Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY)

 - Class of 1901

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Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1901 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 228 of the 1901 volume:

5 I 0 f I V l E f . Q mfiibjf 514 G' QL it E :JS 43, 6 + xD gg I sy EB is M fl: I ,X Jvc -:V f W A ate. ORPQ 19 Q 1 N u I ,QA ' x Y 1 THADDEUS ORVILLE WHITNALL TO THYXDDELIS OQVILLE WHITNPILL THE GENEIQOLIS DZXTIQON Ol: OLH2 LIINIIVEIQSITY WE DEDICTXTE THIS BOOK BOAIQD Ol: EDJITOIQS LIOTT, Eclizor-in-Olziqf' . WILLIAM THOMAS HENRY,A JR., Business Mcmagev FSSGCIZYTES JOHN AMBLER WILLIAMS ARTHUR J. EVANS FRED CURTIS WHITFIELD I I DDEF7-XCE TU DENT DLlDliCElll0hS HFC never all That their CdilOi's COUlCl ClC5lI'C. Such WOFR NIS alwags to be 5LllJOl'Clll1GlCQl to FCQLIIGI' SClXO0l W0l'R, and l'lXC I'CSUll' of SLIlJ0l'ClllXE1l'l0IX must appeal' in ThC finished Dl'OQlLlCl'. IT is The Th0ughT That This fClCl is I'CGllZ6Cl, Ellid CluC GHOWGIXCC ITNGGC, bv fI'lClXClS in ORG out of College, that has .encouraged the editors of the l90I SRL- VIYXGLINDI G5 llXClJ lXElV6 STI'lVClX NNlTlX llXC I1NLIlllTUClll1OLlS Cl6lElllS of its preparation. , ln placing this book into the hands of the public, it is the desire of TNG l30ClI'Cl to HCRIXOWIRGQC VGlLlCCl GSSlSlCllXC6 fI'OI1X lXLlm6l'OLIS fi'l6l'ldS, ClI1Cl 6SD6ClClllV to l'6lKl6l' TIXGRRS to TlXC ElPllSTS, lVl6SSl'5. CICOPQC S. ivleidt, CX. '0l, of New VOFR, Glifl CIEJOFQ6 H. Smllli, '0l, GHG Wllllam GLllll6lX, '97, of l'lGITXllTOI1, whose LIIXCCEISIIWQ G6VOl'l0l1 to the WOFR l5 mElI1lfCSl' fl'0m COVCP to COV6l'. Colgate University, Hamilton. N. Y., ADriI, 1900. THE LINIVEIEQSITY COIQDOIQZXTION JAMES B. COLGATE, New York GEORGE W. STEDMAN, ESQ., Albany PROFESSOR PI-IILETUS B. SPEAR, D. D., Hamilton REV. ABRAHAM C. OSBORN, D. D., Columbia. S. C. REV. EDWARD LATHROP, D. D., New York REV. WIIILIABI T. HENRY, D. D., Elmira HOSMER H. KEITH, ESQ., Sioux Falls, S. D. THOMAS P. KINGSFORD, Oswego PROFESSOR ALBERT S. BICKMORE, PH. D., New York EDWARD M. GROUT, ESQ., Brooklyn JOHN C. EHOYT, Utica WILLIS E. FORD, M. D., Utica A THOMSON KINGSFORD, Oswego EDWIN H. RISLEY, ESQ., Utica ' FRANCIS T. PIERCE, Hamilton GEORGE W. DOUGLASS, Brooklyn ' DANIEL W. SKINNER, Hamilton REV. HENRY H. PEABODY, D. D., Rome JAMES C. COLGATE, ESQ., New York REV. JAMES W. FORD, D. D., Philadelphia, Pa. REV. HENRY M. SANDERS, D. D., New York REV. 'ROBERT G-. SEYMOUR, D. D., Philadelphia. Pa. GARDNER COLBY, Orange, N. J. 7 AUSTEN COLGATE, Orange, N. J. OFIEICEIQS Or THE COQDOQHVION JAMES B. COLGATE, President ' JAMES C- COLGATEA SGCFGUWY WILLIAM M. WEST, Treasurer EXECLITIVE COVIIVIITTEE EDWA RD LATIIROP ' ALBERT S. BIOKMORE HENRY M' SANDERS JAMES C. COLGATE GARDNER COLBY H g 6 GEOR. PHILI1 XEXX'T JAMES XYILLI SYLVI JOSED LI NIVEIQSITY IZZXCLI LTV GEORGE EDMANDS MERRILL, D. D., WILLIAB1 HENRY CRAWSHAW, A. M., President Professor of English Literature, . Dean of the College Faculty PHILETUS BENNETT SPEAR, D. D., Professor Emeritus Of Hebrew and Latin JOHN GREENE, PH' D-f Professor of Latin NEWTON LLOYD ANDREWS, PH. D., LL. D., W N C D D . . . ILLIANI EWTON LARKE . . Professor of the Greek Language and Literature, A ,R D ' 1 J. J. Joslin Professor of Christian Theology Lecturer on the History of Art , , ROBERT WEBBER MOORE PII. B. JAMEs DJORFORD TAYLOR, LL. D., , ' l , , , , Professor of French and German Professor of Mathematics X , ALBERT PERRY BRIGI-IAM, A. M., WILLIAM HALE 'MAYNARD' D' DW ' P Professor of Geology and Natural History, Professor of Ecclesiastical History Cumtol, of the Museum SYLVESTER BURNHAM, D' D-, - . I DAVID FOSTER ESTES, D. D., P1'0f9SS0F Of Old Testament I11l5G1'P1'G'0U'0l0Uf Professor of New Testament Interpretation Dean of the Theological Faculty Liblm-mn JOSEPH FRANK MCGREGORY, A. M., F. C. S., ARTHUR JONES, D. D., Professor of Chemistry and Mineralogy Perry Professor of Homiletics 7 5 R? Univergjtv RALPH WILDIER THOMAS, A. M., FRANK LUo1Us SHEPARDSON, A. M., Jfacultp L93 Professor of Rhetoric and Public Speaking, Principal of Colgate Academy Registrar GEORGE RICKER BERRY, PH. D., Professor of Semitic Languages WIELBOURNE STUART READ, PH. D., Professor of Philosophy CLEMENT DEXTER CHILD, PH. D., Associate Professor of Physics CHARLRS VVORTHEN SPENCER, A. B., FRANK CARDIAN EWART, A' Mg s Pl'0f6'SS01' of History Associate Professor of Modern Languages L S s 1. PHIL Boi' P il l ni yr ll ological and Xml lS3S-lf U. Colgiitv sity lion Colgan- 1 CCLLECE FACULTY GEoReE EDMANDS MERRILL, ll Il, P1-esideuzf A. B., Harvard University, '69, A. M., Harvard University, '72, D. D., Colby University, '96 Born at Charlestown, Mass., Dec. 19, 1846. Prepared for college at Cambridge High School. Gradu- ated from Harvard University, 1869. Studied Theology at Newton Theological Seminary, 18621-72. Pas- tor of First Baptist church, Springfield, Mass., 1872-77. Pastor of First Baptist church, Salem, Mass.. 1877-85. Pastor of First Baptist church, Colorado Springs, Colo., 1885-87. Pastor of Immanuel Baptist church, Newton, Mass., 1890-99. Traveled in Europe during 1872 and during 1885. Traveled in Southern Europe, Egypt and Palestine during 1897. Trustee Newton Theological Seminary. Member of Execu- tive Committee of Foreign Missionary Union. Director of Northern Baptist Education Society. Author of Crusaders and Captivesji 1890, The Story of the Manuscripts,'i 1881 g The Reasonable Christ, 1893, and 4' The Parchments of the Faithf' 1894. f PIHLETUS BENNETT SPEAR, lb If 11' ' A. B., Colgate University, '36, D. D., Colby University W Professor Emeritus Qf Ifcbrew and Latin Born at Palmyra, N. Y., May 733, 1811. Prepared for college at Ostrander's Mathematical School and V Palmyra High School. Graduated from Colgate University, 1836. Studied Theology at Hamilton The- ological Seminary 1S36-38. Classical Instructor, Colgate University, 1835-37. Instructor in Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. Colgate University, 1837-38. 'Pastor of First Baptist church, Palmyra, N. Y.. 1838-40. Associate Professor of Hebrew, Colgate University, 18-172-50. Professor of Hebrew and Latin, Colgate University. since 1850. Treasurer of Colgate University, 1864-88. Secretary of Colgate Univer- sity Board for ten years. Secretary of Educational Board, Colgate University, for ten years. Librarian, Colgate University, for iive years. 9 R .J K N .1'f 111113111 from Yxnlir-cl in M -1fI.utin. sity. since 411. Sweden 1 -'Z Vollege f'A4'r' lvnl N 1- I - , jg lilbruharu. r, , 1 . ,..-,J , 'refs-ssor nnfl. Italy. N11-rnber of .Kms-rican WKILLIANI Huxav CRAWSHAW B df A B Colgate Un1ve1s1ty 87 A M Colgate UHIVLISILY 89 P1 ofessm 0 Enqlzslz Lzteomtme, Dean of the Faculty Born at Wewbmg N Y Nov 0 1809 Prepared lOl college at Colgate Academv, Hamllton N Y G1aduated flom Colgate Unlverslty 1887 Instructox and PIOTGSSOI Colgate Un1ve1s1ty slnce 1881 Traveled ln England and Scotland 1892 Member ot Modern Language Assoclatlon of Amerlca Member of Amer1can Soclal Sc1ence Assoclatlon Assoclate Member of Nat1onal Instltute of Art LSCIGHCS and I ette1s Dean of Colgate Unlverslty slnce 1897 Actlng Presldent of Colgate Unlx e1s1ty 1897 99 Authol of 'lhe Inte1p1etat1on of T 1teratu1e 1890 and an annotated ed1t1on of Dryden s Palamon and A1c1te 1898 x Rossa r WEBBER MOORE Ph B Un1Xe1s1tvotM1ch1gan 84 Pmfessov Qf lwewclz and Geomcm Boln at Delphl Ind Dec 14 1802 Prepaled lOl college at Ann A1bO1 Hlgh Nchool Ann A1bo1 Nllch Graduated 11 om Unlverslty of Mlchlgan, 1887 Dld graduate work at the UH1V61S1t1GS 1n bt1ass burg and Berlln 1889 90 Studled at the Unlverslty of Chlcago 1896 Professor of Latln and Brench Georgetown CKyJ College 1887 89 Professor of French and German Colgate Unlverslty slnce 1890 Member of the Modern Language Assoclatlon of Amerlca Lecturer 1n German Llterature at the Bay VIGW Mlch Chautauqua Assembly 1893 1897 and 1898 and at the Florlda Chautauqua 1899 Authol of a pamphlet l'l1StO1V of German Llterature 1894 bontrlbuted to the Bay View Magazzvzf elght d1lI1Cll s on 1 ermanllterature 1893 94 ten on Germany and Her Llteratule 1897 98 AIBFRI PERRY BRIGHAH A 1 fb If A A B Colgate UH1VGFS11JV 79 A M LolgateUn1vers1tv 8.2 A M Harvald Unlversltv 92 P1 ofessoo of Geology cmd 1VatumZ Hestmy Cmatov of the .Museum Boln at Peuy N Y Iune 19 18m Prepared for college at Perry Academy N Y Graduated flom Colgate Un1ve1s1ty 1879 btudled Theology at Hamllton Theologlcal bemlnary 1879 82 Pasto1 of Fnst Bapt1st church bt1llwate1 N X 1889 85 Pastol of Tabernacle Baptlst church Utlca N Y 188v 91 btudled at Hars ard 1891 92 Professor of Geology and Natural Hlstory Colgate Unlverslty slnce 1899 Instructol Harvard bummel School of Geology 1891 1894 1895 1900 Chalrman Comm1ttee on Geography Natlonal Educatlonal Assoclatlon 1897 98 Vlce Presldent New Yolk btate Sclence leachels 1900 Traveled extenswely 1nWeste1n Unlted States 1893 1897 Fraveled 1n Eulope 1899 II College ca? JIFHCLIIIQ Q23 Qlollege Q23 jfHClllfQ JB , . -. - . .. . --'Q 'iztinfr Y t- lptomwphlc goclpty NIQITI-bil of .IHNIICUI Xssor 1 o o Fellow of the Goologiooll Society of America Member of L fi Iona Tl D t L. I I: Q K ' -t lfulxlivzltions as follows: Advancement of Science. Member Boston Society of Natural History., Member Onclflft llifozjllfifll inoolgnyguvwiill History... IMHAV: I Geology of Oneida Countyji 1887-883 Inorganic Nature in the Poem oi Job, V 718-'if ,. tLp,,fYiWh, ff. ' , ,Niml Oriyin UI. .I-Ulm- .4 Rivers and the Evolution of Geographic FOF1'I1S,:a 18923 4iFinge1' Lakes oi New Hork, V 18.73 :A by 1. mUUd.- IMITHMN in graphic FO1'I'I1S,M 18953 HDrift Boulders in Central New York, 1395? i'Th9 New U00S1'?LPhQ'- ifiil' if 1-io .. Phwi, ll-4-,U . - 1. ' .--- xr-Q ..4Z .12 r'jI- Chenango ValleV,', 18973 i'LakeS,w 18979 Hpresent Status of tho Elootwo byotom ln Ammlmm L0 Livio' , th Xdiwnd H In ,, ' . 1 tv . -- -, '-1 -- irj ', ' 22xS. raphy in Secondary Schools, 1897, f'Report of Committee on Geography, 1393, lldhocd Dmvulioi iii I U ' ' 48' The Eastern Gateway of the Lnitecl States. 1899: ' lf.-xt 1898, S' Topography and Glacial Deposits of Mohawk Valleygf 18.1 , Book of Geology, 1900. JOHN GREENE, If 6 ll, W If If Ph. D., Colgate University, 773, A. M., Colgate University, '76, Ph. D.. Colgate University. '86 Professor of Latin, Born at Edmeston, N. Y., June 8, 1850. Prepared for college at Edmeston High School and Colgate Academy. Graduated from Colgate University, 1873. Studied Theology at Hamilton Theological Seminary. 1876-79. Instructor in Latin, Colgate Academy, 1873-76. Pastor of First Baptist churcll. Waterford, N. Y., 1879-82. Principal of Peddie Institute, Hightstown. N. J.. 18873-89. Principal of Colgate Academy, 1889-93. Professor of Latin, Colgate University, since 1893. RALPH WILBIER THOMAS, .1 V A. B., Colgate University, '83g A. M.. Colgate University. '91 Professor qfRlwtm'1Ic and Public Sywfzkfafnyf. lfqfigfmr Practiced Law at Albany, N. Y.. 1885-872 Professor of English and Public Speaking. Albam' .xi'1llll'lllY English in the University of the State of New York, 1888-92. P- fi 1 - . .- . . 1 Colgate University, since 1892. io Lssoi of Rhetoiic and I uhlic Speaking I2 Por? in Nova Scoifiaa 1861' P1'ol9iU'od for College at Colgate Aciuloulv. Graduated from Colgatm- l'ni- verslty in 1883. Studied Law at Albany. N. Y.. 1883-85. Admitted to the liar. at Allmanv. N Y 1885 1333-88 EX2LIniI1e1' in English in the University of the State of New York. 1887-88. Chief I':X21Hlil1l'l' AIELBUL' lj-NH 2 nat.-d fron Sage iff-ll l'rofes:4or f 1 I M CQEORGE Horn llraduatcci 'the Unire Chicago. Ill.. 1894- Semitie I. since 1898 Uld Testa U-ff! 'l ' ' UH IO1' - follows: 'Sill-WU - of Topo- -posits in .tal Moog- rndzlclqsf' 1 Text .V s 0 ff M up fair- I ni- N Y 18-3 Xf:afl1-my. rininf-r in Speaking. MELBUURNE S'rUAR'r READ. df 1' .1 A. B.. Acadia University. '91 : Ph. D., Cornell University. '95 Professor of Philosophy Born at Berwick. Nova Scotia, Sept. 27, 1869. Prepared for college at Berwick High School. Grad- uated from Acadia University. 1891, with First Rank Honors in Economics. Studied at Cornell, 1892-95. Sage Fellow in Philosophy and Ethics. Cornell, 1894-95. Principal Wolfville High School, 1891-92. Professor of Philosophy. Colgate University. since 1895. CHAm.Es WORTHEN SPENCER, .I A' lf A. Ii.. Colby University. '90 Professor of History Born at Foxboro, Mass.. Nov. 16. 1870. Prepared for college at Coburn Classical Institute. Water- ville. Me. Graduated from Colby University, Waterville, Me., 1890. Studied at the University of Chicago 1892-94, and at Columbia University 1894-95. Instructor in Science and Ancient History in Hebron Academy. Hebron. Me.. 1890-92. Professor of History in Colgate University since 1895. GEORGE IRICKER BERRY, 41 V, 4' lf lm' A. B.. Colby University. '85: A. M.. Ibid.. '88 z Ph. D., the University of Chicago. '95 - f,--- , Professor of Semitic Languages N Born at West Sumner, Me., Oct. 15. 1865. Prepared for college at Hebron Academy, Hebron. Me. I Graduated from Colby University 1885. Studied at the Newton Theological Seminary. 1886-89, and at A ' g. 'the University of Chicago 1892-95. Fellow in the Department of Semitic Languages in the University of Chicago. 1893-94. Pastor Baptist church at Liberty. Me., 1889-923 at Gardner. Ill.. 1893-94, Marley. Ill.. 1894-95. Assistant in Semitic Languages in the University of Chicago, 1895-96. Instructor in .,w Semitic Languages in Colgate University. 1896-98. , Professor of Semitic Languages in Colgate University . . ' 'vs Q f Sv . fr' ' 'iiil I since 1898. Author of The Letters of the Rom. 2 Collection in the British Museum. 1896: H A New fz5 1f,1g, Old Testament. 1897 : A New Greek-English Lexicon to the New Testament, 1897. 2 . 13 '-ww U Qiollege ta? jfacultg Q23 college 02 jfacultg .22 X CLEMENT DEXTER CHILD, df lf lf, L' E . 1 ' , - -' - 1 'I ' A. B., University of Rochester, 99g Ph. D., Cornell UHIVCISILF. .M Associate Professor' Qf Pf'f.VS'5'f3 Born at Madison. O., May 15, 1868. Prepared for college at Fredonia Normal School. 1'11'afl11a1tf-sl from the University of Rochester, 1890. Studied at Cornell University. 189.2-91. v Studied in 'ml ln. GermaI1Y and Cambridge, Eng.,1897-98. Fellow of A. A. A. S. Principal of X1 ehster High School. 1890-91.1 Professor of Mathematics, Cook Academy, 1891-972. Assistant Instructor of Physics. loruell University, 1893-94. Instructor of Physics. Cornell University. 189-1-97. Associate Professor of Phy- sics. Colgate University. since 1898. FRANK CARMAN EWART A. B.. Denison University. 392g A. M., Denison University. '94 m, . - . K' Assoczazfe Professor' of .fllodewz Lcmguagfes U 0. Born at Marietta, O., Sept. 4, 1871. Prepared for college at Granville Academy. Graduated from Denison University, 1892. Graduate student in the University of Chicago, 1892-93. Instructor in Latin in Granville Academy, 1893-95. Student in the University at Heidelberg, Germany. 1895-96. spending the vacation in travel in Germany, Italy and France. Acting Assistant Professor of Modern Languages ' in Denison University, 1896-97. Instructor in French in Kalamazoo College. 1897-99. Student in the Q f Sauveur School of Languages at Amherst. Mass.. summer of 1898. Associate 'Professor of Modern Lan- guages. Colgate University. since 1899. GEoReE WHEELOCK BANNING M. D., Columbia University. '95 Direcziov' of the Gymmtsimn, Izzstruczfm' in Plzysioloyy dm! fLlf'If1.I'llt7 Born at Rockville, Conn.. Oct. 335, 1869. Prepared for college at New Britain lligh School. Studied at Gymnasium Department Y. M. C. A. Training School. 1888-89. Graduated from College of Plivsicians and Surgeons of Medical Department of Columbia University. 1895. Physical Director Y. Bl. C. A.. Pat- erson, N. J., 1889-90. Physical Director Y. M. C. A.. Pawtucket. R. I... 1890-91. Phvsical Dirfctor St. Bartholomews Parish House, New York City, 1891-95. Director of the Gymnasiu1n'and Instructor in Physiology and Hygiene, Colgate University. since 1895. Studied Ophthgdmoloo-Y and patholom- at University of Gottingen 1897-98. 'H' ' I4 WA Y 1.9. N D Born Conn. Graf Institute of Biological l Colgate Uni I 1 Le. A xg. . g figt . 12113155 I a I X. Ros' BURN li. Born in Arbor High Arbor High many. 1895-' In connectie Manual of F .. liixuliiatecl iii llsrlin. 1 W1 5CllOOl. Uornell of Phy- E J . F it f p g, .51 iz ,. Studied l'lij.wir:ians NI. lf. .X.. Pat- i llll' 1,-tor St. ln-i1'm:tor in l'?Lflx'2lU,Q'fV all A. B.. Colgate Umveisity. 9-1: A. M.. Colgate University. 96 Inswuttov in Biology Born at Noank, Conn. March 10 1870. Piepaied for college at My stic Valley Institute Mystic. Conn. Graduated from Colgate University, 1894. Student in the Biological Laboratory of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences, Cold Spring Harbor, Long Island, summer of 1896. Student at the Marine Biological Laboratory, lVoodsholl, Mass., summer of 1898. Assistant in Geology and Natural History, Colgate University. 1894-96. Instructor in Biology. Colgate University, since 1896. .9 ,X , an. . my i QWHCIIITQ Ja? WAYLAND MORGAN CHESTER, If 0 ll, W If ln' ,A GOHQQC ,LQ ' ' I I I I ' ,S J, . .. I x ' Q f - Q 1 . y , 1 L I f 1 -is CLARENCE DARWIN KINGSLEY, .J li' B. S.. Colgate University. '97 Assistant in Matlzematics 1898. ' Rov BURNETT SMITH A li. S.. University of Michigan. '99 Assistant in Clzemistry Born in Jackson, Mich.. March 25. 1875. Prepared for college at Jackson High School and Ann Arbor High School. Graduated from the University of Michigan in 1899. Assistant in Chemistry, Ann Arbor High School, during college course. Student in Chemistry at the University of Heidelberg, Ger- many, 1895-96, devoting the vacation to extensive travel in Germany, Switzerland, Holland and Belgium D . In connection with Professor J. M. Montgomery, of the Ann Arbor High School, author of 'L Laboratory Manual of Elementary Chemistry. Assistant in Chemistry, Colgate University, since 1899. 15 Born at Syracuse, July 12, 1874. Prepared for college at Syracuse High School. Graduated from Colgate University, 1897. Studied at Harvard. 1899. Assistant in Mathematics. Colgate University, since . , x . be 'xn- iw 1' N LUX ,, 1, 'fi Q' f f 5 ff K ,f .1 4 Z -w If 3' . 1 '. . DAVID FOSTER ESTES Librarizm MAY FRANCES SMITH Assistant Librarian VIRGINIA APPLE'roN WIIIIISON Curator of the Baptist Historical Collection LANT G ILMARTIN Janitor I6 W' 'Y CLASSES W m ! Q i i . ,wmiw ,F if i ' I 3 V 2 Q i B u 5 I i ! 7 pil ' 1 1 ..x 1 dk LH E W Miss SA DEAR A Colgate' maiden, from thi giddy YC when.- plea for did they You U H new ei We. t never cc hale the rejoice l of C'Ol1i:11 future. LETTEI2 IIIQCIVI '99 DIE WEITE WELT, Marchuary 32, 1900. Miss SAL M. A. GUND1, Hamilton, New York. DEAR SARAH :- And so you are a debutante,-will come out at Colgate's Junior Prom., and, waiting, like Longfellow's maiden, 4' with reluctant feet, you want one more letter from the old friends of '99, before plunging into the giddy vortex of society. Well, you shall have it. For when,-from the days when they listened to a Faculty plea for more gymnasium equipment even until now,- did they ever turn an unsympathetic ear to one in need. You wonder, do you, at the changes which mark the H new era 'l at Colgate? We, too, wonder and admire. While our feet may never course swiftly over the new track, nor may we hale the festive pigskin across Whitnall field, we yet rejoice in their innovations with a deep joy, begotten of confidence in the brightness of Colgate's athletic future. And the chapel. O, shades of the original thirteen! Can that be so transformed from its pristine blankness, that it is now sacrilege to salt the freshmen therein ? They whisper, too, that there has arisen a new college custom, needing the services of no college of heraldry to give it prestige, but fully sealed by the traditions of the past. Mercury and 1903. Well ! well ! ! well ! ! ! Forty men, did you say, out nightly for football prac- tice ? And our eyes have often looked upon the melancholy spectacle of a single C' sub bucking the line for the edifi- cation of some three or four languid rooters ! ff Verily, the world do movefl And all these things move us, Sarah, to tell you confidentially that the new President is O. K. We, though scattered about this land of ours, from Schenectady even unto Beaver Dam, have met with few thrilling experiences. None have Won eminence as polit- ical agitators or pulpit orators , none swum to glory across the raging streams of the Philippines. Some are teaching Hamo to classes by the deductive method, and some inductively as private tutors. Others are immersed in law or submerged by theology, while yet others are I9 1et'terta.'ta.' from '99.ze chasing the elusive dollar over the thoroughfares of busi- ness life. HI-Iow does it seem, you ask, ff to be out in the cold, cold world ?U We will answer by an illustrative parable. 44 O ' nee upon a time there were youths, and these youths were banded together into a class and went unto college for four years and got learning ! Latin and Greek, Psy- chl ' ' o ogy also, and Ethics, and many other branches of knowl- edge. Commencement day came and the band played, 20 K 1 and these youths were given pieces of parchment, yes. diplomas of sheepskin. And then they marched forth to meet the worldg and some there were who expected the world to meet them with shouts of 4Behold the conquer- ing hero comes,' but instead it asked: 1Confound you. what are you good for, anyhow ?' Yours lovingly. 1899. III. YDS. fwrth to ntcd th? wnuluer- JMIBXHL ISHN. S ENIQQ CLASS ..,' r - f - -, W gf: is P if , 1 f- 10 I' 1 se' x A f .X . - -eff f Q -X ,... , 5.51, , A Nqwq 4: NX I avihx?-L? hw? ' we iv i f . 'C' R 'X ,I Rx fw J N xr' X .L -fi 0 mu ':. 'A 3-4, 4, , , - -'A lg -Seeger, - gxigg-.fwse-1Q::,3 5,-.xi 35? ' , XNQEHLIN S XS-'SA xxx 4 new 4- XX Nwar-'ra i em, Ex ' xxgd sq ! I n N W 1 U 23 T I5 ttf Of Niiifff uChLk'x- 1 P1'Q-Clllilltih iirst iiizide ii because hw' ' near itseiiu. foul' long Work and Tilt Year Lifter their ciiplfiiim us that the da belonged td remote to be there is tiiinw Our own dug' Course is ui behind us and to pick up Fx 5 the maxiuei' 0 travels bud: ie graduates. 'X SENIOIQ HISTORY T lS with mingled pride and regret that the historian of Nineteen Hundred takes up his task. Pride for the achievements that have given our class the position of pre-eminence that she has occupied so worthily since she first made her entrance into the college world, and regret because her life as an active part of the University is so near its end. We who are its members have lived together four long years-years that have been filled with the work and the play that make up this college life of ours. Year after year we have seen class after class receive their diplomas and depart, and always it has seemed to us that the day of our departure was far-distant, that it belonged to some far-off, shadowy time which was too remote to be thought of seriously. And now suddenly there is thrust upon us the realization of the stern truth. Our own day of graduation is close at hand. Our college course is almost at an end. WVe must soon put it all behind us and go out into the H cold, wide world to try to pick up a scanty livelihood as best we mayg and after the manner of seniors since time immemorial, our mind travels back over the days that We have spent as under- graduates. I As freshmen We walked in the straight and narrow path of rectitude with fear and trembling, looking forward with joyful hope to the distant day that would see us free from Prof. Jim and his hated Math. As sophomores we led an untrammeled existence of merriment and pleasure, a terror to the freshmen and a thorn in the side of the faculty. As juniors we enjoyed a life of happy idleness disturbed only at intervals by Doctor Read and his Psy- chology. And now at last we have reached the final stage of our journey and have taken up the duties and respon- sibilities that fall to the lot of seniors We have always been vigorous exponents of the H stren- uous lifefl Our achievements speak for themselves. The long list of victories in class contests, from our freshman cane-rush to the inter-class debate, our successful SAL. and our never-to-be-forgotten L4P1'OIU.,7l as well as the laurels that we have won in the rocky fields of learning, these are sufficient proofs of the strength and ability with which we have worked. But notwithstanding the prosperity and success that have been ours, now that we are at the end of our under- graduate career, there comes over us a feeling of regret, HJIETOLQJQ .-, , -lil- to1 we 1eal14e, as We neve1 have befole that our llfe to0ethe1 1S SW1lt1y passmo and that the happy days paltot the deal old Colle TC I p111t we mll 1l1x N S1lO1GfO1 her' and fo1 us, she Wlll IICXCI fmcl sons 111o1g ECIUOY Q3 I' ' H' ' ' ' - '1 1 ' ' I ' QS- U 5 ' ' 2 'HY- ' . C5 - ' ' 5 C ' be her children, and whatever the future may hold 111 l y' ' 1 ' C ' 1 f' 1- ' ' ' 1 ' ' ' H' -' -1 mthm the p1oteot1n01 arms of ou1 Alma Mcctev w111 soon be ended. But it will be only in name that We will cease to be loyal and lovmg than those who claun membelslnp 111 the class of Nineteen Hundred. Q Wil X' 5 x rw-.ml Ill llIUl'U in the Osxxiwl T GI-INR X. K QQLIKX x.1 X V: fl I .11 C111 1. SENIOIQS OIIIZICEIPS Pmsvidemt JUDSON SMITH RUMSEY Vice Po-esideozt - - LELAND DELOS FOSBURY SCC7'6lfCU'y cmd To-easuo-er HENRY RUSSELL VVESTCOTT, J R. PQIGC - - - li.-XRRY EMERSON FOSDICK Tocast12m.ste9- WALTER CONCEMORE CHAMP Histormw XIVILLIAM MORE PARKE CLZX55 OSXVALD THEODORE AVERX' New York Uity, N Y. THOMAS EDWARD BOSWELL SfLGH1.ljUilZG, Ky. A K 15. 9 JV E, B A B: Second Dodge Entrance Prize: Q5 K W, G2 N E, B A B: Class Vice President Q725 : Asso- Varsity Band Q15 Q35 3 Leader Varsity Band Q35 Q45: Second ciate Editor 12500 SALMAGUNDI Q35g Press Club Q35 C Kingsford Deolamation Prize Q725 Q Press Club Q45. HEN Y EJTIN 'E B 'E U 'f ' .ZZ N. Y. GEORGE LIONEL BENNETT Clayton, N. Y. P' I L' Rh D Umm' ' . , SPl'A.UNIC.BLlB:Clz V eP'f5 l?t 3:Clz'.' Q5 K W. 9 N E. B 11 BQ First Dodge Entrance Prize: Tolwtmaqter HQ Q wb It mblun C J L55 Second Allen Essay Prize Q735: Second Sophomore Latin U K ' ' I Prize Q735g 'Press Club Q15 Q735 Q35 Q45g Mandolin Club Q35 z Class Pres1dentlQ15g Class Toastmaster Q725: Assistant Man- ARETUS P- BURROUGHS Aram AZMUHW Nr' Y' agcr Glee Club Q35 g Assistant Manager Baseball leam Q35 g u .Iunior Promenade Committee Q35 g President Athletic Asso- B Q0 Hg Junior Promenade Committee Q35: Press ciation Q45 3 Chairman Patrons, Day Committee Q45. Club Q45. Q 27 X Senior .29 Ronsirr W. Busaoueus New ,lllziolb N- Y- fi 13 1:1 II : Junior Promenade Committee 135 : Varsity Foot- ' ball Team 135 145: Varsity Basketball Team 1735: Varsity Baseball Team 135 : Press Club 135 145 z Board of Managers Press Club 145 5 Associate Editor'Madisonensis 145 : V2lf1'SltY Track Team 1725 135 3 Rowland Oratorical Speaker 145. DANIEL AVEBSTER CHESTER NMMT, UUHH- B 19 Hg Kingsford Declamation Speaker 1735: Varsity ,Band135: Recording Secretary Y. M. C. A. 135 : Associate Editor 1551515 SALM.-xGUN1x1135: Class President 135: First Osborn Mathematical Prize 135: Patrons' Day Committee 145- AKVALTER CONCEMORE CHAMP Ozaeidtt. N. if Q5 F A. 9 N lf, .B A B : Captain Class Football Team 115: Class Historian 115 125: Varsity .Baseball Team 11.5 1725 135: Captain Class Baseball Team 1735 : Varsity Football Team 1I5 1:25 135 145: Captain Varsity Football Team 1735 135: Class President 1725: Junior Promenade Committee 135: First Kingsford Declamation Prize 135 Q Class Toastmaster 145 Q Athletic Advisory 'Board 145 : Press Club 145. HENRY RAYMOND DALP.Yi1rr,E lfVw'cestw', Mass. A K E: Entered from Colby 1355: Varsity Band 135: Varsity Track Team 135 : Patrons' Day Committee 145. Wittnui MAsoN DENISON 15101555-OSU, PU, A T: Captain Class Football Team 1735: Captain Class Basketball Team 1725: Captain Junior-Freshman Basket- 2b ball Team 1255! Varsit5' Football 'l'1-ani 1115 I 552 Vim' President Athletic Association 1755 3 Ki1Ul'5i 'V'i D' hU mi'm speaks- or HM- 111111 eu- GeEoRoE CHARLES Ennonr -l 1f f '- -5' Y- A K E. 10 NE: I3 A B. Class Viet- President 115: filet- 1 1ub1l51f25135 145: Leader tilt-e1'lub 115: Instrumental Club 1735: Chairman Sophomore- Soiree Coiiiiiiittw- 115: 1'niV91-511,111511111-11.111, 135 1.15 3 Varsity Football 'l'1-ani t 1 I : Varsity Track Team 1255 145: Captain Varsity 'l'l'a1'k Team 145. LELAND DELos Fosisuin' Nf'1 ,'!- -5-4 V- 515 I1 A. 151 N E. B A B: Varsity Baseball 'l'4-am 115 V35 135: Junior Promenade Committee 1315 : Class Viet- Presi- dent 145. HARRY Emi-:ssoN Fosmeic lifgihlo. .5'. Y. A T: First Kingsford lleelamation Prize 11 5 : l irst Baldwin Greek Prize 1735: First Sophomore l,atin Prize 1735: First Allen Essay Prize 1725: I-'irst Grout Uratorieal Prize 135: First Lasher Essay Prize 1355: First llowland Uratorical Prize 14-5 : Editor-in-l'hiei' Nladisonensis 1re- signed5145 : Associate Iiditor Aladisonensis 1215 145 : Editor- in-Chief 125015 SAI,M.,xot'Nin 135: Class poet 1725 1255 145: ln- terclass Debater 145: Athletic Advisory Board 125 1215 1-15 : Secretary Advisory Board and Athletic Assoeiation1345: Secretary of N. Y. S. I. A. U. 145: Press Club 115 : Toast- master Intereollegiate Press Association 1355 : Treasurer of Y. M. C. A. 135: Manager Varsity Band 135. i. F' lv Z' JT -a ie .4 x 1? 1: 'Lin item title- -5 .. ..- llticizm. I Ciisiatig- ? .lurks lf-A. l'r'L. 'IF g.i xilxf. .Q Y. BI. PZIIXYAHI' ll lil ' l':w's1 XYii.i,i.ui T5 ..' A' 1.1 X 'UQ' n F1011 Y 'TPI' utul i 2 l'1ll'l-Q if YPS1- -Y l' Irsr lv,,.7', .1. rival lzuill Vw'- : In- I . v-,-ruff HARRY SCHUYLER FOSTER. Sing Sing, N jf Q K' W, Q52 N E, B A B3 Class Poet Q15 : Kingsford Dec- lamation Speaker Q15g Press Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45g Class Historian Q35 g Associate Editor Madisonensis Q35 g Editor- in-Chief Madisonensis 3 Grout Oratorical Speaker H ERRERT ERNEST HATOHMAN West Way, NV Y. Q K gf. Q59 N li, B A B: Class Vice President Q15 : Class President Q25 . , CHARLES HENRY HERRICIQ Ummm, N. l'. CP K W. 9 N E: Junior Promenade Committee JAMES DAVID HOXVLETT I Lfimsolngbw-g, N. Y. A K E, Q N E. B A B: First Kingsford Declamation Prize Q15g Class Orator Manager Varsity Basketball Team Q35 3 Second Grout Oratorical Prize : Vice Presi- dent Students' Association Q35: Press Club Q35 Q45g Board of Managers. Press Club Q45g Interclass Debater Q45g President Y. M. C. A. Q45 3 Rowland Oratorical Speaker Q45. EDWARD DAVID MITCHEIJL Plniladelplria, Pa. B Q9 U. I9 N E, B A B3 Class Vice President Q15: Class President Q25g Press Club Q25 Q35 Q45. W LLIAM MOIQE PARKE Gloveo-smilie, N Y- 5 I A KE. Q-I N E. BA B: Press Club Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45: Secre- tary and Treasurer Press Club Q35 : Kingsford Declamation Speaker Q25 : Grout Oratorical Speaker Q35 : Vice 'President Press Club Q45 : Manager Musical Organizations Q45 : Asso- ciate Editor Madisonensis Q45 : Class Historian Q45 1 Inter- class Debater Q45. NVILLIAM LORD ROOT lIll71?,'fZlO71f, N. l'. A T: Captain Class Baseball Team Q15 : Varsity Baseball Team Q15 Q25 Q35: Captain Varsity Baseball Team Q45: Varsity Football Team Q15 Q25 Q35 Q45g Captain Varsity Football Team Q45 g Mandolin Club Q15 Q25 Q45g Class Vice President Q25g Chairman Junior Promenade Com- mittee: Crout Oratorical Speaker Second Osborn Mathematical Prize Q35: Rowland Oratorical Speaker Q45. FRANK SHIELDS RULAND Sidney, N. lf QFA, Q-I N IC, BAB: Associate Editor 12100 SALMA- GITNDI Q35: Class President Q45. .TUDSON SMITH RUMSEY CYK6fIfCl'l'fl'Ilfj?lS, N. Y, B Q9 Hg Class President JOHN MANVILLE SAYLES Mexico, N. Y. A T: First Kingsford Declamation Prize Q25: Junior Promenade Committee Q35g Assistant Manager Varsity Football Team : M anager Varsity Football Team Q45. PHILIP SIDNEY SMITH Jfamilzffm, N .l'. A K 111. I9 N E, B A Bg Class President Q15 g Manager Class Football Team Q25: Manager Class Baseball Team Q25 : University of Cliicago. 'EIS-021. Senior em Glassyews Senior as FW Gllassfnm' WIIJTI K SEYMOUR SQUYER Q K TF, 171 N E, B A B: Press Club 115 1725 135 145 1 BOZLFCT of Managers Press Club 135 145: Chairman Board of Mana- gers Press Club 145. V IAM THAYER TOWER Uortlcmcl, N If A K E, 69 N E, B A B: Manager Class Basketball Team 1725 : Manager Junior-Freshman Basketball Team 135 1 Class President 135: Second Kingsford Declamatiou Prize 135: Rowland Oratorical Speaker 145. 312. W1 Aulnmf, N Y. EIENRY RUSSELL WEs'1'eo1r'1'. J 11. 5 S'f'l'llllfflil. A T: Press Club 1151251351452 1211-e 1'lul51l51'35 1255115 Grout Orato1'ic:Ll Speaker 1215: Kingsley-fl IJ1vl:un:1ti1m Speaker 135: Second Lzlrslwer Iisszly Prim- 1215: .luni1 H A R0 Freshman Basketball 'l'1'2llll 1155: llmvlzmml 1n':111n'i1 11 Speaker 145. LD ORVILLE XVIIITNALL ,N'551-fff-51.111, X, 5 1 A K 15,151 N lf. I3 A 13: Alilllll1.Q'1'I' llaxsc-hull 'l'1-:lm 115 ffl Press Club 135 145 : Junior I,1'0lll1'llil1l1'l'lHlllllll11'1'1fl52 1'lg1 Vice President 1735 1255. W' 1 30 flu Int is 'x ff fx'- 5 ,F sb, ' Ci . yi.5, f:.LL'inu T .ning- U 'i1'ak1 .Y Y, X Q3 ' I 1 Iggss QQMVVQ Q53 O.. Q ,Dew .Q 3, f , Kg, 1 M '?..z. .....-X YJ5 S mfw I , , ., l QM1.. .QS ' X X4 li '12, Ex k'x,,, xv gg ,1 5 Xkgxxiv- I . , -, mf' Q Rb ' '5 1415,- F f ? 'L nk f-3 ' GL , fxg '7f-7'i, + f .zff-mfs: -fi f lgf.'g:,:.gi.X 1 ?,'iZg'VW' xi'-'Ef5 AW5A 4-Z , . 114: jk f .,,,S 5 ' ' .,-.' 3f2.::.5H:4ig, -, ,,,.q.7:g '- C-if Q'x 5W:5'!I fs5E 5:- P '-163 ,-fx s ' ' u sq'!' h1'Vfv!lrE Q54 IIF I5 fri'-s ui 4 f' ua' W T71 ' lg KN K N iw X: ti ff!! Y .AN , Until 4 'mil . If ' .: - - V'-'14 7 niff? 4: fd! Y' . f +p1:.l-,g1g,,- ...7 72' M, ' 1 , --- '. .1:::f.1 'Lilly' 1 M 'kg f', g:2 ,g3,5 f:Eff A' In V ,4 1,-.,,b3.fs1m::5-EAI ix. 5 'ii' 'ZZZQSHZ I ff .L LJ fggflllfj .1 illlll y 1552554 ' ' 'EQ1fy.yg14 Q Ll! V ullw 22111-Sai? nw -- Illmm' ' .. ' , M W' Illia? - ' Q ' C-1-151 T Sbv N YA ff 1 f E? :- r r' 3 mil 5 gag? E1 2 1-V1-rw' kwa day uf :frm A sawing . . , XX 4' fm Tift . .1 In Ihr vu 1-f clmw um' f uwukv. XX speak. -uf I 1-fdiefgv 1-ua. in-vu llllrslv In our fr' Ship. 14' The Y -. 1 E. ,. fx thv miistim-1' vat viuw- -- o bfvlnlh. uw- ,i fm' th.-ix' wx. 5,4 . wi P , .uk ,df 1 ,Tw up . ,E 1 freshmen to an egg shampoo with Broad street dust for a drier. Then just to show Simmons there was no hard feelings, every manfbut onej put up a V. s Later in the term, on a beautiful morning in early June, the report was heard that from the grizzled orifice in McG 1'GgO1'y'S face, there 'had come forth the words, ffthey are hellersfl It struck a sudden chill through all our hearts, and we felt that it was the benediction for the year, but of a character far more gloomy than the one we received from H Jim the year before. Yet we must con- fess to some feeling of pride in our achievements, great 6. 34 and otherwise. The class have lived up to whatever ideals they happened to have at the time. Now and then, an unprejudiced onlooker might reasonably suppose that our motto was 4' Treat, drink, and be merry, for to-morrow we graduate. But on other occasions we travel under the more inspiring watch word, aiozim mfffru' Still we are confident that when we have left the scenes of our college days, and our foot-falls no longer echo through the cobwebbed corridors of Alumni Hall, the rec- ord of the first class of the twentieth century will be remembered as an interesting and honorable one. -mls 1111 nm' Vow ldcl' f11CS vvho VCC- v . be JWTPLA ,1- 5 HRK JLINICDSV OFHCEQS P1 eszdent Vue P1 eszclent JOHN MOOSHIE ERNEST ARTHUR HALT ASGYJLUCHQ cmd Yrecasmea HERBERT WHEEI ER MAREAN Poet O7 atm H zstoo um I Orastmczstev GEORGE HENRY SNHTH GEORGE LEROY BUCK NELbON LEWIS GREENE FoREsT PREQFON HUNTER CLHSS GEORGE LEROY BUCK ,Sagem Hall A I FRANK PORES BUSSELL bpmlrmcl Ill Prepared at Keuka Institute Q K llf O N F Class President Clj' Vaislty Bootball fleam C11 Pj' Varsity Baseball Team KID CPD' Captain Class B ootball Team CU fre- signedj' Chairman bophomoie boiiee Committee K, J' Asst Manager Varsity Football Team f3jg Class orator C3j. Though hall his virtues are not here exprest 3 The modesty of fame eonoeals the rest. Prepared at Wayland Aoademv Beavei Dam Wis .LIKF UNL bdli B ourth Dodge Entrance P1 izc, 3 Kings- ford Deelamation bpeakei Clj' Vai sity Basketball 'leam Clj' Fix st bophomo1 L 'Latin Prize C, J ' Class Historian Dj' Cap- tain Class Basketball 'leam UD BJ. Xu w 'is work begins 'Lt gfnwd knows wlneu. a ul his work is never through. 3 3uniOr Q72 GEORGE CALVIN DAPSON OWUCCG, N K 61355 eg E 1 Prepared at Oneida High School QFA, BA B ERNEST LAMOTT 1 l A Sophomore Soiree Committee CQJ g Jun- ior Promenade Committee C3Jg Press Club C3J. H A lazy, sleepy, cu1'ious kind of Il chap. 41-51141- ELLIOTT Brookjelcl, N Y. Prepared at Cortland Normal School Q K llf, C17 N E First Madisonensis Competition C215 Business Manager Madisonensis C3jg Editor-in-Chief 1901 SALMAGUNDI C3j. By his wo1'k ye shall know him. WALTER DALTON EsTEs UfU1li75U'1, IV 17 Prepared at Colgate Academy 41513, ONE, BAE Second Dodge Entrance Prizeg Class Historian Cljg Second Baldwin Greek Prize C2j 5 Second Kingsford Deelamation Prize C233 Class Vice President C333 As- sociate Editor Madisonensis C33 Cre- signedjg Interclass Debater C3Jg Grout Oratorioal Speaker C3J. 'L He would not with :1 1Jl'I'l'lll1lf0l'j' tom- .flssert the nose upon his lvillfl' his own 91-41-41- ARTHUR J. EVANS Prepared at Arcade High School B C9 II Sophomore Soiree Coinmittu L ' 1 J C721 2 Kingsford Declamation Speaker C731 1 As- sociate Editor Madisonensis C3jg Associ ate Editor 1901 SALMAGUNDI C3l. A lhillll' behaviour, and :l llueul' touuum llmuw Elton, Af If 5 -R. x,. v, 1 IN HERBERT FRANCIS EVANS Higlzlcmd Park, Ill. FREDERIC REYNOLDS FORD Prepared at Evanston 1Ill.5 High School B 19 H Press Club Q15 125 135g Class Historian 115 g Intei-class Debater 135. There are not mam more like me 41141141- Prepared at Elmira High School A K E, Q N E, B A B Glee Club 115 125 135g Sophomore Soiree Committee 125 3 Athletic Advisory Board 125 1353 Class President 17254 First Law- rence Chemical Prize 125. The other of the Heavenly Twins. 4141-41 JOHN GARVIN FOOTE Belvidere, IZZ. NELSON LEWIS GREENE Prepared at Belvidere 1Ill.5 High School A K E, C9 N E, B A B Varsity Baseball Team 1253 Manager Class Baseball Team 125 g Chairman Junior Promenade Committee 1resigned5 135. One of the Heavenly Twms. Prepared at Colgate Academy A K E, 69 N E, B A B Captain Class Basketball Team 115: Class Vice President 115g Varsity Base- ball Team 125 3 Second Sophomore Latin Prize 125g Mandolin Club 125 135g Class Historian 135. Gimme :1 cent : I want to be tough. E Imiwz, 1V. I Hamilton, AF Y v gunior Q3 ROBERT LEONARD GURNEY Sli- Louis M0- clagg QL? . .L 4:,'-- A' ' Prepared at Kirkwood fMo.j High ' School. Q B o 11, Q N E . Class Vice President C72Jg Varsity Band in P' 5' Qrijg Manager Varsity Track Team CTEJ 5 V f3Jg Treasurer Y. M. C. A. Q3j. E ' A theologue more by need tllan genial bout. lil- 91- Sil- ERNEST ARTHUR HALL Euclid, N If Prepared at Phoenix High School. BQII Sophomore Soiree Committee C2jg Press Club C3jg Junior Promenade Committee CBJ: Class Vice President CED. I will sooner have -1 beard ion l . , . .. ... gf 'Ol1tl0p2ll1110f my 1l2ll1d,thkll1 he shall get one on his cheek. 4o X - as WILLIANI THOMAS HENRY, JR. Prepared at Elmira High School. A KE, C-9 ZV E, B A B Fourth Dodge Entrance Prizeg Banjo Club fljg Mandolin Club flj CBJ f3Jg Leader Mandolin Club Q29 Cresignedjg Class Pres- ident ffljg Class Toastmaster 021: Sopho- more Soiree Committee Cf2jg Varsity Foot- ball Team C3jg Glee Club 135g Business Mana-ger 1901 SALMAGUNDI 1335 Manager Varsity Band Q3lg Instrumental Quartette el. Q 'L And there never was an minute When little Willie wasn't in il. Sl!-HY-HM JONATHAN HOLDEN Prepared at Sherburne High School. sZ5KYf,f9ZVE,BAB Class Vice President C2jg Junior Prom- enade Committee f3l: Press Club Q21 135. You should be wonian, and yet your beard for- bids ine interpret that you :irc so. E'1mfgi-fl. AT ii L+1i'-'1- Sf1,67'b7l7'?7C?. Af Y. CIiAR1.i1s . 5 . 5- if F . LEXVIS PATTON HORNBEQRGER Plwjlcaclelplzfia, Pc. Prepared at St. Paul's School, Garden City. A AKE,C'9NE,BAB Banjo Club 1153 Mandolin Club 1153 Manager Class Track Team 1153 Varsity Football Team 125 1353 Junior Promenade Committee 135. l .l r E' 'Tis better to have loafed :ind Ilnnked. Than never to have loafed at all. il-Sl-SM CHARLES ABEL EIOXVLAND Blceclcingzton, Mass. Prepared at Drury Academy. North Adams, Mass. LIKE Captain Class Baseball Team 1153 Varsity Baseball Team 115 1253 Captain Varsity Baseball Team 1253 Vice Presi- dent Y. M. C. A. 135. His worst fault is, he is given to 1J1'2l-YC1'-li FOREST PRESTON HUNTER Bfzq7'taZo, N. Y. 3uniOr Q73 011355 .13 Prepared at Colgate Academy. AT' Third Dodge Entrance Prize 3 Class President 1153 Second Kingsford Decla- niation Prize 1153 First Allen Essay Prize 1253 First Baldwin Greek Prize 1253 Inter- Class Debater 1353 Class Toastmaster 135: Grout Oratorical Speaker 135. I need no grind 3 I :nn one BF bk- bk- MANFORD MONROE JENKINS Adams Centre, N Y Prepared at Adams Collegiate Institute. Q K IF, B A B Class President 1253 Press Club 125. U .X lmir on the lip is wortll two on the brush. EDWIN KNAPP MUNROE Camiggus, N yn CHARLES BEDDING Prepared at Syracuse High School A K E, 9 N E, B A B Mandolin Club flj C25 CED 3 Varsity Foot- ball Team C353 Chairman Junior Prom- enade Committee 135. His corn and his cattle were his only cure And his supreme delight a country fair. SP4 HY- fill PHIPPS East Roclcctwccy, N Prepared at Colgate Academy AT' Y. Mandolin Club gn fray mg Leader imm- dolin Club fill CED. And yet he loves himself L is it 110i Stffllliw 43 JARVIS ALEXANDER Roor Prepared at Colgate Academy A T Mandolin Club Qlj QBQ C313 Class Presi- dent C2jg Captain Class Baseball Team Q21 g Varsity Baseball Team C25 g Varsity Football Team Q3jg Junior Promenade Committee f3j. bl want to be an lobster. 4914 OBADIAH NIARTEN RULAND Prepared at Sidney High School VQFA. ezv B415 Junior Promenade Committee C3j. Where he falls short. 'tis natures fault alone 1 Where he succeeds, the merit 's all his own. Hamilton, AT Y. 3uni0r JA Sidney, N. Y. 61858 43 3unIOr gg NORMAN FELT SHELTON RUSSELL Hamilton, TV ' Prepared at Colgate Academy. .4lKE,69NE,BAB I i'N01'I11:u1 is an Mormon ell- all SL GEORGE HENRY SMITH V Prepared at Colgate Academy. LIT' Varsity Band flj f2jg Varsity Track Team flj C233 Sophomore Soiree Commit- tee fresignedj C2Jg Mandolin Club CBJ f3j: Press Club 133: Class Poet C3J. H Old man, God bless l A sweetly ? you, coes your pipe taste Plweniaz. TV ffggmjlggna N Wy, HERBERT LEWIS STUBES Colm-ado .Syn-ings. Co! EAARL VINCENT SNVEET 1J1w,,m l C Prepared at Phoenix High School. The sweetest th Tnonfis LONGLAND ll T l B fr? II Varsity Track Team Qljg Kingsford Declamation Speaker ill g Class Vice President Ltijg Manager Class Football Team Q25 Q35 3 Class President Qiilg Mana- ger Varsity Basketball Teams C35 3 Jun- ior Promenade Committee Q3j g Grout Ora- torical Speaker CBJ. ing: that ever grexv beside 21 11111112111 door. 494944 A THOMPSON Alpena, Mich. W land Academy, Bea- Prepared at f ay ver Dam. Wis. A T Varsity Football Team L15 C25 C35 3 Glee Club 1733 C3jg Sophomore Soiree Com- mittee Qtllg Junior Promenade Com- ' ' r 3 mittee Q3j g Grout Oratorical Speake Q J ,,.,- Ay, iihil-12,5 11. fat goose' ar, N, Y. BYRON WARREN V:XLENTINE Prepared at Marion Collegiate lnsti- tute. BUII Entered from Rochester University LBUQ Junior Promenade Committee fre- signedj 135. 'V' I illll little, but I Zllll hot stuil' just the s:1111m fltfbllffltf LEON TVTASTERS WATTE Prepared at .Brockport Normal School. Qzcizf, 6'JNE,BAB Manager Class Baseball Team Q15 I Varsity Band Qlj 125: Varsity Football Team Clj C21 C35 g Captain Class Football Team CBD g Sophomore Soiree Committee CBJ g JI unior Promenade Committee 135. ,-,.,- T' Now good digestion wait on :1pp1:tiu-. And health O11 both. 45 Hoosfick Falls, N. Y. Belleville. N. Y. 3unior as 6136533 I i FCI? EI? IVIEIVIBEIQS CF I9OI I, E ! JOHN ATANASOFF CLAUDIUS ANDREXV MARSH CHARLES WALTER BATES DUNCAN MARTIN LUTIIER DJCPHAIL WALTER SCOTT BENNETT GEORGE SAUTER MEIl7'F EVERETT PIARLOXV BOWEN CHARLES LEWIS OXVENS CLAUDE MILTON CHESTER EDWARD ALBERT PARKER ANDREW GORDON DYE BENJAMIN CALVIN HARVEH' HENRY HYDE PRATT BURDETT JOHNSON HARRY BRYAN STOVER HARRIS WARD LEWIS CIIARLES HIINRX' STRONG NIICHAEL JOHN LINDEN ALBERT LINCOLN WYIIAN I 47 i 1 f 'ull flD6I1lOI'i8m CLAUDIUS ANDREW MARSH PHI KAPPA PSI BORN J ANUARY 23. 1879. DIED OCTQBER 18. 1898 . 48 ' l QDHQMQIQE CLASS I . I .4 Y I I I 3l l i 1 ,E 5 ! - w , if , ' IIIEHTP IL ' ' ' t1'1ed 11- X ' All 5 - .' Z'7f1f5', the P '1 l'l '-7' ' I I' 11 , T ZX' and the di ,, e 1 NWN 'l -' - 1 , . X . f :IXIQLDIU 1 A X fi if 1 W Huh' bv m--1'1i1 X Q 17 :ix K l f 7 , eff of houxw' N114 1' ,.,f no. W Q, ' ,r Q keep the :Ln QF- ' d 1 f ef D I f I i3iil2'ffY2'5f:gg is Our uelmw: 5 vurietv, We .,mlJ'J , ' , , f luvested 111 an : 1 -- ' i Q leetlou and v f UT' the Freshme 11 1 Q. cessful with :me us vullevs ue mug to suggest lu ala H011 to do so. LX XYe have had existence. Ami 1 SODHUMOIQE HISTQIQN E are now Sophomores,-the most of us-mfiwebfile diem ! And We have struck an attitude in keep- ing with the dignity of our rank. When we tried to scratch our heads in the fall, our iingers began the spring-tooth harrow act three inches from our scalps, and the distance has since been lessened by only three- sixteenths of an inch. But this record has been kept up only by sacrifice and great effort. We sacrificed a couple of hours' sport at foot ball, and it has been a great job to keep the faculty informedthat we are Sophornores. Our achievements have been mostly of the bloodless variety. We have purchased class caps-one of us, we invested in bamboo canes-a few of us 3 we took up a col- lection and got 69 cents, worth of green ink to advertise the Freshmen, and if our diplomacy continues to be suc- cessful with those brawny underlings recently in service as valleys de chambre to bovine herds, we are planning to suggest to the underclassmen, when we are in a posi- tion to do so, a proposal for universal peace. . We have had a scrap or two, however, in our careerful existence. And usually, when forced to it, we have given a good account of ourselves. Gne of the prettiest rushes in the history of the University was pulled off last spring between 1901 and 1902, in connection with the base ball game. If we of 1902 ever did ourselves proud it was then. We had the naughty-ones up so high in the air that they did not strike the diamond till the eighth inning and then only because HPick had injured his arm in a little side issue with HLone Wolff, We, as a class, don't care much for variety and won't give a Soiree or any other old thing if we can help it. With such stars as ffThe Handsome Slimer, ffMac,l' and '4Hunt, our reputation is safe. The sorriest, dafiiest, most worm-eaten bunch of mush- heads that ever struck Hamilton on a dark night was the class of 1903. The first day up in the old chapel we shot sodium chloride at them till they looked like thirty- cents in a Kansas blizzard, and when they came around with their little two-cent yell to challenge us to a cane- rush, we went out and sent them home to the tune of 19 to 8. We took the pool, though, and smote the enemy hip and 51 X l ...- .V ., -, . f5ODl3OmOI'6 'lbi5fOl'Q JZ thigh, as Moses humorously observed, when we cleaned out the gang of naughty-ones around Simmons's the night ofthe banquet. They thought they could stop our feed by throwing eggs and water at us, and they did put the place on the bum , but when we got the old man in the back yard pitching cobble stones and paving bricks at them and we rushed in front, they began to think we might do something if we got our nerve up. The only thing in which we have distinguished our- selves this year is the amount of spirit we have shown in chasing up Mercury. Neither Hunks, bones, nor money have been spared in our pursuit of the scabby deity. True, we might have had better luck and perhaps shown more horse sense, but we aren't to blame for what Dan Stokes knows. Charges of professionalism notwith- standing, our latest plan of action is to bribe Stokes to take the preliminary theological work and join the class of 1902. We need one good all-around man in our aggre- gation, and if f'Duckie's l' dough holds out we intend to have him. 6 V 1 i W l w ' i , N l 1 l a W Q -r r ,' i i g 1 P g in 6 E I ' w , , A :WEE 2-A--wif? M52 sw- fy X.- .aff . 7, , Wg 41,5 X W ,,,, Wy f X' g , V rzwf-frqrf, ,fn f 11 ' H ,a',f,f,qVV , - - A-4 A., ,Ai - 5 ,lf EEF! ' gl wg?,f-NA B 'ig' A W 5 ,W ' 1 ' ',,g:g,3g:jg2f,, ,wa , 1 X , 0 M 'nib 'Q ff! :ga-: 'l.g?: , 2. X - 121111244-if , - X ' ' Qi T' 4fg2fef111hfQ -' 'QNX . X 153. ff?- f MN . . -H - :,,,- 7253-vf '- 3:51. V ' QU' if 121 J XXX X f' 2 3 gg x Lf --'- ' fpggfffi f X fl ' ' ' 'm f -M Lis A' 'fag' V 1'55 9w ' ' liligigf i' ff ' P A .--, ,, ,l, L '- RM-... W f, , ,M ,.Z, W - ., W , , . , - W L-.-V - f fix ' , , , , ,f -fy Z 1' f ,V V TQ f x V- H X xx . 1 .1 -4 j , , -77--V , ' -4' - xitiz-QQ, - Y- - ,' ' Q . . ' ,,., -:-vm.-ff -2-'tsiigx Ya, ' -'V Q V V , ' f -' -- fm , J i J if 1- ,? ? ,,m.,y.-xew Y ,, Vi V g I M V , - . 1 mf- I ,,,, '-gg,--iv?-t 1 - V H -V M, H n'Q,Q,f ,.., ..., J QM, V - , ff Ly, - . ' ,v,,,....,,., . ...mf ,,,,,g,,.ff' L..,.L f f - 1 ,f 3 -K '.- -7-H ,QQ ,fu J ., V-ffweffw '-gk W f 1 Y, if A J .. L4.1 '.,f,, 2, :fffrff:ffz0 feT,,,gf,m 'ig G -,. 4,7 25 -H- Y 'N ,,f., L A ,,AA,,.f M. '57 3 7 T v 'L P fb? vp' 5' V 'f.1 if-, M 'CYZQ Ji 021176 1011711 VV,V ,.., .V A ,,V,,.N, Y ,. ,. ,VZ V ., AV V. ,Wm VA, H J inn EIA! siit .Imax 15-1I51lR lin in Fu E1- N 1 .XXVI ANN QX. SCDHOIVIQIQE OFFICERS - President EUGENE CHRISTOPHER PLATNER Vice Presiclenc GEORGE BREXVSTER SNVAN IS'ec1-etcngy cmd flwusurer EIIRY ANDREW BAUER Poet - DANIEL JOSEPH SNVEENEY Omtoo- JAMES EDGAR MILLER Historian FRED WAXHN BEAL 7'oc4stnmste7- ROBERT J UDSON GORE 4 CLASS SAMUEL HOXVARD ARCHER IVAN HONVLAND BENEDICT Petersburg, Va.. WzLte1'bu1'y, Conn ELMER ELLSWORTH ARNOLD LEWIS JAY BINGI-IAM Edmeston, N. Y. Spencer, N. Y. JOHN ATANASOEI' ROBERT HUNTINGTON BREED Omarchovo, Bulgaria Cornwall, N. Y. GEORGE LLEWELLYN BARDEN ROSCOE DAVID BROXVNELL Gage, N. Y. Fruit Valley, N. Y EMRY ANDREW BAUER CHARLES FRANK BULLOCK HGl'lill11G1', N. Y. A Crosby, N. Y. FRED VVAHN BEAL IRVING BUNDY Hamilton, N. Y. Osage, Iowa, 55 x l f5OpbOm0re IPXLFRED SPENCER DAVIS ' EZRA MINOR MORSE M895 cg cg Lansingburg, N. Y. Watkins, N' Y' CLARENCE EDWIN FORD JOHN LEONARD OAKS Camden? N. Y- R21,11dELllSVillG, N. Y. LINDOL ELMER FRENCH WILSON NEWTON PERKINS Worcester., Mass, Cazenovia, N. Y. AIJBElQT IIENRY GAGE EUGENE CHRISTOPHER PLATNER Worcester, N. YY. A Cherry Valley: N- Y ROBERT JUDSON COPE FRANK PORTER Cazenovia, N. Y. - BOOUWOHO: N- Y- SAMUEL MUNROE GRAXTES NVALTER RATCLIFFE RANDALL RiOe's, N. Y. ' Troy, N- Y- ERIO VIELE GREENFIELD ERNEST LAXVERE SANFORD Durhamville, N. Y. Island Pond, Pa. HUBERT WINFIELD HESS CHARLES SLEEPER STERLING Masonville, N. Y. , Millport, N. Y. GEORGE BURTON MIXRSTON GEORGE BREWSTER SXVAN Albrllly, N. Y. Beaver Dam, Wis. HUGII Ross MClVlILLAN DANIEL JOSEPH SXVEENEY Maple Lake Sta., Ont. Hamilton, N, Y. JAMES EDGAR MILLER NELSON ERVIN.T110MAS Eaton, N. Y. Lansingburg, N. Y. fIALSTED HOWE LEGGETT BETA THETA PI BORN JUNE 221. 1880 DIED MAY 6, 1899 56 IQESHWIZXN CLASS I ' fe l W HE impoi in volved year. ant Seem queer to study history in lesson given ou' the U. S. histc Hill Collegit Ins We were disc of the year by Eldred put my the ends of the look awful sour. smile was pror lots of students was very Cordi been two years a few the year l We made many ance. Wfhy. sc there was Mr. I FIQESHWIAN HISTQIQY HE important dignity of writing a history has involved upon me, 'ere I have been in college one year, and that too, of a mighty class. It may seem queer to the uneducated masses, that we don't study history in college. Anyway, we aint had no history lesson given out yet, and so I will have to think about the U. S. history that was learned to me in the Sugar Hill Collegit Institute, in order to begin right. We were discovered at about the same time in the fall of the year by Mr. Eldred and the bustman. When Mr. Eldred put my band box into his wagon, it jarred down the ends of the bustman's black mustache and made him look awful sour. Mr. Eldred saw it and smiled, and the smile was promptly recorded in little red note books by lots of students that had come to meet the train. We was very cordially welcomed to this college: They had been two years without getting any new scholars, except a few the year before that didn't amount to nothing, and we made many friends at once by our scholarly appear- ance. Why, some of us had really preached, and then there was Mr. Dawley. the son of a minister, who has since been the inspuration for big editorials in the college newspaper. Such a class made friends, and they told us to carry salt to school the first day to put on the Sofomores heads when-they begun to swell. Some one told the Sofomores, two, and they had salt, but it didn't last long. When it was gone some of them got in a heap and begun to say H hitey, titey, just as had been said to them probably when they had been danced on their papas' kneas. Then we gave a mighty yell and were cheered, and we knew we had beat. On Sabbath morning we went to the Babtist church, a wunderful church with seats and electrick lights and real live birds. Our class kept togather, which was well, as it seems all the classes keep togather. Next to us set the Juniur class, or two of them. One looked like a foregner and the other a converted heathen. Up and down the middle isle trotted a grayish man' with a heavunly gaze, who held his hands in front of his breast and kept rubbing the perpetual due of heavun into them. By and by. after a scholurly and soothing discourse, they didn't sing an hymn and went out. jfresbman ibistorwx It is unnecessary to treat at length a certain midnight epysoad of our class, since the matter has been so praited about and enlarged upon by the Sofomores that it has spread to the ends of the earth ere this. Suffice it to say that the athletictax was so heavy and unlocked for that we could not afford to buy class canes before spring. It was a long time before We found out Why the Sofo- mores sung a baby song after We threw salt at them. But when We challenged them to play foot ball, We were told by the Junurs that they Were really babes and never play foot ball. That is a game that only strong boys play. The Junurs told us at the same time that for the first time since hllother Payne gave us the farm the rust could not be rung last year, because only big, scholarly boys can ring the rust. But our foot ball practice will come into play when We finish our exams. in .lune and make up for the puerility of our swollen-headed su- periors UQ In compleating the history of our college life it needs but to say that our class was chosen the gardians of Mercury, the god with the scabby back, because the Sofomores had showed sines of incompetuncy and cosines of insanity. We hope our friends will not think the trust misplaced. It would certainly be selfish to keep him all the time, and so We let him fly away for a few days, exercise. Like a true '4home1', he will return in due season to the vacant place in our air-line system. 3 WiH 9 and 1 su- needs ns of 9 11 9 XsiuQS trust in QU dayg n due IJGAQ 7, 190 , . Fl-, ' 2 . 44 - I 'Q ' 4, ' --' Y' 'ff A -'K if A - Q I A A A 1 - - A - '1Ef:,.a-' A '. AM 1 Y, ,:,,5:-g,-- ' if f , -- 'Ji l ' 3 W A .A A AAAR1 A I . .,.l. I I I f .X,E l f R u g! ,,,. A A H. I 2 5 I 4, , ' ' ' .-V235 Y I , '5gg LIi??k, XA 'X.' ,, I R A U6 :A RR 1 X5 P r -5' 1 FRED WI YVILLI.-'UI :AUSTIN I GEORGE HUGH B3 Ef.-XRRY C CARI, C0 DANIEL f EI.-XRRY 1 Ii.-XRRIS IIIQESHIVIEN GFILICEIQS Presidem - ROBER'T XVALLACE CRAINE Vice Po-csidemf - LAWRENCE BREINARD MCIYETIVEY Secretary nm! To-ensfzzrer - AUSTIN LEWIS BABCOCK Poet - - ' LAVERNE AUSTIN XVALKER Omtov- ARTHUR MUNGER GRIFFIN Ifistm-ian GEORGE BYRON ROORBACH Toasmmszfeo' - HARRY CHARLES BUCK FRED XVILLIAM AINSLIE Burlington Flats. N. Y. YVILLIAM ALBION ANDREXl'S Elba, N. Y. AUSTIN LEWIS BABCOCK Madison, N. Y. GEORGE MURRAY BEAL Hamilton, N. Y. HUGH BRYAN Sherburne N. Y. HARRY CHARLES BUCK Sugar Hill, N. Y. 3 CARL COLVIN BURT UlySSeS, Pa. DANIEL PARKER CARD Smyrna, N. Y. HARRY THOMAS COLLINGS Eaton, N. Y. HARRIS BINCHAM COOK Camillus. N. Y. CIJXSS 65 ROBERT WALTIACE CRAINE Brookfield, N. Y. ROBERT B. CROWELL, JR. Wallkill, N. Y. WILLIADI EDWIN DARROW Hamilton, N. Y. HOWARD CLARKE DAVIS Lynn, Mass. LEE SHERMAN DAVIS Sidney, N. Y. CARROLL HABIILTON DAWLEY Minneapolis, Minn WILLIABI EDWARD DIMORIER Afton, N. Y. SAMUEL DEYO DOLSON Libertyville, N. Y CURTIS CLINTON EDGETT Hamilton, N. Y. JOHN CLARK ELLINVVOOD Wolcott. N. Y. jfregbman GLENN BLACKMER EWELL JAMES WALTER ROGERS PELV1l1Ol1, N. Y. Slanesville, W. Va. 51355 JA FRANK LAFAYETTE FOSTER GEORGE BYRON ROORBACH Hamilton, N. Y. FOYJU Plain, N- Y' IRVING GALUSHA EDWARD BINGHAM SHERWOOD Amsterdam, N. Y. CamilluS, N- Y- FLOYD TOMPKINS GOODIER. TILSTON DWIGHT SPRING Cedar Lake, N. Y. Elmiw, N- Y. ARTHUR MUNGER GRIFFEN WALIJACE TEALL STOCK Verona, N. J. Hamilton, N. Y. GEORGE LEWIS HAYES DANIEL RICHARD SULLIVAN Danville, Va. Myersburg, Pa. HENRY THERON HOLTON MORRIS MOTT SWEENEY Farmer, N. Y. Hamilton. N. Y. EDWARD LEONARD JAMES ALBERT TERRY TAMBLYN Rushford, N. Y. Allentown, Pa. ALBERT THOMAS JENNINGS GEORGE OLNER TAMBLYN Earlville, N. Y. Allentown, Pa. JOHN WAIITER LARKIN HENRY' YVILLTAM TAYLOR Solvay, N. Y. Hamilton, N. Y. ORMA NEIL MARSH RALPH HOWARD TIERALS Hamilton, N. Y. Cornwall Bridge. Conn GEORGE VICTOR MCALLISTER LUCIAN STOWELL TUTTLE Hamilton, N. Y. Alabama, N. Y. LAWRENCE BREINARD MCKELXVEX' WILLIADI HUNTINGTON WIXITE Waterford, N. Y. Belleville, N, Y, T A MOORE LAVERNE AUSTIN WALKER Mawlius, N- Y- Greene, N. Y. RALPH THOMAS NORRIS ROBERT EDWARD WILLIAMS HlH1l'OdS, Cghgesq FLOYD JEROME ULDS ARTHUR EDWARD WOOD Adams, N. Y. Sidney, N. Y' FRED WEIIIJINGTON REED FRANK IYELLY YORK ' N01'th Hebron, N- Y. Smallville, N. YQ 64 J ? 5 ,. I V 'C YAFQQ Qgjfsv -1 f f ?x f '-EQ-' xf X, N ,f F ' G ,vw x A J, f , I , . ...A. nf, , ' A XT ZLL WA XS' - I Q7 It'- Q 1: We QM 'A' ' ' 9 f 0 Q S .,- ' 7 ezgmemsmefo r A 11 , I X u wp,,g:j S, iv' , Aff-. Q f ' i X f f f I f f i Q K lp Eqiqii :gag 'H 1, D fw f? . n W .cf fciasi Q 2 P 0 Q 4 S5 W K Enzo: :QE X ' QQ 1 5 f 2 J L x x , 5 1 K v 5 1 S wx' ni X TQZ QQ 6 ,Y N. 4 E 4, :ff 5 's ' ,. 5? J I: K' L w-, l E y E F' ,A i. . x 4 --Mg' ., 'fs' 1 X 1 ' ' A f'f?i7.- , II, sh I ' If-ij.:.' j X K --.X 4 liifff , f 'f-ff A-K xy X O 1 6 .. ffgfpfff fl XJULJ kryL,xx x' 1 lunr ,,,fe12 5 '- kilr X W 1ll R - , VY 5 I WW I F l VV ,Q 7 X IKULQQQQ V- EUQQE dv 1 Qi VN Pm . Tmzix . XI . Slmu G-xx151.x . 131 . L'1fs11,uN C111 . BETA ETA . ILU-lux . LA51B1u. . P1 . IOTA . . ALPIIA :XLPHA OMICROX . EPSILQX Ruo . TAU . PIII . . T1l1c'rA . X1 . SIGMA . GAMMA . Ps1 . . UPSILON . C111 . . ,li1+:'rA . ETA . . KA1-11A . LA M1s1mA . . P1 . . Io'rA . . A1.1'11A A1,r11A OM1c1coN . EPSILON R-IIO . TAU . DELTA KEDDZ31 EDSILON I oUN1m1+:11 AT YA1,1-1 Ux1v1+11:s1i'v. 1844 HOLL Ol: CHPYDTEIQS Yale University Bowdoin College Colby University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabania Brown University University of Mississippi University of North Carolina University of Virginia Miami University Kenyon College Dartmouth College Central University of Kentucky Middlebury College University of Michigan Williams College Lafayette College Haniilton College MU . NU . . BETA P1-11 . P1-11 C111 Psi PIII . GAMMA P111 . Psi OMEGA . B1c'rA C111 . D111.'1'A C111 . PI-II GAMMA . GAMMA BETA T111f:'rA Z1c'rA . A1,r11A C111 . P111 E1'S1LON . SIGMA TAU . D1c1.'rA D1-:1,'rA AL1'11A PIII . TAU LAMBDA D1c1,'rA If.-XPPA Colgate University College of the City of New York University of Rochester Rutgers College De Pauw Universityx Wesleyan University Rensselaer Polytechnic lnstitute Adelbert College Co1'nell University Syracuse University Columbia College University of California Trinity College University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Chicago University of Toronto Tulane University University of Pennsylvania VILI CHHDTEQ f DELTZX KHDDH EDSILQN ESTABLISHED 1856 FIQHTIQES IN LI IQBE H. S. LOYD, D. D., '56 C. W. UNDERHILL, A. M., '62 W. L. BARDEEN, D. D. S., '90 F. T. PIERCE, A. M., '57 J. W. HURN, B. P., '73 C. W. SPENCER, A. B., E, ,90 W. N. CLARKE, D. D., 361 A. H. STOCK, A. M., 776 H. H. HAWKINS, Ph. B., d1I', '88 F. O. LLOYD, M. D., '81 FIQHTIQES IN LINIVEIQSITHTE I90O OSXVALD THEODORE AVERY WIIILIADI MORE PARKE HENRY RAYBICND DALRYMPLE PHILIP TOMPKINS SMITH GEORGE CHARLES EMBODY WILLIARI THAYER TONVER JAMES DAVID HOWLETT HAROLD ORVILLE WHITNALL I9Cl FRANK PORES BUSSELL NELSON LEWIS GREENE WALTER DALTON ESTES JCI-IN GARVIN FOQTE FREDERIC REYNOLDS FORD LEWIS PATTON HORNBERGER CHARLES ABEL HOWLAND WILLIABI THOMAS HENRY, JR. SHERMAN JONES EDWIN KNAPP MUNRO NORBIAN FELT SHELTON RUSSELL HERBERT LEWIS STUBBS I902 LINDOL ELMER FRENCH ROBERT JUDSON GOFF JFAIBIES EDGAR MILLER GEORGE BREWSTER SWAN NELSON ERVIN THOMAS I903 AUSTIN LEWIS BABCOCK HARRIS BINGHAM COOK ARTHUR MHNGER GRIFFIN EDWARD BINGHAM SIIERWOOD JOHN CROSBY VOSE 70 x---rf' ' 5 , ' YCQZQ I U I QYQQBHKQ ff ,f I V A :gal 6562 N' W2 Y F bglff Ag, S , . 11 ff- if XA A T' , 1 ,Q 'iybc 00 E f- , ,' V y t V ,jx .1 , . -4: -LE, -ix. , JV- P f- f - x f'YfVfsfZ!UQf' A49 04 X iff' Q I ,Q . If fp W 3 1 ,EZ-415 ff QM? Q QQ? ffwmvl xj . gp A fir ff f 'gpf?Fw,f,'f ACE? f f X Q f pf fr x , 0 1 , -Wm fw292+ 139 0 7, 35 cf ff my ffff avec 49 2 7' W ff .,,, ggi- '5 C' U50 7 45 07 .70 4,6 if X - 'ix 7 x A 464 QL b I -.1143-f W' WA'-422, ff Qyf-iff V-'V 1 AW , Jwfffrwgffy ... 5TA.vro1gl,4 , ' mfrbvzm . - NCQILL I ' j NEBRASKA if 1 Tonoum X A 2 ,J fu'f'f ' f -5 if.-1.-z'-1: -1 ,.,-.'-f--1-rf, -- -.1.,Y-.A.,. . .. . 1 , .. , -.,. ,. f-, ., ,., . . ,,..,, - ...- , Y.. V.' Y . v , ,. , ,. . , ., .. 4...'..,f.....4'f.'r-.-V3.far -. V . -. ,. . ,.. ,- . 1. ...nf f V1 --, .f... . , , .. ' :a1F: .Rl'fnI-,V-my-.---nrrr-.qu p--4ffg..- x 1.1 . .-fr-.'--Q,-,,,,.--fa . .- - -. .n..n.:..1-e-.-, . . up '-H..-,-,r , . 1 -. 1-f. 5 -4- nv,-3 H. . X Y , .. , , , L bm,-,-,,,,J,0.,,, .,,,.4,,,1,.,,,v.,,,.,,.J , ,,, . . ,.. 4, . , A . -5- ..., .W ,,, , .-,, ,, .. ., , , I . L.. FoUNDr:D AT XVILLIAMS CoI,r,r:G1c. 1834 IQCLL OI: CHYXDTEIQS Williams College University of Michigan Union College Northwestern University Hamilton College Harvard University Amherst College University of Wisconsin Adelbert College Lafayette College Colby University Columbia University Rochester University Lehigh University Middlebury College Tufts College Bowdoin College De Pauw University Rutgers College University of Pennsylvania Brown University University of Minnesota Colgate University Massachusetts Institute of Technology New York University Swarthmore College Cgrnell University Leland Stanford Jr. University Marietta College Nebraska University University of California McGill University Syracuse University University of Toronto 73 CCLGIYFE CHHDTEIQ DELTA LIDSILQN ESTABLISHED 1865 IZIQFXTDES IN LIIQIBE WILLIADI LORD ROOT W. H. MAYNARD, D. D., '56, H. J. F. MCGREGORY, A.M.,F.C.S.,'80,Arr1. O. S. LANGWORTHY, M. D., '89 S. B. PARTRIDGE, D. D., '61, My. F. H. HOWARD, A. M., '81, S. H. F. YALE, A. B., '91 J. M. TAYLOR, LL. D., '67 B. W. THOMAS. A. M., '83 C. T. BROXVNELL, A. B., '94 C. S. SAVAGE, A. M.. '78, BT. G. R. BERRY, Ph. D., '85, Cy. C. W. BRIGGS, A. B., '94 A. P. BRIGHAM. A. M. '79 W. F. LANGVVORTHY, A. M., '87 C. D. KINGSLEY, B. S., '97 C. H. OLIVER, A. B., '99 C. E. SOHAIBLE, A. B., '99 FIQHTIQI3 IN LINIVEIQSITHTE I9OO YVILLIAM MASON DENISON HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK . JOHN MANVILTJE SAYLES HENRY RUSSELL WESTOOTT, JR. I90I CHARLES BELDING PHIPIJS JARVIS ALEXANDER ROOT JOHN AMBLER WILLIARIS I 902 CLARENCE EDWIN FORD SAMUEL MONROE GRAVES FOREST PRESTON HUNTER HERBERT WIIEELER MAREAN FRED WAHN BEAT, ROSCOE DAVID BROWNELL I903 GEORGE MURRAY BEAL GLEN BLAOKMER EWELL GEORGE BYRON ROORRAOII HENRY WILLIAM TAYLQR I I 74 GEORGE HENRY SMITH THOMAS LONGLAND THOMPSON HUBERT WINEIELD HESS WITJSON NEXVTON PERKINS T. A. MOORE UQ9- aufg -vi? 3 fu Q BGJH9 if QQ, 9 5 SW QXLPHA . BETA XI' . BETA IQAVPA BETA . . . GAMMA . ETA . DELTA . P1 . . LAMBDA . TAL' . . EPSILOX . KAPPA . ZETA . . . ETA EPSILON THETA . . IOTA . Ml' . . ALPHI CHI . Oxucnox. . PHI :XLPHA . Psi . . . x X 4 iii'- ffjjlnw NX?-v-A N axnzw Iiarral' De Pau Indian: Hichigz Wabasli Centre Brown Harnpde Xorth C Ohio W1 Hanovez Cumber Knox Virginia Davidso Hotham ALPIIA . BETA NU . BETA IIAPPA BETA . . . GAMMA . ETA . DELTA PI . . LAMBDA . . TAU . . EPsILoN . IQAPPA . ZETA . . . ETA EPsILoN THETA . . IOTA . MI' . . . ALPIII CHI . OMIcBoN . . PIII ALPIIA. PSI . Miami Cincinnati Ohio Western Reserve Washington and Jefferson Harvard De Pauw Indiana Michigan Wabash Centre Brown Hampden-Sidney North Carolina Ohio Wesleyan Hanover Cmnberland Knox Virginia Davidson Bethany I1'oUNDEIa AT NIIAMI UNIYI+IRSI'1'Y.4 18321 CII DOLL OI: CHFIDTEI25 I... ALPIIA BETA ALPHA GAM MA ALPHA ALPHA ALPHA ETA ALPHA RIIO ALPHA ALPHA NU . ALPHA PI . RI-IO . . . AL UP AL OM BE PHA SIGMA sII,oN . . PHA CHI . FIGA . . TA ALPIIA BlfI'1'A BETA BETA GA MMA BETA DELTA SIGMA . . BETA ZETA . DELTA . EI-sII,oN LAMBDA Beloit Iowa Wittenburg Westminster Iowa Wesleyan Denison Chicago Wooster Kansas Wisconsin Northwestern Dickinson Boston Johns Hopkins California Kenyon Mississippi Rutgers H Cornell Stevens St. Lawrence 77 BETA ETA . . 'PIII .... BETA TIIETA . NU .... Al'.I IIA ALPIIA BETA LAMBDA BETA IOTA . . BETA OMICRON THETA DELTA ALPIIA TAU . ALPHA UPSILON ALPHA ZETA . BETA EPs1I.oN ALPHA OMEGA BETA PI . . . MU EPSIIION . ZETA PIII . . BETA CIII . . PIII CIII . . . DELTA SIGMA . Maine State University of Penn Colgate Union Columbia Vanderbilt Amherst Texas Ohio State Nebraska Pennsylvania State Denver Syracuse Dartmouth Minnesota- Wesleyan Missouri Lehigh Yale Leland Stanford .I I I 1 I II I :I I 'I II II II I 5. I ,. I ,. I I 'I I I I I I I I I I S D SMITH, '66 A BETA THETA CHADTEI2 BET THET ESTABLISHED 1880 I I:I2I3I'I-IQES IN LIQIBE W. H. CRAXVSHAW, A. M., '87 JCHN. GREENE, PL. D., '73 W. A. ST. JOHN, B. S., '87 A. S. SHELDON, A. M., '73 F. A. GALLUP, A. M., '90 F. L. SHEPARDSON, A. M., '83, Br. E. W. SMITH, A. B., '91 ARETUS P. BURROUGHS EDWVAR ARTIJUR J. EVANS I HERBERT FRANCIS EVANS EMRY ANDREW BAUER IVAN HOWLAND BENEDICT FRED WILLIAM AINSLIE WILLIABI ALBION ANDREWS CARL COLVIN BURT W. M. CHESTER, A. B., '94 A P' ' .B W. W. BARRIER, A. B., '98 S. J. FORD, Ph. B., '98 A. R. MILLS, '99 C. J. BURTON, '00 FIQHTIQITS IN LINIVIf.I2SITHTIf ROBERT DAVID MITCHELL ERNEST ROB ERT GEORGE ALBERT GEORGE SAMUEL I 900 W. BURROUGHS I 90 I A RTHUR HALL LEONARD GURNEY HENRY YOUNG I 902 HENRY GAGE BURTON MARSTON I 905 DEYO DOLSON DANIEL WEBSTER CHESTER I JUDSON SMITH RUMSEY BYRON WARREN VALENTINE EARL VINCENT SWEET EZRA MINOII. IWORSE ' EUGENE CHRISTOPHER PLATNER FRED WELLINGTON REED J, JAMES WALTER ROGERS , FLOYD TOMPKINS GOODIER HENRX' THERON HOLTON ROBERT B. CROWELL, JR. LUCIAN STOWELL TUTTLE 78 RALPII HIOXVARD TIBBA LS I' .QL I 1 I 6 3 I . I N 2 L -' ' '4 . 4 E VI, I 5 xl I , 1 X ,Z UQ 'aw 5: rg' X ,Ii M 'Q , I M SU 5 n I . i. , ,1 ll , gp 5 i I fi- QE .Ny fl? Fr iff J , .fx-1 I DW' l . .ii ' ,N r M Q' ' ,Wi ,, , -nfl iv L qui' ix J' V lf? M 3 0 Q, ,. W-Ni J. 1 1 .gm pf fa Wil! ' La! 'Ui I ll ge gl iz' Q 5 5-if ff ZX: -5311 1 I H, n . 'Hx V1 j Ei , r lim 1. I Vg r W il , 21 'Y 5 IX' ' , k i Nia g : I X5 lx K I, V 14 , If' 0 , . . Q1 sh 13 PA. ALPHA . . VA. ALPHA . . PA. BETA . . . VA. BETA. . . PA. GAMMA . PA. EPSILON . . VA. GAMMA . . PA. ZETA . . . PA. ETA . O. ALPHA . . . ILL. ALPHA . . IND. ALPHA . . O. BETA . . . IQAN. ALPHA . . D. C. ALPHA. . PA. THETA . . IND. BETA . . IND. GAMMA . . BIICH. IXLPHA MD. ALPHA DHI KAI? DA' DSI FOUNDED AT lv.-XSIIINGTON AND .I15FF1cHsoN. DOLL Ol: CHYXDTEIQS Washington and Jefferson College University of Virginia Allegheny College Washington and Lee University Bucknell University A Pennsylvania College Hampden-Sidney College Dickinson College Franklin and Marshall College Ohio Wesleyan University Northwestern University De Pauw University lvittenburg College University of Kansas Coluinbian College Lafayette College Indiana State University Wabash College University of Michigan Johns Hopkins University PA. IoTA . O. DELTA . . Miss. ALPHA. Wis. GAMMA. N. Y. BETA . N. Y. ALPHA IowA :ALPHA N. Y. E1-s1LoN BIINN. BETA . PA. KAPPA . W. VA. ALPHA CAL. BETA . N. Y. GAMMA N. Y. ZHTA . ILL. BETA . NHBR. ALPHA MASS. ALPHA N. ll. ALPHA AVIS. ALPHA . CAL. GAMMA . 1857? University of Pennsylvania Ohio State University University of Mississippi Beloit College Syracuse University Cornell University State University Colgate University University of Minnesota Swarthmore College University of NVest Virginia Leland Stanford Jr. University Columbia College Brooklyn Polytechnic Institutf University of Chicago Nebraska University Amherst College Dartmouth College University of Wisconsin University of California I I I I I I . 4 I II 5 I 5 I II II I I II I I I I I I I I I K , I NEW YORK EDSILON CHHDTED DHI K' DDZX DSI ESTAEIIISIIED 1887 I1I2H'I'IQES IN LIIQBE J. E. GRANT, '97, Ex. WILLIABI GUILLAN, '97 FRANK STRADLING, '97, EX. STEPHEN J. EARLY, '98 ILIQHTIQES IN LINIVIEDSITITI-If I90O GEORGE LIONEL BENNETT THOMAS EDWARD BOSWVELL GEORGE LEROY BUCK ERNEST LAMOTT ELLIOTT GEORGE LLEVVELLYN 'BARDEN CHARLES FRANK BULLOCK HUGH BRYAN HARRY CHARLES BUCK DANIEL PARKER CARD ROBERT WALLACE CRAINE HARRY SCHUYLER FOSTER HERBERT ERNEST HATCITMIXN I9OI JONATHAN HOLDEN MANEORD MONROE JENKINS I902 ALB'RED SPENCER DAVIS HUGH ROSS MCMILLAN WALTER RATCLIFFE RANDALL I 903 CARROLL HAMILTON DAXVLEY IRVING GALUSHA ALBERT THOMAS JENNINGS GEORGE VICTOR MCALLISTER S2 CHARLES HENRY HERRICK FRANK SEYMOUR SQUYER EMMETT CARPENTER MILLER LEON MASTERS WAITE IRVING BUNDY CHARLES SLEEPER STERLING RALPH THOMAS NORRIS WILLIAM HUNTINGTON WAITE ROBERT EDNVARD WILLIABIS FRANK KELLY YORK fN X X Wi ff .5 we X 'y-. '..A.f,' I':i .X:.3 N1 If Tx: I--5 X 1'3- llxjy- XVI Tm' KA! Pm liz: 5Iu.X lim Iwi X1 Hyx lim I-Iv llxylq lim IIN Zu lim P1 Io'rA . ALPIIA C111 . NU DmU'1'E1aoN . TAU ALPHA . Io'rA MU . U1's11.oN . OMEGA. . NU Ers11,oN . T111f:'rA PSI KAPPA NU . C111 . . . IS1c'1'A . SIGMA D1+:U'1'1Q1:oN l51c'1'A C111. . . DE1,'1'A . X1 .... GAMMA P1-11 . lil-1'1'A MU . Ees11,oN 0M1e11oN . . . l'1141'1'A D14:U'1'1c11oN IJ1c1.'1'A 1J15U'r1c1ioN Z14:'rA D1cU'r1-:Rox R110 C111 . . . DHI C-WIMA DLL TX l oUN111-in Ai' W.xs111Ne'roN Axim .l1cFF1c1:soN. is-LS DOLL OI: CHPYDTEIQS lVorcester Polytechnic Institute Amherst College Yale University Trinity College Massachusetts Inst. Technology College City of New York Columbia University University of the City of New Yorl Colgate University Cornell University Union College University of Pennsylvania Lafayette College Lehigh University Bucknell University Pennsylvania College Pennsylvania State College .Iohns Hopkins University University of North Carolina University of Virginia Roanoke College Ilainpclen-Sidney College Washington and Lee University Richmond College K A1.r11A . , l'1 . . SIGMA ..... T11 1f:'1'.-x l71+:1 1'1':11oN . I1AM1:11A DI1ll l'Eli0N OM IC RON DE U'l'lC RON H1-io D1+1U'1'1iHoN . . Z1-:TA ..... LAMBDA . . TA1'. . . I-'si . . . . KA1'1'A 'l'A1' . . N11 ...... A1,1'11A lJ1c1 1'1M:l:oN . GAMMA D1+:U'1'1c1:oN . C111 lo'1'A .... NIU SIGMA. . NIU .... . P1 l'J14:1 1'1c1:oN . Z14:'1'A PIII . . I1AM1s11A Ni' . . lJ14:1.'rA X1 . . OMEGA M L' , C111 MU.. . Washington and .leilerson College Allegheny College lYittenl'1urg College Ohio lYesleyan University Denison University Ohio State University Wooster University Indiana State University Ile l'auw University llanover College Wabash College University of Tennessee Bethel College Illinois-Wesleyan L'niversity Knox College University of Illinois lfniversity of Minnesota University of Wisconsin University of Kansas William Jewell College University of Nebraska l'niversity of California University of Maine University of Missouri 'I'I-IITI7-I DSI CI-IADTEI2 DHI GPWIIVIM DELI' ESTABLISHED 1887 IZIQYXTIQES IN LI DEE IHELBOURNE STUART READ, Ph. D., ls' N, '95 IRA W.. BINGHA31, Ph- B-5 79? F IRA I'1'0TAI',ING, A. B.. X, '97 EDGAR RUYLE HYDE, A. B., 94 HUGH STEVENSON, A HENRY ELTINGE BREED GEORGE CALVIN DAPSON EIIMER ELLSWORTH ARNOLD LEWIS JAY BINGHAM WIVILLIAM EDWARD DIMORIER LEE SHERMAN DAVIS R, '96, A, M. 52 797 HENR IQHTIQES IN UNIV EI2SI'I'PYTE I9O0 WVALTER CONOEIIORE CRAIIP LELAND DELOS FOSBURY I9OI OEADIAI-I MARTEN RULANI7 I902 ROBERT HUNTINGTON BREED ERIC VIELE G-REENEIELD I 9015 CURTIS CLINTON EDGETT LAWRENCE BREINARD MCKELVEY 86 Y HYDE PRATT, Ex. 700 FRANK SHIELDS RULAND FRED CURTIS WVHITFIELIJ FRANK PORTER DANIEL JOSEPH SXVEENEY FLOYD JEROME OLDS ARTHUR EDWARD WOOD Y 1 i 1 qi I I. 1 x i X 9 x 'Q' ,f U'f'N1f'f.'3T'g l'11f'. -'Q - 5'f!'Iu:i. Nf- I' UQ. Y.. L lnuu 4.1- '-rw, KJAAMI Y 1 Adelbert College Rensselaer Po Hamilton 1,. Ponnsy Uh f THET NU EDSILON SOPHONQIQE I1I27XTlfl2Nl'l-Y lQS'I'.-XISLISIIICIJ 1882 IQOLL OF CH7elI3'l'EI2S lVesleyan University Amherst College Syracuse University Stevens Institute y Union College Rutgers College Cornell University Lehigh University Rochester University Lafayette College . University of California Wooster University Colgate University Bucknell University Kenyon College Dickinson College Aclelbert College Allegheny College Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Dartmouth College llainilton College University of Michigan Pennsylvania State College University of Pennsylvania Ohio State University Northwestern University University of the City of New York Kansas University Swarthmore College Chicago University Bowdoin College S9- W. O. T. AVERY G. L. BENNETT T. E. BOSXVELL G. L. BUCK F. P. BUSSELL Fi. L. ELLIOTT L.-Gr. X Lank ? Mani' I Yes indeed Aristooratiow -1- Size7 X Self-esteem f Complexion Z - booze X Initiation F. O. LLOYD, M. D., '81 . H. CRAXVSIIAW, A. M., '87 ETH CHADTEI2 THETPI NLI EDSILDN SCPHONCIQE I:I2H'I'EI2NITY ESTARLISI-IED 1882 I:l279X'I'I2lfS IN LI DEE W. L. BARDEEN, D. D. S., '88 W. A. ST. JOHN, B. S., '87 QPa.le Aiejv : , F. A. G-ALLUP, A. M.. '90 W. GUILLAN. A. B.. '97 S. J. FORD, A. B., 798 M.AWI'IITE. Ex, '98 I:l2lTl'IQIfS IN LlNlVEI2SI'I77XTE l9O0 H. E. BREED L. D. FOSBURY C. H. HERRIOK W. M. PARKE F. S. SQUYER W. C. CRAMP H. S. FOSTER J. D. HOXVIJETT F S. RULAND W. T. TOXVER G. C. EMBODY H. F.. PIATCHMAN E. D. NIITCIIELL P T. SMITH H. O. WVIIITNALL l90l W. D. ESTES R. L. GURNEY J. HOLDEN E K MUNRO H. L. STUBBS J. G. FOOTE N. L. GREENE L. P. HORNBERGERI O M. RULAND L. M. WAITE F. R. FORD W..T. HENRY, JR. E. C. MII,I,ER N. F. S. RUSSELL F. C. XVHITFIELD I902 -f- Q. E. D. Never-the-less - Size? QBostonj'fb 2 AJS B ggnggygqdggg -f- We two andB QWOH LDT' - Bad flirt . '. no lie - If A If TamQ-E11 + fcguege 'f' ADT CUNHY WY X Q 2 Sedatee -A Math Fiend 0-0 A B1 B + B Bookfullness Pretty Boy? -N QTWO feetDS 1'f' Columbu? - Qstudelltywu Qviolinj' TiBJYMJ ' BTHELHFNLI Calmosty - Go-odfellow QfTot-with-stgndingj , QSkatingj2 G Cchristiani Hemidjlf ' QGYOII donft dztrejn 90 I A 26 D,-f lv' Ph .Mi- Iii ., O G T. H F. G. XV T L E. E P. C. D. AVERY BENNETT BOSWEL1. BREED BUSSELL DAPSUN ESTES T. L. E. E. P. C. D. HE'r.x . . W W BETH DELTZX I3 ETH IES'1'.xEr.rSr114:1m 18521 IQOLL OI: CHHI5TlfI?5 ALPIIA . . Sy1'1lC11S0 L'nivo1-sity lhxxlxl.-x . . . Now York l'l1iVC'1'SitJ'Y Culggmto Cnivm-sity DI'ZI,'l'A . . . livxxssvlzmvm-I'o1yt0cl111iulusl,it.111.v I+ll'su.uN .... Lzmfayvttv Collvgc- l'I?H'I'I?lfS IN UIPIBE M. CllES'l'l4IR, A. M.. '94 E. R. .HX'IblfI, A. B.. 'SM GU1l.1..xN. A. D.. '97 H. H. PE.x'1 1'. Ex. 'UU I:I27-YTIPE IN LIINlIVEI2SITHI'If I900 AVERY BENNETT Boswl-11.1. BREED BUSSELL D.-Xl'SfbN ESTES H. L. XV. C. G. C L. D H. S H. E. .T. G. F. R. N. L. STUIAHS CHAMP EMBODY Fosmzlu' Fos'rEE H'A'1'f'lIMAN Foo'rE Foul: GREENE J. D. HOWLETT E. D. TWITCIIELT, W. M. PARKE F. S. RULANE J. S. RUMSEY I90I W. T. HENRY. JR.. .T. IJOLDEN L. P. HURNUERHER XV.u'1'E F. C. XVIIITFIE 93 T. SMITH S. SQUYER . T. TOXVER O. VVHITNALL K. TNTUNRO M. RULANU F. S. RUSEELI JBeta Delta JBeta I2 as . l902 G. L. BARDEN R. H. BREED A J. E. MIIJIIER G. B. SWAN L. J. BINGHAM C. F. BULLOGK F. PORTER D. J. SXVEENEY A. S. DAVIS C. S. STERLING 1905 B11 14 .d 151 4 V 18 187 .H 91 -Ll 19 F, h . U Ve? -I-C 1 IRI SD CJOISQD :I C Un ISU CSpec1'1,5 BljStlIJI3jmfI bi- Ifswimalllless Z Hunk Lfmunku qIIIoutlIh-Q:swel1-head12-f-oigaI's4j-cfreshym 1801bS- ' b k nb 11119 V0 V-0 -1,fzopXfQ,,4aR1et1 3 I qw. Freshj Cswve114-I-b-ze'JQdamse1sD12 horse5 EL 1 f' 1fKmQZS19YX Uticalm - b0h11E5 V- Wg k f . 2 3 K V wgolfi 12-I-14QInRbh ffba11D'R Q QRhetoI'icj'l ffbfmeless +E1fFI'i?11ChlQ'H3Lfgh J:l-Fina1S11 CC0lgate52 Papa Q fbillo -1- me EBENEZER Dr. UH T - K mice I xg YVILLIAM H. W1-d' d N 4 . . ' f . -5 5'- 1 : swells frRf lt Sweeigefse- 1 A xv -Psings - 13f'Ca1I'tsee I ' 2: 0: ycappilo -1- noir ' Y TJ - -If-1 G . 3 tl 15 ,sv-H ' V V FRESH J Cstarj 1+ P' Boy oI'atoI'2 st stu tut ers S CEYGSDN +I g J - 1119 C?hD -I' dvemu .67-I H- I - - - . I ,iT h w . L 7 VT ,Eggs R X -i0 1.Se1 : rr R2 V0 .E through 7 I+ 955011 CU W 1751 H. 5 b-less2XMath21 booze 11 fgwywf' . Cmyu Pipe? It - W. Q ' --5 - - 1 T 7 2 iq S01V6d3 Xanlfdumulib E D +113 my golden h?mL fsomwmollth 0525 5951 I C, W. UNDE15 Doo' . oheveuXI'ouge's ETMW I-Students Q d0eS7 'I J' M' TAY ffhangs dovvua ' Sunday-school! 4 i.lf'0H:0 5 CWIMUW 'f' fqeam SM! I b0y2l' D' JECE IfQcigaI'ettesJ1f'XQllorsejf - fluukw H Straight 2:1 lr I Q l A fbohn mtjw specialsw 'Il' Shy J 110 C?j ' : This I:QA1'1,ic1QD4JI A 94 Q DHI BETH KZXIDINX l 61'xm:n .yr W11.1.1.xx1s .xxn M.xm'. 1776 CIZIZICEIQS 1'ras1'rlcnf - A. P. BRIGIIAM, A. M. Vive l'rf:s1'f!wft ' NV. F. J-JANGXV0R'l'lIY, A. M. lice. SUf.'7'CIfll7'.lf - A. S. SIl11:1.1m6N, A. M. Uma SOC7'Cffl7',lj REV. C. S. S.xY.xG1c, A. M. 7'ref1sm'eo- - - D. F. Eswzs, D. D. CH7-IIQTEIQ VIEVIIBIIIQS I llcxrzzlcn Dmmullz. D. D.. LL. D.. R. I. A.. '46 SYIN1-1s'1'r:u BURNIIAA1, D. D., Mc. A.. '62 l.1.1.xA1 I-I. M.xYN.xu1w. D. D., N. Y. E., '56 JOHN JAMES LEWLS, LL. D., N. Y. E., '64 EDWAHIQ Jlfnsux, D. D., R. I. A., '65 , FI27-WIRES IN LIIQBE IS. SPEAR, D. D.. N. Y. H., '36 A. P. Bmullml, A. M., N. Y. ,721 V. M. M. GUODICNUITHII. A. M.. N. Y. H., '50 J. F. MCGH111+3u6RY, A. M., Mass. B.. '86 W. H. M.xYN.xR1m. D. D.. N. Y. E.. '56 F. H. HOWARD, A. B., N. Y. K., '81 H. Lowa. D. D., N. Y. H.. '56 F. L. SIIEPARDSON, A. M.. R. I. A., '82-1 W. N. Cl...xuKlc, D. D., N. Y. H.. '61 G. R. BERRY, Ph. D., Me. B., '85 N. L. Axnurzws, Ph. D.. N. Y. H.. '62 W. F. L.,xNGwuu'l'11Y, A. M., N. Y H S4 S. Blruxuxxl. D. D., Me. A., '62 W. H. Cu.m's11.xw, A. M., N..Y H, S4 W. UNDI11lllllI.I.. A. M.. N. Y. H.. '62 O. S. L.xNc4w61a'1'11Y, M. D.. N. Y. H., 'SSI I. M. 'I'.n'1.6u. LL. D.. N. Y. H.. '67 C. D. CH11,D. Ph. D., N. Y. I., '96 D. F. Es'1'1-is. D. D.. Vt. A., '71 W. M. C11Es'1'1-:R, A. M.. N.Y. H., '94 J. Gxuclcxrz. Ph. D.. N. Y. H., '73 J. P. T.xY1.oR, A. B.. N. Y. H., '94 A. Joxrzs, D. D.. N. Y. E., '73 H. A. JUMP. A. B., Mass. B., '96 A. S. Sllmlmox, A. M., N. Y. H., '73 A I. Ho'1'.x1.1Ncs, A. B., N. Y. A., '97 C.- S. S.w,xGr:, A. M., R. I. A., '78 E. L. IKNIGIIT, A. B., N. Y. K , C C. E. SCHAIBLE, A. B., N. Y. H., 'J9 95 7X 1 , l I, 1 r 1 , FIQZXTEIQNITY CCNVENTICNS 1 I - l'l 1, Dlflfl-H WXDD11 EDSILON DELTH LIDSILON ii, Fifty-tliircl Annual Convention Sixty-fifth Allllufll COHVGHUOI1 Springfield, Mass., Nov. 18-20, 1899 Detroit, Mich., Oct. 18-20, 1899 .li ij. DELEGATES DELEGHTE5 H. O. Wu1TN11L1., 1900 P. T. SMITH, 1900 J. M. SAYLES, 1900 H. W. M.1EE.1N, 1901 151 W. M. PAEKE, 1900 W. D. EST-Es, 1901 41, W. T. HENRY, JR., 1901 ' ,Eli 1 BETH THETH DI , Sixtictli Ann ual Convcn tion ,. ,ll 5. Niagara Falls, N. Y., July 28-August 1, 1899 fl 1 , I DELEGHTES ' . A. P. BUP..RoUo11.s, 1900 R. W. BUEROUGHS, 1900 ,, . DHI KHDDH DSI DHI GHIVHVIH DELTH if District Council Fifty-first Annual Convention Brooklyn, N. Y., April 5, 1899 Dayton, Ohio, Oct. 19-22, 1899 DELEGETES DELEQA1-55 E. B. SHALLOW, T88 G. L. BENNETT, 1900 L. D. Fosisumf, 1900 F. C. WHITFIELD, 1901 1 WM. GUILLAN, '97 C. H. HERRICK, 1900 9 96. 'E is 1? 3 gif:-1' XJ! sa wvrm' 'H' 2 L General ly Atbletxcs H -4. Q, JAX V I f x ix 'K 5 A , W Q 5, , 'fum - 4' u - H-a f:,Q:' p ,, 5 5 ,f T' f 1 3 I If .Q wit' . I K A -43210 -g i . 3 f . W ,F .Y NEW YORK STHTE INTEIQCOLLEGIY-WE FXTH LETIC LI NIGN VIEVIBED5 HAMILTON UNION HOBART COLGATE QIIIZICEIPS, l599-I9O0 Presidezzt - - W. E. WEED, .Colgate Sew'az'fu'y H. D. SPENCER, Hamilton Vice Presiclent - PROF. HOWARD OPDYKE. Union 7'9'ecasu1'a9' - C. E. FRANKLIN. Union HTHLETIC COVIVIITFEIE b W. T. WARREN, Hobart PROF. W. P. DURFEE, Hobart PROF. M. S. READ. Colgate J. D. EDWARDS, Union H. D. SPENCER, Hamilton H. E. Fosmcic, Colgate 98 X , I INYYNCI LOP'IPfII'I'I'IfIi HQ, 5, 'II, Pam W P TFRRE1 Hnmlton Puolf. W. P. DURFEE. Hobart Pam Hoxxmw OIDXRE Umon Pum--, M. S. Rmlw. Colgatv L IL D C Illl LOIVIlVII'I'IiIfIf C X P IGHYSTON. Hobart IJI NNPYN I S 7-lW7flI2DIfD Football T1 ml Football T1 acl Baoeball Football Q? I '. . u. 1 . l- . - I . I Iff- ' . T. K. u . I '97 - - 'JIS -za c lil 'I '98 Baseball N I '98 LI W '99 ' Q I '99 . I I '99 I I . F' T I I Q 99 Colgate Hamilton Union 'Hamilton Ham I I tou Eltblctic JB UIIIIOIIQBJS 1.-. . 4 4 COLGETE ZXTHLETIC ZXSSOCIDITIQN OFIZICEIQS, I599- I 900 ,Pv-esidemt - Vice Presiclemf Trecasurev' Secretary - FDVISOIQY BOARD DR. M. S. READ, Clacz'i7'm.cm WILLIABI GUILLAN, '97 H. E. FOSDICK, 1900 0. W. BRIGGS, '97 W. C. CEAMP, 1900 W. L. BARDEEN, '90 - F. R. FORD, 1901 GEORGE L. BENNETT, '1900 - FREDERIC R. FORD, 1901 CLARENCE D. KINGSLEY, '97 - FREDEEIO R. FORD, 1901 IVIYXNYXGEIQS F00tBcaZZManage1', J. M. SAYLES, 1900 Base Ball Mcmageo'-, I-I. 0. WHITNALL, 1900 I T1'ack1Wcmage9', R. L. GURNEY, 1901 Basket Ball lllavzager, E. V. SWEET, 1901 Ass? F0015Bc4!ZMmvage9', G. L. BUCK, 1901 E. A. BAUER, 1902 A IOO ss7t Base BaZZMmmge1', F. R. FORD, 1901 1 . ,L If N . gf, , Vg V, 2' 4-ff' -'71-! .'l'J...-fi. 7 Q32 7, 'Wh ' Q 1 1 ' KJ: , f 1 ,ff -'Q ww , , , Aff, ,fl ' ' IV 12 ' bi, ,mf Af 1,4 f ff V ' ff I ,Fri Ugly. LAW? I ,467 ' 1-l 'f,, ,- 1 fb f Qikzg- Q-9 7, . --'11 W f W . W -1 Qwiwufy-: ,-'. rw if ff ' fLQi ff , ' 1 ,ff L, 1' ff -.QW-.'x N' Q 8 ,mf W-, . X ,fax f f? . WW, A '61 J Wa'-1Mf,,u N-yay l i f My: 41' f -'Yhf i f-ff ' 'WIN' Xff QW I ' X ' ' M -' 1 :ff f - ' V 625 91' .1 M' WL ' I Q 2, ':ff'!7 55 1 , fiff , ,Z , , f,'. I , of gg L 7igH?Y3g.fm 1:15 . ,5Q,,.e j j , ,H-X 'Wm gk V H 57 4' 'N T S ' XZWZ W fi! 9' ' ' ' W iff X- n , if I X ,,0Ql'! !:f ,5' 1255: nf T if ff-.4 1 f , .' 1-.'Xfm l', 'f ' f xfig ,,.-,4,. 4 , fig.,-X1 Y .- 6,4219 1 -1 1 ,ny ' . 171' ,If 12513:-1,'7 ,f f X ',? fl' 'J . f f'lZ1ffl'?2g?f' N?-,537 5 5 ' . -'fi' 1 V if-Gvgf 9' ',4?'f2' ' - N Y V. N -J EQDT- Wx- -1' 4 :Av EJ FOOTIBZXLL V LINIVEIQSITY ELEVEN--I599 Captain. WILLIAM L. ROOT Mzmager, JOHN M. SAYLES Oemfwe. W. H. WAITE5 R. HARIJAN LQffG1lCl7'fI, S. H. ARCHERQ C. W. BRIGGS RigfIJG14f67'f!, R. E. WILLIAMS5 E. C. MILLER Lqf? Tackle, R. W. BURROUGHS Right Tackle, SHERMAN JONES Ley? End, W. L. ROOT. G. L. I-IAYES5 L. J. BINOHAM Rigl1,ztEnd, T. A. MOOREQ H. C. BUCK Lqfk Halves, L. M. WAITEQ W. M. DENNISON R' HH Full Back. zgz alves, G. C. EMBODYQ L. P. HORNBERGER W. C. CRAMPQ E. K. MUNRO Qucfofm- Back, J. A. ROOT5 A. Svelaslilvztes. W. T. HENRY. IO2 JR.g J. A. WILLIAMS M. GRIFFIN ' R I , - 1 1 .gf r 'Aff in fgli' I, I at .INN , ' . E 'lf vi l X z IV Q Y 1 ., I I ' ,I 1 I ,EV N .5 , ,lx 4 1.1 ,li 1 , v'Qf-I 1 K X Ygr . fi Wi 4. ,u 4 ' Lux- N . Lf 1 1 'N 1' -3 fi I, if LE il LI 1 !: 4 . A li 5 . 1 3 F A 1+ YQ A: 1' li 1+- A E w .w ' -'F 5 Ella' .2511 Qgivhg 3 1 ,E 2 ff as W 5 my lf f N X' .4 Ii Q n . 11 I -Q ' :Q I 5 n , W1 , , 3 V, FL DATE September 233 1 October T October 14 October 20 October 28 November 4 November ll November 18 IIOOTPJYXLL GLW I ES 5.i7X5oN Ol: 1599 UN1N'. or VE1u1oN1 1 PLACE scene Richiield Springs CoLGA'rE ConNEL1, 42 Hznnilton CoLoAirE HAB11I,'l'L7N 30 Hamilton COLGATE ST. JOHNS U Hamilton CQLGATE Svufxousm A. X 1 Mnnliue COLGATE ST. JOHNS U Schenectady Co1,oA'rE UNION 5 Albany CoI.oA'1'r: Utica CoLoA'rE HAA11I,ToN 38 log THE FOOT BELL SEZ-XSCN OF '99 T the opening of the fall term many vacancies were found in our team, both by graduation and by faculty regulations. The incoming class brought in a number of good men but there was a direful lack of weight both in and behind the line. Captain Root, with the aid of the graduate coaches, prepared a team which was badly defeated by Cornell. the effects of hard training and had not been the good fortune Our opponents showed skillful coaching, which of our men. Our neXt game was to be with our old rivals from Clinton, and the men worked hard and long. All were becoming encour- aged by the number of men seen nightly on the gridiron, and hopes were high that Hamilton would bite the dust. The eventful day came and Sweetland's team carried us off our feet by fast playing such as had not been seen in a small college team. We now saw that to make any kind of a record we must do the hardest kind of work and train faithfull nished with a training table and the services of Stannard 7 of the University of Pennsylvania, secured. Our next game was with St. Johns whom' we defeated handily. The coach now suggested a new style of playing, which y. About this time the team was fur- IO seemed to work well, and with the willingness of the players some fast practice was seen. Our old friends of the Syracuse A. A. lined up against us on the home ground and a good game was given. Their weight, how- ever, was too much for us, and the day was theirs, 12-6. St. Johns was again defeated, and the team the following week played the first league game with Union at Sche- nectady. By good, fast playing victory was ours, and hope for the pennant ran high when Hamilton g Saturday. The next was with the University of Vermont team at Albany, and the ff ' game was played in a sea of mud. With a substitute team they won by a score of 6-0. The last game was with Hamilton and on this game hung the cham ' h' pions 1p. Our team went to Utica accompanied by nearly the whole student body. College spirit was never better and although we played a losing game che d er oubled on cheer. It was a hard defeat to bear but we brou ht 8 home a lesson-to be successful on the gridiron we must h . ave a coach from the very beginning until the end of the season. 12-0, could but tie her on the followin gailne L 6 I ' f 1 ff? f ul X X I Q X N mxm u. x 7 ff f V fff ff fm .ffl QS' WRX ' fl If fWf ll N' f nyl' 'lf V ,wif ,fin ffl 1 fy M A 1 ,flf'h,'ff'f ol X I fd ff I ff ff 4 'f I JJ 'MLW I ll' if W' T53 if 'A ,V 1 uni mu, f- 12 -1555 , I, -L., F T Z gf 10 ff f 1' f , 4 , , 5 ,j I f f f 1 V 4 f ,f f K pf . 0 1 ' .. , L' A ' N . - f ,--' . ,H .5 , 1 my N F159 1, . f 1- .- , 1 , . 'fi'-hgw W! 'J if if fy 1 3 ' . 4 . ,fy ',' 1- I-. -ff V1 -' , , f - 'as , 'f' f QM fiviza, 19 . 01 , ' f f .fflilafh ,V f , 1 . 'fi ,W IIA, f,, , I X9 . 'ff' -Higm, :. il. M ,f ff, 4A9,,-'W , Z is fl lil.: Q 539111141 A13 1,25 1-'y-.4'?,' N- 'f . .w,!i:f'?i . 1 - yi 2 ,fx i gggqgfzgfi' Q9 A . ut, f 'J , I Q-F - ffH:1:',,fflIf 'fy' 1' 'J ' y 74 9' -af f ' 1' , 1' 2: 'fa Q fr- -19 HJ . 9.4 12f'f':'li Y nj 'f'm.',: '. ,.-, ' , , fn fffywfi 'f iz 5 fmi ,fy f ' vi 6 71' '-4' ff' 11-l'a'. If fy fn 4 . v- fn! J 4 fi df' f 9 :j ' - 5 ,Q I 4 21 X f ' we '72, 'W f ff, M,-,, ., ff ff ,f 4,--' f qnmsiff, N I, ywa 1 , Q4 4' My I, -WI, Www 1 I ,A V .-1 qu ,f' . 1.4 gi-X fl LT' K -T - - .M ' f .3 L, As ig! 1-H' 1 N 5, 2 - .. 3. 5' T 1 i 5 4 . A 15 ' I! . , UNIVERSITY NINE .1 R 1599 1 --?.. L. si ' :, , ' T C. A. HONVLAND, J0CQ9ZLH:7'l S R TREAT Manager , W..L. ROOT, Catcher C. S. STERLING, P, h C. A. I-IOWLAND, Ito ers . Q L. D. FosBURY, First Base J. A. ROOT, Second Base .EI N. L. GREENE, Third Base X1. H . B. , R. W Lg, L. H. Er W. C. it G. L. 51, J. G. .. fi' 5 it tri H xii L! uf :fl DICKSON, Short Stop BURROUGHS, , WATKINS, Rlght F CRAMP, Center Field BUCK, F, 1 FOOTE, Left led 108 ield BASEBALL GAMES SEASON OF l699 DATE 1 PLACE SCORE April 15 Ithaca CORNELL 145 COLGATE 1 May 3 i Schenectady UNION 93 COLGATE 8 May 9 Hamilton HOBART 165 COLGATE 4 May 11 Manlius ST. JOHNVS 129 COLGATE 5 May 15 Hamilton COLGATE A. 85 COLGATE 22 May 27 Clinton HABIILTON 165 COLGATE 4 Total runs scored by opponents, 75 H H -- -- Colgate. 44 109 BATTING AND IZIELDING ZWEDAGE5 'l ISYXTTI NG FIELDING wo. GAMES A. E. ln. 21: 9.11. s. E. P. c. No. GAMES P. o. A. E. P. c. FOOTE 72 T 3 0 0 IT' .429 CHAMP. C. f. 0 5 1.000 STERLING 1 15 5 0 1 1 .400 W. Roo'1'. c. .1 728 .950 W. Roor 5 18 11 0 1 10 .389 FOSEUEY. 1 b. li 11.1 .923 IIow1.ANb li 73:1 7 0 1 S .348 GREENE. 3 b. 4 4 .909 CEAS11- li. 24 7 1 1 11 .333 How1.ANn. b. p. dz Q 11 13 .566 GREENE 4 115 LD 0 1 1 .313 BUCK. 1. f. 4 S .800 BURROUGIIS 5 10 5 0 r? T2 .313 STERLING. p. at r. f. 5 1 706 Fosnnm' 0 20 3 3 0 1 .238 BURRoUG11s. 3 b. 11 r. f. .1 4 700 Drcusox 11 21 0 1 4 .238 WATKINS. 1-. f. .. 72 667 Blum 4 17 4 0 0 :2 DICKSON. S. S. it 1. f. 0 10 649 J. Rom' -1 14 E5 11 0 72 .214 J. Rocrr. 2 b.. 4 7 1547 XV.-XTKINS :2 5 11 11 0 0 .000 Foorm. 1. 1'. 73 0 ,000 IIO HE Season ways. Tli the Varsit that there WaS The old players 1 the best there 1 failures of the se determination to We began the ering that we W none whatever o with the record 1 At Union a Y close throughout then an error in men a lead of on thus losing a W1 can honestly sag the spirited, sy porters. Let CC May Htll. Hob: in the most dill .C. Will E050 W272 9:09 sofa 500 T013 T00 :SGT fi-19 .MT U00 BASE SIDED NI BALL OF I 599 HE season of '99 was very unfortunate in many ways. Though there were plenty of candidates for the Varsity, yet few were experienced players. so that the1'e was very little real competition for positions. The old players were sure of their places, so failed to give the best there was in them. The many mistakes and failures of the season are best forgotten. in the hope and determination to make 1900 a complete success. We began the season with Cornell at Ithaca. Consid- ering that we went there with ahnost no practice and none whatever on the diamond, we were quite satisfied with the record made. At Union a very pretty game was played. It was close throughout 3 for the first seven innings Colgate led, then an error in the field and a few hits gave the Union men at lead of one run. In the ninth we failed to score, thus losing a well contested game. NVe who were there can honestly say that we believe the game was won by the spirited, systematic yelling of our opponents sup- porters. Let Colgate read here a lesson. May Sith. Hobart came here and found the Colgate team in the most dilapidated 4'bLl.llOOl12lSCCllSiOl1u stale that one can imagine. Of course they had a Hwalk over. By the way. the above mentioned state was quite permanent. At Manlius-except for the first inning-we played the .Tohnnies to a stand-still. in fact, out played them in the field and at bat. After the first inning. in which the shortstop fi went up at the rate of five errors. their hits were scarce and their scores scarcer. Of course and as usual, we demonstrated to our Aca- deme friends that we were still their big uncles. . Impatient with our many defeats and failures, the Advi- sory Board finally took matters in their own hands, and with what result we all know. We hope and believe that their action will be infiuential in strengthening every de- partment of athletics this year, in which case the season will not have been a total failure. iVith the entering class has come some exceptional material which will be available this spring. and which should do much to inspire the men with the spirit that wins in baseball. There seems to be. moreover, at this writing a general inclination to get into the game. and put a team in the field that will do credit to the college. and bring confidence and cheer to the hearts of the rooters. III QOPHDIVIGIQE BASEBALL NINE CLZXSS OF IQOI J. A. ROOT, Catcher C. A. HOWLAND, Pitcher E. K. MUNRO, First Base J. G. FOOTE, Second Base N. L, GREENE, Third Base H. W. MAREAN, G. C. DAPSON, Short Stop W. T. HENRY, JR., Right Field J. A. WILLIADIS, C 1 H' W. MAREAN, entel F1eld L, M. WAITE, Left Field K I II2 4:59,-I L I If-u , wfcxx. A x --'91 1- An'- : , -x, 7-- X ., 'xml ff TTT? 'A N f ,idfa's'y ai Q-ENS Q., ' Q mul!-:-X: , ' Y, .,i5-w. xgST'5s X bf? i-ggi.. -'-5 V r Nxt., vmvgvq A K. '14 Wgrsxkx B 4,.i3T 1 i W' ' A Xt-. ff-'l4,'f. - Aff ' E I. ,. 'K f Y if W, 'H VN' . u-vLx'ir'xx ' ' 1-A , . V A if, Fl'-'gg'f4'7f'1:.',t,, . 1 L-ff-Kg x xiii' ' z 6 ! . ,Kham ., , M, 4 'Q 1-.4 - X Q ,X-1' ' -1 4 , , yup, , r, A, -y 'fl ' 5 N N. MGX gm, w Q., W v is A LX' I A OLC4 l A W 5,-qt-'en N ' ' .Lanaaf ' ' A ..-'ia , f vfww Q -.qi -I , .maj i .4 . ' .A , 1 -'Q . I it rl, 1 - ff X V., in -MJ .-..- ., -,-.,- n.,., ' SOPHOMORE BASEBALL TEAM fCLASS OF 1901 X , , rg 1 .f Q ' ,fa Q, 1 ,W A ,gt 1 4 ,N I, 1 Q, 1 , 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 L- 11 1 1' 1 1 1 1 Ti 1 ,1 I 11 1 11 1 1 T 4 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 I , 1 1 1 1 1 111 1 I 4 , 11 , '1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1: E 1 1 ' f 1f 1 1' 111 1 1 1 1 1 1' I2 1-1 E1 1 11 11 1 1 1 1 1 M 1 f 1 '11 1 1 11 1 1 ,1 ' X 5 ' 1 1 1 1 i 9 .1 L . 1x! 1 -1 I1 BZXSKETIBFXLL EARL V. SWEET, Germ-ul .llanugar JUNIOR TEAM FRANK P. BUssELL, Captain. J. ABIBLER WVILLIAMS, .llfmugev Forwards, J. A. NVILLIAMS, J. A. ROOT Centre. F. P. BUSSELI., J. AT.xNAsOFF Guards, E. V. SWEET, F. P. HUNTER, H. W. JWAREAN SGDHOIVIOIQE TEYXIVI IRVING BUNDY, Captain. EZRA M. MORSE, .llmmgev Forwards, L. J. BINGIIAM, R. D. BROWNELL Centre, S. H. ARCI'IER, A. H. GAGE Guards, I. BUNDY, F. PORTER IZIQIEHVIYXN TEAM ORMA N. BIARSH, Ijcqfmiu :XRTIIUR M. GRIF1-'EN, .llmmgw Forwards, O. N. MARs11, I. GALUSHA Centre, R. E. NVILLIAMS, A. M. GRIFFEN Guards, L. A. WVALKER, J. W. LARKIN, T. A. BIOORE IIS BASKETS 'LL LE' CUE SEASON OI: i900 TEAMS SCORE DATE SOPHOMORE VS. FRESHMAN 10-9 H , n January ZZ ACADEMY VS. SEMINARY 11-13 SEMINARY VS. SOPHOMORE 19-15 - L 6 February O ACADEMY VS. JUNIOR 39-Z1 FRESI-IMAN VS. JUNIOR 1 16-14 W a , 1 , , 1ieb1'ua,1'y 12 ACADEMY VS. b0PHOMORE 1 50-15 ' JUNIOR VS. SEMINARY 1 16-13 , 1 , , Fe-b1'uzL1'y 2b ACADEBIY VS. FRESHMAN 1 16-11 ' i 1 JUNIOR VS. SOPHOMORE A 36-10 H 1 - , , 1 :wel O SEMINARY VS. FRESHMAN 31-10 SUMMARY JJJJJJJ JJ JJ JJ FCQAMES TEAMS ------ .---- - --- - ---- 1 EA,.E -.A WON LOST PERCENTAGE ACADEMY 4 1,000 JUNIOR 2 ,500 SEMINARY Z ,500 SOPHOMORE ' 1 .259 FRESHMA N 1 .250 116 C I H R. W. BURROUGH G. C. EMBODY TIQPQCK HTH LETICS V199 H. W. M.xm:.xN, liffpzfflw R. L. Glzuxmx .llumfgw TEZYIVI H. W. BUIIIUIITHIIS H. W. MALQEAN J. D. W. C11r:s'1'r:1z H. R. MCM1l.I,.xN H. R. DAl.1u'M11m: E. A. P.xuKlf:n Cl. C. lflnlmm' W. R. R,xN1m,u,l, 1 L. E. Furzxcu G. H. Sx11'1'1l '- Sllrzxumx .Tum-Ls G. H. YOUNG 1 i 1 H9 K., BEST ATHLETIC IQECOIQDS AT COLCATE V ii' W in i Wi, viii-Y Ai,-Qriinir min-, iw . E V EN 'rs HOLDER 100 yard Dash 72730 yard Dash 440 yard Dash 11811 Mile Run Mile Run Mile Walk 1 129 yard Hurdle 9? 72739 yard Hurdle 16 TD. Hammer Threw 16 TD. Shot Put Running Broad Jump Running High Jump Pole Vault Two Mile Bicycle Race 'f Mile Relay Race M. ATTARIAN N. CLEVELAND H. H. PRATT C. H. SEARS W. W. B.xRR1cR S. S. Hnsn, Jr. A. Z. HALL H. H. PRATT H. H. PRATT H. E. Nnwnm. P. A. BIUNRO G. A. BRIGGS A. H. SIMPSON IPI. R. MAcM1r,1.AN A. G. DY14: C1 ,ASS CLASS RECORD 782 19 Sec's Ex 783 EX 1900 IBM Secs '98 54 1-5 Secs '98 73 Min. 4M Sec's '98 4 Min. 502 Secs '98 7 Min. 42 Sec's Ex 1900 18 Secs Ex 1909 BTX Sec's '94 89 ft. 3 ins. '95 X ft. '94 19 ft. 9 ins. EX '95 E 5 ft. 32 ins. 19073 9 fn. 8 ins. Ex 1901 5 Min. 38 Sec's '99 3 Min. 73395 Sec's pl 13 Same as now used in inter collegeiate league. 95 .. .. .. -. 4. .s as is -f' This has 12 relays, each man running 1463g yards. GA DAT14: Oct. 10, 1879 May ::1 1897 May ::1 1897 May728 1898 May :es 1898 May 18 1898 May 21 1897 May :z1 1897 May 39. 1893 June 8, 1895 May 18, 1894 Oct. ra, 1891 -May 19. 1899 May 18, 1898 May 21, 1897 Inter Class Inter Class Inter Class 2nd An'l N. 73nd An'l N. Inter Class Inter Class Inter Class 9th An'l N. MES Y.S.I X I Y.S.I X I Y. S. I Opening Syr. Ath. l 1Lld Inter Class Inter Class Inter Class Inter Class Inter Class 120 Y LISIQAL CI LIES VXI iw g .. 4 ' YY V 'W N V Y J I I g I I I I I I I I I I I I. II II If I, II :I II Ii I I I I I 1 I 1 I . I I I QI II 'I I 'I I ,I GLEE. CLUB Leader, 'GEORGE C. EMBODY Jllcmager, WILLIABI M. PARKE FI IQST TENOR E. M. MORSE Gr. O. TAMBLYN L. J. BINGIIAM J. SECOND TENOI2 J, E, MILLER' A. T. TAMBLYN R. L. GURNEY E. FIIQST BHSS Wg R. RANDALL H.. R. WESTCOTT, JR. H. W. MAREAN F. SECOND BASS E, E. ARNOLD I. H. BENEDICT W. T. PIENRY. JR. G. I22 til! ii i. . f Y W fi'--:--f ,W LARKIN G-REENFIELD FORD EMBODY I. xr':K1N QHPIENFIELD PHRD NHSHUY B. Plum' L, Rm aT WXNDOLIN CLUB 1,fmlw1', CHARLES B. PHIPPS Mamzgm-, WILLIAM M. PARKE VIZXNDOLINS C. B. PIIIPPS N. L. GREENE E. K. MUNRO W. T. STOCK G. H. SMITH GLIITYTXIQS W. L. ROOT A. L. BABOOOK E. E. ARNOLD J. A. ROOT MYTXNDCLYX W. T. I'IENRY,' JR. 125 INSTIQUIVIENTZXL QLIPYIQTETTE HENRY W. TAYLOR Picmo Uowzet Flute Violin I2 W. T. HENRY, JR. O. T. AVERY - G. C. EMBODY H. W. TAYLOR Laude? ISCELLIDXNEOLIS . . . M 9- 3iOI2G7-YNIZATIONS 5 Q THE IVIZXDISGNENSIS Published Alternate Mondays during the College Yczu' B07-YIQD Cl: EDITCIQS HARRY SCHUYLER FOSTER, 1900, Eclitor-in-Clziqf' ERNEST LAMOTT ELLIOTT RSSOCIRTE EOITOIQS HIXRRY EMERSON FOSDIOK, 1900 ROBERT W. BURROUGHS, 1900 JOHN AMBLER WILLIABIS, 1901 ARTHUR J. E 128 , 1901, Business l1IlU'L66ffU7' YVILLIAM MORE PARKE, 1900 VANS, 1901 Hmi. 1900 - 5 Jglfq, wf-A L. AA Y . -i 'i' ' -fs V ff: -Q3 V' , Q 5 5 ' vt . 'l .lf if . a I' QL Z gg fi- L, fi ff A 1?'Qv Xie' T' 1' .,,.. iii . 4: ffl fgfs Tv 'S . 4 f! V21 43.2 ful iff! I L Ulf sg, w w L v f P 1 1. 5. pf iT K. Q2 E V1 ii fl V i i. 5 T ll iT TI 'f 'l N 1 6 1 J r L. U-J-A The Hobart Herfzfzf The ffeznzilfwf l The Hf!llZZ'If The -Ufffff The I TL NEW YQQR ST7-TFE INTEIQCQLLEGIATE DIQESS TXSSQCIATIQN OIIFICEIPS President - RALEIGH HOLDEN, Uhiversitg Herald Vice Presicleut FREDERICK W. STEXVART, Rochester Campus Secretary cmclT1-ectsurer - Miss LAURA CLARK, Sibgl IVIEVIBITQS The Hobart Herald The Sibgl QE1mi1'uj The Hamilton Literctrg Monthlg The Universitg 1 orztm CSy1'2'l.CllSCD The Hamilton Review ' The St. Stephezfs College Messenger The Mctclisovfensis Qflolgzmtej The Wells College Chronicle The Rochester Campus The Cornell Mctguzinte The Corieorclievzsis QUnionQ The Colmnhict Literctrg .llonthlg The University Herald QSy1'acusej The Parthenon, QUnionj The Cornell Era The Ltlll7'67Il'lil1L QS1. Lztwroucej The Vassar Miseellcwzvg The Alfred Uniuersitg llerulzl 131 I Q X 1 L X 3 . I 5 1 l J 1 rt if 3. P. I . f v v i . I I S I f w A i I i 1 M CQLGZXTE DRESS CLUB - OFFICEDS President - Prof. R. W. THOMAS Vice President - - W- M- PARKE Secretary and Treasarer E. D- MITCHELL K BOY-UQD OI: MYXNYXGEIQS F. S. SQUYER, Chairman R. W. BURROUGHS J. D. HOWLETT DADEQS IPEDQESENTED Albany Times- Union Pacific Bcqatist Auburn Daily Advertiser Rochester Herald Book Reviews Home Daily Sentinel Christian Herald The Standard Earlville Stanclarcl Syracuse Post Standard Evdfdmimfr' Syracuse Herald Hamilton Republican . T7-gy Daily 136007-fl Journal and Jllessenger Utica Press New York Education ' Utica Herald Neic York Evening Post Utica Observer Neic York Tribune Utica Sunday Joarnal Oneida Dislmkch Utica Sunday Tribune 07295650 U 7175070 The Watchman Philaclekohia Public Ledger I32 5.,- 1TT'i , PROP. Y G, L, BENNETT T, E, BOSWEL A, P. BI R. W C 1 R, W, CRA: if eww! VI EIVI BEDS Golgate Q72 PROE. R. W. THOMAS DR. W. N. CLARKE PEOE. R. W. MOORE . IDYGSQ Qlllb I9OO G. L. BENNETT W. C. CHAMP W. M. PARKE T. E. BOSWELL H. S. FOSTER F. S. SQUYER A. P. BURROUGHS J. D. HOWLETT H. R. WVESTCOTT. Jr. R. W. BUEEOUOHS E. D. MITCHELL H. O. WVIIITNALI. I9OI I G. C. DAPSON E. A. HALL J. A. WILL1AMS H. F. EVANS G. H. SMITH G. H. YOUNG I902 G. L. BARDEN H. R. MOMILLAN I903 R. W. CEAINE I. GALUSHA R. E. WILLIAMS 9 I 33 -- ,..,. THE SZXLIVI GLINDI Published Annually by the Junior Class EDITODS FOI? I90I ERNEST LAMOTT ELLIOTT - - Editor-in-Clziqf WILLIAM THOMAS I'IENRY, JR. Business Mmmgeol- YXSSOCIYXTES ' JOHN AMBLER WILLIAMS ARTHUR J. EVANS FRED CURTIS WHITFIELTJ 1 H Q7 Qi: I ,if i IEW T34 l f . I I z ' 5 1 I I I 3 3 4 illfl ff'-. 7' 2, 37 +- I B In 1: , z A I E is if 2 I 4 66: . Q' pm f 9'-Tak' E Devotional. C. A My -4 Y. M. C. 23. GFFICEQS President - - J. D. HOXVLETT Vice Presiclemt - - C. A. HOWLAND Treasurer - E. C. MILLER Uorresponcling Secretary H. E. HATCHBIAN Recovding Secretary G. H. YOUNG CHYXIDIVIEN OI: COIVIIVIITTEES Devotional, C. A. HOWLAND Missionary, F. P. HUNTER Membership, H. E. FOSDICK Finance, E. C. MILLER Bible Study, H. S. FOSTER Hand Book, E. C. MIIALEII T37 i I , J JLINICI2 DQQMENRDE CLASS OI: I9OI Gymnasium. April 720. 1000 P7.eSidg,,f- REV. 'W Vice Presiclents. RE . ff R12 G. A DYXTDQNESSIE A Rf MRS. W. L. BARDEEN MRS. D. F. ESTES MRS. R.. W. MOORE MRS. C. W. SPENCER MRS. A. P. BRIGHAM ' MRS. W. F. LANGWORTHY MRS. A. F. PAYNE MRS. R. W. Tumi.-xS 14 MRS. W. H. CRAWSHAW MRS. J. F. MCGREGORH' MRS. F. L. SIIEPARIISON MRS. C. H. VAN TUYI. I IQECEDTION COP1IVIl'l'FEE MRS. N. L. ANDREWS MRS. G. E. BIERRILI. Fmf I MRS- W- E- FORD MRS. .Tf M. TAYLOR 'MRS W, M, WEgT Treczszu commnwiri A EDWIN K. MUNRD, 0fI.CH:7'77Zfl7? EARL V. SWEET, S,,c.,.6,,,,,.y Um, yvlwmmw, L GEORGE C. DAPSON JONATHAN HOLDEN JARVIS A, ROOT THOMAS IJ. TlI03IIlSllN ERNEST A. HALL LEWIS P. HORNBERGER ORADIAH M. RULAND Lrzox M. WARN: F A BUTLER .91 138 3.61. CQLGHTE ALLIWI NI IXSSQCIFXTIONS G EN EI27-YL HSSOCIILXTION OIZFICEIPS I 900- I 90 I Ijvwaiflfffft. REV. W. A. GRANGER. D. D., '7-L. Mt. Vernon Seca-awry, CHARLES W. UNDERHILL. ESQ., '62, Hamilton l'1iwl'v-esidcnts, REV. G. H. HUEu,xn1m. D. D., '75, Auburn 7'o'eusm'ev', PROFESSOR J. M. TAYLOR, LL. D., '67, Ham- REV. E. H. LOVETT. '77, Davenport. Ia. ilton G. W. DOUGLASS, '88, Brooklyn Necrologist, PROFESSOR W1L1,1AM F. L.xNGwOR'r11Y, A. M.. ENCER REV. DANIEL H. CLARE. '95. Waverly '87, Hamilton IOMAS IN TUYL 7-YLBZXNY COLGHTE 7-YLLIPINI 7XSSOCI,3l'I'ION OFIIICEIQS l900-l90I President, HON. C. M. PARKE, '68, Gloversville First Vice President, REV. WV. J. QUINCY, '76, Troy Second Vice President. W. P. THOMSON, '77. CohOeS 7'v-ezzszwwr, L. J. CA1.1mwELL, '97, Amsterdam b'ec1-emo-gf. J. B. CREIGIITON, '97, Regents' Oflice. Albany NEW YORK COLGHTIE YXLLIMNI YTXSSOCIY-YTION IPSON M-7 IfXIfCLITIVE COI IIVII'I'VEIf I 900- I 90 I F. A. BUTLER, '90, 38 Park Row, New York L. A. GOODENOUGH, '86, 39 Summit Ave., Jersey City, N. J. E. B. SHALLOW, '88, 1090 Dean St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 139 l 1 1 l l 1 1 1 ! l l , 1 I 1 I 1 1 ! l . 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 I ! l l ! l 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 YELLS FIND CQLCIQS CCLLEGE Maroon Hip, hoo-rah! Rah-rah! Rah-rah! Hip, hoo-rah! Rah-rah! Rah- rah! Colgate! Colgate! Rah! Rah! Rah! Colgate! CLFXSS OI: I900 Red and White C. U. ! C. U. ! Rah-rah! Rah-rah! C. U. ! C. U. ! Rah-rah! Rah- rah! Hoo-rah! Hoo-rah! 1900! Rah! Rah! Rah! CLFSS OI: I 9Ol Orange and Black 1901, Rah, rah I 1901, Rah-rah ! C-O-L-G-A-T-E ! Sis! Boom ! Ah ! Colgate! CLRSS OI: I902 ' Gold and Blue Hity, Tity, Zip! Rah! Zoo! Colgate! Colgate! 1902! CLASS Ol: A !905 Red and Blue Raekety, Caxl Co-wax! Co-wax! Rackety, Cax! Co-wax! Co- wax! He-Ha-He! He-Ha-He! Colgate! Colgate! 1903! LIKE Ruby, Old Gold and Blue 1 Rah! Rah! Rah! AKE! Rah! Rah! Rah! AKE! Rah! Rah! Rah! A K E! Mu! 140 i JI' Peacock Blue and Gold Vzu11cpopoS 5621 Rah! Rah! Rah! Sis! Iioom! .-Xh! Us-lr,z1 Upsilon ! Colgate ! If H ll Pink and Blue Phi! Kai! Phi! Beta Theta Pi! W-0-0-ti-L-I-X! Woog-lin' Woog-lin ! 41 A' 'I' Pink and Lavender Hi! Hi! Ili! Phi Kappa Psi! Live ever! Die never! Phi Kappa Psi ! 41 1' .1 Royal Purple and Old Gold Rah ! Rah I Phi Gamm ! Rah ! Rah ! Delta! Rah ! Rah ! llah ! Rah ! Phi Gamma Delta I fl' il lf Rah! Rah! Rah! C9 N E! Rah! Rah! Rah! U N lf! Rah! Rah! Rah! Q N E! Tm-:-'1x-x-NL'-Ex'-sl-Lux If .1 If Beta Deltl Beta Delt! Yelp. Yelp. Yelp! Beta Delhi Delta U ! Rah-rah ! Delta U ! Rah-rah ! 'll Siumrr z3rroS-221111 n1'3r11 Tnmms :ll.I.l-iN Al'lTHl'lI C.'m1'.xN Jeux D.x1:111 l- MASK NAT Levis EDMYXD Hllil RALPH I'11T'1'1e W11.1.1. .l1'1HX lYll.l,l lllaxlzi Rm: XVILLIA ll 'l'f 1X1 1 v 71+ ry cr v rry 2 Delta! Voog-lin ! bi Kappa. hi Rah: .hx Rah! Ln' DITGIQEEQ Conforrccl .Iunc 3272. 18921 YA. B. 'I'um1.xs A1.1,1cN II.x1c1:1' 811111-Jw: IIIGGINS C'11.11:1.1-is BICICENZIE N1:w1'oN .AlC'l'lIl'll Cmxxxx CAIN S'1'1c1,1114:N IIo1.1m1f:N. Jn. C11A1:1.1-:S H1c1:B1:nT 01.111111 .luux D.x1xu1.1. W1-:1:s'1'1c1: C'1114:s'1'1-31: l4'1c.xNc1s U1,Yss1cs Ko111.1:1c Homme Locxwoon Pom' l4'1:.xx1i FIGIKJQIS Dl'NlI.ABI E1.1s1:1z'1' I-I11,1,1':s Lon: Co1:N1f:1,1Us EDWARIJ SCHAIBLP: NAT 'l'I'1IiIiY l4'1c.n11-: WA1,'1'E1i C1..x1:1i DIASUN DIL B. I.m'1s l':IHIl'XIJ 1511111 111111111111-1 EVI'1Rl'1'1 I' E1.1m14:1m S'1'1'.x1:'1' Rom' T1m.xT ll.x1.1'11 I'm 1'1-11: l41,1ss li1f:1:'1'uN Axsox G.x1:1:1f:'1 1' C11A1e1.1f:s EA1:1. lVAl,'l'I'Il!S W11,1,1.u1 lYAI.I..U'lC lgl'I.I.UK'li Glcolcullz W11,1,1.u1 S'1'1:o1:1c1, Slcvxxouu H1cNN1':'1 1' W1-11.1.1311 IB. S. II1-:1:1s1:1c'1' .ASIIICR C0011 FIIICII .Io11N N1f:v1Nu11:1: I3. D. .Imax lil-:N.1.x111N Axlncnsox. A. Ii. .lus111'.x l41'1:N14:'1 1' thxxoxu. A. IS. W11.1.1.xx1 lllcxm' linuwx. I'h. li. A1.v-x L1f:oNA1a1m KNA1'1'. A. H. lI1-:N1:1' Z D.xv1s. A. Ii. C1'1c1's W11,1.1.n1 Nlcuus. A. li. Gxcqmsxc E1m1'N11 'l'1:.xv1-:lc S'1'1':v1f:NsoN. A. M.. B. D. HONOIQLYIPY D. D. Illav. W11.1.1.xA1 'l'uxu11 C'.x1csox ll.xNN.x. A. li.. Class of 'T0. Bradford. Pu. R1-xv. XVILLIABI W.x1,1,,1u1a D,1wI.1':1'. A. li.. Class of '81 iScm.D. Minneapolis. Minn. LL. D. Hox. 1515011615 A. HARDIX. Little Falls I4l DIQIZES Lewis Commencement Ovation '3U'dW'n GVCCR FRED JOHN NEVINGER A FOREST PRESTON HUNTEIQ. First NVALTER DALTON ESTES, Second ELIQCHC A. Dowland QIXCIHOIW FRED J ORN NEVINGER Sgphgmopg Lqfin JUNOV GVGHOH FRANK PORES BUSSELL, First 1 NELSON LENVIS GREENE, Second HARRY EMERSON FOSDICK. First JAMES DAVID EIOYVLETT, Second Kil1QSfOI'Cl DCCliimClTiOI1 C1055 of I900 WVALTER CONOEMORE CHAMP, First CIGSS of I554 DCDGTC CORNELIUS EDWARD SOIIAIRLE, First FRED JOHN NEVINGER, 56001161 VVILLIAM THAYER TOWER, Second . LCIWVCHCC CHCINCCII Class Of l90I 1j'REDER1C RE1'NOIJDS FQRIQ, First EDWARD ALBERT PARKER, First GEORGE EVERETT ELDRED, Second WALTER DALTON ESTES, 5900115 Lasher Essay Class of I902 A HAIQRX' EMERSON FOSDICK, First IVAN HOWLAND BENEDICT, First HENRY RUSSELL YVESTCOTT, Jr., Second GEORGE BURTON NIARSTON, Second Allen Essay DOCIQC lfI1TI'ClI1CC FOREST PRESTON HUNTER, First YVALLACE TEALL STOCK, First GEORGE HENRY YOUNG, Second GEORGE BYRON ROORRAOII, Second . osborn IVIGTIWCITXCIHCCII Dm Beta KGDDCI WEBSTER CHESTER, First YVILLIAM LORD ROOT, Second ELBERT HILLES LOYD, '99 CORNELIUS EDWARD SOHAIBLE, '99 142 vilq, 'eeond ieeond Second Second Second Second 1A1BLE,'99 Ny Y 5 l 1' J 1 Wa 2, 1 3 I i in 1g , si I 4 a 712 hi! 3 , r eq rl if U1 iw 3+ . S, .?' ff! in rf' I x53 21 f v :J 31 I ' 1 M N I , l 5 'z P 1 N. 1,4 . e 3 v 1' ' 'Q' - f 'A ' 1 . n Y I ' , .Q sv' ',.-s, , ,,. W 1 L. 4 ' mf, - - V Y 44' ,N 'Q , , 5 4- . 1 ' Q fb-4 A 1 K, V 1.- Q, Wu. 1, 'hw 1: vu kind the Prrill vther their i-tion and aton and ence ghas . has h to J the 'anis with s on hest ings New THE I9l2ESlDENT'S HOUSE IDERHAPS no one addition to the University's equip- ment during the past year is more noticeable than the new house for the President. which is now nearly completed. Rich. massive, substantial. it takes a promi- nent place among the modern structures on the campus. and adds materially to its beauties. The new building is located just east of the library. on the site of the old house. the removal of which was cause for reiiection on the part of those familiar with its his- tory. The new structure is built of blue limestone from the quarry on college hill. with cot- tage finish for the second story and ond fioor. which has six bed-rooms and two bath-rooms. and on the thirdtloor are four bed-rooms and servants' bath. The house is heated by the indirect hot water system, which is so arranged that any rooms not ordi- narily in use may be entirely isolated. The interior finishings of the lower story are mainly in hard wood. The house is built in the most thorouo'h manner at an D entire cost of about 326.000, The erection of such a building at the suggestion and expense of Mr. James B. Colgate. of New York. serves forcibly to remind us again of that gentlemans practical and abiding interest in our 3,-it rrlnm zmmfr. and X I inspires a spirit avi' rooi as shown in our cut. Its 0'en- 1 r - ,, T 'Q ' ,-'gig l ot gratitude to- Z3 , . -. .-, E: Alllix X ,li I C . . . f .. -f f' 'ff V- iff- 4 '- 'fs if 41 , . . eral dimensions are about sixty by l ' g glngi i s i . gQif4f,. A I ward l11m in the - - f N 'H I--'ff- i l' ' . e Q - nity-two ieet. with wide porches i ' - T,-- L - ,gsgize 'E - I i L4 Jffyiiysi 'Q' 1191111 ef CVPVY ' , f' ' . Q ,., rg-.:i f T FK- L .gf :Q -3' T ' upon the west iront and toward the l , ,,i,,..,,..,-,ai .. i .-ff? . undergraduate north. The first floor has a library g rj 715' -55.1 -I LL-.-i l f -f saigg f . ' E' and alumnus. C18x26J with large fire-place nook E 'fn-A--1-43255313335riilj,-55:3 r I . : ' :Qi .,-- l ff. '. .'-5 gil' r'-.Y1-f.' ,. T:-fl 5fr f ,,-- 'N'-1 ', . , . 1 ' I 7 ' . . ,,,-,,, ,,, A' v ., I ,JH I il X mf P31101 C14 X 185- dems i-.----..-.,.--gg:-4e.-.g:gLg-.. ii ii if room Q20x22J. all connected by wide doorways with each other and with spacious en- trances and staircase halls C20x3-lj. The Presidents private reception room Cl-lxlSJ also opens upon the stair- case hall. A wide staircase. with finish in the manner of an old colonial house. the Bellingham mansion. in Chel- sea. Massachusetts. leads to a wide landing and the sec- I l'lH'l l'lU'lNIIll'IN'l'.S HOUSE WHITNALL ATHLETIC EIELD ' HE new athletic field is being constructed on the Hat at the south-west corner of the campus. When com- pleted it is to include a one-fourth mile oval cinder track with 11220 yard straight-away: a turf football gridiron and jumping apparatus inside the track. and a smooth-dirt 47 Y M '1'kTI1l .Fold X'i11sg I his gate sent -on1e tllis uued Fuc- H to L to vere nent had that stees oval Ited. grat- ed of WHITNALL ATHLETIC FIELD IN COURSE OF CONSTRUCTION qs if 0 LBEDT PERRY LAD indeed are we all to welcome home from his year's travel and study in Europe our alumnus. whose achievements do us honor, our instructor. whose teaching inspires us, and our friend. whose interest in student welfare every college man knows. Our hearts went out to him asvhe left us a year ago almost overcome with a grief that years will not efface 5 and now we rejoice to find him full of energy and hope and confidence, as he once more takes up his work with us. Professor Brigham's interests are not limited to his own scientific lines. He is thoroughly abreast of contem- porary educational thought, and has been closely identified with the general advancement of our own institution. especially so during the spring of 1897, when he and Professor Crawshaw temporarily served as leaders of the faculty. He is a Fellow of the Geological Society of America. a member of the Boston Society of Natural History. The National Geographic Society. and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. The National Educational Association has frequently rec- ognized his work and for two years asked him to serve as chairman of its committee on geography. He is well- known as a preacher, and numerous prominent churches 151 BmGHAM,A.V. seek him as a frequent supply. As a lecturer he has always been popular 3 the American Geographical Society and the Brooklyn Institutehave honored him with invita- tions. and a portion of his yeai-'s leave of absence has been spent at the University of Chicago where he gave a course of lectures on --The Teaching of Physical Geography. His year abroad has been a source of consolation. of enjoyment and of inspiration. He has traveled widely. enjoyed intimate relations and kind hospitality of many of the most prominent geologists of Europe. has studied carefully and at some length the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge. and in his own scientific line has become thoroughly acquainted with the glaciers and the topog- raphy of the Alps. Several months spent in Germany have made him familiar with Berlin. Dresden and Ham- burg. but towards the Bavarian capital. Munich. he seems most ardent in his praise. During all this travel he has been a constant worker at his desk. and brings home in completed form a manuscript -' A Text Book of Geology. which will appear in the spring among the Twentieth Century Text Books. Wle welcome him as one we know thoroughly. and as one in whom we have abundant confidence. 7 Lf :Bri . . . ,, .V - W, H.. . ii'-f.f u- '. 'iff Q-1-11 urn ges the Ned C01- as ate. the grae The and sid- nme fille uial Ome xxx 41.5.5 'V 5 A - 1 x ,zf FRANK CARMAN EWART, A. M ,sf 1 QI GZIHLIDUI5 HIIUYQVO UDHFBID IIE subject of this sketch was the first of his classmates in 1901. to be taken by the angel of death. In the fall term of his Sophomore year he was stricken with appendicitis. The anxiety of the student body during his brief ill- ness, the loving care of his fellow students, the gloom and sadness caused by his untimely death are still fresh in memory. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew J. Marsh of North Brookfield. After graduating from the Union School of that place and from Colgate Academy with the class of UT. he entered Colgate University. September 1897, as a candidate for the degree of A. B. He took an active interest in all branches of college life. He was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi and the Theta Nu Epsilon Fraternities: a member of the Colgate Press Club and correspondent for the Utica OI15c'1've1': a member of the Mandolin Club and vice-president of his class. He was a popular and genial companion and those more intimately associated with him can testify to the warmth and unseliishness of his friendships. Ile was naturally a student. gifted with considerable talent. and had the prospect of a bright and happy career before him. The funeral service at North Brookfield was marked by many attestations of love and esteem. The local chapter of Phi Kappa Psi attended in a body. and six of his classmates acted as bearers. The memory of the bright. earnest and manly life will ever remain in the hearts of his fellow students. to whom his last mes- sage was. Tell the boys that I love them: tell them to love Jesusfl 155 7 I A QT-DQLHQIQI ,Jo 4 -. Y- N ' 1' l under things weak- n't be- et him wields -ziuniu P of the isilinar- :ion to irge of udents. assured ir sons ui and in gen- s. balls. ie finds li him. without general ast and 1 --Lab. intil the sort of Z1 shock to Paulis system, as it was to the rest of us. and soon following this came of a sudden one day the discovery of Atanasoifs menagerie. since which time he has been subject to the blues two days in the week. As a rule. however. he goes about his work singing : I ll he off for Phil-a-mon-a-del-phia in the morning. ill' elf ill- INVENTOIQV OF THE BOLIDOIIQ BANGLES OIL N SFZVIINAIQY BACHELCIQ NE pair long pads 3in. x 4in. x gin., with printed guarantee to correct any pair of bow legs on first trial. Instantly applied to any cut of pants. 1 Lg. bottle Skunk Fume. 5 Doz. bottles Castor Hair Oil. 1 Box Axle Jaw Grease. 1 Bottle Toilet Water. 1 H T S. Sisters' Hair Dye. 1 Pkge. Lampblack for the Eyebrows. 1 '4 Prepared Whitewasli for Shaving. T Varieties Scented Toilet Soap. 1 Bottle W'hite Bicycle Tooth Enamel. 1 Pr. Curling Irons. li Pkgs. I-Iairpins. 1 Perfection Face Wash. 1 Embroidered Night Cap. 1 Ruiiied Night Robe. I PSALMLI5 .ILINIOIQI 10: 15 A. M. COME. let us apply ourselves unto this Psyc.. let us be joyful that there are yet twenty minutes which are as a rock of our salvation. 2. Let us come unto this hour with thanksgiving. and look pious as the circumstances will permit. 3. For our leader is a great man, and a great ruler over us all. 4. In his hands are the reigns of power, and the strength of the whole board is his also. 5. This hour is his, and he sanctions it, and his hands prepared the service thereof. 6. O come, let us study and bow down. let us kneel if necessary for deception. 7. For he is our boss, and we are the children of his will, and the beneficiaries of his bounty. To-day. if ye should hear his voice, 8. Harden not your heart, as in provocation. and as in the day when beans were thrown : 9. lVhen our predecessors yielded to temptation and saw their scholarships withheld. 10. Forty years or so were the powers grieved with this sort of thing, and finally said. it must be stopped. and it was stopped. 11. Unto whom this precedent may yet be taken, that the base worldliness of psychology enter not into the day's worship. 59 w u Q . . ' ' C, 0 .,-r' . , . v 'L .f ' 4 . I 1 Tv I ' J I . . . ...,,... f ll n- 5 l . 2.' 'fl' 'L . . . il , 4 .V . -' .-LQ wg ' 1' 1 - --H , A Ir-. ' , Q 'fIf1'f', f lawn. U 5 X N-, , wt' N' ' ' 'Zwfw-: -m .Q 3' v'4'A.v-1-gum 53,5 1 .AA , 1 .N 'O sv- . L-.If 4.102 :en ug Q.: 'WR it l 'lgiiua-. n. 1-Y' - , , , :Ov .N 4129 4,530 I nv, svn ,H : X, I' , u . wg I-ll 'NVQ hqtqsiu N 1 lv 5 My .. rf-C ilu umm, in wh W l!:'L.'Q'Qf3, fiflua-an, '11 voyage beeps it rinkles Clap- ipenny wugh to -nee at started Prom.. ement. idents. ie SAL. such a ree. f' THE CCLGFXTE LHISE-AN ADDIQECIYTVION NE of the most pathetic things in this world is to see someone og something misunderstood 5 to see oue's best endeavors not appreciated. We have loathed, abom- inated, detested, despised, hated, scorned and cursed Colgate Lake. Dammed to be made, the lake seemed made to be did. But meanwhile I the lake, slumbering in its silent slime, has been fulfilling the pur- poses of its great creator Qwe do PJ not refer to the Divine Being, but to Jim Tay1or.J Now, we have at last come to appreciate that its ex- istence is not purposeless. We now realize that it is the Ultima Thule, the ne plus ultra of our campus-at least on the west boundary line. It is a perfect, ideal source of speci- mens for the department of Biology. Notice the intensely beatifie, pig- in-clover expression on the face of our esteemed Prof. Chester. Here shall lie down together. Here the Amblycorypha rotun- difolia and the Cyrtophyllum concavum sweetlysing their sibilant song. The Erimyzon oblongum and the Chilo- myeterus geometricus follow out the mathematical in- stincts of the Great Creator Qreference same as above.j Living in the succulent slop is the sleep simulating Siphonophora. The somuolent Solex platyrhi- nus finds here a salubrious habitat. Every strange marvel of the earth, sea and air, of any imaginable use in the department of Biol- ogy, may be found here in great abundance. and Colgate is to be congratulated upon the extent of her resources. ll-ll!-HDL LONE WOLE5 NEW JOB E have all seen wooden Indians used in advertising cigars, but the latest nov- elty in this line is '4Lone Wolf's advertise- ment of L-Oneita underwear. Judging from the success attending his lirst appearance, especially among the ladies, this change of the Staphylococcus and the Haema- method and kind with the Indian will be a great tococcus abound in their pristine beauty. Here Lumbri- means of profit to themanufacturers of thisline of clothing. cus terrestris and Spirogyra gambol ungainlily. Here is It is understood -' Lone makes a good thing out of the job. fulfilled the Biblical prophecy that the Echinorhynchus angustatus gigas and the Seaphirhynehops platyrhinehus 161 He says his next appearance will be when it is warmer, probably Junior Week when there are plenty of visitors. Yi' we i QT at any 'duced gladly Esti- fg , P 5 1 'GS HTG LNY. THE PECL! If VY ILGOTBYXLI. GENE Lima Ur f'UI,I.l-LGE Sglgylgg Child . r. e. . Maynard Read . r. t. . Estes Bobbie r. g. . . Berry Mac. . U . Jones Kai l. g. . . liurnham fCapt.J .lim . l. t. Langworthy Banning . 1. e. . . Gallup Johnnie . . r. h. h. . . Sisson Spencer . . l. h. b. E. XV. Smith lirigham . . 1. h. . Howard f'1'2LXV. fCapt.j f. b. Sheppie Iiant. . . coach . Dennis li. B. Smith . . mascot . . Oliver l'rex . . . manager Dr. Clarke Thomas .... trainer . Tucker llooters for the college-Kingsley, Ewart. Chester. Hooters for the Scrubs -Mrs. Willson. May Smith. Miss Brown. Ref- eree-General West. Umpire-Sq. White. Linesmen-Frank lionney and Kirk Barber. Timekeeper-1leorge Jackson. The afternoon of the 31st of September last was typical of a Chenango autumn. The largest crowd in the history of Colgate football had gathered on the campus to witness the game between the Faculty and the Scrubs. Both teams were in prime condition. During the long summer days the trainers and coaches had been exerting their most earnest eiforts in order to produce the largest possible amount of brawn. The result was the best that could have 1 been hoped for. There they stoodg twenty-two models of physical manhood. Three o'clock comes. Referee West signals for the game to commence. The college has the kick-off. After a moment of suspense the whistle blows, Craw makes a dash at the pig-skin and tears up chunks of sod. Time is called for four minutes until Craw comes to himself. He mournfully tries again with the other foot. and the ball strikes the seminary dean just below the chest. Burnham gets red-headed. and after making the air blue with a string of Hebrew 4-damns, rushes at the college 4-kicker' with intent to kill. But Craw was saved by the prompt and fearless intervention of the ever solicitous Thomas, trainer of the college team. Peace having been restored the game continues. After the signal. Kai, chanting the war songs of the Greeks, makes a desperate dash through the line. But Bobbie thought it was his ball, and so successfully Hrubbercd in the way of Kai's mad rush that he was rolled over and over amidst the hearty but somewhat sarcastic applause of the scrub team. Bobbie gathers himself together, clears his throat and then spits. lrVhat an expectoration that was! and how far reaching were its after effects. WVhen Banning got the ball for the next rush he slipped on the treacherous spot and scored in the middle zone of the scrub center. This was enough. .Tones spent eight minutes on his back, and then amid the thrilling falsetto 7 4 1 K Q . r R nor-rtin some iv .e says. fe iv th' ie says. th' use hinf he ne says. he says. ers.' he wciologi- Sthreetf ssin th' ihe gim- odentsf tttendin nts.' he ived by he says. fr-paved rajooced - is Wan -He has rtmentf he says, 4an' accidentally teaches Latinf he says. 4He belavesf he says. 4in thrainin th' young tr'm th' toime they lave th' cradlef he says, 4 till they enter colledgef he says. 44 4 Is thim hop-piekers,' I asked, as some tired-lookin. yit sthur-rdy sons iv toil past by. 4Not at all,' he says. 4 thim's th' Sophimor-res in full dhress,' he says. 'IL class what spinds mosth iv the'r toime in evadin th' tleet-winged god iv Murkryf he says. 4an accidentally do a little sthudyinj he says. 44 4Th7 gintleman comin' down the st-hreet foreninst us.' he says, 4wid modhest br-row an' onassumin gar-rbf he says, 4is a mar-rvel iv larnin an' experiencef he says. 4He has visited ma-any insthitootions iv edycationf he says, 4 both as stoodent an' insthructor,' he says. 4He's a fav'rite iverywheref he says. 4 He's aisy on the b'ys,' he says. 4 He's fond iv apples,' he says, 4an'll have thim. ef it costs a sign-a-cure,' he says. 4His morals is onap- proachablef he says. -He can't help it,' he says. 4 it r-runs in th' blood,' he says. 4As Hogan says, 44 Happy is th' man what's no worse than his father, ' he says. 4He's variable' he says, 4but niver reaches th' lower ex- thremef he says. 44 While I wuz sthill lookin' at the man, a swell lot iv guys past by. 4Thim.' says Profissor Gilmartin. he says. 4ar-re mimbers iv th' mosth ar-ristocr-ratic organiza- tion iv th' insthutootionf he saysg 4thim's th' hunderd I an' twinty-l'oive dollar cluhf he says. 4They ear-ras th r honors an tl11n pays l r thim.' he says. -Thr watch- worcl is l'1'fff.ff.' he says. 'an' th'r mottof he says. -is. I Jn :fluff laznflfff'-1'fffA'ff.' he says. -Tha' repootashun in col- lege is onimpeachahle.' he says. - They always pay th'r debts' he says. -an ' cilehrate th' Day iv Prayer I' 'r col- legesf he says. -Thr cour-rage is dauntlessf he says. 4A .S'm'h'ff.' he says 4can niver preclood a Prom wid thimf he says. 4 Th'r all r-right et th'r religious zeal do'n t tire th' insthitootion.' he says. 4- 4 Th 'gintleman approachin us, ' he says, 4wid onsarlin' stepf he says, 4 is a linyel clecinden t iv ,'lI'l'-VON Hur-1'-1'-r, he says, 4hut he's a gr-reat credit to Colgate' he says, 4 he's spreadin her name far-r an' widef he says. 4 Hes a lecturer on phisical appar-ratus,' he says. -an' th' name iv his machinef he says. 4 is pinethr-ratin ivery instiutoo- tion iv larnin.' he says. 4 where he can carry it.' he says. 4 Durin his spare toime, he teaches Germanf he says. 'Hes bin abroadf he says. 4an can expectorate more fur-reign matthersf he says, -than even Mack himselff he says. 44 XVe'd scarcely past this jainal gintleman whin we met an intilligent yit harmless lookin young teller. what greated us wid a pleasant 4How-de-do !' 4That young mans looks is deceivin' says Professor Gilmartin. he says. 4He has gr-reat possibilities in 'im,' he says. 4Some dayf he says 4he'll be a profissorf he says. 4At prisent uf s 1 . faq liscuss- V,xi.Ex- head at .ithorf .ings Of ressure ke not t seem 1. T AL- l some- ice. iate for YSOI1. if Federal ORDER NO. 207 New Yoiuc. February 231. 15100. T T a meeting of the Board of Trustees of Colgate Uni- versity. held in this city to-day. the matter of the conduct of certain professors in the chapel service of the college was taken up and discussed. and general instruc- tions authorized as follows z- The President is proving so eliicient in the work that Dr. Banning is hereby relieved from all assistance or attendance at the chapel service. The Dean shall be granted a leave of twenty minutes each day beginning at 9:-L5 A. M.. in which to repair to his private oiiice and there relieve himself of all pent-up emotions. that he may thereby be the better enabled to assume a calm. dignified. and reverential air during the chapel service. P As Professor McGregory is exempt from attendance at chapel except upon state occasions. he will see to it that at such times he fail not to appear in cap and gown. NVQ' have been unable to advance Mr. Kingsley's salary to the desired 515250. but in lieu thereof he will be no longer required to do Professor Taylor's singing and reading of the psalms. The matter submitted by Professor Moore has been brought up for discussion. and it was found to be the sentiment of the board that there is likely to be a certain I v wandering of the mind and consequent lack ol' reverence in looking about the room through the lingers during prayer. NYe forward under separate cover to Professor Spencer a pamphlet entitled. --Gesture and Gymnastics. which we trust will be of value to him in leading the singing. as well as in the work of his department. Professor Ewart is hereby delegated to quietly pinch Professor Chesterls left leg at the conclusion ol' the service. HY- DX- sk' HOME l2LlN HITS W111TNA1.i.- '- He knocked 'em off. he sawed 'em oll. He chopped 'em oti, he chawed 'em oll'. But still his whiskers grew. PARKE-- A reasonable amount of fleas is good fer a dog -they keep him fr'm broodin on bein' a dog. R.UA1sEY--- A pretty well bred. agreeable youth. FosTEH--- WVhy do they heap these cares on me g l am uniit for state and majesty. M1'1'CI1l-11.1.-H He dares the world and. eager ol' a name. He thrusts about and jostles into fame. Blrimoueiis. R. W.--- -- Broad-backed and brawny. built for loves delight. A prophet formed to make a female proselytef' CKAMP- Serene contemplation of his inner sellf' TOWERl Pretty, but not old enough to go with girls. 'w .. 1 e u w s .-4 L. xt, ix a, ,L Y H . 1-rv A ' 22,5 - y. . A M X e ,An lv ' on Wash- Q an s arg M . Y, in '-guhwaef 'WHQ Lv. inf ga' twine .thz a Ls him mushes .houts Weak ormer 7 were to go Knight 4 and RRESH- NOTIC- E--AND - t h e if bat- recalls fh you rv V' . spend 'e just CONFl35lONS OF Zi KEY SWIDEIQ ONFESSIONS-ah! that hath an ugly sound. Yet mine is the usual but oft untold history of those of like attainment. As a Fictitious Personage. however. I can be readily interviewed. as it were. and so am the subject of a write-up in a Life-like way. Seine may mistrust that I am a composite of several Tollgate gradu- ates and about-to-be's 3 but -- I ain't. 'cause I never was. To give my story a -- local habitation and a name QSee Crawj I will confide to you that my Pa was a Tollgate man. so I came to Tollgate too 3 and as Pa was a 4tHLl1JtCI' Dupterf' I became a -'I-Iupter Dupterw too. New as every one knows, the proudest achievement of a -- Hupter Dupter is to gain one of those shiny watch-keys that Kai and -- G. play with in class. So when a I-Iupdupter. who'd played with his key several years. came back to Tollgate. he said right away. -- Why don't you try for a key '? --It's too much like workf' I answered. --To try fora key. hard? No. it is the easiest thing in the world. he thundered. -- VVhy. I stamniered -4 Pa says you have to study, bohn and grind. and I'ni not built that way. -- You' just wait. he said. -- and I'll send the copy I had of the -- Key-code. and if you can't get a Key and study darn little. why. Tollgate has changed. It came. I saw. and was conquered. It was a well-thumbed pamphlet which had apparently einanated from Billiams College many years ago. It bore the title, -- Useful Hints 171 In Key-Getting or --The Royal Road to a Regal Prize. Omitting the long dissertation on the intrinsic value of the bit of gold. and passing over the minute directions given for the overcoming of unusual problems. l' will append the final Code. 1. Bohn like the --genial fiend during your freslnnan year. you can make it up in your senior year. Z. Occupy the front seat in every class. and ask numer- ous questions. 3. In languages use a horse --just to polish your translations. 4. Carry numerous --cribs I to exams.. just for securi- ty's sake. 5. Never elect work in the upperclassman years under a new Prof.. your --rep isn't --good with him. G. After class. spend ten minutes with the professor discussing the interesting points in the lesson. It serves a double purpose. for it pulls the professors leg and makes you solid with some of the boys by giving them an occasional run. 7. Never say --I dunno 5 rather with much blandness say. -- I could not exactly decide. but my opinion is. 8. If your marks are too low. or the pace too hot in the class you enter with. drop out a year and cram on back work and the next years too. then come back and try again. Illness is a good excuse to use. for it excites the Prof's sympathy. ' 'Wk ug -A- ' an rf is but one : for one reat 11935 VC SOH19 01-ks. ith best sweet 011. vith the ill make gat, with ' THE HISTOIPICPYL OIQDED OE EOIQESTEIQS, OI? WOOD CAIQVEIQS' ASSOCIATION Meets on the third floor. under direction of lllclalz KA1'14:1,I,mf:1s'1'1-:lc Smcxcl-zlz. BIOTTOS I vow I must have my knife sl1aL1'p011ed. IDENKNIEE DEOIQEE -LFLOSSIE XVESTCOTT ' -- Gmulmwz BUCK JPYCI4-IRNIEE DEGIQEE -'SAP-HEAD HENRY 4-TAME-'1'1GE1z Houxummxu BOW I E- KN I EE D EG DEE --SWEETHI-:AR'1 ' SMITH H MAC MILLAN WIELDEI? OE THE EXE -- BUBHLESU GREEN EXDCIIICCI, fOl' SlLIlNlJCfI'iIXQ DLIITIKI CLIl'I'il1QI SCZISOIX ASLA1-S HUNTER -f Lum: Wow MUNRU 173 f-Q, 1 Y 5 nw .. Q 2.4 '4-'P 31 -ut firmly imething to write otograph t I kept i and the 'graph 3 I summer ie Charm- rove and in ham- uses and ngs that were but e defiant ard work iiting for 4 of still years of 7hen how d turned g' corpor- ed down, the Wed- iuth and ard. story in it. Don, of course, recognized the story and its writer when he first read it. When Don was home the next summer, he took the SAL. over to Sis one night and read her my story and explained to her that she was the heroine. Sis. being a sensible girl. didn't care. But then Don. instigated by some evil spirit, or possibly deluded into the idea that he was playing a practical joke. began an alleged description of what manner of fellow it was who had written the story. He told her that I was uglier than sin. more gawky and awkward than the average four-months'-old colt. and that I had such a confounded -big head that a shoe horn was an indispensable instrument in putting on my hat. ButI didn't find out about Don's artistic attempt at character delineation till long afterward. When she learned all this Sis began to feel as if some clown had been trying to take liberties with her. She had no desire ever to hear of her would-be ohronieler, and I don't know as I blame her. +C- 96 K- '35 94' 55 It was the dayboat up the Hudson. on the Thursday morning before Commencement week. I had been out of college a year and was going back to Hamilton to meet the boys and to see Don graduate. I was enjoying the ride up the river. when I heard from my lefthand neigh- bor, -- Well, I must read this SAI.. Don sent me. before I get to Hamilton. -- Yes. I would. Sisf' The mention 1 V , I of the SAL. and the nickname made me turn and I saw my girl of the photograph and a woman who was evi- dently her mother. Well. I waited wondering if l would have a chance to introduce myself. The girl read a little and then said. -' I don't see that joke. --Probably be- cause you don't know the people. her mother answered. HPardon me. I said, handing the girl my card. -- l am a graduate of Colgateg possibly I can help you on the jokes. ff Mr. Russell Allen Howe. she read. --I have heard of you through Donald MacKensie. Mr. Howe. l am very glad to meet you. May I introduce you to my mother ? lVIother. a friend of Don MacKensie's. Mr. Howe. Her mother looked as if she thought it was rather suspicious. but did not refuse to have me present- ed to her. IVhen I was seated again I began to talk about Don until I guessed I had set at rest any doubts she may have had as to my being the only genuine Russ Howe. Then Sis told me that Don. knowing that they were in the East. had invited herself and her mother to Hamilton, and that they were going to Colgate Com- mencement. Then we talked and laughed about my story about her, and she told me how Don had described me to her. Then we walked about the decks. So things went till we came to Albany. I had an appointment to dine with a friend. who was in one of the State ofiices. but I saw Sis and her mother to a carriage, and arranged for their baggage to be sent to their hotel. As I was Ii 0 Q . , 0 Q . ... 0 'fy' , Q- 9 4 'MV' . 'A ,fir mf, an . 5 4? 4 X ' vw is .4 A. ,, ' ils -ew. T 9 ' 'ny QM'- xl ' 1-lr: , nn' ,,,, M WW! - aww. .www 'ew 4 af 1 1 'K .1.,-- , inn 'Mah N L, .,, in engage- tnd as I the end I threw ig in its . world. mt. T. know a Lchines. come to out. the nd once, VIR. DONNEGRWS VIEWS ON MERCURY fWith abject apologies to Mr. P. F. Dunn and Mr. Dooleyj gg EGOBSQ' said Mr. Donnegan, as he came in one night last fall where his cronies were already gathered, HBegobs, an' Tm thinkin' thot th' new mon Jim Colgate has hired f'r foreman up there on th' hill ull be afther wishin' he'd known more before- hand! HA11' wot is ut now, Pathrick? 4-It wuz Docther Andrews as wanst wuz atellin' of me of wan of thim haythen gods as had a shplitting hidache wan day, an' begobs, whin they tapped him lightly wid a pick, out kem a new god fur the likes of thim haythen furriners to worship. An' now, wud ye belave it, wan of the min in the College had a hidache the ither day, an' instid of tra'tin' it wid soda wather, he encouraged it a bit, an' the divil take me if Mercury wuzn't borrn ! ff An' wot the divil is Mercury? HFaith, an' its an image of brass, for all the warrld like the felly himself thots jist bestowed it on an unixpictant an' ungrateful warrld. Ye'll readily remimber thot all this fall the byes have been the dacintest iver known. The cider mills warrn't run- nin' yit, 'n' barrin' a little pool at Timian's 'n' penuckle at th' Parrk House, there warrn't nothin' goin' on but studyin'. This cudn't last, an' so, instigated by the divil or the livery stable keepers, this moighty bright b'y wid such a big hid thot it ached, invinted the ijee of settin' th' b'yes' at sa'rchin' for somethin' they niver had lost f'r 1 they niver had had it an' didu't waut it. an' 1-udu't kape it whin thay wot it. Sure an' its only a student wad be ID afther puttin' anny wurruk into the likes of a job like thot. So furrst this great mon breaks into a house himsilf to make a ricord, and stales thc statue for an igzample. Oc-h hone. if anny poor Oirish bye had a done thot. twud a bin burglary an' the pen' sure. but somehow this time it wuz replevin summa cum laude. An' iver since. the half o' the byes have lift their buks. an' have been a racin' au' a chasin' up hill an' down. by day an' by noight. a huntin' aich ither an' a gittin' out iv aich ither's way, ontil as I heerd wan of the Profs say -Their wurruk has gone elane to the divil, bad cess to Mercury ! ' -- An' wont th' new mon be afther stoppin' sich dom foolishness ? queried one of thc listeners. With an air of great deliberation Mr. Donnegan closed the conversation with the sage re- mark, Hl'm afraid he don't know thot much yit, he's new, ye'll remimber. il-ll-:lb CROWELL- Ye Freshie man, just from ye farm. with short cut vest, high water pants. TAYLOR-if A weak son of a mighty father. DIMORIER-4' ' Tis but a peevish boy 3 yet he talks well. B1-1.-N.. G. M.- I have within myself much that pleases me. REED--H I thank my God for my humility. 7-Y WXCYXTION EPISODE HE shadows of a June evening were just becoming noticeable. Memorial Day had again come and gone. and a group of Colgate students were seated in a train at Syracuse ready to return to their college halls. It was a merry group. Song followed song. joke succeeded joke. Twenty keen eyes were alert to catch the iirst glimpse of anything for i 1 yy I C.-V,-.. .......-,-,A .,....,........-...L--W 1,4 . . students fell over one another in their excited rush for vantage ground. The conductor approaches. He glances at his watch and looks anxiously about. He signals the engineer. The blissful moment is at hand! Their arms extend. She casts a last. long, loving look at his face. tears start in , her eyes. and he takes her LT' Q C Q. 2' 5' 2' qv- 0 cf C+ H 2: Z z E Q :F ,. se :J 5' :' E 4 r O , V '-' T' ' F' p-5 sf 0 D 0 J F 2 5 I 3 F ei- 5 A X .nd W' 5.2 I C+ M 2 2 4 UZ 2 :I 5 - ff H: Q. A ,., 4 2 4 .-J IIS t-J n ,-4 .gg - ,... 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V - 5' 1 if e D et if s- ff A Us 4 E ,le U f 2 : ' fi P' E ET 1 C M rr- : c: ZS 'I -5 w : 9 -3 ff ,- -- .T ..a rg .1 .J : fi- '4 C 5: ct H 3 5 F' 1 E E - 2 'f f ' Q ET 'T :L 6 ' Q 1' E S .-. .- cf C , ,.... g, ,,, -rf ... 14 ev- : ,.,4 5 :- f-1 3,31 he ,-, C -f f-r J'-s f-1 C -a lL .- --' f-s FT' c M C+ M cn T4 ,N ' '1 T C 1 ' -1: ' P-w I 'I there manifest. A separation was at hand. y How would he do it ? How ought it to be done ? Were those real signs of sorrow in the convulsive movements of her care-worn face, or-did she have him on a string ? Surely this was an interesting moment, and our young .DENISON-'LSOIHG love two, and some love three. I love one, and that is me. BENNETT--ff He gabbles like a goose among the swan-like choir. 178 rush for is watch -ugineer. extend. Q. loving start in kes her Their rung Col- eality of itnessed. realms of Cl poetry. , FQ XV vhole soul ceth dew. that kills ntly for swan-like i THE GLEE CLUB TRIP T WAS the most wonderful election Colgate had ever seen. Prexy nominated Bill Parke for governor of the Musical Johnnies on the prohibition ticket, and he was unanimously elected. No wonder it hurt Sweetheart to raise his arm, for the next day the doctor found a fracture in his shoulder. After prayer by Chaplain Arnold we sang that soon-to-become-familiar hymn, it We Are On the Water lfVagon,' and went out. Well, if we should try to tell you all that happened on that trip, the 4'SAL. board would have to print an extra volume. But there are some interesting and quite extraordinary events that surely ought to go on record. For instance, when those Norway lasses so completely fuddled Morse that he forgot his shirt when he dressed the next morning and mistook his collar for a belt. Frankfort is a delightful burg-it is so conveniently situated. Why you can get out of it by two steam rail- roads and a trolley line, and Utica, Ilion and Herkimer are all nice places to spend Sunday. Everything went off beautifully at Crloversville. The ladies sent us so many flowers that We couldnit wear them all at once, but had to shift bouquets between the acts. Do you know, Gurney is a most wonderful man-he is one of those fellows who H hustle while they waitf' You should see the things he raked off for field day prizes- a dress suit case, towels, a toy gun and HI-Iydes's bull I dog. All this he did while hunting up life insurance victims, selling typewriters. stereoscopic views. etc.. and then took a little side trip to Fort Edward -- just to pass the time away. WVhen we struck Albany we visited the capitol and in the chamber of the assembly were granted --the privilege of the door. Just what that means is not quite clear. unless it is the privilege of being walked on. Wherever we went we received excellent press notices. But the best probably was the one we got at Hudson- the manager wrote it himself. We were royally enter- tained, too-the people treated us just as though we were members of the Colgate Grlee and Mandolin Clubs and deserved such unusual honor. lVhy. in one instance the hostess asked '-Spook Arnold if he were a profes- sor. He felt quite puffed up about it, too, until it oc- curred to him that she was enquiring as to his religious faith, and merely wanted him to +-grumble over the hashf' Well, on the whole the trip was a success. Cf course there were a few little breaks made, and in order to avoid similar difficulties in the future we beg leave to suggest that it is just as well not to wear a dress suit to divine worship , and if you really want to pay a girl's car fare ask someone to lend you a nickel, and don't fumble around in your own pocket until the girl has paid her fare and the conductor has passed on. 79 : ll ' il -L ii . ,j il ll 32 .5 P4 12 1 , l n l i ji 'l ll j l Til .f 'ff i' I if . r. ...j A E' A ii . l .jj . m l The trip wound up with a whoop at Oneida. After the concert the ladies served ice cream to us and Bill Henry sang an original production entitled, '- She I-JlCS Fl?lf5l'IPlIiN C.xu.n---nlust for a handful of silver he left us. ' . y .fu-HA io- o-1-een. bashful sim mleton. LIRIN U. C, Buried Upon the Hillfi After this we passed around the Blick. I-I. C.-'4When I behold his graceful movements I hat and got almost enough to pay our way home. AV' SM 96 F7-WOIQITE BCOKS OF THE FACLILTY Merrill- 4 ' A Eearful Responsibility. Andrews-ff Wo1'ld's Almanac. 7' Taylor-'The Art of Anglingf' Crawshaw- - - The Gadfly. Moore-H Dutch Lullaby. H Brigham-H An Introduction to Geology. Greene--4Unknown Fathers of WVell Known Men. Thomas-Hinds and Noble's, i'EXhGTH1JO1'lL11COLlS Speeches for Every Occasionf' Read-H The Story of an Untold Love. Spencer-H The Art of Gesturing. 'i Child-H The Descent of Man. Ewart-H Father Goose 'I -Rhymes and Jingles for Children. Chester--4 The Story of a Malaria Germf' Kingsley-Professor Jim's Algebra. Smith-if In Her Stepsf' A Bann in McGregory g The VVorkers. mourn for Adonis. T.xMisr.YN, A. T.-HA silent and lonely creature. T.xMial.YN, G. O.---I take pleasure in singing, sir. U Dauuow---He never will have cholera infantum. CoI.1,iNos-4-My life is one demned horrid grind. G-1ur1+'1N---Awkward. embarassed. stiff, without the skill Of moving gracefully or standing still. S17l.1.1vAN-4-Fierce as ten furies. terrible as hell. Hor.'roN---A town that boasts of inhabitants like me Can have no lack of good society. Rom-zks---If he be not in love with some woman. there is no believing in old signs. Sk- bk' Sk- WHEN DID DIQQIL. .IIN GET TI-Ili I2LlN ? A Leonardsville correspondent writes: 'QFPOIII an item in last week's Edmeston Local it would seem that Elmer Arnold is as proficient in music and mathematics as he is in the national game. Elmer is now the leader of the banjo and mandolin club of Colgate university and is acting as teacher of mathematics in that institution. His work as a teacher is so satisfactory that he is likely to hold the position permanently. 180 O Q. ernents I it the skill ll. lu .. te me an. there 1 it would .usic and er is now Colgate in that ory that NEW IBOGIRS MY FIRST YEAR AXVAY FRoM MA. By Floyd Jolds. Wattown Publishing Company. Cloth, 30c, ' In this little book the author recounts the experiences of his first year in college. and suggests reforms for several errors in student life. The book contains many original poetic gems and teems throughout with freshness and originality. Especially interesting are the chapters on -' How I learned to Smoke and Bet. HHOW I became Popular, and -4 How I Interest People by My Loquacious Abilities. Great success awaits the author of this vol- ume. ' How I MAKE RECITATIONS. By George V. McAllister. Twanda Press. Price 55498. This is a series of charming sketches depicting in a touching manner the author's own experience in the class- room. Sometimes the attempts described are exceedingly humorous, but often the situation is truly pathetic and enlists our sympathies. The fact that a testimonial in the form of a key is being prepared for the author shows the high esteem in which the book is held. St' ell' SIL 7-ILIISE THE WORLD OVEI2 WVilliam Henry is my name. 'Tis said I am a man of fame g For W' King of cuts Imake a claim. -E.u. ISI I SOIPHOPIOIQI3 H 0 lhn':ir1 me not. Sir Soph. :xl every turn. Nor 1-:irp :il every Ilan' you may dist-ern: Thonggh syllogisins hang not on niy toiisiiv. I :ini not surely :nlways in the wrong. PoH'1'E11--- Nobody will ever know half that is in nie unless something unexpected turns up. OAKS-H O wonderful. wonderful. and most wonderl'nI wonderful! and yet again wonderful. and alter that out of all whooping ! BUI,i,oek--- He means well. but has a had way ot' show- ing it. STERLING---I really feel as though somebody is looking at me. N BREED. R. H.- -- His voice was ever soft. Gentle, and lowg an excellent thing in woman. MIi,m:R, J. E.-H Fair of face, fair of form. But the devil himself otherwise. MCMILLAN--+ If the beard were all the goat might preach. Mousn-H Seas roll to waft me, suns to light me riseg My footstool earth. my canopy the skies. SANFORD-H As high as heaven. as deep as hellff MARs'roN----His heart is as far from guile as heaven from earth. Buowxsm,---I am the hero of a Sunday-school book. .I shall die young. Qi l Q Q P IV 'l'wo y1-11rs 11go 11o111- ll1'21I'Ll 1111- 111-lls, 'L111:tri1: he-lls. W11111 1-1111o1i1r 11181'l'll110l1t Ill91'l5 w11s 11s 1fIist'1'y 1.1-lls I How they CIILIIIII tiukle, ti11kl1- 011 1111- icy 11i1' of 111o1'11. Whil1- 1Jl'0l'HSSOI'S' l1r11ws did 11'ri11k11- l'll2l1tj'011112 11-1-s111111-11's 1-y1-s di1l 11vi111cl1- With El spirit devil-l1111'11. K1-1-11i11g 11111111-11111111-11111111, How tllfl sto111111g1- 122111114 to 1:111111-. So t111-y 111-1-1l11't,1111y the 11111111-1' As 1111- 11111:i1-111 story IPIIS, lillf 11 cost 1111-111 11l'ty 1lo1l111'sj11s1 to s1-11l1- 1'o1- 1111- 111-lls. For the 111-lls, For 1111- 111-lls, 111-11s, 111-lls, 111-lls. 111-lls, b1-lls, 111-lls, For 1111- 1ixi11g 111111 1-1-1111iri11g 111' 1111- 111-lls. SIL lk- 'H- YE GQIND F'I' 1111011 11 111id11ight ill'P21l'y, I l12lV1' I'01111lI 11i111 11'1111 111111 XV111ll'j' 1ioh11i11g o'1-1' S01119 11111t111-11111ti11 1o1'1-. I have s1-1-111 his 11ody s11111:i11g, 11s 111- Sll1ICIK'11l.Y 1111-w111ci11g S1r11ig11t1-hed 1111 to gri11d 21 little 111or1-. I 1111v1- XV2lI'Cl114d his 1:11i11 sink low, i11 11 light 111' 1'111li11g glow, While .Ii111's C11l1:11l11s fell down 1111011 1111- 1111o1'. A 11d 111'te11 have I asked hi111 what so 1ve111'ie-d 111111 111111 111s1c1-11 llI111 Oh, 1111- Osborn, 11111tf6l'Bd he. 1111d nothing 11111111-. Only that. 111111 1111tl1i11g I11011-'.'I VE OQITXTOQ High 1113011 31 1I1'21V0j'211'1I 11101111ll, I IISIVP s1-1-11 llllll 11-1111 111111 11111111d. SI101lI,ll12' Pow1-1' I with 1li111111r11111111,i1: r11111': I IIZIVI' s1-1-11 11is l1111ly 11-1-1111111-, 11531011185 1111- 111111 l14'.Kl 111111111-. 1Io11i11g l.l1l1S to 111111 11111- 1I1'SILlll'1' 111111'1-. I'11:1v1- SP1-11 his 1-y1- grow11i11111111r, 11'111-11 l14'I.01'I' 1111- 1'o111lig111's g1i111 111- 1'1-11 110911 to look 1111011 th1- lloor. 'I'l11-11 111- Sllllmlld 1111 11111- s111g1-, with 11 v1-X1-11 Illlll f1'ig1111-111-11 1'11g.El'. 011. 1111- Ki11gsl'11rd, g11s111-11 111- 111111' 2l1lll 11111l1i11g 11111r1-. Only this. 111111 l101l1I1121l101'11. I SHINING LIGHTS WINKL112, 111'i11kl1-. 1i11l1- s1:11' A 1'o11s11-1111111111 l11'ig111 w1-111'1- .111 11111111 1111- 11111-k s1-111 row, .Il1SXYl'1'l11,EI Il1'I11'1'Ij' 1 1l1111'1 k111111'.' ll' il' ll- TIQI-IGEDV OI: LIFE l1I'S'l'Y nook. .111 11111 11-x1 hook. .1 S1-11i11r 11111'1l 111 111-111 : .1 111:1i1l1-11 f21l1'. Wi1l1 g11l1l1-11 h11i1'. G111-s 1ri1111i11g 1l11w11 1111- s11'1-1-1. 111- s1-1-s 111-1' 11:1ss. 'l'l11- l11111k.11l11s. ls1l1r011'1111si1l1- with gh-1-: N1-xt 1l11y's1-x:1111. '1'11o li1t11- 1:1'11111. X11 I1i11'll1'l01 S 111-g1'1-1-. 1-4111- ODE TO H H7-IVIILTON GIRL EAR 111-ss, I 1-vm' s11111l 1'1-11111111111-1' 'l'111e ti1111- we- sk11t1-11 011 1111- 11o111l. M1-t11i11ks I llP:l1' your words so IP111I1'1'. .11111 s1-1- 1111c1- 1110I'1f'j'0111' g111111-1-s 111111l. I 11111011-11 111-11v1-11 was 111 IYOIII' 1111-1-. Y1111 we-rv so 11111111 111111 s111-o111l1li11g. Y111' 1li1l I l:11o11', 111111 i11 y11111'j1-W1-11-11s1- .1 1l11x1-11 s1111l1-nts' rings XV1'I'1'I1IKII11!. 0 l11'11w11-1-y1-11 11121I1I 11'i111 g11l111-11 1111i1'. I 111-V1-1' k111-11' y1111 s111l or 111-11isI1 : Iflll 1-v1-1' gay :11111 111-11111111i1' .11111 i111v1111111:11':111ly 1-1111111-11is11. I l11v1-11 y1111 1111-11. I l11v1- you .Y1'I. l 111' :1ll 1111- sw1-1-1111-ss 111111 is i11 11111. .11111 IIIOIIQIII I I1-1-1 s111111- I'11111I 1'1-g1'1-1. I-111 V1-ry gl111l I 11111 11111 XVIII y1111. 1, 1:- 11 I gg. U11 ,F I 1:21 1'bA ,. 1.. 1 ' 1 1 1 1 11 , 11 1 '1 I. .1LII 1, 1, - iff 1. 1 I I1 -Y 11 ,1 'I ,I 1 .1 ,F yr QI 1: 1! 5 12 111 51 1.11 ill .., 11 1 1 ' I 1 If 1 Q I. .4- 11 11, IH '11 II 1 If 1 V Y 4 1 evening e night. by red ill pieces ie youth- ntil they d of corn X priests ie youths xy. One iliac-Gog. there is peak. for Year this of which e several different .snow not hers they s of this he priest ptoe and igcons in Y The i spirits, even to this day among the youths there, that once at this cere- mony of exorcism, the evil spirits came in mighty flocks even as the locusts of our own country and brought con- fusion and consternation upon the priest Gumdrop. Across the passage from the apartment of this priest is the apartment of another priest, where, it is said, the youths are taught in woodcutting. Among the others are two priests who are thought to be false--Clarencedan win and Kaigar. They and their teachings are shunned by the better part of the youths. There is a certain peculiar religion which I have found here among a group of fanatical youths. Of this religion one Phozdyk is at once the god and the priest. Preceiv- ing that this religion would die when he left the place, he sought and found a means to make it everlasting. He turned the fanatical worship of himself into a new channel --even into a worship of an image of Mercury. As our neighbors, the people of Troy, regard the Palladium as the symbol of Athene, and worship it accordingly, so this Mercury is the symbol of Phozdykism. By veiling the true character of this worship, the god and priest has won many new converts, especially from among the num- ber of less experienced youths. But the older and wiser have not been made proselytes of the new faith. The aboriginal inhabitants of the land of Kollgate were a most curious people, known as Theologues. A few CVG11 now survive and are kept on a reservation. The chief 185 haunt of the last representatives of this race. so rapidly becoming extinct, is Eaton Hall. Once a week,it is said. the Theologues are let out to go to their Hiields. . The chief priest of Kollgate did not grow up around those parts. I-Ie is an importation-a proselyte. God made man bifurcated, but this chief priest has sought out many inventions. among them that every youth on leav- ing Kollgate must gown himself in the garb of a woman. The inhabitants tell me that in this land there are other places where the youth congregate. Ol' this I do not know, if there be any I have seen none such. fkrllflll- VEIQBFI PROPIQIPI Axinu-Jws-H There never was so wise a man before. ' Susnwoon--4Then for his voice there is none disputes, V That he's the nightingale of brutes. .AINSIJ1-4'BLlt why should I for others groan, when none will sigh for me. 'l GNJODIER.-4' You sunburn'd sickle man of farining weary, Come hither from the furrow and be merry. T11sniu.s-4- What ani I 'K An infant crying in the night, An infant crying for the light 3 And with no language but a cry. ELr.INwoon-H Can anything be done for you ? WVALKER-I-No fiies get into a shut mouth. 4 -1 K 1 we M' Q, 1.5. .. SS P! 'S fm -' Q n .Qu ' :isx , hurl spat 105' were and thus if a few 011 the lthought useful in in the g tree. --rap that was fly- rhere un- lscovered E rn r y id strad- rn in i e 7' s n e c k. 1 classes r o u n d Smry an e was re- efenders fighting ey flew, 2 dagoes he score higher, until the Sophomores Won out with a record of ten runs as against nine. The pent-up joy of Qld 1901 rang out over the campus until the hills echoed back the joyful sound. Whe1'e the Freshmen Went no one seemed to know 5 there was evidently a hole in the ground some- where. An inventory of personal effects revealed numer- ous depleted wardrobes and a sadly dilapidated binner, but these were sacrifices cheerfully made. The honor of 1901 had been maintained, and they passed to the rank of upperclassmen with a feeling that they had shown them- selves Worthy of the coveted distinction. alt' at Alb IN SHOQTS Hmss-H Like those who stature did to crowns prefer, Black-browed and bluff, like HO111Q1'7S Jupiter. 'I ARCIIER-'C Or forced by fear or by his profit led, Or both conjoined, his native clime he iiedfi ARNOLD-if WVhiskers and pipes. FRENCH-H There is a pleasure in poetic pains WVhich only poets knowff BEAL, F. W.-4 fWould I were a little fatter. BINGHAM-HFO1' my voice, I have lost it with the halloo- ing and singing of anthems. SNVAN-HFO1' he is wise, if I can judge of him, A And fair he is, if that mine eyes be true. BENEDICT--4' He had a face like a benedictionf' 1 HVILICH LlflllI2NlNG Ili-l'l'lcI PIFNDE IIIPI PIJFYIV' NE of the reverend doctors of Zion Hill is alllieted with mental aberration and when the disease holds sway over him, 'ffor ways that are dark and tricks that are vain this reverend divine is peculiar. Last summer in driving he stopped before a watering trough but his horse refused to guzzle. As the Doctor sat cogitating on the perversity of our dumb friends. a brilliant thought Came into his mind. --Too much weight behind. Firmly he grasps the axle and raises the end of the wagon. Surely now the beast could drink. On the same day he was requested by his wife to get her a yeast cake. A half hour later he was seen walking down the street with a half dozen fruit jars under his arm. Returning home, he decided to boil some eggs. and put a kettle of water on the stove for that purpose. When the critical moment had arrived and the water was boiling. he calmly dropped his watch in the water and counted off the minutes with the aid of the egg. When night came the good Doctor was thoroughly tired and ready for bed. Deliberately folding his trousers, he placed them between the sheets, and turning down the light, threw himself over the back of a chair and con- signed himself to the arms of Morpheus. ll- ll' ill- BABCOCK--4' But what am I, an infant ? 7' 7 H .1 'K' Sllch ' double lso thx' myself. I 1 water. e scrub ions. hiv. .. ieult to ' men. plendid :ted to stinyf' VUICC. U t? ayde. . BILL, THE BLLIFILEIQ ILL was always in hard luck. It had been his fate from the time he had first kissed a Cortland eo-ed until he donned the cowl of senioric membership in the Colgate Order of Thoroughbred Crawlers. In spite of his eiforts to the contrary, Bill had never basked in the sunshine of .Iim's favor nor been soothed by the man of moustache and oil. Johnnie had left him a heritage of bad dreams through four terms of rough sledding, and his chances for a key had disappeared like dew before the sunshine. But the gall and bitter of Bil1's lot was not to over- eloud the superb rainbow of promise which his airy conceit had declared was his. Skilled in the art of blutiing he gained the sympathetic ear of him upon whose shoulders rest the eloquence of Colgates sons. The debating session was closed. Bill's orbiculary member had done full duty. ffMay I see you at my house within the hour, asked the Professor, and ten minutes later Bill, installed in an arm-chair, was smiling a sage smile behind his molars. H I wish to speak with you, Mr. i, because I consider you a representative member of 1900. You have legged it so long and sue- cessfully that I have the supremest confidence in you. and I now take the opportunity to ask you how I Stdllfl among the shining lights of 1900 And Bill interested more in his A B C's Cyes, D's gratefully receivedj than I the 9th commandment suited his answer to his purpose. and wending his way liomeward mused on the eredulitv of man. sit-sllfskf SOPIE THINGS TH7-IT DlDN'T GET INTO Tl Ili HSQAIIJ' PETITION signed by the whole Fresliman elass and nineteen others imploring the Board of Trustees for a restoration of the reign of Ingrahani. A blood curdling story, -- How I iiunked thirty-live Freshmen in Math. by Professor Kingsley. A proposition from Dan Stokes to the Freshman class A Freshman's account of Ewart's solo. A sirine' Joem. 4-The Fragrant Leek. by A. A. 15 I1 .. Nasoff. An extended explanation of .Iones's reasons against electing literature. i'B1'yZt11'S Mistake. explaining in detail the state ol' the young mans feelings when he discovered that he was -4 seeing home the girl he had not met. A long-drawn-out article purporting to be the easual remarks of an Old and somewhat large member of the Fresliman class. The gist of the article is as follows: --Dont have to work here. Such a snap. Forty min- utes a dav ol' study. Have to have hat made to order. Key Suref' etc. etc. ' 39 V' ided s in PXY. img- .ish- Pyes heir 'riet' t to heir ith. ptist lc at my ning' rink ome 'aise iies tem bed Doom om HAMILTON ' I 3 WAS November eighteen in the year ninety-nine 'Phat we journeyed to Utica. feeling so tlne. Our colors were flying, our cheers i11 the air, And our th1'oats nearly burst as we sang eyerywhere- O poor old Hamilton, O poor old IfIamilton.A You cannot beat us. no, no no, I You play so very slow, slow, slow. II 'I'here were Sophies. and Juniors, and grave Seniors too : Prexie, some profs, and 'l'll60l02ll0S-tl l'ew. .I erowd of green Freshmen went up with the rest, 'l'heir elass eanes-were borrowed, their flags-Perkinsi he III .Xt the end of the journey as hungry as bears. We eleaned out cafes and bought pie upon shares : Iiut the team in fine style to the Butterfield went. A nd whetted their appetites as though it were lent. IV We 1'ode out to the park a short time bel'ore three. A nd our big delegation was pleasing to see. It was proof to all there we were loyal and true,' And for onee we outnumbered the Buff and the Blue. V ,. We were there for a purpose 3 and all knew it. well. 'Twas to give the team vict'ry by aid of the yell. We marshalled our men, and the noise that we made Would soon put a calliope way in the shade. ' VI l'was the annual battle with old I-Iamilton. And we sa.id we could beat her as easy as fun 2 ' For the team had been training, had grown fat and sleek .Xt their own private ta ble-price three plunks per week. VII 'l'he line-up consisted of star men of high stamp. We had Archer, lflmbody, Rob Williams and Cramp. Also Leon and Louie. Sherm Jones and Bill Waite. Billie Root. Miller. Jarv., Burroughs.-Moore fills the slate. VIII When the whistle n'as blown t'olgate's tealn got the ku lt llut they lost the pig:-skin lnost deeidedly quiek. Our rivals were strong. and our line at eaeh juueture Went down like a tire when it gets a had puneture. IX Ilo Ilow .Ind y w they shoved us. and rolled us, and pushed us bam-It p u n they ehased us. and raeed us. and they dazed out ol tno vhen the game ended our seore-it was- nit I lienee. to tell just our feelings. no words would just tit X I was November eighteen in old ninety-nine When we eante baek from l't. feeling: any but line. Sl We had lowered our eolors. our eheers-0 how l'Ill'l' I l'or we heard the sad strain on the eool evening: air-- '- O poor old Ilalnilton. O poor old Ilanlilton. We eannot beat you llll-illtl-llll'-W We play so very slowisIow-slow- ill' ill' ll!- 191 HIS IQEIZORVIATION 0WLl'l'l l S aetions have of late. tfaused de g1aiigg ' to speeulate. 'l'hey rubbered mueh. their wonder g They asked each other, Is it true ? Is he playing: the prodigal son. Ol' only a bluff that he's begun ? A l'ew months past we did not know 'I'hat .Iinnny would deeeive us so. Patent leathers, niee new hat. Uollars, neekties and all that. Whenever .Iinnny got some tin This was how he blew it ln. 'l'o hops and dances then he went. t'ahs and tlowers took every eent- You ask the eause of all this whirl? Why. don't you see. .lint has a girl. 1 ted i'Cl1 1119 ro- op- fh y ifo- ine. eek. Ller- iyer the the Hes nent BIQEVITIES Born, January 15. to Prof. and Mrs. W. M. Chester, a son. Professor Chester purchased a new hand sled Janu- ary 13. Total attendance at chapel on that chilly December morning, officers and teachers 8, scholars 31. '4Bubbles7' says he thinks the Hwater wagon is a good thing. He and his father believe in it. Five blooming Freshmen amble into chapel on the opening day of the fall term and attempt to squeeze into the Senior seats. They are squoze out. SPENCER--ffNC5W 1 borrowed these benches, so I would ask for that reason that you restrain your artistic im- pulses, and juvenile attempts at amateur carpenteringf' Dr. Read, our only unmarried professor. gave a lec- ture recently before the Child Study Club of Hamilton. Some one has been mean enough to ,hint that the Club's membership is confined to college widows. Students preparing for the ministry will find it to their advantage to look through our advertising depart- ment for a notice of Prof. Moores auction. Since the introduction of caps and gowns at commencement he has no further use for the tile, and the same will doubtless be struck off at a bargain. May 24-YOUNG asks to be excused from reciting be. cause it's the Queens birthday. SPENCER-'4Prayer at the opening of congress has de- generated into a stump speech to the Almighty. Rowland Contest-Buaaoucris gives eration on the battle of Manilla and thoughtfully omits the battle. He had been fired from the Glee Club and thus suppli- cated one of the powers: -'Please professor. I did not flat once last year and besides l spent seventy-live cents having my dress suit pressed. The nrst day of the fall term he ambled down the hill and stalked into the Presidents ofiiee. That dignitary and the assembled company arose and made their obei- sance as he with confidence began his conversation 1 -- l am a Sophomore 3 my name is Przmcmsf' There was a crowd around Kai's desk. Cards were being signed and numerous inquiries answered. Above the din and confusion the Scribum Salmagundis caught the burden of one man's song : '-il am a Sophomore, this year, Doctor. fl- ell- 49 MCAI,I,1S'l'Eli- Better be damned than mentioned not at allf' COOK-1' Poor prattler. how thou talkestf' DAWLEY-4' O, I'm pretty 3 1'm cute, 1 am. 193 s 5 o s., 1 - ' . 'I , A 1 9 lx . 14 -.n-lx -Q 1 31' xv JSM! : idk 1:11 ,fm 'Y Q ' 1 1-V--ex me . nv?--warn, 'W fihwnmh-1. Q, I L ,M. tie ion 'ICQ H119 t. mv E'1'ti ' 3. ,311 THE SODH5 IN NODE TIQCLIISLE N the fifth of April, the Sophomores-Colgate's only hope-held a banquet. They had been large- hearted enough to ask the Freshmen to attend, and- they did. But quite to their surprise the Freshmen found on arriving at the feasting-place, that the Sopho- mores had taken it upon themselves to renovate all tra- ditional college customs, and had changed a class banquet into an exposition of military genius. Standing by a chalk-line which Freshmen were forbidden to cross under penalty of death, stood the Sophomoresl guardian angel, armed to the teeth. In each hand he held a loaded horse- rcvolver, strapped on his shoulders were two Krupp guns, his pockets served as rifie-pits for innumerable fiends of sophic origin, and to complete the outht of this doughty man-of-war, two trap-doors stationed in the toes of his boots would repeatedly fly open, and out would come two torpedo-boats, on casters. It was in- deed a noble defence, worthy of the courage and mental acumen of 1902. So also Napoleon, the bravest of the brave, protected his empire by feasting in his tent, while without his footman made battle for him. ' Thinking thatia plate-glass window did not furnish sufficient protection, the Sophomores had pinned up stal- wart newspapers, pulled down the shades and taken other unexampled precautions. But even these failed. The window was smashed, the papers were tO1'1'1 down I f' Us- safe and the curtain drilled through. until. as a fluid lmenedic- tion, the Freshmen poured in upon the lmanqueters a costly vial of ottar of rosesf With a just reverence. and by a motion of the house, the Sophomores withdrew themselves to the other end of the room. where immedi- ately the boisterous banquet took on the silence and stupor of a plague-stricken city. The hall that a moment before had resounded with boyish laughter now seemed pervaded with thoughts of Home. Mother and Mercury. At last Sam Graves, shaking the lethargy from oti' his shaggy shoulders. arose, and with profound dignity vol- unteered the toast. -'Scientific Methods of Mopping up Carbon Disulfide. Then French threw a lit. and on recovery said he had been overcome by one of his semi- annual ideas, but that he was confident of not being taken again before September. His innocent presence was soon missed from the barbaric number. but he presently returned, lugging the product of his painful idea-a bas- ket full of clothes-pins. Mcekly he took his seat. and after adorning the bridge of his nose with one of the pins. passed it on to the other elders. The Muse of vagrant ideas then threw her mantle over Duckie. In his monumental toast. t'Mercury, the Unknown God, what a sublime soaring of the imagination. what eloquence of harangue, what power to depict the unseen ! The flight of his fancy was confined only by the walls of the room. fi Q, .inn W. 3, jg 1 . 4 1 f' 1 R V .1 'K , Q Jn XS- ut iid to of . I ne si- let ite nv gi en he 'ed ,IJ a la- nd no ise 1et VlEl2CLlI2Y'S HISTOIQV HIS year's SALMAGUNDI would certainly be incomplete, if it did not contain at least a partial account of the wandering statue, which has recently entered on another era of Hmost disastrous chances? All the traditions of the messenger-god have heen fulfilled in this his image, and his story here, as upon Olympus, is one of sudden appearances and strange departures, deep-laid plots and cunning subterfuge. The statue's history begins about twenty-one years ago when a gentleman from Pittsburg offered to the class of 79, then Seniors, a Hbronzel' statue of Mercury' for the campus, in case they would furnish the pedestal. The offer was readily accepted, and Mercury was placed at the head of the college hill, where the mounded earth and the toppled pedestal may yet be seen, marking the former position of the Olympian messenger. , In the course of two or three years there came signs that even divinity could not protect bronze paint from weathering. Gradually a white substratum was disclosed between the pealing scales of hardened paint, and so hideous an object did the statue become familiarly known as the f'God of the Scabby Backfp' It was but natural that for such a miserable god, even that it was divinity students could have no respect. And W6 f1UCl that the hopelessness ot saving the statue from disin- tegration had no sooner become apparent, than the sanc- I tity of the divine Hermes was violated. First a suit of underclothes was drawn on to cover his shameless nudity 1 then, that not sutiicing. the statue was treated to a coat of gloriously brilliant pink paint. And finally when 'ST were freshmen. on the same night in which I they de' stroyed the seventy-five-foot bridge across the campus creek, they carried Mercury from the hill and placed him in the yard of the Ladies' Seminary. with his beckoning finger directed toward the window of the seminarys most popular girl. The next day Professor Goodenough. from motives which are obvious to all students of mythology. took Mercury from the yard and shut him up in the barn. The luckless image, however. did not have long to rest. Within a few nights the students took him from the barn. and conducted him in state to the village park. where they placed him under an arboreal canopy and did him reverence as beiits a God. For a few days Mercury remained thus regally enthroned in the park. but the town authorities soon degraded him from his rural temple to the cellar of a carriage shop on Maple avenue near Wiekwire's feed store. . .lust how long he remained here. the writer does not know. but surely not for long, tor 'ST were still Freshmen when the Juniors came to them one day with news that the Sophomores had planned to capture Mercury that night and keep him hidden. Early in the evening l1el'ore'SS had put their plans into eliect. the freshmen took Mer- 97 . 1 . .J 4 1 5 W w , . iw mini, 'wg ...al-Q ' 5.4 9 .- ,- Q s , ev ' A f if U . ,.. 'S rt' 1 . ,Lia li . Ali A I . 1 -,fra hx-M, . 1 ' 1 -g ,,V.,' 1 .,,,1 A , .rf , ms .. 1: 'wY Yqiza F: gm 'mf vw if f. 'Ari Z .Q 1' 1 ' ' -T lx nz x.-. , Q .' 'sw' mi 1 4,.5.., X . pt' 1, :i ,gag HI La,! ,'-1. 54:10 4, Q Second-The class holding the statue shall have at least one banquet during the year, at which the statue 311311 bg present. Tlzircl-The statue shall not be hidden outside the limits of the Chenango valley, between Earlville and Bouckville. Fowtlz.-Force shall never take the place of strategy in gaining possession of the statue. A The class of 1903, who, under this custom, were made the first custodians of Mercury, were given two weeks from October nineteenth, in which to change his resting place, and thus give the Sophomores an opportunity to catch a clue. The change was made Wediiesday night, the twenty-fourth. The Freshman committee who ac- complished the rather difficult feat-for the entire Sopho- more class was on the watch-was two in number. One was called home to Madison by purported news of a rela- tiveis illness, and one was carried from town under robes and meal bags in the bottom of a wagon. 'Meeting in Madison the two left for their difficult undertaking, and 7 carried Mercury from his hiding place to a bed in the swamp, beyond Pecksport. They were so unfortunate, however, as to be surprised by daylight before their task was entirely completed, and they were forced to conclude I the god's interment by covering him with half of a hollow log and scattering leaves and brush over all. Here Mercury might have lain for a century. had not Dan Stokes set eyes on a fine old tree in the swamp. and laid his axe to its roots on the side toward the gods burial-place. For the tree. in falling, struck and broke the hollow log, and disclosed the shapely arm of Mercury protruding from the muck. There are various stories ol' what Dan did when he saw this apparition. but of this we are sure, that he dug the unfortunate god out. and left immediately for town to tell the story of his strange dis- covery. There were those who heard him who guessed at once what it all meant, and that night, before any ol' the students had heard the news, a townsman drove to the swamp, found Mercury, and hid him on his own account. as rumor says, in the basement of his store. At present writing, there is a great deal of mystery about the god's condition and whereabouts. This much only we surely know, that while the Freshmen have not actual possession of him, they and they alone know where he is, and can take possession whenever they are so inclined. What more may happen before this article is published we dare not guess, and the tolling of it w gladly leave for future historians of Mercury's wanderlngs. 99 0 Y 4 rwty 1 v- In 1 44' ' 1 1 l o I f-Fi'if-:ILETajii'-Q-1-: aL,..1::..1'AT 3'JJT7,.-'. i':f-5. -JEL27..Qi:::?LH 4 urea. ,1-'L' -'f '- , , V . i - . I A . 1 x K I r V x x .44 'I' if Z- S Eli gg ZXDVliIQ'l'lSEWIIiNTS -.-xx Il Lxll IW f N 1 , -z x K 1 4 at m 1Nl1 paw- vw M TNI! svkwx Q , - 1 PA-L6'1,f f'5 NNT' ik hs. 'AL'k'N7q'5 N!! ug' 45ii1T,fE..nf E' . ., 1, A cmwW.,v,:,n,,N,N,,ni:mxv,N5 . A A Q :-: nu, Q P. U, n Q n nl u r an 1-qs. 57,3 I Y Q if ro LL is Prisrs 0. s. oRv1 COLLECTION numbering over 3,000 bound vol- umes and 58,000 documents, comprising the reports of all Baptist Societies, State Conventions, Associations, Collegesg also sermons and addresses bearing upon the history of the denomination, is now placed in a special department in the iire-proof library of Colgate University, Hamilton, New York. The object of this collection is to form a connected history of the Baptist denomination and Work, which is of the greatest value, not only to this, but to succeeding generations. It is earnestly requested that owners of documents which in any way relate to the Baptist Denomination will send notice of the same, as it is desirable to make this collection as complete as possi- ble. .Eor further particulars, address i THE . SAMUEL COLGATE BAPTIST HISTOIQICAL COLLECTION HAM ILTON, NEW YORK. I Meir' 00005 M10 .szhioes Hamilton, New York . . STUDENTS . . 2 n, 1 B S Y . -A-fx -it ' lrei, fl?f?'Ti??-2215 JY, , ,,,. Y , W A .15 E 2'-'PEEETE Ziaiiiiiiffvii-E25- ': E iE'1 'EE T' ' T' T' .5 0 , ,.,,1Y ' 441- -an-gf fl - eff- -:W 7 - 7' -+---- f ---- --- -L--Y - una-,1.'.,,. L Waterman's Ideal Fountain Pens A necessary convenience. They are used and endorsed by peo- ple of education as the best writing instrument of the day. It is the popular pen at all the Universities. Schools and Colleges. Ask your dealer or write for catalogue. L. E. WATERMAN CO., 157 IiI'0IItIlYIlj'. New York. N. Y. Fountain Pen Manufacturer in the World. Largest ' No. S BROAD S'l'IllCI'I'l' jf. my Next to Postolliee JEKXIELEJE. and S e-ial attention given to the - ll'lhJ2lll'Ill:I ol' Specs :intl Iiye Sta-111315121 ' ' ' Glasses. l'rescriptions lilleml. Lenses re- 'Xu kindq Rpp,Li1,inrr ac-I. -I-. ' ' ' ' H plum 1 4 attended to proinptly. iii L Q nhl ii 1 -l,. Af.. he , Hi' G Y , , ,, ,pw .,, -W Nxt 'wfi' -....,. ., Q-.....,,.v . Holnillon NewYo I Colgole Llnlvergllv H GEOIQGE lfDlVl7-YNDS IVIEIQIQILL, D.D., Dl2lf5lDliN'l' QIQQZXNIZATIQN Colgate University was founded in 1819. -'f'-H-'- chartered as Madison University in 1846. received its present name in 1890. It has always been closely af- filiated with the Baptist denomination. The University comprises three distinct departments: The Academy, the College and the Theological Seminary. These are under the direction of the same Board of Trustees and President. and share the general advantages of the institutiong but each has its own administra- tive oiiicers. faculty and buildings. . LQCZXTKDN END The University is located on a beautiful EQUIDMENT tract of some two hundred acres in the .-i-- village of Hamilton, Madison County. N. Y., a region noted for its healthfulness and beauty. The Uni- versity makes exclusive use of eight large buildings, besides several small ones. The value of the buildings and grounds is about S600,000. SCHQLAQSI-HDS Aid is given worthy students, who need ------ '--' it, by scholarships. These are given ill by the University from funds devoted to the purpose 3 and C23 by the New York Baptist Education Society to students for the ministry. For University scholarships, apply to Dean W. H. Crawshaw. Hamilton, N. Y. For aid from the Education Society, consult Rev. H. S. Loyd. Corresponding Secretary, Hamilton, N. Y. The general library occupies a building recently My completed at a cost of fll5150,000. There- are 501110 727.000 volumes, besides pamphlets. and the collection is constant- ly growing. The reading room is most spacious and attractive. Ample grounds for out-door sports. A large modern gymnasiuln. fully equipped. The exercises are in charge of a specialist in physical training. Occupies two buildings on grounds adjacent to the '- College and Seminary. Courses of study prepare for college or scientific school. I'rincipal's certificate admits to colleges and scientific schools without examination. New gym- nasium. Ample grounds for athletic games. For special infor- mation. address. F. Il. Shepardson. Principal. Ilamilton. N. Y. - - The College offers three four years' courses in arts. Q53 letters and philosophy. letters and science. leading respectively to the degrees of A. B.. Ph. B. and B. S. There are excellent museums. and a new laboratory building. fully equip- ped. The standards are high and the expenses moderate. Occupies a beautiful new building. Eaton Hall. ,The courses of study are planned to -- cover three years and give a thorough equip- ment for the work of the ministry. The faculty numbers eight besides lecturers. For special information. address. llev. S. Burnham. Dean. Ilamilton. N. Y. For catalogues of all departments. address. liegistrar. Folgate University. Ilamilton. N. Y. Applicants for admission to tln- College. and those desiring general information. should address correspondence to Dn.-xx W. ll. CnAwslIAn'. Ilamilton. N. Y. -- -- -- - T' R 2 5 'F 1 X . 'ff fx . ff :- 2 f '-7'-ff C 35' 19 f li ur 2 CARL BAUM 35 SUN 1VlEN'S FURNISHINGS 'Nff4l?'RE'Ns?ls?F'lHk1Ys'7ls'Ns4ls7lf7Hlf4is'?lf'Ns7lf'k'Ks and CL G ua -zu A M M -M -M iw M I 1 33 144 W. QV it HE Clothes we make are positively guaran G teed as to quality, fit and workmanship Our stock of lVlen's Furnishings and Cloth A . . ,.. ing consists of reliable goods, latest styles and are sold at the lowest prices. We cheerfully make good any unsatisfactory purchases LEBANON STREET, HAMILTON, NEW YORK RUST , , ' T Greetings to '60 and 'OI E. B. SHELDON 4?n?'1i?viQ24? riEMQif1c41i4iif?lQ1i:wi2iif4i2rlfi':1iswikis Ulze iN'i'cl2coLLcolix'i'c Bite' Qruggist BU PERU rr - r Q riuii PM FO' This SW COTIQELL SL LlZONAl2D, .OGQQCEQIES Q 4773-4-43-S Broadway. TXLBYXNY, N. Y. mmm mu Smith i N N Block Building l 1ill1Ei4HtS15l3LLiqGi.1 CADb, GOWN5 und HOODS L t 1 Broad and L b St y Illustrated bulletin, samples, etc.. upon application. HAMILTON N Y vii ---y-.1--ff-- --'f - .------J- ' 'Mi Apr R : 4 f s A 5 Q ' 'bb 10.1-ff' 3 u-mu! J 5 1 4 2 . if ' L ' R ,. ? I Q 0 i -2 Y .. -- - 2 fax-Lu ,IW 1 4 X s Q f 1' 1 Tx:'f'!'3 6 . . if..w.f.z-'..f..f.f.v'-r'-ff'-' R A ,,,.., ..,,,, .L.4, , 'mv-f A I V. 'f- Ix C -xiriiu nl 9 ' 1 . N Q -we , S ,sw O 1 000-O th 0020110 QOIIQUQ gfj' 4 our-0 : ll! 05 A U -a .QF ' U 'yamd 1 Qffm.-. 5 ith.. st sly... .L 3 Q 'ful'-Q, 4 ' ' ' ' ' ' '- ' Y -f--'-f-'---'r,.-:--- -f----Q-1 if-.-.wwf-af 1-Info s-uav -c ::u1ia:,::mx. ivzrr. m or 9NV VNVNVNVNVNVNVNV VNvNV4VvNy,NvJVvNvNVNVNV4 E n1itI7ffpqfbwc1ye io. HZXIQDWPXIQE, IJLLIIVIBING, TINNING, STOVI3 FIND IILIIQNACES ..... NV- v v 'vNv-NvNvNv1vV.Nv1vvNv WH. IAI. HILL, AEL':,TaO,T4U'ffiIl?'2K Photographer Q24 OLII2 SIDE LINES! ' - B, I R q ' K Fine Cablnet and 5 rcgc es, opcmmg, . coal-as . ' AGENT FOR Group pictures u . 1 Sunbrxes 1 uno Oiamera Supplies Kodak Came,-as lSigyu.l1'-5 :Incl Rr-1p:li1'i'11g1 'nu' ?pmi- EASTMANQS KQDAKS. 31.00 to 52500. Plntvs. Films. Dovulop- CLASS DHOTOGQADHEQ 5 c'fc1.1es. STr:Rx,1Nu WIN-Pls. 1-rs. I,2ll701'5.1IOIlllCS. litmz. FOI-2 '93, '94, '96 AND '99 b4Na4NnlAAr4NN4XulNufXalXNfNN'bvfNNlNaJNNfXArfXNJNalXu'Na'NNfNM4 A.f4NaA,pAyJNnl4NN-Au4XNJNa'fNN4Na4NN-A44Xu4Xa4NNA.rJNAfANJN,q4 lv Q Rowleg V' W I 'N V N N 'V 'X- 'V 'V'P When in town Call on us for SWMORS U E Xxf HEN EZSffLEQ1'?fo'If3L1fI2I5If3E1, I'D'I0 IaI6 90005 8 ll0NI'I,E'xik HORTON AND DOIIEBTII UGAR ax -- 'SY' am I CWN 213235 Srolb P . 8 P 'g 1 aw-ww --- I DQPIIQ f 5,3535 In oobblns addon S I I-IONEIQX Q I HE overnment Square eafe, - Q SLANIA 1300145 ,www rupNl5l-IUQ5 fi- , - W' YYQXSETIRECTIICISUI DNC 75-77 .grand St., cor. john, C 5 - J 5 ' ' 2'0I1VE?'iEv I Ill HL'TTERl-'IELD noun: I '21 1 ' jf gf Q ' ' 7 Utica, N. Y. UIICCI, H- vx..f-fx.m.f-n.fA.f-fv-m.f-fwvx.f-n.f-vx,.,-fx.f ix MONARCH 'affaili WPA' X ' NEW YORIQ '--LONDON 7 fi 5' I I 11+ M W A , PRF 'jg 3. ,,-ii' ,i UV 'ful sssa 5 955555 vu .,. I f' na 'lmw W fl my f--., ...W . , .4 N., 4... 44. , K Av L. new h' but Wnssqmr, ' ' Milf e'-'ff2f-'-f- fvffrfv-A . Han -- lilrnhill' T . ' I.'.- .BY TIP . . .. . 'Ui as 'rr :ner .A.::a1nQ : .. 7 ,- Q... A 14:3 Ib -Y. 1 -'L-..?f' lunar I - 5. . nav :rn .,,,,w,,, .NL E HAVE THE LARGEST AND REST EQI'IIf'I'ED .mon XVE PRINT , OFFICE IN THIS LOCALITY 9 WE PLEASE om: ' PATRONS IVITH THE QUALITY OF OUR I'RODl'C- THE SALMAGUNDI THE MADISONENSIS THE ACADEME TIONS i WE ARE I'REI'ARED T0 FURNISII ICS- TIMATES ON ALL KINDN or 1:ooK AND .mon wow: COLLEGE, SEMINARY and M I V ' ACADEMY U PRI ' I I G, ENGRA V ING CATALOGUES I If AND EMBOSSING IN THE LATEST STYLE AND ART O NOT PLACE YOUR ORDERS LQ LLIQTT WITHOUT CONSULTING US n Publxshers of .... ----A THE HAMILTON REPUBLICAN SNFVS SNSN SAANVVSGSAANSAGNVSVSNSNS 'P '1'HE -- ,1--H 1-H A N, -an do E IIPILIAIBLL Ab I OLLOWS. C+ ' -7 I -I-'Ii'-P' MH 53555615 X Leave Franklin Street. New York 7:40 A. M. 'f5:45 P. M. S XII H b N West 426. Street. New York 7:55 A. M. 13:00 l'.'M. In !!,,f'7f xiN,X Arrive Hamilton ...... 3:27 P. M. 172:01 ,, ff- .... ' X 6 HCA .. md 3 Xi .I 'A--LJ! J Leave Hamilton ..... . 9:35 A. M. 41:36 P. M. , Q , Arrive West 42d Street. New York 7:10 P. M. 3:35 P. M. I5 I r:Lnk1in Street. New York 71:35 P. M. 0:15 P. M. I Jggkecl thus Q20 run on Sunclnys also. Its Uvpots :nuI I l'I'l'I1'S in New the foot ol' l r:mIsliu :mul West J. C' Two t.r:xi11s each - Q Sm Img'-l5',,1i The one-wav Limited mme Ee- 4 GCIWII Iluwcfmlcl' Assam olliundnys. tween New York and Hamilton -, 56 DCLIVCI' NPCCT, New York WVU! 56065445 NSN! SNNWNVVSVVVWVVUSVVNSSNQN VVVSNVVYVSNNQ xi Platino Photography SQTAL RATES fins-cim 85 itch ju 3. fatter... Turkish Egvptiaa Imported ond Domestic Cigarettes ALL KINDS OF TOBACUOS. UI- GARS, juipes, etc. The Butterfield Cigar Stand ' The Franklin Square Cigar Stand Utica, .95 STUDENTS aaaaaaaeeeeeee F YOU ARE GOING TO HAVE YOUR PICTURE TAKEN REMEMBER THAT FREY LEADS THEM ALL IN ARTISTIC EFFECTS OF PLATINO PHOTOGRAPHY KODAKS and KODAK SUPPLIES on Sale CARL K. PREV 11 Broad Street, UTICA, N. Y. siffbileleflt-'KAL QEAE 9,-'if :Ne ,se ? 42 'li 7is'WIs'Ksfi2 136 Gbencsec Street, utlca, otel -ff Zliaxwell 'lbRl11ilt0llv 1l4. Q. il STEAM HEAT HOT AND COLD BATHS ELECTRIC LIGHTS il Solm Keegan, Proprietor Spring ibouse 745 4- -4- ITIS it- 01. 5. Regnolbs proprietor 'IR6IfOI'b jfall5 mlb glllpblll' QDFHTQ5 Sherburne, J. B. Gram 232351-,?l WENTY-ONE years proprietor oi' the Hamilton Book Store, the largest theological and miscel- laneous book store in New York State outside oflarge cities. Buying large invoices at lowest cash price,.having customers everywhere, running ex- pense low, we are able to sell cheaper than our city competitor. We do a large business in second-ha nd Books. Have purchased several large and val- uable libraries I'rom heirs ol' deceased ministers, professors ond others. Any such library for sale we will buy. Anyone wishing to dispose of part ol' their library will do well to write us. This part of our business alfords rare opportunities to secure Connuentaries, Encyclopedias, 'l'heologica.l and mis- cellaneous books very cheap. Dr. Cla,rke's books always on hand. Sub- scriptions received I'or all magazines at lowest rates. ,Satisfaction in prices and terms guaranteed. xii ,754-Te! ,gDanz'els it Slzerburne, UZ. Q24 HELEN M. and W. S. FISH Proprietors SUDDEQS AT SHORT NOTICE and Reasonable Prices A 'II Ili na. T 1,955 xiii .A-+0 'm:.., I Q mimi E T fi . 'G ' i l i K 'i 5 'Q M. , 1 6 we Q0 4 OQQIOOCQ . IOOOCO I 'Y COO if OCOOOQOOOUQOOOOCCIX ,M mf - - il. L Levis .isnt I .1 Q-1 ae is xo up saw' 8 Gi ,Oo g- :- I ',fIfi15'g A . 'sw 1., N . 'I . V ea k it OO W 1 Ol Ill I , I I II I I 1 3 I 3 I I I , I I I I I :I Ili r 'I I I- L: I lf I ll 'I - rl , -1 DJ Z fi ,ri J QI 'LI II ii Ei I3 :Bit Ii If IJ.: gg! fl E Zi: 4, 'S I 11 .lxx ll? I NIII I TIIE FISI4 TEACIIEIQSA OENQII1 I'I5gIgqggIf',r INCORPORATED A 0 ' -t 14,047 Positions Filled at . . Salaries Aggregating 59,065,290 NV' +Mw?',swl' 59' -If w?'w3?j Sl' 'I' 'lf' -I' 'If' -If SP1 4,577 IDOSIIIOITS Flllecl IIT New YOVIR, New ,leI'Sev, IICIN i IOSTUN.1'llIl',XllU.NllXNl'I.XI'HI,lS. Q xxx l ll.XXl'lSt'U. W.XSlllXli'l'llX. F III Xll IOIONIOIO txIIIIS I O'I'lrIIiI2 OIL: ii 'IN ' fl, l , A St fif .ff SEND IRQUN IDI. Ii. ciI2OciIaIiI2, X I - 1 W. D. IaI-I2I2, COIWITCCIICIII CIINCI IDCITIWSVIVCIINIEI, IIIC SICIICS C. YXNTI IONY, FIPS. PI. I2. .IOI2D7'lN, I I NCCIVCSI IO IIIG IX CW YOVIR OIIIICC X I I -,-S I Iclllclflk I . . NHL we ADVISE IJAI2I5NTS we RENT AND SELL JQSFIDH QQQQIX ABOUT SCHOOLS . . SCHOOL PROPERTY S ' ' I i ' 91-1Itf1ltf:lwIt-2It-1ll-fIlf2.!AI,l2llbll1llblsa4ftbalsgtislwl i , LIIII-Ivallerl Il I3 I, as s 40 A -1 ' ' NDIS on ,fair Rlbany . . OI Q IICDII LI . T lgglf e I'IaI1S I Ineachers C- h ' I IJFOVICICS SCIWOOIS Nltwtr- Ifot' Wtftmtvas x I I Obtaining 44:54 deac 6718 OlaIIGradeS ' ' S,,,.?,.,,,1,-,U ' ' Furrtishmgs , Positions all-All wilhC0mDC1Cnl ' ' ' spill, .PZ Teachers BOOTS g8l10y l1tII'ItlSltecl MUSIC for . . SIWOGS I l'llIIllLl':llIIl'fi:'. 'E!'i. 'EIZL 'ltil.l1E'3.. 'Elm 'tl'. 'II ,',tI. ' il. 'III'I I- IIIx'I'I'- Rubbers siIy. wat, Ins, Will. 'sI7. 'IIILI I-'III-,:I'lI . I Send for Illustrated Booklet f I llll't'l'ilIj'. 'SI-I, 'II3, '5III, EIT, IIN. II-- 94 Slain' Slreeil '00, lvllllilllli l'OlII'2I'. TI5. Wi. TIT NO 2 I '98, 'SIIL 'llll lllllllllltllll'thIII 1l'.'l ' , 'III3, WIT. EIS. 'IIII. 'lIlI. thru-I-II I , ,, J ,. ,J , NIIIIINIIIII, 'II4. 'I:5. 'IIIL 'sI7. 'Ina 'I-.I. ll-I I HAQLAN P. FQENCH, Mftlfijgwfl Proprietor . - -Rulflflyr 95- 121- 73 SIUIC, SII-cel, IYIIJLIIW, II. v xiii A slice To a DIIDCILII IS one 1 e mllxb' man' I' son wlw Old IIRQIISIX curve Cut p1pe Tobacco I9 so DODLIIGI 1 he RV! Cy, curved llll box that hrs onv poclael KVW P Tobffco I9 EIIXOIIXCI leason No o'rl1e1 plpe tobacco has CVCI made as lllCIllLl ITFICIXCIS Ill so sI1o1T a TIIHC IT dusoppomts no o Il l vox 111lll1c smut o llN NN wrt Oll ll t ll 111 lllll 11. Xcldws OLD I NGLISH DTI XR LMFN L l HE YTXIVIEIQICPZN l OBHCCO CQVIDANY F111 A we fvollecirv All de-11l1rs sell it. I I I I X VC, l VX ALES AGENT FOR Knox Celebrated Hats High 'et X53 Z Umbrellas Grade c Imported wi HENRYAMARTIH ry Correct Hats 49-if-XXSX Styles HENRY MARTIN 104 Genesee se UTICA, N Y I-latter and FUI-ner Caterer Restaurateur 249 Genesee St. owlands S1 Beal FUR- .NITURE. 'INDEALER' UTICA N.Y 9' elarke Brick Lnfezjy and pilI'IV Boarding Stables Creameyg Supplies ge,,.,,.s,,,5f2,,,,,f1,,,,,,gz, , Hamilton, ll. Y. xiv CIQSIIG Gvlbfan ..Dl'ALlRIN.. ' BUILDERS 1 1 HARD WARE Stoves, Furnaces, Tmware, Cutlery, Etc Plumbing and Heating PHKENIX YLOCK LL1sANoN s'1'R121Q'1'. Hamillon, N. Y. 51-ll? I K ..! -ul fails a xl -A, -ux.. N S H P Di2oMD'r N. E. Bureau of Education W W W W W I I Organized 1875 'l I WILLIAM F. JAQVIS i ' ALVIN F. PEASE I COUQTEOUS T EAC H ERS' PM I missions' TIQEATMENU fe , DEALING! I Wcstcrn Olliccs. Kansas Cilv, Mo. Akron. Ohio A Send for Forms f We have unequalled facilities for - G E C Y i - 'I - - placing Teachers in every part and CIrCI'IIarS ofthe country i i--1-lfff-117--ef l .V 7 D 0 IIN lsusmiitlx H Bxxliilfjxcax li-XIQOKI HEADQUAQTFILSJIRR'LIOMMERCIAL . . Grosvenor Q24 H Soda' i-:.x'i'nN s'r1:l-11-:'r ll.XMII.'l'HN.N.Y. 2, L., A. 84 L. H. Babcock , the Eagle , S' IIEMAEIIS IN F' M' ' ll..I. lil-1uull.k llllll.. PIANOS AND ORGANS 'ne Ilhnery '5T il? il? SIP AND Fancy Goods .gb .913 Cool -gfls -.Refreshing Kxrrzs: Ii'2.Ulll'1-:ll nm' .Slrs .Wight COLGATE DENNANTS ,Wong 21-ner Norwich, N. Y. Society and Class Colors 'IFl0tWICIJ, IH. IQ. XV ,f-,., 'yh 363.-,1 ', V' f,-x..-3:,nj.f .A A . 50.1. lf,. Ty4' 5 , A - 1' L' 4 1 ' A--' r' ' HV f ,Lx 1517 f 112 ,if K+-- A ,M , X OR Ur T N? W ,S fic aw ww uw rw F H I1 mlm P- W 9U ' , T y.-ONE AND N-EQ --'n f 4, i 1 LINIZ lLLusTRA- g Q A 'l'u0Nsl1olz'l'lllS , if , BOOK W ERIE Q., -' EN A 'N J53Qf .mmni mv . .. 1 5 254 comnussr. . ' B N. 0212, Q1 , V Q., X 2- 953 ' -i f ' XX- TI S TT II ' we x u 0 2 ling raving Companv 4 X 234 CONGIQITSS 5TI ?IiIf'l' ' SOM dll Amund COIQIQESPONDEINICE SOLICITED xwrm. SDECIAL AT'I'EN'I'ION aww TO . QQ Q Fn H5 'f COLLEGE booms I B X ron' MGSX ' X US HOALNUR E - u A g , w'w-N-A XXI 1-va -Y-,' 'V11 u 3- t K Mass. KINGSFORD'S QiV.YE9Q,,5TABQU 'VVNVQ Tl ui , OIQIGINPYI- FOI? OVEQ x - .Sqm Q INGBIZQIQDB VE!-U25 , QQQN 5 STZXIQCH - ,, Ff 4g5 V ' L sea L .L ..-- X ...f y lnllt. nog?-S ,W ,, ffwyz ' mist ? 1-, 33. ' wwiwwf, SEE?-1 'N' .123 I-ALINDDN - 4:-'ENS' 0 Z y3 ,.2Zi'1 ff 51 LVEIQ Q L055 I F Giant in Strength Platchles in Duritg - N d ' fffdffwlf' ,fff,2g:,f ifiiif, iii?-ffjrffwiffgffifwf'it mx: , , , 6, D , ,, N K t mn I um: sv vu lngapgfnsablg S Dil S x., G I Cf X Eocrggsecping FOI? 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Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908

Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Colgate University - Salmagundi Yearbook (Hamilton, NY) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 1

1912


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