Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL)

 - Class of 1909

Page 1 of 210

 

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1909 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 210 of the 1909 volume:

ALE7UE EDU125 'NI A f fiw BELGPI G5 TO f 1 Q--b 'li X AW fd' HJJ, X QW Elm? ? M - Kea , :h,w g Q' 33 5 - I5 130014 ' .L--. -l- ii - -5: ,v fl ff E- f Tv K Q 5 ' Env-.Q ff.A , H xy ' K J A f f I IW PROLOGUE Should you ask me whence these stories, Whence these slams and roasts and write-ups With the odor of the udog-house, With the dew and damp of Physics, With the curling smoke of pipe dreams, With the jokes of Dr. Bishop With their frequent repetitions and their wild reverberations Like the planer down in wood shop, I should answer, I should tell you, From the class room and the office, From the dreary waste of lunch room, From the haunts of Mr. Comstock, From the den of Mr. Evans, From the chapel, halls and basement, lHome of Lyman, Freshman chaserl We repeat them as we heard them From the lips of Schweitzer, roaster. THE EDITOR. 3 3 a. THE POLYSCOPE THE NINTH YEAR BOOK PUBLISHED BY THE STUDENTS OF BRADLEY POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE PEORIA, ILLINOIS, IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD NINETEEN HUNDRED AND NINE Printed at The Beehive Press S DEDICATION E RESPECTFULLY dedicate this book to DR. FREDERIC L. BISHOP, in apprecia- tion of many years labor in behalf of the students. FREDERIC LENDALL BISHOP, PH. D The Locomotive Rehl -1--- Rehl! --- Reh! Rah! --- Rah!! ---Rah!!! B! P! I! Sis Boom Ah! Rah -1- Rah-- Rah! Rah-I Rah-- Rah! Rah-Rah-Rah! Bradley!! !! VIEWS ON THE CAMPUS BRADLEY HALL VIEWS ON THE CAMPUS HOROLOGY HALL VIEWS ON THE CAMPUS THE GYMNASIUM VIEVVS ON THE CAMPUS vat' THE TENNIS COURTS VIEWS ON THE CAMPUS .W I THE FIELD VIEVVS ON THE CAMPUS u THE WEATHER BUREAU q1' 3 - 1 lllll q S'-C'YEE.1R3' 5-Uh' tigulxi I-I 1 6 OLIVER BAILEY THEODORE CHALON BURGESS President of Board of Trustees Director of the Institute V- Officers of Administration THEODORE CH-ALON BURGESS - - Director of the Institute and Dean of Higher Academy and College CHARLES TRUMAN WYCKOFF - - Dean of Lower Academy DOROTHY DUNCAN - - - Dean of Women ALLEN T. WESTLAKE - - Dean of Horology CLARENCE ELMER COMSTOCK - - Recorder 17 .- -li- :4 .i....l..- s -1-.- K, f lf lm- Y im igli-'gig : f.. Y ,, ff:- ,,., .l , ...- 1.1.-1... 4 -- i- Q- ,i fi- Y- -5 ii 9? -- E, -P' WLN 'ii' The Faculty ALLEN T. WESTLAKE, Engraving FREDERIC LENDALL BISHOP, Ph. D. . Physics CHARLES ALPHEUS BENNETT, B. S. . Manual Arts 19 41- THEODORE CHALON BURGESS, Ph. D. . Greek and Latin DOROTHY DUNCAN, A. B. German CHARLES TRUMAN WYCKOFF, Ph. D., History P r I O GEORGE C. ASHMAN, Ph. D., Chemistry ELIDA IQSTHER VVINCHIP, Domestic Economy CLINTON SHELDON VANDUSEN, M. Manual Arts 20 CLARENCE ELMER COMSTOCK, A. M. Mathematics WALES HARRISON PACKARD, S. B. . Biology MARGARET MCLAUGHLIN, A. M., . English , FRED E. BROWN, Watchwork e HELEN MARION DAY, . Domestic Science V J. O. LOFBERG, A. B., Latin and Greek t 1 I ,1 R u ,fl HARRIET KEMP, A. B., . German and Latin CHARLES H. BROBST, M. D., . Optics DEWEY ALSDORF SEELEY, B. S. Meteorology 21 KATHERINE FEDORA WALTERS, A. B. Greek and Latin -Q-1. 2: N ., Qc' .-:rf 91 ,, JOSEPH S. BICKLE, B. S., Mathematics BERTHA REED, A. M., Ph. B. . German and French NIELVIN DEFOREST RENKENBERGER, A. B. Biology 22 FOREST A. FORAKER, M. S. Mathematics MARTHA SHOPBELL, B. S., Domestic Economy eff '- , .-J-IIA 'L X i Q V! ., Q, G - . i ' Aft 'Al f 74, . y, L, I I . J Nc. v,3...,vh 'J FREDERICK HUSTON EVANS, M. E. Manual Arts MAUDE R. FAIRBANKS, Drawing CLARENCE R. HART, . Watchwork V GRACE ADELAIDE MICKLE, S. ALBERT ANDERSON, EATON HAUK, . English . Drawing Jewelry .Tw JAMES A. IWINER, . Watchwork MRS. M. D. RENKENBERGER, . EDVVIN F. GEORGE, A. B. WILLIAM FREDERIC RAYMOND, . Manual Arts BERTHA MAY SCULLIN, A. B. . . Sewing MAY A. LODGETT, . Mathematics 'E-. A 's PR Sewing I 1 . English 24 I , XXX? X x X f, i X ff ff-if-+ f ff ,f f-rwfffx .1 - 1 fx f W X ,I fy F 5, If ' fl. If N N X M fly, X ,-.1551 A-x ' '-g:ii? fff X M t, , ffffjfid , -f ff? VF-' , 5' if.. f ' ' f -' J L Jziasasl. ffm f,Af - X ll' f f A I f- , ' , 4, - ' f X ff ' L Q' ff' 7. ff ' f X K 1-fag 61 ? 7 fx X ? , tg X X lug 1: Q XX Pro A610 edu: ff X 55 ' 5, cf, U14 .Q X XX! A N .wwoa w f.,C7m,Oe, X 'WWI UlffllllllfffflfzxffwfffUmmmffmm, , V f N fa ' 4 gy f W6 X fr ,f h X A '32 ' ff n I xl Ai. ff! 7Fe'51'Z2'Z'5 e K M 'M' - , f ' N , , ' X KW? W J X ' X , 1- X ' U I :Dr8f.1bofa7f,clTire3 lb N 'ng X :E A fri fi L-A M 'ky Wgwgggggggizzf X X 5uys fAffoof5a7l5J!?r- w ' NO O 'e fs 762 75 Ghem E Q L- -'EVA Qiidtjglg xii, -X K' N fi X j 301.776 J f E X J x f F- Cr ffl! 7Df,aHa1cS.5,E'x. J 7 Pip 53 FQ MMD ELEM 1 Q9 ,-P .ff .V xv ' A 'J -qlxw ,A 1 gk ' . ' 9: M .. xv, X' ' ' ' X rf lf-,VAL X X ' A The Bradley Girl Seniors NAUGHTY NINE! RIGHT IN LINE!! MIGHTY FINE!!! ' NAUGHTY NINE ll!! Officers President - - - ROBERT PLOWE Vice-President - - EDITH LOVE Secretary - - BERTHA BAUGHMAN Treasurer - - - MARRS SHOOP Colors-BLUE AND WHITE 27 ROBERT PLOWE, Engineering BERTHA.BAUGHMAN,Lnmmum IRENE C.IJDLE,Sdmwe - ERMA DONATHEN,Lhumum- LUCIUS A. FRITZE, Engineering Peoria, Ill. Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill PK I 1 ani:-.-' - . Y Qffgzg, 'I Q EDITH B. LOVE, Science WILLIAM H. HUDSON, Engineering HARRY E. SCHWEITZER, Sciedce MELITTA MARGARET, Classics VIVIAN BONIFACE. Literature Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoda,IlL Seward, Ill. Peoria, Ill. Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill 'E sv I EDWARD M. MUNNS, Engineering GROVER BAUMGARTNER, Literature ANNA BIBO, Literature I-IAZEL BROWN, Literature - FRED CAUSEY, Science Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Pekin, Ill 0 BERNADETTE CAMHN,Lhmmum HUGH COOPER,Sdmme - ROYzX KELLER.EnQnuhng SUSAN KELLOGG,Lhmmum NhUUEzX KNAPP,LhUmum Peoda,IH Peoda,IH Peoda,IU Peoda,IH Pekhp IH .I ' 9. LAR MERRILL I. SCHNEBLY, Classics FRANK WERCKLE, Engineering EDWARD CUSHING, Engineering CARL PFEFFINGER, Science Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill Peoria, Ill. Peoria, Ill. The juniors HARRY J. KLOTZ - President AMY KEITHLEY - - Vice-President GORDON KELLAR - - Secretary FLOYD E. SANFORD ---- Treasurer -PAUL T. WELLES -MYRTLE M. LEININGER -ALLEN W. HEYLE -GENEVIEVE N. JOHNSON -CARL A. TRAEGER -CHARLES A. ATWOOD -FRIEDA H. SHERLING -RALPH G. MILLEN -ETHEL M. SUMMERS -VVALLACE SNYDER -LYNCH R. CONWAY -HARLEY L. CLARK RUTH L COOPER OLGA C BELSLEY RUTH R SHERWOOD ANNA L CATION HATTIE J MALLING LESTER R MASON MAY BOWSHER META BECKER Colors-MAROON AND GOLD -PEARL KELLEY -FRANK E. GOODING -VERNE I. REED 24-MYRA H. KING -CLEDA M. KEAS 26-ROY P. CARSON Z7-DALE W. NICOLEN 28-EDGAR B. DONLEY -LOUISE I. DELENT -FLOYD E. SANFORD -AMY KEITHLEY -HARRY J. KLOTZ GORDON G KELLAR MARGUERITE RICHMOND HAROLD W WAGNER BENJAMIN PFEIFFER GEISERT A HOWARD JOHN MINTON OMEGA MCNAMARA - . 33- . - . 34- 34 CQQQGD G5 Q W w w QDQQQCEQQ C73 Q G9 Q69 Q9 QD SIT and watch the Hames go dancing up The chimney, from their bed of glowing coals, VVithout, I hear the dull drips of rain Cn roof and window-panes, and now and then The rustling of some tree, as if it would Protest against its load of heavy drops. And as I watch and listen, half-asleep, The thot occurs to me, how like the Hames My own endeavors spring from glowing hopes And plans of success, and how they, too, Dance gaily for a time that's all too brief, Only to vanish, swallowed up by some Failure se 1 Dark chimney, overlooked in eagerness To reach the goal. Or if, perchance, No chimney intervenes, cold, heartless words Like steady drops of rain, drip down and quench The gleaming tongues that flared so hravely up. My protests seem in vain, for, like the leaves That droop and quiver underneath the rain, For ev'ry drop I resolutely try To shake away, a hundred more descend In pitiless succession, till at last Amid the glowing bed of hopes and plans I scarce can fine one spark to urge me on. V1v1AN BONIFACE, '09 'The Class of l9l0. OW we are known as haughty Juniors, but what trials and tribu- lations we have gone thru in the intermediate stages leading to that exalted height. To those of us who have gone the whole distance within these walls, that period of turbulence, known as the Freshman year, is only a very faint memory. But as we ponder over that time, recalling incident after incident, the memory is as a whole a most pleasing one. In the first place we have reason to be proud of our having in our midst, at that time, such a large number of people who have made themselves prominent in the records of great achievements at Bradley. Of course most of them were in the insignificant em- bryo state of Freshmen. I say most of them, because Ed. Lidle wasn't. Football season had started before school did, and Red in his mole skins was already well on the road to fame. However in his actions in school, he was as meek as the humblest Fresh. Among those who were unheralded and unsung were little Benjie Pfeiffer, who has since blossomed into a football hero and general manager of renown, and Pig, now known as Roy Carson, who since his second year has annually donned a Bradley baseball uniform and distinguished himself as a graceful catcher of flies. Gordon Kellar began early to manifest the qualities, which were to make him the present TECH editor. Lester Mason, a rugged bunch of muscle, had not yet become aware of the prowess which was to make him the plunging fullback and football captain. Before going further, something must be said about the girls. In regard to this charming part of the class, it is sufficient to say that that unsurpassed organization of delightful femininity, the jolly seven, belong to the class of 1910. - A few forced acquaintances with the cactus were made by several of the innocents that year. The chief result of this hazing by the pompous Sophs was to cultivate the habit among the Freshmen of going into the solemn confines of the library for safety. This habit has stuck and to this day the members of 1910 have cherished an unusual affection for the library and its book lore. That was the last year in which the Freshies were allowed to roam at will. The sight of detachments of rollicking children, happy in their freedom from restraint, making too frequent trips to Hamil- ton's, other groups playing tennis and baseball and still others strol- ling in the direction of cool and shady nooks, thrust the duty upon the faculty of providing study rooms for Freshmen. As Sophomores we enjoyed hazing Freshmen immensely. About the time we were having the most fun tho, Dr. Wyckoff called a division meeting and we heard the oft repeated words in a warning voice. Thereafter the Freshmen wandered about in a most im- pudent manner, without being molested in the least fnoticeablyj It is a fact to be regretted that since then the proper attention has not been given to our incoming yearlings. We then passed into two years of oblivion, but we were actively engaged in affairs incidental to our higher uplifting during this time. It was in the third year that Ed. Donley was promoted to us from High School. Ed's rapid rise began soon after his arrival and he reached his highest point on Jan. 29th, '09. It was a position he could retain only a few seconds, because the wind was blowing a gale and the pole was coated with ice. But when he came down he brought something of the Senior's with him. Then came the time for us to take the Academic Certificate and enter college. The convocation went off in much the usual man- ner. VVe were much impressed with the solemness of the occasion and the foretaste of what was coming in two years. But the ordi- nary trend of affairs was ended there and something was pulled off which was unparalleled in the history of the Institute. We went on an all night tally-ho ride and vied with the Seniors and Juniors in the fun we had, in spite of their efforts to nip our plans in the bud. The great spirit of 1910 was made manifest a few days before graduation. First an indistinct longing crept thru the class to do something with a rush, and wake up the class of Seniors to a realiza- tion that the coming Juniors were alive and wanted everybody to know it. On Wednesday, June 17, the class met in the Physics Lecture room to organize temporarily and launch their plans. All we needed was a treasurer and Floyd Sanford, who had come to us at the beginning of the fourth year, was given the job. He was such a good custodian of the enormous sum raised that he was given the position permanently this year. VVe decided to have a wild ride around town and go out in the country to have a midnight lunch. The affair came off as planned. only it proved more delightful than was expected. Immediately after the graduation exercises, twenty-five strong, we started out on our first junior stunt, It is necessary to relate the ride up Grand View Drive, and our luncheon in Brown's Pasture at 2 A. M., with a billboard for a table and a full moon to add to the general effect. That was the way in which we entered upon our college career. In the Fall of 1908, we found on returning to school, that several of our classmates in the academy, had left us. Julia Voor- hees, Natalia Jobst and Irene Schertz were the girls missing, while we lost Nevius Ballance, Frank Huber, Ed. Lidle, Carl Paul, Aaron Philips, Earl Smith, Henry Truitt and Oscar Sieberns from the ranks of the boys. To make up this loss in numbers tho, we had twenty-four members join us this year. We organized and elected officers the first day and have gone along swimmingly. We broke another record too, in getting our class-pins before Christmas. I might say that six mainstays of the football team, Conway, Clark, Miller, Pfeiffer, Millen and Mason, were of the class of '10. Pretty good, eh? I could enter into a long discourse on the varied personal accomplishments of our class, but this story is told on the other pages of this book and besides the editor of this POLYSCOPE is a Senior and it might unnerve him for his task if he had to recall what they had to contend against. just read the list of juniors and keep their names in mind while you look thro the book. HARRY KLOTZ, '10. f ff fi: 59 A X f y Q, f x Z U3 Q , ff Q f fff'1 Y 'R,I?J 7 , 'T 415 3 A EQ M P. f ' V X FI X05 77 DN Q -, Xix 7 EB Y 4 XJ, , A f , it 2 1r f EL' CN I m lfif ff W X fX 4 W M Q Eg fi-.X Bv-rvHQm'o9.Q, -x':?5xi '- I Normal Class CARROLL W. ANGIER Presldent ANNETTE FULFORD Vice Presldent CORA B. MILLER Secretary HAROLD E. EVERLY Treasurer 1 ...ith . 'N' - Qi ,- Hi L L JIHWQ fi! ff .nl-- vii.-lrlzfff H sziiiiiiassiiff-J'Wfffff'-X : zu XL V9 EQEWM :We..41 - 1' ...-. 40 CARROLL W. ANGIER, Manual Training Litchneld, Minn. Dignity and reserve are two of the graces which he possesses. ELLA C. WESTLAKE, Manual Training Springfield, Ill. She's little, but Oh myll' BERTHA CASE, Domestic Science Peoria, Ill That cool possession of herself. AUGUSTO HIDALGO, Manual Training - Manila, P. I Let's not do today what could be done tomorrow. BRISTOL E. WING, Manual Training Muskegon, Mich In every deed of mischief he had a heart to resolve, a head to continue, and a hand to execute. EDWARD KURTZ, Manual Training - Olney, Ill. Dignity and reserve are two of the graces which he possesses. ETTA MAY ALLISON, Domestic Science - Lerna, Ill. She is not conscious of her worth. ANNETTE FULFORD, Domestic Science - Peoria, Ill. Her heart is not in her work-it is somewhere else. ELEANOR COEN, Manual Training Normal, Ill Be to her virtues very kind, Be to her faults a little blind. HARRY GLENN BOWERS, Man. Tr. Sault St. Marie, Mich. A 'good fellow' with what that implies. gs-Q l OLIVE ADELE BALCKE, Domestic Science - Quincy, Ill As welcome as the showers to the April flowersf, RALPH GORDON MILLEN, Manual Training Biggsville, lll His heart was the only vulnerable spot of this modern Samson. ROBERT C. CRAIG, Manual Training - Peoria, Ill Much might be said if one could read his mind. GEORGE F. HUTTER, Manual Training Wilkes Barre, Pa There never was but one good co-ed and she's left school. Why d0n't the mail man come? HAROLD EVERLY, Manual Training Vlenona, Ill. Thy modesty's a candle to thy merit. E. R. THONIPKINS, Manual Training - Bloomington, Ill Too late he stayed-forgive the crimeg Unheeded flew the hours. STELLA SHIELDS, Manual Training Monon, Ind High flights has she and wit and will And so her tongue is seldom still. MARGARET VVATERS, Domestic Science Terre Haute, Ind Her voice was ever soft, gentle and low. CORA B. MILLER, Domestic Science Toulon, Ill. Most dangerous are quiet folk. VVILLIAM DENNIS McLEMoRE, Man. Tr. Mason City, Ill. Eureka did you say? lt seems so near and yet so far. in'-si, I. -, S I C aawaaaaaaaf EDWIN ATHELSTEIN Ross, Manual Training Addison, Ill. FLORENCE RITTER, Domestic Science Williamsport, Pa. GEORGE F. FOTH, Manual Training - Jersey City, N. J. VERNON C. SAYER, Manual Training Pasadena, Cal. ROBERT J. SMITH, Manual Training - Ruston, La. R. G. BILGER, Manual Training - Cincinnati, Ohio Aint I the mustard. BERTHA BAUGHMAN, Domestic Science - Peoria, Ill. Her modest looks the cottage might adorn, Sweet as the primrose peeps beneath the thorn. Recollections of the Past By Augusto Hidalgo S WE look over the time since we first met in the tower on a sunny September day, we cannot help realizing how in the midst of our heavy work there has been something, now and then, that has lightened our hearts and brightened the day You remember the day in design class when we were told that a spot has size, shape, color and intensity, how this spot can be modified by changing one or more of its properties, leaving the others unchanged, or by changing them all? It was our first lesson in design and, like all first lessons, it had something funny about it. Surely you have not forgotten how later, when making the intensity scale, we were tought to close our eyes and see something you do not learn anywhere else in the whole United States. And you must remember too how Rocky in an evil hour produced a wonderful punk floral design, how he was encour aged by the teacher saying, You work too hard, meaning that his lines were visciously stiff. You heard, perhaps, Miss Mickel ask, one day, Is this an original design, Mr. l? Ches mam ches, was the reply, altho the design in question was copied from one of the teacher's own drawings In the elementary hand work class, furnishing the doll house building railroads, bridges, churches, school houses and other houses on the sand table, how these employments recalled to us those years, long ago when we were young. For some of us are quite old, with the exception of one or two whose scalps produce remarkably poor vegetation on account of frequent eruptions of heated gases thru the pores of their over estimated craniums In the work with Mr. Van we learned the different properties of woods and the trees they come from, their leaves, their flowers and their fruits. It was in this class that Millen informed us that the dog-wood flower, which he saw, was red. His statement was true but it was a case of color reflection In the seventh and eighth grade work Van said one day' Here Clarke has a working drawing that is unique in its character It suggests the coat hanger Miss Westlake had a drawing of a foot stool which was a specimen of the touch me DOI Miss Where is my Key complained that those horses in the wood shop were notvery steady because as she sat on one of them, suddenly she found herself seated on the floor Donaldson made a record for himself by attempting a half inch cut on the planer At a class meeting when Hidalgo was advocating equal rights for men and women, he was laid on the table While visiting the Corning distillery, some young ladies started on the return trip earlier than the rest because President Angler and Doctor Thompkins chose to take a stroll back to the hills Wing tried to persuade his Right Bower that he was not in the least bit affected by the negative lxberality of Mr Corning After bumming for half an hour around the town, Wing and Company boarded the West Bluff car Wing soon gave way to slumber even in front of the fair damsels on the seat opposite him I-Ii head was tired Recollect Petchy s former dislike for northern girls, Rockwell s widely known talk on The girl I m going to marry a a Sunday School oyster supper and Kurtz s sense of practicalness shown by his renouncmg his seat at the banquet and choosing to stay in the kitchen with the cook And so it is on down them termlnable list of accomplishments attained and other things perpertrated inside and outside the school walls by the 09 Manual framing Normal Class . . 1 ,, . . . . . . H ' 1 N . . . g . . . . S . , . . . . , . ,, . , . ,, , I 1 , . 7 U . . . , , . . 46 ll LL was quiet as death in the realms of the paper dolls. But the air was thick with mystery and dark plotting, as four villainous Normalites stealthily stole down to the chapel roof. Their hearts were steeped in the wild desire to do some awful thing and have some awful adventure. There was blood on the moon. Stealthily, stealthily, hissing mighty oaths between their clenched teeth, the four terrors fared forth in quest of prey. Darkness over- spread the heavens and, the Horolog clock stopped. There was more blood on the moon. Muttering terrible threats of dire re- Who Swiped the Cow-juice? venge, did the awful Normalites go forth and the gale whistled, shriekingly, around the flag pole. And there was still more blood on the moon. A death-like pall overhung the atmosphere. The universe trembled. O terrible suspence! An awful deed is about to be committed. What will these terrors from the tower do? It is awful, awful, awful. Alas! Alas! Oh terror of terrors, it has been done. They have committed the awful deed. It is too late. The thing is done. fThe next morning the cook could'nt find her bottle of milk.l az-ai:-at'L1'fai::ziL'-1 L' 'lui- '-'--iv 1'-'ffr' -V Qi .' - ' ' 41.S...1.7LLJ..1.-Iwf--fi.-JJ-2-2 iw ,1Hf4r4'9.:: . gg ,,..:.!1g6e': f:,. mf.,-1:1-gf'!-!zz:g'g?: A F-.w:,,. 3'!'?1F!if7f3':-1.1-.at--.41--.au4,:.i,..-cz-3,,-:ff gg:.'::pg-,:..g-.1-1-5,,,,-5.11::s::.7:,'.'-J-:-::-::I-: 1-1-1-5-5 -151-.1-,:5.f...,31 1' 5 -, .- ua,-:1':'.-J:-y 19,133.-gi..-:.,..-gizf :-21254 1 '- V2 22-3552337 -'J-311 1 ff '51 , , - '-fag fr. - 1'-Q.: : -- ' v -.'-.wr -2: V--'-. , .. Q-. fd, . .' .- 1'-1'--1 32'-:.'::-5'-'J-. 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I I , Memories I-IEN the day is long and dreary And the sun is hid from sight, And the wind is moaning sadly As it hastens in its Hight- 'Tis then I think the thoughts That take me far away To a home out in the mountains Where dark is the light of day. Oh there the deep thick forest Keeps out the bright sunshine, And outside the wind is roaring Round that quaint old home of mine. I can see the old, old cabin, With the windows rude and small And the heavy chairs and table And the bunk built in the wall. I can see the open fire-place, With the big logs all ablaze, Lighting up the rough bare room With their bright but wavering rays. I can see it clearly now As if it were yesterday That I left that dear old place And came far, far away. 'Twas but a little home, And I was but a lad, But as I sit here dreaming, The remembrance makes me glad. C. 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Qlr YI, ' ,- I 4 V f' - 7, ,gf , -. My gg, ,fa I , 9 5 , , 3 Q: fif V 1 d V., r I, 4 5 I i A w Q ogy Ll 1! f 1, ,YW qs JI 71. - . fy , ' 'vw 1 -, - gn I I I ,f . , X 4 1 ff' - .. I ' fl . L f, .f 'J' L . nr 'ff mf 'I r xi Q2 iw!!-1 - Q ,. ff X ff , -- ' ' ' -Sf ..::,..,a f W f ' ' X E F K, -- 35 '1' ' ft U ' I , ' '..'::f. -a.' .y,x: : :u.s:2',g4 A 1 3 fi V 551 1 EP 'Y M' f' Q J 1 - Q:- ' . f f ,, Q f , , , . ,1 gs' 10:4 ' ' N V f if --4, 5 -y 1 . --, -C -g L- It ILM' Q ' V X, 1 Je, . . -L- J!! A . Q Y 1 'P - f W 1-my Q- . . Xfnv F h Q U' I 1 5 X ' ! , . , V V 4 V 6 f I 5 V Q- i lv Y V A 5 -Wx , x D I 1. r-' . in -1 V ' if Q I r 5 I QL ' I YL' l! tl ' '30 ,QW X E .' 7 .1 -' -' ' i' ..I I l tv! QQ E - . ,W V W - Y . -..N , l, - Q -, D n ,,., ' 5 ag! ' f- ' 1 A- ' UW. A N ' ALPHA PI J 9 7 5 4 8 1 6 2 Alpha Pi Alpha Chapter Color-PURPLE. Faculty Advisor-WALES HARRISON PACKARD ACTIVE MEMBERS 1 ROBERT PLOWE, ,09 5 ROY PORTER CARSON, '10 2 ROY AVERY KELLER, '09 6 GEORGE GORDON KELLAR, '10 3 GLENN MAYNARD EBAUGH, '09 7 PAUL THOMPSON WELLES, '10 4 ROBERT CLIFTON CRAIG, '09 8 RALPH MILLEN, '10 9 ROGER SCHENCK, '11 FRATRES IN URBE FRED BAILEY BOURLAND GEORGE RICHARD MAC CLYMENT MARK WENTWORTH COWELL MAURICE SEIBERT MEEKER SYDNEY BREESE CUTRIGHT ALFRED DE SHON RADLEY ALFRED WILSON HARRIS ALBERT TRIEBEL CHARLES HEBARD LYON GEORGE R. WHEELOCK RALPH WADSWORTH WHEELOCK 51 -, ' ' PHI LAMBDA .0-'f' fu. , ., xx L -Q. 2 I 3 4 wx. Phi Lambda XI Beta Chapter Colors-BLACK AND MAROON. Faculty Advisox-JOSEPH BICKLE ACTIVE MEMBERS 1 HUGH COOPER 3 RALPH SEYMOUR 2 JOHN H. KUHL, JR. 4 JOSEPH BATCHELDER ALUMNI CHAPTER EDWIN PAGE CHARLES FISCHER FRED KRAEMER DEAN PROCTOR WILLARD MOSHER ROY U. TYSON EDWIN OAKFORD FRED FABER CHARLES VANCE HARRY WARD EDWARD MILLER CHARLES MEYERS NELSON SWEETSER ROBERT TURNER JAMES C. HAYWARD WILLIAM JACK ALBERT ALBERTSON HOWARD NEWELL FRANK MURRAY JOHN WILSON JOHN SULLIVAN GEORGE FLETCHER DELOSS S. BROWN PHILIP HORTON FRANK HASBROUCK LAWRENCE FARLEY JOHN OLLIVER DAN HALL HOWARD MELLOW HERBERT WILLIAMS ROBERT OFF GEORGE RAMSEY RICHARD PEDRICK FRED SCHIPPER GRANT MILES HARRY VAN TASSEL ROSCOE KELLER FRANK MORRILL WILLIAM WADDELL CHARLES MILLER RALPH MERCER EARL VAN TASSEL JOSEPH CANFIELD CHARLES SCHAUMLEFFLE MILES FULLER EARL SMITH HARRY MERCER DONALD WILEY JAY SWENT HAYO BLOCK 53 SIGMA TAU BETA , YU I f' Sigma Tau Beta Colors-GOLD AND BLACK. Faculty Advisor, CHARLES TRUMAN WYCKOFF ACTIVE MEMBERS ' 1 BENJAMIN PFEIFFER, '09 4 DAWSON BRANDE, '12 2 EDGAR DONLEY, '09 WILLIAM BENNETT, '09 3 JAMES AYLWARD, '12 5 RAYMOND TAYLOR, '10, JOSEPH E. GREER RAY A. BIRCHPIELD EARNEST E. DICKISON FRANK H. JACK, JR. GEORGE W. BRYAN, JR. FRANK W. PARR ELMER G. HUFFMAN GEORGE B. EMERY MERLE O. SLANE OSCAR O. BORG GENERAL C. HUDSON ROSCOE D. GREER ROBERT W. WANSBROUGH HARVEY E. HINES CLAUD N. NOACH GILES C. KEITHLEY EDWIN JAMES DONLEY VERNON C. WEAR ALUMNI CHAPTER EARL C. TAYLOR WILLIAM T. WHITING GEORGE H. ANDERSON CHARLES P. ISELE THOMAS J. COOPER ARTHUR T. SMITH ROY W. HELM ROBERT H. WOOD LESLIE A. HEGLER WILLIAM H. PARKER ALLEN E. PROCTOR EUGENE A. SCHNELLBACHER ROSS P. SEATON EUGENE C. KENYON RICHARD T. CULTER ROLLY J. HANDBURY ALLEN D. CAMPBELL 55 ROLLY B. KING CARL H. BLOCK ROBERT M. EWING WARD I. WALKER CLIFFORD J. ORE HARTLEY G. CLARK WALTER B. OEF HOWARD M. KEENE WILLIAM B. EWING CHARLES P. EOOTE WALTER A. RHEA JOSEPH J. HAYWARD WALTER A. WOOD JAMES A. WOOD JOSEPH P. BIRCHPIELD OLIVER M. ARTES GEORGE W. FULKS DELTA GAMMA DELTA 'N om -rw: HOIWE- STFQETQ1-1 Delta Gamma Delta Color-LEM ON. Flower-FORGET-M E-NOT. Faculty Advisor-COM MY ACTIVE CHAPTER EDWARD ALEXANDER SMYTHE CUSHING ROYAL ARCHIBALD KELLER WILLIE HALLROOM HUDSON ALUMNI CHAPTER HAROLD LANCASTER LACKERSTEEN FRATER IN F ACULTATE BISH, SR. ORNERY MEMBER DR. CHARLES TRUMAN WYCKOFF YELL:- Beryllium, Zirconium, Aqua Regial Delta Damma Delta, Rah! Rah!! Rah!!! 'Phone, Main 36 57 qi Colors GREEN AND GOLD. LOUISE LEONARD DANFORTH FLORENCE STETSON HAZARD GERTRUDE SEWARD SCHRADER GEORGIA RIDER GRACE SEIBERLING HAZEL PAGE NATALIA JOBST ELLEN AVERY MABLE SLANE LUCY PROCTOR LUCY MOLL FRANCES AVERY ELIZABETH RIDER ALICE GOSS KATE BUCK ETHEL HATFIELD LOUISE MILES WINIFRED JOHNSON Omicron Kappa Kappa Kappa Flower-JONQUIL. Faculry Advisor-M ARGARET MCLAUGH LIN ACTIVE MEMBERS MARIE ALMEA KNAPP, '09 2 MARGUERITE RICHMOND, '10 AMY KEITHLEY, '10 4 MARTHA DOSSE TRIEBEL, '10 ELIZABETH LETETIA ESTEP, '09 6 MYRTLE MAY LEININGER, '10 RUTH LILLIAN COOPER, '10 ALUMNI CHAPTER MARY HUBBELL LUCILE BATCHELDER ITALENE PEDRICK ETTA SPALDING VONA RITCHIE BROWN GRACE KELLOGG HESS VERA HALE MARY CAMP LUCILE CREVES MURRAY HELEN HOPKINSON HUNGERFORD ADA WANSBROUGH PROCTOR THEODOSIA POWELL SADIE SUTTON GABLE ELIZABETH ROADSTRUM LILLIAN PARKER KEENE MARIE FRANK HARRIS GLADYS CORNING LOVELACE HELEN MILLS SOROR IN FACULTATE GRACE EATON HAUK 59 BERNICE HALL MABLE KENNEDY ELIZABETH RADLEY LUTHY HAZEL SCHOLL MYRA VANCE MARGUERITE SMITH LOUISE PETERS ERMA SEAJTON ELISE TRIEBEL ANNA BLOCK ELIZABETH FABER OLIVE KEITHLEY BERTHA HOLSTMAN JESSIE RUTHERFORD ANNA STREIBICH ANNA RICH LAMBDA PHI 4 6 3 5 8 9 1 Color--LAVENDER. Flower-VIOLET. F 1 ELLEN ALICE MUIR, '08 2 ERMA DONATHEN, '09 3 ELEANOR COEN, '09 Lambda Phi aculty Advisor-KATHERINE FEDORA WALTERS ACTIVE MEMBERS 6 UNA MAY GARRETT, '11 7 ETHEL MABLE SUMMERS, '10 8 VIVIAN BONIFACE- '09 4 MYRTLE LEININGER, '10 9 LOUISE DE LENT, '10 5 IRENE CAROLINE LIDLE, '09 10 IRMA M. MOSCHEL, '10 NELL HODGES, '10 SOR ORES IN FACULTATE BERTHA MAY SCULLIN ALUMNI CHAPTER NETTIE JOBST SARAH AN J ET GRANT MRS. LILLIAN SUMMERS TANSIL BLANCHE FRANKS RUTH HOUGHTON MRS. MARY SCHUREMAN IMIG BESSIE MILES RAPP , MYRTLE FRANCIS LAURA PRIOR SARAH MABLE STRAESSER THEODOSIA MARSHALL VICKERY VERA RAILSBACK CLARA KOCH EDITH WALTERS KATHLEEN COCKLE F LOY ELIZABETH ROCKWELL HELEN MARY TJADEN GRACE CAMREN FLORENCE WILSON COLE LOIS IDA CUTRIGHT RUTH FLORENCE IDA CUTRIGHT JASSIE CANDEE ARCHER MRS. MARY HARPER LANE AGNES STEVENS STEVENS 61 The Gymnasium AVE you seen our new gymnasium, Which is not yet complete, That has so long been a'buildin' On the lot across the street? It was watched by all the students, We have often heard them say, There really was a new stone Added to the gym today. 'Twas last year we were promised A new gym in the Spring, And we thot to say good bye To the dog house-wom out thing: But our hopes were wildly shattered, When March arrived once more And the players in the dog house Crowded thicker than before. But when the gym is finished And we can use the same, We'll celebrate it nobly By winning every game, And could the students name it, Unanimous, one and all, With a grand old celebration They'd christen it Bishop Hall. CHARLES ATWOOD, '10 62 r i ll llluumm uullullll 1 lwlllnlllllll II? :num IIMIDIMIIIIII ll lllllllllllllllllllllllwlf 1 . 'Ea' R K 1 Nm f --ff ?H 1 Y 1hf' MM -I 1 t 1 y P- R- 1, K . Q S 5' if il. ' X P CV 0, I' 4+ , 'K ff 1-W . V I ff ' 'f i ' 'W' f ff fNANMf -, N X - WML 5 'l QS 9 1 1 ' W F SR L' rim, ..,' g 4,,gV vi, V , rl- ' , gif l 71? J-:Y fin' 'NPL if 4? .L if s'i g 7 i ff, w p -4 Ml, ff! f. if mf + Q i +g1-3 SS Fi 'gff f ' fi 4 ,,42 ,zg e.w fm-: aim -1a assign samsylmllmmm 7 ,, W' j 'ZH f 1 + , pf- + H , f . 3 . g LTf X :II xl K If l 'INXU !N' J f f fig-YQ X' f X J nj! !! ,VI M XX W X I X f 'I Ja, M' If W ' XX V f f 5 lf' 'M Xf X X ' n il .I ,I KX W X 1 ' oh., . g W- M Q X wwf 13 1,3-Vw-I AN ADVENTUROUS 5 lliliiqiftliif TRAPPING EXPEDITIQN f. I ff gf'l5...'!FH ray A , H U N Iwi JIM! M9 il I I I 1 I' li ll Wolf Yfmrdfka 'nhl IQIIIWII Klllltlllieiiiii Xin Him 'tim Biillll mu MGIIII 1,2 W om 'il' I. iii ,Iv Q Sli? if V I ' 1 ll' 5 'I P il,?', gil ii I i uh- 4 W 4 ,-fill 29, SA M- - B ra o w i 'l',,1l 'Q5 'gitl WW 1 iv gr 5' if 'ry I fl! y e 1. ,P I7 I if 'QT FTE. Iwi l, , , I g ggllg5.a..ag.agr.a.ai.ia.5iag.t5ifag.a,stqi.ia3 I it r llv L- ll ilil if n-i ill if nn' 1' ll ll . l , ,i 1 AMES TRUMAN, a lad of about eighteen years, Simon Young, a grizzled old scout, and I, were employed in the late fall of 1743 by a prosperous Virginia merchant, to cross the Appalachian Mountains to trap and hunt wild animals for their skins. A relief expedition was to be sent to us about two months later. We crossed the mountains and built our cabin, set our traps, and prepared for a long stay. During the winter, we were bothered several times by the Redskins foraging around the cabin while we were out tending our traps. Finally one day when we were all away, the Indians broke into the cabin and stole most of our pro- visions. We had no way of getting more until the relief party arrived. The next day the scout told the lad and me to watch for signs of the robbers from the woods near the cabin. We had lain in the bushes for about two hours, seeing no sign of the thieves, when suddenly I heard a twig snap behind me, and turning, found myself face to face with six Iroquois. Springing to my feetl discharged my riHe at them, but they overpowered us, bound us hand and foot, and carried us into the woods. After being carried steadily onward for about an hour or so, I heard sounds that indicated that we were nearing the Indian village. We soon reached it and were immediately thrust into a wigwam, guarded by several braves. We had been in there but a few moments, when an Indian stalked in and severing the bindings of our feet, said in broken English: White man come. see torture. Mabbe white man be tortured tomorrow, Ugh l Struggling to our feet, we followed our captor to the scene of the torture. In an open place in the center of the village, were gathered the Indians, seated in an elongated circle, down the center of which were piled at intervals, several brush heaps, ready for lighting. At one end a scaffold had been built, some six feet from the ground. At the other end was a small platform upon which the chiefs were seated in state. The lad and I were conducted to this platform and were thus able to see plainly all the details of the torture. VVe were scarcely seated when an opening was made in the throng and thru it came the prisoner, a Deleware Chief, with an escort of about thirty braves. He strode along haughtily in their midst, clad in a magnificent beaver robe, with strings of polished shells about his neck. After being marched about so that all might see him, the prisoner was led to a log in the center of the open space, upon which food had been placed. As his hands were bound, one of the chiefs fed him. The repast finished, the remains of the feast were removed. The prisoner's hands were loosed and a hush fell upon the savage horde, as he arose to sing his death song. His voice now quavering in a Weird minor cadence, now full and strong in sonorous monotone, penetrated to the farthest ranks of his foes. As the song progressed the singer's body swayed to the rythm of his voice. The swaying of the body became more rapid -as he began to move around the enclosure. One by one the fires were lighted, and each individual of the mob, arming himself with a piece of bark, lighted the end of it, and as the singer fwho had let his robe fall to the groundl passed along, his tormenters applied the blazing bits of bark to his flesh, inflicting painful burns. The victim did not wince, but went on faster and faster, never stopping in his song. A growing excitement moved the croudg a shout of delight arose as one young buck ran up behind the prisoner and pressed the red- hot head of an axe against his back, the sight of the smoke from the burning flesh, and the odor that was wafted to the nostrils of the fiends, set them in a wild frenzy. Gradually the lust for cruelty in the savage breast broke beyond restraint. Now one goes toward the dancing figure and tears loose a finger nailg another, coming up from behind, cuts his flesh, still another thrusts a pine splinter into his shoulder and lights it. At length the prisoner's vigor shows signs of exhaustion. He stumbles and falls, but in a moment he is up again, his voice rising higher and higher, as he moves more quickly aroung the enclosure. His face is no longer recognizable. Long thorns have been thrust into his cheeks and forehead, and masses of clotted blood hang from his eyebrows. The surface of his torn and scorched body is covered with oozing streams of blood. Soon he staggers and falls fainting. His tormenters sieze him and lay him upon the hot ashes of the firesg the pain revives him and he jumps up and struggles on. Again he falls. This time his persecuters pour fresh water over his burns and wounds, some one holds a cup of water to his lips, the refreshing coolness recalls more to life and misery. He is dragged up the steps of the scaffold and made to stand erect, his arms stretched over, and fastened to a cross piece, thus suspending him so as to throw his weight upon his wrists. . Pandemonium breaks loose. A crowd of yelping, screaming, deamons surrounds the scaffold. The prisoner gazes on them and a smile breaks on his lacerated lips, as with eyes glaring with hatred he reviles and mocks his enemies. Heated stones are placed beneath his feet and boiling water is poured over him. A red-hot iron is thrust into each eye. A young buck climbs upon the cross-beam and deftly scalps him. Finally, sightless, and quivering in awful agony, the prisoner summoned his remaining strength to gasp out one last defiance. His head droopsg a shudder runs thru him and a chief runs forward and bares the still palpitating heart, with a quick stroke of his knife. The heart is tossed to the young braves, who tear it into tiny pieces, devouring it raw, believing that in so doing they will each acquire some of the bravery of the dead prisoner. The head is severed and laid at the feet of the chief. Horrified at this awful sight, I turned my head away and looked at the lad. He had buried his face in his hands, and his whole body was shaking with convulsive sobs. The Indian who had led us to the torture, now came up and said to me, How yu' like 'em? Mabbe get same tomorrow. Shuddering, we were led back to the wigwam. That night, asI lay tossing about on my blanket, Iheard the distant call of a screech owl. This was the signal used by the scout, and I now believed that he was coming to help me. The thot was very comforting and I lay all thru the long night waiting impatiently for developments. However nothing more happened and in the morning a guard came and took the lad away. All through the day I waited in fear- ful expectation for them to come and lead me to torture. But the day passed very quietly and I was not molested. I think they were waiting for the return of some of the braves who were off hunting. 1 The following night I was sitting, wide awake, in the guarded Wigwam when I heard a slight noise behind me. Looking over my shoulder, I saw, in the dim light, a knife carefully cutting the bark of the wigwam. It was the scout who had in some way worked thru the guards to me. He cut my bonds and rubbed my numb wrists and ankles. In a moment we crawled thru the hole and be- gan to creep toward the woods. It seemed to me that we were hours covering the small distance, but at last we reached shelter without hearing any sounds of alarm in the camp. The relief ex- pedition had arrived justin time and were waiting for us in the woods. We had yet to rescue the lad, and the scout proposed the follow- ing plan: the members ofthe relief party fsix in numberl and I, were to surround the camp. At a signal from the scout, we were to start toward the village firing our rifles. While the excitement, caused by our rush, lasted among the Indians, the scout would steal in, free the lad and make for the cabin, where we were all to meet. The ruse succeeded and the Indians probably thinking that we were a large party, did not follow. 11? W' Fl 1 Vw '. KNXKWX 'I ll i 445 gfwi iLKXlKlKKdllldlpi I ,Q A , I as Qi 5 E ,- V' ' 5 -E ' f . 65 A Noctumal Episode T was a dark and stormy night. But that wasn't all. It was raining. Over in Bradley Hall amateur Hamlets and Ham- letesses were ruining and shooting rival grain merchants with all the fervor that the modern problem play demands. But that wasn't all. Outside in the drizzle stood the Gym, stony and mortarfied. But that wasn't all. Silently, silently, one by one, the 1945's stole thru the mucky muck and climbed to the Gym roof where the pine boards pined, as the merciless wind chilled them thru the thin coat of claret and elephant smoke, which the 1923's had given them the night before. Now they were to have a new overcoat. But that wasn't all. One of the Hamlets missed a cue and went outside to look for it. VVhat did he hear? A clatter on the Gym roof. A quotation from Goethe. Curses? -' P - ?- 3 -H This Cannot be. The 1945's paint that roof? No. A life if need be. But this never. And with assistance he hurried to the scene. With stealthy tread they stole to the third floor and concealed themselves with the skill that only true villainy inspires. Above them the unsuspecting 1945-ers toiled as those whose labor is born of love. But that wasn't all. The 1911's were also out among them on this eventful evening. They arrived at the Gym in time to see the last 1923 begin to climb. In an instant they rose to the occasion and then to the second floor. Silence reigned. So did the clouds. All was quie- tude as among the Freshmen in the Dean's oflice. Ah, 'twas but the lull before the storm. With a mighty cry, the 1923's broke from cover. The battle was on. History knows no contest so fierce. But love and determination won and soon the 1945-ers were being dropped thru a hole in the Hoor to the mud below. But that wasn't all. Now it happened that some of the Horologs, having gone broke playing pea-pool at the barber shop, were also out to do a little painting and they were soon doing battle with the valient 1911's. But fortune this time frowned, and the Horologs were victorious. To the latter, men used to seeing the works without the cases, occured the idea to undress the 1911's in order to better investigate their movements. With the Horologs, thots are deeds and soon the unfortunate 1911's were wandering thru the Gym as naked as the day they started boosting the milk trust. But that wasn't all. 'Twas all but Durley. Durley would not submit and as a result was soon doing a pajama Marathon to Main street and back for the benefit of the happy Horologs. And so he ran, panting but pant- less until the twitter of birds greeted him on his final trip. Then the Horologs hied themselves and Durley tried to hide himself but it was of no use. His clothes were gone. In vain he sought redress and at the break of day he made his way homeward clothed in a sweet smile, some red paint and a piece of a cement sack. And that wasn't all. Little would be painters, Little pots of paint, Sometimes means suspension But it makes the Gym look quaint. - '-l0l'lL dafwhfcf- 1940. N , ' f f X! ff f f f f' ff! N X f '17f '1 K' ff! if -F1114 vfimfgvl XQ-3 f ,W ll, ff! J, ,, phi? gkfyv' lf 4 is Xi l'f!f!WMit:. '17 V, ' ' f' ' p ,M-.At-1 fa a p a ! , ,f f 2 --11 -x, KWfi mxkvf f X 3 fbi in W' wwf fa - j W ff --,i a a , ' f ' 4' 7-il: ea f-at-W l, -L,TE A 7f - -N Z -Q 71-1 ,gif y QXKET' N i g Z- Qfx., X - j K .call ' gb - - T, :Eff-' Q, al fi -Y -' ' S '--ff 5 F'-Oryxqfog, fl 2:-W 4 Al X' 22522 i 411 lfze vzgfhl Drippmg, he arose to shake an impotent fist at the disappearing truck. , 9 Wmllllm miliiiiiiiiiuiimuumrrrmruwwufmwfH- FW.. X Lb N101-1 TS WORK s xgfe g U : 11,0 I llfflv ' A Li , Q 3 BY LIONELBONIPACE. ?' . .nm 'gil ' 1 -- 1 N V El!!! W 7.1 REL: 11101111 ' ,' 1 . lmillllillr llll Ilff AMONG L BON .FA 5 I W , gi V 5 ALL IN' 'rr-:E -, it v f 4 , if , S g S A X h I X E Z X :Q ll 1 f - ' 1 I tp. I - g -1-1. ', f -,-, . i ,WJ 0 5 4 I wuilggllt lulum. X ' 'us 'Magnify I 3 -,,.,...4 , Q!! 5 0, , -92. 'u'f , 'fy , X 51-irg,,,x!l!1. M T-A In ' ll! if -3 I 4f1H,rT:uI ' 9 'H T - -nl l lui.: . mi 4 i l I T' -1 ,'l fnuurnu if 'l X l I I 9 ,If ,, - X BET yuh We'll get soaked tuhnight, growled Carr, to the man in the next bunk. Huh! the other returned, They always do upset lamps or som'pin of a night like this. Then the two subsided, and silence reigned in the bunk room, save for the uneasy tossing of some sleepless head. The low-turned gas light Hickered over the row of white cots and glittered on the polished surface of the sliding poles, wavering uncertainly. At intervals the black squares of the windows were lighted by the flashes of lightning. After each flash an ominous silence pre- vaded the sultry air, to be, after a pause, broken by mutterings of thunder. The storm grew nearer, the play of lightning and roll of thunder were incessant. Suddenly a blinding Hash illumined the noom and the deafening that followed almost drowned the weak reply of the jigger on the wall, the still wavering Hash showed the men, struggling into pants and hip-boots and diving for the poles. Another peal of thunder drowned all other noises, and another flash revealed the long truck rolling out of the great front doors. The ghastly green light showed the men clinging to the side steps, lighting with coats and helmets. Carr grurnbled thru the bed-ladders to his neighbor of the bunk room. This is-, but here a puff of wind and rain drove the words back in a sputter of wrath. Around the corner they lurched, the great machine swaying crazily. It dipped dangerously into mudholes, sending sheets of spray into the blasts of wind, which whipped them, stinging, into the tillerman's face. The storm grew in violence. The thunder and lightning abated, but the wind rose to a terrible velocity. The three, mighty- , X W lzfff , X ill N ,aa ,A - -N . f tat., rqzyqvggi, A, 'I' A hi., ,I 125, -.,,.u1 i 'E Atl! Y - ff ' A' f x QW iU f x V L 2 . fs' 'ia-i?l41i1 'v Pf Q, N 'ifif wx M M M' gigs? XMNXN .nity 'f5 w llifx tnzxxx-Q-1 . -gig W' fail X f X i Qmwji Q '4 fn , F? 1 f1f1 2f4,' 1 'f ',1,- V! . -ff f' ?Z7'MMi 5 NM WW 3 Y N- e .. -'91 ' M f,1F 'M?'J' fkgdasifk -Nici' V 5 'r?,.f!-4'7,,27,.'1 1 .,:,,-, X Y -X f ',C',7'W7: 5.1i'f,iff1f ,hx 4 '-:af ew, NL f' 5521! WI' F V.Y 5'i5:il VV ' if X? 1, ,ww Q- I W i 1 WMM -Un WI Raw , V5 -'fff 'Sw , QQ 1 ' 'MQii5i55!EF:!EFifY ' ,p, Zminvgfr W5 Wulf Wife: r, J, m gb. f1f'2 ,Wy ff W 'm i F 5'W?'1m Q' Ju L 4 M A xg! ',1U'5-vw MW W.vf-'Hmm WF' ff-99' LQ 'ff' f if 'f-A ,i4 Wyl,fmfgfz!g M - ' b Jf f X he f5x1f4 5M ' X 'if -az, .fgmfqlxxff I' '-' I If ' 3: E ' Y si QkSw N '9 03- ' XX SfiS ilN'4Xi f Qi? af i ' XfQ XX X YY1 ' -All in the 7llfllf'S work I-Icll,'7 hc sand, dryly. flanked, deep-chested grays strained against the buffers with the fierce joy of their kind. As they neared a dimly-lighted street, a shining steamer skidded around the corner, whistle shrilly piping, and had not the grays reared, using their combined strength to hold back the live tons of steel and wood, a collision would have resulted. The steamer, however, straightened out with a snap and disap- peared in the darkness. To add to the predicament, a falling tree crashed upon the tail of the truck, snapping off the extension and bringing forth a How of abuse from the shaken tillerman. A little further on, the driver reined up so sharply and sent the XA-X f, A 1 A A Y'ZVi,' if 1 i- is is truck around the corner so suddenly to escape a mass of live wires that the tillerman Was caught unaware by the quick turn, and al- lowed the battered tail of the truck to swing into a lamp post with a crash. Carr was precipitated into a mudhole with a heavy thud and splash. Dripping, he arose to shake an impotent list at the dis- appearing truck. He stumbled to the box and found that the Hre was black when his crew had arrived. Then, swinging to the side step, he rolled a ball of fine-cut be- tween fore-finger and thumb, and after chewing thotfully for a moment, he finished his uncompleted sentence to his neighbor of the bunk room: uHell, he said, dryly. ifH'?Xsf f f ilu' R 5 in W XXX llll iQ llll 'ii 1-,, , ' l xtxilik., .I S ' KES' x N5 i Kish H 71 f r Qoneniilvwamce Q9 fq Hx X John Tenham leaned back among the gay pillows. ,-3... K 7 Qyfff' W A Trzlble Victory -3 EIITT-'V' 'U Rf r Q Ffa,- xp VIVIA-H Bolgzfzoicff' A3 Q i Wi ' f We A ' X- I -'1,-- jf , 1 N 'r 42-. 15,6 -,,fff 'i ':'1?'ipF EM Q... iillxhlm .wtfiflnii ufhw t. ... ' Yl. .- ' 1 Q ' g-,,, if 2 ill-EQ Eff 1 1 H-'ff ' 2 - fi if ff f 'li W' . l?Il ,JLV1---:elfie- ' 9 - i Z+- 'QF'-'vig 5 ll f I' 'qlfg it all ,tw t u re 5' 'l ags-QV? fi, J B alma , , 5511535 A , ra...if'u . OHN TENHAM leaned back among the gay pillows of the window-seat and watched with a frown the lights twinkling out over the campus. It was the night before Thanksgiving and he was restless and unbearably lonely. It seemed as though in the midst of that world of hospitable lights, there was small occasion for loneliness, but he knew well that in not one of those houses, whose windows beckoned so invitingly, would he be tolerated, let alone welcomed. His room-mate, Harry Payne, had left for home that morning, with a crowd of other jolly students, and would not be back for four days. He had tried to persuade John to go with him but John did not feel in a mood to go visiting, even to old friends, and as for going home, he declared, he guessed he'd rather stay and take a calling from the Dean, than to go home and have the deuce of a row with Dad. So Harry had gone, and sure enough, scarcely an hour later, John had been summoned by the Dean. That gentleman, a most learned student of everything but human nature, had proceeded to tell him in just how many different ways he was a disgrace to the college, his family and himself, and ended by informing him that unless he showed a marked and im- mediate improvement, he would be invited to pack his suit-case and depart. And so that night, as he lolled on the window-seat, he felt at war with the world in general, but most of all with himself, as he thought of his college career and the Dean's summary of it. He had entered college three years before, with more advantages than three-fourths of his class-mates, money in plenty, good looks and more than the ordinary amount of brains. He made friends by the hundred, got through his studies with about a quarter as much work as his fellow-students, and did wonders in athletics. He made the crew in his freshman year and had no small part in win- ning the big race of the year against Bedford, the time-honored rival of his own school. After that the college was his to command and that was the beginning of his downward career. In vacation he visited Harry, did the town with a highly ornamented freshman cap on the back of his head and was the ob- ject of admiration of every girl in town, for the fame of his record in the crew had preceded him. Harry's sister, Elsie, alone refused to bow down and worship, and persisted in treating him as a very ordinary and human boy. She ordered him about much as she did Harry himself, exasperated him almost to distraction by imitating his swagger and lofty airsg and told him flatly that unless his head stopped swelling, the college would not hold him by another year. As a result, john treated her with a lofty indifference, which was rather a failure as she serenely disregarded it, and though he did not dream of admitting it, even to himself, liked her a great deal better than any of the other girls. VVhen he went back to college in the fall, he started in to be a sport, His neckties reechoed to the heavensg his clothes were just a little more pronounced than any one's else, and his hats were the smallest and most rakish procurable. He was still extremely popular, indeed, even more so with a certain class of men, and those who represented the rowdiest element in the college, became his constant companions, finally to the exclusion of most of his former friends, except Harry. That friendship was of too long standing to be broken off in a moment, and had John wished to be rid of him. Harry was too fond of his chum to see him wget in badf' as he expressed it, with no one to help him out, when he was ready to come. It began to be an understood fact around the col- lege that any especially lurid escapade could be traced to ujackn Tenham and his crowd. In vain did the Dean threaten suspension and even expulsion. john was too sure of his father's money and influence and went serenely on. His natural keeness carried him fairly well through his studies, with the least possible amount of outside application. When spring came he went in training for the crew with all his old eagerness and energy, and for a time seemed to have gone back to his old self. But presently he grew restless under the strain, broke training with one grand smash, and was unceremoniously Hred from the crew, only a. week before the great race. But he did not care much. After all, the crew was nothing but hard work. So he and his cronies celebrated the occasion with such vigor that two of them were expelled and the rest given only one more chance. That summer John spent at home, loafingg spoiled by his mother, who refused to listen to a word against him and severely ignored by his father. His junior year was more or less a repetition of his sophomore. The fact that he stayed in school at all was mainly due to Harry's influence. His first friends, in spite of Harry's pleas, refused to have anything to do with him. The girls in town shunned him in holy horror. And it was mainly these two facts that kept him where he was. But Harry knew him better than these and stood by him through it all. When vacation came he dragged john home with him, almost by main force, with the promise that he would stay a week. He stayed all summer. To his amazement, everyone treated him as if his record was the cleanest in the college. True, most of the people knew little of his escapades, but Harry's family and in particular, Harry's sister, did. Elsie welcomed him almost as warmly as she did Harry. She was a great deal kinder to him than she had been that first summer when he was more or less of a hero. She rode with him, F1 ibut' sailed with him, played endless sets of tennis with him, took him out and made him, as she said, Umix up with the other men and girls, in short, before the summer was over, convinced him that he was really fit for good society, and what was better, made him eager for it. In the end, John came to the conclusion that there was no one quite like Elsie, but he remembered his record at college and forebore tel-ling her so. So it was with great hopes that Harry started back to school with him in the fall. There, however, he found the one Haw in his plan: the college had not Harry's insight, and the girls were mostly spoiled and petted creatures, extremely unlike Elsie, so they saw no more reason for treating John like a civilized human being than they had the year before. In consequence, john received the shock of his life, for his return to college was like a slap in the face of all his good, though unexpressed, resolutions. The only people who were glad to see him were his old pals, and it was most natural that in spite of Harry's guarded protests, he should turn to these when the others gave him the cold shoulder. For a while he did try to keep straight, but it was hard going, and one day when he had heard himself pointed out to a pretty girl as the ucollege bum, he lost all control of himself, and after wiping up the ground with the youth who had made the remark, went off on a lark that lasted three days. It was on the fourth day that he had seen Harry depart for home, and it was that night that he looked gloomily out over the campus and thought of his college career. 'iI'll chuck it after Christmas, was his conclusion. When Harry arrived at home, the first thing demanded of him was a full and complete account of John, and this he gave, reluc- tantly enough, but truthfully, because he realized that Elsie would get it out of him sooner or later. All the answer he got was: You bring Jack home with you for Christmas. lf you come without him, you can just travel back the Way you camef, And Harry brought him. What he went through to get him there he never told, but he finally succeeded. John was so glad to see Elsie that he waked up into his proper self for a while and Elsie saw to it that he stayed there. On New Yearls day they Went for a long tramp, the last, for John was to leave that eveningg and on the way home, Elsie began a conversation that she had been planning ever since he had come. Ujack, will you do something for me? she asked, i'I'd rather have it than anything I can think of. Sure, responded john, conhdently expecting a request for a pennant or a box of candy, uwhat is it ?', NGO in training and win the race against Bedford again this year, was the quick answer, HI know you can do it. For a moment he was too much amazed to think, then it flashed over him that she was making a fool of him and trying to humiliate him. 'iWhy F he demanded, stopping short and frowning angrily. Why, because I've never seen you row, of course, replied Elsie, guilelessly, iiand l'm going to be in town the month before school closes to go to all the commencement dances and jollifica- tions. I've been counting on that race especially and you've got to be in it. HYou don't know what you're asking, Elsie, said John slowly, and still looking at her with suspicion. Why, it won't be hard for you, will it? asked Elsie, still the ' 1 is 'f ' N ' 7 1 Y ffxif R NW' , KX, f ,fa Y -g 1,-4. f' X, 5 af 1 QNX 2 NY rj f, f fif x Qv W N ' fiwiff' X , rf H il M g KffffM s, 1 w yp 4 f N 5 ' Hu N .A ly .-,A , t 6 7 HK ! If Mi W V -X I.-5 4' WM WK f , ' X 1 ,1 , F X f -L t ' x-'ff--.fm-' N ,Af -p fit. xg Qu f f if QU NX 'Mui W NW 5 ,N IR x 1: Mu ff ffgx . , mf J 'g il :I A X 1' ,I ,J , ,, fn f- 1' A., lv I ,- ,, ,-X f. RN YW -'Mi x' ig' N 1im iK 'V !L!M5 JIlLiB nn fm lml Wg MW lg f M W N dw wk W mm' W W, -X X-N ffl' Af ' x , xv , ,Mfg I ,,'N 'M':?'E X ' I U X N -. T it ! ' 1' ll! S, X hw-,Z mix 45 f I L' 15' , 4: A X3 V W r V' A ': 95x21 H WX X ?cf Yuma-1 XQSQX W' W' U xx' 11' JW f! 'aHW iv 50 ' Xwisv U If 'j3 X. , U W 3 WM J M N W ,Al 'F X -ww ff ' ,'r1j ' 1-R 1? ' q 1 hd X KAN . , f :RW . Mf Q fm WK Wh WJ E 1.il?x K Kjlflfmflfjx fl' in X Q' wx! ' yxy W- :J ff N If If 5 ff XX 55 Q A Z X Is it a bargain? ATQIVIJ picture of innocence. Now Jack, I shall not care a bit about go- ing if you fail me. Well, I wont, he answered, I'd do just about anything for you, Elsie, but don't be disappointed if I fail. Don't you dare fail, sir, she cried. Do you think I want to be made fun of for backing a college that can't win? No, you can win, and you've got to do it. I shall write you every week, and I shan't expect any answer except the reports of you in the newspa- pers. But you are to see to it that those are the right sort of ans- wers. Is it a bargain ? John held out his hand, uI'll do my best, he said. And you'll win, replied Elsie confidently. Q No one except, perhaps, Harry guessed what making the crew that spring cost John Tenham. Keeping in training took every ounce of will-power he possessed, backed up by Elsie's weekly let- ters. The aches that he endured were trilles compared with the upraised eyebrows and scathing remarks of the students. But gradually, unperceived by himself, college sentiment began to change in his favor. The Dean rejoiced that he had given him that last chance, and took all the credit for the reformation, as he called it. But the crew and Elsie absorbed all of John's thoughts, sleeping or waking, and though he was vaguely grateful for it, he did not stop to analyze the change. On the day of the race Elsie arrived, and it was with her con- fident words, 'iYou,re going to win, ringing in his ears, that John took his place in the shell. The race was like a dream to him and efforts were almost mechanical. The crowds and pennants and shouting seemed miles away. His own shell seemed to crawl and the rival one to fly, and he had a hazy recollection of an absurd story he had heard sometime, about a hare and a tortoise, when his own crew slowly forged ahead and crossed the line, five yards in advance of the other. It seemed vaguely natural to be pounded and shouted at and re- joiced over by a howling mob of students, to be hustled off to his dressing room and then to an interminable banquet. But the only moment that was clear to him was when he hnally escaped and made his way to Elsie's hotel and was ushered into her mother's sitting room. uYou did win! I knew you would, and I'm so glad! she cried as she entered the room with both hands outstretched. HAnd, oh Jack, you've won two victories, one over Bedford and one over your own college! And as Jack looked down into her flushed and happy face, a brilliant idea occurred to him: Make it three, Elsie, won't you F he said. U GwG:.D Z L 'ffgijfff-Q: 3-.,-?::!,Q.' 4 0 '-11251: 2 , .g31...f,Q l 1315.0 .ming :i.,:',, .31-sp , .1-If-1 11 fr -- . ,,,,. 1. .g, 1.9 ,..,-,. 1 'T-' .3 .3 ti ite? .fra ' V 4 ilfugfhg. .. . 15.13 .y 'IQ ,, 'lv ' . 1 '?Z1.-- 5 -'r: -v1- . .- 5 51 ' LD .5531 f ,gi li l .', - ' - wr.. , 32 F35 . Ed: EL H an gp fl 4 'f' wr 1 V A ' E'lTfxMlL 2-ZZD OAI 0 cC3ZUSMZ7NG I ' 1 lv ANI! ', i 1 09, o ll 6 Ale fWith apologies to A. Conan Doylel E SAT, one night, in our Baker Street lodgings. Burdock Combs raised himself from his heavy arm-chair and took from the mantle his bottle and from its morroco case his hypodermic injector. I watched his long white, delicate lingers adjusting the slender needle. He then bared his arm and looked for a spot free from puncture marks. Placing the needle with a practiced twist, he plunged home the tiny piston and sinking back into his chair with a sigh of relief, gazed steadily at me. ls it morphine or cocaine tonightw I asked Combs. Neitherl', he cried, lt's worse than that. lt's Perunaln VVe sat brooding for several moments. At last Combs exclaimed, VVhat is it, Swatson? Still pondering over that Harrison case? ls it murder? Murder nothing, I replied. Here is a wealthy old man, living alone. He is a noted traveler and collector. Found dead, seated in his chair by the window. No scars, no clews. His money and jewelry untouched. The only sign of disorder is the jumbled condition of his curio cases, which he was doubtlessly arranging. These are the facts in the case, yet Burdock Combs says murder. I, a doctor, say heart failure. I'm afraid, old man, you're wrong this time. Well we shall see, he replied, I only wish we had some excuse for taking up the case. It looks promising. At that moment the bell rang and we heard a heavy hurried tread on the stairway. Gestrard, murmured Combs, and a moment later the big chief of detectives, pale and excited, pushed open the door. Combs, can you take a case? he cried, breathlessly. One of the men, whom I sent to make an inventory of the room in which Harrison died, was found dead shortly after lamp lighting! In a moment all my theories Hed. This was no doctor's case. A double murder. TW Well,,' said Burdock, We'll just go to satisfy Swatson heref, Laying down his pipe, he began to fill pockets with vials of chemi- cals, lenses, tobacco, matches and his trusty revolvers. Come, we're off he cried. Brushing aside the gasping detective, he rushed down into the street with me at his heels. We sprang into a passing four-wheeler and were soon whirling away to 42 Cabbage head Alley, the scene of the double tragedy. S Entering the house, we made our way past the cowering group of servants, up stairs to our grewsome work. We drove the police from the room and Burdock Combs took up the case. The body was still in the chair and no marks were visible except a small drop of blood such as would ooze from a prick of a pin. The muscles were peculiarly rigid as if by the action of some strong vegetable alkaloid, such as strychnine. In spite of my comments upon the condition of the corpse, Burdock paid no attention to the body. Never before had I seen him so active. His shiny, beady eyes looked like those of a bird, as he went crawling about the room, his lense close to the end of his hawk-like nose, and his body bent nearly double. His slender, white lingers slipped lightly over every object he scrutinized. Not a thing missed his gaze. Mouldings, cases, bric-a-brac, floor, windows and pictures, all underwent his rigid ex- amination. At one or two positions he had stopped in his inspection, mumbling to himself and grunting unintelligible exclamations. Suddenly he uttered a sharp cry and pulled a small piece of paper from under a large piece of petrified wood. Squatting, Turk fashion, in the middle of the floor, he tried to decipher the crazy characters. Hal We have a clewl Burdock cried, gleefully. This kind of paper is used only in the tropics for government documents. The ants, which are a pest there, cannot eat it. It is very expen- MT sive.', We were absorbed deeply in this find, when we were startled by a shrill, whistling, croak which we instantly recognized to be the call of the South Sea lizard. Both of us had heard it con- stantly during our campaigns in the Queen's service. Combs leaped across the room in one mighty bound. Scarcely had he moved when something struck the glass of a large mirror, across the room, and rattled faintly as it hit the hard wood floor. Stay low, he hissed, We are targets. Keep away from the lamp. Don't expose yourself. Then sliding himself over to the big mirror, he began another microscopic examination. His thin nose was only a few inches from the Hoor, his eyes shone like fire. Not a thing escaped his minute observation. Then another excla- mation and he sat up, holding out toward me what looked like three shiny, black thorns. Closer examination showed that they were hard, close grained wood and that they were evenly rounded on the heavy end. Watch, said Burdock, and taking three small vials from his pockets, he placed a spine in each and then pourd a colorless liquid over them. Two of the liquids immediately turned a dard, cloudy brown, the other remained clear. Blood! he cried, It never fails. A better test is yet to be found. Three of them, one for the policeman, one for Harrison and one for me. Some one is still in this thing for a purpose. Going to the corner, he pulled from a case a heavy sheet of cork linoleum, to which specimens were pinned. A few quick slashes of his knife and its outline took the semblance of a man's head and shoulders. Then, lying on the lioor, he began moving it back and forth and at the same time working it toward the Window. At last the card rested upon the sill and near the chair. Then from the lips of Burdock Combs came the same weird whistle and almost instantly something hit the card with a faint tap. One of the darts had stuck in our dummy. Combs carefully noted its position and, turning to me said, We will investigate the house across the way, the second one with the blinds up: last window: third floor. VVe locked the door and went down stairs. Burdock handed me a note he had scribbled on a leaf from his book and said, To all the papers and then I'll see you at Baker street. I'll look at that building. Glad of a chance to put a lot of good old London between my- self and the Fiendish marksman, I left Combs with many misgivings. This was the notice I read in the papers the next morning long be- fore Burdock put in an appearance. Information wanted-A col- lector will pay liberally for an expert opinion on some Maraganthan curios. Apply not later than twelve today. Dr. G. W. Swatson, 109 Baker Street. Two or three hours later Combs showed up and I knew from his appearance that he had been successful. We will close this case in twenty-four hours, he said as he looked over the notice and hastily turned to fill his pipe. We will proceed to locate a young man, careless in his habits, of good family, a drinker, a spender, and one who has lived in the South Sea Islands. His initials will prob- ably be H. S. We sat down to breakfast and were nearly finished when a messenger entered. An answer to our notice. Burdock drew forth the note from the envelope. I could hardly restrain myself when I recognized another sheet of that precious tropical stationery. Comb's face showed no trace of feeling. Tell Mr. Moon to call at his earliest conveniencef, The messenger departed. Before noon a well built young man of about thirty years called. He was heavily browned and carried himself with almost a military air. When he greeted Combs, he awkwardly extended his left hand. ML Moon, could you pass judgment on some Maraganthan curios? Iam about to make a purchase and would like to get an expert opinion as to its value. Easily, sir, my father died in the service ten years ago. I staid with my uncle, Sir Henry Strand, who also died last year. Seven years of my stay with my uncle were spent on Maragantha. I should be pleased to render you service. We will look at the stuff at once. I summoned a four wheeler and away we went. Moon and I were in the back and Burdock was with the driver studying a book which the young man had given him. It was a diary his uncle had kept and whom it showed was a great traveler and collector of curios. We soon arrived at the Harrison mansion and went at once to the grewsome room. The door had hardly closed when Burdock turned to Moon and said, Moon, I arrest you as an accomplice in this double murderl Fooll he yelled, What does this mean? Mean, said Burdock, What do you know about this? Going to a bronze bust near him, he struck it a sharp blow on the head, and broke off an ear. What would you have given to have found this night before last? he said, and threw the ear at the feet of the prisoner. Moon shuddered. Beads of sweat broke from his face and he sank back into the chair by the window. Burdock then uttered that same piercing cry and the prisoner sprang in terror to the center of the room. That's enough, Mr. Moon, said Burdock, We will now listen to your story. No, I can tell it just as well. YQ 77 Your uncle was a noted collector, and during his service in Maragantha in some manner came into possession of the missing 'S1i ' ear of the Goddess Imugar. Later he bestowed this upon his friend, Sir Hamson, as a reward for helping him catalog his collection. This ear has been missing for centuries and the priests of the order have a story of how some day a prince would return with the relic to claim the reward which was justly his. Small wonder you thot it was worth a trip to London to get this. As soon as I saw the darts and the paper I knew they were of Maraganthan origin. I also surmised that a little easy money would help bring someone to the front. Now I see why you were so eager to inspect Maragan- than curios. You might possibly run across that ear. You know that- Yes, yes, I know. But I am no murderer. The law cannot hold me. I have done nothing. NOP Well then listen. We put that mat in the window and located your blow-gun artist in the house across the street. The house! Then you know. Yes, I'll finish the story just for Swatson's benefit. I did not care to take chances with any darts, so I spied around by the wall over there for a while. Watching the eaves and the rear window, which I had marked, I whistled. A short stocky form raised itself on the front eave and put a slender tube to its lips. No novice was sending those darts. It was a Maraganthan, fighting to avenge his God. He was merely your tool. He only knew that you called, he blew, and that Imugar was pleased. He knew nothing of your motives. Again I called and again he launched another death deal- ing dart toward the dummy. But after the second shot I heard a grunt and the brush of a soft falling body bumping on the ledges of the house and then something hit the ground. It was a grass case holding seven of these hellish spines. Then I felt safer to explore. At the water spout in the rear I found the print of a foot whose toes h had never been pinched by shoes. My lens and my pocket lamp showed countless marks, left by our nimble South Sea friend, when he used the pipe for a stairway. I could still hear him feeling about in the gutter for his darts. So up I went and forced my way into the first window. In the small room I found nothing but a pile of old clothes upon which our creature had slept and a coil of new heavy rope fearfully rough and gnarled from use in the rain last Thursday night. This rope bore traces of skin and blood near one end. Your Weight got the better of you, when you went off the sill, didn't itf Show me your right hand. Ah, rather raw, eh? I thought so when you shook hands so awkwardly. In one of the old suits I found a pawn ticket with which I redeemed this watch. From it I deduced that you were of good family, for the watch was an old design, undoubtedly handed down to you, and very costly. I knew it had been pawned a number of times, because the brokers have a careless habit of scratching numbers in the cases with a pin instead of bothering with a ticket. You experienced easier financial conditions because you always redeemed your watch. You drank, because the keyhole in the case showed scars, from attempted wind- ings when your nerves were not in the best of condition. These things with a comment in the diary as to your habits makes easy deduction. Your shoes left traces on the sill here. You searched the case but could not find the ear. Harrison knew the danger of owning it and had stuck it on that bust. I saw the joint when I examined the room. I knew your search was among the curios, but the diary suggested the ear to me, as to you it had suggested this murderous path to luxury. Am I not right? UYeS.H I thought so. A knock at the door. Come in Gestrade. Here is your man. There is another across the street, third floor, back room. A black man. Here, Swatson, where is the needle? A Little lncident T was Christmas day. The poor children were sitting at the long tables, which the Salvation Army had so amply furnished for the occasion. They were having the time of their lives. The way they did that dinner justice was a pleasing sight. I watched two of the boys with special interest. One, a little fellow with coal black hair, was tearing at a huge drum stick like mad. His plate was nearly empty, although it had been heaped full for the third time. The other, a towheaded lad, was gingerly nibbling at a sandwich, while his plate was not yet cleared of the first helping. just as the first boy laid down the bone, completely stripped of its meat, a plate of delicious jelly tarts Was passed to him. He immediately took off and handed the plate to the other little boy, but he passed them on without taking any, saying, I am not ready for tarts yet. When the dish reached the end of the table, it was taken away. The boy with the black hair was just in the act of devouring the last half of his second tart, when the towheaded little fellow looked along the table and said with a sigh, I wish they would pass those tarts now, I want a tart. . Hml rejoined his neighbor, Yuh want t' take a tart when th' tarts go roundf, I How many of us let our opportunities slip by, because we think that we are not yet ready for them. We can pront by this little lad's example and take a tart w'en th' tarts go 'roundf' CHARLES ATWOOD, '10. Z 1- R-V! - un: fl Url Q? X 1 f I if si, + 1, li: ilff f Al' li Q l l , wifi, ' :iff y ' :N 52 'SN ..f' ax XX , 1 ' I f - Y . 'X x I L.uBs :'NlLfXFANh !i:'E: x A . lf? I In A A ml' .II 151' mama.. -4l'yy,f' ' 9'3 SOCIETY I ' 'eww ' 'Q HAH EQ X . X ' , I' but xx x 4 N X N - A4 I, I AI 1 M ,, ' 1 '. , wg , Y. , yy I N1 ua r ff 1 X ,far P P 444 xx Afdniwmxxx I' I' XX RX P I 'N'I ,w w I ' X ww C, N. A , N ,M , 'AX II H 'X N 5 I L fj I .AID A. . ' 4 .I A X' ROBERT PLOYVE ..... . . . President OFFICERS GROVER BAUMGARTNER . . . Vice-President GORDON KELLAR .... . . . Secretary MEMBERS FACULTY DR. C. T. VVYCKOFF ELLEN MUIR, '08 BESSIE MORRIS, '08 ROBERT PLOWE, '09 GROVER BAUMGARTNER, MERRILL SCHNEBLY, '09 ROY KELLER, '09 HUGH COOPER, '09 ERMA DONATHEN, '09 VIVIAN BONIFACE, '09 IRENE LIDLE, '09 ANNA BIBO, '09 MELITTA MAGARET, '09 MARRS SHOOP, '09 GRACE EATON HAUK HARRY KLOTZ '10 CARL TRAEGER '10 GORDON KELLAR '10 FRANK GOODING '10 CHARLES ATWOOD '10 ETHEL SUMMERS '10 EDITH RUTHERFORD '10 SANCHEN STREHLOW '10 CLEDA KEAS '10 LOUISE DE LENT '10 FLORENCE SCHWARTZ '11 WALLACE WEST 11 9 1 7 3 I 1 ! 9 9 9 D Y 9 OFFICERS GEORGE F. HUTTER .... . . President BERTHA BAUGHMAN . . . Vice-President OLIVE BALCKE . . . Secretary-Treasurer NIEMBERS ELLA WESTLAKE RUTH MAJOR BERTHA CASE RUTH SHERWOOD LUELLA FAUBLE MAE ALLISON STELLA SHIELDS HELEN M. DAY BESSIE COLEMAN EDITH LOVE CORA MILLER ANNETTE FULFORD LAURA CATION MARGARET WATERS ETHELVVYN MOSS GERTRUDE PATTERSON MRS. E. E. WINCHIP LYNN D. ROCKWELL HARRY G. BOWER BRISTOL E. WING C. WALTER ARLITT EDGAR B. DONALDSON CHARLES A. BENNETT AUGUSTO HIDALGO CARROLL W. ANGIER CLINTON S. VAN DUESEN SS VERNE REED OLGA BELSLEY FREDERICK RAYMOND E. RAY TOMPKINS LOUISE DE LENT MYRTLE LEININGER ONALESE WHITE WILLIAM D. MCLEMORE ETHEL SUMMERS FREDA SCHERLING ELEANOR COEN ORA CLOVER MAY BOWSHER ENGLISH CLUB English Club OFFICERS ELLEN MUIR ..... . . President GROVER BAUMGARTNER . . Vice-President GORDON KELLAR . . , . Secretary-Treasurer IVIEMBERS FACULTY MARGARET MCLAUGHLIN ' E. FRANCIS GEORGE ELLEN MUIR, '08 GROVER BAUMGARTNER, '09 ROBERT PLOWE, '09 VIVIAN BONIFACE, '09 ELIZABETH ESTEP, '09 EDWARD CUSHING, '09 MARRS SHOOP, '09 GORDON KELLAR, '10 SANCHEN STREHLOW, '10 HARRY KLOTZ, '10 GRACE EATON HAUK LOUISE DE LENT, '10 BENJ. PFEIFEER, '10 EDITH RUTHEREORD, '10 RUTH COOPER, '10 MARJORIE PLOWE, '11 LORING EUNN, '11 WALLACE WEST, 111 ARSINA HAUK, '11 JAMES HUNTER, '11 UNA GARRETT, '11 GIRUS DEBATING CLUB The Girl's Debating Club OFFICERS MELITTA MARGARET . . . . . President META BECKER . . - . Vice-President CONSTANCE HECKMAN . . . Secretary RUTH SHERWOOD ........ Treasurer KATHERINE FEDORA WALTERS, Critic. IVIEMBERS META BECKER, '10 OLGA BELSLEY, '10 ANNA BIBO, '09 HELENA BURGESS, '12 ERMA DONATHEN, '09 MABEL MCDONALD, '11 LOUISE DE LENT, '10 CLEDA KEAS, '10 CONSTANCE HECKMAN, '09 LOUISE HELMBOLT, '09 AMY KEITHLEY, '10 EDITH LOVE, '09 MELITTA MARGARET, '09 BESS MORRIS, '08 HELEN PAUL, '12 EDITH RUTHERFORD, '10 ELLA SENGENBERGER, '11 RUTH SHERWOOD, '10 GRACE WEAD, '10 ARTS AND CRAFTS CLUB Arts and Crafts Club GLENN M. EBAUGH . GORDON KELLAR . LOUISE DE LENT . ELLA WESTLAKE . ADELAIDE MICKEL . FREDERIC RAYMOND OFFICERS . . . . . President . Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer Curator MEMBERS FACULTY MAUDE FAIRBANKS ADELAIDE MICKEL CHARLES A. BENNETT VIVIAN BONIFACE, '09 ELEANOR COEN, '09 WILLIAM H. HUDSON, '09 ROBERT CRAIG, '09 GLENN EBAUGH, '09 ELLA WESTLAKE, '09 ANNETTE FULFORD, '09 STELLA SHIELDS, '09 CONSTANCE HECKMAN, '09 GEORGE HUTTER, '09 LOUISE DE LENT, '10 GORDON KELLAR, '10 OTTO DAVISON, '11 1 THEODORE FRANZEN, '11 ARSINA HAUK, '12 ETTA M. ELLIS, '12 91 THE BRADLEY DEBATING CLUB The OFFICERS ROY A. KELLER . FRANK GOODING . WILLIAM GIESSLER . J. O. LOFBERG . . MEMBERS HARRY SCHVVEITZER, '09 ROY A. KELLER, '00 CHARLES ATWOOD, '10 JOHN MINTON, '10 HARRY KLOTZ, '10 93 Bradley Debating Club , President . Vice-President . Secretary . Critic GORDON KELLAR, '10 FRANK GOODING, '10 FLOYD SANFORD, '10 CHARLES APPLE, '11 VVILLIAM GIESSLER, '11 'Tw 4 , . 'fp' f l ,- ' I s, ' , W if 5 3, XX 7 ,','f M, Xi ,f ' f.i1tq,ff q of-'lag-mrrflu if it f Mx 'lvl l lx QNX '14, , , ' . this xv. f, X lx W'.5-N, N- 5 . ,y f , ,, ffrlfx A' F'5'l-- R, H . 1 A ffZ'i'f1il+4lAN N: ss 4 - - eff-'-1 '- -' N5 yas- g- ,ff ,fa J, W 7 xx x I A7317 I' - XX gf! NJN Lwyff ' -1 ,A , Q 1.24 , il lx fry, ff. -551 1 ll ci' 'ff' f15lf':7'1'. 5 f in V4 ii ! - .Z 'nf it ll A' rg? ff ,if fi . 1,4 ,I - , 556 C lx K A rl V gr 4 1' in X 2.1 7 , x , f ' ,rj , L. ,ff f Y' Q, ' . f ' . .lgff W y f 7149 gf 'yh',j,rQ, K Y f y j xwfi JW .X x W f 1,9 121 .127 ' xr.. -ff Y, a f f 4 K X f rf. yr. Y! l NCTC, Q ,f ' ' gf - X, A, 1 ,gtg swag-. amid -1' P , ' , Ili ff ff P f - -'X SOILOS 'Sli' .1 ,, f '4, Q Q, f flfY'1 + Q f A - Qt X Xxlx of ig, ff A x x Y 4 I I x vif A 5 CW' AA Social Club MARGUERIT E RICHMOND . . President HUGH COOPER . . Treasurer The Social Club is an organization, composed of the students at large, whose purpose it is to promote goodfellowship and good times among the members of the school. To do this the club gives three dances every year to which all students are made Welcome. The dances are always great successes and are remembered pleasantly by all who attend. y X I ' T' 'uf , F . 'WE iiiifr if 'i mi - -- '--een , NA, 1 R-32 .gif 'gps ' Ji . ' xi :I-ffl '.J I f- : 0 f -- RZ' , 7-. it ' mRigS!,1?l. - 'H f 955W 9 , NNN , 0 3255 - ' A 4 5. 5' W' Q' 9' A- W 6 X ffxief , 'lit ' lfax tilfiafluwlh , 'SL if '- f I - Q-A no-Q. UU00000000000000000000IJOOODODUDUUUUUUUUUI7 ,on OFFICERS MONTGOMERY G. RICE . . . President BERTHA M. SCULLIN . . Vice-President LAURA E. GEACH . . Secretary BENJ. S. BEECHER . . Treasurer The Alumni Association was organized june 20, 1901. Saturday of convocation Week, has been regularly set aside for the Alumni Associa- tion, and is known as Alumni Day. Each year as the membership has increased, the Association has gained stability and importance until now it has become an important organization of the school. Q I INSTITUTE DEBATING CLUB ... iw, Institute Debating Club FREDERICK A. CAUSEY WILLIAM M. SHOOP WALTER FORD . E. F. GEORGE . OFFICERS . . . . President . Vice-President . Secretary . . Critic MEMBERS FREDERICK A. CAUSEY, '09 ROY F. FORD, '12 WILLIAM M. SHOOP, '09 PAUL E. HERSCHEL, '12 MERRILL D. SCHNEBLY, '09 BENNETT R. PARKER, '12 EDWARD M. MUNNS, '09 HAROLD BALLENGER, '10 CARL A. TRAEGER, '10 FRANK G. MERCER, '11 EDWARD J. MARTIN, '12 JOHN M. GOSS, '12 HAROLD D. MCCULLOUGH, '12 THEODORE I. FRANZEN, '12 97 Echoes Although I am a Senior Cons may come, I'll never be a Grad. The way the teachers hound me BU! we Wmlldnif Stab' at home. They could Hunk us if they wanted, And cons may go, Would drive a mortal mad. So I've bought some invitations, Bur YOU bet we SHW Salome- And had my picture took, ' While I'll never have a sheepshin, I'm a Senior in this book. DELTA GAMMA DELTA. -CUSH. Laugh, and the class laughs with youg What is a vacuum F Bishop asked. Laugh, and you laugh alone. Poor Taylor muttered and then he said, The first, when the joke is Burgess' joke, The proper word I can't recall, The last, when it is your own. But I'm sure I have it in my head. 98 65 W 'S' 5 - A x A W N W3 X ' f f ' x 1 X 1 9. ,J N X ? f W H ! .fa 5 x f Ox rf f, wi A X' wx fy X xg! ', H fest 410' J wugi, fd uh U, i x l 1 I' 1 X X f f -1- 1' ,mf N lf qw di W , f ' xg 'I L ' A M X X J 'f f Q X ,+I WZKWVN 5 U: I Y xwa N- II t xx ,Q 'H ll tmm I I 1' ix ' W Q, ,Q , , r ' I f x ,,' ' . - 4 ff ., ,. A A .-1 ,. ,,, 1 I wif' W ' IW X ' ,gy , ,M f . x- 4, fyl , X V , I mx 4,113 K . X: W . '47 , Q. X m X x WR , , X V v , Wx I N' X ' . if . ! ' X X QV' 1 M' Q ' l 1. - . , , 1' 4, ' V I 1 A r 11:-v . -'i A .' , : r Y 4 11' -',f.Lar-v- ,, '- ., , ' 'F ' 5 '. ' , , .'1'.. ', I' 7 r x 0 , .- , , , 3 -' 'L ' . X. 'Ni ff I IX q X -P1 '. 'W J , I Q, All ' . ' ' ff f 4221 , 1 v - . .f 1, 1 - a '.13:J' , , f , ' 5 if . Q V X -.ll!! Ar 'I XQ . IV! xx! If 7 I 35.1 Flag! ' Ll lf 'y 'tix A X ' , A x X . l, x V. .F ,f , ,N X N 1 ,E Pk 4 '4 I fn ??41 A x ' . i a vwxrb jf , i A It V , z ,- ' , Q Q vf lil 1, , b ,ff t. 4 f ,1 , ', 1 I Q fl y f - 'ai JXX: ,r Q 1 ' A, Q if - Q Q J fi VH ' 4 , L4-' X. Aff, 'f 'Q A , Q - Ni 1 -. is ' Ag Af ,gg-,ein in 2 W ,lm X My , ' Q' K ' ! ff' ' ' lx ' J X W mm. lx A Il l- i IF 5 'ff H ,O ni in I- - W ' Q . i mu- -1---- X' 1.3! W lull 'V.Fii?.. , Y :'rFT' QE MWWM TMK '08 Foot Ball Team VVILLIAM BENNETT, A09 . BENJAMIN PFEIFFER, '10 JAMES COOK . . . FRANK MERCER, '11 ROBERT CRAIG, '09 WILLIAM BENNETT, '09 BENJ. PFEIFFER, '10 WILBUR FORREST, '11 LUCIOUS FRITZE, '09 HOWARD DURLEY WALTER CRABILL, '11 ALVIN MILLER, '10 JAMES HUNTER, '11 GEISERT HOWVARD, RALPH MILLEN, '09 EDWARD CUSHING, '09 '10 LYNCH CONWAY, '10 DAWSON BRANDE, '12 HARLEY CLARK, '10 JAMES AYLWARD, '12 LESTER MASON, '10 Average weight, 175 1611 Ends Guards Center Tackles Quarter backs Half backs Full back -.., QT' f 57 The Revlew of the Last Foot Ball Season LT QGETHER the past football season was a most com mendable one Our team won fixe out of eight games and played good ball in those which they lost The reason of our success was tvso fold, namely the good hard working bunch who responded to Captain Bennetts call and the steady and eflicient drill which they receixed under Coach Cook Much credit must be gn en Cook who thoroly understood his job and devoted himself to it untiringly The team started things with a rush by winning the Frst three games,wh1ch were home games, by a large score Then came that game at Wesleyan We ll nexer forget that day We took 1 hundred rooters along outrooted Wesleyan on their own Held 1 Nj Pllillfl-'ER 'Ill won the frame to the tune of sixteen to nothing and painted Bloom inffton in the evening for desert Then our winning streak ended and we lost three games. But we could afford to after what we had done. As a fitting finish we heat lllinois College twenty-eight to live and celebrated the victory by our big Athletic Banquet At the end of the season the points stood one hundred and sixty four in our favor against eighty-one in favor of our opponents 102 f-11.55 Iloxzxzzx. V . V . . v- ri . , . . . .V 7 . .Y .. . . .. V . . Y.. I V. 7 V L v 9 , ,NIgr. M - 7-v PH ' 1 --1-1-i--.-.-111. JIMMIE Coorc, Coach Bradley Bradley Bradley Bradley Bradley Bradley Bradley Bradley The 08 Schedule 15 Galesburg H. S. . . 38 Spalding Institute 45 Hedding College . . 16 Wesleyan University 10 Illinois Normal . . 12 Lombard College 0 Charleston Normal . 28 Illinois College 164 103 . I WM. BENNETT, '09, Capt Basket Ball Line-up EDXVARD MUNNS, '09 F. D. SMITH, '11 . . F. D. SMITH, '11 J. H. KUHL, '11 LYNCH CONWAY, '10 HARLEY CLARKE, '10 EDWVARD MUNNS, '09 FRANK MERCER, '11 LORING BUNN, '11 ROGER SCHENCK, '11 104 P Forwards L Centers ' Guards l R' Q? Basket Ball Review, l909 LTHOUGH the basket ball season this year was not as suc- cessful as that of last year, still the Institute has every reason to be proud of the team representing her, for six out of thirteen games were won. The teams played, were college with the excep- tion of the Y. lVl. C. A. Clippers and the Peoria High School, while the home team was composed of those in the Higher Academy. Three of the home games, with Hedding, Illinois College, and the P. H. S., were extremely close, giving the spectator no little ex- citement. Normal's big floor at Bloomington, coupled with the fact that the team had to play in base ball clothing on an extremely warm afternoon, had something to do with the one-sided score in the game against the State Champions. Bradley has good reason to be proud of the basket ball team for, X 1 rm sxiirii, '11, Mgr. X S X Bax! 77 Y-ZZ tor the hrst time in the history of the Bradley-High game, Bradley s was-. foil was victorious, thus enabling a certain Bradleyite to go home in other things beside a barrel. The team this year, as in former ones, has had a very incon- venient time for practice, not only to the regulars but to the second team also, which stood by the first throughout the whole season giving them the needed practice. However, with the new gymna- slum almost completed, and with most of this year's team back next year, the prospect for ,IU is very bright. EDWARD MUNNS. 106 I' 6. ry IL: . 5QL:,f T' A ' s I A fs-Ffrfkf' 'KQ- fu- ' SEAM - 1 foes -Q 5 X i . it ' 1 X . X az. X ' . A, N4 f ligne: S X If Q 151222 -- ' ' i riff! -f f i jft. I fig? 'ff rr' Ar:-,,, might ff 7 Z?- A f- 4 WEE 74 QQ- 5 1 riff x fx fs . ' ' ',' fx f-S2 , if fs 9 fs A ,sa 664 A fx,-X,-t2'Jf'i',-X ,?j 's 'img A A i A A fx' ' fi5:g::GD- 1 -Em lil Q33 E atslxeb, -f Sclieclule, l 908-'09 Peoria Y. M. C. A. Clippers, Eureka College, William and Vashti, Milliken University, Illinois State Normal, I-Iedding College, Lincoln College, Milliken University, Hedding College, Lincoln College, Peoria High School, Illinois College, Illinois College, 107 Dec. 3 Dec. 8 Jan. 8 20 23 29 Feb. 5 12 19 21 26 Jan. Jan. Jan. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. March 4 M arch 14 -.,,. Y ,-. JAKE MERCER, '11, Caps. '09 Base Ball Team FREDERICK LINDEBURG, '09, Manager HOVVARD, '10, FOX, '12, LORD, '11, CLARK, ,10, CONVVAY, '10, FRANK MERCER, ,11, Cayman V. 5 P. C. lst B. 2d B. SCHENCK, '11, 3d B. MCEWEN, '11, S. s. CARSON, '10, R. E, MERCER, '11, C. F. HEINTZMAN, '11, L. F. VESTAL, '12, 1, Sub. RUGGLES, '11, 1 108 THE BASE BALL TEAM I-IE base ball season this year has afforded several good games and promises several more good ones before the season closes, but unfortunately we go to press in the early stage of the game. Thus a systematic review of the year's work is impossible here. However, we can safely say that we have a good team and that they are doing good work. Manager Lindeburg has arranged a fine schedule, but so far the elements have robbed us of some of our best games. But it is not probable that we will have to cancel any I Renwick LINDEBFRG, '09, Mgr. more. By the time this book is published the famous P. H. S. game will have been played. Of course we won. How could we help it? VVe wish the team all success during the season and expect fine results. 110 fig tx ill April April April April April April April May May IVI ay May May May May May June 10 Bradley 17-Bradley 19-Bradley 20 Bradley 21 Bradley 22 Bradley 23-Bradley 1-Bradley 5-Bradley 12-Bradley 15 Bradley 20-Bradley 21-Bradley 22-Bradley 28 Bradley 5 Bradley '09 Schedule Illinois Normal 7 Knox College lrainl Illinois Normal 5 Eastern Illinois Normal 5 Indiana Normal lrainl James Milliken lrainl Illinois Wesleyan 0 Illinois College lrainl Lombard College 9 Illinois Wesleyan Peoria Peoria Bloomington Charleston Terre Haute Decatur Bloomington Peoria Peoria Peoria lPoly Peoria High School Peoria Knox College Galesburg I-Iedding College Abingdon Lombard College Galesburg I-Iedding College Peoria James Milliken Peoria 111 scope in press? I , 1 l W ,,-....j...--W Y - ff A l i r -Albig Inns... L.-......-............. A .. ,J Mui gl' ? ,5- y , .W , Tu ayi . sy 94. 1 ., 69 ..--f ... . 1- g ,. A ,I AT THE LOMBARD GAME The Athletic Board DR. T. C. BURGESS . . . Chairman DR. F. L. BISHOP .... . . Secretary-Treasurer JAMES H. MINER .I ....... Horological CLINTON S. VAN DEUSEN Chairman of Interschool Committee GEORGE C. ASHMAN . ..... Faculty LESTER R. MASON . . . College HAROLD MCCULLOUGH . Higher Academy EDWARD MARTIN . Lower Academy AMY KEITHLEY . . Women 113 EL - - 1 .. ' X ' yvzf' VIPE' ' J, ,- 'J A +V-if 7 x V I 'fi . Members of the '09 Track Team LESTER R. MASON, '10 . , ROBERT PLOVVE, '09 . A. W. JAMISON RALPH MILLEN, '09 LYNCH CONWAY, '10 ROY A. KELLER, '09 JOS. R BAILEY, JR., '11 JAMES HUNTER, '11 HOVVARD L. DURLEY, '11 CLARENCE A. GORDON, '14 CHARLES A. ATWOOD, '10 MARCUS SCHLIEPER, '10 ROBERT PLOWE, '10 LESTER R. MASON, '10 GLENN EBAUGH, '09 DAVID HARRIS, -'09 Manager Captain Coach TRACK TEAM, '09 Track Review l909 N GENERAL the work done by the track men this season has been a great encouragement to those interested in this branch of athletics in particular. This year, in contrast to all previous years, the work has been carried on as a team and not as a number of different individuals. The result has been that the coach and the captain have had about three times as many candidates from which to select their team as in former years. The results have been apparent, for with but three members of last year's team to start with, we developed from almost unknown material one of the fastest and best all-around track teams that Bradley has ever hadg and beyond this we have brought to light other men who, though not first team material this year, can be depended on to fill up the ranks in the coming years. The credit for these results goes, without doubt, to Coach Jamison who worked hard and faithfully forthe best interests of the team throughout the season. The annual interscholastic meet, on April 24th, was an entirely successful event from every standpoint. The entry list was larger, more records were broken, the crowd was larger, and under the efficient direction of Manager Mason the events were run off with- out a single hitch in the program. Davis, with four firsts, Won the meet for Averyville, while Pekin and Elmwood were close with sixteen and fifteen points respectively. Hunter in the sprints and Gordon in the mile did excellent work for Bradley. The importance of the interdivision meet has been greatly in- creased this year. Beginning with this year, each winner of a first place will receive a silver pin, and each winner of a second place a bronze pin. The division winning the largest number of points will receive a large banner. The meet this year was characterized by many close finishes, particularly in the dashes, where the con- tests between Plowe and Conway for first were the prettiest races ever seen in the history of the interdivision meet. In respect to the number of entries, the tenth annual far surpassed any former inter- division meet. VVith the dual meet with Wesleyan and the Intercollegiate still in the future, it is almost impossible to give any sort of a definite estimate of the comparative strength of our team, but it is safe to say that the college that wins from Bradley will have a team that they may well be proud of. ROBERT PLOWE, Captain. MANAGER MASON I Interscholastic Meet, Interdivision Meet, Wesleyan Dual Meet, Intercollegiate Meet, 117 '09 Schedule . . April 24 April 28 and May 3 . . May 3 . May 29 'WIN an 5 iii' l fi M 'fi' ,f,f325r1,YhiAQigQ5 imgggg Ag!! 'V 'ffgyngiu ' .' ' ff-I V 4 1 L W .ggiiggggm 1:25 Y l W - 'ii ' ig . 5 -,V . 6k fl-'3 'T ' 0 A FAST MAN ON THE HURDLES Al , 1 3.-?kf52.w,, 'V K im Qty 1 wx ' .. -1, . fi , fb? - Jxzgg-Iy , ,. ' if 4 1. X ' ' iffy f ,452 , 1 1 ljlrb' .A 1 g x 4 1 , , o ' , 6 K , f , it . .N p .. Y 'kgs pfygwl- nur: 5 , , . '- , kv . ,ja . - o 1 sz' i Ap, 1 ,M ' - ,. 1 4 5. V ,Q .L W ' 4' , f 2,3 :' W ', f'g,i Q: A .. 1 . , . 11 ,Q 'Kl- AT THE INTERSCHOLASTIC EVENT 50 yard dash 100 yard dash 220 yard dash 440 yard dash 880 yard run 1 mile run 120 yard hurdles 220 yard hurdles Shot put Hammer throw Discus throw High jump Running broad jump Pole vault Bradley Athletic HOLDER Tracy Hancock Tracy Hancock L. T. Dillon L. T. Dillon Robert Plowe L. T. Dillon Joseph Cowell joseph Cowell Robert Droll Joseph H. Kilver A. Y. Bartholomew Ed. Lidle H. C. Fawcett Fred J. Kraemer Glenn M. Ebaugh Glenn M. Ebaugh Spencer Mellow Rscoiw 5 1-5 sec. 10 1-5 sec. 10 1-5 sec. 23 sec. 23 sec. 54 sec. 2 min. 12 4-5 sec. 5 min. 20 sec. 5 min. 20 sec. 16 sec. 28 sec. 36 ft. 8 in. 115 ft. 3 in. 92 ft. 5 in. 5 ft. 9M in. 20 ft. 8 in. 9 ft. 8 in. 119 Records WHEN Mann 1902-Meet with Wesleyan 1902-Meet with Wesleyan 1904-Fifth Annual Interdivision 1904-Meet with Lombard 1906-Meet with Eureka 1904--Meet with Lombard 1906--Meet with Eureka 1906-Meet with Eureka 1909-Tenth Interdivision Meet 1900-First Interdivision 1901-Second Interdivision 1906-Seventh Interdivision 1908-lst Annual Intercollegiate 1903-Fourth Interdivision Meet 1907-Meet with Eureka 1909--Tenth Interdivision 1907-Meet with Eureka .Q 1041100 MLA' .Xin i lfkjffd Q ' I UM M H FU I 'lx --x A Js I J ?- f ' rl-5 'JV' Q L... Q u n I' v f Y- cz 0 1 F' ' A In Foot Ball ln Basket Ball ' 'N N AYLWARD CONWAY KUHL K FORREST HOWARD BUNN MASON CLARK SMITH BENNETT PFEIFFER MUNNS FRITZE MILLEN MILLER CRAIG l 5, 1 A THE POLYSCOPE went to press before the Bs were awarded V track and baseball. W M'f2, .... -1 ff mfg h',l.' -f -' GOLD PINS .i.........1 MASON, BENNETT, PFEIFFER 120 PYT' ff'- CHARLES ATWOOD, '10, Manager Tennis ANAGER ATWOOD has arranged two good tournaments to be played off this season, namely the men's and women's tournaments. There is a long list of entries for each one and an exciting and interesting season is promised. At the time we go to press it is impossible to give any probabilities as to the outcome of the tournaments, but in any case the winner will have to play with Schenck, the winner of last year's tournament, for the school championship. The manager has not yet been able to arrange any games with other colleges but it is probable that he will do so be- fore the close of the season. 321 e sie V- xi J e e we -e 1 - 5- H -f 5.if1,Z '.i 'ggNL i 5-gf fig. ff? i.. li ' - -- ! ? ff. 32 Ar '22 M' 20-3 R 'VI' Twggifivfge HS Evan' T-aus Ffnofher Sfudq In Evoiulion I cared not for the sharks that shineg I'll never ask for Cicero in mineg I only made the ball-team, Three Hunks and a can were mine. Brande. 122 'f S ,Cf , ' NX O R E' f Wk. , .Q X N QOPY Xl , gllu E521 ' ' fwf' H 1- ,j?j 'i-'?sj?'9 Ravi, ., -,T - 1 E + WA iw, fTf1x 2J'f'f ' 0 QE-if f 1 y li 1 ' ' ,q-1, Ni p 5 , I 0 -zu jf' 7'4 5 'A ff W Q A Z ' W P ,nf fifyfa - -i':'yAf'2Z I fix , if I 0 J H 1'?5qggy , iffy! J N l,,yI ' lu , -- l Wafefulnff ' U Wifi' f V L4 '-: - ' f M X 'W?'5sa1 W' ' ' 'V' 1 If '5 'v .-- ' 1' ' fx 1-ffwff fffgs f K VX '-Q. s f . 4h I, 1 4,-2-335 'ing' ,f ,f,f1l'f ! if Q1f :mifJ.lj.:'7, 3, lb' x...t:' D Q! , 2 v, -My ft N KI Uv F E X: 3 f 3 7714! af-, Kg - X , Au - ffff, J 0 if M, f ff: '1 'v iff' Wf'f7' Eii': fi.- ,...-f- mf fm ,534 WLM b I: I W 73101 f W'W' 1 m iffff -fl . . U s X IIQQQ ,, Jn .J X lin ho 'U ff- ., L I I 'M f 1 -I' 'I ' ff, , X lu- lwll . '-1325. mx WfQ'W0'a 1-llf 1y'5.ff - C-'I 1E11,l!':f Muf. L!.!.'N Em f' X , WWI W 1 1 M- yssfg 'ff F' '-ff' f N f f'i f1 'tflff 'r1 K ' if ' jx 9 ' HX' 11, f' 1' n ' 1 I 7'-2' 4-sf I Wk 1 WX aw f t N- f f X. X 1 X fx U A x N L: 5 x N 2 1.8 5- X I L1aNu.a'ar-115455. , LX Kg ' !X THE EDITOR 123 -' aebpfxmi ' f, Z Dtfos 77100-10.3 fygycff .ijanfyrd 3-IQ P H , 3, , : A Q-S .2 '55 f v S' II 1 ' 'gg 7:4 X ,if 11 f a N td W g ' 7 5 .gi ' f I -'T .ff 1' V. H ffuflaon V ig? , . 1- qve fl bw x r- X 4 I .Qu A 'yu ' ' 4 4 C3l2'1 Ffa.-xon gn : ' , X Y ' ,' V av in N gl - L ,- Y, -L 1 , - - vw Qiwurlf: J fyf-Trai,-Ll L A Q Y Y - - '-'Ah' 'T'- 1 The Polyscope Staff WILLIAM H. HUDSON . . Editor in Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS CHARLES A. ATWOOD BESSIE MORRIS . . LESTER R. MASON LUCIUS A. FRITZE . ELLA WESTLAKE . DELOS H. THOMAS . J. H. KUHL, JR. . FLOYD E. SANFORD . . Literature . Subscriptions . Athletics . Organizations . Normal . Horological . . Business Manager Assistant Business Manager 'Q 'Q Nu i me 'f ' Q-X' The Tech Staff THE , TECH 1 HA HELLLR GGKE l 4 VOLUME xu APRIL NUMBER 1 ' L, W XX -A 1' , .ai F gg 1 Aw f f --1 A R 1 J s,i'q4 'H f.4 YA 4 I . U-HR T311 , 'v I . . lv li A 2 6- 45- ,I if-1 R4 'r l ,a P- 1 E+ ' ':.. P' l 9 0 9 . G. GORDON KELLAR, '10 . . Editor in Chief ROY A. KELLER, '09 ..... Business Manager ASSOCIATE EDITORS HARRY J. KLOTZ, '10 BESSIE MORRIS, '09 RALPH SEYMOUR, '09 ELLEN A. MUIR, 'os ROGER SCHENCK, '11 ROBERT PLOWE, '09 IRENE LIDLE, '09 . LIONEL BONIFACE, '14 OTTO DAVISON, '11 . Associate . Local Athletics Social Freshmen . Art .253 C: CD .CVD LJ G E55 'E'-4-1 me bxt-4 -2.2 'U GFS ff? CD sa 3-IC 23 se hee cpl tn :- Das Q O -C53 E-'E 7: .E L :cs E cu 'E 'J-1 O 3bOLltS hC Where tot ua G5 .a chapel ant in penn U -C 4-0 C 3 O 'U -A-I .92 O 5 bi: E O hd en barn ITI tea t-hall 0.3 .Ad cn CU .Q GJ -C 4-v .Ad O O 4-I S 'U 1: G5 J-5 -C-' .99 T O- cu -Cl Q cu ..r: il' 'U fu .9 3 en O S vi an FU 1 -C U 4-a 5 Q 0.9 lzed th moral Who de ON I PT R SC DE a German con. 'U C! CU cn CU 53. GJ GJ D 25 -C: -'Z 3 is 4-v -A-I U U '-4-1 5 cn I I f:.1ggm.w.i,,, 0 3- M Ulf ' Z f 1 I , ' I fix-FJ f ...A -1 in . ! I L A ...I Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS CHAIRMEN President, . . . . CHAS. A. ATWOOD, '10 Bible Study, . G. GORDON KELLAR, '10 Vice-President, . . WM. C. GIESSLER, '11 Meetings, . . JAMES A. HUNTER, '11 Secretary-Treasurer, . . CARL A. TRAEGER, '10 Membership, . WM. C. GIESSLER, '11 MEMBERS CARL XV. ARLITT, '10 CHARLES A. ATVVOOD, '10 LORING L. BUNN, '11 HOVVARD CAMPBELL, '11 FREDERICK CAUSEY, '09 ROBERT CRAIG, '09 LYNCH CONVVAY, '10 EDVVIN L. DOUGHERTY, '11 OTTO DAVISON, '11 ROBERT N. DAVIS, '12 HENRY ECKSTEIN, '11 WALTER E. FLOOD, '11 WILBUR s. FORREST, '11 WILLIAM C. GIESSLER, J. BERTON GREEN, '12 LEALDOS W. HAIG, 'll ALLEN W. HEYLE, '10 WILLIAM H. HUDSON, '09 JAMES A. HUNTER, '11 REINHARD IBEN, '11 G. GORDON KELLAR, '10 ROY A. KELLER, '09 FREDERICK LINDEBURG, '09 ROLLIN J. LITCHFIELD, '12 EDWARD MUNNS, '09 JAMES M. MCMEEN '12 HERBERT S. NICHOLS, '10 WALTER E. NEAL, '11 ARTHUR W. PARK, '12 THEODORE PLACK, '12 BENNETT R. PARKER, '12 ROBERT PLOWE, '09 LYNN D. ROCKWELL, '09 WILLIAM M. SHOOP, '09 HARRY SCHWEITZER, '09 FREDERICK M. SPENCE, '11 CHARLES J. SCRANTON, '11 ROGER SCHENCK, '11 SHUNTOCK SETH, '11 FRANK D. SMITH, '11 WALLACE SNYDER, '10 CARL A. TRAEGER, '10 MERRILL I. SCHNEBLY, '09 FRANK WERCKLE, '09 , X-74 'A ' I V! -1 '4., - Q f 2' A- 65 'fix .f 'ff' 4 ' , K-TSW, fm 10141 I Q! 1 f lj? X I JDJ 3 9 IN V ,, ,fr -'A ., ff4,A7, Q3 A A A- ,EA -' . f X 4, . fx A I f X C C' K--sr' p ' ' ' Tj!-A I ' x F - X' L3 -f r ,ff-L Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS FACULTY IVIEMBERS President, . . . . ETHEL M. SUMMERS, '10 DOROTHY DUNCAN MARY BLossoM Vice-President, LOUISE HELMBOLD, '09 BERTHA REED KATHERINE WALTERS Secretary, . . HAZEL BOTTS, '12 MARGARET MCLAUGHLIN HARRIET KEMP Treasurer, . EDITH LOVE, '09 MARTHA SHOPBELL MRS. ELIDA WINCHIP STUDENTS BERTHA BAUGHMAN, '09 MARY HUNTER, '12 MARGARET RUSSELL, '10 MARY BIBO, '11 LAURA CATION, '10 ANNETTE FULFORD, '09 GRACE WEAD, '10 ELAINE JACK, '14 LOUISE DE LENT, '10 PEARL BUCHNER, '11 SUSAN KELLOGG, '09 VERNE REED, '10 CONSTANCE HECKMAN, '09 HELEN WHEELER, '13 OLIVE BALCHE, '09 MARGARET RINGNESS, '14 EDITH LOVE, '09 MYRTLE GORDON, '12 MELITTA MAGARET, '09 FLORENCE SCHWARTZ, '10 RUTH SHERWOOD, '10 HAZEL SPENCE, '11 EDA LUCAS, '12 IRMA MOSCHEL, '10 OLGA BELSLEY, '10 HAZEL BOTTS, '12 LOUISE HELMBOLD, '09 IRENE LIDLE, '09 MYRA KING, '10 ELIZABETH BAVINGTON, '12 JESSIE MERCER, '11 CLEDA KEAS, '10 HELEN THOMAS, '11 ELLA WESTLAKE, '09 ANNA BIBO, '09 129 Perfectly Happy ROM the maple boughs, swaying so light o'er my head, Comes a medley of notes, thrilling sweet, And as carefree as those merry songsters above, My heart echoes each delicate beat. O'er the riot of blossoms that nod all around, Flutter butterflies, dainty-hued things, Disputing the sweets of the How'rs with the bees While my heart dances, light as their wings. The breeze, faintly sweet with a subtle perfume, Is as soft as the touch of a hand That caresses my forehead, my hair and my cheeks That the wandering sunbeams have tanned. I should like to sail up till I reached that white cloud That so lazily goes floating byg Such a soft, downy pillow must bring pleasant dreams On its way thru the smiling blue sky. And yet, after all, there are pleasures enough In this merry old world of ours, I think I will stay here and dream yet awhile 'Mid the butterflies, bees and the Howlrs. Somewhere there are folk who are weary and sad, Who are toiling in grime and in dust, Upon whom disappointments are heaped, thick and fast, And who've lost all their hope and their trust. But to me, as I lie here and happily dream, They seem dim and far, far away, For around me are hundreds of bright, happy things, And my heart is as joyous as they. V. B. 130 uluuuummumusmn WHWmM. mM ..... FHNNPM1 W f f Q XX A ug X rv l 'gg' 4 SQBLWH77 hm ,-arg, Yiiif I A A fikg Rm K 'Ni ll 1 i mg' ff' '25,-Q' Ax :i- JI 1.2 ,f X Lul f W, gig X flglilvl gym xg 235 Q N I K7 Q' 'E 't W f NN 'E X5 . I 0' 1 4 1 ff, , Q K' 'F .K 9 x 'fo -' ' 'f 1 ' 'L f fd .. 2 4 ' in fEii:'aasi1:'N. -' x - - ,-. -F--:EI -L n ' f Q ii J , . --.fb if X 'S I. Aw K - x A ' I 1 I x K' I Q !ll:l' --.. '. Z ' iiisiiw ' ' ' - 5' -' 'U mm' ' 5 2 P 'fri ' - I ' ' ' Y ,:. ',,'- - X: - ' . Elgin-gzligk 'j - ! M! xx! . ,o il I ,X-n g-,. 'I It 1 Ib I Q-' ,' 'f ' ' 1715! L n E 1 Z - , vb- af, I . . 50 7 Jia f T A V 1 yZ.jyg,4y,i--- 4,! H V- E sal , 1 t 53. QNEEQIML .ffl ' I, C ,-1' ' 1: -'A N - - 1 f m-', - v 95's .-- if mv! !,','g:::AU f, .4 ffff W, . 5 Q ff - ,E-:E-5:3-1 , ll fuss My ruE552,5,?yl. 12:1 , -. :gsfggl ,la-A' ' 1 . j J i ' o ', 't . ', ' cw' 3 . . --.rf -Q' iraq I :axf kf .1 XXVLQIL' 'X' X, lIll'l 4 ll xf 1' F' ' ' gl , Q' , ' ' 2 f 035' '.'7z E 'f' ' :ff W, ' f, 'W 'l ' '1:::2f ' .L -. V' ' , 1' ' ' Uff M xx -- . N f .5 ' - f , -I 1 4 .4 . V! 1 . IS' T L. A 2 3 V , ' , '. :Q i- x-xl' .h4H,, ., . I I 2 , , 1, A .1 . ' '- H' 711. .X 1 K , X3 , ,lay Ag.: A ' fi ' Q X T j H 'M A . ' . ' 'Ii- 1' I ff ff ' i gr' kay I . DR. C. T. VVYCKOFF NE of the most enthusiastic and valuable lines of work in Bradley Institute is the work which is done every year in music. This is carried out by two Bradley organizations, the Bradley Chorus and the Bradley Symphony Orchestra. Both of these institutions prepare and present the finest music obtain- able. Appreciation of their work has so grown that the students and citizens of Peoria look forward eagerly to their public appearances. For this healthy growth of interest in good music the greatest credit must be given to the director of the chorus, Dr. Charles T. Wyckoff, who has worked faithfully for many years for that which is now being realized. We are indeed fortunate in having Dr. Wyckoff with us, as he is one of the best musical directors in the country. Dr. Wyckoff has led choruses in Chicago, done general solo work, taught music in Doshisha University, Japan, was for many years member of the Chicago Apollo Musical Club, the lead- ing musical organization of that city and is at present director of the Christian Church choir of this city. For many years he has trained the Bradley Chorus to give their excellent annual concerts. The students have reason to be proud of the successful efforts of those interested in music at Bradley and of the high quality of the music which they present. We hope that this feeling will grow until Bradley will become more noted than ever for her good music. 132 LELA MORRISON ul..- SOPRANOS LOUISE GIBSON RUTH ALLEN HELEN THOMAS LUCY FORD SYLVIA FRANCIS MYRTLE LEININGER RUTH BAILEY PEARL KELLY RUTH SHERWOOD LOUISE HELMBOLD MARY BIBO SARAH CROSS META BECKER HALLIE MALLING ETHEL DRURY LUCILE PULLEN HAZEL HANCOCK NEVA FORD MARY PORTER MRS. E. H. SCHIMPFF MARIE KNAPP ANNA ELLIS VIOLA MARS SANCHEN STREHLOW MARGUERITE STREHLOW JOSEPHINE SPECK MABEL MCDONALD HAZEL SPENCE ,,,, .1l.-j1 -- The Chorus FLOYD SANFORD, Secy. GROVER BAUMGARTNER, Pres. RUTH COOPER ADDELENA DE LENT BESS MORRIS ONALISE WHITE FLORENCE DRURY MARTHA BAILEY ALTOS ANNETTE FULFORD CAROLINE BAUGHMAN OLGA BELSLEY ARSINA HAUK FLORENCE SCHWARTZ MELITTA MAGARET 133 TENORS BURTON GREEN FLOYD SANFORD WILLIAM HARMS FREDERICK CAUSEY BASSOS GROVER BAUMGARTNER HUGH COOPER WALLACE WEST HAROLD MOCULLOUGH OTTO DAVISON MARRS SHOOP GLENN EBAUGH JAMES HUNTER DAVID HARRIS THEODORE FRANZEN CARL TRAEGER ARTHUR SCHOETTLER LESLIE MEIDROTH HAROLD PLOWE LL FRIENDS of Bradley Institute take pride in the Symphony Orchestra. Comparatively few colleges, or even cities, can boast of a similar organization. It is conducted on the broadest basis, and is open to all capable players of orchestral instruments. Its membership includes a majority of the very best instrumentalists in this vicinity. Its prime object is the study and practice of the very highest class of orchestral compo- sitions, and its library of classic music for the grand orchestra is the largest in the state outside of Chicago. Its great success is chiefly due to the enthusiastic and capable efforts of Harold Plowe who has been its director since its beginning. Mr. Plowe is one of the best musical conductors in the state and Bradley is very fortunate in having him in this position. The orchestra was organized ten years ago, and in the last decade has given many fine compositions, among which are the following: BEETHOVEN-Adagio from Sonate Pathetique, Polonaise op. 8. MOZART-Die Entfuhrung Overture, Don juan Overture. HAYDN-Surprise Symphony, 2d movement, Fifth Symphony, finale, Symphony Militaire, complete. MENDELSSOHN-Priest's March from Athalia, Lord God of Abraham from Elijah, Italian Symphony, first movement, Piano Concerto, in G minor, Spring Song. WAGNER-Tannhauser March, Dreams, Song to the Evening Star, Pilgrim Chorus from Tannhauser. SCHUBERT-March Militaire, Moment Musical, Unfinished Symphony. CHOPIN-Polonaise Militaire, Marche Funebre. WEBER-Selection from Freischutz Concert Stuck. VERDI-Pilgrim Chorus from Lombardi, Prison Scene from IL Trovatore. GOUNOD-Overture to M yrella, Marche Pontificale, La Reine de Saba, Soldier's Chorus from Faust, Funeral March of a Marionet. FLOTOW-Martha, Stradella, and Albin Overtures. GRIEG-Peer Gynt Suite, 2d and Sd movements, Norwegian dances, 1st and 2d. BRAI-IMS-Hungarian dances, 5th and 6th. TSCI-IAIKOWSKI-Romance, Chanson Trieste. RAFF-March from Lenore Symphony Cavatina. BELLINI-Norma Overture. ROSSINI-Barber of Savilla Overture. BALFE-Bohemian Girl Overture. BOIELDIEU-Calif of Bagdad. ADAM-Le Brasseur de Preston. SUPPE-Morning, Noon and Night, Poet and Peasant Overtures. 134 Members of the Orchestra DIRECTOR BASS J HAROLD PLOWE ELMER PAUL VIOLINS S MOON FLUTES WILLIAM HUDSON ANNA KERRKBLR1gT BCESIEIIIIANSZEABUSY J- - CLARINETS HELEN PAR H PUT AM 4 HAZEL ITANggNggRG 1EI1,iEI1gR1?ER0?XXN TRUESDALE WHEELER CORNETS I. N. VANCE MABEL OE I D RKER LAURIE BADGLEY MERRILL DWINELL GORDON BELSTERLING TROMBONE DONALD BADGLEY ALFRED BURNREUTER C L ANDERSON VIOLA ' ' TYMPANI AND DRUMS DR- JOSEPH CONIGISKY ROBERT PLOWE DOROTHY PLOWE CELLOS PIANO LEWIS BROWN WILLIAM CATION LUTIE POFFENBARGER Ex-Members - VIOLIN g'IYI-1?'1gIf,IIf6BALLANCE-WATSON BASS HORN MAJELLA HOWLAND-LACEY - ' AF GEO. RAMSEY GEO. F. CARSON VERNA MURPHEY-HARPER EDNA SEDGWICK GERALD FRANKS A. P. MILLER MARION THOMAS RUDOLPH ZANT A. J. DAVIS T KING BENTON GERTRUDE MANNING FLUTE ROMBONE EGMONT MEYER IRENE BUNCH LOTTIE GRABER ANNA HART-DUPELL LAURA NICHOLSON A. L. DEAN ETHEL JONES FOREST TAYLOR ILMA HUNTER MAY BALLINGER FLORENCE ROCKWELL JEANNETTE MEANS-ROSS HUBERT ENDRES DR. EDWARD LOUGHRIDGE JAMES ROBERTSON GENE BROWN MAY ULRICH DAVID OFF SIDNEY NEWMAN JAMES WILTON FRED BOHL KATE MEIXNER WARD RHEA RUTH WOODWARD GARFIELD BEESON OTTO SAMEK PORTE WHEELER HAZEL LOQUIST MARTHA MACKAMER H. G. LEMBERG VIOLA R. R. BOURLAND HOVVARD KELLOGG ILMA HUNTER WALTER DEHORITY ARTHUR PLECHER CELLO SUE SLOAN HENSLEY JAY PLOWE FRANK T. MILLER HEYO BLOCK RICHARD KAYSER DR. REX SHOLL ROBERT PLOWE DR. ARTHUR G. SMITH JOHN HANSEN WILHELMINE MEYER DR. FLOYD KEENE CLARINET ALEX. MCCOSKER CHAS. MCINTYRE G. F. BORG W. R. BABCOCK E. C. LEMBERG BASSOON GENE BROWN CORNET WAYNE BURKHALTER PROF. GRANT HOOD HOWARD FAHNESTOCK FRANK A MURPHY H. R. MOWELLE L. H. OLDKNOW R. D. BARTLETT HARRY MERCER ALFRED HIATT H. A. MANIFOLD TEDDY KARS J. S. MARTINET W. B. JOCHMAN HARRY BROWN TYMPANI LULU ODELL JOSEPH GOSS COWELL ESSIE HEYLE DRUMS IOLA POWELL MAINZER JOHN ALTMANN PIANO CLAUDIA E. BURKHALTER IDA BARKLEY ARDELLE HARRER CARRIE WESTON MILDRED FAVILLE JOHN JOHNSON Elenrnth Annual Spring Glnnrrrt PRESENTED BY Flhe Elnatitnte Glhnrna Uhr Erahleg Sginphnng Qbrrhratrn BRADLEY HALL FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL SECOND NETEEN HUNDRED AND NINE 2Hrngrzun Part Songs--fa? Elgar-HAS Torrents in Summer fb? Macfarren- The Fairies THE CHORUS Suppe-Overture-uThe Poet and Peasant Srhubert-Symphony in B Minor-First Movement-Allegro Tit!-Serenade for Hute and cello THE ORCHESTRA Part Songs-Cai Sullivan- O Hush Thee, My Babie fb? Barnby-'LSweet and Low THE CHORUS Chaminade-Trio for violin, piano and cello HELEN PARKHURST, LUTIE POFFENBARGER, LEWIS BROWN Part Song-Gaul-uThe Singers THE CHORUS Saramti- Faust Fantasien-Solo for violin BERTHA SEABURY Part Song-Foote- The Bedouin Love Song THE CHORUS Sfharwenia-Polish National Dance Lachner-Marche Celebre from first suite THE ORCHESTRA 136 x -f-.XR QP. fx xNXx -W li x f S fo' 5' f - I 42,4 any -'MU' X v l'gl'l 1 -n' 'Mfg 'Qt n Ib W' 4 ffl' 0.-si? 1 I I , W f sway 4 , n . 605 ' I' I cn' , 69a W5 5 N n p 9 n 1' fn f 1 4' 0 . gl - MWF '13 H' , 1242115 wp'- fl E zany! J o n 4 0 '. 1 , 1,14 1' 'I ef 4 1 04 ah, 1 IH 1 'vas' Q J Y' ' 03 fi Q J fx-TX va K' l ' 'Pa 4 ' ' x!x'!1 sm, xov' ,gf l 4 'LU '71, l X R Q' lx X X , v Qi ,T Q . , if L:-Z 'QE' 9. ' r if . O' 1Eng,.,, '15 ! ' n' U n' 'v f 9 'n F. 'l I 'n 'air' L' .ff M W wi:--.2 1'1 li 5' '- 'qi-'.5v,g,g4 9 - ff 1, L , ff .nv , -1 . O ffi 12'H.v..-4.53-E LQ ff 1 'f 1' -.1 -Q11 ' 052713 ' .- - :f-:A 50' fu- -,W--Q 1 'MQ V 5 f , , A -.', gf '1 I-::fi?vf5v'7 1 7 qf f 1 ul J , .1 J f f , 1 ,, . 4 I ,. Q . Q ' 15 2,5 Ag, I 1 Z ' f X Y 1-ai fo'-' 1? 5 0 1 qu ' . ,- 4 I f Q 11 QM! x, 1' -'1 li 3 X N Z sw . -3 0. Q Q - A . is ,ilu 9 6 I j V 'fl', ,7 .v, f 6, ,gy ' I , UQ. 7 f 43 K H J, ' N f x X f f f Z f 4 I r K fl Z a ' ff Z X Q Sm, f 'V 'W' ..JlflIIIYlIIffllIUf!I H0 .7 f .KS Qi in I 4 gwiwm - N W 7 I 2. .-. -1n ,I X f 3 I The School Feeling HE thing that attracts the attention of every new arrival at the Horological department and is noticeable from the first, is the feeling that exists between the department members and the mem- bers of Bradley Hall. From what I hear I do not think that either school is entirely to blame. What they need is something to bring them together. I The lack of goodfellowship between the Horolog and the Polly is due to a great many things. In the first place most of the Pollys live in and around Peoria and are surrounded by their friends while all the Horologs are from a distance and among strangers. Then the Horologs have such long hours that they cannot take part in the athletics and the various student activities and recreations that take place in the Hall. The Pollys are at the Hall a number of years and so become more or less, in that time, acquainted with all that goes on and become a part of the school while the Horolog has no definite term and the crowd at Horolog Hall is constantly changing. These conditions keep the two bunches more or less estranged altho there is no bad feeling on either side. This tendency how- ever should be overcome and we hope that when the new Gym is completed that both bunches may get closer together and work to make Bradley the leading school of the West and a pride not only of the students but of Peoria and the surrounding country. DELOSS THOMAS. 138 PART OF THE BUNCH The Escapement The canning season will soon be here again if the hot weather continues. Let us all hope we are not the next in line. Who told the kid to use oil on his file and to ask Marie for end shake powder? Merril says the only thing lie can wear around his neck is a rubber band. His head still retains its normal size. Wanted, Some energetic Horolog to keep the tennis court in shape for the rest of the bunch. Our old scout has left for the wilds again and we think from his stories that the rangers must have missed him while he was away. Brace up, Murray. Tears Won't true hair-springs, although they bring relief sometimes. What instructor was it that said he would club the next man from filing who stepped inside the C room door. Somethimg new has just arrived from Texas in the shape of a fifteen year old. We hope he does not go astray, but as he is boarding at the brewery we cannot promise anything. johnny B, have you caught any more dogs lately? lts funny how some people develop a sudden affection for dumb animals. Some Horologs were found asleep on the bluff the other night. No doubt they were overcome by their walk up. Eddie Foyes leaves for Missouri soon. Good luck, Eddie, in your noble calling. Lang says that, barring bad luck, he will finish up his test by August lst, which is pretty good for Lang. Some of the bunch who are in Elgin seem to like it very much though the B. H. S. still seems to be running. Brewer entertained friends at a Dutch lunch on Saturday eve. All report a full time. Some people pick watch work for a get-rich-quick scheme, but soon drop it when they get up against it the first time. We understand that one of the filers had a fit over a tap the other day and wound up by fainting, but seems to be doing nicely at this time. One of the bunch in finishing, remarked that the C room should have a chronometer to save Mr. M. the trouble of chasing up stairs to set his Ingersol so often. We begin to see the improvement in the material furnished, especially the alcohol, which is at least three per cent. pure, the rest being aqua puraf' We have often wondered how the club obtained its nickname brewery, whether it was once a brewery or that there is a great deal of the brewed material passing in late at night in the shape of i well, anyway we understand that the landlord is all right and things are improving of late. Baxter you will please refrain from snoring during watch lecture, we do not mind if you sleep peaceably as that will not disturb Prof. Hart. Goldie has at last departed for the big state Texas, We hope he makes good at the trade, but don't examine any eyes as we would be fearful of the results. ll i J.. ahh.. Dr. Preswood ialias Alabamal- Is this test staff alright, Mr. M.?', Mr. M.--'ll don't think it will do. You had better try another. Alabama-'ll think Mr. M. you had better let me examine your eyes. Our drummer is making good, not only at the traps but in watch work. Wanted nice girl for same. The attendance is more regular since they closed Pete's. Score one for O'Conner. Well Willie, we hope you make a good watchmaker, llwell anyhow everybody can't become an expert. We would like a ball team from our bunch, but we cannot spare the time although we have the material. Wanted to know why the boys spend so much time at the material window of late. We are wondering if we are going to Springfield this year, as there were some lively developments from the trip last year, but we will promise to be good, Mr. W., if we go. Since the alcohol throwersv left for Elgin, quiet reigns once more. What is that peculiar smell that invades the air? Is it singed cat? No, somebody's head over the gas jet. The paint gang did some good work on the new gym. We hope they stay long enough to enjoy the privileges of the same. Wolf would like to swap a lap-dog for a trued hair spring to use on his test. Some of the fellows are leaving for Elgin. We hope they make good, but you know the old adage about the rolling stone. Cheer up, Henksler, the C list is not so long after all. We of St. james, miss the strains of Van Court's horn these summer days and we hope that he is making good in that Southern state for which he has just left. Our new building has arrived in the shape of a model school house built by the Polly, and presents a fine appearance on the lawn at the west of our building. They say laquer is good for the headache. H Brockett ? Arm Back Bridge Curve Crown Elbow Enamel The Anatomy of a Horolog Ear Eye Foot Face Finger Flank Figure in How about it, Head Pallet Hand Shoulder Heart Shank Heel Seat Knee Tooth Knuckle Toe Lip Tongue Waist Q r 3 1 j f i 4 me Q, Qi in, .433-.--P ' ' fi I THE COUNCIL The Council DR. T. C. BURGESS . Chairman FACULTY DR. C. T. WYCKOFF DOROTHY DUNCAN COLLEGE MERRILL I. SCHNEBLY MELITTA MAGARET HIGHER ACADEMY RUDOLPH HEINTZMAN LILY KEITHLEY LOVVER ACADEMY JOHN HICKEN EMILY BENTON 143 in' Af ELL me not in joyful numbers, School life is a happy dream, For the person Hunks who slumbers And schools are not what they seem. School is reall School is earnest! And to Hunk is not our goal. Past thou art and dare returneth, Is the aim of every soul. Not conditions and not sorrow, Is our destined end or Way, But to pass, that each tomorrow Nears for us commencement day. Hours are long but time is fleeting, And our lessons, hard and long, Still like pickets bold are keeping Bradley girls from Fashions throng. In the office of Dean Burgess, In the campus, in the hall, Freshmen do as Senior urges, Be a man in Bradley Hall. Trust no future, howe'er pleasant, Let the dead past bury its dead. Work, work, in the living present, Prof's within and hope ahead. Lives of great Deans all remind us There is much to learn from books, And by cramming, leave behind us Good marks in the Bradley books. Good marks, which perhaps another, Plodding on, but all in vain, A forlorn and flunking brother Seeing, shall take heart again. Let us then be up and doing, With hopes on commencement set, Still achieving, still pursuing And each a diploma get. J. E. W., '10. , ? fi -,ia mhh Q Nllllu. ' A5219 f-S'-, 'U' - . iv' ' ' X X , X , -'- , ' , il.- TX ,Q b 'e x QX W 4 I I X - QA X 7 xx! X 1 , , 1? f W6 T - Q f FW ' t 3 ly , x Q 1- i 'Vx ' J ,mx 1 'lx x' EAW ,ll 5 ,-' K V ,Af . .4 lf' , ' Q ' v! fix fb. . 'Y W1 Q f ff X f X N I: X x r ' Z W X N , R' ' K X W V X N X , fgix Z If swf. N' 5 'fig Q ,J 1 X N U A., B- X62 Q QU ? Q,-fs RAMATICS at Bradley are a very important item in student activities. Every year several good plays are given. of course we naturely think first of the annual athletic benefit in this connection but it is only one of many. Every year the modern language department gives a German play and often a French play. The annual German play given this year was well selected and cleverly put on. The humorous little sketch made a hit and offered a fine evening's amusement for the large audience of German enthusiasts. The college students held their annual College Doin's in which they presented the clever little comedy skit, The Bradley Tattle-tale, the tattle-tale being the name of a newspaper the office of which is the scene of the play. The play pictures the trials and tribulations of the editor. Our old comedian Cush was on deck with a good assortment of hot ones and of course made a decided hit. This year the Omiron girls for their annual play, gave George Fitch's story, The Strike at Siwashf' which had been dramatized for them. The play came off in fine style and was a credit to those presenting it. A large musical program was given thru the play which added greatly to the enjoyment of the evening. The cast boasted of three choruses, The Cupid Chorusf, The Pickaninnie Chorusn and uThe Kiowa Men . All did well and were well received. Altogether the play was most excellent and was put on in true Bradley style. The English Club this year at their annual banquet presented the famous scene from Midsummer Night's Dreamf' Pyramus and Thisbef' in Elizabethan style, just as it was presented by the artisans of Athens in the Shakespearian play. The cast in the enactment of their little scene gave the English Club one of the most pleasant evenings that they have ever enjoyed. H6 HE Bradley annual athletic play given this year on April six- teenth was by far the finest in every way that Bradley ever put on the stage and that is making a very strong statement for we have put on some fine ones in the past. However we feel justified in making the statement. Everything came off in A1 style ex- cept the weather. But the weather did not keep away the crowd for the house was packed to the limit. More tickets were sold than ever before. The house was blazoned with the colors of the Senior and Junior classes and of the fraternities. School spirit was very manifest and something was doing all the time. The Bradley Symphony Orchestra furnished a fine program of musicin its usual excellent manner, finish- ing off the evening in true Bradley style. As to the play itself we have already said it was our best. Especial interest attached itself to this play in that it was the first appearance of a newly written play which is to appear on the stage CARL PFEFFINGER AS PHILIP SHIELDSN JULIA VOORHEES AS UKATHERYNE STUART next season. Emily Foster Day, the author of the play, was present at its presentation and was well satisfied with its first appearance which means so much to a im playwright. For the success of the cast , which represented us, fx greatest credit must be given Mr. Frank T. I Wallace under whose careful coaching they practiced. It certainly takes a very good coach to put on the stage every year a production which smacks nothing of the amateur, in a few week's time. The stage fittings were of the very best class on the stage. Most of them were made for the occasion at the school and did great credit to their designers. The play ran off without a single hitch just as if it had been on the road for months instead of being a first appear- ance. This speaks well for the stage manager and the property men. In fact everything was done up in fine style from the cast down. We congratulate those connected with the play and wish next year's management equal success. A-J ..mP 1 . lf la GOLIATH A Play of Modern Life in Four Acts BY EMILY FOSTER DAY. STAGED BY FRANK T. WALLACE. Characters of the Play in the Order of their Entrances M rs. Lutrell . Jeanette Gray . Henry France Katheryne Stuart David Ireland Mark Shields . on the Stage: MARIE KNAPP LUCILE MAPLE . LESLIE MEIDROTH JULIA VOORHEES LESLIE LORD HUGH COOPER Philip Shields Edward Bard . Allan Robb Mallory . A Reporter Operator . . CARL PFEFFINGER . . JAMES AYLVVARD HAROLD MCCULLOUGH . . VVILBUR FORREST . . GROVER BAUMGARTNER . ..... GEISSERT HOVVARD Scenes in which the Action of the Play transpires: ACTI ACT Il ACT Ill ACT IV The Grounds of a Chicago Suburban Residence during a Lawn Fete. Pine Hill, Henry France's Summer Home. Henry Francc's Private Office. David Ireland's Office. 148 ' 1 - - - -f-Q1 i, il, 1 Ia ' I 'Ref :?1COr1x.'l.IxIX'.l. 2, A Chorus I . THE STRIKE AT S1WAsH George Fitch's Saturday Evening Post Story. Dramatized by Percy A. Folsom PEORIA WOMEN'S CLUB Thursday, Feb. 11th Music in charge of MRS. DAVID LACKEY CAST OF CHARACTERS Ole Skjarson ...,...............,............,..............,,.., ,,..,4,,...s,,,A,.,..., H AROLD PATCH Hart D. Stroyer, of the Eta Bita Pies ...,,w.,..,.,,.,,,.. ,,,,,...... F RANK COLLINS Algie Brewster, of the Chi Yi Sighs .....,,As, ..,.,A,,.,.., I OHN OLIVER Reggie Frankling, of the Alfalfa Deltas ...,,... luA...... D AWSON BRAND Petey Simpkins ,.,.,.....,.s...........s,..,,....,.,,Vws...,..., ,.AA.,,,,,.,, C LARK VANCE Bost, a coach ................,.............c.,.,.......V,,cc,,, ,.,.,c.,,,.,...,. H UGH COOPER Eckers Hall, of the Kiowa team ,,,.........,,. ,.,,.,,.....,, J AMES AYLVVARD Miss Spenser, of the Fi Lamb Dies ,......, ..,,.,... M ISS ERMA SEATON Miss Cutting, of the Kappa Ipsilons ...,..,.. c............,.. M ISS MARIE KNAPP Miss Frost, of the Yama Yamas ........,c...,...... .,,.,.,....,,.,,... M RS. WM. GABLE Miss 'Winter, of the Hama Fattas ,,......c,,..,...... MISS MARTHA TRIEBEL Members of the Kappa Son-of-a-guns, Sigh Whoopsilons, Football Players, Girl Students, etc. Time-Present. Placcfkjonesville, Minn. SYNOPSIS! A ACT I-Scene 1: Student's Club House. Scene 2: Olels Apartment. ACT II-Ball in Ole's Honor. ACT III-Football Game. MUSICAL SELECTIONS-FIRST ACT 1. Our Family Tree ,.....,......,.......................................,.... DAVVSON BRAND 2. Pet Names .,,...................,. MARTHA TRIEBEL and CLARK VANCE 3. Cupid P. H. D ......c,,i..,.....................,...... MARIE KNAPP and CHORUS 4. Oh le! O Ole O Ay ........................,.,,,..................,................ H. K. PATCH S1-:COND ACT 5. Alabama ....,.,....,..,,,,,,,,, .....c... E D. HOLSTMAN and PICKANINNIES THIRD ACT 6. Dance La Cigalew .............................i....................,. CRIQUETTE BUCK 7. Finale .....................................,... ....,..,............,.... ................................................. CUPID CHORUS-LUCY PROCTOR, LOUISE PETERS, BERENICE HALL, MYRA VANCE, ITALENE PEDRICK, MARGUERITE SMITH, -IESSIE RUTHERFORD, MYRTLE LEININGER and GENIE MCCLURE. PICKANINNIES-MARGUERITE RICHMOND, AMA KEITHLEY, RUTH COOPER, BESS ESTEP, KATE BUCK and SNOVVBALL WASHINGTON LEE. KIOWA MEN-JOE BATCHELDER, LEONARD ARMSTRONG, RICHARD PEDRICK, CARL SLANE and J. H. KUHL. MASCOT-GEORGE SMITH. 'Q C 'A TEDIOUS BRIEF SCENE OF YOUNG PYRAMUS AND HIS LOVE TI-IISBY AS GIVEN BY THE ARTISANS OF ATHENS AT THE NYEDDING FEAST IN MIDSUMMER NIGHTIS DREAM, ACT. V: SC. I. CAST Prologue E, , E, .LHUGH E. COOPER Pyramus C....,, G. GORDON KELLAR Thisby E. FRANCIS GEORGE NVall , , L, E,,E , ,,IE,,E,,EE, LORING T. BUNN Moonshinev, , , L, ,E,, ..,, E,,,E,, VV ' ILLIAM M. SHOOP Lion, . , , , GROVER C. BAUMGARTNER TIIE VVEDDING PARTY IIB COSIUIDCI ELLEN IVIUIR ROBT. PLOVVE ARSINA HAUK BENJ. S. PFEIFFER LOUISE DELENT JAMES HUNTER l ii-I THE BRADLEY TATTLE-TALE A Playlet given by the COLLEGE STUDENTS Portraying the Trials of an Editor The Editor ,,,..L...,,r,..i,. ,. His Stenographer ,,LL, I .Lr. , A War Correspondent .,,. A Poet ,....,,....Y....,ss,,sse,,s s,,se The Artist ......Y,.r..,r.e,,rwr,, .L.,,r , , The Colored Supplements The Colored Extra .,,e, ,I I The Society Editor .trte,,erL Fashion Editor ...,Yrw.,wrr CAST 151 EDVVARD CUSHING ,w,L,,,MARIE KNAPP MORRIS ,,,vL,,Lr,. EDITH LOVE . ...r.,,r.wv,er. WM. HUDSON ..r....FRED LINDEBURG ., ..ww...,,,rw., MAYO GOSS .ELIZABETH ESTEP RALPH SEYMOUR ENGLISH SPOKEN HERE CAST TAUPIN, Merchant, 50 years old ,..vvYE,.EA... ,,...........,,... vE.,.EEA. G R OVER BAUMGARTNER EURANTHYE, his wife, 40 years old .,E...,..w., , E,,,,A,, ,,E,E,,E,RA,E,,.,4, B ESS MORRIS CELESTINE, his daughter, 18 years old ....,r,,,. ,r,.,..,,,, R UTH COOPER CARAMBA, a Mexican, 45 years old aa,a,a,...,,,,,,.,......,, .,r, vr.r,,., B E N PFEIFFER ANAIS, his wife, 30 years old ..,Ya,.r.r....,..r......a,.,........,a,........,avrr.......,..,, w,..r.,,,,,,,,,,, M YRA KING JOHN POODLE, Englishman, 25 years old, Celestine's lover ......,,.. ,a.r..r,r,. H UGH COOPER ROSE, Taupin's maid ..,,.,,, ., .a..,,.,,,,, . ..,,.a.a......Y,,.........,..,,.,.....,,,,.r.,. ,.,,, ,,.,,,.,,,,,,,, j E AN LOVE SYNOPSIS Taupin, who cannot speak a word of English has arranged to rent rooms during a big fair, and has hung out a card, ENGLISH SPOKEN HERE. John Poodle a kind fellow traveller rents a room of Taupin for Anais, who has become separated from her husband on the way, when john discovers in Celestine a girl whom he has formerly fallen in love with in London, he also rents a room at an enormous price. On account of the maid who quits, on account of Anais' jealous husband who enters and on account of Taupin's imagining that john Poodle and Anais belong together, arises a very comical confusion, which, however, is finally cleared up to the satisfaction of all concerned. 152 1-1- . X v mill. aily.,,.,W.,,.r.ip A Q, .Er Cecil Q E E S. y 'Ulilf' Zilzibe :lb 6:13 HE SECOND Annual Debate between Bradley and Eureka College was held at Eureka on April 9th. The subject was Resolved, That the welfare of the Nation demands the enactment of Federal laws providing for a graduated income tax. Bradley maintained the negative and Eureka the affirmative. Bradley was represented by Messrs. Merrill I. Schnebly, Frederick A. Causey, and Harry J. Klotz. Messrs. A. F. Larson, Guy L. Zerby and Chester L. Gains appeared for Eureka. The debate was an excellent one throughout. Bradley appeared to have the better of the argument, but Eureka's men were more at ease on the platform. The judges' decision was two to one in favor of Eureka. Much credit is due to Mr. E. F. George of the English Depart- ment for his work in coaching the team. - One interesting feature was the large number of Bradley students who went to Eureka to hear the debate and support the team. At least forty friendly faces greeted our debaters when they appeared upon the platform. We must have certainly convinced Eureka that Bradley is a live institution. Such an unusual display of interest is highly encouraging, and we hope that it means even more enthusiastic and more effective debating next year. gf f f ll X i f XIQLJJ f X NNN ' If i I F ff f 'X X f i A 5 sr 1 'L , gif f., , . via, ' f' uc! 5 Q Y -Ml, 4' ,rl .yy if ui ,X .A AN ff ml 5 .nm ii . Q- ibn A ' -- SUCCESS? Well I should say so! We mean the Athletic Banquet of course. It was the best banquet that we ever gave. Following the victory over Illinois College, two hundred students sat down to the feast. Toastmaster Cooper started the ball to rolling by one of his clever stories, and then the audience listened to the eloquence of all the knights of the gridiron, faculty members, managers, etc. Following the spread the assembly indulged in a jolly dance program and all agreed that the evening was a huge success. On April third a banquet was held in honor of Mr. C. A. Bennett, who had recently returned from abroad. The members of the Pedagogic Club, faculty of the Normal department and invited guests were present to the number of sixty. Mr. C. W. Angier was introduced as toastmaster by President Hutter. The following responses were made to toasts: Student Experiences, Mr. Hidalgog Pedagogues, Miss Balkeg Teacher's Courses at Bradley, Dr. Burgess, The Social Side of the Pedagogic Club, Miss Baughmang The Pedagogic Club, Miss Day, The Weather, Mr. Bowersg The Emerald Isle, Miss Shields. Superintendent Smith of the city schools gave a very interesting talk, and Mr. Bennett gave a fine account of Industrial Education as he saw it in English schools. Music by Miss Baughman and.Mr. Hartz. On March 20th the English Club held their annual banquet and we are told it was a big success all around. Mr. Fred Bourland acted as toast master on the occasion. Mr. P. G. Rennick gave a number of dialect sketches. Short talks were made by Edward Cushing and Miss Janet Grant. Following the spread the Play Pyramus and Thisbe was given in Elizabethan style by members of the club. On May 29th a banquet will be given in the new gym. The day is the date of the Intercollegiate Meet and the gym will be formally opened on that day. A line time is assured and we know that the spread will come off in the usual Bradley style. Q , ,I Lectures THE LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATES Hou. Cr.AnK E. CARR, Galesburg, Ill. November 13 Mr. Carr knew Lincoln intimately and was closely associated with him during the period of the famous debates with Douglas. The lecture gave a full and interesting account of this series of debates, so important in the history of Illinois and the Nation. Mr. Carr has long been prominent in public life fformerly U. S. Minister to Denmarkl, and in more recent years his writings-pan ticularly The Illini -have brought additional reputation. He has been much sought for as a public speaker. THE NEGRO AS A CHARACTER IN FICTION Miss MAncAxz'r MCLAUGHLIN December4 The lecture contained a discussion of the most important novels and short stories in which the negro has appeared, and pointed out the excellencies and defects of treatment. IRELAND Miss DOROTHY DUNCAN December 11 This lecture presented a brief history of Ireland and fumished a picture of the modern life there, dealing especially with the counties of Cork, Kerry, Galway and the region around Kilarney. This part of the Island is rich in folklore. The immigration from these counties to the United States has been great. There were numerous lantern slides illustrating not only many places not often visited, but also the city life of the Irish people. Miss Duncan spent most of the summer of 1907 in Ireland. A COURSE OF SIX LECTURES BY Rr:v1:iu:ND DAVID BEATON. M. A. Lecturer in General Literature, University of Chicago SCOTLAND IN SONG AND STORY Scotland in Song and Story fLantern Slidesl january 8 Scottish Ballads and Pre-Burns Literature january 22 The Genius and Poetry of Robert Burns - - February 5 The Genius and Work of Sir Walter Scott February 19 Modern Scottish H umorists - - March 5 Scotland's Contribution to the World's Progress March 19 Dr. Beaton is a native of Scotland and resided there until early manhood. In the themes which he has chosen for this series of lectures he has the advantage of speaking about his native country, on scenes and people familiar from years of personal contact. Since coming to America, Dr. Beaton has been successively college president, pastor of important churches, and University extension lecturer. Dr. Beaton has spoken in every part of the United States and Canada, and his lectures have been enthusiastically received. He is a clear thinker, a pleasing and forceful speaker, and to these qualities as an orator there is added an unusually attractive Scotch accent. Many in Peoria have heard him and know for themselves his power as a lecturer. FOUNDER'S DAY TXVELFTH ANNUAL OBSERVANCE THURSDAY, OCTOBER THE EIGHTH NINETEEN HUNDRED AND EIGHT PROCESSIONAL-March ..,.,,... ,.,.,,,.,, E . Guiraud INVOCATION- ...,........... ..,.....,...w.. ........,. ....,.......,..,.w,....., ..,..,. THE REVEREND W. B. SHOOP ORGAN SOLO-Oflertoire in D Minor .............,...... ..U...... B atiste MISS EDITH CAMPBELL THE ADDRESS- The Social Value of a Liberal Education. PROFESSOR NATHANIEL BUTLER fCollege of Education, The University of Chlcagol RECESSIONAL-Prelude ..,....... ....... M . Costa 156 ,i1 1 QJ-5 fjf ,I UUI MI Bid' ,,, Wg- Y jf if 4iX M NW M y , V73 5 f X 11 ff SW, 6 75 Q vs y N mlwiur IL. 9 f Xfxwkgf 1 . ., I - ,. I -:iw A X 1 f 9 11 Q ' 1 V ? A ' K 'N 'L ff ' '4 x X xdi ' - ig, h I ' Nj :I N '- -' ,I I I gt 1 S X X fl I - If ,'.- x -,-Q H' Iggy, f ly N 'I 7 F x KM f xx' Ai ,I ' n fi 'xx A X ii- fa W , K M ' 1 f- 45' g . . x faiir,-sv?x N QQ' X XX fl - QNX ' ' f I 1 R gr. -5 I 4 5: J I ' ,fr K it I H I F1 ' , NVXX , VN 5 fy- 1,5 V .V 5 L, 9, L I ' 5 f X . , Q5 V14 K I Ih, Q, , xx Q 1 -2 ' f 1- - ,Af fm - - I Q- LIONEL QQNWAOF- ' I The Bradley Athlete Who boots the pig skin in the fall? The Bradley Athlete. Who teaches rooting in the Hall? The Bradley Athlete. Who is it never loses heart? Who takes the stiflest course in art? The Bradley Athlete. Who in the country chews tough chops? The Bradley Athlete. Plays basket ball in butcher shops? The Bradley Athlete. Who is it as as he turns or whirls, Still has his eye on all the girls? The Bradley Athlete. Who is it always clouts the ball? The Bradley Athlete. To distant timber. uncut and tall? The Bradley Athlete. Who has a cleaning for them all? Who moves the bleachers, spring and fall? The Bradley Athlete.-CUSH. 158 lin' if Flew across the pan. Strike one . Now Heinie has two strikes and three balls. Up on the bleachers Jimmie holds his breath. The pitcher once more Winds himself up. jimmie's heart stops beating. Jimmie dear, gurgles the fair young girl at his side, Why do they always run when they hit the ball? lt was at the Lombard game. It was ninth inning. Bradley was at bat. Two men were down. Lombard was two runs to the good. Home run Heinien walked to the plate and grasping the willow wand, faced the pitcher with Hre in his eye fHeinie's eyel. The pitcher doubled himself up, suddenly unsnapped and the ball Have you ever seen a peanut stand or a sardine box or a church step or a board walk or the wind blow up the street or a home run or a barn dance or a man pull up the river or a steeple chase or a man catch his breath or an asphalt drive? 159 The Episode of The Editor Being a Defense of His Helpless Victims The Editor sat on his throne llt was a three-legged stooll And munched from hunks of manna sweet lA cheese sandwich-oh fool.l His forehead broad, was marked in lines, His crafty eye was dark, Upon the suave and cynic mouth There sat the villian's mark. His brain was busily whirling round, To rake up some new way, ln which he might torment the school, And hear what they would say, He thought of satires and of puns- He cast them all asideg He'd tried them many times beforeg His faith in them had died. At last his smouldering eye lit up, He smiled in awful gleeg A brand new torment had appearedg He'd try it-heel heel heel Of manners he had tried a score To make his paper badg With stories poor and poems worseg His jokes were awful sad. Each month a mighty howl went up The day the paper came, The pain and grief he caused the school Were really quite a shame. And yet in spite of all these things His joy was e'er the more, When he could make the others squirm In agonies galore. They kicked at him-he only smiledg Their tears he did not heed: His heart had withered long before- A heart he did not need. Oh, editors are mostly badg This one was much the worst That ever to angelic mind An anger brought, accurst. And so he put a sign on highg He tacked it in the hall- Ten good live stories wanted soong Now don't delay at all. Of prizes he would give a score- A neat ten dollar bill, A five, a two, and then some ones, For shorter stories still. He advertised, he talked it upg 'Twas always on his tongue: He threatened, bribed, and coaxed and swore At old and new and young. 'Twas then that some began to writeg And then there came some moreg Until at last an interest raged Unknown in school before. They wrote like madg they stayed up nights, They thought in plot and verse: The pile upon the Ed'tor's desk His cares did reimburse. At last the fatal day came 'round When judgment should be given, Confused and anxious was the air Of those who'd worked and striven. The editor retired alone, With pen and carmine ink, But what he'd planned to do therewith ' Not one bright soul did think. With awful glee his face was litg With joy his pen he took: Refused-no good, he wrote on allg Ne'er stopped to take a look. Each theme he put in envelopeg A stamp he stuck theretog And sent them back by Uncle Sam- 'Twas what he'd planned to do. Myriads were the hearts that day That sank-and then sank lower: The pain they suffered down inside Was like to none before. And then each asked of some one else. Who's got the proffered bill? But no one's ever seen it yet, And no one ever will. 'Twas then it slowly came to them, The whole thing was a fake. We're stung-we wasted all that time Not one theme did he take. A mighty uproar then ensuedg The hero only smiled. His satisfaction leapt by bounds As they his name defiled. For editors of every sort The most delight do take In turning down the stories That other writers make. And though these things I've said above, From most are always hid, He acted and he thought like this, He did-oH YES HE DID 1--G. G. K. '10 161 't .J 1- I 2, ' - ill! !! 'I- ! 1 S filfyfyl 0,1409 I I l X DR. BISHOP ilecturing in Physics 3 on the Heavenly bodies! VVe will not be able to see the shape of Venus again for five thousand years. TAYLOR'S THEOREM- What you can't cur, drop. Spectator in the first row at UGOLIATHH as the mob gets in its heavy work, I thought that this was a wheat deal but it seems to be all HEY! MR. COMSTOCK- Gauss could Work diflicult problems in calculus when he was ten years old! CUSH- That's nothing! When I was six years old I used logs to build a play house. KELLER- And I've heard that rabbits multiply very rapidly. What did Fritze find in Chemistry to make him so talkative at Calculus the following hour? A great calamity has befallen Bradley. We havn't any more pair trees. You can't find a tree on the Campus that wont afford shade for a dozen or so. We know for we've investigated. If the Trustees don't hustle around and get some more for us we'll never be able to keep up our reputation. The Theme-writer's Nightmare In the year 1930, a young man was seen with a beard, slowly meandering rapidly down Twenty-third Avenue in East Peoria, on the back of a camel with a long tail and gold eyeglasses. In his right hand he carried a cannon and in his other, an umbrella. He was a young man for his age, but looked older. His costume con- sisted of a coat-of-arms and knickerbockers of the same, and on his head, he wore a red cap made of black sheet iron. In his face was a look of unsteady determination and a corn cob pipe. As he neared the corner in the middle of the block, a mighty roar like the sound of a Jersey Mosquito reached his ear--in fact his two ears-and in a second, four hundred and seven real live lions with angry tails and mounted on nice red wooden wheels, rushed out at him and announced their sad determination to eat him all up. He said not a word nor anything else, but just aimed his cannon and fired and when the battle was over, all were dead, slain outright, killed or mortally wounded. . The Bradley Siamese Twins Persons Lofberg Baile George ? 3... - W, Swing wide dat gate, 'Postle Peter, Ring de big bell, for de Pope, Saints and Martyrs den will meet dere De Ed'tor of de Polyscope. Sound dat bugle, Angel Gabriel, Tell de teachers, loud and shrill, Clear out dose gal'ry seats in chapel, Here comes now our Brudder Bill. Turn de lights up, QD Mister Watchman, Arms are de middle 'round, Let de ork'stra play its bestest, Jess Tell Me Dat You Lub Me Hun. Den let Moses fetch de sheepskin, Caps and gowns? I've got 'em on, Spite of all de Calc and Draw'n', Flunks, and now and then a Con. Tune de harpstrings tight, King David, Sing dat Lub You Dearie song, Let the seraphs dance with Willie, Tell, dat for dem, I'm strong. Joseph, march down wid your bred'ren, Wid banners bearing de master key, Talk on cuttin' from de Doctor, l'se done nuttin,' is my plea. De Ed'tor iss Angels, hear me yell Hossaner, Hear me wid de help of Fritze Make de Chem'stry Lab resoun'g Hallaluyerl Now Pm quits. I've berry near been canned, 'N' so Bill Hudson is a member, An' a charter one at dat, Of de Delter Gammer Delter. Course you'vre heard, 'Postle Peter, Of that great and llourshin' frat, Ancient Order of Angels Where only engineers can get? 'Nudder Cherub, Angel Gabriel, But my key doan touch dis lock, I'se had notes and calls unnumbered, But l'se got dat key yet, Doc. What? No one here at de landin', 'Peers like sump'in 'nodders wrong. Guess I'll gib dat sleepy Peter Fits from Hudson, and berry strong How am dis? De gates all fastened? Out of all de shining throng, Not a Bradley girlee even Greetin' Willie Wid a song? 'What er narrow little gatewayl My! Dat gate am hard to move, Who am dat? says 'Postle Peter, Frum de parapet above, Uncle Peter, doan you know me? Me, a 'sistant down in Physics? All de girls in Bradley lub me, Though there's some the fellows kicks. Hark to dat ar curious roaring, Far away, but growin' nigherg See de drefful dragon flyin', Head like night an' mouth of fire. 'Tis de berry king of debbles, An' him rushing right along, Oh, dear Peter, pleas' ter open For dis poor ole Hudson. Ole Nick an' Doc are comin', 'S gettin' getting warmer all about, Oh, my good kind Ornery Member, Let me in, I'se good throughoutg I doan want ter go wid Saten, Ter dat berry warm climate Where's fire and brimstone. Profs are dere An' I can't even intergrate. Dat loud noise am comin' nearer- Dreflul smell-hyd'gen sulphide- 'Nudder screech? Good 'Evans help mel Doctor Ashman, doan let me slide: Allers got my lessons good, Rode my ponies, worked full hard, Helped Bish make de 'metric flame So's'e got a big reward. Hi' dat gate aint a swinging, Aint yer gwine ter let me froo? All's hollering, Study more, Everything round's getting blue, Bang! Ha, dere's Belzebub- Physics three, an' Chem'stry two. Well, 'tis like ole times in Bradley, Dough dey wouldn't let me through. -E. N. M. '09 164 F H Our Question Corner The purpose of this section is to answer knotty questions which our readers are unable to solve. The following are some which we have recently received : DEAR EDITOR-HI am very much in love with a young man, but there is one thing which mars my happiness. I am afraid to sit in the dark. -TOOTSIE. DEAR TOOTSIE-H Do not let that bother you, for I can as- sure you that a young man always feels for a pretty girl who is afraid in the dark. DEAR EDITOR-HI wish to enter college. How would you advise me to do it? -A SHARK. DEAR SHARKIE-H The best way to enter college is thru the front door. DEAR EDITOR- I intend to enter Bradley next year. What studies would you advise taking? -INQUIRER. DEAR INQUIRER-uTake any old studies except Dutch. DEAR EDITOR-H How is condensed milk made? --C. H. E. DEAR C. H. E.- A large number of cows are crowded into a small pasture and made to remain there several hours. On being milked they yield condensed milk. DEAR EDITOR-is Kindly define the following technical terms for me: Dead center, transformer and dead beat meter. -ENGINEER. DEAR ENGINEER-UA dead center is a deceased canine. There are many types of transformers on the market, the most im- portant of which are manufactured by the Warner Rust Proof Co. A dead beat meter is a meter that won't pay its debts. DEAR EDITOR-H How are cream puffs made? -'lVlUSTARD. DEAR MUSTARD-i'To make cream puffs you first procure a quart of milk ffresh cow's milk preferredf, and add thereto a chunk of butter about the size of a brickbat. Mix thoroly and flavor with essence of prunejuice. Add plaster of paris gradually un- til the cream reaches the desired consistency. Now roll the cream into balls of about six-inch diameter, lay on a board and set in the sun to dry. These constitute the heart of the cream puffs. Next you must make the skins. To make these skins mix a thin paste of flour and linseed oil. Apply to the creams with a brush. Bake to crispness. When baked apply a thin coat of shellac and the cream puffs are ready for serving. DEAR EDITOR- Who is the most handsome professor at Bradley F -M ISS CATCHEM. DEAR MISS CATCHEM-'iLMf. Raymond is the handsomest man at Bradley, but he is married. DEAR EDITOR- I am contemplating matrimony. Is married life one happy dream? We have received a great many queries similar to the above. Now we feel that we are not quite in a position to permit us to pub- lish that which means so much to the future happiness of our read- ers. Therefore after much brain exertion we hit upon this happy solution of the stupendous question. Our plan was this : We would send a reporter to interview some of the members of our enlightened faculty whom we thought would know more about it than we. Here are the results of our endeavors. Read them for yourselves and act accordingly. MISS REED- Ach es muss so schoen sein. MR. EVANS-H Well, this is a question that requires the deep- est pondering. Neow, deown in old Kaintuck among the beautiful meountains, where all is quiet and peaceful and the eagle soars high among the azure depthv- fThe reporter couldn't stand any more., DR. BISHOP-H Well now, down in Bostoni But every one has heard that before. MR. BIKLE-H It certainly must be one happy pipe dream. MR. RAYMOND-- Aw, get our. DR. WYCKOFF-H Existing in the soaring realms of the ideal- istic heavenly bliss with one's wagon fixed to yon star, twinkling far beyond the reach of mortal man, we should look back along the paths of history to those ancient times among the Chaldeans and Phoenecians-- fHere the ambulance came and bore the reporter away., MR. VAN DEUSEN-MI refuse to answer. MR. COMSTOCK- That is a-very important matter-would like to-answer it-got a class-see you later. The reporter was out of breath trying to keep up with the stren- uous prof. and gave up the chase. DR. ASHMAN- I cannot formulate an answer off-hand, butI think that according to the latest molecular theory the concentration of the bliss would vary inversely as the square of the time. DR. PACKARD-- All people are not innoculated with the same species of bacteria. MISS DUNCAN--N It looks good to me. You must take this statement on its face value, as Miss Duncan refuses to elucidate. DEAR EDITOR-H Where can I find information on pipe stretchers ? -FRITZE. DEAR FRITZE-NFO1' information on pipe stretchers see the librarians. They have had a great deal of practice looking up pipe stretchers lately. DEAR EDITOR-is How do you catch rats? -RUBY. DEAR RUBY- The girls at Bradley catch them in nets. For further information see Mr. B. He has Annette. DEAR EDITOR-UI have been bothered a great deal by ma- laria. Can you suggest a good remedy? -PATIENT. DEAR PATIENT-K' We have tried a great many remedies for the malaria and find the following most beneficial. Take a grain of quinine and add thereto a .quart of whiskey. Take a glass full every thirty minutes until you feel the effects of the quininef' DEAR EDITOR-HI have been disappointed in love and don't care what happens to me. What shall I do F -HOPELESS. DEAR HOPELESS-6' Take Peruna. DEAR EDITOR- What makes a good chaser for a man to use after a strong drink? -ADAM STEW. DEAR STEW-- Anything but your wife. DEAR EDITOR-UI am studying at Bradley and the faculty have compelled me to study Chemistry. I wish you would tell me what sense there is to studying Chemistry and why they make me take it. -GIRLY. DEAR GIRLY-i'The principal aim of the faculty in making you take Chemistry is that you may learn to eat spaghetti with a monkey wrench. DEAR EDITOR-uWhat is your conception of Paradise? -DREAMER. DEAR DREAMER-uAl Fresco. DEAR EDITOR- I wish to do some very brave and reckless deed that I may become famous at Bradley. -AJAX. DEAR AJAX-N Go to the machine shop and ask for some waste. DEAR EDITOR-uAre wives and husbands parted in heaven ? -FRAULEIN. DEAR FRAULEIN-H No, nor united either. So you had better get busy if you don't want to be alone for seventeen million years. The Kings Magician and the Prince There was once a king who had a beautiful daughter. She was was in love with a prince by the name of Conflagatus. The king had said that he would never let his daughter marry, but to have some reason to give to his people he hit upon the following plan. He would make a list of trials that each suitor would have to go through. l-le had at his court a very wise and learned prophet who boasted that he knew everything and that when he found the question he could not answer he would kill himself. As the last condition on his list the king demanded that the magician be asked some question he could not answer, for his highness thought it was impossible. A great many young noblemen tried but gave up before the trials were half completed. After a long time two princes came to the palace. One of them was Conflagatus and other a foreign prince. They had fulfilled all the condition except that of interviewing the prophet. The foreigner was ushered into the magician's presence first and he asked, Why does anybody know everything? The old man smiled and said, Easy my son, very easy. It's this way. Everyone knows what he knows. To know what he knows he would have to know what he doesn't know. If a person knows what he knows and knows what he doesn't know he knows every- thing. Are you answered? The prince hung his head, left the room and Conflagatus came in. Well sir, what can I tell you? The magician chuckled as he watched every move the young man made. Tell me, he said calmly, How old was Ann? At last! gasped the wise man as he staggered against a pillow. Then putting his hand in his bosom he drew forth a sample package of Eata-buncha- Shavingsf' the new breakfast food, gulped down the contents, and died on the spot. Conflagratus married the king's daughter and they lived happily ever afterwards.-CUSHING '08. Revenge A young married man of rather fragile character came home one evening and stealing into the house so as not to let his wife hear him, found her enjoying the company of another man. The husband became desperate but did not know exactly what to do to avenge himself. He crept out of the house, however, as quietly as he had come and retired to a buffet. There he walked up to the bar and said: Bartender, I don't care what becomes of me, and then after a pause, Give me a lemonade. Drinking this the despondent man sat down in one of the chairs which the proprietor of the buffet kept in the establishment for his tired patrons to rest in. He thought he would end it all, for what was life now that his wife was untrue to him. Finally he walked up to the bar again. . Barkeeper, he nervously repeated, I don't care what happens to me. Give me another lemonade. - He decided to drown himself, but when he reached the river the cold aspect of the water changed his courage into fear, so he returned to the buffet once more. Walking up to the bar, he exclaimed, Bartender, I don't care how intoxicated I get to-night. Give me another drink. The dispenser of liquid courage looking at him with a sneer, asked, Say man, you must have something on your mind. What is the matter with you? P The despondent husband looked at him with a startled expression on his face and answered, Well, I'll tell you. When I came home to my apartments this evening I found my wife sitting in the room with another gentleman. This has so discouraged me that I am going to end everything to-night. I don't care what happens. Give me something strong. Give me a Coca Cola. After he had finished drinking, he left the buffet and hastened home, determined to have vengeance. How he should revenge himself was still a mystery to him. He sneaked into the house and was in the room where his wife was entertaining her company before either of them was aware of his presence. He looked at them, his face white with anger or fear, no one could tell which, and then with a malignant grin, ran to the corner where the visitor's coat and umbrella hung. Grasping the umbrella firmly with both hands, he broke it over his knee. With a smile of satisfaction, he turned to the visitor and exclaimed, Now, I hope it rains. C. P. '09. i 'li' .ini 'aw-. f f i l f f , f f id e l- xgms r . .-..i. SOME POPULAR PLAYS ILLUSTRATED 'PHL URM? 'W' - 'H2 f1E'7 'L'MM K 'H fn., sw M -A - - ,, M 2 U N DEA .4 ff nr OFF. A n . ? dt N1 ll,,J ,Lf L, My-f+f7u ' 'Vi F .- N fffmfk gf , 3 vi . , h MN glw fi-gm If A, 5 XJTW i , X 'I ,iffy I fl M J L Y wif ' MW 5' L ...I ' xij-.-- ' W Z 1 ' 1 ',-. 3 N f i kk:-. Q , , I f 'f- XAX f 1 S -157' ft ,fl ' X' 'all ' V ' K X A .. A22 41 A ' 'ma T H Rae. fwrv-es -1-1 , E' g, Wstnhf f L , Y n 1 . - ...... - , 511, ,, 11 ,- V L .xi My X ' N X WMVzf,f4W1z'ZZf Q LJ f L w k ,L xv xx X f I Am 1- M ' , ff iw MW f fi . X vu ,X I ' 1 1 1' vu ,gk lx , IIUSUF :f W X 1, Fx Y' if IW 2. 'N V W' x' ' . W. A. fr 5 Cz. W . . .nfffa ,, .. ml ' I , f - L, A I fr, f4c'fg':'f, !,l' 1 6 1674 lil AA X , , ' ,v-Iflf . !!.!! 1- I, , , 1,, f ' , . 1' ',fl!' ,YIl,.-- ,,1' L. Q ,I V ' ,f . 7 X W 'Y K, .4 1 4 . M, gf . 1' 7 A Ugg Z ,W gicgfivix XX -53, A L erm an L ow 5 P' ' Y H 29ifE:1e?:?'!Q9i ' N 170 1 5 1 to 1 .19 DECENBER08 l909APRII.,1909. I s M i sg 5 Z s u-,ny .Y cc, S M 1' iw iv- S s n 'QQ' 3 'I fa 0 11 .2 is 4 5 f 1 S 9 1 ' 5555- ':3'3i 1 to 14 I5 iQ 'X ll 12 15 . ,vi w if M M M N is- ?:':-iii!! i': N M 26 Z4 mizrswz ... 25 26.37 28 29 so September Sept. 21. About a million students register. Sept. 24. Baumy can't make u hi ' d p s min whether to take Greek or Steam Engineering. Sept. 22. We're at it again. The Tech stall: gets busy and the Techlett appears. Sept. 25. The Sigmas and Omicrons Dance at lvy Club. Sept. 23. It is discovered that everyone above the third year has Sept. 26. Lambda Phis give a reception at Una Garret's home for entered a Chemistry class. 171 new girl students. Il- ,,-- Oct Oct Oct. Oct. Oct Oct Oct Oct Oct Oct October ,, X 'T 1 -. sit-Q Oct. 20. Tech appears. Wow! Hit 'em again. Y in-g-1 Y Oct. 22. Parents' Meeting. SqN,-,,h,...,- ' X1 'Wi T- N..,-- -- 1 T pdq fx A ' Lu... I O M 'MQW-qv CQ-vlzgfj IOURIW ff' X gl X-Zx . N 1- -ff 'P KIKH Ml I If-,QB K , -N cr gitajtp., fin' ..-g,,, .4Lgg5,i1' a GQ- fa .. . .Q T?EtC'i4-TJ F' -'J 5-I-- T-. 1' ' , f C ' Q env Y A ' f , f J fr - - ga-51 4 ,ff ,f 1 . -2? Hudson 'Q 9 1 I ,. X I f - Mr. Comstock tells the calculus class a new way to lj ' V X 'fi idlfll Q perform manual labor. XM X? - g x -s iv. Annual reception for new students. i 13:71 X X71 X We beat Galesburg High 15 to 4. Lambda Phis have a spread. Annual Founder's Day exercises. We clean up Hedding 45 to 0. Sigmas give farewell dinner for Bob Nowland. Roy Carson entertains Pis at his home. We lay it onto Spalding, 38 to 4. We are entertained by the Fiske University Quartette. ff fee t? an L 4 Oct. 24. We all go to Wesleyan to see our boys beat Wesleyan X 16 to 1. Cush and Hud sell special round trip tickets to everyone going. The Sigma Tau Betas gave a banquet in the evening. The rest of the bunch celebrate in a different way: Finally we all get home. The Lambda Phis take a hay rack ride to Mossville. Had Lynch happens to be in Peoria and goes along. Oct. 30. Oct. 31. Illinois Normal lays it on us, 24 to 10. 172 9 f Ai November Nov. 14. Charleston wallops us to the tune of 26 to 0. Nov. 7. The annual college doin's lfxcf fl Q are given. 6 X 7451 3' X Nov. 9. Lambda Phis have rughouse Nov. 20. MrQriCie-Jrig gives exhibition of drawings made on his , Y - . , p u op . y - at Louise DeLent s. ii' N 11 W ' ' K if . f xv' OV- ' hfi get lt again' 18 nox Nov. 21. We lay one on ' All T H-'Jw' 09- t ls time' to ' Illinois Wesleyan Nov.13. Lambda Piiis hold an initiation. Hon. Clark E. Cari and Celebrate with f gg. f lectures on Lincoln-Douglas debates. The engineer- the fo 0 t b a ll J f ing boys call on the Pedagoges and wash their dishes b 'Im'v1!u' with the kerosene rags. anquet' ,Q .1 .- . , , th ' . i 1 e A - 2 1 - - -1: 4 2 'fig' hi llftf ' V il Once 'lhere wasalilfle boy. 'l - .. Q ,ilk I' V Tilgfqj -E I I Hvdwv US. QC' Q I 1-. i. ' Nov. 26. Omicrons have an initiation and spread. . 'Tre-.- : . . ', I :qu K e- pg Qt Thanksgiving holidays begin. 'GH 4' 5.5 5 V .A U ' Q L W .i5gQf55?If 'Q5iggl Nov. 27. The Alpha Pi boys give Thanksgiving dance f ' - - i f'Y ' ' Www iiiiii 1 ffq -N 'W ' 11355 at Glen Oak. J l , .,.. -. X X 'iffli f yi.. ' f X g i X x X . ,, I I 'PFW N X -I X h l f S - lf fl , C7-WN 9 X Nov. 29. Another Tech is forced on the public. . rf 3, X 1 ff X f ' N 'xr 173 1 December x Dec. 3. The basket ball team tries out on the Clippers and are Dec. 8. We beat Eureka g 1 , defeated 47 to 23. 48 YO 27. X R 5 0 bib Dec. 4. Miss McLaughlin lectures on The Negro as a Dec' 11' Mr'BennettlealieS f flrix K! . . . ,, for Europe. Miss fr , Y x 7 5 Character in Fiction. Duncan lectures on H 4, X ,f X I Dec. 5. Seniors enter- Ireland. , Z fix j p 1 tain Juniors. D t 13. Th . I h X , J l -x l Q T, Who smped ec wedciniir Swliliedifiiqieix. C .73 Qc' I I- bp' ,Zh the Charlotte Bobby buy a pair of Q yyebst . r l iugiffh i russe? new pants? 4 P fl ff? 'T if ,.-a i I Dec. 15. More knocks heard. Tech out again. - g.:...::- f - bvi!.'L1-I X lil 'A' A'iif231?'J I N N Dec. 18. Autumn quarter ends. hfl I - Q l W , , Dec. 19. Y. M. C. A. f f . f 1 8' 1. N W' carnival. Did nl' i X x 1 t ' . f l 'SQ you g0tOhl?.?11 , 5 1 gllffr-.fgrfmg , ' 1 and Heaven. .1 X , I , fifw, MASQ Dec Lamba . -- 4 1 't t t ,- , - Q , ef, ,,i llltt, it X tl 9 w:.:.iJ.C.:.f jf i ! I i KA 1 Q 4 During vacation . i . ' 1 J we, are resting ff K 42 1. 4544- T up l for the new 'up . X X A V ik ca year. l Q X - 1 - ty' Dec. 25. The prettiest dance ever given by the Pis, at 1 if C 1 'T' 1 ' Club y , V. 1 ip - Women s . K X og. Dec. 7. Baumy fires the boiler in ice Dec. 29. C2:r?itf,ron's annual luncheon at the Creve Couer -Wwe jmftilg .for Elaf-knee: cream trousers and tan u ' oxfords. Dec. 31. Jolly seven entertained by Amy Keithley. Zmd awful rrrcfo fi:-I1 le: I ,lan ,lan plan. Jan. ,lan ,lan Jan. n . January 1. Omicrons dance at Glen Oak. 4. We're at it again. 5. Bobby can't get used to sticking around. 8. William and Vashti beat us 22 to 16. Lecture course begins. i 10. The Sigmas have a football picture taken and hold a mock election for captain. 11. Miss Baughman plays the organ in chapel. Who jimmed the stops? A SK - V' X zfw W w r l x bf N ' rs. tsvgfgfi ll f- X It im -N f A ' W--! l ' A sb ' if ii .i Libs , gf4D, Q 1. - e 13- fiq? , 1 Q K XJ.-cb-' 0 ?':'4-f'Qfei ?- 6 Xl 4 ' 'glziijr 2 .ff W' 4 TLYWRQX-X-f f i X Zxifi- ? , ,N ffurfaafv 59 12. Miss Duncan tells her fish story. Ja Q1 an. 15. Fritze scrubs Butch's anvil. One of the most thoroly enjoyable jollifications of the J !ll'l3Fq,iT i U. Q. of A. at their rooms. sg, f--. .55 GWR ! ' V Jan. 18. Evans and Ashman slumber if K 'A A peacefully in chapel. 3.11. 3.l'l. an. Jan. Il. 'x X X l ' - fig'- UB H1 Jan. 20. We wollop Milliken. 22. Second lecture in course. 23. We play Normal in Dress suits JW, and consequently are beaten. Sigmas have dinner at Creve Couer Club. f 26. The Freshmen change the stand- il ard projectile from the hymn it book to the bean. ' 28. Seniors and Juniors do some flag pole stunts. 29. Hedding beats us, 27 to 26. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb. Feb 5. 12. 13. 18. 19. 23. 26 28 February We beat Lincoln College. Third lecture in the lecture course. We beat Milliken 50 to 36. The Lambda Phis give a Valentine party at Miss Boniface's home. The German play is given. The fourth lecture is given. Mr. Ashman flecturing in chapell Your'e all more or less familiar with the cradle. We lay one on Peoria High, and celebrate afterward. Cush gets his pants back and everyone has his watch the next day. Bishop dreams the score. The Omicrons gave their annual play in fine style. 176 March Mar. 2. Omicrons give spread and farewell shower for Bess Estep. Mar. 4. We are beaten by Illinois College, 35 to 33. Mar. 5. Another Pi stunt under the butcher shop. Dutch Strehlow takes the standing broad grin. The fifth lecture is given, Modern Scottish I-Iumoristsf' Mar. 6. A new Ph. D. arrives in the Physics Dept. 1 I Hurrah for little f -' Lord Kelvin. L reg- - -.. - Once more the ' ., -'-,I -fi l blasergaent gets X I-liilplll ffl? a ea of the attic. if ,FHA BB. fr Mar. 8. The biggest man in Peoria returns from Chicago. Mar. 10. Miss Reed- Mr, Cushing, you're a Senior but you act like a Freshman. Mar. 12. Phi Lambda Xis give a dance at Bradley Park. Mar. 14. We get it again from Illinois College. Mar. 17. Mr. Comstock makes out a list of schedules by follow- ing which the calculus class can graduate. Lindy balks on his because it doesnlt allow any time for shaving or taking a bath. But then Lindy always did have funny notions. Mar. 18. Miss Paul, reciting in Physics, The sound is propor- tional to the pressure of the bow. Mar. 19. Last lecture in course is given. Mar. 21. We get another Tech. April 1. All the chocolate creams have a very queer taste to-day. April 5. About 700 Seniors came around after the lecture in the evening to paint the Gym roof but oh how it rained. April 6. Designers from the 'Mg' bf' Hall get busy on the 0 Gym roof. 2 LN ' 5' ' ' April 9. Bradley-Eureka debate 4 The pajama Mara- thon is pulled off. Horologs also get some paint and decorate on their 4 A' t yp? ex T X lillf T ' ' 'V 'QW-.T e . 'ixl-EQQQT 1 ep A ki 'fc I vi- '-. Q x hy! XG 15 Q.. own account. April 10. Normal hangs one on us. April 12. Mr. Comstock sizes up the Calc class and then starts reading a pamphlet on Thru Hell Gate. April April 16 April 17. April 20 April 22. April 23 April 24. April 28 April 29 April 30 178 a 4 . . T Goliath is presented if 'Mgr as our '09 athletic Ze 'L Q benefit. Wasn't - ff L - ' Y 'I 1 3, . ' I1 4 ' that a line scrap. 4 VZ if x 35,1 f -QQ! A-vi 11 ,RL V' ,Hx SLT X A . pi f.. The rain keeps us 45 . f ,7 -Q 1 4 . . Q .age K from licking ,X 5 - 1 1' xx Knox. Oh you 'T-B gf1: i 0' it '. - -1 Seeley. AJ gg XM :fx X .. fx f W-If ua- X N I gf Normal hangs another one on us. Rain robs us of another victory. Lindy loses his watch and is touched for his stick pin in a slow town. We wollop Wesleyan 11 to 0. Bradley gives its best Interscholastic meet. Good work Mason. Interdivision Meet starts. Knocked again. The Tech is out. Alpha Pi picnic dance a Bradley Park. -- May 1. Snow storm knocks us out of another victory. May 5. We clean up Lombard in the ninth. Conway and May 6. May 8. May 12 May 15 May 19 May 20. Heinie live high for a week. Pair trees begin to look promising. Rain kills the Bradley-Wesleyan meet. We clean Wesleyan again, 13 to 0. P. H. S. again falls before B. P. l, 17 to 1. We take another dose of Tech. The boys start on a short ball trip and are beaten by Knox. Howard goes without his suit, leaves his shoes on the train and keeps the hotel waiters busy translating the French on his bill of fair. Lindy keeps his jewelry this time. May 21 May 22 May 24 May 25 May 28. May 29. We beat Hedding 12 to 4. Donley calmly explains to a crowd of awe inspired Heddingites that he puts the shot 48 feet for Bradley. We clean Lombard again. Great game. Bradley 8, Knox 7. Good work, jake. The Physics Department has another bunch of new arrivals. Maltese, Five of ,em. Polyscope day but no Polyscopes. The Second Annual Intercollegiate meet. We are already in press but we know that it will be a great success. The calendar is in press now and we wont attempt to prophesy any this year. E WISH to extend our sincere thanks to the staff and all others who have helped us to make this POLYSCOPE. For contributions in art we are indebted to Lionel Boniface, Edward Anderson and Ellain Jack, and for contributions in literature to Vivian Boniface, Edward Cushing, Asa Brown, Lionel Boniface, Carl Pfefiinger, Gordon Keller, Augusto Hidalgo and Harry Klotz. We have done our best to make this POLYSCOPE one of which Bradley might be proud. If we have in any degree succeeded let your appreciation he our reward. We wish all success to the '10 POLYSCOPE. P. S. We are going to study our Calculus now. We need the credits. 180 Readers of the Polyscope NOTICE Ill This year's Polyscope cost the manager two dollars per copy. You bought it for one dollar. We are enabled to do this thru our advertisers. Now it's up to you to justify their support by patronizing them and telling them about it. '51 'bf' 5'- Bradley Polytechnic Institute I . School of Arts and Sciences Six year course: Academy and two years of College. Work is offered in: Science, Mathematics, Language, Litera- ture, I Iistory, Engineering, Mechanic Arts, Household Economy. Graduates who wish to go further can enter the third year in good colleges and engineering schools. MANUAL TRAINING FOR BOYS. DOMESTIC ECONOMY FOR GIRLS. NORMAL COURSES FOR THOSE WHO WISH TO BECOME TEACHERS OF MANUAL TRAINING OR DOMESTIC ECONOMY. 2. The I-IoroIogicaI Department A school for practical instruction in Watch-making and allied trades. Departments: Filing and Tuming, Watch- work, Finishing and Repairing, Engraving, Jewelry, Optics, Instruction at the Bench, supplemented by Class Work and Lectures. I WATCHMAKERS AND JEWELERS IN NEED OF COMPETENT ASSISTANTS ARE INVITED TO CORRESPOND WITH THE HOROLOGICAL SCHOOL. -- -A -FOR CATALOGUE AND FURTHER INFORMATION, ADDRESS . as as A THEODORE C. BURGESS, Director Bradley Polytechnic Institute, PEORIA, ILLINOIS , THE UP-TO-DATE STYLES AND BETTER QUALITY OF JEWELRY AND SILVERWARE IN LARGE VARIETY, FOR A REASONABLE PRICE The Crawford Jewelry Store 305 MAIN STREET :: :: PEORIA, ILLINOIS SI-I O ES! VVI-IOSE? TI-IlEl.BAIQ'S OF COURSE 121 S. ADAMS STREET ORDER YOUR FLOWERS AND FLORAL DESIGNS Geo. A. Kuhl jflorist -. i 435 MAIN STREET WE GROW ALL THE STOCK WE SELL MIXING IT UP THAT IS OUR BUSINESS Elie BRADLEY AVE. PHARMACY wM. v. Durnsn. PH. G. Col, BRADLEY AVE. AND UNIVERSITY STRICT THREE PER CENT INTEREST ON TIME DEPOSITS Start a checking or savings account with the Merchants National Bank of Peoria A designated depository of the United States Government, with resources more than two and a half million dollars. Your banking business, be it much or little, appreciated a d given courteous treatment. CORNER MAIN AND WASHINGTON STREETS i Dressed ,Cy -, Dunlap Hats in the best i clothes when fo tg bought of A Q , 5' Q ,A E ll?-2' , 1 - 31.5 Mm 52 Hzopmfu. r WW -QQ U , ' iw 6, PIANOS THE HILTON MODEL PIANOS CHICKERING, S500 to 51,000 Made in the East, for this house only, by Kohler 8: Campbell, S265 to S350 BALDWIN S500 to 51 000 BALDWIN 84 CO., Cincinnati KOHLER sr CAMPBELL, New York ELLINGTON S300 to 5500 ' ' GOETZMAN sr co., New York ' EMERSON, S325 to S400 S250 and up HAMILTON, S300 to 5400 Edison Phonoaraphs. Sl2.50 to S100 Victor Talking Machines. S10 to S200 Fischer Player Pianos In writing our music section we find that we have made two dreadful errors. We did not give the dog house quartette a write- up nor mention the fact that Fritze sings in a choir. For these thotless blunders we crave your pardon. 5 EAT the Best DRINK the Best RICHELIEU RICHELIEU or PURE FOOD CHASE 6: SANBORN TEA and COFFEE EVERYTHING EATABLE OF THE HIGHEST GRADE A SOLD BY A RICHELIEU CREAM CHOCOLATES 439 MATN STREET at 6Oc. per pound are as good as any 2 in the market at a ny p ri c e PEORIA, ILL. 6 if , C. LOVEFQIDGE jflorist Choice Cut Flowers and Floral Designs a Specialty STORE, 402 MAIN STREET Both Phones Main 209 Peoria, Illinois FRED VAN ALVVICK l Popular Price Tailor 209 SOUTH ADAMS STREET Phone Main IZ96 Peoria, Illinois D. I-I. TFQIIDID 84 SON Headquarters for Kodalcs, Photo Supplies and High Grade Quality in Developing and Finishing I Peoria, Ilin 206 MAIN ST. ois J A C Q LJ I N EVERYTHING A N D IN THE LINE OF DRAWING INSTRUMENTS, C O PAPER, INKS, Etc. O KNOW that Everything you buy is good -not passably good, but thoroughly good, is the sum total of shopping satisfaction. It is particularly gratifying for us to say every article of apparel We sell for an, Woman, Boy or Girl is conceded, by people who know to possess the highest ideas of fashion, perfect tailoring, individu- ality and greater assortments. In all+QuaIity at a moderate price. The Largest Qutliitters in Central s Illinois ffydfff ,fs ist ,, 'gi ,333 A fsirg Q-'.. .fi ,- L -' Ir' .11 'ffLs4Q?fPw, - 5-L fwfr . 'rs is 11-17 2 1: ri '- - f: -,, -5.-rfsr-iv 5 .Q ,I - 1 rl:-2 2 I ,J 55425,-?' ,g A95 ?.g.v'5'-:iid 'A Q aim f M AI N ST- The Largest Bplcgggofgalore in Central YADAMS' NEW AND MODERN PLENTY OF CLEAN EVERYTHING WeWis ' I,'?S1'.Z.'l i,.Li'.LZ.Zg'2' i i 'i L I N E N CLARK .THE BARBER ONLY THREE BLOCKS FROM SCHOOL .0 CORNER UNIVERSITY AND MAIN STS. TELEPHONE 1916 Rvwcliffei The DruggiSf 3uIius Levin, 'Ciba Gailor Keeps line Candies, Perfumes and Druggist Sundries Fine Box Papers, Tablets, Stationery, etc. M A K E R O F 33' S' A DAM S ST' lbtgb GIH55 CBCIITICUICWS CBHYUICIITS Sub Postal Station NO. 7 A-r PQPULAR pplcgs PEQRIA ILL TRIEBEL 8: SONS 'D ECMA PRINTING AN I3 STATIONERY Co. Monuments Headstones IVIausoIeums Commercial and socaeiy Prlnters H n Largest Selections Best Materials Oflice Stahonefl' Wedding Invltahons Newest Designs Lowest Prices Announcements, Programs, Etc. 112-114 N. ADAMS ST., opp. Court House, PEORIA, ILLINOIS Both Phones 406 404 S. ADAMS ST. First Class Work BGLJRLAND :EL BAILEY FARM MORTGAGE AND BOND INVESTMENTS PEORIA. ILLINOIS ' 'ir' ' ' For YOl,lI'l g Men U n in e W FOI' Young Women t It is only recently that we have enlarged our lVlen's Depart- ment. The stocks are greater, the qualities better, the prices more favorable for economical shopping. The same goods that are found in high class haberdasheries are here for much less than you are used to paying. For linen, neckwear, and the little classy Wearables, shop here. As always, the Bergner Store holds the very best in things for young women. Inquire of your class matesg they will say, I always go to Bergner's because the selections are greater and the prices are more moderate. ln addition to all the absolute necessities we have a wonderful display of Wearables that give the desired finishing touches. POSTERS OF COLLEGE LIFE Ill Portraying the athletic sports and social doings in college life, posters that will give life and attractiveness to a collegian's room, can be purchased from the largest picture and picture framing store in the city---here. ill For rugs, carpets, furniture, anything to make your room look cozy and com- 0 l:FUQiNlTL!BEj ' -1 fortable, come here. y HSTQGK VERY PALMER Emacs!-arc Co. Electrical Contractors Estimates furnished on Agents for Standard Vacuum Cleaner Electric fixtures, supplies all kinds of wiring TELEPHONE WORK A SPECIALTY and general repalnng WHEN IN NEED OF GOOD VVORK CALL. ON Us OFFICE, BOTH PHONES 2175 RESIDENCE PHONE 5154 John G. Streibich 301 to 305 S. WASHINGTON ST. GENERAL AGENT FOR Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co. I: ire and Burglar Proof Safes and Vaults Always have a large assortment in stock to select from. MY PRICES ARE RIGHT. A A TRAIN LOAD OF TOBACCO. Twenty-four Cal-loads Purchased for Lewls' Slngle Binder Cigar Factory. What is probably the biggest lot of all fancy grade tobacco held by any factory in the United States has just been purchased by Frank P. Lewis, of Peoria, for the manufacture of Lewis' S'lB'd Ci .Th lt 'll mge in er gars e o wi make twenty-four carloads, and is se- lected from what is considered by ex- perts to be the finest crop raised in rnanyayears. The purchase of tobacco is su cient to last the factory more than two years. An extra price was pzid for the selection. Smokers of wis' Single Binder Cigars will appre- ciate this tobacco. -Peoria Star, january 16, I909, PAY YOUR TECH SUBSCRIP TIONS stnnrusfnnrn at cn. The Qwggch an C . Polyscope Quality Stores are the ----' Wai. l Q! Qur careful atten- tion to all orders, large and small, is a good advantage in buying here. We've built up as good a reputation for fair dealing as We have for cleanliness. That's just another reason. 417 South Adams 518 FD. 520 Fulton PHONES 3351 The Beehive Press 'Nough Said ' P. S.-The Tech has been on ti ry ' 3ames 1burtabIe,ZEaiIor anb Draper Thanks you for past favors and respectfully invites you to call and examine the 1Flew jfabrics for Spring anb 5ummer 1909 MORSE'S CANDIES FINE PERFUMES SCHOOL SUPPLIES Only the best of FRUITS, SYRUPS, CTHE OLD RELIABLEJ The First National Bank You will meet thveulggslgrggyeilltielssirivizzirzign and domestic ICE SITEAM of AT OUR FOUNTAIN . CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, S800,000.00 we L. D' tl' F U R R Issues pass boolcs in Savings Depart- Style Originators Quality Pioneers Pfg5SSgLE?N men' d w 'g M 'ntemst' A STY1-EQUALITY The Bradley Polytechnic lnstitute is a TH DURABILITY Corner Main and Elizabeth Sts. ?FEllf:idZ:n,::eg::3 thgliisgaizugt 207 S. Adams Street Mgr., R. B. Roberts Peoria' m' invited' Established I850 lncorporafecl IBS4 VV. E. ELSTON TAILOI? 226 MAIN ST. PEORIA, ILL. The Uplands Hardware Store 2l26 Main Street Rudolph Strehlow, Prop. Roller Slcates..Builder's l'lardware..Slate and Tin Roofing Lenox Steel Fumaces and General Repairing ' CALL US Both Phones 600 Both Telephones Main 68 Kinsey 8: Mahler Co. Manufacturers and Jobbers of lron Pipe and Fittings, Plumbefs lVlaterials,Steamand Gas Fitters' Supplies, Etc. Copper and Brass Work Ollice and Factory: Comer Adams and Harrison Streets Warehouse: 209-2ll S. Water Street, Peoria, lllinois Koppis Bakery FOR KOPP'S SPECIAL BREAD AND CAKES 504 S. University Street Peoria, Illinois PEERLESS PANTITORIUIVI 403 Main St., Cor. S. Jefferson BEST SERVICE FOR STEAM OR DRY CLEANING, REPAIRING AND PRESSING OF LADIES' AND GENTLEMEN 'S GARM ENTS PLUMMER 61 CO. STAPLE AND FANCY C.ROCER1Es BOTH PHONES 210 Both Phones 3808 2120 MAIN ST. DRINKBOTTI-ED HEIDELBERG CAFE LUNCHEON 11:30 10 1:30 . . 250. DINNER 5:30 to 7:30 . . 35c. SHORT ORDERS THE MOST REFRESHINC. DRINK D- FAUSER- Pfov- at 8 hom IN AMERICA s1s MAIN STREET PEORIA, ILLINOIS .1555 KX WYNDGQCO. .JAIVIES E. DLJRKIN 1' . . D F2 LJ G G I S T ff M ?Bplenl:lq, fsplsiclals 501 MAIN STREET COR. MADISON AVE. .o m lArEuiran1ee3llJ2?en1l.Izaehe:?lheP52400 Guth's Fine Chocolates and Bon Bons A. D. Foss Co. Fine Chocolates l Wynd's Special for Ladies BEST ICE CREAM AND PHOSPHATES XJ? L Palent,Tan, and Gun Metal: thePr.S3.50 The QUALITY, STYLE, and REASONABLE PRICES on these two Specials make them Universal Favorites. TRY A PAIR. The Reliable Shoe House JUHN C. WYND 81. 00. 206 S. ADAMS ST. Wwlner Building Q My E iiwffj W if . - W fir n fx 31 'ck , ,A GI X j ,1 6,'g'f',ffi,x , f f l .....,, ,Q I . ' 5 5 . X 'XXX 4 'i:'1Iff:'.-ll' I I X, K' ,A H i,if12.,1'i'llN Y' I .1 X ,.. ,,j!,1IIlfgQx I ,' 'I ,N mix ' I1 ll ' WALK-QVER SHOES THE SIGN OF QUALITY FOR lVlEN AND VVCDIVIEN WALK-OVER SHOE STORE S.ADAlLloS7STREET SchipperSBl0ck F. B. BRADLEY 51 SCN Make Good Clothes l24 S. jefferson Ave. Pe Ilh JE. jf. Zagelmexger THE TECH PHARMACY THE BIG WHITE STORE MSM 5 P lu, 14 Residence Phone Main 3572 Ofhce Phone Main 3877 WALTER WYATT, M. D. PRACTICE LIMITED TO DISEASES OF EYES AND FITTING GLASSES I02 South Adams Street Over CIarIce 6: Company Residence, 2I8 Fredonia Ave. Phone, 3544 Old Ofhce Phones: II77 Old, 405 New DR. M. T. EASTON PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON OFFICE HOURS: I0:30 A. M. to I2:30 P. M. 2Io5: 7Io8P.M. Sundays: I0 Io I2 A. M. 432 MAIN STREET PEORIA. ILL. DR. CHAS. BROBST EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT OFFICE HOURS: 910 II A. M. RESIDENCE, 415 BARKER AVE. 2to4 P. NI., 7 to9P. M. DR. J. F. COOPER SURGEON omee Phone Main 702 Reesdenee Phone Main 994 ,9,ff,f,LCnEi,?IZ4'Y'A'N STREET OBSERVATORY BLDG. PEORIA. ILLINOIS Bean Phones at oaaee and Residence PEORIA. lu.. PHONES: OFFICE, MAIN 738 LADY IN ATTENDANCE RESIDENCE, MAIN 4406 DR. EDGAR Q. THAWLEY OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN 334 WOOLNER BUILDING Resume c .419 N. Moreno S PEORIA,lLL.INOIS Dr. Howard IVI. Sedgwick NERVOUS DISEASES MENTAL DISEASES HOURS: IO- IZ: 2-4 34 I Wwlner Building DR. J. D. NICOL DENTIST PHONES OIIIce 867g Residence 2I08 OFFICE P 5082 DR OFFICE HOURS: IO 1012 2'ro4ANo7'roB P.M. Rss., 406 GLEN OAo4 Ava. so rs-cones woo . E. L. DAVIS 123 SOUTH ADAMS ST. oven o'rT:nHzlMr:n's A.M. PEORIA, ILL.. The Home of J. sci-IRADZKI oLoT1-11No co. Hart, Schaffner and IMMX ZI7-219 south Adams street C L O TI-IES Good Clothes for lVlen and Boys NCQYQIENG W. P. Walker Co., Makers of Men's Cloth HOTCHKISS 84 HARRIS ARCHITECTS HERALD-TRANSCRIPT BLDG. V PEORIA, ILLINOIS J ames MacAda.ms S Co. 213 South Adams St. - - A. J. N EI I. Popular Price Tailors , P R O P R ' E T O R suns T0 onnmi at si5.00, s11.50, 52000, 522.50 '0 mm, m, '3 'a ' sm Mr. Evans flecturing on Machine Designl-And now as we p dl k h b f I panorama which spreads itself before our vision it beh p d d plyl Eine Peoria.. Conservatory gf Music EUGENE PLOWE HAROLD PLOWE CLAUDIA EIl.T?IJJllDIII:ll,IRIC8I?ItALTER BERNICE B. ELLIS ESTELLE VAN HORNE Hair Dressing and Manicuring I D I I- C3 I-I S CSL C I. LJ ST Toilet Articles a Specialty HH: WE MADE 'T' 'TS RWHTH Official jewelers of the MRS. K. T. GOODMAN Leading Colleges, Schools DEALER IN and JEWILRY French Hair Goods Asmauons A IOQRANDOLPHSTREET 430 MAIN sT., second Floor PEORIA, ILLS. 931.2152 G. P. KLICKIVIAN D U A N E 533 MAIN ST' Te'eph'me4887 GROCER, TEA AND coFFEE HOUSE STATIONERY, MAGAZINES, OFFICE and SCHOOL SUPPLIES 432 MAIN ST. TEL. 504 ggfifms E A STRAUSE Sc CO Sole Pffx' FANCY ToBAccos ' ' ' Agents 3-3-3- SMOKER'S ARTICLES T H E H O U S E O F V A L, U E S Cecil 17 ' THE WEIII ALI. STEEL SSZQSRIZQQOT FIIIIIIAIIE ASOLUTELY GAS AND DUST TIGHT. Rivited like a steam boilor, tlieref I I1 o joints to open. It consu very little Iuel . Over 2000 in use in Peoria alone A 'F. MEYER at BRO. co.,Agts. PEORIA ILL MCLEAN 84 HOLLAND ATHLETIC Gooos CATALOG AT REQUEST CHICAGO GALESBURG sox 1oz aox 515 A tfzlelic Outfiiters to Bradley Polytechnic lnstitule I ' i 15 mx fi L.. is A 9 1 I C. H. Knights -Tliearle Co. Columbus Building C H I C AGO WHOLESALE JEWELERS Diamonds Watches Jewelry Clocks Silverware Tools and Materials PUBLISHERS OF KNIGHTS SUPPLY CATALOG icholson Bros. Are Our Photographers They have pleased us and they will please you I07 SOUTH JEFFERSON AVE., PEORIA, ILL. l02 and IO4 South Adams Street, Peoria, Illinois WATCH DAILY PAPERS FOR ALTERATION SALE Our store to be Remodeled from Basement to Roof CLARKE Sc CO. BASTIAN BROS. CO. Mfg. Jewelers, Engravers and Stationers CLASS AND FRATERNITY PINS ENGRAVED INVITATIONS AND PROGRAMS Class Pin Catalogue forwarded upon request 284 SOUTH AVE. ROCHESTER, N. Y. I GET Bradley Jewelry in the Bookroom. Latest designs in Pins, Fobs, Paper Knives and Spoons .20 I i L 1... . , C1 'Fly


Suggestions in the Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) collection:

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Bradley University - Anaga Yearbook (Peoria, IL) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912


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