Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI)

 - Class of 1901

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1901 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 320 of the 1901 volume:

9Srtf% m LIBER BR.UNENSIS-m.VOL. XLII PRICE : ONE DOLLAR FIFTY CENTS ADDRESS : HOWARD A. COFFIN TWENTY -TWO HOPE COLLEGE PROVIDENCE RHODE ISLAND SPRINTED BY THE F. A. BASSETTE COMPANY PRINGFIELD MA D B SJ • -J tf - .0 v: or V O THAT SCHOLAR WHO TAUGHT US TO PRIZE GOOD READING AND BROAD THINK 1NG : WHO WON THE SUPPORT OF BROWN MEN ON A PLATFORM OF ABSOLUTE IN TEGRITY : WHO LEFT HIS STAMP ON THIS UNIVERSITY: AND HIS INSPIRATION IN THE HEARTS OF HIS STUDENTS HAMMOND LAMONT A. M. THIS BOOK OF BROWN IS RESPECTFULLY DEDICATED EDITORS or 1901 Tkacker Howlaivd Guild A4 RDITOIC-IN- CHIEF Walter Louis Frost A0 MANAGING EDITOR. Howard Aldridge Coffiiv XO U SINESS 3 f AJtfAGRIV. Robert Irvirvg St e ere AA4 JoKrv Bo,yderv atoiv 4 T Janves Durvcarv McLeod B01t Michael Jokiv I iivdeiv AK.E Howard Hiram. TucKer Z¥ Stewart BaKer McLeod OAX Edward FarrvKanv Greatve AT Arttvur Ogderv Clift ATW Johrv Packard Gray ATA Earivest Palmer Carr KLX Heruy Cleaves Sullivatv QK ASSOCIATE, EDITORS, James Bancroft Littlefield A A Crawford Richmond Green- A $ Samuel Noyes Douglas vj y Russell William Richmond a II Harold Weeden Nichols A K E Eugene Bailey Jackson Z Myron Charles Fish A X Everett Jarvis Horton A Y Arthur Dean Dudley X t Georce Burdick t A Howard Joseph White A T 12 Charles Raymond Austin ATA Howard Henderson King K 2 Frederick John Durfee $ K It PREFM A PREFACE, I take it, is, in the present instance, a little space kindlv reserved for the editor, in which he may offer various apologies. He ought to beg the business manager ' s pardon for being interested in the contract; he should admit that his laziness in matters of copy was the real cause of the managing editor ' s degeneracy ; he should ask forgiveness from the Board for having dared to ask them for anything else; and then he is ex- pected to shake hands with all his colleagues in apologizing to the read- ers. Along the same line, he is afford- ed an opportunitv to crave from the S LIBER BRUNENSIS faculty no worse penalty than suspension, and to state that all objectionable grinds arc lies which crep ' up quite unbeknow n. I he editorial we, on the contrary, have no such humility. We merely wish to return thanks and ask a blessing. The latter, according to precedent, is certain to arrive, even though it he disguised. The distribution of gratitude is as follows: first, to Brown Uni- versity tor furnishing us the finest spirit and environment in the college world; second, to the fortunate few who read this preface; third, to the various freshmen who offered us points about them- selves and were referred to the advertising agent; fourth, to all who were of special practical assistance to the editor, namely : four hundred and eleven students, two co-eds; and fifth, to the Board, for non-interference; sixth, to Mr. Delanev for the use of his name. Anv faults or mistakes will be cheerfully overlooked, and readers are invited to pat the business manager on the back and give a glad hand to the managing editor, for thev did all the work, and need cheering up. The editor alone is fullv conscious that this Liber is the best of the centurv. Then here ' s to Good Old Brown, and her feeble reflector, Liber Brunensis! Statistic CORPORATION President BOARD OF FELLOWS Rev. William Herbert Perry Faunce, D.I). Rev. Ai.vaii HOVEY, D.D., LL.D. Hon. Francis Wayland, LL.D. Hon. Thomas Durfee, LL.D. Rev. Thomas Davis Anderson, D.D. Robert Hale Ives Goddard, A.M. ii i i m Willi vms Keen, M.D.. LL.D. Rev. George Edwin Horr, D.D. Hon. John Henry Stiness, LL.D. Hon. John Summerfield Brayton, LL.D. Rowland Gibson Hazard, A.M. Henry Kirke Porter, LL.D. VOLUME XI, Ml BOARD OF TRUSTEES ihonk Lake, N. V. Valley Falls Hon. Joseph Hr. u Walker, LL.D. Worcester, Mass. Hon. John Carter Brown Woods, A.M., LL.B. Providence Hon. Andrew J kson Jennings, A.B., LL.B. Fall River, Mass. Hon. Fran is Almon Gaskill, LL.D. Worcester, Mass. Joseph Pitman Earle, Ph.B. Wickford Hon. James Lei xi Howard, A.M. Hartford, Conn. Arnold Gri i . LL.D. Providence Rev. Hi.xin Sweetsek Burrage, D.D. Portland, Me. Rev. MOSES Ho max Bixby, D.D. Providence Hon. James Goodwin Batterson, A.M. Hartford, Conn. Robert [ves Gammell, A.M. Providence Hun. ()m ak Lapham, A.M. Providence Colgate Hoyt, A.M. New York, N. Y. William Vail Kellen, PL. P., Ph.D. Boston, Mass. Hon. Jon i max Chace, A.M. Valley Falls Cornelius Sowle Sweetland, A.M. Providence George Lewis Collins, Ph. P.. M.I). Providence Gardner Colby, A.M. New York, N. Y. Edgar Oscar Silver, A.M. New York, N. Y. Eugene Waterman Mason, A.B. Providence William Ensign Lincoln, A.M. Pittsburgh, Pa. Charles Gregory King, Jr., A.B. Cleveland, Ohio Rev. Henry Melville King, D.D. Providence Stephen Ostrom Edwards, A.M. Providence Stephen Olney Metcalf, A.B. Providence Stephen Greene, Ph.B. Boston, Mass. Theodore Francis Green, A.M. Providence Ray Greene Huling, Sc.D. Cambridge, Mass. AND OTHER OFFICERS ■ Moral and Tntellert,,,,! • ,; Professor of Mechanical Engineering II. W m:i. A.PPLETON, Sc.D. Newport-Rogers Professor of ' hemistry NZO Williams. A.M Professor of the Germanic Languages and TAleraturei and Director of t aim.. Ml). Ph.D. Bailey, LL.D. ' Zoology aud Geology of Pure Mathematics Professor of Botany Upton, A.M. Professor of Astronomy and Director of the Ladd Obst Dean of the University John Franklin • i Cashing S ' . Jl I Morris Av tory 196 Bov 7 Cooke Street Henry Brayton Gardner, 1 ' h.D Professor of Political Economy Bumpus, Ph.D. IT Oriole Av Prof ssor of ' oniparative Anatomy. and ( ' urator of the Museums of Zoology and Anthropology OIA ' MK XLIII  Skars, i,i n I) al and Political r of Psychology Walter Cochrane Bronson, A.M. Professor of English Literature Walter Goodnow Everett. Ph.D. Professor of Philosophy and Natural The Harry Lyman Koo Carl Bari s. Ph.D. 4.-J4 Brook Stn 14 Larch Sir. f Purr Malhen, atic John Edward Hill, Sc.M., C.E.M. 77 Taber Aveim. Professor of Ciril Kiiyiaecri ng James Quayle Dealey, Ph.D. 872 Hope Stree AssociaU Professor of Social and Political Science Walter Ballotj Jacobs, A.M. 310 Olney Stree Associate Professor of Pedagogy 274 Benefit Stree f Biblical Literature and History Edward Clifton Burnham, a 1!.. Sc.B. 21 Niokerson Street, Pawtuoke; Associate Professor of Mechanical Kngi aeeriag Albert deforest Palmer, Jk , Ph.D. 71 Elm Grove Avenu Associate Professor of Physics I.I UK R BRUNENSIS KRSON -lll.i . V..M. Associate Professor of Musical His n.NHM Knight Pot 1 11:1;. A.M. . Issociate Profesi tor of the Englii ih Languag A.LBBRT BUSHNELL ,T )HNSON, A.M. 1 lis Walnut Assistant Professo r of the Roman ' ■ Languag Frederick Poolk G KM M. A.M. Assistant Professor of Bi ology i: M.i ' ii Winfrkd To-w Kit, AM. sorofChemica, ' Physiologi A.rthur Eugene W a rsoN, A.M. Professor of Pi iysics 1.| x INDER MEIKLEJI ihn, Ph.D. lis Pn Assistant Prof essor of Roman Literature and History Frederick Slocum, Ph.D. li ' i Cam]) Street Assistant Prof essor of Astronomy Awik Crosby Emery, Ph.D. (iii Benefit Street Assistant Professor of tin ' Roman Language ami Literature Dean oi the Women ' s College Ada Geneva Wing, A.M. 109 Bowen Street Assistant Professor Of Physiology and Sanitation in the Women ' s College Fred Eugene Parker, A.B., M.D. ill Waterman Street Director of Physical Culture Frederick Tapt Guild, A.M. 18 Benefit Street Secretary of the Faculty and Registrar Edwin Eddy Calder, A. M. Board of Trade Building Instructor in Chemistry Walter Edward Smith, A.M. 17 Jenkins Street Instructor in Chemistry East Providence 114 Taber Avenue VOLUMK X 1,1 II . ' 74 Benefit Street Instructor in English amks Franklin Collins, I ' m. It. Instructor in Hofauii unit I ' ura or of the Herbaria. liKIIKliK WVI.I.VS BkXKDIIT, I ' M.!). Instructor hi English 468 Hop B St I Young Orchard Ave: 3fi Plent; V St! 17 Universi ty I! 12 Mawne ' Ewer, A.M. el) Starr, A.M. ctor hi Mathematics Instructor in English ;k Albekt (Johi.din ;, A.M. Instructor in Latin 234 Wayland Av Edward 1 ' , Thomas Cr Frederick Lent, A.B., I .P Benneti Grad, A.B. m:i Chamberlain, A.B. Instructor in Botany Jr., A.M. Instructor in English ami Public Speaking Instructor in Biblical Literatw Instructor in Semitic Languages ( k Brown Lester, A.B. Clarence Elnathan Norf Harky Kay Poole, Ph.B. ' nstructor in Mathematics l.B. Instructor in French Instructor in German Oak Lawn 31 West Clifford Street 509 Public Street 59 University Hall 10 Howell House I.IP.KK BRUNENSIS l.i vii ii cm vri kh i: ufohd, Ph. 15. t Benefit Street Jamkh II ikpkh Ch vsk, B. It) Preston Street Issiatant in English Frank Wilson Chknki Hkrsky, j VI. 82 Prospect Street As.nst.unt in English Grorof Saunders Cooper, A. B. IK) Congdon Street Henri Jeweti II w.i.. A. P.. 13 Benevolent Street .1 v Perkins, M.D. 7s Brond Street Thkron Clark, A.B. 30 Congdon Street rthe Women ' s C ' ollegi ' allege John Milton Burnham, AM (iO Stuart. Street, Address: The Library Nettie Serena Goodale, A.M. 40 Angell Street Cataloguer Beatrice Jennie Barker, Ph. P.. 40 Angell Street Anna Metcalf 81 Brown Street Reference Librarian Herbert Olin Brigham 05 Waterman Street Assistant in the TAbrary Archibald Grant Delaney 359 Brook street Steward Frank Everett Lester East Greenwich Frank Edwin StArk 170 Lockwood Street Assistant in the Machine Shu,, John Edwards 210 Doyle Avenue Assistant in the Ladd Observatory Candidates for the Degree of Doctor of Philosphy A.M. 1S99. Mathemat P A.M. 1900 Philosophy 234 Wayland Avenue I West Clifford Street ekonk, Mass., 2-1 lii Worcester, Mass.. 10 Congdon Str A.M. 1 100. History, Political Economy Jonathan HissKt: Wesi Point, Iowa, 62 George Street A.B. Iowa College 1897; A.M. Brown University I! Comparative Anat- omy, Neurology, Physiology George Herbert Sherwood Olneyville, 62 George Street A.B. Brown University 1898; A.M. 1899. Comparative Anatomy, Physiology John Smith Shippee East Greenwich, East Greenwich A.B. Brown University 1894. Latin, Greek ,IBER BRUNENSIS . Mass., 53 Wate l.ii Barker Waltok Lakewood, N Y., l 3 East Manning Streel I ' ii B. Cornell Universitj 1897; A M. Brown Universitj 1900: C narative natomj . Neurologj . Phj siology Leonard Worcksteh Williams Muskogee, Indian Ter., 172 Prospect Streel l.B. Hanover College 1895; L.M.Princeton Universitj 1899. Comparative natoinj . Philosophy . Physiologj HrlClll Histi Candidates for the Degree of Master of Arts se Stevens Bartlett Providence, 103 South LngellSireel ];. Vassar College 1900. History, Pedagogy, German phine An.iki, Beane Olneyville, 27; Plainn ' eld Street A.I ' .. Brown University 1897. Pedagogy, Social Science ; Louise Bliss Easl Providence, 19 College Streel ty 1900. Comparative Anatomy. Chemistry, Botaux Fall River, Mass., Hope 48 iity 1900. Geology, Chemistry ;k Providence, 95 Benevolent Streel iity 1898. German, English Providence, 75 living Avenue iity 1900. Social Science. Astronomy Edward Blanchard Chamberlain Bristol, Me ., 121 Pleasant Streel A.B. Bowdoin College 1899. German, Botany .Iohn Lee Chapman. Jr. Central Village. Conn.. 130 Mitchell Street Ph.B. Brown University 1900. History, German Chap ' .. Brown V Wilson 1 A N N 1 i W ALCOTT ( I ' M ,B. Brown I.YIH G ARDINKR C Ph.B. Brown VOLUMK I.I 1 1 .1 wiK.s II i; i- 1 i; Cii i Whitman. Ma 1 1 minis ( ' • it n i; I Barnes Sn Sarah Elizabeth Goodwin .i:. Smith College ISTO. Greek, Latin, German F.M.M II ELENA ( rREGORY I ' l ' A.M. Wellesle College ISitl. English Literature, Pedagoj stance Hurford li.i-.s Providence. S Gushing St ree Litt.B. Smith ( ollege 18 l.= . French, German, Botany Rumford, Rumfon rsity 181)0. German, French, Psychology ersitj m Pedagogy, Comparative Anatomy, Botany rence Brows Lestek Providence, nOS) Public Streel A B. Brown I ' ni ver,.i.y MM 10. So. :ial and Politi, al Sc ience, Histor; Y, Math M w.ki, Sno-h LeV m.i, A..B. Brown I ' ni irersitv 101 io. iv, lagogy, 1 Englisl ence, 124 We. deyan Norm n Allen Moss A..B. Brown I ' ni versitj i ' . 11 10. Pe. lagogy, Englisl I ' l ' .iV ideuce. 231 Br LIBER BRUNENSIS , Mass., 207 No. Main Street, Pawtuckel . EnglLsli Baltimore, Mil .4 Benefil Street A.i:. Wellesley ( ' ..liege 1898. Comparative Anatomy, Pedagogy, Bo1 Providence. 41 CI edagogy, English Fall River, Mas . Pedagogy, German Mt. Pleasant, Pa., University 59 Latin. History of Art, Greek, French Bessie Sarah Warner Bristol, Conn., 205 Waterman Street A.B. Smith College 1895. English, Philosophy Helen Bowen Waterman Providence. 70 Corinth Streel A.B. Brown University 1900. Pedagogy, English Emma Clifton Watt Providence, 207 Atlantic Avenue A.B. Wellesley College 1898. Latin. History of Art, Greek Hki.k.n Kidlkk White Pawtucket, 2 Appleton Avenue. Pawtnckel A.B. Tufts College 1899. Pedagogy, History of Art, Spanish Nora Girai.da Wright Olneyville, 387 Plainfleld Street A.B. Bates College 1895. Pedagogy, English Des Moines, [a., 19 Sumpter Street niparative Anatomy II. Registered as Non Resident, yet living near the University and «b to pnjoy certain of its privileges George Thurston Spicer Providence, 371 Broadwav A.B. Brown University 1K97. Music. Fine Arts, Comparative Literature VOLUME X 1,1 1 1 . Fully Non-Resident Hopedale, Mass. Lai in, Mathematics, Physics Cambridge, Mass. Meteorology, Chemistry Bolliston, Mass. Social Science, Pedagogy Fail River, Mas.-. Latin, Pedagogy Atlanta, Ga. . Chemistry, Social Science. Westerly llist.ny, English. Pedagogy St. Johnsbury, Vt, . German, Elementary Law English Literature, Pedagogy New Bedford, -Mass. Political Economy, Political Science, Social Rangoon, Burma History, Burmese Special Graduate Students Oneonta, N. V , 93 Sun versh 1893. English Provide) 897; A.M. 1899. Pedagogy Barrington, Barrington ridence, 550 Broad St reel EEICH William Dorinc; Woonsocket, 5 Slimmer Street. Woonsoeket AH. Dartmouth College 1883; A.M. 188H. History .ii i; w.ki.la Hall Providence, 417 Pine Street A. P.. Welleslev College 1880; A.M. Brown University 1900. English, French LIBER BRUNENSIS i.i in is,. Krnyun Kingston, Kingtttn 185)7; AM Ml : Al.(. I.M.N SHBRW U A..B. Aniliersi College L88 : Ph.D. I 11 u;i.i:s Edward Tilley .i;. Amherst College 1892; A.M. II 1 1 i RBI 1:1 A i . i i: n Vonz .M Simpson College I8i)0. Philos HISTORY OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND ONE. Sceni : The Front Campus r. Mf : Class Day, 1901 | S.MR] OF 1 hi Old Front Gate 1 The an Wickle Memorial Gate Old Front Gate: Well, my son, how are vou getting on here ? Van Wickle Gate : First rate. Like the place eversomuch. Still, the) keep me prettv busv. (). F. G. : Nice work though. Yes I envy vou, my boy. 1 used to have lots of good friends up here and I hated to leave them. Say, it ' s about time the Senior Supper Procession came down isn ' t it ? V. Y. G. : Don ' t know, father. You see I ' m verv young and never saw a Senior Supper Procession. 1 see a lot of light over on the middle campus, though, and mebbe that ' s it. O. F. (j. : Ah, yes 1 Here they come down past Manning now. Seems just like old tunes. See the big motley crowd in front with the torches, boy. I hose are under-classmen. Now, look there and see the fine stalwart fellows striding along in step. There ' s the seniors, my boy. Fine-looking crowd, eh ? Military drill and four vears ' gymnasium set them up. See the fine-looking chap with the baton and the glad face walking by himself over there. That ' s young Russell. V. W. G. : What ' s he walking by himself for? (). F. (i. : Well, you see, nobody else is quite in his class. Now we ' ve got it. Here comes Bird Taylor. He ' s been through three times already. Can ' t shake him, son. He ' s the fellow on the other side there with the halo over his head. 26 LIBER BRUNKNSIS . W. G. : Win has he got so many clothes on, father? (). F. (i.: Oh, those are just varsity sweaters that he ' s won at baseball, football, basket ball, handball, hockey — Y. W. G. : Come, come, father. Who ' s that big fellow with the dog? O. F. G. : That ' s Chet Eaton. He ' s the fellow that made the Junior Celebration tall through last vear. ' I nev had a lot of fellows of rather shady reputation in ' o i , and Chet said if the thing pulled off, Andrews and P. B. Greene would probably do something to disgrace the class and they ' d better postpone it. The fellow just behind Chet is a chap named Coffin. He ' s a most famous man. When ' 01 were Freshmen, Coffin captained a schooner party that the Sophomores ran down the bay and caused a lot of trouble. The two fellows behind him are Linden, the lit- tle fellow with the serious look, and Teen Davis, the big fellow on this side. See him grin, son ! V. W. G. : What have they done ? (). F. G. : Linden ' s main work is in nine volumes entitled What I have done for Brown. Davis has done most anything. He ' s chiefly known as the main squeak of the Glee Club. V. W. G. : Who are these fellows on the tag end here all bent over and looking worried ? O. F. G. : They ' re Tute Davis and Nickless. Tute ' s all weighed down with $BK keys, prizes, medals, scholarships, etc. He ' s the main prize pincher, vou know. Nickless is figuring out a new chess problem. Well, they ' ve all gone down now, so I ' ll be moving ' along. Good luck to vou, my boy ! LIBER BRl MENSIS Class Day Officers ( lass Pay Committct Edwakd Tudor Gross John Hoyden Eaton Edwin Faknham Greene President of Class Supper . David Connolly Hall Orator ..... Charles Barker Eernai Poet Thaciikr Howland Guil Address to Undergraduates . Howard Aldridge Coffj First Speaker at Class Tree William Lathrop Clark Second Speaker at Class Tree Robert Wing Steere Hymnist Prophet . Historian Statist ie ion Odist . Myron Powers Davis Howard Hiram Tucker Michael John Linden Harvey Nathaniel Davis Howard Oscar Winslow SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS Presidenl First Vice-President . Second Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Andrews stands high, eu-n m hi.- locking feet. H High School, and has maintained an excellent standin md checkers, and he is vice-president or the This quiet lid was born .,n.i educ at.-d in Providence, K 1. Next year Swas B - lyill enter the University of New Y ork when he expects to pursue a course which Howard Parker Blanchard Blanch Blanchard came to life at Sandville, New Hampshire, and later moved to his pres- ent homein Danvers, Mass., where he prepared for college at the Holton High and in supplying the mean- uliu li -ati-h ' he inner man. LIBER BRUNKNSIS Ch xki.i s Edmund Bryan i , A Y Charlie Jack ' | 11 I. a u born in Merrie England, but Brown gol him. He prepared ... the B kfield | Y, , High School, and the Cortland Normal School. He is a fixture in the Glee Club, upholding the tenoi section, and he has headed the ,- inization of Brown Musical Clubs. He can make you laugh, too. Charles Winchester Br Brooks rooks claims Montgomery, New York as ce, as the Liber reporter tells us, is Mui town, he has specialized in mechanics, a nter in bridge architecture. iplace and home. His onl During his course here at :s to make his future career Florence William Burke Burke A njtiu- of Wc-t Springfield, Massachusetts and at pie.,ent a resident .it Mittineague in the same state. He is one of the classical scholars .it ' Naughty-One, and expects to become a teacher of Latin and Greek. Krnest Palmer Carr, K 2 Cair was born in Canada, and fitted for college in the Cortland | N. Y. j Norn: School. His chosen profession is teaching, and he has already had several e: experience. He has been interested in debating, being one of the Hicks contestanl and his class mates have recognized his character and abilitv bv making him se Floyd Levern Carr An active student from Hornellesville, N. Y. The facetious interviewer repor his specialty as the Y. M. C. A. emplovment bureau. His excellent work i debate has won him a position on the Varsin ream. He will enter the ministn Elm er Seymour Chace, A Y Elmer Chace comes from the Providence High School, and has held mam .ollege hon- ors. He is a good speaker, and besides winning one of the Carpenter prizes, he- made the Varsity debating team. He has looked out for Brown ' s athletic interests in his position as secretary of the N. E. Intercollegiate Athletic Association, and also as manager of the track team. The Cammarian Club elected him to mem- bership. VOLUMK XLI1 Web Chase, A t Pin rntiird Brown from the Bun kton High School. While in college he h.! interested himself particularly in athletics. In his freshman year he made his ila-s baseball team and in his Junior vear, the Varsity. He is also goal-tend on the Roy Cap Roy came from Wesleyan Academ) and while at Broun has been actively interested in all that is besi in college life -making a specialty of athletics and the Y. M. C. A. He i- a four-vear- member of the Vai i: base ball team, and is now captain foi the second season. As General Secretary of the V. M. C. A. he puts much of his time into the religious work of Brown. His class made him vice-president the first vear and president in the Junior year. He is also a member of the Cam- marian Club. Upon leaving college Rov will probably continue in Y. M. C. A. work. Noone has a Stronger place in the hearts of Naughty-One ' men than Roy. Billy 1 Billy came to us from the Rome ( N. V. ceeded to work his way to fame. Bilh sophomore year; has been leader of the Glee marian Club. He has also been popular in life. By common consent one of the fi School will probabh continue his education. Daniel Allen Clarki One of Little Rhode ' s in retired to Kiskeville. He be, as he usualh seeks the k rHUR ( )gdi n Clift, A T 12 her baseball team, and as vic-t-re-ident to, two different ears. He has s the Glee Club and played on the famous Brown Brass Band. He is a n of the Cammari in Club, and a Liber representative. Clift deserves all the ho gets, and ' • Naughty One give- him the glad hind as he goes into business Clarence Albert Coa- Coates is a Providence boy, who, they say, is admired among other tilings for a handsome mustache and a truthful disposition. His office as treasurer of the Re- publican Club shows hi- di-position toward politics, and he intends to study law. I.IBKR BRUNENSIS I low ARD l.DKII)(.l. COI PIN, «l I Ml, Coffin come from Ea I F lirfii Id, Maine, and pn pared il lie u.i .mi in : il.i- pirsidrnt, .in, I lirinol in llic (anion.- banquet .illair. Si] ' u ils , ,111,1 i II president ol thi , i M ( ' A .m,] j iimnlin ,,i il«- ( ' jmiiiliilhi Chili. He i- .,, I I i I l,n I |r will I II n Coag claim- he is regi-trini in Or.ingr, N. |. II, fitted in thi Orange High School and cnti ' i ril linwn with the ilrtnmin.it ■ n to do or die. Hr has been a hard workei and stands high in his departmrni of Bi,,l, _ ' . He has Iicen a sup- porter of athletics and has played on his- class football and baseball teams. Next war hi- will take po t-gradu.itc u oik with a view of studying medium- lati-r on. Albert Linwood Copeland Cope hails ration equall) t. faithful and con letics he has als ' , Thomasti n II J Si h J ti 1 11 in Uademy. He ha been a scientious itudeni nd ha vi n the i teem of his fellows. In atli- i been a hi-.utv -up p.,,.,-, ,,t : in- Brown and White. He will teach Ernest Willard Crawley, A T A Km ' attende Hi- chief occup; Providence, usu Island Genera .1 school in lr.- native town oi Warren and finall) landed in Brown. Lt ' u new, since has been riding back and forth between Warren and fathei is a politi ian, md it present is a member of the Rhode Harvey Nathaniel Davis, A 1 Kappa and won f the rntia.ne pii r-, an,l in 1, •■ •■: ■.-.,■ l.r made Phi Beta the znd Hicks prize. This yeai he has been awarded the Wffl- larship, given to the first s holai of the class. Tute is presi- ating I n, ,n. and a member of the Varsitj Debating and Chess Pec o comeVa cL a oX?w e nVorgra e du C rwk an( Myron Powers Davis, X P Teen Someone has rel an ambitious si famous ' tromboi whether as reade Club, and has ht ' erred to Teen as executioner-in-chief of the chapel choir, ml and sole owner of an organ, originator and proprietor of the re solo. ' No one can denv that he manufactures good nature, r for the musical clubs or otherwise. He sings tenor on the Glee •en elected to write the Was- hymn. Teen expects to teach. VOLUME XI.III 33 Peti k Terence Dolan Pete Worcester High School prepared Dolan foi Brown and with the law in mind as his ultimate profession, he has picked his courses along the lines of ' Social Siieme and Knglish. Strains from his violin are familiar sounds on George Street, and he has been heard in the college orchestra. Next year he enters Harvard Law School. Charles Borromeo Dugan, K 2 1)ool w.mes hom Briiu kerhorF, N. V. He gra( there, and then went to the Cortland N Y.) Norm; He has taken high rank in his classes, but besides ha he has a good o-.ord to show on his class foot ball t ,,natom and histon and expects to become a phvsic will teach. Thomas Edwin Dunn Tommy ' s home is Winchendon, Mass. At the Murdock School, whei Broun he found no tnrihle in making the ' ai it Ti.uk Team. In hi After his graduation he will entei hn-ine- Chet ' uas horn in Brockton, Mass. After graduating from the Brockton High School he entered Brown, where for three years he served up benders on the Varsity Nine. He intends to go into the shoe business in Brockton with his father. Hxkkis Hkmvsox Eaton, V Hal Eaton came from down in Main-, his home being in Ca Hall I Conn. | School sent him to Brown, and therein Naught ' gentleman. He has upheld hi- la- honor in base hdl Next 3 i) John Bo Jack Eaton, like his brother, h LIBER HIU NKNSIS D Leland I .eslii Eaton L, L. Eaton entered Brown from Colli) Academy. During his course he has be- i dine lee oglli ed .IS din dl tlii n. i :.].•.. | i iir in.l In! I.iilni liwill.l i-l vhii I. thi B D i i i d ha i er h d, in I he hai held this po rum since 1S7X. His future busine enterprise an undetermined Broadwood, New In- home. n a member of the Varsit Dartmouth and M. I. T. for an M. E. degree, which Edwin Bowf.n Evans, 4 A ® Ed ' - came from the Providence High School. During h : s college course he has done much to promote the soi ial life of Brown. He has been treasurer of the Sophomore Ball Committee and a member of the Junior From, and Senior Ball Committees. Next year he expects to go into business. Chari.es Ernest Ewing born in Somerville, Mas-, but soon removed to Troy, New York, ep.rred for college at the academy. During his Senioi ear he has served in the Gvrti. He intend- to enter business after graduation. Henry Milne Fenner Henry belongs in Fall River, Mass., where he prepared for Brown at the Durfee High School. He expects to go into the textile business with his father, Henry S., who is an alumnus of the class of ' 79. VOLUMK XLII Charles Barker Ferna Fernald brg.ni hi.- coliege career .it Dcni-on I ' ni ci si t , ( Ir.im ill,-, Ohio, where he he won first pii e in the Hicks debate, .unl th.it he is ke-president of the Debating Union. He is also interested in chess, tennis, bowling, and the V. M. C. A., and is Naughtv-One ' s diss orator. He will enter the law, but expects to teach ' Rube ' - Fri. Friedel hails from Delaware, and fitted for college in Wil He entered Brown with the idea of making teaching his his studies with that end in view. Friedel will earn a his profession. Wai.tfr Louis Frost, i A ® Louis prepared at the Providence High School. He holds the unique distinc- tion of being a member of the editorial boaids of all the literary publications of the college, save the Y. M. C. A. Handbook. He is an editor of the Brown Daily Herald, artist of the Brunonian, and managing editor of the Liber Brunensis. Edward Hawes Fuller ' ' Ed ' ' Fuller is from Paw-tucket. His work here, however, has shown that they do good work in the Pawtucket High School, for from the very first he has been one of the leaders of his class in scholarship, as his election to Phi Beta Kappa in his Junior year will testih . He has fought his way through the Humanities, and ex- pects to put them to use as I lawyer. He will teach next year, however. Frederick Arthur Galvin, (£ K Galvin was born in Spencer, Massachusetts. It is rumored that he has devote considerable time to cultivating the acquaintance of the ladies. He intends t enter Harvard Medi, al School. Herbert Gilbert, ATA George was born at South Lyndeburg, Xew Hampshire, and now makes his home in Providence. He has always been ot a quiet disposition, but his work has been both earne-t and biilliant. His chief occupation while in college has been Studying, and he won a Phi Beta Kappa key in his Junior year. After graduation .; ' ■ LIBER BRUNENSIS Charles Herberi Gilmore, (- A X (J.IK Gilly is .1 native ..t Turners Falls. He was too brilliant foi such .. place, ami .molding unit !■■( ushin Hi .1 , desire to insert .1 tew hunks beneath his wig, he entered Brown. He played iwu seisms mi hi .las- football team and also ■ .nine (nit square ah ila-s liaseball man.iL ' ei in hi Snphomnre war. Dress suits ami .lan.es aie hi- hith urds. He 111. i lie. nine .1 l.iuvrr. s High School. He is a quiet t im must intimately sa he prndut prominent place among his intere Packe Jack home. He march, continued his liter: played football on 1 gave them up to as cessfully has he led tire. ' ' jack is , en through e goes from Edward Farnham Greene, A Y Rhode Island, ■ster Academy. He nember of the Class as a Varsity debater 1 Clu Bro Percival P. Greene Percy Greene is one of the litera: Philadelphia, and inherits loyal Brown and his grandfather, Prof. S. S. Green ponsible post of Editor-in-chief of the prevent him from earning a formidable the Phi Beta Kappa key. Journalism lett Greene, A A c -. P. B. has tempted fate in the nonian. His journalistic efforts did y of H ' s, and in consequence he v Edward Tudor Gross, A A J sentative Bio. E. Tudor is a r he has proved himself easily the university cha the New England Intercollegiate Championship has ehairman-ed all his dance committees, and i mittee. The class has given him several offii With all these interests on his hands, Tute made the Phi Beta Kappa election ! He is a Providi besides class baseball, :nnis, and last year won In the social line, he of the Class Day com- busint VOLUME XLIII J 7 Thai. HI k Howland Grim, A l ' He entered Brown from the Providenc musical and literary. His cornet has b literary efforts brought him the Carpel class poet, and .1 place on the Brunoni, rial! Chili. Incidentally, the drinks are Dwid Connolly Hall, K i Henry Clay Hart, A A f Henry Cl.u of Eufala, Alabar dents. He has joumalistk 1ap.1l but he expects to make the law William Riggs Harvey, J A © Bill Bill prepared for college at the Rogers High School of Newport. While treasurer of the Sears Reading Room Association, he put that institution on a firm financial basis. He is at present a member of the Cammarian Club, and of the board of directors of the Athletic Association, editor-in-chief of the Brown Daily Herald, and president of the Senior Class. He intends to study law at Harvard Law School. George Bradford Hayward, A T Q Doddy Campello, Massachusetts, produced him, and Howard High School, Brockton, trained him. He has rushed the pig-skin for Naughty-One, and showed his cour- age likewise in the burglar alarm business. Having learned the methods of trapping thieves, he will enter Harvard Law School and learn to convict them. Charles Herbert Hough, A T Q Hooker With Pawtucket for a birthplace and Woonsocket for a preparatory education, Hough has some excuse for his artistic vagaries. This Liber and others owe much to his clever ideas and skilful figures. In both baseball and football he has stood by Naughty-One. Illustration is his chosen line of work, and he will study at the New York Art School. ;S LlBEft RRUNENSIS 8 Charles Sherman Hoyt, A A t Sherman Charlie Sherman is a New Yorker who ha- become a prominent membei I Naughty- One. II ■ mm h to his ass stan.e and intlueme, .uid he ha alwav- lieen to the front in matteis of (lass ].. .ilt ,in.| pilit. lot three year- he has upheld the husine - end of the liruimtiian, and he is also a memliei of flu- Camm.uian Club. He will piol.al.K -tu.K naval an hitecture a- his future pro- I-land, and -till makes it his home. As he irmiii he tried foi the track team, and ran He likes to think of the future dav- when am Carter [ohnson, A K E Bill is a loval Naughty-One man, who got his edge in the Providence High School. Four years in ( taste for an v profession. Business, says Bill, and that is the line I am going to follow. George Milton Jones This gentleman was born at Utica, New York. From there he went to Chicago to live, and still claims the Windy Citv as his home. Brown did not see George until the fall of 1900, as he had taken his other three years at Dart- mouth. He showed his wisdom and came down to Brown, influenced greatly, no doubt, bv the result of Brown week at Hanover last spring. George ' is an exceptionally bright student, and, after graduation, will enter the ministry. Harry Francis Kellogg, K 2 Harry Harry is a Providence boy and fitted for college in the Providence High School. He is a good student without being a grind and he rinds ample time for society. During his college course he ha- speculated in Mechanical Engineering and expects to make that his life work. He plans to enter his profession as soon a- he graduates, and thinks he would prefer railroading or naval construction. Thomas Hknry Kenworthy, X 3 Tom Kenworthv came t. Brown from Hampden, Mass., and gained a reputa- tion, according to a friendly critic, as a masticator of the cloth. Brown men know him as a philosopher, a gentleman and a man whose good opinion is worth having. He will become a teacher. VOLUME XLII1 39 Bill King was born in Pennsylvania, and fitted for college in the Mount Pleasant In- stitute. He began his universitv career at Bik knell, but at the end of his Fresh- man year entered Brown. He stands well in the class, and his enterprise ought to William Theodore Knoop Billy Bill He came to Broun from the Providence High School and has a retain a love fir that institution. Bill h.i- always seemed to pi fondness for doing the reciting for the whole liass. He is as ye his future occupation. Allen Kramer Krause, © A X ' •Pretzels Krausie Pretzels ' was horn in Lebanon, Pa. With a pipe in h ; s mouth and a Lim- berger sandwich in his pocket he entered the University and was quarantined in the Messer house. His specials is brains, and he is a keen man to argue with. When he leases these dear old grounds he will study the art of cutting people, not socially, but mereh with a scalpel. Thomas Francis Lawi.or, t K Tom was born at Lincoln, R. I. He is one of Dr. Garvin ' s chief politica supporters in Cumberland. He entered mllege with a purpose, and has diligentl pursued it. Tom is fitting himself for the profession of engineering. Edward Benedict Lf.derer Lederer was born and educated in Providence, and came up on the hill from the Classical High School. His compilation of statistics regarding Providence girls is a wonder. Next October he will enter Columbia Law School. Michael John Linden, A K E Linden came from Colgate to join Naughty-One as a Sophomore, and has proved a mighty man among us. He managed the football eleven last season, and has represented the college on several newspapers. He is also a strong worker for the Y. M. C. A. 3 I) 40 LIBER BRUNKNSIS 4) I 1 1 Kill K I COLBATH LOW, W A Hermes Shortj ' Berl Hemic wai unearthed in Winchester, Massachusetts. Hii father is a box manufacturer, but Shorty is not a Boxer. He followed Hie brother Charlie to Brown, and here in his Freshman year he contracted a habit known as fussing. Thii ha now become hii long uii William Kinm.ii Low, A l KingV lege from the Providen ce Huh School. He has done much liti ' wi lii.iwn, bring .in efficient member of his Sophomore surei nt the funi u Promenade, and a member of the Gym- Upon leaving college he will probablj be Harold Lester Madison Maddy A Rhode Islander. He prepared at East Greenwich Academy, and since his entrance into Brown, he has allowed a scientific bent to carry him through most of the curses in Rhode Island Hall, with an industry which ' means success. He Daniel Joseph Malonev, t K Dan comes from Chicopee Falls, Massachusetts. He was a four years ' candi- date for the Varsity baseball team, but his perseverance did not meet with the Berton Lewis Maxfield Max ■ laxrield lives in Franklin, New Hampshire, and came to Brown from Tiltoi eminarv. Besides carrying on his own studies, he has conducted those of others s a tea, her in the Pawtucket evening schools. Next year he will be hard a ,ork at Harvard, preparing to practice law. William Charles McLaughlin, S K McLaughlin was burn in Providence, and wended his good natured wa through the Classical High School. He had a leaning toward oratory, but became dis- couraged and decided to study medicine. He is a hard worker, and his friends VOLUME XL1I1 James Duncan McLeod, B II Jas Mi. Jim Jas was hom i„ Providence, R. I., and prepared for college .it the Manual Training High School. He defended the honor of Naughty-One ' s football team railroad business in Chicago, and will carry with him no small tame as a Stewart Baker McLeod, WAX Mickety Mac ' Mickloud Another Brockton boy, with a dog. He educated himself in the High School of Thanks to a congenial smile and . generous heart, he ha.- more than accomplished his purpose. He will study law with his eye on the position of ward-heeler. Jesse Gkorge Melendy, P A © Mel Mel prepared for college ar Colin Academy. Since hi Freshman year he has played on the football team. He has also been a member of the track team, and has scored points for Brown with shot, hammer, and discus. He holds the Brown and New England Intercollegiate record for the shot put. During his col- lege course he has made a special stud) of chemistry, and he- expects to teach this Max Merrill Miller, A T A Max Max was born with the intention ceeded admirably, studies, and has m on a farm up near Westrield, Vermont. He came to Brown He has been noted throughout bis course for his ability in his ide a good record in scientific work. When he leaves college he will take up eng ineering. Daniel Potter Myers Dutch •■ Dan D.m face and pretty well known will leave the city jBjBS F 5 ' 2 ' Harry Eugene Nickless Nick ' Nick the ches 1 Mass. ), spent a entered Brown as her of the ' varsitj be connected with fiend, was horn in New York, prepared for college at Woburn ■ar .it Tufts, two year- at Newton ' Theological Seminary, and I Sophomore. He is president of the Chess Club and a mem- team which has made such a good record. Next year he will the- ,Y. K I ' t. I.IBKR HRUNKNSIS Frank llen Pagi , A ' I ' Q ' ♦Frank native oi thi city, and i graduate of the Johnston High School. Naughty- One attributes some of her athletic prestige to his baseball and football ability. ;n helping frri.-l out the Sophomore kidnappers, he will studv law al Harvard Ernesi Trow bridgi Paine, X I is .1 Central Falls boj with brains. As .1 man of letters and works lie has honored with the Phi Beta Kappa ke) and the- Geo. Ide Chace scholarship. ml) thing which has power to draw him from his books is Teen Davis ' organ which he can discourse most sweetlv. He will teach. Preston Hill Porcheron, ® A X -Push Push comes from Brockton, Mass. His father is a civil w was but natural that Push should lean toward militar) honor. Brown he was major of the Brockton High School cadets, and 1 Brown battalion under Capt. Murray. Engineering will be h ; s George Moses Purver unci is a Russian with a remarkable career. He served in his country ' s arm) ; is imprisoned, and obliged on release to walk a thousand miles to reach home; grad- ted from the Russian gymnasium, and was refused admission at all the universities cause of too liberal ideas. On his way to Switzerland where he expected to ntinue his education in freedom, he was arrested as an anarchist, and only released len he bought a ticket for America. He went to the Providence High School Charles Sheldon Read Charlie Read was born in Providence and received his preparatory training in the Provi- dence High School. His future occupation is as yet undetermined. David Robinson, • ' Daw was born in Drumdollagh, Ireland. He came to America in 189a and prepared for college here. Dave speaks fluently German, Polish, Russian, Portuguese, Irish and Welsh. He expects to continue his studv in the Harvard VOLUME XLI1I 43 Sal prepared tor college at the l.ewistnn ( Maine ) High School. He sear at Dartmouth and entered Brown a Sophomore. He had done muc mote good feeling between Brown and Dartmouth. Next year he intend: law at Harvard Law School. Hendricken Slattery, 4 K A Providence man. He ha.- 1. h.ud during hi- career at Brown tend- to pursue the stud of lav Arthur L vn ;koki) Slocum, A A t Archie Sloke East Providence never turned out a better athlete than Archie. His football record is especiallj brilliant For four years he has played on the ' Varsity, and last year was recognized b) the authorities who make up the All-America team as one Roy Harmon Smith Dutch Naughty-One ' - lightweight wrestling champion for 1900 was born at Stawn- ton, Va. He prepared for college at the Miller Manual Labor School at Miller School, Va. He now lives at Crozet, Va., where he will go after graduation to await an opening in hi- favorite profession, mechanical engineering. Lee Smith, A Y repared at the Oxford (N. V. ) a C. K. degree, and something W lter Smith, Z Walter hail.- from New Hampshire. After exhausting the educational facilities of Andover he entered Brown. His interest has been centered in athletics wheie his efforts have been rewarded bv membership on the Track Team, Freshman and Sophomore Football Teams, and instructorship in the gymnasium. Smith will become a lawyer. 44 LIBER BRUNENSIS Win i hrop Mor i on Soi i hwok hi, A Southworth iva born in Needh im, Ma a hu etl , and tame to Brown from the Needham High S.I I. Nol evervone who is waked up in the morning b) the , |,.,|.r| 1,,-H vr.A ,r tin: V M. S, Mit hu , „ i h i the motive power. Roberi Wing Steere, A A l ■ been class treasurer, .1 director of the I!. 17. A. A., and the football eleven. He has plaved foui sea on with the as elected to the Cammarian Club. Bobb savs he would like to juggle capital Claude Evereti Stevens, K i 1-.- in the Mansru-ld ill for Naughty-One. to follow that awhile Henry Cleaves Sullivan, J K H. C. Sullivan comes from Portland, Me. At Brown he has stood high in Rhetom and Knglish, and in his Senior year was elected to the- Liber board. ' His Amos Lfavitt Taylor Amos .mos, the genial head waitei of the Brown Co-operative Refectory, «as born at Danbury, N. H., and graduated from Phillips Andover. Pol Econ, social and political sciences have been Amos ' strongholds for H ' s. He expects some d.n to be a lawyer, but where to prepare is still undecided. George Allan Taylor, B ® II Providence High rack Team, Class cializing in Chem- VOLUME XLI1I 45 )LL THOMP! ' Dope Haverhill, Massachusetts, claims Thompsi him a preliminary love for hooks. He ha phile, as well as a good student and an agi Frederick Harris Thurston, A A t Fred Freddy Mrs. Gibbs « Freddy ' Thurston is a Laconia | N. H.) hoy. His popularity is traceahle to m od fellowship and a mastery of the art of hitting the box. Naughty-One in geneial and Slater Hall in particular knows him and is glad of it. vard Hiram Tucker, Z Tommy Tucker r Lee, Mass., and Worcester Academy v ■s of the Sopho- sium Ball. During the Junior year rian Club. Inspired by his success as the business held. Charles Sampson Turner Sammie Charles Sampson Turner, the uuiet, unobtrusive lad of Naughty-One, was born in Providence, and the High School is his Prep alma mater. Sam- mie says that some day, if the gods are propitious, he expects to be a doctor. Where he will prepare for his life ' s work is still a dark, misty, unsettled problem. Walter Ernest Tuthill Tut Mike Tut was born and brought up in Palmer, Mass. He is an authori hall, and his ability to play the game was demonstrated on his class ha ' where he established a record tor base running. He intends to enter bus Edward Daxid Tuedell, K 2 Tweed Tweed, one of the small men of the class, hailed from Philadelphia Providence High School, however, was his prep, school. He is knov genial fellow and a faithful student, and assists the efforts of the chapel choi 46 I.IBKK BRUNKNSIS II ,u i-, Templi k.n Waller, X l Mill in. in ni niijjhtv i ' .i sum .imi Forceful tongui from Veimont, fond of good Cooking, .1 talwart defendei ol the faith in Pop Seal class, and a warm advocati  l the elective system. He has held class offices and managed the musical clubs. Next u ' .n he « ill take up medi ine. |ack began lit.- in l.aiuaster, IVmi: Kjiii,i. Shortly after he had attuned the habit l talking he moved to Attleboro, Mj .u husetts, where the air was lighter. He attended S( 1 1 there and prepared for Brown. In the future he hop es to be a Bertram Albert Warren, K 2 Bert !„■ IV .!-, ' .. C ...I H.Ji S,l,,.n|. He ha. leen a serious work has occupied much of h : s spare time, but his uualities Libe Washburn, i A ® Wash 1 Wash prepared for college at Colby Academy. He is much interested in ath- Harry Lee Watson, X t Wat mgenial soul, from Mt. Olive, N. J. His greatest pleasure raising adventures in the woolly west or else to describe his George Everson Weeden, Jr., A T fi urge Weeden s a uui t of Providence, and a graduate of the English and Classical School. If fame were contagious, his rooming with Libe Washburn ve infected him with glory. He will seek fame for himself along the VOLUME XLIII 47 Frank Hiram Wf.sti.ake, Z Westlake received his earl) training in the High Scho (Gradually weaned from western ideals he Ins become c shouting ons do not form Mi c-sential in his toilette, his scientific researches ar the med ' h al m hool in l of Allan Rattray Wheeler, Y Tacks Wheel., • Wheelei is a native of Concord, Massachusetts, where he pre During his course hen- he has achieved the difficult task of com and athletics, and distinguishing himself at each. He has helpe. the college dance-, pitched successfully for the ' Varsity, and mac center and elsewhere on the eleven. His future occupation Xaughtv-One wishes him good fortune. Hunter Carson White, Jr., ATA Hunter prepar . oliege stunts ha- | lt - studies and has well one of Rhode Islai when he leaves Bro Holt Whiting, A T 12 Winnie ' s birthplace was Oakdale, Massachusetts. He prepared at the West Boylston (Mass. ) High School, but picked out Rhode Island for his collegiate education. He has supported Naughty-One ' s athletic honors on the baseball field. He will enter Harvard Law School. Ernest Town Born at Cape May, X. J. He has pre] fess ' on of teaching hngbsh, and is kno i on-cientious student, and a good man t Howard Oscar Winslow, B © II Howard ' Providence Higli Phi Beta Kappa. 48 I.IBKK BRUNENSIS was bom in Mansfield, Mass., and enteied 15 own ., .1 .-..pljunion-, horn tin- water Normal School. A tendency to show a retiring dispirit ion has been ed 1 three years of the life together. Al is a good student and expect 1 bi tea hing othei oune idea how to -hoot. Henry Joseph Winters, S K Winters comes from Pawtucket. His Providence Law Library. They say hi the state of Rhode Island and Provider the Rhode Island Law School. burden is a volume from the ion to become Chief Justice of [rving Levi Woodman Woodman Woodman ' s home. During his college course he has 11 worker, and a good friend to any man. He is good r for Naughty-One during his Sophomore year. He ■w HISTORY OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND TWO TH K automobubble was drawn up in front of Rogers Hall waiting for the Junior Ride to start. Nearly all the 11 essentials had arrived. To insure the ultimate success of the party, Dinah Stiness came about three hours early in his dress suit and Eton cap. Billy Blanding showed up on time and some of the bunch wanted to start right off with Billy at the helm. Billy wanted to run the thing, for he ' s had a lot of experi- ence running automobubbles, but the rest of the Copper Pie crowd objected. They claimed that the only man to steer the bubble was Buxton, and Buck hadn ' t shown up vet. Currier be- gan to throw fits about this time and finally succeeded in extricat- ing his yellow-colored pan-cake menagerie from his pocket. Stiness got mad at Currier for trying to sneak his dog in free and it looked for a minute as though there might be trouble. The arrival of Buxton, however, straightened things out. Billy Blanding now took a back seat, looking glum, and Buck started the machine going. We hadn ' t got more than four feet when the bubble began to rear and kick and we heard a wild yell from across the campus. In half a second we had all turned around and saw Rastus Clarke running like mad to catch us. Buck got out the whip and we made the best speed we could, but Rastus finally caught us and we hauled him aboard. In about two hours when he had recovered his wind sufficientlv to speak, we asked him what he was doing with the blue book under his arm. He said he knew he was late for something, couldn ' t tell just what, but thought it must be History. Everything went along swimmingly till we got over bv Hope Street and then there was a lot of trouble. Richmond had been trying to tell the crowd on the back seat what hot stuff he is and Sherman and Dennett got mad and started back to college. They were so cut up about the matter that thev missed their way and walked to Roger Williams Park. Just after they left us there was another fuss. Lincoln got mad because he couldn ' t see anything $1 LIBER BRUNENSIS on account of White ' s hat and made some objectionable remark about it. Whitford sided with Lincoln, but most everybody was down on him because he insisted on singing M v Jersey Lily. We finally settled the row by throwing Lincoln out, and Jerry Holmes pacified Whitford b telling him that he liked his whiskers. Well, at last we got as far as the Seekonk and were about to cross Red Bridge when we met a man with a double-barrelled shot gun. The man was harmless but the Copper Pie crowd couldn ' t see it. Unfortunately for us, they all sat on the same side of the bubble, so when they dodged, over she went. For about two minutes we looked like ' 01 in a cane rush. When the dust and smoke cleared away we got straightened out again and found two missing. Somebody said Billy Blanding had sneaked back home. Anyway, we couldn ' t find a trace of him or Douglas anvw here. Later we ascertained that Douglas was up a tree. Steve Briggs was down on his knees yelling for help and Ted Pevear was trying to kill the man who owned the gun. Dick Rav was doing sentry duty with the gun over on the East Providence bank where Jerry Holmes was leading a prayer meeting. After a while we got all the gang together again and started sailing away toward Last Providence. We had intended to take the road to Rumford ( and Beerville ), but Harry Hart insisted on running up to the top of Fort Hill to see if we could find a trace of Bill Bates or Tim Sheehan, who are supposed still to be in the vicinity of Great Barrington looking for the ' 03 banquet committee. Hart ' s proposition went through and we started up the hill. On the way up Buck started in on a Louisville story and forgot to stop the bubble when we reached the top. Then it was all off. Fairly started on the descent there was no stopping us. Straight down we rushed at lightning speed. Dinah tried his hypnotism racket and Gene Jackson offered up a short prayer, but it was no go. We had to hit the bottom. And we did. We went clean through nine freight cars, and shot plumb into Narragansett Bay. The Glee Club men reached shore first by aid of their Virginia top- buoys. They organized a rescuing party and most everybody got back after a fashion. Next dav a lot of the fellows were laid up and Al Potter said they ' d had too much Copper Pie. Clarke of course, isn ' t back vet. He ' s late. JS S DKESS PARADE W rMM l. - . , JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS Jeremiah Holmes . Charles Abbott Phillips Harold Weedfn Nichols Louis Everett Young Everett Jarvis Young . President First Vice-President Second Vice-President Secretary Myron Jay Abbey Elton Merville Adye, K 2 Edward Kimball Aldrich, Jr. Morris Ezra Ailing, A K E Christopher Astle Dansville, N. Y. Forestville, N. Y Providence Northford, Conn. Providence Ernest Preston Broun Atwood, A K E Providence Charles Raymond Austin, ATA Providence Robert John Barker Providence Williston Wright Barker Newport James William Barry, A T 12 Hadley, Mass. John Palmer Barstow, AAI Providence LeRoy Bartlett. B ® n Providence William Penn Bates, A Y Providence Messer 5 44 Camp Street Hope 26 University 60 897 Broad Street University 48 Maxcy 203 Hope 3 University 55 33 Benevolent St Slater 6 103 So. Angell Street 141 Benefit Street 54 IJBKR BRUNKNSIS Edward Lewis Bayliss Arthur Bruce Bennett William Cornell Blanding, Z James Leonard Booth Robert Lawton Bowen Howard Denison Briggs, Z Paul Brown fames Cunliffe Bullock Walter Roberts Bullock, A X George Burdick, A Thomas Burgess, A A Harold Granville Calder, ATA Philip Caswell, B n Alfred Griswold Chaffee, Z Thomas Carpenter Chaffee Harry Smith Clark Erastus Weeden Clarke Bernard Cohen Samuel Cohen Charles Bernard Coppin Abel Rathbone Corbin Edward Pittman Corey, ATfi Windsor Pratt Daggett William Robert Parkhouse Dave Winfield Haine s Dennett, A Y Anthony Hamilton Dexter, Y Samuel Noyes Douglas, Y Lucian Lorimer Drury, J A © Arthur Dean Dudley, X 3 Frank Ernest Fash Andrew Little Fraser Frederick Henry Gabbi Arthur Simeon Gaylord, ATA Henry Wilson Goodrich Bruce Henry Green Crawford Richmond Green, A J Allen Greene, A $ Frederick William Greene, Jr., $ Boston, Mass. T- 1 College Street West Held, Mass. University 13 Providence Slater 2 Pawtucket Pawtucket Providence I ' niversity 34 Ashawav Slater 12 Milwaukee, Wis. 87 Congdon St Worcester. Mass. Maxcy 436 Pawtucket University =52 Newport University 28 St. Albans, Vt. Slater 6 Providence 22 Whitmarsh Street Newport Hope 20 E. Providence Centr e Hope 20 East Providence Maxcy 426 North Andover, Mai ss. Maxcy 428 Providence Hope 29 Providence 7 1 Arnold Street Pawtucket Hope 33 Palmyra, N. Y. Waterman St Oxford, N. Y. Maxcy 430 Providence : 7 ' Butler Avenue Auburn, Me. University 32 Providence 2 45 Cranston Street North Adams, Ms Hope 24 Pawtucket Pawtucket Providence 4 Manning Street No. Swansea, Ma ss. University 8 Concord, N. H. Hope 27 Fall River, Mass. Maxcy 322 Lowell, Mass. Maxcy 426 Providence Maxcy 436 So. Hadley Falls, M ass. Maxcy 202 Hopkinton, N. H 87 Congdon St Charleston, S. C. 125 dishing St Troy, N. Y. Slater 20 Providence Slater 13 Newport University 28 VOLUME XLIIJ 55 William Choate Hardy, A T Q Henry Joseph Hart, A K E Charles Raymond Haslam George West Hathaway, B © 11 Edward Lapham Hill William Austin Hill Jeremiah Holmes, 4 A © Charles Herbert Holt, A T fi Everett Jarvis Horton, A Y Joseph Waite Ince George Milo Innis Eugene Bailey Jackson, Z Howard Henderson King, K 2 Ray Forrest Knowlton, A © Harry Clifford Leach Kirke Porter Lincoln, A A $ James Bancroft Littlefield, A A $ Joseph Ferdinand Malm stead, ATtl Earl Northrup Manchester Elmer Daniel Meserve, A T O Henry Knight Metcalf, A A J Arthur Earle Munro, B © IT Henry Natsch, $ A © Walter Elijah Newcomb, 4 A Harold Weeden Nichols, A K E George Frederick Paddock Wesley Arthur Paige, $ A © Alonzo Truman Patterson Lorraine Terry Peck, $ A © Theodore Frederick Pevear, A K E Charles Abbott Phillips, A $ Halbert Edmund Pierce Robinson Pierce, Jr. A T 12 Thomas Edmund Burt Pope Alfred Knight Potter, Z Charles Arthur Powers Everett Duncan Ramsden Fitchburg, Mass. Hope 37 Lynn, Mass. University 12 Providence Maxcy 322 Tiverton Hope 10 Gardiner, Me. Messer 2 Arlington, Mass. 66 Meeting St Mystic, Conn. University 60 Providence University 58 Providence Hope 40 Providence Maxcy 436 Shelburne Falls, Mass. University 56 Woonsocket Slater 2 Uuiontown, Pa. Hope 29 Sutton, N. H. University 33 Rockland, Me. 253 Potters Ave Pittsburg, Pa. Slater 4 Providence yS Prospect Street Providence Hope 37 Factoryville, Pa. Hope 1=5 Ken nebunk port, Me. 33 Benevolent Street Providence Slater S Quonochontaug Maxcy 436 Brooklyn, N. Y. University 58 Catskill, N. Y. Hope 42 Providence University 47 Providence 63 Governor Street Franklin Falls, N. H. Hope 12 East Providence East Providence Bristol, Conn. Hope 42 Lynn, Mass. University 47 Danielson, Conn. Slater 15 Fitchburg, Mass. University 32 Providence 172 Prospect Street Providence 20 Hawthorne Street Providence University 21 So. Gardner, Mass. University 30 Warren Warren 56 LIBER BRUNENSIS Charles Addison Richardson Ray. A : Lewis Stillman Record Charles Arnold Reese, A Y Russell William Richmond, B © II Albert Langworthy Saunders, K i Walter Stan lev Seamans, Jr., A T A Philip Darrell Sherman, A Y Charles Perley Smith Erwin Ke ' lsey Smith Koheit Ordway Smith, A K E Irving Southworth, A Y Arthur Steele Bradford Earl Stephens Thomas Henry Stevens Walter Leslie Tandy, A T A Charles Arthur Tetrault Ralph Cameron Thompson, A T 12 Frederick Wheaton Tillinghast, A Y Oliver Clinton Trees, ATfi Lennox Gresham Walling, B © II Willard Garfield Ward. X 4 Arthur Edward Warner Charles Perkins Webber. A T A Frank Eaton Wells Niles Westcott Alan Rattray Wheeler, Y Frank Walter Wheeler Howard Joseph White, A T 12 Everett Thomas Whitford Warren Lyle Wilmarth, X $ Louis Everett Young, ATfi Franklin, Mas.. Slater 17 Worcester, Mas Maxcy 3H Newton Highlan ids, Mass. Hope 40 New York Hope 36 Westerly Hope 3 North Providenc e Maxcv 202 Pawtucket Hope, Charlestown, M: Hope 31 Hartford, Conn. 58 College Street Providence University 47 Needham. Mass. Hope 40 Providence 3 8 Benevolent Street Hornellsville, N . Y. 87 Congdon St W. Hampton Be ach. X. Y. Hope 15 Gardner, Mass. Maxcv 204 South bridge. Ma Central Falls Portland, Me. 33 Benevolent St Pawtucket Hope 24 Lawrence, Mass . 33 Benevolent St I Lu risville Hope 1 Providence Hope 2 1 Riverside Maxcy 206 Wakefield, Mass Maxcv 204 San Jose, Cab 87 Congdon Street Oak Lawn Oak Lawn Concord, Mass. | Manning Street Wakefield, Mass Howell 6 Providence Hope 1 Woonsocket University 31 Central Falls Hope 23 Woonsocket Hope 1 HISTORY OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND THREE I WAS sitting in my office the other day soliloquizing on my greatness, when my worthy friend William H. P. Faunce dropped in to ask permission to use the University telephone. While he was using the same, having received my permission and advice as to its proper manipulation, my nerves were somewhat jarred by a loud veiling out on the campus. William was somewhat put out, too, and looking up he said : Archibald, what is that rumpus out there ? It ' s Cox, said I, leading his class in some cheers. Tell me, Archibald, said William why they asked him, ot all others, to lead them. Oh, returned I, I guess no one asked him to. He does lots ot things without being asked. He is willing to put himself out to be prominent. Accomodating youth. Yes, very. But not nearly so enterprising as his triend Hart, who made himself so popular with ' 02 last spring that they were obliged to take him down the river with the reallv important men, though they didn ' t want him a bit. I always wondered why they took him, said William, and now I see. Do you know, said 1, ' 03 is one of the strangest con- glomerations that has come to Brown during my administration ? Well, it is. What other class would have revived such a moth- eaten institution as a Sophomore society ? Have they reallv done that ? Why, I thought the good sense of the college had abolished such foolishness forever. Yes, they have established a branch of the T. N. E. 60 LIBER BRUNENSIS Had they any reason for doing so ? 11 I suppose they did it to perfect their political organization. The society, then, includes the whole class? Oh, no! How unsophisticated you are, William! It takes in only those who consider themselves the foremost men of the class. I should think that would include prettv nearly the whole class, atter all. It would, only there wouldn ' t be officers enough to go around, and what use would the society be then ? He could find no answer, so I remarked : How fortunate it is that we don ' t have to take such prominent men as Walworth, Boland, Drew, Bakeman, Rockwell and Reggie Brown as seriously as they take themselves ! I would have philosophized at some length, but William broke me all up by asking, Do you think they will try to stop the freshman banquet this vear ? I guess not. They ' d be afraid of you calling them ' muckers ' in chapel, William. Whether they do or not, said he, can ' t vou find some way to stop their infernal yelling? Winning a football game is a poor excuse for such a racket. I reproved him for daring to suggest my duty to me, and he left my office utterly subdued. I am a firm believer in keeping a man in his place, you know. Then I rang up the fire department. — Archibald. FOWAR.D MARCH SOPHOMORE. CLASS O F F I C E. R S Clarence Van Reynegom Bumstead Lester Earle Dodge . . b Lewis Frederick Hall . Sec John Francis Murray Harry Lothrop Bates President irst Vice-President nd Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Alexander Hewes Abbott. I A © Robert Aldrich, A A $ Sherman Alden Allen Woodbury Whitely Armstrong Edgar Louis Ashley Charles Hervey Bailey. A t Percival Rogers Bakeman Harvey Almy Baker. A A J Louis Foristall Baker. A P Merle Taft Barker, A K E Robert Lincoln Barrows. A Y Watertown, Mass. Providence Morganville, N. Y Portland. Me. Medfield. Mass. Dorchester. Mass. Chelsea, Mass. Providence Barrington Taunton, M Providence Hope 43 Slater 7 Messer 16 Hope 16 Maxcy 428 Slater iS Hope 5 343 Thayer Street Slater 18 University 50 Hope 40 62 LIBER IJ RUN KIMS IS Thomas Austin Barry, B ® II Eugene CI. irk Batchelder, A T U Charles Franklin Bates 1 larry Lothrop Bates. A K E Edward Babcock Beam. A K K Daniel Everett I icl lows, X ! Frederick Joseph Berth, t K Hartzell Russell Birch Edward Joseph Black Alfred Varney Blackstone, © A X Percy Howard Blanding, Z vj Richard Warren Blanding, Z Oliver Ililliard Booth Arthur Eugene Brown Howard Earle Brown, B © 11 Reginald Langdon Brown John Ervin Bullard Clarence Van Reynegom Bumsted, A K Elmer Ellsworth Butler, A Y Gonzalo Edward Buxton, Jr., t A © John Hutchins Cady, A A t Murray Hubert Cann, A © Cliarles Sturgis Carpenter, Z John Patrick Carroll, $ K Roscoe Arnold Carter, © A X Charles Dyer Casey, 4 K Toseph Clarence Cawley Henry Howard Cawthorne, X Charles Otis Chase James Garfield Clifford, ATfl Lewis Hartsough Conant. ATA Fred Milton Cook Theodore Arthur Cornell Michael Francis Costello, $ K Fred Judson Cox, $ A © Frank Lawrence Dillon, B © n Lester Earle Dodge, K 2 Jerry Dearborne Drew, i A © Brockton, Mass. Maxcy 320 Fitchburg. Mass. I Diversity 22 Cattaraugus, X. i ) Benevolent Si Providence (niversit |J Paterson, N. J. University 48 Providence Providence Hope,; Maxc 201 Olneyville Hope 2, Providence Maxcy 320 State Farm. Mass Slater 3 Providence Slater 2 Providence Slater 1 Poughkeepsie, X. Y. Slater 7 Providence 35 Be levolent Street West Kingston Hope 10 Phenix Phenix Keene, N. H. 62 Meeting Street E Jersey City, N. J. University 43 Watertown, Mass. Hope 16 Providence Hope 1 1 Providence Slater 7 Providence University 34 Providence LIniversity 19 Providence 131 Tockwotton Street Highlandville, Mass. LTniversity 52 Providence Hope 28 East Providence East Providence Leominster, Mass. 36 Richmond St Haverhill, Mass. Hope 28 Ware, Mass. Maxcy 318 Palmyra, N. Y. =;o Waterman St Reading, Mass. Messer 2 Providence 1 23 Thayer Street Pawtucket Pawtucket Haverhill, Mass. Hope 44 Palmer, Mass. Maxcy 313 Block Island Maxcy 210 Haverhill, Mass. Hope 44 VOLUME XI.III 3 Henry Bernardin Drowne, ATA Leon Arthur Drury, A T i2 Frederick John Durfee, 0 K James Warren Dyson Stephen Howard Easton George Wilbur Eddy Frank Henry Ehmke Waldo Henry Fish, (-) A X Charles Hamlin Eole Robert Foster Gay Xichols Freeman, Y Percy Winchester Gardner, f A ® fames Lawrence Gartland Willis Elhridge Goodhue Howard Bristol Grose, Jr . A P Phillip Bai dwell Hadle) Willis Warren Harrim;m, A T A William Albion Hart, Y William Thomson Hastings, A Y William James Henry Fred Alden Hersom Leslie Robert Hicks, A Y Harrison Bucklin Hill Edward Winslow Holmes Albert Wesley Hopkins Nathaniel Orson Howard William Carter Johnson, A K E George Edward Kelleher Erederic Mason Kinsley, K 2 Norton |ude Lam son Alexander Joseph Larkin, J K George Albert La wry William Ross Law ton Robert Herman Lear Harry Gancello Leighton Rov Sylvester Litchfield. © A X Providence 20 Benefit Street Fitchburg, Mass. Hope 37 Providence Richmond Square Providence Hope 38 Central Falls University 31 Greenfield, Mass. 87 Congdon St Silver Creek, N. Y. 14 George St Central Falls University 25 Concord, N. H. 120 Congdon St Poughkeepsie, N. Y. University 10 Washington. D. C. 4 Manning St Wakefield Hope 46 Warren Warren Silver Creek, N. Y. 38 Benevolent St Boston, M iss. Slater 15 Shelburne Falls, Mass. Howell 7 Whitinsville, Mass. Maxcy 20S Concord Junction, Mass. Hope 44 Feeding Hills, Mass. Hope 47 Southbridge, Mass. 1345 Westminster Street Somersworth, N. H. 87 Congdon St Chicago, 111. Hope 8 Rumford Rumford New Bedford, Mass. 62 Meeting St Olneyville Hope 21 Providence 6 W. Park Street Providence University 50 Providence University 17 Worcester, Mass. Hope 41 Pierrepont Manor, N. Y. 29 Benevolent Street Ansonia, Conn. University 31 Rockland, Me. Slater 1 Providence 37 George Street No. Leominster, Mass. University 18 Lowell, Mass. Hope 46 Fitchburg, Mass. University 51 64 LJBER BIUNKNSIS Earle Jerome Mathewson Edward Joseph McCaffrey, l K Charles Anthon) McDonald Lewis Stanle) Milner, A K K Samuel Moffat William Thomas Murphy. t K John Francis Murray Danforth Livermore Nash. A T l George Smith Newcombe Charles Lemuel Osier. l Fred Alleyne Otis. X Melville Neal Otis. Z Harr Merton Paine, X l Lionel Henry Peabody, Jr. Edwin Miles Pertilla Arthur Lloyd Philbrick Arthur I ' pham Pope. A Y Henry Wallace Pratt lames Edwin Quinn Frank Norton Rav William Orrin Rice. A T 12 Maurice Benjamin Rich William Lewis Roberts Harry Westcott Rockwell. A K K William Benjamin Satterlee, A A 4 Arthur Henry Scott Timothy Joseph Sheehan, 4 K James Leonard Sherman, 2 , A K Lester Burrell Shippee, A Y Charles Aloysius Slattery Tilden Hendricks Stearns Claude Henry Stockard Bates Eben Stover Frederic Daniel Sullivan, t K Leslie Hunt Sutherland, $ A © Albert William Hayden Thompson William Homer Tobev. AT!! Cyril Richard Tobin Centra] Falls Central Falls Providence Hope 3 2 Providence Maxcy 201 Moosup, Ct . University 47 River Point Hope 33 Providence 27 Landor Street Providence Hope 47 Augusta, Me. 33 Benevolent St Thomaston, Mr. Hope 13 Providence Hope 25 Providence University 1 1 Providence University 21 Providence Hope 26 Middletown Messer 16 Norwich, N. V. University 4s W. Somerville, Ma M axcy 433 Newburyport, Mass. Hope 30 Bridgewater, Mass. 62 Meeting St Stamford, Conn. Hope 28 East Providence East Providence South Gardner, Mass. University 56 Providence Howell 4 Goffstown, X. II. Howell 3 Rockwell ' s Mil Is, N.Y. University 48 Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Slater 7 Pawtucket Hope 28 Fitchburg, Mass. Maxcy 205 3 Providence University 44 East Killingly, Conn. Hope 39 Providence 24 Vernon Street Wilmont, N. H. Hope 14 Providence Hope 20 Chicopee, Mass. Hope 32 Providence Maxcy 205 Natick, Mass. University 60 AT A Providence Maxcy 203 No. Berwick, Me. 33 Benevolent St San Francisco, Cal. 29 Benevolent St VOLUME X LI 1 1 65 William Hutchins. Turner, A K Arthur Brown Tyler Manning Eugene Van Nostrand George Roberts Walworth. A A George Waterhouse, A Y Allan Ferguson Westcott, K 1 Edward Nelson White Henry Wilson White. l Samuel Hall Whitley, $ A - William Tourtellot Wilde, Olneyville Olnewille Arthur Melvin Winslow, B ■ II Providence 68 L ' hsipin Avenue Paul McCord Wiswall Providence 50 Lexington Avenue Trueman Doane Woodbury. B © II Bow Mills. X. 11. Howell 3 Francis Elliott Young Easlon, M«l. Hope 1.5 I ' alersnn. X. |. Lin iversit) 1.3 Providence 3 6 B OV nell Street Key port, N. J. Hope 21 Newton, Mass. Slater . 1 Beaufort, S. C. Hope 8 Alexandria Ba . X. Y Hope, Acushnet. Mas Providence I11 iversity 10 Hope 27 Plattshurgh, N. Y. Hope 5 HISTORY OF NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FOUR MY Dear Jim: I blew into a place called Providence the other day, and now I ' m bailed out I ' ll tell you about it. It ' s a joint somewhere between Massachusetts and the Mohawk River. For a quick tip, it you ' ve never been there, all 1 can say is Don ' t go ! Well, Jim, I got into the place about 2.40 p. m. and struck a fellow named Mason, who was sneaking around the big end of the town with a scared look. He seemed mighty pleased to see me, and 1 think he picked me out for a mark from Olneyville. Any- way, he said there was a push of hoboes on the tall end of the hill who did stunts with their heads, and he wanted me to go up and see the place. I agreed, so we started up a perpendicular rise about nine blocks long. Looked like it must be the proud part of Rhode Island. 1 tried my best to keep on my feet but it was no go. The hill wasn ' t used to it and Mason told me that Stevens and Judah had shown that the only way to reach the top after 12 is on your hands and knees. So 1 got down and crawled. When we got to the top, there was a fellow named Woodman rubbering around looking for a job. Woodman ' s the bloke that wears the ioi hat, and tells people how to do things. When he spied us, he nailed us for cold coin and started right in to make a land. I got the cue from Mason and gave him the bad wink. The next thing we struck was a real freak. I asked Mason what it was and he looked ashamed and said it was another Fresh- man named Max den. We nailed him and asked him what was pulling off around the place. He said the best he knew was a meeting of the Willie Bovs ' Club up in Lyon I I all, and the password was Sap ! 70 I. MSI, I ' BRt l. sis So over we went to Lyon Hall and took the elevator up to the Willie Boys ' hangout. The first exhibit we struck up there was an affair tagged De Lisle. 1 claimed ir must he a Freshman, for I ' d been told that they didn ' t have anybody but Freshmen in the Willie Boys ' Club, but Mason said he was the president ' s under- study in disguise. Jim, it anybody ever gets around you ami savs De 1 .isle, that ' s Brown for dodge. Well, Jim, that Willie Boys ' Club is the greatest place you ever saw. The walls are all hung out with skeletons of Sophomores that the Freshmen have captured in football games, athletic meets, rushes and debates, but ' 04 didn ' t figure much in that sort of junk, 1 noticed. They ' ve got a funny-looking specimen named Boone in charge of the menagerie and a fellow named Sackett to tell you about ' em. Sackett does his job for the glorv of the thing, but Boone ' s a fellow that ' s got a long line on anatomv. When 1 got in, the W i 1 1 i e Bovs were talking over a scheme to send an exhibit out to the Pan-American. Willie Taft was leading the meeting. He ' s the mainstay of the W i 1 1 i e Bovs, you know. They ' d already agreed to send Allen to sing a ditty en- titled, Hatless Allen, or How I Keep from Getting Bald, and it seemed a sure pipe that Capron and Benjamin would have to go out and show- the folks how 7 they give afternoon parties at Brown. But the main rub was right here. They ' d agreed to have three exhibits but couldn ' t decide on Number 3. One crowd wanted Masurv to go out and do a tew of his heart to heart mono- logues, but another bunch was support ing a missionary scheme with Kimball and Lynch doing the star. They ' d got all worked up over it and there might have been a fight, but Savage lit a cigar- ette and Ripley fainted. When they got him out, Leland woke up and got mad because nobody ' d tell him where he was. He started in to move the joint, and everybodv took to the tall uncut. Yours as ever, li = VISAED Agg j ™ _J FRE.SHMAN CLASS OFFICERS I lOUGHTON Mil ( All . Frederic Savage Elmer Tompkins Stevens Charles Wf.si.ky 1 1 ink President :e-Presiden1 Secretary Treasurer Henry Frederick Alliens, B © II Clarence Edwin Akerstrom Austin Ketcham Allen. K 2 Cap well Allen Chester Salisbun Allen. A K E James Vere Anthony, A T Q Everard Appleton William Day Appleton Edmund Kingsley Arnold Willis Frank Avery Joseph Chester Bailey, Z Harry Vincent Ball. B © n Levi Herbert Ballon, A T Clifford Thomas Barber Br )oklvn. N. Y. Maxcy j.35 Co icor.l [unction, Mass. Howell 4 ■ nfordville, N. Y. Messer S Br  okl n. N. V. |S Waterman St W Mass. Maxcy 212 W ire, Mass. Maxcy 318 Pr (vidence 209 Angell Street Pr widen ce 209 Angell Street T uissett, Mass. Messer 9 Mi nches ' ter, N. 11. 62 Meeting St Pr widencc University 13 R( xbury, Mass. Maxcy 435 VV onsocket 33 Benevolent Street A catlia 14 George Street LIBER BRl NENS1S William Henry Ban Surfield, Conn. 38 Benevolent Si Irving Judson Beck with Oxford, N. Y. Maxcj 130 King Belding, A K E Malone, X. Y. University Edward Merrill Benjamin, A A «|. New York, V Y. Slater 11 Ralph Herve Bevan, A Y Providence 475 Hope Street Charles Blake Boland Worcester, Mas . Howell 2 [lsley Boone Brooklyn, N. Y. Messer 1 Thomas Sidne) Booth, A A $ Abington, Conn. Maxcy 32 William Mitchell Bottomley Arlington Arlington John Rich Boukhy, Jr. Weymouth, Mass. East Providence John Masters Bovey, jr.. A A Nantucket, Mass. Slater 8 Asa Lloyd Briggs, Zt Ashaway Slater 12 Herbert Fiank Brightman Fall River, Mass. Pawtucket Morris Brown Woonsocket 19 Pratt St Ralph Arthur Brown Silver Creek. X. Y. Messer | William Gaylord Brown Collinsville, Conn. 38 Benevolent St Earl Whitney Browning, K i Worcester. Mass. Hope 38 Bertram Clyde Bughee Woodstock Valley, Conn. 58 College Street Bertram Harrington Buxton, A ® Providence Hope 1 1 Arthur Ewen Cameron. ATA Providence Maxcy 203 Adin Mowry Capron, A $ Stillwater Slater 5 Clifford Eugene Carr Providence S7 Congdon Street William Edson Cheever Providence Maxcy 204 Harrie Norman Cheney Providence 30S California Ave Paul Franklin Clark, A T $2 Portland, Me. University 54 Warren Almon Clough Groton, Mass. 29 Benevolent .Street Arlington Ingalls Clow Orange, Mass. 35 Benevolent St Harry Moses Cobb, A A $ East Parsonsfield Me. FriendsSchool Guy Blandin Colhurn Nashua, N. H. Maxcy 206 George Frederick Cook Providence Hope 1 Frederick Aloysius Coughlin Woonsocket Woonsocket Henry Carlton Courten Palmyra, X. Y. 87 Congdon Street Daniel Bradley Crane. B ® II Toledo, O. Hope 10 Ralph Conant Crockc r, A T 12 Bridgewater, Mass. 33 Benevolent St Azariah Foster Crowell, Jr., K 5 Woods Hole, Mass. Hope 3 Prince Sears Crowell. K Woods Hole, Mass. 29 Benevolent St Charles Francis Cudd) Somerville, M,i . Maxcy 205 VOLUME XL! II 73 W.ilton Wheaton Daniels. B © 11 David Davidson Foster Barker Davis, A Clarence Washington Dealt? - ) Harold Williams Drtiry Richard Owen Dummer James Harper Duncan William Young Easterbrooks, B © I] Howard Foss Esten, ATA Porter Fearey, A K E Louis Etlwaul Feingold Charles Fowler Fields. A V John Fierce Filson Francis Ford George Blinn Francis, Jr. A Y Charles Rivers Frazer Herbert Augustine Freeman James Murrv Gallison, A Philip Trayne Gleason Clifford Moore Granger William Henry Gray, A K E Spencer Benjamin Greene Elmer Dinsmore Greenleaf, A X Charles Francis Cross, Y Fred Arthur Guptill. A T 12 Wells Albert Hall X f Leo Gregory liana Harold Robert Hanson Wendell Edmund Harlow, B © II Howard Farnam Hart Charles Shailer Hascall, ATA William Chace Hascall, ATA Marshall Robinson Hastings Harry Worthington Hastings Oscar Leonard Heltzen, A T A John Peabody Herring Pawtucket Hope 34 Providence 20 Arch St Providence Slater i( Bryantville, Mass. Messer 14 North Swansea. Mass. University 58 Weld. Me. Si 2 No. Main Street Haverhill, Mass. University 34 Pawtucket I ' diversity 5 1 Pawtucket Maxcv 434 South Bethlehem, X. Y. Maxcv 207 Worcester, Mass. 14 George Street O ran In, Conn. Maxcv 434 Diamond, X. Y. 29 Benevolent St Narragansett Pier S3 lb, well Street Providence Slater 9 Auburn. Ala. 26S Brown St Willimantic, Conn. 29 Benevolent St Franklin. Mass. Slater 17 Lonsdale Hope 23 Feeding Llills. Mass. 3S Benevolent Street Malone, X. Y. University 44 Central Falls Hope 42 Auburn, Me. 38 Benevolent St Philadelphia, Pa. 41 Angell Street Portland, Me. I Fniversity 22 Brockton. Mass. Maxcy 429 Providence 133 Elm Street East Providence East Providence Middleborough, Mass. 3=5 Benevolent Street Fayetteville, N. Y . 87 Congdon St New York 72 College Street New York 72 College Street Auburn, Me. University ;; 1 Agawam. Mass. Hope 47 Providence 497 Morris Ave East Providence East Providence LIBER BRUNENSIS Clifton Henrj I I William George Hoffman. Jr. Clarence Warren I [olmes ( Jeorge San ford Holmes Gnstavus Benjamin I loll CharU- Wesle) Hunt, X I New Ion Peck Hutchison. X Royal Nesmith Jessup, A .T A Frank William Johnson, A T 12 Frederick Clark Jones, A P Harold Vincent Joslin, A K E Noble Brandon Judah, Jr., $ A © Llewellyn William Jutten, © A X Henry Roy Keene, A K E Herbert Alden Kenyon Horace Earle Kimball. Y Matthew Kollig George Elmer Lamphere Ralph Arthur Lane William Edmund Lane. B © U Louis Russell Langworthy Charles Bainbridge Leland, A K E Alpha Freeman Leonard Jesse Wanton Sbippee Lillibridge Frank Fred de Lisle, Y Samuel Everett Lincoln Albert John Loepsinger Warren Weston Loomis, A Y Michael Joseph Lynch. Y Joseph William Mackenzie Walter Dennis Mackie Edward Sumner Macomber, © A X James McPherson. A Y Robert Grant Martin, A Y Carlton Howard Mai) ott. K 2 Ralph Edward Mason. A A $ Mas.. Hope | Providi 38 Atwood Street Lancloff, II. 35 Bcncvolenl St Paw tin I- tin- St re. t Boston, Mass. 272 Benefit No. Charlestoun. N. II. Hope 23 Providence Slater 1 z Brooklyn. N. Y. Messer 10 Rumford 1 University 58 Providence Slater 14 Easthampton. Mass. LJniversit) 48 Chicago. III. :;- Waterman Street Fall River. Mass. Maxc) z 1 1 Sumner, Me. Messer 5 Providence I lope 46 Providence [42 Angel) Street Silver Creek. N. Y. Messer [5 Mystic. Conn. 87 Congdon Street Worcester, Mass. Howell 2 Antrim, N. II. 35 Benevolent St East Providence East Providence Clifton Springs, N. Y. Maxcy 427 Needham, Mass. Maxcy 429 East Greenwich Hope 41 St. Albans. Vt. 29 Benevolent St East Providence Hope 19 Providence Hope 27 Windsor, Conn. Hope 17 Holvoke. Mass. 29 Benevolent St Fall River. Mass. Maxcy 2 1 1 Providence 43 Woonasquatucket Ave North Dartmouth. Mass. I ' n i versify 55 Glasgow. Scotland Maxcy 426 Salem, Mass. Hope 17 Millhrook, N. Y. Messer 8 Providence Slater 1 1 OLUME XLI1I . 75 Stephen Waterman Mason, Y Providence [49 Waterman St Alfred Fellows Masury Y Danvers, Mass. | Manning Street [acob Alexander Mattnck Worcester, Mass. 14 George Street John Prior Thornley McBay, ATA Providence [63 Howell Street (ames Alphonsus McCann Eugene Ambrose McCarthy, $ K Eugene La Verne Mclntyre, ! A© James Joseph McKenna Lauren ' Leslie McMaster Houghton Metcalf, A A Allen Webster Milliken, © A X Richard Montague, A Y George Albert Mori el I Elisha Capron Mo wry, A K E Joseph T ler Mo wry Christian Augustus Nelson Oliver Perry Xewton Samuel Bailey Xewton, f A © Lester Hutchinson Nichols, A T A Ernest Harper Noble Frederick William O ' Connell Thomas Francis Joseph O ' Malley Horatio Nelson Otis, Z John Hector Palmer Arthur Lionel Patch Harry Maynard Penley, © A X Walter Enos Phillips. A A Walter Everett Prince George Butler Purick Bernard Perry Raymond. X J Xewton Chaffin Reed Wilber Tibbetts Reynolds Edward Payson Ripley, A J Louis Earle Rowe Herbert Lee Sackett Lucius Albert Salisbury Sandy Creek, N. XL 29 Benevolent Street William Sandager, X $ Auburn Auburn Providence University 18 Fall River Messer 9 Waldo. Wis. Messer 7 Providence University 18 Wakefield, Mass. Howell 2 Providence Slater 8 Xew Bedford. Ma Cambridge, Mass. Lakewood, X. J. ss. Maxcy 127 Hope 30 Maxc 316 Providence Oneco, Conn. 1 1 University 43 Rutherglen Ave Xew Sweden. Me 1066 Broad St Sandy Creek. N. ' . 29 Benevolent St Xew port Bennington, N ' t. Hope ii Maxcy 321 Meriden, X. II. 33 Benevolent St Providence 75 Langdon Street- Merrick, Mass. Messer 12 Providence Portland, Me. University 10 Bene Stoneham, Mass. I lope 19 Auburn, Me. 138 Benevolent St Cambridge, Mass. Slater 10 Worcester. Mass. 14 George Street Port Jefferson, X. V. 82 Prospect St Winchendon, Ma. ' Hope 22 Greenfield. Mass. 87 Coiigdon St East Greenwich Hope 2 Dorchester. Mass. Slater 17 Shawomet Leach Hope 10 Smith ' s Mills, N. Y. Messer 1 5 76 I.IP.KR BRUNENSIS Ernesl Alexander Ssiunders, Y Charles Frederick Savage, l A © William Joseph Sa ei s Berrick Schloss Edwin ( rarzea Scott Eliot Rossiter Scudder, A P Ralph Atherton Sherwood Caleb Arnold Slade, Z Harry Smalley Samuel Newell Smith. Jr., A K E George Lawton Spencer, B © II John Jay Staley, K 2 Albert Hayes Stanton, X £ Elmer Tompkins Stevens, A t Herbert Jackman Stowell Wilder Lee Sturtevant, Y Edward Padelford Taft James Birney Tatem, Jr., ATA George Francis Teehan Edwin Judkins Tetlow Clarence McGregor Thompson Roy Tow ne Samuel Beedy Trumbull Earl Vanderbilt Reginald Chipman Wade. Herbert Palmer Ware Frank Peck Weeden Albert Benjamin West Carlton Grieves White, X t Eugene Merrill Wilson Leon Arnold Winslow fohn Freeman Woodman Thomas Joseph Wynne Arthur Lincoln Young Somerville, Mass. Maxcy 433 Chicago, III. Messei 7 Fall River. Mass. 29 Benevolent St Pawtucket 1 lope 7 Pawtucket I lope 38 Brockton, Mass. Slater 19 Providence I lope 33 Attleboro, Mass. Hope 25 Fall River, Mass. Messer 9 Providence 9 Benevolent Street Providence Hope 10 Warrens, Wis. 29 Benevolent Stieet Ekonk, Conn. 22 Ilalsev Street Chicago, 111. Slater 14 Berlin, . II. Howell S Somerville, Mass. Maxcy 324 Providence 272 Benefit Street Putnam, Conn. Hope 24 Providence Hope 10 Providence Hope 5 Hartford, Conn. 58 College Street Windham. Conn. iS Pequot Street Lawrence. Mass. Maxcy 431 Little York, N.J. 38 Benevolent St Salem, Mass. Slater 19 Shelburne Falls, Mass. Howell 7 Providence Maxcy 204 Providence 57 Roanoke Street Somerville, Mass. Hope 18 Mount Vernon, N. Y. Howell 8 Bath, Me. Maxcy 316 Manchester, N. H. 62 Meeting St Warren Warren New Dorchester. Mass. Maxcy 319 SPECIAL STUDENTS William Walter Andrew, A T A Charles Edmund Bryant, A Y Dennis Francis Carey Albert Bronson Cole George Ashton Conibear Albert Linwood Copeland Walter Barron Hastings Currier, AK Fred Philbrick Curtice Clinton Viall Dean. Z 1 Harold DeWolf, A A Charles Edward Grinned Dickerson, Peter Terence Dolan Francis Dwyer Leland Leslie Eaton Henry Peirce Eldredge, Jr. Z Max Simon Fei lei- Thomas Albert Fenton Myron Charles Fish, © A X Isaac Fleming Robert Nathan Gee, B n Thomas Leo Gorman, J K Providence Brook field, N. Y Worcester, Mass. Arlington Providence Tbomaston, Me. E Springfield, Mass E. Washington, 3. Providence Bristol X4 Providence Worcester, Mass Ansonia, Conn. Bradford, N. H. East Greenwich Providence 2 Providence Pawtucket Musquodoboit, N Arkwright Central Falls Hope 6 Hope 6 University 3 1 Arlington 362 Point Street Hope 13 s. University |S N. II. 5 Benevolent Street Maxcy 432 Bristol 62 Pearl Street Messer i 38 Benevolent St University 13 University 19 Si Willard Avenue 198 Broad Street University 25 .S. 38 Benevolent St Hope 20 Central Falls •s I.I UK R HRl NKNSls Mai r Elmer Griffith, A ' I). IV Lew lrvii id Com is Fred ig l.il.l. ioIIv Hall. erick Hall ) Handel K . l Chii rles I la rgrove Geo rge Edc jar llatlnn va IK.v ,-ard Ra ymond Ht :yd ( ieoi rge Arc hibald IIu rnpl Dan |nsh i.-l fosv ua Hen ph Hurley rv [ones, [sra ;l Webs iter Kellv Joh. i Maria Lennon, t K [ames Mam rung Lent. k : Geo rge Hei irv Lewis Robert Bell Longvvell |ohn Patrick Lynch Robert Wheaton Mawney Tohn Edward McCartin Collin Alexander McLeod James Duncan McLeod Duncan Martin Luther McPhail Lester Willis Nickerson John Ferdinand Oderman Frank Went worth Pen ni man Preston Hill Porcheron Emanuel George Psiaki, K 2 Enrique Quinones James Aloysius Ranger Vinton Irving Reynolds Joseph Francis Russell Cloves Preston Salladav Morton Emery Sanborn Philip Sheldon Henry Williams Stiness, ARE Cyrus Briggs Swift, K 2 Henry Edwin Tiepke Burtt Neville Timbie Arthur Herbert Whittemore, A K E Frank Bowen Whittemore, Z Walter Hastings Woods, K 2 Frank Ferris Woollev Augusta, Me. ; 5 B.iicv uleiil Stre i Boston. Mass. Ho,,, ,, Bridgeport, Co, in. Maxcj (.25 Providence 33 Pocassit Avenue Charlestown,M ass. i 15 Waterman SI Providence 75 Alms Street Crompton 1 Manning Streel Manville Manville Providence 3  East George Streel Columbus. (). ' [9 Congdon Streel Providence ioj Broadway Pawtuckel Pawtuckel Winthrop, Mas; Messei 1 1 Lynn, Mass. }i Charles Field Si Reidsburg. Pa. 87 Congdon Streel Bristol Bristol Providence 380 Smith Street Providence 2 26 Blackstone Streel Boston. Mass. 29 Benevolent Si Providence Hope 34 Beverly. Mass. 29 Benevolent St Brockton. Mass Howell 6 Providence 287 Admiral Street Concord, Mass. 1 George Street Brockton, Mass Slater 1 Athens, Greece 36 Pratt Street Santa Clara. Ci iba 233 Med way St Holyoke. Mass. 29 Benevolent St Providence 60 Evergreen Street Adams, Mass. 127 Benefit Street East Greenwich East Greenwich Manchester. N. 11. Messer _) Pawtucket Park Heights. Pawtuckel Providence University 45 Providence (04 Prairie Avenue Pawtucket Pawtuckel Pittsfield, Mass. University s n Reading, Mass. Hope IO Worcester, Mas is. Maxcy 432 Providence 65 Cypress Street Pawtucket Pawtucket «E$I©IW;CMSS 1 OFFICERS Saida Newton Hallett . Presidenl Jessie Wheeler Vice-President Adelaide Kimball Burton . . Secretary Marion Harvie . Treasurer Rutli Appleton, K A © Minnie Leora Bartlett, A 2 Lilla Rogers Birge, A 2 Mabel Jennie Bowe, K A Adelaide Kimball Burton, K A © Daisy Frances Coulters Alice Carey Devereux Louise Conant Gam well. A 2 Mary Louise Gregory, A 2 Margaret Noble Goodwin Saida Newton Hallett, K A © Marlon Harvie Grace June Jones, A B Sara Imbrie Manatt Providence 209 Angel! Streei Providence 1S2 Broadwa) Providence 50 Jenkins Streei Providence 491 Elope Streei Providence 85 Waterman Streei Providence Cranstc Manton Mant Providence 10 Wesleyan Avenue Providence 2 3 Broad v Harwinton, Conn. 6S Lloyd Str Providence 2S3 George Streei Providence 3S Congdon Streei Philadelphia, Pa. 325 Gano Str Providence i Keene Streei VOLUME XLI1I 8] Mai) Alida Oi swell Providence 631 Public Street Genevieve Partridge Woonsocket 1 College Court Edythe Grace Peck. A H Providence 277 Washington Street Mary Florence Rafter Damariscotta. Me. 325 Gano Street Canclace Allen Smith Providence 47 Jenkins Street Lura May Thomas Attleboio, Mass. Attlehoro Alice Louise Ward Providence 27 Larch Street [esse Wheeler Saxton ' s River, ' r. 7,z Gano St Ruth Stiles Allen Providence 76 Pitman Street Mary Edna Budlong, A H Providence 88 Chapin Avenue Emma May Caufield Ashton Ashton Maude Evelyn Clarke. A Newport 42 Angel 1 Street Amy Jenckes Cook. K A © Woonsocket 101 Congdon Street Ella Francis Cory Providence 5 1 Arch Street Alice May Cushing Providence 5 Franklin Street Nellie Maude Dauphinee Providence 1 86 Ohio Avenue OLUME XLII 1 83 Maude Farnum Providence 1 1 2 Bridgham Street Qrace Deborah Gallup Woonsocket 42 Angel 1 Street Lillian May Ganiwell, K A Providence 73 Taber Avenue Abbie Sweetland Ghodey, K A © Providence ioj Congdon Street Edith May Guff, A B East Providei ce 202 Waterman Ave Esther Dora Griswold, A 2- Providence 28 Oak Street Mary Louise Hays Westfield, M iss. 66 Benefit Street Leonora Hill Providence iz 1 Broad Street Mary Child Lee Providence 92 Bellevue Avenue Millicent Rawson Leete, K A © Pawtucket 93 Summit Street Katharine Fiances Littlefield. K A © Providence 98 Prospect Street Ella Baxter McCaffrey Providence 61 Congdon Strict Myrtis Alida Millikin, A B Providence 30 Portland Street baz a Page Mown, A i Providence 7 Barnes Street Alice Maude Paull Bellingham, Mass. 130 Ford Street Grace Pierce. A B Providence 72 Broad Street Ella Artemisia Pollard, K A © Attleboro, M iss. Attleboro Marguerite McLeon Reid Providence 32 1 Blackstone Street Ada Rogers, A B Pawtucket 5 Clyde St. Pawtucket Margaret Roys, A B Uxbridge, Mi 26 Alumni Ave Helen Macomber Sherman, A i Providence 4 Llmwood Avenue Bertha Northrop Smith Olneyville 1 36 Pocassett Avenue Ida Maude Warren, K A © Providence 13 Smithfield Avenue Ellen Sefton Waterman, A B Olneyville 918 Plainrield Street Miriam Edwina Witliee, A B Houlton, Me 34 Pratt Street ■ SOPHOMORE CLASS g£S I 5 5 h OFFICERS Charlotte Anthony Ethel Ella Rich Ruby Marion Atwood Annie Francis Ciieeyer . Presidenl . Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer Ruby Marion Atwood Charlotte Anthony, A 2 Jessie May Barbour Jane Barclay Alice Morse Barrett. K A © Mabel Irene Bartlett Anna Burnside, A B Edna Georgiana Calef Alice Sheehan Carroll Annie Frances Cheever Annie Mabel Cobb New Boston, Barrington Ashton Guelph, Ontari Providence Providence Providence Concord, Mass. Providence 13 Xo. Attleboro, 1 Attleboro. Mas; N. H 68 Lloyd St Barrington Ashton 153 Benefit Street 07 Williams Street 6 Vinton Street 359 Knight Street 66 Benefit Street Tockwotton Street ass. No. Attleboro Attleboro YOLUMK XLIII 5 Lillian Maud Coffin Providence Flora Sawyer Gifford, A B Buffalo, N. Marion Brooks Gould Providence Alice Nina Hersey, A B Hyde Park, Bessie Allen Hood, K A ® Providence Bessie Alberta Loud Providence Helena Manatt Pi Hester Jane Mercer, A B Mary Elizabeth Mercer. A B Ethel May Munro Georgie Smith Peck, K A © Celia Sweeting Peck ha in, A i Ethel Ella Rich, K A © Lillie Leonaretta Scholfield, A B Providence Helen Sherman Sheldon, A % Providence Alma Stockard Providence Geraldine Ethelwyn Street Cranston Ida Lewis VVheawill Auburn Helen Whitmarsh, K A © Providence videi Willima Willi ma Bristol Provide! Providei Provide] Hartford Avenue Y. 17 Keene Street 45 Charles Field Street Mass. 148 Broad St 7 Parkis Avenue 4 Wesley an Avenue 1 5 Keene Street Conn. 4 dishing St . Conn. 4 dishing St Bristol 4S Princeton Avenue 16 Preston Street 375 Blackstone Street 40, Beacon Avenue 1 15S Westminster St 41 Waterman Street Cranston Waterman Avenue 42 Arch Street 33 FRESHMAN CLASS Edith Violet Aldrich, A E Mary Ma It by Ailing Nellie Hathaway Baclieller. Laura Frances Baker Lena Belle Baker Florence Butler Beilemn.ni Maud Emily Bertram Harriet Clara Blades Laura Brooks, A B Harriet Louise Campbell, A 2 OFFICERS Edith Field Wilcox . President Eleanor II. Stark . . Vice- President Annie Fisher .... Secretary Miriam Francis Slocum Treasurer Sterling, Ct. 375 Blackstone St Northford, Ct. 1 19 Waterman Ave Newport 66 Benefit Street E. Brewster, Mass. 1 68 Williams St E. Erewster, Mass. 16S Williams St Birdsboro, Pa. 84 Comstock Ave East Providence, 137 Summit St Pawtucket Pawtucket East Providence 23 Mary Ave Centredale Centredale VOLUME XLIII Agnes Alice Caw ley Flora Melville Cotton, K A © Annie Louise Conley Alice Marion Crosby Lottie May Devlin Annie Fisher Florence Ward Greene, A i; Minnie Elizabeth Locke Linda May Lowell, A B Nora Lorelta Magnire Theresa Rachel McKenna Annette Walker Milligan Mary Ellen Oslin Sara De Veaux Packard. K A © Vera Rector Inez Vernon Sayer, A B Marjorie Wads worth Shaw, A B Lura Cook Shreve, A 2 Miriam Frances Slocum, K A Bertha May Smith Eleanor Stark, A B Mae Sten house Harriet Fuller Griggs Stephens, K Elsie Marion Straffin Ada Henderson Strange Sarah Ellen Taylor Edith Marion Tillinghast Georgia Louise Towle, K A © Anne May Walker Edith Field Wilcox, A B East I 3 rovi dence 19S Juniper St Provi dene e 1 ' ) Humboldt Avenue Woon isock et 2 y North Main Street Matteawan, N. Y. 66 Benefit St Pawtucket 60 River Street Providence 5S7 Academy Avenue Narraga unset Pier 1 syElm wood Ave Fall River, Ma s. 232 Pearl Street Providence 78 Hellevue Avenue Providence 79 Andem Street Providence 39 Bainbridge Avenue Saylesville Saylesville Providence 241 Amherst Street Providence 19s Waterman Street Pawtucket 204 High Street Providence 9S8 Smith Street Oak Lawn Oak Lawn Auburn Auburn Montour Falls, N. V. 66 Benetit St Woonsocket 132 Park Avenue Providence 41 Chapin Avenue Pawtucket 313 Fligh Street A © Willimantic, Ct. 66 Benefit Street Brockton, Mass. 66 Benetit Street Assonet, Mass. 299 Knight Street Methuen, Mass. 44 Ruggles Street Providence 129 Oxford Street Providence 47 Camp Street Palmyra, N. Y. 274 Benefit Street Providence 41 Med way Street Susan Grace Aldrich fosephine Bauer Abby Bullock, A 2 Emily Braiuard Day Mabel Anstice Gannett Mary Manton Grant Edith Gray Mary Elizabeth Halcrow Ruth Louise Handy Bertha Ella Harrington Helen Elizabeth Hersey Hannah Heaton Flora Johnson Gertrude Selwyn Kimball .Susanna Eliza Knight Grace Fisher Leonard Hope Waldron Mason Ethel Busiel Morse Mabel Cornelia Moulton. K Bertha Mabel Nason Emma Grace Osier Alice Emma Parkinson Lucy Pierce Frederique Remond Irene Seabury, K A © Marian Lydia Shorey Louise Isabel Thurston Caroline Ballou Vose, A 2 Martha Jane Wilson, A i ast Provid rovidence rovidence rovidence rovidence Providence Providence Providence Manville Providence Providence Brunswick, Summit Providence Anthony Providence Providence Providence Providence Georgiaville Providence Providence Providence Providence Providence Albion, Me Providence Manville Edgewood Mr [3 Wheldon Ave 609 Broad .St reel 28 Pitman Street 216 Medway Street 43 Chtipin Avenue 1 87 Bowen Street 52 Larch Street 106 Somerset Street 66 Benefit Street 50 Prairie Avenue 148 Broad Street 66 Benefit Street Summit 9 Villa Avenue Anthony 156 Broad Street 333 Gano Street 596 Broad Street 327 Elm wood Ave Georgiaville 241 Rhodes Street 2 Wnitmarsh Street 19 Lester Street 9 East George Street 72 Keene Street 68 Lloyd Street 93 Almy Street Manville Edgwood VOLUMR XLIII 89 §1 ft SENIORS WOMEN ' S COLLEGE 1 Ruth Applkton • .. Lkora Bartlett i V B Lilla Rogers Birge L P F B 4 Mabel Jennie Bowk B H Daisy Frances Coulters PMr H I Alice Carey Devereux L F S I.nlilSI.- I ' dVJKT i;4MWRI,], 8 Louise Conant CJamwkll 90 UBER BRUNENSIS 6 S E N I C) R S WOMEN ' S COLLEGE VOLUME XLIII SENIORS WOMEN ' S COLLEGE Kl.YTHK Gr Mary Flor f Ox The Ten- Mil FRATERNITIES ' Nulla societas, nullum collegium — Cicero. 9 6 LIBER BRUNENSIS Alpha Delta Phi .IBruncmfan Chapter UnstttutcO 1836 Percival Bartlett Green Edward Tudor Gross Henry Clay Harl Charles Sherman Hoyt Arthur LaDgford Slocura Robert Wing Steere Frederick Hams Thurston Thomas Burgess John Palmer Bai Kirk Porter Line Robert A Id rich Harvey Almy Baker John Hutchins Cady Harry Moses Cobb Walter Enos Phillips William Benjamin Satterle George Roberts Walworth Edward Merrill Benjamii Thomas Sidney Booth John Masters Bovey, Jr. Harold DeWolf Ralph Edward Mas, Houghton Metealf Roll of Chapters Hamilton College Columbia Universit Vale Ui College of Michigan v of Rochester VOLUME XLIJI Mh ihattai Mil K.- illetov, l ' li Kappa Jo) us Ho] Williams College C ollege of the City of New Vo Wesley an Unirersitv . of Toronto . of Chicag . . Resident Members C T Aldrich Brown ' 77 (i S Cooper Brown II L Alclrich Brown ' 76 H E Cooper Brown Samson Ah. iv Phi Kappa ' 92 Gardner Oornett Brown Rev T 1) Anderson Brown ' 74 J A Cross Brown F W Arnold Jr Brown ' 98 A II Cushman Brown Benj Baker Brown 75 Rev H 1 Cushman Dartmouth V C Baker Brown ' SI Robert Cushman Brown ! S Baker Brown ' 7. . Dr F L Day P. row n Aliram Barker Brown ' 83 Prof E P. Delabarre Amherst A A Barrows Rev F .1 Basset r Brown !2 T W Dyke E G Durfee Bowdoin Brown T W lit, knell Brown ' 60 Seeber Edwards Brown C It Brayton Brown ' 63 H C Field Brown Zephaniali Brown Brown ' 65 II C Foster Brown H II Bucklin Brown ' 00 .1 It (Wadding Brown W (, Ca,ly Brown ' .- It It Goff Brown W H Cady Brown ' 98 II L Grant Brown Dr F 1 ' Capron Brown ' 77 E P Greene Brown J W Campbell Brown ' 99 J C Hartwell Brown A B Ohace Jr Brown ' 93 Prof A G Darkness Brown M G Chace Brown ' 96 CM Henshaw Trinity Zechariah Chaffee Brown ' 80 G C Einckley Brown Dr C V Chapin G E Church Crown Amherst Brown ' ' F L Binckley M W House Daniel Howland Brown Brown R B Comstock G L Cook Jr Brown Phi Kappa ' 70 I () Hunt S F Hunt Brown Brown 9 8 ,IBKR BRUNENS1S c A Kilv.-rl Prof ( ' F Keni Re II M Km- I G l.a.l.l Di- ( ' II I nan B W Mason II II Mason A C Mendenhall ( ' I) Owen Jr c F Parkhursr, w A Peck VV R Perse .1 A Pirce Prof W C Polan F M Pond Prof A K Poller H M Rice F B Richards K C Richmond W E Sargent J W Verm P I! Wesle B l Whili I () Winsli Prof A Ion . Lu , Shi LIBER BIU MA ' S IS Delta Phi .ICeta Chapter lEstablisbec- 1S3S Roy Elliotl dark William Lathrop Glarl Harvej Nathaniel Davi William Kinsley Low Thacher Rowland Guil Howard Mri.-iul Ci A.din Mowry Capron Foster Barker Davis James Murray Gallison Frederick (Mark Jones Edward Payson Riplej Eliot Rossiter Seudder Elmer Tompkins Steven Roll of Chapters Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Fta Lambda . f New York ( iolumbia Rutgers ( Lehigh University Johns Hopkins Unive Sheffield Scientific Scl VOLUMK XIJII Resident Members Prof Joseph N Ashton Hon George T Brown Robert P Brown Brown Brown Brown ' 71 Arthur P Johnson Alfred S Johnson Edwin Knowles Jr Brown Brown Brown Martin S Budlong Brown ' ' .Ml Joseph W Lewis Brown Prof Eennon ( ' Bumpus Brown •84 Harold L M.-Aushm Brown Charles D Burrows James C Collins Jr Brown Brown ' ill William A McAuslan Prof Wilfred 11 Munro Brown Thomas Crosby Jr Brown •!I4 Walter L Munro M I) Brown Prof Xatlianiel F Davis Frank T Easton Brown Brown ' 70 Lewis Tew Place Herbert E Rice Brown Brown Prof George W Field Koyal H Gladding Brown Brown | 87 Ha rold A Richmond Edward T Boot Yale Brown Clifford H Griffin Brown ' 94 (ieorge T Spirer Brown Clarence 11 Guild Jr Hon Charles Hart Brown ' 41 Walter K Sturges Hon Cyrus M Van Slyc Yale k Brown Prof John E Hill Rutgers ' 84 Prof Arthur E Watson Brown Rev Joseph M Hobl.s Edward P Jastram (ieorge A Jepherson 1 ' .row n Brown Brown 87 Clarence E Wilson Prof (Ieorge G Wilson Brown Brown Brown l ' si I ' rsaos Hoc 104 LIBER BRUNENS1S Psi Upsilon Sigma Chapter ffnstitutefc 1840 Man Rattray Whe James Aloysius Ran William Albion Ha Stephen Wateriinni Ma.-o Alfred Fellows Masury Wilder Lee Ntmtevani Roll of Chapters Tlieta Delta Beta Sigma Gamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Union College . University of New Ya Vale University Brown University Ami, erst College Trinity College . Lehigh University University of Penn University of Chicago VOLUME XLIII 105 Resident Members ri. ' i, Br W T A I Anilnlion Arms Bio Prof W W Bailey Bro E Barrows E A Barrows D Bec-kwith T Beck with 2nd Wi 1 Binn V;il. W Ely llev G McC Fiske F C Flelcher T C Foster W Gammell Benjamin Gardine ell ' 96 uii ' 96 A Bourne Jr Brown ' 89 Et Gardner Brown 77 S W Bourne Brown ' 99 Col R H I Goddard Brown ' 58 II B Bowen Harvard ' 65 D L D Granger Brown 74 3 Rridghatu Brown ' 117 F.B Grant Brown ' 69 s W Briilghani Brown • I4 H T Grant Jr Brown ' 69 F H Brown Brown ' 85 A Green Brown ' 58 W H Biiffum Browti •98 T F Green Brown ' 87 A W Calder Brown ' ill R C Green Brown ' 96 G C Carpenter Brown ' 93 H R Green Brown ' 97 Ed Carrington Brown 73 E H Green Brown ' 97 A I) Cliapin Jr Brown ' ! 1 E A Greene Brown 76 E F Child Brown ' 71 C W Greene Brown ' 84 H L Clarke Brown 76 F W Greene Brown ' 85 Alfred M Coats Yale ' 90 W T Grinnell Brown ' 98 Dr G L Collins Brown 73 C Hale Brown ' 96 Le B B Colt Yale ' 1 ;s G D Hale Brown ' 99 Le B C Colt Brown ' 99 Dr A E Ham Brown ' 64 B G Comstock Brown ' 01 L Ham Brown ' ' .14 B W Comstock Jr Brown ' 02 Prof A Harkness Brown ' 42 W P Comstock P. row 11 ' 99 F A W Harris Brown ' 88 H Cong.lon Brown ' 94 B B Harris Brown ' 82 H W Cooke Brown ' 91 S C Harris Brown ' 86 E W Corliss Brown ' 95 J L Harrison Cornell ' 86 G If Currier Dartmouth ' 89 F Hayes Brown ' 81 A L Danielson Brown ' 86 L H Hazard Brown ' 89 J De F Danielson Brown ' 87 C L A Heiser Brown ' 90 J H DeWolf Brown ' 57 .1 Henshaw Brown ' 87 C T nominee Brown ' 67 F S Hoppin Yale ' 56 S R Dorrance Brown ' 63 C T Howard Brown 78 W T Dorrance Brnvvn ' 94 W C Hun toon Jr Brown ' 94 L W Downs Trinity ' 88 F L Jem-ks Brown ' 98 W W Dunnell Brown 75 Prof J F Jameson Amherst 79 S S Durfee Brown ' 80 T A Jenckes Brown 77 Hon T Durfee Brown ' 46 V D Kilvert Brown ' 98 Col H A Dyer Brown ' 94 G F J King Brown ' 89 Hon I! T Eauies Yale ' 43 C P Knight Brown ' 85 C C Earle Brown ' 03 W Knight Brown ' 85 lo6 LIBER BRUNKNSIS s D Km iwlea w C Langilon w Larchar .1 r .) B Lew is ( ' W Li| M .iii 11 1; F Lij L Lip ■ pit i pill A T Mai E 1 ' Ma- son E NY Ma SOU J] ( ' B Mai ■kinne II A Ma ckinnt V E L Ma B Mer 11 Mei B Mei Ei H T Me tnman W B M Miller Brow n in Rev Aril. Brown ' .Hi Eon II I: Brown A W Ron Brow ii 7« F M Sack Brown ' 78 II V S.IC Brown ' IIS F A Sayli Brown ' 69 F M Smil Brown ' 99 E P Tall Brown Brown ! 9 f It ' Taft U W Tafl F W Miner Jr Brown ' 94 i; ■ Tingley Trinity ' 52 • I Morris Brown f 50 r h Tingley Brown ' 76 C A Nightingale Brown 78 c M Tolnian Lehigh ' 85 II 1! Nightingale Brown ' 83 Rev .1 G Vose Vale ' 51 (i L C Orinsl.ee Brown ' 90 i; ][ Vose Amherst ' 92 F P Owen Amherst ' 74 James Warren Brown ' 00 .1 F Paine Brown ' 98 H P Waterman Brown ' 74 Prof A S Packard Bow.loin ' 61 g Waterman Brown ' 86 I)r .1 C Pegram Brown ' 92 w B Waterman Brown ' 83 W B Phillips Brown ' 58 M Watson Brown ' 7:5 Prof I Pierce Brown ' 56 ; g Watson Brown ' 97 Dr F L Piirdy Syracuse ' 92 R i; Weeilen Brown ' 99 S P Remington Brown ' 90 w R Weeilen Brown ' 91 J Richardson Brown ' 82 [) r j L Wheaton Jr Brown ' ill W C Rhodes Brown ' 64 m White Brown ' 99 F E Richmond Brown ' 99 ¥ l An C X ioS LIBER BRl NI.NMs Ikappa Cbapter Beta Theta Pi 1901 es Chester K: Ho art! Oscar Winslow i Duncan McLeod Allied Robinson Winter e Allen Taylor Morris Albert Bol Le Roy Bartletr, Philip Caswell Robert Nathan G 1hb3titUtC 1847 1002 George West Hathaway Arthur Kan.- Munro Russell William Richmond Lennox Greshatn Walling Walter Wheal Frank Law renee Dillon Arthur M«h in VVinslow Trueman Doane Woodb 1004 Henry Frederick Ahrens William Young Ea terbrooks Harry Vincent Ball Wendell Edmund Harlow Daniel Bradley Crane George Law ton Spencer Roll of Chapters Di-kin.son Cnlleg Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Delta Sigma Beta Zeta Beta Eta Beta Theta Nil Upha Alpha Beta Iota Beta Lambds Stevens Institute st. Lawrence l ' ni Maine Stale CnUe- Colgate University Union College Columbia College Amherst College Vanderlnlt Univer VOLUME XLIII 109 Beta Omicron gpbeta Delta Alpha Tan A.lplia Upsilon Aloha Zeta Beta Epsilon Alpha Omega Beta Pi Mu Epsilon Beta Chi Beta Gamma Phi Chi Zeta Phi Zeta Alpha Phi Alpha Beta Kappa Beta Pi Ohio St; Lambda Tau Epsilon Kappa Zeta Eta Beta Theta Iota Alpha Xi I si Alpha Beta Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Eta Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu Alpha Pi Rho Beta Psi Beta Sigma , Unive y of Ne ity . aska Pennsylvania State College University of Denver . Syracuse University . Dartmouth College University of Cincinnati Wesleyan University . Lehigh University Rutgers College Yale University Ui of Miami University Ohio Universily Western Reserve Universii Washington Jefferson Coll Harvard University De Pauw University . [ndiana University University of Michigan Wabash College Centre College . Brown University Hampden-Siilney College University of North Caroli Ohio Wesleyan University Hanover College Knox College University of Virginia Davidson College Beloit. College Bethany College University of Iowa Wittemherg College . Westminster College . Iowa Wesleyan University Denison University Richmond College Universif, of Wo Universily of Kansas . University of Wisconsin Northwestern University West Virginia University I ' m rdoin Co University ,f ( ' ,, rado 1885 1885 1888 1889 18! 10 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1893 1891 1839 1841 1841 1842 1843 1845 1845 1845 1845 1850 1852 1853 1853 185G 1856 1858 1860 1861 1805 1808 1809 1870 1872 1872 1873 1873 1900 1900 1900 I.IBKR BR UN FAS IS Graduate Students Resident Members B 1 ' Allen T Angel 1 E C Arnold II S Babeock E T Banning W H Barne J T Blodgett H J Boyce A 1! Brownell E I Brownell II C Brownell D C Cliase A F Clark 11 F Colwell a H Crooker M I ii Dunsrer Jr s Edwards W F Grant E B Harvey M D L W Horton V F Horton L R Holmes A J Mc( Bonnie H P Ma ining W S Me ider S V Mi lard E C My iek T F Na. eau A DeF i aimer E E Pieree M W A Pr isbney W E Pr ee F M Kee d E A Rol inson R C San ger H L Seo tt W 11 Scotl R L Spe iser A C P Sin R Tin rTn w F Yi Ison L A Wa erinai W A Young Brown Brown Monmoulh ' LIBER BRUNENSlS Delta Kappa Epsilon Iflpsilon Gbapter Ifnstitutefr 1850 William Carter Johns .Michael John Linden Morris Ezra Ailing Ernest, Preston Brown Atwo Waller Barron Hastings Cnn Henry Joseph Hart Stanley Milner 1 Weeden Nicho Theodore Frederick Pevea Arthur Wellington Pinkha Robert Ord way Smith Henry Williams Stiness Arthur Herbert Whittemoi Wallace King P.eldn Potter Fearey William Henry Gra Harold Vincent Joslin Hersey Roy Keene Charles Bainbridge Iceland Klisha ( ' apron Mown Roll of Chapter Central University of Kentucky VOLUME XLIII IT 3 Alpha Alpha Omicron E psi Ion Rho Tan Mu N ii Beta Phi Phi Chi Psi Chi Sarama Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Clii Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Cl.i Psi Gamma Phi Epsilon Sigma Tan Delta Delta Alpha Phi Omega Delta Kappa Colg ite University Colle Re of the City of New Univ ersity of Rochester Rritg irs College De P iuw University . Wesl eyan University . Reus selaer Polytechnic Adel .ert, College Coin ,11 University Syra use University Colli nhia College Univ ersity Of California Trim ty College . Univ ersity of Alabama Van.l erhilt University Univ ersity of Minnesota Mass ichusetts Institute of 1 Univ Rrsity of Chicago . Toro ito University . Tulai e University Univ ersity of Pennsylvania 1889 1890 18! 2 1898 1898 1899 Graduate Student Edward Blanrhanl Chamberlain A B Bowtloin Resident Members E B Aldrich E S Aldrich •1 W Angell C X Arnold F H Arnold Hon D R Ballou Hon G N Bliss Union ' 60 G M Bliss Brown ' 97 Ensign W C Bliss Brown ' 96 F B Bourne Brown ' 73 W J Brown Esq Brown ' 93 ; A Bullum Brown ' 69 II 4 LIBER BRUNENSIS W W Burnham Brown ' 83 L H Meader Dartmouth ' 72 T J Burrage Brown ' 98 S O Metcalf Brown ' 78 W C Burwel) Brown ' 85 C A Miller Wesleyan ' 91 C C Burnett Harvard ' 86 Dr A L Morrison Brown ' 90 W J Binney Harvard •81 Hon E C Mo wry Brown 61 W B Chase Brown ' 85 C H Paige Jr Esq Wesleyan •91 A H Chase Brown ' 97 H R Palmer Brown ' 90 Dr E I) Chesebro Brown ' 87 G R Parsons Harvard ' 8ti W A Dyer Brown ' 86 E D Pearce Harvard 71 E M Doild Harvard ' 80 Dr N Perrin Brown ' 69 Dr F M Eaton Yale - 82 J TV V Rich Wesleyan ' 75 E F Ely Brown ' 79 Rev C A L Richards Yale ' 49 M S Fanning Brown ' 91 C P Robinson Brown ' 63 W D Forbes Brown ' 00 Col H B Rose Brown ' 81 C H George 2nd Brown ' 98 L E Salisbury Brown ' 63 D F George Brown ' 94 Prof L Sears Yale ' 61 A K Gerald Esq Brown ' 93 W B Sherman E A Godding Brown ' 86 Rensselae r Polytechnic ' 72 H M Grant Brown ' 95 TV B Shurrocks Brown ' 98 H J Greene Brown ' 99 C H Smart Brown ' 69 W E Halm Columbia ' 90 C H Smith Jr Brown ' 99 G W Harrington Brown ' 98 R TV Smith Wesleyan ' 70 W Hayward Brown ' 85 E L Smyth Brown ' 80 S C Howard Hon J H Stiness Brown ' 61 College of the City of New York ' 75 G A Stock well Brown ' 72 C H Johnson Esq Brown ' 77 G A Sturdy Colby ' 73 Prof A Jones Bowdoin ' 60 A H Swift Brown ' 82 F W Jones Brown ' 99 E De TV Talbot Brown ' 99 J D E Jones Brown ' 93 C L Thomas Yale ' 53 J E Kendrick Wesleyan ' 76 R W Tower Brown ' 92 Hon Lapbam Brown ' 64 J W S Tucker Brown ' 97 N W Littlefield Esq Dartmouth ' 69 A G Utley Brown ' 54 F N Luther Brown ' 84 A T Wall Brown ' 85 G R Macleod Esq Brown ' 89 C H Warren Harvard ' 64 Lieut A C Matteson Brown ' 93 TV G Webster Michigan ' 83 iron C Matteson Brown ' 60 Dr W R White Dartmouth ' 74 Col F W Matteson Brown ' 92 W W V bitten Brown ' 86 G A Matteson Brown ' 96 J P Williams Brown ' 89 Prof A D Mead Middlebury ' 90 LIBKR BRUNENSIS Zeta Psi lEpsilon Chapter Howard Hiram Tucke William Cornell Blandin Howard Denison Biiggs Alfred Griswold Chaffee Percy Howard Blanding Kiehard Warren Blanding Charles Stnrgis Carpenter Frank Hiram Westlake Asa Lloyd Briggs Clinton Viall Dean Newton Peek Hutohim Horatio Nelson Otis Caleb Arnold Slade Frank Bower White of Chapters Zeta Delta Sigma Chi E psi Ion Kappa Tau Upsilon ( lli ersil Of New Williams College Rutgers College University of Penn Colby University Brown University Tufts College Lafayette College University of Nortl VOLUME XLIII 117 Theta Xi Alpha Alpha P.si University of T01 Columbia Collegf McGill Universit Case School of A Yale University Leland Stanford , University of Mil 1808 1868 1868 1870 1883 1885 188H 1892 1899 Resident Members P E Aldrich Hon Eil win Aldrich E S Aldrich Gen William Ames T Andrews C E Bailey S H Bailey Jr Charles Blake H M Boss Jr M B Brown J G Bucklin E N Casey J L Casey M L Chadsey C W Clement C E Cohen M H Cooke W M Cotton C C Couillard H R Cross W J Cashing H D Day J T Day G L Drowne Hon Elisha Dyer Brown Brown ' Brown ' Brown ' Brown ' Wra H Eddy O E Fitzgerald H W Greene .1 F Greene W Grosvenor H W Hayes G J Holden H J Hove S D Humphrey P S Jastram H L Koopinan H D Knight J D Lewis W S Mason Dr H G Miller E W Olney H W Ostby J O Otis W P Otis A D Payne Jay Perkins N PI ass F K Potter R C Powers W J Reynolds Jr Brown ' !)0 I ' .town ' 73 Brown ' 77 Brown ' ill Brown ' 60 Brown 76 Brown ' 95 Brown ' 97 Brown ' 60 Colby ' 80 Brown ' 02 Brown ' 67 Brown ' 77 Brown ' 60 Brown ' 98 Brown ' 99 Brown ' 97 Brown ' 96 Brown ' 72 Colby ' 91 Brown ' 71 Brown ' 98 Brown ' 86 n8 LIBER BRUNENSIS H Richmond Brown F H Webster J W Slater Brown 74 F A White E G Smith Brown 80 H C While F A Spratt Tufts 83 W W White H C Staples Brown 7 H H Wilkinso Cyrus Tuft Jr Brown 78 C N Williams J F Thompson Brown 01 E B Williams E L Ti nk ham Br own 95 J A Williams J H Tucker Brown 70 Hon J C B W F A Vose Brown 99 H P Young G A Ward Tufts 95 g 0 LIBKR BRUNENSIS Theta Delta Chi Cbarge Charles Hurb ii-t Gih William Hem y Hull Allen Kramei K rans Walter Ruber s Bulk Myron Charle S Fist! 1[nstitute 1853 lerbert Colbath Low itewart Baker McLeod ' reston Hill Porclieron Alfred Varney Blaekstone Llewellyn William . Edward Sunnier Ma. Roll of Chapters Brown University Bowdoin College Tufts College ttobart College . Lafayette College Hamilton College Dartmouth Colleg Amherst College University of Miohigai Williams College Harvard University VOLUME XLIII glgnia Deuteroi Clii Deuteron Delia Deuteron 18)2 181)5 1896 1900 Resident Members W o Blanding Brown 74 Dr B Miller Brown , A M Bowen Brown ' 63 Hon A S Miller Brown ' 71 A L Bowen Brown ' 73 G L Miner Brown ' 97 George Briggs Brown ' 76 II A Monroe Brown ' 94 Hon A L Brown Brown ' 7(1 Dr N F Morrison Boston Uni ' 79 V T Brown Brown ' 7:i II K Palmer Brown ' 79 F A Burlingame Cornell •! 4 Julius Palmer Brown ' 77 Ralph L Burbanks Tufts •its F K Parker Bowdoin ' 91 J Allen B ti triii gton Tufts ' 99 E S Parker Brown ' 96 Dr G H Carr Brown S M Pitman Tufts ' (19 Jeffrey Davis Brown ' 70 David V Reeves Brown ' 98 B ( ' DuBois Brown ' 99 F M Rhodes Brown ' 90 G H Eisuald Brown ' 95 E S Roberts Brown ' 96 Dr II H Eddy Tufts 80 C A Selden Brown ' 93 K ( ' Frost Tufts ' 90 S A Sherman Amherst ' 85 Dr C T Gardiner Tufts ' 64 Hon H J Spooner Drown ' 60 G I! C Hall Tufts ' 94 H J Spooner Jr Brown ' 91 E B Hamlin Tufts ' 72 W R Stiness Brown ' 91 G N Harrington Tufts ' 70 A C Stone Brown ' 97 II Hidden Brown ' 65 C S Sweetland Brown ' 66 S A Hopkins Brown ' 93 L E Taylor Brown ' 65 C C Hoskms Brown ' 05 Dr V O Taylor Tufts ' 65 C A Hull Brown ' 99 F A Tyle Brown ' 91 M W Kern Brown ' 92 C S Tower Brown ' 90 1 ' II Kimball Brown ' 94 J H Tower Brown ' 07 F P La, Id Brown ' 93 Dr A W A Travel- Brown ' 92 F H Lewis Brown ' 97 Rev J J Walker Amherst ' 89 B K Lyons Brown ' 99 C H Walling Brown ' 95 W D Martin Brown ' 62 H H Waterman Cornell ' 85 R K Marvin Tufts ' 99 A H Watson Brown ' 70 C F Mason Brown ' 61 Dr D S Whittemore Boston Uni ' 86 F W Mathewson Brown ' 73 124 LJBER BRUNENSIS Delta Upsilon 36 town Chapter Unstttuteo I860 Edwin Farnham Greene Byron Lee Smith Winthrop Morton Southworth Philip Darrell Sherman rrving Southworth Frederick Wheaton Tillinghast 1903 Robert Lincoln Barrows Arthur Upham Pope Elmer Ellswoitli Butler Lester Burrell Ship] William Thomson Hastings George Waterhouse Leslie Roherl Kirk. 1004 Ralph Hervey Iie ;i Charles Fowler Fie Charles lilinu Frai Warren Weston Lr Roll of Chapters Willian Union rlamilt. Ainliei Adelbei VOLUME XLIII 125 Wisconsin 1885 Lafayette 1885 Columbia 1885 Lehigh . 1885 Tufts 1881 i De Pauw 1887 Pennsylvania 1888 Minnesota 1890 Technology 181)1 Swartmore 1893 Stanford . 1896 Calif .rnia 1896 McGill . 1898 Nebraska 1898 Toronto . 1899 Chicago . 1900 Graduate Students Resident Members Dr H P Abbott Brown ' 85 S A Everett Brown ' 91 F H Andrews Brown ' 84 W G Everett Brown ' 85 (t F Andrews Brown ' 92 Rev D W Faunce Amherst ' 50 A A Baker Brown ' 84 Pres W H P Faunce Brown ' 80 C W Barrows Brown ' 95 Dr C M Godding Brown ' 78 H C Bowen Brown ' 04 A J Goodenough Amherst ' 54 W M P Bowen Brown ' 84 C G Hamilton Brown ' 88 E E Bradbury Amherst ' 56 R G E Hicks Brown ' 98 Prof W C Bronson Brown ' 87 N M Isham Brown ' 86 E C Burnhain Brown ' 86 Prof W B Jacobs Brown ' 82 W J Chase Brown ' 87 H E Jacobs Brown ' 93 F Clapp Brown ' 95 F A Jones Brown ' 96 G M Crowell Brown ' 94 L M Lincoln Brown ' 92 C E Dennis Jr Brown ' 88 Rev A M Lord Harvard ' 83 Prof J Q Dealey Brown ' 90 C H Manchester Brown ' 86 Rev C A Denfeld Brown ' 89 C A Meader Brown ' 91 J R Dickinson Brown ' 95 H C Miller Brown ' 97 A M Dunham Brown ' 98 Rev E C Moore Marietta ' 77 LIBER BRUNENSIS C U Mn 111 ford J S Miirduck J B Peck Win B Peck Wm T Peck W L Phillip C C Plunimer H W Preston C C Remington Dr F T Rogers C P Roundy Harris Elwood Stan E A Stockwell A S Taylor W H Thornley Jr J A Tillinghast F E Tingley W J Towne Prof W Upton S R Wailmrton G F Weston Dr H A Whitniarsli G A Williams Rev L S Woodwortli Brow Colgal LIBER BRUNKNSIS Chi Phi Ikappa 1histitutet Chapter t90t 1872 Clarence Albert Coates Harry Warren Mumfon i Howard Aldridge Coffin Ernest Trowbridge Paine M. roll Powers Davis Halley Templeton Wall er Thomas Henry Kenworthy 1002 Harry Lee Watson Henry Howard Cawthorne Willard Garfield Wanl Arthur Dean Dudley Warren Lyle Wilmarih Harry Merton Paine Daniel Everett Bellows Charles Lemuel O: Charles Edward Grinnell Dickinson Henry Wilson Wl Wells Albert Hall Charles Wesley Hum Bernard Perry Ravmoi Roll of Chapters Providence R I Graduate Students VOLUME XLIII 129 M J I Arnold E 1) Bassetl H E Bellows F Bellows A B Bicknell B S Blaisdell E L Blanohard C W Boardman G X Bullock c A Batman I. II Campbell A H Chamberlaii II P Cornell J H Davenport S T Douglass A V Ed.lv .1 V Estes .1 A Gammons F P Gorham H B Gorham E P King M D Lapharn S S Lapharn Jr Resident Members Brown ' 97 H B Loml Brown ' 73 H B Lovewell Brown ' 92 C H McLane Brown ' 95 W A Mowry Brown ' 96 L J Osier Brown ' 89 D B Pike Brown ' 99 W A Potter Brown ' 86 G H Raymond Brown 73 E W Remington Brown ' 76 W S Rejnolds Brown ' 92 L W Robinson Brown ' 97 W A Scott Brown ' 81 G 11 Slade Brown ' 83 W L Slade Brown Brown ' 79 P I) S Slocum E B Smith Brown ■93 J W Smith Brown ' 98 A P Stevens Brown 93 W 11 Sweetland Brown ' 98 S A Welch Brown ' 76 A L Wheeler Brown ' 00 R S Wilcox Irown ' 00 irown •97 irown ' 77 ; row 11 : 78 irown ' 78 Hope Coll 132 LIBER BRUNENS1S Phi Delta Theta IRboDe 1fslanC Blpba 1901 IrnstftuteO 188? Edwin Walter Williai Bowen Evans Louis Frost , Riggs Harve.v 1002 Jesse George Melendy Simon Henry Salomon Line Washburn Lucian Frederi Jeremi, Burdick Edward Buxton .1 Lorimer Drury •k William Greene li Holmes Jv Hay Forrest K now 1 ton Henri Natseh Walter Elijah New coin Wesley Arthur Paige Lorraine Terry Peck Alexan .Murray Fred Ji Jerry 1 ler Hewes Abbott Hubert Cann dso ' n (ox earborne Drew Percy Winchester Gard Lewis Frederick Hall Leslie Hunt Southerlan Samuel Hall Whitley 1 Bertram Harrington Buxto Noble Brandon Judali Jr Eugene La Verne McTntyr Roll of Chapters Miami Univers ' -• ■•! iplia In. iana I ni versify 1849 Ke 1 in Wi Illi In 1m iana o Bet iana Alpha tl l| li:l Ipha elta til No Bu Fra basli ( thwes ler li Wes nklin liege . em University eyan University College 1850 1850 1857 1859 185(1 1860 1860 VOLUME XLII l 33 Michigan Alpha Illinois Beta Ohio Gamma Indiana Epsiloi Indiana Zeta Missouri Alpha 3 Dell i All 111 [o Georgia Alpha Georgia Beta Georgia Gamma New York Alpha Pennsylvania Alpha California Alpha Pennsylvania Delta Vermont Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Missouri Beta Minnesota Alpha Iowa Beta Kansas Alpha Tennessee Beta Ohio Zeta Texas Beta Pennsylvania Zeta New York Beta Maine Alpha New York Delta New Hampshire Alph: North Carolina Beta Ke] Delta Massachusetts Alpha Texas Gamma New York Epsilon Virginia Zeta i Eta itts Beta Rhode Island Alpha Louisiana Alpha Missouri Gamma University of Michigan Chicago University Ohio University Hanover College De Pan w University . Missouri University Knox College Iowa Wesleyan Universi University of Georgia . Emory College . Mercer University Cornell University Lafayette College University of California University of Virginia Randolph-Macon Collegt University of Nebraska Pennsylvania College . Washington and .infers. Vandei Univer of Mississippi of ' V :i Co! ege Univei Dick it Westminster College University Minnesota . Iowa State University University of Kansas . University of the South Ohio Stat Un Unive ify of Te: University of Pennsylvar Union College . Colby University Columbia College Dartmouth College University of North Caro Central University Williams Coll ege Southwestern University Syracuse University Washington and Lee University Lehigh University Amherst College Brown University Tulane University Washington University 34 LIBER BRUNKNSIS California Beta Illinois Eta ImlianaTlieta Oliio Eta Oliio Theta Washington Alpha Leland Stanford Jr University University of Illinois Purdue University Case School of Applied Science University of Cincinnati University of Washington Graduate Student Henry Jewett Hall A B Resident Members F A Whittemo: W H Barnard A T Swift F E Carpenter A Cashing N M Wright A T Stratton F A Greene C E Til ley H G Beede H M Barry S E Kelley F E Horton Dartmouth ' ,ss Fr ck SI. Lmlie Bro •st vn ' 93 Bro vn ' 94 illsd ile ' 94 Broi vn ' 95 A S Morse W H Kenersor H N Pratt H B Briggs A M McCrillis H G Wilcox H F Clarke N T Ewer T M Phettepla. E H Turtle C C White ■36 LJBKR BRUNENSIS Alpha Tau Omega IRbofce HslanD ©amma Delta Gbapter UnstituteD 1894 Arthur Ogden Clift Charles Herbert Hough George Bradford Hay ward Joseph Ferdinand Mai instead Frank Allen Page Harry Sheldon Pratt James William Barry Edward Pittman Carey Leon Arthur Drury William Choate Hardy Gustavus Benjamine H Elmer Daniel Meserve Uanforth Livermore Nash Ralph Cameron Thompson Oliver Clinton Trees Howard Joseph White Louis Everett Young Robinson Pierce, Jr James Vere Anthony Levi Herbert Ballon Paul Franklin Clark George Frederick Cook Ralph Conant Crocker Harry Elmer Griffith Frank William Johnsoi Roll of Chapters Alabama Alpha Epsilon Alabama Beta Beta Alabama Beta Delta California Beta Psi Ge I ' ll, Uni Lei Em them Uni versity of ml Stanf. versity of .rv Colleg ige Alabama rd Jr Univ ersity 1885 1885 1891 1878 1881 Mei Sch Uni cer Unive •ol of Ted versity of nology . [llinois . 1880 1888 1895 Ros c Polytecl nic Institi te 1893 Tul me Unive rsitv 1X87 VOLUME XLIII KM Massachi se Maine B la Maine Gi nil Miehigai A Michigan B Michigai !! New York Alpha Oinicr hi St Lav New York Beta Tliela Corne Ohio Alpha Nil Ml Ui Ohio Alpha Psi Witt. ' Ohio Beta Eta Wesle Ohio Beta Mu Woost Ohio Beta Rho Marie Ohio Beta Omega Ohio g Pennsylvania Alpha lot i Muhl. Pennsylvania Alpha lili Lehig Pennsylvania Alpha Up wlon Penns Pennsylvania Tan l-nive South Carolina Alpha P South Carolina Beta Pli VToffo Tennessee Alpha Tau S W 1 Tennessee P eta l ' i Vande Tennessee Beta Tan S W P Virginia Delta Virginia Epsilo is; id 1892 issi 1804 1883 189J Graduate Students George Albert Goulding A P. Brown ' Nels Johnson A P. Brown ' Edward Everett Thompson A B Brown ' ! Lee Barker Walton Ph B Cornell ' i Jared Harvey Randall A B Brown ' 1 George Elliott Coghill Sc M Brown ' . 3 8 LIBER BRUNENS1S Resident Member Samuel Adams George Cheney Antl: Ernest Simons Bishr George W Carpenter Hugh Davis 1 William Ellis Farnu William S Garst Frank Hall Herhert Bra.lford Horinn Lyman Alpheus Randall William Francis Miner Harry B Shnman Brown ' 96 Brown ' 02 -._ oo v ,_., m 140 LIBER BRUNENSIS 3Beta Cbt Gbapter Delta Tau Delta flnstitutefc 1896 William Walter Andrew Ch arles Raymond Austin Harold Granville Calder Arthur Simeon Gavlord Walter Stanley Seainans, , Walter Leslie Tandy Charles Perkins Webber Lewis Hartsough Conai Henry Bernardin Drow Willis Warren Harrirm v Tatem, Jr. mi Hayden Thorn pi Oscar Leonard Heltzen Royal Nesmith Jessup John Prior Thorn ley McBa; Lester Hutchinson Nichols Roll of Chapters Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Kappa Rho Upsil. Allegheny College 1863 Ohio University 1862 Washington and Jefferson ( ' ollege 1861 University of Michigan 1875 Albion College . 1876 Adelbert College 1882 Hillsdale College 1867 Vanderbilt University . 1870 Ohio Wesleyan University 1866 University of Iowa 1880 University of Mississippi 1848 Stevens Institute of Technc logy 1874 Rensselaer Polytechnic Tns itute 1870 Washington and Lee Unive ■sity L896 VOLUMK XL1II ' 4 ' mega Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Epsilon Beta Zeta Beta Eta BetaTlieta Beta Iota Beta Kappa Beta La 11 1 Ik. Beta Mti Beta Xu I Seta Xi Beta Otiiirn.n Beta Pi Beta Kl.o Beta Tan Beta Upsilon , I ' ln Bel India lUn he Pauw University University of Wiscom University of Georgia Emory College . Butler College . University of Minnesi University of the Soui University of Virgin.; University of Color Lehigh Unive rsity Tufts College Massachusetts Inst Tulane University lo Con 1 Ui niversity of Chicago Graduate Students 1881 1897 1870 1871 1888 Arthur George Host George Llewellyn Hi Herbert A Men Yontz Simpson College Resident Members Arthui Horace Blanchai (1 Brow Benjai Arthui lin T Livingston L Giles P. row Brow I! H Rice Stevens Inst of Tech ' 85 A B Smith Mass Inst of Tech ' 93 Alfred Safford Tnfts ' 01 fr.-JM, . ' ■ ' - r ? LIBER BRUNENS1S Kappa Sigma JBeta aipba Cbapter UnstftuteO 1898 Ernest, Palmer Can- Charles Borromes Dugan David Conroy Hall Harry Francis Kellogg William Irvine King Claude Everett Stevens Edward David Tweedell W [aines Manning Lent Emmanuel Georges Psiaki Albert Langworthy Saunders Hastings Woods Azariah Foster Crowell, Jr Lester Earl Dodge Frederic Mason Kinsley 3 Briggs Swift i Ferguison We s Howard Maryott ay Staley Roll of Chapters Zeta Eta Prime Alpha Alpha Mu Alpha Beta Kappa Alpha Chi Lambda Alpha Iota Phi Omega Upsilon Tau Chi niversity of Virginia rinity College (North Carolina) . University of Maryland Washington and Lee University [ercer University anderbilt University ,ake Forest University niversity of Tennessee . S. Grant University outhwestern Presbyterian University niversity of the South lampden-Sidney College niversity of Texas . •urdue University VOLUMK X 1,1 1 1 ' 45 University of Maine Southwestern Unive Louisiana State Uni „l,r I I 1 Eta Randolph-Macon College Sigma Tulane University Nu College of William and Mar Delia Davidson College Alpha Gamma University of Illinois Alpha Delta Pennsylvania State College Alpha Epsilon University of Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta University of Michigan Alpha Eta Columbian University Alpha Theta Southwestern Baptist Univ. Alpha Kappa Cornell University Alpha Lambda University of Vermont Alpha Mu University of North Carolin Al]. ha Nu Woffonl College Alpha Xi Bethel College . Alpha Omicron Kentucky University . Alpha Pi Wabash College Alpha Rho Bowdoin College Alpha Sigma Ohio State University . Alpha Tau (ieorgia School of Technolog Alpha Upsilon Millsaps College Alpha Phi Bucknell University . Alpha Psi University of Nebraska Alpha Omega William-Jewell College Beta Alpha Brown University Beta Beta Richmond College Beta Camma Missouri State University Beta Delta Washington and Jefferson ( Beta Epsilon University of Wisconsin Beta Zeta Lelaud Stanford, Jr. I ' nivei I Jet a Eta Alabama Polytechnic Instil Beta Theta University of Indiana . Resident Members LIBER BRUNENSIS Phi Kappa •ffnstttuteC) 1900 Frederick Arthur Galvin Thomas Francis Lawlor Daniel Joseph Maloney William Charles McLaughl John Hendricken Slattery Henry Cleaves Sullivan Henry Joseph Winters Michael Francis Costello Frederick John Dnrfee Thomas Leo Gorman Daniel Joseph Hurley Alexander Joseph Larkin Timothy Joseph Sheehan Frederick- Daniel Sullivan Frederick Joseph Bert John Patrick Carroll Charles Dyer Casey Edward Joseph McCaffrey William Thomas Murphy Eugene Ambrose McCarthy Resident Members n D Mc( E Sull ph Ha U E C Mon F M lu- ll She el Brow I ' .row Tin mas P Corcoran Brown ' 95 I Cha s J O ' Connor Brown ' 95 t Hen ry Corrigan Brown ' 98 t Hei ry Farrell Brown ' 98 5 Cha rles Carroll Brown ' 98 (led F Troy Brown ' 99 F Gallagher Brown ' 99 J B O ' Donnell Brown ' 99 P J McQuaid Brown •oo Chas P Lynch Brown 00 VOLUME XLIIJ ' 49 FRATERNITIES Sum man? Alpha Delta Phi .... 25 Delta Phi 21 Psi Upsilon . 17 Beta Theta Pi 2(i Delta Kappa Ep s Ion 29 Zeta Psi 21 Theta Delta Chi 17 Delia Dpsilon 27 (hi Phi Phi Delta Theta 2!) Alpha Tau Omega :sn Kappa Sigma 2 ; Phi Kappa . . . . . 21 7 UmjmmTi r T!Ti F M x 54 LIBER BRUNENSIS Alpha Beta Instituted 1893 Edythe Grace Peck Mary Edna Budlong Edith May Goff Myrtis AlidaMiiliken Grace Pierce Ada Rogers Margaret, Roys Ellen Seften Waterman Miriam Edwina Withee Edith Field Wilcox Hester Jane Mercer Mary Elizabeth Mercer Lillie Leonaretta Schofleld Lucy Vernon Bayer Marjorie Wadsworth Shaw Eleanor Stark Graduate Students Clara Elizabeth Comstock, A.M. Brov , ' ii ' 95 Edith Ray Clapp, Ph. B. Brov rn ' 00 Ruth Story Devereaux, A.M. Brov ,-n ' 97 Phcebe Rushmore Gifford, A.B. Brov i-n ' 98 Linda Richardson, A.B. Brov i-n ' 97 Mary Randall Stark, A.B. Brov irn ' 00 Ellen Ella Tower, A.B. Brov ni ' 98 Helen Bowen Waterman, A.B. Brov n ' 00 Edith Holmes Williston, A.M. Brov m ' 90 VOLUME XLI1I l SS Resident Graduates Ner.iie Seren: Bert ill l!e;ilri Ida Ellis Hawkins Mary Ann McQuaid Sadie Emma McCready Bertha Abby Nichols Emma Bradford Stanton Charlotte Susanne Tillinghast Anne Tillinghast Weeden Florence Josephine Whiting Brown ' .- Brown ' 117 Brown ,( .)7 Brown ' 99 Brown ' 97 Brown ' 95 Brown ' 96 Brown ' 96 Brown ' 94 Brown ' 9(i 156 LIBER RRUNENSIS The Secret Order of Delta Sigma flnaMutefc 1S9 3 190t Minnie Leora Bartlett Louise Conant Gamwell Lilla Rogers Birge Mary Louise Gregory 1903 Charlotte Anthony Helen Sherman Sheldon Celia Sweeting Peckhani Martha Jane Wilson 1904 Lura Cooke Shreeve Specials Ahhy Bullock Caroline Ballon Vose Graduate Student Mabel Snow LeValley VOLUME XL1JJ ' 57 Resident Member Ki c -Mini Adelaide Augusta Esten Harriet Laurannali Latlia Lillian Gertrude Mac( k )uil Helen Eddy Rose Ruth Edna Batchelder Beulah May Hahn Adrienne Mathews Jennie May Eddj i D - Kit Brow Brown ' i Brow ©HTA 160 LIBER BRUNENSIS Kappa Alpha Theta alpha Epsilon Established Gbapter r 1S97 1901 Ruth Appleton Mabel Jennie Bowe Adelaide Kimball Burton Saida Newton Hallett 1902 Amy Jenkes Cooke Millieent Rawson Leete Lillian May Gamwell Ella Artemisia Pollard Abbie Sweetland Ghodey Ida Maude Warren Katherine Frances Lirtlefield 1903 Alice Morse Barrett Ethel Ella Rich Bessie Allen Hood Irene Tinner Seabury Mabel Cornelia Moulton Helen Whitmarsh 1904 Flora Melville Cotton Harriet Fuller Griggs Stevens Sara DeVeaux Packard Georgia Louise Towle Miriam Frances S locum Faculty Member Ada Geneva Wing Wellesley ' 88 Graduate Students Lucy Anna Kales. Pb P.. Brown ' !)8 Josephine Angell Beane, A.B. Brown ' 97 Agnes Elizabeth Clark, A.B. Brown ' 99 Mary Beecher Leonard, A.B. Brown ' 99 VOLUME XLIII 161 Roll of Chapters 2Upba District Chi Alpha Beta Alpha Delta Alpha Epsili Alpha Zeta Gaiuiiia Aim Eta Alumnae Barnard College New York City Burlington, Vr. Philadelphia, Pa .(Beta District De Pauw University . Delta Universitj of nii Epsilon Wooster 1 n i vers Eta Universitj of Mi Kappa CJniversitj of Ka Pi Albion Co le ;e . Bho University of Ne Tau Northwest (Mil l ' l I ' psilon Universitj of .Mi P.si Universitj of Wi Alpha Gamma Ohio State Unive Alpha Alumna- Greencast e. I n.l Beta Alumnae MinneapoJ s. Mil Delta Alumna- Chicago, I linois Ep.siion Alumnre Columbus Ohio . Zeta Alumna- [ndianapo is, Dk iSamma District Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of California I 62 LIBER BRUNENSIS Resident Members Elizabeth Christina Grant Brown ' 98 Ida Evelyn Waite Brown ' Grace Margaret Hamilton Mrs. Carolyn Graham Walton Brown Special Wooster University ex- ' Anne May Larry Brown ' 99 Ethel Gertrude Westcott Brown ' Edith Augusta Thompson Brown ' 98 Clara Whitehead Brown ' Mrs Elizabeth Warren Viall Mary Green Wilbur Brown ' Cornell ' 90 OFFICERS AND COMMITTEES 1900 = 1901 President Hon. Ruben Thomas Durrett, LL.D. Louisville, Ky. First I ' ice-President Hon. Chari.es Matteson, LL.D. Providence Second J ' ire- Preside James Mac Alister, LL.D. Philadelphia George Grafton Wilson, Ph.D. Samuel Slater Durfee, A.M. Providence Executive Committee Theodore Francis Green, A.M. Howard Mai.com Rice, A.M. Zecharia Chafee, A.M. John Byron Diman, A.M. Robert Perkins Brown, A.M. Advisory Committee George Grafton Wilson, Ph.D. George Fremont Bean, LL.B. Frank Lincoln Morse, A.M. Everett Colby, LL.B. William H. Bennett, M.D. William Burdick, A.B. Marshall Augustus Newell Ae RHODE ISLAND ALPHA of the Phi Beta Kappa Society OFFICERS AND C O M M I T T E E S 1900 = 1901 President Prof. Wilfred Harold Munro, A. M. Vice-President William Vail Kellen, Ph.D. I ' iiriYs ii din St; irftrrr Prof. William Whitman Bailey, LL.D. William Thane Peck, S .1). I ommittee of . Appointment Prof. Albert Granger Harkness, A.M. Daniel Beckwith, A.B. Henry Frederic Lippitt, A.B. Hon. David Sherman Baker, Jr., A.M. Henry Allen Whitmarsh, A.M., M.D. Rev. FredErk Denison, A.M. Prof. Walter Cochrane Bronson, A.M. Prof. Walter Goodnow Everett, Ph.D. Prof. Walter. Baei.ou Ja obs, A.M. Auditing Committee Robert Perkins Brown. A.M. Prof. Nathaniel French I) wis. LL.D SOCIETY OF SIGMA XI OFFICERS AND COMMITTEE 1900 1901 President Prof. Benjamin Franklin Clarke, Sc.D. Vice-President Prof. Nathaniel French Davis, LL.D. Recording Secretary Arthur Horace Blanchard, C.E. Corresponding Sec ret a ry William Herbert Kenerson, M.E. Prof. Hermon Carey Bumpus, Ph.D. Councillor Prof. John Edward Hill, Sc.M..C.E.M. Committee on Nominations Prof. Benjamin Franklin Clarke, Sc.D. Prof. Nathaniel French Davis, LL.D. Prof. Hermon Carey Bumpus, Ph.D. William Herbert Kenerson, M.E. Arthur Horace Blanchard. C.E VOLUME XLIII ,67 The Owl John Palmer Barstow Walter Barron Hastings Currier Anthony Hamilton Dexter Crawford Richmond Green Eugene Bailey Jackson James Bancroft Littlefield Lewis Stanley Mii.nki: Harold Wkki.kn Nichols Alfred Knight Potter Frederick Wheaton Tillinghast I 68 I.IBKR BRUNENSIS Cammarian Club Elmer Seymour Chase Edward Tudor Gross Roy Elliott Clark Thacher Howland Guild William Lathrop Clark William Griggs Harvey Arthur Ogden Clift Charles Sherman Hoyt Howard Aldridge Coffin Mich all John Linden Harvey Nathaniel Davis Robert Wing Steere Edwin Farnham Green Howard Hiram Tucker Libe Washburn ammariAtv cu 170 LIBER BRUNENS1S 1Rc irngtttuteO 1900 1902 Delegation William Penn Bates Howard Dennison Briggs William Connell Blanding Thomas Burgess Gonzalo Edward Buxton, Jr. Samuel Noyes Douglas Henry Knight Metcalf Harry Merton Paine Theodore Fredrick Peveak Charles Abbott Phillips, Jr. Ciiaki.es Addison Richardson Ray Henry Williams Stiness wrfir LIBER BRUNENSIS Theta Nu Epsilon Sophomore Fraternity JBeta Tflpgtlon Cbapter Established 1900 1903 M$g% 5 | HV7 W 4 F ! 9 F 2 £W HL Offf ?$ 9 K±B|| CL1YV9 ' +F 5 Sy9aeWTYy r b-6 Z!Ci$M$fg eWO$MX 3 Z%Y| Y||Rv H SO=%?.-. S !! ||.-.-=-iJAl% 2 3 SW=$!!F||T% 5 J lv.-.FK? 4 3$2.-.X!!S8 VOLUMK X 1,1 1 1 H3 Roll of Chapters n Iota Kappa Lambda Sigma Tan I psilon Phi Chi Psi Oinega Delta Kappa Delta Sigma Pi Phi Lambda Lan P eta Beta Delta Delta Alpha Iota Kpsilon Epsi Oamma Kai Kappa Garni ( lamina Gam Beta Upniloii Adelbert College Hamilton College Renssalaer Polytechnic Stevens Institute Lafayette College Amherst College Alleghany College Dickinson College Pennsylvania State Coi University of Pennsylv University City of Wooster College University of Michigan Rutgers College Dartmouth College Ohio State University Swarthmore College IJowdoin College Kansas University University of Virginia University of Nebraska Ohio Wesleyan Univers Maine State College Harvard University : ScllO of Ap College of the Cil University Venn of Ne Alonzo Rogek Williams, A ' B Charles Edmund Bryant, AY John Parker Gray, ATA Charles Herbert Hough, A T 12 Stewart Baker McLeod, ® A X Philip Caswell, B © II Andrew Little Fraser Lester Earle Dodge, K 2 Robert Nathan Gee, B © II Willis Elbridgk Goodhue Vermont Academy Club OFFICERS A. O. Cu it M. P. Davis H. T. Waller . T. D. Woodbury President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer MEMBERS A. (). Clift H. A. Coffin M. P. Davis H. T. Waller 1903 T. D. Woodbury 1902 A. II. Whittkmo 1904 C. VV. Hun Resident S. Adams E. N. Case ' s II. M. Barry H. D. Casey W. C. Sherman W. C. Burwell, A. M. ( _. Dkvi.i ANDOVER CLUB- O F F I C E R S J Amos Lkavitt Taylor .... President Edward Jarvis Cushing Bullock . Vice-President Samuel Noyes Douglas . Secretary and Treasurer [EMBERS Walter Smith, 1901 Amos Leavitt Taylor, 1901 Edward Jarvis Cushing Buli .OCK, I9O2 Wesley Arthur Paige, I902 Samuel Noyes Douglas, I902 Leslie Robert Micks, 1903 Richard Warrex Blanding, I9O3 Howard Farnam Hart, I9O4 WORCESTER ACADEMY CLUB OFFICERS I.. S. MILNER EDWIN FARNHAM GREENE iWAKD II I RAM EDWARD LEWIS BAYLISS THOMAS CARPENTER CHAFFEE DUNCAN MARTIN LUTHER McPHAIL GEORGE ALBERT LAWRY I EWIS STANLEY MILNER CHARLES ABBOTT PHILL CLINTON VIALL 1)1 FRANK BOWEN I JAMES Mai PHERSO LLEWELLYN WILLIAM JAMES MANNING LEV: RICHARD MONTAGUE Resident Alu Hon. John I Blodgett W.A. -71., Brow ' So J. C. Hartw ell W.A. 93, Brown ' Henry B. R W.A. ' 77, Brow ' Si C. C. White W.A. 95, Brown ' Rev. Charles A Denfeld W.A. ' 86, Brow •.,i (.. G. Bass W.A. 96, Brown ' J. I). I ' ' .. Jone •ds. Esq. W.A. ' fy, Brow • n II. M. Hov« N W.A. W.A. 96, Hn.wn ' c 96, Brown ' c 1). W. Whit. W.A. ' 92, Brow ' 97 J. L. Peaco ck W.A. 96, Brown OFFICERS I!. K. Smith VV. T. Hasting W. W. Loomis J. P. Gray President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer ME.MBE.IRS 1901 John Packer Gray 1902 Erwin Kelsey Smith 1903 William Thomson Hastings 1904 William Henry Bark Clifford Moore Granger William Gaylord Brown Harry Worthington Hastings Warren Weston Loomis Resident George Milton Bardsley, Ex. ' 02 Henry Parker Manning, Ph.D. BOW . JPLUB OFFICERS Harvey Nathaniel Davis, ' oi . . President Charles Herbert Bennett, ' oi . Vice-President Edward Winslow Holmes, ' 03, Secretary and Treasurer Jerry Dearbqrn Drew, ' 03 . . . Manager Varsity Team, 1900=1901 C. II. Bennett, ' oi, Captain B. C. Ewer C. H. Currier E. W. Holmes, ' 03 J. (i. Clifford, ' 03 ( ' . B. Fernald, ' ( W. A. Hill, ' 02 ( ' . W. Brown F. M. Cook, ' 03 OFFICERS President George Hi: k dick, ' 02 Vice-President Walter E. Newcomb, ' 02 Secretary I. K. SOUTHWORTH, ' 02 Treasurer George Waterhouse, ' 03 DIRECTORS VV. R. Harvey, ' 01 A. R. Corbin, ' 02 H. A. Rockwell, ' 03 PRESS 114 OFFICERS 4? President I Ikxkv K.. Metcalf, ' 02 Vice-Presi dent . Irving K. Southworth, ' 02 Secretary Harry W. Rockwell, 03 Treasurer Everett J. I Iorton, executive committee ' 02 Percival B.Greene, ' oi William K. Harvey, Howard D. Briggs, ' 02 ' 01 Checker Club a OFFICERS Harry Eugene Nickless Arthur Irving Andrews Walter Louis Frost Stephen Howard Easton President e-President Secretary Treasurer executive committee The President Ex-officio Everett Jarvis Horton Lee Barker Walton- William C. H. Brand Charles Barker Fernald BISHOP SEA ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Thomas Burgess, ' 02 President Allen Greene, ' 02 Vice-President William L. Clark, ' 01 Secretary Anthony H. Dexter, ' 02 . Treasurer E. Tudor Gross, ' 01 Librarian Dean Winslow Upton, ' 75 Prof. Wilfred H. Munro, OFFICERS H. A. Coffin, ' oi E. F. Greene, ' oi H. W. Rockwell, ' [eremiah Holmes, ' o A. H. Abbott, ' 03 R. E. Clark, ' oi President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer General Secretary Graduate Advisory Committee Gardner Colby, ' 87, Chairman W. R. Dorman, ' 92, Secretary and Treasurer Lockefeller, Jr., ' 97 C. S. Coon Prof. J. Q Dealev, ' 90 Chair C. B. Fernald, ' oi Samuel Moffatt, ' 02 M. |. Linden, ' oi George Waterhouse, ' Henry Natsch, ' 02 E. F. Greene, ' oi M. A. Bolton, ' 02 T. H. Kenworthy, ' o R. E. Clark, ' oi F. L. Carr, ' oi Jeremiah Holmes, ' 02 F. L. Carr, ' oi A. H. Abbott, ' 03 E. (. Horton, ' 02 Bible Study Membership Religious Meetings Missionary City Missions Reception Northfield Conference Deputation New Students Employment Bureau Information Bureau Hand-book Finance Advertising and Statistics OFFICERS Jessie Wheeler M. Edna Budlong Saida N. Hallett Lillian M. Gamwell Alice C. Devereux . President Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary . Treasurer CHAIRMEN OF COMMITTEES Religious Abbie S. Ghodey Missionary Bessie A. Loud Bible Study Rlbv M. Atwood Membership Adelaide K. Burton Reception . . Louise C. Gamwell City Work . M. Louise Gregory Music- Maude E. Clarke Library Mary L. Hays Finance . Alice C. Devereux Intercollegiate Lillian M. Gamwell LIBER BRUNENSIS Brown Debating Union OFFICERS J H. N. Davis, ' oi President C. B. Fernald, ' oi . . . Vice-President P. W. Gardner, ' 03 . . Secretary and Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE A. U. Pope, ' 03 H. C. Hart, ' oi H. B. Grose, ' 03 Brown-Boston University Debate Boston, April 12 Question: Resolved, That trusts are beneficial to the community as a whole. Affirmative, Brown Negative, Boston Debating Team C. B. Fernald, ' oi, Captain E. P. Carr, ' oi A. U. Pope, ' 03 Alternates : T. H. Kenworthy, ' 01 ; E. J. Horton, ' 02; R. W. Richmond, ' 02 Won by Brown Freshmen- Sophomores vs. Freshmen-Sophomores of Holy Cross Worcester, April 18 Question : Resolved, That if the Powers could settle upon an amicable division, the partitioning of the Chinese Empire would be conducive to the best interests of the world at large. Affirmative, Brown Negative, Holv Cross Debating Team P. W. Gardner, ' 03, Captain P. R. Bakeman, ' 03 E. La V. McIntyre, ' 04 Alternate ; T. A. Cornell, ' o} Won by Holy Cross Brown -Dartmouth Debate Providence, April 23 h estio i : Resolved, That the integrity and independence of the Chinese Empire should be preserved. Affirmative, Dartmouth Negative, Brown Debating Team H. N. Davis, ' oi, Captain E. F. Greene, ' 01 F. L. Carr, ' oi Alternates : C. R. Haslam, ' 02; R. G. Martin, ' 04; R. Montague, ' 04 Won by Brown VAR$rft|EBAnNG TEAMS OFFICERS Richard Warren Blandin Charles Sherman Hoyt, Robert Aldrich, ' 03 Howard Denison Briggs, Commodore Vice- Commodore Fleet Captain Secretary- Treasurer M E. M B E. R S 1901 C. S. Hoyt S. H. Salomon A. L. Slocum S. B. McLeod 1902 W. C. Blanding S. N. Douglas A. K. Potter H. D. Briggs A. Green R. W. Richmond T. Burgess H. J. Hart R. L. Smith G. E. Buxton, Jr. K. P. Lincoln R. O. Smith P. Caswell L. Milner H. W. Stiness W. B. H. Currier A. D. Nash 1903 R. Aldrich C. V. R. Bumsted W E. Phillips H. A. Baker J. H. Cady W B. Satterlee H. L. Bates C. S. Carpenter W H. Turner R. W. Blanding F. A. Otis G. R. Walworth P. H. Blanding M. N. Otis 1904 C. S. Allen A. L. Briggs P. Fearey W. K. Belding W. H. Gray G. L. Spencer w- Musical Clubs LIBER BRUNENSIS Glee, Banjo and Mandolin Clubs OFFICERS ANTHONY HAMILTON DEXTER President WILLIAM ROSS LAWTON . V ce-President WESLEY ARTHUR PAIGE Secretary ! HN PALMER I3ARST0W Treasurer ALFRED KNIGHT POTTER Busii ess Manager WILLARD GARFIELD WARD Assistant Busii ess Manager GLEE. CLUB EPH WHITE MYRON POWERS DAVIS CHARLES ARTHUR POWERS BERRICK SCHLOSS Second Ten First Bass PAUL FRANKLIN CLARK WALTER BARROWS HASTINGS CURRIER CHARLES ABBOTT PHILLIPS WILLIAM HUTCHINS TURNER WILLARD GARFIELD WARD Second Bass GEORGE MILO INNIS FRED ALLEYNE OTIS ARTHUR LLOYD PHILBRICK HOWARD JOSEPH W ' HITE WILLARD GARFIELD WARD HOWARD JOSEPH WHITE Reader VlYRON POWERS DAVIS MUSICAL • 13, CLUBS U LIBER BRUNENSIS MANDOLIN CLUB red alley First Mandolin JOHN PALMER BARST OW FRED ALLEYNE OTIS ALFRED KNIGHT POTTER Second Mandolin WALTER HARROWS HASTINGS CURRIER WILLIAM HUTCHINS TURNER JOHN HUTCHINS CADV ANTHONY HAMILTON DEXTER HOWARD FOSS ESTEN WILLIAM ROSS LAWTON Violin NEWTON PECK HUTCHISON •Cello HOWARD JOSEPH WHITE BANJO CLUB UTCHINS CADV JOHN PALMER BARSTOW JOHN HUTCHINS CADY NEWTON PECK HUTCHISON FRED ALLEYNE OTIS PAUL FRANKLIN CLARK ALFRED KNIGHT POTTER WD. LARD GARFIELD W RD Guitar ANTHONY HAMILTON DEXTER HOWARD FOSS ESTEN WILLIAM ROSS LAWTON VOLUME XLIII ' 93 The Symphony Society Charles Edward Grinnell Dn kerson, Special . Conductor Manager ' Viohm Charli 2lt Vl hu William Day Appleto Elmer Dinsmore (;re NLEAF, ' 04 ( ello Howard Jos eph White, ' 02 ( .met Thai her H WL. ND G Bass Alfred Rob lnson Winter, ' 01 7 ge Rob -:rt 3 Wai Flutt - Thomas Br tGESS, 02 1 -)rums 1 1 en ry Bern ari IN Dl William Be i. Satterlee, ' 03 iano Frei junsop. Co x, ' 03 ( Yarint Joseph Fer JINAND MALMSTEAD, ' 02 LIBER ARTISTS E. L. Blanchard, 1899 W. L. Frost, 1901 P. B. Greene, 1901 C. H. Hough, 1901 ). H. Slatterv, 1 90 1 J. B. Littlefield, 1902 T. D. Sullivan, 1903 Miss H. Manatt, 1903 Miss L. L. Scholfield, 190 Miss H. F. G. Stevens, 190 + Miss H. E. Hersey, Special MISCELLANEOUS LITERARY PUBLICATIONS SOCIAL COMMITTEES PRIZE AWARDS 196 LIBER BRUNENSJS JOARD OF EDITORS Thachrr Howland Guild Walter Louis Frost . Howard Aldridge Coffin Robert Irving Steere John Boyden Eaton James Duncan McLeod Michael John Linden- Howard Hiram Tucker Stewart Baker McLeod Editor-in-chief Managing Editor . Business Manager Edward Farnham Greene Arthur Ogden Clift John Packer Gray Ernest Palmer Carr Henry Cleaves Sullivan ASSOC] James Bancroft Littlefield Crawford Richmond Green Samuel Noyes Douglas Russell William Richmond Harold Weeden Nichols Eugene Bailey Jackson Myron Charles Fish ATE EDITORS Everett |arvis Horton Arthur Dean Dudley George Burdick Howard Joseph White Charles Raymond Austin Howard Henderson King Frederick John Durfee LIBEPvJ r T ®¥ W 1 W ' M-ir ' t $ ' 1- 0 f .ilk 1 v| ' l jl LIBER BRUNENS1S Published ■ Monthly • During the College Year by • the Student • of • BROWN UNIVERSITY ■ • S O A R D OF EDITORS Percival Bartlett Greene, ' o Howard Oscar Winslow, ' oi Thacher Howland Guild, ' oi James Bancroft Littlefield, ' Phillip Darrell Sherman, ' 02 Thomas Burgess, ' 02 . Louise Conant Gamwell, ' oi Walter Louis Frost, ' oi William Thompson Hastings, William Albion Hart, ' 03 . Charles Sherman Hoyt, ' oi Everett )arvis Horton, ' 02 Editor-in-Chief . Brown Study . Brown Verse Under the Elms . College Press Alumni Notes Book Reviews . Artist Associate Editor Associate Editor Business Manager Assistant Business Manager B R U N 0 N I AjN VOLUME XLJ1I BROWgffi RALD William Riggs Harvey, ' oi . Henry Knight Metcalf, ' 02 Lei.and Leslie Eaton, ' 01 Editor-in-Chief Managing Editor Business Manager EDITORS Walter Louis Frost, ' 01 Edwin Farnham Greene Henry Cl ASSOCIATE EDI.TORS Howard Dennison Briggs, ' 02 Jerry Dearrorne Drew, ' 03 Walter Elijah Nrwcomb, ' 02 Alfred Knight Potter, ' 02 Harry Westcott Rockwell, ' 03 George Waterhouse, ' 03 VOLUME XLIII Junior Week. PROGRAM OF THE WEEK April Eighth, Ninth and Tenth • Nineteen Hundred and One- Monday, April 8th, 1901 Concert — Glee, Banjo and Mandolin Clubs 8 o ' clock SAYLES HALL io o ' clock LYMAN (.YMNAMl ' M Reception to Junior Class Theatre Party sday. April 9th, 1901 ■ PRESIDENT FAUN KITH S OPERA HOUSE Wednesday, April 10th. 1901 Special Chapel Service 4 to 6 o ' clock 7.30 o ' clock 8.40 o ' clock Baseball — Brown vs. Andover Junior Promenade 3 o ' clock q. 30 o ' clock SAYLES HALL VOLUMK XLII1 2 °3 COMMITTEE. OF THE WEEK Frederic k Wheaton ' I ' i Arthur Dkan Dudley John Palmer Barstow Walter Roberts Bui. lock Harold Granville Calder Samuel Noyes Douglas )eremiah Holmes Charles Herbert Holt Walter Elijah Newcomb Charles Abbott Phillips Alfred Knight Potter Charles Arthur Powers Russell William Richmond Albert Langworthy Saundei Timothy [oseph Sheehan Henry Williams Stiness Louis Everett Young JUNIOR PROM APRIL 10, 1901 COMMITTEE ■f Charles Abi 3ott Phillips Chairmar Henry Wii.i mam st1ness William Cornell Blanding Thomas Burcjess Gonzalo Edward Buxton, |i Samuel Noyes Douglas Louis Stanley Milner Harry Merton Paine Alfred Knight Potter Treasure! Charles Addison Richardson Ray Frederick Wheaton Tillinghast VOLUMK XIJII Eighth Annual Sophomore Ball February 18, i 90 i committee. Harvey Ai.mv Baker . Alexander Hewes Abbott Louis Foristall Bakkr Harry Lothroi- Bates Richard Warren Blanding Clarence Van Reynegom Bumsted Chairman John Hutchins Cady Gay Nichols Freeman Howard Bristol Grose, ]r. Fri I) Alleyne Otis 2o6 LIBER BRUNENSiS Hick ' s Prize Debate Thursday, June 14, 1900 IS ANY SPECIAL LEGISLATION NEEDED FOR THE REGULATION OF GREAT INDUSTRIAL COMBINATIONS? Harvey Nathaniel Davis Chari.es Baker Fernald Ernest Palmer Carr Edwin Farnham Greene Awards ist — Charles Baker Fernald zd — Harvey Nathaniel Davis VOLUMK XL1II 207 Carpenter Prize Speaking June 18, 1900 |ames William Barry Thomas Burgess Allen Greene Eugene Bailey Jackson Russel William Richmond Howard fosEPH White 1st — Russel William Richmond 2d — Thomas Burgess 3d — Howard |oseph White MBKR BRl ' NENSIS Prizes in College Studies The Carpenter P rem nuns . The Howell Premium The Foster Premium in Greek Lucius Lyon Premium in Latin Gaston Prize Medal The Dunn Premium The Carpenter Prizes Arthur Edwin Norton Charles Huntington Porter Martha Wilbur Watt Frank Thurston Hallett Nellie Florence Munroe Harry Kav Poole Edwin Schvler Cobb Frank Thurston Hallet Waldo Gifford Leland Thacher Howi.and Guild 1st Russell William Richmoni 2nd Thomas Burgess 3rd Howard Joseph White Charles Barker Fernald 2nd Harvey Nathaniel Dams The President ' s Premiums in Preparatory Studies Greek In Latin The Hartshorn Premiu 1st Ralph Hervey Bevan 2nd Guy Blandin Colburn 1st Ralph Hervey Bevan 2nd Robert Grant Martin 1 st Ralph Hervey Bevan Elsie Marion Straffin 2nd Arthur Lincoln Young 1st James Joseph McKenna 2nd Albert Benjamin West ?;- Ralph Hervey Bevan LIBER BRUNKNShS Brown University Athletic Association OFFICERS Prof. John E. Hill . . President Howard A. Coffin, ' oi . . Secretary John S. Murdock, ' 96 . . Treasurer Board of Directors John E. Hill, President Prof. E. B. Delararre Prof. A. K. Potter Prof. W. C. Bronson Prof. A. Meiklejohn Dr. F. E. Parker M. S. Fanning, ' 91 F. VV. Matteson, ' 92 W. R. Harvey, ' 01 H. A. Coffin, ' 01 G. E. Buxton, Jr., ' 02 H. W. Rockwell, ' 03 J. S. Murdock, ' 96, Treasurer Baseball Committee M. S. Fanning, Chairman E. F. Greene, Manager VV. R. Harvey Football Committee F. W. JVIatterson, Chairman II. D. Bkiggs, Manager H. A. Coffin, Jr. Track Athletic Committee F. VV. Mattfson, Chairman E. S. Chace, Manager G. E. Buxton, Jr. Tennis and General Athletic Committee M. S. Fanning, Chairman H. VV. Rockwki.i. G. E. Buxton FOOTBALL SEASON OF NINETEEN HUNDRED F comparative scores count tor anything in indicating the playing ot a team, no Brown representatives ever plaved a more consistent game than did the i 900 eleven. The highest number ot points scored against the eleven was in the Princeton game, when the nembers ot the team were really tired out from l plaving two games and travelling over three thousand miles inside of two weeks. At the opening of the season, although there was a lack ot new material, the prospects were quite bright, as there was an unusually large number of old men to rill the vacancies. Three positions had to be filled, but thev were very important ones; quarter- back, center, and left tackle. At quarter-back it was not expected that a man like Pratt could be developed, but the position was filled bv Scudder who should prove a valuable man in the coming season. At cen- ter there was trouble for a time, but finally Wheeler fitted into the place and played an unusually steady game, notwithstanding the fact that he had had practically no experience in football. Left tackle was tilled creditably by Keene, who was also verv useful as a ground gainer. Robinson, ' 96, was again coach, and he was assisted the first of the season by Gammons, ' 98, and later by Emory, ' 97, Chase, ' 97, and other alumni. The first contest to really test the mettle of the team was 1 1 LIRER RRUNRNSIS the Pennsylvania game, played in Philadelphia. The first half gave indications of a bad defeat, but in the second the team played a stubborn, defensive game that will long be remembered. The Harvard game was a close, hard-fought contest from start to finish, and while the score was close the team lost when it should have been victorious. Against Dartmouth the team played as hard and fast a game as the opponents, and officials gave them opportunity. The result was an easy victory for Brown, the score bv no means indicating the relative strength of the two teams. There is probably no team in the countrv that plays a more trying schedule than the Brown team, and this fact mav to a cer- tain extent explain whv Brown was not accorded a higher place in the ranking of the colleges. Brown is in rather a unique position, as there are no colleges that are her distinct rivals. What we need is a true rival. We are in a class with Cornell and Lafayette, and games with these colleges would stimulate an increased interest in football which present schedules, made up of games with large and small colleges, fail to do. With games like these the team would have some definite goal to attain, while now we have no one game that means everything to us. The prospects for the coming season are not quite so bright as they were last, and many new men must be developed to fill the places left vacant. In one respect, however, there is a great chance for improve- ment, and that is in the willingness of the men to come out and do their best. If every student in college could feel himself per- sonally responsible for the success of the team, there is no reason why Brown should not keep her high position and acquire still wider fame. L. Washburn. VOLUMK 1,1 1 1 i 3 SCORES Saturday , September 29 Broun Saturday, October 6 Brown Wednesday October 10 Brown Saturday, October 13 Brown Saturday, October 20 Brown Saturdav, October 27 Brown Saturdaj , November 3 Brown Wednesdaj , November 6 Brown Saturday , November 10 Brown Saturday, November 1 7 Brown Saturday, November H Broun Totals : Brown Colby Holy Cross M. I. T. U. of P. Chicago Princeton Needham . Tufts . Harvard Dartmoutl ( )pponeni LIBKR BRUNENSJS Varsity Football Team M. J. Linden, ' oi ..... Manager H. W. Briggs, ' 02 ... Assistant Manager L. Washburn, ' 01 ..... Captain E. N. Robinson, ' 96 Coach A. H. Abbott, ' 03 T. J. Sherman, ' 02 L. Bartlett, ' 02 A. L. Slocum, ' or W. A. Hale, ' 04 A. R. Wheeler, ' 01 H. R. Keene, ' 04 A. H. Whittemore, Specia ]. G. Melendy, ' 01 Quarter = Backs E. R. Scudder, ' 04 R. C. Wad Half = BacKs L. Washburn, (Caplain ), ' 01 II. B. Ball, ' 04 T. W. Barry, ' 03 S. B. Newton, ' 04 Full = Backs W. P. Bates, ' 02 H. E. Kimball, ' 04 §B B «B 1 9 TEAM ° ° - • • 2 I 6 LIBER BRUNENSJS Sophomore Football Team R. W. Blanding W. H. Tobey M. E. Van Nostrand, r A. L. Philbrick, r. t. E. K. Ehmke, r. g. F. P. Curtice, c. H. M. Cobb, 1. g. H. E. Brown, I. r. SUBSTITUTES J. P. Carroll L. H. Peabodi C. D. Casey A. W. H. Thompson C. O. Chase G. R. Walworth F. M. Cook Manager Captain R. W. Blanding, 1. e. A. F. Crowell, Jr., q-. w. E. Phillips, 1. h. b. w. H. Tobey, r. h. b. w. H. Fish, r. h. b. c. R. Tobin, f. b. SOPHOMORE FOOTBALL M TEAM ■-, -■ „.,;■;■,-■.;.:■■■ : BASEBALL SEASON OF NINETEEN HUNDRED T HK call for baseball candidates brought out about fifty men. After two weeks ' work in the cage, was the consensus of opinion that Brown would have the weakest team in years. But in many respects the season has never been surpassed. The team won the undisputed position of second place among college nines, and was by many even conceded first. For the first time in several years our season was a financial success. Our Ethical Status, so often criticised, and justly, too, was placed on a par with other leading universities. Every one of the Big Four was obliged to admit the superiority of Brown. Twice Yale went down and twice was Harvard defeated. With Princeton and Univ. of Pennsylvania we broke even. With the smaller colleges, however, our record was much inferior. Caspar Whitney in his review of the college season says : If, indeed, there is any team having the right to dispute the leadership with Princeton, it is Brown, which against the larger nines has made an equally good, if, indeed, not a better record. If Brown ' s work, he continues, had not fallen off so materially in her smaller games, she would be, in my opinion, entitled to the leadership among Eastern college baseball teams. As it is, there is no question as to Brown ' s right to second place. To Libe Washburn ' s superb pitching we owe in great part the above stated position. His delivery was always effective and at critical times he was especially steady. VOLUMK X 1.1 II 219 Three members of the team, Crane, Washburn and Clark, were given positions on the all-collegiate team of eighteen players, while three others, Bacon, Detmers and Whittemore received very favorable criticism in Outing, the recognized authority on college athletics. Perhaps the most exciting game of the season and one ot the best ever played by a Brown team, was the second game with Yale, which was settled in Brown ' s favor by a home run drive in the fourteenth inning. One of the greatest factors in our success was graduate coach- ing. Fred Tenney, who was with us the first four weeks, was followed by Fultz, ' 98. He in turn was succeeded by Daff Gammons who was appointed head coach, April 15, for the remainder of the season. Aside from those mentioned, the follow- ing assisted from time to time : Lauder, LeStage, Robinson, Rodman, Sexton and Weeks. R. K. Clark, Captain, igoo. SCORES Pr ovidenc, 1 League Hi )lv Cros Ai nherst Pr ovidenci : League V illiuns June 11 lirown vs. University of Pennsylva June 1 5 Brown vs. Wesleyan Andrews Field 9- 1 Worcester Andrews Field Adelaide Park Andrew: i Field Cambridge New Ha ven Middleto wn Andrew: i Field Hanover Andrews ; Field Princeto Franklin Field Andrews 1 Field Worcester Andrew- i Field Andrew: i Field Andrew: i Field Andrew: i Field Andrews ; Field Andrew: i Field 6- 1 - 6 3- 6 LIBER BRUNENSIS Varsity Baseball Team OFFICERS, E. F. Greene, ' oi .... Manager A. D. Dudley, ' 02 .... Assistant Manager R. E. Clark, ' 01 ..... Captain sity Nine, 1900 R. E. Clark, ' oi, c. f. . . Captain H. A. Chace, ' oi, c. M. W. Crane, ' oo, 3b. A. H. Whittemore, ' 02, c. E. A. Saunders, ' 03, s. s. L. Washburn, ' oi, p. R. E. Clark, ' oi, c. f. A. R. Wheeler, ' oi, p. T. W. Barry, ' 03, 1. f. C. C. Eaton, ' oi, p. W. H. Tobey, ' 03, r. f. W. H. Detmers, ' 00, ib. A. H. Abbott, ' 03, r. f. W. H. Bacon, ' 00, 2b. W. A. Hill, ' 02, r. f. VARSITY BASEBALL 1 TEAM °° TRACK 6 FIELD SEASON OF NINETEEN HUNDRED TH E season ot 1900 was a notable one in the history of Track Athletics at Brown. For the first time in sev- eral years the Track Team became a recognized depart- ment of the Athletic Association, and Manager Brown, assured ot financial support, was at liberty to arrange a definite schedule. The spring was unusually early and the track was in good condition at the very beginning of the term. Dr. Parker very generously acted as coach during the entire season, and in a few weeks succeeded in putting out a team that defeated M. I. T. by a score of 8 1 to 54, an exact reversal of the score the year before. Ten days later, Brown again gained distinction on the track by snatching a victory from Dartmouth at Hanover. The meet was one of intense excitement. Not until the last event but one did Brown succeed in taking the lead, but finally left the field with a score of 74 to 6i. At Worcester we must acknowledge that we were disappointed. We felt confident of success, but Williams proved too much for us in a decidedly wet contest, and Brown had to be contented with an easy second place. This ended the season for all except the stars, who entered the contest at Mott Haven. In that meet, Captain Hall secured second place in a record-breaking two-mile run. Brown was represented in the Olympian games at the Paris Exposition last summer by Captain Hall. He won his heat in VOLUME XLIII 223 both the 400 and 800 metre handicap races in record time. In his 800 metre championship, he won his heat over Tvso, the win- ner, and ran third in the final. The prospects for this year are very bright. With most of our point winners in college, and with the assurance ot the support of the Athletic Association, we look forward to a successful season. ' Ihe contract has already been signed with Dartmouth for a dual meet in Providence, and at least one other dual meet will be arranged in addition to the inter-collegiate contests at Worcester and Mott Haven. We hope that the example ot the last two vears may not be forgotten, and that in the future Track Athletics mav be assured ot the place thev deserve in the eves of the Association. Let it never again be said that Brown cannot support Track Athletics. Elmer S. Chace, Manager, iyoi. 224 LIBER BRUNENS1S Track Athletics OFFICER? E. S. Chace, ' 01 . . . Manager Irving Southworth, ' 02 . . Assistant Manager D. C. Hall, ' 01 . . . Captain D. C. Hall, ' 01 . . . Captain Nels Johnson, ' 99 W. P. Bates, ' 02 C. W. Brown, ' 00 E. K. Smith, ' 02 C. P. Lynch, ' 00 E. M. Adye, ' 02 J. F. O ' Gara, ' 00 B. H. Greene, ' 02 E. S. Tuttle, ' 00 R. F. Knowlton, ' c W. Smith, ' 01 J. B. Tatem, ' 03 |. G. Melendy, ' 01 A. V. Pope, ' 03 T. E. Dunn, ' 01 M. H. Cann, ' 03 R. H. Smith, ' 01 A. I. Holton ' 03 Parke Erwin, ' 01 T. H. Stearns, ' 03 J. B. Littlefield, ' 02 F. M. Kinsley, ' 03 [rving Southworth, ' 02 H. E. Brown, ' 03 VARSITY TRACK -. l 9 TEAM o o 226 FIBER BRUNENSJS Brown University Athletic Asso- ciation Records E. H. Weeks, ' 93 D. F. O ' Brien, ' 98 100-Yards Dash Apr. Oct. 26, l 3 1892 1897 E. H. Weeks, ' 93 220-Yards Dash 22 ' i- sec. May IQ  1892 F. K. Taft, ' 98 440-Yards Dash 5 l }, sec - May 21, 1898 D. C. Hall, ' 01 Half-Mile Run 2 m. May 21, 1898 A. L. Wright, ' 00 One-Mile Run 4 m. 24;i sec. May 21, 1898 O. N. Bean, ' 98 Two-Miie Run 10 m. 3! sec. May 21, 1898 H. C. Brow nell, ' 92 One-Mile Walk 7 m. 29 sec. May 17.  8 9 3 J. F. O ' Gara, ' 00 120- Yards Hurdle 1 8 sec. May 1 2, 1897 E. S. Tuttle, ' 00 220-Yards Hurdle 26;i sec. May 8, 1900 S. A. McComber, ' 96 Running High Jump 5 ft. loj; in. May 9 1896 F. W. Marvel, ' 94 Running Broad Jump 2 2 ft. 2 in. May 2 3 1894 A. I. Hoi.ton, ' 03 Pole Vault 9 ft. 8 in. May 8, 1900 F. E. Smith, ' 96 Throwing 16-lb. Hammer 125 ft. May 3°. 1896 J. G. Melendy, ' 01 Putting 16-lb. Shot 40 ft. 2 in. May 8, 1900 L. Washburn, ' 01 Throwing Discus 1 10 ft. 10 in. May 8, 1900 VOLUME XLI1J 227 New England Inter-Collegiate Athletic Association COLLEGES IN THE ASSOCIATION Amherst Bowdoin Brown Dartmouth Mass. Ins. of Tech. Trinity Tufts U. of Maine Wesleyan Williams W. P. I. Officers for 1900 President E. S. Goldthwait Williams Vice-President H. S. Parker Dartmouth Secretary Clf.eland Amherst Treasurer H. T. Winches 1 er M. I. T. E. S. Goldthwait, Williams Walker, Bowdoin Wells, Wesleyan Barton, Trinitv E. S. Chace, Brown H. T. Winchester, M. I. T. Cleeland, Amherst I.-IBKR BRUNENS1S Best Records of the New England Inter-Collegiate Athletic Association ioo-Yards Dash A. Curtenius, Amherst 10 sec. Half-Mile Run D. C. Hall, Brown 2 m. 120-Yards Hurdle Stephen Chase, Dartmoi th I 5i-: sec 440-Yards Dash G. B. Shattuck, Amher St 50A- sec. Mile Run A. L. Wright, Brown 4. m. 24; sec. Two-Mile Bicycle R. Murray, M. I. T. 4. m. 3 4 1 sec. 220-Yards Hurdle G. P. Burch, M. I.T. 25 sec. 220-Yards Dash H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin 22! sec. Two-Mile Run O. N. Bean, Brown 10 m. }i sec. Pole Vault |. L. HuRLBUT, |r., Wc sle) an I 1 ft. 6± in. Putting 16-lb. Shot |. G. Melendy, Brown 38 ft. to. 1 , in. Running High Jump 1. K. Baxter, Trinity 5 ft. 9| in. Throwing 16-lb. Hamme P ' . C Ingalls, Trinitv 1 26 ft. -},- in. Running Broad Jump Stephen Chase, Dartmoi th 22 ft. 3 in. Throwing the Discus A. L. Grover, U. of M 108 ft. 8 in. May 2 1 , 1898 May ... 1898 May 18, 1895 May 27, 189. May- 21, 1898 May l 9 1 900 May 21, 1898 May 9 1 900 May 2 1 , 1898 May 21, 1898 May 20, 1899 May 2 3- 1 896 May 20, ,899 May 18, .895 May ■9 1900 VOLUMK XLIIJ 229 Fourteenth Annual Meeting Worcester Oval Worcester, Mass. May 19, 1900 track events 100-Yards Dash H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin, 10!, sec. R. S. Edwards, Bowdoin C. ' g. McDavitt, Dartmouth 120-Yards Hurdle P. Porter, Williams, 16J sec. P. P. Edson, Dartmouth H. |. Mint, Bowdoin One-Mile Run |. Bray, Williams, + min. 43+ sec. R. I.. Frost, M. I. T. E. C. Hawley, Amherst 220-Yards Dash H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin, zi sec. C. G. McDavitt, Dartmouth A. C. Patterson, Williams Half-Mile Run D. C. Hall, Brown, 2 min. sec. F. H. Ki.iar, Amherst H. L. Trull, Dartmouth 440-Yards Dash L. R. Hill, Dartmouth, z-J sec. C. F. Park, Williams D. F. Snow, Bowdoin Two-Mile Bicycle Race R. Murray, M. I. T., + min. U V sec. Wells, Williams H. F. Brown, Brown 220-Yards Hurdle R. S. Edwards, Bowdoin, 26!, sec. E. S. Tuttle, Brown I ' . Porter, Williams FIELD EVENTS Pole Vault F. Souires, Williams, 10 ft. .V, ond Place T. S. Cline, Weslevan A. T. Hoi.ton, Brown R. S. Phillips, Amherst F. K. Barter, M. 1. T. T. W. Howe, Williams K. Archibald, Dartmouth 23 o LIBER BRUNKNSIS 38 ft. 8 4 37 ft. 5ft 5 ft ;ft. 9 9 9 Putting 16-lb. Shot J. G. Melendy, Brown F. Corson, Dartmouth T. B. Johnson, Williams Running High Jump L. G. Blackmer, Williams F. K. Baxter, Williams R. M. Thayne, Williams Running Broad Jump H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin 22 ft. 8 C. W. Brown, Brown 22 ft. i} 2 G. M. Hubbard, Dartmouth 21 ft. 1 1 , ' , Throwing 16-lb. Hammer J. G. Melendy, Brown 113 ft. 11 F. Corson, Dartmouth 112ft. 10 N. foHNSON, Brown 105 ft. 11 Throwing Discus A. L. Grover, U. of Me. 108 ft. 8 A. M. Watson, U. of Me. 104 ft. 1 1 J. G. Melendy, Brown 103 ft. 5 RECORDS ESTABLISHED 2- Mile Bicycle 220- Yards Dash Throwing Discus R. Murray, M. I. T. H. H. Cloudman, Bowdoin A. L. Grover, U. of Me. 4 m. 34 J sec. 22! sec. 108 ft. 8 in Dartmouth M. I. T. U. of Maine Amherst Wesleyan Trinity Tufts SUMMARY allowed to stand. VOLUME XLI1I 2 3 ' BASKET BALL ASSOCIATION OFFICERS Edward M. Benjamin Chari.es A. R. Ray Captain Manager Edward M. Benjamin ) Charles A. R. Ray j Edwin K. Smith, Centre Henry F. Ahrens ) _ , Guards Porter Fearey i 2 3 2 LIBER BRUNENSIS Wearers of the B GRADUATE STUDENTS C. W. Brown, 1900, Varsity Track Team 1900, Varsity Track Team H. A. Chase, Varsity Baseball R. E. Clark, Varsity Baseball C. C. Eaton, Varsity Baseball D. C. Hall, Varsity Track Team E. T. Gross, Varsity Tennis Champion ). G. Melendy, Varsity Football, Var- sity Track Team 1901 A. L. Slocum, Varsity Football L. Washburn, Varsity Football, Varsity Baseball, Varsity Track Team A. R. Wheeler, Varsity Football, Var- sity Baseball L. R. Bartlett, Varsity Football W. P. Bates, Varsity Football B. H. Greene, Varsitv Track Te H. M. Paine, Varsity Footba. T. G. Sheehan, Varsity Football A. H. Whittemore, Varsity Footbal Varsitv Baseball 1903 A. H. Abbott, Varsitv Football M. H. Cann, Varsity Football T. A. Barry, Varsitv Football, Varsitv H. E. Brown, Varsity Track Team Baseball H. V. Ball, Varsitv Football H. R. Keene, Varsitv Football 1904 E. R. Scudder, Varsitv Football BROWN BROTH For O charm of powerful trouble, f g g| LiKe a hell broth boil and bubble ! -34 LIBER BRUNENSIS The Co-Ed and the Book-Store ERE are you going, my pretty maid ? ' I go to the Book-store, sir, she said. Haven ' t ] seen you there before ? Yes, sir, you have, sir, times galore. What do you seek there, ' co-ed, ' say? I seek what I ' ve sought there many a day : A book they promised me, ages ago, I must take them to task, for being so slow. Dost know no better, my brown-eyed girl, Than to trust the words of a Book-store churl ? Then listen to me, I ' ll open your eyes : Trust not the Book-store in any guise ; Know that ' tis run by men of , Men that are mortal, — hence bound to lie. Their names tell the story ; listen, dear, And listening learn, and learning fear. Paine comes first and points to a Coffin — Used as a coach to Hades often — There stands the Osier, and loudly Bellows: Come along, my merry fellows ! Come, and sing and dance, and holler, Cheer the Book-store and Sir Waller ! Cheer the co-ed and her dollar ! — What! are you going, mv pretty maid ? I must to Pembroke, sir, she said. And sadly she turned, and went her way Wiser than ever before that day. Dramatis P e r s o n a e . King i t the I ampus Act I Scene I. Providence. George Street, outside Messer Palace. Enter Boland, who has been after water ( i ; meeting a band of Sophomores. Bol. Hence! Home, you idle Soph ' mores, get vou home. What are you doing here upon the streets When you should be tuck ' d tightlv in your beds r What have we here, a rough-house ot some sort? [Exit, yelling. A Soph. Come on, fellows, quick before he warns them All, of our approach ! [Exeunt, rushing pell-mell into the Palace. Scene II. The Same. A room within Messer Palace. Enter Boi.and, followed l several Sophomores Bol. What, have ye enter ' d thus our Holv Shrine! Ye shall know better in the future, fools ! [Fights with the nearest Sopho, 236 LIBER BRUNENSIS ist Soph. Where ' s the blamed key? 2nd Soph. Never mind the key ! [ The Sophomores in a body knock down the doors of Albion ' s and Alexander ' s apartments. Enter Albion and Alexander, clad in garment of sleep. Alb. O ! What the deuce is this I now behold ? A dozen sturdy Soph ' mores in my room. O ! Say ! What meaneth this ? do tell, I want To know. Can ' t some one here explain to me The cause of this uncall ' d tor uproar in The spot where I am wont to get my nightly rest. Oh ! Gods ! What means this ? Say ! Alex. In the name of tomorrow ' s baseball game What am I up against r [Albion and Alexander are hustled down stairs and dropped into a hack. Exeunt. Scene III. Sr ueedunk. Near the Railroad Station. Enter Bitterrum and three beefy Sophomores. Bitt. I smelt this trouble, when, on yestereve, [Aside I heard the Soph ' mores would raise very Cain With us poor Freshmen ; and so I then decided To go home, thinking the journey would do me some good ; But I ' ve been follow ' d, caught, gagg ' d, tied. Oh H ' l ! Still, now that I ' ve been captur ' d I ' ll be gay ; I ' ll sing a song to wake those lying dead. [Sings ' ] You and I, love, in our light canoe On the river, grey in the morning ' s mist ' Tween the drooping willows drench ' d with dew, That sparkle and glint where the sun hath kiss ' d — How the joy of life fills every vein As we push — ist Soph. Cut that out, will you ! We ' ll soon fill your veins with the joys o ' death. 2nd Soph. Let ' s throw him in a pond and let him extricate himself as best he may. 3RD Soph. No. Let ' s drag him in the dust until his head assumes abnormal shapes. [Exeunt, dragging off Bitterrum, VOLUME XL! 1 1 2 37 Scene IV. Carnpu. Enter Brit ritty ! Byminehon- In Front of Maxcy Hall. and Archebawls. esty, welcome. Brit. Forswear not thyself , sweet youth, for I am not welcome. I was hir ' d today to keep a special Eye on 210 Maxcy, where Bitter- rum resides. Arch. Ha! Ha! And hast thou not no special eye ? Brit. I ' ll give thee specia deuce, an ' thou ' lt keep not still. Arch. Still, I will not keep quiet ! I am a wise man in mine own generation. The police were call ' d out to-night, but nothing was for them to do, for I was nigh. 1 true, what was it thou would ' st say ? Brit. Put thy hands over thy mouth, and I will tell thee ! Arch. But first put thine own hands before thy face, thou nickel-plated watch. Brit. Alas for what I have to tell thee. Bitterrum is now in parts unknown. For all Stearn Hercules and I could do, the Sophomores have taken him away. I ' ve swung my night-stick with great force and done my part ; but they ' ve outdone me. Arch. Why, what an ass art thou ! A show of force is all that thou hast made, withal. Come on, you mad-cap, I ' ll report vou to the Dean, who is building a bonfire on the tennis-court. When I ' ve had done, you ' ll be done up indeed ! Exeunt . sing wise, I do no see too much. But tell me Scene V. Enter Slatts, Clarenc Providence. van Reynardo, ' , and a crowd of Sophomores. Slat. O! that I had not left my Slater home, And wander ' d forth into the lonelv night. O ! George ! This is too bad, ves, too darn bad ! ist Soph. This is a person wal worth taking. Get me a gag, my brother, and stop this too ambitious tongue of his. 2nd Soi ' H. Here ' s one of rubber made, brought for the purpose. Clapp it at once upon his jaw. [Slatts is gagged. Clar. Gum — dom — mum, mum, ! _Already gagged, handcuffed, and trussed up generally. 238 LIBER BRUNENS1S 3rd Soph. Yes, mum ' s the word. Hear the poor fellow trying to break through his gag and steal a phrase or two. Enter a Sea Captain. S. Cap. By your patience, young gentlemen. The sail has been ready this half hour. I shall crave of your leave that you be prepar ' d at once for speedy departure. The wind is North by South and may shortly die down altogether. Come, come, I beg of you ! 4TH Soph. The gentleness of all the gods go with thee! Start down the Bay with them, and land them In some spot where th ' intense excitement Of class suppers will not upset their nerves. 5TH Soph. Come, fellows, hustle them on the boat ! [Exeunt. Act II Scene I. Rubbur Neck. Interior of a barn. Enter Alexander, with a table of logarithms. Alex. Here am I, prexy of the Freshman Class, Shut up alone within an empty barn ; Alas, how beastly is the law of fate : And then how beastly my surroundings here. I have before me all my college books, And am allow ' d to share the horses ' quarters ; To breakfast with the mules and spotted cows ; To dine with hens, and to indulge in All th ' accommodations that the place affords ; And yet I am not happy ! Alas ! I cannot seem to study with The zeal I grind with over in the lib ' ry, Surrounded by the co-eds in the alcoves ! [Exit, weeping. Scene II. Campusia. Sayles Hall. William the Fawnst, seated upon his throne. A vast concourse of students assembled for morning compulsion. ist Senior. Gee! don ' t the fellows look as if they had been out all night? 2nd Senior. Yes, and catch on to the expressions of fear and trembling on some of the Freshman countenances. ist Junior. There ' s a general atmosphere of unrest abroad this morning. I wouldn ' t be a bit surprised if there would be plenty doing anon, VOLUME XLIII 1-39 znd Junior. Say, they didn ' t do a thing to Bailey up in Slater last night, did they ? [Reads from the morning paper .-] He fought a desperate battle with his six ors, but was finall) bested and carried to hi room, although struggling all While all this was going on, gag parties were in progress in other par college, etc. conquer- the way. ts of the Will. 1 request all the students to remain [Announcing a hymn of praise, At the close of the morning exercises. _A grat tir of confusion in the assembly. Sev. Freshmen. O! thou Almighty and Allgracious 4 King, 9 Have compassion upon us, th) children ' BW jk id Cho. of Sophs. M 1 1 Five young Freshmen taken r M 1 j And landed tun on a distant shore. ' Jl W 1 They ' ve gone for good; they ' ve gone to stay, k fc c They ' ll never come back any more! r £ Will. Rebellious subjects, enemies to peace, [Rising and addressin Profaners of home and Alma Mater; bis subject. List now to me — what ho! you roughs, you toughs; For the first time since I have been your King I find myself disgrae ' d, ea, much disgrae ' d, And with myself th ' entire institution. On pain of torture, from those hands of yours Throw down the mis-spell ' d Herald; to the ground, And hear the sentence of your moved prince, — These civic brawls, of base tradition bred, Bv you wild Freshmen, cruel Sophomores, Have so disturb ' d the quiet of our streets That citizens can no more sleep at night: If ever you disturb our streets again You shall be all expelled from these halls: There are a few hot heads among us here Who, by actions vile and most disgraceful Have the world ' s Finger of Scorn turned toward us. Bv Wavland ' s shadow and the shade of Ben, Not for a moment will we countenance Hoodlumism or base Rowdyism ! Once for all time I ' ll give you fair warning, If I hear of any more kidnapping, The leaders we shall hurl from out our midst ! When fathers of vour vicious doings read, They ' ll never children send to this our realm: Now follow out after the faculty, Let ' s have no more of this ! [Exeunt. 240 LIBER BRUNENSIS Scene I. Providence. A Room in a Private Villa. Dinah, in bed. Din. To go or not to go, that is the question : Whether ' tis nobler to remain here in me bed Or to take arms against a sea of Freshmen, And by opposing end them ? — No, no, — I ' ll sleep Some more; and by a sleep, I ' ll save me head. Then, when reporters come to me, I ' ll say ' Tvvas I did this, ' twas I accomplished that ; And they ' ll believe me: How dare they refuse! ! Scene II. Providence. North Main Street. Enter Billy Penn and a band of Sophomores. B. Pen. The Freshman Ball-Nine very soon will come On a box-car from Pawtucket. Stand ready men ! The game ' s afoot ! Sick ' em as soon as I give forth the word ! Enter Widdease, with Another Band of the Same. Widd. Here come de Frishmin. Git ready ter cut their raw red th - r - o - a - t - s ! Enter a Pawtucket Box-Car. B. Pen. Rush for it ! Widd. Race ter it ! A general rush ensues, during which the Freshmen escape from the car into the crowd. Enter Lieutenant Larrance and a Force of Policemen. Larr. Stand back ! Ye Beggars, out o ' this ! [Brandishing his club. B. Pen. At them ! Widd. Ot thim ! Larr. What ho! ye jolly Frishmin, I ' ll yer layder be. Come git in line and follow after me ! Widd. Follow on ! Follow on ! By ther light o ' ther moon, we ' ll knock thim out soon, Follow on ! [Exeunt all but Larrance, who has been knocked down and trampled on. The above passage has led to heated discussions among the critics, concerning the speaker ' s state of mind. Prof. Kompp Litr, pitting himself against the universe, has lately brought forward an ingenious theory arguing for the speaker ' s resolution. VOLUME XLIII 241 Enter Chief of Police. C. of Pol. () ! mighty Larrance ! Dost thou lie so low ? But yesterday, the word of Larrance might Have stood against the world : now lies he here, And none so poor to do him reverence. O! my Policemen! Will not you now help me? Arise, bareheaded, fallen officer ; I ' ll help thee to the Station, and once there We ' ll issue warrants for th ' arrest of all These fools, knaves, and foul murderers ! Gr - r - r ! By the great Mayor, when once the King of this Is told, he ' ll never, never pardon them ! [Larrance is home off slowly in the arms of bis Chief. Act IV Scene J. Providence. Dining Hall in GeM s Restaur anto. The Freshman Class Preparing to Sit Down to a Banquet. Enter Bitterrum, Clarence van Reynardo, Slates, and Albion. All. Hip! Hip! Hip! For naughtv-three ! Here ' s to naughty-three, Drink her down, drink her down ; Here ' s to naughty-three, She ' s the class for you and me, Drink her down, drink her down, Drink her down, down, down. But. And here ' s to mv escape from Sophomores. They dragg ' d me in the mud ; I got away And went to Barrington, where, as the clock struck six, Stearn Hercules met me ! Behind two racing steeds He brought me to the citv, and so here ! All. Here ' s to naughtv-three, (etc.) Alb. They thought they had me, those blamed naughty-twos ! But I too got away — and fairly ran Back to the friends I have affection for ! All. Here ' s to naughty-three, (etc. ) 242 FIBER BRUNENSJS Clar. and Slat. Long, long shall we remember how we sail ' d Far down the Bay. Cuddled all together, We sat upon the deck and cried like babes ; When suddenly some classmates, led by Percival, Steamed alongside with a little snorting tug, And, in true pirate fashion, fell upon The four beast Soph ' mores left on guard. The fight was desperate. Ah ! how they smote Each other hip and thigh. Oh! Gods! The fight Was stiff as any fight in History. But at the end Freshmen prevail ' d, and we Were carried off in triumph ! All. Here ' s to naughty-three, (etc.) Alb. All here but Alexander, President Over us all. Forsooth we miss him sore : This was the noblest Freshman of them all : His life was gentle ; and the elements So mix ' d in him, that Nature might stand up, And say to all the world, This was a man ! Bitt. Within our hearts his memory shall lie ; During our coming jollity, oft ' times We ' ll think of him. But now let ' s all be gay And share the glories of this happy day. [Motions classmates to seat themselves. Curtain VOLUME XLI1J ±43 Who Are Thevi Coxev - Mrs. Gibbs « Bird Crummy Puss Hermes Migety Aunt Mary « E P h ' ' Magety Wid Ease ' Kid ' ' Brodie Dope ' Dub Pee wee Willie ' Piano Legs Bronco Tollev Carr ' Lizzie ' ' Slats Horse Carr ' Reggie Buck Scupp ' Cupid Wash ' ' The Terrible Swede ' Stump P. B. Pin « The Dog ' Dinah Noisy Basket Diogenes Sebastopol Tute Chauncey Oil •loth Drawback The Liber Would Like to Kno w Why some enterprising manager does not organize an Old Woman ' s Sewing Circle in Hope Colleger (Could G. E. Waterhouse or R. Montague volunteer any information here?) Where there is a hat that R. W. Richmond, ' 02, cannot talk through ? Where there is another [erry Holmes in Brown University ? Why Bird Taylor never buttons the top button of his jacket when he has on his a B a sweater ? Why the nursing bottle was ever taken away from Winnie Whiting ? Where Linden ever earned the B that he wears? Why Judge Sullivan tried to resign from the Army ? Whether Delaney ' s office boy belongs around here, or whether around here belongs to Delanev ' s office bov? How long the new Student Government game at Pembroke will remain a fad ? Where Abbot Phillips practiced his love making for the IT K farce ? 244 LIBER BRUNENSJS Another Chapter from the Chronicles of the Men of Brown fTylOW it came to pass, as David was about to enter the hall I X | I commonly spoken of by the men of Brown as Old Rhodv, |§Sg3iPpsJ that David said unto himself, Lo, it is but six by mine IBMggffig j timepiece ; I shall do much work this day, yea, even before cock crow, much shall I do. Then a voice within said unto David, Do all that is in thine heart; for the Biological Department is with thee. And it came to pass that even as the voice spake unto him he smelt a smell like that of a burnt offering burnt upon the altar continually morning and evening. And it came to pass, likewise, that even as David smelt the odor the same voice out of the winds came to him again, saying, V r erily the building slowly consumeth itself, for it is smoke that thou smellest ; go to, now, give an alarm, yea, even as I command thee, do thou it : For and thou put out this fire great honor and praise will come to thee at the hands of the men of Brown who will offer burnt sacrifices and peace offerings before Chapel daily. Now, therefore thus shalt thou do even as 1 have commanded thee. And David went forth to do as the voice had commanded ; he lifted up his eyes, and looked, and, behold, even as he started to give forth an alarm, the key of the alarm box could he nowhere find: And David was sore vexed and he cried again unto himself, saving, Damn it all, why has it come to pass that thou shouldst urge me on to deeds of glory, O ! voice within, and yet keep from me the precious key with which I might smite the smoke, yea and subdue it. And David pulled the hair of his beard in his rage and swore a mighty oath, and he said, By the skeleton of a horse, neither male nor female, which I on a time beheld, things are not coming my way, not by a jug-full. VOLUMK XLIII 2 45 And it came to pass that even as he spake thus with himself, behold an iceman approacheth, John the son ot his father of the tribe of Ammonia. And David said, I will shew kindness unto this man because he may help me to send forth the alarm. So David stepped up to him and whispered even in his ear, Thinkest thou that David thy servant asketh too much of thee when he biddest thee break through the alarm box with the tongs that thou car-riest. Now when John beheld that smoke was pouring from the building both before and behind, he chose out his ice-tongs with his right hand and smote the box so that all the glass brake at the force thereof. And the voice spake a third time unto David saving, How wouldest thou like to be the iceman ? Verilv he deserveth more praise from the King of the Campusites, and his faith- ful steward Delaney, than thou who hast done naught worthy of honor with thine hands. But be of good courage, and behave thv- self valiantly for thv people, and for the dormi- tories of this land, and let the iceman do that which is good in the sight of Faunce and man. So the iceman sent forth the alarm and soon the firemen came, this time as friends and not as enemies. For once, as it hath been recorded in an- other chronicle of the men of Brown, in the second reign of Benny the harmless, after that the men of Brown had smote the men of Princeton in battle hip and thigh, the firemen did turn their water against the men of Brown and did go up against our fires which thev had built to put them out. But now no longer were the firemen in arrav against the chil- dren of Faunce, nay, for thev were on their side. Now in the meantime, as the herald cried forth on the day after the conflagration the students were awakened from their sleep by the crying of fire, and the giving forth of the alarm throughout 24b LIBER BRUNENS1S the land and by the smell of smoke a nd by the hurried running of many of the first arrivals. And to some of the people this saying of the herald is ob- scure even to this day. Now when the children of Faunce saw that the smoke per- vaded their building, many of them said one to another, verily we are up against it, we should have insured our goods. And they cursed themselves because they did not take out a policy. Moreover, many of the men of Brown could not at first tell where the fire was ; but they followed the push. And it was soon seen that the smoke came from Old Rhody, commonly known among the men of Brown as Bugology Hall. And some of the students turned to help the firemen come against the blaze to put it out, and others set to work to rescue the things which were therein. Now some of the minerals and a bottle of poisonous germs were lost, but all the rest was spared. Now some of the men of Brown said unto Faunce, their father, We are in a great strait ; for very great is our loss, since we have lost more than one thousand pieces of gold by this confla- gration. But the father of the men of Brown consoled their spirits and bade them be of good courage, and he made an oath that he would offer sacrifices in the house of Sayles because of the good deeds done by David. And soon the fire was put out and all the people departed every man to his breakfast, and some of the bravest went even to the Refectory : and David turned again unto his work praising the voice which had bid him be of good cheer and singing hymns unto the Biological Department all the day long. Jim Field ' ' he is a man whose pen Runs on and on all day, And I ' ve been told it goes best when He has the least to say. VOLUME XLIII 247 Choice Word- Pictures From Various Daily Themes Inspired by the Fire No sound was heard save the half-audible snoring of Chet Katon ' s dog and the sizzling of the Rhode Island fog. A heavy column of smoke was blowing over to Slater, and Slater, thinking itself afire, began to save stuff. Hermes Low brought out a girl ' s picture; Migety saved his dog; Enie Phillips saved himself — he slept. M m Over by Rhode Island, the janitors were throwing fits because the apparatus hadn ' t come. Harry Hart was doing stunts in a pink night shirt, and out on George street the Physiological Chem- istry crowd were down on their knees praying for their note books (to burn). % The clanging of the bells roused out Pin Chase and Buck Whittemore. Buck managed to get awake before he reached Rhode Island, and there delivered an oration on the inexpediency of starting fires when he isn ' t around. Pin had worse luck. He missed his cue and woke up on Waterman street where a girl said he ought to be called needle because he looked so sharp. The fire had its own ideas on the liquor question and wouldn ' t touch a drop. It was a proud fire and the Fire Department knew it. So they sent up after His Imperial Highness, who came down and looked angrily at the flames, and the flames ceased to blaze. Unc Bailey with his bunch of property savers now managed to get through the smoke-filled corridors. It was dark and chok- ing inside, but the rescuers did great work. Baker got out a few choice bones, and Brown, ' 02, saved a beautiful iron chair. Over in the Engineering Department, the following problem was posted : Given Archibald and a hand pump, is other apparatus advan- tageous for the scientific extinguishing of a dangerous fire ? 248 LIBER BRUNENSIS JSrown University 45 University Hall Providence, R. I., April 1, 1901. My Dearest, Darlingest Mama : Your letter came yesterday and you are just the best mama in this whole, wide world ! You don ' t know how I wanted those dear little doilies ! They are just what I needed for my cunning little escritoire, and 1 don ' t know how 1 ever can thank you enough for sending them to me. Oh, mama, I have had a lovely time here this winter ! Sweet- heart and I have been together always. Sometimes the poor dear little doggie gets frightened because some of these horrid boys around here nearly scare him to death shouting at him. But then I take him right up close to me, in my arms, and kiss his cold little nose and smooth his dear little curls, and get him all calmed down again. 1 have met a real nice young gentleman here this winter. His name is Harry Stiness (those rude boys call him Dinah. ) He ' s been just as good to me as good can be. He has called on me quite often, and he has taken me out to spend several enjoya- ble evenings. My only regret on these occasions was that I had to leave Sweetheart at home, and you know I never go any- where without him, (not even to my meals). I have also met some real nice girls here, too, whom I like very much, and with whom I try to associate ; Miss Lawry, Miss de Lisle, Miss Clark, Miss Ashley, and several others. I think, mama, that if you and papa don ' t mind, 1 shall go to either Wellesley or Vassar next year. I think I should be in more congenial company there. The girls here are all right, but there are so many rough, rude boys that I get frightened some- times. Whv, only last week, I put on that pretty red woolen shirt waist with the scalloped bosom and the long cuffs, that I bought when I was home last, then I arranged my hair very pret- tilv, and went to chapel bareheaded. I tried to smile sweetly and look coy and shv ; but, when 1 was walking into chapel those horrid boys looked at me and laughed right in my very face. I think VOLUME XLIli 249 it will be much better for me to go to Vassal next year. Don ' t vou, mama, dearest ? Well, 1 must close now. Answer soon, dearie, and give my love to papa. With a thousand hugs and kisses, Your loving daughter, Winnie Bessie Hattie Currier. P. S. I have discovered the dearest new kind of perfume ! I use it all the time, and will tell vou about it when I get home. It is only 49 cents a bottle, too. Such a bargain ! w. b. h. c. Life at Brown ' I H E Freshman struts in the college yard, A Thinking how little the faculty know; The Sophomore savs his studies are hard, And wonders why thev have them so; The Junior flirts and bets and soaks, And does not know that he is a fool ; The Senior sits in his room and smokes, And thinks of the folly of going to school ; The Co-ed chatters in Pembroke Hall, With a brain as light as a white goose feather; While the President sits within easy call, Presiding over the life together. I ' d gladly keep on living Were it not for this one thing, That Teenie Davis still appears To think that he can sing. 250 LIBER BRUNENSIS A Bit of Gossip (Entn e nous) T last we have it — a Professional romance, and in the French Department, too, just where we might expect to find it. Prof. Filsdejean, the Freshman ' s friend, has given signs of promise for some time past : the co-ed ' s picture, the butterfly ties, the natty rigs, have not been meaningless, and have not escaped observation in the fierce light which beats upon the autocrat of the parlez vous. Not content with shining as a wall-flower at the assemblies ot Pembroke wit and beauty, he desires to launch forth as a dashing cavalier and dare the ladies to battle on the polished floor in true Parisian fashion. Pembroke is all agog. Who will be his first partner in the light fantastic ? That is the question. And how prevent an outbreak of jealousy when the momentous event has transpired, how lessen the number of fair suicides? We advise the Pro- fessor to make the girls draw lots and thus set an example of impartiality that has not been equalled since the palmiest days of Gilbert Sullivan. Imagine it, ye gods ! What a sublime spectacle of trained intellect ruling the emotions ! Professor, persevere. Dancing lessons are tedious, we know, but a sure founda- tion in the grammar of the art will prevent your downfall, and save many a frail skirt and tender toe. And what a noble example to the English department ! i Gilded Cage VOLUME XLIIJ FABLES IN SLANG The Fable of How Dinah Fell In With The Lite Together O NCE there was a Boy whose Father thought that he was a Genius, so he Sent the Offspring to College. When the Examining Committee asked Dinah what his Qualifications were, he said that he could Play Muggins, Make Fudge, and Recite Entry Mintry My Black Hen. So the Committee Stood Respectfully Aside and Let him Pass. The Boys said that Somebody had Pulled the Plug out of Dinah ' s Think Tank. But the Girls said he was Great. He always Strolled into Evening Class Meetings in a Saucy Coat, and people said that he was a Nice Boy, and had a pretty Complexion. When he was in his Nighty he looked like Anna Held. His Mother used to Bring Visitors in to Look At him while he Slept. Dinah decided to Become a Typical College Boy, and bring New Methods into Brain Farming. So he Started Out one Night with some Keen Fellows to Put the Hamlet on the Bum. But he discovered that Beer did not Lav Well on his Stomach and that Smoking Hurt his Eyes. And when he Took his Stand at the Stage Entrance the Johnnies Rushed him for a Chorus Girl. Discovering that this Sort of Work was Too Coarse for him, Dinah chose a Short Cut to Fame. He Hurdled his Scruples and Went to Chapel. That Evening he Shed his Bunty Outfit and went to a Young Men ' s Christian Association Meeting. His Ap- pearance created a Sensation. The Secretary told him to Go Awav, that they were a Band of Brothers met together by Per- mission of the Faculty to Enjoy themselves in their Own Way, and that thev didn ' t Propose to have any Cheap Skate introduce variations on their Quiet Time. Dinah replied that he was no Cheap Skate. He was a Pilgrim. He said that he had Resigned his Position as Mascot of the Brown Yacht Club and laid aside 252 LIBER BRUNENSIS other Worldly Amusements, including his Glad Rags, and desired to Become One of them. When the Meeting had grasped the Situation they Resolved themselves into a Good Cry, and seeing that they were Above Corruption, they Took Dinah In. Dinah now goes to Chapel Regularly. Through the Good Offices of the Y. M. C. A. he was elected Usher at a Glee Club Concert. It is now Rumored that when Coffin is Planted the same Good Officers will elect him King of the Refectory. Thus did Dinah Show his Wisdom. Moral: Be Good. The Fable of How Chet Became the Power Behind The Throne O ' NCE upon a Time a Tough Mug named Chet Bolted into Brown University from Somewhere South of Boston. He had a Broad Chin and Determined Shoulders, and vou couldn ' t Dint him with a Copper ' s Mace. The Faculty Threw Obstructions in his Way, but he Ducked French, Side- stepped Mathematics, and Came Up Smiling. Chet was Very Talented, but he Believed in the Value of Concentration, so he Confined himself to Two Specialties. He decided to Play Ball and Run the College. It was his Delight to Get Out on the Field in his Uniform, Talk out of the Side of his Mouth and let the Kids Admire his Shape. The Captain believed in New Men beginning at the Bottom, so he made Chet King of the Bat Bag and gave him a Job Chasing Fowls. Seeing that his Baseball Ambition was not Panning Out very well, Chet turned his Attention to his Other Specialty. He deter- mined to become the Pendulum of the Whole Works, so he ran for the Class Presidency. When he Solicited Votes his Classmates Bellered and Slapped their Thighs and told him to Fall off the Earth and Change his Face. Chet had noticed that when the Photographer Took the Class Picture on the Steps of Manning Hall, the Look-Pleasant-Please Stood him Up behind a Column, so he Decided that the Presidency was Only an Ornamental Job. VOLUME XLIII 253 After Chet had Kept Ouiet for a Few Minutes, he decided that Something was Coming to him. So he Fvolved a Brilliant Idea. He had been Reading in the Papers how Mark Hanna did McKinley ' s Thinking, and he determined to Run for Manager of the Football Team, with the Understanding that Another Man should do the Thinking while he Gathered In the Bokays. But the Students did not like the Siamese Twin Arrangement, and they Silently Told Chet So. Seeing that he did not Belong where he was, Chet became an Ishmaelite. He collected some Choice Spirits and Formed the Amalgamated Order of the Discontented, with the Motto, Vote the Wrong Way. This Order was a Great Success. It elected Strangers to Office and gave Others a Show. By Turning Loose a few Membership Fees, it Destroyed the Y. M. C. A. as a Political Machine. It Revived Baseball Scholarships and Brought a Re- turn of the Good Old Days. Thus Chet Arrived at Last. Moral : Know Thyself. Ill The Fable of How Paige Got Rubbered THFRE was once a young guy in Training for a Student. His name was Paige, but he thought himself a whole vol- ume, although having no License for the Same. This Paige once annoyed his Mates by Rushing around an assortment of his Female relatives. So his friends got next to their Job and handed the Guy a Fake letter from the Dean. As the Guy took this for a Call, he became Thick and also Hot under the Collar. He informed his friends, who had all Bunched in to see him do his Stunt, that he was Wise to the Move of the Dean ' s and further that he would show him a Thing or Two. So he called on the Dean and proceeded to read the Riot Act and the Declaration of Independence, while the Dean gave him the Merry Smile and the Stenographer had Hysterics. Moral : Even a Paige can be Turned Down. 254 LIBER BRUNENSIS Clipping from the Malone (N.Y.) Farmer December 3, 1900 THAT a football player ' s athletic- training is sometimes put to prac- tical use was shown on Monday, when the Breezy Time band was playing on Main street. A. H. Whittemore, of the Brown University team, who visited friends in town after the Thanksgiving game at Ogdensburg, was standing on the walk listening to the band, when he noticed a horse driven by a young ladv becoming unmanageable. Without a sec- ond ' s hesitation Whit jumped over a snow drift and tackled the rearing and plunging animal, which he soon reduced to a condition of subjection. As the band ceased playing he raised his hat to the young lady driver and stepped back, re- ceiving as a reward for his prompt and timely assistance a smile, the ravishing sweetness of which made the brawny athlete, who has faced the foe on many a hard-fought field where the bravest and strongest quailed, blush like a school girl. As the handsome young lady drove away Whit was heard to murmur: I guess I ' ll settle permanently in Malone. I wish the wheels in Nick ess ' s head Went round the other way, And then perhaps there ' d be some chance He ' d stop that ceaseless bray. VOLUME XI.Ill 255 From the New York Whirled O N the evening of February eighth occurred one of the most pleasing social events of the year in the Pink Tea at Maxcy Hall. Strictly a subscription affair, it repre- sented the creme de la creme of the beauty and chivalry of college society. The affair began shortly after eleven, the guests being received by the committee at the head of the stairs, accord- ing to the New England custom. Some slight confusion was caused bv one of the footmen at the door, who, through an error, sent awav a number of those invited. This mistake was, however, easilv rectified and the festivities were soon at their height. The scene was one of dazzling brilliance with red sweaters and fancv bath-robes lending an unwonted touch of color to the sombre black and white of conventional evening dress. Early in the evening light refreshments in form of dainty Switzer cheese sandwiches were served and souvenirs of churchwardens and English Curve Cut were distributed. The tea proper was of the finest brew. The guest of the evening, Mr. A. (i. I) v, arrived some- what late, but more than made up for his tardiness by his enter- taining conversation. Time after time his bright sallies of wit and frequent ban mots brought bursts of appreciative laughter and loud applause. He, in his turn, was surprised and delighted by an original song, made in his honor and sung for the first time. As the time progressed this delightful informality became more and more a figure, and the enjoyment became more general. The culmination of merriment was reached in the cotillion, in which the Keg lock-step and the Bacchalanian figure were most original. A number of new steps and figures were introduced. The only disagreeable feature noted was the presence, toward the last, of a small, brown-whiskered man with a note-book. He was said to be a reporter. Apart from this everything passed off well and the organizers are to be congratulated upon a highly suc- cessful social event. 256 LIBER BRUNENSIS An Open Letter By Walter Whf, Being an attempt on his part to answer certain questions con- cerning himself, which, at various times, have gone the rounds of the Brown campus: Questions ' Why are you alive ? ' What is your present occupation ? ' Have you no work whatsoever ti do? ' ' Why did you come to Brown ? • Do you think that you are one ? • Why did you buy a bull-terrier ? ' Have you succeeded yet in obtai recognition from this ' upper so-called ? Do you know of anyone would vouch for you a the truth of these s ments ? Answers ' J am unable to tell. ' A gentleman of leisure, supported by someone else. ' Well, I try, so far as possible to ape the habits and manners of those whom I consider the Brown aris- tocracy. I try to be as like them as I possibly can. That is all. ' Because 1 always loved to see and hear about ' real college sports, ' and I wanted to be one, too. ' Oh, most assuredly 1 do ! ' Because several others of the upper set here had them, so I wanted one, too. ' Well, no. But I still have hopes. If I spend a little more money, buy a few more stylish clothes, and act a little more on the de Castel- lane plan, they may admit me into their circle. ' Well, Lemmie Walling and Arthur Munro might. Thev are all I know of. (Signed) Wal- VOLUME XLIII 257 ■That Old Green Bag of Ham 7 The .shitting scenes of college life Bring mam a vague regret, For friendly faces come and go, And swiftly we forget. But round about the campus elms, With all our whims and shams, This year we miss one thing the most, Tha t old green hag of Ham ' s. The Freshman hears, with starting eves, The wily Sophomore brag Of how a thousand daily themes Would hardly stretch that bag ; Of how the class in Rhetoric 2 Received their daily drams Of Stevenson and Kipling from That old green bag of Ham ' s. The Junior lad who flunked the course And still writes daily themes Sees F, rewrite and overdue Confront him in his dreams. He grinds his stale fortnight! v stuff And as he grinds he damns The luck that put him up against That old green bag of Ham ' s. The Senior smiles complacent smiles And yawns and smiles again, For he, forsooth, is through with briefs, And scorns all rhetoric men. But whisper Hardly up to grade; Rewrite before exams! He ' ll have a fit and think he sees That old green bag of Ham ' s. 2 LIBER BRUNENSIS What plenitude of wind it held, What tons of compressed air, What Willie-horse-power verbiage The Freshman stored in there. What reams of lovely co-ed gush, What co-ed anagrams, What co-ed hopes got smothered in That old green bag of Ham ' s. J see the tall, straight figure now As into class he strode, Felt hat and coat-tails specked with dust His bike raised on the road. A fleeting smile, a few remarks As crisp as telegrams, Then, thump ! and things came tumbling from That old green bag ot Ham ' s. Then we forgot the essays due, In interested thought, And heard great literary truths Well-turned and ably taught. His deep voice read us things worth while, Fine poems and epigrams, And all these things had fallen from That old green bag of Ham ' s. Pandora ' s box could never stand Comparison with this, Which dealt out wisdom, wit and woe, Pain, laughter, tears and bliss. We loved it, yet we dreaded it, And oft, like little lambs, We ' d bleat in terror just to see That old green bag of Ham ' s. VOLUME XLIII 259 He ' s gone, like many another man, Whom Brown has tailed to keep, For other posts look sharp for brains, While we mav seem to sleep. And what old Bacchus used to get In lusty dithyrambs, We ' d beat in cheers, to welcome back That old green bag of Ham ' s. Whittemore A M elody Mr. James Bancroft Littlefield has generously permitted the use of this inspiring poem from the advance sheets of his forth- coming volume entitled Sweet Songs for Sickly Students : When Whittemore runs bases The bleachers pause and stare, Letting their score-cards fall ; But the other team it phases, And makes them drop the ball. And starts their agony At our usual victory, When Whittemore runs bases. At first, the pitcher smileth Although it jars his bone; At second, he blankly stareth As Buck starts out alone; At third, the grand-stand howleth Will Whittemore get home? And now the clamor swelleth, The bleachers up-ariseth, The umpire calmlv smileth, The Brown coach loudly laugheth, A ki-yi-vi resoundeth The prettv girls admireth When Whit the bases runneth. 260 LIBER BRUNENSIS Hall of Fame N order to place Brown in the front rank of American Uni- versities it has been decided that we must establish a Hall of Fame. To form the board of judges, the faculty has appointed from its two most important departments, the Administrative and the English, Victor and G. S. Cooper; the students have elected Harvey N. Davis, Percival Bakeman, and Richard Montague. This board has started upon its duties and up to date report the following applications: I am without doubt the best example of the real Freshman lady-killer in the class of 1904. Easy in my manner, and graceful in my carriage, I readily carry off the palm. Those who heard Eddie Thompson seek his lost friend with the cry of Girl Wanted while 1 showed her the college, or who saw me walk down Westminster street with one girl, holding another ' s muff at arm ' s length, must admit the justness of my claim. Every day adds to my popularity, and when I leave college 1 shall have made for myself a record equalled by few, surpassed bv none. Edward Sumner Macomber. As one of the most prominent members of the undergraduate body, I hereby make application to have my name enrolled in the Hall of Fame. My sterling qualities have inspired great confi- dence in the students as is shown by my election to the editorial board of the Brown Daily Herald and my present position as Treasurer of the Sears Reading Room. Never before has the Herald so scintillated with wit and humor ; never before has the Reading Room been run with such careful attention. In connection with the second office, I may state that, if the precedent established in the cases of the last two treasurers is followed, I will attain the unique distinction of being elected president of the Senior class in my Junior year. George Waterhouse, VOLUMK XLIJ1 261 Since I entered Brown I have been active in almost all de- partments ot college life. As a student and as an orator 1 am unequalled. As for my record as a business man 1 point with pride to the money I saved the Refectory by closing the door at twenty minutes past eight. Concerning my work as a journalist I need simply mention mv celebrated report of last fall ' s football game with Dartmouth. Only in politics have I failed to attain distinction, and there merely because I have steadfastly adhered to the principles of the Y. M. C. A. and have absoluely refused to enter any combination. Michael John Linden. We, the undersigned, wish to recommend Henry William Stiness for the Hall of Fame or for anything else he may desire. President of Brown University. Corporation of Brown University. Trustees of Brown University. Fellows of Brown University. Faculty of Brown University. A Sad Tail Once upon a time there was a Brown dog. Its owner, wishing to sacrifice something, advertised. This is the wav he did it: The owner pocketed $28. 0. R. W. Richmond pocketed the pup on a nine- cent share. (To be continued in the next Refectory report. ) 262 LIBER BRUNENS1S The College Press N accordance with the custom of former years the Liber presents two specimens of the work that its contemporaries have been doing here at Brown. There was to have been a third, but the printer refused to reproduce the Brown Daily Herald clipping we sent them. The Brunonian (price 25 cents a copy) is devoted to the more serious literarv work of the college. The following extract shows this more serious tendency : 4 Strike up the band ! I suppose you will want to know the raison d ' etre of this wonderful mystic brain-fruit maze of dreams, dreams, dreams. It was written among the murmuring meadows, ten feet away the water lapped lazily laving the lake. Gee, but it was hard work! Work is a panacea for ennui. Happiness is the absence of ennui. Inspiration is the froth of happiness. Be care- ful when you blow off the froth. Ain ' t that good? It ' s mighty seldom college fellows get a chance to read anything like that. It can touch anything I ever did except that stunt of the March Hare and the Hatter. That was a winner. But I am getting tired and 1 should think its about time you woke up if you are going to finish that brief — Have a cigarette? Through the kindness of its editorial board we are enabled to print the following extract from the advance sheets of the new magazine, the Sepiad. To the public at large, to the Ladies and Gentlemen of Pembroke University and the Men ' s Annex in connection with Pembroke University. In this, our initial number, we announce the literary independence of Pembroke. Not content with a few inaccurate Pembroke Notes in the Herald, a place in the Brunonian picture, and a poem in the Liber, we are going to start out for ourselves. That Pembroke has long excelled in literary VOLUMK XLITJ 263 ability is acknowledged bv the Knglish department, as all know who have heard the daily themes read in Knglish 1, 2, 3, or who have seen the New York Sun. Therefore this magazine, conducted by a board of ladv-editors selected by the Knglish department, will carefully follow the rules of that department, especially those con- cerning the avoidance of passive constructions and the beginning of every new sentence with a capital letter. In no sense will this publication pose as a champion of co-education, for it is the belief of the editors that there is no longer a place for co-education, and that the time has come when male students should be banished from the campus and the so-called Men ' s Annex should cease to exist. We shall, therefore, content ourselves with pointing out Kadies ' True Sphere in higher intellectual activity. On the fol- lowing pages may be seen how highlv intellectual the ladies of Pembroke can act. Philosophy 27 Prof. Mfiki.kjohn — ,Are there any questions? [. F. Russell — In regard to that matter we were speaking about yesterday : If I were walking along the street wheeling a habv carriage, and for some reason or other the baby should fall out, would the mere fact of its crying signify that it was hurt ? Prof. — Well, what has the class to say ? ( Order of Rag- chew ers for the next forty-Jive minutes — Pope, Davis, Whitford, Johnson, Davis, Johnson, Davis, [ohnson, Davis, Whitford, Potter, Thompson, Whitford, Potter, Thompson, Whitford. Thompson, Pope, Davis, Potter, Whitford, Whitford.) Hart, ' 03 — Now if I should toss up a cent to see if I were to be elected vice- president of my class, what would my chances be? Prof. — T think you can see for vourself, Mr. Hart, that, since the cent must land either heads or tails, vour chances of winning or losing are equal. Hart — And you say also that according to the causal law it is predetermined which way it will land ? Prof. — Yes. Hart — If I had onlv known. 264 LIBER BRUNENSIS Lecture on Dante TiO illustrate better just what Dante meant by the passage I we are now studying I have prepared this cartoon. Notice 1 that the motto over the gate-way differs from the ordinary ' version all along the line. The onlv true method of trans- lation is to translate so as to make the meaning just what you want it, and then to interpret that meaning. That ' s the point. Now anyone would ordinarily suppose that, when Dante spoke of this gate to Hades, he knew what he was talking about, doncher see ? In reality, when we come to view his work from the highest eternal standpoint of the twentieth century, we see that what he was actu- ally referring to was the English department of Brown University, all along the line. Interpreted in this light the passage means, It you buck up against the English department you will be damned. There is no harm in using the word damned if vou bring it out strong like this, DAMNED ! DAMNED ! DAMNED ! That ' s the point. Dante, having no knowledge of modern science, made one triffling error. The birds of carrion, whom he speaks of as in- numerable, were in reality few and signified theme-readers. Apart from this his description is fairlv accurate. The scales of justice lie broken just outside the gate and the lottery ticket takes their place. We do not see Virgil anywhere, for Virgil signifies reason, which is forbidden to enter the English Department. Instead Death stands at the gate of failure with his red-ink pen in hand. That ' s the point. The flunked themes surround the tombs of the victims as the flood at Galveston surrounded the houses. And, speaking of Galveston, — [See? that ' s the point!] Gay Freeman ' ' 5 head ' s above the earth, It stretches all around, It is so large it hits the sky And makes a hollow sound. 266 LIBER BRUNENSJS The Acme of Fame Pembroke Hall The Juniors had a class supper and social Saturday night. During the supper several members of the class who had been in the afternoon to see L ' Aiglon, be- came so enthusiastic over Maude Adams that thev proposed a toast to drink her health. The girls then instructed their president to write a note to the actress telling her of their intense admiration of her as an actress, and their love for her as a woman. The note was carried down to the Narragansett Hotel that evening. — Brown Daily Herald ' x V VOLUME XLIII •267 Pi Alpha II us a JMvpos I. McCoRKER DUGAN Dutch Myers Thomas Edwin Dunn, Esc Bird Taylor Curve Cut Walling Pipe Dreams Laury Oom Paul Stiness Miss Currier Liz Abby Speed Tatem Cupid Venus Bakeman Reggy Brown Ptellyou Thompson LIBER BRUNKNSIS The Li Dramatic Bureau i the following Si Currier, ' 02, in Brown Bowling Club in Asst. Librarian Brigham in Jackson, ' 02, in Miss Emery ' s Protegees in ]ack Gray in C S. Hoyt in Victor in Bill Harvey and the Herald Board in Delaney in Lou Baker, ' 03, in Pembroke Student Govt. Board in Reggie Brown in Scudder, ' 04, in Harvey Davis and Allen Green in Maxcy Hall Stock Co. in Buxton, 02, in Mr. Koopman and his Assistants in Adin Capron, ' 04, in The Hammer and Tongs Society in Broncho Westlake in The Yacht Club in The Chapel Choir in Pin in Byron Smith in Gilmore, ' 01, in Shade of Ham Lamont in Booth, ' 03, in Chet Eaton and his Pup in Coffin, ' 01 , in Britt in King Brothers in The Liber Board in ars now open for engagements : The Little Minister My Lady Dainty The High Rollers Sherlock Holmes The Gay Lord Ouex ' ' The Climbers A Royal Rogue The Fatal Card The Telephone Girl and In the Palace of the King Miss Prinnt and A Comedy of Errors The Greatest Thing in the World Zaza Secret Service A Wise Guy ' ' Why Smith Left Home ' ' City Sports ' ' A Hot Old Time ; A Night Off The Night Owls The Sorrows of Satan A Social Maid Lost, Strayed or Stolen What Happened to [ones Side Tracked The Man from the West ' ' A Breezy Time A Bunch of Keys A Merry Chase A Woman in the Case Other People ' s Money On the Stroke of Twelve Me and Mother The Devil ' s Auction The Highwayman Under Sealed Orders A Royal Family Much Ado About Nothing VOLUME XL1II 269 Courses of Obstruction The Committees of the Faculty have desired us to publish the advance sheets ot the new 1901-1902 Catalogue of Courses of Obstruction, Alphabetically Arranged. B D H J PPLETON ' S NTIQUATED NALYSES Tf OOPMAN ' S 1 OMICAL ft ,D 11 OURSE OT A 1 LEY ' S UG-HOUSE OTANY y ANGDON ' S ONG- UNGED RJ ECTU RINGS EAN ' S AILY IALOGUES im m unro ' s 1 1 ONOTONOUS VI EDIEVAL IT A UMBLINGS VERETT ' S VASIVE THICAL VALUATIONS 11 M EIKLEJOHN ' S VI ANY IWI ARVELOUS 1 A AXIMS ARDNER ' S REAT ' RIND yk RESIDENT ' S If RACTICAL REACHMENTS ' ILL ' S OT UMBUG . UNTS If ACKARD ' S REPOSTEROUS X AL ONTOLOGY AMESON ' S ERKY UDICIOUS UXTAPOSITIONS fv ARKER ' S IJ ROLONGED 1 HYSICAL X UNISHMENTS 2 7 LIBER BRUNKNSIS R S OP I OLAND ' S RETTY ICTURES EGISTRAR ' S EGULAR UBBER-NECK OUTINE EAR ' S OMNIFEROUS ERMONS u PTON ' S N-EARTHLY TTE RANGES ' ICTOR ' S OLUMINOUS OCABULARY w ILSON ' S INDY ANDERINGS Bubbles I often lie awake at night And wonder how ' twould seem Had Macomber ne ' er come to Brown - Only a pipe-dream ! I do not like the Refectory Because the steak, I fear, Is cut from off the same old bull They ' ve used for many a year. VOLUME XLIII 271 ACKNOWLEDGEMENT T HE LIBER BOARD WISHES TO ACKNOWLEDGE ITT INDEBTEDNETJ TO THE FOLLOWING To Mr. E. L. Blanchard, ' 99, for his cover design other drawings; To Mr. D. B. Pike, ' 94, for the use of his picture, On the Ten Mile; To all the Ttudents who have helped to make this Liber a success through their artistic literary contributions; To Messrs. Rose Sands for the use of their copyrighted photograph of President Faunce; and to The F. A. Bassette Com pany for their many kindly suggestions 272 LIBER BRUNENSIS Index Frontispiece Introductory — Title Page Dedication . Board of Editors Associate Editors Preface Statistii s— Title Page Officers Board of Trustees Faculty and other ( (fficers Graduate Students The Seniors The Juniors The Sophomores The Freshmen Special Students Pembroke Hall . Fraternities— Titb Pag Alpha Delta Phi Delta Phi . Psi Upsilon . Beta Theta Pi Delta Kappa Epsilo Zeta Psi Theta Delta Chi . Delta Upsilon Chi Phi Phi Delta Theta . Kappa Sigma Phi Kappa . Greek Letter Societi broke — Title Page . Alpha Beta Delta Sigma Kappa Alpha Theta Clubs — Title Page Associated Alumni Phi Beta Kappa Sigma Xi . . The Owl Cammarian Club Pi Kappa Theta Nu Epsilon Masonic Club Vermont Academy Club Andover Club Worcester Academy Club Connecticut Lit. Inst. Club Bowling Club Sears Reading Room Press Club . Chess and Checker Club Bishop Seaburv Association V. M. C. A. V. W. C. A. . . . Debating Union Yacht Club Musical Clubs Symphony Society Liber Artists Miscellaneous— Title Page Liber Brunensis . Herald r Week Ju. r Prom Sophomore Ball . Hicks Prize Debate . Carpenter Prize Speaking . Prizes in College Studies Athletics — Title Page . Athletic Association Football .... Sophomore Football Baseball .... Track and Field . N. E. I. C. A. A. . . Basket Ball Association Wearers of the B . Brown Broth — Title Page . The Co-Ed and the Book-Stora Kidnapped Who are they ? . . . The Liber would like to know Another Chapter from the Chro: of the Men of Brown Choice Word-Pictures A Letter from 45 U. H. Life at Brown A Bit of Gossip . Fables in Slang . Clipping from the Malum- ( N Farmer .... From the New York Whirled An Op2n Letter . That Old Green Bag of Ham ' s Whittemore Hall of Fame A Sad Tail The College Press Philosophy 27 Lecture on Dante The Acme of Fame Pi Alpha .... The Liber ' s Dramatic Bureau . Courses of Obstruction Bubbles Acknowledgement Index .... LIBER BRUNENSIS Maine Creamery Co. HEAVY AND LIGHT CREAM CREAMERY ICE CREAM 69 BROADWAY, PROVIDELNCE,, R. I. Special Attention Given to Churches, Weddings, Soci- eties and Family Orders Jf 4f f ff ff ff 4f Telephones 1623 and 3221 OUR CREAMERY is the best equipped establishment of the kind in New England and is always open for inspection. «f We use cream of the highest test possible and only pure fruits and flavorings in our ice cream. tF ' tiriF ' i tif ? Gent em n paym t of c ild like to add that we were more than satisfied with the qual- ity of the cream you furnished us last night. We have never had a more satisfactory arrangement for our class day reception. Yours truly, A. D. Dudley, For Chi Phi Fraternity. College Stationery FRATERNITIES and College Societies will find in our Stationery Department all the latest and best ideas for Class Day Invitations, Menus, etc. WW ? ? Special attention is called to our Embossed Correspondence Papers and the superiority of our Engraving and Die Work «? f  r r Of interest to the student are the University Shields, New Brown Pin Class Canes Superb collection of High-grade Pipes in Brier, Amber cif Meerschaum TILDE.N=THURBER C?. THE, YEAR IN MINIATURE Sept. 19. Sept. 20. Sept. 20. Sept. zi. Sept. 22. Sept. 24. Sept. 25. Sept. 26. Sept. 27. Sept. 28. Sept. 29 Sept. 30 Oct. 3 Oct. Oct. Annual Fall Opening. Members of Bill v Poland 1, 4, 6, become aware that to define Art satisfactorily is not altogether easy. Annual Y. M. C. A. fraternity rush meeting in Savles Hall. Editor William Riggs Harvev inaugurates his startling series of Herald editorials. Manager Hoyt of the Brunonian secures a subscription. Co-ed applies for a registration card at the library. Archie Slocum the winner in a row on the Seekonk. Prof, (in German ) Is ' ktiessen ' regular or irregular? L. L. Eaton, ' 01, (reminiscently) Regular, sir. Prof. Langdon contemplates teaching a new course entitled Galveston, 35. 3 6 37- Prexy (in chapel) There seems to be a tendency among some of the students to remain seated during the chapel exercises. A word to the wise is sufficient. Let us sing hymn number 314, ' Stand up, stand up ! ' More gas than usual in Prof. Everett ' s recitation. Freshman inquires at the First Baptist Church where Delaney ' s Bible Class meets. College mourns the prolonged uncertainty concerning Prof. Delabarre ' s whereabouts. Prof. Delabarre heard from. Mourning confined to the class in psy- chology. Senior Election. Things doing ! Co-ed asks Mr. Starr if she may write biologies for daily themes. Lent falls off the top note in the chapel anthem. Pop Munro adds a Boxer joke to his monologue. Student: Well, Dinah, everv man has his failings. Stiness : Yes, and I ' ve had mine in d near every course in College. Two members of the class in Philosophy 5 hand in their abstracts on time. Prof. Wilson : If two men from warships of different nationalities were in swimming on the high seas, and one should assault the other, what could the injured party do? Salomon : Call a cop ! LIBER BRUNENSIS Oct. i I. Pres. Faunce alludes to the constancy, loyalty, and devotion of the Brown faculty. vC tJL Oct. 12. Prof. Jameson accepts a call to Chicago. ADVERTISEMENTS , ' 03, gets up in time for breakfast. Flag raised on University Hall. O. E. Leavens Co. Men ' s Fine Hats and Furnishing Goods • DREKA FINE STATIONERY AND ENGRAVING HOUSE 1121 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA SPECIAL FINE LAUNDRY WORK 86 Westminster St. THOMAS H. LYMAN 000 CATERER 000 II FRANKLIN STREET PROVIDENCE a R. I. THE ELOISE COLLEGE INVITATIONS STATIONERY PROGRAMMES BANQUET MENUS FRATERNITY ENGRAVING WEDDING INVITATIONS RECEPTION CARDS MONOGRAM AND ADDRESS DIES VISITING CARDS H. S. TANNER THE JEWELER Nos. 64-66 Westminster St. TURKS HEAD Providence a Rhode Island FINE REPAIRING Oct. 15. Annual Missionary Assession Meeting of the B. U. A. A. after chapel. LIBER BRUNENSIS |fe The value of any canvas, water color, etching, or reproduction, is preserved and enhanced by Artistic and Consistent raining. The development and advancement of this special work is an arr oP ujhich V| uue have made a careful study. Abr m Mendenh ll hi ) Matfheiuson Street. -• ' J.Q2?. ADVERTISEMENTS Brown Opposition Debating Union Mr. Stiness, Running Junior WeeK On Monday morning, April 8th, the Union held a heated debate in Sayles, on the following interesting question : Resolved, That Dinah Stiness is justifiable. Affirmative — Dinah Stiness Negative — Student Body Victor, as judge, after praising Stiness for his ability as an orator, awarded the debate to the negative. [Prolonged applause. Shouts of Rough-House. ] LIBER BRUNENSIS Oct. 1 6. Prof. Everett springs his dogmatic joke. BROOKS BROTHERS MAKERS OF FINE. CLOTHING IN NEW YORK CITY =FOR NEARLY A CENTURY = R ED COATS Lined and Unlined and all Furnishings and Accessories for Golf. Appropriate Garments for Riding, Driving, Wheeling and the Hunt. Medium and Heavy Weight Suitings of Plain and Fancy Worsteds and Cheviots. Dress Suits and Tuxedos. Neckwear of Confined Patterns. Club and School Colors. Gloves for Street Wear, Driving, Bicycle and Golf. Covert Coats, Sandowns and Raglans of Various Weights and Colors. Rain-Proof Garments in Our Own Shapes and Our Own Con- fined Materials. Shirts and Pajamas Ready-Made and to Measure. Bath Robes and Wraps, Room Suits and Gowns, Hosiery and Underwear. Leather and Wicker Goods, Kit Bags, Shirt Cases, Luncheon and Tea Baskets, Riding Whips, Crops, Twigs, Etc., Etc. Our Booklets Cover All and Illustrate Much. Separate Editions for Cloth and Furnishing, Liveries and Golf. Broadway, Corner 22nd Street •• NEW YORK CITY - . - Oct. 17. Freshmen are herded together in the Armory. H. R. Keene elected President. ADVERTISEMENTS The Year in Miniature ( Continued) Oct. i 8. No Galveston in Langdon ' s Comp. Lit. Oct. 19. Rumor about college that Prof. Langdon is losing his mind. Oct. 20. Prof. Langdon re-mentions Galveston. Immense relief. Oct. 22. Chicago Football Game — w id ease this trip ! Oct. 23. The Liber Board decides to get out the Liber before Class Day. Oct. 24. Interclass rush occurs, under the auspices of the Society for the prevention of cruelty to children. Oct. 25. Prof. Langdon announces that he marks the essays handed in to him by their weight. Oct. 26. First junior briefs due at 2 p. m. Junior class dines at Jumbo ' s at 3 p. m. Oct. 27. In the absence of Goulding, Thurston comes in late and plays the chapel organ. President Faunce returns thanks that one leader is always supplied in place of another. Oct. 28. Tommie Dunn : I lost $1 1 .00 on the Princeton game, fellows. (cus- tomary groans. ) Oct. 29. Hardy, ' 02, makes chapel. Oct. 30. Prof. Dealey suggests that the class read the Old Testament through be- fore Friday. Buck Whittemore applies to the Dean to know whether he can change his card of registration. Oct. 31. R. H. Bevan and others win Freshman Prizes. Nov. 1. Prof. Crowell (hearing the sound of horns and megaphones upon the campus): I am glad, gentlemen, that we ' re sure we ' re in an ed- ucational institution. One might think we were in a jungle. Nov. 2. Mr. Barrows : If a man plants crops in the Spring, and he dies during the Summer, he gets the crops just the same. Jack Gray wants to know if he gets them cooked. Nov. 3. The Brown Republican Club, and Tudor Gross, parade with much enthusiasm and spirit. Nov. 5. Mason and Francis commence a week ' s engagement at Keith ' s. Nov. 6. Pop Munro tells his annual billiard-table joke. LIBER BRUNENSIS Nov. 8. The Herald characteristically declares that the November Brunonian contains a piece of verse entitled: Whether the Cap with Sweet or Bitter Rum. ' ' ' ' NEW EDITION Webster ' s Inter= national Dictionary 25,000 NEW WORDS, ETC. Prepared under the direct supervision 1 Harris, Ph.D., I.L.D., United Stat. missioner of Education, assisted by corps of competent spe ia list-, and cdiii out. Rich Bindings. 2364 Pages, 5000 Illustrations:. Better than Ever for Home, School and Office Webster ' s Collegiate Dictionary with a Valuable Glossary of Scotch Words and Phrases a ' book, the largest of the abridgments of the International. It 1 sizable vocabulary, complete definitions, and adequate ety-  ies. Has over 1100 pages and is ric hl illustrated. Itsappen- a storehouse of valuable information. Specir en Pages of Both Books Sent on Application G. 3 C. MERRIAM CO. PUBLISHERS SPRINGFIE.LD a MASSACHUSETTS P. O ' CONNOR Practical Plumber and Sanitary Engineer MANUFACTURER OF AND DEALER IN PLUMBING MATERIALS Estimates Furnished 26 30 COLLEGE ST. PROVIDENCE, R. I. Sweet Smells of a thousand smells A rare and undistinguished fragrance made. The above was written six hundred years ago ; today those words would fittingly describe Anthony ' s Floral Cologne which is distilled at the corner of . . . Angell and Thayer Streets PROVIDENCE - - R. I. A. A. WATERMAN COMFY, Sole Makers MODERN and EVERY DAY FOUNTAIN PEN have removed their factory and office to 22 THAMES STREET NEW YORK CITY Their pens are on sale at the College Book Store Note Initials A. A. on each Pen and Holder Nov. 9. Prof. Everett tells his class in Ethics that to make a man good you must first make him sick. ADVERTISEMENTS Nov. 10. Prof. Everett sends word to his Ethics class that he is sick and cannot attend the recitation. L. A. TILLINGHAST Catering Company 275 Westminster Street Providence BEACH SWEET Insurance of all kinds BANIGAN BUILDING PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND Best Quality is Always Our Quality Brown Stationery, Brown Pins Prize Cups and Trophies From $2.00 to $§0.00, in stock Watches, Jewelry, Silver Ware, Cut Glass, Stationery, Imported Art Wares, f Etc. BIXBT SILVER CO. 137 Mathewson Street, Providence Nov. 11. Whitford advertises for a position as English butler. 12 LIBER BRUNENSIS Nov. 13. C. Barns reads a paper before the National Academy of Science on: Hysteresis — like Phenomena in Torsional Magnetostriction and Their Relation to Viscosity. GEORGE L. CLAFLIN S COMP ' Y WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DRUGGISTS 62, 64, 68, 70, 72 South Main St. = Providence Retail Prescription Dept. = 62, 64 South Main St. Rhode Island Concrete Co. JOHN S. WHITEHOUSE [ . T c-oTr M-r «vn TREASURER | U QU ! B$ DOWNING M fe PRESIDENT AND JOHN S. BR SECRETARY ma TELEPHONE CALL: 118 ESTABLISHED 1865 INCORPORATED 1896 CONCRETE Side 3 Lawn Walks, Drive ways and Basement Floors OFFICE: 3 Custom House Street (equitable building PROVIDENCE, R. I. Nov. 14. The Franklin Press Company type-setters go on a strike. ADVERTISEMENTS Nov. 15. Nov. 16. Nov. 17. Nov. 18. ov. 20. ov. 2 3- ov. 24. ov. 25. ov. 26. ov. 27. ov. 28. ov. 29. Nov. 30. Dec. Dec. 3 Dec. 4 Dec. 5 Dec. Dec. The Year in Miniature ( Continued ) Prof. Jameson with great presence of mind clings to McLeod ' s dog during chapel prayer. Prof. Everett questions M. P. Davis, ' 01, upon an ethical problem. Teen, aided by his note-book bursts forth into an eloquent reply, (applause.) Chapel choir disgrace the German department with an anthem in Dutch. Eaton, ' 01 : Gad ! I ' ve only half an hour in which to read six hours and report on it for Pop Sears. Come over to the library with me, Crummy, till 1 get a book. Eaton, ' 01, asks Pop Sears for his mark. A high C, Mr. Eaton. Dartmouth students are incensed at the effort made by the Brown foot- ball players to cast odium on Dartmouth. Prof. Wilson: Mr. Holmes, what causes immigration? Mr. Holmes: Some impulse from behind. Tommie Dunn attends church. The following Thursday appointed a day of general Thanksgiving, and all college exercises are suspended. The Bishop Seabury Association begins its life together, and plans a smoker. Lights go out in the Library. Prof. Jameson assists the co-eds to escape. In Junior history one of the unfortunates informs the professor that mon- asticism was having monasteries around. Prof. : (Eng. class) Gentlemen, it is no great achievement to make a disturbance in a class room ; any fool could do that. I could my- self. (Class weeps.) All students are notified that their term bills are overdue, and should be attended to at once. The Brown Set-them-up-in-the-Other-Alley Club, win their first attempt. Dick Blanding ' s auto, blows up at Pawtuxet. The rest of the story has been suppressed. Coffin, assisted by the Book Store, issues a Brown Calendar. R. I. Hall caught smoking on the campus. LIBER BRUNENSIS Dec. 8. Prof. Everett shows up without test-papers. Teen Davis leads the pro- cession of relieved waiters from the corridor. HORTON BROTHERS MASTER PHOTOGRAPHERS Brown University Photographers: ' 8 i , ' 82. ' 83, ' 84, ' 85, ' 86, ' 87, ' 88, ' 89, ' 90, ' 91, ' 92, ' 95 ' 96, ' 97, ' 98, ' 99, ' 01. 256 Westminster Street, Corner Union, Providence Elevator Opposite Shepard Co. Telephone Tnur nnrmitnru Rnnm ought to be furnished tastefulIy with turniture thac 1 out LJui rruiury lwurn will not on]y ]ook we n, but wil] successfu n v with . nd the strenuous life of the collegiate c have everything you want in CARPETS AND FURNITURE, including ODD ROCKERS, TABLES AND ALL n f fl n fl rV nW 7 t KINDS OF FURN- ISHINGS sr «r PARTS OF THE WORLD. c The Manufacturers Trust Company 73 WESTMINSTER STREET : : PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND Will receive your money on deposit and allow interest on daily balance. Does a general banking business and makes a specialty of ladies ' accounts and other individual and trust deposits. Dec. 10. Prof. Poland forgets what he began to say. McLeod gives the sig: for the next slide. ADVERTISEMENTS Dec. i i. Prof. Manatt discourses on the merits of Sapho. You Ask, Perhaps J. H. Althans Company Why we advertise in this publication. Well, we have asked the same question and as yet have been unable to devise for ourselves a suitable answer. We certainly do not expect to get a very large patronage from among Brown men on account of it. Oh, but there are their friends and their wives to be, and, of course, they all read this book, and no one who reads this book would fail to read our ad., and, of course, if they read our ad. thev will trade with us. Providence Public Market Company CATERERS TWO HUNDRED SEVEN BROOK STREET : PROVIDENCE : RHODE ISLAND - - - Telephone jSj MENUS AND RATES FURNISHED FOR CLASS DAY SPREADS : : : Ice Cream in all Flavors E,very Order Made Separate REEVES AMERICAN SHELDON BROS. Band and Orchestra J. T. SHELDON S. A. SHELDON B. R. CHURCH MANAGER Commission Merchants Wholesale Dealers in Mutton, Lamb Veal, Poultry Game, E,tc. = ===== 255 Canal St., Providence 54 North Main St., Providence £ First Building above Central Police Station ARNOLD BLOCK TELEPHONE 1212 I TELEPHONE CONNECTION Dec. 12. Olga Nethersole well patronized at the Opera House by the Greek departmei LIBER BRUNENS1S Dec. i 3. Hayward in Art speaks of the Marsyas as representing a Satire. PRODUCING THE CHOICEJT GRADE OF WORK WHERE ORIG 1NALITY IN ARRANGE MENT JK1LL IN EXE CUTION ARE REQUIRED PRINTING OF ILLUS TRATED BOOKJ AND MACHINERY CATA LOGS GIVEN OUR CARE FUL AND PARTICULAR ATTENTION IN DETAIL TheF.A.Bassette Co: Printers Publishers BOOK COMMERCIAL WORK GERMONA BUILDING JPRINGFIELD MASS THE ELEMENTS OF ARCHITECTURE FROM THE CURIOUS PENS1L OF THE EVER MEMORABLE IR HENRY WOTTON, KT. LONDON: 1651 :: PRINTED ON HAND-MADE IMPORTED PAPER AND REPRODUCED IN AME OLD JTYLE AS THE ORIGINAL PUBLICATION THIS BOOK CAN BE HAD ONLY OF THE PUBLISH ERSAT THE PRICE $1.50 Cuts for all Illustrations in this book were made by ,, ;.; : V graving i f 1 ) 01 II1I HIGHEST QUALITY 1 BK — J I 4 ' ii.n khino. ■ ;l r. 56 Harrison Ave. B ■ 6phngfieId.Ma66. Dec. 14. Chaffee declares that the Roman world spoke Greek. He is supposed to argue from the fact that the American world speaks Irish. ADVERTISEMENTS Dec. 15. Exams begin GREENE The DRUGGIST Just What You need after completing your Uni- versity Course and before entering business, is a short, practical course in the science of BooK=Keeping with Shorthand 6J Typewriting And its application in manufacturing, commercial and banking business, and particularly in corporation business, as taught at the Bryant 3 Stratton Business College 357 WESTMINSTER i T R E E T You Must Wear Clothes 41 DRESS SUITS TROUSERS I have catered to Brown men since Sept. i 876. I have given satisfaction to all during that time. Visit me and I will tell you what I intend to do in the future. IlEl Kl IVKUllllC. university tailor 34 NORTH MAIN STREET, PROVIDENCE Prexy urges the students to use less gas. LIBER BRUNENSIS Dec. 22 — Jan. 2. Home, Sweet Home. A Chance to Choose IN LOOKING at clothing here, one great advantage our customers enjoy is in the very much greater variety of patterns than is carried by smaller dealers. Another is in knowing that the size you want is here and ready to try on at a moment ' s notice. Then, we make such alterations as may be neces- sary, just as the custom tailor would do. Our Business Suits, cut in the military manner, with broad shoulders and fitted waists, are models of elegance. Nothing like Evening Dress Clothes ro test the cut- ter ' s skill. Every detail must be precisely right. No botch-work will pass inspection. We make Evening Dress Suits, as we make all kinds of clothing, with skill and taste. The custom tailor can give you no better goods and no better fit. The finish, too, is all that the most particular man can wish. The prices must be equally gratifying to the most frugal man. Everything in Furnishings and Hats for all occasions. All in keeping with the requirements of good taste. No Clothing Fits Like Ours. ' J. A. Robinson MANAGER Westminster and Rhode Island Hospital Trust Company ALLOWS INTEREST On accounts subject to check ACCEPTS TRUSTS Collected by will or otherwise RENTS SAFES At $10 per year and upwards Capital, $1,000,000 Surplus, $1,000,000 JESS OP ' S STEEL For Tools, Drills, Dies, c. All Sizes Carried in Stock Its Superiority is Unquestioned WM. JESSOP ? SONS, Ltd. CHIEF AMERICAN OFFICE 91 John Street - - New York City W. F. WAGNER, General Manager Manufactory - Sheffield, England Established Over a Century Ago Jan. 3. Hermes Low receives a letter directed to the Art Museum. ADVERTISEMENTS The Year in Miniature ( Continued ) |an. 4- 5- Jan. 7- Jan. 8. Jan. 9- Jan. IO. Jan. i l. Jan. 14. Jan. 16. )an. 18. Jan. 19. |an. 22. I an. Jan. The chapel leader makes an impressive pause in the Lord ' s Prayer. Mr. Delaney has a box at Keith ' s. Freshman Hayden calls attention to a good grind on himself. The musical clubs return from the South with several severe cases of ex- pansion, indicated by new hats. First Vesper service in Savles. Standing room at a premium, especially for students. Howard White ' s Southern sombrero blows across the campus and carries away a 50-foot section of fence. Young man wearing an a B a sweater is refused admission at Horton ' s Studio. Mr. Whipple attempts to conduct Prof. Everett ' s class in Ethics, but is ushered out amid enthusiasm. Prof. Everett admits that he is imperfect, but suggests that others may be more so. Caswell, ' 02, appears in chapel without his usual morning letter. Hockey victory at Philadelphia. Prof. Hill, owing to Prof. Dealey ' s illness, assumes the chairmanship of the excuse committee, and opens up a rushing business. Faculty attendance at chapel a farce — The Oldest and the Youngest acted by Messrs. Clarke and Hall. Prof. Bronson, lecturing, says that a character like King Lear put in Midsummer Night ' s Dream would look like Jumbo sitting in a cobweb ! Whit promises Amos Taylor not to throw any more Refectory biscuits. Adin Capron entertains in 5 Slater. His room-mate, W. L. Clark, be- comes a much-sought man. Rubber ! Reggie Brown caught loitering on the campus within range of a partv of co-eds. Jan. 26. Dr. Benedict brings new gray matter into English 2, — on a string. LIBER BRUNENSIS Prof. Bailey: Gentlemen, of what use are leaves? Caswell, ' 02, Ask Adam. Wedt V3 ? , y wr r y t r e r f ss r s fr s fYfjs -e, National Bank of North America FORTY-EIGHT WEYBOSSET STREET: PROVIDENCE CAPITAL $1,000,000 C. H. MERRIMAN, President B. F. VAUGHAN, Vice-President S. E. CARPENTER, Cashier Collections Made on the Most Favorable Terms INTEREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS Blackstone Canal National Bank TWENTY MARKET SQUARE, 1st Floor: PROVIDENCE Incorporated 1831 Reorganized 1865 Capital $500,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits, $185,000 WILLIAM AMES, President HERBERT F. HINCKLEY, Vice-President OREN WESTCOTT, Cashier Directors : F. S. Hoppin, William Ames, Herbert F. Hinckley, William W. White, Frank W. Matteson, Daniel Beckwith, Edwin M. Dodd. Jan. 29. Atwood, ' 02, tries a new brand of complexion powder. ADVERTISEMENTS Feb. 3 1 - Feb. • Feb. 4- Feb. ij. Feb. 6. The Year in Miniature {Continued) Baseball candidates called out. Washburn recognizes a dangerous rival in McKenna, ' 04. Currier receives a Smith College catalogue. )oe Levve inquires what it costs to get a good grind in the Liber. Pembroke Juniors at their social drink a toast to Maud e Adams. Maude Adams leaves town hastily. W. G. Ward obtains special commendation tickets on the Elmwood line. Crummy subscribes to the T. M. C. A. ! ! Czar Holmes organizes the Weak Junior Committee. Notice from Herald Harry Jay Phoole, ' oo, has just been appointed instructor in the German department. The scheme of women instructors at the University is not meet- ing with great success. The name Sepiad was chosen by the students, having a suggestion of mystery about it. The Friends ' School HAS a large number of experienced teachers, and, as far as practicable, they are specialists, limited to their special departments. Special attention is given to preparation for college. The fine arts receive careful attention. Excellent instruction is given in music. Wood-carving has recently been added. It has an Astronomical Observatory, valuable apparatus for chemical and physical work, and a rich mineral cabinet. The Library contains about six thousand well-selected volumes. A very home- like and agreeable appearance has recently been given to the rooms by the use of large numbers of beautiful pictures and busts. It is lighted with the Edison Incandescent Electric Light. The educational force of an institution of this character is not limited to school hours, it is constant. The great benefits of co-education are everywhere discernible. For Particulars Address Augustine Tones, A. M., Friends ' School fr s PROVIDENCE, R. I. June, 1 90 1 Prof. Poland (reading) Let all the women sit together by themselves. Loud applause for the two co-eds. 11 LIBER BRUNENSIS Feb. 8. Howard White gets material for a rhapsody entitled ' Cello and I. BLANDING BLANDING IMPORTERS AND DEALERS IN Drugs Medicines Chemicals and Druggists ' Sundries PHYSICIANS ' PRESCRIPTIONS CAREFULLY COMPOUNDED 54 3 58 Weybosset Street Providence, R. I. President and Manager J. M. Stockari WHAT CHEER STABLES COMPANY LANDAUS, VICTORIAS, COUPES, ROCKAWAYS, BROUGHAMS Alexander Brothers WHOLESALE GROCERS Corner Custom House and Dyer Sts., Providence Distributing agents lor Bridal Veil Flour, Cruikshanks Pickles and Preserves, Fort Stan- wix Flag Brand Canned Vege- tables, Silver Cord Canned and Evaporated Fruits. Feb. 9. Stiness officiates at the mid-winter gymnasium meet in full dress, ADVERTISEMENTS Bronson tells his class to Slater Ha 23 that he has known men whose whole college education was limited !. Well, perhaps it might be worse, professor ! Where to Buy is as important as when to bu . We invite all who are interested in the use of PAINTS To our large and well-selected stock, which we offer at the lowest prices. We are grinders of Leads and Colors and can save you one profit. We sell all the leading brands of Pure White Lead at corroders ' prices. We sell only Pure Linseed Oil. We are importers of French Window Glass. ESTABLISHED SIXTY-SEVEN YEARS Oliver Johnson Co. Up-to-Date People APPRECIATE GOOD PRINTING TOUR ORDER IS NOT TOO SMALL; NEITHER IS IT TOO LARGE Snow Farnham MERCANTILE PRINTERS 63 Washington Street, Providence WHEN in want of an Extra Fine Table Butter, give the HUDSON VALLEY CREAMERY BUTTER a trial. Sweet, delicious. Always fresh. Packed in prints and small tubs expressly for the best trade. J. H. Preston Co. Commission Merchants PROVIDENCE - - R. I. New York Law School New York City Day School, ;i Nassau Street 4 Evening School, 9 IV. Sth Street. £ Summer School, ( eight weeks, June to August) 33 Nassau Street DIVIGHT METHOD OF INSTRUCTION Degree of LL.B. after two years ' course ; of LL.M. after three years ' course. Prepares for bar of all states. Number of students for the past year ( 1 899-1900) 775, of whom 308 were college graduates. The method of study pursued aims to give the student a thorough knowledge of legal princi- ples and ol the reasons upon which they rest, and to lender him well-equipped for the practice of his profession. The location of the School in the midst of the courts and law- yers ' offices aftords also an invaluable opportunity to gain a knowledge of court procedure and the practical conduct of affairs. Send for catalogue explaining Divight Method courses of study etc., to : : : : George Chase, Dean 35 Nassau St. The president leads chapel, in spite of the Herald, which announces that he is in Florida. 2 4 LIBER BRUNENSIS Feb. 13. Fifteen of the faculty attend chapel, and receive an ovation. JTenlej Sullivan and Company M MENS SHOES ffieac i - 97 ade and to Order MMMMMMMW 159 u eatmi ' nster Street - Providence JOHNSTON BROTHERS Florists $6.00 All Leathers $3.50 $5.00 All Shapes $4.00 204 WESTMINSTER ST, PROVIDENCE Telephone 154 Intercollegiate Bureau Cotrell Leonard 472, 474, 476, 478 BROADWAY: ALBANY, N. Y. MAKERS of Caps, Gowns and Hoods to Brown, Harvard, Yale, Princeton, Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, Johns Hopkins, University of Chicago, Wellesley, RadclifFe, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, University of California, University of the South, and scores and scores of others. Illustrated Catalogue upon application GOWNS FOR THE PULPIT AND THE, BENCH Feb. 14. L. L. Eaton preaches a sermon to the various editorial boards. Text: All college organizations must be excluded from this our holy shrine. ADVERTISEMENTS 25 From the Gallery Chapel starts the day with worship, worthy aim beyond a question, But we often rush our breakfast, and begin with indigestion. Chapel offers quiet moments for reflection and decision, But we often feel compelled to plug our Trig with more precision. Chapel gives us time and space to sing the hymns that may inspire, But we often much prefer to chew the rag and stamp the choir. Chapel offers holy scripture from the ages immemorial, But we often choose our reading from a Herald editorial. Liber sees, and smiles quite franklv, and inquires without emotion, Will they change our human nature, or no more compel devotion ? Advice When you do your fussing, fellows, Do it thoroughly and well, Never mind the Bib. Lit. courses, Let your Ethics go to thunder. Have a little friend in Elmwood, Have a queen down Warren wa ' Peacherina in Pawtucket, And a pearl from some far Bay; Tn East Providence a corker, Close at hand an East Side belle ; When you do your fussing, fellows, Do it thoroughly and well ! Save your money for the trolley, Make at least two calls a day, Flatter, flirt and fib and jolly, Squeeze her hand and come away. Learn a song and sing it often, If you wish to make your mark. Well, in short, when fussing, fellows, Do it just like B ly CI k. 26 LIBER BRUNENSIS Feb. 15. Thomas Edwin Dunn, esq., hears that the Liber is coming out despite his efforts to the contrary. He secures the aid of an attorney. 1108 Chestnut Street Philadelphia We have our own Photo- sfrf graph Gallery for Half Tone -f JTfS} A£ and Photo Engravings. Fashionable Engraving and Stationery LEADING HOUSE FOR Before Ordering Elsewhere Compare Samples and Prices Maker of Stationery for Class of 1901 and Other Cl Get Our Prices on Fraternity Inserts and Station ' Pay your athletic tax to-day ' ' occupies most of the Herald. ADVERTISEMENTS 2J ASK Rastus Clark why Crosby wouldn ' t accept his excuses the day after they had both happened to patronize the Empire theatre. Howard White what the usher said to him the night the lights were turned up suddenly at Keith ' s. Whittemore how he liked the joke Langdon sprung about a wise father. Uncus Bailey about the chemistry department. Tommie Dunn what he thinks of Prexy ' s cold bath Ethics. Nickless who threw the singing-books. Jack Gray about Private Dunn ' s court martial, and anything else that has happened in Maxcy. Bobbv Aldrich about the Slater Hall brigade, and the Sopho- more Child-Stealers. Louis Baker what he thinks of co-eds. The co-eds what they think of Louis Baker. Bird Taylor who interpolated a grind on him in the Pi Kappa farce. Kidnapped (Revised Version, 1901) Act. I. Nothing doing. Act. II. Rough house. Act. III. Nothing doing. Act. IV. Sophs get a man ; Freshmen get two. Act. V. All off. 28 LIBKR BRUNENSIS Feb. I 8. Prof. Munro remarks that he saw more drunks in Pawtucket one Saturday evening, thai in all his travels abroad. Class wonders where Pop put up at Pawtucket. Established 1866 S. TOURTELLOT COMPANY Fruit and Produce Commission Merchants S. TOURTELLOT a J. L. TOURTELLOT I. W. TOURTELLOT PROVIDENCE, R. I. Pay Cruickshank Carpenters Jobbers Hardwood Floors a Specialty Class Day Decorations and Furniture Repairing Jt jZ j PARTICULAR CAR PENTERS FOR PAR TICULAR PEOPLE Shop : Sixteen Crawford Street Providence, R. I. ' Phone 899 A. W. PAY S. C. CRUICKSHANK The RHODE ISLAND NEWS COMPANY Importers, Jobbers and Retailers Books and Stationery Fancy Goods, Toys, Athletic Goods, American and Foreign Periodicals 50 1-2 Weybosset Street. 21 and 23 Pine Street C. F. IRONS C. A. RUSSELL IRONS RUSSELL MANUFACTURERS OF Emblem AND College Pins ALSO PRESENTATION JEWELS Designs and Estimates Furnished Free of Cost 102 Friendship St. Providence, R. I. Feb. 19. Steve and Thurston keep awake in Art. ADVERTISEMENTS 29 Feb. 20. Dealtrv, ' 04 decides to start a new fraternity. The New England Grocery Tea House and Market £) WEYBOSSET, ORANGE AND MIDDLE STREETS: PROVIDENCE, R. I. THE best equipped establishment of the kind in America. Almost everything in the line of Kdibles viz. j Groceries, Teas, Coffees, Confectionery, Fruits, Meats, Fish, Game, etc., etc., and all in quantities to suit all classes of buyers from the smallest to the largest. Branches: At Pawtucket, R. I., and at Worcester, Mass. B. F. ARNOLD H. E. MAINE t LIDGERWOOD HOIST ELECTRIC HOISTS N --|£ Are Built to Gauge on the 1 i.- Duplicate Part System. Quick Delivery Assured. . STANDARD FOR QUALITY AND DUTY LIDGERWOOD MFG. COMPANY 96 Liberty Street, New York oT G - A Safe and Economical Boiler Furnishes Dry Steam Rapidly ABENDROTH ROOT MFG. CO. 99 JOHN STREET j NEW YORK Feb. 21. At midnight the Dean and some friends celebrate around a middle-campus camp-fire. 3° LIBER BRUNENSIS Delaney consults the Dean as to the appropriateness of his conduct on the previous evening. AMERICAN 4 NATIONAL BANK Banigan Building, PROVIDENCE = 10 Weybosset Street = RHODE ISLAND Capital, $1,000,000 We Solicit New Accounts and Invite an Interview at the Bank NT EREST ALLOWED ON DEPOSITS 4 O f f ic ers ENTER, President E. Mu NER, Vice-Pr ' sidtnt iuN r, Cashier W. G. Brow n, Ant. Cashie Dire c tors w. 4lLI Carpenter jE 7 EY D EN H Arnol A G ROSVENOR George C. Nightingale H. Watson Robe i W Taft J. W. BISHOP COMPANY Contractors c%f Builders OFFICES 417 Butler Exchange, Providence, R. I. 53 State Street, Boston, Mass. 107 Foster Street, Worcester, Mass. 34 Canada Life B ' ld ' g, Montreal, P.Q. MILL Worcester, Mass. Throw Away Your Glass Ink Filler and Use DEWEY ' S PERFECT (SELF = FILLING) a FOUNTAIN PEN a Can be Filled from Any Bottle No Ink Joint to Soil the Fingers while Writing Every Pen Guaranteed Colonial Pen Co. 7? For Sale at College Book Store Feb. 23. Dealtry, ' 04 decides that college men are a poor lot. Index to Advertisements nil Rocn 3 Co., J. H. Bassette Co., Tm Bi ii Swej i Bishop Co., J. W. Claflin George L. Co. . Pen Co. Leonard . Cqloni Cotrel Dreka . . . . E. W. Collars . Friends ' School . Greene, the Druggist Henley, Sullivan C Horton Brothers Irons Russell . JESSOP, Ym. SONS Jo Bro Macullar, Parker Co Maine Creamery Co. M m i , iurers ' Trus: Mendenhall, Abram . Merriam Co., G. C. . New York Law Si hool Olh er Johnson Co. Pay Cruikshank Pre STON, J. H. Co. . Providence Public Marke Ree ves Am. Band and Orc R. I Concrete Co. . R. I Hospital Trust Co. R. I News Co. She ldon Brothers Spr ngfield Photo Eng. C Sno V Farnham Tan NER, H. S. . . . Tili en-Thurber Co . Ti i inghast, L. A. Tou rtellot, S. Co. Wat erman, A. A. Co. Wh r Cheer Stables Co. Wright, E. A. En m Si i : bij;|;ljlHHil : lTl;;!i;Ji i iWi ' Ik, i ! H te ijiii liiii; PI fi iisii ■.:■■ ■ in


Suggestions in the Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) collection:

Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1897 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1898 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1899 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

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Brown University - Liber Brunensis Yearbook (Providence, RI) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

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