Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH)

 - Class of 1911

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Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1911 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1911 volume:

mm $rinh5tune 1 9 1 o AN ANNUAL PUBLICATION OF $erman Wallace Giullege BEREA, OHIO EDITED AND MANAGED BY 715112 1111315525 ut 1910 ant 1911 DR. VICTOR WILKER Echitatmn To the man who is a lover of humanity, a neighbor to his neighbors, a friend to his friends. and above all, as we have ever known him and will forever love and cherish him, a father to the students, a man whose every virtue is goodness, to iBmtesgur Milka we affectionately dedicate this book The Board of Trustees First Class-Term expires 1910 Rev. A I. Nasl. D. D .................................................... Cincinnati. Ohio Rev. J A. Mulfingcr ..................................................... .Chicago, Ill Rev. W. Gicsrcgcn ........ .p ............................................. Brooklyn, N. Y. 6'. J. Kalmbach ..................................................... Grand Rapids, Mich. W. A. R. Bruhl ..HAU.,,U,...A...,.Uh.........u..........AHUNDCnvingtOn, Ky. John W'ahl mt largd ................................................. Cleveland, Ohio John Schneider, Bereanerbund, Central German Confercncc ............... Columbus, Ohio Second Class-Term expires 1911 Rev. G. Hiller ........................................................... Boonville, Ind. Rev. joseph Kern ........................................................... Berna, Ohio Rev. J. W. Huber ................... .............. . ........... . ......... Leuisvillc, Ky. John Faupel ............................................................ Baltimore. Md. G. 11. Kuechenmcistcr ................................................. W'cst Bend, W'is. C. F. Zipperich UM largw .................................................. Chicago, Ill. Rev. H. J. Peters, Bcreanerbund, ChiCago German Conference ............. Oshkosh. Wis. Third ClaS$nTerm expires 1912 Rev, Elias Roscr ........................................................ Detroit, Mich. Rev. H. Lemkc ......................................................... Milwaukee, X-V'is. Rev. J. G. Lutz ....................................................... New York, N. Y. C. F. Streckcr ................... ............ , .......... . .......... Marietta, Ohio C. H. Hunefcld ......................................................... Cincinnati, Ohio Rev. C F. Blume Git larg$ ............................................ New Ulm, Minn. Rev. 1-1. 1-1. Heck, Bercauerlmml, East Gernmn Conference ................ New York City President E. S. Huvighorst ax-omciw ....................................... Berna. Ohio - Officers of the Board of Trustees Rev. A. J. Nast. D.D. ......................................... President Rev. W. Giesregcn .............................................. Secretary Rev. J. C. Matting . ................................ Treasurer President E. S. Havighoral .................................... Auditor Executive Committee Dr. Albert Nast President E. S. Havighorst Rev. J. C. Matting Mn J. S, Schneider Mr. J. W'ahl Visiting Committee Central Conference: Rev. George Miner ................. ............... Detroit. Mich. Rev. John Floercke .................................. Holland. Ind. Eastern Conference: SelcctiUn not yet mat.ch Chicago Conference: Rev. A. J. Loeppcrt ................................... Elgin, 111. Northern Conference: Prof. H. J, Hoffcrt ........................ St. Paul Park. Minn. 4 Foreword 0 style this issue of the Grinrlstone rm experiment would he tantalizing T Our co-wurkers and encouraging friends with the. idea of hazard, which we hope our honest labors and the good will of our patrons will entirely forbid, and yet to say it is a success would border so closely upon Phariseeism, that our skirts might be soiled. Hence we 1213' this, the product of our best endeavors and labors. the object of our ardent hopes antl desires before the readers requesting that they deal with us in the spirit of brotherly affection. Present students, perhaps, may know what is herein contained, Yet its value Will increase with age as that of a rare coin. Former students will be reminded of pleasant and fruitful days spent at our small yet thriving school. Future students will gaze with anticipation at its pages and look forward to the time when their names and faces will be parts of another book of the same kind and name. Friends and supporters of the institution may in a benignant attitude compare this with other schools, see room for intprm'ement here, fnr develop- ment there. In fact, naught, it seems to us, so concisely. 50 vividly and graphi- cally can place before the little. part of the world that is interested in us, the conditions at our school in its domestic life, its inner circle as such a publica- tion. And for this. as well as for reasons of pleasure and selfvrealimtion, we place this annual heforeenot the world. it sounds too cold and distant-hut before our friends, and in their hands we shall not suffer. TH 1-: BOARD. The Grindstone Board, 1910491 1 Robert E. Noelker, Editor-in-Chief. Edward Andree, Assistant Editor. Walter Johann Lcmke, Art Editor. John A. Vollenweider, BNSiHESS Manager. A. J. Groncwald ......................... Athletics Editor Alfred B. Nimz ...................... Organizations Editor Rhea Strecker .............................. Social Editor D. H. G. l-latthaei ........................ rKomics Editor Literary Committee R. E. Noclker Alma Blankmeyer Ed. Andree Emma. Regatzky B. E. Breihan Business Committee John A. Vollenw'eider Arthur H. Scibel Dan W. chke EDWIN S. HAVIGHORST KARL RIEMENSCHNEIDER VICTOR WILKER JULIUS 0. BERR 1F aculty Edwin S. I-Iavighorst. A. M.. D. D. President and Profcswr of Comparative Religions. A. 11.. Mt. Pleasant College. 1887 5.1111,, Huston School of Theol- ngy, 18911. I'J.D.. Iowa Wcslcyan University, 1899. Karl Riemenschneider, Professor 1855-1863. Gymnasium. Zurich. Switzerland. 1862-1864, Classical School, Lud- wigsburg. 1864-1868, 'I1llcl;ingen University, 1Vuerttembcrg. 1868, Ph. 17.. University of Tuch- ingen. 1898-1908. President of Mt. Pleasant College, Mt. Pleasant. Inwa, Since- 19118 President of G. W. C. Ph.D., D. D., LL.D. of Philosophy. Since 18551 Professor in German X'Vunace College. 1883-1893, Vice-Presizle-nt of Ger- man Wallace College. 1893-1908, President of G. W. C. I111. Baldwin University, Berea. Ohio. LL. D1. Allegheny College. All!- gheny. Pa. Victor Wilkcr, A.M., Lit. D. Professor of Modern Languages. A. P- . German 11521112166 College. Since 1873 Professor in German Wallace College. 1892-1903, Instructor in Case School of Applied Science. Julius 0. Ben . Lit. M. Professor of German Language and Literature. 1863. Kocpcnick Lohrer Scminnr, Deutschland. 1867. Hartford, Connecticut. 1869, Teacher in Cleveland 1011501 Public Schools. Since 1872 Professor in G. W. C. Lit. M., Baldwin University. 1900. THEODOR RODEMEYER C. WV HER TZLER ARTHUR L. BRESLICH F. GERTRUDE AKINS -10 Faculty Theodor C. Rodemeyer, Ph. D. Professor of Latin and Greek. Gymnasium at Basel. 1885. 18931399. Professor at St. Paul1s University at Basel, 1887. College. St. leule Park, Minn. Ph.D University of Berlin. 1889. Since 1899 Professor at G, W. C. C. W. Hertzler, A. M., D. D. Dean and Professor of Practical Theology. A.B.. German W'allace College 1839. 183971895, M. E. Ministry. 1890, BCFlll'l Uulvcrsuy and Euro- 139571900, President of St. Paul's 1m de' C lie St P 1' P' k 111 111.111., D.D., Central Wesleyan Col' 0 ge' ' m s M , I 'IIII'L lege 1903. Since 1900, Professor at G. 1V4 C. Arthur L. Breslich, B. D., Ph.D. Professor of Hebrew and Exegetical Theology. Instcrhury Gymnasium, East Prusi Ph.D., Universitv of Wisconsin 5121, Germany. 1904. A'B'1 German W'aliacc College, 1904-1908, Instructor in University 18961 of Wisconsin, Madison W'iscon- B.D., German Wallace CnIIegc, Sin 1898 1898, Entered M. E Ministry. Since 1908 Professor in G. W. C. F. Gertrude Akins, B. L., 13.3. Dean of W'omen. B. 1..., Baldwin University 1901. 19064907, Preceptrcss of Baldwin 19014904. Instrumor in Moravian University, Bcrca, O. Seminary, Bethlehem. Pa. 1904-1905, Instructor in Fairfield Uowa1 High School. Since 1907 Preceptress and since 190571906. Parsons. Colorado. 1909 Dean of Women, in G.W.C1 3.5.. Baldwin University 1907. 11 ALBE RT RIEMEN SC HNEID ER CARL RIEM ENSCHNEIDER SELMA M RIEMENSCHNEIDER KARL GROSSMAN Faculty Albert Riemenschneider, A. B. Director of School of Music. 1396-1902, P111111 n1 Rogers. of Cleveland. Ohio. 190271903 1Vicmla, AustriuL Pupil of Hugo Reinhold in Piano and Rnbert Fuchs in Cmnposilion. Professor of Piano, Pipe Organ and Theory. James H. 1903-1904, Pupil 1:1 Charles Clemens, of Cleveland. in Pipe Organ. 1904-1905 1Pnri5, 1:17:11ch Pupil Df Guilmant in Pipe Organ. Since 1897 Instructor in G. W'. C. School of Music. Car! H. Riemenschneider, Jr. Piano. 1893-1903, Pupil nf jznncs 11. Rogers 01' Cleveland. 1902-1903, Instructor in Piano, Ger- man WaHaL-c College. 1903-1906 1Vicnlm, Austria'i, Pupil of Lcsclletitzky in Piano Robert Fuchs in Composition. Since 1906 Tnstructor in Piano, GCT- man 11-2111er College. and Ethel Mattison. 19103F Graduate Piano DEpurtment G 1'17, C. School of Music. Since 1907 Instructor in Piano. Selma Matting Riemenschneider, Piano. 1909 On leave of absence for special work at Chicago University. A. B. Voice. 1901. Graduate Piano Department of G. WI C. 1904 Graduate Vocal Department of G. XV. C. 1901-1903, Pupil of James 1-1. Rog- ers, CIL'VClamL in PinnoA 1901-1904,.1nstrucmr in Pianm Ger- man W'allace Collega 1904-1903 1'Paris, Frnuch Pupil rJf Matilda Marchesi in Voice. Since 1905 Instructor in G. 1N. C. School of Music. Karl Grossman. Violin. 1905. Graduate m W'est Side College of Music, Cleveland. 13 1905, Pupi'l of Johann Bcck 1'11 Violin and Theory, CHAi HINKE JOHN C' MARTING ROBERT L. WAGGONER GEORGE F. COLLIER 14 Faculty Charles Hinke, Ph. B. Principal of G. W. C. School of Commerce. 1904. Cm-ington Uiyj High School. 1907-1909, Tutor in Stcnography. G. W. C. 1909. P11.B., German Wallace Col- Since 1909' Principal of G. W. C. lege. School of Commerce. Rev. John C. Matting. Treasurer. Robert L. Waggoner, A.M., B. D. President of Baldwin University and Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy. 1838, Baldwin Academy. Since 1903 President of Baldwin ISQ, A. 13.. Baldwin University. University. 1908, B. D.. Heidelberg University. George Foster Collier, B. 8., A. M.. Litt. D. Professor of Engiish Language and Literature. 1639, Hamlinc University. St. Paul. 1894. A. 13., Harvard University. Minnesota. ' 1895. A.M.. Harvard University. 1892, 13.5., Ohio Wesleyan Univer- Since 1895 Professor in Baldwin sity. University. 15 EDWARD L. FULLMER FLETCHER D. WARD JOHN E. ADAMS BERTHA STARKEY Faculty Edward Lawrence Fullmer, M.S. meussm' of Natural Sciences. IRMA Xngnln NnrmnI Stlmnl. An- 1890. llcmhcr L'ninl: Pacific llr-Jng- golm Indium. icm Expedition. H4811 HS Ohio Static L'niu-rsity. IHW-IPUS. Professor in Dakota State L'niu-rsily. 'l'nivvrsily, Since H493 Professor in Iiuldwin John Edward Adams, A. B. Professor of Mathemalics and Astmnomy. H4947. Wcslcyun Academy. Wilhm- 1903-1913. h1sll'11ctnr in Mnnlcwnod hum, Mass. 1901. ,-X.H.. H'vslcynn L'nircrsill. Middletown. Conn. 1001-190; Instructor in Day High L'HiVL'I'SiLV Svhunl. xVCStl'hL'F'iLT' C'mm. I11s1itutu, Cnncm'driiic. Pur Since 1903 mecssm' in Hulrlwin Fletcher De Lay Ward, B.S. Principal of Normal Department. 1875. UlerH Cullmc. $934905. Sum-rintcmlL-nl of T.nrnin 18111 ILFL Ohiu Nnrmn'l. lollitn Public 36110015. 18811-13911. Superimcmlom of Leroy Since 1005 Professor in Baldwin whim Public Schools. University. Bertha Starkey, A. B. Preccptreas and Assistant in Normal Department. 19114. AJL Huidellwrg University. Sinu- 1W Preceptrcss in Bnhlwin 1904-1989. Instructor in TiFfm University. KOhicJ Public Schools. WALLACE MEMORIAL HALL 1.554 Jlrlllllll ? x m Mn .. I910 Clams Officers B. E. Breillan..................................President Rhea Strecker ............................. Yiee-Pres'itlen't D. W'. Henke. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .Secretary-Treztsurer Class Colors Clams Motto Maroon and t'Eray. Fit Fahrieando Faber. Class Song Cheer once more. dear Seniors, Oh, cheer once more today; Let us sing once more to the dear old school we leave; How deep in our memory the school days have Silt'lken. And'how every deed is impressed on our mind: The strolling. the anfsatz and Healing the pumpkin. And all the dear places?- That 0ft we'd find when we were out to stray. Oh! how loud our routers; then would sway When at the game our boys would proudly win the day. There were hot times in the armory. those- Sehool days. school tlayi now has come the last day. Latin. and Greek. and philosophy. These we have conquered up 10 degree. Now we must soon say adieu. but to- our motto we'll be true. To conquer ourselves and the world subdue, Till with honor and glory were crowned. 0ft t0 Berea our thoughts willhdrift To the dear old German Wallace where we were as- Merrily we strolled along on the lawn by the pond. Merrilyr in laugh and play. but now- May these few days that we in school did spend Fit us to fight our way until the end. Now farewell. faculty. your love and charity Within our memory firmly shall stamle Now let 115 cheer once more. dear Seniors. Oh. cheer once more today; Let us sing once more to the dear old school we leave: To our dear old Alma Mater. now. goocl-hye. -Gt'orgr' Fmsrkv. Ivlelody for Senior Song: Medley inchuhng Old Kentucky Home. t'OId Oaken Bucket. 'iHot Time in the Old Town. School Days. 'W'Iassa's ill the Cold, Cold Ground. hood Night. Ladies. Nearer. My God. to Thee and 'tMy Old Kentucky Home? 20 Senior History 1: the hundreds m' eulieges Ellltl universitier: that are sending into the Ulti rugged world thousands U! men and tt'tumen with tlipiUlllElS. degree; of all kinds and l'leseriptions, German Hiallaee furnishes, like the woman of the parable. her pittance. Hilly fourteen. eleven men and three women. have persevered through tour years. of griml and struggle intn thiq last term nf ease and relaxation, hut theae are of the kiwi n'htL though they may not he heard uf in the New York Titties, St. Louis Pust-Disptltt'h, or other nmnstruus dailies. yet in their own circle they will be known with rehapect amt hmmr. At least we may conjecture this. it a similar course through eullege has any inliuetlt'e upon the future. I. utlr years ago this 1:135; gathered from seven tIiH'erent states atml twu transatlantic countries. at the Lhmt'e. of German Wallace and hegan a most l'aleas- ant, interesting and. at times, extremely exciting career through eullege. Back in the mist of the first years. we see the tlear old 1910 pennant wave proudly and tleFiantly in the early morning air; again comes the picture a year or so later of one of our class climbing up the greased and barbed tizigstatt' fur the junior rag. and again we tremble with Ellipfflilel'l'iiht'l as he lets himself down with a rope to the ronf 21ml, like the hemes of UM. runs over that dizzy gable to climb into a third story window. and at last to escape Victoriously with the enemies' pennant. while they gaxeil dumbfounded and open-monthetl: upon 0111' palates still linger the effects of that must delectable J l1nic'1r-Seniur banquet. which, as a class. we tendered last year's Seni:,1rs. int this and all the tmenumeratetl events nt' tlltr L'nllege' history lie in the. past. It 60:11:35 to cheer 1.15 when on the moonlight nights we chat in the deep chairs on the veranda or sing the wag of cheer from the college steps. 'We have in a manner, by the impmitiun ut' Senioml dignity and austerity. amt. perhaps, thoughts of the future. lost the. outward characteristic. marks of the vivacious class at a year ago. the have replaced the frivolous with the seriuus, the unproductive with the productive. Slltmhler to shoulder with the Juniors we have gone to a work which has but one precedent in the annals of German W'allaee. a work must :Iifhcult because new tll 115. the task of producing an annual. lint difficult as it may have been the true Senior grit and haektmue hag supplieil what was lacking in experienee. 50 with a few mnre weeks; we will he ready far degree and diploma with the thousands uf utherh. and hope we may fare as well as they. ur being Ameri- cans with the American spirit. we wish to fare better than they in this vale of tears or eternal Mzty-thiy. whichever we may make it. 't' u Ii iilS't'ORlA N . Edward Is. Audrcc. WUinnr . . . . . ..L l1illimihe. Ohio CInssivaI. SvlnlIL-r; Prvsidcm 2, N'iuc-Prcsilluul 3, YaLIL-rlitinry orator 3; Fwy: Unsa 3; V. M. C k; PrL-sidcnt 4-; f'il'inrlstonc A531. Elliltlr 4. He's m'c-r tu'vniy-nlw l0 Ire sure. but we Cilll him Minor!1 lwcuusu hi-s hmlhtr was Maj. If an unassuming. unpra toniirms curccr in Schonl is :m indicatiun 0f fulurc success, lid is llu- hmm- Bishop Nuclsvn. Yet he has been quite uctiw in Society. in Y. H. C. 9.. mud in 111v class. Next year hv Mil begin in :1 carm-st to dispense will: what he 11:15 learn: in lwlmlf nf the church in the Slums of Cleveland, KV'IICI'C le 11:15 :lil'i'zilly' imrn LHBY iklf $01110 TEI'I'IC, Alma Hlnnkmcy er. Hlankey . . . . . . . . Khaledm, Ohio Crunmcruinl. l'hilonmtlwzm. K- icc-I'rcsidml' 2, President 4; Girls, iliaslcoti hall .5, 4'. Kirindstmlo 81:an 4. She is A. IL hence. 5110 this war desires to nhtain :1 Ii C. 5. 5110 comes from that Iili'lc town at the crOSi-rnath mllud Tr-Ivnln. :Lnd strange to say 5hr: is prnurl of it. A Senior clear thrungin she is, and :I iiwly mm: at that. Next yt I' u't'H. nhzll tln girl: care about the fulurt :my- x'ny umyhc she'll lentil. maylw she'lI cnnk, nmyhc she'll paint. 111:13'bc wL-1I. wlm can NH? .Kl lcmt HIE ways 01' the cnrclws :m: GEL Bernhard IC. liruihml. lieu ........ Bartlett, Texas Phiiosnphiml. ltmcrvd :Is Frouhnum frmn Winn Memorial College, Hrmlhnm. 'l'l'sznx UL-I'mnuin. 5t .- 1. l'n'sidcm 3. Vzdvrlinury Uratur 3: 0:155 1 rtS-idtnt 2, 3. 4: WHHIEMJ' Guurda 3 Lieutenant. 'lilu'y say that familiarity breeds similarity and anyone cert 'nl'x rvuld easily guess lu- vaing Hunk; hmml shouldch, 111:1F55Yt arms. nml qimwy haul. . :md uhm'o all by hraring the dew, mm rvus. ullra-lmss voice. With which he 50 hmrtily greets his frivnris. torril'ws 131's cmmics. llmt lion's from the grazing; laml in Tums. A typical Temm with a John Anatin army hul ml his Iwzul. :1 hearty hnudshalu'. mntagiuns laugh. a merry, jLH'iHI twinkle in his L'yL'. is the manner in which thu western uhirlu'iml .slrm'k Hurm. and he leave: il with some Of the quantity mkcn MT and quality :ldtICtl. Gmrgc C. Felleckc. Fisknsu ..... r:lia'fux, Minnesota: Theological. 5t. P:1111 s College. St. Pnul Park Minn. Class of '00. Wii- lnmcttc University. Sulvm, Oregon. Gcrnmnim President 4: Track 1mm 3: anhall H-W'A 2, 3; Athletic Assn. Manager 3: Y. El, C :X Cabinet 3. Fiskus' alias George FOnSt'ktu mm of those long. hmm- juinlcrl gmlul westerners, Trained upon the fnotlmll field at St. Pa11P$ anti undcr Strict milimry supervision at W'EL Iamcttc. he has hem :1 very prominent factor in all class doings? :Inrl. thnugh dstraight :IS :L diof' he never fnrwcnt the pleasure of :1 good practical jnkc. George generally shunt! in 16 1:1111'9:112 committee. his training in the past standing him in good stand in this work ycs? The chief positiml hr held xhi1o Eli U. XV. C. was night watchman 0m: Hnlltm'r'cu, and Hum :1 vow went 111th HI:- H. U. FhapDIT '30 Limil .li. Liucltel, . . . . .......... . . . . . ,llittslmrg, l'ai Scientific. . Kgl. Buy. Krt-is R'aISL-hulc. Ix'niscrlnutcrn. hymn, Ger- many. Gcrmanin, Yicc-Iircaidum 3. Preddcut 4; 'Wzllincc Guards. Sergeant 3. 4. anh :h-r Kaiser! 5 That's the way wl-Lmiiiai' shunted when he mum to Ecrca four years ago but now he sings. Can you still see I'm L1 German? Well, i hnin't'. le i5 :1 wry sn-ttlud :md faithful student, his iavoritos hcing exams. He camu hen: :1 thorough despisur of girls and a dcspiscr oi giris am! :1 hater of social I'unuiuns. ' l'hose awful question marks! Those girls! Last 3171:: ID and hehuidi th' change. You can imagine it uilhnm mun: words. int this ycurhwcii. 21 rcrtzlin party remained in Missouri and ihliil hm; gum: in his I'm'mcr :mtc. cxccptn. What can nut :1 woman :lt'a? .Mmcm j. Urunuwalti, Jack . . .Spukane. KVaahinglun PhiluS-ophical. St. Paul's College. St. Paul Park. lEinn, University 01' Milmcwtn, Minneapolis, Minn. Germania, President 3: Basket hail 'in 2. 3. 4: Alirack tram, 2. 3, 4; Tennis KT, 2. tennis team 2. 3. 4; Athletic Assn Presitlmtl 2; li. W. jnim iinnnl m' Cumlml; Viriliiilft Ulturds. Captain 3. 4; Y. M. C. Ax. Cabinet 4', Grindstnnc Mat? 4. Naught i' So much tn be ahhnrrcul as lhc specialist. seems in he Jackis favorite tintlritlo. IiL-nu: hc h:.- hum :m :IIL :lrouml man. Honors in ha. 'ct hail. track work and tennis are his: his name was c01..picuons m1 lhe pmgrmns of all public functions and his 5111iiing jnliy face was seen Elt every gathering. And then he was no simlch even in these most abominable pests. the grind :mti intnhus 0f student life. sins??? 'I'hc fan'uriic sang of Jack is, All the girls like lack. lilliiUS lluckm'... ............ Si. iiuu'l'shul'g. Rusw'iu Classi . Germanium. Eau'l'ulzlry i. Yicu-Prcsiticnt 9. Vnk-LI' 'lor Spenkcr 2. Prusiticnt 3; K'nhmicur Rmul. President 3', Thor: logical Sacicly, President 2. 1th fm- Uchs'i i'it'Ci'x'L'l'. Yon Cassius has :I lean and socialislic look. Julius Cnmc from 111C dark country of Russia :1 few yen 3 age. and i5 guing hack next your to hcip his brethren gum lihcrty and fight for their rights. Even thnugh hc chips go into ecstatic; when Hobs says Rackefeiier :mri Judas arr: gain;r 10 live together r-Lcrllaiiy yL-L he's :1 gem! nhi fciiou'-:11mnst tun I'mv u chap in he hiliillg around in Russian prismis m- :11 iilst tiic nut. in Sihcrizl. iNalch lhu Musmvitc papers next year. Ihmicl XVA Ilenkc. Dun . , . , . . . , Pigeon, Michigan Commerciai. Gurmanin. Vx'iw-PI'L-saitiem. 4. Secrelary 4', Class Sec.-Trcns. 4: Y. II. C. A. Cabinet 4', .Mhiclic Assn, Manager 4: Grind- sl-Jnt- Staff Business Cmmnittcc 4. Quiet, mmiusl. rchrmgz, Dan has g'mw through collcgu ahsnrhing information and dreaming of future greatness. and in thzil Lucilnrn way of his, with those small. shining eyes he mz-nam-R in 50:: bargains and hllF'iI'lCSS propositions where others: see them not. If he were not hnncst wc wouhi say grout u'mhh was in store. for him. 1:1:t iii; Ilchs says. Wlm ever make: muucy honestly those days. The question 15 WiH Hrm rhnngc :mti gnaw fut I.II!--u'o'il itwu'c ii 0pm. Alfred B, Nimz. licrnhard Frau .Mzmimwnc. W35. Mnuitmvoc High School '99. Munitnwuc H C, Til. E'Iass.ical-Thrulngival. Hm-thv. Vicu-lh'L-hidenl 3h Prcshh-m 4; Grhulstmw SIHIT 4; W'iscunsin Clnh. h'Frzu Nimz. the gem with the funininc tastes. rroppml hair. fashinnnhlv Shirts, luml N'ncks Emil pemharly qriking wacahulary. No, he's. no L'ullnwcr nf Fm Iillrurms hut he docs think him :1 hhmmin' fair liar and that is why he reads him. l,ikc about :I tlnxen more fellows. he's from Wisconsin. fl'um Mauimwoc. knmm all about girls. munuy, life, cm. hecuusc ha: nrarkml in u hank ten years or so. He will emL-r Current Rihlirnl Institute next year with a view In accept :I pustnrntu ml .NUIHL' hatlcwuuds ciruril hy and by. Rnhet'l Ii. Xv-clker. Kid ........ Iizltesvillu, Indiana PllilUSl'Iphicul. Schiller. VicerPs'vsitlum 2. crL-tury 3. Valcrlicmry Oratnr 4, Presith-nl 4: Grimlsmno. itnr-in-chiof 4; Winner Ora- mricnl 3: lmlimm Chub. President. Kit! is :m emiroly ncu- Species. Darwin fails to mention him 51ml Fullmcr duos amt know him. Cier-frco and cart- Iuss he meamlcrui lhmugh college. Originality was. his: hnhhy. Out 0f the ml was his cry. nltcmating with uX55110 wants to Ihrnw the hasehnll? His genialily and good- humor gave him the prvsidc-ncy Hi the Indiana Chm; his brilliant speaking won fur him Ihc Uminru his pipe brought rlvm n 111m him tho wrath of the faculty: his hund- some appearance cnnhlishud him in the grams of a Curtain B. U. Inssiu. :Ilatl his rcvnrci :IS :1 Stndvm phucccl him in tho Grindstonr: criitnrhs chair. Hut truly. lhv mum- Ix'itl CUV- ureth :1 multitude hf ginsh Jennie. Rivkzml ........................... .Her Ht Philnmathcnn. C'omnwrciaL A fair HDu'cr is in Int- 50ml. nut hrnrd 5U thinks JCIIIIiC. A Iittlc hurkwnrrl uitnut tt'ming' fnrwzlrd xecms to be her OHM fuihh: mul lilm- hill remedy lhut. We feel that She has failed partly in her education hccnusc she has had very little of that jnost practical lrnining' in Dictsch Ladies Hull under the stern preceptress. Arthur II. Scihel. Cy ..... Ierl thl Lac. hViF-mnsin Fond du Lac l-ligxh Suhnnl T16. U. W. C. Fchnnl nf C'mh- tm-rce 38. Scientific. tinelhv, Secretary '4. President 4: HaskUI-hzlll. Sccmnl lrull! mpmiu 4; Track tram 3; Vn'nllnct' Guards Sergeant 3, 4: Grindstclnc Staff 4: Wisconsin Clnh. If there is anything that Cy does not knwu- nhnul hasuhall, if there is any trick worked in thc National or Americnv League that he does: not have the. inner workings of. Prcsr dent Ran jnhnsml will tell himiat least so he minke. Cy's main :-.'-uhjt-c1 oi study here should have hven AIm-ricun His, terry in tarrlvr tn learn thv Hicks of graft, hccausu he expects to cnttr Ihe cix'iI sorvivc. P, 5. III: :llm is frnm thWL-nsin. W'c say it in an under tmu'. hi-CHUSC ut' czm'l find his mun UH lllL' map Find 51, $5 00 rrwnnL 24 h Rudolph Simon. ' IluhI:'x'n. A .A.....t'lcvcizuul, Ohio ThcnlnglcuL Schiller. Svcn-lury 4. I'I'vsiclrnl 4-. Hut : the tmly H'Inll in 111C 61' 4 who it. Ialcssvd Inr umyhc sr'nnrthing dam hy having: H mm. IIL- LEUK'S :Ilmul :IH- :luy singing that liult- hullzul, l'n- gm minu. hu-u. l'w gm mine. From his pmnuncmtion um.- would think tllzu Simun is Gur- mmL hut 11c 3:th lw's Irish. SI: wv 1mm tht'rL' him hm. ruulrr. yuu um SCL' 111C Rllinv ilw hi5 l-IlCl' if yml Itmk closely cnnugh. Rh '11 ll. lerckct'. Rt'zlr ......... .Jizlt'icltzi. Ohio l,iltran. Philmll 111mm. IJI'L itlcrlt 3; Urimklmw 31:1le 4 Rearv Ims hcrn :1 Fresh. Snph. junior and Svninr with all her mig'ht. Nothing hwt-m on without lwr 112wingz a hand in i1. Shr's frnm Ohio lmt funny-Ilcr physiugnnmy i?- :lmungsl 11m Hunsim- launch. Ff unymu- wants ta knuw why, ask them that know :Lml that 111mm: :ul 'luuly iH sclmnl. A 19min in SL'hcml. there is nu rmsnn why she hhulllci nut in: mm in thE world, cxccpl I'nr llw fun that she :thnrs u'omunK suHrugv :md :Invs lml serum in hi: :1 erlmg fnL'Im' in 11w Anti- Salmon Ixugnv. chrv WC fvnr 5hr wiH 11'4? nmrh Hf her valuuhh- rm-rglx wilhlml rlm' crcdit. Ii gnu mm: In 11mm: htr smilc say vYnh'Hw Try it! N '4: SWINGING BRIDGE 1911 Class Ollicers john A. Yu-llenweider ........................... President Emma Rngatzky ........................... V-icc-l'residcnt D. 11. U. l-latthaei ............................... Secretary H'alter .l- Lcmke ............................... Treasurer Class Colors Cherry and lilack. Class Yell L' rah rah! Wallace! Eleven! L' rah rah! Vs'allace! Eleven! L' rah rah! Wallace! Eleven! juniors 1 1! 2x Junior History UT of the haze .--ur1'm1mliugr the first year of 1011? exix'u'nce al 1Yallace. an indistinct picture is home to our mindrc. We see a Freshman class. newlyarrivenl. dressed with a mmher's care. very unsophisticated aml entirely unnequaintcd with the traditions of LL W. C. lint before the 61059 of 0111: 1'1reshman year we had delved deep in the mysteries of college 11ft am! we came hack for nm' HupIu.n1nurcyear. ready to shnw the Freshmen the altraclinns 0f Wallmv- aml 1hr: interesting sights of I-k'rca. Since then we have made rapid progress- until today 1'111 stands fnremnsl in 311 circles Of college activity. 111 the three years of her existence. 1011 has twice succesgfnlly raised her Class- Flag 011 old Menmrial Hall. In her Freshman year her representative won the English Hpen Oratorieal contest. 111 her Huplu'r- mm'e year she furnished two men fur the Varsity lmsket-hall team and .wveral men on the track team. 1911 has always had one great ambitioneto publish the Grimlstone-anl'l this year scea our amlritilm realized. Because we were so few in 111111111ch we 16! the class of 1010 in 011 a gwni thing. The 1910 Urinrlstoue is more or 1955 a volume: nf the. rmniniscenees m' the junior class. Page through it. Xute the ncetunplishmcnls nf 1011 and judge fur yourself whether :11 nut we have set the pace for J11 the other classes. This is our year for fnn and joility. Next year we will have the added dignity of cap aml gmm! 311:1 must needs accept the added respmlshwilil'x: Then. here's 1'0 you, 11.111! Maj.- ylmr success in life equal your success in college. May you ever love and cherish the Cherry and black and may the l' rah rah! Wallace! 1E1even!! awaken m:nly 111011521111 Incumrics in after years. And here's tn your pregirlent and vice-ln'esiclcnl. 1911: may Ihey soon hear the strains of Lohengrin above the junior yell. THE HISTORIAN. John Iihcrt. Haunts ....... H'cbslcn Smtlh Dakota. Nwobgicnl. I'lnlL'red Elfi Julliur frnln Charles Cily CONCR'C; CIV'FICS CHI. lou'a. Gcrnmnin Yicc-Prcsidmt 3: Y. M. E'. .N. Vicc-Prcsidrnl 31 anuntccr Bnml. rlclcgntc 'm Ruchcslvr cmn-cntinn 3; Theov logical Society, President 3. Another 0110 of those whooping. ymx-Hng'. howling. shouting sons of the West, with all the danger. blustvr and wickedness extracted :mr! lmilml :mt 1n such an oxlvm that I10 has been made president of that llzu'mh-SH :mrI yet powerful organiza- tion, the Thuningfcnl Hacimy. 1n I'L'I'CI'CIICL' m We honest faith nf T-Tmmrs we ma; .K; ilmt fnr two lm'ms ht: sat Opposite thv Sceptirimn of G. W'. C. incarnate in the Hrmwb ing Club, and yet Iit' was not shaken. He is prepared there- fure, in a few year's To meet lhc Rings nmi ntiucks of all lhc- hmckcrs of tho colrl. crnul norltl. Florence Englert. Flmsie . . . . . .. .LTIevcland. Ohio Literary East High Fathom, Cleveland. Philonmthc:ln. Florence, IIEL' cxcr hright. happy, smiling, little Junior from Cleveland. If pm upcm IIIQ sculrs perhaps she would not cm much of :I Iigurc, yut among her Cnlllpilllil.:ll$ and friends that nnervfurlr-nuay smile nf hers works 111iraclcs. Even the fact that friends hun- cumc :mrl :I friend tH has gone out of hrs? inmlediatc cmeany, ya . 5hr smiles on. Um: grain of gond-humur is worth :1 prmml nf religion any slay, might be a permanent motto nf Hummers. Stella l'icss ....................... Danbury. Ohio Classical. Philmnallzcnn: anmttccr and, Dclcgatc ln Rochcslcr con ventinn 3. Miss; Hess is going In school and lvnruing rapidly bm whafs the use? She is a member of the Volunlccr Band fist: Is Mr. Rev. KI'J :md 51M: will C'l1ll iirzllly by being served a 1;! cannibal unch'r lhr: inspiring name 011 the heathen Bill of Fart. Bouillon :L In chrcticn Amtriquc. But what is the dichrcucc lmu we cut ? ask Elisa H. and Mr. K. It is not the being eaten that we wiil worry ahout as; long as our life runs along smoothly. Gustave .I- Iialctsch. Gloomy 6115 ,. . icrezL Ohio Scientific. Entered as Freshman from Ohm Mechanics hmitute. Cin- cinnnti. Goethe. Svrrclary 1. President 2; BEIHkL't hull W 3; Track team 1; Winner oratorirul contest 2'; W'allucc Guards Ser- geant l. Long, lanky, hig-fuutul. rudv. crude, ungainly, Gus shinnv bles. shques 71ml Su'nggcl's uhuul th' cnulpurz, clutters tllrtlugh the recitation EHIIL at times nmtlcring ta himself and at other times Inokingz qniir sane. int whun lu- ariscs in public. crosses his humls rmhvr rcvcrcnlh' ELC'l'OSS his hishnp eagle uhat is to luv; and hugins upon unc u? his pathetic. synmalhyi seeking, tJIIinu-likc mastt-rpivces rrl' lrag'ic pathos, you would scarcdy lew 111:;- lnd. Then we do nut call him Cue? but rather the uhilmml chulchcr. Gus is swimming master and gym instructor in lllc Ucrmuu 3L F. Orphanage. 30 H'allcr JUIIEIIIII Lcmlw. IV. j. Dutch IYaumu, H'iy-L'misiu Philosophical. IVuusnu High Htimni flaw. of '07. Goethe, Secretary 2, X-.IiL:t-Ilrcsi111'11t 3 X'IIICLIicIOrg' Urainr 3; Class 'Iirczisurcr 3; Basket I: all UHicinIZ 3; Icnnis team 3, Track 1mm Manager 3: Y. El. C. A. Cabinet 31. 4: Grind: stone Art Iidilur II: HCI'HIIH'T AthIL'IiL' Editor 2. 3; Athletic A5531, SccHI-rcaaa. 3: Uruhcralra: Wisconsin CIub. A teal fresh breeze from the big Varsity storm from gcnuim' sport 1111:11Iullcmtc-1I unilcgo s:pi1'it.11nI111rIIvd full. and 51-131 I19 I1:1s:111 :1111111111111inc Imsis nI' u'nl'k 111111 plug that at times 511rpri1 5 I1i111.III.II1 11:15.- IJl'CH :1 sucinl athletic and NeLI-rnisiug factor. :1 MIT! 01- RIIIt 11f Ii. IN. If. Since the day he dropped in 1111 IIt'n-n. Hetnct'n IJcing called up before the faculty 1111:! its investigating cn1m11ittcos and pulling 995 21111! Il'JlIs in his studies, he dues 11111 I111I'1w which he enjoys the 111111-13, 11111 1.10 11:1. Thv stack nf rcIi-ss in his mom and the big hook; in IJucH-i 1'IIi1'c chI Hi ilIS School L'an'L'r. Willimn l,imlnor. IIiII ....... Mishiwll'. Wisconsin Conmu-rciaI. Goethe. 'I'reniurrr 3: Id'iscunsin CI11I1. This; is Ilc: tilc 111ml wiih the maiden heardi Since Bill first entered II'ICM' cinssic IIIIIIS 11f Imming I113 I135 been besieged by innulm'mhlc- .1121:an a:llcsmcn :1an demonstrators of cwry known make of r:I211r. safcty rnznr rIr Iawnqnower. Yet Bill has come forlII 11111-11: atheLIinr hcllcr unshm ed. And as tho facullv has 11111 inuistutl 11111111 the rcmoxnl of Bills hirsute 11dun1i11c111 11L 11:15 IIL'Lumc :1 Iunim' Liilh :1 promise of grt'lt things In CDI'I'IL' upon Iiir. c11i11 HiII is :1 pluggcr but not :1 grind 1:111I 11L- 531's he likes IIIL Dean 5 tIEISE-SES the best. Daniel I'll. . Manlmui. 'IImI ..Ii1'211111 Ilepids, Mich Philosophiczil. Toledo tOhinI High SL'lInoI Class 01' '07. Gernmuin. SL'L'rL-lur-x I. Ic'ILT-Prcsilltllt 3. YnImIictnry Orzllnr .3: Cinss Svcrctnry 3: BIISICL'I INIII W' 3; VWEIIIIICE' Guards. Sergeant 2. 3: .MhlL-lic .Xss'n. l'rmitlcm 2.; Grind- stonc Staff 4: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 4. The picture ducsn't do Dan justice. 111- is in his element 511 .'I wtfstL-rn. lImmeI Shirt. curdurru' lrUllSL'rR. MIL 5111111'i11g 1110 new studL-nts I'IH' 1111'sterics of G. IA . C. Iifu. Dan is :111 IJIlI hand :11 tlur code 11f imrmluclinns. Coming from 'Iiolmlo High SL'ImnI highly rurnulnmndetl itilnl in; far I'nnlIIEIlH. 110 made good I113 inIIirtm GC LII1 the gym Ilmu' 11ml H.111 was a turrm' t0 aII ImsketJmII forwards. IIl' is 11m: 111' Mm Innmus nine Iiazers suspended some years 111211. and 0111' of the noted IllA strumcnts of torture hungs in 111:: 11111111 111 strike terror i1110 the hearts of the new men. Frank Otto ................ ..I zIs:IIIL-11:1. California Philosophical. Sun Prairie HIisLnIIsinI JI1L11 Fclmcul UR Goethe: Y. M. C. .-.L Del 221111,- lo SpriugliL-ILI cnnuulion 3; Wisconsin CIuIs. If :10 11119 will thw your 111.1111, 110 it 3.111112-clf Is :1 great principle of Frank's. III: is; :1 mrnL-List and his 111115iL'n1 1211111111- 1ion has been crirrii-d In 5111-11 :111 Cxtrnt 111211 III: has :11 ICZISI IciIIcrl :1II the cuckmurhCi. 11115. 911:. :Ilmnt IIIL' dorm. Other- wise 1111.- lad is 1-in-3.- quict. I'IC. I111: sn 11111113 fellows here. is from kkrisconsin. or better 11:15, fur hi1: folks I1L-211'1'11g that 50 mzmy smdcnts 11cm hero from thul sliltc. 111111'1Id 111 Culi- fornin. He is now :1 110510111112 111' Icust Ixy ariopliml. III Ennna l'lerminzl liogalzlcy, ljanlski . .Luuisvillc, Ky. Literary. - Shortridgc High School llmliunapolis. lmlj Class of '0? Philomathenn, Secretary 2, Treasurer 2: Class Yicc-larcsi- dent 3; Girls' Basket ball 2, 3: Indiana Club. The dashing, brilliant, lJrown-eyerl vu-Cd from the other side of the Ohio. She formerly war. :I Hoosier :1an was loyalty itself to her stata'. yet since her father has moved to Kentucky, she has decided she would take advantage of that state's reputation for feminine beauty and we are certain that the Kentucky girls will not reject her frnlu their sisterhood, when she goes; there this summer. Whrk? She has dum- her share but soon that will he :1 thing of the: past 50 we won't mention It. Oscar Simmerer .. . . . . . . . . . . .Olnmleatl Falls, OlliU Commercial. Olmstead High Sclmol. Though he does not live amongst us here in the dorm, yet Zinfs rep has Hoatcrl abroad that he is :1 wry diligent student. honest warkcr aml an adept at throwing lmrHc-slmcs. But he is from Olmstcad llalIs and sorry to say we never heard of any good coming from Olmstcacl, since Fiskus Fensckc started to preach there. John A. Yollenweialcr. l'Yolle .. lallimurc. Maryland Classical. Germania, Vicc-President 2. President 3: Class President 3: Basket ball W ! 2: Tennis champion l. 2'. Baseball Manager 3: Wlallace Guards, lst Limitcnunt 3: Y. M. C. A. Cabinet 2; Grindstouc Business Manager 3: Athletic Ass'm President 1: Track team Captain 2: Joint Athletic Ass'n B. W. Board of Control 3. Volle in the G. W. C. vernacular is :1 synonym for oysters and Baltimore. Alone he comes from the far east. not escorted as the wise men of old. but undoubtedly equally erudite. Valle, besides gaining a reputation in lmsket-ba'll, starring in temlis. standing high in the military conmam', becoming famous in Diftsch Hall and notorious at l-luliei Hall, being accounted :1 gnarl hantl at raising Ned in the Hall and on the campus. also went tn classes and. is believed to have Iearnt a thingr or twn. Bring :1 Junior he still holds this idea but next year he will open :1 hmml vista of new thoughts. Vollc will land a good fat job in the future if a certain fair coicd does nnt stop his shining career. I912 Class Ohicers Paul Flemming ................................. President Aaron Rapking. . . . . . . . t ..... . ......... Secrelaty-Treasnrcr Class Colors Gray and Black. Class Yell One two! 0110 two! Tim Rap! Tim Rap! One two! 0m: two! Tim Rap! Tim Rap! Soph!!! Sophomore History As XVl'itten hy :1 l'reshic. UPHUMORE! W'hat glowing pictures. what noble deeds. what heroic S actions. that name conjures in our minds! Vt'hcn we arrived at Wallace we were told that the Soplmnmrc class was the greatest. the uncunquer- :11ch. the only Class. Everyone was ready to tell 115-: what great things this class hatl accmnplishetl, yet in Ft few weeks we discovered that the class uf 1912 was :1 nmmntity. a fraud. 3 cmtglmneratiun 0f 1110115!chde 111iik-50ps 311d muckers. What :1 disappuinmwnt! It tore mtr heartislrings to think that we had hem thus cruelly deceived. hut WC promptly :act to work to reform the Sopho- more class. tHere follows a long, beautiful line 0f gushing. warm atmosphere. which out of kindness4 for Messrs. Flemming and Rapking we have graciously tnnittmlr-Editors.j It may he trllt: that 21 member at the llepiSCll Sophomore. Class won the German fkatm'ical Contest. that a Sophomore is President. of the Volunteer 161ml. that ' Yim 15 the tennis champion and HRRIII! has rushed a R. U. girl. but the fact remains that the Sophomore Class has never accmnplislled anything. and it is doubtful whether the class of 191.! can bolster up its grades enough to remain in college till June. 1912. In sincerest sympathy. A FRESHMAN. 34 F RESHMEN! HEARKENQ YE WILL ALI. BE mnow INTO THE QUARRY UNLESS YE HPPEBR RT nlE-r6cu F! R DAHES. 1913 Alfred H. Mueller .............................. President 'HiIda Gottfried ............................ Vice-Prcsidcnt Albiu Kruschwitz................V..............Secretary Class Colors Yak: blue and gold. Class Yell A La Pa Sac A Sac A Zeeil One Nine One Three Ka Sac A Zeel! Ka Sac A Zee One Nine One Three!!!! 36 History of the Freshman Class N the evening of October 1. IQUU, 21 rather motley crowd assembled in the parlors of Dietsch Hall. for the avowed purpose of urgauizing a Fresh- man classt There were high-schunl grails and men who haul withstood um.- ur twu year; uf prep. life at U. WV. Li. and had comm fnrth unscathed fmm college politics. tim'lnitul'y rCthctions :md huarlling-cluh grub. Smut- had gone through nmre rcrl tape than retl table cloth. There were stars in haskct-ball, held athletics and tennih, and others who ranked high itt their academic work. Iivcrybudy proceeded to gt'l acquainted wiIh everyone else. Then the. following were Chosen 1:.1 guide the destinies 0f the. 01359: for this year: President .................................... Mr. Mucllur V'Eice-Presitlent. . ...... . . . A . . . . A . . . . . . . . . .Mis'a' H. Gottfried Sucretary-hlhr115mm: . . . . . . . ................ Mr. Kruschwitz vVariants- committees were: then appuinletl with instrucliuns to promote the general welfare. of the lhtcshman c1355 and look after ils interests in the realms of the upperrclassmen. Instructions ware 1115.0 issued to pram. ordering them in duff their hats when parking 1913. The class of 1013 has an cnmllmem nf ninetccn members and is composed of the best material in thu- stmlunt hotly. Yale him: and gold arc the class colors and the white carnaliun ir: 133 syl'nholt The year it: pansing successfully and the class enjoys the distinction of being the heat organized clam; at V'allacc, hav- ing never had a dispute: among its mumhcm The anuuaJ banquet was hehl m1 Fchrnary ?lh, and :xltht'mgh 11w principal cum'escs disappeared under the guidance of lhe upper-classmen, we, ncverthelccs. enjn'nyctl thc riprczul and the sausage and chicken gravy. It'rcshmun arc mm' occupying some of thc most important positions offered. mch as Y. 31. C. A. president. President of the athletic asscr ciation and I'hrcsitient of the literary societies. 1913 sees before it a hright future, the coming years at tlcrman Wallace are full of promise for us. THE HISTcmmN. 37 CLASS OF l9l3 Freshman Class Hattie Amcrman Oscar lhlckstahler Etta Grey Hilda Uoltfrietl Herman Guhse l. Haehich Oscar Humi Sam Kactzel Albin Krnschwitz Henry Lash Ciass Roll Alfred Mueller Ethel Pctlil Myl'cl Reynolds Alma Sumu'mrs Noble Stout: Clarence Thalhcim Pcal'l 'I'hompson Nelda Tholm Hugo N0ehl 39 Preparatory Class Caicers Chief Dietrich Hall Irussur .................. Little Hrcnnner Leading Giggler ....................... Tiny Lillian Hitter Assistant to 01-101. .Fllsscr .................. W'ee Flossie Ries Head Grub Slinger ...................... Innocent Aliinger Class Colors Baby blue. Class Motto Baa-baa-aa chou-L'hou-baa-a-a! The above is in infantile language. Translated. it reads I want my mafd Clasa Yell We guess we are the ' Prep5. Though we haven't made our REPS. W'e are getting there with weak and tottering steps! Oh, Mamma! Oh, My! 42 School of Commerce Faculty Edwin S. l'lavighnrst. AAL. 11D. President of German Wallace College. Charles Hinkc, PILIE. Principal and Prnfcssor of the 'l'ht-nry and Practice of Donwbtic Cnnlmcrrc. Shnrlhnnd :Ind Typvwriting: Miw Irv ticrtrlltlc Akiug, ILL 11.5. Instructor in History ul' Commerce and Commercial ngraplw. Rev. John C. Marting. Treasurer of German Wallace College Nast Theologisches Seminar Fakultaet Edwin S. Havighorst. AAL, .1J.D. mensvr tler Verglcichemlen Religionsgeschichte. Karl Riemenschneitleln Ph.Du DD LI..D. Professor der 1 liSlDI'iSChE'l'I Tllcologie. L'. W. I-Icrtzler. $.11... DD. Professor tier Prnklischen Theologie. Arthur 1-,. 'Breslich, 13.D.. PhD. Professor dcr Excgetischen Theologie. 43 IIIIIIII IIIIIII Ht IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII PIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIIILIIIIIIIII m . U HH'HIIHIIII IIIH IIIHHIHW IV . . . lil I.l lElliiu I .-k - . E- - Il1IlIII.l I'1II School of Music Fmvm S. Ilu'ummmr, AM 1117.. President. Rm. Jana: C. MAH'HNG. 'I'rcasurer. ALBERT Rum liN 5cm x 12mm. A. Bu Director. Piano, Pipe Organ and Theory. Carl H. Rim11enachncitlcr, jlz. Piano. Ethel Mattimn. Pianm Selma Marting Riemensclmeider. AR, Voice. Karl l.'irossr11a11. Violin, l3. Gertrude Akins, Preceptrcss and Physical Culture. Albert Riemensch neide r. AB .. Director of the Choral Union. Victor W'ilker, AM... LitLD. Modern Languages. 45 PROF. I. O. BERR PHILOMATHEAN SOCIETY Unllmlvd lNr-U Multo :--HLWime . 1';;:'11 .4961:th Sorores in Collegio 1910 Ahnu Blankmcym' Rhea Slruckcr 1911 Huruncu EnglL-rt SicHu Hum Emma Ix'ngnlzky 1912 I ilgd llvrkw Flnrtucy Milrhf'u Mildred I'Hu'slmli 1913 Hattie Amcrman Ilikla Huttfl'iwl Maud Krugel Mabel Mtliclwy Hillel Pctit Ruth Rcyamltia Myrel Reynold; :len Smmner Pearl Thompann Nekla 'I'hnms Preparatory Dora Adnm litlu Grey Minnie Miller Ottilie Gottfried Grace l'.t'e:lclmfl Elizabeth Junker Marie Hump Selma Xiermeycr Florence Reis Lillian Miller LHC-Y Bauer Ldlma 52111110 Miss Achcrlc Mary Grnhb Mary HarriS Special Liilic Unhlkc Clara Ricmenschncidcr Rcth SmcdlL-y Elma L'nncwchr Officers 1909-1910 President .A . . .Mzu'ic llamp Alma Hlimkmcycr Hum Adam Vice-Prcs. ....-K111m Hizmklneyer Rhcn Streckcr Florence Mitchell Succreinry ..... Umn- Ih'culL-hnfl I'llgn IIL'L'L'C'I Hilda Gottfried 1f! GERM ANIA SOCIETY Fratres in Collegio Earl Schumann 1910 Licm'gc I?Cnskc :K. J. Limncwald I HCCkCI' 1911 J. Ebert 11 H. U Matthaei 1912 A. Kruschwitz 1913 H. Lash U, Frey H. l'.iiui15c Preparatory Max Beyer J. Krill Carl Ertel .X. Ii. I-l. Guunthcr J. Simulcuhancr Portman OFEcers 1909-1910 Isl Term 2nd Term I-jx'esitient ..... J. Vollenweider 15. VircAPrcs. . . . .IJ. 'W. Nenkc Secretary ..... Max Beyer Yalctlictory Orat0r9ll H. OI .. Cklcttcl l1 Matthaei Oscar 11111ch 15. E. Breiilan D. W. chkc Emil Gocttel J. A. K'ollenweider 0. Huml Noble Strmc C. Wcmmcr Fred W'Olf D. uronhmau 3rd 'l.'erm G. Fenske John Ebert D. XV. Henke G. M atthaei l'hiultltd 1308 Motto : !alriww'mhtr . Ir'rrm Hum. Fratres in Collegio I'usl lirndnatc Charla llinlcc 1910 lid Andree R. 1C. Xoclkcr R. Simon 1.913 U. Buckstuhler 5, ll Knclzcl Preparatory L'ims. lx'upfcr XVm. Michel 1.. A. Fchrcihcr Wm. Eberhard lCImCI' Puppcr Officers 190971910 181 Tenn 3nd TL'rm 3111 TL'I'HI President R. Ii. Noclkcr IL Simon 8. IL KEIC'EZCI 'x-'iCc-13rus. S. E. Kilctzel Uwar lh'wkstuhlcr Ufm. Michel Secretary 0. I-iockslahler Wm. Michel -R. Simon Yaletlictm'y Uratm' R. 1-2. Noclkcr $3 COETHE SOCIETY 93orein 1910 $001,131: 1883 I-humlcd 1834 Moth: :--.-lgv Qmm' inx. Fratres in Collegio Post Graduate .1. H, Xckmann 1910 A. H. Scibel 1911 Gustav Kaletgch W. J. Lcmku Frank Otto 1912 Paul Flemming 1913 A! fTCil R. Nimz XVm. Limlncr Aaron Rapking Arthur l'phoff A. H. Muelier Hugo KYochl I. Haebicll t'. Thalheim Victor Krueger Preparatory Robert Wilkowske Ed Allinger Fred Schweinfurth Karl Patow Tom Lee 151 Tcrm A. 1-1. Mueller 11 . J. Lemke R. 1Vilkmwkc Valerlictory UratnrgXVaItcr J. Lemke President Vice-Prca. Secretary Mathew Betz Roland Sclaaefcr W'm. XVicsc .11 Steinkraus OHicers 1909-1910 2nd Term :1. H. X11112 13d Allingcr .-L Scibcl J ! R. Zullikcr R. Lims'r: 3rd 'l'l-rm A. 1-1. Seibel R. WWlkowske I. I-Iaebich Y. M. C. A. CABINET Apr. 34. Nov. 6, 'N'Uv. 10, jam. 3, Sept. 13, 1 Nov. 13, Ian. 16, Feb. 12. March 1 OFHcers and Cabinet 1909-1910 President ................................ Edward :1111'11'1'1' 1 ice-Pl'esi11cut ............................. I1. 111111'1111111111 Recording Secretary ........................ X . I11 RILmIIL-r Corresl'mun'ling Sccrctnry ..................... 1C. 111101111111 '11r1'1'11111r01' .................................. 115931 11111111 Chairmen of Committees Drz'ufianaL-Ii. Andree 51111111111 .1- 111'1.111c1x'21111 1'3!va .5111111-1'FD. 11011111111111 1111'111111'1'thf'1i'1a111 11:11:19,131 11113511111 Srudy-A. 111311111111: 114111111113. W. Henkc F1111a111'1'10. Huntl 8111111111111. Mirhcl 11111.11'1'-1V. 1111111111 131111111111111'11111g11 11111-111 Lectures Given under the auspices of the Y. M. C. A. 1909-1910 11101.1 ......................................... .1 I111111'I: 111 Keys. I11: 11'. 1,1 '11'ngg11111-1' 1.11 11. 1'. 11.1011 .............................................. Cl'InlInuIng-x'.H 111111 l11'11:-' .111111II 1.IIL'YL'IEII'II1. 11.301 ......................... 1111' 5111111111 1'111111'111-1-1' 1.11111'1:11l'i11-11.'I 51:111 1.' 5111.1 .1. I 11'1111'. 11111111111115, 11110 ................................................. 11112117111111.- 111111. AI Hi1'1111'11-1'11111-i1I111'. 9011 ............................................. h1.1111113r1111111y. 1712 1 . 11.2 111:1'lzl1'1'. 1910 ........................................... TIN? Volunteer. 1115-; 11. Starkey 111 11. If. 1910 ................................................. l-klnking. 311'. Clay 111'1'1'11'11, L'11'1'131111111. 1910 ..................................... 111.- Ye Fishers 1:11 311-11. 131. Y. 1'1'1'I11'1-1' 2, 1910 ............................. 1111' 11111115111 11.4 :1 1,111! 1111111. Dr. 1121111'111'1'11-1'. 1111114111111. 31' THE GRINDSTONE BOARD Our Publications Der Bereancr Published monthly by the Faculty of German K'x'zillacc L'ullege. Editorvin-Chicf ............... Victor Wilkcr. A. 3.1.. Lit. D. German Student Editor ..................... D. Worthman Locals and Personals ........................ Chas. I'Iinke Athletic Editor .......................... .X'alter J. Lemkc Y. M. C. A. .............................. E. H. fiuenthcr Business. Manager ...................... Rev. J. C. Marting Deutsch-Amerikanische Zeitschrift fucr Theologie 11ml liirche. A bimonthly theological magazine. edited and published by the faculty of Nast Theological Seminary. Erlitnr-in-Chicf ..................... C. W. l-Iertzler, D. D. ..x. L. Iircslich. m. n. Assistant Editors ..E. S. I'iavighurst. D. D. L The Student's Handbook Published annually by the Y. M. C. A. I-l xi. Ricmcnschneidcr. D. 13.. Ph. D. Editor ...... . . . . .. .A. H. Mueller. President of Y. M. C. A. The Grindstone An annual. devoted to the hen intermits of students and school. Edited and managed by the Classes of '10 and '11. THEOLOGICAL SOCIETY Theologischer Verein Gegruendet im Oktober, 1907 President .................................... john Ebert Vice-Prcsiclent ................ R. W'ilknwskc Secretary .................................. R. Schaefer j. Ackmann Ed. Allingcr Ed. Andree R'Iathew Bet; Max Beyer O. Bockstahlcr Wm. Eberhard Carl Ertcl G. Fenskc Otto Frey Robert tkoss Oscar Huntl j. Hacker Sam Kaetzel John Krill V. .Kl'uegcr .Mbin Kruschwitz Chas. Kupfcr Thomas D. Lee Wm. Michel Alfred Mueller Frank Otto Karl Patow Aaron Rapking Louis Srhreiher F. Schweinfurlh John Sleinkraus A. L'phoff H7111. Wiese Hugo W'oehl Fred XVOHC D. W'Drlhnlan Theological Society Lecture Course, 1910 jan. 7 .............................. The Church and the Social 11'1'nblems.h Rev. Ehrgott. Cleveland. February 8 ..H. Soul Power in Oratory Dr. Morrh. Cleveland. R-Iarch 9 ...................................... The True Life of Jacob. March 10 ........................................... Nativity of Christ March 11 ......................... ...... Manhood of Christ. Madame Mounlt'urnl. Palestine. til VOLUNTEER BAND BAND. of Baldwin Wallace. Urganizutl October 7. ltH'Jf'u. Mtzurr: '!'hr ff:ungrhmffrm of Her H'm'fd in mm- Urm'rrm'mr, President ................................. Karon Rapking Recording Sucrctury . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .., ....31;1x Ilcycr Llsrrcx'lnnuling Sovrcizu'y ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Iimmu Vuurman 'Iwrcaburer .................................. Hugo XVOCIII Nellie Cockrell Mantle Krugcl john Hhcrl Alhiu Ix'rusclm'itz Herman Guhw Hertha Starkcy Julius Hacker D. Wurilmmn Sleiln Hess Rudolf anliker Volunteer Band Lecture Course 1909-1910 April 21 1009 ......................................... Chintsc 17.11lpi1'c. Dr. l7. Uhlingcr. November 13, 1900 ............................ The Volunteer Movement. Miss 139111121 Starkey, November H. IUOU ................................. A XYol'hl's 1:11:1pirc. Rm: Fhrgult. UCVCIHIHL January 5. 1910 ............................. IllnHIrzueti Lecture on '.Xfrica. Hr. litlwurrl lhchurds EB Oratory Winners of the open oratorical contests since 1907. 1909 Eiryh'sh Courts! German- Caant 1. R. E. NocIkcr 1. E. J. Pfeiffer ' BeSSie Shank 2. D. Worthman. 1908 English CWIIIL'SI German Contest 1. Gus J. Kaletsch 1. Paul Flemming 2. A. 11. 1-inckstahler 2. Paula Seidlmann 1907 English Contest Gcnmm Contest 1. Arthur Wilker 1. Herman Pfiaumer 2. Earl Schumann 2. Paul Flemming Fiity dollars in prize money was OHCNLI each year, the money being donated by Mr. Pfaffman of Cleveland in 1908 and 1909 and by Mrs. J. C. Matting of Berea in 1907. Mr. Vogt of Cleveland is the donor of the prize money this year. 154 Choral Union Prof, A1 Riemennvhlmidcr ....................................... Director College Male Quartet A. .I- i'ironcwalnl ............................................. First Tenor Chas Hinkc Second Tenor Gus J. Kaletsch ............................................... First Bass: j. Vollcnweider Second Bass 65 WALLACE ORCHESTRA Orchestra LeOma Salmon .............................................. - ..... Violin Max Buyer ....................................................... Violin Ernst Gucnther ................................................... Cornet Walter j. Lemke .................................................. Piano Orchestra Engagements 1909-1910 May 20. 1909 ............ Brunswick tUhioj High School Cmnmencement. May 36. 190W . . v. , . . . . . . . . . . v . . . . . . . . . . .Strongsvillc Commencement. May 2?. 1909 ..................... Royalwn High Schnol Cmnmencemcnt June 2. 1909 .................. Hcrca. Ohio, Middleburg Commencement. Dec. 6, 1909 .............................. Concert at Wyest Park, Ohio. January 29. 1910 ................................ Concen at Rockport, Ohio. 6? WISCONSIN CLUB Wisconsin Club Organized 1006 President .............................. Dr. A. L. Hreslich Socrotarj.'fl'reasurer Mrs. A. Dora Adam l. Hachich 'I. Klinghcil W. J. Lelnkc Wm. l,imlnel' .K. Ii. Mueller I'n'e-zlich I. Woehl .............. Mary Grubb A. B. Nimz Frank Otto R. Schacfcr l. H. Seibcl C. 'l'halheim XV. u'icsc R. Vilk0w5ke INDIANA CLUB Indiana Club Organized 1009. l'rcxiclent ............................... Robt. E. Nnelkcr Secretary ................................. 0. Huckalahlcr Treasurer ................................... Ed. Allinger Marie Hamp Elma Unnewehr Florence Reih Sam Kaetzcl Emma Rhgatzlcy XVIII. Michel Xclda Thoma Louis Schroiber I . Schweinfurlh 71 WOLVERINE CLUB Wolverine Club Organized 1910 President ...................................... H. Guhse V'icewPresident ............................ Paul Flemming SecretaryiTreasm-er ......................... Dan Mallhaei Mathew lictz Lillian Aliltcr Dan chke Karl Patow Oscar Hund Fred XV'OII'e 73 OFFICERS STAFF .9$E:Yi?aliaimalm1a .. Jim Wallace Guards Staff Officers faptain A. .I. Umncwahi 1A1 l,iculcnuulu-I. X'ollcnwciiler 2nd Lieutelmmill. Ii. Hreihan 141 Sergeanl A. H. Mueller QuaI'lcrluastcr Lawr Htmd 2nd SCth'Ele-Elllil iint-Itel 3rd Sergeam k H. Scihel +111 Scrgmnlull H. Klzltthuci 5th Scrgeam-I. Hachich lRl Corporaliu. liockstahler 3nd Lhrpm'zLI-nk L'phuFl' 3rd lerpultll ICtI. .XllingL-r 4th Em'pnral L'. U'cmmer Cun'many Eugler li iiuentlwr Bereaner Bund Offmers President ........................... Prof. A1 Riemenschneider gC. H. Blumberg, Southern Conference W. G. Boemmcls, Northern Conference ViceAPresidents ................... GEO. Hartung, W Pacific Conference 1 Li. Schuldt, California Conference J, L. Panzlau, Nortlnvestcrn Conference Secretary .......................... Dr. C. W. lIertzlcr Corresponding Secretary ............. Victor W'ilker I Rev. j. C. Matting I Dr. V. W'ilker Executive Committee .............. I' Rev. I3. W'. Schneider Prof. Al Riemenschncider . Dr. C. W. Hertzler ?6 G. W. C. Athletic Association Officers lst Tcrmian Term 3rd Term President 0. Hund I. Haebich Secretaryxrreaslwer XV. J. Lemke H. Lash Manager D. Henke D. Henke Baldwin-Wallace Athletic Association Joint Board of Control German Wallace Baldwin Dr. A. L. Breslich Dr. G. F. Collier A. J. Gronewakl J. Balmer Stout J. X'Yollenweider Carl Drake 0 Buckstahler 13d. J. Cargill Basket Ball Manager, Carl Drake, B. U. Captain. 1. Gronewald, G. W. C. Base Ball Manager, J. X- ollenweider, G. WC C. Captain, j. Stout, B. U. Track Manager. W. J. Lemke. G. W. C. Captain, j. Gronewald, G. W. C. 78 up article: with Iiahlwin University. f1.i:'111i11g the: lhlh'lwin-Vtiallace Ath- letic Associatiun. under which baseball. hn;kct-hnll and track athictics ril'lhtllli be mnductml. The joint aimcialiun i5 gm-cmecl hy a joint itt'ml'l'i of control. consisting 111' nne faculty member and three sttnienla from each ut- the lllStihltitJni Herman t-Vallacc also has its own altltictic mstmiatintt. ttmlL-r which lcnnis. gym and general athletit'S art: wmhu'tuL Rasket-hali wili never be what it 511011111 be at U. tY. C1 until a 11mv gymna- c-ium is built; The 11ml Of an athletic. Fluid fur hasclaall aml the field 41:01-15 is also generally admitted. Nearly every student at G. XV. L'. participates more or low in SIIIIIIS form of athletica but 110 0119 allows the spnrts to interfere with his- SChIJUi Work. The Rtudcnts realize the value of gunni. clean zllhletica hut the lack of a suitable gym and an athletic Held checks their realizations amt puts it damper 911 their enthusiasm. Baseball is. played in frrmt of the buihlings on the campus. and quite fre- quently a wihl throw costs the erratic pitcher a few dnltars. In track work the fellows are forced to p355 through the streets tlf Berna UI'I their daily sprint? to the country. and even this was prohibited hy City Officials. All these hin- drattccs tn Hurtesshtl athictics at G. H'. C. would he dune away with if we had an athletic FtehL on which :1 baseball held and cinder path would won he put in goal condition by the fellows. hes up to the alumni and men interested in G. W. C. 111:1 in 0111' welfare In give us their Financial stlppnrt in bringing mu athletic tield to a realization. Athletics should have its chapter in the history of. every L'LIHCgC. They should he umlcr the control 01' the faculty to a certain degree. mti should he participated in by as many students as 111.1:x'sihlc. Whether a student takL ; his daily exercise in walking. playing baseball rar tennis. it is :15 neccasary to his 111ental and physical welfare :19 his scholastic work. and a real student will nug- lcct neither, Athletics give a man conflrlence in himself. which develop: into Ftrength of Character. and an athiete enters his future work in life with the same degree of confidence in himself that he has gained in his athletic contests. Athletic team: representing G W. C. have made a name for themselves. through their sportsmanship aml gentlemanty conduct. wherever they have played. Other and larger institutions want to play 115 and we have 511th schools as Reserve. Case. Warmer. Mt. Union. Ruchtel. Hiram. St. Ignatius anrl Ashland reguiarh' on 0111' schedules. Future students of G. XV. CV Should always hear in mind that the: snccesa of any institution depends to a certain extent on clean and moderate athletics. A. I. GRONEWAID. 79 T NW! years ago the Athletic J-U-u'u'iation of German Vt'allacc Liollcgc drew I90371909 BASKET BALL. TEAM Braden. Mgr. Kaletsch. C. Lemkc, Ochial Lagcman. G. Drake, L. G. Vollenweidcr, R. F. Gronewald, L. F. Starkey, R. G. 80 KW mumwl I 9097 I 9 I 0 Drake B Lemke UV: Heck H3: Matthaie W? Lechnel' !3 Gronewald HIM Stone NH 190941910 L'arl Hralu'. Manager .K. j. H11 nwwultl. Captain. Lcil IRn'wnrcl ............................................ k j. Grrmcwalrl Right I'hrwanl ............................................... R. chlmcr Center ...................................................... Curl Drake Right Guard .............................................. Dan Matthzu'i Left 61mm! ................................................... W. Heck l'ut'wurll ...................................................... H. Cullse Suhrilitutc X Stone 83 Basket Ball S far as winning games is concerned, basket-hall has been a failure at A Wallace during the past seasrm. But two years ago German Wallace Claimed the state hasket-hall ehampirmship. Then the Baldwin and Wale lace teams were consolidated and since that time the team has been playing in hard luck. The season of 1909-10 opened with but two old men hack in school. Grollewald was elected captain and Drake of Baldwin manager. Captain Grolle- wald immediately issued a call for candidates and it was necessary to develop much green material. A team was finally rounded into shape, which played goed bail considering the lack of a coach and the Small gymnasium in which the practice games were played. The gymnasium is much too small and has a very iow ceiling making it practically impossible to aCCOIIlIJiiSlI much. It was impossible to play public games in the gym. necessitating the use of the city armory, thus placing us on a strange Floor. The lack of a coach was keenly.r felt this year and Captain Gronewalti was forced to act as coach. We hope that our dream of a new gymnasium for German XVallaee College will he realized in the near future. The faculty Should nut hesitate lung in securing the services nf a competent coach and physical director. The team last season was confronted by a very riiFEeuit schedule, Coiiegians of Cleveland, Ashiaud. Casct Vt-rouster. Hiram and Buehtei being on cam playing list. Considering the ealiher of their opponents, the Baldwin-i-Yaliaee team made a creditable showing. The season opened on Thanksgiving night with a game against the Cniiegians. Cleveland Y. M. C. A champions for several years. Our team went dawn to defeat after a hard tussle. The score was 41 to 12. The following week we met Ashiand College on our Hoor and defeated them by a score of 28 tn 9 Ti-H' was once more in farm. The team work was good and the passing- was quick. snappy and accurate Captain Gronewald's H007 work was the feature of the game. while Metthaei's guarding was Excellent. After losing a close game to the Case School team. BJ-V met Virooster University in the Eerea Armory 011 the evening of January 29th in the most exciting game of the season and defeated the visitors by a score of 31 to 30. With the ReDre 1? to 8 against them at th eenrl 0f the first half, our fellows came back strong in the second period and played the Wooster team off their feet. For brilliauey and perfect team work the game was the Finest exhibition of basket ball ever seen nu the Iota! floor. Now W'ooster was a point in the lead. then 37W forged a. point ahead. X-Vith hut ten seconds left to play and Baldwin- Wailaee one point in the lead. a hush fell over the hall and when the time- keeper's watch had ticked away the Iast second, pandemonium brnke loose. B4 Prof. and etude alike forget their dignity and joined in the mar. What hap- pened afterwards is a matter of history. Some of our other game: were Close 31111 were lm't became of our rmpor nents' superior height and weight. The Hiram and Collegian games. were lust to teams that had a hotter knoxi-leilge of the game and played basket ball of a superior class. Here we would call attention 11.; the excellent oHiciatiug Of Referee Lemke during the 112l5t season. He has given satisfaction wherever ht: has worked and during the entire season has never had a decision questioned. His refereeing during the seamn has been such that he deserves recognition 215 one Of the most capable UH'lCiCllri in basket ball in the state. Captain Gronewahl will be the only member of this year's team wlm will he lost by graduation. Although his loss will lire keenly felt. a gnotl team should he built 1111 at'nuntl such men as Leehncr, hittllUI'IWCillCF, Matthaci. Drake and Guhae next year. Two other college basket ball teams deserve. special mention. namely. the Secmul team and the Freshman team. 'lihese teams helped much tuwanl ilevelol'r itig the Vanity team. During the whole semen they were loyal, appearing regularly at practice and often playing the lint team Close. These two teamS have also some good Varsity material in their line-nps. Captain Seibel and Guard I-lenke have played their la;t season mttl will graduate this june. The Second team played two public games during the past season with the Fresh- men and won hoth of these games. The First game was a 20 In 33 victory for the Seconds. Captain Seibel's freethrox-ving was the feature of this game. cage ing seven mtt of eight attempts from the Fmtl line Stone itarreil fur the liresh- men and scored 18 of their 25 points. The second game was again won by the Second team, the score being: 41 to 29. Captain Siehel showed his; usual gum! form and Right Guard Guhse played a mat game. The School of Commerce was not represented by :: haukel ball team this season. A j. GRONEWALD, Captain. 85 Notes on the '09-'10 Season HAT 31-30 Wauster game was certainly a peach fer excitement. The T crowd was keyed up to a pitch 0f intense excitement and when the game was over everybody slapped everybody else on the backJ and each of the players was surrounded by a. crowd of admiring co-ecls. Referee Senseman of Ashlautl came to Betea to oHieiate for his team on December 3rd. but he hadn't worked in the game more than Five minutes than the crowd showed its disgust and he wae'removedi Lemke of G. W. C. refereed the game. Senseman struck one 01' the spectators and after the game a. bunch of fellows gathered outside of the antlory to get Senseman's goat. but he slipped out of the haek entrance, wandered through the stone quarry and Finally found his way to the dormitory, where the college fellows protected him. Right forward Guhse, who entered school at the beginning of the second term, proved a valuable addition to the team and played a hue game. He was a member of the Detroit West High School basket ball team for a number of years. The team had a great time dOWn at Hiram hut Everhard of Hiram spoiled all their fun, when the game began. t'Tiny Ahbutt. the 260-ptmnd center of the Case team. made a hit with the crowd. Kaletseh, the Varsity center during the season of '08909, was- hurt in the hrst game of this season and was unable to play for the remainder of the year. At the start of the game with the Cleveland Collegians on Thanksgiving night. Shartlt. the big, rough center of the Collegians remarked to Referee Lemke, Aren't you the. little nut that refereed our game with W'allace last year? The little nut made the big fellow play clean basket ball and Shardt had seven fouls called 011 him during the game. Leehner shot three pretty baskets from near the center of the flour in the game against Wooster on February 5th. Captain Gronewalti had a total of 20 field goals during the season. Leelmer got 18 goals from the foul line. In the Collegian; game, Rob got 8 free throws. A fait-sized crowd of meters aeemnpanietl the team to Weoster 011 Feb- ruary 5:11. A moving picture show proved a bigger attraction than the ball game. Misa Akins elmperoned. in the last game of the season against Baldwin, Ebert played center. The 53215011 was a hnaneial success, $14.00 remaining in the basket ball treas- ury at the close of the season. Considering the fact that we have not a gym- nasium of our own and had to pay high rent fer the use of the armory. this Financial result is very satisfactory. A. J Gronewald, Captain Carl Drake, Manager Walter J Lemke, OHicial B. W. SECOND TEAM Gronewald Seibel Henke Krucgcr Ebert Meyers Black Lemke 35-3.; -., .. . . - -.AI..-,.- wayn': Kru Bchwitz Haebich FRESHMAN TEAM Lemke, omcial Stone Bocksiah ler Hund l909 Goilmar Ke nn ey Meinken Stout Dreisaig Black Starkey Braden Sutton Ca rgill 1909 Frank I. Gollmnr Manager J. Balmer Smut ................................................. Captain Catcher j.l.'1. Stout 3rd 'I'3212evlt, Sutton F'itcher?R. Edgar Left FichlgE. Lea Pitcheri'l. Kenney Center Fieltl-Rt Braden Pitchereli. j. Pfeitter Right FielrIeH. Black Short StupeE. Cargill SuhstittttCe'l'I. Starkey lst Baseet. 13. Meinken Substituteel. Dreissig 211d Ewe 1:. I. Gullmat' Suhatitlltee-J. Smith HE prospects for a winning baseball team were very hright at the begin- ning of the season of 1900, when shortly before the First game two star players were barred by faculty restrictions on account of low grades. In spite at this r'hsappointnwnt. Captain Stout and Manager 0011mm worked hard to round the team into shape. Captain Stout is one of the most remarkable baseball men that BaldwiII-K-Yallaee has ever produced. His position wae behind the hat. hut he was able to till any infield position at a moment's notice. Wlith the exception of Pitcher Pfeiffer. every ptayer was a new man. Not much eonId he expected of the green material. but nevertheless the team opened the FEELRL'II'I at. Bcrea rm April 14th. by giving St. Ignatius College of Cleveland. an awful trnuncing, 13 to 4. Kenney was 011 the slab for 8.4V and held the visitors to five hits. St. Ignatius used three pitchers but they all lonlced alike to the Berea buys. Cargill and Kenne-tr each skimmed the hall over the fence for a home run. The team kept on playing good ball but after SCVCI'ELI men were out of the game on account of injuries. we lost a couple of Close gamma. among Which was an eIeven-inning 10-8 defeat by Buchtcl. The 5eason closed on Dec- oration Day with a game against the Rerea city team. which also went to eleven innings. Edgar. PfeiHer. Lea and Kenney constituted the pitching staff. Edgar was perhaps the best Hinger and was sought by several Tri-Stale League Teams. He had :1 big assortment of curves and a bunch of speed, and would have won all his games but for poor support. He injured his arm about the mirlche of the season and was out of the game for several weeks. During this time Lea and Kenney were on the firing line and both pitched good ball. Lea threw a great 93 game against Ashland College. but was robbed of a victory by some stupid base? running by his team-matee in the last inning. Captain Stout was the heaviest hitter 0n the team. He got four hits in the St. Ignatius game and doubled four times in the Buchtel game. Meinken 0n the initial sack. played a steady game all season and was a big favorite with the eo-eds. Gollmar. on second. played a. great fielding game all season. and also had a good batting average. The infield was erratic at times and gave the pitchers poor support. Case, hl'estern Reserve, St. Ignatius. Hiram, Buehtel. Berea. am'l Ashlaml. were on the 1909 schedule. The schedule far the season 0f 1910. as prepared by Manager Vollenweider is as follows: April HevSl. Ignatius; at Berea May MLSL Ignatius at Cleveland April lGh-Case at Cleveland May l8--lV005ter at Berea April 23-Reserve at Rerea May 28-Buchtel at Akron April EFeHiram at Hiram May 3MBerea A. C. at Tierea June 4wRuchtel at. Berea. The prospects fot' a winning team this season are very good. as Stout, Car- gill, Dreissig and Kenney are back: and Drake. Leehner. Lash. Stone, Meyers; and Black are good new men. A. J. GRONEWALD. Foul Tips During the Baseball Season Captain Stout had four two-haggers out of six times at bat, in the game with Buchtel. at Berea, on May 15th. Starkey had a total 0f four errors in the game against Case, at Cleveland, all of which were easy ground balls. Pitcher Edgar was a good man with the stick and always managed to touch up the opposing pitcher for a hit or two. Optimistic Mike. on First base, was a big tlrawing-carcl with the routers. In the Buchtel game on May 5th. he drove in three runs with three timely singles. Had Dreissig come out for practice at the be- ginning of the season, he would have cinched the shortstop position. During the entire season Baldwin-VVallace was nut-fieldetl in but two games, Case and Reserve JOHN VOLLENWBDER turning the trick. Manager Lea's single was the only hit made off Bradshaw of Hiram in the Hiram game. He fanned 13 men. l'Fats'l Shire unmired all the home games during the past season. 94 Track Team W. J. Lchu- ................................................... Manager j. Vullmm'cidL-r .............................................. L apmin. '00 A. j. Groncwzlltl ............................................. Captain. '10 U. Htwkstahlcr .l- Urmicwzllil UA l?cnscke D. H'. chkc U. Huml Li. Kalctsvh H'. Lemkv .X. Ranking A. H. Svilwl .I. Yullemx'eicler Track and Field Athletics ICRMAN Wallace has been very rillCCt'HSi-IH in track am! FIL-ld athletics G Iluring the past few 5mm. although the lack of an athletic Held ha; fortml us in use 1110 Hum Fair Grmmda for this purpose. JilTurih' are now being m:nlc tn purchasu land suitable for an athletic and basiclmll FlcltL Baldwin University has an excellent baseball field but lackq :1 rulming Track. The annual dual truck and lieIcl meet with lialrlwin was imtiiuled in 1908. l'iemmn- H'allarc winning the 'UH meet by a scare uf 45 m 36. Ynliunwchler. j. Uruncwalltl ziml Rapking. plz-LL'e-winnurh in the '08 mutt, returned tn school the fnllnwing year 11ml fm-mcrl the nucleus of H10 1:191' yc-m'k ream. which mm the dual meet with 601mims to Baldwin's 48. Jack er'mcwald proved himself the greatest :111-arum1tl track man 3911-3 11:15 EVCI' known. He was entered in six uvents and mm first place in uuch. Um- uf twelve events. XVRIIave won nine first placeb. ' 95 J. Gronewald had things his own way in the dashes and also took. the half and the mile without much trouble. In the half-mile run, Seibel was entered to set the pace and tire the Baldwin runners if possible. The ruse worked and Seibel led the field for over a quarter of a mile with the men running their best to keep up the fast pace. The Baldwin runners were outgeneraled and, when Seibel dropped back, Gronewald passed the bunch and crossed the hue thirty1 yards ahead of Hall, who took second place completely exhausted. The greatest race of the day was the three-mile run, in which Gronewald, Vollenweider and Tormohlen of Wallace, and Hostrnp of Baldwin finished with barely a yard separating the iirst man from the fourth. Immediately after tak- ing second in the threeamile run, Captain Vollenweider entered and won the broad jump with 18 feet. The 109 team made a good record and as but two men have Ieft college, much can be expected of this year's team. Gronewald, who will run his last race for the blue and white this spring, has been elected captain of the 1910 track squad, and with the old men and the wealth of new material on hand, a good track team should be developed. W'. J. Lemke is the newly-elected manager and is bending all his efforts towards mak- ing the German Wallace Athletic Park a reality in the near future. Wallace-Baldwin Dual Track and Field Meet May 17. 1909. Track Events Event Winner Second Third 100 yd. Dash ........ Gronewald 1W1 Hall tB1 Tormohlen CW1 220 yd. Dash ........ Gronewald tWJ Hall CB1 Tormohien 050 440 yd. Dash ........ Hall tB1 Vollenweider tW1 Overly USU 880 yd, Run . .. .. . . . .Gronewald 1W1 Brown tB1 Tarmohlen 02W 1 Mile Run ....... Gronewald tW1 Hall UH Brawn OH 3 Mile Run . .. . . . .Gronewald 1W1 Vollenweider 0N1 HOSTI'LID CB1 Field Events High Jump .......... Hund WW Edgar tin Brown 031 Broad Jump HHVollenweider UN? Hall tB1 Drake 031 Pole Vauh .......... Gronewald tW1 Edgar tBJ Brown UM Shot Put ....Drakc GD Rapking 1W1 Curtis CB1 Hammer Throw ..... Drake 031 Fenseke CW1 Curtis KB1 Discus Threw .......Meinken CW1 Drake tB1 Curtis tB1 Paints scored: Wallace 60 Baldwin 48 Kaletach GTOHEWi-lld TRACK TEAM, I909 Lemke VOHEII WBid E r Backstahler Rapking Fe nsckc Seibel HE G. W. C. Athletic Associatiuu has three tennis cnurtr'. which are used T to a great extent by the students generally. llecuuse of the guml facilities. ttrallaee hah turned out some expert tennis players. In the Spring mi 1908. She FITHII annual tennis tournament wzH held with a big entry list. The t'irntlewnhi twins captured the doubles eaeily in Straight sets throughout the murnameut. Vollenweider won the singles tillet Still more interest was taken in the 1900 tournament. which was hchl during commencement week in june. The games were all close. but Ronsllauseu and Haebieh took the final match from Meinken aml Ililtke, two set: out of three. and thereby won the right to challenge the holders of the ehampiomhip. A9 A. E. Gronewalrl had left school, I. Gronewalcl :mcl t'nznllenweider met the chal- Iengers. After two fast sets. Ronshausen and Haehich captured the title. Ronshausen then won the singles tournament from I-Iachiele anrl challenged J. Vollenweider. the Champion. The match was played on the Monday of tour meneement week and attracted .1 large crowd of spectators. The match was undoubtedly the finest exhibitimt of tennis 111 the entire tnurnament. and X'nllew weider was forced to exert himself to the limit tn keep his title. which he dirt after three hard sets. Both men served in good form. hut Yrtllenweider'n brit- liant returns were too much for his opponent. Romhatmen $110tt'l3t1 a Hash of good form in the second set. but he was unable to drive the champinn away from the net, from where Vollenweider beat down his attack with ease. The longEFt set played ht the tournament war: that hetween Grnnewnhl amt Lemke. the score in games being 10-3. The hmgect single game wax: :11;th played in this match. the game going to deuce 7 time; the scnre hy paints heing 11-91 Lagemann refereed the games. while the committee in charge at the tournament consisted of W'. J. Lemke. Chairman. Chalk I-Iinke and Oscar Henri. The Varsity tennis team will this year consist of Yohenweider. I'Iaehieh, Gronewald and Lemke. Many new men are showing gnnd form and the tourna- ment of 1910 promises to surpass that of L'Ht year for interest and enthusiasm. A, JACK 1:;R0NIEVI'ALDV es VARSITY TENNIS TEAM Vollenweider Lemke Haebich Groncwald GIRLS' GYM CLASS GIRLS' BASKET BALL TEAM Thompson Miner Rica R. Reynolds Rogatzky M. Reynolds McKclvey Gottfried Amcrman Girls, Athletics IRLS' athletics, under the supervision of Miss Akins, have made marked h ; progress. during the last few years. The girls are not organized with Baldwin into a joint association. but each school has an association of its own. Girls' athletics are entirely under the control of Miss Akins. Dean of Women. who has shown herself a competent director; but if the girls were better organized with a president, secretary, captains. etc. there would undoubtedly he a decided advancement in their athletics. As conditions now exist, the girls are more or less pasgive and held in check, being not allowed to play any outside gamea in basket ball. whereby to keep up their enthusiasm. Physical culture is conducted under the Dclsarle and Swedish methods, and gym attendance is compulsory. At the close of the basket ball season of 190809, the Wallace girls chal- lenged the Baldwin University girls to :1 game. The chalIeuge was promptly accepted, and the game was played in the G. W. C. gymnasium on March 16th. 1909. It was :L very close and exciting game, the final score being 2-1- 10 17 in favor of the German W'allace girls. Both teams played a fast game and the score was always close. The T3. U, team was in charge of Miss Starkey, the pre- eeptres: of Baldwin University. The crowd was composed entirely of girls and the interest in the game was at fever heat. Had there been a neutral referee. perhaps less hair-pulling and scratching would have been witnesaecl. The line-up: German Wallace 34 Baldwin 1? Alma Blankmeyer. . . . . . . Left Forward ........... Grace Klein Gertrude Hahn ........ Right Forward ......... Icona Loomis Genevieve Phillips ......... Center ............... Mae Bruell Lillian Mitter . . . . . ..... Right Center ........... Miss Hower Hilda Gottfried ......... Left Guard .......... Leonie Lawson Tiliie Hitlerneyer. . . . . . . . Right Guard ............ Inez Shaw Baskets from tield-Blankmeyer :3. Hahn 5, Klein 2, Loomis S. Baskets Miss Akins. from foul-Phillips 4-, 13111011 3. Referee 1 03 FOOTBALL TERM ILLUSTRATED i The Line-up 104 Organ Recitals by Prof, Albert Riemenschneider, Of the G. 11'. C. School 0f Music. 1909-1910 23rd Organ Recital ................................... American Composers October 3, 1909 Mrs. Al Riemenscimeitler. Soloist. 24th Organ Recital November P, 1009 Miss E. Unnewehr. Soloist. 25th Organ Recital ...................................... Christmas Music December 5. 1909 Mrs. G. F. Collier. Snfnist. 26th Organ Reciml January 9, 1910 Assisted by Ladies Trio. 27th Organ Recital ............................. Modern French Composers February 6. 1910 Assisted by Choir of German 11. E. Church. 28111 Organ Recital March 6, 1910 Mrs. David Heck. Soloist, 29th Organ Recital April 3, 1910 Karl Hrossman, Violin. 30th Organ Recital ........................................ Bach Program May 1, 1910 101i Xx . .. .Z JWWW A. 4.11.8... f M X April 1. 1$JU$J Dm11my appears at Lzulics Hull. L'rucl girls cut him down. April 3 Rah-rah boys tic hKiEIH m trot.- lmt Mm Hitler comes to the rescue. April 5 $611i11ur Sncicty Jnhrcsfcsl. Aprii 10 er113' Six cnlcrtain in DielsL-h Hall parlors. April lvl- lIis5 Mohr am! Mr. Mathews leave for 1110 Hicst. Mathews goes 21.4 far :15 L'Hmstead Falls. April HFBRMwin-XYallacc upem baseball season by defeating SL Ignatiua 1.3 to 4. April lgmt'ioethc Society 35th anniversary. April 34-JI71'. R, 1., XK'nggmner of Baldwin lectures bcfurc the Y. M. C. 3.. on A Bunch of Kcys. April ZMEight fair co-cds cause stir by hoofmg if' to Cleveland and back in six hmlH. The immurtaI ones are Misses :Mnurmau. Blanktncycr. Gottfried. Ilahm Ilamp, Iiarrin. RiH 21ml Rogalzky. 11f! hlay hlay RIay hlay May ATny May May May 3 151111' crmplm furnish mmiv a1 511't'mgsvillc. FCIIFL'L'C. chke nml Ixmkc among;r 11w rural lnlent. ilu-ljr. Sclmcitlcr CHICI'HHHS Senior tflzLx'a'. 5 E3L1Chtd tumq trick in eleven i1113i11g-, Hm-Incl 10. Unhlwin-XYnllncc 3. S-agtnng again! .Xshluml f5. liztldu'itvWallace 5. 17 H'aHaCu wim :mmm': track anti 13m mL'L'L frmn lluMwin. Ufalhu-c 00, Baldwin 43. jack wins 5ix iil'sis'. 18 j1minr$ hunciutl Huniurs, HL-ninr gnwnn Illlll pink night shirt appear 011 lo!91 1rn1e xVircs iI1 frtn11 tyf l.atlEc: l lalL 23 Col1Cgc picnir :11 L'11ippen'n Iglkv. KM umL-w- hit with lu'ccoplress. 35-lln and Nlra llarighurM cwucrudn Scukn LJa4i 3 L-43orcn :X KL. H: lhdnhViu KkH1ucC. 7. Eleven innhlga lll June June June June June June June 2 'l'cnni: tmn'nammt. Rumllzmscn and llaebicll take doubles and V0!- lenwcidcr captures singles clmmpionship. 5 1 acuIly 0f Schoni of .UUFiC give Hvelhovcn evening. 6-Dr. Havighorst delivers; Ilnccalmlrcam scruum. 7- Open oratorical contesla Yalmlictory exercises of Lit societies. 8 Cl10ral Union rcmlcrn' Ilaydn's Seasons. 10-GCH'I1E111i:1 Society 50th anniversary. SEFTaHBEE fl DDUGM- thni pugs M15 September .54ch 18-32 KL E, A. Irrqntinn. Sept. 30-111 mcimics hold clcnirms. 50111. 35 1 'I L shic4 sing on Ladics Hall steps. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. Oct. October 4 1$ utting party. Sil-Iessrs. Krueger and Staudenbaur go on snipe hunt. lkjunior Hag floats over Memorial Hall. 25 C1eveland Alumni Arksmciation holds banquet. Prof. Haber. ,97, acts as toastmaster. 3MI-Tallowe'cn party at Dietsch Hall. 114 Alisa: Rica barks. Nov. Nov, Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. NEANER ViEH Cf November 9 Prof. and Mrs. A! Ricmcnschncidcr entertain Dictach Hall gir15 15 1'Iay ride 10 Dover. iSCHbCkC takes the chalpvrnn. 20-wu'isc0nsin Club xprings Surprise party Lm Dr. and 3111. :k 1.. chglich, 23 Scxtet from LucieW rendered on half a dozen alarm clocks in dining hall. 24 Schi11cr Thanksgiving party. 25 I ackct-hall season opens. 26-qu-Icssr5. Scibel ancl Lemkc leave for Medina. 2? 3'Iiss Mitchell has party. 115 Deni Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec. Dec Dec. Dec. December 1 6le111 grows mnustachc. ZHNnelkcr 51111111:ch in German Lit. 3 Rex-1 Ilecker gives m'chcgtra an oyster supper. I'iultlwinJYzllktcc 38. Ashlaml 9. Ashland College lcarm a few things almut basketball. 6 Co11ege m'chestra gives concert at H'cst Park. t'n-ccls swipv hm.- Rorlcmcwrk hat aml mm. ll-E-ialtlwin Y. M. L A. holds 'I'uur Xrulmtl the Vx'm'ld. Mm. I'l. in pink pajamas makm hit with Rap. 17 L hri5tnms receus begins. Ilhcrhanl, acting its president nf hnanling' club is given shower hath. 25 thristmas cmcrtaimncnl :Ii Urphzmzugc. 27 FIeighride m Dover. HIE URN '05; LIGHTS, r MERMY V330 m a' Jun. Jun. Jun. Jun. Jun. jun. Jun. lam. sz. jun. Tun. january -I 'l'hc grind begim again. tyihmn .Kkins siix :Ll Rowdy 1:11:10. LLIJ-ula .su'ipt IHITy :LL Sugar Iimvl. '1 1U1l Kutlkm' run out aumkiug. 10- Male tlunrlt-L svrvnzulw chm uf 'Wcmwn. 14 t'2lsu tlL'i-L'Hh 1.11:lwin-H'allucc 33 In 10, Tiny AMu-u lalnyn CL'I'IICI'. 1; 5.;1Cig-ln-irlu l0 IJm-rr, N ich uhjcrts tn r-H'cvl lighln'. 237 llmul rvuelun mall suln in bnnrtling Club. 26 3!051'5. Stumlrnhuur mnl Krucgcr cumu Immc frum L 1crolnm1 an owl TH . Ilm-a- 'mm' mother know ynu'rc um? JQAJJWHL game. Eialtlwin-Wallau- 31. H'mmlvr 30. Everybody happxz Mnrwlhms Ilmv nMHm-ry crultiun appears in l-iorca. accompanied by 315M Hump. x31 ---UI'V11LnxLI';1 givca L'Imvct'i :Ll' anklmrL am r' mow I? FREJNNIM' Fab. 1: 13b. Fell Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. F ebruary 5--I3rcccptrcss attcmls movin picture show :u Wooster. .7111'63-111111111 hanqum :Luul hickcllrs dlsappem. S-Lhilfkmli rc-appcar and gang holds spread. 9-11hc Dcan'n birthday. 11-.- X. H, Mueller. president of Frcshman Class. president of Y. M. C. .31.. and president of Iiat-a I'iite-a Pie frat, slides into boarding club. IFX- alanine:- l'QCtiVeKl. Miss llamp sits on cullapuible chair in board- ing club, 191I11cliana club has' party :1? Ladies Hall. 22-Choir gives concert at Strongsville. Cliff and Miss Rica ditto :13 April 3, 1900. 18136 Aprilj 241Hiram 25. BaldwinAYallace 12. ZkLiemIaHia sc'aciety party. 118 College Colors Sky blue and white. College Yell Rah I Rah ! W'alpimn-wah! H'allace College! Sis-hcmmvhal1! Tiger! Rah 1 Rah ! - -'ah-lm1-wah! Wallace College! Sis-bomn-hah ! 'I'igurf Rah I R2111 ! .V:Lh-1mn-wah ! W'allzlce College! Six-bonnrlmh ! Tiger! College Sang Du Smdt tier 'Weisheitslchrcn, D11 Urt :ler Jugendzicr, Um dcineu Ruhm 7.11 nwln'cn Sind wir vcrsammelt hicr. In Llrei Sprachen steig cmpur L'ns'res Lieder; juheichur! Stimmet heute ins gemcin In den j 111ml fremlig ein! CHORUS X-Yallace College. Wah. H00. Wah! With a Tiger. Sis! lkmm! A11 ! Rah, Rah, Wallace: Wall. Hon. Wah, W'ith a Tiger. Sis! Htmm! Ah! Uh, German Wallace College. TU all a place 5:0 dear, W110 come in quest of knmvledge 120 From parts remnle :11ch near; Many a man hast thou cacnt forth Who has proved the sterling wurth Of our dear U. W. L7.-- Sn may it ever he! CHORUS: Erg hU unmes gaudczunus iDLun 511mm juvenes. Jucumla sit inventus Usures pereant! Yivat acatlmnia, Vivant professures'. Yivzlt 11161111313 rluzchilth Stamper sin: in Hare! Clinlu'r': Head of Berea College Sets New Ideal by In- sisting on Quitting After 40 Years No Longer Able to Care for Broad Responsibilities, says Ger- man Wallace President, Who Often Has Refused Other Positions at Higher Pay. 33' UHRHTIH' IJAlJ-Z. EV. DR. KARI. Ix'IEIh'IIiNHL'IINlLIIIIiR. In ruaigning :15 prcwitlcnt HI R German Wallace College. lierca. ahur 40 yams uI service. reel :1 high irl mi HI duty,I fur atlucatm'ti. just 35 ht: has rcpcettL'tIIy rufusml nfft'H uf m:nn- t'emunel'mirc chairs in large eastern universities. because IW tlmttghl he was uccdcd at Utrmzm Wallacc, btJ Imw hc hay insisted un giving up lhc prusidum'y because III: feels he i: 11:; Iungcr able In 11:: Everything that it m-Ilegr ltt'cwitlctlt sltmlld do. He will Continue to IIUItI the chair uI Itlt'tlnsanIy. Dr. Ricmcnrachneitler wan happy as he tuItI uf hi?- Iifu as El tuztchtr. HL- ant in his slraighl-Icggwl desk L'hair before the nItI-fashinnut desk in the study mum at: the Imys' t1m'mit:.nj.-', where he 113-5 given zulvicu amt lIIIrLItI m-cr hig tumoe for 30 years. His stocky figure. straight-cut m:nnth :mII :Iutcfminczl chin. I'I'IEHIU him look younger than hi5 64 years. My resigning i5 nu slantl fur thL- tlslur thcnr-t'. hc said. Vrm Mullkc amt Frederick the tircat have bIIt'HVlI what we Hermam ctm tIu :mcr EU, TIN.- presidcnt of a CHIIege HIIIIUIII nut Lme be the IezuIing spirit uf hi5 institution, Iml Should I'JC nhIc tn rt'larcsunt I1 WCII zLIJruaLI muI ralmuhlcr :1 its responsihihliw. I don't feel uqunl tn that any longer. though I'll leach till lhc emI. Ileairles l'w Ilild charge ulA the Imys su lung I want a little. rest. Nut that they've played tricks on 111:, fur they havmft.H hu ilfIKIL'tI hastily Thu :Iunr ulwaya atuml upon so they never were tempted. IWert: ynu strict when thuy 1.:IayutI tricks tm uthcr Incnlalu? The keen gray eyes twinkleti. That tIrprntIL-ti un the trick. Ilc maid. iLh' it' he knew of some that even the tleall haul cnjuymI. I'IIvc had so many letters Irnm the hay:- whn hawc gum;- ultl Imam here. he said. with :1 glance :Jf prirlu at the Iitluretl desk. that it makcs mu qu1, if I had my life In live over again, I'ci :lu just as I have lIt'tI'lC. 'I wu-z mulerwl thu- chair of Greek at Cincinnati University. Harmrtt amt uthcr iustitutinns. but I always Felt it my duty to teach my own nmutry youth in El. theological school. So I stayed right hens. Anyway. I tIichI't want munty much. I wszt hruughl up to a great deal. :tntI aII I needed vats a living :tmI :1 little over for uhl age. And hero I cnulrI come near this life DI the lll'll'JII'L Teaching tlucslft mean just filling the: I1L'ELtI. hm inlIuL-ncing the IIIL: There was I Iltt.IlIIl'htUlL IltultIleslml was such :1 Iazy hwy. Ho I called him in here and we decided he'tI better make something Hf hilmclf. Nmt' Ichs a prut'ussur iu the University of Maine.U Perhaps it WEN runly perspiration The afternoon was turritl and the Huffy IIttIe runm stilting. Anyway. something inatL-nml amt l't'lIItEII front the HM pmr fcsmr's cyvs and thus Intlzzing rat a Hy was very distinct fur a minute or tu'u. 'IYEN'. I know I helped them tn hc hotter men. he said finally. amI l'ruc :ervicu can't he paid. Dr. Riemenrzchueillcr is n gTHtI'IlFltU rut the University Hf I-IstEI 11ml I.I'It.' I'llih varsity lilf. 'IIuehingun. He is I't'cugnim'I a5 um: uF lI'lt: foremost Crcck hL'I'Il'IIRI'h in NW I'Ititoll States. Appeared in thta Cleveland Press nu Junc- 91h. I008. 121 The Dean Who watches little girls and boys Partake of walks and other joys, And tells them not to make a noise? T he Dean. W'ho makes the rules, 50111:: ten in number. XYhich often cause you all to wonder, And when you break them give: you thunder? The Dean. Who goes to chapel every day, To watch, Ubserve, sometimes, to pray, And plays the organ when IJrof's away? The Dean. Vv'ho wears last seasmfs hat made tier, And meets you at the Dietsch Hall door, And has her troubles by the score? The Dean, Who goes along as chaperon, W'Ellelle'.er we want to be alone, And has a sweet way Of her own? The Dean. 1Who lectures oft 0n etiquette On social laws her tongue does whet. The like of which was ne'er seen yet? The Dean. Who takes the priv'leges away, And brings the mail up every day? Whose heart has neTer yet gone astray MT The Deatfs. W. J. L., '11. 122 What has become of former G. W. Students tTranslated from 2111 article written for the L'hristliche ApolugcteU HY Puma V. WILt-u-z-k. ERMAN Wallace College was founded in the y-nr 154134. with a faculty c:.:11s:i5ting of Hr, William Nam. ID. 0., I-H'csitlunt: Rev. jztcob Rothv weilcr. Professnr m Herman and Biblical Literature; l'. W- Mosblcch. Ph. 13.. Professor of Ancient Languages; Albert .l- Nas-t, Associate Pt'afessur; Miss Bt'lary Hascantig. Instructor in 31min. Tht- institution at thi: time trwl'tf't'l two building. the Hzthlwin Hall and the Wallace. Hall, huth uf which Were du- nated to the school hy persons whnse 11311165 they hurt; The primary mmivc which actuated the 11thth in their hlJt'rnlity, wzm to disseminate the Herman Izmr gtlagc and nurture tht: liermfm spirit among our youth :md to prepare ytmng men for the German ministry. 111 llmv far the institution has IIL'CIII'I'IpliSl'Iet'I itB-i purpuac. the fullnwing statistics are iutcmletl to show. Nuvct'lhelcah. tigurcs are at times: very unreliable. TL ilVIIit'l giving misuntleratamhngs :tmt leaving false imprussiuns. .! shall make a few explanations in advance. 1. In 110 instance have I employed a name more than nncc. cxccpt in such cases :15 are explicitly stated. 2. Only such students. are cnnsiclcretl a5 hurl hcen regularly matriculated. 3. Thusu, whu in the cmlrsc uf time have changed their profession, are accounted m that :me. at which they wut'kml tht- lungest. ur at which. in my opinion, they accumphshcd the most. -'l-. None have been enumerated as ministers. who have not been regularly taken into a conference and been in active service fur Zl timc at least. Upon the Other hand, those who are working in churches ul- uthcr tlenmninations have been counted. . 5. Among the alumni only those have been mtmteti whu have completed om.- of the four college courses. 6. in spite of pains and care in cultucting and arranging. these statistics calmut he accepted as authentic. Errors mag..- have crept in and, moreover, figures are always. mute or less rctative. Of the farmer tiiermzm X-Yallacc students, the tullowing are accounted for: h-Einistcrs ........................ ....336 Lawyers 11 Missionaries ............... t. . t . . . . . . 14 t1 is a Judge of Supreme. Court in t5 ministers are counted as such? State of VWitshiugtolm Editors and A551 Editors ............ 7 DDctnrs ..... 2'4 f5 ministers are cuuntctl a5 editorsJ Apothecaries . .. .. ,, A u ,, , 9 meessors at cuilcges and secondary Literati . .......... ... . . . . ..... . . . . 2 schools .................. 44 Lecturers 1 us are also cuuntcd ELS miuislersj Stlperintcntknt nf Dcucuness Hume. .. . 1 High Schnols thien'J ................. 20 Insurance agents ..................... High Schools tW'oulmU .............. '15 Phutngrztphcrs ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, 2 Music teachers 01cm. . . .. .. . t. . . 10 Bankers . 2 Superintendents and teachers of Public Engineers 6 Schools and Principals of Secretaries nf City 3-2 M. C An 2 Iligh Schnals O-Ienl ............... 20 Prominent business men . ... . . 90 High Schools t1-Womenii... 15 tThis category is. of course, thighhh-s-t in- Teachcrs in Pnhhc schonls .tMan... 20 cmnpleth Teachers in Ifltblic schools tWomenL. 21 tThe edltur has-atltlcd Lu l'mtl Winter's list the students of the last few years, whu were not Included in the profegsur s articleJ Translated by R. E. N. 123 BOUND FOR DOVER A Toast to thl: Lfllapcron Here's to the chaperon, May she learn from qupid Just enough 0f blindness To be sweetly stupid. Men are apt to fret and worry. ml what :- the use? 'When too late, they always hurry. But what's the use? Just to keep thc business boomilf. Men :10 lots of things inhuman. Even argue with a woman, But what's the use? SFREADS The End of Despair IIDNIGHT. A loneliness, an awful, phantasmal loneliness had settled its M dreary ebcm wings over the sleeping world. and in the densest. gloon'tiest shade of this horrible shadow! I pondered. The window was open, amt the summer breezes wafted softly into the roomt Quiet, shapeless smoke streamed intu- the atmosphere beyond. Did I say shapeless? A mistake. for in the deluge of moonlight that ltowed past the easement. these clouds took form: mysteriuus, vacitlating. The study lamp had gone out :1an left the mom in tntal darkness except for the red glare that was cast in the dark corner at my side from the glowing embers Of my pipe, :11ch ulmn the crimsnn tapestry this Circle of light took on Iuritl. phantastic shapes. The trees and grass glitterecl and sparkled with a million diamonds as the quartermouim shed its yellow rays over them. The little chapel over the way loomed up as a cathedral, dark and stately. And in this glnum amt lnnetiness there crept uver my mul a restlessness. a nervousness. a shuthler. The words of the great atheist Nietzsche. :itthEtI in my mind. I turned them over in every phase. When we die. in a mmnem we are nuthing. Oftcn read and heard eumplacently. these wnrds now hall a fitsw cinating. speII-hintling effect. I could not Shake them off. They grew as a demon upttn me. L'nacmtmtahly the gloomy scene transfunnetl itsei'f shswly into one of weirdness. memminess. l-Imrribte shapes with glaring. Eery eyes. lurked tn the shadows. antl the menu. as it peered through the trees. gritnted a9 a 4.1111. and from its crimson tipts trickled retI dl'tlllb uf bhmd. A :lesire to walk. to run anywhere, seized me. It Nazi growing terrihle, horrible. Ar; a monster the SUII' tude bore down upon me. My breath came hunt. my heart hem: fast. But why? Some mysterious. irresietihte, indehttahle force Filled my hreast. Suddenly upon the watk resounded footsteps. Tu my ear they came as clotls thumping upon the lowered casket. A man. tan, sturdy, muffled in a large over- coat and a stmtched hat passed by. His walk was. steady and firm. A comnum man. And yet my imagination clothed him in a shroud of mystery. The demon in my frame became irre:istible- I must away. Frantieally I drew an my great coat, and stealthily a5 a thief 0r murderer, shmk hurriedly into the Street. Dis- tinctly the footsteps could be heard through the damp. cirizzling air. and faintly I could see him as he passed from tree tn tree. Mechanically I followed him. My heart hounded harder. As I continued. the distance hetween us hecame shorter and shorter. Out of town. out of sleep. into the country. upon the hard road I fuliuwed. Miles. it seemed. we traversed. In the distance the helfry pealed the earliest morning hour. He came to a division in the mad. :me leading into light open hehlst and the other intrt dense. dark forests. He stopped, mused a moment. then turned into the darker path. I know not why. but when I came to the parting of the ways. I could not have gone in the nther direction. My feet wnuht not have car- ried me. WE walked 1m. No human habitation passed we, onlyr dark. grew-iome forests. the haunts 0f the grim and ghastly shadows. After a time am open field came into view. surrounded by gloomy. stately cypress trees. The moon mysti- fied the place with a dismal. tttelaneholy light. In the middle Stuod a Itmtse. El lag hut. olrl, dilapidated, with :1 forsaken atmosphere hanging over it. As a tomb it loomed up in the nightly shimmer. As a tomb of the past. A path led up to the door. A; the man approached this. he gIanced up. He came to the 125 path, turned suddenly, 211111 entered it. I 1111-1111111! into the 51111111111: 111 the trees 50 as not to be seen. The spectral leader 51111111111 with hasty 511'111655 1111 the path. His form was slightly 118111. 1113 appeared larger-mnre 111-1'5101'113115etha11 111311119. As he came to the 11111.11, 111-. 111111911 the 131011-111r111g 111111 11115111211 i1 1.1pe11. The 11111.1r 111d 1101; grate but rather 115111611 111111 the night. 11 1:11.151311 111111 1111: 11131111311011; 1111111 was lost in the 11111 111111 111 11111111101. .1 111111.11 11.111111? even here. The irresistible force was $1111 leading 1111: on my way. Slowly l crept t111'1111g11 1111: 1111111 light 111111 1111: high. c111111111y. slimy grave 1111 to the 1101156. 116511161; 1111? 1111111 it 1111.11 11111 11110 1111c11111gea 11'111111111'. 119111111 11115 with :1 throbbing heart 211111 11'e111111111g 11111113 1 011111011211. 17111111 within came the sounds 11f regular 1111711516115 1111011 the 1111111. 1.1111: 111111115 111 1ca11 lhcy 11'11 111111 1113' 5111.11. 3111211111111; 1111151311 511111111: lht' scene 111113111311 1141311 111 111-1! 11111111721 hare. unplastcrecl 11311111, A huge. black 1111-1111111. 1111: lire 111 which, 1111c 1111' 1111-1111111: 111 the 11111211111111115'. haul 11mg gone 11111. hlled 11119 11111 1:1f the 11111111. A 11111113 51111111 111 one corner. There 11111011 the 1112111. sunken in 1111:1'11121111111. 1111.1 112111115 clenched behind his back. 1-11.: face. as I 11111111 vaguely 3.1136 it, was 11'2111. 5211.1 211111 earc- Worn. 111111 1111: 1111115 111:11'111'11 11111 1111:111nc11111121 211111 despair. 1121111 111111 furih 11c s1r1111e. muttering tU 11111111c1f. 1 1161231111: 13901111111311. 1'11111'111611 111' 1111-1 11111g11etic presence. 211111 r2115:ch 1113151311 higher 211111 higher. I11 the 11191111101: 111111211 :1 11':111.'1H'11.1g; from the gable 1:11 the 11111 1113011311 an 1:11'1'1. :1 11111131111. 1111.1111'11111g. 11111111211 groan 111211 froze 1111' 111111111. Through the forest moaned 111111 gr1-1a11e11 1111' 1111111 :15 the 111197.115 sighing thruugh the ever greens 1.1131111 the ghastly graveyard. A solitary ernw Happed 11111111111111 111111 c21wetl. W215 I drea111i11g 111' insane? 11111 the precautions. thus far taken, were neglected. The 11111111111ght. 121111111: over me. cast my 911121111111 11111111 1116'. Hour. 1 11111 not set: 11. 111: 11211113911 over it 211111 11111 not notice it. A 111111111311 gust 111 1111111 111111111 1111' 11111111111 211111111- 1111?. A c0111 211111111113 12111 through 1113' frame. My 211121111111 1111.1Ve11. 1-11: 521w 11 211111 stopped. 1 1113111 my breath. Suddenly 111: Rcr '21111e11 an 21111111, terrihlc. 111111111- curdling curse. 111 :1 111111111311 111: .mprmlg 111 the 1111111011r 111111 was 11111 1111011 1111:. hearing me to earth with 1111: mighty frame. Cold fingers 1211151311 111111111 my neck. 1 saw only a pair of tiger eyes g1ean1 11111111: 1110. 111 1110111 I read 1136:1111. T111: 1112111 cursed 111 an undertone. an EVEN 1115' eyes were 11111311111115; 111111: before me. The earth seemed 111 be falling. A last prayer came 1113011 my 11115. 1 must meet eternity. Death with 1111 its horrors 51111111 open before 1111'. 1 1051 2111 hope. My whole 111'e 12111 through my 11111111 11111: 21 Flash. Then 111C lingers- slow1y relaxed. The 1112111 mac from my breast 111111 bade me 11:11:. Entraueed 1 311.1011 before 111111, 1115 11emrmiz1ca1 eyes glared 11111111131 very 50111. It seemed decades. centuries that we 91111111 thus. Then with 21 voice husky 21111.1 choked, he spoke in a 110111-51: whisper. You have come 11e1wcen 21 1111111 211111 1115 premature 1113511611 11821111. 1 111011ght 111 11111 you. 11111 :15 1 11111111 111311121 1:11 11. 11 1111111 1111 3-1111. 11' may 1111 the 111111111 good to hear me speak. B111 swear 111' the gods: 111111 adore and the friend; 1111: 1mm.- not 111 interfere with 1111' deed. Swear 111' you die! My voice :tuek 111 my throat. 11111 1111-1 1111-1 muved. 1-11: was satisfied and began. I was reared 111 a Christian home 111' parents whom I 11r1'11'511iped. God, church. religion were 2111 parts 111 my 1121111r life. 1 read 1111: Rihle. 111 short. 1 was a Christian. T111311 1 went 1111-11 11111- $11111. cruel 111111111. 1 was 21 great reader. Works 011 :kepticism 211111 atheism 11-11 111111 111-1'112111115. I read them. They drew me 011. I read more. Lactic. Schnppetthauer. Hartman. I'Iaeckel, became my idols. l 1:151 11151 faith in the first Chapters nf the Bible. then I ridiculed the whole Fli'rtt hank. and. lastly. the second was 11111-11 a myth. Bettex's. Augustine's. Schneider's arguments fell lint before the hiting. cutting shafts of the ridiculing 111:11erialists. Grad. church, Christ. prayer, all faded from my 11111111. ttlasphemy reigned in my mul. Hut I remained silent about my sacrileginus philosophy. My parents- wct'e tlevuut Christians and for their Rake I went t0 church and Cursed Its walls. L'ltrsetl the sung. the minister and the. tim'l whum IIL' praised. 1311111- CIITSL' made my heart harder In any much nf sympathy and religion. I believe in 110thinge1mthing+t lull. heaven or hell! 1When the lead has entered my brain. the seat of the 11er1'es. the cells of arthm, all is over; A11 eternal sleep. An eternal. absolute nuthiuguess. He stopped a moment, Through my cnnfllSetl minrl ran ThHF-C wants of Nietzsche. whose mysterious import had brought me hither: 111 a 1111i1111e11t. when we Ilit'. we are nuthing. Ah! here was but lJItC 0f the examples of the hundreds that have gone intn :1 suicidal grave hceanse of the destructive hooks of the. ieonnelasts. He was in the tlepths Uf the darkest despair. Cnulul 1 th': nnthing to stay his rash deed? He continued: This world is more 11nhea1'al.lle. hnrrihie to 1111: than any hell of Dante n1- Miltml can ever be. 1501' Ihe richer. uf paradise I cannot tell my friends of my great change. Nothing to hope fnr. here 01' hereafter. It is nothing. 1 hate it all. I tire of it and gm from hence: hut my last words of advice tn you and lhe world are: I'hink nut that man can know 01' learn. Tamper not for wtsdom's sake with the poisonous. sleeplicisun' You see my sad e11d-whe1'e it has 1911 mm 31111111 it as 3-1111 wuultl the atIIjElJS sting. 1 Curse it nuw. I curSe Payne. Yuttaire amt Feuerhaeh. If I believed in :1 hell to cmue I Would execrate them into the most excruciating RtlHeringst Hut IISCICSR There is 110 hell. Enough! CG from hence. Say not it won't. He drew a colrl. glittering revolver from his overcoat pocket. Mechanically I began going into the direction in Which he pointed. 'I could 110 nothing. T0 interfere. meant 11m deaths: to call for help ware vain. Again the dnor closed and waited. I stopped. A cloud huriml the 11101111. The owl 1.111 the gable aeremned. The wind moaned and shrieked. I waited! t-Vaitucl! Waited for What? Death! Dustructinnl Suicide! The snspense was awful. Thousands mt weird thoughts ran through my insane brain. Suddenly a loud report rent the silence. A vivid 11:th Filled the hut. .Xll was cwer! Dazed. dumbfounded. Itnrrnrvstrieken. bewildered. I went hack nver the mad. A11 was still in the mask of Death. The clock chimed 61:6. :1; :1: :1 5.2 Again 'I sat hy the mpett willlhlw 2111:! again the summer breezes waftett into my chamber. I pondered over the suicide and his 11111115. Think nut that 1112111 can know. In the mnming the paper: would say. His motive was prnbahh' husiness care and worry .Kh. husiness cares. and wnrriex Haw littte the world understands: the working; of the 11111112111 heart. In the oriental sky appeared a faint layer of gray 111111 a glimmer of dawn. The tapering steeple of the chapel pnintetl upward 111 the 1111'11'11i11g tight and an indistinct Hmtering uf hupe shot thruugh my heart. Perhaps. perhaps Nietzsche. was wrrmg. Runner YE. N11151.K1:R. '101 128 Freshman Thrce chickens are n-Inissiug And will nder appear again, If 1 should tell who took them, It would shock you there and then. There were some fine young ladies. W'ho had a spread that night; My how mall the Freshies wen: To think they had a bite. Now the Frcshies were so fiery TD think the chickens were not there; Vthn they had planmd it out To have a sumptuous bill of fare. Instead of chicken done up fine And dressing oh, So good: They had to hustle round And End whatder they could. And so to ml the missing link Into the shop of meat they rushed: 129 Chicken And from the counter quickly snatched A great round ring of Leberwurst'. Lchcrwurst and chicken gravy Had to fill the bill; But I guess the. Freshics Are longing for those chickens still. The Freshies fumed :md sputtered And said they'd raise a row, The thieves found out, must be Punished for the trick smuehuw. So there was much debating And threats of every kind: But they who ate the chicken Did not seem to mind. W'e should hand to every Frcshie As a fitting souvenier, A chicken bone wclI-polished Writh a nRah-Ia'lh-cl'lickell cheer! FLORENCE ENCLERT '11. DAUGHTER OF GREEK MEETS SON OF GRINDSTONE IN BEREA Out There 15 tho Place W'here a. Cnllege Was Literally Founded Upuu Sandstone; Now Everybody's Happy and Flourishing irucuu. u! an. :oaamrowmt 8!:an 0.. 03L H. Omit ur lrrlndmmu Thi- your :holc- When you com! to Bevan. Ior Wurdr wuklnx II Inn. you'll nu mm: m nu up lane n! the mull, urn aver Ihu. Grumman; md- arm pnulblu. an! no. u:- ura .9 IN! Iur um um nah n hap- I? mm mm; mum mu u clun- Itml l ambush nnw. mm- pllins'. mn- lt-l'lul. I'lll 11! Ink hmllchlilmi mm luv Iii m u um um amm- nylllm Wu have no sulwwa. lu mu heal plan In ta: nuts to lln Ewrrlhm: and mer mm! on: barn. Then a um J W. llunhun Camp : for human!- Thar WRI- wun . nmo wu-br- Jum- 91m: III! lIl-FO.I PHUF5 FUHGWE Hum HEHEA Students Suspendednn Charge of Beating 12 With Stavea Reinstatad. Nine students at German Wallace college Bares. suspended for haz- ing In the faculty last. W ednesdaV. wen: leiilstalerl IN the board Mon- day ms is what the huz'ers were charged with: Thrashlng 1! students with barrel stmes Dousing one student with buck eta of warerv Fowing 10 Yale locks. Ruudug away from prayer meet- mg. The man who got. Ihe ducking was Grasshopper Sleiger. a. new stu- dent from Germany. The hnzere said 1:119;r mnty intended to beat him wilh slaves, but that De put up 3mm :1 hard light they decided to add the water. Locks were fortea. it was charged. in getting intq the. studenta' rooms. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY. Il IGDIFDI ACID -900 OFFIGES ll AMSRIGA. CABLE SIRVIGE T0 ALI. THE WORLD. mmnanmnm n:nvm-n-uom Mwlmhmvd: men...- II-II-nn-Am ad. mm..i....w Mm mmu ' mummy. .....2:'...M. .ELE.'.:' .1':.:,.,..!.. .mmun .n '73: hr dr;n,mmmwmwmu:;-u uroluu-ww uummu mmmuuugdq; nI-Inml'xb xunntsn mnml'fsh. mum-wuh mumm. u -m-mm noazvrr c ctowav Pn-m: mu ra- nu nu... The Raven on Smoking UYith Apohagicr t0 llocJ Ah, how well do I remember As each faculty-pledgml Incmbcr Voted that no dying ember Of the butts should grace the finm'. Vninly have I sought to borrow Makings just to drown my sorrow. Sorrow for the smokes nf ynre But quoih the Doctor: uNevermore And the raven never flitting, still is sitting, p: 131 Still i2: siiling on a pallirl bust of Rody Just above my CI121111IXT dnnr: And his eye: have all the seeming 0f :1 demon that is dreaming, And the hall light o'er him streaming Shows the emply hows on the Hnon But my pipe nr tobacco qcnttcrcd on the Hoar Shall be liflcd ncvermorc! ROBERT Ii. NIIIEIJCI-ZR, alias Tad. AUFSATZ COMMITTEE The Last Aufsatz Committee These were the last of the h'Aufsatzm's. Of the nine on the picture but three are lefthBohhy Noelker, Dan Matthaie and W'alt Lemke. In their memories this picture will recall many happy evenings spent in enforcing the motto, Hilf dem Brmler zur Denim. by means of thorough and nerve-tingling :iAufsatzes, administered with slippers. straps and bed slats. So diligently did the Committee ply their task that the faculty felt compelled to summon the Aufsatzetsii and inquire into their lllethmls of procedure. As a result of the investigation by 'tTJnc'i and his colleagues. the nine heroes pictured above were given an indefinite leave of absence from all classiest and the pater in each case received the sad news in a faculty letter. Then was one of the timc-honored traditions of old Wallace shattered, and to this: day 110 iKAufsatW has been administered to any unsuspecting Freshie. How did you knew he was from the cnuntry? Stone sat in his room, By his accent, A smile was on his face: But he didn't spenkti, His French unnoticed on his desk, No, but I heard him eating a piece of The causchhc had a case. pie with his: knife! 132 In Memoriam On the Rcmovai of :1 Maple Tree from the Campus. 'Twas Friday night. the stars shone bright, The dorm in slumber lay; When athletes strong. a motley throng, hYent forth into 1h; fray Each armwl with spade or dull :lx-hladc, A rusty saw or two, They crossed the court. then halted short As the enemy how: in view VV'ith ax and spade the charge was madE. Haw valiantly they fought; But not :1 word Frnm them was heard For fear thUy would be caught. Those gallanls brave, how they did slave T0 down that harmless foe; Their breath came fast, lut then at last They laid the monster low. A smothered yell, from their dry Iips fell And thcnhfm' the quarry hole; With n tearlcsa eye. without :1 sigh They watched it t.lnwnward roll. If you knew it not. 3.1le miss the spot. So meat the job was done; And On the place um 51 single trace To tell of the missing one. No more at night, frmu :l bright moonlight Win it screen a loving coupie; Nor in its shade, low games he played In a single court or doublet Near the midnight hour from the college tower They heard the Hagstnff groan; And it seemed to Say in a uamlrnfnl Wily. T11 soon he left alone, As a witness sage, m1 history's page. The tales that are yet meld; It may some day, in tree-temity Write out in letters bold. EDWARD Amman. Schreiber at Home Lnuie met her 111 the meadow As the- sun WE'IS sinking law: They walked along together In the twilight's afterglow; She waited patientLv, while He lowered all the bars; Her eyes shone down upon him As radiant as the stars: She neither smiled nur thanked him. Indeed, she knew not how; For Louie was but a farrnefs lad And she - - - a Jersey cowl Even if we cannot give forth rays of mnshine, it is not necessary to go out of our way to cast shadows. BALDWIN CAMPUS G. W. C. CAMPUS. 1890 The Snipe Hunt The midnight hour has softly struck, the dorm is sound asleep: The wind sighs through thc bending chm, the 1110011 his watch does keep. Now forth they come, ll'll: hunters hold; they go to 100k for snipe; And Victor lugs along a barrel, while Stautly has a corn-cob pipe. 011, 011. they go, they do not lag, not rest their weary feet: The Frcshics also march along so innocent and sweet. And now they reach the turning point and walk along the track; W'hile Freshie still plugs or. behind, the barrel on his back. But suddenly across the road Eiey. fast a little stripe: And Staudy opens wide his mouth. Uh. fellows, see the snipe! Reta held his sides. Art hit his tongue to keep from laughing out; While in the rear Dan wondered what the fun was all about. And now at last they reach the woods, the night is dense and black; While Fteshic still plugs on behind. the barrel on his back. But then they set the barrel down and Freshies lie in wait; No snipe are seen, no snipe are heard, they do not take the bait. When several hours at last have passed, they suddeuiy see light; And straightway then they homewartl g0, they'll get no snipe tonight. I've seen !em fresh. I've seen iem green, and nerve they do not lack: But snipes are out of style, dear boy. with the barrel on your back! Lw. J. L, '11. 135 Applied Literature DANIEL H. G. ll-IATTHAEL I am the very pink 0f courtesyKl-Ed Andree. llWho thinks too little and talks too much. -Krueger. He was a scholarhancl a ripe and good one. h5chweinfurth. uAnd still they gazed and still the wonder grew, That one small head could carry all she knew? uFlorence Mitchell. dYon Cassius has a lean and hungry look, He thinks U? too much UL such men are dangerous. hF. Otto. Let us have men about us that are fat. -Kaetzel and Krueger. Her voice ever soft, gentle and lowilthea Strecker. llAnd she will talkhaml she will talk, Ye gods, how she will talkl'l hh-larie Hamp. A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing. anck Gronewald. l'Gocl made him, and therefore let him pass for a man? Michel. llAs merry as the day is longfthillian Mittet llTax not so bad a voice to slander music more than ouceftheibel. For suffrance is the badge of all 0111' trihe. -Fr'eshmen. HW'e took sweet counsel together. ijohn and Emma. 'lHe had a head to contrive, a tongue to persuade and a hand to execute any mlschieffl-Lemke. llHer face, 011! call it fair, not palefl-FMyI-el Reynolds. A pleasant, smiling cheek, a speaking eye, A brow for love to banquet royally? -Mabel McKelvey. llFrom the crown of her head to the sole of her foot, 51165 all mirtlLlE-Ottilie Gott fried. A man he was. to all the students dear. hProf. V. W'ilker. hSmiling face, eyes of blue, Her gym suits also of that hue- -Ruth Reynolds. Full well they laughed, with counterfeitetl glee, At all his jokes. for many jokes had 1163' hDr. Rodemeyer. iTlh, call it by some other name For friendship sounds too cold. hSchaefer and Mary G. And we're all good fellows together. hThe juniors. llMoum less for what Age takes away, Than for what it leaves behind. -uMiss Akins. Oh, Kid, has she: done this to thee? What shall, alas! become of me P hEcl Andree to Kid Noelker. 136 mm W PH $?.ktk, owno. PHOTOGRA ER G. W. C. FACULTY I 8 7 7 Pat Flinn, on American Politics G-intlemin 8: Ladies 8: Mr. Chairman: In this great country of America, there? always great min to stand up for the roight and tramp on the wrong. First, there was George Washinton, who made the great spaehe over in th' convention in Virginia. ahout: ltlt is natural for mom to divulge the illusions of hope. Thin thir was Patrick Hinry, Whin the great Civil War broke out. who stood up and said: The slaves must be fray, because 'All min are cremated fray antl aequal.' Now, today welre agin up aginst it, and we need some great min to stand up for the might and tell the people what is wrong. So 1 come before you to spake to you on the subject of American Politics. My first point isr-what they call the 'tTenttperanee 1110ve111ent. Theree a lot ol preachers Emtl people that can't drink, that don't want nobody else to drink naelher. They bring 1113 500111 arguments. but there ain't nothiJf in them. They say that men get drunk and bate their woives. Now, is thot the fault of whiskey? Niver at all. It's because they don t have the might kind of waives. If they had one loike moine, they wouldn't do anything loike thot. Thin, they say that liquor isn't guotl for a man's brain. You never hear of 3 111011 that had a sickness called whiskey on the brain, shure not: but don't you hear about mony men thot die from a sickness called water on the brain ? Now, if they wouldn't clrenk so much water, they never would die from thot sickness. Another great question for the American people is the Trust Question. We have trusts and trusts and trusts 1'11 America. There's the whiskey trust, the tobacco trust, the steel trust, the oil trust, and two or three more I don't think of, and the Money Trust. Thotys the one I'm tryin' to get into. The great danger eooms up when the same min get their hands into all these different trusts. You know, a trust raises prices. Now, when the same min get to ownin' all these dittereut trusts, theylll be raisin' all the prices. The Railroad Trust'll charge so much that whiu we travel well have to walk. The Ice Trust'll charge so much thot we kin only have ice in the wintertime. The Coal Trustlll charge so much for coal thot we'll be in danger of freezin'. The Meat Trusfll charge so much for 111eat that we'll have to ate bread. The Flour Trustlll charge so much for hour that well have to cut out bread, too, antl ate vegetables. Then we may be all might for :1 while, if they don't form 3 Vegetable Trust. But soon alonglll come a Fresh-air Trust and charge us for every square foot of air we brathe. and when thot gets too high-priced, we'll have to quit brathitf and tloi. But we can't afford to do even thot, for we'll then be overcharged by the Coffin Trust. 50 I say: t'Down with the Trusts. But the great quistion thot we hear so much about is all this fuss about Women's Rights. ' Besides the dozens antl dozens of women goinl round talkin' about the great things women kin do, and the great things thot women has done. and the great things that women oughter tlwthere are even some fool men praeehhf about womelfs suHrige and women's roighte. They say that a Woman is mom's aequal. that she must live under the same laws thot the men do, and so why shouldn't she help to make those laws and vote? W'ell, let her vote if she wants to. See if I care. Let the women be Senators and Presidents and City Councilmen and anything else. jist 50 they quit all this fuss about their migllts. What I am for is a moule roights. A mou oughter have the might to go into his own house without first havin' to clane every speck of dirt from his fate. A man oughter have the right to ate what he pleases at his own table and pass by some Stuff he tlmft want. without havin' a cup ol coffee thrown at him. A mon oughter have the might to go out with the boys once in a while and come home a little late. without foirldin' someone waithf at the door with a broom. I say what they oughter preach is-AMONlS ROIGHTS. 138 There are more questinns for the American people. but these are the most important tmes. Now, I want to say a few words about the ditterent parties. First. we. have the Republican Jetty. That's. a good party. There are some foine men in that party, There's Mr. Ruusevelt in thot party, and here's mcsclf in mm party: and then there's Old John D. Ruckefuller, loo. Nuw, I'm nut a special trieutl 0f Rockefeller: but 1 luike his class. just the kuiuti of folks I lolke to mix up with. ll-ell, ultl juhn D. Nuttkefeller is President uf the Oil Trust and Vice-ltresitlent ut the Money Trust and president of two or three Lather trusts. Now, there are many more mine men in the Republican Party, but I won't men- tinn any more. The straight fact ti, every mom that belavcs in prosperity is in that party or hallgin' unto it. Thin there's the Denmt'ratic Party. It ahllt such a bad party, but it belongs to the Dawn and 0111 Club ever amce it wanted to have Fray Silver. Thut was a bad staml fur the Democratic Party to take; to want to make silver fray. They tlitln't want the slaves to he fray in lltt; time of the Civil War, and so they uughttfl tu want wilver tray. They uughtcr slancl fur fraytlnm all the time 01' not at all. 'J'llin. there's the Sucialist Party. 1 tlun't know jitst what kuinll 01' a party that is. I thought it was a fuiuc party, but I've changed my muincl. .I thought they wanted all the money ul the enmttl'y it: he netlually tlivuletl. Say, wouldn't that lit: toiitt? Yuu'tl get but much, l'Il get :50 much, uhl Carnegie, Rockefeller. and all the rest Would get jist as much as you and me and not a cent more. And thin about the time 1 got all muine spent and Hul'lltl of these lellers'd lhink they had mureln the rut ul 11m itld all be put mgether again and well have another division. 311': now I hear that ain't what them Socialists want to do at all. They've got some fool seheme about haviu' the government uwn the railroads and coal mines anrl a whole lot more of the trusts and industries; and they don't waul L15 lo have any Senators any more; jist want that llouse of Representatives to run the gttvurlmtunt. lWell, l. :loll't want :my Llf their HUWefElllglEtl Schemes. Thin, there's the Independent Party and same nmre parties yen don't hear much about. But I cltm't bclave in any of these parties 'ccpt the Republican Party, and I don't belave much in that. But I tlt'l belave in stantlitf pat fm- prineiples and great men. We don't need any parties at all if we have the might kind of principles and men to stand for than lint hefut'e 1 Close, I want to spake about the great rcfourm movement for clean 1mlities. jue Folk, ever there in Mississippi m- Missmtri or somewhere, has been tloin' some fume work. in what they call eleanhf out the pullticians. Amt up in New York I hear they're tluin' some goutl cleanin' up, tnu. Well, that's what we want. Many of those politicians think thut the ptthlic afliees are jist matte fur them tr: make mouney out of. And it may be as hard a5 driviu' tiles out of a barrel uf molasses, to Blame out all the graftitf politicians, but if we get inspired by leolcin' at sich men as Patrick Ilim'y and George Lincoln aml Abrahmn W'asltington, we kin do it. 1 tell you. when Bridget wants to clean out the insects that get in the brearl-bex. she takes scaltlill' hut water; and when we get after these graftin' politicians With the sealtlin' hot water of peoblie inr.lignatimt, they Won't have any more show than a suow-ball on the Fourth of July, and well make them feel worse than an lrithman that's strayed into a jewish synagugttc. Now. me frinds. I want you to stand with me fm- clam: politics. If we want to we kin run out all these scalawag politicians aml run the government right; and then with pride aml admiration we kin think of tho! great American who wrote the dictionary and who baid: i'leerly and Union Imw-and fnre- every OHCe-alltl imparable. -C1-1ARL1:5 HINKE. 139 CAMPUS The Soliloquy Club Their motto: The surest way to hit a woman's heart is to take aim kneeling. Gullsc utters: l lave her, I love her, And who will dare To chide me for loving A maiden so fair? Kid Noclkcr gushes: Long had 1 searched Q'er land and sea; But at Eaidwin I found my aFEnity. Andree nmans: Here's to the love that lies In a woman's eyes, And lies, and lies, and lies. Goettel mumbles: In the Show Mev state Thereks one clear to me; If shekl be here Then Pd happy he. Nimz gives this: The little one charmed me. I had quite a case; But Myrers the nicer W'ith her Classical face. jack Gronewald says: XVoodman, fell that tree, Spare not a single bough; I carved a girPs initials there, W'e. both love others now. Lemke continues: For happiness I ask but these three: A pipe, a moon, and Marie! Wemmer sighs: When Florenceiq dimples come and go. I watch them, torn ,twixt bliss and woe. G70r at her feet I long have sat meJ Their fitful charms distract me 50, Because, alas, I never know, If $1165 laughing with or at me. Kruegefs wail : Lathfs :1 dead language. Dead as it can be; It has killed Off all the Romans and now it's killing me! The editofs refrain: Lives of editors remind us, That their lives are not su'biime; That theyWe got to work like thunder. To get their copy in on time. 141 CAMPUS. IBSB Comics D. H. G. Matthaie. Editor Mary had a little lamp, Which jealous was no doubt; For every time her beau came in, The little lamp went out! Mein Mann, der ist Prediger, Seine Frau, the bin ich; Er pretligt den Lenten, Und ihm predige ich. Where shall the lover rest, Whom the fates sever, From his true maidenk side Parted forever? Some in the Deants studio, Some at the Rocks, Some at Fiedlefs, Some just look around for a new one! We will know that the Millenium is here When-We have that new gymnasium. WhenFBaldwin and Wallace are one. WheneMiss Akins is married. VVheneEberhard has graduated. VVhen-Jack has but one girl. X-VheniFrey can pronounce Greek. XVheneStaudenbaur can play tennis. theneFlemming no longer smokes 3 for 55. WheneSclm'einfurth plays baseball. WheneBroadmiudedne-ss is no longer a scarcity at G. W. C. Whenr-Kid combs his hair. A joke, it is a gentle thing And hatH a pleasing sound; W'e pity those who feei a sting Whereter they may be found. For only they who're worth the while Have all their foibles shown; Who woulddt furnish many a smile VVhereby theyke famed and known. 144 The unlj; limu llmi I ah linwn in th-n I r-lmly. huitl Ibrlman. Say. x'nu must gm awful lirL-ri standing 111; all 11m time. rcpliml jack Uruncwuld. ' Ilnz H11 111C bnarding L'IuIH wI hcy haw: a virtue th-I'L-ver they gm. 31.155 MI'l I l- .Ri V'.-hll?H 11.x:w Ring1ings. Heard in front of the Ladies' Hall llI : I'm 'h'll'ng in kiR-a ynu when I leave. ' HIII-: Yuu 111:1; gm :ll Imus. Heard in Sacred History The E'Zpistlvs 2111' the wives of the Aln'mtlm. Fl'CShl'JlPII. having CIHSH picture taken. Mr. Smudlcy: Nuw. Ii'ln't a minute. llun'l 511111,, MI: lizlrtzcl: clun't grin, Mr, l'iuml; thm'l throw out yr:1n'cllc.:t like that. Mr. luckstzlhlcrz well, in a ward. lmak natural. just 35 you Would if you wcrc raccing your chickcns Rlolcn ! Calling Night at the Ladies' Hall III': S:13.'. if ynu wort;- tll'CSSCkl in whitv. I'cl 1M: icmptml ln kiss yum. SIII-: lecuw me far a few minute: till I change my dress. Dill yum tcll him In cum: and sci: mu 9 Yes. i lultl him to go and sec yum. Miss: Akinr-L hut IIL' said that in: had already won yuu sertrnl limes. but still wanted 1:: lulu: me to the game. replied the new girl. Man nmkca friendship a mcauls and law an uncl: with wnmzm it i5 jmd 111C reverse. .I. I. 'I :1ylur. When Miss Akins had la grippe Hm: Ix . Yuu needn't wurry :llJnut Miss Aldus: she has a remarkable cnnsiiinliun. .K HALL Iiml .---1 WoIl, yum rmghl tr: sou. her hy-Inws. rules and regulations. that we haw: in lhc- ll:-lll ! Kid Xudkcr may Iumw his luminous. hut he thwsn'l miml :1 little thing like: that. Calling night at the Hall My. I promised Miss Akins I'd leave at nine delock and now it's ten already, said Stamldy. 'XGoocl, we still have eleven hours, was her reply. In Grammar Class Miss AKINs-X'X'Vhat does lhe ahbreviation X. 133 mean. Mr. Kupicr? XNO answer from lx'upfel'J M155 AKINSn- Tvc been waiting two years for that. HENRY LASI-L tasideX - W'hat. the bachelor ? PROF VV'ARLHX'What is. a hypocrite ? ' ALPHABET DJXN-QJX fellaw who goes in chapel with a smile on his face. A man with lots of iRlough can afford to Xloaf. Imprudent W'hcn mother boxes Mary's ears, She stands in tears and blubbcrs; 011. foolish child, to stand in tears XVithout a pair of rubbers. If all is h'fair'X, in love As you and I must know; I fail to see where the poor brunette Has even the inghtcst show. Kindermund X50, jetzt schlaf in Gottcs Hut. XXSagX mir 110th, Mutter. ist der auch 50 gram wie der deine? Sueszes Kind Na, Junge was kickgt r111 m'ir so an? Wrater. du sichst ans wic ein Leewe. ' Na Junge. du hast ja nnch gar keinen Locwen gesehcn; IINa, Vater, beim Nachbar i111 Stall Htcht doth ciner. J'ungc. das ist doch aber em Esel. X-Ta. Yaier. so siehst du ans! Technik LEHREthVvaS stellar: sic sicll unter einer Kettenhrueckc 'ror? SCHUELIER X'Wassc-r ! 146 Many a mnullcxitm is nut :15 pink us it is painted. PROF. WILKIER tin French classlh$l shall be tempted to give thin class an examination. ' D. H. ti. M.- Pr0fc.-;sur, yield not to temptation. To the Senior As a Freshman bright, with pure delight. I-Ic surveys these classic halls; lYith pictures fair and llrawingri rare I-lc decorates the walls. W'ith hope most high, with beaming eye, He greets us: when we call. Vt'hat grades he'll make? X-Vlmt honors take He'll win the First of all. The Senior now, with classic hrow Knows if he kept his boast; Nith record good or record bail HI;- answers 10 the toast. He says Gootl-hyc with tealr-hllml eye. In sorrow he says, Farewell. 1501 the last time. he hears the thimu Of the dear old college hell. Vt'ith eyes all tears. with heart all fears. He hears 1.15 wish him well; H'hal now he'll do. what course pursue. God above alone can tellt D. H. G. M. l'Icrc's where I prove an artist. 1130. 1With never a brush, he cried: He stretched his arm and then he drew The maiden by his side. HA 5. Times. Aber wir wollen waiter lrrnm the distant east. where the oysters grow. Came a fair young gallant. Yolle you know. Little did he;- know what was his fate. hit. ah! oh. no. it was not too late. Here l'lL' met a. maiden. wondrous fair. H'ith eyes af brown and golden hair: Her smile was sweet. her eyes were bright. She was all. yes, all. in this gallant's sight. This youth lacing full of ambition. Always: found time for his dearest 111iF-5i0n. Ah the fates were kincl and Cupid true. He was granted the honor this maiden to woo. Thus, regardless of duty. work 01' wcathen Emma and V0119 are always together. -HI1J:.t l.'in'r'rpIeIEm 13. 147 The farmer may talk of the blue bird. Of zephyrs the poet may sing, Hut a tack upright On the Hour at night, Is the Sign of an early spring. The jokes that a fellow Rcuu-mbcrs are yellow Vt'ith agehreally century pets: lint the true bull's-eyc hitters The dandy side-splitters Arc those he always forgets. 0h. Miss Aldus, I think Franz is: just flue. Why so ?' uWeli, do you know. today while he was tending the furnace. 11c snmshetl his finger, and he sat there on the steps and talked to God for five minutes! After this world some go 10 bliss and some to blisters! Early 10 bed and early 10 rise Gives a man a baggy look under his eyes. The Komic editor may work Till brains and hands are sure; Hut some wise duffcr's sure to 5213:. Geo, I've heard that before 1 I laugh, our dear fricncl Schaefer cried. At everyone who laughs at me. Good land. his friend L'phoff replied. '110w Very merry you must be. 148 The first time Iltll' friend Iltmd played Int:ket4.iall, somehruly pushed him ngahm the wall with the result that Referee Lcntke at once called it ftml, saying. Foul on Dan for shoving. Hund picked himself up, 1erka :LII around and then saicl. Fuwl? Ittwl? why I thought it was the 'IRVDntieth t'cnttu'y Limited! HII'AI'IJIEN1t.H.'lilt-7 Ifk this heaven's bliss that I taste? The mumbled answer XII, that i-a thgate's fttt'c pmvtlct'. Say what you want tn. said Sciutefet'. I nun: rutlc in :1 carriage. Yes. said Iiitl. his rme-matc. when your lnnthur pushed it. W'hcn Hcckur relurnc-II In New Ym'k HCVCI'ilI Slltlillltl'a rtgn. he lulrI hire sisters about his wonderful progress in Greek. The result: I-lis sigters heard him give the college yell. Fur joy they could 562111er Speak: Oh. say, do juut listen to Our Julius rcciling Greek! MESH Rugulzky at Simpson tmt': clay ltt'ulmsml sending the picture of a football term entitled It'it'st Iern ttt jnhtmy. The L'nmir Lillitm' thunght 01' the EolItm- ing classic lines: At: Hht'u'ltll as IICIJCIh. his razored check. tThib knowledge it nnly experienced by contact.ht mnit Iiditm'J I nwm' saw at purple um: I nCt'L-t' Imlnc in 50!: une: But by the purple- milk we get. I know that tIlCl'L' must hr: nnc. It says in the Rational Living That giving. not getting. is: best; And methinks that I hear, 'W'ay hack in the roar, Hume .Xmens. and then, Him: 115 at rest. -4'I. II. II. Aixr'rILm-I. L'umit- Ifdilm'. Btu. Hm-i- tin First Year tiermzth- Die thugs tIlerh dcr l'enster aprang ttnc'l :tIIcn meineg Schickens gckillt. I49 In Acknowledgment Now that the work is finished, the book completed and success seems to be assured, the editors feel that they cannot close before showing. in a slight degree, their appreciation and gratitude to those, whose labors were 50 willingly rend- erecl and without which the work could never have reached its present state of development. First, we wish to thank Mr. Smedley for the interest and care shown in all the photographic work for the annual. W'e mention it especially since he, in all cases, forbore from putting his name under his work, thinking that it might in a manner prove a deterioration. Next we wish to thank those students, who aided in the work by contrihw tions and suggestions, and personally Mr. Lemke, who magnanimonsly took upon himself the laborious task of typewritmg alt manuscript for the press. Then. finaily and principally, we extend our heartiest and most sincere thanks; to the men Who furthered the enterprise with Financial aid by their genn erons advertising, and we request our friends and those interesteu in us to heip pay this pleasant debt by patronizing them. eTnE Em'rtms. 150 :SIMPSON,S: This store is very often frequented hetnuse Every person gets nliat is asked fur The goods are clean and neatly displayed. Prompt and i'IJIJTIE'OlIS lJ'Patmem given every perm. rm prim are very reamnahlv Drugs. Medicines, Toilet Articles. Combs. Brushes. Tooth Powders, Tooth Brushes. Face Creams Fine Candies. Luwneys Chocolates Easiman Kodalu. Kodak Suppiies. College Text Books. College Supplies. College Pennants An excellent line of Stationery and Writing Supplies. People come to our store for ICE CREAM because they get the best cream Kinsman-ihe best flavors and the. best service. Everything aboui our beautiful fountain is sanitary. YOUR PATRONAGE IS GREATLY APPRECIATED d. S. SIMPSON, DRUGGIST Phone 4:: BEREA, OHIO IS IT TRUE? That where LIFE is, Ihere constant change must be? l'hm :0 hr. ALIV F. means frequent change of view-point, :slniiing lrlmnrn'nw. Incrhapa. :II wine swimm- pnsitiml ol today? Thm NEVER to change i: to lie DEAIL :1 fossilized It'lil' only? That Kipling's word In slutleum, DON! take your tplesqu selves I00 sL-rimlsly,u is wisdom? That in all this Change one attainment will never need revision or rejection? Love never fclileith.'1 That the KIND HEART wili always be concurrent ill this world and the next? Hum :15 Life r physicnli comes only from other life. so character. spirit life comes from thI char- acter, His caught not taught? That, as nineteen centuries ago, to ENCARNATE truth is the WAY to propagate it among mm? That, hence, TO LIVE A LIFE is infinitely more to the world than to proclaim a message? That a Christ today incarnate would he rejected by Ihe Hestnljliafm-cl order economic and religious? ' SliII. New wine, new Imlilesf' H50 many gmla! so many creeda! So many paths Illai wind aml wind, ' While just the art of being kind I-: :111 this sari world needs, - ALL THE MUSIC ALL THE TIME THE KAISER MUSIC STORE Musical Instruments, Sheet Music, Music Books, Etc. Largest Stocks Lowest Prices Write to us for all of your music wants 45 The Arcade, Cleveland, 0. 62m Berea Shoe Parlor FOR THE MOST UP-TO-DATE AND STYLISH FOOTWEAR Why go to Cleveland for your Shoes when you can get them here just as well? 10 Per Cent. Discount to all Students J. O. MERZ, Proprietor The man who wants to dress a little better than others will Find at MORIST T H E T A1 L 0 R All that he is looking for 11 Always the Latest in Furnishings We The Make Correct Suits Styles to in Order Shoes $ 1 5 for and You ng Up Men Which Clothcraft Suit P Hadn't you better select that Clothcraft suit you had in mindwnow-bcfore someone else gets it? The Clothcraft Spring line contains the newest style cx- pressions in design and color. No matter which you selectwit's all-wool and will hold shape and styleo The signed guarantee in the inside coat pocket insures this. Some pay high prices to get all-wool. Your guaranteed Clothcraft suit costs you only $10 to $25, Better make your choice now. J. H. WERNICKE III DAVID J. BECK Grocer 5123 Woodland Avenue CLEVELAND, O. GOOD EATING GOOD SERVICE GOOD MUSIC Qtuyahuga Restaurant Basement Cuyahoga Bldg -:- Opp. New Post Office Popular Place at Popular Prices MUS : THOMAS F. REYNOLDS 233 3: E: :3 :3 :f H FROFRIETOR THE BEREA PRINTING CO. PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS The Enterprise The only Nrwspaper that covers Western Cuyahoga! Northern Medina and Eastern Lorain Commie; JOb Printing We have the bestequipped oHice in the county, outside of Cleveland. We handle all kinds of Catalogue ami Commercial Wurk. I V f 4 German Wallace College AND Nast Theological Seminary DEPARTMENTS I. The Department of Liberal Arts With full collegiate courses: 50 classical, HQ philosoph- ical. 0:1 scientific. 030 literary. II. The Academy With four year courses of study. Ill. The School of Music One of the best in Northern Ohio. IV. The School of Commerce With Q'U. A nine months' Certificate Course in 130010 keeping. 0L A nine months' CertiEcate Course in Stenography. 80. A two-year Certchate Course in Bookkeeping and Accounting. HO. A three-year Course leading to the degree of Bachelor of Commercial Science. V. Nast Theological Seminary A faculty of Eve professors, Thorough Courses. Oppor- tunities for practical work. For further information. address the President E. S. HAVIGHORST, Berea, Ohio ANCIENT HISTORY 1873-1877, Smedley 8: Brown 1877-Sept. 1885, Smedley, Brown 8: Co. Sept. 1885-Jan. 1889, Smedley 8: Brown Jan. 1889 to-- F. Browu For thirty-seven years I have been selling hardware to the college, professors and students, and ask all to still see me when in need of hardware of any de- scription. I thank you for all past favors : 2 : : : : : F. BROWN BEREA, OHIO The Cleveland, Southwestcrm Columbus Ry. Co. CONNECTS BEREA WITH Cleveland, Elyria, Lorain, Amherst, Grafton, Oberlin, Wellington, La Porte, Birmingham, Henrietta, Florence. Berlin Heights, Berlinville, Norwalk, Strongsville, Bruns- wick, Medina. Chippewa Lake, Seville, Creston, Madir sonburg, Wooster. LeRoy, Lodi, West Salem, Ashland, Mansfleld. Crestline. Galion, Bucyrus, Rockport, South Dover. North Ridgeville. Linndale and Puritas Springs. LARGE. COMFORTABLE PLUSH AND LEATHER UPHOL- STERED THREE-COMPARTMENT CARS. FREQUENT SERVICE BETWEEN ALL OF THE ABOVE POINTS. LIM- ITED TRAINS STOP ONLY AT SCHEDULED STATIONS. FAST TIME. BAGGAGE CHECKED IN ACCORDANCE WITH REGULAR BAGGAGE RULES OF THE COMPANY. W. W. PARSHALL, Agent GENERAL OFFICE Bridge Street. Berea. 0. 815 Garfield Bldg, Cleveland. 0. VI $ $$ I N ADDWTION TD PRODUCING MORE COLLEGE ANNUALS THAN ANY OTHER HOUSE IN OH10. WE ALSO MAKE A SPECIALTY OF ARTISTIC PROGRAMS AND MENUS 0F INDIVIDUAL CHARACTER 7DIFFEFEENT THAN THE ORDINARY KIND. DONE 1N LEATHER AND iMPORTED PAPERS. OUR MANY CREATIONS ARE EFFECTIVE AND CONVINCING. THE PRICES. TOO. WILL APPEAL. SEE OUR SAMPLES NOW THE 0. S. HUBBELL PRINTING COMPANY TI-UPD FLOOR NEW PLRIN DEALER BUILDING SUPERIOR AVE. 61 E. 5TH ST ENTRANCE ON ROCKWELL AVE. CLEVELAND. OHIO. QDEIIEEQ-u 33 Baggage Transfer PHONES 2:132; For a neat double or single rig, sleighing or bus parties call on E. M. Brown, Livery 45.47 Bridge Street ' BEREA, OHIO Guy. Phone 4 Bell Phone 23 .I Practice Economy by trading With 0 the faculty and students of G. W. W C. and B. W, we offer the following re- R E T A 1 L E R 0 F solution and move its Choice Meats adepmn' Resolved, that we pur- who does a cash business chase our Dry GOOdS at the very lowest prices and Notions 0f C- F- 7 LANE. Oyster: in Season 80 Front Street Baker Art Gallery COLUMEUS. O. Visit BAKER ART GALLERY State and High Sts., Columbus, 0. For the Finest Photos. The largest, Hnesl: - - and best equipped gallery in America. XII SPIES BROTHERS oneSini'fof'iifiiiiiaijifil; COlIDtF-Y, 156 Wabash Ave. lWemmlethe German VVaIIaL-e CHICAGO, ILL. :EI-Jegc pins and statiom . . Catalog sent on request. Makers of Class Plus Class Rings, - , . , Only hlgh grade of goods Fraternity GOOdS. manufactured. Bell, Main 2187-1 Guy. Cen. 357-1.. BAKODY-BERGER 612 EUCLID AVE. H1141, 12m Clu R ENCE BUIL'DINCI' CLEVELAND PHOTO GRAPHS FOR PARTICULAR PEOPLE For Furniture, Floor Coverings, Etc, go to the Big Store KOCH 8: HENKE Lorain Ave. and West 30th St. CLEVELAND, OHIO XV The Corner Market MFI'J'S! C lass Meats Home Rendered Lard a Specialty CARMAN g YULE 5:11,;jzn Io Cuyahoga Phone. Central I599 Bell Phone West 374 F LOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS QBhiu floral Qtnmpanp Connors d? Ehrbar, Proprietors MAJESTIC THEATRE BUILDING '353 West 25th Street CLEVELAND; OHIO Phone I40 CURTIS 8: WAGNER PLUMBING and SEWERING BEREA, OHIO Slafe Roofem and Sheet M eta! W orleers Phone 140 C, MERZ : :- REPAIRS SHOES NEATLY AND PROMPT-LY AT REASONABLE PRICES Bridge Street BEREA. OHIO 6728 B. Dreberir 30111: Co. I: l A N O S PIANOLAS 502.4 E. s e i A 2:35:12 venue Cleveland. 0. XVI THE 0. 9 HUBEELL PTG. 60.. CLEVELAND


Suggestions in the Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) collection:

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

1899

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1900 Edition, Page 1

1900

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

1914

Baldwin Wallace University - Grindstone Yearbook (Berea, OH) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916


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