Cornell College - Royal Purple Yearbook (Mount Vernon, IA)
- Class of 1917
Page 1 of 271
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 271 of the 1917 volume:
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MNA, V Q. ,4,.-L., ,-.-m' eg, . ., Y--A -, , 1-5:75 :WV lffi-.FFA ,rim 5- , 4,55 w 7j.,-JA., 5'Yjf',4 v'1-,-.?Z,g'Qn'i- -FSL-'YQ, ' , 5-'ggxh' - -if: 41 -:Ji . ',4,w'- '7. 61: -5, - -ff' wr 2--elf 'vw -M rf ' -- - fir- mm- 'div rw '- - pvvgikz. if-F.. viva... ,,.-1' -mv 5 Aaidgziiifg' -gf-'-. ..,1:-J:-. N -'-- r:..h. .M f-:L ia - H .- ew ' if 3 M. . -., ., - JR 't D A Copyright .1916 by Clmrd R Benton and Jobn J. Knzgbt C 0 ' : 'A ' , ' 4 . 4 ' W 0 1 C F, V b 1 r 4 -, 4' wx- f 41,4 r 'su '41-ami ,I ,, , L, M X,fiL,.gA,: 15 4 44 :,Q,3t','1'1.. 'L f 4'wf'51 f' -M V v X in N, U' .4 W , 41- v ,iw -..J4-. ,V '.,, 'wk ,' wi, 4 gf: ai . , 4 . ,, -, fe IF, f' if y-- 4 44 .A Mx As, A 's 4' ' 4 v 4 I 4 44 wlqx. p4 4 4-4 41' u'-44 454. 5.5 f R 4 ,4 4 A 'S-3'4 - 4 1-f4.,' 4-4 ', 4-'44 f 4 , .MS . . ' ' 4 ,,,41'W,.4 K , 4 ':v ',.S-. V ' :'w-4, ,ir ..L,'.,. Qx ,.,,,y4, 'I k ,.4,.4,5,,'-., H 4zqxfri.Q1 7ma4.24b.4?S?m.. 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'V V' ' -V ' ,x---1 1 --f V A, .4.. , vow. 1 inf' - '- ' ' ' h I--.--.-f.,.V. -b.. ,-' .V 3 ,, -NM, .- .,- ., V., V ., 4. ul I' I ll 1 E ' 4 ,pw 'ummm M Y., .7 I, :tk I I mi f J' 3,5 , 5 Jr. Q-, WTA , f l Foreword t f' Tbe function of a college annual zn our opznion ts to ex- press tlze lgfa and condztzons exzstzng at tbe znstztutzon fwbicb zt represents. It bas been our purpose, tberehre, to obaracterzke as fazrly- as pos- sible tbe lk of Cornell College. We ba-ve nzade zt our ann to portray 'not only tbe enwron- ment zn fwlzzob tlte students lrve, but also tlze lzabzts and actzlvl- tzes of tbe student body. Our goal bas been a truly Every- bodzes' Royal Purple. As suolz, tlus, tlze szbcteentb volume, awazts your judg- ment. ' 1 , - . . - F. s V : .-W y N xii . .YA ,A ,fd h ,1 .ip . is fi . ,z 4 .. ' vi Vi' M, 3 vw ' :YW -i. A 4 V, -, 1 W ICM 5 K v l X . sri ., .V ' ' fl W ,Q 3 dns 2: 13 'jf' s se.. f Vfhq, .fix I .j HQ' A fix . .4 , ' 'ff-fe ' . ' E1 .-. 1 ,I b F ,' 11' - 9- , , Jn I 5. ,iv we V, ,ff-. 'I' Z J, v -1' fl 9' - '94 x 1' : . - 1. -ij . -1' F' Qu -sr 1. ri' 15 Ai ' -Ji ' + Us uf R L ,Q ng 4 AVL -- e... , I, . w 1 ,, I - 1 -W , A 1 V , ,v mash' . X Q owl mm.. 4 M hm- .wks M M,faa1assrsE2faiH1fl1asfxs?ii'1sa1h.wi:szr1s awares.1hfM44if+ia1a,,a.s,i.f.e4,QQih.- d -W Order of Books BOOK ONE Tlze' College BOOK TWO The Classes BOOK THREE Alkletzbs BOOK FOUR Organz2az'z'ons BOOK FIVE College LW .,,,..r -- Y lqdvl h...-.lgi E U E ! 5 E f 1 2 5 ? 3 s N' i 2 2 mai 3 smug 4 Edu! gi I! mf 'F Kas W wg QQ 1 ra' W ':'.-FEL' ' .' '-'.'l - -'-1:-'.-'-5- '2Z7 f:'.7C:'.'-': 1, 1--1-'fir-'rfz-11 L5 5. ,,, ,Gum an .. .. , 'I The f ollege Gio he at home in all lanhs anh ages. with nature. Qrt, uno monks as intimate trienhs, to learn anh to form character from a2'.111f1fIf5? LH t f,'gC'I'.1v'v' .-1 ,....x U I f . s e,. 3,ai-upf:4a:1,:-lf,-f ,I qgrgggggfgw-iw M- W We-or E . W I M 2 ng . ,fx 1, tb, V-I 1 . u nqwvl-.U LN sb if . E :'-nk: V' ' H 1 tl, , X 1-Wg: fa' N , P' VJ? - '91 5 :rev A - ll Q W: ALL 4 ll , J 1 pour tlassmates uno professors -this is the offer of the Qiollege for the best four pears ot pour lite. '-35239 BOOK ONE Campus Scenes Th Chpl The Library South Hall Science Hall The Conservatory The Campus x , V 1 v f .I X I f u 1 v 1 r Q n 1 I f 1 L x 1 v 2 S Y . 5 . a . Q Y i , 5. 2 F ? ? . if 3 E s 2 mu.1w...- J.. ,Mn ,M 4 1 , , , I The Palisades The Gymnasium The Fountain Bowman H all 7 xx 4 1 -44,4 ,-,A , X L , . , 4 1 , , . w . . ,.,,..'.f:-:-wut-4.':s ', The Palisades V i The Cedar River The Palisades Cliffs The Palisades Cliffs 1' rl' ' H Spring Hollow I , ' x 'M 'N' SS 'f' Nm ' w f Lwnl k f ff Wx! 1 Q Q' . K X Am V V- vfvpx W f n Q,'ffyff 'A.f,g-ff',M 1 , W M QW y . W' ff? fftff..0I : 1 s 'Cn l y My Q ' f 2 If , 1 1 ' ,,lf' '7gqfff g,fMf iff, f' ffffx K n 7 1 ff X 2, A,- fe Hz 5 , THE ROYAL PURPI. n The Faculty T he Faculty is the name applied to a particular organization of individuals which inflicts its presence upon most colleges and univer- sities. These individuals eat, sleep, and drink water like ordinary human beings. Many years of excessive toil in carrying around heavy burdens of titles and degrees has caused most of them to be- come stooped shouldered. In spite of this deformity, they are pleas- ant and inspiring to look upon. If they are not in their classrooms occasionally emitting intelligence in capsule form as mental delicacies for the students to feast upon, they can be found dissipating in the library, consuming volumes of literary sweets. Over-indulgence causes the minds of many profes- sors to become potbellied. Cornell professors however have been able to restrain themselves and have kept their mental symmetry. They are very fond of research work, especially at the end of every semester, when they unearth deep, vague, unheard-of questions for exams. They take particular delight in giving tests when the stud- -ents are the least prepared for them. - In other words, the faculty is the one concealed bump along the avenue of our college joy ride. Nevertheless, man is made by hard knocks, and such jolts as the faculty give us develop the characters that make successful alumni. ' C. P. B. owe wqgr.-ys,3nrfgx :xQ-i n qrimm 'VKW ,.,..,.. .J .I I ... -' ' if ' ww. mfg. .vu f m n- 'ze 1 -': u:4n1'ff.Q... -. -Q - V - - .R f . , f -W... . ...fav , .,W-,wifngi W - ,, . ,, uw- A s..,,.L.................L..r.2Ise'Afestzm'.1:+I.2 ..:..t.,.,:a.1:f'r13sx.:..A., ' W ' - Y---r - mm 4'---W 'W -------:Q-rw-:::iAnwfm -i-vf-:sL-4nmg- rc1-5,-12i.m,,,,-,..,,.,..,,,,,,q,,,,,,m,'m71-g,:,..,,, 1- y----, ..- IHE. ROYAL H Ll-A-JD' I ' 1 l x I, L... I.-- ......t,,.... , ,, I .. iw' Yi ' ' ' ' ' -W--v 'FY' i 'f- 1 L----.211-114111 ,, YW W i-,,,.,,,, I ' I I ll CPUY MORTIMER KNOX, A. B., Professor of Romance Languages. 1 AI.BERT SAMUEL KEISTER, A. B., A. M., Acting Professor of Economics and Sociology. ELSA STRAWMAN, Instructor in Orntory. JOHN LEONARD CONRAD, Mus. B., Instructor in Voice. WILLIAM HARMON NORTON, A. B., A. M., LL. D., Alumni Professor of Geology. HARRY MCCORMICK KELLY, A. B., A. M., LL. D., Professor of Biology. MARY LORRAINE MACLEOD, B. Ph., M. Ph., Dean of Women and Director of Physical Training for Women. WILLIAM FLETCHER KING, A. B., A. M., D. D., LL. D., President Emeritus. FLORENCE ETHEL BUSSE, A. B., Instructor in Home Economics. CLARENCE JACK SMITH, A. B., A. M., Assistant Professor of English. I ll I Q av- -.4 f E Y +21 f L . 1-' fr-H I ---------.-..-... ,,-v,,,,-,A-,hm-K-gl l 1 GORDON BEEBE, B. S., Professor of Engineering. JOSEPII MADISON BACIIELOR, A. B., A. M., Assistant Professor of English. D. D. TORRENCE, Professor in Janitory. EDGAR D. BEACH, Mus. B., Instructor in Voice. WILLIAM STAHI. EBERSOLE, A. B., A. M., Litt. D., Professor of Greek and Archzeology. FREDERICK MILTON MCGAW, A. B., A. M., B. S., Assistant Professor of Mathematics and Manual Training. ELSIE BARRETT, Secretary to the President. JOHN ELBERT S'1'oUT, A. B., Ph. M., Professor of Education and Principal of the Academy. ROSE EVELYN BAKER, Ph. B., Director of the School of Oratory and Professor of Public Speaking. JOHN ROBERT VAN PELT, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Professor of Philosophy and Biblical Literature. 5 lil 'P ul .1 il , 4 , , 4 l l I f.. r A- '....z is ,. Tx. .WI I vi - P -.. .r .-..g.. .,.! .. ,.-, ..-.. Heros, ., - ,,,.. ,-. ...-..-.-... . . . I - ,.. ...no ............. . .........' ...... ,..- . .. .- -..-...-. ..,,s I.. .,...,t,., . .. ...... ....... . ... .. . I f i . V M' ' ' . R - f sg.:...1vs.ms.xvw-.4wr.upu:m-wf.M-.s:m-n.wfms-.,.1.-m.fr.-wswmmvmgmrlmygs .mf , I il I Qi EA l ll li ,I ,. ll il I .ai lp! ll If M lf Ill all 3 I ll ,l gg MARGARET MAY TAYLOR, B. Sc., A. B., Instructor in History and Mathematics. li? HENRH' CLAY STANCLIEF, Ph. B., Ph. D., Professor of History and Politics. EDNA TRAXLER, Mus. B., Instructor in Piano. ll onus H. sun-H, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Professor of Physics. EVELYN CARRIE RILEY, A. M., Professor of Latin. E . al ll , iff HENRY ALBERT MILLS, Director of the Art School. ,il LAURA FRASER RISTINE, Instructor in Stenography and Typewriting. 'l FRANK SIIAW, Mus. B., Director of Music Department. I I ,I I ,li . . . il 3 GERTRUDE MADISON, A. B., A. M., Dean of Bowman Hall and Instructor In English ll NICHOLAS ICNIGI-IT, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Professor of Chemistry. E I I ll , till l , ,I l l l lll 3, l l Ill l l PEW A . . HIM' 3 j ai , 'I'5,.' . -iu4.n..s.s..f....m.m..-.sg-ssl...-.,.n.-.1-...s---v.......r, ' 'AWS'-56-Es, I 4' We 2' sf 'Q' rvnw-V ', . MAI r... : 1 .,. .... ,..-e Sf,..,s.,B X F, fm , , W , . l T415 ififf?.LfCI1fZQ. ,RZYQLJIJILQ itlilff l.'1f7,..l1'..TE2Ll'LZE'f1:.,,.i' T Z'l ..a.a'f.t.-......J.1,...'f 7 'WW .u,4a2:'1'rZ5.f'Il7..'35,S'3Zii'.5Iiif:!,tFI1YLsi2fi5K3iEGTI:i',? ' Q! , . . . ...-...........---,......-. .A ,,.. . -......,,...........,.,......,...........,..-......,.--.....--W-.-.-.......o..........L.................,,,,WEX ll :I I . f I M3 'N - s ' -I I rw I r I . li cf A I-- V L, FQ f- L. I I ' ' ' . l ' 1 I I 'l lS,TY,liZ?2fii'l iQT' L i'-''I217iK'Ef1ffl'f.'lf'.Ilf.Ell2?Z.:.2Q.fIi.S1fY1flli2l?lf.I. 'Z2'I 22'ifaE:z.' W mi H.. .... ...fm ..,, ..,. .W .... ..VL M.. ..,....-..................., ,.,, ...,....-............. .,..... . ..-. .............w..,............L.......-........,........ I li I 1 R ,X I , I QQ ' i ll I 1 ', l I I : If . Wi I 5 J I I l , I I l i X . I .I I I1 I i i ll I , , . is ,I I' I If I ,. . . 1 I i', I Gil GEORGE HERBERT Bnrrs, A. B., A. M., Ph. D., Professor of Psychology. li SHERMAN VVILLIAM FINGER, Ph. B., Director of Physical Training for Men and Instructor in , ,,, I I 'lli German. W JULIA SEILER SHAW, Mus. B., Instructor in Violin. l 'Ui EDWARD RANSOM RIs'I'INE, B. S., Principal of the Commercial School. 3 f il l ii Ili' I 5 llf All I ' ELMO LOTT, B. S., Instructor in Agriculture. I NELLIE MARGIKRET HAR'rUxc, A. B., Instructor in English. . , I CHARLES REUIIEN KEYES, Ph. B., A. M., Professor of German. I MARY BURR NORTON, B. S., M. S., A. M., Professor of Mathematics. I-IoRAcE AIIDEN MILLER, Mus. B., Professor of Organ, Piano, and Counterpoint. ' I I l i l ,I ' I, .I 9 F ....l.IL...,:.,,.- -.....-.......... ...,...-...,..,.:.......,...LL,,, . N., .... ,A .. L -L I I , I . . , I 3 . 5 . l l S 2 5 5? 'z QE .Qi frat L ! W Hui gg 25,1 2 0 2 K ig!! T EW ! .,.3.-,-.,g-'f:.- ,fx 5.11 . fa'-'t'F g-1: 1721- . . :vc ' ' ':'T-tiff5-I'fi-I-1-'-EF.1'af. Z:1i-J-'.'-51:1::2-i - r'-Ef- I ,. .. . h... , . , .':--1-1' ..1'1-I11:.L-A',a.-'.1'i'-':'-ri'iz-:-751, I. I H 'i? ii A S-..1-zfsrf-:fit-f-:M - Jw . -.,.1,.....,...,-, .2 W in-1 if B 'Q 5 -:52:5'.1i5iE-211.2 if Wm I T Qrs:3:h':f: Q f - ' 5 325 six, 542 Q gig .1 fi.. -L f fi IIIIIIJIS 12 1 . K 414.3-'xx r 'g 3 5 T M Mr ' 1 ik E z X 1 wk 42 W f' I 'f Glu lobes. nib aspiratinns, ant L 4 1 emi? olhhreams. Rlorehzautifulfnr being nlh muh gunz. -Zlnlnell 7 si BOOK TWO 4 'EW ' 'I' M.:-r gg-up -.- ...i-U...-JW: 3:59, -,- ,it .' . .,.,.,,-t-T A ,rp V ll Q 1 ,yr , . im , ii, .......-.......... ft.: ,, ,,..,.-----L-an-ae.. THE ROYAL. PURPLE -. WT, , M ,,,,,-.1..1.r- The Class ofZ917 Between September 14-17, 1913, two hundred and seven individ- uals, assembled from the towns and country of Iowa and neighbor- ing states, were dumped off at the noted city of Mt. Vernon. Im-A mediately the atmosphere became saturated with a hue of delicate green. The little historic town was violently shocked at such an un- sophisticated body and wondered what other curiosities this world had in store for it. The stock market in chapel seats soared to an unknown level. Money grafters about Cornell declared unheard-of dividends. I It was soon discovered that this class was like plants-the greener the stock, the more vigorous and sturdy it is, and the greater capac- ities it has for development. With the aid of a few unsecured tal- ented seniors, the first class officers were elected: Scheeler, presidentg Darrow, vice-presidentg Mills, secretary, Briggs, treasurerg McCul- lough, athletic representative. From then on Cornell sat up and took notice of the wonderful growth and development of this un- usual class of 1917. The class was too busy to have even a Freshman Banquet. In the Sophomore year the class had a picnic at the Pal. Debaters were discovered, scholarships made and athletes were un- covered until finally the school realized that it was a privilege to be in the same institution with the class of 1917. In athletics the class had a good Freshman team in football, and they won the class cham- pionship twice in basketball. The class officers in the Sophomore year were Myers, Kreger, F. Brown, N. Belz and Benton. The of- ficers for this year are Kreger, Baker, Daniels, Scales and Frei. In November, 1915, the class realizing the need of some social function at that time in the school, gave the first annual junior Parle. H. R. F. Q49 ' 1' . THE ROYA L P URP HELEN BAUER Litchfield, Illinois Alethean Quiet, quizzieal, and quick. F ARVA llf 0. I 0 71 Y. 7 - , Sarah Bernhardfs .vucce:.mr. LUTHER MANLY BIXLER A Nodaway But he, 'while his companions slept, Wa: toiling upfward in the night. RUTH BOWEN Mt. Vernon Alethean Class Basketball '13, '14, '15 Varsity Basketball '15 An 'A' student and a 'C' athlete. THE ROYAL PURPL FLORENCE IRENE BROWN Cedar Rapids Aesthesian '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff A Bofw-on arrolw made you wen lou' your heart. CLIFFORD PHELPS BENTON Cliff f HL. 71 'witty to talk lwllli to thznk upon. CLARK BOWEN Pat Mt. Vernon Adelphian '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff Freshman Football '14 .Varsity Football '15 Freshman Basketball '15 Varsity Baskletball '16 C Club fl man of parts, usually found in athletics or in a Brown study. P LOUISE COURSON Clarion Philomathean I YM in herself sho dfwelleth not, 1 No simplest duty is forgot. '1 I' THE ROYAL PURPL HELEN CROMER Anamosa Aonian Class Hockey '13, '14, '15 Quiet, exclusive, sometime: a coqueltef' CLIFFORD BOYLAN I KICHEYD WILLIAM D. DAIu1ow Gladys Cresco Miltonian Men's Glee Club '14, '15, '16 Inter-Society Debate '16 '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff Born in a handbox, nourished on ro- logne, What fwill he be when he'.f fully grown? IvA Louisa CARMER 3 Mt. Vernon I Aonian , UntroubIed fwith no criminal record. i I l 7 1 Ehinnnn... THE ROYAL PURPL THBLMA MAE DAvmsoN Ottumwa Aesthesian Class Basketbalu13, '14, '15 who saw Cl-mnuzs D. Emznsous Sterling, Illinois Miltonian Secretary Y. M. C. A. '15, '16 President Illinois Club 1 He ha: ,more goodness in his little finger than you have in your whole body. NBVA BETH DUMOND Maywood, Illinois Aesthesian Illinois Club A smooth and steadfast mind. ' F I' ..-.......... . .- A- mnwou-dw , , 'ur-qwqaun THE CROYAL PURPL l .ll F 1 HAZEL Ikvmc DAFFBR Fairmont, Minnesota Aonian Class Hockey '13, '14, '15 All Star Hockey '14 I f fzuxring gave credits, Pd have my degree. ARTHUR E. EYzs1'oNa MARY HENRY Hank Reinbeck Freshman Football '13 Freshman Baseball '14- Varsity Football '15 Captain-Elect Football '16 Class Basketball '15, '16 Freshman Basketball '14 '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff Pep Club C Club With hair and hear! agloiw, And developing an rye for the fair sex. IIAZBL ERlcKsoN Villisca Alethean Secretary Y. VV. C. A. A daughter of the god:- Divinrly tall and most divinely fair. .fb N, A I 1 . d3.f:,..,, , F THE lROYAL, PURPL. Imus Eucnum FLACK Boise, Idaho , Aonian 1 With an arcenl, a fwit, and a -will all her own. f Ouva keep: PAUL Muscatine Washington Adelphian Freshman Football '13 Freshman Basketball '14 Varsity Basketball '15 Captain-Elect Basketball '16 Whence is thy learning? Hath thy toil 0-ver books consumed the midnight oil? Imam: Gonmm' Mt. Vernon Philomathean Class Hockey '13, '14, '15 . Girls' 'Glee Club '16 Her lofvcly looks a sprightly mind disclose. N65 THE ROYA L PURPI. Y Q L I1. -I' ELLEN ELIZABETH Gmrrnn Ashton, Illinois N Alethean Illinois Club Class Basketball '14, '15 Eternal sunshine settles on her head. l.'IL'.5 EMMA great af- I pay my debts, believe, and :ay 1ny prayers. HAROLD HARTMAN njaken Belle Plaine Adelphian Class Football '13, '14 Class Basketball '14, '15, '16 Witty, courteous, liberal, full of spirits. JOSBPHINB HUNT Belle Plaine Alethean '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff Much of -wixdom, worth, and tact: An out-of-door girl-a Walker, in fact. THE ROYAL PURPL. C. Ron Howmzn uDaisyn Mt. Vernon Amphictyon Freshman Football '12 Varsity Football '14-,J15 DON Pep club Editor the Cornellian Smooth as a tabletop, fwithout scratch or mar. G. H. KEISTER Scammon, Kansas Zetagathean Forsooth, ho 'was a fworthy -man fwithal. ESTHER L. Komen Charles City Morningside College She manned hrrself lwith dauntless airy Thero's one modest, kind, fair. '1 , -- ... THE'ROYAL PURPL y ORTHA MAY LANE ' Mt. Vernon Alethean 1 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet A friendly heart with many a friend. JOHN A HC!! S LrLLxAN When clash, Let duty go to smash. Cmrronn Keyes LAYMAN NCEE!! Mt. Vernon Miltonian Varsity Cross Country '13, '14, '15 Varsity Track '14, '15 Like slofw punk burns-but he gets there just the same. DArsY MIRIAM MARSTON Postville Alethean What 'would Cornell be -'without a Marston? 11- f I' THE ROYAL PURPL Mnncuznrrn MCKBRRAL Traer - Alethean Love ix better than fame. . ff mu nn -, 1710 RoY Grundy Center Amphictyon Y. M. C. A. Cabinet Freshman Football '13 '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff Disguise our bondage as vale fwill, 'Tisf-woman, 1-woman leads us still. ERMINA MURLIN MILLS Mt. Vernon Aesthesian - Sub-Cabinet Y. W.l C. A. President the Geneva Club A quiet dignity and charm of gen- - Ileness are hers. ' F1 f 'ILHE ROYAL. PURPL. N Bzssuz B. MILNER l Farley Alethean Class Hockey '15 So so f ' To know her is to love her. DOUGLAS PAnsoNs HDougI? Marion Amphictyon '17 ROYAL PURPLE Staff And -when a lady'.r in the case You know all other things give place. LBILA NAGLE Red Oak Aesthesian Class Basketball '13, '14 All Star Basketball '14- ' 'I loved once three 'whole days together. 1? 'fl 740 H' e HE ROYAL U L CLARICE N1ssLEY Mt. Vernon Aesthesian Class Basketball '13, '14, '15 Varsity Basketball '14 Girls' Glee Club Y. W. C. A. Cabinet Pep Club '17 ROYAL PURPLE S96 PIII 'f 1 -1, Girls' Glee Club '15 Orchestra '15, '16 Music is the universal language of mankind, Well Iangnaged, Lueilef' CLARENCE CARL Scr-rM1o'r Schmidtie Rockford Amphictyon Class Basketball '14, '15, '16 Not to know him is to argue yourself unknown. CELIR ROGERS Mt. Vernon Alethean Never bold of spiritg Of easy spirit, naturally good. THE ROYAL PURPL EDNA B. STBADMAN Monmouth, Illinois , Alethean X Class Basketball '15 l l Port lffl, . Lucy 'work days. WILLIAM GLEN SMITH Philosopher Smith Epworth Seminary Principal of Public Schools, Delaware, 4 Iowa, '09 Student Pastor Morley, Iowa, '16 fill the courxes in my life .vhofw that I do not belong to the roll of common men. HAZEL FRANCIS STUNTZ , Peoria, Illinois Alethean Class Hockey '13, '14, '15 Vice-President Illinois Club Wisdom personified and sawed off. 7 1' vNW......-T, .... W.. , THE ROYAL PURPI.. MABBL OLIVE SERGEANT Dows f' Aonian Russnu. E. WA111' 4 Colonel Mt. Vernon I Miltonian Men's Glee Club '14, '15 President Glee Club '16 Next to your mother -whom do you low? Bnssuz ELLEN Scovau, Corwith She ha: a natural lwise sincerity. 71' I' 7 m , 1 1 nw THE ROYAL. PURPI.. 1. e 71, Sun VIOLBT TALLMAN Mt. Vernon Aonian All Star Basketball Class Hockey '14, '15 Her friends are many: her enemies Gsokcxz Mt. F , LILLY Your of, 'way of in Ames. , Hmzou? W. WILLIAMS usukeyu Vinton Zetagathean He only lacks some -vices to be perfect. CLARA ETHELDA WALN Mt. Vernon A quiet, modest maid is she. 1 .- .Mu mn.-- , THE ROYAL. PURPL Esrmm M. W1u.1AMs Vinton Philomathean 1 Class Hockey '13, '14 X ' All Star Hockey '14, '15 A. 15 The glory of a'firm, capacious mind. Josnpn YATES Bertram A student of Greek. FLORENCE Wycxorr Villisca I have a Will of my own. ' x X 9 . ,. A. ., ., , . . E 1 Nw 'J V41 f THE ROYAL PURPL JUNE WILDMAN Mt. Vernon Aonian Her life is a eontinued succession HILTON it Q' 24 0 0 ! ' 71 ALICE pen. N t MAEEL SHERMAN Washta Aesthesian What more should I desire or seek to attain? V 7 4 a 4' I 1 g,'3Li.. 'B'n-jujlizflifji, gin.-.:r,l , . Af' , , .cw 5.54 . .1 ,-. .H V ., 1 ,,f.1,'i.-4. i I Y r b f Q A , 'hf'L::,l-lifffllffmtiiu ' . .wi 'K if ' xv. ' . l9l'lHl15il4L.'1lY':l?2 1 'W .-+8 V l Integrity, simplicity, sincerity my aim- s n H-- E Q ' Q I Q Y 1 . 5 . 4 ! l X I I J .e . , I FQY ,n f iw-gg QQNIINH3 ' My-fi ? I Ww Lun i 'll 2 ff. 151 me Y .:. 2 xx? S- Qyy WF HHN? ' 1 gg, 5155 i I : X? 1 Q , 1 -. :. 1. O 1: eg' X O 31 Q 0 ' Q UQ, Q., -if OaB 0 0 0 ? QQ I Q r Q, 0 0 Q v gs N, fl. If 'iiinigi '?Q?r.f l, O ss,' . ' -i . . D Q Sfnq., :Qxtk . -o ,. vm 'Q giffafefiqas' 5'-rg :Qs 4,g.-.,-- -' ,, a', fo' sif' I ,1Zgj.,d,.-.uQ4.. , xg Q9 .N .v ..,q., -gh I .3 sv -.--fv.1- -az.,-.Q O ,1 , . .na :-aemp.. .Q,s.Lx.4:'9--3-I .gf-2 ,-vas, . - n-- - - u 1 '. 1 -' 1 ' ' 0 1 I ww .-3.4-affi' -Q-. 9' -1 0- P 'c f '- '- . mg. 'wiv s v 'WYE . 2 f ' .. us! 1 xv K 1, 1 K7 .1 X 0 C L , Aw X X5 4 y -xx K flf N A-' - .- Ri J ,. . Q .1 , gsfva s 'W-fs? .V A. Ol G aff Li.. , I . . .. . .' S 'gb 4 ., 1 ' nv f- - 1- 9 1 4- .sl 'Zgn....g Q5ga.a,,,.....3,m', .SW Q N, W X K ' 'f9 459' .. dq..q-4. 1 Q ' ' - - 4 .9-' ' Cidilbt A ,ng , ' J t, - - Ori .I . ' xi - - .- , 4 4 . -qi 1. ...,,: wx, ..l IQ' if . -1, ., . xg xx 54.2. ! , . K .1 gg 4. 35.31 . . , 45 ' . . s I I X E H , Q RA + Lmrxca n--I -1.7.-, I Ex I x. W4 X , T -- u 1..?..-.- X f y -Q L up-is . . A -xv-'X Coach Finger lylention the term Cornell Athletics and you suggest the name Finger. Back of every movement, every strong organization, we find but one responsible force, one im- petus or propelling factor that generates the spirit of that movement. In the last few years Cornell's athletic standard has risen from mediocre type to, as Hon. Reed of the famous Reed College puts it, one superior to any in the United States. And the in- stigator of this movement and back of the organization is Sherman W. Finger. So much has been said of Finger's work, so much favorable comment and respect paid him, that it is difficult for one man to give him all credit due. But his success is demon- strated by the seven hundred students and nearly two thousand alumni who take off their hats and pronounce him the best ever. S i21g,.,x lf A A f QL grfff vgmpg W Zi D, ' , Q ' , ex. in , Xb Z ,.,-q Xxx' X' X ff f,fM1N1 Qm f w s! f' .. 'fp ' i 4 I B ' I 95 ' Ni 'BW xx . 5 1: W SQL, U Vvifflqfxfn 'LX '1 TOP ROW' Cleft to l'i1.:htJ-Cmu'h Fill1.:vl', Boylan, Howard, Zehr, Knight, Assistant Cornell Lott. MIIJIJl.l'I ROW'-ldyoslolie, Smytlie, Johnson, litter, llugln-s, Grigshy, G4-tlnnnnn. li0'I l'0M RfJxviC1lllllJiH'li, Bowen, Walker, Winkler, Capt. Allnnson, linrtwvll, Moyer, Milholin, l x'l-i. The Football Season of 1915 Looking over a review of the football season in the 'OS ROYAL PURPLE, we were particularly impressed with the following paragraph: A glance over the season of 1905 is not a pleasant one from the standpoint of vic- tories won. But one thing of which Cornell can justly be proud is that the game was played here by clean, manly men, without the slightest tinge of professionalism. Coached by one of the best football men in the state, they were taught to play the game, not only in a scientific manner, but cleanly and squarely as well. It seems that Cornell retains the spirit of former years. The game is still played by clean, manly men, on whom there is no taint of professionalismg our team is coached by one of the best coaches in the stateg is still coached to play the game in a clean and scientific manner. VVhatever else may be said of this season, it was first of all marked by the same qualities which have ever distinguished Cornell teamsg true sportsman- ship, coupled with a determination to win, exemplified in their slogan, Hit 'Em Harder. In preparation for the first game, that with Iowa at Iowa City, October 2nd, the men returned early to the training camp at the Palisades. Altho the initial struggle ended, Iowa 33, Cornell O, Cornell demonstrated that she was to be a factor in the race for the state honors. The second game came October 9th, with Leander Clark on our home grounds. It was a good day for football, and especially for Stub Hartwell, who annexed four touchdowns, nearly a record for one man in a single game. Score, Cornell 37, Leander Clark 6. October 16th saw the team in the northern wilds at Carleton, tired from a compar- atively sleepless night in a Rock Island Pullman. The game was played in the rain on a very muddy field. Carleton, by wonderful line plunging, superior weight, and aided by Cornell's unlucky fumbling, won 33 to 0. October 22nd was a day of respite from strenuous labor when Iowa Wesleyaxi went under by a score of -P0 to 0. pq, ,NR i 5 M Q ,. J.-.....,,-V ,.,..,,, ,if if cl 45 1' .'713',x'.h, E .-V ,, m ,.............., .,.,....-,..,. ..,,..,......M -,,,,w,w ., ' Ay . X xxgicw f,'rL,,V,-N My 'Q-Ef.fa+.5 af if 'Q asf' wt .4 W r .-7 -J ,Q . Q23 MJ E Il? 'A is X r 1 i i 1 vi Q 5 Q I i i f Y 2 ll 1 Q 5 E On October 27th Cornell met her Hrst really strong Conference rival. Simpson put up a game, hard fight, but superior football enabled Cornell to win with compar- ative ease by a score of 27 to O. In this game the work of the new line coach, Van Buren,'was first made evident, Simpson being unable to make consistent gains at any time. The next game, that with Highland Park November Sth, at Des Moines, ended 0 to 0. The score does not show the relative merits of the teams, sickness and injury proving a more deciding factor than football, with Cornell the unlucky member, en- abling Mike Hyland's so-called non-professional team to hold Cornell scoreless. The next to the last game, that between Coe and Cornell, was played at Cedar Rapids November 12. Cornell, in the language of one of Coe's own students, out- played, outgeneraled, outrooted and showed a far better spirit than the Cedar Rapids aggregation. The goddess of Ill Luck again pursued the Purple and White, and Coe, taking advantage of every chance, came from behind and snatched a victory from the very jaws of defeat. Coe's Miracle Man Park, famed not only for his prowess on the football field, but also for his unparalleled, unprecedented scholastic feats, was unable to pierce Corncll's line and her lightning backs could not skirt Cornell's ends, so that with the exception of that disastrous few minutes, the game was all Cornell's. The final score was Cornell 10, Coe 13. Following Fickle Fortune's Fantastic Frenzy favoring Coe, Cornell still had a chance at the state honors until Grinnell gently lulled her hopes to sleep, Homecoming Day, in one of the cleanest, hardest fought games ever staged in Ash Park. The game was played on a wet field. The score, Grinnell 13, Cornell 6, adequately tells the story. The team loses several mighty good men this year. Captain Allanson's place will be hard to fill, as will be those of Smyth, Johnson, Campbell, Milholin, Zehr. i CAPTAIN OSCAR ALLANSON Right T1u'l'le For two years, Ole,' has been selected for the Conference Eleven, and his work this year justified I All State Team as tackle. his being placed on tie l 'stent both on offense and He was wonderful y consis ' , . defense. He was a stumbling block in the way of the opposing backs, and he could always be relied ' ' I 'i backs to go thru. upon to open a hole for us our . HENRY FREI, CAPTAIN ELECT Righi Guard Hank earned the captaincy of the '16 Varsity . . . - f team by his hard consistent playing in evely game o ' . , , . ' evi- the season. His pep and grit xx ere always m dence. He never quit and his playing thruout was proof that his appellation was not a misnomer. H fam---M,-f-.--'atm--f-.uv-1-pi.-we-...mf-.,. my ,va v-1,-vw-H-m we w A- 2 R5iZI3T55lFL1l'qE'5m.2.Ufl'MLQ'EFJZ.'7ZE.7Ma,gf... .'..,..'L'.?i'.1.1h',...r-' '..'.a F-t'. ,.:? .a.s.2 f . i.,. .1. ,.i.i. 1-e.-'Z ' 15f:.. i-+'.'?. .A-M .tZ'V.',,.'. l. Y wwahaw eewwee- ,f vs ' MMV -T-f-fn .mwawffmwfim mvvw-an-f.wf,w mmm ,W Wnryw. an 1.wnvee-.am-u-unmniu-1.f.1.i..1-A if GYAL. PURPL . L. FQ 1 'ap ua.. ' ,' E'L.M 'W'uw ....u.mMm M W -wmfnmnyfmlr-uma mw-ww.-.lnfwqmam-rvvv.-9-w-mvm E135 5' 11 5 w,1p-w..-v.v,-w-,wr.w-vm-..f1-swvs-4ufaf-ii- -'...n.gm.-anne:-umm-an.nm.M.n,..qw.wmw: RALL GRIGSBY Left End Rall was out of the game the greater part of the season, nursing an injured foot. With this year's experience, he should be a valuable man on the squad next year. ROBERT SMYTHE Right Tackle Bob, a comparatively light player, makes up for his lack of weight in his aggressiveness and fight. He has had three years' experience on the team. Grit and Scrap were his middle names. ANTONE JOHNSON Right Guard A steady, reliable player, always on the job. He filled his position in a more than creditable manner. He has fought consistently for three years, plugging hard all the time. We will miss him next season. CLIFFORD BOYLAN Left End Cliff is fast and sure in going down under punts. A hard, never-miss-'cm tackler. His height and experience made him adept in receiving forward passes. A badly sprained ankle kept him out of the last few games. His ability will make him a valuable asset to the team next year. Q . 1.-r' lm-vw-'w x v-'- ,H RAYMOND WI NKLER Fullbacl' Another new man that showed up well. He was a reliable player and was seldom called upon without making his gain. With this year's experience his work next season should be hard to beat. 1' GAYLORD CAMPBELL Right End Shorty received a twisted knee in the first half of the Iowa game which bothered him all season. His playing in the Grinnell game demonstrated what he could do when he was in shape. His graduation will be a great loss to the team. He fights every minute of the game. CLARK BOWEN Right End He won his place in the Iowa game and played a hard, consistent game thru- out the season. He had a habit of com- pletely spilling the interference and then tackling the man with the ball for a loss. He made the Conference Team. JOHN GETHMANN Left Half The wily halfback had his forearm broken in the Iowa game and was un- able to play until the Highland Park game. Jack's end runs made him the most feared of Cornell's backs. He was a whirlwind in running back punts and picking forward passes out of the air for large gains. His work in the Coe and Grinnell games won a place for him on the Conference Team. ..............,.. , M. . ........- V. ... . ., JOHN KNIGHT ' Right Tackle Few men ever attain to the Varsity without Hrst going thru a year of bat- tering either on the Freshman team or the Scrubs, but ,lack achieved that end, and his playing justified his success. MURISS WALKER Fullbach A new man in this position, but he filled it from the start to the finish. His dropkicking and line smashes were ex- ceptionally good, altho he was handi- capped all season by a wrenched knee. He will continue to be a valuable man next year. HARRY IWILHOLIN Right I'I11If Mildew is a strong, steady, exper- ienced player, accurate at shooting long forward passes. He showed up mighty good at carrying the ball, especially in open field running. He has the old Hghtn all the time. RALPH MOYER Quarterback Handicapped by a bad shoulder, which he received the Hrst of the season, he was unable to play his best. His speed and ability more than made up for his lack in weight, and next year we should see him adding much to the strength of the team. ROE HOWARD Right Guard He was out of the game until the last of the season, but his work in the games in which he participated was a source of sorrow to his opponents and a source of joy to his teammates. ARTHUR EYESTONE Center Playing his first year at Varsity foot- ball, he was a hard defensive player. He handled the ball well and while lacking in experience, his performance on the whole was creditable. COTTON ETTER Left Hrllfback One of the new men who showed up exceptionally well. His punting and long, accurate forward passes were ground gainers, while his drop kicking could be relied upon for three points if the occasion arose. WILLARD HUGHES Right Plalfbafk Chub was the deadliest tackler on the squad, and his ability to take one or two men out of the way was responsible for many of Cornell's long 1'uns. His driving power when carrying the ball made him a hard man to stop. WARREN HARTWELL Quarterback Stub is light, but oh, my! His spectacular jack-rabbit dashes thru the fields endeared him to the hearts of Cor- nell rooters, and earned for him the re- spect and constant attention of all of his opponents. He missed the Conference Team by a narrow margin. ORES ZEHR Center Playing his third year at center, Hap- py was a steady, accurate passer, and he could always be relied upon to take care of his man, both on offensive and defensive. He never played better than he did this year. His leaving will cause a vacancy that will be hard to fill. N 4' x The 1915 Football- Squad TOP ROW ileft to rightj-Conch Finger, AHSlStIUlt Conch Vnn Buren. Knight, Smythc, Cnptnin Allnnson, Howurd, Devine, Danskin, Grifgshy, Zehr, Romer, Frei, Buylun, Wnlkor, Assistant Conch Lott. BOTTOM ROW--lloglu, Cnxnphull, Winkler, Ettur, Moyer, Johnson, Bowen, liyestune, 'l'oI'l'nnc0, Hnrlwell, Milholin, Gfbllllllllll, West, Illlglll'S. 1 6 x Freshman Football Squad of 1915 'I N 5. 1 ' 4. ' . 1 ff' Q 4 TOP ROVV Useft tn riglltjb-'Cum-I1 NV:-st, S. St:nlsIrvx'1'y, I ilIL21'l', Cnrnlns, Coltingrhaun, WVilc0x, Mubbitt, NVIIICFHOIII, hI0llf.l0l', I . Slzuwlsln-l'l'x', Willsvy, Kilnn-V, Pots-1'sm1. L1-num. BOTTOM RONV-Scott, Rogl-rs, Homlly, Wuvks, Brown, Glusnvr, Juhnsnn, Wilson, Hulse. w The Freshman Football Team The class of 1919 was represented on the gridiron by probably the lightest and most inexperienced squad that has entered the school in recent years. This handicap, however, was offset by speed and natural ability to such an extent that the team devel- oped into a comparatively good organization after a few weeks of training. In scrimmage with the Varsity, the Freshmen, being greatly outweighed, were hardly able to hold their own. They are, however, to be congratulated upon furnish- ing the Varsity as good practice as they did under adverse circumstances. At times by bursts of speed and clever manipulation of the forward pass, the Freshmen were able to cross the Varsity's goal. This was not the general rule, however, altho the Freshmen always played with a great deal of fight and determination. The Freshmen had only two games, one of which was with an outside team. As a practice game for both, the Freshmen and the Varsity Reserves met in a regular game. The Freshmen won, 17 to 0. The following Saturday they triumphed over Maqtio- keta H. S., 28 to 0. ln these two encounters some promising material was disclosed which should give some of the Varsity a race for positions next year. The following men received numerals: Captain Glasener, q.b.g VVilson, q.b.3 Rog- ers, f.b.g Munger, f.b.g Scott, r.h.g Johnson, l.h.g Lemon, l.e.g Weeks, r.e.g Stansberry, r.e.g Carolus, 0.3 Hoadly, l.e., Peterson, r.t.g Kilmer, l.t.g Cottingham, l.t.g llflabbitt, l.g.g Wate1'fleld, r.g.5 Wilcox, l.g.3 Brown, r.g.g Finger, c., Wilsey, c. Esrol. VVEST. .Q 3 ' ' Jw' 'x 1 E .f I if N...,.wi-- X ,,..,-....... --..-.....,.-.,...f..,N-Q fi Q ri if I Z Q lug z L 5 5 9 n Q ,I 5 1 , W I K n 45 b --nw ..,.,w:-w1w,.--f.-.1-,f.f.,f-rv-M I y j f 1-J RJ EWS: 5 Class Teanis FRESHMEN iii SOPHOMORES 'Q A W.-,, -. eff. 4V 3?a?'? L 5? A 'M ff' ' ' .. ,... .....-M, M-M...-m-.H-f-M.-,..,4-,,. -.-- .W wff-4-qa E ri rg '- , 1411:-n....f. .,... -..W-1-..-..f f X , fi, ,Mig ,J, f ga .AXSZKY i' rv' Q xr' vu' fd' V 4... WW ff N-xxxixfxx XX gif? lf!!! K Ml ' 41 Ii X -. gv g--,ax V ,, ,N , ig? 5 ...i k X fzfmv iw rf Ai Khan .1 L34 r 'gl7Flf!'3Z N-.wg rr-:HHH-' ' ii f . 1 Q -Q Ml?vv N f- 1. ., f -Q6 RE'-xxx W I lr f X X MQ X F' NN vf W :iv 5 ' 1 Z f We X , 0 ' , 1 -V XLS MQ' ' Y H ii WW. : 1' f,x - iJipi7f .l M 5,3 hifi!!- a Qi:f11 mf 1 Varsity Basketball Team U16 OO +91 'ix C go 4' we O: I ci. I.. Q.. 'EO '41 'EE 93 :L io V2.1 Fc H- rf 25' gn r'3 U. 'eil QS -1: .:: E 2? E? F' S? E 2 b S Ill O nz: cn EI' D B C' fb 'I U V3 ,Q-w,,,m A www- b Q A. I 'gl lx .J-V A 3 jf' J' ' g w -- V ,.,........., ,. .. .,.,W, 'mg j- Q, ,- m-...f,...5,..,..q.va.1...1.,...,..,...........,.. 'W if L h A' fm- -zjy . bleiiig. W... NBJV Q ,,,uzf-,- , .' Y-4jr .' -tv . fp ,ts .. ff, ijtwv-m'i',, 1 -hifqk 'gy nt44:.4'Gf11ai5wS-'9J11.:-wel ' nik!-5'!+'PK'f9 fi ' 5- 4,-I'G1'54.h G,..W :.ul,. L n. iutgwgf .1f1',f'f?:g5f,,,,,gx.5...fwk. 5 Films - f-f-f- --- - f f ffff nf --- 1 . . - + -I W.-.ima--fm - -W W f W -- ' ....u-n,..-..a1-- --..aa ......wa-a.......,u-w-mug:-L- ,.m....u....,, ,, ...... , ,.-mu.M...-,,mm.w-.m in mvvfs .1 THE ROYAL. PUHRFDL. ..4r.s..i.s,-,'-, . ' J. 4,.gfs:2x'-1-'-:milwvvwu.11-...,.:: .ie-:ff-ffx,.:.fi-Q..:mx1,wH'gg:t-nwivfri.:fmt-:af11f:'.wiiw4 :IZ5. ...n A fiargu Wag, - 1, .ws-:,,T. :.....,,,.....,...,.....................,...,..f,,.......,.-.W.W--,.., 1916 Basketball Season Do you love the fierce joy of conflict? Does the scent of rubbing oil mingled with the odor of perspiring bodies arouse no vague desire in your breast? Then, my boy, you're not a basketballffiend. But this is not to be a thoughtful dissertation on the psychology of the human organism in relation to muscular activity. Rather we desire to state the plain, unvarnished facts concerning a basketball season, which, if not wholly successful, was at least a hard fought one. The first notice on the bulletin board in the gym, calling for basketball aspirants, was answered by twelve men. Of these, six were of the Freshman Varsity of '14-'15. Between these men and the six veterans a fierce rivalry ensued for the first teami' berths and the privilege of representing Cornell on the basketball floors of the Iowa Conference. The old Jeffries-Johnson story repeated itself. The older men failed to come back, and the first game, with Iowa, found Cornell's team spotlessly innocent of any old men. From this yearling material Sherm managed to mold a team which ended the race for the Conference Championship an acknowledged second. Description of the game like those played this year is impossible. The scores do in most cases tell the truth and nothing but the truth. And they tell it with no troublesome comments. Blessed indeed are the humble, but you will pardon us if we lay our one small garland on the shrine of Cornell's team. Fight, my dear reader, of the original and undomesticated variety falas! of even too wild a nature sometimes, we fearl distinguished every man on the teamg but you will agree with us in that ancient parodied proverb, It is better to have fought and lost than never to have fought at all, . RALL GRIGSBY. Iowa 33 Cornell 16 Leander Clark Cornell Coe 25 Cornell 12 Des Moines 22 Cornell 44 Penn 18 Cornell 37 Simpson 13 Cornell 15 Des Moines 15 Cornell 22 Iowa 29 Cornell 19 Simpson 21 Cornell 47 Nebraska Wesleyan 49 Cornell 18 Coe 34 Cornell 13 7 A ' if fi I l , -ist .M 1' ...X.,.,.,,,,,... .W , ,.l,1n,- 1,-,, , ,. ,,,., , .,,.,..,. , Q, .,,.,.,-. .0 .N-mmfnfnmvwvnmw-0-.,.-m.,umb 'W -. .-M. ,,,.v,4, 7.-..-L-K. f.m-unnw.-mm-V. ' - X ...J F3 f ' '-NJ' ' x 1 L.. ' 1 'Ki E' I .. ....-,ff 4 M-, .,f..,-M., ..., . 5 ,f.v.,-,....,.- . ,-,. V .. 1-2.1.2 4-...-...N-w.4q.LMl-u N-.qmm1wwM-mM.- fy -M .- -L.-mf ,ui-...W 3 yn- 1 -n-wnr, ..-...LQ-.rw.m .wwww-,W Freshman Varsity . W .XV Q, VN 2 Ag B ,..,.,W-.n....,m .4. A,-A ff,,.- 4-.,. qi J 1 'U Qr ry- --W '- f - ' . ' e s 1 -V - -W--'w,wi.Nwt-is-ww .. -,.a..w-..iwm:www ' I THE iROYAL.,.PURF'L. E F 1.4 wwnn, F- W-,, -.e ., sw-, fM,e,i,.n .aa M., i,w-1i.e,.twi--1.-.1,,Li.l-gif , w i Q..,an,,,..,,..,,,,,,,..,ui.fim,sgg-.,,,w-,.L9g-gyqagqg ' X' The Freshman Basketball Season The first game of the season opened with Wiltoni H. S. It looked for some time as if the high school boys were going to win, but the Freshmen acquired some pep and the game ended with the score 43 to 17 in favor of the yearlings. A few weeks later the Freshmen went up against Mt. Vernon High. There was a misunderstanding somewhere and only about five-minute halves were played. The score was four and. Later the Freshmen had another crack at this team. They trimmed them 24 to 12. The game was very fast but the High School men could not stand the pace and were unable to break thru the Freshmen's defense. The season closed with the game with the Varsity Scrubs. The first year men lost with the score of 25 to 22. This defeat was due to the absence of two of the regular men. The games with Iowa City, Cedar Rapids and West Waterloo High Schools were canceled for some reason and the Freshmen began to lose the old time spirit, having nothing to look forward to. The team furnished good practice for the Varsity squad, as they always put up a good fight. Peterson and Lemon played guard positions, and anyone who saw them work knew that they did their share. Kepler and Carolus were two good centers. They inter- changed with each other. Magrunn played a great game at forward. Hoadley, Murk- hardt, Cooper and O'Banion were men that showed that they had the stuff in them to fight. Next year the Varsity should be greatly strengthened by the addition of this new material. D- HOADLEY- 1 i w l ll i, W -l . ll W . N. . - -1. .,..Q..a- 'l ' is Q CLASS BASKETBALL TEAMS A lf' 1 - x 1 c 'QA 'H ., xx ,X N I V QM rf , 1 J , K, fm X N114 If ,f ll I. f x S I' ff x . 1 h 5- ,oh-X M A f,4' l, ! V W ef I I if f , M, XR- 5 ' R NSS 11' X XX J' ' The1915 Track Team '1'OPOR0?VT Qleft to rightj--Conch Fintrer, NVinkler, Briggs, Peck, Super, Moyer, Mnsselmnn, Assistant ,oaei mit. MTDIJIAIC RONV-Anderson, Younkin Milholin, Buntun, 'l'orrnnee, Sin-eler, Curtis. BOTTOM ROWV-Boylan, Captain Tlloinpson, Manly, V. Smith. Track Season Cornell's track season of '15 opened on April 17, at the Drake Relay Carnival in Des Moiiies. Cornell took two thirds and a fourth from a field containing the strong- est college teams of the middle west. Inspired by this, the team ran away with Knox on the Willard Field the following Saturday, taking all but three firsts. The next meet that we entered was the State Conference Meet at Coe. Without our surest point-winner, Manly, and with Boylan and Peck out of condition thru injuries, we were able to secure but six points. However, under the circumstances and considering that it was the fastest meet in the history of the Conference, we made a creditable showing. Tracy Thompson again won for the Purple and White a point in the State lVIeet, at the same meet in which occurred the wonderful mile race. Fackler was ba1'ely nosed out of a place after he himself had broken the old state record. The annual dual meet with Coe was held May 29th on our own field. Confident of an easy victory, Bryant's famous four-man team from Cedar Rapids were, however, forced to their limit to beat us. ' ... eA..,....s....,..... ...e-...,.. ... , ., . -. . 2 1 i il.,-Rv .f,' -..-N-tv-f.-.H-.eg.:....,..,... -WWY--..,4en.2...,J1-s-mum-nf'1mn-Y-1-1-'cv-ww-V-W 1 IM fi fTHE RCYAL 'f3l..,5F??3l,lf.ll il -regex: 1 , ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.-,.,,A..-.. -as W-,,,,....,,,,tw,M,.w,m,m,,,...,. ,,,4 ,mm ,,h,, ,,,,. ,. , , iw The most redeeming feature of the season was the home meet, June 6th, for it re- vealed a strong future and a new spirit in Cornell track athletics. Four records were broken in the fastest home meet in Cornell's history. It showed an abundance of young material with natural ability, lacking only a little experience, coaching and prac- tice to develop from good men to point winners. The invitation meet held the first Saturday of ii f May was very successful. Over two hundred track Jil stars from twenty-five high schools made a fast and spectacular meet. It was a success in every way, . and above all, it encouraged a number of future 3 greats to try our track again under Cornell , colors. We are sorry to lose Captain Thompson, Smith, Fackler, Terrall and Anderson, who were all good men, but an unlimited amount of new material and -...Y the succcss of last year's old men assures us a EVENT Two Mile University One Mile College Half Mile University Two Mile College Four Mile University Half Mile College One Mile University 'Chicago disqualified. greater track year for l9l6. H. R. F. Drake Relay Meet April 17, 1915 TIME 8:1:3 3:28 1:30 182422 1:31:4 FIRST SECOND THIRD Purdue Kansas NOFYIIWQSICFII Coe Grinnell Des MOIIWCS Chicago Ames Drake Morningside Hamline Cornell Wisconsin Michigan Chicago Coe Grinnell Cornell Chicago' Northwestern Minnesota Q A 'ff P-E 4' ilffis.. l X H I l - .s -..W e A 'Y-if 57' .v ,, . A y. I I -E I I I 5' C I V 1 w EVENT 100 yard dash Mile run High hurdles 4-40 yard dash Low hurdles 880 yard run 220 yard dash Two mile run Pole vault Shot put High jump Discus Broad jump Knox Meet April 24, 1915 FIRST SECOND MANLI' C CURTIS C TEMPLE K FACKLER C ,Im-INsoN K BENTON C WINRLER C I3oYI.IxN C BENTON C YOUNKIN C PECK C FACKLER C MANLY C SMITII C THOMPSON C ALDRICI-I K BAKER and Tonn K HOLMES K SI-IEELER C AVERIIOFE and CRANE K MussELMAN C SIIEELER C RADCLIFF K MERRIAN K Forfeited to CORNELL Total-Cornell, 743 Knox, 48. Half mile relay E 1 mx I I X I THIRD AUIIL K TORRANCE C ANDERSON C SToDImR'I' K JoIINsoN K LIENIIARIJ K CURTIS C TORRANCE C BOYLAN C NELSON K MANLY C FRANCIS K CURTIS C TIME 10:2 4:53 17-4 55:1 28:4 2:08:3 23:2 10:32 9 fr. 6 34 fr. 3 S fr. 7 107 ft. 6 20 fr. 3 in. in. ln. in in A I Zi EVEN1' 100 yard dash Mile run High hurdles 440 yard dash Low hurdles Conference Meet FIRST IIGY1' G X:-OODROE HP LIGHTER Coe BAILEY Coe LIGHTER Cox Half mile run CURRY M 220 yard dash HOYT G Mile relay GRINNELI. Two mile run WII.I.IAMs M Half mile relay G'RlNNELL Shot put PETTIT DM Pole vault LEUDER M High jump WENIG M Discus KNAPP Coe Broad jump COE Total-Coe, 46, Morningside, 31, Grinnell, 285 Highland Park, 95 Des Moines, 9g Cornell, 6 Dubuque, 3, Simpson, 3. I Q- D May 15, 1915 SECOND BAILEY Coz' MORLEY M MASSEY Cor ARMSTRONG DM MIXSSEY Cor WALKER M CURTIS C COE DAFT S Coe FLAI-IARTY Dub THIRD BuRNs G BARI.ow Con JONES DM PURMORT Coe DEWEY G AUGUSTINE G V. A. SIvII'I'II C CGRNELI. TOWNSENIJ G CoRNEI,I. VERNON M PARKER G and LEE Coe tied PARSONS G and YUILI. Coe VERNON M HIGHLAND PARK 'PRACEY II P MORNINGSIDE TIME 10 Hat 34- 15:2 52 Hat .2S.4 01:3 22:4 33:2 10:16:2 1:3322 fr. i l1ft10In Sf I tl 4A iii 129 ft. 5 In. 21 fr .3in. I A .Rf eT e I. THE ROYAL PURPLE Home Meet May 29, 1915 EVENT FIRST SECOND THIRD TIME 100 Yard Dash MANDY CURTIS YOUNKIN and HARTMAN 10:2- Mile Run TORRANCE K. C. SMITH LAYMAN and FACKLER 4:41:1 High Hurdles ANDERSDN YOUNKIN SOASH 17:3 440 Yard Dash BOYLAN SDPER MOYER and WINKLER 54:3 Low Hurdles ANDERSON HARTWELL SOASH and EYESTONE 28 Half Mile Run Peck FACKLER K. C. SMITH and TORRANCE 2:0512 220 Yard Dash CURTIS MANLY SHEELER and HARTMAN 23:0 Mile Relay Freshmen Sophomores Juniors 3:42:3 Two Mile Run THOMPSON BRIGGS LAYMAN and PEET 10: 12 Half Mile Relay Freshmen Juniors Seniors 1:38:1 Pole Vault BOYLAN and HARVEY EYESTONE and KRATZ 9 ft., 9 in. High Jump MANLY MILHOLIN BROADSTON and GRIGSBY 5 fr., 6 in. Discus SHEELER MUSSELMAN SKELTON and HUDMAN 111 ft., 4 in. Shot Put WALKER HUDMAN SHEELER 35 ft., 2 in. Broad Jump CURTIS and BRoADsToN PHILIPS and ANDERSON 20 fr., 2 in. Total-Freshmen 595 Sophomores 21 3 Juniors 303 Seniors 24 Inter.-Scholastzc Meet May 8, 1915 EVENT FIRST I SECOND THIRD TIME 100 Yard Dash Cedar Rapids W. Waterloo Manchester 10:4 120 Yard Hurdles Marshalltown Oregon Ccdar Rapids 16: 2' 440 Yard Dash Freeport Newton Newton 54:4 220 Yard Hurdles Marshalltown Newton Oregon 27:3 880 Yard Dash W. Waterloo Cedar Rapids Marshalltown 2:09 220 Yard Dash Cedar Rapids VV. Waterloo Newton 24:2 One Mile Run Freeport VV. Waterloo Marion 4: 55:4 Half Mile Relay Newton Cedar Rapids W. VVaterloo 1:39 ' Pole Vault Oregon Byron Marion 9 ft., 9 in High jump Cedar Rapids Cornell Academy and Marshalltown 5 ft., 6 in Broad Jump Oregon Cedar Rapids Newton 20 ft., 1 in Discus Throw Byron Kalona Epworth 108 ft., 8 in Shot Put Marshalltown Cornell Academy and Independence 40 ft., 1 in Total-Cedar Rapids, ZSMQ Marshalltown, 185 W. Waterloo, 155 Newton, 14 Ill., 103 Byron, Ill., 75 Cornell Academy, 5: Kalona, 3 Oregon, Ill., 143 Freeport, Marion, 3: Epworth, 1: Manchester, 1 3 Independence, LQ. 'Records broken. 7 I' 1 1 THE ROYAL PURPL if Indoor Meet March 11, 1915 EVENT FIRST SECOND 30 Yard Dash MANLY WEEKS Rope Climb VVINDENBURG HEALY 440 Yard Dash WILLIAMS PECK Low Hurdles MAGRUNN WEEKS Standing High Jump !.MUSSELMAN and BOYLAN 220 Yard Dash MANLY BOYLAN I Shot Put BURKHARDT MUSSELMAN Half Mile SMITH TORRANCE High Hurdles MAGRUNN WEEKS Running High Jump MANLY BOYLAN THIRD MAGRUNN BOYLIIN J. MILHOLIN HEALY HEALY LUDIKING MAGRUNN PECK ' COOPER REICI-I TIM 3:2 21:1 59:3 4ft 24.1 33:2 2:1 4:3 ., Sin. 6:0 Fourth place counted but not given here. Total-Freshmen 5025 juniors Sfiyzg Seniors 165 Sophomores 83 Academy 2. EVENT 100 Yard Dash 220 Yard Dash 440 Yard Dash Half Mile Run Mile run Two Mile Run High Hurdles Low Hurdles Half Mile Relay Mile Relay Pole Vault High Jump Broad jump Discus Throw Hammer Throw Shot Put The Home Records HOLDER SMITH HovEY CURTIS E. LoTT F. MILLER TORRANCE THOMPSON CLINTON LUSTED LUSTED, M ANLY, CLINTON, SMITH TAYLOR, EYESTDNE, ScoTT, GRUWELL Ross CLINTON CLINTON SHEELER CARHART KRAMM WHEN MADE RECORD '13 10:1 '11 '15 23 '09 54:2 '05 2.04.4 '15 4.41.1 '15 10'12:0 '13 16'3 '12 26:1 '13 1' 33:1 '12 3'35.1 '12 10 fr., 4 in. '13 5 ft., 794 in. '13 21 fr., 6 in. '15 111 ft., 4- in. '13 122 fr., 1 in. '12 36 ft., 8 in. iff, Cross Country The cross country squad of 1915 has earned its place, and will be demonstrating its strength on the track by the time this issue of the ROYAL PURPLE is in your hands. The squad was the largest in seven years or since cross country gained prominence in Cornell, and, its work was by far the best. Seventy-eight men finished the hilly four-and-a-half mile course in the Home Run, K. C. Smith setting a record of 25:25:3, with Ralph Briggs a half-second behind. Twenty-two men finished under thirty minutes. Interest was good, and continued thruout the season. The men came out not only twice a week for the credit, but many came out three and four nights in the endeavor to keep in the running. A hare and hound race, relays on the cinders when it was muddy, and several races against time over the regular course kept the interest up by furnishing variety. A dual run with Ames as a preliminary to the football game on Home Coming Day proved rather disappointing. The muddy course was a great handicap to the Cornell men, who were not equipped with spikes as were the Ames runners. Altho Howland Vw VARSITY HCC TEAM led Ames to a rather one-sided victory, Briggs and Nlerwin finished second and third. lierwin did not count in the score since he was in the Freshman team. The following men composed the Varsity team: Captain Briggs, K. C. Smith, C. La man. Grettenbur and . La man. The Freshman team, which mav be ex mected to . g . . crowd these men for places, was composed of Nlerwin, Nlather, Jacobson, Zea and Krull. C. L.fxvMAN. i WINNERS OF THE CC Fall Track fi A-71 swf-... Fall track is a new departure in Cornell athletics. It has proven, however, a val- uable impetus for the spring work. The track work consisted last fall of only the sprints and hurdles, with occasionally practice in the jumps. However, some valuable finds were made for Varsity material. One of these men, who has fought hard for real victories, is lVIagrunn, who comes all the way from Walla Walla, Washington, to be a great point-winner for Cornell in the State and Intercollegiate meets. That fast little century man, VVindenburg, will carve his name on the sprinters' tablet in the gym, and future track men will look with admiration on that record. Other men of the first magnitude are O'Banion, Healey, Gardner and Cooper. These men have all displayed great ability to cover the two-twenty and hundred yards in minimum time. Bretnall, Groves and Winter took naturally to the four-forty. In one heat, Bretnall was caught in the fast time of fifty-four and four-fifths seconds. Benton showed his usual good form in skimming the hurdles, and with his returned strength, he will run away with the home records. Following him close in ability are Reich and Gardiner. These men with added experience are to be heard from in future barrier contests. Ebersole, Vance, Burkhart are track devotees who have shown good ability. Considered from various viewpoints, fall track work is a success and it is hoped that it will become a permanent feature of fall athletics. CHAS. LUSTED. THE ROYAL PU RPL. 11- L A 4., ., . ,,,,..1,.,.,.. V., ,,,, .,g,,,.,, 4,11 g., ,-. ,,. ,, -. ,,, . ...v , L.-', .4 -gf-2 .ff .. -,,-... ,,..,,., 1' , ,, ,. 1, ,V .,4,4.L ,Wi I Z' WWE xr fwz Q mf B Ks Wg: , 'X N X 6 f N5 51' S52 Q un. rm nw. -rw wMa. VW- V ,ylfkm 1' WMYVVNA O ll llawiilfffda' I ' . 'S+-2r1'r4E.iw-MimiSwv- ,,- fa iw. -1 -5. .- ,N -1.151 1' ,....-..,-,-...ts M- V. 1 wa. 1 2 1 w-,a.i-nw1.w.s..,-wlmwvw Xfi, .,..,..-.a....u.4u...p-m..-1..-q.v,1...,.sm.-f - f.m...m1 ,,.-f,..,,i.g,m,...,.-1, 1g,,,,..,f.,..,-is ,,,,qx,q,,,L,Lrfg-t,..q,,-,.,,s:...nfv,.yg..-..rmmnq,.p.nwq E Epi Hlff TQQYAL F'L.JRPLEl il ll ' 4 l The 1915 Baseball Squad i l TOP ROW Cleft to right!-Couch Finger, Walker, Kuebler, Kettering. Getlmmnn, Conch WVest. BOTTOM ROW-Hughes, Turner, Grigsby, Hinkley, Captain Mnrston, Etter, Byerly. Baselaall Season of 1915 Ten victories and four defeats is a record that any team would be proud of. Yet in a way Cornell's baseball followers and critics were disappointed, because they felt that last year's .team was equal to Iowa, the state champions, and also superior to any other team in the state that was ranked above the Cornell team. The season started with a victory over Grinnell. Then without the services of our l old reliable Byerly, we lost both of the games to Iowa. Highland Park was easily i beaten, but we were forced to the limit to beat Carleton in two wonderful games, which ended 1-0 and 3-0. We simply ran away with Simpson, and with the same old spirit we added prestige by beating Ames 6-1. Tired after a strenuous trip and play- ing against luck we lost a 4-3 game against Highland Park. But we got revenge out of Grinnell and Simpson the following Monday and Tuesday. Friday, May 28th, we handed Coe a glorious beating to the tune of 7-1, and a few days later we shut out Wesleyan 10-0. The next Coe game was called off on account of rain. With everything to lose and nothing to gain and with the Conference cham- pionship virtually ours, we showed our true spirit of sportsmanship by agreeing to play another game with Coe. As a reward, we were beaten in that awful first inning. The boys came back and fought a wonderful uphill game, outplayed their opponents 'L 0 i ' - lla N-nmiuwvsyiv-.r1e.1m,gmmqpQ-14--an-m -- -V V Y Y 1 ll iw, f.,L5V.,fr Q ,rv -' 31 5 ' 71:91 75 '- .l5?f' ,. . -'vw xx. '. ' .W ,sw -F - - V. -.,- - . . , . . . 2 i:.i..,t.w1..nJMT' f 17 aW.L?w1.0Z1wL!1Ef:2.i1i,':b.1.Mfi.1,.2 ,...t, ,. . ,. .. .V---.W-Wa aw.-. - mat.. vw, ...U r . M - V .,,, . , ..,.- .. 1 ,,....1.... M.. .A ., .1-M.. 1 i.M...... ,. ,.....v. Nw f........-.i , -..,. .., ,,.,,, .,.,...,,, 1 Q. 'vi gi H , A ' nl F9 ' ' rgggr 2 VT ref ll 11 L X Q xl M L- f if fa: V' lm, .ass 1.5f:1r.iL1:.::.1.e...4.aL. , . . I is 11 1 but failed to overcome the big lead. Thus the Conference title was lost, Coe's claim a trifle better because they had played two games with the feeble Wesleyan team while we played but one. Cornell's baseball team of '15 was an aggregation of players with league calibre, strong in every department, perfectly coached, and with pepper to burn they proved their merit by beating Ames and Carleton, the champions of Minnesota. We will lose three old veterans, for years the mainstays in the Cornell team, Kuebler, Hinkley and Marstori. But we still have an abundance of old men and with the new material we are already counting of victories for 1916. H. R. F. F 4 1 is 1 , g A . 4' I :' --mf-ft Q-W--an fee- 1 - QT- V e Q ,L 41,335.1 a-.-W...-M.. ......M....,,,,,,W, XY ,.,.- .,,, f.. .- ..... ...,...-.,. THE ROYAL PURPL Faculty-Senior Game At precisely three o'clock, June 6, 1915, the faculty walked unto Donald Diamond. The Seniors, who had been practicing all day, immediately left the field and cleaned the bench for their superiors lest they should soil their new duck trousers. Prof. Bradly at once made a survey of the field and calculated thelexact marking of the diamond. Keister and Smith adopted a favorable codification of the ground rules, while Prof. Van Pelt called roll. Seven minutes later Umpire Byerly called Play ball! O. H. Smith, the first man up, an indifferent batter, reminded Grape Juice Anderson, whose oratorical delivery had won him first place among the state's slingers, of the morning final, and the latter grooved the first one. Smith's calculation of ac- celeration and inertia, coupled with appropriate kilometres of potential energy, enabled him to break all rules of gravity and hoist the pill over left Held. C. J. Smith followed, bumping an easy grounder to Peter Jensen, and should have been an easy out, but his persuasive phrases and figures of speech convinced Byerly he was safe. And thus the faculty demonstrated the practical side of education. And after it was all over, with the aid of Keister, who figured out the score according to the law of Diminishing Returns, the Faculty reported the game 8-3 in their favor. Nevertheless it was a good game, full of spectacular plays. John Evers Finger and Tyrus Van Pelt played wonderful ball, as did the Professors Gethmann, who did the battery work in true German fashion. The lineup: FACULTY-J. Gethmann, c., M. Gethmann, p.g S. Finger, lb., Moore, 2b.g Lott, ss., C. J. Smith, lf., Keister, 3b.g I. Finger, cf., O. H. Smith, rf. SENIORS-BOVVCII, c., Anderson, p.g Jensen, lb., Kuebler, 2b.g Gammons, ss., Duke, lf., Soash, 3b.3 Shafer, cf., Thompson, rf. The faculty showed mental superiority, besides physical, by making fewer boneheads. ,An 'I . I 1 1 in I' Tennis I Twenty-two years ago W. H. Robinson of Hampton, Iowa, started a movement among the men in college toward preparing Cornell's first tennis court. It was merely a plat of skinned turf in one corner of Ash Park, affording a subject for criticism and ridicule among the students, but it introduced what afterwards came to be the most popular sport in school. We now have twenty-four of the finest and best kept cou1'ts in Iowa, affording amusement and recreation for every student in Cornell College. Tennis is everybody's game, everyone can enjoy it, and perhaps no other college finds it so than we. Our rank in tennis is well up to the front thruout the state. Our two- man team was a contender in the semi-finals at the State Tournament at Drake. Singles: Van Pelt vs. Bennett of Highland Park, 6-l, 6-2. Van Pelt vs. Page of Drake, 6-3, O-6, 4-6. Smythe vs. Van Ginkle of Grinnell, 7-5, 6-3. Smythe vs. Nicholson of Drake, 4-8, 4-6. Doubles: Cornell vs. Grinnell, 7-9, 5-7. In the home tournament we easily defeated Coe, who later beat Iowa. This show- ing vouches for our standard which we claim to be equal to any college in Iowa. Our tennis teams were made up of Smythe, Van Pelt, Howard, and Torrance. s l A fs?-.Mr w .1 'Jes A iz' lil 1 I ,, l 7 HQ? if , ,.,, -,, .. my .4 ...-... ..i.. ... . s...,.,,,,.,,,, , , . .V Q, ., ..,,, ...........,...,,.....,.,,,. ,tt ,,,,,,,, ,two , W 732,1- ,.. F. 'Wiki 9, .m......a--- ,Y,Y,,-, W, xx ,.... , THE ROYAL PURPL 1- . mn. , W.,-1-, 1 ,.w,.a,f,4:.,!,g,MI,. ,A:,c.,,,-t., , Q V ,V. , . . 1- .. ,Y 1. wwf ., ,- N-.1 N Nm, +V- -. 4, 1. .. . 1 , -ur- 1 if f-f It X If N ' SQ 1, ,f :fig V - X 1255 ' id 9 6 it K 'Q Ie no 5563? 3 I . 60 Cl JEL? X x X Q L3 f Q 552 0' 1 ,V 'X -Q QQ ? fi hi C35 XY Q10 I7 I K KL , K': '- VT: EPZ? , V . A A : 4 jQM ,fa-+5.1:,, W if I aww iii- 'IM .Jlf ,.::.l,g,.-Q- If ff,2'tJE:.Q' 1 i 1.-1 .. rl' ' 'f'xx 1 :.,XQ.s3:?,51g . U. M L.,3'pnf. E539 gmfw2mn2wrQrcQf2i K Fda I - ' I' Y l 1 SENIOR HOCKEY TEAM Joshczway Turnipseecll on Girls, Athletics Wall, I never, said Uncle .Ioshaway Turnipseed as he seated himself on a 99 4-l-1007 pure soap box, removed his corncob pipe, shrugged his shoulders, and began: VVall, 1 ain't sayin' nothin' agin edication and such as that, but I do want to tell you folks about a little school down there in Linn County which they call Cornell Collidge. Now you know, Nlirandy has been a-tryin' to git me to go down there for three years to visit her sister's stepson who is a-wall, I reckon this is his fourth year there anyhow. Wall, last Friday morning I takes out old Sally and hitches her up to the spring wagon and gits a peck of Jonathans and some of lVIaw's cucumber pickles fer the kid and starts out. I ain't goin' to tell you nothin' about my trip or nothin' about that kid fer I never laid eyes on him. I druv into the northwest COFIICI' of that 'forty' they calls Ash Park, and I swan, if I ever saw anything like it in my life. Thar was nigh on to a hundred girls standin' around on some level pieces of ground marked out in squares with some ,, KE r . l ' V' ,,gC'TsE?.l . 3, ,f .-,K 5 r Jtxff, 7' ,A li 1 - , , , by. a l A J Ex R fl. w SOPHOMORE HOCKEY TEAM ALL-STAR H OCKEY TEAM , . . . .. -.,-...,-,.-my ---' ...V-. , ,....,.1 .,,- ,.......,..,,.,..... ,V . .....-.... . ....,-..,..,- .x.,a..,. . .,. ., l A-,msn-.w-www. .. ,. , .-. P-..M..,.1wf.1w.wwW..-wave-1-ivfw fu.-.,fa--wap ,,f. M.. 'Q 'ffl le 'Tl Ll R FJ L, -W-L f-f'-'- A' N f- -.iwkmmvmw N. .wa-W -ff 1...-.vm-.fu- ll i SOPHOMORE-SENIOR HOCKEY TEAMS white stuff, and a battin' a ball up in the air with a fish net partition between 'em. They. was a hollerin' 'deuce,' 'love,' 'forty,' and a yellin' somethin' about Marjorie Monroe bein' a champeen. That may be a profitable sport but the idea of them girls a battin' that ball and a runnin' till they was all het up, I couldn't see no sense to it. I got out of there as soon as I could, but blamed if I didn't run into a worse bunch. There was about two hundred girls arunnin' every which way with some crooked clubs in their hands and with a young lady follerin' 'em and a blowin' a whistle. When I got up closer and seen how them girls was dressed, I never felt so mortyfied in my life. No civilized woman ever dressed in such a fashion, and I thot about their poor mothers first thing. I don't know what this world is a comin' to when the young women behave in such an indecent manner. And all the time they was a yellin' 'dribble,' 'dribble,' and a lot more nonsense. I stands there stock still .with my mouth open and purty soon one of them pert young ladies comes up to me before I realized it and says, 'Do you like hockey?' 'Is that what you call that battin',' says I. 'Yes,' says she. 'This game makes the Seniors the champeens. The Sophs beat the Freshies and the Seniors beat thc Juniors and now the Seniors are beating the Sophs. I'm on the Senior Basketball Team, too, and you ought to see us play. We've had the cup for three years, and we are so proud of our captain, Irene Van Ness. We played our final game just last Tuesday night with the Sophs.' 'Walll' was all I could say, and I started across the field. It was a gittin' along toward dusk and over to one side I seen a bunch of girls around s in V' v N U I 1 . -' ' 'vyivuu wf',',v,s i ui ..nrwl f1Y:vv-'WFP'-wI'r 'xi 3al!mlllA'l0x'lrsl.l.uln:.l.llZM1.-lllllli' 1 N-l 1.-f ii'-1. ,fli- .,,.H-mr.. it 'K . .-M.. ' M Q i in ' -. . 7 , 1 j 7 ' 4 ff , ,Qu A Tw' uw, H ,af 1 JUNIOR BASKETBALL TEAM a fire with weenies on the end of long sticks a pokin' them into the fire and a hollerin' and a eatin' 'em. I mean the weenies. They was a yellin' somethin' about a Hockey Picnic, but I was so plumb beat, I went over to where Sally was a pawin' the ground and jumps into that spring wagon. That old mare must have felt somewhat like I did, fer she never stopped lopin' till she reached home. I'll be durned, if I didn't fergit all about leavin' them apples and pickles. Now it's my opinion that girls' athletics may be all right where a feller gits used to 'em, but I swan, if I wouldn't a durned sight rather live in a country where the women folks gits their exercise by washin' and scrubbin' and where they is dressed in a decent, Christian-like manner. ARVA BRADY. Q -.......,,..,- -..,. ,... .wdvxigx-if K- will-gf! ,- g . , ,, . if'.', I1 vxg Viv' ,L.,,. i l, it 1 . Q I' SENIOR BASKETBALL TEAM SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL TEAM FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM Awards Given Hockey llfleclals, Ruth VVilliams, Esther VVilliams, Helen Cromer, Varsity Cys , Irene Gormly, Mina Taylor, Valborg Jensen, lllildred VVitherell. Senior C's, Rose Miller, True Arbingast. Junior C's, Lilly VVagner, Lucy Stahl. Sophomore C,s, Vera Ogren, Bess Siple, Leah NVier, Pauline Kettleson, Eunice Travis, Hazel Row- ley. Freshman C's Nlary Taft, lllattie Tippet, Grace Tippet, Elma Kidder, Doro- thy Erb, Leslie Peterson, lVIary Day. . 4 .,v-....-F V -- .- ,. V N , J A L 1,5 3 ,I .- ....., . .N -K..--..,.....--... 1,52-,Q-, fs ,Q I l ' ' L-QM ,.f',,,i-fx K,5,'.' X i 3 .--' 4 .-'21 'M lzfff ,- -'wir if .T 'f 'GW' X'-fl Q Q51 WA gf' w, A, v.e2'f' 35 Y. le X ALL-STAR BASKETBALL TEAM Basketball C blanket, Dorothy Keyes, Nleclals, Sue Tallman, Irene Van Ness, Ruth Bowen, Ethel Cook, Clarice Nissleyg Varsity C's , Ellen Griffiths, Florence Neff, Thelma Davidson, ,less lVIaryin, Phyliss Brown, Edna Maligold, Lucy Robinsong Junior C's , Laura Wilcoxg Sophomore C's , Dorothy Hutchinson, Helen Bauman, Frieda Kirk, Gertrude Brown, Freshman C's, June Hawkins, Florence Hogel, Doris Ludwig, Gladys Peck, Bess Swenson, Ida Yeaman.' ,, as F uf, .,,. ,,,, 'l ff s,e,.s -,..,,L,. I ight -,1':iK?yn l'if,,,,5f THE ROYAL' PURPL MARJORIE MONROE, TENNIS CHAMPION Tennis , Varsity C's, Nlarjorie Monroe, Romaine Guild. Sophomore C, Grace Josten. Freshman, Marjorie Monroe. ' 4 Indoor Work Blanket, True Arbingast. Medals, Margaret Misener, Edna Petty, Lillian Montgomery. Varsity C's, Helen Cromer, Mildred Wetherell, Phyllis Brown, Jess Martin, Valborg Jensen, Bess Siple, Pauline Kattleson. Junior C, Lilly Wagner, Esther Williams. Sophomore C, Dorothy Hutchinson, Mary Bartholomew, Laura Wilcox, Joyce Barnes, Mildred Beaman, Leah Wier, Viola Gaffney, Eleanor Peters. Freshman C, Florence Baldyvin, Dorothy Deardorff, Dorothy Allard, Doris Lud- wig, Anna Smith, Grace Smith, Geraldine Hughes, Helen Alexander, Marcia DeBey, Florence Hogel, Lois Hoel. - l 71' N. if .Li Q , Ag- Q , .,jjf11f- - ,ir L 5 . 3 I T E I 1 , . E Q 5 r 4 i 1 i i 2 . H' 5 I E I 6 Q xix 2 'flill' 7 i Q . K ii id' lim' 533 1 2 F Q . . vi 151 F . fm A . 'F ,I ff fl is :GCI1-7127-17. Wiiiffifx- 3?,f9I'fR15if4ill.FiWi.21 QBrgani3-atinns man being essentially aetihe. must tint in aetibity his joy, as lnell as his beauty anh glory: ann lalmr, like everything else that is gosh, is its num relvarb. ---Whipple I BOOK FOUR f- -'H I I 2 ' ff I U TH RoYAl. PURP LE Q. -bali! ' W' ' X : as 'Q Wi? W F 1-W VW42 my ' ff I .ti V 'Q f 7' mm 4 ' lx X' xv' K 1 Q5 f ',n,,5541- y VA fda 3 'lQf,f-,L .4 .L Y X 'T THE ROYAL PURP ' Q9?f'- ' N. THE ROYAL PURPLE Adelphian Literary Society ,Fall Terri .... Winter Term ...... Spring Term ........ OSCAR ALLANSON BEsvEN ANDERso:I ALBERT XANDRAE RoI.LIN BAIRD CLIEIORD BENTON LESLIE BOSWORTI-I WILLIAM BRANDON CLARK BOWEN HAROLD BUTZLOEF LEE RAY BYERLY FoREsT CHAMBERS GAYLORD CAMPBELL KENNETH DANSKIN COTTON ETTER ARTHUR ELLIOT CHARLES ERWIN IRVIN EVANS HENRY FREI MORITZ FINGER INNES GARDINER RAYMOND GRANT JOHN GETHMANN MAX GRETTENEERG PAUL GRIGSBY E RALL GRIGSEY LOYAL GRIFFIN DEW11'r HOGLE CLARENCE POLM MELVIN HAESLAR PRESIDENTS ROLL 7 A I . I' .....ALDERT ANDRAE ............OREs ZEHR ......JoIIN GETHMANN HAROLD HARTMAN WARREN I-IARTWELL CARL HAYMOND DEwEY HOADLEY ANToNE JOHNSON HAROLD JOHNSON EARLINC GARRIsoN KEITH LEMON HARRY MILPIOLIN CHARLES MAEDITT HARRY MAGRIJN LEWIS OHM JASPER O,BANION ROBERT SMYTI-IE FLOYD STANSBBRRY MERRILL 'FORRANCE OSCAR 4R0RD0RF ' HOMER TRIMELE GEORGE TURNER HARRY VVARREN Louls WEST LAWRENCE VVEST DUKE WILLIINMS RAYMDND YVINKLER CLARENCE WISE HAROLD WILfoN LESLIE WELCH EVERETT YORK OREs ZEI-IR TK. ' H -W.-1... .H ,. ..- ,, , . me 1,,......+.1g A ..i.f.E: ,S Lfmmu.-HM-, UF? - -W-.. Qivfnbnf W .W 1 ,.,.,.,... THE ROYAL PUR PLE Philomathean Literary Society Fall Term ....... Winter Term ........ Spring Term ......... 1 TRUE ARBINGAST 3'DOROTHY ALLARD .5 FERN ACKERMAN MMILDRED BEAMAN J'FL0RBNCE BALDWIN . L MARY BARTHOLEMEW l 1 BBSSIB BELZ g BESSE CI-IIPMAN .7 LOUISE COURSON fo JOY CHAI ,, FORESTINE DEVINE ,y MARCIA DE BEY ,3 MARY DAY ,-I DOROTHY DURRES Ib'Ru'rI-I FLANIGAN lg, IRENE FLANIGAN I7 GRACE Fox .4 CAROLINE FITZWATER '11 IRENB GORMLY ,o HELEN GUNTHER M GLADYS GEARI-IART 9,9-DORA LEE GITCHELL ijMARGARET HUME M EvELYN HEss 3,gjULIA HARRISON -Lg, ETHEL HARRISON . 5' M'ARGUERITE HILLIS I, Lols HOEL M LUCILE HICKMAN 30 MARION JAYNE 31 FAITHE KIIJDER 31 DONNA KING 33 FRIEDA KIRK PRESIDENTS ROLL .........LUClLE S1-IERRARIJ ...........RU'rI-I MILLER ..........IRENE VAN NEss 3-I FERN LEvAssEUR -55'D0RIs LUDWIG 31.9 RUTH MILLER 37 THELMA MORRISON '58KAT1-IRYN MCINTOSH 37 LILLIAN MCKINLEY QOFAY MIDDLETON HIMARGARET Morrrr ,l1fFLoRENcE NEFF 43 FERN OLSON ,NELEANOR PETERS 45'ERIvIA PEABODY HLGENEVA RENNER I4 7 MARY Roan V3 HELEN Rosa y7LUCILE SHERRARD ob MELVA STEWART fl CLAIRE SCHMICKLE 6 RUTH SMYTH A F3 MARGARET SYMINGTON iq ELIZABETH SWENSON 6-.VANNA MARIE SMITH 5-L RUTH THOMPSON 57MARY TAI-'r 5-qs IRENE VAN NEss 5.7SYEIL WOODRUFF 60 HARRIE1' WARNER bt LEAH 'WIER by LILLY WAGNER 9 2, ESTHER WILLIAMS by TESSIE WILCOX QSMILDRED WETHERALL bwJEAN WOODRUFF X--f , G! .,......,..,. ,, M., .,--M....-...,.,..A..-.., ...,....,d,,,.,,...,..,.,-,-, Mm. ,M ,....- .....w.-....,..J...-.....A...............Q. 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PURPL: ,.. . ,,.-..v..,.. ,.. ,...,.,l.,, , , .,.,.m Lf-n.4ww. -.v.-u.1nv..-nuff -v -wr .-fmmr N-,1-1--N: vw -fngm-an-.11-1-fu.-u-n-mnxe-eg-: - .......::f-1-1 .- Y,,.,.,.........-i.:::m-r-mma.f.ff1.a.-....f.. .1..........a..,TE..,........4.u.........,...........-.., . ... ,LITE 5 l 'r I 2 , -wif-Aw'-.-rf., .-I .W-wr f --y W -.,-. ,H ... Y , ...,,,,..v,,-,H -. ...M .Y mu-v.,-.Q-,V , -1-v nv,-:L-U,-.,..-f,,..,q..,,.,,.,,,,p,i-H- r. , ,N f -5, ., .,1-,, .M-,-.-fy, ......-..2uuL4.af.4-h-.n.-uvuw.-n...-...4.J...:.4.nu..,-,. . x-,,.Q,mmm.w,....-....f.,..,.--V-.mzafgg--Y---mm,fix:-.-, -,j.,,..,,,i..,.,g..,....,,.i.i+?,, f...,,,.-,Af---,V.,,,,Tf:ffi:3- , , H W W ,Y Y? Aj yr f? y A 5 ,A,.wax7 if ..W.w,,,,....,.,.,.....,1.-,.....,...,..,.,.m,,.,.,......L.g.g M, 5 J9'ff?Qg ,- -MM - W , - ff' LE THE ROYAL PUR I fl Amphictyon Literary Society PRESIDENTS Q Fall Term ............. ............... ......... R o Y WEls Winter Term ........... ................. R OY WBIS Spring TErm ........ ............... ....... D o UGLAS PARSONS ROLL . I WENDELL DENNIS 1 RoE HOWARD 3 ALVIN HULsE 4 DoN KREGER b'RALPH MoYER 4, Roy McCuLLoUc1-1 FRANK MUNGER gJ'0HN KNIGHT 7 HAROLD NICHOLAS I0 DOUGLAS PARSONS -zl IRA RGGERS 7 A, I. I 12 PHIL Sco'r'r I5 HAROLD SORTER If CLARENCE SCHMIDT If WARREN SCHMID1' 19Louxs SNEDLER l7MURISS WALKER , fg'W. WxLsEY 17 Roy WEls .,w CLARENCE WILSON 7-J LEo VANDBRHAM , 14?'DONALD Hu'rc1-usoN Q-. V, '.-nf.-,ggyn-wr.':q kzv:'Qg:,1- f,. ,-- . , .M ,, V, ,.. 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CAROL AUSTIN MUVRIEL BE'r'rs RUTH BENEDICT FLORENCE BROWN ELBANOR BROWN PHYLLIS BROWN ANNA BRUEN GRACE BYERLY TI-IELMA DAVIDSON CLARA DEPUY CLARICE DILLENEURG LUCILE DRUMMOND 3 DOROTHY DEARDORE SYLVIA DAVIDSON HELEN DAVIS HELEN FISHER JESSIE FISHER HELEN ESGATE EUNICE HARTLEY DOROTHY HuTcHINsON VALBORG JENSEN GALE KENNEDY PRESIDEN TS ........BURNA MCCULLOCH ROLL 74: ........CLARICE DILLENBURG ............LAURA WILcOx BERYL GRIFFITH FLORENCE HOOLE DOROTHY KEyEs HAZEL LLUELLEN EMMA LOCKE- EDNA MANOOLD JESSIE MARTIN ERMINA MILLS BURNA MCCULLOCH CLAARICE NISSLEY LILLIAN MONTGOMERY ADRIA PARSONS AMANDA PI-'ENNER EDNA PETTY GERTRUDE PILLINO JESS RYAN NELDA SCHLUE MAELE SHERMAN MILDRED TI-IORPE RUTH WILLIAMS LEILA NAGLE AURA ILcOx Jud. XY u. hh.. 4I4.L.u.:.4.Q...n.r,1.-, .M -I .-,, 'I......II..,. I.,..I....n,..- ,.. . Ind...-Iab..f,.p.-. mm-.. ... ..... A.. . 1 , II .I -, . WI...-,-, ,I I UI... ,.E. I,-,... .....--....IN.,I.ImD.-I , .. . . . ...I 1-I.. 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THE ROYAL PUR LE Fall Term .......... Winter Term ........ Spring Term ........ ........MERLE MANLY ................CARL PIKE .........HARoLD MAXWELI. X, Zetagathian Literary' Society PRESIDENTS ROLL ROBERT ALQUIS1' CRAIG ARBUCKLE BURTON BAKER WILLIAM BIERDERMANN GEORGE BRETNALL RALPH BRIGGS HULEER1' CI-IEEVER EvERE'rr COOPER MALCOM DOWELL ARTHUR EYESTONB MONTE HEALY ALFRED JACOBSON RoscoE KIDDER G. H. KEISTER HOWARD KRATZ OLIVER LARUE HAROLD MAXWELL I' MERLE MANLY WILLIAM MOORE ISADORE PANLASIGUI CARL PIKE CLYDE REED T1-IEDDRE REMER ALFRED RIGGLEMAN ELMER SHERRILL KARL SMITH DoN STAIKRY PAUL ST'ERNER HARRY TERRELL ROBERT VAN PELT THEODORE VVEEKS HERSHEL VVI-II'rEI-IEAD HAROLD WILLIAMS HOWARD ZEA 1 Zi 1 11 E1 S1 5. 51 11 51 W1 JI, ,1 i1 11 11 1111 11 1'1 111 111 11 11 11 l1j 11' E11 11 111 11 11 115 1 1 11 1 111 111 11 11 1111 1111 11 111 1 11 1 1 1 1' E1 111 111 11 111 11 1 11 11 1 1 1 ,N 11 Q 1 1f 1 1 4 11 1 '11 1 1 1 E1 11 1 1' 1 1 111 E 1 11 1 1 13.1. 1W.,.11-,1 ....,,. .Wg-.,,,.-,,,,.-,. 1- wqy- 1.--.1 ..,. . -...M 1 M.-,111-1-1r,1--U 1-qw-wqwf-vw 1f'iF:'1rv:': . .1 1 1 1f'1fffraw-111I Wlr1:n -F11 'v- YLL... .7fl.4f1,li.1,1..,.',..4.f.g.41f,'f11.-.L -.,.J2..Qg',.X:',1L,,7ff'ff'..f'lTf'1. .1 ,1T.fEu1.g -.'..i4am:. 5'.5n1.i.:.m..-m:1L.7..L1m.1m9u--Q-Q-F-QFM-11 ' 1 -'h1 -'-'f '4 'A 4'L'1 - 1 ...M ..-..w,1,1,- ,.-...,.,.H1-.-v,-,u.....1,1.1,.w---m-...,.,.,,..1 . .-1.1. -..1 .m.1.-f-..M.,-1.1..1.f..f1,.,,n-W.,.-W-W.,1.-1..m.1.,11.1.1111-,1,..,,-1,..-1..,-..--,1--.1-1.1.-,-...,1-.,m..f.1.,.11-.,1',..,...-...is 1, . 1' ' , 1 . 1 11 . 111, 4-.1 - ... ---A 1 1 21 'H 'Nw ,J 111 LJ 13 '. 1,1 ,.1.,1 .. pf f V 1 3 1 '11 j 1 1 1 - X , , .VJ . 11 x ...... 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RUTI-I ANDERsoN IRMA ADDLEMAN EMMA BAHLS ESTIIER BANDY HELEN BAUER HELEN BAUGHMAN EDNA BELNAP TI-IEREsA BELNAP ETI-IEL BEYER RUTH BowEN FLORENCE BRACKETT ARvA BRADY GERTRUDE BROWN VERNA CARPENTER ALTA CHAPMAN' FRANCES COLLINS LUELLA COOK MILDRED CREIGI-IToN MARIE DANNER MADGE EDWARDS HAzEL ER:cRsoN JESSIE FITZGERALD VERGINIA FRAZER ELLA FREDERICKSON LILLIB FREDERICKSON VIOLA GAFFNEY ELLEN GRIFFITI-I MARJGRIE GRIFFITI-I IRBNE HANNA LEONE HART RUTH HILL PRESIDENTS ROLL I' ...........RUTI-I LANE ........MADGE EDWARDS ........BLANcHE SWINDELL MARIAN HILL CLARA HONETSCHLAGER GERALDINE HUGHES JOSBPHINE HUNT VIVIAN JONES ELMA KIDDER RUTH LANE JOSEPHINE LUTZ GLADYS MADREN DAISY MARsToN Q HORTENSE MAYNE MARGUERITE MCKERRAL MARIAN MCKERRAL RosE MILLER BEss MILNER MARGARET MISENER ' FRANCES MOORE PI-IoEEE MUBLLER MAUDE NICHOLAS JENNIEPADEN FREIDA PAGE LUCILE RANDALL Lucy ROBINSON CELIA ROGERS HELEN SPRY EDNA STEDMAN HAzEL STUNTZ BLACI-IE SWINDELL BERNICE TREAsE ALEERTA WooDRING FLORETTA Wvcorxf IDA YEAMANS 2 L 1 I , F L F 5 ? l 3 5 u 4 s 5 1 2 1 F F gs VE 1? 1 3 5 1 3 1 Q 111 . 15 Y l F i 1 I 1 3 5 5 F i, H if I F , 1. 15 ,1 li ,V :I 1: w , V nm: ,.,,..,.,,T.,., W., .Y., ,.,.,. ,.l A ..,, W., ,., 7,....,,W..,,,....7,,. .,. . . r-4 , -J ...1 M V f s .:.,.,f.,:L2L.L. ut- .-f.1,.Q-:.1.,..-.:.f.. ,,. , ' . M .f..J. ,-.u..f.,L'.'..w:A.,,,, ,..g .,4- ' I 1 N- H, 1 fx Q f 3 V ..., ,, - , .. N A , Q - . , 1 1' x ...N X K ' ' N - 'ff-1--.www -my--:-Am, , . -4 P - ,. . , .. ..... .. . . ... H L..-,,,.,,, ...:.w...f..:Q.,g,...,..,.,..1m.....:. ,..,. . - M ,.,..,.--.f-QM wr ..,,'.c.,' J. 'm,!,..,,?,'i':.1-4-W -K1 - ..v..1-,...k.-. Q..-M. VL. V... ...mu :wma-nI..,: THE ROYAL PUR P LE' . in W 'MiZtonian Literary Society PRESIDENTS Fall Term ....... Winter Term. ..... Spring Term ....... .......HEREER'r PEET .....CHARLEs LUSTED ........WILLIAM DARRow ROLL 1 JAMES BALLz - 'H HAROLD MUSSELMAN ,P CLIFFORD BOYLAN 5. VVILLIAM OwENs ,Z EMERSON BURKHARDT 'I h XNILLIARD OLLIVER IJ SIDNEY BROADSTON af' LESLIE PARRY 5' WILLIAM DARROW 5, L7 HERBERT PEET josEI'I-I CHASSBL O I, LYLE PEcIc -1 ' CLAUDE COTTINGHAM Q A PAUL PHILIPS - C, JAMES DARRELL ,A Q, L MALcoM PRICE Q MAX DASKAM .M TRUMAN SCI-IAI-'ER ful' RALPH DENNIsToN 5 L1 Roy SIIELLY ff C. EGARTON DRUMMOND 3I Dow THOMPSON CHARLES EBERSOLE fi: CHARLES HARRIs fff RICHARD KIMMEL I fs CLIFFORD LAYMAN ,,, JoI-IN LAYMAN V' JOSEPH LODGE , If CHARLES LUSTED If GLENN NIATHEWS 2-1 KENNETFI MATHER 7 A a I I' c7 gv WILLARD THRAMS 51 -4 FRANCIS REICH jj14fHILLARD SAsH iff MARVEL STOCKWELL I 4, ROLIN THOMAS VERNON VANCE EIL RUSSELL WAITT 3 NoRI'I-IRUP WINTER fb DWIGHT WINDENBURG -my mfwv mm.: , , 1 .- .. 11. .1 ...1. -....f... .- .-..1 ..,.-......,...-1.1-M111..n.1-1.'f..1i.L.v...1.1.k1..v..-1..,...-..,...,.......-.... , . - ...- - .... - .1.. 1 ..,. . 1,1...n-.111 .... .-1.M111.1.1.1.--,.1.1.1..w1............1- 5 i Q 11 1-1 v 11 1 in U 11 1 1 .ff-1. 1,.. 1 1 ' R 13 1.- P1 . 1 ., . 11......,..L..1.1 M.. .1 ..- 1w1.mm1..u1 .1 1- .1..m,.11...,,.1.,.m.,1W..11,..,,.1-1m........1,...,.., ....... 1 : 11 11 11 1 1 , ,. ., 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 5 1 1' 1 1 1 I I 1 1 1111 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1, 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 111 1 11 E 1 11 1 11 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 'F 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 111 . 11 51 1 1 aw 11' 1 1 1 ' 11 1 '1 1 1 E 11 1 11 1 111 1 11 1 1 1 1 '1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 5 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 11 111 1 1' 1 11 1 1 11 1 1 . . 1 1 1. av A -1.,..-:1- ,V '7 3 ,f ,. N I 9 f 11 N, 1' ' f--...U-1.----.-u....4-..11-ww,-V....1-W...--.1...Q.1f.i,.w.-1 . 0 I iffy: 5 .ZW ., , .1 -ff -f wK,gl!T W l ni THE ROYAL PUR LE Aonian Literary Society Z'- Fall Term ...... Winter Term ...... Spring Term MARGARET ADAMS JOYCE BARNES MAURINE BALDWIN ETI-IEL CooK IvA CARMER PAULINE COATS ILo CRAETREE HELEN CROMER HAzI:L DAFFER ESTHER DUNHAM DOROTHY ERE VERNA BILSBOROUGH IDRIs FLACK MILDRED GREEN MARION GASTON ROMAINE GUILD EMMA GRIFFITH OLIVE GDULD JOSEPHINE HAMMELS HELEN HAMMELS JUNE HAWKINS ELIZABETH HARTMAN GEORGIA KNAPP PAULINE KETTIIEEON PRESIDENTS ROLL 'U 1 D I' ......E'rI-IEL Coox ........SUE TALLMAN ......HELEN CRDMER RUTH LUSTED BERNICE MOORE LILLIAN MAXWELL EVA MAXWELL VERA OGREN ESTHER O51-IER MABEL OSHER NELLIE PLUMMER IRMA PoR'rER GLADYS PECR HAZEL ROWLEY EHRMA RAMIDGE OLIVE SARGENT EDITH STOHR 4 BESSIE SIPLE MERLE STEFFEN NELL TERRALL GRACE TALLMAN SUE TALLMAN f ANNE WILSON DOROTHY WILSON HAzEL WALKER BERTI-IA VVOODARD JUNE WILMAN RUTH HELMS I ' ! 'W L awww 'N 'f 'sf 7 M g A a '7 WX 2 4, I 0' 4 In 655' ' I 'SQl?gDW gift' 4 X1 LJ W f TI-IE ROYAL. PURPI. 9 4 Ll bf If 7 95 7 10 U 11, '5 ZA' Parmenian Literary Society President ....... Vice-President ..... Secretary .......... Treasurer ...... Censor .......... Critic ...... DAVID ALGORTA O. A. ANDERSON C. W. ANDREWS ALBERT AULWES J. W. BEARSE Roy BROWNELL FRANKLIN CAsI-ER FRED CLARK LAWRENCE CORK C. B. CROFUTT D. C. ELLENWOOD ARTHUR FDDCE N. E. HEIINER OFFICERS ROLL 7 1 0 I' fl! ,n H- l f IQ, 19 MI 9 l 9 J gli 1 L' 'J- 9 1' .5 'T ..........EDGAR MORTON CYRUS NoRDELooIvI W. BEARSE ..........VERNE SI-IIPPEE A. ANDERsoN H. ANDREWS Sf W. E. JOHNSTONE CECIL KING CLAUDE CRONK HOWARD MCCAEE WILLIAM MERCER C. W. MITTEN . E. B. MORTON C. V. NORDBLOOM VERGIL PETERSON A. C. RBINKING V. C. SI-IIPPEE J. J. SNYDER FRED WHITMAN HILTON YouNC M.. ..1..A...,-Q-1-gg.4......::Y ,.a,z.g..: ..1,m., +'em ..1Mm'1.,m- m...... , ...Mw.s' nun-ww.f.w3niuwmf:ww+vmn' 1-'fvwef' 1 11.5.1 '-f H '44 ':'- , 5 WWW wwv-Y W YVVY WW 1- - Y-Nm W , Y V -, x , . m?f:L,,g..,u'u-um' X ' . 'fwlwwwtemqx-w.:f-wff-'Wimwi 2-ffffrf,-.uf-ifx.:-bww.,.w+ur,-'gQ1.fw.wr:wwail,--1.w5.' ' v V , , f.-f' A -M 'f',-91 1' I 'i:nlt1v....,,, , ,, 'X x 1 i x N ,lk ,JI3 7 A . QJFH- 1 THEOROOYAL PURPLE Promethian Literary Society f OFFICERS President ........ ......................... ...... B o NNEYBEL ARTIS Vice-President ..... ....... M ERCY AYLESWORTH Secretary ....... I. ............... CLARA WALN . Treasurer .... ...... . .MINNIE KOPF Critic ..... ........... ............................................ ......... ............. I v A C ARMER Censors. ...... ....... C ARRIE WEIGI-IMANN, HELEN EvENs, ESTHER KOBER ROLL f BONNEYBEL ARTIS ESTHER KOBER 4 MERCY AYLESWORTH MINNIE KOPE 3 LEONA BRowN VIRA KuNTz Lf ESTHELLE BREws'rER EDITH MACLBLLAN 5' MARGARET DAWSON ETHELYN McCuLLA 1, ALMA CHRISTENSBN MARGARET MCNEILLY 7 MAYEELLE COLMAN HAZEL MILLER 45 DOROTHY Cus1'ER MARJORIE MONROE -I HAZEL DAVIDSON OLIVE NOBLE ETHEL Dl'I'l'0 ESTHER NORDBLQOM 1. HELEN EVANS PEARL PALMER MARIE FAUCETT FLORENCE RACKLII-'EE If MARION FIsI-I ORA SI-IEFEERII - IVLUCIA FORDYCE BERTHA STIEE r5'Ru'rH FOREST I-IAzEL SMITH me MAEEL FRAUENHOLZ Lucy STAHL 17 OLIVENE HAHN MINA TAYLOR :I Ib BEss HAUI-'WAITH CLARA WALN 19 GRACE JQSTEN CARRIE WEIGI-IMANN f 1'HAzEL KENNEEY WILMA WILCOX 9 'ANN KERCHNER RUTH WILDER 7 A I ' l l ,v Q WF: Fl eb if IF in ,T fs' lf li :I y . It H ik wi 11 :X 423 f A -,v ,I M 1 I, M M H H V lx: Mn ,I Ml -1 1 ,fi V, 193' , x , 1 H I wr Ei 1 ! 3 '1 'I X W1 w N w I N 5 l T 4 I N1 1 , , , A 1 1 w w. W M 1. N '-an 7 , '. , .7f.,,g id.....L.-,..Llflf'Tflliffllluf'TLTYLITQHIPTLIIYQAL.2Q3l..l5i 3Ti'I1L..'l3iLf.L.'.f... . 'if :l'E?2Ezu.xJ!5'nZ21a..u...n' i 1 .. ., .. , ,.-,..f1+ A- ., . , -v . :.-- .N ,U wnwm ,rl . W... .,-,ww -'1 v-,:-.0 .f-..-wm--.-.- Mr--1-www.-1 -mm Lan.. 41.1,-ae u-w-on -M u-...fm gn-nan--un.m.wu-.Lu mnwiw. .A-1-m.w,wwum umm ' 'iff sf-e cv W , L1 542 ' i V! x .. . . ,. . .. .,-. -111, M, , I ,Q ,,, -,pawn-.npr 1 v W ww, Q-f7,p-1 -W ,rv 4-.......,L. ,a. Ei 5 .1 - H -fu Q,11r-v.m1w-mann.-'nwwm.n.uwvu1-,.n-Q.V-..mv-vnwwummmug -,T - ,,,,:.a-:evra--f'21--1 -:W-:inn-...:: ,-:wnnnwwnan-nqwwmgmw gn-an-.mn 1 P n- ,kg .N ,A U, n-gumanv-v ,, Af, V' A e Q41 ww 1. i 9, in 4 IH R f w v 1 I 1 N ! 1 ..i,A,,,, ,,,,.,--n-v..f-W :.,...-...-1. ,, ...-,,um.,--.Q -... N.. .,-....-W..-f--u . . -- .4. , , -..:.-...qs--Nia, LJ,-g .w-.Q 4- - - - -A , , .1 I E , .1.agP , wx. 2 ,. f Ly. fr .V , W . W -. .. ......W ,fn ?-,..v-Y -..-by -, M JL. ,..,., ,.,, K .'. .....- -f,.n1qq-f.Wmf,.,,..q-,, ?,.-3-w,,.,-W,-,,.q4iw.-,,1,.f, L- -.,54,V..r:,,r,.l:i,.,a ',!.,,,.9,-5,-L.,.,,4m1-,4vq4qpg7-yfy 655-V , . , . ,, , ..,... ,. ,.. J, ,,,.,,.m., L ,.l..u ,Wfm.1.4.., w..,U, 4..,.u......,1v.wn1SA.f.:....,,.ufr,u..Q9A-mx. .,w....mK4.....1, :.Lwu...Q.q....-..,.,..... 1 r :wg 1 THE RO'YALq PUR LE 'N A. 'N In Gladstone Literary Society Fall Term ...... Winter Term ........ Spring Term ........ STEVEN BUTz' MERRILL ARBBRT LLOYD COROLUS HERBERT CHENOWITH ' w' PAUL CLAPP ' I.: CHARLES CROFUTT W 'G Lv RALPH DENNISTQN SEVILLE GASTON DoN JONES PRESIDENTS ,A I f ROLL ..........SEVILLE GASTON .........HORACE MCROBEILTS .........LLOYD COROLUS I U GEORGE LEE ' nn HORACE MCROBERTS ,-z DALE MERWIN r 5 HARRY NEWMAN , I L. N. PRITCHARD HARLAN RUSSELL ,,. ff HOWARD SMART 'fCHARLEs WILCOX V EARL YA1'Es ' PAUL BRACE mi, ,, ,,,. J, 4,. A :,.-,n..,,., ,...,. . i.,..i'-....J:,'.:.,.....',N .M ',,..:,.. i..',.., .. .s..,.. Q. M Y, .,,.Q:,-M.. 1.v.,,.4,a.,.a..M4, .w..n.mwf...:v.w.A....JLmzw-4w.L. w A.-.,. ,,.- ...M pf 51 Y A L. W U 31-3 W L ,,.,,w-.w,.,,,,n . X. ,. , W, nw. , ,.,.,,g,..m.., UL ,.W,QI,.,,i.,.L,,,,.:..M.,, ..,....x Wi.. ...... 1 .g..x, ,,,1...4,w awww.. 41. .-..,.,+,A,,..,.,k.,.1. .W .H ,-.,....n,1 .' w. ' 'Q H 59 .pn L? f ff 8 yr' IN I N ,J .fi 1 is ..v--L , ,,,, -4-:4.,::.::,e.w.:T:.:.p: - ..:a:..4..Wi :f MJ ,as W' ff- Q'-. .1-2 -X, ' .4 W ,fue 1, 1' -. x A v Q R 1 W, L7 may , I -' Fi 1 F' ly' Tx Y: 1. . -,fw-1-vw'-mmAv'--:-w.-'mwn-.:w:v-w-ww.w1'v-fwfr'-rwr'rw-m1mm'm1:swwmw1amwNfvS4:w.-wvx,xwwwvqv ,Mr-M A PY THE ROYAL PURPL. - V W 1 1 ' ' -,., Z, Clionian Literary Society Fall Term ......... Winter Term ........ Spring Term ......... I DORA BONSALL I, RUTH BEOCKMAN 9 MARIE BURNS U HELEN EI-IRKE -. GLADYS GROVES HENRIETTA HANKEN MAETI-IA HANKEN Q' ALMA HILMAN 12 ELOISE HoUsE ,Ib JBANNETTE HUF:-' W MARIE JAMISON I9 CHARLOTTE JOHNSON - I g.. 7 SECRETARIES .........JEANETTE HUF:-' .......SYLvIA ROBINSON .......LEILA ROEEY ROLL 12 EDYTI-I JoIINsoN I q DOROTHY JoN ES LL, CECIL Loucxs ILA EMMA MENGLE W FERN MILLER Q'4,ESTl'1ER NEWMAN ' ,q MINNIE NovAcK gf LELIA ROBEY, - 1 I MILDRED ROBBINS' 9, 7 SYLVIA ROBINSON. 9 Ti GRACE SMITH ' HAzEI. WALROD Qgf ,nw ' ,... ,N '-1 . T, 'M ,- .12-H ie 3 3 , -, if 4 2 A 1 f V Q 5 ,LQ M mlm- I N, ,L .A lg K N, -. 11 'G-ff '--,. ft '-N., , , , 1 -,, -nf : I : - A.- xg , W W ff, L.. ju ann: md N 1' - 'w-:ii 1 , W'-'RQ--.3 -.U -..'j- M W. A f. ' I W v.t'..,'-.- f 4 'f,g.,, 5 t fx L 1' 1 A ' 1, M121 5 'r nj K 1 , W'-a,,lLL:L,li 1 ' 'V-.Alix F -If-H-Wm ? . 5 if P 'A-an 55 - . Z ,L W S E U ,M . ,N ., , Eg 1, A R :ZH W ir, M-iw- if ,j ...ALL Jain' - 5 4 -. L- ' , 11 S '...l.,w - ,- 'l a ...fmt 1 - 1' E -321 1 A 2 A Y 3 5 '-534 i ! N- ,, 5 ic 'f QS il eg? T9 ii H 315 Ae wi F: H VI M N ii is E 1 Q? 22 I , gif M 1 ' Q 5 , , N, 1 f 2 lf fm 1 , I 4 i rg v ' , im M iv af :' 1 L 5' iz? L! ,Agn .wh Y 'X-. Iv., H, ' .gi-,, ir 4,3 qu .,,, ,QA nfl.. ,, , 53 Jim iz-, , .mn 1 ,1 N Ki, y .N gx . 'fa 1 ggi.. 11 21' 4. if se' -,E M HE ROYAL PURP Z4 King-Irving Literary Society Fall Term...:...... Winter Term ......... V Spring Term .......... ' CLRLA ANDERSON 'Lf PAULINE Cozmzs MARION JAYNB V, GAIL HARRIS 5'WILMA FRANK 5 FRANKII: FIsI-IBURN fp DOROTHY PUFFER ' rg PEARL MCCAMMON1 Of MINNIB THOMPSON' ,5 AHAROLD CRAFT V ? 'll 14.6-rn Lu M ' 1 w , , f PRESIDENTS ROLL ........RAYMOND' FAUccIz'r'r L ................ HoIvII:R BILL ..........CLnLA ANnIzRsoN If GIzoRcI: CARMRR LHOMER BILL V1 SIGMUND EIKBN '4' WILLARD HAAK RAYMOND FAUCCETT I ,I WILLIAM MCCAUSLAND - 'I LU'rI-IRR PLATTENBURGER -1 VERNON WEEDEN If LLOYD SNYDRR 2 f BEN WA'rI:RI-'IIzLn f 'fvff Qu Q fv-II-' IA. .I C M I THE UPPER PAL TAVERN :gn Sv A q 5'f l ip !! , ' W 5 wx? 1 k 'Tm fx H 3 , X X 1 f' j 7 1 X f I fo X 'N' .yb f ff 4 l ' h' 'U ' ' a J, S X , 'A ww H 5 , X , ' K- , QMVLV' , Q N f VK A 9 X IQ f le 11 1,,, f f x I XEHX f 5 THE ROYAL PURPL , f,.,, 4 Preliminary Intersociety' Debate December 3, 1915 QUESTION . RESOLVED: That the universal adoption of a single tax in the United States would be preferable to the present system of taxation. A ,Hfrmative-fl del phians CLARENCE HOLMES ARTHUR ELL1o'r'r RALL GRIGSBY Negative-Miltoniarzs ' GLENN MATHEWS VERNON VANCE NORTHRU1' VVINTERS Decision-Negative two AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE , ?1 -' 'F r ' , -.v ,Y-...m, ,., , ......,...,-v,,,, ,... -M,,.,,,,,,,-,-Y W ,, THE ROYAL PURPL W-, ...-,...,. ,,,, ,-,-.,.W.v. .J-........w-.. ...,,:....m. Preliminary Intersociety Debate December 10, 1915 QUESTION RESOLVED: That the German system of Industrial Insurance should be adopted in the United States, constitutionality granted. ' l Afrmative--Zetagathians ROBERT VAN PELT RALPH Biucos KARL C. SMITH N egative-A m plzictyons DONALD HUTCHINSON Mumss WALKER - JOHN J. KNIGHT Decision--Affirnmativc two AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE 5 .4 -- v S . - ., ' N ., I--I - X. Y C L Km. ,M N I wr f TW h ' ?W xwp izylli Im-:Q ' F '1'F',. 4 -My-A.-wtwwfmeom. f I,,.,,-ii.-I,mmfwMmmwwmgwW4:'. , I I TI-IE ROYAL' PURPLE I I saggy ! my 3g5g,Wggp,mgmu.M, W- V r Wspum-w,,' ..Yf,ILf-k m I W :-w , wpW,I,,- .. f ,...1..:.vil.I,.:v ,ni f.,.qI- ,wr -'I-. .. . A ... 1,,,..m gr4v.,.,g.,w,.I.1. 95,393,- Final Intersociety Debate April ll, 1916 I QUESTION RESOLVED: That the conservation of human resources involved in the employment of labor should be further centralized in the Federal Government. ' Amfllldfivf WILLIAM DARROW LYLII PECK rlQRUEMAN SI-IAFER , Negative PAUL STERNER HERSHAI. WHITEHEAD WILLIAM BIEDERMAN Decision, two for the negative AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE X- if 7 A o 7 H W A ll...M.,.. A 'uvmwwm-Msn! ' . 'xwffvfsvfin' l. , , A ... - -vu ..,..m..... ...... 'S-asus-V-..z:-.. H, .,,, W in 1 ,W ,, , , ... ,, ,. ,,,, 1 ,,,,:,w1--.....-. ...--.-... ,, ,W ,v THE ROYAL PURPLLL 1 ,vt W , l The Intercollegiate Debate Mm-ch 10, 1916 QUESTION Z . RESOLVED: 'l hat the minimum wa e laws should be anlied to factories, work g l I shops Cincluding sweatshopsj and department stores in the various statesf, At Nlount Vernon Cornell vs. Coe Afirnzative CARL E. P11412 Rov Wnls CLIFFORD C. BOYLAN Decision, two for the negative At Grinnell Cornell vs. Grinnell Negative DON C. KREGER MERI.E W. MANI,Y J. HERIEERT 'PEET - Decision, two for the aFf'irm:1tive April 7, 1916 At Appleton, Wis. Cornell vs. Lawrence College N egativv l DoN C. KREGER CARL E. PIKE Roy WE1s Decision, three for the affirmative AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE 7 A . 'ff' R n I I ' fffzm- . I' ',gE 2'II: L 'L JH'al5?'i,e. FL'.e.,Q.-.:..W4e.L-. .Amee-, ML'x':A9 - m e ' ..3,- wswf:,-fdfsz-.n':,mw Af Vim:-I -, .. 1.-ww Awwzmw-mwrnmemf v.uu,-1-,.-mwmv-'m-g.m.-r. .vm .1 mn-fnnwfm-ff---ww-mrrfmm-Q-f-.1 1-1-vm.::x w.v.',:.n-11-ngrf. 11- -.nmwnmrv-mm-E-gunman.-fm1mmm1 Lwnfzmnwgwfm-mfnf M f H E R Q Y Al. P U RfDL.E ' wwf -I -N .M li HMMif6n'41-P- '?W4I?12Wi5ZX5Q'WMi5-'d.-'m'f'-lw. f! N-an-'W ' --uf m.wL.wfn Mu,.mumQ-flu-Quan-Mupnmmw-nun.-.-.wp-ef .'.:, :.. - ..n-uuu........ .....a::.inn:....,.4-:.:g, -W.. .av.u:.--..n .7 1-vm-zmwumi. F.-.-.1-vmemana.-,-.....L-.fLv.n..v The Academy Debate was forfeited to the Gladstones by the Irvings. ,. . .f , TIIE LOWER PAL TAVERN ' .. v ef . + Qfbff' e f'1:p, v THE ROYAL PUR LE ' f. I '-SLN.. A 45. ,P i N:, !MMX ' Nix ' M 'dA N 3 04 J Q M , ' ' x L, ' f -, ....., 1 'XXX W Sf Q','.11ZL- ,ffm -if bhf- QM' f!'yW ' if .,.. M ' L -1 .-,. . 5 fl W 1 X X 4' hi K '.Ru1hI f.llu' X ff xg ff V Q! . X . 0 Z 4 f , 4 - f. W A IW' Wigan A XA iff' Ill, WY Aa 'I I' X.' 'W 'WW ZW X ?'f iW XA. 1 i Men 'S Glee Club JOHN L. CONRAD ....... RUSSELL IC. VVAITT .... CRAIG M. ARIIUCKLE ..... WILLIAM D. IDARRONV ...... Trvzorx RUSSELL xVAl'I'T, 'I'aIInton, Nlass. CLARENCE IVIAIIRITT, Redfield, Iowa WILLIAM I-IELLIS, Boston, IVIass. LUTHER PI.A'rTENnURo, Mt. Vernon, Iowa IVIERLE IVIANLY, Springville, Iowa RALPH DENNISCUN, Elmira, N. Y. VERNON VANCE, Newton, Iowa I'IAROI.D NIUSSELMAN, Lanark, Ill. XVILLIAM IDARRONV, Cresco, Iowa JOHN L. CONRAD, Troy, Ohio TRACY ,IPI-IOMPSON, Mt. Vernon, Iowa ! jo. V'- ,115-,,,, 1' .. ry'a:'.f , itll' If -I . XI, if .. I ww, 3' ,ig II ......Director .....Prcsiclcnt .......IVIanager ......ACcOmpanist Iinysfs PHILIP SCOTT, I':ll1ll1CttSbIll'g, Iowa IQVERETT YORK, Lisbon, Iowa IQEITH LEMON, Anamosa, Iowa IEIESLIE PARRY, Pierre, S. Dak. ROY SHIZLLEY, Iliarengo, Iowa CRAIG ARliUCKI.E, VVateI'loO, Iowa CLAUDE COTTINGHAM, Creston, Io PAUL PHILIPS, Sterling, Ill. I 1 f . 1,2 .IS VY. tr I f If' 53,1 .1 XVII THE RO'YAL PURPL. Program I II The Sword of Ferrara - - Bullard An Act from Up-to-date Grand Opera Cab Calm as the Night - - Bohm Smith tbl Come My Dearest 1 Hdam dela Hale 1240 Scene 'I he Tyler Flat' The Old Man in a Tree - M. Lang Cast: , Cal Clouds - - - - Shilling Mr. Tyler ...... Withersiz Toon Phillips tbl The Postillion W- Malloy Mrs. Tyler ........ Tetra zi Knee Helmsj ' Coppah Moon - - - Shelley Janitoro..Caru iso-called Cottinghanil Invictus - - - B. H uhn Chorus: Other residents of the Hat. III Three Folk Songs: Cab The Minstrel Boy Qlrishj Qbj .Drink to Me Only Cliinglishj Cel March of the Men of Harlech CWelshj Three Shakespeare Songs: Cab Oh Mistress Mine fbj Sigh No More, Ladies CCD I-lark, Hark, the Lark Arr. by Barrett -,i..M.1.-.M Men 's Glee Club Trip FROM THE MEMOIRS OF A DEAD BEAT When Mabbitt kicked the porter's stool under the car as he started to board the train in Cedar Rapids, he wasn't sure whether he was going to like the trip or not. In fact he did not especially care about any of the places until we reached Lyons. l i 1- , gl f III ,,l.. ,, - li -I -lv'-'M'-I-..41L..1gklfif!-Lizlii '....5l'......'h.lk.T.U.'Zl'.'.Tg..Yl,...f'... L..7?.' Vl'.C'lL... . ' 'few-'rmfmvw-nw-+e4.:'f'A'f-Q-W -:wwe-m:..':ww.n'iam auf: :L-A'-'Y --fp - :--A--....-1 ,,,?:-emma-Q-..t0-V --:wa-.--,, V f---...aL , -- Y W V Y Y V H HE ROYAL PURPI.. sl 4 ...W - ,.. , .- .. .. 1. an-,, V if -W-f2i::...li.-., Wylie-zaffgr frm-a........n...fia,.,....1 17YEL ... 2lxmM.....,...,,.Mi. -mf V hmm' . .L :A-vfiaffsa-W...,-dm-.r..uint,-,.1M-!'Zfs':-iq...:,mf4 - nu W ,,-..,, ,, F, H f ,W W In Anamosa our prima donna spent most of the day slumming in the State Re- formatoryf' When she reached the tragic part in the aria, all her beautiful, blonde hair came-down. ' Everybody was happy at Lyons. York found out a lot of things about the 'Jef- fry' that he didn't know before. 'Isn't 'Crane',Arbuckle a funny thing ?' That is what one lady said about him. When he was asked to say grace this year he was prepared 5-so were some of the rest. Mabbit was sure that Mr. Keeler was still in Mt. Vernon, but really he hesi- tated to say what he .was doing at present. Cottingham was simply overwhelmed when he, met his relatives. This was at Dubuque where we had a splendid crowd and amidst too-mufllch-ous applause, Prof. Conrad was 'forced to respond with an encore'. . . At Waukon, .we had a S180 house and poor acoustics. It was here that Tracy Thompson did the one really heroic act of the whole trip, when he rescued the pianist from an avalanche and ignomy. Had it not been for Tracy's quick work, the trip would have been discontinued. At McGregor it'was our privilege to see the Miff Tree upon which grew all manner of strange birds. Parry, Helms, Manly, Scott and 'Ourbustle' went out for a walk. When they got to the bluffs they asked Craig how it was up there. He found it all right so they viewed the Mississippi from the Heights. Plattenburg called at the post oflice for his laundry but it wasn't there. Lanark is a nice town in Illinois where we sang March 23. It was our good fortune in Sterling to be of real service. There was a good deal of anxiety among the natives as to the whereabouts of Paul Philips. We knew where he was, so we returned him to his rightful owner who sat near the front at the concert. She seemed very happy-Becoming somewhat bOl'Cd with letter writing, Vance and Den- niston decided to come to the concert and appeared about 8:30. There were 800 people present. Several unpleasant things happened in and around Port Byron. We rode to this place in and on a freight train. We left in the Mississippi. At Davenport, Craig got a raincoat and Shelley got left. Mr. and Mrs. Shaw assisted us in a very fine concert. Bill Walker made it very pleasant for us at Wilton. Some few repairs were necessary where Arbuckle and Mabbitt rolled against the stage wall of the school house. With the concert at West Liberty, we closed a very successful trip. Even Mus- selman was sorry he couldn't chew his gum any longer. Lemon and 'Slicker' de- cided that they really liked the trip. 'lf Q ff' D S M- W, my 'K Ns I 1 l I 7 i I , l w w v !-go 3? 1 I! I 1 I+ II ,Eff Q., 4,7 A? ,vi Law wa ...A -1 I .Jaw - g?.-L ., . , Q, L... W., A. .... ,-.,.. - -..LL M.- I. L. -, . ,, L , ,Q-VA W 4, :TEV-V-f First Sopranos ARVA BRADY ESTELLE BREXVSTER RUTH SMYTHE CLARA DEPEYW' IVIARY BARTHOLOAI Ew HELEN Roms First Altos RUTH MILLER PERSONNEL CLARISSE NIssLEY IRENE GORMLY HAZEL LLEXVELLYX PHYLIS BROWN S erond Sopranos CLARICE DILLENBERG ROMAINE GUILD ANN NIARIE SMITH BERNICE NIOORE Second xlltox RUTH WILLIAMS OLIVE GOULD DOROTHY DEARDORF EDNA OTT JESSIE MARTIN' AMANDA FENNER Girls ' Glee Club MISS EDNA CTQRAXLER ................. ........................ .... ------ D i 1' CCYOI' Miss AMANDA FENNER ...... ...... A ceornpillllsf MR. FRANK H. SHAW ..................... ....................-- -'------ S l IDCYVISIOH EXECUTIVE BOARD RUTH MILLER CLARIcI3,DILLI3NBI2Ro Group of Songs - - - Selected Waken, Lords aIId Ladies Gay - Noyes fTLEE CLUB Ojala ------ Patty Stair lndian Nlountain Song - C. W. Cadnzmz CTLEE CLUB Rosie O'l3rien - - Parker Fillmore Mlss BRADY Sunset ----- - Grieg Will o' the Wisp ---- Spross MISSES BARTHoI,oMIzw, GUILD, MILLER, WILLIAMS, OTT College Songs I GLEE CLUB RUTH WILLIAMS Jessie MARTIN Twilight Dreams - Gillet-llouseley CELEB CLUB W'ith a Violet ---- Grieg The Leaves of the Wind - Leoni MISS OTT Little Gray Dove - - - Sam' Rose in the Bus - - Forster Two Clocks - - Rogers liowl of Roses - - - Clarke CELEE CLUB In the Canyon ---- Dennee Capricietto ---- Jlloskozvski MISS FENNER Pot-pourri GLEIE CLUB Girls, Glee Club Trip At 4:45 on the morning of March 26, when twenty-three troupers filed off the C. Sz N. W. an hour and a half late and iII the midst of adrizzling rain, the Girls' Glee Club was finishing its first trip. Yet the blackness of the weather and of the hour were typical only of the trip's ending. Ten Days in a Suitcase or From Freight Car to Pullman, the story might well be entitled. The concert at Shellsburg on March 16 had been the iIIitial one. The banquet- ing which continued thru out was begun here, when a four course dinIIcr was served to the entire club. The evening's performance was held at the opera hoIIse. Here it was that Harold Boles acted as stagemanager, and the next morning, because of the postponed arrival of Prof. Shaw, acted as ticket purchaser. The secoIId day at Rockford, Ruth Smythe entertained at a luncheon, and the next morning the club was fed at a waffle breakfast by the CZIITID Fire girls. The concert iII the M. E. church was a successful one, in spite of the fact that the audience seemed inclined at Hrst to take too much for granted and had to be forced from their torpor by a specially patented device. A bumping dash to the station in a delivery wagon was Mary Bartholomew's aIId Helen Robb's way of catching a disappearing train the next morning. A W HF :FJ . s s 1 5 2 At Nora Springs, where the change was made for lylason City, Louis Schnedler was waiting with his car ready to show off his home town. Immediately upon the arrival at Mason City, the club was hustled off to Ruth VVilliams', where another luncheon was served by Gladys liate and Gertrude Filling. The audience here was appreciative. The girls Sundayed here also, and in the evening faced their largest audience. A union service of the Nlason City churches, held in the Cecil Theatre, with closed doors shutting eighteen hundred people in and seve1'al hundred out, proved to be a Cornell affair. Speeches were made by Prof. Stout and by Assistant State Attorney Sampson, Cornell '03, and two groups of songs were sung by the Glee Club. Hansel came next, altho the engine had to hunt around in the fields before the sta- tion was found. A concert was given that morning before the consolidated school and in the eve- ning the tiny church was packed. Hansell was the place where Jess Martin and Clarice Nissley camped out all afternoon because their host's baby had Hbreakings out. Here Ruth Smythe revived her horseback riding inclinations. Hampton was Edna Ott's home town and the customary luncheon was served, lvlildred Brown, ex-'18, being one of the guests. The concert at Hampton was one of the best given, due, perhaps, to the presence of Williard Clinton on the front seat. As an evidence of his popularity here, Prof. Shaw played by request several pipe organ solos. At Clarion, concerts were given at both the grade and the high schools, where Rachel Peisen and Paul Shafer are training Clarion's youths for Cornell. The evening's program was held in the high school building before a responsive audience, and was followed by a reception given by the Clarion teaching force, with Sup't. Kellogg, '12, at its head. Several hours of the next day were spent in the hotel in Eagle Grove, waiting for the Webster City train. There Lola and Leila Hughes were acting as managers, and in spite of the rain, a comparatively large audience greeted the girls at eight o'clock. The group of songs given the next morning at both of the Webster schools were received enthuiastically. The next day at Ackley, on the way to Union, after several hours of monotony, the moving picture manager was persuaded to give a private show to the Club. At Union that night, Irving Finger having acted as ticket seller there was another good house. From Union to Con1'ad is less than fifty miles but it took five hours to cover the distance. Four of them were enjoyed at Gifford and the last stage of the journey was made on a freight train. Romaine Guild did a solo number entitled Home Sweet Home upon arriving at Conrad and that evening one of the best concerts of the trip was given. On Friday, April 7, the home concert was given and that with a concert two weeks later at VVyoming, concluded the season's work. CLARICE NISSLEY f ' - e wr ' .W-.....f.4..m-.-. .w.f...-.,.-.v-...uv-.-.-..--..w-a., no ......i.- 5 J? Ag. ini' WS' Mx r' ,Eff 'EQIIJV' if 1 N . s i 5? 5 'i 3 .E , il , 2 'A . ii ,Q 34 Ei fa 4? .. ,i N: 1 , , 11 U ,X 11 ,. gi 3? is rv Q .U .5 42 3 'E 1 'J 'iz ,v 1 15 ,. F2 :X 1 1 M 9: . Y. . ,, I N it ng-.ff I' ,.,r,. 5-V, kj.. H11 nf. X' .64 1 No.. Orchestra OFFICERS Dnector .... ....... H ORACE ALDEN NIILLER President ..... ............... R ORERT SMYTHE Segretary ......... ELDON RAMIGE rl rcasurer ......... ..... L UCILE HICHMAN Concertmcistcr .... ..... J ULIA SEILER SHAWV First Violin .IUIJA SEILER SHAW Lucv BOYD CELADYS REICH DEWITT WILLIAMS HULIXERT CHEEVER SYLVIA ROBINSON Srfond Violin ELEANOR CURRENT IRMA ADDLEMAN LUCILE I-IICHMAN MARJORIE GRIITFITPI ELEANOR BROWN DONALD KNIGHT HOWARD ZEA MEMBERS Cello JOHN R1cGLmmN EMERSON BURKHARDT PAUL BRACE Bass LYALI. BRYANT MRS. LUELLA MILLER ROY BROWNELL Flute VERNON SHIPPEE THEODORE WEEKS ' Clrzrirwf ELMER SHERRILL JENNIE PADAN Oboe LAXVRENCE CLARK t. .:.:..g4r4.Wnn1-rival'-.f...:,4.. - saga, .ap-.Ng v A-. .AA ,:.,,.,..V,g:,u,',gfMw 'j' f lu: ....-5 3 1 i, THE ROYAL.'PURF'LEi 1 lr 5,97 R i 1 Trombone THOMAS KEPLER JAMES BALZ LEO VANDERHAM Piano LA URAXVVILCOX French I'Iorn ROE HOWARD ROBERT SMYTHE Viola i MALCOLNI DOWELL HAROLD JOHNSON Cornet ELDON RAMIGE MARGARET ADAMS Drums PAUL RICHMOND DON STARRY -11 17291916 Orchestra Trip L The spring trip of the Cornell Orchestra came to a close last evening when they played at St. Paul's Church, Cedar Rapids. Covering familiar territory, yet appearing in a few new towns, the trip was more than successful, the orchestra bringing home more and better press notices than ever. i The orchestra numbers were always well received, the full praise of which is due Professor Miller, who has so untiringly worked with the orchestra through the whole year, drilling them for this trip. It is unusual indeed that a group of college students are able to play so ably and so appreciatively the class of music that appears on this year's program. It means earnest and extended practice as well as a certain amount of ability. The soloists who appeared with the orchestra were alsosuccessful. Mrs. Shaw, as violinist, never failed to please. Miss Clara Schmickle, as reader, was always recalled two or three times. Her work deserves the highest praise. Miss Lucille Randall, vocalist, possesses a distinctive interpretive charm and always won her audience. A novelty was given by the bell solo by Paul Richmond which always won a deserved en- core. Mr. Eldon Ramige appeared as cornet soloist in a very pleasing piece and Roe Howard as French Horn soloist. The territory covered this year was rather extensive yet served the purpose of ad- vertising the school, as students come from every town visited. The itinerary follows: Calamus, Maquoketa, Ashton, Ill., Franklin Grove, Ill., Wheatland, Iowa, Monti- cello, Manchester, Independence, Waterloo, Belle Plaine, Cedar Rapids and the home Concert, ROE HOWARD. ' Zeit? L: v1 1. 6, . . J yx f if Z. 1? in H :- fe T1 2' ai if :L sg 5 ?: 4 1 5' s ,Q ia T! 1 ii E1 11 i is if ll L 1' Q si 9 2- 4: ., ,. iz if ef 'L H X, 1 . Y, , 41 : fr if 4 .1 9, v ii 5? 5? is 1' fl E ' s ? f 1 - ...-..M'.- ' ' 1 I 5 Z , . I 1 . 1 1 L . , X.. rx Q xf . Q., , :HW ,. N1 if .12- . . u 5 EP- -1 Y' x ar ! The Cornell Banc? Clarinet T. SHAFER ELMER SHERRILL FRANCIS REICH LAWRENCE CORK KELLY WELCH Cornet A. RAMIGE CECIL KING LLOYD CAROLUS A. HULSE C. W. MERCER M. DENNIS NV. BIERDERMANN 1...-ai: , H , W' W , ,f 11' -Q-avg: PERSONNEL E. A. RAIXIIGE, Director Picfolo V. SHIPPEE 1lIf0 ROY SHELLEY ROE HOWARD ROBERT SMYTHE RAYMOND GRANT HARRY RIEYVMAN Tenor M. DCDWVELL S. BUTZ Baritone JOHN KLIMO LEO VANDERPIAIN'I ln: ' 3 r-' Af ff f ffbib, I A Kr 475' A .mmm Trombone THOMAS .KEPLER JAMES BALZ JOHN RIGGLEMAN HORACE MCROIIERTS Tuba FLOYD STANSRERRY HUI,l3ERT CHEEVER Drums DON STARRY PAUL RICHMOND .R-n..4...., M... ..,, ., A . VWW. 'W' y - g 4 - .,. -uma: ,'.m.,,ym1fwwv.uu+4.:w:w'w-ww-Nwwf-1-ev-'W,u-ww.ww.: wwwWMUI WTHEQ ROYAL PURPL 'F' 'ff--Mffww-wwM-W-w-wwV.wwmnwW-.A-.M...ffM.w-.1-,W-magnum V, , V , ,, , f -my 4 W-'F' 0 xwwxfx f Gif Q V W QI Yi is x i X 7 HH ' W N a f -ity' 1 X. A f 'El 5 ' XX Xl jf N4 Z V! will X Rx X4 WZ' eel-N K 7 w gx, XNQUK fix xx L2 Z A f ' I f 45 ' XM' x x H 'W ,fn N W N ff N A fgz X W, UNM M yfj W Q XA fx 44 M g- N 4 Xu XX J ..:!:: .... ' ,' f B kuiqfilllf I X'KXm3' Z B! aa X IU 2 is ' I I U 14 .M X A V kfijjw Bw r 'X Q NQWBX WW R A, REUGFOU Y. M. C. A. Cabinet President ....... Vice-President .... Administration .. Religions Education ..... Campus Service .,... Community Service. Secretary '.l1l'C2lSlll'Cl' .... . fr,.,,,. ya., gf v. ., Y- 4 ,-'S-Pu rv, ......NVn.L1AM BRUANDON .......HERllERT Prim' HANTONE JOHNSON .....HARm' 'TERRr2l.1. Roy NICClJLl.0LIGI'I KENNITH DANSKIN ......CHARl.Es EBIERSOLE H. ANDREAE V lea af' . X I Q ,ww 1 . X , 4, nf-rf . .f,ff.4.-.4.4.,.i. .-H. ,....-..w. nf, EX WT. fi, 69 NSF- .. 4 Rift F' Y u xisliiigfsxx ix 1- Mm JLQJT. .. .'f.',:..,-Y.-. .' -. ,fu 5'z!vn't1gh':r s -Lew.i,.1.-'f::-fviilzyt-?wGfgvjf:.,,S' in ,Qfs,ig5,.iyii.',m7,,.p'-'grng.q4,, ,fr:4f3'15r3v!igg,y5xi:i,g,gp 1.4.7, .....--.. ..... W .,....... . . -,.......,Mg-1-ia...-.f.e.i.a:f.m::-..1-vw-mi1:a.w-an-m--.,.. :av-mr.. .....wswnn--v.:-1mm.f+a,m- a-.-...W-N 1-f- -.-.- -af..-Y-rr.-Wi .aw .fn HE ROYAL FJURFL. ww 1fw.afr.'f:.2.fA.. .f..:.f.-. ,. wr.-f .f.r.fear.w-flaw.,wf.+re:f:., g.r..w..+-.s,. r..g4i.z.mrs.m- f - f .....---.- ,., --.M ,..i...,.,.....-......m........... ,.c,M.........a..M......-.....,..... X :mg Y. M. C. A. From the opening day of the college year when the new arrivals were given help and instructions by the wearers of the Information badges, until the present writ- ing. the Y. M. C. A. has been a conspicuous factor in the college activities of the year. Altho we were handicapped by the problem of introducing a new plan for holding our devotional meetings, we believe that the change to Thursday evening has been a suc- cess. No one desires to return to the old system. The average attendance has been above that of previous years and interest has been keen. We have secured capable leaders both from the Faculty and from the students. Our regular monthly vesper se1'vices held jointly with the Y. W. C. A. have been profitable and well attended. We consider ourselves fortunate in numbering among our speakers such men as Dean Birney, President Flint, Rev. J. W. Holland, Dr. R. F. Hurlburt and others of equal ability. Our employment bureau, conducted by Roy lVIcCullough, has been unusually elii- cient and extensive in its work. Mack's office in Room 16 was filled with job- seekers every afternoon during the early part of the year. Few went away without a job. The Bible Study department has been working under a new plan in cooperation with the churches and has been very successful. The special religious meetings con- ducted by Dr. Brown of Rochester, N. Y., were a source of inspiration to all who at- tended. Dr. Brown's simple, forceful messages won the heart of every hearer, and created a new Christian atmosphere in the college. lVIr. Danskin, chairman of the Gospel Team work, sent six week-end teams to neighboring towns. During the holiday vacation, teams were sent to Conrad, Palo, Le Claire, and Alburnett. About thirty men were given some profitable experience in this work. The' number of decisions was not as large as we had anticipated, but we are confident that much good was accomplished. The success of the Association has been due to the spirit of cooperation between lVIr. Brandon and his cabinet, and to the loyal support of the men of the college. We wish for our new officers a year of even greater achievements. HERIRERT PEET. 71 . I' Y. W. C. A. Cabinet President ........ Vice-President .... Secretary ..... 1 '1 reasurer ................ Religious Education Voluntary Study Finance .............. Social Social Service .... Publicity ..... ......RUTH FLANIGAN .....CLAR1ssE NISSLEY ......HAZEL ERICKSON ..............RuTH LANE .....FLoR12NcE BROWN BURNA MCCULLOCH .BLANCHE SWINDELL FERN OLSON ............ARvA BRADY .......NELLIE PLUMMER .-...J 1. ,- - ..-- .-.:.:-..--f..-mf-,...i-:...N 1- .: H '.I9'1a, 2' NS 5 W -....,..,..,..........,m..:.lifs1.fQgm S ,M 3 ffm. .ff ig' lj The Y. W. C. A. To realize a geniine spirit of friendliness among the girls of the school, and to bring Jesus Christ into the day's routine have been the ideals and the aim of the Y. W. C. A. At the beginning of the year, an entire new enrollment was taken, so that every girl was made to feel anew the importance of the Association purpose. For the new girls, a reception was held during the first week of school in the Bowman Hall parlors. Here everyone met everyone else and became informally acquainted. The Geneva interest has been very strong this year, and many are planning to at- tend the conference next summer. Last spring, the rally luncheon brought the Geneva spirit very definitely before the girls. The luncheon was served on the crest of the hill between Science Hall and the Chapel, just at sunset. The menu cards were made of little green canoes and the t0aStS printed inside were entitled, The paddle, The good, stiff breeze, The lazy back and The under-current. When the conference date arrived, seven girls embarked, and came back with such enthusiasm for the youngest child of the Association, the Geneva Club. This club has been organized for the purpose of uniting Geneva enthusiasts in a unit of common interest, and for prop- agating the same race of enthusiasts indefinitely. The Bible and Mission study work of this year has been made unusually suc- cessful. Small group classes were held in the Methodist and Presbyterian churches, this system being called the Student Sunday School. Practical mission work has centered about our sister college in Foochow, China. A personal interest is taken in this, our younger sister, because of joy Chai, '16, who leaves this summer to take the science department in the college. The social service committee has furnished a new rest room in South Hall, where cab- inet and committee meetings are held. The regular Association meetings come on Thursday evenings each week. At two of these President Flint led in a joint meeting with the Y. M. At another, Dr. Betts gave a talk on The Psychology of Alcoholism. Dr. Robert E. Brown had charge of the special religious meetings in the winter. He struck the note of every-day-ness in religion, and made the friendship of Jesus Christ a more vital thing on Cornell campus. ERMINA MILLS. ..-., ,,f1 v 'v 4. i 'z 51 5 E if ii ii if 11 Ji 3 i 1? i I W 22 i'3 J ai is 3 il 533 El? 4 , ,M 5 1. hi ii 5 ai H iii 3' ii if 1 1 il if ,i 3' e 5 ii M' if :L gk ii fi if il 5? 5, 1 U Si 3 li 1! w U H 5 I ' 5 515 iii N 1 Q! W 1 3 g 14 ll ay + el 11 3. fi , 1, i if x 'x ii an iii n..mn--1-n J x 1 --f'mm.u':e'sa.-w .mg red:-:fa-..A,A,..4m-..f.., Q ,f,,M,,g,Wg.g,L,1u1...,5: r, , ., V . .Q ww ,. 'APM .. . . ,, .-.,,.m.,,, ..,-+ l H- v 'Wi' -wwf' V v,l,,wv,v.44f.ffw:a-aku W I'-ww-mwe'l:4.,a,1.11-Mixmm: fx -u.,v.,-g...qg,- m:.q.,,5:,,-gflpmmgw-vp. M-Wg'r.,nq f,,4W,,,!,,,,4g,wiggg,1g1f,,,,',a ,,- ., ,G-.9 .V , W- f,. ,H ,,H,,mv.i . . - .V Q, AAL. The Volunteer Banc? CARL PIKE, President HARRY TERRELL, Secretary KENITH DANSKIN RUTH LUSTED WARREN SCHMIDT JOY CHAI GAIL HARRIS IsADoRo PANLASIQUI BONNYEEL ART1s HELEN FAUSKE KATHRYN McINTosH 7 A n - N I . E f f ..:ZQIff'TT1fTl f 1'T.Yi 'i .HC .3 .. W. ..qqj'. '5 '!'.5 K '.-y,..T'j1,, ,jJ2I'.'.R'fT?....-1.1 ......-..,,. .,,..... - az--..if 1.-4-wmdemaatwsswwfe-om. : - A -smwtuuliatwv H. ,. 4 :....J., 1. .va-.af req.-N.-qu-i-new-sex-.sn----fn af mf f.-nm.. s-.,..5..a...-mr i.ma.u-..,.w--u.m-1.-p4m,wun1n.x.m:1M-r ann.-M-tqaxwam.-.1- HE ROYAL PURPL., .4wf.-.-.-1--f+www---sw:-mv-wav'wff.-vmmtfmqxiv---i--w...W.r-m---r-w---- is iw-iq..--, -,nf-Q., -.W ,gf , 'M,---,Q-f-:wi-2,-rw-':uvH:1,?Tw'mnrrvs::-..'-w-p7mw.- ..........a...,.-.... 1 - ..,............t ,.......-.,.,g- . f.-..-F7 ..-...... f1 1 mai 1.f....m-. - A.: U A-A..-na ra.. ...1 J -..rn ,..s.....,a....s..-as-.-W..-f ......,..,-..-,.m..,...-..f.-.a...... .en-...mg-.1..-..-A-.m. .U-nm-.,,.nJm-nur...-.u.ww.n-.v.,wm..f-. .-., The Prohibition League OFFICERS President ............ ......................... ....... E L MER D. S1-u2RR1LL Vice President ........ ....... D oRo'rHY I. WILSON Secretary ............ ...... W ILLARD THRAMS Treasurer ..... ....... CHARLES HARRIS Reporter ................ ....... J or-:N RIGGLEMAN State Secretary ....... ..... O SCAR ANDERSON State Orator ......... ........... ............................. W 1 LLIAM BUELL True to its traditional motto, the Cornell I. P. A. Does Things, the local league has again made good this year. This habit of doing things was shown by William A. Buell, when on March 31, he wrested from competing schools the first honors of the state I. P. A. oratorical contest. This together with the victory in the Old Line Contest by last years I. P. A. president, W. Warren Anderson, places Cor- nell's oratorical reputation in an enviable position. Can this position be retained by duplicating these victories next year, thus making three state triumphs for Cornell in three years? Wide attention has also been gained by the Cornell league by its service as host to the state I. P. A. convention on March 31, April l, and 2. At this convention two innovations of the local organizations were featured. The one A Model Tem- perance Library, exhibited a group of the best temperance books and displayed methods of catalogueing and classifying all liquor problem study materials in a col- lege library. The other feature, A Scientific Temperance Display, was an ex- hibition of temperance facts by posters, illustrations, and first hand examples. Both of these exhibitions proved timely for forwarding temperance propaganda efficiency. In addition to the exhibition features, an excellent force of speakers were provided. rg-,ah f -3 .'7gi.n. h V . ' ,Q . gm, A i I 1 . T NN. 133'- silij ' 2. the chief of whom were State Attorney General Cosson, State W. C. T. U. Presi- dent, lVIrs. Ida B. Wise Smithg National I. P. A. Secretary, Harry S. Warrnerg and University I. P. A. Secretary, H. J. Burgstahler. The theme of the convention, Constructional Citizenship, was echoed by each of the speakers and will be re- echoed throughout the state by the increased activities of the many leagues that found new information and new inspiration at the convention in lVIount Vernon. Among the agencies that have accelerated activities by the Cornell I. P. A. was the report of a survey team which during the Christmas vacation investigated the temperance situation in East Iowa. This survey covered the largest of the river towns and a number of interior towns. People of every shade and variety of opin- ion on the prohibition question were interviewed in breweries, saloons, dope cure institutions, jails, factories, libraries, Y. M. C. A.,'s, churches and colleges. The fighting strength of both temperance and liquor advocates was noted. It was found that the dry sentiment was large but scattered and inactive. The common tendency among many prohibition advocates was to view passing temperance events as specta- tors, not as participators. Opportunities for local constructional temperance pro- paganda was neglected. Of the visible activities some were misapplied, inadequate and ineffective. Cooperative organization and effective leadership was lacking among factors that could have helped meet the needs of their respective communities. On the other hand the wets were well organized and were alreadyiplanning to defeat constitutional prohibition in 1917. These revelations showed more clearly than ever that wide visioned college trained leaders are necessary to help direct modern social and political movements. That the I. P. A. has a distinctive place in helping to find and develop such leaders is apparent. Activities yet to be completed this year will be the finishing of the deputation team schedule, the delivering of the home I. P. A. orations, the concluding of the Demands for the Temperance gospel teams have been continuing thruout the year. Of the lecture course one number, The Psychology of Alcoholism, has been given by Professor Betts. At the home oratorical contest Cornell's next year state I. P. A. orator will be chosen. Fifty dollars in prizes will be given to the winners by J. L. Tennant, an alumnus of Cornell. The absentee voters law by which all students of voting age can vote by mail if away from home will be explained at chapel and by booklets that the state is printing at the suggestion of the local league. In spite of the fact that Iowa went dry this year the Cornell I. P. A. has enjoyed the best year of its history. Activities have been redoubled, greater fields of use- ion of efforts has been made. In the fulness have been found, and a better applicat words of a recent newspaper comment, The Cornell League has been especially well conducted, the predominating policy being not of prejudice for a cause, but a . . ' ' . - 7, desire to do practical and therefore effective work for its advancement. O. A. A. Winner of the State I. P. A. Oratorical Contest VVILLIAM A. BUELL 0 E E5 pf A, M xx . v 'IZA 1 MILMZN A 55: - J WW, ff l' ' 1, U , jY ' I N , .,,' If YR V 'J f 7 ff fp YN Wg Q' J? X' W f ff! 1. M 7 76' X S ' L 'E-Qf a fifg ' , 'lf f , , ' 'ul .- - N- Hx . ' - 1 f ,, ?.T'4 ' M ,I y u,'Q,l N - 1 fx' -N W' -Rx ' V ,731 IMEWX -12 3' 'A- J w H' 1, H -brjgovbfgvb Lev -All .......4A.'-fdw Ebb--' ' H 'flaw-' 0 x A I -1-mf X ,, W, - N xx I t K X - 1 ,I M. hx' 5T..de,q1- ul XM 'LH- wdx I 5 W' ' ' lf. ..,...,,A r ww -'.5..y.Q...4-amwmwnsn ' H E R O Y A L. F' U L .,,. -..MAL 4-1--L+-L14--P -- The Pep Club ALLANSON, President MANLY, Vice-President SHERRARD, Secretary JOHNSON, Treasurer ANDRAE BENTON BRADY BRANDON BYERLY FRE1 Kamen N1ssLEY ? ff. f' sm' e .- e - ,eee T '3 ,f UQ, 1 'LQ N -- H'r1 N1ii ?'41IrIf'1'-1'-ff - '-L-in-4--wwrmurmaawnmswqwmnw.-W, -. .. ,w,.,,,.,5r...sAnmi, THE ROYAL. PURPL. E -' wwf- .2-vi -V . , , , . . I - I A I. A. r .rf-.cz..-w,..gs.w-.-+f'i,..-N. eu., ., . . ..M.f,.f.-.M.,,,,,.,g, The Autobiography of the Pep Club I am a machine of twelve parts created four years ago because the student body realized that it needed an organized force to lead it. Each spring I am overhauled and repaired. The parts that have worn out are taken oh' and thrown into the junk heap called Alumni, and new parts are added to fill their place. This year as usual, I was cranked up and started the first school week in Sep- tember. My heaviest work always comes in the fall, but this year I have had to work harder than usual. You may judge this for yourself by what I have done. I arranged for the annual Tug-of-War between the Freshies and the Sophs, the stunts at the mass meetings and games, chose Brandon, Benton and Maiily to dance and wave themselves in front of the rooters at these mass meetings and games. Then I started the band agoing, bought suits for them, arranged for the Homecoming Day, and bought the Hit-'em-Harder banner. When I saw that the students were starving for lack of amusements Cand I, famishing for moneyj, I gave several big feeds, the Ratto entertainment, started the Colonial Party, and gave the Sans Souci banquet. As a machine, I am used in various ways. Every body, from the students down to the faculty uses me as a stone crusher to mash all their problems which they have been unable to break up. Among these problems has been the Society question. President Flint uses me as a chain to connect himself up with the students. The students have me generate pep for them. Were you to take me apart, you would find the twelve various parts to be the twelve busiest students in school. But when I have work to do, never is any of the parts too busy to work for me. C. P. B. 74 . ...Nl I X C Club ,K .-.fu .1 -, f L . 1 1 4 .r x A. . , J -, S , xg, .3 . '43, x ' ..,,3 1 I. a I J The CH Club The work of the C Club this year is truly worthy of comment. Organized with competent leaders, including twenty-seven active members, much was accomplished toward raising the athletic standard in Cornell. This year the C Club has undertaken and succeeded in equipping a magnificent lobby room for C men, starting the movement to remodel the Varsity locker room, promoted the best of Cornell's successful invitation meets, and above all has strength- ened the organization itself, brought men closer together and encouraged them to unite in all its efforts. The C Club is one of Cornell's strongest organizations, and never before has it demonstrated its ability and importance as it did this year. The annual C Club banquet occurred March 6 at the Hotel lVIontrose. Every man attended, and the old Cornell spirit was manifested. For five years the C Club has held an Interscholastic Track Meet here in the spring as a means of getting the high school men in this part of the state together, and to influence them to come to Cornell. Theclub has been very successful in getting men to Cornell. OFFICERS M1Ln0r,1N ......... ..President MANLY Vice-President CAMPBELL ------ Swrewry JOHNSON ,,,,,, ..... 'I 'reasurer BOYLAN HUGHES ETTER ZEHR VVINKLER TORRANCE FRE1 MOYER PECK Howxnzn M1Lnoi.1N TURNER EYESTONE ALI.ANSON BRANDON KN1G1.1T MANLY BYERLY SMYTHE WALKER LUSTED BOWEN GETIIMANN MEADE Gmcsny C,xMPnELL I-IUNT PIARTWELL JOHNSON 'ia ., 4 ,fini nv P4 l,i.yf,-ugv' I V If cg . :fy ..,,...,......,.........,.,..,..,.,,., ...,,.,. .4... - WX-'T' gy 'Sk-A57 ,gdv 7 ' ff Y' fx? E .dh , x N. at 'rf'r-1 - -'-A--rw ff : 1 H- '- --'ff---'-f' vw-'H --'1-'v-ww--M-rw-mlrwnw sf- v--V-fv-. -.isa .. A- .Y--.1-fv----L----I:-lfrv -.-....n ,..n.u1.a.-.:s4..s.J...g.r.--1A.fL-A .......-....-...Q1:-- - V A--------L A - -- -----4 - - ----A - -4- 14 wfmmux- H, ,,, ,W -:::- , , -W Y H , V HE RQYAL PuRPn.t --mf-..,..., -....,,,,.,- 5,01-'-,-,-'g.w, ..N.,.,.-,1..,.. ..,. -U-A .,....,--.-an .. .., ,wwf ..,...W-, .,, .,,,., ,,, Q .....w....-.mnm.As..w6n.u1...n+-!n9-eLu.ran4-k -' -....ifg,.-.nu -fn' A ' ' The 1917 Royal Purple Stain Iiditor-in-Chief ...... ....... C 1.1 worm P. BENTON Assistant Editor ...... ...... H ENRY R. FRIEI Business Nlanager ........... .... ...... - I OHN J. KNIGHT u Assistant Business Manager ..... ...... D OUGLAS l ARSONS .CLARICE Nissmv Literary lfditor ..................... ..,.. lVIen's Athletics ...... VVomenls Athletics ....... lllusie .............. Student Life ...... Art Editor ...... Organizations ...... Religious ........ Joke Editor .... .. .......CLARK BOWEN ..............ARvA BRADY Wu.LmM DARROW FLORENCE BROWN 'RUTH NIILLER ROY MCCULLOUOH -IOSEPHINE HUNT CLARENCE VVISE Photographer .,,, .... I' .IELVLN HAESLAR irq is w ,fi rn . ' 'I ' 1' xl O Qzi. -.f 'M B fagm' Wil. ' ,- 'Q -fl-V by I 71 LA 3 CLASS OF 1915 SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS ,... ..,. ...... ..,.,.,., ..,.,.. ,.,,. ,.....-.,v,,....,..,,,.,,-.......,.... ..,-.....,..,.,.., . --'-::.-..11.-:rw:-,.1.'-I,,-:.:,:3,:..5..,1'.'..:.:,-1,31-,.,,:. a.,-.JH -jg.:'-.',...,3-:-I-.1-1.121.15ZH,--,-4,-:::..:,-5.-. ur wr- '- ..' x,,:,,.!.u..,-g.',:'g'. .....,,..-,..................,-,-.. ..,,...., ,,...,.,. ...f,.,1,1.,....,. .v. ww .. ,.f. 1 ,why-.. -H Z wld!-'.,'1 .- '5:.:f-,:. -.sq-, 1.-. .U Alf- :-X' as '- , . A J I W v' I' ' f Jw , mm W I H -x Q ,' x 'f 1 My l ,f2:,. 'grnf-' ff l X I M 2 'H Il 4 ' I rf Q :M Wu sip R mx ff , el I B K W f ls rr IN ' wa Y X w we all are gatbercb here, wha else no refuge bah. l we all are gathereh bm, we fouls- Xvi 11Ebe5ah,tbe6lah,tiJeJl!lab. -Ubnmas Md EW .7 BOOK FIVE .- -. -... U.. -f.,-......-. ...-1.....-.-.mf-t...........-.' S13 -. CALE DAR March Back to school again. The Seniors' new caps make their first appearance. Trin- ble brought a Flower to class and gave it to dear teacher. I took Dorothy to the Orchestra concert. Steiner lectured upon Immigration this evening. April Paid up all my bills today. Have fifty cents left for the rest of the month. Girls' Demonstration. D- is some dancer. Easter Sunday. D- looked fine in her new hat. Gladstone-Irving debate. Slung hash at the Girls' Grex. Final inter-society debate. Dr. Yarros spoke in chapel. C Club picnic at the Pal. Hope I will be a member next year. Snapshots were taken on the campus and then shown at the Star. I looked awful. Took D- to the lVIen's Glee Club concert. It was fine. The Girls' Glee Club and the Orchestra went to C. R. Nodate tonight. The Drake Relays. We got two thirds and one fourth, tying for third place. Grinnell baseball game, 6 to 5. The track team left for Knox. The Senior-Junior baseball game was a comedy of errors. Cornell won the dual with Knox, 74-48. On the trip home Fackler tied his feet to the seat in the train for fear that someone would run off with them while he slept. H ,, . 1 Ham spoke in chapel. He told what is the difference between life and love. Life is one fool th'ng after another. Love is two fool things after each other. Pretty good for the old boy. I-lle offers to lend the students money to attend the Festival. Iowa baseball game, 7-2. lf West had let me play, I bet we wouldn't have lost. ' lWay Festival began. Cornell 6, Highland Park l. fs- 5 A .fm-ff . -Wim 5 'MN-AA .vf::f.r5ssA H, :fri-27 '5 5-sr'-T. ' .3-' Y gy 5 Yung? iz. F 11 13 21 31 22 -' - . ' '14-fivbidlon-+wv'..uenm'?v Aww'-' --'J f .im 4 ..e4NYw1vmb-aflv0!1-.a-..m-1J-- 'fu--N-'mp win mr. . -Q. .- 5-.1 ,. N, ..,.,, ,,. HE ROYAL PURPL. r - 7 f Htmwmvdwaum.u-wvmiwwfml...-,u.m-.wwfuvaxx--Km.'-.-.enmawsranmamuixm-.-w,..iu1-V. -,mf -i.,.,...:.. w.'-- .. -. ,. .. .. f. .... 4. May l Dad only sent me twenty-five beans. I wonder how he expects me to live on that 3 Phoebe Mueller tried to burn down the Science building. 4 Mildew made a speech for the Interscholastic Meet. Stout thinks that the girls ought to help entertain the boys, too. 5 Girls' Glee Club concert. Torrance played the part of the villian and switches OH the lights in the fireplace. I 6 Party at the McLeod House for the Girls' Glee Club. 7 Carleton game. We won, I-0. 8 ' Caleton game in the morning, 5-0. The lnterscholastic Meet in the afternoon Banquet in the gym and then the Dawn of Tomorrow in the evening. Night shirt parade. The Gordon House girls duck when the lights are turned on them. Keister gave a war talk in chapel. C. J. Smith says that the whole Journalism class are cowards. 14 Funeral of Mrs. Nicholson. 15 Conference Meet at Coe. Prohibition contest here that evening. 18 Coe beaten in baseball, 7-4. quit. Ames beaten, 5-1. 22 State Meet at Des Moines. Highland Park game. 23 Got a call-up for cutting chapel. 29 Dual meet with Coe. out and gave hot bellies to those who were not at the meeting. Went out to the Pal with D-. It started to rain while cooking supper. Got soaked walking to the car. MacCollough and Pete Jemsen took 05 their shoes and rode on the car barefooted. Had a swell time, even if it did rain. A 7 A .. . J, .i .. ... Cousins lectured. His speech was full of spirits. I thought he would never Girls' Glee Club give a concert. We had a business meeting in society. We went June 1 Lots of bills coming in. Guess the folks will have to sell the old red cow. Coe was beaten in the tennis match today. 3 Pep Club picnic. They say that Blake ate another green worm. 5 Home Meetf' Freshmen won. 6 Butzloff went to the Rapids again to meet his girl. 9 Exams began. ll Cavalry charge under Doc. Knight. Knox gave a heck of an exam in French? C 'ED1TOR's NOTE.-The faculty censored the rest of what was said about this exam.j September 13 Arrived in Mt. Vernon. It seems good to see the old bunch again. Gee! the Freshmen make the grass look brown. I wonder if I looked as gawky last year as some of them do this. Had a lot of.fun acting as General Information Bureaus, misdirecting the Freshies. 14 I enrolled today. Stood five hours in line. 15 First class at 7: 45.i I got up in time for chapel, which wfas formally opened the college year. I'll bet the exercises will be as dry as ever. We gave a chautauqua salute to President Emeritus King. . 16 Prof. Harris, formerly head of the Department of Oratory, conducted the chapel exercises. A piano tuner made his presence known during the services. The Y. M. and Y. W. held their open meetings in the Aesthet. and Adelph. Halls. 17 The Y. M. and Y. W. gave their annual deceptions. The girls had theirs in Bowman Hfall parlor, while the other was held in the gym. 18 Met a swell looking Freshie by the name of Margaret at the Faculty Reception. Took her home. Had a better time than I did last year. 20 First Pep Club meeting. Bright prospects. 21 Rushing rules read in chapel. We had our first football scrimmage. I'll bet I will be stiff tomorrow. Mary Taft wanted to know where she could get reserved seats for the Tug-of-War. 4 . rvlwvwnmmf W.-mf-.wmuf-:::1:w....T...:V,,,.,l,4f,,,, -:-,.- ,gif V .f,,,::,1VVf --T ,1 ,rf V , 1 V y Y WW g 7 f Y mf 'f .'1'T1T- .QT HM' ft f7 f'il - Vs., F: 1ffi '1f.'v'f'fr'f'f- 'f 'A a-'mf'.i. wmv ii ww Wu..-L----1 VA- V , ,, , , , , ,g Uv, g Y H y -- V W-W, g ,vw H 22 Another deception. Margaret and I went walking instead. 23 A Junior girl found herself in the male section of chapel seats. 24 Kennedy, the state secretary of the Y. M., conducted the chapel exercises. Prof. and Mrs. Shaw gave a reception to the music students of the Conservatory at their home. 25 Tug-of-War at Inks' Pond. Everybody got soaked. Arva Brady encountered an obstacle on the way home. 29 Roll keepers elected in chapel. Rivalry among the Freshies for the places of honor. October 1 First big mass meeting in the day chapel at 6: 45. New Cornell slogan, Hit 'Em Harder, adopted. The girls' societies open the rushing season with a reception for all the new girls on Prof. Keister's lawn. 2 Went to Iowa City. They beat us 33 to 0. Sherm didn't let me stay in long enough to show what I could do. 4 A fire started in Chem. Lab. Doc. Knight regrets that he extinguished it. 5 Don Kreger gets everybody to stand up and pay up. Freshies elect officers. Red Hughes came to chapel. 6 Pep Club collects the stand up and pay up pledges at the chapel doors. No one allowed to escape. 7 Thirty men join the Volunteer Band. At the Junior class meeting, Brady moves that for decorations at the Junior Parle that some of the class stand around as wall flowers. 8 The Band was the big feature of the mass meeting. Dutch Andrae cracks a joke. 9 We won the Leander Clark game, 37 to 7. I took M- to society. 10 Went fussing. Mary Taft has a different man every night. 12 Artists' Course recital by Jenny Dufau. 13 Pep Club initiation. A financial campaign is started by a string quartette consist- ing of Meade, Brandon, Andrae and Kreger. After serenading the girls' houses they sell popcorn and Hershey bars. 16 Game at Carleton. Wet field responsible for the score of 33-0. If Fing had taken me along I bet the score would have been different. f ', .-.W wi, W X V , Took M-- to the Junior Parle. Had a fine time. We beat Iowa Wesleyan here in the afternoon, 40-0. Between the halves, the Seniors and the Sophs put on the heating plant stunt. Prof. Stout told a Ford story. Pres. Flint and family arrive. A special dinner at Bowman Hall for them. The head waiter made a social error by ringing the bell on time. We won from Simp- son, 27-0. Several of the girls' houses had parties. Pres. Flint unexpectedly takes in the Bowman Hall festivities. The Varsity squad went to Grinnell to see the Coe-Grinnell game. The Fresh- men defeated the Maquoketa High. November The fall tennis tournament began. The janitors had a great time getting the hose cart off of Bowman Hall porch this morning. Highland Park and Cornell played. O-0. The Bowman Hiall girls gain the con- sent of Bliss lVIadison to attend the 'bonfire in Ash Park. The Illinois Club elect officers. Juniors hold a regular business meeting. jack Knight elected business manager of the '17 ROYAL PURPLE. First appearance of the Vesper Choir. ' First fire drill at Bowman Hall. One girl was found missing. Great excite- ment. She had returned for her jewelry. Dean Freer steps on the Pep Club, about Coe's funeral. Clarice Dillenburg wears a red sweater to chapel. The temperature is several degrees higher. Violin recital by Marx. We had a snake dance after a short mass meeting. We had a rousing mass meeting and a half holiday to attend the Coe game in the Rapids. Score 13-10. Who said luck ? I lost twenty-five beans on the game. Took M- to the Strand after the game. Ames, Iowa, Coe, Cornell and Cedar Rapids High all gave their yells at the Strand. Founders' Day formally opens the events of Inauguration Week. The president of Iowa Wesleyan paid a tribute to the founders of Cornell. Fire at the Watson House. Rall Grigsby acted as Ere chief. Hank Frei said there ought to be brakes on the hose cart. Soph. hockey team defeated the Seniors in the final game of the season, 4-O. The losers gave a weenie roast to the winners. The band make their first appear- ance in their new uniforms. They look good. The Freshmen Scrubs clean Main Street. The girls furnish the eats after the work was done. The Ceremonies of Inauguration began today. There was a procession in aca- demic costume to the chapel, where the speeches were given. There was a bunch of noted speakers. There was a lunchon given that noon for the guests. Big mass meeting this morning. The Girls' Glee Club gave a novel stunt. First appearance of their hats. Punt Hill forgets his speech. I helped dish at the hand out given at the Gym at noon. Grinnell won the game, 13-6. Dot Allard comes to breakfast this morning. Junior and Seniors girls' basketball teams play. The Seniors won. Gosh, we had a big dinner at the Hall today. Didn't go to classes today. Guess I ate too much. Dr. Van Pelt conducted chapel. He cracks a new'C ?j joke. A pessimist is the man who sees only the hole in the doughnut. December Kiss-me-quick put up at Bowman Hall. More bills. I see that I won't have much to spend for Christmas. The Senior girls win the basketball championship by winning from the '18 girls. The Domestic Science Department gave a luncheon to the trustees, their wives and friends. Fire in the Coleman House. I was some hero, as I helped pull the hose cart. The Illilts defeat the Adelphs in debate. I didn't go, but I got Jack's notes and copied them to hand in to Miss Baker. They say that Prof. Beebe took Miss Singleton to the debate. The Y. W. had a bazaar and sold sandwiches. 4- ' , TH'E ROYAL PURPL. .il Aesthesian gave a rushing stunt at the Rapids. Sophs elect officers. The Adelphs attend the Majestic at the Rapids. H'ad a good time. Frederic Morley gave a recital. The student body had picture taken. Frank Spaigbt interprets Dickens. Hank elected football captain. Spaight admonishes students not to read any modern novels or ma azines. g C. J. Smith gives a rebuttal in chapel. He says that all classics were modern some time. Heard The Messiah at Vespers. Freshmen are very excited over the spelling exam. Wlebster is very popular. Candy contest in full swing in Domestic Science. Recital by the Senior students of Oratory. Vacation begins. Gosh! I will be glad to get home. M- wants me to come up to see her the last part of vacation. l d January Ho, huml Back to school again. Gee I was glad to see M-. Stub says that he never went to see that girl of his at home during vacation. Harry Warrexi appeared on the campus as Charlie Chaplin. Clarice Dillenberg in the true spirit of Leap Year proposed to four men in B. H. parlors. The competition was keen. Mrs. Mac. discoursed to two young gentlemen in regard to the proper use of the B. H. whistle tubes. Cornell lost to Iowa, 30 to 12. The Philos had a rushing party at the Rapids. , Gosh! the Star Laundry returned a clean shirt. The Geneva Club met with Er- mina Mills. Mrs. Ralph Hill told some Geneva experiences. Doc. Knight met with a fall in the business district of the city when on the point of giving one of his jokes to a fellow citizen. C. J. Smith gave a report of the National Athletic Conference in chapel. Miss McLeod entertained twenty-five Senior girls. 71- 1 naw df a'.:':.r:.':r..f:r I ,I I PM 'ww rf lf R Q Y A L. P.. U ' .W rrrff I took M-to the Aonian Public, Merely Mary Ann. It surely was good. We beat Leander Clark here in basketball, 47 to ll. Ole Allanson prayed for the fraternities at Adelphian Society. No chapel. Social fifteen minutes in the library. Mrs. Macey and Helen Keller give one of the numbers on the lecture course. Mr. Riggleman takes a slide down B. H. steps. Clarice Dillenberg and Helen Guenther ate all day suckers in the library. Dr. Birney spoke in chapel. Cornell lost to Coe 25 to 12. The Ao. girls in Merely Mary Ann caste entertain the boys in the caste and Miss Baker and Mr. Bachelor at the Strite House. New C sweaters appeared on the campus. Gee I wish that I could wear one. Exams. Exams. Exams. Lee Byerly caught studying in the library. Eleanor Brown arrived for breakfast when Mrs. Mac. rang the bell for dis- missal. Briggs tried to sneak some food to her from the waiter's table to her, but the attempt was futile. B. H. waiters attend the Birth of the Nation at the Majestic. February Q e Heard a lecture given by Karl P. Harrington of Weslyan U. on Antiquities of Rome and Italy. Dr. Cadman lectured tonight. I didn't go because I had to get a lesson in Economics. Miss Beebe, National Y. W. C. A. Jubilee Sec't., led the regular devotional exercises for the girls. Prof. Bachelor told in Y. M. how to fill our sails. Stub Hartwell went to Des Moines with the team on the basketball trip on 5.44. Basketball squad left for a three game trip. Maxwell goes to see his girl. Mary Taft writes in English, Another man. The Aletheans gave a rushing party. The Milts were at home to the new men. W' W , 4:u'?:'1,,2f -' RPLt - s-' ,-:i4: Gez.a..i .,..:..4'1.. MM: fi- '. 1'-l' THE ROYAL PURPL The Freshmen showed due respect to the Seniors. The Seniors first, the Jun- iors second, the Sophs, third and the F reshies brought up the rear in filing out of B. H. parlor today. Cornell lost to Iowa 28-19. The reserved seats were a new feature in the gym. There were signs of over enthusiasm in the grand stand. MargaretfM., Doris L., and Betty D. were seen hacking bobs. The Am- phics gave a rushing stunt at the Majestic. The Aletheans gave a Valentine party in their hall. i . Day of Prayer. There were no classes after chapel. , The Aonians entertained the Milts. Erma Rammage and Ruth Helms show the proper leap year spirit by taking their men in a taxi. The Simpson team lost to us in a 46-10 game. A peppy crowd. The Adelphs were host to the new men. The College Revival Meetings began tonight. Dr. Brown is the leader. Bach. gave a feed to the Milts in his favorite haunt, room 5, main hall. A rousing impromptu mass meeting was held on the campus. It started at 2:30 in the morning and lasted until breakfast. Gee, I hated to get out of bed so early. We went around to the different Profs. houses and made them give us a speech in their pajamas. Staff stew. Coe-Cornell Game-The girls got up this morning for a mass meeting. Flunk Day tried. Coe won the game. The Aos entertain the new girls. I went to the Colonial Party. There were more there this year. Most of the fellows wore dress suits. ' ' ' 450 pieces of B. H. silverware disappeared from the dining room during the quiet hours of the night. Oflicers of the law and student detectives begin the search for the missing silver- ware. Detectives search the Smith House for the missing silverware. Stub Hartwell had a serinus accident. Another Crip added to the Adelphian List. fs 74 . if ,ix J' , 3 -l ll 14 10 17 30 HE ROYAL PURPL March l Philos gave a rushing party. Miss Hart gave a recital. 2 Went to hear Dr. Betts lecture on The Psychology of Alcoholism. Sans Souci. Gee, I had the time of my life there. Everybody was dressed up crazy. Didn't have a cent when I came home. Thomas Devine left for Russia today. He left Billyus with Schnedler. The C club had their banquet at the Rapids. 9 Rushing season is over. We got a bunch of good men in our society. The Freshmen took the indoor track meet. I couldn't run on account of my leg being stiff. The College Guild entertained the women of Cornell at Dr Betts. The Seniors and Juniors are trying to raise money for a swimming pool. I wish they would hurry up and get it, because I never did like to swim down there in the stone quarry. The triangular debates between Coe, Grinnell and Cornell were held tonight We lost both debates. Spring vacation started today. Back to the farm for a week of hard work. Wish that I could have made the Glee Club or the Orchestra. I bet they will have a good time on their trips. 27 Back in school again. to chapel today. 31. The big I. P. A. convention started today. We won the oratorical contest All the I. P. A's look alike. Ralph Briggs lost his hat and had to make a long distance run across the campus for it. ...............'1 X. Prof. Keyes advised the students in chapel to go to the Pal. Clark Bowen went T'W4.-ifECi'1.?,4R7Z...L .Q . ..-.mi 1.1fEW!3i? ., -1 .J.1., 1. . -.Y.. J.. . 1.. :'fJ'fl'2.': .'.' .If'iT .?'f'1 1ii i1:1'f'1.Mf L..f'?I1if'iIi 21TLfT' 'TTTT 1 1L.,I ' 1 i- .-...,-1. - ..,.1,,a.11,,!,.,,..-, .1.1..,..k.1....1m?..1.,..,.T.11-v..,,,.1. L ,gym 1,..n,...L-1-11111.-.11,:,1.,fQ11..1.a.11..1.L-.171,1,111m111.11-11,,,..1-1.1.-V1-W31 2 1 . 1 1 11 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 , 1 , 5 1--5 1 71-K ... --1 1 ll 1-1 0 A - 1 1 -1 Lf 1 1- 1 1 11 . 1. 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E.. 1 I. 1 7' Alf'Q.T2EXLILi.iflfQICfi?li3ff'ffS1.V'TiiiilflICi1fZ. 5'1f.2.1.'f':QLTff..Wfi'fQRZf1f5ff1'gf?lfTI'2'fff'I'T'TTII2 7 ,,m,,,,.,,,,,,,,,.-.,., , -....1..,1 .,.. J -...., ,W1.w1......mw.....,.......m,A , ,. . . 1 .- - 1 1 1 1. . 1' 1 1 I I 1 1 . 1 1 ! 1 I . 1 1 1 1 1,1 1. a 1 1 . 1. 1 1 I ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 I .. 1- 11 1 1. 1 I' 11 1 1 1 1 3 1 1. - 'n, - ..1.- - 1, , . Qu A 1-..-4-.V f' -V4 rf r ., I X if 5 Q A .... . .-...M ,.....,.,,..... ,.,L.. uxllvix br' 1' '33, 15' rug' .11 :1 if 1, ak ,441 x 3' LJ 'F-1' 'wi :1 .1 s 1 1 1 1 11 I 1 '1 1 1 11 1 4 .ff wif A 1 ' ' ' a::,'4': fun H 'if4lfv'9f ' ' g ' ' ' ' 'ff ffl' 'fir-l'v'in4'v'l1 1 ---w-Olllzil df I ff, 'Pj THE ROYAL PURPL. THE ZETAGATHEAN LITERARY SOCIETY fl PRESENTED BURNETT'S The Dawn of Tomorrow Characters Bedell, a secretary ........................... ......... M ilo Meier Powell, a butler ....... Mr. Oliver Holt ......... Dr. Satterly ................. Sir Bowling Burford ....... Dr. Heath ................ Sir Oliver Holt ........ Feathers ............ Glad ..................... Barney, the coffee man ...... ....... Bet ............................ Jim, her husband ........ The Thief .............. Policeman .. Dandy .... Polly ................. Lord Tommy ........... . Little ........Merrill Peddycoart ......Merle Manly ..........Henry Van Pelt Tracy Thompson .............Clyde Ryan ..........Ellen Griffith .........Arva Brady Howard Younkin Blanche Swindell ...........Jay Marston ....Edwin Mellott .........Carl Pike .........Paul Shafer ...Gertrude Sones Starry Staged under the direction of Professor Bachelor. X AW tg ,we-Q h-.gf-gf 'f,-V-gy 4-1 ' mq.,m1.pwv'4.gM,r,y:an.1.,.w -i,yv.,L1pM .J'.:.-a-aiI51,.1.f ----M-v-w.f.L-B-A-avfm , 4, , li ' H'f2' ROYAL. PURPLE' E' LM lx 3'-.1ww. w4w ww www - 1.1 -'m f wsuwLrmw.Mmw::Q2m'w..,. wif1'f'ffwi':2:'1w.wa+w,v:w.a f+.,m :f,v..f. ..w-nm.-fm' I 'W I I w W W N , , W. Wg? THE ROYAL PURPLE. THE AONIAN LITERARY SOCIETY PRESENTED ZANGWILL'S Z V Merely Mary Ann january 14, 1916 Characters O'Gorman, a journalist ........................ Northrup Winter Mrs. Leadbatter, a lodging house keeper ........ Ethel Cook Rosle, her daughter ................ ................ L ...Anne Wilson Lancelot, a composer .... Mary Ann, a drudge .......... Peter, a tea merchant ............ .........Kenneth Danskin .........Romaine Guild .........William Brandon Bramson, a music publisher ................ Harold Musselman Rev. Samuel Smedge ................ Lady Gladys Tottingham ......... Caroline, Countess of Foxwell ..... Lady Chelmer, a poor peeress ....... . Lady Glynn .................... Howard, a butler .... ..............Malcolm Price .....,......Bessie - Siple ..........Joyce Barnes ........Dorothy Wilson ........Lillian Maxwell ............Herbert Peet Lord Tottingham ................. ......... C larence Broadston Kiss me, dear love, goodnight, Dream of the old delight, My spirit is summoned above. Kiss me, dear love, good night. Staged under the direction of Professor Bachelor. 71' -., f N. The Fresh-Soph Tug of War NVho got wet? Everyone who attended the annual tug of war at Ink's Pond. After everyone had walked out to the pond, just before the contest began, a terrific downpour of water from the clouds above fell. So all the teams were soaked before they started to pull. The Sophs won two pulls out of three. The lightweights were the first to blister their hands on the rope. The Freshies were forced to take the water route. In the middleweight class was found the best fight. The Freshies determined to rid themselves of the lightweights' defeat and after three minutes of exhausting effort to hold them, the Sophs took a dive. With the honors evenly divided, the heavy- weights continued the contest, the Sophs winning. After the excitement was 0ve1', the crowd plowed their way home thru the mud, spectators and all claiming honors of being the wettest. ma.-nl-:Ar T HE ROYAL PLJRPL. -. V - - . -, - - s M .. . W -. , 1:mv.o..-:mama-n.1,:5,--xxfn Dear Brethren and Cistern of the I. P. A.: i 1 1, All meet for prayer and milk tonight CWed.D at Sister Benidict's home at 5:30 sharp, so that we may get home before the street lights are lighted. All bring your knitting: Schmidt will show us a new stitch. Goody, about a thousand times! We must not forget, however, in our excitement our true purpose, i. e., to bring this campus to a higher, truer, sweeter, cuter plane. Shoot the graham crackers, girls! Oh Beulah Land! Remember the time and place. CSignedJ I SHERRAL. When the question was asked in a Pep Club meeting how many of the members could meet at eight o'clock, Grace said: Put up your hand, Antone. You can meet whenever I can. Keister says All small towns are dry. They are too dry for me. Yet he advocates prohibition. Prof Knox: Miss King, what is Ie console? Donna: Le console means the king's advisers. Prof. Knox: No, it is a piece of furniture. A mirror with a shelf underneath it. He, placing his foot in his hat: Will you go to the reception with me Saturday night ? Freshman girl, whose name we promised not to divulge, 'replies quickly, I'd.1ove to. What time ? She, on second thought: Oh, no, I can't. It's bath night. Overheard on the Gormly House porch: Does my hair bother you P No, it is the best I have tasted this evening. Prof. B.: What is a 'ceremonial'? Colonel Waitt: When two people want to express their feelings or they get together and have a ceremonial. emotions, Lemon was just returning from a date when he was asked, How are you, Lemon ? Lemon: I feel pretty well squeezed. GY 4 . 5 -ww 1 ' '1 'l -.mctfm fwmwn-xv if Y - - ,i--'ffixwf A Little Flash I often sit within a class And think without cessation: Wl1at is the use of all this fuss To get an education? Nleanwhile the dear professor says: t'I'll now assign a thesis. I'll ask you to consider why Mosaic is made of pieces. From thence you may go on with care To trace the plain connection Between the well of Jacob And modern excavation. The value of the liberal arts, I'Il state to you againg It broadens you, and teaches you To know your fellow men. And yet the question still comes up From where suspicions lurk, Wliy is it that our leisure's spent In catching up our work? Can anyone be human When he's always writing theses On subjects like Consider why Nlosaic is made of pieces ? -ffh., .. dw iv. N' ' '2le.C s, I M d ff, W ' -i ,, .si 3 1 wf.-' wntf,-1 ,- W. ofizfzjf Y 7 2 v.,-. ' Q ,, A4 J- ' A 41- ., ,.:- X ,- . v.. -. ' v-- . v.. - li-,-' 3 - -. A . 'f . 4, Q-5: .r1 .f,,., 'f,f,f:,5.53,,y,,,,,L,,,,,. fy . AH-Ac' , .... ,,,,, ,,w-, , , ,,. W, ,, ,,,, ,-......,.......V...,- ...-,,,,.-,,, .M , , ,, .,.,- ,,,, ,,, W W , , ..,..,.,,. ,. ,, ,,,, ,..,, , N, mn ,-,,, ,,W1gf--,,,.,,54 :THE ROYAL PURPLE .. Y 74' I' 5 1 I A 1 i I , L-if? E5 1 . 5 I ! Ei I I Y w 5 I? ll w 'N w ir M U 'I r s I 1! r N! T HEHROYAI. PURPI. Ruth Helms Ctranslating French, me voudrais 'vous embrasser? J : Will you em- barrass me ? Prof. Knox fcorrecting herj : Will you kiss me 2 Ruth: Oh, yes. Hartwfell kissed me in the spring, I Elliott in the fall, But Craig only looked at me And never kissed at all. On a botany trip Paul Grigsby asked a great number of foolish questions. Prof. Kelly, pointing to the electric light wires, asked Grigsby, What is that? Paul: I don't know. Prof. Kelly: That is an electric plant. Then Prof. Kelly pointed at Paul, and said to the rest of the class: This is a gas plant. Y. Arva Brady: Thought your reading was verylnice, Gertine. Gertine Ahrens: Thank you. I liked yours very much, too. What was yours ? 1 ....l.. Lemon arrives at a house on the Glee Club trip where he is to stay for the night. He arrived about three o'clock. Hostess: We will have dinner a little early. Lemon: Oh, I have already had my dinner. Dutch Elliott champions the cause of free love in Socialism. Breathes there a student with soul so dead,, Who never to himself has said, As early chimed the chapel bell, Some words' that rhyme with ham and dwell. Dorothy Hutchinson C picking some feathers from her muff D : I don't know wheth- er I am becoming a chicken or an angel. . ,--.wvw-vw vw, -. mm, Q. .-1... --qr.N-mf.. f ' ! ' X X 1 5 I x 5 T fc QQ Y fxx A 1 ' R 5 .,...,....-.-.,,....y..1 .. . ... I.-an n.-uw.u...-.-..1,mf.,..-4-.f.--,r-.-,.1- .- ...- uf 1 --,A if 1. ,Y-Q -Xb E dy Ax 4949 vu THE ROYAL PURPL May Festival of 1915 When word came that Julia Culp would be unable to fill her engagement there was general disappointment. We were fortunate, however, to secure Marie Rap- pold and no better substitution could have been made. She promised to give a free concert later on in the year. Rudolph Ganz was welcomed with more than usual interest because of his re- cital here in the fall. Those who heard him will long remember the Liszt Con- certo in A Major. Friday afternoon of the Festival, Francis MacMillen appeared in a recital which showed him to be a master of technic and an artist. The quartet this year consisted of Olive Kline, Margaret Keyes, Lambert Murphy, and Clarence Whitehill. The Chicago Symphony Orchestra was here for the thirteenth time, which gives Cornell a reason to be proud. The Oratorio Society assisted by the quartette presented S. Coleridge Taylor's A Tale of Old Japan. Great credit is due to Prof. Miller for his untiring efforts to bring the very best music to Mt. Vernon. i 71- r qw ,,, ,.---1.91q- ,m-mp'-'m-rv,-vm-.irq-1-wrv'21xf ' V-.., ,. -- V --...m...-, .-15.22. 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Q3 Pictures of Memory Among the beautiful pictures That hang on lVIemory's wall Is one of the green old campus, That seemeth best of ally Part for its gnarled trees olden Still in the sunset's glowg Part for the violets golden That sprinkle the vale belowg Part for the vines on the chapel VVhere sparrows and robins nestg Part for the halls and the classrooms It seemeth to us the best. For apples that grew by the pathways, ! .K . K . , . x g . And grapes that exept ou the lel e, , For parties and picnics and programs, Time gives them the golden edge. ' But these are not all of the pictures That hang on lX'Iemory's wallg They form but the background of Friend ship, The happiest picture of all. Light as the down of a thistle, Free as the winds that blow, VVe live thru these beautiful seasons, Seasons that quickly go. Our feet on the hills will cease passing And one of these autumn eves Will find us scattered and parted, Like wind thru a bed of leaves. The light of the present upon us, True hearts around us that glow VVith life and love in union niet, In trust that good friends know. Therefore, of all the pictures That hang on lVIen1ory's wall, The one of the green old campus VVill be the best of all. BLANCHE SXVINDELL. -at 14 A- x THE ROYAL PLJRPL Qiiwwomuf-meta.:my.f..:-f-...t-www-N-,f-exam: mv ' Wai-'. .f,'s.-3,1-, ., ., .. .- ..,.,, --1 .I Y . . .... .........-.,,.m ,...,....-.........,, , ,v ,W , H , Sparkling Literary Gems Extracted From Freshman Themes Let the water run thru the hydrant for about ten minutes and hang up and dry. Also gave him more time to write one of his best works came to light. He CMacaulayD tried very hard to make them this worksl interesting as friction. Rules for basketball-No one can kick it or run with it because it is a fowl. The venerable Bede at this point of his career entered a nunnery and became the father of English literature. fThis must have been at the time of the Birth of the Nation.-Ed.J I First you cut out the rotten parts of the apples and boil them Hfteen minutes. The cat sat washing her face on the table just opposite. A country Storr. In general the storr looked very poorly furnished and in a very unsanatory condi- tion. The storr keeper wore a long rubber apron that was too long for him for it toutched his shoe tops and whenever he leaned over it draped on the Hoor. His shoes were of that old style commonly used by country folks of past times as they were long polished leather. The kind which he was able to slip off and on without much exertion. When he walked in them they clattered on the floor conciderably. They reminded me of the kind George Washington wore. His hair was long and uncombed and he was unshaven. In appearance he looked to be rather out of date. WHY I CAME TO CORNELL College prepares you for all the common phrases of life. Then I expect to walk over a few rocking chairs and the piano looking for the stairway. If you don't succeed at first, give up like a fool. 1 u s 0 '??44-1-.iIZ1jg,f 1'QgQ-f ffilil'-35EEi'ET?f dz .'iZi2L2!fZ5i':'.... X.'fTl'ifEE., I. 'Lf.1'L'f'ZlLQ'Z'.QI,LIfLT'ILL ,.lf.1..'L. l. 'LZTLT.2fKL..'ff-.l1117Qjf 1 f L 5-.-v.,..W.-,,.,,.m,..,,, Yfvw. ,-..,i,,,,:,-m,,..:T:,,.,.f,,-g::,,Eff.f.........i,Q.-.Y,-,...w...-.....-,.....- ..w..,............1.,..,..m,......m,:,1-. -T .W . li u G if ... B - f t k., ,...x , T., N, z X1 A v -,D g.t: Q... A .- ,P I ,,,,, I .-... I 1 s H... ' ... I s J , . ' ,i . ,, ,. ' , G-vwg Awvwvtwn-ew-,,.f,.'.,,A..,..-,A,..,.,-.N..,.,..--..-fx ,,,.,,.,,,,:, ...W.v...Y- ,.,U-,-f- f,. 'IT..'ZC'..'1'?L3 . -. Mh mu.,yM.-. ,-, ...,.-...1...,.,Ah.......'.14.,T 1?.,,f,!5-.u.1'3L..i..,..-,.N.A-.-...-,4. ....u..- 4..., I, ,.....,.,- ...., ,7 fu? -W , -,f:1.,LY,..,..F?.......,...,.L,i?:A:f- -Jiffy-,u.q....m.........Y.,. W I, 1 W w i , , Ns? THE ROYAL PURPL The Dirty Shame Club President ................................................................ MARGARET MOEEETT Vice-President ....... .............. A DRIA PARSONS Treasurer .......... .......... D OT. ALLARD Secretary ........ ....... B ESSIE BELZ Errand Boy Herald .............................................................. MARY TAET All Star Fusser I RULES AND REGULATIONS.-Mary Taft is to be fined two cents every time she speaks the name of Stansberry. 'S.74 collected inside of two days. THEIR NATIONAL SONG: Stand Up, Stand Up, Stand Up for Stansberry. From a Freshman's theme: Mr. Smith presents his compliments to Mr. Jones and wishes to say that he has a hat that isn't mine and if he has one that isn't yours, perhaps they are the ones. ..L --1-l Fern: Max is not the only nice thing around me. Chula Hughes, after reading what he considers more than his share, comes to a comma. He asks Prof. Finger: Is that a period? , At the Knox Club, Miss Hart, hearing a peculiar sound in the hall: What's that ? Miss McLeod: Why that is Ole Allanson laughing. He always makes me think of a little girl. Miss Bussee: O, he makes me think of a chicken cacklingf' This space reserved by Raymond Grant for Mary Day 71' I' X .,e.,-'-'nm.g5,,A '. f :Q R V 1 , Y., , , - , ,,-35,514 -' ,iw V, , -1, I 4 :14-.i'-ff- w,.w-ga-. f.W,q5Aw.o.:,u3-1,5.f,w44 if -l K -v.-,.m-W-,.,,T.,. ,,,- W W YYWJ., ,-s, ,wvwvwvvz ,:WV-,,6,1,,.,.....,...,....,1,,.,.,..,,....,.,-,,,.. ---...-,:.,.,.,, A 1-,.,,,,w,..., ,. 1 4, V 7' 1 3 C' , I I I Q O Y L3 Q 1 X' L. 5 I , Elixir, .P .- , , . . ' 4' -' ' V- 9 -.M sg 'r : ,g 41-.-,-ww-'snyawgpizinik-f'wn1n5.m' wg 'H1i'-.--,.:--- V... ,,,- ---- W Y..,., , 1-...., .. ...- ...:vn.-'N-vw.---vw-ff--'ww f--v- 1-fm - v -ww um-I-1-mM..,,,.Q...-.W.,5 I W Y x - ff I - 3 L, 1 A Q - 1 1 l u ' - I' nk, , ln.. w I , THE ROYAL PURPLE x--..-1 ., , U, ,. A, H -,-.,iv-Y-,1.,.v..,.w.vsni.fiwAW. ,, V . , . V' -- 1 . . w ...mau- g Ode on the Heating Plant Thou still unrealized dream of lofty chimneys Thou foster child of stoves and of slow Time, Modern invention, how art thou replacing The stoves which battled long 'gainst wintry clime? lVhat blackening waves pour forth in belching billows To breed disease or mar our clothes, or both, A nzortster in our dales of Arcady? VVhat men and maidens are there but will loathe To stroll within a mile of thee, O dream destroyer, To black their faces. Is this ecstasy? Seen heating plants are good, but those unseen Are better, therefore, O ye powers, build on, But take these bins and smokestacks from our campus, That Fair Cornell may never have to change her tone. Fair youth, beneath the trees thou canst not sit To sing your song, nor canst thou breathe this air. Alumni, never, never canst thou boasting Quote old Cornell, her storied walls by sunset lit. Her beauty's gone, her vines are nigh to roasting, For though we love her spirit she's not fair. O Attic Shape, Fair Attitude, O Plant Of bins and chimneys, branching pipes all wrought, If Ash Park's kindly trees seclusion grant, Then, comely form, dost give our hearts to thought And deep-felt gratitude, Cold Boreas. When old age shall this generation waste, The heating plant remains in midst of other woe Thou ours, a friend to man, to whom thou say'st: Comfort is warmth, warmth comfortg that is all Ye know in college, all ye need to known. B-LANCHE SWINDELL. ' NEW f.-,,wv-upvn..-4.v-,5.,1,-......-,w.x--Y- .w 1.,..--:- ,N.v..--v- V- ...-..--,tv ., -.,- .,-,.-- wg- w- 1 ,- v 1.0-.....................f.....W,,.,... .. .-. ,.., . .M ., . . ..... ... .-. -.,,...-.,..., . ,W .-. -...........,..... Y.: Q-7. .- - ............x:::,1.. .v., gf Q..-.,......1W,-...:,.. W.- .- --.....M.-.f-,-,-,-.-.......,..- HE 'QOVA' Vfw' X' 2 1 LM LJ ' qaws:.w-vnu'-vw.-m-..,w.w -u W. ,. . -. -,---.-ff - f..-. ..,.Y. ., .M , v. ... W .. . . 1 ... V. Y .. 1-nghdn-441113: h:.ur.4l.'.gAn-nnmn4-A '-u.-e.n1n'.....V.un4nsqi.-Iuafiwlhluh. n-.J A..-M4-uma: 44ml-hula--n-. nl... . -..-..-v,a.-A-4. ,AQ-. V- A---K -A-V A-Q,-.....a:,11,,,,,Lgg,,h...q,T.,,.,....: :..Y , --.,..V....--2--7.--..., ,,,-,...-.,,, ,, , , , V C7 A I , I X,' A I , THE ROYAL PURPL Grant, to Mary Day: It pays to be a minister's wife. You get ten per cent off. Mary Day: Yes, even on my grades. Mrs. Knight, in an argument with Doc. Knight over Mary Taft and Stansberry: Besides, the Stansberries didn't finish their first one. Ruth Smythe, translating German: If I can serve a worthy man, I will. Lee Byerly: I'd like to be the worthy man. Grant, to Mary: You taste my pudding and see if it is sweet enough for me. Briggs, during a little heart to heart talk with Mrs. Mac.: I thought I served you first but not the other girl. WE WONDER WHY Celia Rogers had a party. There was only one piece of cake left and some girl wanted it. . Celia: Sure you can have it. I can eat crackers now. MacCullough: I am going up to Albia with my gospel team. Mrs. Mac: Why, that is my old fussing ground. Keehn, on the trip to Knox, hands Finger a pack of cards: Here, you'll find more use for them than I Will tonight. Fing: You may not find use for these cards tonight, but I'll bet you will hold some good hands, tho. He: Let's go to the Majestic. She: I have been this week. He: So have I. She: Oh, wasn't the diving girl's partner splendid ? He: Didn't see him. She: I thot you went to the Majestic. He: I did. 21- 'f 'rw f..-, . ,. ., 'm3.'n'Ff1.'YIiE3lY.'E?ahi'I'!215f2E'ff'1'f'fYTZ M73 I f'i1'i.'TTT1IfiEl'Lf T' 1 2211 TJ 1' -..., .- ..,. ,,,.... L.. ,A-.-A u. 4 inn, . . ..,V...,..,,,,,,-.f-.q-w--f.-n.-..,,.....f.N--.--',m,.,f...k. 'vf 5 n 1,2 ii gi 'D l a 1 W N 5 1 1 L I N x x n 1 g I , 4 , f H E 5515 uf Y A L Q' n 14' 1 M'F Z'flR '1.5.:': E...f ?.Q'fi.?X:27f...'i5. 'ff,L1l3I'IffII1LL1 I - M .,. ., . ,...g,.1..-..,. .rv 1 , f-1.--.. nm- .v-4:1--4--w vw- -1M-vw.-w v.--'vu -..,.-. ..-,--f . my .x -1....,.-.,.,.f..-v J. .. .. ,...,4..,.,.. L., .,... .. . -- ,-.11.f..-1 ... f EW Arva Brady, at B. H. table: Have you ever heard of Cotton Etter, the baseball player? . UNO Y, Well, have you ever heard of Cotton batting P Helen lfriclcson, in the Lib.: 'LDanny, are you going to the debate Friday night ? Danny: Yes, but I am going alone. Mtisic Student, to Prof. Conrad: Prof. Conrad, I dreamed last night that you said it was no use for me to attempt another music lesson, and so you sent me to another lady. On the Girls' Cllee Club trip Arva Brady hands Prof. Shaw a letter: Here is a letter with a lady's handwriting on it.', Prof. Shaw: Yes, it is just from Conrad. Dutch 'l'urner: It is better for the churches to take their tainted money than to let the millionaires hand it down to their ancestors. ' THE 1LLiNo1s CLUB -ff, ,' I 1 ' ' .' , - J' W.-. - . , ga., A, ...aww ..... .. ... ,... ,.-.... ......,. ..... - ...........,.. t., , . 'iffy .- .- -.1 V4. i5fL e7 V ' N .1 Xvrw, guy .W r -Jr, . 'fl li ,T 571 Sq 4 MEL J 'Cr -.,,.,-4-V-v--f-:mu-uv-5.1.-. - . -ww - -u-,wfr'1-rr -z:a:g',r.'-g-- 1 rc ' Z:-1 ' ' ' I f ' Q D 4 1 L V' V .,,. .,,..qu,,,-,..,...- ff. fi. ,,.,.. , V ...W x f . x P I L .Mug-..-....-.-W.--........L..,,...,.,.. ..-., ... . ..,X . .,. ..-.............. ., . ..a l I 1 THE ROYAL F-'URPL 'me ,,,.,.w.,- w.i..iv .uim,,w.-. 5,-,t,,, ., . . , .-. Y I .. W , ,. - . . Reggie? Brother at Cornell The following scraps of conversation between a well known student whom we will call Reggie and his brother, who is visiting him: What is that building for, Reggie ? Oh, that is the Library. Who is that big man standing on the steps, who acts as if he owned the building ? That is Ole Allanson. V Who are those two people who are looking so soulfully into each other's eyes sitting there at that table ? V That is Clark Bowen and Florence Brown. Whse is that girl who told them not to talk so loud? Is she a police oflicer ? - That is Miss Crawford, the assistant librarian. g What building is this ? This is Science Hall. -f What are all those girls doing there in that room ? v That is the Domestic Science Department, where the girls are learning to cook. 'fIs this room across the hall from the Domestic Science Department where the girls keep their supplies ? ' HNo.H Then ,what are all those bones and those bottles for P That is the Biology department. , What is making that awful smell upstairs? That is probably Doc. Knight telling one of his stale jokes. Who is that man with that Charlie Chaplin mustache, Reggie ? That is the Professor of the Biology department. Reggie, who was that girl that came into the dining room so late? Wasn't she the same one that was late at dinner ? ' That is Mary .Taft. Yes, she was late to dinner. Is she always late ? Most always. Why do they put up that rope across the doorway during breakfast ? That is so Stub and Antone will come to breakfast before eighteen minutes after seven. Who is that man out there on the' running track who is yelling at.those two fellows. That is Coach Finger bawling out Winkler and Weeks for being so lazy. Who is that man? Is the the president of the college ? No, that is only Kieth Lemon. He only acts that way. .V1 T' R' ' 1' wr- ,, mv: -.2-Q.-.-.hu-v., , -. 4 I 1 -'-M 1'-+3 ,wx-3 X f A - I u 1 X Z f g L R + s ' 1 1 k J Wann-Q11-.wJu.-tu-,w-my ,....g.,k.v.-fam.- fn-.,-fm. Ami .w,, -Q C51-. XV' 'J-'g'L5.., .,.vg,Q,..x wa- ,--U.:-.f..--1.--.-..f.,h.... ...U-fy-Q.,-...-.. EI , --' 4 ,fl V 3 2, Y' J ' . A-'A '43 cf Q? Wag, 1 4 f .bl J , ..' fu F V Ay, , . . , QLTf22'77iT'...f ..,-,,,,.,. , . ,Y -v-v..-,.-i-N U- ..f.. Cornell Lexicon Bowman Hall, a chicken coop. The Cornellian, a bi-weekly news-ance which is merely an advertising sheet disguised. Scientists have for years been making microscopic studies of it and have been un- successful so far in discovering any news, therein. Library, a building used by the fussers of Cornell as a rendezvous. All dates are made there. Chapel seats, ancient instruments of torture used by students during devotional exer- cises. They are now used to keep the audience awake during long speeches given in the lecture course. U Stove, a mechanical contrivance which provides work for the janitors and which keeps the temperature of the class rooms at the roasting point in the close proximity to the stove and at a freezing point elsewhere. Science Hall, an ancient building, which contains a homogeneous collection of chem- icals, wheels and mechanical appliances, animals in a pickled state, bones, paint- ings, and edibles prepared by the Domestic Science Department. Trip filrounfl the Worlzl, a dangerous and hazardous tour taken by couples after dark. The only way any couple has made the trip successfully is when they have hung on tightly to each other. Hockey, a game played by girls in which they attack each other with curiously crooked sticks. Chapel, a compulsory meeting in the morning of every school day attended by few stu- dents and fewer of the faculty, where unimportant announcements are read. I , , ' J' ii .i new x 1 THE ROYAL. PURPL l 371. l f X. . 1 . ,... ......,,,1..,1.....,.,...-,.,,..,1-. .. ,,.. 1.-,.W..,.,1..,-11.1 ,,,..1,,1.1,....1,1 -1-1-1W,,M...- -. , .1 1. . .. . ,ww . .. .. . . . .,. 4. ,Y-fx.:-. L .1 .4 '. 21414. 4 .g ,1.4.1,1.,- .-r1f- ..1.-mv - - .u. ,.u- ',..111.-U A 1.11 ,1.Lp..-Ann? mann' avg.-A411-oufvnv-1.. m.wuMn-4a:lamilrm0Anvwvl1.'nh-nl4.-n4rxAr1-dd..,-4.M....1. gn.-w .. - -11 .wr----:Auf 5 Lv:-w-we-11--v..m-uw-n-'1-1-1 .M 1 11 -,....1,,11,-1:1 L., ,1,.. ,...,..,.1...1.1..1,..H....,.1.m,Q...,.-.m.....,1 11...-M-.11-W.-..... ........,.-.1...11..-,.-.....-....1,..1...,., ,,,- .-....,--E.-.......-....,-.1.Q11,....1 li 1 1 E 1 ' 1 H .. . .W ,. ,X If I 1 1 1-1 11 . .1 'Q 11 1 1 Q1 1 1 A 1 . x --.,,1.1 E1 'L .-.. 1 1 11 1 I J ' f '1 1 - 1 11 1 . ,. .. . 1 ,. ,,.. 1 , . ... .1.1,11.-111.-M .1.n-11H1- -.1.-xf.111..1...f1.-1-.-hf 1-11.-1,1-111.11,--1-I-:1.1..:fan-11,-,.1, ,.---,-, .. .. 1 1 1 ..1:L'.... . -1 .1 1 ,, . 1. 1.1. .-1-M .111 , .L.,..1-1,,w.:..,.....-. WA.-.1...1,- W..-.1 .1...,1.,...-M.. .1-Q-vN.....,..-............ .-.1..:.,1-u-- -...N-a.-1-+.1..1-.+1.,..1..,.h........11.Q-.N.............,....1..,,.3,' 1 g. W.,fn.1-M11.M,-11.f..,.w..m1,.1--.v. 1f..,1wn-1..M.W:-MW!-Rf.-..114 -Wg .,1,.,.1.1-..,11...m....h.-mZ wwf, -M?..f1.,..,.-..1...-. 1 ,,:,.1.,.--1.11,-z-.-...,.1' E 1' 1 11 1 11 11 X 11 I 1 1 ' 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 j 11 1 l 11 1 1 1 1 1 1' 1 11 1 1 1 1 , 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1' 1 1 1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 ' 1 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 ' 11 1! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ' ' 1 , 1 , 11 11 ' 1 11 1 11 11 '1 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 A 1 1, 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 , ,,,,4f'.- 9 .1 --2--jr 41 X - gf, . f-. I '1' ' . ,1-1 fl ,..,...,.1A11 11,. 1 g . 1 M 413 21 A ,, 1 1 1 O4 qw , f. X 1: I ff -.9 ' Wa. f 'frm ,- fr . sf' 4 THE -ROYAL PURPL :x4l l . tx! . fly. ' ...- .M K ,l A One Reel Comedy, Faassen . by l Harold Wen Blight Mutual fAfection7 Film Co. ,z X. 1 ...........-...... P WV'.4a1:ffi'f.1m -'w 'Q31... ms2.r+s,:cwm.wff mmf ? Zz'Ell?E'e?'E'Z?Qu. .M 'i i5. i 1 M1,... fi -.1:Qp,4f.w-1.....veW,....W -l , .-...fwwww..-.f,.m.f'4:,.,-. . 1 K'..-.-rw.-....-.mfff?..... -i,,,-..i...-.m........,..-.............,i.,.......,.,.,.,,,,,,..--,,,,,,.,w,,,, ..-.-.e....4f,,, , W- .gmliw 7, ,,.-.- 3' ,i w li l q , f.. I l .. ' . ' 1 ,f25HE HCJYAL PURPLE 1 i V-lr' ...:'f'f.'ilmi'f21we-JV. 'Hd' a4'1:riu W i .QIHB ' - AERH L ' irbifd32sh.Fr,'fm . .W n-Z:-Gm--:..:zg'-ww.. v. 'w-' rgwzww-iw,-V :-.',1l4.f'..f.'wJ ,gggmei-'L- .-'-.' ',w1',-uf 'dalmfir-Pi' ll lfwrivw-'iw ' fir-' -..-Yi: :mf 'H N-.. effgv-mum-1e'55f:-u--af:Q......,.1T,,,.,-1..g...-..-, ,W - ' -..,, , 76.1.1 -,1a,,,.a.,,.-'warmer-11 1 U : l ll , 1. , 1 1 1 J t 4 J r v- s L. 1 7 Honk, honk! Here comes Duke on a joy ride with Grace in their new Ford. Duke develops pictures and a case on his girl. It is a question which he does most. Hey there, Archiebald, turn the crank. Cornfed plays ball mostly and the rest of his time was spent in hunting fox. He is keeping a Stohr now. Let's have a little more exertion there on the lever, Archie. Here we have a picture of Dad out by the Barnes. He says he got there by the way of a Lane. Fuss on, old boyg may the symphonious tintinabulation of hymeneal chimes proclaim your nuptials. Manipulate the lever, Archiebald. Jake is some sofa pillow pusher. He has gone with about every girl in school. He started in with True and this is the last one he had before this copy went to press. A little more acceleration there with that crank, Archie. Aa A iiiii Q' ' 7 I' ..,...,,,.,.. ,.,.,., , , Wm, V ,,,.,,.,... ..,.., .... ...W f.. Ys....g.....-........:..g.l.i.s....s...,. '.J '.'r1'.k. YYYY Y Y --Y YY Y YY -AY Y Y--A---. ,N-..,..,.bYwsm H E R Q Y A l. P U xi F3 L. Q 4 i The gink in this picture who has that pessimistic, getting married, never-do-it- again look is Ralph Briggs. He spills gravy and breaks dishes for a living. The coy little damselfby his side is the captain of this good ship. She says that he minds the helm pretty well. Turn on to the next picture, Archiebald. Here we see Mildew, the champion mid- dle-weight fusser of Cornell, sitting beside his fair one. He can sling more concen- trated fussing to the square inch than any other man in school. Wind up the film, Archie. It was Omar or Shakespeare who spoke thusly about Shortly, He love not wisely, but too frequently. Turn the crank, Archiebald. This is not a self-starter. The hard shell around Don's heart was deeply Marred last year. Lately, however, he has been favoring a young unsophisti- cated Freshman by the name of Doris with his presence. Little more speed there on the lever, Archie. A 1 . X . Y. 7 1? S ff' , .. e Ni 5 M ,lem 1 Tg - WJ.- 'I' Lil' ' .... W. ....., ..,, 1 I S 7 M I V 's 1 Y . 9 1 i '--- r, 1 Y W. ' S The faculty censored that picture where you had your head in her lap, Doug, so I had to use this one. Turn on, Archiebald. Dutch sleeps on a collar button every night to raise that dimple. Oh, girls, don't you adore dimples? Let's pass on to the next picture. Here we have another Dutch, ladies and gents. That cute little maid standing be- fore him has left school, which has reduced him to single cussedness. I bet he won't remain that way long, tho. Wind up the film, Archie. This is the girl Ben had last year. Ben knows that I use hair tonic and he is using that as a hush fund. He has a new girl now. Turn the lever, Archie. p 4,5-if A X .ix- 5lIif.Z'.I.....7 7',T.lf2'5EE'EF2P5':! .L''fZ2f?'g.Zf??TfSf5i':1,'TT2F.'f?fl2I 1Tff L1. - -fi-,fu .--.iw-,-,-W.-s .1-. , Y, L.. - i .V fi ,., ...V 1 sa F ff f E, f H F ..... i'. Q ,,,...,. , :-i-i.,.f-vw. ,ww L lVIax, the botany fiend, whose specialty is in Ferns. VVherever Fern goes, lllax al- ways follows. We will let her love and cherish the little runt while we pass on to the next picture? Archiebald! What do you think this is -a -ld? Here is Atlas with her world on her shoulder. .lack is the Business Manager of this annual, so we will let him off easy. VVind on, Archie. Jap is feeling quite spry, altho he has just taken a trip around the VVorld when this picture was taken. Archiebaldl Well, it is about time you were moving. Danny and Esther are going out for a little picnic. He will go anywhere if you just say Heats. The way Esther looks out of the corner of her eyes would get any man. When you get time, Archie, crank 'er up. 1. 1 rf ix . ,X . ,,-. . ,.,.,,,..,,, .. .- ..,,,.. ,,Y,. .W ,... W..-W..-W.-,T-.,.s -,ww we . .,,.,., -.-..,...v-- -f .,M,,....,.,,.L11:.,..,, ........ 1..- .....,.........t M'1.1.....if,,,,.,,,,,M,,,,,g:. ....., 1-nm,-w-:.-....+ . ------f --V .--W -V -- ' -vzlfv' Al.- PURPL. . f -,we . . .. ---,i------ ....t.s.igt-ef,:g,.,... -',--- -aff-t1.et w--,fi.mm.,.u.n. 1-J... . -- -i - , .... 1-1. ...- 1- - Y-f-19,542 Q--w:.i. A--M-z....ir-fe--......m1ms-nmm.-::a..-r:'-1-- Here we have some famous Globe Trot- ters. They have just come from a trip around the World. Irvie is some ardent youth when it comes to fussing. Turn to the next picture, Archie. Whoops! Can you beat this for an il- lustration of that pathootic little song, Way up the river he will row ? Last year, Wise had an awful case on Grace, but this year he is having a royal time with a King. Wind up the film, Archiebald. This is not an Ingersoll. Stub has the fine art of kidding the girls down pat. It is a common sight to see seven or eight of the fair sex listening rap- turously to the insane, rippling cadences of his prattling talk. Stub is never seen out twice with the same girl. I-leave, Archie, heave! Wow! Whoopsla! Don't interrupt these two infatuated individuals, nestled in amorous juxtaposition.-Curt was here last year. Turn the crank, Archiebald. . -mf-r ,.-- 'A--W-N 'iv-5, Y' -7 'x fl 5 '15 4.11.51 ff v ,.. r x2 K , ' '. ' ' Jn---1 9.3,-ew.i:f-at-ff-H.-s ...U .......-...tm--.smnmn-in-v-.. 'wily -' , .s -..,- .V w . yy. V1.1 5 lfnnna was going with liob Smythe. A dashing young eowpuneher from the wild and woolly XVest appears on the scene. The plot thickens, then-Aw, but what could you expect of Fiekle VVo1nan? Letls go, Archie. Oh, girls, this was so romantic! Squeek Reed bet that no one could get a date with Hazel but he. The B. H. waiters bet Aflac that he eouldn't get a date with her. The waiters lost. That was three years ago. Can you beat that, girls? Start 'er up, Archie. By Antone's side, vividly featuring that old story of won1an's devotion in one reel stands Grace Byerly. Yes, they are as in- separable as Dutch and Lucile. VVind the film, Arehiebald. One Minute Please fb Reijefded But here, ye soft organ pipes, blow softly. Oh, -less, to think that you would come to this. Charlie and I had hard work to per- suade you to have this picture taken. Turn the crank, Archiebald. We will not disturb this couple any longer. 5 This space has been rese1'ved for Grant, Anclrae, Bowen, Walke1', Stansberry, Bran- don and other steady Cornell fussers with their fussees, who are all passionate personi- fications of puppy love. Too bad we couldn't have had a picture of each, Archie. Bess Siple surely loves the Irish. She has sworn allegiance to Ireland. I had to tree this couple before I could get their picture. ' Archie, turn that there old film. V2ll1ClCl'l1il11l,S favorite subject for themes in English is that of modern woman. In one theme, he told what his idea of a per- fect woman was. Helen, ask Bach. for the article. Nlanipulatc the lever, Archiebald. P- - f. W -. - N-..,,.,y ...M .., in pf v 'jjj A' N, ' 49 4 , X V . .NL 1 , . Hang on to her Skee. He thinks that a girl in Cornell is worth two Mormon girls out in Utah. Little more smecl there, Archie. Fern is his tulip, Fern is his rose, Fern is always with him wherever Butzie goes. The first date this couple had was farther back than that of any other couple here in school. Turn to the next picture, Archiebald. There are bells, belles, and Belz. Math- ews says that the ringing of the latter would be the sweetest music to him. VVind 'er up, Archie. 5 , 'Tl'-'Y A 'gr-T.. . flip, x l K t A .- 4 -.xp PASSED BY THE CUPID'S BOARD OF CENSORS Here is another pair of campus pests who are abusing the silences of the Abbey Creek with their chatter and giggles. Next. Clarice smiles in a very regular-go-to- wedding manner, and that smile has fooled thousands. Just one more heave, Archie. lf these are the Holms of a Parson, why shoulcln't Clarence's name be Parsonages? This picture concludes the comedy and they all lived happily ever since. Rx Thi ? it . qv'-rn , 1 , ., . . fur ,.r:r7vwnvf 'vvWvfvs1-'1-w-v-h-v1f1t?'v'r.'g'1-'7'1'11'-' -v-v1-1,-gig'-1,4 .- y-rgrmV-'w 'r -'H'-:'w-r-vw. rp 1 u ..z.-..::'.wz4.'.ex..:.1.v.n. a...w..i ,a .3'l.i'klAm, ,,.-.m'f!sx.:-.fm .a,.y.-..-,- . X. . ,..n,.a.. ,. ....-..,...- .fa , . f . ...-L..,.ll..M.. ..-. .,,.. .. .. - .--..w.. .-. 1. 1, .V , . ii 1' ,..............,...,.....,...............,..,,m..,....-.,,,,.f ... ,.,,.,..,.,,. . ...- W. . . , ,X ,-...nf-ti-..-s M...--..-.-ff. lli c T- '7 : i , l 'il' lei E S? C' A L P ' 7,,., , .. . Y ,,......., , A , Q ,,,,.f.k.y.,w,,,,,-4,-7:-gg-u-yr wr.-fr'-'ws-vu '1-f,--...-1,fw'.- r-V '- -V '- -T, '1 fifff...3 7..f'I'..fL .. '..,.',. E.'L'LZ:X,..- .......,w4...L.Ai,...,ta.'.,.... ...,..,.w,.-.. ..,.u,..,.,. -. ,... ... l . . . . . l To the individuals whose pictures appear on the preceding pages, anc l whose pictures should have appeared there, we dedicate the following: Love Oh, Love, let us live with a love that loves, Loving on with a love forever, For a love that loves not the love it should love- I wot such a love will sever. But when two loves love this lovable love, Love loves with a love that is best, And this love-loving, lovable, love-lasting love X. Loves on in pure love's loveliness. Oh, chide not the love when its lovey-love loves With a lovable, loving caress, For one feels that the lovingest love love can love Loves on in love's own loveliness. And love, when it does love, in secret should love- 'Tis there where love most is admired, But two lovey-loves that don't care where they love Make the public most mightily tired. , BEN KING. .. ei- M-U-.-mf.-u--1-.-1.w-wvqw...-.1..-.....-..1..,.,-..-wt-.,.o. mm, n.m.-1-.- W-M iw,-F -.,,,. .-M - -- l to all others X f 1 L.. i'. A Brunette Pczstorial Across the rolling meadows the tremulous note of the lark came throbbing. Far in the distance the lofty tower of the chapel rose against the cerulean atmosphere. QNone genuine without the cerulean.j They sat on the soft, grassy bank of Abbey Creek. Her head rested trustingly on his manly shoulder. Her slender white hands lay pulsating in his rough, strong palms. Softly he whispered into her shell-like ear those old endearing words upon which lovers have dwelt for time immortal. Shyly, she looked up at him with lustrous eyes that spoke volumes-regular full morocco, gilt-edged volumes. On the evening breeze came the faint sound of the old chapel bell as the golden sun sank behind the burning clouds. Ah, but such love has passed. The grassy banks sit night after night in lonely vigil. No longer do the gentle murmurs of the babbling brook intermirgle with the soft cooings of lovers, to form a harmonious song which fills the air with gladness. Smart talk prevails. The young ladies raise their eyes superciliously to the young gentlemen. Having dissected the psychological emotions of sex instincts, the young ladies are no longer interested in weaving thrilling romances of brave knights on charging black steeds, who rescue gentle maidens from tall tOWC1'S. The young gentle- men have studied the economic p1'oblem of family life and the high cost of loving and have learned the futility of two endeavoring to live as cheaply as one on twenty bucks a week. Yes, love has passed. Rrqzziesrzzi in prlrr. fu Y V 1. , ma, -. 1-wb,--ww. ..., .. , '- -...V 3-,. ww,-'. -n'..14w OYA PURPLE , f 4 x . M M- . f , . , K .A J 1-ff'mmfu.a.1w,yf'-wwf-inmy it n 1 - ' 4. 'AA g A Q . i I ,S I 4 l i xv. I .-' S15 . ,E , ,w4.r,.,n.f-,- -n-nw. .... -nu, - -V V. , l-if ff ' ffl. l.. P . WK. -,,T.,... -.,. .- The Joys of the Student With fingers weary and worn, With a brain unable to think, Droopingly I sit in my blue pajams, Wielding my pen and ink. VVrite, write, write, Reports for Geology and Ed. VVrite, write, write- Not a thought remains in my head 'l'here's a theme yet for English And a notebook for Doc, My eyes are red and weary And it's past twelve o'clock. I am tired of ceascless striving, College life has lost its charm, And I've just about decided That l'll go back on the farm. Jake the Fusser RUN AT HIS REQUEST i-:F-er., ' -f.:w- W , 7 F ,, V j fg 0 r . , J - My If V 4:- ,, Y if I i B x 1 f 2 i 1 5 i 1 f Q 2 2 7 l 5 . 3 3 5 1 3 E . 5 s 5 M 2 5 F 3 5 3 E 1 P i s fra.,- E ix 1. ! 5, 1, 4, 1 IZ 1 1, 1, 1 li 'I f il gf il ,, f fi E E f 1, lv P ,, , 5+ ix 22 ,, ,, E z N -- -f 'f f'-we--mu -My +...,.-ww-.N .tm- ,..' , ,, Q., L . I .... , . .,...f.....'.t., , M- .. . W. . f'...f - -1 MI, .AM J.. .,.,.. .l..L,.., ..s. ,-,..,. ..,M.,.....- ..- ..,, .,.-.-im-W ,sms---vm ..--.,,-,t..f uw.-.r..n W 1w.,m.,a.., 1iMs..m,.f..-1 ...e,M....K ..-. Ye Fable of Ye Student Assistant Once upon a Time when Man walked up and down the lands and listed to the Call of the Wild which was wafted to Him on the Wings of the Gentle Zephyrs, there were no Student Assistants. In fact there were no Profs. except those who searched the Deep Dark Woods for Herbs and Bugs for Supper, or for amusement, picked up Sharp Coloured Stones to hurl at the Chattering Birds as,They fluttered around in the Tree Tops. These Profs were Energetic, correcting Their Own Papers and doing Their Own Work. They would have deemed it a Disgrace to let Anyone else do Their Duties and would have hid Their Faces behind Their Hands for Shame. Thruout the VVhole World was a Spirit of Happiness and Contentment. But unfortunately, It is not the Nature of Maxi to be Satisfied for long. As the Babies of the First Graduates grew up and began to part Their Hair and were sent to Cornell College to acquire Knowledge, a Girl, and Other College Frivolities, these Profs. grew Fat and Lazy and began to wear Starched Collars and shave off Their Beards. When They had advanced so far as to cover up Their Sus- penders with Vests and wear Paris Garters to hold up their Socks, some one of the Wise Ginks discovered that Their Shine would glim farther if They had Flunkies to do Their Work. With the Biological Skill of a Kelly, this Wise Gink took the Skeleton from an Anura or Toad and wrapped it in the Hide of a Shark Cfor He knew that the Flunkie must be a Bright Animalj. Into this He injected the Life Blood of an Oys- ter. After Many and Frequent Consultations with the Rest of the Faculty, He dubbed His Creation Student Assistant, to be commonly known as Theme Read- er, Lab Assistant, et eetera. This being on Saturday Night He rested the Next Day. Because there exist Laws against Child Labour in Iowa, it was found necessary to reward these Student Assistants for Their Excellent Services by paying Them Four Jitneys an Hour. Then the Prof. of the Janitor Department found that the Light of His Candle was growing Feeble and henceforth Student Assistants were duly created for Him. Thru the Constant Companionship with the Profs., these Student Assistants have acquired Like Manners and Actions. They complain Loudly and Frequently about Their Heavy Burdens of Responsibility, yet these Gruesome Ginks of Assistants would not give up Their Jobs to be even the President of this Institution. They Labour under the Impression that the Mere Students look up to Them with Awe and Respect. They call Prexie Chuck, and affectionately pat the shoulder of Stancliff. They joke with Ham and borrow lvlatches from McGaw. They move with All the Pomp of a Sardine in a Can of Oil. Moral: They have played the Fool and erred Exceedingly. C. P. B. X 1 v lv xi 1 UF. ,, 4, , ,..,,.,Y.. .Y.,V, , , .,.- -....,.-, ..-.,.,,.,.f,-k,, W, ,,,,. ,,, V. V.-,.-f- ...W V. ,. --7, - - Y., Q uxw-., .W t,......m,...-.W.,-,...,.M....,..-,W,..-,,,.-.VK:,, U A Q 1 1 W 1 --f ,.,. U.--wv I 2 5-' 2 L 3 f- 1 51 X . , L.. . 1. '-J,,,f zz I 1 1 V , -...-....... ,..-.K-4. ,,,.,..f.v. .- ...,. -. X-., 15,1 ' LfJILL..Q-l.Q-Q.T.4.IQI.IQ..L....,.Q.l.L.,m.,L,.,Q.W... . .,w...a.,.1..m.W.v..- 1 1 aff ' x , JE i I i 4 , is , ' E Mi J ' , l fig ' fig 1 - s 12 It gy! 1 ml Wi W U, ,K QW w I 'I u I 1 3 l 4 l 'Q :I .mf is Fi 1 ui 3 A ' li is ,L as H ji ! 1. M 'z 1: gi . -1 5. M: Si vii :ya 3? 55 Z iii Q A gl Us 53 2? 1. ei is gi 1: 3. 'S E z 5 i ,,q,, 5 li il 2 3 , 1 N , ' -.-.-M... , -..W-..,..-... .........W.,-,.v....... ..,,. - w...,-.,,.,.,. Ari' , f Y-31:7 ,A 1 5 if 4 , V1 f g 'vg 2 . ..- Se VT. E: X'- , ., ,,. .. . ..., ., ....4. ,.,,..., ,,., .,.: -.,, 1, . .. , ...,,, , .....,,,..-,,.,,.... .X :Q is T HE ROYAL PURPL. Bowman Hall Boarder, carving the Thanksgiviiig bird: I can get away first rate with this stunt on a chicken, but this ding-busted turkey reminds me of being in a strange city. Another Boarder: What do you mean ? First Boarder, still carving: I can't find the joints. MOTHER GOOSE FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS Ancient maternal ancestor Hubbard Proceeded to the hither all'-yielding cupboard To procure for her canine a portion of ossified matter 3 But when she reached her destination She found no trace of marrowed ration, And in consequence the necessitous mongrel received an empty platter. -T- Coed selling candy at Sans Souci. Male Student: They tell me I must buy some candy. How much is this ? Twenty-five cents, answered the maid. Umi thoughtfully returned the victim. Aren't you a little dear? Well, rejoined the maid, that is what Max says. TALES FROM THE INQUISITION Perspiration burst from every pore, and stood in big, cold beads upon my forehead. The agony of suspense grew at length intolerable and for a brief period I relapsed into insensibility. I was aroused -by the call of my name. I started to my feet, trembling in every fibre. Cautiously I began to proceed, with my eyes straining from their sockets in hope of catching some faint ray of light upon the subject. I kept on. Still all was blackness and vacancy. Suddenly like a crash of thunder there burst upon my ears the words, Sit down: you're bluHing! L...-.T.1-.1- Ann Marie Smith: When is the May Fete ? Wise Senior: In January. , i ,Q 9115? l y 'Y 1 ,x f 3 X. v v v- . A QI- ' .P My E th ? f' Mmm W' an HE ROYAL PURPL Prof. Kelly: Mr. Butzloff, tell us what separates North and South America. Butzloff: The Equator. Prof. Kelly: A mouse can swallow a mouse whole if it wants to. Ireland, who frequently is in' a state of ebullition: Do you mean hole ?' v York: A cow can swallow anything down and then swallow it up. You'd better not go to the party in the rain. You know your rubbers leak. That doesn't matter. I've got pumps inside of them. Teacher: Why did Cesar cross the Rubicon ? ' F reshie: F or the same reason that the chicken crossed the road. You can't get me on any of those jokes. She is surely well- featured. In what way ? She has an eye for beauty, an ear for music, a tooth for sweets, a mouth for pie, and a nose for business. ' Yes, and that man over there is a man of mettle. How's that? He is a man with a grip of steel, an iron nerve, but a heart of gold, and probably silver-tongued. Miss Traxler, leading the Girls' Glee Club: I want you to Crescendo on the 'Love' and then die away. Welsh, to the Joke Editor: Nix on any Cornell girl stuff under my name. It would raise the deuce with my girl at home. - 91. M - -4 A if if f :Z , - -,.4w-.,- WY ,. . W.-1.N.... .f ga 'I if wi ai ' iii . if a ? i ai! fi ,3 3 , ,, Mi 2? E 1 Q, 2: W ii A .. v xg 42 Eg ': i fi -5 ix ' :fi YV 2? ii' V: Z! 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A A 5 , . 1 I 3 1 Q l if W 11 11 1, 11 . 1, 11 if ,I W' ,. 'N J X' ,V 1 ,1 1' 1 2. i, , . lx l W1 1 J, 1 Academy Ola? Time Party 5 ' i 1 1, 1 ,1 , 1 1 1 I . 1 'I 1 11 1 ll 1' 11 1 .1 1 2 11 51, lr 1 1! ,1 if ll 1 1 1, 513' 1 11 li U T 1' 11 11 1 ' 1 Y 1 1 4 1 1 Y ' P 1 1 1 1 1 1, 1 1 1 1 15 1' 1 1. II 1 Il gm..--U-ww' 21 Q , -1 1 - :gl S A U ju-vs 3 .v .KA W 1 1 ' E . J 1 1 1111 .-,.,:,, Tig,L,,.:,,1,n,..m1 I' .. ,fu N . HE ROYAL. PURPL The Stick Around Club WHEREAS, Our pocketbooks having declared bankruptcy, WHEREAS, the distance to our home being too great to be traveled by foot, We, the following, having been forced to remain in Mt. Vernon during the spring vacation, do hereby organize ourselves into the club which shall be known as the Stick-Around Club of Cornell College. Chief Fosterer of the Spirit ......... ....... R UTH F LANNIGAN Game Keeper ........................ ......... S vim. WOODRUFF Keeper of the Jitneys .................... ....... B Ess SWENSON Assistant Keeper of the Jitneys ......... ....... M AX GRETENBURG Chief Instigator and Animator ....... ................ M ARY DAY Officer of the Day ...................... . ....... RAYMOND GRANT Assistant Officer of the Day ...... ...... C LIFF. BENTON Setter of the Pace ......... ........ L ois HOEL Agitator ......................................,,.,...................,.,...........,.. ...... A RT. ELLIOTT Members: All the rest who stayed here during vacation. , The club was organized the Friday night beginning the vacation. The meeting was held in Bowman Hall parlors. Various games were played, from Tiddle de Winks to Three Deep and Ruth and Jacob. Miss Yount afterwfards declared that she never heard such a racket up there in the parlor in all the thirty years she had been in Bowman Hall. Saturday night a meeting was held in the Philo-Milt Hall. Miss Singleton chap- eroned. There were about fifteen couples present. Sunday afternoon some of the members took a walk out toward the Ivanhoe. They stopped at the school house and indulged in the various games of Anti-over, Crack the Whip, First Couple Out, et cetera. Six rolls of pictures were taken. Sunday night the whole Club attended the sing at Bowman Hall. Tuesday afternoon the Club marched out the railroad tracks to the first woods, where a Weenie roast was held. I' 4 1 . I 4 s 4 -e if ri W 4: r .v :V 33 1 X , . E? is Q! :J .7 :E Ii 2: is Q1 . VX is ,A In fz fu H 3? ii Si 25 'I if fa 5: Y! 1 w The May Fefe Given by the Girls' Physical 'lifilillillg Dcpzlrtmcnt ' under thc direction of Bliss Rlachcod. May Queen RUTH GLENNY u'-4 .. THE ROYAL, PURPL. -n' On the trip to Knox last spring, Fackler changed his seat to one on the opposite side of the car so as to see the Misissippi River when the train crossed the bridge. From the 1916 Zenith CSimpson College, : Prof. Bachelor of Cornell gave a talk in chapel emphasizing the need of a well-rounded college course. He made such a pleasing impression that some of the girls wondered if he was true to his name. fLet's hope that Bach. behaves himself the nextltime he speaks away from Cornell.-Ed.J Doc. Knight: Nitro benzine is a Havoring for soap. Ask Thelma how much her Bill is. Bliss Traxler asks Ole if he is coming down to the Jordon House that night. Ole: No, once a week is all that I can stand there. Speaking of emotions in psych., Boylan asked: Would an actor really have to love an actress before he could play the part? a i. 1.. . Mildred.Green, when asked Are you still in our French class ? replied: Still is the Word. Haven't opened my mouth for a month. 1l -1 After a certain point in grammar has been explained, Prof. Knox pointed to Vance and said, There you have it in a nutshell. lLiL....1-1 Doc. Knight: Miss Parsons, I don't suppose you ever go to court, do you? No, I don't suppose you have to, anyhow. Probably your own house is a court house. FOOTBALL IN 1950 9 Cornell won the toss up and chose partners for the first quarter. Coe kicked off to 'Bowlegs' Betty, who fainted at first sight of blood. Time out. The field doctor hurried to the rescue and supplied pocket mirrors and invisible hairpins to the injured. Play resumed .- GJ vum--1: -p.f.-.f-,n...-..,,.-1--..mffu.v.,.f ,.,...w,...X M...-W-...... M. .N ,..1.,- mn. J , ..- ...., . , ' .-.A -Y ml .K f N ll x 11 Y 4 ,z f RJ 1 X v 1 -.. --,- -- F- .mnwn-.m.wnmww..wmg.v...n...-Hyun.-.-um-uvfgwwg Q- - 1 NA., , . VN r -m..N. . .,- ,-m...,.........-w-...M,..,-,..4..,.,.,..................-... Llkgm 'WTF' ' HE RCDY3-.IL PURPL Fresh: What does this bachelor degree one gets when he graduates, mean P Soph: A bachelor degree means that the recipient is pronounced educated and hence is incapable of assimulating any more knowledge or grasping a new idea. . - First Waiter: Why does Clarice Dillenberg sing so much louder this year Second Waiter: She wants people to know that she took lessons in voice in summer school. PH 1. ' There was a girl named Warner. She acted like Little Jack Horner. She wore a green lid, This cute little kid, And sat off with Short in the corner. - Shaw: This is an electrical cap. Ruth: I-Iow's that ? Shaw: I had it charged when I bought it. ii...-..l-ll COMING! COMING! COMING! One act tragedy, Doc. Knight's Freshman Chem. Exam, featuring General Blue Books in a Cavalry Charge. - Keister in Economics: If a man's partner dies what relationship in the firm exists? Grifrin: He has what is called a silent partner. ,iliiii-:l Cold, dear? About to freeze. Want my coat, dear ? No, only a sleeve. ff '- 0 A . ,ffzrg 1 I I -- 4 l ' off 3 Q - w. ' fn-peg 7, : 1 -- f X, f , .V .v,.., , -....m. .-.....-.-.-..-.,,,.-u...... .,.,.......-.......f..4. U.. ,..-f-1 N - - 4, k:4. Pa ,' ., ' f r YN-.. i N ,, . . . J - ' .,.,.-L -Q , H ., f K, , 1 TRI? L' a 'x NX f X xl QQ ., xx. .--. ..,. , ,, ,.,,,.. ,,..,,..,,.-.,,.....,,,,,,.., ,,:,,,,.-.. .,, .V M, ,. A W., 4 K N-v.,.,-,-sw-,gnfv-wp-imgft-rnmv--wry--x,. , . - 1--H-M -if---W ---H 4 I I 1. a.l.....:..1h..e,.u...I,......v...z.......,..f......,.,,.,..tv..I.,..t..t...n-aw-wum.nwhLmmw ' Q :.n:......,.....-.....1f.e.':u' ,m.,,,.,.-.V 5m..,W..'..w . ,,....,i..,.,,i.f,..5im:fL----....m,,,:tf..,..,,...,:-fi -1?1.-- ,rf , , , .,.. , ,.... ., ,MQ-1, ,1 -f-f g -- -.w.....,..,..-,, GIH2 ROYAII. PLJRI-3L.5pQ, i- 4 .W .-I-vqwgf'-err---er' , Q - -V -,-5f4-:--M-q--:- W .fy-9. . --tv V- -V ......., .,, V - W., .-7-V 1. J--v-yr-gw---V:-v-gaps, ,. , I V.,-...J .......-,.-N.,-N., ,.,.,,.m ..........12.......i.. .......,.,....t,,.s.t:,.l.,n.a.r. ,,.i:e.a.f.,.....i.:f.o,,..-.ut...Ie1.......a.:.'fm1 QwEmm f -- - I.. frat.-wvawiwf. ..wf,........s.:.....-...4.....,J' .,,,g,,,,.,,,,.,Y .. . ,,,, .i,,,m,,....- - - - Yfgri-1 ,,,,,,,..,,,.,.f-ff55- , W, V - ----Afa:-,-- YV, --.-:Y -V V--Y: -- A THE BRIDGE OF SIGHS UP TO DATE BY Doc. KNIGHT I stood in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs, And there I saw the strangest sight I've ever seen. 'Twas the rising of a German submarine. Sherm.: Hughes, how fast can you read German ? Chub: About six pages in Hfteen minutes. Sherm.: How many in an hour? n l sz Chub: Four. Colonel Waitt, a singer of note, Had a terrible frog in his throat. He coughed like a Hup Till he coughed the thing up, This unfortunate singer of note. Doc. Knight to Dot Allard: When you breathe chlorine, did you think of the poor boys in the trenches of France ? She, after a pause: No, of course not. Doc.: I don't suppose you would. You were probably too busy thinking of the Cornell boys. ' A TRIP TO HECK We went a little farther and came to the brink of a pit. In this hole were men in all manner of terrible and distorted positions. f P!! at are these. I asked. These are the professors who Hunked students, giving as their reason the following: 'Well, I didn't quite like the attitude you took toward your work.' Now they are doomed to assume the attitudes which they ascribed to their students, replied Dante. Yes, but what are those stalwart youths on the couches who look so contented ? I asked. ' Those are the students they flunkedf' :ft 7 A ,lvl XJ I 9-fr C K s I 2 4 1 I THE ROYAL PURPL '1 l The 1918 Royal Purple GLENN MATHEWS RALL GRIGSBY Business Manager Editor-in-Chief 71- X. T HE ROYAL PURPI. Z A The 1918 Royal Purple PARTIAL CONTENTS How will we earn our board when the smokey stoves are gone ? The Janitors. How much is Bosworth ? Q The Old Swimming Hole. A lovely tale of scum, mud and cramps at the Stone Quarry, by Glenn Mathews. A Woman's Right to Change Her Mind. by Emma Locke. A Knight for a Day, by Raymond Grant. A thrilling, soul stirring, delicious, irrestibly bubbling romantic tale of a young couple. Standing up for Stansberry. by Mary Taft. For supreme drivel, take it from us, there is nothing sweeter and softer. At the Tea Shop With My Girl and Fifteen Cents, or Why I Started to Train for Tennis. Originality by Miss Ditto and Albert Aulwes. I Took Him for Grant-ed. Mary Day MI-V SLow I TH E ROYAL PURPI.. I i ,mf-wr-mn-. . -- Z' Please Patronize our Advertisers t l THE RCDYAWI.. PURPLE The Cornellian DoN KREGER CLIFFORD BOYLAN ANTQNE JOHNSON Editor-in-Chief Managing Editof Business Manager I Have Clothing For You li 'll We wonder whether hiv- ' Q you fully appreciate what a wonderful clothes ser- ,-f' fjg, -Vx M vice we rencler. 7 fl, .A.' V , Ill We offer you the cream , y of the worlcl's best clothes, f .t' ii Society Brand, Hirsli W ick- ff wire, ancl Michaels-Slern E ,ll Clothes. ,Q fi why, any of them i ' Woulcl be enough to justify ' ill? ' e-N, f any house to make a big '- IH . Q 'E 51 QM 3'c fuss about lt. fre t . Il-'l 1 A 'g i Ill The Wonderful facilities , 51. . ' 1 of all three of these great millet style leaders are yours to 2 profit by. qIYou'll never know what they mean to you until you come to see us. . We always carry a full line of athletic goods of all kinds. Fred A. Bauman Mt. Vernon, Iowa W.. ..,,,,.,..,. ,.,,.,,,,. ....,. ...,.. .,. ,..,,.. ..-. .--W-. .- .V fy . W.-7.--W. ,,,, .. T, ., ,,.-,,..,., ..........,...,,,., ,,.,,,..,..,....,,..,,, .......... '......1.....,...a.....-. ,...,,.,.,,.,...i.. .. .. .-.,u...4..:e.s..,4,ga.t-Q-...... l... .s.L...1.:1.M. .Ea...g'.c'.1........a132.2?i.e..,w:.'.at,- ., ,..,,. ,...,.,,M .r ,. .1.A, . ...I .,.,,. - , . . ., . -,.. ....,....--...du .- .- .. f- ,.....,.-. , A. . F? VW Z F-' 55 FP Pi '- ' . .... ,J x ..... -I. . .-- Y-,--- -.M .lf -... ...- .- . ...X ......-.N . ., ...s ... ... . .. .,,. .,A,......4-uy 'v-r1mA.,,--,,,..3,.,.,.,,,:..,..,,..1.,,,.,,,...,,,,,,.,n,.,.,.,,,,,,,,F..,,,,,l7Y,q.Q,.,,!,A.,,,i,,,,,,,?,,.,,,,. '.s1.........,.,.-.....,.,s-. .c.. Ag..- Z:a.:......i..-. ,.4..g.. .,...,.. .. .1 ......u..!iL.L..L....., L- ':..,L.,.a...L...r........:.i.u,s...m....4a...J...g..i....,.-.t wa.. ti.. . . . tt... - A. .t...w.w-....t..-..w .wwe . ....f...u.4..,.,.-as M ..... ...,,.. .-,.......rm...-....a..s..m.a...t.............v4.w... , ,VM . ,, - .- Business and Pleasure They sat in the parlor and in soft tones her told her of his love for her. My darling, he said, removing her photo to the pocket on the other side Cgo to Buser for photosj as he took her hand CIvory Soap, at Fox's Big Store, keeps the skin smooth, in his rough palm Qno blisters with Baun1an's tennis racketsj, I have de- layed until now asking you if you will have me because I was not sure that I would graduate this year. But since my work has improved fuse Punt Hill's typewriters for accurate notes, 5.20 a day buys onej, the Profs. assure me that I will get my diploma and I will soon be able to support you. . While he had been speaking she leaned back on the sofa Cbargains at Neff's, the Cor- nell Furniture Manl, but now her lustrous eyes fBennett's for Belladonna Powders, looked into his, and she whispered, Is this a real proposal? He clasped her in his sack suit Cmade to measure with an extra pair of trousers at Zacke's for SZSD and replied, How can you ask such a question! I love you madly, passionately. I would willingly die for you. He drew from his pocket a ring Cgo to Hoover's for diarnondsl and attempted to place it on her finger. One moment, she whispered shyly. Do I understand that you p1'omise to marry me ? I do. Her powdered cheek fuse Melba Face Powder, at Cornell Drug Storej fell upon his shoulder. Then, she murmured sweetly, I am yours. C. P. B. iff ' 9:9 . ra - t a gif., -, ' V A ' j '5- 0 uv-.1 'P pf B A, - N , :ig-e:..:.e::e.....:.-+4-5:11:11-, e.f:-531--uuesatit ,Q '-f-22fA .QWI4 A ga, . .Kliyl L25 W 1, .fs if iq 7:0 I X Rah ' an QU Woulc:ln't fquegcion the Worth of a dia moncl purchased at TiH3any's. No more right has any man to ques tion the Value of a KILLIAN Style in MCH,S clothing X X 1 4 f A -HW And in Women's Wear, 0 course it is ,lfkcf-N? -r f ex, I' tx: 3. E , ,fi X , ,, ., , wg yt 1 L fix H Q, 1 HT - X X yy, xx : , if w-,'l Q 3 I 1? l H-w-co. K I L L I A N ' S CEDAR RAPIDS THE ROYAL PURPI. The Flutter Passed Yaps Society Chief Matador .............................................................................................. LEE BYERLY Collector of the Royal Laundry ......... ,,,,,,,,,, W EARY WILSON Keeperof the Sacred Bull ........... ,,,,,,.,,, K EITH LEMQN Herder of the Floosies..g ......... ,,,,,,,,, S TUB HARTWELL Model to the Royal Sculpture ....... ,,,,,,,, C RAIG ARBUCKLE Blender of the Tobaccos .............. ,,,,,,,, S Log STANSBERRY Tinker of the Sounding Brass ........... ,,,,,,,, H OMER TRIMBLE Muck Racker .............................. .,,.,,, A RTHUR ELLIOTT Member .......... First Student: Do you know my brother P BESVEN ANDERSON Second Student: Yes. He and I sleep in the same row in chapel. VVeeks, last fall: Gee, I wish that I had been Adam. UWhy PYI Weeks: Well, then I could have been sure that I was the first to kiss Eva. On the Glee Club trip, Prof. Conrad phoned to a house for Lemon. The hostess assured Prof. Conrad that there was a lemon there, and called York to the phone. New Arrival: Can you tell me w here I can get good board ? 3? Old Bowman Hall Boarder: Only in the lumber yard, I fear. Dorothy Deardorf must be an artist. How do you know ? Why, see the attention she is drawing. i Doc Knight: Miss Jane, are you any relation to the rest of the 'Janes' here ? E f flu '-' ... xt ........... X. - .G .. Nm. fd if sf. f gli si ,W l ,'--.. ,lu A ' ' 1 A A. jlgfii' Q ,1'jf',', J 1,,l - - 1'1 -' I , , !l lEi iil!il!T!llllTi'E'I ll ll iilif l l l f - r 31 Qitrwmml attteegmai lf 1, A, i dk: Q Wiizfilflf .se ml lfilL?i'iii'ii etlr si 4 H Q' iii' 'N i fi liltlill ii' if C ' ind - it . . i - , , 1 , . , 1 i LX llll' fi' ...I 40. H, alt' 1 - J 4,,i 'A 5 V o a , ,N E. -, new ,fmwbf N' 1 : ii! ll! ir a ' . 'mls 1 lf - , 1,5 -' ,., ,, , ', ,Q 'LR ..- I, .p QC , . . L - ,, Q . vs J . --L, in .' --.Tl ,. -i . We Y 0 . . - ,l - . - C 1 :ig 1 3 fx -' Ms., i ,,, Lk' T - , V - ' , ...V ll' N3 'f:33f1fi?f:3E7g'5 '- - ffuibf ' ' . I ' j -figiiqflpl,-, x.r. , If , if - ' - , . , ' - ' ' . - any-G ,we -' 112 IJ., . . -if 1 .I '49, nl-A,,,, 4. ' 1 f',y i . U -, .I N. -f who make Denecke's, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, their Shopping Headquarters are usually the best dressed girls in school. One thing is certain, they are always in style and much of the time, two to three months ahead, before the styles become common. For years we have specialized on Garments for the College a little better their requirements. Serving more College Girls each year and serving them Girl, learning each year better each time, is well worthy of note by college girls who are not already patrons of this store. Our assurance that we will serve you well on all matters of dress-Coats, Suits, Dresses, Shoes, Millinerv, Hosiery' Underwear, Neckwear Gloves Silks - 1, Y P I Mail Orders Given Prompt Attention Cedar Rapids' Best Store for VVomen etc. 3 t i G .wa BlcfsrviE'sToREQfuowA ' Y'-'L s -f A F N.-w 12' Q , ' sw zz fi ew .1 , f ' N fi -1' 5 .,4.....-..-.....,..,....,..s...w.....s,, V b 3 5' ,ws , . ,.,.,,,..- V- ir . ' . If 'iv,1-'IIA f A-i - xi Av 'IFF' XL tgp, . .: .,,g,-2 1 Ygn- if 'tri '- 'I .if X, ,Q .f we Egg!! .- R ,C ll . M., Jw Y, WW. -'lm J, qw 'QQ-.,ff,Q , 2 ' Q Nw T . if 22 J YM! E 'km Xxilxlxxxilxnxxxxxx YX!!!I!1'rXl'!Ixl!ll!I!xx'xrl!zxU!1llxxxxxx1!lll HERE WAS A TIME NOT SO VER Y LONG ago, when all printing looked alike to most of usg it was just printingg but that time is past and a new day has dawned. Most everyone today has a very highly developed sense of what is right and proper in all manner of printing. It is one thing to appreciate superior quality and another to produce it. To produce it requires men of skill, industry and zeal and a good equipment. We have a corps of efficient craftsmen who are schooled in what is right and how to get the best results. We have a master printer who will give your work his personal attention. Our equipment is of the best. There is a glowing sense of satisfaction in dealing with people in whom you have ab solute faith. Dependabilily IIXIIIXIIIXXXIXXXXIXXXQI be lin teas QEcunnmp Zlhbertising ftlompanp Iowa City Iowa Pros awww Riu? 24323, 0 ov ' e 2 l sv 99.259, 1:1 -HK? . . viola'-, ' . 'f f ' 47. 'H .ak .I .W. 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' - 'K '1 , v.lf 4' ,ffl , 'rl' r- ',':,,y, :pq-34. - ' wmv f - '11,-:f',l7?b5'gx. ' '.w?:s:r. Z -': f '.' I. , 'T' 1' ' , -gm.:'S1-Tfffgrf d . :,.',L.,5.,g3x.,.E,A S lv gl r ,A -I X ,rw 'I ,- ,Q I, ci? A Fry' 4 I ,N Cr, fl xp:-.uh ,f,- .cz ,N .---f .-A.-'K ,.'g 7p?,, - Lu ,. --,-'H . 'l ' qI-ffi'?D'4if.f7Z1- . Qff'5QvfQ -5 gtg? ' ' I . ,,.,,,. V 0 A ' .- .4. - f - f A K I' I - ' - . 1 if 43,.-aww L 1 4 1 x s Hmsn Wlcnwmf Cos Cloth e s V 2 1 ' Q B S Look for this sign in our window. It stands for tailoring ofthe highest order. FRED A. BAUMAN MT. VERNON, IOWA COMPLIMENTS OF REID, MURDOCI-I 8: COMPANY CHICAGO MONARCH BRAND FOOD PRODUCTS Don'l Slay Hungry but Slay Healihy CITY CAFE A quzet place for a Quic Lunch A cool place for a Cool Drznk We carry a stock of all Eleclriciiy FOR .0 ' LIGHTING HEATING I A POWER... QU kinds of appliances Lamps, Portables, Irons Washers, Ranges W apsie Power C9 Light Co. MT. VERNON, IA. XVHS 21 His heart t lt His b ill was h 1 When E F21 tter went f g A Platncr H01 I T. I-I. ZACI-IE 8: SCN TAILORS lVlt. Vernon lowa Make new suits to order and clo Dry Cleaning, Repairing and Pressing. When in town and in need of work clone, call OH HS. We will guaranlee to please you RED LIQTTER DAYS OF CORNELL Wlieii the heating plant is installed. VVhen we have the Junior-Senior swimming pool. When dancing is permitted in the gym. Wheii the Frats return. When Doc Knight moves his appamtus to the New Science Building. MA GNU HOTEL Cedar Rapids New- est Fireproof Hotel Two Prices 551.00 Without Bath 51.50 With Bath Popular Priced Cafe ancl Restaurant in Connection DEMPSEY Iowa's best Cleaners and Dyers. We clean, dye, press and repair all Ladies' and Gents' Garments. Send us your silks, satins, chiffons, plushes and velvets. Kid and Silk Gloves. Neckties and Silk Shirts. Plumes and Feathers. VVe will send them back just like new. CEDAR RAPIDS STEAM DYE WORKS D. D. Dextrser, Prop. E. R. MOORE COMPANY Makers of Collegiate Caps, Gowns and Hoods Originators of Moore's Official High School Cap and Gown Annual Distributors of Caps and Gowns to the Seniors of Cornell College 932 to 938 Dakin Street frm My Qu' .ad :vid Did your watch stop when you dropped it. Yes, Do you think it went clear thru the floor? It has been reported that a girl in the Domestic Science Department strained Clllcago her back recently while lifting a pan of her own biscuits from the oven. I i 1 Z7 jg Ix SN J . ..... .QMQIAXA .qv ly, A ........... . ,..,.........,..-.-...q..........,-.......,...... s .J f.. Y ,, ,. :N Jr. ,, ,. W! .. K gf ff 45. 1 v- ,- . . ,A f. X , .37 If . S .F W its .5 . . aplur bun DIAMONDS WATCHES AND JEWELRY New Location 218 South Znd St. CEDAR RAPIDS 84 uhakersz Yon take care and sometimes go to extra expense to ohtain good exposures, so why let them out to he finished hy inexperienced people. VVe guarantee lvest results and handle all work care- fully. Starting May lst, we will have all work in the mail the second day after receiving it. Our prices are right and our work has never been excelled. All rolls developed, 10 cents Prints, Vest Pocket, 2Mx3M, 25C per doz. ZMX-IM, 350 per doz. 3Mx3W, 3Mx+M, SMXSM, 50e per doz. Post Cards, SOC per doz. XVII MAKE A SPECIAI.'I'Y OF ENI.ARGIEMEN'1'S XVRITIE FOR OUR PRICES THIS VILNITA PHOTO COMPANY 821 Chestnut St. St. Louis, Mo. i ' 1 ' ' Command Ds to C ' I .X Insure Satisfaction in lv. I i 4 . X A3 '.l 40 X. . Qt f- ' ,M :Wan l 6, F fl MODERN DRAMA Act One-Illaid one. Act Two-Nlaid won. Act Three-Nlade one. FOOTWEAR I If you cannot call in per- son we invite you to write -to phone-to wire-We will send goods on approv- al--at once. QEDAR Amos. National Bank Building fl .ill l I g 5 if -'-. f 0IllllllklfffqfffllllllllllIIIIIHIIINIIIM J : flffigfflyllllllllh MRS. A. K. KNOX Qllateress il... Spreads, Picnics, Banquets Society and Private Lunch es Roberf Burns H zzfufmzz FzY!ed Cigar Have You Tried One Lately? xx fi Y'0u1'r 'very truly C O NWAY CIGAR CO. W. G. WEEKS, Mgr. Cold Air Vault FOR Storage of Furs N. SCHOEN,CInc. Established 1894 ' Exclmzive F zz rrzkrs 210 3rd Ave. CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA D CONTENTS OF A SUIT CASL KTIRLS, GI,l5E CLUB Powder Powder Rag Rouge Soap Nlidcly Blouse Lilac VVater 3 VVash Cloths 12 Towels Comb Tooth Brush Tooth Paste Pumps 3 doz. Hair Pins Pompeian Night Cream Cough Drops Lavalier Rook Cards Camera , TlifATRL' W, . - E cvnv n Ar- ' vi N in I in 2.30 It 8:15 G I Es 51.533, fifffi.. Cedar Rapids, Iowa Wm. J. Slattery, gr. Presenting bupteme Bauhehille The Cream of EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN Attractions Our Booking Aiiiliations Encircle the Globe , ,.,i,.r,,4, :auf-' .9 'fir' - ' ' 'Z L L' , 5' rig' ,JW -, - J ,ji J . gy .QJQ ' , H , i I -v--yr. , wg--l' ,J.:,l l 4 g,,'i,l3',:l?y QA, 'Jig -4 MJ -.il ill- ., ', .14 ., - - . 5 -dll' in- 4-1 fi .-gg. f - . ,fi f5!,5F5.f:v: in : t' . if-my if -, -H i,.i.t'- fi 1 V - .f v ,L .Q 4.- liit, '. I , . i -fl- 1 fi 11 .- n -nn' t 3 ,Q-. -,r.f'f1'. ii. ,..:..-.',, 1- ' ' .Pg fy. ,4f 'i5f2'f-' 2 . if 295. - 4.-,.:,'.1.f' . -' gr .: fwfr V 1 ,Mi-',f, - Air! fig 1- , , U 5' .:,xf.'. ' . . i i..t,. :mmf - Q -if I .. .i. ', il . Arif 4 A J.. My 'rv .' .' M,-' Qi ' Ai? 4 .1-H u . , .i.,, twig, I ,--'lin 14 b V '5: ...j'e' , . if 4- :i l Jii2ftA ' .1'f1f l fy 5 G' .-G ' 4 if- i . - 'Q-jf, ,- ..f ,,i .f:f,f' if ff :wLf ,1ff W 11. 'F 't-M.. ,I Yi .' jrj n 1. IET MMW E- I. ...N AA . .fy by IU, lfmyr M lf ui. - ,cz ' , rin- Q 4 .f , ar f . ' .gwqedfl -- cgi: I wg, J .. , , cfk.g:,f' Shoe Styles of T he T imes Qiibapman 86 Zkepler Mt. Vernon, Iowa CONTENTS OF A SUIT CASE CContinuedD His Picture Button Hook Il'Ianicure Set Perfume Vanity Fair CAprilj Writing Paper Fountain Pen Curling Iron Switch 2-l Handkerchiefs Other articles use of which not known MEN's Guin CLUB Dress Suit Pumps l Collar l Extra Shi1't Front l Extra Handkerchief ilautel untruse CEDAR RAPIDS IOWA European Plan First Class in Every Respect Rates 51.00 and Up BANQUETS A SPECIALTY C. E. TAYLOR President and Manager The Buser Stud illnr Ighntnz Special Attention to Students Across Street from Interurban Depot io Eiztmnnhn Fine Watch Repairing Special Jewelry Manufacturing Lutly Kr Taylor Co. matrhez 223 First Avenue Phone 67 Cedar Rapids, Iowa ff' Your Friends g Can Buy Anything . pub, 1 You Can Give Them Student Cwritii homej: How do Except Your Hhntngrap J. R. G1LMoUR Photographer It lg vou spell 'linancially'? Other: F-i-n-a-n-c-i-a-l-l-y, and there are two IAS in iClIllJ2ll'l'ZlSSCCl,.H sg? et S '92 Your Friends Can Buy Anything You Can Give Them Eawfff Tow' P I-I GTO G RA P H Everything Photographic at the CAMERA SHOP The Post Otiiee is Opposite Kodak Finishing 8 I-Iours Service Enlargements Kodak Supplies WHEN IN CEDAR RAPIDS VISIT The illilissinn brunt Billiarh Barlow I-Iendquarters for 'Baseball Scores All Kinds of Soft Drinks and Cigars VVe Have the Celebrated Malta on Draught GRAY AND GRIFFIN, PROPS. a..Ar.i. een 1 For Any Wear and Everywhere a f. 65-K. Leads Them All Call and see them at E. KYLE LEONARD KOPF, City Meal Market We Always Have on I-land a Good Supply of Fresh and Salt Meats Oysters in Season J We Solieit Your l atronage the Manuk- igv Hrraa B Y AUG. A. BAUMAN Mount Vernon, Iowa Your Patronage Solicited for All Kinds of Printing Orders HARMON BROS. DIiN'l'lS'1'S 1. Remove live nerves from aching teeth from 3 to 5 minutes without any pre- vious treatment will: lilllz' or no jrain. 2. Fill or crown the same from 15 to 30 minutes' time. 3. Decayed teeth or roots removed and same replaced by bridge work in same dav with gold or porcelain. This work is solid, durable, looks real and can be used same as your natural teeth. 4 Synthetic Porcelain Fillings enable you to have your front teeth restored to their natural color and shape. These fill- ings cannot be detected. 5. Alloy and composition fillings 5 to 10 minutes' time. 6. XVI: stand above all when it comes to extraction of teeth by our easy method. 7. False teeth lplatesl, we have an ex- pert man in this one particular line, that makes plates look and feel like your own natural teeth. 8. If your teeth need attention, it will pay you o visit llarmon Bros., Df'u1i.rf.v. ALL VVORK GUARANTEED Phone 1951 Over Kresge Sc and 10c Store urnell ea 5131311 flflfhere Pfeasing Atmosphere 'wztk tlve Best to Eat Afwttzts You If you want to pass a Pleasant .Hioztr drop into the Zgrunstnink lub Eighteen Tables Good Light and Air Largest Place in City 110-122 S. Third St. Second Floor REQUISITES IN A ROOM-MATI5 PossEss1oN-Hats, gloves, shoes, tennis rackets, money to lend, home folks that send eats, good humor Cinexhaustiblej. PERSONAL CHAIRACTERISTICS-A cheer- ful willingness to run errandsg a Hu- ency in raving over the possessions, friends and accomplishments of the other room-mate, a nice appreciation of the times to speak, and the times to keep silentg a religious observance of boundary lines in the clothes closet. GENERAL AMIABILITY-An overwhelm- ing desire to do just as her room-mate wants her to do at any particular mo- ment of the day or night. .VVI-1ITSELL,S STAND 01'Cl':iP-N Ho1,EsoME illl . ,.. rm ALI. ','?N,U ' 5 ..a111l.. A, ALA'l'M3Lli Hl'I'SlELI.'S WIE-IITSELIJS STAND Peanuts, Hersheys, Gums, Corn Popcorn in 5, 10, 25C bags R. E. GOODYEAR Barber bison 4 Cl121ifS Good Workmen Nice Line of Tonics and Face Lotions We 7731 to Please You A JEVVELRY STORE is AMONG You IT IS HOOVER'S Xvith an ldeal and an Aim It is to serve you with the hest in Perfect and Attractive jewelry. Neatest and Newest of VVorld's best patterns in Silverware. Cut Glass-Rich, Clear and Elegant. Fine China handsomely decorated. Every line new, full and complete. A perfectly equipped repair department. Bargains in diamonds a specialty. Kindness and courtesy mark the Hoover service to all. You Are VVelcome H. H. HOOVER. JEWELER Zlianneg 8: Svrellarz Gligar Sturm Gln. HEADQUARTERS FOR ALL KINDS OF BUGS AND SPORTS 221 lst Avenue 312 2nd Avenue C. W. NEFF Cornell's Q FURNITURE MAN lnvites you gclsggglqceroygz his general p I at EASY CHAIRS, PICTURE - . - . l , FRAMES, WRITING DESKS 'll f , , . 1 yi TABl..ES,CEDAR CHESTS mb 'f ' A ill! law L I . MANICURING ll f,lll .,...1llll The Right Way, 35d u ,Q- ' 0 'K --AQ FK Hartz 'Hair Stare Montrose Hotel Bldg. C d R I How near were you to the ansuei in L' ar apl SP Owa the fifth question P Just two seats awav . .. ..-..m- X fan. ,, tx. Elm I i r x I Z l E r I l I r ll l Q . Q 5 e i. 9 I 1 Y F ll ll 1 . ,. I E r tl if 1 i r 3 i .......--....,.f-.-e,,...,..... rm--..1.-v,-..- -...----.C-. E 5 .., .. ......,s.. 1. O. W. HOLME ff Heating and Plumbing FURNACE AND TIN WORK ALL WORK GUARANTEED FIRST CLASS Northwestem Mutual Life lnsurance Co. Of Milwaukee Still is the dividend paying Company of U. S. A. VVrote in 1915 over S314-4,000,000 insurance, 42 per cent of which came from old policyholders. ELWOOD MACY, Agent Mt. Vernon, Iowa C. D. VAN VECHTEN, Gen. Agent Cedar Rapids, Iowa Vauderham Hardware Dealer in Shelf and Heavy Hardware Plumbing and Heating Phone l24 Mt. Vernon, Iowa GEO. E. BROWN North Side Barber Shop Work Guaranteed We Solicit Your Patronage H. C. GILLILAND Eastern Linn County's Largest Dry Goods Store lNIt. Vernon Iowa WHERE THE MONEY GOES Tea Shop College Oflice Book Room Star Theatre Cornell Grafters Buy Your Candles AT THE jllilt. Fernnn Qlianhp kitchen They are made fresh daily. A nice sup- ply of all kinds and all flavors may be found. Step in and get prices. JAS. VARVARIS Proprietor 15 V ,, .M -.V 4. V fZV.I '4.A Q V 1-ix' I- V h V V4 :VV VV -. 1 .. A -,..V.- .., -V . .,., . -V .. . I I - ,V. I VVYI. - II ,V- V VV V ' - 1 ,aj-5.1 , , x VQVVV.. 7 A ' a V Z, - , . V , -4 ,VV,,, V .Af 4 .TL V ' x V. :VV - .A V ,, 4 5 - .. .', .-., .. V ',- ,- .:. 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