ported that he is imarried. It was this year that We got those cute little pins, like the one Mana Needles Wears. We likewise got photographed by Elliott. He said We acted like a lot of geese, but when we went back this year he said the MAKIO of '86 libelled him and that he referred to the dear little ducks in the class. ln our Freshmen year We fell victims to the wily scheniers of '88 and engaged in a bloodless rush with the conteniptible canaille of '89, This is the year We did not wear class hats. We adopted all the current styles in succession, but the wicked sophs got on to our meetings every time and then Grandpa Halglw WOUld put it in the paper. WV e had a little revenge, FOWGVGT, Whell WG Shut up.Hagler, Newton a.nd Dick llglorrex' ln the 211350 ffl-U Clay, Where they had hidden themselves so as E313Ze1ZgS3fntife?7T3f1jrGedEaliieocflppi' meeting. We nexier would h y they got to laughing when We were tliymg to get Off the Committee of the Whole and thus 18 I r l ! n l 3 Q 5 HHH? I '-- '16- D n 1 I l F CHARLES PINCKNEY Fox: B. Agr.5 Springboro 5 18845 Kirt- land5 BiologicalClub5 B. Agfs Commencement Crator5 Q45 Lemtern,' Pres. Kirtland5 Agricultural Chemist5 . Universalist5 Ind. Democrat. GEORGE PERRY CRIMSLEY: B. A.5 Columbus5 1885 5 di If W5 Horton 5 Biological Club 5 Class Day Poet5 Y. M. C. A.5 Geologist5 Presbyterian 5 Republican. YALBERT HENRY HELLER: C. E.5 Wapakoneta5 18855 Civil Engineer5 German Lutheran 5 Democrat. JESSE LEE JoNEs': B. A.: Martin's Ferry5 18855 W F A5 Hor- ton 5 Biological Club5 Y. M. C. A. 5 Sec'y Horton 5 Q25 Secly Y. M. C. A.5 Vice-Pres. '90 5 Pres. Y. M. C. A.5 Q85 Pres. of Dormitory 5 Editor-in-chief of Crfiticg Q45 5 Vice-Pres. Dormitory5 Q45 Pres. NIAKIO Board5 Q45 Captain Foot-ball Eleven5 Correspondent Commercial Gazette 5' Ana- lytical Chemist5 United Presbyterian5 Ind. Democrat. JOSEPH HENRY LARGE: C. E.5 Freedom5 1887 from Chio VVesleyan5 Tennis5 Q45 Quarter-back on Foot-ball team5 Civil Engineer5 -i5 Republican. HUGH CLARENCE LAUGHLIN: B. A.5 Belle Center5 18845 X Q 5 Horton5 Y. M. C. A.5 Tennis5 .Athletics5 Q15 Vice- Pres. Horton5 First Honor, Oratorical Contest5 Horton Anniversary Declaimer5 Treas. Athletics5 Cor. Sec'y Horton 5 Horton Anniversary Crator 5 Vice-Pres. Cra- torical Association5 Q45 Pres. State Cratorical Association 5 Lemtemg MARIO 5 Crator Horton-Alcyone Contest5 Law 5 Presbyterian5 Republican. RALPH DAVENPORT MERsHoN: M. E5 Zanesville5 18865 Tennis5 Mechanical Engineer5 --5 Independent. HENRY STALEY MITCHEIJLZ B. Sc.5 London5 18845 41 1' A5 Tennis 5 Athletics 5 Tennis Team 5 Manager Tennis Team5 Pres. Athletics5 Q45 Vice-Pres. State Association5 Manager Ball Team 5 Correspondent Sunday Ileraldg Pharmaceutical Chemist5 Universalist5 Republican. 21 SENIOR BICGRAPHIES. CHARLES LEVI ARNOLD: B. So.5 Milan5 18865 Hoi-ton5 Y. M. C. A.5 Tennis5 University Day Orator5 Q35 Arbor Dany Crator 5 Treas. of Class5 Teaehing5 Congregational- ist5 Ind. Republican. BIABEL BAsTERnEs: B. Pl1.5 Columbus 5 18845 5 li' li' 1' 5 Brown- i11g5 Kingls Daugl1ters5 Q15 Seo'y Browning5 Pres. Browning5 Lcmtem,- Deelaniation, Aleyone-Browning5 Q35 Juliet, Aloyone-Browning 5 Q45 l5flAKIO5 Class - Prophet5 --5 Congregationalist 5 Democrat. BORERT KELLOGG BEACH: B. Ph.5 Kelloggsville5 188435 df li' W5 Aleyone 5 Thurman Club 5 Q15 D-eolaiiner Aleyone r51111lYL'1'- sary5 Q25 Contest Crator5 Pres. Cratorieal Associa- tion 5 Aleyone Anniversary Crator5 Lcmzfmz 5- Q45 Pres. 5 Aloyone5 Contest Crator 5 Class Day Crator5 Law: 1--5 lDe1noCrat. IiENRY CHARLES BENNETT: B. A.5 Colu1nbus5 1887 from Illinois Wesleyan 5 W F A5 Aleyone5 l5lAKIOI Yiw- Bres. Cratorioal Association 5 Q45 Ivy Cration, Class Day 1 5 6 1 Correspondent State J0zw'fnaZ,' 1 5 Methomlist 5 lmqulu- liean. CHAUNCEY LEANDER CAYLOR : B. Se.5 Columbus 5 188:53 1 Horton 5 Q45 Contest Crator5 Author Caylofs liUOlllS 5 NV inner of Aloyone Caylor-Eylar Debate 5 Toaclling : l'1'es- byter1an5 Ind. Republican. Y 1 N' ' . , H' . KNOTT CROCKETT LGBERT. B. Agr.5 Tilnn 5 188u5 M111,.tu.S: Kirtlancl5 Biological Club5 Far1ning5 3 11111. Rl.- publioan. 4 RUSSELL STIMSON FEICHT: M. E. 5 Daytong 1886 5 A' fp 3 Mm-- 01195 Tennis 5 Pres. Dorniitoryg Class l'res,g ll1liX'lxl'SiiX' 1 l 1 1- I. l . ' m Day Pies., lnleotiieian 5 ii 5 1q,05l,u15,1u.5m. 20 1 CLASS' GF 991. MoTTo:, We zoom' spoi. CLASS YELL: '91, '91, '91, ' W. D. Rnns, IV. H. CLARK, J. F. BURNS, A. W. JoNEs, NIATTIE Mosns, F. E. POMERENE, Eoe1j1 one is ez son of ez gmz, Who z'sn'z' '91, OFFICERS. . . . . President. Vice President. . Secretary. . Treasurer. . . Iistoontctot. . Sergeomt-at-Arms. HISTQRY. TOLD those MAKIO editors, when they asked me to Write the Junior history, that I just Wouldn't do it. But they said they would leave me out of that horrid Wind-mill pio- ture if I wrote a real nioe history, so I promised. . As a olass We have done very little to distinguish ourselves this year. We in- tended to banquet the Seniors, but gave it up after learning that they had allowed 4' Joe Smith, Prexy, and Sam Derby to make oat's-paws of them and agreed to act as chapel spotters. The Faculty came to us at the olose of the Winter term and wanted us to spot. But We were not afraid of them as the Seniors were and told them that We oarne to the O. S. U. to study and not do the Work for which they were paid. .W hen they found we would not spot they were the tiredest set you ever 23 ALICE llYNES MooDiE: B. A.5 Coluinbus5 13355 ff HFS B1.55Wmug5 Kings Daughters5 Q25 Sec'y Browning 5 Bain- fe1'n,' Essayist Alcyone-Browning5 PICS. BTOWU-1113 3 Q45 Critic Browning 5 Class Orator University Day5 Class Historian 5 Teaching5 Presbyterian5 Republican. CHARLES BRADFIELD MORREY: B. A.5 Chester Hill 5 18855 Athletics 5 Alcyone 5 Q45 Pres. Alcyone5 Class Pres.5 Half- back Foot-ball Team5 Physician5 --5 Ind. Repub- lican. hlANA liUCKLE NEEDIJESZ B. Ph.5 Groveport5 1884 5 Brown- ing 5 Kings Daughters5 Q15 Class Sec'y 5 Monitor Brown- ing5 Vice-Pres. Browning5 Q45 Pres. Browning 5 Teach- ing5 Methodist5 Republican. A 5 .losE1-Ar-I CHALMERS RITCHEY: B. Sc. 5 Uniontown 5 1884 5 I'lorton5 Class Pres5 Pres. Horton5 B. Sc. Com- inenceinent Crator5 Debater Alcyone-Horton Contest5 Fariniiig-5 Congregationalist5 Democrat. BERTHA SCOTT : B. Ph. 5 COlL11T1bL1S 5 18845 Browning5 Kings ' flaughters 5 Sedy '90 5 Pres. King's Daughter's5 Arbor Day Orator 5 Pres. Browning5 1- 5 Methodist 5 Repub- iican. CHARLES EDXVARD SKINNER: M. E. 5 Redl-ield5 1885 5 If 1-1 115 Q35 Class Treas.5 Class' Treas.5 Gleo Club5 F2L1'1H111'Qf5 Prcsbytcrian5 Dcinocrat. CARL CLYDE SMITH: B. Ph.5 Chester Hill5 18865 A' dig Q25 Class Trcas. 5 Q35 Contest Orator5 Critic Horton 5 B. Ph. I Coinnienceinent Ora.tor5 Class Ocle5 Tefichi 10 Republican. 1 lh5 V NELLIE TALBOT: B. A. 5 Colu1nbus5 1886 5 11' A' F 5 Q15 Critic Browning 5 Essayist Browning Anniversary 5 Historian Erowlllllg 5 V106-Prest. '9O5 Sec'y Oratorical Associa- tion5 Orator University Day5 Lcwzltem 5' Q45 C1-MC B1-own- U18 5 PFFS- BTQWHHIQ 5 LC1f1lf01'f11,,' B. A. Commcncoinont 01'3it01'5 llG21'Cl11Dg5 Congregationalistg Republican. 22 CLASS CF 992. COLORS: Gold and OZz ve. ' MOTTO A: 'f Omwrd. CLASS YELL: 192, 192, We are the people of the O. S. U. CFFICERS. O Cr. C. SHASFFER, . . . President. S. C. KERSHAW, . Wee President. MIGNON TALBOT, Secretory. L. WV. GRISNVOLD, . Treasurer. CHRISTINE HOUSTON, . Hvlstoricm. VV. W. BRONVN, . Sergecmt-at-Arms. 3 1 fl' , E have the best people in eollege 2 9.53 ' Q 1 among oui number. I care not what Others may say, . I'm in love with '92. L 3 'f!lrQf45f5?f.i3 2 if - - 2 S Norman Crawford is classed with if , O-ff, I - ll ' 0, ii Ill us in the eatalo ue, but it is a mistake WF I fy- '53, ' llu . gl I ,,.. ,I H ll for which H We'll hang the Fae-ul-tee. ' . ' ' 'Ui' il.. ' - - - - llm um ,'Mq-1l '?'v'-:4-lll'l'g .14 VV e have the prettiest girls in eollege ,' 4 ' . S . ' ll l ' 'l -Mignon Talbot, Eekka Robinson, Christine Houston, Carrie Wright, Alla Slyh, Charlotte Claypoole and Bud Alexander. Miss Bud would be the prettiest but she ehevvs gum too much. Then think of our boys. There are Deaeon Polk and Corporal Tomlinson of the Battery 5 Romeo Orpheus Keiser-C, my Romeo! Baker, Pratt and Mills, the three most sanetimonious people in eollege exeept Prexy 5 Billy Evans, the greatest rattle-brain and Wag- fExaet shades-Pumpkin Yellow and Yellow-go-Green. , 25 saw. Vie have as much loyalty as any class in college but pre- fer to show it in some other way than spotting. , I , , A .Y - - an 1 , , Of the girls of the class 'C a remnant only is left as Prexy Orton said in his lecture on fossils. Misses Blakiston, Piper, and lots of others have dropped out, leaving only Me, Sadie O'Kane and Allie Beach. Lila XV2LS1l7l31l1UCl1 of a loss however. .Xlice Beach is a sister of Bob Beach, the senior who neither chews, drinks, smokes or swears. Helen Lemert took fifth place in the local oratorical contest, which is pretty good for a girl. Hannibal Clark got first place and won second place in thestate contest. Karl Doney writes the Lcmtcrot. There are some other editors but all they do is to make fun of the paper after Karl gets it out. Sigerfoos, Gale, Mock and Kiesewetter run the battalion. V NVe have a number of freaks that deserve mention. There is Carey Pratt who is a compromise between a junior and at sophomore. He is so glum that he sours the milk in a pitcher six feet away. W hitacre is a compromise too. He is midway between something and nothing. Jimmy Burns is the missing link. The monkey and the man strive for supremacy in his make-up with the odds in favor of the monkey. Kershaw is a freak in appearance but he is all right mentally. The reverse is true of Frank Poinerene, for egotism and self-esteem make up two-thirds of his mental equipment. XVc have received some notable recruits from the class of '9O. Among them is George N. Cole, who is a member of the down town Christian Endeavor Society and always attends chapel. XVe stand some chance of getting Chauncey Cavlor into our class also. So you see we have a great class. Each year sees fresh laurels won and new victories achieved by us. In 00110953 11311, in social circles, in athletic sports, '91 leads every classi lNlA'i i'1E Mosics. 24 1 CLASS QF 993. COLORS: Wl9z'Ze and Gold. MOTTO: Soy notlaing and Sato wood. YELL: ,93f ,93, ez Zouglo g'tmg'o1'e we. GFFFCEFRS. R. F. FOSTER, . . . . President. C. R. IIAMILTON, F Vtee President. E. FOX, . Secretary. W. L. GRAVES, . Tlneasurer. LOUISE MERRILL, . , . HiS150T'iCm. A. H. KENNEDY, Sergeeent-at-Aof'ms. HISTQRY. l QR class may come and class may Q r i go, but I go on forever? X WVhen one thinks of this admir- , able quotatigna hefisilinciist invari- vt, a y remm e o e ares iman class, not so much becauseof its har- mt- I- t .f. 'S'f fiLQ? mony with the quotation, but because .. H ' uf 4' Q Um of its strange contrast. For three con- secutive years now, the few, who have ever done the Work in class meeting have tried to arouse suflicient class spirit to enable '93 to stand on its feet, but with little success. This utter lack of unison may be attributed to what are known as shirkers. For three consecutive years, as We said a While ago, We have Becktonedj them to come and join us. We make no Bonefsj about saying 'I what we think either. Though this create a Gale We are not Blunt about expressing our opinions. Some one 27 . . 5 ' 1 1 . 1 .x A tongue that Barnum ever failed to run across, Uoorltll, thc , . g 1 'K . , . J, . A, sweetest-voiced captain that evei gave a command, 11.111115 Flynn and Irve Dungan, the longest neckcd and longest haired men in college: Charley Kershaw, the Sl1OI't0St, and liclblie IVoodborne, the tallest oflicer in the battalion. l Jo you want any more ? Hear some of our schemes: We are going to plant a boulder bigger'n the Whole college right in the middle of the campus. But see what we have done: What other class kicked like We did against Seniors spotting in chapel 'K Wvllill other class dared tackle our ball team? And where is the class that will put a man against our Innis for brilliant sense, or against Schucller tor modesty ? Don't talk to us about other classes. ,No other man in college except Cfaylor could write the following-except a Sophomore : Is a beaming bright eye made to Hash on but one? Shall I not bask in its ray? Shall its glorious light not be free as the sun To drive all that is dark away ? Is a face that is fresh as a dew wetted rose, To be hidden from some thirsting youth, And the smile behind which a blOO11II11U' cheek glows 6 D C To shun all nature's clnldren forsooth 1 Why is beauty on earth, if not to encheer Mankind, that else would well die? Since bright eyes, lovely faces, sweet smiles there are here. Why be happy in them should 11ot I '? . , g I I No, indeed l 92 has no reason to be aslianierl ot ll0l'SL'll. Hear how she yells,- Ninety-two l Ninety-two l We are the people of the O. S. ll. ll1s'1'o1u.-xx. '76 .J ALUMNI ASSOCIATION. OFFICERS. E. E. SPARKS, '84 ,... . . President. V. G. EMERY, '87, . Vice-President. J. A. WiLeUs, '88, . Secretary. FRED. KEFFER, . . ' . . Treasurer. HISTORY. n of our alumni have already risen gf , to positions of honor and trust although I ? ' ,sg the Alumni, Association has been in f ,dll jg P I, existence but little more than. ten years. Z e ff? F A committee of the Association .has '- Fu r - been hard at Work on a history of the fig' 'X' li' members who have received diplomas from the O. S. U. It will be published in J une, and Will con- tain valuable information also in regard to the history of the institution, its professors and trustees. Great difficulty was experiencediin securing the facts, owing to the removals of the graduates or their negligence in answering inquiries. In this connection the action of the class of '90 is to be commended. lt has formed a per1na.nent organization, and left with the Sec- retary of the Alumni Association complete data in regard to the time and place of birth, future occupation, permanent address, etc., of each member. lf each succeeding class does this, future histories can be easily compiled. During the year the alumni have been recognized by the appointment of one of their number as a member of the Board of Trustees. Other alumni should be appointed to this posi- tion. They will take a more active interest in the college than men who are already trustees of half a dozen institutions, or Whose chief business is politics or farming. 29 has said that tt Old Hutch was among us but there is abso- lutely no foundation or e C of meat for the mind We Killheffer and thus put a Levcrtingj ur Meek man comes and asks for f th statement. When we are in want to our needs until again o food. How We Trimble When Augustus comes to class meet- ing, for fear he will spout some of his Storefrj of oratory. But we must Turnterj over a new leaf and stop Guyfingj everybody. That '93 is much better than '92 everybody will concede, for the essence of conceit is dealt out by the 'wily Sophs upon a Platter. Unless they get a move on 'em and brush the dust off their clothes, '93 may beat 'em yet. But what distinguishes us mostris the fact that a rumor has got afloat to the effect that three of our members Were principal agents in the destruction of the Wind-mill. There may be--- on us in some respects, but we chal- lenge any class 'Within the massive portals of the U. S. U to produce such fair and perfect feminine beauties. Ah! the other classes sink into insignificance when compared with '93, and We stand out as a -star of the first magnitude in this re- gard. O, ladies, fair and studious, to you we owe our thanks for many things which you have done for '93 and let us all in one grand flourish do you honor and homage. And now, reader, We close this eventful history of our glorious organization, known as the Class of '93. If it be his- tory, study it Well, if it be fiction, read it with pleasure: if it be a mere flight or .fancy of the mind, consider it thoughtfully that you may profit by its imagery. to ' NIX1E'l'X'-rlllllllil-I. - .i -,ui if 28 PHI GAMMA DELTA. .li- Founded at Washington and Jefferson College, 1848. ACTIVE CHAPTERS. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Yale, Wooster, Columbia, Wittenberg, Cornell, Ohio State, College of City of New York, Ohio Wesleyan, Colgate, Denison, T Washington and Jefferson, Adelbert, Bucknell, A Indiana State, Pennsylvania, Illinois Wesleyan Pennsylvania State, DePauw, Allegheny, Hanover, Muhlenberg, Knox, Lafayette, W'abash, Lehigh, Michigan, Georgia, Bethel, Richmond, William Jewell, Roanoke, Kansas. Hampden-Sidney, California. Marietta, GRADUATE CHAPTERS. Chattanooga, Tennessee, New York City, Kansas City, Missouri, Cleveland, Ohio, Columbus, Ohio. 31 SECRET FRATERNITIES OF THE QI-IIQ STATE UNIVERSITY IN THE ORDER OF THEIR ESTAEISISHIVIENT. if ! xx X1 ff ,f V AVWF' PHI GAMMA DELTA. OMICRON DEUTERGN CHAPTER. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. CK NEWTON BROWN, F. W. SPERIQ, GEORGE B. KAUFFMAN W. B. W7IETS. FRATR ES IN COLLEGIO. CLASS OF 'OO. IJARRY S. BIITCHELL, HAIQRY C. BENNETT, JESSE JONES. CLASS OF '92. JOHN S. COOKF WVALTER C. POLK. CLASS OF '93. J. En. BIIEEK, MILTON H. WVESTON, CALVIN BEROER, +LOft College. 32 ARTHUR WV. TAYLOR, ROBERT S. BLAOIIRORD A. SERVA. PHI GAMMA DELTA. EPSILCN GRADUATE CI-IAPTER. JOHN F. IVICFADDEN, K. D. WOOD, JOHN B. WIIQOFF, VV. B. VIETS, - C. N. BROWN, FRANK A. RAY, CHARLES A. WVIKOFF, C. VV. MII,I,E12, EDWARD ORTON, JR., E. W. MIX, ELLIS LOVEJOY, PAUL JONES, U. H. MX'EIiS, JOHN J. DUN, WALTER A. DUN, '78 FRED. HOWALD, '78, J. F. MCFIADDEN, '78, A. B. MOMAOKIN, '79, TV. F. NOBLE, '79, R. S. TOWNE, '79, J. C. WARD, '80, H. D. GREGORY, '80, H. R. POOL, '81, C. M. LEWIS, '81, IRWIN LINSON, '82, F. VV. SRERR, '83, 7 . A Established September 24, 1887. ACTIVE MEMBERS. HAL F. BENHAM, C. B. NVHILEY, L. T. HENDEIiSON, ROHRER, A.. L. J. T. ANDERSON, MIT,LER, LOVEJOY, J. SHEAFE CASEY, F. TV. SPERR, G. S. CUNNINGHAM, W. W. MEEK, CHARLES E. GAINES, S. A. WEBB, C. C. J. R. ALUMNI. C. E. HIGBEE, '83, JOHN J. DUN, '88, C. C. MILLER, '83, J. T. ANDERSON, '84, C. V. MEAD, '84, - EDW. ORTON, JR., '84, J. B. WIICOFF, '84, J. R. .LOVEJOY, '84, ELLIS LOVEJOY, '85, XV. R. MALONE, '85, M. N. BIIX, '85, WV. J. ROOT, '85, H. C. BLACK, J. H. VEROOE, VV. F. ICELLY, SAM. L. BLACK, EDWARD W. DANN, H. M. CROWV, GEORGE B. IQAUFFMAN, J. L. DANN, C. D. WADDELL, A. N. VAN DEMAN. C. D. EVERETT, J. S. MYERS, H. J. ABBOTT. G. A. MASTERS, '86, W. B. VIEl'S, '86, Gr. S. CUNNINGHAM, '86 FRANK A. RAY, '87, WV. H. HANNUM, '87, J. S. BTYERS, '87, U. H. MYIERS, '87, E. W. MIX, '53, . S. A. VVEBB, '88, H. S. NEWTON, '89, TV. XV. IWEEK, '89, C. EI GAINES, '89. ADDITIONAL RESIDENT MEMBERS. RIEV. N. S. SMITH, O. H. PERRY, C. E. HIGIZEE, A. C. BUTLER, W. G. BEATTY, REVW,G.WILL1AMS,D,D W, E. MCCLUNG, 33 Q - , n'vifiif vfwhi' I f ,i1Li i:5 ziii f gif' -, vig. j, fg5232ggijg'gfw - fp ,V 5-EQ :,'f'1-'.'f 1 :Jw V V 1, 4' , J , V, 21-YT '4 -r if zi, ' ' , f -- V1 4Zf-m ': f fF'Li' X W, f -V . 522 ., af. az- 7 , fy -,Y L f , - - .'.z1.Eeq,.ll:-.1 -Mn, f 7 V fa ff ' . Wm. , -. ,, A -., -Y I L- - -g - ' - -- T--+1-1 55,1-'V, 4,911 V ' my - .1.f.,, 1191 , - ri , ks, f fix!!! '. ,.' if.-'um' 1' 'f' -- ii -I 'Riff M 1, -'- - Y - iZi'L5I' ?-LU - -'WT 5' fff, 464 V Lx.- V V- . ff- , -U V' V ,,.,,1L4:f. f..,M:'f .-Af-Q.. gf .1Qfl.'wV',,V f -1 ,. -,f-q vw mifff ' iq lem 7:'3'f,27f',4'5-559' ' -mv gg ' Q, ,Jw ,V K H V, - ' V V -V H:.fVVI,:', ,.VVV ' - - . Vf, 11: :V .1-111 Efw' -, X-' ' 'A 'Hr 'V' ji- ' ,, 51, Ihzgff ' ' 1551 Q-.251 11 ply' f-1 if f4fLMV -,fmcegfq V ww W ' ,-fi T'!.Jf44Z5i7 5fM ' gy' yy W ' 3 uw.-V W1-.xc Rf--1 T3-:,:,--zginngrg.5-11-ggf,:g:.N-,gt V, ow- , ,fy TSQRESSSEEQ:??v5S??5S3p5a,, ' X51fPf-:sflNSS!-S55rf:F:f'ff 1 fVVVfmV 'rf'-' vegfg-Vgrzvrzfreqk::Q32,M.V5-' 5 ,wmwyf Q4 ' .-. 'f'?2fvVs, ,bl nm. ' '- 2:-:iff- f ' ' vm ,A sg. Rh ! '- - Jlixfh if A iii -' 3' .rw ' Y.gm.1g ff ' ,fwf '1 'f L- Vw' ' ,-.ff -ii Q:.-f'i2:-'T'- 'W' 45- 1 5111323 Z. . 51QgfUs+-w- -'L 1 al' ,f 5 -V?-ff-z-A - 341?9'-.eX'41:V2V,-wx -'VV,-'V J fitsf' .f x 'Y-PN?-253+ ' 411.4 ram - ,. , .-1 1 Vg, -...Vw ,+ 4V-fm, ,ffm ..... , V A H , , .,,, H444 1 Q V f f ff? V , , ' w,-gfifl , zf if?'i?3,'Iif ' +A.. fv f , , ..,,,, , V, ,V I Y fg ,,,,, , DREKA,PHILA. 4 PHI KAPPA PSI. Founded at ,-.1-.-. Washington and Jefterson, 1852. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS. FIRST DisTR1cT. 1852 Pennsvlvania Alpha .. ......... ...... . Ieflerson College. 1858 Pennsylvania Beta. ......... ..... A llegheny College. 1855 Pennsylvania Gamma ..... ..... B ucknell University. 1855 Pennsylvania Epsilon ..... ..... P enn-sylvania College. 1859 .Pennsylvania Zeta. ....... ..... D ickinson College. ,1 1860. Pennsylvania Eta ......... ..... F ranklin and Marshall College. I 1869 ......... Pennsylvania Theta .... .. ..... Lafayette College. 1888 ......... Pennsylvania Kappa. ...... ..... S warthmore College. 18651 New York Alpha ......... ..... C ornell University. 1880 New York Beta ....... ..... S yracuse University. 1881. New York Delta. ............. ......... H obart College. 1887 1853 1855 1856 ISSO 1868 1857 1857 1860 1866 1871 1880 1865 1 bltifl 1870 1864 1876 1875 1881 1867 1888 1876 1881 .........California Alpha... New York Epsilon. ................... Madison University. SECOND DISTRICT. Virginia Alpha ..... Virginia Beta ....... Universitv of Virginia. . .................. U g . ' I .....1V21.Sl1111gtOI1 and Lee University Virginia Gamma. ............. . .... Hampden-Sidney College. Maryland Alpha. ...................... Johns Hopkins University. District of Columbia Alpha. ....... Columbian University. South Carolina Alpha ............... University of South Carolina. Mississippi Alpha ..................... University of Mississippi. 'NHRD DBTRKH1 Ohio Alpha ..... ...................... O hio lVesleyan University. Ohio Beta. ........ . Ohio Gamma ..... Ohio Delta ........ Indiana Alpha .... .. ...Wittenberg College. .....1Vooster University. .....Ohio State University. .....Dc Panw Universitv. Indiana Beta ........................... Indiana State University Indiana Gamma .. .... ..... ............ 1 1 Iabash College. FOURTH DBTRKHI Illinois Alpha. ......................... Northwestern University. Michigan Alpha. .... . Wisconsin Al ha . . . . .University of Michigan. University of 1Visconsin. . p ...... .,.,. Wisconsin Gamma. ....... .... . Beloit College. Iowa Alpha. .... ............ ..... I T niversity of Iowa. A Minnesota Beta ....... Kansas A1 ha .... .University of Minnesota. .....-UIIIVCTSIILY of Kansas. ....................University of the Paciiic. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. Ch icago. Cincinnati. Springfield. Pittsburgh. M innezlpolis 34 PHI KAPPA PSI. DELTA CHAPTERAOF OHIO. Established May 15, 1880. ' ACTIVE MEMBERS. CLASS OF '9o. ROBERT K. BEACH, G. PERRY GRIMSLEY .CLASS OF '9x. GEORGE N. COLE, GEORGE H. MOCK. LOUIS F. KIESEWETTER. CLASS OF '92. PERCY MARTIN, E. BRUSH HATCHER, PEARL N. JONES? A CLASS OF '93. AUGUSTUS T. PETERS, FRANK A. COPE, ERNEST T. JOHNSON, ELMER G. RICE,T CHARLES POWELL. .,... -1---l f5fOhiO Alpha. TLeft College. 35 ,T-,i ...Q ,vg,.,-,,. . -..J 4, ..,. ., 1 4 ' ' , f X 1 4 , . f Q 4 5 w I I Q i k I L 4 I i 3 f r 1 1 5 s 4 i 1 ! I Q , v x 5 3 . g vi Y S 1 G . 1 v I E 5 Q. 1 W 1. -sl I Vfglg, 1 :E ,,, E . if rail .: - if 1 Q? Q if 2, , E . . ! . i 4 . i , , gf 2 1 4 ' lg 1 ,Il ? f 5 , , 1 . A R ,' i 1 2 1 :Q ' 'S 1, i. I 1 R. 5 5 ,I I W. -L16 if iii 1 1 5 1 PHI KAPPA PSI. ALUMNI. 9 '80, J. SCOTT LIUMPIIREY, B. SC. I 1 '80, SIDNEY A. SHORT, B. SC. , '81, WV. K. CI-IERRYI-IOLMES, B. SC. '82, OLIVER L. FASSIG, B. SC. ,I 5 '83, E. M. VANHAIRLINGEN, B. SC. 7 5 83, J. H. GALBRAITI-I, B. PII. , '83, G. F. BIARVIN, M. E. W '84, GEO. YV. DUN, B. SC. 5 . T I I 7 85, E. L. T. SCIIAUB, M. E '86, J. P. JNIILLIGAN, B. A. '86, E. J. CONVERSE, B. A. '86, W. W. IQEIFER, B. A. I 7 4 87, H. D. PAYNE, M. E. '87, P. CONVERSE, B. Sc. '87, O. G. ZAUMSEIL, G. E. '88, A. H. HARTWELL, M. E Ig. I L, '85, C. A. MARBLE, B. SC. '88, J. A. WIIIGUS, B. PII. my - Ig, ,I '80, W. L. PETERS, M. E. '89, H. P. HORTON, B. PII. Ig, gag' , , '89, H. F. MIIILER, M. E. I- li I mug . IM, I RESIDENT MEMBERS. 2 L f. IZ w ' ij? 13 . HON- JOHN BEATTY, WILLIAII TI-IOMAN at . h , 7 Q' .qu I HON. L. J. CRITCHFIELD, J. H. GALBRAITII, Q 3 j DR. VV. J. MCMILLEN, A. D. SELBY, I II .Y . , ,, , Rm. J. C. JACKSON, P. G. ROBINSON, .D GEO. W. BICCOARD, J. M. TAYLOR, ' EUGENE LANE, WVILLIAM NEIL, . I x ' - a v, ri J- R' BOWDLE, C. B. COMSTOCK, . ,E ' RVILLIAM GREEN, E. R. DIARCH, ' LL' B' CHERINGTON7 E. L. T. SCITAUB, LIERMAN M. HUBBARD, GEO. XV. DUN, QT, RRRD' W- HUBBAIAD, THOS. H. JOHNSON, I - CHARLES E. FREEMAN, E, J, QONVERSE, f' if AVILL B. CORNELL, J. E. SIMS, ' 2 fi 5 E I., 3 IRIRRD- YSQIEDD, J. A. WVILGUS, 5 Y CARRY HEDD, H. F. JMPILLER, 51, CARLOS SHEPD, E. D. LIONVARD, A V , HAS. S. CHERINGTON, M, S, BROWNE, 'gli' SEHTTRR, E. G. RICE, , . . ,. LNDERSON, J, HULL' H . . 36 pi i 2251 H 'E 1 i I Q . Alpha . Beta . Zeta Eta . Theta y . Kappa Lambda . Mu . Xi . Omicron . Rho . Tau Chi Psi . Omega . Gamma Gamma Delta Delta . Delta Chi . Zeta Zeta . Zeta Psi . Theta Theta . Sigma Sigma Alpha Beta . Alpha Gamma. Alpha Delta . Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta . Alpha Theta. Alpha Iota . Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu . Alpha Xi Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma SIGMA CI-ll. Founded at Miami University 1855. CoLoRs: Blue and Gold. . I . . . Ohio Wesleyan University . Woost.er University . Wasliingtoii and Lee University University of Mississippi Pennsylvania College . Bucknell University Indiana State University . Denison University . DePauvv University . Dickinson College . Butler University . Roanoake College . Hanover College University of Virginia Northwestern University Randolph-Macon College . Purdue University . . WVabash College . . Centre College University of Cincinnati University of Michigan Hampden-Sidney College University of California . Ohio State University Stevens' I nstitute of Technology University of Nebraska . . Beloit College Massachusetts Institute of Technology . . Illinois lVesleyan University University of Wisconsin . University of Texas . University of Kansas ' . Tulane University . Albion College . Lehigh University University of Minnesota ef' .-vm, ,f F x v 5 . ,A X, I 'Q if ,Ay X xg AX . D -4 -,U ,ji J RJ , ,J Q N E1 ? . 3 - - , if ffw E3 f ' ' x, 4 ,f - - Q ff Q H xx if-' . - qi 9 Qi I-3 X x E' K- n . El , jil gg I U. Vo- , 'Z L 71 V -i lv 11452 3 V J ' 4 i f V' W 'Sf J 4? Lf' A A A XXX N X A ,, js. ff ff .f ui 4 . ax x X54 SIGMA CHI. ALUMNI. GEO. R. TWISS, '85, OTTO SCHROLL, '86, ROBERT HAZLETT, '87 H. P. SMITH, '86, GEO. T. XVEIDNER, '87, ARTHUIR T. HEATII, 87 HARRY HEDGES, '88, HOW'D N. THOMPSON,'88, CHESTER H. ALDRICH, HARRY R. HALL, '89, . . DYXVID R. HANCOCK '89. D. K. WATSON, BEN. B. WOODBURY, MORRIS BOOTH, JAMES C. GODMAN, GEORGE WM. BEAT CHAS. Q. DAVIS, C. S. FAY JAY J. JENNINGS, 7 LINAS KA UFFMAN, WV. B. CARPENTER, ED. MERION, THOS. B. WVILSON, J EWETT NORRIS, RAY KINNIEAR, TY, M.D. FRATRES IN URBE. VV. C. IVIERRITT, HARRY C. ELLIOTT, A. WV.. WILLIAMS, H. K. TERRY, JAMES WATSON, W. B. NORRIS, WALTER B. PAGE, EDMUND SMITH AMOR SHARP, 7 HOXX'ARD T. GARRETT, JOS. D. POTTER, HARRY GATES, GEO. MCCUIJLOCII, DEWITT C. JONES, THOS. E. POXVELL, THOS. H. RIOKETTS, GEO. B. MONX'P1ENX', OTTO SCHROLL, FRANK J ENNINGS, JASON VV. FIRESTONI DAVID E. MOONEY, CHAS. O. ADAMS, CHAS. C. OVIATT, WM. V. KELIYOGCI, -- MEYER, GEO. B. MOCANN. I ALUMNI CHAPTER ROLL. Eta, Lafayette, Iota, Indianapolis, Theta, Cincinnati, Omega, Chicag 39 SIGMA CHI. 6, IIE1-!!c1I1f1Igg1I:2!'UQ. fi 1- -' n '3 ' ' ,' x X 1 gY, r' 'ff '. -' Q XI--SX! 1 IX F? f.-Eb Q.. , X X I' 4 -9 L.-.I 'S- -Im, - fa-7 f ' gf..-' I K . ,rniffluig . .X IHITTT-I In ALPHA GAMMA CHAPTER. Established in May, 1882. ..- - FRATRES IN COLLEGIO. CLASS OF '9o. DANIEL E. MILIIER. CLASS OF '9 1. FRANK HENRY GALE, DAVID TOD ROYQK LORING H. G0DDARD,X GEORGE E. IVICCULLOCH. CLASS OF '92. WVILL W. BROW'N.9'c CLASS OF '93, CHARLES E. KILBOURNE,X JR., NVILL H. KRUMM, GUY R. WILLIALIS. CLASS OF '94, R. T. ELLIS. T Leit College. I 38 -1.4255 . Q Y 5 1. .gf qs... 125 'A 2-1 1 S. 1521 2 L 5. if? , -ll, 1 Y' .N fri, X V, . , ff' if i A V, N., Y , . gl - mf, Q. gun -15,-, : ' l' f.' ' if? W 1 gli? V W., :N -.2 2--if if asia, v-.lx 'x i 171. A fi - .: HA - AY--vi O41 , .. - - -fx. +- , W Wi, , Li? W gg ,J ei .v , ....... -..-.. ., - E 9, , ,f 1, - :sr 'K .iii .... - f .Tim 2- 1 -Y - ' I '52553' - ' 3 r- ai? - A . .... -1- :- -- i f X ff I n ,Z :if Q 5 'F flak ,N ,, ff ,J H Ark. 1, A 1 -:L-' ,f --' ' Y 1-2555-'r' ' bi QI , 9 f 1 rm N .E A' I1 Q Y - -1 - '- w-f.'!'!-f 7 ' -f nb - . ...- 1, 'a ,g,ga.k-Q15-4 21 rf ---T - , . at 1320 ' f- -' if -- -' Q , A ' lf, : , -- f , 1 ...,.,, 'f,'f:-ff-E2-xx ,, g',' -j 2-' 2 ALEPG KQ ,ff-f 'HS -X, XX a ims , L E V 'QA , ,,,, , , '32-' , i :gl f kf ,. -ff, - W :F -:Offs 45,9 .-Agp gr - 'iw-1'-'-1 ---B .yvgaigxAe:-'qs,,+r3a:g:g:g:g' , 2 --'- 1 1' 1 1 ':' 2-Gaza 4 Jia? .-:,, : lf .....................,.--. WMA... -. W X- X -f , ,....... K V .--1l.x.7,, - .f:-55:-5:-E-:ex-31?:-:-5:521-.Ig.5.3.g.5.7 X W 54 - '-.'i,k7f ,' uk.,-., -.X : '.':-12-'-'EX if ' Ei! . 1 - ,....,. ---.-. .--A-- XJPQZIW' Y ,. , ........ wuz..- .,,,, 1...- 1 ,. . , .. . . .5 . f' ' 1 -5.191-.fv,1-. K-.S rf . Y -23- -7.356611-.FJ-Z1 5-Sf, -. -2-2-1-iii ' ---- V uf: '- 'f.v55.?L3HE'ii2I' ' 51 L J? -W , Loc mfoon .N Y, I Copy 1-Lgfztew J N' rf ff-1-. 1- 'W axvfgfi -' fs' f': ' ' ' Z N11-3 'fz:rf-rife-:':-5:5:at T - W. 5 1 '42 V -' '-'f ' ' ' ' 'ag-1335352351: V -:zz-::::: Eff PHI DELTA THETA. ..,. - ' Founded at Miami University, 1848- Colby University, University of Vermont, Amherst College, Cornell University, Ci lle0'e of the City of New York, 5 2:- Syracuse University, Pennsylvania College, Allegheny College, University of Pennsylvan Roanoke College, Randolph-Macon College, lVashington and Lee University, South Carolina College, Central University, Emory College, ' Vanderbilt University, University of Alabama, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, University ot' Mississippi, University of Texas Miami University, Ohio University, But-htel College, Indiana University, Butler University, Hanover College, University of Michigan, Northwestern University, Illinois lVesleyan Univers University of lVisconsin, Westminster College, Stat.e University of Iowa, University of Nebraska, 7 ii. CHAPTER ROLL. Dartmouth College, Willizinis College, Brown University Union University, Columbia College, - Lafayette College, Wasliingtoii and Jefferson College Dickinson College, Lehigh University, University of Virginia, Richmond College, University of North Carolina, Centre College, University of Georgia, Mercer University, University of the South, Southern University, Tulane University, Southwestern University, Ohio VVesleyan University, University of Wooster, Ohio State University, NVabash College, Franklin College, DePauw University, Hillsdale College, State College of Michigan QA g'l Col.i Knox College, Lombard University, University of Missouri, Iowa TVesleyan University, University of Kansas University of California. ia, ity, 3 y ALUMNI CHAPTERS. New York, N. Y,, St. Paul, Minn., Nashville, Tenn., Franklin, Ind., Pittsburgh, Pa., San Francisco Cincinnati, O., Cralesburg, Ill. , Cal., Philadelphia, Pa., lVashington, D. C. Columbus, Ga., Los Angeles, Cal., Selma, Ala., Akron, O., CPIQHQO, 111-, Kansas City, Mo., B3lt'1m0TC, Md-, Richmond, Va., Atlintfb G3-, Montgomery, Ala. LOUISVIHG, Ky., liulializlpolis, Ind.. Minneapolis, Minn. 40 I 7 ' PHI DELTA TI-IETA -. ,A fx X-JAN X A9 ,Q giQQf90Q'QQt,.' xl O - ' I A . 0 gigrixk gg G 1' GF.. .' G9 aumdfi QA 1 5 0 1,5 . ..... .. Aga Q I an ' 1 . ffl: ' ' -f ' 23 EAD A I ,f 9' ' G Q A' I ,gi ' L X 'l If I .V I, f 1' QHIO ZETA CHAPTER Established, 1883. COLORS: Amgen! and figure. PUBLICATION: Scroll. FRATER IN FACULTATE. R. D. BOHANNON. FRATRES IN COIDLEGIO. CLASS OF '9O. SAMUEL ELLSWORTH BENNETT A CLASS OF '91. AARON WESLEY JONES, JAMES ELMER lRONIPSON, FRANK VVILLIAM RANE, WM. HENDER.SOh BONTNILR CLASS EOF '92. GEORGE 'WILLIAM CHESSELL, ST. CLAIR ALEXANDFR, GEORGE FRANCIS FISH, EDW. TALMAGF SANDERSONX CLASS OF '93.' LURAY STEWART, FRANK 'ASKEW, EDWIN BLOOM, JOHN IQUHN. CLASS OF ,94. THEODORE LINDENBERG, ATIVIN SEDGNVICK, .il.... 1- - : Left Colleg C. H. FARBER. 6. 41 I 4 1 l v H I V I I ,Ig ? in , tw! il iw ' ,X lx, wk fm , -gm 54- N, Xi e :5, . 5 1 255. 2 I 5 K ' , ,qi .l X 34 E i2 ' 2 ' a 5 z Q QQ I gf ll' A' Cf il 'ia -Y I i ' -A 1 I. , Qx , xgl ,e rf ,W wi ll HH ff: I fe in f 1 i 3 1 i 1 1 'Q H 5 1 i M 5 Y r 'Q CHI PHI. . Founded at Princeton in 1824. CoLoRs: Searle! and Blue. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS. .................................University of Virginia. ......Emory College. ......Rutgers College. ......Hampden-Sidney College. ......Franklin and Marshall College. ......University of Georgia. ......Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute ......Ohio State University. ......Brown University. . ..... ...... U niversity of California. ......Stevens Institute of Technolo 1859 ......... Alpha ... 1867 ......... Gamma 1867 ......... Delta. ......... . 1867 ......... Epsilon. ..... . 1854 Zeta ...... 1867 Eta. ...... . 1878 Theta ... 1883 Iota ...... 1872 Kappa ........ 1875 Lambda 1883 Mu, .......... 1877 Omicron 1883 1874 1871 1888 1873 1873 1882 1869 1868 Pi ......... Rho ...... Sigma Tau ...... Phi... .. . .. Chi ....... Psi ........ Omega ..... Xi Aleph ....... Beth ....... Vav ....... .au--0-n , . gy. ......Yale University. ......Vanderbilt University. ......Lafayette College. . .. . . .1Vofford College. .....University of South Carolina. ......Amherst College. . ...... .Ohio Vifesleyan University. .... .Lehigh University. ......Dickinson College. ............................Co1'nell University. ALUMNI CHAPTERS. ..................................Baltimore, Maryland. ......New York, New York. ......VVashington, D. C. 43 4 dm . , .Vg Q x L g, fx , f .a,':1j 1- VF - ' Y j -1,31 ,-1 --L. vu-.jr-, Y Vi W.fg.'-ff' 53.,1, ....fs?Qb Y ' V , , MM ! si 151 f 34 if ii I T51 gf1 '.A, eff, , - -S : ....,- I -.-- I ..-..,- ibm Q. . 5.4. f .... V ' nf. - j !2??T X . ,,5- ,amy Y IA45.,-,...,., vzalwnfgb, ir XE245, J K -43 'Y' 5. L Tfsa , Q 1 ' PA:-.+ . ., .- X wx ,b .MMM ,Q A f f , WI' 7' Y, ff f ' f' ff,fv'L EI'1:1SS:-, .J 1f:f:5:5:2:3:f Q:-if wsksa- N 'lf 2 r 15 X'--2: V1 1 V' -11-ff, X we X N 1 :ff'? - A U Umm ' x Q K xi j x m l X X W Wi X F X 5 ' N H' , N A -J37 Y ff, , V NH wx X - ,':V'9Xv:1 , -tv I :iff he M 1 af U ' Xiyfllf jj? 'la QS ' -'fv . 4 -1 - ' 'J ,f, , xv , . ' , wg, '- . ' gg f'-M ,X '. P52413 7 .fi ,, 9 ' ' f 'W xxx - K, WX My ,A ' N ' Y 4 f ,, x , f ,ff , 'xxx X V+ 'M-4 5 in fi ' ff ' W. QEQ' ,,, Y?-lf , XX jx! fy, W.: 5 ,?V gf X g A W, LLA, X N.-r W 'Pi' V' ,H f ' J 1- f N ff'-1' , L ' 'f? fvYw KA Wiigv f-if-V' n 'XF 'Ni ' 'W -Wa M Sq X V J xxw ww SY. 1 Rx' ff x, ? X r ' f X21 A Xjyfxxik X A E.LHIXST.1fXR .S CO. NX. I lf'f1!a1f1-4'y!zLrwl,f CI-II PHI. ALUMNI. EDWARD EARL SPARKS, '84, WILLIAM P. BENTLEY, '85, 7 FRANK E. HILL, '86, I WILLIANI A. CONNELL, 86, WM. F. CHARTERS, '87, F. J. CELLARIUS, '88, A JOHN ADAMS BOVVNOCKER, '89, HARR'Y L. KIRKER, '89, A RESIDENT MEMBERS. HOMER C. WHITE, ARTHUR E. EVANS, D., Cf Z. L. Ivhite 82 Co. EDWARD Cr. ROBERTS, Real Estate Dealer. JOSEPH R. LANE, Of Z. L. Wfhite fic Co. JOSEPH F. FIRESTONE, Columbus Buggy Co. CHAS. G. SMITH, ASs't City Ticket Ag't B. QQ O Midland and Scioto Valles: Railroad. DAVID F. SNYDER, Civil Engineer. HARRY H. MARSH, Physician. HON. THAD E. CROMLEY, House of Representatives CHAS. B. COWAN, - Chittenden Hotel. FRANK L. PACKARD, Architect. W. C. WHITMORE, Train Dispatcher. A. V. R. PATTON, VVith A. Gr. Patton -F. W. SAVAGE. 45 6zCo CHI PHI. ICTA CHAPTER. Established November 9th, 1883. ACTIVE MEMBERS. CLASS OF '9O. A RIISSEIJII STIMSON FEICHT, I1UGH CLARENCE LAUGHLIN, CARL CLYDE SMITH. CLASS OF 'OL JAMES FERGUSON BURNS H ORAOE L. WI-IITAORE. 7 CLASS OF '92, WM. XVOODBRIDGE FRANKLIN, CAREY SIMON PRATT, 'HUELLER ROBERT H. HASSLER, ERXVIN WVALDEMAR SC CLASS OF '93. A IEOLLIN FINNIE FOSTER, WIIJLIAM H, PURDUM, I1ERBERT S. TALBOT,X A JOHN EVAN MORTON. 5f?Lefl3 College. 44 x x Q 'xl x .3 N X.. N Y-5, xii Z0 X'b1.is5Q. .4 ,151 450 ' f-if N xl! ii5iE?5't1T 5 .15 .7 --:QQ -xx , -' - ,ff x ug.-:asa -.,. ja: 'O Y . ' f ,x,.x,X .,.- ,, g .1 . I .x M.. ,,..,,,. ix 'i 1 . x 'N F.-1+-k:::g:xf-fri: .'.x,'h,' 1 :.,: r xx. , hx-'xg.x'1 ff- 1-an -1'-:sf J- mv willzrx' .Asffw J-ai--'iS?: W--fail' ,ln xsyr' -1 .i-ggi'--'Z-Piivxir ' f . :fn 'nw-', ' ,iff 422' ,iw A .-xxx . X19 , -in 3 , fx., xx, ,fu .N 1 xx' 9 ' 'rf f3ffE1,ff?W ' F iii! f-2 fZ:1'i .xsl-2-1-ax-fix , , L-px - -x f ff 'ff-'Tiff ' X15 2' ' 'f - ' -fifefllfiiif P 'xffv ff iff , ,, Z! fr!! N? 77 gf 1 W 3xg3xxxxr61x17i x nw- 1 'V,-ix!xWgQ0'Q3 Q ' xxg . 15x:g,w,. .x Wiixjvl, 1 xl, xI x x gf? 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' ff-XX NX XS wxx + Nx x' x x -xx! - X' 0 x ,WN xx Mxxxx xxx xx x fu x xx X x X x xx 9' 3 , 'Rum Rx 'x MX NV Qxx .Y--ww 0.1.2.5-xxv O5 X x ' - -'-Wifix-J:.'f4N ' 1' X: xiii --:.Z.iEa'lll - V -J -in'1, M , xx--xv ' . v R' L ' - xx -,-' ' 'fl ix2':i3x 35x5' :sux-x-lg'f:i'2i1-3'lff?x!:'1'-'QAXXV NQXR - X xx V :.x.5xx xv-x xxx: XX , x xx ,.,.p. Le:x.9,.,.-,xx,-f:---5,4.,'gf A. I A, ..,. :pxxa1n.,g:f,x-Q,-55,55-,x-e ' xvxf- xi-:xx-xi-. -xv .xx H if wmv ,S5 QNX xx x X x N .f Ixpxxxe Qx Q xx If sxxx NX X N x- x .xx Q qfkicu xxxmx x xx, 5 + A x M x R xx x xx Xb xx xx , X4 xx A 3x..1S , SV NX' . .x,w 1: 5, 11' X X X x xx j 1 ',zlfx M .xt QM-iii. Q3 fv '-J ff if I. l x Q- ff -X fx fx 4 x , wx XS xxxxyxx O ' fx mxx X 5:'.HH,1x1.Iil SNS swf- N v , 32 Xxx , xxx xx X ' W xx QQ SKA' X953 x 7, .-mf.. xx X xx X xxxklx xgQx 'xv M7 TW? , xxx x xx xxx X a xx f X 'fl ' qfff MMV x 4 ff xx xxxx X NXFES xi r 1 I K 'f iv W 3 Xx X x xxmxi VMUW 9 Jw f LH f if 1 x x xxwx X x 1 1 g f I x . f Y. ' f x n xi X Q X www ' x, 4 ff 1,511,111 vpafgf , wx x, x- +5 'x x X -gg:-x-rg,:vx-:zz- ' fxl- ' ' ,H x-: 'I-.' 1--r-E,::5.f. f-1 3315. x,- ! Lf.-f::,.-x ,E X xxzx.-.mmf faigxgxixxx x1 x xxxmx X x ff Q x ,xx xxx ,x x ,atm xx x .,.,i .f x . xnrlr -11:a'-wfpqiiffxx me . j1 gx3gg,.ig?xCjq -. xslggxxxxx xy. x igxgfux Q ' x - lx, iljiiixgi-x3iX1:::gy'my-.j' .11 N' -:::..x '..x' xc x xx+,j Nr-xml' 1.1 . P . ' x ' Q R 5-:ix , 1 , waxy' x - :Pier-' xxnnxnlfm' Q x x x fx ::7::F5V' W xE?Zg1,K0i 3'f'S'-xi3:in:chf25? uf iafa2iQ111H :JW xm- ---- X f x Q H -. ..,J,f:ffH C- r flq -. 14 x ,'fx,1Aw' ,x H xx1:gg1'-rx5-qasaxr-.--xx--x '- - ,fkrggyxygkfx-xx x gxxgs 3-::f-f'F' : v 6f I W k :i?'fffU'1 f-12:55 ' W x 'fT?4f. 1' xx - ' ' Mx xx , - L' , ' ,wx . 2 '- x-iffy, 4f,F.i?xx '-x'xr21?sQXXfRQ , - Q ' ' 'iigffffx .-..f ,.,:2'i xp, 2,4 A - . :xxx -w,,x ' ,.y if :,.1xNx':ri1:xs-W , - x 1 - g f emgf'-,W wg . .....,,. A W7'if'1' 11r ff if' D xx,.w 4Xg l'xxxM'fff1??' -' 145925 ,ff 121141 ' x x, xk.,, x. -,1g.NN'Xs- f , ffLJw!xf W H X 171 .Wigfx --' ' F..f 'x JA. .rex -P x.'x - x ig5.jJ-4211321-4512 ?iT , 7 g15?'1'a . ' - 1- ' i mx QR: ff- - ,,,,-x , f , A-rs,qx.efv: ' K gf? x ' 'fA gig . . x, ' X , Y 31, Iifllfrl .: if fl.,-Y t xml li :L ,gs jx liiijif K Z 'Qi . ff, ,, xxwfxi- x .,.. -x-.fQ.xxxxW,,Y Y - WJ -,mf 4 f X f H fx xxxx x xii-xx, , J x ,XNFQQSSR V J , f, f, V rx, -V Jeggyf' :I ,ig f' x x X x ' ,' - N 521, ' 1, .- 3,315-l ,.. Af- f X N,. ' H ff - CW' E5Zzf' X f f XQSSR -. si 'f x QS? 1:1 ' ' ,X ' NQ P-'iif!515i'5ge5:?f Dxaffmkhzh. 1880 ......... 1841 ........ 1841 ......... 1842 ......... 1 184.3 ......... A ..- 1840 ......... ..- 1840 .... 'H.n 1840 ...... H. .f 1840 ......... 1847 1850 ......... 1850 1858 1858 1854 1860 1861 1866 1867 1868 1868 1.231321 1870 1872 1872 1878 1878 1873 1874 1874 1875 1875 1876 .........Upsilon 1878. l879.. BETA THETA Pl. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Alpha. ........ . .Beta .............. Beta Kappa . ...... .... Epsilon . ..... .. Eta . .... . Delta ...... Pi ........... . Lambda. ..... . Tan. ...... . Kappa ...... Zeta ...... .. Omicron .... Theta . ...... . Iota... .. Mu Chi . .......... .. Psi ............... .. Alpha Beta ..... Alpha Gamma. Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon.. Alpha Eta. ..... . Alpha Kappa.. Alpha Lambda ...... .... . ...Alpha Nu Xi ...... ..... .........Alpha Pi ...... Northwestern University. .........Alpha Sigma .. .........BetaDelta...... Sigma. ........ . Beta Zeta ....... ........Alpha Chi...... ..,,...Ornega ...... .. ..... Miami. Adelbert. .Ohio University. Centre College. Harvard University. DePauw University. Indiana University. g I University of Michigan. Wabash College. Brown University. Hampden-Sidney. University of Virginia. Ohio Vvlesleyan University. Hanover College. Cumberland University. Beloit College. Bethany College. Iowa State University. VVittenloerg College. Westminster College. Iowa lVesleyan University. Denison University. Richmond College. 'A University of VVooster. ..... University of Kansas. .. . . ..Randolph-Macon. .. . . .. University of Vlfisconsin. .... ......Diekinson College. . . . . .. Cornell University. ......8tevens Institute of Technology .. . . .. St. Lawrence University. . .... .Boston University. ......Johns Hopkins University. .. . . ..University of California, 1879 1879 1880 1880 ...... 1881 1881 1882 1884 1885 1886 1888 1888 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 1889 1890 1890. 1890 Beta Eta ....... Beta Beta . .... . Phi. .......... Beta Theta ...... Nu ...... ...... ...... ....... Alpha Alpha ...... . ..... . Beta Iota ......... Beta Lambda ...... . ..... . Theta Delta ..... Beta Omicron ...... ........ Alpha Upsilon. ....... . .... .. Alpha Xi ...... . Alpha Zeta ..... L ....... Alpha Tau. .... . Alpha Omega ...... L ...... Beta Epsilon A ...... . ..... . Eta Beta ...... .... . ..... . Phi Alpha. .... . Beta Pi ...... . Beta Nu.ffff.'.. .. ...un ..-..... .. .....--. Maine State College. University of Mississippi. University of Pennsylvania. Colgate University. Union College. Columbia College. Amherst College. Vanderbilt University. Ohio State University. University of Texas. Pennsylvania State College. Knox College. University of Denver. University of Nebraska. Dartmouth College. Syracuse University: University of North Carolina. Davidson College. University of Minnesota. 1Vesleyan University. University of Cincinnati. - ALUMNI CHAPTERS. Providence, R.I., 1Vheeling,W.Va., Indianapolis, Ind., LeavenWorth,Ks Baltimore, Md., Richmond, Va., Chicago, Ill., Kansas, City, Mo Louisville, Ky., Cincinnati, O., Denver, Col., Washington,D. C Boston, Mass., Cleveland, O., San Francisco, Cal., Philadelphia, Pa. New York,N.Y., Dayton, O., Omaha, Neb., Newark, O. 5 E I 3 i . A I' f ! , 4, 1 f 3 i, sy. F , 5 , 2 iw , ' 'I . 5 A 'Ml 1 4 ELM. T Vft 1 . in M 5 Q My mf- BMA' bi: :gi 5 E i 3 v I , 1 I Q V' aw Ii , 5 .1 ' I ig? lui! fr? 'fi NI Y 5 1 AQ 1 QU - . A . ' . LN n? .i' .M Q ? I I 1 m gg E2 4 i ig I. 'Q 1 X BETA TI-IET Pl. ALUMNI., CLINTON L. DELAMATRE, B. A., L. L. B., CHAS. V. PLEUKHARP, M. E., G. GLENN ATKINS, B. A VVALLACE C. SABINE, M. A., FRANK M. RAYMOND, B A HENRY J. VVOODXVORTH, B. SO., HOWARD HAGLER, B. SO NVILBY G. HYDE, B. A., L. L. B. JULIUS FLOTO, E. M., WVILBUR H. SIERERT, B. A., CHARLES P. SIGERFOCS, L S RESIDENT MEMBERS. HON. HENRY C. NOBLE, GEN. GEORGE B. VVRIGI-IT, GEO. HALDI, COL. CHARLES PARROTT, J. CAL HANNA, A REV. I. F. KING, DR. E. B. FULLERTON, HON. H. J. BOOTH, T. J. KEATING, A J. J. LENTZ, HENRY A. VVILLIAMS, CHARLES J. PRETZMAN, H. C. W ILL, I JUDGE T. J. DUNCAN, CHARLES DOE, L J. D. LESLEY, VV. A. BALDXVIN, DICKSON L. MOORE, C. C. HOOPER,, REV. E. SCHMID, M. D. PHILLIPS, HON. XVILLIAM J AMISON MAJ. A. C. HOUGHTON, THOMAS G. YOUMANS, HON. J. M. PATTISON, LION. H. C. MARSHALL, PROE. S. D. K.ELLIOO'm'. 49 E .qv I 5 . I ? I 7 P, F I' I I. . 'Q r ' I r f 1 I H IV' .V V 'a V. ii K. ! Ii 1,3 H lx . W l . .Ml J. I I ' S M LQ' ,ya H fr? U57 T il I Ai, UT? .' Ezi- F .Ai .w'1 f 111 'tai i N. UT ildllf .Ig .nz . wi I: . I Lv PE M . I I v R -. no 11 ,. .I vi L' .5 IH ,111 lf. 'LW I. YQ AIP 5 z EETA TI-IET Pl. 1839, ISQC. THETA DELTA CHAPTER. Established, December 16, 1885. CHAPTER ROSE: CLZfb6Z1'I.7I6 Marmot. .l - ACTIVE MEMBERS. CLASS OF '9O. CHARLES EDNVARD SKINNER. CLASS OF '91. CARL GREGG DONEY, FRANCIS STUAIQT IQERSIIAW, EDXVARD SIGERFCOS, FRANK CARTER WOOD, FRANK ETHERINGTON POMERENE. CLASS OF '92. S P. PLATTER EVANS, HERBERT LINCOLN JOHNSTON, SAMUEL CHARLES KERSHAW, EDWARD BANCIQOIVI' lXIL'f'A1i'1'lCli. JAMES ROWE TOMLINSON. 5? s CLASS OF 93. ERNEST IQENT COUL'l'1CR, XVILLIAM LI'Sc'1I'S li1:AvI-:S. CHARLES ROBEIRT HAMILTON, AR'l'1IUH. 11UI.l'UBll! li ENN:-:mx A CLASS OF 'O4. 1, I 'I E. D. MOODY. I I . SPECIAL. 1 PI-IELPS CHAPMAN LlClC'l'E. ' 48 f ,WWHIK W '7, 1 ' f- ' , . Q x X ' 'Q 1 f ,xi V h AL we11Xf.Co.B st KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA ESTABLISHED. 1882 ...... ...U 1881 ...... ...... 1888 ...... ...... 1883 ...... ...... 1877 ...... ...... 1876 ..... ...... 1888 ...... 1888 ...... ...... 1872 ...... ...... 1875 ...... ...... 1878 ...... ...... 1881 ...... 1882 ...... 1875 ...v.. ...... 1878 ...... ...... Founded. 0ctober15,1870. CoLoRs: Lzlglzf mm' Dark BIW. ROLL OF ACTIVE CHAPTERS Boston University, Phi. ....... ...... . Lawrence University, Beta ...... Syracuse University, Tau.. .... .. Cornell University, Psi.. .... .. Buehtel College, Lainbfla. ..... . lVooster University, Galnnna. . . . Allegheny College, Rho ...... Ohio State University, Nu ..... Incliana University, Delta ..... DePauw University, Iota.. ..... . Butler University, Mu . ...... . Hillsdale College, Kappa. ..... . Adrian College, Xi. ....... ...... ..... . 'Wisconsin University, Eta . .... ...... ..... . . Illinois WGSlGy2l11 University, lCpsilon... 1882 ............ Northwestern University, Upsi It in ..... 1880 ............ Minnesota Uni versity, Chi . .......... .. 1882 ............ lowa University, Zeta ...... ..... 1888 ............ Kansas University, Omega . .... . 1884 ............ Nebraska University, Sigma ...... 1875 .......... . .Missouri Un iversit Theta.. . . .. Y, 1890 ............ University ot' Pennsylvania .... 50 KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA. AW ' . fvxf-si - LWSAQ Eiga SSP .-,41 ':Y 1 I 4 ' - - 1 U' I K - - . N 5 P NU CHAPTER. Established, October 12, 1888. ACTIVE, MEMBERS. CLASS OF '9O. ALICE H.- MOODEY, .. NELLIE TALBOT, , - ' A. MAREL BASTERDES. . CLASS OF ,'91. MARTHA A. MOSES, I ALICE M. BEACH, HELEN C. LEMERTX . CLASS OF '92. - CHRISTINE HOUSTON, BQIGNON TALROT. CLASS OF '93. LOUISE MERRILL, CARRIE AVRIGHT, CLARA BYERS, KATHERINE IQRAUSS --l.ii iffLeft College. 51 6 ff I 9 gi 55 FRATERNITY SUMMARY FACULTY, . . IRBT GRADUATE, . SENTORS. V. JUNIOBS, . SOPHOMORES FRESHMEN, . SPECIALS, . PREPARATORY, ' TOTAL, . 53 . KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA. ALUMNI. ALLA BERTA RICKEY, '89, . ALBERTA D. GARBER, '89, RESIDENT MEMBERS. MISS BELLE SLADE, Lambda, MISS FANNY BANCROFT, Xu, MISS CGRA RIGBY, Phi, MISS CARRIE A. Pococx, Nu, MRS. J. G. HANNA, Gamma, MISS MINNIE BLAKIS'1'uN, Nu, MISS ELLA PARSONS, Gamma, MISS FANNIE GLENN, Rho. MISS J ENNIE HOFFMAN, Alpha, MISS LYDE DONVNING, Lambda 52 W ff mg: 5 , X x . -.T , X, X X - v ,frm ' xf X , Z X2 fx XXX-K, - X WX jg ,Www f ,,,,, -, fl? 1 GCNVENTICNS. PHI GAMMA DELTA, General Convention, Indianapolis, ffnd., Cct. 24, 25, 26, I State Convention -i. PHI KAPPA PSI, ' District Council, Springfield, C., April, 1891. Grand Arch Council, Cincinnati, C., April, 1892. SIGMA GHI, White Sulphur Springs, V a., August, 1890. PHI DELTA THETA, Atlanta, Cra., Cctober 19-23, 1891. CHI PHI, Baltimore, Md., High Noon, Nov. 13, 1890. BETA THETA PI, Wooglin-on-Chautauqua, Aug. 25-30, 1890. KAPPA KAPPA GAMMA, Bloomington, Ill., August 27, 1891, 54 1890 HISTORY. 1.-1 i 'l i i in Ag in 1874 under L U' M ff -up the name, of the Deshler Society, ff I W X p the history of Alcyone consequent- i 5 'il ly begins with that date. It adopt- W pf? Lt T' ed this name in recognition of its ' HBV 4' eminent benefactor, John G. Desh- W-O ler, of Oolumbus, O. Most a year afterward, at the request of Mr. Deshler, the name was changed to Alcyone Literary Society. The early Work of the society is said not to have been first-class. Like all organizations of a literary character, founded in a school in which the sciences predominate, it struggled for a while to maintain its position. lt was found diflicult at first to draw the mind of the chemist or the mineralogist from the 'f retort or the blow-pipe to the essays of Bacon or the lyrics of Burns 5 to reconcile the devotee of the transit and the differentials toa couple of hours of exercise --in declaiming oratory and debate. The value of such training soon became apparent, however, and suddenly Alcyone loomed up as a grea.t literary light. Her orators became prominent both at home and abroad. Two of them took second honors at state contests, while others have received prominent places at the local contests. One thing that speaks Well for Alcyone is the great num- ber of O. S. U. graduates that have belonged to her ranks. The names of more graduates are found upon the pages of her catalogue than that of any other similar institution in the University. One year more than half the graduating class were her members. This year she graduates but three, viz.: R. K. Beach, O. B. Morrey, and H. O. Bennett. -fr- Ol ALCYO FORTY-Two MEMBERS. MOTTO' Fabrz' Fab1'1'ffa11a'0 7 COLORSQ Gold and Gray. F. E. POMERINE, J. G. M. SKINNER, ERNEST COULTER, L. W. GRISWOLD, H. A. SURFACE, F. H. MCGUFFEY, GFFICERS. 50 FIDIIIIIS. . I1I'08I.lIt'IIf. VIICP- P1'f'Sfff4'11I'. . Sc'c'1'0fm'y. T1'f'u.w1l1'c'I'. . . C'c'1lSm'. S0l ljf'0llf-lhlf-gl rms. 3 P 0 4 I' '- N P 1 all 1 HORTO COLORS MOTTO H. C. LAUGHLIN, J. G. S. MARSIIALL, E. D. MOODY, H. L. JOHNSTON, E. W. SIGEHFOOS, M. A. SMITH, . H. NIEUVAHNER, FIFTY-FOUR MEMBERS. Cezrulmal ami Slay Blue. Per angusfez ad ezvzgusziz. H OFFICERS 59 . President . Vice President . . Tveeasuwer . R6C07'di7Zg Secretcwy Oorfresponciing Secretary. . . . C'0'f1Itie. . Sewgewnt-ay!-Awms. One open meeting was held in the College Chapel this vear. lt was a fair representative of the regular meetings, and showed that besides the great amount of work that most ofthe students carry, they yet find time for literary training. ' 1 l t The challenge this yeai of Alcyone to Horton for a 1 erary contest was accepted, and will occur May 29th. Alcyone's rep- 0 t' n A S J E flar' Essay F. S. Kershaw, resentatives are: ra io , . . . 5 , , -, Declamation, F. A. Cope, Debate, C. G. Doney. All the men have had experience, all have been before the public and held the audience. Something from them is not only expected, but will be realized , and if Horton beats them, so much the better for her. ' On Field Day Alcyone's members did not exert themselves for the minor prizes, they saved their strength for the chief event, the 'ftug-of-war, with Horton. Here a victory meant something, here both training and skill Would tell, and they did tell when her chosen athletes 4' set the teeth and stretched the nostrils Widefi and Won in two fair and square pulls. The line picture of the University that now adorns her Walls, is the silent attestor of the strength of her Worthy sons. She hopes to win the contest. If she does she will then have convinced her neighbors that she has both brawn and brain. 58 oration counting 5 points and the essa.y counting 4, making total of 0 5 while Horton Won the dec1amation,3 points and the debate 5, a total of 3, giving Alcyone the contest. Gn the sec- ond contest the oration and debate counted 600 points each, the essay 500 and the declamation 300. Horton had anrnajor- ity of 16 on the essay and 95 on the debateg While Alcyone had 7 on the declamation and 45 on the oration, giving the contest to Horton by 135 points. On the decisive contest of the series the scale of points was the same. Alcyone Won the essay by 155, the oration by 65 and the debate by 35 3 Horton won the declamation by 365, giving her a majority of 115 over Alcyone, and giving her the best two out of the series of three. 61 HISTGRY. wg- g.nnfl3'2':'-r? E !': ! '. N ' D . I' ff mWW'Wz, l: course we are all proud of being ' members of Horton. We hare 1635011 to be. We were recently in a tug-of is ar which resulted in a victory for our opponents, of bone and muscle-brute f force, but as a literary society we flour- , ish a flag that bears the names of vic- 1--gi tories won on many a rostrum. Suppose we take our Ohio State University representatives to state oratorical contests. Delamater of Alcyone in '84 got second place, Taylor of Alcyone in '85, last , Milligan of Hor- ton in '86, third 5 Laughlin of Horton in '87, third 5 Atkins of Lklcyone in '88, last, Boy of Horton in '89, fifth 5 Clark of . ? 1 X ' X- .,,4. l N .W ww ' Horton in '90, second. There are four out of seven for Horton. ln places, Alcyone has one second and two last, Horton has one second, two third and one fifth. ln our local contests within our recollection, the orators have been as follows: in '87, Laughlin and Wilgtis of Horton, Aldrich of Alcyone 3 in '88, Atkins and Beach of Alcyone, Batchell and M. A. Smith of Horton, in '89, Roy, Dungan and C. C. Smith of Horton, none from Alcyone, in '90, under the new method of choosing orators, they were evenly divided between the societies, Horton having Clark and Sigerfoos, Alcyone, Beach and Skinner, Browning, Miss Lemert, with Dixon and Caylor not members of any society. We see that out of fourteen orators from Horton and Alcyone, Horton has furnished nine and Alcyone live. Let us look at the series of three contests between the societies in 1883-4-5. In the first contest Alcyone won, the 60 HlSTCRY.' A body has been hold- ing a most interesting series of meetings this year, as any one of its ommcfrous visit- ors will admit. The programs have all U ,ff! :'-.f?fr':':-fi X 4 -- J., if f'---:zflliha-111.1 U ' 2 'f5 l'f:- 7,1 H53 ' if-.1 ' ' I , Hb 'xx iq, , 2.1 xi 'W.f 715' ' HX X -E ffff- '. .-.'l.4!'-sn - W ft ' df, i41!'ig.f , f tQ!,.:,','-'gf 1 Vfv'4VUi'f6' N 433-a55n'1 l7 'gQxlxQy'.J1l , 5 i X -:gif 4- fl ' 91' I a IV H X been excellently carried out and each W' Af member has been found loyal to the last 1 f ' ,rx ,M drop of' her heart's blood. f There has been N 5, , ,great need of sacrifice, too, for two socials Q have already passed and still something must be done. The body will continue desperate till that piano has been paid for. The tender maidens who at the last social allowed the common herd to gaze upon their beauty, enhanced by gay colors and shaded lights, have received their reward in the praises showered upon them and need no further mention. Others there are, meek and modest, who would never be brought before the eyes of the public were it not for this reflection of college life. These are the foundation stones of the society. To them we look for stirring speech, powerful invective and unanswerable debate. The last men- tioned is the staple article of' diet of' these mighty minds. WVhen such mighty questions are discussed as Physical Cul- ture in College, Marriage a Failure g U Robert Browning the Intellectual Exponent, 7' C' Professor Queen or Professor Bowen, the Favorite 3 Equality of' Heights of' Kershaw and Deardorff the gentlemen can ill afford to be absent! The new feature of the exercises is the chorus rendition of one or less college songs-generally less. Cut of' this will probably grow a Ladies? Vocal Club which will rival the 4' Crlee Club in merit if' not in beauty. 63 BROWNING. WW , V -----f- I , 1 ' . -.... I 'i ,.,.- . ' ........--.. S--- - ,' L2f9 'W-5 LW LN, v THIRTY MEMBERS. COLORS: Pmlzi ann? White. OFFICERS. wfC.j0LD QW.jAFFLEs, . A . IJj4CS?:d6'I?1t. 1fE.jAHLY QRQOBIN, . . Vz'ce-Pofesvldemi. nfS.jELDoM 10. Kg, . . . Urfitic. QEQASTEIQ QCQHICKEN, . . Secretcwjg. 4i1X.DXVFULLY CSQHEEPISH, . . To'eas1m'er. 1iL.DITTLE CH.DEAD, . . Jlfonfitow. QBQIG QSQQUASH, . . . HiSt07'iGf'I lf. liE.DCCENTRIC QWQARBLE11, Musical Dio'ccz5ov', 62 6 3' F 3' 1 x x fi A Sr ,lf gl il 1 I G. H H K. R. L. X Z ff ff! If 1 jx, R! ff' ll lf KIRTLA D. 4 1- 9 TWENTY MEMBERS. GF F I C E RS. V 1 P. F OX. . . P1'csz'ricnf. R H. RICHARDSON, . View I'o'csz'rZcn.f. if C. OBERHOLTZER, . . bbcremry. V ' C. EGR-ERT, . f1SSi8ffL?Lf bbcretczry. D. MERCER, . T'1'easu7'cr. R F. PLETSCI-IER, Sevjgccmt-at-Arms. x ,f cl . gi gk . .ff ' ri., 65 R Several oi' our inenibers have been invited to Join othei societies and we doubt not that they would be valuable addi tions, but each loyal ineinber of Browning will shout to her dying day 7 N Hi, Oh ! Hi, Oh I Browning ! Browning ! Stand back Aloyone! Back Horton! Browning Browning, XV e are the front ! ,ki ill -If A ff L ' . XZ - ' N' f , vQ,g '-.s r t 'Wifi-r ' fbfgig' ig: - A' I ffl! J I 1 ' s'.-'g idx , Lu? iff-vs 1 tr xiwm- K - ff -1, , ig -,- ,-, 4.- ,-.M ,-1 w.: n .y , - , f . ML- ,, ' ,, ,fi .- e,. ---. , '-:f--- ,- . 1, ., fi X 7- - . , ? . 4' ' x ' ...I I 35 'Hz- gs, 77 ' ..- , Q ff V 1.65 X Z 22 551, -.Y-XQL 1 ' 1,4 JSC: ff, -x - -fb. 'll ,Zim -:,K,?L.:t.' --N X I x W i F r -K tifigt 'B ENE-ii if X 1 X-' 41- ' -.X - -I L.--. , ' -. ,ge-, -, ii -liafgkg ,aff ff' U ti Q' r i I7 e 1 I' I 5 t w 4' ' X- 5 , 1 , in ' , - fn -' '-.,:ggg,.f 64 f ORATORICAL ASSOCIATIONS. - INTER-STATE ASSOCIATION. W. A. BASTIAN, DePauw, . , ' , STATE ASSOCIATION. E. J. LEWIS, Marietta, ..., ROSCOE J. MAUcK, Ohio, I W. H. CLARK, Ohio State, E. '. W. H. MAUER, WOOStG1', .... C. G. DONEY, LOCAL ASSOCIATION. H. C. BENNETT, , . CHARLES SWICKARD, . L. F. KIESEWETTER, ..... INTER-STATE coNTEsT. Lincoln, Neb., May lst, 1890. S. W. NAYLOR, 'Washburn, Kansas, . . The Puritan and Cavalier. A. C. DOUGLAS, Monmouth, Illinois, . Our English Language. ROBERT TUCKER, Buchtel, Ohio, . . . Democracy, the Dominant Idea. STATE CONTEST. Springfield, February 20, 1890. ROBERT TUCKER, Buchtel, Akron, . . TVILLIAM H. CLARK, Ohio State, Columbus, W. H. CLARK, Monopoly and Communism. LOCAL CONTEST. J. L. DIXON, Human MincI,'7 . . .- J. G. M. SKINNER, 'f Lafayette and Liberty, President President Voce Presficlent Secretary T0'caszw'cr Prcsidcnf. Vice Presiclcnz'. Scc0'cz'fw'y. Trcaswcr. First Place. Second I'lac'c. Tfzizfrcl Plczcr. Ffz'f1-st 1'Zaw'. ISECQMZ f'lfH'f'. Firsf I'ffr1'f'. ,Skconrl 1C,lfIl'C'. Tl?'?'7'CZ l'Zffr'f'. Delegate to Inter-State Contest, . . W. H. C'L.i1:K. Next Inter-State Contest, . Des Moines, la., May I, INVI- Next State Contest, . Wooster, C'-I Feb. 20: wgl' Local Contest, . . - - Dec' 61 183' 67 HISTGRY. a OTWITHSTANDING y X i Kirtland is not mentioned in Q 431 j . . f -Wg, the catalogue, it ranks with ik ff! f '1f3 ' WW the other societies of the Uni- llmfff f my ,Q ,Q -- I W , ,.jQi versity in regard to literary - ability. The object of the ' y LLL if . V,-s societf is to develo a fac- 6 X I 3 P ,fi ha ,lf ulty of observation, and cul- ','W f'4t tivate powers of original re- search 5 to form clear and accurate habits of thought and expression, by reading, writing, and discussion, to make a sys- teniatic study of the sciences most intimately related to agri- culture, and to assist in promoting the -Agricultural Department of the University by collecting material illustrative of its various branchesf' Successful Weekly meetings have been held throughout the last college year. The exercises consist of declamations, essays, debates and papers on ,original investigations. The society has at last freed herself from some impediments that have been a hindrance to her growth. The membership is constantly in, creasing and it has been necessary to ask the Trustees for new rooms. Since October, the society has had one representative on the Board of Editors of the Lantern. Kirtland Will grad- uate two members in J une. .ff 4 A 7.0 I4 KI I BIQLOCICAL CLUB. TWENTY-FIVE MEMBERS. PROE. IQELLICOTT, . . Poqesficlefmf. PROE. LAZENBY, . Wee-President. H. A. SURFACE, . . Seconetcwy. r - . '. ' .ll -f ffl- Qu' .QQJ L 7 . . f, f ' Q ' ' ffxiff' MV,Nm WfM0V I , 'N ' f Q ' I lf!! , X MAF I I bf ffl? R. - 2 N 155' ff f 'H 'lr ' B A ,fr f ff ' ' Q 1 1 1 Q yw, 1-will I X W 1 I 9 ' -. 1 vw- 'f Q JH fr 1, Z 6, . I . fm off 559m ln fm fumbfhiz' Clfdmff f' + f fm! fffr M 24 , ' . WlZ u If 3, r Hwy? ' 4 3 X , N! 1 Ml. 27' Z 'f '. , .. Y H7 '7l x ' Ll? Z M ' f 'Zffff N rl x 7 J I fy, .gf Qi' f 'V fy. -Q n f f fffoff 'J 1 , L '57 ,wg 'ML K ' 1 ' Rf Y U 7 f I xxx il R 1' 1 I f .l. I' ,X , , .I , I 1 f2f9V X 1? kiwi' -f rj if AWA! f I f. 2457 I ' C x ! ff ilffvaf? I f I 1 ,I ,Af S S w 'K 1 BICYCLE CLUB EIGHTEEN MEMBERS. 1 OFFICERS. Wil' E. VV. SCHUELLER, fa 7 Z GUS. T. PETERS, Tourmaster and Acting SZ'c:'y. WM. KRUMBI, Pace-maker and A ating Trans. Capt. and Acting Pmwf. Y.M.C SEVENTY MEMBERS. J. R. TAYLOR, H. J. NVELDAY, . Vice-Pomesideozt. L ., H. SCOTT, . . Secometcwy. ,L G. E. J OHNSON, .A., . T1 . Presiolefnt. fZ5'ecLs'wrev'. in IGNGS DAUGHTERS TWENTY-SEVEN MEMBERS. .mm J -fosffffffm. gl BERTHA SCOTT, f SADIE O'KANE, if EOKKA ROIRINSON, qgfjly--1 E 5,217 f iff a - f LOUISE MERRILL, MIGNON TALBOT, es J A I- -, . President Vice-President COT. Sccfre1fcw'y Rec. Sccfrc1'ao'y . Y5'caSm'efr l C. E. SKINNER, C. E. SKINNER, C. E. SKINNER, C. E. SKINNEB, I. L. DUNGAN, N. W. STOBER, H. E. MOYER, H. O. OSTER, J. W. TAYLOR, H. A. SURFACE, STUDENTS' VINN. TWENTY MEMBERS. MCMILLEN AVENUE. EIGHTEEN MEMBERS. PIONEER CLUB. EIGHTEEN MEMBERS. a 9 o HOTEL DE SURFACE. TWENTY-FIVE MEMBERS. 71 Presiclcnf. Vice-Powsidczzf. Scc1'cfcm'y . Stczvcwd Prc.S1'clc21zt . StC1UCI?'d President . Szfmuarcl Prcsirlcnl . Stczufwd r s .' ?f .ff 'fxkqk C Q1 1 ff 1lJ?.E K X :Z f fx E J f 2. fi ff LQ g LsQ!!wM 1ll?:ii'E fk-! . XTX ff ' W-Lf- iff My ig 'M L . K7 1 BCDARDING CLUBS. NORTH DORMITORY. SEVENTY MEMBERS. W. F. LAVERY, ,... . President JESSE JONES, . . Vice-Presidcm.t G. E. MCCULLOCI-I, . Scco'etcm'y J. H. NIEWVAHNER, . . Stewao'd SOUTH DORMITURY. TWENTY-FIVE MEMBERS. E. B. PEDLOW, ...... I IE '1'0sz'f1'mf. J. C. .RITCI-IEY, . . C'710s1'm11' C71'ar'l'01'. 70 H 3 1 F f L f' 3ANjO CLUB. ' QWQ GUITARS. J. R. TAYLOR, F. A. CoPE,' E. T. JOI-INSOIN MANDQLIN. T. B. TWAILTJIQR. BANJOS. F. A. MASON, R. T. ELLIS 73 f.W - ' 1: ,KA f Q '65 :'EE.'I iEiiEEi'3i5.l-.- N 1 ' ' W 'Z'1if me jf ' S f ff Q3 ,755 'E ,WJ lo I? fqwf, 5? f in 'MJ Jew., QL IK XZA ff X 1'q?'f.T..g f.,. .. I ' U ,gf as X - was 1 Y IIIJ ITJT , 5 1? FHM ul In 'H THF MGP? u J' 'B O. S. U. GLBB CLUB. GFFICERS. J F RANSOM ,.... Dm ectoo F K COULTER, . . P1 cszricm' CHAPI ES R. HSAMILTON, Scczctaoy F N SCHUELLER, . . . . Tvccmwef NV L GRAVES, .... . Acvompfznzsz' MEMBERS. FIRST TENORS. C. E. SKINNER, H. J. WVELDAY, E. W. SOIIUELLER, F. S. IQERSHAVV, R. S. STEWARD. FIRST BASS. L. F. IQIESEVVETTER, H. H. TRYON, F. D. ASKEW, W. L. GRAVES, SECOND TENORS. W. T. TWILLS, J. R. TAYLOR, R. O. TWORRISON 7 C. R. HABIIIITON SECOND BASS. R. D. SIMPSON, T. C. DUNLAP, W. H. KRUMM, E. K. COULTER. f . . ' ,rf ft . .i ff 1 3 F f gfufft my F g - , ' F . , 'lL fiffftffi, i ' '43 , QQ-tl 'f'Egg. ' A jj F ' '- ' fs- J. 2 I . ,I YF Q JEI, 9 I I Y .,, xW -- - K I , :Ill f I -. -'z. '....., i Are fyou 1-eudy? ATHLETIC ASSCDCIATIQ . OFFICERS. F. IQANE, - '--- , I'rf1s1'fIffp1l E. D. MARTIN , - Vicfe-P9'es17d1'nt C. B. BIORREY, - - - Skfcrctcary E. W. SCHUELLER, - - Trfzusuwfr H. S. NIITCHELL, ----.--- Baer Ball Jfczmqjm' R. T. ELLIS, ----- . - - Foot Bull Ahznffger Field Day, State Fair Grounds, May 17th. CHARLES BOSLER, . - Y Denison, ----- l'rr.w'flf'm. H. S. MITCIIELL, - - Qhio State, - - - 171.00-l,l'K'Nl.lIl'lIf. XV. E. F ORGY, - F - WVOOSte1',' - - iS'w:rctury am? Trr'f1.wrm'. Field Day, Wfooster, May 2311. Q-f. A ' 'fin N ' r , , KX it WZ ill! ik' . If Z. ,W I PWM.- 'XA it' 'H if' t !i6'fj.fiiQ7 R-N. U ffl to Q, flffllllifldizl ' Q k.bl4!::4' ' ffmzt ' , , F' ' lt f fqI.iiiisyf,1 i ' 1' ' I V x I 1 rg' .ja fi ,sg 'Q 5.4 , 'I ....1L,X li l . . ' ' 'nl-2 ,,Q.,'if ' Qf' 3- 90 011544, 99,8 .Q - ,IQR of rv irc- I Nj 3, ,,-Mi'-'T' ,gc uw ' -,,. tlllraflffffffff'm'P ,. if .-. - . . , 'This GT nd cnc 'the .-Male 723-U ' 75 4 NZ' ., .,.. -I 61 149' ' I' :I-I., 0 575, gf' S- . 1' L. ff' 54 'ff-. , 'aff' ff . fu . V? . 1 I 1: 'zzz ffii' ,Q:3, t-' I 'gulf' y,. I . E ,gp - S . isp fr- ' ,,,, ,Q-I .E '- ,4 TTT ' 'ff' ---'---T -'..:f1 ' ' I f 4s,fNf 'i -- .. I , --.- ' - ' f Tr-H A-I' -X ' . .g2,iI'1 -Jfff E. .- LI, g - . K 1 1 -- . -3- '-' ,X ? gfg? is 4-15. -P --rf ,, 1 -' fpa disi' -L H' :'.-Jl-- It I L-,: 1 QW' lf ' f-if :O I- ' I - -'- ---I 1 X Ig.. f ff: 7 ,. 4-3, , Y 1, ,Y----i-:Yr V , yi ' fr at ,. ' 2--4,4 '::1,,.--T1 ,f 3 0-.'v:r'.E:' co....., f , .... -,.. f I I. :J ff ,' ' 4. . 1 F. 1-' TENNIS ASSOCIATIQ C. VVOOD, .7lIcmageo'. PROFESSOR LAZENBY, . . . Pfcszdcnf MISS LOUISE MERRILII, bcczcfcuy F. C. VVOOD, . T 'l'0Cl.Sll7'67' STATE TOURNAMENT, CO1umbuS, June 14, 1890. SINGLES. T. B. TNIILLER. DOUBLES. H. S. MITCI-IEIJT, and R. O. TWORRISON. 74 DATE. April 21 May 10 May 31 June 13 Oct. 19 Oct. 26 April 12 April 1.9 May 3 May 16 May 24 -....-..- ...... no---aus. ...- GAMES PLAYED LEAGUE GAMES. O. S. U. vs. Kenyon, at Columbus ......Denison vs. O. S. U., at Columbus....... S. U. Vs. Buchtel, at Columbus ' VVooster vs. O. S. U.,.at Columbus auf... nnnfnnovu ..... ...n--0. .....-..- ....-..O- -vnuns.-. ...N-O. S OTHER GAMES. U. Vs. Asylum ............ U. vs. Starling Medical College. .... . U. vs. Capital University ......... .. U. Vs. Y. M. C. A ..... Q ......... ..... S. U. vs..Capital University U. Vs. Columbus Grays ..Ohio Wesleyan vs. O. S. U., at Delawareu... .. ..-.ou.--..- . -fu.-1... -.-..-- ....... SCO RE. 'J 11- - S--L 11- -1 7 .. -ll 14-13 9- 1 16- 7 .. 27- 3 5-4 15- 5 11-10 OHIO INTERGOLLEGIATE LEAGUE. K woN. p Losfr. PER cr. Denison. ....... .. 7 . 1 .. .. .875 O. S. U ...... .. 5 . Rf .. .675 Wooster. ....... .. 5 . 3 .. .. .675 Buchtel .. 2 . 6 .. .. .250 Kenyon. ....... ......... ......... I 1 ......... ......... 7 ..... . 1 25 SCHEDULE OE GAMES EOR 1890. KENYON. Woosfrniz. Buci-ITEL. O. S. U. DENISON. 4-5 4-5 2-14 4-9 Kenyon .. ......... ......... lV lay 15th May 22d. .... April Mtg.. May Sth. . 15-3 Wooster... June 12th... ......... ...... A pril 26tl1.. June 3th... June 14th. 3-9 7-5 I QOH Buchtel May 3d ...... May 17th ......... ......... 1V lay 31st May -Q 1. O. S. U.. June 5th. .... June 6th June 7th ......... ........ . April 26111- , 12-2 13-9 12-0 S-1 Demson May 17th May 23d .... . May 24th May 10th ....... .. 77 -1-Q nh MMR XKXKXNWNNXWXXWWW ul I . 2 HQ ' ' z ' f' . I CA . ' 2. ,J . 'Sf 4- W 2 ' -2 Q va 1- 0 ' v,,f-'S'-,, ' 'X' f ,-Q 6 , ff' jf 1 7' 'We ,W 7 N fig, - - I . s 4 ' ll oa'326'lra DE 21 FUQLER! A Qs! p Jggw 2 2 72 0 ' , ft 2 EW W' i f Z ' A 'A ff tl .ew I E ' 4 If 'ff7!' Q 4 I yi ,4 94 I S f 7 I 'is-6 Ll -R 7 , Y f 1 ' .- , , ' 2 W f gf W' 2 in H' 0 ', aurfri ders nigh. KY, V Q X '335'3'5'i nr fx -s 9 M 7'4 WW if is-'QL 'I f - 'Q' X' 7 ' 0 f - f . T' A V TTQUL 1 SUDVNG TD BASE 'Mii-':T-'.flrrlfffI,lm1n1 BASE BALL. A comics TEAM. li S. C. BENNETT, . . . Ckzpfczioz. J. H. ETIENVVAHNER, . . . Dfcmagmz G. D. PEARCE, Catcher. F. WV. RANE, Center Field. ED. BIARTIN, Pitcher. C. W. BARNES, Third Base. J. C. ERNST, First Base. S. C. BENNETT, Second Base. C. S. PRATT, Right Field. G. C. SCHTEFFER, Left Field. T. B. NIILLER., Short Stop. E. B. PEDLOW, Substitute. GEO. CHEssELL, Scorer. , XV. F. LIWERY, Umpire. MEMBERS OF THE INTER-COLLEGIATE LEAGUE. A Kenyon, Denison, Buchtel, Wooster, Ohio State. ' OFFICERS.. C. H. BosLER,. . Denison, . . Prcsz'dcm'. H. i.X1ITCHELL, LT., . Iffgp-l71'p3g'dpppf, W. E. FORGY, . Vfooster, . Sccrvfm-y. A 76 4,5777 :vu--1 X QNX , X L Q X X - N ' vw' X,Q.z1. Y N - C' X X, . . S. . .X A ,D X .MX Y I b K X X .Q 2 3 X X Q . 1 1 X X N A 1, ,X 1' - ... v ,, . rx! - ...-- W ,- ' f 4 I - r i F P .6-?' f 'gba Sigefiia sb QMMEJ xxxxxxxxxfzxmxxxmx mXm1mK M iss 5yGrS M emberij E55 Smfth ' M155 Brownma Miss Garber' Miss Bradford Miss Herfagk Miss Herllhy Munn Grfmsley Dun an Meg? Elhs Mills Carroll Howard Stnnbuf-ty Waodcu-FF JN. Bradford , ll- Px.To.ylor Instructors W S n , 7 -kj i A 5 5 44 ,I 31 r 1 1 1 l Z , :ra n A ' -1 I s I 5 1 I ! Y i I V 1 v K. I s sia.sm of its members was aroused. In 1886 the graduating class presented to the battalion an elegant, gold mounted serv- ice sword, to be worn each year by the captain of the best drilled company. This has been, it .might be said, the life of our organization. The class of '86, was indirectly the cause of victories later on. In 1886 a competitive drill was held be- tween the University of Woostei' and O. S. U. battalions. The C. S. U. was victorious. The next year another drill was ar- ranged with the same institution, but owing to a disagreement between the parties it never came off. The prize company then went to Findlay, Ohio, to the great Natural Gas Celebration which was in progress ot that time. Here they won a. prize of 8500, taking second place, being beaten by the Toledo Cadets by only Va few points, while the VVooster City Guards, a crack organization that had participated in the ltfashington Drill, was away below them. These contests have had the etfect of arousing the latent energies of the men and have improved wonderfully the general tone of the organization. Lieutenant Kilbourne of the 2nd Artillery, was stationed at the University in 1887. Lieutenant Kilbourne has, by his earnest efforts and gentlemanly treatment, won the confidence and respect of all at the institution. The standard of the bat- talion has been kept up and new equipments have been secured through his efforts. Lieutenant Kilbourne has made many attempts to match his battalion against others, but without success. During the present year, challenges have been sent to five different military schools, viz.: Ada Normal School, Kenyon College, YVooster University, DePauw and Purdue Universities. None have ac- cepted and the commandant has been obliged to give up all thought of another drill. In thepast four years the battalion has been in splendid condition and it is with extreme regret tha.t the members of the battalion say good-bye to their re- spected commandant. 81 THE BATTALIQ HISTORY. HE O. S. U. battalion was organized with the opening of the University. At Hrst it wa.s under the command ' and tutorship of certain members of the faculty and such persons as might know the rudiments of the science. Drill, during this period, was voluntary with the students, and consequently, as is always the case, the exercise was only a farce. In 1878 Lieutenant Luigia Lomia was detailed by the lVar Department to take charge of the department of mili- tary science at the University. Lieutenant Lomia was a severe disciplinarian and many are the tales told by the ex-students of their first experience with the discipline of Lomia. By the efforts of the lieutenant, drill was made compulsory and mili- tary affairs at O. S. U. took on a new phase. Lieut. Lomia was an artillery officer and much of his attention was given to that branch of the service. Through his efforts a four gun battery was organized, which was the best artillery detachment ever on the college grounds. Lieut. Lomia is now an attache of the American legation at Rome. In 1881 Lieutenant George Ruhlen, an officer of the 17th Infantry U. S. A. was placed in command at the University, and the battalion passed into a new era. Lieutenant Ruhlen. labored faithfully for the battalion and achieved success. Dur- ing his term of service the men were only required to drill four times per week and three-fourths of an hour each time, Chapel exercises and Rhetoricals seriously interfering with the work of the department. ' In 1884 Lieutenant A. P. Blocksom of the Gth Cavalry, U. S. A. was detailed to this post. Under the energetic action of Lieut. Blocksom the battalion progressed rapidly. The enthu- 80 . ',. - Qt w.-f .v-. , .-,--,A ., ...-n.. -- gf. -' - ,L - ,' . J, x , -z...-... . -Y,...4--p... ...V-. , ..-, ..- 4 4-A as Wai L.,--U-Qs, , ' A X . X N . 2.30 - xv .Xx. , 5.gfQ 'Q frixvl ' X x -xx .,. bz..,XX Q 'Y XM . W , i Xt- X v ,F B . -gyr- JVZS. it 'Rf li. x '- , 'f ' ' ' bnm- x. + x wk, xxx X' ' X 1 O. S. U. COEPS CADETS. ROSTER. COu1n1a11daut C. E. KILEOAUENE, . . First Lieutenant, Qnd U. S. Artillery. FIELD OFFICERS. J. E. THOMPSON, . ...... Lieutenant-Colonel. L. F. LKIESEXVETTER, ....... . . Major. STAFF OFFICERS. Captain F. H. GALE, ...... . . Adjutant. Captain PERCY MARTIN, . QMCWi6?'WLClSi6T- I. L. DUNGAN, . . . . Sergeant-Major. . Quartermaster-Sergeant. W. H. TRYON, ...... COMPANY A. CPIOKED COMPANYB. EDWARD SIGERFOOS, . . ..... Captain. H. O. OSTEE, . First Lieutenant. A. H. KENNEDY, . Second Lieutenant. R. V. MYERS, . First Sergeant. E. EVANS, - . Sergeant. E. K. COULTER, Sergeant. J. H. BONE, . . Sergeant. C. R. SWICKARD, Corporal. C. R. LIAMILTON, . Corporal, D. S. HEGLER, . Corporal, WV. K. LANDACRE, . . . Cbrporal, COMPANY B. S. C. 'ICIERSHA W, ..... . . Captain. E. B. LqCCARTER, I. L. STINEBAUGH, S. H. INNIS, XV. K. LANMAN, D. XV. BROOKS, C. S. POWELL, R. O. MORRISON, P. P. EVANS, . VV. A. HIfXTT, J. B. ICUHN, T. B. GIBSON, R. S. GOODELL, E. S. VVOODBORNE, A. F. PETERS, , - . ,. , COMPANY C. 82 First Lieutenant. Seconel Lieutenant. F irst . . . Sergeant. Sergeant. Sergeant. Sergeant. Sergeant. Corporal. Coiporal. Corporal Corporal Captain First Lieutenant Second Lieutenant -Mr. 1. .J -aw-ww R. F. Fos'1'E1:, A. M. TURNER, R. T. E1.L1s, H. E. BIOYER, Gr. H. CHESSELL, G. C. SHAEFFER, G. S. FISH, . XV. H. CONEY W. R. Mcmfv, N. XV. STORER, . C. M. CROOKS, XV. L. EVANS, C. HEC+I,ER, J. XV. I'IOXVARD, F. WV. STINSMAN, H. F. FLYNN, . J. GREEN, . C.- H. FA1:BE1:, C. A. DYIE, . L. R. W. PUGH, XV. C. PULK, J. XV. TAYLOR, W. H. SPENCER, J. R. TOMLINSQN, E. B. I'IATCIIER, C. A. PHELPS, . VV. K. PALMER, F JV. E. H.XZEI,'l'INE, F. H. lVICfAfUFFEY, E. XV. SCIIUELLER, CCMPANY HDF BATTERY. First Scfrgvcmt . Svrgecml. Sergeant. . Sezgcawt. Scrgaffznt. Cb1yJotraZ. Cozyzuml. Cozporal. Cmynoral. . . Ccqn'a'z'n. First Liciftuzlfzzzt. Second LI.6?lfe1'?2U1It. First Skrycani. . Sffrgemzl. Sc'1'gc'1mt. Sergmv 1 i . CbI'?lUI'ClZ. . Cofymrfzl. Co1'po1'ul. . Glrjnzrvll. Scrgmnt, tin Commfmu'5. . . N6'l'fjf'llllf. f'0rprn'11l. . C'm'p07'r1l. Cvllfflflflll. , , , Cbljmrrrl. mst Sergeant, . Drum Nf4f f'- Lggbdgy, I1?'l.'IlClyIUl ,JlIlNI'f'tllIl. ' 5 155. 61:27 ciauwb. . ,qazeiifazzegw .Nb wifi!! fiiffgtiilh. 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'I ff lf, - 1 v'fJt7'1f!W' ,fn-I ' nu, 3 I 1 ' '61-f, I 1-TTIN, 'J A Jiffy - f 1171! E3-'P-lx-z J ' ll 1fm '4 f .,.iig.,--,-?- .:-- Aff lf, Q 84 4X Y JV 53,--Q I fax, f , ' 1 '- ' if ----ff--Lfalyfgl I fl X M:- '-Zf-' ,Q Ti' ff! FJ... if-ll? i .:' .--52.15-1--f5--x f -.. -- . A 5- '40, 1' 'Q J '.::' ' -zul- 2 - 4ff3f IIS, 'X-El-'x - 5-,2.g.- - ,-' I ,f , suv., . . 1 ' ' f' g 1 Esikf lf f - If A ff Q' 50 - ' ' Q J, 1553 1215? :fiisllfgpg in ' ' u1Z'I2'g1-'Q f5'fv.::pg,-cf: Ti, , 'f K, , f lgrgy' .ill 4.9: 4?4fn5:s , -1 , , Y . i ,Wm 1 Mygygiw-ggsggggfigigmgq . ,Q ' f ,f 4. a . Inf- , , gn -WW H V ! fy? -4 - . fa 1 I SENIOR PROME ADE' B. NIORREY, . Geneml Ohcwlvmcm COMMITTEES. ARRANGEMENTS. RUSSELL FEICIIT, EDNVARD SKINNER, O. B. MCRREY. INVITATION. JESSE JONES, ' MISS ALICE MCCDY, MISS PIARRIET DOTY. MUSIC. T. G. YOUMANS, H. S. MITCIJELL, WALTER BRAUN. RECEPTION. R. K. BEACH, I H. O. BENNETT, H. C. LAUCHLIN, ' C. O. SMITH. 96 The sly Seniors called it :L Promenade So Prexy would not catch on. 84 SUNDAY LECTURES. REV. W. I. CHAMBERLAIN, . . . Jzuimu-y 18, 1890 The Silent Partner in all OW1lC1'Sili1J.n DR. XVILLIAMS, . . . . . Fvlmmry H f'NetiO1Ia1iSm and Cil1'iSifi2lllif5'.U DR. GLADDEN, .... Fl?lJl'll2ll Y 23 The True SOCiZliiSlll.H DR. MOORE, .... Aiillfil Sr. Control Of Ti1OUQ'i1t.77 DR. FELTON, . . E . . April 123. f'PhySiCa,1 Evidenees Of the Autlxeliticity Of ilu' SO1'iptuI'eS.7' BISHOP FOSTER, . . . . MPG' '4- XVRS Ci11'iSt Divine '? '7 'P PRESIDENT ELIOT, . . . - 'him 1 ' I'I'eSe1'Va.tiO1I Of ai GOOII Familv Stock in 21 I,ClllUf'l'2lf, X'.u - 87 NN UNCEME Fall Term began, . Browning Social, Fall Term ends, . . XVinter Term began, Local Cratorical Contest, Horton Anniversary, Browning Social, . . State Cratorical Contest, . University Day, . . . Fort Ancient Trip, . XVinter Term ended, . Spring Term began, Arbor Day, . . Field Day, . State Field Day, . . . Horton-Alcyone Contest, . Alcyone Anniversary, . Baccalaureate Sermon, . . . ' Literary Societies-Commencement, Class Day, .9 . . . Commencement, . Spring Term ends, . Fall Term begins, , Fall Term ends, . Winter Term begins, WVinter Term ends, . 86 NTS. September 16, 1889 November 1, 1889. December 18, 1889 January 8, 1890. January 24. A February 7. February 14. February 20. February 21. March 20. April 2. April 9. April 24. May 17. May 23. May 29. June 6. . une 22. I une 23. fune 24. June 25. I une September 17. December 24. January 7, 1891.' April 1. UNIVERSITY DAY. A - Olmpcl, Iwidrzfy, Felmzary Q1 , 1890, 2 P. M Fresh 1112111 Orzttor, . PROGRAM. . . . . C.R.SW1oKA1In Subject-Whenoe 'F What? Why? Whither? Sophomore Orator, ' . . . f 7 E. W . SCHUELLER Suhject-Universities, their Rise and lnfluenee. Senior Essaiyist, . . . . . . AXLICE Moo Iii Y Subject-XVhat will not Vfoinun, Gentle WVOIHEUI, Dare. Junior Orator . , .... W. n. R li Es. llhe Pztn-Aiinerioan Conoress. 27 ANNUAL VISIT OF THE LEGISLATURE. F0bI'uIcII'y 1.9, 1890. Sztlute. - lnspootion of Lztborzttories and Apparatus. Lunch in Botanical Building. I PRESIDENT The State of Ohio, 4' The University, The SQllfltC,H 'C The l,louSU,U - if Tlio lCrlIIo:Itor.l Citizen, Soorr, Toast Master. GoVEENoIfI C,mII'EIcI,I,. , SEN,x'I'oI: M.IssrIc. LIEUT. Gov. M.II:oIfIs. SIIEIIKEII HYsEI.I,. SENA'I'on RIc'If,xI:Iis. S9 1 Unliversity Chapel, l'll'b1 lLll7 ll 7, 1890. 4 Essay, Vanity Fairf' . WV- D- REES- Uration, Andrew Johnson, ..... I. L. IJUNGAN. Dec-laination, 'fThe School Boy's Strike, Bally Dean, or ' Goin' up Head. ..... EDWARD SIGERFOOS. Debate, ResoZw'd, That the School System of Illinois is preferable to that of Ohio, . . . Aiiirniative, . J. M. DTARTIN. Negative, J. E. BOYD. S Prayer, . . . PRESIDENT SCOTT. TOASTS. 'fTl1e Faculty and Students, . PRESIDENT SCOTT. Reminiscences of Dorm Life, PROFESSOR KELLICO1'T. College POlitiCs,', . . . R. K. BEACH. O. S. U. Abroadf, . . . JESSE JONES. Student Life at Cainbridgefl PROFESSOR BOHANNAN. 'K First Im pressionsj' . PROFESSOR CHALMERS. Practical Jokes l , . . . M. QUEAL. I. The Dude Of the Future, . J. E. BOYD. , 4'Student's Poniesf' . PROFESSOR DERBY. .i 'L The Ideal Dormitory, SECRETARY COPE. The Station Apples, . l . . . . J. N. NIEWVAIINER. PROFESSOR LAZENBY, Toast Master. ' , g 9 ALCYONE ANNIVERSARY. Q Ufn.i've1's27ty Chapel, Friday, June 13, 1890. 57 :vi ,I . . , '5 Declaniation, Slave Ships, , C, R. HAMILTON. Oration, Man and Truth, F, E, POMERENE. 13? cc 1 'I , 1 Essay, G09th9,, . ...... L. XV. SCIIUELLER. il Debate, Resolved, That Large and Populous Cities are 9 Detrixnental to Free Institutionsf, . . Aiiirinative, . J. Cr. M. SKINNER. Negative, G. E, lX'ICClULI,OCII. I 5 1 .JI 88 CLASS DAY PROGRAM. C. B. NIORREY, J . H. LARGE, Tuesday, Jamie 24, 1890. . . President's Address Custodian of Pipe of Peace R. K. BEACH, . .... Crution Miss ALICE MooDY, . History. G. P. GRIMSLEY, . , P06111- Miss BIABEL BASTERDES, . Prophecy. H. C. BENNETT, . . Ivy Cration. - CoMMENCEMENT om-xToRs. Neither God, Man, nor devil can tell on what basis the Faculty selects Coniinencoinent oratorsf' PROFESSOR TUTTLE, . University Crater. Miss NEIJTJIIE TALBOT, . . Arts. C. C. SMITH, Philosophy. J. R. RITCHEY, - . SCiGHCC- J, H, LARfQE, . Civil Engineer. R, D. MERSHON7 . Mining Engineer. R, S, FEICHT, Mechanical Engineer. C. P. Eox, . . . H Agriculture. WV. F LAVERY, . V9l391'l1m'115'- ill ARBOR DAY. First Prepzmratory, SOOO1Id P1'Op21.ratOIy, FI'Osh1IIa1I, . SOphO1I1OI'O, J u11iOI', . SOIIIOT, S. C. IQERSI-IAVV, R. S. GOODELL, , N. S. STORER, .iii- Apwz 926, 18.90. Elm, . . R. M. HAMIIITON. DI1'0op?Io1g Oak, NIISS EDITH COCKINS. Red Jfaplc, . R. F. F OSTEI-i. SWlwQtc Oak, I. L. DUNGAN. Oak and E lm, . F. VV. RANE. Salim Babylowfica, MISS BERTIIA SCOTT. PRIZE DRILL. . COmpzI1Iy B. CO1IIpa1Iy UC? . CO1I1pa1Iy DH j. -- F1 ALCYONE-HORION CONTEST. si Ilfay Q9, 1890. ALCYONE. HORTON. F. A. COPE, A . DGC12lIH1ElItiO11, M. A. SMITH. A. S. J. EYLAIQ, cbmuou, H. O. LAUGHHN, F. S. IQERSHAXV, Essay, D I. L. DUNGAN. C- G- DONEYQ DGb21 ffG, . . RIITCHEY. CHAPEL QRATION. C. P. GUY, Charles SL11111161m,H . F May 16. L Z2 W. D. REES, ni ff The American U11ivO1'sity,7' May 23. L 90 , FIRST ANNUAL FIELD DAY. - GHIO INTER-COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION. Wooster, May 23, 1890, FIELD OFFICERS. I IIIDOES. . o Q PROF. J. T. EXVING, CHARLES IHRIG, GEO. D. CROTHERS TIME-KEEPERS, XV. C. BRYANT, GEO. PLUMMER, JR. W. E. FORGY, Scorer. G. G. LONG, Starter. FRANK PICKINBAUGH, Referee. EVENTS. XV. F. LAVERY, O. S. U.-Putting Shot ......... ........ .... 3 5 ft., 154 in. A. G. MOGAW, WVOOster-Standing Broad Jump .. . 9 ft., 95111. J. R. J AMESON, Wooster-50 Yards Dash ......... ..... 5 5 seg J. ROSE, Denison-Running High Jump ......... .. . 5 ft., 3 in. C. H. BOSLER, Denison-Drop Kick. .......... .... 1 35 ft., O5 m. J. R. J AMEsON, Wooster-100 Yards Dash ......... .... 1 05 sec W. F. LAVERY, O. S. U.-Throwing Hammer ...... .... 6 7 ft., A. G. MOGAW, Wooster-Standing High Jump ...... . .4 ft., 7 in. J. R. J AMESON, Wooster-Hurdle Race ......... ...... 1 6.5 sec. G. H. RAMsEY, NVOOster-High Kick .... ......... . .. . 8 ft., 6 111. VV. A. LANDACRE, O. S. U.-Pole Vault ......... ......... .... 9 f t., 1 1n. J. R. J AMESON, VVOOster-Running Broad Jump.. .... .... 1 7 ft., 4 in. H. G. LAUOHLIN, O. S. U.-Quarter Mile Run ......... 59 sec. C. H. BOsLER, Denison-Throwing Base Ball ......... ......... 3 23 ft., 10 In. C. H. BARNETT, Denison-Standing Hop, Step and Jump, 29 ft., 115 in. J. M. MARTJN, O. S. U.-Mile Run ......... ......... ...... ......... 5 m i n., 285 sec. W. NV. RIDDLE, Wooster-220 Yards Dash. .... ......... ......... 2 5 2 sec. C. H. BARNETT, Denison-Running Hop, Step and Jump, 40 ft., 2 in. SCORE BY POINTS. NVOOster, 62 U. S. U., 50 Denison, 41 I Buflhtel, 4 93 FIELD DAY. Held at State Fair Gv'Ozmds, May 17, 1890. OFFICERS DF THE DAY. F.. W. RANE, .... . . Cleric of the Course PROFESSORS IFHOMAS, QUEEN, AND DERBY, . Judges E. EVANS, ..... ' . . Starter PROFESSOR THOMAS, . EVENTS. .f Time Keeper s . u G. W. RIGHTMIRE-Running Hop, Step and Jump . .......... 38 ft., 4 in. H. BEATTY-Running Broad Jump ...... ......... ......... . . . 17 ft., 15 in. J. S. HINE-Standing Broad Jump. ....... ......... ......... ......... 9 f t ., 11 in. J. S. HINE-Standing High Jump . ....... ......... ...... ...... ..... 4 f t . , 3 in. 'W. A. LANDAORE-Standing Broad Jump fwith Weightsj .... 11 ft., 15 in. E. M. BLOOM-Running High Jump. ....... ....... O .. ......... ...... O ft., 3 in. H. BEA'rrY- 50 Yards Dash .... .. ......... ......... ........ ...... 6 4 S ec H. BEATTY-100 Yards Dash ........ 112, Sec H. BEATTY--220 Yards Dash .... ..... ' 26 seg W. A. L.-XNDACRE-POl6 Vault. ....... . .. 8 ft., 8 1n. L. C. ERNST-ThFONVlDg Base Ball.. .... ..... 2 66 ft., 10 1n. J. B. HUGGINS-Drop Kick . ....... ..... . . ......... ..... 1 23 ft., 6 1n. J. B. HUGGINS-QL131't8T Mile Run ......... ......... . .. .... 633 sec W. F. LAVERY-Pllttlllg Sixteen Pound Shot.. ..... ..... 3 4 ft., 11 in. Exhibition Throw ......... ......... ..... ..... 3 5 f t., 35 1n. E. M. BLOOM and VV. A. LANDACIIE-High Kick . ...... .. 8 ft. G. S. STEWARD-Hurdle Race. ....... ......... ...... ........ 1 9 Q Sec E. BRADFORD-One Mile Bicycle Race. .... ......... ...... . . .... 4 min., 135 sec W. F. LAVERY-Throwing Sixteen Pound Hammer ......... 71 ft., 8 in. P. LINCOLN and L. C. ERNST-Three Legged Race ........ . 145 seg P. LINCOLN-Quarter Mile Walk ......... ....... 1 .. ......... .. . 1 min., 462 sec A. T. PETERS--SIOW Bicycle Race, 50 yards .... ........ . . 3 min., 29 sec J. M. MARTIN-Mile Run. .......... ...... ...... ...... 1 . , 5 n1in.,38 Sec G. S. STEWARD--S21-Ck Race, Fifty Yards. ....... 14 Sec ALCK'0NE ......... ......... ...... ......... T u g -Of-War ........ . . ........ HORTDN 92 A mlm I rn. 7' 'F U M ,urn .. ' ' ' . -L -,. , , ' f 1 l . V' . . 1 J : lA,',l,!' I., V I .. 13053 . , ,.:,- 7 ff 1,1 -'f ff, I fn? . 41 '4 ' 9 lffifffgff ' . . eng-12 ' 11-gffn f f ii ls Q I !I!ff lf: f fiiri -5551 2 Z ' NFPA -u 'ON EE! -'f ' sziiiviiif 5 iE?3 f'?5' ff! I '- , , ' , ' ATN- 1' '..--.:9!fCif ,- 5?2'f 4?I A 4' f - if ' A :N -1-T -7-L 1 'U FORT ANCIENT E PEDITIO T Illcwch 920, 1890. ORGANIZATION. EDNVARD ORTON, PH. D., LL. D., . . Dfio'cct0of'. AH. A. SURFACE, F. K. S., M. A. O. O., . Chief Geologist. Miss .IULIETTE SEssI0Ns,HSpi11ste1-, . fflwclzcaeolbgist. TH. O. LAUGHLIN, . . C'0fm.mfisscw1y Agent. SAMMY ORTON, , , Dfmmgq- Bell, FINANCIAL STATEMENT. .. GOVG1'I11HQ11t Equipment, . . 350,000,000 00 R. R. Fare, 351.00 per me111be1', . 25 00 M. A. BASTERDES, candy, . 04 D. T. ROY, ginger snaps, 20 Ouewing gum, . 50 ITG appease the natives, . 00,000 00 I Rare specimens purehasefl, 25 CoIIee all around, . . 1 00 TQLQLI7 , ' 350,000,026 99 ff?FeIlew of Know-:LII Society and Member of Oolleeting Crzmks. 'I'IEiemuverI from oiliee for securing IDPOVISIOIIS UIILIGI' false pretenses. iljy pmmissory note, pzlyzuble when Tribellte S11lgS agzun, 95 BEST OHIG STATE UNIVERSITY RECQRDS. 't BY XVHOM NVHEN MADE. RECORD. Cherryholmes . Lavery ...... ...... . . Cherryholmes . ...... ... No. ooNTEsT. 1 100 yards dash.. ..... 2 Putting 10 lb. shot ...... 3 Running hop, step and jump .... 4 Pole Vault. ...................... ...... . 5 One-fourth mile run ..... 6 Standing' broad jump. ...... 7 Running 8 Throwing broad jump.. ..... ,... base ball. ......... . 9 Throwing 16 lb. hammer 10 Running high jump ...... 11 Standing high jump ..... .. -... Scott ......... ........ 1VadsWorth ..... Hine ......... Rane ......... Beatty, VV.. Lavery S.... .. Bloom. ......... . McPherson ..... 12 220 yards dash . .......... .. 13 Mile run ......... ......... ...... .... .... 14 Three-legged race, 100 yards ...... .... 15 . . . High kick. ........ ......... ...... . 16 Drop kick. .... . Beatty, H. .. Martin ......... ...... . Lincoln and Ernst Bloom, Landacre.. Huggins.. ......... Field Day, '81 . ...... . Field Day, '90 . ...... . Field Day, '81 . ...... . Field Day, '82 . ...... . Class Day, '86 .... ...... Field Day, no ...... Field Day, '88... Class Day, '85 ..... Field Day, ,ao ......... Field Day, '90 ......... Class Day, '86 ......... Field Day, '90 ......... Field Day, '00 .,....... Field Day, '90 .... Field Day, '90. Field Day, '90. -...-... 11 seconds. 2-34 feet, 11 inches. 41 feet, 3 inches. 8 feet, 8 inches. 61 seconds. 0 feet, 11 inches. 18 feet, 15 inches. 327 feet, 9 inches 71 feet, 8 inches. 5 feet, 3 inches. -31 feet, 5 inches. 26 seconds. 5 minutes, 38 seconds 145 seconds. 8 feet. 12.3 feet, 6 inches ! Y x, EFFus1oNs Evoivso ON THE 1-3xPEo1T1oN. IVahoo I Walioo I Aint I a dandy! Rip! Zip I Bazoo I Red sticks of candy! IVhat's the matter with the O. S. U. L. F. K. In the time when boys were tough, Kiese and I were' quite enough, But we traded hats and oh! They said we were a show I H. C. B. Lest those boys the crowd disgrace A veil was drawn o'er each grinning face ' WVhen a yell broke from each feller The people said, O, raise the umbreller I 7 Miss J. S. .1 , Miss Basterdes, after climbing a tall hill :-'fl do wish there was a saloon of some kind around here, I am awful thirsty. Miss Talbot :-Mr. Surface tells you the name of every- thing you ask him aloout, and if you don't ask him he tells you anyhow. On the Central College -trip, Jones, Grimsley, and Roy with little Sammy Orton on his back, waded across Big Wal- nut Creek, thus saving themselves a mile walk. Miss Scott watched them a moment and then exclaimed, H Mana, I just wish Dr. Orton wasn't here I C ew RESULTS. ici. ffflf 1 , V 1. Siluriacian shale weathcrs into ' if '-521 - I yellow niud--very sticky. , if--I, I ' I ' ' , . , . V 'M f 2. Force of Gravity very great in the -3' ii'-1, ll . . 23 . . ' 7 IW- , fl 3 country visited. Proof: Laughlins pro- rl nf ' if -f 1 .1 io- 5 vision hainper left near the edge ofa pre- - ,L 55 cipice was drawn over the edge into the it ii A i ' abyss below. 3. Fossils-choice specimens of' sixty species previously known. Many new species, a few of' which have been exainined carefully and nained as follows: Crcwmmvi, gigcmtczm L--Surface, v Ylwllobfite biciztgcfzwzclevii-Ta.lbot, fldj I:Cli'l:?JCli Twmibfilfzfs-Neeclles. 4. An important ethnological fact-the aborigincs ofthe country visited have hair and skin of' exactly the saine color as the clay banks upon which they vegetate. Food for thought. 5. Dogs of the region have but one X, eye and are usually without a tail-a de- ,wyfgyf generate type. iff: x c f y, 6. ATheory. The alantosauros VG1'g- gc, ing to extinction becaine doinesticated and 1 ' ' - A was the beast of' burden for priineval nian. This aninial, 100 feet long, harnessed to a car of' proportionate size, drew thc earth used for the walls of Fort Ancient froni the meadows be- low. This explodes the old, incredible hand basket theory. 7. Through the influence of this expedition, the State of Ohio has purchased Fort Ancient from the inhabitants ata vast expense. ln the centre of' the enclosure, in iinporishablc Q? shale a noble inonuinent will be erected to connnenioratc the labors and sacrifices of' its inenibers and the remarkable inipe- tus given to science by the Expedition of' 410. 96 5. 1 13 t 0 S . 443100 .5 got. away with three dishes there. He says he didn't want the creain, but atc it for a. bluff so Prexy wouldn't get on to him. llhe next teast the boys had was on some oysters donated hy the gl'OCC1'ylH2l,11 when his back was turned. The next event was the niilkmanls ha.ppening to get under some water that was accidentally thrown from a third floor vrindow. He got- angry. The greatest wind-fall of all, however, was when the bread-man stopped one day to talk to the cook and left his horse unhitched. The horse got scared at a fire-cracker and ran off, scattering pies and cakes with lavish hand among the mob of Dorm boys that followed. Feeling the necessity of varying their diet somewhat in order to preserve their health, the gang visited the Experiment -'-' 7 Station one night, and secured ten 1 bushels of apples. They promised J J rff, I Green and Hickman that they would -fwo' fu W note the number of seeds in each ap- be published in the Szfatv7o'n. Bullctfioz. C fl ' dfQ7flI!f 5, which is issued in order to diminish 911 I' !Ill KN ml 3 , v ll ll J.-I4 -9 I A .Ill elif, -Alllq' '-'V' 'z',ff. I' Q I I Ml-, ' if 1 . . Ay If- 4417, ple, its color, size, etc., so they could -MM Hts- .. T uf' 'f ge., 3, Vw' the surplus. The boys had no bas- kets along with them, but had only pillow-cases, while Deacon YVhite used an old pair of pantaloons with the legs tied. lf they had had a cart they would have taken the whole crop. The next night some of the boys who wern't in it, announced that Prof. Smith was in the Dorm, searching the rooms. ln an instant all was confusion. Sanderson threw his sackfull of apples from the fourth story windowg Large hid his in the cellarg Deacon TVl1ltGjUlll1JCtT01121 street car and went down town. The boys who wern't in it followed them, and run in the apples. XVright didn't get onto the joke for two weeks. He thought he was a goner and wrote a letter to the facility protesting his iiniocence. I Thanksgiving was celebrated by a banquet at which the Faculty was present. ,Wright distinguished himself by giving 99 W! 4 F 1,1 qw C s g,17,fR.!!.,5 X 3 fx Io I San: fl af!! If if ,T .1 ' - 4. ffl , I' l ,flf I .sqm H., Q11 I ITe'T in M . -I 'pDxSrnD Crocker Ondsnigg oTI-IE QRTH DGRMITCDRY. HE Dorm opened this year when Jack Niewvahner, with his usual good-natured grin, came marching across the boulevard on the s'teenth day of last September. He met Blunt on the steps. They shook hands and then tested I some of Sid's razzle-dazzle which Blunt was taking to his room for future reference, having found it in a snug nook in the HZZL, chemical laboratory. With this simple ,L T, ceremony Was the Dorm opened. . . Pi Soon the students, old and new, came flocking in, and old Charles was drunk a Week on the money he made hauling trunks. The new students, having found they Would not have to recite the first day of college, concluded that they would go over to the Y. M. C. A. reception at Prexy's and indulge in free ice cream and cake. The old students did not go to the reception for they Were Weary with traveling. So the President kindly sent M. Hart to the Dorm with a freezer of cream forvthem. The boys were very thankful and praised God from Whom all blessings flow. They ate the cream and left the empty freezer in Benedict Arnoldls room. Clark ate a. quart of it at the Dorm, and then went over to P1'exy's and 98 I uf v l ' C I -iillllx. ' ' i' fimlfir' Vi ' V kifigiigusmx W f, 1 , l5illlll lii- ' A fa . I 1, ! pl -Q mf mu.. JA 1 l lf. ., I . f MJWA' . A I I I i W2-3456 ' L' 4,'a 'iii'N ' ' olllfff iff 1 life' riff :M td filffdifinqslllif 'ff e.coancef F 1, as WF' .W ' MOCK DEMOCRATIC ATIO Al, CONVENTIO . 'f The shades of night were falling fast, and soon the campus of the Ohio State University was shrouded in the early evening darkness of a March night. The soughing of the wind through the branches did business at the old stand, while the electric lights along High Street were blinking at each other as if somewhat impressed at the following legend tacked up on PreXy's fence :- U, DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION, CHAPEL, MARCH 14, 1890. The chapel beaming with noonday brilliancy, gotten up for the occasion by electrician B. IIill W hitney, presented an animated appearance. Each delegation had its banner planted and some were ornamented with designs or portraits of favorite candidates. By 8 olclock the corridors and chapel were crowd- cd 5 lobbyists were hurrying to and fro, messengers were hur- rying pro and conf, chairman were hurrying back and forth. I lOl Prof. Lazcnby thc pass-word. S0011 after this, Wright and Mrs. Stark started a laundry. .Pratt gave l1i111 a shirt to wash and got back a sleeve. Wright is fl'Ol'li1 London, f' by Gawclfl Tl1en Pat O7CO1ll1G1' loft tl1e Club without good reason, and forfeited l1is 35 deposit. He sent thc Club the following letter: To the flziortlz, Dorm .' I a111 advised to 11otify you tl1at ifi ani not payed the five dollars devv nie inside of ten days I Will bring suit for it agai11st the stewart tl1is being 17th Feb. 1890 i an1 yours in .Justice P. F. UCONNER. Tl1e Club decided to let llllll sue which he didn't do. The l1appiest event of tl1e year was When a lot of the col- lege girls can1e over to' see the foot-ball ga111e a11d stayed for supper. After supper a Cl2L11CG was held and tl1en the girls, ac- companied by Mrs. Noble, inspected the boys' roon1s. ln Feichtfs TOO111 seven en1pty beer bottles Were found. They de- cided not to tell Prexy till after co1nn1e11ce111e11t. The Dorm has 111ore college spirit than all tl1e rest of tl1e O. S. U. It supports tl1e base-ball and foot-ball tea111s, feeds visiting clubs, a11d is the retreat of oratory a11d 111usic. Here you find the orators, musicians, base-ball and foot-ball players, athletes a11d students ofthe college. All preps desiring a inerit in physics sl1o11ld call NVhit- ney Professorf' Gnans IN ALcYoNE:- Scott's masterpiece l1owcve1', was tl1e Lady of the Last Minstrel. Roy l1andi11g Surface a fossil :-U Mr. Surface, hero is a very fine spec1111e11 of fnwdulla obZ0f11.gata.'7 . l 00 partisans of Campbell and Cleveland each claiming the nomi- nation. Hats were seen flying in the air and half the Conven- tion was standing on the chairs yelling and gestieulating. Fin- ally another ballot was agreed upon which was taken with the following result i Third ballot : Cleveland, 514, Campbell, 301. The telegraph immediately sent out the joyous news to all the world that Grover was again in the lead. ' The band played Down 'went McCrinty, the delegates cheered, every-Q body yelled and pandemonium reigned supreme. After a measure of order was restored, Governor Campbell received the nomination for Vice President without any oppo- sition. Senator WV. Hannibal Clark was appointed to notify by telegraph Messrs Cleveland and Campbell of their good fortune. NOTES. The telegraph service was unexcelled. C Mother Pratt's being the only caravansary near by, did a land-office business. The Texas delegation had an a.ble representative in Major E. Coulter Bloodseye. Major Bloodseyels modest and gentle- manly conduct captivated the ladies. We regret to say that while Senator Kennedy, of Michigan, was leading the applause for Butler, the beer-bottle he was swinging about his head accidentally struck Delegate H. L. Johnston in the eye. Delegate Johnston, while he had no ob- jection to hitting the bottle, objected to being hit by it. How- ever, the affair was amicably settled by the intervention of friends. W. H. Clark to Prexy, f'Pres. Scott, may we have the chapel next Friday night for holding a mock con.vention? 15-CXy, ff 0 ygg, certainly. Clark, For a Denioeratic Conven- tjQ11? Proxy, hesitating, 'fWell, will it be decent, and orderly. p 89' 1 O3 At fifteen minutes after eight, the temporary chairman, H enor- able Frank E. Pomerene, got one of his feet on the platform by mistake, thereby ringing the electric bell for the band to play, and in a few moments Annie Rooney '7 was wafted forth in chunks upon a cheering multitude of enthusiastic delegates. Wfhen order could be restored the Permanent Chairman, Professor Lazenby, was introduced. He made an elegant ad- dress, that sent the Bourbon element Wild. Then theConven- tion settled down to routine Work. No contests were reported by the Committee on Credentials and nominations for President of the United States being declared in order, Honorable H. C. Laughlin in a most eloquent speech presented the name of Dan Vorhees, ff The Tall Sycamore of the VVabash. But when Colonel Albert Sidney Johnson Eylar of T exas, placed in nom- ination Hon. John G. Carlisle, the applause was tremendous. The messenger boys were kept so busy bringing in bottled beer that they regretted not having a pipe line run from Mother Pratt's to the chapel. Senator W. Hannibal Clark, of Alabama, placed Ben Butler before the Convention 5 Honorable E. Siger- foos, of North Carolina, David B. Hill5 Honorable Bi. Kellogg Beach, of California, Grover Cleveland and Honorable ff. Laird Dungan, Governor Campbell. The first ballot resulted as follows: Cleveland, 154 5 Campbell, 190 5 Voorhees, 104 5 Carlisle, 150 5 Butler, 104 5 Hill, 108 5 total vote cast, 815 5 necessary to a choice, 408 5 no election. After the vote was announced the chairmen of the different delegations could be seen in earnest consultation and it became evident that Canipbell's friends were preparing to stampede the convention. The effort was Well nigh successful, the gallant Governor coming within three votes of the coveted honor, as shown by the second ballot. The second ballot: Campbell, 4055 Cleveland, 3795 Car- lisle, 4 5 Butler, - 5 Hill, 8. Changes to Cleveland and Camp- bell from the other candidates were so numerous that the clerks made some errors and the greatest confusion ensued, the 102 0 1 l i .1 ? ei lr ir 1 'Q 1-r.M4.msf :ur 1 L 3.14 f.,a:2JE.wa-1 A 'fs 'W 4' R 4. 1fluL,?li lr., lv-!' --nu .nm -,,, gg i ., u -w A -.I J nfl! -.-:Aft 'f ':' 3 ' . ' H ,- OMG STATE UN lv E-Re Z P3-4 Ili -CCZ'I4Zq dl1aazez,14.fMrMf,,1,,f.- WL. .Y ,, V W? . .. . - ' i'f,Qi:w1 hfg GN 10 S'PRlNGFlE-.LD 1 H THE SPRI enero TRIP. . SEEDYviLLE,. O., Febfmafry 21, 1890. Frfien-d E benezer .' Since the last time what I wrote to you I have had a mighty queer time. Last week I went down to Columbus to see neighbor .Iones's boy. I guess you remember he was a right pert sort ofa feller. When I got down there I went immediate to see him. When I got there he was just get- ting ready to go down to Springfield to a speaking match of some kind or nother, and he says to me, says he, fiIeremiah, you must go with me, I 'low as how it wont cost you more than a dollar and a half. Well, thinks I to myself, since I got iifteen dollars with me, I might just as well go, so lf said I would and We went down to the depot together. IVell Hal, that's Jones's boy you know, he bought our tickets and we went to the train. New you might not want-to believe this, but them college boys had a ear all to themselves and had Ohio State University in big letters on the outside. New Ebenezer, I'll swan I never did hear such a noise as them boys could make. They kept yelling, Wahoo, Wahoo, Rip- Zip Bazoo, I yell, I yell for O. S. U. I couldnlt see no sense in such yelling, but they seemed to think it was lots of fun. Well, we got down to Springlield all right and got off the train. I .Iust as we got elf some other boys from another college yelled, but they couldn't yell no better than our calf. IYQ went up to a big hotel to supper. I never did see men act as funn y 105 LETTERS ERCM CLEVELAND AND CAMPBELL. 816 MAmsoN AVIE., March 20, 1890. W. H. CLARK, Eso., V Dear Sir : I received the dispatch signed by yourself and others with pleasure, as an evidence of friendship and kindness which causes me gratification. But I know that you Will not fail to understand me when I say that I am sure there are questionsiand topics which press upon the minds of our people, the solution and treatment of which are of vastly greater importance than the political fortune of any man. I do hope that the students of the University of Dhio will appreciate this fact, and will see their full measure of political duty, in laboring to enforce the doctrines of true democracy and in relieving the people from the delusions which beset them to their undoing. Thanking you and your associates for the kind opinions contained in your dispatch, I am, yours very truly, GROVER CLEVELAND. EXECUTIVE CHAMBER, CoLUM1aUs, Mafrch, 22, 1800. W. H. CLARK, EsQ., DQ! Decw' Sir .' 'I received your communication of the 17th notifying me of the great honor conferred upon me by the students of the Chio State University. Please tender to them my thanks for the compliment, also for putting me in such good company as his Excellency Grover Cleveland. With assurances of good will and genuine democracy. I am, sincerely yours, .IAMES E. CAMPBELL. - RooM 30, N. Domi. COPE :-4' Now, Bob, this is a jack-poi and it takes two jacks or better to break it. Beach Qeagerlvb I can break it, I've got two pairs. 104 Them boys was drinking beer and Whiskey, but Hal says to me says he 'f Beer and Whiskey is bad for the liver, so We'd better drink shainpainf' I didn't like that Very well because shampain costs more but as H l ld , C a Wou nit have nothing else so we took shainpain. ' IVell we staid there a long time-and kept putting it down until I says to Hal, 4' Hal, can't put down no more. Gosh, I'm filled Way up to my back teeth. Pretty soon we began to feel good, so says I to Hal says I Let's sing 'em a songfi So Hal and I We sings and sings. I Wanted to sing Old Hundred but Hal he Wanted to sing Razzle Dazzle, so we each sang our own song. t Pretty soon I began -to feel kind of sick and I tells Hal I'in going out to get seine fresh air. We sat down on the paye- ment for awhile until a hack came along. VVe stopped the driver and get in. Hal, he couldn't Walk very well so I had to help him in. It Was hard Work too, because they had a ter- rible big earthquake there that night and the ground went every which Way. t Finally We got to the hotel all right and they took us up to our room. I must havelbeen mighty sleepy, because I went to sleep before I got to the room. Next morning when I got up, I had such a. headache I eouldn't see straight. Hal, he had a headache too. My head felt as big as a bushel basket, but when I looked into the glass it was just about its usual size except a bump on my forehead where the side of a house bumped into me. As soon as We dressed We went down to breakfast and then took the first train home. That trip cost more than a dollar and a half though, you bet. Here's what it cost: Railroad fare ............ ........................... in 1 Q0 Speaking match . .... 0 '70 Hotel bill . ........... Q UO Hack . .............. '2 00 Tooting - 9 00 .1512 50 Yours truly, Jniznni.-xii. 107 as them waiters. Why it took them an hour to give us supper and they only brought on a little at a time. I guess that they thought that We would eat too much if they brought it all out at once. After supper we took a walk. We saw a Columbus boy named Billy B--n standing on a corner holding up a lamp post. - TA Delaware student came up to him and said, 'C Do all the boys of the O. S. U. get drunk this Way 'F 3' Billy said some cuss Words which I will not repeat and started for the Delaware boy. He chased him to the hotel and a worse scared boy you never saw. Then we Went to the speaking match. They were mighty slow about starting and when they did start it Wasn't Worth much. The speeches Was no good and they Were so tangled up and they used sueh big Words you eouldn't understand them nohow. Well I did my best-to sit still through. it. When the thing was over the colleges what Won just got up and yelled louder than the Baptist preacher What used to preach out home. After the speaking mateh, Hal and I Went to the banquet. It cost me a dollar and a quarter, but I thought as how I'd started in heavy I might just as Well keep it up. After the banquet Hal says to me says lie, 4' Say Jeremiah, Qet's go out on a toot. I'll never say nothing to nobody about it if you Wont. Then says I to him, C' XVhat is a toot ? Says he to nie, Why a toot is when you go out and drink beer and whisky and have a good time and don't give a darn for no- body. WV ell, thinks I to myself, I reckon as how I'm away from home, I might go out just this once to see what it was like. So We starts off together and Went to the Grand Central Hotel. The front door Was locked so We Went around to the back door and knocked. Pretty soon a man let us in and we went into the saloon. - I never was in a saloon at home, so it kind of scared me till I got used to it. There was a good ina.ny of the college boysthere. I guess they got in the same way as how we done itl 106 a 3 Y! I 2? ,.1 41 I ie GL 'yt ,,, ., 111 ,, W 1 U, r 'Q he 'H n F . v 1 'Z 1 i K, 1 a r 'J Vw-E' V+ M , nl 4 , I I 4 f i ff' I ' u 1 7-' i ? ., ., 2 XY 'fa .I Ev u wvmnriam IIB. Queal, C1855 of '91. E165 331111302 236 1890 QD E Gutbmbge C1855 ot 94 Bbleb 1lQovembe1 36 1880 x:H...Z -M 0 1 o 9 9 6 Q ' r 0 ' Q Q Q o Nm IN MEMCRIAM. ALFRED H. WELSH. Alfred H. Welsh was bornin Fostoria Seneca Count . ' C' - C 'yi Ohio, September 7, 1849. His father, James NVilson Welsh, was born in NVarren, Trumbull County, Chio, March 7, 1817. The mother of Professor Welsli was Sarah Fisher before her marriage. She was born in Carroll County, Chio, August 13, 1828. After her marriage she attended the school of which her husband was the teacher, as both pupil and assistant. He died September 11, 1860. Cn July 4, 1863, Mrs. 1Velsh was married to Mr. Selah Bush. She died of consumption at Pier- son, Montcalm County, Michigan, December 25, 1881. At the time of his father's death, Alfred was eleven years old. Until that event he had attended the common school, but the family needing his assistance, he obtained a situation in Mr. Qafterwards Crovernorj Foster's store. At, this timef' says Governor Foster, he seemed like a nice, well-behaved boy, desiring to better his :condition and to make a man of himself. After his mother's second marriage he lived on a farm -near McCutchinville, VVyandot County, Chio, with a Mr. Wi1'iinger, his former teacher, and an intimate friend of -his father. He did his part of the farm labor faithfully, but spent all his leisure in reading and study. For this reason he was thought by the other boys of the neighborhood to be proud, and, although the reason of his seclusion was not what they supposed, it is known that he cherished a dream of future tri- umphsg His first step toward its fulfillment was to obtain a college education. His friend, Mr. NVininger, syinpathized with his ambition, and being acquainted with the president of Bald- win University, at Berea, Chio, took him there, and during the first two years paid his expenses. This was in 1867. He en- 109 I i W W , 1 I r Q Q r X In I V i' . , V, ' g . , - p 111 t-1111 hill ot 18811 he began 111s co11nect1o11 with the 01110 btate liniverslty, as assistaiit i11 tl1e Department of History and lunglisli. .All the work in English was assigned to l1i1n. At the end of two years the department was divided 'md he was made the head of the new Department of English, with 'die title of associate professor. ' t During his first year at tQ1e.University he published noth- i11g 2 but in January, 1887, his Lessons in English Grammar appeared, followe11 in September by his English Masterpiece Course gl' in August, 1888, by his 4' First Lessons in English ,H in November, 1888, by his Plane and Spherical Trigonome- try 5 and in J 11119, 1889, by l1is English CO11lPOSlt1O1l.H Professor XVelsh was married, December 25, 1888, to Miss Emily L. Clark, daughter of C. T. Clark, Esq., of Columbus. The close of 1888 found him engaged on a book to be entitled A Digest of English and American L1JEG1'2llZl11'C.77 The work was approaching completion, and he purposed to finish it before he allowed himself any vacation. He went with his wife to a house i11 the country, near Huron, Erie County, and gave himself to incessant labor. He rose about four o'clock in the morning, and, contrary to his custom, often continued his work in tl1e evening. Cn Thursday, July 18th, he 1'C21Cll1?1l the last chapter, a part of which l1ad 136611 previously 1Y1'1iiL'll. Cn Friday he took his first holiday, going with a friend to' fish o11 Lake Erie. He ate heartily at dinner, and in tl1e afternoon he bathed in the lake. The next day he resumed his writing, a11d i11 tl1e evening Went fishing again. Cn Sunday he was unwell, but on Monday, in spite of the fact that he kept his be11, he did some work. Cn Tuesday he supposed himself to he better, and arranged for another iishing excursion the next day. But the 11ext day he was worse, and on Friday his phy- sician pronounced 11111111ZL11g61'OUSlylllW1tl1 peritonitis. The appearance of a consulting physician with his attending phy- sician at 110011 on Friday, led hiin to surmise that his illness was liable to prove fatal. 1111611 he turned his attention to his 111 tered the preparatory school, but was admitted to 1'I'L'Sl'1lllil1l rank the next year. His friend being unable to aiibrd him further assistance, he contemplated witlidrawing from the col- lege in order to earn nioney for the completion of his course. But at this juncture Governor Foster canie to his aid and gen- erously met his expenses. He graduated, in 1872, as the vale- dictorian of l1is class. He had not sought or expected the honor, and was surprised when informed of it. He was at once elected to the chair of mathematics i11 Buchtel College, which opened in Akron, Ohio, in the autumn of that year. Two years later he was transferred tothe cl1air of natural science, which he held for one year. He then re- tired from the institution, and spent the following year in travel and recreation.. ln 1876 he became the teacher of mathematics in tl1e High School .of Columbus. This work was afterwards exchanged for that in English. His connection with the High School .having closed in 1880, he devoted himself to the completion of his work on the 'C Development of English Literature and Language. The prologue is dated July 4, 1882, and it appeared in two volumes September 30th of that year. This book, 111ore than any other of his works, made his reputation. It was widely noticed and discussed in this country, and attracted attention abroad. Its title to originality was sometimes disputed, under which attacks, however, Professor Welsli was supported by several of tl1e best critics of tl1e country, among them Vlhipplc and Steadman. The merits of the work were generally acknowledged, illld it may be fairly said to have survived the period of criticism. I have seen no adverse criticism of any of his later books, and am informed that they have met with nothing but praise. His Essentials of Geometry 7' was published August 18, 1883. It was followed by his Essentials of Englishf' August 2, 1884 g by his 't Complete Rhetoric, August 30, 1885, and by Man and His Relationsf' about the same time. 110 MISCELLANEOUS I Q x u 1 ' 1 N r 4' 15 ' f ' 'Jig Izixtk 1, E ' g , ' .i W '- fl' ' ,i4Qf',fflR4- Asa I , Q 4 ' ic- g5 J . X Q Love cmd DGQUI goffl Un the O-5-U They homye egch -mal CA revord un the past Yea Y. dying, and for the I'C1llitl11'l11g' hours advanced with conscious steps to meet his fate. He asked the doctor how lo11g he would have towait. Whc:1.1 told it would perhaps be three or four hours, l1G'11GPll6tlZ l donft want to wait so longfp Later he said, soliloquizing: The soul takes its flight slowlyf, He continued to sink gradually and without a struggle till seven olelock in the. evening, when he quietly ceased to breathe. Deathf' wrote Professor Vfelsh, i11 0116 of his letters, 4' is but the triumph hour of entrance through an arch of shadow into everlasting day, where we shall enter upon a11 endless career in which hope is changed into fruition and aspiration into achievement. . No o11e could know Professor Welsli, even casually, with- out bei11g aware of his great industry. He was the author of eleven books already published, and the twelfth is written. Still another, The Real and the Ideal, was projected, and was intended by him to be the great work of l1is life. - But the end has come with almost tragical suddenness. We mourn the departure of a friend. But we are advancing by the same road, and shall at last reach tl1e same goal. Let us Walk by the same, or, if we may, by a still better rule, and hold steadfastly to the same exalted faith. 1l2 The 'nighls that -I copy, the days that I cram, Are Iilled with the labor of yegyg, HIHESOPHOMDRE. Oh, how our minds are trainineled- IVe would climb the pyramids of thought, The mighty wave whose ebbing surge ' Has borne all others back Should lift us on its icy crest To Reason's adamantine peak, VVhence we could soar across the iields Of aether infinite, Or plunge into the bottomless abyss And drag rich treasures from its lowest caves. But all is Vain! The hungry World must Wait and we condemned To waste our precious time at meancr things, Called Physics, Calculus and Greek- Fit subjects, it may be, for common minds, But not for such as ours. I THE JUNioR. I can not Wear a junior plug For fear the wily soph. lVill tear my clothes and spoil my mug To get the stoxgepipe off. 1 THE suixuoa. Our girls are tall, our girls are fair, But others beat our time, So We must stand aside and swear, Or Vent our grief in rhyme. PREXY. And PreXy's woes should see the light, But when he came to it There were so many things to write The poet had a fit. He tried to speak-and what I heard I took a pen and Wrotcg His voice so weak that cvery -word A Seemed sticking in his throat: 115 WIDE IS ME. PRIZE Poem. ,1....- Come, listen while I sing to you The woes we all must bear. The tale is sad, the tale is true, And when you hear my story through, You'll sigh for Delaware. CHonUs:-H Come, man and wife, and girl and all.' THE PREP. Demerits rush from every side, I And all my lies are stale 5 Four times on Prexyx some I've tried, Another time they'll jail. When last I said my soldier pants WVere at the tailor's store, He gave me such asearching glance- I'll tell that filo no more. In Dutch no pony to be had, And every little break ' By student good or student bad A H deeshperat mischtakef' Oh, that I were a college man! Then I could join a frat, A And see the town with Billy Br+-wn Or have a time with Pr-tt, And once again the truth could speak Except to Kilbourne grim, And scarce as oft as twice a week Prevaricate to him. THE FRESH MAN. How pleasant to sit in the chemistry class Half dozing, of Schrader's to muse, While Sid at the bar seems but filling my glass And Freddie is blacking my shoes, But, ah! for the day when the final exam. Like a horrible spectre appears, 114 T0 PREXY Proxy, fairest of thy race, Let us see thy stolid face, Let us hear thy voice once more As in ancient days of yore Dost reinomber many men, Score on score by ten times ten, Sent from this their happy home Out into the World to roam ? Dost remember many a day, lVhen thou didst in chapel pray 3 Made us students tear our hair And our souls olerilow with swear? Prexy, fairest of thy race, Let us see thy stolid face 5 Angels hasten the glad day That a new Prex comes this way. .l Misses Lentz, Battetrson,.and Strick- V ler try to rival M. Frankie Iilatclior, 4 ff M.. Alston Moses, and lf. Dean Cope, hy X Climbing the Wind-mill. VVe are in- ,X f X deloted to Percy Martin, who sat at the foot of the ladder-and kept them from Coming down till our artist arrived. -- iz 'A Veported .LicmdniaPlf1. J. E. BOYD :-That smile of thine would break the Sah- hath. 1 DR. IJETMERS--HAeCll, mein liober fran ! Mako dose goosos out dis yard 5 anyhow dot one goesefl 117 M The Jl1l1lO1'S-ElfjllCl1l2Ll1b7S-itlltl Bott's- Colunibus Club-Will not spot. NVait till I look the matter up- Trustees-excuses-demerits-drill-7' The poet gave a gasp and died 5 His mantle fell at Caylorls side: And all the lovely ladies cried, Though they their sorrow tried to hide 3 The MJXIQIO fiend his lyric took To render sad his funny book. A society young lady Visited the College recently, and Prof. Lord showed her the wonders of his lab. expatiating on his pet balance for fifteen minutes. How delicate, she said duly impressed, That must be the kind of balance they Weigh atoms Withf' THOMPSON :- Who is that couple Walking so fast? Chessell:-'4Eckka Mazola and Erdis Geroska going to the contest. Thompson, recalling Prof. Robinson's chapel talk :- Great Scott, no Wonder there are 140 lines between E and F on the solar spectrum. 9: ,W 1 , Frank Wood? Flat 2?mZ'1E q'?Jil1f-5' How dioiqit gist 12,1616 g .116 Wt snows CLUB. Wg, A OFFHQRS, , Mew MR- KELLY, . . Pmsiclmzt A tc- JACK STONE, - . lV5fce-President mls 1019 RGYQ - . Secvetcwy X . . G PROF. EGGERS, Scvfgecmt-at-Awms -f 1 F' . , PQQUQI gf' Mfdh . ,F Pap . MEMBERS AND WHAT THEY SMQKE. - SCRUsc1r, M1'reHELr,, ........ Chibouqueu TED MILLER, Rising Sun Plug Cut, 50. per Caddy. FRANK COPE, .... Pennyl-Oyail DICK ELLIS, KRUMM, - HUTCIUNSON, EGGEIKS, - C. N. CBROXVN, - n - Dehnonico Stuinps. -UDClC1't21liG1 S Delight - Stinkweed Pipe. Henry Mud Cigzirs. - - . Plug Cut. ROY, - - . - Duke's Cameo Cigarettes. IQILBOURNE, SR., . -. - Antique Meerseliauin. LORD, - - Shakings from Antique Meersehauin. NORTON, - - . - Anything he erin get. K1EIJLX', . . - Indian Cabbage Leaf. Applicants for El-d1fl1l'SSlO11 are Ide, Prexy, Balz, and Father Eis. XVI-IAT LD DO IF I WERE PREXY: Wl'10l.1 I Went tO an entertztininent and knew that they 'Wanted to danee, I'd leave before nine o'eloek. Ld fire, Coekell, Barreife, Hutchinson, F. L. Xxrflgllll and Goodell for the good of the College. I WVhen SO1l'.lQtlllll1g goocl had been Said in ehzipel, I would not get up afterwzircls and spoil it. ' . 9 WHAT no THEY SAY? 1. lVhat does Wfhiskered VVhitncy say In his gabbling every day? Make me a prof.,,' says Vlfhiskercd XVhitney, Make me a prof. without delay. But the Board says: VVait, old Bunker, NVait until your brain is strongcrg ' VVait until your beard is longerg lVait until We've gone away. II. VVhat does our Jap Mesloh say In his blubberings day by day? Mesloh says, with lVhiskered lVhitney, Make me a. prof. without delay. lVait, O Mesloh ! a little longerg 'Wait until your Dutch is strongcrg 'Wait until We are no longerg lVait until Welve gone away. Why do the German students like Plymouth Rock hens? Because they make good Eggers. ' l - O. S. U. CooNs:-Blunt, John Kuhn, Madison Jackson, W. H. Cofojney, Guss and Pealc. f, T.-. .i Beach and Johnson meet Ritchey and Arnold coming home from a church fair. Beach. th-ilariouslyj H Hello boys, We are in the same condition you are. c . -til Prof. Eggers comes bustling into the laboratory and knocks down some blue print paper Prof. Lord has juw hung up to dry. Prof. Lord :- VVell, you l1aycplaycd', Qpauscsj. Prof. Eggers :- Say it, Prof. Lord, say it. 118 PRIZE CHESTNUTS. H I-low long, oh Lord, how long I W L5,9, m.,H. 1 Fariners say stones grow. They do gl- OW 1eSS H DR. ORToN. NOW, if we have good luck, this experinient will he a suc CUSS' Prior. Nonfrox. l And so this round of change goes on until at last some 1 ,A , 'V , Caesai seizes the Government. PROM-, CQLTIQEN- 6' None of us like to sec the dude among us, but all of us, l ani sure, would be glad to see hiin subdued. Pnor. LAZENBY. - HQW BILL WENT TQ CQLLEGE. A NOVELETTE. CHAPTER l. ARLY one morning in the fall of 18-, Squire Bartonls spring Wagon was to be seen in front of the house. The horses are hitched to the ience. The near horse, Old John, is trying to reach a bunch of holly-hooks about a yard froni the fence. He has already hroken two pickets with the pole of the Wagon and probably thinks he will soon obtain thc coveted inorsel. Little Charlie Barton leans hack on the lincs, flourishes the Whip and yells, Wfhoa, John, hold upg l'Vo got a hold of you now. I 7 -lust at this point out conics Squire ly., f, 7555. Q . . , v iY lQ'W ' ' Barton and Bill carrying a trunk, a neu ' 5.!lfimfl5g'j,ffmm W rod trunk covered with artihcial leather: 121 OUR FCJREIGNERS '9 ' , 'M' W H QONFS . Scmdwzch Islcmds X 1 l GR ADO . . Japcm. K lSH1IxANVA . . Japan DAVID RLES bwcwvza, Iflctles. g tg, 111,713 J. B. HUGOINS, . . . Eorzglcmd. -.4--' .f 'fqe German urlis the QJOLP- Little DeardortL-Dear little dtwjorf. PROF. XVEBER :-J' There is putrefaction in Denmark. ' PREXY ORTON :- Very line, Very Hne indeed, Mr. Ritchey -but hardly worth preservingfl CARR TO PROF. THOMAS :-4' If you don't let me take this study I will partitifon the facility at once. ROY :-J' When the Cedarville limestone is burned it makes a magnificent lime, that is a magnesian li1ne.', ROY ITAGLER who has been readin 'about the University 7 . of Nebraska yell: f'Say, Lanman, you study Latin-what does 'Eloi, eloi, lama sabachthani' mean E? . AG. TO FOX :- Say, how many years has that man with two stripes on his coat been here? Fox :- This is his second year. Ag.:-- I might have known that, one year, one stripe, two years, two stripes, of course. 120 1 -55- .- iii' 5'-:Elf-P - ,wg . 1-1- A4: NH., ' r 'f v' .f:' 1 7 Y ' . x v ' ff' - 'H 4, , - i f Eiga - - 1 7 A J' cf' wiv, ,wx - r X 7 L' .- Q - A 7 ' ' .X W' I ' 7 7 ' lx l I 1 4 1 f X. Q Lf n 7 0 'l' ' CHAPTER II. lt is July 4th, a few years later. The same scene is before our sight, the same frame house, the same yard with its bio- ' an apple tiee and Norway spruce in front, the same hog-pen across the road. But there is one marked difference. Between the big apple tree and the wood-shed swings a hammock. r 4 I . Phere reehnes a young man Q .-. . ,, wearing a light spring overcoat 'Nu and holding a cigarette between f, f his teeth. His pale face is framed in a pair of .Burnsides ,limi piggy 7 I X in and on his upper lip is a ymous- Q f f ' ' tache. Beside him lies a silk hat and a copy of Shakespeare - ' T.fIfifi,LX .1- Xie ! an N-Q' sf-r . -f gil . , fgfeg W, 2 '.,.'-595 arf. y , 'vii , Mgt f I i,'1'1,,,.. ' -7' ffj .. ', ' , , H 'ii illlk :I,,,, '5i5.i: 'I N-fc' ' . W . A W 'fp -I, gf if In 1 . I il, il Hi vv U and he is reading with apparent IDU -9' interest, a paper he has just taken from his pocket. lf you were near enough you would see that it is the Cincinnati Enquirer and that particular part known as Clara Belle's letter. This individual is Wh H. Barton, A. B. He reached college a.ll right 5 didn't miss connections nor forget his umbrella, no indeed he was very careful-asking no less than eight persons when he entered the cars if this was the train for Monroe. He got off the train and after looking to see if his trunk got off too, started out with a club steward who helped him find a room. . A When he opened his trunk he found that gl'Z1llCllllOlill01'7H bottles were broken and their contents scattered over everything completely ruining BaXter's Saint's Best, but not hurting Dick Gnlow in the least. College began next day, so Bill gathered up an armload of books and hurried away to see Prexy, very much worried because he did not know what the lessons were for that day. But we cannot give everything that happenedg how he wrote home three letters a week for the first term 3 how he visited an orchard one night and came home by a much longer but more expeditious route without any apples either: 123 1 1 I K J I Q A 1 4 1 l l I behind comes one of the girls with a shoe-box and umbrella and Mrs. Barton with a big basket, all of which are carefully stored in the wagon with the potatoes, peaches and cabbage that Farmer Barton is to take to market. Then Bill and the Squire get into the wagon, the latter takes the reins and drives off. Not however until Bill and the rest of the family have exchanged many words of parting, such as '4 Write as soon as you get there 5 if you get sick, let us know right away 5 '7 C' look out for uncle Jim when you go through Shermantownf' The fact is, as you have probably guessed, Bill is going to college. For weeks this has been the much-talked-of affair of the Barton household. Grandmother Lansonhas taken the greater part of her store of roots and barks and made a supply of cough syrups and bitters for Willy to take along with him, seein' he'll be so far away among strangers who don't know nothing about mullen tea, hoar- hound syrup and wild cherry bitters. And Martha Lanson has given Bill her favorite volume of dBELXt61'7S Saintfs Rest and has earnestly admonished him to read Jonathan Edwards on the Will as soon as he can get it from the library. The Pastor, the P. M., Judge Gorman Qwho never saw Bill but once, but knows the Squirej and County Examiner Vilallace have written recommendations tes- tifying to the honor, ability and worth of Mr. William Henry Barton. Some of them told their college experience. XVallaee had attended the World's International Normal two terms and Gorman spent three months in af law school. All these things have happened and now Bill is leaving home. An angular looking fellow he 1 is. His sack-coat iits or rather doesn't lit, in a very negligent way, is about four inches too long 3-,n I ' y while the sleeves are as much too short. He wears a celluloid collar and a big colored tie. His sun- burned face is adorned by occasional rudiinentary appendages which have never been in contact with a. razor. 122 if X 'slf 'J X lffi 1529! xi. , 3 ,, : r , : .... ,. ,...-iid ' XXX! I . 9 ,721 '. ' l a I' .1 . ,-WL.,-':, f, f , il . ' fr-zf,4,f S' -' 1 . XXV Mi' 'lfuikkffgf i ' X K .i z w 2 A. f .,.1 - ,A , .Q - ' ,nfl sq! J fa if 47, , ,fat fe -ff fin-i,-.1.. : an fa' ,,-5,27 -' .1311 il I ' '- yn ,af 'f5fi'Ef: f9w' If fig' 14,2 71 'mf if? . ,,fVZEEZg3fQ,j, '1',1 I ld ,I -ff 4 !:7.r 1, ,, f r -. - 1' X '. r ,f , .r 7 K Zjf , Auf, .ff , ',-' f, .X 4 I Wilt xii. rr V- J L f:-,4 1, 5 , 1 -n f ff :. HH l i 1 -iff! if . I I! It-'il .L 'I , I I I V I ' 1 'W ' .I J f H ' I H1 U lu n X ff , K . . PENSIVE. She sits against the WindoW's pallid glare, A graceful silhouette against the light, Her face a shadowy profile to my sight,- A pensive profile, pure, exquisite, fair, Beneath the clustering locks of heavy hair As soft and dark and beautiful as night, Below the gay, black eyes, long lashed and bright, Look off across the dreamy autumn air. Her head rests on one supple, slender hand,- The other toying with the curtain's chain, Upon her breast a knot of pansies gleams. She sits and dreams and looks across the land. I Wonder as I Watch her, half in pain, A If I have any place in those still dreams. NIAKIO Editor comes into Senior German for the first time three Weeks after term opens. Prof. Eggers 'stops recitation :- if Wvell, Mr. ---, We have been awaiting the pleasure of your company with a considerable degree of expectation for some length of time. . 125 how he was elected Sergeant-at-Arms of his society and so got his name in the college paper, and sent home seven marked copies to his friends. His love affairs and the bogus fraternities which he joined I will pass byg neither can I describe how his appearances and manners changed, how he began to wear cuiis the second term and discarded celluloid the second year 5 how he told his mother she need knit him no more yarn mittens. Neither Chem., Psych., Butlorls Analogy nor Christian Evidences were able to completely down him for at the N. G. University tlunks are unknown and conditions are unheard of. lVhen he went home the second year he talked only of his vic- tories in debate and the applause which his oration received, The winter vacation of the next year Qhe sold hooks during the summer nowj his subject of conversation was the boys of the Sigma Chi Omega fraternity. In fact his sisters wondered how such prodigies ever came to take Will into their number. But the reason was plain When- i I Cro BE CONTINUED IN oun NEXT., YOITNG IJADY TO MAK1o EDITOR :- Does Mr. Hassler ever really smile ? Whv When he meets me on the street he u 7 7 speaks to me as if it were the most serious duty of his life. Cn the street car :-Cale 791, contemplating the new But- ler Block. t'Gosh, boys, wouldn't a fellow be 'flying if he owned that ? If I had a block like that I'd get married right off, and travel for a year or two. ' T-.. NoRTH END YoUNe LADY TO MAK1o EDITOR :- Doesn't Mr. Woocl take a very great interest in tennis ? Vlfhy, every. time I pass him on the street he is s.aying something about it. I donlt believe he can talk of anything else. 124 I CCRRESPCNDENCE. lL'flfto'i's of lllcikio : I I have had to stand a good bit from the hands of Pres. W. I-I. Scott. But the last straw breaks the cami-31's bagk. 1 hear that hc intends to charge us 35 each for our sheepskins, lt was not so written in the Catalogue. I kick. I'll make a light on it, so help me. Yours truly, . I C. P. Fox. LFROM THE sAME.j Editors of Makto .- I Want to know Whether or not Prexy Scott is paid for meddling with the private affairs of students. This morning Count Caylor came to me, hollow-cheeked and with tear-dim- med eye, and told me he would be unable to publish his book of poems. The Prex, he said, had asked permission to use the poems in the C. S. U. catalogue to boom the institution. The Count refused, and Prexy, to get even with him, Wrote to his father. VVhen the Countfs father came home from Florida, he stole the manuscript of that book and hid it. The Count has been losing ilesh at the rate of a pound a day since this high- handed outrage. Thank the Lord, We Wont be here next year. Yours, C. P. Fox. lVIessenger boy to Deacon Vtfhite at the Dorm :-- Who the fellow this message is for?'l Deacon Qnlcfllfilflwlyi UN-i-e-u spells noe, after a fashion, and V-a-ll-11-0-13 U'U 'WV'- Yes, it's for Jack. I l27 33 li 2 4 N M if - D 1 gl , I . 'r if T Al ig n I A 1-I s ' f 1 1'-r2'Jf3:f.., ' A ist,-iii,-psig, ' j f , - All fl, Us 6' N L ov-lg ? 4, J, ' H.: ' ' W 'E' V 4 -.f ' lf Q-f 4 am l Jo! 'uf ru J Il lf H114 Toaruas. A horde of Indians squatting round A swarthy wreteh hun froin a tree, Bent double, pale with agony, And burning there Without a sound, The Inquisition's awiiil pack Of black, masked faces and cold eyes About one, who with horrid cries Is torn to pieces on the rack, The wide arena's awful glare Ten thousand faces bending o'er, Vfhere blended with the lionls roar The shrieks of Wonien fill the air, The Sultan, in a dungeon diin, With all his harem in conclave W'atching his serpents crush a slave And strike their teeth of fire on hiing i All these are little things to this 5 That thrills ine to my finger tips,- Those saucy, sweet and mocking lips E . 4 That teinpt nic to a stolen kiss. g 2 Billy Graves, thou art a chuinp. Anyone who is too hon- est to tell Prexy a lie to get out of extra. drill, ought to be thrown into the creek, ' 126 g l 1 These braided coral horns and rings, These twin valved shells, with tooth and fret, That plowed along the beaches wet, Live ears filled full of murmurings,- These mingled bones and teeth and spines, Strange Writing of old Memory, These foot-prints of a vanished sea, These carbon ferns and sprays of pines, These tracks-of fragmentary lines,- WVhat Wild fantastic hints they be I lVho Will explain their life to me, These lees from ancient ocean's wines ? ----W-Y--- lt is said on good authority that Dixon was formerly a preacher. 4' See how the mighty have fallen. , XVALKER TO Miss DERBY :- All the girls here are so cold and unfriendly, Won't you be my friend S? GIBBS in a debate in Alcyone:- VVhy, the inventor oi galvanized rubber had to have a monopoly of it. Prof. Chalmers, to the English class :- That's the way my brother and 'I did when We were boys and girls together. W'e heard a young lady remark the other day that Mr. Cole wasn't a bit nice looking with his hat off. George you ' 7 had better keep the top of your head under cover, it doesnt fill the bill. . Cadet, limping up to Lieut. K., salutes :- May I be ex- , . - ' I ' Y 77 ' A cused from drill today, I twisted my h1P,Y9StG1fif15 ? Llcfut' K.:- You may, if necessary. Report to the adyutant that I Qxgugod youf' Cadet reports and runs out to play tennis. 129 u FOSSILS. 1 1 p 295,51 in, V iii fi , -, ' : ' N' H E now the yawning quarry stands 1 mf' a . . . - A huge abyss with bcethng sides, filj-l1,' J ' U i' Wi' Once rolled an ocean's ieo pled tides ' 'bg 'P ' And broke in surges on the sands Z -- Of long-forgotten antique landsg But here and there the stern rock hides A long tombed trace that et abides ,,, fi D - ' A mummy buried Without hands. This delicate spiral of a shell A serpent coiled in lustrous gray, p A whorl of roseate pearl once lay By some weird sea-gulf's ebb and-swell iVhere from the land-most wave it fell 5 Its lamp of life has fiashed awayg Its slumbrous dweller of a day Has died and left no tale to tell. This lily carven out of stone A bulb of folded petals, cut And sculptured like a fiower just shut A bursten bloom that grew alone Set on at stein of ringed bone, Shaped like a deftly grayen nut Its white scales dinged by ages' smut, WV hat time has lapsed since it was growl This mollusk frozen into rock, XVith every linked filament Caught prisoner as it came and Went And fixed by stony key and lock Enduring through the centuries, shock, A silent sphinx in silence pent, 3 Till from its massy prison rent Men found it in thequarry dock. This cylinder of glittering rings And welded scales all closely set Like some queer Chinese minaret,- These other Gorgon-stricken things, 128 7 7 1? THE ENCHANTED FOUNTAIN. There is an island in the southern seas XVhe.re springs a iountain in a caVern's gloom - From out a monster mountain's secret Womb, Filling the dusk with murmurs as of bees. So wondrous is this stream that whoso Wades Down into its clear coolness and there laves Changes his sex amid those magic Waves,- The women change to men, the men to maids :- 7 A damsel and her lover once Went there And bathed 5 and straight the Waters changed them both 3 The golden-haired maid became a handsome youth, The lover turned a girl with long black hair: WVhat sweet confusion slipt upon them then I The youth was now too shy to woo the maid, The girl was bolder, Wooed him unafraid,- Entire reversement of the rules of men ! Miss Mosns TO Miss LENTZ:-f'Say, are you a Beta TW' MissiL. 1- No, Pm a girl. 4 Miss M.:- Yes, but l mean what are your principles Miss L.:-J' A girl's principles. 131 9 'f--44 71' - dr 'T 'i'f 5 .Ti ' ' sf- I. if-4 'f'f ' '4 91 W.n p Q , -- '. fl , A Mir- T41-V-J . f-fx fs , e .J xii- '-ff: F ,.T, -N. f, X- ff- e v -If f - 69 fam fn f 'QKFN fr ' Il ,f f ., Q- 4 91 .- 1, gig! v- 2 I UE? ,IP ' V' 1 ,,I,f,,.,,f ,M - 'V 1?-, W f yflfl !!:Hllllllf-ll.I 4 -f 3'-x IIN U WW ' 4 ' W .ff .. 1, .1 ,I I te is f ffwia X . , - 41 41 ' . 1 3'-Q 5 ff' ' - 'IW 1 ' 524' '.1h..- - fi? f, . ,I W 'fl 'l '2liL.iil:'l'.?'Zf-31455Eiii::'fiff -'fi'EQfl: ' 'X '2 - T'-f f Q ,-if? rff ff 447' ,Y FM ,ui gg.-atffj wx Ns--A-zizfffgffp, , -1, , I A ', ..'.,1.---,Fi pf- ,as , I, In . - a 5 , I T f 5 T'+5fi '35 fiifl '- ,li Q ' ' -- Gif -'iyg'-':sh-'jy7i '1i fn' .f I X 2' F5 g' , I 5 l , - , -l 1. ,L,f.Z . - ,' , f f f-1 --f--'.- 7 - 7 ' l -. ' ' --f X f 'A' X ,4 . f X f .- , I f .-4 X ,gf j7,,q,,3. . 7' 43 ' . 1 '- 5 W .Af 1 aff'.fWii2f.I4if1El2'1'f2 f u f ' , ' . 5 f f ' ' ' .I fx5.?!fQY2: 5 I V .. --2. . ,,,, TTE'f l'IowfThe'G1PI5 went To die Ciecu - H k J . , . - CGLORS AND GRDS. One day my love Was dressed in somber state, From delicate throat to graceful, ample clad In black 5 her pensive so like Fate It turned my mood from merry unto sad. Next day in purest white she greeted me, So lily-perfect and so snowy pure That half I looked again in doubt, to see If she Werc Hesh or spirit, to be sure. And next day from her head to her feet In dainty gold and crimson she was clad, And she so saucy and so roguish sweet, It turned my mood from gloomy into glad. Goss :- I tell you what boys, I was so scared for 21 min ute that I turned White. I 130 111sc1uRE INy co111c SECTIGNS. l'1'ot'. ll. l111gi11s by W1'llflllg' O11 the board fa-XY Cb-yD2ip 2 i ' , ' 1 ' 1 ' . M111 lm-ul tl11 ' llllLllOlH.H tolls l11111 what to do he expounds ' 1 1 - I U r W . 1 4 -' V . tm 11111.1i11111. llllh oquat1o11 as you see keeps I'L1I1111Hg o11 b 1 Ll 12111 0116, so that if you cut off tl1e last part you cut oil' t.l1o dogaud leave the tail. and 1111 wl11-11 x is 0-1-M11-151 gi 'lass all lilllgllb. 4 .xl'll'l' 1-11111posi11g l1i111self, goes o11. After eXpa11di11g you slap tl11- x flfllvll hero and put tl1e y U around tl1e CO1'11G1'. 'l'I1a1 also knocks the p out of tl1e equation and leaves 4' a Zlllfl l1 : no, lillili-,S W1'O11g-17111 liable to cl1alkograpl1ical l'lll'fVll'5. The 11 goes out for a11 eye-ope11er betwee11 acts, but 1l11' a stays lll. You can see from tl1is that the tangent 111111131-s at llllllllj' degrees. It ClO117t look tl1at way, but never- Illvlvss its soff A Write 1low11 ax+by+ic:z. After working awhile Barney l'il'YIll1 asks, 'C Say Prof., old man, what becomes of the i TP l'1'111'. H'lll1o ff i drops out, or i11 other words, the equation has his 1-ye k11ockcd out. I w 1 Mll 111 the class who wa11t merits laughj. lc'1'111'. 44011, that 1'811ll11ClS me of a co11u11dru111 some 0116 askwl 1111- the other day. How do you spell blind pig with two l1ftt1e1's'? I will give you a 111atl1e111atical de111o11stratio11 of how it is fl0llL'. lt 11ot strictly 111atl1ematical, but we'll take it 111-V1-1'tl11-lc-ssf' , Writes down 11 gf' That SPGHS' Pig with the N1 H lilxlfwlif-fl out, therefore bli11d pig. D t I gil 'lass laughs a,gai11, and Ecka Mazola lEL111l3S.D 1- , , ' . 1 ' -.- Cissinom is all 1'l0'l1JE ill xx?lllil'l'2ll1 l31oW11111g lcccptloll- I e f G D . . . . 'P 'obi11so11:- l ClO11,l 111- I1l:11'1-, and 11, has Its l'lfl'9G' MISS IM 77 lxllirkk fllffllllf lllfllf- V33 ll I fa- -V f' N OHIQ COLLEGE YELLS. IDG! 1iso11 Heike! Heike! ! D-E-N-I-S-O-N 3 Denison! Denison ! 0 S U ' I yell, I yellw H WV21llOOl WV2lll0Ol Rip, Zip! Bazoo! or, for O. S. U 1 I yell like h-111 Buelltel 4:Y6-l10, Ye-ho, 'Ye-heeza! WVOW-WOW, Buehtel ! Kenyon Heike! Heike! Heike! K-E-N-Y-O-N 5 Kenyon! .Kenyon! Ylfooster ' 4' Rah, Rah, Rah ! Rah, Rah, Rah! ! Rah, Rah, Rah! ! ! VVooste1'! ifiT11e ofiieial yell. T The way we give it away from home. v Z 5 .- , N f ,-11 -f uf' 1 f' J ai ' ' ' .Q 4' il . if x - I A lg .,, , .1 1 w Q ' fa 125 11- '- . 'i f ' ,, , ,g,.,.---usvf 'lille ' 'Eg' t:g::5'-r I ' . Q ' ?- - In 3211111 'z wg 5 ,,, 1 I 1.1-' 'I ,, Q. 3 25111122 Y f .. ii' . -ii ez' iff I sn Q - W. H. CLARK, R. D. MERSHON, W. T. MILLS, W. D. REES, C. H. FARBER, C. P. GUY, GEN. WVALCUTT TO SAMMY USBORN,-HYGS, Sannny, I fought bravely for my country and bear on my body the 1112lLl:liS of thirteen Woundsfl Sammy famazedj Gee, Geneial, ' 7 ', ' 4 77 ' ' didn t any of them piove fatal 3 132 13, 3: 5' .4 If. 4, Lvl! VE W ,lg , SOME PRACTICAL PROBLEMS. at 1 Gwen a three gallon jug of Bou1'ho11 :mal l'1-all mul Dixon-lVhioh Will he downed l2l1'SlL? lVhy Cloes Prexy Swallow a lie but refuse to In-lil-w tln- truth? WVhy does Frank NVoocl try to aot tuH ' '! How many Elegrees in a college ? t , l 1 - T.. ,. i oDE TO eoHANNAN. 1,2 1, W 1 4 Some trouble themselws ll Oler the questions of llistory ' The letters of Juuius Or the Man of the Mask, ' ' But for a Hrst-Class ' Insolvable mystery k t v 6 0 2 15 2 E One of your problems Is all that I ask. S : f l ,Q u P 5 eitl 52. ki- me QL i Q R? fx ' ' 5 Ml' I - W l , .l 'Ill PK -' n 4 3' ,Q 1 , -fwlbfw ,7 1 ' a -qv Y F ' -' 1 tif 1 Y 'r nl ff5f:Wlll ll'lLf-- 4 ,A ,I G, M v ,df ll ' 'QQ bflfl' fy' Li 4 ' 'N w . '-451 - Mt ..,,. , lo 1- 4 ' s . + 'W ft ll' f 1 'lb ix j 1, 'VI fm ml lrlpiffff fix, x 2 f - ' ' ffl' ll' 'llljnbfl' '. ', '-, It I Z ' J uf' f fgfsa3,i'?55 ' A 2 rf-.1 5 J J - nl . - ' 1 l ll l1iiv'i2fs'.-' .Q f fl 'f it ' I sy 'f l l, s l 'L ff , 4,,f u1,, A Q ' bccsdxble to rouse 6f1f0-nts mm, U ld vos new fllmotf' 'nl 2 ' - r. Dames., l dev pottle. pecau-SE Cl dk POCWENQ D 2 3 I l 3 5 l35 2 I l 5 1 5 ICONTRIBULED BY Misses L. AND Oh where, oh where ls my cast-off hat! g Oh where, oh where Can it be! lVith the crown torn out, And the trimming off 3 Oh where, oh where I Can it be ! We've lost our hat And don't know where to iind it. Y lVe'll let it alone And it'll come home J With dandelions trailing hind it. Tl-IE FLIRT. With what weapons does she hurt , Hearts of men, this arrant iiirt? Laughing eyes of brilliant black, Tender blue or melting brown Casting roguish glances back, , ,Then demurely looking down, Poutings of a rosy lip, . Sudden moves of throat and waist Supple shoulders, bodice laced, Subtle curvings of the hip, Peach-bloom cheek turned half aside Drooping lashes, fragrant hair 3 Form elastic, pliant, trim 5 Rich soft dress and snowy skirt Raised a trifle high to show Arched instep and ankle slim Tripping consciously below Blushes, smiles and frowns. h Beware! These, and many more besides, Are the Weapons of a ilirt l A 134 ow UFGEUYS the T rowin QOOTYK 5 dressed up VZPW - MEMORIES. How dear to my heart are the Scenes of my college davs, YV hen fond recollections recall them to view, E 1 There's Prexy and Thomas and Sid with his hobbies, And even 'f Old Bobbyw and Kellicott too. There'S big Deutcher lVeber, with wide-spreading shadow And Kilbourne who drilled the battalion so well. There were Hunks and conditions in physics and eonieeg A But nary a merit our record to swell, The much Worked-for merits. the dearly-loved merits, The merits, the merits, we crammed for like h-- ! THE SOPHOMQRE-ERESHMAN RUSH. The rush was due primarily to the hanging of an efhgy by the Freshmen onthe new chemical building. The Sophs found the Freshmen had hid the keys of the building. Georgie ' Christian Schaeller D. lift and Igzlfe' 7 e y , , fa9-420 Pl'CSlCl0l1t,7S Clerk, told the F1'CSll- The Ob,g 'df t, Qual: men they would all be arrested, but they only laughed. After chapel exe1'c-ises The Ifreelnes brought out their cane, which more nearly resembled a young Saw-log. R. K. Beach, whose lung capacity has been ealen- lated to be double that of any man in college, was chosen T rel'- eree. The bugle for drill was blown, but no attention was paid 150 A fgw WQgLk-k11QQd PQQPIQ fell lll, bllt l'1lHHl ul' lllOlll Slfmrl about waiting for the fray to I f ag, begin. Sergeant Innis, who was XSS- -L ig ,hi miffjffrgi never known to show the leaet T XX- ' lL,l,f?F7,fl f dfxrlo trace of class spirit, proceeded W 4 If .,l ,Ai to drill the few unfortunates of ' 'Q Fl his squad who had answered to their names. At last, when the spectators had alnnef con- 'ltDead Beat. 1'-37 1 PLACE--THE IARCADE TOILET ROOM. TIME-EVENING AFTER THE CONTEST. Drcwnatvis Personac. FRANKEE, nfwhose surname is Galej, AARON, ofthe tribe of Jones, Qwho are as the sands of the sea for 11L11TlbG1'b,BILLY, who is also called Krumm, this anoesters came from County Donegal, Irelandj A GALIE-4cJl111111ID3', boys, what are we going to do with these old collars? YVe didn't bring any baggage. J ONES-U WV hy, ain't you on tO my scheme, put 'em inside your hat band. KRUMM-C' Say, you fellows won't stand any show to-night. YVhy, this white tie and 5 cent collar looks stunning. I'll out you both out, I'll bet. v JONES-H Say, Krumm, yould better get some of that stuff before you leave. - KRUMM-4' Wliztt stuff? .IoNEs- Why, naphthaline 5 it knocked my headache silly. QExit Krumm 5 returns soonj. IQRUMM--USELY, Jonesy, that fellow says he never heard of naphthalinef' QSeizes Aaron by the arm and drags him into a palatial apartment resplendent with mirrors, out-glass and silverj. NOW tell him what it is. ' JONES-4' WVhy, its that greenish stuff, you know, that you put on icef' g A BAR-IQEEPER-HOl1, yes, but we call it alasfintlw here.'7 PROFESSORS EeoERs, QUEEN AND LAZENBY, discussing the royal hand bell-ringors. Prof. E.:-U Well I wont in about 'LQ11 o'elock, and I must confess, I got enough of it in half an hour. P1'0fS- Q- fmd L-3- Wl1Y, We enjoyed the concert very much. Prof. E.- Indeed! 'Well, as I have frequently remarked, there is no accounting for tastes. 136 w dl Tlllh would iight for his class as well as for the Lord, and the wav he threw the Sophs into the shrubbery was a caution. Good- ell was carried out of the fight three times, and was only kept from going in again by some one threatening to go after Mattie Moses and have her sit on him till the rush was over. Alter a contest of one and one-half hours it was declared a draw, as a few of the Sophs still had their hands on the cane. The Held was strewn with hats and caps, collars and cuffs, tattered clothing and wounded Sophs and Freshmen. The light was a goodsnatured one throughout, and will increase the loyalty of every student to his iff: N tg: M class organization. The Fresh- I- 9 Ur 1 ,iii FSS? b y men were handicapped by not be- F if llyjnl Q ' ing well acquainted with each jf ff AQ TE other. It was no uncommon thing l-f . fi to see one Freshman standing k - -2 another on his head or pulling him off the stick. The Sophs were the better organized, but were inferior in numbers. Al- though the rush was declared a draw, the Freshmen clearly came out ahead. l A After the Delaware-game some of the boys were taking a walk. They had been drinking sulphur water and were in a romantic mood. As they passed a pond, a solitary frog began to sing. Ted Miller :- WVhist! Methinks I hear a cuckoo I 'l After a party call at Miss Hatcher's. Miss Cope:-You are afraid to wade into the lake with me. Morrison :-HI n-n-never take a d-d-dare. They join hands and wade in knee-deep. Net result-he has the neuralgia for a week and her mamma gives her some catnip tea and a lecture and sends her to bed. 139 cluded that the balloon would not go up, J. Ed. Meek and l. Laird Dungan set the ball a rolling, and in a few minutes at least a hundred Sophs and Freshmen were mingled in a con- fused mass, fighting like tigers for the saw-log. The rest of the battalion and the different professors whose recitations had been broken up, crowded around to witness the affair. A num- ber of Horton men, seeing I. Laird Dungan was being badly used up by the Freshmen, rushed into the fight and pulled f him out and tied him to f -x 1 'V . . 1154? F a tree, thinking the Alcy- -jq' ' 3 ,', 'W' W E ff! f 1,7 one-Horton Contest, on WMMW, 77 ' which he was essayist, of , If VA ' ,,, .- flqf ja ,I .l 1' ' ' J ' more inportance than the rush H Buckenberger n . Mitchell was also seen hunting among the confused mass of legs and arms for certain members of the ball team whose presence was absolutely necessary if he expected to win the ball game with Buchtel. The rank and file of the mob, how- ever, were allowed to suffer. Now and then some fellow7s sister would try to persuade him not to go into it again. Wliile the iv, W-, W W boys were so hotly engaged ,A I, the Freshmen and Sophomore V, I Im M, gh girls .had a little rush of their I 1 gm ,qtagik era own in the cloak room. The W Freshman girls outnumbered Qwffx li . 5 , , ,f'Q'Q the Sophs two to one, and 'soon - 'H ' ' 1- had them subdued. Then they went out on the campus to cheer for '93, T The Freshmen had the cane in their possession several times, but were so excited that they failed to turn it over to the referee. Gibbs was their Achiles, while Berger, Scott, XVeston, Peters and others, did excellent Work. Wlienevei' the Sophs made a spurt the cry would be, 'f Gibbs to the rescue ! ' On the side of the Sophs, Lincoln, Johnson, and Barney Flinn were towers of strength. Y. M. C. A. Baker showed that he 138 VSING A SUNG QF SIXPENCEU I r fn 7 V, ,A . f 'ri I 1 Lflq a song of sixpence, a pocket full of rye: . Two and twenty seniors, in a college pie: ' 1' f f Xvhen the P19 Was opened the seniors all came out Q, ,fy nd Hglegiucommenceineiit day with a weary Stream of qv 1 r' o h n. 0 1 . ,r Prexy was in his ofiice, excusinff pre f ' -- . , , , pk. excuses. W 1 The gulls were in the cloak rozdm, 'clattering all like f g osesg ' But two were playing tennis Qyou guess who I sup- posej When each knocked a ball and hit the other on the nose. i- . J. B. HUGGINS :- Say boys, I'm just an awful chump, 'aint I? 77 l BILLY BROWN says he would like to have Sadie O'Kane and Mignon Talbot for watch charms. PROF. LORD Clecturing on Bessemer steelj- Bessemer missed it on carbon, but he got there on siliconf' PROF. LORD7S MOTHER :- Nathan, do you really talk to the boys in the laboratory the way the last year's Makio says you do ? ' .-.. YoUNe LADY-'f Who is the best tennis player up here, Mr. Miller '? TED- Oh, I donit know. I guess I am? Browning Social at Prof. Smith's. Prof. J oe tries to convey the ice-cream freezer into the kitchen but it is too heavy for him. Ted Miller gallantly offers his help. Still the freezer remains immovable. A brilliant thought strikes Joe, who ex- claims :- I think if Mr. Miller could get his breath uncle-r .it that would fetch itf ,141 4 6 A I 4. in 1 V - l if W ,. , LEEP AND RESTY M6213 .L , . mululuuufw Sleep and rest, sleep and rest, Time to get up long ago: Rest, rest, the bed is best, Time to get up long ago : Breakfast is oVer,he ought to be dressed, But he sleeps like a little bird hid in his nest,- He was out last night, you know : Sleep, my daisy one: sleep, my lazy one, SNCRE! ..i- - The term is grown old, And trials are coming: He's out in the cold . At the year's last summing,- This prep, Whois been bumming. Demerits are thick, And his hopes are fast paling : How his father will kick VVhen he's sent home for failing Z Here's enow for sad wailing! Opening of the Fall term :--BEAcH,'90, to Mrs. Hess, nee Fox, '90, visiting the University with ,her husband :-ffWl1y', how do you do, Miss Fox? Glad to see you back. Are you going to be with us again 'F Early in May, Deacon White, who used to live in Jersey City, observed the first mosquito of the season, come sailing into his room. Catching it by at-he wings he exclaimed : 4' Great Caesar! How's folks in New Jersey ? 140 SOCIETY CF CCLLECE WIDCWS. Morro : Let Students coine and Students go, While each year gives us a new beau. MEMBERS IIN SICCLLEGE. ALICE MOODY, 1 SADIE O7KANE, JULIETTE SESSI0NS,X MATTIE MOSES, PLEDGED. I FLORENCE COPE, MARY HATCIIER, GRACE HBTNDERSON. BACK NUMBERS. CARRIE POCOCK, THOMAS GRANT YOUMANS, FANNY BANCROFT, C. CASPER OVIATT, NIADELINE POCOCK, NIATTIE GUERIN. ,-L.ii1-,11.11l- p it By transfer from Connecticut Alpha. I jli,,l,i--A Never Say die, 'Say Mr. Dye. W Rane: f'I'In not Inuch on Speaking, but l'In li-ll on geStureS. 4 On February 9th ProfeSSor Norton paid hiS once-a-year l A Visit to the Chapel. MI M---n' Talbot : U Since I Wasat the PreSS Banquet ISS at Woo ' l ' ,k 't foulcl be real nice tO be a Lone Star. This Seems paradoxical. Ster with that Mr. B---11, I H111 1 ll 1 43 , as yg Inav HAZELTINE. 2 2' li ' I X .I IL ,ff 'N Billy Hazeltine played the cornet , ' All nic-ht with sweet music, and yet WW? XVl1?e11 the neighbors had stood 4 L , fit! All they possibly could, 5 L ' 'Y'-. , Q One morning he left there, you bet! -1- XVALKER :- Miss B. you look as though you might loc friendly, Wonit you be my frien df? r .li-.T Prior. BoWEN.-This name is a synonym for all that is polished and erudite, the owner of it came to the O. S. U. from the 4' Monumental City, Where he graduated from one of the finest Universities in the land. Hvaing spent some time in a foreign country, he combines With his learningthe charm of foreign manners.. However much he may have traveled abroad he seems to be loyal to his native land in his use of Americanisms. Possibly the student who asked to ,be excused from recitation on the plea of illness was astonished to- hear issuing from those learned lips, No, you don't Work that gag on me. As a philologist, the professor must be able to trace a Word from its origin, and, indeed, to give the provincialism that was in use at that time. This he can do most ably. His explanation of the Word iilet,', was certainly unique. cAfter tracing thro' the Latin French, he explained its use in English to signify a cut from a beef or critter. Possibly from this matchless expression, one may conjecture with certainty Where the early life of this dignified' gentleman was spent. That is to say, one may form some idea, so to speak, Where the iirst part of his life was spent, or in other Words' one may have the idea Where he spent the early part of his life. f ' 142 i i PROVERBS AND MAXIMS. Take your hat off is Sid's first law. Everybody's business is Dunlap's business. Never say Great Scott ,' say Great Prexyf' A Two flunks do not make a pass, even if two negatives do make a positive. Visitors at the University should not fail to hear the pho- nograph pray in ehapel. . It is not considered ehie in good society to say 4' rats when XVhitney's name is mentioned. 'f Rodents is much prefers able. Overheard in live hour physics elass+Would-be assistant in Proffs chair: i Lincoln, you dad-blasted slow-poke, puta move on your- self and work this- problem. Why, you ornery ehump, you act as though you had been out last night trying to buek the tiger or rush the growler 5. if you don't put a P. D. Q. move on yourself Illl give you the razzle-dazzle. Now, youlve heard me. -A S Ffjvrv J 5 Q U I f ki -MX -,,,.,-,,-,, -' ,.,. 1 U ff L , .jk ,, 't fi? -..K N -QW 1714! gif! WN of M N wtf its it . 17 s cl X' Pgy 4 li, '-gJN.fx.,J- - - -- lcflr Whenx -Eine Q. 5. U. moves T0 The Ccbkmtijf 145 MY WITCH. You often have heard of the witch of the tale, Not the jagged-tooth'cl hag with her kettle of charms 5 But the beautiful woman-like witch who is seen But once in a year, either waving bright arms And twinkling arched feet in the dance of a queen To an audience of beasts in a black jungle dale 5 Or sitting high up on the curved new moon In a robe of silvery pale green mist - That flutters and flashes into thin air, XVit.h her golden hair in a Grecian twist, Her deep eyes dreamy, her white arms bare, And seen in a sort of spectral swoon 3 Or riding a monster under the sea lVith her robes stripped off to her supple waist, With her soft breast wet and hercheeks a bloom, And her drenched gold hair all loose and displaced As she slides like a meteor into the gloom With the sea-echoes following murmurously. . I too have a witch as well as the tale, Though she never has dwelt in the moon or the sea ' My witch is the simplest and sweetest of girls XV ith a magical form in her white drapery, With a pretty head crowned with the brownest of curls And whose eyes are so bright that her cheeks seem pale. 7 ,1- Hx Fw 55 , Q17 ,ZF n xf X ' ' in N - ,fn .. 4 tt e 5 M-,f ff - X i 'ff f ff. A 1- 5 M ' 'f-11217, A' ' ,Q C - l ' ' ji ih.,uL 4 4 , em., x rx! 'f - 'K J ,g f l W . H 1 , '1 in 144 El'UN'l'lill2l l'l'Ill in' oNE or THE Bors wiro XVATCIIED THE DELAWARE ISTIIDENTS xr 'rms S'rA'rE OiiAfron1cAL CoNTEsT.j I stood by the open bar-room, And gazed upon the sight, And saw the tipsy students Pass in there very tight. I saw the gay procession Put down the foaming stuff, And I knew that on the morrow, Their heads would ache enough. i i It must be so-my dear, thou reasonest well! Else, whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after many passes I Or whence this secret dreadi and inward horror, Of making many Hunks? lVhy shrinks Frank Gale Back on himself and dares to ride a pony? :Tis the fear of the fire I' that stirs within usg I. 'Tis Prexy himself who points out for us the razlzle, And intimates conditions to us. Student in physiology-4'Professor, where is the Vein of humor '? L , b ,hu ff 'y E' is r rli ZZ Ji of WWWXWWMIWllllllilllllillllfricfxgrflffucmir! 1f'lfff'!l. f fi ,f' V f I ' 1 ' r fl '1' I .7 F . MJ'-1 ' -X --- g 2 ts A gif , - N- --fl-- -f P 71,-If 1:7 1 Q , yy!! I l 'W aff? E . , ' Q i , ' I f tl- ,I 'gi . . , X I' f Z, ff 752121, ff, If ,- Wffgfilf' W -I GUI'-5f,QPTT,i-,Qf, jlfcisc offer Qfccim fvf U'fllYfiK'0 147 A LEAF FROM THE LIBRARY CATALOGUE. BARON LTUNCI-IAUSEN, . Kennedy: '93- THE 'GYPSY QUEEN, . . . Miss Striokler. THICKER THAN XVATER IDOTU1- SOUP- W HAT NVILL HE DO .XVITH IT '? . M2lI'1DiH'S PHZG- ITOMEXVARD BOUND, . . VVoOdroW, et al. rffllf GIAN1'7S ROBE, . Simpsonls Overeoat THE HAPPY BOY, . . . BGCk, '93 TWO ON A TOYVER, Misses Moses and Cope. HARD TIMES, . . . , Final Exams. FAMOUS FUNNY FELLOWS, Joe Taylor and Sid. Norton, A REAL QUEEN, . . . . Miss Neil, I SAY NO, . , , . .. . , WVhitaore, '91, A W OLE IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING, . Mills, '92, PAI'A'S OVVN GIRL, I , .,.. Miss L. Cookins. DEAD SEA FRUIT, - . Senior Vacation and on the MAIQIO. THE LITTLE GOOD-FOR-NOTHING, . . Kiesewetter, '91, BETNVEEN TWO LOVES, . . . . Smith, '90-. NOT LIKE OTHER GIRLS, Miss Ruppersberg, '91, A VITAL QUESTION, Did I pass in Math? RED AS A ROSE IS SHE, Miss Lamme, '93, GOIN' THRO' THE RYE, . . Ted Miller and Cope. J ACK AND THREE JILLS, Krumin, Florence, May and Mattie, A ONE THING NBEDFUL, . T . . A Gymnasium. THE INNOOENTS ABROAD, I Delaware Students. THE QUEEN OF BEDLAM, Miss Hatcher, '94, THE JONES FAMILY, Jesse, A311011, ,615 ag, A FoOL's ERRAND, ' . Prexy as a lobbyist. A FAIR BARBARIAN. , , , Miss Lgntz, Ted Miller's analysis of Holland's Bitter SWeet 1- I . The darkest cloud Will smile out loud I And thread a chord of light, ' 146 CGMPARISONS. il CoMPAR1soNs ARE CRUELJ, . RITCHEY-AS meek as a sucking dove. PEARCE-AS quick has greased 1ightning. Miss TALBOT, '92-As smihng as a basket of chips. CROOKS-As for1orn as an uninated corn. SIGERFOOS, C. P.-As co1c1 as the north side of 21 -12111112115 gravestone by moon1ight. LALLEXANDER-AS si1ent as a snail on a cabbage 1Cfli1 C. E. SKINNER-A1S1D1lC1l out of tune as a corn-stalk 11111111 in the hands of a, p1ough-boy. CUCIQIJE-HG c1oesn't know enough to chew gum. MR. IiELLY+L11iQ a Scotch terrier at a rat-hole. HUTCHINSON-AS fresh as butter just from the chu1'11. Fox-Like a singecl catg better than he seems. EXTRA DRILL SQUAD-AS hungry as 21 gravcn iinagv. N ow see here McKnight, you and Pa1n1er 211111 122111111 1111111 to keep away from Peop1e's Theatre. 1t's a 11:1cl111z1c-cl im' boys of your age. 1Ve're onto you. -- ' ,fi .Mil ,K 4ff! J ff 4 f' ftfff ., f ,? lfnfffv .fjfff X jfmjhtp WC1t,Chn1c1U,G.5 U, pe1'foFmm3 his usual dufffes HH THE PAST YEARS ATTRACTIONS. LORD CHUMLEY, . NATURIAII GAS, THE LITTLE TYCOON, THE FLYING DUTOHMAN, A SAD OOQUETTE, . OUR FLAT, . THE DRUM MAJOR, A BRASS TWONKEY, ETELD BY THE ENEMY, LOVE IN HARNESS, A COMEDY OF ERRORS, THE HUSTLER, . THE NAROR, . A . THE TWO OLD ORONIES, THE WOMAN HATER, THE SERIOUS FAMILY, A PAIR OF JACKS, . OUR IRISH XIISITORS, THE BEOOAR STUDENT, DON QUIXOTE ,... THE DAUGHTER OF THE REGINIENT, THE DEAD LETTER, . . RAISED FROM THE DEAD, ILAFTER MANY DAYS, PATIICNCE, . DAMON AND PYTHIAS, GIROFLE-GIROFLA, Huggins, '84 Steward Ishikawa . . Mesloh Miss Oope, '93 Wliitiiey Pearce . . . . Walker The Base Ball Remnant . . Pomerene, '91 The Kenyon Ball Games . . Beach, '90 Martin, '92 Oepe and 'Miller i.. OO1e, '91 . . . The Smiths Misses OOpe and Hatcher Walsh, Ped1OW and Mullay . . . Sanderson Burns, '91 . . Graves, '93 Student Spotting The Athletic Ass'n The Catalogue . PrOf. Eggers . Sehiek and BOOth The Misses F1 ynni . Student tO PrOf. BOWen- PrOf. can .Itake that examina- tiOn tO-day? Prof. B.- Oh yes, any time this morning, zf not tsooneof' '1-48 Nov. Dec. J an. F eb. .18 11 A. W. Jones makes a speech in the Gratorieal Asso- ciation. Great sensation. 14-Gale recitesin Political Economy. 15-Caylor is given an ovation by Alcyone. Debates. 17-Miss Moses and Miss Cope explore the mysteries ot the Wind pump. 22-Alcyone and Horton hold special meetings. 6 -X di reception. l 3- Thanksgiving. Usual amount of tlunking seq. First lecture in course. Dr. Mayo on The Duty of the North and the Nation to the Children ot the South. 9-Prof. Norton attends chapel. 15-W'oodroW announces his attention of not returning. S A Great mourning. 1-3-Mills taken for a mogul and put in the round house. 23- 24- 28- -Lecture. Rev. VV. l. Chamberlain The Silent Partner in all ownership. Prof. Queen oversleeps and fails to meet the politieal economy class.. Moyer explains to Sid. what a. grasshopper pony is. Oratorical contest. iwrm-tm, J. M., breaks the habits of alifetime and takes a girl. Browning girls after computing the amount oi' crackers needed at their oyster social send in an order for a barrel. 31--W It' W' reception. 3-- 13- ao- 9 9 .J ..4 233-- Dr. Williams, lecture Nationalism and l'h1'istianity. Sid conducts chapel exercises. State Oratorical Contest. Delaware boys shocked at the naughty Columbus students. Their om-atom' also badly shocked. University Day exercises. Dr. Gladdenls lecture, C' The True Hfwlallslll- l5l Sept. Oct. Nov. 15 16 18 19 25 28 -E. T. Johnson takes his iirst speed. 4- 5 19 20 TWO OF A KIND. I'm dying for some one to love me, To call me his idol, his own 5 I can't bear the thought of remaining Forever in this world alone. -J. SESSIOINS I want to be called pet and sweetheart 5 I want to be loved and caressed 3 I want to be cared for in earnest, For flirting I e'cr shall detest. -M. H ATCHER il CALENDAR. -New members from the back counties arrive. -City kids in Knickerloockers invade the grounds. Upper classmen wonder where the nurses are. -Starker appears with his new suit. Great sensation. -Prof. Chalmers taken for a new student. Talk of ducking him for wearing a silk hat. -Wood and Whitacre get short of cash and go on a raid. Result, 2 dogs and 3 cats, netting 31.25. Tommy Bennett attends Alcyone. -Geological excursion to Central College. Signior Surfaceis iirst appearance in his renowned acro- batic feat. Q K QF picnicq A-C. S. U. os. Asylum. Score, 14 to 13. --Memorial services in honor of Prof. A. H. Welsh. 25-Alcyone7s musicale. 26-C. S. U. fus. Col. Medical College. Score, 9 to 1. 30- 31- gg.. Basement gang breaks loose. I Caylor joins the Thurman Club. Two of the College girls and Ted Miller appear in chapel with kid gloves on. Rumors of a co-ed. frat. . 150 If ever it should chance that a victim must be found, I've got a. little list, I've got a little list Of O. S. U. offenders who'd as well be underground, lVho never would be missed, who never would be missed. There's the boy who whistles in the hall an operatic air, The girls who in their gossip quite occupy the stair, And in the lib'ry alcoves each loudly whispering pair- They never would be missed, they never would be missed. Therels the mathematic's tutor who conditions by the score I've got him on the list, Iive got him on the list. The prof 's who live on essays and always ery for more, They never would be missed, they never would be missed. The girls who for amusement ascend the college tower 3 The gang that in the basement stay idling by the hour 5 And all the supe professors f?l who Hunk to show their power I know they'd not be missed, I know they'd not be missed. The blow who boasts of' records and never wins a race, I'Ve got him on the list, I've got him on the list. The youth who smokes a cigarette and puffs it in your iaee, I know heid not be missed, I know he'd not be missed. The boys with lots of moiiey, who never had to work, WVho, when they're sent to college, will all their duties shirk, And on examination, will pony like a Turk, Pm Sure they'd not be missed, lim sure they'd not be missed. 51. Ifxy all if A' A N' mx 4 . ., . . A J ,H 47- Q ill z ' X 1 . uv' t' n-, ..xll l53 Feb. Mar. Apr. May May 15 17 27 -Legislature visits the University, everybody does the agreeable. Great activity in Lord's laboratory. 9--Dr. Moorels lecture, Control of Thoughtn 11---Miss Moses falls down stairs. 12-Geological excursion to Nelsonville and Buchtel. o. s. U., 175 o. U., 6. 13--Dr. Felton's lecture, H Physical Evidences of the Authenticity of the Scriptures. --Eggers looks up in chapel with both eyes open. O. S. U., 14, Kenyon, 2. Sigerfoos, C. P., begs pardon. 1-Foot ball, O. S. U., 20, O. W. U., 14. 3-O. S. U., 5, C. U., 4. 4-Bishop Foster's lecture, Was Christ Divine? -1 0--Clark shoots a jack rabbit in Nebraska. Denison swipes our invinciblesf' -Field Day. 23-State Field Day. O. S. U. wins second, taking five 29-- 31-- first prizes and breaking three records. Alcyone does up Horton. . O. S. U. 7, Buchtel, 6. ' ff X X17- px. . 'K CQ., ' I 4 X 4 fi, lv ,di 9 .5 1 X .urgfu . fytlnlbcf' U ., ? 4 Z Y' ' I If 45 'gb . K 7. ' 'q'f V. 'fmt A Af. . H' ' S AQGTA 'Z f 1' ' y qlhiifgaksii la V 1 4 'V Q, 1 W - . 5864005 mgllflfj the Growlew. 152 ,,, .- ,y-,-.04-4-v,4....-. s -A i i, 1 our To BARQN vow Ecciaias -BISMARCK Oh Bismarck, oh Bismarck I've Watched you night and day, 'And Bismarck, O Bismarck You still are very gay, But Bismarck, O Bismarck, You're almost silver-gray. So Bismarck, Oh Bismarck, 'Tis time you mend your Way. A FEW THINGS WE ADVOCATE. That some one give Kennedy a little salt toireduce his freshness. ' That Goodell chain his voice. That the girls stop looking at the boys in chapel. That every member of the MAKIO Boarcl be passefl mth merit. Q r Y' f J' 'I f .f i ' ll 7 . - ' lf fl- ' cis ' 'I way X' N ' fy-, N V 'fly JL' lflilx ' ' H? ' X ' llj HN' 11,1 X f I 0359146.34 f, ,- W,- 4,,.44?,,,Q::xxge7 g ' I -5,553 a f yum an Gnd bag Com Oumorv Cllletilincholi Clrwwilsr R6 futsou fdm hy l5:3 SPECIMEN OE MISS SESSION'S STYLE. Most Beloved cmd Rererenced of all Beings on this Plcmet .- With humility and yet with undeniable delight, I read your words-your pearls of love and approval. They fall on my sensitive soul like drops of cooling dew upon the fainting grass. ECI-IGES ERGM TI-IE CLASS-ROOM, Political Economy. Prof. Q.-U Mr. Gale, what is credit? Gale.-It's buying a thing and paying for it when you get ready. s Senior Greek. Miss Moodie, translating.-'f And the goat's horns grew out about 16 paces. i . Pnoiv. BROWN.- Mr. Cole, what is the arc whose cosine is zero? Cole.- Minus ininityf' Prior. Loan :- Viets, I'm afraid you are not as well grounded in the Scripture as I am, or you would understand the allusion. The Pharaoh referred to is the old Rameses that they dug up and took the lining out of, over in the British Museum the other day. He compelled the Children of Israel to make bricks without straw, donlt yer know ? 7'-x- -gur- P frfvvfx I .- -...J vnu' dhse- Q E ff li - X , . X f X s-, 4- . ' , H - i V- 1 - , .1 S I- ' - I 1 0 I - I Iwi I ,'5,' .I ,- , T .' MQ! lmili ' hu' ii' , 1 '57 QV. 'U ' ' 'f Mill - riff lf? - if ' pinhv Sql- X A ' :A ll i I ia' 'iq IQ '-I- ' LQ ' ' 2 up' ' . 5. '- ' . un U n . . nu In In Atv Udoulci You. believe lb? ':. ' thelf' CtrQu,si'1'f-'xp ,Sgr-ne of our WSW Seen turnanfllsomersoults on 'the C. mpus! 154 POMPADGUR CLUB. BARON VON EGGERS BISMAROK, PREXY SCOTT, PREXY ORTON, PROF. SMITH. t l VVhitney.+f' NOW just the least initefl In the drawing room. Student.- I think this foot is inuoh prettier. Prof. Josie Taylor.-ff Yes, that is the prettier of the foots. .i Old Gent to Cadet With gun.-- Wfell, young inan do you oarry your guns loaded ? Cadet.- No, We usually load our- selves up and let the guns go to -. lli At Claude Duval, Qhetween aotsj F. C. VVood.--Say, Pom, next time We give Chawley Sig. a ticket to the opera to get 21 pass in Histology, and he don't use it, he'll know it. Scene, ladies? rooni. Miss C. H. has a photo of Mr. Floto. Miss Helen L. Wants it, but Miss H. disputes her ownership. Miss L,-J' Well it is his and I Guess Whftt's his is mine 7 1 C F: C ' . A- C- EF 5 lil' if? fd W NJ ll N E -V 5155327 is-Q Zz 4579 'ff 1' Sw' I inf!! . , fic' iii! f If f I xx fl fl!! I x' L .JJ iii, Ag? 5 ff1 i '1J L' :- ' A The ,Dorm Ullalte- lcieul and R60-' 157 WANT AND LOST CGLUMNQ IVANTED-By Misses Weber and Henderson-A new deck of cards. Losr:-On the night of May 29th, in the University Chapel, a sure thing. F. A. COPE. XVANTED :-To know the address of the CBIOOHIDIHQ Uni- versity student who never saw anyone cut grass before. Ad- dress, , DAISY, Box 999, Orrville, O. W ANTED :-Students to coach in tennis playing. Refer by permission to Prof. Lazenby, H. S. Mitchell and Ted B. Miller. Terms reasonable. CHAS. FARBER, '94, IVANTED :-To know the whereabouts of WVillia1n H. Krumm, a tired looking youth, who occupied and broke down a bed in Bly hostelrie on the night of Feb. 21st, 1890. Any information thankfully received. I Pnorn. LAGONDA Housn, . Springfield, O. XVANTEDZ-SO1116 one to protect me when I go out at night, so that I wonlt have to bother my landlady with carry- ing out the stones I bring home with me. - XVILBUR THOBURINI MILLS, Nephew of Bishop Thoburn. 4-, 1 get Sow :- . I I! Sonq by Colleqe Girls- F ll! FX an I V V .,. . ' I q , 74 Z W f ff e....i-w igfggi. NZ! -4 f' 7t'i'?7 3 156 f qs flff 167: 'Qlllff-?'47 ' Q, - , ff A . H L - f- 3 I, -1 1 X ' ' I .31 pf ' an . X 4 4 X If X N R l ,eff he l 1: A f if Q: 12 . -f ,Q s ' fc ' 1,-'ff f W .I 'L f 6 . fl 1' ' J-75077 ' J. I I g Ixfgi'-QQ 'Il if-' ,g ln., - D ' x 1 wif-,A fl 1 ' is jf gr W i x K ' K '1 . ' -13 ., V' fx Ku. ' X' l Thus have we ezs 'well as we eoulel gezlhereel ez posg of obser- 'vczlzbhs as lhgf grew czml' lf some me 617103 wofmwood be fomza' among lhe sweel herbs, their 'ZUlZ0l6S07716716SS will make cz111eha'.s for lhelr hilleffhess. Qi Is Cope a dude? Well, I should oaokle to extermination. Miss Lent-z, that snioker of thine maketh me smile inter- nally. e ,il.11 M. A. Smith, '91, showing Visitors around :- There's Where the clock used to be. 1. -i There are four girls in Eggers's German class and all of them are Worthy of Mensehenfl A It is stated on good authority that Prof. Eggers' ponipa- dour is the envy of the entire faculty. Class in Geometry. Prof.- VV hat is a circle. Student -4' A circle is a round straight line with a hole in it. Prexy says he sat by his brother's cradle and kept the flies off him. We are Willing to take hirn at his Word, but We entertain a private opinion that he most decidedly forgot to keep the flies off himself. Prep. to Surface.-f' Say, Old Horse, What are the names of these flowers? S.- Those are the Serophulariaoeae Antirrlinium Orontium, the Aselepiadaceae Asolepias Phytolao- coides and the Calyoanthaceae Calyoonthus, Floridus and the--. Prep. falls in a faint. Funeral three days later. fl 4 ' WW 7 Wig . , ' If so ' 15411 if , tallest xref ,f-as . 1 -- - Q-sgxiillgr 1'--in ffl 4 f if -.- .-:.za1.4v'if .?1-. Q5 I e ,C f - 'IL'-' :Tm ' f -. late ' V, jg f ff .. -alum .- ,IX X -i',.,ijf,':i-,, , . . Seen behind the Somalia'-5-if ' U ' ve'-.Sf G., 'sth -Ll , I U.l ffl Oh FII-. fwe57ff?1l1wS1fs bZdi1i 'S'J5:- Vftg5?Q?3'l. i 158 - C. E. 1iILBOURNE,iThG11 at soldier, Full of strange oaths, and bearded like the pard, Jealous in honour, sudden and quick in quarrel, . Seeking the bubble reputation even in the cannon's mouth. R. D. BOHANNON,-'With mirth and laughter let old Wrinkles come. ' D. S. IQELLICOTT,-BQELTCI was 'never a true standard of brains. C. N. BRONVN,-A dark proud man he Was. B. LUCY BOWEN,--As melancholy as a Quaker meeting-house by moonlight. E. A. EGGERS,- The bull dog will 'not allow himself to be teased. G. B. KAUFFMAN,-There was also a Doctor of Physik In all this World ne was ther now him lyk To s ieke of hvsik and of sur 'er fe. l P . J AMES C1-IALMERS,-He had a face like a Catholic priest. G. YV. MCCOARD,-The Sabbath dawns upon the poor student burdened with the thought of the Hunk of the morrow. F. VV. SPERR,-A man of yinegar aspect. D J . N. BRADFORD,-WVltl1OUt theskill of moving gracefully. J. T. WHITNEY,-A braying ass Did sing most loud and clear. A F. KEEPER,-He is so thin he would have to pass a spot tivicc to make a shadow. f 1 Alfr ' I 'I I f .lffff . l 121231451515 5 f W - H ,244naiu!f4!'1fM1ffl ' W lj!! '4Qs4ig:f?,ifg!g .harm A wifi 4 'f 'f ': E I -1111-1' tg ,, 7 ,l ,,,,nmh,1 I '1YIT7?T1'ii. -A-It 'lf iQJ,T,- ,uf',m.f'fZ In . U ' l'- Milt' 'I' H lp NV nu I xtftqsre meber clllnbwl ihe NFEUCELH 161 FACULTY. il- WHAT TARGETS THESE MORTALS BE! XV. H. ScoTT,-They that stand high have many blasts to shake them. EDWARD ORTON,-A sweeter and a lovlier gentleman Framed in the prodigahty of nature The spacious World cannot again afford. S. A. NORTON,--A gentleman who loves to hear himself talk. N. S. TONVNSHEND,-Qll good gray head 'Which all men know. S. VV. RoBINsoN,--As dry as the clerk of at lime-kiln. N. W. LORD,-Of all bad things by which mankind are cursed Their own bad tempers surely are the Worst. S. C. DERBY,--And of his port as meke as is a mayde He was a veray parlit gentil knight W. R. LAZENBY --Full ivell they laughed with counterfeited glee, - T , At all his jokes, for many a joke had he. 7 J. R.. SDIITH,-Wlldt a spendthrift he is of his tongue. H. A. VVEBER,-As big as what boys dream of when they're too fat to snore. B. F. THOMAS,--Oh he is tedious as a railing Wife 5 Worse than a smoky house. I had rather live on cheese and garlic in a wind-mill than feed on cakes and listen to him. J. W. QUEEN,-Ye gods, how We do miss that beard of thine. H . J. DETMERs,-For he by geometric scale could take the size of pots of ale. 5' If QB ,Mo 1 i ' V.. , X Q. Jr iff, ' . I fs- 5 ', WMAYWM,emfmmeeaff ' U17 X:XT - L' ve .M U'TT' 'fQf W,!D Pu lun X :-- '-is t 'Rees 6 ut K- I I 51116 Fadalilo Lev-1 '-2: A 160 FEICH'1',-13211106 ?, 'Didlyousay dance ? Fox,-Not all the pumice of the college town Can smooth the roughness of the barnyard clown. GRIMSLEY,-lVOl1lCl that the gods had made me poetical. HELLER,-Go poor devil get thee gone. Why should I hurt thee? JoNEs,-MAKIO, LiARGE,-WhEtt7S in a name? LAUGHIJIN,-MAKIO. MERSHON,-Wl1OS6 deep conceit is such as passing all concep- tion needs no defense. MITCHELL,-M5f master is of curlish disposition. Miss MOODIE,-She hath a natural Wise sincerity, i A 'simple truthfulness and these have lent her A dignity as moveless as the center. MoRREY,-How with giant's might He heaves the pondrous thought. Miss NEEDLES,-Her hair is not more sunny than her heart. RITCHEY,-A solemn youth with sober phiz. -Miss SCOTT,-A maid who vvas lovely to soul and to eye. ' SKINNER,-He blushed, Oh how he blushed. ' SMITH,-I spend much time before my glass. Mrss TALBOT,-Mistress of herself tho, China fall. 4 f fl! ee SGW 1' ' af MIK Sogby College Gn'c'I6 PN In I ' ,X -W1 I --N I -I x ,. 132 . ,?..p. g3:.g5i X --4 'wf: If -f 'IW' . F'-'2.iff5sf5!z ' 7 i - ' 'im i1Z 7e4'l5p 7354 ' gi I. ,' l',Z- me .:...-4 ft , 163 .A. VVILGUS,-I know I am not popular with the students, ' but I have a very high reputation with the faculty. . C. P. SIGERFOOS,-XV hat a strange melancholy life-doth this . creature lead. C. WV. MESLOH,-Pl1lGgl113tlC Dutchman, to himself alone so great. J. R. TAYLOR,-I do the 'igh art fake, I do. I .am nothing 'if not comical. ,...,,..,.., ...-..-. SENIORS. VVe have fought the field together, We have struggled side by side, Broken is the bond that held us- lVe must cut our sticks and slide. ARNOLD,-ThGl16 lies a deal of deviltry 'neath his mild exterior. Miss BAsTERDEs,-Makio. BEACH, R. KK-And slight Sir Robert with his watery smile and educated whisker. BENNETT,-A pretty' fair fellow, barring a few faults. CAYLOR,-Marry sir, they do praise me and make an ass of me. EGBERT,-I am myself, indifferent honest. . Comes in here, having History of Philosophy. f f f 'mf fy ain,mn f rl f X lf!! R632 Q' 'iw' ' ' . if f 'iff W7 -5' 0 .hcfgayf fs 2' X7 nygyflayz 5 , , 1. j- f fm Thar QLQ-5, X ix, I , f K hafta what y, lf in 1 191 ml ,fy ff l ejokyn ei. f ' M rf! ' - t 4 w 162 I o Miss LEMERT,-But since hels gone I feel forlorn, I think all day about him. NIARTIN,-HOW7 calm and dignified. NICCUI,IJOCH,-MAKIO. ' BLOCK,--ThE? course of true love never did run smooth. Miss O7IqANE.--AS meek and pure as doves thou art, Or beings ofthe skies. ?OMERENE,-YG Gods! annihilate but space and time And make two lovers happy. REES,-Ig11OT8th outrage, swearing, Hazards, drink, necotian leaf. Miss RUPPERsBURG,-She dipt in all I That treats of whatsoever is, the state, Electric, chemic laws, and all the rest SIGERFOOS,-This Senior, Junior-giant-dwarf. SMITH,-How much, methinks, I could explain this man VV ere I not bound in charity against it. SURFACE,-Grand-gloomy-and very peculiar. NVHITACRE,-H11Sh, my dear, lie still and slumber. VVOOD,-Rare compound of oddity, frolic and fun. 4 e M-in t .. The Gxtrcxprxil gbqluacl -- N35 JUNIORS. FOOLS ARE MY THEME, LET SATIRE BE MY SONG. Miss BEACH,--SO sweet who oould not fall in love With you. BEAO1-I KY,-He never, no never, was known to say 4' dammf' BOYD,-I haint lived in the Woods to be skeered at owls. I snore. a BURNS,-I pity loashful men. CLARKE,-XVhG11 a man looses his temper and 'aint oool he might as Well hang up his fiddle. COLE,-I loathe that low vioe--Curiosity. DONEY,-Fit for treasons, stratagems and spoils. GALE,-I Want to be a dude and With the dudies stand, A cuff inside my neoktie, a Cane Within my hand. GODDARD,-NOthl11g to light him to heaven but his monu- mental gall. ' JONES,-Oh 'What a useful secret it is to lie to the purpose? KERSHAWV,-Llf97S but a walking shadow. KIESEWETTER,-MAKIO. l- 9tComes in here, having Junior Latin. 'xi . -i f ., X H-Nl '. :A ' N i . ft ' N 1 'f . K! Watched ar Lhe Nlknnfg ournamenh- j Mfflqsc 22 T 164 GUSS,-Is always anxious to prove he is not a goose. I'IATCHER.,-HOW sweet and gracious e'en in common speech Is that fine sense which men call courtesy. HEGLER,-A man I knew who lived upon a smile, A And Well it fed hiing he look'cl plump and fair. NIISS HOUSTON,-dN7l12Lt a splendid place the new lab. porticro will be for a telic-ca-tete, Frank. V JOHNSTON, G. E.,--Plain as a pike staff, sober as a judge. JOHNSTON, H. L.,-MAKIO. iil-EISER,-TOO fresh to keep-too green to eat-throw it away KERSHAW,-As pale and Wan as ashes was his look, His body lean and meagre as a rake. NIARTIN,-I am Sir Oracle, And when I ope my mouth let no dog bark. MILLS,il1111HOCl6St Words admit of no defense, For want of decency is Want oi sense. NIENVV.4HNER,-HG1'G rills of oily eloquence in soft Meanders lubricate the course they take. PHELPS,-My life is a de1n'd horrid grind. POLK,-How long, O Lord! how long '? PRATT,-Drink no longer Water, but use stomach's sake. About six feet. a little wine for 2 ... . ,ff-fly: 'f ,i f'ff 'X d' I T if ' - i f ZW4,f,ff. :f-as-K 7 - f - - QW 1' r ' 'A fp- ff 73 ' 4, -5 .W Il ,. fy V: . . f-fu ' 1:55 g ' If ff Lif--5 MLQV, .v 'F if 175 'gr HRK? , sfilulff ' 1' Q -- 1? ' '41 1 ' Hill 1249- ' ,f-' ' X! -1-4. an 773: 7 1, X' 'iff f A fi 5 .4 wi -16, i-F . My , ,, ff' 'a 527' HYIP Jr. W' ,ff 1 X f f 5 f YJ A 4 jf. ?i!i?f::I5,M5-, I. 4 '31 ' C1 11 Q f 5 Q:5:sssss:qgb ., 1 f pd ', 4 1 of f .,, . f y y . ,L 1 , :M W1 in ff rl' S S f Jgfqjfvf J ' if ' Lf- lj, ' f 'W .rl S ff r i H M: c M , law ,ffl as 211' ' J - , - Uv --K fig Nluao l. '6 MISS L '?., Ofld Chi Krlvwtconfl HST 13 SQPHQMQRES. THEY ARE ONLY SOPHOMORES BUT THEY HAVE LARGE HEA-DS. ALEXANDER,-Young ladies, please don't look at me so, it makes me nervous. ALSDORF,-Thy modesty is a candle to thy merit. BAKER.-1,111 but a stranger here below, Heaven is my home. BROWN,-I love my steed, it is my pride, I always keep it by my side. CHESSFILL,-N2LtL11'G hath framed strange fellows in her time. Miss CLAYPOOLE,-A damsel of high lineage. Cnooics,-Lonely as a catamountg dull as a bachelor beaver. DUNGAN,-ALlV2LHC6d in view he stands a Sophomore of dread- ful length and dangling arms. EVANS, E.,-All the great men are dying, and I don't feel very well myself. - EVANS, P. P.,-Trust not in him who seems a saint. EVANS, IV. L.,-Fools, for argument, use wagers. ' EYLAR,-NVith words of learned length and thundering sound He awed the gaping rustics gathered 'round FISCHER,-Truly an empty subject. FLYNN,-Give my honest Irish lad a chance. GooDELL,-A slothful and listless soldier Debauched by circus and theater. ' 7 GRISXVOLD,-N015 very handsome, but very intellectual. . 1 Q' W '5' J Q if 'IJ U pl I , ' I I El 'I ' 1 M 1 In 4 I 'f 5 ' f ' -I ii- 1 -i I 'WWWLIJUII A ,I imayyrmiiuzwf s we FRESI-IMEN. il SO VERY GREEN THAT COWS WILL MAKE CUD OF THEM BEFORE LONG. BECIC,-AS small as the little end of nothing. BLAoKFoRn,-Oh, praise me not. Lookgently on me or I sink to earth. BEACH, R. Kjk-He neither drinks, smokes, swears or eliews. BLOOBI,-MUSIC hath power to soothe the savage breast. BONE,-A terrible man With a terrible name. Miss BYERS,-Her air, her manners, all who saw admired, Courteous though eoy, gentle though retired. COULTER.---I7111 out of my eradle, I'm safe through my teens 77 I guess Ilm some pumpkins and think I know beans. CoURsAUr.T,--Wouldn't he like to go to bed, , And have a eabbage leaf on his head. DAVIS,-You are quite an enigma. FISH,-WhO swears like a pirate and drinks like a fish. FOSTER,-He implores the passing tribute of a sigh. Miss GALE,-lVOL1lfl my horse had the speed of her tongue. Ginns,-lVould that someone would explain things to nie, really, don't you know, this old World seems so foggy. GIIZSON,-SO111GbO1.l577S darling so young and so bold. iiffomes in lierelhaving Analytic' Geometry. if I WhY Moody went fo Dclowale - fb 1556 the Foot Boll ejome., or muff-Q ' 169 RANE,-fF1'L1l57 a ladiesi pet. RICHARDSON,-I am just as happy as if I had good sense. Miss RoB1NsoN,-As full of twitter as a oanary bird on a peroh. RoY,-I ain a deep soheiner. SCHZEFFER,-Friendship ends Where borrowing begins. SCHUELLER,--The insatiable rage for talking! Mrss SLYH,-VV ho would think she Was a dig, SMITH, J. XV.,-He's a Whole teain and a dog under the Wagon. STINEBAUGH,-liudirt Were trumps, what hands he Would hold. STORER,--Look! I do believe he's awake! TALBOT,-The lady doth protest too inuoh inethinks. TRYON,-He looks as solemn as though a stone Wall lay on his grandmother. W ooDBonNE,-A valiant flea that Would dare eat his breakfast on the lips of a lion. - I M65 CHHW she lost hee' sheep gil land dldn C know where ro find hum za I iff R F245 name was Bwamaf, ond has left the towrb if N Bl-xt l'1e'l6'ft. his address behind him , mf - . - . 'Fig 1 ' ' rggfiiarzf 7 168 KIRK,-As serious as a White mouse in a wire trap. LEVERING,-A fellow Who has no tongue is often all eyes and ears. - LINCOLN,-He stands the shadow of a mighty name. lV.CCARTER,-HOWX' long, O Lord, how long. MEEK,-Had he wings held not be an angel but a goose. HIP' iiss MERRILIJ,-Oh, how I love to dance. MORRISON,-NOt to know me argues yourself unknown. MOYER,-A Would-be funny man. MULIJAY,-HlS hat fell off and bent his ear . His naine was Pat Mullay. 7 Miss NIULLIGAN,-GT3ClOUS was her bearing. MYERS,-DOH7t kill the birds, the pretty birds. PALMER,-1121! Ha! Keep time. How sour sweet niusie is WVhen time is broke and no proportion kept. PEDLOWV,-Wllitt is it? Solid, liquid or gas ? PETERs,- You are too shallow, inueh too shallow. PUGH,-None but thyself ean be thy parallel. PURDAM,-I'1n a inasher, am. RoBINsoN,-My quaint habits breed astonishment. RUTrkN,-F1'CSlil as a bridegrooni, and his ehin new reaped Showed like a stubble-field at harvest home. SANDERSON,+lf l ean't pay l ean owe. SCOTT,-A. youth to fame ere yet to manhood know. 3.1 ' 111111111 11111111111111111111111!l1111111111111111111111111 11W11111111111111,. . 'dif f-91 ' ' ' T ' J- J what wo 1:he'T -ce-'f-Vxl0.P'- l ,Hlcx1'2me'g night' Pad, Uffcowsei 171 GRAVES -Onl I to fill u S ace. I 3 MISS GUERIN,-FOXGS are all tails, woinen all tongue. GUITTARD,-A11 unforgiving eye and disinteresting counte- nance. HAMILTON,-Swans Sing before they dieg 'twere no. bad thing did certain persons die before they Sing. HASSLER,-The tartness of his face Sours wild grapes. MISS I'IERTIIHY,-A Inaiden withering on the stalk.. . MISS HERRICK.-She had with all her merit . A great opinion of her own good qualities. MISS HESS,-An Airy Fairy Lilian. MISS HOEL,-Like Proserpine, gathering flowersg . herself a fairer flower. HUTCHINSON,-AQODEV unmixed-incessant gall. INNIS,-I am just as happy as if I had-good sense. JOHNSTON, G. E.,-Oh ye gods! how I hate to hear him sing. KENNEDY,-The more you speak of yourself the more you are . likely to lie. I I MISS IQRAUSS,--Al2LCk : there lies more peril in thine eyes Than twenty of their swords. IQILIIEFFER,-HG would a butcher be. I 'J -:ie- fl T1 ,Il I Ill YI, ll' W . -593- f, Jw i rll' - S ' H du lle as Th? coxlv5U in this giclee, The qlrls 'um pecl over 'tile creek: fxrnd inseam gboefes laughed 'Fgv 'sdiezxsjlillvxpeaclvobotb -fbi' and qscfadff I.'n5l, 3 1 I l lf ,MW fffzffffffff ' I . l 'W'-f'fu f1 - f ' ' ' - - ve- - Q, u ' . ,f 3 - ' -o- ii. 'E ll .. 170 BENBOW,-Aye, in the catalogue he passes for a man. THE BAND,-This music mads me! H Let it sound no more. CAMPBELL,---Clf what avail are pedigree or to derive one's blood . from a long train of lofty ancestors. Miss CLAYPooLE,-The sweetest garland to the sweetest maid. COCKLE,-If I chance to talk a little While forgive me. l had it from my father. Miss COPE,-+Give a wide berth to long-haired men and short- ! V haired women. DUNLAP,-I am giddy-expectation whirls me round. Miss DOUGLAS,-S11l1DS and cranks and wanton wiles, V Nods and becks and wreathed smiles. Miss DERBY,-A sweet, timid young girl. DEAR,DURFF,--7TlS a great thing to be a man. DAILY,-And daily it became more numerous. ZDUNHAM,--SC-3lClOI11 he smiles, and smiles in such a sort, As if he mock'd himself, and scorned his spirit, That could be moved to smile at anything. FARBER,-U De young rooster dat crow too loud is.'lectioneerin' ' ' 77 Q fer a l1Cli1117.c M1ssEs FLYNN,- Git out wid ye? FLEMMING,-rqlld leaning back he yawned and fell asleep. Miss GARBER,-How apt and sharp her answers too. HAMILTON,-A barber never yet has mowed my chin. ff gps f',..ff fn E JM, X F! ,kg-,43 1 - .x IIA f- f-5 -s -f f 9321 . 'L 1 1 1 . 13am-f', 71' gets- 1: ii: 31,5121-:ii .f ,J - y 1, hy fi 5:41:25-55:2 f' L12 i. . 4, ' -jr? 2'- 1 -sf ' ,. - fr. , ef:-M ., - N . . - v:,..q'-: 5 - ., -L , A ...---- -- ' Q ?:' . - K . ' . x fnaifgf, fl, XiYV'Pxui's mo-3l1 'Wlt-org, 173 SHEPHERD,-He has a patent on his smile. STORER,-Obstinacy is like red hairg there is no cure for it but to die. ' Swiokrinn,-A Christian is the highest style of man. TALBoT,-Young-valiant and wise. THoMPsoN,-Makio. XVESTON,--SOHIG men have so little backbone that you might as Well try to stand an angle Worm up on end. lVILLIAMS,iI11 moody meditation sunk, Reflectin ' on in f,fllJBu1'G Hunk. , . D , Miss XV R1efHT,-Here is a spirit deep and crystal clear, Calmly beneath her harvest face its lies. WRIGHT,--Siiblime tobacco I , ANYBODY AND ANYTHING. THE BEST IN THIS KIND ARE BUT sHAoovvs. ABBE,--He never says anything, but will listen forever. BARRERE,--A fool of the third story. BEACH QR. Kfk-He struck me as much like a steam engine in trousers. BRUSH,-A still small voice. l31eNNE'rT, TOMMY,-A promiscuous seeker of K. Ms. ..ill. -. I i55Comes in here having 2nd prep. Physics. -f ,Ml ' - ' ' if 3177117 1 N - Eiga, UIQ? n'.?r'f, 4-1 4 - -X . :QQ---1' ,ul 'w , K- i Q- as 55:'24,lg,,'lsl'.1L'61 fy -f '14'v. ..f5'lXlk:lltldlll f ,4Qwi::g-m:f,.:f4:,Wt H1 4 ,1fm:fp26 f.iQ:!?4.?Pl9i5'1. :QW I ,-fc - f 51ff2.11 i1 .l -44 , fi! iii- 52 L NTI., K 1 I ji- x I Y 'Hp th 1 X. . mfr., fy E Tw-H + T q -4 ', D A -,,1w,,Vl.' .,, 1 nl A ' 92- 'Rm' A Qi-. - -,..- - ..-1100--' vs V- l - 5 , mf. EH- '- 'ff- -C'04r- Popular Bathing .- RGSOVU 172 PONVELL,-I a1n monarch of all I survey-my right there is none to dispute. MILLER, TED,-A damned saint, an honorable villian. RHETOR,ICAL CLASS,-WG damn forever this book of small size and huge depravity. SMITH, A. T.,-But I confess I That I am fond of' girls g I really am. STONE,-Joyous he sits, with thick and curling clouds Puffs away care and sorrow from his heart. Miss STRICKLER.,-Giddy and volatile. WIALKER,-N2LtL11'6 seldom makes a. fool-she simply furnishes ' I the raw material and lets the fellow finish the job to suit himself. WALSH,-HQ1'Q,S a large mouth indeed. SERVA,-It's Oirish I am, shure! BEReER,+You've heard of Cal. Brice haven't you? He's my uncle. TAYLOR, W.,-Got aIIy gum? I want to load up. MARTIN,-SOm6 men are born with houses and some with scrip I and land, Some are born with a silver spoon a1Id some with a different brand 5 , But Johnny ,came holding an argument in each hand. OSTER,-Behold! his breakfasts shine with reputation, His dinners are the wonder of the nation. MISS SESSIONS,---AS outspoken as a north-Wester. :iii 'ff I X- 1' iiiifi' E-2:22 llli-lu 4, - 115625, f . I 7 limi f eff.. Ig . If 'H in eww if '-iigfylmm.-.?f1ul,, f lu' XXI,tiv1,,-giliei ' , 'QEQQIWM lnaitjmzsyq' ,Qty ' f 51:1-5 'l '7 '7'-J.g,g:'1- , - 15:61 fZiE u.w' 23- '?. '. '.,3Q:5:, This is c- Library Alwve: 'These am'xEn heh C uudenn: 'Theyorg studlfmq Romance SEE 'Q' 175 MISS HENDERSON,-Ill hope of contradiction, oft wilt say, Methinks,I look most horribly to-day. I-IUGG1NS,-Fantastic, froliosome and Wild, Witli all the triokets of a child. MISS HiATCHER.,1H2l11g it! how I like to be liked and What I . do to be liked. I HONVARD,--It iS as if oraoked. IHAGLER,-VVl12Lt iS it ? for heaven's sake what iS it? HECHLER,-A hapless infant here I roam I'm further from heaven here than at home. MISS KELLIooTT,--Now the Summer days are coming Gertrude K. iS full of Woes, - For the price of every Walk Is five new freckles on her nose. KUHN,-Ponder on thy radiant hair. M Miss LAMME,-Fie, I swear her oolor is natural for I have Seen it oome and go. Loonnns,-Good stuff 1na.y be made ofa Sootohman if taken in time. MASON,-A fatted calf. I MIXKIO,-A book's a book although there's nothing in it. MAIQIO EDITORS,-A chief 'S among ye takin' notes, And, faith, he'll print it. MCALLEN,-My lofty head shall strike the stars. I - 1 fm' Fr,-Q 0 . .,, . I M' 'We-1 ' r,i...,.. I.. . A ' X X X R W 'Q I W W5 y X 1 M64 ii up ffllik ' it Li , 4IP Z f- ' f a f i Qh mlllu' I ' QW' Ball CPipPleS. ' 'l74. HUCQGINS.--44 Fi-fo-fum, I smell the blood of an Englislnnanf' liiGI1ll1Ul1IISIIaiUi1i tin lmluiuaielles C1GAR15'r'rE SMOKERS who are willing to pav a little more than the price charged for' 1 the ordinary Trade Cigarettes, will find THIS BRAND superior . to all others. The Richmond Straight Cut No. 1 Cigarettes I tw ! Cately iiavoreil' and highest cost Gomp LEAF grown in Virginia. This is the 01,11 AND ORIGINAL 'BRAND OF STRAIGIIT C'U'1' Cigarettes, and was brought out by us in the year 1875. BEWARE OF INIITATEONS, IVIANUFACTU RE RS, and observe that the F IRM NAME as below RICHMOND, VIRGINIA. 15 OU QVQVY Package' J0 IIN SIEBER T, ISAAC EBERL Y, EMIL IKIESEWETTER, ' President. Vice President. ' Cf!-S1Lff'1' THE 244 South High Strfeet, -GOLIUIVIBUS, OHIO. Pays Interest on Savings Deposits, and does a General Banking Business A Issues Drafts and Letters of Credit payable anywhere in the world. Staplezano :jane z rocer, No. 267 SOUTH HIGH STREET, TELEPHONE 575. 0' E, B. MCCARTER.--'4 How long, O Lord, how longf' are made from the brielitest most deli- Ux ...--7 A --- dpfi- 'x I 1- ' f X X 'IV fy fx F , Q 1 ZXMWW - 'Xpl- V 09 7 LLENLQ :fy i fllr . . 51-wh N 'Ut ' I O R iv TIE F X 0 I 0 9 nil! 1 O U' In U' F fi BEIITII.-I SCo'I r.--U XVIIGH I get 21 good chance I am going to get 111a1'1'ied. Many people wonder what P. D. means. It means PHOTOGRAPHY-QONE QUIQKIIY. The P. . Q. Camera, - JUST QUT. THQ LZLICSL IIIIIIIGOIISIUGIII IH DGLGCIIYC CZUIIGTZIS. ....-----rs-:runner . f ' Takes Plctures A-IX5 11101165 111 SIZE 63.-Eg,.f6 .,I:.i,I.4..-' II:Il .--, .ve-5'-k-.s-Wil, ...Ie--e.,,lgI:.,.,... ,ggI.I..-miwmldmhrmgpvg I -wer ,.,. 1.fmt?1I21.1i.a:I.tI-if5.1.57-5V-'V Yfqgggzgwirggggag . . , .. 5 'E 3 ' . . F: WIFE- -!'E,- . '-' as s. 1 62.542 'Z. sussiiltf' ELEEPP- ' e1ther vertically or horizontally. L CAN BE USED WITH EITHER FILMS -' - 3 on PLATES. his ' ff lzafn I Protected by Ffour Patents and another 'fi efgffyzllfm-s2.9g 5--11 ir, .,. ,. ff ' I E ' .,'1g' A' L -' -,yi .5 ,. yr' 'r:':':5- 1: .n.'.f:q. --,', . .75 vi I ' henduw. -. I'-:er :ve .' .- : . I D 4245-1 'I -' Handsomely covered with black grained leather, and fitted with fine combination instantaneous achromatic landscape lens,with patent double dry plate or film holder. PRICE, COMPLETE, ONLY 820. E. 81. H. T. ANTHONY 81. CO., Manufacturers, 591 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. 17 Years established in this line of business. IVIIITACRE.--H Hush, my dear, lie still and slumber-'I . VV A L L I S, AND SPECIALIST IN THE ADJUSTMENT OF , LENSES TO ASSIST VISIGN, I II I' i ' I .f , 99 NORTI-I I-IIGI-I STREET, , CWESLEY ELocK,J CQLUMBUS, QI-HO. X -.1. Examinations ot the Eye Made Without Charge. .ft E.- 'iiiii 'iii We measure the Eye in a manner peculiar to ourselves. with appa- K ratus of our own invention and manufacture. and can assure better i results than can be attained by any other methods. K Sutterers from weak or failing sight are invited to consult us. X ssxx N' Q ' TELEPHONE 973- C. S. PRATT.-- I come home late 'o nights. . A - 1 PROF. THOMAS.- The bell stmkes one, 'We take no note, of tune. ' O U C 'Q1Ile.seII jfine ano Ctbeap Stationery, Evoealeo eell Epaloing ano 1Reacbee' Eportinga Gooos. we llbaper or fresco 5ocietQ1Room9, ano keep llbapere of 3Hckil1b5. GOING 8115 566 U5 Ht 613 and 615 North High Street. ISAAC o ASTON W. C. WHITEHEAD, A SEETH HAYES, Gltmagtj Ebatctz, FIV? ll7SUV2l7G2. PATASKALA, O. ' 58 BAOARD OF TRADE. Permit 268. . E. Telephone 1174 MzXY HATCHER.-- Ubi mel, ibi apis. . T I-I E Home Made Bakerfy I-las Removed to No. 7 EHST IJONG STREET, Where they will continue to carry a iine line of LGZAKNIDUIEESE, lBIEi LIZZA E, 53101-ElSlEtS,, tPUiEtS,, lE'il'E'3e as they have been known to carry in the past. A WEDDING CAKES A SPECIALTY. ESTABLISHED 1850. TELEPHONE 4:97, J. R. HUGHES 62 CSO., Erunlae. Eraveling Bags, Etc. SALESROOM:-No. 36 NORTH HIGH STREET, E T EGOIJUMBUS, OHIO. R. K- BEACH'-H118 never, no never, Was known to say damn, ali' The 5. D Ill? TNQ! Q . It Q is Well Paid! when is well Satisfied. Messe Y YOUR SHOES QFQN .B BELL, +eNiclie1Pla'ce Shoe OUSG,-se Largest Stock in the City to select from. Prices Low Consistent with uality. CALL AND BE CCNVINCED, 99 T. High Street, Wesleg Block. And the next day it mined. ' .' .1'L ,1:,.w:-'fm' 1 -n-1-fn' v- ' ' -' ,. .1 . E VAA- JI., .3 L Aw 1 H Z , 1 - '.2fA '-'1Q'Q1'5. 2' 1 f-f-5,2 ',g ,.-, 3 1 , 1 V jfj',6,.g-? 5 't, In f'i'f f Y: left gl -V :.z', tif' 1' '.-' f fu ' gs? 'Q jstgii' I ef A 2 . ' Y QIVHS: Zlfl ' ' flff' - -: ' ' w :nl qw..-R'. 1, ', , 1 ' ' , I A,. ,. .,,. - ,- ,, . r ' 1 I it ' I I I 1 1 'N 5 . -fi.: 1-.-L1 ' . , - VVS ,gb f N 4 - : ., rl, , Q .zfdf xv ' . ,ps .-. . Y. .-,., , ,5 may lylvl ,Aix , Z-'Wai : -'H r gb , as P' 3 Q iw tu, K TAX , yi .W I H .I , .C V V, I 1 l 1 I v , 1 ' f xx we ' f- ft ' ' f '24 , F: 4 ' in . 4 64 If N-.t 1 , 4 K .2 ' ' . 1 X 'Q' J' '. , ' Y. 1, ni' ' A fl fd . X ,X 1 f 1 Q41? H, .rf,:,g, , 4 ' U' -3- V. Ljcwi 4, V 1 , W H I ,v1w+ 1 W . ' 1 ' r 1 I y 1 .- L ,:. . . '1 1.3-Q-'aj . . , 1 , . n.- 'r1':rr. -1 ng :' -' 1- 'fy --::,- Q ' 1 - - - .H li' ' 5041, 4' I . 1- y ,iz-7 i ,I 1 n 1 I v ' H I X , 1 nn r , . ,K M L A I fi LU' f K ' 'L ' ' A I In I.: 0, . ' , H '5 1, v ' ,. v , -233, 'nan 1 Lg :lm .,., 5 5.1 , -A , ,1- -H-V, '- ffm . ,yu 5--i ? 1.5, . - . ,, ' fag 'Ai' .':' . .' fm, f Hb., -1. 1 .. . pw-IH' wg-F-f'-rn-N - -. -.... 1. w., ,- . f' --1 ,vp V. , ..- .1 1, 1 , ..f tg, ,L , l,l.'.:l 1 we-,4 A - : ,I ,if5j.,1,.: .,',,.,f.-5 1 ..' . .13 1. . PJ ,555 .365 1251.-.. s UM!Jfz's-Q5 fp, pg ' - - w. ' 55,2 'A ' , ' MH?-' ..,,lyQ ' 4'.'w1 fYfL-.z:p.z -sf' .fist-:ij lfif. 719. .' A , .,1,'-ji, VET. .J 5 int- ,uY1:,,3-1-rg, :HL-. -.4 + 1. -K4 JJ- ,x g l ' - - -1 1 if R -.1..,'.,., ..1,' H ' . 1- . 1 ' ' --.:, 1.' -mwhf Vs' -4- -4- Nr' Y .1 - 1 , . . --..- ',-.,: H 15' .. 'H' n 1- f- . 1, A- .' -sw -4: .- - , ,1,i',., is ,: .K ,f.,..,t,,vw.w . , -. 5 mln.. XJ .- . , I. 1 . , - ' - igi4 'AL , -- in . V , ,,,,Y -'-'- '- t Ns ,,- I, . + Y, A LE s 1. Y sf?-u The Picmeer Qompany Of cJDA1fHQI'iC6i. Y , ORGANIZED 1866. N 'V f J , i . 6 OQQPETEAKBOQG N . K , ' f fmn mi N A iz-.. . aa , ,z.,..Wf--A 1Insurance against loss or Damage to llbropertgg anb Ioaa of life anb injury to persona Causeb bg Steam JBoiIer Egploaions. I. M. ALLEN, President. I. B. PIERCE, Secretary. W. B. FRANKLIN, V. Pres't. ' F. B. ALLEN, Sup. Gen. Ag't. Columbus Medical College, a school of Medicine and Surgery, founded in 1875. Nineteen Professors and instructors. Thorough clinical and laboratory instructiong Hawkes Hospital, owned and controlled by the y College, is provided with commodious amphitheatre, and every facility for clinical demonstration. , if The next term opens September gd, 1890, and closes March 5th, 1891. For catalogue and other information, address, DR. D. N. KINSMAN, Dam, 215 E. Town Street. or DR. M. DUNHAM, Scajf. 222 E. Town Street. , 1 . , , ,, .,,,,..1.....-2 4 - -1-A--LT -' 'Y - . g e - K Q 77 Domi. GINGER SNAP.-U Hard as the nether millstone- or' ' A ' . ' i ,A iyivergity -1- g Wiylforfns The f Millerzlherqbant fllailoring Q Q. 3,551 South High Sires. Telephone 7658 Seasonable Cocos. Satisfaction CBuaranteeo SPECIHLK RHTES TO STUDENTS. j. P. MILLER, MANAGER, COLUMBUS, Ol-llO. .lon NonLE.-- Did Ooluinlous Win ? WEBSTERAS UNA REDGED wiisrfpa TH f W 0fv,4an1aof- f-97ff,f,',gfW7 W 01o7'10M4 1 if ' . 5 , 7 X i HQ Fil' 0 r EEST A f 1' any 1 lm- ff , Besides many other valuable features, itcomprises A Dictionary of the Language containing 118,000 Words and 3000 Engravings, A Dictionary of Biography giving facts about nearly 10,000 NotediPersons, A Dictionary of Geography locating and brieliy describing 25,000 Places, A Dictionary of Fiction found only in Webster's Unabridged, All in One Book. Webster excels in SYNONYMS which are appro- priately found in the body of the work. It is an invaluable companion in every School, and at every Fireside. IT IS THE STANDARD A111 hority in The Government Printing Cffice, and with the United States Supreme Court. ' Recommended by the State Supt's Schools of 36 States, and by Over Fifty College Presidents. For supplying Schools, Every State Purchase has been of Webster. The London Times of England, Says: It is the best Dictionary of the language. Hon. Geo. Bancroft, the Historian, Says: It is superior to all others. Toronto Globe, Canada, says: Its place is in the very highest rank. Similar testimonials have been given by hundreds of the best American and European Scholars. GET THE BEST. The work now has 3000 more Words and nearly 2000 more Illustrations than found in any other American Dictionary. Sold by all Booksellers. Illustrated Pamphlet free. , Published by G. 85 C. MERRIAM 8a CO., Springfield, Mass., U. S. A. , 9 , --T:,,:.h.s . . K . K l'MM.- ,NVI1 it tonne we hut, to clollt ge foi 3 lt 17lliV ind h wc 1 time I: in 2 A x A-.A , Ac, 18,7 I' gg!! . 7, J 2.2 2 li 2. 1 P RANKLIN RUBBER Co., Rubber H Goods H of H Every H Description. . FULL LINE OF GENTS' MCINTUSH AND RUBBER COATS. No. 148 North High Strfeet, CODUIDBUS, OHIO. Miss B1uf:Y1voG1,1c.- There are feminine inen--there are masculine WOIIIOILH .ssafi5::: ' r ,P 1 ..:a..,:1:. 1f . ,,,, 'Af1 - l -aa A ..... V - - :. f A -5. l.'.':E!l.l fl-1 L N . -os . mm ' L gll'l'n-lt 'libs' r'llm1m1HlElliHl4 ' El1 .m -4 r M. II l 9 - ll' J ,W 1' , ---r- lm :umm ,,, ' ,H El, l m Ml t l fl 15 lilllllH.l1lfl'llMlllll'll Ei l i :Xl-I H f g iS'?f K' ll l m . ta- V -ll ll 'rf7lJ ll -f5'!T l'2' -- ,mm , lf. . A Nu M' S l nllli lll 'Xl l. . 'rl L l:url'iJ -4- ' il I ' - 'dlp ' u nn ii a, ll -?-5:5 1'5.'EES 2 F lt, . l:'g:', ,.l,, l. ,L :I f iwussmuv- Ly . . I A -W ,M 1 I 4 fl 51 W ,,l Hllwlf. 1. . LSI!! 'Jlf'lW 'll' A 'l' '- .' -. .K f 's l ' r::Ltf1lf.y1-2 4--x W, . - V. N. l 1 5,5 , Q, e p, ,- , . :QI X'--V1 I ll -E - G eri? 5.2! -M Eg iw-:tially 7'1 ...'ii l' 5595 ? f:'iYg 'Y-TE E 1 if 2-is-'W - e?5ea ,a'?fgl'31-ff if 5- I I . L ly!-ii egnt Rfzs fa, W wf 'Q,fe,fs - 552 Ebisfw - 'isa'-:Egan-.Q 2,-Q -+- -'Way L: f ,fg,..,l.l if-we-f vm.. -.. f ' ' 4 2 - 4?Affi?a?9?a ,. Ei .m9p1feC t E .--QPARK I-IOTEL,m.., H. KAUFFMAN, PRoPR1EToR. NoRTH or UN1oN Dsror, COLUMBUS,--OHIO. ENGYGDOPZEDIA BRITANNIGA. For 120 years, running through the various editions, this has universally been aeknowledgrecl the Standard Encylcopaedia of the worlfl, but the prieo, from iHil24.00 to 35240.00 per set, has kept it beyond the reach of those of inorlerate means. Now, however, upon the completion of the ninth and latest edition, it has been reprinted, page for page, and word for worfl, with all the niaps, illustrations, and indexes, and is otlered in the full number of 25 volumes, eaeh guaranteed more strongly and durably hound than those in any of the higher priced editions, for . p h ,,, - O N L Y SB 5 6 . 0 O , on terms of easy payment, so easy as to place it within the reavh of all. The sole agency for IECCJLEJLIJAXID 85 CZCD., Columbus is with 131 N, HIGH STREET, Con. OF LONG STRE ET. TTPIEE ravelers OF HARTFORD, CONN., ' IS THE O' l largest Eccibent Gompamq 1121 T1-15 I wonnra, ONLY LARGHEONOE IN ANlERlCA.. 7 BEST QF LIFE QQMPANIES. Noother Life Policies as liberal cost as littlemoney, no others as cheap give aslmuch for. the money. Assets, s11,52a,649.3o Surfplus, s2,365,534.o6 Paid Polieye-I-loldevse 9,511,500,000 in 1889. ' ' was 'p f-' f f fs- 4 u a.. -5 R. O. MORRISON'-c4H6l1O, Goldy ! 7' ' 1 i ECLlPSE -MONTAUK-SEABRIGHT SPECIAL- and CASINO RACKETS for 1890 are unsurpassed Send for Tennis Catalogue. Special Rates to Clubs. Use KINNEARRS PATENT STEEL CEELIIQIG fm- public- E buildingss It has UUVCI' fzmilvcl to nmuul ull wqmlim-lxwlmts. n nu nu l I V P l ' l1' l'l'l l ! '5' f il5E55 W 'U lMll.lll 3593? O l l lllllllllllllUHHHIWill!!!HlllllllllHH!WI1lllilllllllllllslilalllllllll-s 5 5 Ei 5 ' UQLQQ 5 '11 W' . s' ' If Q l ff i l ,77Z'J s?i'E2l' I .5 C3 ? ,.l- f f Sl?-l 1, 1 'r O 5 :D il N1 ll ll 1,1 I!ll,IJIIIllIQlqllmlleuiWifi!!Qllaialgala2li5fllalfaallae1l2QQ?Qfia11faf2gl!za?5llggi ll l pn H fn If , gl up :Mmmgl1lleEglfaeifwnglsltflil5lg1llullllizlfflie2P2llwimSliilliillfll, T5 W W' li l ll !!I1fllIiu'lflIli:,H:l,.1I,,,,,'','Anfl-,',-. lf.'1 '! Fg Arla l 'ff l Q ' 4 i N' l I. E, wwf1?'fh:5,I'l''f1'llf3'J1flEfFiifillllfiQviff'.?e:l55E!E!2Ti'ffiii?i2l5e53'f,f'fifilI , V 1 ' I lif t ll Ulu HMI,Hnl.,1mlzll1mllllHlllflllilllillillluzalilillllilllfliilalfZl3lez5lllQl11QE:fllsszffllsllllilllizllllila1ll.lfx all , 9 Selections of CQ25lQlGP7Z 'Poems CALL OR ADDRESS SMYT1-1 E73 BUCK ETORE, COLUMBUS, QI-IIC. lNI1c1asnoN.--K' All uddle-patefl ass? 'N , . , --- -11... .J:.,. , ...-...vw-. L.. ,....- .M -.... 1 '-f 1' W' - --.n-,,,1mf.-...f Y - .f....- , -W L , 2 5 F' 'li 2 ked a if 9 9: 251 .,, S I 3 3: U FY gi.: if 2. t . ' -. e f- fi 5' iz' ,' -1, -' ., .4 . - , 4-TNF 'T i .' 'E f , . Prepared according to the directions of Prof. E. Hoi-zsifonn. This preparation is a brain food. lt increases the capacity for mental labor, and acts as a general tonic and vitalizer. lt rests the tired brain, and imparts thereto new life and energy. Dr. C. P. McClure, Rantaul, Ill., says: Very beneficial to strengthen. the intellect. Dr. 0. C. Stout, Syracuse, N. Y., says: I gave it to one patient who was unable to transact the most ordinary business, because his brain was tt tired and con- fused '7 upon the least mental exertion. Immediate benefit, and ultimate recovery followed. Dr. Chas. T. Mitchell, Canandaigua, N. Y., says: i Nl recommend it as a restorative in, all cases where the nervous system has been reduced below the normal standard by overwork, as found in brain workers, professional men, teachers, students, etcfl Dr. F. W. Lytle, Lebanon, Ill., says: I have personally used it with marked advantage when overworked, and the nervous system much depressedfl Dr. E. W. Robertson, Cleveland, O., says: H Can cordially recommend it as a brain and nerve tonief' Descriptive pamphlet free on application to Rurnforfd Chemical Works, Providence, R. l. Beware of Substitutes and Imitations. CAUTION.-Be sure the word 4' I'I0RSl+'0RD,S,7 is 1JRIN'l lCD on the label. All others are spurious. Never sold in bulk, The Qolumbus Buqgqy Qc. CQLUMBUS, or-110, MANUFACTURERS OF Buggies, llbbaetons, Surrevpe, 5-:-NA e NA-2.-Q' Gabriolets, lDictorias, Etc. R 2 fx e -'W No. 37 4'V.xss.x1:', Ilmfrzmz Imuv I'H1i'l'- AJ. we make time firstfclass vehicles Suiteb to everxg climate. wut faciIitie5 are unequalebg our faetorxp is the largest anb best equippeb in the worlb for the mmmufacture of fpleasure carriage5. BRANCH HOUSES: CHICAGO, ILL. DICTI-IOIT. mm. v1xcf1xx.x'r1. fp. KANSAS cf1'rx', no. mx l-'HANif'ISf'4J. cam, W1'1'ff3 for our frlfdff lflfzsfmfwf Cafu!Qg'1fu. TSHIKAWA - A Japanese young man, a matter of fact young man. TH ' bio State Ulniveraitxg, CEOILIWDLIE. Q--Q-0-I-0 . AS thirty-two professors and other instructors, who conduct twenty-two departments. It offers ten courses of study leading to degrees. Three are general, leading to degrees in Arts, Philosophy and Science 3 and seven are technical, leading to degrees in Agriculture, Veterinary Medicine, Pharmacy, Civil Engineering, Mechanical Engineering, and Engineer of Mines. The degree of Mechanical Engineer is given at the end of two courses, 'Mechanical Engineering and Electrical Engineering. Besides these, there are three courses of two years each-the general Preparatory course, the Short course in Agriculture, and the short course in Mining. The collections and laboratories are extensive, and well adapted for practical and efficient work. A new building has been erected during the past year for the departments of Gen- eral Chemistry, Agricultural Chemistry, Mining and lvletallurgy and another building for Electrical Engineering. - The Library contains over 9,000 volumes of valuable ma- terial, selected with special reference to the wants of the University. . The expense of attendance is moderate. Facilities are offered by which many students are able to reduce the cost of board to a minimum. Employment is also given to a con- siderable number. , Catalogues will be sent on application. T 7 I I Miss LENTZ.-H Now' this is what I call a gal-ez pretty and plump as a quail, eyes that snap like a cap, and peart as a Katy did
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