Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME)

 - Class of 1909

Page 1 of 218

 

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1909 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collectionPage 7, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection
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Page 10, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collectionPage 11, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection
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Page 14, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collectionPage 15, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection
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Page 8, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collectionPage 9, 1909 Edition, Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection
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Text from Pages 1 - 218 of the 1909 volume:

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I -' C ,n ,HY l ,v - L - I I' f' , , ,1 hr : ' , .I f' ' QL 's'a'1V ', . . fi' '- ., My IV H' , L ' WUI u - in l J 7 I- nity.. , I I ,NF 'A',! fv 2411.3 'NYM' lhghu ' . .xa at ju, ,lu K' A ' gzxk vf' 1 ' .' 719 ff' ' .-fy. .l'.'-N V .-4 s B .P I r .A as .fri 'S -4 + If J i 4 , .1 1 t' rn l ' , 1 , 1 , , , 1 r . I I ,'.' .' 4, - 9 lj'll'. , u I' Q: -C1 .JIU nh .4hl'.:l'yus' .I Y , , 3, :up . k,Ql' UQ! I T I' ef. s 10 I r 1. u 4 f n 4 if , -. 4 P a I , I ' ll'-4 'fl s ,yy ' 1 'J 1,' - si I' ' e o 5 Q Q 1' rw 0 ' ' . 's 1 1 L' ' ' 1 0. - Q' 4 .4 . -' '. 'V , l Null! ' A.. 1' -'V' I 7.4 ' If- .'.'T1f'f3!l'E-3. .' -'f . - . TJC1' I v 1 '-' ' A .50 v N ,., u, a 0 ' . 'RJ .4.' yn' 'A 1 . ,., ,-v-Ai' I. ag' -ji. ,P -' x QQ-,X fn 1 4f'xJ-ei 'L i-no I S I J u .x 44- C- J.. ml 1 4 lb 1.. L ?.u'v' . kfH , I 1 s ey. 4 - -ll ' z-- Y ' I 4 N. 0 Q 0 x O 0 J w Q46 Y 1 ' s , --'wi'-54, ,N I , o I V . I. QP O O 5' 'F 5 .A , 'E' .J A e . A . 1- 9, , ' fv YJ- u 41 O --vcr I s I ' '-of ' L , I 54' 2 A bf ' 4 a W 3 5 N' s ' . O ' u In ..f 5. ' 9 .1 'A. . . .y' r . I . .O 5 'gm' ' ' . - . 0 '1 vo' '11 , . :Y AJ li -n s , EW 4 E ng. 44,0 vgbf .fi -4 F 'X-og: Ol.: 49 :Q Q Wg: tw.: 433, bfi QL, ZF: CQ 413, Mi -al! -wg: m,: vig, Ni -gl! Nj! f'lQ: -gb. bfi - 1 ' 'T -guy 4 sn Wg: 231: 1- F QQ -ag: UIQ: -gil QW J , ive 'Q D qrii -Q! 235. v ft' 5- Sgr, MSO via' X. m , 11 ggi, L. , , . ly .T , AV? I1 15535 1 L? A, T CD Pg 0 H 1 O H I' 2.25 4-511 iii MQ' 01' ggrii JL.. Wg: Qui: bfi ii Z-55? - Sfi 225 ug I 1 mf I K P , - 295: gi 3 P V Q Bt' 11 arg, 1 ? , .25 L 1 - ,nl V4 Y M Q 7135 Class of 1909 1 - l I 5, 1 vga I VLQ . . ,xx v 4 , . . V Y- A B?2i!! 5S53i!!BSvE1l!U 1 4. A' L 9 Q, mf H Q. frsm Frqmtlne ?:ess of the Journal Printslfop Lewiston, Maine Bf'?1!!l 5I'?2LE!J15b?3!U ' .. in :, oz ws. 9 .- fs. , x s ef . 5 Jr x,A . s .' YW' ': . ' ' '.' . 'lr DQdiC8tiO11 Where e'er the years may lead our eager tread. Whatexfer time may hring of lifes rich meecl, This hook shall he to us a treasured thing. Herein we reacl what other eyes ne'er see- Of moments dimmed hy shadows quickly Heel. Bright hours with joy and many hlessings fraught And days of fellowship. of effort shared That drew us each to each and made us friends. 2 -'yr 'rw QP 'Q , , , F 5 F x .O Y P v r 4 A sl OL4 I C ' .- v -1 ' 0 8 O 'soc .53 I as I . -,ja . - . .-P1 n.' i ,'1. .Qv.l ' J .V I '. . - L Q 1 . Q - , r X I Q1- N , ' n ' ,1 ' Q A Qtr .. 4 AA ol HI .W 1 .4'. A.L'r L - u .4 n jsp, , . V- 7 gf- M fr: V f - . -n '1fN.gf.V' ' ' ,,-' . 5, A ' 1 ' 1 ' .X. . 9' . jfgh- U.. his ' ff -. ,. Q . Il qvg 1 N . - I .. . - . X 4 N ' , '5' Juv 4 . Q, x K N aL 'A--IJ' 'lt' . f , . . H u N ' ' . V . ' -Q . xA fs ' f, kYf ' - .544 ,L V , it !1hL'a.7'..mr+. . N ' A rn. 9 . 1 ' 1 Bat SAM.-nniiai Annual Parade skip th Raiadfap s Y Lowering clouds, wet grass and dampness in the air failed to upset the Bates College alumni parade Saturday morn- 'N9 SS Part of the 75th conn- mencement exercises, not with the huge indoor athletic field where a whole baseball dia- mond can be laid out, avail- abl2. After gingerly tip-toeing thru the campus dew-dimmed blue-grass, the parade turned into the big cage where a Lewiston Journal camera man caught them: Upper left-Class of 1929 step-: it out, man, woman and clmld. Upper middle--The fourteen- ers, the silver jubilee class winning the prize for best cos- tumed. Upper right-Give 'way for '04. Yes, there were some men in the class. Lower left -1909 marches ' with precision. Lower middle-The last of the gay nineties-the Class of '99 Lower right-The standard bearer for the class of 1889. Overcast skies drove the Bates alumni under cover of the huge in- door athletic field for the stunts put on Saturday morning, altlio a short parade around the campus was staged first. Gifts Three gifts from college classes were announced, a fund of 51,000 for scholarships is the gift of 1909, the choice of 1929 was a. panel for a. stained glass WVil'1d0NVilll the new chapel, the class of 1928 also has , wr., , 1-s or ther-. ---f--v-Y - -------.---f- MS. Mai-FE.-Eealey 3 aww him Services for MPS. Mary Ellen, ealey were held at 8 a.m. Satur- 'y at her home, 286 Pine streei. ibut-n, followed' by a solemn high quiern mass at St. P-atriCli'S lurch at 9 o'clock. Rev. M. E. urran, pastor, officiated at the ass assisted by Rev. James H. ,eegen as deacon and Rev. Wil- 'ed A. Jordan as sub-deacon. hose ln the sanctuary were Rev. Jhn F. Nelligan, Rev. V. E. Non- rgues, Rev. John Conoley and Rev. phn Barrett of Hebron. . . The cornmittal service at Mount .ope cemetery was conducted by ev. Father 'Keegan, Rev. Father elligan and Rev. Father Jordan. Bearers were Michael Donovan, ewis Driscoll, .Walter Haley, Hen- y 0'Nell, Roy Hudson and Charles ylvia. ' Out of town residents attending ere Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Sullivan, r. and Mrs. John T. Sullivan and 'iss Alicia. Sullivan all of Bos- tn. lT'l'0RNEYS TESTIFY I POWER DIVORCE Iecision Reserved in Case of Young Auburn Matron Before the contested divorce :aring of Natalie Gross Powers of uhurn and Grant Powers, her New ork cartoonist husband, was com- eted before Superior Court Justice .and to testify. At the close Jus- lbert Beliveau in Auburn, Friday, at only the principals and sup- Jrting witnesses but both the op- osing attorneys had taken 'the ce Beliveau reserved hearing. Marshall John G. Marshall, Auburn, one of e counsel for Mrs. Powers, took e witness stand to tell of a call e husband made at his office aft- these divorce procedings were stltuted, saying he dldn't blame S wife for starting them, as she d suffered a great deal, but Ring to give the Gross some pub- y. Berman The purpose of Benjamin L. Ber- in, Lewiston, counsel for Grant 'W0I'S. in taking the witness stand IS to 6X1-'vlain his connection with visit of Grant Powers' first wife Lewiston in the fall of 1937. He .id he was retained by the flrs: rs. Powers to seek reimbursement r her from those under obligation her, that he called on Mrs. Fred Gross, mother of Natalie Gross owers, to explain the situation and as an eventual result the first nat 'rs. Eowers was paid 53,500 to ob- .in It a New York divorce. , had come out in prior te ti- ony the first Mrs. Powers had ot-- .nied only 3 Mexican divorce from rant Powers before the time he ltered into a marriage ceremony ith Natalie Gross. It had also ap- :ared Mrs. Natalie Powers had lrnished Grant Powers 53,500 for final settlement with his first ife and that, after she got a. New ork divorce, they went to Vermont nd went thru a second wedding sremony. . Witnesses for Mrs. Powers in- luded Dr. A. E. Chittenden, Au- urn, who testified he found her 1 a highly nervous and rundown condition when called to treat her 1 August 1938. On basis of long :quail-itance. as a. physician, the actor denied Mrs. Powers was :naturally an highstrung young orns.n. , 'Also to testify for her were'Mrs. red. J. Gross, the mother, Mrs. ruce Fenn of Auburn, her sister. Irs. John E. Libby of Auburn, h . Klngdom', music by tht choir and Alexandre Lemieux, soloist, Miss Florence Wells, organist:-1:30 p.m., picnic of Young Peoples Society. St. Joseph Rev John F. Nelllganl Pistol' Low Masses at 7230. 9 and 10 a.m.g high Mass at 11. Ru sary and Benediction 4 p.m. Holy Family Rev. V. E. Nonorgues, Pastor Low Masses at 6:45 and 8 a.m.g high Mass at 10 a.m.: vespers at 8, French spoken. , St. Patrick ' ' Rev. M. E. Curran, Pastor Low Masses at 7:30, 9, 10, high Mass-at 11 a.m.: Rosary and Bene- diction 'at 7:15 p.m. ' St. Mary f ' Rev. Maxime Pomerleau, Pastor Low Masses at 6, 7, 8, 9 and 10 a.m.: high Mass at 11 a.m.:, 7 p.m., vespers. French spoken. SS. Peter and Paul Rev. M. E. Marchand, Pastor Low Mass in the crypt at 5:30. 7:30 tchildrenj and 10:15 a.m.g in the church at 6:30 a.m., 7:30 iso- dalitiesj, 8:45 and h 10 a.m.3 high Mass in the church at 11 a..m. United Baptist Rev. P. L. Vernon, D. D., Minister Morning worship 11 a.m. sermon by Dr. Gilbert Laws, Norwich, England, soloist. Mary E. Vernon: organist, Cecelia C. Gossg for the remaining Sundays, there will be no Junior or Nursery church for the children. ' ' Grace Lutheran Rev. Edgar R. Fehlau, Pastor 10 a.m., morning worship, sermon topic, Your Faith and Your Vcaal tion, choir: 9 a.m., last 'session of Sunday school. A ' ' Trinity Episcopal Rev. Charles Woods, Rector 8 a.m., Holy Communion, 10:45 a.m., morning prayer and sermon. Church of Christ, Scientist Morning service, 1:30 o'c1ock, subject, Is the Universe, Including Man, Evolved by Atomic Force? Sunday School for pupils up to 20 years of age, at the same hour: Wednesday evening testimony meeting at 7:30. Reading Room, Auburn Savings Bank Building, 33 CON,-f of.-.A+ Ann---ef --- 1-11-- 11: nir or l Q tes Su E. p.b J an Ca Yc Mi hi' sz vt nl Sl af br h an era we 1 Be hex hex t as he An aga He Rev. Benjamin D. Tibbetts pastor 9:30 a.m., church school for all classes. 10:30 a.m., morning wor- ship, sermon The Time of the End. 6:30 p.m., young peoples prayer and fellowship service. 6:30 p.rn., prayer circle for older group. 7 p.m., evening service of song and word, sermon Christ Standing By. East Auburn Baptist 10:30 a.m., Children's Day ser- vice: Rev. George F. Currier, speaker: ,Helen Andrews, organist. High St. Congregational Rev. J. F. Stearns, Pastor 10:30 a.m., service of worship: fifteen-minute organ recital by Louisfell at the be- servlce: Miss Mary at First Church of Christ in Cambridge, Mass., solo- ist: subject of the sermon'by Rev. John F. Stearns will be: Zac- chaeus . North Auburn Methodist Rev. M. Gerry Plummer, Minister 9:30 a.m., worship with sermon, theme, Like a. Tree g special mu- sic by young ladies' choir, Miss An- gie Sklllings, organist and director. 10:30 a.m., Sunday School. Court St. United Baptist Dr. Edward Babcock, Minister 10:45 a.m., morning worship, ser- mon, The Brotherhood of Religious Adventurersug 7 p.m., evening wor- ship: sermon prelude, Why I Am Opposed to Sunday Movies g 9:30 a.m., Bible school: 12 ni., Preble Class for women, Men's Good Fel- lowship. , S. Mlchael's . Rev. Robert F. Sweetser, rector 8 a.m., Holy Communion: 10:45 a.m., Holy Eucharist and sermon. Sikth St. Congregational Rev. Alban B. Hyde, Minister 10:45 a.m., morning worship, ser- mon, story for boys and girls, chorus choirg 12 m., Sunday school. Marlon Payne glnning of the Nevery, soloist Mlinot Centre Cong'l Rev. Alban B. Hyde, Minister 9:30 a.m., church and Sunday school services. High St. Methodist Rev. Earle Grundy, Minister 11:00 a.m., morning worship. Ser- mon subject: Our Source of Helpug Xvleslnvon mins-m-ir -nlnssr ' fourm' degrees., The Stevens' 'Mills degree team will wurk.the degrees. A' supper will precede the meeting. Local News Briefs, T-il ' Three Hurt irl Collision H0SDitallzation ati St. Mary's was given three men early Saturday morning after a head-on collision on Golder hill, Sabattus, road. All three were slightly hurt. They were Hollis Hall, 24, and Daniel Ouel- lette, 26, both of Sabattus, and Real I-Ioule, 27, ot 10 Union street, Lewiston. A car operated by Thomas Jean, 69 Lincoln street. in which Houle, Romeo Asselin, '77 Knox street, and Harry Maheux, 5 Cross street, were passengers, was travelling toward Lewiston when it collided with one operated by Hall. with Hall was Ouellette and Marshall Roy, Tampa street, Lewiston. Capt. O'Connell with Officers Breen, Kelley and Rancourt investigated, MRS. GRANT PRESENTS VARIED PIANO RECITAL Mrs. Hazel Penley Grant present- ed her second recital by piano pu- pils at her studio, 41 'Winter street, Auburn, Friday afternoon. Linwood Jones entertained with violin solos and Beryl and Phyllis Sturgis Sane' songs. The following program was pre- sented: Duet, Mr. Policeman Cadman Donald and Jean McDonald Here We Come Forest Phyllis Sturgis Her First Ball Matthews . Joyce Cameron Mhrigolds All Aglow BBHSOI1 Woodblrds' Carol Bari-ll Barbara Maguire Lightly Row Indian Dance - MCIUUTB David Slostrom Violin solo. The Dying Poet G0l1SCh8lK Linwood Jones Edith Jones, acc. The Giant Walks Efb The Cello Blake ' Paul Blouln , The Campbells Are Coming Scotch Al' March of the Giants M3553 Joyce Allen Toy Town Review Forma' The Rodeo V Stlllwel Donald McDonald Carmenclta Bglqgn Sklppety Skip Q e 9 Beryl Sturgll . ,Y , -., , ,,4-Ak 'Rhea Another nature lesson, if you ask me, whispered Buster to his brothier Custer. 'Any objections? asltefl Custer. Not at all, said Duster. I like nature lessons. So her pupils followed the Lady Mouse Teacher into the Hollow Tree School. And Uncle Wigglly followed them. In one naw the old rablbit gentleman carried a crumpled green leaf. ' Teasing? What is in the leaf? whispered Miss Mouse. She had given Uncle Wiggily a. chair on her' platform. Ants, replied Mr. Longears. Oh, now you are teasing me, said Miss Mouse. . No, really I am not, said Uncle Wiggily. Look! He opened the leaf. In it were crawling many ants. Please don't let any of them get on me. whispered Miss Mouse. They tickle so! And she giggled a. little bit. I shall be careful, promised But have you any a little sugar to 1. Uncle Vlliggily. sugar? I need show how the ants send their wire- less signals from one to the others. Miss Mouse happened to have a little sugar on the cheese cake she had brought for her lunch. She gave Uncle Vvlggily a. few grains of the sweet sugar. Now here is what I am going to do, said Mr. Longears. He put the crumpled leaf, filled with ants, on the desk of Miss Mouse. On af chair, some distance away, he put some of the sugar. I will now take one ant over to the sugar on the chair, said Mr. Longears. The other ants, still in the leaf, cannot see this one ant, they do not know where he is, and they, do 'not know where the sugar is. It is too far away for them to smell it. Receive Message But when the first ant gets to ij' rs .QE . . 'fle- 'NOW watchf' the SUSBY, he will, from inside his body, send something like wireless messages to his friends in the leaf, and they will know just where to come and get the sugar. Now watch. Surely enough, it was only a little while after the flrst'ant was at the sugar on the chair, before out of the leaf on the desk came crawling the other ants. They swarmed down off the teacher's desk. They crawled across the floor. They crawled up the legs of the chair. Then all the ants began to eat the sugar. Did 'you really get a wireless message from the first ant? Uncle Wiggily asked the ants that had swarmecl out of the leaf. Yes, we really did, they an- swered. Not a wireless message such as is sent over a radio with glowing tubes. But a message that only we could hear and understand. It came thru the nerves in our tiny bodies. It is 'very wonderful, said Uncle Wiggily. And this story is really true. Some scientists in Eng- land have proved that ants send brain signals, like wireless, from one to another. ' ' So next, it the gas stove doesn't go to the movies just when the kitchen sink wants to wash the disher, I'll tell you about helping Mother Hen. fReleased by Bell Syndicate! H 4' 'P OUR CHILDREN I BY ANGELO PATRI 1-1 .- -W LQ M Eg! THE MIRROR Jonatllan Young Stanton A.M.. Lirt.D. Born at Lebanon. Me., -lune 10. 1834: was graduated from Bowdoin College. 1856: studied law, 18511-57: taught at New Hampton Literary Institution, 1357-59: studied at Ando- ver Theological Seminary. 1859-6.2: principal Piiikerton Acacleniy, 186.2- 643 in Europe, 1374-75: Professor of Greek and Latin at Hates College. 1864: until 1903. Latin. and lQOfil. Greek. THE MIRROR QQ Q Q51 George Colby Chase. D.D.. LL.D. Born at Unity, Me.. March 15, 1844: was graduated from Bates Col- lege. 1868: teacher of Ancient Clas- sics and of Mental and Moral Philos- ophy at New Hampton. X. H.. 1868- 70: tutor in Greek at Bates College. and student in Cobb Divinity School. 1870-71: graduate student in English Language and Literature at Harvard University, 1871-72: Professor of Rhetoric and English Literature at Rates College, 1872-943 studied in University College, London. and in llritish Museum, 1891-92: President Bates College. and Professor of Psy- chology and Logic, since 1894: LL.D. from Colorado University in I895g New Brunswick L'niversi-ty. I899g Bowdoin College. 19021 DD., Colby College, 1895. E I ' v ,I 5 '1 Q Lf Ax HA? 4' .. . 1' nz- sg, . JP OW f I I A A 1' xv! v Y A 5' 'u CII 'J N 7 MIN nf. qi 1 I , A 1 Al J 'T .3 H li 19' 'I in 'fx . FL K J ' Q. 'X 4!M, Z I 'N P -,z E T ,X HW? ?TXNk3x.xf: gfmll 1 yl 1 lnI ',r Mk I' k X P IW mf A 4 H ' l l Xxx 'N L! l 1 , Q X X S X X 3 -W , XX X ig, 5 XX H ' f 7 Y ... In I, X If l I IN X N My ' f fl J I, i IW 1 tl ffz d' 'wi fy 'nfl Mull' Jw JOIIII HOIIIIQS Rand. Born at Parsonsiield, Me., August 3, 18331 member of the first entering class at Bates Collegeg teacher of Mathematics at New Hampton Literary Institution, 1867e76g Professor of Mathematics at College since 1876. Deceased November 7' 1907- ,I , . -,A JGHN HOLMES RAND. A.M 1838-1907 T U TH1: 1v11RR0R li .l.1yIIl8l1 JOFCIHH, llorn at Utisfielrl, Me.. March 12, 18455 was grafluatecl from liates Col- lege. 1870: principal of Nichols Latin School, 1870-74: principal of Lewiston High School, 1874-89g sturlierl ahroacl, 1889-903 Ph.D. Ilates College, 18963 Professor of Chemis- try at Hates Ciollege since 1889. Willialn He11ry Hartshorn A.M., Li11.D. liorn at Lisbon, Me.. june 17. 1863: was gracluatecl from Hates Col- lege. 1886: principal of High School and Superintenclenlt of Schools at Laconia, N. H., 1876-18891 instructor in Physics ancl Geology at Hates Col- lege, 1889-901 graduate student at Leipsic L'11iversity, 1890-913 Profes- sor of Physics ancl Geology at Hates College, 1891-943 travelecl ahroacl, 1898: Professor of Rhetoric ancl English Literature, 1894-19073 Pro- fessor of English literature, 1907. Aftlllll' N'9VVtOl1 LQOIIBFJ, Ph.D. Born at liroolclyn, N. Y., Septem- ber 27, 18703 was grarluatecl from Hrown L'niversity, 1892: Phi Beta Kappa: appointed to G. A. R. Fellow- ship for two successive years: .-XM., 1893: Ph.D.,189.13instructor at Brown L'11iversity, 1892-941 stumliecl in Ger- many, 1894-95g Professor of German, John li. Stetson l'uiversity, Floricla. 1895-963 lfairinount College, Kansas: 1896-993 instructor in lfrench, Hates College. 1899-1901g Professor of Ger- man siuce IQOIQ stufliecl in Germany 1007-8. -ur--1 LX r ls! 134 THE MIRROR Frances C. Norris. A.M. Graduated from XYIlSllll1f2,'lOll L'ni- versity, St. Louis, Mo., Il. .-X., ll. Ag instructor in Modern Languages at Ottawa Cniversity, Kansas, 1895- 1905: graduate student at Oxford, England. and the Sorbonne, Paris, 1905-1906: Dean of women and Pro- fessor of French at Bates College since 1906. Frecl Austin Knapp, liorn in llaverhill. Mass., Decem- ber 9, 1872: was graduated from High School, at Peabody. Mass., 1890: from Bates, 18963 instructor in Latin and Mathematics at Nicholls Latin School, and assistant in Chem- istry and Physics at Bates, 1896-73 instructor in English and Laitin at llates, 1897-81 instructor in Latin at Bates, 1898-1901: did graduate work at Harvard, 1901-3, with All. in 19023 Professor of Latin at Bates since 1903. 1 George M. Chase, A.M. liorn at Lewiston, Me., April 17. 1873: was graduated from Iiates. College. 1893: taught one year at Alfred High Schoolg also one year at D. M. llunt School, Falls Village. Conn.: three years at Fairmount College, lYichita, Kansas: studied at Cobb Divinity School, 1897-98g Yale Cniversity, 1899-19013 instructor in Yale College. 1900-19013 Professor of Classics, .-Xmerican International College, Springfield, 1901-19o6g Pro- fessor of Greek, Bates College, since IQO6. 'x-ff.-f'2r1ep , P? THE MIRROR Frank D. Tubbs, A.M..S.T.D. Born in Mexico, New York, April 9, 1864. Educated in the public schools of New York, Mexico Acad- emy. Syracuse Cniversity and Ohio lrVesleyan University, taking degrees of AB. in 1888, All. in 1893, S.T.D. in 1898. Taught one year in the public schools of New York before entering college. Assistant in Chem- istry and Physics one year in college. Taught Physical Science five years in Puebla, Mexico: Science and Theo- logical Studies in Mercedes, Argentine Republic: two years in Kansas, NVes- leyan University: five years in public school work in Marion, Qhio. Profes- sor of Geology and Astronomy in Bates College, 1907. Albion Keith Spofford. Born at Paris Hill, Me., May 22. 18813 'was graduated from South Paris High School, 1899g Bates Col- lege. 19041 graduate student at Dart- mouth College, 1904-5: instructor in English at High School, Hartford, Vermont, 1904-5: lecturer in New Hampton Summer Institute, 1905: graduate student at Harvard Cniver- sity, 1905-6: instructor in English at Bates College since 1906-7: co-author of Laycock and Spofford, Manual of Argumentationf' Professor of Eng- lish and Argumentation since 1908. Grosvenor RODTHSOII Born at Boston, Mass., December 13, 1867: was graduated from Boston English High School, 18863 studied at School of Expression, teachers' course, 1890: artistic course, 18915 teacher at School of Expression, 1889-923 Union Baptist Seminary, 1892-43 teacher in School of Expres- sion, Newton Theological Seminary. Yale Divinity School, Bates College. I894-973 instructor in Qrautory since 18973 Professor of Qratory since 1907: received Degree of Master of .Xrts from Bates College, 1907. 'A ': THE MIRROR Alfred Anthony. Born in Providence. R. I., january 13, 18602 llrown Cniversity, 1883, AAI.. 1886: divinity course in Cobb Divinity School, 1883-1885, and Uer- lin Cniversity, 1888-18901 since 1890 Professor New Testament Exegesis. Cobb Divinity Schoolg author: the degree of D.D. from Hates College. '02: liatcs College Cobb Professor of Christian Literature and Ethics. Halbert Britan. XYas graduated from Hanover College, Hanover, Indiana. 1898, with A.l3. degree: taught in Kentucky, 1898-99: graduate work in Philoso- phy, at Yale, 1900: Fellowship at Yale University, two years: received Ph.D. at Yale, 19023 taught in New Haven and continued work in the University, 1902-33 principal of Rey- nolds Acadeiny, Albany, Texas, IQO4- 52 Instructor in Philosophy at Bates College, 1905-7g Professor since 1907. George Edwin Ramsclell, A.M. liorn at Turner, Me., April 1, 18753 graduated from Bates, 1903: taught at Maine Central Institute. 1904-5: graduate work at Harvard with AAI., 1906-73 since IQO7 Professor of Mathematics at Bates. lv fl! THE MIRROR Jerome Holmes, Born at Lincoln, Me.. September 30, 1885: graduated at Gould's Acad- emy 1902: Bates College, AB. 1907: assistant in Latin, IQO5-6g assistant in Chemistry, 1907-8: instructor, 1908-9. Herbert Purinton, Born at Bowdoinham, Me., Oct. 15. 1867, was graduated from Colby College, 18915 student at Newton Theological Institution, 1891-92: stu- dent at Cobb Divinity School, 1892- 94: instructor in Hebrew and Qld T e s t a in e n t Interpretation, Cobb Divinity School, 1894-965 graduate student, University of Chicago, 1896, Professor of Hebrew and Old Testa- ment Interpretation. Cobb Divinity School, 1896-1908: Professor of Ori- ental History, Bates College, since 1908. F 1-ed E. Pomeroy, A.M. Born at Lewiston. Me., March 6. 1877: Fitted at Lewiston High School: was graduated from Bates College. 1899: assistant in Chemistry, 1899- 1900: instructor in Botany. 1900- 1901: gradua'te work at Harvard. 1901-1902: Professor of Biology at Bates College, since 1902. -0 THE MIRROR Vvilliam Everett McNeill llorn at Montague. Prince Etlwarcl lslztncl, Canacla, November 29, 1876: attcnclccl Prince of XVa-les College, Charlottetown, l'. E. I., 1892-941 ISA.. .Xcaclia College, lVolfville, N. S., 19003 IIA., lrlarvartl College. IQOZQV instructor at Bates College. 1903-6. Cal'OllI19 llorn at Pittslielcl, Me., March 25. 18673 stutliecl motlern languages in Boston. two years, then at lierlin and Paris, 1895-963 instructor in Modern Languages at Maine Central Institute 1896-99: was grafluatetl from Bates College. 19013 All., 1902: insrtructor in Romance Languages and Dean for the women of the college, 1902-1906: marriecl lYilliam Everett McNeill, 1906. Edgar M. Ashley, A.M. liorn in Lakewood, New Jersey. September 6. 18801 egracluatecl from lioston Latin School: from Brown University with All., 1904: in- structor in lirown, 1903-ff stuclietl at Heidelberg University, 1906-7: instructor in tierman, liates College. 1907-8. 'rfwaiiz +1 , ,, is X.. ,K THE MIRROR Constance Gutterson Born of missionary parents in India: came 'to America at the age of nine: graduated from Boston Normal School of Gymnastics in IQO4Q taught in Baltimore and at Philadelphia, 1904-5: director of Ladies' Gymna- sium at Bates, 1905-6. Alfred B. Kershaw, A.M. Graduated Amherst College, 1904, A.B.g Settlement work, IQO4-6g grad- uate work in English at Har- vard, IQO6-'jg Amherst, A.M., 19075 instructor in English at Bates, 1908. Blanche Afvlnttum Roberts. Born at Lewiston, Me., January 2, 1879g was graduated from Lewiston High School, 1895: Bates College. 1899:assistantat Kittery High School, 1898-99: student at Amherst Summer Library School. 1904, and at Forbes Summer Library School, IQOOQ Assistant Librarian alt Coram Library, Bates College, since 1903. 'Y LQ Eg QQ THE MIRROR gg Daxfici W. Bfafldelle, A.M., P1'l.D. liorn at Altona, Ill., September 21, 18773 l1.A., Augustana College, Rock Island, Ill., 1899: graduate student in Pliilosophy, University of XVisconsin, 1899-1900: same in Philosophy, His- tory and English, University of Min- nesota, 1901-1902: M. A., 1902: same in Department of History and Eco- nomics, Yale University, 1904-19071 thesis submitted, 19081 Ph.D., 1908. William Vvliitehorne. Ilorn at Jamaica, XVest Indies, Feb- ruary 9, 1873. Graduated from Som- erville High School, Mass., and Tufts College. Has taught in Tufts Col- lege: University School, Providence. R. I.: Muhlenberg College, Allen- town, Pa., Lehigh University, Soufth Bethlehem, Pa.: and Pratt Institute. Brooklyn, X. Y.: member of Delta Theta Delta Fraternity, of American Physical Society and American Asso- ciation for Advancement of Science, Professor of Physics at Bates College. 19079- Caroline Augusta Woodman A.M.. S. B. XYas graduated from Vassar Col- lege,1874, Phi lleta Kappa, AAI.. 18893 Massachusetts Institute of Technology, SB., 1889: studied at Harvard Summer Schools, three terms: Amherst, two termsg Marine lliological Laboratory, 'Woods Holl, one term: in Europe, three yearsg taught in Portland, 'three yearsg in Canandaigua, N. Y., nine yearsg at XVellesley College, five years, librarian at Bates College since 1895. X xx 1 v 2 .19- W N111 ' ,. K nf 69 X If , 3 It E fl, U vxxli f f , ,f :4 K V 7 xr 7 rv, K NX Q ' I S i 34' Q if Q wf f WV 1 32 Xw yi X !! QQIMQUTMQAQQ A R 39 15 41' 1 , , . Y-J V - 1, 1. I. ' X ,f it 4 wil ' Q fn , W !f x y X I 'K ye ' ff V w x 'X H X Q W xx 'H X XX? 4 X M!! Z. K fX-??Q---.:t-- -f AV Lf-QE Z 1 I A fl I ! ff 121521 V, , 1 ,ff JKIQ 1 50 ' - I K Y ' N x V ' '25, , c ,.f , f , if 'x 1 'XE' - x 4' pl 3 , l 2 ff 5 l 1 1 11 I L F S Helen '- Heddy She powesses that rare quality. a good ' V, nature never ruffled I' I'm Dfjident, modest and :hy William Porter Ames Bill Noted as a Walker. runner, and general good fellow A ndglaams u'z'ffE glozcfzhggentral1't1'c: Gne whose oratorical ability has won for him, Amy Etta Bartlett The years did not affect her youtlnfulness Rare compound of 0lfLl!1'lJ!,f7'0!1.f, andfun Who relzlrlzed ajbke and rqbired in apun ' George Frederick Bolster Bi!! not only fame in surrounding towns, but also the Presidency of Roger Hall Association and the honor of being Class Day Chaplain Thy voire .rounds like fha proplzef: word fx.. . Willard Sands Boothby Bill A rare gooa chap behind the bat, Ar tennis unexceuecl : For football 1-me arranged the games. Class Marslmlwhe has held .ii Amf-whirl a 7Zzdy': in Ike case- I751 kr?o7uT'a5H'z3flz:r ti 'n .v iw place Percy Hilton Harris Booker Book F or three years our line has been solid Wltll Booker at guard He could on either .ridz dzlvpute, Confute, :lzange lzandr, ana' :fill confzdz ' s -lnlpii-4-.. .-4 -L.. - , Corinne BTOWII Buster Buster has held many ofgces in both Class and Society, has played Basketball four years. and has ever been the orator- ical representative of the girls Alta Belle Brush ' ' The maid of the mountain Thy cheerful, gentle way: Ida admire I . X sq nq Winnifred Amelia Chapman ff Win noted for her basketball playing and her practical common sense A diamond izeari, unjfawcd' and clear 4 'is Pi S . I I A 5 N 'L -Q ll ' v 4' JOIIR MU1'1'8y C81'1T0ll eady to .meef all comers as heavyweight cl1amp1on 11? the Held of scholar- slup and honors Bazaar: wlzen tlze great God let: loose a ffzinkcr on th1'.fplan:t 5 X 1 i Bertha Sarah Clason ll UP ige has adorned thelsecretaryslnp of Polym- nia and the G.A.A.. has made the girls Basketball team for four years, and expatiated Ivy Day on U Our Class H It would talk-Lord' how it talked Stephen Aratas Cobb. J r. Rasta: Rastus-a lad of remarkable versatility and a e collection of M B's H'-'of Football, four: of Baseball, three: of Basketball, one: whose Onbf baokx Were womanir look.: p - xay, JC 1 'ff 3, ' 9 fp' fb QI fr fu' , ' f f X I .V -'x - ' fr, 4: - X . iz I .vxr?i,-.ml I- . U., 32 Isaac George Cochran Ike Ike, a popular member of Piaeria. has held nu- merous Claw ogces. made goocl in the Soph- omore Debates, and for three years has OCCUPICA an unusual amount of space on the Football Held, being Captain his Senior year He lla: I know not what qfgreatnexs in lzi: look: and qf lzzlglz fate, Tlzat almast awe: me Solomon Everett Cook C6 I! A celebrated mathematician and expouncler of the System And lziving wirdom witlz :aclz .rfud1'ou.r year anti'-XJ ,g., r t 111' 'LF .h - 1.14, h. V 1.13, C f f ik Q .L ' 1' ', -...s.. William Gladstone Crommett H Duke A compendium of synonyms. antonyms, and woras of more than exglmt syllables Kz'ndne:: in women, no! their beauteous look: Shall win my love -Y. X N Phyllis Caroline Culhane U 7? Pat Hrst became prominent in the Freshman Y Prize Dees.. has made the Basketball team for four years, as Senior was the digni- , Bed President of the G.A.A., gi f and culminated as Class I'I1stor1an : Tlzcy morkea' tlzecfor too much t'Il7'l'05ibl K 'x X Q- -Q n ' 1 . I 7.15 ,Qcp I F, x si. 11:11 R x X I X, Q- -. Q 4' 1y,,r,., . Edith May Davis Ted Her interests have not been confined entirely to college activities Arm' qft the pang: qf abxenre to remove By letters, sqft 1'n.'n'prelerx of love ' lt'-s xshanamhil- , . ' 1' va 'Q-4 -LILO-6-itbt' 31 .Y -+1 -' S. . -.Q-if . ' .ff X . , O '1 I I 1 A' - T In fi - e f 1 . I ff t t ' Li A K 'xl r I4 l - ,Q '9 VI S, l Florence Marie Dunn Floxrie . 7 i H Flossie U possessed that happy talent of I worrying only part of the tune J I' Of easy fzmper, naturalbf good I ' 1 L 1' v- -4 '41, fy 1 I l he 1 W5 1 vi, , 'W I , N I' x ' q lbir. ' - 4 'I 'I V I .1,,g,uU --.a,..n.,. . ', -'f--H,-ca.-14 ' ....g4g..nnt1ga.-nil Scott Sidney Eeklmoff ff no Known far and Wide as collaborator wit Noah in Vvebstefs Unabridged This young man expresses lzimxeff In term: foo deepfor me Agnes Spaulding Fogg Few er otherwise peaceful college career was lnterruptecl by Weeks of torture on the Class Book Comnuttee Clzeerful and bzuy all day wa: xlze, Healtlzful amz' happy as one could be If i ' I , , I ' ' I I I It 'I ,I I Q I t 1, ra l. . I P, . I I 1 I I P IIIII ISI I, I.I ,rr I ,I I I Alice Ad8mS Foss Faithful to her class but not unfaitlmful to her fnencls Wlthout Langing: sublime and a:pz'1'atz'on.r lzzlglz 'a W .I, X :LN I I I A -.l, -, . - lv' 1-L... 'Q ..,. gv - -vf-.x. .,...1. ., 1 Henry Lester Gerry H H y H has Won our respect as student classmate and gentleman Iam the very pink q' courtesy Grace Ethel Haines 211136: onorecl as the Secretary of Piaeria and prouunent 1n the Sophomore Dees. and Junior Exhibition ' For man is a giddy thing and this 1.5 my conrlusion Agnes Donald Grant Q ' Dania gnes made good in the Sophomore Dees and on Ivy Day toasted and roasted M Our Boys H floss mypatienre and lawn it too u r . . ' Sf.-1 -1 s 4 , X affix.-13.4-iff' I II I' 1 Q I sy I X I jx ,, I I Herbert Francis Hale I, ll H V I Assistant Expesitor QfDetai1s in. the Clmemi- II cal Lab.. Ius Jumor and Seruor years Men qffew 'words are flu best men I. I I .5 v , - U.. 4 .rib 'J I I I -1 Il , j. I If . I I '. I Mary Hardie X Man'e , . 'XI Mary will long be remembered for her 'IIB 'I Ivy and Class Day Odes I , Her voice was ewr sqft, genflc, and low, I An excellent fixing in woman wg- Ixv I., I.' III I . I. I. 'L -4 ,-.41 -yrs '.I Y. r'. I. ' I X.f'f . I-. I ,I I ' u T ,QQ I I A ,xx .-I ' f K ve W l W I I - I ' ld?-E7,Z.i 5'-1 , 'A Charles Lester Harris Our foremost historian and sole repre- sentatlve from Detrozt a nationlv care CIBTCIICB LGSHC HHWICS A man whom we would fain have known four years mstead of one Theforce qf his own merit makes his way A man condemned to bear the public burden qf YT' , ' 5055:-Zila - gs. -.M.,- - , ,.. -,sa-Q., ' ' 'C-NSW' ' 1. '9--vi-Q-A -4':naal1 'v'-.!veKJ'J1..4x- - --4' -, k ,L .A , FX 03,-' .V ,Y ... inn-,ii -A-47s-.'!.'! 9 i,,.Ci..'i1 - -- V- A - I . . In I ,1 My rj? 'ffi 'S W2 ,lgfl r Ixw If, 4 A L Ralph Simpson Hayward Ralph has contributed to the musical organiza- L- . t1ons of Both Ins College and lus Somety I '. Ido not think a braver gentleman, Nu E More daring or more bold, is now alive .VV . 540 A A .. Ri gn t' . 4 4 qv M ,G 4 ff . Grace Everlina Holbrook N H Bun H ranks Hrst among our literary artists serving as Literary Editor of the Student, making a place in the Junior tion, and being the author of both the Ivy Day and Class Day Poems All will spy in thy-face A blushing, womanbf, a'1'xf0'Uerz'nggrafc . , Q..-.a--1.-.-.x.ug.-gg.. Q.-eq. .,, L.-,,,-. I. U V A - -'sralrxjifrluz'-sl mu., '.-,rn . grew. -..--K4 in f.'-,g,:-,-,-Q -,Q -- f , ..sA1i.,'..s.,- .-': 4:03:12 l...uL.I fbi-: - 3- - .. . . Carl Holman A Student of much ability A man he .veemx qf chenfulyerterdayf And ronidenf tomorr0w.r Wallace Floyd Holman Wauace got a good start by Winning out in the Freshman Dees.. and with the exception of Sophomore Dees.. Junior Exhibition, and a few other prominent honors he conducted himself very modestly, even as our Senior President Cheerful at morn he wakesfrom xlzort repose Breathe.: the keen air ana' carol: as he gon .54 , ' , cn...-ik n- -Au-., ,- 4L 2 '., ,- -3 ,gn -.g..-'nJ'. .u'-L lx, ' 49 . lfz.1r---0394u1'.r'- 1 4- -J Y,-' v .' . -.-.- .- 1 . ., 01 I K' If . X Horace Irvmg Holt Very much a man and a member of the ' ' Bates-U. of IVI. Debating team, but one of the boys for a' that Q , I H1's calm and blamf life , Daex-'with .rulutanlial blffsedrzesx a!101ma ' I 1 I . 'C w A Alice EIVQ Howard K' 'um H in ALC? will be TQHIQIIIIJQTQA IEOI' IIQI' calm Gnd QFBCIOUS SIIl11Q I 'Z She Jpmkx, behkwex, mm' acz'xju.vf af Jflf oughi glf5 - A ' ' 4 '1...n..A -- 4 ' ' L.. ' '4L:!1-sitf-- - -- lk.. .W 1 N I .0 -- Florence Mabel Hunt U TUJJQ1 oss present every time when rt comes to playmg Basketball. playmg on the team three years Pat1'em's, am! rhzgjie ME cards : 3 .iff . , - -..E --ar.-rr 311:99 - 5-,GZ 1. -'LA5 .' -.- ,xv '1, iff!! 1, . bg: K . N -nr: Alice Mildred Humiston lfummy H Hunmy H made a jolly good proctor at Cheney 1n her Jumor and Semor years Ilflurb good is done up in small bundles 4. .--Q-rg.. -111 4,-- , :o' 1-Q1 - J . ,V 1 Arthur Irish H U enownecl as an after-dimer speaker and as mtercollegxate half-mxle c11amp1on 1n Ins Sophomore year St1za'z'ou.v he .vale 'witlz all his book.: around John Poland Jewell Almost as good gs. a ' horse ' for reading Latm, wluclx al?1l1ty'Was. recogruzed by a Faculty pos1t1on 1n fus Seruor year 1HG'.ryear: are young, but his experience old I .fx ,........, Dana Stanford Jordan j1idden The man who did things as Bible study chairman in the and as chair- man of Eurosoplna Executive Committee Ipropose tojigh! it ou! on Ibis line if take: all summer JHSmiH8 JOTC1811 Mildred was instrumental as a Senior on the Music Committee of Plaeria, and by no means accidental in the Sophomore Decs. Hufzt hay' a dayfor aforgotten dream One of our foremost in sclwlarslmlp. being Angle Estella Keene au eclltor of the Student, and an ass1stant m Engllsh Talleing Jh: knew not why amz' cared' not what Frecl Henry Lancaster Frcddif Frecl lmacl a remarlcalnle vocal intonation that secured luim a place on botlx tlle Sophomore ancl Freshman Dees., and also much con- cealed ability lay means of VVlLlCl1 he se- curecl llonors in clelaatlng, and tlie Presidency of Polymnla and tl1e Bates Democratic Be merry and appbf your clziefzst tlzoughf: to courfshzp Ska doeflz little kz'na'rze.v.re.v Wkirlz most leave undone V . xv 7- .-- f--Q04 e , --,Mg . 3-4 1' n -1 +2 I Q! v A1ZiG Edfie Lane Alzie-the truest of friends i or de.rp1'.ve , , l ,fi V ' l Ernest Everett Larrabee A man loyal to his work and respected by all The great .vilent man '. . . . - e,4 ri I 3 N v.' l 4' .'l 2'-1 f 1 , . .si 3:13 'V-1 L -.4z'cv:1:1s-Q-. , Jvfvw- -- Fw-ll '.1f.fQ-'j2!..inls'1, - - .0 . Li.:-,-.1.!LlLQnfaXi:144Q 1 l J .JV X wx x . 1? .1-T44 .- ' V. ' Y' - ,Ly -su :nuff-,. - , .-.4- - , f'0':PL -1 - , - .J a, I, 5 fQf:.Q:-I-V'---17-T-Z :stir 12- -f-f :K - --- -e ' 'u , ' Jw , -gi H- 3 K I, .f 5' , ' ,u-if at lx t 'X 1 x - 5. iif in - 'll 1 Y , 1 . I 'Y L' S ATT- 1 4. rg-,UQJ 1 Olive Mary Lasselle H 77 Snydes' ready wit will always command our respect Did nothing in particular ' And did if very well x . .-,a x Warren Edgar Libby H Lib 77 Lib won honors as a Sophomore in the Bates U. of M. Debate. He has Worked hard in Atldetics, making the Track Team in his Freshman and Sophomore years, and his Football as a Senior Istoop to myfellow-manfrom my Iqfgf pedestal I 1' 'A ex ' It 4134K-fl '2A1 l-- f-v- 'l- -' ' ' r N ' ' ' ' . ZJY...-. .---ik- ' - -- - ' '- ' ' ' ' , - --A ..,g,,-- '---'1 Frecl Collins Loveioy Freddie A popular society man and social lion Pvc lived and loved Arthur F ay Linscott Linnie Arthur has been a loyal man. prominent in Class and Society affairs. macle the Sophomore Dees.. and ofticiatecl as Class Chaplain Ivy Day Up rox: th: bzfggzst devil qf them all VFX- 'fk af T? If l V1 , V 1 s R - ' ' -'v ' 1 .mf lxivr-g 'j'x 'ft . I i I . - , xx mn?-Tick ,Y X, I , N. JP VV1111am Harr1s Marhn e 8176! my made the 'Varsiqz Track Team ' A Sophomore and Junior years. and has always been the mainstay of the class in the potato race Thozfrf .rurlz a lourlzy, tzsg1,pIea.ran!feIIOw I Q K X , 1' ' z I!! ,XX . f ff WL I' JK? LN ff' ' 5' ' f 1 ' 4 yi B lus H Angie Winnifred Maxwell Angie is in a sphere of her own when it com to cel tml IIl2C118Il1C8 For gf .rlze will, size wz'11,y0u may depend 0n't, And she u'0n't, :llc won't, ,vo fhdftyf an :nd an't I -QQ ' ef-Eff' W ' 4 4 -il. . r '.S5xN .' ggi' 'NTXFJ a .A .- '. N la ,II -In 0 ,fx qyglrlwl nSL,,f'r f fF?,S'C Lb 1 'Ngflff NL' -S-7,2 I Altllea Caroline Meader OUT 105131 QUBICQI' 1IlBid0I1 Ihazfe lzeard cy' the lady, andgood ward: went 'witlz lzer name Helen Maybel Merrill W ' 1 Helen has a mind of her own and sticks to it Tlzere's little qf the melanclzobf element in her 1 4-- 1 :',: flig- L., .5 wg! W.-.' Sir-- 1 I :VY HS, ill Lo' .J QU.. :kai sr l--w 5 , Fl 4 PH: W' 51,1 ! it T V11 M N iw! 'NF . ' J sf rx' 710' IF? gg- j K I. sv 1 5 4 ll' Q.-r -f4'i!rvH14r.' Engl: '.. N' V .- 4' 1'- ' . -' l 'P ' .- --Mg- ,-. ,- sv- -- Beulah Mitchell Most unassumingly studious A progeny qf learning ,I L' ' -'19, ' ', -A 1 r . G'8I'C1I'l91' FCSSCHJQH MQTTUI Fritz Fritz has gained renown with his broad jump making the 'Varsity Track Team his Junior year and the Class Team both his Junior and Senior years Happy am Lfrom care 1'm free, Why arm't they all contented like mt 5 ag.-' 3-ek., 2.-wl--g.:i ' Q -... - . 1- .h,.f- ,LAL ,:v,:.r Arthur Everett Morse Assistant in Physics his Senior year Iwa: not always a man of wo: f Harry Claire Miller Count A man of much latent artistic ability famyoung and zznknowingn r A man of few words but weighty counsel ' ' fchesley NQISOII Strange, fu the worlrf, be wore a basbful look Raymond Silvester Oakes 0al's,1 ' The founder of our present hlandolrn and Glee Clubs, a faithful Football man in his Freshman and Sophomore years, an able track man last three years. and Assistant in Chemistry his Senior year All hz':fau!t.r are .vurlz that one lows fzim af! the betferfor them Clinton Dewitt Park H Clint ur spectacular Freshman baslcettmall player ' Sfaieb and tall lze move.: through the hall The chief of a tlzozzxandforgrafe :ROC-llfley Gerald Page --Rm' His offices are limited entirely to class. so- ciety. college end intercollegiate. and are launched ut lus Freshman, Sophomore. Juruor and Seruor years Wearing lzz'.v wzkdom Izglztljf -.4 , r, - u- 4 21.1-- -f ' Frederic Metwlf Peckham Freddic All ideal CO!IlH1ittQ9 Cl'l8iI'IIl8!1 81161 whose C19 hating enthusiasm has for two years made lum alternate on Bates-Clark Debates Iwill not retreat a single inchj and Iwi!! be lzeara' Universally known as an authomty on all tlungs pertalrung to 8t1'll9t1CS Work may be tlz: rzatcstgzft q'G0dto man If: getizng stale with me . r .9 -.Q. 'Cf-.D-.41.h?:.',Zz-L--a-nissan-r. -' --.Jkii 'A 4 M . '- -'.'eff-z. 4'--A 7151. .zyw-17-:zu-v --- 5-0-1.-lfivws-eg -it- 'Sr:.'24, ,gt-dy Riva-.x,: xo:-. ... .'.. ,a-g4vtp..s -all-U0 V f 5 l,,' .- .+, 'QQ , - W' Ciba' . Q 'I I v'.,1':: Sl 3 'L'- 1 : I ' 7 '94 'VZ on ng .-.-'+ 73 I 14, ll X ju. x '42 -I f 1 ' 1 fin l , I N ti K, Fifi r 521'- l 'J ' ',ix4'rxrs-jj 'I ' ali s Mi Harrison Morton Peterson if ! sc Pda n L . 2 L '5 5 Fleet of foot he has the record of bemg on the gm, ' c ass re a eam our ears : was a rs -c ass -.gv 'I 1 1 y t f y H t 1 Q ' T ' 1 I temus manager and a player of no mean 3 alnhty. also honored W1tl1 a class day part ft 3 ' Iam nat a poI1'tz'cz'an and my olher lzabit: aregoodn A 1 1 - 1 7 Wfl fm 'Q lv U-F.-rnei. 3 A 'X 'Q' . ' J i . .. h .. I Carl Thatcher Pomeroy ll H As a Freshman he discovered ann? developed a relay team that was a wmner yi Hz maker zz solitude and call: if pfdfln i ' I E 1 I A . u '. f I , , -f. 1 A ,I x o .-. x , ,- r 1 -. 1. ' s. I t 117: '4L.1sl, ' 0 'r 1' ' -Li , J - . - e V W - . Y Y -I-Y -Q - , , ' - , ,,b-tvs. -'6ml.2.1s-Alf QZ - ZZ. S 4. , -' ...mn - - Rav , ' . ' ' -p-.aegigig :rf 2:E g-l 9,- g , - D ' 4 ur, 4 r... - -'-f'-- ...A-1ill1' A-:. 'i. 9 ' X 1 fi - 1-f-1'3: --1-1-'S---'S--' 'gf' s,RQ1:..z-.asa-.flu ' 1 'I 1 . f T, f -1 fa Ju r Q LI I if 3 - K Carl Russell Purington If ' ' I Puffy 7 ' l Purry shone in the Sophomore Debates, ' ,. I' . ' winning the prize in division Z ,ll 1 . ffunling he loved, but low he laughed to Jforrz X l I Ku 'g J g' xnl I' A ' I , A u is . x l A L 'Y' 'I 'i . ill ' H sd Qi I Y LC - 5 'i r' Carl Herman Ranger , 5, ' 1 V . , A wr1ter of humorous sketches I H: loved his books ' I I :W I P 4 1 '1 , .1 I I ,iii V fl 'I M l N -1- u 'gf -m.e-z.'S - -..,- f ' ,' 4:-S-,.l- 1-, e:..1-.-c'-',:1.rv'.s - ' - - '-31-49 'I4...54Jv.Y-+ Charles Everett Roseland Charles made the 'Varsity track team in his Sophomore and Junior years. As a Senior he managed the baseball team and was chosen for the Pipe Cration on Class Day Ink seemed For digniiy rongbosed and high exploit Ralph Gerry Reed Reedie A reed-but not shaken by the Wmd Constant at church John Bryant Sawyer olm has acquitted himself with credit in everytlnng. that came lus way : debater. Cd1tO1' of the Student, and ass1stant in the English Department Deep on lzz'5j3'wzf erzdrnzzwz 1fa!z'bem1!z'0n sal and rare I. Myer Segal Jfike W on chstinction as assistant in German Sbuf up in rmasureless comm! -.-- ... , , , ' -- ,.q' x- - - ., ,.-.-,V - George Hathorn Smith Smiilky Smithy H was most in evidence When love was young 1n spr1ngt1me. but was always an ardent student of Biology, being assistant in his Senior year Hang sorrow ,- card!! kill a ra! L l..v-- -Q. Q..-s -sc vs . --, -- . ,.. -1,.:3.f I 4 C1818 AQIIQS Sharp ilce the busy bee hath she improvea each shining hour Dzkpafrfz zls flu' sou! ry' business 5. lv' ul ' L Mak - - .-. :L ' .f -vi vC. .lf 4121 gf tu I rw. .gunna na-vz-ie-v...g...s1.i,nI..z.A,'s-.-f- 'Av , .- Q , 'ogm5:,:- 11,4-,--J? ..,xrc:i'J:.-r--- - '- -' ar, r ' .4 , I -'19,-:una -Hx- -.au--,..+ -m... -.-:.f:.. fx 1 , -- , A- f If e . L. . ig Harold Edgar Stone Sfein Stein has been the man behind the bat for three years. Captam 1n Ins Seruor year I Wlzat cz falling aff was there Herbert Lewis Story Herbz'e An authority in German and Chem. and a firm behever 1n co-educauon A I am no! ang: zvifgf in mysef but the cause that wi! is in other men - V ' 'Q-4Ll:L.l-l.l12'.f, .4 .. -0-A, -'Vi n - 231.3 , ' , ' . . 11413.25 1-' ' Qsliil' -4......nl.b.. '.- 1 I 5- Edith Winnifred Swift ff lfWn First in baslcetbau 2. 3, and 4, First in tennis 3. First in the hearts of her classmatesl Size is zz 'wee winsome Ilzing Joseph Bertram Wadleigh U ja, A man who has done credit to his class. and to his college, as well as to himself Consecralex lzzlf lzours by 'ZlZQg'0I'0Zl.S' ejoaef and an lzonzsl aim Y? ' Wsonv' - haifgx-....., - - R143-31 4.4 funn ai.-- -Sa.: .. .r.4- -.. --. , - pr ' lai slul'i-g4.-i, if -11 - 'fx' ' qv 1 lg E x. V1 y J o11n Thaddeus Wadsworth H Tad Politician of the 5I'St Water. and phil- osopher at large I like work, z'!j?z.vfz'mzfes me ,' I fan si! and look af iffbr lzours is I. sl ' Iola Agnes Walker Iola has attained honor ag an editor of the Student and as presnlent of the Y.W.C.A. A good heart as betfer than all Me brad: in the zuorldu is Q , ' .Li-c-t.z...1..-nav:.-g.- ..' ' A' bfi 411312, Aw1 g.n,...:- '14.-'E . . ,.- - Laura Maude WGQTQ Like an AUBUTII LBUTS VVZS always reacly for a good time :lbw Laura moves along the joyous crowd, Smilex in her eye: and :fmpars on her fzlpf' Q 11.5,--- L- ' St.: . Y , . 3- -ggfgx-. 4 11,17 Th ' , ' -'j' 'N 8' Q. an il . 11,1 l 1 1 Nellie Blanch Waller Bzmflz ' She Joesn't always say Wlmat sl1e means lout mvanalaly means Well Wlzere More is musir tlzere :an be nofhing bad F l I '4 K n quounttssf. A I Joseph Alfred Wiggin H 73 man of unassummg unportance Lord, wha! a simian! ', 'x v - I 4445.-in ' Q-2 , .q - i1.1... ..,, ...K . -..Mx-, L O Louis Burton Woodward Louie uien has a choice fund of wondrous wit txczrsrns and homely plulosoplmy Oh, g00Lz'gnIy bead zuhzkh all men blew y' f li? I v ' ff' gb as I' - f Ai ' 1. . I: ff . I' ,' W juggx ' . 1' l L i . ' L 6, 5 H J ' Y. ' i'l'wfL'51y fw, J xi H 7 'lv w - ' ' ' ' 5 , if I i4 X 'fNA,y'n Q5-3' . V4 WI 'Q A' K5 'lllz CMrs.D Dora Coolidge Chandler A c Oncor 4, N. H. Left Junior year. ,il 4 L. EL 2 ,a . '1 X D 1 fi 'I . 5' Lucy Farrar LeW1ston Malne ft at end o Jumor year Entered Mount Holyoke 5 1 3 . by . . 1 ' .4' 5 -F I ' , ' . Le f ' ? I I 2 - . I ' 0 ' . N h l . x ' Qff A v'-5,1 I J-fl,l1 ' ' wx, If 1 g H- 9, , ',. N I .. 'fo -'o 'N . - .Y L., x . ,ri ' , I.. yu ' -ftyw H . ' x ' T fi, I-. A - 'I' li Lje:EnilY JH Uk ' 4-no0d1.nlln-Q.:-nugxz' - g . J . .. . 1 .. . ,- ----1' +--.v ,-,....4. ......g-- Norman Frost erea. Kentucky. Entered Bates fall of Left at end of Junior year Entered Gbeflill A GeOI'Qi8 Mabel Greenleaf uburn, Blaine. Special courses 190 Archie Hayden arcliner, Maine. Left at end of Sopho- more year Frederick Hamilton Presque Isle, Maine. Left at end of Freslunan year n X If . H I - Ar, 'J' 6 Q Q-1 Yi -imagine: ca:-In .L44... 44:1-.,- .-..- ' L L: I ' ., vie-14-Leng-4 A .131 Y' -fl r ' -iii - ....,.n.-..--.. L Q A , '- il Fred Jones 21'CQ1', NISJILQ. Left JUDiOf year x I! '. Eleanor Keough Lyndonviue. Vt. Left at end of Freslun year. Teaching X l1un nn.k ,'4.--z,.g- - - , - , i 1.n'i'L iii.. --- .. -'- - .- g.i3i,-1 Lgl-- - X iilill l ' '1 ,Ji it -i - . .mpg--s.5fw:ut'A.1,f!.i'-.1't-vQ'-I-K -1 if-29211 If ., -J Louise Small ortlwvoocl Narrows. N. Left at end of I I Sophomore year. Teaching lv N. .' . I mx v 1 V I ff ' f. if '- Q:-1fme'3fI'-, - 'fl -114 ., D 1 Lf-.xlffz ' 15, b . :R +4 W 9'-'x'TT3gr7' f Q, J, 54 I 1 fMrs.D Etta Hodges Rowe l Left at end of Sophomore year N I 4 I-, 'I -,I :E H .P ll, ', F' fin - 4 n I f . e 1 Y I e - .- 4 -1 -. 5 'gl .J Af- 'X 1 ' X- 41 -P-,if -1 Jus-- vt' 1-Q .l -o Q, 1-1 -v-cs.. 14 - 'A I 64.5. ,:'C . f'T- F ' i-aiztw-.n':...--Jil..-I :-7- .'T l'-- E 5 - v' f' - 'l 1 -has-1.3mm-nQ.6.A' li Q-iii-'Q -Q WA - Y -gfxint K ltsnbnl e- i1,i1f xi' q :Y W f ff fr , n fjfef we X W Wi 1' if 7 '.1,Q,1!1 gr ag CX ' f H ellie Smith Buffalo. Left at end of Freslunan year d , Ur Edith Tetreault Augusta, Maine. Left at end of Sophom year. Teaching I .1-.4 -an .J , -bar 3-3.6 , , ' ' 4.-- SATURDAY JUNE 17 1939 i.EWiSTON EVTaNiNCg ' --- 1 Upper left: A member of the class of '01, Rev. George E. Manter, of Buffalo, N. Y., center, is seen with Mrs. Manter at the left, and his daughter Miss Luella Mantel' who is a member of this year's graduat- ing class. Upper center: Wives of members of the faculty officiated at the re- freshment table. Just before the re- ception began, Mrs. Angelo Bertoc- ci, Mrs. Peter Bertocci, and Mrs. Lawrence. Kimball. were photo- graphed. With them is Prof. Robert E. McGee. Upper right: ln the receiving line, at the upper right, are Presi- dent and Mrs. Clifton Daggett Gray ffurther end of line, near top cen- ter of photoj Mr. and Mrs. Louis S. Parsons, retiring president of the Alumni Association, Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Rowe, Prof. Grosvenor M. Robinson, Dean Hazel M. Clarke. Prof. Fred A. Knapp is shaking hands with Pres. Gray. Lower left: The new president of the Bates Alumni Association, Wayne Davis '12, of Boston,is third from the left in the group that in- l I l i Rowe, Mrs. Rowe, Mrs. Davis, and John E. Peakes. Center: Present as a guest of the college was Miss Lillian Bates, daughter of Benjamin Bates, for whom the college was named. She is second from the right in the group with Miss Dora Jordan '90 fleftj Miss Nellie B. Jordan '88, and Dean Hazel M. Clarke irightj. Lower Center: Two Auburn women in the class of 1919 are Miss Margaret Jordan fleftj and Miss Lillian Tash. With them are Stephen Gould, Washington inven- tor, and Herman Bryant of Matte- wamkeag. Lower right: The class of 1934 having its fifth year reunion, was well represented. Among those who registered were six of the seven in this group: left to right, Edward I. Lelyveld of Boston: Miss Miriam Wheeler, Miss Georgette Lepage. Miss Ruth Johnson of the college registrar's office: and Harold Olum of Auburn. Miss Roberta Tapley of South Casco, a guest is photo- graphed with Dr. John B. Hanley who recently received his doctor's degree in geology at Johns Hopkins 1 I-EWISTON EVENING JOURNAL y SATURDAY, JUNE 1.7, 1939 5 THE EVENING JUUHNAL , ESTABLISJHID 1881 The Lewiston Weekly Journal the predeceslor of The Lewiston Eve- ning Journal was established in 847. 1 Entded ll Second-clan Matter Sept. 28. 1870, at the Pont Office at Lewiston Maine under the Act of March 5, IS76 Lewiston, Sat., June 17, 1939 MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prell is exclu- sively entitled to the use for publi- cmtion ot all news credited in thi paper and 3,11 right of republica- tion: of special despatchen therein are also reserved. The Journal assumes no finan- cial responsibility for Y-Tpographical errors in advertisements but will reprint that part of any advertlse- ment in which typographical error occurs. Advertisers will please nntl- ty the Advertising Manager prompt- ly o! error which may occur. DAILY SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE !N ADVANCE BY CARRIER IN Lewiston and Auburn One Yea: 53-00 Six Months 4-00 Three Months 2-00 One Month -70 One Week -18 BY DIAIL In Maine and New Hampshire one Year 56-00 six Months 3-00 Three Months 1-50 Eight week. 1-gg One Month The Lewiston Journal Saturday edition by mail in Maine and New Hampshire 52.00 per Year- T0 HDF uddx-ess by mail out of Maine 8116 New Hampshire 53.00 a year By Mail to Any Address Outside Maine and New H8mPShh'BQ Une Year 5730 IN TODAY'S NEWS THERE IS NO NETV D1'00f needed of our affection and respect for Bates College which is ob- serving its 75th anniversary but 10 make today's contemporary his- tory complete, this newspaper offers sincere congratulations and wishes for continued success in its field of service so excellently performed. The location of Bates College within the city of Lewiston is of unestimable advantage to this gen- eral sectlon of Maine. Its influence inieducational and public life is greatg its economic value is real indeed. The trustees yesterday author- ized the immediate going forward of plans for a. new dormitory for ,v ..-.-. .. ,.. L.: ' lg ' ' R JUST TALKS-O COMMON THEMES On A Future Source of Power T When We think over the past and consider all the fuss that objectors made to the utilization of Wa.ter-power in Maine and its' transmission Cunder the strictest of State supervisionj across the borders of Maine we are amazed at the lack of foresight, shown. That was a. great campaign and the opposition won- sadly to the damage of society. Today, the Federal government is intruding into States, and aside from all that we have the Diesel engine that competes with water-power and now they are talking about solar energy 'or the heat of the sun. A lot of water has run over the dams since then and water-power hangs on because of the greater initial in- vestmentsg but We perceive the possible doom of TVA in all this. Ways of storing the almost infinite energy which the sun pours on the earth's surface, and a highly efficient so- lar engine which will supply power at a cost of about a half cent a. horse-power-hour are described by Dr. Charles G. Abbot, Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, in a report on the latest phases of his sun power researches, just issued by the Institution. . Solar power utilization now is just approaching the practical stage where, in certain limited fields at least, it may compete successfully with coal or water power. The proposal would utilize a. solar heater, several types of which have been invented by Dr. Abbot, which would catch the sun's heat. His friend, Dr. Cottrell, suggests a silo-shaped, cement-lined pit in the ground, filled nearly to the top with dry, loose sand and rooted over. Above the sand would be placed a layer of glass wool, a very poor heat conductor, approximately 10 feet thick, such as is used for roof insulation. Then, as the proposal is reported, 'a pipe leading from the solar heater to the center of the Qupper surface of the sand has an appropriate network of branch pipes cov- ering the surface. A similar network at the bottom of the pile leads to an outlet pipe, and thence runs back to the heat- er. An automatic pump which runs only while the focus tube is hot draws hot air through the solar heater into the top of the sand. Owing to the notoriously bad conductivity of dry sand, and the high degreeof protection from upward convection and conduction -offered by th thick layer of l . . 14 'd l s ' By Paul Mellon , ll News Behind' the News Q To Abandon Proposal to Regulate Telephone Monopoly WASHINGTON 4 Nothing win' come to the Federal Communica- tions Commission plan to regulate the telephone- monopoly more closely. at least not this year and probably not next. The Comrnission dialled itself into a busy signal in Congress. The leg- islators are talking adjournment. If the Commission had really Wanted prompt legislation, it would have called earlier. Furthermore, next year will be an election year, and that is no time for government re- wiring of a S6,000,000.000 industry ffrom the prevailing political standpoii-it.J ' If you will look behind the report, you will find many peculiar cir- cumstances. It is founded on a rec- ommendation made a. year ago by FCC Commissioner Walkei' who then wanted completed FCC control of telephone policies. He consulted Tommy Corcoran, archghost of New Dealdom, frequently near the end of the S1,500,000 investigation which led to that drastic conclusion. How- ever. Mr. Walker' now approves this much milder request for regulatory authority which seems to represent a victory for his adversaries on the commission, Messrs. Craven, and Case fBrown and McNinch going along, as did Wa1ker's friend. Commissioner Payne. to make this milder course unanimousl A XValker's appointment expires June 30 and the Oklahoma delega- tion in Congress. which is strongly behind him, expects him to be re- appointed. -u 4- -M The deduction appears to be warranted from these and other circumstances that the Corcoran boys may have lost some of their original eagerness since the tele- phone companies redtzced rates after the investigation started. The Commission claims to have saved consumers 530,000,000- to date. which it considers enough to justi- fy the unprecedented cost of the inquiry. V 4- a -1 FCC Will. however, break 2.bOl1i even with Congress in their ignor- 'ing of each other, the long threat- ened Senatorial investigation 02 FCC has been plugged into a wrong number or a dead line. It seems the FCC has been net- tled by all these -Congressional charges about its inter-office pol- itics. so it has kept a memo of the name of every Congressman who called the Commission With Dfiliti' cal requests-such things as fa- vors for broadcasters in their States, etc. 4 ll 1 The Commission, therefore, is in the position to say to Congress: All right if you want to investi- gate us, but we will have to drag your names into it. There will be no investigation. it il 1 Chorus girls apparently are not good lobbyists. If those willowy blonds parading in the Buckner Philippine bond trial in New York left any impres- sion here, it is not evident. Before the trial opened no Congressman could recall having seen any of the girls. While the legislators some- times have faulty memories, it is certainly true that the bond legis- lation was not passed or seriously considered. There is a. moral in this for lob- byists. The Broadway and Holly- wood technique never goes over here. You can get further with ten letters from prominent voters than ten of the williest willows that ever wept. This is a subtle town. Ik ik 44 Scratch the Cohen-Mead bill for insuring small business loans from your list of probable legislation. Even with such powerful backers as its ghost-author. Ben Cohen. Supreme Court Justice Douglas and others, it cannot get thru. The Senate hearings failed to de- velop evidence of a substantial need of credit by good small busi- nesses. The bill probably will be thrown into the NVagner committee banking investigation and resurrected next session. lk lk lk This government has no hope of getting the 550,000,000 of damages due from Germany in the Black Tom case. Everyone here knew it when the German member of the Claims Commission withdrew when he saw the case was going against him. However, the Treasury has 325,000,000 due Germany on war 111'0De1'ty seizures, and will keep that as 3 5092: settlement. ' lk ll ik YVhen the tax and relief bills get out of the way, watch out for a swift unplanned adjournment of Congress. ' ' , These are the only two pending 1na.tters in which a la1'g'e number of legislators are interested. The lawmakers are not generally anxious to stay under a. wilting sun thru the summer just to pass Mr. RoOsevelt's arms embargo repeal program. Their personal bill cal- endar is fairly clean. They will be anxious to get away to the moun- tains ana seashore. At any rate that's the plan ar- ranged sub rosa by opponents of the neutrality ,repeal bill. cut off heads and did, while he lolled in drunkenness. WVe are not to have any masters. NVe in America. shall keep our ancient landmarks. We hear-which we do not quite believe-that there are cells of Communists in this community. But they are not REAL. They are only theoretical Communists. But citi- zens! Be awake! N iwgisiiiiigtifiiiliial Military Swap May Help Relations With Argentine dent Hoover did have some corn- prehension of it, but he wasn't tactful enough-his good inten- tions didn't take. President Roosevelt's My Friends was just the right touch. It registered. So did State Secretary Hul1's recipro- cal trade prograni. It isn't so much that they're different that they're peeved about it-they're SimIUatico, as the Latins express it. 1 It il Itfs notable that Argentina is sending some military students to the United States. 'If Argentina can be convinced, ANY Latin American republic can be. Brazil is traditionally friendly to the U. S. It has products that ad- - --...-....-.in nnn,,l1A +....:i-.1 new STATE CHAT I MEMORANDUM TO JUNE June, h0W do you forever bring so blue a sky? And the flowers in your hair- are Dassing sweet! Since the first hour you showed YOUI' Winsome face I have laid all my store of wgy. Ship at your feet. Have Y0111' will of me. branch and bud, vine and root. Work your wonder: weave me full of flowers and fire, Dazzle my eyes with color, stop my breath with scent. I am YOU1' subject now and will give you your desire. But. Sweet Miss, if you coquette 8-HCT fill my heart with rue November nurtures such a cure-all as will see me thru! eMadaliene Cash Mechanic Falls, Me, O il A Bates is receiving congratula- tions, this week-end, on its 75th. She is proud of her campus and her graduates, when they get together on perfect June days. lk lv if Maine's most conspicuous opti- mist is the Fort Fairfield man who bought a bargain in 4,000 razor- blades. Friends are joshing him about their lasting his life time. K i lk Ca1ntlen's soap-box derby is set for The Fourth. Knox county boys are taking notice. if . in M f Xvarren reports the best day- catch ot alewives, this season, at T,S,000. 41 U it Probaldy Maine will be intro duced to the Cathance Barge Channel, soon. 'K vii Q Sound 'sleep blessed Mrs. Car- rie House of Glen Cove. the other night, and disappointed a daugh- ter in 'Frisco, who was phoning home -by virtue of a lucky admis- sion ticket and as a compliment Lrom the wor1d's fair authorities. lk if 'K There really is a little red schoolhouse --in A1'ViI1, Calif--' Boston Transcript. . But .1-vin, Calif., has nothing un Pa1's1,nfield. Maine, when it ,l.. . --,5GmOuSeS' r ,, Y Q U Y, The Great Game of Politics By Frank R. Kent It Isn't The System WASHINGTON IT IS interesting that after six years of experiments, men wholly sympathetic with Mr. Roosevelt's ideas and objectives and extremely friendly toward the President per- sonally. should be forced to the conclusion that his major experi- ments Sillillly have not worked. Under the circumstances it hardly makes sense to advocate his con- tinuation in office. many things in this do not make sense just isn't news, but then so Administration that another 8 of Mr. Roose- the real yard- measure his achievements was the number of unemployed and the size of the re- lief rolls. By that yarclstick, of course, he has tragically' failed. Vehement denial of this came from the New Deal press agents and various publicists who in the be- ginning leaned strongly toward the More Abundant Life. The more im- portant of these reeanted some time ago. but it is significant that admission should come now from strong New Dealers such as Mr. Raymond Clapper and Mr. Leo lvolman. 0 I LONG AGO critics velt contended that stick by which to lk 1 1 RECENTLY Mr. Clapper. writing on the subject of the basic New Deal policy and with lull know- ledge of the spending drive now on, said this. But after six years the unemployment figures show that pump priming has not worked. This is exactly what critics of the Administration have said from the start. It is pleasant to have it now confirmed by onc who has been- ancl still is-highly eulogistic of Mr. Roosevelt and the Roosevelt policies. This about makes it unanimous, except for Mr. Roose- velt himself, Mr. Eccles, Mr. Hop- kins, Mr. Aubrey Williams, the brainy boys of the White House advisory group, C.I.O.'s Mr. Lew- is and the Messrs. Lasser and Ben- jamin of the Workers Alliance. 3 JK t AN equally frank statement comes from Mr. YVOIITIHII concerning the failure to solve-the labor problem solution a few years ago in new labor legislation like the Wagnel' Labor Relations Act and the little Wagner Acts in the States. But the longer these stay in effect the more dissatisfaction develops. 9 8 it CONTINUING. Mr. Wolnian as- serts: We have raised wages rap- idly and lavishly and spent heavily. but we have not been able to raise either the total employment or the total pay rolls to the 1929 level. The ten years have elapsed without success. There was a wave of strikes in 1936-37 and we are afraid of another now. The policy simply has not worked. Thus, we have two competent persons anything but unfriendly to the Administra- tion and anxious to see the Roose- velt policies succeed - admitting. one that the great basic policy of spending has not worked. and the other that the heavily propagand- ized labor laws and regula'ti0TlS have done nothing really fm' 135013 U U S UNLESS yon are a rank Drop-2' gandist. it is, of course. imD0SSib1e to contend otherwise. Even the New Deal economists ot the Leon Hen- derson t3'De agfee 'mat after Six years of heavy spending and drastic labor legislation things are ln S- clreadful mess. But do they blame the New Deal policies? Do they concede that the great expefimems have tailed and the planned econ- omy of the brain trusters flopped? Not at all: not at all. They place the blame on the capitalisfic SYS' tem and thru the so-called Tern porary National Economic Com.n1t- tee, otherwise known as the mo- nopoly investigation, which is dominated by the alleged experts of the SEC, are trying to make out a case against it. It must be all wrong, they think, to have failed to rally back to health under the New Deal stimulants. 'U 8 U THATS the idea of the bright boys who sold Mr. Roosevelt the scheme gf giving the system these shots in the arm and regulating the life out of industry. It does not occur fo them that, perhaps, they had 'fhf ,wrong remedies: that if theyg 11 A V Q-is , v,.t. . 'id 1 Q' .4 'Y iff 'lf ll, by ryj. L!4:'s'f +5 A 'T 1755 , ,Vi 9,--if .55 ,,-. , Y r S L n I F ' .',. kg ' .I , - .'Lf'1.' ffl . I . . f,,.. L.. . O A L I D .'-. . ...-.' 2 , I . 1' ,Q W A .44 -.v' ,.,l. 5. -1. ' T ll -v 4. .-, .un I ' I' N 5 1 . xl A x- p A, xx. n..-L- r ' f 1 u , J A .Y. :'. ' , J .4 '. - -w P ' rfb . Sv , '. Q ., .. H- . . .Y, , - - , a . . - - , - . . ,- . 2. .. 4 . -I vu- ., 11. . gl' . - Q.-nz 2. 6,1 3 R. 'f 4. 32.1 -H ' .' 1- tu- 7.- , nw. 51 1:1 K ,L .gr - 17' 4 ' S Q if 0-1 JJ N M' ,- x 41 0 ,. uv ..', ,.,.- 'MOM AA 'Mo Z 1B9PI!M I 606 vpn!-u91oLL B 9-3 E 'CJ O 2 v-e SD F' CD P-1 Fr '4 ET I5 no 25 fire' N 2? Q: 'U Fo ai E2 Fm Mm PT 5.3 Wo. Qs: '45 3-E. O vw F' E '-s O CD D' O 2 W cn .1 '4 c- o o 5 W sm 'U 'U cn -e P+ Q4 CD 5-1. N E- CD FY' 14 U' p-1. Ph Ph U' S3 C5 UQ 'S y-4. 'U 'U CD 'S FP '4 2 S5 D' Q...-.- Q M Q THE MIRROR Q M Q UIII QU Q RODXEY G. PAGE Yice-President of the Class Cl I 1 President of the Class C25 Q Execu- tive Committee of the Class C39: Yice-President of the Athletic Asso- ciation CSDQ Advisory Board C39 C411 member of the Maine Intercol- legiate Arbitration Board C43 g Y'ce-President of Eurosophia C333 1 Pres- ident of Eurosophia CQ 3 Freshman Declamationsg winner of the Sopho- more Division Debateg winner of the Sophomore Champion Debate: Ivy Day Orator: Editor of the Student C33 : Bates-Clark Debate C35 1 Bates- Clark Debate C455 Class Day Oration. JOSEPH B. XYADLEIGH Chairman Class Executive Committee C252 Yice-President of Class C41 3 Assistant Tennis Manager CZXI 1 Varsity Tennis Team C3l 1 Varsity Track Team C3j 3 Yarsity Relay Team C41 1 Captain Class Relay Team C4jg Captain Class Basketball Team C2391 Yice-President Y. M. C. A. C3lQ Yice-President Pizeria C33 3 President Y. M. C. A. C453 President Pizeria C41 3 Manager Mandolin and Glee Clubs C45 1 Champion Debate C2jg Toast-master Ivy Day: Address to Cndergraduates Class Day. .IUHN B. SAXYYER Freshman Declamations: winner Sophomore Declamations: winner Sophomore D'vision Debateg Champion Debate C2l1 Bates vs. Clark Debate C3jg winner Junior Exhibition C3jg Editor of Student C351 Ivy Day Toast: Chairman Executive Committee Pizeria C411 Assistant in Elocution C4jg Assistant in Argumentation C44lQ Bates vs. Clark Debate C4j. QQ M Q THE MIRRoR Q E QQ JOSEPH A. XYIGGIX Vice-President of Class 123: President of Class C335 Assistant Manager of Track Team 123: Manager of Track Team 133g Varsity Track Team 113, 123 3 Captain Class Track Team 123 g President Maine Intercollegiate Athletic Asscciatien 1333 President Athletic Association 1433 President Parker Hall Association 143: winner Division Debate 123 1 Champion Debate NVILLARD S. BDOTH BY Manager Class Basketball Team 1133 Assistant Manager Football Team 133 : Manager Fottball Team 143 2 Chairman Class Book Commit- tee 1431D2seball l3 113, 123, 1331T61'11li5 l,i 123 5 Tennis Team 133, 1433 Captain Tennis Team 1435 Class Marshal 113, 123, 133, FRED H. LANCASTER Class Executive Committee 11131 Parker Hall Executive Commit- tee 123: Yice-President of Polymnia 1333 President of Polymnia 1433 President liates Democratic Club 1.13: Manager Student 133: Fresh- man Declamationsg Sophomore Declamations: winner Sophomore Dlivis- ion Debate 123: Champion Debate 1231 Address to Halls and Campus Class Day. JOHN M. CARROLL Class President 1 1 3 3 Class Scholarship Prize 1 1 3, 123 1 Coe Scholar- ship 133: Sophomore Champion Debateg junior Exhib tiong lqlates-Uni- versity of Maine Debate 1233 liates-Clark Debate 1333 Bates-Queens Debate 1.13. Editor-in-chief Bates Student 143. CORINXE M. BRUXYX Class Secretary 113: Yice-President of the Girls' Athletic Associa- tion 133 3 Executive Committee of the Class 133 1 Executive Committee of Eurosophia 133: Girls' Basketball Team 113. 123, 133, 1433 Freshman Declamations: Ivy Day Toast. Q Q QQ THE M1RRoR Eg M QQ! GRACE E. HOLBROOK Class Executive Committee t2l: Associate Editor of the Student L13 and Q2jg Literary Editor of the Student fglg lfreshman Declama- tions, prize winnerg Sophomore Declamations: Junior Exhibition: Ivy Day Poemg Class Day Poem. ARTHCR F. LI XSCOTT Class Treasurer Q1 J I Class Executive Committee 143 2 Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. 12l: Secretary of the Athletic Association !2y: Chair- man of the Parker Hall Associat'on Executive Committee 145: Execu- tive Committee of Polymnia C2l: Treasurer of Polymnia C351 Sopho- more Declamations: Ivy Day Chaplain. IOLA A. XYALKER Secretary of the Y. XY. C. A. CZJ: Xiice-President of the Y. XY. C. A. fgjg President of the Y. XY. C. A. 443: Class Executive Commit- tee C4Q: junior Exhibition: Editor of the Student l3lQ Assistant in English Cgj. f4il. CHARLES E. ROSELAXD Assistant Manager of Student C231 Assistant Manager of Baseball fgjg Manager of Baseball QM: Yarsity Track Team t2l. t3l: Class Relay Team 443: Intercollegiate Debating Team l3ijg Pipe Oration. Class Day. E. XYIXNIFRED SXYIFT Class Executive Committee f2il 1 Pizeria Execut've Committee QQ 2 Hockey Team Manager C331 Tennis Manager LU: Basketball Team QZQ, 135. f4l1 Tennis Champion fgj. Q41 QQ! THE MIRRGR QQ! M Q XYALLACE If. HOLMA N Lhairman of the Executive Committee of Polymnia 141 1 Class Pres- ident 1413 Freshman Declamation, Prize XYinner3 Sophomore Declama- tions: Junior Exhibition. XYARREN E. LIBISY Champion Debate 1211: Bates-Cniversity of Maine Debate fzjg Intercollegiate Debating Team f3l1 Mandolin Club 14jg Class Relay Team 111, 121: Yarsity Track Team 111. -1213 Football B Q41 ll. MURTON PETERSON Class Treasurer 1313 Manager of Tennis Team 131g President of Maine Intercollegiate Tennis Association 1351 Captain Class Relay Team 1213 Yarsity Track Team 1111 Farewell Address, Class Day. ISAAC G. CUCHRAN Yice-President if Class 131: Executive Committee of Class Czjg Football Captain 1413 Football B 12il. 131. 1415 Ivy Day Toastg Champion Debate 121. RAYMOND S. OAKES Manager Mandolin Club 131: Manager Quartette U15 Leader Mandolin Club 131. 1411 Yarsity Football Team 111, C215 Yarsity Track Team 131- 141: Assistant in Gym 131, 141: Assistant in Chem- istry 141. FREDERIC M. VECIQHAM Chairman Ivy Day Committee: Alternate Bates vs. C. of M. Debate 121: Alternate llates vs. Clark Debate 131, 141g Sophomore Declama- tions. M THE MIRROR Q M CARL T. POMEROY Captain Class Baseball Team CI5: Captain Class Track Team C155 Captain Class Relay Team C15, C35. GEORGE H. SMITH Manager Class Basketball Team C253 Assistant Manager Baseball C35Q Class Executive Committee C153 Ivy Day Toast C35 3 Assistant in Biology C45. PHYLLIS C. CCLHANE President Girls' Athletic Association C452 Girls' Basketball Team C15. C25. 635. 645: Freshman Declamations: Class History. JoHx P. JEXYELL Class Drill Squad C15. C251 Junior Exhibition: Assistant in Latin C45. , ANGIE E. KEENE Scholarship C352 Junior Exhibitiong Editor of Student C35Q Assistant in English C45. STEPI-IEX A. COBB ball Team CI5. Captain Class Baseball Team C25 3 Varsity Foot C35, C45: Varsity Baseball Team C15. C25. C351 Yarsity Basketball Team C 35. BERTHA S. CLASON Secretary Girls' Athletic Association Secretary of Polymnia C25g Athletic Association C453 Girls' Bas C255 Executive Committee Girls' ketball Team C15, C25. C35, C45g Ivy Day Toast. LQ QA QE Q HAROLD E. STONE C9-lit?-in l3flS9l3Hll Tffllm l-ll: Varsity Baseball Team f2il. fgl, C4j XVINNTFRED A. CHAPMAN lvy Day Committee: Girls' Basketball Team Ci2il. Cgl, 645. DIOHN T. XYADSXYORTH Class Treasurer 423 1 Presiclent of Republican Club Ml. MILDRED nl. JORDAN Music Committee P'aeria 135, f4l1 Sophomore Prize Declamations RALPH S. HAYXYARD Class Track Team Qzl, i331 College Band Q.1,j. XYILLIAM H. MARTIN Treasurer Eurosophia C25 1 Manager Class Track Team C43Q Var- Track Team 123. fgil. GARDNER F. MERRILL Class Track Team lgl- C43 1 Yarsity Track Team 133. 9 CLINTON D. PARK Executive Committee of Class 133 3 Class Basketball Team CID, Q2j CARL R. PCRINTON Treasurer Y. M. C. A. 135: winner Division Debate fzj. THE MIRROR Q Q tg Q M Q THENHRROR Q M CLARA A. SHARP Class Executive Committee 1-tl I junior Exhibition. NYILLIAM P. AMES Varsity Track Team 133. 141: junior Exhibitiong Baccalaureate Hymn, Class Day. GEORGE lf. HOLSTER President Roger XYilliams Hail Association 149 g junior Exhibitiong Chaplain Class Day. GRACE E. HAIXES Secretary Piaeria 123: Sophomore Declamationsg -lunior Exhibition. ARTHCR IRISH Manager Class Track Team 15l: Intercollegate Half-Mile Cham- pion 12j 5 Yarsity Track Captain 145. DANA.S.jORDAN Chairman Bible Study Committee Y. M. C. A. 13l. 141: Chairman Executive Committee Eurosophia 14j. PERCY H. H. HOOKER Football 12l, 13l. 145. ALTA B. BRCSH Secretary of Class 133 1 Freshman Declamations: -lunior Exhibition. SCOTT S. EEKHOFF Corresponding Secretary Y. M. C. A. 125 3 Sophomore Declamations. AGNES D. GRANT Sophomore Declamationsg Ivy Day Toast. M EQ THE MIRROR MARY HARDIE Committee Chairman Y. XY. C. A. C45 g Ivy Ocle: NELLIE Il. XVALLER Executive Committee Polymnia 635. FLORENCE M. HCNT Girls' llasketball Team QWZQ. f3il, CU. HELEN XV. ADAMS Class Secretary 145. CARL HOLMAN Champiun Debate C21 HERBERT F. HALE Assistant in Chemistry LU. HORACE l. HOLT Hates vs. C. of M. Debate KZU. ALICE E. HOXYARD Ivy Day Committee l3U. ERNEST E. LARRAUEE Assistant in Physics C43. ARTHCR E. MORSE Ass'stzint in Physics LU. MYER SEGAL Assistant in German Q45. EA M Q Class Day Ode 'E-L ki 'xx bi- V ,nE l-Su Q, 5 if- Q ,.. i , , ,ff i 4' I 1 J 1 i If X WWWHM ,l..:tUi'i 5 1 v- '. :vii ' ,N .- ' . ,, , 4,-,Y ,A l Iv, ,U J ' fi, - I . ' I' I N23 ' - Y, sm .' Class of 1910 U2 KD GS Q14 S-1 - v-I 'HH UJ 5-I Q9 Q3 lfalls Lisbon d ll la clys lN -n .v ,- vu N! 14- Ga' U Cirecnl ll TSO jeffe Ill Elv 1 U .2 U s, D drew 2 Centre Turner l':1rsons ll Alice Ha llonlton Grace .- v .-1 ,- W A ..- ,- .- U I- 4 I C -.- T U w - U U Z' N -v .- ...J 5. 2 -. .- .- -4 we s-4 .- C 1- ,.. -J A .- ,- ,.. U 4-a 2-4 'U 1- E 4 U ..- ,.. - an Z L- CJ +' S15 .- ,.. rcliner ' Ca 1llS ilk 2. 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Ranger VVeymouth, Frederick R. Troy Peakee' Jollll Eelwlll 5? Albans Wiebber, Lenora Goldie York Village Pelleller' Jollllrlgapllsle lxeegall W'hipple, Ralph Clarence Gonic, N. H. P?mbeffOH,Ef11th,MaY LCWIHOH whituer, Elizabeth ivtarian Gorham Pierce, Robert Milton Boston, Mass. Wriglrr Mary Payson Wiseasser Pmgree? Helen Spelcford Allblllll Wfynian, Gulie Annette Manchester, N. H. Q5 a degre OI' rovisional candidate f YP A EKSHM A1 W ,. g X , Q I ! x N 0 f IX fl X l I 0 , Q1 , 2 . 'Z 1 x 1 r,L A ' IQ ' Q HL Q . . . 1' nfl ii 1-, 1 5 gi J! 4 ,Q 1 , s if ff '.. 4K',.,A J' i Y, Mig. l K' 1 I .1 -, .4 V4 V-, Milf 1.915 j Q89 1 it! , 1 ,ya '- 'Sl 1 .fu M ,. iv , 'ji ' , . L 4 ,K-its I , 4 lie? L11 1 fff' 1 N 4 5, .. .Lf -. fd, f 'fl ' 7- 1 V s 4 , Ln, Class of 1912 IEISS 3 TGS f QI'S Q U. ho .E IP P, 5 ,- .- .- Q. .-. .- 4 PN. 11 rv ,- -Y 0- .- CJ .- .- O .-. 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X14 L- 33 I o L :IQ 1.1 3.- 75 3.2 .-1: 14,- N 51, 5: ... ...Q :Eh :E C.- '-15 46? : O 4-4 CII 3 GJ Y .-4 ,- - E IJ L- GJ 4.- F3 P .2 omas, h T .- .J 3- C '-4-4 1- GJ 4- .- W e XV F11 ll clbo ra .E LJ ?H - L1 w-4 lorse, B 6 .llurnha n U1 GJ .- L- rman Cha ,No 3 lThurlo Anbu rn C1 I 3 I-Ll GJ U . .- L- 4- .- W GJ fi -4 1 ,- G CJ Z r- .- O 4.1 f ..- GJ Y U14 I-' .- O 4-J U1 5- 'J F' - I-4 4- GJ S- F5 on :- M bfi 4 M F1 ,-. Q v-J r .--4 x r- - O 41' .- .-- .-J O 'T' r-1 lexancler A .-bd 21' G5 L- L LD 5- GJ 5 GJ .- - .- 'U U: r- .- GJ 4.1 ..- Y .-4 ard h Ric CI -' O P-. 23 x Tue 11 u b u r e A Iren Willielliiiiia W. GJ 5. C : o 4-3 .2 3 GJ .-1 GJ 4- 4- GJ Lim CS C 11 Fra C'- O GJ QD .- u-I Y -4 I r-1 .- ..- .- .Z Z' G L- rv '11 r-' -- O 4- GJ .- L- .-I NY . GJ 1011 'I ar 14 3- GJ .LC 1- GJ ZZ' -4 Harmony CFC irner, Clair Elsm H. Ti N. ,- .- M G5 'Z Ca 11 Sherma r: .1 GJ Q U .X A.- P-'-4 eeport n Fr elvi E-4 .4 5. o M GJ Z7 4-I : F vi vu rd -4 6 f-7 .- +4 .- .-I O F' P .: G3 rv .- 5. 1- rs ?'4 6 ef cu P' cn C k- Ferry ,ui 'CJ Ree 11156 Belle Lo Twoinbly, oin .- GJ 5 O 5 r-1 4- U1 GJ E :-. re 514 .4 S1 E LJ C. o 4- CD I .- .- L- .- .- A P--4 'TJ CI F3 .- T' O P Deering ph i n e Jose b, .D GJ 3 ui U7 FJ M-1 6 wi L- O '4-4 .-4 GJ G L- A F, ,- Ayer rt Albe cl. 2111 R leboro, Mass. tt A F .- 4- 1.- No CI' Abn 1 :- G 3 O I L. VVelc rt O Newp GJ v-1 .- ..- .- 9-9 on : Q' Q I-Ll ?1 .- .1 ?1 Z. H.. .- FG Y C .- - cu C6 iston CW L lare C heatie W 11 VVhit1na 1111 . Co orcl ff ta S Frederick 'Villiam rf 4.7 5-1 GJ v- C C GJ an GJ Ti: 5.- .- ami Q5 6.24 :J -1- 2: .: - ii' 54' 554 I3-- U2 .53 O35 4- .- 'VZ QJ- 54 U 3- o I'- : E Q. ...G 'E 4-':.. fljo Q7 .93 2 53: 24 M. P14 GJ me Q.- GJ .2- EO r- -. KD- 4-I Z: W8 F' '51 an rn F3 l'-4 6 :- O 4- ui O .-A -. 3- '-5 v. Vv P-Q orge ,Ge lin .M C O LJ : u-bur A ll be Isa ristina ig, Ch 1 .- Ld' 5-4 O '4- K A sd .M O O LJ 5. s- :- G5 E O. C-' rd .-J De Dover sa Flora elis ef Z. F. .- O an r- .- ..- .-D .-.-... o CQDSDGCC Auburn va .EE cn 5. 2 Q1 .-'I O- Jose 7 11 C121 ...- Lin Unity ribou clT l Zl1'O H lancl OSC EF +I'rovisional candidates for a degree. 5,81 ng.. ff fy M +I-l YE. QQ LQ Eg Halls and Campus .QA Q M LQ QE E E QE E E 55 E E E sg E eg E QE E E QE E QE am View of time Campus from College Street: QQ Q THE MIRRGR Q of the College from NIL Dax'icfl ,,,, , 5 4 fl, x ,W 'NJ xi I ' x ix 11 ,M A 1. '- fx FROM Scmzwcz. HAL. Q3 ks, X A - Wx. N ef ' N .gf VY-. g-if i 7, f x 1 , x '11 Chapel Physics Laboratory Interior of Chapel I I r 'l X Girls' Gym fslie Reception Room Qi oram Library is.idNff4 T, - 1if4+ A' ?',J fr-' 2, f-'Ti'-'9Jf ' N' sur, nun 1,1 L 'E H 'T' 1 r A 2 1 Q .4 u 'Z H N Y' SUEH5TVillES 5126 1234? ,. z ' I 4 H Ev r N N X X X fl Z K, nl tl ! I , V X , , .Y : I ff, , 'N ff l 'f A K ' Q M THE MIRROR QQ! H gg! Libbey Forum IBBEY FORUM has been built by the Hon. W. Scott Libbey of Lewiston and is a gift to the college by this liberal and warm friend of Bates. The building is substantial and 'commodious, well adapted for the purpose for which it has been constructed. It furnishes a permanent home for our literary and religious societies and is a fitting monument to the permanence and worth of these institu- tions at Bates. The rooms are well arranged, beautifully adorned and amply equipped and at once places an individuality upon these very essen- tial departments of our college, which they never possessed before. In gathering together these different societies and associations from their present quarters in the several halls of the college, it furnishes much needed room for other departments and thus affords a great aid to the college. All students of Bates appreciate the noble gift, and extend their warmest thanks to the liberal and high-minded giver. 'AS V X K K L- - we M , ..- ...----f-----P ---3: 7, --i-A,--.-W gr, XQQW 1 t s h .il li ,. l 'W W '- S qi X Q X yk rf.-s -Q f H .sa . je ff jx t I ttelllt tele .... OFFICERS President. Rodney Page Vice-Pres.. Roscoe Bassett Secretary. Charlotte McKee Assit Seciy, Aririie Marston TTQRSKIFQT, Horace F. Tkl1'11QY '11 COMMITTEES . Q Executive, Dana Jordan Music. Ralph Hayyw'ard Decorating, Agnes Grant UROSOPHIA enjoys the distinction of being one of the oldest of the literary socie- ties. It was incorporated in 1869 when the Maine State Seminary became Bates College. True to the meaning of the words from which it derived its name, Euro- sophia has stood for the culture of the mind and the social unity of its members. The literary societies have contributed in large measure to the excellent work which the college has obtained in intercollegiate debate. With the growth of the college in members and the addition to its curriculum, the character of the society has of necessity changed. A large body of students cannot contine itself to one type of work. Eurosophia has accepted the change and has sought to meet the demand of its members and to make its work enter- taining and benehcial. Eurosophia has received its share of the members of each class since its organization, and all its members unite in a word of commendation for their society. 'l'he names of a fair proportion of the leading members of the class of 1909 stand upon its roll. Those members of the class who have enjoyed its programs and participated in the work of the society, feel that they have received a benefit and experience that could be de- rived from no other source. All realize, as they are about to take their places in life, that the social and literary training of this society cannot be too highly appreciated. For Euro- sophia they cherish sincere regards and high ambitions for the future. f ef' -9 ,-s- P o LYsI31 Aj1 OFFICERS President. Fred H.lL311C3St9F Vice-Pres.. Qrel Bean Secretary, Wiiiiiifred Tasker Treasurer. Charles Merrill C0lVliVllTTEE Executive, Warreii Deeoratiiig. Bertha Clason, N IAJUKING backward over four years of college life, perhaps but few memories are awakened that linger longer than those connected with our respective societies. lluring the past four years 1909 has tried to hold Polymnia true to her boasted fame as a society noted for pleasant democratic good fellowship and high literary standards. We have striven to consider the individual members as a unit, not as a part of a great whole. and while it is not our purpose to mention individual work we can say with sincerity that each one has had a part in keeping the society in its place and in cultivating that spirit of student fellowship that lingers in the memory of college days as long as mind shall last. We bid you farewell, Polymnia, with regret. Whether we -have been true to your best interests or not time only can tell. But this we know, that among all Polymnian members of 1909 there is not one who does not consider the time well spent, and whose heart will always quicken at the mention of Polymnia. A in is ,rim I fl, XX X O ..1sieii,ls,h, Ili, -e A s tew xi at Quay f ff! V-L xp: O ' 'l f, an J A ,gg Q, QQ v. ,fa X' A. H 7 ? , -.a OFFICERS President, Joseph Wadleigli Vice-Pres., Everett Farnsworth Secretary. Rita Cox Asslt Sealy. Mary McLea11 Treasxirer. Samuel Aas COM MITTEE Executive, John Sawyer Music, Mildred Jordan HE last society to be organized at Bates, Piaeria incorporated the best ideals of her sister societies. As members we can easily convince ourselves that Piaeria is the stone that stands at the head of the corner. But it is not her place in debate, in literature, or in music for which we shall hold her in memory. In life we remember best the heart throbs-now an emotion, a passing joy, a fleeting vision 3 the awe we experienced as freshmen, the palpitating heart and unwilling limbs, the good fellowship of the SOCia1 hours, each noisily talking louder than the others, the friendships andfwell this does nOt concern Piaeria g perhaps an occasional thrill to trip the light fantastic toe-forbidden fruit always is the sweetest. Oh, life was quite real at those Piaerian meetingsg now monoto- nous programs and dry debates, now amusing and sometimes interesting parts, then the social hour, and finally, down the paths to the dormitories,-but we are straying again from our theme. Piaeria has been the silent builder of personality, the kind tutor, thru whom we learned to give our personality expression. We have often criticized and pointed out failures and shortcomings, perhaps justly, but we can never rightly estimate her inrluence. Piaeria, once home of the muses, our society home for four long, pleasant years--life hangs high your picture on memory's walls. CII -I-EI,-A v -7-1' V N! s I s if 'FW I OFFICERS President. Joseph WHdl9iQ:ll '09 9 P QS.. St8I1l9y E. Howw'ard '10 RQC. S9C'y. HOXK'8Pd D cor. sea, Charles E. Mmm '10 COMMITTEES Membership. Robert Pierce R9ligiOllS M99ti11gS. Arthxlr Linscott Nlissionary, Stanley Hoxx'arcl MXlSiC. Walter Grahanl Reception. John Sawyer Finance, '0re1 M. Bean '10 Train and Intelligence. Charles MBQOOII Nort11i'1elcl and Intercollegiate Relations. William P. Ames '09 Bible Study. :Dana Jordan Haxtdbook. Willianl Martin Q H THE MIRROR Q M Y. M. C. A. HE YOUNG Men's Christian Association is a part of a world movement among college men. Its purpose is to win men to Jesus Christ and to make their lives more efficient and effective. The Bates Y. M. C. A. was organized in 1888 by john R. Mott, now General Secretary of the World's Student Christian Federation. The Association has ever held an active and potent place in our college life. During the last four years Redden '06, jackson '07, Cate '08 and Wadleigh '09 have had the presidency in their turn. The Bible Study work in both junior and Senior years was ably managed by Jordan who increased both its enrollment and efficiency, while Linscott has for two years had charge of the Religious Meetings Committee. The work of the Association has been especially aided by the work of jordan '06 and Holmes '07, who served as graduate secretaries in ,O7 and '08 respectively, also by the Northfield Student Conference which tive of our class have had the privilege to attend. Among the college Associations of Maine that of Bates stands in the first rank and the strength of character that Bates' graduates possess is due to a large extent to the influence of the Christian Association. X + Life-5--Tiff 1 5 V i 2 Alf il' Y T L HH,,,1?:.li r is W ig OFFICERS President. Iola Walker V P e G e :Harlow Rec. Sec'y. Frances Hexw'rtt Treasurer. Jane Edwards Cor. Sec'y. Florence Dllllll COMMITTEES Membership. Grace Harlowx' Religious M99fi11QS. Mary' Hardie Bible Study, Amorette Porter Mrssronar5', Alice Hxlmiston ocral. Nellie Nx1tti11g Finance. Jane Edwards Intercollegiate. Florence Dllllll Pastor, Jennie Edwards Extension. Alzre E. Lane QQ E Q THE MIRROR LQ M M1 The Y. W. C. A. OME of us Bates girls have in the picture gallery of our imagination one view that never will fade. We see before us beautiful Lake George, all about us the great mountains, and near at hand the dear halls where we gained perhaps the most wonderful inspirations of our college days, and why? Because we were members of the Bates delegation to the Silver Bay Y. W. C. A. Conference. Yet more of us will remember the quiet hours of spiritual uplift which we spent in our association meetings, either in the reception room, the Y. M. C. A. room or on Mount David, and none of us will forget the good times when we met on the mountain side to welcome the new girls to our college and association, or when we came together for a socially and financially profitable hour at entertainment or candy carnival. Our work as committee members and association officers, our visits from Miss Bentley and Miss Wells, our territorial secretaries, when we were helped to a fuller realization of the importance of our work in the college and in the world, and our constant efforts to realize the aim of our association- Closer to jesus Christ, all have made us see the value of membership in the Y. W. C. A. nugget. 1 fb-. . qzctx: :aft G K- 44' 3 r 5 . S 4 , 5f2 2Q ,J-- ,. q.. ,',. 15 , . H .5 O '- -' :fu 'vu . sl .nib ' '1' ' f 1. ' 'XIQ .',., : u -.. '.. 1 s',5 l'xr-, I u -,. . gg' I f 1 Xiu. wif.. -.-U... . , J 1 4 ' ' 1 - ' - 7. 14' 3? I ' r g ,Nik ,. , '. ' sf. Y . 1 . . s 5. . Q X mush: ,'.,L-..' ' ' I , ' 1 . , ' ' . . N K wen YN I ,ll Goss 7' U 'igi F A Z-T f AX NGWK 'E 1-1 KE5 QQ Q QQ THE MiRRoR H LQ The 6 s Student, i IKE other colleges, Bates has a representative college paper, the Bates Student. This represents all phases of college life, including literary, editorial, local, athletic and alumni departments. It has a department devoted to exchanges, which include the publications of most of the leading colleges. The editorial board consists of six members who are chosen by the faculty from the junior class to begin their duties at the begin- ning of the winter term. This means that the 'tStudent is in charge of a different set of editors each year. The choice of the editorial board, consisting of three young men and three young women, is based chiefly upon the ability they have shown in the English department. The board chooses two assistants from each of the two lowest classes. The business manager, also a member of the junior class, is elected by the class. Each editor has charge of one department of the paper. At present, the ff Student is a monthly publication. There has been some discussion, however, of separating the paper so that it shall include both a monthly and a weekly edition, the monthly to be devoted to the literary department, and the weekly to include the locals and athletic news. This Plan has proved successful in many college papers, and will doubtless prove so in the case of the Student, if it is ever tried. ' gf 3 ,.. .- -- .- .Q A v 'CL ,- .- dv - A ...- A nd CL Cu -5.- .- .4 'Tl .f F' V 2 I own ral Q 2. 2 JZ A -4 .4 P 1 .-. -. U EP .. L. V -2 ... D Q A 'xxxg Smxxxwk -. f S X . DEBATING COUNCIL President. Rodney Page Secretary, John Sawyer Faculty Members A. Keith Spoiford. A. M. George Chase. David W. Brandelle. Ph.D. Student Members Joseph B. Wadleigh '09 Fred Lancaster '09 i- X lr- lv X' L H if x x 75 , W -2 1 1 Bates vs. Clark Debating Team.E1908 Murray Varroll '09 Rodney H. Page '09 john 13. Sawyer ,UQ U. OF 1909 vs. BATES 1909 TE.-XM XY. E. Libby H. I. Holt J. BI SOPHOMCRE CHAMPION DEBATE TEAM Z-1 Cv ?1 ia wi r:Q'El3 5? cd 6 fx Q9 :UE Q7-1 20-4 Tv o U82 'oi CD n +-QLD :Z Z . -1 C0 8-1 8 gg . gfi 5 . J'-n I LQ 5 Q E Q THE MIRROR 2 Q Debating HE FAME of Bates in debate came to us when we were in preparatory school drowsily rehearsing Hama, anmx, amaf, amamuf, fmzrzfix, amauf. 'l Then the years flowed swiftly by and we were Sophomores at Bates College, reading, arguing with our classmates, flogging our weary brains to conform our ideas to the principles of argumentation that had been re- ligiously drilled into us. Soon we were to defend the fair record of our Alma Mater. In the midst of our mental perturbations word came that the Sophomores from the University of Maine wished to meet us in debate. Libbey, Holt and Carroll who with a few others had viciously sacrificed their regular debates to enter the trials were chosen as the team to meet U. of M. They won an easy victory at City Hall, May 1oth, IQO7. The regular Sophomore debates were held in the chapel to the edification of the usual small audiences. Sawyer, Page, Wiggin, Cochran, Lancaster, Wadleigh and Miss Greenleaf wore the laurel in their respective divisions. At the champion debate, Page carried off the palm of victory and won the proud title of champion debater of the class of 1909. Then there was silence in the halls of debate as we imbibed deep draughts of technique. In the spring of 1908 after long and arduous training our team composed of Page, Sawyer and Carroll advanced on Worcester, met the redoubtable host from Clark and adclefl one more victory to the Bates banner. Again there was silence in the halls of debate as we listened to new laws of argumentation. S ual M Q THE MIRROR LQ M Q Then in 1909 strangers sat among the mighty. Lawton 1910 with Carroll defeated Queen's University at Kingston, Howard 1910 joining forces with Page and Sawyer debated Clark again at Lewiston and then the unkindness of the gods went down to an undeserving defeat. Thus as a class we have been prominent in debate, we have swelled the list of Bates victories by winning three debatesg we hold the unique, but perhaps, unenvied honor of meeting one of the three defeats in debates Bates has suffered in her long history. Oh, but the long days of plodding through ponderous volumes, the long and worrisome preposition, and then iinally the palpitation and nervous excitement-none except a debater can well realize. But the pleasure of mental combat, the clash of contending argu- ment send their thrills of joy and stir every nerve libre. Whether the end be victory or defeat it is enough that we experience The stern joy which warriors feel In foemen worthy of their steel. ' A Niche an comm Liimify l'?Q?x?x :mm fx N A . f x.K 5 1, if Xi X ' f f . M- 1 --14 ,f gig 471 X, X J - RM wk, I k X . 'gx xx X, 5 ,Xxx f V 'Warw ffm J , :1:s' :fl 1 if X ' PM QD ,- 'X gwi ifr' V X I' !! ' P1 -H 11 V1 fi 5 ,F p G fy' , f-r 4 ,V ,V . , L, 1' I. N '. 'T'Q5i' Band Corners. Rollie H. Gilman '10, Leader Ralph S. Hayward '09 Clair E. Turner '12 nets. J. Stanley Erskine '11 Elton L. Quinn '10 rtliur C. Morrison '12 Eugene E. Baelrelder '12 Altos, J ol1n Palmer '11 Charles H. Abbott '11 Bass. Arrliur Tebbetts '11 T rbones, Edward H. Fuller '12 Harry C. DeLano '12 P l George H. Beard '12 Saxophone, Hubert P. Davis '12 Walter Tl1Om8S '12 Bass DTUm, Paul YQ3tOI'l 'll Q M LQ THE M1RRoR Q M Q The Band HAKESPEARE says: Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast. Dr. Britan, in his Fine Arts course, says: 'fllusic hath great power to excite and arouse courage in the savage breast. We who have listened to the inspiring strains of the Bates College Band will vouch for the truth of these statements. Never has martial music aroused the enthusiasm of a football team and its supporters to a higher pitch than did that of the Bates band in the fall of r9oS. After a checkered and precarious existence, asking aid from the students and faculty, with few men and fewer instruments the band has patiently and with long suffering become a live factor in the college life. Greedily did its members drink in whatever praise was bestowed on them and nobly responded with bursts of melody, harmony and rhythm such as one might imagine would accompany a football game in Paradise QLost .J The Band has improved year by year until last fall's Band was considered by many musical critics of marked appreciative ability to be the best Band that ever represented any college. It was composed of about twenty men each of whom had in himself more than enough ability for a whole band. The majority of them were the handsomest men in college and fertile brains immediately put forth the idea of providing the Band with uniforms. White duck trousers with garnet stripes were worn with black coats and the Band presented a very chic and patriotic appearance. During the past year it played at all the football games and mass meetings and was a non-partisan instrument for both the Democratic and Republican clubs. But, alas! when the Band furnished music at the exercises in commemoration of Lincoln's birthday in Feb- ruary. About nine fellows were persuaded to mount the platform, face the vast assemblage and render what was intended to be inspiring music. The result was heartrending. Dis- banded at the end of the football season, many of the players and instruments out of com- mission, the music stored away in forgotten places, it was madness to attempt such a per- formance. But the Band disclaims all calumny that might be heaped upon it for that occasion. It was not the Band. In the days that are to come when we listen to the inspiring music of Sousa's or the Lf S. Marine Band, our minds will still turn back to the good old days when we marched behind the BATES Band while it played Phi Chi or Our Director, and our hearts were filled with the courage and enthusiasm of Old Bates, which shall never die. QQ! M Q THE MIRROR LQ Q EMA The Bates College Grehestra HE BATES College Orchestra is a thing of comparatively recent date. Of course an Orchestra of some kind has always existed in Bates, but more for the amusement of the members than for the entertainment of the college. In 1904 the Orchestra had its real beginning. In this year, although there was not a variety of instru- ments the organization earned a very good reputation. It was this beginning which served as a nucleus around which to build the present Orchestra. In the Freshman year of the Class of 1909 the Orchestra was not verylarge but showed an increase over the previous year. It presented more variety of instruments, yet the whole was not well balanced, as some parts were stronger than others. The weakest spot seemed to be in the violin. Here, in the Sophomore year Libby fitted in well and made a strong addition. In this year they managed to find four violins, thus making a strong department. This was the first time Bates had been able to get an Orchestra entirely of men. This organization showed a variety of parts and was the first really strong Orchestra Bates had turned out. The following was the personnel :-Bangs '08, Libby '09, Quinn and Ramsdell '10, violins, Fraser and Goodwin '08, cornetsg Ramsdell and Bowman '07, clarinetsg H. Goodwin '08, trombone, Wheaton '08, bass horn, Sawyer '08 and Davis, drums, Colson '07, piano. The next year the organization was larger and stronger in the different departments. One valuable addition was Haywood '09 who did good work on the cornet. He and Libby were the '09 members. The team gained many Freshman members who understood music and made a material increase. In this year the number of parts was increased and also the strength of some, making the whole well balanced. In order to defray expenses the Orches- tra united with the Mandolin and Glee Clubs and gave a fine musical in the college chapel near the end of the spring term. In the Senior year of the Class of 1909, Libby substitued the Orchestra for the Man- dolin Club, but Haywood the other ,O9 member was made leader. Under him a strong team was developed. They lost some in numbers from the previous year but made up for this in quality. The Orchestra has played more than any previous one and has thus gained in experience. The Bates College Orchestra is, at the exit of 1909, well established. It should grow in numbers and quality till it must resort to competition for picking the team. This is what will bring up the standard and put the Orchestra on a good paying basis. On the whole the future of the Bates College Orchestra looks bright and promising, and under good manage- ment the organization should grow and prosper. ORCHESTRA First Violin. Hubert Davis '12 Second Violin, Charles W. Dow '12 Clarinet. Stanley Erskine Leader First Cornet. Rouie Gilman Second Cornet. Ralph I'Iaywarc1 TfOmbOHC, EdYW'8Id FUIIQT '12 Cello, Charles Abbott '12 Traps and Drums. Walter Thomas '1 Pianist. Arthur Tebtzetts if Mandolin ancl Glee Clulus MANDGLIN R. VV. Oalces. lst Nlanclolln. Leader J. B. YYndlQigl1. lsr Mandolin F. Lorlnff. lst :Vlandollu G. Ramsclell. lst Rlanrlolln G. E. Brunner. 2nd Mandolin XY. Remrnert, Qncl :Nlanclolln J. R'lOLlltOIl. 3Xl3I'lClOl1I'l C. XV. Doxv, 2nd Mandolin XV. E. Libby. Blanclola C. Stanllope. Flute ' Xxv. rIxllO1T18S. TTHIJS and rx. Telulaetts. Planlst GLEE VV. Grallam. lst Tenor. Leacl H. P. Davis. lst Tenor A. Nlorrlson, lst Tenor L. A. Luce. 2nd Tenor R. Bassett. 21141 Tenor P. Yeaton, 2ncl Tenor C. Stanlmope. lst Bass C. Holman. lst Bass R. E. Cole. lsr Bass VV. F. Nlorrlson. Qncl Bass C. Peaslee. Qncl Bass L. Smltli. Qncl Bax H. Dax'ls, Vlollnlst Qulmluy. Reader LQ M THE MIRROR Q 3 Q M3HdOlin and GIQQ Clubs ATES, in days of old. was well known for her mandolin and glee clubs, but long before the entrance of the class of ,O9 this interest passed away. In 1906 there was a mandolin trio which professed to do public work, but there was no college organization until in the fall of 1907, two ,O9 men put their heads together and after much etfort produced a club of some skill and good enthusiasm. A number of trips were made and successful concerts given. A perma- nent organization was formed. ' Although a few good men were lost that spring by the graduation of '08, the Freshman class more than made up the loss in the fall. Much interest was shown by the student body, and by hard work and careful elimination a combination was evolved which pleased the public and well represented the college. A number of programs were represented before good houses in different parts of the State and nothing but commendation was heard. The men taken on the trips this year were: Libby log, C. Holman '09, Loring, Ramsdell, Moulton, Bassett, Cole, Peasley, Luce, Morrison '11, Tebbetts 11, Morrison '12, Brunner, Dow, Stanhope, Davis, Dunn, Smith, Quimby. Graham was leader of the glee club g Oakes ,O9, leader of the mandolin club, and Wadleigh ,O9, manager. We of '09 leave to the future clubs our best wishes for ever-increas- ing successes. If they continue worthy of the name of Bates College we shall be well satisfied. E 1 Q 53 '23 D Theta Sigma 2 .W 5 M ' S ff 1' wx 'Y' , Z ,f 1 ' ka ,xg YV x 1 , , - y ,' 4,,, , 7, N f X x p, , f' if wwffis J X f xx Q fi 6 ZH xi f . lf -x 1, X .E-,:3. ' A' f ' av N 1 .xx 'P V, 1 , ,r, I W f X 45 ff 1 x -X X f f r r 3 Q ATHLETICS 'VQQUNXXW VXUS-v Bains QB' Q-ovsxi 0 Bains 0 Wanna 0 Boizs 0 Bowdohxb VNS- 'Bdizs 6 Cow: 0 Balm 0 WGKMG 0 Boiizs 6 fBowAo'm0 X95'l Bains 0 con., 6 Bolsas 6 TYlo.'me. 6 30.128 5 B0w'do'm6 'x903 1 ,Bain 0 Cdl., 6 X 30.1915 0 mgtgnqa Baits 5 Baurdcxmo :Bo.sel:oM-1-' N06-' moj- BUTHS 1 Qfluxw-3 0 Balxes 5 QQWJ 'A Bm-S 1 Qoklvg 5 Batesxx con, 5 Bates 2' Tnaxne 1 BQTZ54 LNTNQIHQ 5 BUTQS 0 Nalmz, 5 Bains k WNNQWQ 2, Butzs 5 Bowdounz BQXQS 'S NB0k,,.loQ,x If BKK915 1 j30uIAOxnG 301,915 3 Bowdoxxxs ' Vi 0 K ' Bates xo Qmalns Q i- MBaTzS 2. Colbvj 0 QBGTQS 2- Q. THcx'uxv. ff ,Y L11 VBQTQS G TU alum 5 gn 1' i BCGGS 2. Boudolmn 5 n-T' 150125 5 Bn-wduln 10 fi-- --., - gX .X -7FS? Www- - THE M1RRoR E Q Athletic Association oFFIoERs President. Joseph Xyrggrn. Secretary. Vvauace Preston. Treasurer. Prof. fx. Knapp Football Blanager. Bootllby. ,Asst Football Nlanager. Paul Thurston. Baseball Nlanager, Charles Roseland. 31 t B 13 Nlanager. Charles Nlerrru. Track Blanager. Elton Quinn, As t Track Blanager. Roy Strout. T s Nlanager. John Nloulton. ,Asst Tennis Nfanager. Earl Gordon, '11 'XdViSOI'y Board I From Student Body. Rodney Page. Blaine Intercollegiate A-Xrlnrtratron Board : Loach purinmn Prof. Pomeroy Rodney Page. -as c , Vice-President. Roy Cole 10 rom Faculty. Prof. Jordan. Prof. 431. Kn PP JL From A-Xlumnr. . . Reade. Costello. .-Xdelbert ,Andrews FOOTBALL ,. QS M' . dxf 1 X 11X NH 7 .R , I an A ,X 3 . 5 X 1 '- Zz 1 ff , 45' X X1FQ?Swf5 5, O - Back Row-llassett 'I0, Carroll 'II, Dorman 'I0, Blclienna '12, Leavitt 'I I, Lovely 'I I, W. Anclrcws 'II Second Row-,lenness 'I I, Keaney 'I I, lloothby Mgr., l'III'iIIL0n Coach, 'l'lIurmt0II 'I0 Asst. Mgr., Sargent 'I I, A. Andrews Third Row-lilward '10, Hooker '09, Cobb '09, Cochran '09 Capt., l'IImmings '10, Libby '09, l'0nkliII 'I2 I' I' I ' I ' I' I ' Q Q Q Mgr. B00tl1by THE MIRROR M Q Football BRING the past four years the record of Bates Col- lege in the football world has been one that gladdens the heart of every Bates man. In 1906 the Bates team won the championship of the State of Maine 1 a thing that had not been accomplished since 1898: and whenever and wherever Bates' record in football is spoken of, every man acknowledges that we are justified in our pride of our teams. Now our superiority has not been due to Stars for we have had none, but it has been due to plenty of hard, con- sistent work, a co-ordination, a spirit of union. working to- gether for the glory of the college. During the season of 1905 Bates beat Colby 28-0, tied Maine 0-0, and was defeated by Bowdoin 6-0, while in 1906 with a team developed from green men, Bates men won from Bowdoin and Colby by scores of 6-0, and tied with Maine bv a score of 0-0. In the season of 1907 we lost to Colby by a score of 6-0, and fell before Bowdoin by the score of 6-5 although we far out-played the Brunswick team, and once again the team from Maine was tied in the mud and darkness 6-6. The last year, 1908, the season started badly, we lost to Colby and Maine by scores of 6-0, but we made a glorious ending to our football days by decisively beating Bowdoin 5-0. When Bates is spoken of outside of the state, the followers of football at once tell you of the remarkable record made by our Alma Jllafer, when she scored on Harvard for three suc- cessive yearsg in 1905 34-6, in 1906 24-6, and in 1907 35-4, in 1908 although we did not score on Harvard we held her to the score of IS-O. There are three men of the class of 1909 who have dis- tinguished themselves on the football held, and the mere mention of their names will recall their ability, for they have been men of more than average calibre, Cobb, the all-Maine ik CBPI. COCITFBXI rterbnclc THE M1RRoR LQ E M quarterbackg Booker, the strong guard: and Captain Cochran, the all-Maine center. But it is not only the men who have won glory and honor in championship games, who have given Bates her strong teamsg for much credit is due the second team men, who have worked hard and earnestly for the suc- cess of the teams. 1909 has been represented on the second teams by three strong men: Parks, Oakes, and Libby who was awarded his letter in his Senior year for hard and con- sistent work. If every class in the future will contribute as many good men, who will work as hard and as consistently as the men of the class of 1909 have worked, the future success of Bates College in football is assured. I K Boothby Mgr., Hooker r.g.. Cochran Capt., Libby h.b., Cobb q.b. ii --4 vii GS -Q Q9 IL N CQ 'U cc 5 U' CD .i U ra 9 U 5 'Z L 6 .: LZ H ... 5 no 7x L L .., o C2 .L- J :L 2 x to 13: 2 E' A .- .. EZ C U7 C1 U x. 'O 72 13 CD 'C ..- :- A L.. CD +- ni .J L 4 O O 1 C vi .- GJ 72 O 'V ,- 1 S O Z .sc 2 C-2 .1 x no 3 : E .,- -. :F no U : c ..- I .I :L L2 so ro X- CD 1.1 5, f: fo -f- ..: f n N2 U :J ,gm C5 w'2 .O - F? G, 2.2 .Q its XJ al O5 go ,CZ SE 3,9 :LJ- Q E Q THE MIRROR M Q Mgr. Roseland Baseball N THE course of the last three years Bates has won no baseball championships. This does not mean, however, that her work in this branch of sport has been of an inferior order. In fact the reverse is true. The standard set by the Bates teams has been such as not only to give us a chief place among the college teams of this State but also to establish a creditable record among the colleges of New England. It will be remembered that Bates has found no dithculty in finding a place on the schedules of such institutions as Harvard, Brown. Amherst. and Tufts. Two games have been played with Harvard, resulting in a victory for them by the close scores of :fo and 4-o. The game scheduled for 1907 was not played on account of the wet condition of the Harvard diamond. This was a great disappointment to the supporters of the Bates team, for it was regarded as one of the strongest teams ever sent out and well able to give Harvard an unusually interesting game. Of the two games played with Amherst one has resulted in a Bates victory. Tufts has been defeated three times with a total score of 24 to 5. On the whole our games with Massachusetts colleges may be characterized as pre-eminently successful. When it comes to a consideration of our Blaine games we like to look at the results from the standpoint of what ought to have been. We have played 18 championship games anfl won ro of them with a total score of 50 to 18. The great stumbling block has been Bowdoin. Of the 8 games lost 5 have been to Bowdoin. Most of these games have been lost in the last innings of play and some only after extra innings. The proverbial luck of the Brunswick college has often seemed to be more than a mere fancy. If we had been told that their players had a horseshoe concealed in their suits the statement would not have been questioned. It is rumored that the suit lost by the Bowdoin player on Ivy Day 1908 lili Q I X , X ty? w 'v 'f Capt. Stone ggi M Q THE M1RRoR -QQ contained the horseshoe, and Captain Stone has resolved to add Bowdoin's scalp to the trophy room collection during the season of IQOQ. The class of 1909 has furnished three men who have con- tributed much towards the col1ege's success in baseball. These men are Boothby, Cobb, and Stone. Boothby made the team in his Freshman year and was recognized as one of the best backstops in the State. He played during his Sopho- more and Junior years, but on account of duties as tennis captain was unable to join the team during the last year. Cobb played a sure game in the outfield and his ability for playing a steady' game in almost any position on the diamond ranks him as one of the best utility men the college ever had. Stone, whose ability is known by all Bates students and by all who follow baseball, was the unanimous choice for Captain of the 1909 team. His efforts for the success of his team made him recognized as one of Bates' ablest captains. f-f' xx , 5 QS Q 1 7 ' X 'Qxxx m1 ' Q N X I xx 1 I I X l i 'T f u W l w W w I ,- I-4. 'v- 1 . ,lis--.K Squad rack T 08 19 O ,- .-. ..- 3- B- CD -. .4 O P1 A ,- - '- .- ..- 3 'KJ V .- - 0-J .. .- 5 as cu A ,- -1 s- CD - 'U C C1 -C U J 5 O Af - .lt U C1 -A --1 Corson '08, U'Donnell Couch, Oakes '09, Ames '09 rl, gg n '09 Mgr., Preston ' Wi er'l1 eti ..- Haines '08, Pell Second Row p '09, l3iSh0 Ir sh ..- ., Schumacher '08, '10, Fraser '08 Capt 31118 illi '08, French '08 W lifford w-C 0 R T h i rd errill '09, Elward 'xo M in '09, rt seland '09, M a Ro wi- R0 nt T0 F . E Q Mgr. Wiggin THE MIRROR Q Q Track F THERE is any branch of college athletics which offers itself to every college man it is the Track. It has been the habit in the past to ignore in a degree its all-inclusive range and give primacy in college sports to baseball and football. During the four years of our course, however, Track has come to its own in a measure, almost attaining the place it deserves as the most important college sport-important because it offers to every man regardless of ability or previous training an opportunity for self-development. If each of the years has not brought forth a winning team it has been the collegels misfortune rather than its fault, the lack of men rather than the lack of spirit. In IQO6 and 1907 we won respectively 22 and 23 points out of a possible 126 in Maine Intercollegiate Track Meet, but in 1908 we dropped to 18 points, holding easily all the while third place. It is pleasant to remember that in IQO7, the year, with one excep- tion, that we won the most points in the Track Meet, Irish of our own class carried off five of them in the half-mile. Indeed, while we must admit in all candidness that Captain Irish has been our only star, we do not forget the spirit and dogged persistence of such men as Oakes, Wiggin, Merrill, Page, Ames, Martin, Roseland, Woodward and Libby, all T. B. T. men, who helped to enhance the prowess of Bates. It is in the Indoor Meet that we have excelled, for we have for four years produced a Relay team of which any class would be proud. It is true that we were given the decision only in our Freshman and Senior years, for in our Sophomore year we lost through accident, not inability to run, and in our Junior year we tried fairly for first place. Six men have made the Relay Team, Peterson and Cobb running all four years, Pomeroy three, Wadleigh three, Libby one and Rose- land one year. F ff: l 8. Capt. Irish, '09 Q THE MIRROR Q E Q With us we know that Track has advanced perceptibly, not only in interest but in material accomplishment, for K which the College is indebted to Manager Wiggin who in .r XX 1907 built a board track, allowing for the first time out-of- A X , 'll' n door work during the winter. - . , That Track will advance with the coming years cannot i 'Q ff? be doubted. The possession of a track coach has become X ,,7 X F if if e Williams, '10 customary rather than mir- aculous. The apathy of the past is disappearing and the future points to a year when Bates' greatest victory in ath- letics will be the winning of the Intercollegiate Track Meet, an event more truly representative than any other college sport and at the same time indicative of true pluck and ability. Va1'sity Relay Team Wadleigh '09, Williams '10, Pike '12, Quinn ,IO Mgr. Wittikind 'iz ' if! WZ? fi W ' Q Q yr! V wif ' Wg 1 N Y , A Lai:- X i x x X K5 ff X gg VS 1i ff - 6 X X,:J f' ff9 , K Sl I :J ff Q f? P-'QI ff f ,J 5 3 JJ S f x iii! X ?gx Nw E f, xl-A Eff ,Z 1 x Sophomore Teain Left to Right-Peterson, Adams, Park, Morrell and Wadleigh. Front Row-Smith, Mgr. Boys, Basketball The activity of the class of 1909 in basketball was coniined to our Freshman and Sophomore years. In our Freshman year, we were twice defeated by the class of IQO8. The first game on Washington's birthday was lost by the score of 16-15 and the second by a small score. The team this year was composed of Hamilton and Dionne, forwards, Parks, center g Adams and Macatherin, guards. Q In the Sophomore year we played the great Washington's birthday game with the class of IQIO. The team this year was Peterson and Morrill, forwards, Parks, center, Wadleigh and Adams, gtrds. Although we were played oi? our feet during the first half we came back strong, and won the game by the score of I3'I 1,-making a brilliant ending to our basketball career. S9IliO1'S Misses Culhane, Brown, Swift, Chapman, Mason, Hunt Girls, Basketball LL is not gold that glitters. If the converse of this were true, the girls of 1909 with an almost unbroken string of defeats in the realm of basketball, would certainly shine. But we are forced to admit that not even by the widest stretch of the imagination can we be compared to stars. We make no pretensions to a brilliant record here, and we offer no apologies for our lack of success. We would merely mention that circumstances have seemed to be against us. The number of girls in our class is limited, especially the number of those whose physical strength and build are suited to the performance of athletic feats. Notwithstanding this, however, early in our career at Bates we plunged into basketball-and never once since have we fiinched. Discouragernent has met us in various forms, some of our best players dropped out of college early in the race, we have faced defeat again and again. But in spite of all we have kept our spirit and pushed ahead to the end. The schedule was always completed, the allotted number of games played even when we realized that the chances were all against us. And when the laurels went to our opponents we gave them the glad hand with a will. Moreover we have had our good times out of it all. We celebrated our games, defeats though they were, with banquets and toast. Often in the small hours of the night, when we were supposed to have retired, we had our gatherings and with the aid of our old ally, the chafing-dish, fixed up goodies tit for royalty for a treat to our conquered heroines. And although the sweetness of victory has never except in one case been ours, per- chance we have made our gains from the good old game. We may have ff won out H in one sense, even though the scores are against us and the record of points in baskets and fouls to our credit is far below that of our more fortunate sisters. -. v HS lmlnplo 1910 021111 Fl'CSl1 Illii 11 Ill ,,- :F 7,2 Q..- 57: 2.41 ..:4. Z :z .IU 142 '-Z 1.5 D... +15 :fr-1 ii' . T 4:4 T271 Lz z...- '-'lpn ai 2? gc -1.2. .- .4 .xg J :E .,--Y ,.... al CL .- L Ps ,- .C ..- C '- .Y ,- :.. -A ...- 'L-fl U7 lr' 'Jul Z1 1.411 US - .... 49 ..- -A - ,.... .EL- of ...: T-v ra.: PJ ,-. :. C ,.. I .- I ... .. .LC L- l':1 72355-1 W Ls' A S f A- v x x x 6 X I A. 'J 'gQ 1 1 N M M 7 Z 1 V ', i J 77 ' f Q , -xl X X , ,X , jj gs kk V ff 7 QE fi 1 , ' jx g , 'fx W x XX X MX ,VN X I .- Xyxf f W xx, XXV? NM A ...S JW .M .X 5 ' Q W Lf T X! n f' A 3 CD ,O IJ ,- 1- ,- C -1 N J 3. O F:-. DL . - U E N ? r L- GJ :L ex C C1 H-l 4 6 go :. c W L. 11 ... 12 :- 9, ,O 2 ,- E .. C .Q -- I ,O U. : -: 5 Q Q Q Mgr. Peterson THE MIRROR E TQHHIS HE CLASS of 1909 has contributed her quota to the tennis ranks of Bates, and although we had only one known tennis player when we entered as Freshmen, yet during our college career a large number of men have become tennis enthusiasts. In the spring of 1906. Boothby playing with Whittum YO7 in doubles, was defeated in the college tournament after play- ing iine tennis. In the fall of 1906 there were three ,OQ men in the tour- nament: Morrill, who was defeated by Salley '06, 6-5, 6-2 in the preliminariesg Wadleigh who was defeated by Whittum ,O7, 6-4, 6-4 also in the preliminariesg and Boothby who won the singles championship by defeating Campbell '08 in the finals 6-4, 6-2, 6-1. In the same tournament the college doubles championship was won by Boothby and Whittum by their victory in the tinals over Campbell '08 and Griiiin ,O7, 6-1, 6-2, 6-1. The Maine Intercollegiate Tennis Tournament of 1907 was the first that ,O9 had a share in. In this tournament Boothby and Whittum represented Bates in doubles but were defeated in the first round. In singles however Boothby worked his way through to the finals where he was defeated by Mitchell of Maine, 6-1, 6-4, 2-6, 6-2. In the girls college tournament the same spring Miss Swift was the runner up, being defeated by Miss Shorey '08. In the fall of 1907 Campbell '08 and Wadleigh '09 won the college championship in doubles. At the Intercollegiate Meet in 1908 Bates was represented in doubles by Campbell '08 and Boothby, and by Tuttle '08 and Wadleigh. Both of these teams won their preliminary matches but were defeated in the semi-finals, Campbell and Boothby by Hide and Hain of Bowdoin, 0-6, 6-4, 6-0, and Tuttle and Wadleigh by Hughes and Martin of Bowdoin, 6-3, 4-6, 8-6. if sys! Capt. Bootliby LQ Q gg, THE MIRROR In singles Boothby lost in the semi-finals and as in the preceding year fell before Mitchell of Maine, 6-4, 6-3. In the girls tournam Misses Swift and Clason, who were defeated only in the finals by the Misses Shorey and Melcher, the final victors. 'N .Iiss Swift secured the singles championship. In the fall of 'o8 Wadleigh won the college singles cham- pionship, defeating Clason ,II in the finals, 6-4, 6-4, 6-1. ent in doubles 'og was represented by Wadleigh Li!! E Q iieli. K 'fa ' l T 1.4 - ,, t, -. A i V 1 - 7 A Y A i 1 lu FGDC lFiSlffS? me p gg C9 W I - , i at f t i r -i .A g N-El I i HE old English game hockey tirst 5 b W V found devotees among the girls at R fl!! Bates in the spring of 1906. It i met with the keenest enthusiasm and the newly organized teams found no engagement ' too pressing to abandon for hockey practice, and the excitement of those games! They were usually with the upper classes, but once with the faculty ladies. Whether it was the spirit of the game or the abandoned freedom we enjoyed in our short skirts, our hair the sport of the breeze as we swung the hockey sticks, the delight and excitement were thrilling indeed. In our Sophomore and Junior years hockey was resumed under Miss Britan's direction, with interest and devotion still interrse, but in the Senior year, with characteristic fickleness the girls had transferred their ' enthusiasm and interest to tennis. Z' ff' 4 V l ' YN 1,- 221 6- .2 Z I -97 -J K. 4- e i fs i it i 2 ' f 1 -X ' s.V -4 ,ur ig' ' I l 1 ,J 1 N 1 OP. Three :Scarf the azxipa. hare and ?1UL1Y1flf.h3:f: ham been a f'i'l.'iT': a' hates. hair. great a f5 1OTEU',1e reptf:mber dai: :af ee: f...ofer'. for tiiv aztumial uhafe. I'-21f.Ll3If'I3.di6:s. too. Have fnarefi the gif., ir. the plearuref of thi, out- f f f fjfxt. '1i.ethirdf.E.afe'.':af meld .ate in rcpternber in the fail 0 1 - harljr in the: afternoor. the hares. drevfefi in white: y.'.'eaterf. ' .irtf and AffQf,Y,:.' 'f,or.r.etf fkipy.f:fi Qightijr afgron the icldv. I u .. the 015.0 gaficrefl at the fair gffflfxde to be awigned Q.. 'Inc tra f r.:: r .5erf:hl four and were: marked out with fo the xc. tm: bluff. tm: orange. and the Each traif eafler, Notzie girfzr. mat the hound. mum fo2.o'.': der. Sgr.. vserf: fond ZL.'J'xg the way: :o'g'.'enir5. too. '.'.'f:rf: f fff Wd. .vpzf ref ai: tor nato 'xxnef uwzrf: rrmievtedi Llgl M QA THE M1RRoR Lil '1'he hounds raced up hill and down dale, through sand, over brooks and fences, in fields and forests, those merry, merry bunnies were leading a thrilling chase. H The little bunnies have gone this way, In cart, on foot, and every old way. This was one of the signs hung from a tree along a trail. On the tip top of a high hill the thirsty hounds discovered a Rebecca's well and there refreshed their parched throats with a delicious drink of cold lemonade. Not long after leaving the hills, the hounds found themselves in a most picturesque spot and in a conspicuous place hung the sign f' Hare's Retreat. This was evi- dence that the bunnies were not far off. With renewed enthusiasm they increased their speed and were otif through the bushes, hot on the trail of the hares. When the excitement of the chase subsided the two hundred girls gathered about in groups to drink in the beauties of the spot. Brush tires were kindled, then came the baked potatoes, the roasted corn, baked beans, and sandwiches, the delicious coffee and cake. Pickles and bacon were not forgotten. 'l'hen came the singing of college songs, a big circle was formed around the tire, and college songs echoed merrily through the forests. Then the circle was divided into four parts and Happy Days was sung with enthusiasm. Now the sun had set, the hares and hounds retraced their steps through the fields to their college homes, these words on every lip, ff Haven't we had a jolly time -never a better! ',,-,. 1 .,' ol , Ja ab, ly!-4 ,,a W 4 xl ' za jf, , 0 i SYSTEM of physical training involving co-ordination. self-sacrifice and discipline- qualities which men entering college have only begun to developgwas meted out to us with varying results during our lirst winter in college. As a class we were made up of men recruited from all tields of activity. presenting all the physical defects of widely varying habits and occupations. Many had round or crooked backs: nar- row, Hat chests and tlabby muscles: some even appeared old before their time. In contrast to these were the undisciplinecl and self-sutiicient athletic men who did not take kindly to the discipline of gymnasium work. Our training began with exercises of marching and setting-up movements to word of command: this was followed by co-ordinating movements with wands. dumb-bells and indian-clubs, developing into finished work for the Athletic Exhibition. Our second and third years were spent in developing tiner co-ordinations by means of parallel and horizontal bar work together with some work on the German horse and mats. In our Senior year a system of grades was introduced in the gymnasium work in which each one's deticiencies and ability were con- sidered and a course of work was mapped out to meet each man's need. A corp of leaders was chosen from those who had done most efficient work in previous years to assist in directing and leading the clitterent classes. Vobb. Oakes. Peterson, Smith and Wadleigh assisted in this work and all proved them- selves competent men in this department. Care was taken to distinguish between physical and athletic training. the aim being to bring the standard of health up to its high- est level and to avoid all excessive strain and exhaustion. Since the athletic class will never exceed ten or iifteen per cent of a college community it is after all for the . main body of students whose interests are not primarily athletic that physcial instruction must be considered and its details planned so that men may be enabled to graduate r stronger. more self-reliant, and more etiicient. .-l-l. ' 'B K S F 3165,-4 vii. 9 -. , E ,542 I 3 fa.. Qfgiif VQQQLQ1 'ig' , Q. -ar - . , Relay Clrarnpm 1909 Cobb, Peterson, Roseland, Wadleigh F Relay Champions 1906 Cobb, I'omeroy. Libby. Peterson -- -g f I' , qu 5 5 X V , Y' Q - V xx -'f uf af xii x' 4X 7, 477 J! Qliggi' L A l T 5 in ' 1 TQ I A X X N ff 1 ' XXV kv 5 if if 5? 9 JW - fx 1-ww 5 cu J, NVilliam P. Am 2d prize li eene Q ie E. 1, Ang Holmax F Back Row-W allace x-I UJ .1 cd ? f 4 N ..- O r-4 ,Q D N ..- s- Q. H L -. s.f Lu 12 95 5 N cn -A .. C'- Z O '11 rf. I-I cd 4: an 4 cd L-1 E U H. H 9 ,QE .Q by as 'E 2 4. .-'I CD 3 5-. -v- f-4 Alta B. 0 W R Second rook, joseph A. Wiggin. olb H v-H H QD U N x.. L7 m. Q2 S ..- cd s--1 Q3 U N 1-. -v- -.1 a-T CD H rn -. O 3 F. eorge G W t Ro Il TO F SOPHCMORE DECS Standing-Misses Holbrook, Grant, Holman. Sawyer lprizel. Linscott. Misses Xettletou tprizel, Hodge Sitting-Peckham. Bliss Haines, Prof. Robinson. Bliss jordan. Lancaster FRESHMAN DECS . . 'sfkii Standing-Bliss Culhane, Stinson, Page, Smith. Sawyer, Misses Brush and Xettleton Sitting-Bliss Pomeroy, Holman lprizel. Bliss Holbrook lprizel. l'rof. Robinson llnstructorl. Bliss Brown. Lancaster L 4 1 4 I Z. fs .-1 7 f ,-. v Q Y. 4, gw ' Q I ff :- I .,,.. 1. 5' Q' ,, JH .3 o .1 I fx. -ah 1 1: .: , f I Z .J .' I 11 1 2 5 z I .' - P .. , Z .': I I L 2, -' .- ,, .1 1. .: 2 1- P - , f -x .-. I ll 3 ' 5 L ., P , 5 -Z Z 'J 1, f i lA' 7 , Q Z .f ,- Z L 4 1 2 1 1 L 2 , L I , , -f -C -L L il' i A N . .K ' . - il ' se- l even ie 'Ei' lsr? ie. A? ' 57 'Y' 4 ' 'f ' ' 4 - s V - 1 z 1 hx ' -Q I as Q , ' , x ' '55 4 N f 1 1 -1 fq ,lyk '?l 'M Ivy O'er yon mountain, soft and silent, Sinks the radiant setting sun, And the breezes gently whisper This day's work for you is done. And the thoughts that haunt each bosom Only each himself can tell 5 Some are glad and full of pleasure, Some sad, and full of fear. For us all a past gleams brightly, For us all a future's near, Phantom fingers point and beckon, Calling us afar from here. Let us too look ever higher, 33 So-in Heaven there still is shining, To illumine darkest night, XVondrous racliancy and glory In that star of hope and light. Little Ivy, now we greet thee, Take thee for our emblem here, For the dark depths of thy green leaves Symbolize this hope and cheer. Great the lessons thou cans't teach us, As thy tendrils grow more strong, Climbing, Clinging-ever hopeful, Always striving up and on. Never one look downward cast, Till our Lord to us in greeting, His Well Done shall say at last. CISSS hi? T ,ii.l .2 4 - Q- - , X - - 1--l-m i s... . tt - T ' af. -.-iizgi i lgi' -r -' .i f f ff' X R ir gi ir 7'-' gxkx Y -I' g g F i xxggsi-a S'X-Q rf -5 --s :-x 'xx X XX - X - Quan Elise HONG the reminiscences of our college life which will recur to us in the future, perhaps those of the class rides will be the most frequent. It was on these occasions that we had some of our very happiest times as a class, for we felt a lack of reserve and abandoned all superfiuous conveutionalities. From the day of our arrival at college to the evening preceding the eventful first class ride with Uncle -Iohnny we heard more of the class ride than of any other college affair. From each upper-classman we gleaned new ideas until we were bewildered by the mystery and in- tangibility of it all. We tried to solve the puzzle of the relation between a fish hatchery and a cider jugg Mount Gile observatory and romance. Portentous and fanciful though our dreams were the night before, the thundering tones of an alarm clock at 5 AAI., hurried sandwich making and a wild dash for the car were unpoetical realities. Not until refresh- ing breezes had blown into our faces, and the sounds of college and class yells rising from the rear seats had filled us to the brim with spirit, did we fully wake up to the consciousness that we were on our first class ride. That day we seemed to be meeting a new world of people-a world in which we were to move for four years and perhaps more. The ride to No Name Pond in the following spring also given by Uncle Johnny was even more delightful, for though the novelty was less, longer acquaintance had made us better able to enjoy each other. We can almost see again the surface of the calm pond and the fairyland of pink and white apple blossoms. We remember the tremen- dous t h u n d e r shower that arose just after we safely arrived at the dormitory A A and we recall the terror of the girls who had missed the seven o'clock car when they realized that the d o o r s w e r e locked. M THE MIRROR Lil, E Q The Sophomore year we went to Merrymeeting Park and later to New Meadows Inn and Bath. We recall the trunk shoot by the rustic theatre and the feats of some of the more daring of the class. Often the picture of a car struggling up a steep incline recurs to our memory and we see again a dignified classmate clad in paddock coat and derby devoting his energies to sanding the track. Perhaps the most ideal ride was held in the spring of our Sophomore year when we went in naphtha launches down the New Meadows River to Gurnet's under the adept chaperonage of Professor and Mrs. Gettell. The day was perfect except for a small shower at just a fortunate part of the day. Many found exploring the island very pleasurable, others preferred trips in the launches. The junior year was rather unfortunate in respect to class rides. The one in the fall had to be abandoned on account of unfavorable weather and in the spring the elements were no less unkind. But undaunted we hired the Grange Hall at Lake Grove and went in a drizzling rain. By afternoon, however, it had cleared off and some chose roller skating, others canoeing. Skating though less aesthetic than canoeing proved far more amusing both to participants and spectators. What fun it was to see the collisions and the down- falls! A large party hired a naphtha launch to tour the lake only to remain for several hours hopelessly stranded in the middle of the lake. The ride the fall of the Senior year, also to Lake Grove, came just before the national election and even the class was divided into Republicans and Democrats. Dr. Tubbs, our chaperone, was politician enough, however, to remain a neutral. He carried a heldglass obviously for nature study, but it has been reported that though it resembled an ordinary binocular it was in reality a chaperone's field glass, an optical instrument which so deflected the light that the user could see around corners. Memories of the numerous baskets of Tokay grapes and of cider drunk from the jugs with soda straws will ever recur. Though the time for the Special to return seemed too early we were tired enough not to offer much protest. A weary but happy looking crowd we were with sun-burned faces and wind-tangled hair. When the car rounded the curve at Skinner and College streets there was a general unloading of boys, girls, sweaters, and lunch boxes and the corner of the campus rang with cheers for the obliging chaperones, for the class ride as a whole, and for dear old 'o9. -N l xl L ll llmneetl Halloweieii Parties ALLOWPYEN, name sacred to witches, black cats. and Hallowe'en parties! Never can we forget the three delightful I-Iallowe'en parties we have had, nor the fourth that we didn't have. Our first one was held at the Davis house in East Auburn. The chief feature was the real Indian fortune teller who foretold the future so vividly that some of us were very much frightened. Of course all sorts of Hallowe'en tricks were tried, but the most amusing one was the mirror test. by which the girls found out for a certainty what was to be their future happiness. Our second Hallowe'en party was held in the East Auburn Grange Hall, and was chaperoned by Prof. and Mrs. Gettell and Miss Norris. One of the chief features of the even- ing was the harvest supper, to which we all did full justice. One of the most popular tests for the future was the pumpkin covered with initials into which we, blindfolded, stuck a knife, the point of which, of course, always hit the right letter. I I Our third and last Hallowe'en function was held A f 4 L , , ' sf X af- ,TQF at the Grange hall at Lisbon and was chaperoned il: fi -ig Y J T by Professor Brandelle. Here. too. we had a 1,5 delicious su ner and a Glorious time. , 'SE X I I D I ,T W fy-Fxxg ee! Of course we expected and planned to have a ' X s X , . , . f X H 2, l-lallowe en party during our benior year, the same -'Q T as in years past, but alas: the Fates willed it other- i '-Tr l i q wise. Thus, while we have three delightful times - 'X l i . 4 X 1 ' L 1. l to hold in our memory. we look with regret upon , .t 'iv f ll . , . f ,gf ,K-X 134' ! 4 Z the one we didnt have, and say with the poet:- i ee Q l f e H 'fBut of all sad words of tongue or pen -- 'I zz -J The saddest are these: It might have been. WSH' A' A ,7 41 7 . ii . ' 5 'f- , I ii- ., E X 'fig -. ' 1 --: Ti J ' Nr- i - - - ' J R Y if E .'.. - ,E , ggi E . a , - , if E-.yz f I i HE CL.-XSS of IQOQ has had many memorable experi- ences, but the most vivid of these came on Sophomore Night. Then it seemed as if the demon element of the class had been unchained. The first expression ofthe night's program came as soon as society was over and the Freshmen set out for their abodes. The long and lanky Williams was seized and served well as a rope in the tug of war between -1909 and the Freshies. After the tug of war was ended the victim was measured and it was found that he had been stretched one foot. The girls of the class contributed their part to the evening's celebration by escorting an obstinate Fresh- man damsel to her home in Auburn. So roughly was this young lady treated that a bill to the amount of one dollar and a quarter for liniment and soothing liquids was charged to the class by her enraged parents. in Fx W Q THE MIRROR ua Then too there were posters in green, labeled Danger put up in conspicuous and inaccessible places. The next morning these gave a pleasant aspect to the trees and buildings on the campus. Great was the merriment when our dignilied Faculty armed with pails and scrub brushes undertook to remove the hrmly pasted posters. Somewhere paint was secured and the numerals of IQOQ were put on the grandstand. There they remained in deliance to all classes for several days. Finally came the glorious end to the night's fun, the bon-tire in front of Rand Hall. Contributions came from various sources-Faculty fences, city bill boards, electric road ties and all available property that would make a flame. In conclusion it can be said that Freshmen galore. posters in green, paint in abundance and a rousing bon-tire made the Sopho- more Night of 1909 a memorable occasion. l ff' THE MIRROR T urning the Debates The bell tolled on in the chapel tower On a bleak and cold March night. For the Sophomore girls it was the hour To perform a last sad rite. XVhat means this sorrow and this gloom, These faces so worn and pale. This gathering in an upper room, The long black robe and veil? The last remains of Soph. debates Were resting in their hier And all the sorrowing classmates And friends were gathered here. The sad procession formed above, The Choir sang a hymn, The mourners wept bereft of love. Each carried a candle dim. And down the winding stairs Across the campus drear They marched in solemn pairs To Hathorn Hall, to hear The priest in accents low Extol the worthy dead. Again in funeral row The priest led out ahead. The choir with sweetest melody A funeral dirge sang low To the tune of john Brown's Body And their tears ne'er ceased to Hou Then up the snow-clad mountain By the trees so dark and tall, Tears flowing like a fountain Cremation ended all. And then through the night of sorrow An old-time wake they held, And not till the dawn of morrow Was grief and gloom dispelled. EJ Q EJ EJ M Q3 i XYWV'g x If l Il , xg xxllllfkxl l 1 .:.,,igl.:s I-'el f eq ff' dWlk sig-A waaaaQa u mr, I T- N NNN nf MINI' my ,midi ,, fy'-lt ' T-wi? X -,. Q, 1' .1 .ax .ax 4, - .sf W - 'T T 1.,,,,, 42 i 1 x I i,Y - IULVX-fd x' .ff !'f f bi 9 f ' af S f. X - ici A i f- sw:-5,,.-L If ii- l' A ,1'.:y. r N Ii.- py '1 SQ:-A 'T ix ,N M E XYERE Freshmen at a co-educational college when these Bird- walks took place. The reputations that we had acquired before coming to Bates were blanks. Every individual was sure to be considered innocent until it had been proved that he was guilty. Under such favorable conditions we began the struggle for our existence at Bates. The courses of study that we were required to take were more advanced and more difficultg and they demanded more time and thought than any we had taken before. The course in Bird-walks was elective, and authorities do not agree in regard to the real difficulty of this course, Yet it seems to be an established fact with the members of our class that this course has been extremely practical. It may be defined as a combi- nation of the Aesthetic and the Romantic. For, in order to pursue suc- cessfully the study of birds and to become familiar with their various forms and habits, an individual must possess an acute sense that is active and capable of detecting the beauties of nature. The element of romance that pervaded this course is directly associated with the personality of Professor Stantong for it was his plain talks and friendly suggestions that made these Bird-walks real. Every Friday morn'ng of our first term of college Professor Stanton lectured to us. These lectures were always interesting and instructive. Wie can never forget the feeling of admiration that we soon devel- oped for Johnny Occasionally subjects would be introduced into these lectures that suggested more strenuous acts than are characteristic of those harmless creatures that make a spring morning com lete. Qnce as as P in particular when Professor Stanton was making a few remarks on the Q-QI E Q THE MIRROR Q M Q general conduct of the Sophomores he said: If in some hand to hand encounter you should happen to kill a Sophomore, why I wouldn't swear that he didn't die in a fit. Perhaps this illustrates the spirit of protect'on for the uninitiated that Professor Stanton always assumes. Our interest in Bird-walks was revived early in the summer term by some more of Professor Stanton's lectures in which he told us the char- acteristics and physical structure of birds. The announcement that there would be Bird-walks every fair morning at 5.30 was hailed with much enthusiasm. Accordingly the actual Bird-walks began under the per- sonal direction of Professor Stanton. But he soon found it impossible to walk so much as he had not fully recovered from a severe injury which he had received earlier in the year. Then he very thoughtfully arranged with Professor Pomeroy to continue the Bird-walks. Professor Pom- eroy showed an accurate and detailed knowledge of the many birds that we saw and under his able direction we enjoyed several early morning excursions. The number of individuals that focused their attentions entirely upon the observing and classifying of birds varied at different times. But as the season advanced it was noticed that there was a tendency on the part of those that possessed a chivalrous temperament to voluntarily arrange themselves into small groups. These small groups exhibited a wonderful ability to accustom themselves to the irregularities of their environment and many of them are still in a vigorous and progressive state of development. The brilliant personality of Professor Stanton has ever commanded the highest admiration. He shows a keen interest in the typical Bates man, and he appreciates the conditions and difficulties with which he meets. Professor Stanton always exhibits a spirit that we may reason- ably covet and his lectures and Bird-walks occupy a distinct place among the cherished memories of our college days. f 5 ff- .F ff r 43 2 EUR?-3 ii'4LQ'i in In ar w'2 1I T l U I- vs , tm? , r Ef.N-- I 4 X V' 12754: 'V , r , G l l k K 1, 4 1-. X K g y lo. l A I- ' rskwf V1 X ly lu KX - Ii l' r fK ' ll ix , f XXZV -G rj ji isa. - 1. , X 5 I'l l ul 1,49 --S , .O l E i as l . 'P 1 ' 2 52 2: f.-f X J 1 X ml . l X f XXASNN l HAT a memory that word calls up of good times and sweet stolen pleasures. There were all kinds of spreads at all hours. There were those we had on Saturday nights when the home folks had timed our box of goodies just right, and we congre- gated at conventional hours to do justice to the home cooking. There we had all sorts of representations: all kinds of national types and even whole families. The Indian chief often appeared with his braves clad in couch covers and feather dusters. Barney and Bridget too often found diiiiculty in quelling the rebellious spirit of their numer- ous offspring. These were always enjoyed and well attended, but best of all were those held by candle light in the scary hours of the night and rendered the more enticing Inj, jr a-,M because so strictly forbidden. What secret plan- 'IQ lA .'l+ji'Df- ning! What daring and caution were required! 4- id' yi 1 T jj , . . . ,A'1,I ' ,F .A Then there was always commission, in the shape U '- A T lb l. of an extra olive maybe, due to the one who first li, vm I jf nj, awoke and aroused the rest of us. No one dared rllllijj 'x ,f 'Ylljl 'il speak above a whisper and when it came to ' ill.'l?fVfl' mounting ihe stairs we crept slowly up, one by gif rjlN1l one, to lessen the commotion. And if, while de- ,j 'pl lightfully devouring our well-earned dainties even Q j' j-j,lf3Q ,.t,, Q fig lhklgllia a slight sound from without was heard, how quickly 'jim Q x1l'f llQ,lf the whole box was covered with pillows and cush- '. FQ , A l. ions, and all but the regular occupants of the room F il-1 1 gg 1 fl crowded into the narrow closets. These were the 15' l' 5 . l ll special times for recounting our various experi- i lf. Pgllp -, ' 'lll' ,- - , Q - ,- l ullt i 2 . f ences and advising and sympathizing with one .gQ's,jgg,p gl, G y another. Here we learned to know and love each tgp , XX X other best. 1 1 , e ' ff tif.- - --T. 1- , K 4 - 1-.- X- X f ' ,.. xxx ,L-a y gig' +4 is Vffff' f iffx' si' ., 4 as if !cf7Ts1T'9X V ff - f X !ffXf FYNNX if fi N V ,N X, C fgiyg I' ,V . .Xilflff yi' ,fl .0 ' , J - X' ' K 'fi J sf' f ff , ' f- 'N N-4-i 1 N X -X Kp, W! fl!! , M f If iff! If 4,111 ffffi I 5115 ix X .X 'l ,VX ff, 1 ! yffy 1 1 X ff! , re, .N ix is E V . ' f 1 1 5 If f f , .QI XX as I LX A f ,fl i ei! KE X V ' ff X ff .I ef ,7 P f R FFQ nf Qi ff Q'f?3Xf f f' if ff 'it 2 4 ,ff-21. - . s XX-J Q-if ff . 'N f - h llillfrg. X' XT.. was ez ff' . iff f' If fff l if fig if ,gf T lei W 1- VM, sf! gg? 'xg REQ!- 'gn X Q f HE first banquet of the class of 1909 was an all-night affair held at the Country Club in Auburn. To all who attended, the big open fire-place, the midnight feast, the imposing figure of Toastmaster Harris as he made his presentation speeches, the toast to our faculty, and the fiery oratory of ff Doc Irish furnished an adequate setting for one of the choicest memories of our college course. It was agreed by all that an occasion of such vast import would bear repeating. Accordingly at the close of the football season in our Senior year we again visited the Country Club. This occasion, with all the good-fellowship and happy results it brought us, was similar to our first assembly. Joe Wadleigh was at the head of the table and all who have heard his ready wit need not be told how well he kept the ball rolling. Only those who View these banquets from the inside can grasp their true significance. The actual participants sincerely believe there is much benefit derived from such gatherings. The loss of one night's sleep, and the evils of a slight expense and the clinging odor of a cigar sink into nothingness in comparison to the hearty comradeship and sympathetic friendliness manifest at these memorable occasions. sail M Q X ,- if ? , f Y ay!- A4:.-: ,,fv i ii ,-5' ' ? 9 e X ? W ' w X tl l' gg: l f.: .if N. 3 .pf ls . . l V ll' v A 1 l li 1 - N l ' 4, K 1 lvslggif Wm,-is ,Ml .ll f ' li 1 t l. A . Q K 1 ,qv Kg , m li N ts l l ll R AX7,,,LJ,- The H College Tea, i HE advent of the College Tea or Iflhke occurred in the first term of our Senior year. This social function might be called a wake inasmuch as it seemed to celebrate the diabolical murder of two of our social pets-Hallowe'en Parties and Class Rides. It had at least some connection with a wake or with death, for it occured as near 7110117711-llg as could be without conflicting with the A. M. recitation. But for sweet charity's sake we give way to the faculty's conception of the affair and try to believe that a College Tea was planned for the purpose of resus- citating dying Social Life at Bates and for establishing a form of social decorum which would prepare all graduates to mingle in the society of the Rothchildren, Huyler, jack johnson and other high and mighty people. The preparation for the Tea proved the sincerity of the faculty. The Big Chief commanded the nearest Beau Brummel of his tribe to assemble the students and to enlighten the unsophisticated as to the mysteries of sophisticated society. Hard and late he studied Josh Billings, Nat Phillips and other authorities upon, What is Right in Society. He showed that sneakers were not permissible in the highest society-as among aerialists and steeple climbers. At the suggestion of the Goose he added that white dzeeks were proper only in the society of gzeaeluv. There was power in his speech. Yea, verily he seemed to wave a magic wand, and presto- among students and faculty, a transformation, aye a transfigura- tion took place. Lo l when the Tea occurred, men ever before clad in sweaters, converted, perspired heroically within merciless hard- boiled shirtsg behold! co-eds even concealed their rats and rolls successfully within their thin locks, and lo and behold! - members of the faculty spruced up, pulled themselves together, and actually wore their neckties around their collars instead of at home on the pianna. The College Tea had worked wonders. So, wefclearly see, there were gl'0ll7ZlI'.S' for-if not in-the College Yea. I THE MIRROR Q Q tg ,-if .sz .. sv .II .. I V ,.. Y. RF l H WF! AT S ,CIFTY iusuoious 1'o1.1111:A1. T 1s1'1f:x111f1n Hele11 Wilson Adams Bowdoin, Me., Sept. 16. '87 Bowdioinham, Me. 'Jordan High, '05 Polymnia Universalist Rellllbliean Teacliing William Porter Ames Marshheld, Mass., Apr. 20. '79 Grant, Mont. Mt. Her1110n.'o4 Pizeria Congregational Republican Ministry Bangor Theo. Sem. '07 Amy Etta Bartlett Chichester, N. ll. Mar. 16, '87 Auburn, Me, E. L. H. S., '05 Eurosophia Baptist Democrat Undecided George l redcrick Bolster 1 Fredericton, N. B., Jan. 13. '82 Gibson, N. B. Fredericton High. '03 Polymnia Ullioll B211JtiSt C0l15Cl'V2lfiVC Ml1Ii5U'.Y VVillard Sands Boothby i Lewiston, Me., Aug. 31, '87 Lewiston, Me. ,Lewiston High. '05 Pizeria Baptist Republican Business Percy llilton Harris Booker Bowdoin, Me., Apr. 10. '80 Dresden Mills. Me. Bridge Acad., '02 Eurosophia Congregational Democrat Undecided Corinne Mildred Brown Lewiston, Me., Sept. 1. '86 Malden, Mass. iMalden High, '05 E111-osophia Universalist Republican Teaching Alta Belle Br11sh Hillsdale. Mich., Sept. 17, '88 Lewiston, Me. Lewiston High, '05 Polymnia Free Baptist Republican Teaching John Murray 'Carroll Washington, Me., jan. 11, '82 Razorville, Me. Rents Hill, '04 Piaeria lndepende11t Teaching Winnifred Amelia Chapman Middletown, R. l., July 27. '88 Lewiston, Me. Jordan High, '05 Polymnia Free Baptist Republican Librarian Bertha Sarah Clason Gardiner, Me., Sept. 20. '87 Gardiner, Me. Gardiner High, '05 Poly1n111a Methodist Republican Te: ching Stephen Aratas Cobb, jr. Gardiner. Me., Dec. 9, '87 Gardiner, Me. 'Gardiner High, '05 Eurosophia Methodist Republican Medicine Isaac George Cochran Rochester, N. H., Mar. 15. '86 Rochester. N. H. Rochester High, '05 Piaeriz Republican Banking Solomon Everett 'Cook Naples. Me., May 19, '89 Oxford, Me. Oxford High, '04 Eurosophia Methodist Republican Teaching William Gladstone Crommett Revere, Mass , jan 20. '86 Chelsea, Mas A Chelsea High, '03 Polymni 1 Baptist Republican Law Phyllis 'Caroline Culhane Gorham, H., Dec. 20, '87 Gorh: m, N. H. Gorham High, '05 Eurosophia Methodist Democrat Teachi ig Edith May Davi' Newmarket. N. H., Sept. 15. '86 Lewiston, Me. Lewiston High. '05 Polymnia Methodist Republican Teaching Forence Marie D11nn New Gloucester, Me., Dec. 17, '85 Auburn, Me. New Gloucester High, '04 Eurosophii Methodist Republican Library wo Scott Sidney Eekhotf Stai stead Plains, Quebec, Jun. 9, '84 Chelsea, Ma s. Chelsea High, Special Polymnia Free Baptist independent Undecided Agnes Spaulding Fogg Gray, Me., Dec. 23, '85 Gray, Me. Pennell Inst., '04 Eurosophia Congregational Republican Teaching Alice Adams Foss Rye. N. H.. Sept. 2, '84 Rye Center. N. H. Portsmouth High, '04 Pimria Methodist Republican Teaching Henry Lester Gerry Fryeburg, Me., Mar. 24. '87 Lewiston, Me. Lewiston High, '05 Eurosophit Congregational Republican Undecided Agnes Donald Grant Vinalhaven, Me., Mar. 21, '85 Vinalhaven, Me. Vinalhaven High, '03 Eurosoph'a Congregational Detmocrat Teaching Grace Ethel Haines Auburn, Me., Mar. 28. '86 South Portland. Me. Portland'High, '05 Pizeria Congregational Republican Teaching Herbert Francis Hale Winthrop. Me., Oct. 21, '85 New Sharon, Me. Kents Hill. '05 Polymnia Congregational Rep11blican Medicine Mary Hardie Bowdoinham, Me.. Dec. I, '86 Bowdoinham, Me. Bowdoinham High. '04 Polymnia Episcopalian Republican Teachi ig Charles Lester Harris Detroit, Me., July 18, '86 Detroit, Me. Maine Central Inst., '05 Polymnia Congregational Republican Law Clarelwe LGSHC HHWkS Morton C0rl1CrS. N- Y-. SCD? 23, '84 Keuka Park, N. Y. Keuka College. '06 Polymnia Republican Teaching Ralph Simpson Hayward Old Mystic, -Conn., Dec. 10. '86 Auburn, Me. Bucksport Sem , '04 Eurosophia Methodist Republican Teaching Grace Everl'11a Holbrook Bedford, N. H., Nov. 25. '85 Manchester, N. H. Manchester High, '04 Euros0ph'a Congregational Democrat Undecided Carl Holman Dixlield, Me.. Feb. 20, '80 Dixtield, Me. Wilton Acad , '01 Eurosophia Bapt'st Democrat Teachi ig Wallace Floyd Holman Dixheld, Me., Aug. 14, 83 North Jay, Me. Wilton Acad.. '04 Polymnia Universalist Democrat Busness Horace Irving Holt HublJardSt0l1. MGISS.. Aug- 30, '69 Lewiston, Me. Bncksport Sem. Eurosophia Methodist Independent Ministry Freedom Acad. '02 Alice Elva Howard Brockton, Mass., Dec. 8, '86 Brockton, Mass. Brockton High, '05 Piaeria New Church Republican Teaching Alice Mildred Humiston East Jaffrey, N. H., Aug. 28. '87 East Jaffrey, N. H. Conant High, '04 Polymnia Congregational Republican Librarywor Florence Mabel Hunt East Pittston, Me., Mar. 7, '87 Augusta. Me. Gardiner High, '05 Pizeria Methodist Republican Teaching Arthur Irish Turner, Me., Dec. 21, '87 Turner, Me. Leavitt Inst., '05 Pizeria Oongregational Democrat Medicine John Poland Jewell Auburn, Me., Sept. 26, '88 South Portland, Me. So. Portland High, '05 Pizeria Free Baptist Republican Teaching A .- ,.. 1 1 .V L J l Dana Stanford Jordan E. Raymond, Me., May 27, '87 East Raymond, Me. Pcnnell Inst.. '05 Eurosophia Free Baptist Republican Undecided Mildred jasmine Jordan Auburn, Me., Nov. 12, '86 Auburn, Me. E. L. H. S., '05 Pigs,-ia CongI'6g21U0l121l Relllfblifflll T'e21Cl11l1g Angie Estelle Keene Lewiston, Me., Nov. I, '87 Lewiston, Me. jordan High, '05 Polymnia Mctlmdlst Republican Tcadllllg Fred Henry Lancaster Pittsheld, Me., June 22, '85 lPittsHeld, Me. Maine Central Inst., '05 polymnia Universalist Democrat Business Alzie Edrie Lane W. Gai'diner, Me., Nov. II, '86 ,Gardiner Gardiner High. '05 pix,-ia Baptist ' Republican il eaching ErnestEverctt Larrabee Auburn, Me., Oct. 26, '87 Auburn, Me. E. L. H. S., '04 Polymniu Congregational Republican Teaching Olive Mary Lasselle Leoninster, Mass., jan. 27, '87 'Le0minstcr, Mass. Leominster High, '05 pix,-ia Roman Catholic Republican leaching Warren Edgar Libby Lisbon, Me., Apr. 8, '88 Lewiston, Me. E. L. H. S., '05 Polymnia Christian Scien. Republican Lalwu Arthur Fay Linscott Troy, Mc., Mar. 4, '85 Troy, Me. Maine Central Inst., '05 Polymniu Free Baptist Independent Ministry Fred Collins Lovejoy No. Chesterville, Me., Mar. 7, '84 lNo. Chesterville. Me. Wilton Acad.. '05 Polymnin Free Baptist Republican Teaching William Harris Martin Hooksett, N. ll., Dec. 12, '85 North Weare, N. H. Manchester High, '05 Em-Osophia Universalist Democrat Medicine Angie Winnifred Maxwell Webs-ter, Me., Dec. 4, '85 Sabattus, Me. Sabattus High. '03 Pimfia Free Baptist Republican Teaching Althca Caroline lvlcader Lewiston, Me., Nov. 22, '86 Lewiston, Mc. Lewiston High, '05 Polymlfa Friends Republican 'l:eaching Helen Maybel Merrill Auburn, Me., Oct. 21. '86 tAuburn, Me. E. L.l I.S ,'05 Polymnia Universalist Republic tn 'I caching Gardner Fessenden Merrill Bridgton, Mc., Oct. 10, '86 ,Bridgton, Me. Bridgton High, '04 Congregational Democrat Business Harry Claire Miller Readtield, Me., July 24, '87 lWinthrop, Me. Winthrop High, '05 Polvmnia Congregational Democrat leaching Beulah Mitchell Lubec, Mc. March I I, '86 Lubec, Me. Lubec H igh, '03 Piaeiria Congregational Republican leaching Arthur Everett Morse Chesterville, Me., Aug. 25, '82 Chestcrville, Me. Wilton Academy, '03 lim-Ugoplliu Methodist l Republican Undccidet Chesley Wilbur Nelson Sou-thport, 'Me., Dec. 1,'85 'West Southport, Me. Boothbay Harbor High, '05 Polymnigl Congregational Republican Undecided Raymond Silvestcr Oakes Auburn, Me.. June 23, '87 lAuburn, Me. E. L. ll. S., '05 Pigm-ia Congregational Republican Law Rodney Gerald Page Bucksport, Me., Feb. 6,' 85 iBucksport. Me. East Maine Sem., '05 lim-Osophia Congregational Independent Law . Clinton De itt Park Presque lsle, Me., Sept. 23, '85 Presque lsle Presque Isle High, '03 lim-Osoplngl Free Baptist Republican leaching Frederic Metcalf Peckham Boothbay, Mc., Dec. 18, '86 tLcwiston, Me. Lewiston High, '05 Polymnig, Free Baptist Republican Law I HZ1l'I'iS011 MOFKOII PCICFSOII Columbia Falls, Me., Aug. 16, '88 ,Columbia Falls, Me. Gardiner H igh. '05 Piaeria Ctmiitll'L'ti1ll'0llill ld8l ld'f'lt i, lk11lg Cllfl Tl121fCllCl' P0l1101'0y Lewiston, Me., May 22, '86 Lewiston. Me. Lewiston High, '05 Pigm-ia Free Baptist Republican Biology Carl Russell Purinton W'e5'l B0Wtloin, Mt-,, April 28, '87 Elllath, Me. Morse High, '05 Pizeria Free Baptist Republican lieaching Nilthillliel PhillipS 2ll No. Marshticld, Mass., Oct. 4, '84 ,Marshtield Hills, Mass. iiillarslilicicl liigh Universalist Republican 'I caching iavcr .A cat . Carl Herman Ranger Wilton, Mc., Mar. I4 '88 JDrydcn. Me. Wilton Acad. '05 Polymnia FVCC Billlllfl Rcllllllllfilll U'NlCClfl'0fl Ralph Gerry Reed South Bridgton, Me., April 22, '86 Bridgton. Me. Bridgton High, '04 lPolymnia Ctiiitlwllilllollill Rfllllllllfilll lCf1Fll1ll8 Charles Everett Roseland Unity, Me., Oct. 3. '86 Unity, Me. E. L. ll. S., '04 'Pizeria CtiiitI Ct-11111011111 llcllmfffll llUSmC55 John Bryant Sawyer Easton,'Me., Sept. lo, '84 lLewiston, Mc. Ricker Classical lust., '04 ,Pi:eria Free liilllml Rcllllllllfilll LUW , Myer Segal Vilna, Russia, Oct. 3, '87 iSt. John, New Brunswick St. john High, '05 Pizeria Judaism Independent Undecided Clara Agnes Sharp Upper Hainesville, N. B., June I8, '86 Lewiston. Me. Lewiston High, '05 Polymnia Methodist' Republican lqcachhlltl George Hawthorne Smith Harrison, Mc., Sept. 25, '85 lMcredith, N. H. N. Berwick High, '05 'Eurosophia lifes' liflllllq Rellllbllcall I 9'5'Fll'll8' Harold Edgar Stone 'l'opsham, Me., May Io, '84 ,Lisbon Falls, Me. Lisbon Falls High, '03 i Universalist Rl'llUlllEC?l1l lljwlllcfg Herbert Lewis Story Mcrrimtac, Mass , Feb. I6, '87 Merrimac, Mass. git-iiritnaal Iigh iPi:eria Congregational Republican l caching t us ting cat ., '05 U ' Q i Edith Winnifred Swift Lewiston, Me., Dec. 16, '87 ,Auburn. Me. E. L. H. S ,'05 'Piaeria Baptist ' RC'I1l1l1l1C?lll lmfllllltl Joseph Bertram Wadlcigh Junction City, Kan , Aug. 23, '88 ,South Kingston, N. H. Sanborn Seminary, '05 il izeria Congregational Independent Undecided John Thaddeus Wadsworth Gardiner, Me., May 30, '87 'Gard'iner, Me. Gardiner H igh,'05 Euro 'ophia R0DUl1llC21l1 Ul1fl0Clfl'Cil lola Agnes Walker Peru,tMc. Dec. 14, '82 tMcchanie Falls, M c. Rumford Falls High, '00 Pimria Baptist i Independent Teaelnng Nellie Blanche Waller Huron, South Dakota, Oct. 8. '87 Westford, Mass. estford Acad., '05 Polymnia Congregational Republican l'eaching Laura Maude Weare Auburn, Mc., Feb. 9, '88 'Auburn, Me. E. L. Il. S.,'o5 Eurosophia Baptist Republican Undecided Joseph Alfred Wiggin Portsmouth, N. H., jan. 24, '88 ,Portsmouth, N. H. Portsmouth High, '04 Piacria Unitarian Democrat l caching Louis Burton Woodward Dresden Mills, Me., June I8, '86 Dresden Mills, Me. Bridge Acad., '05 Eurosophia Episcopal Democrat Teaching City Girls nfl Hall Girl X-Q6 X X olm Nfun-ay Carroll Jr. Adelaide Vvilson Holt clcnowlerflgment For the support and co-operation of the class of as a whole--our grateful appreciation. For the generous efforts of those members whose contriluu tions have made the book complete--our hearty thanks T be Editorial Board of The M irror Editors of The Mirror Willard Bootllby JOII B S YVYQT Grace H ollnrook E. Fogg George H. Smith BUSINESS MANAGER John B. Sawyer 9? J olmny Georgle Gracie Wi JSR Aggie Ui 2 College Yell B-A-Rah ! Rah I T-E-Rah ! Rah ! S-Rah! Rah I B-A-T-E-S H y! Hooray! H y' BATES .757 f-fqfh ' ! I . 'sn ' ., JA 4. ' .Lf 'I x l 't . , I ' 5 PQ If '. N x Q N O K' I .I ul 5 R 5 14-If - 'f 41' f' 1- '-Y 1 i W. ' 1 1. - IL Q - .'..j',C. . 'H o' V 'fr 'iz 0 tx ' , W 5 . r ,5 4 n 4 5 7' I s ' s l . s , 0 ' I , 5 u '. 'wr 1 I 1 a l 4 f 1 E. . f . 4 QA' . Q T364 Ll D. 4 0 U I f .'y . A 'v 1 .-Q Pnl 1 Q ' n 59- f. -. 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Suggestions in the Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) collection:

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Bates College - Mirror Yearbook (Lewiston, ME) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912


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