DePauw University - Mirage Yearbook (Greencastle, IN)
- Class of 1891
Page 1 of 190
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 190 of the 1891 volume:
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4-14. 'By QJ' co, 241 r:,, IZ-fax 'iff 5 ',: W4 9' ,uf IRAGE PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIOR CLASS OF ASBURY COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS 0. DE PAUW UNIVERSITY MAY EIGHTEEN HUNDRED NINETY INDIANAPOLIS CARLON 8: HOLLENBECK, PRINTERS AND BINDERS 1890 QQQQQW f 4i REASON PROGRESS ,sB 4:g,3 ew . W K HHUII1. FIALBCTSIIYII HQ. 07 L F M.SIz?iif:, fqkyaor Le , Lfouigt, SLCKY, J.l'l.HQrmsolz. Jessialiobla. Bus1NE5S.Bofu7a H cuff ....,.. .. ..., .. ..,...,. AW. 1f-, ,, , , , lil' junior Cfnss gf Q0 gbnuw Wrzizwrsify, flie syfrzpafliigifzg rzssociafes gf aff our cfforfs, ffe fvimng Hearcrs cyf aH'oz1rfinar1ciaf lizzrdcrzs, and our mosf llfrzicnz' crifirs g fo flie arzfngonisfs gf 5liU77lS, Mefricrzrls gf fprog- ress, and flie rliampions cj' fiewgzzk Qyf ,ffleasorz every- 'wHerz', Mis 6ooQ is IIIIIZIUIIIOIISQ dcdicafed liy - FEEL' Qgzfliors. M 'A 'Inf 75452275 LY '- X5 3 'N A f - .f,fig7005.:-EKQAF3 X455 4-9 Q Xihm.. :mlm M lu rn ll N- ml ru LJ H M1 Wuhlhl hJlnd'1414lr'd W4 hi -L' Jw- IN MEMORIAM Q' 4'V V 'O Illliclld 4, Qu. MT CARMEL ILL Qivrl FEBRUARY 4TH, 18 AGED 27 YEARS 8 HHH! 'W-Pm? WAN? x in sa ughiiir 'V' 'rd ' MQ ' iq 35 gum, 'N nu -r, nfff px1H1q'Mln1yy4Hg1q1 nu sm my un pu Mah .mg W. an lm- TEE' UI Fil TT El! E311 KT? in ri TIE' UN Dil WTI - E101 Pig EYE? Vu M , un ww C35 1 - Q I 2 a 4 , un nn I , , 9 'J ua un 15 EU ' I ' IU JW: W, W 4b nu nw wb uq: ' lil us: gm 9 as mi fm 'HE - .wi mu gn. all If IW' ill W '41 iii . ,H N , N3 W ' W Nr .H H bw M E-in ra iisklnn IUlW'1MlI1lll'lliI -M , UU'1W'., M'!'U'! U-FUN. The New Administration. 955 1. f' Square your conduct by the straight-edge. 2. H I had rather my safe were open before an honest man than closed and locked before a dishonest one. -Dr. john. 3. Fasten the chairs down by something stronger than screws of steel. -Dr. john. 4. We need men with backbone straight up and down and conscience running all through it. -Dr. john. 5. H We all, students and teachers, are amenable to reason. -Dr. 6. H God and one constitute a majority. -Prof. C. 7. ff De Pauw University has a divine purpose--namely,- to assist young people to realize within themselves the divine image in which they areideally, potentially created. -Prof. C. 8. The best preparation of young men and women for life in this republic is to make them subject to reason during the formative period of studentship. -Prof. C. 9. ff The struggle to comprehend and conform to the reason in this institution is worth more intellectually to a student than the study of Latin, Greek, mathematics, science or anything else in the curriculum. -Prof. C. Io. ft You are no longer subject to prescriptive rules. You have an opportunity of acquiring freedom by conforming your conduct to reason. --Prof. C. 11. Let us be manly men with back bones erect and pointing toward the zenith. -Dr. 'f 15 - I j .-'.l?,AQfcGH:i:i 1- 14,,,1j'-j:i ., ' 'S A 1 'I V ' f 1,1 Qw f ga i, w 1 iw f llffjf ' W - A 1 ,Q ,, :, .K ,, z ' ' A in ,J- N ' f'- I, ' f12 f:2 '- If gm X , ,f'?,'-K A ,I iff ' f U55 igf ff 'f 'A f' 7-- X ' X ' QM, .-1551. f4 Q. : v 'g j m M 1, 5 - be ,My 7 2 .wgiliijygi V. fa.-JG If iw f, : 65F?l YQ gf, Ni ,ll ,f 4 .13. , 4 f'g' ..- x 5 .' 11 155' '- f 4. 'mf ' if JW!!! Q! Our New President, the Students' Choice. SK EVER in the history of De Pauw University have the trus- tees so nearly conformed to the wishes of the whole body of students, the citizens of Greencastle, and the friends of the University everywhere as in the election of Dr. P. D. John to the presidency. De Pauw never saw a happier day or students with more thankful hearts than that afternoon of the 12th of December, i889, when the wires brought us the news that the petition, signed by 800 students without a dissenting voice, had been granted. The spontaneous yet magnificent reception and ova- tion that awaited Dr. John on his return from the city con- firmed it. . - The long line of march that escorted the Students' Choice from the depot to the hall amid the tolling of bells, the roar of cannon, the happy glare of the bonfire, sweet strains of music, the rejoicing of citizens, the enthusiastic shouts and songs of students and later the wonderful throng in Meharry Hall, all but feebly tell of the universal enthusiasm and joy on the night when, as one of the speakers so happily expressed it, Green- castle had become indeed a veritable 'fjolinstownf' Truly no hero or public man ever had more loyal support or fuller and deeper love and confidence of his followers than the new president had inspired. Indeed Dr. John, by his reason, his love and his personal magnetism not only now sat enthroned, but had enthroned himselfin the hearts of all who knew him. Dr. P. D. John was born in Brookville, Franklin county, Nov. 25th, 1843. Owing to poor health and being unable in con- sequence to endure the close confinement of the school room he was compelled to leave school at the early age oftwelve. For the five succeeding years' the course of his study was seriously in- terfered with. At the age of seventeen, however, he com- menced teaching and for three years taught in the public schools of Franklin county. Indiana. But he was not destined to remain longin lower positions. In 1863 elected to tl1e Chair of Mathematics in Brookville College, his rise was rapid. Li- censed to exhort in '64, admitted to the conference in '65, in '69 he was elected to the presidency of the insitution. On the 24th day of-Iune, 1869, he was married to Miss Orra Poundstone of Brookville, Ind. n Resigning his position in Brookville College in the spring of 1872, he immediately accepted the vice-presidency and Chair of Mathematics in Moore's Hill College, a situation he retained during the four ensuing years. Elected to the presidency of Moore's Hill in 1876, he served most satisfactorily in that ca- pacity until 1882, his work thus far in direct connection with the' institutionhbeing interrupted only by a year of '79-'80, on leave of absence in Europe, spent partly in travel and partly in Paris studying music and the French language. Remaining as president until 1882, he resignedg an act, re- gretted alike by students, citizens, faculty and trustees because entailing theloss of his untiring efforts, to which much of the success of Moore's Hill College had been due. In June of '82 Dr. John accepted the Chair of Mathematics in De Pauw University and still retains the position. V His success and progress in these larger fields of educational work has been characteristic ofhim-rapid and marked. Clear, cautious and safe from the moment of his first connection with DePauw University, he has been recognized as a prominent counsellor and adviser in its affairs. His ability as an execu- tive and administrative oflicer appreciated by all and recog- nized by trustees, he was successively elected vice-president in 1885, acting president in June of '89, and in December of the same year to the highest place in the gift of the institution. Since 1867 he has been a member of the S. E. Indiana Con- ference. For the year 1889 he served as president of the Indi- ana Academy of Science. ifzsiiih. f Truly a remarkable career,-at 17 a country school teacher, at 20 a professor, at 26 president of Brookville College, at 33 president of Moore's Hill, and at the age of 47 called to the presidency of one of the largest and most magnificently ad- vanced Universities in the nation, recognized everywhere by educational men for the soundness of the educational principles to which he adheres and the ability with which he advocates them. Without the advantage of a college education, by his in- tense personal application he has attained a breadth of educa- tion equaled by few. Master of Latin, Greek and modern languages, mathematics, philosophy and political science, En- glish literature and oratory, it has well been said of him that he can go without preparation into any class room and come near- er to being at home on the subject treated than any man in the United States. But not only an able educator, Dr. John is a clear, forcible and eloquent speaker. Possessed of a rich strong voice, ofin- tense magnetism, of wonderfully keen and logical analysis, his comprehensive mind, his broad culture, his varied scholarship, his inspiring thought, all combined make of him the leading orator of Indiana and one of the Hrst preachers of the nation. But above all eulogy of rich and varied talents, of scholarly attainments, beyond the qualifications ofthe instructor, the lect- urer, the orator, molding and directing, giving color and life and form to all, stands a model Christian character. Absolute purity of motive, a sweet temperment, a deeply reverent spirit combined with those sterner elements of character that make of him H a mountain of granite, a veritable intellectual and moral Gibraltar -elements which all men admire and respect and emulate, go to make up the characteristics predominant in the new president of De Pauw University. H Take him for all in all he is a man, the right man in the right place, and we as students are proud of HIM. Editorial. at To the faculty, trustees, alumni and students of our Uni- versity, to the college world in general, and to friends of education everywhere, the class of ,QI presents, with pleasure, the present issue of the MIRAGE. We realize that the silent but steady revolution in our college management, the magnifi- cent success which has characterized these changes, the grand prospects for future growth, and, above-all, the changes yet to be made in order that our University may attain its proper position, are subjects worthy of our highest literary endeavor. Many of the matters to which we refer, and of the measures which we advocate, are by no means local in their application. False systems of administration, false methods of instruction, exist in every university. In fact, we believe, there are very few in which so many of these frauds have been exposed, and shams brought to light and abolished, as De Pauw. She has been a pioneer in cutting out and clearing away practices and customs, the outgrowth of false 'theories with which our entire university system has been cursed. She has led the wav in opposing those ideas by which arbitrary dictation was substituted for rational control-ideas productive of artiiicial polish and shallow learning rather than genuine intellectual vigor and strength, and rewarding cringing subserviency to petty rules and despicable toadying to men in authority instead of true merit and brains. She has been one of the first to discover the reason underlying and guiding the policy of a true university, and to insist that faculty and students, methods of instruction and rules of governmen, shall conform thereto. This work of reform begun so earnestly on part of those who have the true welfare of the University at heart, and car- ried on so successfully in the face of the opposition of those 5 . . wt , who have represented the false ideas of the past, is yet by no means finished. Yet we believe that in this work of progress our University stands one of the first in the country. If, there- fore, in the preparation of this volume, devoted to the welfare of our University, it should become our duty to criticize curric- ula, methods of teaching, and to hold up to view shams and hollow pretences, let it be understood that this springs from no petty spite, no personal grievance, no spirit of anarchy on part of the editors, but is a plain statement of the sentiment of the students of De Pauw. Concerning the nature of the College Annual it is necessary to say but little. From a mere compilation of statistics this publication has grown to be the recognized method of expres- sion of the sentiment of the students upon all matters relating to the Unive1'sity. We would call especial attention, however, to some of its new artistic features. Instead of the customary fraternity designs we have at great expense and trouble, and through the support and encouragement of the fraternities, in- serted fraternity plates including the portraits of every fratern- ity lady or gentleman in the University. We take pleasure, also, in presenting engravings of the several University build- ings and portraits of the deans of the various schools and the departmental professors. Many new features will also be found in its literary and artistic work. To our many friends among the students we would say: If, as the annual compliments of the season go around, you find that H the wheel has turned full circle, and you are there, do not raise your voices in condemnation of the editors, or in frantic appeals invoke not the vengence of the few would-be gods among those in authority, who would lend a sympathetic ear to you plaintive wailings, but like men remembering you are not without imperfections, and seeing yourselves as others see you, profit by it, repent and pay penance for past misdeeds by purchasing extra copies of the MIRAGE. As a matterof course the MIRAGE failed to appear last year. No rational man even suspicioned that it would appear. Ex 1ll'hl70 wiki! veml. Unlike the mountain in ancient proverb, the .unfit Class of 'go labored in vain and produced not even a mouse. Committee after committee was appointed 3 meeting after meet- ing announced, but in vain. Class spirit dead 3 college spirit dead, influence, enterprise and individual endeavor in 'tin nocuous desuetude 3 thelast spark now glimmering beneath the smoldering ashes, it only remains for the authorities at com- mencement to t' douse their glim. Over their grave the living Juniors will erect a crumbling monument and inscribe upon its surface: tt Cum Alexandro et suis satellitibus, B. D., B. A. M., T. B., W. V. B., G. L. C., T. L. N., H. H., P., hic nihil jacet. And the places which knew them once will know them no more forever. A word may here be said in regard to the history of the in- stitution and the transformation in spirit, enterprize and growth, brought about by the new administration, referring for more de- tailed account, however, to class histories and various sketches. It is with great pleasure that the MIIQAGE, ever loyal to its Alma Jlllzier, records the unparalleled prosperity of our institution during the past two years, in its financial success, its increase of students, its wide-spreading influence. But, above this, it congratulates all friends of the University everywhere on the change of the administration. Like the dawning of a millenium, old things have passed away and we are living in the light of a grander day. Iron-clad rules, the dictates of faculty, the petty detective system, the imperious mandatory will of one little man clothed in a little authority, has gone down before the establishment of the new regime, based on the honor and manhood of the student, the enthrone- ment of common sense, conscience, reason. The arbitrary barriers imposed by the old system, in laws, in government, in curricula, in modes of instruction, are being rapidly abolished. The student, recognized as a man, trusted by the authorities, and amenable only to the reason of the situation, knows that if he fails to conform thereto and refuses to come into harmony with the reason of the situation, he has not only been put out. but has put himself out of harmony with the institutionpand mas! go. . fn.. And every member of the faculty must realize that he must conform to the same rule of reason or he must go. There is no alternative. - The professor that would bar and bolt his doors, govern his classes by childish threats, and treat men and women as little children, has no place in the new DePauw. That instructor who can grade the ditlerence of men's studentship between 98.66 and 98.67 per cent. has no place in the new De Pauw. Kindergarteninstructors and narrow-minded, fossilized antiquity has no place in the new De Pauw. That professor who fails to see the relation between the mere skeleton frame-work of chron- ological dates and description of events and the broad philoso- phy underlying and connecting them, has no space in the new De Pauw. The magnetic instruction, reflected from magic lanterns, slow Eurtains and foot-lights, manipulated by tramp show men, has no place in the new De Pauw. That instructor who would dictate with arbitrary decree the religious faith of the student, silence discussion and answer every question suggested to a free and inquiring mind upon morals and ethics by reading quotations from the one prescribed author, has no place in the new De Pauw. True, broad-minded, generous, liberal, brainy men alone are in harmony with the spirit of the new De Pauw. Many important changes have taken place in the faculty since our last issue. The Rev. Dr. Martin, who served the college as president for fourteen years, because of his advanced age tendered his -resignation to the trustees last june. This being accepted, as a reward for his past services to the Univer- sity he still retains the chair of mental and moral philosophy. We are compelled, also, to note the resignation of D. S. L. Bowman, who will long be remembered by those who knew him best and received instruction from him, for his deep and fervent piety, his genial disposition and splendid entertainment. These vacant places have been ably filled by the election of Dr. John, our beloved vice-president, to the higher position, and Dr. H. S. Gobin, of Kansas, as Dean of the school of theology. We take great pleasure in noting the return, from ...Asif ff their studies abroad, of Dr. Post and Dr. Baker, and the in- creased interest inspired by. them in their respective depart- ments. ' Additions to the faculty have been as follows: Professor Harry Beals, to the chair of systematic theology, Professors Hoffman, Fallas and Haskell, in the preparatory departmentg Professors O'Neal and Wentworth, in the school of music, Professor Fisher, in the school of art, and Lieutenant Williams, in the school of military science. We mention with pleasure the great progress in several of the departments of instruction, and desire to refer especially to the thoroughness and efiiciency of work done in the departments of biology, chemistry, politi- cal philosophy, English literature, oratory and Latin. This is manifested by the large number of students taking elective and honor work in these departments. P The military department, since the arrival of Lieutenant Williams, has been characterized by increased thoroughness and regularity in drill and by interest manifested by the stu- dents. Our eflicient librarian, Dr. Post, and his able assistant, deserve special notice for the rearranging and cataloguing of the I6,000 volumes and numerous periodicals of our library-a work which has in convenience and accommodation to the students met a long-felt want. The Pan Hellenic spirit among the fraternities has been steadily increasing. jealousy and bigotry are fast dying out. The idea is rapidly growing that new students should be given ample time to make a deliberate choice among organizations which to such a great extent influence their college career. Present merits rather than past record is more and more recog- nized as the standard of excellence. The word fraternity 'i is acquiring a new signiticance, referring to a harmony of social and literary tastes. In the midst of this great work of reform in our University, under such auspicious circumstances and surrounded by such brilliant prospects for the future, with nothing in view but the welfare and prosperity of the new De Pauw, the Class of ,QI submits to the college world for its careful consideration this issue of THE MIRAGE. Y Eiffel, n Q xi -5-3--i,---M N xxx -'Q yo QE GCTLUAE 1 f ff 1 C ' WH ' 1 -N iff yr 5 ,f XJ! sid' I nn., 'ff- 'W' ' W 'f ' ,,1,421w'fi s' ' V .- rf ' ,,4 .- IIU5 v, ,115 IIN!!! 7' '52 5 - .1:!!i'fii V 'jM1 . f XL - , ay. JIFM 1142 -f,:,m+ ff ag, 'R 'mafwif'-YM 1 ,E f:'fff,w'? z ' A f j 1 11 Eiggigiiifi-'ev W ! 'f'-f41f, ,,f,l 'lfi,,, .752 fl , ,.jr'25j, ' ' , Q- f 'f 'fggff rFf'...'--'F- 3 T,,,'i1'f7 55, fu? SX Nk5., :,H ' lIA.E7!i ff V 491255-1 -wif, , Ir 555: nl MMQM -'Q,5N?tl5f'3:'!Q54 -2m-, Q, ' YH, I f T'f4 -9 4-.-,w lv w,O0 ,6Qx:f't'-'i-.'Q5l7 M: fE'-'Q V WN W . Q V H592 '.E.'.r-94: 6'3ne'm'A. fi -vw I' yu X ? fjW ' :1:,L:j,f I t M '7 S35 'W bin . .W 'cv k ':..x1kf':.-YQ1n:f ff 'wif JM ' -'UV-J-x'e: 'w V I W7 A57 lg? Jy i ffm' 7, ll.. , w , M H-.rf--,, 1 , I I 'f I f 41 ' , Y-4 f if W4H 59a1gv :af , Zfwfl A ' af? 423' UE X -1 4 ww W I f' '. .f ff ,p w-W J. JW JZ waz: .LA XM. f g x ff f! W X ff MW ,'-if 45 will sw , m J in M W 3' 5 f fw ,Q f gps +I U91-f-' W l I' f 0,9 6' Q. WIQX V N in , ff , pw 1 , .' qjf-PT f fl 'f'E:',1.p'?7f.fAfY Q N X? ' Of W L fl 4 ' 41. of X J? , ,y 1 img' ,A 1 Rx . r I -f' fgiP'2'4f 513- . Z 7' ,.. . Q ' g , , -fi 1. : xXx f,f,.1 F I ,.,:.iL ,. if I 'kf 'YW 1 'Lg X ' 1 Z I V -, Z. 5 1Sf1 QNX. 5115 49x W ' 7 wal- 'g,.?Qaa The Platform of the Mirage. di HE Junior class of De Pauw University, in convention as- sembled, pauses on the threshold of its proceedings to do honor to those noble defenders of the rights of the students, and self-sacrificing champions of reform and progress who, in the past, have advocated in the MIRAGE the principles oftruth and justice. We look back with admiration on their unswerving devotion to progress, their persistent opposition to shams and false ideas and the courageous spirit in which they met the petty fiings, the backbitings, and the impotent ravings of those in authority upon whose official feet they, in the exercise of their duty, happened to tread. Their principles have triumphed, their position has been vindicatedg their names will be handed down for inspiration to future classes. We wish again to congratulate the University upon its unparalleled prosperity during the past year, and reaflirm our unswerving devotion to the guiding principles ofthe new adminis- tration, to the unvarying rule of reason and justice, and the growing recognition of the inalienable rights of the student in every department of the institution. Pointing with pride to the abolishing of chapel speeches, the establishment of the Junior performance upon a sensible basis, and noting with pleasure that measures long advocated by us are at last, under the able direction of our executive ofiicer, be- ing-rapidly adopted with the resulting growth and increasing strength attending our institution, we feel renewed confidence this year in the powers and capabilities of the Class of '91. To those fundamental principles, cardinal doctrines and long- standing traditions of our class, around which we have so often rallied, for the triumphs of which we have so often battled, in defense of which we have so often bled, we aflirm an undying D devotion. As in the past to measures that will secure the unconditional prohibition of puns, the immediate and total abo- lition of the flunking system, iron-clad restriction against the immigration of under-class men into the afiections of the junior girls, and that which will promote the absolute freedom of the junior press, we pledge our strict and unswerving adherence. On the living measures of the day ,PHE MIRAGE, ever con- sistent with its character and moving spirit, takes a decided and consistent stand: 1. We believe that nothing so well bespeaks a thriving and progressive institution as the earnest and loyal support of an enthusiastic body of students toward the departmental profes- sors, courses of instruction, and the executive management of the University. Better, for purposes of advertisement, than catalogues or year-book, urgent appeals from pulpit or lectures from platform, stands a contented and satisfied body of students, unanimously respecting those in authority for broad-mincledness, ability and liberal culture, speaking and working for the new De Pauw. No one with a word of regret that he came here, none dis- satisfied with his instruction or treatment, none compelled to leave because of lack of appliances, of libraries and labora- tories with which to pursue his work, means for the future a popular and growing institution. In accord with this belief we recommend that trustees and board of visitors alike mingle more freely with the students, learning their opinions concern- ing instructors, modes of instruction and the needs and de- mands ofthe students. A flying visit made at a definitely appointed time, and mingling with no one but the instructors whom they employ fand who find it convenient to their interest at such times, on dress parade, to present as good a showing for themselves as possible, and from gentlemanly courtesy refrain from setting forth the faults of other departmentsj, is but a poor way of discovering how well their constituency, the great mass of the students, are being satisfied. 2. Once more we are compelled to note that a relic of the olden times haunts us still. But the Sunday afternoon antiquity 1' ,469- yr is bound to go. At the last time this chestnut was up for discussion before the powers that be,'l but four ofthe faculty lent it their support. Of those, out ofharmony with the spirit of the times, one has been dethroned, one has left for pastures green, the second two supported it on the miserable plea that some restrictive measure is necessary to keep the students of De Pauw ffrom the best Christian families in the land, and a body of students the most reasonable and orderly of any in the nationj out of mischief. Out of mischief! From Sunday fish- ing! Aye, rather to preserve this opportunity to roar and bellow and paw the air. But this prison discipline will go. The curses and contemptuous fiings of a thousand students three and thirty times a year COMPELLED to attend this Hweariness of flesh and vexation ofspirit are bound at last to beat it down. 3. The MIRAGE would lend its encouragement and support to the maintenance of our famous students' enterprise-the De Pauw branch of the Inter-State Oratorical Association. No one thing, perhaps, draws so many enthusiastic, ambitious, brainy young men to our University, or from so great a distance, as the healthful condition of the department and the uniform successes we have met with in every encounter. Success that speaks well not only for the energy and intellectual strength of our students, but in the most complimentary terms, also, of Prof. Carhart, the leading instructor of oratory, written and spoken, in the country. For the interest and sympathy in this enter- prise manifested by Messrs N. T. and C. W. De Pauw, by their generous donation offered each year to the successful contestant, the students wish, through these pages, to extend their thanks. 4. On the question of Finances, the MIRAGE advocates the adoption of a sound and conservative policy. We favor heavy issues and a large output of both greenbacks and legal tender, and urge the growing necessity for the free and unlim- ited coinage of both gold and silver bullion. We would con- demn, however, in most urgent terms, the hide-bound poli- cy that would store up in barred and bolted vaults t' those glit- terirlg Shekels, much to the detriment of our several private exchequers. A rapid circulation and fair distribution of all useless surplus into private banks would meet our unanimous approval. 5. While opposed, on general principles, to all salary grabs in which we are not personally interested, we would most heartily urge with ex 2505! faclo application an increase in the salaries of the members of the faculty-salaries that rather than be a disgrace would become the dignity and rank of our institution. We would further recommend a just and equitable discrimination in the amounts paid to the several departments. H Some men are cheap at any price, some things are dear at any price. If a chair .in the University is worthy of a pro- fessor, it demands and should command all of his time, and his time should be suitably rewarded, at least with a living salary. 6. The MIIIAGE advocates the establishment of every de- partment, above the Sophomore year at least, upon the H elec- lzi1e system. No student doing special work ought to be hampered by useless studies farther than the second college year. Each department would then be compelled to stand or fall on its merits, and the perpetration of antiquity would soon be a thing of the past. 7. The Department of Athletics, founded this year upon a sound and permanent basis, with systematic working organiza- tion, should meet the hearty support and co-operation of trus- tees, faculty and students alike. So long neglected in the past, it is coming at last to be recognized in its true character as an essential part of an educational institution. 8. Endorsing the spirit of Pan Hellenism, commending the purposes that inspired the founders of our junior clubs, organ- ized for the promotion of class fellowship, class spirit and mutual improvement, we would advocate all measures calcu- lated to break down petty jealousies, personal spite and preju- dice. 9. We condemn in the strongest terms the practice so prev- alent on the part of some of our Hwould be instructors, of inflicting on their students examinations continuing through a period of four or five hours, and often so long that many of the better students are unable to finish in the time allowed. We A-.1 believe that no one is deserving the name of instructor who does not know at the end of a term's work the character and quality of the work done by any student in his department. An examination continued so long that, with the attendant men- tal strain and nervous excitement, the student is completely worn out and prostrated, is brutal and should meet with the disapprobation of every one. Io. Finally, then, classmates of ,QI and members of our new De Pauw, condemning hollow pretense and sham and mockery, and standing for the rights of the students, let us plant the banner of Reason and Progress deep in the bed-rock of eternal truth, and with the rallying cry of Down with the old and up with the new, go forth ,to battle and to victory. ' 4 ...., , - s QQ r 71+ . Joint Board of Trustees and Visitors. N L 'lGJffiEDJ35-1' 956 PRESIDENT, BISHOP THOMAS BOWMAN, D. D., LL. D., St. Louis, Jlfo. SECRETARY, A. B. YOHN, Inddznapolis, Ind. TREASURER, COL. JOHN W. RAY, A. M., Indianapolis, Ind. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE. BISHOP THOMAS BOWMAN, D. D., LL. D. J. P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D. ALEXANDER MARTIN, D. D., LL. D. CLEMENT STUDEBAKER. GRANVILLE C. MOORE, A. M. ' HON. CHARLES C. BINKLEY GEORGE L. CURTISS, A. M., M. D., D. D. JOHN POUCHER, A. M., D. D N. T. DE PAUW, A. M. WILLIAM NEWKIRK. R. s. TENNANT, A. M. INVESTING coMM1'rTEE. WILLIAM NEWKIRK. COL. JOHN W. RAY, A. M. N. T. DE PAUW. THEODORE P. HAUGHEY. HON. CHARLES C. BINKLEY. -l .l, Annrrmo coMM1'r'rm:. CHARLES W. DE PAUW. A. B. YOHN. THEODORE P. HAUGHEY. sm-EWARD AND sUPEmN'rENnEN'r or cnomws AND nUu.nxNcs. EBENEZER T. CHAFFEE. . ....a12:f'1 Fmsr 1875 1878 1879 1880. 1881 1883 1883 1885 1885 1886 1887 1887 1887 1887 1887 1887 1888 1888 1888 1888 1889 -1. U 1 .. ...n. ... A - .I A . 1 -vw-nr' 1 IE grustmzsif 954 BISHOP THOMAS BOWMAN, D. D., LL. HoN. T. B. REDDING, A. M., PH. D ....... ELECTED. HON. J. A. S. MITCHELL, LL. D.. .... . WILLIAM NEWKIRK .................. HON. CLEMENT STUDEBAKER. ....... . HON. C. C. BINKLEY ......... . ................. ....... . I-ION. GRANVILLE C. MOORE, A. M ....... ...... JAMES W. GREENE, D. D ................. . CHARLES F. GOODWIN, A. M ....... MILTON MAHIN, D. D ............. REV. SAMUEL T. COOPER ....... .. RICHARD S. TENNANT, A. M. ...... . NEWLAND T. DEPAUW, A. M ............. JOHN E. IGLEHART, A. M ........... ....... MARTIN L. WELLS, A. M., B. D .......... . JONATHAN Bu-:cr-1, A. M. ............ . CHAS. W. DEPAUW, A. M. ..... I ELI F. RITTER, A. M. ....... . JOHN s. TEVIS, D. D ...................... REV. HENRY J. TALBOTT, A. M....... Mn order of election. T wwf..- TERM SL. Louis, Mo. .. ......Newcast1e. ......Goshen. ......Connersvil1e. ......South Bend. .Richmond. .Greencastle .Crawfordsville. .Brookvil1e. ......Bluff'ton. ......St. Joseph, Mic .Terre H aute. ......New Albany. ........Evansville. WILLIAM R. HALSTEAD, A. M., D. D. .......... Terre Haute. . ..... ..Edinburgh. ......Greencastle. ......New Albany. ......Indianapolis. ......Indianapolis. ......New Albany. '1 '-1 - fel 'n j rw : H er' rg. EXPIRES 1892. 1890 1891 1892 1890 1892 1892. 1890 1891 1890 h. 1890 1890 1890 1891 1892 1891. 1891 1891. 1891 1892 1891 CCCG3Q5?QQCQQQ5E6mM E-.flffisit urs - SK INDIANA CONFERENCE. REV. T. W. WALKER. . Rav. W. B. COLLINS. NORTH INDIANA CONFERENCE. 'REv. R. D. ROBINSON. Rav. C. G. HUDSON, D. D NORTH-WES'I' INDIANA CONFERENCE. Rmv. D. M. WOOD. REV. J. W. HARRIS. . SOUTH-EAST INDIANA CONFERENCE. REV. C. C. -EDWARDS. REV. A. N. MARLATT. 'f'Deceased. . Jyffopm, ARNOLD yr!!-K-,, ., .-ff f 11.14 : A mf-W' -1, . . , ' ' w, , ' mzuq5Qpo?ch new QIIB Zfzuznltg. SK BISHOP THOMAS BOWMAN, D. D., LL. D., Chancellor. JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., President, Prcjessor of Mathematics and Director of McKim Observatory ALEXANDER MARTIN, D. D., LL. D., Professor of Mental and Moral Science. JOHN B. DEMOTTE. A. M.. PH. D., Professor of Physica. REV. EDWIN POST, A. M., PH. D., George Jfctnners Professor of Latin Language and Literature. PHILIP S. BAKER, A. M., M. D., Professor of Chemistry. 'S. L. BOWMAN, A. M., S. T. D., Dean of School of Theology, Professor of Systematic Theology. HON. ALEXANDER C. DOWNEY, LL. D., Dean of School of Law, Professor of Law. JOSEPH CARHART, A. M., Professor of English Literature, Rhetoric and Elocution. REV. THOMAS J. BASSETT, A. M., PH. D., Principal ofthe Preparatory School. HON. HENRY H. MATHIAS, A. M., Professor of Law. HON. JONATHAN BIRCH, A. M., Professor ey' Law. 'Resigned Jan. l, 1800. HON. GRANVILLE C. MOORE, A. M., Professor ey' Law. JAMES H. HOWE, Dean fy' School of Music. ARNOLD TOMPKINS, Dean of Normal School and Professor of English. WILLIAM I'I.'MACE, Ihofessor of .History in'Normal School. IIENRY A. MILLS, Dean of School qf Art. JAMES RILEY WEAVER, A. M., B. D., Professor of Political Philosophy and Modern Languages. BELLE A. MANSFIELD, A. M., L.L. B., Professor of History and Preceplress of Ladies' Hall. 'ORRA P. JOHN, Professor of the Pianqforle. JULIA DRULEY, Professor of the Pianoforte. TSUSIE G. KELLY, M. B., Professor QI' the Pianoforte. JOHN POUCHER, A. M., D. D., Hamzon Professor of Eregetical Theology. OLIVER P. JENKINS, A. M., M. s., Professor of Biology and Curator of the Museum. 'LIEUT. WILL T. MAY, U. S. A., Professor of Military Science and Tactics. GEORGE L. CURTISS, A. M., D. D., Prqfessorof Historical Theology. REV. WILLIAM F. SWAHLEN, A. M., PII. D., Robert Stockwell Professor of Greek Language and Literature. JENNIE S. TOMPKINS, Prcyessor of Mathematics in Normal School. ResIgned, Jam. 1, 1890. 1'Absent in Europe. To return Sept. 17. 1 1-ff' Associate Professor of Malhem LENA EVA ALDEN, Professor of the Piamjorte. ALICE WENTWORTH, Professor of Voice Culture. 'HILLARY A. GOBIN, A. M., D. D., Dean of School of Theology and Professor of Practical Theology. TLIEUT. R. C. WILLIAMS, U. S. A., Professor of Military Science and Tactics. WILBUR V. BROWN, PH. D., atics and Associate Director of the Observatory QIHENRY B. LONGDEN, A.M., Associate Professor of Latin. THEODORE L. NEFF, A. M., Associate Professor ry' Modern Languages. WILBUR T. AYERS, Instructor in Mathematics. HERMAN HINSCHING, Instructor on Reed Instruments, ' PARKER B. GRAHAM, Instructor on Band Instruments. CHARLES E. DIXON, A. B., Instructor in Latin. HARRY M. SMITH, Instructor onthe Flute, Piccolo and Trombone. GEORGE H. ARTHUR, Instructor in the Science and Art of Pianqforte Tuning. LOUISE FISHER, Professor of Art. 'To enter ou duty June 19. 1'Entered ou duty Jan. 16. IAbsent in Europe. To return Sept. 17. W. ' JM.. 'HARRY L. BEALS, A. M., Instnwtorin English. ERMINE FALLASS, PH. D., Instructor in History and Mathematics 'ARTHUR O'NEILL, Instruotor on the Violin. - ANNA ALLEN SMITH, Instructor on the Pahnqforte. EDGAR S. PORTER, Instructor on the Guitar and Mandolin. FREDERIC W. ROUS, ' Instructor on the Oboe. JOSEPH GROGAN, - Instructor on the Contra Base. J. V. ZARTMAN, Instructor in Liyht Singing. ' ADOLPH SOHELLSUHMIDT, ' Instructor on the Yiolonoedo. ' - ANNIE L. BUNGER, Instructor on the Pianqforte. 'Dec. 12 transferred to IQlCl'fl0l0l'8hfD tn Systpmntio Theology. 1 7 V . ' -,51E.fW A KI J, .1 ' . 'ME .SWANLEM -1- jfzzfi. f.1Myfmp. O W. . ,P W a 4 Iflfqgfiflff 522 - J . nf' .- A's'B '4'- .ef .Lfg5,f5'nf3ifff4vr,.,,:l,, X ' f P4511 -l0scPw cxnffnfer f,- .1 A , f -f,..f,' 5: W 1 .L Uv . . V! 7. . fl .,.1',N ,iii i'ff1. V.-. V, . ' f.. ,hwy-.3 j,1,?,Zwi3f Ai ,E - 4 'f M 0' V. - psi, V ,lj v T ' - - 1- Us ,-C1 'E : 'y 1 1 r ,1- W .A ..,,,,,,...-..,..,,, W, 1 I .y ,,,, it x , . , A, I 1 1 W, ffm ,sfgfivrfiff 5 2f1ifw2?Ea:f?? Tiff? .1g:1yf,s:s,g., ..iw . . . - , ,W-xg, -I gl 3 .3.1.- 'Aim -fa., V.:,.'.' -- .Qi . 1 -1. 1' . -'-15. '-:!.rg-fu , j N- gif. -1 ay-, - -V+: A :,,.yU5A 4 . i l 1 ,I yivwfll-451. V ' P. 4 ' lx 5 . 1 by 'ii' W it iq. , . sas-as-sea-sa-seas '5 Departments of the University. SK . I. Asbury College of Liberal Arts, including:- K .fy vuiiiifi-titiiftiiifiito -- II III ' IV V V1 VII VIII 1. The Classical Course. 2. The Philosophical Course. 3. 'The Scientific Course. I 4. The Course in Literature and Art. . School of Theology. . School of Law. . School of Military Science and Tactics. . School of Music. I , . School of Art. tw L Normal School. QQQEQ: . Preparatory School. ' EQEQQQEW wg 7 4 ,asm 1 avi ff? 1 1 is- 'mi , 1.34 A , . , '1 , i,.l My 15, .fi . ' ki ul? Vai, ,yy ' ,f. fin ..., ,,..1,.n . , , aa uf . 1 -'LLM V iii-- ..-4. .LA . UW ' r I M vi. .VW TEE WI .- QQ . 1. Asbury College of Lriloeral Arts. Olmhxlznlm 1838. Zjzxcnltg. il? JOHN P. D. JOHN, PRESIDENT, Professor of Illuthematics and Director of the Observatory. A LEXANDER MARTIN, Professor ey Mental and Moral Philosophy. JOHN B. DEMOTTE, PrLy'essor of Physics. EDWIN POST, Prtyessor cy' the Lalin Language and Literature. PHILIP S. BAKER, Professor of Chemistry. JOSEPH CARHART, Przyessor of English Literature, Rhetoric and Etocution. JAMES RILEY WEAVER, Professor of Political Philosophy and Modern Languages. BELLE A. MANSFIELD, .Professor cy History. OLIVER P. JENKINS, Professor of Biology. - WILBUR V. BROWN , Associate Prqkssar of Mathematics and Associate Director qf the Observatory ii . 'Absent in Europe. 'HENRY B. LONGDEN, Associate Professor my Latin. THEODORE L. QNEFF, Associate Professor of Modem Languages. WILLIAM E. SWAHLEN, Professor qf Greek Language and Literature ' CHARLES E. DIXON. I Instructor 'bn Latin. - 9 cavbl CCWQDQQQQD' G1 - ' 11. School of Theology. O1zGAN1zaD 1881. 'zr.c1t.IT-g. SK BISHOP THOMAS BOWMAN, D. D., LL. D., CHANcEx.LoR, Lecturer, h ST. LOUIS, Mo. J. P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., PRESIDENT. As. L. BOWMAN, A. M., s. T. D., DEAN, Hofessor of Systematic Theology. THILLARY A. GOBIN, A. M., D. D., DEAN, Prcjessor of Practical Theology. JOHN POUCHER, A. M., D. D., Professor of Eregetakal Theology. GEORGE L. CURTISS, A. M., M. D., D. D Professor of Historical Theology. ALEXANDER MARTIN, D. D., LL. D Acting Professor of Practkal Theology. iH. L. BEALS, A. M., Instr-awtor in Systematic Theology. 'Resigned Jan. 1. T1'o enter ou duty June 19. Iltutered on duty Jan. I I 2712+ -,A' .1 1 W SCC! A Y ,xlll Ill Wm ' ff AI-2' I . .Inf 2,63 'ly ' ' I' I' e ,g - lm' I 'x ' . S EMI If I -' f a'mmn lmumgi KI If Y I lil I ,f fff I- .' . I If .IX I I f . - 'V 'Q ' .L ,- ,7' , I fy I ,HTI7 I, I -,. I I 1,'I',IgIII, 'N f f' M X . 1 ','.'f'Q':f'1:f1Q '- 'fi , ever ', Xl U V ' A A , vu If! ffDE!3I I fr f ' I, ' If Qux:RK:-Rexx' ., ,I 'I - -'- I' I I. I. Ik.. .1 , Ig'-:gat-X. if I 'l'fQWVPffi I, - ...,. 4. 1. . ..,. .:: I-. I Ilfmmwwgi ,I 4 ' W' wwf- :n 'f 'f'sfv 4p'ru-zlfwvillljql xrYfQ1f?f 2 I Wlhxlulxunxlkm' 5 vmummmun 1, . 4, . ,Hu n . If ',gAaff, f'f9.g3'f ' '- ..' ,1:ux'BEbsM! I Qfimfusf iggif , 14 , '? 'LflT U11- , v ,ff'1!WWNX,'ii'w:xe1, 'u u U ' L10 l --1Hmw1u1-- ' luegwfdix-X1-sv1 fff -4 - 1 '--. WCC? jx Info I 1 9 , fr U If 1 I .. W WWW ca I rr 5 ' , f f 4 , ' I II I'AfI Afilff r Af I ,I B , If I 'bf 5.5 I ,,IIfIIIj,I IX IIN N I ' , 1,1 . JlP.?I5l9jfA3l?f' I 1 ,-:, ,gakfqf M I - ., N ,QU I,zV .. ,,?,?2 ,!,, ' U2m.HfJE7'Jm 4, I3 jg f-.III'jJ X -ITIIIZS5-,3g3I5gf.f, : M I 'li fI I 4 f 'ei' 'fn-gwyxxggwgnx ,wmmuxxxin kllllklll !!LX!!N WWW!! Mimln.. xmxhilmn Q' FSEY ummm IKXIIIIIW WMIIW A I 1 imxiux-Wifi XMI! , E' pr Khan' ji-ug I x Nm K 2 gkk 'W vy iw-sul7'l!j1i4w.,m ? , nl, -1 L 5 'lf I IN I , X n 1 , mf W -w w 4 4 Q4 f ' 'HX fx nhl' 'U but sn? I I -4 X I I I ' 1 ' q I r x nn-mu :aww-1' ,fs 7' 'ff If- u U ef w' 'fn 9 ' I ' ' I X , I I J ll 'R wwf f'I,'- 'I ILA md If' M.,..e.....'1 I . W. III W , , , MI I I u mm I I- I4 5131 YIIIII Xb, , I K I XIII 11 F1 J 1 HIV 4 , rj' f XII x fd' .,v 4. R 1 . , I I X I! f IV x XI X IH Q Ss XX 1 :I X 3 SS Q ' f gi NN a',n ff 'Qxf MW li' f 'gl' 4 f 1: ' 1- . ' U ' .-' '---X. I f 'M g 2 IQ 'Miif 1' fflffwif w f., 1, ,LN I 1 MW W -f' H 'Amy .. ff! Sf ' 'N N S ' ':'- 1 '- fi' - If I ind 'il ff, - 5 IZA x iv- I If ' .. . nl ff?-,II, h A V457 FII.-gill. ' -- Qld A- V ' k i L ' rf V13 '?T'1'?'f ' '-- 131' -- 'L ' ' - - pm.. . -' 1 '- 1- 1 ' ' A , 1 U 1 111. School. of haw ORGANIZED 1884. 096600 amltg. SK JOHN P. D. JOHN,A. M., D. D PBEIDENT. ALEXXNDER' C. DOWN EY, .LL 1 I ' DEAN, 1 Pfqfgsso'rdLaw. f HENRY-H. MATHIAS, A. M . Prqfcssor qf Law. JONATHAN BIRCH, A, M., . B'ey'esao'r ey' Law. GRANVILLE C. MOORE, A. M V ' .Przygsaor of Law. JOSEPH CA1iHART.A..M.. B-qfeaaor of Elooutian. ' JAMES MDE! WDAVED, 4. U 1-5-ofehbor' qf Layla. . . - i5u Q:g., Lff ww School of Military Science and Tactics ORGANIZED 1877. 4 fzxculig. D 956 JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., Resident. - . LIEUT. R. C. WILLIAMS, U. S. A., 'Q ' Oomnumdant. .Prqtasor ny' Mditary Seiierme and Zizctica. ' 4 ' G. M. WALKER, f Cadet Major. I. V. School of Music. ORGANIZED 1883. - C' . . , ' amrltg. JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., President. JAMES HAMILTON HOWE, DEAN, Professor of the Pianqforte, of Charms and Orchestra. 'ORRA P. JOHN, Professor of' the Pz'ancy'orte JULIA DRULEY, Professor cj the Pianoforte. TSUSIE G. KELLY, Mus. Prrycssor of the Pianoforte. B., LENA EVA ALDEN, Professor of the Pianoforte, Harmony and Theory. ALICE WENTWORTH, Pipe Organ, Harmony, Wzeory, Composition, and Conductor Professor of Voice Culture, Opera and Oratorio Singing, Italian and German Song. BELLE A. MANSFIELD, Preceplress and Professor of Illusical History. ARTHUR O'NEILL, Instructor on Stringed Instruments, and Leader of the School of Music Orchestra. PARKER B. GRAHAM, Instructor on the Cornet and French Horn. Res1gned Jan. 1, 1890. 1Absent in Europe. To return Sept. 17. L...fmHi3!' l , 'f ' ,W ' 6 n . ,H 5- .-', , jX:L:i.:I:, . 5 nlv, 4-1 A ?:3::, V . rf' ,fgvjzx ' l 'nIr:egs' my 'N , ' , ' I W lf ,, f 1 j- if f..1' :E 12 . 1,' ,lily xi g,Qw75 ff .' 'riimg L' n ,f . ',,'fQfiC ' 'iii' YW ii: .aj -. I f :ff Aff, - I -gil! ' f I' I -42 V151 4Zn fav -1- 7, M- ' , W ,,,,yf:f.1.:fiff'-'7' - ws f . ,l ,dwwwy f' . , 5 xvgff Hz, ' 0 Q, A114157 W J? I , nll!'!A. , I gh ,9 ,gi X , , 35:4 9' 'V ,, ,. QS , LA Eff if ' K jk VI. School of Art. SK JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., PRESIDENT. HENRY A. MILLS, DEAN, Professor of Drawing, Painting, Perspective, etc. LOUISE FISHER Professor of Painting, Drawing, Wood barving, etc. 'JOHN B. DEMOTTE, A. M. PH. D., Professor of Physics. 'PHILIP S. BAKER, A. M., M. D., Professor cy' Chemistry. 'JOSEPH CARI-IART, A. M., Professor cy' Rhetonb and Elooution. WJAMES R. WEAVER, A. M., B. D., Prcyessor of Modem Languages and Literature. NBELLE A. MANSFIELD, A. M., LL. B., Preeeptress of Ladies' Hall and Professor of History. 'QWILBUR V. BROWN, PII. D., Associate Prtyessov' of Mathematics. 'THEODORE L. NEFF, A. M., Assochzre Professor in Modern Languages and Literature. ! 'Y 'Wrofessors in the College of Liberal Arts. The work of the Art School is done in thelx regular classes. 1 ' lf! Xlslfl W i I K .W J N' - . Wag ,Q f ,, f X' flgf IIAHII-S7d6g0L,s?ot W W H H H II IW A VII. Normal School Onozx ruzsn 1885. JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D Q.. '1'Enters on duty Sept. 17. PRESIDENT. ARNOLD TOMPKINS, DEAN, Professor of English. WILLIAM H. MACE, Professor of History. JENNIE S. TOMPKINS Professor of Malhematics. LILA MACE. Instructor in History. CHARLES W. GREENE, Inslructor in Geography. 'MRS. R. M. JOHNSON, Instructor in Practice School. 9 8 4, mr ':1!i:::E::Q:::: 'k', xfmf 'RA 5, U U U U U U UW L Y' FTE. 5 . ., N , i .. W.-352, 0 7','1': F,-a ff:-A A Ma , I A' - -, .. . ri-, ..,. fhf x',f'1l -,I 'lf 11- A ' sh , gQLL1ff . if , fx u- 'vw' ,N W! ' -K xx .- f . f 'f' ' , W Q ji?5'W7 X 'L' Hg fI 'e ,L lm .I ffpmxx ,, ,ff Q. '- ,- 4f ,v V ,fs Eff' 'W' ' I 1 ff? ' AQ, 32.5. I x, ., Ak W Tux .N 1 Ilnvniy .V,, ,ix ji X . f my ! ..fg1' , Ov- -ff, ggwb,-A V !I.vjI ,, y -W.-,.4l'I E?Q.gi.:3r:,- 5 dam, S ,fif z lx 1 ,,, 'lijpyvw-Q -LA I X SL : bfi ' , ,, ' ---1' ff Q u -Q ,f' lil qifi V ,,- xX1xIWfff,:,.v x v ., , QX !' ' d I ,Lvl X , W W X .4,' -w i ,. 4 -. W f'.f'7 'I A xv 15 X-XI ,f.',1m'2f' fi- 1 K ' fp ,ff X W ,f V LfC1..:45 H Ha f.3QVfSi5 177, - f L -' fffif' in-. A ' ' X ,. W 1 + ,- .W 1 A , 1f l 'SW . - V' ' ff D W MM Q iw W, If 1...7f--.,!!MIf: N M N' A'Xfj.pf5,,nI.m ' T NX X 1 -, ' , ' my I ,W K , E on , 1, X W ffagfyl 7, I mf xiijz .I VI ' by lfflfl, 41,1fl,'l'l -SME ' +'f:i.' ' -ff '95 .f:'T1f'5v. --A 'x ' 5, f gf TU 1. G4 W 'T M ' .fx',:Gfi'g: Y - ', M ., f 1 lf' ,J ' 'W 'V 1:31am--. MY ' f A'i T ,tl .2-',f5.g'r' I. z v- .1 Jg'+1'yNjlX if ljlip ng g ' Z KLL ' ,jr ,M-,L 'fc' fir - I ' M f ., W' - Af ,pm 4 ::'211 W kiln, A-I., ,- ,qu A , 0,1 65,1 ' X 11, 1 W '? V K,,1'!UX ' , i Wk! In 5.14,--9. 25' ' '-puwlif , Jil, ,RY lima! 'A ldxq ' , I. J W' gui fl'im'fFS1:if1 wi. ' .Wd l W- ' Sh im? ' -Q 'lf 'ff ' 'sm , C v ,ww , , ,H if .f Q - WJ, 1, ,4e , ,N ' 4- K 2, il 1 MS . W3 'H '1 , iX'L-'-:n.- 1 , My Af, fly '34, 135' F -,, ' - , ,A f . xgfx-'QM 'kd ...-- I V - -! ' 'pfa' -'S ar H7 ,Q Q 24 lj .ju qP ---- A 1 .1 ' - ,. E , J 5 :ip x.,,.,-.X-N Q cg 157 ..,, VIII. Preparatory School X . JOHN P. D. JOHN, A. M., D. D., rn1:s1DmN'r. REV. THOMAS J. BASSETT, Pa. PRINCIPAL. WILBUR T. AYERS, A. M., ' Instructor in Mathematica. 'CHARLES E. DIXON, A. B., t Imtruclor in Latin. D 'REV. HARRY BEALS, A. M., Instructor 'in English. V X ' ERMINA FALLAS, PH. D., Instructor 'in English and Pcnmanship. A t MINNIE HASKIJLL,-'A.4B., ' A Instructor in Latin and History. U. .L HOFFMANQ A X . Instructor 'in Englwlhh. 1 j 'ARTHUR-tcUNNINGHAM, t ,QQ V 'Tltl01'f'll'.Ldli7l,'-W W , . ,. D. .T. NQDOIJOAL, A ff .1 4 f5f'F 3?'f'0W' 1 A . 'j A Q, 1 A CHARLES 711. '1O.V'POUCHEB,' U W ' 'r'., '1'11tor'in Qreekf A DQ Bolton! .of Theology Jan. 1. V- -,r ,,..X -' JOHN B. DEMOTTE, PH. IJ., .Prqfeasar of Physica. PHILIP S. BAKER, A. M., M. D., Prqfessor of Chemistry. JOSEPH CARHART, A. M., Prqfessof of English Literature, Rhetoric and Elocution OLIVER P. JENKINS, M. S., ' Prqfasor qf Biology. 'fav' I 1 5:57, 1 , 'Taj' l .,- x '1 5 N N . - f' -1:7 + . ..:-'f'L.s . , : A' Y-305' ,,E..m.fgP,, . ,Ag gf: . . i litarg apartment. COMMANDANT, R. C. WILLIAMS, U. S. A., 2d Lieutenant 15th Infantry. G. M. WALKER, R. E. Locum, C. A. Houfrs, , A G Lows BENNETT, . . M. LINE, , . W. DASHIELL, . M H . H. TURK, . L. Bunn, F. L. LxTTLEToN, F. M. DOWNEY, L. S. DURHAM, E. C. SMITH, J. B. F. GREGORY, A. GREENsTnEnT, Officers, , , , N011-commissioned OHicers, Band, - . . . Privates, . Total, . FIELD AND STAFF. . . . . Major. . lst. Lieut and Adjutant. . lst Lieut. and Quartermaster . Sergeant Major. Quartermaster Sergeant. . . Color Sergeant. LINE. Caplains. E. G. ROGNON, C. H. C. Poncman. First Lieulenanla. J. E. N EFF, J. A. HIGDON. Second Lzksulenants. A. Cow, C. W. MCIVIUITLEN. First Sergeanle. F. A. THOMAS, C. A. Rovsr-1. SUMMARY. fFebruary 17. 1890.1 . 15 16 . 12 . 146 .ES I 141 1 ff'f, A VM J! X f , aff,-WS -If Iwi XX X 41 ly! 'sw X I W ffl? ' lg, 1 WH P .1 X Hx .M 1.5 .. 4 x . X V Il .3 A. ,V l ', I . I 332 ' 'U I2 W x X Nm! 1'2 X f Mfg. .iff fn ww 5: '59 lpyiizyfizi ,- ,ff,':h, ' rw '--3 MAH, 4 ,,.,x.x,. . 1, N . x 40 ' H5 S M5 : 1 'W . GZQwqvjigf,5:5-31.gg!L:L!5L.im, m l ,I n V I, . '-lu-gf,f'i L , 'Y: : l ' -s GM in 41 f ::Q fl' ' N J Senior Class. A- I. Do:rEx', . . D. T. MCDOUGAI., . H- L. BURR, A. W. Moomz, ORA N EWCOMER, SIDELIA STARR, . A- T. BRIGGS, . J- H. ROBINSON, . R. W. Best. E. E. Botkin. W. O. Bower. A. T. Briggs. H. L. Burr. H. S. Chenoweth. Hattie Clearwaters. Worth E. Cnylor. Fred. H. Cleveland A. I. Dotey. W. W. Florer. Maud Fulkerson. J. W. Griffith. W. R. Hornbaker. H. M. Johnson. Florence Kemp. W. H. Latta. L. Levique. D. T. McDougal. Paul Miller. SE OFFICERS. MEMBERS. President. Vice-President, Historian and Treasurer. Secretary and Prophet Orator. Poet. Essayist. Declaimer. Sergeant at Arms A. W. Moore. Ora Newcomer. Marie Nutt. Chas. Poucher. G. C. Price. R. H. Richards. W. B. Rinker. J. H. Robinson. E. G. Rognon. Minnie Royse. F. T. Rudy. J. W. Sluss. Sidelia Starr. C. W. Treat. M. H. Turk. G. M. Walker. J. C. Walters. A. Ward. R. O. West. NQON SK Love comes like a summer shower Softly o'er ns stealing. AUTOBIOGRAPHIES. From early youth a prominent member of the anti-lean society. Am proud to inform the public that I wear a No. 13 shoe, 19 collar, and Mother Hubbard pants. ELMER ENORMOUS BOTKIN. My life has been one of sunshine and shadow. Though blighted with un- requited affection, I still retain my matchless gall, can laugh with reckless abandon, oft iilling the air with demoniacal cackles. Am called at home by those who love me Annie Burr, but am known abroad to all the world as Honfajcn Lanonfrna Bunn. Have excelled throughout the course of a short but eventful life in the exer- cise of the maxillary process fthat is I have a. limber jawj. Talking is as natural to me as milk to babes. WORTH EDENEZER CAYLOR. I am of a romantic turn of mind. 'Gaze but once into the liquid depths of my melancholy humid eyes and you will be aware of it. The study of love in all its phases is the absorbing passion of my life. HATTIE CLEARWATERS. Red is the most beautiful of the seven prismatic colors. It has been the aim of my life, by self-abnegation and outpourings of spirit, to render sufficient thanks to the Almighty for adorning my cocoanut with this lurid hue. Am also a talker of no mean ability. FREDERICK Arran CLEVELAND. Grades are the ambition of my life. The one-hundredth of a per cent. means more to me than politics or woman's love. The great struggle of my life has been to adapt When trousers to the gentle outward curves of the extremities addressed. Isaac ANANIAS Do'rnY. Have been endeavoring for some time to augment the fund of general infor- mation concerning woman's rights. Have succeeded sadly thus far. Mann FULKER-SON. From earliest recollections have been a lover of the equine race. Have now on hand for disposal a rare and valuable collection of well broken horses from the celebrated stables of Harper Brothers. WILLIAM RIDER Hoarzaaxna. Immediately after graduation I intend toreform the wicked world. Before I begin, however, I ask pardon from a suffering public for my thieving career as a book agent. HARRY MMHUSELAH JoHNsoN. Have spent the most of my life in the compilation of a rare work, entitled How Can I Win Tll86Qu or The Wails of An Old Maid. FLORENCE Kmmr. H if :fl 'I Y' Have acquired an enviable reputation as a manipulator of high school igeeches, a brilliant linguist of the Wolfe school, and a singer of feline sweetness. y favorite song is: Let me feel my arms around thee. Am an epicurean in Philosophy, a lover of rich dessert, the Nutt predominating. PAULUS :MATTEI MILLER. P. S.-Pm from San Lewee and the big bridge. M My earliest recollection is of my father saying at my nativity: I Add i son shore, enpect to preach the gospel, and in leisure moments cultivate the double- ume' ADDISON WHANGDOODLE MooRE. f F0tlr prominent acts of my life are as follows: Bycicle riding, lover of piano Tiff, dlssector of cats, and lastly, but not least, mpc extraordinary and valet P emlloteutiary to Prof. Jenkins. DANIEL TarLonA'1-E McDoUoAL. Y Am a sweet girl. Terre Hut is my home. Moses my only rival in meekness. ou bet. Guy says so, too. MINNE HAHA ROYSE. Am a relic of antebellum days. Remarkable and thrilling career as a masher. Hel2 is my Simnghold. Favorite solution Gal, + Chezk. CHRISTOPHER XVIENNAWVURST TREAT. all tIn early life, pipus, in youth a masher, in my later days a Republican. At he bxmes Pfeffy. Llf6,B pathway has been as peaceful as a summer's day. Favor- ol average Taraxmef' Prof. of California Jack and shining light in the the- omcal School, I am Ramos HARLAN RICHARDS. P- S.-Afiiicted in this vale of tears with indigestion. Was born before the war. Peculiar disposition. Gets Houghfy easily. Will study law after graduation. The wedding day not as yet definitely settled. JOHNATHAN IIANCOCK ROBINSON. S5011 but bloodcurdling career. Lawyer, detective, molder, carpenter, fgffcheff lfleptomaniac, book agent, manager theatrical troupe and prima donna, en iifr blfclclist, farmer,-tramp, killed one grizzly, had yellow fever, spinal men- frg lsr 1a.8l'1ppe, all diseases in fashion. Have had one proposal of marriage Om 8. Kickapoo squaw. Am at present a precocious lawyer of 17 summers. Notwithstanding my extreme youth am to tie the nuptial knot. ERNEST GRANT RoGNoN. lockcousge life uneventful. Given attention to the cultivatioaof struggling Sub? all the exhibition .of a classic profile. Am studying medicine at present. ci JQC under consideration, Diseases of the Heart. Am considered very fas- .namig by the ladies. , FASCINATING 'l'nEaAPEUT1cs RUDY. A111 unable to say how I got so far in college. All I know is, Whereas, I w . . . . this once a Freshman, now I'm aSen1or. Chief characteristic, not knowing any- mg for sure- METHODIST HAIRBRAINED TURK. a d Will exhort for a livelihood, candidate for the Fiji Islands. Ever willing 11 desirous of entertaining Newcomerfsl in college. , ALBERTUS THEOLOGY Barons. a Intend to become teacher in Greek. Cheerfully recommend horseback riding 9 8 healthy and invigorating exercise. 4 C. HERonoTUs Xmzornou PoUcHnR. , df .- ffl niQ'f5i1.l . . N ' nf . --fs.,-. -. '.35!JiaS5h'.n1 1 W Am a vocalist of no mean pretensions. Have a compass of live notes. My favorite selection is Let me feel thy arms around me. MAME NUTT. The majority of my years spent in the cultivation of basso profundo for ora- torical purposes. Was also a distinguished high private in the rear ranks for three years in the meelitary school. Resigncd in disgust. ROY OWEN WEST. A native of China. My early life ran quiet as the Yangtse Kiang by which I babbled. Can never be president, so will get married and hie me hence. Noted in De Pauw for extravagant use of scriptural phrases, truthfulness and pious spirit. GUY Mrr.'rrADEs PEDESTRIAN. fOwing to the lack of vitality and energy these accurate autobiographies were written by a Boswell, entirely disconnected with the class, and hence are impar- tial and true to 1ife.j ., ' Z' VM1, 1. sr -X4 .ful FS-' . 9 1's'i' l X , 'il i L . . , I 1... 4 . ' ' ,, 1 F 'C'6l 44, 'r 1 an gf. -,Jif f'7 ' is H. H UNT, , C. T. ERICKSON, J ESSIE N onuz, M. XVALKER W. H. XVISE, . W. A. BASTIAN, W. H. PETER, Louisa STUCKY, J. A. PATTERSON, JOE TAKASUG r, , . Junior Class. SK OFFICERS. Nora Alleman. Thurman Allen. Ellen Atwater. W. A. Bastian. Edith Basye. Olive Bayne. R. K. Bedgood. H. C. Binkley. H. M. Bricelancl. Bertha. Darnall. L. F. Dimmitt. F. M. Downey. O. F. Dwyer. X MEMBERS. Jessie Noble. R. W. Noble. Lulu O'Keefe. G. S. Painter. President. Vice-President Secretary. Essayist. Orator. Historian. Prophet. Poet. Treasurer. Chaplain. J. A. Patterson. 1 W. H. Peter. Olive Poucher. A. R. Priest. Addie Priest. E. E. Rhodes. H. L. Ritter. Louise Romel. Bessie Rose. E E 5 a 5 a 2 E 5 5 2 I1 1 ! 3 '91 None so valiant, none so mighty, In De Pnuw ns H one and ninety Covered o'er with spotless glory, Ever to be famed in story. Tune, O heavenly Muse, the lyre To ninety one, no theme is higher. UR banquet stands out unrivalled in the history of De Pauw. Perhaps its most remarkable feature was the fact that it WHS given by the class of '9I. f This peculiarity ofitself would be enough to distinguish it ,fomqtlie common herd of banquets. Merely to see the class of 91 Sitting around the festal board would have constituted a feast for the eyes of any unprejudiced judge of good points. But Wllen, in addition to this, ,QI comes in conjunction with hominy, dried beef, pickles, and sundry other equally rare delicacies, when solid wit is relieved by brilliant flashes of silence, when eddY'S silvery laugh blends harmoniously with NefT's Stento- B 1'U1.I'1 tones, where Stuckey's divine grace of form is counter- Poised by Basye's gold-rimmed intellectuality, where Hunt's LettY,10Cks glow with the inspiration of the occasion. and Wel- tlgn S qulet and demure bearing was even more conspicuous I1 usual, when all these things and alnumber of other little Wangements too numerous to mention unite, the result is sim- Ply astounding. thegis certainly remarkable how almost exclusively we possess iains ofthe college. It is true that at thegbeginnlng of our El?ul'S6 there were a few btrainy men in the classes above, but k ey soon saw their mistake, and by dint of pretending not to HOW anything on examination days, they managed to fall back PP down to our class, and to-day they are among the most brill- lant lights of '91, b The far-reaching renown of the class is conclusively proven y the fact that Sasamori and Takasugi came all the way from Japan to join it. These men are both honorable men, and up- z , 5s5,'1:s-v, 4. 3 . iqawljg.,-.g,-,. t sl hold well the dignity of the class. The former has even adopted American college customs to the extent of, as he himself ex- pressed it, getting sticked on a widcly girl, and the ready wit and bright sociability of the latter has won for him the title ofthe H Little Irishman. On the evening in question, as Sasamori came up over the campus, the moon hid her face in despair, knowing herself eclipsed. This slight astronomical disturbance, however, did not hinder the rapidity of the evening. In parlor and hall the musical laughter of girls rippled up from sofa and alcove. Dark eyes were there, whose dreamy splendor suggested ancestral centuries of southern nights, blue eyes, reflecting the clear, bright northern summer, fans became the most deadly of all weapons, and eyes looked love to eyes that in spite of spectacles spake again. The Brains, the Chumps, the Skulls, the Styxes, and the other rather unimportant members of the class all were there. The men were brave in decollette vests and consump- tive neckties, and the costumes of the ladies it were profanity for a blundering masculine pen to attempt to describe. Alto- gether it really began to look perilous forthe boys when, hap- pily, the Hon. james U. Turner, of Arkansaw, created a diversion in the rear -by gently hinting that the collation was ready. It would have made the famed Artemus laugh almost till he cried to see how gingerly the noble Hunt handed Mrs. Mans- iield out to supper, how Binkley's face gleamed with the hope that now at last, perhaps, he might have ten ham sandwiches to eat, how the countenances of all lighted up in anticipation ofthe chance triumphantly to prove our superiority in a line in which we have been doing honor work all year. But here it is better to draw the curtain over the scene. If we are fortunate in the future we may, perhaps, have yet many good things to eat. We may attend many brilliant social gatherings, but we shall never again attend ajunior banquet. In the far future, when the band now so closely united shall have been scattered far and wide,each, it is to be hoped, at his post of toil and duty, with every one, perhaps, will abide as a precious thing the memories of the halcyon college days, the Junior banquet. it if ,e it . w -a:mfMa.-uhaimf,.':.,.e- txanmrztsza-1tw .frm-.um-1.1,f..,t,f,i..,ar:..v,bn-mwtmimtw-init! M,..'!.1f1.Li I- ,1-'fl:I:1!5:fFSgi:3 gf ' I -'A:f.1 ' 'l'g:FvgLZf5?' .- 1 V, V' xafg.z5f,Q:?'f g:., ' A 'Z' 3'5L': If' 4 . V Esatzgf I I 411-52 '22:,f?-LE:g,, '-Q 'Z-',9tf1,j.f',,?,f,fy - 'lf NX' Nw-6 ' ' ' '4 :7gf::p:Fl5Ig:5Q fn, ' ' ' iff , U f if ff 25019 q:.g::,,-,g5d,,g,a51,gf'n,n, 4 f . , - ff Q-as f,fY,w!1ff! 'ffm' f ' f - Q X115- 'f!7'!4f1fflfff'f 'f 1 1 A, , r , ss ,Lg-gg ':f,r:.75f:g5g,!.f,f4,1 ,oz f , ,4 f f ,rm - ff-',' I, S ziigffifigffjfffg gl' 'f , fssww' 11' f r www :'fffffP:f:f:2-fa 5 iff? X f x4.5ow1,.,u,f?,'.!.u'.,,.:,.g,r xy X 15 .,, www, 9p75Zpif3LiQg:!,i,g i9Lmg,i.11-in:f1:':w4ff' - r 7, . +V' um' f-4-211104441545 if A gn Y, ,VA V . ma! Nfl- 1J':f2E1zr J' V ..,f f , -.j. f, -I 1 ,r rgnrggg, ,, f ,. f - fr 1- J ff js, -iff. - mlm- fzf wi-f -- as1sm .ff f K 'Q .1555 - -L a,2-gfjgfg:-,f-: ' X-J , ' 1 'yi if S'g'g2v2!'1i,vL1 1 gf? f JL2Q i:l13'-5537. ., ,:1,,m,A,5E Ill.-'.ifrff-:ff-'Q4.':'71'. :55lx-Mgr,.,1,5 EST? 4 ' 1' fT .fiiaf'2'TAFffz?:'1'i-ifa'-1123411-a 1,21 g,:- :Wi v , y . x. .,4,..,. V ,,..,v,,...x',.4f ,,:,-,,,,-f.:':g--, in . .- -,- f' ' f K,Q,:'.,f?f-': .-7f4:'j,,,.,. ' -.Y'.T.f.. -M V , ' MTL - '1 r.-a+.--ff ,L-ififh-f- ' 1:-'11 ,,,,,,, , e.-5-4-:fz::'.'.1-:2?E'.2--gf tiff ' -1:-T - A 1 , . . ,... Class of '92 JOHN CARPENTER. GEM-nuns Mu-ugns, C BENJ. Ama HARLES W. Honem 'f F. GREooRx', . UR R. Woopwmm, P OFFICERS. J l . President. Vice-President. . Secretary. Treasurer. . Historian. .mul-.:.Mfr5'sH 1 . ,:.v.ZL'E 4,1 4 . f, fs. f .lee ' ,Y H' ' M. 2' ' A. ur. 'HA .'--'t , x , .r A,-, I Allee, Thad. S. Ammerman, Charles. Arbuckle, Jamesf Austin, Harry H. Beard, Frank M. Bicknell, Mary. Booth, Fenton W. Burris, Wm. P. Caldwell, Frank. Campbell, John C. Carnes, Dessie. Carpenter, John. Cole, Albert M. Cook, Myra.. Cook, Nellie. Crane, Albert B. Dashiell, George W. Dorsett, Alvin DeW. Dukes, Richard G. Durham, Lee S. Ellis, Ida. ' Ebbinghouse, Cora F. Fitch, Fred. Fisher, Bertha B. Florer, Laura L. Gelwick, Blanche. Glenn, Wilmer. D. Greenstreet, Joseph. Green, Charles W. Gregory, Benj. F. Hendricks, Frank. Herrick, Bessie M. Hodell, Charles W. Hornbrook, Henry H J akes, Charles. Johnson, Jesse. J ones, Robert R. Kimball, Nellie P. MEMBERS. ..,. we Line, Arthur M. Lloyd, Dova. Marlatt, Mary C. McCurdy, Halcyone. Myers, George H. McGinnis, Orville. McKee, J. Lee. Mikels, Gertrude. Montgomery, Harry C Moore, Jessie E. Moore, Ernest S. Nelson, Eliza J ean. Norton, Charles S. Ned, Jessie. Osborne, Edward G. Pence, William P. Powell, Perry E. Preston, Lelah. Ray, Lucia H. Ritter, Herman B. Rowe, William. Royse. Alvin 0. Rose, Aaron G. Smith, Earl C. Stewart, Oscar M. Sharp, Ozoru. T. Smyser, Seldon. Steele, Daisy. Stokes, Samuel H. Takashima, Steta. V Thomas, Fred. A. Thornburg, William A Waltz, William. A Ward, Zella. Wetzel, Alberta. Wood, Melville. E Wood, Charles. Woodward, Arthur R. 24 'S' ww 'I' 'ttwiw 'ii av 'Cf it w 45' 7- fr l i 4 ri . fl 'BW . , W ' 1. ,' . ' ..- '-'H!j.l, - F, - w .. ' . if p' .,.,.-. -K' ,.vg,1.fg 'il ...if . ' J .. F-tu' Tr sf'i.:'5 rxN i'!1fWf321 ul' . t?5.f. 'fm wif-25 f12,hL'iy'9ilVte1mTqdk 5 'ff1?'4'W ' -ur.. ez'-U:--...-v..s.w21flw Hrf. '1 f f.. .ezilvffff-.ftf -ft'-r , Yu N . -. ' J at We ee . f with it we QW' -' iw ' Ft 1- ff .1 vw ... .M -Mi. e ts1v:.-wivrf.+'.f4mife!f,14-Jw eh z Mfr.,-'w..'+ i1, in 33.4,-.-..,.4smrfr-,, -..sz-:sms-r'v-f----2-- :,g'w:g r'--if-f .1W. Ja -'pw' .if 'f gan' -ff . -1 'ar '. .53 .-mf, 'Nuff ' Jgfr- .' 4 1- 2- - - . A, '1' ' 1 . 1. ,1,1..v.w.v -A ls- Class H istorg of '92, ye UT of the realm of shadows, tears, pap-bottles and flunks- the region waste and wild, where peace and rest never Clwf-111, where hope never comes, and where black-browed Zeus SWS upon his Olympian throne and wields the scepter o'er the Vefflant Preps-therefrom we never came. Not Darwin nor the renowned Huxley has as yet discovered any principles of the hYP0thesis of evolution that will lead to the conclusion that the Class of ,Q2 could have had its origin in the chaotic regions of Prepdom. We are not to chronicle the history of the individual members now comprising our class, so we make no inquiries relative to the years prior to '88g but suflice it to say that some- where, and at some time in the revolving cycles of years gone PY, HH Ornnipotent Mind conceived the idea of a Class of 92 for D. P. U., and said Let her be, and she was. In accordance with the everlasting order of things we were C0mpelled to be Freshmen. But we here desire to publicly make known the thankfulness felt by us all because we were 'mt 21S green as they generally grow. The perfume of new- Ulown hay is all right in its place, but when it lingers lovingly and strongly around the Freshie it is altogether too suggestive, so ,92 asked 't to be excused. Before a month of the Fresh- man year had passed '92 had shown herself to be a class full of spirit, weighty with brains and mighty in muscle. Within that time several class-meetings were convened. They were not the old-fashioned Methodist sort of class-meetings eitherg they Partook more of the nature of the friendly conventions held by Thomas Felines on the garden wall in the wee nocturnal hours, when the neighbor, disturbed in his peaceful dreams, awaketh his slumbers and cusseth. The muscular exercises in which 'Mi the class participated in these conventions resulted in the demo- lition of a dozen chairs, several untimely and inconvenient pro- tuberances superinduced upon the craniums of unfortunate filibusters by enthusiastic investigators of human anatomy, and the annihilation of the candelabra suspended from the Grzeco- Roman frescoed ceilings of Plato Hall. But these pugilistic performances developed up Cthis exquisite expression is quoted from the lectures UQ delivered to the Sophomore class by Prof. --, and was used 329 times last termj the phys- ical abilities which eventually assisted in overthrowing the os- tentatious class of 191. This important event transpired on the anniversary of the 158th birthday of our glorious country's pa- ternal ancestor of the iirst degree of consanguinity. The cre- mation of ,QI in efligy was witnessed by hundreds of delighted inhabitants of the city, as was also the cane rush which fol- lowed and from which the class of '92 came off victorious. But as we have never had resting upon us the stigma re- sulting from braggardism, we' refrain from revealing to the world the particulars of' the conflict that was so disastrous and humiliating to '91, who came forth early in the morning with an undefined combination of confidence and rodomontade, dealing in allopathic quantities of ineffable ostention, but pos sessing only homeopathic infinitessimals of' that silicious element commonly called sand. Although the unprece- dented termagancy of that day was intended by '91 to preclude '92 from wearing their mortar-boards-which had been adopted as the class hat-the outcome ofthe turmoil so reassured our class and established the fact of her superiority that, without entertaining any fear of an impending hot rush, unintimidated byescowls, we donned the classic head-dress. Although not dealing with individual characterization we would say 'kflfinlzz belle ualuram puellarum uostra1'um. Since '92 first began to perambulate these halls her fairer, gentler members have been an honor to her. Unlike the girls of other classes our girls are ranked among the best students of the uni- versity. For beauty they are unexcelled, for wit they are phe- nomenal, for loyalty to '92 they may be counted on every time and all the time. t. N: . f., .A-,,. V .1 , . K-U-f A tp- ., - 5.,., ,f:,5 ,,,, , , P :,fg,. ., Qf, .. M ,4.s.- , 1, I-,:.., if .gfisg-M 'P ,bw A ,A yt, , 'B ik-...tifmt-.z l N1 ifwwfax-.tl-Ffifrilflliw'''LAW'Vigil!iiiifii-543151264iitiai9ii59131't'v'J'V3i3235i- 'fW7 1ff-'3if'i'7'4iii 5'3'5 UY 'Q5 'ifii't5-W 5i'9il i' AS Sophomores we have met several college H dragons but I'Zill:g2letalw'acys .come off 'imore than conquero1's, for we have have be o En-ure that which can not be cured fby usj.H We fessorsfn oied and counter-bored lJ5:CC1't21lIl so-called pro- who H develop up the tt philosophy of the subject E-lunder consideration, and who, in order to disseminate the pro- ndlty Of their own unfathomable acquisitions of knowledge SEE Continually delivering learned dissertations on the necessity B beCOID1Ilg acquainted with H our methods of investigation. ut We can look forward with joyful anticipations to the fast gppl.02lClll1'lg' day when, receiving our last Sophomore examina- OU paper marked H O. K.,,' we will say, Get thee behind me, Satan I l Soon weill be Juniorsg for already, in fancy, we can hear the members of 'go singing their class-song which begins: We rode our 'ponies' over the hill, t-iood-bye, Alma Mater, good-hycg And only a few of us got a spill, Good-bye, Alma Mater, goocl-hyc-.', Then will 792 show the world what a Hjunior Class Annual ?ll10uld be-how much can be reflected by a H Mirage. Until len, We shall not forget to sympathize with you, gentle reader, and, fOr your consolation and the enlightenment of your dark hours, we commend to your reperusal this brief H class history of 792-H D. W. te-f - + steei 1' A Q ,I '- i 1i..-a.ig 12 H -fe at '9'!. EDN 1 005.3654-ess . W5 if I ,- -. 3 --3 :L- 3 M. :sf 1,1 fp 17, ' ,J 'ff I Q '13 Q i, A ffjff 'I-J .f gli' 'ff 1 ,Z 4.5311 , . ' .f V f .f, bf - ' 5 3 J, f - 'ff Il, . I '21,-... ' gif, quiz? '-if ,- 1. - , , ,. 5.401 v-' ,. ggi: - 1 - ' ' I x - 1 f -.17 1' -5 f J YEfZNWA5:ee's2' 1 ,. links,-53? ' QEZ' -5 '..:T'-1ff.Tf',.3?9 ' 41-152 'f A .2121 Q Ov? -, ' , Z Pill' lf:----' C6 . Q - ' I F25 IX! I X5 IX. Where ignorance is bliss, 'tis iolly to be wise. Motto: E'EiE1FY1 atque etiamf CLASS Coz.ons-Lxom' Bmm AND DARK WINE. OFFICERS. . J. A. SUmvAm', President. E. F. BROWN, . Vice-President. ANNA Poucm-za, Secretary. T. J. FRENCH, . Chaplain. H. C RILEY, Orator. Mvnu Anson, Declaimer. EDITH WAm'z, Prophet. EMMA Corrfzv, Poet.. R. R. JONES, Sergeant-at-Arms I Q f bi. 'Hmmm P ff 1 . ,.i..?1.1. .As-...N-5. :y J 1 ...1.f.:g:r.e.e...a :. .1 'P Myrta Abbott. W. Alexander. V J. S. Angleton. H. H. Austin. Minnie Beem. Sallie Bridges. E. F. Brown. H. P. Boyd. Grace Bink. W. Burns. Jesse Case. Anna Chaffee. J. L. Chaffee. Emma Coffee. Chas. Cottingham. Chas. Crawford. Nellie Darnall. Gertrude De Forest. A. E. Dickey. C. H. Dixon. Harry Dowling. J. Downey. Sydney Eads. Sarah Edwards. Permelia Edwards. W. E. Ervin. Anna Eslinger. Frank Evans. Nellie Fatout. F. E. Fried. W. C. Fried. B. Garner. . E. A. Gilmore. Ethel Gregory. H. H. Hadley. Homer Hall. Nellie Hanna. Annie Haney. ' MEMBERS. Dova Lloyd. M. Machlin. Julia Mason. Martin Mee. O. Merrill. Laura Miller. John Minor. G. F. Mull. Jessie Neill J. B. Nelson. Clelia Newcomer. J. Ogden. D. P. Olcott. F. O'Hair. Margaret Paterson Anna Poucher. F. Powers. F. A. Preston. Dora Reavill. H. C. Riley. V. H. Ringer. Kate Rodgers. S. G. Ross. W. S. Rowe. Clarence Royse. E. L. Ruffner. E. Schnaepp. Q. M. Searles. Carrie Shank. J. Slavens. W. E. Sollenberger. Earl Smith. ' Myrtie Smyser. Olive Stanley. O. M. Stewart. J. H. Stephens. J. H. Sumwalt. A A. E. Taylor. ' 1.5.2 1, vi a Ollie Hays. L. Heckathorn. Bessie Herrick. G. E. Hill. J. S. Hoagland. Sallie Hornbaker. R. R. Jones. T. Kemp. S. R. Knox. ' Blanche Lee. - W. W. Lewis. W. B. Linch. Dora Tippy. Minnie Tribby. J. U. Turner. J'. C. Vermilya. Edith Waltz. Ida Weaver. Vernie Weaver. L. A. Whitcomb C. Wilkinson. Ji E. Wilson. Susie Wright. gk ffm wifi-2155 ., gf lf.. . War Well as ee- SE Quips and cranks and wanton wllcs Of sportive lambklns. P-TT-N.- Large foot-prints on the sands of time will I leave. C'R-S-K-IJ-N.-H Thou hast outrun the constable at last. SANKEY LIC-L-N.-U But what is this? What thing of sea or land? R-Y-sic.- The worst fault you have is to be in love. M-RR-E..- I say the earth did shake when I was born. BRO-N.- Then he will talk. Good gods! how he will talk. S-R-L-S.- He bears the marks of many years well spentg of virtue, truth tried, and wise experience. SL-V-Ns.- I am too handsome for a mang I ought to have been born zt Woman, I--Y-CH.- A crow doth sing as sweetlyf' J'HN-NS.-An elephant among ladies is the most dreadful thing. AL-C-TT.- I am a masher, I am. H-D-EY.- What a satisfaction it is to wake up in the morning, put your hand on your left side and find your heart still beating. BR-N-R-- Who plucked the feathers of this rare bird 7 CII-F'E.-'uC0l1f0llDd it all! Who says I have bow legs? W-TS-N.-'ilim somewhat of a liar myself. Miss H-Ys.- And I forsooth in love! I that hath been love's whip. I D-F-R-sT.- Uncertain, coy, and hard to please? A-GL-T-N.-H Beauty and brains go not together. Ill-CH-IN.- NDI pretty, but massive. O'H-IR.-U I must be a most fascinating young man. 'Tis not my faultg the ladies must blame heaven. R-F-N-R.- Beard was never a true standard of brains. -T. Fuller. CR-W-F-D.- Conceited, soft, and dudefied, Expanftjse of gall personified. AL-X-ND-11.-- Bashfulness is an ornament to youth. U. W. SM-T1-1.- Too modest for publication. W- C. dt C. F-I-D.- Edward Buckingham. Taylor Spencer's jewels. J- CH-F-EB.- The loud hoarse bray that speaks the vacant mind. X -i . , , Q N ' - ,.,', ...-,X 4 1 1- 1 - . L. 1, fcnljs' - Q mr-'W dlwaal 'ff 'Ar:iif+'a-5 1 ,R . -,-, rf gf. X., .-. ss 'nw 'J '1 .x ,511 W.. tl fl .32 1 ff, N.. .. 'ta .2 pw.. .QM .Args wa, , . is ' 11 L, v. h it 32. rf as J. Tj . '1'1. .-g J .J A I. it-4 ' w r fr. ,. ,.,.' a n SM ' '.5 '2.,t, i ' . in .7 w .-re '-.' vp, . ,. .M 1. v. LGE H7451 . ,1 -N sv, X, Mxss O-F-Y.- Too shy and distant to be won. Miss D-RN-L.- If to her share some female errors fall, Look on her face and you'll forget them all. -Pope. H-s'r-R.- His ears laugh as his mouth goes by. WH-T-U-MB.- Like two men rolled into one. J-s AND Miss C-. Ye gods annihilate both time and space, and make two lovers happy. M-NT-NE.- Weary, stale, flat, and unprofitable. H R-NG-R.- Soapine did it, use soapine. A Miss N-wc-Man.- For if she will, she will, and you may depend on it. And if she wont, she wont and that's the end on it. L-W-s.- When I orate let no dog bark. R-ss.- His chin unshaved looked like a stubble-field in harvest time. IRV-N.--'HAD oyster may be crossed in love. MISS W-V-R.- I am to myself dearer than a friend. E-A-S.- Mouth, mouth, thou art fearfully and wonderfully made. GR-Ns-EET.- Will you be mine, my love? D-CK-Y.-'CA man may gawk and gawk again, ears and mouth wide open.' L-M-N.- Mamma's darling, papa's pet. P-N-cn.- Conceit personified and sawed off M-LL-R.-l' What we know is very little, but what we think we know is im- mense. F-LK-s-N.- Some men are born poets, some men become poets, but some are not poets at all. ' g Miss R-AV-L.-H Pleased with a rattle, tickled with a straw. VV-LK-S-N.-N Lost, strayed or stolen. D-WL-NG.- He's merry like a cock, as thinks the sun rose a purpose to hear him crow. C-NG-H-M.- Alas ! our young affections run to waist. M-LL.- A delusion, a mockery, and a snare. Miss ST-NL-Y.- Whistling girls and crowing hens always come to some bad end. VERMILLYA.- Rich on poker chips. Miss PA-'r'r-s-N.-- Her smiles haunt me still. M-NT-NE, J rt.-- In th'e world I fill up a place which may be better supplied when I make it empty. Mrss H-GH.- 'Tis a time for memory and for tears. A. E. T-YL-R.- So very green that cows will make an end of him ere long. fBy request.j ' R. D-RN-L.--U His only fault, he talks too much. Or.c-'r'r.--? 'I ? 'I 'I 'I 'I ? 'I PORTER.-tSoliloqnizingl I must be awfully popular. I can just go with the best of 'em, them way up yonder in society, in wealth. Why, I'm even going to the -1 reception. I must be a brainy-man. FR-M-N.- The fittest earthly type of Hell. Freshman class meeting. W. E. S. S. 'div ., lf I f'.l.., ?.,A umm V. ...pint J2,H'Cl5,j,V.R I za: -W Qtpvzkirpfgrr .?wAClQm515ig,yyr,.3LQis3h:Qyii',,afn:Wd -. .I ,. t an tiitfgllbirikirt ,Agfa-'j a nv' p.. -yt.,-I' 5 5.7,,1,fg.ti f,.j.HI.,ri:.w-fax.-,,, 24.14-,,1,.., ,' W, .W-A, .fy .-,'...v..,....,.1 -,1 -. 1 I- ' ' V- 1 -. 4 X x raternities , Zlii..-.i 'YYY -vw i,5:ff1L 163. Q35 f :2??'. 34.9i'T , ,fini-' ' Sj6'Qi1if ' .QM 453-fl . gg., .,. as-' f ' .,. . - . V ' up-.., . ki 4. . . YL, ' 2,35-f: F this .' iw .1 '. iii iff'- Q. ,Au . ' :WET . ' VTYET ' '11,-. 1 . 'I I YC. if w ...Y R '. u. ' th .'f.J!5QT 57' '- ' ?-i' . gi.- ' tw. D, -lift. If Hit. :nm iii, ,-4' f .7 j'.f,l'1.' gift. 1'r ' 7 J K.,-,.. . .f. , . :X .M ,gf-1 M.. ,rum , . iffy 'VLC' ..':i 'L . 'f-.gif .253 , :.-f , '.-'ir V' .QV ' lfrf' . ' 'i':4 '. , ii-2. i iffw 13.5 3?,:3Q'. ' Qzlff 'I ' . N1 me .5 5 FN? -' 135511 ' A 3 hi s I 'f??' :Cv . 4, -infer' - c.?Q,5lQ,. ' . iw H 'Yun - V - Ll 33.1. p. .,..r,s,, - -.L .f lj 1511 .1 I . ' ...Ugly 'tht .1 i ' 1, fizmg-, , . v ' 'V Jifmi.. ... f ' if , -.4 1 +- qgg-I'-wf. A.. I . s .. H L r 2 ,air,,,,.,?,,.,,,,,,,,,., ,tx,W.,.i,..,3,,,5.,.pq,,,.,qWLi1?,.,it L N ,,-.W gg 1 I7 l eta appa. Postgraduate Fraternity, Founded at the College of William and Mary, December 6, 177t' SK OFFICIAL ROLL OF UNITED CHAPTERS. Alpha of Maine . . Alpha of New Hampshire Alpha of Vermont . Beta of Vermont . Alpha of Massachusetts Beta of Massachusetts . Gamma of Massachusetts Alpha of Connecticut Beta of Connecticut . Gamma of Connecticut Alpha of New York .i Beta of New York . Gamma of New York . Delta of New York . Epsilon of New York . Zeta of New York . Eta of New York .. . Theta of New York . Beta of Ohio . . Iota of New York . Alpha of Pennsylvania Beta of Pennsylvania Alpha of New Jersey . Alpha of Indiana . Alpha of Kansas . Alpha of Illinois . Gamma of Pennsylvania . Bowdoin . . Dartmouth . University of Vt. . Middlebury . Harvard . . Amherst . Williams . . Yale Trinity . Wesleyan . Union . . . University of City of N. Y. College of City of N. Y. . Columbia . . . Hamilton Hobart . Madison . Cornell . Kenyon . Rochester . . Dickinson . Lehigh . Rutgers . De Pauw . . . State University . Northwestern . . Lafayette Brunswick, Me. Hanover, N. H. Burlington, Vt. Middlebury, Vt. Cambridge, Mass. Amherst, Massl Williamstown, Mass. New Haven, Ct. Hartford, Ct. Middletown, Ct. Schenectady, N. Y. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. New York, N. Y. Clinton, N. Y. Geneva, N. Y. Hamilton, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Gambia, Ohio. Rochester, N. Y. Carlisle, Pa. South Bethlehem, Pa. New Brunswick, N. J. Greencastle, Ind. V Lawrence, Kan. Evanston, Ill. Easton, Pa. r Alpha Chapter flrxdianaj offlxi Bela Kappa X . Omcers, 1839-90. PRESIDENT, JAMES RILEY WEAVER. vice-PRESIDENT, JOHN CLARK RIDPATH. SECRETARY, WILLIAM FLETCHER SWAHLEN. Tnmsunnn, ' GEORGE LEWIS CURTISS. f06jfi9Qi3f94'f .REV S L charter Megubere. u . PRO? -C - EOWMAN, S. T. D.,Dean of Theologibal School of DePauw University WILLEAM . WALDO, A. M., Act. Pres. C. BALL, A. M., Editor Daily Gazette, Terre Haute, Indiana. . 'D QQlS6'M.1bq5.y1w9Ji?D - G ' CLOUD, Canon Gunn, . CUNBAUK, WILL, . , C UMISS, Gxonem LEWIS, . 32 IQAUW, CH-uyLEs WASHINGTON, GOBINAUW. N EWLAND T., . Iona, HILLARY AsBURY, . ART, J orm EUGENE, LESSON, Aucnsmns Lyman, RIDEING, Tx-:onus Bnn'roN, . nn, Joan CLARK, . RITTER, Em F., . , , ZVZAHLEN, Wxnnmm Fnmmonmz, . mon, Hmuw James, . :ENN-WT, Rroxnnn Sncus, OWN. SALEM B., . WE-WEB, J Aura Rxnnv, . chapter Members. McLeansboro, Ill. Greensburg. Greencastle. New Albany New Albany. . Baldwin, Kangas. Evansville. . Indianapolis. New Castle. . Greencastle. Indianapolis. A Greencastle. New Alliany. . Terre Haute. Terre Haute. . Greencastle. if ., i -an J 1.J?'ff. ju.. i J'-5 Q- f:?:cQ .i N . -r ' ,lg Vi. . ,linkin ,-If . hi eta Kappa. 956 HE MII1AGE,, is happy to welcome the Alpha Chapter of Phi Beta Kappa to De Pauw University. This fraternity is the oldest and most reputable in the new world, being founded only live months after the Declaration of American Independ- ence. For one hundred and fourteen years it has flourished in perpetual youth. It has included in its membership the largest and most distinguished array of talent and genius ever brought together in any single association on this side of the Atlantic. It has poured out into American literature a constant stream of the finest essays, orations,-poems, and other literary productions ever sent forth from any society on our continent. Until recently Phi Beta Kappa has been kept east of the Alleghenies. At last, however, civilization made its way through the gaps in the mountains, and the great valley of the Mississippi has become fecund not only in the material things which spring from the soil, but in those nobler products which spring from the brain. It is in the wake of this progress west- ward that Phi Beta Kappa has at last found a residence in the Wabash valley. Its establishment at De Pauw, being the first in the State and the second west of the Alleghenies, is a recog- nition of the primacy of our university among her sister insti-' tutions of the west, and a recognition of the proud rank she has been so fortunate to gain in the literary and educational centers of the east. f A.J,',.i V, 4afig.L-.r.,. . , i . f xvgbgiaypz-1 .i ,vw .Q ,4., f'1.-1 ,..., A A i ., , .. Q N .V ,, , 'ftN'1' Vi if-,q,,.:!. w.'f- ':. zwiif- i1 i'f'-Wir Lupe HW -' X -24 .ni .imc 'f Z.-.J-U' 1 .'vf3!'L': Q.. .1 riwii.-. 1 wtf. ' . '--'H ff v'l2-fem -.cf-, em- uw' -in-My .Q,:A-:wp . :+I w'swiif'--4 if f-if fi-fel I EmmmaamaAm a.4m.aa4fsf' V . -.M ei . .f ii soc int Eli Beta Kappa, in contraclistinction to the undergraduate letles, is essentially postgraduate, planned to carry forward O Professional life that spirit of emulation, fraternity and mutual assistance so worthily begun in college life. The main 0bJeCf,tl1erefore,is-to offer to graduates at the close of their sen' . car de lor Ye-M, 01' some time subsequently during their professional eef, Opportunity and inspiration for constant superior en- avor and nobler achievement. Phi Beta Kappa is worthy o De PHUWS may De Pauw prove worthy of Phi Beta Kappa. 31 . JF gs, If 'W Ll t ' f '2 iff '-', -t1t1-'- .Iff fr ','- -ll -ff-4- if t, -.Q ' N '- .,,. ' 'liz ' - ,,,w,j.g, ' . ,,.v.-,wj'.f,e.g,V I - . f J, 'rvwf '21 fi ,, Q' Z' 1 ff' qv rw'-ilvfi, 'lm '- 4fffL2pni'af ' fu M 1 'Q w Fr 4 ' ', ' ' '.'-1',fj'.3j,?:1 1' nw Founded Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 1839 HARVARD fEtaQ, BROWN fKappaJ, Bos'roN fUpsilo'uJ, STEVENS fSigmaJ, CORNELL fBeta Deltaj, UNION fNuJ, Ser. LAWRENCE QBet.a Zetaj, Conumnm fAlpha Alphay, - SYRACUSE fBeta EPSIIODD I . DICKINSON CA1pha Sigmal, Jorma Horxnzs QAlpha Chij, HAMPDEN-SIDNEY QZetaJ, VIRGINIA Q0micronJ, CENTRE4 fEpsilonJ, CUMBERLAND, fMuJ, TEXAS fBeta Omxoronl ' ff . . . d 5 I 'iff :fj4 1'-.4ff,.-Z: 'I'-Mini' fbi? 312334. 5' Ji wb A' S W M nt M, YF? w .wMQ1,, Q ' 2-rQ1..f 3fW74'W57'f'J' R v v .1 . af , ., , , 4 W' 'W uf- 1- f W W 3 in-1 H: f Zlf ' YWAVT ,. . : 2'5 1 , 44'4:J'-7 ' 1 'F,444-5:.rfgrgi'.,,-,4l,'f1,:l 33,9 -. ., I, ' A fa f- 4 x f., , 4 District VL gixgxiliftlphat, WITTENBERG QAlpha Gammaj, wmmi ZIKHPPRJ, umm fAlpha Etaj, WASHING ESERVE CBCWD, XVOOSTER tA1plm. Lambdaj, OHIO WETON-JEFEERSON fGammaJ, KENYON fBeta Alphaj, BETHAN SLE3iAN Kfhetrll, OIIIo STATE tThetn Deltal, Y fpsltv UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI tdis.J. DE PA District VII. INDI UW u?eItaD, MICHIGAN QLambdaJ, ANA fmt: WABASII tTauD, HANOVER tlotaj. District VIIL K. ,. BZOX mlphf' 5-U, IowA XVESLEYAN tAlpha Epsilonj, IOQLOIT CCNP, IVISCONSIN qfupnm Pi,j VA STATE C-A-lpha Betaj NouTIIwEsTEnN fRhoj. xv District IX KISTMINSTER fAlpl1a Deltaj, DENVER tAlpha Zetaj, CA NSAS KAIPIIR NUJ, :NEBRASKA CAIpIm Tauj, LIFORNIA fomegal, UNIVERSITY 011' BIINNESOTA fdis.J. f. Q fAf1i '-t- I .. pfri-1:1 '-'fiffa ,:4:. I ii '.A' 1 A:' :Yif3f-llffk. '- ..c...?A,r.. U -10 . . . ' -L. I G. fi ' V' I.f.w.+r, 'qu' jf . . - .,,. - .,. I H I., , . .. .. I .If , Vi . .5 x J. .,, k 1 . . 'n I, 1 Nfl ,wx V . ..- Beta Theta Pi. Delta Chapter. Established in 1845. il! FRATRES IN URBE. R. A. OGG, H. H. MA'rHIAs, R. S. RAGAN, C. R. Hnmoun, G. W. LEE. ARTHUR OUNNINGHAM, T. W. Flsx, ' J. B. Tucxmz, M. B. RUDIBILL, C. C. Mn-sox, IsAAc Hmwmozm, J. F. CLmAnw.4'rEn,s. A FRATRES IN FACULTATE. ' H. A. Gosm. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. V. Seniors-'90. ALBERTUB T. Bxuoasf Monms H. Tvnxf , Jumbrs-'9l. V Rronum EARLE LOCKE,' CHARLE T. EBICKBON,' WILLIAM G. SEAMANQ5 . Cxnmns O. MERIOA.al X - Sophomorcs-'9Z. ALBERT M. COLE,' Lu: Summrr Dumnmf' WILLIAM P. PI:NcE,' Pmmv E. P0WEi'4L,' Cmrgmuon A. Rovsnf' ROLAND F. DAB.NALL,w WILLIAM C. Fawn, Gnoaan W. DAaaInL, Fnnnmalok E. Fnxmnf' WILMEB D. GLENN, Anrnua M. Lum. ' Freshmen-'93. I E ' PAUL PoLx,1 DUDLEY P. 01.co'I:r,1'4 . CBABLH E. CoDnINsInm. . , ,g..'-.4 , . H z. aim Q Mm W GD flew-If Jima - ' I. 1 ?: Qf3v'Yv4'wfP ,' V ' K ' ' , , '1 ' f..fA'.-jf,...fflWi.-fT1.:I,.','.gf... ? K,gQQ,f 1, . - - I ' I -, , -- ' ' i .- , ' M , A'--jwj, 'L I -'gf'-,En fir' . px-rrJP'7,Si,? Q.15'q.-.1,' 3,- Tvy'.- 4 e. , 5 f' V9 1 Q ,Av-J'g, Iv i g p- I ,I Na+ Hg I . W ' V9.1 M., an W' -+ 5. 4 1 1 -, x 2.4 EJ . 'V ,-vf,5.:1.z.pe- w:.,wYa-. I..-I ,, 4.0 'iw' 1 .1-A ' .W :I :r '1P'..':,+.-J. .few-.T-'Ii'-f4'.',3- um m .ff f'L1 K: +ifq.,Q2L wg'--.4 ' pf ' .-:f .!. f .f H -... .-. ' .'f1 f.,w,. - .5 1, In - A f- Q-. If .1-.L - -1 - fi. ,. . . --1. I - I ,. M , ., ,,.: .vu ,Ji-I fn. . - .If iQg?ihf'g'Fvd4i7f'g -H.,-fg,.T'f.'1g:.j1,r3j.,,,:gg',g'm.', i-.rgeif gin:lQ12fi.g,:.,I.g,7.5-,.y.,.I,5fgf.:ff..I.,...F I. N- . b A V- X: Af 2 J EJ X ff 4 XXJN ,W K mi. , L, ...V --.:, r ,Jr ., , . Z., Y V , , ,Vi -,.,Vr.Ja,-..r, ,e , at , .w at , l , 7 , ,vw qui mlgegg-,W Wg. , w...s.- . ,l,- ' ,. U 1 .- - .,sl. ' , . ,u-we ' . 4 ' ,Jw ,paw i 415, :,. .age . ,, . -. - g,,-1,,..f.s,,V -f23.4r'?a- ff .1 , . A , V-,ff,.,r1V 1.,-- iff , ,1,g,g.1,,, SGH, ....,,,.3..,,t.,,,.g A , ,gg f -1 a,.1,a,,t 4,.g4Vs1-15. 5 ,.:,,n,r-.yV,t,L3V,, 1 u'f., , N, : ,y,,..,, A ,. ,v ,. . ., , U ,, .6 ,Ugg ,AV -,,,, rpxwh l H ella n. .11 tip , 154 iw , aw-xg wif Wi r 'C M ' ,, Us ,al , '6 ,5,.-:,-15gr- 4' . . V ' , Il:-f x,f.vV,w'5,-W 11,3 1 ?lwi Gamma elia. Founded at Washington and Je flerson College, 1848. 914 Canons-Rovm. Pnnrmn. 'BGQMW CHAPTER Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Yale University, ' College of City of New York Columbia College, . Madison University, . Cornell University, , Washington and J etferson College, Bucknell University, Peunwlvania College, Auegllflhy College, Muhlenberg Colleg Lafayette College, Lehilh University, ex Pennsylvania State College, University of North Carolina, R0aU.bke College, HamPden-Sidney College, Q University of Georgia, ' 1 ,fig ' 1 . V . 11,-..... - , nw . , ROLL. Marietta College, Wittenberg College, Ohio Wesleyan University, Denison University, , ' Adelbert College, Ohio'State University, Wooster University, Indiana State University, De Pauw University, Hanover College, Wabash College, f Illinois Wesleyan Universi ty, Knox College, University of Michigan, Bethel College, ' University of Kansas, William Jewell College, University of California. ev, 4 1 All Vi? his S , lit? wget, ns,,.,.R if l +3914 R ,K M 'l:i'S? , 'V ,t .. . , ,, ' , . H ee , limi-X-in ' , V . V f lc 1 V- M sv ..?1,fPl, -1,--we 'I .1 , ' . -1 , , -' ,- -, - ' ,V , 1 V 1- f elf-1.-,..gl5,'f,,,w2,,-254' Vg 1vii,g:.,r .,'i.gra' 'hi-.fg'1gw ,.,,V, ,- A, ' , 1 . ,' . V V - I ,V , 'rw ,V :y,,,fl',j,,f l,pf'-- ..,f -IMHV if -' 1 -,-3-vga -. f'lt.,1-,-VV- . -, -, ' ,,.u . ,r ,-, :.. , ,p 1, 9 'y,,,'V.nq ,,f...l' ,, -V., 52, ,.1,V Qi , ,. ,'V - ,- '- -,-.gs vs.:f,4,- . , H- ,f,.1V.,, V- -,-fff,u:r.', . ., '-,,,w'V-1 V. Fi -A . -'Win ' 1 I-Vw fi- r - . l ---fVV,Vm f' V. -wan. .,V . ,VM rwrfgn '-,1-X,.sa . - A f N. - t - ,,V1?,. 1 Life'i3V',f:W,ksS'4w v2s,Hil',?1 ',1..','.n. fvi L-'n''Q-g:,,,'g-.q.::'.n.,v:f ', . A l m fn- ,41-g'a'f:k VZ? ,. .. V.r 1, , A, ,mn VW. V tg., r l.f w www' VIE-651 V, ,LLM-AY.-.r,i'.. .,.-4 , tt, . , , li- ,gn if 4,3 , in -. EMM' , V . . by 4 ' -. ' ' A5-fi1Vf.g!V-7ggfq'l'3'34'4.5'ffm'afflfgffwg'EQ-.1',AE1E:'t jf ,,.s.?2,'31-y,1HvE'1yt.,.v1 ', x ' ' ' -.' v , -.wer wV-, , V,g-U' --H' , , V V' t.. r 1, fl - Y. . -V19 32512 ' gj., 4,.w.. ..-er. 4, .. ff' i. .11-'EE' if ' my, .A .wi ,Jw 45: ':' . ..:-:N , V.. -uwqv .' R,-. A . hy fra . , ,, ,,. q. ' .W'X Q Af . if fam ,- .. 1. ., Q Hu. L. . 'MT . 5-ku V ' V ' D,-.W - I Phi Gamma Delta. Lambda Chapter. Established in 1856. FRATRES IN URBE. J onN CLARK RrDrA'rn, LL. D., HoN. JONATHAN Bmcs, A. M., W. MoK. BLAKE, A. M., Hou. Anmson DAGGY, A. M., .huns F. DARNALL, H. S. Rmmox, A. M., G. C. SMYTHE, M. D., T. W. TAYLon, A. M., WALTER ALLEN, M. J. Bmoxmrr, V B. E. Locxmnen, VA. M., ANDREW HANNA, ' A. L. Locxnrnom, FRATRES IN FACULTATE. Gm. L. cmmss, A. M., D. D., T. J. Bmw, A. M., Pu, D., N. L. BOWMAN, A. M., 5. T. 'D. -Q FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. Seniors-'90. J. C. WALTERS,l Juniors-'91. Gno. R. WELBORN,' . ' H. C. BINKLEY,' ' E. W. Sfl.'UCKY,5 H. HUNT, Sophomores-29.9. J. LEE MoKmc,' . 0nvxLL1: W. MOGINNIB,lo , ' ' R. R. J oNms. ' Freshmen-f98. Fnux O'HAm,1' ' JAMM B. Nm.soN,1' J , CnAnLDs L. Srmdum. J. H. ROBINSON., W. A. WAnNnn,' FRANK D0WNEY,7 A. E. TAYLOB,a EDWARD Cmnx RIDPATH.n E. E.'smn,H J. A. GREENS'.l.'REET,u Auausrus KELLY, A WILLIAM Rnnvzsf' . . . , ' l .., 9 1 . V, g ' , u M , , i' 3 3 'hi' ' 1: 'Wig A J ,J TW n-.,:,1 G Q3 G39 MS Wg ,,, , W BETA, I GAMMA, ZETA, ETA , TH ETA, KAPI-A, LAMBDA MU, , . Xt, , I 0MrcRoN, Rno, TAI-lx 4 CHI, , PSI! . OMEGA, , , GAMMA GAMMA, DELTA DEI.-1-A, DELTA CHI, . Zrn-A ZETA, ZETA PSI TH-'TPA THE1-A, ALPHA BETA, ALPHA GAMMA, 3 . S' HX lg 5 l. Founded at Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, 1855. Conons-B1.u1: AND Gunn. X'Q9X9ew CHAPTER ROLL. University of Wooster. Ohio Wesleyan University. Washington and Lee. University of Mississippi. Pennsylvania College. Bucknell University. Indiana State University. Denison University. De Pauuw University. Dickinson College. Butler University. Roanoke College. Hanover College. University of Virginia. Northwestern University. Randolph-Macon College. Purdue University. Wabash College. Centre College. University of Cincinnati. University of Michigan. University of California. Ohio State University. :A g,,.,,f,j,.. x V 'fi grep - ALPHA- DELTA, ALPHA EPSILON, ALPHA ZETA, ALPHA TIIETA, ALPHA IoTA, ALPHA LAMBDA, ALPHA NU, . ALPHA XI, . ALPHA Omcnozv ALPHA Pr, . ALPHA RHo, ALPHA SIGMA, ALPHA TAU, ALPHA UPsrr.oN, Stevens Institute of Technology. University of Nebraska. Beloit College. Massachusetts Institute of Technology Illinois Wesleyan University. University of Wisconsin. University of Texas. University of Kansas. Tulane University. Albion College. Bethlehem College. University of Minnesota. University of North Carolina. University of South Carolina. .,.. ' fr gf' rss:-'iefw -va.AF -4-ff wwspe. ,- .,. vw -, ...-5.1.15 Homer Pennell. L. E. Bennett. U Fred. Davis. ff' A it V' 1 'V ,Uh 1 Q, ff 1' ' V A. QAA. 5 W N' E -+2 '.,. 'fl' A'A 1 n , r L' r- , .,.-. 15 V.l- Q,v' A i I ll , I . f ' n - 1 ' n f n In ' V 5,,,,,.r. P' Frank Hendricks. J. H. Harrison. C.McMnl1en. s 993 55535653 96-' S i g m a C lx i . XI Chdpter. Established in.1859. FRATRES IN URB13. . W G BURNFTT, A. M.. L. M. HANNA, M. D., Hon Tnonns HANNA, f F. D. Aman, LL. B., B F Conwm, A. M., ,. SILAS A. HAYS, A. M., Hon D E W1.LI.mMsoN, l 1 SAMUEL A. Fxsnmz, O F Ovnnsmnm, A I A A A. A. DAGGY, FRATRES IN UN IVERSITATE. ' A Seniork-'90. ' HARRY R. MoMur.LnN. ' Juniors-'91. Joan H HARRISON,'- Fmzp. P. Df.v1s,A Lotus P Bnuum-'r, , .Q A JAMES A. PA'r'rn:n.soN. ' Sophomofes-'92, A A CAsn W MoMm:LLnN, A J'4MEs'W. Annucxm, BENJAMIN F Gamdozw. Fmux L. Hnumuoxs, ' .TULIKN D. Hoaus. . - f3Freshmen-'93, V ' I - - - J Ames M OGDEN,A . ' Houma F. PENNELL, Gnuuns 0 WILLETQ, J HUGH H. HADLEY. . .1 4s:e 42:.:'es:'f . . A 5 A A .M .- 1 ' 1. . 11 . , I- Nj. i '1,:. ,5g..,-1354-nf 1 . A 7 I if r . '1v,,-1' 'JM Vi' -.4-QJ, , I I li P, h,.f I9-.ff r in 19 44 . new 'fq '1 '5 1 Qgjfif 41- 'I-f'kff' ff fffi4?fi . ' 5 ,IE egg? V 'N :I T ,, . K nl, T' ,N yi, , f 1 'I 4 A If- i, ' My ,, 16,43 , 'H PM I , ,Liv vi.. Il, 1' ,' I 4 aff 'J' A, Liffjf :.g'f.:yif'9?'QAi'7 U Agyf. l' --1' :,31A,-mg . -' ,f, , 1,-1 ,174-1-W FP-5' fi -1'i'-3' f, C - .. : f Y 'I f-lf -.mt 31 v,1.-va,-1... :fa.+g-PM I .vffgf ?f I 'M ' I .J . ..,,l,, W lxi Kappa si. Founded at Washington and Jefferson College in 1852. PENNSYLVANIA ALPHA, PENNSYLVANIA BETA, , PENNSYLVANIA GAMMA, PENNSYLVANIA EPsILoN, . PENNSYLVANIA ZETA, . PENNSYLVANIA ETA, PENNSYLVANIA THETA, PENNSYLVANIA KAPPA, NEW Yom: ALPHA, . NEW Yonx BETA, . NEW Yom: DELTA, NEW Yom-I EPsILoN, VIERGINIA ALPHA, VIRGINIA BETA, VIRGINIA GAMMA, MARYLAND ALPHA, . DISTRICT or COLUMBIA ALPHA, . . SOUTH CAROLINA ALPHA, . MISSISSIPPI ALPHA, . OHIO ALPHA, . . OHIO BETA, . Onro GAMMA, . Orno DELTA, 5 'M ,I Syl N v 'ing 1 QL 9M'?x '15 ,I 'fn .J COLORS-PINK AND LAVENDER. . - 6 KWQQAQ Q -' CHAPTER ROLL. Washington and Jefferson College Allegheny College. Bucknell University. Pennsylvania College. Dickinson College. Franklin and Marshall College. Lafayette College. Swathrnore College. Cornell University. Syracuse University. Hobart College.- Madison University. University of Virginia.. Washington and Lee University. Hampden-Sidney College. Johns Hopkins University. Columbian College. University of South Carolina. .University of Mississippi. Ohio Wesleyan University. Wittenberg College. Wooster University. Ohio State University. A' r KWH 4' W N 'rf' P A, dl W wx Jzgif 5, 44 f LWWA 3- . ,1 ' ' ' I . 1 X , ', .,, If . ... g 'E , , 1- 'Y a at ,' 1- 1 'A'.'7'.J 7' -' ' si fi .-...'f :1'-1 '7 H, . ,, . .. .- it f .-.1-if I . -...f.- ---.I ff..,.,,- ,.-uf . -2, . 1 I 'X-i'i1'gM ffwtsn 1' . 'L-'Pl if 4 7 ',f-W. qi' fi ' Emi' 'igU '7L:?? u'J1lfu2,1T JP-' 'JEIMTEV :4 'f3 - if 4+ i2h VR'f 'JW' 'ffwi' A ' 1 'I ' gf .. ' 1 ' I M 3 -v' 'I' ' ' i '1.t -K 'w- '-W RX ,jam A. ki , 2... ,.: 'ik'-24, -, vw Q. - ' 4' x r., '3i..1i!?.f5fa . 4'-,-r ' f' ,,,g1 ,..,N ' .f . -an , .V ,...fa.. ,.f'I,.,,, ZA. .,.,.,2,,, . ,,5. .we gl. ,,,'f.p-. Q ,-., , ...IA In-ML',m'.,. K, -A ,z,..,.., V1 ,, A . V1.1 , :,..,,,, ,wil e.'w1 H: ,'1'g' 'T ' -ire -- .fff'..'.f 1f'f. 1w'3'? .' 1' 1? '- .-J. Ziff. A---i'i '1': --I , g INDIANA ALPHA, INDIANA Bm-A, . INDIANA GAMMA, ILI,INoIs ALPHA, . LIICIIIGAN 1ILl'HA, XVISCONSIN ALPIIA, XVISCONSIN GIAMMA, IowA ALI-IIA, , :MINNESOTA Bm.-I, IQANSAS ALPHA, . CALIFORNIA IILPIIA, Pittsburgh, pn. De Panw University. . University of Indiana. Wabash College. . Northwestern University . University of Michigan. University of lVisconsin. Beloit College. of Iowa. . University University of Minnesota. . University of Kansas. University of the Pacific feDQeDwNv ALUMNI ASSOCIATIONS. Cincinnati Ohio Chicago, Illinois. , Minneapolis, Minn. Springiield, Ohio. -bljglagckg v , XJ l im 1 .W ,I 'Isl I A rm 'fS:I414s'e.1 1v1 -' i f' I-I J - Sr . v - Phi Kappa Psi. I Indiana Alpha Chapter. ' Estdblished in 1866. FRATRES IN URBE. E. HAwK1Ns, M. D., W. W. MCNEFF, A. M., JACKSON Bovn, 'J. A. MICKELS, W. G. NEFF. FRATRES IN FACULTATE. EDWVIN XPos'r, Ph. D., , JOHN PQUCHER, D. D., J AMES RILEY WEAVER, A. M., B. D., THEODORE L. NEEE, A. A WILBUR T. AYRES, A. M. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE.. ' Seniors-'90, . , GUY M. WALKER,1 ' - FRED. A. CLEAVELAND,n FREn.T. Runyf A A CHAB. P. Kuxoirr, LL. B., DAN. T. MCDOUGAL.u V Juniors-'91, MERLE N. A. WALKER,' A AOHAB. A. Hou'rs,' E. Rona. ZARINGJ ' L. H. MURLIN,9 FRANK L. LITTLETONfo . N ' . Sophombres-f99, . 1 Vx CHAs. W. HonELL,'1 GRANT G. Ross, , HARRY H.'AUBTIN, 1 ' FRANK M. BEARD,u ' E. G. McGmrE, , FRED. H. Fr'rcn, O. M. STEWARTJ7 V Freshmen--'98. ' ,V ' CHAS. E. CRAwV1a'oRn, A ERNEST L1 R-UFFNER,n f J 6sEPH A. SUMWALT.. GHAs. L. WA'resoN, WALTER E. ERvxN, EDGAR S. PoR'rER, , N 'Q 11- . ua . Q rl' M 2? .55 ' , ...J ,lm- 51' ff' 'fr A Q12 . 'W .ff fi .1 f1X'vu'f.',- ' .' , .., ,Jn alta appa Epsilon. PHI! - THETA: . XI, ' SIGMA, IPS1,. , UPBILON, , Cm, I HBETA, ETA, . ' XALPHA, LAMBDA ' Q , Ion, , ' ' ALP ' Ohfrcnon, EPSALQN, v . I RI-ro I Ting: . . MU, . Nu, , A 'BMA Pm ' P1-non ' ' P-UPEI, . GAA: ' Palo Burn M4 PHI, Mme , A1 rn, GAMMA, Bum, THEM, Hr, , EPs1LoN, . HA ALPHA, Founded at Yale, 1844. COLORS-RED, BLUE AND GOLD. CHAPTER ROLL. Q . . . Gale. . Bowdoin College. . Colby University. . Amherst College. . University of Alabama. . Brown University. . University of Mississippi. . University of North Carolina. . University of Virginia. , . Harvard University. . Kenyon College. . Dartmouth College. . Central University. . Midclleberry. . University of Michigan. Williams College. . Lafayette College. . Hamilton. . Madison University. E University of City of NeW'York. . University of Rochester. Rutgers. - . De Pauw University. ,. I Wesleyan University. ' . Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute . Adelbert. i . Cornell University. A . Syracuse. . Columbia College. University of California. . Trinity. . Miami University- , A. - ,University of Minnesota. A . . Vanderbilt. A -. l , ...f.-,af . 1 yga ...-I, :gf 1-631' . JZ-: .YZ , . ,V 43 ev pf m uf-I. .If . -f. Q. Q. 91 va in I. Q r- .. A 'I' I 'mfr .ff R.. we K RJ . 5. . 'Y .v IN fn- rr f Q, 6 Ji mf lv I :N Il. 4: My mfr r' 4 If ,. 1 I . aw , . ,w . - vm I :f .5 gi' I .E V .. fjjaif I N N Ig , . ., -I 3?5fkfwf'g+14rfE'Q?2f?.g'3?I?'3f'517f3?rI.. . ,. - I M ,. 1 -- ,I ...I-E ,MI .:f, V., , . I Rlia appa V psilon. PSI Phi Chapter. Established in 1866. FRATRES IN URBE. HENRY V. DEVORE, M. D., FELIX T. MCWHIRTER, Ph. D., CHARLES XVEBB. FRATRES IN FACULTATE JOHNB DEMo'r'rR, Ph D PHILIP S BARER, M D HENRY B LONGDEN, A M CHARLES E DIXON, A FRATRES IIN UNIVERSITATE Scmors '90 A I Do'rEY,'0 ADDISON W MOOBE,ll GEORGE C PRICE .Tumors '91 THURMAN ALLEN, R W N0BLE,1s W H WISE Jmms A HIGDoN, W M TIPPY, RUSSELL K BEDGOOD H L RITTERI1 Sophomores '92 'VIELVILLE Woon H H HORNBRO0K,l' J S JOHNBON,' HARRY MoN'rGoMERY, J omr CARPENTER R Gr DUKES,T VV S RoRE,1 C S N0RT0N,9 H B RITTER 3 ORA F MERRILL,'1 HARRY DowLrNG, ' ORA M SEARLES I ' 'f QE-Qu' Og, W' af .- I . iff' ' - A L I 1,55 , T ' t V '.- QM ,I ' - ,l:g fJ'a,f' ,J .' ' , ' ' . , ' V ' . I ' . I I' . ., . . B. ,ai .3 ' ' - Q Y . , , Q- -Y , Wf? 1 -. ' , ' 3 -' 'I f ' ' ' ... .f ,, u I Q. ' . . . . if , A , 1 Jfr ix' -. . , N ffgf, ': , . Qi ., - I - . f,.T1?'7'l--Q., - I . ' . ' , ' 1 X L ' . 4 A ' :'. 1 'J x.' - ' ' ' u u -.525 -. - - ' I9 me I y - - - I - a lirpffi' V - A ' . ' 2-'ji A-',. - . ' V . . . . np ' - ' ' ' -- ,5 w1, I ' -- - . . If- ?2rf ,',,, I V - . l,s,:iI 44,2 1 . 1 ' 3 f - . 5.'..g,.1 . I f ' , ' ,g,.?I'?: . - , I . . . A , ,I I , A . I A . . .JIU I.5','N , I ' ' . . ' ?EgI1'.4-Ig '- . . Freshm en- 93. -ga, ' ' .- C: -iv. '. 4 , , ' ,, Ng ,FQ-1. j, , ' ' , ' I . . ' ' ' ' . '., -.,- H ' ' ' ' ' ' .5-C5 ,.ffE'.- A Q. Qhfjl . ' V ' ' 1 ' . lx , . .' ' -571' . - 1 -- -, . ' ' ' - ,, H igh.. 4 -V 4 Q.. H E H . , .11-'I 4-Vg .H , , , J' ,, ' , ,.I, -g:f.-g . - V, - . . . . ' NM, , I , ' N' V ' I A I A , I '. 1,1 J.. 'iii A - . ' . ggi? . U - 4 A -, : V . H ' . ' fy, ,,4f,A,1-- jf' - -.3 V . 5 f , . Y I- A - Y - ,sf'.iij.,, -4 I . . -. '- ' ' -' A , . 3 1 1 4-' .mf x .fi apps lplxa lxeta. Founder! ut De Punw University. Jmnnury 27. 1870. ALIIIIA Cli.u'Ti-:u, BI-Im Cn.u-TEE, DELTA Cniufrnn, , frfsxnoy C,,M,TER, IIETA CHAPTER, I?TA Cimivrnn, kwm CHMWER, L,umn,x Cimvrian, MU Cxr,u-1-ER, 0 NU CIIAI l'l-IR, , Omcuox CllAP'l'E1t, PI Cn.n-1-ER, t Rno C,,M..1.ER, Smxm Cxml-'rEn, TAU ClIAl I'EII, , UPSILON C,,M,,l,HR, PHI CIlAl PEn, Q Cnr CII.-u.,,.ER, . Comms-B1.,u:x .xx n Gum. wwicsosw UIIAPTER ROLL. De Pauw University. Indinnn University. . Illinois University. NVooster University. . Simpson College. Cornell Univeriity. . Kansas University. University of Vermont. . Alleghany College. I-Innover College. University of Southern California. Albion College. . University of Nebraska. University of Toronto. . Northwestern University. University of Minnesota. . 'University of Pacific. Syracuse University. t MEMBERS IN FACULTY. JULIA DEULEY, Emnxfx F.u.r,.iss, LOUISE Flsm-:n, BIIUNIE H,asKE1.L. x , v w ' tr v.' f 1 WWW Mns MRS MRS MRS MRS pp Alpha heta RESIDENT MEMBERS J B DEMOTTE Jomr BROWNING, A LAUGHLIN P S BAKER ALBERT ALEAUGH, BELLE HANNA, MARY IRVIN, LILIAN SOUTHARD, ELEIE ALLEN, MYRTLE ALLEN M J' BECKETT DR HANNA C R HAMMoL A L LOCKRIDG MARTHAJ RIDPATII, IDA BLACK, BELLE HAYs, EMMA RIDRATH, MARY BARWICK, MRs MRs MRS MRS ACTIVE MEMBERS Class of '90 ORA B NEWCOMER, MAUDE FULKERBON, HARRIET CLEARWATERB LULA O,KEEFE, MARGARET SMITH, OLIVE PoUoHER,' Loursn E.,RoMEL, A ' A ' ADDIE PRIEST, ANNIE HARVEY, LucxA RAY, GEBTRUDE MIKELS, GERTRUDE DE FOREST, IDA WEAVER, - MYRTLE SMYSER, , NELLIE DARNELL, ' Clabs of '91.' LENORE, ALLEMAN, E EDITH ,BAsYE, . . .4 EMMA LAMB,. . , INA J oHNsoN. Class of '92. ' Clubs of 'bi OLTVE BAYNE, , CARRIE SIMPSON, BERTHA DARNALL v ,. ,' BERTHA F1sEER,. A LELIA'L.F'LORER. ' VERNIE WEAVER, J Edsin CASE, ' -SALLIE BRIDGES, QLELiA NEWCOIHER. D 4 W, V. ng., . , . 4 . W, 3 QP Vik ,J R Q H 9 1. mm f wwf 9. I . 3 w --c x 4 Q if ,gx ?.fi'J1' ' 4,-,J 1 '11 1 5 Q 5,1 f 4 ' 5,1 V .,f I 175 L I ff, .u W a - 0, I . ,,,, , :NN-. mu Pm 1gMN-'I ALPHA, . J. EW V HAMI'S1I1nr: ALPHA, ERnoN'rA1.r-rm, , A SSACHUSFTTQ ALP M NE 4 - rm, W YORK Anmm, W YORK BETA, N I-1 New , YORK Gnmm L EW ' Yonk Diarxm, New PEN Pax PEN PEN YORK EPSILON, NSYLVANIA ALPHA, NsYLv.xN1A BETA, NSYLVANIA GAMMA, NSYLv.wr t D A 1 ELT X PENN I ' PENN Pima Vino SYLVANIA EPSILON, SYLVANIA ZETA, SYLVANIA ETA, . VIRGINIA ALPHA' ' V N14 BETA, , IRGI VIRG1 VIRGI NOM- NIA GAMMA, , NIA DELTA, NIA Zara, H CAROLN . A B 3 SOUTH 1-TA, Cmzou NA - KENTU Bmux, CRY ALPHA, . Delta Theta. Founded ISIS, Miami University. ROLL OF CHAPTERS. - Colby University. . . Dartmouth College. - University of Vermont. . Williams College. - Cornell University. . Union University. College of City of New York. . Columbia College. Syracuse University. . Lafayette College. - Pennsylvania College. Washington 8: Jefferson College. ' - Allegheny College. . Dickinson College. University of Pennsylvania. . Lehigh University. Roanoke College. University of Virginia. Randolph-Macon College. . Richmond College. Washington and Lee University University of North Carolina. University of South Carolilm. . Centre College. Q il x L' 'L . If . jrf uw ' 5 1 l .,, 4 ., A. . 1 J' 5,4 Y-'iii T ., U 4 ...rw . 'c . .f.:gv-Q , I , wr. psp H,-2: - .,v!'H'.' I :-34 Qaa.Z45.:. .K 1 2 .Ta , Q: A: . M .L -J H, l .' QF-fa .-. --., 'ci .5 in 54 I ,,,:,q.!N Wig .:a':'Q-53 51 'fi 3 .ue l Q-1153 'Vw ' . 1? . .Wifi w .-53 . ' rea. .Leap I 1, ,Q keg: 4. .,. M . .til Wifi' ' 1 fi -fa .Y 2 . M , fl 14 .14 'S . ff? ,- Wu, Gllxwlghigt, I 1 :Wu 'Q A. If .M p -v IQENTUCKY DlETiT.l, C+EoImIA ALPHA, . GEORGIA BETA, GI-:oIzc:IA GAMMA, TENNEssI-:E ALPHA, TENNESSEE BETA, AKLABAMA IXLPIIA, ALAIIAMA BETA, . ALABAMA GAMMA, MIssIssII'IfI ALI-HA, LOUISIANA .ALl'll.l, TEXAS BETA, . TExAs QIAMMA, OIIIo ALIIHA, OIIIO BETA, OHIO GAMMA, OIIIO DELTA, OIIIo EI'sILoN, OHIO ZETA, . INDIANA ALDHA, . INDIANA BETA, INDIANA CTAMMA, . INDIANA DELTA, .INDIANA EI'sII.oN, INDIANA ZETA, BIICHIGAN ALPHA, BQIICIIIGAN BETA, BIICIIIGAN GAMMA, ILLINOIS AIil'llrl, ILLINOIS DELTA, . ILLINoIs l+JI'sILoN, ILLINOIS ZETA, . WVISCONSIN ALPHA, Mrssovm ALPHA, Mlssoum BETA, IowA AI.l'IIrk, IowA BETA, . IQANSAS ALPHA, . NEBRASKA ALIIHA, CALIFORNIA AliI'lI.l, ' ,iii 'Alta B 4 v . r Central University. University of Georgia. Emory College. Mercer University. Vanderbilt University. University of the South. University of Alabama. Alabama Polytechnic Insti Southern U niversity. tut6 University of Mississippi. Tulane University of Louisiv-Us University of Texas. Southwestern University. Miami University. Ohio Wesleyan University- Ohio University. University of Wooster. Buchtel College. Ohio State University. Indiana University. Wabash College. Butler University. Franklin College. Hanover College. De Pauw University. University of Michigan. State College of Michigan. Hillsdale College. Northwestern University. Knox College. Illinois Wesleyan University- Lombard University. University of Wisconsin. Universitv of Missouri. Westminster College. Iowa Wesleyan University. State University of Iowa. University of Kansas. University of Nebraska. University of California. 4 7. rf 'I . , n .1 MY! wb imvanngso xl. S+ X' -r 'Y 4,4 t , . f - 1 'Y .. Q 1 1 ,L . f -I l N. . r gf M' ' 'f' 7 .-N Q Q -I -,gil-' ' ' X f I 1 'Q i , Q, 'I l, - V 5 1 r - -- -'11 I WN M H h Pqiira h X . . . , , ' g , 'b . V - P rf 1' , 5' ' C 1 f ' Q . 1 f e . . f , V A' 1 V , 1, , v ' ,ll J lv N - .f Q ' M 5353 4 53 4 4 4 4 n ,Phi eHa SK heta. Local Chapter. Established 1877. WQQQQQCGTQQQWRN FRATRIQS IN URBE. 1- Nm, A. M., G. 0. Moon:-:, A. M., F- MIOORE, A. M., J. L. R.xNn1:L, A. B., 'V ING McL1c.'xx, A. B., J. R. Mlnnnxc, A. M. W. M. RANDEL, A. B. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. lf- M- Mn.1.1-:n,' 12. G. Rocsxoyyi EV, A, BASTI-xN,5 SAM LI0RI!IS0N,7 J- Eh. NEFF!! 1 ERNEST MOORE-I2 Jorrx CHalFFEE,H Hom-zu HALL us Y H- B. P.vr'roN,'B Clmsrlclsx Sm,m,2D Seniors. R. H. Rrcxmnnsf C. W. TmaA'1'.' .fm1.iors. O. F. DwY1c1:,' I. E. N1aFlf,9 A. R. P1m:s'r.'0 J. Y. T.xKAsUm, Sophomorea. Q GUY OsnonN, Freshmen. W. D. FULKERSOXI5 HAI.. LEWMANF' F. A. PnEs'roN, WVARD W1I.1.rAnrs, I WN 'ff' 'ff' 53-535353635323 4- 4?3433453453'53'534?3'534?34l3 4.-:1'4!. ',, . N, I .4 A vm - .4 ' . iw! .- .1-A . Y-L. . 1 img :LJ ..., . iff? A V ,.,. 9,3 . 4-' . im! f.-- ,JK 1-40- ' mi. ..,, 13? Q 7 A all ...A ..Q Kappa appa Gamma. Founded Oct. 13, 1870, at Monmouth, Ill. Local Chapter founded March 25, 1875. COLORS-LIGIIT AND DARK BLUE. wwfoow CHAPTER ROLL. BOSTON UNIVERSITY, . . ST. LAWRENCE UXIVERSITX', SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY, . , CORNELL UNIVERSITY, . BUCIITEL COLLEGE, . , WOOSTER UNIVERSITY, ALLEGIIENY COLLEGE, . , OIIIO STATE UNIVERSITY, . INDIAN.-x UNIVERSITY, . . DE Piww UNIVERSITY, IIILLSDALE COLLEGE, , BUTLER IINIVERSITY, ADRIAN COLLEGE, . , XVfgCONSIN UNIVERSITY, . ILLINOIS XVESLEYAN UNIVERSITY, . , NORTIIWESTERN IINIVERSITY, BIINNESOTA UNIVERSITY, , SIMPSON COLLI-:c:I-:, . Iowa IINIVERSITY, . , IQANSAS UNIVERSITY, . NEBRASKA UNIVERSITY, . , RIISSOURI UNIVERSITY, Boston, Mass. Canton, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y. Ithaca, N. Y. Akron, Ohio. Wooster, Ohio. Meadville, Pa. Columbus, Ohio. Bloomington, Ind. Greencastle, Ind. Hillsdale, Mich. Irvington, Ind. Adrian, Mich. Madison, XVIS. Bloomington, Ill. Evanston, Ill. Minneapolis, Minn. Inrlianola, Iowa. Iowa City, Iowa. Lawrence, Kan. Lincoln, Nell. Columbia, Mo. 4 . If A '. Q45-.YE V-, :Q 4 ,. ..- , ,5:,, f Q, f ,xf 4 4 'Q 'ag Q W ,f,. xfiygb, 4 h , 'A 5 iii. 5 E' :gf 1 sf A 1' Lf V ' A . I ' L-it I: ' , , 1.5 I '11 1 fj Q- .' 6.4. ' 3 A xi ' L .1 SH .zz . . 1' 5, ,Al ff., ' A t ' 35 :F ' a X - fi'-I ,ff ' Q... .K N 'gqfllixzgij A fy 1 .,,4 - 1 ,. V' R 1 ' V ' 1'-'V 1: 3' -ai appa appa A we BTYTXHNB. f RESIDENT MEMBERS. W TUNIE HAYs, RosE J OBLIN MRS. Pnor. LoNanEN, MARY LANGSDALE, RODA KELLY, ' ' ' F 1f0RENCE ALLEN, IDA ANnEEsoN, EVA BOWER, MRS -T R TUNNEL IDA OLIVER HATTIE JOSLYN I P 'Studying in Germany Mns. Pnolr. NEFF, SUs1E KELLY, KATE STONE, MINETTA TAYLOR, J Essn: Cowoxm., Mas. M. M. BAcrrEr.n RosA MAnQU1s, l Mus. F. G. G1LuonE, EMMA BICKNELL Susm Horwood, LEILA Rouen ACTIVE MEMBERS Class of '90 MINNIE ROYSE, SIDELIA STARR LULA B WARD Class of '91 LTLLEN ATWATER, JEsa1E NUELE Essm ROSE, NELLIE WRIGHT Clan of '99 NELLIE FATouT Class of '93 HALQYQNE MCCURDY BESBIE Hnmuoxe DESSIE CAnNEs ZELLA WARD, BLANCHE GELWIOK ConA EnnxNanousE MARY BICKNE J Ess1E MONTGOMERY HALLTE HALL JEAN NELSON, OLLIE HAYs JESBIE NEFF, MAGGIE PATTEnsoN ANNA L CHAFFEE! BYRDE NEFF EMMA Conn DovA LLoYn, MYRTLE Gnvnn, NELLIE HANNA, IIUCILE MARSHALL, MINNIE BEEM, ER ku Delta Tau Delia. Founded, Bethany College. 1360. 956 Cotons-ROY.u. Pulu-Ln. OI.n Gotn, YVIIITH. CHAPTE Allegheny College. Washington and Jefferson College. Bethany College. Lafayette College. Stevens Institute of Technology. , Franklin and Marshall College. Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Lehigh University. ' Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Tuft College. Boston University. University of Michigan. Cornell University. Albion College. Hillsdale College. Michigan Agricultural College. Ohio Wesleyan University. Kenyon College. Butehel College. R ROLL. 1 Adelbert College. Ohio University. Hanover College. Indiana University. De Pauw University. Butler University. ' University of Iowa. Simpson College. Iowa State University. University of Colorado. University of Minnesota. University of Wisconsin. Vanderbilt University. University of Mississippi University of Georgia. Emory College. University of the South. Tulane College. University of Virginia. O . . gpm --'bwwfwseseaeseeeseewg-' Delta Tau Delta. Beta Beta Chepter. Established in 1882. X . FRATRES IN URBE. .EMBA B. EVANS, M. D., CHAS. W. LANnEs, A. M , AMES M' H-WS, . JAMES A. Sco'r'r, Axvrnkm Tnoor. FRATER IN FACULTATE. Hmuu: A. MILLS. FRATRESIN UNIVERSITATE. Q A Seniors-'90, V VWJORTH E. CAYLOR, , Cmnnns H. Poucrgxm, Annan W. Fnonmn, Rox' Wssr. A Q 'S Juniors-'91, ' , 'mu' S- STRATTAN, . Ani-nun J. Tuma. ' T ' P ' ' Sophom5res-'92. ' . Q SHAD' S- ALLEE, A ' J ons C. CAMPBELL, YDNEY E. EAns, SELDEN F.SMYs1m. A. J , V ' Freshmen-'98. L- - -- ' Gosm-11 C. Cnow, Howfmn Rove, , BOMB F- Mum., J osmru C. VEBMI!-XA, LAM A. Wnrroomu. V 1 -- Gm 'H' 9 ' ,' ' 'jf- 1 Wham? . :. ' . , ,A ...,,gg.fr?.T.... l,:.,.l.,, ,,,,,,g- . V ,wx V, 1. 'AM 1' . A I L,y.Afae'. up-Eym w, I'. ,Ifg.' f 4 ,.w4A,L.lMf.., 5X W J 5, ' 12, Y, , .+A . . H. ,, -AW, Q W? -- Q wr' 'SL-'aw-ni ,- A- , ' ,f',,-t1:'.u.E . M .,'v,. w- .1 ..,v. 1.5. . 'fl ,, 1 'Iv ' ' Alpha Chi Gmega. Founded in the School of Music, De, Pauw University, October 15, 1885 Beta. Chapter is established at Albion College. Albion, Mich. SK FRATERNITY CoLons-OLIVE GREEN AND SCAELET. ' 'RESIDENT MEMBERs.' JULIA BLACK, BEssIE Gnooms, ' A V BELLE HAMMoND, . A ETHEL Q. SUTIIERLIN. - ' MEMEERS TN FACULTY. I. LENA EVA ALDEN, Mns. ANNA ALLEN .W ANNQIE L. BEINGER, J EBSIE Y. Eox, . LAURA MAnsn, LENA V. SCOTTQ A ML JANET'WILSON, PEARL ALLEN, u I . . Mns. ORA P. J ozni, SMITH, . H ALICE WENTWORTH. ACTIVE MEMBERS. ' ' EMMA Cox, LILLIAN E. Moonm, ALTA M. ROBERTS, - ' DAISY D. STEELE, MYRTLE BoLTz, OLIVE CARTER. -1 . - Q M-52 6? ml 1659 M51 6351 Qwmz-gbqgg-zungfiixb Qs My Q - ' 'lr I Q 5 v M , v 1 Ex Y. X . . , ,. . -9' :3 VM. gf, , - viin fkv - Iv yi ,ir 'Q 5 I . Founded in 1872 at Syracuse, N. Y. Local Chapter established June 18, 1887. Couons-SILVER GRAY AND Bonnmwx. A' GAMMA' n Syracuse, N. Y. Boston, Mass. Evanston, Ill. Gpeenca tle, Ind Ithaca, N. Y. ' Mmom P N' ' D, ULBE, Busan: BARNES. GEBTRUDE Simson, MARIE N U'r'r, FLQRENQJE Kmrr, EPA ELL1s, SALT-IE Hofmmx C www CARRIE SHANK, MURTIfnABBOTT, DonA REAVILL, Pnnmnnm Enms, Mmnm TRIBBY. X n l v l ? n 1 1 w 1 H , -Agfa' ,.,.uff - x WE EK alta psilon. ne Pauw Fraternity. Established in 1887. FRATRES IN UNIVERSITATE. Seniors-'90. ' Q WILLIAM O. Bow:-:ns,' RALi'l-I W. BEs'r,' JOHN W. S1.Uss.' b H J zmiora-'91, A L OWARD M. BmcnLANn,' EDGAR E. Ruonnsf Quxs F. DIMMI'l'T,n Ennis E. SLUSB,.A F ghvnnr B. CRANEJ5 EN'roN -W. B00Tll,B WILLIABI A. Tuorwmmo D. P. MCCLQED, A , ' Fresjzmen-'9.5'. 1-FFRANK EVANg,l4 AMES M. HAmu.'roN, ' Jolm Smvl-:N. Sophomores-'92. . VXLVIN O. Rona, OzonA T. SnAnP,f' E Awrnun WooDAnn, FR.lNK A. CALDWELL Emma E. MEECHADIJ bwz sua WILLIAM W. LEWIS,mH I Q- ' VM' L...---, . ,.. ni ...., .,.. P f - N' J lu : XA Q '1 ' , Q,'1 Nl' X iq' . .,7 '7 '.j x X P40 fjfvf.. if 10,240 ' G T' I' NU X f X' fy 0 . -. T' 3 5 , -u. ' 4-1.61. 7 224 f . W2 ,f fffffgff f-Q .ff ...,w,f- We yi, I n find, 3.:y,7f,W gf, f. MIL, I .H , ' fi ' I ' fbi wi 'W MH fulfill . 'ln Uflflhlff-'x Y. M. C. A. A OFFICFRS. A. T. BRIGGS, . . . . President. E. G. Roaxox, l . Vice-President. R. 111. Looms, Corresponding Secretary. U. Snsmronr, . . Recording Secretary. R. TYEAL, . . . Treasurer. 95? Y. M. C. A. OFFICERS. ORA Nnwcmnan, .... President. Bnssm Rosie, . Vice-President. Fnxxm Rorn, . Corresponding Secretary. ANNA Buxamz, . . Recording Secretary. Liaxonm AI,I.mmN, . . . Treasurer. SK PHILOMATHEAN LITERARY SOCIETY. Founded, 1870. OFFICERS. NF:r.1.11c F.u'oUT, . . . . President. Diassnc Cmxs, . . Vice-President. I'Lu.cm' DICCUIIDY. . . Treasurer. Nm.r,1F:Iim1mLL, . . Secretary. .x. 'W mvxu-I-w DE PAUW CONCERT COMPANY. Al.1c'1a xVliN'l'WOR'l'lI, . . . AR'l'1lI'R U'Xmm., . . .XIDOLPII SITIIEI .Lullzs II. Huwn, . . . DE PAUNV T II. L. MAxn'1cL1,, Jour: INIILLIS, . J. V, Z.x1c'm.xN, Cu.xs.D1xuN, .l.SL'IUIID'l', . . Soprano. Yiolinist. Yioloncollo. 1,i2U1iSt. SK EMPERANCE MALE CLUARTET. . . . . . . . . First Tenor- . Sc-cond Tenor . . First Bass. Second BaSS- 'E .1-' '--' E-n' E J 3331 E E f? .4.i5g5 , . H , wa af W e 53, Kg 11- f:'f,I'!J.. I' G YA' ahh QBQX 2, rr' A: MKS EPSILON BETA CHI FRATERNITY. cd in 1Hr4A. ll. W' grrll:-1l'r.vl:, .El.u-14: XX lCN'l'Wfl!i'l'll, l,:m'm IMJXT, luvlnum fmmjnn, LMC MVRQPF1-A ,x1.1:lam- H Hpml lhvlxrlxf Nl.x1:r:.u:1,l'hxlIl1l, llmww 1 Ima? litlqvll lux V 1 D Xlglwlz UNH, Q1 ICURIGIC Xhc1,1xm:x, LEM gmiwm Imlsx' Nlllcxcus, ljmHH'wF H lim-: l,J1'n1l,m, . . l lmvmg Srl1wlxl,.:l-zlzs, upqprl'1:1:,nmj4:qfIi1ixlum, ILXN BICIJUV 'lTN, IAVLI. lxhhl4'h,, . 1 'f-HA, URVIl,l,l'1 Nlvhlxsls. 554 DORM BANQl7IiTING CLUB. I' 4: '- ' ., in un XX Hman., Alumnae Numan, rl! A ' . . , 4 I. Luci MM lim lum,.x1S1mu'x, 1' l.llIg1gNl,E I H Ymrxuy Asn lhmwx, U, Kllxlhll Frm MH. .3 ,...- 11 un. 1, fit! 47 X XX, BIOLOGICAL CLUB. O. P. .II-INKINS, Ph. D., ..... President. H. L. BURR, . D. T. IAICIJOUGAL, - Mmfllmrs. R. K. Blcnaoon, A. T. BRIGGS, C. W. QIREEN, J. A. GImIcNs'rRIsIa'I', . Secretary. Treasurer. D. IV. LEWIS, L. H. IAIURLIS, w ln. C. n'IIN'l'0NE, G. C. PRICE, J. H. Uranus, H. B. R1'r'I'1zR, Urms. IIODELL, F. T. Rum: UNIVERSITY WHIST CLUB. E. ld. Rnolms, ...... President. 1-I. C. BINKI,m', . Secretary. A. J. TAYLOR, . . . Treasurer. Illlinllnws. Swss, E. E. Rnomcs, G. R. W1cI.IxoRx, S. S'rRA'r'rAN, H. C. BINKLEY, F. LI'1 1'I.IcToN, C. AVAIHERS, 'PAUL IIIILLER, D. T. MCDQIIGAI M. SxII'r1I, XV. M. C.xYLoR, A. L. T.xx'LoR, HARRISON, E. NV. S'1'Irc:KY, R. I-I. ILICIIARDS. DE PAUW MALE CHIARTET. W. B. LYNCH, ...... First Tenor. A. S. LURINIQ, . . Second Tenor. C.xsII II'ICIVIULLEN, . . First Bass. B. FRANK GREGORY, . . . Second Bass. Q6 1 1'l'xL Tm'mn'. C. E. CR.xwIfoRn, P. M. MIIILIEII. J irx! Brlxs. C. W. MCMULLEN, W. R. HORNRAKIQR. DE PAUW APOLLO CLUB. Sammi 7'c'nor. M. H. TURK, E. F. BROWN. Scrfmrfl ,lz'r1nx. W. H. Wxsrc, XVILL SIIANK. SM f LMCDOUGAL XIZLKER, . . Chaplain and Pilot. L I n ZARING, Lvnu, MANDOLIN AND GUITAR CLUB. F Mcmdolina. 1 Guigarx, ERSNK DOWNEY, C. E. CRAWFORD, ' ' PORTER- Homme PENNELL. A SK RED HEADED CLUB. INSIGNIA ORDINIS.-WHITE IHORSE. COLOR-RED. Grand Headlight, . SUNSET HARIIISON. Members. S BZRREL EVANS, REDDY Hua., RFICK JOHNS, , Gonx' SPEARS, BIQD KORN COBB, ' Cnmsox WARD, C ILLIANT CASE, AUBURN Jonssos, A EHESTN'-'T HUNT, SCARLET Musa, ARLYDAWN Turous, AUTUMN LEAVES Tnonsmmo CO-REDS. SIMIBON, Muuzns, Noam. 556 CANOE CLUB. One cruise annually. 1 - . '. . Commandant. . Photographer and CBUIP Follower . . Forager and Custodian of SPi1'it5- FLEET. L ' , Lrnmlz, A Mnmnc, OLUE- U w . .x- 5 r r 1 If - . A- ff- IVIMQCHAM, , G- lx. NVUODARII - A mrlclmfxx, MILITARY BAND. 1 JOHN E. Hmnox, W- ll. EVANS, J. V. ZA n'1'xmN. C. XV. Gluclax, FRANK 1+lv,xxs, M. Sums, XV. D. fIIGlNlN, FRANK C.xI,1mw14:l.l,, He uhm. fludcth rm wife. tiudeth Il good thing. !Ymm'm'ml. Bu'K 'U', Rlclavlcs. G Almost l'z'rsuruI1'rl. - WA - - JOHN l'M Rv ROBINSON, MvDm'u.xl,, W ' NIILLICII Flnxsllzlz, Hnxmuy ' ' 1 1-4A'l l',Xy JAS. H. Ilmvl B Unflwr l'rm1'ir'I1'on. I. NV X . , J F 1QLklzli, xvnsry SLVSH, - J. r - 5 L H, TAx'r,on, Mmmrsox. Iffl0kxl1'1l1'rx. t 1 L,.umu, jglvmg, fllffdflx. I'W '1 3'1'0N, Tuuxmc, DE PAUW WHEELCLUB. D-11 MCDoLmA1,, F - 1- QT. Rocaxox Cl . . ' IA1u.hb I'Io1ncm,, i1'El'T.w. M.. I' Blimm, ' I IU- NEFF, CT. O, ROSS, GEORGE Mum., F. M. Gmacaolu' I X ' 1. lf. DIMMITT, Y, W. H. ARlsl'vKl.11:, H. F.P1cxN1cl.1., E. Km.sm', F. M.'xLm', LEi:1JL'1mAM, I'IAnlcx' TIIo1:N1wnu, Am.m Blzocxw.-xv, A. .Touxz-sox, 1iIClIA RD Him., J. A. PAT'l'El!SOX. ? E' E? ,Q 1. Lf' x-,xg . L- 3. M ri.. 4. PLY ffirifw X.Qg?2g2. if 's5'1g'Y . ef., .,f,'., v Nr -f .2 1. 1- Eggialfg. - , .... Irv A 5 xgf'-3 liwifff '- effhii- e?r i:f.'H- . wa' 3 ' ,. 3.. -:ff lfzygfff t 51.'x, lf Qflff' 'Z ' V 1 1. Cf If A ... A. N . 52. fl f f...-.n rf H' v ff. '4 QR, 1. 4. x, . .1 H5 1 .,,1., nf 1. ' ,Zh . ,L N L 'tm W' -gf..-. . M .. if-?-.. , M 3-.4 ..,. 2, F COLLEGE CHOIR. BELLE A. MFKNSFIEIFD, , Pos'r, 599 ff STYX CLUB. J Emcms, BEALS. BADGE-CEIIBERUB. COLORS-RED AND BLACK. Q Membership limited to th1rteen.J W- A- BAE1-mx I G- R- NVELBORN, A- R. Pun-:s'r, R- W. NOBIFE, ' W- H. NVIBE A- J. TAYLOI: ! F. M. SMITH. THE SKULL. BADGE-SKULL. COLOR-BLACK. QMembership limited to elghm CHARTER MEMBERS. OBINSQN, R. O. WEST, ' ACTIVE MEMBERS. -T. E. NEFF, E- C. RIDPATII, S- S. S'rRA'r'roN, M I. E. NEFF, J.H.R S. Momusou, J. A. PATTERSON, C. T. Emcxson, F. M. DOWNEY, W. M. TIPFY, E. W. S'rucKY. J. 'CQ WALTEHS. H. C. BINKLEY, R. E. Locxn, HAL Rr'r'rEn, Rnomcs. 956 CH UMPS. COLORS-BRIGHT YELLOW, ST. PATRICK? GREEN. p ' LENORE ALLEMAN, OLIVE BAYNEL MARGARET Smrrn, CARRIE Smrson, 0L1vE Poucrmn, BERTH4 DAENALL, A LULU O,KEEFE, JEss1E NoBLE.- -' . 1 1:71 'f-'34 .rv v- BRAINS. 1 CoI.ons-Roxzxl. l'UllPI.l'1, ST. 1'A1'im:K's Games. EMMA Linrn, INA Jonxsex, Enrrn Bixsvlc, Anime l?nI1cs'r, Blass Rosie, lyevrsla S'rUc'KY, Emnax A'1'w.x'r1cn. PAN-THUGATERIAN CLUB OF DE PAUW UNIVERSITY. emflel-ins. Lima Wann, En1'rnB.xsv1c, . . Fm XVELLS, ANNA BUNGEH, . President. Vice-President. Secretary. Treasurer. THIRD ANNUAL CONCLAVIC. lN'I.xm'n 1, 1889. ' Ybusfx. Toast-Mistress, Pnmf. B. A. lllixxsifm We Ourselves, . . . Sweet Sounds from the South, . The Latest Sound Wave, The New Regilnelltalsf' . Seng uf the 'l'hngatei. The S0-called, . . . ' . . , To See Ourselves as Others See Us, Our Invalirlsj' ilIARtil'ERI'l'lC,H .... Noble Duke of The Pan-Hellenic-As it XVas, Is and York, March. Shall Be. U The Biological Specimen, . . . . . The Study Bell, . When I was a Prep, . , Lucius MA'l rl Ln. . lNl.xm:.un-:'1'Snrrll . lI.v1 rnc Picnlcrxrl . lf'l,e Wm.l.H Mvlu Bmclcu Mlxxuc llasicl-:lm .lrxssuc COWGILII . . . Luvm RAY news, Lenlsla S'1'l'l'l:Y Annm I-IAYH . l'lr,r..x ADAMS Zicmnx II. XVAIH7 Mixznc llIcA1ncn Seng. K Grand Finale. -.v i' ' ' ..f U xv? gun 5 H v I 4., ,.i . L.,, E 5 S E z 4 5 i 5 2 A i I I H flap ' ' m y x I : iAJ?X':ST f'i-.XXXL A1 f ,,f '-'a'! ff 1g'f 'f .L lj 'f -fl! b ff Y Law.-:wf gfa, , '- f- :za '-f, ,, 1 ' N -19, 1 HU' ' Uf f 'mC.'gvy Y H '?'?ffH '- 'W WI' N 1 GLY c EIUN-F' ? A V. All 1,,2gf:,f.,w : 74 ' fe .ai I ' .-1-i i? lf, f - 'A ' wasf f.-.. -:w:af,f'4,,wif a' '1...wv.'f:5ef'v 'v t 1, Ks ., qu. hH'J'-- 4 5'fx'lW'faf'f ff ,, , . i -We-ssfS3EigafefrwgScif?gb6e932iB!.iQ4gf?9W42ibzgagfsjmf 51-f f - 'L'3'W514?'?+f '-30 -Y? EW ?'?iff..4'W'. I '2Z ff 'I'2.'2''533f'e'f W'7f'L7fi1fG4'ff?3 ' 6??f,'Y f4?W'W f2f'7A ' V ' me,g'QgeQf1ffv-RWk9-wiwviwa'WWWe?fWi?faw?'aT59i'ff,es2ie44i?,iWv A Y if 2 9 , .. MM X.,--.U v. ,vw qt' Y-1, My 4.1 ,,g wm,J,j1f 1 1,11 I, 42,1 M ,.1 'SQQQ-'26iM.Xh9 giiqfmggjmflffg-Qgwyal qv,ytq5f m3xWJ,ZofzZ ' '-QWZQ' fyflfj f XM, ',Q w ,,1 f'. 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W V' A MLW !ZM21l ?1 , f 1911, I. , if 4 ,5fQ',, jfiQ1,2ffq,f'!' w' 1 , H 3 5,521 'iff' WU Nr 'V E311H''fF2f5W5'ff1f?ff,?ff5Efff-55:2!f'5:1 :17'?3--A aff- Www fi f ' , f n-D+' WA.f WITH'841ef2f','!:r4f-:Wi'ff' 4 l.' I f iv-Mm. . f 1,1-A, -ypp,QJ,'1z.-44.f..v,'v f rv. 11 -f ff.-',1 ,rw-5-4 1 ' v mi Q4 ' '72f52. W WM, I gl',5.f..-km I wi V42 I vjxgglqhlaf-A-Hgwy' 44, xm.i'?g,gv4::,,gl Mix: . Ik'-'-lwiffii 1 fp? ' lQI 'F9i!j,!lggfi , fjyf- -gh, '- , Is MI . 1 JM'-kill f' P1 - -EWLMJ3 1 'Qi' .'vA i 'WI A . f - z W77'i'35' ff W 9 W2f5L2nK 1 in :ff wwf-, . .w!' Armin 5 il! xg' .2 .3 ...Q -. R Q, ffffqq' , fJ4'I1, ' V -.ffzglgfi y,1,4 j . 1 -'.,:Iv, cu, y ' 5250 94321, 5 ' -' x iff- XX f.'-- Y 'wv? - H 1 'MW -E51 f Q f 1 K M .ff . ,D y if ' g , 9 f ' - UM l,' ' I3 , .W . if W I A f'!U1W ?9f, A... , J ww f f ivff + 'lf ew ff riff? A W ++, M , -V x xg F w , 'lf ggvy 3!'Wf'f1,' ' u l Q:'f'? :1j':','f' VZ: N , X I1 ..,, wg ,.,v,4,.pYf,,4 .ww , sw . l - v'exswL. Huff-M.-f ,frm12.1'fAf':-JAM , - 1 w i- ' ffm f N Mfa fff:L.ff1if:memffefgs V: W f!f'f 10 l ff 1-Q im . :W 2 V. f '- my . ' . 14. f' Will'- 7 ly' if .' -yi I ' I '- w ifaz' ,VE Vx 'ff' ,y ' V ' '- .' y Y' ' H :x g Q, ,f f I ,' If yf 4fffffgfg,v,1j ff :sv ' iw M1 f , -Q , - 'alff irlly f xl X u - gfsy - ' ' 7 f 4.-if f xx.. so Y . fi Personals. lNo'ri:.-Our fighting editor is Mr. .loliu L. Sullivan. Any one dissatisfied with Clic Mn:.son will please call on him. Satisfaction gnaruuteed.l Hmm. Rrrri-zu .isp lI.umv Mox'roonr:nv- llappy as cannibals arm nfl or as live hundred swine. I'Iooni.i.- Much too good for this wicked world. Com:- Ol1! wad some power the giftie gic us, To sec onrsels as ithers see ns. llonsnnook- The devil is an egotist, I know. llIcl.lolfo.u.- While tumbling down the turhid stream, Lord love ns, how we apples swim. l'lllIl'KSON-UA very ancient and lish-like smelling hair Bunn- Beauty itself doth of itself persuade The eyes of men without an oratorf' oil. Z1ci.I,.x IVARD- And as the bright sun glorilies the sky, So is her face illnmined hy her eye. .Tonx IROUINSON'-'H Art thou not half myself? One faith has ever hound us, and one reason guided our wills. Noam- A .gentle little lad. IVr:nn- Hang all the husbands. Lookn- A handsome youth, so sweet and innocent. X Hours- O, Lord, how lazy. lNIAc'ili.ix- Mistake no more, I am not a musician. llowxicv- I ani not shaped for sportive tricks. llicpooon- A plain, blunt man. .l'iI.4JIlER'-HA harmless child. l.'o1.k- Did you ever see one freshcr?,' WA no- My heavens! What a prodigy. Zalzixcs- Wish I was funny. Rum'- That man was cut ont to become a bachelor. EMMA Uorrnv- That sweet young innocent. Wowrn Clxvtou- Five parts brass, Three parts monkey, Eiglit parts check, And twenty parts donkey. Nicifif- I-Ie is a soldier iit to stand by Caesar, and give direction lJ,xsnoc1.r.- I-le droops and hangs his discontented head. liurxicmzx'- llow happy could 1 he with either, Were t'0ther dear charmer away 9 But while ye thus tease me together, To neither a word will I say. J 'ffl' dai ',:' of l..1 a ' ,..,e if .5 , 11.453 igQi3j3:':-v5v.:.,- e . 2 H M ' , lnq N , ...ti 6 0' ips X . P Wm it 'UW Pmwzim- There IS a fatal Fury in your VISRQQ. It blazes herce and mellaces destruction. iI::5I:wR0YS1C: I have dependence on another's will. - Ann- Phe mild expression spoke a mind SIDELI X SH In duty.iirm, composed, resigned. Lum ,Pima Mill- Une Juste et Jolie madamoiselle. ' - A - In mathematics he was greater Than Tycho Brahe or Erra Patcrg For he by geometric scale DOTF V-N Could take the size of pots of ale. . A NVhence IS thy learning? Hath thy toil HOME xKlfJ'e1:clJooks consumed the midnight oil'! ' I - A tn- In small proportion we Just beauties see, Tm! W-HB .And.in short but wide measure life may perfect be. '- e wise with speedy HMM, Mg:Jf001 at iprty isa fool indeedd' 1 H Moon-N xuum- An angel s sweet it it resembles thee. - 1 h! who can tell how hard it is to climb GEM F The steep where 'Fame's proud temple shines afar? U' Mllxels- ' Tis beauty truly blent, Whose red and white Nature DORSFTT H O' . I hand laid on. ' - . tor a kingdom which I could rule. y 's own sweet and cunning W - . . . born JSE The tnnes are out of joint. O! cursed spite that eer I was J 0 Set them right. EA v Q X ' ' . . . e loveln rs. N1f.i,soN- L1race was in her cyeg in every gesture dignity and Mi: . RH'A- Language, thou art too narrow and too weak to ease us HOW. gx'i'xl?cieiFis'-- 'Tlie seals of ollice glitter in his eyes. WEMQORN-cliere is no courage but in innocence. H FRASFR-U C The rabble gather round the man of nelvs. PORTIQR-uEo1n1ng events cast their shadows before. MCKQF-M Otefnal smiles his emptiness betrays. MAR H h' lshawin . n DUR3i:n'rHS1wf1'1'11- Thy words are like the notes of dylrlg SKINS- EMMFM-H Tele seems to be saying too plainly: Admire me. OU - Ilorist to the queen. 1 'rut nv 'A daughter of the god , Tall and divinely fair MUPH I have, alas' philosophy medicine, Jllflspruden ' mlm S A nd, to my cost, theology mm S 0 sweet and voluble in his discourse veal. h great X L unison By my troth, Nerissa, my Vorld h ! N CF U Tl e time was when a man had lost his wits, 6 little body 15 ' . J . ,, x.5'r. :N . 14,-ly' . fn' 1. .wh , 1,99 i. l .Q V ,W . -, -V., ,fic ' ,511 N +0 Aff? w H i we . qs 1 -ff' ,, . -Ni fp '- u n i i P if 1 ' Wir' '-24 Ei ,IP 1 i'f534't 5 275 I ,.-,,,5 -1: .fffty :.W'R - ww ' f, ..- ' 11' Z .5- -r l l il' Cm cgi. 'A 31: 1 ' - c B 1 in . . , -U , . . . . ce too, Mevxlii. n ' M , . ,i-uw. rf?-1, ' I ' -H 1 . . - n . 1.4. er' . , ' oily tl . CA I 1 A H , . aw y Of sjtlrxza JE! is U - V X P . 1 ' glrii F Q - rs f :Vffflp 2, ' . - - ' .ss 1 d die. I T . ' wif e si if ,t'L4l,.f3 , 9' .iii A . '1'liwf gf,.f,. I ' Wim. . ' N . 3 PM Wil? 15 gzfilfir . r 1 1 L . -',f1v.,ij1',- .Sify y g: ga.-Q ' , Hifi. 'W f,Q.Q1.. 'w 1, I j.52LK-'-Yei Q!h, ax , N . wifi?-t lzie . , A ,nj f i Rf W ,W M- v LH ':,.,M,g:.431,f, . A 1 .. -N 1 Ml . . . .- - 1 4 s nv -um., J Q --.QW- L. 4 ' - X. Ahlhln 5 T : l i IT V-A ri 1' 7 N 4 Field Dag at cz ?auvx7. SK' -llfffyfw for l'onI4'sIs on l fr'lrl Ilrljj. Dm:s1c'r'r. Suhsniruted fc W WSWS, Sxslmolu, l:.3yvf,'.f,'. M,xx'm: Uowraxlm, Um'-.Vflr l:1Il'l'. O. F. Dwyg-r, ,... 2 min. 10's soc. R' R- -IUIWS, . . . 4 hours, 3675, sec. Slunfliny High .lmup. Y H 0'fe-D1Sup1wa1'od from sight and has now-r heou seen B W0rs-Fniivcl to get his foot OIT tho grouml. Um'-flfilf' Walk. Tl l Paul Miller. Mario Nutt. US Face resultvd in a prcmuturv lie. Timo: li hrs. 40 min. 13 sec llnlvllr' lflll'I'. 10 sec. Dr. Post, , . 10113 sec. Dr. Bassett, . , C llllllllllfl' 7'l:rulf'. James II. Ilowv, .,,..... 150 fi. U- T. Mclimignl-Throw thu hammi-r through Prof. llowe. Distauco, 25 inches, scant. .MU Yards llusll. h '4'5', Ccircular motiouj . . 56 soc. J '1l'4iS. Twill, . , , , . XX mderl at ll 51 l Puff' Vullll, lligdon-Vaultorl over the college tower. Erickson, in attempting.: to follow, stinmhlecl on the Lower and fell to the grrmml. The soft mnml of the campus walk :lull his own elasticity protected him from serious injury. - l u0l-Hull lx'i4'll'. Ro' West, . . . 1 mile. B Hull 7'lll'0lI', Frank Smith, . . 224 I't,. HSM in. lf1'r'yrlw lfrnv'-Um' ,lIilf'. hee Durham, . . . Wg min, Ilan Mellmigral, ..... l hr. 1 sec. lfursl' l:lll'1','7'l'llI'k, Um' Jffff. Prof. Uurlmrt. Prof. Jenkins. A fler I4 trips around the truck this race was rleclarerl :L tie. Dice were thrown. Uurlmrtz successful. ljlllljf ,:Ill'l'. Juniors-llarper's 'I'l':u1slnLimi of llennosthenes. Snplmnnores-Inferlinenr on Ilnrace. Decided in favor of the Juniors, on account of longer experience 115 jockeys. is V -1-fx .1 1 .. .'-' :Li-V: l ,- i ,V VA i N 4 - ifw Fi? 'i X Jr kdm. fu-pxg 1 I r duces an If Faculty We do beseech and lmplore that the guar ge S ln the west gallery be nemoved STUDE 7' Ilfarlm We refuse 'om olfei of a te1m's ciedi 5 g cilogy We endeavor to treat all departments alike, S of bribes EDITORIAL BOARD n evgdzlur Plese lite tu me an tell me whether you t 1 aint wget threw college I lmev bm hete mgh on ten 1 r Azzew ylt Your n tiuly F L AB13o'r su ies Mot Probably domestic duties keep you from c 1 ren 11,3 Wmslow s Soothmg byrup IS good for fre graduatg in t'y0u continue in good health, perhaps you . lme to attend the World's Fair.-EDITORS. W , , ,Can eamed'A huge iron safe with combination lock wherel ' ' ' ' W. V Sat' j3R0wN.elY deposit examination questions.--PROF. ' ,It - 1 r els rum0I'Gd that Prof. DeMotte will 'be in his recitation 00m d . :is falseurmg the latter part of the year. The rumor, however, - ' leave for parts Lunkndwn ge Wm' however, by urgent request, V U OX' about commencement time. iv . g Work ln Chemistry this year. Please send them to ou on QSPITAL KL WCC, before they become mcura THORITIES. T 0 tl ze Family- We understand that three Juniors took , Q r I ' ble, --INSANE il , , . . ., 5, 5,1 1 ,, N . .Nfl-'lhl . lxwm -,, 1 -1 , t Egg 1 w?'l '21 V 1 is -.f V- 'R-51? ,-f,--'sf 'H ' 'f 'W'-fe 'bf 2 sf ':- 1 . Wanted. Hypodermic injection of brains.-Turk. Some one to love mef'-Rudy. To foreclose my mortgage on the University. -Prof. Brown. A female kiss. -H. L. Burr. H To know why people don't laugh when I make a joke.' -Rob. Noble. . 't Common horse sense. -Myers. To discover some one who does not think my magic lan- tern shows are not superbly lkz'n. 4DeMotte. H To know if my wings are growing. -Perry Powell. To know if other people think as much of me as I do. -Pence. To pay all his bills by checks on the Interstate. -W. A. Bastian. H The trustees to do their duty at their next' meeting, regard- less of personal feelings. -The Students. H To know whether I would explode if a pin were stuck in me. -Welborn. H To know how much of me is wind and conceit, and how much is Taylor. -Taylor. Note.-Drop a nickel in the slot and test it. . To know if my ability is appreciated at its full value. -Zaring. Note.-We assure you, yes.-Editors. 7 zmora bilious. RQ llow dear to this heart are the scenes of the college, As fond recollection presents them to view, The campus and Uprepdom where widespreading knowledge In splendor and wildest luxnriance grew. The Dorm of the ladies, the music school near it, Locations, 'tis said, where the muses most dwell, And whence issue forth on nights that are star-lit Those sweet, frisky maidens we all know so well, The dewy-liped maiden, the azure-eyed maiden, The music-school maiden that doth therein dwell. And some hailed the friendship there formed as a treasure. For oft when the moon by a cloud was concealed, They found it the source of an exquisite pleasure- The purest and sweetest that nature can yield. I'rememlmer how ardent, with cheeks that were glowing, I seized my first pony -I was sure it could tell- Not then in my freshmanly verdancy knowing A pony's a snare, a delusion, a sell 3 And then the professor, the stern-eyed professor, In whose august presence my tail-feathers fell. The chalice of wisdom, how glad we receive it, In haste its cool draughts to convey to our lips, The pathway of knowledge, how easily leave it- Onr upward course marked by too many wild slips. So, when far removed from this loved situation, The tear of regret will intrusively swell, As fancy reverts to my Junior oration I thought-at the time-I delivered so well 5 That How'ry eration, that thrilling oration, That Junior oration which made my head swell. .I. W. SLUSS . Af: r QF Qin ls sei 1 V., - ji---. 'il-W-l ...z4. 1, . . Field Dag. 100 hundred yards das Pufiillg lfiih shot, Standing hroad jump, Hurdle race, Half mile bicycle race Half mile run Mile walk, HOV' Skip and jump, High kick, 220 yards dash, Mile race, Rmmilll-F high jump, TWO mile bicycle race, Pfltato Race, Throwing hammer, Three 10:rged race, Tlu'owin:: lmse hall h, May 21. issue. .Lxxucs Tvnxiaiz, Roma ZARISG, F. A. 'l'nmr.xs, Rowe. Znuxca, IC. G. Rmaxox, Rowr. Zuuxu, GUY lV.x1.K1cu, M. Nlill'CilCN'I', l . A. Tuoxms, .Tuma Tvlcxl-nz, F. T. Rl'm', U.II1cnluxu, L. F. lJmm1 r, 111. Rvvlfxrzn, FRANK Ll'l l'l.lC' M. W.x1.Kmc ak C. l-lmuuxu, FUN, R u mfxic lc, ll seconds. 34 feet. 10 feet, 1 inch. 20 seconds. l min. 31 sec. 2 min. 24 sec. ll min. 50 sec. 38 feet. 7 feet ll inches. 27 seconds. ti min. -L sec. 25 pole. 7 min. 8 sec. S4 feet 4 inches 335 feet. 40 - . ' .. R0 yards dash lncyele race, li. L+. Rocasox, 30.5 seconds. ummlll hroad jump, liowr. Zmzrxu, 18 feet 514 inches Q 'i 0 ' 2 f3i , me 'vfilaiuck' - Ii ? i'-ff? 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'y v pg 1122. fr I F-'-1'jp - ef -K 5:5:11:-vs.fffzfcszg.ai-2-ff::s l :f-'-Q:-'2..g1s.wif:--ugsiffn 2:-I Ha..-Ffa fa--a f f . . .. 2452- 1 ' 7:1 :2E?5'f-5.1-M.:5-wi 'KWbf15993EEfsf:?:2'f:5f:4:aEsiZiE'f?Eiaui'f 1'mqf1-fe 1 C Q? Q ' ' ,595 '-s-- 4:1 EQHWQ Lg , I X - -kb . -,.. - ,. - - x ...ff55i!5 .4543 Q! 1, - 0. 1 - ' V f 1-, T -. TZ 1' Y ' -T ' Y - ', . - X 4-:vw E SN,-- - AS: NZ VY 15 1 - I -' - ' Z7 , :Z-4Z? 5? ? 6fg3 r ' -1. v ff' ' K wg 5 ,, We wkll draw us afjmkxted shippcrosi-L-painter!pecan. ' 5 Announcement Extraordinary. Si? THE STAND-PIPE, THE SENTINEL OF DE PAUW. IND' in of me 1'l'0l!l'0SSive Scientific Research Series, by Professor D., Ph. ll., li, A., Alum- ,.f,..-.,...,1.J nns Asbury Preparatory School from De 1 Illlii l'lllXOISllJj, intent astle., Inc SYNOPSIS Uf the forthcoming Pliilosophical and Scientific lecture in the famous Hllgllellot series, by Professor D., the noted popular lecturer of De Pauw University, assisted in the manipulation of red lights and slow curtains by the distinguished scientist, Dr. A., reared and especially trained by Dr. D. '11 U16 art of keeping silence and not revealing the 1-acztumalubrainibztw of tl - - . . 10 combination. To our numerous patrons this announcement will be a s . . . . . - . ource of untold gratification. These distinguished men no longer need nl- troduction. Almost every Sunday-school, camp-meeting and kindergarten ill this fair land of ours, extending from bleak Maine's icy shore to Cal- if0l'l1ia's Golden Gate, and from the lakes to the gulf, has paid tribute to their profound scientific learning and beautiful pictures, while are gathered and treasured by distinguished scientists of the East, cvcn the mmozmwf- ments of these celebrated lectures, as symbols of the progressiveness and DF0found research of America's scientist, and the brilliancy, wit and genius that has made of De Pauw University the Mecca of physical science. The eloquent orator who furnishes the accompa and suggestive views of the electro-stereoptieian has coursing through his Veins the blood of the steadfast Huguenot. 'In his every word is reflected the sunshine and glory of the land of Napoleon, of Hugo, of Boulanger. In the University, which he tific knowledge by means of his intense personal magnetismg the formality of class lectures and recita- 1tl0llS being rendered entirely superfluous. niment to the artistic ifllentific work he is a genius. To his classes in Onors with his instruction, he imparts scien T: A 'R H -Kgs , ldgif A -22.2 5 . .4 V- . g f--.f ze E1 - f 1 Y, X 1 if -nf L, . . . rw- , V K 'Ii'3lfii? !g.: ' 'f- U: f it 6 The lecture which is here announced promises to be one of his most logical and profound. Dr. A. is now revising it, and is engaged in a search for rare poetic gems with which to adorn it, and a few genuine ideas to be introduced in various places. The patent upon his distinctively original system of posture of 'the body and position of the head in delivery has been extended, and will continue one of his main attractions. We take great pleasure in presenting the following synopsis of this rare entertainment. rxrnonuc-'ro1:r. CThe Dr. will walk upon the platform to music, and will be so attired as to show the perfection of his elegant physique, and strike an attitute.7 1. Opening tribute to the grandeur of the universe. Awe struck I stand before conceptions of eternity and infinity. 2. Insigniticance of man compared to the other works of God. What is man that thou art mindful of him ? 3. The immortality of the soul considered from the stand-point of 8 great man. To be or not to be. Dust thou art, to dust returnest, waS not spoken of the soul. tHere will be projected upon the' canvas a speci- men of the subject under discussion, extracted originally from t.he noted lecturer himself, and highly magnified so as to be seen by the naked eyed 4. Transient character of works of man compared with those of the Creator of the Universe. The hills, rock-ribbed and ancient as the sun. fllerc will be introduced a beautiful scene from the Rocky Mountains by Dr. A., followed by aview of a ragged urchin, an original scientific pun devised especially for this lecture, the relation of which to the center of the uni- verse thc doctor will carefully explain.J N. B.-The doctor takes pains to make things clear. 5. The Stand-Pipe, one of the works of man, piercing the clouds of heaven, it rises tall, stately, solitary and alone. tViews of the Stand-Pipe from north and east by Dr. AJ PAM I. The Story qf lim Standing Stand-Pipe. 1. The G1-mlnfrsx qf Gcniun.-Galileo, Mozart and Edison. Clllustrated by pictures from lantern by Dr. AJ 2. Mart-in. Luther, lhc Jfcggm- Boy of Germany. CScenes from his life- scenes from the Alps, peasant girls of Switzerland, by Dr. AJ 3. Genesis ry' the Silent Sentinel. tViews illustrating various stages of its marvelous growth. Picture of A. Lincoln and fac-simile of the Emancipation Proclamation, by Dr. AJ 4. Scientific diagrmme illustrating difference between heat, light, sound and electricity. The wizard of the nineteenth century. tlficture of cyclone, by Dr. AJ Philosophy of the cyclone. AMG . -me -WWE -V uf ., .. .4 h JV., .. 0 O 5. The Jllulrwial of llm Slum!-l'f'pf-.-A trip to the iron mines of Ifennsyl- mlm- Clhcture of cross-section and scenes trom mining hfe,'.by Dr. AJ 5. lfow ilu! lVfuIl lfnlflx .-Iboul lin' Slrlnd-l'ipr'. f'n1npfn'1'1l to the music of thi? 1mf'if'71.fx, fill Island of1'hil:c. fbi Pyramids. ffl An encouraging song. WD Crocodile ditty. ffl Snake music. CI'rojections by Dr. AJ UTI 7- The C'07lf6NfN of the Slam!-Pipe. Cflcean scene, by Dr. A. Rendition of 19 Sea, the Sea! the Great Big Sea, by Dr. DJ 8. Brotlmr-H Qf ll1r'Sruml-l'ipv. CViews of Washington Monument, Bunker Hill, St. 1'aul's, etc., etc. lhuir II. Tlu' Silcul Srfnlfncl. What thc Stand-Pipe bcholds.- The silent sentinel of the earth and air 1- The Observatory. fViews showing astronomical instruments,eclipses of . the Suu, groups of nebula-, comets, etc., etc. 2. Description of the Sophomore and his girl, arms u lu mode. flllus- tmled by views of humorous pictures. Audience designed to laugh.J 3- The railway system. CGrcencastle street-cars in motion, shown with thrilling effect by Dr. A. String accompaniments. The lecturer singing- Tllerc's a hole at the bottom of thc sea. J 4- The story of Mctwiinty, who tried to climb tothe top of the Stand- v Pipe- fVi0w by Dr. A. and song by Lecturer, Down went McGinty, etc. 7 P.uc'l' III. Ilfi.-rxion of Ihr' Slum!-l'ipr'. 1. JfC,llfI'fl7I of Siam!-I'1'pe to .La Grippr. fThe germ theory of disease illustrated by a series of views just imported from 1'aris.J 2. The Slunrl-Pipe and the work of 7ll'l71ll07'Il7lf'6 Ifzgform. And still must C pale-faced mothers weep, must ragged children starving wander th.rou,.zh the street? f 3- Effect of the Stand-Pipe upon the pro 1 ci 1 rom Looking Backward and review of Edward Bellamy.J U 4. The Stand-Pipe and the Negro Question. tScenes from plantation life in the South. Estimate of the late Jeff. Davis! ll nof moverty. CPiCCl1I'0S 5. The Stand-Pipe and foreign immigration. Plea for the restriction of paupel' immigration. Shall not our civilization protect itself? K, fe, ' , ASE: It fi' 4 are-'tires l'2llSl:5i-iflflsllh Q.: . V 1 ,fi 5 1 ti. Will the Slum!-Pipe ever Inn-st! Pathetic description of dire results ,, which would follow.- And when the cruel waters had withdrawn, 11819 ,y -lx corses lie upon the moistened ground, and golden locks are matted, eyes are V work and women must weep, etc. fSlow music, scenic cftect by Dr. AJ endure. Thou too, sail on, O ship of State! Sail on, O Union, strong and great ! And over the glory of our beloved land will stand the standing Stand-Pillev - an ever watchful Sentinel. It will stand us some tall cliff that lifts its ' awful form, etc. Triumphnl march by orchestra, accompanying delivery of soul-inspiring peroration. Patriotic song. Solo by Dr. D. Audience asked to join in the chorus. All concluding with a picture of the Stand-Pipe surmounted by the Geddes! ' closed, which never more will greet the morning light? For men must N 7. The Slfmfl-Pipe and the lim-ling of Ihr- lhzpuhlif-. The Republic shall 'ff .1 r of Liberty. ,aj-. .- ,-. ,,.., , . o 1 - ' , .-SY'-'IP7 ix ff fo 2 H: Q , ' - , wseeiifsef s.ag A-511' :.,'sg-511' 1- , ,.,-,. V 15,7- Elef- ' 'q 1'lf'f5: f?5l lhlriif ff .Q fl V uF 9'! . , 6, fllkifxf 455253 fy Wfiiiji .. -- A Y .' fiizigif-'rf ,- lA,i.,,. N1 I la 'UI chi' :N 4---15 . 50 45:1 ,.,, 4 9 1 'il , E, .' ' 5Jll!:fQ.- Exif' 'f' -'39 :: f!sz'e ,i. 1, +L. ., '- ?fg:!z.:.fQ. X '-if . I-Z!-I...-ash., . 4 lifefffg .- fifQil'Zl!'55?:' , '52gLi3S55g1.f.3ef. ngnlasfg . . 1 ' .f.vI.lal!ais:e: in , 5. if,.'.:.,: 'j' ff ,lffdlfll . 1 1' l,?'Q-g2:5','. . fassef ' qm,ef ..4'w1zg-.f'r:g:mAllx W ':7S7:l'?,?'gf .-921' nm s png: 5 Q 1 P r X , We 45,-J. in .+ ' '.- 55 7'-Il, . sol. ,Ie , .Q 4. . Bill 5 if 'Z-'ls fi' grills: .. N . i fs? n iv ,h .f-. E5 ' 'M fe as ' X-,' ha ' 7 1 'fs 4+ -if -x- 4+ 41- , -n- -is -if so if I 1 This lecture has been prepared at the express request of the Board of Trus- J tees of De Pauw University,with which the distinguished orator and scholar X1 is connected, for purposes of advertising and of giving some idea of the rapid l i progress and great discoveries in physical science at De Pauw. There M0 only a few dates left on our list. Special terms to managers of Sunday-schools. ' Old Reliable 25 ct. Lecture Bureau. up ,- .1' .A ' . rn' :q :LV .1 V. ,,, .. 1' .N it ij... ' Jw!! :VIL . ' -' -I ' . W. l 3. filiilf'-' Lit ' 'Q 1 - I c' We . 'HF' - .4- .Ji ' - -4' ' L , .. . ' g ,,, , g 1 .W - vp,- '-'.i.f- ' 5' . ,t,1',,,. I Lyin- , . ' r P . 5551 1infv3.if9m5i'gZir2sv:'1?:a-mg-iz.:.. Q ' were.5rtfe:-:'tiss3ti3xdlfffl5ii5fk.t.s-.rbLsmzK?5i 1--f 2 'af 8 X f h1FU1WEW ' - Q V551 5 .YQ ' ,M1f,.'w,-. M 1 im!13.ifwj,g2ZyWm,in, ,, ,Af .X 'f:qg-,'- -aa fn ' xg'ml'j',w7, f f - KL W-l'.'f 'l1f fI' I ' . ' 'iff Q , , 5 A - f . ,, ,Aix 4 1 ,' f w --'H f' Q ,, W . 7 I 'AIl'H ':!V: 7' a 42 'f,, 1 f fw 'wfl'li.'!1l5 fit f z f f if 4'r f yin,-I, X ffg V1 Of! ' 1 R fIf',lq'of J ffw my . f' ,A 1' Ifx,-WA, f F' ' ,'f,,,-',,1,,v 1 , K -V Lkfwkffffml X ' JV f'!.' ' X 5 351' K I ,J : his-4' a Y .Aff - if-14 Q- ,dr 1 I 'ZX Y X X Z f, , if fffif fn gg V X-,Xu-.1 NP, . Z, U X X h 44, , A-JL. 15 ff bf D- I f If N, .,. X i K vainly ffl, . K 1 X N , ,y ff . , 1 'A , x ,- 7. , X 5 ,Ig x , l x I ,--51,15 - , A wx ,Z-f5,,:g!Il!!!ly6 , W ' ' X 'iv um ' ,aff ,,: ' N ,Q-:H-'if' -- . , f.- .-k. . -1 SH -:Q f,,M . It . .Tri,,,, w M Q . 4 5 2 f- WE' xx 1 Mia X ' I -ff ',,A,:j!cD'f-J LL R 1 1 . Qi .4 V f fx., Tclxl? x 5 , , M wwf ,,1-- :- X Fx R ff B A X: ff! ' f 'N--,Tu 111' f , K X ' ,,.f -ff: N f I zffngizv, f fn, ,f Nh 17 A Nj !. N '41 W .. 0 W X ' ,Epi 4 Pi' ' . - ' 'i47'i -f?-5--' '- . -Q U I- ,JJ Q ,,f,-'. 4. - -SP -4 9, 'Hu - if . - n . A A ,-21 1 lil' -1' 'x V ll Q41 be ' 11.11 E , I1 f ,EQ , -.:g:f :-'gs . , ' 4, 7 1 134 V 4. .A ' I 34159, We Mt L 535352 Chorus. 955 Listen, good people, and you shall hear Of the music QFD which pierces the still tender ear Of those whom Providence kindly QQ let fall Within hearing distancelof our Music Hall. Promptly at seven on each Monday eve Dean Howe requests all music students to leave , Their arduous duties and go, one and all, For an hour of discomfort in old Music Hall. There's no end to the sorrows that college life brings, But what equals the grief of the student who sings, Responsive to Dean Howe's imperative call For all who take music in clrear Music Hall? 'Ir -Yr -K' W -Yr 'Yr 'lf The piano is started, Dean Howe claws the air, Each orchestra member sits up in his chairg First a few feeble tones on the evening air fall,- Now, alas! no more silence about Music Hall. K' 'Yr -Yr -'lr -14' -K' 'lf O, ye powers that be! have your hearts become hard? Does the tale of our woe strike no answering chord In your breasts? Are you heedless of what may befall Us when we are assembled in dark Music Hall? Q. But, although we suffer, it is not in vain, For the hideous discords which bring so much pain To our untrained ear, must certainly seem Unbearable, quite, to our sensitive Dean. But since upon us the duty's devolved, We'Il try to endure it, but be it resolved That we offer our sympathy, hezu'tf'elt, to all W'ho, more pity for them, live near Music Hall. 5,31 J 4-ff-,'+'fg,si13 e If . ,ees gihuigsxs-.ss V525 5 ermarx Play For 1889. SK Qlimnm. nun egi2i1f1III.l2I1l1. QLessing.j Major von Tolllu-im, VUTZI1bSCl1i0f1UlA, . FRANK McF,u:1..xND- Minna von Barnliohn, . . . Graf von Brnchsall ,... Frmizisku, ihr liliiclchvn, ..... Just, Bodivnlcl' iles Majors ,..... 1'nnl XVOFIICY, gewvsvnor Wnclit nn-istvr dos Majors, . Um' NVirih, . . ....... Eine Dann- in Tl'!l.ll0l', . Ein Foldjiigor, . . Ein B0di011t.vr, ...... u . . . Iq1'v1l,1c Dl.VI l'llEWS. L-hlzoicuic W1a1.no1zN. . 1'Zm'rn Sxwrn. . .FRANK Rumi WII.I.1,xn Smfss. S'l'liVlC S. S'1'1m'r'1uxN. . SIl5lELIAS'l'.XRR- 'l'nnmmN ALLEN. . A. J. TA x'l.0H. Die Scene ist vera!vwvulisvlml in dom Silllll' vim-s xVil'ihSllIIllSI'S und ninom lllIl'ZUlSt0SS0l1d01l Zimmer. wwQQQQQ erman ,Flag For 1890. 956 gig'C1i5ilI1I. QBenedix.J Ausdorf, . . . Kutlmrina, seine Fran, . Alfrvd, .... Ennna, seine Gatlin, . . IIO Lisbeth, 5 ' ' ' ' I . . mme 1' 7- ln Alfr0d's DIUIIQUJII ' Scene in Alfred's Hanse. H, I-I. Ilouxnnoolc. . CARRIE SIMPSON. . CQRANT Ross. . . INA Jonxsox. Cimlzmzs Poucnnn. Colm Emnxunovsic. dl. The flssemblg Room. IIN-livercil ut the banquet given by the class of '93, Doc. 7. IMLI Iv, , A. ETX--. qw uw-,',,. SE When the hours of day are numbered. And the voices of the night Summon us unto a banquet, Where we eat with all our might, Ere the evening lamps are lighted, Like a phantom, grim and tall, Bassett's shadow, by the firelight, Dances on the parlor wall. And the forms of the departed Enter at the open door, Ayres, the loved one, though hard-hearted Comes with angles us to bore. Next, young Dixon, who did cherish Noble longings forthe strife, Till his girl said, No, sirg stop there ! And he goes without a wife. And with him the Being Beauteous Hopkins unto us is given, With his rocks and horrid gases, iTill we wish he were in Heaven. O gg,-'.'1f Us-rf. 1 :,,,g-,yi fx ua.,-3 , ,.,11,5,f 1 '- With a slow and noiseless footstep, Beals, the Messenger Divine, Takes the vacant chair among us- He's the last one in the line. Still here's Bassett gazing at us, With those deep and searching eyes, Though like stars, so still and saint-lik They have caused us many sighs. But we wander from our subject- Fancy leads us far astray- The Assembly Room we'd speak of As we see it every day. With its rows of sad-faced Preps, And its Dictionary', too, Which is poised upon the steam-pipes With a monstrous overshoe. Old Assembly, dear Assembly, We remember thee to-night, And we toast thee, blissful region, For we know by keen foresight, That we'll not be there much longer, So we safely wish thy reign Long continued. Mays't thou prosper In remaining Prepdom's bane. ?lQ?l9?l+2?lQRi?li - C O at .T , H2 wS-,li , .' . . 'tg' , 1 . - mltttlifibsii-Fw:-fl 1 .A t ,trawl '...3..2f 'tif 1 Eighty-Nine to Ninety-Une. 555 HE class of '89 desires to express its appreciation for the u college enterprise and spirit manifested by ,QI in continu- the publication of the MIRAGE. Though no longer a par- tlillpant in the events which make up this, the most memorable Pffrlod in the history ofour University, though scattered far and Wlfle Over many States, though busily occupied with other duties and other enterprises, it is impossible to forget that the Purpose leading you on in this work is the same as that by Eihich the members of '89 were guided in their contest against 'g0U'y, hypocrisy and hollow pretence. This work of college ef0l'm which you, as students, are endeavoring to promote, is fine the magnitude of which you may not now comprehend. It lflvolves not merely a change in small matters of administra- tion of authority, it reaches out and includes the very founda- UOH upon which rests the honored institution for whose welfare lve are all so deeply solicitous. Its demand has been a change 111 the central idea by which all of its affairs are to be directed. N0 better illustration of the rapid growth of a reform, when OnCe the conditions are prepared for it, can be found than in the history of De Pauw University for the past year. Little did We imagine, when scarcely two years ago, as students, in a Publication similar to your own, we advocated changes in its administration, when we protested against its shams and de- mflnded that reason should dictate its laws, and true merit de- termine the position ofits members, that in but a few months after our graduation so many steps would have been taken t0W2ll'Cl carrying these ideas into practical efiect. --if 1 H f 1:52 With pleasure do we recall this period in our college expe- rience. Many ofthe events in that experience may have un- pleasant memories associated with them, but were indeed of more profit to us than years of Greek and Mathematics. It was ll preparation for opposing those false ideas with which the true student and man must contend in every department of human endeavor. When '89 entered De Pauw University what did we find? We found it covered over with traditional practices handed down from the past, their only merit consisting in their age. The authority of the ft Fathers of old Asbury was the basis of every institution that existed. The question was I1Of asked concerning its customs, tt Are they the logical outgrowth of existing conditions? but 1'ather, tt Have they the sanction of the past? As in days of' divine right it was not the wisdom of the laws that was the first concern of governmentg it was the legitimacy of the royal succession. The omnipotence df the faculty was a recognized principle. The maxim was-the fac- ulty, especialty the president, can do no wrong. The fact that a rule had been enacted behind the bars and bolted doors of the 5' star chamber, and had been promulgated in thunder tones from the rostrum. surrounded by all the pomp and majesty of chapel, was good and suflicient reason for its existence. That student who would question the wisdom of one of these sacred enactments was looked upon as a rebel against disci- pline, which was the first and only purpose ofa proper institu- tion oflearning. To such an extent was this idea carried that members of the faculty-some of them still connected with it, t0 its shame-prided themselves more upon their proficiency HS spies and detectives than upon either their ability or success before their classes. Gaudy, flashy show, not solid mental strength, was patted on the back by those who had original control. Outside criticism by a student of work in any class- room was regarded as presumption and impertinence. The voice of the one best fitted to pass judgment upon the fitness of a professor for his place was hushed. The student was not 1'6- garded as a part of an organic institution, as a co-worker. He was the material with which to feed a gigantic sectarian ma- chine. He was a child, subject to paternal rule. He was con- ' f it . gonted with predetermined theories to which he must conform. Ahait he could think seems to have been beyond suspicion. rbitrary authority, not reason, was his guide. ' Somehow, it became firmly rooted in the minds of those who led our class, that this was not the foundation upon which to base a great institution. Doubtless this conviction was the 1'eSult of ideas which were advocated in one or two class r00mS-ideas which were then considered by many of those in Fifwer 'as little short of heresy, ideas which were founded upon e solid rock of everlasting truth. In the words of one worthy to Stand at the head of any cause, we believed that there are eSSentially three things in the world: first, purpose, second, existing conditions under which a purpose is ' Dlfd, the adaptation of means to the purpose and conditions. e Pauw University, like every other thing that has a right to exlst. exists for a definite purposei It is the duty of every glember of the institution, president, professor, and student, to lSC0ver that purpose and contorm thereto. Freeborn Ameri- Eafl youth, destined to a bright career in this republic, are to e Subject to the will, to the arbitrary rules, of no man or body Semen, whatsoever. They are to be governed by reason. to E contended that the sentiment of one thousand students was e a part in the management of the institution. ' thqgn conformity with these ideas-we acted. We knew., indeed, b f Such action was far from being the road to oiiicial favor, Ut We cared more for our ideas of right and for the permanent fizoofl of our University than for the smiles of any set of men. u Hkmg advantage of the customary college annual as a form U1 which to clothe our ideas, in the name of the progressive Ttudenfi we opposed time honored institutions, long since use- ess ilnd meaningless. We held up to view men who, in the Class-room, failed to grasp the purpose 0 ' ' Wlth0ut thought, without analysis, without insight, men who felled to comprehend the first principles of true education. to be realized , 17 f a university, men ye turned the light of criticism upon matters which had long een a reproach and shame. We advocated the abolition of ' f tl - . le0r1eS. Of customs, and of men. The reception o oux annual was in strict harmony with the character of the men at 'X tub' . g'1Q?i,fy!4f. rr, 'tv i is . 144' 73Qgf,.f., Lg-55.5, .gtgwg whom its blows were aimed. Behind the secret doors of faculty meeting, in petty ways, they vented their spleen, and bestowed rewards upon those few weaklings in our class who bowed before authority and crooked the pregnant hinges of the knee that thrift might follow fawning. Their satellites we do not condemn, their mental strength is such that just criticism would be cruelty. Neither do we cherish resentment against those who, by their deeds of malice and revenge, inflicted upon us gross injustice. Wherever in our dealings with mankind, we look for an example of bigotry and petty meanness cloaked in piety and position, their faces will be present in our mem- ories. Disregarding this, we kept up the work in which vie had enlisted, standing firm for principles of reason in every law and custom, and for men of brilliant mind and deep thought in every class-room. We rejoice in what has thus far been accomplished in this Work. A man the very embodiment of our principles, a man of intellect, of power, of genuine Christian spirit, a man above all, who was the students' choice, now stands at the head of our University. Around him stand many of the faculty and the great enthusiastic mass of the students., New life has been in- fused into every department. The weight of the thought of the student is now felt. Old things are passing away, the reign of new ideas has begun. To 'QI we would say, keep on in this work of progressive reform, for it is by no means yet accomplished. There is still room for growth and change. After the tearing down of old institutions, after the banishment of old ideas., there must come the development, the building up of a University founded upon the new principles before which the old have fled. New de- partments, new libraries, new gymnazia are needed. In ac- complishing this the enthusiastic co-operation of the students will be a force of the greatest iniluence. Turn the energy which it was once necessary to put into condemnation and crit- icism into an aid for progress and growth. It is true that there are those who remain who are out of harmony. with the new order of affairs. They are a hindrance to progress. They are known to us and to you g and you know your duty. Surrender no nn' .,, pointg keep firmly togetherg lead the sentiment of the students and make yourselves worthy ofyour position and trust. You will have the prayers of '89 to the immortal gods in your behalf. Though no longer with you in person, like King Hamlet's ghost, I am thy fathom-'s spirit, doomed for a time to walk the earth, Till the foul deeds done in the body are hurried and purgrecl away. Adieu, adieu, adieu. Remember. l89. , FQ 4 0 fi!-,fQXkYs1 -,, ,Q - 0 . A x , ' N 0 jigig E . .- 'r LZ ,:, , ,.'f,Pl'.x ., .' -'fq!43 U 1 'r ' s l , V I. 1351:-, ' .5952 ' , , 5 ff? ff' W ,Wa,Wff2.lQ3fv'f',fff??? 5 u gh! sllvffjxy ini.--' 3, I if Vjyl u,. 'mf Q4 my F gfs-ffeq44Li'4'cwff f'V .Q A1 - ,Z 5 1 Wa'-:lc,5!ff,.-,',Ai,i,,!f7 .3 A h 'Vila ,fly ' .1.:Z,: um,-,fi ,lr 1 ,- 1 -f M --1' 2 1 iff f 1' M-pr, WILQH' 5, V , 4 4 , 1 .. f ,147 V , ,,, .:,- 15-Z' ' N ' W, ' x x 6 . af, bk' D f 7 'ff , XX xx-XE. iff I I I W A J . I N 9571 m l f1':'9fc I V l Ffh' 'uf --- -f- - ' 2 1?- f7f3 ' '- 7 ' W iff? 9 2:7 - . f WN vf1 2f'f' -7 JB' gl ,434 f' iff . ' , I 55.0, f rm' f J A L ,,,Qg5jW,g jmfggnpffx ,gg . ,Ld ,:',,4,,, gf. ii ,',w'I'u lla' , :J ,1f:'51.'!5F'F'1!f5.!nwzf f . .. i'i ll1 I'ff'i'v fy , I, f QElt',1Qu'ffffI-,i'i , ' -w fr, . e:fff 1. 'nBit:51uF?5a2?-, A W 921322313119 771152125 'f V5 '1'E??6W'1 fi 5'f:fEf?5 if, f 7 fn ,fn ll 1 1 1 f , 4 ,,,,,n,,. Im, I'-ofrzffl ' ' affzlfagv: 'wi' 'l'1!Mgi4 M Wifi! iff' ff Q5Em4ilus2v4Igff,4?f1 l If ,Q rj I I ' refs. . 'W W ., u - 7:55 ,' f, iff J- 4 X, HUA Mn , . , 1 f, 'G' ' ,,'r4:r'55S'5 I - 4-1. ,I ff '. -'J- 141. 1' 1' 3' '55, Af2gg,jQjiig.f5gf5g5:a --, . ff, - , 1- -5 ' W' 9'-'f l--E11F!I!7'h 'f ir 1f' .354 '13 1. . M:iWi'f'5-g1'4f: f'K ff 1 Ihr -'-f-- -ul ,- MW biiigfvzdiav ff ,mf 'ms-12: ffII1::uIfE ' 555'-Q: 55sf1:5'agW -M wggiigisngfgsir I -,' 's' , , , ' 4 SLA' Eiigy ggzgi ggwggiiafiiisaigg 1' ,i .1' -' . f, rf. ., 2:-v. :fi bwa5:'.f3rfWWw,W!2f 'i51! ..-,fazs:2aaa- 1 far- 5:52555 winga'.4,g,i:sv:jmfg1gggs: ', 'JV' ,' , .3 ,,,,...n . v wi ,ff 'f' 2342125-35.5 ' . fl! A f,,, ' if' 7 152? :ii 'F' 1 I J gf llll 1 ,, f, fif f' JW gmwunll U 1 52, 251,33 , 4' ':' ,w-2' ' 1 X I ef ' A .W 'W 1 1 I X ' ww!! ! f 1,3111 , f ,uhqn f f ' ef ,?' ' P' 1 f 6 -3' P lm s 1 f 'I ' 4.1 1 'rl R 'ff H 2 ' ,,,','.f 1'1!LrUHHH'h fi 1- . ,711 f H' ' ' f f NT!! .ai rxilf 5,15 1: F, 4 1 Ml 'pil' ? :Zi 1,4 519311: If 11' I if Ulxli IA' Leif I ,lm 1' I ' '!f . A I 5 I L k ,I M 1' 'flu 71,351l'21riN-iiW'i555'.:f 1, ,IEW , +I W1 MM' EQ! l ,jf ' ,I 1 ,fi in Typical Rcciiaiions ev TYPICAL MEN. SK Svicxia I. .vllunmi Hull, Tl:ii'1ll lom',' llIllNlL'Ill1lfiI'N. Enter doctor in a terrible rage, the scowls of horrible nightmare yet lingering upon his brow, his muscles still knotted with the agony of peut-up fury. Ready to tear passion to tatters he exclaims, Sometime during the past week, some hoodlum defaced with pencil traces the Observatory walls. I want it to be distinctly understood that if that occurs again, no member of either the Sophomore or Freshman classes shall enter the walls of my Observatory or set foot upon the grounds of the University Park so long as they are students of the college. Amazed, awestricken, confounded, tl1e students hold their breath in silent wonder until seine weak small voice ventures to beard the lion in his den and trespass the awful silence with-- IIow long since the gentleman purchased this University ? The puff-ball bursts like the transformation of Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde, it staggers, quivers and sinks helplessly into the chair of infinity. But see! he moves, he starts, he seems to realize his situation, a smile of grim satis- faction spreads over his features. Eureka ! he exclaims, I have found it. Revenge is sweet. He chuckles, seizes his roll-book, calls the roll asking for an impossible problem to be solved, and as each man seeing the impossi- bility fails to respond he sets opposite, his name two zeros, knowing as he does so that no member of the class recites more than five times in a term, he has virtually fiunked the whole class in the term's work. Once more he is himself again, his equilibrium restored. He resumes a vertical posture and extending his index finger toward the cupboard in his room he cxclaims: Do you see the heavy bar and yale lock I have placed across that door? To-morrow is examination day and I am going to put the list of questions behind that bar and bolt, and if any one breaks in and gets them, I will prosecute him to the full extent of the law. I will give one hundred dollars myself from my own wages to discover the thief, and if the facility don't spend as much as the salary of one professor for one year to hunt down the vandal, Iill resign, so I will. I will move heaven and earth to find out who did it, and I want it distinctly understood that if I find a scrap of paper to-morrow, besides the examination paper, or discover any one looking up from l1is paper he will be suspended, saying which he dis- missed the class which marched out to the tune Old Grimes is Dead, ex- claiming with one accord, How Long! O Lord, how long! must this lie endured! .,:A,.Akm b 1 I SCENE II. II. L. N0llflllll'il Hull. Sumwl lo the sluules of Palestine. , Clinter troupe of Theologues rushing about the doctor, grasping his hand and receiving a benediction for goodness. Being promised to be ex- cused if flunked, they retire to their seats and pay reverent attention to all that is said. Meanwhile a few men. have entered and without toadying have taken their seats.J Recitation begins: Doctor pointing to one of the brightest theologues says: Now,sir! can you tell me who was the first man? Theologue, dazed, stammers and declares he had read that once but had forgotten. CDoctor to theologue No. 2.3 Now, you can tell me, Brother Sankey, can't you ? Just think a moment. Don't get confused. COminous silence.J Theolognes No. 3, 4 and 5 alike amazed. The doctor then asks Brother John Robinson : Can you tell me ? Brother Robinson quietly answers, Adam, when the doctor, already on the tiptoe of expectation, shouts out in glee: Ah, there's the man for you! That's right! That's right ! CExpectorates.J You'll make a preacher bye and bye. Bright young man. Class, please take note of Brother Rob- inson's answer. The doctor next asks: Where was the first man placed ? One after another, Hesekiah, Lamentation, Ishmael, stand in blank amazement, scratch their heads or sink into innocuous desuetude in. spite of the encour- aging words of the doctor. Finally a voice from the back seat exclaims: The Garden of Eden. When the doctor, surprised to find an answer so early, rushes back, grasps Brother Frank Smith by the hand and in ecstacy of delight, draws the at- tention of the class tothe fact that he has found in Brother Smith a star of Bethlehem in the theological firmament. Class is excused for five minutes to congratulate Brother Smith and Brother Robinson on their brilliant prospects. Some one starts: O! these jewels, precious jewels, His loved and his own ! Finally the excitement subsides and the recitation is resumed. Doctor propounds another question : Who led the children of Israel out of Egypt? Again the encouraging words: Can't you tell me ? Just think a min- ute. Easy now. Now I know you can tell me. But all in vain! Sankey, Moody, Adanijah, Shadrach and Josiah Wesley fail to respond to the doctor's entreaty. Finally the doctor says class, and Brother Renos Harlan Richards ventures to suggest, in modest tones, Moses. The spell is broken, each several and particular theologue takes his thumb from out his mouth, and a smile of admiration lights up the doctor's face as he gazes enraptured upon the calm and placid features of the new found hero 9 meanwhile he has burst into a vociferous applause, and clapping his'hands, expectorating and shouting, That's right! that's right! Well done. He points to Bro. Richards with pride, and advises each brother to emulate the example of Bro. Richards, the future Spurgeon of America. ff' , The class is dismissed to allow an opportunity for congratulations, while the doctor proceeds to make the books as follows: Bro. Richards Ctilorious Young Mani, . . . 100. llro. Robinson ttirand Recitation ll, 99.67 Bro. Smith tliright Youthl, . ' ....... 99.156 Bro. Sankey CVery well meaning young man but a little deficient J, 99.50 Bro. John Harrison CA good head that will llame in the futureb, . 99.43 Josiah Wesley Olust not discourage himy, ..... 99.47 Adonijah CPoor fellow! hasn't had a good opportunityj, . . . 99.55 Shadrach, Thanatopsis, etc., marked in the order of their respective pieties and the recitation is over. Scicxia lII. ltcrfluiion in. Il'esl Walleye. Psychology. Class asleep. The rack for clothes that some thoughtful trustees had placed behind the desk Cupon recommendation of early piety and childlike simplicity rather than ability and liberal broadmindeclnessJ, seems to be the center toward which all bodies are facing. At intervals of ten minutes the inanimate object, as if working by the recurrent. action of some hidden spring, moves, rolls its eyes, turns its hand toward its vest pocket, opens a watch and in sad, hopeless cadences, like the last sob of some weary wage telling its story to the pebbles of the beach, moans out, Only thirty minutes more of recitation, class. lDon't get restless. You can stand it alittle longer, can't you? Omiuous silence for ten minutes when again it moves, and the spell is broken. Only twenty minutes now. Don't go to sleep! I know it is tiresome and uninteresting but I can't help it. CTll011 to itself, ll7ly was I born? why 'wus 1 born? J Once more a deathly quiet, broken at last by a bitter wail of despair from the desk. Only ten minutes more. Do keep awake! please do! Oh Lord! what om I here for, what am I here for? At last the bell tolls, a smile lights up its featuresg a glimmer of hope for a moment, then it sinks again with a collapsing sigh into innocuous desuetudef' while the class leaving the room repeat the accustomed quotation of Dickens,- Dead how long? Only IS years. Sei-:NE IV. Hcrnuut Vlnxs in Dr. lf. L. Summers' Ildll. About one-third of the members of the class being i11 the room the Prof. begins to call the roll,being continually interrupted by members coming in. l.'rof., assuming a solemn air, taps his pencil. The class fold their arms. Must have strict order. Impossible to proceed with recitation without positive silence in the room. Roll proceeds. According to previous in- struction of Prof. each answers present by giving his conscientious esti- mate of the degree of perfection with which he has mastered the day's les- son, and his daily recitation grade is accordingly marked perfect if answering present. A Mr. Durham. All but last paragraph. Mr. Gregory. 99f76. Three girls southwest corner here interrupt with We're here, Profes- sor. So graded. ' Mr, Poucherf' Present fsmile goes round roomy. 1 -1- CNN Miss Roysel. Have read it all over Prof. f-1. -is 1 eff, At thisjnnct ure some one drops a pin. tProf. puts on a long face and taps his pencil.J 'fl tell you it is impossible to proceed without perfect order in the room. Order is Ileaven's first law and mine, too. Let there be hositive quiet. tl or full three minutes deathlike stillness prevails.J Roll call is completed and recitation begins. Any questions on lesson assigned for to-day? If not we will proceed to commence, to begin to go on and read at sight. liands go up all over the room. ln order to explain a point in the first four lines requested by a student, Mr. Poucher is called on to translate. Didn't get that far along, Prof. Finally, all disputed points explained class begins reading: at sight. Miss ll., reading, translates-- A man dying: left his estate to -F' Prof. interrupts with, You have the idea, perhaps, but I think bequeathed V is always used in that connection. Here Mr. A r. asks if he may be excused. Prof.- What for? Silence on part of Mr. Ar. Prof.- Well, yes, if it is absolutely necessary. Sight reading continues. Mr. S. translates: 'f Because this was so it-. Prof. interrupting: H' Since this is so' is more proper. You evidently had the right idea, but 'because' is too free, you must read literally. ' Student proceeds: The hour of Tell's return was a glad one to his family. tProf. commentsj I think to use, 'had a happifying: effect on his family,' would be more elegant in that connection, and more literal. llere, for ten minutes, the professor discusses very lcarnedly the difference between the lion's month and the mouth of the lion. At this juncture the bell rings. The professor then calls on some one with reputation for fast reading and who desires to display himself, to read. Class impatient. Professor taps for order. Must have positive quiet, etc. Ten minutes after close of the hour, bright youth sinks back exhausted. Professor: Take for next lesson to page 133. Student: Why, that is 25 pages '? Professor counting: No! only 24,'Q. Students all: Too much. V Professor: Well, throw oli' last five lines. ttllass vanishes.J Kinder- garten ended. Sensi: V. Ilnzmmy Ilull. Thullurinwr on nh-ek. Students lounge in and drop into their seats. Roll call begins. A student nnavoidably detained, enters the room just as his name is be- ing' pronounced and responded, but not yet having reached his seat is marked absent. The students by this time having taken their books from under their chairs, where they had left them the day before for safe keeping, opened them to the place of the lesson, spread them on their laps and settled into their customary historical comitose position, the recitation begins. As the name of each student is called he closes his book, and gazing on that of his neighbor, answers the question. Professor: Mr. A. you may recite on the subject of the Babylonian and Median monarchies, and the kingdoms of Asia Minor. Having started 4 Q :el 11' X his . ,:.. ..x lr ' .wi Mr. A. upon a twenty minutes talk,thc professor,tixing her eyes admiringly on space, falls into a reverie on music having charms to soothe the savage breast, etc. Mr. H. succeeds in talking the required length of time, at the end of which, the professor, recalled to the realization of her position, pro- ceeds to read from Thalheimer on the subjects about which Mr. ll. has been talking, and placinga 10 on the grade book,continues: Mr. B., you may recite on Phienicia and Judea. The consideration of this subject should have required, ordinarily, fifteen minutes, but Mr. ll., being: a young man of few words, completes his recitation in exactly twelve minutes, twenty-two and a half seconds by the professor's watch, and receives therefor a full round UO. Miss ll., what was the time of the conquest of Babylon. Miss ll. having closed her book somewhat too suddenly, and being rather short-sight- ed, is not able to remember the day of the month, and not hearing dis- tinctly the words of those prompting l1er, is marked, therefore, a zero.', Mr. M., you ma.y describe the llattle of Marathon. Mr, M. having by this time fallen asleep, his neighbor awakens him and and tells him the question. Mr. M., rubbing his eyes, begins somewhat dis- connectedly, and recites the Battle of Thermopyla-. llaviug co1npleted,l'he professor says: 1' Very grood, Mr. M. Mr. R., you may describe the Battle of 'l'l1ermopyl:e. Mr. R. rehearses what Mr. M. had said, and also receives a lil. llere a new student, not understanding the method of conducting the recitation, and having supposed from reading the catalogue that there was something in the study of history besides the memory of dates, nalnes and legends, ventures to ask a question involving the relations of cause and ell'ect, and pertaining to the philosophy of history. Whereupon the world historical spirit is righteously offended, and the new student is immediately squelched, marked zero, and warned by the students never to broach such an irrel- evant question again under penalty of securing the everlasting ill will of the professor. Mr, S., can you tell me the hour'that the Battle of Marathon began? Mr. S. Cllright Studentj- I think it was 2 o'elock in the afternoon. Professor- There is some dispute as to whether it was two or three minutes after 2, but I am inclined to think from careful research that the latter is more nearly correct. I wish you would look it up more fully, Mr. S., and report to-morrow. There being yet ten minutes of tl1e recitation hour left, the professor re- quests Mr. L+. to give in detail a history of the Rise and Fall of the Roman Empiref' Completing satisfactorily just as the bell rings, each student care- fully places his Thalheimer under his chair till the morrow, while he goes home to prepare his lesson, should he feel so inclined, from Swinton, yawn- ing as he leaves the hall. How long .Ye Gods! Ilow long! . Sci-:Nic fVI. Place, Da Moth: Hull. Time, ten o'clock daily. The only off hour enjoyed by the Senior class. Scene opens with an inrush of members who scramble for seats in the back row. Billy H. getting a seat in the northwest corner as usual. Roll- call discloses usual absence of Guy W., Paul M. and two of the ladies. Ike . .pa F. if ' . m..'.,,, Q l -. rl . . .lt . noi. llotey and Doc. Richards come in late. The class then become engaged in probing the profound depths of the human intellect under direct manage- ment of Dr. M., A. B. C., D. D., LL. D. Investigation conducted strictly by the scientific method with occasional reference to a few hints on the sub- ject published in neat and condensed form by one who signs himself N, P. - Yale College, 1871. tWe did not stop to speculate on how sad the pa and ma of the author must have felt when his report card came home each term with HX. 1'. on it.3 The Dr. opens up Mr. 1'orter's work on Intellectual Science, then pro- duces a cigar box of the Ben Hur brand containing paper slips on which are written names of Seniors. At this juncture enthusiasm of class runs very high, inspiring many original and brilliant observations. The Dr. draws out one ticket and Chas. Voucher wins ist capital prize. Dr. M.: Mr. P., will you discuss section 45 ot to-day's lesson. Poucher rises with alacrity after a hasty perusal of his book, recites word for word, giving the full munber of words to the line, fully explains the number of capital letters contained in the paragraph, and other necessary points, and sits down, with the benediction of the Dr., amid the subdued applause and open-eyed astonishment of the class. After expectorating a few remarks in reply to an aptly CBJ put question by bevecque, the Dr. returns to cigar box lottery and F. T. Rudy draws 2d capital prize. . Dr. M.: Mr. Rudy, will you discuss section 46 of your author in full? ltudy becoming still more rudtdjy and twisting his Adonis locks into a lov- er's knot, proceeds: I did not study the chapter by sections, Dr. My social engagements are too pressing for such tine work. ' Rudy is marked a ftunk. Dr. M.: Mr. B., you may recite the ninth paragraph of the seventh lecture. Mr. B. ' Dr., on the presumption that to master the thought of the lec- ture and not its typographical arrangement was the true purpose of the student, I did not commit this lesson by paragraphs. Dr. glares, groans. marks the anarchist a zero, as the student takes his seat. Dr. M.: Mr. R., what is Matthew Aruold's verse ? Student questioned soliloquizes, Great Heavens, what are we coming to E while the class burst out in uproarous laughter. Student flunks gracefully. Dr. M.: Class, can any one tell me? Dead silence. I 11 Dr. M.: The key to the situation is a word beginning with C. Class begin guessing: Comprehension, culpable, cats, curious, cow, conscience, etc. At last wearied out the class gives up in despair, when the doctor smiles grimly and says: The word your author uses in this connection is !'l:rix1i'un. Here a discussion arises in the class as to the meaning of the section. Discussion is interrupted by the Monitor with, Young ladies and gentle- men, all discussion in the class is positively forbidden. You will confine 1 4 4. . dfQ'f?2JiQ' . .- 1.1-4 - V, N yourself strictly to your author. Mr. Porter was established and foreor- dained from the very begimiing of the world to write mental and moral sei- ences. As I take it, each sentence in your author's work is an axiomatic truth. There is no way but one way, and ideas 11ot consistent with your author's views are heterodox and intideli' Here cigar box is forgotten and recitation proceeds. Class all on the qui rirr, under discussion of Sense Perception. Dr. M.-- Will l.l1e tirst gentlemen near the door on the back row please state your author's views on the conditions of vision? Mr. B. recites at some length, and sits down perspiring very profusely. Dr. M.- That is correct as far as it goes. But you might have Stated the substance of your author's views by saying simply that 'in order that an object may be seen it must be visible. ' Ctllass takes notes! Subject changes to moral science. Dr. M.- Mn W., what does your author state as the comprehensive law of man's duty to his fellow-man? Mr. W. Ccontidentiallyb-U The Golden Rule-Thou shalt love thy neigh- bor as thyself. CGlass subscribes liberally to home missionsj Dr. M.- lVill the third young man from the end of the second rowslate with what, according tio your author, does the moral sense begin? Third young man tlunks in silence. Ur. M.- Will any one answer? Whole class imitates third young man from the east end of the second row. llr. lll.- Well, youne: ladies and gentlemen, your author says the moral sense begins with childhood. Bell rings and lesson assigned over for next day. H N. B.-'I'he trustees have kindly made provision as far ns possible that no student be subjected to any two ofthe above professors in any one year. os ss. is 'if' ff: V-'ff-.-1.',. . i fig, --. . ,,Ag'Vf 1',,Atf M, . I .5 sg -e,?,,,wfl . TN A i i W Indiana Oraizorical Association Swuvn Jonx A wr I if: 1V11.1. Cims. DE PAUVV BRANCH. S. S'l'ILV1 l'AX :1NG1.li'1'0N, R. 1'1mas'r, II. Wrsis, T. linluxsux 1889-90. 916 President. Vice-president. Treasurer. Recording Secretary. Corresponding Secretary lfqn'c'sf'utalilwc qf Dv Pauli' ul Shih' Ul'lllUI'fl'1ll lfontvxhi. 1875 1876 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 18811 1890 ' Representatives of Indiana nt Interstate Contest. -1- First. at Interstate. Clli.xnI.1cs A. D1X'X'lCIC. Joux 8. 3IcMn.L.xx. ' Jonx IC. Kmcx. TUCKER L. T.u'Lon. AUmfs'ri7s L. Mnsux. N. P. Cnsvmz Cn.uu.1-:s F. CoFF1x.+1' Jour: NV. Emsox. S. L. Bmzxcmn. T. G. Cxnnrmcns. A. J. BEVEIil1JHE.'x 1' Jos:-:vu M. An.u1s.+ FRANK 111. Axnmzsux. Ronlclw G. .Io1rNsoN.+'r .I. 11. WII.K1s1zsnx. ' Wim. II. XVIHILQ1' D2 Pauw 1-Idz. PUBLISHED UNDER TIIE CONTROL OI TIIE DEPAUW LITERARY ASSOCIATION. J. H. Rolnxsox, A. W. Mooma, Rox' O. XVEs'r, D. T. McDoI'ca.xI., ERNEST Rocaxox, Rox' O. WVEST, . H. M. Jolmsos, I J. W. Snuss, 5' A. W. MOORE, R. E. LOCKE, . STEVE S. STRATTAN, Mmm Fu1.KEnsoN, G. R. WVELBORN, . J. H. H.umIsoN, PAUL M. MII.I.I-zu, FEED. P. DAVIS, HPINRY T. Uvsox, ERNEST RoGNoN, ' w 'UM' . X Board of Di 1-cr-Im-s. J. A. PA'rrEIzsoN. QSM Editorial lfurpn. LOCAL ASSISTANTS. J. E. McMuI.I.Ex. President. Secretary. RALPII W. BEST, R. E. LOUKE, D. W. LEwIs, Editor in Chief. Assistants. Literary. Exchanges and Fraternity. Alumni. Co-Iflds. Chief of Local Staff. LULU M. O'KEEFE, DAISY O. MIKELS, ANNIE L. BUNGER, C. LEON SMITII, Business Manager. +I C Y auf, , . - , , E O SZFIOUSIXZSS. KN I it NIKON' l-UI! Tlll- IH' l lWC4lI.ll Il Nlllll- U P HX KT!-Af Illili at My flwar illistvr Ilunl, Editor of the ,llira'ugc.' Hearing say that you are writing a book about the MIREAGE, and being a teacher of celibacy and osterity II have taught I2 terms in 16 counties of Indiana, counting the parts of terms which because the people did not appresiate my merits I did not iinishl and having wrote much both in poesy and prosaics for the publick press and being honorably attached in the college of depaw and having saw many things in this school which should ought to be otherwise and thinking that the ardousness ofwriting the whole book yourself would render one of my pro- ductions not innockuous to you as our late lamented president Cleveland would say and would that he was still so I now take my pen in hand to compose you a composition about seriousness. Seriousness is one ofthe most cardinalous virtues which hu- man Hesh is heir to and exemplifycations of frivolousness and unseriousness should be nipt in the bud and espeshially in school and hense I am often caused to mortify at observing the pre- vailing levicy which to an unpremeditated extent prevails in the scholars and forasmuch as likewise in the teachers some of them of depaw the verity of which observation can be verified by everybody who wants to. In our very good normal school the complaint is not so amazingly exceeding as in some of the contagious ramifications ofthe college and essentially in princi- ple Basit's primary department and Mister-Iohn's school which all the scholars feel so big though I don't know why since I bet not half of them ever taught school and the scholars in the school houses over by the brass deer and the couching king of of beasts and the methodist meeting house and to see some of -UA. . them girls who are big enough to shuck corn come into chape with them Hat boards over their faces that they paint on and the brushes sticking over their ears more than a foot long that they paint with is enough to petrify the patience of Peter Parley and the way some ofthem girls in Miss lVPansfield's dormitory they say do take on is a contumasious skandle on Holloween night. I hear they dress up like Indians or gipsys or hottentots and swing umbrellas and assassinate the fellows when they would be mighty glad to get a beau of one and some with trails below their feet which are more than a yard long and some of their dresses to short at the bottom and some too short at the top and some at both ends and some without no dresses at all and the whole crowd go giggling and wiggling and pacing and racing and ranting and panting and cavorting as Mr. Gothe says the witches do that make soup for Miss Mackbeth on Mount Par- nassus on VValpurgis night and the preceptress a snickering at it all and thus hallucinating them on which as I say is far below the dignity of a school mam of her ripened years. And our own dean though he has a fellicitous facility and fluency in teaching grammar so that I can't understand a word of it and has wrote a rhetoric so beautiful and deep that nobody can see the bottom ofit though somebody said that it was because of the mud and not the deepness is altogether too much given to levity for when in our grammar class a scholar corrected a sentense by saying that they carried the great Napoleon back to France for burial he said no it was only the bony part that they carried back which a schoolmaster should not ought to have said and one scholar said that his coat was so short it must have been cur- tailed and another said that he should have it retailed and he should be as sober as proff mace and should wear a shiny hat like the other teachers do who are so bald on the outside of their heads. And then Mister Hows is name who pounds the piano so in chapel and stands on the big box with a swallow tailed coat at the concerts and shakes his Hstand a club at the girls a scream- ing and the fellows a blowing out their brains in them big horns as if he wos mad at them for making such a racket which he may well be and leads up the tall girl with the big bouquet on her bosom by the hand as if she couldnt walk alone yet and has I wrote a song book for a dollar about depaw and cant induce any woman to marry half of the music school because he per- petrates so many poor puns and all the scholars snore at them and dont laugh which he does himself' and sings barry toned songs of his own composing and would be a great man if only he wasnt so small and was more ostere like little Mister Baker. Some of the teachers can have no acceptations taken to them on the ground of levity of which Mister Downey is a man of great specihc gravity and Mister Beals who some scholar said would answer forthe geometric definition of a line as well as Mister Hoffman and who has laughed once in three years when the boay in his essa about Meharry hall that its north end was adorned by a row of professors sixty feet long and I couldnt see anything to laugh at but Mister Beals did and laughed so hard that the girl who set next me said that his mouth looked like the mouth ofthe Amazon and Mister the latin teacher who the boys say would do tor the definition of a mathematical point but he weighs a ton in latin and never smiles but when he Hunks a freshman and Mister Mills who grinds the. corns ofthe art scholars and Mister Martin who they say has only laughed once in I5 years when the man who never takes off the black cap from his head which them who have seein it say looks for all the world like a skinned onion had to teach preparatory elocution. Now Mister Hunt I have great respect for you for I heard a girl say you was the deepest red man in College and you must be to write a whole book and did you hear that doctor Curtis wanted the woman who was curing she said with electricity all defects of the body to apply it to his brain and she said twould be no use for she must have a germ to begin on and I aint wrote near all I know for my pen scratches so and if you like to put this in your book and need some more to fill up with I have some good poetry wrote this spring and if you 'find any mis- pelled words please correct though I am a pretty good speller and dont think you will find some and send me some books for this and excuse haste and bad pen Your loving scuoor. TEACHER ff- A ,V M mine' ' x if 1 ,. 1 . ew.. V. . i , I J lxih- AY' .N N ' J ' T l , Q, 1, NX N 'lla iv -4 qi. 1268 I N Y ill Dr 7' li' ' ' - i Ty in-F of f I ! .A x A 'T eff fr' titt Q stser 4 Heaven is not reached at a single bound,', Nor do we rise at a single step To the Senior class from Junior Prep., But we climb to the top from the lowest round There is always a turn in the longest lane, And, though the way seem dark and drear, We shall reach at last, if we persevere, The tall silk hat and the rattan cane. H I count this thing to be grandly true, 'Tis better to be in the Freshman class Than'to be a Soph. if one must pass By sleight of hand or pony through. We hope, we aspire, we resolve, we trust, When the final ex. is drawing nigh, But we feel like a wretch condemned to die When we know that H Hunk we surely must. C T-X WN-l'JVkfE'g-fl 9+ . K :Alai tg. C? 2.-. v- W -W 'f fr- ' if-1-'Q University Lecture Course. Df McDoUca.u,, M,xx.Vxcru R6 November 26, .... PROF. THOMAS C. TRUEBLOOD. Hamlet Readings. SK January 17, . . . . . . DR. E. C. HENDERSON. Swords of Grant and Lee. February 4, . BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRAL CLUB Concert. February 26, . CHICAGO SCHUBERT QUARTET. Concert. Juneg, . . . . . . . . CHAPLAIN MCCABE. Sunny Side of Life in Libby Prison. -'ff ' ' 'f'- 5 3 fa , qfygw .inf 5 'cgi ujirjig xgidfaff 42 D' 1 X png . .A Q -aw s j', ,Q-. .'1 '-. JI 1.152359 v m, mf'- X gf- fm' .. Q -N il9'M?Z'5 ty: ,fl'l'?1f -1- 'gffxs ., D - v . ', ' 4 . I ' I ,. A ATG -'if' 1- 1' rf' - -X 'ff ,- - 52gf.A.P,.J L- ff- 1. :WL h'vx:i iw. . - '- M - -.:': - gn , f- M.. -41 HN jx -'FQNI5 ' ifW'f W :M .4 ,y. Iv wi? n nl Sf' X dvertisements Tiff? 1-l ,- ----11 YYY Richmond Straight-Gut No. 1 CIGARETTES. mn Cigarette Smokers who are willing to pay n e more than the price charged for the ordinary trade Cigarettes, will tlnd THIS BRAND superior to all o lers. 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WbLT?O56 CKHL Cx l9ol'lc,cU, rex!-fe-rl-seforf raged-L WNQGW1 wr H Jfhis ZPIQYL Jeiesialy 'Sh 15 m QQQ39 scheme unlse ar Q3f?,1scL1'xi5l1CcY GYEHGSH1 Qogpeacauwlllal Yegfi x , O3 1 O? ox Sim iw1foYmfNi0H xG8HEOH 8: Selndy, TH E P 0 P U LA R TAI L0 R S Carry the largest assortment of Woolens ln the clty. '1f51'?-I-5?-A Cfjj Ji A I J P ..:r ,. . : For line Custom-made Suits give us a call. Yours respectfully, CANNON S: SANDY. 2-nstnu, ilemujgurlx :tml Gmiczxgn Qcazhzrs' Qygcmizs ...li ' . 7 Tremont Place, 6 Cllnton Place, 106 and 108 Wnhssh Ave., '12 21:12 .211 1. BOSTON. NEW YORK. CHICAGO. All A at nl .qliw-,fl 3 5 r r -' ' In -'P EVERETT O. FISK 8 Co., Managers. .,-Q,-QAGENCY MANUAL FREE. Patrunize Hume Industry an Y .ti . . ...RSA .. I MA RTlN'S STEAM LAUNDRY Fljjjffiizif Does first-class work. Give him your custom. La. H SI N L1 :.: :' , Y V V Y Y A, t: 2.1:' : Qf:'m.:-QQ: ' A fx' 1: :1 ,:: '.::gLQ: E 6. U S -t W : lu- Fine rose buds, carnations and lllles sspecial ty. General assortment ol cut V, H flowers, smllsx. etc. Wedding orders fllled promptly. Funeralde- X si ns made u ln an artistic ma ner and on short notice. Bas- 8 rlrets and Bouqueg arranged tastily. TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA. EBSTEH'S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY. TH E BEST INVESTM ENT For the Family, the School, the Professional or Private Library. 'f f ff ...li'll'.'Zi'.'2.i'2' liafifglifl 0,033,005 fuggwny Printing 0813 and the U. S. 016770140 ,. 'i ' ITSFUI' Supreme Court. , . f- It is highly recommended -- -- --0+ -- by 38 State Sup'ts of Schools Besides m ny other unblo feuturcs, this work contains and the lggding Canoga A Dictionary of the English Language Pre-Mem of the U- S- and with 118 000 Words and 3000 Engravings, Canada. A Dictionary of Biography Bfggjly gfugfgefihei 301331 giving l1acts'about nearly 10,000 No ed Persons, oountryp are ,based ulm: A DICUUUZVY of Geograllhy Webster, as attested by the locsxnirrndtlgriofiy describilpg P aces, leading school Book Pub- IC IOIIHI' 0 IG IOIl lishers. founiziillynin Wangefsglnabadged. It has 3000 more Words In ne on ' and nearly 2000 more En- Wobster excels in SYNONYMS, which are appropriately BT11713189 than an? Uther found in the body or tho work. American Dictionary. FOR SALE BY ALL BOOKSELLE RS. Illustrated Pamphlet ol' Specimen Pages, Testimonials, ac., will be sent prepaid upon application. Published by G. 8 C. MERRIAM 8 OO., Springfield, Mass. Walter Allen's Little Drug Store. Your Trade Solieited. Opposite the College. Books, Stationery, Artist Materials, Lawn Tennis, Base Ball Supplies and Fishing Tackle, at S. 1EIOP'VV'OO'D'S BOOK STORE. HOLLINGSWORTH'S TREATMENT LLOCAL AND CONSTITUTIONALJ Prevents and Cures Colds, Nasal, Plmryngenl, Laryngeal and Bl'0llCllllll G'A.'I'.A RRH Hay Fever, Asthma, and Catarrhal Consumption. DR. l'lOLLINGSWORTH'S TREATISE mailed free. Gives full information respecting the nature, cause and trentinent of thc disease in its various forms. Address GLOBE MEDICINE C0., Terre Haute. Ind, SK CHAS. LUETEKE, BAKER 231 225' E33 Fresh Bread, Rolls, Cakes, Pies, etc. Everything necessary to a tlrst-class bakery al- l ways on hand. All orders for special occasions quickly tllled. 2321 E 5,3 -I-------GREENCASTLE, IND. 231 THE PALACE GF SWEETS no Nou' mn. 'ro vlslr 'rue 5171 . Palace Eunfentiunery and Eafe gi For Supper and Fine Home-Made Candles. Fancy Boxes of the most excellent Cau- xi dies put up to order. Oysters and Fruits served In best of style In season. Lunches xx to order. The largest line of summer beverages kept In the city. DO NOT FAIL T0 GIVE US A CALL. 233 J. M. MERRYWEATHER, Proprietor. - A-.. .....,, LL-, ..- -.--....-- -ii- ,, JOHN G. HEINL,V FLORIST, Terre Haute, Indiana. 17 Choice Ross-s and Cut Flowers at all seasons of the year. Orders promptly tllled. za Correspondence solicited. Also agent for all the tlrst-class 133 TRANSATLANTIC STEAMER LINES. FQ Round-trip tickets n. specialty. Write for circulars and estimates. Address JOHN G. HEINL, Terre Haute, Ind. W X HEADQUARTERS FOR 5123 Fishing '1'aci4Ie,Boats 5: Camping Outfits EL BASE BALL, FOOT BALL and LAWN TENNIS E GOODS, GYMNASIUM SUPPLIES, HAMMOCKS. yi A full Iiue of Tennis, Base Rall, Gymnasium and Sportsmcn's Uniforms and Clothing. Depot for A, G. Sr,u.mNra dz Baos. Send for Catalogue and prices. CHARLES IVIAYER 81 CO., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. 4555 ECLIPSE -'VIONTAUK-SEABRIGHT SPHCIAL- and CASINO RACKETS for 1 890 are unsurpassed Send for Tennis Catalogue. Special Rates to Clubs. 1' G - aaaa, Q S Mm Poker Glub Meets every Snnduy Afternoon. N0 LIMIT. CHIPS, FIFTY CENTS R. E. Lock, Dealer A. O. Royse Durham McKee Mull l R11kc-off devoted to lIIliAGl-1.1 M BOOKS, STATIONERY AND NEWS iyfl. Qzmgzlows iglook Starz, f!l'l7CDElI,C2I5T1.D, gud. l We kuop ll well scloa-tell stock nf 1lllN0lflllll100llR Books, Bilmles. lllylllll Books, School null 1 nllegm-'10xtBnoks. I'I1lln mul Faure? Smtioncry, Fancy Goods, l11 .o11Ll1c1', l'l1u-sh nnml Vul- vct. Alltllllrlllbll und l'l1orug1'11pl1 Al llllllH,Al'f1lBtS' Mnbcrlnls, Gold l'CllI'l and Pencils. Our fncilitics for 1'cw.-ivillg ull thel11tcst.p11l1llc11tlo11s of merit nrc spcuclyu11rl1'eliul1lu.11111I nll orders for goods 111 nur line promptly llllezl. Orders by Mail, or in Person, Respectfully Solicited. n JL A A 1 A wr v wr I 11 - WBIK 81 GO.. Wholesale and Retail Gruuers SOUTH SIDE SQUARE. Oh! the Dorm. Starvation Armyg See them crunching' on With knife amd fork and platter, A hundred and fifty strong. E. HAWKINS, Physician and Surgeon. Olllce, E. Washington St., Opp. P. 0. BUREAU OE GENERAL INFORMATION. GUY WALKER, CHIEF. HARRY MAXWELL, Assrs'rAN1'. muvnnsa POWELL, MCDOUGAL, C. L. SMITH, HUCKLEBERRY. Junior Studiesfor Spring Te?-m: 1. Blolo fy. one hour e k. 51 p r wee 2. Serenades, six hours per week. 3. Lawn '1ennis, twelve ours per week. 4. Love, time unlimited. Pli'3llLALLEN'S DRUG STORE Is the host plnce no buy Stmloncry. Toilet Articles, Lmnps, Funny Goods. etc. BEST GOODS AT LOWEST PRICES. HIEROGLYPHIO DEP'T OF DE PAUW UNIVERSITY. Cor.. RILEY WEAVER, DEAN. JOSEPH CARHART, SENIOR PROF. ALBERT ALLEN. M. WAI.KER, TUTOR. STUDENTS CAN ENTER .AT .f1.NIf' TIME. Somerville Steam Laundry AGENCY AT LANGDON'S BOOK STORE. VJ- S.. COX, DEHDER IN REM: ESTHTE and HTTORNEY HT hlllll Call or Wrlte for Particulars. Etc. 25 CTS S10 98 0 0 Z CD C Z 'U -I O Z Best Cough Medicine Recommended by P11 sicians Cures where 'ill else fails . Pleasant and ngreeab e to the taste. Children take it W1ill01li. objection By drug'g.,ists 'U U! -Q 'ua -Q ,C :U m 'fl -'40 1.m ISO'S REMEDY FOR CATARRII.-Best. Easiest to use. Cheapest. Relief is immediate. A cure is certain. For Cold in the Head it has no equal. It is an Ointment, of which ft small particle is applied to the nostrils. Price, 500. Sold by mlrliywists or sent by mail. Address, 11. T. IIAZELTINE, arren, Pa. The Finest on Eaiith! an The CINCINNATI, IIAMILTON N DAYTON R. R. is the only line running Pullman's Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trains, with Chair, Parlor, Sleeping and Dining Car service between Cin- PE2 cinnati, Indianapolis and Chicago, and is the only line running rf! Through Reclining Chair Cars between, Cincinnati, Keokuk and Sk Springfield, Ill., QQ? sit? AND THE ONLY DIRECT LINE I 5:53 ai 4 ' between Cincinnati, Dayton, Lima, Toledo, Detroit, the Lake S+? Regions, and Canada. fl? The road is one of the oldest in the State of Ohio and the only tiff line entering Cincinnati over twenty-five miles of double track, Qi? and from its past record can more than assure its patrons speed, comfort and safety. Tickets on sale everywhere, and see that they read C. H. LSL D., either in or out of Cincinnati, Indianapolis or Toledo. gg 1 -ii- E. O. MCCORMICK, General Passenger and Ticket Agent CINCINNATI. . 0u1' New Pronouneing Parallel Family Bibles. The latest issued and the very best. The authorized version and the revised vcrslon ln parallel columns, line for llnc, upon cach page. Two blbles in one volume. Evexay proper name ls divided and accented accor - ng to the best modern authorities. The only Parallel Blhle In the World with thls NEW Fl-IATUBE. ' Agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms. Write for terms and particulars to CRANSTON Sc STOWB Cincinnati, Ohio. The Greatest Success of the Season, BIBLE BRILLIANTS Royal zfuarto, slze, 9Mxl1?, printed on the finest ca endered paperg urge, clear type, with every proper name dlvldod and accent- ed : 820illustrations,68ful1-page, two of them rlnted lnnlne colors 105 between hall and Pull-page, and 147 smaller than half-page. BIBLE BRILLIANTS SPECIAL OFFER T0 STUDENTS. lTo Secure thc following special prices men- tlon this advertlsementl Heards' Prize Synopsis: CA revlew ol' the llrst years course ol study for mlnlsters.J Flex- ble cloth. Prlcc 30cts., net 20 cts. A Study of the Cmmtitulion ol the M. E. Church: By George L. Curtis, D. D. Flexible cloth. Price 60 cus . net 45 cts. Nutlail's Standard Dictionary: Ol the English language. 100,000 references. Price 81.505 special 75 cts., postage 10 cts. Smith ll: Peloubret s Bib e Dictionary: Eight col- ored maps: 440 illustrations. l'l'he Teach- ers' Edltlcn.J l2mo., 825 pages. Prlee 82, net 81.40, postage 10 cts. Ederslzcinvs Luc of Jesus the Messiah: lNew cdl- tlon.l Two volumes in one. Prlce82: special 81.50, postage 15 cts. Edersheun's Bible History: 7 vols., lGmo., half leather. Price 86: special 81.50, by express, not prepaid. Oruclcn's Concordance: lThe Student's Edl- tion.J A complete concordance to the Old and New Testament. Price 81.505 special 81, Dpostage. 20 cts. acru cal Revised Bible: The Revision of 1885 compared with that of 1611, showing at a glance what words are common to both. Invaluable to studentsg Octavo cloth, price 84: special 88: morocco 5, sgeclal 8315: Dl- vinlty clrcult89, special 66.7 , postage80 cts. New Special Teachers' Bible: No. 2,155, small, 8 vo., mlnlon type, Alsatlon Sevant, Dlvln- ity Clrcult, thin paper, silk sewn. red under gold edges, full concordance, colored maps, etc. Formerly 86, now 85. We will send one of these Bibles postpaid to any student men- tlonlrgg this advert sement for 8425. I-l3'Sen for our new Theological Catalogue, also new price-llst of course of study books.'E'll CRANSTON Ja STOWE. 100 West 4th St., Cincinnati, Ohio. .f are Nils iw AKQ 1 . 'i' i,....t-, ' . .. ' F' n r - ' Y c..-milfs '1 . 1' C . - A Q l K. , K- Tx s M .xt Ll- .,,,.. .tlsz Ml Samm .. B '-X. BQ , r-., ,,y: M f l llfll UW .. A l , ll ' westin cvlylsawn Q I, I9 JOH STREET, -A B a.lllannallm1mmnmlwunl:muniva.tnul.....- NM? ,gessnllmnllmlamnalammllllmllm . 4-YA M .grr ' l, . ' . 4 A v 1 it L., X V...- N 1 95955916956XSSSKXSKHSXXXRQXXXXXXXXSKSSSSSSSSSSXQSISSSS SHKSKSKSKSSGSKSKSSE 554956 Bundle gl Upmeynr, MAN U l1'.lCI'UREllH HF FRATERNITY EADGES Of All Kinds. B fore ordering O1 llnxlgo, get our prices mul styles. We g mruutcc satisfaction 1 l low prices. 121 mul 123 Wisconsin Street, Milwaukee, Wis. READ The I1lC1lEL113.1JO1iS News STUDENTS, ATTENTION! When you return next full go down to ll. F. JOSLlN'S and buy your L nl and Kind- llng. Oillce nt the old Nn'l Mlll near the Vundulln Dcp t For 21 Book, I1 Lamp, Z1 Brush, Z1 Cigar, For Soaps, Pomudes, Tooth Powder, And, in short, forlwlmtever you need, go to LANDES' DRUG 84 BOOK STORE Inks, Pens, Frzlternity Stationery, Etc. I ...lgg0... A FEW OF OUR TWO THOUSAND New and True Music Books CIIOICE SACRED SOLOS, ZH tlne songs ......... ................ . . ......5l 00 CIIOICE SACRED SOLOS, for Low Voice, 40 songs ...... ...... 1 00 SONG CLASSICS, Soprano and Tenor, 50 songs ..... ........ ..... . . 1 00 SONG CLASSICS, Low Voice, 47 songs. ....................... ...... . 1 00 CLASSIC BARITONE and BASS SO GS ........ .......... ...... 1 00 CLASSIC TENOR SONGS, 36 songs ........................ ...... I 00 CHOICE VOCAL DIYETS, the very best ................. .. ...... I 00 EVEREST'S ALBUM OF SONGS, good selections ....... ...... l 00 MAUD B. WHl'l'E'S ALBUM tasteful songs .... . ....... ....... I 00 SULLIVAN'S VOCAL ALBUM, a master's work .... ..... .. l 00 POPULAR SONG COLLECTION, 37 good songs... 1 00 GOOD OLD SONGS we used to sing, lI5 songs .......... ....... 1 00 COLLEGE SONGS, 150,000 sold ......... r .................... . .......... ...... . 6 0 COLLICGE SONGS for BANJO, for GUITAR: each ,............... ...... 1 00 Rl-IYMES and TUNESg Osgood. Sweet home music ............. ....... 1 00 INSTRUMENTAL. PIANO CLASSICS, Vol. 1, 44 pieces ............... .... ...... .Sl 00 PIANO CLASSICS Vol. 2, 31 pleces.... ..... . .............. ........... . ...... 1 00 o1.Ass1c.x1. PIANIST, 42 pieces ................... .. ....... 1 oo POPULAR PIANO COLLECTION, 271pleces ..... .... ..... ............. . ..... . 1 00 POPULAII DANCE MUSIC COLLEC ION ............ . ....... .... ...............,............... ...... . I 3 YOUNG PEOPLE'S CLASSICS, 52 easy pieces ..... ........ .. ......... ...... ,,,..,........ . The above are all superior books. Any book mailed for retail price. OLIVER DITSON COMPANY, Boston. c. 11. n1'rsoN .e co., sm BROADWAY, N. Y. ESTABLISHED naar. EIMER Sz AME D Importers and Mmlnfnctnrers of CHEMICALS CHEMICAL APPARATUS, ASSAY GOODS. SPECIALTIES I Absolutely pure Chemicals and Acids, Royal Ber- lin and Meissen Porcelain, French Platinum, Knvnller's Bohemian Glass, Fine An- alytical Balances and Weights. 205, 207, 209 and 211 Third Avenue, New York. lSth Street Station of the Elevated Railroad. -43,11 1? k i ,Q ,. A-F 1. E I 'J 'llmmlqlllul HMI mszmr- I ll lily N fiend 3 5 I X- , Q fe S Q ' L - , Sr.: 5555 vi Q? 5 Q ia X 3 Lf Lg. 9 NNN ss . iw V V T V4 lllwm ...1. ,.,....,..... M: Y H 2 : 'f'-'I 1 W r M .J 11 nnM 2g:u:ff:r:5:::::'l ::::::f::::: fo, W M s, E'ifQQjffjQfQffI':: 'v FHCEFXND ORKS, -U--5.1r:unlf,,jg21laszeszzssiszz 1- - M I Nb, '2sssgsg:::::::z...: 'z ,K ,.., ...W ....M. . .1..,,....,.. ut.. 919 IvgusfgTFgEE11 4 mmm, Q , 1eHMoND, IND. ,fs M W t , Il ,. I . I A. S. LURING, Agent, Greencastle, Indiana. Agents wanted ln every town. Write for prices. Agents now established in flve states. SPECIAL'l'Il-IS-Laundry Blue for family use. Saves labor and timeg does not injure the nn. est goods. Prlce, 60 cents per pound. Indellble luk put un in small bottles, sent, post-paid, for 15 cents. lfor sale by D. W. Walters. These goods are used and recommended all over the United States. ew Improved ' S 5 . ss 'ruff' 'FM mp X Q, ' xx l 'N Y H.-' as ,r X Q 5' 'ff is A t We mdk' V Q? 'le X .. fozlit -'wu,u'l Q t -E . S X X reset f S t Q We 4111,-,,.4p I E , xx WS I 1.1,-U! , , A-Mba: Msgs '.' ' 0 0 U a o WPIEIDQ .Mae 1 e The Standard Typewriter of the Age Every One Warrallted. 0ver 40,000 In Daily Use. Wlth its late improvements, it is unrivalled for speed, ease of operation, neatness of print, perfect alignment, manifoldlng power, and durability. We keep a large stock of the Best Typewriter Supplies and Linen Papers. Send for circulars and samples of work. H. T. CONDE IMPLEMENT co., GENERA1. AGM-S, 70 and 78 Wont Washington St., INDIANA POLIS, IND. I 5 'r , YOUNG MEN AND WOMEN EDUCATED tor successful business, taught how to get a Living, make Money, and become eutcrprlslng, useful cltlzt-ns.P N X th H d th I i m tl d , ouoxrxssvsm, . '., on e u son e nn ns n on e- Edsxfmall Colleges voted to this specialty, consists of the Schoolsyof Bllsllless combining Theory and Practice by a novel and original system ol tralnlng, var ' ' . lety of otllcentegrlgivgfg ltbalfecgmcllslggggsegnzfiifecrtzmlzgtglcglratlgtloxftilcggutallxttltgllilsltg transactions ol daily occurrence as conducted ln the gttleataexfmancsges ot Ialew Kork and Lcingfm. . . .' ' e es e ore uca ng young a es. 1 honoglaphy and FYPCWI ltlng' Students wlshlng to become shorthand amauuenses are thoroughly drllled lu correspondence. Students desiring to become general verbatim reporters are taken through all grades, flnlshlng on lectures delivered in t ecol- lege: in no other school in this country ls this opportun ty offered Pcnnlanship gazllndelss, Drawing and ornamental work.. An art indispensable 1 . readily learned, and when acqul cd earns od a . These schools, em- il eleg 1'flP11y hractng six departments, are ln charge ot eight prgtgssors and tlve assistant instructors FASTMAN has been well t I d THE BUS N Q1 . . ' s y e ESS N VERSITY OF AMERICA. It ls the oldest and most practlcal Commercial School and the largest and most popular Private School ln thls country. Refers to patrons in every state. YOUNG MEN and Boys starting ln llfe for themselves or assuming the business ol a father '11 or relative, and wanting the best preparation to assure success: YOUNG LADIES desiring to qualify themselves for good posltlons, and to make themselves indegendent for lite in a short t me at a very moderate expense: PARENTS AND GUAR IANS wanting their sons to be useful. prosperous citizens, and their daughters prelparcd for the accidents of llfe, and made self-supporting: ACADEMIC AND COl.l.l'.GE GRA UATES dcslrlng a practical and profitable tlntsh tothe r thcoretlca and unavall ng education: DISAPPOINTEID YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN who are tled to conservative families, , or places unsnltud to their arnblttons and abili- ties, or who deslrc to change thelr course of lite, by seeking places and bushtess more satlslac- toryisaud remunoratlve wil tlnd rtttt naw, short, practical course of study here mostlnvaluable. here are no vacations. Applicants enter an daly with equal advantage. Board and tul- tlon tees more reasonable than ln any other FlyRS -CLASS school Ad ress tor catalogue Wtsffssasssffansef-P....-.. EAST't8tt.H93taa9E-Y. Q34IIIlIlllllllIlIlIIIIllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIHIE33 E E : : E WC C. DePauw Co., Lcssce, ut 9 E Ci E U3 IP Z F1 E O SP Z 'U K 2 sa CD L P U2 U2 2 O W W U2 I 3 e at a fe E2 'Q is Qfill C S S' 5 3 vw - o o .9 ca o o 'TJ 0 0 .- 'E 2 f' Q CD .. 3 5 SE 'b.o 38 co 'E' ox in ,nm Z EE ... fi L40 :si Fe B Q 9 N. 'l'. DEPAUW, l'rnt'l. W. D. KEYES, Stc'y. C. W. DEPAUW. Vl'CC'PfC3'f .gf .gilt 't t we c.m.ne.Rm an IMHXWXXKVPMNNNXXXSWXNENSY With perfect instruments mu. wzxmmnm , , SXWY-RXQRXX T0 'HQ BNESSTZFRXQQKE there IS nothmg to prevent XTENED5-If -555NkMF.mk1RAnEMkRYx the student from acquiring 'mmmmm N m ST vmLkM'wmh' the manual dexterity ne- 'CilfI?'3 4' - A '-Mmfiffflfirtt N 3 M K X t X ' t t 0 vt 'N XAXA. eummv. mst Humans nuxmwvt x :tx h A 'A . ' h A K---e ' --:J-'- - f1,.fs--- f 1-,-1---7-..-.--1---ge-ffiflnh-5 ,Q eessary to produce the best -'f,r,...,.,,,:,...s'.. ' f-:-I ... 0 V g t t-A-t I ' ,511-7 ' S --.L .. , e,........,, .a.. 1 . . work 111 the least tune. - 4- '? -...R owls Above! D1 zzwmg fw- 3. ez: 5f 'L US- '-' EWG Mu Q xx E 'b rl 'RFPKCX r. ki Teri .....GENU1NE... Alteneder Drawing Instruments THE STANDARD 0F ALL 0'l'llER MAKES. -3- -if SEE e r ooper Pos. ----FoR----- First Class Livery and Transfer Line Feed and Sale Stables, Corner of Indiana and Walnut Streets, GREENCASTLE, IND. 11 da- 'FM a HF personally conducted limited excursions over the vt.. . CIIESAPLAKF tb Onto RAlLWAY, that proved so popular ,, l ist yutr, will be repeated during the season of 1890, and June 24, July 15, August 2b and September 16 have been selected as the dates of departure from Cincinnati. A special train of royal vestibuled 5. coaches, with nn observation car attached, will carry the tourists f ,. s. 4 . AY WY I ' , dk.,--1 , H V . -,,iI 3s1 7g1.3 'f 1 - ii I . 15: yr, 9 -Q. J 345 5.3.4 , 3' ' Q . , , A VII' mm lhstas --MLX all Y, . Y V .ii,fQ5'f,i'i g g gg gg A W g x 1-asa A c' e vi 'ii ' 'X ' 7'.'s 91f'a?t-r -fri 1 ' ' 'A z -. ' V , . sl over the entire route by daylight. Stoppages for rest and sight-see- ing will be made at White Sulphur Springs, Natural Bridge, Luray Caverns and Richmond-Old Point Comfort and the sen.-shore being reached the fourth even- ing in time for supper. Every provision that experience and foresight can suggest will be made for the comfort and enjoyment of the traveler, and no more delightful outings QRS! for the coming summer. - ' Tickets covering transportation in both directions and all expenses on the going trip, including meals, hotel accommodations, livery, admission to caverns, etc., will be furnished for the nominal sum of thirty dollars. An experienced agent of the company will conduct the party and look after every detail of the journey, secure rooms at the hotels, 'point out the various places of interest, care for the luggage twhich will be accessible at all timesi, and relieve the tourist absolutely of every care and responsibility. The scenery along the line of the C. 8a O. is unequaled in variety and splen- dor east of the Rocky Mountains, the Natural Bridge and Caverns of Luray ac- centuating the whole with Divine emphasis, while the ,historical associations and places of interest that crowd one another the whole way make a trip over this famous railway an endless delight, and present an object lesson in National his- tory that never can be forgotten. Pamphlets giving full particulars will be furnishetlon application to H. W. FULLER, General Passenger Agent, Cincinnati, Ohio. .9 I n ,'., :l, n,1, fx.. .. .. ng ... mmwmmmmmwmmmmmwmm TI-I E OFFERS TO YOU ALL V A N D A I. I A A MOST DE- SIRABLE ROUTE TO INDIANAPOLIS and the EAST I llfi, 2MwMAWM:rfQIwMWHQ ST.. LOUIS AND THE WEST. SOUTH BEND AND THE NORTH. On this line is located the famous Lake Maxinkuckee, ll delightful summer resort. For full information, f'alI on or address JOHN S. DOWLING, Agent, Greencastle, Ind. Or E. A. FORD, Gen'I Pnssg'r Agent, St. Louis, Mo. 5. il U WHWHWMWWWHWHWHWMMWWHMNWWH MILF' -f 51, Wil l x.. , K' A EA 1. I Ll -.....,, -. fl ' I ' , we I F Hr Fri' Eastmaozfs Transparent Films, Fon Rom. Hox.DERs. NO STRIPPING REQUIRED. Eastlmaas Model Qf1889 Roll Holders, wrrx-r LATEST 11v1PRovE:MEN'rs. Eastmanfs Lzzferckangeable View Cameras. Licu-rr, sTRoNG, HANnso1v1s:. Eastmrmls' Permanent Ifromifle Paper. IN HALF TONE, Unequalled. IN COATING, Absolutely Perfect. IN RANGE OF COLOR, Unapproachable. Eastmauls Transferotype Paper. A Bromide of Silver emulsion, coateduupon paper, from which, after Development, it may be stripped and transferred to other surfaces. invaluable for Transparencies, Opals, Placques, Tiles, Etc., New Kodak Cameras Yea press the button, we :Io the rest. L0r you can do il. yourself.J Seven New Styles and Sizes, all loaded with Transparent Films. For sale by all Photo. Stock Dealers. SEND FOR CATALOGUE- THE EASTMAN COMPANY, ROCllBSt0I', N. Y. lp ' 1553 bis ?1Tf3f 2213 27 E151 131 5:23 Ik Sr- iff ax: 22:1 iff? A A A A W-.fx or off it fl. 'QR M tit WW fl? 5253 fi? 933 Eff 731 321 E231 131 E51 xr X ' -fm 1 a ix SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. Pictures iinished in OIL, WfX'Flili COLORS, INDIA INK AND CRAX'ON. W. . . . . . HOTOGRHPHER Special Attention paid to Large Photographs. Work as good as the best and Prices us low us the lowest. . GREENCASTLE, INDIANA. G. 65. BGIZGSC, EHYsxG1AN AND SURGEON. A Office and Residence, East Washington St. Tom O'Conne1l, the Students' Friend. Doors AND suoms MADE AND REPAIRED. 1--ltlndiana Street, two doors North of Banner OFHCC- De Pauw Glwestrxuts. 40s Good morning. Have you used Pear's Soap P When will the MIIIAGE be out? SUNDAY AFTERNOON ff sPoU'r.', The iron bars across Dr. B's door. Several so-called Professors. 956954 SKSKSESESKSKSKSK XX .USU ' M an Q? 3 v' , 31 .lf . - f - gl' e '- , , ,-A R H., UAE
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