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B xg L as vo x ., X I X 4 r ms, 'K ' X, X ,-Q' af ' N :L X 5' 9 4 x S or df? x . N X is assi N5 gg L I- lk it X ' . , 5 r ' .3 .. ' fi ' . fn wg W xxx X Wi 1 iz Z X 1 ik. dwg' NN' .1 . 5, 4 , f 4,50 ., t .f. -4- -, fi ': GOHEEN HALL ,. --, 'V ff' fw f f v W ,m mm L -1 '- 1,1 ' , f' ,rf 1 ' ,gag X f, 'f' JWM IIW' m fm l gf! 11l,Xlh- ,,1fQ5'g . ,a, ?a'af A . ' 1 Lf Vgllfpgfe M y 5 ' ll 1 - 1 ffl f vfffffv 14 1 xi f M 1 wp . I , V A 4 ily- 'Xl 'fl E., - ywwff l 4 7:-,I . . , 4 W 1' ,ls fy mf yvsiil JM iilllfffw ff' ,W W, A5gW+f Lx H f P 1 X M, L ,q, .5?g'y c nv eg 1 1 2 Qi f A 1-f 5 'agh 531- M ' irwk' ,'-. . 1' ,- ' ff' ' 'Y - 4 K I , - QQN N X lgffsc ' v flu: s 'E-g::x i,,.- A ' 'IQD V A fl If K ..-,..-' ' INN:-J ' C' X N--'I-1 'lf - ,bv - .' 'l4n4'n Q1 . 33.7 ' ' 31? W' ff ,C 51 ' ' ff' X la, la 0.7 Q My , .,l 1,l. f H ' ' f bf:zE:25e:ff2i': 4 if 55: ' X' ' 'SWJWW 4' if 'f+5Q.'3'Q3-Q . Yifizsesal WL lk-. .. ,231 asf: L f MQ F NYM 4' 8, f ql'o'5:0'6NN0s 1 ---fd l ,.. ' 'fgzg5.. m , 1 I! ' IAM 1- 'Qifi-j ,f s ' X 5 4 +1?2f.f -ll K V. X XWQX ,, mi, - V A dl ,, J. . eaigg' M2 111 A 5 I X7 If K Ywgx U W ,111 x ,M 1. 1 Il, Ar 4 J a . X V 1 ,f , rf! i I K iki? LXM x my ' 1 . ' i.-.J .f X A 2 J 1' 2 Q ' l ki.. .7 Ll xl Lxfg.-7 Ll History of Hamline TURDY pioneers, coming to Minne- sota from the eastern frontier, were not satisfied to make their daily bread and hew away in the forests for their stock and crops. They wanted their children to be educated. As early as 1849, when Minnesota was organized as a territory, this need was manifest. There were no schools then, and no provision for higher A education. The Methodist Church took the first step in the matter. ' . In 1850, there was some- talk of organizing an academy or seminary, which soon grew into the dimensions of a university. Four years later a charter was granted on application made to the Territorial Council of Minnesota. Bishop Leonidas L. Hamline had been interested in the project, and made an endowment of 825,000, in real estate, putting the institution on a financial basis. The new university was incorporated under the name of The Trustees of the Hamline University of Minnesota. Provision was made in the charter to fix the location of the institution on the Mississippi River between St. Paul and Lake Pepin. The early legislators be- lieved that the success of an educational institution depended largely on 'its prox- imity to navigable streams, for the reason that a large majority of the early settlers made their homes near the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers. Also, the students, like freight, could be more cheaply transported by water than by land. L , ' Early History ED WING, then a collection of Indian huts and numbering 305 inhabitants, of whom only ive were white people, was made the site of Hamline University. In accordance with the provision of a treaty, the Indians vacated the place in 1853. In November of the following year, school opened for academic work with only one or two teachers and an attendance of probably sixty preparatory students. 'As Principal Brooks expressed it, Hamline University was founded at a time when tepees were more plentiful than houses, and Indian-trails more common than highways. However, the venture was considered a success. T he first catalogue published, in 1855, contained the following as the first faculty: Rev. Jabez Brooks, A. M., Principal and Librarian, Miss Louisa Sherman, Teacher of Modern Languages, Painting and Drawing, and Mrs. Frances L. Dun- ning, Teacher of Music and Ornamental Work. ' Two years later the university proper was opened, being the first and for some years thereafter, the only college institution in Minnesota. Chairs of mathematics, natural science and ancient languages were created, as well as professorships of theology and law. Hamline University also has the distinction of leading other colleges in the United States in establishing a scientific course of equal rank with the classical, and affording the same educational faciilities to the women as to the men, at that time a very novel idea. In the spring of that year, President Brooks resigned on account of ill health, and Rev. B. F. Crary, D. D., was elected to fill the vacancy. This Page Seventeen year 1857 also marked the panic that met the university at the outset of its career There had been no opportunity for the settlers to store away wealth against time of adversity, and when this panic struck the country, it required the most heroic struggle to con- tinue. The trusteeslof Hamline University were obliged f 1 1 ' . ji i.l' .yly V T T, I Q ' to devise means to meet the current expenses of theinstitution..The saleof part of Bishop Hamline's property, which comprised the first endowment, andother real estate, the raising of a 310,000 endowment, together with contributions of friends of the institution and sale of scholarships-all failed to place theiinstitutionon a sound financial basis. The significant epochs Qin theuhistory of Hamline seem to come in regular beats of two years. In'1859,' thefirst class was graduated from Hamline University, the Misses Elizabeth and MaryfSo1Tin,4 sisters, being the ones' to complete their courses. Another two years' elapsed and the War of the Rebellion broke out. Prof. H. B. Wilson of mathematics and about seventy-five students enlisted, leaving almost no able-bodied' men, President Crary resigned, having been se- lected by the legislators of Minnesota' to organize the public schools system of the state. Dr. Brooks had meanwhile recovered his health and was again elected by the trustees to the presidency 'offHamline University. Many reminiscences of early Hamline .still cling to the graduates of those days. Judge Hascal R. Brill' contributes thefollowing recollections of the pioneer days: , V T . I ' . The boys who came to Hamline did not come with the intention of finishing a four-year course. They came and remained as long as they were able. The railroad did not penetrate as far as Red'Wing and the students had to travel by boatorstage. T , ' - We cooked and ate in our rooms., There were no athletics. There was in- deed no college to compete with if we so wished. We played a simple and crude game of baseball. The fact is, there was not much time for athletics, work was our major sport. The students applied themselves very seriously to Livy and Xeno- phon, or whatever they happened tobe taking. Ii -Qi 3: , nigh, 442. lil' L 'Lf 1 Q Lg.: ' fi: 15..W!'1: 'J .wig :awZ.f:' -I, 2 ,. gg . 1 1 ' f-, Q u 1 I .. ,fy K , K A ' . XX 1 h A I i . . ' . I Page Eigli N: lb Y li. N 96 .iw lip 'A 'A ss -5 . mx. U P . 1 4 'va , , m,, gi 1 ,Nr iv. 1 F43 'Y me 'Q u .Y 9. :Sr '4 fa' 'Ib' P . -.-'.'f'. i 1. Mi . . L , w . 4',1' gp ZVL.-f'-af W' l' fi ,,x Q ,' V Rl VX 9- x .1 5 . K X , - .- 'AQ 'I V 1 U Ll .P--C. Lli' time il l:..'..: 1 iL...i1 li 'iii' i.'1fv.riwfr... Mr. A. J. Meacham, one of the earliest students, entering in 1857, has some de- l i gh t ful observations on the old days. In 1858 Hamline boasted of a chapel and three recitation rooms on the first floor. One of these, the music room, was also used as a li- brary. A ' At that time the tuition did not exceed ten dollars a term. There was no ground for argument concerning incidentals. The freshmen did not carry a check sewed up in his inside coat pocket, but calmly walked up to the receiving ofiicial and donated a few hams, some flour and a little pork and beans. This is what supported the faculty. ' ' - The main building consisted of class rooms on the first floor and a dormitory on thesecond. The girls were supreme at one end of the structure, while the boys held the other. The masculine element was as always, full of fun. There were three literary societies-the Philologian, the Adelphian, and the Segournian. The journalistic ambitions of the students were satisiied by a paper published weekly by each society in turn. It was not printed but read in chapel. Last Commencement HE year 1869 was another period filled with incidents. The liabilities of the university were such that a majority of the trustees favored a discontinuance of instruction and the school closed, Dr. Brooks having resigned. This decision was made quietly by the trustees and the students were not aware of it until commencement. It was the tenth -graduating class which went out of Hamline on March 4, 1869, and the last commencement at Red Wing. In the meantime, the Minnesota State University, Carleton College and other institutions of learning had been organized, and the need of this college in the state was less imperative, though the project of reopening Hamline University was still one of the first interests of the Methodist Church. During the eleven years fol- lowing the closing of the institution, the Board of Trustees continued its existence W .N ...grisly 1 s 1 .ss r ' rs: . .- .g-wi.: ya. -gs .f iXSQSswt:ySQSx n. tr. .'Fwf5' ' -ixXhX1i.Q3AXQ.i3Q.QX tx Q3 Page Nineteen at 13 , :..71,y..1,'f, 1:41-.zz ,igff-' - 1 as a corporation, and when, in 1880, Minnesota entered upon an era of wonderful prosperity and commercial progress, Hamline University was reopened as a col- legiate institution. The property at Red Wing sold for enough to pay off the indebtedness of the university, and the task of securing a new siteiand means of erecting a.college building began. Money and land were contributed by friends of the -university who were desirous of having it removed to the vicinity of St. Paul and Minneapolis, and as soon as possible, building operations were begun upon a tract of ground comprising about forty acres, midway between the Twin Cities. Hamline University was reopened with Dr. John as president, in 1880. Uni- versity Hall had been built at a cost of 350,000 It contained all the recitation rooms used by the college, the chapel, library, dormitories, and boarding depart- ment, and was the only building belonging to the institution. The theological and law' courses of the university were discontinued, -but a medical college was attached. Two years after the reopening of the university, a boarding hall was built for the accommodation of young women, and was called Ladies' Hall for many years, until in 1910 the name Goheen Hall was adopted in honor of Mrs. Anna Harrison Goheen of Minneapolis, who contributed a large sum toward its cost. February 17, 1883, was one of the memorable dates in the history of Hamline, for on that day the original building was burned. The pathetic sight, of Dr. john and the students trying to save what they could, lingers in many recollections. Thea next day schoolwas convened in Goheen Hall and plans for rebuilding were ma e. Part II T an meeting of the trustees in june, 1883, the resignation of Dr. D. C. john as president was accepted. It was a fortunate day for Hamline University when its Board of Trustees elected Rev. George H. Bridgman, D. D., LL. D., then president .of Lima Seminary in New York, to fill the vacancy made by Dr. John's resignation, and Loren H. Batchelder, A. M., LL. D., formerly of the faculty of Haclgettstown Collegiate Institute, N. J. to be professor of Physical Science. , 1 . I age 1 nt 'flf-- i - 111. f..wif-ii...q,.-w,'4-'.,. W1 . . ,.. ,X t K Dr. Bridgman had already mastered difficult educational problems at Lima and history has amply demonstrated the wisdom of his selection to be the head of Ham- line University. Equally wise was the selection of Dean Batchelder. These men found an institution in its infancy, both laboring for years, with the aid of other devoted men and women, produced a physical plant and an educational routine of the highest order. The labor of supplying the ways and means for the educa- tiogal lprogram fell upon 'President Bridgman, ably assisted by Dean- Batchelder an ot ers. . f The institution of that day consisted of a College of Liberal arts and a College Preparatory Department. The former was made up of iiive seniors, six juniors, thirteen sophomores and fourteen freshmen, in contrast with this enrollment there was a preparatory department of one hundred and twenty-eight. It was the task of President Bridgman to develop the College of Liberal Arts out of these beginnings. His first achievement was the enlargement of the Ladies' Hall by an addition at the south end whereby its capacity was doubled. 2 In 1887 Science Hall was erected to afford space needed for the scientific laboratories and for class rooms. In the same year the Department of Biology was founded and Henry L. Osborn, Ph. D. was elected totake charge of it. In 1889 the Department of History was added to the curriculum. George S. Innis, Ph. D. was .made professor of History. He had formerly been the head of the Latin Department and the place thus vacated has been filled from that time to this by William E. Thompson, A. M. These additions to the faculty and curriculum improved the institution sufficiently to permit growth of the collegiate work and the results were shown by the increased attendance in the College of Liberal Arts. Up to 1898 the work in English had been carried by various other departments, in that year a professorship of English was founded. The Qchief work of its early development was done by Richard Watson Cooper, A. B., who was elected in 1899. In those days the college library occupied the rooms on the second floor of University Hall, now occupied by the Greek Department and the Y. W. C. A. The library was in charge of Dr. Innis and was open at a few stated hours for draw- ing books, but there were no facilities for using it as a place for reading or library Page Twentyfone ' gg.-gl.15:i4:',jjf.' aff ' I -.L .f 1 if., 'f.,,:f5 ' 1 E' L . 4,---.. li' La in research. The need for greater accessibility developed with the larger faculty and increased attendance and in 1901 Anna Davis, Ph. B., was elected librarian. Professor Milton I. Griffin, A. M., of the early faculty resigned in 1901 and lames S. King, A. B., was elected to ill the position of Professor of Greek and Modern Languages. His classes grew- and courses developed rapidly so that 1n 1903 the Department of Modern Languages was separated and keptin charge of Professor King and William I. Keller, M. A., later succeeded by Roy Towne, M. A., was elected Professor of Greek. Q In 1904, the courses of the Preparatory Department were extended so as. to equalize the four-year courses required for college entrance which were becoming general. But with the constant improvement .of the high schools, the necessity for the Preparatory Department gradually ceased and in 1911 it Was finally dis- continued. During the period intervening between 1896 and 1906 the attendance in the College of Liberal Arts was constantly increasing so that the catalogue of 1906 shows an enrollment of two hundred and ninety-two. At this time there began a period of very active extension of the educational facilities offered to Hamline students. ' In 1906 the courses in Political and Social 'Science were separated from the History Departmentand made into .adepartment and given into the charge of Erville B. Woods, Ph. D., who wassucceeded in 1911, by Don D. Lescohier, A. M. By 1906 the English Department had enlarged to' such a degree -that a separate department of English Language was founded and Thomas, P. Beyer, -M. A., was elected to be its head. ln 1907 President.Bridgman'succeeded in securing the endorsement of Ham- line's work by Andrew Carnegie who became sufficiently interested in her progress to give the Trustees the sum of 330,000 to be used for the erection of a library building, provided that an equal sum should be raised and set aside as an endow- ment for its upkeep. This latter condition having been met, the building was erected and today is the pride and comfort of all. During this same year the second floor was added to the rear part of Science Hall at a cost of about 3B10,000, and the space thus afforded was appropriated to the biological department. In 1908 the Department of Philosophy and Psychology was instituted and Gregory D. Wal- cott, Ph. D. was elected Professor. For many years Hamline had held an enviable position in College Athletics. The first mention of a Physical Director is that of R. P. Kaign in the catalogue of 1892, but good teams in foot-ball, base-ball and track had been in existence much earlier. For many years the rooms -in the basement of Science Hall had been used by the Athletic Department and were gradually improved and made some- what serviceable. In 1910 funds necessary to build and equip the present Gym- nasium and Norton Field were raised and at that time William Baird, B. S., was elected to the post of Physical Director. Thus gradually during the twenty-nine years of the presidency of Dr. Bridg- man, Hamline-passed through the early stages of its career, advancing steadily from crude beginnings and reached its present substantial estate. In 1912 he resigned from the active work of President and the Trustees elected Samuel F. Kerfoot, D. D., an alumnus of the class of 1889 as his successor. In the few years that Dr. Kerfoot has been president, he has made many improve- ments. 1n 1913, the Department of Romance Language was foundediand Louis Rowell Herrick, M. A., from the faculty of Wisconsin University was elected to take charge of it. The same year the teaching force of the Department of Biologv was strengthened by the addition of an instructor and Orren John Wenzel of Micli- igan University was elected to the position. ' Page Twenty mo X xo. ' X5- Y l 5 p In 1914 the Department of Physics Was separated from that of Chemistry and Jens Mad R 1 ' sen ysgaard, B. A., Was elected to be Professor of Physics. Hamline is thus steadily improving, as time passes, the total attendance this year being three hundred and eighty-three. With its enthusiastic faculty alumni and student body and its splendid location and equipment and high educational stand d d 'd l ' ' ' ar s an 1 ea S it has become one of the important forces making for leader- ship in the Northwest. Pa g , . . ureau of Education, 1902 and The History of Hamline at Red Wing . - Part II. This sketch is furnished by Dr. Henry L. Osborn of Hamline University. rt I . Drawn largely from Greer- The History of Education in Minnesota U S B A Page Twenty-three 'i ,ij '-, ,L 1 1f',f,' k ii V Af. ,., :, ff,-'Q 1-',g-' ,fi-'-.'S'fH I . 1 X. ,x k 915: cl-G :HP A ,- Y 5 Q55 L4 ngf YN'1i'c'!If-X' --fl. Page .1 .,- ,U . X- . . Y . .-,-, .V 1 . i .5 5' 1 5.3 . .l .l . lr al U. -ll lllxl lm ' J l if l l 2 . A nmumuuuuum GEORGE S. INNIS Acting Dean A. B., A. M., Ph. D., B. D., D. D. PM Beta Kappa Delta Tau Delta - Professor Innis received both his A. B. and A. M. at Ohio Wesleyan, 1872, and his B. D. at Boston Theological Seminary, 1876, his Ph. D. at Illinois Wesleyan, 1885, and his D. D. at Hamline Univer- sity, 1901. Tu'e1zly-Jive .U rllwuf-5 ni T V IHHI an X N L. H. BATCHELDER Dean A. M., LL. D. Dr. Batchelder has been the Dean of Hamline since 1883. He graduated from Middleburg College, Vermont, with the degree of B. A. in 1874. He was elected professor of Mathe- matics and Chemistry in the Newark Conference Collegiate Institute at Hackettstown, New Jersey. Later he studied law and was admitted to the Bar of the State of New York. In '83 he ac- istry and Physics at Ham- line. The Board of Trus- tees conferred the degree of LL. D. in 1906. Wil . WVILLIAM E. THOMPSON A. B., A. M. Phi Beta Kappa Professor Thompson re- ceived his Bachelor's and Master's degrees at Brown University. He was presi- dent of his Freshman classg Howells, Dunn and Carpenter Prizeman, Ora- tor at the Junior Exhibi- tion, and valedictorian of his class. 5 V ,I lf'-' in L , -. ., -,, - a-. .3 - L., .AV L L, Lu-L, , , t.-u HENRY L. OSBORN A. B., Ph. D. Phi Beta Kappa Psi Upstlon Professor Osborn received his B. A. in 1878 at Wes- leyan University, Connecti- cut, where as undergradu- ate, he assisted for three years in Zoology. ' For three years he was a Graduate Student and Fel- low in Biology at Johns Hopkins University, Whe' e he received his Ph. D. in 1884. For the next three years he was Professor of Zoology at Purdue Uni- versity, Lafayette, Indiana and in 1887 became Pro- fessor of Biology at Ham- line. He has spent three years traveling etxensive- ly in Europe and he has been editor for four years of the American Monthly Microscopic Journal. JAMES S. KING A. B., A. M. Phft Beta Kappa Sigma Na Professor King Was gradu- ated from Northwestern University With the de- gree of A. B. in 1901, and there in 1910 he also received his A. M. Immediately upon gradua- tion he Was tendered the chair .of Modern Lan- guages at Hamline. For three years he Was Pro- fessor of Greek, French and German and for twelve years he has been Professor of French and German. Professor King is a mem- ber of the Modern Lan- guage Association and the German Pedagogical So- ciety of Minnesota. THOMAS P. BEYER B. S., M. A. - Pitt Beta Kappa Professor Beyer received his B. S. at VVesleyan Uni- versity, Connecticut in 1903, and his M. A. at the University of Minnesota, 1907. For three years he was Professor of English Lit- erature and History at Tarkio College, Missouri, coming to the chair of English Language at Ham- line in 1906. Last year he travelled in Europe, visit- ing and studying in places intimately connected with his work. Professor Beyer has pub- lished a number of ar- ticles. One of the inost in- t.eresting of them is hiS. The Vocabularly of Two Years, which appeared ill the Educational Review. Page' Twmzi X.. X .JN ' +w .', W.'1-l .'.l . .' .v . ,x .: -S L 4 r '. . , .1 U -i'r...J ' ELIZABETH BRAGDON Ph. B. Phi Beta Kappa Delta Gamma Miss Bragdon received the degree of Ph. B. at North- western University in 1900. While in College she was President of the Young Women's Christian Asso- ciation, played the posi- tion of forward on- t e girls' basketball team, and was delegate to two na- tional conventions held by her sorority. For a year after gradua- tion she taught Latin in Evanston Academy. She has spent much time in Settlement Work with va- rious Girls' and Boys' Clubs in Chicago. While abroad she gave special at- tention to the study of the .Japanese people. In 1913 she became Dean of Women and an Instructor at Hamline University. Miss Bragdon is a mem- ber of the Northwestern Alumni Association, of which she was Secretary. Page Twenty-seven GREGORY D. WALCOTT A. B., A. M., B. D., Ph. D. Phi Beta Kappa Delta Upsilon Professor Walcott received the degree of A. B. at Brown University in 18973 A. M. at Columbia Univer- sity, 1899, B. D, at Union Theological Seminary in 1900. He then studied at Bonn and Berlin Univer- sities. For two years he was in the ministry but in 1904 accepted the professorship of Latin and Greek at Blackburn College, Illi- nois, and there later be- came Dean and Professor of Philosophy. Elected to the Chair of Philosophy, Ethics and Psychology, he came to Hamline in 1907. Professor Walcott is a member of the Western Philosophical Association and the American Assacir- tion for the Advancement of Science. GEORGE W. HARTWELL Ph. B., A. M., Ph. D. Phi Beta Kappa Sigma Xt Professor Hartwell re- ceived his Ph. B. and A. M. at Wesleyan Univer- sity, Connecticut in 1903 and '06, and his Ph. D. at Columbia three years later. For two years he was In- structor in Mathematics at Michigan Agricultural Col- lege. He was Fellow for a year, Assistant for a year and Lecturer for a year in Mathematics at Columbia University. The following year he was As- sistant Professor in Mathe- matics at the Universitv of Kansas, coming in 1909 to the Chair of Mathe- matics at Hamline. Professor Hartwell is a member of the -American Mathematical Society, the Circulo Matematico di Palermo, and a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. MORRIS L. ARNOLD A. B., A. M., Ph. D. Beta Theta. P11 Professor Arnold received his A. B. at the University of Minnesota in 1904, his A. M. at Harvard, one year later, and his Ph. D. at Columbia in 1911. For a year he was Pro- fessor of English Litera- ture at the University of Minnesota and the follow- ing year he was Assis- tant in the Graduate De- partment of English at Columbia, at the same time studying under Bran- der Matthews. He became Professor of English lit- erature at Hamline Uni- versity in 1909. ' Professor Arnold is Chair- man of the Educational Committee of Drama League of Minneapolis, and a member of the Modern Language Associa- tion of America. ROY TOWNE A.- B., A. M. Professor Towne received his A. B., 1905 and his A. M., 1910, from Brown Uni- versity. While at college he won some special prizes in scholastic work. He took first place in long distance running in an inter-class track meet. He was principal of Old Lynne High School, Old Lynne, Connecticut, for a year. The following year he was teacher of Greek and Latin in Williams- town, Massachusetts. For two years he was principal of Berkeley Grammar School, in Valley Falls. Rhode Island, accepting the Chair of Greek Lan- guage and Literature at Hamline University in 1909. Professor Towne is presi- dent of the Minnesota Classical Association which he founded in 1912. DON D. LESCOHIER A. B., A. M. Sigma Nu Professor Lescohier re- ceived his A. B., 1905 and his A. M., 1907, at Albion College, where for two years he was a graduate student in Economics and Sociology. ' For a year he was Special Agent for the Wisconsin Bureau of Labor. 'In 1909 he was appointed secre- tary of the Minnesota Branch of American Asso- ciation for Labor Legisla- tion, which he still holds. Today he is Expert and Chief Statistician of the Minnesota Department of Labor and Industries. In 1911 he became Professor of Social Science at Ham- line. He is also lecturer in Economics at the Uni- versity of Minnesota. Professor Lescohier is identified with many or- ganizations engaged in the solution of industrial prob- lems. Page Ttrmtx 1 X 1 ,, M... R- , I '. - I 1 1 x . v I ,,: X y I x'I ',t', lt ltilv-1 I vt xl ll X! .f JENS M. RYSGAARD LOUIS R. HERRICK I JOSEPH B. HUBBARD A. B. B. S., A. M. A. B., A. MQ Sigma Xt A Phi Delta Theta Phi Beta Kappa Professor Rysgaard re- ceived the degree of A. B. at the University of North Dakota in 1903. During his last' two years in col- lege he was president of the Young Men's Christian Association. ' For seven years he was an Instructor in Physics and Mathematics at the Uni- versity of North Dakotag a Fellow in Physics and Mathematics at the Uni- versity of Chicago for two years, and was Gradu- ate Assistant in Physics at the University of Wis- consin for two years. He became Professor of Phys- ics at Hamline University in 1914. Professor Rysgaard is a member of the American Physical Society. Page Twenty-nine . . I 1 Professor Herrick received the degree of B. S. at Am- herst College in 1902 and A. M. at the University of Vlfisconsin in 1907. He has studied in Barcelona, Spain and Tours, and Paris, France, and for three summers has con- ducted parties through Europe.- He taught French and German at the Massa- chusetts Agricultural Col- lege for five years, and later Was Instructor in Romance Languages at the University of Wis.consin. In 1913 he became profes- sor of Romance Languages at Hamline. Professor Herrick is Vice- President of the Minnesota Educational Association, College Division. P Mr. Hubbard graduated from Wisconsin University with thesis honors and held the Scholarship in Economics, in 1912. He received his A. M. there Kin 1913. He became Instructor in Economics at Hamline University in 1913. The following year he took an additional position at the University of Minnesota as Assistant in Economics. .-,--my rf .--:f . .L J-5.1,-,,:,u1..,. -,.-1: -. f-Q .J 7 ff 2- ' Mxff' - 'Ag ll P, Liz L. ' WILLIAM BAIRD B. S. Professor Baird received the degree of B. S. at the School of Architecture of the University of Pennsyl- vania in 1903. For iive years he was holder of the World's record in pole vaulting for distance, which was 27 7-4. ln 1909 he became Coach of the Track Team and in 1910, Physical Director and Athletic Coach at Hamline. While here Coach Baird has had, probably, a more remarkable record, in all lines of sport, than any mentor in the West. Besides being an athletic director Coach Baird is in- terested in many other ac- tivities, particularly art. Recently he was elected a member of the Minnesota Fine Arts Society. HUGH A. MURTA Ph. B., A. M. Professor Murta received his Ph. B. in 1905, and his A. M. in 1906, at Hamline University. He played tackle, in his Freshman and Sophomore years, on the Varsity Football Team. Professor Murta was as- sistant to' Dean Batchelder for a year, after which he taught Chemistry, for two years at the State Normal School, Pasadena, 'Cali- fornia. He is Chemistry Assistant at the University of Minnesota and also in- structor in Chemistry at Hamline. Professor Murta is a mem- ber of the American Chem- ical Association and the Philomathean Literary So- ciety of which he was president in his Senior year at Hamline. ALBERT H. JOHNSTONE A. B. Phi Alpha Tau Professor Johnstone re- ceived the degree of A. B. at Wisconsin University in 1905. The following year he attended Harvard University, after which he studied for a year at the Leland Powers School of Oratory, Boston. For three years he was Instructor in Public Speak- ing at the University of Wisconsin, later becoming a member of the Faculty of the Leland Powers School. He was Lecturer in the Extension Division for the University of Wis- consin. In 1912 he became Professor of Oratory and Debate at Hamline Uni- versity and now is Lectur- er in-,tae Extension Divi- sion for the University of Minnesota. Professor Johnstone is a member of the Coit-Alber Chautauqua Company. K F Page Ilzrix i ..... ,sl--. X ., X A wig- hu. -- 1 -Q-X -,- 1.1,-,,-... ...W 1 , I X X . ,- 'w.','H'u'1- :z.C.',. 2 .. ..,'.','1.. ,' ff -'ll v'w1! Lfsniaf I -.v -54 :Wig Q A' xXlLgL.l J 219 U J 'X 1 1 1 v ..f.?,:.t .l .,,,, ...L JOHN A. JAEG-ER Professor Jaeger was ap- pointed instructor in sing- ing at Hamline in 1913. For five years previous to his coming to Hamline, Professor Jaeger was Mu- sical Director of the First Presbyterian Church, St. Paul. At present he oc- cupies a like position with the Hamline M. E. Church. Professor Jaeger studied music at the Conservatory of the Ohio Wesleyan Uni- versity and later contin- ued his piano studies with Professor Carl Heilmeier. During the last fifteen years he has paid special attention to voice culture under the best instructors in the Twin Cities, and under Mr. Frank H. Tubbs of New York City. ANNA M. DAVIS Ph. B., Ph. M. Miss Davis received her Ph. B. in 1889, and her Ph. M. in 1901 at Hamline University. She is a mem- ber of and in her senior year was president of the Browning Literary Soci- ety. Miss Davis was the prize student of her Latin class. For a semester after her graduation, Miss Davis taught in Albert Lea High School, coming to Hamline as librarian, after an in- terval of home life, in 1898. GEORGE A. THORNTON Professor Thornton came to Hamline in 1912 as in- structor in piano and violin. Previous to becoming aflil- iated with the faculty of Hamline, Professor Thornton was First Vio- linist with the St. Paul Symphony Orchestra for three years, Choir Master and Organist of St. Clem- ents Episcopal Church. He was violin pupil of Edgar Haddock at The Leeds College of Music, England, and assistant to the organist of Selby Abbey, Yorkshire. Later Professor Thornton passed all qualifying examina- tions for piano at Royal Academy, London, and for five years was organist at Ferns Cathedral. 7 X X 1 Page Thirty-one '. 1 1' '.t:1.4'1H , ...Vg-J... --.-- V fgvzlag, 1 1 ., ,. U.. 4. .,,,...: -- ' . .-1-f.x..-1:v...,. . ' .'.'i1Tal i9.'1'k- 5 S ffl Uri 5 ll EQ E2 S3 F Y- 1 J STERLING TEMPLE ORRIN J. WENZEL Ph. B., A. M. A- B- Phi Lambda Upsilon Sigma' Xi Professor Temple received his Ph. B. in 1905 and his A. M. in 1906 at Hamline University. The following year he did graduate work in Chemistry at Harvard University. For two years he taught at Rayen School, Youngs- town, Ohio, and then for an equal period taught Chemistry at South Da- kota Wesleyan. I ez' ns new praise fcnfcns men llfen QI! little showing-- F01 their work conzfinnethy sind their work ccntinneih, Broad and deep continaeth, C1 eater than fheir knowing! Mr. Wenzel received the degree of A. B. at the Uni- versity of Michigan in 1913. During his Junior and Senior years he was Assistant i n Zoology. While in College he was a member of the Michigan Rifle Team. In 1913 he became in- structor in Biology at Hamline University. Ana' we all praise farnons nzen Ancients oj the Collegeg For they taught ns cornnfzon sense-- Tried to teach ns cornnfzon sense- Trnih and Goofs own Cornrnon Sense, Wlhich is rnore than knowledge! -Kipling. - . 4 .. wx.-5..t.-49 Page Thirty-iwo x , -A, eq- 1,-N.-.nw-f i.,6-,v..1 .. . . Vx x X X X M H'-1' . ' .' Q up I'-,nl Ig 12' 'I lJI'I,','g-:Mag I lvl Il ln .I ll lwl 1.3, ll ffl, I ' I 9 A- 1.-3:59 A Aix- f mlb, I .af A-:law nl L .A ,, XA ,,,,n A 2 A and A 1, lf, f, - - l V., fp vrtqeuq, N,:J,.A3.,fA,f:p.po,boAA no ,,,, gn' 0 gov, - ccfglnmnnnnmpnn nFq7h,,g Aqnfgon, 171 95,941 X g .ff - . ,-,GAY A ,n X oguovn 1300, 0,nQ Q-I MII, lgffi, Cc , of. AMO A n Mn ,ag 0 9 , 0 0 -7 , lg, f'wlf WIiQ'5fw'5-ww n o0'IfA - 3Pfll 20'lf55f1'40 9'ff:g +9. 5' 'Zu 0 QW 11, '1'P-Rfiifr'-f', lSl055'Q'AXl Q5 'if K4 ' l 5fIi:.+f:saf X f 3. xg . ' E222 1 - as I. ff -J-X I I I-,K -5 jf -1 Q , , 1 l 9 f, 1an4 . ' ' gl ' X f .:'f-2321 aff - ' f' .Q l 'f II: ,s oQDg,?f'007A7 . I X I ,,,., W' 1:1 .4 5-LM.-1 A 25 il I af-Nl 2 JL G ag- 'A 45317, A I I am i 1' I A f T f K mm. o-.-:I , P ' I. J W - ' -ri fg- J' 1?-:5 'I I C ' 2 lv I I-Ill' ull I ff ff' U, lr v ii Ir Nj, .il ' ll l .L .K x.F? .hill , ' ' mi 'l.fJElE,-ll Q N , ' Ik. P . I 1--ww - A ,May Amr ,M ,M.1f'?W iw ffm wx-fff I ' ' ff 'X 'l f4'4fr'a 1' yi' '4 X 'I L'Qf,'T' Pjllffif l , Xl!! Xu ': I YI , I TW r f g WQB l' lj if l L .EW 27 14-f-we The Alumni Association of Hamline University ' J - A THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS L. I. C. MILLER, '94, Bertha, Minnesota . . . . President B. B. HERBERT, '65, Chicago, Illinois . Vice-President ' MABEL WALLACE BRINK, '00, Hamline. . Recording Secretary FLORENCE R. GARRISON, '11, Hamline . Corresponding Secretary HENRY G. MATTHEWS, '11, Hamline . . . . Treasurer PEARL A. HEAL, '02, Hamline ....... Historian A. I. WALLACE, '96, Hamline . .Alumni Member of the Athletic Board M MARTHA CLARK, '89, Hamline R. B. MACLEAN, '96, STERLING TEMPLE, '05, Hamline MARY BASKERVILLE, '14, Hamline ' THE HAMLINE ALUMNI QUARTERLY FOUNDED IN 1904 5 C. N. ALBERTSON, '02 . . . . Managing Editor 1 A. I. INWOOD, '01 . Business Manager V EDNA HUSER KING, '03 . Associate Editor ll ll! I Page Thirty-three C. N. Albertson I. C. Miller Mrs. Mabel Wallace Brink , , A. 1 1,--,yg,3.,.f5 R 7-f-,-5.7-f,:'Lv1f I- ' H '- ' r' ' fr 'ff' ' 1' -I 1 i L.--.f.i1f?C'3,j' Y. w.f.m'1: . .- . ,.,,..:.f 0 X, , L, .. Q I. L DJ '- -... -' Gm L. R. Ez- ' Aw M: 2112+ 1f:',A.:p',-gn. -,lf .. ,mv .,',,L.' ifiW17 ' WLQQQQQI J- J- . - .M If A J :een T 1,.'f,f,!f'fZ, -- - I . .....--.----------.,...---. 'I' I f ii , gi, A lUIllHIlK'WlWll1ll'lll' num ... 'lf I . E ly: 2 INN - 'IIB IJ I mm wwf' f III wwf. - :!.:V!1-JJG I LIL 1' JJ I1 I e VJJL3 ity, Il is , ,, If li . I Y ll,I 1' tl n m 9. ' IV I I ee S' .N I g I lllllllllllll ' 'HW J O I? Wljf- M I U , I f I QIML.. I' I IM. I x I , 0 O 0 'Q If The Hamllne UHlVCF,SltY 1 J I ' I N, ,f of Mlnnesota I N I I X ,---, 'I A Corporation E. P. RANDALL OFFICERS OF THE BOARD HON. NIATTHEVV GEORGE NORTON . .. . . . President BENJAMIN FRANKLIN NELSON, ESQQ . First ViCC-P1'6S1dC11t EUGENE FRANKLIN RANDALL . Second Vice-President HON. JOSEPH MALCOLM HACKNEY . . . ' Secretary ERASTUS FLETCHER MEARKLE, LL. D. . . . Treasurer REV. WILLIAM MCKINLEY, D. D. REV. FRANK ADELBERT CONE, D. JOSEPH ULLAND HON. HASCAL RUSSEL BRILL, LL. D. HON. JAMES THOMAS WYMAN REV. SAMUEL FLETCHER KERFOOT D. D. COL. PERRY HARRISON EUGENE MARION PHILLIPS, PH. B. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN NELSON, ESQ. WILLIAM MOSES, ESQ. REV. EZRA CHARLES CLEMANS, D. D. WVILLIAM HENRY GOLD, ESQ. REV. WILLARD ISAIAH KERN, A. M., S. T. B. FRANCIS ASBURY CHAMBERLAIN, ESQ. 'REV. GEORGE HENRY BRIDGMAN, D. D., LL. D. JEROME WINTHROP WHEELER, ESQ. ADOLPHUS P. NELSON, PH. B. ! . , . .i'f2c.-1.2.-ff.: Page Tlzirly-jour X. mf-3 33,npg.'.v.xx'J.x.IT-f'QK '-,N xx, X., O 1 ' V' f I-1 f1..l.,..-'iff N i '?f:-'1 fL'fHf-A w ff 1 I I I I I I I 31, , , . , .-W JI, 5: -I I A-Q1 Lia If mi I I Af , I - . f C. L ..,, xx L Hg: A Student Council Blume Evenson Parker Healy Goff Farley Thompson B each Stromrne. H uff Featherstone Henernan N1cholson r Collette L. Leigh A. Lee Huser Fitschen Herrmann 7 I5 HE Student Council, organized by President Kerfoot in 1912, consists of twenty students- ten 'men and ten Women-chosen by the four classes at their regular fall elections. Though in the main, an advisory body, possessed of little real legislative power, this year has seen a material increase of the council's authority over student affairs and an approach toward the goal of complete student self-government. OFFICERS President . . .FRANKLIN BLUME Vice-President. . MINNIE PARISH Secretary . . INGA SOCKNESS Treasurer . WILLIAM PARKER Page Thirty-five 1 ,.-lt. ... I .,,,u .1-Hx.-r-,-:, ,f,,J1 V- ' . 4. V , . -,N--,,,v,.-..'-Ufy.-. 1 ' '.,- ' .' .'- j.',- ',Qu,f,L.-fv MEMBERS OF THE COUNCIL 1915 FRANKLIN BLUME LEONARD STROMME ALLEN COLLETTE SIEGFRIED HERRMANN LUCRETIA GOEF MILDRED FITCHEN LILLIAN LEIGH ALMA LEE 1916 WILLIAM PARKER DONALD FARLEY R.USSEL HEALY EVELYN HENEMAN STELLA BEACH MILDRED HUEF 1917 FAWCETT THOMPSON LESLIE FEATHERSTONE INGA SocKNEss RACHAEL EVENSON 1918 HARRY NICHOLSON EDNA HUSER 5 5 F 4 Q vi 4 5 A 1 Q3 Pi E 5 PE 5 l , , 1 A TWO NIR The Album+Co11ege Classes i IRST is the Freshman-young, yet hopeful, ready to conquer the Worldj the Sophomore 1 feels as if the Weight of the universe were upon his shouldersg the Junior is making his mark in the worldg while the Senior, his studies in his lap, calmly surveys the -future from his point of vantage. V4 A 1 I 9 I , 2 1 h', 1 Y ,B J. 5. 5 - 1 x. x E S x Q x 3 S 2 S S S x Q N Q S N xv X, f- Aw ,wx,,1 f ! r , 1 12' ,. I w wg N Q Q . 9 C , Rim Q90 ,cngeul Samgearf ' Page Thirty-eight 1 . Y X Ax. X N. X NU.. X xxx ' x x N r K ' , x ...- xx w xx xv M X x I 4 Page ,,,, .,,,, -4' f 'r'Ifi'7LZr3E'7'F, if V 1, fir:--'.3:11'C-'11i'!lI2xfEW?-li Mf-i:'lX'i'fQlllQk l 1 1 1 V f K If 4 is-if H-.fs 3 Mi FORK xx in 41 L, M Lgmir it Q W . RUTH V. ANDERSON Grantsburg High Grantsburg, Wis. A Q - Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Senior Class Vice-President. She seems to drive aliill care away. , W. EVERETT BAKER Janesville High .Janesville V Amphictyon Y. M. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, Student volunteer, President I. P. A. Intercollegiate debate QLD, Forensic V Fraternity. - - Let Socrates come back arid clairh his honest rhari. FLOYD S. BAUMHOFER Hamline Prep. Montevideo Euphronian ' ' Y. M. C. A., Homiletic Club, Gym Team, Forensic Board. A silerit, shy, peace-lovirig rharig He seemed rio jiery partisan. ESTHER OLIVE BANE J Waseca High St. Paul Athenaean - A h A Literary Board, Editor Maga. There is riot so variable a thirlg in riatiire as a ladjfs head-dress. Thirty-nine , .2 1-yf..ly. 4.-J ' 5. E 4 E .u 45 a Qs. in kfr u 1 11 N. P 5 I nv-vnxwv -v il LI4 1, . 1' f iii F. '-1 .f if rx . -. .' 1'-v - fan, 5 1. 223 3' A ,. . .. ,f..-.,g,':-.9-.f15,-.xtsa-.f', ff-:L- 51:viQ'1r1. 1631.-Ili H . -- '..- :'.a..r.-:H ...-.......... ....-. .- 4' YL ' , . . x H F' C 'S-.0 Ht- .? I5 Ui: 'U .. '-N lvl' if J rl Gm 1-' J U1 ff 'J 'X J L Hn- 1- C, -' A ' '- . , J-Q. c' . 4 iii- if -. -.17 if lf , .. 5,5 1' it H Pi fi 1,1199 '- tiff-ff 351: 1, All 1 '-Qi l- ' 5. if W L: 'f 33 gl ell 1, H' .X x-' ' -1 fi li f' Hi nl 1 Pl xi- gf Ll 9:1 R H la EF -it ze ig Ei DORTHA G. CALKINS Z su 5- 21' il! Humboldt High St. Paul Q5 .5 Athenaean ll it F ct if Inter-class Basketball. r Eg Tho' it's work, work, work arid worry, Q . f There is always tirhe to lofve. fi fi if Si ,s 7' ,, A U ii S LUTHER C. BENSON Hamline Prep. ' St. Paul . Y. M. C.'A., Homiletic Club, I. P. A., Socialist Study Club. H Bat rich he was of holy thought arid work. FRANKLIN L. BLUME New Ulm High St. Paul Phi Aipha. .,y, 5 6 f by J f Phi Delta, President Student Council. gi Athletic Board, Baseball H 121, Q3D, Basketball H CD, CQD, CSD, CLD, Cap- tain 1914 and 1915, Manager 1915. My little body is aweary of this great 2 Q45 Q world! EDNA E. DAVIS ig F Devils Lake High Devils Lake, N. D. r g Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Literary Board, Sigma Theta. , If you wartt a thirig dohe well, yoit'll do A X well to ask Edna. 1 N X N K l Page F orli' if x wb: ww-'NN L ,. X .42 my '. .' . 1,4 Q. ,M-. .1-1... .S 1 x f 'f xv 1 l +1 N wil 1' at lx 1 1 1 1 , . J , -, r, n-,,,. Q .3 , ' IRENE FISHER Taniaqua QPa.j High Pine City Browning ' The sweetest lives are those to dnty wed. ALLEN D. COLLETTE Pine City High Pine City Amphictyon Fellows, Vice-President Y. M. C. A., Student Council, Maga Staff. Onr snbject hails from the wilds of Ham's home town. Calm and ministerial, Col- lette never carries a hammer bnt always has a good word for all. THADDEUS D. M. DAVEY Plainview High ' Plainview Amphictyon Phi Delta, Junior Class President, Athletic Board. Football H GD, Baseball H CD, CQD, QSD, Baseball Captain 1914 and 1915. Fle. Teedee plays the best game of baseball, keeps the best notebooks, and has the biggest heart of any man in college. He has, they say, too mnch of the milk of hnman kindness for his own good, bnt his friends all swear by him-and say, his Frosh cap still fits! ' MILDRED E. FITSCHEN Olivia High ' Olivia Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, President Hall Council, Glee Club. There was a yonng lady named Pete Who by all was considered right sweet, Bnt she nsed the Tri-State Till it grew fvery late Still their talk was never complete. Page F orty-on e f Q f Lx-C rig A Fi ' - EQ L ' '-v if . E, . 5' - If GT Q. .RA E -.,. ti? x 345- GS ai' '35 L.. X -..,.-f. :,- 314'-b.. .v,,.vig:1,-in-,-. 1: V j,li:i.-.1 ,I Q33 .1 Q P. Er-4 M J Q - ' 1 if 5V'J 4... I y Z Q I LUCRETIA A. GOFF Drayton High Drayton, N. D. Athenaean , Y. W. C. A., Student Council, Hall Council. Lou has a heart that stretches from here to M orttarzag A . CHARLES E. SAUTER New Ulm High A New Ulm A Amphictyon Y. M. C. A., Amphic President, I. P. A. A mart of words arid sweet song was he. IVAN T. JONES Blue Earth High Gwatonna k l Amphictyon Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Senior Class Pres- ident, Student Council. ' Inter-collegiate debate C3j, Crlee Club Manager, Forensic Fraternity. Why, thert the world's mine oyster Which I with sword will opera! ' LOLA V. GRINNELL Winnebago High Winnebago Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Senior Class Vice-President, Glee Club. There was a rtice girl we called Lola, Irt cardiac dealings riot slow-la, We thought she was sweet Arid couldrit be beat Bat H aa-girt we let Lola krtow-la? Page F orty-two r . . 'lI'fflfi5ZA'A?:' ww.-.f 1 .- .. Q fu iii--ti-. g Q- M . . . . .1,.., g ...mmf 1 X X :swing...v.:XHg,,-5.55ijlwgxx 1 i55'y2LuL.iiRR31GTfi'ff', 1 Q Q X x X xx X N 5 I Nm.-.1g'. me - ,..,-. t .., x x a Qwvm.-V wiv'--flJ:.'1'i.n'!'.'P:'r!-Mt?I H l l 1 Y fl X rw f' W 4 '1 11 f fi L 2 4' 1 l ., ,fx ,X ,- fx H., L N .L-'wmxwftlsixv'-buffmb ii L1 ,A-E-. bull like ii il xi .MJ 5 PHILIP L. HAMLIN Pine City High ,Pine City S Amphictyon Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Student Council, Oracle Staff, Class Treasurer. Inter-collegiate debate CQD, Football H C3j, CLD, Forensic Fraternity, President Student Enterprise Association. Hamlin stands for the best. SUZANNE G. GQERTZ Mountain Lake High Mountain Lake ' . ' Alpha Phi ' Y. W. C. A., Student Council, Glee Club. ' President D. D. . H ere's to Site With eyes of blneg Sweet dignity and mischief too. HAROLD M. HENEMAN Pembina High Pembina, N. D. Philomathean Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Athletic Board. Track H CID, CZQ, C3D, Captain Track Team, Drake Two-mile Relay Team. The guard dies but newer surrenders. SIEGFRIED F. HERRMANN Fairmont High Fairmont Amphictyon Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Student Council. Three year student, Biology Assistant, Osborn's Pet. N ever cz con, never a flnnkg Sigerfoos stndied on Saturday nights! Page F orty-three 'fr' -3-.sl '.-' .-f. v.-f-aw y ,f U i . iv, ..t. ,., I..-ft -- :'f..lrl' .Hr z w 1 L+ wtf J .1,,.l N, .....: . 4 ETTA L. HALVERSON ,sq St. Peter High New Ulm N Euterpean 1 Y. W. C. A., Euterpean President i Etta has the rare ferninine virtue of never jidgeting, at least externally. 4 .ff 1.1 ffl f ' my .,. 1 ,. ' 4 .H A . .x f. , 1 EDWARD KROLL ' Arlington High Arlington p Amphictyon gf Kroll is the gny that pat the roll in the rolling' that gathers no rnoss. H ailing frorn the bnrg of Arlington, the horne of fast horses, fair wornen, johnny Mo- if F? ., 4. 11 4 5 Govern and Schrnidts, Ed 'had non-, tg , 1 '..' 7, Methodist notions and the oonrage to -s if live np to thern. He gradnates this year. '1 I., rv ARNOLD KIRKPATRICK Hamline Prep. St. Paul Philomathean Phi Delta, Chemistry Assistant. The tirne of life is short, To spend that shortness basely X Were too long. 'f ELIZABETH LAMBERT if Fergus Falls High Fergus Falls Browning p Y. W. C. A. President, Glee Club. Hamline's most charming young lady. ' X All that's generous, all that's kind, Friendship, virtne, every grace Piotnred in this happy face. xxx 1'0geFol'!3'-1014 iff A, .X.'g',Xs'1-QVC'-'ing,K . X X qk.x'sg, Q QNQ X 5 X Page 4 , r . , 4 .- X. 1 - r . .J 3 7- M lg it K, l ,.l A r vzf , g LAWRENCE R. LUNDE Lake City High A Lake City . ' Philomathean . Phi Delta, Shark. ' The steady rnan The ready nftang H e ever hath his wit. ALFRED L. MALLERY Hamline Prep. Lakeville Phi Alpha . Fellows, Y. M. A., Athletic Board. Fle. Prep. was the winner of the Senior Good- looking Contest, he's a shark in this deep water stnyjf. RUTH S. LEE .Jackson High k St. Paul ' Athenaean Inter-class Basketball. Rath is SO bashfnl we could scarcely get her picture, but yon'd like her if yon knew her. HENRY C. MECKLENBERG Cedar High and Minn. College, Cedar Y. M. C. A., Homiletio Club, I. P. A. Inter-class Football. Q 'Tis with our jndgrnents as our watches' none Go just alike, yet each believes his own. I F orty-,ive .. -J .-. -- V I I L . . r - .. .., - -- -f-. -.N -Y, .-f ,.'12' gl.. ,M,,,., ,-.L A ,.,g:,,. .,:., ras., C ,,, .M-... V- View 5: 474 ii f -NT-I Az: if 5-25' 7 E951 1:-'vx Y' L. li Q1 L .J ,..-.1 .2 'V ALMA G. LEE Annandale High Annandale Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, Maga Staff, Student Volunteer. Sigma Theta, Winner of Skinner Prize. One may smile and smile and smile and yet be serions. JESSE KENDERDINE Higher Grade School, Brighton, Sussex, England. U ' Euphronian Y. M. C. A., Glee Club, Inter-Society Debate 1909-10. A man he seemed of cheerful yesterdays and confident tomorrows. ' THEODORE LARSON Cokato High Cokato Euphronian Athletic Board. Track H CID, QZD, C3D, Basketball H C3D, 145, Football H QZD, Q3j, QD, Football Captain 1914. Oh. it is excellent to have a giant's strength, bnt when Swede gets married he'll have to tnrn most of that strength to tact. MARGIE M. LEE Jackson High St. Paul Athenaean - I know it is a sin For me to sit and grin. Page Forty-six K 1 1 X X 5,5X51--5,t,y,xyXuw:s't-if iw- . --.X--w-H I X N .v L fm- 15' f - i17'xV1 Il'f 3' ' 'x .J I Q. V it K -fp 3 Q., 1- fffnj' lp-L R J l V L i f r J W! VIOLETTA PETERSON Alexandria High Alexandria Athenaean I Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, Glee Club. Sigma Theta. A winning way, attractive grace, Ambition jlllling her for any place. I. LEONARD STROMMEX-U Volga QS. DQ High St. Paul Phi Alpha I t Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Glee Club, Forensic Board, Oracle Staff, I. P. A. Silence is the rnost perfectest herald of joy. ELZER TETREAU . Minneapolis Prep. Wesley College, Manitoba U Amphictyon Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Homiletic Club. Wiiiner Harnline-Macalester Oratorical, Skinner Prize Vllinner. For the good that a nian achieveth, Good beyond an angel's donbt, Snch remains for aye and ever And cannot be blotted ont. IOSEPHINE C. THoMPsoN Athenaean Botany Assistant, Three year student. She forgot the Wellesly prayer: Help its good niaids to be Give its patience to wait Till some snbseqnent date, World without rnen. Ah rne! Page F orly-seven xnxx-1-,.. ,.,,. i X-.. . J ' .yq-,,,,:,. --3,y.- -1 , .. . .. ., ,,.,3..g',f,.-,Q 'jA,v,, Llhwf' . .'rl'-L..' fxk'-Il.xX L . .., .... . , ,...- I rl: I ,nl ' il f fl. g V.-.,l.X.7X--.H -- ,., 5 J f, Bs , A el N L -.y 5, f . ,w -M. Jn ' :TQ . 5- 'il 1 .-, ,Q 'J - v 1.1 'L tx: .., F 5 - 5 fp fa U. r. V IL 2 -,n 4'w. 'M 1,6 dull ffl ff' if Wil if iglllff 'in 2 ,.,A . lgajlffn it 25.19 -. . r. Q. V ri 31 if 143 -rv Eg 2 1 W X1 7 p. 52 -xi W it Fri ,lf T5 rg 12 tb LF 5 at Q1 F.: 5,1 P2 ,la xl R2 L3 EQ 51, 'E UQ Us if g, .v 1 F4 tg so Q 3,1 i? Q1 F2 12 l M lif ri T 5, V1 1 X 5- A E F il WY 136, 113 IW .A ks 1.3 'JI FS -fx si .- it fl ps 'if 5 fr K' 'L ffi iff- 5-gl rl 2 4 if 1 .. is .- N .QQ Qi Qui See tl il W va .9 Il-1 Q: iw 23 L 0 lei . 15 iff L: la iss Q X2 ' .lu Q ig IF! 5. QE EQ 9 ,. ii l... ix ,Y iv ' lb 'Ti fl 52 cz Q55 H. e5 .. is .. +3 Q12 .-V. :J-' lil I. iii ii' 5, f 4 fl if - . 'fi i' '-,, fi Hi .. S, 1 LILLIAN E. LEIGH Topeka CKan.j High St. Paul Sigma Delta Y. W. C. A., From Ohio Wesleyan U . Arid mistress of herseh' though China fall. FRANK SANDERSON Hamline Prep. Minneapolis Euphronian Phi Delta, Y. M. C. A., Homiletic Club, Gym team. Our little theological WH IP! ESTHER L. PETERREINS St. Paul College Echo Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, Manager Glee Club, Oracle Staff. Sigma Theta. Oh, Wood that we two were M ayihg. WARREN WOODCOCK Plainview High A Plainview Amphictyon Phi Delta, Band. O waft me to a place a gale holds forth, there let me study, also take mine ease. Page Forty-6f5l1f -L,-.YK-uw,-g,-sg.xgm-'--.uw--'X X g S Q , -L' Qu, . Y 5 ,vi r -I-A. l, rp. f fl l' :fl iw 'ul ll 1 i BLANCHE B. WoRKMAN Alexandria High Villard Athenaean Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Chairman Literary Board, Athenaean President. It is ruinored that Blanche is about to enter the rninistry, but we think when it cornes to the preaching she will let George do it. TRUMAN B. CLARK A Amphictyon Oracle Staff, Poet Laureate to Hamline NUI!- H e caine from where he started on the way to where he went, but he wouldn't tell us where either place is. GRACE M. UMPLEBY Hamline Prep. Fort Clark, N. D. Browning Y. W. C. A., Senior Class Secretary. o Along the cool sequestered 'vale of life She kept the even tenour of her way. Page F orty-nine ffv,..,,.,,. ,. Ax' Y., is .figs we A 3 wx + K - -. 4 X lgxgt-S V x f . K 1 x ' k i iisimia 3 Y X we i S V? - - I. M. xg gig K Q fi: ' 3 wxoky. if .P i SENIOR PARTY AT GOHEEN BLUE BEARD' S WIVES fs fb' w gwntw 'Q A f , 1 PREP'S DRESSER Page' Fiftj I X . XX . x X In 1 .AXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXV JUNIORQ3 Z I . 1 .,. x l 'lf wr' eta' 1 .1 -fs. .. Q fa- ' tj!!! l l .sm , 1 61 ' ! all a l i ililliilsliisamssaEal ifsiliQzilll ff -i!1'1i.Lgl L all H 5, . FLORENCE ANDERSON ig X Red Wing High St. Paul iff Alpha Phi I Y. W. C. A., Oracle Staff. A Tell her the rnoon is niade of green cheese, M she'll believe you. . 1 . fl 1. u i me ll li . ii ! x il E -. ....... ,......-.... ARTHUR C. ANDERSON I johnson High St. Paul Philomathean Y M. C A., Maga Staff, I. P. A. And still they gazed, And still the wonder grew, That one srnall head could carry all he knew. JUNE ANDERSON V Cumberland High Cumberland, Wis. Sigma Delta Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Because your generous heart gives out A kindly thought a rninute You rnake the world a whole lot better f just by living in it. Page F i fly-two ' ' w '71 -.-:R si's ' ' D 'Q. . ex,-. 5. 'Ae 4, x V21 I . i , Vi 4.1 ., . .. . . , STELLA D. BEACH Hamline Prep. Ilion, N. Y. Alpha Phi ' Y. VV. C. A., Student Council, Hall Council, Liner Staff, Glee Club, Peppers. Dark hair Shining eyes Merry hurnour- She's a prize! LESLIE DAVIS Sleepy Eye. Sleepy Eye High, Ohio Wesleyan U Fellows, Y. M. C. A, Horniletic Club. There's life alone in duty done And rest alone in striving. ' 1 , MARY D. V. BERRYMAN Spring Valley High., ' St. Paul Euterpeah Vice-President Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Look out for her, rnerryanan, ' She's the one has the blue e'en. . 3, P e Q ,W A w ,L i -i A , fi..-g gi. 1,3 ig, :my svn' ru fl ga:-:Wg :,1.,- .ix ,, ..,, ,. - -. ,.4--..:.- . .,. i. Q , A. - -3-.' -' . Q' Q. 1 :. .v: X' -- 1-:,:::1V1,j!5. gr- ...-,.. . r '. .. . 1 E 1'.' ' Til 'lin' ilfi'll l.l'f::-T?-E E-..-J.-I ,png APE gill M351jffi:f!.if:!:a,iUi:f-llklill. g.2f:f5:fl5, 5, ,qlllif all HIM z., .QI ff- X 3 xi Ii gi i 1 I in li ll! 5 I i 5 iii I ir! ...W -. ...s1----,..,..:,,..,..-...,. ,.:..,:.,1,5. -3 :ww JY rf' 112.15 hw 510. v' 'f -A all-32: api sv Vive.---M1 2--,::. 1-:W :A -1: zifz .f' 1 5: at 1 ian. ' . :s af.: mmf '?Eiig1:g,q:a. , P' .:: ?w5.sf'i252 ,fag-5 figs 1 .Lf H.:- Page F i fly-three .nan-. U .V .,n sz ,.., I l al R T 1,4 . ,V V. 1'-. .3-,'-y.-.,,-,- 1--f 1-.-aw .. --,, , V. A , . :w..-uA-- f' ' x -1.---V-'4 X - . 3 .Y F Lrg ff :iq U Gi- 27 if A f, X . W' 'T'-i'i? 235: , I in :A Eiathtlat mvwltlwVEtwltwll.fls:: 1 lg . 5. Q? l li 1 J' 4 5 f. M Il ll 4 l I 5 1 K n 1 l x I v 4 ll 1, ,. 'u 'v 1. l 351 ts is li lp la. -ll 4 . 1. il, ...Q- i'ili1lli5fflliiill'5'IllVUE!!Ii: i5liiSi,lllI7 Ylllllll ill' ' ll 5 5' ' I TV? ill lil l f' 'K LL.. if --3' 5'3- JOHN CARLYLE BLACKHURST Rush City High Deer River Euphronian Fellows, Y. M. C. A, Cracle Staff, Liner Staff, Scenario Artist. Fle. Glib of tongne and great in script is jackg but-sad to say-a bnlky envelope with a rejected scenario awaits hirn every three days. M. VINETTE BABCOCK Sisseton High Sisseton, S. D. Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Bunny takes sorne high leaps. Over the transom is ont! RoYAL N. BROWN Redwood High Hanley Falls Philomathean Beta Kappa, Y. Mp C. A., Student Council, Book-store magnate, Class clown, Rooter king. Skinny has cracked rnore jokes and broken rnore Send Ten's ' frorn horne than any rnan in college. Like the lilies of the jield he toils not,' neither does he spin. Bnt great is Royal N. Brown of Hanley Falls jnst the sarne. Siwmxwhitmdmmhwwwwlwff o New Page Fifty foul' F f ?'H-.hf,, 1 Tig-gfgyixzgg N -S xt K X 1 ,AMX .1-- .i....X+,s , E -A--1.',H,,.,ff. M V- A X x ws, -Nm-'H-11' itil-1335 31 i1:TQ'1Ti - Ml K lu'-itligl . 1 . A Q la N x l A lf ,il FLORENCE A. BUELLY Oxbow CSask.j High St, Paul Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Oh, she's little, but she's wise. She's a terror for her size Arid she doesu't advertise Does she, girls? ARVID A. ERICKSON Milaca High Milaea I Philomathean Literary Board, Oracle Staff, Liner Staff, Secretary to Bishop Quayle, Hamline Press Bureau. A mart that is yourtg iu years may be old irt hours if he have lost rio tirne. MAE E. BREWSTER Howard Lake High Howard Lake Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Do you riot kuow I arh a wouiart? What I thirtle I rhust speak. Page Fifty-five up---.4-.,,,,,-. .. ,. . .. .. Q f 1 I NEAL E. Dow Worthington High, Worthington Phi Alpha Phi Delta, Athletic Board. Baseball H CD, CZD, Football H C31 A power have I but of what proportion I arn not yet instructed. ISABEL R. BIRNBERG Humboldt High A Sf. Paul Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Peppers. How she does like Chase and Sanborn Tea-he! EZRA A. DURBAHN New 'Ulm High New Ulm Phi Alpha Phi Delta, Band, Liner Staff. Fle. Sanerkrant, wienieworst, pretzels, nnd beer Gerrnans, Germans das sind wir. Page F i fly-six XV., ,X .M -N. . . X X-.N X-NN . Q I, 1 kllii l fr, :Urs DONALD C. FARLEY Hutchinson High Excelsior Phi Alpha Beta Kappa, Class Secretary, Glee Club, Y. M. C. A., Literary Board, Wireless Club. Chemistry Assistant. Another of those-students-but a rrterrter mart I never spent art h01ftr's talk withal. BERTHA M. DAHLBERG Mechanic Arts High St. Paul Browning P Y. W. C. A., Liner Staff, Glee Club, . Peppers. . Bertha is sehr schort th rhore ways than orte. ARTHUR S. FELIEN 'V Cannon Falls High Cannon Falls Euphronian Y. M. C. A. I strove with rL0rLe,' for rtorte was worth my strife, Nature I loved, and rtexttto Nature, Art. Page F ifly-seven 4, 1-2'-: .':qf'fs,:f',:'1 fy,1f'..'gtLfLr'-'12 .1 .w.-1:.T..,..,..... .. . . . ,, Uftj fr '2 '- ,J LJ L1 'MJ 517-'il' H 1- -Q - s fi T 'li SS :1 ,: Q If ,. 'f 'ffl ,Yi 1' in ,L f. Elm if E'-I gi fl R, ll ll ll l NELLIE FEETHAM if it F 5' lr ..l :,- Central High ' St. Paul gg Browning 55 Y. W. C. A., Inter-class Basketball, Peppers. 4 . w .V x ,x .if She doesn't say rnuch, but she can back that. gi , V 1, , aj rf L' if rl., L. li. CJ xl l rf if 1 I la 1,5 xy. ga E1 51 Q1 ,IR Vg 11 2 If: , f-' in ,J ft Lv 6: 15 fi 4: fi il 45 'IJ HOWARD C. ANDERSON il .1 T. I- .1 n .,f. Jamestown High Valley City, N. D. 1 Phi Alpha .Q Phi Delta, Y. M. C. A., Glee Club. 13 li- if J' nf if The happiest life that ever was led 52 w L Is always to court and never to wed. Q3 if ' -1 7. ' if Pi ' I1 lf' 7:' V5 . 1. 41 2 K. . 9' 5,5 :.x tl p K. li. ,., :fi if R if 1 J fi 'fl ' Q2 rl ,il xl, ff 51 3 1 A il ffl ki. 'A is LILLIAN H. GEBHARD it .. J ' xx Li 35 W ,,. Eagle Bend High St. Paul 5 lv Euterpean Y. W. A., Vice-President Peppers. Lillian is a sweet little rnaid ff .4 ,A With dignity, courage, real modest and . c .ID C H f. W l staid. - On rnost any subject you'll jind she will talk, Her ethical views are as sound as a rock. lx N N Page' Fifty-f'fRl1l milfs 1 X -,L j 'J 'ffl -J:'X'.BX.RNnVJf'f NM, X wx was . - tg Nh J Kem NSI:-A' X ,K vi -i J, .9 ii, -'r v. .. sb .- 5, - . 6: if ry .H 1 . J -a -9 55 K 4 .3 ., Spf' fl 1 N :W ., li ii 5- Q Q' -1 fl l .ll gli li :fi Q, if .lu li S? QC Lu' 5 X L 1- J 12 he if gi: 'I Q. E-5 36 if -. ,T ' E ,ff za ' 2 5? Y Q. fi: Ti 'cf Us if -P :fi R li 32 S xl 23 .-1,1 its si 53 s FW I' 'F . 'ft 11 it li ' F 16 F59 F5 . . li H lfl gg .1 er gl .f ,cf 'il Aa at 3- 1,6 . gi L, 'J ffl iff, li it ei ti G iii El 'i if ll H' -Y .ri 'El .. .IV , ,. -'lf A? re Y EQ 'P .. ,, li '5' Q. 3,1323 ,gill :fi ,Y .5 .Vi ..,- -,J fig gl Av 1 'x ill lg P15 fif if W ifi zlgf xy h ,1- 3.4-1? lL' J rm ' . A, f.. X ,.,. .. ,, X X ' ' ' ' 'W - -9.-':'.l5-' 1'.-'Ili'-55:-'v.1I.llxillii. -. ...-.'l,'.'l':l l1'lll'3 T ilf3?7....154J13l?f',5 l , U xl rw r J Q' .V ,K W. , -,Z -J .. -X, A 37,3 , - MILDRED HUFF Renville High ' ' , Rqmville Sigma Delta Y. W. C. Ag,.Student Council, Peppers.i She doeth little ikiudrlesses which most . lecwecuridofhe or despise. - f . , EDWIN R. Foss Heron Lake High I u Heron Lake ' I ' Euphronian - ' It Musician ' He used to be a terror but Music hath charms- 4 , RUTH H. HUMPHREY Central High St. Paul Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Student Council, Liner Staff, Inter-class Basketball, President . Peppers. H ere's to the girl who does the work, H ere's to the girl who doesrft shirk, H ere's to the girl who's ctgeriuiue brick, Here's to Ruth H. Humphrey. Page Fifty-ii-ine ,.fQ5l'f1'.7n:'v 12 H.+:e.'.'rv'f me-1-It-ca m-.norm . .i?1v.-sezcmuolw-.fu-T1 af:-:1--1.f:-.m ,sd f if -- l '4-- 4-- :-wi. . 33.52 -'JZEZ .-,-X: ,S -.ci.-,y.:.lf.-Q.-,-41.-:. . - -1 ,rpg c- hi 3413 5 3i!r:1 J v-'J-m c:.. 5 ii lj llllillllllll fl??'llllllfll'2ll f 2 ,ll s 1 4 Q . nv 1 V I fl' 3? l l -.il Tzi' iz: RUTH M. HARVEY Cumberland QWis.j High Farmington Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Student Volunteer, Peppers. ,Ruth is famous for all sorts of breaks. She isu't a bit vicious but she is ori iritimate. terms with Sir Bandage. HAROLD C. HELLIWELL Milwaukee W. D. High MilWaukee,Wis. Philomathean Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., I. P. A. Captain Gym Team, Captain Tennis Team. All's well that ertds well, like Helli-aw, draw your owrt cortclusiorts. ANNE CORINNE HEDENBERG Hallock High Hallock Browning Y. W. C. A., Liner Staff, Peppers, Red Heads. D D Clever? Well, rather. lflfho? M e? Page in t 3 1 . X .,..,-Y .QON 3 1 S . l'l '1 Q l.. m, ..... RUSSEL K. HEALY Drayton High Drayton, N. D. Philomathean Y. M. C. A., Student Council, President Forensic Board ' A Inter-collegiate debate CSD, Forensic Fraternity ' A Oh stay, the maiden said, and rest Thy weary head upon this breast. A tear stood in his bright blne eye, But still he answered with a sigh, Ex- eelsior! I 's INA H. HARRIS R . Park River High Park River A Browning . Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Herels to those who know how to growl- and won't! HENRY J. HEDIN Sauk Centre High ' Sauk Centre Arnphictyon ' Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Glee Club, I. P. A. The handsornest boy in the class, Gene does things. Page Sixty-one J -' P -. -1.- ,., r.- , -, . N...,f.- K S l K E 1 I .. , ,iii 11 Illlfl'-i' I I 4 i 5 E .2 J l A aa . A gy: l s- al wf5zzp,,,.1.551f1f .M , 'E,.,J ini - ' Y .I llllllill allllllllllllll l lllllli .llllllllllllllllll Z E 1 . u I 2 5 I I s l I . li 1 W lx! l I f. +5 . l ' V 1:1 l.l u, . 4 g. v I Q ii 2. E ls l Q? z E 1 ig, Q l Ng gjsll . tg, Q ll E 'l Y ' l ' ' l i , L 5 1 X if iii 3 sl 5 Qi . :lf Lf if i . 9 'x - '1 -W ,,, 1 Q. ill 5 -'P I-i in . -. . 'fl 1 5, -5 '11 ' +2 l A Q, 2 i E S ' I U' I li vs I l Y A l 5 , nn, . 4 1 A I all 1-i I S ! 2 E 7 9 e n al, il lv UE. Ig' 1- M5 :Qi k il.. I ' j gui22iteiffit1t21f'f:lafwfsfivzirwill uwzfl if If 'iiizswia NFQ' .fi . 4451:If:Effie2itfgggilgililgWlllgllllu .ll1llllli2ilil.lllllHli2We W.. 1: YQ x, al 'l .,, ..V,,,,g M V H .IT-g,.. M: f - ,rqcggvi-. N Q1 'C Hifffffil Q 'f . .1111 Q--ws.: A ' ' ..,-,5,jQ.j -mfs-,V,5.-ifzgq-.l,L 's gl ll -I . gl 1 Ei . 4 l li v , Q'-u 5 .-F, . ,.,.,. -F X FRANK WILSON HOWE Red Wing High ' Red Wing Amphictyon Y. M. C. A., Glee Club, Band, Liner Staff, I. P. A. Howe, oh! Howe shall we extract that thorn in the editorial chair! Frank is a nice boy ont he's fvery rnnch in love- ancl always has been. EVELYN HENENIAN Pembina High Pembina, N. D. ' Browning Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Student Council, Hall Council, Peppers. D D ' True blne clear throngh. ABNER L. JOHNSON St. Peter High New Ulm Euphronian Y. M. C. A., Secretary I. P. A., Secretary Socialist Study Club Ab-ner has tilted with Cnpicl and still he insists on being Social-ist. Page Sixlg ' - i-.wi .'Ll1Qi7A'2i?'?CU 'x '1 X '3 1 V, .NYM N ,iq-six-xx-.1 X. X .W 'vm sw-+1-.M :Ns -X 1- L'?iWff'75.iil5f1iff1?.xlD1l' V - lx x N a-fair:- f.x'V.f-NikiQ.'1w'1fN, .'ff-1:'I.:'. 1-..-':3J. KL'.,, 1 Q A f I X., f, im I, H V tx u 5 - . ii. - V x x U L, .JA--Q. L1 ' E Lwj L LQ xl AUGUST HERRMANN Arlington High Lester Prairie Philomathean I Fellows, Y. M. C. AQ Track H CD, QZD, Penn and Drake Relay tearns. A Persian's heaven is soon rnade, 'Tis but black eyes . and lernonade-and marriage licenses. ' WILLIAM DITTES tHamline Prep. St. Paul Euphronian Manager Y. M. C. A. Handbook I allus argy that the rnan 'who does about the best he can, Is plenty good enough to suit this lower mundane institute. WILLARD D. HUMPHREY South High Q Minneapolis Euphronian Fellows, Oracle Staff, Liner Staff. Football H QZD. Fle. Strong in the hot air stuff, Mighty in the shoulders, Short, keen-Shake! Page Sixty-three .--VKX' .'--- -'rx --.f . eww--xfq UN-'J' ' vv. .i v...-A.. an .., if-1 A 2 ' W clk' - f I 1,1 I 1 LL-11 W. - . U C., B I-.1 .1 ' L,- I' fl M -: , 5--- 6 ...wszi 5 1 li l ' Q I , I If Y T t 1 . H I . , 1 '3 . A A A' ii l A A . ' 2 j 1 . I C. Iii Q -'sxxz .E',ifl ll'i iiilillilliil- lil? 'illfl fill ' tr vena ta m nd ,. . nn if 4. u ,...-1 L . . , ' r Q ., -' - Q' 7 ' u N S xxx. ef' WJ f f' gm 2 ,, . is ,mg f r ee f? v5'as5,s. fa . : ... ' . - - X ' - 'X .i q w fnu mmfgg 4-9. H, 3: flflf i ii-' ' 1 , iiviii ' e:.' 5 - l l ' fy h f 'll i lllal mti lltil l ll lllll ll ,L-.:.u-1: t . X ...b 'f-3: Q . k X kk - t . N xv-A1 335 . I , K 1 .- . kbg-A-'L1 i-:ing O r it 'a ll 5' r ' ' r . Gig . , M, g 1' ll ll .l I 1 l I 5 Hi ll 1. 5. . li W X all z . if i . ll I I ll E , . ,,z sl l, 5 Q. ,. 1. i .Y l L4 . w ll if al ll il ll A 1' .fi ltfffn l api lllllllllllflffl it il lfl ll Ui llllglfli tell ROBERT H. KELLS Sauk Centre High Sauk Centre l Amphietyon Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Liner Staff, I. P. A. Inter-collegiate Oratory, Chemistry As- . sistant. Bob oi' Boob 'whiche'e1' yon will, At Goheen Hall he's waiting still. Only it's a changed kind of waiting! ESTHER A. JOHNSON Rnsh City High Rush City t A b A ' Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Inter-class Basketball, . . Peppers. , Gets her beanty sleep in class Ent she neber fails to pass. . WILLIAM R. JOHNSON Detroit High V Richwood A Arnphictyon Fifteen loses what sixteen is glad to gain. 1 I L 't'AAl if '3,iilllQIllnllrl1.1l ll, ll anim! ttieitbel Page Sixty-four 'N -' '-x 'x7.1.--,.lgf:. -.N t- n' .v-ti-r' 'fx X. .. , ., A .s-. - ,xl-.'-M 6 X ',1f1.. -' .. U ,, V.. . .. - . i., e . i5l1y.,:,:,z 3:1-,glm-, X l w . ,. . .f . K 1 ,N I r .1 lg' 1 l l' S N- X .... V1 2 X JU? ffilWI.:E1, ff' cf -- ', rs .s , . . i X if il - e li .1 Li .3 li .,li-1., ii gf rf -I , RUTH KLEMER Faribault High ' Faribauk Euterpean Q' Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Glee Club, Peppers. Arld here we have the lorlg and the short of it. Q 4 I WILLIAM F. JOHNSON I Rush City High ' A Rush City . Euphronian A Baseball H CD, QQD, Basketball H 131. Noisy doesrft say rhuoh, but he delivers the goods. MAY I. MILLBROOK Biwabik High H ' Biwabik Atnenaean Y. W. C. A., Peppers. She evidently takes Math for pleasure. Page Sixty-,Eve gs. ?.TxL1 ,' 3 '- jg: ' - 4 .f 'X fl fi rl Qi .Nl E 5 i an 2 9 . 4 9 l . ,. L , .. ar' .3 .I , ' in a N 6 i i Q F 5 l 1 , . . lu D 1 l . li lf. ' i 2 1 - M 2-31.-27:22 - '-V.. E fifrfji-f 4227 il? Eilils, 5?5l3ll52.ii5la2-M59 7fff.i'i11lf'f'iffl-fx' M fi A sql! glifisasf-5t15ggsrpg,x.gg5,f925-p5gi1!i..g.f?5hl'1 35525!5'f'E'i5'S1:lfI,f?'fl lf aisegww -' ...za :z2al.a,.ia?isila:1'hillyf13.Qil5.3s5-itazasgfgig1gm.f,:Qisg.3s: f7F'L'2iig5Jl'i JH 0 JW A .-,F 1:-:: .11-. . g- 4: 1 'ww N35 I sf ff X il are I l l i 5 l 1 J l l l u il 1 ' 4 in 1 P I ff H ,.,, ., . kv.. . ..f-19.-.v,, .-,-,Ll :S ,iQk-'sI::3i.L .. 33 ,L '11, ,.'. ,. -' 1 Le- - Q -- ALBIN JOHNSON Lake City High Lake City Euphronian A srnile on a face is an indication of good cheer, a look of seriousness purports worth. B' HAZEL MURRAY Plainview High Plainview Athenaean Q Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Her narne disputes somewhat the color of her eyes. Hazel is sorne punkins on the side, See Sil? 1 PAUL S. KERFOOT S. D. Wesleyan Prep. St. Paul Philomathean Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Literary Board, Forensic Board, Business Manager Oracle, Maga and Liner. Inter-collegiate debate CZD, C3j, Forensic Fraternity. Lord High Fle. The rnan with the rnask. Doc can tell you that a jig tree grows in the heart of the Arctic Ocean and sornehow you sort of think it does. Hjirninie, pull down the yellow shade, the man wants a green suit. Page Sixtx su X' .N 6,6121 xxx vlm , yjo vi - 1-NA. .,. . - 3 U.. 4 VC1,eW.l.,:AlVw:v . , - X ,, . , I. n -1 2 L'-i M limi eo. J , 1 -. .. ,J . 1 CLIFFORD N. LUNDSTEN Hutchinson High Hutchinson Philomathean Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Athletic Board, . Football Manager, 1914. ' Of all eloquence a nickname is inost con-. cise-Tnbby. , HELEN L. Ross I Winona High Winona Browning Y. W. C. A., Peppers. D D Brains bn! no heaitg he has it. SHERMAN M1LLBRooK Bivvabik High A Biwabik Euphronian Y. M. C. A., State and Local Treasurer I. P. A. It is not so strange I n a youth from the Range To jind that his inozfto is speed ,' But he also is neat, Pennflan, whistler, not beatg H e's a mighty flne fellow indeed. Page Sixty-sefven 'ji-I '-Pj: l,'j,:-.a'.3'x-ylz.--. yi - me Q 1.y1,Q LJ41'2'ief f -2-'.'- .:--' L-L ,. MINNIE PARISH Grand Rapids High Villard Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Vice-President, Student Council, Liner Staff, Secretary-Treasurer . Peppers, Red Heads. She radiates cheer and she doesn't like to be called dignijied. MILTON B. LINDBERG Rush City High Q Cokato ' Euphronian Y. M. C. A., I. P. A. Smooth inns the water A When the brook is deep. H f ANNA E. PECK Rochester High Rochester Sigma Delta And I oft have heard defended Little said is soonest mended. Page S1'.x'i,v'-el It ,.' li 1-.1-VH g K - A, . L, LEW E. FIERO Mankato High Mankato Philomathean Fellows, Y. M. C. A. Footbaii my Lew looks like a Spaniard-sornetirnes-,' he acts like a gentleman always. THOMAS MOE Mechanic Arts High St. Paul Amphictyon ' Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Liner Staff. Biology Assistant, Drake TWO-mile Relay Team. Fle. Torn will draw you a picture or run you a rnile, it's all the sarne to hirn if it's for you. He's one of these be-sure-you're-right then-go-ahead-folks, with ernphasis on the go. EDITH MARY SANFORD Faribault High Palisade Euterpean Inter-class Basketball, Captain 1915 Team, Peppers. Now she is thinking French, you see, I Talks Spanish every day, Her Physics and her Shakespeare- She's always in the fray. Page Sixty-nine gf- sg..E'.c.-ar.-Y.. f I I ' I I I I I I I I , I I I I I I I III 'I I I III I II I. II 'I I .... L, 74:1 . . I ii' X ' -if-',w, , ,Q57jf'3f-j'G'5f:f ilu . 5 Fluff np- 5277-I.!1'? . . I X I- f -I .' , ...,..y:3 .', A--Li, Lsqi' L If kg LT...i.Z J dy' I4 wr i ,--- ,I I'.N,,4 if I P-f.q'f' 3' nj, Ef Q, I v yi I 'L-1 U Jil ' N 6 7 .S 'fp '- 1. I L- J, 'g .5 I- J If he 5 Is .V K '-r 5 w I 1 5 4 . -f L. Bi - 1 J: a. 'J-I r,- R I. . ,,. . ' I .v 1 fi lil X' :fi 5C.:: -'r IG If, 5-2 'Z III Ei af LX M IQ ix 'fn :Ii il id .A ig ' Ii! , rs H. as 7:3 ,AMG If '1 L! it EL' TF gif sr FQ I' HEI r.' .Lg Ig w . A Sl fl Ig E? 4 --I j 3: if 151 is fl 1' ly 553 if R eg A eg 12 Fr., - C ad Ei Is' G 223 2 RZ aI - A 1. .12 II! if ff EQ ? ik E is G3 'FP 'EI I1 23 A1 :x ,7 ag '25 Iss 5.5 S4 I4 . K. il 'Q if ff :S 1 up ij ll' ' rf' if: 13 li it A ss is If all r II' fl il El 13 KI Ri TS: 11 -1 If in 22 Iii S 'gg sz 5 :xv ri N SMI , fix .,. .2 53 X .A g 5 22 E ar' 2 4,33 ,-45523 59:25 A5 ug, fsllyffk A ME gf ffl is iff ,R gg, n ,IJ .M gg 'Q .JW f .fn'r' ,IV wig H ' r. Q., ,Lg l an-3 w::'I'71o'.'.'55:' I I , ,X Wx X l X CHESTER H. ORRISON Delano High A Delano Amphiotyon g Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Glee Club, Band. Ozone, I have a good one, fellows. Have yon heard it? g Ask why he's called Ozone if yon don't know. R GEORGIANA L. SANFORD Faribault High Palisade Euterpean Glee Club, Liner Auditing Committee, - Inter-class Basketball, Sophomore President, Peppers. Sings low, but aims high. EARNEST C. PARISH Grand Rapids High Villard A Euphronian Y. M. C. A., Vice-President Forensic Board, Homiletic Club. ,Inter-collegiate debate' C-3D', Forensic I Fraternity. 'Tis my vocation, Hal, 'tis no sin for a man to labor in his vocation. Page' SFP: F 1 ...N,... ,f L l I Q my X X X X 21 7 . V . xx - pl lr if When Dorothy has her lonesome spells N w A N flap' F X LESLIE N. SOHOONOVER Kasson High Kasson H ' Philomathean W H Beta Kappa, Y. M. C. A., Oracle and W Liner Staffs. ,, Fish is a man who's worth while,- T.. A rnan who can srnflle ' Is 2 ef: W' hen everything goes dead wrong. sys A ,S , ,S 5. sq is ..1 .v. , fu Jil if 'U X IJ - DOROTHY E. ,SHERMAN Slayton CMinn.DHigh, St. Croix Falls,Wis. Browning ' 25 Y. W. C. A. Cabinet, Glee Club, Junior J- K1 gr, . Vice-President, Peppers. v,' Q X .49 15,1 She's long-ing jnst for Horn-er Kells. pq' Lg. .ng lr- ? ul lr? ,K w l Vw '1 ai . 5: H 4 6' ff, 1. DANIEL SCOTT Worthington High Rushmore Q, G. gg Arnphict yon ig, Fellows, Class President, Y. M. C. A., ie? it Q Glee Club. me. T. ,, re 1 T' I have fought a good jight-and have Y: iff fractured rnrne elbow! .w y w .T q 1. T . x 1 J J. 1. -2 s ,. :v 233 . .., ,.',:,x,-. M., lk ff r 'A ,J ff' Page Seventy-one ,-3'g'4:1t1n:'-f 1. F - .M -.. , ., f.-pm:::'rva:sez'zs11. All - , .fwuw - ..1c11,.,:f. ,f . .. . fr ,. 3--.wgo::':':.gfgiz3.1., 6 l s MABEL M. SELL Fairfax High Fairfax Alpha Phi Peppers. - Good at problems but a hard one to solve. . WILLIAM PARKER Sauk Centre High Sauk Centre A Arnphictyon Q Beta Kappa, President Y. M. C. A., Liner Auditing Committee, Student Council, Honiiletic Club, I. P. A. I Oh, Gravefsb thou hads't no sting, Oh, Parker, thou hast the victory! OLIVE E. SPERRY Owe tonna High - I Owatonna Browning Y. W. C. A., Hall Council, Glee Club, Liner Board. D D Little M iss Sperry Alzoays so merry- Dazrtty and Charming as any fairy. F , X Page bciwzty-11r'0 X I X .K . X X N- .. - .X . I. XX ' I 4 F r x. n i i 'I L I I l 'I i It I -Q-N 5 f li . , A, . V ,. .ww iA1l'.5K1l'l'f'- 'V 1 'm V. , . , , I 1 -M .-, lg ii ll-'.'W,,J l . 'f--41 New ...R iltll It -1 Q -5 -- 4- V. f ,..1.1.l '-.1 'GENEVA M. SILVER , Clarkflelcl High L Clarkiield Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Peppers. Golden hair, Silver name, T00 bad she will change the same. HAROLD E. STEELE Central High , St. Paul Philomathean Beta Kappa Football H CZD, C3D, Captain 1915 Football Team. The little boy with the big voice. LILLIAN L. SKINNER Faribault High Faribault Euterpean Y. W. C. A., Glee Club, Peppers. Late but laiighiiig. Page StZ'L'6IIlj'-H1l'6t? h- .YZ X. . . Vx. -i.. E. K..-il LA gh, ,J 1 iq f-i'illx X' 1 fnwlllil I ',.,..,f A0,f..f,,,. . 1 li if , lf if S Q il. ,f , is H F F l l. .5 K L H W ! llllilllli ll s-.J U .il ,Q ,. , . ,I N, ,C X' ,fD,4L:f:.-, 5:7-:ll-...N :st-,effzz-i IL,-:lg-iEarp.Q-fly:,',-,j..j.-5,11-.5L2:QQ,g5-Z-:-Elf? g.-,.2,-fggfifjlmxiia ,1,3,'.f,'g1,e,:gf,g,,,f 'FL ,,f,j.gfl' at .-. f ff',, ,..- D ,. nu... J-z ,, - L, ,,..f 4,-Q -.i,,, -2214. Z.,-1ej:'.'l ' , - . ' ' ' 11 ' , , ,1,', -, .f, ,- ,- ,,-, ,- H 5, , .5 , f ,-5, 71 Wie.. z. . .- A 1' .1 vj.,.i,5q,',3g -' ' Q .1 -' I 1 ' -' 4' ' ' 1 N' ly l Lf: J ec- - . v - .4 1 -I-1 .- .. ,.. 'jj' U. if r -- fl -V fy., I K Y I, 5 V: ' X, ,I -.-.-11 .-,A,,,Y 1,5141 bfjg Egg' V may Q, 1.3 v.-e l 3,2 4,-y g-gz,,- , va, :, - .. me. ,.-xl .L ia .Wuxi ,...-. ':,1.L:.f.f,,i..f ,.'e'g.,g,,Qg,vEl5 .Qi Qi- I3 ii tl 1. -: ,:, g, 2, 2. 9- 0 4 r. . - 4. ff, J -, f--:Iv Lf, ff Q, G 1' E 'w.' ff . 4 ,, . ,111 A , . .. 135. ity? ' 1.1 7,5 - 32 , 1 . Eff 'B 1-L jj 1- ,fl N -. M .. . rr VH I' fn ALFRED D. STEDMAN Red Wing High Red Wing ,, Amphictyon ., Phi Delta, M. C. Cabinet, Forensic Board, Ass1stant Editor Oracle. , Inter-collegiate Debate CZD, Forensic :il D ' SU 1- Fraternity. J-. , ,X ,V .. 'gg W 3 R B QS As cub reporter of The Press, Sted rhade gg two H arhliue stories grow where rtohe HJ hi :if sg ever grew before arid got iu a hah' col- ge ee :U u . Q1 - ie Q urnrt 'j'eature ou the side. A uose for 25 in ich 1- 1-., L5 uews aud au eye for argurheut-com- EZ .xr A. 533 17 'iT 1 Mi il A biue 'ern arid there you have our Stedy. gg is . .C , if is Q if r -A 32 P.: .: -1 5 Q 3 F it Ex it i f Ve elf. - f' N 0 Y 1 ef ,S 2: '-i' .gr .. .S ,.. , GRACE TAYLOR Aberdeen qs. DJ High se.Pe.u1 s, Alpha Phi A Y. W. C. A., Peppers. v . , . H ,ff . . , Si You're a clever little lass, Gracie T., Ei if - 3 vi I ' 5 Q .. fs T F? We'll rhiss your jokes, alas, Gracie T., ff rf, ' if 5 1.5 .' N lg Wheu you're teaching in the West Will you have your thot's expressed To be published in the Press, Gracie T? Eg is 'F 5 EE Pl E K be f S JOHN N. TORVESTAD -e . . . Q Fertile High Fertile Gamma Delta is Y. M. ,c. A., President Socialist study 'l E 5 SE .5 ciub, 1. P. A. ., ,A A So while the brilliant triflers failed with all f 4 . their braius arid push, ' x l sit . Wise, steady-going johrtrzy wort by sticking if 5 12 ' is s .41 to his bush. ' gui aug .- . :-1 -1 5 Y ' X 1. fi '- .r x- , f E. fi .e S U 55 iw X fl .5 - i.: ee ,jx P- 11 xx Q ix' 4 7 ,. if-'ffits VR V 1. .V o .. 'T- X 1 fri Ax. aim ?eQ -Y ,HJ I- , ,, ,em gets 21:12 efw xv ee la tr x 3 .gg J, ,Q , X, 'Z-'13 FD' gg T. Q.. l.- P+ - A Q: 3: .. . LC' .-7 1' ' 17 3 ' zf,Qf g 5, gi 5 lL -. , X., M '1 . at 14337, U. lf X . J . . . - N :il i 1, , .wx,,.,,,.Hi,w,M,? H MTW-TK' I age bf 1 1 1113 .tom Q 2 T-,::1,A,f,,5, 3 nl .. ,. ., .. .....w... x x Au.. x x X . .W,..N.,Ql,,,MXm,:,.,,,,:,,MX X V' I' 7175 5.l'C7 .iQ'5i'5'-'.i-. I -'A .5 F -cr. New , A l . , ..,.. ,,... , i V ' W A X-wi? --'Nl XX' N - ' L 1 .5 X l 21-ffl 'Sli-.1 .l.',XdTll'31f5.':'f.xmL'l'fIwe-tx: 1 Qliikx S'TMk',g,l.j3jf,Q,'.x 1 M N K X X T K .X.il::'cxxN, Em? .Q55.,,NxgAQ,5- XHNQQX X. , .., , ..x.. . . ,-1 . ' lg : .,V. xv. EU.. V. N ,mf .. --L-1 3.- Us i.ecPfr's:,-u,4.!.f.fr- XQKXM p, y ' .Y W if l . r 4 . 5 lil dale. UVB LUG liil L il :D f ff LESTER G. WOOD Worthington High Rushmore Amphictyon Fellows, Y. M. C. A. Ejjiciency 'ln salesrnanshipn you'cl often hear hun quote, In fact he'd scarcely ever let you strike a sflngle other note. E. MYRLE TINKER Johnson High St. Paul C ' Athenaean Finance Committee Y. .W. C.- A., Glee Club, Inter-class Basketball, Peppers. Really, there's so rnuch to say about this Tinker that we suggest you get acquainted. LESTER H. BERGESON Lake Park High Lake Park Philomathean Ten-twent-thirt patron. Render unto all rnen their duefsj but rernernberg thou art also a man. 1 are Svwnly-jifw 3 -- ,gs .-.--5.5 X x A. .f ...N ,Af S I - 1 l W. W. BASIL YOUNG Central High St. Paul Y. M. C. A., I. P. A. V A inodest man who hides cz personality others inight well envy. LOUELLA R. TRAVER Detroit High Detroit Y ' Athenaean Y. W. C. A., Glee Club, Inter-class Basketball, Peppers. Roly-poly! But people, she's reducing and she's happy. V WILLIAM MULDER Hamline Prep. St. Paul Park Fellows, Y. M. C. A., Liner Staff. Football H QZD, C31 Getting inawied didn't hnrt him cz bit. Page Scf'mt,v-sis HANK MOE THEA WOHLER Cumberland High Cumberland, Wis. Alpha Phi Y. W. C. A., Peppers. We're going to have a qaizz and I don't know a thing! 'szfoo Bad! LEE ALTON WORKMAN Alexandria High Villard Amphictyon Y. M. C. A., Class Treasurer, Homiletic Club, I. P. A., Gym. Team, Liner Staff. Truly A 'workmah that heedeth hot to be ashamed, and there's a heap of fini in this mah if you but 'work it out of him. Page Seventy-s ri en f'Tx. .. Q J ,. 5 ti? liz? f -Q , :Gaia axle, l nl s filuf i l m in f llallu s . N .i.... li 9 if ll sw . fi l . x ag.lsl1lllllll gl1lll?l llillllI',i1lfllQlQI3l'3 lllllllll I ll' fl ffl mi if ,, E! I ' I i I x l 'J iv i El - l ,: 'f sg gl if pg il 'il 1: if If I , v , gi ls 1 ll ll , J 4 ll j 1 l , I 1 E , R 1 'I ll! J 1, 1 P I I Y l x I i i V r 1541 l X- R14-. f ' H f-,N 3 51 X.-..,, .15 ,L,1,.:',, 1-Af X . Iy: l.fJf.'r:-r-.L 2.11, -. f 4'-f ' , . ic,-,Ji R4 if It-X,,y: H U ',. .max g, . K, i....YN. Peppers JUNI OR PEPPERS CLUB EPPERSH is a club of Junior girls organized to promote class Pep.', It aims to be a per- petual get-together affair for junior girls at Hamline. The last Friday of the month Was set aside as pep day-superstition ignored-and the first meeting Was held on the twenty-third day of Jan- uary at the home of Lillian Gebhard. GFFICERS Chief High Stem, RUTH HUMPHREY High Stem . . LILLIAN GEBHARD Core .... MINNIE PARISH Seeds . . ALL CHARTER BXIEMBERS 5325? K 1 I'41gvSr:'vr1Iwx' 1 1' X 'SIZP' ffifw ,...-id Elm. M 'xfgg X X x SGDHOWXGRES Sophomores M onson Sandborn Wolf McIntyre Calkins Brown Finger Thompson Hagstrum Lutz Arthur Pile Sockness Elliott V Graves M arzahn Baker . Dittes Dixon Hustleby Ebert Vanouse Carlson Dunnell Hammond Garlock Wylie Tindall Erickson The Rime of the Lamb-Like Sophomores Oh, We're the Lamb-like Soplfmores And We're gentle, meek and tame, And We're mild and inoffensive .QBut Watch Timm play the game D We never create scandals, Commit suicide or elope Or by horse-play show our ginger D CBut in basketball beat Oppelj For we are lamb-like Soph'mores,' We'll be 'virtuous sheep some day When all you wicked, scofjiug goats H ave goue the pruurose way. RMP 'Q- A -4 ffm tx X 2 f ll- x:Xb Q ' 7' 0 'i--R 'I'-3' IS? f -- y fpbx s A 0 ,ff x 5l'lTr h4' . Ji i' 1. A Gt s R H sgil C fad gy-bfi , 427m , 35,3 gm , qgem .. M iw N lbiiwkuu 6 ,wg-lor ,, -J rg! 1. 1 1, ,A v N vor . W it Nxxu L ' K K it N-534 L N 141164 IT?-ff ok up ,Tl X' . , gives. 5 I' x I xiii ll X X ,IX - ,K cr. gp 'iqskl L I 1 bl. ' I 1' v ll l I tu xlLl.X 553144 Lx if ily lil ag 'VR Page Eiglzty Class ofl1917 Porter Martilla Featherstone Mickelson Krippner Hcsslcr Lois-Lola Gold Peterson Smith Stewart Springsted Aldrich Good Dunn Carver Blackbourn Bradford Krienkc Hanscom Mrs. Blackbourn james Cook Labbitt Gordon Liddle H. Scofield W. Scofield Spasm II We didn't smash the gym doors With a battering ram, last yearg We didn't pour that pint of flour Down on our teachers dearg But Dennis Works the Wireless And Schurtleff has the repg Thompson debates and whacks the drum Yet still you say we haven't pep! lfVe'1'e only lamb-like Soplfmores But 'we'lZ be sheep some day When all you sfneering, scomful goats H afue gone the P1 if1m'05e way. QN m W -f :X ,ii 'AYY J s'Q v 4375 f Qi 1' H' Q ' 7ff.,aw ,LAI -4 O06 no 69A I,-4 fx 1 'ff LU' lg-Jef-QV' af . '5fW'4n '- A w --2' ' k il 'L' N' , f ' 'Z j It ,gen -ima a. from Q- Nj , Nfl! ffl. iss! xi xflykiijlqfrl 3 5, R fat' AZ if ly X 11. C.. 'I Lzwlw VI ' A , - ' I ' I 'L 'f I 'Q ' r I4 J A kj-E '.z5wZ5gQvYN1'M M lf ,, X , .4 K Page Eiglziy-om: 1 , xl 7 ,W iz. v.,jH,J wg, ,Q -. uh in I' :Q . 7, 1 Hn, ,I fig' -yi. - if 'Z-L Wg. w A 11537: E Q, La V , ,A ' ... ml.. N fi 911, ,,-, ,A U .bi 1 NY L1 HS i-- 'L '14 G, 'z T, it ,r A ,1 if A, rr L' ' . ,jx .V , 1 I fi' - - ,F if 0 si :Y ' -aww ' ' Zig fi! O 13 , 51: ff K5 u ,ps O nu Q. 1,1 fe? 65 fe V az fi fo ' i fk . if if Y '-1 3? LQ , F1 61 I1 fl al- Q, nd 10 ! 1f fn ., , . E3 6 lair '1 .-. iif F5 3 t L ,- r - ,ne 1' ,V 1? X15 -9, Qf Lf' Q? if 5- li, ,,y, Pz , .7 , in iz SQ: N 5: lj vs 'ff fi' if if V4 gg , f gt' fi ' 5 V ., ,1 , Q53 YL- f 1 ,q if ' if: E J as ag 'ff' if as ' -3, X ,' ,, .- at Y' ff' -'E 1:1 if ef 1 ,w '1 '.f, Z., .3 it 51 5 5 X ai E5 ' 34 ip , ,, , I 3 gf 1? ' ai ?'1 23 2,1 if E5 90 f n H' BU ei U EF? SEQ ,li 15 3? ze 'TT if U ., 4 -f 914 Vai ,Lf 71 S3 2:1 ii -', af -. in 222 Zi? Eff G1 J' Q3 ,, ki ,Q YE fg .A is Sl 21? H, , 392 puff, 4 if . f ,,1.. .5 sf: H1 ' lx SQ 'grz ra. ' 'V , fly aj, ,if l 1'3: Ei 62 all 'J: T12 is kg Y 2. iq fi ii 57,24 E3 ff 0:23 1 H1 , 'MH ,, KH-'rf fi 5 ir: M2552 gs ', ff f f x Hfgigff , 5, ff: 12237 ,if 4? .,gJf,,,Q 1 51 'fin .M - 51193175 Q ii ,I M if Q: ifrfw P' .L'f' 12 45 1. r ge ' 1 .4 W, C3 M -L! gl f U, :ff 'uf 'l., L ,M ,.,J 1 i, ,Q ,Q as ,nut ,JV I 'Tx V' H . El , ., fi L ,l 1'.,! in f , , ,-- N ., ,F !H,. 1-,,,, 35 hy, -. . A fx ' ,Q :. gl 5 It N V1 .Q N ,, 1 ' v . '- s 5 ,.h. . x, X ll -xv. F Q ..: V 5.1 - MN' lfq Xiffx gp, f,- I ., 1 ,., IIA,-I , T ,Q -K 100 X 1,9 xx K N , ' '-554 A ,I ,W .. .K '-12,1 2,4 M, , NH, f:,, ,GI 1 414' , .,,A lm,-.f fy, W, ,X .,ual 1,,,,v ww. '1 , , , . , , X f Z XX FIQES25 M EN 2 55' f- l-1g',,,..- -sl'- R X Y XX x x f X- S X 2 l ' fad., -- X 4 2' f gf.. f if-' 1 S Freshman Class OFFICERS President . . Arnon Benson Vice-President Marian Wiech Secretary . Eva Hamlin Treasurer Ernest T. Lee W W Qi ? . 53 SWR I gf N 1.1. is E: Y . V r l, 'ff i Page EigIzi3v1fbnr U rr: ' 'QM 1 R' M.. xi, A 1 T-5 rf 54- , 'kr' rf-ire 'a fig: nf . 2 'hey SY Jfiflx 1? as We -hifi 134. x 4 N w Page Eiglzty-jixvc .,.-W, .. ., f. .,.. . ,f,- f., AF, l I, ,, l 3 ml ,,, .R fd in 1 .V , Vw :AJ 1,-i , '- V 1 131 it in .N 9. .e, fi, U- Q'J.::'s: :f1f.'?:'-r.5.ux.1':izwL,,. . .zg f, -vf. . .rn-. 1 f, V r'-a rx fit: 'i -ft' '1 6-3 .A FRS M '- J l F h St r' r' p N a Hamline-Union street car, with One Eye on the fl , f s i ylssssr Telescope which we had Reluctantly left in the back of 5, p ' eeeee I the car at the Conductor's command, and with the other 'if' straining Anxiously to Lamp the Red and Gray banner which we felt Instinctively would be Floating over the i i i F T - Instieteution, we, the Class of 1918, made our way to the Li' . s A as s T Halls of Learnin at Hamline HU . Rl as . A A - T g if 9 s A sssts s sstst sssss s ' Anxiousl , with cautious, Puss -foot tread, we made our way up Snelling Avenue, regarding Everyone we met. Q ,r-,Q , Humanity was made up of two classes of people that day, Friend and Foe. Anyone who approached another with conhdent smile and Ready Handshake was a Foe. We felt F71 P T .k -, ad . . IAPV- that in our Bones. Anyone who Slouched around like a German waiter at a Irish celebration on St. Patrick's Day ii- fj ,,r. was a Friend. He Had to be. Gradually we got next to Things. We strolled into LQ 51: . . . , A R1tschel's and like true Hero-Worshippers purchased Fly- gg specked postcards of the Track Team of '99. 3? ,gi Our Fellows tackled Football, our Warblers warbled Vx . . Fi their way onto both Glee Clubs, quite casually we separated the Sophs from one Perfectly Good Cane- M A' ' ' Rush. Our Chest swells when we recollect our Foot- ball championship, the Track ditto and a Girls' gg Basketball team that couldn't be beat. Then one Da it was borne in u on our Infant ,Y Y P Intellects that we would have to Organize. 'Rather more easily Remarked than done, for when several Q2 32 . . . heated meetings had come to a Sizzling Close, we were uncertain whether we were the proud possessors of Two Presidents or None. At length, with malice P:-, SJ aforethought, Arnon Noah Benson was legally elected, and is now guiding the destinies of our Frosh Career. 3 -Amen, LET Us PRAY. r Q1 if lf: , 55 vt -c 'J M I - Q Li L4 fm x , , ig V375 sw P15 wi if Eff' Jr lg, yy, 4' .fi tw!! 5-4 Qr, f,f'-' ,lf 7, .uf H .V 4' all V 1 I 1 l 1 X xi X 'THREE The College Year' H, none may reach by hired speech of neighbor, priest and kin, Through borrowed deed to God's good need that lies so far within! Ye have read, ye have heard, ye have thought , he said, and the tale is yet to run: By the worth of the body that once you had, give answer- what ha' ye done? -Kipling. f 4 2 3 I r ,. Z all in 1 .0 5 I 2 ? '1 s s 5 F 1 : 1 u x I K Iv ll, I i Q X L V ' I ji is Q , W . X . ,. .,. -. -- X. ,-1, fx. :.- A .1.:.. P-L' lr- ' 'ucv V f Q: -. -.I 'V 'kfw 1 'l L -'fig 52 3 if fl- ' 11 11 Q . r. , . . . . Y. L' ,I . . l l ll 1 :wr-1 Q .J lf o -J o .,. N-J ..-J sf - V -- T ROPHY CASE THE GREAT GAMES OF LIFE E are in a World of turmoil, 5 h f Where the Winds X I . drift high the sand, A5 XX gg y r , if - 'vw Q Where the tides of doubt and sorrow, a .Beat and burst upon the lvl- strand, . here the constant stress of duty Bids us face each pressing foe, And demands that we be valiant, In this World that rushes so. E must hasten to the conflict, As the music from the band, Has announced in notes sonorous That the game is close at hand. ES We're out upon the gridiron, And We're here to face foe, Wemust buck those husky rascals, When the signal-man says, Go. OR there is no time to loiter When we're in life's foot-ball game. If We even stop to whimper It will bring us grief and shame. E are in the great gymnasium For a game of basketball Where We've got to scratch and scramble, Or be kicked and cuffed by all. E are pushing and We're crowding And we'll Win the game at last, If We keep apace with progress. Men, We've got to travel fast. OW Weife Out UPON the diamond ES, we're in life's game of tennis Of this great ball-game of life, Where We'Ve got to hit and hustle Or be cancelled from the strife. And vve'll swat that pesky ball And we'll master every trial Be it great or be it small. OW We're in the field for action E are all in life's great battle That Will test our utmost skill Our success will be assured If our duties we fulfill. And indeed we're here to wing We will ight for truth and justice And we'll prove that we are men. -T7'1HlZl1-11 B. Clark. P51 V - .- on Z Fi -'4 V'-I :- -, 'a I 'N ... n r -. f . ,,xs.. f fff..':ffff f.u,,f.'.'ff:14,:a- 1 ,1.1avpmfaff.::a1Q::1:1w:.f,awau:f::f,a1:wzr:.sv.e:.affpz-mmflmamvfeazfvzzsrfwiqriacq-:nac:m.wmwzwp1wmatariffsfazmffsuaauavawwnn:.wzressaw5.1.12-r-mmef.rszr.ar1-wamcmcxzfmummax.-g:s::'z:2m:lwi4:v:.g.g:Qvrfsszfx I ff,-,U 7, , , ,, ' : v 1 at 'Lggj-aizas f A 1:--1.11: f.v.vrm'f:a4z': uf:wazfzvv''1cwnmfQfff.c:ff5.:m:2::f'1fzfrfrmzfaemfmrarzzwosm.zu-eeafb?fz25o51z+ra::mQ:was1mm:win-.LMnzamz.2afmwsv?:1r:fzer5:.rrQreexamifafuzfcaxmnel:wx-tra:1:wa3:-.L.-czffr-esmtp:-..Y-:wwaz: A rw. .i an-M.: Page . 1 Athletic Board Mallery Heneman Manning Hopkins Lundsten ARE you 'UP' IN fallm-:7 HAVE vou EVER PLAYED MARci.es Fon KEEPS? HAVE YOU EVER PLAYED BASEBALL IN THE 5UMMrR?, up EvERH EA A LLMYOA smu www N - e E A B0 ahh X QM? 1' Q QNQQ w A ming TX f , - ,igfnl , I lu lf IQ . THLETICS at Hamline are eon- trolled by the Athletie Board. This body awards all honorary athletie insignia and eleets managers to all college sports. Eigliiy-nimv I , If i Ill ' E ...Q f 9 mu gfff' - Dow Blume Davey Larson A. 1. Wallace Prof. Herrick Prof. Hartwell Coach, Baird OI- FICERS Dr. G. WV. Hartwell . . President Alfred L. Mallory . . . Secretary Will Baird, Athletic Director anna' Coaclz. MEMBERS Faculty Rejnresentati-ues Dr. G. VV. Hartwell, Prof. L. R. Heriiek Alfwzni R6Pl'6SGll-fGlli'Z'6 A. J. VVallaee Class R6Pl'6S6ll-lGfl I'CS Senior, A. L. Mallery hlzmior, Neal Dow Sophomore, Howard Manning Frcslmzazz, Kenneth Hopkins Football Cla ptaius AJCllZCZg6I'S Theodore Larson . Clidord Lundsten Basketball Franklin Bluine . Franklin Blume Baseball Thaddeus Davey . . A. L. Mallory Track Harold Heneinan . Harold Henenian Gyuz and Teizuis H. I-lelliwell . . Franklin Blume I ,,,,,.,5 ,I n, r U-,,-.rf, H, 1, fl ,V fT1,J..,,gKI.,3g,5,fM ...W . f if uY.,,c,, ,.,. , . .,J....,. . ,V U A , , f I, .- f' H 1 1 ,5- .-Hr A' ,f I, g N If 'I .5 bd L , L, I I F lm. L-A,-cr I, - wg x.: vw. I I A I Isrzgss: fi ' ' wi' X' J Here Was a Man Who Stood A Four-Square. I AMLINE UNIVERSITY, IN LOOSING CAP- TAIN SWEITZER, LOST ONE OF THE BEST KNOWN MEN ON THE STATE COLLEGE GRID- IRON-AT THE SAME TIME THE BIGGEST MAN IN THE HAMLINE STUDENT BODY OF THE DAY. HE WAS NOT ONLY ADMIRED BY THE STUDENT BODY AND SIDE-LINE SPECTATORS, BUT WAS LOVED BY HIS TEAM MATES AND ALL THE STUDENTS WITH WHOM HE CAME IN CONTACT. HE WAS NOT ONLY ADMIRED FOR HIS QUALITIES AS A GENERAL ON THE ATHLETIC FIELD AND AN IDEAL MORALLY AND PHYSICALLY, BUT EOR HIS STANDARD OF LIVING AND HIS GOOD, HUMAN, SOCIAL, MANLY QUAL- ITIES, THAT ARE IN COMMON WITH LIFE. AS AN ATH- LETIC BROTHER DEATH HAS ROBBED US OF OUR BEST.U Vllgc' Ani-7 I I X 5,51-iw.,ji . Lf. .y , . , Mg: . . -. . . .c',f ,,-1.., .- 'I-L. f.: zz--.-uw f. .- 4. .,1 ff, f .V '.-.gf-'v -v npr.-L--- - .-4- . nut,-, 41-...:M-.:'c1.f-lg:...'.'.1J:.z- ,f.-:,'0.:,lLQR-LT-:Ki-If-1311 .li-'nf '.f. asf:-L qv. - rx. --1 X f. V -I ,X . , ,- , s c 'QT' 2 . .f . 1 J. nl .'l .S .-L rl. W, .1 Qc ,t 7 I .1 v, -I Q ff, .2 'K ,Q x '. , 1. -' It wi ,. .4 1? il Y L '1 v.. R. ,F W ' S! 'Lx .1 ., I '--i SW 71 .Li T12 - . fu' 'xl 1 1' .4 ,s , . Ll 49 H7 ff -fl. f.-' .7 ,4 ful li: L75 rj if 31 li fo fl :Atl K .7 l 'X .1 ff ,4 .ll nf ,E 1,1 1,5 'li if Fr fr- Sf I .' li' ii f I ,-. M- -. of Uf it .il .: 1 'U' w lj C. .u bl gl. ei ny . zj 7. L fi U1 2 sf-: it M A -gm . 'R kfd .1 ,fl 32 , 'E li ,rl 113 55 Li' I ,I as at H5 ft up . ,. nfl! lil L1 'ff ill Q Q ' P. il fs 'A by i V .Ill , J' JS vi Vg 1-I 'r 51 . , if FW vi I Qi -, u'. lf' Li fat 'E F-. :Br f' ilk c, V? . V , is 1.. .- Fl 'll :Qi I .l N .',- -' fir 'rl l 'ff qu i x 1' ,fl ' Il ,- g-5 ,. K J ,ri 5 fr , . 'ii ll EFI -.1 2' - if 32 was MIG 1- ,557 Page :L- ift , .. x.j fx- ,,. ,,- W., ,f,,- ,U . .vb --v lf. ...Q . v 1 i' - Z'-l Football, Basketball, T Theodore Larson Basketball, Baseball Franklin Blume Baseball, Football Thaddeus Davey Basketball, Baseball Vllilliam johnson s L if-A THREE'TP'NUUY rack Football, Basketball, Baseball Curt Timm TWVO'TP'BlEN Basketball, Football Reynold Oppegaard Baseball, Football N cal Dow Track, Football Howard Manning FOOTBALL Theodore Larson Harold Steele Philip Hamlin Clarence Nielsen Leon Truax Thaddeus Davey Curt Timm Neal Dow Lawrence Schoen Howard Manning Kenneth Hopkins Harry Frost Harry Roese Edward Emerson Ludwig Stoylqe Reynold Oppegaa VVilliam Mulder Lewis Fiero rd Wlillard Humphrey Nimfly-one TNF.-'.'X-'X-IXHI'-Q.il'E 'F' ' L . '.'.'X'. iff' ' .IQ N BASEBALL - Thaddeus Davey William Wynn Allen Dobner Thomas Nass Leonard Lee Franklin Blume Curt Timm Howard Nelson Neal Dow Williain Johnson Roscoe Kirkpatrick FHHJJANIDTRACK Roger Anderson VVilliam Crays Harold Heneman James Ballentine August Herrmann Theodore Larson Howard Manning John Booker BASKETBALL Franklin Blume Reynold Oppegaai d Theodore Larson Curt Timm lVilliam Johnson T A Eggs l X . it llll If-s , . , . .. -I law' r' ' ,fy 3 S I f' 1' g gg VJ. X- 'ch .vi lf U f.--. l' 511: 1, V l....J Coach Baird THLET ICS at Hamline since Coach Baird's ar- rival in the Spring of 1910 have had a record of almost unalloyed suc- cess. Marvelous results have attended Coach Baird s efforts and to- day Hamline boasts of athletic triumphs such as the West had avi? as A ' Lvlllll . . ' , UMM i . lr ' never before seen. , ALL CCACH BAIRD'S track teams have been State Cham- pions and the last four out of live he has trained have been Tri-State champions as Well. All of Hamline's basketball teams-everyone coached by Vlfill Baird- have been State Cham- pions, and the 1915 team Won first honors in the Tri-State Conference. In football, Coach Baird turned out, in 1912, a team that Walked off with the Tri-State Championship, and he produced a champion- ship baseball team in 19 1 1. AND THESE great records have been made With never a charge of professionalism laid against Ham- line. Hamline athletics have been built up by a man having ,probably, higher ideals for amateur athletics than any mentor in the West. ALL HAMLINE takes off its hat to Coach Will Baird-the big- gest man in athletics in the West! COACH WILL BAIRD ., M, .f.., .4 -J il U TJ 15,1 The Athletic Year HE 1914 BASEBALL TEAM tied With Carleton for second place in the State Conference. The strongest part of the machine was the pitching staff composed of Captain Davey, Curt Timm and William john- son. Neal Dovv Was one of the best outfielders in the state. THE TRACK TEAM began the season by beating the Uni- versity of Minnesota in a dual meet on Norton Field, Carleton next fall in a dual meet and Hamline Wound up her intra-state track record by Win- ning the State Confer- ence Championship very handily. Tri-State honors Were next in line and Ham- line's eight men team Cleaned up the field at the Huron meet by an overwhelming total. HAMLINE'S RE- LAY TEAM won the half-mile race at the Drake Relay Meet and took second in the mile event, Journeying on to Philadelphia, the star quartet took second place at the Penn Relay Carnival, the greatest athletic meet in the world. THE BASKETBALL TEAM won the State Championship and was universally accredited the Tri-State Championship. The 1915 tea.m was the best team Hamline ever had. Ziaamf Page Xflzrt FCDTBALL THEODORE LARSON Captain 1914g Two Years A11-State Tackle ff.. 5-Lf ,1 0 . lit 'tl if r. ' 1 1. 2 -if Ll, -2 u- -'I m .ru 1 J. A d IL '2 1 -1 u S. l F 'IT gm ,xl .X x fx . vi. 7 l. 'L i 9 .y. L p. :ll -2 ,cs li Ni Ts S. Q, l yi wg, .xl.5,,,,:,1a,.T,Q-QYLQN X-,345,fggg-91554553,:ng3g3,,A153,1353gg,5,3,jq,135,'g5gQ'5351SS5535152E?Qf5:EGiz5Ek?i2l?T???jYsnfiifE-5Ta5if.l?.i?WCMf5f'33?512l223351251 vi ,1'4?Iii77ffM ' 1 'f.1fC', lf .riiijnjz vii: qZffff19'3gW 5A'xiY7' R' 'Q 7 Q :A 1- -EZ all 'gk ll 1f:11.:a'i11a'f:1f:f512'f,2f,n:,.m'':-a:.1 fi 541.111-gift':1fc:9Zi'r-11:12-25119mi5,1312Srweszasxwf:-semen: 1 9 ai-v U ' ' ' 'J:l iv U fha if E331 st? 11,14 4 Q5 1 E131 fi iii! AROLD STEELE: The Rubifoam Kid. We Q2 call him Tmy, which aptly describes the exten- Li Q42 sity of his anatomy but his structure IS surely of if ,H gg . 0 e , W 3 true steel. Hamline w1ll have a cracking-good Captain for her Football team in 1915. '15 'Y X: E53 - 1 in Q1 Teams 1913, 1914-captain 1915. jp ff? W xr ,, ' si 2 ff PF fl 41' vu .5 J :Cy L51 5 .X 3' ' ai ., :LU I A lvl 9. JE its ' El ii 9 . gg 1 1 IK 7, If I ' I! gg Eg HEODORE LARSON: Lars, Odlronszdes. Q: 35 Captain 1914, who 1S always in the game,-and 9 gi 3 most every game at that. The most positive Ath- - 55 lete that Hamline has had in years, never spectacular, E3 ' ' - 1 13 A but always in the game and never taking a slump, Lar- Q 5 son's work has often been overlooked. Eg xi. 9, ,Q 55 gg Teams 1912, 1913, 1914. x, gp, 1. 5 is 55 pg Q l 55- hn ,f I.-1 E. Q if fl - be Q 53 15 ? P if . L as E5 S if G: 3 Pr ' 35 5 SE P 55 3 U gg . H E. L F Q 4 si 1- , Q 1 Ly 9 S K 22 ga u , T HILIP HAMLIN : Old Hqm! One of the staunch- 5,35 est, truest, hardest fighting men that Hamline has ever turned out. if J 3 5 . Qi gg I Teams 1913, 1914. X Is, -,R w KX Q2 51531 xl A15 1- ,a . iifflx Ru 5 Wal xi, rff,i95' , ma W gli T K, W Kimh' W WM U I Page Nuzvly-four Ng EEE A vigil filyiffh?f'aWSI1f5G4.nuliifsiwycfueiiEEQQYLQSYE195251292:Tf5'gf:'9'0LNgXEtflL'vgxxqfmwzfgmvQ'4:3'g:uq,'1o3w:wN,gw5gggq55,1 my 1,,-,-AMXNNYE,W,,,,,,., xx, WWF , ,J X. 8 ,RN Xu ww Wax tx N XZ, Nt., xl:E.U,K'E'df .:5jfECCdfiL'lWZQL'fSlkllyiw'L-f'Cx:'15'53yfp,uw'f1-3,13wmv'vpi-1-gp-1 ---,zu .v,,1,9,, '-.,.f,.. , -.,. ' T1 I 'lwwkx Vg-WQVJL fw?N V.fQl-Nix Q9 ' N 'W ' V ' f- 4'9' 'M M-M1fcwLl.f1 4 wx 1mtL'--X'.-9flf:L'..m-LQfE?1?iYs4!:iRlZ'fiEiQ'2'3-llE.'Q?5'-Tlljiil292zRlLl,l2fm'W5xxS1i:fq',3My.j,5173q4-QLHMQ,-,QX-5-Al1?-v,L,,miNtM:mfg X vi-,N-5-W T-.RW R,--1+rN.g.,w-QXQ,'Q'xQg3Q1,5 v 1 I 1 w 1 A cr l ' ' w I wi vi -1 .. . X .,',',,jr-.7-K-N ,f i .. -.-,-... ... F rw ,fy .-., -,,,'S:'iI'.. mf' .i-5:15 7, g' ,-5111,-'Z L . 1-11 -mf, .!,',.Ix NJ . I I V. . -. w yf V fx. f- 1 fs., ef fig , ,. f q 7 1 I- la 3 L. J J L L J 3 . ft, ' fi 31. f booting saved and gained many a yard for the Red, and Gray. Curt made the All State the past two years l f .Q ' if Teams 1913, 1914. ft g 'l A ag fi A 3 if? gli 34 54 In K. ? 4.4 Ei fl ,-J .il N.. I-1' f , .4 r il 1 93 ' 1 lv! 1 5. , Si id yr il ia' . YA :lx fif U? i f 5 fs 1:1 93 lb ,Ai 1 in VJ E 515 if! 531 xl f. 1 fl rl A 'll . lf , . l ,W 1,1 1, UQ ni,- .' H 1 vu 1,1 I 'll If it-3 ARRY FROST: Frost He came down from 1' fl F4 Crookston in a refrigerator car, and later in the .11 i ' Fall he cast many a blight on aspiring runners who tried to circle his end. Harry is a hard player and as game as they make them. Team 1914. x - sl . if X. y N X URT TIMM: Cootie. Timm was one of the - fastest and hardest players who ever sported on .. Norton Field. His offense was wonderful, and his ii ' LARENCE NIELSON: Ch:is1ine. Always in a receptive mood for a bit of fighting,-and e'gad, he . puts up a good argument, be the dispute physical or vocal. Team. 1913, 1914. N X Page Ninely-jis'c T.-YJ' -' saver.- im . , .xx . .,r..,X, , f U fl A J .x , 111, itfazixgffl-.--4531. 1' we 'iiffafzz-'f11'ff . A w H fl 3' 4.4 I' Il ff, U-.144 . .7 . ' ei 'ey at A, L, ,LJ U , H.--.f -1 '- 1 ff il H. Ti sy: rf U 5 OWARD VMANNING: Samson. Old man Manning's son, Howard. He came to Hamline , A with a pole-vaulting record and a love for Kelly- I pool. Baird turned him loose on the gridiron last year and he wrecked the bucking machine. Manning should make the All State Team next year. Team 1914. 9. H4 W N ff. .ig n ul 'J 'U it 21 K bf L 1 5, if Q. 5, 13 Qi lv iz HADDEUS DAVEY: T.D. He is the pos- sessor of a seven league boot. Thaddeus played Q9 center except on the fourth down and then he came sf back to send the pigskin on an aireal excursion. Davey was a mighty big asset on the line. Team 1914. U' 1 ,. Q: il S rf xi s FI YH X i .s if .e if 411 Q-1 Fx sf .1 .ff SL QQ x: xl- F74 9 xx Q. is I AWRENCE SCHOEN: Shane. Schoen is a T5 hard. and consistent lighter, and makes an opponent feel every ounce of his bulk. He will be back on X the line next year and one of the outskirts will be well protected. Q. X Team 1914. uf' K' Page Ni n aly- six RN 1 X w .K st X X X N 1 , .x X - sw ,MN-,-w i 4 x 5 I' V gig: '.'. gi.- 'xr , f 1 b'lJ,43gW1i Li is Miki 52 2 ' gil f 5, a ENNETH HOPKINS: -'Happy' Small, but oh, l . . Q my! First of all, a gentlemang and a heady, hard I 1 upon when things came his way. His tackling Was 1 5 1 I I I Team 1914. I 3 ' I I lr 1 , f. M . 1 1 YJ i' -V ,t -. ,, A :I L. ,A ffl K Y 14 , 1 12 ii H .tv ly , . All fr lie fi ,, . . in 1 .ry 1 --1 t, fl, :li ffl 1 Pj A 1. . li ff ' fl, 4 1 I! 'K : J . 3, Q! , 1. .3 ,. Sill f,f luis '.-i 1 2. .ji I Y' 3 .ff 1 U U VE l' v-1 -R .'. I S 32 -' cherub. l l X Q5 Page Nimrly-scfuv n it . . s .ii, , 2U ' ' iq' H1 L I. I 1 and sure player always. Hoppy could be depended . deadly and his running superb. it - LIFFORD LUNDSTEN: Tubby. This is Man- t 5.1 ager Lundsten, a boy with a level head. Ap- ' palling good natured and quite harmless is this EAL DOW: Df,wie. A man who was always able to be at the bottom of a pile-up, and who always went back in for more,--this was Dow. He was adamant in his position and he could carry the ball too. Team 1914. sf?- ,Q JB 5 A ' -7 .XF E-A l. xx ,f -.VT i 1 -v si' C' 'Jil 'J F75 T 232 F in 'L' .71 ff .X iii Q31 1. bfi 4 4. if fc? 'I cf A . .-1 V1 .m ' iii .1 E it if E. 913 fe: fel 5 if fi? lj ' sg ig 52 E3 5? if fi VL .J .W 1 . pr -'Q FG QA Ei fi if 11. wi vi of aa 323 'fl .-11 -1. 14 Ji 1: 53 I . Hd 1 32 bk. YF ff! 31 Q: TR ai 'F vi: f' XL :T 513 Q: Pg fy gi v ,.. 1, .xl is is sv if if 5 2 132 ai fs gl it Q is dc 5. .3 Q3 ll X H af 1 lt xx N- g iz ,f ., 35 E2 is P 42 5' is sl rg ,. if it Ei B s f iv ll, 5 Sl Q K5 'Q if i . 55 -J Ei xi , sf- ez, , Heli' EGM gre Hifi 'I My 41. Fi H' ,GQ ' ' Elini' A W I, r, .fn I., gr D. ,L , 9 A .ix 'ill ga H li 5. X .Al . ry: .UT .ll .Q .5 ff. A 31 , , fa' F15 ' ' I fl' .Le , .. .-, .,.- . ..,,,,L. ,, .':f.,:-. Aff? :xt , l , -by-.-5,--elvis,-,-as-ggwif-.1-fm'-y.'.f,,gg1,fV, ,L-1 - -1 -,,.f:, . .,.'..r Qs.,.f-'.f- V -.-V-.. ffl--In --. -l , ,'-,. wif?lfiliiitfiil'-3:-j93:,C mil E W J ,, iw ,qrqfggyzrpc.-2-isa'-.rr .45.Y1-T'-Lipman L 4-'tw -1 H L -' -F T i otball izv x. L Aj if-21 by it q N Better Fo ' Q it Rl 5 . 1 f ,X I RQ , D E UST what can be , I, ' done to secure a f fl Q Lf! lk better standard of W ' 'K Football at Ham- .l.f . Qj HERE is no doubt but, that-just as the fortunes of Napoleon were buried with his grand army in the snows of Russia, so Hamline's chances in football in nineteen fourteen were buried in the registrar's records. Too many of the men who in nineteen hundred and thirteen had fought for the honor of the Red and Gray and had experienced the sweetness of victory and bitterness of defeat had failed to come up to the scholastic requirements upon which the faculty lays so much emphasis. As a result much ,valuable material was lost. However those who had failed to come up to the required standard remained loyal to the team to the last and did every thing pos- sible to aid their more fortunate fellow-players. To have a winning football team it is necessary that the entire institution, which the team represents, should be poor loosers. By that I mean that every possible effort be made that is not forbidden by the rules of the game to bring about the team success. Deeds alone count in football. Hot air, good intentions and lovable spirit that does not emanate into deeds is extraneous matter and often does a lot of harm to the game. True sportsmanship and obedience to rules are essential for the good of the game but those who interpret their meanings should possess what is called Horse Sense. '1G7!,'f2K4f'3ll-ll-Y5?'r flU9'l5!ZETf' 'X 4 V .1-',,.f:..-w.' rf -'Q' -1 Y '.'.z:1'Um.-::- Q 1 line is a problem, which no doubt can be accom- plished only if the high spirit which began to manifest itself near the close of la.st season con- tinues. T healumni and undergrad- uates are well ac- quainted with the fact that the foot- ball team of the past season was a failure, in fact the poorest in the history of the college. -The blame for this cannot be put upon the shoul- ders of the coach or the players them- selves,-they did nobly under the hindering circumstances. Hamline had material in school the past year which was capable of forming a champion- ship organization, but was unable to use them because of adverse and what we believe too strict faculty ruling for a school of our size, and we lacked the material. Seven veterans were on the sidelines lines last year. This condition of affairs can and must be remedied if Hamline is expected to hold her own in the athletic world. The Freshman Class of last fall did not bring in any great amount of promising material and in a small school like our own we must look to the Freshman Class for many varsity , and second team experienced men. . Thenatural question arises, How are we to get these experienced men F And the answer is,-yes, it is co- operation . The past season is dead and I for one am mighty glad of it. Above all, we want a good football team next Fall, and we all must help make it and support it, y.fvWM.ml Page Nfneiy ugh! 'JTx':T.'1lf1.'.1.'.7 -X -- ' . - - -X -x - .pw , x A - - - it X A.. I J NNNN ff TR CK WILL CRAYS Captain 1914, breasting the tape at the State Meet. 1 ri-State Conference Champions Ballentine Heneman - Manning Herrmann Crays THE 1914 TRACK SEASON HE Track Season of 1914 Was the most successful in the his- tory of the institution. The crack relay quartette pulled dovvn na- tional fame at the great Relay Carnival at Philadelphia and Drake University. Booker Coach, Baird 1 Anderson Larson An eight man Team svvept the Tri- State Meet at Huron, South Dakota, in brilliant style, and the squad carried off first honors in the State Meet at Northfield. They also won the dual meets with the University of Minne- sota and Carleton. Pugr Um' II1n1dre'a' i..1..,J u , . A lu'X1,,, N 'j .i X. -... ., - . . The Speediest Quartet in Minnesota Collegedom Crays Ballentine g I T fs up -I . cf Herrmann Anderson The 1914 Relay Team OST RENOWNED of the four athletes Who composed Hamline's crack relay squad was Roger Anderson, one of the fore- most track men of the state for the past four years. Rog can run the quarter in close to fifty seconds and the 220 at a ten second clip. In 1913 he lowered the state record in the 100 yard dash to 0 4-5 seconds in a dual meet against Carleton college. Anderson lives in St. Paul and came from Central High School. BILL CRAY S, another of the Red and Gray speedsters, last yea.r negotiated the quarter mile in 52 seconds illat tieing the state record. He also ran the 220 in 22 seconds flat last spring. Crays is from 1Vinne- bago. I age One IIzmdrv.1 Om' 'gi PIERRMANN and Ballentine were the two younger runners of the team. Herrmann is a pretty runner with an almost perfect stride and lots of staying power, and could push any of his mates for speed. He hit the 53 seconds mark several times last spring. Herrmann hails from Lester Prairie. BiLXLLENTlNE the .fourth runner is a Minneapolis 'South High school boy. He first made a name for himself by winning the quarter 'mile dash at the Chicago Stagg Meet three years ago, when he cleared up the held in the high school inter-scholastic. He made the relay team in his hrst year at Hamline. Ballie is one of the prettiest runners who ever broke Minnesota sod. He is at the U. of M. this year. c . I xml 'J' r! in - iff ls . X-. flu E Q I . 5 . . il vc .N L sv -. .1 3 21' Yi. .1 Ply Kr 4551 'Z J.. . ,., .,,..,-. . ..e.-,-- , ,..eq1,r-.-,v,-.e...--- . 7:-, X--'wk-. ., , , ...-,V . Ly, ic' ,- .' ,rig . sfwe-mfaf-,fi-1f...v.i,,,-.Q.?.-:iff,UL.fr,:w.a,J...1.. ', . . I-,-w.!'1j,f.w 4 f ,, . f, MAY 23: Carried off the State Meet v at Northfield by the total of 79 . J i X points against Carleton's 60 and g QKMD Im-,f .X 0 Macalester 18, with St. Claf 7. Q MAY 29: Swept the T ri-State Track 1 Hg We Q 1 ' l Meet at Huron, South Dakota. ,B 'f A 4 S-FU U A ' Competing against all the Colleges A , and Universities of Minnesota, and North and South Dakota. n 'g' f HE T k S , The big point winners were: CAPT. . mc Gam CRAYS in the 100, 220, 440 and relav. 151, , which was one of . J ,fi gg .iis 1 . t f Start to Crays established a new record for 3 h, Vlchorav mmb d the 100 yard dash at Huron, in 10 K if '- P15 ,h egeli Ytsen ' seconds Hat. . ,lf ? .f mgt Te? fe ay, Sams ANDERSON in both hurdles, the 440 te the T918 CeT111V91l0f and relay. He established a new , ee I' the Tfllddle West at record for the 440 yard dash at Huron Drake University on of 51' seconds flat. ' Anderson was also eg l,s, ' April 18. The half the individual point winner in this Vptr e rp . mile and the mile Meet, taking 3 Firsts, besides run- ,W team Wee Composed ning a beautiful race in the relay event. if of Ballentine, Ander- 1BALL1EN'1ENE,1111 the S205 320, and 53 Son, Herrmann and re ay. a ie a so esta is e a new rsl' 0 0 Clays, the two miie record for the 100 yard dash in the team of Booker, Moe, Culbertson and TTI-State Meet Of 10 Seoeellde Het, en Heneman. They carried off lirst, 3 SIOW Week- He elee fled Wlth Qlllg' second, and fifth places respectively. 1eY Of South Dakota 111 the 220, Put' APRIL 25: The team Won Second ting up a new record of 22 seconds. place in the Great Relay Carnival RIIIERRMANN' m the 220, 440 and lv :Q of the World, competing with Col- G ay' . . umbia, Syracuse, Carlyle and Penn. MOE, m th? hahgmtle' , State. HENEMAN, in the mile. and two mile. fi MAY 7- Defeated the Universit BOOKER,mthetWOm11e' 55 ' Y of ' Minnesota decisively by the score MANNQG and LALIESONE m the Held ig of 74 to 54 capturing nine Firsts Cusargggg aTg1T?1erri3O?1a5e lf? ? ofa possible fifteen. . d H. h' - ' H ' G 39 31 M 15. W th D 1M t nh an. ig Jump.. e was the in- gg AY ' on e U? ee Wlt dividual point winner in the State Carleton very handily capturing Meet. , fi eleven f1rsts out of fifteen. , Ii E5 li sa lx 25 ir' .5 sl ffl, 'n 1' 'vi H MHP.. tl J ,vw v. START, HALF MILE, STATE MEET 1914 .-isa' ,gf Page One H undrrd Tao X '7 1 'ff' .ffji '-gf,'.'.a,'--'wa - rr wr.-g.:-.-ws '- f - . . QM' Jiffy v?::4..v'-lelmaffrg Akin. ...x ,nil !.intw,iJ 1.511 Q IX Q :.U 1. 1 .ayef9gxigm,w4,gyQf,5,,1.N,W-mu , X X ,Nm m ,.R,,',c3QT,,.,v,.N.em. ,y.N.,, X X 111+ f XV Xl ' x .ae 1. f.1.l1v zrvof.Sm,efA'c.37.y,.1.,1.'7...Q-,,f:f,5,A..'e,W. -me . ,U 5 ..,...-.,,..,..,.,,,.,. an r, ,W X my X lx X X L 0 ,- r ,X1xwe,f., -N, xx X - ' 1 -' ' ' f ff --:L-'vw a'-za-..a,a.,:.11.. -.r,-.511 .gtfgg 1 smr.cf.'fv.'-.5 5:-11.1105-msf' za . x , x , X x Ox A ' ww -V .- , . ,1f,.frv,v-,fn,, AL,-wr-zz -. -- ' -, -4 r , v L j L i 'f .. , , kv., .N.wg---,f.-n,,.,'w..-.1 ,V ,,. ', , ,,f V V 1-f gg Q: 1xv:u5.: 53 k' x ' ' 1 , X 4 . 11 ..--Q. E:-L L -3213 53,3 u J 0 my 11 mos BROAD- JUMPING gms r I A A fp HIGH HURDLES, STATE MEET, 1914 A BREAKING THE TAPE X Page One Ilumirvd Tlnwc I X.,-,u.. A., .x It ,M-.W .. . X . . 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N V. ,. f, , ,x,. 7 Jbzn ,,.A i 2,3 :,., 19 .1 ,' ff - ' vw - 1::gz.,1s'1:m1 Q' gin' 4 1 - 21- 11 ,L-' 1 -'-. , , , Zu: b b ' ' ,-.'-' 1 Aj VI4- RG SLIPPING OVER W -, LS' ., 11, ,- ME Y f' 23,434 4- 11 H .19 'a .1131 .v.',y' ,419 f 1! Q I . V H F 4 I ffll 1r11.,,11.11,:-1,1,y,1f,f,.,,.J,1f , A ,, Page One H zmdr cd F our .,.1 ,, .11 1: .,, 112- J N' lvf' ' ' :'i11'.g-z- 1 1,,f1.,., 1. 5 pq ' 11 F Q .. . ' 1 'M' 'X' X 'Q'f-'f fX'-Yff f1'- 11 11 11 1 1 ,X , . f 1 1.,1 , f1 111 I I: ,Vx :X 01 lx 1,1 I L X, MK NH .f E K 5 . 11,1-X X 55 ' 1 '.14-fgxii NX 4 I I 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 I 1 uno, In 1 , 11 1 1 1 11 1 5 T BALL FRANKLIN BLUME Captain 1914, 1915g Manager 19155 Four Years All-State Center 1 1 1 E ri-State Conference Champions, 1915 Oppegaard Coach, Bzmircl 1 'IYQUII johnson Captain, Blume Timm I P11171 UI' Sl X 7 A wi- 1' 1 f 5: 11- fJ.'i L- Y :li .J 11 rf . 2e-5f'73'ff'QL ,ffgfffkfj 7T,'1'7fgjfi'::?'.-af-gf' 5-. N' 'J - '- ' 1 f' f. . 1 -- -. - .- mf., ,. fr. , , ,L ff 5-JF 52 M3154 55 fre 1 -1 -J J L.L:3 L: L1 u i of J J. '.,xf,1-.-Af.-Q-,,., . Nl., . L.-., ...nf N..q,,,g.,,, V,,, 4. ' A WW VNN ff .if -SY, X X, I - KYBR I TKQX X jan ff' I ' 'ik 8 A, WVW 'X W 'W' f fUAWff ' ff , R 1 Z ' 'BEPQO1-0 4 X if ,MX . Joblnsoeril Vl 4 N wllllffwff -0 X Q V f P S Q LQOKEIJKE . ' ' TH ,,,.. ' QL ! SPI-IINY?2 M ff V E XV ,, , ' fp rx 1 I EE ED X 1 , 1 I Ex x 'Huw fl xw ' 'S 1 xx ,4 NX f HND, 5 Q I E 'l7MM Q5 mx Y' CSJJZSTRATIJG Q - pTHe'Pf2oPFl ,D N .X N ww 'Fon A 03 ' , w QWA53 ,L W M12 DAS WZ? f' ,Q -f 1 4 li Down 7345 5 Q, 471, 9' 1F'L00Tl. W g I M 91 A3 ,, 11 - xx Y fr I 1 I j X 5 ,,,, B ' 'li-IE ELOPIGATED W Nix! M NWCENTEIZ, wua HAS S R fv ,, 7 BEEN A TOWEL , GPPIE , 1, wg! . OF 5Tze1ueTH h, 0g9EGAIZO, -.11 5 Fan HAH Qui? 5 I F f:':'l4x .' -11' lv Gumzo. HE NSQUAT ' X Tan t llQ','f.l' MNg5-- W Sf X , ' aQLiJZE':-f6MEMvw9:',Q24g 0f ZgF-Mi? .. , , iw ' One II u mlrcd bcrcn 1- -wwf v- 1: N- ...,, ..n,X.., A. Nw .EN . , -Cozrrfvsj' BI. T. Caizze whl El 'I 1 f fm: ffm '. SKIET s Xt , ' xg OURTH consecutive state championship! And the finest basket- ball record that any college or university in the Northwest has ever had-these are the master achieve- ments that the 1915 team wrought for Hamline. All praise to that basketball team. All ,honor to Captain Blume, four years the pivot, and the master of all opponents! All honor to Larson, the most conscientious, the steadiest and the hardest playing guard in Minnesota-always in the game and never taking a slump-to Oppegaard, his running mate, whose skill and sportsmanship have helped to cover the 'scutcheon of the Red and Gray with laurels, to Timm, the nghting forward, who always played hardest in the pinchesg and to Johnson, who played through the season like a veteran, with never a hint of a weakening-the best defensive forward Hamline has ever had. All honor to Coach Baird, the wizard of basketball, whose clever, consistent, training organized victory after victory for the team! The basketball season of 1914-15 marked the crest of the oncoming wave for better athletics at Hamline. It is a tale of triumph, a story of vic- tory. Teams hailed as leaders in other states-Missouri Valley cham- pions, kings of Wisconsin, undefeated Carletonians,-all fell before the mas- ter attack of the Red and Gray until for the first time in the history of the Tri-state conference, a basketball team, the H amlwme team, was awarded the title over opponents in three states, Minnesota, North and South Dakota. With a defensive machine composed of five men, .Coach Baird's quint held its opponents to a total of only 265 points throughout the season, while with a superb offense, also of five men, the Red and Gray champions rolled up the grand total of 672 points against their opponents. No team was able to score more than nineteen points against Baird's wonderful defense, but repeatedly the Red and Gray offense rolled up totals of fifty and sixty points in single contests. Page' Um' Ilumirvd I all B LL x I' N .A-3 ' 'f .Af-... . ' ..f: 121i:'Qf aff , -...' ,JH 1.1, Mu, V 1 , fy g :cw :Mgt 1 ' ' , - IL 1 1. 1. n 1 La. f I G ,. i 1 4 1-.. -4 S4 hz 11-' in 51 Gi .11 1.31 1. 1 J 1 IZ ll K1 5 ,. .-A Q 3. ,,. jx X1 I, 1, Y 11 -, 1 A1 fi? 1. 1 ii il A .l. 1 -111 V f 'J fl7fL'3'w 1 T:,,.1T.'f'T.1,ff.Z1, lp mkf sy! ,xx T' f ' N :gx'gf:'jj Ag.: . i K X '-f.f i1.Q-W-,111fe- 1 1 N J -f- 11 J MH' 1' W ' 0 I liggfg. 5211 ,f 5 wer' 1 ase a qua 1 l ,L'i1fsi'- .34 ,3 ,1 es, .V I ,ya 111 ii ig 151 -- if A ig ' P1 .. ,, T xt 11 if rs ' gt? if cf 113 'L Xl if E55 A! 0 -L1 fam' fi P il -'S J if Q15 -11 .L - E1 e '11 V Q 1.5 iff 2? D Qi iii Ei H if 11' TS .11 Lf. 1, 1? 1 X - X 1 Qi is Q1 lk y Ii 112 . . . . ,. gg Lee Dow T1mm Wynn K1rkpatr1ck Capta1n.V11ckham 51 QA Blume Nass Davey Nelson Johnson Dobner 'i 5 1 1914 S eason 3 Yi - - . . 53 Hamline, Og Minnesota, 3 Hamline, 55 Minnesota, 11 'W IX ' 1 gg Hamline, lg St. Olaf, 2 Hamline, 85 Stout, 5 ng 1-, ' ' . Cfeff 11'1111I1gS1 . Hamline, Og Stout, 1 gi 55 Haml1ne, 29 Concordia, 6 five inningsj Hamline, 63 Macalester, 3 Hamline, 63 Carleton, 4 gi Hamline, 33 Campion, 11 Hamline, 2g St. Johns, 1 3? Hamhne, 55 St. Olaf, 5 Hamline, 3, Park Region, 2 E Hamline, 35 Carleton, 7 Cfourteen mnmgsj 5.5 Hamline, 25 Concordia, 1 Hamline, 33 MHCHICSWT, 4 ., f 1 E? if Q 93 E1 fu H 11 ai FJ -1. 'S all rj 'LE 111 .4 14 'ii Inj gl 533 1 C9 1-9 1 .' IQ .11 J F4 al 1 Psi ll. NP -1 -A 1' 1. Q Q5 ,. if 1 is 21, 26 ,IM 1fi,11? 1?2 511,421 ff 'lf 1 ff .' 1 jg 1451 1 9,4 'fb lj at Q7 g51Qj11 TEEDEE SAFE AT FIRST 111251 af? my fl? Z1 , ,. N1 I'11ce'l7m' II1n11x'r'1': lvl ,' ' H' ' H ff1:Vf l 1 ' A 1 1' 1 11 1 1 . , .. , ll 1' ll V11 1 f H1111 ., ,, ,1 M., . . - 1 1.11,,, Pagv ,-- 1: .. fm -,maj-f 1-,-..-rfj-..----.r f- ' ' -L-,-1-.-'J : rv - - .-iz'-U: :J541-Liii ..- - . ,'...... --1 -.. ...,..,-,f-,.-..,..,,-1. '. .... U., F' X r.- . . 'if'.-Iv, A vgf I : ,1.-'lit -' V-. f-33 9 ca, .-. gg, 51, Nqr.,-g .5f .pf W3 lin li 3? 9 f J take care of short and second respec- Qg f 1, I 1 ' if tively, in the outfield Dow was perfectly A le, capable of handling all chances that f '3X'f'-ii Seri - , came his way, in the pitching depart- ! I f ment Capt. Davey was the only veteran I on hand but was later ably assisted by X5 if Johnson and the Freshmen star, Timm, A A S E B A L L I S A phase of athletics that has been Weak at Hamline since the champion- ship days of 1911. In 1912 the team Won only one con- ference game and this was the open- ing game against Macalester. It was a good start but the jinx gotubusy with his gloom and held sway thruout the season. The 1913 team started the climb that leads out of the cellar, so that the 1914 team was able to finish in second place, St. Thomas being the fortunate College to cop the pennant. THE 1914 TEAM had six veterans at the start of the season: Wickham, Who Was playing his fourth year on the team and Who Was usually there with the needed hit, Wynn who was on the championship team of 1911 filled in third and proved to be a powcr of de- fense in the diamondg Lee and Dobncr, the diminutive pair, were on hand to Happy Nelson developed into first catcher and did Well considering it was his first year in college ball, for he de- veloped fastg Blume, the elongated basketball star, took care of first sack in good shape and it was his timely hit that saved the game against Park Region, Tommy Nass, the jeff of the team was used as utility man and showed promise, Manager Kirkpat- rick Was also a dependable man to use in emergencies, but was handi- capped by an injured knee. THE SEASON of 1915 looks bright. Captain Davey is again on the job and will have the assistance of johnson, Who has not lost a conference game, and Timm, the speed merchant, who pitched phenomenal ball in Canada during the summer. Nelson is in line for the receiving position with Mea- cham and Oppegaard, the football and basketball star, making the fight a good one. The remainder of the team will be made up of new men but there seems to be plenty of material on hand and the team will work to the best of its ability and give Coach Baird the best goods it is able to dclivcr. lfVe are all pulling for a baseball championship. JLMMA 777 0 l if SWEITZ IN ACTION One H undrcd Elvzuvrz .- :ip -,:v fa - P I 1 4 A CLEAN HIT E ON THE BENCH THE LONG AND THE SHORT OF IT 1914 Foot Ball Squad I'41gc0m' II1nm'rn1' VIXTKTIY Gym Team 3 XVorkm:m Ilurtwick Porter Coach. Baird Call-:ins Runfllc-tt Doane Munson CHDUIIII, Hclhwvll Taylor S8I1'!Cf'SUI1 Baumhotvr 1'11gcOm' IImm'rrd Tl1irlrf'n '....n ll 'I l 1 pl 3, li 2 1 4 l. a 1, 1 if a r -G 4, , .1 r .il in 1. pl? ,. ll 1, .H .l ,VE If l N 1 11 1, 1 1 1 1 i a, 's V lr li 15 al is ,. x 2 5 , . 1 .r 1 A I , 1. , .. F1 4? if ie TL nil 5 ls 'i .Hui Tl Ali ,lf ill El ll lx l. ,, 7. EJ. ll .li 1 I. ,. 3. 1, E, ll l, ,. 1 I l. 5. ly l ,Q 115 fill if :ii si 41. gl-lf 1. w..--K .- , M, Hsu.-. 1. ..'. ..- .f .5 '- . X L-' 1, 9 N M .iz M- If r' mv fi ,. 5 .. ., , . ,. 1, .I Us M .. .Q 3 . '4 7' 'Q '1 5 -Fw rl, u' is f., 1 :.J tffl A-. .ii2?f':l?- Q-312 xfifffi ig .Ti S? EQ FE .-1 P32 fi? Sf 3. iq 6 fl if Cs IR .3 w. 9 if r. gk ff E rg N51 5- Q . ,,, Nl iv 121 FQ lei 9' L fre Q- t fi is ff 4 2. 5- K5 12 31 fi sf E2 if 5 if fi , . F4 5? Us f is if li fi Q1 'si gi 5 A 15 nf Q! 1 fi. P2 if Qi f? V .1 A! if Pk 2:3 ge E eff E.: is H Q E if 22 if Q Ez B? sf F E 3, 'I u li 5 F! if 42 AJ ff if ff -Emil Q-152 M 95 sz sf- ff, yu, 1.1, If gli Qvfffi if ,vlviw fi '.f,P F- L' ,mf .'ff.5a' rift rw' -ZZ-L1.2.ii.i-M521T-?tg.'fl. 3:3f5fsQff1:+1:,2:15s-is strc:-t:f.2'gf51-fiQzfFfffv:1f.'g-if. Kmffi 5 -sri:-:nv-if . :rl .ff -ffgfaizr,-g. - 2 X 5- . ::L - 7' 'T Af 'f' LT. ff'-'-wi '7 f ' 'T 'WJ lf L :1 fl !5'i2 ' , . f ' ' ' 1. ivy- ...ma 'p ff:-A W 55 N' Sl L33 U Lg X '-1 LJ nd 1.2 Bu-.firx J Gym Season Y M N A S T I C S came into its own at Hamline in the year 1914, taking a place as one of the minor sports. At this time Coach Baird managed to find seven men who looked like 1 promising materi- al for a gym team. They worked dili- gently' and in March 1914 en- tered the North- western Gymnastic Meet, held in the U. of M. Armory. This team suc- ceeded in placing seventh out of an entry of twenty-one teams. 1915 has achieved even better re- sults for Hamline in a gymnastic way. Interest was started early and in place of seven men, we sent fifteenrepre- sentatives, to the Northwestern Meet, and this time placed fifth. Helliwell, Sanderson, Hartwick, Workman and Baumliofer, gathered points in the order named. Each year a home gymnastic contest has been held for which go'ld,1'silver and bronze medals are offered. y In 1914 Tommy Nass took first, Frank Sanderson second, and Harold Helliwell third. A brighter future is anticipated for gymnastics in Minnesota Colleges. Coach Mitchell of the Agricultural School has announced his intention of holding a contest open only to the State Colleges and High Schools, with a scholastic requirement. This will be confining gynmastics in the Colleges to its proper sphere and will undoubt- edly prove to be a big incentive for the students to put forth their best in gym work as well as other branches of Athletics. Hartwick was elected Captain for 1916. . Tennis Season IT H the building of two new model tennis courts at Hamline there has come an awakening of tennis enthusiasm. Prior to this year Hamline has not had much to boast of along this line, but througn the efforts of Prof. Herrick who is, himself, a great lover of the sport and by no means a poor player, Hamline now has courts that are as good as the best. Cwing to this lack of efficient courts Hamline has not, in recent years, been able to build up a team to represent her. This year, however, a team will be developed and matches played with other schools and colleges, with the idea of entering the Minnesota College Tennis Conference next year. As yet only three matches have been arranged 3 one with Park Region Luther College and the' other two with Macalester College. More matches will be ob- tained, however, in border that ex- perience will not be lacking to the men on their appearance in the tennis con- ference next year. No dehnite team has as yet been picked as there -seems to be an abundance of material on which no valuation as to playing qualities has been made. Last fall Nelson and Helliwell showed up well, in a match against Professors Hartwell and Beyer, who form a very formidable pair. Other players of ability, are Schoonover, Anderson, Parish and Ames. Hamline may well expect with the organization of a tennis team, that she will have in a few years the same successes that have been evidenced in basketball and track. Page One Hundred Forum rz J T 'J 1 I x I' J,'a.Yx'A-Jam.. X, ,W .,vq,x.,,X, X . . . .. 1 1 1 J farm',.,.l-.n,1,.,.-,-,, l 5 X X Qt'-I'.'4f,.'.,. l.-f.Y,M. l' 'H r vywx f-7 , .'-, f... -,-'..'Z- 0 S , ,,w :.ffN?lT.ff',5'.1.-1 - r v -X rl :Eb ' 1 .-.Q .1 3 ,nn .... , 1 .1 . ,. , x. ,J ' I if 1 it 'z -a Y If - V ae: FJ .-4. VJ Li 1: L XJ cgi u La' tl L3 W Cross-Country Squad llc, 4 ti Gai E fa : M f' in E l W ff? X ff-CA ff x it , Ii C. ' f . 1 - Q aff . 5 'f f . 1 ' f , V. 5. .4 'ji' , 1 X ..w- ,Q I . 1 I Harron Harbin Souster Porter Albjerg Cross-Country Season OR years in the East, cross coun- try running has had it's regular place among college sports. At Hamline it is still in its infancy but is rapidly being developed. Every fall Coach Baird offers three medals, gold, silver, and bronze, to the three students who place in a three mile run, the run coming off about the first of No- vembcr. For three years Harold Heneinan has won the race, lowering the record each year, his record for the run being 16:53. This year he decided to stay out and give the newer men a better chance. The race this year was Won by Charles Harbin with an ex- act duplication of Hencman's best tiinc. Ben Souster and Victor Albjerg finished second and third respectively. All three winners were freshmen. Next fall plans are being made for dual runs with both Carleton and Mac- alcster. C1aI.AxRI.r5s lol.-XRHIN. I are Om' Ilmnirrd 1 1'frrvr1 '- XQN ff. ,.v C Buechler Hull Keeler Kerr Kies, Captain Kirk Freshman Class Champions N the girls' basketball tourney this year only two teams were entered, and but one game played to de- cide the championship. The un- defeated junior sextet, who for two years had won the title, met the Freshman hopefuls on the evening of March third. The result was a vic- tory for the Freshmen by the score of 8-4. The feature of the game was the good work of the Misses Mary Keeler and Alma Kerr who garnered two baskets each for the Frosh. 1 The Junior team consisted of the Misses Ruth Humphrey, Esther John-- son, Georgiana Sanford, Edith San-- ford, Myrle Tinker, May Brewster. I l Sophomore Class Champions NTRAMURAL sports in the form of Basketball, furnished consider- able athletic excitement during the year. At every game the gymnasium was packed with the ad- herents of both contestants. - In the preliminaries the heavy- weight Sophomore team defeated the Freshman aggregation in a speedy game-score 18-12. T ne Juniors- who for two years had held the cham- pionship--opened the season well by defeating the Seniors. Consequently, the deciding game was the one be- tween the second and third-year men, who had long been rivals in all inter- class sports. ' The game was played on the evening of March fourth. The Sophomores rushed the ball from the start and obtained a big lead, but in the second half the juniors opened strong and for a time threatened Sophomore supremacy. Soon, however, the sec- ond year men again forged ahead and massacred Juniors' hopes for another Championship. The final score was Sophomores 29, Juniors 1.6 ODDGSZIHFC1. Coach Manning Timm, Manager Nelson Sch oen H6SSl6I' F1-0313 Page One Iliuzdrm' S1 fun N X O ,F .1 1 QE, F 151 .af si if ?. - 'f. .'v554: ' ' ' ' . . ,J'Jg,-'J' . v 1'1 lE'FIa?'f6: - Vaiw - : 1 . ,-Er '- '?3?'5' ' R5 1 93 A fn - V ov u fmfl, :: .. f 5 -:wi 7 x00 -.,, f 'W 'fu Q' OHATOHY' Q... Mi i1 :-vp l I 0 Forensic Board Baumhofer Persinger Kerfoot Parish . ' ., fab .L y i Ea, R ' .lzb 'x I llvl. Q I. milf W HREE years ago the Forensic Board as now constituted took Overall responsibility for oratory and debate at Hamline. On the Board two members are elected from each Of the Men's Literary Societies, and the men of the Faculty Committee on De- bate are members ex-OfHciO. f I I Farley Liddie Healy Kells OFFICERS President . . . RUSSEL HEAI.Y Vice-President . . ERNEST PARISH Secretary-Treasurer . ROBERT KELLS MEMBERSHIP Faculty Committee on Debate DON D. LESCOHIER ALBERT H. JOHNSTONE THOMAS P. BEYER , Society fQ6j77'6S67'L1fCZZf7:'ZF6S Philomathean Russel Healy, Paul Kerfoot Amphictyon Robert Kells, Alfred D. Stedman Phi Alpha Donald Farley, Leonard Stronnnc Euphronian Ernest Parish, Floyd S. Bauinhofcr Gamma Delta Frank Liddle, Emery Pcrsingcr IRLQ4' Um' I1'1um'rn1' Iiigl it FI c,'.-,lg :vL.f4,-59 Mg-3.11, ., 'uv' U5-.A K- as p D .- .1--L3 1. jk T, ,pls eg 5 '-eg -. ., .,.,,., ..,.,-, . . . . , ,. L- ff 1 n i . , . V ,gg c J ,V-Le, avg, f.---- U 5 Nl :K-3 Q kj -key ,-. ,, ., . ... R. .. mlllll llllllllm lllllllllll lllllln llllll ll IIl mllllll Illlllllllllllll llllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllll Illl IIII llllllll llllmllllllflllllv' l i will ll llllluii i ll . l i xx , N the fall of 1914, inter-collegiate forensic men met and organized an honorary Forensic Fraternity in which membership is automatically acquired when a man represents Ham- line in an inter-collegiate debate or oratorical contest. The purpose of the organization is to stimulate forensic activity, to bring promising high school debaters to the university and to standardize the awarding of medals to forensic men. Hereafter seven HH fobs will be given to the six debaters and one orator every year, the wearers of these fobs to be known as forensic H men, as parallel to the honorary awards in athletics. Pagi Om' Ilurm'rvd Nirzvlcxu Honorary Member ERNEST LUNDEEN Student Members IVAN T. -TONES LELAND PRYOR EDXV.-XRD VOORHIEIZS ALFRED D. Srxsml.-xN RVSSEL H12.Lx1,Y Frxwcisrr 'l'1e1ox1PsoN N.,xTH.xN Krslilz D.-win LVNDIQIQN P.-wi, Kmzroor EVIQRIQTT BMQER ERNEST PARISH PHILLIP H.-KBII,IN HIZNRY M013 I ,. . .. 1 I iw 'P'ffL'1:L-291, ,41- fi ull 1 . lww ii . ', ,-:aiu sa Y:-L , ye iff, ,Y fy, U il ill ' J 1 23552 J L' C L ., l,....J T 0 L sl W1 L. c,,.J 41 Affirmative Team .Paul Kerfoot, Opener Henry Moe, Closer Everett Baker NTERCOL- 5. L nf' LEGIATE de- bating has not in recent years held the prom- inent part in the interests and activities of Hamline stu- dents that it once held. But this condition has been rec- Ognizedas retrogressive and now de- termined efforts 'are being made to restore debating to its proper sphere of influence and Hamline to its former position of supremacy. With this in mind, Prof. A. H. Johnstone succeeded last year in organizing a pentangular league with the live leading Minne- sota colleges. In drawing Hamline's opponents were determined to be at Carleton and St. Olaf Colleges. Ham- line and Carleton had not met in de- bate since l901 and at that time Carle- ton won. On account of the intense rivalry that exists between fthe two colleges coaches on both sides picked strong teams for this debate. E5 . , , f ff J1 Q. 4 A HAMLINE VS. CARLETON Hamline M. E. Church, April 16, 1915 QUESTION Resolved : That the Federal Govern- ment should own and operate all Inter-state Railroads. . Hamline Ajjirmative PAUL KEREOOT EVERETT BAKER HENRY MOE LEROY OLIVER, Alternate Carleton I Negative THOMAS YOUNG , JOHN QUINLIVAN ROBERT L. CALHOUN Decision Unanimous for the negative. judges Prof. E. Dana Durand, University of Minnesota Dean Guy S. Ford, University of Minnesota Judge Edward F. Waite, Hennepin County District Court. Page Om? Hundred Twenix AVN. .U Q X l Hamline Page 425 gl f 5 .4 f fi -, 72 LM Zz? an gi! ,di ' 1 1:54 2-fi iff 'f Nil! 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'U :1g,a'?,3:'i,' .tl :J, jg ' -rg i vf 3 . f:.if'w -SW 'f - f - '-'Pg-f --Jw I--ra' N ,. .I J, ,. ,,,,,. , .,, ,. , , QT... 1 f - 5.-ffgfiaaaaggx-a32ffg5,,f5.i I 1 -- .-.-.....-- ,T - 1 ,-1':..', 1. -3 f - 45.-'A-', ' '-+ Ie..-3 f in fd .! if:.W'g'--,'-:fdefl-'Y' -Q--f ...-'P' F -:vv 1 M 1-4-,f?1f:Z'193.'5 '-C ' ctrf-5,3 :,t4.12f's'e Q'JsiIQ1!I'y--53 'S I 1- 55 rf 'L' -1 r. tus. , .1 , PL-ax qv C, ff. -f l .i 9 w g Q-:ag 3- 5,5 ESWQQJQ.. ,yaiiagjg-?:,g1,3fg-L tggfQ12..?,gfg:-,g1,i',I4fg 4. vfggrst-gfgffg-,,, iff. 12.334-It -g.g,.1i-L5 , .Nj-'. ',,.g .a -1 Fl 2 rl, . ,41 nh-I v g.w-,,.-:qv--g., H , , A - -z,.'1', ' ' -'.'-'I J ' .. -4' ucv, niwl-Q23-'s1?'5'.: 14.351-1.0'..f4,'f:v -imfifvfiiwifsara''.-'arf-' v 1: .. .,.. . ' .ma gf . .- '.Cff5'1 I-5'-2'-:'?..L4f:f?-..-fi 'ge , .. . ., N, .' ,Fx-f.v'.1 .f. - i'.i'.fa21iY.' J Russel Healy, Opener Ernest Parish, Closer Fawcett Thompson Three years ago Olaf entered upon and in the first two H I L E Hamline's afh r m a- tive team debated with Carleton, the negative team was at St. Olaf College engaged in verbal battle with its Scandinavian rivals. Hamline and St. debating relations contests the down- staters were returned the victors by two to one decisions. Consequently Hamline was especially anxious to win the debate this year and sent a strong team composed of Ernest Parish, Rus- sel Healy and Fawcett Thompson to break the hoodoo. Healy and Parish had been seminar veterans and al- ternates in previous years, and Thomp- son, a newer man, developed fast. The dope assured a close contest as, indeed, it turned out to be. Om' Ilmldrcd Ttcwrlly-orlr , ST. OLAF VS. HAMLINE HOYME MEMORIAL CHAPEL, NORTH- FIELD QUESTION Resolved: That the Federal Govern- ment should own and operate all Inter-state Railroads. St. Olaf Affimrirzcztritfe Sam Hagen Clemens Granskou Edwin Hulscther Ncgali-vc Russel Healy Fawcett Thompson Ernest Parish Robert Harron, Alternate Decision: Two to one for the Afliima- tive. Judges Dr. D. F. Swenson, University of Minnesota Supt. J. Monroe, Faribault Dr. A. C. Rogers, Faribault FJ -E it Q -5 Fx if -ie -E bfi v3 . - . . I 25 T! I v it I :,. l 1. l 5 l x 1 11 1 11 5 r 3 F I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 .1 1 M 1 v 1 1 1 1 1 nter Collegiate Oratorical Contest l 1 1111111111111 111111111111 1 i Q 1 N the Home Oratorieal Contest Robert Kells was the choice of the Judges to represent Hamline in the inter-collegiate contest. Two days before the contest, however, he was taken ill with quiney and doctors declared he would be unable to speak. With the contest but thirty-six hours away, Ivan T. jones, took Kells' ora tion and by performing the impossible memorized it in time for the inter-eol- 7 legiate meet. A natural. orator, jones won second place in the contest. KELLS INTER-COLLEGIATE ORATORICAL HOYME lVl:EMORIAL CHAPEL St. Claf College, Northfield, March 15, 1915. PROGRAM Robert Calhoun, Carleton T110 E-z'oI1111'o11 of Pervez' Robert Kells, Hamline T110 CT01IQI!U1'I.1IQ' .l1'111,1'x Selmer Berge, St. Olaf Pc11s1'o11 If.l'f1'L7'I'dg'Clllc? Paul Hanson, Gustu.x'ns Adolplnis 'l'11cS011111'r111 12111 l'1'1111 Z7I'O171t'11I P. B. lireinieker, lXl1l1ClllCSi1Cl' T110 l'1'1111 1f1c'11Ic'III' nr nr rn ul Decision: 'll re orallions 1 'X 1 1 5 2l.l'CUl'lllllQ to mnlq. S 1: l3elix'e1'erl ln' lvzln 'lf ones. l'11e1't'111' 11lUIr11'r'r11 1 11 X i H. 1. .ll A . .a 1 L,- ., ,. .9 1.-, ,-.4 1 -r fn glj ,. . 1 4 l V 1 ff, i x g. , J .l .5 A fb- . .fl l tl . Tr' nj 32 J l .vi 1. . f. .ff fl' -' ' ii . .- ,,. fi 1? .Ii f Liv ry ri rl li if V , :Q Q 322 f aj fl Y- FX ,. ig be Ani 571 .Er J 5'- rp ii , M 4 .ff A- YI sf 3.1 .. 1, ', Q. fl -1 P5 gg ' 'I' Z- -W fc' K1 fb ff zz if Li! 3 1.- iz: ,ffl FE if I ,' i. if .Ai Hd li- ff if L, at if it 31 5: if iQ I-il 'ii to .rff I4 :D 33 gi Zi .E I '1 ai i. sf it it :Qi ci 'gd I xl rx lb' ,.J. if il 2 G' it -i i. R: I 1 iii v 25 l' 7' , . IJ 12.1 lk il' 'fc iii Ig .K i- 55 Ti 5-K H . 'I .I ll .32 iff ,YW -xi . .., . if . 4. :- jl 'li .4 , L. Qt ll H ,, I., : , .-N . I. :g .. , 0' 'iii ff ' ,X i 1' WT ,ai 'Hg at ' ' l 1 . , A' -gg X - : .I 'I it ii A T.-N '-Y Qu' N fl, Q-31 Page xiii . -VXTYX ,' X . i ---:w -uw. . , i. . ., , .. 1,..g-p:.:t:jg.j-1-:,g.w-3. -,L -ng-. 3-l 7- -'-- - .-1 - '.'.T.,v, '.l...f1w,-.L.',',':... JI -1---......,.--..,..A ,-...-.- ...- l E311 Fx it-fi -5 fl ll r:-. fi at - Li f .At ru ii ' X u za is eo adies' Oratorieal Contest .N . -, X , - 434. IRENE 'Z 1 .. I t 1 LII 4 X , ,. A, fi . X my o ,, ,fltf ifi --ii 'mf' 5 N ,' j-L-tv, , f HV?-ivlmlx ight- -i - I ' ,H , 'xi fi F Nu. , . HE Ladies' Oratorieal Asso- ciation was organized in H702 and since that time, with hut two exceptions, nas held a con- test for the women of the institution every year. Each Literary Society selects one representative to the contest af ter a tryout among its own members. This year the contest was especially hard fought. Irene Vanouse, speak- ing for the Browning society, took premier honors from Mabel Hagstrum of the Sigma Delta Society by only a fraction of a point. Om' Ilmuirvfi' 7':c-vzzly-l11f'm' 1 31.2 . ' , Qs - I Y ' N il., VANOUSE LADIES' ORATORICAL Hamline Chapel, March 11, 1915 PROGRAM Irene Vanouse, Browning Society OIZC Qf the ll'0r1d'5 1lIc1sz'Cr,w Mable l'Iagst11nn, Sigma Delta Society Rfglztvozmzexs l'f,rnIfcfl1 L1 .Yaffmz Olive Good, Alpha Phi Society C'I1'111bz'11g fum .-aluzvriru Lillian Gehhard, Ifutcrpcan Society lu I7111' U-zwz I-lurk llzrd Lillian Constant, .-Xthcnacan Society' The .bl-zt'i1l.'e111'1zg of flzfzzfi Decision: Urations arranged accord- ing to rank. JUDGES David Lundeen, Minneapolis Rudolph lVosmelc, Minneapolis Dr. C. D. YX'alcott, Hamline I. I. Inwood. Hamline Prof. H. A. Schofield, St. Paul T Hamline-Macalester Uratorical Contest ' ELZ ER T ETREAU PEAKING against Macalester Seniors in the first dual Oratori- cal Meet held in a generation, Hamline Seniors Won eighty of the one hundred dollars offered as prize money. Elzer Tetreau and Leonard Stromme, for Hamline, Won Hrst and second respectively. It is planned to make this oratorical contest an annual affair, each col- lege entertaining in alternate years JUDGES Prof. H. B. Gislason, University of Minnesota A Rev. Geo. M. Miller, St. Paul Prof. C. Abbetmeyer, Concordia Col- lege Hamline-Macalester Cratorical HARTTILINE CHAPEL February 19, 1915. PROGRAM Elzer Tetreau, Hamline The Dj7'17fU llII'C Qf 5001.411 Ixqfornz Leonard Stronnne, Hamline The N ew PC1fl'IiC7fI',9III H. F. Softly, Maealestei' Szfrzkes, an .ELTOIIOIIITC lllisfv , l P. H. Bremieker, Mzienleslei' .H lfltyllllf of fhe TIIL17I.'Z'I.LI1IIdTf? S. Nyquist, Maezilestei' The Expolzenzf of .l111er'1l'a11 Idmlx A. D. Stedinzm, llnmline A .lj-zw1'W11g llvtlgl' Decision: f3l'll.l,lUl1S :1.1'1':1nged ll.k'L'01'kl ing to rzmk. l'11.Q1'UI1f' I1m1.fu'.:' 1':.'uv. X V I' co LE E SN -,, ff Ay . wr-, Tim I W Kai:-4 x1l i'w ' Q miiiniiiia a M '-:D W , 4? '5:iPa15mx Qly iuiil ii +7 ?!U,ll E!,.i!!' M W4-HW Z WS wb P BL ICATIO 5 f 0 Literar Board Dr. Arnold Moe Bane Workman mwmwl' ,-irdam . Wasil! 0' f ,S ' -s -4' 'lp 1 1 F 5 Q. . A s, aifisf 1 f 1 . 1 Z' Q -1 , Q, 'lflwluit 1 , , 1 If 11,101 ,, 1. ITH the organization of the Student Enterprise Asso- ciation, the Literary Board was created to supervise Hamline student publications. Active mem- bers are elected by the four college classes with the editors and business manager of The Oracle and Maga as advisory members. One faculty rep- resentative is elected to the Board by the student body at large. Nominations for Oracle editor and business manager are made by the board and after their election stalls l Erickson If6I'fOO'E Arthur Yan Camp are approved. The editor of The Maga is elected by the Literary Board. Officers President . . BL.-XNCHE TYORKMAN Secretary . RVTH AAN C A1111 Members DR. MoRR1s LERox' Axzxoro, Faculty Represeiitativc l9l5 B L.-1 N U 1-1 li W o 11 li 11 .-x N ltllli ARV111 lilawlssox WIT Guiwlc A11'r1e11'1: ISHS , U lxU'l'll Y.-xN C.-Xklll Advisory Members IEs'r111c11 O1.11'11 l2,xN1Q, lfd1lorXlq1g11 ltl1cN11x' lxitlli, lCilito1'Or11vlc PA111. 5. lx1c111voo'r, B11s111t-ss XlQ11141gc1' O1':1.clc :md lXlz1:1:1 1'1-'rw 1 1 int: .1 aga Staff 4 .31 1 4, . wi :ww Kerfoot Anderson Collette Bane Lee Arthur a e a ' a Y ! r ,,,, Y, 4 m li X I ' . I 17' I VV if, 'I 9 XZ ,M 'gff X' 'f a H A ML IN E rr r a 4 a 5s,A1Nf1? UNIVERSITY v Q or r E s ' l ' I f fl , ' ' ' 7 f' ,X ff lag -f , M-V ' 'V 4- 5. VOLUME VII a FEBRUAREL, A915 , z rrhr QNQUMBERQBQ f r e a4?Ed'ito'rw1QnwQhieff of z X . l a r . r f f , ff ,rrr M f , r or M rr coLL3T1fE,e '15 l l MARY 1GRACrE,gRwR'THURfl7 l CLARENCE ARTH URANDERSON 316 4' 2 'ff , j W 'f 'X Z VX' ,,, ,f , ' ff, , w , r rr a r f r u X , L A ,,. ! f an ,, ,A ii ,c W 3, ,,,, , .. ,, , , 4- The Maga is a bi-monthly magazine devoted to the publication of the works of Hamline students of a purely literary character. Page One Hmzdrefl Tuwziy-sez'en 1 K l ' A ' 1 1 fr x I I 1 l n 4 r If ra If E. 4 6 f lfl 1 X U 1 sf? FL Uv auf . 1. 9 +4 ,Q lr if Cf! r, 521. ', X l 'r 52 lil 112 ' 1 N w J 4 1. lk? D' X x I I I I I I , I I I I I I , 1 I I I . l I I I I 1 I Hamline Oracle Staff . I I I Kerfoot Sehoonover Hamlin Blackhurst Humphrey Stedman Van Camp Anderson Erickson Peterreins M06 - , ,V ',,,, g1'jgiff-f:j f1, .Q7r53'ffl V. Q5 , ,, ',w:, ff, mv.--,',s,f.gsf,1' ,Q1.,f:, :,p-za-'V-vga P Q' . , 'f-f':f5r:.f-r.::1a--,rsrf.--,--- rf ---'-H-.1-::'12xis,.iF',e ,Wm.,: ,fr ,, ',,,:f f.-,-L . , ,.,f ,,.,. .,,.- - ,.,,,.- V u i I l IQV! .' ':.' ,'-,. ,.,i, lzf. ',1,4 0 , Q ,f. s .,,V: -V', 13' 3 61' '5:1,f.I-5 I 'll'Q lnlll I flnl'l Q flffili-ff? lllell fs' IIr,lrl 'f 'i,i'l,f'?75fl el' ile l'le if It'rf e ' 'rr f eel e leell ' P rg l.l, ,. gr p n, ihee Q H igkwfarztis Srtgmfignsg .p Q . rg:Assoe1astefEdr1101's l?z3pUL p S.V',fISflZ11I?C5O'f . . . Q1 ,Biisiriess Manager , A I Cointribtiting Editors up ip fqI?mI,1,iPtL. Irlfrmtiw It ES1'r111eR1Piz'riz1ne12xNs , 'LEONARD Smommm VWILLARD Iltzmyumsx' I I flll g f17.fD.p Illbfryxrv I 71213. CLARK I Atgvm Zlbiziczrcsoa Ioan: BLACTIQIIU Izsir it , , .,,, I , ' I A Ig Reporters I I ' IRUTI1 VM-LCAMP I Fr..orusNcp13 Asmcusow , I H d I ,fI.AE'5I,IIB Sc:1AxooNox'uR I . , , I I I I HE first issue of The Oracle was distributed twenty-eight years ago, sueeeeding the old Hamline Magazine which was founded in the early sixties. The Oracle first a.ppea.red as a bi-Weekly newspaper. and was later, in 1908, enlarged to a sixteen page magazine appearing weekly. Last fall, however, the present editors. believing that the inagazine style wa.s not eondueive to making' the best dis- play of Haniline news, did away with the traditional magazine town and adopted a live eohnnn newspaper in its plaee. The nanie was also ehaneed to The ,I ItY'IIIII.IIt' tlznule. ln its present 'form i!'I1r 1'z'rz111I1'm' Oracle ha.s reeeived high rank ainone eollege newspapers ol' the west. I'U.Qf'iIPIt' 11:wz.1'u'rz' l'zz': .'-N 1 iner Crew Blackhurst T. Moe H. Moe Durbahn Kerfoot Howe Parish Kells Erickson Schoonover Beach W. Humphrey R. Humphrey Dahlberg Sperry Hedenberg Henry Moe, Editor-in-Chief Paul Kerfoot, Business Manager Thomas Moe Ruth Humphrey BOARD OF EDITORS Henry Moe, Chairman Robert Kells Leslie Schoonover Paul Kerfoot Arvid Erickson Olive Sperry THE STAFF Artists Thomas Moe Leslie Schoonover Lee Workman Athletics History F acnlty Willard Humphrey Arvicl Erickson Bertha Dahlberg - Sqnirrel Food John Blackhurst Will Mulder Stella Beach Anne Hedenberg The Albnin Ruth Humphrey Minnie Parish BUSINESS STAFF Page One Hundred Twenty-nine Lee Workman, Assistant Manager Frank Howe P 1 1 l J 1 A 5 s s 16 l l 1 1 1 l l I 3, 5 . I n V I 4 ,1. .T Y. 'H .,,. iv '-N 7.1 ' 1 L, .11 R -.e 4 71 'Q 1 I 3 If PL 4.35 I, 1,-f f1 '-wg 5,4 M1 X 1 g f.,1c.i:em r f 2 .f...gf.2. by . .Vg W x 1 . Utd L-an L. u N. llc L 43-1' U -1' lalriqki rfb- 23? 2? 1- x-'77 -.n A 1 1- :L.g2'N'r Iggy f W ',,, 1'h1e,i'1- V- -in 4 -a.w.l,4.f fr:- 'F Lv. Y , M, 2: 2 Q' ai? 11, 11 41 in if li 55 E1 if ' Faculty Bulletln Y. M. C. A. Handbook ki . X11 - . PRoF. THOMAS P. BEYER, Editor WILLIAM DITTE5, Manager 2 51 . . HE BULLETIN, issued quar- HANDBGOK. H 0011113011- terly under the direction ef 3, drum of all knowledge necessary member ef the faculty, Wes to the successful Frosh career, founded in 1911 with Dr. Gregory D. 15 15511001 0V01'Y 51111111101 11110-01' 1110 Q, ,E v . -. A . . , . . Walcott as first editor. This year 11110011011 01 1110 Y01111g.M011 5 C111f15'U12111 gg Professor Thomas P. Beyer is in charge. ASS0C1at1011- The ed-11501 15 0113111115111 . u O . ofthe Y. M. C. A. Cabinet Handbook The Bulletin is a chronicle of note- Committee, 5 Worthy Hamline activities. Faculty The Handbgok ig. mailed te 311 and the achievements of alumni are prospective Freshmen to aid them in featured in somernumbers and others getting a good start in the routine of 9. . - - are devoted to athletics, glee club Work college 1116. A 11st of early college Q and other varied undergraduate suc- 3014108011101 111110110115 15 g1V011 and the CQSSGS. irletgiodsi of hgetting acquainted out- 11 f. ine . urt er it containsan account 11 The Bulletin has 3. Wide circulation' - 1 - 5 - - - 5 fa l of Hamline s varied activitiesfath- 'C11-170112110111 1110 N0f'E11W05t, 05P0013l1Y letics, debate, oratory and the musical among the high schools of Minnesota. clubs. ?i og 5 1.. -1-1e--- meeeee 15 1 15 fi: 1? 11 if 11' U 1 111,11 0711? I'41gv11m' IImm'rcd fllzzix if 1 .1 .v, 1 f 1 1 4 1 i f ' 'WSU .f ' X. H' 5 f fig 'jj 15. Af im 'Eg if My ff ff U 'fx 222 'f 333 Q AP 'f '7 If fl iff 15: 1-1 ER ir? 1' Qf ge? 1? El M rg W E? fi xii fi 7? ff' V 25 if eil if 'A xx il! 95 H! 271 is Sfg as If 453 ff? rf 44 549 EY f ,ff 2 ei 315 'ei if 75 ii ri if: as 57' W Q' FF jf: Qi 51 C fel 25 f ff-J E5 9? Pi ii he gg 95 '65 39 941 fi QS '-f VN u W 2 ,Q 5? Q P 5 3 5? is sf ish? ni 1, N. ,, if: Sf 1 Hifi Ms Q S2 fx: Qs, .. ,, . , wf Q5 iw is 515555 R523 if W Q? Qi? fc fig ax ' Page O W6 H 4 -, Uundred Thirty-one ' V 'f ifiir. :ff W '1'!iA'- 7-xf.,,., r, . ,tfvu ,,,1,7nm A ,. .f,',..X. ' ,F .. '-'--'. 21 -Xa-uf 11.12, W 2-LM-,,, .,.. .. M,nyiwgicmjlqlt H, , ,,-y,.,1p ,wiwxml ' 1 1-,Q --,. , ''M'----wwf,-fvfh . 'QE K ' -'huYLQiLj:fq:f,g,,J, A A X i ' KYQQP-gf,f4,x-,N - w- 1-' wx , . x ff. T-fi'fhQ',g,,,! ' ' 1-Rwf, 'V QX f . 4.51-?,31!.yNi-S33 Csikipvw Qi V,- - fmpfvw W FOUR fN College Organizations NE man in a thousand , Solomon says, . Will stick more close than a brother And it's Worth While seeking him half your days If you ind him before the other. ' Nine hundred and ninety-nine depend y On what the world sees in you, u But the Thousandth Man will standyour friend r ' y y With the Whole round world agin you. V -Kipling. , A ' H .-:E auf U -5 1 i i ! 5 IM i! H i 1151 f W5 ' , Mi Mi ' N 31 E W 'E . :I UW? . WHL NNW I NINE 4 EW? X NUI n! mp? MI 1 x 4 F i lit .. 1 3 1 I I 1 I l 1- - 5 f I V 1 A I V . ! ! Y! ' S ? '21, i A L , L ,Y L l 2' 1 L ' 1 4 1 i EA I 4' A I if 8 Z 5 4 V 1 1 I 1 I li il ' ir : 1 x '- K I! 1 J 1 I , , , ! H I 5 5 4 V x L 1 I , ! i 1 ?, I e 5 L i W Jig wir X my ', ,W :EQ 5 , l 7 i J 5 f Q E, 1 I , K i 2, 1 1 i F X r .' A Young Men's Christian Association Herrmann Moe Labbitt Baker Q Stedman Collette Garlock Sauter OITISOH Stromme Dow A Parker Thompson A CABINET OFFICERS il Nm ? . 7, v Ffh' 5 s Y President . . . W ILLIAM PARIXER uf Ml V Q --' . , t . ,Lu m !l.,fim' Vice-President . ALLEN D. COLLETTE 4 ' I l1 , 0ZW'I:T 'H in Jggif g i lillin I 5 -fW1'fWf:: p ,... V w' l . .,.. Secretary . . ALFRED D. STEDMAN iwauwfffuf fvf-U ...L - -A Treasurer . . NEAL Dow HE purpose of the Young Men's Christian Association is to stim- COMMITTEE HEADS - ulate growth in personal char+ acter and life of practical Christian PUb11C1tY - - - HENRY MOE service among men of the University, Music . . . CHARLES SAUTER and to promote vvholescnie good fellow- Bible Study , ITAXYCETT THQMPSQN Sing' Ehliwfjfk dlrecgegl and Car' Finance . . SIEGFRIED HERRMANN rie on t e resi ent an ' is cabinet. ' Y Club Room DEXV ITT GARLOCK The Six O'clock Club nieetings and Sunday Bible Classes are important features of the Y. M. C. A. Work. Devotional Meetings are held every Wednesday in the Prayer Room. V Social . . . LEONARD STROMME Church Relationship, W7II.I.1.-uxx BAKER Employment . CHESTER ORRISON Local Boys' Work . . RAY L.-XBBITT Pays Um' I1Il7ImIyl':'sI' 'l'l11'ri,v f 111 r . ' Page YUUUQ W0111Sn's Christian Association Peterson Erickson W'orkman Klemer Lambert Heneman Sherman Fi 'N X N N . in , ' u H Y' 4' . I' .R 'T ' X I J A If Q E ' . I SxZ, it A M C6 - .7 an HE Young VVomen's Christian Association, While more limited in its practical iield than the Y. M. C. A., is a big activity in which is centered the religious life of Hamline Women. The aim of the organization for twenty-seven years has been to develop spiritual interest and to build up a broader and deeper spiritualthink- ing. This Work is carried on by reg- ular Thursday meetings which sincere, broad-minded college women lead or which are addressed by prominent leaders of Y. W. C. A. Work. One Hundred Thirly-,Eve Berryman Davis Fit schen Peterreins 'l inker Sockness A. Lee CABINET OFFICERS President . . ELIZABETH LAMBERT Vice-President . MARY BERRYMAN Secretary . . INGA SOCKNESS Treasurer . . MYRTLE ERICKSON COMMITTEE HEADS Finance . . . MYRLE TINKER Religious Meetings . . . . . . VIOLETTA PETERSON Conference and Conventions . . . . . . EDNA DAVIS Music . ESTHER PETERREINS Social .... EVELYN HENEMAN Mission Study . . . ALMA LEE Bible Study . MILDRED FITSCHEN Association News, DOROTHY SHERMAN Social Service, BLANCHE WORKMAN House and Rooms . RUTH KLEMER l X omiletie Club A Frederick Gilchrist Harry Rieke T. B. Clark Lee Workman Taylor Henry Mecklenberg Elzer Tetreau Jesse Kenderdine A T Luther Benson Ernest Parish Earl Monson W. H. Parker Frank Sanderson Will Mulder Allen Collette I e 4 1 ' ' 6 X W , 1 , xi P 5 lull: - Q' 51.-:-f 3 ' ' f 1 N Ki .., -' YI f'l'l R7 HE Heiniletie Club is an organ- ization of embryo Clivines banded together for 'mutual help. Organ- ized in 191 I by Dr. George S. lnnis, the plan of study from the Hrst has been to have a series of leetures given by prominent Twin City pastors anil original papers by club menibers. OFFICERS Honorary President . . . . . . DR. Glzouoit S. lNN1s President . . Elwizsr Pl-xR1sH Seeretary . ll ARRY Rinks Treasurer . lil-im, lXloNsoN ,h v ,bv--1 lug: Um llzfmrnu Hmm IX Y a v '-' ' 'il'Q::1-3-sg. 'Ge'oq-.,:-, 'ETX :MS ..,- 3 .qi 1 'I ' - 135, ,MM ,'.. F ,mu z7,,nILc,i,4u Wynn Y Q W 41,1 ww W X , 1 Wil lx ' Q? i 'WW I W Qff'Nf 'ff'-A1547 'Tx-N N17 , , ,, 2 I., -, XX iSE'f.K,-.uf sf-ME, ,., fini uf H1 .. -23-.3'44..2' .,,, gg I,,,, ,J VSICZX CLVBS fy 3,-ity' U ff 0 2 1 ff ,. I Af- , f,,f.4 63-61 1-I, lf! fl f ' ' 4 , ' gl 1 ' 1 iff , 4 K' JD Men'S Gee Club Sandborn Lindgren Mickelson Hainsworth Gardner Vollick Pond Liddle Stromme Webber Harkness Kenderdine Ames Hedin Prof. Jaeger Scott Orrison W f A. OFFICERS G I fcj . E7 K DANIEL SCOTT, President 59? -gag . 1 ,ffm 1 7 IVAN T. JONES, Business Manager A V ' ' iff HENRY HEDIN, Ass1stant Manager I r' 'X . A4 ' 'Il W f I Q PERSONNEL :Ei:-, i I is 4 5 vF? - 'igi:fs. if T , N F zrst Tenors '!ggg,g,gh f, fi ! ' CHESTER QRRISON ROY HARKNESS 'Lg K, Imp. JOHN KENDERDINE GEORGE X7OLLICK ' V A' F 5' . 5 lm GEORGE GARDNER HE Hamline Glee Club was iirst organized in 1884 as a male quartette to practise college Songs and stimulate musical interest. Today the Club has a membership of twenty voices beside a reader, piano- logist and two soloists. With Ivan Jones directing the finances and Prof. John A. Jaeger, the music, this season -tihe thirty-iirst-was the best in the history of the Club. Two tours of eight and ten days eacn, beside num- erous Short jaunts, through twenty- five towns of Minnesota and South Dakota were taken with superlative success. Second Te-nors LEONARD STROMME RAND.kLL VVEBBER HENRY HEDIN LAXVRENCE SANDBORN F irszf Bases FRANK LIDDLE DOUGLAS AMES DANIEL SCOTT Second Bases WILLIAM LIAINSXYORTH STANLEY NIICKELSON HAROLD POND ELWIN LINDGREN LEONARD STRoIx1A1E, Reader WILLIAM HAINSWORTI-I, XXCCOIHPR-11l5t and Pianologuc Artist RANDALL W EBBER, Clarinet Soloist PROE. JOHN A. JAEGER, Director 1'agvOm' Ilumirrd 'llhirij '-:'I' Z' nf wb I'. ru A gs - -Q, , f. , . ,F A vm, 1 W,'21-,-1-'.1l-'.'1'r:'.1:me, ,1::I-wiv.-Ir'311 1 1 1 -If , 1 U U .r ,, .. 1 ,111 ,JN I ,V A 1, ' U il ll Ill lil: ll 'ill 71l'.wl:1-11 ia lfl 1 1 11 f I - in x.. .,.,, . .R , adies' Glee Club H' 7 I N Q 1 A3 It . x , ' I.. ., A x xiiwrf , , V V. I ryyy G It 11 1 fs G . . 'G 1 o r 1 ' f flyff 1'11 f4,V', E iff! X ' N 1 1 I X ' . ' ' N rotrl 7fv'Q5i A A ,I ' l si A I f 1 . A V, 111 , , A ,X11 11,1 1 ,H ,Qjzgjrg 1V1, ,gaggfggfl Dahlberg Sanford Tinker Lambert Grinnell Peterreins Hodgson Goertz ' Fitschen Skinner Gordon Beach Sperry Klemer . Calkins Sherman Dunnell Smith Hull Peterson If OFFICERS S' ,V Q A Q !,,f was ESTHER PETERREINS, Manager and 1 ,651,,131r President ' ' yz ' vN,,4 .Q-Q' ,lf , 'N' - - mg: e- '- N 1- Us -El STELLA BEACH, Treasurer ff ' Q PERSONNEL ,War First Sopranos V I RUTH KLEMER MYRLE TINKER Page x- ITV 4 J' li? J' .X ' I 41. ! .C Y - ,xil ,-I l . N the Ladies' Glee Club Hamline University has an organization few colleges have been able to support. Though begun only last year, the final concert' of the club at the close Of that season was a great success and on the several occasions that the glee artists have made their appearance this year their productions have had all the attributes of real art. At present there are twenty members in the club, all university students, selected in a competitive tryout. Plans are being made for a tour through nearby towns and if carried Out should prove a boosting project of the first magnitude. One Hundred Thirty-nine SUE GOERTZ BERTHA DAHLBERG OLIVE SPERRY FLORENCE DUNNELL - First Altos MILDRED FITSCHEN ELIZABETH LAMBERT ESTHER PETERREINS MARGARET HULL ELLA SMITH I Secorzd Sopranos STELLA BEACH LILLIAN SKINNER VIOLETTA PETERSON THERESA GORDON MARGUERITE CALKINS Seoortd Altos LOLA GRINNELL- BESSIE PEOPLES GEORGIANA SANFORD GENEVIEVE HODCSON DOROTHY SHERMAN !!7 'f3 115:'- lmA? 7f3?J77-i'?1'fffR K?- .1Zi'1?f7Tf'fl,1'f7fe'ff 11.41,ff,,es'm'mf,fw:f1g5.,,n1ffr1v.21v:zw M I '1 J 1 .' ,Qf 1,,,, f -U, --if' 1 , , A 1 ,. : ,mar ,W I, lf' ,,,. ,f ffl wtf.. -an 1 27 ' Ya , is gl .2 .1 I O 1 N .1 4 5 f' 1 iv-1 I pil itll' 52 1240. tv '11 121,515 :AIVXJ P2 22 52 ffli' I , 6 ' Q 2 it 35:-1 t .1 'L I lf l li iff li il gi ft it if is .V gif 5 Y 23 AR L I E E if if ?g if .. si if 1 sl! Q Q. ii E if 4: I Liv K L A Ct 'f il Ls si E Si E-E il if S-few it if H lk .2959 til l': igixiii if Qtr., 52515 gil 5312 E2 5' ?1 uf. -J 4 '. r alle I 1' gf 'sing R.. -2',l 1. 1' :'frEegg-my ,. rzgrzfzcemrfw sm:xsysymcfaaesespfimsfewa-1. .,2rrnme:z::b:,1?gs:s:roen1::Is:es'o:frzaffrrzfxgg, 5,1 , A 13 Q an A in-.Refs-wnffseswvtfff, afar' lghvvqf 1- 1 JI asoaaaeerimwzrrtsswamazmww,-:rara.f..r:1,I1clAlaIe::s:m.1.w::IQ-xmlrea. 2rf.ffLI:::a:.z:4s1+e1 it ' 1' 4 a'.11-,fmlff-T 14, 15,1 ff--... .5 . u - A .' inn f if :f,'1' , L ,MJ :J .. flag Sl ' -- ,HM - --4 I - Mrirnfem If . who Og A F ' A V ses 9 Wi- -1' Q 5' I7 i ..A Q cava ,I W Tililli gn ff fmxwl FTER a mediocre showing for A Several Seasons the Hamline Band came to its own again this year. With fifteen instruments out Professor Jelma created a rousing lfpepn producer. The boys Were on hand at' the football and basketball games besides leading a Parade or two during the year. Leader, MICHAEL JELMA Solo. Cornets, WARREN WOODCOCK ARTHUR FITZLOFF First Cornet, HOWARD ANDERSON Second Cornets, LARS KLEPPE SHERMAN TALLE DEWITT GARLOCH I GEORGE GARDNER Clarinets, GEORGE VERMILYA C. HAROLD CRIM Alto, FRANK ACKERMAN Baritone, FRANKLIN BLUME Trombone, CLIFFORD JONES Saxaphone, ELVIN LINDGREN Tuba, STANLEY PAGEL Snare Drum, FRANK HOWE Bass Drum, FAWCETT THOMPSON ' 1 k Page One I1 undred F or U N VM P Z f W f E ggi Q M ll! lffllffllllmf K Off N 2 Qi X Q ' 3?-E--qu: X-K ' 'I r :-f- 5 3 5 f is-ef XZ' X5 O EW? :Saw wi Wu fs ff I l 3 ,. if xxx. l 1 l fl ,N ,. L 5: 'l l I w 1 l l l l i l ,. l l i I J l I 1 V r r r 1 l 1 1 'l l N, ,Y q., 1 .- vi' .f . W 7 W l .,. , , lu. Z., V -1,-4, ff-f,,..,. W.,-,',7,.'-'.,,' ,, ,,.,,, , . .,,,, .. -V.,-1,5-,-, iq-,f ,,,,,,-,J ,g,,3f..f,,f,, ,, ij. .W rf, fl H - V- ' . ..-X . H- ---.-aw s-,ffx f? f JN nf r, Fl- Huwtftffsg:ml!-lil:-i1?H'v'l '5'W?'w Xif 'l ' ' ' , ,W . -. rr' 1-f 121' i. Lf.:-1: rv:-su.:-v. -ux-!.mfi,.m- -F , .Ht if r. . 1 ,fx In ,fig -1 1:- ' 7 'f .5 2 i' ' VL' .r 'Q ., 1' 1: lr' 54 17 , f Nye? 1 , 7 ' X I if fr K lr -' g. KJ ':', X91 '5l l'f8'7V'1l5-, ' -.ww-1u,:S'rgf3:r.-',-.'-11'f fl af-K- l u LJ c c NJ L-:Q -f V - Q f -1f,-wa z.,fc:J::21qw.f:'1ffszfxffja-fl1f.x.Lt4,11-., U. L., M zlffr. ' '11, T. ax: if -1 if az ,G M7513 vu .,.. I-. i 'f 151 ,yu 'rf' Q -Q 'F' ll fl W L' 5:- fi' Q1 i 'lr rgflflfzj, A I EG news MW cf li' ill if lx if gg L0 if :el g .fe SZ wa li? li xi V3 if gf .yy ,E 2 li' 5? if at 5, 54 if 31 VN t' lx is is ll ah sz 55 -Y ll ig f in ll 2 Z ll 5 si ii ff? is 512 fs ' , 553 Q 53 gl if ig ' sg E ez ll GQ 525, 9 ll fa is M fl EMQY slag? 5 Q' mil LW'fll1 Elway is .jf 5' I7 il' is ful' 5? is 'Jr :E WS' .wtf i hilomathean Literary Society ' h 1 F ' St S hoo over MacFarland Dennis Sato NIC Osoll-Ielliwell rancls Andersonone Ericlisonn Rieke Brown LaI1gh0E Hopkins Rodlin Gruenhagen Kerfoot M onk M eacham Ledbetter Nelson Lunde H eneman Lundsten Healy BCFECSOH Herrmann Fiero Timm Steele A Vollick Carver 55? ' Flwayg ?rogreps8ngLlEj 5- 1 .: ,.-ri f Vg' JT 47 i Alil ., ,f . liiiif ' '59 l5'f?i?3Q'j- l' ' f ' ',.' isfiil Flr'f?'. - W, ' lust -N ,1,f5,g,! f, g.gvf:.Z,ig:Eg5Z:.' l L ' ll iff .Ml H+ ll'll'l'f'i1'52q X ' ' Griffin ' f' Q if 0 BOUT the year 1880, after the removal of the college frbin Red g Wing, Hamline had one literary society which was attended both by young men and young Women. But as the number offstudents increased, in 1882 there Was alsplit in the general organization and the Philomathean Society came into being. The fol- lowing year a sister organization, called the Browning Society was formed. 3,.., ..,, ,P ,.11rr.J-1.1,-Y-I.. -'l OFFICERS President . . Harold Heneman Vice-President Russel Healy Secretary . john Ledbetter Treasurer . Harry Nicholson Chaplain . . Arnold Grueuhagen Critic . . Curt. Timm Yell Eisto! Eisto! Eisto! Star! Philos, Philos! Yes we arc! Pugf' Um' Ilumirrd For N f ' X gl, K' H 'f- J ,421 1 X 1 K I Q sg,-4-My , X , 472414 J YJ? r yi ,. fn,.,,', ,,,.,. J r'- .'l.Ulw:'.l-. 1 g -x R K 8 .4 ,V -3s,..,. , l 3 5 1 1 1 si I ., 1 4 i Y V -.y.f..,4 .. . .. , ,C . i. I 5 it F if ii'i1'i' tl 'i il 1 r ... ...1 Y Browning Literary Society E 4 3 i 2 2 L- ' Y -T I Harris E. Lambert Heneman Gold Barclay Thomas Gold H. Ross I Hedenberg Brown A. Lambert Askeland Schmahl Feetham Dahlberg Q Vest Carver Maclntyre Fisher Umpleby M. Ross Ellingson ' Arthur I Sperry Leavitt James Schulberg Lyle I-Iustleby Sherman Vanouse if Werder Smith ll! x 5, . I t 5 ' .,l'r . f' I . 1 . 1 E URING the past year the Ph1lo- OFFICERS . mathean S0CietY had two TCP' President . . Grace Umpleby y resentatives, Paul Kerfoot and Vice-President Irene F1sher Russel Healy, on the mter-colleg1ate Secyetayy , , Dora Leav1tt debating teams. One member of the Treasurer Irene Vanous il' Men's Glee Club Was a Philo. . I Irene Vanouse, speaking under the yell ' colors of the Browning Society Won I I . . - 1 first place 1n the Lad1es' Oratorical Ea-ta-na-Wash-ta! Rah! Bah! 1 gall? . ' 7 Contest. FIVC members of the Ladies Hurrah for the Browmngs. Rah. a . f Glee Club Were Brovvnmgs. Rah! Q U 1' Page One Hundred Forty-three W. MWNWSF 177' , .I :,r ,Vi,V,,,,,? .. , X , r.7::.g:?'Ef.,.g-TIJAFLT li'i'Q,, I I -' 'f ' ' Qtzzafiwfair-z.fvJ,fae i'2rf52i'?bGFI9S2 2 I Y n P I . ' . fy '-wi, f f ., Q K., Q - ,fl ,w w , f 1, .J U r,,,,' Li- 1 I JT' T Amphictyon Literary Society ' . B H ' th V mil a Heins Robinson White Crane C. lones ginvdldll Gariiiiiirkmanenson Portelinswor Calkinir Y Hedin U Krlenke Featherstone WIISOD Wood Kells Davis Johnson Parker Labbltt T. Moe HOWC B1aCkb0111'I16 -Collette Baker Hamlin Sauter Herrmann Kroll Woodcock I- I 01165 Scott Anthistle Clark' Davey Fawcett Fitzloff Lindgren H. Moe Tetreau Stedman ea2 iDxZ ZOZ'ZOZOLTlI O . ee f an f e , er , ' by Z I Q I A . T19 KN rf rf Affff Q N N x f e' AMW fb 16. -Ag. g m1 'Josh ' Y sswwxxsr XX-L N xxliii -X r if iz: b-AHA . K, 1 'T' Q - . it fm fe r ' . jim I' I Q .'-of' 1 i -ss-iss is v-.Yiwu o fha?-is-.N pg, F03 C. INC QQ . 1 , 7' ,ff f X- Q' XV' S222 Q 5 ' f i-fn i---l---14' ,l-T N the year 1883 the men and Women of the old Hamline Literary So- ' ciety reorganized under the name of the Amphictyon and Athenaean 'Societies as rivals to Philo-Browning, -so that, by competition they might furnish impetus to debate and oratory. President Kerfoot was one of the lead- ing spirits in the new venture. Many of Hamline's early graduates received their first platform training in these societies. OFFICERS President . . Charles Sauter Vice-President Henry Hedin Secretary . Floyd Heins Treasurer Ura Krienke Chaplain . . Allen Collette Critic . . Daniel Scott i Yell Ra-ta-ta! Ra-ta-ta! Ra-ta-ta! Rix! Automanton-gar-oudenI Hear the Am- pics! Page Om' Ilzarlrfnwi I ori,x r l K thenaean Literary Society I. Lutz Ericson Gordon Hull Hodgson Peoples Wall V W. Scofield Hamlin Wiech M. Lee Bane Traver Holmes Graves Peterson Carlson Goff GQ Collins Hanscom YVh1pple Wolt. Murray Loucks R. -Lee Wood Tinker Workman H. Collins Mrs. Blackbourn D. Calkins Ixeis G. Lutz Dunnell Richardson Noll G. Millbrook M. Calkins M. Millbrook Spahr Mrs. Herrmann Chambard Constance Franklin Kappahn McCoy Thompson Wylie .QI-f , Q e ilzifei' . gl' H i L HE AMPHICTYON Society this year had two men, Everett Baker and Henry Moe, in inter- collegiate debate. Robert Kells, the Inter-collegiate Orator and Elzer Tet- reau, Winner of the Hamline-Mac- alester Inter-Senior Oratorical Con- test, are Amphics, as is Albert Black- bourn, alternate Inter-collegiate Or- ator. Tetreau was also designated Skinner Prize Winner for all-round college Work. Six Glee Club men and the manager are Amphics. Page One Hundred Forty-fre The Athenaeans had six members on the Ladies' Glee Club. OFFICERS President . . Blanche Workman Vice-President . Imogene Lutz Secretary . . Hattie Spahr Treasurer Florence Dunnell Yell Che-he, Che-ha, Che-he-ha-ha! - Athenaeans! Athenaeans! Rah! Rah! Rah ! gm' -A ff -.-. rw f ff , , Li Q L1 TTL J hi Alpha Literary Society Westby Nelson W bb Blume S tt Schoen Tame Reed CO Fai-pifmes 6 Anderson e er Stromme Mallery Durbahn Carmen 'Chard . Husebo Nunn 101195 DOW Ff0St Oppegaafd E-rlftma' of tba' 50113. ' ill: , ' 'F 34 1. if 5,555 .5 ll .gi ., 41. gba? ii' Eh filiigiq- u FEI , f- '-wa f - ' QE! ' --.L l E ' nf gy giimrifziiizijltgmf-Simi HI-ALPHA-PHI, established in OFFICERS 1898, has 3' brilliant record in President . ' . Franklin Blume P.1atfO1'm Work of an kmds' V1'ce-President . . A. L. Mallery Both in women's and men's forensics R d these two societies in the past have Secretary ' Rodney ee shown marked talent. Especially, in TWGSW07' - LEIWTGHCG Schfben the past few years has the Alpha-Phi- Society done consistent work of a high Yell order. Music has always been a fore , 1 of Phi-Aipha-Phi. This year Saw a AHe'1Xa'me' 1 change from the time honored rooms Ka-1116-148--lm of first Hoor to new quarters on the ground Hoor of University Hall. Phi Alpha! Phi Alpha! Page' Om' 1Imm'rni Fortx wx Page 1 K . X ia iz it ' r..,,1 . ., ' 1 '..,,.l Alpha Phi Literary Society A. Lee Davis Goertz R. Anderson Grinnell Harvey Sell ' Taylor Humphrey Fitschen A F. Anderson Beach Peterreins Buelly Hammond Pile Peterson Cook Dunn Stuart Jones Huser Bergman Wohler Good Van Camp Gordon Ward Faucett Way Blossom R. E. Anderson Quayle 0 7.1M t,1?1.P?,. ff' fi, ' fri- '..-1 , V 3 if fy r .W HE PHI ALPHA Society Was represented by three men on the Glee Club, of Which Leonard Stromme Was reader. Stromme Won third place in the Home Oratorical Contest and second in the Hamline- Macalester Inter-Senior Oratorical. Six members of the Ladies' Glee Club, including the manager, are Alpha Phi's. Alma Lee was awarded the Skinner Prize for all-round Work among the young Women of the college. One Hundred Forty-seven ,-fx: ,.1ff,f,,,:. ,.,,. .. V, . ,,,,,,,,',,,N, , , 1-If hw TW., 3 - ymgypi-my, 'gffjfWr1fm'11 :xg-rx 1S:1W:w?:f5l?R?5 i'11'?viC4SG' 'n OFFICERS President . . XMildred Fitschen Vice-President . Eugenie Hammond Secretary . Mildred Huser Treasurer . Olive Good Yell Alle-ka-me! Ka-me-ka-mi I Alpha Phi! Alpha Phi! far 1 ,HI I 1., fx f .,, rt '. 1. fr ' .5 1 7. f, r I, , 3 I W fl ST, 1 A 1 , , Wm 9 F2 R If 9155 1 ,Q fl zi Yliiii' 51911 :gm Qjfffig 'fi 'W fr ES if if if Fr 5 61 725 ver ,' ? ei li if E3 5 S ri Z Q Q ll sa T rr rl gi il if r S ai P' gs 6 be ig 5 ri H E S lr 3 S2 nf ix K 5 F2 ? QQ 3 I' ir SE if E if 2 rg ws! .r we 'irvig 5: H V13 sz Sep 5922 aiiilffyg limi Fm f Pa H'-554 Z',l5.n'.Q3 we ie -is 22 x- Lx R-Q 15 've an SH x .Q V - 'N , . A . ' . 4 ., ., 1- Q. ,Z 1 ive,l'NS'E!T4i?bzSN73i'3-C. ,Mi ff:i.eawr.q- ,1isf.s25,fm--may -Qf.fmafasrraxikil'friv9L+'f1+f?NW753'd+ '- -NW 7 Euphronian Literary Society Lindberg Krippner Roach Mickelson A. Johnson Gribenow u Foss Dittes A Doan Aldrich Harron Harbin Manning Van Dyke Hartwick Mllbrook W. Johnson A. Johnson Rundlett Pond Garlock Peake - Rother McNeil V H Sanborn Warner Jenson Baumhofer Munson Parish Larson Blackhurst Lee Fellne Finger Albjerg Fuller ,Humphrey Kenderdine Martilla Pagel Sanderson Shervey Souster Springsted l 'QQQ UQQQQQQQQV' C wifi , f 9 '7w'Gbif1'2f OM SPM' ' Sk 399' ,, X Need- W. HE Euphronian and Euterpean Societies Were organized sep- arately in 1906 to meet the greater demands for literary training growing out of the rapid expansion of the university. Later the two were consolidated into brother and sister organizations. In their briefer career, by steady plugging, the societies have become strong rivals of the older lit- erary societies. y L oFF1cERs President . . Theodore Larson Vice-President . Stanley Mickelson Secretary . . Earl Monson Treasurer Sherman Millbrook Chaplain . . Ernest Parish Critic . . john Blackhurst Yell Alle Kazoo! Ka-zi! Ka-zan! A Bun! Boom! Bah! Euphronian! A Page Om' Ilzuzdrrd Forty-er If 1 i I x Z 4 l a Euterpean Literar S ' t i 1 I l li 2 I , liluill' nl H. Brewster' M. Brewster Sanford Berryman Linderholm K 1 Ab h , B-lemef JOTIIISOI1 Kerr Evenson Blackhurst ee el-H. Scofielda amson Sl-:mner . Babcock Sanford Halverson .Stark Marzahn Eisley Parish Gebhard Dixon Dahl ' Birnberg Ebert Pfaff Silver l l ' fix l 1 I. f HE EUPHRONIANS had one .Three young ladies on the Ladies' man, Ernest Parish, in inter-col- Glee Club are Euterpeans. legiate debate this year. Robert ' Harron, alternate against St. Olaf, and OFFICERS Le Roy Oliver, alternate against President . . Vinette Babcock Carleton, are both Euphronians. Vice-President Helen Scofield Four men on the Glee Club are Secretary . . .Edith Sanford i members of this society. Treasurer . Lillian Skinner Page One Hundred Forty-nine -l 'I e I l i g ' ,Ti J. 1 5 .3 . -z A V I w -H 1 7 5 ,. I.. :wt :lil 1 'Q all l.. UM fl' U .I V ...I Jw, yn., .1 f,' 719 l if Q'- l .M 1 X ,-.'-f.f,v.1f,,.-.'. . .. 1. wwf-. -' ., .- K i 'v ' fr . -.- .L, -. ...WJ ll.. V , i f lf ratio-me f Gamma Delta Literary Society Kleppe Harkness Bradford Persinger Friemire Shurtleff Torvestad B acon Trygstad Davey R ippie Weiss Tubbs Price Thompson Carlsten ' Kumm Elliott Liddle Temple Oliver Nielson . J. , , - X ggi!--'H sw Tie Yzk 'fyl lb P 2 3v' . K r 1 4 Aj ' g f Lf.. if A . Ill ,- irq ll X' ' T X X 7 X '. 4 f .mg I I nn - Z um murumumfunmnumnnumuum E ummlnraanxuummlu mnmuummmu H ummn n IT I-I the over-crowding of the other societies by two large Freshman classes, Sig- ma-Gamma Delta Was organized .in the fall of 1913. Some strong men and Women Were secured and nelped tide the society over the first critical few months, until last year Sigma- Gamma Delta made as strong a bid for members as did older societies. I I I K 1' I I l Today Sigma Delta is the only young men's society that does consistent Work and actually holds regular weekly meetings. OFFICERS President . . Chester Carlsten Vice-President . lVortl1 Stewart Secretary . Harold Kumm Treasurer . Harold Price Chaplain . . Fawcett Thompson Page Om' Ilundrm' I 1 1 , l ix ' , . -A .,,v,,M.. 1 ' fi' l 4,1 1 . ,,, 1 EH ll. ', S img il l irq, lv, .MJ r,q,4,l,H I I K J Sigma Delta Literary ociety Palmer McKenzie Hagstrurn Anderson , Huff Halberg Baker I Norman Sockness Thayer Dittes Gaunt Kirk Peck Leigh Alexander Iewett Wilson Korphage Parker E. Smith Mrs. Herrick Mrs. Johnstone AMMA DELTA had one man, Fawcett Thompson, in inter- collegiate debate the past year. Ray Harkness and Frank Liddle, soloist, were members of the Glee Club. For the Sigma Delta Society, Mabel Hagstrum in the Ladies' Oratorical Page One Hundred F ifty-one 'Ht 11- . L , ,S tiiflwa E. 3. -'- '..j,g.1:-'s15 ' , Contest Won second place, missing first honors by only a fraction of a point. OFFICERS President . . . Lillian Leigh Vice-Presideret Anna Peck Secretary . . Frida Kirk Treasurer Inga kSocness f I 14 +:..X':,: -y 7 C:L?If'?.?NE3i'i F Ex Fl gf i Sigma Theta rdf jr I F P 1 ,L 2 f A lr F r w C , , 1' r 1,1 V t X , H I if if vi I ,f sm 5,1 1? 5 f ,. ii. A, ,xg I I Q ft eg l , 1 w . t i d A Y 1 , wi li V , sn, N 5 , w. 1 Y 1, . . :J fr. , . X 1 v Violetta Peterson Esther Peterreins 1 A Alma Lee Edna Davis M I IGMA THETA- is an honorary Class roonlwork. Qandidatesmust S 4 Scholarslnp soe1ety for Semor , nave an average otmnetyorabove f 5 Women, founded by the class of Q h 2 in their Hrst three years of college 1912 as an incentive toward better 5 Work to be eligible for election. Y Page' Om' Ielzuzdrnz' I 1'ffx 1' 1 ' 4 L , 1 1 I wwll 5 ' l 'km I , X IOLA M COOK MYRTLE E PETERSON CLIVE H SDERRY HELEN HANNA LOIS' E ROSS' LOLA GQLD H B JAMES SLISANVIRA CARWJER GOLD EVELYN -AHENEMAN ' IRMA E SCHMAHL MNH CHEDENBERG SUZANNA G GOERTZ Page One Hzmdrerl Fifty-lhree X, Y x 1 , s 1 ' ?'. xhl1-',-' fQ,'7'iff'5' 's 0 , ,fn 1 rf 'Zig' X 112 f r ll I Vg Lad, l 1 f 1 +1-gi L, L1 w.-.., r o L-..o H F-L-E F ff WV , ga W ' Q .. V , f f , .. , ,,- , gfbfyqv-. , 1 . f 'ey K l., 42? f '2'y.1'9'W.ff' .1 A ,- at '- ' X ' f',y1s422l ' -- 'H fi . 1114 Q 1,71 if ' J M 'er f f Q,...-.,f-NM, , f . , . .' A 1 f - A . ' .1 ,q f-X13 5 1 , ,bg 1 .- .' as trid 4 2 5-:Jaw 2 if f 1 f V Q 4 ,4 isyyi 1 My 4.-f,f'?,w Wa' 'S f yfw ,yff if 7 M It X X J , .f 1 26? :sf fa-if f-1 f wff'fc:!7 THE TEMPLE ff' . X ' f. ' 1 . ,,.,A , -f lo o T ' Q M l'34??'T f' l . it :- V 4 OFFICERS Lord' High Fle-Doc Kerfoot EX Lord High-Prep Mallery Chief Matadore-Oppie Oppegaard Collector of the' Royal Laundry-Dan Scott ' Keeper of the Sacred Bull-Black Jack- hurst Fosterer of the Spirit-Blackie Black- bourn ' A A Herder ofthe Floosies-Teedee Davey Model to the Royal Sculptor-Billunr phrey Blender of the Royal Tobaccos-Hap Nelson ' Tinkler of the Sounding Brass-Tom Moe Retainer of the Bottle-Durby Durbahn Assistant at the Only Oasis-Hank Moe Member-Mr. Florian Peter Ritschel l l THRONE ROOM SKULLS OF CANDI- DATES DROWNED IN TANK Page' Um' I111m1're'd' Fzlrlyifozlf x- -, pq! . --wp -,um ' 'W .15 ,Mg 53 Q 5 ' ' J' - - . .. . , -.-xi, xv'-Q ---l5QR j N - , Q - 'B Pb ws 11--1: Mx rf ' 3- , 211: ,- -rw, ,,f A ,,- . I, ,fi 7, , -Q .. ,., A ,- 'Q ,-.I x - , , K X v ,. . . ' -K .. X. . 5. F. Ak, . B , A . ,W . fx U . 1, 4 I . . 'll I, H If 4 ff F, . I I J, 'll - I I w gt g N ! SF: 5 M N . 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YN--A-5' 'wi . ., iw- 11'-,m ' q . , 11:5 5 - A gi-an -,V 154.35114 ' h. gfg,--P.--ff,-n-mgi, I W, . J - Beta micron Sigma Kappa Founded 1901 , 4 W1 Ig: M2421 54,93 v,,,,,,, , f fy 4 f , 'LW M f Z 1 y' f ,-I, V a ll x f , ,,, , X X f! f f he Q ? f 7 ,y 45 f Z W f X 4 ! 4 IQ Z r ,i .H 'x 1 o .ggxj Q 4.x - 4 571 e A f , X Q , 41, 175' X X X : X' 'i 4 1 t f lim ,H Q4 , K 'A-...B 7-11--vii I Cl u V' H L 1, CX fl rj X 'J fi J 114. XlfZA.fL..' ' I ll 2 N ia ,J X if H Sl . a ggi o . if X L11 e Melville Monk Fletcher Meacham Donald F. 'l '11 cy Ilnrolii Sloclv Howard hlziiiiiiiig Cliflord Lundsten Ro fl B ' ' ' - - - ' y'1 iown William bpott Imlnml llurtwwk Leonard Stromme I-lowami Nelson Kenneth Hopkins William Pa 'l - ' H ' - - - ' ' V N - 1 cel aiold Ili m,m.m VVill1.im Luivoi' Leslie Scliooiiovci' Doufla A . H. -, 'e - ' ' ' ' E, S mee 'lrold Ilolliwcll Lloyd Home. Paul lxorloot. Rgmilnll Wclwbci' I'u.Qe' Um' Ilm1i1'r'uiFi'v'fx XIX I Iwm, 1 I I - ,I ,, I M I '1 ii'1 ' IIIIIIIIIIIIIIH' IPUU'if1'11 ' 1 . I.. . Nil f I I h ,,A-5f5Inqlllll ,,Ef f f'a?5'f' - 4f ' I I A L- I E ,III ly ! Ii nm ,i if V:v..XwQ .Y,, , ,l l 27151 1 f E , ,,,, I ' 42 fnzsnsliiesfiiii, I ie,11:.ir1l'f',f!'.i:Z2' L' - F ratres in niversitate 1915 HAROLD ITIENEMAN LEONARD STROMME 1916 ROYAL BRONVN DONALD FARLEY HAROLD HELLIXXVELL PAUL KERFOOT CLIFFORD LUNDSTEN WILLIAM PARKER LESLIE SCHOONOVER 1917 1'IONVARD MANNING HOWARD NELSON WYILLIAM SCOTT HAROLD STEELE , , . Q11 ff 7 .u 1? .X 'HE Q if 3' 0 N . XA z I I Az-WW 1918 DOUGLAS AMES VVILLIAM CARVER KENNETH HOPKINS MELVILLE MONK LELAND HARTWICK FLETCHER 'MEACHANI RIANDALL WEBBER ' Page One Hundred Fifty-seven .f I V AW IN I . X 1 . 1 f , y fs ... ff . ag 1. 1, y. L . ,X :- ' ar, J V 51:2 If 3 ww if Y-L 'J -- ri :U 'M-Z, 'fl' i'! f1-Y U3 E, ,H 'I4 -fy , .1.,, Ti 'Pj ,fl is 2,0 f' N in FAI' lf J ,va ir V. 25 , fl- Q13 if 2,2 ' 7,5 fl! ,gg Lg Q3 yi fi, A- M 'F' s--, 1-1 HS f' :bg as :Pr '-: vi gl Lia V! iff 'T 1 i ff! X3 M Lg . f w .17 '42 E123 ,J rg fx pf iii fi 'rx if? 425 f-if if id I Z! xg Q5 my 3.5 ,W C? is M xp 1.5, 4, :Q .1- 5 VL fli .1 I.: A-if 'S 59 Sli ,J FE rf? 24 ws EJ if: iz, ,,-5 f-I TE ti? Til SE .fx P Hx Q5-. fi Q? 353 iw eg Qi N f gf gy? ,A ,J 'rj , L wg F5 fy 357 Ez sg 33' ji .:, ' Fi 52 H ,, si 'Gi li P21 25: yi 51 Sf: 5-Q Q: fi. M :.a- Lf Qi 11 fi 44. LJ xv Z2 46 T34 rgz fi 'T 1 ?: 1-. Ng 'PF f ly! .,, 55 1 . 41, ea ne if' ,J 5' :J ', lvl! M ,', gif F2 ,' be vg H. ,H H! :kj W fa' Vi 7,3 W P' ,L f 1 ' , . E 5 , 53 4, if ,TI 54, , 6 1,1 .11 5, if! , W ,L A 7, H Q-' . f ff Q 1 A f ,,' I 5 . , ? f L 1 ,Q ,j ff, ' f ' I1 V .L 5 V, ' f 1 f v , L - 'WI g x v Q w I I 11 I N xi, H514 . 'r,. ,. I, 'I 'N fr ul, 54 H' x V -v 4.111 I l 1 4 l, . i 1 A y 1iL.uz,z'l' ll,.!1J'Q,X 1, I Fello Founded 1908 Nunn C. Jones Van Dyke Hainsworth Oppegaard Humphrey Blackhurst Carmen Tindall Nelson Davis Labbitt T. Moe Calkins A. Herrmann Blackbourn Mallery S. Herrmann I. Jones Hedin Wood Hamlin Collette Kells H. Moe Scott Harron Souster Orrison 'IZIB C N Q. 3,5-vi. n 'I' .,u. ,A4 .kj . .Z ang.-,nj 3 ,v M 1 ,frwli f r Page One Hundred Fifty-nine f ,. . ..,A ,- V V, f - .tm-vz,'Yr'.Z3'1'f- Wi, I , ,f-.1-VL. ,.,,, if wil .....w.s.w.,. .Am N.-nl .x- .em . ., I ,V , 1 V, ., x, -..yr . .. i,,.,,, 4,4 yi' -3 'gl ,j,i,:,1.3l-Ml lr.,-, 'rw,,n.: f -... S Q-D -,H 9EifS?i2'A , , 1 ..x ,4 A' 52 Lif In Q5 Q1 C. It -'Y H -1 2-J A-.4 ,i 1. fi X :ii 1 U7 L-1 . X. .1 J 1, .Ii 5 1, Ly i-l i zi- .. 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A ., 'AFP 'f3g1!?f51i71'fn9:ClC?fPJ4i'cvf4f.1.:w.fn,-1-., '-21 Vp. M, J., .1-.. . ,. . 13.51-:3.f4:f,-.lzvp -.ny 4 L rf fr va- f. I-pf fy ff. - 1- 4 N f- . fl W, . I .W V: qw. ,.,,,1,,,,x1f:q ,, ,.,..,,,,.o,,. Eh- ,' gf , zi Q' -gl 3 H.. . ' 5' 5, ,V .--v:v! r--tN.'1:mfg-.x.-i'.:4.-0.95112.'f.h:-.141-.i?,QF.z-4'--ffl-w,.2.w..f-15:5ii?..sh 1 U u xL b 12.3.3 Lf J -J 1.42 -1 L.,1 L g7.L'1.' K fre WY' 1 6 'El f?': i'f54 Founded 1910 fi mn.-. nhl 11 ED rar as 5 1-QT w- P vg QE wi? 3? .Q P2 if 35, lib! Uv E if be lg al if SE 95 'NJ -. 55 n E .A 32 H2 .' 'lj 53 is if n? .5- 'Qf 93 ,Q 22 Sk if 5 EL 34 :Q 4 Stedman Ledb tt ri? - Benson Talle e I?-d Anderson Vermilya Frost V6 Q Westby ' N' h 111 ETSU Dow Francis Sa d .4 , IC olson Ga d n efson M. ,. T r ner Gruenhagen Feath t - . 15 5' 1mm Durbahn Schoen Blume D ers one Fltzloff Voulck 3, gg avey Lunde KlfkpatfiCk Fi L5 Y! 4: 9 5 WS i? ,A Qi 2? ill -- ,4 . ' .., QW 'Ffh-' ' '11 fi 5 , 293 wg- T5 L 25 - .'91fif'f0 -'if 55 55 SV ,I .x,. Q: .J 51 Er PJ? iii Sv is Ei N1 X23 rf gs iff .nv Ei ri fb' if 5' V: r. 'l x. ii 51-5 lf: ,IJ fr E-N122 'Y ,ll 6117273 -,4 .gf wg pg JT IV? Gt , fill fl, F' A12 A159 ,cfffifi iff M12 H z? MM: W Si iff lvx. I ,,r5 f7H V, k , K I Puge' Om' Ilumirru' Sixty-iivo o , A , , ,' ,,1,',,, 'H '1 'H fu -x,,,'J A ' .y x 1 . f , 1 W 5 1 , X 5 1. , In , ff 1 I, I. gf. , gcf I' ff'-'Z ij T E371 5 fl! 1512. ,,,. 44 'ff fi' kj? 'L ll f, ij 11 ll, NI 33 ,gg 51 f? ,T CP, Qi ,A ,4 :.f W1 gi di Eg fir Jg ra gg fs: Q, fi Sf? 3 fs, Q ip: Q91 Eif A QQ iag K, ,Ja F3 if H2 fi rg. Q5 E5 Qi Z7 Cy' Q g ez si fi si gd gr ,. if is F: ,., is V' ij f, xl? Y? Q g gk J, Q5 if fi W 5 ,331 in iff gflxp SEL If- ,K Q . f A K. 'v xy. M 'iii' .ati Lv .Tn . 1:1 ,1- :Y I A Yi U. . 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Fr, I I I 5 I r I I I r I I I .1-,1-..e 1 1 I I l ,in o 53, X ..,,.bN .XB AT XXIX e I X Pje CIJYV 5 X Of' 92 VUTT5 1 M 1 1 f N XM ' -I X N 'fm' I 'rglw' XX ,fl ,' wil ff I - :Z X X ffwfflff 11,1 I J flxxffllxfhflf, I' . -I Nl N f' edlcated to All the N utts ln College 2 x i? Who, by their untiring activities, have made this section possible. I .X 1. The Alma-Nack ill? sem f Q W',41f lf 2. Cases Y 3. Sob-Cases X,-are 1 4. The Alma-Mater l Q ' xx qAs she is.J , ' 5. Plain Nutts Z fs-.za ffr- - N L ' H b 4. .' . , 1 l r 7 .I J 'X 51 -,,-e-V1.5 , , JJ f,. 2 . ix 'J 'U swf. 1 ia 'x V 'r -I J, 1 1 v. 5, 'lfiiilil 2' gf! .ny is fl V 'f if I iff H.: fl? ly ,fl A 1' 111' ..., .W 'f NJ 3 fg' :w,'.-ifiwt Zidfmai In '- f' Ye Liner Ima- ack May, the Month is it lc 1914 96 it Pk of Preparation - . xi-' fi '5 . , K S All -XJ Nj I' f ' xx -ix ' 1' f-NXT 1 . w N kiwi? '. ' - The famous' relay team leaves for Drake stagiuxxn. X Columbus wore red tights 1492. vs wk 2: Ruth V. Anderson proposes to T. D. Davey at eleven p. m. on the 31st. NOTE-when a man Ioses his heart his head has to do double worlgg ,F X The girls' Glee club sings to a packed house-shady stuff. R. The Fellows' picnic at Christ- Phi Delts are requested by Prexy to walk the straight and narrow way. pw v-, We study for the coming exams. le- 4... ' Q Como mud hens stretch their wings once more and Doc goes rowing. APPENDAGE-The Vel- vet is in the rear pocket. mas lake. wk :k az Foster gives house party- Grace and Frank went. it ik X On board the old tub Red Wing ThetStandard Laundry returns at the all Hamline picnic. Dan! a clean shirt 665 B. C. We have no dancing here. By Dan! Dan! the insurectos. 'F 'F fk . the order of the student council 'F Bl' 'F Oles beat Hamline in a loose Number 745732. The Glee Club returns after the game- i 'F 'lf 'l' usual best trip ever and Hum- First Titanic sunk off a bar on mel and Rutledge remain at St. Peter street, III B. C. Duluth visiting friends. ,V I'x - V ' f fl l N-dv'-'J-ns- 'V I tux. is rs F... -'xx x M.,,...-. V:'Aj? I 'A , qs -Pr ,- lfiip X ' fp!-:W XX ,J-A . 0 1 ',:75k?ifS, 1 .',,. .. 6' 9 'ffffjily3k,.5,.F .w 'Q . 5' IZ -- f K av? ,f J ,I M ' ,wx .J l,v,! i . I , 0 w T lfk-,fi .HQ , W1 I tY --- N-5, -S X f ll ' -.qi V i Q r- Z VVe amuse ourselves according to our several tastes M' ' fn '-adn x li 3 B A 9 1 . 1 ' -- - ...rn , f II .,f.cgj,,',v-i-- 5 nr ' ' 1 . rw 1 ,H f I ,I 5 5 YAY! . . .ix--4 -461 x Page' Um' llumirnl' Ni.x'!,N'--N D rex ' Q -fu ,R sgkg N851 'QQ A .4-aD'li'i Q if 1 -Q affix W .va ' :A -, as 1 f f -.X fs is F' .t vi D . ,.- M-. 'F' ea - v' W: - 2 l L L .--Q r, .J L fn .1 1 H 0 ' Ye Liner Alma-Nack The Goryfk 2' 96 1914 X if 'R Month of June Qs I' .-'. '-ff ,A ' v Dx V .3 X F , ,.e, E .T X X to - llzq N-ee g ,I f p , E 2 OLD grads show up around the f Campus- -: If 2 . fv . Wiki? ' V Albert Blackbourn is invited to ' spend the Sunday at Fosters. Charter members ofp'the'B. V. .'s. if wk :nc Minnie Parish falls in love 1914. . :ze as :sf l Minnie Parish takes the Healy cure 1914. DeWitt H. Garlock a jealous ri- val says that Healy is leading a double life. ak ak at Euphronians banquet in their local halls. Those were the gory. days of Alcoll, Billumphrey and Strawberry. ak ak ak COAL FAX COAL FAX. ae :xc if Regents buy a new flag. 8765 B. C. g Q Prexy prays for rain and Hub- bard gets spring flours. as :ze ik 1 John ,Torvstad gets a neck shave. 1899. vs as as The alumni day arrives-Prexy does some more co-operation. if vs ff Inga Sockness falls in love with Truman Clark and Noah takes a decided stand for woman suffrage. A. D. 24. Hook towel epidemic breaks out in gymn 1914, 1915, 8765, A. D. The last chapel. Sophs spell down Frosh. Bush stays around the institu- tion to take up summer work and King goes isllina ak We go to work. Pk be as Bungi Lee visits the Star and the Daily News CAncej gets a scoop. SN' 13 5 W ' Ei naz i? .. N se.j +:-,- W... T .M ff I L,,,,,4,fn1 The Snooze club in the lullaby lectures origij nated in' Biology class. Pk as ak Tipperary is not a German song. as vs as ATT--ENWFSHUN The D. D.s are classed as lotus eaters and by many as birds who fly not. fs Page One Hundred Sixty-seven .-,,:,..Y.,.,,,, , ., . M X x X J , I w v ' 1 J f ,, r x , yr, 5.1 1 x , HOMEWARD BOUND -A' 1 e v e- ef . rg, Q- 'r X' 23 , 6 fiiwg ' . -'Z'-44 f ug,-W v - ::.:w ff,..:. -- ,, yum, f ,Q 3,-Q, - I NW . Ax- m a ' Q-::,,'.,.: - 5 - X ..,1,4 v , , V.,,, .1,1V Z ,.V. 2 -g f? ' Q : rv- z 1,-N ,Z -, ,. , ,f '. I:-' A iff , ., .4,,., :,, . , y . 5 '1 .-: f- 1 , ' 'Q - Q 'T Q , A Wvyr, , f. 4 'M , E,- , X ' - ff X 'WK ' 5 1 Kai 0 34 Q Q if 1 0 4 fj .sf f 5'X.X-.!f' f e U f -. 4 ' if 1' f ' 1 af yy Z 2 A003 -mf X 1 9 X,,,, ' ff Zimf ii 09 f 6 .5 ff' gf 7 . ., ,U . ,f ff eff. -, . V JUNE DAYS Goobye winter-come in spring-why Hello Summer Time. A little fishing, swimming in the dawn, riding bikes and selling books, sitting by the rocky fords, and con- solation-why that's sum- mer. ' V fx: gg:-, . W? Zh3 1f!ji , - 1:33. M5,,zf-wr-W-ff 41g:n:g.q.,f- W Z 'f f9Wf'Wg,,.f-ff' '4,,,g,fH ,f ' f ? 3 may , f am' wfffdw' ,, '41 'ff , ',,,1w Q., M f f. cf f f -E , ,,,, 4 X uf, 1 W' ,E . .5-,V , , ,K V, ,rf - f7r.,,,, W. ,ff Z'T,,, 40 7 : W V Q221'4f'T'17f9 'f ' , - xx --145343, f .T .ff? 7'+' I A-I-jng f 2,5 ,- ,gqyg fi -f :,5'1-'4 0 H , W f PE ,. .W -'yy 5, any - , - . u'2T ? ' i' '. J 'lg' 'V I HJ' f 'I I 'WW' A .1 WM 2 f1,,f45M,,4, cf V' vw Y, . . ' f r 44 ' we Qg2,2,'1v'H'Zff '4 ' -4:1 ,, A-.L ' -, f ' ', pf- .r . Q 9 M 1 52,1 .V 1 4-ef.,-1 E 1 -- ff fffl' '- ,, .E 5 1,4 ,.,,,,,,.A . , u -Y H ff . -' ,- , ,, , ff 1 ,,VV , ,E 152 5 'fg1g , , V , '51 lif flkb 5 '4 ff f ' , ,-E5 . Q N - ,Q-. E 1-ew W -, 'Aga fW,f,f,,,,-,- , ,W fu-I 5,,,,.,, 2 . Yi ,M f- ,, f Que ,f f 52 .mf ,K--W . if f' -uf -f 1 ,,.. . '11,-virw . COOLING WATERS -QM, f-M ff, ax 1 A fy 7 ' Qt 7 Q, ,wie-1 qi 5 .4 an QL ' ' Nz vga- A-f fv A ! 'V if .6.w,. . A . N ff is uhh A 5 M E1 WU ff 2' S W 1. Q in Ei-1' jf-'x i f llf' 3 T - 5' 1:1 W' f.-FN ,e-. 'f:'iIf-z'I- E: i' E313 , , -'ffl ,Eg5:? f'1'iz. - ' X - , ' X .N,.. X1 , . , ,C -I . A.,, I :U -....:q.,..,1, , ,. , , ,. X 4LZ5Z2EF '-'f.-fL,- ' f : ', -:QV 'H 9.-gc v'-a... 'FT'f:j1.,' 2 . AM ,-Hex. .4 ,,,- ' , 4 f w '442'11w2ff21'z2f,- f' WM - wi ' , ,.:.f:- i:a,f,1- 4 N ' . . .. - sz' ' 5,1 FFP 5 1-.a . , - -E..:g:,2.2e V. . -f-- -.f,eW 'f' 1' 2 ,- , ,' , y.4,'z-:- QW? 455 ?'x,. v ,SEI-2 , ,e , fy- 13, fy -1211:',,,f:i'E7i: :I'- g:5 f .'.v4v Wirfgqelm-.11534-'X9QS I? :'kx , , 1 4- . 225 'Z . .fame ' .z. ,f:A ,, X ,.,4,-ffm gf-W-xzw. -f .MW ., ,::.,fg, E-:gg ' ,- j Vg-. Q ff - .Q j .-new-, 1 E. r ,Q j S f Eye? , 2 K Y 42,5 E X525 Af 'Q fag 98138, ' 'G 'f 2 Q ' P, N E 5 S Xi ' . f Uifrmy 5 we XZ, Q22 , QQ 3, N E Q 4 JULY ZEPHYRS ', sf E ,J-:Q ,E 1, ,..,.,,.... 1 . E . , I x .-se f CQ 'EE -aff? i' ' ' -11.5. Jah? . f 33-'. .Eff - ' ' N, H I' Q- -qw iikix JVJQ. . vain, x '- J - .. . '-1 fm: - .gsm- A - . R 'I ', ' '-T71 : '-'- x Txf-gf! 7 ,q 5-. ' 0 i '1 Er, 4 .fly AUGUST AMUSEMENTS SEPTEMBER A, M, ,f ,, w 1 Page' Om' I-Izmdrrd Sixiy-viglzl ' 1 ,V 2, n if 5 1 I J v. X 'W vw 1 il nu If 1 U W 1 W1 ,ina w 5 H i x I l,, n X 1 fi Ye Liner Alma- ack . September Greetings? it 'F 1914 if ii it How are you? .Z f X? ' 9 -. f ae I f,xlS'k 17' ,.-1:5713 A -Y Prep. Mallory returns and school starts. Ak wk wk BILL johnson appears on the campus withakeugenikc pants on. 6 ac Amphics starts rushing and Clark commences to fuss. ac if Pk Prexy gets two football men in 1914. K ia. ' Q to N X S ' I iw Z f Hartwell cans two football men, 1914. ,F X 96 ' Y. M. C. A. holds a deception to students. gk ak gk Nielson admits that he is ap- posed to fraternities: 1914, 1915, 2000 A. D. bk at wk Bragdon tries to get us to spring that old Greek joke: That Beri- cles was an Athenaean. Give lt a shave! at PF as Blume joins the Y. M. C. A. 987654 A. D. Freshmen break the usual tradition and beat the Sophs in the flag rush. Book store admitted to the Steal Trust. 87654 B. C. Doc Innis holds his watermelon feast. bk gk ak The football men come out and beat Michigan in a slow disin- teresting garnke. at Dk The Liner stops at Canary Islands for co,kal.:k X Faculty decide to con every- body and a freshman buys a his- tory book. 98767 B. C. ' 11.3.1 . We replace our typewriter rib- bon 1987. . ' Foul 'stuff-the acting janitor is not up in twelve hours. Larson gets the football cap- taincy. Hermann is still rushing Tinker. Student council dies a painful death. 18765 B. C. Mac cleans Hamline. 1-' ur . Q' 'Qi' - xy. I 2 . A freshman girl gets X in an exam, 7865 B:kC. ak :ze Same girl dies 7865. at :nc as The Philos give a joint and all the pledged Amphics were there- more foul stuE. ww: wk xg The first egg thrown at a chapel speaker 8765 B. C. WE MUST OCCASIONALLY GO FUSSING CWarm windsi. Violetta starts preparation for the pop contest. at vs if Batas give free showers to promising freshmen. Page One Hundred Sixty-nine .LS XX Ex.. -4 I 'Z 'X N ' ,-N, I V Q'- Q9 Ye 1 Liner Alma-N ack October, and the if ik it 1914 it lc if King of Outdoor Sports The Passing of the Third Goat back. Note:-The goat was borrowed from a brewing Co., where Doc had a strong pull. The other gentleman by 'Che aforementioned animal is -the editor surrounded by our sixty piece band. 96 Jr Dk Freshman party at Doc. 'Innis and Benson illustrates the inside workings of the mafadore sys- tem. l V wk wk wk The Oracle comes out. - wk Pk Pk Hermann gets some hair tonic and a neck tie, 1914. vs wk Pk , Bill Board Baker starts a series of sensational pictures afloat against licker, 1914. Cub Stedman signs up with the wrestling team so that he may better cope with the social psy- chology bull. wk if ak lQe'Soto discovers the fountain of Juice-lemon aide. 1546. The freshmen elect three pres- idents-Mexican stuE and it started a revolution. an Pk :ic Benson is elected president of freshmen class. -nf :nc wk Benson gets bid to Phi Delt fraternity. Pk :if s Local FLES meet in their secret adytum. wk Pk Pk Girls carried knives to class in the stone age. 87654 B. C. Pk aa: wk Electricity is installed in place of gas at Goheen hall but Jones is still there. Murderers of high C organize. Prexy is traveling in Way Poker cigarettes and wimmin .. will lie considered as concealed dqwrf Easty N0 Nobuui Sato weapons in the eyes of the man- this is no show troupe-he is only Hgef- 4 traveling. The Phi Delts in a care free attitude. This was censored by Baker but was passed by the student council. Blume did not vote. WE CAN STILL GO FUSSING. CPicking' the jentianl . 1 ' Q do , Yi 1 . ss' .N . Howe gets back to school and 4, .-fZf.v11L' 6 starts the daily newsfancej. it v i XS' +xS Pdgc' UPU' H11 DIm1'l'e'41' nqtlt N I 1 s 5 has Q. Q1 y 1 il!! Pu: ig nas: th: 'VI rr , F yr. -'f If ,il 3 Given- Q , xr , . V ar il A ax ,. - -' Q' N-. . z. I.,--1 ... . xi, .x A, . waz, ,.. Av 1 LXA3-g1,v-j,-1,3 . y M g 4 x ' 'A X 3 4 ti Li,J i J ii K iy J X9 J r L4--'ia I A ix V23 575' ' E - H- u J LIL gy Ye Liner Alma- ack N0VCITlbCI', Days of tk X it 1914 if it it Sadness, December N117 5412- x Z 4 5 ...ftlv ' . 1 ' . 7' E i- X ,A lg' .' , 2 Q70 Carleton football game. 77 to 0. and the Oracle editor presses his pants. as ak .ak Bill -Bored Baker says. that pabst is a. brew and not a woman. Roll over Anthony you're on your back, 1914. ak gk is Ivan the Terrible shaves with a Gillette safe? rkazoar. Cadv.j Anthistle delights a packed house. ak 96 ak Bilbored Baker says that Fuller is rushing Paff. Romeo is dead. me .LB ., - - KELLS wins the Oratorical and Billum's going to the Aggies. x ae :ae . Peruna testimonials indorsed Snfaaccepted by Temple 87654 ,.. EAN x, -24' ' I T - - , VWN-. xg - '06 X K, ,fl ' L I 1-,I X . 4 .' C x in I D J Q 1 wg, Z' . . 1 LI !,L : The Liner is becalmed in the straits of senior bay. Blume holds the class meeting because he fears that the golden nuggets are a treacherous shoal. Class vote to have Their pie consumers 1n the Liner. Blume did not vote. Bragdon devours egg nogg. .NOTE-the cooks' union fur- nzshed us with this rather shady fact aalzozit tire egg nogg. Birn berg carries knitting to breakfast. I ask you? The Junior football team is beat- en by the seni:!o,r.c9revvk-fund Oppie. Blume elected B. B. captain. my 3: af x All Hamline day submitted to. by the faculty and the Frosh cap- ture . the football championship. Thanksgiving proper arrives. Those higher up decide on a va- cation. Three days vacation and we all go home. FEgyptian cigarettes first intr0- duced into Egypt 1987 A. D. 'iii-'ii' Page One Hundred Seventy-one The Betas hold another, party. We were paid ten dollars not to tell the names of the two persons engaged in the not ex- actly eugenic expressions of Jones features in the little playlet. A case of Mistaken Identity at the Lutz home, 1914. We get the Pay my son from emotion. X X is Bragdon makes an egg nogg, 1914. t v :iiil'ii1.. , J. 'Y ,W if ' ll ef ' ' ' i' , Q' 9 --A . 424 ' -f l. A' Y,P ' - ' A. home and depart. WE DON'T HAVE TO WORK. OH NO. TRA LA! 'Q Xl - e .' . IJ, X 5' l V NQQW V l X- X x 1- Q -Q, 1 w .. 1.4-v-A:-.'..w.M-.-i.:-..,gw-1,4-,.x, I A 11. ' ' N -' :2 -f q f, .' f ,.4. 1--.ri . 'f..a:3,.',,. .... .,...'...4 wg,-ng, , e.'. , .. ganna- 1 1 X saw: we i l 1 i r 1 l i 1 Ye Liner Alma 4 Nack January, Days of X X if 1915 X lk if Premomtion .': !'-. Altiwas Baird, Baird. Bairii! Vi 1 J Q A I 9 all In y Bm dl. d done ray., f - llli P-9 fymw ., You ami p may 1 r M f e W - im as - vi ' its T' . J v ' , ' ' 4 ff ik 'mit l , , X i N' w ud- I A' J i - fix X ' , I rv iz X 5 E xl ,?. ' J kj ir 1 ll L' x . If fmt .I i I , N , han X I V I 5 V. , - , lv' wx ' Q l ---- . Y' A gallery god's idea of a regis- ' ' ' .HMP KIRK BAGS A DEER trar' 4, , ,,.,. ff- 1 :ze as as .ff ! xy I ,ef I i .V , f Coach Baird will forsake the dingy One 'Minute lunch for he too has succumbed to the frivolities of married lifek. Pk ak Birnberg invites Sanborn to dine four times a week now. :sf Pk a Anna Maud still opens the library in the? usylialagway. Three schooners were sunk in St. Paul 1663. We all get back and there are a fewffnew names not yet placed on the Catalgguf. ak Arnold comes to chapel now for he is a daddy. Prexy makes the usual speech and Walcott the usual apology. Betting the first day was three to one he would Call him Benedirt. Pk :if ae The Peerless quint defeats Stout and the Aggies. This vic- tory stuff is agettingx monotonous. . X Turk Manning rushes Helen Collins and Caesar leaves Rome 14 B. C. Blackbourn and McNeil attend the dry convention at Topeka, Kansas. rBut the FLES are wise to that marriage stuff. The Glee club exists and Euro- pean war movies are made in New Jersey. . Exams come on and a few de- cide they may not remain much longer. Larson washes his track pints and Noah builds the ark 876a4354 B. C. The classes still go on. qThis is some classical reference to that old adage Time and Tide . You ask rne?l WE TAKE NOURISHMENT FOR COMING EXAMS hx ., .... XXX t. ic '-.x EXTRA! Fiero tries to kill Villa. Otherwise Lew is a re- spectable person. 3 L tx, X5 N...- Vugv Um' Ilzfxziirm' Svrwvitx I 0 Second semester opens. l f 1' ED uw- .TR L .4 '..2 .ful ' ai 'ES 1'N'5 Ye Liner Alma- ack February, Wailing X lf if 1915 X if S' and Gnashing of Teeth , ' X2 s X1 R bfi-lf! ' l i ii!! V1 ' Page Illness at Goheen. it 'F it Hank Moe and the rejuvenated Kerfoot count the Po cont bk 24 24 ' Howe the Daily News Cancel poses for the Oral guy . Esther Bane getsfa new hat CCo-edjokeb. ' ' Salome dances in chapel. Doc and. Happy -possessed season tickets. ' . , , Hugh Black speaks in chapel and math will be elective. Ah-these were the days of real sport. At least a few Gods of our faculty be with us yet-We might forget, we might forget. Pkfkvk Oppegaard elected captain of next year's basketball team. Will the Madison tick please copy. . p est votes preparatory to making bets on the aforementioned contest. Note the careful armament and other precautions to se- cure safety. Bragdon forbids the girl to call each other by their nick-names. What's in a name anyway? Ask Nunn. 96 Dk 2 Any Night after the Soph-Senior banquet. The Curse of Poverty. ,fig ff fi fn ii , ' , v 121' ' J .f ' WJ' ' 'C' i l .1 rf I it ,fl at X ff IN' 'iii hike fg K in 5 f l 1 if J ' V, 1'2- le. If U In F' 'ff J r X LNX Wanted a Monitor. Sympathy discovered in the color of old rose on the nose of Belshazar, 9587 B. C. Kells taken sick on the eve of the oratorical and Jones comes to the rescue with a second place victory after Ysevken hours notice. - . Pk Hamline and St. Johns basket- ball teams battle to a tie on the home floor. wk :F a Sophomore-Senior banquet is held at the Lemington. There was no hair cuts-No scraps and everybody went home in two socks. Irene Vanous wins the ladies' Oratorical contest. wk as at Beyer creates a panic among the Irish monitors by appearing late in chapelajviih are green tie on. Jacob accuses Arvid Erickson of selling bible symbols, 603 A. D. xc it a Sophs win the college basket- ball championship. Tubby gets a stand in with Prexy and arouses the jealousy of one Wilson by carrying the chairs down from the roof for chapel. Green Reporter- 'Hamline certainly had some track team year? ' - u . 322212 onelJ She also had a line baseball team. Baird- YUP- Ambitious One- But say who in H- coached that football last fall? WE PROTEST COMPULSORY CHAPEL One H 'zmdred Seventy-three .. . .nt ymirnwz .v1e:.:xa1 if N ' f P l L 1 H i53:7-i3.J7'-fR- , I U ,. .., Qvl, :fs-s.,,.s, .--......,, ,,,.. . ,. .. ,s F. -. .exif .-is 5- . -fe- ,N ts-,. 1. l- 'V-X-1 in .1 K--,-1 51 :Ci .I '+-u'u Li.-,JULXA1-all M ea - -v ,l M.-...., 1 -,,, X 1. i . , w .t ul v. .l. , Q tl W x li Q ,. ,Q J . ,. .,. Y, 1 :fr ... gl fi .L 32' a. it -x'r 'a ., .K 4. -v L 1 i ra L! it ,1 w. Q ,N 4 . 4 Y I .' Al a ack 'i March, The Outdoor 1915 Season Opens - 545.39 I :vis N s C' E QQ , A . 5 ss l 'M' I 5 f!?'f ff ' - fr . S i s f S- w ff -ist. tl f l xii- iss X ' 1'1'. The Million Dollar Mystery fjL2f15.53 ss that has confronted every stu- ' X X-gf dent since Wally started to teach X V e s Qxx . T. psychology. ,Q It 'lf 'lf .l General clean up of cons and gt The Liner coming into port Y - M ' failures around the campus. 5, with the priceless cargo and smooth , -- - ' 'fi V3 fAm0ng the latter Anrhiytle F, blue S6855 N0 ,SUD-Mary-AHHS and Sauter delight the inmates ,l and the band playing. We wunda l of the Barn by shavingl. who got that pop contest? A ' 1915. ' X .I . X k f Brooks decides. that he may 'G I ak Y' M' Ci-IA' iiutlatesd aplfiieb 0 enter the engineering departments The occupants of Frog Pgnd pnfyer at .amme an .1 S urg 1915. vote themselves a loving cup for QMS Smokmf' sfsgme-70ke'7 it 'li it services rendered the institution. Qi The Red Heads in school organ- Flashlighi B1'9?kS aPPeaf5 1 on I I ik ize a society with an appropriate the 03111945 111 gill-be Of a 1611153 em John D. Rockfeuow gets- the E: motto Blaze Away- merchant' hook gold epidemic, 1883. .fi The Modest Quintet downs the - K . , ' ' gi' lower state b ketball tive in two Lab clefmed- out betore the Fly Paper Ike devil for the fl as h tlef invasion 603 B C G - . games.-Ancient history. 5 ur as X 'sk ' ' Oral 'iilliglps a Picture ofhPrepls fr if ik room. . is exp ains, w y. e h Student council begins to pale H1-1 club formulated and Sleuth has that continual barber smell 564 B. C. Johnstone makesaspeech-Rotten. 011 him- . o ' 5 'F 'F 1' Note-Stg. Hermann thestu- The ground Hogs appear for a 'i dent assistant resides in the short time. same domzczle. gg il 5 if 'tiz 1 2t.1p 4. I 3 ... 225 .-.. f ft 9,-ga. f,..... I ,,,,. ,.,. 5 A . W ' A . . - .,.l iti , '.-.'i- -4- 5 . A 4'l '- i , .'ef' L .'l, ' ,,'.- f y 5, ' ,f::4, U .. ..', -sm.: ,,.- , ...-..,. , ,.,- 44 I X ,',..' a 1 'f' Q te .-.1, g ,,,,. . .,. .ef, ,-if 'yi X X , . H ,,, ., - .uf f :-f. -1:11 -. - '-- 1 -fvf Q1 , H, . . ' ai The Con gang rush the growler Hamlin exchanges pictures with Fergus Falls . district baquet and do a little work. Marjorie Lee and Wilson sends their ,former S. S. rote es- A-3 . e P g r if 22 X greetings- sk sk Dk tformer-formerb. ' l . . , H Moses discfwered in the Bull Student council decide that the . is Ds. - - ilgissshes and Timm goes to chapel, Daily News canes, is a disease, We get a little sleep. ff - 1915. Y Y a X if ig . 3 A. M. 'Tis done and as Q5 Liner in deep seas closely pur- t afittfbfeags h1Stan,?.at tlfoghes- Stevenson says, Well we done Sued by a German submarine fer In emahy en er am? Y a our- but that is the editor's lB1umeD, 1915. ema e so t es pipeis said. story. E3 . . . ' ' . 51 X X K Bill Baker says that to steal a ik ik ak S Hannah james sells the ex- man's whiskey will not give him First religious scandal discovered cluslve use of her name to a coal hydrophobia but lt might make when the Gold Dust twins admit EQ Company- hlm mad. 1915- that they Smoke cigarettes. ' , W A s I . I I don't know as I can say much, mused W v Fly Paper Ike, as he I leaned back in his A f chair, But the only , is thing I ever got in this L tx. as world for nothing was - '12 F5 a con in dutch and I 'ggi hear that the regents iff are .going to put a gill gy if special war tax on them I this semester. fg ali 99 to-rs, IC ' 4 Page One Hundred S!'7't'7Iflj'-'YAOIII' S' if ' I 'L - 5 I A? EYE -'I :WQi ix'?::i:Y:, ' w17'f'f'Wfffllf 1 ' 71-'1ff'l' lftW!:'4 ' N.UiHf'f P 1:1 2-lariv-fm-Ss e:fs'x:'1 t ww -wr -A-xxzftwwirvwzw -ww. new as m-'fr we rf- y .Q ra-'px ww 'MX Y W 'V 'Y .X 'll 3 Q' .1 :g,','f2f'5iZfi' .-322' , Q, ,.,, . , ,,,,, , ,, - -1 .N Q w 'fvix-+1 -'MXN'-'I'-, K5 Q :',:4:,f's.J-o5'rW-2t.A nib' ,-LQ' wfri.. :,'-:-- 1 ' ' -2:51111irff-I-g'Q!,21L-,QA if f gi .fgyl-3g-5rQ,1WQjs'gml1!15.v5 t.,JigLg.fl,,MxE.:,:.-isI ,hy I ssfssB,.,s fs,-ws., A-yy:yjxv.ssrpygyszs-Spit'pkg-XRQLLN- l 1 3 . i 3 . I Q .nn 'Y ,J J G l 3 1 J I 1 'nu hu. is in N, 'N wx lm Rh z 'I 'ins U! Vi l.O I I F5 ull 'ii :lf 431: 9 4' I. 5 tai J fa, . 9? 1 K Q +L ?f L ' w .1 V- - . -fn' ,. A ,- - r , , 'g ' '- :P fu , ,-S f-Y 3 ' Q L If--T 4-,Aw Y , ' H: : X-7' f ' T. .J X.-'..' u lg 'E . 'vi -. I1 ,gl V ! A PHI DELTA FROSH H CRun by Requestb LLUTJ1 ,U 'G TEORUTE' F WE PAY 50 CENTS CONTRU3 Ji I pr 1 I fl Q7 1 L5 Lf ' EE ' EE if ' o o e o if iv YOU MEET THAT G w EJ? si 1 NIFTY FROSH DUBS DOBNER APPEARS .L- I 1 6,- 4-1 ' HEAVY FROST f'Ll S I ui H PHI DELT S AWAIT THE HEIGHTS GANG BLUME GETS A A A BASKET , PARTY A ' 'ff I fi 0' F Q Q 1 Q' z'f,f1,S 1 UMM, x WW' N -. X A - 2 2 - ff? T Q.- s A A A EOCK BEER 'V Page One Hundred Seventy-five , . , T. , ji Ex J. '-zm, X -... Q. v 1 , ' f .1 I W. f fhood HP fo X k Swx Page Om' I1IHI'til'l'd Sf'i'c2115'-Six' C-1 .- . 'tw I X. lc: ty .. it , K. fi ,fi 'J ,ti V ii 'fl '.l ..1 -. is 1-' Pu I, , . ,Z If 'lf ri K, T, 1. r .J ., ' L1 ,N , Ladies and Gentlemen: We owe the usual apologies to the memory of Bill Sykes, Bob Chambers and Pankhurstg With every respect to those canyons of Dante's Inferno. With utmost caution regarding the Pure Food and Drug act and the Immigra- tion Law, we have emmassed at a stupendous cost and 1 I Y 1 s 1 W - XB with great risk of life and personal property this massive ,., conglomeration of bovine fed, misjointed, Hannel jawed, 237 L born-in-Missouri bunch of Nutts, Whose playful person- :E ality and fondness of something to love have made them 1, forsake the grapevine route and to delve in the great ill g' Problem of the modern college world, viz: How to K graduate with as little knowledge as possible and to leave the campus and settle down to the proposition of H, ' living on south-east winds and hopes of a future place ,Q Xb on the poorfarm. Pedro, begin the operations. v x ' -.xx X-. 'li L M ff 's-- . S il ff' .7 .77 X ll 1 -I 1 X xx 'X 7 N gf CASES i ESM'-3 'li Somewhere in the past one old Sherman who marched M F to the sea and swiped the gin and other junk from the -.E Nj, i' 33 negroes he tried to free, said that war was-well if you WY P W ' 22 know history you can guess. This little Dot Sherman Qi doesn't believe that old adage for in many ways she likes ' 2,6 fx? war-at least she and Bob are chewing the rag all the i Q5 ,Q time. Those flags they are waving are supposed to gi 211 give a patriotic atmosphere to the great scene. Every 2' it EQ body stand up. e 5' gg Stand up Pedro, that's our flag they're waving. in it TURN THAT CRANK! .11 l 4 . fi Q at .lg .V 5,1 Careless, happy Dawbahn, a FLE of reknown, and 5, Flawerance Dunnell. 'T-s summer we know for pipe those duck trousers. In psychology class he prefers the g V2 green colors. Flawerance prefers Durby. They will jf! A both graduate next year and then-we wunda? Q gi Pedro the implement. Lt 1 E A if ll 5. ,T 5' Y ll-I 1 Ml L, 'ia Ruth Humphrey sure is a Nutt. All fussers are Nutts. E fl Here she is sitting on a rock and the poor Freshman is 1-K 1 .. proposing to her. 'Tis a sad scene, mates and it re- : minds me of an old story. The poor Freshy found that Q i cultivating her love was just like planting mustard seed and now he resides in Japan trying to find the trail of the A: -1 army who have gone on before him. . ,A Wind, Pedrog we might overtake the army yet. t Page One Hundred Seventy-seiren l I 6 g'ix,.3 V1.5----ll -.'.,r,,.j. :..f- .21 ' ' r' r 1 X M1 il .Ji l. Lip o l Ji L N ' L ' 'Q' in c.....: nf' '-1' 41 .vs CASES Here is the reel life of Stromme the human hot air sponge who forms Billy Sunday's right hand shadow when it comes to speaking in chapel. By his side vividly featuring that old story of a woman's devotion in one reel stands little Heinie the most ardent supporter of the Beta Kappa house. She smiles in a very regular-go-to-wed- ding winsome way and we can safely say that smile has fooled thousands. Why she is smiling now we do not know. Pedro, turn the crank. , Be not deceived by this rural scene.. Those deep sleeping waters and the closing shadows in the back- ground indicate that this is a very late hour for these two Nutts to be about. The tall one with the statue-of-Lib- erty pose is Henry J. Hedin and looking up skyward is a maiden named Paulson. The picture does not reveal the secret of this ghostly midnight interview. Maybe they are just kidding each other and don't know it. If Napoleon had seen this he would have smiled at Helena. It is too bad the wheels of time cannot pause for then these two specimens would it perfectly in this scene. Let us turn to a more pleasant sight. Pedro, revolve the handle. This is the scene, that would easily feature in Kip 1ing's famous play The Light that Failed. The ligh we refer to is the gas light above the two worthies stand- ing on the cold cement sidewalk. She is a Junior and he is a 'ver bad Sophomore. She once lived in a cottage and was considered to be great. He became a promising chemist whose specialty was peroxide blondes. She now lives in Goheen and wise old nutt that he is only smiles his rest-for-the-weary smile and lets it go at that. Hail, all hail! to strong arms and fair women. Pedro, spin the implement that smile was meant for more than you. . f But here, ladies, gentlemen and Doc, let us pause to see one of nature's greatest works. Uncle Tom and Little Eva-what a moment of happiness. You would think they were painted wallnuts on the border of Time. She looks at him as if he could protect her in an hour of need. If he couldn't do that he at least could lead a good retreat for he 'is a runner of reknown and made his record trip the time he tried to swipe the cakes at the Junior-Freshman banquet last year and Lindberg Bred the awful Rwealwer. Pedro, keep her clicking. Page One Hundred Seventy-ezghl . . - t-h . l im .pile EW L1 Q SIM .v,,, ,,, , ..vg,,..1 . O 5 ii iffy? 0, L7 3 I 1 5 s CASES I . These two well known pests are frequently seen abusing h the silence of Frog Pond acres with their chatter and gig- ,A gles. Jimmy always had a fellow and Sandy never had . a girl until he met jimmy. There is a pathetic look on her K face.for she fears that she might flunk in Shakespeare. l He is a very parit gentle knight. . Pedro juggle the giggler. We knew she loved the flowers, but who'da thunk she'da picked an Astor by the low hanging pines and Proposal Rock. Astor-some flower that can change the name Smith to Anderson. Long live and long hail 'I to the genius of our race. I- Speed Pedro, remember the race. va -5 s l. H 2 n n is But here, ye soft pipes, blow softly! Travers, oh Luella! to think you would have come to this. It is but the call of the Traumerei and methinks he harped to much. So here, ladies, gentlemen and Sted we have Harper and Travers. Merciful goodness! Pedro speed on we have scandal in the rear. Ea I C' H : And here is the Nutt who sought eternal happiness. 5 Unlike DeSoto he did not look for a hidden brook but ., had it thrust upon him unexpectedly. Now to him all ,Q is Bliss. His feet stray up towards the blissful haven where a little nutt welcomes him into the blissful home. 1 He quit school and was married. Well anyway he was a good Hazelnutt. Pedro! By the weeping willows they sat as the. golden sun I, dipped deeper in the gray west. Wrapped in the thick A blankets of their Alma Mater they resemble the last J review of some ancient Indian tribe. The two Nutts are Short and Fiero. This is not the same Fiero who 1 tried to kill Villa. The other two are Dot and Marge. ' 1 It is rumored they frequently sit under weep1ng.w1llows. This is positively the last traces of ancient barbarism. Q Watch those Indians, Pedro. They are liable to scalp H us. Page One Hundred Seventy-nine .fr -5 iff I 1 -:b'n 'r',.:5'1'f4'.,'u'Q5.51-'-f51Ff',-gl.,-3.7gang -we 5 r '-'-1'r'?f.e.?::--i N S b - fs W-gr - x , - X , 1 -..,- c all-.J lei vf 1 CASES Ha, the plot thickens and here we have the far famed Student Assistant Sigerfoos. He is so called because in his spare hours he cuts up frogs and delves into the mysteries of frog life. These two Nutts gave Billum the inspiration to write his O. E. column. We could say more about these two feline beings but once in our past we used Sig's hair tonic and he is sort of using this as a hush fund to hold .against us. Tink-tink, I hear the Tink of Tink-er calling me. Pedro twist the lever. ' ' ' ' Ladies, gentlemen and Tubby, let us introduce for the first time the wonder of seven nations in one boat. The Nutt with a smile is Helliwell, and the ally is Wieck. Some stern 'German accused Hel. of being an Ally but there is no trace of his ancestors being in the ark and so we presume he belongs to the ish family. Wieck is a very quiet maiden and she has cute dimples when she laughs. Pedro wind up that last reel. Feather, come quickg Smitty wants you. Here they are smiling in childish glee. Feather is a good student and even allows such German words as Hell to be occasionally mixed with his English vocabulary. Smittysays Hell is alright if it is used according to the German interpretation. However be not de- ceived. These two are really the most desperate characters in school. Ho-hum. Pedro speed up we are crossing a bridge. What a sad sight. Was such a career as yours Esther to come to this. She is dry. The gentleman is giving her a drink. Has it a bovine reputation? If not then why should she be looky so happy. She writes European war stuE for the Maga and he writes Life Insurance. Don't look for any connection, there isn't any. Pedro! Harold Henniman to the front, ladies, gentlemen and Anng Here is a nutt we must pause and examine closely. This is the first time in the history of our institutuishonfpunj that any one was able to get a picture of Hennie in an ordinary pose. He is usually seen scratching up the cinders on the long two mile run with his tongue hanging out-flapping around like a bunch of window shades in the breeze. The one with that eternal smile is Helen. Long live Henie and Helen-we know them both. Pedro, are you up in twelve hours? Page One Hundred Ezghly '1 J.a' ' 2-. :1v.l' T:-' i':-'-':h'11fx7,-J' N ww v ...X I 1 CASES Skinny Johnson would have made a good name but then some shadow came and now it might be Skinny Lee. Lillian heard that we were going to put her here with Albin and she gets peeved and did the usual thing. He is at present travel- ing his own bum trail and she-oh well that's another story. Really, Hank, it's 'a crime to put this in. It's murder Pedro. , Ladies, gentlemen and Stellag Don Farley the chemist who has delved in the mysteries of a fuss- er's life at last. She says she is a sufferagette. That is what they all say. They look happy and she is far from a Pankhurst mood. The sun was shining when we snapped this. COh-hum three A. M. and psychology to getj. MANIP- These two N utts who explain the long and short of it think they are pictures on the wallg At least they hang together all the time CPunJ and seems to be in a very affectionate frame of mind. She sings with the highest notes of the canary and he imitates thunder on the bass end of the glee club. Oh it's great to be a genius. ULATE The reel life of the erstwise Labbitt who at- tends Y. M. C. A. conventions and is a. monitor in chapel. The other Nutt is Erickson. Maybe she can tell us who broke that plate in Goheen hall last year and then pushed it under the table. This is the only dark blot on her career. They're engaged and soon will join the great unnamable rank who have gone on before. THE CRANK. In the same bunch we have the last two Nutts, Parker and Graves. Parker was to go down in the Siamese Islands and take the risk of death via the spear route, in order to convert the tanned savages. But it seems that a Grave in this old northern clime was good enough for him and so they too will be married in the-fthe usual monthj. This matrimonial businesssure is getting mono. tonous. Page One Hundred Eighty-one 1 v A i gl 5 l 1 I Q 2 I 5 1 L I I 1 4 . A. N . ,. . . f . . . -- . ' 1. ,,,.i xi x. -4 . r ' -',,'-'. - - PV',' 1 '55 .'-Tl - , '-1 - ' -.fy-.K l '- .'L1'x.'.p-'.-.'.---ix.-at-l'. ll-..l.' .e 5 K .--x Ns!-,Juv--Nffi.sQn,'4 r I I v 4 , Q7 'l ' v . is .4 Q sl IE .1 9 1 l 1 J: .X ty. -v, .r z, v. L1 '35 J, s fr it 1 sei P V. .fu , ' .fi ffl: ' fir' 7 aff' if ' -V3tT'5'35'- 7'-'fy m xii Q-is Dvd Ln il 223 '43 :.'-:.:ef:w.f1- . . ,Laaf,:,av's:'L.'.iRk Jr -'f' ii ., 66 99 ' it ' Qlfnl' . , t ts? y These two Nutts broke all records the time they.ran JE y to catch the Dan Patch special for Carleton. :The animal pg gg in front with his feet high in the ozone'1s Spike the Phi tit-Q1 Delt special who hangs around the institution and never Q: passes in a subject. He is- condemning the affection '1' which seems to be evident in the actions of the two. 'Qs -1 . . . , 3, Dame ,Rumor said they were to be married in June. I ask you? li .9 ' i :Q 1 Pedro, you must crank that machine. It isn't like a .rf Q Ford. y 1 4 EQ ' . E Q 1' .4 205 ll fi ,H UN . 1 its fi' ' - . V4 is ' We will now rise and sing the anthem. After u that Pedro I shall give you a nickel if you will promise gg it , to leave the horrid drink alone. 3 i 5 1 E H 'J 5 H .2 i el we G , 0 ft: Pg-3 s ' .eve Q1 an . r ff l , 4 ' e. - . - Q 55 gf H . V -V - o tr .gilt K 5 1 , l'f '1lIljI gl 352 i f 0? ff'-:sm fe f .- , . Flilllil 'fi fe f ' - f lIY it I-1 'I K 5' ,. I fer E3 'ii fl -. ' ' K f fi :U ' I ' ' Q. 1 f ' , ., 2 Fi' T c:, S655 IJ cz: 99 EB . if ll A Mm5,f li J Q Q ur 0 ase ectlon f to so -f r as 5 53 1. :Q :L b This is the memoir of Ruth V. Anderson. If all the boys she has instructed in the manly Q3 art of Comology were to be concentrated in a group they could easily form an army that might gl if clean up the Ally-German bunch together. as ak if 1. 1' 'F 'f' ,5 VVe feature a few of the More noted. :K 96 gk fi H' sf fl .l EQ Z5 if A G 5 ig sg Pg Here is one of that mighty X F53 i army. He was a fast V ig .- 'Ihis man Srlvernale fell young man and she loved J it gt A for her charming smile in him in the days of his F jg the early days of her life track fame. He graduated 52 Qi ' but now he also is married. last year. ii tr Pedro. ' fi G .9 : F' 5: '- L-3 6 fa t Q fo 55 Q. T2 L ., :Z 9 T. D. Davey, or Tug boat go QQ Tom as he is dubbed .by if , is those who know the me Terrible Win and Ruth V. 95, QV if Pf hi? feet, IS 2'-1 good boy, at your mercy. She evi- fi in spite of our illustration. dently has caught a re- 3 -,Pj Ss? The Tunes depleted Were Heetion of herself in the 5.32 355 the days of grand Old base- water for look how serious tl N E+ Q P811 at Hamlllle 9:1111 S116 she is. However both are Eiogi IS 0bS6I'V6d holding h1S married now, H0-hum A53 mitt, but later on she re- Such is life, turned the mitten. 1 Next. ffgfgfg Pedro, a little more light ff 5 on this one, if the censors 52 Eg ' will allow it. K EEE 95? Q4-k?i 5? .s . .... , .. . - ., ' 4 Page One Hund1'ed Eighty-two Sim 5 if '75fff 'v'4Tf2'CWff'-2 1175125 7727? ' ::':mfe1:rfrf::Lf.f.:sperm'averse-2212114irmzmm-ufv1wfmv,eT:fmj-.-Mao n.wmfzz-ufvggw N 'xv -1' -. f Lu- 1 -.f -.:.-.--- JJ' -.- . - f-,-.-- fe.. ,. fs- A ,. P--. 'E3Q't!': .-,urs:5.:.E'f.'lL-.-4-S491 .LL-?.1w.-wr1-1-i'.er'.'?.iJfK'.2'c.',E.D.-fa: :o:f:53qpQfg.ecwgfag-acz'furt:g.j::,ggq.--yry:--fi.--v-fslms..-.,,ee ,,,.'..,-'- -.ea ,...,.,-.,,,,.,., . .. , . . ft.. , -f1Q 2 T ',XVtj '-Q. wiv , qw' .-. , . ......,.,-, .r.-.f..s-...- .e,,e4.f:,f:.f4 -f1.'xM'.ffnX:Qifxi-','1ia1'3a. ri?EiS79:11LLLNHFLQ'fLlrStYAu'AL'J:4-Xl Jf'21'.I?U,IgQf:7',LiL, 1QLyi5QPAQ:'l?Eg:9x.iP4:ix5-RE-fixX Hyu- .' W 1 ' 1 .I ,I Ll Xl ag... al .if I In this scene the party looks like squirrels and Hank says they are good Nutts. The picture at the bottom shows the jealous rival, Al Collette. The last and inal Film depicts them by the wall. Ob- serve carefully that the wall is not Wood. Hasten, Pedrog we knew Here is 'Lizabeth Lambert, one of the lesser lights in this sob case, and Ham. He was a gentle youth, me thought. Note the expectant. look on his child-like features. Observe the more deadlier of the too as she stands slightly back and gazes at Little Nemo. 'Tis sad so change the slide, Pedro. Here she is again. His mother calls him Ecky for short and reports that he is slowly recovering with the rest of the army. Pedro, feed the carburetor a little gas and then Ha! the' double standard. These were the bristling times when Prep wore a moustache and walked with a kitty-like stride. The other 'un was his pal and together they Enanced Aa disastrous campaign. Sue is the girl who really caused the song, It Took Ten Cents to Steal Your Heart Away although Floy Brown came up a strong second. Note carefully, Phi 1Beta Kappas and Happy, the charateristic poses which makes this picture a feature. him well. flash the next one. We let them off easy, Pedro. Long ago and he's a barber now. Has she a fit or is it merely love. This could easily be called The Silent Plea. Davey is grinning and seems to be enjoying the joke im- mensely. Here he is posing again and is very serious. Crank that machine fast Pedro. That ain't no wheel barrow. vs Pk 11 A peculiar Histoiical Episode T. D. M. Davey falls in love, 1912. :t is :ne :xc Tom Davey :falls ins lore, 1913 Long Tug Boat Davey falls in love, 1914. ak ae wk :xc Thomas Denyit Much Davey Ph. B. falls in love, 1915. Page One Hundred Eighty-three This is the fable of ye monitor. Now you know just how he can afford to buy such expensive gifts. .He, is a good strategist for he has never been seen with the same girl twice. Why don't he give the poor woman some ice cream? I ask you Hazel because he IS my monitor and I must not get him angry. By gosh lf,S Tom's girl too. And Luella Travers! Goodnight. A little darkness, Pedro. I must think. This man is Cutey Timm and the girl- well, that's another question. The only reason we put this in was because Cutey swore on a stack of Bibles that would convert China in iiftezn minutes, that there never existed a picture of him with a dame. Did you sign the pledge to your last Ger- man Xam, Pedro? Qxillriiqg s gf N-X M ,X x K 'T Y X N .ge N . wk Page Om, Hundred Eighly lou: X Page ...., V. . .. ...i .--v,f-:--l.',-'rv-1:-13 , ,-4 ,nfs-5. 1.,.:,. .. ... V 'N ' 'xx S' ll X H , .1.:'.::f:r:.-f.'-.1iw-.-'fxrffzlizfimw.-4:1 K1PEP-1'ff1:'af:asfzfmvnzf.-ff.:r:'.'x-'-fx-.-1'-wat 1 f .aan ff . f - Vx P X I x 5 1 5 ,Qu ggi'-a U 5--fy iq? if .1-f7'f'l'.'l X , .,'Qtfl1i?s9 N x ws.vwxv.sf.'rv v il K li W 'S lj 1 U Li 524.2 L19 U iii!! SEN-'1rn9:ff.2f f l'1 L.q?. , V X THE ALMA-MATER iw ' AS SHE IS . fl ir- ffa f . VK ' -Q... mb' ic 'Iv Q ve! X - I ef t 9 J if The Usual Crab Act qa la N ielsonl Fly Paper Ike sneaked a snipe from the close proximity of a huge foot, and borrowing a match from the regent begang Say this passage on the rolling green sure is some trip believe me. Yuh have school six days out of seveng chapel five out of sixg bible four out of iiveg Shakespere three out of fourg gym two out of three and basket ball one out of two. Yuh got ter take stuff from the analyzing of saw dust to the studying of the choppy Gringo language: Yuh goter skin frogs, butcher cats, count the hairs on ameoba, gargle dutch and take a dip in the river of Jordon and finish up with a religious shampoo over in King's sunday school class. Janitor Jo borrowed the snipe, tooka couple of puffs and then handing the dark oriental beauty back, he closed his eyes and lispedg Thas was wrong wisth the school. If you goes to chapel sixthh times a week your a fanatic. If you stay away your a heretic. If you study bible your a joke. If you take gym your a weakling. If you cut up cats, frogs,-well, you know Ike those ginks ain't human. They both looked over the tall smoke stack At the Bartenders' 'Me x ' f FJIIIV' nf. 9 ' .6 !, 1 L, X ' Pl 0 if sl 1 .Lf , x - riff. f lui I t Qvx ---'n gi... - ezsxxgirlf wig, tv fl , u : 1 -f ll' - Hunan 'I Liv' - 4, X A I 5 'J E ' . , X:-r X' q PL v 4 F -4 Q f Q- 9 Q 1 0 'X fy Senior Education Stuff Prep Mallory's famous song: On the Ave- nue . Synonomous with Anne Laurie . IN MY LITTLE CANOE, JUST BUILT FOR TWO, ' you and me-CChorus Now Enters and Singsj-YOU AND ME. JUST US THREE CChorus Kicks High-D JUST US THREE- WE WILL FLOAT DOWN MY RIVER SO BLUE- OOOOOOO-OH. ON THE AVENUE-CHere the Leading Lady Lifts High Her I-Ieadj ON THE- AV-HA-NU-U. QGreat Applause From the Galleryj Prep and his company reappears on stage and bows. where the lazy clouds lulled in sweet content against the deep blue heaven. Then with a sigh they van-into the pool room. if xi' 'if 5. C l 1 . . wr- Q L. .ff rf f -' H. . rl, 5 F, ffl sk X 1r:'l 1' X X Q 5 I f 7 l f f K E f 4 4 X 'f iw' ' fl X 4643 . 4' , xl 1 X Iii' xx, U f',u W 2, XX - 1 1 'L ' fi I ga . ' gr. gil 4 TQ,- 'W Convention Dishers of the foamy. These men can give you anything from a Walcott high ball to an Irish whiskey. They are the sacred keepers of the old crowibar. The gen'man sitting by Stella is chief bot- tle washer and gave Poe the inspiration to write The Raven. Aside from that they all are very gentle folk as Sweet Will Shakes- peare would put it. One Hundred Eighty-Jive I1 E a 1 . uns- . xx . Qx'1:v wsrsis' r 1-1-'N ' si vi 5 f,: X k -N-NX 1 4' 395,-ji 'jp ffl'-:V-f-j3z?j'f1:H7.:.57-f'f:Q-ff 1?1,TIYQ-?'7.l'.Q':iiCe-15:712e'Qi3.SL1?lZX'TQ2T1W41-12-,itil x rj iilfifri. 5:2121 471253559wqE?ifi'2Il7i'iE'V'5f7,f-' f ,k-:gif , L- v -41' '. ' Q f rd l,. in vw 4-g. 1, .45 ,.-25 Q 1 Fc l an Q. Fl .. B 5, nf. v-1 it 'I lx RT 5,1 T 5 R f fy' it .Q I E1 l H g, U' .-, X.. sq Rf Pi S Ci ,. , . ri gs 12 is 7. K v 1 ff. .fl l 322 254 H 1 rv w .why 1,13 -. - U :svn 5:2 rg -pg-X 3 get it Q- 1, ff c and-712eg2,fgn,, I, 'femal- enfff lfll .Gi-it U xi U in f 4.',ffs.zw'Nwa5:1wsssss':w.ue-rL-Qztiwlfrfffiazwizgemaerfj a ll fl .g .5 necessary. Then as the babies grew up and began M e e to part their hair, the proffs grew fat and lazy and be- . gan to wear Standard collars and cgmb ttlzeir eylebroaavs. One of them started an inovation y ge mg s ave at the barber's college once a month. I , When they had advanced so far as having vests ip A Tale With H M0111 to cover their suspenders, some wise gink discovered that their shine could glim farther if they had flunkies gg-. fs to do their work. Ossey, at that time a butcher in Q a French Frog delicatessan shop, thunk deeply on ?li 'Q,s 5 1 2 the subject for he was very anxious to have something I 4v' do his work. is Qf'C,I? Yl with all his biological skin he drew the skeleton is V ' from a Bull frog and wrapped it in the hide of a .sjhark if X lgglssey knew. the flunky must beta bright ammalj. en in the silence of a Saturday-night, he amputated 11, Lt ei the fore-propellors from a sleeping mud puppy and ig K- 4 inished up with thrseddozleln gong haired amoeba E4 is N- N from which he mou e a ea . 5 Finally after much thought and consultation with A the rest of the faculty he dubbed the creation Stu- Qt dent Assistant. The next day being Sunday, he 1 A A resitedf Sion leiverybcedgf wast gettnf hstudent ias- ii Q5 sis an s. no nee e one o mar is examina- eg! ft tion papers. It became popular at once with the ' jx boys and went to shows and baseball games because the boys wanted good marks. The janitress wanted lil one so it could lug water and scrape snow from the Q? X, sidewalks. The proffs soon formed a radiator com- gat Eg K pany limited and kept the hot air lin circulation while F :ig the student assistant did the wor . 1. S? f J Soon the ITS began to smoke black pipes and b ,. N fl ,fm wear Standard collars just like the proffs did. The Y: Qi i-J amoeba lgalr began to grogv mvdvagd Emil they only , kt t'f1 -d te o'ce tt. Q, Crree UPOH fl ,time when man Walked up and down spghee olovsauheelscoof tleieluetuileeent assistaht scrzalghees ff 23 the wide unending sea.shore and listed to the call of the mahogany of the desk and he Counts his coupons the wild, which floated in from the walling mists about during chapel- him, there were not any student assistants. In fact This gruesome gink wouldn't give up his job to f lhere were ner any Prerrs except those who foamed be president. He calls prexy Sam and affectionately rn the deep grey of e dewy dawn fo gather sea Weed pats the shoulder of Rysgaard. He jokes with Jim Of bl-ISS f01' breakfast- and borrows matches fromjohnnstone. He moves Q gli At that time they graded their own papers and did with all the pomp of a sardme in a can of oil. gg their own work.. Over the whole world their was MORAL-They have played the fool and erred 53 a feeling of happiness and compulsory chapel was not exceedingly. Q S: if Grate Heroes of the Campus if ,I if.. By Robert W. Apartments gg if 5? 'tl fi J ii QQ Gi 91 if 1? Ei iff :ff sl I Ci f : is .. , 55 QI -gt 5 LEANTNGS from the sawdust trail of one of Hamline's grate heroes: Cashless Doc won prominence be- .fc cause of his unusual brayery in the irst night shirt parade and since then has been sought at home and abroad. ie M He has had several invitations to join the Homiletic club but because of orthodoxical reasons he refused to 59125 accept them. He has had more Women than the Shar of Persia, broken more engagements than Ann Heden- burg. and smoked more genuine stogies than Johnstone. At present he is running the Oral Den. Aside from Legldtllrigytlseiiigeligace and Iim Jam jems he manages to get to chapel at least once a month to pay the monitor his ' ' 5:5 lffrlf QQKLX' I K I Page One Hundred Eighty-six Nefifbfi , rf -- - f. -. . ...L -1 .1 1.,-1-N,,, fy.-,ygzfu-0,-X.agl-.-Qx F'---1IJ1s'::eQf.if,i'f' 1fg1:gg5,q:.Q.'rg5.5.- Q I H ' A' ie 1 V:.Q-Nvlici. .less-:xi.-1-. sr, 5 ., x Na: 1. :mv.r.:wxw.Qi Netra? ,. v Y. n 1. 1 rl -.x is .QL. KN'-X'-w-was x-'k -'YQ-li -..l1i':Qx:l.--ev :v:'.'2.:'.-.E-r.'-'?19Nc,1L,f'3Gg2,'.E-.cl'-sm'.-,1:+1lf.t'qt:Nfa,NE:-rriffninf:-'fignmlnaivlrlMW,fri2'-'f Mf:r,fis:-.wa-.2'.1-sf:1i7'.'2 .f,:.f:2fs:,t2z4f01.1.'111t rw. ' inififkg1i5i'f'fW'- Pfg7f5'I'.fiffiki K 1 JY- ,-'Tx'Q .xw',- . : F 1- X Q- x' LI .gf ir., ' V: ,Qu fi., ,elif 1. f. wx , fl- l, if .-!1f47D1'1'.CnH.f' A., 1 X LGE ' 5li'3ii1tISiif Ll'.V-'4 n'ffi'x.4NNY?iE'Lk'l11-XWT'3E5- V:-Uivri ball MQ i.ix'f.fi Q-Q G ji?x3. flii?'s?-'xr T-'QW 'l c':'C:J.f,':59I.'1 -' Rffmi -iff? 2.1 vi wh ffv' rl c 'C U3 is ff-'L r 1 ' lit. x lx 5. In Defense of the Hamline Athletes Or the final solution of that 77 to 0 Score By Theodore Beans Larson K Ay! Their hearts' born out on grounds, ii 3 d fi f Where football wings on air, 'Q X Nix , And captains sing their challenges- 2 , But defeat is spelt quite quickly.a'0'Q F ' W :ze we :fe fff N K f -J X . it Q ' V0 all Though scores 1S always tell, QL E , 'fill And sore conflict goes on over, E '.j,l', But the battle cry of our football boys Z5 5621, X 3, X Shall bring Hamline stands for the best. SSS 53 '-it ek wk :ia 'S -. 1 Oppegaard and Humphrey also, X A A - . . . . . 'H f,- Sat waiting in the sidelines, W ' And the faculties whole crew, K5 5 Murmured gleefully in the grandstand. 8c8a 25 Q ' 'Wi' Mr. Larson shows an unusual ability in 5 making air and quickly rhyme. 3 -8-8-8 Here again he shows his master 's touch by fi connecting his battle cry and prexy's co-op 23 - yell in perfect rythmn. is f m .fx-' 818: There is a bitter touch in this passage if . g X -.f against the faculty 'Black Death. 67 s 06 NOTE-We like to think that he started right but only lost the trail. 5 xi 'E fl la THE ORACLE STAFF'S TIPPERARY. X ,,,- Fl :vb g LE It's a big jug so tipp'er'Arry 1 ,131 .fff I is FQ 5, Cause the spirits run so slow. V I! ! ' 7114.1 , Y If gg It's a big jug so t1pp'er'Arry ' . if ' WF ,QW c if 3 And then pass it on to Moe. ' - J -f ge S You don't get none Dow or Dennis Q.. .., jc T f V v gf jf -5 You neither Sted or Jo F' We f 2 I 'N- , i IPS a big jug SQ fipp'er5Arry ff f1,Xh.a, :,.'g'2,J -, .ffwfyi g 3, And then pass it back to Moe. E' ' Mllirqjjijljll I - . ' 'l.f?fi -- 1' , ' 1 . ! - f 1 E N OTE-'Arry is the cockney nickname for Q' X ' fi 5 Arfvid Erickson. ' , .xi 3 fs A - Zi l s 152 if 3 52 ff ,if 'ii E 5-3 it li fi Ll 'C ii - 3' 22 3 , li lg W iv i H V , 'fi ix W. .e e e e c . gi ., all . . . . gg UPPY Oppegaard depicted in his haunts. During his high school days he received an excellent training 3, Z3 in pool and later on entered the army to do battle somewhere out near fort Snelling. He occasionally as- lg, ' 7 sumes the robes of the minister in order to keep company with one Angelou Watts. In the 'summer the Qc f gg warm aqua draws him from his haunts and he takes his annual bath. Among the Con men of the institution he has an excellent standing. Forbear to judge oh Lord for we be sinners all. ig: F5 ' . fl: Page One Hundred Eighty-seifen ' f,'.2,TvS'-.'ei7f.4 x1'f1'2fm::54'-''f 5- 1-ww . . .-'f-4. 1 V i. Q , H it i i W .sais-sfazx' f i 6'lf-'iff'-'.f?.'-'I' A ' ' 535' A Let Us Pray! This g a n g h a s smoked more pipes, Fussed more fe- males: nourished back to health more consg been in more night shirt parades and got away with it better than any other b unch in school. It is sure a piping gang. And s o e n d e th the lesson. Little Known Lives of Well Known Athletes BLUME, the terrible German sub- marine, in his street clothes., He won glory for the achool.' Aside from being an expert at the pill, as here re- vealed, he is the author of that stir- ring Melo-drama, Two Tall Pale Ones, Heinie. - Note the cig in the left mit. SKINNY BROWN, of Han- ley Falls. He is one of the schools greatest athletes. He played quarter on the Junior football team and with the a1d of Milbrook managed to lose the game against the Seniors. For every touch-down he failed to make he was given a stripe on his sweater. He looks like a solitary imprisonment guy with 99 years left. Observe the nail in the left part of the Jaw. FISH, a drawer by business and an athlete by inclination. A good pool player and one of the best card sh.arks on the Homiletic club. He runs a good expense account and is an expert at throwing the -discuss. Glim the Fatima, Con- stance. KIRK, who once loved the lab and flowers. Now he lo-hikes along the pavement with a dame. He 1S 'here seen hauling Irish ammunition. There is no pill in his Jawg he is perfect athlete. 1 i I Z Page One Hundred Eiglziy-eight Af 'i Y: V. ,i 1 A X .4 .1 P .1 ,l an r XX x X t x 5 , Ny ri 27 i x f vig:,Niftyl,.,.:-gui-',:1 ,XHRZTF lhfvx ijfilx,Nj-kI..Y,!jk' x xx r 1 A ' .Q Muzi LLA3 E1 22553 J ml !lLlL'QJZ,4.l,'q,l 4.L?LLuLUL:l2,',Vl It . Plaln utt 2771 it ii? A. s 25 ' r sf. is A' ig n Here is the original Owl Catchers' Union. This gang did not need to ioin this fraternity but their choice of females was so different from the rest that lf if they must needs travel a long way to call at her domicile. - - jawn and his wife. jawn SL is a good Nutt. Thas' all. A Recent Sob-Case , gii E9 .ig e iQ His First and Only Sin on sale if at the book store by Jean Lean Libbeyt ' A one act tragedy in real life entitled Their busted Comet or a failure to Understand. fl Scene 1. Youth and its frivolities. Could Ruth 51, V. have foreseen this? ,Q Scene 2. Contentment. Affections though they eil seem severe are oft in mercy sent CI-Iymnal dopel. Scene 3. A new shine. Disbandment and soft if music by the pipe organ. 5 Here is a barrel full of moneyg At least it is a barrel full of Gold. Get in the Barrel and wait -is a pleas- V ing and economic problem fi, that will soon face the woman's 'L club if the high cost of living does not drop down. if if Violetta the scientific girl. lf I The dead Soldiers about her camp typify only too well just how scientific she is along some lines. -j S Irate One- Where in the deuce are all those Poverty- This school is certainly run like a .5 Lab assistants? great factory. A u fig, She- In the catalogue. 1 Alrzmnus-- Yep-They're canning them right fig a ong. Page One Hundred Eighly-nine -, r, , Hs., -,....-, 4 ...I.,.v,ef5. - -. . R X V, ...vm ...,-fr-.., fy,-,...!,c,,- .,...., ,f.. -- i::..,,'a Jeff.: uw.. . , U.-. f I., - .H .: ,. ..,:4 1 ' V,-sf 3,- ' A lg 5 L- . ML. ,. . L 4 L, LL IQ -,1 aa my .-.. Excelsior fS01U Dust or Anything You Like.D When Shirtliff's last formulas settled and Woody's last cornet expired- When the seniors have all graduated and The paralized janitors iiredg I We shall go and faith we'll be glad to-lie Down for a minute or two 'Till the old Great Northern shall bear us To a place we must work anew. But the females shall all be tired. They shall Rest in an invalid chair. They shall muse in the thick grassed corners and Go without combing their ratstltit They'1l be missed-at the Goheen hash house But will eat at the Baltimore lunch And they'l1 write songs of Tipperary While they wait for theygookd :gd bunch. 'Tis then the fair ones shall miss us and Only their fathers shall blame. Cause the little tots won't have much coinage- And no one will feel quite the same. But the man with his first love the town girl-The one He always loved best- 3' Will be dancing the hesitation-We'll let you imagine the rest. M You thought I was going to say'hair didn 't you? We did. X is wk The editor of this spicy germ was a senior. Why he should be so bitter against a co-ed's expense account can not be determined. As far as we know he never took a co-ed farther than the rest room or to some free Y. M. C. A. aEair. However he seems to think that he is slipping something over the world by reference to his old town girl. 1 fhf cf- f fa 6 To Our Acting Dean By an unknown author. You can talk of wars and warfare In street car with your carfare When your miles outside of nations who are fighting sir. But when it comes to cussing From those who art is bluffing- It always was against thsat gnegkman Hartwell. Now in Hamline's sunny clime Where I used to spend my time Aworking like ol' Harry just to pass well, Of the faculties whole crew- The squarest man I knew Was our present registxiar,akGe2rge Hartwell. Yet he was mean! mean! mean!- A terror to the athlete was this 'dean'g Call the flunkers to the desk Make them pass the proper test You're our guardian angel ylgeri Doctor Hartwell. And his face was all a smile- Full of kindness free from guile And he always was to chapel just on time. With a methodist hymnal book Or a mathematel lookil' 'l' if He always stood away ikip ian tlie line. So we hope when he is dead That some halo its his head As he floats on wings up in the heaven's blue. And if he'll rule that land As he did our motely band He will still be doing caredit tri our school. It will be Dean Dean Dean- Some stars are falling downwards heaven's dean. Call the gang of workmen out- Put the devil on the rout , Your the mighty of the angels lordly dean. af wk ac So I'll meet him later on In that place where he'll be gone Where there'll be no three hour math and six day chapel. He'll be eating fresh caught carp And atwanging on a harp and I'1l get a make-up quiz from George Hartwell. :ze va :ze it it 'l' if there is no word like mathematel we only put at here to ryhme. We thank you one and all for your kind attention. ,ff ,l Qc , , , arg., . il y i .I if i N91 Xl 1 1 I 'x ix l l 5 0 6 Z! 0 And 1t's been lots of fun. i -1 r CNG, You can't have your money back.D Page One Hundred Nmetv or .5 -34:-:asv,-fy.:Al:.'y i,.5,-M R W X ' . , A s frl gx , . . , . .,u.. .. .,., ,- , IlilIHIIIIllIIIHIIIIIllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllilllllllllIIIIIIIlllllIII!IIIIIllIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllIIIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIUIIIIIIll!IIIIIIIHIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIlllIlllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIll! .IIHIIlllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIlllllllIlllllIIlllllllllllllllllllilllIllllIllllllllllllIlilllllillIIllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllllHHHilllllIlllllIlllllllllllIIIlllIlllllIIHllllllllllIlllllllllllIlllllIlllllillllllllillllllllIlllllllllllllllllilllIIIHIIHHIillllllilllllllllllIHIIllllllllIIHIIIIIIHIIllllIllllllllllllllllIllllIlllIllllllllllllilllllIlllllllllllllllllllllIlIIIllllIlllIllllllllllllilllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIHHZNII WT v Private Oiiice of MALCOLM EMERY NICHOLS LL. B. of the Nichols Expert School St. Paul i1 -. The -only Business School that YOU would even THINK of attending. - .. Favored by Hamline. A Business and Shorthand School with a Standard and a Reputation. .i . Wonderful Equipment, Selected Students, Faculty of Experts, Individual Instruction, . Certainty of l r Employment. N V ,gli.,i,,,,,,,,, -1-Q-gpg 21 r 5, g o 'U Hajj o i S 3 . 1 R 3 , ' n I . 4? 4- -- W -- A 4. Hamline University Book Store BROWN and I-IEINS, Proprietors 'T A r . V i 133 Dflelllllg 1-we. ST. PAUL 753 Snelling Ave., St. Paul ui. ull uni: 'il-un an ll I I qs 1 Private Office of MALCOLM EMERY NICHOLS LL. B. of the Nichols Expert School St. Paul -l The -only Business School that YOU ' would even THINK of attending. Favored by Hamline. A Business and Shorthand School with a Standard and a Reputation. 1ii-1. Wonderful Equipment, Selected Students, Faculty of Experts, Individual Instruction, Certainty of Employment. Hamline University Book Store A BROWN and I-IEINS, Proprietors Q Commencement Gnfis - College Pennanis, fewelry ancl Blanlqeis Ailzleiic Supplies E OID un tio ,I-Efi-X?Jv:i1tli!Ig14L35y 5 Phones: T. S. 6672 N. W. Midway 624 A.J.Wallace 6: Co 2 S DEALERS IN I ICE el FUEL Coal, Woodf Hay C0 Gram and Mzllsiuf E TRUNKS HAULED AND 6 FURNITURE MovEo - DRAYINC. 735 Snelling Ave. ST- PAUL 753 Snelling Ave., sf. Paul X X sis uu uu nu nu nu un un ofa 'I'-un un- un uu uu un un an un ul nl nu ll u ll ll ala 4. III u nu IIIIQ ein sion nu nn un un - nu un uil nu up nu nu 4, X H 01126 C 00km g H 01116 Service WE SOLICIT YOUR S O C I E T Y A N D CLASS FEEDS. WE ARE HERE TO 475 SNELLING AVE. Oldest and Best Restaurant in this part of the city. For years it has been head- quarters for Hamline Stu- dents and their friends. CLEAN, QUICK SERVICE SERVE YGUC, ALWAYS OPEN lVlr.and Mrs.W.E.Wallace GOHZ 55 Wheeland It 720 SNELLING AVE.. i PROIDRIETORS -I H -H W M -I M --'- ---- H -- --lfe ---- I -.2 Q- ---- VY :--- ----a - II II II llll II II l l gif . is a f JULE FRANKEL GEO. ALLGAUER N Get Tailorized Frankel 8: Allgauer, Inc., EELS 89 E. Z'lC1fN3f5ZZf ll Ill llll llll llll- ill!! llll llll llll llll Ill! llll llll llll lll lIll + llll llll llll llll llll llll llll I llll llll llll llll llll -f-llll llll llll-A-llll llll + Oil un 4, I-IAMLI E I-ICDIVIE Fine Residences near the University on easy terms. Loans readily placed on first class security to net the investor 6 per cent payable serniQannually. Farm Lands, large and srnall' tracts. Insurance. Care of Property. DITTES REALTY C0 422 American National Bank Building or I577 West Minnehaha Street St. Paul, Minnesota OID II :nl 40 I 010 ull nm nu- gig F Qhrxlfltzvlh, DR. P. GANFIELD 2 Eentizfi i ?giYgga2Z1832gdWaY 721 sneuing Ave. 'Io 4' 'I' 'I' RUBBER, TENNIS SHOES - LADIES' and GENTS' FURNISHINGS 5 A. FREIMUTH 4. pu un uu nu un un un nu un mi HO!! vin ll u 'Q' . I. st ERo. Pianos - Victor Victrolas Violins, Mandolins, Guitars, Bancl Instruments Sheet Music Expert Repairing o All Musical Instruments. CAMERAS AND ALL Pl-IGTO SUPPLIES DEVELOPING AND PRINTING Zl-27 West Fifth Street ST. PAUL 4' III I-II III III III--III III - - ---- -'-' II I I '-'f -III I III IIIII II I IIIIe 4' -1' II II II I--- II -I-I -I-I III- I-I- - I I -III ---- - 4- +I II + Fine Watch Repairing a Specialty Special Rates to Students E Q I Q 'E ese A veetssees A B ' Des eve H. . ertossi YQ ?aEeQnage C, : I jeweler I -5- III- -- 2f -- 4- soLICITs YoUR PATRONAGE H WITH A COMPLETE LINE OF I '3 ' A 'I' Watches' Diamonds Hamline Barber Shop Silverware and Cut-gfass ' HEATH ancl LAVINE, Proprietors Phone: N. VV. Nlidway 458 ' 2 467 Snelling Ave. Opposite Car-barns 75l Snellmg Avenue --nu uu un nn nu nu lll uu nu un uu nu nu nu nu nog it-nn II nu un nu un nu nu nu un nu un -- - lib 1 mil nsxxwnzxun urxuaauunxvmr uu 'fab . 3' N vw nuuixnuaurruuru Gi.. r P ,,'v.. X I 13 W Q ' s .:st.-sl., I. I 5 . 1 is . 5 ,Q OX I xx g X Q 5 ,ff 32 X SX . fy? 0 X XR is vs .vi if NX N . ,Q Q I Y xx gf 1 is 1. 1 ff , I. xxx XY? Is 5 avg kj , X! x x XX 'QS 5 fwff I 2 :S QW X A Q . We f f . ii Six NE 3 H I SXX 'X 217 Q 23,0 2' ff fi eg Q .xxsx X 5 , , 542 5 V f :I P-9' N . ' HE may . . .. UI 1 Ii.: X:-JI! ?l.Ib'! !.' IFllll!!!.I'UIlIKlI l 4: . .. . K - - . s-is - - fs-vswzmwmsssomwwfmmwmmwwwf . ' .. . 1 .. ,. G ll Ill!! I Il! aa - , A ,. ..,,.,,,,....e. .:.,,,....5,:,., I 1 -f .,ras':f3E:, ' fa, . -'Nw-1, J fri-L: IQFiSQ?-'..1-f:I:f .5ZE5'...-2-- . . ' J 'f 1- ff' 615 I 1 iw . - ' .I . .,..,. V.---Eg.-3' I li H? :!F:E:'If i-fi.'1-11. it: ' if 'IQf.:.I:.E?'sf 1i5.7:'f::W. . . ,di . 6 IIII I I'II IIII-fllll I II I I IIII IIII IIII u a 'gf'-In L QI IIII IIII IIII III I I III IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII I I IIII IIII-I 40 QCII IIII IIII fllll IIII Ill IIII III IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII--IIII IIII IIII up F. PITZ Merchant Tailor Phone: Midway 547 708 Snelling Ave., ST. PAUL, MINN I I Il III IIII III I I IIII IIII IIII II I I II I+ +lI IIII-H IIII-- I ' IIII II I I III I I IIII IIII I QQ Stationery Confe ctions Periodicals E. A. BEEBE SNBLLING AND MINNEHAHA N. W. Midway 957 T. s. 8010 Sporting Goods Ice Cream Cameras and Vander Bie's Specia1t1es Photo Supplies Brick and Bulk IIII IIII IIII IIII--IIII I Qc qflillll IIII II I III I I I IIII IIII IIII IIII IIII I Il II IIII QI + IIII- - C I--'I IIIIW---II I I I III III III I nu nu-. gig again I Vander Bieis ce CYCHITI If is the Best For Sale At ALL TI-IE LEADING DRUG AND CONFEC- TIONERY STORES. Bolli Phones I II II I III fvlll I -IIII -IIII I 'IIII J. C.VanderBie 496P?ftFfig5.fJiQ F ill III .I 1 - '. , ,..,.. .fa . ,lk M , , .5 f,. I . '- eii' . 9' iif' . jr ., -if V' -A 3 . ll .1 t o is EEF? :i Eg. 5425 .4 -:Qi iisf M f .3 a.E.E-55-1 A f wggg 555.55 S Q PEE FE . I - i Wcirrizsf as E551 F5 LISP f I E' i E we ' J. ...'- ll., V ' . - S X' I x, 1 FIIEWSI. FF EEE EE 1 EE ESE 5: E .. giili f i giiistffi :L WIN .' ---e 'fi' 'Q .... , .... .... ... .-. ---- 'IN - sz. . if A j iri it if P+ k itiiff ei.. 3 . 1. '... ..l?:I.f-5 ,wsgm '-- I I 1 'G ..e. - S HOME OF THE IRST AND SECURITY NATIONAL BANK MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. IIII IIII III I I I II I II I I I I I If'IIlI f 'I I - IIII IIC? iii' II I IIII IIII IIII III IIII IIII IIII IIII + IIIlllllllllllllllllllllll lllllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllll lllllllllIlllllllIllllllllllllllllll HTHOROUGHLY SATISFACTORY SERVICE SUPERB QUALITY OF ENGRAVINGS COURTEOUS C0-0PERA- TION AND lMIvIENsE IDEAS IS the typlcal expresslon of BUSIHCSS - Managers and Edltors we have served Wrlte for our Blg 1916 Plan--get your name on our IVIaII1ng LIS BUREAU OF ENGRAVING MINNEAPOLIS -I MINNESOTA D lllllllllllllIlllllllllIllllllllllllllllllIlllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllllll llllll I I I I Ill SK Y UNGA TIST EA NS EE E IN F U AYS By Makmg Drawlng for Natlonal Advertlser nw-I-' I Our faculty tralned hlm M1II1ons of dollars spent for Commerc1alDes1gns Com IDes1gn1ng mastered at ,ff home by our practrcal Correspondence Method Takes only part of your tlme Increase your Income Book entltled Your Future and Follo of Commerclal Illustratlons FEDERAL SCHOOL OF malled ffee COMMERCIAL DESIGNING, MIILIIYEAIGEBIIINN 37' n-of 5 5.5 4 I V ps? - - n u a :Il : ... - .. . 1 - - .. - .. . : - - - .. - : ' - - - . .. .. .. . .. .. .. a 4 A ' t 1 . 1 .. - .. - .. .. .. 7 .. 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A :E ' ' ' - fm-- I' fCf,lJvI'2 EWI-2'VEMIK''vnbnf 'If , Q J1',,,,f ,. .Ja-wc-ff Em:-an ,:,m'y,L 'rM wl f.'Eyf'-ffL.wf5A+F,EffE . ff' A 3' -' A wr 'LLL 'i'vf 'f .ffm . iiI p I-Wy'AfNDI:ff,fzf'EHlz,QtW V - I uf . , . . 5' 7 .-Gif ff I. -- ' ' - 9,11 ,Z ?i53 '1f1iVf'J'5l '.3. if ' . ::,g 3 y wi Q3 1 53.31 .f:,Q j.3 ,,,,j',' 'I 1- A, ff 1 , - I ,-g, .:.: ,I .sf '-'YQ-,, I f ' 0 .f1,. A ,X 6 A Q I , E 'Hi , -Ig 6211312377-9 -A , ' I I' 7'-M.,-rf' 1 'iffwfi - , 1 - 'Ef3F3 . I'i Sf,-'i h I l Ill The highest standard of ex- 4- .'- 15. cellence is characteristic of the photographic productions of fffl . the Stuclio. 53: A 23: Q V ' 608 Nicollet Avenue - If ' Medical Block 7' Minneapolis J 0:5 5 The Liner of 1916 Appeals to you because of its portrayal of college life, and it will refresh your memory for many years to come. Those in charge of the production of this volume have labored faithfully to build alasting memento: They-have carefully watched details, arranged copy properly and performed many things: of apparently little importance that has resulted in the classic make up of this Annual. -4 ThefArtis'ts', Designers, Engravers, Editors and Contributors have all done their part satis- factorily to' the managing board in order to make this the best of all Annuals. After all had practically completed their work it remained for the printer to furnish the fin- ishing touches and the T ' T qflrchitect-Bulletin Company was equal to the task. They followed orders implicitly assisting the managing board with sug- gestions of value, gleaned from years of experience. Their expert pressmen carefully watched the engravings, drawings, and halftone illustrations so that the faintest details would be as true to life as printers' ink could make them. Skilled workmen, artists in their individual lines, have followed this book from conception to finish. It is just so with all printing that is done at this place. It is carefully finished in an artistic manner whether it be a business card or a College Annual. ' CZK? Qflrchitect-Bulletin Company -is ever ready to assist the publishers of College Annuals or publications and desires the privilege of submitting estimates on any and all first class printing. We make a specialty of College Printing, Annuals, Magazines, Fraternity papers, Stationery, etc. MAIN GFFICE AND PLANT 2429 West University Ave., Midway do 4' 1, , ,.1.' -V, 1 .ff , ,,,, I, A .h gf ,, 747, ,I lf' I if' '4 is , - I If I',,-.kflfv Li' -FT ' -15 ., A',fiw, , J, 4 434, ,1J,,4 u- ' 11 V I ' f L If , 4 '.v - V 4, 5, J ,f ,'-L -I ' v ,, ., q , ,J H 4-1 , vf '-V! 1? , , vis' , f ' ZZ' ix f 15 r ' 1 , I. N 'ily , .A , , f Q-XF X9 I A' Q 'Lip' , X .1 .nfxf .- gl ' , 14. .. .v A 1 W 4. V-LTV i 'V J fn. 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