Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH)

 - Class of 1914

Page 1 of 446

 

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1914 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 446 of the 1914 volume:

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L M ff.'QVE'C3LNf1'5f1 ' ,...-. --- -,573 Glu mallare EH. iliuhinsann, genvruwa hvnefartur uf Eartmuuth Olnllvgv, mhu frum the aummii uf hifi friurarnre gram Innksa hunm with unhrratanhing amh zgmpaihg upnn thy nerhn smh aupiraiinnz nf gnuih, this. The tifig-ziaeih unlnme nf ihv V Elgin, in hvilirateh an EI mark nf the reapnri smh afferiinn uf Earimnnih men MOOSE A Fragment CFrom Verses read at the funior Smofferj What shall we sing of and live for, Juniors of Dartmouth College? What but the best that men strive for: Friendship, and art, and knowledge. Knowledge, and art, and friendship: these be three, As most men find. Here let them join in a living trinity For men of heart and mind. Now this is the word of friendship and knowledge together, The bond of the men who know: That word-just come-from the stern Antarctic weather, ' Out of the age-old snow: When the last chance of life hung on there being Not four men-only three, Une said: Just going outside-may be some time. . Some time . . . eternity! Great things are simple: not science and not art Can make men tried and true, But just that each day each man do his part Even as these English do- These noble comrades, giving life for knowledge That all men yet may know. For them this word was said in Anglo-Saxon Twelve hundred years ago: The holly-wood is cast into the fire, The dead man's treasure-chest Lies open to his greedy heirs, desire- Fame is bestf' Fellows!-though F ate be false, and Luck your debtor, Glory in deeds well done! Hold fast the old truth: defeat with honor is better Than victory ill-won. Then win!-if the last ounce of strength and courage Can win the day- -Curiis Hidden Page OCTOBER 1 0, 1912 voL.Lvi 7 Z 1914 Uhr Bight , What is the fE.gis? Perhaps a number could tell us that the fEgis was the shield of Minerva, but perhaps some might be interested in going a little farther into the detail and the truth of the word's significance. If we were to read into ancient, classic literature-Homer especially-we should find Zeus, the king of the gods, bearing the aegis as his particular property, and not his intellectual daughter, who, it seems, only bor- rowed father's finery on occasion. It was in the following manner that Zeus came to possess the aegis. Cronus, the old king of the gods, was very jealous of his offspring, and insisted upon swallowing every one of his children as they came to the light. Old mother Rhea, however, soon came to resent this summary disposal of her brood, and when the baby Zeus was born, she served the old gentleman a stone wrapped up in baby dresses, which he unhesitatingly bolted, and the infant she hid upon the island of Crete, where he was nurtured by the goat, Amalthea. When the lad grew up arid the old goat died, Zeus placed her sign among the con- stellations, but retained her skin, which he used as a shield, by fastening one end across his shoulders and holding the skin out across his body on his left arm. With this armor, the fearsome Gorgon,s head in its centre, Zeus fought against the Titans in the battle of the gods and giants. Athene, Apollo, and the hero Achilles are all storied to have used this invulnerable protection at times. According to her statues, Athene was fond enough of fashion to change the style of the aegis from shield to breast-plate, which she bound to- gether over her bosom with the snaky medallion of the lVledusa's head. Writers differ widely in description of the aegisg various conceptions of its form and nature seem to have been built upon and away from the original interpretation. Pri- marily, the aegis is the symbol of the grey thunder-cloud, fringed with light- Then Zeus toolf up his aegis which many a tassel trailed Refulgent, and the mountains of Ide with storm-clouds veiled, Anal, lightning, thunciered loudly and shook it from the height the goat-skin, golden-edged, with the Gorgon's head-symbol of the tempest and its terrors. From such form, however, it is turned into a breast-plate, and again we have it as the smooth, round Argolic shield with the ever-present face of snaky horror for a boss in its centre. The conception of the round shield, though perhaps not the truest, is yet the one we must select as the best to explain our year book name. Ours is the smooth, round shield upon which, as upon the shield of Achilles, may be graven many wonderful thingsg where, instead of the circle of the earth, we may draw the circle of our college world and bear our 1EE.gis thus emblazoned for a record of our academic life. C99 v0L.LV1 1914 Sigia The Soul of Letters fair, brows banded round With golden thought, and twined in her hair The rose of vivid fair-flowered, thorn-scarred life,- On her we call to guide our hand-to write For us the brief scope of our college year In tabled lists, in story and in jestg To blazon forth upon our zfgis, face, As did Achilles on his storied shield, A city fair with feasts arid banqueting, But malge it here, instead, our college haunts And picture all with cunning art and sh-ill The golden round of this, our college year. Draw there the realm of mind and intellect, And those who teach and those who sit and learn, And those who claim the palm of honor, won In quiet, learned wise.- In friendship's bond Be graven those who pledge with hand in hand A mystic fellowshipg mid lfindred souls Upraise the altar of true brotherhood To burn with comrade-love.- Those, too, set down Who with their body's brawny strength have gained The laurel and th' acclaim from those who saw Them battle for the College in the games. Here place the ranlgs of them who, with a slfill Born not of sturdy limb, accomplish much ln gentler arts,' their deeds portray and give Them honor, as they ought.- - And now, that naught Be laclfing from our shield, in jocund mien Our fun and foibles suffer to be drawn With sympathetic hand, and bear with us In all our folly and absurdity. And thus our boolg, which we would style our shield, Is doneg therein is writ, thereon engraved The golden round of this, our college year. -W. B. Humphrey C105 IQ VOLLVI 1914 Cifrnaterz nf Eartmnuth Glnllrgr AND OF MOOR'S CHARITY SCHOOL ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, D.SC., LL.D., PRESIDENT. WILLIAM MARTIN CHASE, LL.D ....... Concord, N. H. Clerlf of the Board. HIS EXCELLENCY SAMUEL DEMERITT FELKER, LL.B., A.M., Cex-ojicioj FRANK SHERWIN STREETER, A.M ...... Concord, N. H. CHARLES FREDERICK MATHEWSON, LL.B., A.M., . New York, N. Y. BENJAMIN AMES KIMBALL, AM. HENRY HOYT HILTON, A.M. . FRANCIS BROWN, D.D., D.Lm. QOX SAMUEL LELAND POWERS, A.M. . . LEWIS PARKHURST, AM ..... ALBERT OSCAR BROWN, A.M. . JOHN MARTIN GILE, A.M., M.D. . EX OFFICIO TRUSTEES OF THE COLLEGE IN RELATION TO FUNDS GIVEN BY THE STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Rochester, N. H. Concord, N. H. Chicago, Ill. ON., . . New Yorlf, N. Y. . Newton, Mass. Winchester, Mass. Manchester, N. H. Hanover, N. H. . Councillors HON THOMAS ENTWISTLE . . . Portsmouth, N. H. HON HARRY T. LORD . Manchester, N. H. HON BENJAMIN F. GREER . Copfstown, N. H. HON JOHN M. GILE . ..... Hanover, N. H. HON HON. GEORGE H. TURNER Th EMOS K. SAWYER e President of the Senate Bethlehem, N. H. Franklin, N. H. The Spealfer of the House of Representatives WILLIAM J. BRITTON ......... Wolfehoro, N. H. The Chief justice of the Supreme Court FRANK N. PARSONS .......... Franklin, N. H. VISITORS ON THE CHANDLER FOUNDATION DAVID HERBERT ANDREWS, A.M ....... Newton Centre, Mass. ROBERT GORDON PIKE, A.M. ' ......... Dover, N. H. OVERSEERS OF THA YER SCHOOL THE PRESIDENT OF DARTMOUTH COLLEGE. GEN. HENRY LARCOM ABBOT, LL.D. . . JONATHAN PARKER SNOW, C.E .... PROF. GUSTAV JOSEPH FIEBERGER . CHARLES PARKER CHASE, A.M. . HON. HON GTIS ELLIS I-IOVEY, C.E. . Treasurer of the College C113 Camlnriclge, Masks. . Boston, Mass. West Point, N. Y. Hanover, N. H. New Yorlf, IV. Y ffl-IP, Eartmnnth Qlnllrgr Alumni DARTMOUTI-I COLLEGE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION Charles L. Webster, '82 ....... President Charles L. Dana, '72 Sydney E. Junkins, '87 Ralph M. Barton, '04 John M. Comstock, '77 Perly R. Bugbee, '90 . T. W. D. Worthen. '72 W. M. I-latch, '86 Thomas Proctor, ' 79 John Gault, ' C. G. McDavitt, . Vice-President . Vice-President . . Secretary . . Statistical Secretary . . Treasurer Executive Committee I. F. Paul, '78, Chairman I-I. G. Pender, '97, Secretary E. F. Jones, '80 E. S. Gile, '95 L. M. Symmes, '08 Committee on Alumni Trustees George D. Lord, '84 95 Harry I-I. Stark, '76 Harry T. Lord, '87 Committee on Athletics E. K. Hall, '92, Chairman 'OO I. French, 'OI LOCAL ASSOCIATIONS Boston Founded 1864 T. I-I. Streeter, '04, 60 State Street. New York Founded I866 L. M. Symmes, '08, 115 Broadway. Cincinnati Founded I875 A. I-I. Morrill, '97, 4th National Bank Building Washington Founded 1876 I-I. P. Blair, '89, Colorado Building. Chicago Founded 1876 Cu. E.. Liscomb, '55, 41 Madison Ave. St. Louis Founded I876 F. F. Foster, '07, 811 Lucus Ave. Northwest Founded l88O D. F. Lyons, '02, 403 New York Life Bldg., St. Paul, Minn. Pacific Coast Founded 1881 L. A. Sprague, '07, Walker's Advertising Agency, San Francisco, Cal. C125 ffl-IE. Manchester Founded I 88 I R. Concord Founded I 89 I E. Western Massachusetts Founded I 892 M. Vermont Founded I 893 C. The Great DivicIe'I Founded I 895 D Detroit Founded I 895 N Rocky Mountain Founded I 895 L. Of the Plainsl' Founded 1898 C. Connecticut Founded I 90 I E.. Philadelphia Founded I 902 F.. Southern California Founded I 904 H. The Rhode Island Dartmouth Founded I 90 7 The The The The The P. Johnston, '99. K. Woodworth, '97 Stearns, '08, M. Smith, '9I. Rutland. J. Main, '06, Denver, Col. Jenks, ,96. L. Crone, '01, Great Falls, Mont. W. Pollard, '95, Omaha, Neb. C. Farrington, 508, Hartford. McMillan, '01, 5026 Pine St. Norton, '06, Los Angeles, Cal. N. K. E. Cx. Carr, Providence, R. l. Mass. The Dartmouth Association of Lawrence, Founded 1909 The Dartmouth Association of Albany, N. Y. Founded I909 D. A. Association of the State of Washington E Founded I909 V. M. Association of Central and Western New York Founded I9I0 H. W. The Dartmouth Association of Maine' Founded I9lI N. C. Redlon, 'O6. Portland. Medical School Founded 1886 H. N. Kingsford, '98, Hanover, N. D. A. Arundel, '00, 301 Essex St. Howesmann, '03, 39 Central Ave Place, '03, Seattle, Wash. Graves, '09, Rochester. H. Thayer School of Engineers Founded I903 G. C. Stoddard, ,8I, New York. Dartmouth Club of Boston Founded I890 P. Richardson, '99, 18 Tremont St. Dartmouth Club of New York City Founded 1904 White, '06, I2 W. 44th St. Dartmouth College Club of Worcester, Mass. Founded I904 D. M. Dustan, '80, 340 Main St. Dartmouth Club of Western Pennsylvania Founded I906 H. Conlon, ,97. Pittsburg, Pa. Dartmouth Club of Northern Ohio Founded I 907 H. The Founded I 908 H. Associations of Secretaries Founded I905 A. C135 M. Haserot, '10, Cleveland. Dartmouth Lunch Club of Springfield, Mass. B. Johnson, ,04, 28 Brown St. K. Skinner, ,03, Hanover, N. H. ffl-IE, VOL.lLVI 1914 CLASS SECRETARIES Dr. W. Barstow, l Gramercy Park, New York City. Rev. N. F. Carter, 51 Rumford St., Concord, N. H. Mr. B. A. Kimball, Concord, N. H. S. R. Bond, Esq., 321 John Marshall Pl., Washington, D. Mr. I. Bridgman, 64 High St., Northampton, Mass. Dr. H. Clark, Amherst, N. H. Rev. S. C. Beane, Grafton, Mass. Dr. E. Cowles, 419 Boylston St., Boston, Mass. Rev. A. Little, 6 Melville'Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Maj. E.. D. Redington, 1905 Harris Trust, Chicago, Ill. H. S. Cummings, Esq., l4l6 F St., Washington, D. C. Mr. M. C. Lamprey, Concord, N. H. Dr. C. Webster, 61 l 7 Winthrop Ave., Chicago, Ill. Rev. H. I. Cushman, Z6 Pitman St., Providence, R. I. Mr. H. Whittemo1'e, State St., Framingham, lVlass.. Prof. H. Goodhue, Northfield, Minn. Prof. C. F. Emerson, Hanover, N. H. Mr. C. P. Chase, Hanover, N. H. Prof. L. S. Hastings, Hanover, N. H. Prof. C. F. Richardson, Hanover, N. H. Prof. A. E. Frost, Winthrop St., Pittsburg, Pa. Rev. S. W. Adriance, Winchester, Mass. Dr. C. E. Quimby, 278 W. 86th St., New York City. H. Mr Mr Mr Mr Mr .j. W. Stevens, Esq., Concord, N. H. W. H. Gardiner, 634 E. 72d St., Chicago, Ill. M. Comstock, Chelsea, Vt. W. D. Parkinson, lO3 Lexington Ave., Waltham, Mas C. C. Davis, Winchester, N. H. D. M. Dustan, 340 Main St., Worcester, Mass. Rev. M. W. Adams, Atlanta University, Atlanta, Ga. L. B. Little, Esq., l Madison Ave., New York City. A. E. Watson, Esq., Hartford, Vt. Dr. P. Houston, 3503 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, Ill. Prof. H. D. Foster, Hanover, N. H. W. H. Hatch, Esq., 22l Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. Mr. E. Rice, Hyde Park, Mass. Rev. W. B. Forbush, 171 Taylor Ave., Detroit, Mich. Mr. C. Flagg, Danford School, Framingham, Mass. C. A. Perkins, Esq., Criminal Courts Bldg., New York City. Mr. F. E. Rowe, 79 Milk St., Boston, Mass. i143 C voL.Lv1 19146 Mr. D. Bliss, Elmira, N. Y. Mr. H. C. Pearson, Concord, N. H. Rev., C. C. Merrill, 609 Congregational House, Boston, Mass Prof. C. A. Holden, Hanover, N. H. C. H. Richardson, Esq., 605 Tremont Bldg., Boston, Mass. M. Boyd, Esq., ll Ashburton Pl., Boston, Mass. H. W. Blake, Esq., Gardner, Mass. C. H. Donahue, Esq., I8 Tremont St., Boston, Mass. Mr. H. N. Teague, The New Weston,,' New York City. Mr. W. S. Young, South High School, Worcestei', Mass. Mr. W. C. Hill, 7 King St., Dorchester Mass. J. E. Mahoney, Esq., North Andover, Mass. A. I. Charron, Esq., 99 P. O. Bldg., Boston, Mass. 'Mr. E. Gilbert, Methuen, Mass. Mr. H. G. Rugg, Hanover, N. H. Dr. T. W. Worthen, 67 Hudson St., New York City. Mr. L. M. Symmes, l I5 Broadway, New York City. Mr. E. H. Erhard, 4 Walnut Terrace, Brookline, Mass. Mr. M. C. Teall, 141 East North Ave., Baltimore, Md. Mr. B. Clark, 8 Boutwell Ave., Dorchester, Mass. Mr. C. E.. Snow, Rochester, N. H. Mr. Wriglit Hugus, Wheeling, W. Va. 1151 ffl-IE, 1912 September 12-1 7 September I9 November 28 Glullrgv Glalvnhar Examinations for Admission. Academic year began-Thursday morning. Thanksgiving Dayg a holiday. Recess from December 20, IO A. M., to January 3, I0 A. M. 1913 Q January 20 to February 1 First Semester Examinations. Recess from February 1, II A. M., to February 4, I0 A. M. February 4 March Il Second Semester begins. Town electiong a holiday. Recess from April 3, IO A. M., to April 17, 10 A. M. May 30 June 5-19 June 16-21 June 21 June 22 June 23 June 24 June 25 September 8-13 September 16-1 7 September 18 Memorial Dayg a holiday. Second Semester Examinations. College Entrance Board Examinations. Speaking for the Barge medal and for the Class of IS66' prizes-Saturday, 8 P. Nl. Baccalaureate Discourse-Sunday, 10.30 A. M. Class Day Exercises-Monday, 2.30 P. M. Annual Meeting of the Phi Bet. Kappa Society-Tues day, 8.30 A. M. Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association-2.00 P. M President's Reception, Parkhurst Administration Building 4.30 P. M. COMMENCEMENT DAY. Summer Vacation of Twelve Weeks Examinations for Admission. Registration-Tuesday, Wednesday. Academic Year begins-Thursday morning. C155 ACA W1 V. f WILLIAM .IEWETT TUCKER President of Dartmouth College, 1893-1909 1 w Z ACVLTY sf 1 1 Vg 7 Q X 5 .1 f fl 'f 7 4 ERNEST FOX NICHOLS President of Dartmouth College VOL LVI Xl 1914 1' ' y H K :Q ,A rf- V Eliarultg Emeriti CHARLES HENRY HITCHCOCK, Ph.D., LL.D . Hall Professor of Geology, Emeritus. Honolulu, Hawaii. l GABRIEL CAMPBELL, M.Pd., D.D., Stone Professor of Intellectual and Moral Philosophy, Emeritus. Hanover, N. H. FRANK ASBURY SHERMAN, M.S., Professor of Mathematics on the Chandler Foundation, Emeritus. Hanover, N. H. THOMAS WILSON DORR WORTHEN, AK., A.M., Cheney Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus. Hanover, N. H. 4219 ffl-IB CHARLES FRANCIS RICHARDSON, Ph.D., Winffley Professor of the English Language and Literature Emeritus. Sugar Hill, N. H. E MARVIN DAVIS BISBEE, BD., A.M., Professor of Bibliography, Emeritus. Chicago, Ill. . Massachusetts Row C 2 25 ffl-IB ' VOL. Lvl 1914 +A 'he .7-Xmhrmir Iliarulig Charles Franklin Emerson, A.M., Dean of the Academic Faculty. A A CID, fb B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18681 A.M., 18713 Tutor, Dartmouth, 1868- '72. Associate Professor in Natural Philosophy 'and Mathematics, 1872-'78, Appleton Professor of Natural Philosophy, and Instructor in Astronomy, 1878-'92. Ap- pleton Professor of Physics, 1892-'99. Life member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position, 1893-. Footballg Captain, Class Baseball Teamg Greek Oration at Junior Exh1bition3 Latin Oration at Commencement. Craven Laycock, A.lVl., Assistant Dean, Professor of Or- atory on the Evans Foundation. AKE, Casque ancl Gauntlet, CIP B K, A E P. A.B., Dartmouth, 1896Q A.M., 1910. Instructor in Public Speaking and Debate, Dartmouth, 1896-'99. Assistant Professor in Oratory, 1900-'10. Attorney at Law. Mem- ber Athletic Council. Co-author of Argumentation and Debate and Manual of Argumentationf' Professor of Or- atory, 1910-3 Assistant Dean, 1911-. Member of the First Intercollegiate Debating Team at Dartmouth. President Dartmouth Christian Association C455 Collaborated in Editing Echoes from Dartmouth 3 President of Class C153 Secretary of Class C353 Commence- ment Prize Speaker 123. John King Lorcl, Ph.D., Ll...D., Daniel Webster Pro- fessor of the Latin Language and Literature. CID B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 1868g A.M., 18713 Ph,D., Dartmouth, 18933 LL.D., Dartmouth, 1908, University of Maine, 1908. Tutor, Dartmouth, 1869-'72, Associate Professor of Latin and Rhetoric, 1872-'80. Associate Professor of the Latin Lan- guage and Literature, 1880-'92. Evans Professor of Ora- tory and Belles-Lettres, 1880-'82. Acting President, 1892- '93,. Acting President of the Faculty, 1893-1909. Edited Cicero, Laelius, 1882, 1897? Livy, Books xxi, xxii, 18905 Book i in 1896. Edited Chase's History of Dart- mouth College and the Town of Hanover, 1891. Trans- lated Hertzberg's Geschichte Der Romer in Altertum, 1900. Atlas of the Geography and History of the An- cient Wo1'ld, 1904. Present position, 1892-. . Member of the Baseball Club, the first athletic organization at Dartmouth, begun in the fall of 18651 Treasurer of llgasebazlgp Clubg Class Baseball Teamg First Lockwood 1'lZ6 . John Vose Hazen, A.lVI., C.E., Woodman Professor of Civil Engineering and Graphics on the Chandler Foun- dation. EX. E B.S., Chandler School of Science, 18751 C.E., Thayer School, 18763 A.M., Dartmouth, 1907. Civil Engineer on Railroads and Bridges, 1876-'77, Principal Atkinson Academy, 1877-'783 Tutor, Dartmouth, 1878-'793 Instructor, 1879-813 Professor of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics, 1881-'93. Precinct Commissioner. 1900-'10: lNIember.School Board. 1896-1911. Associate American Society, Civil Engineers. Present position, 1893-. Footba.ll3 Clark and Rollins Prize 145. 6235 , -1'1,,f:'?-'fri' , 1 '- j,p-.- 'J , ,, , f 7, 'far x V V' -' -'aff l 1 5-,.-si fi. . , S H ', voL.Lv1 . i 19148 Edwin Julius Bartlett, A.lVl., lVl.D., New Hampshire Professor of Chemistry. 111 Y, 41? B K. - A.B., Dartmouth, 1872Q A.M., 18753 M.D.. Rush Medical Col- lege, 1879. Assistant, Monson QMass.J Academy, 1872-'733 Principal, Glencoe CIll.J High School, 1874-'75, Instructor, Lake Forest 1111.5 Academy and University, 1876-'78g As- sociate Professor of Chemistry, Dartmouth, 1878-'833 Lec- turer on Physiology, New York University Medical Col- lege, 1887. Abroad. 1873-'74, 1900-'07 Author of text book, and of pamphlet, magazine and encyclopedia ar- ticles. Expert in several important cases in the Courts of New Hampshire and Vermont. Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member of the Dartmouth Scientific Association, New England Chem- ical Club, American Chemical Societyg Honorary Member of New Hampshire Medical Societyg Honorary Member Palaeopitus. Author of Laboratory Exercises in Chem- istry r- Calculations of the Quantitative Chemical Labo- ratory. Moderator of Town of Hanover. Present posi- tion, 1883-. Class Baseball Team3 Editor of Aegis g Varsity Baseball Team 1453 Treasurer Baseball Association. COn leave of absence for the second semesterb. James Fairbanks Colby, A.lVl., LL.D., Parker Professor of Law and Political Science. A K E, KID B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18721 A.M., Yale, 18773 LL.B., Columbian Law School, 1875. Clerk of the-House Committee on Re- vision of Laws, 43rd Congress. Instructor in Economics and History in the Sheffield Scientific School, 1877-'803 in International Law in the Yale Law School, 1883-'85. Author of Manual of Constitution of New I-Iampshiref' 1902. Present position, 1885-. h Theological Society Clbg Secretary Theological and Mission- ary Society CZJ C373 Lockwood Prize Competition 423. George Dana Lord, A.lVl., Professor of Classical Arch- 1 aeology and Associate Professor of Creek. AK E, GPIB If. A.B., Dartmouth, 18843 A.M., 31887. Principal of lVood- stock 1Conn.J Academy, 1885-,873 Tutor in Greek, Dart- mouth, 1887-'913 American Philological Association, 1887-3 Instructor in Latin, 1888: Instructor in German, 18901 Assistant Professor of Greek, 1891-'993 Associate Professor of Greek and Greek Archaeology, 1900-'073 Professor of Classical Archaeology and Associate Profes- sor of Greek. Archaeological Institute of America, Bos- ton Society. Present position, 1908-. Charlcs Darwin Aclams, A.lVl., Ph.D., Lawrence Pro- fessor of the Creek Language and Literature. Clib fi, qlfilf. A.B., Dartmouth, 18773 A.M., Dartmouth, 1881Q Ph.D., Uni- versity of Kiel, Germany, 1891. Instructor in Greek and Physics in Cushing Academy, 1881-'84. Professor of Greek in Drury College CMo.J, 1884-'93. President of.the Classical Association of New England, 1906. American Philological Association. Member Editorial Board. of The Classical Journal, 1907-. Author of Lys1as, Selected Speeches, 1905. Notes on the Peace of Philo- cratesf' American Philological Association, 1911. Present position, 1893-. C245 'Q voL.Lvi 7 1914 William Patten, Ph.D., Professor of Biology fZoologyj. B.S., Harvard, 18835 A.M., and Ph.D., University of Leipsic, 18845 Walker Natural History Prize, 18793 Parker Fellow at Harvard, 1883-'86, At Marine Laboratory of Univer- sity of Vienna in Trieste, 1884-'85, at Naples Zoological Station, 1885-'86. Assistant in Lake Laboratory, Mil- waukee, 1886-'89. Professor of Biology in University of North Dakota, 1889-'93. Trustee of Marine Biological Laboratory, Ylfoods Hole, Mass. Member of Boston So- ciety Natural Historyg American Society Zoologists CVice-President Eastern Branch, 1905-'06Jg American As- sociation Anatomistsg Palaeontological Society, American Society of Naturalistsg Honorary Member Imperial S0- ciety Naturalists of St. Petersburg, Russia. Author of works on Anatomy and Embryology of Anthropoidsft Eyes, Color Vision, Origin of Vertebrates, 'tFossil Fishes of Devonian and Silurian Formation. Present position, 1893-. Herbert Darling Foster, A.lVl., Litt.D., Professor of His- iofy. GJ A X, 413 B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18853 A.M.. Dartmouth, 18883 A.M., Har- vard, 18923 Litt.D., University of Geneva, 1909. Instructor in English in Ylforcester Academy, 1885-'88g in History, 1888-'91. Morgan Fellow in Harvard Graduate School, 1891-'93. President New England History Teachers' As- sociation, 1893-'94, 1901-'02, 1908-'09g Member Historical Manuscripts Commission of American. Historical Associa- tion, 1908-'09g Chief Examiner in History for College En- trance Examination Board, 1911-. Editor, Records of the Town of Hanover, a History Syllabus for Secondary Schools. Contributor to American Historical Review, Harvard Theological Review, Bibliothica Sacraf' New York State Historical Society Proceedings. Present position, 1893-. 1 . President of Classg Secretary of the Athletic Association, Champion in Doubles in Tennis Cwith Henry Aiken, '87Jg Final Honors in Greek cum laude, Speaker at Commence- ment. Fred Parker Emery, A.lVl., Willard Professor of Rhetoric and Oraiorp. K K K, Sprinx, flb B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 1887g A.M., Dartmouth, 1890. Instructor in Massachusetts Institute of Technologyi 1887-'91, Studied at Universities of Paris and Berlin, 1891-'93. As- sistant Professor of English, Pennsylvania State College, 1883-'94. Author of Notes on English Literature, and The Language of St. Thomas-a-Becketf' Present posi- tion,1895-. . Bicycle Club, Tennis Club. COn leave of absence for the second sernesterb. Louis Henry Dow, A.M., Professor of French. A Y. A.B., Harvard, 18905 A.M., 1894. Private Tutor, 1891-392, Studied in Germany, 1893. Harvard Graduate School, 1894-'95. Instructor in Greek, Dartmouth, 1895. Assist- antl Professor of French, 1896-1901. Present position, 190 -. C251 ,fa f fi, 7 3. fff W1 ff, We aff I N07-f, 'gy -gi: 311 .111 V. ' Q' j.:,QE':j Awif V- ' ., ,.1:-yu 1 ' J 1173? xiii , 21,1-i , fi 'ifiztf ff' 9 -V ' is f .- sf. 52619, fy- 1-4 - 4 -f ,f,.. ,rv , , f .,4b'f4Wv, 'x ' 'Y if62.-M2311-il si,-ofa, . gi- '14-.,,.+:1:,4-4'-.1 . .:, v Zeuapinfi ,i:::e:fE1fi4ziv:?'.- rips ' , 4- Efiesegi.--.-1f:g.5gf v . . . d'HB db 1 li. Harry Edwin Burton, A.lVl., Ph.D., Professor of Latin A.B., Harvard, 18903 A.M., Harvard, 1893 Ph D Harvard 1895. Instructor in Greek and Latin in Peekskill Acad- emy, N. Y., 1890-'92. Studied at American School of Arch- aeology at Rome, 1895-'96. Instructor in Latin and Greek, Dartmouth, 1896-'97g Assistant Professor, 1898-19033 In- structor in Harvard Graduate School, 1903. Author of SelecitJg51s from LiVy g Latin Grammar. Present posi- tion, --. Frank' I-Iaigh Dixon, Ph.D., Professor of Economics. QD 13 CD. Ph.B., University of Michigan, 1892, Ph.D., 1895. Assistant in Political Economy, Michigan, 1892-'95, Studied at University of Berlin, 1895-'96. Instructor in History, Michigan, 1896-'97. Assistant 'Professor of Political Economy, Michigan, 1897-'98, Assistant Professor of Economics, Dartmouth, 1898-1903. Chief Statistician, Bu- reau of Railway Economics, 1910. Author of State Rail- road Control, 1896, and of various magazine articles on Keller's Romeo und Julia auf der Dorfe. Assistant tic Monthly and various economic journals. Present position, 1903-. Warren Austin Adams, Ph.D., Professor of German. A.B., Yale, 18863 Ph.D., Yale, 1895. Instructor in Latin at Kenyon Military Academy, 1886-87. Studied in Berlin and Munich, 1887-'89. Instructor in Languages at Mont- clair Military Academy, 1889-'91. Instructor in German at Cornell, 1891-'93. Instructor in German at Yale, 1893- '99. Edited Goethe's Hermann und Dorotheaug Gottfried Keller's Romeo und Julia auf der Dorfe. Assistant Professor of German at Dartmouth, 1899-1904. Present position, 1904-. Special Honors in Latin. Gordon Ferrie Hull, Ph.D., Appleton Professor of Physics. A.B., University of Toronto, 18925 Ph.D., University of Chi- cago, 18973 Fellow and Assistant in Physics at Toronto, 1892-'95g Fellow and Assistant at University of Chicago, 1895-'97. Instructor in Physics at Chicago, 1897-'98 and summers of 1898-'99g Professor of Physics. Colby College, 1898-'99, Assistant Professor of Physics, Dartmouth, 1899- '03. Professor of Physics at Columbia University Summer School, 1909-'l1. Studied at Cambridge University and Berlin, 1905-'06, Member Comite International des Tables Annuelles Physico-Chemiquesg Secretary American Com- mittee of the Congres International de Radiologie et dfE1ectriciteg Fellow American Association for the Ad- ciety, Astronomical and Astrophysical Societyg Member of vancehment of Science, Member American Physical So- American Committee on Tables of Chemical and Physical Constants. Author of Articles on Electrical Radiation, Experimental Determination of the Pressure of Light, the Elimination of Gas Action in Experiments on Light Pres- sure. Present position, 1903-. Baseball Teamg Soccer Teamg Fencing Team. C267 x voL.Lv1 5 ' 1914 George Ray Wicker, Ph.D., Professor of Economics. e A X- 'A 1 P A.B., Cornell, 1890: A.M., 18985 Ph.D., University of Vifiscon- fiyiifia A..x..' sin, 1900. Teacher 1890-,92 and 1894-'97. Newspaper f i' - Work, 1892-'94, Graduate Student in Economics, Cornell, 1897-'9s. Harrison Fellow in sociology, University or Pennsylvania, 1898-'99. Honorary Fellow in Economics ', , iifiifa., and Special Fellow in Municipal Politics, University of 'ffl ', Q Wisconsin, 1899-1900. Instructor in Economics, Dart- ,,,, mouth, 1900-'03. Assistant Professor of Economics, 1903- .Q '10. Assisted in instituting and editing The Wisconsin 1'-1 Municipality, 1899-1900. Co-author of Elementary Prin- V ciples of Economics, 1904. Expert Specialist United ' ',., States Census, 19023 1904 Valuation of American Railways, .' 1909 Street and Electric Railways, 1910 Preparation of Y Q . ,ffjiff-gjigfz -,.,' Reports on Production of Petroleum and Natural Gas 'Vl' ,Q and Renning of Petroleum. Present position, 1910-. Prescott Orcle Skinner, A.lVl., Professor of the Romance Languages CFTCHCII and Italianj. fIDBK. A.B., Harvard, 1896, A.M., 1897. Instructor in the Romance Languages, Harvard, 1896-'9Sg Boston University, 1897- '98g Roger's Fellow at University of Paris, 1899-19005 In- structor in the Romance Languages, Dartmouth, 1900- '05. Assistant Professor, 1906-'12. Present position, 1912. John William Bowler, lVl.D., Professor of Hygiene and Physical Education. Director of Alumni Gymnasium 1889-'93, Assistant to Dr. Sawyer at Harvard: in charge of the Charles Bank Gymnasium, 1893-1901. General Super- intendent of the Public Gymnasia, Boston, 1899-19013 Di- rector of Physical Training, Dartmouth, 1901-. Present position, 1905-. Dartmouth Medical School, 1906-. Siclney Bradshaw Fay, Ph.D., Professor of History. K KK, ff' B K. ' A.B., Harvard, 18963 A.M., Harvard, 18975 Ph.D., Assistant in History, Harvard, 1900. Parker Travelling Fellow from Harvard at University of Paris, 1899, and Univer- sity of Berlin, 1900. Austin Teaching Fellow at Harvard, 1900-'02, Assistant Professor of History at Dartmouth, 1902-'11. Research at Berlin, 1910-'11, First Semester. Contributor to the American Historical Review and The Nation of reviews and articles on Modern Efuro- pean History. Member of the Verein fur-die Geschichte der Mark Brandenburg, and of the American Historical, Economic and Political Associations. Present position, 1911-. C273 VOL.LVl . i 1914 Colin Campbell Stewart, Ph.D., Brown Professor of Physiology. FA, CIJA2, 2 E. A.B., Toronto, 1894, Ph.D., Clark, 1897. Scholarship in Physiology, Clark, 1894-'95g Fellow, 1895-'97. Instructor in Summer School, 1895 and 18975 Assistant in Physiol- ogy, Harvard, 118971985 Tutor in Physiology, College of Physicians and Surgeons 1Columbia3, 1898-19003 Demon- strator of Physiology, Pennsylvania, 1900-'03, Assistant Professor, 1903-'04g Instructor in Summer School, 19037 Associate Professor of Physiology, Dartmouth Medical School. 1904-'07g Professor of Physiology, Dartmouth, 1907-'08. Member American Physiological Society, Fel- low American Association for the Advancement of Science. Author of articles on Smooth Muscle, the Sym- pathetic Nervous System, etc. Present position, 1908-. Frank Arthur Upclike, Ph.D., Ira Allen Eastman Pro- fessor of Political Science. X LID. A.B., Brown, 18933 A.M., Brown, 18963 A.M., Dartmouth, 19113 Ph.D., 1907. Instructor in Latin and Greek, Atlanta Baptist College, 1893-'97, Instructor, Ylfayland Academy, 1897-1904. Graduate work at University of Chicago and Brown, 1904-'06. University of Geneva, 1906-'07, Present position, 1907-. Baseballg Public Speal-zingg Commencement Speaker. James Walter Goldthwait, Ph.D., Hall Professor of Geology. EE, CIJBK. A.B., Harvard, 19025 1903: Ph.D., 19063 Assistant, Har- vard, 1900-'04g Austin Teaching Fellow, Harvard, 1903- '04: Assistant, Radcliffe College, 1901-'04. Instructor, Northwestern University, 1904-'06g Assistant Professor, 1906-'08. Assistant Professor of Geology, Dartmouth, 1908-'11, Fellow of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Scienceg Fellow of the Geological Society of America, Member of the Association of American Geo- graphers, Seismological Society of America. Author of various bulletins and reports of the Geological Surveys of TVisconsin. Illinois and Canada. Papers in the Jour- nal of Geology, American Journal of Science, Bulletin zfgliihe Geological Society of America. Present position, Wilmon Henry Sheldon, Ph.D., Stone Professor of ln- tellectual ancl Moral Pliilosopliy. A.B., Harvard, 18953 A.M., 18965 Ph.D., 1899. Assistant in University of Wisconsin, 1899-1900. Teaching Fellow, Harvard, 1900-'01, Assistant in Columbia, 1901-'03g Tutor in Columbia, 1903-'05g Preceptor, Princeton, 1905-'09. Ex- ecutive Committee American Philosophical Association. 1909-'12, Author of Psychical Causationu 119003, Simple Apprehensionu 119083, Psychological Review: Methods of Judgment 119073, Psychological Bulleting Negation 119013, 'tUniversals 119053, Ideals of Thought 119103, Philosophical Reviewg Definitions of Intensity 119043, Abstraction 119053, 'l'ranscendency 119073. Modern Theory of Judgment 119083, Journal of Philosophy. Present position, 1909-. 1On leave of absence for the year3. 1285 voL.Lv1 7 A 1914- Curtis l-liclclen Page, Ph. D., Winlfley Professor of Eng- Ush. G QB ll,iA if A. B., Harvard, 1890, A. M., Harvard 1891, Ph. D., Harvard, 1894. University of Paris, 1894-95, Institute of Higher Stud-ies, Florence, Italy, 1900, Instructor in French and lecturer on English Literatu1'e, XVestern Reserve Univer- sity, 1891-92, Instructor in French Harvard University, 1893-'94, Professor of the Romance Languages and Lit- eratures and 'Professor of English Literature in extension teaching, Columbia University, 1895-1909, Professor of English Literature. Northwestern University, 1909-11, Treasurer of the Concordance Society, Trustee of Gil- manton Academy. Associate Editor of Poet Lore and of The Pathfinder. Editor i'Cyrano de Bergerac's Voyage. to the Moon, with Life of Cyrano, etc., 1899, The Lives, Heroic Deeds, and Sayings of Gargantua and I-Iis Son Pantagruelf' by Francis Rabelais, with intro- ductory essay, British Poets of the Nineteenth Century, The Chief American Poets. Translator: Songs and Son- nets of Pierre de Ronsard, Mo1iere's Chief Plays. Present position, 1912-. Highest second year honors in classics, highest final hon- J ors in'modern literature, -honorable mention in French, Bowdoin Prize, Sohier Prize, prizes in middle distance running and tennis. ohn Wesley Young, Ph.D., Professor of Mathematics on the Chandler Foundation. 2 X, Q5 B K. Ph.B., Ohio State University 18992 A.Nl. 1901' Ph.D. rn ll ., , . . CO e . 1904. Instructor in Mathematics, Northwestern, 1903-'05, Assistant Professor, Princeton, 1905-'08, Assistant Pro- fessor, University of Illinois, 1908-'10, Professor and head of Mathematics Department, University of Kansas, 1910- '11. Member of American Mathematical Society, Deutsche Mathematiker Vesirmiginne, Circolo Mathematico di Paleorus. Author Projective Geometry 619107, Funda- mental 'Concepts of Algebra and Geometryu 619111, Papers. in Bulletin of American Mathematical Society, Transactions of American Mathematical Society, Ameri can Journal of Mathematics Present osition 1911-. - D , Class Football Team, Basket Ball, Debating. Benjamin Tinkham Marshall, B.D., A.lVl., Phillips Pro- fessor of Biblical History and Literature. A K E, Casque and Gauntlet, CIP B K. A. B., Dartmouth, 1897, B. D., Union Theological Seminary, 1900. Ordained Eliot Congregational Church, Boston, 1900, Pastor, Scarborough-on-Hudson Presbyterian Church, 1900-06, Pastor First Presbyterian Church, New Rochelle 1906 12 Present osition 1912 1 ' - D , -- Football, Captain Class Football, Class Baseball, Track Team, Glee Club, Prize Speaking, Pray Modern Language Prize. John Hiram Geroulcl, A.lVl., Ph.D., Assistant Professor L E of Biology fZoologyQ, KK K, Casque and Gauntlet, itl lf. itt.B., Dartmouth, 1890, A.B., Harvard, 1892, A.M., 1893, Ph.D., 1895. Instructor in Natural Science and German at Burr and Burton Seminary, 1890-'91, Instructor in Biology, Dartmouth, 1894-1906. Studied at the Labora- tory of the Sorbonne at Roscoff in Brittany, at the Naples Zoological Station, and at Marburg in Hesse, 1898-,99. Member American Society of Zoologists, American So- ciety of Naturalists, American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. Has published papers on Inverte- brate Morphology and Embryology, especially of Echmo- derms and Sepunculids. The Development of Phascolo- soma. Anatomy and Histology of Candina Arenata. The Inheritance of Polymorphism and Sex in Coliasphilodice, and other papers published in Science and other scien- tiic journals. Present position, 1906-. . ditor of the ZEgis , Editor of the Dartmouth Literary Monthly? 4295 voL Lvi 5 1914. Ashley Kingsley I-larcly, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of German and Instructor in Old English. A A fD, Sphinx, dv B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18945 Ph.D., Leipsic, 1899. Member of Lan- guage Association of America5 American Dialect Society, Author Die Sprache der Blickling Homilienf' Editor Wi1denbrucli's Das edle Blut. Compiler QGerman party a Bibliography of Useful Books for the Library of Teach- ers in Secondary Schools. Associate Editor Dartinf'mth Alumni Magazine, 1907-'11. Present position, 1907. Editor, 1894 ZEgis 5 Business Manager Dartmouth Lit- erary Monthly. John Merrill Poor, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Astro- Twmy. C9 A X, CP B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18973 Ph.D., Princeton, 1904. Principal Hanover High School, 1897-'985 Instructor in Mathematics and Astronomy, Dartmouth, 1898-19005 Thaw Fellow in Astronomy, Princeton, 1900-'02, Instructor in Astronomy, Dartmouth, 1902-'05. Member American Mathematical Society, Astronomical and Astrophysical Society, Societe Belgique d'Astronomie5 Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Author of articles on Orbits, Preliminary and Definitive Sphermerides, and Bio- graphical Sketch of Professor Charles A. Young. Present position, 1906-. Class President C233 Class Treasurer C235 Permin Class Presidentg Orchestrag Second Thayer Mathematics Prize 425: First Prize in Physicsg Honorary Mention in Mathe- matics. William Kilborne Stewart, A.1VI., Assistant Professor of German and Instructor in Comparative Literature. A Y. A.B., University of Toronto, 18975 A.M., Harvard, 1898. As- sistant in German, Harvard, 1898-'995 Instructor in Ger- man, Dartmouth, 1899-1907. Student at University of Berlin, 1904-'05. Member of Modern Language Associa- tion of Americag Society for the Advancement of Scandi- navian Studyg American Dialect Society. Editor of Fulda's Der Dummkofff' Part translator of Zizek's Die Statistichen Mittelwerfef' Present position, 1907-. Baseball Team: Editorial Board of College Paper. COn leave of absence for the year.J Robert Longley Taylor, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of French. XII Y. A. B., Hamilton College, 18823 Ph.D., Yale, 1900. Instructor, Kansas State University, 1882-'835 Tutor, Robert College, Constantinople, Turkey, 1883-'87: Teacher. the I-Iill School, Pottstown, Pa., 1887-'93g Graduate Student and Instructor, Yale, 1893-1900. Editor La Bibliothleqne de mon Onclef' 1898. Published Alliteration in Italian. Edited t'L'Abbe Daniel, 1906. Present position, Resigned October 5, 1912. C309 fi'HE r VOL,LVI E ' 1914 Richarcl Wellington Husband, A.1Vl., Assistant Professor of Creek and Classical Plulology. 2 CIP E, HID B K. A.B., Leland Stanford, 18953 A.M., 1896. Assistant in Greek and Latin, University of California, 1898-'99g Instructor, Leland Stanford, 1899-19005 Instructor in Greek, Dart- mouth, .1900-'03. Member of American Philological Associatlong' Advisory Council of the Simplified Spelling Boardg New England Classical Association, President, 1911-'12, Author of articles and reviews in Transactions of the American Philological Associationg Classical Philologyug Classical Journalvg School Review. Dart- mouth Press. Present position, 1903-. Homer Eaton Keyes, B.l..., Assistant Professor of Modern Art. Nlf Y, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus, CID B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 19003 B.L,, Dartmouth, 1900. Il'lSllI'l1CtOl' in L English at Dartmouth, 1900-'05g Attended lectures at Munich University, 1903-'04g Instructor in English and Fine Arts, Dartmouth, 1905-'O6g Graduate student at Princeton, 1910-'11. Member American Archaeological Society. Editor Dana's Two Years Before the Mastg Planned enlargement and alterations in Rollins Chapelg Managing Editor of Dartmouth Alumni Magazine, 1909-. Present position, 1906-'l3. Appointed Business Director of the College, 1913. eader of the Mandolin Club C33 C435 Editor-in-Chief of the ZEgis C3J, The Dartmouth C4J, and The Literary Magazine C435 one of the Founders of Junior Prom IVeek, and a Member of the First Prom Committee C353 Dramatic Club C27, C359 winner of Literary Prizes CQJ, C353 Honorary Mention in French, History and English, gufus Choate Scholarg Commencement Speakerg Class oet. Charles I-Ienry Morse, Mus. Bac., Musical Director. Mus.Bac., Boston University, 1876. Professor of Music and Director of the College Music at Wellesley' College, 1875- '84. Founder and Director of the Northwestern Conserv- atory of Music, Minneapolis, Minn., 1885-'91. Organist and Chorister of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., 1891- '99. President New York State Music Teachers' Associa- tion, 1894-'95, 1895-'96. A founder of the American Guild of Organists. Editor of Five Organ Collections, A Col- lection of Anthems, a Collection of Part Songs for Female Voices: Musical Editor of two I-Iymnalsg Composer of miscellaneous songs, anthems and part songs. Member Musical Teachers' National Association. Appalachean Mountain Club, Bostong American Geographical Society. Trustee of New England Conservatory of Music and Pres- ident of its Alumni Association. Present position, 1901-. George Richard Lyman, A.lVl., Ph.D., Assistant Pro- lB CD II. Harvard, 18973 A.M., Har- 1906. Superintendent of Assistant in Botany, Har- Radcliffe, 19003 Instructor in Botany, Dartmouth, 1901-'O4. Instructor in Botany, Marine Biological Laboratory at 1Voocl's I-Iole, Mass., 1903-'07. Member Botanical Society of Americag Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Scienceg New England Botanical Clubg Vermont Botanical Club. Author of articles on Life Histories of Certain Baridio- mycetesg Culture Studies on Polymorphism of Baridio- mycetes, Proceedings of Boston Society of Natural His- tory. Present position, 1904--. fessor of Biology CBotanyj. A.B., Beloit College, 1894, A.B., vard, 18995 Ph.D., Harvard, Schools, Amboy, Ill., 1894-'96. vard, 1897-19015 Instructor at Sub Half, Varsity Football Teamg Track Teamg Debating Teamg President Class Debating Society. COn leave of absence for the yearn? C317 Vot LV1 g A lore Charles Ernest Bolser, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. ZX, FA. A.B., Dartmouth, 18973 Ph.D., Gottingen, 1901. Member Am- erican Chemical Society: Fellow American Association for the Advancement of Science. Member Athletic Council. Present position, 1901-. Winiier of the half-mile in the New England Intercol- legiates C23 C37 and 1453 Track Captain C435 Address to the Athletic Field, Class Day: HHonorary Mention in Chemistry. I Leon Burr Richardson, A.M., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. CIDBK. B.L., Dartmouth, 19003 A.M., Dartmouth, 1902. Graduate Student, University of Pennsylvania, 1904-'05g Instructor in Chemistry, Dartmouth, 1902-'10. Member American Chemical Society. Present position, 1910-. Honorary mention in French. Norman Everett Gilbert, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics. A T A, I' A, fb B K. A.B., YVesleyan, 18953 A.M., 18965 Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1901. Instructor in secondary schools, 1896-'9Sg Fellow in Phy- sics, Johns Hopkins, 1900-'01g Professor of Physics, Ho- bart College, 1901-'03g Assistant Astronomer U. S. Naval Observatory Solar Eclipse Expedition to North Carolina, 1900: Sumatra. 1901: and Algeria, 1905. Temporary As- sistant Astrophysical Observatory, Smithsonian Institu- tion, 1902. Studied at Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge, 1910. Fellow of the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science. Member of American Physical So- ciety, Astronomical and Astrophysical Society, and So- ciete Francaise de Physique. Author of several articles on Eclipse Phenomena. Ionization and Relations between Ether, Matter and Electricity. Present position, 1903-. Ralph Martin Barton, AB., Assistant Professor of Mathe- matics. A A CID, Sphinx. A.B., -Dartmouth, 1904. Member American Mathematical Society and Circolo Matematico di Palermo. Present posi- tion, 1904-. COn leave of absence for the year.J 4327 'Q VOL. LV1 3 A 3 1914 Lemuel Spencer Hastings, B.D., Assistant Professor in English. NI' Y, fl? B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 18702 B.D., Yale, 1876. Principal of Stevens High School, Claremont, 1881-'893 Principal Nashua High School, 1889-1905. Inst1'uctor in English. Dartmouth, 1906-'10, Present position, 1910-. Captain of Class Baseball Team C333 Secretary Class Base- ball Team C33, C433 Associate Editor of The Dartmouth C433 Chess Club3 Theological Society C33, C433 Salutatory Address at Commencement. Arthur Houston Chivers, A.lVl., Assistant Professor of Biology. 1' A. A.B., Dartmouth, 19023 A.M., Harvard, 19043 Graduate work at Harvard, 1904-'06g Thayer Fellow in Biology, Harvard, 1909-'10. Instructor in Biology in Dartmouth, 1906-'11. Member of American Association for the Advancement of Science. Present position, 1911-. Charles Albert Proctor, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Physics. A K E, Sphinx, I' A, QIP B K, E E. A.B., Dartmouth, 19003 Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1908. Henry Parker Fellowship, 1901-'02. Fellow in Physics, University of Chicago, 1902-'03. Assistant in Physics, University of Chicago, 1903. Instructor in Physics, Uni- versity of Missouri, 1904-'07. Member American Physical Society3 American Mathematical Societyg Fellow Ameri- can Association for the Advancement of Science: Con- tributor to Physics Review 3 Member Athletic Council. Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Dartmouth, 1907-'09. Present position, 1909-. Football Team C23 C333 Track Team C23 C33 C433 First Thayer Prizeg Class President C133 Member of the First Junior Prom Committee. Charles Ramsclell Lingley, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of History. B.S., Iiforcester Polytechnic Institute. 19003 AM., Columbia University, 19073 Ph.D., 1910. Instructor in Mathematics and Science, Barre High School, 1900-,021 Instructor in German, XN'orcester Polytechnic Institute, 1902-'043 Grad- uate Student and Fellow in History, Columbia University, 1904-,OSQ Master in History, Jacob Tome Institute, 1906- 'O73 Instructor in History, Dartmouth, 1907-'10, Member of the American Historical Association, Author of The Transition in Virginia from Colony to Commonwealth, The Treatment of Burgoyne's Troops Under the Treaty gf Saiiagtloogaug Political Science Quarterly. Present posi- 1on, -. I . Second Football Teamg Cross Country Teamg Ed1tOF-lH- Chief of College Annual. C333 ffl-IE, Eugene Howard Babbitt, AB., Substitute Professor of French. fl? B K. A.B., Harvard, 1886. Teacher in public schools, 1877-,803 Principal Greenwood's Public School, New Hartford, Conn., 1880-'81g Instructor in German, Harvard, 1885-' S63 Student at Berlin and Paris, 1886-'87g Instructor in Modern Languages, Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology and Harvard, 18871883 Student at Copenhagen and Berlin, 1889-'90g Instructor in Germanic Languages, Col- umbia, 1891-19005 Professor of Modern Languages, Uni- versity of the South, 1900-'03g Instructor in German, Rut- gers College, 1903-'05g Substitute Professor in German, Dartmouth, 1908-'10. Has been Secretary of the American Dialect Society and Secretary of the Committee of Twelve, of the Modern Languages Association, on Modern Lan- guage Instruction in the United States. Edited Dialect Notes, 1895-'99g Author of College TVords and Phrases and An Introduction to German at Sight g Edited Die Velorene Tochterng Author of Monographs on American Pronunciation, Pedagogy of Modern Languages, and Pgiyfblems of the Southern Colleges. Present position, Albert Harp Licklider, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of English. E X, CID B K. Round Robin. AB., and A.M., Randolph-Macon College. 18975 Ph.D., Johns Hopkins, 1907. English Master, Norfolk Academy, Nor- folk, Va., 1898-19035 Fellow of the Johns Hopkins Univer- sity, 19065 Instructor in English, John Hopkins Univer- sity, 1901-'0S. Instructor in English at Dartmouth, 1908- '11. Author of The Metric of The Chaucerian Tradition. Present position, 1911-. Glee Clubg Choirg Fortnightly Cotilliong Second Football Teamg Class Secretary. Eugene Francis Clark, A.M., Assistant Professor of German. KIIY. A.B., Dartmouth, 19013 A.M., Dartmouth, 19053 Harvard, 1908. Teacher, DeMeritte School, Boston, 1902-'06. Grad- uate Student, University of Marburg, 1906-'07g Harvard, 1907-'08. Member Modern Language Associationg Ameri- can Historical Association. Acting Editor Dartmouth Alumni Magazinejt 1911-'12g Contributor to Educational Review. Present position, 1908-. I Class Track Team C133 Winner Grimes Prize C4J. COn leave of absence for the yearb. Charles Nelson Haskins, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. S.B., Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 18973 S.M., Harvard University, 18993 A.M., 1900: Ph.D., 1901. Assist- ant in Physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1897-'98g Student at Gottingen, 1901-'02g Instructor in Mathematics, 1902-,035 Cornell University,.1904-'06g. As- sistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Illinois, 1906-'09, Member American Mathematical Soc1etY3.F'el- low American Association for the Advancement of Science, Author of articles on the Theory of Differential Forms. Present position, 1909-. C343 ffl-IE, vam s 1914 Ernest Roy,Green,lA.M., Assistant Professor in French and Spanish. A.B., Harvard University, 1901Q A.M., Harvard University, 1907. Assistant Professor of French and Spanish, Dart- mouth, 1907-'10, Present position, 1912-. James Milton O'Neill, A.B., Assistant Professor of Ora- tory. A 2 P. A.B., Dartmouth, 19071 Master in English, Hotchkiss School, 1907-'09, Instructor lin English, Dartmouth, 1909-'11, Present position, 1911-. President Debating Union C33 C433 Captain Debating Team C53 C433 Permanent Class President3 Debating Team C23 C33 C433 Third Rollins Prize C333 Second Class of '66 Prize C233 Chairman Webster Club C43, COn leave of ab- sence for the year3. Charles Henry Hawes, A.M., Assistant Professor of An- thropology. A.B., Trinity College, Cambridge University, 18992 A.M., 1903. Travelled in Asia and Oceanica, 1900-'013 Examiner to Cambridge University Anthropological Researches in Crete, 1904 and 19093 Lectured before Royal Scottish Geo- graphical Society and Anglo-Russian Literary Society, 19031 Lecturer in Anthropologyt- Wisconsin, 1907-'09. Member Hellenic Society, American Anthropological So- ciety. Author of t'In the Uttermost East3 Joint Author of Creto the Forerunner of Crete? Author of papers on Cretan Anthropology. Trinity College Historical Society3 University Secretary of the Social Settlements. Present position, 1910-. Walter Van Dyke Bingham, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology. 2 E, flb B K. A.B., Beloit, 19013 A.M., Harvard, 19081 Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1908. Instructor in Secondary Schools, 1901- '053 Fellow in Psychology, University of Chicago, 1905- '06Q Associate, 1906-'073 Instructor in Educational Psy- chology, Teachers College, Columbia, 1908-t10. Fellow of American Association tor the Advancement of Science. Member American Psychological Association3 Interna- tionale Musik-gesellschart. Author of . Studies in Melody, The Role of the Tympanio Mechanism in Audi- tion, and other brief papers in The Psychological Re- view, The Psychological Bulletin and The Journal of Educational Psychology. Director of the summer ses- sion 1911-. Present position, 1910-. Glee Clubg Debating3 College Journalism, Manager of Mu- sical Clubg and of Oratorical and Debating Union. C353 voL Lvl Y 5 Y 1914 he George Clarke Cox, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Philos- ophy. B o II, qw B K. A.B., Kenyon, 18865 A.M., Kenyon, 19005 A.M., Harvard, 19085 Ph.D., Harvard, 1910. Student at the University of Geneva, 1899-'02g Member of the American Philosophical Associa- tiong Episcopal Clergyman, 1888-19089 Assistant in Philosophy, Harvard, 1908-,113 Assistant in Philosophy, Radcliffe College, 1909-,115 Lecturer in Philosophy, Dart- mouth, 1911. Present position, 1912-. Track Teamg Editor ot College Annualg Kenyon Day Oratorg Salutatorian at Commencement. Erville Bartlett Woods, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of bo- ciology. CID B K. A.B., Beloit College, 19013 Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1906. Assistant Principal, YVanpun CWis.J High School. 1901- '02g Librarian and Instructor, Beloit College, 1902-'06, Professor of Political and Social Sciences, Hamline University, 1906-'11g Special Agent and Expert, U. S. Im- migration Commission, 1908-'10g Member American Socio- logical Society. Author of The Sociological Concept of Progressn CAmerican Journal of Sociologyj, The 'Work of American Prison Relief Societies fJourna1 of Prison Disciplineb. Present position, 1911-. Intercollegiate Debating Team, Editor of the College Paper, President of Classtllj. Theodore Harding Boggs, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Economics, Book ana' Bond. A.B., Acadia College, 1902 and Yale, 1905g A.M., Yale 19065 Ph.D., Yale, 1908. Instructor in Stockbridge High School, 1902-'03g Instructor, Yale, in Social Sciences, 1908-'11g Author of England's Problem with India CYale Reviewl 19095 Canada and the French Canadian CUniVersity Magazineg, 19111 The Government of India CPolitical Scienee Quarterlyj, 1911, and other articles in The American Political Science Reviewjf The Canadian Mag- .azine and The Journal of Race Developmentug In- structor in Economics, 1911-'12. Present position, 1912-. Baselgell Captain QAcadiabg Hockey Teamg Class Day Com- mi ee. Arthur Dunn Pitcher, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Math- ematics. 2 X, I' A, CID B K. A-B-, University of Kansas, 19063 A.M., , ' 'versity of Kansas, 1907.1 Ph.D.,.University of Chicago, 1910. Fellow in Mathe- matics, University of Kansas, 1905-'06g Instructor in Mathematics, University of Kansas, 1906-'OSQ Fellow in Mathematics, University of Chicago, 1908-'10g Assistant Professor of Mathematics, University of Kansas, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. C363 voL.Lv1 ,E A .1914 Earl Gorgon Bill, Ph.D., Assistant Professor in Mathe- matics. CID B K, 2 X A.B., Acadia. College, 19023 A.B., Yale University, 19055 A.M., Yale University, 19065 Ph.D., Yale University, 1908. Instructor at Yale, 1908-'10g Graduate work at University of Bonn, 1910-'115 Instructor, Purdue University, 1911-'12. American Mathematical Societyg Deutsche Mathematical Societyg Vereinigung. Present position, 1912-. Lelancl Griggs, Pl'1.D., Instructor in Biology. 1' A, fb B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 19023 Ph.D., 1908: Professor of Biology at Doane College, Crete, Nebraska, 1906-'08. Author of De- velopment of Amblystomsn Uournal of Mo1'pholog'yJ. Present position, 1908-. QOn leave of absence for the year . Arthur Herbert Basye, Instructor in History. CID B K. A.B., University of Kansas, 19043 A.M., University of Kan- sas, 19065 Teacher in History, Parsons High School, 1904- '05. University Fellow, Yale, 1906-'07g Bulkley Fellow in grgiserican History, Yale, 1907-'08. Present position, Editor of the University of Kansas Weekly C35 C493 Junior Prom Committee, Senior Play Committee. Francis Joseph Neef, Pl1.B., Instructor in German. XII Y. Ph.B., University of Chicago, 19055 Fellow Student Univer- sity of Berlin and Leipsic, 1905-'07g Fellow, University of Chicago, 1908g Instructor in German, Brown University, 1908-'09. Present position, 1909-. -M' C379 VOL Lvl 5 A 1-914 Francis Lane Childs, A.lVl., Instructor in English. CID B K. A.B,, Dartmouth, 19065 A.M., 19075 Henry Elijah Parker Fellow of Dartmouth, Harvard University, 1907-'09. Present position, 1909-. A-Egisu Boardg Lockwood Prize C335 Rufus Choate Scholar C235 Honorable Mention in English, French, and Botany. Clifford Pease Clark, Ph.D., Instructor in Creek and Latin. fl? B K, 11' Y. B.A,, Wesleyan University, 18955 Squire Scholar, Heidel- burg, Germany, 1895-'96. Instructor in Greek and Latin, West Newton English and Classical School, 1896-'97, Pro- fessor of Latin, Fairmount College, YVichita, Kansas, 1897-19075 Professor of Latin and Greek, Dean of the Academy, Drury College, Springfield, Missouri, 1907-'09g Fgeftlow in Classics, Princeton, 1909. Present position, Charles Joseph I-Iilkey, Ph.D., Instructor in Political Science. A.B., College of Emporia, 19055 A.M., University of Kansas, 19073 Ph.D., Columbia, 1910. Principal of Minneapolis CKansasJ High School, 1907-'OSQ Scholar inl Political Science, Columbia, 1908-'09g Fellow in Constitutional Law, 1909-'10, Toppan Prize in Constitutional Law, 1909. Authorl of Legal Development in 'Colonial Massachu- setts? 1910. Present position, 1910--. Raymond Watson Jones, Ph.D., Instructor in German. A Y, CP B K. A.B., Cornell, 19053 Ph.D., 19103 Fellow at Cornell 1905-'073 Marburg in Berlin, 1907-'08, Instructor at Princeton, 1908- '09g Assistant Instructor at XVisconsin, 1910. Present position, 1910-. i385 J il VOL. Lvl y I 1914 -ul , F7 . Harry Livingstone Hillman, Director of Athletics and As- sistant Athletic Director. National Guard, New York, 1897-19073 Thirteenth Regiment Athletic Association. 1899-1901: Knickerbocker Athletic Club, 1902, New York Athletic Club, 1903-'09, Competitor Olympic Games, St. Louis, 1904, Member American Olym- pic Team, Athens, 1906, London, 1908: Commissioned Sec- ond Lieutenant Thirteenth Coast Artillery Corps, 1907-'10 fFull and Honorable Dischargeb. TVinner of thirty-seven World's, National, Metropolitan, Canadian, and Military Championships, Thirty NVorld's American, Military and Regimental Records COutdoor and Indoorj. Present posi- tion, 1910-. ' Earl Lockriclge Braclsher, A.M., Ph.D., Instructor in English. AB., University of Missouri. 1903: A.M., Columbia Univer- sity, 19045 Ph.D., Columbia University, 19113 Graduate Student Columbia University, 1903-'06, Oxford University 1907, University of Berlin, 1908. Instructor in English University of Missouri, 19065075 Instructor in English University of Illinois, 1908-'11. Author of Matthew Carey Editor, Author and Publisher, A Story in American Lit- erary Developmentj' 1911. Present position, 1911-. Carlos August Blume, lVl.A., Instructor in French and Spanish. - A.M., Yale University, 1910. Graduate of the Royal Gymna- sium Wfiesbaden, Prussia, 19045 Instructor in French, Yale University, 1909-'10. Present position, 1911-. Francis Asbury Waterhouse, A.M., Instructor in French. A.B., Harvard, 19055 A.M., 1906. Fellow in Romance Lan- guages and Comparative Literature, Harvard, 1907-'10 Present Position, 1910-. Musical Club. 439i UQ voL.Lv1 . A 1914 1 Chester Arthur Phillips, A.lVl., Instructor in Economics. CID B K. A.B., Central College, 19045 Yale University, 19085 A.M., Yale University, 1909. Present position, 1911-. Mark Skidmore, A.lVl., Instructor in French. A.B., University of Missouri, 19053 B.S. in Education Univer- sity of Missouri, 19063 Secondary Teaching' in Missouri, 1905-'08. Fellow in Romance Languages. A. M., Univer- sity of Illinois, Columbia University, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. Band: Orchestra. 3 l-lenry Wells Lawrence, -Ir., lVl.A., Ph.D., Instructor in History. A X P, KID B K. 2 A.B., Yale University, 19065 A.M., Yale University, 1907, 1 Ph.D., Yale University, 1910. Assistant in History, Yale l University, 1906-'07, 1909-'10g Professor Cpro temporej of History, University of Vermont, 1910-'11. Member of the igriiierican Historical Association, Present position, Arthur Bond Meservey, B.Sc. fOxforclJ, Instructor in Physics. CD A GJ, KID B K. A.B., Dartmouth, 19065 B.Sc., Oxford, 1911. Assistant in Phy- sics, Dartmouth, 1907-'08g Demonstrator in Physics, Ox- ford University, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. ZEgis Board, Class and Varsity Debating Teams. I 1 C409 YQ VOL.LVI 5 A 1914 Albert Craig Baird, B.D., Instructor in English. CID B K. A.B., Wabash College, 19073 B.D., Union Theological Semi- nary, 1910 CMagna Cum Laudelg Graduate Student at Col- umbia University, 1910-'11, Instructor in English, Ohio- Yifesleyan University, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. Intercollegiate Debating Team, Literary Editor of The XVabash g Vice-President of the Press Club, President of ghe Calispean Literary Society, Class Historian, Baldwin rator. Adolph Burnett Benson, A.lVl., Instructor in Carman. YD 1 IC, GD IJ fl. BS., VVesleyan, 1907: M.S., Vfesleyan, 19103 A.M., Columbia University, 1910. Master French and Ge1'man, Bellefont Academy, 1907-'09, University Scholar, Columbia Univer- sity, 1909-'10: Fellow in German, Columbia University, John Bell Scott Prize QGerrnanJ. Present position, Meyer Grupp Gaba, S.1VI., Instructor in Matliematics. BS., University of Chicago, 19073 M.S., University of Chi- cago, 1908. Instructor in Mathematics, University of Kan- sas,' 1908-'10, Instructor in Mathematics, School of Mines of the University of Missouri. 1910-'11. Member American Mathematical Society, Member Circulo Matematico di Palermo. Present position, Dartmouth, 1911-. Henry Andrew Doak, A.lVl., Instructor in English. A.B., Guilford College, 1908, A.B., Haverford College, 1909, A.M., Harvard University, 1911. Principal of the Farm- ington High School, Farmington, N. C. Present position, 1911-. Football' and Baseball G at Guilford: President of the Guilford Athletic Association, 1906-'08g Editor of the Guilford Collegian, 1907-'08, i413 voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 Harlan True Stetson, Sc.lVl., Instructor in Physics. dJBK,2'E. . Ph.B., Brown, 1908g Sc.M., Dartmouth, 1910. Assistant in Physics, Dartmouth, 1908-'10, Member of American Asso- ciation for the Advancement of Science and of Astrono- rnical and Astrophysical Society of America. Present po- sition, 1911-. Class Debating. Roy Wilson Follett, Instructor-in English. CID B K. A,B., Harvard, 1909g Instructor in English, Agricultural and Mechanical College of Texas, 1909-'11, Everybody's Maga- zine, November, 1911, The Infinite. Present position, , 1911-. 1 Editor and Contributor, Harvard Monthly , Contributor to , Advocate g Harvard Musical Clubs. Herbert Greenleaf Coar, Instructor in Biology. I' A. A.B., Dartmouth, 1910. Present position, 1911-. Reginald l-lunter Colley, Instructor in Biology fBotanpj, 17 ll. A.B., Dartmouth, 19093 A.M., Harvard, 19125 Instructor in Biology, Dartmouth, 1909-1910. Austin Teaching Fellow in Botany, Harvard, 1910-1912. Present position, 1912-. C423 IQ voL.LVr . A 1914 Harry Gilbert Mitchell, Instructor in Chemistry. K E., I' A. B.S., Dartmouth, 1910. Instructor in Science, Kimball Union Academy, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. Freshman Basket Ball Team. Andrew Jackson Scarlett, Jr., Instructor in Chemistry. l E A E, F A. A.B., Dartmouth, 1910. Present position, 1911-. Warren Choate Shaw, Instructor in English. K K K, A E P, Palaeopitus. A.B., Dartmouth, 1910. Instructor in English and Histo:y, Lowell tMass.J High School, 1910-'11. Present position, 1911-. Varsity Debating Team, Third Prize Rollins Speaking, Lockwood Debating Prize, Second '08, First, '09, Class Secretary, '08, '09g President of Debating Union, Secretary of Palaeopitusg Class President, '10, Senior Fence Speaker. Peter Staub Dow, C.E., Instructor in Graphics and Engi- neering. CID I' A, I' A. . C.E., Thayer School of Civil Engineering, 1911. University of Tennessee. Present position, 1911-. I D Member of Class Basket Ball Team, Glee Club at University of Tennessee. 1431 vox. Lvi -U I 1914 -I O X' P. August Robert Krehbiel, A.M., Instructor zn German. iff eF.et1 l, qw B K. -15:2-,Y a A.B., Kansas University, 19093 A.M., Kansas University, W ' A 1910. Graduate work at University of Chicago, 1911-'1Z. ,gj i Present position, 1912-. Joseph Eugene Rowe, Ph.D., Instructor in Mathematics. CD B K. A.B., Gettysburg College, 19045 A.M., Gettysburg College, 1907: Ph.D., John Hopkins University, 1910. ll'1St1'llCf.O1' at Goucher College, 1910-'11, Instructor at Haverford Col- lege, 1911-'12. American Mathematical Society. Papers in Transactions of American Mathematical Society. Present position, 1912-. Foster Erwin Guyer, A.M., Instructor in French. CID B K. ,-LR, Dartmouth, 19065 A.M., Dartmouth, 1908. Stuflierl in Paris and Berlin, Teacher of French in Chicago Univer- sity School for Boys, 1908-'09. Instructor in French, Northwestern University, 1909-'11, Fellow, University of Chicago, 1911-'12. Present position, 1912---. Edwin Carleton lVlacDoweH, M.S., Instructor in Zoology. A.B., Svvathmore College, 19095 M.S., in Zoology Harvard University, 19113 S.D., Harvard University, 1912. Notes on Myology of Chimpanzee and Baboon in American Journal of Anatomyg Size Inheritance in Rabbits in Journal of Experimental Zoology. Present position, 1912-. C447 'Q VUL. LV1 5 A 191-4' Frank M. Morgan, Ph.D., Instructor in Mathematics. q9fB If, 2 Ii A.B., Cornell University, 19095 M.A., Cornell University, 19105 Ph.D., Cornell University, 19125 Assistant in Mathe- maticslat Cornell, 1911-'12, Involutorial Transforma- tions Hisglfgtmerican Journal of Mathematics. Present po- S1 ion, -. Fred Donald Carpenter, A.B., Instructor in German. Q B Kg q'F.A. A.B., Trinity College, 1910. H. E. Russell Fellow at Trinity. Student at University of Bostock, 1910-'11g Leipsic, 1911- 'l2. Present position, 1912-. Basket Ball Team, Track Team, Salutatorian. Walter Alfred Phelps, A. M., Instructor in Physics. G IB Ii. B.S., Dartmouth, 19103 A.M., Princeton, 1912. Assistant in Physics, Dartmouth, 1910-'11g Parker Fellow, Dartmouth, 1911-'12, Graduate Student, Princeton, 1911-'12. Present position, 1912-. James Melbourne Shortliffe, A. M., lnstructor in Eco- nomics. CID B K. A.B., Acadia, 19093 Yale, 1910: A.M., Yale, 1911. House Master and Teacher of Greek and Latin, Horton School, 13034085 Yale Graduate School, 1910-'12g Present position, Honors ,in Philosophy: Class Presidentg College Dehating Teamg Winner College Oratorical Contestg Assistant Business Manager, Acadia Athen-aeum g College Tutor in Classicsg Yale Fellow in Economics. 1453 VOL LVI 1914- Anclrew Thomas Weaver, A.M., Instructor in English. C19 A T, A 2 P. A.B., Carroll College, 19105 A.M., University of Wisconsin, 1911. Master of Public Speaking, Tome School, 1911-'12. Present position, 1912-. Debating Team, Representative in State Oratorical Con- tests. John Wesley Merritt, NLS., Instructor in Mineralogy. 2 X, '19 B K, FA. B.S., Northwestern University, 19105 M.S., Northwestern University, 1912. Present position, 1912-. Class Treasurerg Class Basketballg Manager Lecture Courseg Author of Papers in Mining and Scientiiic Press, and in Bulletin of Geological Society. -in Vot LVI A A 1914 tllllvmhmi nf Ihr Zfhiruliien nf Ihr Annnrmtvh Howard Nelson Kingsforcl, M.D., A.lVl., Professor of Svrhnnla Ctihing Elwairurtinn in tlpe Glnllrgr Pathology and Bacteriology QlVleclical Schooll. 2 flb E. fl If IQ. Brown, 18943 M.D., Dartmouth Medical School, 18973 A.M., 1908. Harvard lVl6CllC3.l School, 125985 instructor in Path- ology and Bacteriology, Dartmouth, 1898-19005 Medical Director, 1902-. House Officer, Mary Hitchcock Hospital, 18973 Pathology Department, Boston City Hospital, 18983 Pathologist, Mary Hitchcock Hospital, 1902-. Path- ologist, Littleton, N. H., Hospital and Manchester, N. I-I., Eliot Hospital, Franklin Hospital, 1907-g State Bacteri- ologist, 1903-3 Member American Medical Association, New Hampshire Medical Societyg New Hampshire Surgi- cal Clubg President White River Medical Society. Author of papers on Mosquitoes, Itiology of Cancerg Infectious Diseasesg Gall Stonesg lN'ater Pollution. Percy Bartlett, A.B., Instructor in Anatomy flVleclical Schoolj. A K E, an B K. A.B., Bowdoin, 18925 Dartmouth Medical School, 1900. In- structor in Preparatory Schools, 1892-'97, Boston City Hospital, 1900-'04. Member New Hampshire Medical As- sociation. Present position, 1904-. George Sellers Graham, PLS., M.D., Assistant Professor TB of Pathology and Bacteriology flVledical Schoolj. CD I'ZS, IX Ii If, GD 1 Ii. .S., Dartmouth, 1902, M.D., 1905. Pathology Interne, Bos- ton City Hospital, 1905-'06: Instructor in Pathology and Bacteriology, Dartmouth Medical School, 1905-'10, Assist- ant Professor of Bacteriology, 1910-5 Assistant Bacteriol- ogist State Board of Health, 1907-5 Pray Prize, New Hampshire Medical Society, 1909. Member Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists, American Medical Asso- ciation: State and County Medical Societiesg Harvard Medical School, 1904. Author of papers on Fat Embol- lism, Primary Carcinoma of Appendix, Bacterial Pig- ment. C475 VOL Lvi 5 I 1914 Frederick Pomeroy Lord, lVl.D., Professor of Anatomy flVIedical Schoolj. A K E, N 2 N, I' A, in B K, A.B., Dartmouth, 18983 M.D., Dartmouth Medical School, 1903. Physician in Iowa City, 1904-'10, Anaesthetist in State Hospital, University of Iowa, 1904-'08g Instructor in anatomy, University of Iowa, 1904-'11, Present position, Robert Fletcher, Ph.D., Director of Thayer School ana' Professor of Civil Engineering. College of City of New York, 1861-'64g United States Military Academy, 18683 A.M., Dartmouth, 18715 Ph.D., 1881. In- structor in Mathematics in the United- States Military Academy, 1869-'70g Professor Civil Engineering and Di,- rector Thayer School, 1871-5 President and Engineer of the Hanover YVater XVorks Company, 1893-3 Inspector of Bridges Vermont R. R. Commission, 18889 Member New Hampshire Board of Health, 1895-5 Consulting Engineer Bridges, YVater Works, and Sewerage-works, 1902-'09g Member Civil Engineering Societyg Engineering Educa- tional Society, President, 19015 Fellow of the American Association of Civil Engineersg National Graphical So- ciety. Author of Papers on Surveying, Bridge Truss An- alysis, Hydraulics, Engineering Education, Sanitary En- gineering. Present position, 1871-. Charles Arthur Holden, CE., Professor of Civil Engi- neering. CThayer Schoolj E X, CIP B K. B.S., Dartmouth, 18955 C.E., 1901, Engineer Middletown and Portland Bridge Co., and Boston and Albany R. R., 1895- 985 Instructor in Civil Engineering in Worcester' Poly- technic Institute, 1898-1900. Instructor in Mathematics at Dartmouth, 1901-'065 Instructor in Civil Engineering, 1900-'04g Assistant Professor, 1904-'05g Associate Pro- fessor, 19051085 Associate Member American Society of Civil Engineersg Member Society for the Promotion of En- gineering Education, and National Geographic Society. Contributor to Engineering Periodicals. Present position, 1908-. Frank Eugene Austin, Professor of Electrical Engineering. 2 X. B.S., Dartmouth, 1895. Resident Fellow and Instructor in Physics, 1896-'97, Registered Lieutenant Assisting in In- vestigation Relating to Projectiles, Fortress Monroe., 1898. Organizer Firm of Consulting and Contracting Engineers, Boston, Mass., 1899. Inventor and Manufacturer of Im- pulse Water YVheels. Organizer Power Companies. Holder of U. S. and Foreign Patents. Instructor Electri- cal Engineering, 1902-'07, Professor of.Phys1csF and Di- rector of Department, Norwich UHlVf5I'SltY,-190l.- 09. D1- rector Department of Graphics, Norwich University, 1907- '09, Professor of Electrical Engineering. Organizer and Director of Department under Carnegie Grant, .Norwich University, 1909-. Professor Electrical Engineering, Thayer School of Civil Engineering, 1901-. Designer and Manufacturer of Physical and Electrical Apparatus. Public Lecturer on Scientific Subject-s. Editor Laboratory Manuals and Charts. Wfriter Technical Artlcles. Member American Association for the Advancement of Science. American Geographical Society. C485 'Q voL.Lv1 5 i 1914 Sydney Lee Ruggles, A.B., QE., Instructor in Graphics and Surveying Clqhayer Schoolj. A.B., Dartmouth, 19085 C.E., Thayer School of Civil Engi- neering, 1909. Assistant in Civil Engineering, Pennsylva- nia State College, 1909-'10. Present position, 1910-. Harlow Stafford Person, Ph.D., Director of the Tuck School, Professor of Commerce and Industry. CID B K. Ph.B., University of Michigan, 18995 A.M., 1900: Ph.D., 1902. Peter YVhite Fellow in American History, University of Michigan, 1899-1900. Instructing Fellow in Economics, 1900-'02. Instructor in Commerce and Industry, Amos Tuck School, 1902-'04, Assistant Professor and Secretary of the Tuck School, 1904-'07. Author of Industrial Edu- cation, 1907. Present position, 1901-. William Henry Murray, AB., Assistant Professor of French, German and Spanish fTuck Schoolj. 112 I' A, 115 B K. A.B,, Dartmouth, 1902. Present position, 1902-. William Rensselaer Grayi B.l.,., lVl.C.S., Assistant Pro- fessor of Accounting Crlquck Schoolj. A A CID, Sphinx. B.L., Dartmouth, 19049 M.C.S., Dartmouth, 1905. Present po- sition, 1905--. 1493 ei' MEDICAL SCHOOL illiviliral Svrhnnl Illarulig ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, D.Sc., LL.D., PRESIDENT. JOHN MARTIN GILE, A.M., M.D., DEAN, and Professor of Clinical Surgery. l Maynard St. GEORGE SELLERS GRAHAM, B.L., M.D., SECRETARY, and Assistant Professor of Pathology and Bacteriology. The Graduate Club. CHARLES BEYLARD GUERARD DE NANCREDE, M.D., LL.D., Professor of Surgery and Clinical Surgery. Ann Arbor, Mich. EDWIN JULIUS BARTLETT, A.M., M.D., Professor of Chemistry fflcademic Deparimenij. 8 W. Wheelock St. TILGHMAN MINNOUR BALLIET, A.M., M.D., Professor of Therapeutics. 3709 Powelton Ave., Philaclelphia. WILLIAM PATTEN, PI-LD., Professor of Biology fZool0gyj. fflcaclemic De- Pflfimfifil-Q I5 Webster Ave. C505 'Q voL.Lv1 l r 1914 '- GILMAN DUBOIS FROST, A.M., M.D., Professor of Clinical Medicine. I3 E. Wheelock COLIN CAMPBELL STEWART, PI-LD., Brown Professor of Physiology. 4 Webster Ave. HOWARD NELSON KINGSFORD, A.M., M.D., Professor of Pathology and Bf1CiCfi0l08D- 6 Clement Roacl. FREDERIC POMEROY LORD, A.B., M.D., Professor of Anatomy. 21 Rope Ferry Roacl. GRANVILLE PRIEST CONN, A.M., M.D., Professor of Hygiene, Emeritus. Concord, N. H. EDWARD COWLES, M.D., LL.D., Professor of Mental Diseases. 419 Boylston St., Boston. GEORGE ADAMS LELAND, A.M., M.D., Professor of Otolaryngology. 354 Commonwealth Ave., Boston. JOHN OSBORN POLAK, M.S., M.D., Professor of Obstetrics. 287 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. HARVEY PARKER TOWLE, A.B., M.D., Professor of Dermatology. 453 Marlboro St., Boston. JAMES RIDDLE GOFFE, M.D., Professor of Gynecology. 616 Madison Ave., New York Citv WILLIAM EDWIN BUTLER, JUR.D., M.D., Professor of Medical jurispru- dence. l I3 Halsey St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ELLIOTT GRAY BRACKETT, M.D., Professor of Orthopedic Surgery. 166 Newbury St., Boston. ALEXANDER QUACKENBOSS, A.M., M.D., Professor of Ophthalmology. 143 Newbury St., Boston. FRANKLIN WARREN WHITE, B.S., M.D., Professor of Medicine and Clinical Medicine. 322 Marlboro St., Boston. PERCY BARTLETT, A.B., M.D., Instructor in Anatomy. 35 College St. ELMER HOWARD CARLETON, A.B., M.D., Clinical Instructor in Otolaryn- gology and Ophthalmology. 4 Occom Ridge. JOHN HIRAM GEROULD, Pl-LD., Assistant Professor of Biology fZoologyj. fAcademic Departmentj. I0 School St. CHARLES ERNEST BOLSER, PI-l.,D., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. fAca- demic Departmentj. I5 E. Wheelock St. C515 THAYER SCHOOL Ulhagrr Svrhnnl ZlFw:11ltg ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, D.Sc., LL.D., PRESIDENT. ROBERT FLETCHER, PI-LD., DIRECTOR, and Professor of Civil Engineering. 42 College St. JOHN VOSE HAZEN, A.M., C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering. Cflcadernic Departmentj. 33 N. Main St. CHARLES ARTHUR HOLDEN, C.E., Professor of Civil Engineering. I0 Occom Ridge. FRANK EUGENE AUSTIN, B.S., Professor of Electrical Engineering. l l S. Park St. SIDNEY LEE RUGGLES, C.E., Instructor in Surveying, Graphics, and Laboratory. 6 Sargent St. RALPH EDWARD WHITNEY, B.S., Field Assistant in Surveying. Bissell Hall. C529 TUCK SCHOOL Efurk Srhnnl Elklrultg ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, DSC., LL.D., PRESIDENT. HARLOW STAFFORD PERSON, PH.,D., DIRECTOR, and Professor of Com- merce and Industry. I5 N. Park St, 'WILLIAM RENSSELAER GRAY, B.L., M.C.S., SECRETARY, and Assistant Pro- fessor of Accounting. 9 N, Park St, 'WILLIAM HENRY MURRAY, A.B., Assistant Professor of French, German and Spanish. 41M S. Main St. WALTER HASTINGS LYON, A.B., LL.B., Professor of Banking ana' Corpora- tion Finance. 5 W. South St. 'FRANK HATCH DIXON, PI-LD., Professor of Economics. fAcademic Depart- mentj. 24 Occom Ridge. 'FRANK ARTHUR UPDYKE, PI-LD., Professor of Political Science. fAcademic Departmentj. I4 Occom Ridge. 'THEODORE HARDING BOGGS, PI-LD., Assistant Professor of Economics. fAcaaIemic Departmentj. 3 Occom Ridge. 'CHESTER ARTHUR PHILLIPS, A.M., Instructor in Economics. fAcademie Departmentj. 43 W. Wheelock St. C533 Summer Svrhnnl Zllarnltg SESSION OF 1912 OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION ERNEST FOX NICHOLS, D.SC., LL.D., President. VVALTER VAN DYKE BINGI-IAM, PI-I.D., D'ircct0r. OFFICER S OF INSTRUCTION HARRY EDWIN BURTON, PH.D., Professor of Latin. JOHN WESLEY YOUNG, PHD., Professor of Math einatics. PRESCOTT ORDE SKINNER, A.M., Professor of French. JAMES WALTER GOLDTHWAIT, IJII.D., Professor of Geology. WILLIAM KILBORNE STEWART, A.M., Assistant Professor of German. CHARLES ERNEST BOLSER, P1-LD., Assistant Professor of Cheinistry. LEON BURR RICHARDSON, A.M., Assistant Professor of Chemistry. NORMAN EVERETT GILBERT, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Physics. WALTER VAN DYKE BINGHAM, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Psychology. ARTHUR DUNN PITCHER, PHD., Assistant Professor of Mathematics. THEODORE HARDING BOGGS, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Economics. RALPH DENNISON BEETLE, A.M., Instructor in Mathematics. LELAND GRIGGS, PH.D., Instructor in Biology. RAYMOND WATSON JONES, PH.D., Instructor in German. HENRY WELLS LAWRENCE, PH.D., Instructor in History. ARTHUR BOND MESERVEY, A.B., B.S., Instructor in Phys-ics. ROY WILSON FOLLETT, A.B., Instructor fin English. INSTRUCTORS FROM OTHER INSTITUTIONS. CLARENCE EDMUND MELENEY, A.M., LL.D., Associate Superintendent of Schools, Neio Yorh, N. Y. ,- Education. GEORGE HERBERT WHITCHER, B.S., Suyrerintemlent of Schools, Berlin, N. H.,' Education. EDWARD LAWRENCE STEVENS, A.M., L.H.D., Associate Superintendent of Schools, New York, N. Y., Secondary Eclucation. MELBOURNE STUART READ, PH.D., Vice-President of Colgate Unioersityg Professor of Psychology and Education. ERNEST FELIX LANGLEY, PH.D., Professor of French, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ROBERT KILBURN ROOT, PH.D., Assistant Professor of English, Princeton Unifoersity. FRANKLYN BLISS SNYDER, PH.D., Assistant Professor of Engl-ish, Northwestern University. ' C543 .L ' , QZQCLASSES ggi ' - 1 + ' -4-.-1 f. 1 A. 1, -- f.- - -,A ' ' :-f .- ffw - --2 u F' 1 wiv- g., If 'W'T'? s7TQl7' ' ., 1 ,. 5- ' . T 'yt -'W E 3 ' fig' SK , Lx fi! '. 'Q .. .11 ,gr- ' 1 1. '-1-f 'vw ' u f 3-Aazfwi-2 2 .2 Q 1, ge - .-. ., .. - M ' . A . ., .r fr - -5,-sgffffitff?-1'-+'x75-ffm-11, 4'nv9.6f:- .'z2a-,D-' rf-'. - 1 -r- A. 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' ', Eff , '-ff., L fy .5 -+52 -- . f-PV -1-HC 'A' FQ N A745 ' 3' 'gf A - 'ry .-:J , . .. A .. .f ,... . ,. , . .. . , , V -, - - -.,,,. .Y F . , A V. U - -1 C, . Q 4 . . N 5 0 - . qi, ,ft 1 ,. jzggg. - I--'.r. 1 . . - V . . ,, . . K. . . ' amp.-J .L+ , 4 - . ,gixifyi J - A -rg. ,N, 4 -. N . I V,-5 . i F. x , : X , 3 ,,..,H , ,Q , - 114+ I. ' . ,. . ':Q-1' f' . fl. 'E51 4 A - ,. -- . 5 'xf?f1Q 1-. 'di' ' 51 f A ' J if 'f-553' f , v fav Y' X 1 - B' , ' 1 5vl,.gHizg'. I ' m 'U' L45 wp. J 1- m,Q 15,0 l f 5 I , . .. 1 - up ,Q 3 Q, amlffig -.-4 Q- f- . , - ' ,- fv::-- - - - rr 'Y - ' A ...:,gQ,..- 43 1 vw- 'rx - .1 . Wiuf' .:Z.- .JV 'f if - 7-3 ' 91, ' - ' V L ' ' :F ' 'FN' , +- ' '1--I f4i'qQf.:. 3975 ., ' af' V 'T Q' 4. - ' ' .- - - . 551 ' L' - -. K '- . ' fi' . , ,ZA ., 3 , P A ? A tb V 6 , xg, ,...MQ,q9-Q N ,-. ft' - . ' W' ', , - V+.,.,-- . ' --ff ...f----,. f ,X 1-wa--2 . wg, -S' ' S' ,fig I L' '3:'5 550522:-w .4-g . ' - -1-+95 'ff - . U f gg - - my '55 , 'F -- Q3-..f 5 -+V'-A-y?gs5 . , 5 .. - ': '.,'-xlufvft' - x- 1- . . - - . ., . 1 , . .- , . - . fzfwf-M .- -- . -, - . - A - . . . , . . . - - - - .. ., f p Z'-, - WH ' W! U 1 -1 - n - 'Y 2 .,.. 5.n----- 'X , mf '- . ffm ':2f .:-f'i'?'iL.-31? .,,f::- --2' JM 5i'f, --54-.gm ' - T ..-A . ,gg - . ,,.,.,' 9w,-:iq - f ' -Q.:f-17.3, - . ' - 'ff-'s ,--'-vs fm--1':.2, ff..,e.-f1'f+3,3, 2'---ww ' -.21-1 -- W, -- f , ,rm if ,Qi- a I9 S E 1 -, N Q H ,e,-, 1 Q L E if 525.7 - ' .2 .-Q? - , . ' A 'y 1' - -2-2 'fi-7: 'ru-1: f ,,- x .- ...xi 3 1 - -t '. f a, ' . -f . - K' 2 '15 . ' 2 4 . Y , ,. ,. J ' -F-gf-?5 '5A - fJT35-Y-534.512-S cgi.-3' . - 1, 55 f f ' 1.1 .gf . 3:55210-.'?:7 '-QT N. ' f'- .n -' ,- , 4?'Q ' .7157 xr 'W-:':I::5 ,,3 3 A'- --,I , SPI 'P 'I if'YjA ,,,, .' ,4' . '. fr? ,-fr. JE .x 5 5... A Q -Q:Z1S5:7Q:5v:5:1...,,',-:fi ' . f2E3g5'2' 5' '12 1. 'R - ,- -, 1-f'- - F3fffK93 ? zY x - 3132 ELF' 'Q ,. -' ,J -fi 15339511 T' .rpg '-5-iigigu-,. ,R A.. ....4i4.,- A, -S . g ,-...W ., .,g, naw ,f.,,ij3g-i.',43Q.g. . -- gs-at-Qfs. -.- f -ff'?'2'i 5 -5 nf 103--Zjll - :ai-'rv'-' 's 92'-2 if .- ' f'f1'QTI'iX1.----.'-9525 - -1-gi AE f' ywwfsfif-':Qs'f. - CLASS OF 1913 . . . . , .. , , .,.,. ., .,,, .,,1.. , , .,,. ,..T,,,:, , ,1 .,,. ,,,,, , , .,,,,1 - , . 35 rg., P -Q, ,W fffffif 'wife EQ Q' W ' K I .1 E '- Q fziiifl ii W K? .X 4 X5 lg' '73, ff , ll - ,fm 31 4: .Q 1 a I REQ -. W lr l. . . I Qalmff 1 : I l , ' u 5-17 1 ff ir W, 'ls we if if li I0 li N if lt N 1 - . 1.1.i .-i ,, ,A.:. .,,. , ,,.: X, X I my .'-: ':A.' Henry Deshon Abbott, K E, QD B K, 1' A Washington, District of Columbia XVestern High School: lst Honor Group 41, 2, 353 Rufus Choate Scholar 41 2 35' Thayer Prine Math. 4253 1st Honorable Mention Physics, Math., Graphics ,425i 2nd Spaulding Prize, Graphics 4353 Phi Beta Kappa 1 So. Fayerweather 'David Ernest Adams, GD A X, CID B K Hanover, New Hampshire Phillips Andoverg Oedipus Tyrannus 4153 First Honor Group 42, 35: D. C. A. Cabinet 43, 453 'Treasurer Outing Club 4455 Wheeloclt Club 42, 3, 453 Magazine Board 4453 Hon. Mention in Greek 4253 in English 4353 Rufus Choate Scholar 4353 First Atherton Greek Prize 435 No. 1 Park Street Sidney Malcolm Akerstrom, Boston English High School Frederic Arlington Alden, KID I' A Roxbury, Massachusetts 36 New Hampshire Vergennes, Vermont Vergennes High Schoolg Freshman Cross Country Team3 Class Baseball 41, 253 Vice-President of Class 4153 Varsity Cross Country Squad 4253 1913 Aegis Boardg Varsity Baseball Team 42, 35 Benjamin Fay Andrew, Proctor Academyg Tilton Seminary William George Arnclt, Mansfield High School Milton Aronowitz, Albany High Schoolg Class Debating 425 Leslie Orrell Ashton, E X Lawrence High Schoolg Freshman Football3 Varsity Foo Henry Elkins Atwoocl, 2 X Keeseville High School3 Junior Prom Committee 435 Ralph Eastman Badger, CID 2 K Lowell High School Kenneth Livingston Baker, A T A West Roxbury High School 4575 Bridgrnan Block Bartlett, New Hampshire 17 Sanborn Mansheld, Massachusetts 56-57 YVheeler Albany, New York 5 Richardson Lawrence, Massachusetts tball Squad 445 Sigma Chi House Keeseville, New York Sigma Chi House Lowell, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa House Winchester, Massachusetts 17 South Fayerweather 'Q VOL. Lvl . A 1914 William Lothrop Baldwin North Stratford, New Hampshire Stratford High School 6 Wfheeler ,Howard Thompson Ball, 2 'IJ E Claremont, New Hampshire Stevens High Schoolg Captain Freshman Cross Country Team3 Varsity Cross Coun- try Team C2, 3, 453 Captain C453 Varsity Track C2, 353 Varsity 2 and 4 Mile Relay Teams C353 Y. M. C, A. Cabinet C2, 3, 453 Wheelock Club C2, 3, 453 President VVheelock Club C453 Student Volunteerg College Orchestra C45 16 Reed Raymond Henry Ball, ID 2 K Adams, Massachusetts Adams High School3 Varsity Golf C2, 3, 453 Captain Golf Team C353 Runner-up Col- lege Championship C25 24 New Hampshire Howard Arthur Barends, B C0 II, I' A, Sphinx Albany, New York Albany High School3 Commencement Usher C153 Freshman Football, Freshman Baseballg President of Class C2,353 Varsity Football Team C2, 3, 453 Thayer School of Civil Engineering. Paleopitus Beta Theta Pi House ,Joseph John Barnett, B C9 H, Sphinx Rochester, New York West High School3 Pea Green Earl C153 Class Chorister C2, 353 Dramatic Club C353 Vifebster Club C3, 453 Chairman Junior Prom Committee C353 College Song Leader C45 4 Richardson QRobbins Wolcott Barstow, 415 2 K Lee, Massachusetts Burr and Burton Seminary and Lee High School3 College Choir C1, 2, 353 Orchestra C153 Mandolin Club C3, 453 Varsity Track Team C153 Christian Association Cabinet 2, 3, 453 Treasurer C353 Wheelock Club3 Student Volunteer Band Round Robin. 1 Bartlett Hall Ralph Eugene Bauman, A K E Cleveland, Ohio University High School Delta Kappa Epsilon House 'George l-lomer Beard Acworth, New Hampshire Stafford Springs High School 20 Hallgarten Ray Lloyd Bennett, A A CD, Turtle, Sphinx Artesian, South Dakota Mereersburg Acaderny3 President of Class C153 Freshman Footballg Captain of Freshman Baseballg Varsity Football C2, 3, 453 Captain Varsity Football C453 Varsity Baseball C2, 35 Alpha Delta Phi House Dudley Bernstein, Lima, Ohio Lima High School 9 Richardson Hall 'Earl Stanley Bidwell, CID K NI' Hartford, Connecticut Hartford Public High School3 Freshman Cross Country Teamg Freshman Track Squadg Class Treasurer C25 8 Richardson 'Leon Gillette Bigelow, B GJ H St. Paul, Minnesota St. Johnts Military Academyg Captain Freshman Hockey Teamg Varsity Football Squad C2, 353 Varsity Hockey Squad C253 Varsity Hockey Team C35 Beta Theta Pi House Maurice Leland Blanchard, A T A Newport, Vermont Newport Academy, University of Maineg Orchestra Cl, 2, 353 Mandolin Club C2, 351 Dartmouth String Quartette C25 14 Massachusetts C585 'Q voL.LV1 5 C IQ14' Louis Foster Blumenthal Saxtolfs River, Vermont Vermont Academy: Class Hockey 1135 Prom Show Cljg Band fl, 2, 3, 435 Choir 421 3' 49 24 Fayerweather .l0hU Hay B01'laI1Cl, QI' A 9, Dragon St. Johnsbury, Vermont St. Johnsbury'Acaclemyg Golf Team 433 Phi Delta Thgta Hguge Edward Francis Brady, JI'-, 2 A E Dorchester, Massachusetts Roxbury High Schoolg Freshman Track Team Sigma Alpha Epsilon House William Rea Bronk, B G9 H New Baltimore, New York Albany High School, Gun Club Beta Theta Pi House Homer HaTTlHSt0l'1 BI'00kS, K E St. Albans Bay, Vermont St. Albans High Schoolg Class Football Team fl, 2Jg Varsity Football Squad C2, 35 1 South Fayerweather Edward Lawrence Brown, A K E, Casque and Gauntlet Salem, Massachusetts Salem High Schoolg Manager 1916 Football Team C. and G. House Howard Bishop Brown, 2 X Stratford, New Hampshire Sigma Chi House Carl Edward Buck, A K E Chicago, Illinois University High School, Hotchkissg Freshman Track Teamg Track Team C25 32 South Massachusetts Charles Edward Buffum, 2 fb E Keene, New Hampshire Keene High School 19 Reed William Paul Butler, A T A Hanover. New H-HmPShiY6 Worcestei' Classical High School Delta Tau Delta Rooms Charles Anthony Calderara Milford, New HHITII-lSl1ifC Milford High Schoolg Honor Man Cl, 2, 35 27 Hubbard Walton Gardner Card Haverhill, Massachusetts 10 College Street Russell Carr, A CD, K K K Winchester, Virginia Shenandoah Valley Academy, Washington and Lee University, University of Vir- giniag El Centro Espanolng Third Horiior Group C23 10 North Massachusetts William Hartley Cary, cp K tp Brockton, Massachusetts Phillips Exeter Academy Phi Kappa Psi House Norman Bennie Catterall, fb F A Brooklyn, New York Erasmus Hall High School Phi Gamma Delta House 1593 'Q VOL. Lvl . - 1914 1- ,Joseph Young Cheney, X Q Orlando, Florida Orlando High Schoolg Freshman Football C133 Varsity Football Squad CZ, 333 Sec- retary Dartmouth Outing Club C43 Chi Phi House ,Lawrence Chesley Chisholm Salem, Massachusetts Phillips Andover Academyg Phillips Club 15 South Fayerweather 'Clifton Albert Clarke, CD E K Haverhill, Massachusetts Haverhill High School Phi Sigma Kappa House Harry Waldo Cole Beecher Falls, Vermont Concord High School 3 College Street ,Andrew Westbrook Comstock, '11 E K Alpena, Michigan Alpena High Schoolg President of Gun Club C333 Gun Team C23 Phi Sigma Kappa House Robert Otheo Conant Keene, New Hampshire Keene High Schoolg Third Group Honor Man C33 19 Reed .Morris Huntington Cone, X 419 A Hartford, Vermont Phillips Andoverg Class Treasurer fly, 'tThe Dartmouth Board C2, 3, 433 Editor-in- Chief of The Aegis C333 Class Secretary C433 Phillips Club Chi Phi House Ralph Herbert Cowdery Winchester, Massachusetts YVinchester High School3 Jack-0'-Lantern Board C333 Business Manager C43 Q 10 Crosby Earl Robert Craig Rockford, Illinois Rockford High School 10 Crosby Edwin Condy Crawford Evanston, Illinois Evanston High School3 Oedipus Tyrannus C133 Honorable Mention in Greek C233 Second Group Honor Man C33 ' 7 New Hampshire Leland Harrison Croscup Lynn, Massachusetts Lynn Classical High School 8 South Massachusetts 'Thomas Donald Cunningham, B GD H, Casque and Gauntlet, Palaeopitus Denver, Colorado East Denver High Sohool3 Vice-President D. C. A. C3, 433 Manager Varsity Foot- ball C433 President College Club C43 C. and Gi House 'Frank Holmes Cushman, 2 il E Claremont, New Hampshire Stevens High Schoolg College Orchestra C1, 2, 33 57 New Hampshire 'George Burrett Davidson Prince Bay, Staten Island, New York Curtis High Schoolg Gun Clubg Rifle Team C23 6 College Street Edward Aaron Davis, 11' Y, Turtle, Casque and Gauntlet Newton High School, Jack-o'-Lantern B02L1'dQ Dartmouth Magazine Boardg Manager Freshman Trackg Class Representative on College C1ub3 D. C. A. Cabi- netg Cast of Pea Green Earlg Newton Clubg Bema Board C. and G. House C603 'Q voL.Lvi 5 A 1914 'Q Ralph Willis Davis East Derry, New Hampshire Pinkerton Academy: Class Debating Team C15 S Hubbard William Lincoln Davis, X il, Casque and Gauntlet, Concord, Massachusetts. Concord High: Freshman Football C155 V - 't F 1 11 f . - . Prom Committee C35 alsl y A400 ba Squadcuiingpd- William Mari M Street High School OH Dent Washington, District of Columbia 17 South Main Street AMD Henry DCSSHU New Rochelle, New Yorlc New Rochelle High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, 3, 45' Manaffin ' Editor ., i 3 Th? P9-1 UT10l1th C431 Press Club C2, 3, 455 Sophomore Debating Tear? C253 The Aegis Board C353 President Ylfebster Club C455 President Dartmouth Republi- Cafl Club C49 43 North Massachusetts Freeman Conant DOC, K K K Lexington, Massachusetts L9XiHS'lOf1 High School Kappa Kappa Kappa House Joseph Michael Dolan, K K K New York City Townsend Harris Hall High Schoolg Freshman Championship Relay: Track Team C2, 35:.New England lntercollegiate Half-mile Champion 1912: College Record Half-mileg one, two, and four-mile Relay Teams C35 52 South Main Street Joseph Paul Donahue, Q A X, Turtle, Sphinx Lowell, Massachusetts- Lowell High Schoolg Captain Class Baseball Team C255 Varsity Baseball 'Team C2, 355 Choir C2, 35 Theta Delta Chi House Frank Valentine Dudensing, CID A 09, Dragon New York City Townsend Ha1'1'lS Hall High School: Baseball C155 Glee Club C45 Phi Delta Theta House Victor Young Dunbar Manchester, New Hampshire- Manchester High School 15 New HamDSl1il'9 Robert Greenleaf Durgin, ' N6WIT1HYkCt, New Hampshire' Phillips Exeter Academyg Exeter Club 12 SaHbOTH Rockwood Spurr Edwards, A K E Southbridge, Massachusetts Cushing Academyg Class Football C155 Class Basketball C1, 255 Junior Prom Committee Q35 4 South Massachusetts Louis Frederick Ekstrom, fb A GJ, Casque and Gauntlet Nashua, New Hampshire Nashua High Schoolg Varsity Baseball C1, 2, 353 Class Baseball Squad C25 ' C. and G. House William John English Charlotte, VCYUIOM Northfield High School Davison Block Harold Bradford Enright KID E K Medford, Massachusetts Medford High Schoolg Freshman Track C153 Varsity Track.C2, 35: Record High Jump Dartmouth-Harvard Dual Track Meet C353 Record High Jump New Eng- land Intercollegiate C353 Record High Jump Dartmouth College C333 Member Am' erican Olympic Team at Stockholm C35 P111 Sigma KZLDDH- House C615 if 'Q VOL. Lvi . A 1914 Donald Putnam Evans, A T A East Orange High School Clayton Alger Fairbanks, E X Dean Academy, Summer Bachelorst' C25 Lionel Fall, 2 I' A Malden High School Robert Ellsworth Firmin, 115 2 K Phillips Andover Academyg Phillips Clubg Freshman F East Orange, New Jersey 21 Massachusetts Natick, Massachusetts Sigma Chi House Malden, Massachusetts Phi Gamma Delta House Fitzwilliam, New Hampshire ootball Squad Phi Sigma Kappa House Ralph Mortimer Fischer Paterson, New Jersey Paterson High Schoolg Class Basketball fl, 253 Rifle Team C253 First Honor Group 635 20 No. Fayerweather Louis Morse Fishel Boston English High School Carl Cheswell Forsaith Grove Hall, Massachusetts 13 South Fayerweather Auburn, New Hampshire Pinkerton Academy, Glee Club fl, 253 Choir 11, 2, 3, 455 Oedipus Tyrannusn C15 Goodwin LeBaron Foster Boston Latin Schoolg Tennis Squad 42, 35 Grover Franklin Fox, 2 E 23 Reed Hall Sharon, Massachusetts 29 Reed Dracut, Massachusetts Lowell High Schoolg 3rd Honor Group i353 lst Novice S i Jump I35 Elliott Peabody Frasier Lynn Classical High: Third Group Honor Man C35 Edmund Arthur Freeman k 57 New Hampshire Hall Lynn, Massachusetts S So. Massachusetts Hanover, New Hampshire So. Royalton High Schoolg Classical Club: Wheeloelz Club: Junior Latin Prize C35 17 Sanborn Hall Harry Tapley French Haverhill, Massachusetts Haverhill High Schoolg Cross Country Cl, 25 29 Reed Hall Karl Harrison Fulmer, XII Y, Palaeopitus Erie, Pennsylvania Erie High Schoolg Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, 3, 453 Press Club 62, 3, 453 Third Honor Group C353 TVebster Club C453 Editor-in-Chief The Dartmouth i452 Secretary of Palaeopitus C45 Ashley Hardy Cale, 111 A C9 Lafayette High School Louis Bernard Gale, CID 2 K Marblehead High School, Tufts College, 1' year C 625 Psi Upsilon House Buffalo, New York Phi Delta Theta House Marblehead, Massachusetts Phi Sigma Kappa House voL.Lv1 . A 1914 Frederick Michael Gannon, K K K Concord, New Hampshire Concord High KSchool: Secretary-Treasurer Press Club C25: Vice-President C25: President C45: The Dartmouth Board C353 Athletic Editor C45: Secretary Inter- Fraternity Council: Wllebster Club: Class Tennis C253 Ylfinner College Non-Varsity Tef1HiS DOUYJIGS C35 Kappa Kappa Kappa House Harold Parker Gardner, K K K, Sphinx Franklin, New Hampshire Phillips Exeter Academy: Freshman Track: Class Relay: Varsity Track C2, 35: V9-TSIYY R612-Y C35 Kappa Kappa Kappa House Matthew Edward Cately, Jr. Newton, Massachusetts lValtham High School 37 New Hampshire Nelson Gay, K 2 Newton, Massachusetts Phillips Andover: Phillips Club 42 New Hampshire William Martin Gibson, CD A 63, lf' A, Casque and Gauntlet East Ryegate, Vermont St. .Tohnsbury Academy: Freshman Basketball: Varsity Basketball C2. 35: Captain Basketball C45: Varsity Squad Football C25: Varsity Team C3, 45: Vice-President of Class C35: President of Class C45: Palaeopitus C45 C. and G. House Donald Bean Gilchrist, X fl? Franklin, New Hampshire Franklin High School Chi Phi House Edwin Carl Grothe, Wayne, Nebraska TVayne High School: Transfer 1912 from Yankton College, Yankton, South Dakota 46 SO. lllallhl Stl'-Qet Edward Leeds Gulick, slr. K K K Worcestei' Academy: Class Cross Country Team C153 YVorcester Academy Club William Barnum Gumbart, E fIJ E Norwalk High School Walter John Haley, C9 A X Hanover, New Hampshire Class Tennis Team C25: 12 Massachusetts Hall South Norwalk, Connecticut Roslindale, Massachusetts Boston English High School: Glee Club C3, 45: Choir C2, 3, 45 Theta Delta Chi House Henry Montgomery Hamilton, KID Kslf Great Falls, Montana- Phillips Exeter Academy: The Dartmouth Board: Phillips Club - Phi Kappa Psi House Paul Stanley Harmon, E X Woodford,S, Maine Deering High School: Varsity Cross Country C355 Varsity Track C35: 4 mile Relay Team Sigma Chi House Ward Hunt Harris Brushton High School: Class Debating Team C25 Theodore Herbert Haskell, X 411 Brushton, New York 35 Massachusetts Hall Swampscott, Massachusetts Swampscott High School: Freshman Mandolin Club C15: Oedipus Tyrannus C153 College Orchestra C1, 2, 3, 45 C635 36 North Massachusetts E Q vot. LV1 5 f i 1914 '- James Alfred Hemphill, Westerly, Rhode Island XVesterly High School 4 New HamDShi1'G Charles Young Hitchcock, K K K Hanover, New Hampshire Hanover High School, Lawrenceville 3 Lebanon Street John Colburn Holmes, B GJ II Franklin, New Hampshire Franklin High School Beta Theta Pi House W1'ight Hugus, 2 X, Casque and Gauntlet Wheeling, West Virginia YYheeling High Schoolg Winiiei' Non-Varsity Tennis Tournament C253 Runner-up Doubles Championship C3, 455 Varsity Tennis Team C3, 453 D. C. .-X. Cabinet C3, 45: Junior Prom Committee C353 President D. C. A. C453 President Interfraternity Council C455 Vice-President College Club C453 TVebster Club C45g Palaeopitus C. and G. House Rollo Wilson Hutchinson, A K K Milford, New Hampshire Milford High School, Band C1, 2, 3, 455 Third Honor Group C35 15 No. Fayerweather Harold Francis -lacobus, fb 1' A, Dragon 4 Turner's Falls, Mass. TU1'llG1 S Falls High Schoolg Glee Club C3, 45 18 Massachusetts Volney Grant Jenkins Amsterdam, New York Amesterdam High School 36 New Hampshire Theo Stephen Jewett, 2 N Laconia, New Hampshire Laconia High Sohoolg Assistant Business Manager The Dartmouth C355 Business Manager The Dartmouth C453 Ylfebster Club C3, 455 Third Group Honor Man C155 Rifle Team C255 Treasurer of Class C3, 45 14 So. Fayerweather Herbert Warren Jones Everett, Massachusetts Boston High School of Commerce 10 College Street Humphrey Gilbert Jordan Topslield, Massachusetts 27 Wheeler' JEUTICS QSCHT .l0TCiaI1, Jr. K Dorchester- Massachusetts Boston English High Ford Block Albert Sidney Kilbourn Enfield, New Hampshire Townsend Mass. High, Fitchburg State Normal, Bangor Seminaryg YVheelock Club: TVebSter Club 1 South Park Street 'cfemfiiie White Kimball, CP E K West Medford, Massachusetts Medford High Schoolg Mandolin Club C1, 2, 3, 455 Freshman Mandolin Club Phi Sigma Kappa House D011 i-'HWYCHCC King, A fl? C9 Mattapan Station, Boston, Massachusetts Boston English High Schoolg Third Honor Group C35 8 New Hampshire Elbriclge Herbert Kingsbury Keene, New Hampshire Keene High School 15 New Hampghjw-Q C643 voL.Lvi 5 G 1914 Charles Brigham Knight, 2 A E Marlboro, New Hampshire Marlboro High School, Transfer from New Hampshire State Collegeg Class Basketball C255 Keene Club Sigma Alpha Epsilon House George Harolcl Knight Lynn Classical High School5 First Power's Medal C35 Frederic Alvah Libbey, Berlin High School 'Charles Harcly Linscott Moses Brown School Davicl Oscar Logan Leicester Academy Milon Grout Logan 1 KKK Lynn, Massachusetts 16 Crosby Hall Berlin, New Hampshire 26-27 So. Fayerweather Boston, Massachusetts 6 Crosby Cherry Valley, Massachusetts 16 Fayerweather Cherry Valley, Massachusetts Leicester Academy: Honorable Mention French and German C35 15 Fayerweather' Arthur Kenney Lowell, A 2 P Reading, Massachusetts Boston English High5 1912 Aegis, Boardg 1912 Junior Fence Oratorg First Prize Rollins Contest C255 Third Prize Rollins Contest C355 Varsity Debating 12, 3, 455 Second Lockwood Prize Debating C255 President Debating Union C455 First Prize Class 1866 Contest Original Orations C355 Undergraduate Sneaker Dartnlourh Night C355 Press Club C2, 3, 455 Vice-President C355 Webster' Club C35 455 Presi- dent Progressive Club C45 Ford Block Harold Cleveland McAllister, A K E, Casque ancl Gauntlet Manchester, New Hampshire Manchester High School5 Oedipus Tyrannus C155 Honorable Mention in French and Greek C255 Rufus Choate Scholar C255 Manager of Hockey C455 G1':1,rluate Manager 3 Richardson Walter Henry McCarthy West Springhelcl, Massachusetts Holy Cross 48 lVhecler George Brewer McClary, A A KID, Sphinx Oak Park, Illinois Oak Park High School5 Leader Freshman Mandolin Clubg Mandolin Club C1, 2, 3, 455 Leader C45 Alpha Delta Phi House Harvey Clark McClary, A A 119, Sphinx Windsor, Vermont Mercersburg Academy5 Musical Clubs C455 Commencement Usher C2, 35 Alpha Delpa Phi House Wallace Edwin McCoy Glens Falls, New York Glens Falls High School: Track Team C255 Rufus Choate Scholar C255 Cross Country Team C35 35 North Main Street 'Charles Stanley McDaniel, CD A O Portsmouth, New Hampshire Portsmouth High School, Brewster Academy5 Choir C2, 3, 45 Phi Delta Theta House John Stephen MacDonald, B QD H Dorchester Center, Massachusetts Holbrook School5 Prom Show C1, 25 Beta Theta Pi House voL.Lv1 g A 1914 if James Loy Maloney, A M E, A Y Cl1lCagO, llliI10iS Polo High School5 Transfer from Denison University 3 South Fayerweather James Raymond Maloney ' Claremont, New Hampshire Holyoke High Schoolg College Band Cl, 2, 335 College Orchestra C1, 2, 335 Honor Man C1, 235 Honorable Mention in French C23 14 No. Fayerweather Leonard Richardson Manley B GJ H, Casque and Gauntlet Sioux City, Iowa Sioux City High Schoolg The Egisn Board C33 C. and G. House Leonard Camburn Martin, A K E Webster Groves, Missouri Manual Training Schoolg Transfer from University of South Carolina, Track Squad C43 Delta Kappa Epsilon House Donald Robinson Mason, K E Keene, New Hampshire- North Andover High School5 Freshman Track Teamg Varsity Track Team CZ, 8, 435 Mandolin Club C3, 435 College Orchestra C1, 2, 3, 435 College Band C1, 2, 3, 43 Bridgman Block William l-lenry Mason, QD A X, Sphinx - Boston, Massachusetts Allen Schoolg Class Baseball C1, 235 Class Hockey C135 Baseball Squad C235 Var- sity Hockey C2, 335 Captain Hockey Team C435 Palaeopitus C435 Cheer Leader C43 Theta Delta Chi House Clarence Coit Meleney, X 111 Brooklyn, New York Erasmus Hall High School5 Second Prize Rollins Contest C135 First Prize Rollins Contest C2, 335 Second Prize, Class of 1866 Contest C235 Treasurer of the D. C. A. C335 Business Manager of the 1913 Aegis C335 Junior Fence Speaker C335 Under- graduate Speaker Dartmouth Night C43 Chi Phi House l-lenry Wadleigh Merrill, A T A Concord, New Hampshire Concord High Schoolg Manager Freshman Debating Club C135 Junior Prom Com- UHttSG C33 14 hiassachusetts Ronald Millar, A A QD Denver, Colorado Georgetown Preparatoryg Cercle Francais: Cast Summer Bachelors . 3 Lebanon Street Edwin Ross Millring Buffalo, New York Lafayette I-Iigh SCl'lOOl 13 College 113,11 Robert Elmer More, K K K Denver, Colorado' East Side High School5 Varsity Basketball Squad C235 Varsity Football Squad C43 Kappa Kappa Kappa House David Beale Morey, GD A X, Turtle, Sphinx Malden, Mass. Malden High Schoolg Captain Freshman Football: Freshman Baseball: Varsity Football C2, 3, 435 Varsity Baseball C2, 335 Captain Varsity Baseball C435 College Orchestra 62, 33: Palaeopltus Theta Delta Chi House Lincoln Emerson Morton, 2 A E, Casque and Gauntlet, Kennebunk, Maine Kennebunk High School5 Manager Varsity Baseball C43 C. and G. House C663 'Q vontvi . A 1914 'f Paul Snyder Moyer, K K K, Turtle, Sphinx Mercersburg Academy: Class Baseball Team Cl, 25: Manager Class Hockey Q25 George Francis Arthur Mulcahy, E A E Boston English High School George Muller Munroe Joliet Township High School Dean Albert Munsey, X 112 Swampscott High School James Bernard Murphy Fitchburg High School Myron Arthur Myers, A K E Lyons Township High School: C3, 45 John Guy Nelson, 2 X, Turtle, Casque and Gauntlet Hershey, Pennsylvania Class Track Team gl, 25: 3 laebanon Street Dorchester, Massachusetts Sigma Alpha Epsilon House Joliet, Illinois l Crosby Swampscott, Massachusetts 19 lllassachusctts Fitchburg, Massachusetts 26 South Massachusetts l-linsdale, Illinois Freshman Track Team 115: Varsity Track Team 11 South Fayerweather Concord, New Hampshire Dean Academy: Freshman Basketball: Freshman Tennis Championship: College Tennis Championship Singles 63, 45: Doubles 42, 3, 45: N. E. Intercollegiate Cham- Dionship Doubles C253 Varsity Tennis Team C2, 3, 45: Captain C3, 45: Manager Varsity Basketball 645: Vice-President Class, First Semester C45 Fred Richard Neumeister Olivet Preparatory School: Choir C15 Thomas Attwill Nichols, X 115 C. and G. House Muskegon, Michigan 25 College Hall Lynn, Massachusetts Lynn Classical High School: Freshman Track Team 415 Austin Brown Noble Whitcomb High School John Noble Whitcomb High School Walter Harvey Nolan, A A CD, Sphinx 3 6 North Massachusetts Bethel, Vermont 54 New Hampshire Bethel, Vermont 54 New Hampshire Somerville, Massachusetts Somerville High School: Freshman Football: Freshman Baseball: Baseball Squad C2, 35 'Clyde l-larold Norton Haverhill High School Henry I-lovey Nutt, E X Alpha Delta Phi House Bradford, Massachusetts 11 New Hampshire Cliffside, New Jersey Hackensack High School: Class Baseball 41, 25: Pea Green Earl Cast: Class Tennis C25: Runner-up College Doubles Tennis Championship 1912-'l3: Wiiinei' of Non-Varsity Tennis Tournament Singles and Doubles Q35 I Sigma Chi House Franklin Cleveland Orton, A A CID, Sphinx Lincoln, Illinois Phillips Exeter: Treasurer' Class 115: Freshman Football 615' Phillips Club: Man- ager Freshman Baseball 145: Glee Club 145: College Choir 62, 3, 45: Round Robin C675 11 Richardson voL.Lvi g 5 1914 'P Herbert4Carroll Osborne Keene, New Hampshire Middleborough High School, Second Thayer Prize in Mathematics C235 Honorable Mention in Mathematics C23 9 College Street Forrest Flagg Owen, 2 CID E Concord, New Hampshire Concord High School, Oedipus Tyrannusn C135 Classical Club, TVheelock Clubg Concord Club Frederick Smyth Page, E. CID E Pinkerton Academy Herman Owen Parkinson XN'altha1n High Schoolg C1, 2 ,3, 435 Orchestra C1, tette C3, 433 433 Choir C2, 3, 435 Band C433 Da Herbert Marsh Perkins Winclsor' High School Stephen Kingsbury Perry A Maynard High School: Honorable Mention History C335 History C33 John Axel George Peterson Proctor High Schoolg Second Honor Group C235 Honorable William Bolster Pierce, A K E 1 Thornton Candia, New Hampshire 23 Reed Hall Waltham, Massachusetts. Freshman Mandolin Clubg College Mandolin Club rtmouth String Quar- 15 Crosby Windsor, Vermont 4 College Street Wayland, Massachusetts- Departmental Honors 22 Massachusetts Proctor, Vermont Mention in Latin C23 32 YVheeler Portland, Maine' Phillips Exeter Academyg Honorable Mention in Mathematics C131 Assistant in ' Physics C3, 433 Exeter Clbu, President C43 Delta Emmett Pishon, GJ A X, Casque and Gauntlet Kappa Epsilon House Newton, Massachusetts- Boston English High School: Class Secretary Cl. 23: lst Semester: Varsity Foot- ball Squad C2, 3, 43, Pea Green Earl C133 Oedipus Tyrannusu C133 Third Honor Group C13 Frederick Sailly Platt, Jr. 115 K 111 Rutland High Schoolg Freshman Football C135 Honors C23 C. and G. House Rutland, Vermont' Phi Kappa Psi House Roswell Joseph Powers Springfield, Massachusetts- Spfingfield Central High School: Jack-o'-Lantern C2. 3, 433 Co-author Summer Bachelors C235 Hovey Poem Prize CDivided3 C33g Editor-i tern C43 Henry Sherman Proctor, Jr. YfVesterly High School John Azro Prouty, A K, E, Sphinx Emerson Institute, Vtfashington, D. C., YVebster Club Delta Kenneth Frederick Raitt, 2 KID E Fitchburg High Schoolg Webster Club C633 n-Chief Jaok-o'-Lan- 15 Crosby Westerly, Rhode Island' 3 College Street Newport, Vermont' Kappa Epsilon House Fitchburg, Massachusetts 1 6 Reed VOLIAU 1914 1 ' x. l :, Q , ,r , John Albert Randall Bridgewater High School Philip Leon Randall Tilton Seminary. Harold Leslie Ransome Kimball Union Academy John Jay Remsen, CD K 11? Erasmus Hall High School, Aegis Board 433, Class T Randolph Rieclell, B GD H, Dragon Manchester High Schoolg Prom Show Q13 Charles Smith Riley, 2 X, Dragon Myricks, Massachusetts 13 East XVheelock Street North Conway, New Hampshire 13 New Hampshire Newport, New Hampshire 63 XVheeler Brooklyn, New York reasurer C35 Phi Kappa Psi House Manchester, New Hampshire 18 Massachusetts Lawrence, Massachusetts Lawrence High School, Freshman Track Team, Varsity Track 42, 39 Walter Robbins 4 , Sigma Chi House Cliftonclale, Massachusetts Saugus High School: Press Club 4235 Honorable Mention German and French 123: Third Honor Group C35 Edward Lawrence Robinson, X fi? 13 Richardson Portland, Maine Portland High, North Yarmouth Academy, Jack-0'-Lantern Board C3, 43: Cross- Country Team Q15 Stephen Darwin Rose Chi Phi House Clifton, Massachusetts Lynn Classical High Schoolg Track Team CZ, 353 Cross Country Team 12, 3, 45 Jay D. Runkle Edwin James Rutherford Amsterdam High School Thomas William Salmon Yvoburn High School Philip Allein Sauer, 2 X East High School, Transfer from Ohio State University John Joseph Scarry, A 1' A Oscar Bernharclt Scharrer 10 College Hall Rawson, Ohio 6 College Street Amsterdam, New York 1 Crosby Woburn, Massachusetts 21 North Main Street Columbus, Ohio Sigma Chi House Dedham, Massachusetts 9 West South Street Dayton, Ohio Steele High Schoolg Second Honor Group C253 Honorable Mention Mathematics 1253 Third Honor Group Q33 4695 24 Sanborn Q H Q voL.Lvi 7 A 19141 29 '.- rf -:A Victor Charles Schellenberg, BOSIOH, MaSSaChllSCifS Brookline High Schoolg Freshman Mandolin Club C133 Musical Clubs C3, 433 Brookline Club 2 South Massachusetts Raymond Moralee Schulte, A T A Dollar Bay, Michigan Dollar Bay High Schoolg Class Hockey C1, 235 Hockey Squad C235 Hockey Team C33 44 New Hampshire Arthur Leon Scott, K 2, Dragon Portland, Maine Portland High School, Hebron Academy, Glee Club C3, 435 Leader of Glee Club C43: Choir C3, 43 18 Massachusetts Frederic Arnault Seidler, 111 Y Newark, New Jersey Newark High Schoolg Freshman Track Team C133 Varsity Relay Team C23 30 South Massachusetts Harry Hoges Semmes, A K E, Casque and Gauntlet Washington, District of Columbia Vifestern High Schoolg Dramatic Club C1, 2, 435 Prom, Show C133 1913 Aegis Board C. and G. House Harold Hodgclon Shedd ' Haverhill, Massachusetts Haverhill High School 21 Reed Hall Alan Bartlett Shepard, 111 I' A East Derry, New Hampshire Pinkerton Academyg Freshman Track Team C133 Varsity Track Squad C2, 335 Man- dolin Club C2, 3, 433 College Orchestra C1, 2, 3, 43 13 XVheelcr Russell Lewis Shepler, X KD Vandergrift, Pennsylvania Kirkiminetas Spring School 6-7 South Massachusetts Carl Elliot Shumway Melrose, Massachusetts Melrose High, Freshman Cross Country Team, Varsity Football Squad C333 Sec- retary of Dartmouth Outing Club C333 President of D. O. C. C43 8 Richardson Edwin Everett Sides South Groveland, Massachusetts Groveland High School 25 Hallgarten Warren Prosser Smith, HP Y New York City A 4 School Street Frank F oss Spencer, 2 X Berwick, Maine Berwick Academy, University of Maine 4 College Street Bernard Spillane, A T A ' North Easton, Massachusetts Holy Crossg Class Basketball Team C233 Varsity Baseball Team C33 9 West South Street Earle Cushing Stanley, A T A Rochester, New Hampshire Rochester High School 8 Massachusetts C703 'Q VOL. LVI . A 1914 George Steele, K 2 Gloucester High Schoolg Honor Group Cl, 2, 333 El Edwin Milo Stiles Alton High School George Henry Stiles Goffstovvn High School Lawrence Clark Stoddard DeWitt Clinton High School Charles Stanley Stone, A K E Proctor Academy, Holderness School Ralph Kenneth Stone, K K K Gloucester, Massachusetts entro Espanol, Round Robin 23 Fayerweather Hall Alton, New Hampshire 9 College Street Goffstown, New Hampshire 56-57 Wheeler- New York City 11 Massachusetts Andover, New Hampshire Delta Kappa Epsilon House Edgewood, Rhode Island Providence Classical High Schoolg Class Hockey fly, Second Group Honor Man C233 Honorable Mention German C333 College Choir C333 Glee Club C3, 433 Manager of Varsity Track Team C43 Kappa Kappa Kappa House Howard Stoughton, E N Charlestown, New Hampshire Bellows Falls High School: Class Track C133 Varsity Track Squad C33 Ernest Alphonso Stowell, B G II Revere High School Thomas Lawrence Sullivan Sigma Nu House Revere, Massachusetts 27 Hallgarten Somerset, Vermont Groveland High School, South Boston High Schoolg Greek Play Oedipus Tyran- nus C133 Football Squad C233 Honors C33 William Tapley 'Utica Free Academy Henry Allaire Taylor, B GD II 32 Hallgarten Utica, New York S School Street Brooklyn, New York Boys' High Schoolg Freshman Hockey Team Cl3g lfca Green Earl C133 Sum- mer Bachelorsv C233 Varsity Hockey Squad C233 Varsity Hockev Team C33 Howard Seely Teall, A K E Phillips Andover r William Bradford Terry Haverhill High School Ernest Eastman Thomas , Middleboro High School Lyman Hinckley Thomas, 2 N Middleboro High School 71 Beta Theta Pi House Sodus, New York Delta Kappa Epsilon House Plaiston, New Hampshire 21 Reed Hall Middleboro, Massachusetts ' 2 4 Sanborn Rock, Massachusetts Sigma Nu House Q VOL.LVI gs 4 1914 Dean Alan Thompson, 2 N Orange High School Thomas Willard Towler, B C9 H Orange, Massachusetts Sigma Nu House Cran ford, New Jersey Cranford High Schoolg Mandolin Club C3, 435 Jack-0'-Lantern Board C3, 43 Parker Trowbridge, KI' Y Yiforcester Academy I-larolcl Stuart Tuck Middlebury College Somerville Pinkney Tuck, A A 111 Beta Theta Pi House Worcester, Massachusetts 38 South Massachusetts Quincy, Massachusetts 23 North Main Street Alexandria, Egypt Ridgeneld Schoolg Honorable Mention in French C133 Vice-President El Centro Espagnolg Vice-President, Cercle Francais Dramatic Club Cl, 235-Cast of Prom Show Cl, 233 Cheer Leader C43 Elmer Clayton Tucker 7 Richardson Chelsea, Massachusetts Chelsea High Schoolg Prom Show C13g Sophomore Debating Team C23 Evans Truman Twitchell, K 2 4 College Street North Collins, New York Buffalo Central Highg Freshman Baseball, Varsity Baseball Squad C2, 33 Chester Adrian Vander Pyl, B C9 H Boston Latin School Russell F rank Varney, 2 N Berwick Academy Clarence Lewis von Tacky, 95 K XII Bridgeman Block Roxbury, Massachusetts Beta Theta Pi House South Berwick, Maine 29 New Hampshire Titusville, Pennsylvania Titusville High School, University of Miohigang Prom Show: Honor Man C23 Francis Parkinson Walsh, GD A X Phi Kappa Psi House Lowell, Massachusetts Lowell High Schoolg Prom Show Cl, 235 College Choir Cl. 2, 333 The Dartmouth Boardg Webster' Club C433 'Glee Club C43g Golf Team C3, 43 Theta Delta Chi House Sherman Broomhead Ward, B Q II Phillips Exeter Howard Porter Warren, 2 N Keene High School Waterman Goulding Warren, flf' I' A VVorcester Classical High School, ors C33 Albert Brooks Washburn, E A E Ylfhitcomb High School Portsmouth, New Hampshire Beta Theta Pi House Keene, New Hampshire 20 New Hampshire l-lolclen, Massachusetts Freshman Mandolin Clubg Scholarship Hon- 13 Wheeler Hall Bethel, Vermont Sigma Alpha Epsilon House ' C723 A ffHB A p VOL. Lvi - 1914 1 Charles Dana Waterman, A A QD, Sphinx Davenport, lowa Davenport High Schoolg 1913 'tAegis Board, Wfebster Clubg Scholarship Honors C2, 355 Editor-in-Chief The Bemang First Prize Lockwood English Composition, Round Robin 11 Richardson George Byron Watts Franklin, New Hampshire Franklin High Sehoolg Class Cross Country Team C155 Second Group Honors C2, 35: Departmental Honors in German C355 Outing Club Executive Committee C455 Wheelocli Club, 8 New Hampshire Harold Eugene Weare Cape Necldick, Maine York High School 44 New Hampshire Pierce Webster, QD A QD Galesburg, Illinois Galesburg High School, Transfer from Lombard College Phi Delta Theta House Frank Taylor Weil North Andover, Massachusetts Johnson High School 26 Sanborn Hall Collin Wells, A K E, Casque and Gauntlet Hanover, New Hampshire Phillips Andoverg Golf Team Cl, 255 Manager Golf Team C351 TVebster Club C45 52 No. College Street Carlton Kage Welsh, CIF 2 K Rockford, Illinois Rockford High School Phi Sigma Kappa House Chester Arthur Wescott, CID I' A Bar Harbor, Maine Bar Harbor High School, University of Maine Phi Gamma Delta House Nathaniel Mcl..ellen Whitmore, K K K, Sphinx Brunswick, Maine Mercersburg Academy, Class Football Team C253 Varsity Football Squad C153 Var- sity Football Team C3, 45 3 Lebanon Street Conrad Church Wilbur, F A Minneapolis, Minnesota West High School 29 New Hampshire Ralph Sprague Wilder, K 2 East Weymouth, Massachusetts Weymouth High Schoolg Class Baseball C253 Varsity Basketball Squad C35 23 Sanborn Warde Wilkins, A 1' A, Casque ancl Gauntlet Newton Centre, Massachusetts Newton High School: Freshman Track Team C153 Varsity Track Team C2, 35: Freshman Mandolin Club C155 Mandolin Club C3, 453 Third Honor Group C35g Round Robin: Palaeopitus C. and G. House Earle Van Kuren Willson, XII Y, Casque and Gauntlet Rutland, Vermont Phillips Academy: Rufus Choate Scholar C359 First Honor Group C2, 35, Honorable Mention in Chemistry C353 Economics C355 Phillips Clubg Cercle Francaisg Dart- mouth Literary lvlagazinen C353 Golf Team C351 Cast of The Summer Bachelors C253 The Green Parasol C353 President Dramatic Club C451 Round Robin C45 Vifebster Club C45 ' C. and G. House Lincoln Squires Wilson, A T A Lvnclonville, Vermont Lyndon Institute: Class Basketball C25 6 Massachusetts 73 voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 in Kendall Winship, GJ A X Melrose High Schoolg Class Basketball Cl, 235 Varsity sity Basketball Team C23 Keith Ainsworth Wood, K E Portsmouth High, Vermont Academy Harold Hamlet Woods Groton High School James Worton Marc Snowell Wright, A T A, Sphinx Melrose, Massachusetts Football Squad C235 Var- 'Theta Delta Chi House Portsmouth, New Hampshire 22 Richardson Groton, Massachusetts 1 0 Sanborn Hyde Park, Massachusetts Davison Block Chicago, Illinois YVendell Phillips High School, Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 3, 43, Class Secretary Cl, 2, 33, Track Team C2, 3, 433 Captain Track Team C435 Harvard-Dartmouth Dual Record Pole Vault C12 6 1-433 N. E, 1. C. Record C12 6 1-23, YVorld's Record C13 2 1-43, Am- erican Olympic Team 1912g Palaeopitus 7 Massachusetts Arthur Edward Wyman, KI' Y V Auburn, Maine Edward Little High Svhoolg Dramatic Club C2, 3, 433 Manager Dramatic Club C433 Prom Show C33 Psi Upsilon House 74 NORTH MAIN STREET Winter Spring CLASS OF 1 914 rnraa . . ....,. i ..ra.a, W : A 1Q,E fV l5.l i!.?! rg , lr Uhr 0112155 nf 15114 Three short years ago the skies of Hanover were darkened by the multitude of Freshmen who descended upon the College. The largest class in history, they were called, -the nothing-like-it class of l9l4. At first the very grass of the Campus grew more green where they trod, but in the football rush the class with a real spirit found itself, and while Beer and Kuech engaged the Sophomores, Cavanaugh took the pigskin to College Hall. Modesty forbids relating all we did that Freshman year. A world championship relay team at Philadelphia, a championship basketball team, a football team that lost but once, an undefeated hockey team, and a track team that made l-larry Hillman weep tears of joy, are a few of the things we like to remember. To unlucky Thirteen we allowed the baseball and tennis honors, and there we stopped. The basketball series was a bit more spectacular than the rush, and much more entertaining than a prize fight. Again we won. Even our debaters awed the Sopho- mores into defeat. The latter rather' discouraged our having a picture taken, but never- theless we used to average about one a week. We stormed Chandler Hall that year, dislodged the Sophomores, tested the fire hose, and then with utmost cheerfulness paid a class tax for damages. The only other incident of note was our bonfire and pajama parade, when the dual meet with Harvard was won, 60-5 7. Having contributed to Doc Bowler's Gym Fund, we were allowed to become 'Sophomores ourselves. Last year we took a kindly interest in the Class of Nineteen-fifteen, and attempted to encourage their infantile enthusiasm at all times. With all diligence we labored to teach them the ways of life, but when they would not be led we had to drag them. We kept the football from them in the class rush, won the baseball series, chided them when they aspired to play basketball, and finally we allowed them no class picture. Now we have lost our interest in youthful pastimes. We study, we look forward, soon we shall be Seniors. Moose is still our leader, and the spirit of the class is unim- paired. C775 4'HE VOL.LVI L 1914 '- 1 PENNELL NUTTING ABORN, in 1' A Brookline, Massachusetts C lA byff Roxbury Latin Schoolg Assistant Circulation Manager The Dartmouth. Phi Gamma Delta House. THOMAS ALEXANDER ANDERSON, K 2 Milton, Massachusetts GiT0m!! Milton High School, Freshman Hockey Team 113. Carter Block PAUL LIVINGSTON APPLIN Keene, New Hampshire GSAIJPYJ Keene High School. 3 Fayerweather HERBERT STOTT AUSTIN Wellesley, Massachusetts Hflusiien ' Mechanic Arts High School 26 Wheele C783 VOL LVI 1914 ., , 1 ' , .H U X.. I : . , ,., , JESSE HERBERT BABCOCK Washington, District of Columbia A A Herb Eastern High Schoolg Third Honor Group Cl, Zig Honorable Mention in Mathematics and Chemistry 121. 5 Sanborn. LESTER EDWARD BACON, E 'IDE Brockton, Massachusetts Balfe,' Brockton High Schoolg Freshman Cross Country team 1135 Varsity Cross Country Team f2D. Sigma Phi Epsilon Rooms. I JOHN CRAIG BAKER, 2 N Montclair, New Jersey Bal3e,' lVIOl'1tC12.iI' High SCYIOOIQ FI'6ShII'1a1'1 .Nf3.1'1d01iI1 Club Sigma Nu House. DALTON GRAF BALDWIN? ATA Newark, New Jersey Dali Newark Academy. 36 Massachusetts. H795 VOL LVI . A 1914 RICHARD JOSEPH SHAW BARLOW, AKE Trenton, New Jersey f SBCCUQ Blair Academyg Class Vice-President 1193 Freshman Foot- ball Teamg Varsity Football Squad 42, 355 Prom Show C1 255 Glee Club' 633. 17 Richardson EVERETT HOLMAN BARNARD, EAE West Medford, Massachusetts Barney Medford High Schoolg Prom Show 129. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House WILLIAM WARREN BARNES, E A E Portland, Maine Bill Deering High Schoolg College Choir fl, 235 Glee Club 113. Sigma Alpha Epslion House. WILLIAM EMERSON BARRETT, WY Boston, Massachusetts SSM!! Volkmann Schoolg Freshman Hockeyg Prom Show C133 Business Manager 1914 ZEgis. Psi Upsilon House. C305 'Q VOLLVI 1914 CHESTER LEONARD BARROWS l Saugus, Massachusetts l Cclleff T b r Academy. 2 Hallgart . LAWRENCE FRANK BARSALOUX T Hudson Falls, New York Mike Hudson Falls High Schoolg Third Honor Group Cl, 21. 22 Whee1e1'. KENNETH HAYDEN BARTLETT Yonkers, New York Ken Left Dartmouth at the end of Sophomore y CHARLES SHAW BATCHELDER, SAX Dorchester, Massachusetts Balch,' Dorchester High Schoolg Class Tennis Team fl, 25g College Choir C2, 353 Glee Club C2, 35g The Green Parasol 4235 Hockey Squad 12, 35. Theta Delta Chi House. C815 VOL. LVI A 1914 O'-' JOSEPH HENRY BATCHELDER, AAfIv Peoria, Illinois GG SQ foe Peoria High School. 40 Massachusetts. GEOF F REY HOUGHTON BEALS Worcester, Massachusetts it-leg!! Ylforcester' Classical High School. 37N North Massachusetts. HAROLD COTTON BEAN, KKK Boston, Massachusetts Beanie', Deering High Schoolg Prom Show 129. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. JOSEPH HENRY BEER New York City , 4410699 Lawrenceville Academyg Freshman Football 4139 Varsity Football Team C2, 31. 36 South Massachusetts. C823 Vo1..Lv1 . P- 1914 ' . F' .9- l FORREST CLIFFORD BLOOD A Tilton, New Hampshire scF0rry1a Tilton Seminary: Class Debating Team fly. 20 Fayerweather. JAMES CALVIN BLYTHE, A T A Chicago, Illinois Cljimf, East Aurora High Schoolg Freshman Football Team 1133 Assistant Manager Varsity Tennis 635. 31 Massachusetts. GEORGE ARTHUR BOGGS, A A fb Grosse Point, Michigan Ceorge', Waukegan High Schoolg Gun Team 125. , Alpha Delta Phi House. I-IORACE LE' ROY BORDEN, K K K Melville, Rhocle Islancl ilgordyii Moses Brown Schoolg Freshman Football Team C155 Fresh- man Basketball Team Clj. 22-23 North Fayerweather. 6833 voL.Lv1 5 I 1914 HOWARD ELLIS BOWMAN, QD K KP Brockton, Massachusetts FSBO, 9 Brockton High Schoolg Freshman Football Team 413. 52 New Hampshire WILLIAM WALSH BRESLIN Water ford, New York Bill GEORGE ELII-IU BRIGGS, JR., K K K New Bedford, Massachusetts Briggsie New Bedford High SCIIOOIQ HOUOI' IVIZ-1.11 fljj Class Debating Team i235 Mandolin Club C333 Cercle Francais C333 Junior Prom Auditing Committee 133. 18 South Massachusetts. HAROLD DAY BROWN, 2 in E Plymouth, Massachusetts , Brownie Phillips Exeter Academyg College Band fl, 2, 335 College Orchestra Cl, 2, 339 Freshman Tennis Team C13. 27-28 College Hall. C843 Peekskill Military Academy. 12 South Fayerweather. voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 iiii R R, X PAUL HARRINGTON BROWN Wakeheld, New Hampshire Brownie Salem High School. 14 North Massachusetts. CARLTON KEARNS BROWNELL, fIJ1'A Potsdam, New York K5 ' 91 Bronmze Potsdam Normal High School: Class Hockey Manager C153 Class Vice-President C253 Prom Show C253 Class Track Team C135 Varsity Track Squad C253 Captain Class Basket Ball Team C253 Varsity Basket Ball Squad C2, 31. ' Phi Gamma Delta House. ELLSWORTI-I BREWER BUCK, A T A Chicago, Illinois Buclfie Morgan Park Academy. A 36 Massachusetts. CLYDE DREW BUCKLEY, K K K Lancaster, New Hampshire f Blick, 5 Lancaster Academyg Class Football. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. C359 D voL.LV1 i f 1914 . LELAND STOREY BULLIS, QIDAQ l l Glens Falls, New York scD0C!9 Glens Falls High Schoolg Assistant Manager Freshman Baseball C3J. Phi Delta Theta House. JOHN RIDDLE BURLEIGH, KPY Manchester, New Hampshire Lbjohni! Phillips Exeter Academyg Glee Club fl, 2, 335 Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 35g Class Chorister 413. Psi Upsilon House. DONALD CHURCH BURNHAM, X CID Gloucester, Massachusetts Dutch Gloucester High School. 30 Massachusetts. I-IOLT WINN BUSWELL Epping, New Hampshire MBU-SH Colby Academy. 25 South Fayerweather. 1863 VOL LVI IQ 14 ., , M A . i ' i l :9 . P' - CLARENCE KILMER BUTLER, CIJEK b Saratoga Springs, New York Pigeon Saratoga Springs High School. 5 Crosby. FREDERIC WIER CAMPBELL, QD A X Dorchester, Massachusetts Fritz Dorchester High Schoolg Transfer from Boston University. 17 Hubbard. WARREN ELLIOT CARLETON, 2 QIJE Plymouth, Massachusetts G C, , Plymouth High Schoolg Orchestra Cl, -2, 33: Band Cl, 2, 39g Leader C395 Literary Magazine Board 133. 52 Fayerweather. I-IARGLD ALVIN CASTLE, CD 1' A . Chicago, Illinois S f ,, Austin High Schoolg Jack-0-Lantern KZ, 333 1914 Egis' Board. Phi Gamma Delta House IST! voL.Lv1 y C 1914, I JAMES HARRISON CAVANAUGH, iv I' A Sijimif St. Luke's Schoolg Class Football Team 117. Phi Gamma Delta House. CLYTON CHANDLER, QD A X Plymouth, Massachusetts Gichanii Plymouth High Schoolg College Orchestra 41, 2, 335 College Band Cl, 2, 355 Manager of Band 133. - Theta Delta Chi House. CHARLES ADNA CHASE, K2 Nashua, New Hampshire uchevyu Nashua High School. , 23 Sanborn. CHARLES MALI CLAEYS, CID K XII East Orange, New Jersey Kiel East Orange High Schoolg Dramatic Club 41, 2, 33, Cercle Frangais fl, 2, 333 Freshman Track Team 1153 Cast Prom Show Cl, 23. 52 New Hampshire. ISSJ VOL LVI 1914, ., 7, '- :I Q . l I EDWARD EMERSON CLARK Sandwich, Massachusetts MEJH Sandwich High Schoolg Class Tennis Team C253 Hockey Squad 123. 15 Whee1e1'. PHILIP FRANCIS COE, LIJFA Worcester, Massachusetts 6613,-lil!! Woi'cester South High School. Phi Gamma Delta House. DUDLEY RAY COLBY Manchester, New Hampshire CCDUJQ, Manchester High School. 10 Wheeler. FLETCHER HATCH COLBY, X111 l ,BerIin, New Hampshire Fletch Phillips Exeter Academyg Exeter Club, Summer Bachelors C135 Green Parasol 625g Jack-o-Lantern Board 633. 10 Massachusetts. C899 voL.Lv1 7 A 1914 :-2 A9- SAMUEL DODGE COLE, CD I' A Salem, Massachusetts lisamii Salem High School. Phi Gamma. Delta House. DWIGHT CONN, KKK Scranton, Pennsylvania Dwight'f Phillips Exeter Acaclernyg Composer The Green Parasol C255 The Bemaj' Board C355 College Choir 133. 46 Vtfheeler JOI-IN FRANCIS CONNERS Vergennes, Vermont 5 G Y 7 Vergennes High School. Davison Block GEORGE. FRANCIS CONVERY, BOH Albany, New York Crane I Albany High School. 17 College I C909 H VOL LVI IQ 14 HARRY MARTIN COOK, E A E North Abington, Massachusetts ' ' UDOCH Abington High Schoolg Mandolin Club fl, 2, 333 Class Base- ball Cl, 235 Varsity Baseball Squad 1235 Orchestra 42, 333 Band 42, 33. Sigma Alpha Epsilon House. CHARLES NEWTON CRANDALL Montpelier, Vermont Cram Philadelphia Boys' Central High, Montpelier Seminaryg Glee Club C2, 333 College Choir C2, 33. 18 Sanborn. FREDERICK PITKIN CRANSTON Denver, Colorado Pitkin East Denver High Schoolg Second Honor Group Cl, 23. Rollins Prize Speaker 623, Class Debating Team 1235 Mile High Club. 14 Fayerweather. WILLIAM STOUGI-ITON CURRIER, E N West Lebanon, New Hampshire Bill Kimball Union Academy. 20 New Hampshire. C913 VOL. LVI L 1914 l HOWARD SPENCER CURTIS Warren, Massachusetts security, Vifarren High Schoolg Third Honor Group 113. 24-25 South Fayerweather RICHARD HYDE CUTLER, AKE Montpelier, Vermont uHiden Montpelier High Schoolg Golf Team Cl, 2, 31. 25 New Hampshire WALTER FORD DALEY Hamilton, Massachusetts Walt Peabody High Schoolg Freshman Hockey Team Clj. 15 Richardson FREDERICK ARMSTRONG DAVIDSON New Rochelle, New York 66Davey97 New Rochelle High Schoolg Freshman Mandolin Club C133 Mandolin Club 133, C925 20 Crosby. VOL LVI IQ 14' ., , M O -. ' i. :P h plf ' I-IERMAN DAVIDSON V New York City HRCJQ! Townsend Harris Hall High School. - 7 New Hampshire. WILBUR LEROY DAVIDSON, A TA Cleveland, Ohio ln business. JOSEPH LAWRENCE DAY, X CID Portland, Maine - A ullarryn Portland High Schoolg Honor Man fl, 255 Freshman Cross Country Team: Freshman Track Team, Rifle Team Cl, 355 Varsity Track C255 Varsity Cross Country Team C355 Sec- retary D. C. A. C353 President Gun Club 435, Chi Phi House. ARTHUR HERBERT DEARING South Portland, Maine ' 'iWalso,, South Portland High Schoolg Portland Club. Davison Block. C935 i VOL.LVI 5 A 1914 JOHN LEYSON DELLINGER, ll-'Y St. Paul, Minnesota G6laCE! Mechanic Arts High School: Captain Freshman Hockey C155 Varsity Hockey C2, 35. Psi Upsilon House. ROSCOE PLIMPTON DEWITT, QIDAGD Dallas, Texas esR0Sn Terrill School Honor Man C153 Summer Bachelors Cast ' C153 Jack-o-Lantern Board 42,355 Circulation Manager and Assistant Business Manager of the Bema C35. Phi Delta Theta House. FRANK HERBERT DONOVAN, XCI3 Lynn, Massachusetts Llpatsyvy Classical High Schoolg Freshman Football C155 Freshman Baseball C15. 6-7 South Massachusetts. WALLACE I-IORNE DRAKE North Weymouth, Massachusetts G5DuClEp9I Yifeymouth High School. 2 North Massachusetts. C947 ' voL. Lvl 5 A 1914 CJLJ' P' - HAROLD LESLIE DUNBAR, KKK Brockton, Massachusetts ' ' ' Boing Brockton High School5 Freshman Football C155 Varsity Football Team C35. 23 North Fayerweather. CARROLL ANDREW EDSON New York City Eddie DeWitt Clinton High Schoolg Freshman Cross Country Team C155 Aero Club Cl, 255 President DeWitt Clinton Club C255 Treasurer Aero Club C255 Rufus Choate Scholar C255 First Honor Group C255 Tied for Thayer Mathematical Prize C255 Honorable Mention in Mathematics C255 Physics C25. 20 Fayerweather. EDGAR HAROLD ELKINS Lakeport, New Hampshire f.l3Zk,, Laconia High Schoolg Third Honor Group Man Cl, 25. 6 Reed. DEAN ABBOTT EMERSON Milford, New Hampshire I-Ieinzn Milford High School. 4 Crosby- C955 voL LV1 5 A 1914 WESLEY THEODORE ENGELHORN, K 2 Spokane, Washington Moose Spokane High School5 President Class Cl, 2, 335 Captain Freshman Football Teamg Freshman Track Teamg Varsity Football Team C2, 335 Varsity Track C235 College Record 35-Tb. Hammer Throw. 25 Massachusetts. ARTHUR CHARLES ESTEP, B C9 II Cleveland, Ohio uESiCp1s, Central High Schoolg Freshman Football C135 Freshman Track C135 Varsity Football Squad C2, 33. Beta Theta Pi House. HOWARD SYLVESTER FAI-IEY, CID 2 K Medford, Massachusetts uHoDjey9s Medford High Schoolg Freshman Hockey Team C135 Fresh- man Baseball Team C135 Varsity Hockey Team C235 Varsity Baseball Team C23. Phi Sigma Kappa House. ERLE FAIRFIELD Worcester, Massachusetts A lice YVorcester Classical High School. 16 North Fayerweather. C963 VOL LVI A 1914 I A - I xr I Q 7,2 , NATHAN ALLEN FARWELL, K K K Rockland, Maine Nate Phillips Exeter Academyg Phillips Clubg The Green Para- sol 425. 10 North Massachusetts CHARLES HENRY FAXON Chestertown, New York C fFax, 7 Chestertown High School 17 South Fayerweathe ALBERT WHITTIER FELLOWS Dorchester, Massachusetts CIAIQQ Bosroniarin School. 20 Crosby JOHN HAROLD FIELD Milltown, Maine Ciilaclai I Cahus High SchooL 3 Sanborn C973 voL.LV1 s 7 A 1914 MYRON JENNISON FILES F airfield, Maine Squeali'H Hebron Academy. 5 Hubbard ROBERT FLANDERS, A T A Manchester, New Hampshire :cRoC1?ya9 Manchester High School. 7 Massachusetts WALTER EARLE FLOYD Winthrop, Massachusetts Rubber Ylfinthrop High School. Monitor Latin C235 Reed Hall Track Team C135 Honorable Mention Lunch Cl, 2, 335 Sanborn Hall Football Team 133g Bull-Throwing Union Cl, 2, 33. RAYMOND I-IASKELL FOSS Dover, New Hampshire if ' 57 Fossze Dover High School, transfer from New Hampshire College, Gun Club C33. ' 1 College i 4989 VOL LVI 19 14 ., , ' .I n xl I :Q . Fi 5 CHARLES FREDERIC FRASER, EX Ft. Coyington, New York ' Fritz Champlain High School. 1 Sanborn GEORGE WAITE FROST Frosty Roxbury, Massachusetts Boston Latin School. 2 Hubbard HENRY BARDLEE FROST, KKK Arlington, Massachusetts GGBTUJQS Arlington High School, Third Honor Group C133 Freshman Hockey Team C193 Varsity Hockey Squad C235 Varslty Hockey Team 633. Kappa Kappa Kappa House HENRY PINGREE FULL Pigeon Cove, Massachusetts Pidge E G1011C6Ste1' High School. 26 VV'l'1e619I' 1995- voL.Lv1 . A 1914 CHARLES KENNETH FULLER, X112 Lynn, Massachusetts GGKCHH Lynn Classical High Schoolg Orchestra Cl, 2, 333 Assistant Manager Freshman Football 633. 10 Massachusetts- GUY EDSON FULLER Springfield, Massachusetts Hceezern Central High School. 11 Sanborn. SAMUEL AUGUSTUS FULLER, AKE Cleveland, Ohio C us GAIL IRWIN GARDNER, BGDH Prescott, Arizona Visser ' Phillips Exeter Academy Prescott Hi h School Thir C1003 Shaw High Schoolg Glee Club Cl, 2, 335 Choir Cl, 2, 33, Jun- ior Prom Committee C33. 17 Massachusetts, ' 5 g : Cl Honor Group 123. 37 South Massachusetts, VOL LVI 19 14' , - TT ' :9 h - pl' GEORGE I-IOLLEY GILBERT Dorset, Vermont X L L Cir? Northampton High School. 3 North Massachusetts. WILFRED CHARLES GILBERT HBH., I Dorset, Vermont Northampton High Schoolg Rufus Choate Scholar C155 First Honor Group Cl, 255 Freshman Mandolin C155 Second Class of 1866 Prize 1253 Choir 4353 Mandolin Club 635g Honorable Mention Latin. French, Greek 425. 1 Richardson. EDIVIUND NEWMAN GILES, A A dv Beverly, Massachusetts LGLUIEGSQ Beverly High Schoolg Golf Team Cl, 2, 355 Runner-up Golf Championship C25. Q 14 Crosby. ARTHUR EDWIN GILLIS, A A CID Manchester, New Hampshire c4Art1s Phillips Exeter Academyg Freshman Football Teamg Fresh- man Track Teamg Varsity Track Team 1253 Vice-President Exeter Club 435g Chairman Junior Prom Committee 135. Alpha Delta Phi House. C1015 Y voL.Lv1 g W- 1914 '1 KENNETH GRANT, K 2 Winchester, Massachusetts llChick99 Wi-nchester High,Schoolg Class Basket Ball Cl, 255 Varsity Basketball Squad C2, 355 Junior Prom Committee C35. 20 Massachusetts. WILLIAM ALBERT GREEN, JR., YPY Dallas, Texas Ci 55 Terrill School. Psi Upsilon House. A JAMES DOUGLAS GREGC., K2 Wilton, New Hampshire f flim, 1 Phillips Exeter Academyg Phillips Club C353 Secretary EX- eter Club C35. 8 Crosby, A FRANCIS DERBY HALL, CID 2 K Medford, Massachusetts MDC,-by!! Medford High Schoolg Summer Bachelors C153 Press Club Cl, 2, 355 Vice-President C35. Phi Sigma Kappa House. C1025 VOL LVI 19 14 I L E 0 xi ' . sv- V HOWELL KNIGHT I-IALLETT, A K E St. Louis, Missouri ' Mai Webster High Schoolg Freshman Baseball Teamg Varsity Baseball Team 129. Delta Kappa Epsilon House. WILLIAM CHARLES HANDS, JR., AA flb New York City Bill New York Military Academyg Freshman Football Team C155 Alpha Delta Phi House. JONATHAN NEWTON HARRIS Allston, Massachusetts X S Cjacleif Mechanic Arts High Schoolg Freshman'Hockey Team 115. 22 Fayerweather. MAURICE GEORGE HARVEY White River Junction, -Vermont I-Iarveu Hartford High School. 25 South Fayerweather. C1035 voL.LV1e l 1914 1 C1043 Kimball Union Academ PHILIP CRANSTGN HARVEY Brooklyn, New York Phil Erasmus Hall High Schoolg Freshman Baseball C15 PHILLIPS HASKELL Gloucester, Massachlisetts Pete 1:1 Reed Ufalcerield High School, Hebron Academy: Prom Show 41,23 5 W. South Street. ROBERT CLARK HASTINGS, QD 2 K Malone, New York Bob 'Malone High School: Studying at McGill Universitw JAMES BENJAMIN HAWLEY Stam ford, Connecticut C S! sf, CS y. Davison Block. VOLINI 1914 HENRY HAYWOOD, K K K, A K K ' New Brunswick, New Jersey Harry New Brunswick High Schoolg Freshman Championship Re- lay Team 1139 Freshman Cross Country and Track Q19 Varsity Track 2 Press Club 1 2 3 Secretarv and Treas. C JZ C, , D3 . Press Club 4353 Prom Auditing Committee Q3D. 19 Sanborn Hall. PAUL I-IIGI-IAM I-IAZELTON Council Bluffs, Iowa ' Hazy,' Phillips Exeter Academy. 5 Crosby. JOHN NORMAN HAZEN, A K E Hanover, New Hampshire Hfohnnyn A Hanover High Schoolg Freshman Tennis C153 Freshman Hockey C233 Second Honor Group 1153 Third Honor Group C233 1914 Aegis Board. 33 North Main Street. JAMES THOMAS I-IEENEI-IAN Palmer, Massachusetts ' il ' 19 fzm Palmer High School. 19 Sanborn. H055 voL.Lv1 A 1914 'f WILLIAM RICHARD I-IERLII-IY, JR., ECIDE Lynn, Massachusetts Squint . Lynn C'l3.SSlCa.l SChOO1. 15 R.iCl'18.I'C1SOIl. LEO AUGUSTINE HIGGINS Lawrence, Massachusetts t sschiefsa Lawrence High School. 23 Thornton. I-IAZEN BEECI-IER I-IINIVIAN, 2 X No. Stratford, New Hampshire Rosy Stratford High Sehoolg Class Football C135 Varsity Football ,Squad C2, 33. Sigma Chi House. LEON PICKERING HOBBS, B QD H North Hampton, New Hampshire ' Hobbsie,' . Phillips Exeter Academyg Aero Club C155 Phillips Club Cl, 2, 35. 37 South Massachusetts. C1061 ffl-IE E Q voL.Lv1 E A 1914 ROBERT NEWTON HOGSETT, A K E Cleveland, Qhio . Bobbie University Schoolg Freshman Football, Baseball, Basketball C153 Varsity Football C2, 333 Captain-elect Varsity Football: Prom Show C253 Choir C30 Delta Kappa Epsilon House. WILLIAM REA HOLWAY, 2 N Sanclwich, Massachusetts KLHOZYQ Sandwich High Sohoolg Studying at M. I. T, OTIS WADSWORTH I-IOVEY, B Q9 II Plainfield, New Jersey H 11 , Ole Plainfield High Schoolg Prom Show CD. 4 North Massachusetts. PAUL Howe, fp A o Cohasset, Massachusetts String Worcester Academyg Worcestei' Academy Club. Phi Delta Theta House. C1075 voL.Lvi l 1914 he 3 SPENCER ACKLIN HOWELL Toledo, Ohio Spence CARL EUGENE HOWLAND Haverhill, New Hampshire ffcarlf, A Haverhill Academy. 7 Hallgarten JESSE HERVEY HUBEL, X II: Detroit, Michigan G b,, WALTER BEACH HUMPHREY, X CD New Rochelle, New York Wall New Rochelle High Schoolg Jack-o'-Lantern Cl, 2, 35: Art Editor' .Tack-o'-Lantern 42. 39: Aegis Board f35g XVheelock Club C2, 39. 38 Massachusetts. ' C1085 Toledo High School. 5 Crosby Detroit University School. 6-7 South Massachusetts. IH!! H voL.Lv1 A L 1914 ALFRED ELUAI-I I-IUMPI-IRIES Methuen, Massachusetts GGHump7! Methuen High School. 35 Fayerweather. HARLAND ALBERT HUNT Nashua, New Hampshire Kid Nashua High Schoolg College Band Cl, 23: T-Ifmoi' Man 61, 2, 36 No. Main Street. EDWARD WHEELOCK JAI-IN New York City Eddie Brooklyn Latin School. 2. VVentWo1'th Street. RALPH AUDLEY JENKINS Pittsfield, New Hampshire ..jenl?S,, Piffslield High School. 14 West Ylfheelock street r C1095 fi'HI-L voL.Lv1 E ' 1914 RALPH CARLTON JENKINS, E N Springfield, Vermont ffjenk 9, Springfield High School. Sigma Nu House. HAROLD TALMADGE JOHNSON, 111 Y Hartford, Connecticut Stubby Freshman Track Teamg Varsity Hockey Team C2, 33. ROBERT LEYBORN JOHNSON, B GJ H Albany, New York FRANCIS FREEMAN JONES, GJ A X New Bed ford, Massachusetts El ' 77 fonesze New Bedford High School. Theta Delta Chi House l l l . C1103 Hartford Public High Schoolg Freshman Hockey Teamg Psi Upsilon House. uBarT-yn . Mechanic Arts High School: Football Squad C2, 399 Fresh- man Football Team Qlbg Cercle Francais 413. 17 College VOL LVI L 1914 :J h :lf ' GEORGE RUSSELL JONES, B GJ II Albany, New York A - uBuZz-pn Albany High Schoolg Choir CD. 17 College Hall. WINFIELD SCOTT STIMSON JONES, K E Spokane, Washington V Scottie South Central High School. 6 College Street. RICHARD CARLTON JOSLIN Keene, New Hampshire fi 7, fos Keene High Schoolg Tufts College fly, 2 College Hall. 1 EDWARD PAGE JUNKINS, xl' Y New York, New York ffjunkff Boston English High Schoolg Assistant Manager Varsity Football C3J. Psi Upsilon House. x C1113 voL.LV1 1914 1' Lawrence High WALTER HILTQN JUNKINS Portsmouth, New Hampshire ..Junk,, Portsmouth High School. 8 Wheeler Hall VAHN HOVHANNES KALENDERIAN Elgier, Armenia in Turkey Kelly Sahaguian Varzha Armenia, Spring field High School 4 Thornton AUGUSTINE JOHN KELLY, E X No. Andover, Massachusetts if ,Y feromc School. Sigma Chi House. ROBERT TURNER KELLEY Woodstock, Vermont HBOBJ J' Woodstoclc High School. 13 East Wheelock Street. 41125 VOL LVI 1914 ., 1 T .I ' 1.- 3 P F1 , RALPH HENRY KELSEY, dr 2 K Claremont, New Hampshire 5 ls, 5 Stevens High Schoolg Choir 61, 2, 393 Glee Club C1, 2, 39. 22 Thornton Hall. ERNEST LA MONTE KIMBALL, K K K Cambridge, Massachusetts Ernie Cambridge Latin Schoolg Third Honor Group C193 Capt. Class Baseball 41, 295 Varsity Baseball 429. Kappa. Kappa, Kappa. House. LAWRENCE KINGMAN, E CIP E Brockton, Massachusetts , Runt,' Brockton High School. 22-23 North Fayerweather. CARLTON LINWOOD KINGSFORD, 2 fir E Riverside, Rhode Island ' UDOCH East Providence High Schoolg Glee Club C1, 2, 393 Choir 11, 2, 39. 1 Sanborn C1139 T ffHE 5 voL.LV1 A E T 1914 is CHARLES KINGSLEY Brooklyn, New York Chuck - WILLARD AUSTIN KINNE Littleton, New Hampshire C iKin7 , tra Cl, Z, 39. 45 Massachusett ERNEST ROY KITTREDGE Chelmsford, Massachusetts G6Kit97 Chelmsford High School. 36 Fayerweathe WALTER DAVID KNIGHT Marlboro, New Hampshire Bino Keene High Schoolg Keene Club. 28 New I-Iampshir V 11141 Erasmus Hall High Schoolg Rifle Team Cljg Jack-o'-Lan tern 125. ' 32 North Massaehusett Littleton High Schoolg College Band Cl, 253 College Orches 1 VOL.LVI 5 A 1914 HENRY AUGUSTUS KOELSCI-I, JR., AACIJ New York, New York Y ssHenss High School of Commerce5 Freshman Cross Country Squad 1155 Assistant Manager Freshman Track Team 1355 Execu- tive Committee of College Club 1355 Managing Editor of Bema 135. 40 Massachusetts. RUSSELL NEWTON KUESCI-I X Brattleboro, Vermont GGSquizi1 Brattleboro High School, 2 College Hall. SIGURD STANTON LARMON, db 1' A Omaha, Nebraska assign X Omaha High Schoolg Assistant Manager Basketball 135. Phi Gamma Delta House. LAWRENCE LVOSBURGI-I LYONS New York, New York Q H VOZH W Summer Bachelors Cast 1155 Green Parasol Cast 1255 Jack- o'-Lantern 1255 Rollins Prize Speaking 115. 11155 VOL.LVI L 1914 ' CARL ASA PORTER LAWRENCE, KID 2 K Groton, Massachusetts GlCap97 Lawrence Academy. 17 No. Massachusetts ERNEST SEARS LEAROYD, K E Danvers, Massachusetts f f 1g,, WALTER KENNETH LE COUNT New Rochelle, New York Count', New Rochelle High School. 23 Hubbard Hall CHARLES EDWARD LEECI-I Whitinsville, Massachusetts 5 5 97 Northbridge High School 39 Wheeler C1161 Danvers High Schoolg Glee Club Cl, 2, 3Jg Choir Cl, 2, 353 Prom Show Cl, 23. 2 Richardson. VOL. LVI 1914 NATHAN COGGESHALL LENFESTY, fb K wif Marion, Indiana 4 csLenss Marion High School: Transfer from DePauw University, Greencastle, Indiana. 46 South Main Street. LESTER KNOX LITTLE, XII Y Pawtucket, Rhocle Island Leigh Pawtucket High Schoolg Freshman Trackg Cercle Fran- caisg Centro Espagnolg Treasurer D. C. A. C353 Editor-in- chief 1914 Aegis, Psi Upsilon House. ALDEN LLEWELLYN LITTLEFIELD, A T A Pawtucket, Rhode Island W ssllewyn Moses Brown School. 37 Massachusetts. FRANK ALBERT LLEWELLYN, A A 'Iv Chicago, Illinois l GCHUTIEY Hyde Park High Schoolg Freshman Football Team fly' 1 Class Secretary C2, 335 Varsity Football Team CZ, 35. 1 27 Richardson. C117J Qi VOL.LVl E 5 A 1914 PAUL WITMER LOUDON, E X North Troy, New York Rain Lansingbu1'gh High Schoolg Class Football C133 Class Base- ball C13g Football Squad C2, 335 Varsity Basketball CZ, 33: Varsity Baseball C235 Vice-Pres. Class C33. Sigma Chi House. WINSLOW HARDING LOVELAND Hyde Park, Massachusetts 44Win Hyde Park High Schoolg Rufus Choate Scholar C1, 23g First Honor Group C135 Third Honor Group C233 Honorable Men- tion in French C233 The Green Parasol C23. 21 College Hall. HENRY OSGOOD LOWELL, 2 A E West Medford, Massachusetts Spike Medford High School. sigma Alpha Epsilon House. CHARLES HENRY LUBY, K K K Worcester, Massachusetts Charlie Worcester Classical High School. 24 Thornton. C1183 V IQ VOL. LV1 1 - 1914 WALTER LAWRENCE LYONS Boston, Massachusetts ' I Tiger West Roxbury High School. 34 Vvheeler RICHARD VOSE IVICALLASTER, wiv 2 K Manchester, New Hampshire 6 G C9 9 Manchester High Schoolg Class Basketball Cl, 25. 3 Richardson DOUGLAS GRAHAM MACCARTEE Salem, New York Hall Mac', Peekskill Military Academy. 20 So. Fayerweathe WILLIAM MALLERY MCCONNELL Concord, New Hampshire Mac Wfilliamsport High Schoolg Glee Club f38JiXIgIht:Eig y233i1LEfeath C1191 voL.Lv1 . A 1914 1 JOHN FRANCIS MCCULLOUGH, JR., KKK Worcester, Massachusetts H ,, Mac cester Club Secretary, 1914 Aegis Board. GILBERT LINCOLN IVICDONOUGH, EX Denver, Colorado MMGCQQ I HUGH ALLAN IVIACKINNON St. Johnsbury, Vermont 5 , 1 CHARLES BROWN MCLAUGHLIN Salem, New Hampshire 5C 1C,, 11201 Worcester' South High School, Class Football C139 Varsity Squad 12, 333 Class Basketball C195 Track Squad C235 Wor- Kappa Kappa Kappa House. East Denver High Schoolg Football Squad 425. 9 Crosby. St. .Tohnsbury Academyg Choir 12, 313 Glee Club C353 As- sistant Accompanist Glee Club 635. 18 Sanborn Hall. Methuen High School. 21 New Hampshire. 'Q VOL. LVI 5 A 1914 ARTHUR DANIEL MADDALENA Boston, Massachusetts W LlWaupJ7 Mechanic Arts High School. Davison Block. TI-IEODGRE MAIN, X fir Winchester, Massachusetts Ted Ylfinchester High Schoolg Freshman Footballg Varsity Foot- ball Squad CZJ. Chi Phi House. FRANZ RAPHAEL MARCEAU, K K K Wollaston, Massachusetts Franz,' Quincy High Schoolg Captain Freshman Cross Country Team 4135 Freshman Track Team C155 Varsity Track Team 62, 353 Varsity Cross Country Team 12, 355 Two-Mile Col- lege Record. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. JAMES PARKER MARGESON, JR., K E Winthrop, Massachusetts Marge VVinthrop High Sehoolg Freshman Basketball KD: Varsity Basketball C255 College Choir Cl, 2, 373 Glee Club Cl, 333 Football Squad 429. 2 Sanborn. f121J voL.Lv1 . E 1914 JAMES THEODORE MARRINER, K K K Portland, Maine ' ' Ted ' ALVIN WESLEY MAXWELL Lynn, Massachusetts Max ' ' , Iiynn Classical High School. 55 New Hampshire WINTHROP MERRIAM MAYO Leominster, Massachusetts ' ' Win ' ' E-Iackley Schoolg Transferifrom Harvard College. 20 North Massachusetts JAMES MARTIN I-IEALY Springfield, Massachusetts ujirnss Central High Schoolg Football Squad fl, 23. 45 New Hampshire C1225 Portland High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board CZ, 353 Co- Author The Green Parasol 123, The Bema Board C355 Honor Group Cl, 23. 46 Wheeler. VOL. LV1 1914 HAROLD JULIAN MORSE A , Barre, Vermont Morsie Spaulding High School. 4 Crosby. ERNST ALBERT MUNKELT, K 2 Brooklyn, New York Manly Boys' High Sehoolg Asst. Business Manager Jack-o'-Lam tern 135. 8 Crosby. WALTER ANDREW NETSCI-I, 2 X Manchester, New Hampshire r Walt,' Manchester High School. 1 New Hampshire Hall. ABRAHAM JAMES NEWMARK Salem, Massachusetts GCABCSU Salem High Schoolg Orchestra Cl, 2, 35. 13 So. Fayerweather. 11235 voL.Lv1 J L 1914 LORING PAYSON NICHOLS, 111 K XII Salem, Massachusetts ck, 9 Salem High School 10 So. Fayerweath CALEB HENRY NILES East Lynn, Massachusetts Cilogief 1 ROBERT SHEDD NOBLE, 2 A E ' Bethel, Vermont Bob YVhitcomb High School. 54 New Hampshire RALPH DAVID NOE, E KID E Newark, New Jersey H Chuck Harrisoii High School. 11 No. Fayerweathe ' 11243 Lynn Classical High Schoolg Class Baseball Cl, 25: Varsity Baseball Squad 423. 16 Crosby voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 CHARLES W. F. O'CONNOR, AKE Worcester, Massachusetts A oem, Worcester Academyg Champion Freshman Relay Team C15' Vlforeester Academy Club: Worcester Clubg Freshman Track Team C153 Varsity Relay Team C253 Varsity Track Squad C253 College Band C2, 353 Prom Show Orchestra C25: Junior Prom Committee. 17 Crosby KARL OSCAR OLSON, K 2 Worcester, Massachusetts Oscar VVorcester South High: Freshman Championship Relay Team of America3 Captain Freshman Track Teamg Varsity Track C25. 2 Sanborn ALAN MAXWELL OVERTON Plainfield, New Jersey Ovey A Plainfield High Srhoolg Freshman Football Squad C153 Var- sity Football Squad C2, 35. 35 North Massachusetts JOHN MUMFORD PALMER, KID 1' A Paducah, Kentucky Padulfe Phillips Andover Academyg Freshman Cross-Country Team C153 Freshman Track Team C153 The Summer Bachelors C153 The Green Parasol C253 Glee Club C2, 353 Choir C2, 353 Press Club C353 t'The Dartmouth Board C2, 353 Commence- ment Usher C253 Andover Club Cl, 2, 353 President C35. 1 Massachusetts C1255 VOL. Lvl 5 A 1914 T- JOHN PHILIP PALMER, if E K Portsmouth, New Hampshire Phil Portsmouth High Schoolg Transfer from Massachusetts Ag- ricultural College. Phi Sigma Kappa House. EDWARD TAYLOR PAPSON, A T A Washington, District of Columbia uljapn Eastern High School, Howe School, George Yifashington University: Dartmouth Board C2, 335 Third Honor Group H235 Wfashingtoii Club CSD. 5 Sanborn. JOSIAI-I PERRY PARSONS, 112 K 111 4 Perryville, Dudley, Massachusetts Hfoshn Webster High School. 19 South Fayerweather. LUTHER ASA PATTEE Portsmouth, New Hampshire ffpatif Portsmouth High School. 13 New Hampshire. C1261 VOL LVI 1914 ., , A A - u ,.- . GILBERT SAYWARD PATTILLO T Gloucester, Massachusetts sspatn Gloucester High Sehoolg Dartmouth Board C2, 31. 43 Massachusetts. CI-IESLEY ARTHUR PAUL Wakeheld, New Hampshire Chet Brewster Free Academy. 14 North Massachusetts. HAROLD ADAMS PEASE, B C9 H Port Chester, New York A Hal - Port Chester High Schoolg Class Debating Team C255 Var- sity Debating Squad C3Jg Rollins Squad 435. 2 Wheeler I-Iall. JQHN TUFTS PEPPARD, e A X A Plymouth, New Hampshire sspepsa Exeter Academyg Third Honor Group C133 Freshman Basketballg Exeter' Club. Theta Delta Chl House. f127J ffl-IF. PAUL LIVINGSTON PERKINS, 111 K X11 Lowell, Massachusetts Park Lowell High Schoolg Jack-o'-Lantern Board 437. 13 Hubbard RALPH IVIAURICE PI-IELPS, K 2 Gloucester, Massachusetts Pf1elpsie Gloucester High School: Mandolin Club 611. 33 Massachusetts JOHN IVIICI-IAELS PIANE New York, New York ll',0hnny97 High School of Commerce: The Summer Bachelors Q15 The Green Parasol 123. 33-34 Faverweather MARSHALL WOOLLEY PICKEN, AAQD New York, New York Pick 11283 Townsend Harris Hall and Harlem Preparatory Schoolg Col- lege Choir C135 Prom Show 115. 40 Massachusetts. 2' 'Q VoL.Lv1 5 A 1914 CLARENCE WARREN PIERCE, 2 N Fairlee, Vermont 5 fjohn, 9 Bradford Academyg Basketball Squad Q1, 25. Sigma Nu House. GORDON JAMES PLATT . Swanton, Vermont Cordon Swanton High Schoolg Freshman Baseball C155 Varsity Baseball Squad C25. MILTON DELOS POMEROY, X fb Holyoke, Massachusetts . uljornsa Worcester' Acadernyg Cheer Leader C1 253 VVorce-ster Clubg Recording Secretary D. C. A. C255 College Choir Cl, 253 Sales lvlanager with Ut1ey's, Inc., Holyoke, Massachusetts. FRANCIS POOLER Boston, Massachusetts UFrannie Boston Latin School: Third Honor Group C155 Choir 12, 35. -Glee Club 135. 2 Hubbard. C1295 voL.Lv1 1 1914 11301 HOWARD HUNTINGTON POTTER I Boston, Massachusetts K SHOE 7 Mechanic Arts High School. 13 New Hubbard RICHARD EDWARD PRITCHARD, E X No. Troy, New York Dick Lansingburg High School. Sigma Chi House JAMES BARTLETT RAIVIAC-E, A K E Monroe Bridge, Massachusetts Red ' Marilius Sehoolg Freshman Football Teamg Freshman Base- , ball Teamg Varsity Football Squad 123. Delta Kappa Epsilon House ERNEST HOWARD CHASE, E N Revere, Massachusetts i6Dan5! Revere High Schoolg Jack-o'-Lantern 633. 27-29 Hallgarten. VOL LVI L 1914 JOI-IN TIMOTHY REARDON South Paris, Maine ujackn Boston Latin Sehoolg Rufus Choate Scholar 1235 First Honor Group 123. 28 Hubbard. EDWIN PERRY REBER, -If Y Rock ford, Illinois , Ed A Rockford High Schoolg Freshman Baseball 117. MARTIN JOHNSON REMSEVN, LID K 111 Queens, New York l5MariY, Brooklin Polytechnic Schoolg Green Parasol 123. Phi Kappa Psi House. ROGER COURTLAND RICE, E N Hyde Park, Massachusetts 64HuSlEy37 Hyde Park High Sohoolg Prom Show 113. 21 College Hall. 11313 I LJL5 voL.LV1 . A 1914 P .9- GEORGE HOWARD RICHARDSON, 2 N Littleton, New Hampshire 6'Rich Littleton High Schoolg Band 11, 2, 335 O1-ehs?gtl1gaaf1gT,u3IriOuS9, ALLEN PIERCE RICHMOND Dover, New Hampshire HAZQQ Dover High School: Freshman Mandolin Clubg Gun Club fl, 2, 333 Treasurer Gun Club 42, 393 Rifle Team 41, 335 Cap- tain Riile Team C335 'Orchestra fl, 255 Band 435. Davison Block, ELMER ROBINSON Pawtucket, Rhode Island Robbie Phillips Andover. 24 North Massachusetts. WILLIAM ALFRED ROLAND Brockton, Massachusetts Bill Brockton High Schoolg Freshman Baseball Team. 24-25 No. Fayerweather. L132j 'Q VOL. LV1 7 A 1914 WINTHROP PIERCE ROSS, EN Mattapan, Massachusetts csROsShD1a Canton High School: The Green Parasol 1255 E1 Centro Espanol 42, 393 Assistant Business Manager of The Dart- mouth C335 Business Manager of The Bema CSD. ' 12 North Fayerweather. f ANTHONY MELVILLE RUD, E N Chicago, Illinois Tony,' St. Johnts Military Academy. Sigma Nu House. - ERNEST TIRRILL SAEGER Dorchester, Massachusetts ffsaegf f Boston English High School: Second Honor Group CD3 Hon- orable Mention in Mathematics 425. 43 Massachusetts. SHERMAN WHIPPLE SALTMARSI-I Winchester, Massachusetts 1 iiSaltp79 Winchester High Schoolg Choir f2J. 15 So. Fa,ye1'weather. 41339 voL.LV1 7 A 1914 i t GORI-IAM PARSONS SARGENT, X 112 Haverford, Pennsylvania K f , Freshman Mandolin Club 615. 17 Massachusetts. HERBERT FRANK SCHUCHMANN Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Uschuclfyu Boston English High Schoolg Honor Group 4195 English High School Club. 12 No. Fayerweather. SAMUEL DEWITT SI-IELDON, A A dv Red Wing, Minnesota aasanlas Lake Forest Academy: Leader Freshman Mandolin Club: Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 395 Band Cl, 2, 33. Alpha Delta Phi House. Q JESSE WILBUR STILLMAN Westerly, Rhode Island ffjessf 1 Pawcatuck High Schoolg Second I-Ionor Group 4113 Orches- tra C2, 35. 9 WVheeler. 41347 VOL LVI IQ 14' ., r 5 A ' i Vx n :g E . F: . JAMES BURNETT SI-IIELDS , Hanover, New Hampshire Hlirnn Colorado State Preparatory Sehoolg Honor List Q1, 21. 2 Austln Avenue. PAUL EDGERTON SIMANTON St. Johnsbury, Vermont Sims St. Johnsbury Academyg College Orchestra Cl, 2, 315 Band C1, 2, 31. 12 Thornton. RUFUS LASI-IER SISSON, JR., CIJFA Potsdam, New York sisisu Potsdam Normal High Schoolg Freshman Tennis Teamg Freshman Basketball Teamg Varsity Basketball Team 62, 315 Class Chorister C213 College Choir C1, 2, 315 Glee Club C2, 315 Prom Show 121. 20 Massachusetts. ALEXANDER THOMAS SKAKLE North Plymouth, Massachusetts llskalfii Kingston High Schoolg College Band fl, 31. 21 South Fayerweather. 11351 VOL. LV1 5 2 1914 it H Fl 5s WILLIAM BAINTON SLATER, 2 X Lawrence, Massachusetts Bill Lawrence High School, Phillips Andover Academyg Glee Club Cl, 2, 335 Choir Cl, 2, 335 Summer Bachelors 1135 As- sistant Manager of Hockey C33. Sigma Chi House. GORDON CROTI-IERS SLEEPER Brookline, Massachusetts xasleepyvs Dorchester High Schoolg The Dartmouth Board Cl, 2, 33: D. C. A. Cabinet C2, 335 Glee Club C235 Choir C2, 335 1914 1Egis Boardg President Brookline Club 4333 Commence- ment Aide 123. 38 Massachusetts. BURT HAMBLET SMITH Springfield, Massachusetts Pinlfey Central High school 20 Sanborn. HARVEY I-IODGES SMITH - Buckland, Massachusetts I KH. H. , Y Arms Academyg College Choir Cl, 2, 333 Glee Club C333 Pr-om Show 427- 51 New Hampshire. tisey voL.Lvi 5 P 1914 PAUL CHENEY SMITH, 2 N Q Lebanon, New Hampshire Paul Lebanon High School. 14 So: Fayerweather. PHILIP WILDER SMITH Wellesley Hills, Massachusetts P. W. YVel1esley High Schoolg Third Honors 115. 45 Massachusetts. WINTHROP JAMES SNOW, C11 A QD Winthrop, Massachusetts l6W'inl5 YVinthrop High Sehoolg Capt. Freshman Basketball C195 Varsity Football Team 42, 335 Varsity Basketball Team CZ, 375 College Choir 62, 353 Captain-elect Varsity Basket- ball Team. 2 Sanborn ' MAURICE. CHARLES SPARHAWK Hanover, New I-Iampshire ll ' Y! M aurzce Keene High Schoolg Transfer from Norwich University, 9 South Park Street. C1373 voL.Lv1 p 1914-A E ROY MARTIN STARBUCK, fin 2 K Saratoga Springs, New York liStar,5 Lawrenceville School, Saratoga High .Schoolg Freshman Track Team. Phi Sigma, Kappa House. WELLINGTON WALDO STICKLE, K K K Sharon, Connecticut 6 , Phillips Andover Academy. Kappa Kappa Kappa House GEORGE I-IORTON STICKNEY, CID 1' A Beverly, Massachusetts Stick ' Beverly High School, Mandolin Club Cl, 2, 35. 14 Crosby. HAROLD ANDREW STILES, AK E Denver, Colorado sa Vogien East Side High School, Gun Team C235 Assistant Track Manager CSJ. 9 Crosby. 41381 VOL LVI A 1914 . - T ' :g . F: 4 STANLEY CARTER STRATTON Brad ford, New Hampshire Stan Simonds Free High School. - 10 College Street. WILLIAM ABBOTT STRATTON Milford, Massachusetts Bill Transfer from Holy Cross. 9 So. Massachusetts. FLORENCE FRANCIS SULLIVAN Fitchburg, Massachusetts Sully Fitchburg High Schoolg Class Baseball Cl, 233 Varsity Base- ball Squad 625. 17 Crosby. ERNEST CLARENCE SWAIN, 2 X Wilmington, Massachusetts GBUS!! VVorcester Academy, Beloit Collegeg Freshman Footb ll Team 1153 Varsity Football Squad C2, 333 WVorces.t Academy Club. 32 New Hampshire. , C1391 voL.Lv1 g A 19214 '- QA JAMES CI-IAMBERLIN TAFT, in A GJ Greenville, New Hampshire S tBiHn Middlesex Sohoolg Choir Cl, 2, 353 Outing Club 1233 Varsity Baseball Squad 129. Phi Delta Theta House. ALFRED RICHARD TAYLOR, K 2 Washington, District of Columbia 64Dic,E71 W'estern High Schoolg Second Honor Group C153 Third Hon- or Group f2J. 2 Richardson, HAROLD FRANKLIN TAYLOR Hardwick, Vermont fudge Montpelier Seminary. 5 Hubbard. ROBERT BROWN TEACHOUT South Lancaster, Massachusetts Eric Lancaster High Schoolg Rufus Choate Scholar C153 Shared Thayer Prize 625. 35 North Main Street. f140J VOL LVI L IQ 14' ZOTIQUE WILLIAM THERRIEN, A T A Calgary, Alberta, Canada Q Zulu Manchester High School: Freshman Football Team 113. Bridgman Block. GEORGE HENRY TILTON, JR., WY Littleton, New Hampshire George Andover: Dramatic Club CZ, 335 The Dartmouth Board fl, 2, 33. Psi Upsilon House. RAYMOND HARRIS TROTT, B 9 H Bath, Maine ' Ray Morse High Schoolg Freshman Track: Class Treasurer Q2, 335 Mandolin Club C233 Asst. Manager Varsity Baseball C33. 21 Vifheeler. ALEXANDER JOHN MARSHALL TUCK, A A dw ' Alexandria, Egypt A lee Ridgeneld School. 7 Richardson. 11413 VOL. Lvi l x 1914 ALLAN ALONZO TUKEY, in I' A Omaha, Nebraska Take Omaha High Schoolg 1914 Aegis Board. Phi Gamma Delta House. HAROLD GRIFFITI-I VAN RIPER, B C9 II Brooklyn, New York uvann Boys' High Schoolg Freshman Cross Country Team. Beta Theta Pi House. RUDOLPH VON LENZ-LANC-ERI-IANNSS Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts Dutch ENDERS MCCLUMPI-IA VOORI-IEES, fb K X11 Amsterdam, New York f f ,, Amsterdam High School. Phi Kappa Psi House 11421 Mechanic Arts High School. Davison Block. VOL LVI IQ 14' ., . A :9 h . K JOHN ALFRED WARREN Wrentham, Massachusetts 5GNigD! Wfrenthain High School. 14 Hubbard. WILLIAM WALLACE WASHBURN, K K K Hanover, New Hampshire ' ' Wash, ' Brattleboro High School, Norwich University flj. Kappa Kappa Kappa House. GEORGE FRANCIS WATKINS, 2 N Wolfboro, New Hampshire E Uceorgen Brewster Academy. ' Sigma Nu House. HENRY WINTI-IROP WEBBER, in E K Beverly, Massachusetts Q I 5 9 Beverly High Schoolg Winnel' Freshman Tennis Champion- ship fljg Captain Freshman Tennis Team 1155 Runner-up in College Tennis Championship in Varsity Tennis Team 62, 335 Singles and Doubles C233 YVinner Tennis Champion- ship in Doubles fax. Phi sigma Kappa HOUSE- C1435 VQL. LV1 1914 I I JAMES RUSSELL WILLIAMS, A A CID Quincy, Illinois A Russ Student at Chicago University FREDERICK HARRISON WEED East Lynn, Massachusetts llFred,! Lynn Classical High School. 23 Tho BENJAMIN HARRISON QUARLES Charlottesville, Virginia 55 17 Ben In Business ARTHUR HARVEY WETHEY Butte, Montana Montana Pete Aero Club 11, 235 In Business. C1445 Rufus Choate Scholar Cl, 233 First Honor Group Q1 23 VOL. Lvl p f I 1914 GEORGE DUDLEY WHEATLEY, E CD E No. Abington, Massachusetts lGDud!9 Abington High School. 11 No. Fayerweather. ARTHUR STANLEY WHEELOCK Marlboro, Massachusetts Eleazar Marlboro High Schoolg VVhee1ock Club: Honors in Greek 123. Davison Block. LEONARD DUPEE WHITE Acton, Massachusetts UL. D. Acton'I-Iigh School, Concord High Schoolg Class Debating Team Cl, 233 First Honor Group fl, 235 Assistant Manager Debating Team C235 Honors in French C235 Ma.nagg'er De- bating Team 433. 14 Fayerweather. MORRIS GARDNER WHITE, JR. Brooklyn, New York Morris Brooklyn Boys' High School. 35 South Massachusetts. 11453 VOL LVI l IQ 14 l RAY LARCOM WILKINSON Salem, Massachusetts ' Willy Ranclolph, Massachusetts Clpatff Allston, Massachusetts Stub EUGENE CLIFFORD WILLIAMS New York, New York Gene Dewitt Clinton High School. 17 South Ma C1461 JOI-IN RUSSELL WILLARD, A T A Thayer Academyg Baseball 115. 1 New Ham ALBERT GAYLORD WILLEY, K K K Boston Latin Schoolg Class Track Team CD9 Varsity Squad 623. Kappa Kappa Kappa Salem High Schoolg Co-author 'The Green Parasol' J 12 10 So. Fayerwca lf pshxre Track House Street. 'Q VOL. LV1 it 1914 EDWARD QI-IARLAN WILSON, CLD A C0 Columbus, Ohio 1 saFat99 Central High School, Freshman Football Team C193 Football Squad 433. Phi Delta Theta House. PAUL FLYNN WILSON Bethel, Vermont Paul VVhitcomb High School. 53 New I-lamps? BERTRAM COGSWELL WOOD, F. X, B A B Troy, New York Bert Lansingb rgh High School, Rensselaer Polytechnic School. - 18 Crosby. ' OLIVER ANDREW WYLDE, 2 X Lawrence, Massachusetts Ollie Lawrence High School. Sigma Chi House. 11471 l VUL. Lvi 7 A 1914 I- P' , -9- ' PHILIP OSBORNE YEATON Portsmouth, New Hampshire Phil Portsmouth High School. 1 Richardson GEORGE YOUNG, JR., A TA Clifton, New Jersey NDI-lite!! Passaic High School: Honor Man C153 Class Basketball 127: Varsity Basketball Squad C2, 39. 8 Massachusetts. RUGAR YOUNG, E AE Joliet, Illinois Penitentiary Pele Howe Military Academy, Joliet High School, Choir C213 Green Parasol CZJ. Sigma. Alpha. Epsilon House. GEORGE WILLIS FRENCH, K K K I Winchester, Massachusetts Clcapi! Bordentown Military Institute. 6 Crosby Hall. C1485 ffl-il: VOL LVI l 1914 EDWARD ALBERT LAVIN. Boston, Massachusetts ' LGTCJQH Boston Latin School: Freshman Baseball Teamg Varsity Baseball Squad C253 Press Club Cl, 2, 33. Ford Block. FRANK ALEXANDER WELSH, 11? s K Rockford, Illinois sawangss Rockford High Schoolg Third Group Scholarship C155 Golf Team fl, 2, 35. Phi Sigma Kappa House. GEORGE MARSH WEBSTER, CID A GJ A Galesburg, Illinois 4:10699 A Halvsburg High School 44 Massachusetts. C1499 wuz: LO WW41-U fran-nur Erarf.-':r11.-1-'wa-' .s .2'.1t--ig1f'-:f1.':3- .. J 1--.-5 V. .- . .. X- ' 'ffITlfIZ'.ITiifI7ffff2'1QfQ.iIiffifffliifififffffiliffffll1?i1ff,fifL.Q ,.', Q .Qf.11f,fTQ1.. '.l,iQIl'Qffl'Q fQflTff1l'f:ff11.I'lQl f Qfll A fifflll 5 FKA K qi ef , mr X llll A W f . ,Q A f --w- f rf' -1- l ' 34 nn- A. 7. jf' K 'wail rxqj gt 'I D ' X Y I' :if-H U9 'Q F-. 5 mam A' 4 r r' I f N.. rr 'r i i . t , t H - ' 11. W .- ' ,f fe. P 1 nf.: M .i r r f ' . ,':.!v':A'W sw.- ' ' f q -Q5 ,g 5 ' 'rl lhlr'-SA ,'rf'qrv,,g, , I j',-- -1 ,. rr r r in ,QA lrrln. 'Tiffin gal 5 .V 'gl W ,..Q ' ,,,, ..,A4 , ,XR f , -... . .- .- ....V. A Q55 Adams, George William, Jr. Adams, Theodore Anderson, Timothy Edwin Andrus, Maynard Bromely. E AE Appleyard, William Sampson. B 09 H Aronowitz, Leon Atwood, August Stein. qv A GD Atwood, Warren Gerald. K E Austin, Albert Murray. A T A Bache-Wiig, John. CD E K Ballou, -Frederick Broughton. X QD Bardsley, Carleton Paterson Barke, Ralph John Barker, Winthrop Dale Bayley, Henry Franklin Bennink, Donald Crone. B G7 H Berry, Paul Burnett Biclcford, Harry Salmon. A K E Bickford, James Gidney Bigelow, Robert Cutting. B GJ' II Bishop, Charles Edward X Bissell, Eugene Van Name. 2 A E Blaisdell, Herbert Chester Blodgett, Philip Haseltine. E CID E Boggs, Arthur Gordon Bowler, Edmund William. GD A X Bowler, John Pollard. Q A X Boyd, Ernest Clayton Brackett, James Herbert. GJ A X Wasliington, D. C. Dorchester, Mass. Middleboro, Mass. Denver, Colo. Guilford, Me. Albany, N. Y. Dorchester, Mass. Fislilfill-on-Hudson, N. Dorchester, Mass. Berlin, N. H. Providence, R. 1. Biddeford, Me. Fergus Falls, Minn. Somerville, Mass. MdHSfCld, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Chester, Penn. Rocliesier, N. Y. Medford, Mass. Miarlboro, Mass. Balalnainville, Mass. Bronxville, N. Y. Roxbury, Mass. Suncoolf, N. H. Hanover, N. H. Marlboro, Mass. Marlboro, Mass. Worcesier, Mass. Washington, D. C. 41511 Z2 Hubbard 44 Fayerweather 6 Wheeler' E A E House 4 Richardson 5 Richardson Zi Crosby Y. I 6 No. Massachusetts 31 Massachusetts 30 Richardson ZI Richardson 5 Thornton 21 No. Massachusetts 26 Reed 56-57 Wheeler' 2 New Hampshire 52 S. Main St. 25 New Hampshire I7 Reed 27 Massachusetts I9 Hallgarten 6 So. Fayerweather I7 Hallgarten 59 Wheeler 2 Reed Guyer Block Guyer Block ' IO Hubbard . 36 Wheeler' 'Q voL.LV1 L 19 14 Bradley, Albert Braun, Gustave August. K K K Bridge, George Donald Brown, Ralph Wolcott. fl? A Brownell, Tracy Cushman. CD A QD Budd, Harold Hume. flv K XII Bull, Albert Sidney. 2 A E Burbank, James Archer Burgum, Edwin Berry Burt, Leo Whiting. A T A Byers, Vincent Gerard. X CID Cahn, Albert Aaron, Jr. Campbell, Bushrod Hill. K 2 Campbell, Gilbert Merrill Cannon, Peter Hugh. 2 A E Carpenter, Isaac White, Jr. A K E Carr, Edward John Castle, Lester Davis. if I' A Chase, Ernest Howard Chase, Russell Demming. A T A Child, Fred Sheffield. A A CID Claflin, Harold Harrington Clarke, Robert Gillies. A T A Cleveland, Albert Cushing Comstock, Joseph Baker. CD E K Connelly, Thomas James Y Coon, Richard Esselstyn, Jr. .., fb E Corwin, Harold Ernest Courtright, Hugh Coy. A T A Crawford, Sidney Caldwell. E CIP E Cumisky, Charles Worden. 9 A X Curtis, Edgar Atherton. Q A X Dailey, Paul Edmund. A T A Daisy, George Da1'row Daniell, William Irving. E A E Davis, Harold Irving Davis, Winsor Reed. KD I' A Davison, Harold King Day, Frederick Drew. E X Degnan, Henry William Dennen, Frank Eugene W'oonsocket, R. I. I8 Hubbard Newark, N. I2 Massachusetts Norfolk, Neh. fb 1' A House Brighton, Mass. 34 So. Massachusetts Glens Falls, N. Y. Mount Holly, N. Billerica, Mass. East Milton, Mass. Concord, N. H. Springyielal, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Omaha, Neh. Manchester, N. H. Lpndonville, Vt. Dorchester, Mass. Ornaha, Neh. Hopkinton, Mass. Chicago, Ill. San Francisco, Cal. Springyield, Mass. Spokane, Wash. Milford, Mass. New York, N. Y. CID A QD House 31 Fayerweather I3 Massachusetts 2 Wentworth St. 60 Wheeler 6 Hubbard 34 Massachusetts 22 No. Massachusetts 31 Wheeler 6 Massachusetts E A E House A K E House 30 Hallgarten 28 Massachusetts 29 Hallgarten 48 New Hampshire 21 So. Fayerweather 35 New Hampshire 33-34 Fayerweather Portland, Me. 31 Wheeler Alpena, Mich. 25 So. Massachusetts Newmarket, N. H. V I2 Sanborn Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 43 Fayerweather Chelsea, Vt. 36 Wheeler Rockford, Ill. Webster, Mass. New York, N. Y. Portland, Me. Washington, D. C. Greenwich, N. Y. Menominee, Mich. Manchester, N. H. Worcester, Mass. Woodsville, N. H. Auburnclale, Mass. Nashua, N. H. I-lanover, N. H. C1527 5 9 Massachusetts 37 Fayerweather E A X House Q A X House 6 Fayerweather 43 Wheeler No. Massachusetts I7 New Hampshire I9 Wheeler 32 Fayerweather I9 New Hampshire Z1 Thornton 5 W. South St. 'Q vor. Lvi i f 1914 Dennett, Sumner Frank Doe, Orlando Cutler. K K K Donahue, Arthur Irving. KID I' A Doyle, Paul Jeremiah Dunn, Leslie Clarence Durgin, Russell Luther. E KD E Dyke, George Edward. A T A Eaton, Levi Medbury. B CD H Edgerton, Lawrence Fuller Ehinger, George Ekstrom, Frank Caleb. KID A GJ Ellms, Harold Stimpson. lb A Q English, Alpheus Thelesphore English, Adolphe William Ferguson, John Logan Fitts, Robert Lyon. E N Fletcher, Carleton Dunbar. E N Flood, Hartwell Walter. KI? E. K Folan, Leo Michael Foster, Chandler Hunting. CI E Ii Frary, Gerald Sharpe. CD K XII Freclerick, Marvin Lester Frothingham, Robert, Jr. A A CID Fuller, Howard Ellsworth Fuller, Wyman Zoller Gale, Irving Russell. CID E K Gear, Patrick Edward. E N Ghee, Milton Pomeroy, Jr. A K E Gibson, Paul Swan. CID A GJ Gish, Carl Knickerbocker. CID A GD Graham, Lee Henry Granger, Fred Wells Granger, William Richard Randolph, Jr. ' Graves, Everett Joseph. E X Gray, Matthew Robert Griffith, Charles Edmund, Jr. XII Y Grills, Ben Willard. 2 X Guest, Robert Gordon. GD A X Hall, Julian William. CD K 1I1 Hamson, Thomas Doliber, Jr. CD E Portsmouth, N. H. Lexington, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Nashua, N. H. Bujalo, N. Y. Concord, N. H. Dorchester, Mass. Detroit, Mich. Rochester, Vt. Hastings-on-Hudson, Nashua, N. H. Everett, Mass. Rochester, N. H. Rochester, N. H. Spolfane, Wash. Brattlehoro, Vt. Broolflyn, N. Y. Maynard, Mass. Norwood, Mass. Peabody, Mass. Great Falls, Mont. Ellfhart, '1nd. I5 Hubbard 20 Wheeler IO W. South St. 9 W. South St. 5 No. Massachusetts 36 Reed 48 New Hampshire 5 Massachusetts 53 New Hampshire N. Y. 23 College CID A Q House I2 Wheeler 7 Sanborn I7 Thornton I9 Hubbard 4 So. Fayerweather 4 So. Fayerweather I7 New Hampshire 32 Fayerweather I8 So. Massachusetts 6 No. Massachusetts 9 New Hampshire White Plains, N. Y. Absent lst semester Exeter, N. H. Norwood, N. Y. Marblehead, Mass. I-Iolyolge, Mass. Kenilworth, Ill. Denver, Colo. South Bend, Ind. Hartland, Vt. Worcester, Mass. Hanover, N. H. Exeter, N. H. Burlington, Kan. Wilmington, Del. Marion, O. Melrose, Mass. Hopedale, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. 11535 Z8 No. Massachusetts 31 Fayerweather 26 College 4 College ll So. Fayerweather ' Z6 Richardson 3 New Hampshire II Crosby II Hallgarten 24 Hubbard 9 Hubbard 4 Qccom Ridge 54 Wheeler 21 No. Fayerweather 39 Massachusetts 35 New Hampshire 25 So. Massachusetts fl? VOL.LVI l tore t Harlow, Fred Bates, Jr. Harlow, Harold Chadbourne Harlow, John McAvoy Harris, Joel Clraves Harwood, Channing Ellis. E X Haskell, Merrill. fb I' A Hazen, Deane Stanley Healy, John Joseph Hiclcox, Sherman Gray. 'If Y Hill, Stuart Merriam. K E Hitchcock, David Ingersoll Hornblow, Arthur, Jr. A X Horton, Charles Dabney Howland, Malcolm Gregory Hulbert, Chauncey Pinneo. E CD E Humphrey, Raymond Marshall. 2 A E Huntress, William Chamberlain. CID E Hurlburt, John Rufus N Hutchins, George Westcott. XII Y Ingalls, George French Ingram, Charles Henry. CID A GD Johnson, Albert Emanuel. E CID E Johnson, Paul Willey Johnson, Russell Campbell. GJ A X Jordan, Chester Bradley, Jr. K Kelly, Russell Morgan Kendall, Raymond Harris Kennedy, Walter Joseph Killeen, James Michael - Kimball, John Clifton. GP A X King, Raymond Thomas Kinne, David Barton, lr. 2 X Klokow, Reinhardt Bruno Lafferty, James LeRoy. K K K La Flamme, Charles William Lamson, Everett Carr. CID K 111 Lang, William Alfred. E. N Lanterman, Herbert Dillistin Law, Donald Edward. E CID E Learoyd, Philip Colman. K2 Leary, Philip Arthur K K K Worcester, Mass. Somerville, Mass. No. Easton, Mass. Allston, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Portland, Me. Windsor, Vt. Nashua, N. H. Middletown Springs, Medjield, Mass. Detroit, Mich. New York, N. Y. Cambridge, Mass. Rockland, Mass. Newbury, N. H. Lowell, Mass. Keene, N. H. Hudson, Mass. Sioux City, Ia. Waukegan, Ill. Eau Claire, Wis. Manchester, N. H. Randolph, Vt. Brookline, Mass. Lancaster, N. H. Hanover, N. H. Sterling, Mass. New York, N. Y. Concord, N. H. Brookline, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Buffalo, N. Y. Newark, N. Manchester, N. H. Exeter, N. H. Middlelnoro, Mass. Paterson, N. Fort Ann, N. Y. Danvers, Mass. Lynn, Mass. C1545 I8 Reed 4 Sargent St. 31 New Hampshire 22 Fayerweather I9 New Hampshire 34 Massachusetts 3 Thornton I0 Thornton Vt. 53 Wheeler' 42 New Hampshire I7-I8 Fayerweather 51 Fayerweather II Hallgarten 9 and I4 College 48 Fayerweather I3 Massachusetts 3 New Hampshire 24-25 No. Fayerweather 6 No. Fayerweather 6 New Hampshire 30 Richardson 37 1: ayerweather 6 Sanborn 8 So. Fayerweather -l- No. Fayerweather I9 Thornton 29 No. Massachusetts 54 S. Main St. 23 So. Massachusetts 8 So. Fayerweather 6 Hubbard I8 No. Fayerweather I4 Richardson l Reed I0 W. South St. 23 Massachusetts 2 N House 39 Wheeler Z Fayerweather 4 Sanborn 20 College 'Q voL.Lv1 l l 1914 Leonard, Arthur Holmes, Jr. A A KD Lincoln, Howard Walter Livermore, Russell Blake. G9 A X Livingston, Alan Campbell. A T A Loomis, John Usher. XII Y Lounsberry, Harold Hough Low, Fletcher. K K K Lowe, Frederick Park Lyman, William Elmer Lyon, Gregory Osborne. E A E Mabie, Edward Charles McAndrews, Erl Padelford McCarthy, Justin Howard McCoy, Robert Carson McDonough, William Albert McE.lveen, William Thomas, Jr. Macl7arland, James Donald MacHale, Leo Robert MacKinnon, Samuel John McMichael, John Flemming. 1If Y McTigue, Andrew, Jr. Magruder, William Francis Marcy, Henry Sullivan. CID E K Mason, John Roberts Meader, Walton Bertram. 111 Y Mernstein, Maxwell Henry Merrill, Elmer Boynton. E X Milmore, Norville Livingston. A A Mitsui, Takanaga Moloney, John Francis Monheimer, Henry Isa Montgomery, Scott Montsie, Warren Edward Morey, Willis Burdette Mower, Clarendon. fb I' A Moye, Bertch William Mullin, Meybert Bruner. A A CIP Murdock, Philip King. GD A X Nichols, Arthur Clough Nissen, William Carl Norris, Ralph Hawthorne. K 2 West Newton, Mass. Concord, N. H. Yonkers, N. Y. Manchester, N. H. Omaha, Neln. Elkhart, Inal. South Essex, Mass. Montpelier, Vt. Northampton, Mass. Marblehead, Mass. Lacrosse, Wis. Calais, Me. Portsmouth, N. H. Stillwater, Minn. Springjield, Mass. Evanston, Ill. Fall River, Mass. Boston, Mass. Iron River, Micli. Denver, Colo. IZ Wheeler I3 Thornton 7 So. Fayerweather l No. Fayerweather 28 Massachusetts 9 New Hampshire 20 Wheeler 7b Thornton 26 New Hampshire 20 So. Fayerweather Prof. Gilbert's 59 Wheeler I3 Sanborn B C0 II House 45 New Hampshire Z2 Crosby ll Wheeler I0 New Hampshire I3 Crosby 29 Massachusetts Far Rockaway, N. Y. I5 No. Massachusetts Washington, D. C. Waltham, Mass. Dover, N. H. Lynn, Mass. Stamford, Conn. Pepperell, Mass. West Somerville, Mass. Tokyo, fapan Z8 Sanborn 9 So. Massachusetts 4 No. Fayerweather 5 No. Fayerweather I2 Hallgarten 26 Fayerweather 27 Fayerweather 28 Richardson Rutland, Vt. 34 New Hampshire Chicago, Ill. 8 No. Fayerweather Manchester, N. H. I4 Wheeler' Waltham, Mass. I2 Hallgarten Greenwich, N. Y. 43 Wheeler Rockford, Ill. l Wheeler Spokane, Wash. I3 Sanborn Albany, N. Y. Z0 No. Fayerweather Spencer, Mass. , IO Hubbard Topeka, Kan. 38 No. Massachusetts Newport, R. 1. 7b Thornton Chelsea, Mass. 8 Crosby C1553 ffl-IB 'Q VOL.LV1 A 7 1914- 'R Norton, Allen Scott. E CID E Norwood, Roy Marchant. K E Noyes, Edwin Miles. E 417 E O'Day, Bernard Vincent Q'Shea, Edward James Owen, Archibald. XII Y Page, Donald Shapleigh, Q A X Parchert, Frederick LeRoy Parks, George Maurice Parnell, Carroll Abbott Parrott, Norman lVlorton Pelletier, Philip Hughes, Jr. E X Pendleton, John David A Penny, Howard Parkess Perry, Raymond Stark Bogardus. X fb Pierce, Roland Eastman Pitman, Joseph Prescott. CD I' A Poor, Francis Lord Potter, Herbert Sears. K K K Pray, Thornton Calder. XII Y Priddy, Allan Leach Putney, Willis Rice Read, George Edward. A K E Rector, Voyle Dixon. A A KID Redfield, Richard Wilson. CID A CED Reynolds, William Riggs, Jr. CID A QD Rice, Edward Gray Rice, Russell Jackson E 7 Rich, Harold Thompson Richardson, Arthur Faulkner Richardson, Garald Kerman. 2 CIP E Richardson, Herbert Clifford. t-If Y Rogers, Caleb Francis Rogers, Dudley Thayer. A K E Rogers, William Nathaniel Rohrs, Franklin H. A A CIP Rose, George Kellogg, Jr. 2 X Rosenheim, Frederic Sykes Rothery, Paul Robinson Rowe., Arthur Milton Hudson Falls, N. Rockport, Mass. Duxbury, Mass. Buffalo, N. Y. Holyolfe, Mass. Carthage, Ill. Malden, Mass. Brookline, Mass. Marion, O. Manchester, N. H. 21 Fayerweather 33 Massachusetts 48 Fayerweather I4 Richardson 4 College Z9 Massachusetts 5 So. Fayerweather 23 Massachusetts Z9 Richardson 2 New Hampshire South Portland, Me. 61 Wheeler North Troy, N. Y. 9 Hubbard lllelrose Highlands, Mass. I7-I 8 Fayerweather Stajforcl Springs, Conn. 9 and I4 College Yonlfers, N. Y. I4 Reed Worcester, Mass. 20 Hallgarten Laconia, N. H. l Wheeler Peabody, Mass. 20 So. Fayerweather Boston, Mass. 6 Crosby Newtonville, Mass. Adrian, Mich. Gloucester, Mass. Boston, Mass. Omaha, Nah. Evanston, Ill. famestown, N. Y. Palmer, Mass. Allston, Mass. Rutherford, N. Lynn, Mass. Littleton, N. H. Lynn, Mass. Barre, Mass. Dedham, Mass. Sanbornville, N. H. New Yorlg, N. Y. Passaic, N. Passaic, N. Springfield, Mass. Franlglin, N. H. C1565 Zl Richardson 46 Fayerweather 7 Wheeler 3 Occom Ridge 42 No. Nlassachusetts 6 Richardson 21 Crosby 58 Wheeler It Sanborn 20 College 30 Massachusetts 27-28 College l So. Massachusetts 41 Massachusetts I3 So. Massachusetts l 7 Thornton 3 Massachusetts Z4 Wheeler I8 Richardson E A E l-louse l 9 Hubbard Swenson, Carl Leslie. 2 N I J I! VOL.LVI a ll 1914 he Rowell, Hugh Grant. K K K Rozsa, Milton Maurice Ruml, Beardsley Russell, Raymond Field. CI? 1' A Ryan, Harold Cargill Saben, Maxwell Boehm St. Clair, George Ashley Sanborn, Edgar Cummings Sargeant, Paul Emerson. KD I' A Sargent, Charles Wesley Sargent, Hubert Eugene Sawyer, Howard Pierce. E fb E Ralph Alanson Seharmann, Richard Adolph Sawyer, Schroeder, Edgar Herbert. 2 N Sharp, Elliot Rosseel. E QD E Shea, Edward Joseph. CID A 09 Sheldon, Arthur Eugene. 2 N Sherman, Allen Simoneau, Antonio Albert ' Sisk, James Henry, Jr. X 412 Slade, Benjamin E A E Smith, Harold Locke. CID K 111 Smith, Kent Hale. K K K Smith, Philip Durant. ilf Y Snyder, Robert McKibbin Spaulding, Roger William Stearns, Howard Oliver Sterling, Arthur Edward. A T A Stevens, Perry Howard. E. A E Stone, Francis Wayland, Jr. A T Stotter, Arthur Leslie. K K K Sullivan, Alfred Bernard Taplin, Charles Rogers. K K K Taylor, William Myles Thomas, Charles Russell. 2 A E Thomas, Edwin Benjamin Tomfohrde, Andreas Henry. B C9 Tower, Arthur Augustus Townsend, William Henry A H Oflea1'15, Vi. Wheeler New York, N. Y. I9 Thornton Cedar Rapids, Ia. 2 No. Fayerweather Worcester, Mass. I9 Wheeler Ossining, N. Y. 38 Fayerweather Newport, R. 1. I4 Hallgarten Calais, Me. I I Wheeler Campion, N. H. 53 Fayerweather Manchester, N. H. I No. Fayerweather Croveland, Mass. I 4 Hallgarten Newport, N. H. I8 Reed Concord, N. H. 25 Reed Atkinson, N. H. 8 Reed Adams, Mass. 54 Fayerweather Chicago, Ill. E N House Dorchester, Mass. 44 Fayerweather Nashua, N. H. I0 Thornton Holyoke, Mass. 7 Hubbard New Bedford, Mass. 54 Fayerweather Norwich, Vt. Norwich, Vt. Lynn, Mass. I9 So. Massachusetts Cohoes, N. Y. 6 So. Fayerweather Wfoonsocket, R. 1. I8 Hubbard Cleveland, O. II-IZ College Brooklyn, N. Y. Z6 Richardson Cedar Rapids, Ia. 35 Wheeler Lancaster, N. H. I8 No. Fayerweather Bradford, Mass. 51 Wheeler Rockfordg Ill. 9 Massachusetts Ravenna, O. 48 New Hampshire Washington, D. C. 33-34 Fayerweather Cleveland, O. 24-25 No. Fayerweather Somerville, Mass. Z2 Reed St. Paul, Minn. 24 So. Massachusetts Orleans, Vt. 20 No. Fayerweather Evanston, Ill. Pontiac, R. 1. II-I2 College 9 and I4 College Chicago, Ill. Z4 College Somerville, Mass. 27 Fayerweather East Pepperell, Mass. Z6 Fayerweather Wyoming, Ill. 3 So. Fayerweather C1573 VoL.Lv1 trail! Fl dl Trumbull, Charles Henry Tubby, William Bunker, Ir. X CD Tuck, Leon Parker. A X Turner, Harold Sumner Vining, Paul Milton. K 2 Waite, Alan Frederick. GJAX Walcott, Harold Bradford Walker, George Edward. 2 CID E Wanamaker, Clarence Leroy. GJ A X Warren, John Daniel Washburn, Kendrick Harlow. E N Waugh, Dan Frank. K 2 Webber, Waldo William Wentworth, Stacy Hall Wethey, Francis Van Vechten Whit, Edwin Samuel White, Raymond S. Whiteley, Carl Frederick. 2 N Whitney, Cecil Elwyn Whitney, Lawrence Atwood. A K E Widmann, Herbert Victor. A T A Wilcox, John Maxson. CID A C9 Wilder, Charles McDuffy Williams, Arthur Phillips. CD I' A Williams, Leon Emery. E A E Wing, Howard Wliitney. K K K Winship, Roger. 8 A X Wolff, Jacob Woodcock, Charles Franklin. 1 2 X Woolworth, Wendell Howard. CIP A QD Wright, Samuel Thompson Wyman, Richard Melntire E Yeager, Earle Adamson Young, George Benham Lawrence, Mass. I6 No. Greenwich, Conn. I0 So. Winchester, Mass. 5 So. Somerville, Mass. Springfield, Mass. 23 Yonkers, N. Y. 7 So. Newport, R. 1. 39 Newton Center, Mass. 43 Melrose Highlands, Mass. Nashua, N. H. Massachusetts Massachusetts Fayerweather 22 Reed Fayerweather Fayerweather Fayerweather Fayerweather QD A X House I3 Thornton Middlehoro, Mass. 2 So. Fayerweather Amherst, Mass. I8 College Lynn, Mass. 20 Sanborn South Weymouth, Mass. I5 Hubbard New Yorlf, N. Y. ZI Hubbard Wheeling, W. Va. II Crosby Hudson Falls, N. Y. Z2 Wheeler West Roxbury, Mass. E N House Port Huron, Mich. 42 Wheeler Millhury, Mass. I So. Massachusetts Newark, N. 21 Massachusetts Brookline, Mass. 6 Richardson Washington, D. C. 26 Hubbard Wvest Somerville, Mass. 26 Reed Pueblo, Colo. 6 So. Fayerweather Lowell, Mass. 56 New Hampshire Melrose, Mass. 39 Massachusetts Brooklyn, N. Y. 41 Wheeler Manchester, N. H. 23 New Hampshire Niagara Falls, N. Y. 42 No. Massachusetts Chelmsford, Mass. I Hubbard North Abington, Mass. I5 Reed New York, N. Y. 3 Massachusetts Cleveland, O. 3 So. Massachusetts C1583 HANOVER FROM NORWICI-1 CLASS OF 1916 K- .- , 1, ff ':- -, .L..4. ,. ,mv -:.--4. f.A. - .-A. ,.,- . ' '-dig ',.- .L ,,-.,, s 4 -Q Q ai Qin 5 im p , A 1' hw - l 4. ' J I 'Y l Y' xg' iff- ff fggg M U1 fl l 'gf'1i1 Q ...afg-1 1 .ri Q W i. ., ,.., 1, ,- .:.,, . -1-.-... .,.: , , ,., .. wk . ..,,. ,. Abraham, Wyman Wolff Rutland, Vt. 19 College Albrecht, Delmar Louis Akron, O. I3 Crosby Alexander, Philip Knox Denver, Colo. 21 Wheeler Allison, Charles Brush Malone, N. Y. 62 Wheeler Alvarez, I-leraclito Enrique Ames, John Lincoln, Jr. Anderton, Robert Hyde Andrews, Fletcher Reed Ayer, Lawrence Sanderson Bailey, Frederick Witter Baker, Austin Lothrop, Jr. Banton, William Walter Barak, Arthur Lewis Barbour, Eric Newell Barott, Roger Blakeslee Barr, Oliver James, Jr. Bartlett, Robert Lake Batcheller, George Randall, Jr. Bates, l-lenryiAnson, Jr. Bean, Henry 1Clifforcl Behnke, Arno Martin Belknap, Charles Monroe Bell, Louis l-lemenway Bemis, William Chaplin Bernkopf, Max Eisman Bettes, Charles Chester, Jr. Biel, William Eustace Bingham, Andrew Woods, Blaney, Porter Hamilton Monte Cristi, Dominican Republic Boston, Mass. Pawtucket, R. 1. New York, N. Y. Fitchburg, Mass. Dedham, Mass. West Medford, Mass. Bangor, Me. Roslindale, Mass. Rochester, N. Y. Canastota, N. Y. Norwood, Mass. Raymond, N. H. Boston, Mass. Middletown, Conn. Dorchester, Mass. Grand Rapids, Mich. So. Royalton, Vt. West Newton, Mass. Springfield, Mass. Providence, R. I. jacksonville, Fla. New York, N. Y. Littleton, N. H. Peabody, Mass, C1615 41 Fayerweather 39 No. Massachusetts 33 Reed I0 Richardson 43 New Hampshire 25 Richardson 23 So. Fayerweather 24 School St. 9 Reed 32 So. Massachusetts 41 No. Massachusetts II So. Massachusetts 25 Fayerweather I9 No. Massachusetts 39 New Hampshire 5 New Hampshire 32 Massachusetts 27 So. Massachusetts 2.2 So. Massachusetts 29 Massachusetts 6 College 40 New Hampshire 37 Wheeler 8-9 No. Massachusetts I7 No. Fayerweather VOL LVI E Q . A 1914 I Bobst, Frank Tucker Boutin, Austin Samuel Bradford, Thomas Leonard, Jr. Brady, William Cleigh Brahana, Henry Roy Brett, William Howard, Jr. Brewer, Neal Kingsbury Brill, Elliot Malcolm Brown, Augustus Page Brown, Robert Arthur Brown, William Howard Brundage, Charles Edwin Brundage, Norman Lamont Brush, Corbin Neilson Buflinton, Howard Maxfield Bundy, Bruce Ford ' Burghardt, Roy Corwin Burke, James Murphy Burlen, Robert Alfred Burnham, Percy Clifford Burrowes, Theodore Norcross Burt, Parker Harland Caldwell, William Campbell, Charles Leslie Carey, Edmund Francis Chadwick, Philip Ward Chamberlain, Harley Hammond Chamberlain, Samuel Harrison, Jr. Chase, Eugene Parker Cheney, Joseph Merriam Chutter, Reginald Frederick Clarke, Charles Moore Clarke, Harold Varney Cleaves, William Lawrence Clunie, Robert, Jr. Clough, Earl Eddy Coburn, Richard Alan, Jr. Coffin, Charles Carlton Colby, John Noyes Cole, Hugh Livingston Collingwood, Frank MacFarlane Rochester, N. H. Newburyport, Mass. Dallas, Tex. Dorchester, Mass. Lowell, Vt. Cleveland, Ohio Portland, Me. Chicago, Ill. Aulnurnclale, Mass. Penacoolf, N. H. Cofstown, N. H. West Orange, N. West Orange, N. Brushton, N. Y. Springfield, Mass. Endicott, N. Y. Lisle, N. Y. New Haven, Conn. Dorchester, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Portland, Me. Glens Falls, N. Y. Lynn, Mass. Troy, N. Y. Hartford, Conn. Lalfemont, N. Y. Concord, N. H. Endicott, N. Y. New Britain, Conn Chicago, Ill. Littleton, N. H. Somerville, Mass. Dover, N. H. Bar Harbor, Me. Rurnforcl, Me. Franklin, N. H. Richmond Hill, N. Boseawen, N. H. Brookline, Mass. Chicago, Ill. Holyoke, Mass. C1625 7 Sanborn 9 W. South St. I6 Richardson I6 So. Massachusetts 21 Sanborn I6 Hubbard 7 Fayerweather 2 Massachusetts 23 No. Massachusetts 30 Wheeler 43 New Hampshire I5 Thornton 2 Thornton 35 Massachusetts I4 Hallgarten I9 Massachusetts 24 Hallgarten IZ Thornton 32 New Hampshire 46 New Hampshire 4 Wheeler 21 Fayerweather 26 No. Massachusetts I8 Crosby 26 Occom Ridge 22 Hallgarten I4 New Hampshire Z9 Richardson II Fayerweather 42 Massachusetts 5 Sanborn Road 24 Reed 8 Sanborn I 7 Wheeler 20 Richardson 4 Fayerweather 3 Pleasant St. 55 Wheeler 5 Fayerweather 33 No. Massachusetts 28 New Hampshire Colton, James Howe Comstock, Herbert Courtney, Conley, Arthur John Corwin, Oliver 'Paul Costa, Frederick William Costello, William Paul Cowan, Francis Clark Craver, Edgar Asa Creesy, Charles Sumner Cremer, John Dorland, Jr. Cunningham, Edward Scott Curtin, John Joseph Cutler, Samuel Ernest Dana, Robert White Dancer, John Cornelius, Jr. Davidson, Lawrence Loeb Davis, Paul Hathaway Davis, Phillips Norton Dean, Alexander DeVoe, Raymond Forsyth Dimick, Karl Eugene Dinsmoor, Daniel Stark Dock, George, Jr. Doenecke, Justus Christian Douglas, Francis Kenneth Douty, Albert Edward Downing, Earle Nichols Doyle, Edward Thompson Drenan, Sprague Warner Dresser, Norman Bates Drury, Chester Dudley, Charles Hubbard Dunbar, Joshua Frank, Jr. Durgin, Charles Franklin Eastman, Arthur George Eastman, Ben Eigner, Israel Ellis, Richard Henry Emery, Arthur Leo Emery, Bailey Van Ness Engelhorn, Elmer Henry 1914 'Q voL.Lv1 A '- Worcester, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Portland, Me. Columbus, Ohio Somerville, Mass. Rochester, N. Y. Kohala, Hawaii, New York, N. Y. Salem, Mass. Washington, D. C. Brooklyn, N. Y. Lynn, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Canton, Mass. Schenectady, N. Y. Sioux City, Iowa Chelsea, Mass. Clover, Vt. Boston, Mass. New York, N. Y. East Boston, Mass. Laconia, N. H. St. Louis, Mo. Brooklyn, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Allenhurst, N. Lynn, Mass. 23 Wheeler I6 Wheeler 50 Wheeler 3 No. Fayerweather 24 Reed , 3 Crosby 5 New Hampshire I9 So. Fayerweather 25 No. Massachusetts I4 Sanborn Press Building I5 Hallgarten 56 New Hampshire I8 Thornton 49 New Hampshire 2 No. Fayerweather 8 College ZI Sanborn I5 So. Massachusetts I2 Fayerweather 9 Fayerweather l Thornton 5 So. Massachusetts I8 New Hampshire 5 No. Fayerweather I4 So. Massachusetts 55 New Hampshire Port Richmond, N. Y. 27 Reed Barre, Vt. 7 Reed Berlin, N. H. 26-27 So. Fayerweather Lowell, Mass. Z3 Richardson Concord, N. H. 25 Reed Wakejield, Mass. 39 New Hampshire Concord, N. H. 36 Reed So. Lynclelnoro, N. H. Fort Ann, N. Y. Lynn, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. No. Andover, Mass. Portsmouth, N. H. Spokane, Wash. 11635 9 Hallgarten l Fayerweather 8 Hallgarten 3 Wheeler 50 Fayerweather 6 College St. 25 Massachusetts ffl-IE, 'Q VOL. LVI 1914 English, John Patrick Eskeline, Carl John Evans, Roger Flagg Everett, Charles Knox Fenno, Jesse Keller Ferguson, Donald Gardner Fipphen, Clarence Wyman Fiske, Arthur Gillespie Fitzsimmons, Raphael Russell Flanders, Harry Tucker Fletcher, Ralph Leland Fletcher, Vivian Albert Fogg, Cecil Winfred Fredericksen, Oliver Jul Frey, Ernest Byron Friedman, Ethelbert Morris Friend, Osborne Proctor Fuller, Donald Wellington Fuller, Granville Benton Gammons, Charles Clifford Garcia, Antonio Frederick Garrison, Frederick Qlney Garrison, Wilbert Brightman Geiser, Donald Able George, Ralph Henry Geran, John Cornelius Gibson, Harold Frederick Gifford, Jay Erwin Gile, John Fowler Gioiosa, Ernest Andrew Gluek, Alvin Charles Goldman, Harry Goldthwaite, du Val Radford Goodrich, John Pearl Goodwin, Lewis Byron Goodwin, Roscoe Bennett Gordon, Douglas Roy Gough, William Alfred Reginald Gould, Glenn Carlton Gove, Lewis Palmer Goward, Paul French Springfield, Mass. Proctor, Vt. Worcester, Mass. Framingham, Mass. Canton, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Concord, N. H. Stoneharn, Mass. Holyoke, Mass. Brentwood, N. H. Dorchester, Mass. Concord, N. H. Hyde Parlf, Mass. Little Falls, N. Y. 19 Fayerweather 42 Fayerweather I6 No. Fayerweather 3 Hubbard 30 So. Massachusetts 5 Wheeler 34 Reed 50 New Hampshire 7 College 25 Fayerweather Z9 Wheeler 22 College Z2 Sanborn 38 New Hampshire Lynn, Mass. 20 Hubbard Grand Rapids, Mich. 37 Wheeler Gloucester, Mass. I4 New Hampshire Lynn, Mass. 3 Crosby Brighton, Mass. I6 College Cohasset, Mass. 15 Massachusetts Staten Island, N. Y. I5 Massachusetts Portland, Me. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Easton, Penn. Croveland, Mass. Holyoke, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. Glens Falls, N. Y. Hanover, N. H. Dorchester, Mass. Minneapolis, Minn. I6 Hallgarten 21 No. Massachusetts 2 Crosby 50 New Hampshire 24 Massachusetts 31 No. Massachusetts I0 No. Fayerweather I Maynard St. 20 Thornton 33 So. Mass. Long Island City, N. Y. 3 College Montgomery, Ala. So. Royalton, Vt. Manchester, N. H. Claremont, N. H. Mattewan, N. Y. Plainfield, N. West Acton, Mass. Perry, Me. LoD1ell,WMass. C1643 25 No. Massachusetts 29 Sanborn 4 So. Massachusetts 6 Sargeant St. Z2 Massachusetts 31 So. Massachusetts I6 Sanborn IZ Crosby I Hubbard Nellftlfli, N. 24 Hubbard vOi..Lv1 1914 it - . Pt 5. Granger, Leo Yearwood Gray, Robert Bowman Greeley, Merrill Lincoln Green, Chandler Titsworth Green, Henry Holmes Greenleaf, Frank Farnham Greenwood, Clinton Whittier Griffin, Robert Hamilton Grout, Ralph Willis, Jr. Gumbart, Edward Hugo, Jr. Haas, Burton Franklin Hadley, Albert Charles Hale, William Arthur Hall, Richard Nelville Hallagan, Stuart Dudley Harrington, James Elmer Harris, Nathaniel Putnam Harvey, Robert Porter Harvey, Shirley Wilcox Hatch, Leonard Coleman Hayden, Edwin Parker Hayes, Perry Hearin, Charles Turner Hird, John Donald Hitchcock, Charles Carleton Hoar, Burton Hart Holmes, Carl Nestor Hosmer, Donald Everett Hough, Woodbury Houle, Alfred Oliver Hovey, Julian Richard Howell, Arthur Llewellyn Howell, George Blain Huse, Mason Webster Irish, George Stanley lsenburgh, Henry Livingston Janes, Charles Raymond Jardine, Alexander Joseph Johnson, Harold Henry Jones, Charles Everett Jordan, Lyman Ray fersey City, N. Whitman, Mass. Hartford, Conn. A uhurn Me Farmington Me Leominster, Mass. Upper Montclair, Dallas, Tex. N So. Nornzallf, Conn. New York, N. Y. Malone, N. Y. Manchester, N. H. Ann Arbor, Mich. Canastota, N. Y. Littleton, N. H. Salem, Mass. Concord, N. H. Concord, N. H. Vineland, N. Hartford, Conn. 4 Reed IO New Hampshire 27 New Hampshire I6 Richardson 25 Richardson 9 Thornton 2 Reed . I4 Wheeler I5 Sanborn 41 Wheeler 52 Wheeler 30 New Hampshire 5 So. Massachusetts 41 No. Massachusetts I8 Thornton 9 So. Fayerweather 34 Reed 34 Reed I6 New Hampshire Z7 New Hampshire So. Manchester, Conn. 111 Y House Washington, D. C. Washington, D. C. Detroit, Mich. West Acton, Mass. Winter Hill, Mass. Pawtucket, R. 1. Dover, N. H. Littleton, N. H. Washington, D. C. Toledo, Ohio Ithaca, N. Y. White River function, Sodus, N. Y. Albany, N. Y. Chicago, Ill. Dorchester, Mass. Bethlehem, N. H. Dracut, Mass. foliet, Ill. C1655 31 So. Massachusetts Z2 Crosby I 7-I 8 Fayerweather I6 Sanborn IO South St. 50 Fayerweather I No. Massachusetts 8 Thornton 31 Reed 7 No. Massachusetts 26 Massachusetts Vt. I6 Thornton 39 No. Massachusetts ll No. Massachusetts 9 Sanborn 8-9 No. Massachusetts II Hubbard E I0 Hallgarten 9 No. Fayerweather Joy, Leonard Wakeheld Keddie, Edward Augustus Kiley, Edward Lawrence Kimball, Herbert Cowling Kirkland, Edward Chase Kittredge, Wallace Grant Knight, Edward Dana Knowles, Winfield Skidmore Kreider, George Pasheld Lapierre, Emery Isabell Larimer, Joseph McMasters Larmon, Park Jerrold Lawson, Edward Howland Lawton, Albert Davis Leavitt, Leslie Westbrook Leavitt, Russell Hall Leland, Robert de Camp Lewis, Allen Dodge Lewis, Philip Henry Lewis, Robert Oliver Lincoln, Carl Kimball Lindman, Edwin Louis Lindsley, Dan Leslie Linehan, Denis D. Linihan, Martin Gates Little, John Dutton Llewellyn, Albert Stanley Lorenze, Eward Julius, Jr. Lyman, Stanley Mitchell McAu,liffe, John Boyle Mccammon, Robert Landon Macartney, Horace Bramwell McClary, Andrew Bishop McCoy, Whitley Peterson Macdonald, Malcolm Ranald McFalls, Edwin Leslie McKenzie, William Harold McLaughlin, James Robert, McLellan, Hiram John McMillan, Livingston McQuesten, Eugene Forrest Jr. 1914- 3 'J VOL. Lvi Y A it 3 - Claremont, N. H. jamaica Plain, Mass. Dorchester, Mass. Washington, D. C. Bellows Falls, Vt. Ayer, Mass. Charleston, W. Va. Lexington, Mass. Springfield, Ill. Concord, N. H. Evanston, Ill. Omaha, Neb. 28 Wheeler 49 Wheeler 3 No. Fayerweather I8 Wheeler 35 Reed 28 Fayerweather I9 Richardson 6 Sanborn l Massachusetts 55 Wheeler 6 New Hampshire 44 Massachusetts Calais, Me. 3 Hubbard Chester, Vt. 24 School St. Portsmouth, N. H. 45 Wheeler Portsmouth, N. H. 45 Wheeler Wellesley Hills, Mass. I0 Fayerweather Manchester, N. H. Lynn, Mass. Steubenville, Ohio Fall River, Mass. Hycle Parlf, Mass. Spolfane, Wash. 31 New Hampshire 7 No. Massachusetts 4 Wheeler I2 New Hampshire I5 Thornton I2 No. Massachusetts Hudson Falls, N. Y. 5 College St. Chicago, Ill. East Derry, N. H. 28 So. Massachusetts 40 New Hampshire New London, N. H. I2 Richardson New Yorlg, N. Y. Minneapolis, Minn. Worcester, Mass. Rutland, Vt. Broolglyn, N. Y. Windsor, Vt. Washington, D. C. St. Paul, Minn. Couverneur, N. Y. Milford, N. H. Rochester, N. Y. Barton, Vt. Philadelphia, Pa. Nashua, N. H. , C1661 28 Fayerweather 33 So. Massachusetts 24 Thornton 34 New Hampshire I2 Hubbard 40 No. Massachusetts 6 Fayerweather 26 Massachusetts 8-9 No. Massachusetts 24 Richardson Zl So. Massachusetts I9 Crosby 49 Fayerweather I6 Massachusetts Mack, Elwood Loveland Mackie, William Arthur, Jr. Magill, Roswell Foster Manzer, Charles Marble, Hobart ,Wendell Marsden, Arthur Gordon Martin, George Harold Mason, Carol Chase May, Lawrence Mendell, Ralph Bertrand Mensel, John I-lyde Merryman, Carl Plummer Mertin, Rudolph, Jr. Miles, Appleton Train Miller, David Baker Miller, Henry Lafayette Mitchell, Lawrence Collamore Monahan, John Carroll Morey, Douglas Morey, Gardner Levi Morrison, Alexander Morse, Roger Earle Mott, William Frothingham Mowry, Jared James Moxon, Benjamin Houston Mullen, John Joseph Murchie, Harris Foster Murphy, Linus Joseph Murphy, Leo Morris Myers, Cortland, Jr. Newmark, Joseph David Newton, Perley Atherton Noble, William Findley Nordell, Philip Gregory Norwood, Raymond Reeves O,l'lara, Dwight Ollis, Luke Sullivan Olson, Daniel Broughton Osborn, Frank Leslie Osborn, Henry Bacheller Osborn, William Baldwin 1914 .., . P A E ,d f V Medina, N. Y. Providence, R. 1. Princeton, 1ll.' Windsor, Vt. Ashburnham, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Somerville, Mass. Boston, Mass. Newton Center, Mass. Middleboro, Mass. Northampton, Mass. Bangor, Me. Roslindale, Mass. Brattleboro, Vt. Denver, Colo. Manchester, N. H. West Medford, Mass Z8 I-lallgarten 21 So. Massachusetts 42 Fayerweather 3 l-lallgarten I6 New l-lampshire 35 Fayerweather 8 Thornton I2 So. Massachusetts I5 So. Massachusetts 2 So. Fayerweather 62 Wheeler 7 College 7 Fayerweather 45 Fayerweather 33 No. Massachusetts 30 New Hampshire Z2 Thornton West Chelmsford, Mass. 47 New Hampshire Lowell, Mass. Broolflyn, N. Y. Brockton, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Medford, Mass. 40 Fayerweather 46 New Hampshire 32 Massachusetts I9 Massachusetts l 7 Reed Wappingers Falls, N. Y. 27 Massachusetts Dorchester, Mass. So. Croveland, Mass. Calais, Me. Plymouth, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Cambridge, Mass. Salem, Mass. Newport, N. H. Omaha, .Neb. Broolfline, Mass. Gloucester, Mass. Waltham, Mass. Lancaster, Mass. Annisquam, Mass. La Porte, Ind. Peabody, Mass. Cleveland, O. C1671 48 Wheeler 25 Hallgarten 9 So. Fayerweather 38 New Hampshire X QD I-louse III 1' A I-louse I6 So. Fayerweather II No. Massachusetts 30 No. Massachusetts 23 Richardson 33 Hallgarten 24 Wheeler I2 Reed l Hallgarten 35 No. Massachusetts I7 No. Fayerweather l 6 Hubbard A VOL,Lv1 1914 it it Paine, George Edward Parker, Everett Humphreys Parker, Howard Bruce Parker, Ralph Milton Parkhurst, Richard Parsons, Charles Henry, Jr. Payne, John Howard Pease, Robert Alvaro Pelletier, John Alden Penny, Vernon Kellogg Perkins, Lyman Cnilson Perkins, Rupert Gerard Perkins, Russell Brown Peterson, Clarence Edward Pettengill, Frank Gordon Phngstag, Louis F rank Phillips, Cteorge Blanchard Phinney, Berton Vesper Pierce, Carroll Edwin Piper, Franklin Porter, Victor Whiting Powell, Sargent Gastman Pratt, George Holland Pudrith, Chester Albert Rector, Gearold Vergil Reeder, Rudolph Rex, Jr. Reeves, Algernon Poole Renfrew, William Howard Reynolds, James Wirt Carroll Reynolds, Stanley Caldwell Richardson, Charles Albert Richardson, George Sanger Richardson, Paul Wentworth Riley, Edward Creaser Riley, Leo Emmet Roberts, Clive Malcolm Robinson, Willard Dunn Rogers, John William, Jr. Rogers, Leighton William Rosen, Leo Jacob Lalfeport, N. H. Denver, Colo. Medford, Mass. Milford, N. H. Winchester, Mass. Concord, N. H. fersey City, N. Nashua, N. H. Zi Thornton 20 So. Massachusetts I3 So. Fayerweather Z4 Richardson 22 So. Fayerweather 33 Reed 8 Fayerweather Z Thornton No. Troy, N. Y. IZ Hubbard Rochester, N. Y. 37 Massachusetts No. Andover, Mass. 47 Wheeler Berlin, N. H. Walfejield, Mass. Denver, Colo. Amherst, N. H. Montclair, N. Clover, Vt. 26-27 So. Fayerweather I2 New Hampshire 32 Reed 9 Hallgarten I5 Sanborn 21 Sanborn Dorchester, Mass. 29 Wheeler Worcester, Mass. 23 So. Massachusetts Littleton, N. H. 52 Wheeler Winthrop, Mass. I9 Payerweather Seattle, Wash. 38 Wheeler White Plains, N. Y. l Reed Detroit, Mich. Omaha, Neh. 5 Massachusetts 40 No. Massachusetts Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Washington, D. C. Broolfline, Mass. South Bend, Ind. Dover, N. H. Cleveland, O. Danvers, Mass. Barre, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Omaha, Neb. H Wolfehoro, N. Brookline, Mass. Dallas, Tex. Orange, Mass. Buffalo, N. Y. t168T 41 New Hampshire 5 Wheeler 35 Reed I3 So. Massachusetts 8 Sanborn 3 Reed 8 Fayerweather A 41 Massachusetts 30 Fayerweather 27 Wheeler II Thornton - 24 School St. 28 So. Massachusetts 22 Sanborn 47 New Hampshire 1914 'Q voL.Lv1 A - Rosenblatt, Alvin Calman Ross, Kenneth Ward Rundlett, Copley McPherson Ryan, Thomas Henry St. George-Smith, -Frederick, Salmonsen, Christian Maurice Samuels, Fred Edward Saunders, John Boersig Scott, Natt Harlan Scovil, Richard Malcolm Shanahan, James Augustine Shaw, Eliot Ashley Shedd, Karl Eastman Sherer, Robert Edwin Shirai, Ryuichiro Shongood, Charles, Jr. Shumway, Davis Sibbernson, Drexel John Simpson, Russell Walter Slattery, John Stephen Sloane, William Earle Smith, George Harding, Jr. Smith, Olin Robinson Soule, Roderique Francis Soutar, Peter Oles Spelke, Mak Splicer, Angus Stamatiades, Philip Emanuel Stearns, John Barker Stedman, Harold Bridgman Steinert, Robert Shuman Stiegler, Herbert Emil Stieglitz, Henry Frederick Stillman, Dewitt Sarles Story, Jacob Stoughton, Allen Fairfield Stowell, Kenneth Kingsley Stowell, Leland Espenscheid Streeter, Milford B., Jr. Strong, Ellsworth Olmsted Studley, Barrett New York, N. Y. St. Stephen, N. B. Concord, N. H. Denver, Colo. Creenwiclr, Conn. Farmington, Conn. Wilder, Vt. St. Paul, Minn. Wolfeboro, N. H. Cleveland, O. ' Manchester, N. H. Watertown, Mass. Haverhill, Mass. Evanston, Ill. Tokyo, fapan New York, N. Y. Port Richmond, N. Y. Omaha, Neb. Oak Park, Ill. New York, N. Y. Melrose, Mass. Norwood, Mass. Rliinebeck, N. Y. So. Freeport, Me. Lynn, Mass. Stamford, Conn. Cauglmanaga, Que Cos, Aegean Sea Portland, Me. Holyoke, Mass. Boston, Mass. Lawrence, Mass. Brooklyn, N. Y. foliet, Ill. Essex, Mass. Whitefield, N. H. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. 23 So. Fayerweather ' I2 Crosby 30 Wheeler 32 Reed I5 No. Massachusetts I0 Hallgarten I6 Thornton 24 So. .Massachusetts 9 Thornton 4 Massachusetts 23 New Hampshire 47 Wheeler 21 Reed 22 New Hampshire Z8 Reed I6 Massachusetts 5 Hallgarten 'Il Y House 31 Hallgarten I 7 Crosby I9 Hallgarten I8 So. Fayerweather Z2 College 26 No. Massachusetts 3 Crosby 29 No. Massachusetts 6 I-lallgarten Zl l-lallgarten I6 Hallgarten IO No. Fayerweather I2 Richardson 30 Fayerweather I9 Crosby 9 No. Fayerweather 24 Massachusetts I3 Fayerweather I9 No. Fayerweather I9 No. Fayerweather Brooklyn, N. Y. 9 Sanborn Newtonville, Mass. I8 College Brentwood, L. I., N Y. 33 Wheeler C1691 fI'I IB ig voL.Lvi , 1914- I-1. Sully, Spencer Edwards Sully, Wilberforce, Jr. Sutcliffe, Adam Andrew Swenson, Harold Ernest Tapley, Gilbert Hutchinson Taylor, Charles Joseph E Taylor, John Leonard Telfer, Alexander MacKenzie Tibbetts, Russell Dexter Townsend, Robert Swan Tripolitis, Constantine Damianos Tucker, Cecil William Tucker, Kenneth Denney Tuttle, Harold Story Tyler, Ralph Gannett Upham, Warren Ford Valentine, Cloyd Hampton Van Husan, Marshall Wells Wadleigh, Paul Fitch Waite, Clayton Byron Walker, Theron Bailey Wallace, Donald Joseph Wallace, Harry William Walsh, Henry Walter Wagner, Walter F. Ward, Frank Ralph Warren, Paul Alfred Wass, Roland Studley H Waterman, Henry Cate Welch, John Francis Wentworth, William Orin Wessel, Donald Westhall, Leon Ernest Wetherbee, Howard Wright Whipple, Percival Dodge White, Chandler ,Tubbs Williams, Earle Raymond Wilson, Francis Stirling Winchell, Nathaniel Prentice, Jr. Winters, Edgar Spring New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Pawtucket, R. 1. Stamford, Conn. Danvers, Mass. So. Norwalk, Conn. Mancliester, N. H. New York, N. Y. Wasliington, D. C. Washington, D. C. Cos, Aegean Sea Chelsea, Mass. Newton, Mass. Palmyra, N. Y. Exeter, N. H. Malden, Mass. New York, N. Y. Detroit, Mich. Lynn, Mass. Fort Ann, N. Y. 23 Wheeler 40 Wheeler 47 Fayerweather I6 Wheeler 4 Sanborn 5 Reed ZI New Hampshire I2 Fayerweather 3 Wheeler 44 Wheeler 21 Hallgarten 8 College 4 Massachusetts 34 So. Massachusetts 20 Richardson I8 So. Fayerweather 26 Hallgarten 34 No. Massachusetts I Z0 Hubbard I Fayerweather Newton Highlands, Mass. Z2 So. Fayerweather Los Angeles, Cal. I4 So. Massachusetts Hopkinton, Mass. Z6 Hallgarten Mattapan, Mass. 30 Reed New York, N. Y. 27 No. Massachusetts Olean, N. Y. 33 New Hampshire Claremont, N. H. 28 Wheeler St. Louis, Mo. I9 College Hanover, N. H. Lynn, Mass. I9 So. Main St. I5 Hallgarten Spokane, Wash. I6 So. Fayerweather Swampscott, Mass. Lakewood, N. Lynclonville, Vt. Hamilton, Mass. Concord, N. H. Barre, Vt. Vlfashington, D. C. Melrose, Mass. Bujalo, N. Y. C1705 I3 Fayerweather IO Reed I6 Thornton Z0 Thornton 33 Reed II Hubbard I4 Sanborn 7 No. Fayerweather I 6 College ffl-in VOL LVI Wolff, Irving Gutman Woodridge, Jeffries Watkins Woolverton, John Hillman Woolworth, Chester McNutt Worcester, Chauncey Marquis Wyman, Roclney Elhridge York, Walter' Raymond Zahriskie, Allan Zint, Karl Bertram New York, N. Y. I8 No. Massachusetts Sioux City, lolva 6 No. Fayerweather Trenton, N. ' I7 Richardson Niagara Falls, N. Y. 30 No. Massachusetts Newburyport, Mass. 23 No. Massachusetts Hampden, Me. 30 Reed Somerville, Mass. I3 No. Fayerweather Newark, N. I7 Hubbard Chicago. Ill. 42 Massachusetts 11711 voL.Lv1 1914 .I - -L. .I . intl, gg. NJZL J x ' N- fl I I .3 If I , - tint. . Q .H, EDIC L SCHOOL FOURTH YEAR Allen, George Edgar, A.B. Barker, james Creighton, Jr. Blood, Robert Oscar Cleasby, Howard Wilfred Emery, William Edward Ferenczi, Louis John Holzer, William Francis Hunt, Wesley Marshall, B.S. Bradford, Mass. 9 College St. New Milford, Conn. 9 W. South St. White River junction, Vt. 9 College St. Littleton, N. H. Bridgman Block Surrey, Me. 35 N. Main St. Bayonne, N. Z4 School St. Arlington, N. f. 4I S. Main St. Hanover, N. H. Davison Block Powers, James Joseph Manchester, N. H. Hospital Robbins, Edmund Henry Manchester, N. H. Ford Block Stokes, Leroy Tyler Rochester, N. H. 24 School St. THIRD YEAR Burnham, Arthur Washington, B.S. Norwich, Vt. 9 W. South St. Carroll, William Edward, A.B. Passaic, N. E A E House Clute, Howard Merrill, B.S. Florence, Mass. 9 College St. Gaylord, James Frederick, A.B. South Hadley, Mass. 9 W. South St. Norris, Rolf Clarke, B.S. Methuen, Mass. Carter Block SECOND YEAR Chisholm, Lawrence Chesley Salem, Mass. I5 So. F ayerweather Taylor, Clifton Clark, A.B. Bridgeport, Conn. 8 Hubbard - FI RST YEAR Arndt, William George Cushman, Frank Holmes Fellows, Albert Whittier French, Harry Tapley John- son Haywood, Henry, Jr. Hutchinson, Rollo Wilson Randall, John Albert Schulte, Raymond Morales Spillane, Bernard C1725 Mansfield, Mass. 56-57 Wheeler Claremont, N. H. 57 New Hampshire Dorchester, Mass. 20 Crosby Haverhill, Mass. 29 Reed Hanover, N. H. I9 Sanborn Milford, N. H. I5 No. F ayerweather Myriclfa, Mass. I3 E. Wheelock St. Dollar Bay, Mich. 44 New Hampshire North Easton, Mass. 9 W. South St. 7 7 2 5 . ? Z 4 Z f , X H .Lvl 1914 YER SCHGOL Baker, Harold Tower, B.S. Baker, Ralph Edmund, B.S. Doe, Nelson Luther, B.S. Farrington, George Hobart, B.S. Hitchcock, George, B.S. Hobbs, Sam, B.S. Mitchell, Edmund lrving, B.S. Perley, Lew Knowlton, B.S. Snow, Mark George, B.S. Stevens, Samuel Spaulding,B.S.Salem, Mass. Stone, Riecl Herrick Waterbury, Lewis Clement, B.S. Whitney, Ralph Edward, B.S. Keene, N. H. Dorchester, Mass. 9 College St. Dorchester, Mass. 9 College St. Bradford, Vt. 4 College St. Kingston, Mass. . Bissell Hall Newton, Mass. ' I5 E. Wheelock St. Bissell Hall Pelham, N. H. Brooklyn, N. Y. 9 College St. Laconia, N. H. E N House Middleboro, Mass. 9 College St. 9 College St. Concord, N. H. 6 College St. Orislgany, N. Y. 3 College St. Bissell Hall INTERMEDIATE YEAR NON-RESIDENT GROUP fStudents on leave of absence in field and office practicej Brewster, John Densmore, B.S. Windsor, Vt. Brown, Harry Madara, B.S. Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Goodrich, Claude Moulton, B.S. St. fohnsbury, Vt. Lewis, Joseph William, B.S. E051 Lynn, Mags, Lewis, Roy Everett, B.S. Lebanon, H. Sawyer, Harry Edward, B.S. KCGTUCD, Neb- FIRST YEAR Abbott, Henry I Deshon Barends, Howard Arthur Cole, Harry Waldo Davidson, George Burrett Dolan, Joseph Michael Gibson, William Martin Kingsbury, Elbridge Herbert Macdonald, John Stephen Osborne, Herbert Carroll Perkins, Hubert Marsh Proctor, Henry Sherman, Jr. Spencer, Frank Foss Stiles, Edwin Milo Stiles, George Henry Tucker, Elmer Clayton Wilbur, Conrad Church C1732 Cambridge, Mass. l So. Fayerweather Albany, N. Y. B GD H House Hanover, N. H. 3 College St. Prince Bay, N. Y. 6 College St. New York, N. Y. 52 S. Main St. East Ryegate, Vt. C. 8: G. House Keene, N. H.l5 New Hampshire Dorchester Centre, Mass. Keene, N. H. Windsor, Vt. Westerly, R. I. Berwiclf, Me. Alton, N. H. B GJ II House 9 College St. 4 College St. 3 College St. 4 College St. 9 College St. Gofstown, N. H. 56-57 Wheeler Chelsea, Mass. 4 College St. Minneapolis, Minn. 29 New Hampshire f 'Q VoL.LV1 ' 1914 L i i -1: iT 11 -il ' 1 1 - - -I - - - E L L L -. 1 3' 'Z Z - L -2 - - : i- -1- ni ,.., f H- Z - ' X147 : Z ' ' 6 A 'E -I- -.rfrff f lil l i Q It E-E ,4 i , rf. 7 7 ,.. .. L, fn, , Iluwtiq L : Illllllljl' , 'lll tl E iff ll lllllll v ni - CHD , UCK SCI-IOGL SECON D YEAR Hartford, Conn. 9 W. South St. Littleton, N. H. 9 W. South St. Lawrence, Mass. Z3 N. Main St. Baxter, john Welles, A.B. Bellows, Harold Adams, B.S. Biery, Walter Lawrence, A.B. Bruner, Warren Day, A.B. Broolflyn, N. Y. Ford Block Healey, William Nelson, B.S. Lynn, Mass. I4 W. Wheelock St. Kennedy, Francis Paul, A.B. Dover, N. H. 23 N. Main St. Knight, Morris Edward, A.B. Bennington, N. H. The Graduate Club Luitwieler, Edward Billings, A.B. Newton Highlands, Mass. 23 N. Main St. Middlebrook, William Theo- philus, A.B. Remele, Charles William, A.B.West Medford, Mass. E N House Vergennes, Vt. 9 W. South St. Smith, Alfred Leslie, B.S. Keene, N. H. 2 A E House Warren, Lewis Pease, A.B. Westhroolf, Me. EX House FIRST YEAR CID E K House 4 Richardson Massachusetts Badger, Ralph Eastman Lowell, Mass. Rochester, N. Y. Newport, Vt. I4 Salem, Mass. C. Barnett, Joseph John Blanchard, Maurice Leland Brown, Edward Lawrence, and G. House Carr, Russell Winchester, Va. I0 No. Massachusetts l 0 Crosby Winchester, Mass. Lynn, Mass. 8 So. Massachusetts Evans, Donald Putnam East Orange, N. 21 Cowdery, Ralph Herbert Croscup, Leland Harrison Massachusetts Lowell, Mass. 57 New Hampshire Marblehead, Mass. 119 2 K House Franklin, N. H. K K K House Fox, Grover Franklin Gale, Louis Bernard Gardner, Harold Parker Grothe, Edwin Carl Wayne, Neh. 46 S. Main St. Gulick, Edward Leeds, Jr. Hanover, N. H. I2 Massachusetts Knight, GC0YSe Harold Lynn, Mass. I6 Crosby Lenfestey, Nathan Coggeshall Marion, Ind. 46 S. Main St. Meleney, Clarence Coit Brooklyn, N. Y. X db House Merrill, Henry Wadleigh E Morton, Lincoln Emerson 41745 Concord, N. H. I4 Massachusetts Kennebunlf, Me. C. 81 G. House 'Q voL.Lv1 i f 191-4' lVlunroe, George Muller Nolan, Walter Harvey Peterson, John Axel George Robinson, Edward Lawrence Sauer, Philip Allein Scott, Arthur Leon Shedd, Harold Hodgdon Shepard, Alan Bartlett Sides, Edwin Everett. Terry, William Bradford Thompson, Dean Alan Tuck, Harold Stuart Vander Pyl, Chester Adrian Warren, Howard Porter Warren, Waterman Goulding Washburn, Arthur Brooks Weil, Frank Taylor Wells, Collin Wilkins, Warde Willson, Earle Van Kuren Winship, Kendall foliet, Ill. Somerville, Mass. Proctor, Vt. Portland, Me. Columbus, O. Portland, Me. Haverhill, Mass. East Derry, N. H. South Croveland, Mass. Plaistow, N. H. Orange, Mass. Quincy, Mass. Roxbury, Mass. Keene, N. H. Holden, Mass. Bethel, Vt. No. Andover, Mass. Hanover, N. H. Newton Centre, Mass. Rutland, Vt. Melrose, Mass. C1753 l Crosby A A fb House 32 Wheeler X KID House 2 X House I8 Massachusetts 21 Reed - I3 Wheeler 25 Hallgarten Zl Reed 2 N House 23 N. Main St B GJ II House 20 New Hampshire l 3 Wheeler 2 A E House 20 Sanborn 52 College St. C. Sc G. House C. 8: G. House C9 A X House 'P vo1..Lvi A 1914 if I. .- div L15 fi-ie 5155 sg.. .N f - -,-,f--T.-5 -,f ,, ,Af ' :Z E ,- 'U ' ' 01-'E ,:1'QA.gt . i X- ft M . 5 'gi i an Q 4 1: . I X I , J ffl i l fa lfx ca X x we 4 f ..f aff! 1 if' ,AQ fx h X it ,fi ui' ff Z ll' Nl Z in fa-sf X X ,, A 5 l ima C , f xx, ' ll - . wld, 7 I l NE: M , ,X Wax X ff! X It W 1 :. ,' 79 , ' lxzilkiblv l ':.'l. KS 'QQ' ll r .. fl ttf-- . N: ff- W f Mem l llllltg . li- ' 03A 4 K V fy ,ff ff ' llllll' R V!!! fl if , v 7 f' -1 All f f . 5,1W,.qp.--'ilu X W WW, in-gr 3 I ntl. iilhllwlll 'Q A Abtdlt ,Vt fig l Q59 M MER CHGOL GRADUATE STUDENTS 5':Admitted to candidacy for a higher degree. Austin, Jane, A.B. fSmithD, Teacher, The Ely Schoolg Greenwich, Conn. Economics, Psychology. Bacon, Willard Henry, A.B. fBrownD, Principal of High School, Westerly, R. I. Education, Psychology. Baldwin, Jeanette Holmes, A.B. fBrownD, Teacher, Forest Park Schoolg Springfield, Mass. Economics, Education, Mathe- matics. Barker, C-race Sylvia, A.B. fColorado Collegej, Teacher, Baldwin Schoolg Bryn Mawr, Pa. Mathematics. Battell, Hannah Mansfield, A.B. fColumbiaj, Teacher, Public School l48g Brooklyn, N. Y. Education, English. Blair, Leila Elizabeth, A.B. fAdelphiJ, Teacher, Public School . l'3lg Brooklyn, N. Y. Economics, Education, History. Burton, John Arthur, A.B. fColby Collegel, Principal of High Schoolg Nantucket, Mass. Education. Carlisle, Lawrence Andrew, B.S. fNew Hampshire Collegej, Prin- cipal of High Schoolg Jefferson, N. H. Education, Psycho- logy. Cassidy, Mary Frances, A.B. fNew York Normal Collegej, Teacher, Public School 160, Brooklyn, N. Y. Education, English. Clough, Nathalie Duley, A.B. fSmithD, Teacher, High School' Gloucester, Mass. Italian. Mathematics. ,fCook, Solomon Everett, A. B. fBatesQ, Instructor, Lyndon Insti- tuteg Oxford, Me. Mathematics. 7 Cregg, Matthew Aloysius, LL.B. fBoston Universityj, Attorney- at-Lawg Lawrence, Mass. Economics, English, French. Currie, Grace Elizabeth, A.B. fNew York Normal Collegel, Teacher, Public School l7, Borough of Richmondg New York City. Education, English. Danforth, Joseph Dexter, A.B. fplquftsj, Principal of Hardwick Acaclemyg Hardwick, Vt. Chemistry, Physics. 55Davis, Mabelle Edith, A.B. fMt. Holyokej, Teacher, High Schoolg Fall River, Mass. English. Fahey, Sarah Helena, B.S. fNew York Universityl, Teacher, Public School 147, Brooklyn, N. Y. Education, English. Fulton. Mabelle, A.B. fMt. Holyokej, Teacher, High School' Newport, Vt. French, Carman. Gaylord, James Frederick, A.B. fDartmouthj, Student, Dart- mouth Medical Schoolg Hanover, N. H. Chemistry, Psy- chology. Quay f voL.Lv1 1914 Q 'SFGray, Ella Durgin, A.B. fBoston Universityj, Teacher, Somerville High Schoolg Somerville, Mass. lllathematics. ' Gray, John Clifford, A.B. fHarvardD, Teacher, Thornton Acaclemyg Saco, Me. Chemistry. i Harlow, May Lincoln, Ph.B. fOberlinj, Principal of Sunapee Public Schoolsg Sunapee, N. H. Biology, English, Latin. Hecllund, Mauritz, B.S. fDartmouthD, Worcester, Mass. lllathematics, Physics. xHobbs, Amy Luckey, A.B. fAdelphiJ, Assistant to Principal, Public School 1065 Brooklyn, N. Y. English. ' Jones, Carroll Thompson, A.B. QDartmouthj, Vice-Principal, Westerly High School: Westerly, R. I. Education. Lodor, Una, 13.5. fwellesleyl, Teacher, Ely Schoolg Greenwich. Conn. Education, Mathematics. MacLean, Daniel Wallace, BS. fUniversity of Mainej, Principal of Alton High Schoolg Alton, N. H. Education, Mathematics, Psychology. McNamara, James Martin, BS. fHarvarclj, Teacher, Fitchburg High School, Fitch- burg, Mass. Education, French, Mathematics. May, Walter Milton, A.B. fDartmouthj, Principal of Lisbon High Schoolg Lisbon, N. H. Education, French, Psychology. Mayo, Marion Judson, A.B. fNational Normal Universitylg A.M. CNew York Uni- versityp, Head of Department of Mathematics, Eastern District High Schoolg New York City. Mathematics, Psychology. Miller, William Alexander, A.B. CDartmouthD, Instructor, Manlius School, Manlius, N. Y. Mathematics. xparkman, Mary Rosetta, Ph.B. fUniversity of Chicagoj, Teacher, Washington Nor- mal School, Washington, D. C. English. Payne, Fanny Ursula, 13.5. fNew York Universityl, Model Teacher, Brooklyn Train- ing School for Teachersg Brooklyn, N. Y. Education, English. xphelps, Andrew Jackson, A.B. fDartmouthj, Danbury, N. H. English. Pitts, Maude, A.B. fAclelphiD, Substitute Teacher, Bay Ridge High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Economics, Education, History. Plummer, Fred Byron, A. B. CDartmouthJ, Instructor, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Geology. Preston, Clara Frances, A. B. fwellesleyj, Assistant Principal, Nashua High Schoolg Nashua, N. H. English, Italian, Latin. Preston, Harry Boynton, A.B. fDartmouthD, Master, Manor Schoolg Stamford, Conn. Economics, English. , :5Rainey, Frederick Albert, A.B. fDartmouthJ, instructor in Bordentown Military Instituteg Borclentown, N. English, Education. A:Robbins, Elmer Ellsworth, Jr., A.B. fHarvarcU, Medical Student, University of Pennsylvania. Chemistry, Education. C1775 ffl-IE voL.Lvi 1914 1 A5Scott, Edwin Hobart, B.S. fMassachusetts Agricultural Collegej, Professor of Ag- riculture and Biology, Georgia Normal and Industrial College, Milledgeville, Ga. Education. 55Scott, Frank Arthur, A.B. fHarvardD, Principal of High Schoolg Belmont, Mass. Chemistry. ' Smith, Mary Louise, B.L. fSmithD, Teacher, Wheeler High School: No. Stonington, Conn. Tyler, Emily Wheeler, A.B. fBoston Universityl, Teacher. The Misses May's Schoolg Boston, Mass. French. :5Yeates, Mary Elizabeth, A.B. fWellesleyj, Teacher, Johnson High School, North Andover, Mass. English, German. Young, Walter Stevens, B.S. fDartmouthJ, Assistant Superintendent of Schools, Worcester, Mass. Education. UNDERGRADUATES, AND OTHER STUDENTS Abbott, Gabrielle, Assistant, Boston Public Schools, Boston, Mass. Adams, David Ernest, Student, Dartmouthg Hanover, N. H. Alexander, Mary Edna, Concord, N. H. Allison, William Henry, Student, Northampton, Mass. Andrew, Benjamin Fay, Student, Dartmouth, Bartlett, N. H. Andrews, Dorothy Holbrook, Student, Adelphi, Brooklyn, N. Y. Anthes, Katherine Louise, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Baker, John Craig, Student, Dartmouthg Montclair, N. Baldwin, William Lothrop, Student, Dartmouthg North Stratford, N. H. Bean, Harold Cotton, Student, Dartmouth, Boston, Mass. Bedell, Mary, Teacher, Livingston, N. Beetle, Ruth, Teacher, New Bedford, Mass. Bender, Natalie, Teacher, Jersey City, N. Black, Ada, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Boggs, George Arthur, Student, Dartmouth, Grosse Point, Mich. E Brady, Edward Francis, Jr., Student, Dartmouthg Dorchester, Mass Buell, Arthur Curtis, Student, Dartmouth: Wellesley Hills, Mass. Bullis, Leland Storey, Student, Dartmouthg Glens Falls, N. Y. Burns, Mary Adelaide, Vice Principal, Jersey City, N. Burton, Maude Eleanor, Teacher, Nantucket, Mass. Calderara, Charles Anthony, Student, Dartmouthg Milford, N. H. Campbell, Gilbert Merrill, Jr., Student, Dartmouthg Lyndonville. Vt. Chinnock, Eugenie, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Clark, Teresa Bernadette, Teacher, Newark, N. Clement, Abbie Louise, Teacher, Newark, N. J. Collingwood, Frank MacFarlane, Student, Dartmouthg Holyoke, Mass. any ffl-Ib . voL.Lv1 ,L -Y 1914 Constable, Ellen Ada, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Craig, Emma, Principal, Pittsburg, Pa. Cumings, Fred Taylor, Student, Fitchburg, Mass. Cutler, Richard Hyde, Student, Dartmouth, Montpelier, Vt. Dage, Zu Chi, Student, Norwich University, Northfield, Vt. Daley, Edward John, Student, Dartmouth, Coos, N. H. Donaldson, Isabel Marshall, Assistant Principal, Brooklyn, N. Y. Drake, Helen Louisa, Sub-Principal, North Easton, Mass. Dudensing, Frank Valentine, Student, Dartmouth, New York, N. Y. Engelhorn, Wesley Theodore, Student, Dartmouth, Spokane, Wasli. Ewing, Gertrude, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Farnham, Roswell, Student, University of Vermont, Buffalo, N. Y. Pitts, Robert Lyon, Student, Dartmouth, Brattleboro, Vt. Flavin, Mary, Teacher, Concord, N. H. Fleming, Mary Louise, Teacher, Atlantic City, N. Frost, Carlton, Pennington, Student, Hanover, N. H. Fuller, Guy Edson, Student, Dartmouth, Springfield, Mass. Gay, Nelson, Student, Dartmouth, Newton, Mass. Germann, Emma Estelle, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Gibson, Elsie Julia, Student, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt. Gile, John Fowler, Student, Hanover, N. H. Gonyer, Frances Louise, Littleton, N. H. Goodwin, Lewis Byron, Student, Manchester, N. H. Gould, Florence Louise, Teacher, Richardson School, Attleboro, Mass. Granger, Mrs. Anna, Brooklyn, N. Y. Grant, Kenneth, Student, Dartmouth, Winchester, Mass. Guest, Robert Gordon, Student, Dartmouth, Melrose, Mass. Hadley, Elizabeth, Teacher, New York, N. Y. Hands, William Charles, Student, Dartmouth, New York, N. Y. Harris, Ward Hunt, Student, Dartmouth, Hanover, N. H. Harmon, Paul Stanley, Student, Dartmouth, Woodfords, Me. Haskell, Phillips, Student, Dartmouth, Gloucester, Mass. Hellman, Dorothy, Teacher, Washington, D. C. Hitchcock, Charles Young, Student, Dartmouth, Hanover, N. H. Hitchcock, Abigail Coolidge, Superintendent, Welcome House, Boston, Mass Hogsett, Robert Newton, Student, Dartmouth, Cleveland, O. Horton, Dabney Charles, Student, Dartmouth, Cambridge, Mass. Hovey, Otis Wadsworth, Student, Dartmouth, Plainfield, N. Jelliffe, Helen L., Student, Brooklyn, N. Y. Jenkins, Volney Grant, Student, Dartmouth, Amsterdam, N. Y. Jepson, William Roscoe, Student, Dartmouth, Sioux City, la. C1795 VOL LVI A IQ 141 ., 1 Y A Q ' xl -5 x , I F! . Jewett, Theo Stephen, Student, Dartmouth, Laconia, N. H. Johnson, Russell Campbell, Student, Dartmouth, Brookline, Mass. Johnson, Truman Emmanuel, Student, Dartmouth, Pigeon Cove, Mass Jordan, James Qscar, Jr., Student, Dartmouth, Dorchester, Mass. Kraemer, Elizabeth, Teacher, New York, N. Y. Leadbetter, Maud Gertrude, Teacher, Roslindale, Mass. Lee, Tsing Lung, Student, Hunan Province, China. Llewellyn, Albert Stanley, Student, Dartmouth, New London, N. H. Lowe, Frederick Park, Student, Dartmouth, Montpelier, Vt. Lumbard, Ralph Emery, Fairhaven, Mass. Mabie, Edward Charles, Student, Dartmouth, La Crosse, Wis. McClary, Harvey Clark, Student, Dartmouth, Windsor, Vt. McQuiston, Fanny Craig, Teacher, Pittsburgh, Pa. Maddalena, Arthur Daniel, Student, Dartmouth, Boston, Mass. Mathews, fMrs.j Jesse Clyde, Chicago, Ill. Mathews, Noreen Marcum, Chicago, lll. Mayer, Lillie Searle, Teacher, Jamaica, N. Y. Millar, Ronald, Student, Dartmouth, Denver, Colo. Miller, Alfred Rheinhardt, Student, Dartmouth, Lawrence, lVlass. Monk, Guy Maxwell, Teacher, North Bridgton, Me. Moody, George Fallows, Student, Lunenburg, Mass. More, Robert Elmer, Student, Dartmouth, Denver, Colo. Moyer, Paul Snyder, Student, Dartmouth, Hershey, Pa. Munkelt, Helena Gertrude, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Newmark, Joseph David, Student, Salem, Mass. Nichols, Esther Katherine, Student, Hanover, N. H. Nichols, Newton David, Teacher, Woodhaven, N. Y. Nislowsky, Lena, Teacher,ABrooklyn, N. Y. Grton, Carolyn Dibble, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Parchert, Frederick LeRoy, Student, Dartmouth, Brookline, Mass. Pohl, Augusta, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Randerson, John Edward Hall, Student, Dartmouth, Albany, N. Y. Reeve, Louise Pierson, Newark, N. Rich, Harold Thompson, Student, Dartmouth, Rutherford, N. J. Riedell, Randolph, Student, Dartmouth, Manchester, N. H. Rochette, Arthur Pierre, Principal, Worcester, Mass. Rose, Stephen Darwin, Student, Dartmouth, Clifton, Mass. Rutherford, Edwin James, Student, Dartmouth, Amsterdam, N. Y. Scarry, John Joseph, Student, Dartmouth, Dedham, Mass. Scidenberg, Theresa, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sheldon, Arthur Eugene, Student, Dartmouth, Holyoke, Mass. C1803 'Q VOL. Lvl 1914 Sheldon, Bertha Laura, Principal, New Britain, Conn. Sheldon, Samuel DeWitt, Student, Dartmouth, Red Wing, Minn. Shepler, Russell Lewis, Student, Dartmouth, Vandergrift, Pa. Skinner, Alice Evelyn, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sloan, Ruby Maud, Teacher, Boston, Mass. Starbuck, Roy Martin, Student, Dartmouth, Saratoga Springs, N. Y. Stone, Charles Stanley, Student, Dartmouth, Andover, N. H. Stone, Mary, Principal, South Easton, Mass. i Strom, Carl August Walfrid, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sun, Hyne, Student, Yale, New Haven, Conn. ' Taback, Pauline, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Taft, James Chamberlain, Student, Dartmouth, Greenville, N. H. Tai, Shin Tao, Student, Norwich University, Northfield, Vt. Tapley, William, Student, Dartmouth, Utica, N. Y. Teachout, Robert Brown, Student, Dartmouth, South Lancaster, Mass. Teall, Howard Seely, Student, Dartmouth, Sodus, N. Y. Tilton, George Henry, Jr., Student, Dartmouth, Littleton, N. H. Towler, Thomas Willard, Student, Dartmouth, Cranford, N. Tseng, Chon Chuan, Student, Norwich University, Northfield, Vt. Verlenclen, Edith Lane, Teacher, Borough of Queens, N. Y. Vining, Roscoe Howard, Principal, Tilton, N. H. Walker, Alberta, Teacher, Washington, D. C. Walsh, Francis Parkinson, Student, Dartmouth, Lowell, Mass. Walther, Elita, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ward, Eugenie Cecilia, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ward, Marguerite Hargrave, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Weingart, Amelia, Teacher, Borough of Manhattan, N. Y. Welsh, Carlton Kaye, Student, Dartmouth, Rockford, Ill. Whitney, Kathryn Concklin, Teacher, Westbrook, Me. 1 Wilkinson, Ray Larcom, Student, Da1'tmouth, Salem, Mass. Williams, Norman, Student, Woodstock, Vt. Winchester, Henrietta, Teacher, North Easton, Mass. Wood, Bertram Cogswell, Student, Dartmouth, Troy, N. Y. Wood, Keith Ainsworth, Student, Dartmouth, Portsmouth, N. H. Yang, Shen-Fung Edward, Student, University of Pennsylvania, Hsigng Yang, Hupek China. A Yang, Sih Zung, Student, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Shanghai, China. Ziadi, Mary Josephine, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ziadi, Rose, Teacher, Brooklyn, N. Y. C1811 THE GYMNASIUM NFRAT NALWVW voL.LV1 i s 1914 ilirzrivrniiivz at Bartmnnth In Order of Establishment Psi Upsilon Kappa Kappa Kappa Alpha Delta Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Theta Delta Chi Phi Delta Theta Beta Theta Pi Sigma Chi at Dartmouth Phi Kappa Psi Phi Gamma Delta Delta Tau Delta Chi Phi Phi Sigma Kappa Kappa Sigma Sigma Nu Sigma Alpha Epsilon Sigma Phi Epsilon DEBATING SOCIETY Delta Sigma Rho MEDICAL SOCIETY Alpha Kappa Kappa SCIENTIFIC SOCIETY Gamma Alpha C1841 u , xr., ' 'c ,, w ,l ax X ,- . , E 1Q'j!:el's,'Sw,vii Q Eg5?1, f' 1'W ,. ? 512 I , 1 ' g Y f,f3eg.v:a?if fl M- ' w,, QA - l im, ?3?f fi 4. . .V-:s 'fQ2: w :1-:Vw 4 .Y. .f1-fff,:?f'q9'f . V. .w 3 ' Q-:gl -. i ' ' ', Q 1 , , ff f l if . .' 4 S W . Qui,-xg.,-Q ig N-k I 5, 3 3. ' V' g gc, ' ?yL1ff,Z,f .. ' f, Q, 'M' -, ' ' R ' N 'X 252' 2 ,Q 'AN' viiffiilif- 4-if: T 'Pip , f , X ' rqixsaxw, .i1 . 395521 4 V V . ' , H V ' f xlaLhgf53,t 4 if . , if - -. ' ' k a i- I w N - a ' ffzdfl NWif77.1ag5'g6-gf' in w g:- -.tm 'gs-'z:'S?' , v zazzu., mxux. w P w I 1 v 1 w n 1 ' VoL.LVr - 1914 ,. . 1551 Hpailnn Zeta Chapter Pratres in Doctoribus Prof. E. P. Clark Prof. Lemuel S. Hastings Prof. Edwin Bartlett Prof. Robert Fletcher Prof. Chas. P. Richardson Prof. Homer E. Keyes Fratres in Universitate I9I3 Edward Aaron Davis Frederick Arnault Seidler Karl Harrison Fulmer Parker Trowbridge 1914 William Emerson Barrett William Albert Green, Jr. John Riddle Burleigh Harold Talmadge Johnson John Leyson Dellinger Page Established l 842 Inst. Francis Neef Inst. Clifford P. Clark Dr. William Jewett Tucker Earle van Kuren Willson Arthur Edward Wyman Lester Knox Little George Henry Tilton, Jr. Junkins Thornton Calder Pray Drexel John Sibbernsen l9I5 William Chaplin Bemis John Usher Loomis Charles Edmund Griffith, Jr. Malcolm Ronald Macdonald Herbert Clifford Richardson Perry Hayes John Fleming McMichael Sherman Gray Hickox l Archibald Owen George Wescott Hutchins 1 187 I Philip Durant Smith VOLIAH Qx ffl-IE 1914 Theta Delta Beta Sigma Cuamma Zeta Lambda Kappa Psi Xi Upsilon Iota Phi Pi Chi Beta Beta Eta Tau lVlu Rho Omega Epsilon Omicron Hai Hpailnn Founded at Union College Union College University of New York Yale University Brown University Amherst College Dartmouth College Columbia University Bowdoin College Hamilton College Wesleyan University University of Rochester Kenyon College University of Michigan Syracuse University Cornell University Trinity College Lehigh University University University University University University University of Pennsylvania of Minnesota of Wisconsin of Chicago of California of Illinois C1883 1833 1833 1837 1839 1840 1841 1842 1842 1843 1843 1848 1858 1860 1865 1875 1876 1880 1884 1889 1891 1896 1897 1902 1910 09 -r ' , n., N . I I YQ voL.LV1 1914 Kappa iltappa Ilfappa Founded 1842 Fratres in Doctoribus Prof. Thomas W. D. Worthen Prof. John lVl. Gile Prof. John H. Gerould Prof. Sidney B. Fay Prof. Fred B. Emery Inst. Warren C. Shaw Frater in Urbe. Rev. Robert C. Falconer 1913 Russell Carr Harold Parker Gardner Freeman Conant Doe Joseph Michael Dolan Ralph Elmer More Ralph Kenneth Stone Frederick Michael Gannon Edward Leeds Gulick, Jr. 1914 Harold Cotton Bean Nathan Allen Farwell Horace LeRoy Borden George Willis French ' George Elihu Briggs, Jr. Henry Bradley Frost Henry Haywood, Jr. Ernest La1Vlonte Kimball Clyde Drew Buckley Dwight Conn Harold Leslie Dunbar Charles Henry l..uby 1915 Gustave August Braun James LeRoy Laflerty Qrlando Cutler Doe . Fletcher Low Chester Bradley Jordan, Jr. Herbert Sears Potter Franz Raphael Marceau James Theodore lVlarriner John Francis McCullough, Jr. Wellington Waldo Stickle William Wallace Washburn Albert Gaylord Willey Charles Rogers Taplin Howard Whitney Wing Hugh Grant Rowell Kent Hale Smith Arthur Leslie Stotter 1916 Andred Woods Bingham, Jr. Charles Carleton Hitchcock Franklin Piper Samuel Ernest Cutler Edward Dana Knight Harry William Wallace Karl Eugene Dimick Douglas Morey John Fowler Gile f191J Allan Zabriskie 1 JI. ,V 1 ,TI EU. E.: I -,n13'1'1,i .. I .' ff' JC ' 'f F, If -:ff H 11 .. L1 1 .1 . ,.I, 1 1. - .,:-19,5 11, 1- , ,1.11.,.111 .,1' -- - I -. If , I.,.JI. ,J 'L I' 1' ,1.N - 1L,. .,- . HT -5 '111 ,I-'.1 - ' I . 1 , 1. ' I K1 1 1 II ' ? I II 1 -'1-EE ' ' 11-'I ,YIJ-II , 'I .-1 1,1 I . - 11. 111 I - -- . 'f:11,1f' 11 51' If Y 111. Q-1-- 1 . 1. II1I..II1- IIE: .1 .IE -1- .I,.I 1 111, . -1 -I- 41 -- -1 ff 'fn Ie - ., .- +1-.1.I . I II , - 1 I .1 H11 -I-. 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I 1' '-. .1 . .,- 1 1,,1, II I 1 1 11 -' 1, 1 211 Y' 1. 1, I ,Q-.1-'z . .1.. .. . I 11 I 11' 711 115 :ul ' -3'I1l1 AI' 1 2 1- ' -1' ji' 1?Gq-JJQ Muff!-2 1 - 1111 111 ' 3 41g ,, '111 D Helium gr -A-14IN '5 '1 -JJI11,.I3.ctIIII E154 -1 W1 -r' '-'r1J1'1 LW ' LF' fn! ,,5I'-C1 'F 1 111... ,- , --gf -1.- Elf I. I :II11I..1,I1I.I I . . - A 3.3 11 1I,I. 1. ,I-If-11 - . I-.,,-,I, . 1-1. .. 1 1. t. '- 'II1 1 I.. --'1:Lfl'l' 2115, -I1 .. .1 A .,.,I,g, III, . I. I. J. 1 I 1151. ,..-A - : rv- '1- - ,..1-ugq h , 11. 111 1- ' 1S- -11:--in V, G - I fp I-' 1 ' 1 . rx 1. 1 A 61-1-Tf T--521-'1 1 xv. . .3 5. '- ,L X'E.':,5'? -1. if .. 4 - A ,,,fI 1-1.I--II113I-I5 JI: ' . 4 ' 5- I .1 .1..I,I..,1 ng :I-'Qi-2',!1'2,'Wi fIi 1 .I5II.IIg.,. ,G1 -- . - . 5 IIII.II III I 11... ,1, 4:51. 1 .1 I ,I,1-I1 MT I, . I -'IIa.f, ' r I-21 .I.,.I. I -.11.1--- 1 I 1 . .1, a. . .. .Ig -II, sm , I .I I,I IIII- If .r , 11 .1 13 1 -1-1-11 1- 1?-11'1---11,14 45 , ,,.1,I MI .1 .,, 1 , I -- 1 , ., 1.... 1 4 I II .-.. .II 11 .11' 1 1 -1 1 1 . A11 115-1'. - . 1. 1. . . .IIUA , .I - - 11' ' ' .111 ,,, .,, II1..1I .- 1-11.1 .- 7-1 . ' ' 1-1-1 x1.-11---. ' H.: .- . .:' 'I1' I 1- . IIPI,.I1 . 1. 1- f- 1 ' 1 1X, .-it 17 1 1 - ' .,1.. .j.1 I . I . , 1. ,- .- 11 1.1 . . .- 1 ' fi' ' , ' -'1 . 1 1 V I .,-V , 1.- ' '1,1 1- 1 1' -f - 2 .. -. 'F Q ' 11 1 11I- 1 . ' III I 1 . I . 1-LII 11 I . . I I 1 . 1 . 1 1 . 1 . I. . I, 1. .- ,Q1 III.. . ,, , 1 11 . .',-r . . lr: III.. . 11 111 ' 1 . III 1 -'. .. ,: .11' 11- : 355 IE-' -' -In - 1-1 -. M11 L.: . g AT' V' :'fII1nf 5-:L I . 'ivh -. ' 'A .N I. II KI 11 .-L, . ,,11- ,' TZ' 1 -A ,T -' 25- 'I'-iiyfl. . 11 - -1,1 111 II .. I- I 1 I ,If-. '?'.'1 ,I1,',I I ,. .. . ' '11 'I J- 5'-. -4 1 ', 1-:5 :'r..J- . 1 - , L.: - -. 1,1-pf?-II. ., , . -,J - --I -' - 1-141 1.-... .1 - .1 1 , ,FI ,If 3'-gffz.. 1 ,.1 - .1 . .-111. -- i:'g'ej1. , I.. Il-. -'11 ., ' f my ' '1 F f 'tn , 1' III I I 11 . I , , I V. ,f-1.-. . 11,II , ' 1:5 J.- 1,11 1'-ri 'GJ . 1 uf -1.11 L 'sg--. .Jg 1, A 111111 IJ 111 1- I - -I 51.3 . -,,,1.- 1 a... 1,1 Q,J5'igiI - -1-1 111- 1-J: , , 11:31. ff- J 11 1' 'f'..- 4 mu: g1'3-1L'jc,I,, ,' ' -f Im Iii I11:f I I.: .H - - 1 1-v.I Jnlgfry,-IQEJ1 1. - ,1 -1 1:..1Ig-'II 1-Z-.1-:L 1. JII' - '1 I I 'E -' T.l1 1T. ?:f?1-.: 11.-..,! - .,31'a.1f.-.QI 1 112.315 1 . 11 1.1 , 'Wiki-.-i,i --III -1 . , - .l,,I,' I' ,1f,I'I , I 41- 1I' :I 3:37-'-1.-'I II Ijl , .-151g gi Ig '-,:-.W'1j,I- , 31. -1 '-' '111 ', ' I 1 !f.:'FII,1'5.iiTLEPQ54!5 fl' Wi gh-I Ifgilif. 1 1 111.1115-13.-.vf.:1I,pe:f - 11 - :lf'L'-.1'g. F51 1' :F . ' 1 ,ni-TJ I T5::j1.LLQ ' A' -1 ,119-I 21255 fri' FIN f'- V 5 57-fi' 1 UW? - 1 Q-5131! .iff - -f 1 1' 51Lfa,F 2'1-' , . II I.5I9'gIIIII:.II1'II.II...,E fI1.E..II..I I,I. IFII . fl--52,11 -:TL 1. VII: f1 IES--1. , 1 1 15,211 I I 1 1 1 1,1-Q15 ' 111, ,311 1, 1 6 1 1 '-' 1. hw - -fs. -515-Amir ' 1+,f-is 1 Vik 1 -H .1249 I'f IEPITI I 'f gl 15's-FICJ' 157 -1- .:Ig,-1 1. ', Y Q .--'-111-1x 11 H 1 1' I 1II II ,I IIILQI I,,T --1 E' ft-g'J.I.I -SL . ' 11 I I -I , I FQ II? gf , I,I , . 1115.1111I'I1.im1gI.-MI. 1 -F SW' if.: :fn-f'--1 1i U 'Y f 1 'i :Qi-F 1 1:2 '- 1 1f 3l.:-I 5 -' .q',qWfIf I 1 11,1 11:1 1.-1fl 1111I5, Ifr 1 1 '- Ti'-1 ,I ,1-J. I5-. ,151 'L 'J 37- 5 1 Q EIA., 1 lq 1 114 'bi 111 113 ni ' Ijl 1 1 31-'111 1 11 M1174 --411.1 5 - fl' ff' rr -I :I 1 vw - X W , 'X ,, 'lv ' Tw-S. if 7 551: a-f '. IX I C 'Jai -:QFJ ' 1 N Q. U' V ' zw u v- 'sw ,,.. f . 15X 5555! I M f in Qgx Xxx .RX- X ., Mfiffg? , J- , X Zf UI x1xM N mm.. zmfm, 'N . 1. ' 1-'txfwfffw ' 4 M S .fN ,z,4 - - 4 Q5 W I ,- ffl-IE g mtv. gqwgg 19... M Alpha Evita ljhi Dartmouth Chapter Established 1 846 Fratres in Doctoribus Prof. Gabriel Campbell Prof. C. F. Emerson Prof. A. K. Hardy Fratres Ray Lloyd Bennett George Brewer McClary Harvey Clark Mcclary Franklin Cleveland Orton Joseph Henry Bachelcler George Arthur Boggs Edward Newman Giles Arthur Edwin Gillis William Charles Hands, Jr. Fred Child Robert Frothingham, Jr. Arthur Holmes Leonard. Jr. Norville Livingston Milmore Prof. E. F. Langley Prof. S. Reeves Inst. W. R. Gray in Universitate 1913 1914 1915 ll95j Somerville Pinkney Tuck, Jr. Charles Dana Waterman Walter Harvey Nolan Ronald Millar Henry August Koelsch, Jr. Frank Albert Llewellyn Marshall Woolley Picken Samuel Dewitt Sheldon Alexander John Marshall Tuck Meybert Mullin Voyle Dixon Rector Franklin H. Rohrs Walter F. Wanger VOL. Lvi A g- 1914 is Hamilton Columbia Yale Amherst Brunonian Hudson Bowdoin Dartmouth Peninsular Rochester Williams Manhattan Middletown Kenyon Union Cornell Phi Kappa Johns Hopkins Minnesota Toronto Chicago Montreal Wisconsin California Illinois Alpha Betta 1511i Founded at Hamilton College 1832 Roll of Chapters Hamilton College Columbia University Yale University Amherst College Brown University Adelbert University Bowdoin College Dartmouth College University of Michigan - University of Rochester Williams College College of the City of N Wesleyan University Kenyon College Union College Cornell University Trinity College Johns Hopkins University University of Minnesota University of Toronto Chicago University McGill University University of Wisconsin University of California University of Illinois C196 ew York 1832 1836 1836 1836 1837 1841 1841 1846 1846 1851 1851 1855 1856 1858 1859 1869 1877 1889 1892 1893 1893 1897 1902 1908 1912 X I Il Q, my 3152322353131 Z.2 :igErigE32:1fE1Ei-' A rg-:-3,-34-I-, P k g,-1-112521:-- .-tl'-' jx , H 35:-'-. .V s ii ,, ,,,., -,gg-, 0 gf , , ? 1 U 1 I IIW Eff XJ l K 'E' x Km Q0 y Oi 6 JEV Q-,LV H5 Qsfumlg , fff I Dirlrll Dlzflu Q 4 T E SM, 1 . 4 X if' 4 zgw 2 9' 5' ,QQ,Q i'S2?f:111 QQ' ad . amp. 1,4145 VOL. LVI - 1 Q 14, y Evita Kappa Epailnn Pi Chapter Prof. F. Colby Dr. Cl. D. Frost Harold R. Hastings Dr. P. Bartlett Dr. E. I-I. Carlton Established l 85 3 Fratres in Doctoribus Fratres in Ur Prof. Craven Laycock Prof. G. D. Lord Prof. C. A. Proctor be C. P. Chase C. P. Richardson Fratres in Universitate Ralph Eugene Bauman Edward Lawrence Brown Carl Edward Buck Rockwood Spurr Edwards Leonard Camburn Martin I9l3 Harold Cleveland McAllister Myron Arthur Myers John Azro Prouty l-larry Hodges Semmes Charles Stanley Stone Howard Seely Teall Collin Wells l9I4 Richard Joseph Shaw Barlow - John Norman Hazen Richard l-lyde Cutler Robert Newton l-logsett Samuel Augustus Fuller Charles William Francis O'Connor l-lowell Knight Hallett James Bartlett Ramae l-larold Andrew Stiles l9l5 Eric Newell Barbour l-larry Salmy Biclcford Isaac White Carpenter, Jr. Albert Stanley Llewellyn C1995 Cteorge Edward Read Dudley Thayer Rogers Adam Andrew Sutcliffe Lawrence Atwood Whitney 7 Phi Theta Xi Sigma Gamma Psi Chi Upsilon Beta Kappa Eta Lambda Pi Alpha Alpha Omicron Epsilon Rho Tau Mu Nu Beta Phi Iota Phi Chi Psi Phi Gamma Phi Psi Omega Beta Chi Delta Chi Phi Gamma Gamma Beta Theta Zeta Alpha Chi Phi Epsilon Sigma Tau Delta Delta Tau Lambda Alpha Phi Delta Kappa Tau Alpha Sigma Rho Delta Pi Rho Delta ffl-IE: , 1 1 voL.Lv1 A E 1914 Brita liamaa iipuilnn Founded at Yale University 1844 Roll of Chapters Yale University Bowdoin College Colby University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama University of Mississippi Brown University University of North Carolina Miami University University of Virginia Kenyon College Dartmouth College Middlebury College University of Michigan Williams College Lafayette College Hamilton College Colgate University University of the City of New York University of Rochester Central University of Kentucky Rutgers College De Pauw University Wesleyan University Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute t Western Reserve University Cornell University Syracuse University Columbia University University of California Trinity College University of Minnesota Massachusetts Institute of Technology Chicago University Tulane University University of Toronto University of Pennsylvania McGill University Leland Stanford University University of Illinois University of Wisconsin C2001 1844 1845 1846 1847 1847 1850 1850 1850 1852 1852 1852 1853 1853 1855 1855 1855 1856 1856 1856 1856 1856 1857 1861 1866 1867 1867 1868 1870 1871 1874 1876 1879 1889 1890 1893 1895 1898 1899 1901 1902 1904 1906 6, ,YL 5 f 5, . , Pri A i X ff'-M V-I ,Mya iw Lena. y X - .AW- Yin ' Trix 'mxi.C , . i'fM fWfi, f x , ,' :Y I f, - ,, J 4217 , U A - Q-' W, Q ,af Q g ' if -JZ X f 1 '. X '1 wi A 4' ug 1, n ggi , MLA Ai Q.L9wf??ffv fg NSF? ,,-,fJ,, Q jr! E. ku- XQX ,.j. ff . xii XB. xi . Dz:e1m,B7v.z7a, IHE mm QEGW 1914 M 51112121 Brita Qlhi Omicron Deuteron Charge Established 1869 Fratres in Doctoribus 1 Prof. Charles Darwin Adams Prof. George Ray Wicker Prof. Herbert Darling Foster Prof. John lVlerrill Poor Fratres in Universitate 1913 David Ernest Adams Joseph Paul Donahue Walter John Haley Charles Shaw Batchelcler Edmund William Bowler John Pollard Bowler James Herbert Brackett Charles Worden Cumisky Edgar Atherton Curtis Frank Eugene Dennen Robert Gordon Guest Russell Campbell Johnson William Henry Mason David Beale Morey Emmett Pishon Kendall Winship 1914 Clyfton Chandler Francis Freeman Jones John Tufts Peppard 1915 Roger Winship C2037 John Clifton Kimball Russell Blake Livermore Philip King Murdock Donald Shapleigh Page Leon Parker Tuck Alan Frederick Waite Clarence Leroy Wanamaker 'Q VOL. LVI 1914 5 Zeta Epsilon Eta Kappa Iota Xi Nu Phi Chi Psi Omicron Deuteron Beta Pi Deuteron Rho Deuteron Nu Deuteron Mu Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Theta Deuteron Iota Deuteron Tau Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Chi Deuteron Delta Deuteron Zeta Deuteron Eta Deuteron Kappa Deuteron Xi Deuteron Lambda Deuteron Flhvta Evita Glhi Founded at Union College 1848 Roll of Chapters Brown University College of William and Mary Bowdoin College Tufts College Harvard University Hobart College University of Virginia Lafayette College University of Rochester Hamilton College Dartmouth College Cornell University College of the City 'of New York Columbia University Lehigh University Amherst College University of Michigan Massachusetts Institute of Technology Williams College University of Minnesota V University of Wisconsin George Washington University University of California McGill University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois University of Washington University of Toronto C2045 1853 1853 1854 1856 1856 1857 1857 1866 1867 1868 1869 1870 1881 1883 1884 1883 1889 1890 1891 1892 1895 1896 1900 1901 1903 1908 1912 1912 4 ,?-4- ,ggfF..--Q-.. X7 4 xg' Q ' i ,W h x A if '63 ' L DV Q- Vw Ii i ,.,L A A - GSA-Y E .-:- ,B-JA? .5 f,rVV X - , ' - . - ' 7 wx, ,fi 01 x 4 gi f s, .JN v voL.Lv1 1914 1Hhi Evita Tllheta New Hampshire Alpha Established I-884 Fratres in Doctoribus . Prof. Frank H. Dixon Inst. Arthur Bond Nleservey Fratres in Urbe A. Fairfield Hunter F. A. Musgrove Fratres in Universitate l9l3 John Borland William Martin Gibson Frank Valentine Dudensing Charles Stanley McDaniel Pierce Webster l9l4 Leland Story Bullis Roscoe Plimpton DeWitt Paul Howe Garland Dell Leech August Stein Atwood Ralph Wolcott Brown -1915 Tracy Cushman Brownell Paul Jerimiah Doyle Frank Caleb Elcstrom Harold Stimpson Ellms Paul Swan Gibson Wendell Howard l 91 6 Winthrop James Snow James Chamberlain Taft Edward Harlan Wilson George Marsh Webster Carl Knickerbocker Gish Charles l-lenry Ingram Kenneth William McPherson Richard Wilson Redfield William Riggs Reynolds, Jr. Edward Joseph Shea John Maxon Wilcox Woolworth Rudolph Rex Reeder, Jr. C2079 'Q voL.Lv1 1914 ight Evita Ehrta Founded at Miami University 1848 Miami University Indiana University Central College Wabash College University of Wisconsin Northwestern University Butler University Ohio Wesleyan University Franklin College Hanover College University of Michigan University of Chicago De Pauw University Ohio University Missouri University Knox College University of Georgia Emory College lowa Wesleyan University Mercer University Cornell University Lafayette College University of California University of Virginia Randolph-Macon College University of Nebraska Pennsylvania College Washington and Jefferson College Vanderbilt University University of Alabama Lombard College Alabama Polytechnic Institute Allegheny College University of Vermont Dickinson College Westminster College University of Minnesota Roll of Chapters 1848 1849 1850 1850 1857 1859 1859 1860 1860 1860 1864 1865 1868 1868 1870 1871 1871 1871 1871 1872 1872 1873 1873 1873 1874 1875 1875 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1879 1879 1880 1880 1881 University of Iowa University of Kansas University of the South University of Texas Ohio State University University of Pennsylvania Union University Columbia University Colby University Dartmouth College University of North Carolina Williams College Southwestern University Syracuse University Washington and Lee University Lehigh University Amherst College Brown University Tulane University Washington University Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Illinois Purdue University Case School of Applied Science University of Cincinnati University of Washington Kentucky State College McGill University University of Colorado Georgia School of Technology Pennsylvania State College University of Toronto University of South Dakota Washburn College North Dakota University Iowa State College Colorado College l208J 1882 1882 1883 1883 1883 1883 1883 1884 1884 1884 1885 1886 1886 1887 1887 1887 1888 1889 1889 1891 1891 1893 1893 1896 1898 1900 1901 1902 1902 1902 1904 1906 1906 1910 1912 1912 1912 f x EMF NZM , 'T' 0 423.-., , , Q5 QQ N, 44' .,,, . ,,. 55 35 344 rx S' 1' It J rf -f 4 C VOL. LV1 A IQ14. GM y 'ima Tlhrta 1Hi Alpha Omega Chapter Established H389 Fratres in Doctoribus i Prof. Cox Prof. Sherman Prof. Lyman Fratres in Urbe Stephen Chase Elden Bennett Hartshorn Nathaniel Lewis Goodrich Lewis Albert Partridge Charles Jordon, 2nd Peb. Langill David Storrs Fratres in Universitate William Sampson Appleyard Howard Arthur Barends Joseph John Barnett Leon Gillette Bigelow William Rea Bronk Thomas Donald Cunningham John Colburn Holmes Robert Leyborn Johnson George Francis Convery Leon Pickering Hobbs Arthur Charles Estep Gail lrwin Gardner , l9I3 914 Wallace Edwin McCoy John Stephen Macdonald Leonard Richardson 'Manley Randolph Riedell Henry Allaire Taylor Thomas Willard Towler Chester Adrian Vander Pyl Sherman Broomhead Ward George Russell Jones Harold Adams Pease Raymond Harris Trott Harold Griffith Van Riper Otis Wadsworth Hovey 915 Philip Knox Alexander Robert Cutting Bigelow Andreas Henry Tomfohrde 9l6 Frederick Witter Bailey Chester Albert Pudrith John Noyes Colby John Boersig Saunders C2115 voL.Lv1 A 1914 '-Qi Erin Zilhvta Iii Founded at Miami University 1839 Miami University Cincinnati University Western Reserve University Ohio University Washington and Jefferson College De Pauw University Indiana University University of Michigan Wabash College Central University Brown University Hampden-Sidney College University of North Carolina Ohio Wesleyan University Hanover College Knox College University of Virginia Davidson College Bethany College Beloit College University of Iowa Wittenburg College Westminster College , Iowa Wesleyan University University of Chicago Denison University Washington University University of Wooster University of Kansas University of Wisconsin Northwestern University Dickinson College Boston University Johns Hopkins University University of California Kenyon College Rutgers College Roll of Chapters 1 1839 1841 1841 1841 1842 1845 1845 1845 1846 1848 1849 1850 1852 1853 1853 1855 1855 1858 1860 1862 1866 1867 1867 1868 1868 1868 1869 1872 1872 1873 1873 1874 1876 1877 1879 1879 1879 12121 Cornell University Stevens Institute of Technology Saint Lawrence University University of Maine University of Pennsylvania Colgate University Union University Columbia University Amherst College Vanderbilt University University of Texas Ohio State University University of Nebraska Pennsylvania State College University of Denver University of Syracuse Dartmouth College University of Minnesota Wesleyan University University of Missouri Lehigh University Yale University Stanford University University of West Virginia University of Colorado Bowdoin College Washington State University University of Illinois Purdue University Case School of Applied Science Iowa State University University of Toronto University of Oklahoma Tulane University Colorado School of Mines University of Oregon South Dakota University 1879 1879 1879 1879 1880 1880 1881 1881 1883 1884 1885 1885 1888 1888 1888 1889 1889 1890 1890 1890 1891 1892 1894 1900 1900 1900 1901 1902 1903 1905 1905 1906 1907 1908 1908 1909 1912 ' ' X Q v , , ,idF?' , V 61 -sf' i f . I l ' ' E L-E E l X ' f, ' X X ,iw W ' i 'm ' LW ?' wwf wx , A , 1 1,5 me S15 N 0 ' 5 IN N NINFE ,l7l70L1nI7JlI'hl voL Lvi l 1914 . ' 1 Sigma Glhi Eta Eta Chapter Established 1 893 Fratres in Doctoribus V Prof. V. Hazen Prof. C. E. Bolser Prof. A. H. Licklider Inst. F. E.. Austin Prof. C. A. Holden Fratres in Universitate Henry Elkins Atwood Leslie Orrell Ashton Clayton Alger Fairbanks Alfred Kohn Foreman Paul Stanley Harmon Charles Frederic Fraser Hazen Beecher Hinman Augustine John Kelly Paul Witmer Loudon Gilbert Lincoln lVlcDonough Frederic Drew Day Whitney Morris Frye ' Everett Joseph Graves Channing Ellis Harwood Reginald Frederick Chutter Oliver Paul Corwin 1913 1914 1915 1916 Wright Hugus John Guy Nelson Henry Hovey Nutt Charles Smith Riley Philip Allein Sauer Richard Edward Pritchard William Bainton Slater Ernest Clarence Swain Oliver Andrew Wylde Bertram Cogswell Wood David Barton Kinne, Jr. Elmer Boynton Merrill Philip Hughes Pelletier Charles Franklin Woodcock John Alden Pelletier Edward Creaser Riley Roland Studley Wass 12155 'Q VoL. LV1 3 8 1914 Alpha Gamma Eta Lambda Xi Omicron Psi Theta Kappa Epsilon Rho Zeta Phi Mu Omega Chi Beta Delta Delta Phi Phi Zeta Zeta Theta Theta Kappa Kappa Alpha Gamma Alpha Zeta Alpha Eta Alpha Theta Zeta Psi Alpha Epsilon Alpha Iota Alpha Lambda Alpha Nu Alpha Xi Alpha Beta Alpha Omicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Alpha Upsilon Alpha Phi Alpha Chi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Alpha Alpha Eta Eta Lambda Lambda Nu Nu Mu Mu Xi Xi Omicron Omicron Rho Rho Tau Tau Upsilon Upsilon Psi Psi Omega Omega Beta Gamma Beta Delta Beta Eta Beta Theta Beta Iota Delta Sigma Qlht Founded at Maimi University 1855 Roll of Chapters Miami University Ohio Wesleyan University University of Mississippi Indiana University De Pausv University Dickinson College University of Virginia Pennsylvania College Bucknell University George Washington University Butler College Washington and Lee University Lafayette College Denison University Northwestern University Hanover College University of Wooster Purdue University University of Pennsylvania Central University University of Michigan University of Illinois Ohio State University Beloit College State University of Iowa Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Cincinnati University of Nebraska Illinois Wesleyan University University of Wisconsin University of Texas University of Kansas University of California Tulane University Albion College Lehigh University University of Minnesota University of South California Cornell University Pennsylvania State College Vanderbilt University Leland Stanford, Jr., University Hobart College Dartmouth College Kentucky State College Columbia University West Virginia University University of the State of Missouri University of Chicago University of Maine Washington University University of YVashington Syracuse University University of Arkansas Colorado College University of Montana Case School of Applied Science University of Pittsburg University of Oregon University of Georgia C2165 1855 1855 1857 1858 1859 1859 1860 1863 1864 1864 1865 1866 1867 1868 1869 1871 1873 1875 1875 1876 1877 1881 1882 1882 1882 1882 1882 1883 1883 1884 1884 1884 1886 1886 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1891 1891 1892 1893 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1902 1902 1903 1901 1905 1906 1906 1909 1909 1910 1910 f 1 N f d' Q ffm g i g! t t 5-id . , f f Jn .X ws, V ,,, mu- Drab: f1..Rh 121 , 'VW VOL LVI A IQ 14- . f V ' sg . P1 . , a 1Hhi liappa Hai New Hampshire Alpha Chapter. Established l896 Frater in Urbe Charles Howard Dudley ' Fratres in Universitate ' 1913 Earle Stanley Bidwell Henry Montgomery Hamilton William Hartley Carey Frederick Sailly Platt, Jr. Clarence Lewis von Taclcey John Remsen Carl Elliot Shumway 1914 Howard Ellis Bowman Loring Payson Nichols Charles lVlali Claeys Martin Johnson Remsen Josiah Perry Parsons Enders McClumpha Voorhees Paul Livingstone Perkins Winthrop Wilcox l9l5 Paul Burnett Berry Everett Carr Lamson Harold Hume Budd John Francis Moloney Gerald Sharp Frary William Nathaniel Rogers Julian William Hall Paul Emerson Sargeant Harold Locke Smith 1916 Edgar Asa Crarer Charles Sumner Creesy Robert Landon lVlcCammon 12195 MVOLQLVI If A 81914 lghi liappa 1551 Founded at Washington and Jefferson College Pennsylvania Alpha Virginia Alpha Pennsylvania Beta Pennsylvania Gannna Pennsylvania Epsilon Virginia Beta Mississippi Alpha Pennsylvania Zeta Pennsylvania Eta Ohio Alpha Illinois Alpha Illinois Beta Indiana Alpha Ohio Beta Iowa Alpha New York Alpha Pennsylvania Theta Indiana Beta New York Gamma Wisconsin Alpha Kansas Alpha Michigan Alpha Pennsylvania Iota Maryland Alpha Ohio Delta Wisconsin Gamma New York Beta New York Epsilon Minnesota Beta Pennsylvania Kappa WVest Virginia Alpha California Beta New York Zeta Nebraska Alpha Massachusetts Alpha New Hampshire Alpha California Gannna Indiana Delta Tennessee Delta Iihode Island Alpha Illinois Delta Texas Alpha Ohio Epsilon Pennsylvania Lainbda Roll of Chapters Washington and Jefferson Colle University of Virginia Allegheny College Bucknell University Pennsylvania College Washington and Lee University University of Mississippi Dickinson College Franklin and Marshall College Ohio Wesleyan University Northwestern University University of Chicago De Pauw University Wittenberg College State University of Iowa Cornell University Lafayette College Indiana State University Columbia University University of IVisconsin Ifniversity of Kansas University of Michigan University of Pennsylvania Johns Hopkins University Ohio State University Beloit College Syracuse University Colgate University University of Minnesota Swarthmore College University of 1Vest Virginia ge Leland Stanford, Jr., University Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute Nebraska University Amherst College Dartmouth College University of California Purdue University Vanderbilt University Brown University University of Illinois I'nive1'sity of Texas Case School of Applied Science Pennsylvania State 12205 1852 1852 1853 1855 1855 1855 1855 1857 1859 1860 1861 1864 1865 1865 1866 1867 1869 1869 1869 1872 1875 1876 1876 1877 1879 1880 1881 1883 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1893 1895 1895 1896 1899 1901 1901 1902 1 901 1904 1906 1912 f . 1IQ, ff? K ,Q 4 X 5',:'5!5 M 1 ' l -N, fr' 5 ,ff x lffgg ,, f. 'i'i'9 Nm 7 -f 1. . . - -1 L1-3 ' - ' fy -'.-' 555-H , ' 1' fa' E.:-gl-Q' bm' ! N-S if - JL f 5 .'-.' x f f 2 i f iw! , ff 6196 fy I ffiftclfg , f voL.Lv1 1914 Ighi Gamma Evita Delta Nu Chapter Established 1901 Fratres in Doctoribus C Inst. Fred Donald Carpenter , Dr. George S. Graham Inst. Peter Stauh Dow Prof. William l-l. Murray Fratres in Universitate 1913 Frederick Arlington Alden Norman Bennie Catterall Lionel F all Pennell Nutting Ahorn Ralph John Barke Carlton Kerns Brownell Harold Alvin Castle James Harrison Cavanaugh Samuel Dodge Cole George Donald Bridge Lester Davis Castle Arthur Irving Donahue Merrill Haskell 1914 ' 1915 Alan Bartlett Shepard Waterman Goulding Warren Chester Wescott Philip Francis Coe Sigard Stanton Larmon John Mumford Palmer Rufus Lasher Sisson. Jr. George Horton Stickney Allan Alonzo Tukey Clarendon Mower Cortland Myers, Jr. Joseph Prescott Pittman Raymond Field Russell , Arthur Phillips Williams Edmund Francis Carey William Lawrence Cleaves Charles Clifford Gammons Antonio Frederick Garcia Nathaniel Putnam Harris 1916 Carl Nestor Holmes George Paslield Kreider Park Jerrold Larmon David Baker Miller Alexander Morrison Olin Robinson Smith 12235 'Q vo1..Lv1 , 0 1914 Alpha Theta Lan1bda Nu Sigma Omicron Pi Tau Psi Omega Alpha Deuteron Gamma Deuteron Zeta Deuteron Theta Deuteron Zeta Nu Deuteron Xi Deuteron Omicron Deuteron Delta Xi Beta Delta Xi Pi Deuteron Rho Deuteron Sigma Deuteron Tau Deuteron Sigma Lambda Deuteron Alpha Phi Zeta Phi Beta Chi Theta Psi Gannna Phi Kappa Nu Iota Mu Mu Sigma Pi Iota Kappa Tau Rho Chi Beta Mu Nu Epsilon Alpha Chi Tau Alpha Chi Mu Chi Iota Lambda Nu Chi Mu Omega Mu Sigma Tau Delta Nu Sigma Nu Pi Rho Chi Upsilon Lambda Iota Lambda Sigma Alpha Iota Epsilon Omicron Chi Sigma Hhi Gamma Brita Founded at Washington and Jefferson College 1848 Roll of Chapters Washington and Jefferson College University of Alabama ' De Pauw University Bethel College Pennsylvania College University of Virginia Allegheny College Hanover College Wabash College Columbia University Illinois University Knox College Washington and Lee University Ohio Wesleyan University Indiana State University Yale University Western Reserve University Ohio State University X University of California University of Pennsylvania Bucknell University Gettysburg College University of Kansas Wooster University Lafayette College University of Texas Wittenberg College Denison University University of Michigan William Jewell College William Jewell College Lehigh University Colgate University ,Pennsylvania State College Cornell University Massachusetts Institute of Technology University of Minnesota . Worcester Polytechnic Institute University of Tennessee Richmond College Johns Hopkins University New York University Amherst College Trinity College Union College University University University University University University Dartmouth of Wisconsin of Illinois of Nebraska of Missou1'i of Maine of Washington College Syracuse University Brown University University of Chicago Purdue University Leland Stanford University Iowa State College Oregon University University of Colorado 12245 1848 1855 1856 1856 1858 1859 1860 1864 1866 1866 1866 1867 1868 1869 1871 1875 1876 1878 1879 1881 1882 1882 1882 1882 1883 1883 1884 1885 1885 1886 1886 1887 1887 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 1890 1890 1891 1892 1893 1893 1893 1893 1897 1898 1899 1899 1900 1901 1901 1902 1902 1902 1902 1907 1910 1910 WNW fg -JY X QW f Ill 'lllllllln mmllllllll Illllllnm wx N 413 i5'L: II fini' QX XX V W X 1 3 .1 I ' ll UlH1IIlI I1 :52 'QW' TAU ffl-II-L r tcm aea Evita Elan Brita Gamma Gamma Chapter Established 1901 Frater in Urbe Prof. Norman Everett Gilbert Frater in Urbe Howard Merrill Clute Fratres in Universitate Kenneth Livingstone Baker Maurice Leland Blanchard Donald Putnam Evans Henry Wadleigh Merrill Alexander Caldwell Robeson John Joseph Scarry Dalton Graf Baldwin James Calvin Blythe Ellsworth Brewer Buck Robert Flanders John McAvoy Harlow Albert Murray Austin Leo Whiting Burt Russell Demming Chase Robert Gillies Clarke Hugh Coy Courtright Paul Edmund Dailey Roger Earle Morse Whitley Peterson McCoy 1913 1914 1915 1916 12263 Raymond Morales Schulte Bernard Spillane Earle Cushing Stanley Warde Wilkins Lincoln Squires Wilson Marc Snowell Wright Alden Llewellyn Littlefield Edward Taylor Papson Zotique Wilfred Therrien John Russell Willard George Young, Jr. George Edward Dyke Raymond Thomas King Allan Campbell Livingstone Arthur Edward Sterling Francis Wayland Stone, Jr. Herbert Victor Widmann Howard Bruce Parker Walter Raymond York VOL LVI 1 1914 ., , ' A si' . As. -y Gamma Beta Alpha Mu Kappa Beta Alpha Beta Beta Beta Upsilon Beta Psi Rho Beta Lambda Nu Delta Beta Zeta Epsilon Upsilon Psi Omicron Chi Beta Epsilon Zeta Beta Theta Beta Eta Beta Kappa Pi Lambda Beta Iota Beta Gamma Beta Mu Beta Nu Beta Xi Beta Omicron Beta Pi Brita Elan Evita Founded at Bethany College 1859 Roll of Chapters Washington and Jefferson College Ohio University Allegheny College Ohio Wesleyan University Hillsdale College Indiana University De Pauw University University of Illinois Wabash College Stevens. Institute of Technology Lehigh University Lafayette College University of Michigan Butler College, University of Indianapolis Albion College Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Wooster University University of Iowa Kenyon College Emory College Adelbert College University of the South University of Minnesota University of Colorado University of Mississippi Vanderbilt University University of Virginia University of Wisconsin Tufts College Massachusetts Institute of Technology Tulane University Cornell University Northwestern University 12271 1861 1862 1863 1866 1867 1870 1871 1872 1872 1874 1874 187-4 1875 1875 1876 1879 1879 1880 1881 1882 1882 1883 1883 1883 1886 1886 1888 1888 1889 1889 1889 1890 1893 Y ' no VOL. Lvl A 5 1914 Q Beta Rho Beta Tau Beta Phi Beta Chi Phi Gmega Beta Omega Gamma Alpha Gamma Delta Gamma Beta Gamma Gamma Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta Gamma Theta Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Xi Gamma Omicron Beta Delta Gamma Pi Leland Stanford, Jr., University University of Nebraska Ohio State University Brown University Washington and Lee University University of Pennsylvania University of California University of Chicago University of West Virginia Armour Institute of Technology Dartmouth College Columbia College Wesleyan University George Washington University Baker University University of Washington University of Maine University of Texas University of Missouri Purdue University University of Cincinnati Syracuse University University of Georgia Iowa State College , r22Sl 1893 1894 1894 1896 1896 1897 1898 1898 1900 1901 1901 1902 1902 1903 1903 1903 1903 1904 1905 1907 1909 1910 1911 1911 X11 ACL ff XJ ,FL gud., 5.44 I'fff?9fhZW?'f'A 'X ' ' f N v r - s z 1 ' X K , ' SWK., X5 N X 'x X ff l-1 Qlhi Chi Chapter Established 1902 Fratres in Doctoribus K Prof. John Osborn Polak Prof. Frank Arthur Updyke Morris Huntington Cone Joseph Young Cheney William Lincoln Davis Donald Bean Gilchrist Theodore Herbert Haskell George Randall Batcheller, Donald Church Burnham Joseph Lawrence Day Frank Herbert Donovan Charles Kenneth Fuller Vincent Gerard Byers Leo Morris Murphy Frater in Urbe Lewis Pease Warren Fratres in Universitate 1913 Clarence Coit Meleney Dean Albert Munsey Thomas Atwill Nichols Arthur Faulkner Richardson Edward Lawrence Robinson Russell Lewis Shepler 1914 jr. 1915 Jesse Hervey I-lubel Walter Beach Humphrey Theodore Main Fletcher Hatch Colby Gorham Parsons Sargent Willard Dunn Robinson james Henry Sisk, Jr. William Bunker Tubby, Jr. x231J nas Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Lambcla Mu Nu Xi Omicron Rho Phi Chi Psi Omega Chi Alpha Sigma Glht Mhz Founded at Princeton University 1824 Roll of Chapters University of Virginia Massachusetts Institute of Technology Emory College Rutgers College I-lampton-Sidney College Franklin and Marshall College University of Georgia Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Ohio State University University of California Stevens Institute of Technology University of Texas Cornell University Yale University Lafayette College Amherst College Dartmouth College Lehigh College Georgia Institute of Technology E Ohio-Wesleyan University of Illinois t2321 1859 1873 1869 1867 1867 1855 1867 1878 1883 1875 1883 1892 1868 1877 1874 1873 1902 1872 1904 1910 1912 11711411 rms, VOL LVI 1, 19 14 Ighi Sigma Kappa Tau Chapter Established 1 905 Frater in Doctoribus Prof. William Patten Fratres in Universitate Ralph Eastman Badger Raymond Henry Ball Clifton Albert Clarke A Andrew Westbrook Comstock 1913 Harold Bradford Enright Robert Ellsworth Firmin Louis Bernard Gale Grenville White Kimball Carlton Kaye Welsh Clarence Kilmer Butler Daniel Baker C-ilbert Francis Derby Hall Albert Crawford Herring 1914 F rank Alexander John Bache-Wiig Samuel Harrison Chamberlain Joseph Baker Comstock Chandler Hunting Foster Irving Russell Gale Philip Hoffman, Jr. Thomas Doliber Harrison, Jr. Porter Hamilton Blaney Robert Clunie, Jr. Edward Thompson Doyle William Arthur Hale 1915 1916 i235J Ralph Henry Kelsey Carl Asa Porter Lawrence Roy Martin Starbuck Henry Winthrop Webber Welsh Woodbury Hough William Chamberlain I-Iuntress Henry Sullivan Marcy George Maurice Parks Reginald Austin Prior Charles Shongood, Jr. Donald Haclcenberg Whitmer Leonard Wakefield Joy Lawrence Collamore Mitchell William Frothingham lVloll Paul Alfred Warren ffl-IE X1 Q Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Epsilon Zeta Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Sigma Tau Upsilon Phi Chi Psi Omega Alpha Deuteron Beta Deuteron Gamma Deuteron light Sigma Mappa Founded at Massachusetts Agricultural College 1873 Roll of Chapters Massachusetts Agricultural College Union University Cornell University West Virginia University Yale University College of the City of New York University of Maryland Columbia University Stevens Institute of Technology Pennsylvania State College George Wasliington University University of Pennsylvania Lehigh University Saint Lawrence University Massachusetts Institute of Technology Franklin and Mairshall College Queen's College Saint Johifs College Dartmouth College Brown University 'Swarthmore College Williams College University of Virginia University of California University of Illinois University of Minnesota . Iowa State University 12361 1873 1888 1889 1891 1893 1896 1897 1897 1899 1899 1899 1900 1901 1902 1902 1903 1903 1903 1905 1906 1900 1906 1907 1909 1910 1910 191 1 429 Gila?-2224 felm, ,el z L VOL LVI xl IQ 14- l 'K 'X I lfnppa Sigma Gamma Epsilon Chapter Established 1905 Frater in Doctoribus Inst. Harry Gilbert Mitchell Fratres in Universitate 191 3 Henry Deshon Abbot 1 George Steele Nelson Gay Evans Truman Twitchell James Oscar Jordan, Jr. Keith Ainsworth Wood Donald Robinson Mason Ralph Sprague Wilder 1914 Thomas Alexander Anderson Ernest Sears Learoyd Charles Aclna Chase Albert Ernst Munkelt Wesley Theodore Engelhorn Carl Oscar Olson Kenneth Grant Ralph Maurice Phelps James Douglass Gregg Jay D. Runkle Winheld Scott Stimson Jones Alfred Richard Taylor 1915 William Gerald Atwood Hillman Barnes Hunnewell Bushrod Hill Campbell Roy MarCh8Hl N0rW0Od R0lJel't I'IB.fI1il1IOI'1 Griffin Cglman I-,gal-gyd Stuart Merriam Hill Paul Milton Vining Dan Frank Waugh 1916 Robert Lake Bartlett John Patrick English Cecil Winfred Fogg Douglass Ray Gordon Charles Raymond James Dan Leslie Lindsley Roswell Foster Magill Gilbert Hutchinson Tapley William Orin Wentworth 62381 VOL.LVI 8 1914 I 1 Zeta Beta Eta Prime Mu Alpha Alpha Alpha Beta Kappa Lambda Alpha Chi Phi Omega Upsilon Tau Chi Psi Iota Gamma Beta Theta Theta Pi Eta Sigma Nu Xi Delta Alpha Gamma Alpha Delta Alpha Zeta Alpha Eta Alpha Kappa Alpha Theta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Lambda Alpha Mu Alpha Nu Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Sigma Alpha Tau 'Kappa Sigma Founded at University of Virginia 1867 Roll of Chapters University of Virginia University of Alabama Trinity College Washington and Lee University University of Maryland Mercer University Vanderbilt University University of Tennessee Lake Forest University Southwestern Presbyterian University University of the South ' Hampden Sidney College University of Texas Purdue University University of Maine Southwestern University Louisiana State University University of Indiana Cumberland University Swarthmore College Randolph Macon College Tulane University William and Mary College University of Arkansas Davidson College University of Illinois Pennsylvania State College University of Michigan George Washington University Cornell University Southwestern Baptist University University of Pennsylvania University of Vermont University of North Carolina Wofford College Wabash College Bowdoin College Ohio State University Georgia School of Technology C2395 1867 1869 1873 1873 1874 1875 1877 1880 1880 1882 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1886 1887 1887 1887 1888 1888 1889 1890 1890 1890 1891 1892 1892 1892 1892 1892 1892 1893 1893 1894 1895 1895 1895 1895 'Q voL.Lv1 ,g A 1914 Alpha Upsilon Alpha Phi Alpha Psi Alpha Omega Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Beta Alpha Beta Delta Gamma Epsilon Zeta Eta Iota Kappa Lambda Nu Mu Xi Omicron Pi Rho Sigma Tau U psilon Phi Beta Psi Beta Chi Beta Omega Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Gamma Alpha Beta Gamma Delta Zeta Epsilon Eta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Millsaps College Bucknell University University of Nebraska William Jewell College Brown University Richmond College Washington and Jefferson Missouri State University 1 University of Wisconsin Leland Stanford, J r., University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Lehigh University New Hampshire State College University of Georgia Kentucky State College University of Minnesota University of California University of DQIIVGI' Dickinson College University of Iowa Washington 'University Baker University North Carolina A. and M. College Case School of Applied Science University of Washington Missouri School of Mines Colorado College University of Oregon University of Chicago Colorado School of Mines Massachusetts State College New York University Dartmouth College 4 Harvard University University of Idaho Syracuse University University of Oklahoma Iowa State University Washington State University Washburn University Denison University C2405 1895 1896 1897 1897 1898 1898 1898 1898 1898 1899 1900 1900 1901 1901 1901 1901 1901 1002 1902 1902 1902 1903 1903 1903 1903 1903 1904 1904 1901 1904 1904 1905 1905 1905 1905 1906 1906 1909 1909 1909 1911 . ,ff L- + Q s We 1 fn 'wsgxikh W 'RP x f Qv2fwge: QQ 0 Q Xfxxoogx ,SB f My if GNN S, Q qs , .,x1 ,.- 'T--, - , ', ,,.'f?, r'jr 'x. Q ' 'Y , ' VS! fi' L .J Q ,ff- . . . , , ,X - ew- 11162,-.'f fm 1' 'Y--ff.:---.gyf 1-ffl J' -rm 1 w-' .H 'Mia .Ji.'1,4?' 1 gg fp. my-' -..,: 4.,--f .xi -f 4 -N X X, -. , an Q 00 'Rf' A fe,P 1 x aff HYQFB ' 'x 1 gin? ,Z'u'f' ,, , he X . K A A,,. A X M rg N .M -V, , we. . . ' ' ' MEL'-Lrf 'ff .1-.,.,7M,,e ,, 1 ,uf .va f'.',f4,A F -44 YP K :gh mf' - 11 Vox X. f 1 N T,-Wi if f f x , 1 ' -sm f Pmnig-,, . , .4 f ,- MEWNH ' 'J' FL, I ' www :PTj':iiEf Qfgi xf 'C-', ffl V52 5' L f ' T .' fi iff? ETP . - WSP-5iQQ'2f 7'gi'A 5525,'..':51 e'l Q4-927fE'AT 3 1-f 'Z ff:s.Qfiaf:'?.T1s5k--f:vs:T?f2i1:'43- H -. 11 . ,RA ,,,g,sq,5fE.:, ,,,,., -f-M gwz' F f jf wg A U9 -fm y, if C ' E-F 15' X. Q 5: W, awk 'f 4- 'Qg iwv' 1 FNZJ ' wfmgfww W H M- , W Y, .. k:1 '..x Q1- ' f:5251:ga.,gfgE fQ?iK555 gEyi 5353? U - 1 F1-fi-f ' zzmkmlyim, , VCL. Lvl L - 1914 Sigma Nu Delta Beta Chapter Established 1907 Fratres in Urbe I John Jackson Baynton Stephen Facley Rasseter Fratres in Universitate 1913 Lewis Irving Corliss Moses Courtwright Ewing Theo Stephen Jewett Howard Stoughton John Craig Baker William Stoughton Currier William Rea Holway Ralph Carleton Jenkins Clarence Warren Pierce George Howard Richardson Carleton Dunbar Fletcher Robert Lynn Fitts Patrick Edward Gear William Alfred Lang George Everett Mott Frederick Lem Pierce Clinton Whittier Greenwood 1914 .1915 1916 Lyman Hinckley Thomas Russell Frank Varney Howard Porter Warren Harold Carmi Robinson Anthony Melville Reed Roger Courtland Rice Paul Cheney Smith Conrad Silas Shumway George Francis Watkins Arthur Eugene Sheldon Edgar Henry Schroeder Gerard Franklin Shaw Carl Leslie Swanson Kendrick Harlow Washburn Carl Frederick Whiteley Ralph Bertrand Menclall Carl Plummer Merryman 42431 fi-is Beta Mu Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Epsilon Eta Nu Xi Pi Rho Sigma Upsilon Phi Chi Psi Beta Phi Beta Beta Beta Theta Beta Zeta Beta Nu Beta Chi Delta Theta Beta Eta Beta Iota Beta Psi Beta Mu Beta Xi Beta Rho Beta Tau Beta Upsilon Gamma Gamma Gamma Alpha Gamma Chi Gamma Beta Beta Sigma Gamma Delta Gamma Epsilon Gamma Zeta Gamma Eta A Gamma Theta Gamma Iota Gamma Kappa Gamma Lambda Gamma Mu Gamma Nu Gamma Xi Gamma Omicron Gamma Pi Gamma Rho Gamma Sigma Gamma Tau Gamma Upsilou Gamma Phi Gamma Psi Delta Alpha Delta Beta Delta Iota Sigma u Founded at Virginia Military Institute 1869 Roll of Chapters University of Virginia University of Georgia University of Alabama Howard College North Georgia Agricultural College Washington and Lee University Bethany College Mercer University University of Kansas Emory College Lehigh University University of Missouri Vanderbilt University University of Texas Louisiana State University Cornell College University of North Carolina Tulane University De Pauw University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Purdue University Ohio State University Leland Stanford University Lombard University Indiana University Mount Union College University of California University of Iowa William Jewell College University of Pennsylvania North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts - Rose Polytechnic Institute Albion College Georgia School of Technology University of Washington Northwestern University ' University of Vermont Stevens Institute of Technology Lafayette College University of Oregon Colorado School of Mines Cornell University State College of Kentucky University of Colorado University of Wisconsin University of Illinois University of Michigan - Missouri State School of Mines and Metallurgy Washington University, St. Louis, Mo. West V irginia University University of Chicago Iowa State College University of Minnesota University of Arkansas University of Montana Syracuse University Case School of Applied Science Dartmouth College Washington State College 12445 1870 1873 1874 1879 1881 1882 1883 1884 1884 1884 1885 1886 1886 1886 1887 1888 1888 1888 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1891 1892 1892 1892 1893 1891 1894 1895 1895 1895 1896 1890 1898 1898 1900 1900 1900 1901 1901 1902 1902 1902 1902 1902 1908 1903 1901 1901 1901 1904 1904 1905 1906 1907 1907 1910 my 1 . wi - ,.. A ,A R S w , , , !f, 'X J ,I , g jf f 'L N T. ,, 4 , . I -'AE 1 X . ig f xi ,fs k g ' X 5' 6? f x f , N. Jw mm Q WOW ZAQQP , ' 'l 1 5E:5E2: ' , f + S' :1:-- f ,J V W ' ,' ' 'SLN 'I DMSAYZPI I N voL.Lv1 1914 Sigma Alpha lipailnn New Hampshire Alpha Chapter Established 1908 Frater in Doctoribus lnst. Andrew Jackson Scarlett Fratres in Urbe Robert Brown Belknap William Francis Holzer Alfred Leslie Smith William Edward Carroll George Hobart Farrington Ralph Edward Whitney Fratres in Universitate l9l3 Edward Francis Brady Lincoln Emerson Morton Charles Brigham Knight George Francis Arthur Mulcahy Albert Brooks Washbui'n l9l4 Everett Holman Barnard Henry Osgood Lowell William Warren Barnes Robert Shedd Noble Harry Martin Cook Rugar Young Ray Larcom Wilkinson 1915 Maynard Bromley Andrus Gregory Lyon Eugene Van Name Bissell Paul Robinson Rothery Albert Sydney Bull Benjamin Slade Peter Hugh Cannon Perry Howard Stevens Frank Collingwood Charles Russell Thomas Raymond Marshall Humphrey Leon Emery Williams 1916 Charles Munroe Belknap William Cleigh Brady Lyman Ray Jordan George Harding Smith, Dewitt Sarles Stillman C2475 'Q VOl..LVI 5 A 8 1914 'd Sigma Alpha ipailnn Founded at University of Alabama, March 9, 1856 Alabama Nu No. Carolina Xi Virginia Oinicron Kentucky Iota Wlashington City Rho Tennessee Lambda Georgia Beta Mississippi Gamma Louisiana Epsilon Tennessee Eta Virginia Sigma Georgia Psi Alabama Alpha Mu Tennessee Nu Alabama Iota Tennessee Kappa Tennessee Omega Georgia Epsilon Tennessee Zeta Kentucky Kappa No. Carolina Theta Pennsylvania Delta Missouri Alpha Texas Rho Ohio Sigma Michigan Alpha l'ennsylvania Omega Ohio Delta Michigan Iota Beta Ohio Epsilon Georgia Phi Pennsylvania Sigma Phi Colorado Chi New York Alpha Colorado Zeta Indiana Alpha California Alpha Roll of Chapters University of Alabama University of North Carolina University of Virginia Bethel College George Washington University Cumberland University University of Georgia University of Mississippi Louisiana State University Southwestern Baptist University Washington and Lee University Mercer University Alabama Polytechnic Institute Vanderbilt University Southern University University of Tennessee University of the South Emory College Southwestern Presbyterian University Central University Davidson College Gettysburg College University of Missouri University of Texas Mt. Union College Adrian College Allegheny College Ohio Western University University of Michigan University of Cincinnati Georgia School of Technology Dickinson College I'niversity of Colorado Cornell University University of Denver Franklin College Leland Stanford University Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta Pennsylvania State College Ohio Theta YVashington University Massachusetts Beta Ifpsilon Boston University Missouri Beta Ohio State University C2481 1856 1857 1857 1858 1858 1860 1866 1866 1867 1867 1867 1870 1878 1878 1878 1879 1881 1881 1882 1882 1883 1883 1884 1884 1885 1887 1887 1889 1880 1889 1890 1890 1891 1891 1891 1802 1892 1892 1892 1892 1892 'Q vor. LV1 . C 1Q 14. Massachusetts Iota Tau Massachusetts C1111111111 Indiana Beta Nebraska Lambda Pi I,Ql1llSj'1V2l11IZl Zeta Massachusetts Delta ' Arkansas Alpha Upsilon Illinois Psi Omega California Beta New York Sigma Phi New York Mu Louisiana Tau Upsilon Illinois Beta Kentucky Epsilon Pennsylvania Theta Maine Alpha Minnesota Alpha Colorado Lambda Wisconsin Alpha Kansas Alpha Illinois Theta Iowa Beta Ohio Rho Iowa Gamma Washington Alpha Indiana Gamma New York Delta New Hampshire Alpha Oklahoma Kappa Illinois Delta South Carolina Gannna South Dakota Alpha Kansas Beta Massachusetts Institute of Technology Harvard Ifniversity 1'urdne University University of Nebraska Bucknell University Worcester 1 olytecl1nic Institute Arkansas University Northwestern University University of California St. Stephens College Columbia University Tulane University University of Illinois Kentucky State College University of Pennsylvania University of Maine University of Minnesota Colorado School. of Mines University of Wisconsin University of Kansas I'niversity of Chicago University of Iowa Case School of Applied Science Iowa State College University of YVashington University of Indiana Syracuse University Dartmouth College University of Oklahoma James Milliken University University of South Carolina University of South Dakota Kansas State University x2419l 185,32 19023 185111 18025 1803 1804 1894 1894 1805 18215 1805 1597 1899 1000 1001 1901 1902 1003 10013 4. . 1003 1903 1005 1005 1905 111015 19043 1906 1908 1903 1010 1010 1910 1912 JI! voL.Lv1 1914 Sigma 1513 Epailnn New Hampshire Chapter Established 1906 Fratres in Doctoribus Prof. R. Husband Dr. H. N. Kingsford Fratres in Urbe Harold Tower Baker Ralph Edward Baker Howard Thompson Ball Charles Edward Buffum Frank Holmes Cushman Grover Franklin Fox J Lester Edward Bacon Harold Day Brown Warren Elliot Carleton Walter Ford Daley Charles Henry Faxon Philip Haseltine Blodgett Richard Esselstyn Coon, Sidney Caldwell Crawford Russell Luther Durgin Chauncey Pineo Hulburt Albert Emanuel Johnson Donald Edmund Law Daniel Stark Dinsmore Charles Franklin Durgin George Hitchcock Fratres in Universitate 1913 William Gumbart Forest Flagg Owen Frederick Smyth Page Kenneth Frederick Raitt ohn Albert Randall 1914 1915 Jr. 1916 William Richard Herlihy, J Carleton Linwood Kingsford Lawrence Kingman Ralph David Noe George Dudley Wheatly Allen Scott Norton Edwin Miles Noyes Gerald Kerman Richardson Max Earnest Saben Howard Peirce Sawyer Eliot Roseel Sharp George Edward Walker Ben Eastman Linus Joseph Murphy Clayton Byron Waite A2505 L1 ff 5 xr.. wx 'Vf' ff Q ibf ii. iff X , 'f of 2 Q , W Q4 N 1 his X n I .,.,, AEE voL.Lv1 1914 Virginia Alpha West Virginia Beta Illinois Alpha Colorado Alpha Pennsylvania Delta Virginia Delta North Carolina Beta Qhio Alpha Indiana Alpha New York Alpha Virginia Epsilon Virginia Zeta Georgia Alpha Delaware Alpha Virginia Eta Arkansas Alpha Pennsylvania Epsilon Ohio Gamma Vermont Alpha Alabama Alpha North Carolina Gamma New Hampshire Alpha Sigma lghi iirmilnn Founded at Richmond College 1901 Roll of Chapters Richmond College West Virginia University University of lllinois 1 University of Colorado University of Pennsylvania College of William and Mary North Carolina College of Meehan Chio Northern University Purdue University Syracuse University Washington and Lee University Randolph Macon College Georgia School of Technology Delaware State College University of Virginia University of Arkansas Lehigh University Ghio State University Norwich University Alabama Polytechnic Institute 'Trinity College Dartmouth College District of Columbia Alpha George Washington University Kansas Alpha California Alpha Nebraska Alpha Iowa Alpha Massachusetts Alpha New York Beta Ohio Delta Michigan Alpha Rhode Island Alpha Washington Alpha Baker University University of California University of Nebraska lowa Wesleyan Massachusetts Agricultural College Cornell University University of Wooster University of Michigan Brown University Washington State College 42521 ic Arts 1901 1903 1903 1904 1904 1904 1905 1905 1905 1905 1906 1906 1907 1907 1907 1907 1907 1908 1908 1908 1909 1909 1909 1910 1910 1911 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 1912 ffl-IB Evita Sigma Zlihn Founded 1906 Roll of Chapters Beloit Minnesota BYOWII Missouri Chicago Nebraska Colorado Northwestern Columbia Ohio State Dartmouth Ohio Wesleyan George Washington Pennsylvania Harvard Syracuse Illinois Texas Indiana Virginia lowa Wesleyan fConn.j Iowa State Williams Kansas Yale Michigan DARTMOUTH CHAPTER Installed 1910 Resident Members V Craven Laycock, '96 James Milton O'Neill, '07 1914 A Frederick Pitkin Cranston Leonard Dupee White 1915 Chester Bradley Jordan, Edward Charles Mabie Cecil Elwyn Whitney 1916 Lyman Ray Jordan 62535 VOL LVI L 1914 , , ' A s is no . ' xx . -J - F1 . Alpha Zliappa Kappa Alpha Chapter Fratres in John William Bowler, lVl.D. Gilman DuBois Frost, A.lVl., lVl.D. Tilghman Minnour Balliet, A.lVl., lVl.D. Howard Nelson Kingsford, A.lVl., NLD. George Adams Leland, A.lVl., 1Vl.D. Edwin Julius Bartlett, A.lVl., lVl.D, Fratres Charles Howard Dudley George E. Allen, A.B. James Creighton Barker William Edward Emery William Francis Holzer, A.B. Arthur Washington Burnham, B.S. William Edward Carroll, A.B. Henry Haywood, Jr. Rollo Wilson Hutchinson Established 1 888 Doctoribus John Martin Gile, A.lVl., lVl.D. Granville Priest Conn, A.lVl., lVl.D. John Osborn Polak, lVl.S., lVl.D. Percy Bartlett, A.B., lVl.D. George Sellers Graham, B.L., lVl.D. Elmer Howard Carleton, A.B., lVl.D in Urbe William James Vivian, lVl.D. 1913 Wesley Marshall Hunt, A.B. James Joseph Powers Edmund Henry Robbins Leroy Tyler Stokes 1914 James Frederick Gaylord, A.B Rolf Clark Norris, B.S. 1 91 6 john Albert Randall Bernard Spillane 12545 1.... Envvnmrrr 19:25 Fun :muh MPPA MPPA rnamznmrw nv un .xurmxzavmxzsus 2595 QA, 'Q VoL. LV1 5 0 1914 Alpha Beta Gannna Delta Epsilon Zeta Theta Iota Kappa Lambda Mu Nu Xi Sigma Psi Eta Oniicron Pi Rho Upsilon Phi Chi Omega Tau Alpha Beta Alpha Gannna Alpha Delta Alpha Epsilon Alpha Zeta Alpha Eta Alpha Theta Alpha Iota Alpha Kappa Alpha Lambda Alpha Mu Alpha Nu Alpha Ki Alpha Olnicron Alpha Pi Alpha Rho Alpha Kappa Kappa Founded at Dartmouth College 1888 Roll of Chapters Dartmouth Medical College, Hanover, N. H. College of Physicians and Surgeons, San Francisco, Cal. Tufts College Medical School, Boston Mass. Medical D91l?11't1DG1lt of University of Vermont, Bur- lington, Vt. Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia, Pa. Long Island College Hospital, Brooklyn, N. Y. Medical Department of Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me. Medical Department of University of Syracuse, Syracuse, N. Y. Milwaukee Medical College, Milwaukee. Wis. Medical Department Cornell University, New York, N. Y. Medical Department University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa. Rush Medical College, Chicago, Ill. Medical Department Northwestern University, Chi- cago, Ill. Medical Departnient University of California, San Francisco, Gal. Medical Department University of Minnesota, Min- neapolis, Minn. College of Physicians, Chicago, Ill. Miami Medical College, Cincinnati, Ohio Ohio Medical University, Coluinbus, Ohio Denver and Gross Medical College, Denver, Colo. University of Oregon, Portland, Ore. Nashville University, Nashville, Tenn. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn. University of Tennessee, Nashville, Tenn. University of the South. Sewanee, Tenn. Medical Department Tulane University, New Or- leans. La. Medical Departnient University of Georgia, Augusta, Ga. Medical Departinent McGill University, Montreal P. Q. Medical Departinent University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada Medical Department George Washington University Washington, D. C. Yale Medical School, New Haven, Conn. Medical Department T'niversity of Texas. Galves- ton, Texas lfniversity of Michigan Department of Medicine and Surgery, Ann Arbor, Mich. University College of Medicine, Richmond, Ya. University of South Carolina, Charleston, S. C. Medical Departnient St. Louis University, St. Louis. Mo. Medical Department University of Louisville, Louis- ville, Ky. Western Reserve, Cleveland, Ohio University Medical College, Kansas City, Mo. Medical Department University of Pittsburg, Pitts- burg, Pa. Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. C2565 1888 1 S99 1593 1 S9-1 1900 1890 1897 1899 1900 '1 901 1900 1901 1901 1809 'l S98 i S99 1901 1 902 1903 1903 1903 1903 .l 903 1903 1903 15-l0+1 1901 1005 1905 1 906 1906 1 906 1506 11,08 1909 1909 1 909 191 1 1911 1912 VOL.LVI 1914 '- Mamma Alpha Scientific Fraternity Established 1906 Fratres in Doctoribus V Charles Ernest Bolser, Ph.D. Arthur Houston Chivers, A.M. Norman Everett Gilbert, Ph.D. James Walter Goldthwait, Ph.D. George Sellers Graham, B.l..., M.D. Charles Arthur Holden, B.S., C.E. Frederic Pomeroy Lord, M.D. Charles Albert Proctor, Ph.D. John Merrill Poor, Ph.D. Colin Campbell Stewart, Ph.D. Herbert Greenleaf Coar, A.B. Peter Staub Dow, C.E. . Arthur Bond Meservey, A.B., B.S Harry Gilbert Mitchell, B.S. Andrew Jackson Scarlett, Jr., A.B. Harold Goddard Rugg, A.B. Arthur Dunn Pitcher, Ph.D. Class of l909 William Francis l-lolzer Class William Edward Carroll, A.B. Howard Merrill Clute, B.S. i Class Arthur Washington Burnham, B.S. Nelson Luther Doe, B.S. George Hobart Farrington, B.S. George Hitchcock, B.S. Sam Hobbs, B.S. Class Henry Deshon Abbott Howard Arthur Barencls William Martin Gibson John Stephen Macdonald of l9l of l9I of 191 l James Frederick Gaylord, A.B. Rolf Clarke Norris, B.S. 2 Edmund Irving Mitchell, B.S. Lew Knowlton Perley, B.S. Samuel Spaulding Stevens, B.S. Clifton Clarke Taylor, B.S. Ralph Edward Whitney, B.S. 3 Herbert Carroll Osborne Hubert Marsh Perkins Frank Foss Spencer Edwin Milo Stiles ' Conrad Church Wilbur f257l W xx QQ- V .Aff A ww l ra., . Sphinx 1 1 ' -:-ill je i x? ,f ' Q - f ti ,f : 043, ,' A 7, K, ,vlrw QW, W X at u 2, ir.,-3325. gr A , f :1-avg'-1-A. , 41-w'5fFr?f.p 'ra r P Howard Arthur Barends Joseph John Barnett Ray Lloyd Bennett Joseph Paul Donahue l-larolcl Parker Gardner William Henry Mason Harvey Clark lVlcClary a C2593 David Beale Morey Walter Harvey Nolan Franklin Cleveland Orton John Azro Prouty Charles Dana Waterman Kendall Winship Marc Snowell Wright ' vo1..1.v1 Glewqur sinh 162111111121 l i A ,fr i in 5-jf' .jf 15? L, ,fir if. A 7 . 'f 'M h.1,'ix'4lE G l U --H ' f , .... e ' f- ' , .J ' gf' x ' A. Ei l 7 I I Edward Lawrence Brown Thomas Donald Cunningham Edward Aaron Davis William Lincoln Davis Louis Frederick Ekstrom William Martin Gibson Wright Hugus Leonard Richardson Manley Lincoln Emerson Morton John Guy Nelson Emmett Pishon Harry Hodges Semmes Collin Wells Warde Wilkins Earle Van Kuren Willson C2615 VOL. Lvi Eragnn W2 P 'Q' A ff 0 1 W w Q . . ' I - ' , .-,-' H ' .f f 'K 5 v:'9 'v.. . 'J -a , Egg? 'een PWmwnqfswwf'5 . by -X. -sf' ' ' ,12 2 w,.-www-Hamer whxfxm eww I .5541 - V 'f 1 'f 9 9 fzul '. ,-1: ,-ms, 4 1 yy ., - ' T fri .53-' ' '3 1 ,f A x 3 413.52 X 'A ,- vv X 4,7Ay ymzwmfq ,wg Agn? J 3 45 E , P5 A, j0l'1I1 I-lay Borlancl John Stephen Macclonal Andrew Westbrook Comstock Randolph Rieclell Frank Valentine Duclensing Charles Smith Riley Clayton Alger Fairbanks Arthur Leon Scott Henry Montgomery Hamilton Pierce Webster C2633 voL.Lv1 rl 1914 ilinunh ilinhin Senior Literary Society my e Robbins Wolcott Barstow George Steele Eclwarcl Aaron Davis Charles Dana Waterman Lionel Fall Warde Wilkins Franklin Cleveland Orton Earle Van Kuren Willson C2655 ATH TIC ffl-II-1 1 VOl..LVI 1914 '1 Athlriir Glmmril nf Eartmnuth Glnllvgr Rlrving French, 'Ol Charles E.. 'Bolser, '99 George A. Graves, Harolcl C. lVlcAllister, Irving French, 'Ol Charles E. Bolser Thomas D. Cunningham, 'l3 Lincoln E. Morton, 'l3 Ralph K. Stone, 'l3 OFFICERS President Secretary Graduate Manager lst Semester Graduate Manager Znd Semester ALUMNI , Clarence G. lVlcDavitt, '00 Joseph W. Gannon, '00 FACULTY Charles R. Lingley Charles A. Proctor UNDERGRADUATES Football Manager Baseball Manager Track Manager Cl-IAIRMEN OF ADVISORY COMMITTEES Charles E. Bolser, Football, Basketball Charles A. Proctor, Track, Tennis, Golf Charles R. Lingley, Hockey, Baseball C2685 ' voL.Lv1 . 1914 Svraann nf 1912 C QOOTBALL , NW-. , :lt lin ' -'hi I . llllqf if ,W -i...-i.l,. un, 5-, 1 JI, 1 ' I P' - . ,n if lm I, f' 1' , - N 5:5 s - - -ge 1 f - 1 4 n 1 At the opening of the football season of l9l2, the prospects for a team of even average strength were none too brightj With the graduation of Daley, Dana, and Elcock last June, Coach Cavanaugh experienced unlocked for and unusual difficulties in developing a team. Two setbacks presented themselves at the outset which were most discouraging, the first one being the inability of Barends and Gibson, both strong members of last year's team, to appear for practice, owing to their studies in the Thayer Schoolg the second setback came when Dunbar, a logical choice for a line position, was severely injured. With three varsity places to be filled and two sets of ends to be developed, a difficult task con- fronted the coaches. In the face of such a discouraging outlook, Coach Cavanaugh went at the matter in a hammer and tongs fashion, to turn out a team which would entitle Dartmouth to a foremost place in the collegiate football world. The season opened with the defeat of Bates on Alumni Oval 26-O. This game brought out one very significant fact, namely, that there would be no lack of second string men when the reg- ulars were on the injured list. In its second game Dartmouth met the most aggressive team that Norwich University had sent to Hanover in years. Al- though winning by a decisive margin, the Green was not able to check the rush of the visitors, who scored nine points in the last period of play. Dartmouth's defensive play was just as ragged as her offensive play was brilliant, but if secondary teams were able to score on the Green, what would happen to the team in its objective games? The coaching staff now had to face a pretty problem. The lVlass. Aggiesn were the opposition for the following week, and the defensive play of the Green showed the tho- roughness with which the squad had been groomed in this depart- ment of the game during the past week. Vermont, though hav- ing practically the same team as a year ago, did not show the C2 691 'Q vOL.Lv1 5 A r 1914 'r E strength expected of her and was humbled in a well-played game on the part of the Green by a 35-0 score. ' A week later Williams Went down before the terrific rush of Dartmouth to the tune of 21-0. This game seemed to be the turning point of the success of the team, for the following week showed a lack of team work which could not be remedied before meeting the Tigers at Princeton. Dartmouth showed a strength equal to that of her opponent, during the early stages of the game, the first half ending 9-7 in favor of Princeton. The brilliant flashes of play on the part of the Tigers and the illusiveness of Mr. l-lobeyu Baker were the undoing of the Green in the second half, the score at the end of the game being 22-7. A week of hard work was now in order and the looked for improvement in the defense resulted in running up a score against Amherst of 60-0. The feature of this game was the powerful offensive play of the backfield, both in line plunging and circling the ends. lVlorey's 52-yard run for a touchdown in the last period was one of the most creditable individual plays ever seen on Alumni Oval. Dartmouth met Cornell at Ithaca the next Saturday in the second game of football in the history of the sport between these two institutions. The Green played Cornell before in l900, when it suffered a 23-6 defeat at the hands of the lthacans. To re- trieve the defeat of a decade ago and as a last opportunity to show its strength before the Harvard contest, the Green gave the record-breaking crowd present a sample of its real strength in making two touchdowns by straight rushing in the first period. Cornell could not stem the rush of the Green and suffered a 24-0 defeat. The following week Dartmouth met l-larvard in the Stadium with a team which was fifty per cent. better than that which went down to defeat at Princeton. Seldom has such a beneficial change been made in a team in the short time intervening between the Princeton and Harvard games. All credit is due the coaching staff in developing the latent powers of the eleven and instilling the necessary fighting spirit into a team which was to meet a rival of championship calibre. At the start of the game l-larvard was immediately put on the defensive because of a fumble by Gardner. Both teams then played conservative football, each trying to gain the 'advantage by interchanging kicks. lVlorey's beautiful spirals and the manner in which the Green backfielcl carried back Felton's punts more than offset the long drives of this much-heralded kicker. In the first half all the playing was carried on in Crimson territory. In this half Engelhorn had two difficult tries for goals from placement, but both attempts failed. ln the second half, an exchange of punts followed by a fumble in the Green back- field gave Harvard the advantage. Then Brickley, whose drop kicking had been the sensation of the football season, scored three points for l-larvard by a goal from the field. Brickley had three other tries for goals from the field, all of which were unsuccessful. ln this period also, Dartmouth's rattling offensive play kept continually alive the hope of victory instilled into the Dartmouth supporters during the initial period. lVlorey's wonderful run of 35 yards through l-larvard,s left wing, followed shortly afterward by a C2705 'Q voL,LV1 5 A 1914 '- clever quarterback run by Chee, which yielded a 35-yard gain, put a different aspect on the situation. Outside of Brickley's feat, these were the most spectacular plays of the day. A double penalty to the Green team and a kick by Morey gave the Crimson her opportunity. All hope of evening up matters was lost. In the last period both teams were freshened by the sending in of substitutes. In the very first plays Dartmouth was put on the defensive and the line began to weaken under the hard rushes of the Harvard backfield. With Dartmouth still fighting off Har- vard's powerful attack the whistle signalled the end of the game. ' - From a football standpoint the game was of the sort that decides championships. Sensational individual work of the players, the ever present possibility of a fluke, and the uncertainty of the outcome made the game one of the most exciting that was ever played on Soldiefs Field. I Of the men who played on the team, Captain-elect Hogsett played the best game of the ends used throughout the season. His tackling was hard and sure, he followed the ball keenly, and showed great speed under punts. Loudon at the other extremity played brilliant football in the Harvard game. Engelhorn at left tackle showed perfect form in the Princeton and Harvard games and won a place on Walter Camp's All-American eleven. ' At the other tackle Estep was a tower of strength for the team, playing his best game of the year in the Stadium. ' Captain Bennett at guard played his usual steady, hard-charging game. At the other guard, Dunbar was light but distinctly a fighter from the first whistle to the last. Gibson at center played a slashing defensive game, but his long passes were poor and at critical times costly. In the backfield, one of the most interesting features of the year was the fight for quarterback between Llewellyn and Chee. Both men developed the same inherent qual- ities as the season wore on and both seemed to be in the same class when the Harvard game appeared on the football horizon. i Of the other three men, Morey at halfback was the steady, ever-reliable ground gainer of the year. His open-field work and remarkable punting against Harvard easily marked him as the star of the game. At half also was Whitney, who played an aggressive game both offensively and defensively throughout the season. His sensational high diving for distance when the Hlast white linen came into view was an innovation in football circles. At fullback Snow was not a great ground gainer but as an assistance to the man carrying the ball and as a secondary defense man, he was equally as capable as the other backs. The fact that this year Coach Cavanaugh, with unmatchable patience and hard work, developed in the course of the season a strong team that played strong football, beginning with prospects that were none too bright, redounds particularly to his credit. All credit is also due to the members of the Old Guard, who helped Coach Cavanaugh instill the fighting spirit into the team. C2711 Photos by Jordan S: Bruner iff Af? ' 'V .ffvikv 5 4'ni3'i f -T5 Y'5Rf, Tf : 3- 7 'N1'5 if ,- -- . : , : -. ,GF -v.-'ss A s. Wg f Q -x fvw'-5. 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Bennett I hvir East Champa Ray Lloyd Bennett, captain of the Dartmouth football team of 1912, although handicapped by hard luck such as few Dart- mouth captains have l1ad to meet, was yet a mainstay of the team at all times, whether on the field or watching from the sidelines. In the pitched battle in the Stadium. his steady, hard-charging, and invariably clean-cut work stopped the heavy Crimson backs perhaps as consistently as that of any man on the line. It is quite often the case that the responsibilities of leading a team detract from a football playerls individual workg it was never thus with Bennett. He stood throughout the season as an ex- ample of the true type of Dartmouth gridiron leaders,-fair, sportsmanlike, and level headed. Bennett's last year as varsity guard was his thirdg while ill College he has been a member of the baseball well 'as of the football team. David Beale Morey, who will long be remembered for his punting battle with Felton in the Harvard game, was in his last year the mainstay of the Green backiield. His seventeen touch- downs, the result of consistent. indomitable plunging. were re- f' V sponsible for more of the varsity's victories than any other of the MQ 4 . backs. Morey. the man who doesn't know when he is downed, Gi, developed into a kicker of parts, and his Hfty-five yard punt to V Harvard's two-yard line gave the team its Hghting chance. i Walter Camp's choice for the second consecutive year as halt- . ' ' back on the second all-American eleven, he was every Dartmouth - 1 1nan's choice for first position on the iirst of all teams. Like Lap- tain Bennett, Morey plays baseball, and leads the team in his last year. H. A. Barends D. B. Morey Howard Arthur Barends, in his third and last year on the varsity eleven, fell a victim to the scarcity of end material, and was made over into a lineman in mid-season. As a back in sev- eral of the minor games he sustained the reputation his phenome- nal work ill years past had gained hi1n. His work at e11d in the Princeton illld lVillia1ns games. and his remarkable touchdown in the Vermont contest, earned him universal respect. No man can do more for his college than Dutch volunteered to dog he came out for the team at the jeopardy of his work in the Thayer School, to he drilled in the rudiments of the most diflicult posi- tion on the eleven to learn. Good ends are born, and not made, luut Barerds was willing to undergo all the drudgery of a, posi- tion which he did not know. 4,2755 'Q voL.Lv1 5 1914 '- . :ff 63' XVK P . I 2, . - - .,lf..gy ,.:.,1Q:-:5.eyl 5gj.,.Q.pf:.Ay Y wi 4 15365. ., . ,Q 5 , 4 if ,, N. M. Whitmore Ehrir East Champa Nathaniel McLellan Whitmore, guard and center, worked for the team on both sides of the line, and in the middle, every minute of every game he played. He was at all times steady, 6V91l-f9l11- pered, and resolute. Big Nate, the man with the smile, gained the respect of every one who saw the Princeton game by a game fight against odds after an injury that disabled him- from the first. It was his third year on the team. William Martin Gibson, center and guard, played in his last year a defensive game second to none. Like Barends, he sacri- ',.,K f:T,3'Q'fl, Iiced his time in the Thayer School to a desire to help the team. He followed the ball and watched his man. How great a sacrifice E he made may be judged from the fact that he was forced to re- linquish his position as captain of the basketball team during the winter because of the demands of his work. Gibson was at all LQJW' times a true sportsman, and a player that brought credit to the ' college. W. T. Engelhorn W. M. Gibson Wesley Theodore Engelhorn, all-American tackle, in his last game was easily the best lineman of either eleven-tribute eu- ough for a man playing against Storer, and in the same game with Hitchcock and Parmenter. Engelhorn, selected captain for the coming year, earned the admiration of every man in College, and of all followers of clean sport, by his manly acceptance and avowal of his ineligibility when he learned that he could no longer represent Dartmouth. Engelhorn kicked thirteen goals from touchdown and a goal from field. He earned his place as the best tackle of the year in the Princeton game, when of the eleven Dartmouth men on the team he was the only one that never wavered. C2763 voL.1.v1 A 1914 iltunthanll 12112 T. D. Cunningham T. D. Cunningham, '13, E. P. Junkins, '14, Frank W. Cavanaugh, Ray 1... Bennett, '15, Robert N. Hogsett, '14, TI-IE TEAM, 1912. P. I..ouc1on, '14, Left End J. L. Lafferty, '15, Left End W. T. Engelhorn, '14, Left Tackle I-l. L. Dunbar, '14, Left Guard N. M. Whitmore, '13, Left Guard W. M. Gibson, '13, Centre R. 1... Bennett, '13, Right Guard W. N. Rogers, '15, Righi Guard Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth ' Manager Assistant Manager Head Coach Captain Captain-Elect R. N I-logsett, '14, Right End H. A. Barencls, '13, Right End A. C. Estep, '14, Right Tackle F. A. Llewellyn, '14, Quarterback M. P. Chee, Jr., '15 Quarterback 1... A. Whitney, '15, Left Halfhack D. B Morey, '13, Right Halfhack W. Snow, '14, D. T. Rogers, '15, Fullhack RESULTS OF THE SEASON. 1 26 41 47 55 21 7 60 Z4 0 Fullhack Bates 0 Norwich 9 Mass. Aggies 0 Vermont 0 Williams 0 Princeton 22 Amherst O Cornell 0 Harvard 3 C2775 L., Captam Bennett Captain-Elect Hogsett Photos by Jordan 8 Bruner A r i . voL Lvl r- 1914. - ' Swann nf 1912 7 BASEBALL QW Nur als N lf ..3 zz: Nu Eh I ., ' E ,, an -. i .i i 0 2 '7l2 XN, if , ld' ,r I I 47 N . J 1 , 4.-. ' fi 4 -4 2 ' X Q lllr 5 A up XXX J lift i . QQ 5' .. Opening the season with every prospect of a team of premier quality we soon experienced a change of conditions. Qur pitch- ing staff did not develop as was expected. lVlorey' and Hallett pitched masterly ball at times, but they could not shoulder the responsibility of such a strenuous schedule as the Green went though. Ekstrom had splendid curves but was unfortunate in not being used on hot days, when he is most ellective. Lavin had a good delivery but lacked experience. The fact remains however, that Coach Woods had many anxious moments solving the pitching staff problem. On its Southern trip the team did not show a lack of out- door practice, as was predicted by the critics, but played with teams well seasoned by practice, and the results were encouraging. We opened auspiciously April I2 when Morey defeated Colum- bia 3-2 in a pitcher,s battle. Hallett in the West Point game pitched the best game ever seen in the military town, letting clown the opposing batsmen without a single hit. Journeying to Philadelphia we then experienced our first defeat of the season at the hands of the Quakers. Seton l-lall was the next opposi- tion for the Green and Lavin was in complete charge of the situation, shutting out the southern contingent by a I-O score. The home season was opened on the Campus with Bowdoin ortering the opposition. The two games with this team may best be characterized as batting fests in which the Dartmouth boys played the important parts. On the first trip since early spring the team journeyed to Syracuse, where Ekstrom won a game marked by timely hitting on both sides. On the following day the team met Cornell and solved the deceptive curves of the mighty l-lightower but could not overcome the one run lead that the lthacans had earned in the early stages of the game. Williams was met on the following Saturday at Williams- town, and Davis, the Purple's premier twirler, took the green- jerseyed boys into camp in a clean-fielding, hard hitting game. Against the Crimson with five runs to her credit Dart- C2815 voL. Lvl A i f 1914 as mouth solved Felton's delivery and started a batting fest which, when the smoke of the fray had cleared away, found Dartmouth on the long end of a 9-5 score. The entire team played first-class ball. The fielding was fast and the hitting timely. During Prom week Williams was the attraction at Alumni Oval and the Purple presented the best fighting team she has sent to Hanover in years. Hallett pitched a splendid game against Williams, but Dartmouth's inability to connect with Ayers' shoots when hits meant runs resulted in her taking the short end of a 2-0 score. Away from home Tufts was an easy victim for Dartmouth,-lVlorey and Hallett administering a double defeat in the series with the Medford nine. The Decoration Day contest was however dropped to Holy Cross by a two run margin. Though playing good ball the team lost to Trinity, June 4th, in a game marked by fast fielding and clever base running. The following day the Yale aggregation walked off the field a Victor after eleven heart rending rounds. The last game of the season was the contest with Amherst during Commencement week. It was a game of the up and down variety and the outcome appeared in doubt until the last man was retired. Probably the best games of the season were the two with Seton Hall and West Point respectively, while the game with Harvard and the battle with Yale will long live in the baseball lore of the three colleges. Summing up the team's work for the season, we claim with justifiable pride that the Green has upheld the reputation of former Dartmouth teams and gained fame among other aggregations as a formidable opponent. E.XAMS L2 S29 . - H, ,.V- AA . -Y ,Q ,AAV sa. VARSITY BASEBALL TEAM A L. E. MORTON, Asst. Mgr.g S. A. HOWELL, H. M. Coox, G. J. PLATT, E. T. TWITCHELL, E. L. KIDlBALI,, C. A. CABOT, Mgr. C. H. NILES, E. A. LAVIN, J. P. DONAHUE, C. E. Rou.1Ns, J. A. STEEN, L. F. EKSTROM, H. S. FAHEY, H. K. HALLE'1V1' R. L. BENNETT, D. B. Momzv, B. SPILLANE, F. A. ALDEN, E. J. DALEY, Capt. Coach Woons, B. A. HOIIAN. VOL LVI L IQ 14 .,, , A 1-1' eb K ' ,il . 1 Eaurhall 1912 1913 C. A. Cabot, '12 Manager L. E. Morton, '13 L. E.. Morton, '13 Assistant Manager R. l-I. Trott, '14 E. J. Daley, '12 Captain D. B. Morey, '13 c. A. Cabot ' TI-IE TEAM. F. A. Alden, '13g B. Spillane, '13, Catchers D. B. Morey, '13g L. F. Ekstrom, '13g l-l. K. l-lallett, '14, Pitchers R. L. Bennett, '13, 1st Base J. P. Donahue, 13, 2nd Base C. E. Rollins, '12, 3rd Base I-l. S. Fahey, '14, Shortstop E. J. Daley, '12, Right Field E. W. Gammons, '12, Left Field B. A. I-loban, '12, Centre Field 1280 Capt. D aley Capt.-Elect Morey IQ VOL. LV1 1914 Date April April April April April April April May May May May May May May May May May May June June June June June I2 I3 I5 I6 I7 24 25 3 4 9 II I6 I8 20 23 25 29 30 I 4 5 Z4 25 Ifiamehali Svummarg Team R. H. E.. Pitcher Team Dartmouth 3 5 4 Ekstrom Columbia Morey Dartmouth 6 9 0 Hallett West Point Dartmouth 3 6 3 Elcstrom U. of Penn. Morey Dartmouth I 4 0 Lavin Seton Hall Dartmouth vs Princeton Cancelled Rain Dartmouth IZ I2 7 Morey Bowdoin Platt Dartmouth 22 I9 2 Hallett Bowdoin Dartmouth 9 9 0 Ekstrom Syracuse Dartmouth 2 3 I Morey Cornell Dartmouth vs Lafayette Cancelled Rain Dartmouth I 5 0 Morey Williams Elcstrom Dartmouth vs Cornell Cancelled Rain Dartmouth 9 8 Z Morey Harvard Dartmouth vs. Vermont Z 3 Dartmouth 6 D artmouth 0 6 2 D artmouth 6 4 37 Dartmouth 6' 4 3 Dartmouth 3 3 I 4 Dartmouth 2 Dartmouth 5 Dartmouth 0 3 3 Dartmouth 8 I0 6 Cancelled Rain Hallett Vermont lVlo1'ey Hallett Williams Hallett Tufts Ekstrom Holy Cross Morey Morey Tufts Hallett Trinity Ekstrom Yale CII inningsj Morey Amherst Ekstrom Amherst I 2 S63 E. 0 9 2 0 7 7 0 3 2 4 3 I 3 3 I I 2 Pitcher Rothwell Devoe lmlay Peploski Means Dodge Eaton Dexter Hightower Davis Felton Hardy Malcom Ayers Carter Dube Murray Adams Blecker Hartwell Vernon Whitman .- . T vor. Lvi A 1914 i i freeman nf 1912 Under the able leadership of Captain Steinert IZ and the ' competent direction of Coach Hillman, the Dartmouth track team -Y ' f. 1- Av lf jf 1' ll MQ! I 161 ' ' V Tn Xxx . -,Q 1- . - ' li' A U. V i v R- ift ,rf V: Lg ilillf a W , entered upon the season of l9l2 full of dash and hope. To get an estimate of the material which had come into the college in the largest freshman class in its history and as a preliminary tryout for men of varsity calibre, inter-class meets were held during the latter part of February. The results of the meets were most grati- fying, and the numbers and capabilities of the men gave the man- agement considerable encouragement for a bright -and successful year. The Green opened her winter season at the B. A. A. Games Feb. lOth. The relay team defeated the M. I. T. quartet in a mile race of the up-and-down variety. Olson, 'l4 won his heat in the 40-yard dash but was unable to secure a place in the final heat. Whitney placed well up in his specialty. In the Columbia Relay Games, held in Madison Square Garden, Feb l7th, Dart- mouth finished fourth in a field of eight competitors in the one-mile intercollegiate championship race. Lawrence A. Whitney, '15 established a new American shot put record at these games. His heave fboth hands, totalled 78 feet 6 3-4 inches. At the Troy meet Feb 22nd, held in the State Armory, Troy, N. Y., our relay four met Cornell in a dual mile relay race. Cwing to the polished surface of the floor, the lack of Hbanksff and as a result an entirely new style of running shoe, our boys were completely put out of the running at this meet. On March 4th our relay team came forth an easy victor over M. I. T. in a two-mile dual relay race at the intercollegiate meet in the State Armory, at Hartford, Conn. ln this meet Marc Wright won the pole-vault and as a side issue ran a dead heat with Captain Marble of Brown in the 45-yard hurdles. A dual meet with Harvard 'at Cambridge, May l lth, was the opening of our out-door season. ln this meet the Green fought it out on even terms with Harvard in the track events but the failure of our field event men to place well up resulted in a victory for Harvard. Olson was the star performer for the Green, his hrst in the century dash and third in the furlong dash netting him more points than any other competitor. Wright made a new dual meet record f2S7J 'Q voL.Lv1 1914 in the pole vault of I2 feet 6 I-4 inches, while Enright made a beautiful leap of 6 feet l 3-4 inches in the high jump. Dartmouth was able to secure six firsts and six seconds as compared' to eight firsts and six seconds for Harvard, a very creditable showing for the Green. The final score was 66 I-2 to 50 I-2. Dartmouth was picked as a sure winner in the New England lntercollegiates, held on Pratt Field, Springfield, May 18th, and lived up to expectations. The meet was the best ever held on Pratt Field, the performances being unusually good: Five new records were made. Wright of Dartmouth gave the spectators a rare treat in the pole Vault, mak- ing a record leap of IZ feet 6 I-4 inches. The old record was I2 feet 3 I-4 inches. Another stellar performance was the remarkable heave of Marden of Dartmouth in the I6 pound hammer event. lVlarden threw the hammer for a new record of 148 feet 8 l-2 inches, 2 feet 2 inches farther than the record made the previous year by his team- mate Tilley. Marden showed his versatility in the discus throw. He made a wonderful heave of IZ9 feet Hat, nearly six feet better than the previous record. Gutterson of Vermont with a wonderful leap of 23 feet 5 2-5 inches, established a new record in this event. lVlarclen was the stellar performer for the Green in this meet, running up l l points. Dolan took the half-mile in the fast timeof l 59 I-5 while Olson annexed a second place in the furlong clash and a fourth place in the century dash. The final score of the meet gave Dartmouth 46 points to Brown's 23, and M. I. Tfs l6. b PARKHURST C2 asp VARSITY TRACK TEAM R. K. STONE, ASST. MGR.g F. R. MAHCEAU, A. E. GILLIS, H. L. HILLMAN, COACH, W. WILKINS, W. T. ENGELHORN, C. B. WHITE, MGR C. S. RILEY, D. R. MASON, N. A. AMBROSE, C. E. BUCK. M. S. WRIGHT, J. M. DOLAN, H. T. BALI.. M. A. MYERS, H. B. ENIIIGHT, A. H. TII.LEY, R. L. STEINERT, CAPT., W. W. MARDEN, C. O. OLSON, P. S. HARDION. 4 C T E PQ 5 Q 2 3 TE E E cs U 1-4 O-0 Q V110 t3 :S E3 if 5 'S -5 fi sz' 1-9 QT Q-O J5 fl? Q E as I 5 5 : o E EE Q Qs.-Q ENTS EV TRACK aa 00.7 IDID I-FX'-KW All QNX .-Nl 0 E I-' v-U. A . sqm PM L.2 40 'U ' . EQIP 3 J . 01.52 im .-1 B4 I FE 4-I SDE ,-L4 'O So L2 O-3 'Zi-E cricrf QQ E-ow 3 QE ulE.y CD CD CD PQ '-'QNI VJ 'D as Q3 'PUD YT YT Q U1 .EN N.E E YT 1:1 -5 .Fa-DS gas 1? ,D I a .ag .EL- ECS U11 .I CI. Cl! 55 Qi DJ C2 3 mfs GEM K6 lb-13 x CD oo? Iv- dd as 6 U GJ KDIIJVJ 'INLFNUW Ill N-N -xoxo Ln-N E E 0 I -.wr :Qs ' 'E -ob, ::,gE o--:f comic .Q ' Q 9 -.EPB 2:3 CQ mh3i Il?- 5321 DDC P S FEEU: .ti-ij Baal E 3 EE 5 S11 M573 aww Efoci xtqfxl Bl'-CXI C2901 'U L.. O Rec ENTS EV ELD FI 1914 ' 4.3 E .E.s.aw fr frfrwff CACA'-4-72 - LMNOQ' . +3 CW ..:-.tw-'I' 'J-4 -N 4351? N I O I LO ..I . E QQ.Q.: 43592 dd L-1 A-6-I jing:-Q53 ECQEQEQ M'W'2P- .- j QI I. -J-.BQ mba: 04, fffoiuf-G-c EEUGJSM IZ g 5 N fem? CT' 0 xo 'P .Q, fd Q R Q i .Q J E H :EI E 5 3 Q3 EE'C'7,.D ON m 4 5 Ju 3 O 5-1 fl 5: '55 S: 2- ,qw 55 'obo-'E -so fY5o....E .... Q15 Om .-C I CDO-.HDI i 4- 191 15 .fa :ELI-7 Q7 I VOL LV .,1, - 1 ' i. .-.- -, P: , , QU 1 . . '- F I I . nl I I l 51- .1 I . . 2 'E .. UQ . D- .U Q Q . 5 ' . . as-Na H' ' H ' A Gnu.: - , ,., Etnvntg-Sixth Annual Nitin Englanh Entrrrnllvgiatv 2-Xthlriir 111312121 Event First 100 Yard Dash Nardmi Co 720 Yard Dash Burns B 440 Yard Dash McLaughlin H. C. 880 Yald Run Dolan D 1 Mile Run Taber Br 2 Mile Run Power M 120 Yard Hurdles Wendell Wes. 220 Yard Hurdles Wendell Wes. I-Ilgh ,lump Enright D Dalrymple M.I.T. Broad ump Gutterson V. Shot Put Bartlett Discus Throw Marden Hammer Throw Marden Dartmouth Brown M I T Bates Wesleyan SPRINGFIELD, MAY 18, 1912 Second Third Burns, Br. Wilkins, lVl.I.T. Olson, D. Nardini, Co. Guething, M.I.T. Steinert, D. Byland, M.I.T. Marceau, lVI.I.T. Keith, W.P.I. Harmon, D. Ball, D. Hall, Bo. Blanchard, B. Woodman, B. Gutterson, V. Blanchard, B. FIELD EVENTS Faulkner, Bo. iMyers, D. Wessels, Tr Shepard, B. Bartlett, Br. Tilley, D. Mason, D. Bartlett, W. Clough, W.P.I. Cove, B. Engelhorn, D. Fourth Olson, D. Lyman, W. I-Iaskill, Bo. Simson, W. Germain, M.I.T. Waterman, Br. Dewey, W. lVIarble, Br. Herrick, Co. Orr, A. Buck, D. 1Rogers, M. Marden, D. ' MacLeod, M.I.T. Bailey, M. Colby Vermont Maine Bowdoin Holy Cross Williams W. P. I Trinity Amherst Record 10 1-5 sec. 22 3-5 sec. '51 4-5 sec. min. 59 4-5 sec. 4 min. 25 2-5 sec. min. 54 2-5 sec. 15 4-5 sec.. Z4 4-5 sect. 6 ft. 7-16 in 4523 ft. 5 2-5 in 5512 ft. 6 1-4 in 45 ft. 8 in 4129 lt 148 ft. 8 1-2 in 55New Record 5 D 2 1-2 1 vo1..LV1 19145 Elrark I9I2 1913 C. B. White Manager R. K. Stone R. K. Stone Asst. Manager I-I. A. Stiles R. L. Steinert Captain M. S. Wright c. B. white TRACK AND FIELD RECORDS -I00-Yarcl Dash-C. G. McDevitt, '00, I0 sec, G. I... Swazey, '06, IO sec. N. A. Sherman, 'I0, IO sec. W. Wilkins, 'I3, IO sec. A. S. Llewellyn, 'I5, I0 sec. 220-Yard Dash-G. I... Swazey, '06, 22 sec. J. S. Russell, ,I I, 22 sec. 440-Yarcl Dash-G. I... Swazey, '06, 50 3-5 sec. 880-Yard Dash-I. IVI. Dolan, ,I3, I min. 58 3-5 sec. Mile Run+j'. W. Noyes, 'I I, 4 min. 28 sec.- Two Mile Run-F. R. Marceau, 'I4, 9 min. 48 sec. I20-Yard High Hurdles-A. B. Shaw, '08, I5 I-5 sec. 220-Yarcl Low I-lurclles-A. B. Shaw, '08, 24 4-5 sec. High Jump-I-I. B. Enright, 'I3, 6 ft. I 3-4 in. Broad Jump-N. A. Sherman, 'I0, 22 ft. 4 in. I6 Ib. Shot Put-I... A. Whitney, II5, 45 ft. 9 I-2 in. I6 lb. Hammer Throw-I-I. E.. Marden, '12, I57 ft. 5 in. Discus Throw-H. E.. lVlarcIen, ,I2, 129 ft. Pole Vault-IVI. S. Wright, '13, I3 ft. 2 I-4 in. 62923 Captain Steinert Captain-Elect Wright ,li ff MARC WRIGHT MAKING WORLD'S RECORD M ' vo1..Lv1 7 1914 An iirliu nf the Gblgmpir 62111125 MARC SNOWELL WRIGHT, holder of the world's record for the pole-vault, and captain of the varsity track team, led the Dartmouth contingent of three in the American squad at the Swedish Olympiad last sunnner. In the past year Captain Wright progress- ed faster than any athlete on the cinders. He startled the College by breaking the Dart- mouth pole-vault record and winning his event in the dual meet with Harvard last spring, with a vault of 1.2 feet ti 1--1 inches. In tl1e New England championships at Springfield he showed his consistency by setting the same mark, and as a climax to his work he shat- tered all existing records for the pole-vault in the try-outs for the Olympic team in the Stadium last June, with the unparalleled rise of 13 feet 21-fl inches. At the Olympic meet in Stockholm he tied for second place, and won t11e toss, receiving the silver medal. At the conclusion of the Olympiad Captain Wright ape peared in four separate meets in Europe with other American athletes, and won each time, vaulting consistently over 12 feet. Among his other laurels is the German record, established in the meet at Berlin. LAWRENCE ATWOOD WHITNEY, Dart- mouth's best weight man, took third place at the Swedish Olympiad with a toss of over forty-Hve feet. Previous to the Olympic games, Whitney succeeded in breaking the College rec- ord any number of times, and in taking the American mark for the two-handed put under Olympic rules, with a total throw of seventy- eight feet six inches. Whitney has been called the best shot-putter in collegiate ranks. He held the scholastic record almost continuously while at Worcester, and has improved since he has been competing for Dartmouth. No rec- ords are safe when Whitney tosses the shot. ... 'A---,,.,f,,. , 5225. , I bigggygm gg 'gg fgawmmikp New ' ' is-5 -., 'f I- :az ' I2-:?3r,:Fg:r.f 'f' 4 'gf 1 : 5225 we -M? ff -W . , V Q if - was aggg ,fag ,awww-+ , naigrqr H. B. ENRIGHT L. A. WHITNEY HAROLD BRADFORD ENRIGHT was the inventor of hard luck on the Olympic trip. After jumping over six feet at the New England meet, and 6 feet 1 3-4 inches against Harvard in the spring. he won his place on the Ameri- can team for the Olympiad, only to be prevented from competing by an injury. He came safely through the semi-Iinals, tying for second with ease, but sprained his ankle before the nnal test. The in- jury to his ankle kept Enright out of the Continental meets following the Olym- piad, and he returned home without hav- ing been able to compete. Enright is joint holder of the College record in the high-jump. g295J R. K. STONE, Men., F. R. MARCEAU. S. D. ROSE, H. L. HILLBIAN, COACH. W. R. GRANGER, H. T. BAL1., CAPT., A. S. BULL. S. W. SALTMARSH, P. S. HARMON, J. L. DAY, E. B. MERRILL. Olrnnn Qlnuntrg Umm The best of the hill-and-dale runners that have represented Dartmouth in a number of years encountered little difficulty in winning the New England Championship at Tech Field, Brookline, Nov. 16th. Eight teams were entered in the four and one half mile run and as the winners returned to the field for the final lap. four green-jerseyed athletes were among the first five runners. Capt. Ball led Taber, of Brown, up to the last half lap when the latter by a bril- liant burst of speed broke the tape a winner. Ball was second, third place fell to Har- mon, and Marceau and Day captured fourth and fifth places respectively. The teams finished in the following order: Dartmouth, Brown, M. I. T., Amherst, Williams, Holy Cross, Worcester Polytechnic. The following week, the varsity, composed of the same members who competed at Brookline, journeyed to Ithaca, to compete in the lntercollegiates against representatives of the larger Eastern colleges. Q In this event, considered the most successful of its kind ever held in America, twelve teams competed. Harvard won the cup, owing to the ability of her runners to sustain the pace set by the individual stars, Jones of Cornell, and Taber of Brown. Cornell fin- ished second, with Dartmouth a close third. The team scores for the run were: Harvard, 32, Cornell, 48, Dartmouth, 87, Brown, l27g Pennsylvania, 154, M. I. T., 156g Syracuse, l74g Princeton, 1995 Yale, 2093 C. C. N. Y., 312. 12963 i Alfrrh ltuhann Eillvg After an illness of but two days dura- tion, Alfred Hudson Tilley, a member of the Class of I9l3 and Captain of the Dartmouth College track team, died after an operation for appendicitis, Saturday evening, July 6, l9l2, at the Mary Hitchcock Hospital in Hanover. Tilley was born in Owatonna, Minne- sota, August 20, l885. As a child he moved with his parents to Clinton, Illi- nois, where his home was until his death. He attended Morgan Park Academy of the University of Chicago in preparation for Dartmouth. In his life within the college, Tilley, by his courageous struggle for the noblest and best, exerted an influence that will al- ways bne felt. He had troubles to over- come, and in overcoming them he won the love and admiration of all. He also served Dartmouth well as an athlete. His high ideals of sportsmanship, his applica- tion and reliability together with his deft skill won him a lasting name among the athletes of whom Dartmouth is most proud, for he won great renown in track work. He first threw the hammer as a boy in Clinton. As he grew stronger and con- tinued striving, he won a reputation for himself in preparatory school. Captain of his freshman team at Dartmouth, he scored thirteen points 'in the meet won from the Princeton freshmen. His sopho- more year found him a winner in the Pennsylvania Relay Carnival, in the Harvard meet, in the New England ln- tercollegiates, fwhere he established a rec- ord, and in the National Intercollegiates. Reward came at the end of his junior year, when he was chosen captain of the 'varsity track team, for l9l3, and thus he achieved one of his ambitions. Though not massive in stature, he was compara- tively heavy. He won fame with his rapid triple and four-turn throws. Tilley was popular in College. He knew everyone, and everyone was glad to know Rhino Tilley. It was not his Captain A. H. Tilley prowess in athletics alone that brought him into honor. Great in that attain- ment, he was even greater as a large hearted, industrious person of high stand- ards. His memory will remain, and life within the college will be stirred to a more faithful and genuine manhood, when the life of Alfred Hudson Tilley is called to mind. C2975 Captain Gibson I n K K W . 4 -ex X X jg llll .1 7 IX lj- ligkjlili mm ' ' . . . :- QE t Swann 1512-1513 The Dartmouth basketball season opened in Alumni Gymnasium Dec. 19th when the varsity faced the Princeton quintet. This contest marked the beginning of Dartmouth's second year in the Intercollegiate Basketball League. Last year the Green team finished second to Columbia and its defeat on its last trip away from home was the most prominent factor in its loss of the Championship. As was the case in 191 l-l2, Dartmouth was represented by a fast, aggressive, and clever team, composed of live players with varsity experience. Captain Gibson had played two years on the varsity, Loudon still held his position as guard. The forwards were Sisson and Snow. The former held the record for the largest number of baskets thrown from scrimmage by any member of the league last year. Margeson was at his old post at center. In the Princeton contest the style of play of both teams was much the same. The contest was marked by aggressive work throughout, each team lighting for a lead. The first half ended with a l I-l l score but in the last period the Green's improved passing and better physical condition was too much. for the Tigers, who were forced to take the short end of a 27,22 score. The team started well on its season but was greatly handicapped by the loss of Gib- son and Snow, the former because he could not spare the time from his studies in the Thayer School and the latter because of serious illness in his family. After the examination period the team made its first trip to play Pennsylvania and Cornell. In one of the fastest basketball games seen in Quakertown in years Dartmouth went down to defeat at the hands of the Quakers by a score of 20 to l 7. The play was hard and fast at all times and the result of the game was in doubt up to the last minute of play. The second game of the trip was lost to Cornell by a score of 30-I 7. After a rest of two weeks the teams in the league started on the last leg of the sea- son, each one bent on annexing the championship title. The Green's first game after this period, was played with Williams in Alumni Gymnasium. This game was marked throughout by the clever passing and floor work of both teams. It was a remarkably fast game and the spectators were kept on edge with excitement all through the contest. It was uncertain who would be the winner until in the 62991 ' voL.Lv1 g 4 19,14 last minutes of play Snow broke loose and caged two baskets from difficult angles, thereby giving victory to the Green. The following week saw Columbia, the winner of last year's title, invading Dart- mouth territory with a speedy, aggressive team. The largest attendance at any league game this season saw the prettiest basket throwing exhibition on the part of the Green that will be seen in Hanover in many a day. The Gray and White team were completely dazed at the remarkable Hoor work of the Green quintet and were unable to break through her defense until the closing minutes of the game, when Jaques made Columbia,s only basket from scrimmage. The score at the final whistle was Dartmouth Zl, Columbia 9. With the big games still ahead and with the return of Snow to the lineup in addition to the lesson which experience has thus far taught the men, the outlook for a rating well up in the league is exceedingly promising at this date. x l we E its r lt fs' a .... g..+,--,.,..',giwQs tt 13003 BASKETBALL TEAM Q V0i..LV1 11914 Eaakrthall 1912-1913 J. Cn. Nelson, ,13, MGUUQCT S. S. Larmon, ,I4, Assistant Manager W. lVl. Gibson, '1 3, Captain J. A. lVlullen, COGCJ1 J. G. Nelson Snow, '14, Left Forward Sisson, ,14, Right Forward Margeson, '14, Centre Gibson, '13, Forward Grant, '14, Left Guard Loudon, '14, Right Guard SUBSTITUTES Winship, '15 Biclcforcl, '15 BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Dec. 19. :5Dartmouth, Z7 Princeton, 22 Jan. 1 1. aCDartmouth, 1 7 Pennsylvania, 20 Jan. 1 3. :':Dartmouth, 1 7 Cornell, 30 Feb. 8. 35Dartmouth, 28 Pennsylvania, 22 Feb. II Dartmouth, 18 Williams, I6 Feb. I5 FDartmouth, 21 Columbia, 9 Feb. 18. :5Dartmouth, I2 Princeton, Z2 Feb. 20. Dartmouth, 9 Wesleyan, 32 Feb. 22. A5Dartmouth, 21 Columbia, 29 Feb. 25. '55Dartmouth, I7 Wesleyan, 29 Feb. 27. Dartmouth I9 Williams, 2.0 Mar. 1. XD:-irtmouth, 25 Cornell, 27 xLeague Games 13021 Captain Mason NORTH MAIN STREET I W- me S-Q 9 I I . . ,k 1 Ng : Z 153 f J. I ,H ix - 5 ff J. f- 1 -'Q Z 0 ' ., il!! ' K' -' IIII . ,Str ' X! 4' 7 W' . . S P .J-I ifiQlT-m 'WEN T 5.-mmm nf 1912-1913 This year's hockey team started its season with the brightest prospects possible. From the few veterans of last year's seven and the wealth of excellent material which re- ported for the first practise, Coach Rocque welded a team together whose speed and ag- gressiveness as well as its skill in handling the puck places it as the best team that has rep- resented Dartmouth on ice in a number of years. Continued warm weather in December greatly handicapped the team at the begin- ning of the season, but the daily practice at the Boston Arena during Christmas recess did the team a world of good. In the initial contest with M. I. T., the team showed strength and ability to play well together. The first real test came however when Prince- ton was met in Boston, and though defeated by one goal the Green by clever defensivework held the champions of last year to a no-score second half. Frost shot both goals for Dart- mouth in this game, while Donahue's defense of the goal was nothing short of marvelous. Dartmouth won the third from the Massachusetts Aggies on a slushy rink. The steady plugging of Captain Mason and Tuck, aided by Wanamakerls clever drives, were too much for the Red and White contingent. Harvard was the next opposition for the Green and in a well played contest, resplen- dent with clever defensive work, Dartmouth was forced to take the short end of the score. Two days later the team retrieved itself by humbling Yale in a 3-2 contest. The games of Carnival Week were truly exhibition games, Dartmouth winning from the Aggies and Springfield Training School, thereby making a clean sweep of the series with these institutions. The trip which ended the season found Dartmouth a Winner from Cornell by a six point margin and from Syracuse by a one point margin. , While the mainstay of the team was consistent playing, the Green nevertheless had some individual stars who did brilliant work. Wanamaker, the rover, was easily the best C3051 'Q VOL.LVI . A i 1914 of man on the ice. l-lis ability for brilliant dribbling work gainecl for him a place on the All- Collegiate Seven. Captain Nlason ancl Frost as the two wing men were fast skaters and skillful on offensive play. Johnson at coverpoint ancl Dellinger at point were game fighters and clever skaters. Tuck at centre was the fastest skater in college and was brilliant in carrying the puck ancl breaking up the opponents' offense. Donahue, at goal, macle many phenomenal stops throughout the season ancl but for his stellar work in this line much larger scores woulol be chalkecl against his team. Coach Rocque shortly after his arrival changed the style of play somewhat, which improved the work of the team. Since he was the real factor in developing the latent pow- ers of the Green aggregation the results reclouncl particularly to his creclit. C3061 HOCKEY TEAM Q 'Q voL. LV1 1914 Qnrkvg Sreaann 1912-1513 I-l. A. McAllister, '13, Manager W. B. Slater, 'I4, Assistant Manager F. C. Rocque, Coach H. A. McAlli ster Tl-IE TEAM H. B. F rost, Left Wing W. I-I. Mason, CCapt.D Right Wing C. L. Wanamaker, Rover l... P. Tuck, Centre l-l. T. johnson, Cover Point l... Dellinger, Point A. I. Donahue, Coal SUMMARY OF TI-IE SEASON Dartmouth, 5 Massachusetts Tech., l Dartmouth, 2 Princeton, 3 Dartmouth, l V Massachusetts Aggies, 0 Dartmouth vs. West Point Cancelled. No Ice Dartmouth, l Harvard, 3 Dartmouth, 6 Springhelcl T. S., l Dartmouth, 3 Yale, 2 Dartmouth, 5 Massachusetts Aggies, 3 Dartmouth, I2 Springhelcl T. S., 0 Dartmouth, 7 Cornell, I D3TtmOUth, 3 Syracuse, 2 45 I6 C3081 was s 4,16 it ? AQSQSXQN afghegs fdyiiq' E 313 1 V -4 in . I 7 ff? X. illl .2 as ff I 15 l Sggaggbk - 4 4' 4 v- , : . NY wg-'eau z'- Q f awvae - 19 f . --Q. 4'mx2QwH , ' xxxo. as 4 X 4 ' 4 JF xy in X 4 X Aff x xx NR ff f A YZ f 3 , 1 .f Q X X V x - llll Svvaann nf 1912 Dartmouth opened the tennis season of l9l2 without the services of the player who has brought the sport to such a high standard at Dartmouth, F. H. Harris, ,l l. While this was a severe loss to the team, it was partly made up for by the great improvement shown by Captain G. Nelson, 'l3, and by the strong playing of'l-l. W. Webber, 7l4, who was on the varsity for the first time. The latter at the close of the season beat out H. H. Harmon, who was the most experienced man on the team, for second place, thereby win- ning the right to play in the Longwood tournament. Fourth position on the team ulti- mately fell to W. I-lugus, 'l 3. As a whole the season can hardly be looked upon as a success. The Green started in strong, defeating Massachusetts Tech in both singles and doubles, May 4th, and a week later the match with Massachusetts State resulted in a clean sweep for Dartmouth. The team left Hanover May 16th for its first trip, to play matches scheduled with Yale, Columbia, Wesleyan, and Williams. In the first match, that with Yale, Captain Nelson was the only man able to win ag point. The Columbia match was called off on account of raing and the following Saturday, Wesleyan duplicated Yale's feat, Nelson again being the only man able to get a point for Dartmouth. The Williams match re- sulted in a draw. A two-man team was sent to the Longwood tournament, Nelson and Webber being picked to represent Dartmouth. Un the way down, the Concord Country Club team was defeated, although Captain Nelson lost his match to F. W. Sulloway. In the Longwood tournament, Webber was defeated in the first round, Nelson went through until he met Johnson of Amherst. The same day the Amherst pair, Johnson and Miller, defeated Nelson and Webber in the doubles. In the final match of the season, Amherst defeated Dartmouth 4-2, the contest being featured by Captain Nelson's brilliant victory over Johnson,-the intercollegiate champion. In the Intercollegiates at Philadelphia, Captain Nelson of Dartmouth was within one point of winning the championship, and had in fact gone to the net to shake hands f309J JL5- ' voL.Lv1 . i 1914 with his opponent when, on a close decision by the referee, his service was declared a fault, and the game went on. After this, however, Nelson's nerves gave Way, and he could not stop Church. Church's win gave to Princeton its coveted cup, which had been in competition for six years. In the College tournament, Nelson and Webber' won the doubles championship, and Nelson won the singles. The non-Varsity tournament resulted in H. H. Nutt winning the singles, and H. H. Nutt and F. M. Gannon the doubles. During the summer, F. H. Harris, fl l, and G. Nelson, 'l3, won between them the championships in three States in singles and doubles. In New Hampshire, they cap- tured the doubles, and l-larris defeated Nelson in the singles final. They again won the doubles in Vermont, but the conditions were reversed in the singles, Nelson winning the challenge round. The State championship in doubles was also won by these players at Cleveland, Ohio. ln the challenge round Harris defeated Nelson. 13105 I, ' Wiz, .-,'- A fir' A . f -, V ' VARSITY TENNIS TEAM W. HUGUS H. S. HAHMON W. W. Wmsm-:n J. G. NELSON, Capt. Carpenter fTrin.J Brigham CM. I. TJ Preston fBl'ONV11J Foster CCo1byJ Scholtz fB1'OVVDJ Thurson CWi11.J Bacon fT1'i11.J McCo1'n1ick fBoWdoinJ Webber fDa1't.J Miller fAn1h.j Cushman fCo1byJ Carpenter 7-5, 6-1 Preston default Nelson fDart.J Johnson fA111h.J Richards CWes.J Pulford fT1'i1'1.J Beckman CM. I. TJ Shepard CBoWdoinj Gonger CWi11.J Nvin iinglanh fllnterrnllvgiairn Scholtz 7-5, 6-4 Bacon 6-0, 6-0 J J . I M1116-31' 6-3, 6-2 Carpenter I' default J Nelson 6-3, 6-3 y Johnson 13-11, 5-7, J J If Pulford 6-4, 6-3 y Conger 6-2, 6-4 6-3 Bacon 6-0, 6-2 I J I I I Miller 6-1, 4-6, 6-3 I J W I L Johnson I S-6, 6-2 I J J I I ? Conger I 3-6, 6-4, 6-3 I J I I T 1 I L Johnson 1 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 J J Johnson 5-7, 4-6, S-6, 6-3, 6-3 Zi OA Im SI I I6 - 'V ffl-IF, will voL.Lv1 A E 1914 DOUBLES Wesleyan Wesleyan A1 Trinity 6-4, G-4 I I , K P W1ll1:1111s 1 Williams an Williams I U-T, G-1 U-1 ' M. I. T. y G-3, G-2 J Igoyydoin l 1 AIEIIIQPSK Dartnlouth 5 I'?1l1'tl.llOl1t11 X Dilrtmouth I 1-0, U-0' G4 dofflult W 1 6-47 6-4 Colby S I .-Xrliherst Amherst :XIQ111Q1'St 6 'Z ti 'P T1-6, s-6, ms-Q l Brown --., '- J Standing on the Eight Point Cup Amlierst 2 TVi1Iiz1111s 142 XVCSIQXZIII 1-2 Dartmouth H Brown 0 Trinity 0 Bowdoin 0 Colby 0 M. I, T. 0 13131 ffl-IIE Natinnal llntvrrnllrgiatrn ai hiluhvlphia Whitney fl-lar.J Tilden QPenn.J Armstrong QMinn.J Mackvell IPghJ Mace fP1'inc.J Peaslee CYaleJ Washburn flflsuzj Fletcher fWill.J Kuhn QPrinc.J Stellwugen fMinn. J Evans Q Yalel Jamieson fPenn.J Wfright fPshJ Vietor CWil1.J Nelson CDz11't.J Devereux 4Har.J I I J I I I J I I J I, I J I I J J I J I Whitney 6-1, G-3 Armstrong 6-2, cs-1 Mace 6-2, 6-1 XVilSJ.1IQlUl'1l G-2, 6-4 Church fPrinC.J Man fYaleJ Jones I Penn. J Webber fDgrt.J Gates Q Yalej Mclieun fHz11'.j Page I1'enn.J M 01'1tgO1l18 QPrinc.J Kuhn G-3, 6-4 Evans 6-0, 6-3 TV1'ig11IZ 6-1, 4-U, - Nelson G-2, 6-2 ry Whitney I I - - T 7-o, T-:J I J I I I 1-Is, J Mace I I L , J I Qil,liU J Ch urch I I Jones I o-1 J J GzltQS I --J, 0-2 I Page J default I L Klfllll 1 6-2, G-4 J ,Ol e Nelson i G-3, G-2 J I I Whitney I G-2, 6-4 -3 J I I I Church I G-2. G-1 I J I ,,l ., 1109 G-2, 7-5 J l e Nelson 7-5, G-3 I J y314J I I ? Church X G-2, G-3 J W , , Nelson V 7-5, 6-2, G-1 J Church 6-4, 5-7 5-7, S-6 6-1 E 'Q voL. Lvi L - 1914 May May May May May May May lVlay lVlay lVlay June Tlhr Gram J. Cr. Nelson, 'l3, Captain and Manfzger H. S. Harmon, 'IZ H. W. Webber, 'l4 Wright Hugus, ' l 3 Capt. Nelson 4 8 Il I5 I6 I7 I8 22 25 Z7 I RECORD OF SEASON at Hanover Dartmouth, 6 M, I, T., O at Hanover Dartmouth, 6 Vermont, 0 at Hanover Dartmouth, 6 lVl. A. C., O at New Haven Dartmouth, l Yale, .5 Dartmouth vs. Columbia Cancelled' Rain. at Middletown Dartmouth, l Wesleyan, 5 at Williamstown X Dartmouth, 3 Williams, 3 at Hanover Dartmouth, 3 Faculty, 3 at Concord Dartmouth, 2 Beaver Meadow Clolf Club, l ancl 28 New England lntercollegiates-Won by Amherst. at Hanover Dartmouth, 2 Amherst, 4 43159 C. WELLS E' I6IiLllExLL R. lE.U'1Q,'rE3ASH, Cistp- WALSH CEnlf Gram F. A. Weigh, '14, Cafvfain comin Weiis, '13, Mfmflgef R. H. 13311, '13 F. A. Weigh, '14 comin Weus, '13 E. N. Giles, '14 F. P.Wa1sh, '13 R. 1-1. cutief, '14 SEASON OF 1912 Fall Championship tournament-Won by Collin Wells from R. H. Ball, six up and five to play. Harvard, 6 Dartmouth, 0 There was very little playing during the season, owing to wet weather. E. N. Giles equalled the college record, making the circuit of the course in 32. - 13165 I 651111 Timm ' T. P. Miller, 19102 G, A, Boggs, 1914 I-I. I-I. Crowell, l9l2, Captain A. W. Comstock, l9l3 I-1. A. Stiles, 1914 Stiles Miller Boggs Comstock Crowell, fCapt. ALL INTERCOLLEGIATE TEAM Biddle, Yale Thompson, Yale Comstock, Dartmouth Crowell, Dartmouth Boggs, Dartmouth Harvard-Dartmouth Dual Shoot Soldiers' Field, May IZ, 1912 Dartmouth. Harvard. 40 ex 50 Mixter, fCapt.j 37 ex 50 39 ex 50 Barthoff 36 ex 50 37 ex 50 Cutting 32 ex 50 33 ex 50 Lockwood Z9 ex 50 D 28 ex 50 Silsbee 29 ex 50 I77 ex 250 I63 ex 250 C3173 ff'HB', 0voL.Lv1 p. 1914 Efhe Elnterrnllegiate Malefarn Svhnnting Qllnh May 18, 1912 ' Yale First Dartmouth Second Biddle 95 ex 100 Comstock 95 Thompson ' 95 ex 100 Crowell, fCapt.J 90 Keeler 87 ex 100 Boggs 88 Emmett, fCapt.D 84 ex 100 Stiles 84 Scott 81 ex 100 Miller 80 P 442 500 437 Princeton Third Harvard Fourth White, fCapt.J 87 ex 100 Knapp 86 Simpson 86 ex 100 lVlixter fCapt.D 85 Bartlett 85 ex 100 Cutting 83 Nimmick 81 ex 100 Lockwood 81 Barnett 77 ex 100 Silsbee 71 41 6 ex 500 406 CX CX CX CX CX CX CX CX CX CX CX 100 100 100 100 100 500 100 100 100 100 100 CX 50 0 1 RIFLE TEAM C3 185 x 191.5 BASEBALLZTEAM F. C. ORTON, Asst. Mgxxg L. P. TUCK, F. LowE, P. W. LOUDON, Coach, R. B. BELKNAP, Mgr. C. F. WHI'EELY, J. G. HARRIS, R. S. B. PERRY, N. M. PARROT. A. P. WILLIANIS, A -M. P. Gm-:E, C. L. WANAMAKER, N. L. MILLIORE, A. A. SIMQNEAU 4'HE: mr 5 ,wrt QQEQDE R. B. Belknap, F. C. Orton, C. 1... Wanamaker, P. W. Loudon, Wanamaker, Tuck, Harris, Mernstein, Dartmouth, 1915 Dartmouth 1915 Dartmouth 1915 Dartmouth 1915 Dartmouth 1915, Dartmouth 1915, Dartmouth, I9l5, 1915 Ifiaarhall Gram Milmore, THE TEAM Catcher Lowe, Pitcher Ghee, First Base Simoneau, Second Base Whitely, Centre Field THE. SEASON 3 Tilton, I2 Dean, 1 1 Cushing, 2 Andover, 5 Worcester, ' 2 Dean, 3 Exeter, C3219 Manager Assistant Manager Captain Coach .shortstop Third Base Right Field Left Field 4 2 0 3 7 4 6 1 915 TRACK TEAM 1915 Zflrark Svvaznn Dual Meet. Dartmouth, l9l5, 70 Worcester Academy 38 l00-Yarcl Dash 220-Yard Dash 440-Yard Dash 880-Yard Run l Mile Run IZO-Yard Hurdles 220-Yard Hurdles High Jump Broacl Jump Shot Put Hammer Throw Pole Vault Hanover, May I3, 1912 Point Summary Dartmouth I5 Worcester Academy 6 6 8 5 I 5 8 3 6 8 6 8 70 C3225 1915 CROSS COUNTRY TEAM ' B. H. CLARK C. Mowisn W. R. GRANGER H. L. HILLDIAN, Coach P. HAYES H. S. POTTER E. B. MERRILL A. S. BULL iltrvahman Glrnma' Qlnunirg The freshman cross-country team competed over the three-mile course at Andover, Nov. 22, against representative teams from Andover, Exeter, Worcester Academy, and the freshman teams of Cornell, Pennsylvania, lVl. I. T., and Harvard. By good team Work Dartmouth '16 captured this run, getting the lowest score of 55 points. The posi- tions in which the teams hnished are as follows: Dartmouth '16, Pennsylvania '16, Har- vard '16, Worcester Academy, Andover and Exeter. C3235 1916 FOOTBALL TEAM R. A. BURLEN. J. N. COLBY, R. R. REEDER, T. B. WAl.K1'cn, P. O. SOUTAR. C. A. PUDRITH. A. G. FISKE, ELL. BROWN, Mgr W. R. YORK, A. J. ZABRISKIE, N. P. WINCHELL, C. C. HITCHCOCK, A. S. BOUTIN, E. A. GIOIOSA. ' K. D. TUCKER, J. B. MOAULIFFE, R. M. SGOVIL., A. M. TELFEH, Capt., R. G. TYLER, F. K. DOUGLAS. 1916 CROSS COUNTRY TEAM rfHE - ' r vor.. Lvl A 1914 '1 19115 Eltnnthatll Gram Edward l... Brown, Manager Charles K. Fuller, Assistant tllanager W. B. Elcock, Coach A. lVl. Telfer, Captain THE TEAM Telfer, Left Emi Boutin, Right Tackle Goldthwaite, Left End Reeder, Right Tackle Puolrith, Left Tackle lVlacAuliffe, Right End Soutar, Left Tackle Zabriskie, Quarterback Colby, Left Guard Gioiosa, Quarterback Walke1', Left Cuara' Tucker, Left Halfhack Douglas, Centre Burlen, Left Halfback York, Right Guard Scovil, Fullback Hitchcock, Right Cuara' Fiske, Fulllvack Tyler, Right Halfback THE SEASON Oct 5 Dartmouth 1916, IZ Exeter, 0 Oct. I2 Dartmouth 1916, '41 St. Anselms, 0 Oct. I7 Dartmouth l9l6, O Andover, O Oct. 26 Dartmouth l9l6, I3 Worcester, 0 Nov. Z Dartmouth l9l6, Zl Cushing, 7 Nov. 9 Dartmouth I9l6, 7 Dean, 7 94 i-4 C3255 PRESIDENT TAFT'S VISIT NQNA ET IC U BARENDS BENNETT GIBSON W1LK1Ns MOILEY CUNNINGHAM MASON f FULMER M'CALLIS1'ER H-uous W me HT Efdetlewnpitna t t i Palaeopitus is the student government council of the College. lts members are all seniorsg six of whom are chosen by class election, ancl five of whom are chosen by the retiring bocly. A . Howard A. Barencls Karl I-I.1F ulmer A .l-lasrold C. McAllister' Ray L. Bennett . .William lVl. Gibson William I-l. Mason T. Donald Cunningham ' Wright l-lugus David B. Morey H Warcle Wilkins Marc S. Wright ' 'g .VOL.LVI A IQI4 A A Bartmnnth Glnllege Nun-Z-'kthletir Qluunril The growth in size and importance of unclergracluate non-athletic organizations has lecl to the gradual evolution of a controlling council not unlike in powers and functions the body in charge of athletic organizations. At first purely an advisory committee of the Faculty, the bocly is now definitely organized under a constitution as the Dartmouth Col- lege Non-Athletic Council. It is composed of four faculty members, a Ctracluate Man- ager, ancl three unclergraduatesg namely, the Manager of the Dramatic Club, the Man- ager of the Musical Clubs, and the Chairman of the Junior Prom Committee. The Council recognizes Dramatics, the Debating Union, the Musical Clubs, the Band, Junior Prom, and the Outing Club. OFFICERS Professor Gordon F. I-lull, Chairman Professor Theodore I-l. Boggs, Secretary T. Donald Cunningham, '13, Graduate Manager FACULTY MEMBERS Professor Homer E. Keyes Professor Albert H. Licklicler UNDERGRADUATES Harvey C. McClary, ' l 3 Arthur E. Wyman, '13 Arthur E. Gillis, 'l4 13295 Painted in 1850 by John Pope of Boston, this portrait of Daniel Webster, considered by critics his best likeness. was long in :L private collection in Europe, until purchased by Mr. Edward Tuck, '6l. and pre- sented to the College in 1912. PRGM 1913 PROM COMMITTEE V DAVIS UG Us B,xRNE'r'r Emvmz ns A'1'w0oD 2 'Q voL.Lv1 i s 1914 Eluninr Igrnm COMMITTEE JOSEPH J. BARNETT, Chairman Henry E. Atwood Rockwood S. Edwards William A. Davis Wright Hugus PATRONESSES Mrs. Nichols Mrs. Brown Mrs. Bugbee Mrs. Carleton Mrs. Comstock Mrs. Davis Mrs. Fay Mrs. Gile Mrs. Hunter Mrs. Lee E Mrs. Lyman Mrs. Semmes Miss Edwards FLOOR DIRECTOR JOSEPH J. BARNETT Sidney M. Akerstrom Maurice C. Avery , Ray L. Bennett USI-IERS Edward L. Brown T. Donald Cunningham Edward A. Davis C3333 Leonard R. Manley Harvey C. McClary Henry W. Merrill Somerville P. Tuck, Jr. VOL LVI Nl IQ 14 2:30 p. 7:00 p. 8:30 p. I 1:00 p. 7:50 a. 4:00 p. 7:00 p. 8:30p ll:00 p. 7:50 a. m. 4:00 p. m. 7:00 p. m. 9:00,-p. m. Zlnnim' muah 1Hrngram Wednesday, May 22 Tennis Match, Varsity vs. Faculty, North Fayerweather Courts Class Hum, Campus. Prom Opera, The Green Parasol, Webster Hall. Fraternity Dances and Receptions. Thursday, May 23 Chapel. Baseball, Dartmouth vs. Vermont, Alumni Oval. Band Concert, College l-lall. Concert by Mandolin and Glee Clubs, Webster Hall. Fraternity Dances and Receptions. Friclay, May 24 Chapel. Baseball, Freshmen Vs. Cushing Academy, Alumni Gval. Band Concert, College Hall. Junior Prom Dance, Alumni Gymnasium. k334J ffl-IF, 'Q A voL. Lvi A E 1914 Hratrrnitg Eanrezr Wednesday, May 22 Delta Kappa Epsilon Reception at Delta Kappa Epsilon House. Phi Kappa Psi Reception at Phi Kappa Psi House. Delta Tau Delta Reception at Delta Tau Delta Rooms. Alpha Delta Phi and Theta Delta Chi Dance in College Hall Dining Room Phi Delta Theta Dance at Phi Delta Theta House. Beta Theta Pi Dance in Trophy Room of Alumni Gymnasium. Phi Sigma Kappa Dance at Phi Sigma Kappa House. Chi Phi Dance at Hanover Inn. Kappa Sigma Dance at I. O. O. F. Hall. Thursday, May Z3 Beta Theta Pi Reception at Beta Theta Pi House. Chi Phi Reception at Chi Phi House. Psi Upsilon Dance in College Hall Trophy Room. Kappa Kappa Kappa Dance at Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Delta Kappa Epsilon Dance at College Hall Dining Room. Sigma Chi Dance at Sigma Chi House. Phi Kappa Psi Dance at Hanover lnn. Delta Tau Delta Dance at Grange Halli Sigma Nu Dance in Living Room of Commons. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Dance at I. O. O. F. Hall. Friday, May Z4 Kappa Kappa Kappa Reception at Kappa Kappa Kappa House. Phi Gamma Delta Reception at Phi Gamma Delta House. Sigma Nu Reception at Sigma Nu House. Sigma Alpha Epsilon Reception at Dr. Kingforcfs House. C3355 vi'HE VOL.LVI , V- 1914 Ellis Mrnrn lgaramnl A Musical Comecly in Three Acts. Music by Dwight Conn, 'l4, ancl Ray L. Wilkinson, 'l4. Book by Theodore Marriner, 'l4, ancl Dwight Conn, 'l4. Lyrics by Theodore Marriner and Ray L. Wilkinson, ll-4. Mr. Frecl A. Bishop, Musical Director. CAST OF CHARACTERS Neel Stanwood fa seniorj Jack Howell fhis friendJ Theophrastus Stanwoocl fNecl's fatherj A Little Laucler fa freshmanJ Usier Beane fa grinclj John fvencler of imagesj Dick Bill fstuclentsJ Jim Giovanni Pietro fVenetian Street MusiciansJ Tony Elise Frothingham fthe chaperonj Comtesse Ysobel Camille Jeanne cle Chateaurien Ctravelling in th Lutie fa village queenJ V Mamie fheacl waitress at the Junc,'J Clarice fanother waitressJ Marie Gaby Deslys Dolly Jorclan-Marsh Molly Houghton-Dutton Polly Siegel-Cooper F lossie Cobb-Bates Sally Shepard-Norwell Kitty Macullar-Parker Tessie Smith-Patterson Jessie Thayer-McNeil fSmythe GirlsJ rs 36 5 B. A. I-loban, J. R. Erwin, E. V. K. Willson G. H. Tilton, Jr., J. Scarry, R. L. Sisson, Jr. L. D. Chase, B. l-l. Foncla, R. S. Barlow, C. F.. Griflith, Jr., R. G. Geller, J. R. Burleigh, S. F. lckes, e United Statesj C. M. Claeys A. I-I. Leonard, Jr. F. l-I. Colby L. V. Lyons R. G. Geller C. B. Jorclan, Jr. R. W. Redfield, S. M. l-lill, R. C. Johnson D. S. Page, J. S. Fawcett, N. A. Farwell, K. l-l. Smith, R. Frothingham, Jr., 1 1 s 9 s 'Q voL.LVi l r 1914 '- PONIES-J. H. Cleaves, 1.12, F. H. Colby, '14, M. Piane, '14, E. S. Learoycl '14, M. Palmer, '14, Cm. E. Fuller, '14, P. A. Leary, 115, G. K. Rose, '15. 1 BOYS-1... D. Chase, '12, R. S. Barlow, '14, B. H. Fonda, '14, H. 1-1. Potter, '14 M. D. Pomeroy, '14, R. Young, '14, E. l-1. Barnarcl, '14, C. S. Batchelder, '14 M. Remsen, 'I4, P. C. 1-lowley, '14, R. M. 1-logsett, 114, H. C. Bean, '14, sl. P. Margeson, Jr., '14, E. N. Downing, '15, A. F. Waite, '15, SYNOPSIS OF SCENES Act I. Station at White River Junction, Commencement Week 9 1 Act. H. Campus in front of Dartmouth Hall, next day. Act lll. Plaza before Hotel Regina in Venice. MUSICAL NUMBERS ACT I 1. Opening Chorus fwaitressesf 2. Cold Hanclsl' Duet Uack and Lauclerl 3. The Charming Chaperone Song Clilise ancl Smythe Girls, 4. 6'Oh, Gaby Song Uack and Chorus? 5. Finale fElise and Ensemblej ACT II 6. Opening Chorus fDick, Ensemble, and Quartetb 7. Profs,' Song fLauder and Chorusl 8. Tennis Girls Song fE.lise and ChorusD 9. What Evlry Woman Knowsl' Duet fComtesse ancl Theophrastusb 10a. uRaffle Song Ensemble Uohn and Chorusj 1019. My Marien U Song Uohnj 10c. Dance Fantasie Dance CMariej 1 1. Thinking of You ancl Campus Dreamsl' by Quartet Finale Cinclucling Nec1's songj Entfacteg Polonaise ACT III 12. Fiesta cli Flora Opening Dance flzllower Girlsj 13. Spotlight Song Song CComtesseJ 14. That Boston Rag Song Hack ancl Chorusl 15. Music Is Calling A Duet flilise ancl Necll 16. Venetian Street Song, '1Kublla Khanl' Song fTrio of Street Musiciansl 17. Lily-of-the-Valley Duet fElise ancl Neclj 18. Arab Love Song Song fElise ancl Chorusj 19. When the Green Comes Forth to Battlen Finale 13371 Ghz 1914 Qlnmmittee ARTHUR E. GILLIS, Chairman A SAMUEL A. FULLER KENNETH GRANT JOSEPH L. DAY CHARLES W. F. O,CONNOR EY! J , K! f f.,,.......,.....,...4......,..--,.....f--. .-. ,.,.,M4,.....,-.,,...,,,,.-,..... ,.,, NY .,,-,....-,,,,..,, ! f' ,7 I . I 1 CQ ENCEMELNP5 gg A 'Y i1!ffM'f'X J V, 111,75-5' 3 fi' '21 if x.....,, M , 3, CLASS OF 1912 'Q vo1..Lv1 1914 5:00 p. 6:45 p. 7:00 p. 9:00 p. Qlnmmvnrrmrnt, 1912 14321. Qlumrnenrement nt' Bartmunth Qlnllege Friday, June I4 Senior Class Sing-Out in Rollins Chapel. Classes assemble for the Wet-Down. Public Initiation of the Palaeopitus at the Old Pine. College Dinner to Senior Class. Saturday, June Z2 8:00 p. m. Speaking in Dartmouth Hall for the class of l866 prizes and the Barge gold medal. Sunday, June 23 l0:30 a. m. Baccalaureate Sermon by the Rev. Charles Reynolds Brown Dean of Yale Divinity School. 5:30 p. m. of ,97. 2:30 p 4:30 p. 6:45 p. 7:45 p ll:00p 8:30 a. l0:00 a 2:00 p. 4:30 p. 6:45 p. 7:45 p l0:30 p 9:00 a Public Vesper Service in College Church under the auspices of the Class Address by the Rev. Benjamin T. Marshall '97, Monday, June Z4 Class Day Exercises. Reunions of Greek Letter Fraternities and Band Concert, College Hall Terrace. Operetta: mlghe Green Parasol. Promenade Concert in College Yard. Tuesday, June 25 Meeting of the Phi Beta Kappa Society. Baseball Game-Amherst vs. Dartmouth. College Societies Annual Meeting of the Alumni Association. President's Reception, Parkhurst Administr Band Concert, College Hall Terrace. Concert by the Dartmouth Musical Clubs. Band Concert, College Hall Terrace. Wednesday, June 26 Prayers in College Church. 9:30 a. rn. Commencement Exercises in Webster Hall, including the conferrn f degrees in course and honorary degrees. 12:00 m. Luncheon at Alumni Gymnasium. ation Building 9:00 p. m. The Commencement Ball, Alumni Gymnasium. 43415 ffl-IE, Glnmmenremrnt Bag Order of Exercises in Webster Hall I Prayer of Thanksgiving II Prayer III Singing of lVlilton's paraphras Let us with a gladsome' mind Old Netherlands e of Psalm CXXXVIQ tune f'Nuremburgl' Praise the Lord, for He is kind, For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. L.et us blaze His name abroad, For of Gods He is the Cody For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. He with all commanding might, Filled the new-made world with light, For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. He His chosen race did bless In the wasteful wilderness, For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. All things living He doth feed, His full hand supplies their need For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. Let us therefore chorus forth His high majesty and worthg For His mercies aye endure, Ever faithful, ever sure. IV Commencement Addresses. l. The Courts and Democracy xHenry Ely lVlcElwa1n 2. The Moral Message of English Novelists Cleon Bucklin White 3. The Dream of United Italy Roy Joseph Deferrari 4. Poetry in Life Charles Raymond Cabot 5. Democracy or Dynamite Conrad Edwin Snow 6. Fragments of Heraclitus 'fafwilliam Willard Flint V Singing of Men of Dartmouthf' VI Conferring of the Bachelorfs Degree. VII Conferring of the lVlaster's Degree. VIII Conferring of Honorary Degrees. IX Singing of the Doxology. X Benediction. tFWith Salutatory rank afxwith Valedictory rank C3425 'Q vol.. Lvl ,p A 1914 'H Evgrrva Glnnfvrrvh in Qlnurar Howard Eugene Allen Edgar Weston Anderson Henry Lyman Armes Porter Wheaton Averill Merton Howard Baker Harry Carleton Barnett Jolm Wells Baxter TI-larold Blanchard Belcher Walter Lawrence Biery tWarren Day Bruner Randall Green Burns ?Charles Raymond Cabot Fletcher Clark, Jr. Sydney Aylmer Clark James Hooker Cleaves Arthur Thayer Cobb tHorace Alvin Colburn tLewis Clyde Cooke tPaul Wendell Coolidge John Aloysius Cronin Howard Hollon Crowell Frederick Davis Day igRoy Joseph Deferrari Dean Reade DeMerritt Willis Chandler Dunning Alfred Samuel Eiseman Walter Benjamin Elcock James Henry English James Robinson Erwin Arthur Call Ferguson Robert Dearborn Fletcher ilVilliam Willard Flint, Jr. W'alter Merrill French Charles Edward Gately George Washington Geiser, Jr. Roland Benjamin Ahlswede tHarold Tower Baker Ralph Edmund Baker Robert Brown Belknap Harold Adams Bellows Thomas Lanahan Brennock John Densmore Brewster Harry Madara Brown Robert Elsmere Brown Lloyd Harrison Bugbee Gardner Palmer Bullard 'i':X1'tllll1' YVashington Bu1'n- ham Elmer Dearborn Chapman Earhvlura uf Art Ruel Savery Gibbs Earl Clifton Gordon Irwin James Goss TVernon Lorenzo Greene James Bartlett Griiiin Willis Everett Hawkes Chester Price Haycock Bernard Arthur Hoban tJohn Lemley Holden TAIVQIII Story Holway John Eugene Hunt iPaul Prentiss Jones Francis Paul Kennedy 'fiX1'l1hlll' Lyman Kinne Robert Harrison Kirkpatrick Morris Edward Knight Hugh Francis Lena Howard Burchard Lines Hermann Lohmann Lathrop Bartlett Lovell Harry Stevens Lowd Edward Billings Luitwieler Barrow Burnett Lyons John Joseph McCarthy Jackson McCoy il-Ienry Ely McElwain, Jr. Harold Edwin Marden tErnst Edmund Mensel tWilliam Theophilus Middle- brook tEdward Cooley Miner Robert Saunders Morris Harold Gerard Mosier TGladwin Merl Nead :Uames Shaw Newton Zfietrhelura nf Svrienrn Lyle Dudley Chase A Walter Hadden Childs Arthur Henry Clark Clifford Moore Cuddy tLowell Brockway Dana tNelson Luther Doe 21Herman Arthur Doolittle David Lawson Dorward Joseph Donald Doyle William Wallace Dudley tHugh Clifford Eaton Ralph Edward Farnum George Hobart Farrington Cedric Errol Francis Roy Lester Newton Daniel Basil 0lConnor, Jr. James Laughlin Oneal Ernest Staples Osgood Robert Lewis Parks, J1'. Dwight Lincoln Perry Ralph Dexter Pettingill Andrew Jackson Phelps, 3d Richard Charles Plumer William Whipple Poole, Jr. Charles Thomas Powers tCharles William Remele Scott Arthur Rogers tFordham Clark Russell TTracy Lewis Sanborn WVilliam Pickering Shapleigh tConrad Edwin Snow tLeslie XVllll21l101'6 Snow Russell Lee Steinert vHenry Bailey Stevens Ralph Widman Tackaberry tClifton Clark Taylor Marshall Tucker Tirrell Ray Wentworth Tobey tl-larry Edwin Trapp Ralph Dustin Twitchell Clarence Getchell Tyler Lewis Pease Warren Stanley Burnham YVeld tCleon Bucklin White William Lee NVhite iiManvel YVhittemore Russell Arthur Wylde ifErnest Ludwig Zimmerman Arthur Edmund French Harold Sylvester Fuller Everett Warren Gammons Alvaro Garcia Wyckoff Lawrence Garrison Roscoe Glenn Geller Claude Moulton Goodrich Fred Prescott Goodrich, Wallace Irving Gould Roswell Eliot Hall Carlton Moi-hous Hammond Harold Soule Harman Elden Bennett Hartsho1'n Royal Joslyn Haskell tCum laude. 'i'Magna cum laude. iSumma cum laude. 13431 'Q vonrvi 5 A g 1914 '- William Nelson Healey TMaurice Hedlund Ttleorge Hitchcock 'fSam Hobbs Benjamin Henry Hunt Sydney Frank Ickes Dana Weeman Jones Wallace Thaxter Jones, Jr. Kenneth Chase Kimball Waldo Gray Knapp Lloyd Witl'11'ONN' Knight Morton Kyle i1Thomas Cooper Lampee Guy Charles Lewis Joseph William Lewis Roy Everett Lewis Rolliston Woodbury Linscott William Henry Locke Charles Edward McCarthy James Francis Malley T. Palmer Miller . tEdmund Irving Mitchell John Douglas More Clyde Gilman Morrill Robert Avery Morrill .John Randall Park Lew Knowlton Perley Wzilter Southward Quint -fMark White Reed Richard Remsen Clearton Howard Reynolds 'i'Joseph Lovering Richards Edward Avery Richmond Perley James Roberts Carle Ellsworth Rollins .Joseph William Russell William Ashe Ryan Edmund Read Sawyer Lindsly Beinard Schell Harold Goodhue Stearns James Alfred Steen Robert Coleman Stoughton Clifton Hoyt Sugatt Elwyn Lowell Taber William Courtney Timbrell Harold Rector Trewin John James Troy Henry Kimball Urion Henry Bowers Van Dyne Henry Rouse Viets, Jr. Joseph Elijah Wadleigh 'i'George Fred Wallburg Harry Caspar Wanner Lewis Clement Waterbury Homer George Watson iNorton Page Webber Carl Samuel Wells iiAlfred Leslie Smith Mark George Snow iilialph Edward Whitney Maurice Young illilaaima uf Ariz Ralph Harrub Blanchard, A.B., 1911. Walter Ames Morgan, A.B., 1911. Economics Philosophy Frank Free1nanDunneld, A.B., Bates, 1904. Ernest Everett Morrill, A.B., 1911. English Political Science Clifton Tisdale Edgerly, A.B., 1910. Arthur Gould Winship, A.B., 1911. French Economics ilillaairr nf Svrienre Fred Arthur Bourlett, B.S. 1911. Psychology. George Joshua Clarke Edmund Joseph Daly Clarence Eugene Dunbar. A.B. James Joseph Powers Harry Bartlett Dunham' Sydney Clifford Beane, B.S. Jolm Jackson Boynton, B.S. Clarence Eugene Ellswortl1,XVilliam Davis Gordon, B.S. B Q .K-. Harold Lewis English, RS. Barium nf fllirhirinr LeRoy Charles Grau Frank Edward Lewis, A.B. William James Vivian Jolm Willard Wesley Arthur Beattie Woodman Oliuil Enginerra - WVillard Mer1'ill Gooding,B.S. Julian Osgood Goodrich, B.S. Clyde Earle Locke, B.S. Leo11 Craig Marshall, B. S. Harold Warren Pease, A.B. Frank Sumner TVhitcomh, AB Riley Tilton Young, A.B. Alfred Albert Hormel, B.S. Warren Fuller Kimball. B.S. iilaaiera nf Glnmmrrrinl Srirnre Nathaniel George Burleigh, A.B. Seth Austin Emerson, AB. Walter Burnap Gibson,A.B. Charles Jordan, 2d, A.B. Henry Jordan Morton. AB. Henry Sanders Smith, A.B. Howard Shedd Parlin, B.S. Richardfiilbert Whelden,A.B. I-lenry Brown Philbrook, B.S. XVillian1 Karl Wobhecke, Stephen Farley Rossiter, B.S. B.C.S. John Augustin Scanlon, A.B. tCu1n laude. TMagna cum laude. C3443 'Q A voig LV1 i s 1914 Ennnrarg Bvgrrvz . fllilwatrr nf Erivnrn Joseph Moody Willard, 1887 fflllemtvr uf Ariz Arthur Chase, Trinity College, l889 Frederick Augustus Vogt Charles Sumner Ward, ISSI Enrtnr uf Eiuinitg William Ellsworth Strong, 1882 Enriur nf Qrivnrr Lewis Boss, 1870 Euriur nf Evitrra Alfred Ernest Stearns fAmherst, l894J Bnrtnr nf Emma Melvin Ohio Adams, i871 Republican Steam Roller at Commencement 1912 13451 1 . ......,v4-fvgv' i I -Z ' 'i'E2:'.1'.'j':f5j'-gffgLf. ''f'1'f:1iI fi f'ff1-1 Lf :g7Lj7:1f -r - L- ,-,- -,:--- F',..- ..,...... ... . - .2-.-,--,I-fl:,,-y'..,g.-11,::'g. 1:.1-sf.,-I a,-1 :, ...Q .1-.-.:::.wffff.-.1 1'1-1-.:! r. .am-.::-.sl .V -A, , ..... ,. . . ,- i V: f -.-.-: .. .wr .,: -5,-.j , 11,-.:.j--:ci-1-Ley : - in-:.'. :.-:.'.'.:E'.:r,-- , .,..... - - .4 - ., iff- Arif: ' ' A' I I .,... -. .- ..... . .... ..--. ..,...,.. ,.., .,., . ,, 4 ,. .. 1 .. . ,.,.,. .,..... H... -,L x-. .c ..,, ..,. ... -. -,.,-.rm-1, 4-'Q as 163 544 ,aw -sqf 'Wm G ' ., 1, Q., 'bl at I '::'iQ 'w .g: W f-it Q 1' fa 11 gy 1 1111 A D I 1, ,'1 'A'Af 3f i 1 f f-i1?'g - '2 f'1 i 'ti' 0112155 nf 15112 Barge Cola' Medal-Original Orations Hugh Francis Lena Class of 1866-Original Orations Second Prize- 1 Edgar Weston Anderson, 1909-10 Lockwood-Debating First Prize- Conrad Edwin Snow, 1911-12 Second Prize- Daniel Basil O'Connor, 1911-12 Newton Alumni-Extemporaneous , Debate First Prize- Conrad Edwin Snow, 1911-12 Second Prize- Daniel Basil O'Connor, 1911-12' Crimes-English Composition First Prize- Henry Bailey Stevens Second Prize- Mark White Reed Lockwood-English Composition First Prize- l-lenry Bailey Stevens, 1910-11 Second Prize- Ray Wentworth Tobey, 1910-1 1 Hovey Poem Prize William Willard Flint, Jr., 1910-11,1911-12 Warren-Prize Scholarship William Willard Flint, Jr., 1911-12 Class of 1846-Latin First Prize- Edward Phelps Johnson, 1910-1 1 Second Prize- Arthur Lyman Kinne, 1910-11 A therton-Creek First Prize- William Willard Flint, Jr., 1910-1 1 Second Prize- ' Roy Joseph Deferrari, 1910-1 1 Thayer-Mathematics Second Prize- Harry Madara Brown Pray-Modern Languages French-Fordham Clark Russell, 191112 German-Vernon Lorenzo Greene, 1 9 Crimes-Improvement Harold Rector Trewin Spalding-Mechanical Drawing First Prize- George Hitchcock, 1910-11 First Prize- Leslie Whitmore Snow, 191 1-12 The Pickering Historical Prize Wallace Irving Gould, 1911-12 Kenneth Archibald-Athletics Bernard Arthur I-loban Woodbury-Lan: School Gladwin Merl Nead William Lee White C3475 1112 Q VOL.LVI A i f 19141. Glnmmrnrvmvnt Stanhing r The following members of the class received a Commencement mark, ranking above 80 per cent. for the course. Harold Tower Baker Harold Blanchard Belcher Harry Madara Brown Warren Day Bruner Arthur Washington Burnham Charles Raymond Cabot Sydney Aylmer Clark Horace Alvin Colburn Lewis Clyde Cooke Paul Wendell Coolidge Lowell Brockway Dana Roy Joseph Deferrari Nelson Luther Doe Herman Arthur Doolittle Hugh Clifford Eaton William Willard Flint, Vernon Lorenzo Greene Mauritz Hedlund George Hitchcock Sam Hobbs ,lohn Lemley Holden Alvah Story Holway Paul Prentiss Jones Arthur Lyman Kinne Ernest L Thomas Cooper Lampee Henry Ely lVlcElwain Ernst Edmund Mensel William Theophilus Middlebrook Edward Cooley Miner Edmund Irving Mitchell Gladwin Meri Neacl James Shaw Newton Mark White Reed Charles William Remele Joseph Lovering Richards Fordham Clark Russell Tracy Lewis Sanborn Alfred Leslie Smith Conrad Edwin Snow Leslie Whitmore Snow Henry Bailey Stevens Clifton Clark Taylor Harry Edwin Trapp George Fred Wallburg Norton Page Webber Cleon Bucklin White William Lee White Ralph Edward Whitney udwig Zimmerman iltufua Cilhuate Svrhnlars Those who attain a rank of 90 per cent. for any year are designated Rufus Choate Scholarsn for that year, but previous to 1909-I 0 the requirement was 92 per cent affect ing the members of the class of l9lZ for the first year of their course. Harold Blanchard Belcher,'09-'l0,'l0-,ll Roy Joseph Deferrari, '09-,l0, 'l0-'ll, il l 'l2 Nelson lluther Doe. '1 1-'12 William Willard Flint, jr., '08-'09, IO ll Il IZ 'O9'-l0, i -' , ' -' Mauritz Hedlund, '08-'09 George Hitchcock, 'l I-'IZ H3487 Arthur Lyman Kinne, 'lO-'l l McElwain,Henry Ely'09-'l0 I0 ll 'II 'IZ Gladwin Merl Nead, 'l I-'IZ Mark White Reed, '09-'IO Tracy Lewis Sanborn. 'l I-'IZ Alfred Leslie Smith, 'l I-'IZ Conrad Edwin Snow, '09-,l0 VoL.Lv1 i f 1914 136225 sinh ignnnru Ainarhrh in'12I12 PRIZES Barge Cold Medal-Original Orations-Seniors Hugh Francis Lena Class of i866-Original Orations-juniors, Sophomores First Prize-Sigvald Asbjorn Stavrum Second Prize-Wilfred Charles Gilbert Rollins-Oratory- funiors, Sophornores, Freshmen First Prize-Clarence Coit Meleney Second Prize4Raymond Stark Bogardus Perry Third Prize-Edward Charles Mabie Fourth Prize-Sigvald Asbjorn Stavrum l,ocl5D1ood-Debating-Candidates for Varsity Debating Teams First Prize-Conrad Edwin Snow Second Prize-Daniel Basil O'Connor Newton Alumni-Extemporaneous Debate-Seniors First Prize-Conrad Edwin Snow Second Prize-Daniel Basil O'Connor Crimes-English Composition-Seniors First Prize-Henry Bailey Stevens Second Prize-Mark White Reed Lockwood-English Composition-funiors First Prize-Charles Dana Waterman Second Prize-No award A Hovep Poem Prize William Willard Flint, Jr. D. .d d Roswell Joseph Powers WI e A therton-Creek-juniors First Prize-David Ernest Adams Second Prize-No award C3491 19141 VUL LVI .X Spalding Class of IS46-Latin-juniors First Prize1E.dmund Arthur Freeman Second Prize-No award Pray-Modern Languages-Seniors French-Fordham Clark Russell German-Vernon Lorenzo Greene Thayer-Mathematics Carroll Andrew Edson Q D. ided Robert Brown Teachout l W lr ical Drawing-juniors fScientific Cou -M ec an First Prize-Leslie Whitmore Snow Second Prize-Henry Deshon Abbott Pickering-History-Seniors ' G uld Wallace Irving o W dbury-Lan: Scholarship-Seniors oo Gladwin Merl Nead William Lee White Story4Philosopl1y-Seniors No award Crimes-General lmprovementfseniors Harold Rector Trewin Warren-Prize Scholarship-Seniors William Willard Flint, Jr. Kenneth Archibald-Athletics Bernard Arthur l-loban Tirrell Medal-Physical Improvement First Prize-James Vincent Forrestal P Ivers Medals-Physical Improvement o Second Prize-George I-larold Knight Third Prize-Herbert Warren Jones C3505 rse 'Q voL.Lv1 V 1914 Tj Bnnnrn , F ELLOWSHIPS Chamberlin-Bradley Merrill Patten, 191 I Parlfer-Harold Ernest Burtt, l9l l RUF US CHOATE SCHOLARS Seniors-Roy Joseph Deferrari, Nelson Luther Doe, Williani Willard Flint, jr., George Hitchcock, Henry Ely lVlcElwain, Gladwin Merl Nead, Tracy Lewis Sanborn. funiors-Henry Deshon Abbot, David Ernest Adams, William Barnum Gumhart, Harold Cleveland McAllister, Earle Van Kuren Willson. Sophomores-Carroll Andrew Edson, Winslow Harding Loveland, John Timothy Reardon. Freshmen-Arthur Gordon Boggs, Edwin Berry Burgum, Charles Edmund Grif- fith, Jr., David lngersoll Hitchcock, Edgar Cummings Sanborn, Ralph Alanson Sawyer. HIGHEST DEPARTMENTAL HONORS sEN1oRs Creek-Roy Joseph Deferrarig William Willard Flint, Jr. DEPARTMENTAL HONORS SENIORS Creek-Roy Joseph Deferrarig William Willard Flint, Jr. Latin-Roy Joseph Deferrari. English-I-lenry Ely lVlcElwain, Henry Bailey Stevens, William Lee White. German-Vernon Lorenzo Greene. Graphics-Leslie Whitmore Snow. Economics-Henry Ely lVlcElwain, Tracy Lewis Sanborn, Harry Edwin Trapp. HONORABLE MENTION SENIORS Carman-Fordham Clark Russell. Botany-Joseph Lovering Richards. Q351J ' voL.Lv1 191-4C A Economics-Harold Blanchard Belcher, Henry Ely lVlcElwain, Tracy Lewis San- born, Harry Edwin Trapp. Archaeology-William Willard Flint, Jr. JUNIORS Creek-Wallace Edwin lVlcCoy. English-David Ernest Adams. French-Milon Cnrout Logan. Cermqn-Ralph Kenneth Stone, lVlilon Grout Logan. Chemistry-Earle Van Kuren Willson. History-Harold Cleveland lVlcAllister, Stephen Kingsbury Perry. Economics-Earle Van Kuren Willson. SOPPJONUDRES Creek-Wilfred Charles Gilbert, Arthur Stanley Wheelock, Arthur Harvey Wethey, Jr., Cameron Whiteford. Latin-Wilfred Charles Gilbert, Cameron Whitefoi'd. English-Arthur Harvey Wethey, Jr. French-Wilfred Charles Gilbert, Winslow Harding Loveland, Ronald Millar, Ben Venito Police, Leonard Dupee White. Mathematics-Jesse Herbert Babcock, Carroll Andrew Edson, Henry Pingree Full, Ernest Tirrill Saeger. Physics-Carroll Andrew Edson. Chemistry-Jesse Herbert Babcock. g352b 'Q VOL. Lvl 3 - 1914 13111 Zftrta liappa Srnrivtg Alpha of New Hampshire founded in I 787. President, Charles D. Adams, '77. Vice-President, Fred P. Emery, '87, Secretary, Harold G. Rugg, 'O6. Treasurer. Halsey C. Edgerton, '06. Annual meeting, in Hanover, Tuesday of Commencement Week, Harold Tower Baker Harold Blanchard Belcher Harry Madara Brown Arthur Washington Burnham Charles Raymond Cabot Roy Joseph Deferrari Nelson Luther Doe William Willa1'd Flint, Jr. Vernon Lorenzo Greene Mauritz Hedlund George Hitchcock Sam Hobbs Alvah Story Holway Edward Phelps Johnson CLASS OF I9I2 Paul Prentiss Jones Arthur Lyman Kinne Henry Ely Mclilwain William Theophilus lVliddlebrook Gladwin Merl Nead Mark White Reed Joseph Lovering Richards Fordham Clark Russell Tracy Lewis Sanborn' Alfred Leslie Smith Conrad Edwin Snow Henry Bailey Stevens George Fred Wallbu1'g Norton Page Webber William Lee White CLASS OF 1913 flnitiates, September l9, 19125 ' Henry Deshon Abbot Harold Cleveland McAllister David Ernest Adams Wallace Edwin McCoy C3531 COLLEGE CLUB KOELSCH PARKHURST BICKFOIID LUITWEILER HUGUS CUNNIHNGHAM Mn. KNAW I Pnor. BURTON 'Q VUL. Lvi 5 A 1914 '- Uhr Qlnllegv Glluh Officers and Executive Committee President, T. Donald Cunningham Vice-President, Wriglit I-lugus Secretary-Treasurer, W. Gray Knapp Harry E. Burton, Faculty Representative Edward B. Luitweiler, Graduate School Representative Henry A. Koelsch, funior Class Representative Harry S. Biclcford, Sophomore Class Representative Richard Parkhurst, Freshman Class Representative Reorganized under a new constitution which was adopted in June, l9l2, the rela- tion of the Dartmouth College Club to the undergraduate and to the community life has taken on a new significance. The composition of the Executive Committee, made up as it is of men from the different units that compose the College,-alumni, faculty, administra- tive and undergraduate-places the policies of the club on a substantial basis and at the same time insures freedom of undergraduate action in questions regarding policies which concern that body directly. Under the new organization the club rooms have been redecnrated and partially re- furnished by the Collegeg an attendant, whose business it is to be of service to the under- graduate membership, has been employed in the club rooms, the old trophy room has been converted by the installation of new lighting fixtures and the rearrangement of furniture into a very comfortable and much used lounge, where magazines and periodicals may be read at leisure. The installation of a large bulletin board, doing away with the necessity of the two poster boards which formerly flanked the entrance door, and also the official College Club bulletin posted once a week, have added materially to the usefulness of the Club. The improvements that the Dartmouth Dining Association have made have had a large bearing on the broadening service that the College Hall has rendered to the members of the College Club. '3552 DARTMOUTI-I CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION vol. Lvi if T 1914 in ' l Q IQ RT GUTH CHRISTIAN ASSGCIATION The Cabinet WRIGHT I-IUGUS, '13, . President T DONALD CUNNINGI-IAM, 113, Vice-President LESTER K. LITTLE, '14, Treasurer J L. DAY, '14, Secretary E. B. Merrill, ,15, Deputations I-I. T. Ball, '13, Wbeeloclf Club R. W. Barstow, '13, Missions E. A. Davis, '13, Religious Meetings E. L. Gulick, '13, Bible Study D. E. Adams, '13, Extension Worlf C-. C. Sleeper, '14, Publicity Handicapped from the outset by the absence of a Graduate Secretary, the Association has this year had to narrow its scope of work in order to concentrate successfully upon some few departments. The greatest fortune was undoubtedly the securing of Pro- fessor Marshall to conduct a Bible Class. From the first meeting in November until well into the spring the Class found favor with great numbers of men. Perhaps the most important phase of work undertaken by members of the Association was that of social service outside the College. Many church pulpits have been filled through- out the year. Social settlement work, the organization of boys, work, co-operation with charity or industrial organiza- tions, and the sending to outside communities of musical or entertainment troupes have been part of the larger scheme of Christian welfare work. Below are the names of the more important towns or pre- paratory schools visited since the first of January: ,Ianuary 10-1 3. Chelsea, Vermont. March 6-10. Lisbon, New I-Iampshire. Charlestown, New I-Iampshire. March 13-1 7. West Unity, New I-Iampshire. March 21-24. Kimball Union Academy, New Hampshire. May 2-5. Colebroolc, New I-Iampshire. C3573 A E N E voL.Lv1 1914 Eleazar mhvrlnrk Glluh ln becoming a member of this club a man declares that the object of his life is Chris- tian service in whatever work he may find he can be most useful. Howard T. Ball, 113, Walter B. Humphrey, '14, Arthur S. Wheelock, '14, Edmund A. Freeman, '13, D. E. Adams B. F. Andrew I-I. T. Ball R. W. Barstow T. A. Anderson G. I-l. Gilbert, Jr. W. B. Humphrey A. G. Boggs R. W. Brown H. K. Davison R. l... Durgin F. C. Elcstrom D. S. Dinsmoor OFFICERS MEMBERS 1913 R. 0. Conant T. D. Cunningham F. H. Cushman E. A. Freeman G. B. Watts 1914 1915 C. E. Whitney 1916 R. R. Reeder, Jr. C3585 President Vice-President .Secretary and Treasurer Historian A. S. Killnourn W. E. lVlcCoy F. F. Owen H. 1... Ransome P. W. Loudon B. H. Smith A. S. Wheelock S. 1Vl. Hill C. P. Hulbert A. S. Llewellyn E. B. Merrill J. lVl. Wilcox C. F. Durgin 'H Emmy? - ffglirgj-2...- :' - .-' .- 11'fQ,.,:'::,v :' -Q .:.5.iQ.g1,.gc,m--1431 ,-X . -.- -41. 1 ?f-1Rx':.:5?5 J' .. 2... f ' ,-.I .'yv!,1T ' ,.', ,, ' 'P --.1 -- . ' .1 - -,nf x -..Tc' .1 f K .' J' . ,- -,.., SN . ...,..,.-.,-.s,-- K .h .. I .-1 ffm' 2 , uf 11 -,. V. f '1 . Q.. Q.,-4.31. X' m wif.,-. .51 3, ,A 1 5 X Q 5 i xii ,. :'- ' ' - Ti - 1' . ' 21 .25 ' 'iw T ..i. '3 -:g ,--xx ,ig ,fa 5 'jx' 53 Nh- .- .-..- 1'-Av -gifs' , '-1- c '-.' - -- - ' ' 'IQ 111252.-W5 5 ' ' n 'T' nz.--' F' .A-Z'1Z:'if-.. -, ,, , 'Qui-L -ff'-'3'3'L-4. ' Y-iw-Cxff.-7 i57.' ' 1'-T' '..'4:.H': gT. , , -f :?'3'E5SE.?gElm3Qff7- 'Z 3 .: I j v I, Q. G .1 ,. ' -X .1-3:-,-.. '12-..,z:,, ,2a. ,i 'qi ' 5 T' Q l f 1' .111 , fr. -01.1-. 'fulgyf .x, I ,.. ..r,,... ., .. -. .- 1 2. 91 :-.-1 1- ,, , .f 5 ff. 3 5' T- .f 1. ii! 23. 5 -- 15 JT' .. f ,,.- '.'. .' Af t f-. :If 1 :-' ff 1: 1 '- , H.. ,,-1, ' - 1 .. ,'1r:v.: '41, Z' .- , 1 ,-X. .- '. : .. 4. u.g, :'f.':l?g A fn -, '. 9' f ' 14.-: .-1 -1 - -:T -, .f,:' ,mx -.1,15:g L'l,f1.'Qi'.--x----lf'-Cf'l.-,.:,'-i3TI1, 3.-., Y' . ' : 12 L . J 1 'Aga ' -I-U A 'M'-0,--.-.w,--.:ff. 0 i ag' ' I L 4 Lf rr Q 1, - . .- mf,- . J 1 f . -CW ri.. - - f , 2. K . . wx 'W . .-f ,Q U- . Q'L:. , 1 ,gi 'xv-f .- J-sew'+ . 1- 1.4 .v f-.V , J -. tf'W vm Pix K. . -x:c.,.,, f '2-511 rx' ,if 'viz ff' X, l 4..'?: Ji, - f 4 gm .1 I s. o C O .- :FZ ,.i'g,,Y' LU! W at-', cv- Q ' -14: ft' -1 ' c 1 x'xg vfx C mt - , f qi' my f ' 2.-.g',, sq-g'Khl' -x5 fr,w K'-- . f 1 x, Ny trays,-r' X ,... 7--Q K , : Xxhw-1...-.8 jiw., xx L -,, a,, 'xrgf . 1. .r v - ' X -kg-,C 1 s. . 2' f . : 'fx X ,K' x- -L 1 I AEGIS BOARD ' - BARRETT CASTLE TUKEY HAZEN MCCULLOUGH SLEEPER LITTLE HULIPHREY E 'Q voL.Lvi 5 A 1914 THB Harold A Castle John N. lilazen Walter B. Humphrey Published annually hy the Junior Class ancl prepared by Editors chosen therefrom. Volume LVI. l9l2-1913 Lester K. Little, Editor-in-chief William E.. Barrett, Business Manager Associate Editors John F. McCullough. Jr. Gordon C. Sleeper Allan A. Tukey The Aegisi' was first published in l860, appearing l874 it has been an annual. Year 1874 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 three times a year. Since ilinrmvr Ehiinrra muh Managers nf thy Arg,ia Editor H. F. Chase S. B. Wiggin Samuel Merrill C. D. Adams J. C. Dana C. A. Babbitt W. F. Furman William Moore B. S. Harmon J. F. Moore Louis Bell A. L. Fuller F. A. Wfood W. H. Dart D. L. Lawrence J. I. Buck W. T. Abbott F. E. Barnzird Barron Shirley A. D. Arnold Manager - J. C. Barrett W. H. Hart . C. Frost E. Atkinson W. Gregg A . W. Broga G. H. Danforth F. R. Lane W G. F. QV J. 8. 'Thompson H. B. Johnson W. G. Carr S. K. H. Hudson F. P. Weeks C5 F. Conn A. A. Fisher 1 E. Doane J. H. Fassett H. A. Blake S. J. Lord C. G. Furnel Year 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 1900 1901 1902 1903 1904 1905 1906 1907 1908 1909 1910 1911 1912 1913 C3615 8. R. QV R . W A. H E. B. R H. J. F. G. H. E J. A. H. M. Editor E. Burroughs A. Caniphell J. Harris J. Sisk 8. Adams M. Ahlxott E. Keyes M. Hopkins S. Stevens M. Davis H. Ham R. Merriam F. Parker H. Howard E. MacAll:ister H. Naylor 1 R. Everett 8. Dunning G. Mosier H. Cone P. R. H. H. C R. F. E. G. M. C. E. W. lt. L. E. A. M H. C. Manager S. Marden M. Thornburgh J. Hapgood M. Thyng E. Carr P. Johnson E. Atwood H. Hunter M. Hubbard B. Wfiley I. Lampee Gilbert B. Smith C. Cochrane M. Syinmes N. Moffatt B. Doggett F 1. Eaton E. Mclllwzlin C. Meleney THE DARTMOUTH BOARD SLEEPER PALMER TILTON -Mmm IN E11 Ross PATTILLO Anonu WALSH GANNQN DESSAU FULME11 J EWET1' HADIILTON CooN BENNINK PRAY V - Bums - ' YOUNG KINNE PAPSON THE DART UTH Founded 1839 The official newspaper of the Undergraduates of Dartmouth College. The oldest college newspaper in America. Published Monday, Thursday, and Saturday mornings throughout the College Year. KARL H. FULMER, '13, ALVIN H. DESSAU, '13, THEO S. JEWETT, '13, H. M. Hamilton, '13, F. M. Gannon, '13, W. P. Ross, 114, P. N. Ahorn, '14, M. H. Cone, '13 F. P. Walsh, ,13 J. T. Marriner, 114 Palmer, '14 J. M. E. T. Papson, '14 From Associate Editors fpooo . S. Pattillo, '14 . C. Sleeper, '14 . H. Tilton, Jr., 'I4 C. Bennink, ,15 Cn. Byers, 'I5 Editor-in-chief Managing Editor Business Managcr Night Editor Athletic Editor Asst. Business Manager Circulation Manager UPU '-l r-l :r O U sv 5- 3 o c I'F Di E as U3 :n 1 Cn PF 'U c: Z 5. :- f'D Q- 5. I -P- C 5. F'Y' :- 0 Pi o 5 0 Q '45 sv E7 CD 1 nv '1 lf: 5 o :s FF E iff E.. Coon, Jr., '15 B. Kinne, Jr., 'I5 . C. Pray, 'I5 B. Young, '15 1844 to 1867 its publication was suspended. The Dartmouth again appeared as a literary magazine with editors from the Senior Class until 1875, when it became a weekly newspaper. From 1860 to 1896, uThe Dartmouth appeared fortnightly, but, at that time, it again changed to a weekly. ln l907 it was made semi-weekly, and in 1910 it became a tri-weekly. ln 191 1 The Dartmouthn was further enlarged and the office of Managing Editor permanently added equal in rank to that of Editor-in-chief and Business Manager. Elinrmrr Zfiilitnrizi sinh illllaneigerzf nf Editor Year 1876 Samuel Merrill 1877 G. E. Atkinson 1878 E. N. Hills 1878 E. M. Yittuin 1879 E. D. Libby 1880 XY. E. Barrett 1881 L. R. Wlentworth 1882 G. M. 1Vard 1883 A. E. Watson 1884 G. H. YVl1itCo1JJb 1885 F. Ladd YV. Fowler 1886 G. 1887 E. E. C1.12lllll9l'S 1888 L. F. English 1889 B. 1890 .J. D F. Ellis B. Reynolds 1891 C. H. Wiley 1892 W. G. Stoughton 1893 H. B. Metcalf Editor-in-chief 1912 C. IC. Snow Elie Ezxrtmnuth Manager . Year Editor 1894 C. Allen 1895 T. Scales 1896 Shirley 1897 J. Maloney 1898 F. Marden 1,899 A. Musgro ve 1.900 E. Keyes C. W. MeGlearn 1901 M. Hopkins 1902 M. Larned A. H. Wlillianls 1903 B. Schliltter J. A. DeBoer 1,904 K. Woodridge F. O. Loveland 1905 R. Musgrove I. O. Cunnnings 1906 F. Libby J. XV. Kelley 1907 H. Howard J. H. Mason 1908 E. Mztcrklliszer F. D. Viloods 1909 L. Theller John Abbott 1910 S. Lyon A. D. Salinger 1911 S. Dunning J. L. Merrill Managing Editor Business Manager H. K. lfrion L. YV. Snow Manager F. D. Field J. A. Ford H. Hapgood J. H. M. Thynfr J. F. Chandler W. M. Fraser V. R. Salinger 1-I. YV. Hall D. B. Keniston H. D. Cushing E. K. Robinson YV. F. Ilorotliy E. G. Smith Amos Dodge L. M. Symnies C. L. Sheldon R. E. Parker H. Butler JACK-O'-LANTERN BOARD ' A DEWITT Pmxms STEIILING CoUn'r1n1GHT CHASE WANGER COLBY Towmsxz MUNKELT CASTLE L W. DAVIS E. A. DAVIS HUMPHREY ROBINSON Powmns Cownmu' KINGSI.EY g 4 . - 1 - f ' N 5 53 5 1 ':. S W : : vffrz at rm-1 ,11 1 ' .-2 '-Uma ' ii1i191 U0Q0 WW1 . 121 Q 11 r at fav f -wi t.. X 1 t 1 8. ff 'Y V fi -um, cl . .1- J.- - 1 . . K.. 1-511. far- 1-as . x-591, ' Q- .auxin ,, ,QI s1,,,g,.f A,x .1. ' xi .Alu tfikzg, iffy ,,. 13- Z hg s V 2. QRS 1, 3 - 1 , 0, Q F Q 'o - 11.1 1 ff N :N E Q ,ft C H . :wrt 4. S at as .. 4,11-f? ' 14.52 A 'QS fi Y- Fw .1 .1 1- 'amass ' Mm a - ,sf-fxlf irc- ff 5 AQ 'fa fi ar ::2 2:5 911 QQ -f 44121, . ',...2Q'sfa1Lf H -f fflfrx J N 4 - is 'e Q ' ' e 45 9' Q 442' . W 'a ' f'1'1- 1? -ales? Seat QQQCL - fi 1' ' A 'irmvfi X ' 5. 5' '. . ERYQR' ' ' Qf:XCxSfQ3if5-52?-Qf'..Q 7 34 mi 'T- ig it M 1 at l'lEr ejef fpa arg . 1. w ' X ' 'N at ...I Qs A. - at as Z ,fi Q9 ' ', O 5 y Z N 'MCMVW' Volume V. 1912-1913 The Jack-o'-Lantern is the representative comic monthly of the College. It en tered the fold of Dartmouth publications in 1908 and has been growing more impertinent clever, and likable ever since. Board of Directors Roswell J. Powers, '13, Ralph H. Cowdery, '13, Edward L. Robinson, '13, Walter B. Humphrey, '14, Edward A. Davis, '13 Harold A. Castle, '14 E. H. Chase, '14 ' Roscoe P. DeWitt, '14 Walter F. Wanger, Editor-in chief Business Manager Circulation Manager Art Editor Charles Kingsley, '14 Hugh C. Courtright, '15 Winsor R. Davis, '15 Arthur E.. Sterling, '15 '15 Assistant Business Managers Thomas W. Towler, '13 Fletcher H. Colby, '14 ' I Albert E.. Munkelt, '14 Paul L. Perkins, '14 y Former Editors and Managers Year Editor Manager 1909 W. T. Atwood J. H. Randersou 1910 E. O. Itaabe H. O. Sandlnerg 13655 Year Editor Manager 1911 J. L. Willard- H. W. Brown C0111191b' H. H. Crowell 1912 I-I. L. Annes U BEMA BOARD k FILES CONN KOELSCHI MARRINER KINNE Ross WA'FERhIAN DAVIS ABORN Uhr Zftvnm 1 Volume I. 1912-1913 C. Dana Waterman, '13, Chairman of the Board Henry A. Koelsch, ,14, Managing Editor Winthrop P. Ross, '14, Business Manager' Pennell N. Aborn, 114, Circulation Manager Associate Editors Edward A. Davis, 113 Myron Files, 'I4 Dwight Conn, 'I4 Theodore Marriner, 'I4 David B. Kinne, Jr., ,IS Contributing Editors Alvin H. Dessau, '13 Wesley T. Engelhorn, ,I4 The Beman was first published in January, 191 3, by a board of undergraduates to H11 the need of a publication which should embody undergraduate literary produc- tions, sane discussion of broad phases of college life, and communications on pertinent topics. Wlqhe Beman is an altered form of college literary monthly that has existed With but slight interruptions since 1886, when members of the classes of 1887 and 1888 founded The Dartmouth Literary Monthlyf' The Beman directly succeeds The Dartmouth Literary Magazine, as it was called after 1892. 13671 PRESS CLUB 'Q VOL. LV1 ' 1914 Igrvzz Gllnh The Press Club is one of the oldest of non-athletic organizations of the College. Its members represent the important newspapers of the East, and through these papers and the Associated Press the official announcements of The Administration and news reports of undergraduate activities are disseminated. F. M. Gannon, ,l3, President Associated Press, Boston Herald, The Dartmouth. F. D. Hall, '14, ' Vice-President Boston Journal, Springfield Republican. I-I. Haywood, Jr., '14, Secretary New York World. A. H. Dessau, ' l 3, The Dartmouth. K. H. Fulmer, '15, The Dartmouth, Boston Transcript. A. K. Lowou, '13, Boston Post. J. M. Pohoot, '14, The Dartmouth, Christian Science Monitor. D. c. Boohioh, '15, The Dartmouth, Philadelphia North American D. B. Ktooo, '15, The Dartmouth, New York soo. C. A. Parnell, '15, Boston American. W. A. 1v1oDoooogh, '15, Springfield Union. J. P. Bowler, '15, Manchester Union. C. K. Everett, '16, Boston Globe. C3693 WHITE MOUNTAIN TRIP, 1912 ' voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 '- lj . 94siS?119ff 2 .-if ii5:,iQ,?7v IIIIZQQIV fit ,V V I.: A lluillu fr. fax ivzzsizv 'Q :, f 5 3.fif5K gf Q 31-. - ffm. if r ,,, ., if Officers Carl E. Shumway, 'I3, President Goodwin L. Foster, '13, Vice-President Joseph Y. Cheney, ,I 3, Secretary David E.. Adams, ,I 3, Treasurer George B. Watts, '13, Fifth Member of Executive Committee The Dartmouth Outing Club was organized in I909 by F. H. Harris, '11, with the prime purpose of interesting Dartmouth men in winter sports. lts motto is Get Outf, and the crossed skis and snowshoes, its emblem. The new organization has speedily made for itself a unique place in the College. Distinctly characteristic of Dartmouth itself in its broad aim, it has sought to open to the men of the College a new field of enjoyment, to teach the many what has hitherto been the prized possession of the few, to initiate the novice into the thrilling mysteries of the Great White Out-of-Doors. The democracy of the trail has served to eliminate all distinction: the intimate contact of the drifted hills and wood- lands has broken down even the barriers between student and instructor, and has resulted in a newer comradeship, a deeper sympathy and understanding worth much to those who would foster the true spirit of Dartmouth. The Whole idea of the club has been to keep its membership democratic, to keep its financial obligations so low that no man need be excluded from its Wholesome activity on the score of expense. It has extended its membership to faculty and undergraduate alike, on equal terms, and has thereby proved one of the most successful means of social contact between faculty and undergraduate body. The membership of the club has steadily ins f371D voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 'J creaseclg the number of men taking the Saturday hikes to the neighboring hills, and the week-end trips to camps and mountains, has climbed to a higher level with each new sea- son. The finest trip of the year is always the winter visit to the White lVlountai11s, a trip which no man ever regrets, and many repeat, for the White Mountains in winter furnish scenery undeniably the finest in the East. The gala event of the winter is, of course, the Carnival. Guests throng in from far and near. This is the great characteristic Dartmouth festival. The hills in all directions are dotted with Hying toboggans, the roads with jingling sleighs. From the Vale comes the clear call of the bugle announcing the downward swoop of the ski-jump, while the staccato crack of the starter's pistol speeds the panting racers on their snowy course on snowshoe or ski. Everywhere gay mackinaws, toques and ribbons liven the snow- banked hillsides. When the dayis sport is over, the guests are entertained with the best the college affords-basketball and hockey games, dramatics, receptions, and the Carni-b val Dance, where all out-of-doors seems to be transported into the hall with the miniature forest of graceful spruces. The Carnival aims to embody the Spirit of Out-of-Doors. And beyond the more Heeting achievements of the passing season, the purpose of the club is to leave behind after each season's activity a tangible evidence of its existence that shall be of service to later comers-a strongly built camp a day's tramp from the campus, open to all who care to use itg a good trail to some point of interest, clearly marked, a map or a handbook that shall serve to guide the newcomer to the best of the country around the campus. The club is one of the growing institutions of the College and is significant of the movement for the finer and more complete development of the men of the college as individuals. A few of the Outing Club Trips. Oct. 9. Happy Hill l l miles Nov. 30 Pine Hill 7 miles . ,,,., Dec. 7 Holt's Ledge l l miles Dec. l4. Fay Hill IO miles Jan. 5 l-lanover Center 7 miles Jan. l l. Lordls I-Iill I0 miles Jan. I8 Craft's Hill 8 miles Jan. 25 Hurricane Hill 8 miles Feb. I. Tilden Hill IO miles Feb. 3. Cube Mountain 20 miles F eb. 8. Etna 8 miles Feb. 22. Jericho I l miles Mar. 8. Mt. Washington 3 days camp MUSICAL CLUBS ,ly ' f1'HF, J , voL.Lv1 ' 1914. Tl ' fig ' . why A123 1 . vim H Harvey C. lV1cCla.ry, Manager Musical Clubs Arthur Scott, Leader Clee Club al George B. lV1cClary, Leader Mandolin Club 'erin . . 'z v rrrr -.4142 C5122 Glluh ff First Tenors f 1 1 ,fig - if C. S. Ba1Che1C1ef. '14 P. A. Leary, '15 11'-1 I1 l 1'-f 1-1. L. Cole, '16 W. P. Mott, '16 'ml 'Pl Q B. Comstock, '15 R. S. B. Perry, '15 215. ff 5, 1 R. 1-1. Kelsey, '14 W. B. Slater, '14 ?-5? E. S. Leafoyd, '14 H. H. smith, '14 ' '16 - 1- P. A. Warren, .N Second Tenors ' R. Burleigh, '14 R. T. King, '15 1' ' F. S. Child, '15 J. F. Maloney, '15 ' 6 C. N. Crandall, '14 F- C- Orton, '13 7 f Q, x if . 1 u wb: N . K '6 If .1., 1 lllf kr 1' .L If it P. V. Duclensing, '13 A. L. Scott, '13 f ' I 1- EQ' C. P. Hulbert, '15 P. lV1. Vining, '15 H -. I. . :I ' ., 33 ' ' 7 F. P. Walsh, '13 A A First Basses 1 S 54' ',.f I .. .. . qi!! R. 1. 5. Barlow, '14 F. Pooler. '14 A' R. A. Burlen, '16 R. L. Sisson, .lf-1 '14 J. P. Donahue, '13 R- K- 510116, '13 5. A. Fuller, '14 W. F. Upham. '16 bin? 1-1. A. Mackinnon, '14 C- F- W11i1CleY, '15 W. M. lVlcConnell, '14 A- P- Wll11HmS, '15 Second Basses R. D. Chase, '15 C. 1... Kingsforcl, '14 U C. S. Creesy, '16 P. Margeson, Jr., '14 ig, ,.,..: .,,.,,,, ,.,,.,..V,,,,.,., W. Z. Fuller, '15 J. M. Palmer, '14 W. J. 1-laley, '13 C. A. Parnell, '15 W. I-I. Renfrew, '16 13751 14 voL.Lvi 1914 A Bartmnuth illianhnlin 0111111 Cx. B. lVlcClary, '13 W. Wilkins, '13 lVl. S. Wright, '13 E. A. Davidson, 114 First Mandolins S. Sheldon, '14 I. W. Carpenter, '15 F. D. Day, '15 lVl. Haskell, '15 W. C. Huntress, '15 A. Norton, '15 A. Sterling, '15 F. S. Rosenheim, '15 F. R. Andrews, '16 W. Sully, 116 lVl. L. Blanchard, 113 V. C. Schellenburg, '15 Cx. E. Briggs, '14 R. W. Brown, '15 H. H. Clallin, '15 R. W. Barstow, '13 W. C. Gilbert, Second Mandolins J. R. Burleigh, '14 R. lVl. Phelps, '14 Cx. H. Sticlcney, '14 Third Mandolins H. L. Davis, '15 B. W. Grills, '15 Guitars G. W. Kimball, '13 '14 Cn. W. Fogg, '16 P. H. Lewis, '16 R. S. Steinert, '16 T. C. Pray, '15 E. P. Hayden, 116 T. W. Towler, '13 15 R. D. Chase, ' Clarineis P. H. Stevens, '15 D. R. lVlason, '15 Violins 4 H. W. Wetherbee, '16 C. E. Griftith, 115 ' Cello A. B. Shepard, '15 H. 0. Parkinson, '15 Drums H. E. Cook, 114 CONCERTS OF Tl-IE MUSICAL CLUBS November November April April April April April April April April April April 16. 17. 3. 4. 5. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 14. 15. Concord, N. H. Joint Concert with Harvard at Boston. Windsor, Vt. Brattleboro, Vt. Keene, N. H. Springfield, Mass. Lowell, Mass. Manchester, N. H. Westerly, R. I. Cxlenridge, N. New York City. Northampton, Mass. C3763 THE COLLEGE CHOIR fi K C. C. Forsaith, '13 l-l. O. Parkinson, '13 E.. E.. Sicles, '13 lVl. S. Wright, '13 C. S. Batchelcler, '14 J. R. Burleigh, '14 R. l-1. Kelsey, '14 L. F. Blumenthal, '13 F. C. Orton, '13 A. L. Scott, '13 R. S. Barlow, '14 C. N. Crandell, '14 J. P. Donahue, '13 C. S. McDaniel, '13 D. Conn, '14 W. T. Engelhorn, '14 S. A. Fuller, '14 W. Haley, '13 W. W. Barnes, '14 W. C. Gilbert, '14 C. L. Kingsforcl, 'I4 J. P. Margeson, Jr., '14 J. lVl. Palmer, Uhr Qlnllrgr CHARLES I-I. MORSE First Tenors E.. S. Learoyd, '14 W. B. Slater, '14 l-1. l-l. Smith, '14 1. C. Taft, '14 il. B. Comstock, '15 P. A. Leary, ' 1 5 R. S. B. Perry, '15 Second Tenors Cx. C. Sleeper, '14 A F. S. . lVl. Austin, '15 S. Child, 'I5 lVl. Hill, '15 C. P. Hulbert, '15 'First Basses R. N. l-logsett, 'I4 H. A. Mackinnon, '14 W. lVl. lVlcConne1l, '14 F. Pooler, '14 R. L. Sisson, Jr., 'I4 A. P. Williams, 'I5 Second Basses W. Snow, '14 R. D. Chase, '15 W. Z. Fuller, '15 S. Cl. l-lickox, '15 E . Q. Riley, '16 14 C. A. C3793 Glhnir , Director C. L. Campbell, '16 H. L. Cole, '16 D. S. Dinsmore, '16 W. F. Mort, ,I6 B. V. Phinney, '16 O. R. Smith, '16 P. A. Warren, '16 R. T. King, '15 H1. F. Maloney, '15 P. lVl. Vining, '15 W. W. Webber, '15 D. D. Linehan, '16 W. F. Upham, '14 P. K. Alexander, '15 J. P. Bowler, '15 J. A. Burbank, '15 C. F. Whiteley, '15 R. A. Brown, 'I6 C. S. Cressy, 'I6 L. F. Plinstag, '16 W. H. Renfrew, '16 V. G. Byers, '15 Parnell, '15 X .:.-. -:-:N-:.as-1-1.1.-...-..'.u.f-,v.-L-.Q-A'-':--4.4:-wx-,v .1--.. 1 1' '-1..,.- .... ... . - Fl!!!-. . .. , . .. , . .. .. .. ,. . ...,. .., ., ...,,.:.:1',-.:.4..1.,.5Lh.,A,,Y.,i.-:,,.54,1:l,V,:,A,jrzrbsz V 'qgi-fsflg z.:35f?.2.2f.:-.Q-.-1--FT?.f.-1'avr:-.1411:v.::': f:.g.:,!?-51,-,-.Lg15-:--.3'gQ,55-,L-,,,:,g.:2...,..i-- .- .- - V- - .-I , ,,,.,,. . ,urs-fer.14.-.2-.-1ra:-:.-f.-.-:arg 7-: .1-.f : f 1-:nwz-.1-.Lv fr L-.1 :1 :-,-,- .Luau g.. u,.:.1q..-....1-,-M... .,-.-.fr r-. L. .- -1-.. r. . ..-,, :fg,ij. .QQ Q-F5 5 H fm ,ff NW gg if .5 :L .5151 1. N 1 Q 4 Q 1' H 1 - - U W :sz ff a 51 I l 1 -N V V! 1-ln I 5' ,J 1 M 15' , 5-'1H 'l .jf N- '- N --L J rfb . pf k 55- V. 5 4? W e W1 1 11 1 X 9451 1 IX . , -if .5153 LF N . P , . ...,. , . .,. , Bartmnuth Glnllvgv Zfianh W. E. Carleton, ,14, Leader C. Chandler, '14, Manager Comets W. E.. Sloane, '16 W. Cu. Kittreclge, '16 D. B. Olson, 'I6 C. W. F. O'Connor, '14 1... W. Joy, '16 Clarinets R. W. Hutchinson, '13 H. D. Brown, '14 D. R. Mason, '13 P. H. Stevens, '15 R. Clunie, 'I6 Trombones J. R. Maloney, '13 C. Chandler, '14 K A. T. Skakle, '14 Horns R. E. Coon, '15 E. Shea, 'I5 C. K. Lincoln, '16 A Basses A. P. Richmond, '14 S. D. Sheldon, '14 Baritone G. I-l. Richardson, '14 Piccolo P. E. Simanton, '14 Snare Drum S. T. Wright, '15 Drum and Traps I-I. M. Cook, '14 Bass Drum H. O. Parkinson, '13 l3S1j A ':.l ..,. .4.,-. , i .f,- -1: ,--1 as ,E,-,, 4- . 5 A RSX r 21' 9 41 ' lil 'll 4 Twill ri Q . ' ..-- ,..1. - , ,, .,.:. ky gffg:,fi,,:v-sz '4.' 4:A':' -s f225ggriif2 gE'fi ,,f' 1g frif?'9f V ' QQgif-ifpiizff35fE5f'-5315-if X ..,.,, .,.,. . .,.4. . .A..,.- .-.Q.. ,. ..... T. H. Haskell, ,13 C. E. Clrifnth, ,I5 J. M. Harlow, '15 W. E. Montsie, '15 l-l. T. Ball, '13 A. Newmark, '14 M. B. Anclrus, '15 C. K. Fuller, '14 H. O. Parkinson, ,13 J. W. Stillman, 'I4 D. R. Mason, '13 W. A. Kinney, '14 W. E. Carleton, '14 R. E. Coon, '15 gl. R. Maloney, '13 CHARLES I-I. MORSE, Conductor First Violins Second Violins Violas Violoncellos Mr. R. H. Colley Double Basses C larineis P. H. Stevens. '15 Flutes R. W. Spalding, 'I5 Corneis French Horns Trombones Baritone G. l-l. Richardson, '14 Tympani and Traps I-l. M. Cook, '14 C3825 bil as F2 C-ll 5 1: 2 Q'F J.:- 95 1: U1- ? 75 ms: 'V S F9 E- U ve N 5 l' . f m C5071 SQ I UU mi? 192 ,. 151 . -:uw ON ZF 54 ON FU W. Brown, 'I5 J. M. Cheney, '16 R. A. Pease, 'I6 H. W. Wetherby, ri 6 A. B. Shepard, '13 D. T. Rogers, '15 H. D. Brown, '14 P. E. Simanton, '14 W. E. Sloane, '16 E.. Shea, '15 C. Chandler, 'I4 GRIFFI1'H PARKINSON WETHEHBEE BAILEY Eartmnuth String flbnartvitv First Violin, C. E. Griffith second Violin, F. W. Bailey, Viola, H. W. Wetherbee, Cello, H. O. Parkinson 13832 1 Eartmnuih Eramatir Gllnh Earle V. K. Willson, '13, President Arthur E. Wyman, '13, Managu John R. Burleigh, '14, V Assistant Manager Lewis B. Goodwin, ,l6, Slage Manager Esta M, Barr, Siage Director Tony Lumpkin, Squire I-Iardcastle, Young Charles Marlow, George Hastings, Sir Charles Marlow, Presentation of She Svinnps In Qlnnquer Cast of Characters Stingo, Landlord of The Three Jolly Pigeons, Diggory, Thomas, Roger, Dick, Jack Slang, the Horse Doctor, Matt Muggins, the Exciseman, Tom Twist, Street Acrobat, uLittle,' Aminaclab. Bear Dancer, C3855 E. V. K. Willson A. E. Wyman Cx. H. Tilton, Jr. W. P. Costello J. C. Doenecke A. E. Wyman C. B. Jordan, Jr. H. H. Semmes G. B. Young L. B. Goodwin Cn. B. Young, C. Doenecke L. B. Goodwin C. B. Jordan a 9 s VOL LVI A IQ 14' ,,, A A 1 ' ,Q A 19 , F., , Postillion, H. H. Semmes, Fiddler, W. A. Mackie, Jr., Kate l-lardcastle, D. S. Page, Constance Neville, E. O. Strong Mrs. l-lardcastle, C. M. Claeys, Bar Maid, X Maid, Synopsis ACT I.-Scene l. Room in Squire l-larclcastle's house. Scene II. Ale House, Wlqhree Jolly Pigeons. ACT ll.-Room in Squire I-larclcastlels liouse. ACT HI.-Same. ACT lV.-Same. ACT V.4Scene I. Same. Scene H. Wood at bottom of garden. Scene Ill. Same as Scene I. Time-l 770. Loicality-England. Action of play covers late afternoon and evening. Shakespeare, QVale of Tempel 43861 A. H. Leonard, 'N ' ,gi :'r'f.'fif::.','.-.- L.-.5-',3-g.-g,-- J ,f :.-:-..',a::-.V-Q. 1, - . ,..-,-. . . .. .. .- - V , , . ,,, ,, ., .. v ---.,..-..- ,K -age-11:w:.11zf..1.:.1f:f-5 ..' ia E 9 .g-,-,,,,g,,,-.,,,.igxiiggg-1791-rg,1t,j,,?g,-,3,3'r.:.L551,Lg-115715L.if-,-f.'.I.'.113,'l'5.212' . .W . . . ....,, .. ' ...- agen We L ?,, ga l f 5. lm in fir tif il. lmillaa if fwlllllwl flaw f al a .. fi 0 -Eiiiif' ' .6 . W , fffs if -f ' - ' ' 1 H ,... f' .af Na - A ' ff? , .4:u'f+., ' X .-ip. wi . f M-age? -fri' A 'J ?':E'5.- .3212 f h el l ' l I ' l 5.'7'152E'S 15 ll We-1' 1 F ii - -tr fly!! f 1' XY, :'2,:-J, 3:111- E I-1 . .ec CHIFQ-4. -. 1..- 971.2 . 1 .5 me rt. .'5-I-:f:-51545-1: 1-ri: 2.115-gtg +5313-,'f,:,:.'I:1'i .:1g.j3 -:,',g:2.5g:,.azg2,a ..:.j5 gn- -jfbifafmac-.5 ,tggggi X 7.53 f. 14- ' :':1'-'.E',f1 -E, 1.'I','E-Ifififlf ffl iitfjlf.-15:'f'.i'1i'1.i.'f.E.'5 - 'v 2JfJ-i:3'.i.E:'.f.- i-Q?4?113'1f-23','i12Ef. .'Ir.-, 25: Eartmnnth Behating, Hninn . Season of l9l2 Season of l9l3 C. E.. Snow, President D. B. O'Connor, Manager Seventh Annual Debate of the Triangular League Brown, Dartmouth, and Williams . Resolved: That in dealing with such industrial combinations as the Standard Oil Company and the American Tobacco Company, a policy of Federal control, without dissolution, is preferable to a policy of dissolution, designed to enforce competition. Seventh Annual Brown-Dartmouth Debate Held at Webster Hall, Hanover, March Zl, l9l2 Awarded to the Affirmative Bronm-Affirmative , Dartmouth-Negative J. K. Starkweather E.. C. Mable V D. G. Donavan A. K. Lowell l. L. Letts C. E. Snow Aliernaies R. C. Dexter Q A. I-lornblow, Jr. - fudges Professor G. B. Churchill of Amherst Professor W. E. Lunt of Bowdoin Damon E. Hall, Williams, ,9I Fifteenth Annual Williams-Dartmouth Debate Held at Goodrich Hall, Williamstown, Mass., March Zl, l9l2 Awarded to the Negative Williams-Negative Dartmouth-Affirmative A. M. Shauffer I-I. E. lVlcElwain, Jr. A. L. Swift C. F. Shepard C. Keller D. B. O'Connor, Jr. Aliernaies P, W, Toll S. A. Stavrum C3875 1 9 14 DEBATING TEAM XVHITE BRIGGS PEASE CRANSTOB Hrezhman-Snphnmnrv Ephedra Resolved: That the plan of the initiative and referendum as applied to lation should he adopted in the state of New Hampshire. Held in Dartmouth Hall, April 27, 1912 Awarded to the Negative l 91 4-Negative H. A. Pease . L. D. White G. E.. Briggs, Jr. Alternates F. P. Cranston Judges Professor H. E.. Burton l 9 l 5-Affirmative C. E.. Whitney C. B. Jordan, lr. J. W. Forrestal D. B. Kinne, Jr. Professor I-I. D. Foster Professor F. A. Updyke C3885 state legis LINCOLN-DOUGLAS DEBATING SOCIETY SANVYER HEENEHAN JORDAN BELL PEASE ' JORDAN CRANSTON FULL LOWELL MR. SHAW MAME WHITE VVHITNEY Mn. WEAXVER YQ voL.Lvi 1914 i- Einrnln-Enuglzua Behating Svnrivtg This organization, formed January l4, l9l3, has for its prime purpose the train- ing of men in debate and public expression. It is designed not for men of ,varsity calibre primarily, but for men who like debating, who have had little opportunity to develop themselves in debating, yet who with proper training would strengthen the 'varsity squad. Officers Leonard D. White, '14, President Cecil E. Whitney, '15, Secretary and Treasurer Members A. H. Dessau, '13 C. B. Jordan, '15 A. K. Lowell, ,l3 E. C. Mabie, ,I5 G. E. Briggs, Jr., '14 H. A. Pease, 'l5 F. P. Cranston, 'I4 R. A. Sawyer, 'I5 H. P. Full, ,I4 L. I-I. Bell, 'I6 J. T. Heenehan, ,VI4 R. L. Jordan, 'I6 E. B. Burgum, 'I5 C. P. Merryman, 'I6 Honorary Members Warren C. Shaw Andrew T. Weaver 13902 'Q voL.Lv1 L - 19145 Uhr mvhairr Qlluh The Webster Club is a senior organization for the study of political and social prob- lems. The members are assisted in their discussions by their faculty adviser, Professor Benjamin T. Marshall, and by others who are from time to time invited to lead discus- sions of definite questions. Alvin H. Dessau, Harry H. Semmes, C. Dana Wate1'man, J. Barnett A. H. Dessau K. H. Fulmer F. M. Gannon W. Hugus T. S. -Iewett A. S. Kilbourn A. K. Lowell Members E. V. K. Willson 43911 J. A. Prouty K. F. Raitt H. H. Semmes S. A. Stavrum F. P. Walsh C. D. Waterman C. Wells K. Winship President Secretary Treasurer U Q voL.LV1 . A 1914 if EP Glvrrle Eliralnrzliz On aiine niieux dire du mal S01-11161116 que de n'en point parlerf'-La Rochefoucauld. Le Cercle Francais de Dartmoutli College fut fonde eu 1900 Depuis ces jours il a eu une existence spasniodique, Ill0l'lTilHt aux cimes de la gloire en 1906 quand les membres, assistes par le department francais, ont donne avec un succes innnense deux representations du Medecin Malgre Lui de Moliere. 'L'annee derniere M. Edward Tuck, par sa generosite, a assure pour tou- jours la vie active du Cercle. La donation a perinis Vafliliation avec L'Alliance Francaise de L'An1erique et de L'Anglete1-re, de sorte que cliaque annee, sous les auspices du Cercle, un conferencier Francais Ll761lllI16I1CB vient il Hanover ranilner llesprit de sor pays. Le Cercle veut saisir cette occasion de tenioigner 21 M. Edward Tuck et A M. L. H. Dow une reconnaissance profonde pour leur grande cooperation. Les Officiers M. Ronald Millar, President M. S. P. Tuck. Vice-Plcsicleflzb M. Lester K. Little, SGC!'6f6Z'f'7'6-T1'ff807'i6l' Les J.lem.bv'cs M. le Professeur Dow M. le Professeur Cox M. le Prof-esseur Skinner M. le Professeur Blume M. le Professeur Babbit M. le Professeur Skidmore M. le Professeur Waterhouse M. R. Millar, P13 M. C. M. Claeys, 714 M. S. P. Tuck. Jr., ,123 M. L. K. Little, '14 M. A. J. M. Tuck, '14 M. YV. F. lVange1', '15 M. Z. YV. Therrien, '14 M. G. E. Briggs, '14 C3925 VOL.LVI 7 A 1914. EEI Olvntrn iiapariul Con el Hn de infundir interes en el estudio del idioma espanol y su literatura, como tambien en el conocimiento de la vida y cultura hispano-americana ha sido organizido el Centro Espanol. Al mismo tiempo ofrece este club ventajosas oportu- nidades para facilitar la pratica del idioma, pues durante las reuniones los miembros tienen la ocasion de leer V discutir los mas importantes dramas y cuentos de los mejores autores espanoles. Senor Lyman H. Thomas, '13 Senor Lester K. Little, '14 Senor Fernando Guarch, '14 Senor C. Senor E. Senor D. Senor L. Senor P. Senor W. Senor J. Senor F. Senor H. Los Ojlfciales Presidente Vice-Presidente Secretaire Los Miembro.9 de la Faculdad Senor F. E. Guyer Senor P. O. Skinner Senor M. Skidmore Los Miembros Estudifmles A. Blume R. Green R. Mason, '13 K. Little, '14 L. Perkins, '14 P. Ross, '14 N. Hazen, '14- Guarch, '14 A. Hunt, '15 Senor H. H. Shedd, '13 Senor T. L. Sullivan, '13 Senor E. E. Thomas, '13 Senor M. G. White, Jr., '14 Senor R. Carr, '13 Senor George Steele, '13 Senor P. A. Saver, '13 Senor H. E. Alvarez, '16 C3937 'Q VoL.LVr l 1914 lj Bartmnuih Glluh uf Ernnklinv Gordon C. Sleeper, '14, Frederick l... Parchert, '15, Vincent Ci. Byers, '15 John C. Kimball, '15, Members V. C. Schellenberg, '13 P. N. Aborn, '14 H. H. Potter, '14 Ci. C. Sleeper, '14 R. W. Brown, '15 V. G. Byers, '15 C. E. Harwood, '15 R. C. Johnson, '15 President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer J. C. Kimball, '15 F. L. Parchert, '15 J. lVl. Wilcox, '15 A. G. Brown, 'I6 J. lVl. Colby, 'I6 W. H. Renfrew, '16 P. Ci. Nordell, '16 W. D. Robinson, '16 Svnmerhillv Glluh Officers Norville L. Milmore, '15, Harold S. Turner, '15, Arthur P. Williams, '15, Members W. H. Nolan, '13 W. D. Barker, '15 A. P. Donahue, '15 N. l... Milmore, '15 A. B. Sullivan, '15 A. H. Tomfohrde, '15 H. S. Turner, '15 A. P. Williams, '15 President Vice-President Secretary and Treasurer C. M. Clarke, 'I6 E.. E.. Clough, '16 F. W. Costa, '16 1... E. Cutler, '16 C. N. Holmes, '16 Cx. H. Martin, '16 H. B. Parker, .'16 W. R. York, '16 Glnurvatvr Gllnh C-. Steele, '13 D. C. Burnham, '14 H. P. Full, '14 P. Haskell, '14 D. B. Olson, '14 G. S. Pattillo, '14 C394J R. M. Phelps, '14 R. M. Norwood, '15 W. R. Putney, '15 O. P. Friend, '16 R. R. Norwood, '16 J. Story, '16 voL.LV1 1914 Qlnnrnrh, CN. EJ Glluh ' Officers Forest F Owen, '13, President Russell 1.. Durgin, '15, Secretary and Treasurer Social Committee 4 Henry W Merrill, '13 Charles H. Dudley 16 Members H. W. Cole, '13 A R. A. Brown, '16 F. M. Gannon, '13 C. H. Dudley, '16 H. W. Merrill, '13 C. F. Durgin, '16 T. G. Nelson, '13 C. W. Fipphen, '16 F. F. Gwen, '13 V. A. Fletcher, '16 R. K. Stone, '13 R. P. Harvey, '16 W. M. McConnell, '14 S. W. Harvey, '16 P. H. Bloclgett, '13 E. I. Lapierre, '16 E. B. Burgum, '15 C. P. Merryman, '16 R. 1... Durgin, '15 A. Morrison. '16 Al. M. Killeen, '15 C. H. Parsons, '16 H. W. Lincoln, '15 C. M. Runcllett, '16 H. P. Sawyer, '15 C. T. White, '16 Smrtngtirlh Qlluh Officers Roswell J Powers, '13, . President Walter H McCarthy, ' 1 3, Vice President ohn L Ferguson, '15, Secretary Russell D Chase, '15, Treasurer Members W. H. McCarthy, R. Powers, '13 H. S. Curtis, '14 G. E. Fuller, '14 J. M. Healy, '14 '13 J. T. Heenehan, '14 B. H. Smith, '14 W. C. Bemis, '15 1... W. Burt, '15 J. P. English, '16 K3 955 R. D. Chase, '15 L Ferguson '15 R. T. King, '15 W. A. McDonough, '15 fi7U'UF'13 P. Penny, '15 G. Rice, '15 . R. Rothery, '15 M. Vining, '15 M. Buflinton, '16 ' VOL. LVI 191499 Ighillipa-Anhnhvr Olluh John M. Palmer, Archibald Owen, Prancis K. Douglas, Members 1913 D. E. Adams 1... C. Chisholm M. H. Cone E.. V. K. Willson 1914 G. E. Briggs, Jr. J. lVl. Palmer Cx. H. Tilton 1915 C. H. Poster C. P. Hulbert R. C. Johnson A. H. Leonard, Jr. J. M. Wilcox 1916 R. P. Chutter C. S. Creesy P. K. Douglas A. 1... Emery 1. F. Gile , Uhr Mile-High Glluh Denver, Colorado Gilbert L. McDonough, Paul S. Gibson, David B. Miller, Harold A. Stiles, Members T. D. Cunningham, 1913 P. P. Cranston, 1914 Cr. 1... McDonough. 1914 P. K. Alexander, 1915 1... E. Williams, 1915 Andrus, 1915 E.. I-I. Parker, 1916 C3963 A. B. President Vice-President Secretary R. E. Pirmin H. S. Teall C. Wells E.. Robinson W. B. Slater W. B. Meader A. Owen D. T. Rogers E. M. Noyes N. P. Harris P. Hayes D. Morey H. P. Murchie C. E.. Pierce President Vice-President Secreiarp Treasurer D. B. Miller, 1916 R. E.. More, 1913 R. Millar, 1914 H. A. Stiles, 1914 P. S. Gibson, 1915 J. F. McMichael, 1915 PAT TIC f. Foreword We feel some hesitation in placing this department before the public. Every new venture is full of mistakes, and of course this modest attempt is no exceptiong but we also feel that any such error should be speedily remedied g and, if any such slip on our part is brought to our attention we will attempt to atone for it in our next issue. Not all mistakes are mistakes of commission, for there are those of omission. No one should feel grieved if he Iinds no mention of himself or his humble works in the following pages, because such an oversight merely means that that person is too nearly perfect to admit of correction. Feel flattered, therefore, and at the same time sorry for those who failed to escape. They doubtless wish they had been overlooked, too. Any one of this lat- ter class who has thought over his grievance calmly and is anxious to talk the matter over with us peacefully is always welcome in our office. Owing to the fact that Robin- son Hall is not as yet completed, we are at present located in our temporary quarters on the top floor of the college tower fthird door from the elevatorl, where we shall be glad to see you any Sunday afternoon between half past five and six. We hope that the steps of said tower will receive as little wear as they do' at present. Remember the words of Bob,', t'Every knock is a boost. -f-ff Mm Oo fi'HI-I VCL LVI 1914 Aegis Calendar September 10: Annual Football rush. 1914 victorious for third time. 144th year opens with an extra session of Chapel. 20: New telephone exchange established in Hanover with only one operator. This seems hardly adequate. 21: Freshmen entertained by the D. C. A. More Bibles and dishes of ice cream given out than in any previous year. 22: First Sunday night Chapel. 39 more to come. 23: The Df1l'Z 7'IIfO'llfHl comments on the folly of giving out Freshman Bibles 2-l: Honor list announced and many incipient cb B K men are compelled to own up. 25: A Senior drops Astronomy becausepit is such a long walk to Wilder Hall. 26: Call for Sophomores to do the work of the Aegis board. 27 : Freshmen defeat Sophomores 3-1 in baseball. Red Spillane stars as umpire. 28. Bull Moosers secure headquarters and connnence to secure votes. Dartmouth 26: Bates O. 29: Sunday. Aegis board refuses to work. 30' A Senior hands in his A cgfis slip and the editor has heart failure. We hope that this will not l1appe11 again. October 1: Dean Emerson takes a cut in Chapel. 2: Juniors turn down the No-Deal Agreement. Why? Ray Trott making treasurer's report: The expenses of the chinning committee are as follows-'l 4: Dartmouth Night. Special train of alumni on B. 8 M. is only one hour late. Mighty good record. 5: WVilson club formed. The plot thickens. The Du1'1'moufl1 announces that it not the place to report lack of heat in the dormitories. G: Football squad is robbed to tl1e extent of 34200.00 and nine watches. This report seems exaggerated. 7: Dartmouth ranked by the Government as a first class college. 2 8: President Taft passes Through the Junc. No wonder. 9: Without warning, the Police Department dons his uniform. 10: Taft comes to Hanover, a big event in the history of the college. Students given one hour holiday as a result. 11: The 11 :19 comes i11 on time. No busses down to meet it. 14: Art Gillis is still running that reading notice: Why not insure your personal be- longings? Do not ask us again because we do not know. 15: Meeting of the Kid Faculty Club. 16: Schedule of hour examinations comes out. There seem to be more quizzes than usual. 17: Juniors finally adopt No-Deal Agreement. 18: Doc Wyman is putting on flesh. 19: Republican Club holds a rally. Report concerning Doc Wyman said to have no foundation. 21 : Bad news. Fonnnittee 011 Administration holds meeting every Friday. 22: Dean Laycock attends Chapel, although he is not compelled to. 23: t'Sign That Book ! Big Princeton mass meeting. Squad leaves for Princeton. 26: Princeton 22: Dartmouth 7. Clouds of gloom. 27. Sunday. 800 men cut chapel to greet team as they return. 29: Important ruling of the Faculty: Christmas and Easter recesses left as they are. A thlctfic teams must not 'l'0f'l.M'H on S-unday. Reason given above. 29: Freshmen caps arrived. It is easy to spot them now. November 1 : Sunday-As usual. 2: Final Registration Day. It is found that a student must be twenty-one years and six months old to vote! C4005 THE JLJ- 3. College Club meets, and decides that it is a gentleman's club! 4: Attorney General agrees with the supervisors in barring students from the polls. He must be a Republican. 5' Roosevelt carries Hanover. It being Tuesday the Faculty grant a half-holiday. 7. It is voted by the College Club to have a five-piece orchestra in the Commons. Ca11 this be Hanover? S: Trustees vote to build an apartment house for the Faculty. What they need is a good boarding house for the Kid Faculty Club. 9' The Dil-l'f'mUlllf71f comes out dated Sfltuwlzly, Nov. S. ' 10. Sunday. Chapel as usual. 11: Patronage of the Commons increased by music. It must be in spite of the food. 14. College gets slicked up. 15' College adjourns to Boston. ' 16. Brickley again comes across and saves Harvard. Harvard 3g Dartmouth 0. 19: New trough announced. It will have a cross-bar in it, the same as the last one. 21. In the meeting of the New England College Association, the question of the value of examinations will be discussed. This is a step in the right direction. 22. Henry Koelsch returns from the Harvard game. 23 ' 350 students in action at The Battle of the June. 28: Thanksgiving Day. The unfortunates who stayed in Hanover ate the dinner in the Commons, adding insult to injury. 30 . Some editor of The Darfmofiitli has evidently eaten in the Commons. The Da-rtmoufli stars its pure food campaign. Jim Haggerty smiles. December 1' It is announced that the tuition will be raised next year. They are making com- parisons again. 2: Jim Haggerty smiles out of the other side of his mouth. The Dartmoiitli turns its tire on the Grill. 4' Announcement that one day's traveling time will be given to those going west at Christmas. Many young men decide to go west. 5 ' Professor Wicker wears tortoise shell specs. 6: Leader Carleton of Commons Orchestra plays a piece which has been requested. 7' hhnv bridge over the Connecucut is announced, udnch wvnl probably be ready in 1916. It is found that Dartmouth has less holidays than the majority of colleges. 8: Sunday as usual. 9. Vifebster Club decides to limit its work to helping the State Legislature. What did they do before? 11. The Dramatic Club cancels its Christmas trip. 13' Long John Peppard leaves for Plymouth. 14: Plymouth, Weekly! Clarion announces that the Dartmouth contingent has arrived. We End the announcement in The Dartmoutlz, that the Aegis Board meets weekly. 15. The DClI'f?77fO'Ilf7li announces that the Orchestra is to strike for more pay. 16. Manager Fairheld denies the report. President Nichols and Vice-President Knapp visit the Grill and see conditions for themselves. 17' Chapel seats to be rearranged. We hope they do not decrease the number of rear seats 19. Home. January 3: College opens again. 4. Epidemic of moustaches starts. G' The DCL'l'f'l7'L0'Lb17fl announces that the Aegis Board is working. Correct! S: John Peppard hands in his Aegis slip announcing that he is an Hhonor man. He gives as his reason that he may have a son leaving for Dartmouth some day and he will then point to his record in the A cgis and say, See what your daddy did. Go and do likewise. 10: Organ in Chapel goes on strike. Refuses to work on Sunday. 11: The Dartmouth prints long exposition on how to crib. 14011 ffl-IE, H 'Q voL.Lv1 A A 1914 13: The .DUI'f1lZfO'llflI now discovers that we have fewer chapel cuts here than elsewhere. This is a step in the right direction. 14: Only eighty days to Spring Vacation. 16: Red Spillane seen in a dress suit. Looked like Scarry's. 17 : Nat Ambrose comes back like the had penny. 13: Seven extra cuts in chapel granted by the Faculty, thanks to The Dartmouth. 19: Exam Period commences, the most cheerful time of the year. 30: Rain. Optimists say spring is here. 31: Duet in chapel by the entire choir. February 1: Our three day donated vacation commences. Commons shuts down, and there is a food famine in Hanover. L: Mr. Babbitt sets a record by thinking 35 out of Mr. Neef is a close second. 3: Mr. Blume desires to enter the race. Bad time for the language student. -l: The Junior Class decide that they know when they want their own prom. 5: The first time we have ever been compelled to give tickets to get out of an enter- tainment. I T : A student ure department is to be organized. 11: Margeson feels sorry for Williams and shoots a basket for them. 16: Two Lord's Prayers rendered in Chapel. 17: Instructor- I have no objection to your making guesses when you have not pre- pared the lesson. Now what do you th-i11J.' about the following question, Mr. Healy 'P 18: Three freshmen, two sophomores. and one junior flunk out of Wellesley: hundreds go to the train to see them oft. What a contrast! 20: Prof. Cox- I wish you would write out that last statement, Mr. Heenahan: I want it as a horrible example of reasoning. 22: In its humble way The Durfmoufh would remark that today is Washingtoifs Birthday. Even the hour vacation granted last year proved an extravagance, so this year the college is to observe the day in silencef' . 9 f Z ! ,ff-.21 L N x M it -F h '-xi' QF 16' ' Y Q 3 I C9 f C' Qi ' Q 'W' If X -fx ' A-'J Qcftfn- No Place for a Nervous Man C4025 She rl oc ko -the Monk -me ,ADVENTURE or QAMVELVINQ page fAr-memes To Que MAQELQ Mi,-, Lunar IN TQ 1-- A PEN y. gcc-1.,,us'syf5 f ,.. EAV QLD CUASY HE 7'5 -552 .N rue' Crimea oF Hg Fltuifigv ooivolszlefxtmzs ipggrnlrjs- ES, Q69-4om',. I cnrcsqe Ann me LAW g:T0:w:-vw: Yo,ghgA?542, JW Xt, :M ONLY- ary X f-0,4 1, : e,4rl.Y - 1 gvxvug-REL, W. 1,6 ,Goa . mam We A , B VVPX ,fx Evm T . Amp - you MR ...X I . www. Kb, DOF gig! SQSDYWQQ Sf 5 , K , -f I E gc H I E .f.' HM peEFER L . w , ll t 1 sv f fff, 2 fum I 4-ry' 12, . - . , mg Z- ls K ' Tuovql-4Tl 4 I 1 1 ig h ii h Musv' Ac+ all I I N ' A gl 1 w .F N'--A'-'-'-' V2 - X ' HAS1-fry w ,i ' L- -.::f fi , W r- - EE W i ..Q wi m. I X' f x 1-:T ' Q. y pf an s 1 ,, : - S . ,E-QL-- ' X . , N of - egg.,-'V i-is , E 5 : A sifq '- I :K - ' g ' i ws 5 Q gg 11 Q t : l I J 3 g . . - 5 X QE O E EV 5 S ' i' MU Q 9 YQ 5 Km 'I .' E 4 'll , if so 4: .4 'T JAKE 2 ' v. ing? .., Ns. 5. Q? O E3 Never-Never Books One of the latest of the truly great books which have flooded our American market in the last few years is Karl Fulmer's Autobiography of an Tinassuming Man. Rarely has it been given to the American public to. read such a folio compendium of universal self-satisfaction. Undeniably the author has full knowledge of his subject, and we some- times wonder if the experiences of Aloysius, the Unassuming Hero, are not personal rela- tions of individual eccentricities. Published by Fulmer, Dessau, and Jewett. The sine qua non of any book of ballads has always the ability of its author to de- pict in passionate, though in some cases overdrawn, terms his inarticulate longing for higher things. This, Carrol Edson has done in his latest contribution to the poetry of the century: The Ballad of the Aeroplane, by One Who Knows and Knows that I-le Knows. The fact that this is a new departure in literature need not detain dilettants from perusing its voluminous pages, for its intrinsic mood so far overshadows the author's love for the limelight that the latter is scarcely perceptible. It deals with the aeroplane in all its various phases, taking it as a toy, carrying it through the precarious adolescent age of glides, to its marvellous maturity as a full-fledged biplane. From these volumes we turn to a real melodramatic red-blood, knock-you-down and-pick-you-up story of love and adventure. In his latest work, James Parker Marge- son, Jr., has given us a real thriller, a worthy follower of the Merriwell and Harkaway books. From the Middle of the Floor is a book which will be severely censured by the critics of the country, especially those versed in the rudiments of basketball, since it depicts the exploits of a superhuman shot on the floor, but like all thrillers containing the requirements of excitement and romance, it will wrap itself close about the hearts of its readers. and this, despite the critics' protests, is what books are written for. Little Nemo IN THEY LYAND 'oF wo?-f6EP.FoL' DRFAMV5 - Cfxpotoms-5 To wmgos mecxwj IIC wi:NDqb'3Ei'E't,' ?,jaf:.:e 4px f-:arg !',,2W9,?. 9 ,,ff1.QQ4i 6 0 ' all is ?NO'l'lCE M ww W +559 fmt ff-V 'ite V gd ffl f FROM THE K WAKQ UP, 5 Y' 7 Agtfmi ei it DE A N Fl l LA5-r SCHAPEI- , ' , My M Q.. ,,, -:-:-3-:- . Q c ' RJU li ke V' -if V OHBE! Rman-AQ ' u I ' .I ', A-15 Ita- W I -A if 4 X23-jiGUEg5H:Uw,:1Q TN A .. ' , ' CU-I--S ffj: 1 Qvlf- JUUST DREAMW ! I .gil , -gli E I NLPKK Si v n ' 1 ,L ,I I,1qFg571ST'lT! , .W i'rQ -1' l r' - - I, , N fr as see iiiii wlmulnlul f ' T el- s T IN THE Qklu. -.. vs lllllll ill li? VM, XILLJ-J-l-. I In : C4041 U ft C If ,M f, N CAPCH-oeuee fb Q M PAYNE, NOTICE T0 ea A . ifxx ffm JANITORS RQ, Ks , 'w ,X N0 BEDS ' Q. F L R J fi-me-.re A' XXX SHALL BE ., f U -f , V 4 me , ,Q MADE BEFORE P P 5 Fg? f!g..Mf .X Lfaig: ll O0 A M ' A 31 ygyll Vvxfxx fgmf gif' iq ' X .1 - was H.N KINQSFORD ks?-Q ll , A Xf Nsoicfu. -121 'M 51 pw: -me ' G ,,,, ,.,, .. f . K f,,, ,M N7 Q bv ,FL-A 51' v nam- 5jf'+ '-f, Books Received The Dolll' by R. M. Starbuck. Appealing, but slightly sentimental. t'Bowls by Toniniy Nichols. An illuminating treatise on the gentle art of bowling. The Autobiography of an Unassuining Man by Karl Fulmer. CSee abovel. The Candy Ring collaborated between Ellsworth Buck and R. M. Phelps. Excel- lent, though rather indigestible for children and Freshmen. Why I believe in Turkey by Yalenderian Kalenderian falias Kelly J. A treatise from the Balkan side, bearing on the recent upheaval in the Balkans. George Randolph Chester, our new Maupassantn by A. H. Licklider. A new series of essays on the ripeness of inodern literature. My New Responsibilities by Walter Beach Humphrey. Thrilling experiences of a recent 115 B K. The Ballad of the Aeroplane, by One Who Knows and Knows that He Knows, by Carrol Edson. QSee abovel. From the Middle of the Floor by James Parker Margeson, Jr. fSee abovel. 'tSWear Words I Have Heard by Skeet Tibbetts. C522 T 0 YJILL IAUSTUWN Zjjrf 'in 11 '-ASR ,b p 2,5- 14053 d7I1IEL gg g mtv. qw 1914 1 Why Aegis ? There seems to be but little reason for calling a college year-book The Aegisf' and naturally some little curiosity has been aroused in this respect. To settle this question, the editors have gone to a great deal of trouble, as the following report will show. The first mention that we ind in history of the name Aegis is as the name of a goat, a particular goat, which was a foster mother to Zeus. History fails to record who got Zeus's goat, but the fact remains that said goat, following one of nature's laws, died. As Zeus had become very much attached to his goat, he decided to save the skin as a keepsake. About this time a friend of his by the name of Minerva needed a new dress, so Zeus lent her the skin for this purpose. There seems to be but little connection between dress and shield, at least in ancient times, but soon Aegis came to mean shield. Here history rests the story and some link seems to be missing in our attempt to associate skin with Aegis, because there appears to be quite a jump from Minerva's dress or shield to the Dartmouth College year-book. In all probability, when the nrst year-book came out, popular opinion classed those who bought it as goats and the book as a skin. The editors preferred some more classical name than Goatskin, deeming this a term of reproachg but wishing to humor their constituents, adopted the equivalent, Aegis, instead. Such at least is our own humble opinion. ' A Sob We go to lectures, meetings, class What profit in these We know that we can never pass And get our earned degrees. The courses that we pass by rights We're flunked in by some crank And we 1l1USt on probation go Because his mind's a blank. The faculty is nice enough When it is not at work But on the bench it's stern and gruff It talks in snap and jerk. I wish someone would tell the Profs Their system is a muss They are not teaching for themselves They,re teaching to pass us. The scene is in a class-room The Prof. is George Ray Wicker, He talks of all our troubles From insanity to ticker. The trouble with our money Our national cur-ren-cy, Is that it lacks a thing Called e-las-tic-i-ty. Now do a little thinking, And a remedy discover. Up spoke a hidden nnancier Make money out of rubber. George grins and hares his teeth. That answer I will bar, It has a disadvantage For itfs stretching things too far. 14065 A. Rufus Choater, A. B. Stands at the top of the tree And I sit here in class and comment O11 the brass Of A. Rufus Choater, A. B. A. Rufus Choater, A.B. Is not half as brainy as me All his wiseacre's stuff is a palpable bluff Why, I'm twice as observant as he. A. Rufus Choater, A.B. Has a drag with the Powers That Be They bow and they smile in an aifable style But it's twenty-four hours for ine. Cruel professors of me I could get a degree Do you s'pose If I'd talk to you nice and call once or twice Like A. Rufus Choater, A.B.? tapping, tapping, Then I heard a Tapping, tapping at the oiiice door Said the student 'Please excuse me' Quoth Craven 'Nevermore. ' A lady fron1 Hamilton, Mo., Went to the Dramatic Club show Said she- I divine That that girl's masculine For she pulls up her trousers, you know. ffl-is A The Fable of the Lamb fWith apologies to everybody and Geo. Adel N 3 Af E 600 3 Il f 1 7 E Wi.. 7 gui' 1 I 1-X ' . - .I I Y. W , :QU I ll ll f Vi K ' l 'ln N I I X 4 Z. l ' 5 ' K U 11,9 I V f 9 x l, , cy -nu I n X 'f I I ff 4., f , 1 9 700, ' 1 . - ! vsfrfmcmggc- Once a decorous Lamb strayed into a Fold among the New Hampshire Granite and matricu- lated. By the time he had learned enough to scrawl his John Hancock on the back of his father's checks, and had become accustomed to wearing a One Cent Stamp over his ear to keep off the snow, he felt real Devilish. He stopped Drinking Milk and gorged his Tummy on Nut fudges. I-le was going to the Devil fast and started fletcherizing Cigarettes. When he got his Porce- lain Fillings clamped on to one of these Lung Rust- ers, he resembled the front end of a Freight in ac- tion on a ten per cent. grade. He took another Step and one day cut a Class. After that he fell the whole Flight and College Joys had the Curriculum up against the ropes fighting for Time. He was lost. They found him at Leb. still lost. New Patent Leathers kept a pair of 212 Degree Socks from the Curbstone. His Suit was English and looked as though it had been dragged across, and was still shrinking. His Blue Garters and Arm Elastics didn't quite show, but his neckwear was clearly audible. They guided him into a Zoo to see the Bunnies Hug and the Turkeys Trot. He tried to look boied at the Gotch-Hackenschmidt Exhibitions which were rubbing the Wax off the Flooi but he had enough Sense to shove his Return Ticket in his Stocking and to it ll A S 4,39 L32 J-Rib yhhmlf, I-Ha '- 4 '4gyQ 1 ' . A '-2 X! XXX 2 Oo ea b , Q .jfs Iwi. M When nobody showed up to peddle his Cognomen among the Cash Girls he felt insulted. He was just going out to breathe when his Eye fell on a vision. The Vision was not injured and wiggled right by in the arms of her Dance Ticket. The Lamb noted that she was cast in one Piece with all the Corners filed off. For the next three Rounds the Vision stored up Energy and grew rest- ' lj S f less. Every time she looked at the Au- keep one Dimpled Palm on his Ingersoll. se lj' 'U L i Q v '- 3 2 2 U, 1' :F 1 girl 'XL X W f J I 'Q ,' , .1 -9 X N39 :M ZX gig , l yn S4 ij' 'l Y X I A 6 x f Nix 5. at on I S an AV ll N +R X N ' 3 ' 4 X1 I, l I K ' xi Q dience, his h e a r t broke a Record in the - grant-Ne - ' ' High Jump. When the Orchestra started to commit Hurder for the fourth Time the Vision got up and started to corral the Lamb. I-le looked wildly for an Exit Sign and then tried to spiead himself over the Wall. The Vision picked him out from the rest of the Pattern 4408? QQ VOL. LV1 5 A 1914 1 and felt soon had him O11 the Boards doing the Australian Crawl with his feet. Shyness slid from him like Soup from the Plate of a Commons Waiter and soon he more at Home than Microbes in a Public Drinking Cup. Before long he had learned that the Road to Leb. wasn't even paved with good lntentons and that the B. 8. M. way that the Road to Leb. vvasn't even paved with good Intentions and that the B. X M. way 'F + 'Nl lll rl . t i m e an jun rj 'N M X F ia ,gl-LL inf 4-htlhg 'll x we I XZ K 'l - V -2531 It '-itil-fzigdz. . V YV WJ, ,M Hlm1L'l 11-1: ll,E'f.a 1 W. '- S ull W ' ' ' . ' i' lh. . T W .. all Mlll-l. ' .4 x pf 4',z 1'.:f::rf2 h 112' U-fu? ,..4m ':'Hg 5, rf , 1 l1.,,'I'IlI'gjj'I'Mmlvl lf llnw?l lE Alf lf' '2 . I f 1 iff' '11, . ,vUK'fv ' :E Q V! f ,515l 7 St, N ll ' Q2 ,J,a3if fgxfya 'f ls Q ' :Z T B Ili alllw l :ul V ,nelly 7 - f '-v fe ' f H rc 1 Elly. . X- H 'H' X I M4 ' l :fllhllf ' YY ' 'J E an S5 f J ' X-'fr' gi V if, I Y ,qX V' mv sf About this Time, the annual Xmas Mi- gration toward Home and Holly came, and the Lamb went with it. His Folks nrted with relief that he had formed no Bad Habits, and he could converse with his Sunday School Super- intendent by talking about the Weather. The Natives said he was the Personilication of Unspoiled Innocence and started knocking together a shiny Ped- estal for hun. The Lamb learned that the Nice Girls and Boys were going to a Dance. l-Ie pushed a few Studs into his White Armor, hauled on his Distress Suit and started for the Hall. Here he found the Goats separated by their Hair Ribbons. by Bashfnlness, and by the Width of the Boom. As Shakespeare or Arthur Duffy said It only takes one to start. Whoever it was, he spoke the Truth? By the Time the Lamb had signed up all the Ifride of the Village, the Orchestra began its Hrst Offence. The Lamb sparred for an Opening, clinched, and started doing the Lebanon Leap. His partner had been fed on a Two-Step-VValtz Diet, but she rallied and stay ed right with him. Soon everybody was doing it, and the Mothers come down from the twenty-five cent Balcony to the Two Dollar Floor and broke up the Dance. The Lamb slunk back to the Granite in disgrace and the Natives knocked the shiny Pedestal apart and stored it away in a Dark Cellar. Moral: Fools will dance what Angels may not tread. i'Must have been Shakespeare. ' C4093 JBQWQYP-f JE f f2i..:.-:.e,,,, nu LJ gf as fi ' , ,,,.. cf Q4 ? x M 4-f. mu Uwe ef-4 4 45 .CA V fu 2 ga ,Q NN nf 251 'S 'X 7-5F 7 51,96 -K in 5 K' V 47. xw i'f 1 1 , . 5+ is lg W- FZ mi wi X' W' vi H-. Y '-if Leg XZ? inf Wi. U-,C iff-Y GRu.n, I comm-fs 6,5 4 5 , 42' E,--' X Q , X ,X ', 'x Wpvevl Mu-EMS il - f gl ,fx-1 s . xi , '. Rims Mm 5ifszS.1x:.7W EERVEY ff-LANE 1 THE COMMONKSD ORCHESTRAxk STARTS '--' :h'NqM RiH OF' THE :Q AMID MUCH APPRGVALW, J PRES:-MAN-SQPH, Foc'1'5u.g RU H . Koo 4077 -I .. K A Ll X Avy Sxxgifs H 1- . ' '-ii! .Q U 7 . , 'I f 52- 1 11' 1' A P ixNkAu ff if i 'A 3' - -Eu 556,01 X 613-nu 1- cb 7 E 'PPfRfN.f- ,f o -,e i f J h ' N Sk X, 0 CK X ful 2 IAQ Q XL f 1, ww Q x,,.x , , ' X0 -' . ' , 4 h 'K Q4 J 5 45 ,.1: 'ma 4 fm ,x WJ X W ,dial 3- f V NNE Z flip' ff 2 Q f 7 u gg ' 4 L K -' X J :Xp I 22' 9 -6111414-ur. MORE AND MORE ClTlF1ED INNOVATIONS AT T HE HJUNCTH Souzfye BANK CONCERT' e Ewuovso BY THE 'Ewvwe LX J Q 1 PEOPLE J Q1 N 4. . V ' K In E n ,mfw ww , .Jw I 4 . 1 ' UJL ' 1 ,9,f .4 f 5 . f fs '- V ,f 4 - 'Y - NQTICE ro 2 9 f f ,D ,i ,352 '9Z T. M, ua- W 27' ' Aiwa- gf? cuavmi 2 ?4 ' ' Si' THAT H5 + -xf,-f .1 fff' S f, 1, -.A.,W. R, Emu? .x,N?'PiiZQEy 'F !BEMA L 1' 4 '- 4 ' NG 4 ' j'fjf ,:'h 5'vf Q, X . -.-... 2' fi? 42 we 7- S 'PY -f 1- ., , r ff ,gfggf QX M K, ff' f 9 , 49 Q R 'X gui ,, 0 5 QQ? ' f l, ,iijhflkfl 351 1: , mm nu.. HW 'W J,nlLfIlHW 'UL gig-1 11 4- z1'i' ' ' .AL - - 4 if P 'fd 6 ,gg 'K ff 'E --,XTE .l l KT' w 5 W K: C: THAT faoueussoms ,XX X QL . Xb RE.lNCARNAj-IGN Monavofz. quasrfcm F-'OR CHAPEL- Q 'ff WHY NQT 'Fu-qs: N' , ll 'gigs OLD REI-IABLS S-ness-r mm P'-Arek ? il users: ov 1-H5 TGUR F NEY ,M.f QRASSA c. '11 BRUVGA ufmf F08 b 4114 1 ab ff ' :xx FQERLESS r :REMEN K THE H fx :NQ::: - tails' n::::l M A53 A f Q, if UU x.f H A X. will 3 JoY'QgZ GMM l Editor of the Hanover Gazette :- Dear Sirz- I The accompanying drawing, by an eye Witness of the recent outrage perpetrated up- on the residents of White River Junction and vicinity, must be of interest to your read- ers, as it shows the horrible depravity of the college youth of today. The facts of the aifair are quite clear. Upon the night in question, more than thirty, yes many more, of the rough element of Hanover, headed by J. J. Scarry and Edward Brady, boarded the Boston and Maine train for the Junction, delayed the passengers, held up the mail, pulled the hell rope, and jeered at the conductor's attempt to be true to his sworn duty of col- lecting fares. When the villainous crew arrived at the Junction, they hastened as a single man to the Globe Theatre, one of tl1e best institutions of its kind in the country, and illegally forced an entrance, hurting the feelings of the proprietor and ticketman, and causing mental and physical anguish to the Junction police force from which that gentleman has not yet recovered. Inside the theatre the college rowdies proceeded to outrage the assembled beauties of Wilder and the Junction with impudent comments, and greeted the performers with catcalls and over-ripe fruit. When some public-spirited citizen turned in a fire alarm, after telephoning to Windsor for militia had been unavail- ing, the rowdy boys from Hanover resisted this form of moral suasion, soiled the uni- forms of the department, disarmed several citizens who had besought the right guaran- teed under the Fourteenth Amendment to bear arms, stoned the citizens, cut up the hose, and beat with it a number of innocent railroad men who were attempting to preserve order with coupling pins. The upshot of the affair was that the fire department became careless with their remaining hose, soaked friend and foe alike, wafted a child through a picket fence on a strea1n of water, and knocked over an innocent woman who was pro- tecting herself from student assault with her umbrella. It is true that very little property was damaged. The rowdies were however re- sponsible for the injury sustained by several of our best brakemen, the police force, and prominent citizens, Some of them are still discussing what hit them. They were also instrumental in forcing to leave town hurriedly Mr. Lorne Elwyn, one of the best Shakes- pearian artists of the day. To cap the climax the students walked back to Hanover, there- by defrauding the Boston X Maine Railroad of three hundred fares which it had a right to expect. It is high time that the police of our land took some notice of this unbridled presumption. I call upon the authorities of the College to investigate, and fire crop and neck any student who can be proved to have been present. Let me also ask where Messrs. Tibbetts, Laycock, Bond and Gautier were? PRO BONO PUBLICO. C4115 flIl'W u IW! IllllW'm 'L luIlIlllIlIIlllIf II 'll V num ' I llilq 5 millIllV 'llllIlllllwlllu1g11vwx1w ---- 1-' cg 5EElllXlGv-t , sr l ,M'f..l T' H s ly gf? fl -0 .- :imp 5 E VI, 1 Om f Q fu in 1 A109 a s Kff Ulf- n l . -:Q Q .4 ,X , .,,- . ff . o. 6 ' 11, 7356! W L, E C ' w'fi '.'5h 5 SI - ii K E+, . , Here you are, ladies and gentlemen. Seeing Dartmouth College for twenty-ive cents. The number is limited, so step right up and give Golden Opportunity a chance to get his hand in your pocket before it is too late. Here we are just outside the inside of the Inn. Inside the Inn is much the same as the inside of any Inn, barring only the ab- sence of a bar. Despite the entreaties of the college authorities, the owner dryly refuses to install an innovation which would make Hanover any wetter than it is. The building we now approach on our right is the Thayer School of Uncivil Engi- neers. It was once the college gymnasium, but its imnates are now mental, not physical gymnasts. Across the street we gaze upon the frowning glory of the Library, the haunt of the thesis writer, and the horror of the uninitiated. This building was originally to keep books i11, but it now lets them out. The fact that they are frequently returned shows that a great deal of credit is due the Library's yinc system. ' The mammoth structure which now rises before us is the New Gym, a huge chunk of outdoors pushed under a roof and walled in. It contains, among other things, a six- lap cinder track, a board track, and innumerable mud tracks left by sightseers. You will find a door-mat to your right, if you please. Upstairs is the great gymnasium floor built in order that those using the gym at Prom time might have something to stand on. We now approach Fayerweather Row, a name perpetuating an outburst of sarcasm following a week's rain in baseball season. This iirst building enjoys the unusual dis- tinction of standing on the site of the only dormitory ever known to have been warm in winter-the former building having burned to the ground a few years ago. The prison- ers escaped in night shirts and the middle of a cold winter night, by jumping to the ground without fear or clothing. The majority struck on their heads and escaped in- jury. Nothing was saved except a piano, which was dropped from the top floor to the stone steps below. Now let us walk toward the campus. Oh, no, Madam, they're not pest houses. Those are dormitories. Yes. two of the oldest members of the Hall family, Reed and Thornton. Passing between these tradition-soaked relics of by-gone splendor. we iind ourselves be- fore Dartmouth Hall. ' Here, ladies and gentlemen, words fail me. even as they have failed thousands who have entered her doors. Here is the lair of the Prof., the Mecca of the faithful stude. and here, despite a plenteous supply of gas. knowledge is painfully extracted. Several years ago the original Dartmouth Hall was burned down, leaving only two windows and plenty of tradition as a basis for the construction of the present building. The great bell at the top tolls the curfew at nine-just another custom, that's all. In passing, you might care to take a glance at this structure on our right, Went- worth Hall. It was formerly a dormitory until the rats drove out its inhabitants, and then, in a fit of remorse at their inhospitable act, set fire to the building and committed suicide. Despairing of ever again utilizing the building to advantage, the authorities converted it into a recitation hall. At last we have reached the Chapel, or college alarm clock, which, it is said, has had a greater uplifting effect on the young men of the college than all other combined func- tions. Recent improvements resulted, among other things, in an effective, novel, pew ar- rangement, so that one may now face tl1e pulpit from any part of the church, by merely twisting in his seat and looking over his shoulder. They failed, however, to provide the much sought newspaper files, which it was hoped would be attached to the back of the pews. C3125 I ' VOL. Lvl . A 1914 We next approach Webster Hall. the home of the highbrow entertainment. Even the nmch vaunted musical clubs are relegated to the basement. Here the Dramatic Club holds its annual production. the Prom Show holds its own, the class in Botany holds its lectures, and Harmony and his choir hold forth. Now, ladies and gentlemen, it you will kindly look between, not at, these two houses on our right, you will see Butterfield Hall, the Bug house. where botany and several ologies are taught. Notice the une view of the campus on our left, and now just a little faster please. There, we got by those two all right, but I forgot to tell you that one of them was formerly the Administration Building. Never mind, here we are right in front of the new one. Oh, 110, sir, you have been misinformed, Skeet doesn't really own itvthat is, its college property, but-well, I don't know, perhaps y0ll'1'G ,right after all. From this building issue subpoenas, summonses, bills, sentences, andsad-faced students. Here too, the Dean holds receptions to a cordially invited few. Skeet expands fcrsely on the possibilities of taking Graphics 3 and Chem 1 on the same hour of the same day, the As- sistant Dean smiles gleefully as the prospects for a large efflux from the Freshman Class become more encouraging, the Treasurer chuckles mirthfully as he tacks on live dollars to unpaid bills, and Prexy dwells above. We are now able to get a glimpse of the Colonial grandeur of Massachusetts Row-the latter part of the name derived from the dormitories' proximity to the river, though personally, ladies 211111 gentlemen, it seems to me rather far-fetched. Behind it is the cemetery-also full of dead ones. Next to the Tuck School, which gives instruction in all kinds of llllSCiQ1ltIf1C misman- agement. and is a veritable l1ot bed of political intrigue. Admission is very diflicnlt to obtain, so we will, with your kind permission, step along to the next building. This the bank, where the man with suflicient artistic ability and financial backing can draw checks, providing he leaves his Fatima on the cloorsteps before entering. The next building you of course recognize as the Commons, but possibly it may in- terest you to see the inside. On our right the newspaper room. No, of course. there are none there now. You see it is rather late, and of course every 1na11 has his favorite paper so-oh, by the way, this is now a gentlemen's club. You can see tl1e notices around on the walls. Next we have the Trophy-I mean the Magazine Room. The trophies used to be kept here, but they are now displayed at the new Gym-no, the storehouse, fPardon me. but it is hard to keep up with these improvementsl. Yes, Madame, it is rather dark for a reading room, but you see that is easily remedied by taking the maga- zines away and leaving only the covers. Yes, it is rather clever. Through the door on our left we catch a glimpse of the huge living room. As you will notice, the table sup- ports all kinds of magazines and dirty shoes, and there is no sawdust on the floor, for as the cards tell us. this is a gentleman's club. ' - We pass to the Dining Hall. Here. if a man has the suflicient patience, he stands a fairly good chance of getting something to eat, unless the waiter is busy, then it be- comes a matter of speculation. The diner sits at a chair and, barring accidents, the food is placed on the table before hi1n. In any case he gets his food, and' whether it be down his neck or his throat is, of course, merely a matter of taste. Occasionally we have music with our meals, or perhaps I had better say we have music at mealtimes. This, ladies and gentlemen, culminates our sight-seeing trip. I will now pass the hat for the benefit of Moreis Charity School. and, if I may use a slang phrase, I trust you gentlemen will all kick in. No, not the hat, money. Ah, thank you gentlemen, thank you. 14133 ffl-IF, f mm j imi so 53 ..--,,,, Here we have the leader of the band, Doc Calle- ' 'iv ton. XVith a baton in one hand and a Cornet in the I A J I other he makes a very imposing sight, second only to S the Father of Music in Dartmouth College. Every 'X IH 'MW' H evening he leads his hand at the Commons, where he l 4 W IfUlw 4ljl furnishes music with the meals, cheerfully playing Hlwmfjrf yu' every tune requested and smiling genially at all his I-. Q .I ' f1M '?1'.l?, f -. lll i mul f Eid 1' 'W' llill ' ' fl r'i' . f -- K Q T. - acquaintances over his spectacles -ll! , xii ' ' ' I ll iff -. 4 st :rw Of, if - RED es - ' N or '4 1, - Wi' klaljufuxl -- - .V l A J z . 'if A fT Behold the smiling countenance of Paul Witnier ffl Loudon, appropriately styled 'tRed. On the manly breast of our vicelpresident can be discerned three assorted D's. This is a decoration which only Red is entitled to wear. These Dis do not mean that he 4. - is a doctor of divinity or a poor scholarg but ,rather a did good athlete. When words fail Red he opens his mouth in his characteristic grin, which is a - f pretty happy substitute. un MW I 'Wilt i i ullil Ll' o nly ii: qu, It 1111544 'If H cfm ia 5 i L N-4 iii -1 Y gp the , 5 .ff 1 1 Here we have the man who put the mouth in .Z4 Dartmouth, Joseph Henry Beer. That is a name -fa P which you cannot forget. At the moment when the p 1 N , artist caught him he was in the process of changing : . 2' from his football raiment to his New York disguise. When questioned as to how his abnormal growth was effected, Joe characteristically remarked, Big eats, guys. fx .0 Af 45 cs Qi 1 F , ox 'J its D ., D lp l 5 'J 14143 'Q voL.Lv1 5 A 1914 ,f 3 fa V ,inl- ' ...FEEL N ' . , Qf, .X if ,nf A x J , A55 MANMLGR SH I P tk 1: I I - I I E xg , ., mam jp x, ,xy I '01 1 , O In.. X ' N Oli 5 Wu, ah WW , ' 'Q ' 'lllllIIIIUHUIIUIIIIIIIU f I ' :gi 'rsmws gt fr I I -1 Ss? James Calvin Blythe, the man that made Cook County famous. Jim got his athletic training on the football iield, but soon left this for another field of endeavor, accepting the arduous duties of tennis manager, which keeps him busy writing at least one letter a week. At present he is planning a little jaunt to the Pacific Coast with his team, going there by way of Poughkeepsie and New York. What little time Jim can spare from his studies he spends in short trips to neighboring towns. 'Iwi Some of the Board objected to running this pic- ture of String Howe, they seemed to be somewhat sensitive themselves. However, here it is, and a very good likeness, it is claimed. String manages to carry his height with true professional dignity, thus gain- , ing for himself another coveted appellation, Prof. X0 It is rumored that this is as far as the simile will hold in his case, but still we think the epithet is a I good one. .. .... . ig . ' L X fr -Nm H-II.. ' wrfff '.4i-i'ii-S1-',Q,5L,f 'Sr S: - gig X X hu .mm ,umf -2 5 . iff t . ix . . lm 1, Fx 11 2 P wb P fi f I i x ., Q Mr. William Richard Herlihy, Jr., Cpronounced Here-lilyj, alias Squint, is shown in the accompany- ing cut. Squint did not see this picture before it went in or he might have objected to the load of dishes which he carries, inasmuch as Jim Haggerty, after seeing what he really can do, might think that he was loafmg on the job. Squint has the reputation of being the freshest waiter that ever donned a black coatg and in fact has gone far towards establishing the enviable reputation which the Grill Gang has in this respect. C4163 'Q VOIQLVI 5 A 1914i 'P ev K. ,1. is Sample Class in Logic Dr. Cox- I will now introduce you to a subject which will give you a great deal of trouble. No, I do not mean myself. Blythe- Where do I sit? Doctor G.- That shows the advantage of classiiication. What have I done with Mr. Blythe? All move over one seat-blitlzcly, please. By the way, do you gentlemen on the front rowi object to sitting there? Voices Cfrom rearj-'KNO I - Doctor G.- The No's appear to have it. I used to be a clergyman once. Did you ever hear Sidney Smiths classihcation of men, women, and clergymen? Rather clever I think. Have you any questions to ask? Voice- All crows are pea green. This crow is black. What follows? Doctor C.- This crow is not a crow. Etc., etc., etc.-Bell. Being somewhat alarmed at the unusual amount of sickness at certain times of the year, The DCll'f'77I0'ZLfll' has started any investigation along these lines. To date the re- sult of this research can be seen in the accompanying diagram, which represents the number of absences excused on account of sickness. Not only is this condition true of this year, but for a long period of years. 0 1. Q. V V o Q V v. 4 A sg 7 , gt L 21 T K, 4, E 4 2 1 Q 5 is 9 so o S A e . ', . -, . b . 1 1 .Y When interviewed by a reporter, Mir. Tibbetts attached little significance to the chart, and seemed inclined to ascribe its Huctuations at the dates given to coincidence. On the other hand, Professor Hull gave his opinion in the following words, 'fWhe11ever for any considerable period of time, events take substantially the same course, we cannot but believe that there is some combination of causes which eifects the result: and I for one intend to make an investigation of this astonishing state of affairs? In the meantime we can do nothing but hope for the best. Mary had a little lamb, Its Heece was white as snow. But who cares about the external covering of the ani1nal, just so the lamb has not become mutton and old enough to retire on a pension before being sacriuced for the Grill. The June exams come slowly, but they loom exceeding large. You can drive a man to classes, h11t you can't make him pass. A girl in Hanover is worth three at home. C4171 MQ VOL. LV1 5 d 1914 IUKIHUCHSII It was impossible to secure a good likeness of John Palmer, so we print instead an accurate repro- duction of l1is home. Although he spends but two , weeks in the year there, this village seems to have Cg,,,ki,, gained an enormous influence over his speech and R ' t , thought. On his wall can be seen a sign Keep your rars boys at ho1ne 11-01-Icing in Paducah industries. This Omce to John, journalism pays better. A w w if Q- .7 , xy as N Here is a man who belongs to that well-known 1 Nu- ,- class, those who know and know that they know. A 1 I. member of the faculty once called him one of the , brightest men in the class. While upholding the gf Aero Club he Iiuds time for other pursuits, such as of--,,-i politics, and public speaking, and we now have him in the latter capacity. Gentlemen, we give you Carrol X' Andrew Edson of New York. jj lfsf fx W IWLX su-:1ll f'l 'M ' The longest way round is the shortest way home-if Jake is at the door. Freshmen of a feather flock together. When in Hanover, do as Fulmer does. A student in need is a friend of the Ol' Clothes Man. 'Tis only a step twixt fine arts and business. According to the Administration committee, the tightest race they ever saw race between the Freshman class and separation. C4181 0 is probably the reason of his being here as, according are .5 1 w u lwxfblll l fri!! ,.,. ,-lu rw J. MUHFQ fllnlwmf is the ffl-In A H VOL.LVI F fa E 1914 o- Expected Criticisms My p-iotzrre -is out of order. If it is. it is because you handed in your proof late, so it not our fault. Anyway, this is an extraordinary class. The wine color of the cover is C-UCC6Cl'fIlffll1j imzppropriate for Dartmozmfh. If you can iind some color which does not suggest some intoxicating beverage, you must be better in- formed on such subjects than we are. You used the some old shape of booh, cmd the some old arrtmgemcnts. Of course we did. Those are time honored traditions and should not be tanipered with. There is no 1Dfl'lLlI'I'G of the Sophomore Class. You never had one taken. XVhy not do so now? The Freshmen will not stop you. The Pathetic Department is rotten. It is hardly worthy of the Jewel:-o'-Lorrfern. We knew that already. Spring a new one. The P-iemre of the Aeyfis Board certainly does not flatter you. You are the lzomeliest hoard that :re ever solo. We know itg but, if you wanted a good-looking bunch, Why did you not think of that before? If your orlmit the Sf!lfClHfCll,f ahoztt your piictfzrre, why do you rim fire? Who is running this book, we would beg to inquire? Anyway it is harder on us than it is on you. The CUIG7'lfIlU7'H stops with February. What do you think we are-Prophets? This book went to press two months ago. Y WE ouR 'SHOULD VVO,RR-Y f if ' X 50' If N 2 I 14191 lb 5 NINETEEN HUNDRED AND FOURTEEN -igigin 'ifiuarh A-F 0:0 LESTER K. LITTLE Editor-in-Chief WILLIAM EMERSON BARRETT Business Manager WALTER B. HUMPHREY Art Editor ALLAN A. TUKEY Faculty 3 Fraternities JOHN N. HAZEN The Classes JOHN F. MCCULLOUGH, Jr. Athletics GORDON C. SLEEPER Non-Athletics HAROLD A. CASTLE Pathetic if 'lu in.1--uni-.in,,1H..-nu1.ul-nn-.u,,-.n,i..,1.1u.1u,.-n.,Tq1un1.,4 iu..i.,.i,..i..1f,,.-., 1' 'A' N89-Q' CK OWLEDGME Q T W1 c' 'uf THE EDITORS OF THE AEGIS WISH TO EXPRESS THEIR SINCERE OBLIGATION TO THE 1915 HEELERS FOR THEIR AID IN COMPILING THIS BOOK: TO PROFESSOR H. E. KEYES FOR HIS INTEREST AND HELPFUL SUG- GESTIONS: TO MR. E. H. CHASE, '14, MR. VOZ LYONS. EX-' 14. MR. A. E. STERLING. '15, AND MR. K. K. STOWELL. '16, FOR DRAWINGS. AND TO JORDAN AND BRUNER FOR SEVERAL EXCELLENT PHOTOGRAPHS. TO THE PUBLISHERS OF THIS BOOK. THE HARRIGAN PRESS. INC.. AND ESPECIALLY TO MR. W. J. O'CONNOR OF THIS FIRM. WE ARE INDEBTED FOR A PERSONAL IN- TEREST IN THE SUCCESS OF THE 1914 AEGIS. WE VVISH ALSO TO THANK THE ADVERTISERS, WITHOUT WHOSE GENEROUS ASSISTANCE THIS BOOK COULD NOT HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED. QIL EIL ll IH, .WS . EMT. TQ! X Fai 'I .,, -, , 9 fs f-I :J - -I -------- ------- - ---------'---H--- 4- fFINlS Q ADVERTIIEMENTI 7 Index to Advertisers Allen Drug Co. Berger, C. L. X Sons Boomer, J. Robert Bowman, W. E. Brooks Brothers Burns Campion Carter, E. M. Clement, C. S. College Book Store Commonwealth Hotel Cotrell 8 Leonard Cummings 8 Pearson, Inc. Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Dartmouth Davison X Bookbindery Book Store College National Bank Press Studio IVard Dent K Williams Dewey, E. G. Downing, L. B. Dreka, Dudley, Charles H. Electric City Engraving Co. VIII XII XVI X III XXI XVI IV XIV XX XII XIX VI XX XIII V XXIII XXII XIV XX XXIII XII XX IV X XI Galvin, Thos. F. Goodhue, G. A. Guyer, A. W. Hanover Inn Harrigan Press ' Hearn, Charles Wesley Hill Ik Harrower Hotel Cumberland Hotel Kimball Hotel Rogers ' Jenkins BrotheI's Jones, J. H. Liberty Trust Co. Macullar Parker Co. Merriam, G. X C. Co. Miller Automobile Co. National Blank Book Co. Noyes Brothers, Inc. Rich, Charles A. Rock, IVilIiam F. Sanborn, H. E. Shattuck Ik Jones Shuman, A. K Co. Smith X Son Victor Typewriter Co. Waterman, L. E. Co. XIII VI IX XIX VII XV X VIII IX XXII XVII XXIII XIX IX VI XXII III XIX IV XVII XXIII X VIII IV XVIII XXI ESTABLISHED IBIS E in D f Cl fgxx gentlemen EHFHIEHIUQ I mails. ' anoAuwAY hmnvcnrv-sscono sr. NEW YORK. Young tMen's Sack and orfolk Suits in the wiclest range of materials of pattern and quality ahove the ordinary Garments for Motoring and other Outdoor Sports ' Travelers, Complete Gutfittings. English Haherdashery, Hats, Shoes, Leather Goods Send for Illustrated Catalogue National c'SIlVIPLEX Note Books E X f ' Wit I G9 A more convenient and W 4 J Y.. 1 ' I satisfactory note hook than I Z A Y ly i - the 5im1S1zx ishardtoHnd. 'X I The full hlach cloth covers 1 - U - - i i come in nine different sizes, ti! E - from 6f5x3Q9 to 112,182 in. I - W They are made with the 3 V opening either at the end or Side' if ' ..', fi ' , By pulling either ring, :tll hoth will draw hack and Q lock, and hath rings can he OPBIBIGS snapped together hy closing 7 A at Bifhel' end 1231 the cover or pressing either as shown. ring- FOR SALE BY ALL STATIONERS Made By NATIONAL BLANK BOOK CO., Holyoke, Mass. III DARTMOUTH Pins. Banners and Buttons. Dartmouth Spoons. Dart- mouth China, Fountain Pens, Sporting' Goods. and many otlier tlmingfs can be laouglit at the very lowest girices at E. M. CARTER'S Jewelry Store Successor to N. A. Frost Watches properly qaepafrecf anal lvarrantecf HANOVER, New Hampshire Compffments of THE ARCHITECT DREKA Fine Stationery and Engraving House 1121 Chestnut St., Philadelphia Banquet Menus Original Designs Fine Stationery Stamped with official F t ' D' and Cgifgggzalsles Inserts for annuals l ' n Ofiicial Plates Visiting Cards Dance Programs Correct styles and h and Favors s apes Invitations Christmas Gifts For Weddings and Wedding Glfts Receptions Of Artistic Merit Correspondence receives Prompt Attention Designs and Estimates Furnished Orders carefully executed in our own establishment by the best of engravers and plate printers with centers as pure and as good as can ine made and covered with a smootli, delicious coat- ing, our DEINIIIOIIII7 QDOCOIZIICS will satisfy time discriminating W' Made by SMITH SL SCN White River Junction, Vermont Bartmnuth nllrgr Manunrr, New Hampshire OUNDED by royal charter, December 18, 1769. The charter of the College was an outgrowth of the plan of the Reverend Eleazar Wheelock for the education of Indians, which had its first development in the foun- dation in 17544 of More's Indian Charity School, Lebanon, Connecticut. In 1816 the State attempted to gain control of the College. The case was fought through the lower courts, and finally carried to the Supreme Court of the United States. Mr. VVebster, in an argument of great eloquence and power, presented the case of his Alma Mater. Decision favorable to the College was rendered by Chief Justice Marshall in 1819. This decision has been charac- terized as Hin its effects more far-reaching and of more general interest than perhaps any other ever made in this country. The importance to the College was such that the recommendation of one of the Counsel in the case has been practically adopted: HI would have an inscription over the door of your buildingf-iFounded by Eleazar Wheelock, Rqfounded by Daniel Webster.' The courses of instruction offered lead to the degree of Bachelor of Arts, and since the incorporation into the College ofthe Chandler School of Science and the Arts, in 1863, to the degree of Bachelor of Science. The Associated Schools Are: THE AMOS TUCK SCHOOL OF ADMINISTRATION AND FINANCE A graduate School offering Two Years of Special Preparation for Business Careers. Students of three years' undergraduate standing admitted to the work of the first year, which leads to the bachelor's degree. The work of this year lays a foundation for the specialized work ofthe second year. Students with the bachelor's degree admitted to the work of the second year, which leads to the degree of Master of Commercial Science. THE THAYER SCHOOL OF CIVIL ENGINEERING Established in 1871. Offers a general course of study and practice in Civil Engineering, so developed as to include the essential principles of all impor- tant branches through two years of professional preparation. THE MEDICAL SCHOOL Established in 1797. The course covers four years of lectures, laboratory and recitation work, with clinics and ward classes at the Mary Hitchcock Memorial Hospital. This Hospital, widely known as one of the best cottage hospitals in the country, is under the management of physicians and surgeons who are connected with the Medical School. Eartmunth Qlullrge 1 1 Eannumf, New Eampahirr V A NEW Dil wE:Bs'rER's , NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY THE MERRIAM WEBSTER The Only New unabridged dictionary in man ears Y Y - An Encyclogedia. Contains thelpith and essence o an authoritative library. The Only dictionary with the New Divided Page. 400,000 Words Deined. 2700 Pages. 6000 Illustrations. Cost S400,000. Writa for sample pages. G. Q C. MERRIAM CO., Springfielcl,Mau.,U.S.A. :.:.1,,.,,5 ' Q W' - mt, i- 1 5 -,E :a.:1,::fg. -q na... .. L - + 1, w if 5, V 2 - '. 1' -fi '-I2 E f'5 EW. 1 .,,,, as I -. 'iztt - iss? .,, ga- 5-at 5 L1 ,U W- if-:-.qe:ss5:: ,.f..,,f E F, ... :om Wig fi 5 V-fx? rr.-:J-1.-as-, .V 1-140 3 -.fagilfnf --' M-: .,-- ,. 1 V1 Z-V. if--. ..o-1 4 - ,.,.. we .4 325.5 : 'rw L-:E I X 'MS - 2-1 -'... ' ram '. , -P in Q3 152 w-:!g.a::em:.:'-..1:xg--.,... , 2. '- . -- ws . my-i-f'1'tf1:-:.i Cummings Sr Pearsons, lnc. Custom Tailors - Suits, 340, 345, S50 348 Washington St., Boston FUR ITURE M Trunks, Bags, and Suit Cases, Curtains, Draperies, etc. Chiffoniers, Couches, Morris and Ofiice Chairs. Room Furnishings of all kinds. Students' Furniture a Speciall? H Geo. W. Rand Kz Son Bridgeman's New Block Hanover, New Hampshire Xlx r E62 1, Silzimillss ,X ,,,,,...-. tx 7 sum N lf you want the best shoe at a fair price, don't do yourself the injustice of buying shoes before examining Stetsons The Red Diamond on a shoe strap is always a guarantee of excellence STETSONS cost from 55.50 to 359.00 the pair G. A. GOODHUE tg THE H A T T L E E Folznulwmss P , M513 110 ,nv-y',,lnT '-s --x N .A 'I . EEK .- -A Q I 14, 2 3,45 9- 5, Ig-A,5X Aa L .04 0' 'idx ' N593 1 c:E'v..- E b- .fe 1 rx ? Tl-IE HOME OF Tl-IE I-IARRIGAN PRESS Class Books, Monthly Magazines Programs,-Catalogs and all kinds of Commercial Pri Ilt in g. Printers to Harvard University Dental, Holyi Cross College and Em e rson College of Oratory. ' Printers of this year's A e gi s . The HARRIGAN PRESS, Inc. Corner of Austin and High Streets, Wo1'cester, Mass. Drugs, Medicines, Toilet Articles, Flags, Banners, Shields,Post Cards, S o u U e n i r s, etc. Confectionery, S ta tio n e r y, Cigars, Cigarettes, Tobacco, Tobacco Jars, Tobacco Pouches, Cigarette Cases. A.SHU1VIAN8zCO., Allen Drug Company Hanover, N. H. -Andover, Mass. We are the Authorized Agents for ff COLLEGE MEN X' SHUMAN CORNER, BOSTON PIPES We carry the largest stock in New England HOTEL CUMBERLANDS ' A 3532111 5 :iti l FEQ EIE WH En! mi ta NEW YORK Broadway at 54th Street Near 50th St., Subway Station and 53rd St. L. H Broadway Cars from Grand Central Depot Seventh Avenue Cars from Penn'a Station. KEPT BY A COLLEGE IVIAN H E 5931125 HEADQUARTERS Fon COLLEGE MEN E'f SPECIAL RATES FOR COLLEGE TEAMS TEC Sn S 551 259 Ten Minutes Walk to thirty Theatres 'EEEW 4' Rooms with bath, 32.50 and up 'nf 1 1 Nx'X. N. D x riff if 2 ' I an EI5 E '. 1 M , S Iii.. ri U I . , 2 .,, , -En W-jilila. 'ri I In it s 'xiii 'stir . 2 :H a gff HTH' ' . E ' i - :nik ,, ': :F.4 'fi ' Bus TW H fig ., .re 'K H , aff IL qv ' , Q 195 L Wa NEWV AND FIRE PROOF HEADQUARTERS FOR DA RTMOUTH HARRY P. STIMSON, Manager VIII A. W. GUYER TOC67' We also carry a line of Fancy Groceries for Dinners and Banquets Fruit and Confectionery Fresh Bread Every Day Iona I C 5 D Two DOORS BELOW THE INN Hanover, N. H. acuuar Par er ompany 400 Washington Street, 'Boston Make in their Workshops on the premises anal offer , reacly for immediate use or to be made to order Cor- rect Clothes for Stucfents. Also Fine Furnishing Goods and Stetson Hats. 9305 TON 400 Tasizington .Street 5'TiTCODf'frlIFfJF3 ssrr 3 kill M E lDL 1 . f f ' . ' X 4 K 7 . h 3 N E o X' 5 r ' 'mf-' f..,,X 4-,muy l ' f i g- --gf N' Lil- A . L t f A : N-1 : s. A-ws-'ruffWives.-ssvrislsyr 1','v:Ai'f 4-:sf A-,, :nw 4 ------ ' ff- rel., f 1' ., - fl .f 4... ....... , Y ,-st. .,.,. ....,, -A ..,, ,V ..:... ..,.4 1 .tg .,... ,V...,t.... , .,.,31. , . ,, .. if MW Q e-s',.'Q H we ?l 1 SW '-'f- i if ,V V -11 A. - .' eeee 1 so 9 -A -r-.: '- 1 , s'rs,'-' W f vigigigif s - f2 5:Z?!3 M '-'- ff-1 f J V ' Z eus . '-AT .ssr at 'gl vfilflfwi-' 4 . ' K Lqm as-1' .V5, gne- g el ' it 2 L f V- If: F g if? 4' . ,,,.,'?BH 'W f -- 4 'F ' 591 K Qsvs Q . tyy ., 5 SP gHe1d'S my absolutely new and so ass , 'tst' ' 1? M ' M f ' ' f,4 f ' . ' w-:mn 1 ct . - fi f h t 1. V gl lu repmo 0 e JM. ww . gm ,V 'Pi Ib tg 3 Qf o A MAGNIFICENT NEW HOTEL by 1, fs , . 1 ?'f V'-k t L, if 7M Modern and Metro olitan m eve Nm 1 - W vw x aku, X ' .,e ,z-4' .'12lw:l':v -' A . . .uf - :- Hb V v 'wav ppomtment and Servlce IX Buhlvg Fine Athletic Goocls and Team Equipment for all Athletic Teams Furn1'slz1'ngs ami Custom Td1.,0T1'Hg The Banister Shoes Vvaclluseft if Whiting Shirts Fownes and Perrins Gloves Dudley Hand Knit Shaker Sweaters Olnllrgr emh Hrairrnitg Pennants zmh Banners Outfifters to Dartmouth College and Preparatory Sclxools Semi far Cam7ogue.4 CHARLES H. DUDLEY Amaralqs Para Caspa A Re71'aZ1le Cure for Danclrujff :: Falling Hair and all I Diseases of tlue Scalp Recommended lay leading doctors So'd in Hrst-class shops Prepared by W. E. BOWMAN, Proprietor HANOVER INN BARBER SHOP SHATTUCK 84 JONES INCORPORATED N X FISH OF ALL KINDS OYSTERS AND CLAMS 128 FANEUII. HALL MARKET Bos'roN, MASS. Hill Sz l-larrower WALL PAPERS Friezes and Mouldings Telephone, Haymarket 1448 25 AND 27 CORNHILL BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS THE Euzemle Cm ENGRAVING Co B U F FALO. N.Y .. W E, .. Wf MADE THE ENGRAVXNGS FOR 7'H!5 BOOK L QI DO You want photographs taken of groups, organizations, your room, College, or Fraternity buildings? IT will be to your advantage to call and get my prices. They will sur- prise you. Why not see me Quality signalizes my work. E. G. Dewey 0 Z'.i5. 2,TZ,.. 7'l?4A577.'S ' 1.61225 Illustrated Manual and Oalaloguo sent nn annllcatlun IMPROVED ENGINEERING and SURVEYING INSTRUMENTS -ff:-. .see-We HARACTERISTICS: accuracy of division: slrnplleity in manipu- lationg lightness com- lGQ,lll?f ' bined with strength, with high powergstead- mess of adjustment under varying temp- eratures: stiifness to avoidanytremoizeven in a strong windy and thorough workman- ship in every part. Their instruments are in general use by the U. S. Goverment engi- neers, geologists and surveyors. a n d t h e fx 1 Xx ' ll ' T' '- 'ist In ' achromatic telescope . 'w gs? fi ll tif, H' . :ft .,,-.1-,I .I .I ,, f - I X range of instruments made for river, harbor. city. bridge. tunnel. rail- roadand mining engineering as well as for trl- angulation or topographical work and land su r- yeying, etc.. is larger than that of any otherflrm in the country. C. L. BERGER Sz SONS 37 Williams St., Boston, Mass. Commonwealth Hotel Clncorporatedl Opposite State House, Boston, Mass. EAST 1IIOff'e1-s rooms with hot and cold water for 951.00 X Q aEAcou,, QV .bilge and up, which includes free use of shower baths. NotL1'ng to equaf this in 9NIewEng7anc1. .IIROoms with private baths for 31.50 per day up, suites is f N I' ,QL 0 or , Q QQ M Q' PTEMPERPXXQ' WEST A 7 3 'fly ,Q c is .Q 3 Q43 G X 4 Q 0, H-I ,f ' ' ui S 2 3 NURTHSIATION SOUT SIAIIQN 2 E 0 , '- 4 g 1 5 '61 '- 4 oi 7,5 Q E are 6' Q Fx 2 We , 'U' 2 QT 1 5 Q. of two rooms and baths for 3154-.00 per day and up. D1511'ng Room, Cafe first-cfass, European 157an. flllfllzsofutefy F7'T8fT00f. Stone floors, nothing wood but the doors. llll-Equipped with its own Sanitary Vacuum Cleaning Plant. 1ILStrictIy a Temperance Hotel. SEND FOR BOOKLET STORER F. CRAFTS, General Manager XII Paris London Berlin Thos. F. Galvin Quang 124 TI'el'I101'1lZ Street Conservatories: Opposite Park Street Church Boylston and Fairfield Sts., Back Bay Telephone, Oxford 1737 Telephone, Back Bay 2323 COPLEY PLAZA D tfitmooiitim o kst tr E. P. STORRS, Proprietor College and Fraternity Stationery. The DARTMOUTH Song Book. Waterman, Sterling and Swan Fountain Pens. Latest and best Safeties. QQ pposiite The Umm HANQVER XIII Elin Bartmunth Svtuhiu is the only place to get duplicate prints from old Dartmouth Groups and Views Moral- Have your Portrait and Group' Nega- tives made where theywill be on hle for future time. , LANCILL, Photographer C. S. CLEMENT 81 CO. , Merchant Tailors 155 MAIN STREET NASHUA, N. H. XIV Glharlrn mvalrg lqvarn jdhntngraphvr in Amin 1914 ivtuhfinz 727 Englntnn Svt. Enntnn, Mana xfxfxfxfxfxfxfxfxfxzxfv ff HE high quality of our Work is familiar to all men of Dartmouth since iaog, which was our first year there as Senior Class Photographer. Since that time We have made on many occasions the Senior or AEOII pictures, and often both classes the same year, as Well as many groups. The total number of individual students thus photographed easily runs into the thousands, a record not possibleto attain with many live competitors in the held, unless the work had been of the highest grade, and the prices such as to commend us to their favorable consideration. iflllr. Hearn pvrannallg makrz all aittingia at Barimnuih Glullvgv. Furniture Telephone, Back Bay 3435: Malden 993-1 J. Robert Boomer aw Formerly with the late Henry A. Turner Co. Wall Coverings U o U h 1 . Posmy Intermr Decorator Goods U Connoisseur Plain , and Decorative Painting 0 103 Newbury St. Boston, Mass. CAMPION Dartmouth and Amherst OUTFITTER TO COLLEGE MEN If Campion Makes It It's Right XVI Superior Design, High-Grade Metal, Careful Workmanshlp Describe New York Boston Philadelphia Chicago WILLIAM F. ROC K BOWLING, BILLIARDS AND POOL Match Games Given Special Attention WEEKLY PRIZES COMMERCIAL HOTEL OO O XVII it E- but a Few of the Good Features of the Jenkins Bros Valves They are the original renewable composi tion disc valves. The genuine Jenkins Discs, with which they are fitted, are of special composition, readily adapting themselves to the raised seats, ensuring absolutely tight closure As there is no metal- against- metal contact of seats, there is less abrasion and wear and the labor of regrinding is obviated Jenkins Discs are inexpensive, and when worn out can be readily renewed without re moval of valve from the piping Demand valves bearing the Dia o d T ad M when buying. It pays to insist p lt th genuine because then ou are f U which has given these valves p SPEED ' 'H-F'-'UUDPPUCU HGGDPPUCQQZD- Y All That is Best in a Writing MAC H IN E VICTOR TYPEWRITER CO. New York oaace: 812-814 Greenwich sf. Poffland, Maine, 210 Fidelity Building Sold and rented by F. C. Blood, '14, Hanover, N. H. ' t XVIII 4, gym The Hanover Inn Hosiers, Clovers, and Shirt Makers Neckwear ancl I MUHICTS 3 . 5 V Ready-made Slurts Madras, Percale, Flannel Sillc, M' 1 Silk and Wool 32.50 to 312.50 iggggf E,2Z,,I,ZfT1?'5, il Arthur P. Fairfield, . Manager Incorporated Hanover, N. H. LIBERTY TRUST COMPANY A SEARS BUILDING, BOSTON Young But -Strong 'IN FIVE YEARS DEPOSITS 33,100,000 An Insticutfon with Dartmouth Icfeafs O F F I C E R S GEORGE B. WATSON. President MELVIN O. ADAMS, Vice-President ALLAN H. STURGIS, Vice-President and Treasurer WM. I'I. SUMNER. Assistant Treasurer HENRY MILEY, Assistant Treasurer INTERCOLLEGIATE BUREAU OF ACADEMIC COSTUME COTRELL 81 LEONARD 472. 474. 476fBROADWAY. ALBANY, N.Y. MAKERS OF THE Caps, Gowns ancl Hoocls to Dartmoutlx, Arnlxerst. Boston University, Williams, Brown, Harvard, Yale, Cornell, Columlala, Princeton anal otlmers CLASS CONTRACTS A SPECIALTY XIX DARTMO UT H PHARMACY The oldest established House in Hanover The compounding of your Prescriptions is our spe- cialty, and We endeavor to please you in every respect. .al :AE JE L. B. DOWNING Apollo Chocolates and Bonlnons. Belle Mead Sweets and Page Cd Shawls L 'the candy of excellencefi THE DARTMOUTI-I BOOKBINDERY L. Hartshorn, prop. TELEPHONE CONNECTION Hanover, New HHHIPSIILTB The COLLEGE BOOKSTORE HANOVER INN all Text Books and Students' Supplies, Plain and Em- bossed Stationery, Water- man's Ideal Safety Pen, Conklin's Self Filler, Pic- tures and Picture Framing, Dartmouth Banners of every description, Mem Book Prints and Photo Albums, The Best College Views to be found in Hanover. Owned and Operated by Students Davison 8: Ward ' Dealers in Dry Goods, Gents' Furnishings, Clothing, Boots, Shoes and Rubber Goods Trunks, Bags and Suit Cases, Rugs, Curtains and Draperies Coal and Coke Q Davison Sz Ward Hanover, New Hampshire WELL DRESSED 3 DARTMOUTH MEN HAVE THEIR CLOTHES 91521 BURNS ANDOVER, - MASS. AT THE INN 9 6 - EVERY .- TWO WEEKS AJQ 4 4 if 4 Q9 X Is Developed an ns ire I1 e Habi ua ass-Room Use of 2 W 'U , 4 1 p 4 y th fi! t ICI E 2 9 A . Waterm - Itfiiui fiilgihiifig' Ideal ff- A 2? n ain Pen t M X5 Ask Your Dealer for Waterman's Ideals D A , E. Waterman compan , 173 Broadw y, New Yoxi The Dartmouth Press HANOVER, - - NEW HAMPSHIRE ' ' ' - - MILLER I 1 AUTO- . I U- OBILE ' i ,, ' ll ll l h Ill f GF Tl-ld womlo ' 'W'llb f 0 Q , gf ' lll I ' v l W W ..-- ' gig, Mm .. EEEE H t l co res ILEIEANEJNQ Ne HE The Most Modern Hotel irr New Hampshire SPECIAL ACCOMMODATIONS FOR BANQUETS AND DINNER PARTIES College Grill Open until 11 P. M. Cuisine and Service unexcelled J. J. POMEROY - Manager XXII


Suggestions in the Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) collection:

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1909 Edition, Page 1

1909

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

1910

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

1911

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

1916

Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1917 Edition, Page 1

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Dartmouth College - Aegis Yearbook (Hanover, NH) online collection, 1918 Edition, Page 1

1918


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