Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME)

 - Class of 1910

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Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1910 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 346 of the 1910 volume:

PrintinO nv SOUTHWOUTM PRINTINO CO '  Ponn«Mo, Maine Binding dv The Seavey Company Portland, Maine FOREWORD We have said our little say. It is hardly to be hoped that in saying it we have given much satisfaction to our contemporaries. We have labored that the Bugle might be an accurate record of the year that has passed. But, if we have succeeded, it will be said that we have not departed from the worn trail of our predecessors; and, if we have failed, we will be upbraided for neglect unpardonable. For truly the Bugle is like the prophet, and can hope for small honor in its own community. The victims of its brutal blasts arc incensed at their treatment; and those whom the keen eye of the satirist has altogether passed over are even more offended. The Faculty frowns upon us as frivolous; the Freshman counts us among his common foes. And where are our friends? Shall we find an appreciative audience in the world beyond, when our own brothers revile us? Alas, it is a bitter fate! We are born to be accursed. But ye say that our mirth fulness will be its own reward? How small is your penetration! “Harlequin without his mask is known to present a very sober countenance, and was himself, the story goes, the melancholy patient whom the doctor advised to go and see Harlequin.” This is what Mr. Thackeray has to say on that point, and we could go on to quote authority to the satisfaction of even our debating professor. But a glance at our picture on a later page tells but too truly the whole story. Our mirth is not even skin deep. And so it is with troubled hearts that we give to you, Students of Bowdoin, the Bugle of the Class of 1910. In only one way, shall we hope to escape the pain of your bitter criticism. And that is by re- minding you that all that we have done, from the greatest unto the smallest, has been undertaken in honor of Her we love most—Old Bowdoin. 5 The Bugle Board. WILLIAM LeBARON PUTNAM, LL.D. TO WILLIAM LeBARON PUTNAM, LL.D. THIS VOLUME IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED BY THE Class of 1910 WILLIAM LeBARON PUTNAM, LL.I). For many years, the name of William LeBaron Putnam has stood among those of the trustees of Bowdoin College. “For a quarter of a century, as chan- man of our finance committee, he has borne the burden of our financial problems from the largest responsibility for investment down to the smallest detail of ex- penditure.” He has given unsparingly of time and labor to the interests of his Alma Mater. Bowdoin’s present financial prosperity owes a vast debt to Judge Putnam. The college is stronger and safer for his brains. And her students though they too seldom sec him face to face, are continually confronted with tin- evidence of his service. Judge Putnam was born in Bath, May 12, 1835. At the age of sixteen he entered Bowdoin with the class of 1855. While in college, he distinguished himsel f as a diligent student. Of his marvelous powers of application, some one has said. “He will work twenty-five hours out of every twenty-four”; and this seems to have been true of him while in college. He joined the Chi Psi fraternity: and, though naturally shy, his sterling qualities were universally admired. One of his classmates writes of him as follows, “There were few in the class of whose ap- pearance and manner in our student days, I have a more distinct recollection. Physically he was tall and straight. Intellectually, he was in the front rank of his classmates, not noticeably brilliant but strong, not worried by any recitation, and making us feel that he had a reserve of power. If one had been a prophet, he might have seen in Putnam a future judge. I doubt if those most intimate with him ever saw him greatly excited, or when lie lacked complete self-possession. Judge Putnam as a student not only had the respect of all his classmates for his ability, but, by his bearing towards them, he won from all the most kindly feeling. There was recognition of his weight of character; and no surprise has been felt by those who knew him during his college life, in view of his achievements and the high positions which he has reached and filled.” Judge Putnam graduated in 1855, with the award of Phi Beta Kappa and the assignment of the English oration, an honor given to the first man in the class. The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 For some years, he worked on the Bath newspapers. In 1858. lie was admitted to the bar; and his long legal career was begun. His ability for close and continuous application, the thorough, logical qualities of his mind soon won him fame in the profession. His power of systematic labor is unequalled. In this, he is a model for all students. At the bar. there was no safer or abler counsellor; he took the lead in commercial and corporation law. Portland’s best known men employed him as their business adviser; the principal railroads and business corporations retained him as their counsel. In 1892, Mr. Putnam’s high qualities received their just recognition in an appointment to the bench of the United States Circuit Court. It was at a great personal sacrifice that he accepted this position. His service here has been noteworthy. He is strong in every branch of judicial work. In matters of maritime and commercial law, his authority is everywhere recognized. There is no abler or more valuable judge on any Federal bench in the country. In politics, Judge Putnam has been a staunch Democrat. In 18G9, he was elected Mayor of Portland, and in 1888, he received the largest vote ever given a Democratic candidate for Governor. Judge Putnam has also been prominent in international affairs. In 1897, he received an appointment from President Cleveland, as commissioner in behalf of the United States, to negotiate with Great Britain in settlement of the rights of American fishermen in Canadian waters. His great legal learning, his determination to arrive at an honorable agreement, brought him into prominence in two countries; and he came to be recognized as one of the leading lawyers on this continent. Again in 1896, Judge Putnam served as commissioner under a treaty between the United States and Great Britain. And so Judge Putnam's fame has extended far and wide. But in the grateful affection of their regard, Bowdoin men will surpass all others. To them, he seems to be peculiarly a Bowdoin man; and all the other achievements of his life sink into insignificance when weighed with the work he has done for his Alma Mater. The bond of common love for the college brings him close to the hearts of all the men of BOWDOIN. 9 FABLE OF CONTENTS PACK Board of Editors ........................ Foreword ................................ Dedication .............................. William LcBaron Putnam. '55.............. Calendar................................. Trustees ................................ Overseers ............................... Officers of Administration .............. Officers of Instruction.................. Collega Preachers and Lecturers.......... Alumni Associations ..................... Campus History .......................... Memorials ............................... The Classes ............................. Undergraduate Student Council ........... The Fraternities ........................ Medical School of Maine.................. Undergraduate Activities .................. Religious ........................... Literary ............................ Musical ............................. Social .............................. Athletic ............................ Football ....................... Baseball ....................... Track .......................... Tennis ......................... Fencing ........................ College Prize Winners and Office Holders Grinds................... 4 5 7 8 11 12 13 H 15 24 26 29 47 53 112 ”3 147 167 168 173 198 205 225 228 234 240 253 256 2 59 265 BOWD 01N CALENDAR I908 September 24, Thursday, 8.20 a. m. First Semester began Thanksgiving recess, November 25, 12.30 p. m.—Nov. 30, 8.20 a. m. Christmas vacation, December 23, 4.30 p. m.—January 5, 8.20 a. m. 1909 January 26, Tuesday, 8.00 P. M. “Class of 1868” Prize Speaking January 28—February 6 Examinations of the First Semester February 8, Monday, 8.20 a. m. Second Semester began February 22, Monday Washington’s Birthday, a holiday Easter vacation, March 26, 4.30 p. m.—April 6, 8.20 a. m. May 31, Monday Memorial Day, a holiday June 4, Friday Ivy Day Exercises June 10- 12, Thursday - Saturday Examinations at Preparatory Schools June 10 - 19 Examinations of the Second Semester June 20, Sunday, 4.00 p. M.- Baccalaureate Sermon June 21, Monday, 8.00 p. m. Alexander Prize Speaking June 22, Tuesday, 10.00 a. m., 3.00 p. m. and 8.00 p. m. Class Day Exercises June 23, Wednesday, 10.00 a. m. Medical School Commencement Exercises 11.00 a. m.. Annual Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society 8.00- 11.00 p. m. The President’s Reception June 24, Thursday, 9.00. a. m. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association 10.30. a. m. College Commencement Exercises 12.30 p.m. Commencement Dinner June 24 - 26, Thursday - Saturday Entrance Examinations at Brunswick Summer vacation of thirteen weeks September 20 - 22, Monday - Wednesday Entrance Examinations at Brunswick September 23, Thursday, 8.20 a. m. First Semester begins n President Rev. William DeWitt Hyde, D. D., LL. D. Vice-President Rev. John Smith Sewall, D. D. Hon. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, LL. D. Hon. William Pierce Frye, LL. D. Hon. William LeBaron Putnam, LL. D. Gen. Thomas Hamlin Hubbard, LL. D. Gen. Oliver Otis Howard, LL. D. Hon. Melville Weston Fuller, LL. D. Rev. Samuel Valentine Cole, D. D. Edward Stanwood, Litt. D. Hon. Lucilius Alonzo Emery, LL. D. Hon. William Titcomb Cobb, LL. D. Treasurer Ira Pierce Booker, Esq. Secretary Barrett Potter, Esq., A. M., Brunswick Hon. Charles Freeman Libby, LL. D. Vice-President Galen Clapp Moses, A. M. Rev. Henry F. Harding, A. M. Alfred Mitchell, M. D., LL. D. Rev. Jotham B. Sewall, D. D. Rev. Edward N. Packard, D. D. Daniel A. Robinson, A. M., M. D. James McKcen, Esq., LL. D. Frederic H. Gcrrish, M. D., LL. D. Henry Ncwbegin, Esq., A. M. William E. Spear, Esq., A. B. Hon. Charles U. Bell, LL. D. Hon. John B. Reman, A. M. John A. Morrill, Esq., A. M. Samuel C. Belcher, Esq., A. M. Rev. Edgar M. Cousins, A. B. Oliver C. Stevens, Esq., A. M. Franklin A. Wilson, Esq., LL. D. Hon. Enoch Foster, A. M. George C. Purinton, A. M. Hon. James P. Baxter, Litt. D. Daniel C. Linscott, Esq., A. M. Charles W. Pickard, A. M. Joseph E. Moore, Esq., A. M. Hon. Edwin U. Curtis, A. M. Rev. Charles H. Cutler, D. D. Franklin C. Payson, Esq., A. M. Rev. Charles C. Torrey, D. D. George F. Cary, Esq., A. B. William J. Curtis, Esq., A. B. Weston Lewis, Esq., A. B. Frederick IT. Appleton, Esq., LL. D. Charles T. Hawes, Esq., A. B. Hon. Clarence ITale, LL. D. Hon. DeAlva S. Alexander, LL. D. Alfred E. Burton, C. E. George P. Davenport, A. M. Hon. Addison E. Herrick, A. M. Hon. Levi Turner, A. M. Hon. Frederic A. Fisher, A. M. Hon. Frederic A. Powers Secretary Thomas H. Riley, Esq., A. B., Brunswick 3 OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION President William DeVVitt Hyde, D. D., LL. D. Treasurer Ira Pierce Booker, Esq. Registrar Charles Theodore Burnett, Pli. D. Librarian George Thomas Little, Litt. D. Secretary of the Faculty Kenneth Charles Morton Sills. A. M. Recorder Frank Edward Woodruff, A. M. Curator of the Art Collections Henry Johnson, Ph. D. ASSISTANTS Gerald Gardner Wilder, A. B., Assistant Librarian Samuel Benson Furbish, B. S., Assistant to Treasurer Hugh McLellan Lewis, B. C. E., Assistant in the Library Edith Jenney Boardman, Cataloguer Belle Thwing Atherton, Assistant Registrar Caroline Tilson Robinson, Assistant Curator of the Art Collections PRESIDENT HYDE. Rev. William DeWitt Hyde, D. D., LL. D.—President. Stone Professor of Mental and Moral Philosophy Born at Winchcndon, Mass., September 23, 1S58. Fitted at Phillips Exeter Academy; graduated from Harvard University, 1879; Studied at Union Theological Seminary, 1879-S0, Andover Theological Seminary, 1880-82, Andover and Harvard University, 1882-83. Pastor of the Congregational Church, Paterson. N. J.. 1883-85. Called to the Presidency of Bow- doin College, 1885. Author of Practical Ethics,” “Social Theology,” “Practical Idealism,” “God’s Education of Man,” “Jesus’ Way,” “From Epicurus to Christ,” “The Art of Opti- mism,” “The College Man and the College Woman.” Member of the American Philosophical Association. Signet and O. K. Senior Societies at Harvard. I B K Fraternity. 15 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Henry Leland Chapman, D. D. Professor of the English Language and Literature Born at Bethel, Maine. July 26. 1845. Fitted at Gould Academy and Gorham Seminary; graduated from Bowdom College, iX« : Bangor Theological Seminary. 1869. Tutor in Latin at Bow doin. 1869-71; professor, 1871-75: professor of Oratory and English Literature, 1875-97; professor of the English Language and Literature, 1897—. Has published various poems and ad- dresses. President of the Trustees of Bangor Theological Seminary; trustee of State Normal Schools, and of Bridgton Academy; senator of the Phi Beta Kappa Fraternity. Member of the American Society of Modern Languages. A A ‱! and 4 B K Fraternities. Franklin Clement Robinson, LL. D. Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy, Josiah Little Professor of Natural Science, and Professor of Chemistry in the Medical School of Maine. Born at East Orrington, April 24, 1852. Fitted at Bangor High School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1873; studied at Harvard University, 1882-84. Instructor in Chemistry and Mineralogy at Bowdoin, 1874-78; professor, 1878—. Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science; ex-president of the American Public Health Association; mem ber of the British Society of Chemical Industry: vice-president of the American Chemical Society; member of the State Board of Health; Chairman of the State Survey Commission: State Geologist. A A «I and 4 B K Fraternities. Henry Johnson, Ph. D. Longfellow Professor of Modern Languages, and Curator of the Art Collections Born at Gardiner, Me., June 25, 1855. Fitted at Gardiner High School and Phillips Andover Academy; graduated from Bow- doin College, 1874; studied fourteen months in Paris, and a year each in the Universities of Goettingen, Leipsic and Berlin. Studied Shakespearean Text in England, 1890. French Litcra- urc and Institutions in Paris, 1895. and Christian Archeology 11 Italy 1905. Head of the Department of Modern Languages at Bowdoin 1877-81; college professor, 1881-82: Longfellow kc,LT 1 .S 'Vf0-,85- Clm,w « «I Art CoN ' ,SV — Edited Schiller's 'Ballads ami 6 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Frank Edward Woodruff, A. M. Professor of the Greek Language and Literature Born at Eden, Vt., March 20, 1855. Fitted at Underhill Acad- emy; graduated from University of Vermont, 1875; studied at Union Theological Seminary, 1878-81, University of Berlin and American School at Athens, 1881-83. Associate professor of Biblical Literature, Andover Theological Seminary, 1883-87; professor of the Greek Language and Literature at Bowdoin, 1887—; lecturer on Greek Literature, Bangor Theological Semi- nary, 1905 and 1908. Published “Exercises in Greek Prose Composition,” 1891; “New Greek Prose Composition,” 1905. Member of the American Philological Association and the Archaeological Institute of America. A 'k and I B K Frater- nities. Georue Thomas Little, Litt. D. Librarian Born at Auburn, Me., May 14, 1857. Fitted at Auburn High School: graduated from Bowdoin College, 1877. Traveled in Europe, 1877-78 and 1904-05. Instructor in Latin at Thayer Academy, Braintree, Mass., 1878-81; instructor in Latin at Bowdoin, 1882-83; professor, 1883-85; assistant in Rhetoric, 1885-89; curator of the Art Collections, 1887-92; librarian. 18S3—. Edited General Catalogue since 1889; Published, 1882. Descendants of George Little, Who Came to Newbury, Mass., in 1640.” Recorder of the American Library Association, 1889-92. Member of the American Alpine Club and the Ap- palachian Club. A K E and k B K Fraternities. William Albion Moody, A. M. Wing Professor of Mathematics Born at Kenncbunkport, Me., July 30, i860. Fitted at Hallowell Classical School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1882; studied at Harvard Graduate School, 1891. Sub-master of Edward Little High School, 1882-84; tutor and instructor in Mathematics at Bowdoin, 1884-87; professor, 1888—. Member of the American Mathematical Association, the American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science, and the Association of Mathematics Teachers in New England. A A I and k B K Fraternities. 17 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Charles Clifford Hutchins, A. M. Professor of Physics Horn at Canton. Me., July 12, 1858. Fitted at Bridgton Acad- emy; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1883; studied at Har- vard, 1886-87, Lcipsic. 1900-01. Instructor in Leicester Acad- emy, Mass., 1883-84; instructor in Physics at Bowdoin, 1885-88; professor, 1888—. A contributor to the “American Journal of Science.” and the “Astrophysical Journal.” Member of the American Physical Society. A A I Fraternity. Frank Nathaniel Whittier, A. M., M. D. Professor of Hygiene and Physical Training; Pro- fessor of Pathology and Bacteriology Born at Farmington, Me., December 12, 1861. Fitted at Wilton Academy; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1885. Studied law, 1885-86; studied physical culture under Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, 1886-88. Graduated from the Medical School of Maine, 1889. Director of the gymnasium at Bowdoin, 1886- 1908; lecturer on Hygiene, 1891-1908; instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology in the Medical School of Maine, 1897-1901; professor, 1901 —; professor of Hygiene and Physical Training, 1908—. The first man in the country to use the serum test for human blood in a court case; also the first to demonstrate the fact that the firing pin of every rifle has a distinct individuality which can be shown by photomicrographs, and that this in- dividuality is stamped upon the primer of a shell at the time of firing. Member of the American Association of Patholo- gists and Bacteriologists, the Maine Medical Association, the Society of Gymnasium Directors, and the Society for the Advancement of Physical Education. A K E and 1 B K Fra- ternities. George Taylor Files, Pii. D. Professor of German Born at Portland, Me., September 23, 1866. Fitted at Portland High School: graduated from Bowdoin College, 1889; studied at Johns Hopkins University, 1S89-90; in Europe, 1891-93; Ph. D. from Leipsic University, 1893; studied social conditions in Germany, 1S99. Tutor in languages at Bowdoin, 1890-91 instructor in German, 1891-94; professor, 1894—; registrar of the college. 1897-1905. Edited Gustav Fryetag’s Soil und Haben. Member of the Modern Language Association of America (Executive Committee, 1901), and the American His- torical Association; trustee of Frycburg Academy, 'P T and 4 B K Fraternities. 18 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Wilmot Brookings Mitchell, A. M. Edward Little Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory Born at Freeport, Me., August 24, 1867. Graduated from Bow- doin College, 1890; studied at Harvard, 1895-96. Principal of Freeport High School, 1890 93; instructor in Rhetoric and Oratory at Bowdoin, 1893-97; professor, 1897—. Published, 1901, School and College Speaker;” 1903, Elijah Kellogg, The Man and His Work.” 0 A X Fraternity. Allen Johnson, Ph. D. Professor of History and Political Science Bom at Lowell, Mass., January 29, 1870. Fitted at Lowell High School; graduated from Amherst College, 1892. Sub- master in History in Lawrencevillc School, N. J., 1892-94; Ros- well Dwight Hitchcock Fellow in History and Political Science in Amherst, 1894-95; studied at the University of Leipsic and at the Ecole dcs Sciences Politiques, and Sorbonne, Paris, 1895- 97; fellow in History in Columbia University, 1897-98; Ph. D. from Columbia University, 1899; professor of History in Iowa College, 1898-1905; professor of History and Political Science at Bowdoin, 1905—. Author of Stephen A. Douglas: A Study in American Politics,” published 190S. Member of the Ameri- can Historical Association, the Political Science Association, and the Historical Society of Maine. A K E and 1 B K Fra- ternities. Frederic Willis Brown, Ph. D. Professor of Modern Languages Born at Concord, Mass., May 24, 1876. Graduated from Har- vard University, 1897; Ph. D. from Harvard, 1906. Studied at the University of Grenoble, France, 1901-02; Harvard Grad- uate School. 1902-05. Instructor in Romance Languages, Clark College, 1905-07; professor of Modern Languages at Bow- doin, 1907—. A T Fraternity. William Trufant Foster, A. M. Professor of English and Argumentation Born at Boston. Mass., January 18, 1879. Harvard University, A. B., 1901; A. M.. 1904. Instructor in English, Bates Col- lege, 1901-03; professor of English and Argumentation at Bowdoin. 1905—. Author of “Argumentation and Debating,” published 1908. The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Kenneth Charles Morton Sills, A. M. Winkley Professor of the Latin Language and Lit- erature Born at Halifax, X. S., December 5, 1879- Pitted at Portland High .School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1901; grad- uate student and assistant in Harvard, 1901-03. Instructor in the Classics and English at Bowdoin, 1903-04; tutor in Eng- lish at Columbia, 1904-05: studied at Columbia, 1906. Adjunct professor of Latin at Bowdoin, 1906: professor of the Latin Language and Literature, 1907—. Member of the American Philological Association, and the Modern Language Associa- tion of America. A K E and 1 B K Fraternities. Alba M. Edwards, Ph. D. Acting Professor of Economics and Sociology Born at Savannah, Mo., September 21, 1872. Fitted at the Preparatory School of the University of Oklahoma; graduated from the University of Oklahoma, 1903; graduate student in Economics and Sociology at Yale, 1903-06; A. M. from Yale, 1905; Ph. D. from Yale, 1906. Special agent for the Carnegie Institute of Washington, 1906-07; acting professor of Eco- nomics and Sociology at Bowdoin, 1907—. Charles Theodore Burnett, Ph. D. Assistant Professor of Psychology Born at Springfield, Mass., June 24, 1873. Fitted at Green- field, Mass. High School; graduated from Amherst, 1895; studied at Harvard, 1898-1903. Instructor in Tome Institute, 1895-96; instructor at the Hill School, Pottstown, Pa., 1896- 98; assistant in Philosophy at Harvard, 1900-02; instructor in Psychology at Bowdoin, 1904-06; assistant professor, 1906—; registrar of the College, 1905—. Member of the American Isycho,logical Association and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. T Fraternity. Ralph Bushnell Stone, A. M. Instructor in Mathematics and Physics B-nnV « mplcton Mass., June 4. 1882. Fitted at Baldwin- vile (Mass.) High School, and Stone’s School, Boston. Grad- uated from Bowdoin College, 1902; studied at Harvard, 1902- o.- ; at lurm 1905-06; at Munich, 1906-07; received A. M. lrom Harvard, 1904. Instructor in Mathematics and Physics at Bowdoin, 1907 —. A A «I and 4- B K Fraternities. 20 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Gerald Gardner Wilder, A. B. Assistant Librarian Born at Pembroke, Me., April 30, 1879. Fitted at Pembroke High School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1904. Assist- ant in the library at Bowdoin, 1904-06; assistant librarian, 1906—. i B K Fraternity. Hudson Bridge Hastings, S. B. Assistant Professor of Surveying and Drawing Born at Walpole, Mass., October 4, 1885. Fitted at Phillips Exeter Academy; graduated from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1907. Instructor in Surveying and Drawing at Bowdoin, 1907-08; assistant professor, 1908—. J r A Fra- ternity. Manton Copeland, S. M., Ph. D. Instructor in Biology Born at Taunton, Mass., July 24, 1S81. Fitted at Bristol Academy; graduated from Lawrence Scientific School, 1904; S. M. from Harvard, 1905; Ph. D. from Harvard, 190S. As- sistant in Biology, Harvard and Radcliffe. 1903-08; instructor in Biology at Bowdoin, 1908—. Member of the Biological So- ciety of Washington. Marshall Perley Cram, Pii. D. Instructor in Chemistry Born at Brunswick, Me., January 1, 1882. Fitted at Brunswick High School; graduated from Bowdoin, 1904; assistant in chemistry at Bowdoin, 1904-5; studied at Johns Hopkins Uni- versity, 1905-8. Received the degrees of A. M. from Bowdoin in 1905 and Ph. D. from Johns Hopkins in 1908. Member of the American Chemical Society. A A «I and 1 B K Fraternities. 21 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 John Merrill Bridciiam, A. M. Instructor in Classics and Ancient History Born at Dexter, March 25, 1882. Fitted at Dexter High School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1904; graduate student in Classics at Dartmouth College, 1904-05, at the University of Chicago, 1907-0S; received A. M. from Dartmouth, 1905. Mas- ter of Greek and Latin at Groton School, 1905-07; instructor in Classics and Ancient History at Bowdoin, 1908—. A K E and I B K Fraternities. Roderick Scott, A. M. Instructor in English and Secretary of the Christian Association Born at Auburn, N. Y., July 12, 1885. Fitted at Havcrford School; graduated from Havcrford College, 1906; assistant in English, 1906-07; A. M., 1907. Harvard Graduate School, 1907-08; A. M., 1908. Instructor in English and Secretary of the Christian Association at Bowdoin, 1908—. «I B K Fra- ternity. The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 UNDERGRADUATE ASSISTANTS Economics Modern Languages Fred V. Stanley, 1909 Ernest H. Pottle, 1909 History Harold II. Burton, 1909 Biology Harold S. Pratt, 1909 William R. Crowley, 1908 Thomas D. Ginn, 1909 Chemistry Frank C. Evans, 1910 Frank W. Knight, 1910 William M. Harris, 1909 Ernest Ii. Pottle, 1909 Raymond A. Tuttle, 1910 Harrison M. Berry, 1911 Charles H. Byles, 1911 Library Arthur H. Cole, 1911 Stanley W. Pierce, 1911 Harris W. Reynolds, 1912 Carl B. Timberlake, 1912 Edward W. Torrey, 1912 Gymnasium Carl M. Robinson. Med. 1911, Leader Harold S. Tobcy, Med. 1911 Harold S. Pratt, 1909 E. Ralph Bridge, 1909 George H. Buck, 1909 Ralph H. Files, 1909 Anthony H. Fisk, 1909 Arthur L. Smith, 1909 William S. Guptill, 1910 Leon R. Lippincott, 1910 Philip B. Morss, 1910 23 COLLEGE PREACHERS Rev. Herbert A. Jump, regular pastor of Brunswick Congregational Church. Bowdoin College has been exceedingly fortunate in the past three years in hearing, from lime to time, a few of the best preachers that this country affords. I Ins privilege has been open lo it only through the kindness and generosity of Professor and Mrs. George T. Files. The Bugle wishes to assure Professor and Mrs. Piles that the College deeply appreciates their kindness. October 18 November 22 December 13 January 17 February 14 April 28 May 16 Season 1908-09. Rev. O. P. Gifford, Minister Brookline Baptist Church, Brook- line, Mass. Rev. Albert J. Lyman, Minister South Congregational Church, Brooklyn. Prof. William Knox, Professor in Union Theological Seminary, N. Y. Rev. H. Roswell Bates, Minister Spring Street Presbyterian Church. New York. Rev. Floyd Tomkins, Rector Church of the 1 Ioly Trinity, Phil- adelphia. Rev. Paul Revere Frothingham, Minister Arlington St. Unitarian Church, Boston. Rev. Elwood Worcester, Rector Emmanuel Church. Boston. LECTURERS Under the auspices of the Christian Association. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS OF CHRISTIANITY October 29 Experiences at the Army Posts of Maine. by W. A. Dunmore, State Y. M. C. A. Secretary. November 19 “The Opportunities for Social Service Open to College Men. by A. L. Thayer, Graduate Secretary Phillips Brooks House Association, Harvard University. January 7 “The Young Men's Christian Association Movement. by Jefferson C. Smith. State Y. M. C. A. Secretary. January 17 “Life Among the Poor of New York. by Rev. H. Roswell Bates, of the Spring Street Church, New York City. March 11 “The Minister Outside the Pulpit. by President David X. Beach of the Bangor Theological Seminary. Under the auspices of the Saturday Club of Brunstidck. November 17 The Boston Sinfonia Quintet. ‱ebruary 11 ‘Original Monologues. by Miss Majorie Burton Cooke. December 5 December 12 March 1 to 5 COLLEGE LECTURERS Readings from the Eneid,” Rev. T. C. Williams. Annie I albor Cole Lecturer; “Dante,” Rev. Charles A. Dinsmore. Exchange Lecturer on the Classics. “Roman Coins. Prof. Geo. C. Chase, Pli. D. 24 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 BOWDOIN BEATA Air : “Wake, Freshman, Wake.” When bright skies were o’er us And life lay before us, 'Neath Bowdoin’s pines we gathered far and near, So filling our glasses And pledging all classes We drink a health to Alma Mater dear. Chorus Clink, clink, drink, drink, drink! Smash the glass in splinters when you’re done! O Bowdoin Beata, our dear Alma Mater, There is no fairer mother ’neath the sun ! When manhood has found us And children surround us, Our college days and friends we’ll still recall. With heart-felt emotion And deathless devotion We’ll send our sons to Bowdoin in the fall. When age, gray and hoary, Has filled out our story, The tender mem’ries swelling back again. Loyal forever, Until death shall sever, One glass to Alma Mater we shall drain. So, Comrades, together, In fair or foul weather, Your glasses fill to Bowdoin and her fame. For where’er we wander, Stronger and fonder The tend’rest ties shall cling about her name. 25 H. H. Pierce, ’96 The General Association President, Franklin C. Payson, Esq., 76; Vice-President, Charles T. Hawes, Esq., '76; Secretary and Treasurer, Dr. George T. Little, ‘77, Brunswick, Maine. Association of Boston President, Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, '75; Secretary, Henry S. Chapman, 91. 201 Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. The Bowdoin Club of Boston President, Dr. Ernest B. Young, '92; Secretary, John A. Corliss, ‘01, 172 Co- lumbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Association of New York President, Dr. W arren O. Plimpton, ’82; Secretary, Dr. Frederick H. Dillingham, 77. 184 West 85th St., New York City. Association of Washington Piesident, Hon. Melville W. Fuller, '53; Secretary, Amos L. Allen, ’6o. House of Representatives, Washington, D. C. Association of Portland President, Hon. Augustus F. Moulton, ’73; Secretary, Percival P. Baxter, 98, Fii st National Bank Building, Portland, Maine. Association of Franklin County Prisidmt, Samuel C. Belcher, 57; Secretary, George C. Purington, '78, Farming- ton, Maine. 26 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Association of Sagadahoc, Knox and Lincoln Counties President, Arthur T. Parker, '76; Secretary, Henry W. Cobb, ‘00, 123 North Street, Rath, Maine. Association of Oxford County President, Hon. Addison E. Herrick, 73; Secretary, Frank Kimball, 79, Nor- way, Maine. Kennebec Alumni Association President, Dr. W. S. Thompson, ’75; Secretary, John C. Minot, ’96, Augusta, Maine. Bangor Alumni Association President, Franklin A. Wilson, ‘54; Secretary, Dr. Bertram L. Bryant, '95, Bangor, Maine. Association of Providence, R. I. President, Alfred M. Mcrriman, M. D.; Secretary, Alfred P. Ward, ’96, 171 Westminster Street, Providence, R. I. London (England) Association President, Harold S. Stetson, ’06; Secretary, Leon D. Minchcr, '07, 19 Kensing- ton, Gardens Square, Bayswater W., London, England. 27 CAMPUS HISTORY FOR over a century Bowdoin men have come, spent four happy years here, and then gone out into the world, honouring through life their Aiwa Maler. When normal, vigorous young men are grouped together in the close acquaintanceship of college undergraduate life, there must inevitably be outlets for their combined energy. Nowadays this energy vents itself largely in athletic sports, but forty and fifty years ago when there was no gymnasium, Whittier Field, or chance for athletics such as we now enjoy, this pent-up vi- tality appeared to a greater extent in mis- chievous pranks, many of which are remem- bered and will be re- membered because of the very whimsicality of their conception and ex- ecution. From -several of the graduates of forty odd years ago, we have ob- tained recollections of college life at the Bow- doin of their undergraduate days and incidents connected inseparably with these recollections, incidents which happened half a century ago when on the campus there were only Massachusetts Hall, the three dormitories, Maine, Winthrop, and Appleton, Adams Hall, and King Chapel, and when each student obtained his water from wells on the campus and maintained his own heating plant in his room, using the banisters and the attic floor for kindling. It is with the hope that this series of anecdotes, all of which are included in the ten years from 1859 to 1869, may both prove of interest to the present undergraduates and younger graduates, and may also bring back to the older graduates, memories of the Bowdoin which they knew. 29 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 At the time of the Civil War, the daily routine was far different, and also far more rigorous, than at present. We now consider it almost a hardship to be obliged to attend chapel at twenty minutes after eight; fifty years ago, six o’clock was the hour for “morning prayers,” and attendance was enforced with unrelenting severity. Moreover, the Bowdoin student of that day had to attend a recitation immediately after chapel, before partaking of the frugal breakfast served him at the “College Commons.” Recitations continued through the day, concluded by a second daily “prayers” at six p. m., after which all assembled at the “Commons” for the evening meal. From this brief sketch of the day’s routine fifty years ago, it is evident that the conditions of college life here have been altered greatly since; and perhaps, with the realization of this alteration, it will be easier to imagine the surroundings among which the following little incidents happened. One afternoon a great uproar was heard from the direction of the chapel, and investigation disclosed Tom Reed and Crowley, of the class of i860, engaged in a lively set-to in the rear of that building. In this set-to, muscle beat mind, or, in other words, Crowley licked Tom Reed. While Tom was the under lad and being disfigured, the pair were separated by a common friend, and when they got up, the Old Testament was more in evidence behind the chapel than the New. Both combatants had bloody noses. There was a rivalry between Prof. Smythe and Prof. Packard, touching who should ring the bell at the old brown church on Sunday morning. The ringing of the bell was to them a religious duty, and both these good men regarded the Congregational Church as the first duty of man. So little attention was paid to the clock that the first to reach the church tower was sure to ring the bell. The result was a little irregularity in the call to prayer. You know only an expert can properly ring a bell in a church tower; the bell must be delicately balanced, then given a swad, and set again. At this job. Prof. Smythe was the equal ot Prof. Packard. One day an artistic student thought it would be well to test the efficiency of these professional bell-ringers by putting up a sacred job. In the twilight hours preceding the Sabbath, a consecrated student climbed to the bell tower and removed the clapper. By a sort of wireless telegraphy the in- formation was disseminated through the college halls, and never before were so many students on the campus in the vicinity of the hedge which screens the brown church from the campus as at nine o’clock of that Sabbath morning, when Prof. Smythe. leading the race, entered the brown tower. The venerable mathe- matical professor was master of the problem of light, but the problem of sound perplexed him. The boys in the neighboring hedge could see the professor at his job, and they were convulsed at the spectacle, even in defiance of the order 30 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 and decorum which should prevail on the Lord's Day. The mathematical expert pulled the rope, but he set the bell in silence. There was no call to prayer. Only the still, small voice was in the tower, but on the campus was irreverent merriment. And speaking of the old brown church, it is to be noted that in the 5o’s, freshmen were corraled in the rear galleries on the right of the pulpit. There were four long benches. The seniors occupied the front benches, and the seats were so arranged that only the senior class could see the congregation or presid- ing clergyman : the juniors, however, on account of the elevation of their seats, could sec more of the congregation than the seniors; the sophomores could see only the bald head of Rev. Dr. George Eliashib Adams, the presiding clergy- man. “The town’s poor occupied the gallery opposite the freshmen. Tutor Snow was supposed to sit in the student’s gallery to keep them in a properly religious frame of mind: he was the only person in the gallery who had an arm chair. That chair was located at the end of the senior seats. Snow had a way of putting his knees against the rail so that it was not always sure whether he was sitting on his knees or on the chair. An ungodly and unidentified student devised a stout string with a hook on one end, and passed it up to the freshmen’s seats. In a solemn mo- ment. Tutor Snow's chair was upset with a clamor which caused the Rev. Dr. Adams to frown severely on the galleries, a thing which he had never been known to do before. In those days church-going was peremptory, and the intellects of the under- graduates were severely drawn upon to promote'constructive presence at church in harmony with physical absence. At every church was a monitor as incor- ruptible as the lobby. One member of the class of 1861 used to go to church early, in order to preempt a single bench which was distinguished from the rest in that it was cushioned. Competition arose, not merely for the cushion, but because by getting to the bench early, the student got soundly asleep before the service opened and was thus enabled to pass the forenoon in absolute rest, 3 CHAPEL TOWERS The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 according to the commandment. This worked for a while with the student men- tioned above, but his envious classmates, one Sunday, rolled him off on to the floor, disturbed the exercises, and elicited a frown from the benevolent face of Tutor Snow. Under the church attendance rules, each student had to attend the Congre- gational church twice each Sunday; but if he attended the Congregational church once, and some other church once, that would do. Every once in a while this same student preferred the Episcopal church, which had a service at four p. m., shorter than any other service in town. But this was not all, for the monitor at the Episcopal church was kind. By arrangement, this worldly student was protected in cutting prayers, and by actually going to the Congregational church in the afternoon and hurrying to be marked at the Episcopal church at four p. m., his religious record was all right. That practice was called “making up” church. After a while, several kindred spirits concluded that this single church service was still giving them undue religious proportion. Accordingly they con- ferred with the monitor at the Unitarian church, and he agreed that if they went to church once each Sunday, it was nothing more than right that they should be marked in church twice; and by parity of reason, that if the student went to church once and got credited for twice one Sunday, he ought to have the right to stay away altogether the next Sunday. However, in order to make this arrangement work, each had to get an order from his father, allowing him to go to the Unitarian church; and as parents were not then in ready touch, he got the letter by the Spirit, and the monitor was none the wiser nor the worse. It soon became tedious to go to church half the time. The resourceful stu- dent then got his father’s constructive request to go home—in a metaphor, don't you know. The final outcome was that the Sundays he was marked present he did not go to church at all, and the rest of the time it was not necessary to go, because he was supposed to be at home. So much for the intellectual develop- ment and moral consequences of compulsory church. In those days, all were required to go to the chapel at six a. m. on the long days, or at daylight on the short days; absence from chapel cut off two marks of honor, hailure to hear the bell was an excuse that could be used successfully three or four times a term, but this resource was exhausted early in the year. It then became necessary to figure how to further cut prayers without injury to rank. Sunday morning cut prayers were less offensive because there was no recitation and plenty of church afterward. It cost twelve marks to cut a recita- tion, but one could cut Sunday morning prayers and go to church regularly without harm, or cut prayers, sleep over until noon, and arrange church matters in the afternoon, with the loss of but two marks. The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Naturally, ingenuity was taxed in the matter of church-going, but the success of the tongueless bell in the brown church suggested to one climber whether or not the lightning rod on the tower might be scaled. The perilous climb was ac- complished one draughty night in March. The man in the bell tower carefully balanced the bell upward, filled it with water drawn up by a rope, with the co- operation of other Congregationalists below, and the next morning the freeze was such that the bell did not ring. It was then the custom to plant class trees. One day the newly-planted sophomore tree was uprooted and planted in its former place upside down, by a THE CAMPUS IN ABOUT i860 precocious freshman, whereat the sophomores vowed vengeance. At a meeting, held in the south wing of the chapel, they unanimously voted to put the offender under the pump at mid-day, and a committee was instructed to do the deed. The offending freshman, who was from Portland, was accustomed to take the noon train for home every Saturday. As he was crossing the campus, dressed in his best clothes, he was seized by the sophomore squad, transferred to the big pump, and cleansed; then he was rolled in a potato patch, returned to the pump, and rinsed off. The sophomores never heard from the faculty in this matter. 33 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 The whole class stood on guard while a select body of athletes attended to the job. Evidently the faculty thought the punishment fitted the crime. In the year 1859, there was a gun powder plot in college. It was concocted in Sodom, and its purpose was to celebrate the Declaration of Independence in a fitting manner. The powder, 400 pounds of it, was hidden under Sodom; but it was spirited away, no one knew where. Tutor Snow roomed in Sodom. The tutor had a “best girl” and was seen one Saturday night en route to his altar. It was deemed advisable by the undergraduates of Sodom, to develop the tutor’s long-suffering spirit by barricading the stairway and dousing the late comer with water if he should attempt to remove the barricade. A big moon swam in the sky when the tutor returned. He found the barricade, sought to remove the wickets; then, finding the job beyond him, broke into a side room amid a shower of buckets. On storming the intrcnchmcnts, he invaded the conspirators’ head- quarters. With characteristic gentleness, the good tutor displayed no passion but he kindly protested. The net result was no prayers and no recitations the next morning but a summons from President Woods, to appear and explain. The ever innocent General Manning was summoned to appear. The general, who was then but a private in the ranks, was addressed in this wise: “I am informed,” said the President, “that there was great disturbance in the north end of Winthrop Hall last night. I know you had nothing to do with it. but I hope you will use your influence to prevent anything of the kind in the future.” One morning not long after, as the class was assembled for recitation, Tutor Snow took his chair at the desk and over he went. An unevangelized Saul had removed three legs from his chair. In the 50's occurred the last May training at Bowdoin college. This event for years had burlesqued military glory. Tom Reed, in a well remembered mon- ograph in the University Magazine,” described this last May training and its fantastic gear. One member of his class was dressed as a woman in hoop skirts, and bore a large broom stick as a symbol of war. Long previous, it had been insisted that students should train as militia. In obeying the order, the under- graduates turned ragamuffins. Long after the order was canceled, the burlesque was continued and it was not until 1858, that the living joke died out of the streets of Brunswick town. Undoubtedly the water wagon was not so powerful in the 50’s as it is today. It would hardly be possible today, as it was then, that a student could retain his membership in the class and almost never recite. This job in jobbery was clone by making up, and “making up” was full of devices. Two of the under- graduates of the 50 s, on one occasion, were suspended for good reasons, with the understanding that they should spend the winter coaching to make up arrears. One of these suspended men was particularly incapable in mathematics. He was 34 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 exiled to Turner, where a certain student who was proficient in that department was teaching a winter school and where this student was appointed his coach in mathematics. The exile had a good time at ‘ the country dances,—never looked at mathematics, and if he had looked would have been none the wiser. In February, he went back for his examination, accompanied by his classmate, the Turner schoolmaster. Before leaving Turner, the schoolmaster took care to write one of Professor Smythe’s favorite examples in analytics on the shirt cult of his pupil, Mose. Mose was instructed thus: “No matter what the Professor gives you, be sure to put that example on the slate.” Meantime, the tutor, who was a favorite mathematical student of Prof. Smythe, none more competent, took care to divert the Professor's attention, which was not difficult. After a social interview sufficiently long, the tutor reminded Prof. Smythe of the business of the hour. “I see Mr. ------- is ready,” he said. The pupil made a glib recitation, Prof. Smythe praised his wonderful work, and incidentally warmly complimented his tutor. “And speaking of Prof. Smythe I am reminded” re- lates this same mathematical tutor, “that one lovely spring day it occurred to me that I had not been fishing for some time. I knew that under my window there was not only good easy digging, but plenty of worms. By an unlooked- for chance Prof. Smythe came along while I was digging worms and remarked, ‘Digging worms, are you ? ‘Yes.’ Going fishing?’ ‘To be sure.’ ‘I hope you’ll have good luck.’ “Of course I cut my recitation. The next day after recitation I reminded the Professor that I was ready to make up my recitation of the day before. The Professor took out his marking book, looked it over with care and said, ‘Accord- ing to my book, you were present yesterday.’ And so I got the worms, the trout, and a cut recitation not charged up against me.” In the 50‘s, a social feature of Bowdoin College was the turkey roast, on other occasions supplemented by the chicken roast. According to custom it was the duty of the Juniors to obtain turkeys for the Senior and Junior roasts. Fifty years ago, if any farmer within fifteen miles of Brunswick lost a turkey or a hen, he immediately made out a bill against Bowdoin College, which the college paid without question and put the charge on the term bill, so that if a student did not join the turkey and chicken roast at the Senior and Junior ban- 35 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 quet, lie paid for what he did not enjoy. It was the duty of the Juniors to obtain the birds, usually in the picturesque shades of night, for that added a spice of adventure and peril. One night, a delegation of the class of 6i raided a turkey roost within the sacred fifteen-mile circle and brought home four one-horse chaise loads of birds. The delegation fled from the farm house in confusion, owing to the fact that one of the raiders, lurching for a big turkey, lost his balance and went up to his knees in a pig pen, whereat arose a joint chorus of birds and swine which suddenly called a night cap out of a window, while a soiled coat tail flew around the corner. The college carpenter of the 50’s was Deacon Dunning, a venerable Con- gregationalism a man who could drive nails with moderation but accuracy. One morning, a jackass was found hitched to a door on the fourth floor of Maine Hall. The next day the college treasurer sent Deacon Dunning to the spot, but the Deacon was several days getting the long cared beast down to terra firma. On the following day, a bill was sent to the college treasurer reading as follows: “Bowdoin College, to Deacon Dunning, Dr.. To getting one jackass down stairs, $6.” Mr. Jackass also went on the term bill. There were several college guys habitually invoked in the days of Tom Reed. One of these was Daniel Pratt: another was his counterpart, one Mattocks, another was a crank from Topsham. while a colored boy from down town occa- sionally passed the hat and danced a jig to his own rag-time tunes. The college janitor of those days, the grave and dignified Curtis, known as Diogenes, was another character of the college. It was his function to build the fires in the student’s rooms—steam heat had not then been thought of—to do chores, and to bring wood from the college wood-pile. and. incidentally, to drink all the whiskey that he could. He had a great thirst, and. with the open rum shops at that time, it was easy to assuage that thirst. Diogenes had a library of close to a thousand volumes. His early biography was never told, but it is believed he came from Canada, was crossed in love, and turned ascetic and woman hater. He lived in a hut on the rear of the main street, not far from the junction of Maine street with the railroad land and station site. Hie songs of Bowdoin contained one “Owed to Diogenes. beginning this way: “O, Curtis, here’s to thee Trapped by photography, etc. The line “trapped by photography” referred to a snapshot of Diogenes, success- fully accomplished by stealth, for he never would sit for a photograph. Later, however, seeing he was trapped, lie was induced to sit, with a large plate of victuals before him. It was the custom of students who did not fill him with 36 '-U The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 whiskey, to fill him with feed, after he had borne a half cord of wood up stairs to the wood room. It was the custom of the students to take drives in the one-horse chaise, which was the fashionable driving gear of that period. One day, a party of students was driving in the direction of Bowdoinham, when they noticed a cart loaded with wood in a Bowdoinham orchard. “That wood looks attractive,” said one of the students. It was close to nightfall. The next day when the farmer went to his orchard, cart and wood were gone. Later investigation lo- cated the cart in an upset condition not far from Brunswick, but the wood never was found, although it is said to have warmed the toes of a student who was working his way through college. This also went on the term bill. The social life of the college in the 5o’s and early 6o’s was limited. Some of the students, however, had special social advantages in paying court to the belles of Brunswick. The candy pull was the regular order for the high society of Brunswick at that time. Several members of the class of ’61 resided in Bath, and excursions to that city were not infrequent. Bath at that time had bibulous opportunities which placed more than one one-horse chaise in a position to help point a moral to Dr. Holmes’s lyric. It was at this time that the forms of athletics with which we are now fa- miliar, first appeared. The first gymnasium was founded in the old Commons Hall, while the class of ’61 were undergraduates. The athletic instructor was Prof. Dole, a lean, lank expert, who was well liked. The gymnasium was open only outside of study hours, which were fixed—or supposed to be—and was closed at eight o’clock in the evening. Prior to the founding of the gymnasium, there had been a bowling alley and cross-bars under the pines. It was one of the duties of the sophomores to cut out the underbrush from under the pines and to erect the cross-bars for general athletic exercise. In 1859, according to all accounts, occurred the first base ball match in the history of the college. In the same year, 1859, two boat clubs were established. Thomas B. Reed was stroke of the ’6o’s class crew. These two boat clubs, representing the classes of ’60 and ’61, once had a match row from Brunswick to Bath. The story runs thus: “We got caught in Merrymeeting Bay on an ebb tide, and labored under a thunderstorm at one o’clock in the morning. It was a hard night, and that was the end of the boat club of the class of 1861.” At that time also, Prof. Chadbourne, who came here from Amherst, did good work in inspiring the students in Natural History; and Packard, of the class of ’61, who afterward became one of the most famous entomologists of the world and a foremost author in that department of science, began his painstaking investigations while yet a Freshman. While Prof. Chadbourne was in charge of the science department, an expedition to Greenland was organized under Pack- 37 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 ard’s leadership, and a summer was spent in the far north. Sledges and dogs carried the party into the Arctic Circle, whence flora, beasts, and insects were brought. The religious well-being of the students of the 50's was well cared for by Prof. Egbert C. Smythe, son of the mathematical professor. Prof. Egbert, as he was familiarly called, was a good man and respected by the students. He was expected to call once or twice a year upon each student to talk to him about his soul, convince him of the wrath to come and the impor- tance of his making his peace with God. There were many skeptics in those days, led by Tom Reed. who. however, re- cited Puller's Analogy as well as Paley's “Natural The- ology with the glibness of a priest intoning mass. In the autumn of i860, there was an effective temper- ance reform movement in the college. Prior to i860, there had been signs of wide de- parture from the water wag- on. In the preceding year, a barrel of beer was on tap on the college campus, and the tankage of several students proved inadequate to the ex- igency. The next day after the barrel of beer was ab- sorbed. President Wood sent for Sam Fessenden. When Sam appeared, Prex said, I know, Mr. Fessenden, that you did not participate in those disgraceful orgies. I have no objection, however, to a student taking a glass of ale occasionally—but a whole barrel—oh, no! The south end of Appleton Hall Saturday nights and Sundays, was dedicated to Bacchus and other deities, and the need of temperance reform movement was obvious. Neal Dow addressed the students on one oc- casion that Fall, on temperance and prohibition. THE OLD CHURCH ON THE HILL 33 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 In the anti-slavery period immediately preceding the Civil War, politics were hot among the undergraduates of Bowdoin College. In the Fall term of i860, when Lincoln was elected to the presidency, there was a poll of the college on the Governorship, and Washburn, the Republican candidate, got by far the larger vote over Smart, the Democratic candidate. There was then three political clubs in the college; a Lincoln Club, numbering 105 students; a Douglas Club, numbering 30; and a Breckenridgc Club, numbering seven; all were supposed to be loyal to the Constitution and the Union. The students held weekly meet- ings and debates. The election of Lincoln was followed by great undergraduate enthusiasm. Among the topics discussed in Appleton Hall prior to the shot on Sumter, was “Has a State the right to secede?” Sam Jordan, of the class of ’61, seconded by General Manning of the same class, took the negative, as also did General Hyde, who later was to make a distinguished record in the war. Today the war of ’61 has passed into the silence of history and its battle- fields have become mere memories. The past in all its unpleasing aspects is for- gotten ; yet we cannot overlook the achievements of the noble sons of Bowdoin who entered the service of their country, and go back to recount the glorious war record of our Alma Mater. At the outbreak of the war, each of the four classes sent men to the front. From the class of 1861, numbering fifty men, twenty-one enlisted. Those were gloomy days for Bowdoin. Noble careers were brought to a close and high ambitions thwarted in a day. But the call of country which sapped the strength of college manhood was nowhere more nobly answered. The college, both in its faculty and students, stood firm for the perpetuation of the Union and the liberation of the slave. Nevertheless there were days of divided opinions and sentiments. In the class of 1861, there were two men from North Carolina and when the division came, both went home to do service in the Confederate Army. Born and reared in a State where men’s opinions and lives differed from our own, they could not consistently disregard the call of their country. Loyalty to the land of their birth alone amply justified their action. For many years after the close of the war, the effect on Bowdoin College was easily read in the diminished attendance. Classes were only half in number what they had been at the beginning of the struggle. This was due to many causes; some of the men died on the battlefield; others came from the army with impaired health; many found cares and duties at home that compelled them to forego a college training. But the institution has gradually gained strength. Bowdoin men were inspired by the heroic acts of her sons at the front and their devotion to their country. Little by little the old standard returned. Today, in the natural and inevitable progress of human affairs, that standard has been 39 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 passed, but Bowdoin s war record lias taken its place of eminence among her countless other achievements. The first few years immediately after the close of the Civil War saw the birth and flourishing youth of the notorious sophomore hazing society, usually designated by the Greek letters X. This society was organized at Bowdoin by the class of 1866, the date of its first meeting being May 10. 1864. It had an existence of about ten years and embraced in its membership, all told, about 170 undergraduates. In order to afford the students of these degenerate days some idea of the hardships experienced by their sires to obtain a classical edu- cation, a few choice excerpts from the records of this society are here printed: these excerpts are sufficient to give, it is believed, a fair notion of the character. aims, and transactions of the society. Half a century ago the north end of Win- throp Hall was known to all Bowdoin students as “Sodom, while the south end was designa- ted by the kindred name of “Gomorrah. For some years previous to the founding of Phi Chi, “Sodom had been unoccupied. The rooms and corridors were sad- MEMORIAL HALL THROUGH THE TREES ly Ollt Ot repair aild locked up. One or two 100ms on the ripper floor, however, had been secretly preempted by some of the leading spirits in this movement, the walls smeared with lampblack, and adorned with various devices, as of skulls, cross-bones, and similar cheerful intimations of murder and mortality. It was here, amid these gruesome surroundings, that usually at the dead of night, offending freshmen were tried,—and. as a matter of course, convicted—after having been introduced into “Sodom Court through one of the fourth story windows by the aid of tackle and fall. Either here or in some room in Gomorrah the “business meetings of the fraternity were gen- erally held. The annual initiations were hilarious affairs. In the records which follow, there is an account of an initiation at the old McClellan Hall: the year following t lat, it was held in the lopsham Fair building, next at the court room at Bath, 40 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 and then in an old mill somewhere in the vicinity of Merrymeeting Bay. It was not possible to occupy the same place two seasons in succession; people as a rule dislike to have their slumbers disturbed. One Phi Chi initiation lasted a life-time so far as outsiders were concerned, although to the initiated, every such occasion caused them to cry for more. FROM THE RECORDS OF PHI CHI May io, 1864. The meeting was called to order by the Archon, etc., etc. . . . The Committee on “Initiation” then reported. Their report and form of “Cere- monies” was immediately accepted. It was voted to appoint a committee of three, ---,------, and , to consider Grip, Signs, Pass-word, etc., and also to create an officer, who should keep account of all “grinds” come by the society. -was chosen a committee to correspond with Yale on Society matters. ------ was requested to write to Boston to find out about a “Cut.” It was moved to resolve into a “social,” and was unanimously carried. At a regular meeting held in “Sodom” on the 18th of July, a motion that H011. Wm, Pitt Pessenden be elected an honorary member of this Chapter of the Phi Chi Society prevailed! ! ! At this time the honorable gentleman was Secretary of Treasury, U. S. McClellan Hall, Friday night, July 23, 1864. Promptly at io o’clock, the members, accompanied by the candidates for initiation, assembled in Sodom in the Archon’s room.............. The members and candidates for membership, arm in arm, started for the hall in which the ceremonies were to take place, conducted by the Agogos. Hav- ing arrived at the outer door, the Agogos demanded admission, and the usual formalities having passed between him and the Prophulax, an entrance was gained, and the candidates conducted to the outer hall. Here the oath was administered to them by the Archon; and at a signal from him, each candidate separately was led, blindfolded, by the Agogos, amid the horrid din of infernal machines (two patent churns), and the unearthly howls and groanings of the members, into the inner hall and the presence of the members, completely masked. By the direction of the Archon, the Agogos removed the candidate’s boots and led him, completely blindfolded, to the blanket already manned and prepared to receive him. Upon this he was ordered to lie down, and at the word of the Archon, was repeatedly tossed high into the air, his body performing all the various evolutions which accompany such an act, until the Archon crying “hold,” he was instantly wrapped up in the blanket and hurried to the mammoth cradle where “everything childish.” having been rocked out of him, he was placed aside to await the completion of the ceremonies. When at length all had arrived at this stage of the ceremonies, the meeting was called to order by the Archon and the Grammateus read the Preamble and Constitution to which the new members 41 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 then affixed their names. . . . Then seated around the table, all partook of the slight refreshment prepared beforehand by the lYattontcs. After the festivities, followed the Istoriographos’s account of the formation, progress and grinds of the society. Then followed the singing of the society Ode, written by Bro-----------, air “Auld Lang Syne. ' Thus closed the ceremonies, and the archives and effects of the society, having been entrusted to the new mem- bers, the class of 1866 dropped the reins of the Society, which for the space of one year it had so faithfully, skillfully and gloriously held. Attest:------------------. Grammateus. THE OLD BOATHOUSE . XT Sodom. Oct. 11, 1864. t p ambers met at No. 22, being called by the Archon, who introduced hiimolf r ft,’ 1 rV- 7 °f ---------College. After every member had satisfied hZ Z '. ! °°i,ng at ,th« bust a movement was made by Bro.------------“that the of three .° .,armmi s Museum.” This movement prevailed and a committee the business S,S.t,nf ° '--------’------- and---------- was appointed to manage (Prince Portla ’i i ( 1 1)aste ',n tlie front part of the book is an Express receipt XTew York ‱ ‘,K.a.n 0SJ?n Express) for One Box consigned to P. T. Barnum. Shownnn ih J'; fA' G; hiti Agt. It was represented to the famous of a Drominenf u USt ,was„.t1lat ° a well-known “break. and was deserving 01 a prominent place in his “Chamber of Horrors. on S ll|'n ,lowing, serve to show that the Scribe was thoroughly he must have bar i C : , IC, ias not s'nce made his mark as a born humorist, must have barely missed that calling by the skin of his teeth. 42 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Apr. 16th, 1866. “Pile Ossa on Pelion” (Smart Translation of Horace). noctes ambrosianae! ! The Genii called to order by the presiding spirit commonly called the Archon, otherwise known to the hoi polloi as-----------------. R---- and D-----, two energetic brothers returning from an absence of several months, R-------- from stealing figs, etc., in the Government employ, D---- from teaching the young idea how to shoot, with a leave of absence from the Prex, -------were anxious to perpetuate some illustrious grind which should transmit their names encircled in a halo of glory to posterity, proposed not exactly to hang Ossa on Pelion, but hang Ossa in the Chapel. The spirits agreed. Various plans were suggested as to the best method of stealing (better styled “conveying” by Bill Shakespeare and the Phi Chi’s) the “kurpse” from the School for the diffusion of Medical Science. No decision was arrived at. All the demons howled at one and the same time, the presiding genius (Asmodeus, commonly called---------- as above) raved, and the assembly dispersed to their several dens in the domains of Hades. Attest:---------------, Gram. April 26th. The spirits in exceeding wrath “having gathered together storms of all kinds of winds” (Homer), and being summoned by Aeolus (otherwise known among the initiated as Asmodeus, or Archon, better known among the profanum vulgus as Mr. -------, Esq.), came together to hold an Indignation Meeting! ! 'Cause why? An unpardonable offense had been committed. No less a matter than the unceremonious removal from the hall of King’s Chapel of the brilliant ornament therein suspended. The worst and most disgraceful feature of the whole thing was that the deed had been done by members of the College and for filthy lucre’s sake. It was voted viz. c. g. par example, that condign punishment be inflicted upon the perpetrators of the deed, either corporeally or otherwise. The corporeal punishment being deemed non-advisable, after several plans had been proposed it was voted that an image or effigy, or caricature of both of the persons who had participated in removing or abstracting the above mentioned skeleton from its temporary aerial resting-place in the Chapel, be suspended or hung in the same manner in the said Chapel by the neck, with appropriate labels attached to the scats of their respective nether habiliments (commonly called pants), or on some other suitably conspicuous portion of their anatomy. This plan was adopted (and afterwards ably carried out). Attest: ----------. June 26th. Society met at 11 a. m. Discussion of the subject of Circuses generally and of Bailey’s in particular, and also on the appropriateness of having a large sign- board (bill-board) erected so near the classic groves of an institution of learning. It was resolved that due sway could not be given to the deep and attractive in- fluences of Plato and Aristotle, etc., while this thing of the body (in opposition to mind) stood in such close proximity to classic ground. Therefore?, it was voted to raze it ignominiously to the ground, its appropriate place. Voted, that all 43 The Bou)Join Bugle, 1910 hands meet at --------’s room at 12 o’clock 1 . m. All who can. bring axes Cay plus ax). If policemen appear and arc obstreperous, hang together and resist. Axemen chosen. ----------. , , ‱ All the rest Shove. Air and Tune: “The Elephant now goes round. June 29th. Meeting called together by the Archon gracefully seated on the floor. It was reported that a foolish individual had been so temerous as to bet the little sum of $100.00 (One Hundred Dollars) that the students would be unable to prostrate the Circus poster a second time. It was also reported that armed watchmen patroled the walk in the immediate vicinity of the board. Some action THE DELTA AS IT WAS was called for, and various times were proposed for knocking it down. It was hnally decreed that 4 o’clock a. m. would be the best time, and also that the demolishing of the board should be made a class matter. Furthermore it was voted that all members of the class not rooming in college should endeavor to do so on that particular night, making use for that purpose of all unoccupied lounges, etc. And it was further decreed that Asmodcus (familiarly termed Mr.--------------) should keep a well selected assortment of alarm clocks in his room. The dis- guibCb were then settled upon, and all further matters disposed of in a manner adjourned '6 1Igh ,ntelIectual tonc of thc Fraternity. The assembly was then Attest: ---------------. 44 AbxattiU'r ffipr Long association with a man impresses upon one certain basal principles of character, which a brief acquaintance fails to bring out. This is not wholly because true men arc naturally reticent, and only reveal themselves slowly, but because basal principles change with changing years, and a full lifetime of asso- ciation is required to bring them all out. It is true also that a man is not the same in each period of his life. Youth, maturity, and age glide imperceptibly into each other, but the characteristics of one cannot remain to dominate the other. Browning expresses the regret that men frequently have for this, in these words: “Nor manhood’s strength can mate with boyhood’s grace, Nor age’s wisdom in its turn find strength. But silently the first gift dies away, And though the last stays, never both at once.” During such a lifetime, T had known Professor Lee. I had seen his boy- hood’s grace give place to manhood’s strength, and, though not an old man at his death, yet there was in him the full promise of an age’s wisdom which would have been a support and a strength to all he loved. Neither as an investigator, thinker, or teacher, was he a great man, as the world commonly reckons great- ness. He was too human for that. He loved human companionship too much to be willing to undergo the necessary isolation. He preferred the reputation of great-heartedness to that of great-mindedness. And in this, he chose what the world needs most; and we who knew him are glad he made the choice. And those who knew him best are sure that it was a deliberate choice. And what a great-hearted man lie was! How his sympathies went out to students, townsmen, and to that wider and ever widening circle of friends, lie was attaching to himself constantly! But if not great as an investigator, he knew what was being done by others; if not great as a thinker, he knew and loved the greatest thoughts; and if pos- terity will not rank him as one of the world’s great teachers, his pupils will never forget the gracious influence which went out from his class room. He had the reputation of being the best informed man on natural history in the State of Maine; and lie got that reputation in the soundest way, not by looking wise and acting superior, but by freely giving out his knowledge to all. Generations of students may not “rise up to call him blessed,” but they will never cease to long for the “touch of his vanished hand,” and for the “sound of his voice now stilled.” 47 ifiarry ilrtapplj Sugan The life of Harry Dugan, as his class and college mates in nine prolific months knew it, was well worthy of imitation. Those who knew him best will cherish most his memory. His short career gave to Bowdoin men, the example of a life devoted to a purpose. This purpose showed itself not alone in close application to study, but in the manifestation of those traits of good fellowship which so endeared him to us. Although physical malady prevented active par- ticipation in athletics, he was daily to be seen upon Whittier Field, watching with keenest interest, the practice of the college teams. Before he had been here one semester, he could call by name, not only the members of his own class, but as well every one of three hundred undergraduates. He was a living ex- ample of the maxim, “to have a friend be a friend.” He was true to his friends and they were true to him. He had a natural influence and a good influence; he was steady when others were not. He had personal worth, loyalty, self-re- liance and solidity. In short, he was a good fellow without a trace of the super- ficial, a scholar without a taint of the pedantic. The college is better for his having lived in it. 49 tiuuarii Sfcntylf prkarft Snatched from us with the most terrible suddenness; Edward Temple Pickard left our number. He was gone before we could realize how keenly we should miss his cheery presence. But since that time, we have been always aware of the place that lie left so hopelessly vacant. During the short year and a half that he spent at Bowdoin, he not only endeared himself to his fellow stu- dents as a pleasant, lovable companion and true friend, but he also commanded their respect by his industry as a student and the strict integrity of his character. His spirit of diligence and unassuming labor were well known to all who were with him in the class room; his quiet, cordial greeting were known and cherished by all who ever met him upon the Campus. These things were known and they arc remembered. It is but a small thing to record his memory here. In the college, it is a living and a potent influence. 51 CLASS OF 1909 v SENIOR CLASS HISTORY ‱‘Cui Ho no?'' 1910 — 1909 Class Game, 1906 Score, ’10, 10; ’09, 6 Seniors. — In a volume published by the Class of 1909, last Commencement time, they frankly recognized their own frailties and their inability to write a worthy tribute to the Class of 1910. They realized that their highest efforts would be unworthy of the greatness of our achieve- ment. And so in gratitude to them for the modesty they have shown, we in turn will refrain from dwelling upon the infamy of their history and the muck-holes of degradation, in which, beast-like, they have always wallowed. 55 SENIOR CLASS, 1909 Class Colors: Crimson and Gray. Class Yell: Cogito, Nogito, Rogito, Ax! M. D., three Cs, C-I-X! Boom-ricka, Boom-ricka, Boom-ricka. Kine! Bowdoin, Bowdoin, 1909! OFFICERS President, Harold Hitz Burton10 Vice-President, Leonard Fremont Timberlake00 Secretary and Treasurer, Ernest Harold Pottle42 CLASS DAY PARTS Marshal, Percy Glcnham Bishop4 Chaplain, Harry Jenkinson Newton37 Orator, Jasper Jacob Stahl5 Poet. Dudley Hovey Opening Address, Harrison Atwood1 Historian. Thomas Francis Shehan, Jr.48 Closing Address. Ralph Owen Brewster CLASS. DAY COM M ITT EE Gardner Kendall Heath, Chairman Ralph Henry Files15 Robert Maxwell Pennell38 Irving Lockhart Rich48 Harold Merton Smith51 56 Hi MEMBERS OF 1909 Robert King Atwell Ex-New Hampshire State College, ’09. Portsmouth, N. H. 17 A. H. Harrison Atwood1 Auburn 22 A. H. 0 A X; Opening Address Freshman Banouet; Freshman Banquet Committee; Class President (2) ; Opening Address Class Day (4) ; Chairman Undergraduate Council (4); Secretary Ibis (4); Dramatic Club (1, 3); Bowdoin-Vermont Debate (4) .: Class Popular Man (3) ; Alexander Prize Speaking (2) ; Provisional Commencement Ap- pointment ; 68 Prize Speaking (4) ; Friar (3) ; Good Government Club (4) ; Presi- dent Democratic Club (3.4); Secretary Athletic Association (3), President (4); Class Baseball Team (2); ’Varsity Track Team (i, 2, 3). Captain (3, 4); N. E. I. A. A. Team (2); ’Varsity Relay Team (1, 2, 3, 4): Class Track Team (1. 2, 3, 4), Captain (1, 2, 3, 4). Melbourne Owen Baltzer2 Steuben 169 Maine St. Bangor Theological Seminary, ’07. Provisional Commencement Appointment. Percy Glenham Bishop4 Boothbay Harbor A Y House A T; Hop Committee (2); Banquet Committee (2, 3); Marshal (4); Undergraduate Council (4); Bugle Board (3). Claude Oliver Bower5 Auburn A A I House A A I; Bugle Board (3) ; Mandolin Club (1, 2, 4) ; Dcutscher Vcrein (2, 3, 4) ; His- tory Club (2); Good Government Club (4), President; Chemical Club (4); Vice President Athletic Association (4); Class Football Team (2) ; ’Varsity Baseball Team (2, 3); Class Baseball Team (1, 2); Class Track Team (2). Ralph Owen BrewsterÂź Dexter 5 A. H. A K E; I B K; Closing Address Freshman Banquet; Assembly Committee (3); Clos- ing Address Class Day (4); Undergraduate Council (4); Ibis (4); Manager Dc- . bating Council (4) ; Bradbury Prize Debate (3, 4) I Alternate Bowdoin-Syracuse De- bate (3); Bowdoin-Vcrmont Debate (4); Bowdoin-Weslcyan Debate (4); Alex- ander Prize Speaking (2, 3); Provisional Commencement Appointment; ’68 Prize Speaking (4); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3, 4); Assistant Manager Musical Clubs (3), Manager (4) ; Dcutscher Vcrein (1, 2, 3); Class Baseball Team (1, 2); Assistant Manager ’Varsity Track Team (2), Manager (3) ; Class Track Team (2). Ezra Ralph Bridge7 Hampden A K E House A K E; Provisional Commencement Appointment; Mandolin Club (3); Dcutscher Vcrein (2, 3, 4); Hebron Club; Class Football Team (i, 2); Class Track Team (2); Class Squad (1, 2, 4); Leader (4) ; Fencing Team (3, 4), Captain and Manager (3, 4). 57 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Philip Hayward Brown Watertown, N. Y. Y House T; Chairman Banquet Committee (2): Assembly Committee (3): Glee Club (1, 2, 3. 4), Leader (4); Chapel Choir (1, 2. 3. 4); Chapel Quartette (3. 4); Ccrcle Fran- cais (2); History Club (2); Good Government (4): Musical Committee Under- graduate Council (4); Secretary and Treasurer X. E. I. G. A. (2). George Henry Buck9 Harrison 4 Cleaveland St. A T: College Band (3); Chemical Club (4); Class Track Team (2); Class Squad (1, 2. 3. 4). Harold Hitz Burton10 Newton Center, Mass. 5 A. H. A K E; 4 B K; Assistant in History (4); Toastmaster Freshman Banquet: Chairman Hop Committee (2); Assembly Committee (3); Class President (4): Undergraduate Council (4); Recording Secretary, Christian Association (2); Corresponding Sec- retary (3, 4); Editor-in-Chief Bugle (3); Orient Board (1, 2, 3. 4): Dramatic Club (r, 3); Ibis (4); Alternate, Bowdoin-Vermont Debate (4): Alexander Prize Speak- ing (2, 3), Provisional Commencement Appointment: Goodwin French Prize (I) : Smyth Mathematical Prize (2); ’68 Prize Speaking (4) : Friar (3) ; President Re- publican Club (3, 4); Massachusetts Club, President (4); ’Varsity Football Team (3. 4); 'Varsity Track Team (2, 3); Class Track Team (1, 2, 3); Class Squad (1, 2), Leader (2). Charles Frederick Carter11 Portland 'F Y House 'k T; Chess Club (1); Romania (3); Class Football Team (1. 2): Second Eleven (4); Class Track Team (2). Max’Pearson Cushing12 Bangor A K E House ARE; Assistant in English (3); Ode Freshman Banquet: Class Secretary and Treas- urer (1); Quill Prize Poem (2); Quill Board (2, 3), Chairman (3): Provisional Com- mencement Appointment (4); Glee Club (2, 3), Leader (3): Chapel Organist (2. 3); College Orchestra; Ccrcle Francais (2); Dcutscher Verein (3, 4): Romania (3); Pianist for Class Squad (1, 2, 3). Guy Parkhurst Estes14 Skowhegan B 0 ri House B O n; Class Secretary and Treasurer (3): Assistant Manager of Orient (3): Man- ager (4); Dramatic Club (4). Ralph Henry Files16 West Gorham 22 W. H. K A: Class Day Committee (4); Treasurer Christian Association (3), Vice-President (4); Bugle Board (3); Ccrcle Francais (2): Secretary and Treasurer Thornton Club (2), President (3, 4); Class Baseball Team (1); Class Squad (1, 3), Leader (3). Anthony Humphries Fisk10 Brunswick 1 Boody St. A A 1 ; Assistant Cheer Leader (3), Cheer Leader (4): Class Football Team (1): Class Squad (1). 53 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Thomas Amedeus Gastonguay” Brunswick 3 A. H. A K E; Alexander Prize Speaking (i); Kent’s Hill Club, President (4); ’Varsity Football Team (2, 4); Second Eleven (1); Class Football Team (1), Captain (1); Class Track Team (1). Thomas Davis Ginn18 Boston B © T1 House B 0 II; Assistant in Chemistry (3, 4); Bugle Board (3); Vice-President Chemical Club (4); Massachusetts Club. Ernest Leroy Goodspeed19 Randolph 19 W. H. K2; BK; Bradbury Prize Debate (4); Bowdoin-Wcslcyan Debate (4) ; Provisional Commencement Appointment (4) ; ’68 Prize Speaking (4) I Deutscher Verein (4) ; Good Government Club (3, 4); Class Squad (1). William Haines Watcrvillc B Âź II House 15 0 II; Class Relay Team (2, 3) ; ’Varsity Tennis Team (2, 3) ; Champion Fall Tennis Tournament, Doubles (1). Roy Clifford Harlow20 Richmond A Y House A T; Second Eleven (3); Class Football Team (1, 2); Second Nine (3); Class Base- ball Team (1, 2). William Matthew Harris21 Lynn, Mass. A K E House A K E; A K K; Ivy Day Orator (3); Manager Debating Council (3); Bradbury Prize Debate (3) ; Alternate Bowdoin-Cornel! Debate (2) ; Bowdoin-Syracuse Debate (3) ; Provisional Commencement Appointment; ’Varsity Baseball Team (2, 3) ; Class Baseball Team (1, 2). Wallace Hanson Hayden22 Bath © A X House ©AX; Second Eleven (i, 3); Class Football Team (1, 2); Class Baseball Team (2). Gardner Kendall Heath Augusta Z 'k House Z 'k; Chairman Assembly Committee (3); Chairman Class Day Committee (4); Under- graduate Council (4) ; Ibis (4) ; Friar (3) ; Good Government Club (3, 4) ; Augusta Club, Vice-President (2), President (3); Class Football Team (2). Walter Palmer Hinckley23 Hinckley A K E House A K E; Second Eleven (3, 4) I Class Football Team (2). Harry Farrar Hinkley24 . New York, N. Y. 8 M. H. A A 4 ; Response Freshman Banquet; Chairman Ivy Day Committee (3); Friar (3I; Cercle Francais (2). Anand Sidoba Hiwale25 Bombay, India Bangor Theological Seminary, ’07. 26 W. H. 59 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Dudley Hovey20 Walcloboro Z 'I' House Z Class Poet (4); Quill Board (3); Dramatic Club (3). Provisional Commencement Appointment; Mandolin Club (3, 4) : Romania (3); Good Government Club (3); Class Squad (2). Arthur Wilder Hughes Brunswick 29 Federal St. A A «!‱; Hop Committee (2); Ivy Day Committee (3): Undergraduate Council (4); Mandolin Club (l, 2); ’Varsity Football Team (4); Class Football Team (1, 2); Second Nine (i, 3), Captain (3): Class Baseball Team (1. 2) ; Class Track Team (1); Tennis Team (3, 4), Captain (2) resigned. Captain (4): Hockey Team (2). John Robert Hurley27 Oldtown ♩ Y House + T; 4 B K; Bugle Board (3): David Scwall Premium in English Composition (1); Scwall Latin Prize (2); Deutscher Vercin (4); Ccrcle Francais (2); Romania (3); Classical Club (4); Penobscot Club; Class Track Team (2); Class Squad (2). Sumner Waldron Jackson28 Waldoboro 84 Federal St. Z t; A K K; Deutscher Vercin (1, 2, 3); Second Eleven (3): Second Nine (2): Class Baseball Team (1); M. I. A. A. Team (3). Edwin William Johnson29 Greenwich, Conn. 13 W. H. Ai'l ; Deutscher Vercin (3, 4); Chemical Club (4); Class Football Team (1); M. I. A. A. Team (i, 3); Class Track Team (i. 2, 3); Class Squad (3). Howard Francis Katie30 Machias 84 Federal St. Z 'P; A K K; Banquet Committee (1): Responses Freshman and Sophomore Ban- quets; Hop Committee (2); Class Marshal (3); Manager Bugle (3): Dramatic Club (3); Mandolin Club (i, 2, 3). Leader (3): College Band (1, 2. 3. 4). Manager (2). Leader (3) ; Friar (3); Kent’s Hill Club. Vice President (4) : Washington County Club; Manager Class Track Team (2). Daniel Frances Koughan 1 Bath B 0 n House B 9 II; Response Freshman Banquet; Good Government Club (4). Daniel Michael McDadc Pawtucket. R. I. 31 W. H. K 2; Undergraduate Council (4); Press Club (2); Chemistry Club (4): Massachu- setts Club; Athletic Council (2); ’Varsity Football Team (1. 2. 4). Captain (4): Class Football Team (2) ; ’Varsity Baseball Team (1. 2. 3); Captain Class Baseball Team (1). John West Manter3- Palmer, Mass. 4 A. H. A K E; Assistant in Chemistry (3); Massachusetts Club; Kent’s Hill Club; ’Varsity I-ootball Team (2, 4); ’Varsity Baseball Team (2. 3), Captain (4): M. I. A. A. learn (2); ’Varsity Track Team (3); ’Varsity Relay Team (2. 4). Harold Newman Marsh” Dixfield A K E House ARE, Ivy Day Committee (3); Dramatic Club (1, 3. 4); Alternate, Bradbury Prize c ate (3, 4); Provisional Commencement Appointment: Deutscher Vercin (2. 3. 4): Lercle I-rancais (2); Romania (3); Oxford County Club: Class Squad (2). 1 he Bowdoin Bugle, 19 0 Harry Clyde Merrill34 Portland 19 W. H. K 2; Bugle Board (3); Good Government Club (4); Chemistry Club (4). Raymond Earle Merrill34 Comvay, N. H. A A I House A A +; Dramatic Club (3); Chemical Club (3, 4); Class Squad (3). Albert Willis Moulton35 Portland 23 W. H. K 2; Response Freshman Banquet; President Chemical Club (4); Class Squad (3). Paul Jones Newman30 Fryeburg 21 W. H. B © II; Class Poet (3); Undergraduate Council; Art Editor Bugle (3); Orient Board (2, 3, 4), Assistant Editor-in-chief (3); Quill Board (2, 3): Deutscher Verein (3, 4); Oxford County Club. Harry Jcnkinson Newton33 London, England 169 Maine St. City of London College, ’00; Bangor Theological Seminary, ’06; Class Chaplain (4); Provisional Commencement Appointment; Pianist for Class Squad (4). Robert Maxwell Pennell38 Brunswick 7 Federal St. A K E; Class Day Committee (4); Romania (3); Secretary and Treasurer Democratic Club (3, 4); ’Varsity Track Team (1, 2); N. E. I. A. A. Team (2); Class Track Team (1, 3. 4)- Willard True Phillips39 Westbrook A Y House A T; Class Vice President (1); Bradbury Prize Debate (4); College Band (2}; Deutscher Verein (3, 4). Harold Parker Pike40 Lubec Z T House Z 'P; College Band (3); Washington County Club, President (4). Louis Oliver Plctts41 Brunswick 16 Lincoln St. Ex-’o i College Band (1, 2); Class Track Team (1, 2); Class Squad (3). Ernest Harold Pottle42 Farmington A Y House A T; Class Secretary and Treasurer (4); Deutscher Verein (3, 4); Good Govern- ment Club (4); Franklin County Club, President (4); Class Football Team (2). Harold Sewall Pratt Farmington A Y House A T; Provisional Commencement Appointment; Deutscher Verein (3); Chemical Club (4); Franklin County Club; Class Football Team (1, 2); Class Baseball Team (2); Class Squad (1, 2, 3), Leader (1). Irving Lockhart Rich43 Portland 8 W. IT. A A 4 ; Ode Committee (1); Assembly Committee (3); Class Day Committee (4); Dramatic Club (3); Brown Memorial Scholarship (3); Friar (3); Secretary and Treasurer Chemical Club (4). 61 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Clyde Earle Richardson44 Strong Lisbon Falls AT; Class Baseball Team (i) ; Class Squad (i). Clarence Linwood Scamman45 Hartland 84 Federal St. Z+;AKK; Ivy Day Committee (3); Second Nine (2). Thomas Francis Sheehan48 Portland A K E House A K E; Banquet Committee (1); Response Freshman Banquet: Class Historian (4); Provisional Commencement Appointment; Brown Memorial Scholarship (1, 2); Glee Club (1, 2). John Standish Simmons49 New York, N. Y. Z House Z 'l'; Class President (3); Dramatic Club (1. 2. 3. 4), President (4): Friar (3); As- sistant Manager ’Varsity Football Team (3). Manager (4): M. I. A. A. Team (2. 3); ’Varsity Cross Country Team (3); Alternate, 'Varsity Relay Team (3): Class Track- Team (2, 3). Arthur Lawrence Smith50 New Vineyard A Y House A T: Franklin County Club; Class Football Team (1, 2); Class Squad (1, 2. 3). Harold Merton Smith81 East Barrington, X. H. A Y House A T; Class Day Committee (4); Dramatic Club (3, 4): New Hampshire Club. Presi- dent (2); Class Baseball Team (1); M. I. A. A. Track Team (2); Class Track Team (2, 3). Jasper Jacob Stahl52 Waldoboro 12 M. H. Z 'p; I B K; Assistant in German (4) : Ivy Day Odist (3) : Commencement Orator (4) ; Undergraduate Council (4) ; Orient Board (1. 2. 3. 4) : Quill Board (3) : Ibis (4) ; As- sistant Manager Debating Council (3), President (4): Bradbury Prize Debate (3): Bowdoin-Vcrmont Debate (4); Provisional Commencement Appointment: Prize Win- ner in ’68 Prize Speaking (4) ; Almon Goodwin Prize (3) : Henry V. Longfellow Grad- uate Scholarship (4); Dcutscher Vercin (1, 2, 3, 4), Vorsitzender (4): Romania (3): Good Government Club (3. 4). Fred Veston Stanley53 Lisbon Lisbon Bangor Ihcologieal Seminary, ’07; Assistant in Fconomics (4): Provisional Commence- ment Appointment. Oramel Henry Stanley54 Lovell 4 Cleaveland St. H e II; i X; Chapel Choir (3); College Band (1. 2): Chemistry Club (4): Oxford County Club; Class Squad (1). Charles Leon Stevens Warren 26 W. H. K 2; Bangor Theological Seminary, ’07; Class Chaplain (3). 62 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Carl Ellis Stone5Âź Norway 0 A X House O A X; Mandolin Club (2, 3, 4), Leader (4); Oxford County Club, Secretary and Treasurer (2); M. I. A. A. Team (3); Class Track Team (3); Class Squad (3). Robert Goff Stubbs57 Strong A K E House A K E; Ccrcle Francais (2); Class Squad (2, 3). James Melvin Sturtevant Dixfield 0 A X House 0 A X; A K K; Dramatic Club (3); Oxford County Club; Class Squad (3). Kenneth Remington Tefft59 Syracuse, N. Y. 23 M. H. 'k T; Class President (1); Responses Freshman and Sophomore Banquets; Banquet Committee (2) ; Secretary Undergraduate Council (4) ; Orient Board (2, 3, 4), Editor- in-chief (4); Quill Board (3); Ibis (4) ; Manager of College Minstrels (3); Deutscher Verein (3); Ccrcle Francais (2); Chess Club (1); Assistant Manager ’Varsity Base- ball Team (2), Manager (3); Class Baseball Team (1); Class Track Team (1). Leonard Fremont Timberlake00 Portland A K E House A K E; Class Vice President (3, 4); Vice President Christian Association (3), Presi- dent (4) ; Manager Quill Board (2, 3) ; Manager Dramatic Club (3); Friar (3); Second Eleven (3, 4); Class Football Team (1, 2), Captain (2); Class Track Team (1); Manager ’Varsity Tennis Team (3). Perley Conant Voter01 West Farmington A Y House A T; Provisional Commencement Appointment; Charles Carroll Everett Scholarship (4); Chemical Club (4); Franklin County Club; Class Squad (2. 3). Leonard Foster WakefieldÂź2 Bar Harbor 0 A X House 0 A X; Good Government Club (4); Second Eleven (1, 2, 3, 4), Captain (4); Class Football (1); Second Nine (2). Fred Paterson Webster, M. D. Portland Portland Harvard Medical School, ’01; Instructor in the Medical School of Maine, 1905. John Alexander Wentworth03 Portland 22 A. H. 0 A X; A K K; College Orchestra; Class Football Team (r, 2). 63 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 FORMER MEMBERS OF 1909 Hervey Drowne Benner,3 0 A X Maurice Linwood Blair, A Y Charles Osborn Bouve, Jr., K 2 Gardner Wilson Cole, Z 'k Matthew Ilale Cooper, A Y John Edward Crowley, V Y Webster Bennett Davis Kenneth Howard Dresser,8 0 A X Daniel Tucker Coffin Drummond, A K E Reed Hobart Ellis, A Y Herbert Gammons, A K E Louis Garcelon, ARE Carl Robinson Green, ARE Leo Edgar Hafford, A Y Lucius Dwight Lumbard, k Y Robert Walcott Messer, 2nd, B 0 II James Atwood Crowell M illiken, K 2 Harry Arch Morrell, B © II Carl Abner Powers Verne Arden Ranger, B 0 IT Karl Desmond Scates,40 0 A X Edgar Floyd Sewall, 7 A Y James Henry Small, Z 'k William Cone Sparks,0 ARE Gardner Wesley Stacey, A Y John Ara Stetson,83 R 2 Fuller Pierce Studley,88 Y Roger Lewis Thaxter, A A I Walter Nathaniel Tliwing, B 0 II Charles Madison Witt 6.j The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 1910 CLASS ODE Freshman Banquet, June 15, 1907. Tune: Phi Chi. Now here’s a health to Bowdoin, boys, And here’s to Nineteen Ten, And here’s to our brave banner borne By eighty merry men. It's triumphed on full many a field, Twill triumph once again ; For Nineteen Ten is in her glory. Chorus: Hurrah, hurrah, we’ll sing to 1910, Hurrah, hurrah, and to her noble men, For 1909 is up the spout And ’leven’s down and out; Here’s to 1910 forever. There’s a class of vaunted valor, Which we’ve humbled to the dust, And soon there’ll come another With a dev’lish lot o’ crust; But we will teach them just a bit, For learn they shall and must; For Nineteen Ten is in her glory. Chorus: We’ll direct their education With a most paternal care, And show them round the Campus With a courtesy that’s rare, We’ll take them to the golf links And perhaps to Topsham Fair, For Nineteen Ten is in her glory. HISTORY OF 1910 On a clear, bright morning in September, 1906, a new class appeared upon the campus of Old Bowdoin—a class that was destined to establish new records in every line of college activity, be it social, scholastic, or athletic. It was not a perfect class—there were Cy Rowell and Gramp Wing, fresh from the green fields of rural Maine; while Dizzy Crowell and Tom Otis represented the other extreme; but the rank and file of the class left nothing to be desired. With Drip, Puss, and Johnny in the front ranks, we brushed 1909 aside and went over to Adams for our first lecture from Doc. Whit. From that moment our superiority was fully proved and even rattle-brain Kid Brewster would not argue the point. We lost the baseball series by some strange, unexplained decree of Fate—but the football game! We not only defeated 1909 by the score of 10 to 6—letting them off easily because of their youth and inexperience—but rushed them all over the field afterwards! In justice to 1909, however, in relation to this rush, it ought to be said that Judge Phillips and Tommy Ginn were not in town. So it was throughout the year. Kid Weeks started his career as a boy wonder at the Indoor Meet—by leading the squad to victory. Our relay team beat Bates. When the year closed with a very successful banquet, but one fatality was re- corded—Lippincott had fallen hopelessly in love! On the other hand—Hawes had become an after-dinner speaker, Slocum had learned to fuss, Otis could smile in his sleep, Sanborn had not been caught in his fourflushing, Lee Mike had two athletic (!) Bs, and Stevens had won a leather medal for saving a child who had fallen into a washbowl! When Sophomore year opened, nearly all the old members returned and we began to make ourselves even more felt in college circles. 1911 was the easiest thing we could possibly have had anything to do with. We beat them in the rush, the baseball series, the football game and the Indoor Meet—there was nothing to it, they never once had a chance to show what they were good for. We took them down to Webber's to have their pictures taken in their new Merry Wids, in spite of the endeavor on the part of the Juniors to prevent it. And to wind up the year, we gave them a boat ride down Casco Bay—although they had to pay their own passage! It was really gratifying to hear the remarks 68 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 they made about our hospitality! And all this time we were giving more than our share of the men who were making the name of Bowdoin famous in the field of athletics. In football, baseball, and tennis, our classmates were doing them- selves proud, but in track, we were without a rival. 1910 alone gave enough points to tie the Maine Meet and to take second place in the New England! With Slocum, Colbath, Morrill, Edwards, Warren and Deming, Bowdoin beat out the rest of the New England colleges—except Dartmouth. This deed alone entitles us to respect and eternal fame, but this is only one direction in which the brain and brawn of 1910 has been manifest. And now we are Juniors and can look down with disgust and pity on the underclassmen—disgust for 1911, and pity for 1912. Already the assemblies have proved our ability socially. Soon will come Ivy Day, then we shall be Seniors. May the course of our career be as smooth and bright in the future as it has in the past and all the additional laurels which we get we will lay gladly at the feet of our Alma Mater. And when the Commencement comes, may it be said of us, “Well Done.” The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 JUNIOR CLASS, 1910 Class Colors: Blue and White. Class Yell: Kuey Katcha Paza! Kucy Katcha Paza! B-O-W-D-O-I-N! Tonki Shona Toza! Tonki Shona Toza! Whoopee! Whoopee! 1910! OFFICERS President, John Leland Crosby9 Pice-President, Elmer Hamilton Hobbs25 Secretary and Treasurer, Richard Raymond Eastman14 IVY DAY PARTS Marshal, Harold Bearse Ballard5 Orator, Daniel John Readcy42 Chaplain, Edgar Crossland Poet, Robert Hale20 IVY DAY COMMITTEE Laurence Gorham Ludwig, Chairman Thomas Otis40 Ralph Lane Thompson50 Rodney Elsinore Ross“J Sereno Scwall Webster01 70 MEMBERS OF 1910 William Elbridge Atwood Paris 8 M. H. A T; Secretary and Treasurer Class (2); Opening Address Sophomore Banquet; Assembly Committee (3); Orient Board (2, 3, 4), Managing Editor (3), Editor-in-chief (4) ; Mandolin Club (2); Chapel Choir (2); College Band (1, 2, 3); Oxford County Club, Secretary and Treasurer (2).—Hebron Academy. George Hutchinson Babbitt Albany, N. Y. 7 W H. A A b; Ex-Bates ’10; Good Government Club (3).—Albany Academy. Ralph Edwin Gilmore Bailey Easton Z 'E; Ex-’o8.—Skowhegan High School. V. 'k House The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Harold Bearce Ballard Gardiner K 2 House K 2; Class Marshal (3); Second Eleven (2): Class Foot- ball Team (2); 'Varsity Track Team (2); N. E. f. A. A. Team (2): 'Varsity Relay Team (2): Class Track Team (1. 2, 3); Class Relay Team (2, 3).—Gardiner High School. Charles Austin Cary5 East Machias A K E House A K K; Bugle Board (3); Deutscher Verein (3); Wash- ington County Club; M. I. A. A. Track Team (2); Alter mate ’Varsity Cross Country Team (3) ; Class Squad (2). —Washington Academy. Chester Alden Boynton North Whitefield 1 W. H. A A 4 : 'Varsity Football Team (2).—Hebron Academy. Stuart Franklin Brown4 Whitinsville, Mass. K 2 House K 2; Assembly Committee (3): Massachusetts Club: Class Squad (2).—N'orthbridge Academy. 72 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 John David Clifford Lewiston A A t House A A 4 ; Alexander Prize Speaking (i, 2), Second Prize (1). —Lewiston High School. John Leland Crosby0 Bangor 13 A. H. A K E; Class Secretary and Treasurer (1); Chairman Freshman Banquet Committee (1); Class President (3); Press Club (2, 3); Goodwin French Prize (1); Glee Club (2, 3); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Good Government Club (3); Penobscot Club. Secretary (2); ’Varsity Football Team (3); Class Football Team (1); M. I. A. A. Track Team (1, 2); Class Track Team (1).—Bangor High School. Henry Jewett Colbath7 Dexter A K E House A K E; Alexander Prize Speaking (2); Dcutschcr Verein (2) ; Friar (3) ; Good Government Club (3); Penobscot Club; Athletic Council (1, 3), Secretary and Treasurer (3) ; Class Baseball Team (1); M. I. A. A. Record Holder 1 and 2 mile events; ’Varsity Track Team (1, 2); N. E. I. A. A. Team (1, 2); ’Varsity Cross Country Team (2, 3); Captain (2, 3) ; Alternate ’Varsity Relay Team (1); ’Var- sity Relay Team (2, 3); Class Track Team (1); Class Re- lay Team (1, 2, 3), Captain (1, 2, 3).—Dexter High School. 73 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Edgar Crossland Brunswick 17 Cleaveland St. Bangor Theological Seminary, ’08; Class Chaplain (3).— Bangor Theological Seminary. Ralph Savage Crowell10 Bangor 13 A. IT. A K E; Glee Club (1, 2, 3); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3) ; Chap- el Choir (2, 3); College Band (1, 2, 3); Penobscot Club, Vice President (2).—Bangor High School. Clyde Leroy Deming12 Cornish Center, N. H. 0 A X House © A X; Dcutscher Vcrcin (3); Secretary Republican Club (2, 3); New Hampshire Club: Class Football Team (2): ’Varsity Track Team (1, 2); N. E. I. A. A. Team (2); Class Track Team (1, 3): ’Varsity Relay Team (2); Class Relay Team (1).—Cornish High School. 74 I The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Richard Raymond Eastman” Fort Fairfield Z 'I' House Z Sk; Class Secretary and Treasurer (3); Good Government Club (3); Aroostook Club, Vice President (3) ; Class Foot- ball Team (1); Second Nine (1, 2); Class Baseball Team (1, 2).—Ricker Classical Institute. Carleton Whidden Eaton Calais 252 Maine Street Ex-M. I. T., ’11; 'J' T.—Phillips Exeter Academy. Sumner Edwards15 Cambridge, Mass. 14 A. H. 0 A X; Friar (3); Massachusetts Club, Secretary and Treasurer (2, 3); Class Football Team (1, 2); M. I. A. A. Record Holder in 220-yard hurdles; 'Varsity Track Team (2); N. E. I. A. A. Track Team (2); Class Track Team (1, 2); Class Squad (1).—St. Johns Military Academy. 75 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Frank Caradoc Evans Camden 27 W. H. B 0 IT; Assistant in Medical Chemistry (3); Chemical Club (3); Class Baseball Team (1. 2). Captain (0-—Cam- den High School. Ransom Edgar Fisher” Ridlonville 23 W. H. Buclk Board (3); Deutscher Vercin (3); Oxford County Club; Class Squad (1, 2).—Chisholm High School. Ralph Boothby Grace1 Saco 29 W. H. K 2; Bugle Board (3); Deutscher Vercin (3); Thornton Club (2, 3), Secretary and Treasurer; York County Club. Vice-President (2), President (3); Manager Class Football Team (2).—Thornton Academy. 76 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 William Stewart Guptill19 Gorham K 1 House K 2; Class Squad (1,2), Leader (2).—Gorham High School. Robert Hale20 Portland 'I Y House '1' T; Class Odist, Freshman Banquet (1); Class Poet (3); Editor-in-Chicf Bugle (3); Quill Board (2, 3), Chairman (3); Brown Memorial Scholarship (1, 2); Ccrcle Francais (1); .Friar (3); Classical Club (3); Good Government Club (3).—Portland High School. James Forbush Hamburger21 Hyde Park, Mass. 14 A. H. 0 A X; Address Freshman Banquet; Class Vice-President (2); Friar (3); Class Football Team (1); Class Baseball Team (1).—Stone School. 77 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Harlan Frank Hansen82 Portland 0 A X House X; Deutschcr Vcrcin (3) ; Good Government Club (3) ; Class Track Team (1).—Phillips Andover Academy. Henry Quimby Hawes8 Westbrook 0 A X House 0 A X; Bradbury Prize Debate (3); Alternate Bowdoin- Wcslcyan Debate (3); Smyth Mathematical Prize (2) ; Deutschcr Vcrcin (3) : Good Government Club (3) ; ‘Var- sity Second Eleven (1, 2); Class Football Team (i, 2); Class Track Team (1, 2); Class Squad (1, 2); Fencing Team (3).—Westbrook High School. Merrill Christy Hill84 ‱ Buxton 29 W. H. K 2; Glee Club (3); Deutschcr Vcrcin (3); York County Club, Vice-President (3); Pianist for Class Squad (1).— Buxton High School. 78 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Elmer Hamilton Hobbs25 Watcrboro B 0 II House B 9 IT; Class Vice-President (3); Dcutschcr Vercin (3); York County Club; Class Baseball Team (1, 2).—West- brook High School. Henry Gurney Ingersoll26 Auburn Auburn Ex-Vermont, '08; Toastmaster Sophomore Banquet (2); Bugle Board (3) ; Orient Board (2); Sewall Greek Prize (2); Glee Club (2); Class Squad (2).—Essex Junction High School. Frank Estes Kendrie27 Old Orchard B 0 n House B 0 II; Glee Club (1, 3), Violin Soloist (1, 3); Chapel -Choir (1, 2, 3), Leader (2, 3); Leader Chapel Quartette (2, 3); Dcutschcr Vercin (3); Thornton Club, Vice-Presi- dent (2); York County Club.—Thornton Academy. 79 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Frank Willis Knight Rockland Classical Club (3).—Rockland High School. 25 A. II. Leon Stanley Lippincotti! Augusta © A X House G A X; Augusta Club; Class Squad (2).—Cony High School. Laurence Gorham Ludwig Moulton Z 4 House 55 ' Chairman Ivy Day Committee (3): Business Manager Bugi.k (3); Manager College Band (2); Aroostook Club: Class Baseball I cam (1).—Ricker Classical Institute. 80 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Frank Bernard McGlone30 Natick, Mass. 19 Stetson St. A T; Toastmaster Freshman Banquet; Glee Club (i, 2, 3); Chapel Choir (1,2); Chapel Quartette (2) ; Deutscher Ver- cin (3); Massachusetts Club.—Natick High School. Harry Buddington McLaughlin31 Williamstown, Mass. A A I ; Freshman Banquet Committee; Response Fresh- man Banquet; Dramatic Club (2, 3); Friar (3); Class Baseball Team (1).—Williamstown High School. Arthur Alexander Madison Elm House Montgomery, Ala. Ex-Howard University, ’10.—Mobile State Normal School. 3 W. H. The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Harold Potter Marsh32 Sheldon, Yt. io A. H. 0 A X; Class Baseball Team (2).—Kimball Union Academy. Edgar Curtis Matthews, Jr.34 Portsmouth A K E House A K E; Response Sophomore Banquet; Alternate Alex- ander Prize Speaking (1); Glee Club (2): Mandolin Club (2) ; Chapel Choir (1, 2); College Band (1. 2): Friar (3) ; New Hampshire Club, Secretary and Treasurer (l'l: Second Eleven (1, 2, 3); Class Football Team (1. 2); Class Track Team (1, 2).—Portsmouth High School. Robert Burleigh Martin33 Augusta A K E House A K E; Press Club (2, 3) ; Cerclc Francais (1) ; Good Gov- ernment Club (3); Augusta Club, Secretary and Treasurer (1); Class Baseball Team (1, 2); Class Squad (1); 'Var- sity Tennis Team (2).—Cony High School. 82 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Berton Charles Morrill Augusta 17 Cleaveland St. Massachusetts Club; Coach of Track, Relay, and Cross Country Teams (i, 2, 3); ’Varsity Track Team (1, 2); X. E. I. A. A. Team (1, 2).—English High School. Philip Brayton Morss30 Medford, Mass. 16 W. H. A A «I ; Orient Hoard (2, 3);) Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Pianist for Class Squad (2, 3); Alternate ’Varsity Fencing Team (3).—Medford High School. Lewis Lee Mikclsky35 Bath 19 M. H. Banquet Committee (1); Assembly Committee (3); Cerclc Francais (1).—Morse High School. 83 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Robert Dillingham Morss37 Medford, Mass. A A l I louse A A « ; Recording Secretary of the Christian Association (2), Treasurer (3); Business Manager Orirni (4): As- sistant Manager Dramatic Club (2), resigned: Friar (3); Class Baseball Team (1); M. I. A. A. Team (2): 'Varsity Cross Country Team (2. 3); ’Varsity Relay Team (3): Class Track Team (1, 2. 3); Class Squad (1): Assistant Manager ’Varsity Tennis Team (2), Manager (3): Vice- President, President M. I. L. T. A. A.—Medford Hign School. Colby Lorenzo Morton38 Friendship A Y House A T: Class Football Team (1, 2); Manager Class Baseball Team (1).—Coburn Classical Institute. William Proctor Newman30 Bar Harbor 10 A. II. 0 A X; Jury (1); Address Sophomore Banquet: Good Government Club (3); Athletic Council (3); ’Varsity Football Team (1, 2, 3), Captain (4); Class Football (1, 2), Captain (1); ’Varsity Track Team (2): X. K. LA Team (2); Class Track Team (1, 2, 3).—Bar Harbor High School. 84 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Parker Toward Nickerson Boothbay Harbor 25 M. H. Z 'K—Hebron Academy. William Bridgham Nulty Brickfield 1 W. H. A A I : Good Government Club (3); Class Football Team (1).—Hebron Academy. Thomas Otis40 New Bedford, Mass. K 2 House Ex-Maine Law School, '08; K 2; Response Freshman Ban- quet; Ivy Day Committee (3); Orient Board (1, 2. 3, 4); Massachusetts Club; Assistant Manager ’Varsity Football Team (3), Manager (4); Class Baseball Team (1); Class Track Team (1); Class Squad (3).—Tabor Academy. 85 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Clinton Noyes Peters Portland 'I' Y House T; Assembly Committee (3); Mandolin Club (1, 2, 3); Deutscher Verein (3).—Dccring High School. Thomas Cooley Phelps41 Williamstown, Mass. A Y House A T; Massachusetts Club; Class Baseball Team (2).—Wil- liamstown High School. Daniel John Readey42 Manchester, N. H. 31 W. H. z 'l'; Ivy Day Orator; Assistant Manager Debating Coun- cil (3) ; Dramatic Club (2); Bradbury Prize Debate (2. 3); New Hampshire Club; Second Eleven (1, 2, 3); M. I. A. A. Team (2).—Manchester High School. S6 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Ira Brown Robinson1 4 Bath Bath ‱ B 6 II: Mandolin Club (2); Deutschcr Verein (3); Class Squad (1).—Morse High School. Warren Eastman Robinson‘S A A I Mouse Arlington, Mass. A A 4 ; Class Historian (1) ; Orient Board 0, 2, 3); Good Government Club (3); Massachusetts Club: Assistant Mana- ger Track Team (2), Manager (3); Executive Committee of N. E. I. A. A. (3); Class Squad (2).—Arlington High School. Rodney Elsinore Ross46 Kennebunk Y House 'I' T; Response Freshman Banquet; Ivy Day Committee (3); Sewall Latin Prize (2) ; Glee Club (2, 3); Chapel Choir (3) ; Deutschcr Verein (3); Good Government (3); Classical Club (3); York County Club (2, 3); Class Football Team (2); Class Baseball Team (2); Second Nine (2).—Kennebunk High School. The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Harold Edwin Rowell47 Cornville 16 M. H. Z 'V; Response Freshman Banquet; Dcutschcr Verein (3): ’Varsity Track Team (2) ; N. E. I. A. A. Team (2) ; Class Track Team (2); Class Squad (1).—Skowhegan High School. Harold Wilson Slocum49 Albany, N. Y. iS M. H. 0 A X; Bugle Board; Deutschcr Verein (3); ‘Varsity Track Team (2) ; N. E. I. A. A. Team (2); 'Varsity Cross Coun- try Team (2, 3).—Albany High School. William Harrison Sanborn48 Portland 'k Y House 'k T; Glee Club (3); Mandolin Club (2); Chapel Choir (2); College Band (1, 2, 3), Manager (2); Classical Club (3); Class Football Team (1, 2); Class Baseball Team (1).— Portland High School. SS The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Charles Smith50 West Medford, Mass. 4 M. H. Z 'V; Chemistry Club; Massachusetts Club; Class Football Team (2).—Medford High School. Ralph Woodbury Smith52 Augusta Z House Z Chemical Club (3) : Augusta Club; M. I. A. A. Team (1).—Cony High School. Leon Hartley Smith51 Portland © A X House OiX; Deutscher Vcrein (3); Good Government Club (3); Class Relay Team (1).—Dcering High School. 89 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Winston Bryant Stephens44 A A I House New Bedford, Mass. A A I ; Ode Committee Freshman Banquet; Art Editor Buclk (3) ; Dramatic Club (2) ; Alexander Prize Speak- ing (1, 2), First Prize (2); Glee Club (1, 2); Chapel Choir (1, 2, 3); Massachusetts Club; 'Varsity Fencing Team (3).—Holderness School. Alfred Wheeler Stone50 Bangor ARE House A K E; Dramatic Club (2, 3) ; Press Club (2, 3); Alexander Prize Speaking (1, 2), First Prize (1), Second Prize (2); Glee Club (1, 2, 3) ; Mandolin Club (1) ; Reader with Mus- ical Clubs (3); Chapel Choir (r, 2, 3); Chapel Quartette (3); Penobscot Club; Class Football Team (2); Class Squad (2).—Bangor High School. Ralph Lane Thompson50 Brunswick 29 Federal St. A T; Ivy Day Committee; Blt.i.e Board (3); Dcutschcr Vcrein (3); Massachusetts Club; Class Baseball Team (2). —Melrose High School. 90 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Frank Dunham Townsend” Brunswick 156 Maine St. Press Club (2, 3).—Brunswick High School. Raymond Anderson Tuttle58 Freeport 32 A. H. 0 A X; Dcutscher Verein (3).—Freeport High School. Alfred Wilhelm Wandtke60 Lewiston A Y House AT; Opening Address Freshman’Banquet; Dcutscher Ver- ein (3) ; 'Varsity Football. Team (2, 3) J Second Eleven (1) ; Class Football Team (1, 2), Manager (1), Captain (2) ; ’Varsity Baseball Team (2); Second Nine (1); Class Baseball Team (1, 2) ; Class Track Team (1, 2).—Lewiston High School. 9i The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Herbert Everett Warren Woodsville, X. H. 3 V. H. A A ‘I ; Bugle Board (3); Deutschcr Vcrcin (3); Friar (3): New Hampshire Club; 'Varsity Track Team (1, 2); N. E. I. A. A. Track Team (1, 2); Captain Class Track Team (1); Class Squad (1).—Kimball Union Academy. Sereno Sewall Webster01 Augusta B 0 II House B 0 II; Closing: Address Sophomore Banquet: Ivy Day Committee (3); Glee Club (2, 3); Chapel Choir (2, 3); Manager College Minstrels (3); Augusta Club; Assistant Manager 'Varsity Baseball Team (2), Manager (3) ; Class Baseball Team (i, 2).—Cony High School. Harold Edward Weeks02 Fairfield Z House Z ; Response Freshman Banquet; Class President (2); Alternate Bradbury Prize Debate (3): Alexander Prize Speaking (1); Glee Club (2): Mandolin Club (2, 3); Assistant Manager Musical Clubs (3): College Band (3); Class Track Team (1, 2, 3); Class Relay Team (1. 2. 3); Class Squad (1, 2), Leader (1).—Fairfield High School. 92 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 George Cony Weston03 Augusta B 0 II House B 0 II; Sophomore Banquet Committee; Chairman Junior Assembly Committee; Bugle Board (3); Augusta Club, Vice-President (2), President (3).—Cony High School. Thomas Wescott Williams04 Houlton 4 A. H. Ex-Colby, ’10; A K E.—Freedom Academy. Earl Lytton Wing05 Kingfield A Y House A T; College Band (2, 3); Franklin County Club; Class Squad (2, 3), Leader (3).—Kingfield High School. The Bowcloin Bugle, 1910 Harry Whiting Woodward07 A K B House Colorado Springs, Col. A K E; Response Freshman Banquet; Chairman Sophomore Banquet Committee; Manager Dramatic Club (3); Friar (3); Manager Class Baseball Team (2).—Colorado Springs High School. FORMER MEMBERS OF 1910 George Robert Aslnvorth, Z Merton Glenn Lewis Bailey,2 B 0 IT Harrison Carter Chapman, A A I Thomas Charles Commins,Âź A Y Harold Wheeler Davie,11 0 A X James Battles Draper,15 0 A X Harry Joseph Dugan. A Y Guy Wilbur Farrar,10 A Y Afton Holmes Farr in, K 2 John Benedict Hanahan, AY James Anthony Hubbard, A Y Frank Alden Kimball,25 A Y Allen Wentworth Lander, 'I' Y ‱Deceased Fred Henry Larrabce, A A I William Duncan McMillan, A A I Robert Walcott Messer, 2nd, B 0 n Edward Temple Pickard,69 A K E Henry Lowell Russell, 70 0 A X Harold Sumner Small. 4' Y Francis Benjamin Spurling,53 A K E Derby Stanley, A K E Cornelius John Taylor, A Y Randall Leroy Taylor, Jr. Charles William Walker,55 Z 4 Jesse Scott Wilson,71 K K K Robert Fessenden Wing60 94 Ot «  t I M  1161 JO SSV'10 HISTORY OF 1911 “ was not like Ik is iti Ike days of old. In the Fall of 1907, there appeared upon the Campus of old Bowdoin “the largest class in the history of the College”—Nineteen ’Lemon. And many and great were the rumors of athletic prowess, and unheard-of brilliancy which filled the air. But forsooth after the Chapel rush they were dissipated, even as the first warmth of the morning sun dissipates the mists that all night long have been hanging upon the mountain tops. For Buster Ludwig and Cony Weston and Siubby McGlone, who were the only Sophomores back, had buried the Freshmen in the dust in front of King Chapel. And it took the Freshmen some weeks before they came to enough to find out where they were. And many of them never regained consciousness, but to this day wander about the Campus, the mere ghosts of their departed selves. Yet there were some who hoped that this class might achieve some worthy deed in the baseball series or the football game. But here again their hopes were dashed to the ground, and the mire on the Delta the day of the football game was as nothing compared to the slough of Despond and Degradation in which the class of ’lemon were then thrown. And so things have gone on from bad to worse, and from worse to wusscr. To be sure the Gibsons and Kellogg and Pope and Skelton and Oxnard had a terrible time at the banquet, and Darby Davis got a fraction of a point at the Indoor Meet. But even such glorious memories as these arc hardly compen- sation for the humiliation which has attended their Sophomore year. For 1912 has beaten in the rush, in baseball, and in football; and they have even rung the Chapel bell in celebration. So let us drop forever the curtain upon the infamies of 1911. Alma Mater is wailing bitterly, “Send us men.” What funny mistakes the printers do make! And presistently too! 97 SOPHOiMORE CLASS, 191 Class Colors: Crimson and White. Class Yell: Mille noncenti X — I! Vive-la Crimson and White, Phi Chi! Braxico, Raxico, Caxico, Keven ! Bowdoin, Bowdoin, 1911! OFFICERS President, Ilarry Lawrence Wiggin” Vice-President, Wilbur Chamberlain Caldwell11 Secretary and Treasurer, Edward Eugene Kern45 98 MEMBERS OF 1911 Melville Cony Aubrey2 Washington, D. C. A K E House John Henry Babbitt Albany, N. Y. 17 M. H. Raymond Coombs Beal3 Lisbon Falls 1 M. H. Harrison Morton Berry4 Gardiner A Y House Harold Vincent Bickmore3 Augusta B 0 n House Fred Charles Black15 Rockland Z House Robert Bradford7 Wayne A Y House John Leslie Brummett Roxbury, Mass. 17 M. H. Franz Uphain Burkett Union 3 A. H. Harold Nichols Burnham Bridgton 6 Cleaveland St. Frank Hastings BurnsÂź Bristol Mills 26 M. H. Charles Hinckley Bylcs10 Central Village, Conn. 32 W. H. Wilbur Chamberlain Caldwell11 Buckfield 1 W. H. William Henry Callahan12 Lewiston 31 W. H. John Everett Cartland13 Lisbon Falls Ben House Harrison Carter Chapman Portland A A I House William Harper Chapin14 Saco K 2 House Lin wood Everett Clark13 Wilton 32 A. H. William Henry Clifford13 Lewiston A A $ House Arthur Harrison Cole17 Haverhill, Mass. 'I' Y House Leon Tucker Conway1 Portland 24 M. H. John Libby Curtis Camden B © n House Frank Elmer Keefe Davis Skowhegan 1 M. H. Lawrence Davis19 Bradford B 0 n House Alonzo Garcelon Dennis20 Medford, Mass. 29 A. H. John James Devine21 Portland 12 A. H. Francis Thomas Donnelly22 Bangor 6 W. H. Samuel Herman Dreear Washington, D. C. Bath Road Walter Nelson Emerson23 Bangor B 0 n House Ernest Gibson Fifield24 Conway, N. H. 11 A. H. Sylvan Brooks Gcnthner20 Newcastle 29 M. H. 99 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Algernon Tuttle Gibson27 Bangor 13 W. H. Arthur Collis Gibson28 Bangor A A i House Orison Perkins Haley30 Popham Beach 9 M. H. Philip Herman Hansen31 Portland A K E House Hugh Warren Hastings32 Frycburg A A l House Charles Boardman Hawes33 Bangor 11 M. H. Alden Sprague Hichborn 8 Augusta 12 A. H. Maurice Pierce Hill Rockland 8 M. H. Harold Kirkham Hine30 Dedham, Mass. 19 A. H. Roderick Paul Hine 7 Dedham, Mass. 19 A. H. Read Clark Horsman38 Princeton 30 M. H. George Wilson Howe39 Milo © A X House Stetson Marlowe Hussey40 Blaine Z 'I' House David Scribner Hyler41 Rockland Z 'k House Alfred Wellington Johnson42 Augusta 7 South St. Herman Adolph Johnson Bath 9 M. H. John Loring Johnson Houlton Z 'k House Chester Elijah Kellogg44 Melrose, Mass. 21 A. PL Edward Eugene Kern45 Wood fords R © II House Philip Horatio Kimball40 Gorham K 2 House Robert Merton Lawlis47 Houlton A K E House Fred Raymond Lord Bath 'k Y House Lawrence McFarland Portland A Y House James G. Blaine McKusick48 Calais 21 A. Ii. George Herbert Macomber Augusta R © II House Harold Percival Marston40 Chicago, 111. 25 A. H. William Folsom Merrill50 Skowhegan 12 M. H. Philip Weston Meserve51 Portland 32 M. H. Charles Lewis Oxnard52 West Medford, Mass. 31 A. H. Edward James Barnes Palmer Lanesboro, Mass. A Y House Lawrence Pratt Parkman53 Portland 8 W. H. Ben Weston Partridge, Jr. Gardiner 24 M. H. Keith Nelson Pearson54 Providence, R. I. 30 M. H. Stanley Woodard Pierce57 Bath 11 W. H. IOO The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Alton Stackpole Pope Manchester B 0 n House Frank Humphrey Purington58 Mechanic Falls 14 W. H. Donald Red fern59 Swampscott, Mass. Y House Frank Pierce Richards00 Bar Harbor 0 A X House John Leonard Roberts Brunswick 102 Pleasant St. Charles Dudley Robbins01 Worcester, Mass. 32 M. H. Harrison Leonard Robinson02 Bangor 11 W. II. Oliver True Sanborn03 Portland Y House Gardner Sanford04 Boston, Mass. 11 M. H. Edward Warren Skelton05 East Brooksville 31 A. H. Waldo Thompson Skillin'10 Hallowell 13 M. H. Earl Baldwin Smith Brunswick 50 Federal St. Abraham Jacob Somes07 Mount Desert A Y House Palmer Straw Portland 15 Cleaveland St. Richard Wesley Sullivan08 West Roxbury, Mass. A Y House George Alexander Torsney70 Berlin, N. H. 12 M. H. Roland Hiram Waitt71 Gardiner K 2 House Horace Herbert Watson72 West Medford, Mass. 29 W. H. Edward Hacker Weatherill Brunswick 34 School St. De Forest Weeks75 Cornish 11 A. H. Harold Sewall White74 Lewiston A A l House Joseph Curtis White75 Bangor 9 W. H. Harold Preble Whitmore70 Bar Harbor 0 A X House Harry Lawrence Wiggin” Boston, Mass. A K E House IOI The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 FORMER MEMBERS OF 1911 William Clinton Allen,1 A K E George Sampson Barton78, K 2 Charles Walter Dinsmore, Z 'I' James Holden Files25, 0 A X Melville Asher Gould, 4 Y William Gardner Haggerty29, Z 'J' Vyndel Arton HewesÂź4, K 2 George Chandler Kaulbach43, 0 A X Percy Warren Mathews William Elton Noyes, A Y Benjamin Kimball Phipps,55 K 2 James Madigan Pierce,50 A K E Andrew Coburn Swan09, A Y Phillips Williams 102 HISTORY OF 1912 Fresh as the new moivn hay.” Like nineteen ’lemon, naughty twelve was heralded as the “largest ever. But unlike ’lemon, twelve gives a reasonable amount of promise of living up to its reputation. For their ranks are full of prep, school wonders and mother’s darlings. ’12 started things off with a rush (i. e. the Chapel rush), and won it. Then they walked away with the baseball series and the football game in rapid seces- sion. And now, as they wander about the Campus with their pipes in their mouths and their coats under their arms, they present a pleasing spectacle. Sem- ester exams have made havoc in their ranks; but Andrews, Kent. Gillin, and Nickerson are still amongst them, and where will you find fresher. Surely the days of the Sophomore paddle knew not such as these. But the ways of the Faculty are past finding out; and the ways of the Sophomores—they have none. 05 MEMBERS OE 1912 Chester Granville Abbott Charles Francis Adams1 James Bailey Allen2 Harold Augustus Andrews Harold Chadbourne Arenovsky I larold Charles Lewis Ashey4 Meredith Bodine Auten Charles Olin Bailey, Jr.° Elden Greenwood Barbour Bernard Dewey Bosworth Solomon Morrison Blanchard7 Eugene Francis Bradford9 Lester Lodge Bragdon Henry Adie Briggs George Clark Brooks Herbert Lorenzo Bryant Mark Wescott Burlingame Kendrick Burns10 Clyde Raymond Chapman11 Kenneth Churchill12 Chester Leonard Clarke Philip Pearson Cole1 Robert Dan forth Cole14 Richard Odell Conant George Thomas Corea Edgar Fuller Cousins15 James Lyons Crane George Fabyan Cressey Theodore Williams Daniels10 Lynn, Mass. 30 W. H. Auburn 28 M. H. Mt. Desert A Y House East Conway, N. H. 17 Cleaveland St. Westbrook 11 Everett St. Worcester, Mass. 10 W. H. Cass City, Mich. 18 W. H. Sioux Falls, S. D. 6 W. H. Yarmouthvillc ' 32 W. H. Leominster, Mass. 5 M. H. Wood fords 6 M. H. Bangor 24 W. H. Wells 17 Cleaveland St. Gorham K 2 House Reading, Mass. 6 A. H. Round Pond 13V2 Pleasant St. Winthrop, Mass. 31 M. H. Saco A Y House Fairfield Z 'k House Newtonville, Mass. 5 W. H. Portland 17 W. H. Bath 20 A. H. Salem, Mass. 8 A. H. Portland 1 A. H. Provincetown, Mass. 86 Federal St. Thomaston 84 Federal St. Worcester, Mass. 0 A X House Portland 17 W. H. Natick, Mass. 3 M. H. 107 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Francis Warren Davis17 Newton, Mass. 22 M. H. Herbert Andrew Davis Portland 8 A. H. Willis Elden Dodge1 Princeton 6 M. H. Percy Owen Dunn Yarmouthville 7 Page St. Roy Lincoln Estes19 Stockton, Cal. 25 W. H. Lowell Sanborn Foote20 Dover, N. H. 20 A. H. Reginald Edison Foss21 Skow began 16 M. H. Walter Atherton Fuller22 Southwest Harbor 28 M. H. James McKinnon Gillin25 Bangor 15 W. H. Eugene Bradley Gordon24 Brewer 28 W. H. Alton Levicount Grant, Jr.25 Lewiston 2 M. H. Maurice Herbert Gray26 Oldtown 26 A. H. Walter James Greenleaf Portland 234 Maine St. John Teague Hale 7 Lewiston 2 M. H. Francis Elias Harrington28 Rockland B © n House Fred Willis Hart20 Camden 27 W. H. Raymond White Hathaway30 Providence, R. I. 27 M. H. Stanley John Hindi Danforth 16 A. H. William Holt31 North Bridgton 2 A. H. Robert Craig Houston Guilford 6 A. H. Stephen Winfield Hughes South Portland 4 W. H. John Lawrence Hurley Malden, Mass. 4 M. H. John Henry Joy Roxbury, Mass. 0 A X House Fred Lincoln Kateon32 Bath Bath Harry McLain Keating33 Rockland iS A. H. Raymond Davenport Kennedy Jefferson 20 M. H. Edward Weston Kent Bremen 20 M. H. George Craigin Kern34 Wood fords 25 W. H. Harold Fremont King South Scituate. R. I. 4 Cleaveland St. Robert Parsons King35 Ellsworth 21 M. H. Stanley Stone Knowles36 Augusta 28 A. H. Edward Oliver Leigh Seattle, Wash. K 2 House Henry Alexander Libbey87 West Newton, Mass 26 A. H. Lendall Durant Lincoln Wayne 4 Cleaveland St. 108 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Herbert Edson Locke38 William Alexander McCormick39 Jesse Hamilton McKenney40 True Edgecomb Makepeace41 Earl Francis Maloney42 Seward Joseph Marsh43 Percy Warren Mathews44 Leland Green Means45 John Houston Mifflin4 Edward Longworth Morss47 Joseph Henry Xewell48 Henry Arthur Nickerson Joseph Carter O’Neil Ralph Gilbraith Oakes49 Arthur Hale Parchcr50 Stephen Carroll Perry, Jr.51 Loring Pratt52 Lyde Stuart Pratt53 Ellison Smullen Purington George 'rhompson Rann54 Harris Walter Reynolds55 Frank Haddock Ridley Benjamin Hinckley Riggs Burleigh Cushing Rodick Henry Rowe50 Parker Whitmore Rowell Earle Leander Russell57 Frederick Benjamin Simpson5 Carl Dana Skillin59 Frank Davis Slocum Frank Arthur Smith William Riley Spinney Peleg William Sprague00 George Hawley Stewart01 Augusta 28 A. H. S. Framingham, Mass. 3 M. H. Brunswick 56 Pleasant St. Farmington 15 M. H. South Thomaston 18 A. H. Farmington 15 M. H. Lubec 9 A. H. Orleans, Neb. 1 A. H. Exeter, N. H. 9 A. H. Medford, Mass. 14 W. H. Richmond B © n House Portland 234 Maine St. South Portland 4 W. H. Farmington Falls 14 M. H. Ellsworth 28 W. H. Portland 23 A. H. Elmira, N. Y. 12 W. H. Farmington 15 M. H. Mechanic Falls 14 W. H. Portsmouth, N. H. 17 A. H. Brookline, Mass. 22 M. H. Topsham Topsham Wood fords 30 A. H. Freeport 17 Cleaveland St. Oldtown 25 M. II. Roxbury, Mass. 38 College St. Portland 216 Maine St. Bangor 24 W, H. Hallowcll 13 M. H. Albany, N. Y. 18 W. H. Calais 16 A. H. Freedom K 2 House Bath Bath Bath Bath 109 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 John Joseph Sullivan, Jr.Âź2 Bangor 15 W. H. George Alton TibbettsÂź3 Sandy Hill, N. Y. 75 Pleasant St. Carl Billings Timberlake04 Lancaster, N. H. 27 M. H. Edward Wadsworth Torrey Peabody, Mass. 10 W. H. Harold Perry Vannah05 Winslow’s Mills 17 Cleaveland St. Everett Parker WaltonŸŸ New Vineyard 14 M. H. Carle Orestes Warren Ilollis Centre 17 Cleaveland St. Ernest Eugene Weeks07 Cornish 15 A. H. Arthur Dcehan Welch08 Portland 23 A. II. Andrew Donald Weston Mechanic Falls 30 W. H. Herman Ashmcad WhiteÂź9 Bangor 5 W. H. Richard Frazar White70 Brunswick 273 Maine St. Edmund Wilson71 Portland 22 W. H. George Frank Wilson72 Albion Z House Allan Woodcock78 Bangor 2 A. H. Thomas Clark Wyman74 Wood fords 30 A. H. FORMER MEMBERS OF 1912 Chester Cushman Abbott, 0 A X Frederic William Mahr, Y Melville Asher Gould, Y Ralph Kay Say ward 5 Y 110 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 SUMMARY OF ACADEMICAL DEPARTMENT Seniors 6 7 Juniors 71 Sophomores 89 Freshmen 113 Total 340 STUDENTS MEDICAL SCHOOL Fourth Year 22 Third Year 2o Second Year z6 First Year 23 Total 81 Total in Academical Department, 340 Total in Medical School, 81 Total 421 Names counted twice 9 Total in the Institution, 412 hi The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL The Student Council was formed in 1908 to take the place of the old Inter- Fraternity Council and of the still older Jury. It is composed entirely of mem- bers of the Senior class. Harrison Atwood, Chairman Percy Glenham Bishop Ralph Owen Brewster Harold Hitz Burton Gardner Kendall Heath Arthur Wilder Hughes Paul Jones Newman Daniel Michael McDade Jasper Jacob Stahl Kenneth Remington Tefft, Secretary 112 PHI BETA KAPPA Colors—Green and White Founded at William and Mary College in 1776 Alpha of Virginia CHAPTER ROLL William and Mary College 1776 Alpha of Connecticut Yale University 1780 Alpha of Massachusetts Harvard University 1781 Alpha of New Hampshire Dartmouth College 1787 Alpha of New York Union College 1817 Alpha of Maine Bowdoin College 1824 Alpha of Rhode Island Brown University 1830 Beta of Connecticut Trinity College 1845 Gamma of Connecticut Wesleyan University 1845 Alpha of Ohio Western Reserve University 1847 Alpha of Vermont University of Vermont 1848 Beta of Massachusetts Amherst College 1853 Beta of New York University of the City of New York 1858 Beta of Ohio Kenyon College 1858 Gamma of Ohio Marietta College i860 Gamma of Massachusetts Williams College 1864 Beta of Vermont Middlebury College 1867 Gamma of New York College of the City of New York 1867 Delta of New York Columbia University 1869 Alpha of New Jersey Rutgers College 1869 Epsilon of New York Hamilton College 1870 Zeta of New York Hobart College 1871 Eta of New York Colgate University 1878 Theta of New York Cornell University 1883 Alpha of Pennsylvania Dickinson College 1885 Beta of Pennsylvania Lehigh University 1885 Alpha of Indiana De Pauw University 1889 Alpha of Kansas University of Kansas 1889 Gamma of Pennsylvania Lafayette College 1889 Alpha of Illinois Northwestern University 1889 Alpha of Minnesota University of Minnesota 1892 Delta of Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania 1892 Delta of Massachusetts Tufts College 1892 114 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Beta of Maine Colby College 1895 Alpha of Iowa University of Iowa  895 Alpha of Maryland Johns Hopkins University 1895 Alpha of Nebraska University of Nebraska 1895 Iota of New York Rochester University 1895 Epsilon of Pennsylvania Swarthmore College 1895 Kappa of New York Syracuse University 1895 Epsilon of Massachusetts Boston University 1898 Alpha of California University of California 189S Beta of Illinois University of Chicago 189S Delta of Ohio Cincinnati University 1898 Zeta of Pennsylvania Haver ford College 1898 Beta of New Jersey Princeton University 1898 Lambda of New York St. Lawrence University 1898 Mu of New York Vassar College 1898 Beta of Indiana Wabash College 1898 Alpha of Wisconsin University of Wisconsin 1898 Eta of Pennsylvania Allegheny 1901 Alpha of Missouri University of Missouri 1901 Alpha of Tennessee Vanderbilt University 1901 Zeta of Massachusetts Smith College 1904 Eta of Massachusetts Wellesley College 1904 Theta of Massachusetts Mount Holyoke College 1904 Beta of California Leland Stanford, Jr. University 1904 Alpha of North Carolina University of North Carolina 1904 Alpha of Texas University of Texas 1904 Alpha of Colorado University of Colorado 1904 Beta of Colorado Colorado College 1904 Epsilon of Ohio Ohio State University 1904 Beta of Maryland Woman College of Baltimore 1904 Gamma of Illinois University of Illinois 1907 Alpha of Louisiana Tulanc University of Louisiana 1907 Beta of Virginia University of Virginia 1907 Beta of Iowa Iowa College 1907 Theta of Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College 1907 Zeta of Ohio Oberlin College 1907 Eta of Ohio Ohio Wesleyan University 1907 Alpha of Michigan University of Michigan 1907 «5 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 PHI BETA KAPPA ALPHA OF MAINE Established in 1824 OFFICERS President James Me Keen, Esq., LL. D. Vice President Thomas H. Hubbard, LL. D. Secretary and Treasurer George T. Files, Ph. D. LITERARY COMMITTEE George T. Little, Litt. D., Chairman Samuel V. Cole, D. D. Charles H. Cutler, D. D. Charles C. Torrey, Ph. D., D. D. Kenneth C. M. Sills, A. M. MEMBERS CHOSEN FROM 1908 Herbert S. Brigham, Jr. Joseph A. Davis Thomas E. Gay Albert T. Gould Arthur H. Ham George P. Hyde John F. Morrison Arthur L. Robinson Carl M. Robinson Philip H. Timbcrlake Chester H. Yeaton Ralph O. Brewster Harold H. Burton Ernest L. Goodspced MEMBERS CHOSEN FROM 1909 John R. Hurley Jasper J. Stahl 116 ♩Deceased ALPHA DELTA PHI Colors—Green and White Founded at Hamilton College in 1832 I lamilton Columbia Brunonion Yale Amherst Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Manhattan Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa Johns Hopkins Minnesota Toronto Chicago McGill Wisconsin California CHAPTER ROLL Hamilton College 1832 Columbia University 1836 Brown University 1836 Yale University 1836 Amherst College 1836 Adclbcrt College 1841 Bowdoin College 1841 Dartmouth College 1846 University of Michigan 1846 University of Rochester 1851 Williams College 1851 College of the City of New York 1855 Wesleyan University 1856 Kenyon College 1858 Union College i859 Cornell University 1869 Trinity College 1877 Johns Hopkins University 1889 I niversity of Minnesota 1891 University of Toronto 893 University of Chicago 1896 McGill University 1897 University of Wisconsin 1902 I niversity of California 1908 alpha delta phi BOWDOIN CHAPTER Chas-ic: Home, Comer of Maine ae.d Potter SltctU FRATRES IN FACULTATE Prof. H. L. Chapman, D. D. Prof. F. H. Gerrish, A. M., M. D., LL. D. Prof. C. O. Hunt, A. M., M. D, Prof. C. C. Hutchins, A. M. Prof. W. A. Moody, A. M. Prof. F. C. Robinson, A. M., LL. D. Prof. F. J. Thompson. A. M., M D. William Ii. Bradford, A. M., M. D. Marshall P. Cram, Ph. D. Ralph B. Stone, A. M. FRATRES IN URBE Harold W. Chamberlain, A. M. John W. Riley, A. B. Joshua L. Chamberlain, A. M., LL. D. Thomas H. Riley, Esq., A. B. James C. Cook Thomas H. Riley, Jr., A. B. William R. Crowley Harold W. Stanwood Edgar A. Kaharl, A. B. John P. Winchell, Jr. Claude Oliver Bower Anthony Humphries Fisk Harry Farrer Ilinkley Arthur Wilder Hughes FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Seniors Edwin William Johnson Raymond Earle Merrill Irving Lockhart Rich nS The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 George Hutchinson Babbitt Chester Alden Boynton Harrison Carter Chapman John David Clifford, Jr. Harry Buddington McLaughlin Philip Brayton Morss Juniors Robert Dillingham Morss William Bridgham Nulty Warren Eastman Robinson Winston Bryant Stephens Herbert Everett Warren John Henry Babbitt Wilbur Chamberlain Caldwell William Henry Clifford Francis Thomas Donnelly Algernon Tuttle Gibson Arthur Collis Gibson Hugh Warren Hastings Chester Elijah Kellogg Sof hoinorcs Lawrence Pratt Parkman Stanley Woodward Pierce Frank Humphrey Purington Harrison Leonard Robinson Edward Hacker Wcathcrill Harold Sewall White Joseph Curtis White Harold Charles Lewis Ashcy Charles Olin Bailey, Jr. Alton Lcvicount Grant, Jr. James McKinnon Gillin Freshmen Edward Longworth Morss Ellison Smellen Purington John Joseph Sullivan, Jr. Herman Ashmead White 119 PSI UPSILON Colors—Garnet and Gold Founded at Union College in 1833 CHAPTER ROLL Theta Union College 1833 Delta New York University 837 Beta Yale University  839 Sigma Brown University 1840 Gamma Amherst College 1841 Zeta Dartmouth College 1842 Lambda Columbia University 1842 Kappa Bowdoin College 1843 Psi Hamilton College 1843 Xi Wesleyan University 1843 Upsilon University of Rochester 1858 Iota Kenyon College i860 Phi University of Michigan 1865 Pi Syracuse University 1875 Chi Cornell University 1876 Beta Beta Trinity College 1880 Eta Lehigh University 1SS4 Tau University of Pennsylvania 1891 Mu University of Minnesota 1891 Rho University of Wisconsin 1896 Omega University of Chicago 1897 Epsilon University of California 1902 120 ,.0.G A ca PSI UPSILON KAPPA CHAPTER Established in 1843 Chaplet Home. Ho Maine Sireel FRATRES IN FACULTATE Prof. C. T. Burnett, Ph. D. Charles H. Hunt, A. B., M. I). Prof. L. A. Emery, A. M.. LL. D. Alfred Mitchell. Jr., A. 15., M. 1). Prof. G. T. Files. Ph. D. W illis B. Moulton. A. B.. M. D. Edvillc G. Abbott. A. B., M. D. FRATRES IN URBE Archibald W. Dunn Barett Potter, A. M. William A. Houghton, A. M. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Seniors Philip Hayward Brown John Robert Hurley Charles Frederick Carter Kenneth Remington Tefi't The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Carleton Whidden Eaton Robert Hale Clinton Noyes Peters Juniors Rodney Esmorc Ross William Harrison Sanborn Arthur Harrison Cole Leon Tucker Conway Charles Boardman Hawes Fred Raymond Lord Philip Weston Meserve Sophomores Ben Weston Partridge Donald Red fern Oliver True Sanborn Gardner Sanford Earle Baldwin Smith Edgar Fuller Cousins Francis Warren Davis Walter Atherton Fuller Freshmen Robert Parsons King Loring Pratt Parker Whitmore Rowell 122 â–ș ♩ DELTA KAPPA EPSILON Colors—Azure, Gules and Or Founded at Yale University in 1844 CHAPTER ROLL Phi Yale University 1844 Theta Bowdoin College 1844 Xi Colby College 1845 Sigma Amherst College 1846 Gamma Vanderbilt University 1847 Psi University of Alabama 1847 Upsilon Brown University 1850 Chi University of Mississippi 1850 1 ’eta University of North Carolina 1851 Eta University of Virginia 1852 Kappa Miami University 1852 I ,ambda Kenyon College 1852 Pi Dartmouth College 1853 Iota Central University of Kentucky 1854 Alpha Alpha Middlebury College 1854 Omicron University of Michigan 1855 Epsilon Williams College 855 Rho Lafayette College 1855 Tan Hamilton College 1856 Mu Colgate University 1856 Nu College of the City of New York 1856 I’eta Chi University of Rochester 1856 Phi Chi Rutgers College 1861 Psi Phi De Pauw University 1866 Gamma Phi Wesleyan University 1867 «23 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Psi Omega Rensselaer Polytechnic 1867 Beta Chi Adelbert College 1868 Delta Chi Cornell University 1870 Delta Delta Chicago University 1870 Phi Gamma Syracuse University 1871 Gamma Beta Columbia University 1874 Theta Zeta University of California 1876 Alpha Chi Trinity College 1879 Psi Epsilon University of Minnesota 1889 Sigma Tau Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1890 Tau Lambda Tulane University 1898 Alpha Phi University of Toronto 1898 Delta Kappa University of Pennsylvania 1899 Tau Alpha McGill University 1900 Sigma Rho Leland Stanford, Jr. University 1903 Delta Pi University of Illinois 1904 Rho Delta University of Wisconsin 1906 124 â–ș DELTA KAPPA EPSILON THETA CHAPTER Established in 1844 Chapter Home. Corner ol Maine and Collette Street FRATRES IN FACULTATE Prof. G. T. Little. Litt. 1). John M. Bridgham. A. M. Prof. Allen Johnson, Ph. 1). Thomas J. Burragc. A. M., M. D. Prof. K. C. M. Sills, A. M. Gilbert M. Elliott. A. M.. M. D. Prof. F. N. Whittier. A. M., M. 1). FRATRES IN URBE Hartley C. Baxter, A. 15. David 1). Gilman, A. 15. Rupert II. Baxter. A. II. James R. Jordan. A. 15. Ralph P. Bodwell, A. 15. George L. Thompson. A. B. Charles II. Cumston. A. M.. M. D. Jesse D. Wilson, A. I ., S. B. William L. Gahan, A. 15. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Ralph Owen Brewster Ezra Ralph Bridge Harold llitz Burton Max Pearson Cushing Thomas Amcdeus Gastonguay William Matthew Harris Walter Palmer Hincklev Seniors John West Manter Harold Newman Marsh Robert Maxwell Pennell Thomas Francis Shehan. Jr. Robert Goff Stubbs Leonard Fremont Timberlakc w '25 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Charles Austin Cary Henry Jewett Colbath John Leland Crosby Ralph. Savage Crowell Robert Burleigh Martin Juniors Edward Curtis Matthews, Jr. Francis Benjamin Spurling Alfred Wheeler Stone Thomas Westcott Williams Harry Whiting Woodward Melville Cony Aubery Franz Upham Burkett John James Devine Ernest Gibson Fificld Philip Herman Hansen Sophomores Alden Sprague Hichborn Robert Merton Lawlis James G. Blaine McKusick Harry Lawrence Wiggin Eugene Francis Bradford George Clark Brooks Robert Dan forth Cole Richard Odell Conant Herbert Andrew Davis Maurice Herbert Gray Stanley John Hinch Freshmen Robert Craig Houston Henry Alexander Libby Leland Green Means Frederick Benjamin Simpson Frank Arthur Smith Richard Frazar White Allan Woodcock 126 ZETA PSI Colors—Crimson and White Founded at New York University in 1847 Phi CHAPTER ROLL New York University 1847 Zeta Williams College 1848 Delta Rutgers College 1848 Sigma University of Pennsylvania 1850 Chi Colby College 1850 Epsilon Brown University 1852 Kappa Tufts College 1855 Tau Lafayette College 1857 Upsilon University of North Carolina 1858 Xi University of Michigan 1858 Lambda Bowdoin College 1867 Beta University of Virginia 1868 Psi Cornell University 1868 Iota University of California 1870 Gamma Syracuse University 1875 Theta Xi University of Toronto J879 Alpha Columbia University 1879 Alpha Psi McGill University 1883 Nu Case School of Applied Science 1884 Eta Yale University 1889 Mu Lcland Stanford University 1892 Alpha Beta University of Minnesota 1899 127 The Bou)Join Bugle, 1910 Ralph George Bailey Richard Raymond Eastman Lawrence Gorham Ludwig Parker Toward N ickerson Daniel John Readey Juniors I iarold Edwin Rowell Charles Albert Smith Ralph Woodward Smith Harold Edward Weeks Fred Charles Black Frank Hastings Burns Read Clark 1 lorsman Stetson Harlow Hussey David Scribner Hinder Sophomores William Folsom Merrill Keith Nelson Pearson Charles Dudley Robbins George Alexander Torsney Bernard Dewey Bosworth Mark Wescott Burlingame Clyde Raymond Chapman Reginald Edison Foss Raymond White Hathaway Freshmen John 1-awrencc Hurley John Teague Hale Carl Billings Timberlake George Frank Wilson 1 Iarold Perry Vannah F29 THETA DELTA CHI Colors—Black. White and Blue Founded at Union College in 1848 Epsilon CHARGE ROLL William and Mary College 1853 Zeta Brown University 1853 Eta Bowdoin College 1854 Iota Harvard University 1856 Kappa Tufts College 1856 Xi Hobart College 857 Phi Lafayette College 1866 Chi University of Rochester 1867 Psi Hamilton College 1868 Omicron Deuteron Dartmouth College 1869 Beta Cornell University 1870 Lambda Boston University 1876 Pi Deuteron College of the Citv of New York 1881 Rho Deuteron Columbia University 1883 Mu Deuteron Lehigh University 1SS4 Nu Deuteron Amherst College 1885 Gamma Deuteron University of Michigan 1889 Iota Deuteron Williams College 1891 Sigma Deuteron University of Wisconsin 1895 Tau Deuteron University of Minnesota 189.S Chi Deuteron George Washington University 1896 Delta Deuteron University of California 1900 Zeta Deuteron McGill University 1901 Eta Deuteron I-eland Stanford, Jr. University 1902 Theta Deuteron Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1906 Kappa Deuteron University of Illinois 1908 130 THETA DELTA CHI ETA CHARGE Established in 1854 Chiptei Ifcuir. Cotnrt ol Maine and McKern Sited FRATER IN FACULTATE Prof. W. I . Mitchell, A. M. FRATER IN URBE Rev. II. A. Jump, A. 15. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO I larrison Atwood W allace Hanson Hayden C arl Ellis Stone Clyde Leroy Doming Sumner Edwards James Forbush Hamburger Harlan Frank Hansen Henry (Juinby Hawes Leon Stanley Lippincott Seniors James Melvin Sturtevant Leonard Foster Wakefield John Alexander Wentworth Juniors Harold Potter Marsh William Proctor Newman I iarold Wilson Slocum Leon Hartley Smith Raymond Anderson Tuttle 3« The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Limvood Everett Clark Alonzo Garcclon Dennis Orison Perkins Haley George Wilson Howe Sophomores Harold Percival Marston Frank Pierce Richards Horace Herbert Watson Harold Preble Whitmore Charles Francis Adams Philip Pearson Cole Janies Lyons Crane George Fabyan Crcsscy Fresh men John Henry Joy Stephen Carroll Perry, Jr. Frank Davis Slocum Arthur Deehan Welch  32 DELTA UPSILON Colors—Old Gold and Peacock Blue Founded at Williams College in 1834 CHAPTER ROLL Williams Williams College 834 Union Union College 1838 1 lamilton 1 lamilton College 1847 Amherst Amherst College 1847 Western Reserve Western Reserve University 1847 Colby Colby College 1852 Rochester University of Rochester 1852 Middleburv Middleburv College 1856 Bowdoin Bowdoin College '857 Rutgers Rutgers College 1858 Brown Brown University i860 Colgate Colgate University 1865 New York New York University 1865 Miami Miami University 1868 Cornell Cornell University 1869 Marietta Marietta College 1870 Syracuse Syracuse University «873 M ichigan University of Michigan 1876 North Western Northwestern University 1880 1 larvard Harvard University 1880 Wisconsin University of Wisconsin 1885 1 .a layette Lafayette College 1885 Columbia Columbia University 1885 Lehigh Lehigh University 1885 133 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Tufts Tufts College 1886 De Pauw De Pauw University 1887 Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania 1888 Minnesota University of Minnesota 1890 Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology 1891 Swarthmore Swarthmore College 1894 California University of California 1896 Leland Stanford Leland Stanford, Jr. University 1896 McGill McGill University 1898 Nebraska University of Nebraska 1898 Toronto University of Toronto 1899 Chicago University of Chicago 1901 Ohio Ohio State University 1904 Illinois University of Illinois  905 '34 DELTA UPSILON BOWDOIN CHAPTER Established in 1857 Chapter Houtc. t j Maine Street FRATER IN FACULTATE Prof. V. F. Brown. Ph. I). James I . Cochrane. A. 15. Samuel 15. Furbish. S. II. Cieorge A. 11 owe. A. 15. Frederic I'. Nelson. A. 15. FRATRES IN URBE Samuel V. Pearson. A. 15. Joseph S. Stetson Cornelius J. Taylor Percy (ilenham P.ishop lieorge Henry Buck Roy ClilTord Harlow Willard True Phillips Ernest Harold Pottle FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Seniors I larold Sewall Pratt Cly le I Car I Richardson Arthur Lawrence Smith Harold Merton Smith Pcrlcy Conant Voter «35 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 William Elbridge Atwood Frank Bernard McGlone Colby Lorenzo Morton Juniors Thomas Cooley Phelps Alfred Wilhelm Wandtke Earl Lytton Wing Harrison Morton Berry Robert Bradford Maurice Fierce Hill Alfred Wellington Johnson Lawrence McFarland Sophomores Edward James Barnes Palmer Waldo Thompson Skillin Abraham Jacob Somes Richard Wesley Sullivan DeForest Weeks Janies Bailey Allen Meredith Bodine Auten Solloman Morrison Blanchard Kendrick Burns Theodore William Daniels Willis Elvin Dodge Lendall Durant Lincoln True Edgecomb Makepeace Seward Joseph Marsh Freshmen Percy Warren Mathews William Alexander McCormick John Houston Mifflin Ralph Gilbraith Oakes Lyde Stuart Pratt Carl Dana Skillin George Tibbetts Ernest Eugene Weeks 136 KAPPA SIGMA Colors—White. Red and Green Established at the University of Virginia in 1867 Zeta CHAPTER ROLL University of Virginia 1867 1 eta University of Alabama 1869 Alpha Alpha University of Maryland 873 Eta Prime Trinity College. North Carolina '873 Mu Washington and Lee University 1873 Alpha Beta Mercer University  875 Kappa Vanderbilt University 1876 Alpha Chi Lake Forest University 1880 Lambda University of Tennessee 1880 Phi Southwestern Presbyterian University 1882 ()mega University of the South 1882 L’psilon I lampden-Sidney College 1883 Tau University of Texas 1884 Chi Purdue University 1885 Psi University of Maine 1886 Iota Southwestern University 1886 (iatnma Louisiana State University 1887 Theta Cumberland University 1887 Beta Theta University of Indiana 1887 Pi Swartlnnore College 1888 Eta Randolph-Macon College 1888 Sigma Tulane University 1889 Xu College of William and Mary 1890 Delta Davidson College 1890 Xi University of Arkansas 1890 Alpha Gamma University of Illinois 1891 Alpha Delta Pennsylvania State College 1892 Alpha Epsilon University of Pennsylvania 1892 Alpha Zeta University of Michigan 1892 Alpha Eta George Washington University 1892 Alpha Kappa Cornell University 1892 Alpha Lambda University of Vermont 893 Alpha Mu University of North Carolina 1893 Alpha Pi Wabash College 1895 Alpha Rho Bowdoin College 1895 Alpha Sigma ()hio State University 1895 â–ș 37 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Alpha Tau Georgia School of Technology 1895 Alpha Upsilon Millsaps College 1895 Alpha Phi Buckncll University 1896 Alpha Psi University of Nebraska 1897 Alpha Omega W i 11 iam-J ew el 1 College 1897 Beta Alpha Brown University 1898 Beta Beta Richmond College 1898 Beta Gamma Missouri State University 1898 Beta Delta Washington and Jefferson College 1898 Beta Epsilon University of Wisconsin 1898 Beta Zeta Leland Stanford, Jr. University 1899 Beta Eta Alabama Polytechnic Institute 1900 Beta Iota Lehigh University 1900 Beta Kappa New Hampshire State College 1901 Beta Lambda University of Georgia 1901 Beta Mu University of Minnesota 1901 Beta Omicron University of Denver 1901 Beta Xi University of California 1901 Beta Nu University of Kentucky 1902 Beta Pi Dickinson College 1902 Beta Rho University of Iowa 1902 Beta Sigma Washington University 1902 Beta Tau Baker University, Kansas 1903 Beta Psi University of Washington 1903 Beta Upsilon North Carolina College 1903 Beta Chi Missouri School of Mines 1903 Beta Phi Case School of Applied Science 1903 Beta Omega Colorado College 1904 Gamma Alpha University of Oregon 1904 Gamma Beta University of Chicago 1904 Gamma Gamma Colorado School of Mines 1904 Gamma Delta Massachusetts State College 1904 Gamma Epsilon Dartmouth College «005 Gamma Zeta New York University 1905 Gamma Eta Harvard University  905 Gamma Theta University of Idaho 1905 Gamma Iota Syracuse University 1906 Gamma Kappa University of Oklahoma 1906 Gamma Lambda Iowa State College 1909 Gamma Mu Washington State College 1909 Gamma Nu Washbourne College 1909 «38 KAPPA SIGMA ALPHA RHO CHAPTER Established in 1895 Chiptrr Houte. Cotnri i l Collm  nd Hup «rll Sllffli FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Ralph Henry Files Ernest Leroy (ioodspeed Daniel Michael McDade Harold I Scarce ISallard Stuart Franklin lirown Alton I (ones Farrin Ralph ISoothhv Grace Seniors Albert Willis Moulton Harry Clyde Merrill C harles Leon Stevens Juniors William Stewart Guptill Merrill Christy Hill Thomas C )tis  39 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Charles Hinckley Byles William Henry Callahan William Harper Chapin Philip Horatio Kimball Sophomores Charles Lewis Oxnard Edward Skelton Roland Hiram Waitt Chester Granville Abbott Elden Greenwood Barbour Henry Adic Briggs Chester Leonard Clarke George Thomas Corea Walter James Greenleaf Edward Oliver Leigh Freshmen Harry Arthur Nickerson Benjamin Hinckley Riggs Burleigh Cushing Rodick William Riley Spinney Edward Wardsworth Torrey Carl Orestes Warren Andrew Donald Weston 140 BETA THETA PI Colors—Pink and Light Blue Founded at Miami University in 1839 Alpha CHAPTER ROLL Miami University 1839 Beta Western Reserve University 1841 Beta Kappa Ohio University 1841 Beta Nu Cincinnati University 1841 Gamma Washington and Jefferson College 1842 Delta De Pauw University 1845 Pi Indiana University 1845 Lambda University of Michigan 1845 Tau Wabash College 1846 Epsilon Central University, Kentucky 1848 Kappa Brown University 1849 Zeta Hampden-Sidney College 1850 Eta Beta University of North Carolina 1852 Theta Ohio Wesleyan University 1853 Iota Hanover College 1853 Alpha Xi Knox College ‱855 Omicron University of Virginia 1855 Phi Alpha Davidson College 1858 Psi Bethany College i860 Chi Beloit College 1862 Alpha Beta University of Iowa 1863 Alpha Gamma Wittenberg College 1867 Alpha Delta Westminster College 1867 Alpha Epsilon Iowa Wesleyan University 1868 Alpha Rho University of Chicago 1868 Alpha Eta Denison College 1868 Alpha Iota Washington University 1869 Alpha Lambda University of Wooster 1872 Alpha Nu University of Kansas 1872 Alpha Pi University of Wisconsin 1873 Rho Northwestern University 1873 Alpha Sigma Dickinson College 1874 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Upsilon Boston University 1876 Alpha Chi Johns Hopkins University 1877 Omega University of California 1879 Beta Alpha Kenyon College 1879 Beta Gamma Rutgers College 1879 Beta Delta Cornell University 1879 Sigma Stevens Institute of Technology 1879 Beta Zeta St. Lawrence University 1879 Beta Eta University of Maine 1879 Phi University of Pennsylvania 1880 Beta Theta Colgate University 1880 N11 Union College 1881 Alpha Alpha Columbia University 1881 Beta Iota Amherst College 1883 Beta Lambda Vanderbilt University 1884 Beta Omicron University of Texas 1885 Theta Delta Ohio State University 1885 Alpha Tau University of Nebraska 1888 Alpha Upsilon Pennsylvania State College 1888 Alpha Zeta University of Denver 1888 Beta Epsilon Syracuse University 1889 Alpha Omega Dartmouth College 1889 Beta Pi University of Minnesota 1890 Mu Epsilon Wesleyan University 1890 Zeta Phi University of Missouri 1890 Beta Chi Lehigh University 1891 Phi Chi Yale University 1892 Alpha Sigma Leland Stanford, Jr. University 1894 Beta Sigma Bowdoin College 1900 Beta Tau University of Colorado 1900 Beta Psi University of West Virginia 1900 Beta Omega Washington State University 1901 Sigma Rho University of Illinois 1902 Beta Mu Purdue University 1903 Lambda Kappa Case School of Applied Science 1905 Theta Zeta University of Toronto 1906 Tau Sigma Iowa State College 1906 Gamma Phi University of Oklahoma 1907 Beta Xi Tulane University 190S Beta Phi Colorado School of Mines 1908 142 BETA THETA PI BETA SIGMA CHAPTER Established in 1900 Chapter House. 14 McKern Street FRATER IN URBE Willis Elmer Roberts, A. B. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Guy Parkhurst Estes Thomas Davis Ginn William Haines Frank Caradoc Evans Elmer Hamilton Hobbs Frank Estes Kendrie Seniors Daniel Francis Koughan Paul Jones Newman Oramel Henry Stanley Juniors Ira Brown Robinson Sereno Sewall Webster George Cony Weston '43 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Harold Vincent Bickmore John Leslie Brummett Harold Nichols Burnham John Everett Cartland John Libby Curtis Lawrence Davis Sophomores Walter Nelson Emerson Harold Kirkland Mine Roderick Paul Hinc Edward Eugene Kern George Herbert Macombcr Alton Stackpole Pope Kenneth Churchill Roy Lincoln Estes I-owell Sandborn Foote Eugene Bradley Gordon Francis Elias Harrington Fred Willis Hart Freshmen George Craigin Kern Jesse Hamilton Me Kenney Joseph Henry Newell Arthur Hale Parcher George Hawley Stewart 144 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 SUMMARY OF FRATERNITIES A A I 41 A Y 45 Y 25 K 2 33 A K E 46 B 0 n 35 Z 37 0 A X 33 Total in fraternities 295 ms V V FRATERNITY CONVENTIONS Alpha Delta Phi Albany, New York, February 18-20, 1909. Delegates: Harry F. Hinklcy and Irving L. Rich. Psi Upsilon Rochester, New York, May 14 and 15, 1908. Delegates: Arthur H. Ham and Chester A. Leighton. Delta Kappa Epsilon Hartford, and New Haven, Connecticut, November 11-13. 1908. Delegate: Thomas F. Shehan, Jr. Zeta Phi Toronto, Canada, January 8-9, 1909. Delegate: Dudley Hovev. Theta Delta Chi Boston, Massachusetts, February 20-23, 1909. Delegates: Harrison Atwood and James F. Hamburger. Delta Upsilon Swarthmore, Pennsylvania, October 22-24, 1908. Delegates: Harold M. Smith and William E. Atwood. Kappa Sigma Denver, Colorado, July 1-3, 190S. Delegate: Sturgiss Leavitt. Beta Theta Pi Niagara Falls, New York, August 4-6, 1908. Delegate: Guy P. Estes. 146 FACULTY. Rev. William DeWitt Hyde, D. D., LL. D., President Born in Winchendon. Mass., September 23, 1858. Fitted at Phillips Exeter Academy; graduated from Harvard University, 1879: studied at Union Theological Seminary, 1879-80; Andover Theological Seminary, 1880-82; Andover, and Harvard University, 1882-83. Pas- tor of the Congregational Church, Paterson, N. J., 1883-85. Called to the presidency of Bowdoin College and the Medical School of Maine, 1885. Author of “Practical Ethics. “Social Theology,” “Practical Idealism,” “God’s Education of Man,” “Jesus’ Way,” “From Epicurus to Christ,” “The Art of Optimism,” “The College Man and the College Woman.” A frequent contributor to leading periodicals. Member of American Philosophical Asso- ciation. Signet and O K Senior Societies at Harvard. B K Fraternity. Alfred Mitchell, M. D., LL. D., Dean Professor of Internal Medicine Born in North Yarmouth, March 17, 1837. Graduated from Bowdoin College, 1859; College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia College, 1865. Assistant professor of Path- ology and Practice of Medicine, Medical School of Maine, 1869-73; professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Children, 1873-97; professor of Gynecology, 1875-92; lecturer on Path- ology and Practice of Medicine, 1897, professor, 1897—‱ Consulting physician, Maine Gen- eral Hospital, 1878—. Consulting physician. Central Maine General Hospital, Consulting physician, Children's Hospital, Portland. Fellow of American Academy of Medicine; president of Maine Medical Association, 1892-93. X 'F Fraternity. Stephen Holmes Weeks, M. D., LL. D. Professor Emeritus of Surgery Born in Cornish. October 6, 1835. Fitted at Frycburg Academy; attended Medical Lec- tures at Bowdoin College, 1862: graduated from Medical Department, University of Pennsyl- vania, 1864; A. M. from Bowdoin, 1889: LL. D. from Amherst, 1905. Professor of Anat- omy, Medical School of Maine, 1877-81; Surgciy. 1882-1905. Consulting Surgeon, Maine General Hospital and Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary. A contributor to Medical Journals. Fellow of American Surgical Association. Fellow of American Academy of Medicine. Member of Maine Medical Association, and of International Medical Congress in Berlin, 1890. A member of the American Medical Association. 149 The Bowdoin Bugle, 910 Frederic Henry Gerrjsh. M. D.. LL. D. Professor of Surgery Born in Portland. March 21. 1845. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Bowdoin College. 1866; Medical School of Maine, 1869. LL. D. from University of Michi- gan 1904, Bowdoin College, 1905; Professor of Physiology. University of Michigan, 1873-75; professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics. Medical School of Maine, 1872-82; professor of Anatomy, 1882-1905; professor of Surgery. 1905—. Consulting surgeon. Maine General Hospital. Edited a “Text-book of Anatomy by American Authors,” 1899; a frequent con- tributor to medical and scientific journals. Fellow of American Surgical Association, and American Academy of Medicine (president. 1SS7-88). Member of Societc Internationale dc Cbirurgie, Association of American Anatomists, American Therapeutic Society (presi- dent 1908-9). American Medical Association, American Public Health Association. Maine Medical Association (president, 1902). Cumberland County Medical Society (president 1876). American Society of Naturalists, Society for Psychical Research. Maine Historical Society, and Maine Genealogical Society. Formerly president of Maine State Board of Health. President Portland Dispensary. Overseer of Bowdoin College, 1886—. The Shat- tuck Lecturer, Massachusetts Medical Society, 1910. A A and «l B K Fraternities. Charles Oliver Hunt. A. M., M. D. Professor of Materia Medica and Therapeutics Born in Gorham, April 26. 1839. Fitted at Gorham Academy; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1861; Medical Department. University of Pennsylvania. 1868. Instructor, Port- land School for Medical Instruction, 1869-1903; professor of Materia Medica and Thera- peutics, Medical School of Maine, 1882—. Resident physician and superintendent, Maine General Hospital, 1874-1902. Member of the Military Order of the Loyal Legion. Pres- ident Maine Medical Association, 1898-99. A A 1 and «I B K Fraternities. Franklin Clement Robinson, LL. D. Professor of Chemistry Born in East Orrington, April 24, 1852. Fitted at Bangor High School: graduated from Bowdoin College, 1873: studied at Harvard University, 1882-84. Instructor in Chem- istry and Mineralogy at Bowdoin, 1874-78, professor. 1878—. Fellow of American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science; ex-president of American Public Health Asso- ciation; executive committee of Society of Chemical Industry. Member of American Chemical Society, and Berlin Chemical Society. A A 1 and b B K Fraternities. Lucilius Alonzo Emery, LL. D. Professor of Medical Jurisprudence Born in Carmel, July 27, 1840. Fitted at Hampden Academy; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1861. Studied law in Bangor; began practice in Ellsworth. 1863. Member of State Senate, 1874-75, and 1881-82. Attorney General of Maine. 1876-79. Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine. 1883-1906. Chief Justice 1906—. Professor of Medical Jurisprudence, Medical School of Maine, 1889—. Member of Athcntcum Society. 4' T and ‘l- B K Fraternities. 150 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Charles Dennison Smith. A. M., M. D. Professor of Physiology and Hygiene Born in Portland, November 8, 1855. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Colby College. 1877: Medical School of Maine, 1879; studied in Vienna and Berlin. Lec- turer on Hygiene. Medical School of Maine, 1890; professor of Physiology, 1891—. Path- ologist, Maine General Hospital, 1894-95, visiting physician, 1895-1902, superintendent and resident physician, 1902—. President of Maine State Board of Health, 1904. Member of Maine Medical Association, and American Association of Anatomists. Albert Roscoe Moulton, M. D. Professor of Mental Diseases Born in Parsonsfteld, September 21, 1852. Fitted at Limerick Academy; studied the branches taught at Bowdoin College under private instructors; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1876; studied at Edinburgh and Paris, 1891. Assistant physician, New Hampshire Insane Asylum, 1876; assistant physician, McLean Hospital, 1877; assistant physician, Worcester Insane Hospital, 1877-88; inspector of Institutions, Massachusetts State Board of Lunacy and Charity. 1888-91, during which time he drew the plans for the Medfield Insane Asylum; physician, Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane, 1891—. Professor of Mental diseases. Medical School of Maine, 1893—. Member of Massachusetts Medical Society, Worcester Medical Improvement Society, Boston Medico-Psychological Society, American Academy of Medicine, Philadelphia County Medical Society, Philadelphia Neurological Society, College of Physicians of Philadelphia, and American Medico-Psy- chological Association. Willis Bryant Moulton, A. M., M. D. Professor of Ophthalmology and Otology Born in Cornish. July 3, 1862. Fitted at Cape Elizabeth High School; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1883; pursued private course at Dcmilt Dispensary and New York Polyclinic, 1884. Surgeon, Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary, 1886-92; surgeon, Eye and Ear Department. Maine General Hospital, 1893—. Instructor in Ophihamology and Otol- Ear Department, Maine General Hospital. 1893—. Instructor in Ophthalmology and Otol ogy, Portland School for Medical Instruction, 1893-1904; professor of Ophthalmology American Laryngological Association, American Medical Association, Maine Eye and Ear Association, Lister Club, and Innomiatc Club. John Franklin Thompson, A. M., M. D. Professor of Diseases of Women Born in Eastport. October 14, 1859. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Dartmouth College, 1882; Medical School of Maine, 1886. Surgeon, Maine General Hos- pital, 1890—. Instructor in Diseases of Women. Medical School of Maine, 1891-92, pro- fessor. 1892—. Member of Maine Medical Association, American Gynecological Society, American Academy of Medicine, American Medical Association, and Maine Historical Society. A A «I , A K K, and 4 B K Fraternities.  5« The Bowdoin Bugle, 19JO Addison Sanford Thayer, A. B., M. D. Professor of Diseases of Children Born in Medway, Mass., August 5. 1858. Fitted at Phillips Andover Academy; grad- uated from Harvard University, 1881; Medical School of Maine, 1886: M. D. ad eundem from Harvard, 188S. Hospital work, Maine General Hospital. 1886-87. McLean Hospital. 1887-88, in Berlin, Dresden, and Vienna, 1891-92, at various times in New York, Philadel- phia, and Baltimore. Pathologist. Maine General Hospital. 1888-1894: visiting physician, 1894—. Instructor in Practice of Medicine, Portland School for Medical Instruction. 1890- 1904; demonstrator of Anatomy, Medical School of Maine, 1889-95; assistant in Practice of Medicine, 1895-97; lecturer on Diseases of Children, 1897. professor, 1898—. Member cf the Signet, Senior Society at Harvard and A K K Fraternity. Frank Nathaniel Whittier, A. M., M. D. Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology Born in Farmington. December 12. 1861. Fitted at Wilton Academy; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1885; studied law, 1885-86; studied physical culture under Dr. Dudley A. Sargent, 1886-88; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1889. Director of the Gymnasium at Bowdoin, 1886—; lecturer on Hygiene, 1891 —; professor of Hygiene and Physical Training, 1908—; instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology, Medical School of Maine, 1897-1901, professor 1901— Pathologist, Maine General Hospital, 1909. The first man in the country to use the scrum test for human blood in a court case; also the first to demonstrate the fact that the firing pin of every rifle has a distinct individuality which can be shown by photomicrographs, and that this individuality is stamped upon the primer of a shell at the time of firing. Member of American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists. Member of American Academy of Medicine, Maine Medical Association, Society of Gymnasium Directors, and Association for the Advancement of Physical Edu- cation. A K E, !â–ș X and 'I' B K Fraternities. Edward Joseph McDonough, A. B., M. D. Professor of Obstetrics Born in Portland, August 10, 1867. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Holy Cross College, 1889; Medical School of Maine, 1S92. In Maine General Hospital, 1892-93, pathologist, 1896-1902, visiting physician, 1902—. Instructor in Histology, Medical School of Maine, 1897-1903; lecturer on Obstetrics, 1903, professor, 1904—. Member of Maine Medical Association, American Medical Association, American Academy of Medi- cine, and Association of American Anatomists. I X Fraternity. Charles Bryant Witherle, A. B., M. D. Professor of Neurology Born in Castinc, January 15, 1855. Graduated from Harvard College. 1876: Harvard Medical School. 1881. Practiced at St. Paul. Minn., and Portland. Instructor in Neu- rology, Medical School of Maine, 1903-05, professor, 1905—. Visiting physician, Maine General Hospital. ‱52 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Walter Eaton Tobie, M. D. Professor of Anatomy Born in Lewiston, December 12, 1869. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1899. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1899-1900, pathologist, 1902-03, adjunct surgeon, 1903-07, associate surgeon, 1907—. Instructor in Surgery, Portland School for Medical Instruction, 1902-03; instructor in Surgery and Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, Medical School of Maine, 1903-04. Lecturer in Anat- omy, 1905: professor, 1906—. Secretary, Maine Medical Association, 1903-08. Member of Portland Board of Health, and Association of American Anatomists. Chairman of Maine Anatomical Board. 1 X Fraternity. Henry Herbert Brock, A. B., M. D. Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery Bern in Portland, May 30, 1864. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Amherst College, 1886; Medical School of Maine, 1890. Surgeon, Maine General Hospital. Assistant in Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1897-1902, instructor, 1902-04, assistant professor, 1904. Member of Maine Medical Association, and American Academy of Med- icine. l X Fraternity. Alfred Mitchell, Jr., A. B., M. D. Instructor in Genito-Urinary Surgery Born in Brunswick, December 6, 1872. Fitted at Brunswick High School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1895; Medical School of Maine, 1898; studied at Johns Hopkins University, 1901-1903. Staff at Togus, 1898-1901 ; practiced in Portland, 1902. Adjunct sur- geon, Maine General Hospital, 1902-06; Genito-Urinary surgeon, 1906—; consulting sur- geon, St. Barnabas Hospital. Instructor in Genito-Urinary Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1902—. 'k T and 4- X Fraternities. Gustav Adolf Pudor, A. B., M. D. Instructor in Dermatology Born in Portland. August 31, 1864. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Harvard University, 1886; Harvard Medical School, 1889; studied in Berlin, 1889 91, 1897, and 1905. Instructor in Dermatology, Medical School of Maine, 1903—. Member of American Medical Association, Maine Medical Association, American Academy of Med- icine, Portland Medical Club, Pathological Club, and American Urological Society. Edville Gerhardt Abbott, A. B„ M. D. Clinical Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery Born in Hancock, November 6, 1872. Student at East Maine Conference Seminary, Bucksport; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1898; studied at Friedrick Wilhelm Universitat, Berlin, Germany. 1900; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1906. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1898; hospital work in Boston and New York, 1899; Orthopedic surgeon, Maine General Hospital, 1900; consulting Orthopedic surgeon at Sisters Hos- pital, Lewiston; visiting Orthopedic surgeon at St. Barnabas Hospital. Clinical Instructor in Orthopedic Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1903—. Member of American Medical Association, and Maine Medical Societies, 'k T and «k X Fraternities. ‱53 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Gilbert Molleson Elliott. A. M., M. D. Demonstrate!- of Anatomy Born in New York City. March 26, 1867. Fitted in public schools of New York: grad- uated from College of City of New York. 1886; studied medicine at Columbia, 1886-90. Since 1891 has practiced in Brunswick. Demonstrator of Anatomy, Medical School of Maine, 1905—. Member Maine Medical Association, Association of Military Surgeons of United States, and Association of American Anatomists. A K E and A K K Fraternities. Richard Dresser Small, A. B., M. D. Demonstrator of Histology and Instructor in Obstetrics Born in Portland. March 15, 1872. Fitted at Portland High School: graduated from Harvard University, 1894: Harvard Medical School, 1898. Adjunct surgeon, Maine Gen- eral Hospital, 1902-07; associate surgeon, 1907—. Demonstrator of Histology, Medical School of Maine, 1903—; instructor in Obstetrics, 1905—. Member of Maine Medical Asso- ciation, and Association of American Anatomists. Herbert Francis Twitchei.l, M. D. Clinical Instructor in Surgery Born in Bethel, November 16, 1859. Graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1883. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1883-84, adjunct surgeon, 1895-1901. surgeon, 1901—. Practiced at Freeport until 1892. Instructor in Clinical Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1905—. William Herbert Bradford, A. M., M. D. Instructor in Surgery and Clinical Surgery Born in Lewiston, January 1, 1866. Fitted at Lewiston High School; graduated from Bowdoin College, 1888; Medical School of Maine, 1S91; A. M. from Bowdoin, 1891. Adjunct surgeon, Maine General Hospital, 1895-1901, attending surgeon, 1901—. Instructor in Surgery and Clinical Surgery. Medical School of Maine, 1905—. Member of American Academy of Medicine, Maine Medical Association, and Cumberland County Medical Asso- ciation. A A 4 Fraternity. Arthur Scon' Gilson, M. D. Instructor in Clinical Surgery Born in Portland, May 17, 1855. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1894. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1894-95, adjunct surgeon, 1896-1903, surgeon, 1903—. Instructor in Clinical Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1906—. Member of Maine Medical Association. 4 X Fraternity.  54 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 William Lewis Cousins, M. D. Instructor in Clinical Surgery Born in Limington. October 2, 1870. Fitted at Fryeburg Academy, and Limington Academy; entered Portland School for Medical Instruction, 1890; attended one term of lectures. Medical School of Maine; graduated from Medical Department of University of Pennsylvania, 1894. Assistant resident surgeon, Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1894-95; con- sulting Gynecologist, out-patient department, Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary; surgeon, Maine General Hospital. Instructor in Clinical Surgery, Medical School of Maine, 1895—. Mem- ber of Maine Medical Association, and American Medical Association. James Alfred Spalding, A. M., M. D. Clinical Instructor in Ophthalmology and Otology Born in Portsmouth, N. H., August 20. 1846. Graduated from Dartmouth College, 1866; Harvard Medical School, 1870; studied in Europe. Settled in Portland, 1873. In- structor in Ophthalmology and Otology. Medical School of Maine, 1906—. Member of American Ophthalmological Society, American Academy of Medicine, Maine Medical So- ciety. American Academy of Oto-Laryngology and Opthalmology, and Portland Clinical Society. Gilman Davis, M. D. Instructor in Diseases of the Nose and Throat Bom in Portland, January 13. 1869. Graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1893; post-graduate work, University of Vienna, 1901-02. Surgeon for the Nose and Throat, Maine Eye and Ear Infirmary, and Maine General Hospital, 1903. Instructor in Diseases of the Nose and Throat, Medical School of Maine, 1905—. t X Fraternity. James Edward Keating, A. B., M. D. Instructor in Internal Medicine Born in Portland, June 7, 1864. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Holy Cross College; Medical School of Maine, 1895. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1895-96; adjunct attending physician; attending physician, Portland Polyclinic, 1903; Con- sulting physician of Hospital for Crippled Children. Instructor in Internal Medicine, Medi- cal School of Maine, 1905. Member Maine Medical Association. l X Fraternity. Willis Bean Moulton, A. B., M. D. Instructor in Diseases of Women Born in Portland, March 20, 1877. Graduated from Bowdoin College, 1899; Medical Department, Johns Hopkins University, 1903. Resident house surgeon, Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1903-04; adjunct surgeon, Maine General Hospital, 1905—. Instructor in Dis- eases of Women, Medical School of Maine, 1905—. Fellow of American Academy of Medicine; Member of Maine Medical Association, 'k T and «I B K Fraternities. 55 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Fked Paterson Webster. M. D. Instructor in Diseases of Children Born in Somerville. Mass.. 1878. Fitted at Boston English High School; graduated from Harvard Medical School, iqoi. Medical House Officer. Massachusetts General Hoe pital. 1901-03: Medical house officer. Boston Children’s Hospital, 1903. Adjunct physician, Maine General Hospital. 1907—. Visiting physician, Portland Children’s Hospital. 1908--. Instructor in Diseases of Children. Medical School of Maine. 1905—- Member of Maine Medical Association. I X Fraternity. Edwin Wagner Geiiring. S. B.. M. D. Instructor in Physiology Born in Cleveland, Ohio, March 3, 1876. Fitted at University School. Cleveland: graduated from Cornell University, 1900; Medical School of Maine. 1904. House doctor. Maine General Hospital. 1904-03. adjunct visiting physician. 1906—. Instructor iti Phy- siology, Medical School of Maine, 1905—. Member of American Academy of Medicine, American Medical Association, Maine Medical Association and New England Pediatric So- ciety. 2 A E and I X Fraternities. Thomas Jayne Burrage, A. M.f M. D. Assistant Demonstrator in Histology Born in Portland. Maine, November 15, 1875. Graduated from Brown University, 1898, A. M. from Brown, 1S99; graduated from Harvard Medical School. 1903; Assistant Demonstrator of Histology. Medical School of Maine, 1906—. Member of Boylston Med- ical Society, and Acsculapias Club. A K E and I B K Fraternities. Charles Henry Hunt. A. B., M. D. Instructor in Materia Medica Born in Portland, January 9. 1881. Graduated from Bowdoin College, 1902; Medical School of Maine, 1905. House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1905, adjunct surgeon, 1906. Instructor in Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Medical School of Maine. 1905—. T and 'l B K Fraternities. Wallace Wadsworth Dyson, M. D. Instructor and Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy Born in Fairbury, III., December 27, 1871. Fitted at Bridgton High School; graduated from Medical School of Maine. 1900. House doctor, Maine General Hospital. 1900-01. adjunct surgeon. 1905—. Assistant demonstrator of Anatomy. Medical School of Maine. 1935—, instructor, 1906—. 4 X Fraternity. «56 The Bowdoin Bugley 1910 Charles Langmaid Cragi n, M. D. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy Born in Norway, March 2, 1877. Fitted at Norway High School; graduated from Medical School of Maine, 1904- House doctor, Maine General Hospital, 1904—. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, Medical School of Maine, 1907—. Member of Maine Medical Association, and American Medical Association. 4 X Fraternity. Philip Pickering Thompson, A. B.. M. D. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy Born in Portland, April 29, 1881. Fitted at Portland High School; graduated from Dartmouth College, 1902; attended Medical School of Maine, 1902-03; graduated from Johns Hopkins Medical School, 1906. Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy, Medical School of Maine, 1908—. George Thomas Little, Litt. D., Librarian Born in Auburn, May 14. 1857. Fitted at Auburn High School; graduated from Bow- doin College, 1877. Traveled in Europe, 1878 and 1904-05. Instructor in Latin at Thayer Academy, Braintree, Mass., 1878-81 ; instructor in Latin at Bowdoin, 1882-83, professor, 1883-85; assistant in Rhetoric, 1885-89; curator of the Art Collections, 1887-92; librarian for Bowdoin and Medical School of Maine, 1883—. Editor of General Catalogue, 1889—; published. 1882, “Descendants of George Little, Who Came to Newbury, Mass., in 1640.“ Recorder of American Library Association, 1889-92. Member of American Alpine Club, and Appalachian Club. A K E and 4 B K Fraternities. Ira Peirce Hooker, Esq., Treasurer  57 MEDICAL STUDENTS ♩The room of Third and Fourth Year students is in Portland unless otherwise stated. Fourth Year NAME Henry Whiting Ball Willard Hiram Bunker James Francis Cox, A. B. Charles Hunter Cunningham, A. B. Charles Leverett Curtis Everett Clifton Higgins, A. B. George I very Higgins Harris Page Illslcy Irving Ellis Mabry, A. B. Walter Irving Merrill John Luke Murphy Sidney Eugene Pendexter Hugh Francis Quinn, A. B. Archibald Charles Ross Clarence Raymond Simmons Otis Franklin Simonds, A. B. Ivan Staples Herbert Ellery Thompson, A. B. Merlon Ardccn Webber, A. B. Millard Carroll Webber, A. B. Francis Howe Webster, S. B. William Cotman Whitmore, A. B. RESIDENCE COLLEGE ADDRESS Mt. Desert Ferry 568 Congress St. Red Beach 435 St. John St. Moulton 294 Brackett St. Strong 174 Xeal St. Middleton, Mass. 568 Congress St. Clinton 280 Brackett St. Clinton 280 Brackett St. Limington 194 Grant St. East Hiram 89 Spruce St. Portland 435 St. John St. Bartlett, N. H. 174 Xeal St. Portland 561 Congress St. Bangor 294 Brackett St. Portland 280 Brackett St. Appleton 174 X'eal St. Portland 82 India St. Limerick 219 High St. Portland S3 Casco St. Fairfield 14 Wescott St. Fairfield 14 Wescott St. Orland 9 Wescott St. Portland 83 Myrtle St. 15S The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 NAM 1C Third Year RESIDENCE COLLEGE ADDRESS Percy Hobbs Abbott Waterboro 44 Ellsworth St. Harry Edward Anderson South Limington 85 Spring St. Elmer Jonathan Brown Strong 851 Congress St. Hannibal Hamlin Bryant. Jr.. A. B. Waterville 22 Charles St. Lester Warren Carpenter North Waterboro 123 Oxford St. Charles Fuller Dccring Winslow’s Mills 22 Chadwick St. Joseph Blake Drummond. A. B. Portland 105 West St. William Joseph Fahay Lewiston 44 Ellsworth St. Charles Harlow Greene Leo Frederick Hall North Bridgton Augusta 44 Ellsworth St. F.rastus Eugene Holt, Jr.. A. B. Portland 723 Congress St. Ernest Davis Humphreys Henderson 22 Chadwick St. Adam Phillips Leighton, Jr. Portland 261 Western Promenade Linn Bayard Marshall Portland 302 Brackett St. Frank Mikelsky, A. B. Brunswick 851 Congress St. James Atwood Crowell Milliken New Bedford, Mass. Christian Vilhelm Ostcrgrcn Stockholm, Sweden 22 Charles St. Blinn Whittemore Russell, A. B. Farmington 302 Brackett St. Charles Francis Traynor Biddeford 20 Bramhall St. Ricardo Gcronimo Valladares Santa Clara, Cuba 9 Wescott St. Albert Kilburn Baldwin, A. B. Second Year Brunswick 10 Harps well PI. James Donald Clement Belfast 10 M. H. Frank Stephen Dollcy Brunswick 7 School St. Elmer Herbert Jackson Jefferson 2 Bath St. Elmer Henry King Syracuse, N. Y. 10 M. H. Paul Raymond Long Parsonsfield 28 Cumberland St. Charles Jewell Nason Hampden 28 Cumberland St. Carl Merrill Robinson, A. B. Portland 7 A. H. Harold William Stanwood Rumford Falls 22 M. H. «59 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 NAME RESIDENCE COLLEGE ADDRESS Rufus Edwin Stetson. A. B. Damariscotta 262 Maine St. Carl Hervey Stevens Northport 185 Maine St. Cornelius John Taylor Bangor 185 Maine St. Mai ford Wilcox Thcwlis Providence, R. I. 185 Maine St. Harold Grant Tobcy, A. B. Clinton. Mass. 7 A. H. Charles Green Wharton Tulare, Cal. 7 School St. Gusta f Fritz Robert Wollin Ystad, Sweden 10 Cumberland St. First Year Roland Joseph Bennett Dover, N. II. 33 Cumberland St. Freeman Fletcher Brown Vinal Haven 1 High St. George Henry Buck Harrison 4 Cleaveland St. Harold Edwards Carney Portland 11 Everett St. Archibald Wallace Dunn Auburn 252 Maine St. Neil Augustus Fogg Freeport Freeport Alexander Rufus Hagerthy Ellsworth William Matthew Harris Brunswick A K E House Walter Jean Hammond, A. B. Howland 30 Cumberland St. Walter Whitman Hendcc Augusta 174 Maine St. Nathan Chase Hyde Freeport Freeport Howard Francis Kane Machias 84 Federal St. Sumner Waldron Jackson Waldoboro 84 Federal St. Henry Lincoln Johnson Brunswick 44 Union St. Harry Hallock Lente South Thomaston 11 Everett St. Clyde Harold Merrill Auburn Frank Elmer Nolin Skowhegan 84 Federal St. Harold Scwall Pratt Farmington A Y House William Rosen New Bedford, Mass. 185 Maine St. Clarence Linwood Scamman Hart land 84 Federal St. Oramel Henry Stanley Fryeburg 4 Cleaveland St. James Melvin Sturtevant Dixfield 0 A X House John Alexander Wentworth Portland 22 A. H. 160 ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA Colors—Dark Green and White Founded at Dartmouth College, 1888 CHAPTER ROLL Alpha Dartmouth College 1888 Gamma Tufts Medical School 1893 Delta University of Vermont 1894 Zeta Long Island College Medical School 1896 Theta Medical School of Maine 1897 Psi University of Minnesota 1898 Beta San Francisco Medical School 1899 Eta Chicago College of Physicians and Surgeons 1899 Iota University of Syracuse 1899 Sigma University of California 1899 Epsilon Jefferson Medical College 1900 Kappa Milwaukee Medical College 1900 I „ambda Cornell University 1901 Mu University of Pennsylvania 1901 Nu Rush Medical College 1901 Xi Northwestern University 1901 Omicron Miami Medical College 1901 Pi Ohio Medical College 1902 Rho Denver and Gross Medical College 1903 Tan University of the South 1903 Upsilon University of Oregon 1903 Phi Nashville University 1903 Chi Vanderbilt University 1903 Omega University of Tennessee 1903 Alpha Beta Tulane University 1903 Alpha Gamma University of Georgia 1904 Alpha Delta McGill University 1904 Alpha Epsilon University of Toronto 905 Alpha Zeta George Washington University 1905 Alpha Eta Yale Medical School 1906 Alpha Theta University of Texas 1906 Alpha Iota Michigan University 1906 Alpha Kappa Richmond College of Medicine 161 1906 ALPHA KAPPA KAPPA THETA CHAPTER Established in 1897 FRATRES E DOCTORIBUS Prof. F. H. Gerrish, M. D., LL. D. Prof. J. F. Thompson, A. M., M. D. Prof. A. S. Thayer, A. M., M. D. Gilbert M. Elliott. A. M., M. D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Willard Hiram Bunker James Francis Cox, A. B. Walter Irving Merrill John Luke Murphy Sidney Eugene Pendexter FOURTH YEAR. Hugh Francis Quinn, A. B. Archibald Charles Ross Merlon Ardcen Webber, A. B. Millard Carroll Webber, A. B. William Cotman Whitmore, A. B. Joseph Blake Drummond, A. B. Erastus Eugene Holt, Jr., A. B. Adam Phillips Leighton, Jr. James Donald Clement Frank Stephen Dolley, A. B. Elmer Henry King Charles Jewell Nason Carl Merrill Robinson, A. B. THIRD YEAR Frank Mikelsky, A. B. Charles Francis Tray nor Ricardo Geronimo Valladares SECOND YEAR Harold William Stanwood. A. B. Rufus Edwin Stetson. A. B. Harold Grant Tobey, A. B. Charles Green Wharton. B. S. Archibald Wallace Dunn Neal Augustus Fogg William Matthew I larris Henry Lincoln Johnson Sumner Waldron Jackson FIRST YEAR Howard Francis Kane Frank Elmer Nolin Clarence Linwood Scamman James Melvin Sturtevant John Alexander Wentworth 162 PHI CHI Colors—Olive Green and White Founded at University- of Vermont, 1889 CHAPTER ROLL Alpha University of Vermont 1889 Beta Beta Baltimore Medical College 1893 Alpha Alpha Louisville Medical College 1894 Beta Kentucky School of Medicine- i8q5 Gamma University of Louisville 1896 Delta Hospital College of Medicine, Louisville, Kentucky 1897 Theta College of Medicine, Richmond, Va. 1899 Epsilon Kentucky University 1900 Gamma Gamma Medical School of Maine 1900 Delta Delta Baltimore College of Physicians and Sur- Kappa geons 1902 Georgetown University 1902 Theta Theta Maryland Medical College 1903 Eta Medical College of Virginia 1903 Omicron Tulane University 1903 Mu Medical College of Indiana 1903 Nu Birmingham Medical College 1903 Zeta University of Texas 1903 Chi Jefferson Medical College 1903 Phi George Washington University 1904 Iota University of Alabama 1904 Lambda Western Pennsylvania Medical College 1905 Sigma Atlanta College of Physicians and Surgeons 1905 Pi Vanderbilt University 1905 Sigma Theta University of North Carolina 1905 Rho Chicago University 1906 Tau University of South Carolina 1906 Psi University of Michigan 1906 163 PHI CHI GAMMA GAMMA CHAPTER Established in 1900 FRATRES E DOCTORIBUS Prof. H. H. Brock, A .B., M. D. Prof. E. J. McDonough, A. B., M. D. Prof. W. B. Moulton, A. M., M. D. Prof. F. C. Robinson, LL. D. Prof. C. D. Smith, A. M., M. D. Prof. S. H. Weeks, M. D., LL. D. Prof. F. N. Whittier, A. M., M. D. Edville G. Abbott, A. B., M. D Wallace W. Dyson, M. D. Edwin W. Gchring, S. B., M. D. Alfred Mitchell, Jr., A. B., M. D., Gustave A. Pudor, A. B., M. D. Richard D. Small, A. B., M. D. Walter E. Tobie, M. D. Fred P. Webster, M. D. FRATRES IN COLLEGIO FOURTH YEAR Henry Whiting Ball Charles Hunter Cunningham, A. B. Charles I everett Curtis George I very Higgins Irving Ellis Mabry, A. B. Clarence Raymond Simmons Herbert Ellery Thompson, A. B. Francis Howe Webster, S. B. THIRD YEAR Percy Hobbs Abbott Harry Edward Anderson Elmer Jonathan Brown Hannibal Hamlin Bryant, Jr., A. B. Lester Warren Carpenter Charles Fuller Deering William Joseph Fahay Leo Frederick Hall Ernest Davis Humphreys Linn Bayard Marshall James Atwood Crowell Milliken Christian Vilhelm Ostcrgren Blinn Whitmore Russell, A. B. 164 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Albert Kilburn Baldwin, A. B. Elmer Herbert Jackson Carl Hervey Stevens Cornelius John Taylor Roland Joseph Bennett George Henry Buck Freeman Fletcher Brown Harold Edwards Carney Walter Jean Hammond, A. B. SECOND YEAR Mai ford Malcox Thewlis Charles M. Wilson Gusta f Fritz Robert Wollin FIRST YEAR Walter Whitman Hendee Harry Hallock Lente Clyde Harold Merrill Harold Sewall- Pratt Oramel Henry Stanley OFFICERS Y. M. Kilim Timid: iu.akk Scott CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION Established as the Bowdoiti Praying Circle in 1815. The past year has been a prosperous one for the association. For the first time in its history, it has had a general secretary, who could devote, better than any student no matter how earnest, his time and talents to the upbuilding of the association. Active membership is open to every undergraduate and men have availed themselves of the privilege. For the first time in four years, the handbook has been re-issued. There has also been four Bible study courses. In this branch of work, which is the dynamo of effective Christian Association work, many men have enrolled and worked. CABINET President Vice-President T reasurer Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary General Secretary Leonard F. Timberlake, 1909 Ralph H. Files, 1909 Robert D. Morss, 1910 Harold H. Burton, 1909 Horace H. Watson. 1911 Roderick Scott, A. B. COMMITTEES Executive Roderick Scott. A. B. R. H. Files, 1909 R. D. Morss. 1910 L. F. Timberlake, 1909 H. H. Burton. 1909 E. G. Fifield, 1911 Bible Study Executive G. W. Cole, 1910 F. C. Evans, 1910 L. F. Timberlake. 1909 J. J. Stahl, 1909 Harrison Atwood. 1909 169 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Membership and Bible Study Enrollment P. B. Morss, 1910 E. B. Smith, 1911 R. E. Ross, 1910 W. P. Hinckley, 1909 Harrison Atwood, 1909 J. J. Stahl, 1909 H. H. Berry, 1911 R. H. Files, 1909 G. P. Estes. 1909 W. E. Robinson, 1910 E. G. Fifield, 1911 IT. W. Slocum, 1910 G. W. Cole, 1910 E. J. B. Palmer, 1911 M. C. Hill, 1910 T. D. Ginn. 1909 Edgar Crossland. 1910 R. E. Fisher, 1910 II. H. Burton, 1909 A. W. Stone, 1910 H. W. Slocum, 1910 A. H. Cole, 1911 Social Sendee M. P. Cushing, 1909 VV. B. Stephens, 1910 E. E. Kern, 1911 A. W. Stone, 1910 F. C. Evans, 1910 Xorthfield E. G. Fifield, 1911 A. H. Fisk, 1909 Gymnasium J. G. B. McKusick, 1911 R. D. Morss, 1910 J. M. Sturtevant, 1909 Finance H. Q. Hawes, 1910 VV. E. Robinson, 1910 Press L. S. Lippincott, 1910 M. P. Cushing, 1909 P. B. Morss, 1910 M usic H. K. Mine, 1911 P. B. Morss, 1910 A. S. Pope. 1911 Room F. A. Smith. 1912 170 M. P. Cushing, 1909 BIBLE STUDY CLUB Life of Jesus L. F. Timber lake, 1909 W. E. Robinson, 1910 A. W. Stone, 1910 E. G.. Fifield, 1911 W. B. Stephens, 1910 E. R. Bridge, 1909 P. B. Morss, 1910 Social Teachings of Jesus H. W. Slocum, 1910 J. J. Stahl, 1909 Teachings of Jesus and His Apostles Harrison Atwood, 1909 G. W. Cole, 1910 Teachings of the Prophets W. P. Hinckley, 1909 I7 PROGRAM, 1908-1909 October i—Reception to Freshmen in Hubbard Hall. October 8—Opening Meeting; addresses by President Hyde, Rev. R. L. Schacff. 1894, and Mr. Scott. ' October 15—Bible Study meeting. “The Meaning and Value of Bible Study as Preparation for Leadership, by Robert Davis, Dartmouth. 1903. October 29—Practical Applications of Christianity. “Experiences at the Army Posts of Maine, by W. A. Dunmorc. State Y. M. C. A. Army Secretary. November 5—“Experiences in Africa. by Rev. F.dgar Crossland, 1910. November 12— Life in India, by Anand Sibola Hi wale, 1909. November 19—Practical Applications of Christianity. “The opportunities fo: Social Service Open to College Men, by A. L. Thayer. Grad- uate Secretary, Phillips Brooks House Association. Harvard University. December 3—“The College and University in America, by Dean LeBarron R. Briggs of Harvard University. December 10—“A Study of English Eponyms, by Dr. Frederick H. Gerrish. 1866, of the Medical School of Maine. December 17—“The Bachelor of Science and the Bachelor of Arts, by Pro- fessor Dwight Porter of the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology. January 7—Practical Applications of Christianity. “The Young Men's Chris- tian Association Movement, by Jefferson C. Smith. State Y. M. C. A. Secretary. January 14—“Experience on a New York Fresh Air Farm, by H. H. Burton. 1909. January 17—Practical Applications of Christianity. “Life among the Poor of New York,” by Rev. H. Roswell Bates of the Spring Street Church, New York City. January 21—“A Criticism of Modern Undergraduate Life, by Rev. Raymond Calkins of Portland. February 11—“German University Life,” by Professor George T. Files. 1889. February 18—Northfield Meeting, led by L. F. Timberlake. 1909. February 25—Address by Secretary Roderick Scott. March 4—“The Ministry as an Opportunity for the College Man. by Rev. R. II Schuett of the Chestnut Street M. E. Church. Portland. March 11—Practical Applications of Christianity. “The Minister Outside the Pulpit, by President David N. Beach of the Bangor Theo- logical Seminary. March 18—Address by C. C. Robinson, 1900. State Student Secretary. March 25—Annual Business Meeting. Reports. Election of Officers for 1909- 1910. HUOLE HOARD — TllOMPKOX Ohms LCDWIO Warhbn Piniikm STKniKX Wbttox Haijc 8u com Ca y First Bugle published in July, 1858. The Bugle is published annually by editors elected from the several fra- ternities and from the non-fraternity men of the Junior class. Its aim is to fur- nish each year, with special reference to the Junior class, a record of interesting matter, serious and otherwise, connected with Bowdoin College. Volume LXIV Class of 1910 EDITORIAL BOARD Robert Male, 'I' Y Laurence G. Ludwig, ' . Winston B. Stephens, A A I Charles A. Cary, a K E Ralph B. Grace, K 2 Harold W. Slocum. 0 A X Ransom E. Fisher, Henry Edilor-in-Chief Business Manager Assistant Editor Ralph L. Thompson, a y Herbert E. Warren, A A I George C. Weston, B 0 IT G. Incersoll, Non-Fraternity  75 ORIENT HOARD Hr hi. Newman McPmuxu Turn- Moiikk Hl'RTOX H n ItOIIIXHOX Atwood White mi ll ORIENT BOARD First Orient published on April 3, 1871 The Orient is a weekly newspaper published every Friday of the collegiate year by the students of Bowdoin College. Its columns are open to all under- graduates. alumni and officers of instruction. VOLUME XXXVIII EDITORIAL BOARD Kenneth R. Tefft, ‘09 William E. Atwood, To Guy P. Estes, ’09 Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Business Manager Harold II. Burton, '09 Paul J. Newman, 09 Jasper J. Stahl, '09 Philip B. Morss, To ASSOCIATE EDITORS Thomas Otis, To Warren E. Robinson, To Lawrence McFarland, Ti Joseph C. White, Ti «77 First Quill published in January, 1897 The Quill is published on the fifteenth of each month during the college year by the students of Bowdoin College. The aim of the Quill is to furnish a medium of expression for the literary life of the college, and its columns are open to undergraduates, alumni, and members of the Faculty. VOLUME XIII EDITORIAL BOARD Robert Hale, 1910 Ernest Gibson Fifiei.d, 1911 Philip Weston Meserve, 1911 Chairman Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Charles Doardman Hawes, 1911 George Alexander Torsney, 1911 Mark Wescott Burlingame, 1912 179 Established in June, 1903 HONORARY MEMBERS Professor Henry Johnson, Ph. D. Professor Henry L. Chapman, D. D. Professor William T. Foster, A. M. Professor Kenneth C. M. Sills, A. M. President Secretary Harrison Atwood Ralph O. Brewster 1909 ACTIVE MEMBERS OFFICERS MEMBERS Harold H. Burton Gardner K. Heath PROGRAM Gardner K. Heath Harrison Atwood Jasper J. Stahl Kenneth R. Tefft January 8—Professor William A. Houghton, Hall. on “The Ideal of Asia,” Hubbard March 9—Professor Henry L. Chapman on Skipper Ireson s Ride, Hubbard Hall. March 22—Arlo Bates, “The Art of Thinking.' Memorial Hall. 181 DRAMATIC CLUB Woodward Smith McUlKIIILIK Wionix Cou M A l«ll Oll.I.IX Him monk Kmm A IIKY STi« K Established in 1904 OFFICERS President Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Coach John S. Simmons Harry W. Woodward Harry L. Wiggin Miss Emily Curtis “A REGIMENT OF TWO” CAST OF CHARACTERS Arthur Sewall, a theoretical warrior Ira Wilton, his father-in-law, another Harry Brcntworth, Arthur’s friend Reginald Dudley, an Englishman Jim Bucknor, known as “the Parson” Conrad Melser, the plumber Eliza Wilton, Ira’s better half Laura Wilton, daughter of Ira Lena, a German maid Alfred W. Stone, 1910 John S. Simmons, 1909 Harry B. McLaughlin, 1910 Harold N. Marsh, 1909 Harold M. Smith, 1909 John L. Hurley, 1912 Thomas D. Ginn, 1909 Harold C. L. Ashey, 1912 James M. Gillin, 1912 « 3 THE PRESS CLUB Established in 1897 The purpose of the Press Club is to afford the college press correspondents an opportunity for giving the world the most consistent and most accurate news possible in regard to Bowdoin College. HONORARY MEMBER Thomas II. Riley, ’03, Boston Globe, Leuiston Evening Journal. ACTIVE MEMBERS John L. Crosby, 2nd, To, Bangor Commercial. R. Burleigh Martin, To, Kennebec Journal. Frank D. Townsend, To, Intercollegiate, Portland Evening Express. Philip P. Cole, '12, Bath Times. Herbert E. Locke, ‘12, Watcrville Sentinel. .84 ( OFFICERS OF THE DEBATING COUNCIL President Secretary and Treasurer Manager Assistant Manager Faculty Adviser Jasper J. Stahl Harold H. Burton Ralph O. Brewster Daniel J. Readey Professor William T. Foster ANNUAL BRADBURY PRIZE DEBATE Memorial Hall, February 16, 1909 question for debate Resolved, That the naval policy of President Roosevelt should be adopted by the country. Presiding officer. Professor Wilmont B. Mitchell, A. M., 90. Affirmative Negative Willard T. Phillips, ’09 Ralph O. Brewster, ’09 Henry Q. Hawes, ’10 Ernest L. Goodspeed, ’09 Charles F. Adams, ’12 Daniel J. Readey, '10 Alternates Harold E. Weeks, ’10 Harold N. Marsh, ’09 JUDGES Howard R. Ives, Esquire, 98, of Portland Professor William T. Foster, A. M., of Bowdoin College Professor Hudson B. Hastings, S. B., of Bowdoin College Decision for the negative. 85 BOWDOIN-VERMONT DEBATING TEAM Atwood St m. Hkkwktkh BUKTOX VERMONT-BOWDOIN DEBATE Memorial Hall, December 18, 1908 QUESTION FOR DEBATE Resolved, that the Federal Government should grant financial aid to ships engaged in our foreign trade and owned by citizens of the United States. Presiding Officer, Judge Albert R. Savage, LL. D. Affirmative — Bowdoin II. Atwood, '09 R. O. Brewster, 09 J. J. Stahl, '09 H. H. Burton, '09 Negative— Vermont E. S. Abbott E. H. Clouse G. S. Harris Alternates O. P . Hughes JUDGES Joseph H. Beale, Jr., A. M., LL. B., LL. D., Harvard University Thomas N. Carver, Pit. D., LL. D., Harvard University William B. Munroe, Ph. D., LL. B., Harvard University Decision for the Negative. 1S7 WESLEYAN DEBATING TEAM IIawrc Aimmk IlllKW'KIKIi FIRST ANNUAL BOWDOIN-WESLEYAN DEBATE Held at Middletown, Connecticut, March 19, 1909 QUESTION FOR DEBATE Resolved, that the Naval Policy of Ex-President Roosevelt should be adopted by the country. A ffirmative — Wesleyan Negative — Bowdoin S. G. Barker G. S. Brengle J. T. Hancock C. F. Adams, '12 R. O. Brewster, '09 E. L. Goodspeed, '09 Alternates W. R. Barbour J. D. Roberts A. T. Vanderbilt H. Q. Hawes, ‘10 JUDGES Hammond Lamont, A. M., Editor of The Nation William Bennett Munro, Ph. D., LL. B., Harvard University Hon. Arthur Parker Stone, A. B., LL. B., Boston, Mass. Decision for the affirmative. 189 CLASS OF 1909 President M arshal Harry Farrar Hinkley Arthur Wilder Hughes Harold Newman Marsh June 5, 1908 John Standish Simmons Howard Francis Kane Coni in it tee Clarence Linwood Scannnan John Ara Stetson PROGRAM Prayer Oration Poem Music Music Music Music Presentations Infant—toy dog Fusser—mirror Athlete—track suit Innocent—prayer book Grind—degree of K II ‘I Popular Man—wooden spoon Planting of the Ivy. Charles Leon Stevens William Matthew Harris Paul Jones Newman Harold Parker Pike Harold Merton Smith Thomas Davis Ginn Kenneth Howard Dresser Fuller Pierce Studlev Harrison Atwood 190 ALEXANDER PRIZE SPEAKING Memorial Hall. June 22, 1908 PROGRAM Music The Ballad of the Hast and West Arthur Harrison Gole, 1911 Kipling The Defense of a Tyrolese Patriot Henry Jewett Colbath, 1910 Hofei The Soul of the Violin John Libby Curtis, 1911 M erril! Music On the Recent Panic Ralph Owen Brewster, 1909 Roosevelt The Diver Winston Bryant Stephens, 1910 Schiller Galgacus to the Caledonians Earl Baldwin Smith, 1911 Tacitus Music The Death of Charles IX Alfred Wheeler Stone, 1910 M oorc The Race-'l'rack Gambling Bills Harold Hitz Burton, 1909 Hughes The Assault of Fort Wagner Samuel Herman Drcear, 1911 Dickinson Music judges Rev. 0. W. Folsom E. C. Plummer, 1S87 J. A. Cone First Prize, Winston Bryant Stephens, 1910 Second Prize, Alfred Wheeler Stone, 1910 191 CLASS DAY EXERCISES CLASS OF 1908 President June 23, 1908 Charles Noyes Abbott Marshal Walter I). Lee Committee George Palmer Hyde Chester Adam Leighton Joseph Michael Boyce Nathan Simmons Weston Earl Howard Coyle Memorial Hall. 10.00 a. m. M usic Prayer Joseph Albert Davis Music Oration Arthur Lincoln Robinson Music Poem Frederick Levi Pennell Music Under the Thorndike Oak, 3.00 p. m. Music Charles Edward Files Music Joseph Albert Davis Music Arthur Harold Ham Music Smoking Pipe or Peace Singing Ode Cheeking Halls Farewell Opening Address History Parting Address 192 GRADUATING EXERCISES One Hundred and Third Commencement CLASS OF 1908 June 25, 1908 ORDER OF EXERCISES Music Prayer Music The Corporation Laws of Maine Kipling: The Young Man's Poet The Initiative and Referendum M usic M usic Conferring of Degrees Prayer Benediction Goodwin Commencement Prize awarded to Carl Merrill Robinson Made in Germany Character in Education English as a Universal Language George Palmer Hyde Carl Merrill Robinson Arthur Harold Ham Arthur Lincoln Robinson Jay Lyman Gray Chester Henry Yeaton 93 DEGREES CONFERRED IN 1908 BACHELOR OF ARTS CLASS OF 1908 Summa cum Laude Thomas Edward Gay Philip Hunter Timberlake Albert Trowbridge Gould Chester Henry eaton Carl Merrill Robinson Magna cum Laude Herbert Storrs Brigham, Jr. George Palmer Hyde Joseph Albert Davis Shipley Wilson Ricker. Jr. Arthur Harold Ham Arthur Lincoln Robinson Charles Noyes Abbott Jay Lyman Gray Joseph Michael Boyce Hiram Benjamin Tuell Chandler Ridgley Colfax Clark Neal Willis Cox Earl Howard Coyle Fred Valentine Dclavina Murray Cushing Donnell William Whitney Fairclough Charles Edward Files George Herbert Foss Arthur Hosmcr IIuse Karl Bray Kilborn Sturgis Elleno Leavitt Walter D. Lee Cum Laudc Harry Herman Hayes Maurice Palmer Merrill Member of 1908 Ensign Otis David Taylor Parker Frederick Levi Pennell Paul Hussey Powers Harry Woodbury Purington Aaron Albert Putnam Clarence Perrin Robinson Edward Talbot Sanborn Karl Desmond Scates Floyd Tangier Smith Rufus Edwin Stetson Russell Shepard Taylor Nathan Simmons Weston «94 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Master of Arts Eclville Gerhardt Abbott Doctor of Medicine Henry Wilson Abbott Harold Fisher Atwood Harold Thornton Bibber William Wheeler Bolster, Jr., A. B. Edson Bayer Buker, B. S. Janies Wilder Crane George Adams Foster, A. B. George Independence Geer John Adolph Greene, A. B. Herbert Wilder Hall Willis Leroy Hasty Arthur Leon Jones, A. B. Henry Edward Marston, A. B. Roland Lee McKay Seth Smith Mullen Olin Scwall Pettingill John Garfield Potter George Charles Prccour Henry Clayton Saunders, A. B. Samuel Edson Sawyer, A. B. Ralph Carroll Stewart. A. B. George Henry Stone, A. B. Widd. Browne Twaddle George Everett Tucker, A. B. George Burgess Whitney, A. B. Harlan Ronello Whitney Edmund Percy Williams, A. B. John Hamilton Woodruff, A. B. HONORARY DEGREES Doctor of Laws Frederick Hunt Appleton (1864) Henry Leland Chapman (1866) Frederick Dodge Doctor of Letters Frank Lambert Dingier Master of Arts Henry Deering 195 AWARDS IN 1908 Goodwin Commencement Prize, Carl Merrill Robinson, Class of 1908. Class of 86S Price. Albert Trowbridge Gould. Class of 1908. Pray English Price, no award. Broien Composition Prices. Arthur Harold Ham. Class of 1908: Arthur Lincoln Robinson. Class of 1908. Alexander Price Speaking. Winston Bryant Stephens. Class of 1910. first prize; Alfred Wheeler Stone. Class of 1910. second prize. Sewall Latin Price. Rodney Elsmorc Ross. Class of 1910. Scicall Greek Price. Henry Gurney Ingersoll. Class of 1910. Goodii'in French Price, Chester Elijah Kellogg. Class of 1911. Noyes Political Economy Price. Albert Trowbridge Gould, Class of 1908. Smyth Mathematical Price. Henry Quinby Hawes, Class of 1910. Class of 1875 Price in American History, no award. Philo Sherman Bennett Price. Albert Trowbridge Gould. Class of 1908. Hawthorne Price, Ensign Otis, Class of 1908. Bradbury Debating Prices. William Matthew Harris. Class of 1909; Arthur Lincoln Robinson. Class of 1908; Jasper Jacob Stahl. Class of 1909. first prizes. Ralph Owen Brewst-ir, Class of 1909: George Palmer Hyde, Class of 1908; Daniel John Readey, Class of 1910. second prizes. Intercollegiate Debating Medals. George Palmer Hyde. Class of 1908: Ar- thur Lincoln Robinson, Class of 1908: William Matthew Harris. Class of 1909: Ralph Owen Brewster, Class of 1909. Brown Memorial Scholarships, Carl Merrill Robinson. Class of 1908: Irv- ing Lockhart Rich, Class of 1909; Robert Hale. Class of 1910: Philip Herman Hanson, Class of 1911. Charles Carroll Everett Scholarship. Philip I lunter Timberlakc. Class of 1908. Almon Goodwin Price, Jasper Jacob Stahl. Class of 1909. Henry W. Longfellow Graduate Scholarship. Charles Wilbert Snow. Clas of 1907. 196 CLASS OF 1868 PRIZE SPEAKING Memorial Hall, January 26, 1909 PROGRAM Music A National Need The Administration of Theodore Roosevelt Music Shakespeare’s Sonnets The Effect of Italy on the Germanic Temperament M usic A Child’s Poet Freedom in University Teaching Music Ralph Owen Brewster Harrison Atwood Max Pearson Cushing Jasper Jacob Stahl Harold Hitz Burton Ernest Leroy Goodspeed JUDGES Professor Alfred W. Anthony, Bates College Mr. Clarence B. Burleigh, '87. Augusta Clarence W. Peabody. Esq., ‘93. Portland Prize awarded to Jasper Jacob Stahl '97 Excused THE GLEE AND MANDOLIN CLUBS A. W. JOHNSON C OHBY Wkimtkii Okowbli, I'AIIKMAX PlKIICt: O.COue Him, Kino Ciuiiiciiim. Oim.is IIi’Iii.imiami: Wk JSfcl.-MMKTT J. I,. Johnson It. I). COMt C. B. Stomk Uskvoo-kk Hhowk Houkiith ltOW. KlMAMIII ItOWKII W'KKKK A.W. Stxvk U. PaIH'IIKK Djayii Smith l‘. P. tVi.K Ralph O. Brewster. 1909 Harold E. Weeks, 1910 Manager Assistant Manage-' Philip H. Brown, M. C. Hill, 1910 F. E. Kendrie, 1910 F. B. McGlone, 1910 R. E. Ross, 1910 C. E. Kellogg, 1911 S. H. Hussey, 1911 J. L. Crosby, 1910 R. S. Crowell, 1910 L. P. Parkman, 1911 P. H. Brown. 1909 A. W. Stone. 1910 W. H. Sanborn, 1910 GLEE CLUB 1909 First Tenor A. W. Johnson, 1911 J. L. Johnson, 1911 G. A. Tibbetts, 1912 Second Tenor H. A. Nickerson, 1912 R. I). Cole, 1912 First Bass J. L. Crane, 1912 F. W. Davis, 1912 Second Bass S. S. Webster, 1910 F. P. Richards, 1911 Accompanist Charles F. Adams, 1912 Leader MANDOLIN CLUB Carl E. Stone. 1909 Leader C. E. Stone, 1909 C. O. Bower, 1909 R. O. Brewster, 1909 First Mandolins J. L. Brummett. 1911 S. W. Pierce, 1911 J. L. Roberts, 1911 D. Hovey, 1909 R. S. Crowell, 1910 F. C. Black, 1911 Second Mandolins J. M. Gillin, 1912 R. P. King, 1912 C. N. Peters, 1910 Mandolas E. H. Weatherill, 1911 J- M. Bridgham, 1904 H. E. Weeks, 1910 G uitars K. Churchill. 1912 A. H. Parcher. 1912 Mandoccllo P. P. Cole, 1912 Violin C. E. Kellogg. 1911 Reader A. W. Stone, 1910 200 CHAPEL CHOIR F. E. Kendrie, 1910 M. P. Cushing, 1909 C. D. Skillin, 1912 P. H. Brown, 1909 T. F. Shehan, Jr., 1909 J. L. Crosby, 1910 R. S. Crowell, 1910 P. B. Morss, 1910 R. E. Ross, 1910 W. B. Stephens, 1910 A. W. Stone, 1910 S. S. Webster, 1910 L. Davis, 1911 J. L. Johnson, 1911 C. E. Kellogg, 1911 L. P. Parkman, 1911 F. P. Richards, 19 n H. H. Watson, 1911 H. P. Whitmore, 1911 M. W. Burlingame, 1912 J. L. Crane, 1912 F. W. Davis, 1912 J. H. Newell, 1912 Leader Organist Organist First Tenor II. P. Whitmore, 1911 Second Tenor F. E. Kendrie, 1910 CHAPEL QUARTET First Bass P. H. Brown, 1909 Second Bass A. W. Stone, 1910 201 COLLEGE HAND Leader Manager W. P. Newman, 1910 L. E. Clark, 1911 R. S. Crowell, 1910 E. L. Wing, 1910 W. H. Callahan, 1911 J. M. Bridgham, 1904 W. Holt, 1912 Prof. C. C. Hutchins, E. E. Kern, 1911 H. P. Whitmore, 1911 C. L. Clark, 1912 S. C. Perry, 1912 J. M. Bkii :;h. m, 1904 W. H. Saxhorn, 1910 Basses II. E. Weeks. 1910 Baritone I I F. Kane, «909 Trombones F. P. Spurling, 1910 Tenors W. E. Atwood, 1910 Altos S. S. Knowles, 1912 G. F. Cressey, 1912 Cornets J. H. Newell. 1912 H. E. Locke, 1912 Clarinets 1883 R. G. Oakes. 1912 E. S. Purington, 1912 F. H. Ridley, 1912 Piccolo B. II. Riggs, 1912 Snare Drums A. Woodcock. 1912 Bass Drum W. H. Sanborn, 1910 Cymbals O. T. Sanborn, 1911 202 BOWDOIN MINSTRELS Town Hall. January 22, 1909 PROGRAM Part I OVERTURE Song—“Bon B011 Buddy” Song—“Somebody Lied” Song—“B - L - N - D and P - G” Song—“Don't Take Me Home” Song—“So What’s the Use” Song—“Sweet Julienne” Song—“I'm Glad I’m Married” Song—“Dat’s Why do Coons am Black Finale Monolog Selection, Mandolin Quartet Monolog Selection Part II Stone, Roberts, 203 S. C. Perry, Jr. W. H. Clifford A. W. Stone J. M. Gillin E. P. Richards H. P. Whitmore R. W. Smith J. L. Crane P. II. Brown R. K. Say ward Weatherill, Cole J. L. Crane Mandolin Club DEUTSCHER VEREIN Wn.iiKii lvrrri.r. WASirTKK Him. JollMMfiN llour.M. SvillM V KUK Kknurii Hr MM. 11 'ItI.- II % A Deuttcher 13 tit in. Gegrundet, Oktober, 1895 EHRENMITGLIEDER Professor Frederick W. Brown, Ph. D. Professor George T. Files, Ph. D. Professor Charles C. Hutchins, A. M. Professor Henry Johnson, Ph. D. Professor Allen Johnson, Ph. D Professor Kenneth C. M. Sills, A. M. Gerald G. Wilder, A. B. VORSTAND Vorsitzender Schriftwart Kassemvart 207 Jasper J. Stahl Leon H. Smith Harold E. Rowell The Bowdoin Bugle, 19JO ORDENTLICHE MITGLIEDER C. O. Bower, 1909 R. O. Brewster, 1909 E. R. Bridge, 1909 M. P. Cushing, 1909 E. L. Goodspeed, 1909 H. N. Marsh, 1909 P. J. Newman, 1909 W. T. Phillips, 1909 E. H. Pottle, 1909 J. J. Stahl, 1909 H. J. Colbath, 1910 C. S. Denting, 1910 R. E. Fisher, 1910 R. B. Grace, 1910 H. F. Hansen, 1910 M.’C. Hill, 1910 E. H. Hobbs, 1910 F. E. Kendric, 1910 C. X. Peters, 1910 I. B. Robinson, 1910 R. E. Ross, 1910 H. E. Rowell, 1910 L. H. Smith, 1910 A. W. Stone, 1910 R. L. Thompson, 1910 R. A. Tuttle, 1910 A. W. Wandtke, 1910 H. E. Warren, 1910 20S the friars Established in 1906 Harrison Atwood Harold Hitz Burton Gardner Kendall Heath Harry Farrar Hinkley MEMBERS FROM 1909 Howard Francis Kane Irving Lockhart Rich John Standish Simmons Leonard Fremont Timberlake ACTIVE MEMBERS, FROM 1910 Henry Jewett Colbath Sumner Edwards Robert Hale James Forbush Hamburger Harry Buddington McLaughlin Edward Curtis Matthews, Jr. Robert Dillingham Morss Herbert Everett Warren Harry Whiting Woodward 209 GOOD GOVERNMENT CLUB Established in 1908 The purpose of the Club is to keep the members in touch with problems of government in city. State and nation. President Claude O. Bower Secretary and Treasurer Gardner K. Meath MEMBER FROM THE FACULTY Professor Allen Johnson H. Atwood R. O. Brewster P. H. Brown H. H. Burton C. O. Bower E. L. Goodspeed T. A. Gastonguav R. C. Harlow G. K. Heath W. P. Hinckley MEMBERS FROM 1909 D. Hovey D. F. Kougham H. N. Marsh R. M. Pennell E. H. Pottle J. J. Stahl K. R. Tefft L. F. Timberlakc L. F. Wakefield W. E. Atwood G. H. Babbitt H. J. Colbath J. L. Crosby R. R. Eastman R. Hale MEMBERS FROM 1910 H. F. Hansen H. Q. Hawes R. B. Martin W. P. Newman W. E. Robinson R. E. Ross LECTURES December 16, 1908—“Corrupt Methods in Modern Maine Politics. by Hon. Richard Webb, of Portland. January 23. 1909— The Connecticut Corrupt Practice Act. by Hon. George L. Fox of New Haven. 210 CLASSICAL CLUB Established in 1908 The purpose of this Club is to give those interested in the Classics an op- portunity to discuss topics connected with classical study in this country and abroad. President Professor Woodruff Secretary and Treasurer Lawrence Davis, Professor Woodruff EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Robert Hale Lawrence Davis MEMBERS FROM THE FACULTY Professor Frank E. Woodruff Professor Kenneth C. M. Sills Mr. John M. Bridgham R. K. Atwell MEMBERS FROM 1909 J. R. Hurley R. Hale F. W. Knight MEMBERS FROM 1910 ' R. E. Ross W. H. Sanborn C. H. Byles L. Davis S. B. Genthner. C. B. Hawes MEMBERS FROM 1911 C. E. Kellogg P. W. Meserve E. W. Skelton 211 CLUB CHEMICAL Bot K II. O. Mrrrii.i. Dii. Tiiam Pi:oj Itoni s on l)t. (Vltl-iNn Vorr.ii Pai.mkii Dock Jobnhos Kvajw Jlwims Hiss Ktani.kv C. A. Smith ltd'll M.-lHi-i: I! W. SMITH Pratt Don Kii CHEMICAL CLUB Re-established in 1909 HONORARY MEMBERS Professor Franklin C. Robinson, A. M., LL. D. Professor Manton Copeland, S. M., Ph. D. Professor Marshall P. Cram, Ph. D. Professor Hudson B. Hastings, S. B. President Vice-President. Secretary and Treasurer Professor Charles C. Hutchins, A. M. Professor Frank N. Whittier, A. M., M. D. Joseph M. Boyce, A. B. OFFICERS Albert W. Moulton Thomas D. Ginn Irving L. Rich EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Pcrlcy C. Voter, Chairman Claude O. Bower Claude O. Bower George H. Buck Thomas D. Ginn Edwin W. Johnson Daniel M. McDade Edwin W. Johnson REGULAR MEMBERS 1909 Harry C. Merrill Albert W. Moulton Harold S. Pratt Irving L. Rich Perley C. Voter 1910 Frank C. Evans Charles A. Smith R. W. Smith 1911 Edward J. B. Palmer LECTURE February 17, 1909—“The Silk Industry,” by Mr. E. J. Haskell of Westbrook 2'3 THE POLITICAL CLUBS The purpose of these Political Clubs was the furtherance of the interests of their respective parties and the discussion of political issues. THE REPUBLICAN CLUB Established in 1908 President Harold H. Burton Secretary and Treasurer Clyde L. Dewing EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Harold H. Burton Jasper J. Stahl Ralph H. Files Leonard F. Timberlake Daniel F. Koughan Total Enrollment, 124 members. THE DEMOCRATIC CLUB Established in 1908 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE William R. Crowley Total Enrollment, 52. November 2, 1908—Republican Rally held in the Town Hall under the auspices of the Republican Club. Murray C. Donnell John D. Clifford Harrison Atwood Thomas C. Com.mins Robert M. Pennell 214 The Sectional Clubs have been organized by the undergraduates, to enable them to act together in inducing men from their localities to enter Bowdoin, and to promote social intercourse among men from those localities who are already in Bowdoin. THORNTON CLUB Established in 1901 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Ralph H. Files Frank E. Kendrie Ralph B. Grace MASSACHUSETTS CLUB Established in 1904 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer 2‘5 Harold H. Burton Robert D. Morss Sumner Edwards The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 AROOSTOOK COUNTY CLUB President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Established in 1904 Richard R. Eastman Robert M. Lawlis Stetson II. Hussey President Vice-President Treasurer Secretary PENOBSCOT CLUB Established in 1904 William R. Crowley Ralph S. Crowell John R. Hurley John L. Crosby President V ice-President Secretary and Treasurer AUGUSTA CLUB Established in 1906 G. Cony Weston Alden S. Hitch horn Herbert E Locke President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer YORK COUNTY CLUB Established in 1907 Ralph P, Grace Merrill C. Hill Deforest Weeks President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer WASHINGTON COUNTY CLUB Established in 190S Harold P. Pike Reed C. Horsman Carleton W. Eaton- 216 DANCES AND RECEPTIONS IVY HOP CLASS OF 1909 Memorial Hall. June 5. 1908 Mrs. William DeW. Hyde Mrs.' Franklin C. Robinson Mrs. Henry Johnson Mrs. Frank E. Woodruff Mrs. Frank X. Whittier Mrs. George T. Files Mrs. Allen Johnson Mrs. William M. Pennell Patronesses Mrs. Herbert W. Rich Mrs. William A. Moody Mrs. Tascus Atwood Mrs. George T. Little Mrs. Hudson 15. Hastings Mrs. Frederick W. Brown Mrs. William E. Brewster Harry F. Hinkley Arthur W. Hughes Harold X. Marsh Committee Clarence L. Scamman John A. Stetson Music, Wilson's Orchestra PRESIDENT’S RECEPTION Hubbard Hall, June 22. 1908 Given to the Class of i )o8 and their friends, by President and Mrs. Hyde. 21S The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 COMMENCEMENT HOP CLASS OF 1908 Memorial Hall, June 23, 1908 Mrs. George T. Files Mrs. Hudson B. Hastings Mrs. William DeW. Hyde Mrs. Franklin C. Robinson George P. Hyde Joseph M. Boyce Earl H. Coyle Patronesses Mrs. Charles C. Hutchins Mrs. Leslie A. Lee Mrs. Henry Johnson Committee Chester A. Leighton Nathan S. Weston Music, Wilson's Orchestra CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION RECEPTIONS Hubbard Hall, October 1, 1908 Given to the Class of 1912, by the Christian Association. Memorial Hall, March 12, 1909 Given to Delegates and friends from the Y. M. C. A. of Maine, Bates, Colby, and Bangor Theological Seminary. 219 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 JUNIOR ASSEMBLIES CLASS OF 1910 First Assembly Memorial Hall, January 15. 1909 Patronesses Mrs. William DcW. Hyde Mrs. William T. Foster Mrs. Franklin C. Robinson Mrs. Hudson P . Hastings Mrs. Henry Johnson Music, Kendrie's Orchestra Second Assembly Memorial Mrs. William DeW. Hyde Mrs. George T. Files Mrs. George T. Little M usic, G. Cony Weston William E. Atwood Stuart F. Brown Hall, February 12, 1909 Patronesses Mrs. Charles C. Hutchins Mrs. Frederick W. Brown Kendrie's Orchestra Committee L. Lee Mikelsky Clinton N. Peters 220 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 FRATERNITY HOUSE PARTIES Alpha Delta Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Theta Delta Chi Beta Theta Pi Delta Upsilon Psi Upsilon Zeta Psi Kappa Sigma December 18. 1908 February 26, 1909 March 26, 1909 April 23, 1909 May 7. 1909 June 2, 1909 June 2, 1909 June 2, 1909 COLLEGE TEAS Hubbard Hall, January 15, 1909 Reception Committee Mrs. Henry Johnson Mrs. William T. Foster Miss Helen D. Chapman Mrs. Frederick W. Brown Mrs. Frank N. Whittier Hubbard Hall, February 12, 1909 Reception Committee Mrs. William A. Moody Mrs. Allen Johnson Mrs. Charles C. Hutchins Mrs. Gerald G. Wilder Mrs. George T. Files Hubbard Hall, March 11, 1909 Reception Committee Mrs. George T. Little Mrs. Hudson B. Hastings Mrs. William DcW. Hyde Mrs. Wilmont B. Mitchell Mrs. Franklin C. Robinson 22 Toastmaster “Class of 1910 “Bowdoin. a Western “Sophomores “Athletics” “Our Fussers” “Our Alma Mater “The Faculty “The Plugger “The Alumni Opening Address Ode History Ode Closing Address J. Lcland Crosby FRESHMAN BANQUET Lafayette Hotel. Portland. Maine June 15. 1907 Frank Bernard McGi.one Toasts View Literary Exercises “Bowdoin Beata “Phi Chi Committee of Arrangements Harry J. Dugan Harry B. McLaughlin Ode Committee Winston B. Stephens 222 James 15. Draper Harry W. Woodward Harry 15. McLaughlin Thomas C. Commins Harold E. Weeks Thomas Otis George H. M acorn her Harold E. Rowell Rodney E. Ross Alfred W. Wandtke Robert Hale Warren E. Robinson Sumner Edwards James F. Hamburger Robert Hale Sumner Edwards SOPHOMORE BANQUET Falmouth Hotel. Portland, Maine June 13, 1908 Toastmaster Henry Toasts Opening Address Athletics Class Spirit Faculty Closing Address “Bowdoin Beata” Committee on Arrangements . Ingersoi.l W. E. Atwood W. P. Newman E. C. Matthews C. W. Walker S. S. Webster Harry W. Woodward William E. Atwood G. Cony Weston SIXTH ANNUAL ATHLETIC RALLY Memorial Hall, April 16. 1909 ORDER OF SPEAKERS Music Prof. Franklin C. Robinson, ’73 Judge Frederic A. Fisher, 'Si John Clair Minot. ‘96 Music Charles T. Hawes, ’76 Music Coach Berton C. Morrill, '10 Emery O. Beane. '04 Captain William P. Newman. '10 Doctor Frank N. Whittier, ’85 Bowdoin Beata “Phi Chi Harold W. Stamvood. 08 Conducted by the Undergraduate Council. 226 BOWDOIN ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION 1908 - I909 OFFICERS President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer Harrison Atwood, 1909 Claude O. Bower, 1909 Henry J. Colbahi, 1910 BOWDOIN ATHLETIC COUNCIL Alumni Charles T. Hawes, ’76, Chairman Henry A. Wing, ’80 Franklin C. Payson, ’76 Roland W. Mann, ’92 Barrett Potter, ’78 Faculty Professor Charles C. Hutchins, ’83 Dr. Frank N. Whittier, '8 Undergraduates William P. Newman, 1910 Wilbur C. Caldwell, 1911 Harrison Atwood, 1909 Claude O. Bower, 1909 Henry J. Colbath. 1910 227 After a few days of preliminary practice under the direction of Captain McDadc and Coach McClave, the Bowdoin team began the season, September 26. by beating the Fort McKinley 28 to o. All the men who were expected back had returned, yet there were only five of them who wore the football 1'.. Hard practice now began in preparation for the Harvard game, which came the follow ing Wednesday. It was a close, hard-fought game, and Bowdoin held tlu Crimson down to five points, as she did in the game the year previous. Having had but three days in which to rest up after the Harvard game. Bowdoin played New Hampshire State College, and had little trouble in winning by a score of 15 to o. The next game was with Brown University at Providence, October 10. The Brunonians made two touchdowns and kicked both goals in the first half, but neither team was able to score in the second. October 17. Bowdoin met Holv Cross in Portland, on the Pine Tree grounds. Bowdoin outplayed her opponents in the first half and scored a touchdown, but in the second. Holy Cross came back strong and made two. which won the game for them by a score of 12 to 5. The first game of the State championship series was played October 24. in Bruns- wick, against Colby. It was a close exciting game, but a goal from placement and a touchdown gave Bowdoin a victory of 9 to 6. On October 31. Bowdoin 22S The Bowcloin Bugle, 1910 wiped out an old score with Tufts by beating her team u to io on her home grounds. Bowdoin received her only defeat from the hand of a Maine college. November 7. in the Bates game played on Whittier Field. Bates got her only touchdown in the first half, but after that, neither team was able to score. The last game of the season was the Maine game at Orono, November 14. Bowdoin won the game 10 to o, without being obliged to play any substitute in the whole game. Though Bowdoin only tied Colby for the championship of the State, the season is notable for the fact that we extended our schedule to a new col- lege, and held Harvard down to one touchdown. Ro  McClr.vc J. S. Simmon Manager 229 BOWDOIN FOOTBALL TEAM Manager Assistant Manager Captain Coach Season of 1908 J. Standish Simmons, 1909 Thomas Otis, 1910 Daniel M. McDade, 1909 Ross M. McClavc ’VARSITY ELEVEN A. W. Hughes, 1909 J. L. Crosby, 1910 E. H. King, Medic D. M. McDade, 1909, Captain O. P. Haley, 1911 W. P. Newman, 1910 A. W. Wandtke, 1910 H. II. Burton, 1909 J. W. Manter, 1909 F. A. Smith, 1912 T. A. Gastonguay, 1900 Right End Right Tackle Right Guard Center Left Guard Left Tackle Left End Quarterback Right Halfback Left Halfback Fullback GAMES PLAYED Bowdoin 28, Fort McKinley o Bowdoin o, Harvard 5 Bowdoin 15, N. H. S. C. o Bowdoin o, Brown 12 Bowdoin 5,,Holy Cross 12 Bowdoin 9, Colby 6 Bowdoin 11, Tufts 10 Bowdoin o, Bates 5 Bowdoin 10, Maine o Games won, 5 Bowdoin scored 78 points September 26, at Brunswick September 30, at Cambridge October 3, at Durham, N. H. October 10, at Providence, R. I. October 17, at Portland October 24, at Brunswick October 31, at Medford November 7, at Brunswick November 14, at Orono Games lost, 4 Opponents scored 50 points 231 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 SECOND ELEVEN Manager Captain J. L. Hurley, 1912 S. J. Hindi, 1912 R. C. Houston, 1912. L. S. Pratt, 1912 C. O. Boynton, 1910. I). J. Readey, 1910 S. W. Jackson. 1909. W. P. Hinckley, 1909 H. W. Hastings, 191! R. W. Smith, 1910. E. C. Matthews, 1910 G. F. Wilson. 1912. S. J. Marsh. 1912 E. B. Gordon. 1912 L. F. Wakefield, 1909 F. P. Richards. 1911 Thomas Otis, 1910 Leonard F. Wakefield Right End Right Tacki- Right Guard Center I-eft Guard I-eft Tackle Left End Quarterback Right Halfback Left Halfback Fullback GAME PLAYED Bowdoin Second o. Hebron Academy, 23 October 10. at Hebron SOPHOMORE-FRESHMAN GAME Manager for ip George W. 1 lowe Captain for pi Orison P. Halcv Manager for ip 3 Henry A. Nickerson Captain for ipi3 Frank A. Smith 1911 1912 F. II. Purington Right end L. S. Pratt H. W. Hastings Right tackle S. J. Hindi C. B. Hawes Right guard H. A. Andrews A. T. Gibson A. C. Gibson Center R. C. Houston E. E. Kern Left guard E. E. Weeks J. L. Curtis R. W. Sullivan Quarterback H. A. Davis A. H. Cole Right halfback G. C. Kern J. L. Brummett I-cft halfback T. W. Daniels H. L. Robinson Full back- E. B. Gordon l9l2 6, 1911, 0. November 21, on the Delta. 232 -------------- ■= The plan for a series of games during the Spring vacation, which was origi- nated and carried out so successfully by the management of the 1907 team, was adopted by the management of last year's team. With only a few days' practice on the Delta, the team left Brunswick for the spring trip with six of the old men on it—Captain “Baldy” Slamvood. “Champ Files, “Dannie McDade, “Bill Harris, and “John Manter. The first game was with Brown University. Notwithstanding the lack of practice of the Bowdoin team, it was able to beat the Brunonians 5 to 4. Seton Hall got her revenge for the game she lost to Bowdoin the year before by beating the latter 6 to 2, on a day so cold that neither team could do good work. On another cold day when the game was called by mutual consent, at the end of the seventh inn ing, New York University won from Bowdoin by the score of 6 to 5. The most satisfying game of the trip was the Princeton game. The Bowdoin team sur- prised the “Tigers” somewhat, by beating them 5 to 2. THE BASEBALL SEASON OF 1908 234 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 The first game after the vacation was the Harvard game. It was a close game, but Harvard succeeded in wiping out her defeat of the previous year by a score of 4 to 3. The two games played with Pine Tree in Portland, resulted in one victory and one defeat. In the first game that the Tufts’ baseball team had played in Brunswick for ten years, it had to take a defeat from Files. The two Dartmouth games played at Hanover were exceptionally close ones; the score of the first one was 3 to o, and that of the second, 2 to 1. The next two games resulted in defeats for Bowdoin—the Tufts game 7 to 4, and the Wil- liams, 4 to 2. Then came the games with the Maine colleges, which resulted in the winning of the championship for Bowdoin. Bowdoin won the opening game of the Championship scries from Colby, by a score of 5 to 3; then came the two victories over the University of Maine—the first 9 to o, and the second, 2 to 1; the Bates game at Lewiston, resulted in a score of 5 to 2, and the Ivy Day game, with the same institution, resulted in a score of 10 to o, two more victories for Bowdoin. The last game of the championship was the postponed Colby game, played at Waterville. This was the only game that Bowdoin lost to a Maine college during the season. The score against her was 3 to 2. The season, though it ended with a defeat, is to be rated a highly successful one. 235 John Irwin, Coach Kenneth R. Tcfft Manager BASEBALL TEAM .Mavtkii Cil.litlKM. rii-ini Ihmi:n BOWDOIN BASEBALL TEAM Manager Assistant Manager Captain Coach Season of 190S Kenneth R. Tefft, 1909 S. Sc wall Webster, 1910 Harold W. Stamvood, 1908 John Irwin ’VARSITY NINE C. O. Bower, 1909 C. E. Files, 1908 W. M. Harris, 1909 H. W. Stamvood, 1908, Captain J. W. Manter, 1909 A. W. Wandtke, 1910 R. M. Lawlis, 1911 D. M. McDade, 1909 W. C. Caldwell, 1911 Catcher Pitcher, Right Field Pitcher, Shortstop First Base Second Base Th-rd Base Shortstop, Right Field Left Field Center Field 237 7 he Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Game Bowdoin 5, Brown 4 Bowdoin 2, Scton Ilal! 6 Bowdoin 5, N. Y. University 6 Bowdoin 5, Princeton 2 Bowdoin 3, Harvard 4 Bowdoin o, Pine Tree 2 Bowdoin 5, Pine Tree 4 Bowdoin 4, Tufts 2 Bowdoin o, Dartmouth 3 Bowdoin 1, Dartmouth 2 Bowdoin 11, Bates 7 Bowdoin 5, Colby 3 Bowdoin 2, Maine 1 Bowdoin 4, Tufts 7 Bowdoin 2, Williams 4 Bowdoin, Holy Cross (rain) Bowdoin 9, Maine o Bowdoin 5, Bates 2 Bowdoin 10. Bates 3 Bowdoin 2, Colby 3 Games won. 10 Bowdoin’s total score, 80 Played April 1. at Providence, R. I. April 2. at South Orange, N. J. April 3, at New York, N. Y. April 4. at Princeton, N. J, April 16, at Cambridge, Mass April 19, (a. m.). at Portland April 19, (p. M),at Portland April 25, at Brunswick April 28. at Hanover, N. II. April 29, at Hanover, N. II. May 1. at Portland (Exhibition) May 5, at Brunswick May 8, at Brunswick May 2. at Medford, Mass May 13. at Williamstown, Mass. May 14. at Worcester, Mass. May 22, at Orono May 30. at Lewiston June 5. at Brunswick June 10. at Waterville Games lost. 9 Opponent’s total score, 65 SECOND BASEBALL TEAM Manager S. Sewall Webster, 1910 Captain A. W. Hughes, 1909 R. R. Eastman, 1910 C. L. Scamman, 1909 J. F. Hamburger, 1910 R. C. Harlow, 1909 S. W. Pierce, 1911 F. C. Black, 1911 R. E. Ross, 1910 C. W. Walker, 1910 F. H. Purington, 1911 F. U. Burkett, 1911 Catcher Pitcher Right Field. Pitcher Right Field, Pitcher First Base Second Base Shortstop Third Base Left Field Center Field 238 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Games Played Bowdoin Second 14. Brunswick High 1, April 29, at Brunswick. Bowdoin Second 5, Ilebron Academy 8, May 6, at Hebron. Bowdoin Second 5, Hebron Academy 6, May 27, at Brunswick. Bowdoin Second n, Gardiner High 4, May 30, a. m.. at Gardiner. Bowdoin Second 4, Cony High 3, May 30, p. m., at Augusta. Games won, 3 Games lost, 2 Bowdoin Second’s total score, 39 Opponent's total score, 22 FRESHMAN-SOPHOMORE BASEBALL SERIES Manager Sophomore Team Harold V. Bickmore Captain Sophomore Team Robert M. Lawlis Manager Freshman Team Edward O. Leigh Captain Freshman 'Team Herbert A. Davis Byles Catcher Brooks Caldwell, Lawlis, Donnelly Pitcher Abbott, Means, Davis Devine, Brummett First Base Perry, Holt Black Second Base Rowell, Davis Purington, Donnelly Shortstop Joy, Abbott, Grant Lawlis, Purington Third Base Estes, Rowell Hussey, Brummett, Bradford Right Field Pratt, Woodcock, McCormick Devine, Caldwell Center Field Hart, O’Neil, Perry Pearson, Wiggin Left Field Weston, King, Gillin Games Played October 3, Freshmen 14, Sophomores 12 October 8, Sophomores 7, Freshmen 6 October 15, Sophomores 6, Freshmen 6 239 TRACK ATHLETICS IN 1908 If you were to ask Coach Bert Morrill the key to the success of our track team last Spring, he would without doubt answer, hard consistent work. Over one-half the 58 points that wrested the State championship in the fourteenth annual meet on Whittier field, were won by men who entered college without any record for track work. Handicapped by the loss of Captain Atwood, who sprained his ankle four days before the meet, and with the defeat of two previous years to overcome, the Bowdoin boys went to the field in one determination to win. The final score was, Bowdoin 58, University of Maine 48. Bates 18. Colby 2. A week later at Brookline, this same team upset all “dope sheets on the New England Intercollegiate meet by taking second place. This is the first time that Bowdoin has ever held second place, having won first in 1899. and third in 1900. Work preparatory for next Spring began promptly in the Fall, under the same coach and captain. A handicap meet was pulled off mostly for the purpose of discovering new material. On October 31, our cross country team ran the second race with 1 lifts, this time at Medford, over a five mile course. Although the time was considerably faster than the year before, Bowdoin was defeated by 240 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 the score of 26 to 29. To the credit of our own relay team, be it recorded that in the 13. A. A. meet on February 1st, they defeated the Tufts team for the first time. Such is the end, up to date, of our track record but not of our aspirations. Coach Merrill and practically the same team are preparing to fight for the “B” in the Spring of 1909. Manager Robinson has scheduled the team for another and more strenuous meet than the two regular ones, namely the Eastern Colle- giate. For Bowdoin prospects in these meets, there is one most propitious sign, everybody is working. Bcrl Morrill, Coach 241 RECORDS. I. C. A. A. A. A. 9 If, sec. B. J. Wefcrs Georgetown N. E. I. A. A. 100-Yard Dash 10 see. A. E. Curtenius A mherst H. H. Cloudman Bowdoin G. L. Swascy Dartmouth M. 1. A. A. 9 see. H. H. Cloudman Bowdoin 21 Vf, see. B. J. Wefcrs Georgetown 220-Yard Dash 22 see. G. W. Grain M. 1. r. 22 Mi sec. E. Bates Bowdoin 48% sec. J. B. Taylor Pennsylvania 440-Yard Dash 50 ft see. G. B. Shattuck Amherst 51M see. L. G. Weld Bowdoin 1 min., 56 see. E. B. Parsons Vale Ms-Milk Run 1 min., 59 see. H. S. Baker M. . T. 2 min.. 2 see. 1. W. Nutter Bowdoin 4 min., 20% see. G. Haskins Pennsylvania One-Mile Run 4 min., 24% see. A. L. Wright Brown 4 min., 34% sec. H. J. Colhath Boxed oin 9 min., 34% see. F. A. Rowe Michigan Two-Mile Run 9 min., 52% see. S. M. Udalc M. 1. T. 10 min., 7% see. H. J. Colhath Boxedoin 15% see. A. B. Shaw Dartmouth 120-Yard High Hurdles 15 Mv see. A. B. Shaw Dartmouth 16% sec. C. F. Kendall Boxedoin H. G. Tobey Boxedoin J. E. Fraser Baft'S 242 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 23% sec. A. C. Kranzlcin Pennsylvania 220-Yard Low Hurdles 24% sec. J. H. Hubbard Amherst A. B. Shaw Dartmouth 25% see. S. Edwards Bowdoin 6 ft., 3% in. T. Mofft Pennsylvania Running High Jump 5 ft., 11% in. G. I-Iorrax Williams D. R. Palmer Dartmouth 5 ft., 7Vi in. W. J. Shaw Univ. of Maine 24 ft., 4V2 in. A. C. Kranzlcin Pennsylvania Running Broad Jump 23 ft., 2V2 in. W. P. Hubbard Amherst 21 ft., 5V2 in. H. H. Cloudman Bowdoin 12 ft., sVi in. W. R. Dray Yale Pole Vault 11 ft.. 6Vi in. J. L. Hurlburt Wesleyan 10 ft., 9 in. W. J. Shaw Univ. of Maine 46 ft., 5V2 in. W. Krueger Swartlunore PurriNc i6-Pound Shot 43 ft., iOl4 in. R. E. Rollins Amherst 40 ft., 814 in. B. C. Morrill Boxvdoin 164 ft., 10 in. J. R. DcVVitt Princeton 140 ft., 2% in. J. C. Ganels Michigan Throwing 16-Pound Hammer 144 ft., V.s in. A. C. Denning Bowdoin Throwing Discus 120 ft.. 11 Vi in. A. K. Dearborn Wesleyan 140 ft., 2 in. A. C. Denning Bowdoin 115 ft., 6V1 in. A. L. Grover Univ. of Maine 243 Bowdoin Track Athletic Team Season of 1908 Manager Assistant Manager Captain ’Varsity Track Team Coach Ralph O. Brewster, 1909 Warren E. Robinson, 1900 Harrison Atwood, 1909 Berton C. Morrill, 1910 'Varsity Track Team Harrison Atwood, 1909, Captain Herbert S. Brigham, 1908 Edward T. Sanborn, 1908 Harold H. Burton, 1909 John W. Manter, 1909 Harold B. Ballard, 1910 Henry J. Colbath, 1910 Clyde L. Deming, 1910 Sumner Edwards, 1910 Berton C. Morrill, 1910 William P. Newman, 1910 Harold E. Rowell, 1910 Harold W. Slocum, 1910 Herbert E. Warren, 1910 Intercollegiate Contests Maine Intercollegiate Track Meet, May 16, 1908 Bowdoin 58, University of Maine 48, Bates 18, Colby 2. New England Intercollegiate Track Meet, May 22, 23, 1908 Dartmouth 49, Bowdoin 19, M. I. T. 18, Wesleyan 18, Williams 16, Amherst 15, Brown 10, Maine 4, Trinity 3, Tufts 1, Vermont 1. 245 Bates Maine Intercollegiate Athletic Association Colby Bowdoin I'nivcrsity of Maine President Vice-President Secretary, Treasurer OFFICERS FOR 1908 J. A. Wiggin, Bates E. F. Allen, Colby E. YV. Morton. University of Maine R. (). Brewster, Bowdoin Ex ecu t it Y Co in in it tee The Officers of the Association Distribution of Points at the Fourteenth Annual Athletic Meet 440-Yard Dash 100-Yard Dasli One Mile Run 120-Yard Hurdle 220-Yard Hurdle Two-Mile Run 220-Yard Dash Pole Vault Putting Shot Running High Jump Throwing Hammer Running Broad Jump Throwing Discus Half-Mile Run Bate Bowdoin Colby 3 I 3 1 5 5 1 6 8 5 i S 1 8 2 3 6 1 5 4 I — — — iS 58 2 246 Maine 4 3 3 I 3 I 7 3 5 S 4« Totals ‘J1 Cm Fourteenth Annual Won by Bowdoin Event First Place 440-Yard Dash 100-Yard Dash Littlefield. Maine Pond, Maine One-Mile Run Colbath, Bowdoin 120-Yard Hurdle Fraser, Bales 220-Yard Hurdle Edwards, Botvdoin Two-Mile Run Colbath. Bowdoin 220-Yard Dash Williams. Bales Pole Vault Denting, Bowdoin Putting Shot Morrill. Bowdoin Running High Jump Meterve, Maine Throwing Hammer Running Broad Jump Throwing Discus Half-Mile Run Warren. Bowdoin Morrill, Bowdoin Walden. Maine Fortier, Maine New record Maine Intercollegiate Athletic Meet Second Place Manter, Bowdoin Williams. Bates Hicks. Maine Smith. Maine Smith. Maine Slocum. Bowdoin Cook. Maine Burton. Bowdoin Newman, Bowdoin Higgins, Maine Brigham, Bowdoin French. Bales Higgins, Maine Rowell, Bowdoin Bean, Maine Brunswick, May 16, 1908 Third Place Chandler, Colby Ballard. Bowdoin Snow. Maine Sanborn. Bowdoin Sanborn. Bowdoin Dyer. Maine Ballard. Botvdoin Scales. Maine Schumacher. Bates tie for second place Morrill. Botvdoin Fraser. Bates Morrill. Botvdoin Cole, Colby Time. Height or Distance 52 seconds io% seconds 4 minutes. 34% seconds 16% seconds 25% seconds 10 minutes. 7% sec. 23 seconds to feet. 7 inches 40 feet. 8Vt inches 5 feet, 5% inches 123 feet, io' s inches 21 feet 106 feet, 9V1 inches 2 minutes, 3 seconds New England Intercollegiate Athletic Association Amherst Bowdoin Brown Dartmouth Members University of Maine Wesleyan Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Vermont Trinity Williams Tu fts President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer OFFICERS FOR 1908 M. W. Cowell, Dartmouth 1). D. McKay, Amherst W. I I. Hock, Williams D. C. McMurtrie, M. I. T. Executive Committee H. W. Cowell, Dartmouth R. O. Brewster, Bowdoin D. B. Abbott, Amherst L. S. Larrabee. Brown D. C. McMurtrie, M. I. T. E. W. Morton, University of Maine Distribution of Points in Dartmouth 4'.) Bowdoin 10 M. I. T. 18 Wesleyan 18 Williams 16 Amherst 14 Twenty-second Annual Athletic Meet Brown Maine Trinity Tufts Vermont io 4 5 i i 24S Twenty-Second Annual New England Intercollegiate Athletic Meet Won by Dartmouth College May 22-23, 908 Event 220-Yard Dash too-Yard Dash 4.(0-Yard Dash 88o-Ynrd Run Mile Run Two-Mile Run 120-Yard Hurdles 220-Yard Hurdles 16-pound Shot Put |6-Ih. Hammer Throw Discus Throw Running High Jump Running Broad Jump Pole Vault Fir«t Place Sherman, Dartmouth Sherman. Dartmouth Stearns, Amherst Gray, Wesleyan White. Amherst Slocum. Bmcdoin Shaw. Dartmouth Shaw. Dartmouth Morrill. Bowdoin Johnson. Dartmouth Pevcar. Dartmouth Palmer, Dartmouth 11 or rax. Williams Sherman. Dartmouth Horrax, Williams Second Place Robson, Wesleyan Robson, Wesleyan Faraday, Wesleyan Gimson. .If. I. T. Colbath. Bowdoin Howland. M. I. T. Horrax. Williams Edwards, Bowdoin Pevcar, Dartmouth Pevear. Dartmouth Kirlcy, Brown Tied for 1st and 2nd place Mayhcw, Brown Orr. M. I. T. Third Place West. Amherst Faraday, Wesleyan Blackhourn, M. I. T. Fortier. Maine N’oycs, Dartmouth Greene. Brown Olmstcad, Trinity Smith. Maine Moore. M. I. T. Warren. Bowdoin Lament. Williams Stevens. Williams Kent, Wesleyan Denting, Bowdoin Salisbury, M. I. T. Allen, M. I. T. Fourth Place Keith. Amherst Seligman, M. I. T. Shipley. Dartmouth Cams. Dartmouth Mcrrihcw, Vermont Pond. Trinity Mayhcw, Brown Mayhcw, Brown Kilborn. Amherst Smith. Amherst N'isbet. M. I. T. Zellar, Tufts Schbingcr. M. I. T. Tied for 3d and .jilt place Time, Might or Distance toJf. seconds 22% seconds 51 Mi seconds 2 minutes, 2% seconds 4 minutes. 37% sec. 9 minutes, 57 seconds 15% seconds 2415 seconds 41 feet, inches 129 feet, 8Vs inches 116 feet. 10Vs inches 5 feet. 11% incites 21 feet, 9 4 inches 11 feet. 2 inches New record ’Varsity Cross Country l earn, 1908 S locus i Morrill Atwood Cole Hobinson Colbath Cary I a'rsity Cross Country Team. ipeS H- J- Colbath, 1910, Captain R. D. Morss, 1910 H. W. Slocum. 1910 H. L. Robinson, 1911 R. D. Cole, 1912 C A. Cary, 1910. Substitute Tall Cross Country Race Hve mile course, Medford, Massachusetts, October 31. 190S Bowdoin vs. Tufts Won by lufts 26, Bowdoin 29. Time, 2S minutes. 23 seconds. 250 ’Varsity Relay Team, 1908 Ti. Atwood, 1909, Captain J. W. Manter, 1909 H. J. Colbath, 1910 R. D. Cole, 1912 R. D. Morss, 1910, Substitute Boston Athletic Association Indoor Meet Mechanics Hall, Boston, Mass,, February 6, 1909 Bowdoin vs. Tufts Won by Bowdoin. Time, 3 minutes, 13 seconds Each man running 390 yards. 25« 23rd Annual Exhibition and 14th Annual I Town Mall. Brunswick, .'March 19, 1909 Harrison Atwood. 1909 Class Track Captains Lawrence McFarland, 1911 Henry J. Colbath. 1910 Robert I). Cole. 1912 ' Class Squad Leaders E. Ralph Bridge, 1909 George H. Macombcr, 1911 Earl L. Wing, 1910 Seward J. Marsh, 1912 6 Won by the class of 1910 Event Time. Height Fir t Place Second Place Third Place or DUtance 20-Yard Dash Colbath, ’10 Atwood, X) Edwards, ho Tie 3 seconds 25-Yard Hurdle Edwards, ho McFarland, h 1 Wiggin, h 1 4 seconds High Jump Burlingame, ’12 Edwards, ho I,c Pennell, ’09 5 feet, 6 inches Pole Vault Burlingame, h 2 Doming, ho Burton, '09 10 feet. % inch Putting 16-pound Shot Newman, ho Hobbs, ho Rowell. ho 35 feet, 7 inches Class Relay 1911 1912 1910 21 seconds Class Drill 1912 1909 1911 Totals 1910 1912 1911 1909 29 22 11 IO Relay Races Bowdoin 1912 defeated Bates 1912. Time, 22 seconds. Brunswick High defeated Morse High. Time, 22 seconds. Lewiston High defeated Edward Little High. Time. 21% seconds . Fencing Bowdoin defeated Pianelli, 5 - 4. After competition, Burlingame jumped 5 feet, 7 inches: a new record. 252 L. F. Timber!alee, Manngcr TENNIS SEASON OF 1908 The Tennis team for the season of 1908 botli did and did not win. In the Maine Intercollegiate Tournament held at Orono, May 27th to 29th, Bowdoin represented by Hyde and Ham and by Hughes and Martin won both her sets in the doubles. In the singles, however, we were not so successful; both Bowdoin and Bates retired, leaving Maine to triumph over Colby. Hughes, ’09, has been elected captain for the Spring of 1909. Both he and Martin will play this Spring and there is every indication that there will be a large number of good men from which to pick the rest of the team. 253 The Boivdoin Bugle, 1910 BOWDOIN TENNIS TEAM Manager Ixronard F. Timbcrlakc, 1909 Assistant Manager Robert I). Morss, 1910 Captain of the 'Varsity team Arthur II. Ham, 1908 ’VARSITY TENNIS TEAM Arthur H. Ham, 190S, Captain George P. Hyde, 1908 Arthur W. Hughes, 1909 R. Burleigh Martin. 1910 MAINE INTERCOLLEGIATE TOURNAMENT, 1908 Champion in Singles, Mitchell of University of Maine Champion in Doubles, Hughes and Martin of Bovvdoin Arthur H. Ham, Captain 25 Maine Intercollegiate Tennis Association Members Colby University of Maine OFFICERS, SEASON 1908 H. M. Peterson, Bates L. C. Guptil, Colby L. F. Tiinberlake, Bowdoin G. E. Torrey, Maine TOURNAMENT Orono, May 27-29, 1908 Champion in Singles, University of Maine Champion in Doubles, Bowdoin Doubles — First Round Hyde and Ham, Bowdoin, defeated Mitchell and Wadsworth, Maine, 6-4, 6-3- Hughes and Martin, Bowdoin, defeated Gould and Guptil, Colby, 6- 1, 6-2. Tuttle and Wadleigh, Bates, defeated Cram and Drew, Maine, 6-3, 6-2. Campbell and Boothby, Bates, defeated Smith and Young, Colby, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0. Doubles — Semi-Finals Hyde and Ham, Bowdoin, defeated Campbell and Boothby, Bates, 0-6, 6-4, 6-0. Hughes and Martin, Bowdoin, defeated Tuttle and Wadleigh, Bates, 6-3, 4-6, 8-6. Doubles — Finals Hughes and Martin, Bowdoin, defeated Hyde and Ham, Bowdoin, 6-3, 9-7, 6-2. Singles Mitchell, Maine, defeated Hyde, Bowdoin, 1 -6, 6- 1, 6-3. Boothby, Bates, defeated Smith, Colby, 6-1, 6-2. Young, Colby, defeated Drew, Maine, 1-6, 6-1, 6-2. Campbell, Bates, defeated Ham, Bowdoin, 7-5. 6-0. Semi-Finals Mitchell, Maine, defeated Boothby, Bates, 6-4. 6-3. Young, Colby, defeated Campbell. Bates, 0-6, 7 - 5, 8-6. Finals Mitchell, Maine, defeated Young, Colby, 6 - o, 7 - 5, 8 - 6. Bates Bowdoin President Vice-President T reastirer Secretary 255 In view of the fact that this is but the second season of fencing in Bowdoin, the sport has met with decided success. At the beginning of the year, more than twenty men were out regularly for instruction, and there were ten in the trials for the team. Two teams were picked: Bridge, ’09, Tobey, ’06 (Medic.), and Stephens, To, as the first team; and Hawes, To, P. B. Morss, To, and Hurley, '09 as the second. Season of 1909 Manager, E. Ralph Bridge, 1909 'Varsity Team E. Ralph Bridge, 1909, Captain and Manager Harold G. Tobey, 1906 (Medic.) Winston B. Stephens, 1910 March 19, Bowdoin 5, Pianclli 4 257 Men Who Wear the B H. H. Burton, 1909 T. A. Gastonguay, 1909 A. W. Hughes. 1909 D. M. Me Dade. 1909 J. W. Manter. 1909 J. S. Simmons. 1909. Manager C. A. Boynton. 1910 C. O. Bower. 1909 W. M. Harris, 1909 D. M. McDade. 1909 J. W. Manter. 1909 K. R. Tefft, K900. Manager II. Atwood. 1909 R. O. Brewster, 1909. Manager H. H. Burton, 1909 J. W. Manter, 1909 R. M. Pennell. 1909 H. B. Ballard, 1910 H. J. Colbath, 1910 C. L. Deming, 1910 A. W. Hughes, 1909 L. F. Timberlake, 1909. Manager Football J. L. Crosby. 1910 W. I . Newman, 1910 Thomas Otis. 1910. Manager A. W. W'andtke. 1910 O. I . Haley. 1911 F. A. Smith. 1912 F,. H. King. Medic. Baseball A. V. W'andtke. 1910 S. S. Webster. 1910. Manager V. C. Caldwell. 1911 R. M. Lawlis. 1911 Track S. Edwards, 1910 W. P. Newman, 1910 B. C. Morrill. 1910 W. E. Robinson. 1910. Manager II. E. Rowell. 1910 H. W. Slocum, 1910 H. E. Warren. 1910 Tennis R. 11. Martin. 1910 R. I). Morss. 1910. Manager 25S College Prize-Winners and Office-Holders A SUPPLEMENT TO THE LIST PUBLISHED IN THE BUGLE OF 1899 Numerals indicate class unless otherwise stated. Goodwin Commencement Prize CU of 1868 Prize '98 R. R. Morson '98 T. I- Marble '99 A. H. Nason '99 F. L. Dutton '00 H. A. Beadle '00 F. C. Lee '01 K. C. M. Sill '01 K C M. Sill '02 R. S. Benson '02 D I. Gross '03 S. 0. Martin '03 G. H. Stover '04 A. C. Shorey 04 M A. Bryant '05 S. P. Chase '05 S. P. Chase '06 P. F. Chapman '06 J. A. Bartlett '07 R. H. Huppcr '07 c. W. Snow '08 C. M. Robinson ‱08 A. T. Gould '09 J. Stahl Brown Prize for Extemporaneous Composition First Second '98 W. W. Lawrence F. H. Swan '99 L. I- Cleaves H. B. Neagle '00 C. S. Bragdon C. C. Robinson '01 K. C. M. Sill D. F. Snow '02 D. 1. Gross R, S. Benson '03 F. G. Marshall G. H. Stover '04 G. W. Burpee W. E. Lunt '05 C. P. Cleaves S. P. Chase '06 O. Peterson J. W. Sewall '07 A. B. Roberts E. A. Duddy 'oS A. H. Ham A. L. Robinson s s'as' ÂŁ -s’ ÂŁ' s' s' 2' 8' s' s' s' a s' $ s' 2' 2' s' 2' s' s' Smyth Mathematical Prize I). B. Hall S. P. Harris H. P. Vosc R. B. Stone F. G. Marshall M. P. Cram S. P. Chase C. C. Shaw I_ D. Mincher C. H. Ycaton H. H. Burton H. Q. Hawes Sewall Greek Prize ’oo P. M. Palmer ‱01 K. C. M. Sills ’02 H. G. Swctt ‱o3 L. V. Walker S. C. W. Simpson '04 J. M. Bridgham M. A. Bryant ’05 No award '06 E. C. Pope ‘07 W. A. Robinson 08 T. E. Gay ‱09 F. P. Studlcy ‘io H. G. Ingcrsoll Sewall Latin Prize ‱00 J. W. Whitney ‱01 K. C. M. Sills ‘02 H. G. Swctt ’03 S. C. W. Simpson '04 A. C. Shorcy '05 J. N. Emery '06 E. C. Pope 07 F. J. Weed ‱08 T. E. Gay ‱09 J. R. Hurley 'io R. E. Ross Pray Englith Prize '98 W. W. Ijwrcnce '99 F. R. Marsh '00 E. B. Stackpole 01 K. C. M. Sills ‱02 D. I. Gross ’o.? C. F. Robinson '04 M. A. Bryant '05 C. P. Cleaves '06 I.. H. Fox '07 K. A. Duddy '08 No award Bugle Editor -in-Chief Orient Editorz-in-Chief Quill Board Chairmen Popular Men H. F. Dana Y ai 0' ‱99-'00 P. A. Bald), 'oo ’oo J. P. Webber '99 R M Greenlaw J. P. Webber '00-'01 C. E. Bellatty. ’02 '01 K. C. M. Sills 'oo J. W. Whitney J. A. Pierce '01 -'02 P. H. Cold). 02 '02 G. E. Fork ‘ot D. F. Sivow G. E. Fork ‘02-'03 C. F. Robinson, '03 '03 W. M. Houghton '02 S. W. Noyes G. H. Stover '03-‘04 W T. Rowe, ’04 '04 J. M. Bridgham 03 P. O. Coffin M. P. Crant '04 ‘05 w F. Finn. Jr. '05 '05 F. E. Seavey 04 I '. I. Putitam S. P. Chase '05-'06 R. G. Webber. o6 ‱06 J. W. Sewall ‘05 W. C. Philoon P. R. Andrews ■o6-'o7 R. A. Cony. '07 '07 C. W. Snow 06 II. P. Chapman E. A Duddy 'o7-'o8 A. 1.. Robinson. ’08 ‱08 P. II. Powers '07 J. B Drummond A. T. Gould '08-'09 K. R. Teffl. '09 '09 M P. Cushing ‱08 H. W St an wood II. II. Burton R. Hale W E. Atwood, ’to ‘to R. Hale ‘09 II. Atwood Goodwin French Prize 'oi E T. Smith '02 R. B. Stone ‱03 L. V. Walker '04 M. P. Cram ‘05 W. B. Webb 06 C. C Shaw '07 J. S. Bradbury ‱oS G. P. Hyde '09 H. H. Burton '10 J. L. Crosby '11 C. E Kellogg Cl   of '75 American Hittory Prize Fir l awarded in 1902 Ye i '02 S. O. Martin, '03 '03 A. C. Shorey, '04 '04 J. E. Newton, '05 '05 J. E Newton, '05 '06 W. A. Robinson, '07 '07 A, T. Gould, 'oS 'oS No award Hawthorne' Short Story Prize Fsr t awarded in 1903 Y ir '03 C. I . Robinson, '03 '04 C. P. Cleaves, '05 '05 E. A. Duddy, '07 '06 E A. Duddy, ‘07 '07 E A. Duddy, '07 '0$ E. Otis. '08 Football Captain Ba ebnll Captain S«i oi 0! Scum (4 ’99 A. W. Clarke, 'oo '00 H. O. Bacon. '00 '00 J. Gregson. Jr., ’oi '01 G. E Pratt. '02 'OI H. J. Hunt, '02 '02 A. P. Havey. '03 '02 D. C. Munro, '03 ■03 A. P. Havey, '03 '03 E 0. Beane, '04 '04 J. F. Cox. '04 '04 W. C. Philoon, '05 'OS J. A. Clarke. '05 '05 H. P. Chapman. '06 ’06 R. J. Hodgson. ’06 '06 J. B. Drummond. '07 '07 C. E. Files. '08 '07 W. R. Crowley. '08 ‱08 H. W. Stanwood. 'oS ■0$ D. M. MeDade. ’09 '09 J. W, Manter, '09 '09 W. P. Newman. '10 Track Teum Captain Tenni Team Captain scjioacc Seno ot 'oo R. S. Edwards. '00 ’04 S. T. Dana, '04 01 H. H. Cloudman. '01 'OS H. G. Tobey. '06 '02 H. J. Hunt, '02 '06 H. G. Tobey, ‘06 ■03 I. W. Nutter, 03 ■07 G. P. Hyde, '08 ‱04 W . T. Rowe. ’04 'oS A. H. Ham. '08 ■os A. C. Denning. '05 ‱09 A. W. Hughes. '09 '06 H. G. Tobey. '06 ‱07 P. R. Shorey. D. S. Rob- inson. '07 ‱08 H. Atwood. '09 ’09 H. Atwood, '09 3' as' s' ÂŁ' 2's'2' 8's'-a? Football Manager a d S x Baseball Manager ad H. W. Lanccy, '99 ‘OS L. I Cleaves. '99 L M. Spear, 'oo ‘99 J. W. Whitney, '00 H. 1« Berry, 'oi 'OO J. H. White, 'ot S. W. Noyes, '02 'oi F. A. Stamvood, '02 I. W. Nutter. ’03 '02 C. F. Robinson. 'o.{ H. II. Oakes. ’04 '03 P. M. Clark. '04 D. C. White, '05 '04 W. F. Finn. '05 J. W. Sewall. '06 ■05 A. C. Putnam. '06 N. r. Allen. '07 '06 H. E. Wilson. '07 C. M. Robinson, 'oS '07 A. L. Robinson. '08 J. S. Simmons, '09 'oS K. R. Tefft. 00 T. Otis, ’10 '09 S. S. Webster, 'to Track Team Manager Tenni Team Manager c4 VMM d '98 R. S. Cleaves. ’99 ’04 C. J. Donnell. '05 '99 R. F. Chapman. '00 '05 P. F. Chapman, '06 '00 II. L. Swctt. '01 '06 L. D. Mincher, 07 ’01 G. R. Walker. '02 '07 J. F. Morrison. 'oS '02 J. P. Mitchell, 'oj ‱08 L. F. Timberlakc. '09 0.1 W. K. Wildes, 04 '09 R. D. Morss. '10 04 R. M Mall. '05 '05 I). B. Andrews, '06 06 A. J. Voorhces, '07 ‘07 R. A. Lee. 'oS '08 R. O. Brewster. '00 '09 W. 1C. Robinson, 'to Glee Club Leader 5 «m at ‘99 W. B. Adams, ' ) 'oo C. it. Willard, 'oo 'oi J. Appleton, '02 V 2 C. II. Preston. '02 '03 I.. V. Walker, 'o.i '04 B. Archibald. '04 '05 F. K. Ryan. '05 'oi R. Johnson. '06 '07 A. O. Pike. '07 '08 M. P. Cushing, '05 '09 P. II. Brown, '09 .Mandolin Club Leader 1 '  W. B. Moulton. 99 'oo II. W. Cobb. 00 01 II. K. McCann. '02 '02 II. K. McCann. '02 '02 J. A. Greene. '03 '04 P. F. Chapman. '06 '05 P. !‱'. Chapman, '06 '06 P. F. Chapman, 'oIt ‘07 T. R. Winched. '07 08 II. F. Kane, '09 '00 C. K. Stone. '09 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Hang sorrow! care will kill a cat And therefore let's be merry.” Of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh ” “THE FACULTY DIVINE” There is an old person called Prex. Whom the students exceedingly vex. When moved to his ire. He says You I’ll fire;” And that’s why the students love Prex. A LITERARY COLLEGE O Tempora! O Foster! Wily Mitch and Prex Hyde! Have ye said that Bowdoin was a literary college? Have ye proclaimed that we were supporting traditions in- augurated by Hawthorne and Longfellow, and continued by a long line of the illustrious. Where is thy boasting now? To what purpose is thy vain-glorious self-satisfaction? Has not Wilmot Brookings Mitchell, A. M., Edward Little Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, gone down to posterity in the words of our contemporary as the author of a story “in no way superior to the average college tale, and, in some respects, inferior.” And did not William Trufant Foster, A. M., Professor of English and Argumentation, at exactly 3.08 p. m., on Thursday, January 21, 1909. utter the words, “It doesn’t do any good for you and I to reason about these things.” Alas, alas, if such degeneration is prevalent among those whose mission it is to instruct and guide the feeble mind of youth, what hope is there that better things exist in their charges? Pitiable, indeed, is such a state of affairs. A few years ago, Professor Foster said with a ring of pride in his voice. “Bowdoin has been on thin ice a good many times, but she hasn’t fell through yet.” But what humiliating changes the years bring. For in these sad days Bowdoin may be said to have “fell through. There is a professor called Spidc Whose figure there’s some do deride; But when he gives a quizz, They get down to biz, And declare that there’s no one so fine. VOICES FROM THE PAST Casey Sills is an enigma, a rebus, a charade or what you will. Casual observers, like beginners at chess, think they fathem the puzzle at once, but by applying the old axiom as to the epidermal dimensions of apparent beauties, they are set on a probably more truittul tack. One of the most promising clues to an inkling of his furtive nature is that he waltzed away with the strawberry blond, to the protracted accompaniments of the fiddles, trombones, tom-toms, while his friends were totally unaware of the origin of the thrilling ballad. But to begin with, if you wish to try your hand at analysis, he gets out of the wrong side of the bed on each side with both feet at the same time, stumbles over the wash-.iaud-stand, composes an antistrophe in archaic Greek with a smile 011 his face, eats with a countenance of indescribable length, laughs over Willie Mack, weeps at a drink bunks into you where you think lie's not, puts the text before the horse, and in short, and 1 his is not a false rhyme. The intention is, however, that the verses be read bv one who has been going regularly to gym and has been running around the outdoor track witn the thermometer at o, with nothing on but a pair of running pants and a sweet smile. I he harmony of the line will then be perfect. 266 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 very clliptically speaking, with such an artless science of incongruities, befogs all perspicacity of insight that he may be Sinbad the Sailor, Charlemagne, or Whistling Rufus. President Hyde thinks on the whole, that Casey is endeavoring to establish a reputation for probity, which will, by contrast, render his later achievements the more stupendous.—1901 Bugle. Marshall Pcrley Cram has a hat which came from BodwclFs, price forty-five cents. It looks like a hybrid tain o’shanter, but never having seen anything like it before, we are unable to classify it accurately. Perhaps Cram thinks that it adds to a look of scholarship (we don’t) and will fit the name “Socrates” which was given him Freshman year for physi- cal rather than mental resemblance. If the class had an awkward squad in the broadsword drill, Freddie Putnam would be Marshall’s only rival for the leadership. That pair doing a drill put up a performance which Dr. Whit, says is no more like fencing than sawing wood.— 1904 Bugle. John Whisker Merrill Bridgham is a recluse, and fortunate indeed is the visitor who catches a chance glimpse of this gaunt, spectre-like form flitting quickly from one recitation to another. Close application to his books has made John the prodigy of his class, next to Sam Dana, of course, although it is rumored that even Sam trembles on his throne now. John spends all his leisure time writing poetry, good poetry it is, too, for the Rt. Hon. Arthur Huntington Nason has been heard to remark that it is almost as good as he himself used to write while in college. John regulates all his actions by a schedule, and, like the Maine Central Railroad, is never behind time.—1904 Bugle. Way back in the mists of ’9S, Brer Stone was a roly-poly little boy with a beautiful complexion. Coming to us from the crack schools of Massachusetts, he was supposed to be well fitted in all respects, but sad to say, his. dread of the Sophomores was so great that he dared not pass a good physical exam, lest he be put in the front ranks of the battle array. But a good drill in the sweat shop improved his courage so that he was enabled to withstand the cavalry practice of the classics and even, it is said, to take legible notes from Whisker. Buck himself, after a gallant resistance, was forced to give him the Math, prize. Since this event, our prodigy has devoted much of his time to the study of German literature. His latest important work, soon to be published, is entitled “Life and Character of Goethe as reflected in ’Faust ” Perhaps the following elegant verse, supposed to be a part of his manuscript, sums up the result of his methodical and exhaustive research: “From eighteen unto eighty he Held e’er a girl upon his knee. And each from Kathcher to Von Stein, Hath influenced his every line, Yea, all of them—wirwird’s gebraust— Compose sweet Grctchcn of the Faust.” —I9°2 Bugle. CAUGHT IN THE ACT. OR HOW OUR PROFS. SPEND THEIR SUMMERS Cast of Characters. Dr. Edwards, Professor of Economics at Bowdoin College. Captain McKoon, Captain of the yacht “Sunshine.” A Junior at Bowdoin College. Storekeeper. Scene laid at East Boothbny, Maine, July 4. Scene I. On board the yacht “Sunshine” approaching the wharf at East Boothbay. Junior (coming out of the cabin) Plenty of water at the wharf, Cap’n? Captain“All right, go for’ard and stand ready.” Junior:— Aye, aye, sir; little to port; steady; hold cr. t) Captain:—“Make fast that line for’ard. She'll lay there all right. (They go up on to the wharf.) 267 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Scene II. On the Wharf. Junior:—“Ought to be some mail at the office for us. Let’s go up before it gets dark. Captain:—“All right. Say. look at this coming (pointing towards a couple coming down the wharf). She looks pretty swift. Junior:— By George, Cap. that’s old Edwards, the Economics Prof, up at College. Wait till 1 give him the laugh. (Approaches Professor.) Why! Mow arc you. Pro- fessor. Glad to sec you. Didn't expect to meet anyone here that I knew. (Professor pushes aside his friend.) Arc you stopping here long?” -Edwards (somewhat abashed) :—“Glad to sec you. No, I am only waiting for the boat. She won't be here for some time, yet, will she? Junior:—“No, not for a couple of hours. Captain (aside to Junior) “Bet lie’s glad.” Edwards (anxiously waiting to pass on to his friend who has gone ahead and waited) :— “Well, 1 must be going. Glad to have seen you. Good luck to you this summer. (Ed- wards hastens away.) Junior:—“Solong. Glad to have seen you.” Captain:— Well, let’s get up to the office before dark. Guess the old boy didn't expect to see anyone he knew. That girl looks as if she would keep him going for a while.” (Exeunt both.) Prof. Edwards en ncaliui 268 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Scene III. In the Village Grocery Store. Storekeeper :— Good evening, gentlemen.” Captain and Junior:— Good evening.” Captain“Can you send an order down to the wharf right away. We want to get away early in the morning.” Storekeeper :— Certainly, gentlemen.” (Captain hands the storekeeper a slip with the order on it and he puts it up.) Junior Say, old fellow, what kind of a girl was that we met with that curly, red- haired gentleman, who just went down on the wharf?” Storekeeper (to clerk)“Who does he mean? Oh; I know. Nellie Dampeaux, the table girl up at Scavcy's. Rather short, round, with dark hair and dark eyes.” Junior:—“Yes, that’s the one.” Storekeeper:— She'll make him travel some, if he stays around here long. Every one round here knows her and they all steer clear of her if they can. She always is picking up strangers, (to the captain) That will be $9.50; the boy will deliver them at the wharf.” Captain:— We thank you for your kindness. Good evening.” (Captain and Junior go out.) Scene IV On the Wharf (Near the boat). Junior:—“Is everything here, Cap?” Captain:— Yes.” Junior:— By the crowd that’s here, I guess the boat must be late. Bet Old Edwards is having the time of his life.” Captain:— What’s the crowd looking at around that corner? Junior:—“Let’s go over and see.” (Both go over.) Captain:—“Say, old boy, it’s that old Prof, of yours, fussing that girl.” Junior (passing behind some of the crowd, to the Capt.) :— I don’t want him to sec me, but I do want to sec him. That looks great for a college Prof, doesn’t it?” (Walking back to the boat.) Captain:—“Well, you never can tell what a man will do when he gets alone, or rather thinks lie’s alone from all those who know him. Guess we had better get out of the steamer’s way. Here she comes down through the Narrows. Junior:—“Yes, guess we better. I hate to leave that girl with the old boy. Ihe lines arc all cast off, Captain. There is good anchorage off the wharf.’ Finis. FACULTY CHAPEL ATTENDANCE During the period February 11 to March 12, 1909. a careful record of faculty attendance at chapel was kept. The Bugle now announces to the world the shocking results which this investigation has brought to light. The great majority of the faculty have so many cuts that it will be impossible for the student body to overlook their negligence and they will have to be fired. To be sure, Roderick Scott has only one cut and Cram only four, but these are dismal exceptions. Mitch is a bad third with 14 cuts; Prex has 18; Oki, 19; Whisker, 20: Chap, 20; Whit and Frcnchie, 22 each. In the whole period, Casey appeared in chapel only seven times; Copeland and Mush were no better. Bridgham and Burnett showed up only five times. Spider came three times, and Hastings, Georgic and Rob worked in but two in the whole month. Buck, Hutch and Brown did not go at all; but the first is excused because he has to get up early every morning to feed and care for I riangle. Of course, under those circumstances, he couldn't get to chapel. As a result of over-cutting chapel, the Bugle hereby declares Hutch, Rob, Hastings, Georgie, Bridgham, Burnett. Spider. Brown. Caspy, Mush, and Copeland suspended for six weeks. Prex. Oki. Whisker, Chap, Whit, Frcnchie and Mitch are put on indefinite probation, and will not be taken off until they give evidence of better conduct. 269 The Bowdoin Bugle, 19JO We tabulate attendance list below for the convenience of reference: Cram 4 cuts Whisker 20 cuts Mitchell 16 cuts H. Johnson 22 CUtS Scott I cut Bridgham 25 cuts Chapman 20 cuts Burnett 25 cuts Sills 23 cuts Little 23 cuts Robinson 2S cuts Hastings 2S cuts Hyde iS cuts A. Johnson 27 cuts Files 28 cuts Brown 30 cuts Copeland 23 cuts Moody 30 cuts Edwards 19 cuts Hutchins 30 cuts Whittier 22 cuts COLLEGE DICTIONARY AND ENCYCLOPEDIA (Abridged Edition) Library.—A place seldom visited by college men. Smoker.—Inferno on a small scale. Banquet.—A quiet gathering of classmates, usually in Portland, at which strict piety is maintained (depending on the size and temperament of classes). Beer.—A beverage that does not meet with the approval of the faculty (in public) but greatly in vogue among the student body. Sleep.—A troublesome necessity and a thing not to be used in the class room. Economics.—A course of study without lectures. Adjourn.—A cessation of college duties seldom granted. I-ove.—Ask Lippincott et ceteros. Pi.UGCiER.—“Puss” Newman. Warning.—The athletic’s hoodoo. Tobacco.—A necessary adjunct to the Math. room. Orient.—The Freshman’s sole aspiration (until he begins to work for it). Doctor.—Any one but “Doc” Whit. College Band.—Opinions solicited. Gymnasium.—A college building that could be easily dispensed with. Glee Club.—A musical organization for which many sing but few are chosen. GRATITUDE (Being an autobiography of an unfortunate member of the Class of 1910). Listen my children and you shall hear A tale more famous than Paul Rcvere’s: Of a ride more thrilling and dangerous too, One that will shake you through and through. Last May of the year nineteen eight, After Sophomore parties had been running late, Pre-N sent Prof. Sills, with smoothest talk, To bid us cut out the annual walk. Where Sophs take Freshmen by the score. And pound them till their feet” are sore. Of course this ban we could not deride. So we gave it up, took them to ride; Gave them the very best there was. To complain thereof they had no cause; But the story of, with what luck we met. Is in the following sentences set. 270 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 On Monday eve of the first of June, There chanced to be a glorious moon; So we as Sophs, could not forbear To draw the Freshies forth from their lair. We gathered the children one by one. Explained to them (they dared not run) : Mow we wanted them in that night quite late. And warned them lest they forget the date. Meanwhile a few had engaged a car. One which would take us swiftly afar To where the castle still doth stay. And loom well up o’er Casco Bay; Here to be met by a skipper old. Whose secret business he never told; But whose boat was the speediest in the place. One which could win there in any old race. At twelve that night the Freshies came. Some unescorted, but all the same They were there at the appointed time and place. Lest traditions of class they should disgrace. We marched them down there two by two, And as we advanced our numbers grew Until when we reached our private road. We had a motley looking crowd: But we piled on each to his seat. While the Freshmen stood with their feet In the running boards and waited there For just a chance to pay their fare. But they were our guests so we (quite rash). Offered the conductor all the cash Which we had collected on the way. From the babes who had come along so gay. We made our trip without mishap. Except now and then the loss of a cap As some innocent one leaned far out. Lifted his blindfold and peered about To see if Lisbon next stop would be, Or whether we would land up by the sea. And so we left our car on the ridge. And started across the suspension bridge; We made it safe and reached the pier, Boats for full forty were waiting here; So we piled half in, left half on shore, As we found the craft would hold no more; And so we left the land behind. Seeking soil of a different kind. ( We treated our guests new like the “Dutch.” But after all. didn't hurt them much. Crab Island was reached, then very soon We disembarked by the light of the mcon. The Freshies rowed themselves ashore. Then came back and carried more. Till all were on land with two Sophs, to watch. No fires were lit, not even a torch But they sat in darkness quite serene And wondered then if 'twerc all a dream: 271 1910 The Bou) Join Bugle, When all at once to our ears did float The indistinct sound of a motor boat; It nearer drew and could be seen. As speck of black on the ocean’s green. We wondered who could he out so late And approaching us at that rapid rate; And then it shot so swiftly by, ’Twas like a shadow cast from the sky. Our senses came back and took firm rcot. We started after in quick pursuit; Our boat fairly flew; wc gained a lot, But still the other was but a dot When suddenly she disappeared Behind the islands we rapidly neared. No trace or sign of a recent flight. No sound at all. On such a plight We looked about and there did see. Way up in the shadow of the trees, A boat at rest. We turned about And quickly fled from us all doubt. For when we turned she started again Back toward the island from which wc came. She turned and twisted but all for naught, It wasn't long before she was caught. Her skipper claimed to be alone But a funny time, wc thought, to roam, So wc searched the deck where under furs. Couching and cowering like so many curs. Wc found a couple of Freshies, who Had come out thus to save their crew. Wc dragged them out and sent away Their skipper, but not without his pay. The rest was done, the Freshies damp Built a fire within the camp; And the glow of this as plain as day, Guided us on our homeward way; Our car wc reached, wc leaned far back. Listened to Jingle and his monkey act Until at an early morning hour, We saw once more the chapel tower. Wc had a reception bold and loud. For those who had missed being in our crowd; Wc kept them warm and sent them to bed With pains which had settled far from their heads; And so wc broke up a happy bunch, Went to our rooms, swallowed a lunch. And then turned in, a pleasant sleep Dreaming of Freshmen with frozen feet. Meanwhile the babes had lost all sense. Their desire for bed grew quite intense Till some of them even started ashore On a couple of kegs to hold up a door; But these swam back and all of them now Sailed into Freeport in an old scow; They reached our town along towards noon, And all turned into their beds quite soon. 272 1910 The Bowdoin Bugle, The event passed off as others such And none of us thought of it overmuch Till letters came from Prcx's hand. To six of our loyal and honored band. Ridding them call at his house next day And for no reason to stay away, As he had some special work to do Regarding the trip we’d just passed through. We went next day to Prex’s lair. He entertained the party there As sort of farewell party, too, For on that day we all got through-. We had taken from Casey. Prex's tip We’d changed the entire plans for our trip; A great success from our point of view But we couldn’t satisfy the faculty too. Moral:—(The only place you'll find gratitude is in the dictionary.) REVERE — Cornville The Misses Nettie Pollard and Anna Barker of the east part of the town, visited friends here a few days the last of the week and the first of this. A merry party consisting of Fred Parkman, Harold Rowell and two young ladies, attended the theatre at Lakewood, Saturday evening. This is an actual fact strange as it may seem. ONE ON JUMP Little Spider” Johnson, Jr., looking at the Bowdoin seal on one of the recent calendars, 'Say, papa, why did they put Mr. Jump’s face on this calendar?” Jim McBane, for the love of heaven. Wake me up at half past seven. For if you don’t, Oh Jim McBane, I’ll have to cut chapel again; And not the least of all my ills, I’ll have to call on Casey Sills. AN ECONOMIC REFRAIN Tune — Broncho Busier Alba Longa, Why don’t you lecture? We cannot always Subsist on dry old data; Now get wise And give us a good speel; Or pack up your trunk For the West. WEBSTER OUTDONE Prof. Sills (in Latin 4) “Mr. Sanborn, what is meant by the word formidable?” Bill (lazily) -.—“The faculty after sending out a warning. 273 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 CINCH FOR PINKY Sullivan, ’12. at the Pastime Theatre passes out a dime and expresses his desire to purchase a ticket to sec the moving pictures. Girl at the desk hands Sulli his ticket and a five cent piece with the words, “Children only five cents.” IN ENGLISH 5 Prof. Mitchell:—“Now, Mithter Haweth, can’t you pronounce the word 'thpethimen' more distinctly. Thound your etheth. C. B. Hawes (with unavailing effort) :—“Thpethimen.” Prof. Mitchell:—“That’th not very good yet, Mr. Hawes, you mutht mathter the thibilant thound. Try ’thimplithity,’ Mr. Hawes.” C. B. Hawes:—“Thim - plith - i - ty.” Prof. Mitchell:—“Very bad, indeed. The tongue thould be held farther back in the mouth in thith way. Do you understand? C. B. Hawes:—“Yeth, Profethor, I thee now. A SAPPHIC RHYME There was a young man from Augustinski. Whose name was Lippincottinski, He was bashful and coy, A sweet little boy When he first came up to Bowdoinsky. He blushed at the thought of fussingski. Didn’t know how to dance or fiirtinski, Till one day a young girl Set his head in a whirl. And now lie's a sure dcad-gonc-inski. 'I’m Gi.ad I’m Mabribd.’’—S. H. Hussey 274 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 FROM THE REVISED VERSION OF THE OLD TESTAMENT It came to pass in the--year of the reign of Prex Hyde, that General whose surname was Slocum, made a journey into the land of Monhegan, which lieth on the coast of Maine. While sojourning there, he found much pleasure in that land and many things did transpire. And when he had been gone four and twenty hours, behold a strange and wondrous tiling happened. For when it was yet morning lie was walking on the shore. And he heard a cry as of one in trouble: and still another cry was heard. Whereupon General lctteth out the full might of his lanky form and comcth upon two damsels, who were also sojourning in that land. They were pouring forth much tears so that General did feel pity for them and spoke to them saying, “Who are ye? Why do ye weep?” And one of them answered him saying, I am Vassar and this Holyoke. We arc but wayfarers and behold we have spent all our talents and have naught left but a check for twenty minte, which no one condescends to cash.’’ Now Slocum was sore distressed and spoke saying, “Be of good cheer, for I am with thee.” At this they wept the more. And as they were of small stature they mounted a small rock, hard by, and falling on General’s neck wept long and loud, so that the color of his necktie was changed. And when they had made an end of weeping he goeth to a house near by and meeting a woman at the gate he addressed her: “Doth thou know Prof. Johnson who tcacheth French in the land of Bowdoin?” And she replied, “Jc ne le connais pas, mais je connais sa femme.” At these words he replied, “Behold I am from that land.” And he prevailed upon her to take the check. Returning unto the maidens he delivered up the talents and they departing went their ■ way. And when four days has passed General was weary of the land of Monhegan so that lie came back again into the land of Bowdoin. Sclah. A PITIFUL TALE In the light of the setting sun of a line Spring afternoon. Honolli TetTt was seated in an arm chair enjoying his pipe and tearing from his classic forehead the eyebrows which grew there so luxuriantly. He had just extracted a particularly large and promising handful, when a modest tap on the door announced Jake Stahl. “I have felt it my duty on this occasion to make known to you a circumstance which I know can only cause you the sinccrest grief; but in a matter of this kind I feel that your assistance will be invaluable. Indeed I think it would be not in accord with my careful observance of the principles which the great French writers have so rigorously established, were I to fail in giving you information which will, I am sure, elicit your keenest sympathies And therefore I will impart to you this information confidentially. It is, to be brief, that Max Cushing’s soul has sunk.” “What!” cried the mighty Syracusan, leaping to his feet, “His soul has sunk? Where?” “Into the mist,” said Jake sadly. Never pausing for a moment, the great Honolli seized Jake by the hand, and together they rushed from the end and down the dusty road that leads to Mare Point, nor paused till the extremity of the point was reached. “What did the soul look like? gasped Tcfft. “In that respect,” Jake answered, “It is difficult for me to explain to you the precise aspect which it is said to have borne. If we rely on the authority of several prominent German writers of the last century, we may assume that the sinking soul takes various forms. But in this particular case which is now under our consideration, the soul is believed to have looked like the 'sun that leaves the winter sea all cold and gray. 75 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 At this juncture, Honolli seized upon a rural gentleman by the wayside. “My good sir,” said he, “have you seen an object sink into the mist hereabouts—anything that re- sembled a sun leaving a winter sea all cold and gray?” No, I ain’t,” said the rural one. Tcfft pulled out an eyebrow in sheer despair and Stahl remarked that the situation was reminiscent of many scenes in the French drama, save that some of the fundamental principles of the dramatic art were not observed. At this point, however, they were relieved by the sound of sweet voices singing in the wood Celestial climbs my soul its heavenward way.” “Thank God,” exclaimed Honolli, “It has come up again. All is over.” A LITTLE JOURNEY TO THE HOME OF GREAT MEN One autumn day not long ago, to relieve the monotony of life with Euripides, Clias. II, John Stuart Mill and others, I betook myself to a sequestered glen for a quiet hour with the Prince of Italian Poets. The air was exhilarating, the cadence of the dying year extremely restful and I perused the depths of the Inferno to my complete satisfaction. My interest gradually became so intense that I quite forgot the bliss of solitude and was brought back to realize my existence on earth only by the voice of a strange man at my side. At first I had half a mind to be angry at the intrusion but the fellow possessed such a striking personality that my indignation quickly changed to admiration and I accepted his melodious summons to follow him down through the woods to the sea. When we had come to the shore, he conducted me along to a small opening in the cliff and turning said, “I must now reveal my identity to you. I am the shade of that il- lustrious man whose work you were studying when I interrupted you and am come to fulfill the mission which devolves on me each recurring century, of conducting to the Lower World, him of mortals whose admiration for my genius is most sincere. Yon orifice is the entrance to the long and darksome way; thither will I lead you and bring you here in safety again.” Now, being a man of not more than normal courage and strength, I naturally hesitated at the rare offer. My companion noticed my reluctance to follow him and said, “Have no fear for your safety. Many of your kinsmen have gone o’er the path, in fact, it is not long since Weary Walker trod this path unattended.” Imagine my surprise at learning this of that indolent Skowhcganite! I immediately accepted the offer and grasping the hand of my leader, we slipped into the realm of unknown darkness. The journey to civilization was without interest except for an occasional odor of sulphur and the frequent “all’s well” of my guide. I had anticipated some trouble when we should arrive at the Gate, but the horned guard let us pass unquestioned. When, later, I commented on the fact to my conductor, he said that only two men had ever passed on their face,” Garrulous Bill Sanborn and Omnipresent Burt Morrill, and added that I probably belonged in their category. (From the sardonic smile on his face, I was unable to tell whether he meant the speech for a compliment, or otherwise.) We sauntered along the mid-way that resounded with the cries of flunked” students and those who were atoning for protracted and unexcused ab- abscnces from college, none of which I recognized. However, I have always thought there were some 1910 men in the crowd. Upon questioning my leader where such men were found, he told me there were numbers of them in the next circle, where I could stand on a promontory and sec them all at once. I thereupon urged a forward march. Before passing into the next circle, we were obliged to go before Minos, the Judge of that realm. I he Shade told me that no one had ever been refused admittance; yet there was a possibility of such a thing happening. My apprehensions were almost con- tinued for just then, I saw a man approaching. He wore a fur coat, a thing unusual for the climate in these parts, and on meeting him, I recognized Hoot Davie. He was just returning from a search for Gaffer.” We duly admonished him for intruding in that sacred place on such an errand and having sent him gently flying toward the Highlands, we went on our way. Old Minos, who looks not unlike our Prof. Hutch, let us pass and after some exertion, we mounted the height from which the whole Ix wcr World is easily discerned. 276 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 I will not attempt to relate all I saw there but will recount only the most important scenes and those that most readily come to my mind. My attention was first called to those who in life were addicted to the excessive use of stimulants and among others, I noticed most conspicuously, “Dizzy” Crowell, Frank Knight, Tommy Otis, and Stubby” McGlone. They were all quenching their thirst from bottomless tankards of Pink Lemon- ade. By far the largest gathering was composed of those who had trifled with Cupid. In this number I saw Slocum, “tall and fleet,” Lippincott, “sly but devilish,” Ludwig, “often but insincere, “Bob” Hale, “seldom and never for sale,” Warren Robinson, “small but fer- vent,” and Webster “eloquent but not persuasive.” I would have counted more but seeing some unwedded ones of the Faculty, I hastily withdrew lest I should be compelled to make some later comment on them. The Math. Sharks, too, had a goodly number and their punishment was most unique. They were each compelled to ride Triangle around a fiery path from which arose the strong odor of tobacco. I waited and watched a few of them make the highly enjoyable trip, some of them going more than once, and I recall the names of Jack Clifford, Rumford Falls Fisher and other ardent admirers of Buckology. It was rumored that Edwards (not Alva) would make the dangerous circuit but he did not appear. 1 learned from a by- stander who was sojourning there for eternity and then some, that Edwards could not ride the steed on account of the abnormal magnitude of his pedal extremities. I could not recall every thing I saw in the multitude of those who had been guilty of “Inflated Capita” and the manipulation of “The Bluff and Hot Air Secret.” But this being the last scene and having lingered there longest, I was able to get a moderate amount of information. There were present and undergoing torment, that “brilliant sage. “String” Hansen, the “affluent” and “somewhat inflated” Townsend, “experienced” and “abstemious Bill” Atwood, “seldom studious and “Icavc-of-abscncc” Farrar, Phil Morss the “Orphean Impositor” and Puss” Newman, “big but convincing.” I was busy taking in the sight when my guide warned me that our time was almost up and that we must go on. VVc turned in at an opening in the rock and pursued our way upward. The vapors of the dark passage overcame me and when I awoke, 1 found myself at the foot of the tree where I had been reading. I arose and reverently wended my way back to academic life with the determination to warn my college kinsmen of their impending doom, as revealed in my journey, and advise the mending of their ways while yet there is time. A perusal of the following pages of specimen lectures and suggestions, will enable any man of ordinary ability, to graduate with I B K honors. SPECIMEN LECTURES Prof. Edwards gave a lecture in Economics II, May 26, 1908. We print it below as taken down by a member of the class: . . ...... “Gentlemen:—In place of the regular and proverbial fifteen-minute quizz, I will give a lecture this morning.(Cheers for ten minutes.) In my opinion Plehn has not fully ex- plained the subject in his book. (Applause for five minutes.) I shall not go into details and statistics. (More applause, including ‘wooding,’ etc., lasting about twenty minutes.) I trust that this lecture will make the subject clear to your minds. (Laughter and cheers, fifteen minutes.) I gave the same lecture before a Club in Oklahoma and they pronounced it a model of eloquence and logic.” (Cheering till the bell rings.) (P. S. This was the only lecture given in the course.) LECTURE IN ENGLISH LITERATURE At the close of the last exercise, I think I was just speaking to the class about the remarkable and peculiar felicity which has always appeared as such a marked and singular characteristic in the prose style of Joseph Addison. And I may say that this felicity is the most marked feature of Mr. Addison’s style. It is this that appears to such an in- tensely beautiful degree in the writings of the Spectator papers. And wc may say that those who are inclined to deny Mr. Addison's felicity of style arc actuated by motives 277 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 of a jealous nature. It is, we think, hardly too much to say that such people are, as it were, positively envious. For this wonderful felicity of Addison’s expression is a most admirable quality, and one of which true lovers of the beautiful must inevitably be aware. And so it is only right that we should discard the opinions of those who are inclined to deny this as prejudiced and, as we may say. almost valueless. (Continue as above for one hour; these words can be applied impartially to any prominent English writer besides Addison.) EXTRACTS FROM ONE OF ROB’S LECTURES ON MENDEUEFFS CLASSIFICATION Some people seem to think that death lurks in every drink of water or glass of milk, that every mud puddle is a sink of corruption, and that every manure pile is an abomination unto the Lord. They will not eat anything unless it has the pure food stamp on it. Some chemists arc like liens. Of course you have all seen a hen that has been fed with lumps of food containing a considerable amount of red pepper, she does not dare to swallow it and does not want to spit it out. She flys around, flutters, cackles, and makes a general spectacle of herself. We have two lungs, two kidneys, two parts to our brain, and more liver than we need. I will guarantee that all you students who care for your- selves physically and pay due attention to the laws of nature, will live just as long as you want to if you do not fall off of something and break your neck. BUGLE BOTANY Being a few interesting facts about common Brunswick flowers. Scientific names arc given in all cases, supplemented by the common names in parenthesis. Corporeus Bararboricus (Billpuss).—A large and healthy plant that will flourish in almost any soil but is especially noticeable in flat, open ground such as Whittier Field. This flower is very bright when in the sunlight but will soon wilt if taken into class room. Syracusus Semiticus (Kcntef).—A remarkable exotic specimen sometimes found in the neighborhood of Brunswick. This plant requires so vast an amount of nourishment that it can only support itself with great difficulty. When sufficiently nourished, however, it will bloom almost regardless of environment. Rubicus Communis (Winsteph).—A plant remarkable chiefly for a blossom of brilliant red color. A remarkable story told of this species by some well-known authorities (See Tcfft’s “De Carminibus.” Vol. XVII, p. 734; or W. H. Sanborn's Science of Acoustics,” Vol. XLI, p. 253) is that if it is allowed to be carried on a Glee Club trip, it will emit a curious noise. The Buglf. will not vouch for the truth of these statements, but simply notes that if true, they are very startling. Grindus Terribilis (Jastahl).—A plant which seldom grows in the open. If pressed in a book, however, it will take on shades of the most astonishing brilliancy. This is said to be Bobby Foster’s favorite flower. Kcnncbunkicus Infernalis (Reross).—One of the wildest of the wild flowers. Blooms only in an atmosphere essentially alcoholic. Bangoricus Elongatus (Dizcrow).—This plant may readily be distinguished by its long stem and light blossom. Specimens of this kind are frequently met with in the vi- cinity of Brunswick, notably in Bath. In this town, it is said to be much admired. Longlegitus Horribilimus Octopipcdonicus Extraordinaris (Sumncredwa).—A most terri- fying and dangerous plant as it has a poisonous nature. It has long tentacles reaching out in all directions. These arc very likely to trip the unwary, thus causing their undoing. LATEST BOOKS A list of books published during the last three years by undergraduates of Bowdoin. 1 he Bugi.k can cordially recommend all these books as elevating and instructive reading. Ihcy are on sale at all the standard book stores of the country. If your dealer hasn’t them, send a hundred dollars in stamps to General Slocum, U. S. A., and he will forward to any address. Love; its Causes and Nature,” by Alfred Wheels Stone. This book is the product ot the authors many years of personal experience. We feel that we can safely recommend it as not only accurate but exhaustive. 278 1910 The Bow Join Bugle, “Christianity in the College.” by Ralph Omvheels Brewster, Max Perfect Cushing, Harold Heights Burton and Leonard Faultless Timberlakc. This book is printed solely in an edition de luxe limited to 1,000,000 copies only. It contains five hundred pages of very interesting reading matter; it is really a masterpiece of speculative writing. Life among the Clouds by Dizzy Crowell. This is a recognized authority among all books dealing with the conditions of life in lofty altitudes. It is now however becoming to a slight extent superseded by a text-book on the same subject by a certain Mr. Straw. “The Simple Life” by William Stewed Guptill. An interesting exposition of the value of sleep. The work is the result of careful experiments undertaken by the author who has sacrificed all in the pursuit of Science and has been the object of his own experiments. “Epitome of Human Knowledge; together with full directions for conduct in any emergency of life,” by William Hero Sanborn. This work will be found invaluable to ail who hope to achieve any degree of success in this life. Professor Sanborn is well known as the most learned man now living and his experience in many lines from pugilism to the lighting of fires contributes not a little to the value of this book. “The Life of a Rabbi”, an interesting autobiographical sketch by Honolli R; TcfTt. Essays on Gracefulness” by Harlan French Hansen. A learned treatise on an impor- tant subject. “Insomnia: its treatment and cure” by “Grampwing”. This is considered to be a highly authoritative treatment of a very important subject. The author who chooses to appear under this peculiar nom-dc-plumc is depriving himself of a fame that is only his just due. “The Rhythm of Motion by Paul Jones Newman. This handsome volume presents in a new form the important subject of walking as a means of attaining and preserving good health; the subject is treated from a point of view strictly poetical. “The Art and Science of Train-catching” by General H. W. Slocum. This is an ex- hausting work of great merit. It is recommended to the perusal of all who purpose to go away on a vacation; but to those who arc about to return, it will prove of less merit. “The Psychology of Sleep” by Dudley Hovcy. This book written by one of the leading exponents of the sleepy life has secured much approbation in circles psychological. It is said that Dr. Burnell will give a course next year which will employ this work as a text- book . “The Temperance Question” by Perfectly Temperate Nickerson. I Ins is a work com- mendable on account of its high moral tone. It is soon to be made “required reading” for all Freshmen. .... “Unnatural History” by Will Punch Newman. This is the first publication of a se- ries of lectures delivered by the author to Allen Johnson during the years 1907-1909. BAH JOVE, NOW DONCHER KNOW! Crossland at the second assembly—in the gallery—after a dance, That’s it, fan the little dears!” AFTER THE MINSTREL SHOW! “Did you ’ear that one habout the bullet taking height years to get through Hoki ’Ed's ’ead?” Puzzle—Newton or Crossland? A prominent literary critic has hinted that the following men are real heroes of the books named below. A Kidnapped Millionaire, Cost of Pride, The Wooing, Adrift in the City. Choir Invisible, Fairy Talcs, The Aristocrat, Meditations, Cast up by the Sea, Wild Man of the West. An Odd Craft, Billionaire Baby, Tommy Otis Tid Peters Leon Lippincott Si Rowell Phil Morss Ralph Smith King Martin Jack Clifford Woodward W oodward Cary Kendric 279 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 ANCIENT AND HONORABLE ORDER OE THE WEARERS OF THE MOUSTACHE Worthy President and Chief Moustache Raiser, Buster Crosby Adored Secretary and Holder of Second Honor Dizzy Crowell Treasurer and Keeper of Consolation Trophy, Mose Woodward Guardian of Safety Raisor, Joe Boyd Charter Members.—Buster Crosby, Dizzy Crowell, Mose Woodward. Joe Boyd. Honorary Members.—Joe Boyce, Marshie Cram, Allen Johnson. Doc Copeland. Fratres in Urbe.—Prexy Hyde, Whisker Woodruff, Frcnchy Johnson. Would-Be Members.—Grace, Herr Roderick Scott, Oklahoma Ed. WELLESLEY CLUB In existence sub rosa since no one knows just when. Organized in 190S. The object of this club is to promote good feeling between Bowdoin and Wellesley as institutions, and to ensure friendship between individuals in the two colleges. Those only arc eligible for membership in the club who can produce to the officers satisfactory credentials of ardent service in the club’s behalf. Fratres e Facultate Kenneth Charles Morton Sills John Merrill Bridgham Charles Theodore Burnett Fratres in Collegio Ralph Owen Brewster, of Dexter, President. Harold Wilson Slocum, of Monhegan, Vice-President. Harrison Atwood, of Auburn, Secretary and Treasurer. Harry Whiting Woodward, of the West. Harold Hitz Burton, of Newton. Harry Buddington McLaughlin, of Providence. Kenneth Remington Tcfft, of I'abyan’s. Other names withheld by request. We regret that the copy for this club was given to us by President Brewster, too late for insertion among the other social organizations. QUERY COLUMN . , I lie Bugle has opened this colume of pertinent and personal questions to gain information regarding some of the phases of college life. Any answers will be gratefully received by the Editor-in-Chicf. t0 kn0w knowledge is power,” is that the reason why Puss Newman and John Clifford arc so strong? VVanted to know, if “Dizzy Crowell and “Bill” Sanborn are overstudying this year? Will “String” Hansen and his pals break out some more glass in Appleton to recom- pense themselves for what they were compelled to pay for last year? What gave C. Elijah Kellogg his swelled head? What are the attractive features about Math. I and II that so many Sophs, are taking the course again? Wanted to know whether “Buck” Moody uses Lucky Strike” or “Old Honesty’” (We hope it is the latter.) We have noticed that one of our library assistants is laughing most of the time Does anyone know the joke? Does AI Stone really think lie’s good looking, or is it only his voice that lie has such a tremendous admiration for. If Brewster had his tongue extracted and were gagged, and were then locked up in a sound proof cell in the middle of the Sahara Desert, would lie still try to talk? Under these circumstances, it he should be able to say anything, would lie swear or just argue’ What arc Brown’s plans for next year? Is this not a more difficult question to answer than the riddle of the Sphinx? 1 ♩Strongly suspected, yet not confessed. 280 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 SOMETHING THAT DOESN’T HAPPEN TO MANY OF US. Fisher (preparing for a history exam.) “I am surprised to find out how much I know.” WHO IS HE? A Freshman having missed an exam, in English, goes up to Mitel and says that he would like to make it up as Professor Casey said lie could. Stranger at Theta Delta Chi House (startled) :—“Is there some wild animal in that room ?’’ Smith (cooly) “No, that’s only String Hansen studying his math.” “Phil” Morss was elected squad pianist not long ago. As he sat down at the piano the first day that there was to be music for the drill, Ralph Files exhorted the Juniors to do their best by saying, “Now fellows, go through the drill just as though you were going to have music.” Whisker (as Kcndric comes out of chapel with violin) :—“Mr. Kcndric, just a mo- ment. please.” Kendrie“Yes. sir.” Whisker“Those cr violin solos are cr no doubt very fine, but cr we would appreciate more if they cr came less often.” Kcndric (aloud):—“Very well, sir.” (aside) “Huh; he don’t know when he has got a good thing.” WHAT WE SEE IN EXAMS Prof. Okc. Ed:—“Locate the final incidence of a tax on a ‘bald-headed’ professor.” Bobby Foster:—“Expound the paragraph, of which the topic sentence is given here in Emerson’s exact style and thought.” Spider:—“Tell, at length, all you know about the world.” “OKE ED” LECTURING ON THE EVILS OF WATERING STOCK Webster:—“A good example of watering stock can be found right down here in Portland, where they use a fish-pond for watering cattle.” DID HE GET THE JOB? P. B. Morss (applying for position as leader of College Choir) :—“Experience? Oh, yes; I lead the choir two mornings when Kendrie was away. BOBBY LECTURING IN ENG. 4 “As I was standing by the falls where the river flows up—Voice from rear of the room) “Huh; flows up.” AN ECHO FROM 1909 Prof. Johnson:—“Mr. Ginn, were Gregory’s ‘Dialogues’written in classical Latin? Ginn (after a long pause) :—“Yes, I believe they were. Prof. Johnson :—“Quite the Contrary.” . Ginn:—“But you must remember, professor-----” (Exit Gum.) A VARIATION From far Oklahoma came Ed. To stay for a year it was said; But alas and alack This year he came back— But Crossland teaches instead. 2S1 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 When coldly wet the chapel towers Stand bleak against the sky, We three spend many happy hours— My book, my pipe and I.” I WONDER WHY Roderick Scott to Bill Crowley:— Mr. Crowley, I fail to see the point of that joke at the minstrel show. I do not sec what I have got to do with a dog or a dog fight. And why did they call me Yellowhammer?” COMING BACK FROM XMAS VACATION (Second midnight from Portland. Yellow Hammer” Scott and “Okie Ed” are snooz- ing with their feet on the seat in front of them.) Brakeman:—“Please take your feet down.” (Snores and grunts from Okie” and Yellow Hammer.”) Brakeman:— Please take your feet down.” Spectator“What ails those men anyhow?” Brakeman:—“O those guys can’t understand English.” Dr. Copeland in Zoology:— Mr. Pennell, name some of the animals of the Australian region. Mr. Pennell:— Kangaroo, giraffe, canteloupc.” Dr. Copeland:— Never mind the fruit, go on with the animals.” After the terrible conflagration at the Psi U. House, Bob Stubbs came over, gazed at the charred relics and the blackened woodwork, inhaled the noxious odors of chemicals, and noted tlie destruction of furniture. 1 hen he assumed his intellectual expression and asked in an injured way, What burnt?” The Class of 1909. last year, published in their Bugle, a list of those who had earned their class numerals We regret that we have not space to print this list. But that class las such a low athletic standard, that anyone who wants to do so can wear the 1909.” We here print, however, a list of those who have not earned their coveted 1909.” R. K. Atwell M. O. Baltzcr P. H. Brown G. P. Estes T. D. Ginn W. Haines A. S. Hiwalc D. Hovey H. F. Kane I. L. Rich T. F. Sheehan J. J. Stahl O. H. Stanley F. P. Webster 282 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 THE TALE OF A TRUE TALE In from of the moving picture show, A beautiful sign did stand Bowdoin’s Mandolin Club here will play It, in bright letters, ran. Now one of the lads on this same club That made a part of the show. Though he comes from the wise, wise town of Bath. Is himself a little slow. Away to his room with boyish glee lie carried that brilliant sign; Quoth lie, although I have stolen it. It now beyond doubt is mine. A stern voice asked on the ’phone next morn Whether Mister Cole was near; Phil thought it was a lady friend And answered without fear. Like Achilles’ at the seige of Troy, Like String's when by fair one stung Were the wrathful words that from the 'phone. The heart of poor Philip rung. Straightway with pale face and trembling limbs, Direct to his room, went he. Took down from the wall with eager haste The sign he had hung with glee. With ne’er a look to right or to left, He goes to the picture place, The owner lie begs to take the sign And, O save him from disgrace. Touched by pale face and plaintive words, The picture man made reply. Some one my boy has been kidding thee, What for old signs care I? Moral Now if Philip in this matter Had just been on the level. He might have said to the picture man O you can go to devil. 1910 The Bow Join Bugle, HALL OF FAME “Fritter Wandtke is a lad of the Rooseveltian type, who finds his legitimate college work all too tame and is continually looking for something more strenuous. In his propo- gativc mind are formulated such subjects as a Lewiston-South American air ship line on which the agent of motion is to be a triplex-turbine-fifty wing power a:roplane. Not content to confine himself to plans for making money, he is already planning how to spend it and the production of the philanthropic side of his nature is to be the endowment of a Wandtke professorship at Tuskegee, the school of Booker T. Washington, whom Dutch would deify. First Brunswick young lady (meeting a chum on the street) :—“Why didn’t you come to the show and dance last night? We had a perfect time.” Second Brunswick young lady:—“Gee. I wanted to, but you know Mr. Wing came down last week and invited me to go and then last night he didn’t come for me. And what do you think, he forgot all about it. He came down this morning and tried to explain and I forgave him, too. I just couldn’t resist that pretty blush of his.” Woodward—Wild, Woolly West! Good at the War-cry—Whoopee!! Birthday Whiskey and a cold swim In Baxter’s frog pond sobered him. Woodward! “Ward Eight!” Gawd! ! ! Tom Williams dropped in on an unsuspecting Bowdoin College in the Fall of 1907. from Colby. Tom aspires to be a real noisy Candyboy.” but, since He is frightened at his own wickedness every time such a shocking word as “cuss” slips from his undefiled lips, we fear that he is hardly qualified to bear such a title. By some means—Tom always puts his finger on his lips when anyone suggests graft—he obtained the position of chief counselor to the Governor. House and Senate of the State of Maine, at the recent legis- lative session, and it is said that he made his services indispensable. Accordingly we have, since his return to college in April, awaited eagerly the results of the advice he expected to be able to tender the faculty. Edgar Crosslaxd is another of those theologs who come to Bowdoin to get a diploma in two years by picking cinch courses. However, he is not quite so bad as Hull and Newton. His chief claim to glory lies in the fact that lie is a loyal Bowdoin supporter, a fact which he proved for all time after the Bates game last fall. When the Bates men and the fair coeds reached Lewiston, after the game and began to sing “Boola Bates,” Crossland, with the courage of a South African lion attracted attention to himself by starting “Phi Chi.” Head erect, shoulders well back, and followed by puffing, panting Anand Sidoba Hiwale, lie marched proudly up the station platform, looking straight ahead and utterly unconscious of the surrounding, grinning crowd. This deed secured for him eternal fame. With his duties as the pastor of a Mechanic Falls church and his missionary work in Economics, he is too busy to be conspicuous on the campus. Clyde Deming was once told that he might become a president and on the strength of this Dcm is scheming. As he is not now just sure which of the parties will be in power twenty years hence, he acts at present as special representative for both. Clyde also teaches a Sunday School class because he thinks such a fact would look well recorded in his future biography. On Saturday nights he is apt to be a little negligent of his otherwise good record. After three years of math., Sumner Edwards has, contrary to all precedent, declared he would rather be a society buck than a moody buck. The only plausible reason for this is the professor in surveying. Sumner is a good track man and better yet, is still coming. 284 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 ‘‱Get out of the way! What do you think this is, a plaything?” Thus spoke the en- gineer, and six-foot three of bone and muscle jumped nimbly aside, as he so often has a chance back in the Allcgash region, saying, “Oh, no, sir, I simply wanted a picture of 451 close on.” Yes, reader, you have guessed right, the man with the camera box is none other than Frank Don't Carkadam Evans. He ranks among the leaders in studies as also he docs in height and ability to cover up a square meal at a short notice. Unlike most of his classmates, Bim is a strong woman hater and is never seen strolling from Art Building to Library and from Library to Chapel with one of the fair sex clinging lovingly to his arm. Carlbton Whidden Eaton, better known as “Bush” or “Bluenose,” comes from the end of Maine, the city of smugglers—Calais. He went to Exeter until that institution could stand it no longer. He then went to Tech to try to learn naval architecture, but lie was so stupid that the faculty there gave up trying to teach him. So he left and went to work building battle ships to amuse himself. He built the North Dakota (with another man to give him a lift in the hard places). When he finished her, he came to Bowdoin to com- plete his education. That’s all we know of Bush’s” past. But his present is enough for us. He is a thoroughly bad character. He has even been to Lewiston with Oily Sanborn. Ransom Edgar Fisher came from Rumford Falls, where the bears nightly howl and the primeval forest is just fading away. Nobody has ever disputed his backwoods origin. Fisher was ostracised with the rest of the “Heraclida:” and tried to make Prexy think he would never return. But he was just giving him some hot air, a thing that he uses with much dexterity in the class rooms. He has fallen into the habit of sleeping over- time since Ridglcy Clark graduated and often the ten-thirty bell finds him still between the sheets. Ralph Booth by Harbour Grace is a regular cut-up. There is only one good thing that can be said about him; he has a pretty sister. Ralphie sprang into prominence Soph- omore year upon two occasions. On the class ride to South Freeport in the Spring, he endeared himself to several of his classmates by lending them carfare. He was manager of the class football team. Aside from these two incidents, we fail to find anything good about him. He spends his evenings in Lewiston, Bath and Portland, and it is even said that he goes around on the sly with Cy Rowell. Just now, Ralph is rooming with Merrill Hill, which fact probably accounts for his failings. “Frisky Bill Guptill, the tobacco chewing philosopher of 1910. is a by product of Gorham and barely escaped going to Gorham Normal School. (Wish he had gone there.) Harold Bullard says that “Frisky” would be all right if lie would only keep quiet con- cerning the “Persistent Problems of Philosophy,” but he won’t. Sophomore year, lie led the squad that barely won third place. This last year, he has been one of the assistants in the gym but no one has known Bill to do any work himself or to coach the others. Bob Hale is small in body and large in mind; never mind in whose mind his mind is large. A thorough disciple of A1 Gould, he managed to get on the Quill Board by sending in some of Al’s old Gloucester stories. Some such pull elected him as editor ot the Bugle. He sits at his desk for hours, chewing his pencil and wondering how he can get even with Rod Ross. You see Bob had intended to have one of those creations from Portland down to the house party and so sent her an invitation. About a week later, she received an invitation from Ross which she at once accepted, writing to Bob that she had already had an invitation. Bob was wroth and since then has been looking for a chance to make Rod miserable. Watch the pages of this Bugle for the result. It is rather difficult to say anything about Jimmie Hamburger for he  ; too slick Jimmie’s nearest friends would deny that he was anything of a fusser and yet it s rue that in Brunswick and Bath society, his name is a familiar household word. J mmic likes himself for his pompadour hair and ability to kid. Most of all he is a sure cure for blues. 285 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 “String Hansen is a great admirer of “Buck” Moody and “Bobby” Foster. However tlitre are some who say that it is not so much “Buck” as a desire to figure out how two can live on $3 a week that keeps String plugging at math. But, by the way. don’t call Harlan String.” That is a nickname and not pretty. His real name is “Handsome.” Henry Quintus Hawes, who next to Jack Clifford and “String Hansen, holds highest honors in math, glories in the asserting that he has never kissed a girl. We greatly deplore this for we all feel that Quintus” has in him the material of a great poet. Let us hope that some generous lassie will, for the good of 1910. supply the necessary Prome- thian fire. Merrill Christlike Hill comes from Grovevillc. (He says that is only four miles from Buxton and that is where Kate Douglass Wiggin Riggs gives a reading each summer.) He has a sweet musical voice and made the glee club, hut no one has yet seen him open his mouth in a concert. Millie is a Win Stephens in disguise but has succeeded in keeping it dark. Brunswick Street Cleaning Department In the Fall of 1906 along with the cyclone which brought many things to Bowdoin from the rural parts of Maine, also came Elmer H. Hobbs, the great athlete and automobile crank Although he claims to have lived in all the largest cities of the State, he had with him a three-year-old cotton flannel slouch hat, together with other characteristics of the country. Soon after taking “Spider’s” and Bobbie’s courses, his athletic ability disap- pared, his auto ideas have vanished, but his hat stays on forever. The less said about Frank Hunter Knight, the better. Even his friends offer but one excuse for all his bad habits and disgraceful actions, he ate with the Medics. Freshman year When Frank arrived in town, he was determined to show the faculty that he could run the college to better advantage than they could. He did not have time that year as he taught some country school about five miles out in the woods. However, lie has started m very well this year and it looks as though Prex would have to go. Frank has two , '|kc Pr°f’ Rol)’ and.to ,K‘con,e a good marksman. He has had some practice in both but lie excels as a marksman. 286 1910 The Bowdoin Bugle, One man in 1910. who in his opinion wc can not say enough about, Kendrie, is (per- haps) known as one of the best violinists in the State: but for fear the college will forget this fact, he renders us a solo every Sunday in chapel. Baggy also had the reputation of being the chief fusser of his class but since he began his semi-weekly trips to Lisbon Falls, lie tires his friends with lectures on morals and how naughty it is to look at a skirt” without first being introduced. Leon Lippincott's great ambition in college was to get himself famous. His first attempt was to room with “String” Hansen, but tiring of playing satellite to that planet, he resolved to make a reputation for himself. Up to date. “Lipp” has broken all college records by three months, for paying steady suit to one girl. At rare intervals, a tall, rangy youth by the name of Martin, stops off at Brunswick for a recitation or two, and again departs for Augusta —, or Portland —: he always denies the latter destination, yet with a naughty little twinkle in his eye. “Mart” is anything but an easy mark for a grind.” for he pays strict attention to his own business, and if lie has any sporty propensities, and if he docs ride around in an auto, he never appears anxious to impress the fact on others. During the Spring, he lives, moves, and has his being in an atmosphere of tennis, as a result of which he wears a big B and together with “Tuppy” Hughes holds the Maine Intercollegiate Championship in doubles. “Luddy” earned a reputation as an able financier by successfully managing the Bugi.k this year : lie cleared thirteen cents. He is a great hit with the ladies and his ruddy cheeks and winning ways have caused more than one maiden to sigh, both at Topsham Fair and in his native land of “spuds.” We all remember how he tried to find a place to “drop his lunch” at the Sophomore banquet in the Falmouth Hotel and his indignation because all the windows opened on the street. “Luddy” is small in stature but possesses great intellectual ability. But his greatest claim upon fame is his splendid mass of hair. R. E. G. Bailey, as handsome a lad as ever boarded midnight train for Bath, is somewhat of a curiosity. Rumor has it that he was formerly a student in ’08 when Bowdoin was in her halycon days, and when the “ancien regime” went, a few of its admirers went with it. Yet Bill returned and pledged himself to good behavior and 1910. So discreetly has he conducted himself that he is apparently without a fault Those who know him well say—nuff said—wc do not want to sec him go. Brought up in the midst of a thriving rum industry one might expect that Chaki.es Albert Smith would be a regular “heller.” But this is not so. We do not mean to say however, that Charles is not sporty: he has at least the semblances of a full fledged Harry Lehr. With pompadour hair and a suit of latest cut. Charles is often seen cJir- roming gracefully about the dance halls of Bath and Brunswick, chatting fluently with an admiring damsel. Aside from this, the number of letters that Charles receives from heart-broken girls, imploring the favor of his smile, is astounding. Vet how haughtily does lie toss them to the waste basket. O Charles Albert, you little know the heart aches and early graves your ruthlessncss has caused. All hail to the Son of Abraham, Lee Mikelsky, the proprietor of the college tailor shop. If one should see Mike’s name in print, he might mistake him for a son of the Emerald Isle. But a look at his nose puts all such ideas aside. It is the proboscis of forty centuries. Mike is a jolly good fellow and never gets mad. He wears a smile from early dawn, varying directly with the size of his clothing sales. 287 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 “Curt’' Matthews divides his time between fussing, writing letters to distant fair ones, and pulling “Bobby” Foster's leg. As to how he progresses in the first occupation, we can only sav that everything indicates great success; the second yields him fat returns on every mail;’and the third resulted in a teaching job at Bridgton Academy last winter. Curt” belongs to that rare class of Bowdoin undergraduates who really enjoy attending the College Teas; such functions offer unlimited opportunity for his social propensities. This accomplished lady-killer has also tried being a football hero on several occasions, and it is rumored that these brave attempts caused thrills of joy in many a smitten female heart. “Oh, if the cute boy should get hurt,” they all sigh. However, “Curt” is a good fellow, even if he does believe that the first duty of man is to fuss. Harry Budmngforth McLaughlin, as the name signifies, is an American Beauty of the masculine gender. His conquests cover all the territory from New York to Maine, inclusive. His studies Freshman year took most of his time, but Sophomore year, he began his campaign, and today he is the peer of Brunswick’s Elite. He can count over to you, broken hearts by the scores and then adds that lie knows that more are silently pining away for his sympathy. He’s not been able to find but a few courses that lie likes. He made many tries but finds that many arc not suitable to his temperament. He says that French 3 and 4, 5 and 6 are {rood courses because they give him a lot of time for his social work. His greatest joy is to go out to the Brunswick Golf Club house with congenial company. He also likes to play golf occasionally. “Mac is a jolly good fellow, and we hope that “Providence” will always smile on him. This notice appeared recently on the Pastime bulletin board. “Among the leading features of our fine program for this week is to be a lecturette on Paris. The slides arc to be the best ever, and the gentleman whom we have engaged to give the lecturette is Mr. Francis Bernard McGlonf, of Natick, Mass. Mr. McGlone’s previous good work before Pastime audiences is sufficient guarantee for more of the same kind. Although the re- mainder of the program is of the same high quality as that presented by the above men- tioned artist, the management offers a further inducement in the fact that Mr. McGlone has offered to present his photograph to each lady in attendance at the afternoon perform- ances. Everyone come then, have an enjoyable hour and take this seldom open opportunity to become the owner of a work of art.” ♩Natick is on the Saugus Branch between West Chelsea and East Saugus. Colby Lorenzo Morton is distinguished from his 340 odd fellow students by a peculiar method of perambulation which is a cross between a Rodcric Dhu Scott swagger and a Bookie Ilitchborn slouch. When Colby is at home, this gait of his becomes the dignity of the office which he holds, deacon of the First Baptist Church of Friendship and head road commissioner of the Cushing clam flats. He got his gait walking between Lisbon Falls and the college, after midnight. Playing Braying Morss comes from Medford, celebrated by the story of Paul Revere and the sweet nectral brow that cheered the hearts of our forefathers in the hot mid- summer’s sun and the cold wintry blasts alike. He is so tall that he consumes an immense amount. His ability at the banquet table has given him the name of “Fillup” Morss, and if you have ever seen him fill up that yawning abyss within, you saw how fitting this name applies. He spent last summer at Boothbay Harbor. He spent most of his time calling on the summer people. We think that he was “smitten” for lie kept it up all summer We do not dare to say much about Bert Morrill for lie can toss the big sixteen-pound shot over forty feet. We can always tell when lie is coming, however, by the deafening roar which precedes him. It is not safe, and certainly not pleasant, when Bert and Silly Gcnthncr get to talking on the merits of Bill Taft. Bert has worked as hard as any man in college for the honor of old Bowdoin and we owe him a vote of thanks for his untiring efforts. lie has coached a track team to the State championship and second place in the New England Meet. Morrill has only one blot on his career; he appeared in a minstrel show with that huge joke from Riverton, Joe Mike Boyce 288 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 “Pottkr Marsh is not lazy, he is simply reserving energy for future activity. How- ever, Potter” has acknowledged that his great ambition is to be a dear brother to the seven sisters of rest. To most people, Cai t. “Puss Newman is known as a great football player, but we have a straight tip from “Mitch” that in the future “Puss” will also be a great author Mitch” claims that if ever any one is able to set forth the ideals latent in Newman's themes so that ordinary minds can grasp them, there will be a revolution in the art of love-making. “Puss” bribed us not to mention his faults, so we won’t, only that “Puss” docs sometimes—go to recitations. R. Doutti.etai.kai.ot Morss struck Brunswick with eyes wide open and jaw flying, observing and commenting on everything. He first began by giving advice to the mother- less Freshman; then he commenced to tell the upper classmen “where to get off.” Strange enough to say. they did not heed his kind advice with such alacrity as did the good natured Freshmen. “Bob” soon went into the brick department of the Brunswick Topsham Express Co. His work for the most part was carrying about parcels of bricks between numerous points of the two cities. He has made good use of acquaintances formed while in the brick business, to break his way into Brunswick society and now considers himself the unquestioned social favorite of the college. His love to talk has brought Bert Morrill to listen to him when all others have left. They have become inseparable friends and are always seen in each other’s company. Wouu) Besport NultY hit the road for Brunswick in a hayrack from the wilds of Buckficld. As the team tore down the street for the Tarbox, it was the butt for many a pun. As soon as he got calmed down a bit, he strolled up around the college, and since then has been seen quite a lot when not taking part in dances at Bath, Lewiston, Lisbon Falls, or Brunswick (lower City). Since we have come to know him better, we find that he is well informed upon any subject that is possible to bring up, that for every exciting experience we have had, he has had ten times as many so much more exciting, that ours sink into nothingness. “Nutty Nult” is out for the coin, so he says; at least, he has started into political life at this early age. He is one of the few Buckficld men in the Third House of the Maine Legislature. He once dropped the remark that he made the neat sum of ten thousand at this last session. The best thing about “Nult” is nobody can “Kid” him, or get him sore. His wisdom on display at all times has led his acquaintances affection- ately to call him “THE OTHER WISE MAN.” You remember the story in the Arabian Nights, how Si'nbad the sailor, in one of his ocean trips, landed on what he thought to be an island, but which proved to be the back of a turtle or some other animal. Well, listen to a somewhat analogous case. A party of visitors to the campus were one day going through the Science Building, when they spied what they thought to be a fossil woodeny mass. They were examining it closely when it suddenly moved and the supposed fossil ambled out of the building in the person of T. Cooley Phelps. Ira Robinson, the sport, tends out on all the dances, public and private, held in Bath, Brunswick. Lewiston, Portland and Topsham. Although a member of a fraternity, he makes his headquarters while in Brunswick, on lower Main Street. Besides this, we must say that Robbie has managed to pull good rank, although it is taking him a mighty long time to prove to “Buck” that he knows enough Algebra to have his class standing. Our only claimant to hymeneal fame is 1 homas I hiosophus Otis of New Bedford, Mass. In a fit of despondency, caused by the proximity of work as assistant football manager, Tom married a “Cranberry Queen.” Tom’s chief ambition is to be considered as the best dressed man of 1910 and lie even tried to bribe one of the Bugle Board to refer to him as the fashion plate of Bowdoin College. But at that 10111 is a hard work- ing boy; especially at house parties and also when he is trying to excuse cuts to Casey. 289 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Bright, bellicose, bustling and breezy. That's the boy—Clinton Noysy Peters. How handsome he looks in his new Spring suit! How the girls do look at him! Does he realize how beautiful lie looks? No, indeed, Clinton is as modest as he is tactful and that is saying a good deal, for his reputation as a diplomat is beyond question. And how sweet Clinton s smile is. All the girls in Rath and everywhere else for miles around would give almost anything to win a smile from him. For they all think that he is just too sweet.” We (e) Robinson is the smallest of the Robinsons, but his long head makes up for his small body. He is very well known among the Brunswick belles, and is surpassed as a fusser only'by the indomitable Steph” the winsom. Witli a little work and numerous calls Freshman year, he has won the Robinson reputation for being a student, so that he hopes to finish his course without any more work cn the books. His advice is Get a rep, and use it.” “General” Slocum is one of our most remarkable characters. We cannot understand him fully. It is a known fact that he has a mania for reading Sapphic literature and that he makes frequent and somewhat protracted visits to Mon began. One day, he has a nomadic atmosphere about him, another finds him engrossed in literature of the most sub- lime sort, and a third portrays his remarkable business ability, as he stands behind the counter of his trading station. But barring all this he is a crack athlete and has a form for speed that is highly Mercurial. Rodney Rcss came from that home of all reprobates, Kcnncbunk. And Rodney has been no exception to the terrible rule. For his college career has been one continuous round of dissipation and glaring misdemeanors perpetrated in utter defiance of all rules and regulations. We shudder to print such facts so publicly but this volume can hardly reach an individual to whom they are not already well known. This wild course is nothing new but dates its beginning far back in Freshman year. Even in those days. Rodney led a wild life and his has been a downward course ever since until the other day he actually smoked a cubcb cigarette. Upon a plane immeasurably higher than that of ordinary Bowdoin undergraduates exists, in lonely eminence, a superior being sometimes dcsecratingly designated Geezer Stone. Geezer,” it is true, is made of flesh and blood, but his whole physical being is swallowed up in a soul-thrilling, ethereally beautiful VOICE. In recognition of his super- lative vocal talents, the name of “Caruso” has been suggested as a fit tribute: his services have been sought by men as great as Paulo Antonio, a name famous in the operatic world, too famous for the insignificant page of the Hotel Eagle register; and as Captain Osh- kesh of the Salvation Army. It is to be noted that Geezer” has descended from his emi- nence in order to take part in his class drills at the Indoor Meet, on which occasions his remarkable form has attracted much notice. Speaking of Leon Smith, what do you think of that sweet little curl on top of his head? Rumor has it that Venus jealous of haughty Diana, persuaded Hermes to steal a curl for the sleeping Ganymedes and place it on Leon’s lid, so that after due experiences with mortal shes, he might ensnare her proud sister. Smitty believes this and already assumes a blase air toward the fair ones. For further information concerning this pre- carious youth, we respectfully refer you to himself; for bashfulness is not one of his faults or virtues. The; Winsom; Boy Stephens says that he came to college from the Holdcrness School, and mcidently adds that Ins home is in New Bedford. Steph’s wide experience at Holdcr- ness has given a great amount of material from which to give advice. “Winsome” doe not half express his numerous attractions for the fair sex. The class ought to elect him the champion fusser of the class, for he has fussed indefatigably-and more or lcs successfully since the first few weeks of Freshman year. The firs? part of Fresh mar fo k VCazoi SnmUS,tr’ CcdT°ni,g fi?d ° ! just, h?w « ««V towel he could dress with for a ra .oo without the Sophomores finding the upholstering. Alas for Steph, the Soph since 1 ,ast’ repnmandcd h,m strongly, and have kept a suspicious eye on him ever 290 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 Ralph Lank Thompson is another Brunswick lad with no ability in a literary line, that is why he is on the Bugle Board. Nobody knows much about him as he is rarely seen about the campus. Freshman year he was not seen but three times during the first semester. He has improved since then and we occasionally see him sprinting for chapel. It is rumored that he has been smitten of a Topsham belle, and it is true that lie and Georgie Files take frequent walks in that direction. However, in spite of his company, we are not yet entirely discouraged. Hf.rbie Warren is one huge joke. He does nothing but joke from morning to night, a fact which explains why everybody avoids him. He has broken up many a serious com- pany with his jokes, and is known to be directly responsible for three deaths. Harry Mac is the only one who can put up with those ancient funnicisms, and Harry is deaf. The least thing will “remind him of “a story he heard up in New Hampshire where he worked last summer.” Then he will go on to tell the most painful, heart-rending and tragical story you ever heard, and if you do not laugh, he is mad. Buck Moody is sore on Herbie, for lie actually had the nerve to spring one of Buck’s favorites. Herb is all right if you can keep his mouth closed. Frank Dunham Townsend, like Alexander Pope, is a precocious youth. When he was four years old he could read any article in the Brunswick Record, a truly great accom- plishment. To be sure he reports for the Bath Anvil and gets into all the athletic contests on the strength of being a reporter, but with the remarkable intellect which he possesses and the wonderful mind, Fat will no doubt become a second Frank A. Munsey in a few years. His whole mind runs to newspaper work and occasionally lie has something printed. He was once heard to say during a nap in English Lit., “I must rush that article It should be good for a column and give me a scoop.” The next day the Anvil announced in scare headlines that Professor W. B. Mitchell of Bowdoin College will preach in Pejepscot next Sunday.” One of the Maine girls saw Cony Weston at the game last Fall and said to her com- panion, I am going to ask my. papa to get him for me.” Later in the dav she saw him with a cigar and her opinion was changed, or possibly Cony would have followed in the foosteps of Brother Jump. Cony hails from Augusta and a sweeter, more petit, lovable creature is hard to imagine. He brushes his hair, cleans his fingernails and spends twenty minutes before the looking-glass every morning donning that three years old chapeau of his. But he is a jolly good fellow and sport. And now, ladies and gentlemen, we have the inestimable pleasure of introducing to you the greatest and grandest of them all—liero of a thousand conflicts, victor in every contest, where his very presence strikes terror to the heart of the foe. Has he e’er lowered his arm to man or beast in the arena? Never! Never! Never! He has ever stood before the world as he stands before us today—unvanquished, yea, unrivalled. To those in the world beyond these Campus Gates, he is known as the great, the glorious Sanborn ; but to us in the intimacy of our affection, he will always be Our Little Willy. There is the same difficulty in classifying Raymond Tuttle as naturalists used to have in regard to the owl; is he the wisest or most stupid of 1910? Because of his innocent face and dreamy manner, one would imagine he dwelt apart in a higher world, but since rooming a year with Si Rowell, Tut has acquired a deplorable taste for cheap tobacco and lemonade. Moreover, in his native town, lie is shunned by all respectable folk as a hell raiser. Wake up boys and watch me pick up this girl. ... The above was said on the second midnight from Portland and the speaker immediately began to put his remarks into effect. Notice the beautiful complexion and strong manly lines of his figure as well as the fashionable cut of his clothes. Having given up his attempt as a failure lie remarked to the fair one as he left the train at Brunswick, Why didn t you let me come over?” The reply was startling, Why didn t you come, nobody prevented you.” Besides the remarkable nerve shown above, he is always present at a certain circle 291 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 of all athletic contests as well as on all razoos. This last statement must be qualified, how- ever for this year after an extended vacation passed in that beautiful Capital City on the Kennebec called Augusta, he lias shunned all such affairs. I he reason is apparent. Skkkno Sewell Webster was verily one of those very, very naughty boys of 1910, whom I rex saw fit to use as an example to posterity. Ralph Wcodenhead Smith hails from Augusta. Since his arrival in college, lie has been prominent in college affairs (by his nose) and occupies two rooms in college, one for his nose and the other for the rest of him. Take him all together, he is a fairly good fellow The fact that he is working his way through college often compels him to seek employment in the lime kilns at Rockland. So hard a worker in fact is Ralph that he is expected to be an assistant in philosophy next year. Cyrus Lemonade” Rowell. This had never been beyond the limits of Skowhegan until it came to Brunswick and was well cared for and had a halter: it soon broke loose Now it can be seen most any time of day strolling around the campus, and in the evening, selling lemonade in the library desk. ZetA Pat Houso, Brunatrics,' Unina. A quiet, unobtrusive lad is Richard Eastman, a lad who always pursues the even tenor 01 his ways except when collecting class dues from delinquent Juniors. Even Dick's most intimate friends are unable to penetrate the veil of mystery in which he drapes himself, so attribute his oddity to love. So free is this auburn haired lad from faults, that he may he taken as a model for the Bowdoin student of a decade hence. George Hutchinson Babbitt came to Bowdoin last Fall from the capital of the Em- pire state via Lewiston. George says that he made a mistake and missed connections for Brunswick; now that he is here, he is going to make up for lost time. He spends most ÂŁLhJ's,‘T,SC,ng aga,ns‘ the tobacco evil: he says that lie has used it enough to know J ali ' JS a, r8 about. When asked why lie could not stay in Brunswick over one Sun- instead of Gardiner, he replied with a patronizing smile. Sour grapes, eh?” 292 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 William Elbripge Atwood of South Maine, South Paris and South Freeport, is chiefly noted as understudy of Ken Tefft in Yellow journalism. Even when Bill was at Hebron, he showed marked literary proclivities and there is reason to believe that he is using the Orient simply as a steppingstone to the Cathance Gazette. Though Bill has never allowed pleasure to interfere with his college work, lie has time for outside activities and only last summer he resigned from the position of president of the Fish Skinners’ Union of South Thomaston, to become the head of the Clam Packers’ Society at South Freeport. Bill is rather good looking in his own estimation. Harold Bcozer Ballard comes to us from the Gardiner plant of the American Ice Co. At the Maine Meet of 1907, Ballard having barely won third place in two events celebrated by having a long drink of rub down, over which his stomach and Doc. Whit battled for half the night, Doc. finally winning out. At the beginning of Junior year, Ballard started to take a trip to Europe on a cattle steamer, but his money and courage gave out at Boston. Ballard is waiting anxiously for his college days to be ended so that he can become a trust magnate and own the American Ice Co. “Chet” Boynton came to Bowdoin with a reputation for heroic deeds performed on the gridiron while at Hebron. He has been handicapped here by his roommate, “Nult,” for whom he has been obliged to furnish the courage to come out to the field. He says that he has given up Nult” as too difficult a case for him to manage, and that next year, he is going to play the game for himself. His chief delights arc calling on the fair Bruns- wick dames, and attending college “teas.” Stuart Shylock Brown, a red headed guy from Whitinsville, would be popular with the ladies were it not for his habit of economizing on postage stamps when he sends in- vitations or photographs. From the dig of Freshman year, he has changed to the society man of Junior year. When he is not attending a dance, he is in his room using his chafing dish or else writing letters to “her.” Charles Austin Cary, who is better known as Jingle, has been very popular ever since he arrived in town. His popularity, no doubt, lies in the fact that he has no bad habits. For the first few weeks Freshman year, Jingle displayed a remarkable taste for forestry works, for long evenings he would sit in his uncle’s rooms on Maine street and peruse massive volumes by the light of the moon. The Sophs did not seem inclined to allow him to engage in this original research at the expense of his eyesight, so they often called to take him on long walks. But modesty is 011c of his virtues and he felt obliged to decline the hospitality of 1909. If anyone doubts for a minute that he is honest and modest, let him ask Jingle. John David Goliath Clifford took care of all of us Freshman year. The Sophomores liked him so well that they didn’t take him out on a “Razoo” until the Spring roundup — many were called, but few were chosen—when “Danny McDadc” came to him with a- lot of talk of doing a favor for old times’ sake, and with many promises not to paddle Johnnie or take him beyond bridge. John’s got an awful wallop and few of the Sophomores cared to start an argument with him. He is taking “Bobbie's debating, and is making strong with “Bobbie.” He says that it is all in throwing the bluff and getting away with it. John has made a major of Algebra, and lie got to “Buck” right at the end of last term. John Leland Crcsby, sometimes known as Buster, started in on a model college ca- reer—according to the faculty—and during his Freshman year gathered in A s as molasses docs fiies. Nevertheless, John fell into the clutches of the evil game of football Ins Sophomore year, and also discovered that his studies interfered with his regular college course; therefore the faculty now shake their learned heads and mourn over the wander- ing sheep, hoping that some day he may return to the fold and be taught wisdom at the knee of Casey.” 293 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 Like Kid1' Brewster, Henry Colbath comes from Dexter, and like Kid,” he never can seem to forget that fact. Indeed, Colbath can forget but few things; he can never forget to make a noise, and at bis best puts “Maud” and her famous “Haw-haw far in the shade; above all, he can never forget that lie is a mile runner. The honors which he has attained on the cinder track and the plaudits of an admiring grandstand ought by this time to be an old story to him, but, the wilderness of Dexter having poorly prepared him for such heights, we fear that he does not sustain with any too great modesty, so heavy a burden of popularity. However, it hardly behooves us to advance such a charge against “Cobby,” who during his two years and a half here, has won his track B five times. “Dizzie” Crowell has won everlasting fame as the founder and leader of the original order of the “Candy Boys.” He has led his cohorts to the Governor's Ball and sundry such excursions; in fact, the only place to which he will not lead his faithful followers is Lisbon Falls. The reason for his dislike for Lisbon Falls is this: one sad day—or rather evening—he was enticed thither by “Mose” Woodward and Colbath; what happened we can not well say. but it suffices to say that ever since, “Dizz” has shown the greatest disgust when “Paper Makers’” balls arc mentioned. Along with a goodly company of jolly boys, who, as the faculty think, are wasting their time here, “Dizz” is not inclined to put too great stress upon his studies; these incidentals are the least part of the proper college course for a man of such varied and many-sided talents as he. As yet, the only occasion upon which “Dizz” has shown any athletic tendencies was when his clearer-headed and clearer-sighted associates had to prevent him from joining “Mose” Woodward in his famous swim across Baxter's frog pond. However, “Dizz” says the whole difficulty is that this little place in the pines is too restricted a sphere for his tremendous powers and that in a little more than a year from now, when lie is beyond the belittling influence of Casey” and the dwarfing sovereignty of “Prcx,” he will let people know that there is such a person as Ralph Savage Crowell. “Who’s that little runt?” a visitor on the campus was heard to ask. as Harold Weeks came strutting along the campus path. “That? O, that’s Speaker Week’s boy of Fair- field.” The runt on hearing that chance remark added three inches to his stature so that now he is nearly as tall as L. G. Ludwig. Little as he is in stature, Harold is mighty in energy and intellect as one would infer from his list of honors, and we do not hesitate to prophesy great things for him, if he can only get that love out of his head. Along in the ball of 1906, in the good old days when life as well as beer kegs, rolled merrilv in Bowdoin College, one Parker Toward Nickerson alias “Toady,” “Nick,” “Park. “Tank,” and others, blew in with the rest of the 1910 huskies. Right then, “Toady” started to vio- late the spirit if not the letter of the prohibitory law, and has been doing so with no mean success ever since. One might infer from the above that “Toady” was a negligible quan- tity, but such is not the case. “Toady” is a dillctante in both literature and prize fighting. In literature Byron claims Ins unfeigned admiration and more than one convivial audience Ijjjs o««n m ved to tears by the pathetic rendition of “Fare thee well.” In prize fighting, loady not only puts it over “Bobby Burns for his own satisfaction but attends the baturday night scraps in Portland as a delegate of the graceful Charlie Burnett. An old physiology tells us that “what the stomach can’t digest, it must eject.” We guess that in Daniel John Readky’s case, Manchester. N. H., has been the innocent stomach of that nondescript lumpa, and has therefore cast him on us. We wish that she had cast further. About the only thing that Dan is doing in college, is clinging in the guise of a debater to the coat-tails of “His Mightiness” Foster, in the hope of making 'the dc-  'Ct u,th -1,1 h,s.,aults’1Da, «  Rood student .... of human nature. He devotes himself assiduously to the study of types as found in the “Golden Eagle. Pythian, and Bath Armory dance halls.” We do not hesitate to say that by this time of3 th typV”Uth°r,ty °n th,S Subjcct an 1 fl,1,y Qualified to write a book on “The evolution 2 4 The Bow Join Bugle, 9 0 A HORRIBLE 1 CUT! Postively avoided b JUD 2E« J New E first-class equipme clean and thorough finest toilet waters TKLEP m . w lTj fr- rlors over Meserve’s unce to his patrons third chair and the ging, to his already rything is perfectly ect. We have the creams procurable. 47-12 3 BARBERS AN ARTIST! — 295 STATISTICS Age? Youngest, 18 years; average. 20 years. 7 months. Owing to diffidence cn the part of some, we are unable to give the name of the oldest. Weight? Heaviest, 265 pounds; lightest. 125 pounds; average. 158M. pounds, 1 Vi pounds lighter than 1909’s average. Height? The class is found to be over 100 yards long, 12 of its members arc over 6 feet. The tallest is 6 feet, 3 inches; the shortest is 5 feet. 4 inches; the average is 5 feet. 9 4 inches, % inch taller than 1909. Rising Hour? Earliest, 6 a. m.; latest, 8.30 a. m.: average. 7.30 a. m. Retiring Hour? Great uncertainty prevails here. The earliest recorded is 10 P. M.; latest, 2 a. m. The average is 11.07 p- m. Politics? Republicans. 34: Democrats, 6; Prohibitionists, 1: Doubt fills, 4: 88% Repub- licans ! Rah for Taft! Smoker? Yeas, 21; nays, 20; occasional, 6. This shows what a well-balanced class we have. Do you believe in hasing? Yeas. 42; nays. 5. That seems to be a reasonably decisive vote. Do you believe in compulsory gym? Gym is abolished by a vote of 30 to 14: 3 advocate it for Freshmen only. Do you believe in compulsory chapel? Barely retained by a vote of 24 to 23. Hours of study per day? The biggest grind studies 12 hours per day. The least recorded period is io minutes. The average is found to be 3 hours and 54 minutes. Hours per day wasted? Seven men waste no time at all! Virtuous mortals. The greatest waste is that of 9 hours; but some men arc modest enough to imply that their whole life is a waste. This may be. Average, 2 hours, 12 minutes. Did you ever get stung on Triangle? Yeas, 2; nays, 45. Nothing gullible about 11s. Have you ever flunked a course? Yeas, 15; nays. 30; one suspicious lapse of memory. 33%% have flunked. Did you deserve to? Yeas, 19; nays, 21; 2 hesitate and 3 refuse to answer. The Faculty must let a few slip by. Who is the best looking man in 1910? Jingle Cary wins with 11 votes; Stone, second (9); McLaughlin, third (8). Who is the best dressed man in 1910? 1st, Peters (11) ; 2nd, Lee Mike (10) ; 3d, Otis (5). Who is the biggest grind in 19 0? An easy win for Rowell with 20 votes; 2nd. Hawes (9) ; 3rd, Wing (4). Who is the biggest fusser in 19 0? Here Stephens makes good with a crash, with iS votes. His nearest competitors are Matthews (5), and Slocum (4). Steve’s victory is well- deserved. but we feel that W. Rob merits honorable mention. Who is our biggest hot-air artist? First. Sanborn (14); second. Otis (7); and Webster (6 each). Other competitors are far behind. third. Ready Who is the wisest man in 1910? Sanborn again, but with only 6 votes. Rowell finishes second with 5, and Hale, Hawes and Nulty tie for third with 4. What is the hardest course in college? 18 votes give Math, a glorious victory here. Eng- Ush 3, and English 6 take second and third with 6 and 5. respectively. Chapel and Phy sical I raining arc mentioned. 296 The Bow Join Bugle, 1910 IVhat is the easiest course in college? ist, Chemistry I, with io votes; 2nd, English Lit. with 9; Advanced French gets 8. Who is the most popular professor? Professor Chapman and Professor Robinson retain their popularity, getting all but 5 votes. What professor is the hardest to bluff ? An awful light between Buck and Bobby, but the young blood wins out 19 to 16: Spider Johnson conies third with 5 votes. Does the Faculty know as much as you do? Close, but the Faculty is finally voted down 20 to 19- What year in college have you liked best? 22 prefer the Freshman year; 18, the Junior. Only 5 cared most for the Sophomore. What has been your most enjoyable experience at Bowdoin? “Maine Game of 1907-” “Freshman Banquet.” “Talks with Prex” (De gustibus, etc.). Mose Woodward’s birthday party.” “Taking 1911 to Crab Island.” “Car ride given 1910 by 1909.” What has been your least enjoyable experience at Bowdoin? “Talks with Prex again.” “Probation.” “Exams.” “Listening to Yellowhammer conduct Chapel.” Who was our freshest Freshman? Nowhere is there fiercer competition, but Peters has a clear victory with five votes; Bob Morss, Kid Weeks, and Knight come second with 4 each. Who was our woolicst Sophomore? Our departed friend, Bob Wing, wins an easy victory in this class with 15 votes against his nearest competitor (Webster) 4. Who is our “easiest” Junior? 1st, Stone (6); 2nd, J. D. Clifford (5) ; 3rd, Newman and Sanborn (4). Who in the class has done most for the college? ist, Colbath, 12; 2nd, Wandtke, 7; 3rd, Slocum, 6. Which is the more sensational, the Boston American or the Bowdoin Orient? I lie Orient (better known as TcfTt’s Weekly) swamps the American 26 to 8. The Orient Board were the first to declare this truth. What is your favorite college after Bowdoin? Princeton, Yale, and Wellesley tic for first place with 7 votes apiece; Dartmouth comes second with 6, and Harvard third, with 5; Chicago, M. I. T., Vassar, Brown, Smith, Columbia and Colby get one vote each. 297 CALENDAR JUNE, 1908 1 Freshmen spend night on Crab Island. 2 “Dutch” Wandtke asks Hutch why it is that the stars seem at times to be spinning in a circle. Hutch pointedly replies that he never was in that condition. 3 Zeta Psi and Psi Upsilon house parties. Skirts take possession of the campus. 4 Everybody attends Chapel and rubbers. “Half Back Sandy” plays at Town Hall. 5 Ivy Day. More skirts on campus. Micky Kane's girl gets wise to him after humiliating exposures at exercises. Bowdoin wins an Ivy game, defeating Bates 10 to 2. and wins State Championship. Ivy Hop in the evening and well along towards morning. 7 Prex in Sunday Chapel makes the alarming statement that “After society comes loneli- ness.” 8 Deutschcr Verein have one of their shameful meetings at the Gurnet. Doc. Pearson asks Casey What is a Post Prandial?” Casey sagely replies that Doc will find out at the Freshman banquet if he (Doc, not Casey) is in a proper state of sobriety. 1909 Bugle makes its tardy appearance. 9 Prex interviews Weeks, Hamburger and Atwood about the Crab Island party. The Sophomores see sun, moon and stars arise and set, surrounded by a halo of Prex’s whiskers. to Colby defeats Bowdoin in the last game of the year. Sophomores decide to fire Prex and Casey Sills. Prex retorts by suspending Bob Wing and Bailey. Webster sees Prex about advisability of firing cripples and thereby scores a sacrifice. Puss Newman threatens to disguise himself as Allen Johnson. M Exams begin. Prex suspends more Sophomores. 12 Tom Commins, when asked to pay his Quill subscription, indignantly exclaims. “Pay, Why if steamboats sold for a nickel I couldn’t buy the echo of the whistle.” 13 Sophomore Banquet at Falmouth Hotel, Portland, eclipses all former efforts. Fresh- men take dinner at the LaFayette, and Doc Pearson secs one Post Prandial twice. 14 Prex gives his last talk of the year in Chapel. 15 Warren Robinson and Reddy Stephens spend an evening away from Frcnchy Johnson’s and Baxter’s. The reason for this is that they both have exams on the morrow and must prepare themselves. 19 Few students on the campus. 20 All gone. SEPTEMBER 10 Football squad reports for first practice. A. C. Gibson hailed as a coming football hero. 24 College opens. First chapel, and Dooley” on hand. “Kid” Dresser’s smiling counte- nance missing; 1912 puts it all over the Sophomores in the rush. 25 “Dizz” Crowell is seized upon by Benny Partridge, ’11, and razooed with the Freshmen. 25 Bowdoin 28, Fort McKinley 0. 28 Prex pronounces his ultimatum in chapel, and declares hazing forever and eternally damned at Bowdoin. 30 Harvard 5, Bowdoin o. “Puss” Newman boxes a “Willie boy’s” ear during the game, unfortunately under the referee’s nose. 298 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 OCTOBER 1 Crowell, Martin and Matthews take lessons in “Magic” at $5 apiece. 2 Proclamation Night; the Faculty gratified at the absence of any disfigurement of the walls of the college buildings. 3 Bowdoin 15. New Hampshire State College 0. Class baseball—1912, 14; 1911. 12; John Manter decides that umpiring is too strenuous. 7 Freshmen make a great hit with the cute little Merry Widow hats prescribed by 1911. Class baseball—1911, 6; 1912, 5; “Doc” Caldwell the hero. 10 Brown 12, Bowdoin 0. Class baseball—1911, 6: 1912, 6; game called after ten innings because of darkness. 17 Bowdoin 5, Holy Cross 12. 20 Lippincott and his lady love rake up the leaves on the front lawn. 22 Bobby” Foster decides in English 6 recitation, that even Jimmie Hamburger might learn something about debating. 24 Bowdoin 9, Colby 6; first championship game. 31 Bowdoin 11, Tufts 10. Tufts wins the cross-ccuntry race at Medford, 26 to 29. NOVEMBER “Al” Gould delivers an address in the church on the hill. Republican Rally at Town Hall. The numbers of the Republican Brigade fell rapidly when each Republican was asked to pay twenty-five cents. Taft is elected, much to everyone’s surprise. Harry Farrar Hinklcy, '09, goes to chapel today, all his stock excuses overworked. “Hink” devotes the rest of the day to inventing new ones. Crossland, ’io, speaks at the Christian Association. Exhibits a Kaffir dress suit. Brewster expatiates” in English 6. New whistle on the “Gym” blows at seven. Still “Mike cannot make chapel. Bates 5, Bowdoin 0. Everybody feeling blue. “Prex” compares President Elliott and Charles W. Morse. Kendrie plays the accom- paniment. New Bedford Club meeting at the Inn, postponed. No one shows up. Dr. Foster gives English 3 its first dose of undiluted Argumentation and Debating Wa Tj Fa —O20 (hot). “Hink makes chapel again today. . . . “The Jungle or “Life among Calcutta’s Four Hundred, by Hiwalc, 09, at the Christian Association meeting. Friday the thirteenth.” Tefft’s Weekly has an unusually bad attack of cramps. Mass meeting at Memorial Hall. . . . . Bowdoin 10, Maine o. at Orono. Bowdoin team and supporters return on a special train. “Week-end League” organizes. It was originally the “Sweet Home club of Lewiston and Auburn, but owing to its great popularity, the members decided to organize lodges at Portland, Bath and Augusta. Those detained in Bangor on business, arrive at four a. m. Sinfonia Quintet gives a concert in Memorial. .„„,|- First snow storm. Members of the Anasagunticook Club hunt up their par crnal a The College gives Ross” McClavc a send-off on the midnight. The band blows itself Mass meeting to elect manager and assistant manager of football and members of the Student Council. . „ . , . . . . . ,, 1912 beats 1911. Freshmen, led by Frank Smith, ring the chapel bt-11. Rev. A. J. Lyman of Brooklyn, is here as the college preacher for the month. Junior elections. . .. , “K. C.” receives many callers, but few go away satisfied. WSC ,Sd,«SS? Woodward arrive safely on .he seeond midni«h«. Note. Fre.h i 'SrA fote ,0 Phil” Mo-’s n, San- born and Tid” Peters contract heart trouble and chronic insomnia. 299 1910 The Bowdoin Bugle, DECEMBER 1 Crossland cuts economics as usual because he hasn't got his lesson. 2 Gent liner has his sweater washed. 3 Bert Morrill gets up in time for breakfast. 4 Dean Briggs of Harvard speaks before the Y. M. C. A. 5 Week-enders leave for home as usual. 6 Prex talks to Ballard and Mike in Chapel. 7 Musical recital on Bach in the Art Building. “Week-enders” return for a wonder. 8 Bugle Board sit for pictures. Alarming results. A1 Stone does his durnedcst to cut short a debate. 9 Lectures on Dante. 10 More of ’em. 11 Dr. Gerrish speaks before the Y. M. C. A. on English Eponyms.” 12 Bugle Board sits for pictures again. Results even more alarming. 13 Prof. Knox as college preacher. 14 Recital on Haydn in Art Building. 15 Ralph Grace recites in German. 16 Dutch Wandtkc combs his hair. 17 Prof. Dwight Porter speaks at the Y. M. C. A. 18 Vcrmont-Bowdoin debate in Memorial Hall. Glorious victory for Green Mountain eloquence. 19 Bugle Board sits for its picture. This illustrates the force of habit. 20 Prex speaks in chapel. 21 Week-enders don’t return. 22 A dreary day of waiting. 23 4.30 i , m. Christinas vacation begins. JANUARY, 1909 6 College opens. Buck sends greetings to most of the Freshmen. 6 “Cub” Simmons and Ludwig try to raise enough money to attend the Zeta Psi convention at Toronto. 7 “Doc” Whit gives adjourns in Hygiene for the first time this century. 8 “Frenchy” informs John Clifford that he would not be redoubtable to a ten-year-old child. 9 “Curt Matthews attempts to re-organize the snowshoe club. 10 Bert Morrill appears on campus with overcoat and kid gloves. 11 King Cole meets a young lady from Bath. 12 First trials for Bradbury Prize debate. 13 King Cole thinks it is Tuesday and goes to Bradbury trials. 14 Harold Burton addresses the Y. M. C. A. college meeting. 15 First college tea and college assembly. 16 First trials for B. A. A. team. 17 Rev. Roswell Bales, college preacher. 18 College time becomes fast. 8.15 risers miss chapel. 19 Second trials for Bradbury prize debate. 20 Lee Mike misses meeting the 5.50 train. 21 Bert Morrill sells his fang coat to Tommy Otis. 22 Bowdoin minstrels at Town Hall. 23 I ommy Otis goes to Lewiston wearing his fang coat. 24 Stephens has his hair trimmed a little. 25 String Hansen mysteriously disappears for a day. 2.) Jake Stahl wins in ’68 prize speaking. 27 Everybody begins plugging for exams. Bet you don’t know what an eponym is. 300 1910 The Bow Join Bugle, FEBRUARY 1 Recital in Art Building. Exams. 2 Amateur night at Picturcland. 3 Cramp Wing visits Girls’ Industrial School at Hallowell. 4 Just exams, that’s all. 5 B. H. S. play and dance. 6 B. A. A. Meet. Bowdoin trims Tufts by half a lap. Prcx tells Portland Alumni that we are passing well off. 7 President Hyde in chapel. 8 First smoker. Prof. Rob’s song wins a success. 9 Doc Burnett and Ippy Booker go divies on the registration fines. 10 Bugle meeting extraordinary. General Slocum thinks of a joke. 11 Marjorie Benton Cooke in Memorial. 12 Lincoln Day. Second Tea and Assembly. 13 Adjourns count double. The bookkeeper at Chandler’s makes the following entry: Prof. A. M. Edwards to one valentine, $1.50. 14 Tuppy Hughes goes to church for the first time in twenty-three years. Floyd Tomp- kins of Philadelphia speaks in chapel. 15 Daniels secs Casey and Wandtke in the R. R. station and in speaking to the latter, says, “Hi Fritter.” Casey looks up and answers “Hi.” 16 Bradbury Prize debate. 17 Glee Club starts on its first trip (after promising Casey to say their prayers every night). 18 Rev. Mr. Dennison speaks in chapel. Nick Carter in his burning desire for knowledge, sets the Psi U house on fire. 19 Burleigh Martin visits the campus. 20 Swimming races on campus lake. 21 Whisker in chapel. Dooley celebrates by performing his Salome stunt in front of the Senior forms. 22 Rodcric Dhu's birthday. Also George Washington’s. 23 All ladies leave the Picturetime because of some unrefined vaudeville. Oki Ed and Yellowhammcr stay through two performances. 24 The unexpected happens. Joe White-in-the-Eye Brewster and Dooley have a two- round-go in chapel. 25 Hubby Hastings inspects his bridge. . 26 Bowdoin is admitted to the Eastern Intercollegiate Athletic Association. Delta Kappa Epsilon house party. 28 Prex makes a record for Sunday chapel service, 13 minutes. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Y MARCH Brunswick town meeting. Adjourns in everything except gym. Prof Chase of University of Maine, lectures on “Rare Coins. Prof. Geo. T. Files speaks in Church on hill, on Germany. Billy Burke in Love Watches at Lewiston. Usual crowd turns out. Mass meeting. T. Otis elected manager football. . Tommy Ginn discovers a hair on the head is worth two in the brush Miss Frances Yeoman speaks in chapel on the Negro of the South. Photographer Webber asks instructor Scott if he is a Freshman. Instructor Bridgham decides to grow a moustache. , T . „ „ John L. White of Chicago, 111., lectures on Single Land lax Baseball team measured for their suits. McDade orders extra laigc size shoe, last College Tea. Instructor Bridgham makes a hit with a little fuz on his upper lip. Reception !n Memorial Hall to Y. M. C. A. delegates and friends. Music by College Band, Glee and Mandolin Clubs. . , , ,,, . M. C. A. of Maine Colleges meet at Bowdoin. Glee and Mandolin Clubs at West- brook. 1910 The Bowdoin Bugle, 14 Y. M. C. A. conference continued. Casey appears in chapel with a cane. Prcx renders a Death sermon. 15 Dooley throws Brewster’s dog out of the choir loft. 16 Final exam, in Math. Freshmen all sore. 17 Bates’ Indoor Meet. Bowdoin. ’12. try rolling around the track. 18 Everyone figures on result of Indoor Meet. Juniors figure to win. 19 Juniors easily win Indoor Meet. Bridgham shows off his band. 20 All who can leave town. Seniors and Sophs console each other. 21 Kendrie: Still another violin solo in chapel. 22 Prof. Arlo Bates speaks before the Ibis on “Art of Thinking. 23 Celebration in Topsham Dance Hall. Downfall of Mike. 24 Several miss recitations. Mike confined to room with a sore nose. 25 Musical Clubs start for Freeport. Rain. No concert. 26 Theta Delta Chi house party. College closes for Easter recess. 27 Harvard and Bowdoin play practice game of baseball. 28 Ball team takes a rest. 29 Coach Rawson fails to find a raincoat in Boston. 30 Ball team leaves Boston for New York, on Fall River boat. 31 Fordham 6, Bowdoin o. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 n 12 13 ‱4  5 16 17 18 APRIL Princeton April-fools Rowdoin to the tune of 7-2. Fisher goes fussing. Bowdoin is trimmed again, this time by New York University. Glee Club has last concert of Spring trip. Fisher goes fussing. “Dan” McDade and “Willie’’ Clif- ford break up a social at New York University by attempting to sing Way Down in Lewiston.” Bugle Board picture appears in Lewiston Evening Journal. Fisher goes fussing again. Harry Merrill, having worked a week on the electrics, turns in half the fares that he has collected, he needing the other half for college expenses. Palm Sunday. Fisher goes fussing and as it is his last chance until June, stays until the wee small hours of the morning. Fellows begin to arrive back. Dooley begins to think that life is worth living after all. College opens. Dooley right on hand for chapel. Fisher has so far recovered from his homesickness that he goes out on the pickup over in Topsham. Ballard starts in training. Wakefield '09. Newman ’10, Hansen ’10 and Burlingame ’12, appear at chapel with hair cut convict style. The hair cutting fever spreads; Ludwig '10. Babbitt ’10. Cole ’12, Bailey ’12, and the pocket edition of McDade, Sullivan ’12, appear at chapel in the before mentioned disguise. Glee Club has last concert of year. “Parson” Ryles in a debate pathetically asks “What have I done? and even “Highballi” answers nothing. Week-enders go home over Sunday. Ballard breaks training. “Harry” Chapman conducts Faster Sunday chapel. Ballard starts in training again. Hill, ’10. arrives back minus his tonsils. “Rob” Hale gives the Bugle Board a blowing up. Inter-fraternity schedule made out. Georgic Files breaks the record for a long lecture to “Dutch” VIII. Andover-Bowdoin game postponed on account of rain. That meant another game that we didn’t lose. Tom Otis, having heard that all the Buclf. copy is in, decides that he can act naturally once more. Annual Spring rally “Rob” tells the students that he was originally hired for ... good looks (Gee but he has gone back a lot since he was hired) All the week-enders go home as this time they can stay until Tuesday. Sunday is usually a quiet day and this was no exception to the rule. hi: 302 The Bowdoin Bugle, 1910 19 Patriots’ Day. Bowdoin wins from Portland, 12 to 9. Fisher inspects Gorham Normal School, with a view to going there next year. 20 Fisher reports that he had a fine time with the “old maids” at Gorham. All the week- enders get hack. Merrill. 11, displays some of his boasted determined spirit of determination. 21 Bert Morrill gives the training squad a lecture for not observing better hours; there is a rumor that he means “General” Slocum and Edwards. 22 Great activity at the Beta house. “Tommy” Ginn is completely frustrated. Even Frank Kcndrie gets excited. 23 Beta Theta Pi house party. All the girls think that Tommy Ginn is awfully cute. 24 Bowdoin almost wins from Tufts; score 7-3. 25 Paul Revere Frothingham, college preacher for today. 26 Trains for track team. Bert feels better. 27 Bobby Foster losing his notes in debating accuses Callahan. Later discovers that War- ren Robinson has pinched them so as not to be criticized. 28 Bowdoin plays a Mean(s) trick on Dartmouth. Celebrates her victory in fine style. 29 Dartmouth gets even with Bowdoin. It takes six men all day to remove the traces cf last night’s celebration. 30 1912 wins from 1911, in an inter-class debate. That was the Sophs last chance to win. anything this year and they lost that. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 3 14 MAY Merely another rainy day. All the week-enders go home, including Fat” Merrill. Jump preached a really good sermon; where did he get it? “Micky” Kane proposes that the poor hard worked medics have a keg to help them while dissecting. The proposal is turned down by the authorities. “Reddy” Stevens says that he don’t know what “fussing” is. (If he doesn’t, who does?) Slocum in same debate says, “I am talking sentimental” (wonder where he thought he was). Plugging for German exams. Bobby Foster misses Professor Lcunsbury at the train. Adjourns in education. At chapel, “Nick” Carter is so afraid that Tuppy” Hughes won’t sing, that he carries him a singing bock across the aisle. A few German exams. Also a college sing. “Phil” Brown and “Micky” Kane do them- selves proud. D. U. house party. Morton has a smile on all day. Fellows tig ure out the score of the Maine Meet and, despite Maine’s and Bates’s claims, think that when points are counted up “Old Bowdoin” will be there. Maine comes down to win a ball game but is disappointed. Most of the fellows that celebrated yesterday’s victory wish now that ‘hey had only drunk lemonade. Brown and Tefft try to stop the Bugle from coming out. Reddv Stevens gives instructions to mothers in English VII. Colbath thinks that pro- hibition is a better subject than woman’s suffrage and thereby furnishes Bobby a chance to spring one of his old chestnuts. . Billy Clifford gets to chapel on time; (it is the second time in his college course but later it is learned that he cut breakfast to do it.) Frcnchy Johnson calls on lorn Otis and finds that Tom had left the room ten minutes before. . Mass meeting. Morrill tells the fellows that we are going to win the meet. Verem drunk down to the Inn. “Jake” Stahl and “Grandpa Stanley assist each other Everybody goes to bed early so as to take the second midnight for Bangor. 303 ' 'V 11 Ra, Ra, Ra, to dress well, buy V_ylir X Gil the clothing togs that we sell COME in and see us, boys, and let us show you a swell line of Spring outfittings of every descrip- tion, just the things that go to make a man well dressed. You will al- ways find a warm welcome in our store : No trouble to show goods The Messer-Perley Company t THE NEW STORE I 515 Congress St.. Portland and 238 Water St.. Augusta (Eressnj $c AUpu Clothes Ready-made or PIANOS Made-to-order and Each the best of its PIANO PLAYERS kind Also Nobby Furnishings BAXTER BLOCK and Headwear 566 CONGRESS STREET PORTLAND, ME. Bodwell Son Brunswick (CnUryr IBook H. iM. VARNEY We carry a complete line of Whit- ing’s fine Stationery — Paper with The College Seal and Fraternity Em- blems in Boxes and Tablets : : : Imubnin Jlmtu'U'r Banners, Pins, Scrap Books, Pictures, Posters, Shields, Ath- letic Goods, Art Meterials, Fountain Pens, Leather Goods, Wall Papers and Fancy Goods. We are always glad to order anything which cannot be found in Stock : : : : : 91 Maine St. Brunswick, Me. COLLEGE Souvenirs a Specialty 3F. ffl. (CItanMrr Son 2Jup your F s i 0 W. L. Daggett Co. TUÂŁ UP-TO-DATE FISH DEALERS Hotels and out of tou)n orders a specialty Portland, Maine College Trade Solicited Special Rates to Clubs F. C. WEBB CO. DEALERS IN itfattry attft i tattfrar (Urnrrrtrs ifflrate anil flrautauittB Maine St. North End Brunswick, Maine The place where the boys all stop THE NEW IMPERIAL imperial ‱Tt bett Hold of its size in Maine J. S. JUMPER. PROP. 104-106 Oak Street, Portland, Maine One minute' wait from Congress Street SOME OF THE FEATURES Hot and cold water in every room. Rooms single or en suite, with or with- out baths. Intercommunicating and long distance phone in every room. Electric lights, steam heat, open fire places, perfect ventilation, modern sanitation, fire escapes, fire alarm on every floor. Cosy office, comfortable parlors and handsome dining room. AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN $2 and $2.50 per day Room 75c up HE COLLEGE BOOK SHOP is WHERE ALL THE STU- DENTS TRADE. H. L. SLOCUM Globe Steam Laundry She Siafagrttp Portland, Me. tfiiyh (grakr lUirk J. CUNNINGHAM, Proprietor Agents, Rowdoin College P. S. Hyler Zeta Psi House E. W. Johnson Alpha Delta Phi House C. L. Morton Delta Upsilon House F. A. Smith Delta Kappa Epsilon House 17E carry one of the best f assorted stocks of Con- diments, Pickles, Olives, Crackers, etc., in this section (EorhFa (Eafp Next to Longfellow Mansion 489 CONGRESS STREET You will always find some- thing appetizing and con- venient here for a “feed” Four Floor Restaurant Private Dining Rooms on two floors Nelson McFadden Catering out of town our specialty NEXT TO TOWN HALL BRUNSWICK CHAS. W. CORDES, Proprietor Artistic Photography JA11 works of taste must hear a price in pro- portion to the skill, time, expense and risk attending their invention. Q Beautiful forms and composition are not made hy chance nor can they ever in any material he made at small expense. flHave your photograph work done hy an artist in whom you have confidence that his skill and taste, combined with the best material will pro- duce the best results G. B. Webber Brunswick, Me. Come to... McFADDEN’S Jffor IGmtrltt'H, (Emtferitmtmj, Gltgars unit Slnbarrn Furnished Rooms Next Door in Connection with Restaurant 208 Maine Street BOWDOIN COLLEGE DEPARTMENT The Eighty-seventh Annual Course of Lectures will begin Thursday, October 21, 1909, and continue eight months. Four courses of Lectures are required of all who matriculate as first class students. The courses are graded and cover Lectures, Recitations, Laboratory Work and Clinical Instruction. The third and fourth year classes will receive their entire instruction at Portland, where excellent clinical facilities will be afforded at the Maine General Hospital. -------FACULTY---------- Wm. DcWitt Hyde, D.D., President Alfred Mitchell, M.D., Pathology and Practice F. H. Gcrrish. LL.D..M.D., Anatomy S. H. Weeks, M.D., Surgery and Clinical Surgery C. O. Hunt, M.D., Materia Medica and Thera- peutics F. C. Robinson, LL.D..A.M.. Chemistry L. A. Emery, LL.D., Medical Jurisprudence C. D. Smith. M.D., Physiology and Public Health J. F. Thompson. M.D., Diseases of Women A. R. Moulton. M.D., Mental Diseases W. B. Moulton, M.D., Clinical Professor of Eye and Ear A. S. Thayer, M.D., Diseases of Children F. N. Whitney. M. D., Bacteriology and Patho- logical Histology A. King. M.D., Associate Professor and Demon- strator of Anatomy E. J. McDonough. M.D., Professor of Obstetrics H. H. Brock, M.D., Assistant Clinical Professor of Surgery A. Mitchell, Jr., M.D., Instructor of Genito- urinary Surgery C. B. Withcrlee, A.B., Lecturer in Neurology G. A. Pudor. M.D., Instructor in Dermatology E. G. Abbott, M.D., Clinical Instructor in Or- thopedic Surgery G. M. Elliott, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator in Anatomy W. E. Tobic, M.D., Instructor in Surgery and Assistant Demonstrator of Anatomy N. D. Small. M.D., Demonstrator in Histology N. J. Gchring, M.D., Assistant Demonstrator of Histology Robert Lord Hull, A.B..M.D., Clinical Assist- ant in Internal Medicine For Catalogue apply to ALFRED MITCHELL, M. D., Dean, Brunswick, Me. Ever Want Your Laundry Quick? Were you ever caught a little short of Clean Linen at an inconvenient lime and wanted your Clothes laun- dered in a hurry? Could you al- ways get this Accommodation from an out-of-town Laundry Agent? Our Laundry, located right here in the City, is in a position to grant you such Special Favors whenever they are possible, and we want you to ask it of us, and let us do your regular laundering also. You'll like our Work and Service. Citizens' Steam Laundry Phone 52-2 Decidedly Distinctive Hair Cuts and Shaves at Lombard's give a man that clean cut and care- lessly careful appearance which dis- tinguishes the best groomed Bowdoin undergraduate We are Specialists in the latest modes of hair dressing and use only the most up-to-date methods and appliances No Sore-Heads or sore faces among our customers Born Barbers to Bowdoin Boys BOB’S BENE A TH BOWDOIN HOTEL Freddie Des Jardin BARBER SHOP 3 Barbers No Waiting Corner Lincoln and Maine Streets Morton’s Caterers 8c Confectioners Headquarters for Smokers'Articles of every description. Agents for B. B. B. Pipes OUR ICE CREAM PARLOR is the best in Maine, fitted in Ox Blood Red and Flemish Oak. Our variety of Ice Creams is always large and the best that dairy prod- ucts can make it CATERING OUR SPECIALTY Colored service when desired. Our china ware, silver ware and linen is of the finest. Qet our ‘Prices 119 MAINE ST. BRUNSWICK, ME. '“COMPARE our work with the other you happen to see : : : Meserve’s.... FRUIT WHEELER SHERBET The blended product of the natural juices of sound ripe fruit and berries ‱Printing anil Engrauing A Delicious Beverage for re- ceptions, teas, and Parties Pi«p red only by TOWN BUILDING BRUNSWICK, ME. P. J. MESERVE Pharmacist Near Post Office BRUNSWICK, ME. Nathan Wood Son Knight Stanwood Portland, Maine Coal Company Manufacturers of the COAL highest grade of of all kinds in large or small lots Flavoring Extracts and packers of the also OTTO COKE and Finest Olive Oil KINDLING WOOD To If phone 146-1 OPECIAL attention given to Chapter Houses, Caterers, Cafes and Hotels Office: Yards: 139 Maine St. 17 Cedar St. DUNNING’S LIVERY STABLE Solicits Patronage of Bowdoin Students FINEST EQU I PM ENT P R O M P T S E R V I C E IF KIPLING WERE IN BOWDOIN. I am sick o’ goiiv to chapel with its towers gray and grim, An the blasted bell's a tollin’ makes my soul feel sick an’ slim; Though I goes to armory dances an’ I stays 'till break o’ day, At eight o'clock that bloomin’ tinkling makes me wish Fs far away. Fer it calls to mornin’ prayers, Them as cuts will sure get theirs So we sit on hardwood benches with no breakfasts ’neath our belts, At mornin’ chapel. Ship me to some bloomin’ heaven that is with no chapel cursed, Where no Prex gives out commandments, an’ I needn’t raise a thirst; Where ten million bloomin’ bar rooms gives continual free blows An’ the streets arc full of chorus girls with autos rows on rows. There from chapel far away, Snug in bed jus’ let me stay; .Whole hours after eight o’clock, I want to lay an' lay, O I won’t hear Whisker pray, Or the chorus tunesters bray; But there I feel I’d be content till I am turned to clay. —


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Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

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Bowdoin College - Bugle Yearbook (Brunswick, ME) online collection, 1915 Edition, Page 1

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