B 'QEL , Y 4' A ...AX IC ,N ' 1 i Q wi if mf . ixklix I7 --Q c X 2 .M 5' N .N K, Q 17Af?k QlQ I Qt vi 15' g el. v f 1 Qibig I Q19 f24F'p-W3 5555 X 1-L -' 39725 , E-'ii wi, f 1 k a, ff W f 1906 K W To PROFESSOR JOHN HEDMAN, A. M Whose hearty co-operation with the students, both in the class-room and in athletics, is sincerely appreciated, this Volume is respectfully dedicated by the Editors Preface Faculty Trustees Conference Board Aluinni Associations Classes Fraternities Sororities Societies Athletics Musical Clubs Dramatics Foss Hall Debating Society Christian Associations The Colby Echo The Colby Oracle Exhibitions Commencement Awards Miscellaneous Slams- Eclito1's Note Annals GNT Dedication Oracle Board 5 7 8 9 I2 13 I4 I5 65 76 33 95 III 121 126 128 I3O 132 134 136 139 146 ISI 161 169 IO7 The Oracle Board EDITQR-IN-CHIEF Fenwiclce L. Holmes, ATQ BUSINESS MANAGER Burr F. Jones, ZXII ASSISTANT BUSINESS MANAGER Malcolm D. Smith, AY ASSOCIATE EDITORS Lewis W. Dunn, AKE V. Ray Jones, ATQ Roscoe C. Emery, ZXI' Alice H. Davies, EK Herman B. Betts, AY Beulah F. Purington Ralph B. Young, TAG Cora H. Farwell, AY Preface Once more the ORACLE ASSOCIATION presents to students and friends an edition of the college annual. The editors have worked hard to make this volume of the ORACLE the best yet published, and to accomplish this, have made some changes in arrangement and intro- duced several new features. The cover design will please those who have complained that recent issues of the ORACLE are antiquated in appearance. A proportionate part of the space has been devoted to the women. The biographies of the Professors will give some inter- esting information in regard to the character of our Faculty. Nothing of a vicious nature has been said concerning any individual connected with the college. In explanation of this last new feature, we would say that it is our belief that college annuals of today take too much liberty in their roast columns, especially, when, as frequently happens, something is said derogatory to the dignity, and frequently to the character, of the Professors. Such things, if they do nothing worse, teach the student to hold the Professor in slight esteem, and the student is the loser thereby, for he acquires most from those professors whom he most respects and loves. We are aware that the omission of these Uroasts will prove a disappointment and a source of criticism to some. Let us say that it required no little sacrifice on our part to withhold from publication some of the contributions we had received, since we were fully aware that by omitting them we were taking away just so much from the wit and sparkle of our pages. Yet we believe that our action will meet the general approval, while we trust that, as a whole, this volume will prove to be not unattractive to all our readers. THE EDITORS March 16, 1906 8 CHARLES LINCOLN WHI1'E,A.M., D.D. 33 College Avenue. President of Colby College and Babcock Professor of Psychology and Moral Philosophy Woburri, Mass. High School, 18835 Brown University, 18875 The Newton Theo- logical Institution, 18905 degree of A.M., 18905 Pastor of First Baptist Church, Somersworth, N. H., 1890-45 Pastor of First Baptist Church, Nashua, N. H., 1894-19005 General Secretary of the N. H. Baptist Convention, 19005 President of Colby College since 1901. KDBK EDWARD VVINSLOW HALL, A.M., LL.D. 229 Main Street. Emeritus Professor of Modern Languages and Librarian Portland High School, 18585 Colby College, 18625 Professor of Modern Lan- guages, 1866-1891 5 Registrar, 1888-19025 Librarian since 1873. 1I1BK JULIAN D. TLAYLOR, A.M., LL.D. 37 College Avenue. Professor of Latin Language and Literature Vassalboro Academy, 1861 5 Oak Grove Seminary, I862j Waterville Academy, 18645 Colby, 18685 Tutor, Colby, 1868718735 Degree of A.M.,I87Ig Honorary Degree of LL.D., Colby, 1901 5 Professor of Latin at Colby since 1873. QIIBK JAMES W1LL1A1xf1 BLACK, Ph.D. 56 Pleasant Street. Professor of History and Political Economy Baltimore City College, 18855 john Hopkins University, 18885 Ph.D., 18915 Professor History and Political Science, Georgetown fKyj College, ISQI-Q25 Associate Professor Economics, Oberlin College, I892-4, Member American History Association, American Economic Association, tMember of Councilj Maine Historical Society, Maryland Historical S0ciety5 At Colby since 1894. flfBK ARTHUR jERE1v11AH RoHER'1's, A.M. I3 Appleton Street. Professor of Rhetoric and Instructor in Elocution Limerick Academy, 18855 Colby College, 18905 Graduate student at Harvard University, 1899-1900 5 Department of English, Colby College, since 1890. d1BK AN'roN MARQUARDT, Ph.D. R. F. D. 37 Dr. Reimann's High School, Lubec, Germany, 18775 Passed the Einjaehrig Freiwilligen-lixamen, 18775 Catharineum at Lubec 1877-18805 Passed the Mat- uritaets-Examen, 1880, Universities of Berlin and Kiel, 1880-18855 Passed Doctorexamen at Kiel in 1885 5 Graduate work at Kiel, 1885-1887 5 High School, Watertown, Mass., 1887-1891 5 At Colby since 1891. KDBK 9 .IOHN HEDBIAN, A.M. 28 College Avenue. Professor of Romance Languages Caribou High School, ISQIQ Colby College, 1895, Instructor in Modern Lan- guages at Colby, 1895-1896, Instructor in Latin and Greek at Colby, 1896-1899, University of Paris, 1899-1900, Associate Professor of Romance Languages at Colby, 1900-1902, Professor of Romance Languages since 1902. CDBK CLARENCE HAYXVARD VVHITE, A.M. 3 Nudd Street. Professor of the Greek Language and Literature Bristol Academy, Taunton, Mass., 1882, Amherst College, 1886, Instructor in Greek, High School, Amherst, Mass., 1885-6, Instructor in Latin and Mathe- matics, Private Classical School, Hartford, Conn., 1886-7, Instructor in Greek and Latin, Carleton College, 1887-1891 , Master in Latin, Worcester Academy, 1891-1902 , Professor at Colby College since 1902. LIJBK HUGH Ross HATCH, A.M. I2 Nudd Street. Professor of Mathematics Eastern Maine Conference Seminary, 1886, Colby, 1890, Newton Theological Seminary, 1893, Chicago University, summer of 1895 and 1897, Instructor in Newton Theological Seminary, 1893-1897 , Professor at Colby since 1903 GEORCEE FREEMAN PARMENTER, Ph.D. Center Place. Merrill Professor of Chemistry Needham High School, Mass., 1896, Massachusetts State College, 1900, Fellow in Chemistry, M. S. College, 1900-1901, Assistant Chemist at United States Iilxperirnent Station, Kingston, R. I., IQOI-IQO25 Instructor in Chemistry, Brown University, 1902-1903, At Colby since 1903. EX GRACE ELLA BERRY, A.M. Foss Hall. Dean of Women, Registrar West Boylston High School, 1888, Mount Holyoke College, 1893 , Instructor in Mathematics, Western College for Woiiieii, 1893-1897 3 Assistant in Mathematics and Graduate Student, Mount Holyoke College, 1897-1899, A.M degree, 1899, Graduate student, Cornell Summer School, 1899, Instructor in Mathematics and Physics, Western College for Women, ISQQ-IQOOQ Associate Professor of Physics, Mount Holyoke College, IQOO-IQOZQ Dean of Women, Colby College, since 1902 WILLIAM PORTER BECK, M.S. 72 Pleasant Street. Associate Professor of Physics and Astronomy Doane Academy, 1896, Denison University, IQOOQ Tutor in Physics, University of Maine, 1900-1901 , Studied in University of Chicago, summers of IQOI-IQO2, Instructor in Physics, Colby College, 1901-1902 , University of Maine, 1902, Associate Professor of Physics, Colby College, IQOZQ Fellow in Physics, University of Chicago, 1904-SQ At Colby since 1901 WEBSTER CHESTER, A.B. 183 Main Street. Associate Professor of Biology Bulkeley High School, New London, Conn., 18935 Colgate University, 1900, Instructor in Science and Mathematics, Colby Academy, New London, N, H., 1900-1902, Graduate student, Harvard University, 1902-1903, Instructor in Biology, Colby College, 1903-1905 9 Associate Professor of Biology since 1905 IO I-Io MARY SYBEL CROSWELL, A.B., M.D. Foss Hall. Resident Ph WARD EDWIN SIMPSON, Ph.B., A.M. 28 Winter Street. Instructor in Geology and Secretary of the Faculty Clarence High School, 18915 Cornell College, Ph.B.,1896g Cornell School of Oratory, 18965 Instructor in Science, Knoxville High School, 1897-1898, Prin- cipal of Knoxville High School, 1898-1900 3 Superintendent of Schools,Colun1bus junction, Iowa, IQOO-I903g Graduate student in the University of Chicago, summers of 1902-1903, Graduate student, Harvard University, 1903-19059 Field and Laboratory Assistant in Geology, Harvard University, I904, Assistant in Physiography and Meteorology, Harvard University, 1904-19055 A.M., Harvard University, 1905 g Instructor in Geology, Colby College, since 1905 ysician and Director of Physical Training in the Women's Division Wilton Academy, 18925 Colby College, 1896, Tufts Medical School, 19035 House Physician and Surgeon Worcester Memorial Hospital, 1903-19045 Instructor in Pathology and Physiology, Passe Gymnasium, Boston, 1904- 19053 At Colby since 1905 ALTON IRVING LOCKHART, A.B. 2 South College. Assistant in Chemistry. Hampden Academy, 1900, Colby College, 1905. DAVID IQENNETH AREY, A.B. 6 North College. Assistant in Biology Camden High School, 19005 Colby College, 1905 2, ., 'f13f'? ' 'Tie ne N' Q ' dxf! 'iff' 4, QQ .,. :H I E -Zflp .V .'1-F-fZl:'?Q1-5253 .- '.-1-1--.f:.f-'fiif-s.. .- ' gg., l, I.-E-3,1 gil - ' ,, . 1-1-1 ,eff -+1-at , -4 - - . , ,-1 ,,f,,gfgii51::4,f ,:-.eff i 1- -bf ze. 1 111' --ffufr '. fi . ' ,1 ,f-4 f'f4tf -53.212-'it-fiia-fzfv-1-- . 4:-125ifkfff-1?-:::f1 fe sf -we ' A , e . me-rf-1:-1 f-146-s-nf-.--1-stair-. g p? -ls. ,W aw- ff, - - Ja., -t:1n-fg5',1t'- 13336 ,-'t+,t'g.,-,:g'1-1-gf1. .' . 7 .g-?,,..,,,.,,r1,, 1-,zgj-1:', . E. ,A , .3,:-.:,.- 3 .g.g,g:::01:--A .nil ff-Lin 'tt 2 .. 1- - , V- frm: 154-11 ef- 523 3,451.5-5 2 ff- J.: .7 pf, V: A . r v -.,. 51 :-' ' 't iff-3-412-1.-I If 5' f 72,3 ,g,,g:4 1 i 7427- - 9 ,. ft? 1 ' S' 4 'I 1'-'if-'.3:fZ5 ,EI?PF:1'.k1'-,-',:.32211-lf 1.23 4 I film-1-f ii'-43 1 E? - ' Ji- 1. 5 1 . , - -A 1 V. '- . ---:f..,g,-.3113-,l ,,L1.g'1'ffl-24 ,Q,53.gIi':f1'-w2'PQ.g+1.',:?' :,452?2'3:,:5:Q P ,::-qvzflgzgzeg, - aa, av 1 :191.-L-,:-- 1 v---PM-wlH if: '-'?F5i ':,.4f-inf' , if fif '-f ff:-211342-gftvfv'-ff:15:5 leii 'W' 3 - E'-.av1:-fii?-Zh:-':,:fm f ?:52g',.pZ:2Eli5g-C1154-Ji-ffqiv' , 11-221-1 -::-a n-.--- : ,- - . , .f45?W, ' ' ' ' 'if '91!'.?f32if151f: - :Q'.f'6':V.'f? 'flfzfg - rg -'ff-1' f-4ZM1fev+1- -- ' Y,f,-ix? .-,-1-.P ,--aff ,f- . f-+.a-.-,-.,,,a.f,2qMa4,.w, .sm--,,-m.,.ff,a1.,.-.,,.....1...aw V .,M,.1-...1.-4-1-4-,-wa--4:-1.-1 vyyy 414- f -rw-1,-,yfm-p.-.f-m4.a-.Aww2:-s,,'5pff:4-capafmem--4y,s1-2.,fm-1.-V:-5:-aa-.3-.W-.1,.,.,,:,-t.-5,15-4.-. -. . .,,1.L.5:,e,.-.za-2,Wg,,,, , . .- , , 1 iifzftiiiilgfipizivf5?45:y ' 7-.1,,4gG5f-ti iff? 'Lgf.515-1,,-7g4-- -D -4:iE72 E72f '1i:5'f:-F,gb.,'-1ycl5zpZg-1-g-17 :3f:5:i21-297:2115'-i52f5gZZf:f:5:5.f, cf L97259'-',f ,- .- , .' 1 CHEMICAL HALL I I ' JQR-A Elflfnusrs ES Officers of the Corporation REV. CHARLES LINCOLN 'WHITE, A.M., D.D., President HON. PERCIVAL BONNEY, LL.D., Vice President and ex-zW'c1'a Chairman of the Board of Trustees LESLIE C. CORNISH, LL.D., Secretary, Augusta GEORGE K. BOUTELLE, ESQ., Treasurer, 'Waterville Board of Trustees TERM EXPIRES IN 1906 HON. EDVVIN F. LYEORD, A.M., Springfield, Mass. REV. GEORGE BULLEN, D.D., New London, N. H. JOSHUA WV. BEEDE, A.M., M.D., Auburn EUGENE N. FOSS, ESQ., Jamaica Plain, Mass. JOSEPH L. COLBY, LL.D., Newton Center, Mass. DUDLEY P. BAILEY, ESQ., Everett, Mass. REV. CHARLES LINCOLN VVHITE, A.M., D.D., Nvaterville GEORGE K. BOUTELLE, ESQ., Waterville HON. GEORGE C. VVING, Auburn ALBERT H. DAVENPORT, ESQ., Malden, Mass. GEORGE OTIS SMITH, PH.D., Skowhegan TERM EXPIRES IN 1907 REV. A. R. CRANE, D.D., Hebron HON. PERCIVAL BONNEY, LL.D., Portland IION. W. J. CORTHELL, Ll.,.D., Gorham REV. HENRY S. BURRAGE, D.D., Portland HON. RICHARD C. SHANNON, LL.D., New York REV. JOHN H. HIGGINS, Charleston CHARLES F. RICHARDS, A.M., Rockport XASHER C. I-IINDS, LL.D., Portland XCLARENCE E. MELENEY, New York City QQALLEN P. SOULE, Hingham, Mass. TERM EXPIRES IN 1908 HON. MOSES GIDDINGS, Bangor WILFORD G. CHAPMAN, ESQ., Portland REV. FRANCIS W. BAREMAN, D.D., Chelsea, Mass. KLESLIE C. CORNISH, Ll,.l,J., Augusta TARAD THOMPSON, ESQ., Bangor REV. CHARLES OWEN, Waterville HON. GEORGE A. WILSON, A.M., South Paris DAVID W. CAMPBELL, ESQ., Cherryfield XALFRED KING, M.D., Portland XVILLIAM H. SNYDER, A.M., Vllorcester, Mass. WREV. EDWIN C. VVHITTEMORE, D.D., Waterville Elected by the Alumni Association T Deceased I2 Conference Board FACULTY COMMMITTEE President, CHARLES L. VVHITE Professor A. J. lQOBER'l'S Professor VV121ss'i'E11 CHEs'1'1zR STUDENT COMMITTEE Charles P. Chipman, '06, Chfzirmzzfz Perley L. Thorne, '07 Wlinfrecl Curtis, '08 Frank O. Dean, '09, Sffffdftllll' William S. Stevens, '06, N. C., North Division Elliott C. Lincoln, '06, N. C., South Division David M. Young, '07, S. C., North Division Harold L. Mitchell, '08, Students in the city I3 Alumni Associations THE GENERAL ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Henry C. Merriam, '64, President Asher C. Hinds, '83, Vice President George Dana Sanders, '82, Secretary Hascall S. Hall, 'f'96, Treasurer THE BOSTON COLBY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION I. E. Burke, '90, President ?Y'CqBig3gi?Ei'5:82' Vice Presidents M. S. Getchell, '93, SecretaryfTreasurer THE NEW YORK COLBY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Charles S. Estes, '84, President Frank D. Edmunds, '85, Vice President Frank H. Hanson, '83, Secretary-Treasurer THE COLBY CLUB Reuben W. Dunn, '68, President Rev. C. E. Owen, '79, First Vice President Rev. George Dana Sanders, '82, Second Vice President George Stanley Stevenson, Third Vice President Professor Hugh Ross Hatch, 790, Secretary Professor I. D. Taylor, '68, Treasurer THE COLBY ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION Harriet M. Parmenter, '89, President Grace Gatchell, '97, May L. Harvey, '05, Edna Owen Rice, 'o2, Secretary Caro Hoxie, '96, Treasurer Vice Presidents THE BOSTON COLBY ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION Dora Knight Andrews, '92, President Clio M. Chilcott, '95, Vice President Linda Graves, '95, Secretary Helen Sullivan Richardson, '97, Treasurer 14 xx -. 0 A45 4 if is i' NA! faq? 1 1 I, .I 5 X If X K1 X YP , Ugg! X 587 CL CL Q Q 14? Ex ' Q f Q Li A , I I 4 Zlq Q pp-li .-.Anja xx., X N g : f XJQQFHN 15049 QQ, . IWW , , ., W 1 2 5 471- X'57Qf3f15j:A'jfjCfj.-IF-Q93ffgigfzf ' I 11,7 5. 5 QLEQX - .A l - -' A 'STE ilnff , W I ' '-13312 f W V 1' -f' Q 'Eg if ik 'R an ----:fee X-57-vv ml- N-1, N K 64, 1 4 . . ,. , X 3 X ,, . V, -gg? .fb N , M, . . . 2 NNW 'kfsg - ' EQ -- ' U Qfif' - . -r f'j'f5 ' ' Aw: ' ' ' 1' - -' - T 'f f-Y' L 1 , . F x -L l 'V ,rggni b C .. -4 144 -- -,f,,.,- x.-T... , .Ta gf 1 . Qqifii' X '1- '42 E f 45 Aim 'UW 'W f X lun 'W if JW 'rw 1 , U0 Fgginix W f su ww Class of 1906 MEN Clam Yeffs -Bingo-Bango-Bango-Rix, 'Rah I 'Rah I 'Rah I for Noughty-six I First we are and will remain, rrpcis q5L?tf'qv Kuf TL,LL'l?V Bingo-Bango-Bango-Rix, 'Rah I 'Rah I 'Rah I for Noughty-six I OFFICERS Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin, President Harold Leon Pepper, Vice President Charles Nash Meader, Secretary Harold Eugene Willey, Treasurer john Crandall Lindsay, Marshal Charles Phillips Chipman, Historian, Karl Raymond Kennison, Orator Percival Willard Keene, Poet Benjamin Austin Gooch, Prophet Rex Wilder Dodge, Parting Address Charles Phillips Chipman, Chaplain EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Wir' P7'6'J'Z'f!767ZZ' wc-qjiria Merlin Colby joy William Spring Stevens ODE COMMITTEE Arthur Greenwood Robinson Arthur Waldo Palmer Harold Leon Pepper 18 Senior History MEN ISTORY is not a mere succession of dates or of incidents. It is a record of progress or decline, of advance or retrogression. This is true both of nations and of individuals. So is it with the class of 1906. A bare set of dates might be given here concerningcur entrance into college and our advance step by step to the dignity of Seniors, and yet it might not be a real history of the class for all that. We came here boys-we stand at the-close of our course, we trust, as men. What have been the influences that have moulded our lives during these four vital years ? Has Colby impressed upon us, as she has upon some eighty-live other classes, those lofty ideals which make for true manhood and worthy citizenship ? It may not be the office of one of our number to answer this question, yet the present historian does not hesitate to reply in the affirmative. Surely never has a class passed through experiences more fitted to test its metal since those days of the Civil war. For civil war has shaken the college during our life within its walls, and we our- selves stand, like the veterans of our national struggle, the few survivors in our college world of those days of conflict. The memories of that time are still fresh within us, but no bitterness is there. Love for college is stronger in our hearts as a result of those early experiences, and loyalty to Colby will not suffer because of them. The pleasures and pains of college life we have shared as all classes share them, and the pleasures have far outweighed the pains. We have always done our best to lead those under our care to a full appreciation of the privileges of a college education. Whether success has attended our efforts is not for us to say. But as we draw near the sad days of parting from our college home we face the future, confident that our record here will never be surpassed while Colby shall stand, and that the world has long been awaiting our coming to its help. I9 Members Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin, CIJAGJ Charles Phillips Chipman, QIJAQD john Wesley Coombs, AY Edwin Parker Craig, AKE Rex Wilder Dodge, AKE William Lamb Dodge, QDAGJ Benjamin Austin Gooch, GAG Fenwiclce L. Holmes, ATQ Virgil Merle jones, ATQ Merlin Colby joy, CDACHJ Elliott Curtis Lincoln, AY Percival Willard Keene, AY Karl Raymond Kennison, AKE John Crandall Lindsay, CIDAC9 Charles Nash Meader, ZY Harold Leon Pepper, AKE Ralph Leavitte Reynolds, ZNII Arthur Greenwood Robinson, AKE john Winn Spencer, QAQ9 ' Linwood L. Ross, AKE William Spring Stevens, AY Harold Eugene Willey, AKE 20 Prospect Ferry Damariscotta West Kennebunk Portland Newcastle Waterville ' Yarmouthville Lincoln Monson Fairfield l-Iingham, Mass Belfast Waterville Waterville Waterville Waterville Waterville Waterville Benton Littleton Waterville Cherryfield CDAQ HO QDAG H0 6 C H AKE Ho AKE Ho 49 Silver St CIHAQJ Ho zo s C zz S C CDAGJ Ho I9 C H 12 CH 4 Spring St 8 Winter St II Winter St 24 C H ro School St 7 Nudd St 31 s C AKE Ho 51C H II S C Class of 1 906 WOMEN Clark Ve!! .- -Bingo-Bango-Bango-Rix, 'Rah l 'Rah ! 'Rah ! for Noughty-six First we are and will remain, 7rp69 Cfnlxfvyv Kai Tbflflilf Bingo-'Bango-Bango-Rix, 'Rah I 'Rah ! 'Rah l for Noughty-six l ' OFFICERS Ella Estelle Maxcy, President ' Rebecca Fuller, Vice President Nettie C Susan Houghton Weston, Secretary and Treasurer Christie May Donnell, Poet ' ' ' ' U der raduates Alice Hope Davies, Address to n g Eva Charlotte Plumlner, Historian Anna Martha Boynton, Pr Cornelia Beatrice Ca . EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Beulah Purington I Maude Townsend ' ODE COMMITTEE ophet ldwell, Statistician Elaine Wilson NI on Maude Townsend Edith Kennison Clara l Ori 21 Senior History WOMEN HE last slides in the lantern fall upon the curtain. Behold a group of thirteen intelligent, happy-looking faces. There are thirteen, you say. Ah !- but that troubles them not. They have outgrown superstition, and look into the future before them with the most opti- mistic eyes. College life has made them the Winsome women they are. No side of their character has been left undeveloped. Wherever there is fun and harmless mischief, there you find them. In the social life of the college they are active. Their scholarship is the highest, and last of all they have not forgotten to acquire that which perfects a woman-a virtuous character. Their chances have not been as many or as varied as they who follow them will have, but they have made the most of what they have had. Preceding slides have told the tale of the past three years, let us see what these last have to tell us. Here is a stage. Midsummer Night's Dream is being presented, and as the characters move in and out, behind the paint and disguise we discover familiar faces. Here is the gaudy show of a masquerade. just lift some of those hideous masks and you will surely find one or more of these fun loving Seniors. See them again in the gymnasium, gaining strong and limber bodies. Quick the order, ready the response. Here they are in summer on the court, passing balls back and forth over the net. Here on the rink and the river is where they spend the recreation hours in winter. See them poring over their books together. None are so studious then. Here are their names on the exhibition programs, and in the Y. W. C. A. records on the different committees. Who can say that there has not been many a time when a helping hand has been extended to some one'all unknown to others. just one glance more at the group as it disappears, and the wish goes with it that those faces may always be as pure, bright and hopeful. 22 Members Anna Martha Boynton, BCD Skowhegan I7 F H Cornelia Beatrice Caldwell, AY South Paris 9 F H Alice Hope Davies, EK Waterville 1 Center Place Christia May Donnell, Bd? York Harbor 32 F H Nettie Rebecca Fuller, Bd: Plainville, Mass. I5 F H Eclith Lincoln Kennison, EK Waterville 4 Spring Street Ella Estelle Maxcy, BCP North Attleboro, Mass. 18 H Clara May Norton, BQ I York Beach 2 H Eva Charlotte Plummer, AY Hallowell 28 F H Beulah Francis Purington, BCD Mechanic Falls 33 F H Maude Louise Townsend, BCD Fort Fairfield I7 F H Susan Houghton Weston, EK Madison 6-7 F H Elaine Wilson, EK Houlton 6-7 F H jf! 5 ff is 3 49 i fi A' 'fil' f ' X 4 .1 fa, .ss -J' 1 - 'S X lx I 1 '- l af' 23 Biographies ,lL ...il- of Senior Class MEN Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin, QAGJ, Pros- pect. QIDAGJ House Coburn Classical I11S'CltLIlZ8,02 3 Y. M. C. A. 3 Class Track, 2, 3, Committee of Twenty, Class Chaplain, I, 3 g Class Treasurer, 3 3 Class President, 45 Colby Debating Clubg Treas' urer, 45 Assistant Manager of Oracle, 35 Sophomore Declamationg junior Exhibitiong Senior Exhibition. Charles Phlllips Chipman, QAQ, Damar iscotta. SDM-D House Morgan High School, Clinton, Conn., Y. M. C. A., Cabinet, 43 Class Historian, I, 2, 3, 4- Assistant Editor Record, 1, 25 Class Chaplain . x 'P N. .. 4 - -a:'i4sL.i f'..,.,l: y i . ,. '-n 4Q Sophomore Declamationg junior Exhibi- tion, First Honorary junior Part, Senior Exhibitiong Committee of Twentyg Confer- ence Board, 2, 3, 49 Chairman Student's Com- mittee, 43 Echo Staff, 25 Editor-in-Chief, 35 Associate Editor Oracle, 35 Le Cercle Fran- cais, 35 Colby Debating Society, 45 Member of Standing Committeeg T135 9NEg Quinnsg Iipicureans. 24 f Edwin Parker Craig, AKE, Island Falls, Maine Cony High School '02, Class President, I , Class Baseball, I, Class Basketball, 1, 2, 4, Class Track Team, I, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Foot- ball, 1, 2, 3, Varsity Baseball, I, 2, 3, 4, Dramatics, 3,4, Stage Ma11ag61',4, Committee of Twenty, Aroostook Club, Chairman junior Prom. Committee, Debating S o ciety, 4, Wearer of Baseball and Football C U, GNE john Wesley Coombs, AY, West Ken nebunk, Maine. 2 North College Freeport High, Coburn 'o2, Class Baseballs Captain, IQ Class Track Team, I, 2, 3, 43 Class Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 1, 2, Varsity Baseball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 3, 4, All Maine Team , 1, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Foot- ball, I, 2, 3, All Maine Team , 2, Varsity Basketball, 1, 2, 3, 4, Captain, 2, Varsity Track Team, 2, 3, 4, Dramatic Club, 3, 4, Awarder of Prizes, 3, Toastmaster, 4, Junior Promenade Committee, Holder of Colby records in Shot Put and Hammer Throw, Wearer of Baseball and Football K' C. Rex Wilder Dodge, AKE, Newcastle, Maine. AKE House Lincoln Academy ,OIQ Y. M. C. A,, Class lJ1'O1JllBt,I , Class Secretary, 2, Class Marshal, 3, Ode Committee, 3, Parting Address, 4, Class Baseball, Ig Class Track Team, 2, 3, Track Team, 2, 3, Chairman Committee of Twenty, 3, Le Cercle Francais, Glee Club, I, 2, 3, 4, Leader, 3, 4, Orchestra, I, College Choir, 4, Band, 4, Vice President of Oracle Association, 2, Athletic lixhibition, 3, Junior Exhibition, 3, Second Prize, TB, ONE, Quinns, Iipicureans. , 25 Benjamin Austin Gooch, CIJAQ, Yar- mouthville, Maine. CPAQD House Yarmouth High School ,OI , Class Executive Committee, 3, Manager Track Team, 3, Pres- ident M. I. A. A., 33 Class Prophet, 4, Dram- atic Club, 4, Debating Society, 4, Vtlearer of Manager's C. William Lamb Dodge, QJAGD, Waterville ' 48 Silver Street Maine Central Institute, Coburn, Bates ex- 'o6, College Band, Debating Society. Fenwicke L. Holmes, ATU, Lincoln. zo South College Goulcl's Academy '02, Y. M. C. A., Class Poet 1 , Class Toastmaster, 2, Sophomore Dec- lamation, Second Prize, Associate-Editor of Oracle, 2, 3, President and liclitor-in-Chief, 4, Le Cercle Francais, 3, Class President, 3, 1'resentation Speech, 3, Committee of Twenty, 4, Member Executive Committee General Athletics, Chairman Sub-Committee on Gen- eral Athletlcs, 4, President Colby Debating Society, Chairman Standing Committee, 43 Senior Exhibition, 4, TIS, GNE, Qninns, lipicureans. 26 Virgil Merle jones, ATQ, Monson. 22 South College Monson Academy ,OI 5 Y. M. C. A., Relig- ious Meetings Committee, zg Cabinet 2, 35 Class Vice President, 25 Chairman Executive Committee, 2 g Colby Debating Society, 4. il I V. , ,Vlgff V , w ' 1 12.15. . pi ' 4 19251, fa' U Q:Q:f:iv.,g -. - mittee, 3 Percival Willard Keene, AY, Belfast, Maine. I3 Chaplin Hall Belfast High School 'org Y. M. C. A., Class Vice President, Ig Freshman Reading, Soph- omore Declamatlong Committee of Twenty, 2, 45 Second prize for excellence in German, 35 President College Athletic Association, 35 Maine Intercollegiate Arbitration Board, 35 Chairman Ode Committee, 3, Class Poet, 3, 4, Chapel Organist, 2, 3, 45 Associate Editor Oracle, 33 Member Executive Committee' College Athletic Association, 4. TB 27 Merlin Colby joy QJAQ Fairfield , 3 Coburn Classical Institute or Colby ex 1 '05, Varsity Football I 3, 4, Class Base in ball, 1,3 Class Basketball 3 4 C Track Team 1 3 C,l12Ll1l'1l'L11 Lx Com -a karl R kennrson, AKE Waterville. Waterville Hrgh School o X M C. A., Yorthfield Deleffate 3 Frrst Entrance Irrze Class Secretary I Freshman Reaclirrgg Managing hdrtor of the Ixecord Class Treasurer Sophomore Declamatron, First PIILG Class Track Team 3 Class Basket- ball Team r 3 4 cl Basketball Team, 3, 4 Athletrc Lxhrb tron 3 Class Prophet, 3g Class Orator 4 Glee Club I 3 4Q Man- dolin Guitar Club 3 4 Manaffer of Nlusical Clubs 3 junior Greek Part Second German l-'rue 3 Oracle Board 3 Junror Exhibition, Iarst Prize Malling Clerk of the Colby Echo, Assistant Business Manager 3 Business Manager 4 Serr1orLxhrbtron OracleArtistg Colb Debating bocrety 4 Oxford Respon- Iohn Crandall Lindsay, CIDACD Waterville II ah School o Commence- ment Usher I Class Baseball I 3 45 Class Elliott Curtis Lincoln, AY, Hingham, Mass. I7 Chaplin Hall Hingham High School 'o2g Dramatic Club, 1, 2, 3, 4, Vice President, 31 President, 4, Mandolin Club, I, 2, 3, 45 Leader, 45 Glee Club, 1,41 Class Track Team, 2, 3, 43 Var- sity Track Team, 1, 2, 3, 45 Athletic Asso- ciation, Executive Committee, I, 2.g, Secre- tary, 2g Class Basketball, 2, 32 Varsity Foot- ball, Sub., 2, 32 Class Marshal, IQ Class Presi- dent, 23 Junior Prom. Cornmittee, 3: Gym- nasium Exhibition 3 5 Literary Editor Echo, 4g Conference Board, 43 College Band, 4, GNE. - 1 W. C 28 Charles N Meacler, ZKII I1 Winter ff D Harold Leon Pepper, AKE, Waterville, Maine. 24 Chaplin Hall Coburn Classical Institute 'ozg Y. M. C. A. Treasurer, 4g I-land-book Committee, rg Freshman Readingg Sophomore Declamationg Class Ode Committee, 33 Class Vice President: Chairman Class Executive Committee: Repor- torial Staff Echo, I 9' College Union Tel. Co., 3Q Athletic Exhibitiong Executive Committee Athletic Association, 2,3, 4: Football Sub- Committee, 2: General Athletic 5ub-Com- mittee, 3, 4Q Chairman Baseball Sub-Com- mittee, 4: Le Cercle Francais, 3: Assistant College Marshal, 1, 2Q College Marshal, 33 Colby Debating Society, TBQ GNE - ..au -. 29 Waterville Ilrgh School o Class Base f ball,1 Class basketball I 3 Class hxe cutive Committee I Lxecutrve Committee Athletic Association I 2clBaseball I Irom. Committee 3 Class Orator J Asso ciate-Editor Oracle N, Class betretary 4 Committee of lwenty 4 Ralph Leavrtte Reynolds Ex o5, AY Waterville High School oo Coburn Clas sical Institute or Class Baseball I Capta n IQ Class Football 1 V'trs ty Football Sub 1,25 Vars ty Baseball 'P 4 Suhr 3 Captain Indoor Baseball Team Dramatic Club 4 Wearer of C Arthur Greenwood Robinson, AKE, Waterville. 7 Nudd Street -i Waterville High School 'ozg Y. M. C. A, Cabinet, 2, 3, 45 President, 45 Class Treas- sl urer, Ig Chairman Ode Committee, 43 Chair- man Committee of Twenty, 4g Track Team, 2, Freshman Reading, Sophomore Decla- mationg Third Honorary Junior Part, Junior Exhibition, Senior Exhibition, Managing Editor Record, I 5 Associate Editor, Echo, 2, 33 Editor-in-Chief, 4, Debating Society, 45 TB, GNE5 Quinnsg Epicureans. Linwood L. Ross, AKE, Little ton, Maine. AKE House 9 Ricker Classical Institute, ,025 Class Mar- shal, 2g Executive Committee, 35 Committee of Twenty, 23 Class Baseball, Ig 2d Baseball, I, 2, 3, Athletic Exhibition, 3, Captain 2d Football Eleven, 2, Varsity Football, 2, 3, 4, Varsity Track Team, 1, 2, 3, 49 Captain, 4, Glee Club, I, 2, 45 Colby Dramatic Club, 2, 3, 4, Aroostook Club, Wearer of Track and Football C's., , 6NEg Epicureans Iohn Winn Spencer, QISAGJ, B e n t o n, Maine. 30 c. H. Fairfield High School ,O2. .30 William Spring Stevens, AY, Waterville. 5 North College VVaterville High School '02 g F 1' e s h m a n Reading, I 5 Committee of Twenty, I g Sopho- more Declamation, 2 3 Class Baseball, 25 Tennis Team, 3, 4, Tennis Manager, 35 Pres. of M. I. L. T. A., 33 Winner of Intercollegiate Doubles with Palmer, 3, Conference Board, 4, Execu- tive Committee,4g Dramatic Club, 4 3 Debating Society, 45 Senior Exhibition, 45 Wearer of Tennis C. Harold Eugene Willey, AKE, Cherry Held Maine. AKE House 7 Cherryflelcl Academy 'ozg Class Secretary 3g Class Treasurer, 45 Varsity Baseball, 2 3, 45 Varsity Basketball, 3, 43 Captain, 3, 4 Colby Debating Society, 4 g Wearer of C. 3l Biographies of Senior Class WOMEN Anna Martha Boynton, BQ, Skow- hegan, I7 Foss Hall Fort Fairlield High School ,025 Y. NV. C. A., Sophomore Declamation, 2d Prize, Assistant Editor 1906 Record, 25 Finance Committee, 2, Class Historian, 2, Fourth Honorary junior Part, Ode Committee, 35 Class Prophet, 4, Membership Committee, 4, Member of Kappa Alpha. - -:V i 'ii '-Anya ,veg-if Cornelia Beatrice Caldwell, AY, South Paris. 9 Foss Hall Hebron Academy '02, Y. W. C. A., Class Vice President, 25 Class Executive Y. W. Committee, 35 Finance Committee C. A., 35 Associate Editor of Oracle, 35 Treasurer of Y. W. C. A., 45 Class Statis- tician, 45 Member of Kappa Alpha. 32 Alice Hope Davies, EK, Waterville. 1 Center Place VVaterville High School 'oog Y. VV. C. A., Chairman Executive Committee, 23 Junior Exhibition, Second Prize, 33 Class Poet, 35 Oracle Artist, 3, Reception Com- mittee ,lunior Prom, 35 Chairman Ode Committee, 35 Associate Editor Oracle, 4, Dramatics, 4, Senior Exhibition, 4, Con- ference Board, 43 Address to Under- graduates, 4, XT9 Nettie Rebecca Fuller, BCD, Plain- Ville, Mass. 18 Foss Hall Plainville High School 'oog Y. VV. C A. 5 Membership Committee, 2 g Missionary Committee, 35 Executive C o m mi t t e e, Class, 35 Membership Committee, 4g Class 1 Q Vice President, 4. Christia May Donnell, BCD, York Harbor. 32 Foss Hall Portsmouth High School, 'oi 5 Y. W. C. A.g Class Executive Committee, I, Soph- omore Declamations, 25 Chairman Class Executive Committee, 25 Y. W. C. A. Finance Committee, 23 Ode Committee, 3, Y. W. C. A. Missionary Committee, 3, Class Poet, 4, Bible Study Committee, 4, 33 Ella Estelle Maxcy, Bflv, Plainv Mass. 18 Foss Hall ille, Plainville High School, 'oo3 Post-gr ate Wrentham High School, 'olg Y. W. Nominating Committee, 23 Class Presi- dent, 43 K A A: TQQ: 3 rf 'C , 3 3? 9 , 2,3 Mali. adu- C. A.3 Room and Library Committee, 23 Edith Lincoln Kennison, EK, Water- ville. 4 Spring St VVaterville High School 'O23 Y. W. C. A.3 Chairman Prayer Meeting Committee, 33 Silver Bay Delegate, 33 President, 43 Chairman Class Executive Committee, I3 Editorial Staff of Record, I3 Freshman Reading, I3 Class President, 33 Third junior Part, 33 Hallowe'en Play, 43 Stage Manager, 43 Chairman Class Ode Com- mittee, 45 KA Clara May Norton, Bib, York Beach. 32 Foss Hall York High School 'o13 Y. W. C. A.3 Missionary Committee, 23 Bible Study Committee, 33 Class Executive Committee, 33 Delegate to Silver Bay, 33 Ode Com- mittee, 4. . 3 4 Eva Charlotte Plummer, AY. 28 Foss Hall Hallowell High School ,025 Member of Y. W. C. A.3 Missionary Committee, 3 5 Secretary of Class, 21 2cl junior Part, Ist PI'lZS,Jll11l0l' Exhibition g Senior Exhibition , Class Historian, 4, Member of Conference Board. KA :it its- I ' i5 'S,,,,, 1, 4 as ,,., ,,. Maude Louise Townsend, BQ, Fort Fairfield. I7 Foss Hall Fort Fairfield High School '98, Y. W. C. A.g Chairman Rooms and Library Committee, I5 Class President, 25 Asso- ciate Editor Colby Echo, 25 Sophomore Declamation, First Prize, Membership Committee, 25 President Reading Room Association, 35 Social Committee, 33 Class Historian, 35 Assistant Manager Colby Echo, 4, Executive Committee, 4, Senior Exhibition, 43 Member of Conference Board, 4. Beulah Frances P u r i n g t o n, Bclb, Mechanic Falls. 33 Foss Hall Mechanic Falls High School 'oog Y. W. C. A., Secretary and Treasurer of Reading Room Association, 29 Publishing Com- mittee of the 1906 Record, 25 Class Sec- retary and 'l'reasurer, 35 Chairman of Executive C0lTl1l'llt6C,4Q Associate Editor of Oracle, 4g Sophomore Declamation, 2? First Honorary Junior Part, 3. 35 Susan Houghton W e s t o n, EK, Madison. 6-7 Foss Hall Madison High School ,OI 3 Y. W. C. A., Chairman Room and Library Committee, 25 Chairman Missionary Com1nittee, 35 Class Secretary and Treasurer, 45 Dra- matics, 4g President of Conference Board, 4. KA Elaine Wilson, EK, Houlton. 6-7 Foss Hall Rickey Classical Institute 'ozg Delegate to Silver Bay, 3g Y. W. C. A, Membership Committee, 45 Chairman Nominating Committee, 45 Class Executive Committee, ZQ Class Executive Committee, 43 Dra- matics, 4. K A 36 Saum 11111111,, Eu111a1:9l 1211111111109 nu 9wnpu.13-:sod 991011 9111.1 .1911 10,1 91q1z92ue113 zz 911121 uoS11M Sdeu 211919111 3 QQ u1sn09 1911 3u11111:1.19J,u9 10:1 p91dn99091c1 Sz 91SnS ' 11o1s911A S111d .11e3nS Su1:1'e111 1191 11 A1 1129.4 V ,11o1S 5111931 99.11-9.123 Vz 1:1-121,11 ' 'pu9Sumo1L SS9.11o11 2 Su1v1o1 1.1013 md 1C.11s1u11u 91111 2111113129111 M oo: 1u1z91zA 1z 191u111n1C1 '.19LuLu1115 911511151 S11n12C1 3u1p12911 Su11191291L X11111sn12:1 p191:1C1 Sz 110111 ' ' ' 110110111 1 ug 3 2911, 3.1 11 913 12 zz 151 ' ' ' A9x1z1A1 A.11zuo1SS11.11 1:19p1:a9p1111 Amp .1911 311101: s,Ce.111V 9A11e11p91,11 zz 11111151 ' ' uoS1uu951 3 1u1f Bu1 191.1 zz 19N .1911nl1 9do111f1 u1 rZu1119A1z.11L sS9.1o111nV 19uuoS .1911 Su111dSu1-911111 zz 911011 ' ' ' S91AeQ1 11S:19o1S u1 Su11qq1zC1 93.1099 :1sV X11uS11a .1911 911S1113nC1 zz S11113 ' ' '1191.1uoC1 9S.1nu p9u11z.1111 3u111o1z9111 511111112 2u1uunp .1911 3u1pu1:1uu1oQ zz 9921 ' 119111121123 11121-1 s,1J1e1,11 p10 5111019951 2u111:m911, 121131 Se 2u1111 9u1eS 911.11 p911.1oM zz uuv ' ' uo1uAog r1o0.119S1u1.1.10N u1 Su1111.1e1q SS9u1Sn11 93119dd1e S111 2u1g1noC1 zz 91911 'X9111M s21zqp111111 10 .1o1u9Au1 .1oSS91o.1C1 K101S111 151 91515 S111 S11o1:J12uS11d zz 11111-A9103 ' ' ' Su9A91S H 111112111 pu1119q 211191 2-1 Vz 9 9dg '19au9dS 1:2911 S,.19cIdad A.111q 01 s911911p 2u12H1L1 19119129111 ss9u11S1111E S111 u p 12 9.1119 1,11oC1 Sz uou19'1-qwoocmg SSo11 2111113 i'4u111.19Aog A.1e1101Ss11,11 SS9u9A111s1nbu1 S111 Asng xz 91qqo21 U0Su1q0H ueX.1o-pu'e11 e 2u1uu1111 SS9u1Sng.1 u1.1S S111 p911mzu-poo-3 zz Eng ' ' Sp1ou.C921 S:1.11e11191 3u1111:1 2u1:1e111 A111111 'S '11 QQ 110119151 Bu1v11z9dg H S1115 91 91' U gz d9c1 ' 19111195 .isea 9111 Engel SS9u1Sn11 291 u9:1o1q S111 ' A1101 pm: .Cpuzng 1 Ez 12:1 ' 19p1z9111 u10p111o11 Se 9111153 19119139111 3u1111oN p9l1qno11uf1 Iz u11of 'AeSpu1'1 2u11J.11S 93813 .IOJDV Ss9u1zE'1 11129111 zz :1u1'1 ' ' ' 111091311 1101 le dn Bu1v1uo'1 1911029111 111aqJ9:1SEq 3111512111 11S1Aog1 oz 191111215 UQS11111951 2 111111 Du cl tfz ' ' 9119951 . . . . of C 01 H1 D111 2 VZ 'HSS Of 111111s1zu111K2 u1 .1o19n.1J,s111 1u9pu9J,u1.19dns 10o119S 11211 91111.11 S11-1 1S911o1.1 E2 93.1099-1190119118 ' ' ' S91u1o11 Io 09 . A1 S C1 .fwq 11110 SJ. -I '11 3 Q 111101911 99Sj S5211 ,Su9f1915 BU11111 Ss9u1s11g1 113110111 S111 111911111103 zz A110113 ' 31913 dd9 2 3 1d B110 15 SZ '9.19 -A3 ' ' 'squlooo ' 'u1:1.L1d111Q . U H C11'111v110z1,1j Cc1E1GNE1.LN1j 113:11-'xz1.1.xno3 no 1 3 XI 1 If . .L fl J fL,, ' , 4, 5 .L ,f , gg . b ,ff fun W I NMR, ,If 4 If 1 . -,. , g cfm-1 .x'QTbf5f4 . A 1 - ,inn 'x W2 E Y 5 gp QW w 4. -i Q r f E, 1 , f Class of 1907 MEN Class Yell:-Hic, haec, hoc, 'tis no joke, Tfveq Eo',u.ev df Auf Anil ' h b Boom 'rah boom, boom ra im, Nineteen-seven in the swim! OFFICERS Burr Frank jones, President Charles Rush, Vice President David Monaghan Young, Secretary Oscar Benjamin Peterson, Treasurer Perley Linwood Thorne, Marshal Otis Alpheus Thompson, Historian Herman Brudenell Betts, Poet Arthur Kenelm Winslow, Orator Robert Alder Colpitts, Chaplain Lewis Walker Dunn, Prophet Chester Alden Grant, Awarder of Prizes Harry Charles Bonney, Toastmaster EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE John Bailey DeWitt Millard Claude Moore ' ' Thomas Albion Smart Ralph Benjamin Young Herman Brudenell Betts 40 Members Myron Eugene Berry, ATQ Herman Brudenell Betts, AY Harry Charles Bonney, AKE John Arthur Burton, ATQ Edwin Parker Craig, AKE Walter Ellis Craig, AKE Robert Alder Colpitts, AY John Bailey DeWitt, ZWII Lewis Walker Dunn, AKE Roscoe C. Emery, ZYII Chester Alden Grant, fIDAGJ Burr Frank Jones, Z'If Elliot Curtis Lincoln, AY Millard Claude Moore, ATQ Oscar Benjamin Peterson, CIDAQD Charles Rush, ATS2 Thomas Albion Smart, AKE John Winn Spencer, QJAQ Albert Kingsley Stetson, AKE Arthur William Stetson, AKE Otis Alpheus Thompson, ATQ Perley Lenwood Thorne, CDACEJ Elihu Blaine Tilton, CDACD Clayton Melcher Ward, AKE Arthur Kenelm Winslow, AKE David Monaghan Young, ATQ Ralph Benjamin Young, QIDAQD Waterville V 22 S C Hodgdon 31 College Avenue Guilford AKE House Corinna '26 s c Waterville AKE House Augusta AKE House North Vassalboro Bradford I4 s C Waterville 4 Sheldon Place Eastport 28 s c Freedom QIJAGD House Weeks Mills 30 s c Hinghain, Mass. I7 c H Newport, N. H. 7 s C Quincy, Mass. QAC9 House Derby, Vt. 30 S C Dexter AKE House Benton 30 C H Houlton AKE House Waterville Presque Isle I3 S C Strickland CIDAQ House Winslow QDAG House Waterville Saco AKE House Sangerville 24 S C Waterville 71 Elin Street Junior History MEN OW in the days when the people of Colby, Qwhich is in the land of Waterville, over against the pulp millj ,rose up against the rule of Prex the Righteous, and there was much confusion in the land, the king went up into Fairfield into a high place and prayed, saying, Lord, there is none more righteous than I in the heavens above or on the earth beneath. Send me, I pray thee, a goodly band of men, better than any that have gone before, or will come after, that I may restore peace, and hug myself exceedingly for my great tact. And the Lord heark- ened unto him and sent him the class of 1907. And the class did wax and increase in strength in the land, and discomiited them that dwelt there before, certain sons of Belial called the class of 1906, and put them to flight, even to the tall timber. And after they had now been in the land for many days, and had won many victories in athletics and in sundry other things over the Sophomores, and had defied Rob in his sanctuary, and heard,Dutchy moaning even as the wind which maketh strange noises, and had had no Freshman Reading, it came to pass that because the King had done evil in the sight of the country round about, a new people came to dwell in the land who did act as them that dream, as somnambulists, for verily they were dead ones. And the class of 1907 went up against them and smote them, and made them swear a great oath to be servants to them, even to 1907, and in the name of CIJX made them do many wonderful works. For many days their hand was not slacked upon them, to teach them wisdom, but it was of no avail, for good was not to be found in them. Now when the class had been in the land for two years, it was seen that many had dropped by the wayside, some -because they lacked the almighty sheckel, and yet some because they did not stand in with the Profs. But the class did still increase in fame and power, and became a mighty force in athletics and in college life. And when they became Juniors and had learned the ways of the Profs. to work them, and of the coords, to dodge them, they enjoyed themselves exceedingly, and did have their Iunior Squeeze. And the rest of their deeds and all that they did, lo, are they not recorded in the chronicles of the secretary, of Dave Young, who dwelleth in 24 South College? 42 Class of 1907 I WOMEN Class Yell: -- Hic, haec, hoc, 'tis no joke, Tfves Elrlzcv 5 Ad Mi Boom 'rah Boom, Boom 'rah bim, Nineteen-seven in the swim. OFFICERS Georgia Connor, President Grace Stetson, Vice President Edith Priest, Secretary and Treasurer Caro Beverage, Poet Virginia Noyes, Historian EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ellen Peterson Bertha Robinson Hattie Fossett ODE COMMITTEE Addie Holway Ellen Peterson Georgia Connor 43 Members Rena May Archer, EK Myrtie Ethel Bassett, BLD Caro Edna Beverage, BLD Rose Marian Beverage, BCD Inez Bowler, BCD ,Ag ' Annie Eliza Cook, BCP Georgia Mae Connoit,3AY-1 - Sarah Stella Cummings, BHD Blanche Miriam Emory, EK Cora Hannah Farwell, AY Hattie Simonton Fossett, BED Lubelle May HfL11,'2K ' ' ' Addie ,Bradeen 5Holway,a 5, Marion Louise Learned, EK A Alma Florence Morrissetiteg- V- 2 A Bertha Evallgeline: Nread, BQ Virginia, Gilbert Noyes, EK I Ellen Josephine Peterson, EK Edith Pierce Priest, EK 2' imfthimay-'R6b1nSOn, AY it Grace Lord Stetson, Bda Alice Rachel Tyler, AY Nellie Perry Winslow, EK ,.'l.. Skowhegan Old. lfiiwn Camden Camden Waterville , Vassalboro if Farmingtonl N. H. -V tina. 21.31.-. Woburn, Mass. Norridgewock Bethel? V3-'E 4,5 N995 Sfeef ZOFH 1zFH 14FH I4FH 9 F H 33 College l:AVenue I3 F H 16 F H .ggzprl 28 F H 'Newl'Harblor' 'l j I2 F H Warren ' 3 1 5 P H Machias IO F H Waterville 2 Lawrence Street Worcester, Mass. I5 PH Norwood, Massa,-,,'45. ,g,,Q9.42 F H Waterville 48 Winter Street Iemtland 8 P H North Vassalboro 16 F H Yarlnouthville Waterville Saco II F H Saco I5 F H Junior History WOMEN ROM the pinnacle of junior wisdom we look back over the three happy years which have passed by so quickly, and ind that in the written record, though there are a few pages we would change if we might, yet the three completed chapters are sources of much pleasure and pride. We have made some mistakes of course, for To err is human and we of the class of IQO7 are nothing, if not human. We have one sportsman,-one Bowler and Archer, and let us not forget that it was Rena who won the prize in the entrance examinations, a feat which had not been accomplished before since 1896, and thus far she has had no successor. Those spreads! Will they ever be forgotten? Our Cook is famous for her skill, and we have two varieties of Beverages. Though the other division of our class lost its Powers we still have the Learned within our midst, and easily carry off our share of honors in every line of college activities. More honors are Cumming Qsj to us toog we may Winslow, but we win, and what more docs one Nead? It has been our aim to make no great Noyes about our achievements, but to spend our time at Colby in a manner which will merit the benediction of our Priest at the close of four well spent years. Memorial Hall 45 SOPHOMORE l I WIS:-,ig Class of 1908 MEN Class YEZZ: -'Rah I ' Rah ! ' Rah I 'Rah!'Rah1'Rah! Sumus duces, 'rah I rah! 'rahl J'Eo'f.LEv Ev Tig, sure as fate What's the matter with 1908 I OFFICERS john Everard Hatch, President Augustus Coolidge Thompson, Vice President Howard Arthur Tribou, Secretary James Robert Nickels, Treasurer Emmons Parkman Burrill, Marshal Harold Nash Mitchell, Historian john Cameron I-Ietherington, Toastmaster ' Alvin Leslie Cotton, Chaplain . Arthur Winslow Libby, Poet William Fred Sherburne, Prophet EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Charles Clark Dwyer Frank Brarnhall Condon james Marshall Read 48 Members Emmons Parkman Burrill, AKE Frank Bramhall Condon, AY Alvin Leslie Cotton, CIDAQD Winfred Francis Curtis, ZWII Charles Clark Dwyer, fIDAQ Percy Silas Farrar, AKE Charles Russell Flood, QAQJ Leon Southard Gilpatrick, ZYII George Abner Gould, AKE john Everarcl Hatch, ATQ john Cameron Hetherington, AKE Victor Ray jones, ATQ Merle Roliston Keyes, QJAGJ Harry'Leonard Kilgore, AY Arthur Winslow Libby, AY Clifford Henry Libby, ATS2 Ernest William Loane, AKE Frank Wilder Lovett, JJAQ Richard Albert Lyons, AY Eben Earle Masterman, QDAQ john Tracy Matthews, CDACD Isaac Ross MCCoombs, AY Harold Nash Mitchell, Z'lf james Robert Nickels, ZKII james Marshall Read, ZKII Frederick Allen Shepherd, CIJACD William Fred Sherburne, ATO Augustus Coolidge Thompson, CDAQ Ray Foster Thompson, CIDAQD Howard Arthur Tribou, AY Samuel Emery Whittier, AKE 49 Waterville 4. Morrill Avenue Belfast 16 C H Norway CIJAO House Wolfboro, N. H. I4 s C Martinsville Chem. Hall Guilford AKE House South Paris CIDAQ House Danforth s C Westbrook AKE House Liberty 22 S C Sidney AKE House Monson 22 s C Dryden CIPAQ House Belfast 2 C H Portland 8 C H South Portland zo s C Fort Fairfield AKE House Brandon, Vt. 31 s C Harvey Station 8 C H Wilton CIJAGJ House Tenants Harbor QJAQ House Sanford 1 C H Waterville I4 Dalton St Cherryfield 29 s C Waterville IO Elm Street Waterville 81 Pleasant Street Monson I3 s C North Livermore CDAQ9 House Roque Bluffs QDAGJ House Rockport 16 N C Saco AKE House Sophomore History MEN NCE upon a time in a beautiful country, there stood amongst ancient willows and maples, on the bank of a sparkling stream, a majestic castle, the wonder of those who beheld it from without. Nor was the interior less wonderful and mysterious than the outer walls, for so it was decreed by the great Master of Learning that only one youth from every fifty should search out the secrets of this noble place. Within, there dwelt a maiden fair to look upon, the light of whose countenance was dazzling, save to those who understood her moods and were admirers of the muses. One evening in the early part of September of a certain year, when the setting sun was sending long quivering shadows over the velvet lawns, and twittering birds discussed their annual flight to warmer climes, as they settled themselves for the night's rest, a youth of stately bearing and thoughtful countenance approached the outer walls of the castle. There was in his eyes a slight appearance of uncertainty, as though he were unfamiliar with his surroundings, but the determined set of the shoulders and the unconscious eager movement of his graceful body showed that he had no fear of what awaited him. He had heard of the beauty and charms of the maiden of the castle and had left his home and friends to woo her. He stepped quickly to the door and rang the bell. if if if For two long years he gave his life to winning the favor of her whom he regarded as a goddess, but whether or no he won lzer, the records do not say. For two years the class of 1908, like the youth of the story, has wooed the Goddess of Wisdom. Each day has revealed new charms in her, and she in her turn has recognized the exceptional qualities of the class and blessed it with her favors. It is believed that future records will record a successful courtship. 50 Class of 19084 WOMEN Class Yell: - ' Rah I ' Rah I 'Rah I 'Rahl 'Rabi 'Rah! Sumus duces ' Rah I 'Rah I ' Rah I I Eo',u,ev Ev Tig Sure 21S fate, What's the matter with 1908! f OFFICERS Nettie May Runnals, President Olive Annette Green, Vice President Jeannette Holmes Baldwin, Secretary Mollie Alice Pearce, Treasurer Helen Louise Cochrane, Historian EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Vivian Betsey Libby Helen Frances Dickinson Nina Beatrice Holmes Carrie Elizabeth Hill 5I Sophomore History WOMEN OW the goddess Sophia, which being interpreted is Wisdom, had a palace upon the banks of a great river, even the Kennebec, and lo! emptiness was in her halls. Therefore went she through the land and called unto her chosen maidens, such as were fair and good and discreet. Then came these two-score and ten maidens unto the palace, and there found they other maidens before them, few also in number and of inferior quality. Therefore were these noble damsels unafraid, and needed no assistance. Under the guidance of the Wise Virgin from Caribou, they did conquer in battle, they did eat peanuts, they did receive their brethren gladly at an ancient haunt, even the Armory, where also the Sweet Singer from Somerset County did enchant them. Also Sophia loved them, for that the Man of Angles had no terror for them, neither the Flying Dutchman nor the Roman Infant. Thus in the favor of the great goddess did they move on until the end of the year was come, when, also, in obedience to the ancient custom of that land, they did make merry, even on the lake through all that evening. From two-score and ten the maidens became but four and thirty in number, yet were they still wise and discreet. Therefore assembled they in the spring and in the fall, and the Wise Virgin from Caribou led them to the good decision. Now, accordingly, have the Sophomores ceased from troubling and the Freshmen are at rest. In celebration of this also, did they establish a notable custom, and the Day of Terror became a Day of Rejoicing, wherein the alumnae returned and made merry with all the maidens of that land. After this did those four and thirty damsels arise and hie them even unto Fairfield where dwelt the Fair Sisters with whom they ate and drank, and were glad for that they met together as of old. Afterward came days of labor when Sophia instructed her servants, even the Man of Angles, the Flying Dutchman, Bruin, Billy Beck, with others, to oppress and have no mercy-which they did joyfully! Yet did the wisdom of those damsels stand them in good stead, and they still serve Sophia within the halls of that fair palace, even Colby. 52 Members Berta Edith Baldwin, BQ Jeanette Holmes Baldwin, BQ Bertha Harris Bangs, EK Helen Burnham Campbell, EK Inez Hazen Card Josephine Ella Clark Lena May Clark Helen Louise Cochrane, EK Susan Angelina Corbett, EK Grace Emogene Corthell Helen Frances Dickinson, BQ Elizabeth Helen Felker, EK Olive Annette Green, BQ Myra Irene Hardy Annie Alice Harthorn, EK Ethel Maude Hayward, EK Carolyn Elizabeth Hill, AY Nina Beatrice Holmes, BQ Helen Hunt Florence Emily King, BQ Nora Mehitable Lander, EK Vivian Betsey Libbey, EK Myrta Alice Little Caroline Dole Noyes, EK Mollie Alice Pearce, EK June Stewart Philbrick, BQ Anne Trafton Roberts, EK Jennie May Roberts Ruth Olive Roberts Neitie May Runnals, AY Lucy Evelyn Treat Idonia Cecilia Tubbs Agnes Eunice Walker, BQ Abbie Frances Weed, AY Esther Huston Weeks, BQ Dorothy Claudia Hopson A B COURSE North Stratford, N. H. 40 F H North Stratford, N. H. 40 F H Portland 29 F H Cherryneld York Village 8 F H East jatfrey, N. H. 37 F H Freedom 43 F H Waterville 77 Elm Street Foxcroft 31 F H Waterville 18 Boutelle Avenue Wiscasset 25 F H Newburyport, Mass. 29 F H Skowhegan 48 F H East jatfrey, N. H. 37 F H Wilton 23 F H Portage 6-7 F H Machias 35 F H Eastport 25 F H Gray 43 F H Newton Center, Mass. 22 F H Bingham 44 F H Waterville Z3 Morrill Avenue Hampstead, N. H. 36 F H Waterville 48 Winter Street Fort Fairiield 30 F H Pittsiield 25 F H Caribou 8 P H Fairfield Fairfield Dover 31 F H Cohasset, Mass. ZI F H Waterville 8 Pleasant Street Mechanic Falls 47 F H Woodfords 33 College Avenue Wiscasset 48 F H B S COURSE Meredith, N. H. 8 F H 53 RE H MAN g, 1 5+ .TQ NQTI f-I If-107 HI H111 llllluc f l4lnW' WUI 1111111 111111, 111 411111.11 ll!! 411111111411 11141 + W Ui 'i Class of 1909 MEN Clary Ye!! .- - Zig-a-rag-a ! Zig-a-rag-a ! Zig-a-rag-a ! sine I Colby, Colby! Nineteen-Nine. OFFICERS Munroe Elias Young, President Harold Willis Kimball, Vice President Wallace Earle Hackett, Secretary Thomas Iackson Seaton, Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Clark Drummond Chapman Thomas jackson Seaton joseph William Hammond Austin Shaw Fran k Osborn Dean CLASS COLORS Brown and Blue 56 Freshman History MEN ISTORY has been defined as a record of the progress or decline of a people's civilization, but unfortunately for the needs of the 1906 ORACLE the Freshman class has neither progressed, as have other classes, nor reached the stage where it is possible to decline. truthful we must make a few notable exceptions. On Freshman Reception, President Young declined to appeared at Miss Cratty's door robed in female attire, his coords. A visitor to the class-room on any day To be strictly the night of the wear pants, and and attended by in the week will hear the Freshmen decline-to recite. To continue in fairness, we must own that they have even PROGRESSED in one direction. They have become adepts in the art of singing a song or doffing the cap to a nineteen-eight man. From these facts, it can be seen that nineteen-nine has some of the attributes of life, and it is believed that by careful nourishment and watery care, should Providence bless her with a life of ten thousand years, she could say at the end of that period with as much truth as she does now with absurdity, I am almost It I North College 57 Members A B COURSE Eugene Frank Allen, JDAQ Chelsea, Mass, KIDAG Ho George Carl Anderson, AY Fairfield Cyril Day Athearn, Zilf Buckiield 28 S C joseph Chandler, AY Livermore Falls ro C H Clark Drummond Chapman, AKE Portland - I9 C H Ralph Bertram Davis Haverhill, Mass. 9 S C Orlando M. Dayhuff, AKE Portland I9 C H Frank Osborn Dean, CIDAQD Hallowell 35 C H Howard Benjamin Foster Milbridge Wilbur Garland Foye, AY West Bridgewater, Mass. 9 S C Austin Dimock Hall, ZKII Newcastle 25 C H Harry Leonard Kilgore, AY Belfast 9 C H Carlton Manning Littlefield, ZYII Chebeague 6 S C Ernest William Loane, AKE Fort Fairfield AKE Ho Howard Austin McLellan, AY Princeton ' II S C Edwin Walter Merrill, ATO Newport, N. H. 15 S C Walter Sydney Morgan, AY Island Falls II C H Frederic Howard Paine Elmwood, Mass. 33 C H Harry Slemmons Phinney, AKE Woodfords AKE Ho Clarence Ray Plummer, CIJAQ Hallowell 35 C H Francis Howard Rose, ATQ Norwich Town, Conn. 23 S C Thomas jackson Seaton, AKE Wilton 28 C H Oscar Iohn Crockett Tubbs Waterville 8 Pleasant Street Samuel Emery Whitten, AKE Saco AKE Ho john Dearborn Whittier, AKE Farmington AKE Ho Monroe Elias Young, AKE Calais - 22 C H B S COURSE Maurice Herbert Blanchard, AY Gardiner I3 Morrill Ave Milfred Isaac Buker, QIDAGD Weld QDAGD Ho Wallace Franklin Fogg Fairfield Leon Clifton Guptill, Z'Il Cherryheld 29 s C Wallace Earle Hackett, AY Farmington, N. H. 5 C H Ioseph William Hammond, ZIP Van Buren ZI s C John Cameron Hetherington, AKE Sidney AKE Ho Leonard Oakman Merrill, AY Gardiner I3 Morrill Ave james Marshall Read, Zilf Waterville 16 S C James Corey Richardson, AY Vassalboro I3 C H Austin Shaw, QIDAGD Milbridge fIJAQ'J Ho Nathaniel Ernest Wheeler' Dunharton, N. H. 5 Gilman St SPECIAL Donald Stone Briggs, Z1If South Paris 21 S C Edgar Fredric Callahan, AY Newport Center, Vt. 115 Main St William Austin Flewelling, AKE Calais zz C H Harold Willis Kimball, JJAGD Presque Isle CIDAGJ Ho Harold Fossett Lewis, Z'lf' Cherryiield 3 S C Nathaniel Percy Merrill, ATQ A Newport, N. H. I5 S C Harry Taylor Tallman, AY Richmond I3 Morrill Ave John Edwin Taylor, AY Augusta II C H Leo Steward Trask, AKE Springfield 25 C H Coburn Hall , Shannon Observatory 59 Class of 1909 WOMEN Cfass IQ!! : - Zig-a-rag-a ! Zig-a-rag-a ! Zig-a-rag-a ! sine l Colby, Colby ! Nineteen-Nine. OFFICERS Sadie Belle Young, President Ella Melvina McBurnie, Vice President Inez Naomi Stevenson, Treasurer Abbie Sanford Hague, Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Winnibel Gower , Cora Elmer Robinson Mabelle Babson Maude Nina Eaton Ellen Mary Cratty 60 Freshman History WOMEN When they first came on this campus, Freshmen, they, as green as grass. ND such they have remained. Freshmen! Freshmen ! What more can be said? These particular Freshmen are so ordinary, so like other Freshmen, so utterly commonplace, that it is, forsooth, difncult to Hnd anything to say about them. They have, to be sure, shown a dependence on the juniors which at first seemed marvelous to us of 1908, who have never depended on anything but our own ever- reliable wits. However, the Freshmen had no such fertile brains, so of course they did as they were told and couldn't do anything without being told. They are so commonplace! Then, too, they are such timid little things. Dutchy, poor, dear innocent! scared them into fainting-fits and tears. He did not mean any harm. 1908 had loved his glare and his roar. How will he know the pitiful timidity of 1909 ? In only one respect do these Freshmen differ from the average kind and that one distinguishingnmark was not won by themselves but instead was bestowed upon them by 1908. They have never been hazed. Boldly have we defied King Solomon. We have spared the rod. May it not prove that we have spoiled the child by our indulgence! We have done what we could for 1909, and we trust that Colby is grateful to us for our skepticism concerning So1omon's precept. We have tried to establish a new precedent. 'We now summon 1909 to follow where we have led, striving as we have striven to do the best thing for Colby. So good luck to you as Sophomores, girls of 1909 ! 61 Helen Esther Adams Mabelle Babson, B113 Helene Bernice Bellaty Bertha Hannah Bryant Martha Elizabeth Bryant Ethel Hannah Butler, AY Margaret Anne Clarke, BCD Nettie Bickford Crane Ellen Mary Cratty Jennie Cox Fannie Miller Crute, AY Pearl Lucinda Davis, AY Dorothy Donnell, AY Clara Augustine Eastman, EK Maude Nina Eaton, BCI? Florence Totman Freeland Leona Cassandria Garland LaVerna Eaton Gibbs, B119 Marion Elizabeth Goodwin, EK Winnibel Gower, B112 Abbie Sanford Hague, AY Alice Mary Henderson, AY Ragnhild Lillian Iverson, E Ethel Rose Knowlton Marian Dudley Mayo Ella Melvina McBurnie Cassilena Marguerite Perry, EK Agrandece Jeannette Record, B119 Cora Elmer Robinson Eunice Electa Place Inez Naomi Stevenson, EK Jeannette Louise Sturtevant, B115 Olive Wood Taylor Marion Gilkey Wadsworth Rinda Baker Ward Julia Jeannette Ware Harriet Eliza Waterman, EK Mary Demorest Weeks ' Jessie Marguerite Whitehouse Members VVinClham, Vt. 26 F H Bluelllll 5 F H Ellsworth 9 p 1.1 Freedom 3 F H Berwick 3 F H 'East Jamaica, Vt. 26 F H Crouseville 46 F H Birch Harbor 45 F H Waterville Oak St Thorndike Thomaston 6 P H South Lagrange 45 F H Kents Hill 27 F H Rockland I5 P H Medford, Mass. 5 P H Fairfield Hampstead, N. H. 36 F H Livermore Falls 4 P H Saco 44 F H Skowhegan 38 F H Gorham IO P H Brown's Town, Jamaica, W. I. ro P H K Portage Lake ro P H Skowhegan I4 P H Fairfield 30 F H Bridgewater 47 F H Caribou 47 F H Livermore Falls 4 P H Robinson 1 F H Derby, Vt. I9 F H Clinton 27 P H Skowhegan 42 F H Spencer, Mass. 35 F H Camden . 38 P H Waterville 237 I-2 Main St New Boston, N. H. I3 P H Portland I4 P H Wiscasset 39 F H Winslow 62 Mary Ellen Woodman Sadie Belle Young, AY Lizzie Ella Phair Ida May Proctor Waterville 39 Gold St Solon 41 F H SPECIAL Limestone 1 F H Waterville 39 Water St Gymnasium 63 - .-, l I P 2 A Delta Kappa Epsilon XI CHAPTER Eslablzkherz' in 1846 FRATRES IN FACULTATE Edward W. Hall, '62 John Hedman, ,QS FRATRES IN URBE Appleton A. Plaisted, ,SI Rev. W. C. Stetson, '79 Rev. Howard R. Mitchell, '72 Frank K. Shaw, '81 Rev. I. H. Roberts, Gamma Phi, '81 Rev. G. D. Sanders, '82 Albert F. Drummond, '88 James G. Harris, Upsilon, 790 V Harvey D. Eaton, '89 Elwood T. Wyman, '90 Dana P. Foster, '91 W. L. Bonney, 792 Hascell S. Hall, '96 Herbert S. Philbrick, '97 Arthur L. Holmes, '98 L. Eugene Thayer, EX-'03 Arthur A. Thompson, Ex-'o5 Alton I. Lockhart, 'o5 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO I906 Edwin Parker Craig Rex Wilder Dodge Karl Raymond Kennison Harold Leon Pepper Arthur Greenwood Robinson . Linwood L. Ross Harold Eugene Willey 1907 Harry Charles Bonney Walter Ellis Craig Lewis Walker Dunn Thomas Albion Smart Albert Kingsley Stetson Arthur William Stetson Clayton Melcher Ward Arthur Kenelm Winslow QIQOS Emmons Parkman Burrill Percy Silas Farrar George Abner Gould Iohn Cameron Hetherington Ernest William Loane Harry Slemmons Phinney Samuel Emery Whitten IQO9 Clark Drummond Chapman Orlando Mellnotte Dayhuff William Austin Flewelling Howard Benjamin Foster Thomas jackson Seaton Leo Stewart Trask john Dearborn Whittier Monroe Elias Young ' 6 6 mlm iv '3i2if5EE:f:f:f3Q:QZQ2f:Q:Q:f:Q:Q:Q:f:f:f:Q:mgEf:fIf Q4 OTUX W 6 , K Zeta Psi CHI CHAPTER Exfzzblzkhed in 1850 FRATRES IN URBE Simon S. Brown, '58 R. Wesley Dunn, '68 Frederick C. Thayer, M.D., '65 Rev. Charles C. Owen, '79 Rev. Edwin C. Whittemore, '79 James F. Hill, M.D., '82 Everett M. Stacy, '81 Warren C. Philbrook, '82 Frank B. Hubbard, '84 Sheridan Plaisted, '86 Dennis M. Bangs, ,QI Stephen Stark, 792 1 Henry W. Dunn, '96 Lowell G. Salisbury, '96 john E. Nelson, '98 Frank W. Alden, '98 W. Wirt Brown, '99 Herbert C. Libby, 'or Orrin A. Learned, 'oo Carroll C. Perkins, 'o4 William A. Cowing, 'o4 Perley L. Whittemore Dennis E. Bowman, ,93 George C. Cook Henry W. Abbott john A. Partridge, 'o4 Leslie W. Getchell Perley L. Whittaker, '05 Charles J. Clukey jesse D. Buck, ex-'04 Benj. E. Brann, Ex-'o4 Frank L. Merrick, '04 Charles W. Bradlee jr FRATRES IN COLLEGIO 1906 Arthur Walden Palmer Charles Nash Meader Ralph Leavitt Reynolds 1997 john Bailey DeWitt Roscoe C. Emery Burr Frank Jones 1908 james Robert Nickels james Marshall Read Leon Southard Gilpatrick Harold Nash Mitchell 1999 , Leon Clifton Guptill Joseph William Hammond Cyril Day Athearn Austin Dirnock Hall Harold Fossett Lewis Clifton Manning Littlefield . 68 H v5.1V:.l3 -er ,,.:I. f ' 4 VA K 1 fl! X HA E 1' P F4-J 11 N w W Mb, A A, W3 TTY ' f ' fb 215 9-se' wx Q af,5:'i ,L cn jijllgfg ,D a ' E mu-rr Hmm. I Delta Upsilon COLBY'CHAPTER E.v!rzbZz'.fAezi 1852. 166-rfxfablzkhefi 1878 FRATRES IN URBE Horatio R. Dunham, '86 Ioel F. Larrabee, '87 Percy S. Merrill, M.D., ,94 VV. S. Wyman, Tufts, '97 Prof. Wallace F. Elden, Bowdoin, '99 Edward C. Rice, 'or John F. Philbrick, ,95 Rev. I. E. Cochra.ne, '79 Wallace Purington, 'or Charles E. Dow, '96 Caleb A. Lewis, 'og Carl R. Bryant, 'o4 Hannibal H. Bryant, jr., '05 Cecil W. Clark, '05 Solon W. Purington David K. Arey, 'o5 Prof. Hugh R. Hatch, ,QC Pres. Charles L. White, Brown, '87 William A. Fletcher, ,QI George S. Stevenson, Howard, 'o3 Edson P. Putnam FRATRES IN COLLEGIO I 1906 john Wesley Coombs William Spring Stevens Percival Willard Keene Elliott Curtis Lincoln 1907 Herman Brudenell Betts Robert Alder Colpitts 1908 Arthur Winslow Libby Frank Bramhall Condon Harry Leonard Kilgore Howard Arthur Tribou Richard Albert Lyons Isaac Ross McCombe 1909 George Carl Anderson Maurice Herbert Blanchard Edgar Frederick Callahan joseph Chandler Wilbur Garland Foye Wallace Earle Hackett Howard McLellan Leonard Oakman Merrill Walter Sidney Morgan james Corey Richardson Harry Taylor Tallman john Edwin Taylor 7o 1 my Ji?- y,l -- wiggifg , fcffoemfn wi. '1' N, 5' ,1- F.-. ,.,. ,,,. 92'-L. ,L-ff jjfg, gag? 'fAC 'l'.tv , 5' ff- .Q ,c . 'f'.4j-fha. , f., , .,,, ffizf . ',: 3: N J wb ,J 'J .v N A .1 :gg pg . ,, J a. 1 3 N rgzn be-we 'f n , 3 -,C X 1 , 3 . 7 ,. Q n A E I X ' 1x? 'wf' ----i f f an pg L A '-5' as ' fs,0fvWZ,g.4Pn- 7,5 fm 1 . 14 ,fffff I ,. .A fr' Q 9 o f f1i'K7lQo f' vink ffw 1 N' In I AV A Jigs, IW- ,.n glggg ' 1.55 4775 W 4' ' Q fffM'-'M .Y V' ,, QA wr f P M .f7m.r'f'a,,, 0 J.'75',fb, ff 46544134 J '4Hm,,, 9' I . 'niwfvfrnff' faqginm, ' Mc su-L ' XMZBRASKAEI .4:i',2ff- wnguro , ' cu-uqncm amuS'rA1E X 'A U-L1Noxsy 5 vi., E:.L.ro'r'rr1.u I Phi Delta Theta MAINE ALPHA CHAPTER Es'fd0fz'J'061f 1884 FRATRES IN URBE Prof. A. I. Roberts, '90 A. E. Linscott, '98 Norman K. Fuller, '98 john G. Towe, M.D. Charles W. Vigue, '98 H. S. Brown, ,QQ Guy W. Chipman, '02 William W. Drew, '02 Harry E. Pratt, '02 Charles W. Atchley, '03 W. M. H. Teague, '05 Clarence N. Flood, '05 Joseph A. Gilman, '05 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO 1906 Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin Benjamin Austin Gooch Charles Phillips Chipman john Crandall Lindsay William Lamb Dodge john Winn Spencer Merlin Colby joy 1907 Chester Alden Grant Perley Lenwood Thorne Oscar Benjamin Peterson Elihu Blaine Tilton Ralph Benjamin Young 1908 Alvin Leslie Cotton Frank Wilder Lovett Charles Clark Dwyer Eben Earle Masterman Charles Russell Flood john Tracy Matthews Merle Roliston Keyes Augustus Coolidge Thompson Ray Foster Thompson 1909 Eugene Frank Allen Harold Willis Kimball Milfrecl Isaac Buker Clarence Ray Plummer Frank Osborn Dean Austin Shaw 72 ,FZ -' , , +e H ., L fm .-H7 I' ?-ff! . f J Cf nf Y' if 5 23? iw S MW awmerww K 6?-1 'Q' '63 f 7 immmgv v 1 LNJJ 4553? if l I Ji g?-LAX '-44? cy M ff-A Q ig 'WX t a g, Egg P4 w, 23 EQXEQXD 6,5 X505 :S+ W Q9 ., Vi k I 'I Eig a. 'Ta Ff a ., N l ?i '- zw fff p ' -Qk-LL ' '4 ' '21 H ' , Wi f -1 1 'N , 1 a . :N Q .' i ,.,. L . QQ: ' 1 14 V. ', i ,gr 4? ' e s' Y 3' . 51-' --1 PM , .y '-V 'M f '-'J 5 - ' 56 ,w ' PWR n. 1 -v '11 F I Q1 4-fy . N N 35, 0 l, g sA X ,. f H f --NK Q w 1 5 'f wfr Qgff' ci ' X O2 Y , ' :C -,f , -Y 0 W, 401 . . '- - ' ' .ap-' , - ' W' - N E' 1 5 I 5 i35'::','g Wig :F ' ,, up 2' I 5 CK - '+' if H 'A EM M3 !.i - V, , J ,W f-Q - N?,a.Mg5'1 , . V Ti, z' . ffl '- QW A. W , ' -' ,Q. 5f ' N B we , ':, .. ! f f i g K +-- ' QA i' nf 1, . -L .ax , Liz-gf iw gg 'if lt Z4.,5 ' .yf2, ..A-, - . + ' 5 . PV, Alpha Tau Omega BJAJTJE CLADALLA fkLPI1A.C1HfXPTTH1 E.n'zzb!z'rhe1z' Z-ll 1892 FRATRES IN URBE George W. Hoxie, ,94 Walter E. Noble, ,QS Harry S. Vose, ,QQ Millard E. Fitzgerald, 'oo Frederick M. Rollins, U. of M., 'oo Elmer W. Allen, '03 Frank E. Wood, ,O4 Oscar W. Peterson, ex-'08 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO 1906 Eenwicke Lindsay Holmes Virgil Merle jones 1997 Myron Eugene Berry David Monaghan Young Charles Rush Otis Alpheus Thompson john Arthur Burton Millard Claude Moore 1908 Iohn Everard Hatch Victor Ray jones Clifford Henry Libby William Fred Sherburne 1909 Edwin Walker Merrill Nathaniel Percy Merrill Francis Howard Rose 74 1-:1.Lmff-11m-mm Sigma Kappa ALPHA CHAPTER fkzmzfiezz' zzz' Colby, 1874 SORORES IN URBE 9 E1nily P. Meader, '78 Sophia M. Pierce, '81 Jennie M. Smith, '81 Hattie M. Parmenter, '89 Rose A. Gilpatrick, 792 Lucia H. Morrill, ,Q3 Frank H. Morrill, 794 Carrie M. True, 795 Caro I-Ioxie, '96 Mary' B. Crosswell, '96 Florence E, Dunn, '96 Alice M. Purinton, '99 ' Mar H. Caswell, '04 Mabel E. Dunn' ex- O3 y ' Hortense W. Philbriclc, ex-'07 Jennie M. Cochrane, O4 Bertha H. Kennison, CX-,O7 SORORES IN CQLLEG IO X 1906 Alice Hope Davies Edith Lincoln Kennison Susan Weston Elaine Wilson 1907 Rena May Archer Blanche Miriam Emory Lubelle May Hall Addie Bradeen Holway Marian Louise Learned Alma Florence Morrissette Virginia Gilbert Noyes Ellen Josephine Peterson Edith Pierce Priest Nellie Perry Winslow 1908 Bertha Harris Bangs Helen Louise Cochrane Susan Angelina Corbett Annie Alice I-Iarthorne Ethel May Hayward Nora Mehitable Lander Vivian Betsey Libby Caroline Dole Noyes Mollie Alice Pearce Anne Trafton Roberts 1909 Clara Augustine Eastman Marion Elizabeth Goodwin ' ' Casselina Marguerite Perry Ragnhild Lillian Iverson Inez Naomi Stevenson 76, L 'X' 1 M 3 n , gf' I ,I . n , J' -R , Q - 1 . , Q- 1 4 ,.3'F.. --f, .IM v 1 hc u 4 V ' ur- -r' 'ws -'na r ' 'Z tv -,IES - -MEL Q N11 1g'f:1'ff1 ' j1lfjL: -, .nw f 'LQ J' Q -1 V 'ff-'L 1,-hm. Ev , vw mg. ,7 J 'Eli 'Z ' fi E: Jw , -'lk' , 1 .5 AQ: . 17-:-j-1 4' ..J,g,?1 , Ay. 1' 'aw-'I . 1, 1 f Lg . - .JF , ' :Jr .':,.7 K 'l. I: 'v- . Milf I-157. 4- 2272 ,JV ,. ' 1 r---'Age ., ff 12 37 .Ii-24451 ,f-- - g .' 3: .YT 1 -'J' .',q:.:. .5134 I 135' -1 . J 4-,q 1. ,-1, : rr 7 . ' 4 , . .JJ V, , ni? 3,-P ,ll 'q -c ,. . J, fl. KE, ',0 E fQI1 H7 ' 4 -5. - ,-.-:. .. .1 ., ,4. , Sag: :..3! . ,lf ,v-.L 7l'I.7r. .au gd ,N f, ,M ,, Nl? vm gy,,','y. 'fs I E' ' ' 14-4 -1 5: 11' ,A rf: .4-3 5-1 5, J, 5 W .3 w.'JM,11 ' , ,ln 'fp L1 l. I V .. -.-X .rg . , . . ,fp-.. 'fl-..gN,, , -- A '-,--, f.-xc'x-- 1-Y--F K I H- I1 't. 'r 1-E :i'f 'T',-TH-5-51', '4S W1:,- Ffa ,M sg Beta Phi Fozmdczz' zz! Colby, 1895 SORORES IN URBE Harriet Vigue Bessey, ,97 Mary H. Dow, '98 Alice Lowe Brown, 799 Mary G. Lexnont, Q9 Josie Toward Davis, ,QQ Edith W. Corson, ,QQ Agnes C. Stetson, ,99 Nella M. Merrick, 'oo Gertrude T. Lord, 'or Delia Hiscock Hedman, 'or Nellie M. Lovering, 'oz Augusta Colby, 'oz Edna Owen Rice, 'oz Eunice C. Mower, ,O4 Ida P. Keene, '05 Efhe M. Lowe, '05 Bertha C. Whittemore Alona E. Nicholson Bessie A. L. Merrick Marian Webber Harriet M. Drake Clara M. Bryant SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1906 0' Anna Martha Boynton Christia May Donnell Nettie Rebecca Fuller Ella Estelle Maxcy Clara May Norton Beulah Francis Purington Maude Louise Townsend 1907 Myrtis Ethel Bassett Caro Edna Beverage Rose Marian Beverage Inez Bowler Annie Eliza Cook Sarah Stella Cummings Hattie Simonton Fossett Bertha Evangeline Nead Grace Lord Stetson 1908 Berta Edith Baldwin Jeanette Holmes Baldwin Helen Frances Dickinson Olive Annette Green Nina Beatrice Holmes Florence Emily King Agnes Eunice Walker Esther Houston Weeks 1999 I Mabelle Edwina Babson Margaret Anne Clark Maude Nina Eaton La Verna Eaton Gibbs Winnibel Gower Agrandece Jeannette Record Jeanette Louise Sturtevant . 78 ,- , f Q l my ' f 4 - Q f H If X I 51, f M N f V N QQ gf S, , Q , K HM Y 417 0 ? X W X 1 fvpag. ' W w 'ff X BF 2 Q .hwagiw W! 1 Y X,-in . A ::,1r,nLa I , l I , 1 I Alpha Upsilon Fozmfierl zzz' Colby, IQO4 SORORES IN COLLEGIO 1906 Cornelia Beatrice Caldwell Eva Charlotte Plummer 1907 Georgia May Connor Cora Hannah Farwell Bertha May Robinson Alice Rachel Tyler 1908 Carrie Elizabeth Hill Nettie May Runnals . Abbie Frances Weed 1909 .V Ethel Hannah Butler Fannie Miller Crute Pearl Lucinda Davis Dorothy Donnell Abbie Sanford Hague Alice Mary Henderson Sadie Bell Young So X x -xxx s'0 ' x The Epicureans SENIOR SOCIETY Fozmricrz' in 1898 FRATRES IN COLLEGIO Sacred Sampler of Syrups, Charles Phillips Chipman Eager Eater of Everything, Rex Wilder Dodge Pl: C. M. R. D., Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes TL. C. T. T., Arthur Greenwood Robinson iG. G. G. and D. M. B., Linwood Lyons Ross VF Chief Mercury and Runner for the Doctor T Lord Chief Tester and Taster 1Grand Goblet Grabber and Dispenser of Milwaukee's Best S3 Kappa Alpha SENIOR SOCIETY Fazzzzzfezi zzz' Colby, 1898 SORORES IN URBE Alice L. Brown, 799 Delia H. HCCllH3H, 'oi Alice M. Purinton, ,QQ Mary H. Caswell, '04 Jennie M. Cochrane, '04 SORORES IN COLLEGIO Anna Martha Boynton Cornelia Beatrice Caldwell Nettie Rebecca Fuller Edith Lincoln Kennison Ella Estelle Maxcy Eva Charlotte Pluinmer Susan Houghton Weston Elaine Wilson 34 1 Chi Gamma Theta SOPHOMORE SOCIETY Fozmfim' cz! Colby, 1900 SORORES IN URBE Mabel Esther Dunn Marian Webber SORORES EMERITAE Alice Hope Davies Myrtis Ethel Bassett, Sarah Stella Cummings Inez Bowler, Blanche Miriam Emory Hattie Simonton Fossett Marian Louise Learned Alma Florence Morrissette Bertha Evangeline Nead Edith Pierce Priest Grace Lord Stetson' Nellie Perry Winslow SORORES IN COLLEGIO Bertha Harris Bangs Susan Angelina Corbett Olive Annette ,Green Nina Beatrice Holmes Vivian Betsey Libby Mollie Alice Pearce June Stewart Philbrick Esther Houston Weeks 86 ' , - ' F Q, ., , ' .-- ' ,. .W Q fv br -'f-' . Upsilon Beta FRESHMAN SOCIETY f'b1l7Zfl,c'fZ7 fafzmnj' 26, 1903 PATRES AB INITIO Harold Leon Pepper, IV Elliott Curtis Lincoln, I 1906 Charles Phillips Chipman, III Arthur Greenwood Robinson, II Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes, V PATER IN URBE Charles William Bradlee Ir., XX PATRES Rex Wilder Dodge, VII Lewis Walker Dunn, XIII Harry Charles Bonney, XIV Burr Frank jones, XII Malcolm Dana Smith, XVIII Emmons Parkman Burrill, XIX john Tracy Matthews, XXV Howard Arthur Tribou, XXVII Iames Robert Nickels, XXVI Edwin Walter Merrill, XXIX Austin Shaw, Harold Fosset-t Lewis, Xxxi William Austin Elewelling,XXXII Wallace Earle IN COLLEGIO 1906 Percival Willard Keene, VI 1907 Thomas Albion Smart, X Perley Lenwood Thorne, XI Herman Brudenell Betts, XV 1908 Ernest William Loane, XXII Arthur Winslow Libby, XXIV Augustus Coolidge Thompson,XXVIII john Cameron Hetheringron, XXI Clifford Henry Libby, XXIII 1909 Clark Drummond Chapman, XXXIII Cyril Day Athearn, XXXIV Thomas Jackson Seaton, XXXV Eugene Frank Allen, XXXVI Hackett, XXXVII 88 Theta Nu Epsilon BETA UPSILON CHAPTER EJ'l'lZbfZ'.S'h6fL' z'1z 1903 HIGH ARCH FIENDS IN URBE flames G. Harris L. Eugene Thayer Arthur A. Thompson Cecil W. Clark Joseph U. Teague ARCH FIENDS Charles Phillips Chiprnan Edwin Parker Craig Rex Wilder Dodge Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes Elliott Curtis Lincoln Harold Leon Pepper Arthur Greenwood Robinson Linwood L. Ross FIENDS Harry Charles Bonney John Bailey DeWitt Lewis Walker Dunn Leslie Willis Getchell Oscar Benjamin Peterson Fred Meek Pile Thomas Albion Smart Albert Kingley Stetson Otis Alpheus Thompson David Monaghan Young FIENDLINGS EKgMZi 8rnj8zo ! 5 EHSZM FEQESA-EF 3h8IWfE ZWO395 F-GQQQQSX mj2XWaN gWSgZl? MQQIIFZZW7 2X?bF4 3b8zMi W 90 cervnxsv-11' ev A wma,-qv PWL1. ,aaa Theta Nu Epsilon ROLL OF CHAPTERS Wesleyan University Syracuse University Union College Cornell University University of Rochester University of California Colgate University Kenyan College Adelbert College Hamilton College Rensselaer Polytechnic lilnstitute Stevens Institute Lafayette College Ahmerst College Allegheny College Pennsylvania State College University of Pennsylvania University of the City of fNew York Wooster College University of Michigan Rutgers College Ohio State University Swarthmore College Bowdoin College Kansas University Harvard University Northeastern University Chicago University University of Virginia University of Nebraska Ohio Wesleyan University University of Maine Case School of Applied Science College of the City of-New York University of Vermont Medical College Trinity College Brown University Columbia University Colby College Lehigh University QI Myrta Colby Cosmopolitan Club President-Dorothy Hopson Vice President-Grace Emogene Corthell Secretary-Josephine Ella Clark Treasurer-Myra Irene Hardy EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Alice Little Elizabeth Ella Phair Marian Gilkey Wadsworth MEMBERS 1908 Myrta Alice Little Lena May Clark Inez Hazen Card Helen Hunt Lucy Evelyn 1909 Eunice Electa Place Elizabeth Ella Phair Helene Bernice Bellatty Bertha Hannah Bryant Olive Wood Taylor Mary Demorest Weeks Jessie Marguerite Whitehouse Marian Gilkey Wadsworth Myra Irene Hardy Grace Ernogene Corthell , Dorothy Hopson Josephine Ella Clark Treat Rinda Baker Ward Cora Elmer Robinson Martha Elizabeth Bryant Helen Esther Adams Nettie Bickford Crane Jennie Cox Ellen Mary Cratty Leona Cassandria Garland Ella Melvina McBurnie 92 ,, l ATHLETICS Colby Athletic Association OFFICERS Burr F. Jones, President john T. Matthews, Secretary Prof. H. R. Hatch, Treasurer EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE SUB-COMMITTEE ON BASEBALL H. L. Pepper, '06, Chairman W. G. Foye, ,O9, Secretary Prof. john Hedman, Treasurer E. T. Wyman, '90 SUB-COMMITTEE ON FOOTBALL Lewis W. Dunn, ,O7, Chairman Harold F. Lewis, '09, Secretary Prof. George F. Parmenter, Treasurer Edward Rice, 'or SUB-COMMITTEE ON GENERAL ATHLETICS Fenwicke L. Holmes, '06, Chairman John E. Hatch, '08, Secretary Prof. Hugh R. Hatch, Treasurer Percival W. Keene A. F. Drummond, '88 97 Baseball SUB-COMMITTEE H. L. Pepper, Chairman Prof. john Hedman, Treasurer W. G. Foye, Secretary E. T. Wyman COLLEGE TEAM FOR 1905 I. W. Coombs, Captain A. L. Tilson, Manager C. C. Dwyer, '08, C I. W. Coombs, '06, p H. E. Willey, '06, 1b E. B. Tilton, '07, 2b E. P. Craig, '07, 3b J. B. Pugsley, '05, ss and p H. A. Tribou, '08, lf G. W. Starkey, '05, rf F. M. Pile, '07, of SUBSTITUTES R. L. Reynolds, '06 O. A. Thompson, '07 G. A. Gould, '08 GAMES April 27 Colby Lewiston Athletics Waterville 21-3 April 29 Colby vs Amherst Amherst 2-3 May 1 Colby Mass. State College Amherst 10-5 May 2 Colby Williston Seminary Easthampton 2-5 May 3 Colby Harvard Cambridge 5-16 May IO Colby Bowdoin Waterville 11-6 May 20 Colby Bowdoin Brunswick 3-4 May 24 Colby Mass. State College Waterville 5-1 May 27 Colby U of M Orono 9-0 May 30 Colby Pine Tree'Athletics Portland 1-9 May 31 Colby U of M Waterville 2-3 june IO Colby Bates Waterville 3-2 june IO Colby Bates Lewiston 0-1 98 Football SUB-COMMITTEE L. VV. Dunn, Chairman H. T. Lewis, Secretary Prof. G. F. Parmenter, Treasurer E. C. Rice COLLEGE TEAM FOR 1905 A. W. Palmer, 1906, Captain T. A. Smart, 1907, Manager O. A. Thompson, 1907, Center ' R. A. Lyons, 1908 Guards W. F. Sherbourne, 1908 H. A. McClellan, 1909 Tackles I. C. Hetherington, 1908 A. L. Cotton, 1908 Ends W. Flewelling, 1909 A. W. Palmer, 1906, Quarter-back J. W. Hammond, 1909 Half-backs L, S. Trask, 1909 J. BL DeWitt, 1907, Full-back SUBSTITUTES J. M. Read, 1908 M. C. joy, 1906 M. R. Keyes, 1908 C. A. Grant, 1907 L. L. Ross, 1906 O. B. Peterson, 1907 GAMES October 4 Colby vs Coburn C. I. Waterville 5-0 October 7 Colby vs Fort Preble Waterville 11-0 October II Colby vs frown Providence 0-70 October 21 Colby vs U of M Orono 0-16 October 28 Colby vs Bates Lewiston 0-28 Nova mber 4 Colby vs Bowdoin Waterville 0-5 IOO Basketball SUB-COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS John B. DeWitt, '07, Manager Harold E. Willey, '06, Captain COLLEGE TEAM FOR 1906 Harold E. Willey, '06, rf John B. DeWitt, '07, rg Clitford H. Libby, '08, lf Elihu B. Tilton, '07, lg ' Howard A. McLellan, ,O9, c SUBSTITUTES John W. Coombs, '06 Joseph W. Hammond, O9 GAMES December 9 Colby vs Taconnet Club Waterville 44-22 January I9 Colby vs Hebron Academy Hebron 23-13 January 26 Colby vs Ricker Classical Institute Waterville 28-18 January 31 Colby vs Oak Grove Oak Grove 52-II February 3 Colby vs Maine Orono 18-27 February IO Colby vs Maine Waterville 20-13 February 16 Colby vs Tufts Waterville 29-22 February 20 Colby vs Guilford High School Guilford 24-31 February 23 Colby vs Hebron Academy Waterville 37-17 February 28 Colby vs Taoonnet Club Waterville 29-23 March 3 Colby vs Coburn Waterville 24-16 March 6 Colby vs Taconnet Club Waterville 30-11 March I5 Colby vs Guilford High Waterville 4.5-17 Inter-class Championship won by 1906 IO2 sl: I 1 Q K K I V 1 . Y- v , , -, Lg.. ,. xv A . M' .vig Track Team SUB-COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS OFFICERS Stephen G. Bean, '05, Captain Benjamin A. Gooch, '06, Manager I. I. Smith, Coach YM' Tzefwziy-Sz'xM Allillldf Fliffff Meef, Iflfezifzesziay, April 27, 1905 OFFICIALS Marshal-VV. I. Hammond' Clerk of Course-H. N. jones Assistant Clerk of Course-J. T. Matthews Referee-B. A. Gooch Starter-Prof. Sorenson Announcer-A. W. Libby Timer-I. I. Smith Scorer of Field Events-H. E. Willey Scorer of Track Events-A. M. Frye judges at Finish-Prof. Kenniston, H. L. Pepper, Axel Uppwall Judges of Field Events-R. L. Hall, H. B. Betts Measurers-F. M. Pile, David Young EVENTS Coombs, '06 Putting 16-Pound Shot 1 2 Hetherington, '08 3 Thompson, '07 Rideout, '07 One-mile Run 1 2 Kennison, '06 Throwing 16-Pound Hammer 1 Coombs, '06 Cotton, '05 Hetherington, '08 440-yard Dash 1 Hunt, '07 2 Whittemore, '05 3 Dodge, '06 Hetherington, '08 2 Coombs, '06 3 Thompson, '07 Throwing Discus 1 104 36.35 ft 5 min II sec 108.06 ft 57 min 3-5 sec 93.2 ft 100-yard Dash Running High lump 120-yard Hurdle 880-yard Run Running Broad. lump 220-yards Dash Pole Vault 2 2 0-yards Hurdle McVane, '07 Morse, '07 Craig, '06 Bean, '05 McVane, '07 Ross, '06 Ross, '06 Morse, '07 Lincoln, '06 Hunt, '07 Hoyt, '05 Curtis, '08 Ross, '06 McVane, '07 Coombs, '06 McVane, '07 Morse, 707 Peterson, '08 Coombs, '06 Hoyt, '05 McVane, '07 Morse, '07 Ross, '06 Lincoln, 06 IOS 10.3 sec 5 ft I9 min 2-5 sec 2 min 16 1-5 sec 20.4 ft 25 sec 9 ft 29 sec Maine Intercollegiate Association OFFICERS B. A. Gooch, Colby, President D. B. Andrews, Bowdoin, Vice President E. A. Stanford, U. of M., Treasurer L. G. Paine, Bates, Secretary EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Officers of the .Association 'lll-IE ELEVENTH ANNUAL MEET ORONO, MAY OFFICERS OF THE DAY Clerk of Course-H. L. Swett, Skowhegan Marshal-G. W. Carle, Portland TRACK EVENTS Referee-G. R. Lee, Portland judges at Finish-H. A. Winn, Lewiston W. W. Bolster Jr., Lewiston E. A. Barker, Skowhegan Timekeepers-A. L. Grover, Orono F. N. Whittier, Brunswick . E. Rice, Waterville Starter-A. S. Macreadie, Portland Scorer-E. Wilson, Lewiston FIELD EVENTS Measurers-E. T. Clayson, Lisbon Falls I. W. Crowe, Orono judges-E. C. Lane, Livermore Fallsi' W. D. Hurd, Orono Scorers-E. H. Cotton, Waterville Albion Lewis, Lewiston Announcer-R. E. Hall, Bowdoin EVENTS roo-yard Dash 1 Porter Maine 2 Doherty Bowdoin 3 Sawyer Maine IO6 13, 1905 IO 1-5 sec 220-yard Dash 440-yard Dash Half-mile Run One-mile Run Two-mile Run 120-yard hurdle zzo-yard Hurdle Pole Vault Putting 16-lb Shot Throwing 16-lb H3lH,f Throwing Discus Running High Jump Running Broad Jump Bowdoin- Colby-8 Porter Doherty Sawyer Kimball Wyman Lisherness Everett Bruce St. Onge Robinson P. R. Shorey Hunt Robinson P. R. Shorey L. B. Thomas Toby Currier Webb Toby Thatcher Currier Shaw Rogers Wiggin Denning Coombs Bennett Denning Bennett Chapman Denning johnson Hetherington Shaw Meserve Goodwin Thatcher McVane Harlow SCORE Maine Bowdoin Maine Bowdoin Maine Maine Bowdoin Maine Maine Bowdoin Bowdoin Colby Bowdoin Bowdoin Maine Bowdoin Maine Bowdoin Bowdoin Maine Maine Maine Maine Bates Bowdoin Colby Maine Bowdoin Maine Bowdoin Bowdoin Bates Colby Maine Maine Maine Maine Colby Maine 23 53 1'5 2 min 5 3-4 4 min 43 4-5 ro min 48 4-5 I5 2-5 26 3-5 IO ft 38 ft 125 ft II5 ft T5 ft I9 ft U of M-55 Bates-4 T Shaw, Meserve, and Goodwin tied for first place 107 SCC SCC SCC SCC SSC sec sec 6 in 3 in 8in 3in rin 'yin Tennis OFFICERS SUB-COMMITTEE ON ATHLETICS William Spring Stevens, '06, Manager Henry Neeley Jones, '05, Captain Representatives at the Intercollegiate Tournament, Lewiston, May I9-20, 1905 SINGLES Henry Neeley jones, '05 William Spring Stevens, '06 DOUBLES Arthur W. Palmer, '06 William S. Stevens, '06 Henry N. jones, '05 Hannibal I-I. Bryant, '05 XVINNERS OF DOUBLES IN TOURNAMENT Arthur W. Palmer, '06 IO8 William S. Stevens, '06 ff Vi, - 5 Qu-,Af-.1 Q x L ' , 4. Q 4 f i W J N ' 'Tl' , - 0 S - q-K fr - Y 7 :T-'Z- l-1' E: -Q ' K.K, ....-B u 1-sz... jf -- ' --'ld-ui. Q A Musical Organizations , Herman Brudenell Betts, Manager THE COLBY GLEE CLUB THE COLBY MANDOLIN-GUITAR CLUB Soloistsz Rex W. Dodge, Basso I. Corey Richardson, Tenor Herman B. Betts, Tenor Eugene F. Allen, Violin Isaac R. McConbe, Reader Emmons P. Burrill, Accompanist Recitation Hall I I 2 Rex W. Dodge, Herman B. Betts Harry C. Bonney Thomas A. Smart Edwin VV. Merrill John T. Matthews Merle R. Keyes Rex W. Dodge Harry T. Tallman Lewis VV. Dunn The Glee Club Leader Herman B. Betts, Manager FIRST TENORS SECOND TENORS FIRST BASS SECOND BASS II3 I. Corey Richardson Frank W. Lovett George A. Gould Austin Shaw Augustus C. Thompson Orlando M. Dayhuff Linwood L. Ross Eugene F. Allen Karl R. Kennison Men's Mandolin-Guitar Club Elliott C.vLincoln, Leader and Manager Elliott C. Lincoln Karl R. Kennison joseph Chandler FIRST MANDOLIN Samuel E. Whitten SECOND MANDOLIN William A. Flewelling MANDOLA Lewis W. Dunn GUITARS 1 I5 Harry C. Bonney Leon C. Guptill Leonard C. Merrill Colby Musical Clubs PROGRAM PART 1 Creole Love Song F f Smifh GrLEE CLUB Little Johnny Jones Arrafzgefz' by Louis Zbazbezzd MANDOLIN CLUB Reading A iS'eZefz'ez! MR. MCCOBIBE The Storm King MHl'Z'07L MR. DODGE Beautiful Isle of the sea LYLIZVTUZLST E7Zfg7Z!7lld6l' MANDOLIN CLUB Old College Days Smith GLEB CLUB PART II l Canlt Do The Sum From Babes in Ybylafzzin MR. DODGE AND GLEE CLUB I Want To Be a Soldier Arnzngfzz' by Lwlgz' Ibzzetz' MANDOLIN CLUB Thou'rt Like Unto a Lovely Flower MR. RICHARDSON Reading Sefafferz' MR. NICCOMBE Traumeri, Violin Solo Shwfzzzmz MR. ALLEN Alma Mater S. GLEE AND MANDOLIN CLUBS 116 G. Bam, '05 Engagements December 9, I905 North Vassalboro january 26, 1906 Slcowhegan February 6 Hallowell April I9 Fairfield April 20 Waterville April 24 Belfast April 25 Castine April 26 Brooks II Ladies' Mandolin Club Mollie A. Pearce, Manager Nora M. Lander, Pianist FIRST MANDOLIN Nina B. Holmes Florence T. Freeland Marion G. Warclsworth Marion D. Mayo Florence E. King Esther H. Weeks SECOND MANDOLIN ' Helen B. Campbell Mary D. Weeks Mollie A. Pearce 1 18 DH TIC 6 v- , .11- Vl.E.H Colby Dramatic Club OFFICERS OF THE CLUB Elliott C. Lincoln, President Harry C. Bonney, Vice President john B. DeWitt, Secretary EXECUTIVE STAFF A. K. Stetson, Manager john B. Dewitt, Assistant Manager E. P. Craig, Master of Properties IZI Trouble A Farcical Comedy in Three Acts P1'e.ve7zz'erz' in IVZ'7Z.S'!07Z'!, Febrzzczry 28, 1906 ,' in Skazzfhegrzfz, Jllarrh 1906 ,' mm' in IfVzzz'e1'vz'!!e, Mzfffh 5, 1906 CAST OF CHARACTERS General Benjamin Darrell Tom Darrell William Bradlee Richard Rich Harry Rich Dr. Otto Diedelmayer Judson Kathryn Winsleigh Elizabeth Kimball Mrs. Rich Molly Poore john W. Coombs E. C. Lincoln Harry C. Bonney Orlando Dayhuff Harry C. Bonney W. S. Stevens EMP. Craig L. L. Ross Earle A. Hackett Ralph L. Reynolds Benjamin A. Gooch SYNOPSIS Act I and II Parlor of Hotel, Palm Beach Act IH Dr. Diedelrnayer's Sanitarium I22 2 I, 1 . nr V V . . x ... . -W . . U , . 1 6 A Midsummer Night's Dream Written by William Shakespeare - Adef! by Mc Smiof mm' fwziof' girls zzz' Fox: Hall, on Me zzffemoofz gf HIl!ZOZUL',E7Z, Orfobea' 31, 1905 DRAMATIS PERSONAE Theseus, Duke of Athens Beatrice Caldwell Egeus, Father of Hermia Anna Boynton Lysander in love with Hermia Cllrigtia Donnell Demetrius Virginia Noyes Quince, a carpenter Susan Weston Snout, a tinker Edith Priest Bottom, a Weaver Ellen Peterson Hippolyta, Queen of the Amazons, betrothed to Theseus Marian Learned Hermia, daughter to Egeus, in love with Lysander Maude Townsend Helena, in love with Demetrius Hope Davies Oberon, King of Fairies Nettie Fuller Titania, Queen of the Fairies Annie Cook Puck or Robin Goodfellow Rose Beverage Peaseblossomj Bertha Nead Cobweb l . ., Nellie Winslow Moth fliames Inez Bowler Mustardseed j Myrtis Bassett Other Fairies Atending their King and Queen-Miriam Emory, Edith Kennison, Addie Holvvay, Caro Beverage, Sarah Cummings, Bertha Robinson Attendants on Theseus and Hippolyta-Ella Maxcy, Elaine Wilson, Beulah Purington, Clara Norton, Eva Plummer, Hattie Fossett, Georgia Connor, Rena Archer, Alice Tyler, Grace Stetson SCENE A wood near Athens Between Acts IH and IV, a song by Alma Morissette 124 1 l 1 Foss Hall q Dedication of Foss Hall 2716 gf! W' M1'5. Arfalzmf F055 Dexfei W' IfV0l'6E5fE7', IVfczx.v. MONDAY, JUNE 26, 1905 ORDER OF EXERCISES Invocation Rev. George Bruce Nicholson Address Mr. William H. Snyder, A.M. Presentation of the Building to the College by the Donor Mrs. Dexter Acceptance for the College Hon. Percival Bonney, LL.D., , President of the Board of Trustees Address Hon. Horace Purinton, Mayor of Waterville Prayer Rev. Edwin Carey Whittemore, D.D. 126 Y - -A - ' Rx Mrs. Adaline Foss Dexter 'Q X. .,s f ,X H ea 1 l eot r E ATU 1 I n f it t I H WINTER TERM OFFICERS Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes, President ' Herman Brudenell Betts, Vice President Lewis Walker Dunn, Secretary Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin, Treasurer STANDING COMMITTEE Fenwicke L. Holmes, Chairman Charles Phillips Chipman Arthur Kenelm Winslow FROM THE FACULTY Arthur Jeremiah Roberts james William Black SPRING TERM L OFFICERS Herman Brudenell Betts, President Lewis Walker Dunn, Vice President Charles Rush Secretary Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin, TI'C3,SLlI'C1' STANDING COMMITTEE Millard Claude Moore, Chairman David Monaghan Young Herman Bruclenell Betts 128 Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS A. G. Robinson, '06, President B. F. Jones, '07, Vice President C. C. Dwyer, '08, Secretary H. L. Pepper, '06, Treasurer COMMITTEES RELIGIOUS MEETINGS B. F. jones, '07 E. E. Masterman, '08 BIBLE STUDY C. P. Chiprnan, '06 A. G. Robinson, '06 B. F. Jones, '07 MISSIONARY I. A. Bowdoin, '06 M. C. Moore, ,O7 MEMBERSHIP H. B. Betts, '07 C. C. Dwyer, '08 NORTHFIELD K. R. Kennison, '06 M. R. Keyes, '08 130 F. B. Condon, '08 H. B. Betts, ,O7 C. W. Athearn, '09 W. S. Morgan, '09 L. W. Dunn, '07 Y. W. C. A. OFFICERS Edith L. Kennison, '06, President Alice R. Tyler, '07, Vice President Olive A. Green, '08, Secretary Bertha M. Robinson, '07, Treasurer COMMITTEES BIBLE STUDY Myra I. Hardy, '08 Christia M. Donnell, '06 Georgia M. Connor, '07 RELIGIOUS MEETINGS Lubelle M. Hall, '07 Mollie A. Pearce, '08 Annie E. Cook, '07 Helen F. Dickinson, '08 MEMBERSHIP Alice R. Tyler, '07 Elaine Wilson, '06 Nettie R. Fuller, '06 Anna M. Boynton, '06 M1ss1oNARv Bertha M. Robinson, '07 Josephine E. Clark, '08 Eva C. Plummer, '06 . FINANCE Cornelia B. Caldwell, '06 Bertha H. Bangs, '08 Caro E. Beverage, '07 I 1 ' SOCIAL Rose M. Beverage, '07 Ellen I. Peterson, '07 S. Angelina Corbett, '08 Marion E. Goodwin, '09 INTERCOLLEGIATE Cora H. Farwell, '07 Maud L. Townsend, '06 Nora M. Lander, '08 Rooivis AND LIBRARY Bertha M. Robinson, '07 Carrie E. Hill, '08 Myrta A. Little, '08 ' I3I The Colby Echo Founded March 1877 A Weekly since 1897 Publisher! Werifzesdays Dzerzhg Me College Year by Zfze Sfudemiv EDITORIAL BOARD Arthur G. Robinson, '06, Editor-in Chief Herman B. Betts, '07, News Editor Lewis W. Dunn, '07, Athletic Editor Bertha M. Robinson, '07, Editor for Women's Division . ASSOCIATE EDITORS Elliott C. Lincoln, '06 V. Ray Jones, '08 Cyril D. Athearn, '09 MANAGING BOARD Karl R. Kennison, '06, Business Manager Arthur K. Winslow, '07 . Maud L. Townsend, '06 Assistant Managers john T. Matthews, '08, Mailing Clerk 132 1 X'. -:K f' ni: V. The Oracle Association Fenwicke L. Holmes, President Burr F. Jones, Treasurer Malcolm D. Smith, Secretary THE COLBY ORACLE Pzzblzkhezf Afzmzfzlbf by Me Sflzficuls BOARD OF EDITORS , Fenwicke L. Holmes, 1906, Editor-in-Chief ASSOCIATE EDITORS Lewis W. Duun, '07 Roscoe C. Emery, '07 Herman B. Betts, '07 Ralph B. Young, ,O7 V. Ray Jones, '08 Alice H. Davies, '06 Beulah F. Purington, '06 Cora H. Farwell, '06 134 f X , V N14., . , xy , . QXL V gf- fffw X22 ,V -. V : Vx 'V A -vvv V V I , A . h x'f It ry iiv -V.L,, :K X 3 :V In iEii,:,5i:,2Z2:. i, - I f ' ' N' Q: .. f ' ,T V . N i:.:Z . Nj JVN - , N , . 'V .A . .,,V., Q Q ' ,X V , ' .,N 1 A '13 f A ig ,,,Q- W' F4 il ' ', I' ' in ,. 41v l, ,, X . g? ' xx ' 'YQQVQQ -I f- ' f 594 A ff FQ 1, A Ox , 'Ai ' 1 f A mwx rj Am' ,Q , A,.,, T ' 4 I V . L ' M M117 AA,,.Q'A f f'A1 f7':1 Q5gIi ' , N .A A A . 1 .1 . V I- V I V, ' K V -' :-: v-!. IK J 5 1,1 V .'V, V Aglvr l vv 3' Z rf 111 --:,. 1' J , , ffirlfz. ' 5 .fi A'. 'f 1 A.Q ii! Z.ifleflfl'?iifi2l1fV- , ' .1., - u , , A : l 'Q -Q w ii ' .: A1 '9 3 1 :' Q fd f K - 'ig 'V-, V,-ffiifffp .A, ' Q V A A v . . X H Sophomore Declamation CLASS OF 1907 Bopfzlvz' Cow-eo, Maj' 29, 1905 MUSIC Grant PROGRAM PRAYER Burr Frank jones Mistress Sherwood's Victory ll A Plea for Peace A Picture of War Ellen Josephine Peterson Ralph Benjamin Young Millard Claude Moore Miss Biddle of Bryn Mawr Smilk Bertha May Robinson MUSIC Speech Seconding Nomination of McKinley if Eulogy on Lafayette Roscoe Conkling Emery Leslie Willis Getchell The Vision of Sir Launfal The American Woman From a Far Country The Shiloh Address Caro Edna Beverage Elbridge Gerry Davis MUSIC Rena May Archer Herman Brudenell Betts Extract from Master Skylark Eulogy on Garfield +Excusecl Myrtis Ethel Bassett Robert Alder Colpitts MUSIC 136 MUSIC Exferorook A zz on Su ozner Ingersoll College Sz'orz'ex YWm'.vz'o1z E7 'erefz' Lowell Berxerzkzlge Anon Bezfefiofge f M72 Befzfzeff B lfzifze Junior Exhibition Bzzpfzlvf Chzzrfh, .SClfIl7'lZ7flJ' E7!E7Zl.7Zg3 fzz1ze'2.4, 1905 PROGRAM MUSIC PRAYER The Young Man in Politics Robert Louis Stevenson-Optimist The Colby Ideal MUSIC The Need of Army Reform Nature in Emerson's Essays The New Monroe Doctrine MUSIC The Prose Period of Milton's Life Abraham Lincoln as a Man of Letters MUSIC 137 MUSIC Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin Alice Hope Davies Charles Phillips Chipinan Karl Raymond Kennison Lucy Mae Whenman Rex Wilder Dodge Eva Charlotte Plummer Arthur Greenwood Robinson Senior Exhibition WITH JUNIOR PARTS J-?rZj5!z'.ff Church, Ylzcrzlay E7'6lIZ.7lg, Febrzzzzvjf 27, IQO6 PROGRAM ' MUSIC PRAYER Music Iapan's Lesson for the United States Karl Raymond Kennison T French Version of the English of Eugene Field W P A 'Ellen Josephine Peterson Our Debt to Virginia Eva Charlotte Plummer T Natural Boundaries of 'Nations T William Spring Stevens Music - T German Version of the English of President Roosevelt Oscar Benjamin Peterson A Pilgrimage to Concord' 1 A Alice Hope Davies TThe Religion of Whittier N Charles-Phillips Chipman ii T Greek Version of the Latin of Cicero I H P Myrtis Ethel Bassett Duty of the Young lVlan in Politics Fenwicke Lindsay Holmes ' Music TIrving's English Sketches Isaiah Adelbert Bowdoin T Latin Version of the French of Chateaubriand ' Roscoe Conkling Emery T Sir Walter Scott's journal Arthur Greenwood Robinson Browning's Philosophy of Life Q Maud Louise Townsend 1 ' Music ' junior Part 'T Excused ' ' ' HONORARY JUNIOR PARTS Arthur Kenelm Winslow Roscoe Conkling Emery Burr Frank Jones Oscar Benjamin Peterson Myrtis Ethel Bassett Caro Edna Beverage Rena May Archer Ellen Josephine Peterson HONORABLE MENTION Perley Lenwood Thorne 138 c muewycsmsu-r , CLASS OF 1906 S Colby Czzmjmx, flfomfezjr Afferizowz, fzmz' lzy, 1905 ORDERM' or EXERCISES MUSIC it n 'PRAYER M CLASS one f 'W ' TUNE: The Messifge 'of th'e' Vi'olet. l 1'oni l'rinCe of Pilsenf' With joyous hearts we meet today, Loud praises to proclaim Of College home, of class renown, And Colby's honored name. Each stately elm tree bends in love, Each willow gently sways, ' H ' AS if attending while we shign Of happy student days Cnoieus To thee, our Alma Mater, We ever will be true, May nineteen-six bring honor Unto the gray and blue! Till Sun and stars are faded, And earth no more shall be, Devotion cleep and loyal We will give to thee. I On silent winglthe fleeting years ' Soon minglewith the Past, But by-goneclays, we'll live again 5 V, For lQ1,6H1Ol,'lQS.6,61' will last. -Angl in the year remaining still M'ay15leasu1'es'thiCkly throng, Anftl xtfoo each heart before we part .' To swell our joyous song. CHORUS We hail thee, Alma Mater, 1 The fairest 'neath the sun, Thy Spotless, fame we'll ,cherish 'l'ill time his course has run. Long live the name of Colby, As loyal sons and true We plecle our love forever To the gray and blue. Oration Charles N. Meader Poem Alice Hope Davies MUSIC History of Men Charles P. Chipman History of Women Maud L. Townsend MUSIC Awarding of Prizes John W. Coombs PRESENTATION ODE AIR: Toyland, From Babes in Toyland. Three happy years have passed, Since we at Co1by's door Knocked with fear and trembling As Freshmen have knocked before-before As Freshmen have before. But soon our fears grew less As fears are wont to do When Colby opens wide her arms To welcome classes new To welcome classes new CHORUS Colby, Colby, today our gift we bring As token of a love more true Than heart or tongue can sing. Steadfast ever will our hearts remain As symbol of which, this our gift We ask thee to retain And as the years passed on Our love for Colby grew And ne'er shall her fond image fade From out our future view-our view From out our future view. And when the coming years Shall on these pictures gaze May they remember nineteen-six Who gave in Colby's praise In Colby's praise. Presentation of Class Gift Fenwicke L. Holmes Acceptance in Behalf of Trustees Asher C. Hinds Music 140 Senior Class Day Yizesday, func 27, 1905 EXERCISES AT THE CHURCH MUSIC PRAYER MUSIC Histories-Women Ethel Lenora Howard Men Henry Neely Jones CLASS ODE AIR : The Message ofthe Violet. From Prince of Pilsenf' Our days in Colby now are o'er, the four short years are past, And e'er we part our thoughts once more we fondly backward cast, Our colors twain the green and white have woven a silken net To bind us to each other lest our Colby we forget. CHORUS oh Colby, Alrna Mater, we love thy honor dear And pledge ourselves to cherish it be we afar or near. And now we raise our voices to nineteen-live and you, Oh Colby, Colby, Colby and the gray and blue. The path which lies before is made with eager fancies bright, The standard giv'n by Colby fair will guide us to the right, The halls of fame toward which we press will yield us honor true If we are ever faithful to the Colby gray and blue. Poems-Women May Lucille Harvey Men Arthur Lee Field MUSIC Oration Guilford Dudley Coy MUSIC I4I Senior Class Day EXERCISES ON THE CAMPUS MUSIC PRAYER MUSIC Prophecies-Women H ' F Elizabeth P. Blaisdell T Men y E Axel Johan Upwall PIPE ODE SMOKING PIPE OEffPEAC1EQ.i' MUSIC Address to Unclergracluates A ' Icla Phoebe Keen Parting Ode . I we --' I PARTING ODE AIR: Peggy Brady. 'Neath the willows we meet to say farewell, Colby, fare thee well 1 Thy love and thy care - VV ill follow us there Xlfhere future years may 'leaclf Vie will ever be true It 1 , , Oh, Colby to you! I' I As o'er lifels stormy pathway wesail. , ' Thyblessing we ask For eaeh future task, Our clear old Alma Mater. CHORUS ' Colby, Colby, There is none beside thee. To you we'll be true, a val-ieut crewg - As over life's billows we are sailing, ' Thy counsels we'll.miss, , But we will know this, I Thy blessings-will ever go with us, J Though life may be clrear, ' VVe'll still hold thee dear,'i' ' Ch, Colby, Alma Mater . Though partiugs be sad, we'll ever be glad . ,, , Oh, Colby for you l ' A song of praise VVe now will raise As we leave thee to day. You have been our guide 1 . Our comfort and pride Through four short happy years. Then up from each heart Goes a song as we part . For Colby, clear old Colby. Parting Address Ezra Kempton Maxlield MUSIC CIIEERING HALLS 142 Eighty-Third Annual Commencement Iflfezifzeszizzy, func' 28, 1905 ORDER OF EXERCISES MUSIC Glenn Wendell Starkey Rose Mary Richardson Arthur Lee Field May Lucille Harvey Stephen Grant Bean Ethel May Knight Cecil Whitehouse Clark Addie May Lakin Edward Howe Cotton ' PRAYER MUSIC The College and the State America and Some of her English Critics MUSIC The Value of Scientific Training Lessons from the Life of General Armstrong MUSIC The Immigration Problem The New England Town Meeting President Roosevelt and'American Ideals The Romance of Elizabeth Barrett Browning I43 X The Honor System , . Degrees Conferred in 1905 BACHELOR OF ARTS THE MEN'S DIVISION David Kenneth Arey Hannibal Hamlin Bryant Jr. Cecil Whitehouse Clark Edward Howe Cotton Guilford Dudley Coy Arthur Lee Field Clarence Nathaniel Flood Alfred McFarland Frye Ioseph Albert Gilman Roscoe Lorin Hall Walter Iean Hammond William Hoyt Henry Neely Jones Thomas Titcomb Knowles Alton Irving Lockhart Ezra Kempton Maxfield Malcolm Bemis Mower Ralph Perkins Norton john Bartlett Pugsley Harry Sherman Ryder Glenn Wendell Starkey Anson Laforest Tillson Axel Johan Upwall Charles Lester Whittemore Camden Waterville North Sidney Norway Presque Isle Bakersfield, Vt. South Paris Prospect Waterville Livermore Falls Berlin, N. H. North Anson Camden North New Portland Pemaquid Winthrop Waterville Farmington Somersworth, N. H. North Anson North Vassalboro Oakland Seffle, Sweden Livermore Falls THE WOMEN'S DIVISION Carrie Sabra Allen Elizabeth Pierce Blaisdell Alice jane Buzzell May Lucille Harvey Ethel Lenora Howard Ida Phoebe Keen Ethel May Knight Addie May Lakin Blanche Louise Lamb Effie May Lowe Mercer Waterboro Skowhegan Fort Fairfield Winslow Waterville Waterville Waterville Sangerville Waterville 144 ' Mary Lowe Moor Waterville Ethel Gertrude Pemberton Groveland, Mass. Alice Jennie Pinkhaln Farmington, N. H. Rose Mary Richardson East Corinth HONORARY DEGREES DOCTOR OF DIVINITY Rev. I. N. Williams Rev. John E. Cummings fI884D Rev. O. I. White DOCTOR OF LAWS Edward Hawes Smiley CI875D Asher C. Hinds f1888j Ioseph L. Colby DOCTOR OF LETTERS Prof. Samuel S. Curry MASTER OF ARTS C. H. Bates Rev. Frederick G. Chutter I Providence, R. I. Burmah Taunton, Mass. Hartford, Conn. Portland, Me. Newton, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Middleboro, Mass. Littleton, N. H. RDS. vi af . M cs'-, x txirrfq? li . r , I X, . If 5 I I I W.E.H THE MEN'S DIVISION RHODES SCHGLAR for 1905. Harold William Soule QI9o4j CLASS OF 1905 SENIOR EXHIBITION. Prize for excellence in English Composition, Edward Howe Cotton. MEMBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA. Arthur Lee Field, Guilford Dudley Coy. CLASS OF woe JUNIOR EXHIBITION. First Prize, Karl Rayniond Kennison, Second Prize, Rex Wilder Dodge. CLASS OF 1907 SOPHOMORE PRIZE DECLAMATION. First Prize, Robert Alder Colpittsg Second Prize, Burr Frank jones. GERMAN PRIZES. First Prize not awarded, Second Prize, Karl Raymond Kennison, Honorable Mention, Roscoe Conkling Emery. 146 HONORARY JUNIOR PARTS. First, Arthur Kenelm Winslow, Second, Roscoe Conkling Emery, Third, Burr Frank Jones, Fourth, Oscar Benjamin Peterson, Honorable Mention, Perley Lenwood Thorne. CLASS OF 1909 FOR EXCELLENCE IN READING.-First Contest. First Prize, Harold Fossett Lewis, Second Prize, Leon Clifton Guptill. Second Contest -First Prize, Leon Clifton Guptill , Second Prize, Frank Osborne Dean. THE WOMEN'S DIVISION CLASS OF 1905 SENIOR EXHIBITION. Prize for excellence in English Composition, May Lucille Harvey. MENIBERS OF PHI BETA KAPPA. Rose Mary Richardson, Ethel Lenora Howard, Addie May Lakin. CLASS OF 1906 JUNIOR EXHIBITION. First Prize, Eva Charlotte Plummer, Second Prize, Alice Hope Davies. I GERMAN PRIZES. First Prize, Caro Edna Beverage, Second Prize, Rose Marian Beverage. CLASS OF 1 907 SOPHOMORE PRIZE DECLAMATION. First Prize, Myrtis Ethel Bassett, Second Prize, Bertha May Robinson. HONORARY JUNIOR PARTS. First, Myrtis Ethel Bassett, Second, Caro Edna Beverage, Third, Rena May Archer, Fourth, Ellen Josephine Peterson. CLASS OF 1909 FOR EXCELLENCE IN READING.-First Contest. First Prize, Marion Elizabeth Goodwin, Second Prize, Alice Mary Henderson. Second Contest-First Prize, Alice Mary Henderson, Second Prize, Ethel Rose Knowlton. I T47 Howard Edwin Simpson OWARD EDWIN SIMPSON, A.M., came to us this year as the successor of Professor Bayley in the department of Geology. Mr. Simpson was born July 9, 1874, in Clarence, Iowa. He received his preparatory education in the public schools of that town, and in Cornell Academy. In 1892 he entered Cornell College, and four years later was graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Philosophy, receiving at the same time a diploma from the Cornell School of Oratory. His experience as a teacher began in 1897 at the Knoxville High School, of which he became Principal after one year's service as Instructor in Science. Three years later he was elected Superintendent of Schools at Columbus junction, Iowa, and served there until 1903, when he entered Harvard University. During the next year he Was Field Assistant in Geology, and served later as Assistant in Physi- ography and Meteorology. In addition to his post-graduate work at Harvard, Mr. Simpson has, during his public school work, devoted several summers to the study of Geology at the University of Chicago. Mr. Simpson has proved himself exceptionally well fitted for his present position as Instructor in Geology, and the students of Colby extend to him their heartiest congratulations for the success he has already achieved in this department. 148 Mary Sybel Croswell, AB., M.D. R. MARY SYBEL CROSWELL was born at Farmington Falls, Maine, April 17, 1874. She was educated in the town schools, and at Wilton Academy. She Was graduated from Colby in 1896, and then taught three years in Wilton Academy. In 1899, she entered Tufts Medical School, from which she was graduated in 1903, being one of six of a class of sixty to receive the degree mm Zrmfie. Dr. Croswell, after her graduation from the Medical School, received appointment as House Physician and Surgeon at the Worcester Memorial Hospital, and during the year 1904-5 was Instructor in Pathology and Physiology in Passe Gymnasium, Boston. The high character of her preparation is attested by the fact that she has taken work under Dr. Sargent of Harvard, and in the Durant Gymnasium, Boston. This year she has come back to her Alma Mater to act as Resident Physician and Physical Director for the Woman's Division. She has performed her duties to the satisfaction of all, and her work has aroused among the womenof Colby a wholesome enthusiasm for gymnastics. 149 31 -11 .1- ...purv- 11.1 Ki,K.,'v l-ni 5- .97 .17 li 3 ,.l..1- ,..f WSQ QSQ The Beautiful, Red. Red Rose K . . . . V. Y AR, far away b.y the seacoast, midst a cluster of farms W . lived he, .xx - Waitiiig with hope and longing for news from o'er I ' - the sea, Z 'Watching and training with tender care, ' The beautiful rose bush growing there, I I ' Telling it secrets that none might share, ' , , V This beautiful, red, red rose. f-' I V' 1 -. Long years ago in his boyhood, when sailing the ocean - 4 V V - tl- -A blue, ' - A The ship, which was bearing him onward, entered waters new 5 And the storm swept on, bringing death and woeg The fate of the sailors, God's book will show, The boy reached the land where this rose doth grow, The beautiful, red, red rose. 'Twas the land of Japan, near the sunrise, and the boy was tenderly reared By an agent of God from the Homeland, making his name loved and feared. And the lad in his manhood loved a maid, A maid of Japan, so quiet and staid, Who best of the flowers 'mong which she played, Loved the beautiful, red, red rose. But the youth did not please the father, and two hearts were sorrow-filled, For the lad must leave the island, so the haughty father willed. r So they said farewell in the twilight gray, But just before he went away, I'll give you a slip, he heard her say, ' A slip from the red, red rose. And when.in the far, sweet future I send you a rose from my tree, You'll know that my love is for you, dear, and my hand for you is free. So he sailed back home from the sunrise land, VVith the slip held lovingly in his hand, And planted there on his own home strand , The beautiful red, red rose. And so for the rose from his loved one, he'd waited through many a year, 'Till the white in the darlchair mingled, yet the symbol did not appear. Then dread disease laid its cruel grip, On the man awaiting a distant ship, Which should bring a rose like those of the slip, A beautiful, red, red rose. At last one day he lay dying, and as his spirit passed, Came the ship from over the ocean, which he'd watched for 'till the last, And they opened the missive so long delayed, For which the dead had so often prayed, Which came from the little japanese maid, A beautiful, red, red rose. I. B. '07 C . E. B. 107 152 l ffl m 1' K X 5 -. I X l A Q , P , , :AH 4'- fl ' X X If 3 It f J 1195 ' f V5g.,H.,,,5k .,.,f:U,, in ,.,, 1: .,,, 2 . ,V ,, 1 ,V . - H I . .1 . ,ff ,,n.ff,.vj ,. ,.. , . , ' yi. H fj . .. . . , ..,, , . , .,., 'QA X V? .A 5':'f-QE! fi, I., , 1 . ' 2 , - -gp ,,-, ,, 44- , , 1 M I .. .. ..-N , ax 7 5 I I as ar 1 ,E .1 A f 1 ff .1 Q' ' , U .A.,.,,,, : ,,,, A ,,:A, ,,A, . . , :,,1 f.: f1 ,, .,3 ,f,,,A, , .A,A A:,: ,A A k -J.,-M X if ! , V :Y5.h-.- .AEVI A ...' '14.A , 'A Q , ,A EJEMAIYEQf?sQ5p5af5ii?5EiMmg'vnnhigigggma ' I I K 1 ' X F xl 1 L ' 1f ?, ff 1,57 fi ' 'Q iff ,ov , X A 5 r I f ggi, I0 1 I iff ' K M11 ?' lx, f T! , ' A H' l f I ,gay f 1, l , 9f'f ,ef ,wp 1 1 ,X HQ H xg ,H JH gy f Mg ,f , ,, x X ' , Su N ff' NJ 1 J: ,xx 1 N, f wh!! K 3 ww f X x f x ' , x , J , ff. 'QL ' ,T HQ 6 It ff' IQ A ,sb 1' iw QE J , X ' i f mS 5 +b ?fQKfQ kA MP , 15. RX '3'S f PT??ES?m' +f , 7 VA Ljff ??f!QbTfE?S9E2 I 2 ' is ' : L1 j ' Y f he ww QE' .X 4 A H LN an FL? A Xi-mf A4 'N z K -.gn AQ f N ff M ' ', 'k ,J ' .' 'f s 1 4 x V V Ll .. 1 5: ', ,-5'9 WX ' 4: P. ' 'V f V' . 'ff ' ' ' ,V ' 'V Aft-l I f- ,., 'viii' ,V -I . ,Z ,:. 1 V I A -I Is- 'f 1' ' Af - - - ' . A ,. 2' gl V X FkN.,,-ff f' 5 -Q:vgff.Quf-, ,ff ' -fa 'jj ' ix L tl i Q ,.: , V -,u '.,4i, ! I fifx I 1 VI., . . V: ni 1 L kk Hifi 5--ffl jg . ,I . , S, 1 M, ixgg-g ,f , .1,.fg1Q - ., ,L f I 5, - J Aa 1. V-V 5 fi' ,' I V' AP ' ' fix JL V' ' u f T ',' N V . zu- r ,ffl-' .-,ff ' X A KL... 'V K., I ' t ',':-71 1' - gqbx x ,'v.L-M fr Kf I . The Violin's Swan-Song O gaily shone the afternoon sun on Paris streets and housetops, and so joyously sang the birds, and blossomed the flowers, that one would never have guessed that the dark days of the French Revolution were at hand-that a cloud too heavy for the sun's bright beams to dissipate, was hanging over the beautiful city. In a grim, stone-walled cell of one of the great prisons, a young man was sitting, leaning his bowed head on his hands. The sunshine, throwing dancing reiiections through the grating of his window on the rough stone floor, brought him no comfort, for at sunset, so his sentence had read, he was to die. To be sure, he had committed no crime, but in those dreadful days when every man looked with suspicion on his brother, and death lurked everywhere, innocent and guilty alike must suffer. Near him on the dusty bench on which he sat, lay a violin which the officers who had arrested him had allowed him to keep. It was worn and battered but very precious in his eyes-his first love and, he was thinking bitterly now, his last friend. His first love it had been from childhood, when he had nestled it under his baby chin and touched its strings with tender little fingers. But not his last, his only friend, for somewhere in its keeping the great city held one who had listened to his childish playing and sung lisping little songs to it, and ever since had been his companion in a common devotion to music. It was she who was filling all his thoughts on this last afternoon. Her face floated before him and her woman's hand, invisible but strong, was tightening his heart-strings. They had always been friends, he mused to himself, for the bond of their common interest had drawn them together. When his friendship had deepened into love for her, he had kept it in his own heart and never told her of it, for, he had thought, life was long and he was young and strong, and he must be willing to work and make a name as a great musician, that he would be proud to offer her. So he had waited and she had never known. But now-now he wished that he had told her. If she only knew he groaned-ff If I could only tell her I love her and say good-bye I Dully he lifted his head and glanced about him. The sunshine was almost gone from the room now, but one lingering beam pointed like a finger of light to the violin by his side. In the sudden need of comfort he caught it up and laid it against his cheek. I54 ff Little friend, he murmured half whimsically, f' If you could only tel her of it! If you could only carry my love to Nattalie and say good-bye' for me ! He tightened the worn strings tenderly with a caressing touch, then went over to the window between whose bars the soft air stole in grate- fully. Hardly knowing what he did, he raised the violin and began to play-to play as he never had played before. For now he was pouring out his love for Nattalie into the strings, and the voice of the violin was the cry of its player's heart. In the absorption of his playing, life and death were both forgotten, and his sordid surroundings faded away. He was not in prison-there were no bars, no walls of stone. It was the man's soul that was playing, and the triumphant strains that sprang from his bow sang of love-only of love. Alone by herself, in her little sitting-room, Nattalie was sitting watching the sunshine with a terrible dread. The noises from the street below drifted in through the open window, but she did not hear them, for she was thinking of the man in the grim prison yonder who was to die when the sun went down. She had sat there all day thinking of him and the torture of her thoughts had whitened her girl's face and made it like the face of an old woman, for she loved the man who was to die. He is mine ! she moaned. He always has been mine-he always will bel What if he never told me he loved me-I love him. That is enough. But in her heart she knew it was not enough-if she could 07101 know. For if she knew, she thought, she could have borne this sorrow a little better. He in his prison, she here-they two could have borne it together, for love always has been stronger than death. But he had never told her, and now-it was too late now. Suddenly she sprang to her feet, throwing off the paralysis that was creeping over her, and hurried to the door with a wild, vague impulse to go to the prison and throw herself at his jailer's feet and plead for his life. Blindly she hurried through the streets and as one in a dreadful dream she saw the huge bulk of the prison towering before her. A few moments later, repulsed and broken-hearted, she stood once more in the street outside the prison with her last hope gone. Above her in his grated window the man who stood there softly playing his last hours away, suddenly felt an impulse to look down, and there far below him in the street stood the one who had inspired his playing. Such a little way from him and yet she would never know. Suddenly an inspiration came to him to tell her that he loved her in the only way left-through his violin. Raising his bow once more he swept it across the strings. High, clear, strong, above the city's din rang out T55 the air of a little love-song she had sung with him often, long ago. The girl in the street below lifted her face rapt with the joy of understanding, for the message-the message was what she had longed to hear! C'est toi, j'ai aime, cherie, ff C'est toi! C'est toi! sang the jubilant strains above her- C'est toi, que le monde commenca Pour moi! Pour moi l 5 The violin has told her. Nor life nor death can keep it from her now. She cannot see her lover but he looks down into her lifted face and reads her answer there. She knows now-he knows, and death has lost its bitterness. The strings of the old violin throb once again with the love which thu man's soul is sending down to her, and then, softly, sweetly, as one who whispers 'fgood-bye, the music dies away. But the woman who must live on alone will always hear the lilting little love-song in her heart- C'est toi, j'ai aime, Cherie, C'est toil C'est toi ' DoRoTHv iJoNNE1,L, 'Og HE Sophomores had a spread one night at Fairfield and met with many mishaps, Mollie lost her Pearce, and Esther searched for Weeks to find it for her. Idonia, in the Hunt for Baldwin apples fell in some Tubbs, and Bertha banged against a Hardy Little Harthorne Weed. In order to Lander they had to send Dickinson to the King Roberts to come and Treat her. The King being Green, sent a Card saying to Walker up a Hill every day. Then Carrie made so much Noyes the Sophomores had to adjourn Hayward to their respective Holmes. .156 Spring' ' ' AIL rosy morning of the year! ' L- iii' ' . Winter's gray skies have fled away, I - . The heavens now are blue and clearg 1 I I- V: Each tree is dressed in bright array, ' , X No longer now in sadness bare. h Q ' Awake, awake, from slumber long! ' Put on thy garments bright and fair, ' , I ,' For gladness now pours forth in song A -' , ' From warbling birds 'mong rustling trees. ,-' A After the cold wind's stormy test, Life and joy ring in ev'ry breeze, Rejoice in thy living, 'tis nature's behest. Sunbeams awake the s1umb'ring hillsg From their sides gushing streams are swelling the strain, One of fulness flooding the rivers and rills, And rousing each clod into new life again 3 Life to last through the summer longg An ever-Howing, rising song To H11 our hearts and tongues with praise. B. M., 1909 A Recipe for a Friend r Egg of strong will-power, thoroughly beaten till it is under Firm control 1 Cup of the sugar of congeniality 1-2 Cup of the milk of unselfishness 1 Tablespoonful of the butter of sympathy A pinch of the salt of ambition 1-2 Cup of the raisins of generosity Some Allspice of fun and mischief 2 Teaspoonfuls of the baking powder of sincerity, which is warranted to make friendship rise ' 2 Cups of the flour of good morals, without which the mixture will lack soliclity Stir thoroughly with the spoon of mutual interests Bake in the even heat of ancection Frost with the refinement of social graces This recipe has been tested with great success in the making of many friends 157 Shakespeare on the Faculty That pure congealed White -fVIz'ds1mzmer ZV2Qg'h!'s Dream ffl: 2, 141 A Hall, a Hall, give room -Romeo CZ7Zll,fZlZZ.6ll I: 5, 25 Thy master is a wise and valiant Roman -fulizzs Caesar ffl: I,I38 Black, fearful, comfortless and horrible -Kbzgfohfz V- 6, 20 Who, I, Rob? I a thief? Not I, by my faith -Hefzijf Fazzrlh Par! 1, I: 2, 153 You will hang like an icicle on a Dutchman's beard, unless you redeem it by some laudable attempt either of valor or policy r -Tweyfk Nzghf, fffs 2,6 Warlike John, and in his forehead sits a bare-ribbed death, Whose office is this day to feast upon whole thousands of the French HH -Kifzgfakfz V: 2, 176 The greater part, the horse in general, are come with Cassius -fzzlizzs Caesar IV: 2, 30 Ten thousand harms more than the ills I know,-doth Hatch -Afzfhofzy arm' Cieopamz I: 2, 124 When once our Grace we have forgot, nothing goes right -Measzzffe for Measzare IV: 4, 31 Thy Beck might from the bidding of the gods command me -Anfhony amz' Cfeojmlnz III: 11, 60 Look on my George, I am a gentleman -Hefzfy Sixfh, Pan' 2, fV: 1, 29 He asked the way to Chester -Hefzfjf Fozwlh, Par! 2, I: 1, 39 A large mouth indeed that spits forth death, and mountains, rocks seas -ffzhgfohfz If: 1, 458 158 I spy a black, suspicious, threatening Cleod. ...... A little gale will soon dispense that Cloud it -Par! 3, Hefzry Sixth V: 3, 4-IO What 'fher is this? Why, Doctor She -ANS' life!! fha! Emi: We!! ff: 1, 82 Since we have Locks to safeguard necessaries -Henry fiym, 1: 2, 176 With ho! such bugs! -Hafzzlei V: 2, 22 Qllefers to Prof. Areyj tThis statement was borne out by facts. It was a case of too much sail in the wind. Piano Practice I Often in Foss Hall so cheery, while I study faint and weary, On my Anglo-Saxon lesson that above all things I hate, While I nod and drowse in slumber, suddenly there comes a thunder, As of Imps of Satan pounding, pounding on the fearful gate. 'Tis some Freshman, say I, thumping, thumping, thumping, sure as fate, Drumming at a fearful rate. 2 Ah! how well do I recall, 'twas an evening late in fall, And the wind was wildly howling through the tree-tops bleak and bare, As I turned and writhed in sorrow, vainly longing for the tomorrow, Suddenly there came a wailing, wailing from the other hed. Can you hear it? Ain't it awful? I can't sleep, a weak voice said, Then she covered up her head. 3 Yes, that music still is ringing, to my heart no gladness bringing, Such a wild, unearthly cadence in the mournful dirge there goes. Oh, the awful clashing, smashing, oh, the fearful splashing, dashing! 'Tis enough to make one wish by tragic death to end her Woes. Will it e'er be thus I wonder? Oh, be merciful thou foes, Never more shall students doze. MAUD L. TOVVNSEND, '06 X59 ,QM Qlwwg CONCERNING THE LATE MR. WINSLOW Dec. 8-Scene. Dr. Black's room. 9 A. M. Crowd of students assembled for European History recitation. Many hollow-eyed faces suggest the fact that articles are due this morning, and the pile of papers on the Dr.'s desk prove it. On the last gasp of the bell, Arthur Winslow slips qietly in and sinks into the chair nearest the door, the only unoc- cupied spot in the room, save the stove, and even this seems in danger from the apparent desi1'e of several flushed individuals to appropriate it. Dr. Black, looking over the slips Qrecording the names of those having out outside-reading booksj and trying to find some delinquent whom he can send home for a book, at last espies Winslow's name with no book to correspond, and his face lights up. With fiendish look of delight he fixes his eyes on poor Winslow, who seems loth to relinquish the twenty pages or so of Charlemange, which he grips in his trembling hand, the trembling the result of an active and sleepless night-fthe Deke boys say he was writing when they went to supper, when they went to bed and when they went to breakfast the next morningj Er-Mr. Winslow, I believe you have a copy of Adams out. Winslow. Well, I didn't have time to get all my books together and get up here myself. Qln desperationj I only got that article done about tive minutes ago. A sympathetic and audible smile passes around the room, but before reaching the Dr. it has lost its first quality. Didn't have time, eh? Well, there's plenty of time now, Mr. Winslow - and poor Arthur, in whom lack of sleep has evidently caused a lapse of memory, as regards a certain inexorable rule which is no respecter of persons, marches into thin blue air in the direction of the Deke House. JOTTINGS FROM A DIARY KEPT IN THE AMERICAN HISTORY CLASS OF COLBY COLLEGE QThis diary records events which occurred in the year f1,905-65. Dr. Black, instructoizj Term opened, all present. 'f' Shorty gives much authoritative information on legislative matters. Miss Pl-r cracked a joke and flunked. Both unprecedented and marvelous. Dr. Black was informed that Colonial Land Records were made by a 162 system of t'PerambuIations. This was news to him and he seemed astonished and a bit incredulous. Robby asked no questions during this period' Everybody sur- prised. Pete forgot his 'outside-reading ' book. Chip dropped his defence of the historical importance of Pemaquid when the Dr. amiably admitted that he had no desire to throw cold HZO and that Pemaquid certainly deserved all she was entitled to. No wonder Chip was vanquished. Miss D- forgot her book and Pete remembered his. Both accidents. Robby', resolutely 'refrained from asking questions for ten conse- cutive minutes. Self-control is a great virtue. Today Shorty and f' Robby H kept quiet and Dr. Black held undoubted sway. Marvelous! l ! I believe Miss D.- usually writes about two hours. This is a direct quotation. Who said it? Never mind, it was somebody who appreciated Miss D-ts power of endurance. Dr. Black made reference to the 'f Migrations of Congress. The learned Dr. exhibited some Continental currency and pointed out a few remarkable and interesting peculiarities. Robby looked up the answers to some weighty QFD questions in some of the Doctor's reference books. P. S. There is much more to this Diary but as you will probably notice, it is not legible. L. DIRECTIONS FOR TRIBOU-HOW TO GET 'INTO FOSS HALL Walk up the steps-ring the door bell Qfz'01z'! kfzofk-they might not hear youj-The bell will be answered by a young woman who will conduct you to the reception room. Present your request. QIt isn't so complicated after all Tribou.j Miss P-n: 4' Well how goes German, Clara ? Miss N-nz H I havenjt heard from him today, but he was better the last time he wrote. Professor Marquardt: I never yet saw an old maid who couldn't bring up girls better than their mother. Question: Did this remark have a personal application? 163 Miss M-y: I will get out my-.Spanish lesson while you are clown to gym. Miss F-r Qabsentlyj H I'm not going to write to jim to-night. Master' Stanley B- sees Misses F. and B. down street, and remarks to his mama, 4' Them's the girls what belong to Miss Cummings. Mr. K-nn-s-n is always sure whom he will see when he calls at Foss Hall, no matter whom he may ask for. MECHANICAI, DRAWING fDiecl in Infancy, September zo, IQOSD CORDIAL Overheard at the telephone: 4' Hello! Hello! Phi Delta House ? Phi Delta House: H Yes ! 'fWell I'm Miss B-t-er, is this Mr. Buker ? 'C Yes. Well can't you come down tonight? I'cl just love to have you. Mr. Ward: Well now, Mr. jones isn't on any committee. Miss R-b-ns-nz 4' Oh, I'd love to have Mr. Jones on my committee. 164 A SOLOMANI A SOLOMAN1 Mr. Grant: U Well boys, l've come to the conclusion that if you want to get on the right side of the girls, you want to get your tickets for the show a little beforehand. H Le duc vient was aptly translated by Miss H-l-s. 4 l'he Deke comes Cde Dartmouth ? J HITS ON FOSS HALL One old lady to another, upon viewing our noble editice: 'l'hat's an awful nice place for lem, ain't it P Other lady: Why what is it ? Reply: 'fWhy, that's the new insane asylum. A Gentleman from' Aroostook looking from train window z- 'f See the new duroniotory. i A DILEMMA SOLVED At the beginning of the year, Herr R- ,O7 was uncertain as to his Place. He had known his Place in years past and had always kept his Place, but he was uncertain, this year, as to what his place was. He didn't know whether he ought strictly to adhere to his old U5 Place, or seek some other place. He resolved to keep the Place so familiar to his school days. A A 1 Still he wasn't quite sure whether or not his affections would be thereby misfsjplaced. He pondered long and seriously. If he should place his affections in such a Place, would they be misfsjplaced? On the other hand, it he should fail to place his affections thus, wouldn't he miss his Place? It was a difficult question. He decided that his affections, heretofore sadly misfsjplaced, would be well-placed, if he should place them in the former Place. And now having found his Place, and having placed his affections in the right Place, he is very complacent. . HEARD IN 'PHE CLASS-ROOM Prof. Roberts: 4' What have you been reading Mr. Willey ? Willey: Autobiography of Leigh Hunt, written by himself. 165 ff , W 1 . :-' E ' m mfs x 4 fx Il ,vgf mnj.ll:U1wx XX my X E ft ff 4f,zz32'2i'.'5fi-M E 'T' -' X' - ,4-,,,,, l.4 in ,TMI I 5, ,, . I' E E f d fi M f- f f fff f A!?Y Wl5E?Ew' AS IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN fr xv, X ff Z , R Q 722 Q :L-E ww f 'f f E Q WNXPUW Mm K TU 5, , VQ4 Ai-LE E xx .- , X H1l1l Y5il X' E !WH l'1 l' '1 'm1 '1 ' A Q HIlIlllf'UUfQfT AS IT WAS 166 RATHER PERSONAL fln Am. Historyj Dr. B. : Does climate and physical geography affect people ? Meader: Yes, when New Englanders go to the South they soon become slow and shiftlessf' Dr. B. : Well, how is it when Southerners come North? Does that make any dihcerence ? Meader: Well, I clon't know about that. Chipman: Don't you think that would be a sensible law todav ? Qreferring to Puritan law against women wearing big sleevesj Black: Yes, Eggxactlyf' FRANK Prof. Roberts: 'C Where's Mr. Lincoln today F Student: 't Sick in bed. Prof. H That's good. QAS an afterthoughtj t'By that I mean to say l'm glad he has a good excuse for being absent. W ELL-R EA D Prof. Roberts: Mr. William Dodge, give me the names of two of Scott's novels. Dodge: Well, there's the House of Seven Gables and- I don't know any others. THE INCONSISTENCIES OF SCIENCE Newton's First Law of Motion: HA body at rest remains at rest and continues to move in a straight line. QMcCombej AN ECHO FROM P. G. CLASS OF LAST YEAR Dr. B. ff Mr. Holmes, I see in your answer to my question, 4 Give the motions of the earth,' you have given one of the movements, 'warblingf Now Mr. Holmes, this story about the music of the sphere's is all a fake, and you might as well be disillusioned now as any time. FACTS ARE STRANGE THINGS Professor Simpson: fassisting in Chemistryj H Well, Mr. Young, that does seem rather strange on iirst thought, doesn't it? But different things are ll W'k'7'L'llZ' you know. 167 WHO TOLD BLACK? Dr. Black: Qin Economicsj Mr. Young, man is a social animal is he not ? Young: 'fYes, sir. Dr. Black: ff Eggxaetly, Eggxactly, you need somebody to go with, don't you Mr. Young P Mr. Young blushes. GOOD INTENTIONS Dr. Marquardt: Oh, Miss Connor, I tried to use you like a gentlemanfl ' SPECIFIC . McCombe concludes an article in which he elaborates on the 4' Big Fourf, Prof. Rob. U Mr. McCombe, just what do you mean by the 'Big Four? ' Mr. McCombe: Well, There's Harvard and Yale and Princeton, and most any other college you might mention. GOOD GUESSING Dr. Black: Miss Noyes, who was the Petrach of Germany ? Niss Noyes : ff Erasmus. Dr. Black: 4' No. Miss Noyes: 4' Luther. Dr. Black: 'A No. Miss Noyes: Well, I guess I don't knowfl Dr. Black: 4' That's a pretty good guess. A COMPREHENSIVE OUTLINE Flood gives an outline of the subject Hats Straw hats, felt hats, stiff hats, and soft hats. We are glad that Esther is feeling right 5772071 again. Well, Tess, you weren't going to let B-ll-y cut you out, were you? Well that,s all right, old boy. 168 The Editor wishes to acknowledge his obligation to the following: Miss Addie B. Holway, 107, Miss Clara A. Eastman, 'ogg Miss Rena M. Archer, '07, Miss Alice H. Davies, '06, Miss Clara E. Lord, Boston Art Museum, Mr. Wallace E. Hackett, ,ogg Mr. Karl R. Kennison, '06, Mr, james C. Richardson, 'ogg who have contributed largely to the success of the ORACLE by their drawings, To Arthur G. Robinson, 'o6, Editor of the Echo, who has kindly given us space in his columns for notices and editorials in regard to the ORACLE, To the College, which in the person of the President, loaned us the engraving of Mrs. Dexter and of Foss Hall g And above all, to Mr. Burr F. jones, the Manager of the ORACLE, who has worked very hard in crder to render iinancially possible the new features in our annual, and who has in every way encouraged and aided the Editor in his work. E h 169 April April April April April April April April April April April April April May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May May june june June June June june June june June june june June june IQ-20 .27 ANNALS Faculty gets up steam WV heels begin to turn Dutchy speels on Faust Shorty returns from legislature The slaughter of cats Colby zd, 15, Fairheld High, IO Bishop Fowles lectures on Lincoln Chapel held at high noon Sophomores make official visit at 3 A. M News of the death of Prof. VVarren Colby 4, Taconnet o Colby 21, Lewiston 3 Interclass Meet. 1907 wins. Freshmen disappointed Fire in South College Baseball nine report hard luck in Massachusetts Link has Reveriesn at Y. W. C. A. Social Kents Hill 4. Colby 2nd, 2 Bowdoin trimed II to 6 Glee Club organizes in City Hall Colby surprises the bunch at the Track Meet Address by Rev. VVoodman Bradbury Colby 9, Maine o. Game forfeited The Preacher preaches preachy preaching in the Echo Colby wins cup in State Tennis meet. Bill and Spud Bowdoin 4, Colby 3, at Brunswick South College 1o, North College 3. Umpire cheated German measles prevalent. Cause: Overstudy of Dutch Colby 5, Massachusetts State 1 junior League Meet, Hebron St. Sophomore Dec Portland 9, Colby 1 Maine 3, Colby 2 Colby 3, Bates 2. Same score but different Junior Prom. Seniors receive a reception from Prex Last hope gone. Colby o, Bates one and won Freshman co-ords abolish hazing. Very humane! Dean and three co-ords drowned in Messalonskee Freshmen wake up. 1908 banner on Flag-pole Herr Rideout shins pole. IQO8 banner disappears Exams All over juniors exhibit themselves Prex makes a Baccalaureate Sermon Foss Hall launched 170 June 26 June 27 June 28 lune june june 29 October I7 October 1 25 October IQ October 20 Ootober GI Starched reception in Chemical hall Class Day Climax. Degrees and dinner 28 fevej Band plays to beat the band 28 fall night, Sports celebrate All gone but stragglers I Black moves, cuts in History Black continues to moveg more cuts. Rob roasts the O. E. Class Betts gets his meals at Foss Hall Berry gets a smell of the future in Chem. Lab. Rainy day Maine 16, Colby o. Coburn plays horse with Bangor on Colby gridirons h October 22 QSundayj Prof. Arey goes to church October 2 3 October 24 October 25 Q2 A. MJ October 25 Q5 P. MJ October 26 October 27 October 28 October 29 October 30 October 3K November 1 November 2 November 3 November 4 November 5 November 6 November 7 November 8 November 9 November IO November 1 I Rob lectures in the chapel. Large attendance Betts sings a solo at Chapel. Small attendance reported Sophomores pass the 7Il!Z7lZlJ' .vtrwzmz to the Fresh- men. mzmmr not .vbwzmz enough to make Rose damn Capt. Palmer injured in practice with Coburn Prex issues his fourth annual tiring-the-leaves warning Cuts in Rob, Black and Parmenter Bates trims us 27-o at Lewiston Another sermon Dr. Colby lectures on Architecture in the chapel Co-ord's Colby Day. Mixed classes have cuts General cutting of the corordsg not yet recovered from their Colby Day celebration Freshman Chandler detects an r sound in the pro: nunciation of den hauden. He gets the hee haw, The Freshmen have disappeared! They return from Fairfield in the afternoon for their reception has been postponed. They all get busy the latter part of the P. M. marking out the football field Colby is beaten by Bowdoin 5 to o. The Freshmen hold their reception at last tit has been postponed eight timesl at the home of Miss Cratty. Pres. Young gets there in petticoats under the chaper- onage of his sister classmates. Feathers in the wind at the bricks Nobody gets up in time for church Bill Sherburne buys a box of matches Dutchy lets his Freshmen german class out early in in order to have a tooth extracted AKE convention in N. Y. Mid-term exams Alpha Tau Omega banquet at the Gerald Hebron vs Coburn. Evenybody cuts chapel 171 November November November November November I3 14 I5 16 I7 November 18 November 20 November ZI November 22 November 23 November 24 November 25 November 27 November 28 November 29 November 30 December 1 December 2 December 4 December 5 December 6 December 7 December 8 December 9 December 1 1 December I2 December I3 December I4 December 16 December I9 1905 December 31, 1906 january 3 january 5 January 8 january 9 january IO January I2 january I3 january 1 5 January 16 january I7 january IQ january 20 january 21 january 23 january 24 Honorary junior parts awarded Freshman reception D. U. convention at Utica, N. Y. Pres. White attends teachers, association at Augusta Colby's representative at Oxford writes to the Echo Candy pull at Foss Hall in honor of Mr. Lovett Rob calls meeting to discuss debating club Black gets through assignment in Economics Rules concerning history articles posted ' Prexy leads chapel at Foss Hall Phi Delta Theta house party Phrenologist visits the college Committee of Twenty meets Announcements made of those who made Glee Club 1 Basketball team organized Seniors requested to confer with Prof. Rob Administration Rules published Colby Club meets Phi Delta meets at Burlington Phis entertain local alumni South College fire QMoore and Morgan heroes, Entertainment at Foss Hall Colby wins basketball game from Taconnet Glee Club goes to Vassalboro Athletic Association meets Dr. Black lectures to Y. M. C. Freshman Reading, Women's Division A. lixams begin Freshman Reading, Men's Division Term ends McCleod appears on the horizon Winter term opens. All back but Beck New Hampshire club organizes Gym. work begins Debating Society draws up a constitution Basketball. Colby zo, Taconuet 18 McCleod rising Basketball. Colby 30, Cobu1'n 13. Beck returns from Charleston Freshman boxing buts. Sophomores omcials. McCleod spectator Prex talks on Pres. Harper. Co-ord sociable Co-ords organize Mandolin Club Basketball at Hebron. Colby 23, Hebron 13. Debat- ing Society elects officers. College band organized Certain inmates of Foss Hall havea fishing party at Fairfield. QObject-an invitation to Deke Dancej Measles at Foss Hall Mrs. Lucia Ames Mead addresses student body at chapel, on International Organization Upsilon Beta initiation. Umbrellas and suit cases popular. Mid-winter meeting of trustees 172 January 25 january 26 ilanuary 27 january 29 january 30 january 31 February 1 February 2 February 3 February 5 February 7 February 8 February 9 February IO February 1 r February I2 February I4 February 16 February 2o February 2 1 February 22 February 23 + February 24 February 26 February 27 February 28 March 2 March 3 March 5 March 6 March 9 March ro March I2 March 1 5 March I6 March I7 March 20 March 21 Umbrellas in Dutchy McCleod gives cut in Gym. Musical Clubs concert at Skowhegan Prex leads chapel at Foss Hall AKE dance at Elks Hall Skating l'll1lC on the Campus. Everybody singing Would You Care First debate. Great success Beck's girl in town. Beck runs from laboratory two minutes early ! llrex gives a reception. Everybody there Basketball at Orono. Colby 18, U. of M. 27 McCleod begins to call the roll at Gym. Assistant Manager of Oracle resigns. M. D. Smith elected to take his place Band dead broke. Everybody coughs up. Aroostook and Hebron clubs organized Dean Berry sick. Dr. Crosswell acting dean. Co-ords walk straight Basketball. Colby 20, U. of M. I3 Day of prayer for Colleges. Men's meeting in chapel. Mr. Robert H. Gardiner of Boston, the speaker flhltl at home Second debate. Long program Basketball. Tufts 22, Colby 29. College band holds forth Tennis shoes stay in the Gym. twenty-four hours with- out being locked up Prex talks on deportnrent in chapel Everybody sleeps late. Beck goes to Charleston Beck gives Astronomy class a cut. Basketball. Colby 37, Hebron I7 Masquerade at Foss llall Mctjleod takes dinner with l'rex McCleod disappears. Senior exhibition. Black's electric light bulbs disappear Black gives a lecture on petty thieving ro6 in the shade in Black's room Basketball. Colby 24, Coburn I6 Dramatic club gives Trouble at Opera House Basketball. Colby 30, Taconnet rr Q Big storm. 'Wires down. No lights Black apologizes for lecture. fSee Feb. 281 Beck goes into Shannon and locks the door. Astronomy class gets a cut Basketball. Colby 45, Guilford High I7 Exams begin. Everybody cramming Class basketball. Seniors win Exams close Everybody gone home 173. ff-i...'T.-. If , Z '1 ll Q Q f 2 f 5 1 1 f ' ' I Z 4 4 4 . A V, , I !l.,. , I fl! 1 ADVERTISEMENTS 1 Index to Advertisements PAGE PACL Austin, Lewis K., M. D., 6 International Correspondence American Book Co. 24 Schools Arnold, F. I. X Co. Bessey, M. W., M.D. Bowdoin College Medical Dept Blair, E. C. Blanchard, Frank Boston Cafe Boothby. L. T. K Son, Co. Brown, F. S. Brown, L. K. Central Maine Publishing Co. Clukey Sl Libbey Coburn Classical Institute Colby College Colby Oracle Combination Clothing Co Davis ik Soule Day X Smiley Co. Drake F. E. Dirigo Market Dunn, E. S. -X Co. Dunham, R. Hi Educators' Exchange Elmwood Hotel Electric City Engraving Co. Emery, H. E. Fickett, Edward W. Flood, G. S. Foster, Edmund W. Globe Steam Laundry Goodridge, F. J. Gowell, L. D. Green, S. A. N A. B. Hager's, Ice Cream and Soda Hall's Band LY Orchestra Haskell Hinds, Noble X Eldreclge Horsman Tennis Rackets jones, H. W. Kelley, H. L. Kennison N Newell Kidder, Dr. Eugene H. Learned, G. L. X Co. Lewiston journal Co. Lovejoy, F. A. Merrill N Craig Miller, C. F. Mitchell, H. R. X Son Moore's Book Store Morrill, Dr. P. S. Murray, I. Field Newell, E. H. Otten, Augustus Pomerleau, V. Poinerleau, Chas. Preble, S. L. Purinton, Horace Co. Redington X Co. Simpson, E. L. Smith, H. A. X Co. Smith, Guy A. Soper, L. H. Co. Stevens Arms 81 Tool Co. The Bridge Teachers' Agency The Gerald The Wardwell Emery Co. Ticonic National Bank Waterman, A. A. X Co. Waterville Steam Dye House Waterville N Fairfield Light Co Waterville Steam Laundry Whitcomb N Stanhope Whipple, A. H. Winship Teachers' Agency Wright N Ditson The Man of the Hour Must Dress Up to the M1nute SLU, -ff iimlqfh Ymfi-C ,' N Jani J ri ' ., , ff V ,ww U D x 4 'A l yJ A 4 dx : wil -x -4 '7 Gffijgdmwppg I f ,ZW Ref-X 'X J rfnlfgs Qfigbggfki a Q 'I ax Jmfrgih' fig covvnmlrr n 115' WQC QQJV wg xx gg WM Q I, 'ix 41 JH' w A W jfgfgggxylwtg limi WQXUGL Q69 AE Ky, 4 M Z. 26 Pr, M FX 2 L QU ,Ur ef xiii? Nl? Al Lu XJ!! 1 y X ,J-i DFW if H, ,pon any -fl! Rx! -it X WXGA I E vrl 'iii' 59 lib N I' 7'1 p 3-, 1 in vu ff, W ann, 1 .lan 2 41: SNK 1 0 .Q 'fav Q v NP , 'fav A L1 I x 4, 1 1 K a If 1.1 u X He can End Evelythmff that IS P1xOPhR ln Wearables 'Lt H DU HAMS fCOLBY 862 ATERVILLE - MAINE i fm 1. f.11--- ,, - 15rzj,v, cz-2 ' - ja rs-14,1-k . M .-A? ..w. V, -fx-. . Q9 N- 0 1 5. 7 , 45, A -V L... ., .W , , ,J : ,. W V: , ' , ..M'73?Ew,,q ..-'- -4 , 'S' .:.:-13, -a, .3l..:.:Q,..L, - Vg if x gjw. -137-mrmiya t- x , V , ,,-V -ze., f W .A ' J.. , - v . - W e f5F1i5?33' 223 'Q as V ' '- sf.1-2i.iq4+mfil'. ' . ' ,Q -Q. -,-: hr.,eg5q.1 , .f -- , 4-1 ,ff-fv'v.,'gg:fe vifakica ' rv '-.qg::q.',v,g 1:5 :,-,:m,u -, 51.-: , '.:.:- 435. A,,.1:,:fg:-?i:2'iw,y:,g3 ug: gl ' 4, -.f::.gf::v r A V. '.f,-Tx:-.1 g5:::lQ'f.'f.-,p :1 .' ff.Axis1:-,fE5gSf1:,'-it-1, wks'-',g : , AfP'J: ':t1.':L-,El .1 4 -.. .-:.'-::f,m. '.-5.41: .-'.' -' ':1f-1-- ,..--:1f.'rM'4. if 3- '- -me - . Wai-. 'mr-' fzvlz: 7 ,-92 I- ff w1ff':'7 RM A1 N X 15512 gf'-Q M ,1- ,f.':' '--.LA 65.4, Vt'f:g2g?-sxriih, 2'A'v', ?4 L1 -R-er v 1 Exif ,fffiiif .fff.:1:1ff2fPf f f diem mm 'ts lf:1u,:- 1- 1:-p,.::',, -6 - , -1f5:gg'f5::3-5, , 'fmwg:, f., f:b.',3Qf1,f -fg. -5-:mmf-' ,: Y 3.'1-LT?f:!2!JU,g1v- -f' -mf? ' .f:n3:esfs1...:,.:s 545:-'Ura H:-1-,1qa:f1:s1?4l5ff '- 5: fl'. 14.f3 1ii?- W EE .-i:-,z 1 ?:Zf?ffi2?-fi' X5 iffftii 'ii 371- 6257 -,w,g71.v, -1-f m, .1 f- , -12-,-,Cn-.-.f.,Q2. .4 :' . aw, . .fm 1 55: 21.54-F,-f-f -'- 'Tv a1Qf'f':',-.bw 5' lwf E3?' W -' ' 55,153 11 ,'1. :-.-Q-5-.zvmgdfl , : !gq,. -1,-,.-'fe 1115-f V J. 1:1521 f i,1,j'- '-'fn' - hy. Qi.-,f1'Q.g'4w.422 5 51351 ,iw ff i,f,s1f ,,f.s,', ,'-44 i yff' 5. 'A 'fr' 'I f ,4 -- 053. w , .-W, - ' . .N ,11,,.. -3 Q p,,4!,, .-b w-w:QT..g5,' W 1, i: :xg-. f-,fu-,n 9' ..,. - MT ff' '2fSfflwZ f' - sz.'5:1 D ?3:?zf 'f Q 'Pf11ff'1aff-i .ig'a.. F513 'f i'5uir---f- '1'1'-f wff --7113' I V:-5. 'fs'-11'- 4' dfxflffv 'TEH' o I-sfggQ,f.-5:91, ,.:r:.1-- I 1 y u - - Q-. 3 mes, J u QW '.-igiiifrif ' f--3-w, .,-1 ' j5.i 0 I I 3, ,j . ' .55Q5j .f 2, -a -- fr 1 , ' 1' -wr 7 - '- , H-111.',,' 1:4-1 S ' ::a:1-s-gy my .-Q ,V , , ,f:'3s1:,.- . ' . f, 1,2 g,1gfgz:'f.- -' .ey ' ff Y1k7x'1' . lm za .' -' Y 'fi 49 - A ,H ,f 7: 1' '24,-f ' ',1 rw ' .- ' ' D H P455 Q 22 it f ' f- if- 1.7 fi' :'2'. X 4 , f Y 1211 E ,. ,.-, ls., ' ..,, 35 - . ,- f wap I 13. 'J' if i?iJdl ,F7ff ,f ,:. ,ff J. V-31 !,i17 g5' .. , 1,-,-. . . W . e -1 -2 -f , W, 4' mr-' ' f I f .. w 1 ' i 2 fn if , -, Hi I -j .151 F I' ,Qlfrfi E f .Lf -f -J ,.f:-Z gzqn' 5 Mfr '..ll1fgW 'd 7 a uv x -' 1 y L ..,1. xiu: eu 'Y' 'fx f uf li QQX ......-l . ' . ' gg 7 ' 77 ' b n C o 0 7 The Finest House in Maine io minutes from Waterville by Electric Cars connecting with all trains East and West 'T' Obe Gentle mv. iff. zssmumfy, aampmrof Fairfield, Me. Prifuzzie Bzzlh in Ewefjl Room Roomx Single or on Suiie RA TES 3.2.00 pw' day and up Rediugtou il Co. Fumitu e Waterville, lvlei Czzrpofs, Fmlherf, C.'rockezjf, mm' IW1zf!1'eJ.re,r P. J. Goodridge Cit Optieian 104 Maiii Street Waterville, Maine Dealer in Wntrhf.r, Clorflar, Jequoffjf, and Si!we1'wn1'e ' MURRA YUS' SPA At the Spa, located at 15S Main St., iopposite Waterville Savings Hanky we furnish meals ancl lunches of every description at all hours. Our Order Menu embraces all the clloicest viancls to be found in the market MURRA Y'S 5 55' Lmzcb Room just across the street at our 5 and io cent Lunch Counter you will End anything pertaining to a l.,i-'glut Lunch Please give us a call. W'e endeavor to please you. J. Fields Murray fTl1e Tra1.fcIm .f Frinndl I Proprietor H. A. SMITH 31 CQ. THE MUP-TO-DATE SHOE STORE Wfzfiz Walk Ofuers G0 ON Trozzblf GOES OFF We lmfve them fir Men and Wofzzen Dawzk 599 Sozzle - I fzfuefmzmf Brokers OFFICES . I' nzcxargganizs rm e e uiding, ost , 11 f d fi 10 E h B I B IV a Lnwxo Mains M Building, Walervxlle, M l I Fam? Haske1l s Grocerzes 128 Main Street Prompt Service B 6 S t G O O d S W aterville Maine E. H. NEWELL CONFECTIONER Hozfze-Made Czmrlief and Ice Cream zz Specially TELEPHO 111 1 Get Your Lunch at the I 3 l BOOTS SHOES l Q 6 Neally a11dPr0mpfly l Bert in Town lv l R 66 Temple Street P7'0f3l'j5m WATERVILLE, ME. l Educators' Exchange Supplies Teachers for all Grades of WVorlc. Nomiuates Candi- dates Directly to School Ollicials C. WILBUR CARY, lVl2mager Y. M. C. A. Bzzilnfifrg P PORTLAND, MAINE - Whlu u W ut a Barrel of Flour that ll W hrtcomb St Stem hope L yu will Please you tw NELV mm' SECOND-HAND mi. F U R NIT URE D It pleases the woman Ei2e1iEe1E1tIiZ1LSNS who is hard tu please HA INES' HLOCK,,uext door to P. O. SC WEFHONE me-,Q 58 Temple Street VVATERVILLE - MAINE WATERVILLE - MAINE iv Pllb!Z.Jf161'J of . The VVaterville Evening Mail The Narraguagus Times The YVaterville Mail The Jonesport Enterprise The KValdo County Commercial The Hancock County Press The Milo VVeekIy journal P1'r11n'r.v of The Colby Echo The Coburn Catalogue The Colby Bulletin The XV. H. S. Nautilus The Coburn Clarion Etc. The Central fllaine Publz'filz'f1g Company 120 Main Street VVATERVILLE, ME. The Eafierfe.. Publz'f!1z'ng Company Main Street CHERRYFIELD, ME. We cater especially to job work of a high order of excellence, such as college, academy and high school papers, catalogues, and booklets, where it is presumed that tasty work is indicative of the character of the institution. Booklets for summer hotels in Maine, summer resorts, camps for boys, etc., receive our prompt and careful attention. Estimates cheerfully given on printing anything from a label to a novel. Address all communications to T HERBERT C. LIBBY WHfK7'7JTlT!,, Jllfzfffe V L. T. BOQTHBY R SON CO. Clncarpuraisdj GENERAL INSURANCE W. A. Bootllby, Pres. U M. F. Bartlett, Treas. Frank XV, Alden C. A. Allen Wlillialn R. Campbell I24 Main Street, XVATERVILLE, INIAINE FRAANK BLANCHARD Dealer in Pianos, Organs, Bicycles, Ph o n og' rap fu, Jewing Ma chin es, etc. 150 MAIN S'1'RE1s'1' WATERVILLE, MAINE LEWIS K. AUSTIN, M. D. Diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Exclusively 143 Main Street, opp. Pulsifer Block VVATERVILLE Telephone 107-12 MAINE OfHce Hours: 9 to 12 A.M.. 1 to 5 P.M. Dr. Eugene H. Kidder D E N TIS T l Crown and Bridge Work Porcelain WOI'k Tel.134-4 moon BUILDING, wATnRv1LLE, MAINE GUY A. SIVIITI-I ..Erniiat.. SAVINGS BANK BUILDING WATERVILLE, MAINE Clothing Cut Over Edmund W. Foster Mercban t Tailor Repairing done in the neatest lll3H'l1E!l'. 50 MAIN STREE1' WATERVILLE, ME. Telephone 65-z M. W. BESSEY, M.D. Office X42 Main Street, Pulsifer Block . Residence 72 Elm Street Hours 8 to io A. M. Evenings 1 to 3 P. M. Sundays 2.30 to 3.30 P. M. E. C. B L A I R ' S HAIR DRESSING PARLORS Artistic Hair Dressing for College Men. Foul' Chairs. First-Class Work Guaranteed. Facial Mas- sage a Specialty . . . BOOTBLACA' STAND CONNECTED 170 MAIN STREET ' elby College G70 Sl gfi CCJl.l3X' COLLEGE has H.1'CglS tration of 2.1.1. Students may K :ew study for either the A. B. or B. S. degree, and for the A. 13. degree may present Z1 Modern Language in place of Greek. 1I'l'he annual ex pense varies from 18200 to 95300. The men and women are educated in sepa rate divisions. 'l'hey have different Chapel services and a double set of honors and prizes. f For lnformation and Catalog Address President C. L. hite 33 C0!1EgL'AUE7lIlP WATER VILLE, MAINE vii G. L. Learned 81 Co. I Ll m I9 ers Steam 8639 Ho! Wdf67'FZZZ67'S Dealers in all kinds of Plumbing and Steam Fitters' Supplies Agent for ELECTRIC HEAT REGULATORS- 72 Main Street WATERVILLE, ME 1 For Pure Confections go to i 7. 1, , 5 J agar 5 We Serve Delicious COLD SODA 5 and Smooth, Rich ICE CREAMS 5 Cul 'flowers 113 Main St. 5' h 3, Waterville I 1 HALL,S' Military Band and Orchestra THE POPULAR BAND OF MAINE R. B. HALL Leader and Soloist 168 MAIJV STREET We Cater for Your Trade at the Dirigo Market Where you will always Gnd ou lmncl a Choice Line of Groceries, Meats, Fish, arpd Proigisiorgs Special Prices given to CLUBS 8: 1-'ICNICS Whitcomb 8z Cannon ESI Main Street Waterville - Maine TA dollar saved is 0 bol- lm' maoe You can save that dollar and more, too, by having your Clothes Cleaused, Dyed and Repaired, M a t t r e s s e s Cleaused and Made O v e 1' a t th e Waterville Steam Dye House C. W. Walsh 8: Co., Proprs Corner CDI7Z71Z07l and Front Sfrcm WATERVILLE - MAINE Telephone Call 88-2 G d LV h L w Price: P pr Ar: 1 H. L. KELLEY A Complete Line of Verioclicals and Magazines, Stationery and School Sup- plies, Baseball, Tennis, and Sporting Goods, NV all Paper, Etc. Picture Framing A Specialty Car. Alllill mm' Tmzplz' SU. Wdf67'UZ'lf6 - MHZ-726 .S.F!00zz' C0 Shippers and Dealers in all kinds of ,Autl11'aCite and Bituminous Also Wood, Llme, Cement, Hay, Straw, and Drain Pipe COAL YARDS AND OFFICE Mazn E99 Pleasant Sis Orders Carefully Filled and P1-omprly Attended to OFFICES: xv. T. srnxx AI T x co. - ' ' - AITHUI DAX IAU 'V ,' ' ALIEN lc POLLAI D XV: l -I ' 9 4 I 1 7 1 C 60 Mzun St1eet E. L. GOVE College Avenue 1 Q V 83 X ater Sheet , f J l ms ow GIIIILIP Straw illaunhrg 52 U. IU. ili1'u111i11glia111, lklrnprirtm' QQ PORTLAND, MAINE C555 26, 28, 30, 32, 34 and 36 Temple Street S PROMPT ATTENTION SA TJSFA c TION G UA RANTEED JOHN T, MATTHEWS, Agent for Colby College Q NJ2Q Q1 Waterville Cf? Fairfield 3 l Railway and Light Company Union Gas and Light Company Are Prepared to Furnish Electrical 5 Service of all Kinds at Reasonable Rates RALPH J. PATTERSON, Gen. Mgr. 116 Main Street WATERVILLE 52 QWENQSQQVSMQJ M W xi Nlooios Book Store 'ver Students Coming to Wate1'ville will find at my Store the only Complete and Correct List of Text Books used at the College Agenf for Spazzlzlifzgfv Celebrated ATHLETIC GOODS fllilerzgex Bought Sold l17lIZRL'71f6'lf REMEMBER THE PLACE lVloore's Book Store 154 Mczzkz Street WA TER VILLE, ME. xii SIDNEY A. GREEN ANDREW B. GREEN . . A. E. G R E E N A iz fhnzciie and BZ'fZlWZf7ZOMJ CCAL The Celebrated Philadelphia and Reading Hard WVhite Ash Coals a Specialty HA RD AND SOFT XVOOD EDGINGS,KINDL1NGS,E'l'C. WA TER VILLE, M E. Down Town Ofnce Ofhce and Yarcl Corner Market Telephone 2-3 251 Main St. The Titonic ational Bank OF WA TER VILLE g. Capital jgt1oo,ooo Surplus and Profits 4o,ooo Offers to depositors every facility consistent with safe and conservative banking. Makes discounts daily. Sells New York and Boston Exchange at reasonable rates. Furnishes Foreign letters of Credit and Bills of Exchange at short notice GEKUIRGE lioui-E1.I.E, President CLARENCE A. Leiolrrox, Vice-President HAsc.x1.x. S. I-IALL, Cashier DIRECTORS Charles W'eutworth Joseph Eaton George K. Boutelle Clarence A. Leighton VVilliam T. Haines xiii ater ille Steam aundr 145 MAIN STREET Sing a song of laundry work, Sing it loud and clear If youlve sought for tirst-class work, Sought it far and near, Stop at once and save your time, Vain will be your quest, Let the laundry do your work That will do it best A Satisfaction Shop H. B. BETTS . R. W. LYONS Agent: hr Colby A Welycome Gift in any Home The Most Popular College Songs :B .50 50 New College Songs .50 Songs of ALL the Colleges 1.50 M Songs of the WESTERN Colleges 1.25 Songs of the EASTERN Colleges 1.25 Songs of the Flag and Nation .50 100 New Kindergarten Songs 1.00 School Songs with College Flavor .go New Songs for College Glee Clubs .50 , New Songs for Male Quartettes .50 Songs of the University of Pennsylvania 1.50 I5 Songs of the University of Michigan 1.50 Songs of Washington and Jefferson College 1.25 Songs of Haverford College 1.25 New Songs and Anthems for Church Quartets CE!c11c1z 1V1f11zber.vj Each .10 to .ju At Bookstores, Music Dealers, or the Publishers Hz'nd5, Nobfe Eldffedge 31-33-35 West 15th Street NEW YORK CITY xiv A II PURIIXIOIN I rl L HORACE IURINIOIN I ,Homme Pwmlon Company INCORPORATED General Confnzcfors and Mafzzgfacfufers of Bffzkvi Yards at Wate1'ville, Skowhegan, Augusta and Mechanic Falls HEAD OFFICE, VVATERVILLE, MAINE Telephone 75-5 f A C N Personal attention gi College Graduates are to requests for teacl constantly in demand l I'ROlN'll'T! COUll'llEOU5 l FAIR l 0 r , if , lf mslyqa Oeacbers Agency OLDEST TEACHERS' AGENCY IN NEW ENGLAND SEND FOR CIRCULARS AND BLANKS 20 A Bmfwz Stnfet Long Dixmfzm Telnplmnf BOSTON, MASS. WILLIAM F. JARVIS ALVIN F. PEASE X, ,fm ,,,,,l . we .,,... -C ,A ,, Ce CAC J XV '1BugIQuur Qlwatnm Svuiia nf EE. Sv. Bunn 8: Gln Nfl Eg:-ing 1g1'l'55ilIQ Qufiillilllj iKP.1,1EIil'ilIg E Svilhrr 571. 1'ElHairruiIIP, fllilainr XV1 OBI1, Thr Evaniirnl Ullman nnhhg mth ntgllsh Sllllf-l1ll1lHfB muh Shirt-iuuint Suits, in Silk mth Qlnttnn Anh surly littlr prizes! Elhqfll Delight gnu Euerggthinig a ztuhrnt umurn for rnrrrrt hrrziaing. at rnllrgc, hnmc, nr in xmratinn arhmvll-3 mrrg Qin, Bepartmrnt Svtnrv Waterville, Mainz Clothing that is made right and sold at right prices is 'lKir Chbz1un'1 H A N D M A D E Have you been buying clothing that gets out of shape, looses its color, and looks faded aftera few months' wear? You are just the man we want to see. We can sell you asuit-one that'll look well as long as therels anything left. of it. Buttons won't come off- color will stand, and it will hold ltS shape. fry us and if we don't please you, we will not ask you to come again. Combination Clothing Company Up-I0-date Clothiem' and Furlzzkbem 46 Nlain Street WATERVILLE, MAINE J. B. CYIIIIJDS, LIAXNAGER xvii f N L. H. SOPER COMPANY Wafervz'lle's Relzkzble Dry Goods Store 'iargest ana 'lowest Ajlriceb womens Outfitters in Central maine 32 .9 .9 3. 'Fry 6 o o 6 s, ffieaby-to-wear Garments, Ftlillinery and Carpets All A .9 L. H. SUPER COMPANY WATERVILLE MAINE K J E. H. EMERY Bbq Eailot A full line of Foreign and Domestic Woolens in Suitings, Trouserings and Overcoatings. Particular Attention Given to College Trade. Prices as Low as The Lowest S6lfZtffdCfZb7Z Guaranteed 12 Main Street WATERVILLE, ME. TELEPHONE 29-4 XIX S. L. PREBLE BEST EQUIPPED STUDIO IN THE STATE FINEST WORK FAIREST PRICES Sixty-fix Ma in Sffeei WATERVILLE MAINE STE V ENS -is - -my 'X --: j,5.g,.' 2 ---Qs, 1311 sqgse, A- A' f' git All our Riflesi and Shotguns possess the lake- tional property of merit embodied in the deservedly popular ST E V li N S prorlucts. 'l his is especially desirable in a small arm, that, by taking clown, can be carried in a trunk, grip, 01' small package. Our line: Rifles, Pistols, Jbotguns Don't fail to send for illustrated catalog. It is indispensible to all shooters, and is mailed FREE upon receipt of 4 cents in stamps to pay postage. A11 Dealers Handle our Goods lil I 1 J. STEVENS ARMS G TOOL CO. P. O. Box 4302 CHICOPEE FALLJ, MAJJ. clown feature, which is an 'ndcli - I-I Q aiiiggiiti' ' ' fikihlziaia 'E' ' XX Manufacturers of Fine I ' ' xg: Q : , il ' I I , if E ATHLETIC Goons -. - - ' ' i , . , V E 7g4'w3' ln.nl5f:i:l!h Outfitters to all the leading Colleges and Schools in New England. our TENNIS h 'iililjllilllflfi ' xA an Tiampions up .L . ' P CKETS dCl ' l' TFNINIS - 225, 1 BALLS: are used by tl1e:leading players and nearly every Club lu the United l'il2il' States and Canada. Baseball, Football, Skates, Hockey, Gymnasium, Tobog- x gans, Sweaters, Jerseys, in fact every- llg thing pertaining to Athletics ' I I SEND FOR CATALOG ll WRIGHT 6 DITSON Il y 344 Washington Street Mmm BOSTON, : : MASS. si - With Exlrnytlgntrc Strings xxi lukey 85 ibby C . ..,S-L We Present a Line of Surpassiug Versa- tility in both De- signs and Fabrics in the Varisty Top Coats, Rain Coats, and Varsity Suits of The Celebrated Hart, Schaffner it Marx Make 355-.S -qsecd ft fekgfff 'X' Ms, 7 Mm YV .1 ,Mil gg' qw qui -'l' 'r K ' ,WZ an UA,,.f12'4-sw? 6lQv?.,,, ' 'P 1 X , ag? ,L 1-312' Q 'ina ji, x lib. , v -Q ,X I 4 - ., - 1 ., Q ' 151-f5'fIs'Lrf-tree., W- ST 'EV-?Q'ifix:?,?Z?i51l'Ni'fQ 4' - - ti mi fumsvgq ' 5-sweat ' '1-u3 42:.12i'g:-, .,' F , 7 -41 F.: f .,, 'i. Qgigijf' 1'i,,.' ,Zg2'?:a, ' EQ 'L 54 , V. .Eg I mN5hEZ5ii47H Wmwmii V 12-W 1 V - 'fit 'ff vp .. i- J, L l il I ,H y ,mall X it S wtf YQ- K - -if-ET' a:'.:?l:-. '-. 9 J , J E551 Fl- f A' v Q, ,.,, X154 if f . me ul 51 ,rg ,H iq, ' , '5v x 'A ', Q gl W. Y -L I NW w J P, K 1 Y -3382. 0 A it 2 7 l A w fx' sei n 6 ,6 affix if l .- xi qi' 4, i , V . Q:-EX s Q J 2: gm , ' f x x 1 f ', Q R Q V Q.. ,M fr X f ,4 , 11213. 1 ,M 1 J.,-1 K Ev? Q6 3' ,T x , 'f 8 I 453,16 r'7 'S :A T 'I M ff K 41 f 4 ,I S fl 'I f 5 s ff 7 in K f fi ,vs ff 31 X Mfg r ' ft I...--.4 . ul-W , J IW 1 l v..:2a.f wwf' 1 l W sd f fri. . 1141 I' Y' -ii-:r f at twi . V' . JS f l?m9s 955 1 rl-. -WQQP 53 i'llfli'f,!f1 J f It QA ' 0 .ft:i,t. '39 K N Q, v.1,jv My x l K u W CopyHgn it ,3b :.'f 'i ' t IQO6 by PiarrSchaHher if hlnrx . . tg? We are also showing a very elaborate line of Coats, Suits, Milli' uery, Linen Suits, Embroidered Linen Dresses, Muslin Dresses, Lace Waists and Lingerie Waists that for Elegance of Style and Chicness and Popularity of Price cannot be Duplicated '93 CLUKETEJ9 LIBBY CO. THE COR NER STORE WA TER VILLE, MAINE xxii Augustus Otten Bread, Cake, and Pastry Of all kinds NVedding Cake a Specialty Boston Butter and Toast Crackers, Soda, Graham, Milk and Cream Biscuits 39-41 Temple Street WATERVILLE - - MAINE Elmwood Hotel M odern and Up - to - Dale Rooms Single or en Suite with Private Bath Rates: 32.50 to 55.00 Per Day F. A. Lovejoy Dealer in Watch es, Clocks, jewelry, l Silverware, Optical Goods. l The Finest Line to be Found in Waterville Fine Watelt Repairing A SPEC IAI TY F 86 Mai71 Street N Waterville ,Maz'ne l xxiii E. L. Simpson Successor to E. M. Abbott Wholesale and Retail Confectioner Fruit, Nuts, lCe'C1'eam, and Aera.teclWate1's. Chocolate work a spe- cialty. Prompt attention given to C A 'l' E R I N G 1 22 Main St. Waterville Ma1ne Telephone, 308-I2 Three Reasons IVHY COLE YSTUZPEJVIKS' YYCADE AT ZVIILLEKCS FIRST-Because the H. 81 VV. CI GA R has the reputation of being the Best xo-Cent Cigar in the City SECOND-Because they can End the Larg- est Assortment of Pipes and Smokers' Articles in the City THIRD-Because we carry the Largest Assortment of Domestic and Foreign Cig- arettes Ilast of Boston You Know the Place, 164 fWH7'7l Si. C. F. MILLER, IW'0j5. Kennison Sc Newell PRACTICAL Paifefers and Paper Hangers Wall Paper and Room Mouldings 76 We5'f Ykwyble Slifer Waterville Maine Tel. 133-5 V. POIVIERLEAU THE LEADING TONSORIAL PARLORS OF TI-IE. CITY Try our Electric Facial Massage Five First-class Workmeli 85 Maz'n S tree! INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS SCRANTON, PENN. W. B. BLANCHARD Rzpreuntaliue P. O. Box 214 WATERVILLE MAINE I-I. W. JONES, OPTICIAN 60 MAXN STREET WATERVILLE MAINE Tel. 1 17-3 n HORSMAN TENNIS RACKETS For 1906 STAND FIRST . In Design. workmanship A: Playing qualities and durability atleast: me-2' ,ifilllllill n , - . ul-lm Vi J uw 'Q H V - i f- f r:sssat..'f1f H:::'5-,::'1' a. ' ' :anti Tm:::.t.:E - L' 1 By the verdict of experts they are xx li:5g. unrivalled in balance. stringing and finish. ,fy HT- ms.. , rex , 5 .gg . . . jf 5 5 1- ' 5 I Sf' ' '- f I Ef. a5- 'gg - s --: . We , T . ' 1 1' ' -vii-l I 2 Elqlnlqg .. -En: -f-.-Ezzzigq:-i i 4 -.2-fi iq r I- 1 -In y YI, L nuun I I Y I ll I , , 1 I 1 JL I ' X N 1 1 I 4 l'l LL x ex i A r r 1 I S ,fl ,,. NEW MODELS The Centaur Double frame and mesh The .Seabright Carzehandle The A-I Model Patent central .Stringing The B Model Extra narrowshape The Hyde Patent knotted .Stringing The Horsman Expert, Cane Handle Send for illustrated catalogue with Lawn Tennis Handbook containing Official Rules, decisions, etc. 354 Broadway, New York Sole U. S. Selling Agents for the famous F. H. Ayres Championship Tennis Balls approved by U. S. N. L. T. A. S T U D E T S ' TB ,J HEADQUARTERS gl I pil T vt.. mf .1 semi f . 5 la W ll f f m l ,- ' y mm 'W ll fy ' ' ' For fine CUSTOM-MADE CLOTHES We pay special attention to the CUT- TING and FITTING of CLOTHES for M? STUDENTS. mmm 'll 1 .JL Sl' , 1, 4- A . Large stock of line Woolens to select from ' - A Z 3 , Egaaglllkrn The latest STYLES in PATTERNS and - , all Q5 mln I -- gf CUT. At POPULAR PRICES .,,..,G,.T X Pressing and repairing neatly and promptly done L, R, BRQWN, 95 Main st, Cash Merchant Tailor AMERICAN B OOK C O. Publishers of SCHOOL and COLLEGE TEXT BOOKS. BOSTON OFFICE: Q3 Summer Streel BOSTON RZj7'ES!7lftZfi'ZlE for IW1zz'1ze W. L. BVONNEY, jPa7'kP!are F. S. BROWN ELECTRICIAN I-Ieadqzmrferr hr Edison Phono- graphic Recordr 59 Supplies House and Mill Wiring a specialty A fully equipped repair Shop for Bicycle and Sulky repairing. A full line Sundries. Dealer in Elec- all kind s, trical Equipments of Lamps, Shades, Fixtures of all Des- criptions. Locks Repairecl and Keys Fitted '. '. '. '. '. TELEPHONE 108-4 5 7 Temple Street VVATERVILLE MAINE VV9.11C1'VlllC M3lHC F. J. Arnold O. G. Springfield F. J. ARNOLD 6 CO. Eillfarowate Nails, Iron and Steel, Carriage Woodwork, Stoves and Furnaces, Glass, Paints and Oils, Milk Supplies, Black Powder and High Explosives. Doors, Sash, and Glazed Win- dows '. '- '- '- '- '- T Tinsmith, .Steam and Water Fitters Waterville 'Maine DAY 81 SIVIILEY CO. CONTRA CTORJ' A ND B UILDERJ' Job Work and General Repairing by Competent Help Ruhberoid Roofing Dealers in Lumber and Aroostook Shingles Colonnial Paint 10675 Pure Shop 37 Front St., Opp. City Hall TELEPHONE 1-46-4 Waterville Me. XXVI Lewiston journal Company 5? AH Prim ting Depczrimen I QFWQQQQQSIQY DQUQQPQQPQQ QQQSQQSCEEQG QQEDQYZDQSIIQQQCQQQ E e fl L Street Lewis'o21 M3i11G xxvii my fi K, THE CUTS. . IN THIS BOOK WERE MADE BY THEELECTRIC CITY ENGRAVING C0 BUFFALO , N Y. HAL V 0NE- MADE F-on u.s.NAvAL. ACADEMY DR. P. S. MERRILL I K Colby, 94,2 Extends an invitation to the students and friends of Colby College, to call any time at his oliice at I48 MAIN STREET, to examine his Static Machine and X-Ray Apparatus, Electrical Vibrator, Vapor Massage and Nebulizer for the lungs, and 500 Candle Power Lencoclesce-nt lamp F. E. DRAIQE LIVERY AND I-Lxcli STLXBLE 71 P1,laAs,xN'i' STRIQET Bowdoin ollege Phiral Evparimrni The Eighty-seventh Annual Course of Lectures will begin October 25, 1906, and continue eight months. Four courses of lectures are required of all who rnatriculate as first-class students. The courses are graded and cover Lectures, Recita- tions, Laboratory VVork, and Clinical Instruction. The'thircl and fourth year classes will receive their entire instruction at Portland, where excellent clinical facilities will be afforded at the Maine General Hospital. For catalogue apply to ALFRED MITCHELL, M.D., LJEAN BRUNSWICK, MJXINE, June 1906 Seniors intending to teach can secure the best service by enrolling with T he Teachers' C0-0penzz'i'veArs0ez2z!i07z . of N efw Efzglezfm' 8 Beacon St. BOSTON - MASS. EDNVARD W, FICKETT, Proprielor Tfresb Flowers ano Tina Tfloral fflksigns Tor fllfair Tprices Can always be secured from H. li. Mitchell Sr Son CI'l'Y f4IiEEN1'IOlTSP:S Store. 113 Main St. Waterville, Maine xxix .fX.fX!3-!T The Bridge Teachers' Agency 1 C. A. Scott E3 Co.. Prop's 2A Beacon Street. Boston College, Academic, 8? High School work a Specialty Jend for Agency Manual uf-X-fvxf-X.f'x.f'x, .1 1. .1illIl..iIh111 ,11 111 1. .1 ..1ln1 11illIi11ill11, 11 ..1lh1., .1ll!11,1ll11.. .1 .1 11. .11 1.1 1, ..1 1. 11. 1.1rIiI1,11I1u1, 11 11 1... .11 1111. ,..1llh1.111. .1 111 1. 1,1 You can always buy at reasonable prices, First- Class Native and Western Meats of all kinds, Groceries, Vegetables, and Fish of all Varieties at the We make a Specialty of Catering to the College Clubs 2 Stores MAIN 8 TICONIC STREETS CHARLES POMERLEAU XXX
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.